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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-30 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. ' • -. I -......... oun .. / anne·rs ee l ......... oas OS ow DAILY PILOT * * * 1o c * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRI~ 30, 1971 VOL. ..... NO. lU. 4 SICTIOHS, 46 .. A.IS Two Sent.en~es Convict Gets Prison, Bride By TOM BARLEY Of Jiit DellY li'llllt Slit! A SMILING Superior Court clerk sofUy hummed tbe wedding march, • woman spectator Jn the crowded .courtroom dabbed her eyes with her h~ker­ chtef' and 1 !Nlming judge. admitted it was the first time he had sentenced a rnan twice in the same day. tt was Thursday, April 29, 1971. And it was the very unusual wedding day of Michael Joseph Walsh and Madge Arline Dunbar. Conrett'i and cake were a long way from Judge McMillan'll thoughts a few minutes earlier as he sentenced Walsh, 36, Anaheim, to five years to life for the armed robbei'y Jan: 22 of a cockt.ail Jounge in that city. THE GRIM-FACED jurist had just read a file which contained Walsh's reported comment thal he would "kill a cop." The defendant tried very hard in . a gUn battle· in whtch he held besieging officers outstde his apartment for more than three hour's. But that was three months ago and the judge relented long enough after sentencing to impose his sceond sentence on Walsh in his cham!>'rs as .tm con· victed gunman, wearing his wedding suit of Orange County Jail dennns, re- cited the vows with Miss Dunbar. "Okay. Mike." said the bailifr. "that's it. Let's go." Walsh we~t back. lO the holding. tank. his bride went back to th~ ap~rt~ent she shares w1Lh a girl· friend and Judge \McMillan ·went back to his crunmal calendar. MICHAEL ·JOSEPH Walsh didn't get his cop. Bul ·he got hii girl. Trio Arrested in Mesa For Dope, Bomb Threat By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of .... DlllY ,lltt ll•tf A clook and dagger case which police allege involved negotiation for up to $389,000 in narcotiCll, a related bomb threat emptying ne1Tby courtr°:Oms and agenlll prowling the area with guns Won't Be Fazed By Protesters, Nixon Declares W ASHJNGTON (UPl) -President Nixon said Thursday night he would not be "lnUmldated" by a n t i w a r demonstrators in Washington but woold stick to bis policy of attempting to win a lasting peace in Indochina. In a televised news conference. UM!. President said a more rapid wilhdrawat from Vietnam advocated by his critics woukl lead to a "very dangerous situa- tion in the Pacific and would increase the d1nger1 of war In the future." He 11ld demonstratorw who break the law will be prose<Uted. Ni1<11 also bld Ul further Improve American relations with Communist O!lna. 11yln& "I hope and I Upecl to vlall mainland O\Jna .. ,al eome time in illee NIXO~, Pap II drawn, flllaJly ended early today In Cosla Mesa. The bizarre episode left three suspects including a professional ra~ car driver from A•aheim arrMed on a multitude of charges. Officers claim only a small amounl of contraband was seized at 2020 Wallace Ave., to cllmax the case originally In- itiated by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, due to the poten· tial scope involved. The arrestees and charges against them include : -Robert M. Gavonl, 24, of 3204 Spin- naker Sl.. Anaheim, conspiracy, plus transporatalion and sale of marijuana. -Jame1 V. Mamara, 25, of the Wallace Avenue address, conspiracy, transporta- tion and sale of marijuana, ptua possession of an unlicensed firearm. -TaJbot P. Slmmen1. 25. a transl~t artist and mwician, conspiracy and mak· ing a bomb threat. A search warrant allowing full entry to the Wallace Avenue apartment where the alleged transactions were negotiated over a nine day perkld was Issued Thursday night. Costa ).fesa Police Detective Sgt . John Regan aaid today be Js uncertain what - if anything more -was found . Local investigaton were contacted by federal agents Thul'lday afternoon and told the alleged deal was established and the stage set. for a raid. Briefed al headquarters. Sgt. Regan, plus lnvesli,gat.ors Norm Kutch, Bob Len· nert and Don Casey went into the area, IS.. BIZARRE, P111 S)J' National Guard Trucks • Torched Ill San DA.IL Y li'ILOT Sl•ff li'Mto VOICES BIZARRE PLEA Hotplt1I Attornty Coll ini ' DA.ILY li'ILOT lllff ,...,. LEFT IN THE HOT SEAT Ch1lrm1n Pro Ttm Smith -Lo.--· DAILY •1LOT tltll l'llO!e 'THIS IS HORRIBLE' County Pl•nntr Foley Two Flee Hospital Hassle .r -- Saddl.eback Facility Denied; Planners Quit Scene By JACK BROBACK Of Ille o.llY •Utt S"ff Orange c.ounty planning commissioners Thursday denied a permit for Saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hills after six 2 to 2 tte votes and three houri of angry debate that ended when two commissioners fled the SCflle. Commission Chairman Woodrow But- terfield and his collegue Fred Jefferson vanished durlng recess. A sthrong estimated at 100 persons hooted, clapped and stirred during the three hours. Veteran county political observers said It was the most incredible chain of events ever seen al a public meeting in the county seat. After commissioners Butterfield and Jeffenon bolted from the session. the re- maining two county planners voted to deny the Saddleback Hospital permit. 'nM!y aaid they did so in order to get the enUre bsue squarely before the Orange County Board of SUpervl0or1. When the meeting finally adjourned, OJ1irman pro tem Howard K. Si:nlth of Huntington Beach ordered lhe taped transcript on the session Impounded ht the Sheriff'• Office overnight for 1afe keeping. A member or the Orange County Grand Jury, present durJng the lelll.on, asked planning director Fore.st Dickason for 1 copy of the ltlll3Cflpt. Dickason, when it was all over gasped, "This has never happened before in the planning comm!S!loo's history. 1 can im· agine how this will be interpreted when the public reads about it tomorrow." The basic iuue wu that the Lulher,Jn Hospital Society wanlll to build a hospital Jn Laguna Hills but t.o do so it mwt have a conditional use permit from the plan- ning commission. Its application for that permil has been delayed for several weeks by action of three commissioners -Arnold Forde, now In Europe; Butterfield and Jeffel'90n. The permit must be obtained by May 18 or tbe hospital's federal grant of $1.6 million Hill-Harris Act fUJ1ds may be lost. The community is raialng a similar amount Jn matching funda to build lhe facility. Butterfield. an appointee of First Di!;trlct Supervisor Robert Battin of San- t.l Ana, set tile tone for the. hearing by calling the question "simply a ruJ estate matter, one of economics." He and Jeffer110n were lo maintain that attitude through lhe following lncred.lble series of evenls. Jn the next tbree houri, the four members commiulon heard every possj· ble reservation about granting the permit removed: -Depuly Counly Counsel Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach i<>ld them that they were not to rule ' the need for a hOBpital but only on general compatibility grounds. -Road department eng.lneer Murray Storm told them that there would be no traffic problems created by the hospitaJ. (This waa one ol Forde'• highly publiciz.. ed "nagging doubUI. ") -DeWitt Bishop, administrator of the SoUthem Callfomla Regional Office of Comprehensive Health Planning told them that the action of a looal ad hoc health planninf committee Tuesday had no bearing on the: decilicn; thtt the regional aa:ency had long ago approved Saddleback Hospital. Despite these assurances that there were no logical c:r legal roedblocks to granting the use pennlt. the following six split vole• took place: The first moUon by Smith was for ·~ proval. Smith and Commissioner Dan Foley voted "yet" wt:i.le Butterfield and Jefferson voted "no". "n.e second moUon by Butterfield was to deny The result was another 2 lo 2 deadlock. Foley then reversed the [ield and mov· ed for denial, "to 1et the matter before the Board of.Supervisors." Jefferson and Butterfield predictably r e v e r s e d themee:lves and voted against the motion. Foley then moved for almpte denial. (llee HOSP~AL·l!Asm.E, P11e I) J ·ose . . More J.)9Qib Expl~ions Hit LA Area SAN josE (AP) -Severo! Nallonal Guard vehicles in-61.n JOH were burned by arsonlstJ: today and in Southern California two more bomb blalll hit the Les Angelea arta Thm'aday night, one at a Bank of AmeriCa and another in a supermarket cootainlnr 15 lboppera and emp!Oyes. No injuries were reported. The bank bomblnJ WU the 17th a\ branches of the Baitk of America, the world's largest, alnce February and the third Uilil week . Police and flre Offlclali at San JOH said arsonist.. pulled 1uollne tank plugs and ignited at least alz vebkles of the type ll!<!d for carrylnf pmonnel. Damage wu Ml at about $3,000. Police issued an alert for a 1961 model car con- taining teveral per90n1 aeen leaving the area. In the community of Mill Valley, acrou the Golden Gate' 1tralt frdln. San Fran· ci&e0, police arrested a hJ&b IChoot sophomore 'Jburlday for lnveaUgaUon In the bombingl of two Bank of America br ancbes and a b1cb ICbool rut room. Police held Bruce Paul Lobml.IIII, ts, a student at TamaJpell High School, for ln- vesUgation of intent to injure w1tb destructive devfcet. 'They uid his 1JTest 1temined from TUua1y'a bombing of a boys' rert room at the IChool, the March 23 bombing· of the bank'• Sauaauto branch and the April 23 bomblnf of the branch in Mill Valley. Offklll• ~ pb a 1 iz ed that Chtre was IO in· (llee lllAST8, Pap I) Oruge · Hazy 11U11sllln• ..uJ greet week· end bucbnlks, , with .mu. c:lumge in ooutal te.mpe.flture& Mercury readings are pegged ht the low· er 60s IocalJy lllld up to Ill further inland. INSmE TODAY Th• UCI TOU>n and GOID!l music oro•p ii b11111 with plcn1 for iti atud<nl end facullV 1pring cantirrt. Detail.r and pic- tures are fn todo11'1 Wee~r. I • I DAJl y PILOT s President ' . Arrives At El Toro .... About S,000 Marines frtlb from Vlet.- tiam cotnbat apent the nllht shlnlq up .t.belr br&SI in anticlP'tlon of 1 visit from :their commander !rt chJef at Camp .Pendleton today. . President Ni.son wu eJCpected to land at the El Toro f.larine Corps Air Station before noon. then immediately board a helicopter for the elaborate ~re.monies honoring the lsl Marine Diviskln at Camp Pendleton. Tbe President, arriving for a planned long weekend along the Soul.h Orange poast. was scheduled to preaent the se- cond unit commendatien received by the tst Division since it entered the Vietnam connict five years age. The group of Leathernecks participating in today 's ceremonies Is the la .. contingent o( the division, which wiU be disbanded -its troops absorbed Into other units. Although the ceremonies we.rt not plan- ned for the general public -scoru ef civilians -were scbtduled to attend. · 'Ibe entire eighth 1rade·clw at Martt Forster Junior High School -atudentl from througbout the Caplltrano Bay arta -received permission lo attend the rites. And during the ceremonies, a San Clemente resident. Ma.rlne Cpl. David J. Romig, will have an integral part in the citation ceremonies. Cpl. Romig, 1'Jio recently received the Silver Star for berollm under flre ln Viet- nam, wUl Carry tbe PresideiiU8;1 Unit ComrnendaUon Streamer back to bas unlt. After the . ,eta,OOrate .,CeJtmonles at Pendleton, tbe President planned to board hill helicopter once more for the trip upco.ast to La Casa Pacllica where be planned to spend a working weekend. His aides said the return to Washlngton would probably be semeUme Jate ¥on· day. No detallil ef the weekend scbedule had been announced early today. l'rOM Page 1 NIXON,-•. my life , In some capacity.'' Related story page 4. - RA?lerTiol to 11111,,... .i.-tra~ In WashingtOn for ilttlOlt two wtlll, Nlton said he wanted to correct an Impression from televisjon a cc o u n t s that t•washingtoo la aomewbat in 111 atate or aiege." "The C.ongresa ls not lntimldaled," Nixon said. "The President is not i!l- timidated. 'Jbb government is going to 10 forward." But he aaid he did "not want to leave the impreplon that those who came to demonstrate were not listened to." Nixon repe.ated that he would not set a definite date for the withdrawal of all American forces from South Vietnam. He said it would have the effect of saying to the North Viet..amese, "we quit, regard· Jes sol what you do." The setting of a definite date, Nilon said, would de!troy any lnctnUve the other side might have to negotiate and would destroy the American bargaining position on pri&oner1 of war. "Therefore, the setting or a date la nol something that's in our interest; lt'a only in the enemy's interest," Nixon said. To get its POWs back, Nixon sald, the United St.ates will keep a residual force in Vietnam "no matter how long it takea." He repeated that the other condition for a total U.S. withdrawal is the ability of the South Vietnamese regime to defend itself. OU.N.I COAST DAILY PILOT ............. -·-... Cit OJ OIWllGI mAIT PUILllHIMO CQti\PMrf a.Mrt N. W ... Pf't&!"N .... '*lllW Jeck R. C11,..., \l1c:I ,.,..... .... o-.a ....... T\1•111•• i,,,u ..... ,~.,.. ... A. .. "''"''" ~ll'W MllW C~11l1s H. t .. , Rlclri1rtl P. Niii Ntltltnl MMleir. 1•1"'1. ~ C.I& ~I D w.t ..., Sll'W H....,.,. a..ct!: am H....,.n llu'-11 . Lat-•'9dl1 m ~• ..,_ t4111•t11111'-" •etet1: ,,,,. tlKfil lwltwe,. .... '*'-'ti ...... --~ ._... UPt T•ll,._lt PRESIDENT ARRIVES Marines Ready Front Page 1 BIZARRE ... alool wltb fivt federal agent.s frcm Lo! An,ela. Otben Mrt ln the area, prompting one frtcbl lid woman to report a suspiciout clraunltanca incident lnvolvlni three armed men claiming te be federal apn.11 .... · Police reporu allege the deal lavolvlng professional racer Gavoni and Mamara, an ele<:rician, was to have involved two pounds of cocaine worth $17,000 on lhe drug market. Federal agents inside the residence about f p.m. with G8voni and Mamara claimed in supplemental reports that Simons arrived, boasting that be had just forced evacuation of Harbor Judicial District Court, Police said he was in for a minor mari- juana case involving pessession of three cigarettes Thursday afternoon and had the hearing cenUnued. "Apparently be didn't like tbe judge," Sgt. Regan remarked, aaylng authorities think Simens 1implJ walked to 1 nearby telephone booth to make a threatening call. The complex w.as emptied of more than 50 persons after a 3:57 p.m. bomb threat, but no explosives werr found. Federal agents, meanwhile, charied they were given a sample gram of buhfsh -the pctent refined fonn of marijuana -and told 1 quarter ton could be bought for '150 per pound. Negotiating for the original two pounds of cocaine, however, they claim the su.pectl agreed to hand I! over in 1 park· ing lot at 19th and Church stretta after contacting 1 supplier by phone. '1be contact was never made. l'ron& P ... J HOSPITAL llASSLE ••• The result wu the same. Foley then m1de another attempt to resolve the illUI by ~ing to refer the matter to the supenitcn without com- ment. The same 2 to 2 vote followed. Butterfield then moved to adjourn the meeting. This failed by the same tie vote. Al thi1 point Butterfield declared a 10. tnlnute recess'. He and Jefferson d.ilap- pear~ for the night, Sm!Ut, acting •• chalnnan pro tem, called tbe meeUng to order after about a 20-mlnute delay. Legal questlODS then jumped up. to corr front the two remalning commJ.ss1cnen. Could two of the five commissioners act on the permit if the meetma had not been legally adjourned? Could two commissioners legally act on the matter in as much as there had been no call for a <iuorem ?· Attorneys present disagreed on the Issue and a 4>minute recess was called to research the 1 ... books. Reassembled at 7 p.m., the attorneys said they bad been un able to make a determination. Foley then agreed to the request of Saddleback HOlplt.al attorney Michael Collins and moved to deny the permit. * * * Hospital Group Plan for Board Vote Explained ' Samuel Tibbits, president of the Lutheran Hospital Society, said today it was at the request of the Society that at· U>rney Michael Collins sought Planning Commission dental of a laod ..ue permit for the proposed Saddleback Hospital in order to take the case to the Boar• of Supervisors. The Lutheran Hospital Society, baud In LDs Angeles, is the intended builder or the new Laguna Hillis facility. "Jt was obvious to us that the Planning Comml11ion, after three sesslOM, wasn't going to a'ct," 1aid Tibbitts. "We felt we had · to move the request -oot of com- mission and get It before the supervisors because we have time limits to meet." Tibbitts conrinned that the $1.6 million allocation of Hill-Harris · funds Jor con- BtrucUon of the hospital would be loat 1f permit& were not secured by May 11. "Jt seems ridiculous that Orange Court· ty should lose th1.9 money," Tibbltta aakt "Our plans are complete and we are ready to go as soon as we get the land use permlt." To argumenb that a -reducUon in bed size of the proposed bospita1 had nullified previous approval of the facility by health plaMing authorlUes, Tibbits said, '''Ihere it no nal<ln to delay on the basil of a reduction in size. This doel not have to be reviewed by any planning body. On· ly if we wert to increase Lbe air.e would review be required." Tibbitts said be hoped the matter would ftCf:ive a "fair and just treatment" wbtn the appeal reaches the tupervilor1. ' .... .,_i. .. Dolllat a:plllnoll 111,tt -lhls-wo.x, Ulo ... mlal>t '" befoN .,,. ....... In u 'DlUCb ., theN was dear tndkatlm tl>al the tommlsllon opposed Ille perm!~ whereal a vote by only two membert to approve might be subject to legal acUon by the opposition. , 1be controverty l\afaced earuer ~ ~eek when It waa reported thit Com- mlaalooer Foroe, an opPOln~ ol Suptrvloor Ronald Co.!J>ert o( Newport Beach, hod been lnstnunentol 111 dtlaylni the apprCl\'al of the permit for lbe SacS. dleback HOlpilal. Autmblyman Robert E. B'-dlwn (JI. Newport Beach) wa1 adviled Of the lltua4 tion and moved into the controversy wttb a promised hearing before the Assembly Committee on Health. Lutheran Hospital Society leaders, who plan to build the nonprofit facUlty tn Laguna Hills, said fu~r delay gtll'lting the permit would jeopardize t h e hospital'• vllal eligibility for the $1.6 million federal grant. Documents on file in Uw: county recorder's office show that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul F. Man are the principal officials In the Viejo Capital Company which purchased a site last year in the Mission Viejo area for the privately financed Mission Community Hospital. Viejo Capital Company ill also listed fill one or 29 partners in the Mission Viejo Medical Company which is building the mission hospital. The balance are mostly doclDrl. Forde has bee.non a tour of Europe and the Soviet Union with Caspen but bu been advised of the uproar and b et.:• peeled back this weekend. Saddleback Hospital ls planned to o~ next year with 150 beds and an ultimate capacity of 500 beds. It bu an associate relationship with South Coast Community Bos:p1tal 1n South i.oma to avoid duplication of major and costly services. Ml.uion. b0&pltal 11 slated to open this summer with 126 beds and an ultimate Hp<llliOO lo ~ bedL Man Sentenced In Check Counts A Coronado man accused en arrest cf palling nearly MOO ln forged checks at Fashion Island atora in Newport Beach ha.a been sentenced to IO days in Orange County Jail and placed en prcbation for three years. Judgl Calvin Schmidt accepted the ptea ef guilty to reduce.d misdemeanor cbargea by Herman Galnes,. 2Z. in a Harbor mflalclp;J court appearance. Galnea wu arrested In the J. C. Penney sOOre Feb. 13 by two oN:futy Huntington Beach policemen W9fklill u security rumll. Uf"IT•IJM• 'WE'LL IGNORE REAGAN' AIMmbly Speaker Moretti State Assembly Speaker Accused Of False C'laim By DOUG WILLIS MMCillM f"t• Wriltf' SACRAMENTO -Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti is being accused by Republicans of trying to drive a wedge between GOP legislators and Gov. Reagan with false claims t h a t Republicans will back a tax increase. The Van Nuys Democrat aaid at a Deft conference Tbunday there ii enouah Republican support for more ttate taxea for 1chools to pan an income or sales tax .increase of at least a quarter billion dollars within the 11ext 60 days. He also predicted enough RepubUcanJ were dbencbanted with the Republican governor's pollcles to auure one aod maybe several overrides of gubetnatcrlal vetoes this yiar -Lhe fint in nearly . a quarter of a century in California. But-Moretti'• ~publica,n coun~ Minority Leader Robert Monagan, aay1 the Democrat has it backwafds and that Moretti might not be able to get Democrats to go along with his tar hike plan. Mooagan, hvwever, refused to rule out the possibility t ti a t he and o t h e r Republicans migbt be convinced to vote for a tax hike, while conservative GOP Caueus Chairman John Stull of Uucadia dismissed It as "blatant and outrageous." Cities· Faee · • • Big ·Ch~es Due to Smog -.. ·-.. •• WASHING TO IV (UPI) -Tfte ~em­ ment announced today nri'at air qUil)ity standards tbal .,. likely ~ focce llharp limlts on drtvlng in dUes ant! pul l!iht restrict loo.a on emlJsions ·by tVf!tY i~ du.slrtal facility in tbe nallon. Achninistrator William , E. RuckelsblJ.1$ of the Environmental Prottctlon Aa:ency (EPA). which issued the standards, said they must be implemented by July l. 1975, and would change some aspecla of Amer\can&' daily ·nves. "\Ve've got lo make some changes In transportation systems. in ck>sing houri, and when we go to work," Ruckelsbaus told a news confereoce. He said big cities would have to p~ mote "rapid transit, car pooling and staggered work houra" in order to reduce automobile emissions enough to comply: wilh the standards. "It may even re<1uire the closing o( some sections of these cities to auto traf· fie at certain hours," Ruckelshaus saidL The standards establish limits for sir major air pollutants -sulphur oxides. particulate matter, carbon monoxide. photochemical oxidents, nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons. Ruckelshaus said the standards for sulphur olkles and particulates woold force massive changes in fuel! used by electric generating plants and other 1n· dustries, with a possibility the switch might force "some increase in electric bills." High sulphur coal ..,,.ould be largely MJl· ed oul in some cities, he said For example, he said, "We estimate that to bring air pollution levels down to tbe standard for parliculales in New York will require a 300 percent increase 1n natural ga! usag'e in the city." From Page 1 BLASTS .•. dlc,tion that the youth had any con- nection with any other tn the recent 1eries Of bombings in California. Bank of America officials Bay they have no idea why their bank should be at~ tacked. They have estimated that total damage to their facilities has amounted to more than a haU million doUars since February. After some of the bombings persons calling tbemselves youthful radicals have written letters claiming respoMibility. The letters said the Bank of America hu bee• 1.ingled out because it symbolizes "the capitalist exploitation of the little man." None of the recent Incidents prior to today's truck burning involved the Na· tlonal Guard. Bu~kley Talks OUlcel'I uJd Galne1 and. a .11-year~Jd g~l frteod cubed • l!llDlbe!' of check.I drawn cin a non-uilt.eut Santa Ana busine11 and used a forged idaiUflcation card purchased in Tijuana by Gaines t• 1upport the forgeries. Gaines' companion appeared in juvenile court and was placed on probation. ''The notion tbat Republicans would yield willingly to a tax increase b absurd." Stull aaid. "Unlike Moretti and his 'mod squad' We don't see anything sacred about the current level of spend. ing. l have repeatedJy stated my con.. viction that a balanced budget could be achieved through appropriate spending cuts and reforms in welfare and Medi- Cal'." A Bank of America branch In Oakland was bombed early Wednesday. Then, for the second consecutive night, another branch was hit Thursday. Crowd of 1,800 Hears UCI Speecli 1 By GEORGE LEIDAL Of flM D&llJ Pllll ll1ft A ruly, washed, clean cut, courteous and attentive audieoce of l,llOO listened to conservative 1 spokesman William JI'. BuckJey Jr, Thursday night at UC fnrtne.. While the Crawford Hall capacity crowd was dotted wllh long-balrtd )'tlUDI people, no bare feel were observed. There were many middle-aged penonl prrsent. The hall's inadequate sound sysltm rre. quently made it difficult to follow Buck1ey. In his opening remarks, Buckley proo moted vice chancellor Jack Hoy to chancellor and confessed hi.s em· barrassmet'lt at having discovertd a fork from the Hoy's 1ilver flatwart 1n his pocket. "That's the minimal exaction from a pre-lectured dinner party," Buckley jok· ed. The audience roared at the remark, evidence it did not think Buckley was a~ vocaling petty thievery. On other criminal issues, Buckley, tn answer to a question from the audience, said he is ••agairut killing of men, women and children." "Killing sometime ts justified," he ad- ded, "ln the effort to rid oneself of a tyrant or lo fret prisoners of war." Noting that he assumed the question was meant to elicit some response to the charge of "American savagery" in Viet· nam, Buckley said doves have charged six times the number of bombs had been dropped there than were dropped In Europe during all of World War II. He discounted that such was evidence of American savagery, in that the bomb. Ing mlsslont were directed at military installatiolll of the enemy . "If we had dropped one hundredth of thcne bombs in search of people, there wouldn't be any people left," he said. Asked to update his views of President Nl1on's forr lgn policy, Buckley aaid he thought Nixon "hu done well in some areas." "He's playing with dynamite In China," Buckley contended noting wryly th1t If Nixon were not a Republican he'd be an "instant llbtral htro" tor opening the door. "Conservatives place too much rtllance on Nixon," Buckley said. He warned against such btlnd faith In Nixon's handling of China "not btcaust of eny lack of integrity'' Nixon has, but rather "his ability to pull it off." Amoni the propositions B'uckley of. ftrtd In his remarks were: DAil Y f"llOT ,.,_ .. , ., LM ,.,.,.,. 'PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE' Buckley, the Chin• Watcher against rtprtssion are doing their best to make the constitution incoherent. -"Our self-proclaimed rtvolulionist.s • .. " should be hung. 81JCkley argued that the "state ti1s a primary, ontological right to protect Its right to survive." tn order to turvlve the st.alt must employ "sanctions o I 1tabiUty". Among such pncticns are the rtmov11 of Bobby Seale from his own trial and 1 "cop's disbanding or a dtmonslralion he fear~ may lead to y\olence." Both, lluckl~y 11aid, may be done tod1y without viclating the Constitution. During the question period followinr hl1 talk, Bucklty said "w,Jfare Is not 1 pro- blem that can be setUed by investing tht state wH.ti the power tc rtgulate the slui of f11m\1Je1." SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY, SALE! A $r.at S•lfttion •f Qu•lity Uphol•t•r•d fumitvr• at • '-t9tfc Snf191! Oioc1e from th••• quality names. S1ttnft1. ..... C..0..1 l.91chwn. Hlbritn, National, Jemestowll Wnt, many cth•rs, SAVINGS UP TO 20,,o Nawport IHdt SHDRILL LOYI SIA T & SOFA h1 Mat.hi ... pllew •IMI ,,..,. print. 1.t--a ... $SH --IALI SOFA ... ltltlful nhttt Hfa. • ..... 2S ·-·--··· .. ·--·-·---SALi SHERRILL SOFA $625 Lowe l•t-R. ... $J6f __ ................ SALi MARGI CARSON SOFA In • NxtuNll •lln Itri,.. $469 $319 ::;.a :;;t .. ~~ .. ~ .. ~~~.~~.~~~~.1 .. ~~~~: •• SALE $505 ll ... tnl --.. --·--·----.. ·--SALi MARGI CARSON SOFA '" llme 1reen print with whit• vinyl w9'tlng ..... $10t ...:.----......... SALi MARGI CARSON QUILTED SOFA In itrl9ht, MW , .. .,.., lleg. SJn --·-SALi MARGI CARSON HlllCULON SOFA $499 $399 $499 ::;:-;.~·~~.~.:__-·---· SALi $439 SHERRILL SOFA :::'.'";;, .. ~~~~ .. ~.~~~~--'~:t. $479 MARGI CARSON LOYI SIAT ~-:.'.":J:!'~' .. 1.:'_'.'. ______ . IALI $259 MARGE CARSON CHAIRS In warm, .. ,""',...._ $169 IA. .... 121S SALi SHIRR!LL SOFA Lewely, cretcent lhapt In •vocado vtfnt, Reg. $6lf _.,, ....................................... SALE SHIRl!LL CONTEMPORARY StylM In a nlct 1tr1,.. 11:91. $55f ..................... ·-····--·-SALi MARGE CARSON LOUNGE CHAIR In 1014. .... Pot ----·-·-·-·-·-SALi SHIRl!LL swim ROCKIR In I'"" Hwtltflltft. lt't• $25S -.-..... -........ __ .... _ ... IALI NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -OREXEt: -HERITAGE NIWf'ORT STOii OflN NIDAY 'TIL t $545 $475 $209 $215 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wesfcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ProfHtlonal Interior Ot1f9ner1 Available-AtO LAGUNA BEACH 345 North c .. 11 Hwy. Phona: 494-4551 INTERIORS • -' ' T ti e oplnlon·maklng community mlsunderst11nd~ the power of reprtulon." -''The ab.soluli.zers in \heir 11truggle The remark wat In response to 11 quu- tion from the audlepce, "How can we stOJ'.I breeding a lose r()'ace?" •------------------------------------------- IJontintton _.ea~h Fountain Valley , Today's J?qel N.Y. St.eeks voi:. 64, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRI~ 30, ·1971' JEN CENTS Jobless Aerospace W orker·s May Find Niche By RUDI NIEDZJEU;KJ Of Illa OtflY Plitt Stiff Jobless aerospace employes may soon find work in classrooms of the Hun- tington Beach Union High School District if a project for federal funding Is ap.. proved oext month. The proposal calls for about f2()0,000 to be used for the hiring of 40 out-of-work aerospaet:: engineers, scientists, data pro- cessioi specialists and administraton to help the, district in developiag COW'$eS .relating ta the needs of the area'a butJnw and Industry. District Sueprlnt.ndent Jack Roper said others would act as advisors and work with studenl.3 in the classrooms, both u tutors and teachers. The proposal was presented to the White House Thursday. It was received by Dr. Edward David, -science advisor to President Nixon and Direct.or of the Of. fice of Science and Technology. Jack Armstrong, a former aerospace administrator who took t.he proposal to Washington. said be was encolD'aged by thf< way it was received. He added ·that Dr. David was en-. thu.siastic about the project and quoted him as saying, "Thia is exacUy !n line with what we have been thinking about." Armstrong reported that a definite decision would be reached by the White House in May. For the past year, Armstrong ha! been working out the propou.1 with Cliff W. Hepburn, assistant principal for cur· ricuJum at Fountain Valley High School, and Frank Schott, a former aerospace employe and Fountain Valley High ~1 parent The group dubbed the progr:am BASICS. meaning Bualn.,. and Science Community service Progrlim. Roper said the fund! cou1a he allocat.d from some $-t2 mUUon U.S. Llbor Department resources which were set aside to assist unemployed 1erospaoe people. 1be district'a lhare, if approved , could support projecl for ooe year. Initially,. it would be carried on .~t lhe Fountain Valley campus on a pilot basls, according to Roper. Those select.cl to participate in the prograqi as advi!lors and teei:hers will be drawn from lbe ... Ure community, . Armstrong was scheduled to meet With the President personally today, prior to his rtturn to C8lifomia. The interview was set up by Robert Finch , special assistant to President N11on and former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Armstrong said. "U we are sucemful in getting this proposal approved, our high schoo l students would benefit enormously by having acces.s to the erperUse of scien- tista, engineers and b u a i n e s 1 ad- mlnlAraton," Roper aaid. "Needless to aay, there would be similar. btntfita to tbe aerospace people involvei!, and to their families." Actual classroom in11truction would pay about 110 hourly while tutorial and U.. struclional assiatanc.e would carry a $3 per hour !tipend, according to tbt pro- posal. "If the fund.! 1.re approved, we coald begin almo.!t Immediately," Roper predicted. He !aid all that was necesury to put the program Into operation one& thei grant has been made ii approval from the dlstrlcl'• boaid of trualea. Beach Revamp Set Downtown Facelift Nearly Reality LEFT IN THE HOT SEAT Ch1lrm1n Pro Ttm Smith 'THIS IS HORRIBLE' County Planntr Folty OAU.V ,llOT Stitt! , .... VOICES BIZARRE PLEA Hospit1I Atforftty Collins By .TERRY (JOVIU.E Of ""' l*IY , •• lttff Makeup artists are nearly ready to lift tbe face of downtown Huntmaton Beach. City officials have announced they now have four properUes in e.scrow which could pave the way for 1~ start 4t the fivt-- block, oceanfront parking lot. And 80 percent of the property in a two- blcck area proposed for a specialty village is now committed to that plan.· "We bave a substantial amount of land for the parldng lot, although it's not a large percentage of the total a'rea ," City Administrator Doyle Miller 1aid today. The land in escrow, however, ii 1uf· ficient for the city to 1ell bond! on te build part of the parking lot. "We expect to have four ~rties out of escrow and ready for bond nles in a men~ to tlz w,eke," Miller addtd. JI• T Fl H .• I H ,.. .. 1.,., ... ==-~~to,,~· wo . ,ee · osp1ta ass e ~:~.:t:::::it:~o::.m: , land and buy It ""-dlat.ly, which the , Cit)' Clft't do klule Jt doesn't hlYi Saddl.eback Facility Denied; Planners Quit Scene e•~p::.t'l'~· 1ot is ••ppoaed t• cover live city blocks along P1clfic Cout Highway. By JACK BROBACK Of tlltl DlllY l"lltt .,.,., Orange County planning commissioners Thursday denied a permit for Saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hills after six 2 to I tie votes and three hours of angry debate that ended when two commissioners fled the scene. Commission Chairman Woodrow But,.. terfield and his collegue Fred Jefferson vanished during reces!. A throng estimated at 100 persons booted, clapped and stirred during the three hours. Veteran eounty political observers said it was the most incredible chain of events ever seen at a public meeting in the county seat. After commissioners Butterfield and Jefferson bolted from lhe session, the re- maining two county planners voted to deny the Saddleback Hospital permit. They aaid they did so in order to get the entire issue squarely before the Orange County Board of Supervisors. When the meeting finally adjourned , Chairman pro tem Howard K. Smith of Huntington Beach ordered the taped transcript on the session impounded iA the Sherill's Office overnight for safe keeping. A member of the Orange County Grand Jury, present during the teSSion, asked planning director Forest Dickason for a copy Of the transcripl Oicka&on, when it was all ove.r fasped, "'Miis bas &ever happened before in the planning commission'• history. I can 1m· agine how this will be interpreted when the pub lic reads about it tomorrow." The basic issue was that the Lutheran Hospital Society wants to build a bospila! in Laguna Hillit but to do so it must have a conditional use permit from the plan· ning commission. Its application for that permit has been delayed for several week.! by action of three commissioners -Arnold Forde, Nixon Greets Marines On Weekend, Coast Tirp President Nixon's jet touched down at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station shortly after 11 a.m. today . Moments after his arrival in Air Force One, the President and his party boarded a helicopter to whisk them to Camp Pendleton where he was scheduled to review 2,000 wa iting Marines. Tbe Marin es. fresh from Vietnam com· bat, Spent the night shining up their bra~s in anticipation of the commander-in chief'• visit. Forster Junior High School -students from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -we.re allowed to attend. A San Clemente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Rmiig who recently received the Silver Star for heroism under fire in Vietnam, carried the Presidential Unit commendation streamer back to his unit. Aft.er the ceremonies at Pendleton, the President boarded a helicopter once more for the trip upcoast to La Casa Pacifica. now in Europe; Butterfield and Jefferaon. The permit must be obtalned by May 18 or the ltospjtal's federal grant of 11.6 million Hill-Harris Act fWlds may be losL The community ii raising a slmllar amount in matchlng funds to build the facility. Butterfield, an 1ppolntee of First District Supervllor Roherl Battin of San- ta Ana, set the tone for the hearlnf by calling the question "limply a rut estate matter, one of economics." He and Jefferson were to maintain that attitude through the following incredible series of event.I. In the next three hours, the four members commission heard every possi- . ble reservation about granting the permit removed : -Deputy C.Ounty Counsel Tom Conroy of Laguna Belch told them that they were not to rule on the need for a (S.. HOSPITAL HASSLE, Page 2) Countian's Body Found in Wilds SAN BERNARDINO (UPI)·-The de- composed body of an Orange Coun ty man belic\'.ed to be from Westminster was recovered in the San Bernardino Mountains today. Authorltie!: ldenUfied t.he victim as Donald M. Alexander, U. No local ad. dress WB.!1 available. The body was found at the bottom of a 400-foot ravine. Officers believe the victim Jost control of his station wago1 and plunged oft the cliff near Highway 18 in the Crest Forest area. A1e1ander'1 slatkln wagon was found nearby. He·has been mining for nearly two months. since last March 2. The 'two block specialty shop area ts bou:Dded by Walnut and Olive avenues · and 3rd and Ith stretts. Top of the Pier plans call for renova· tion of that area into 1 coordinated 1bop. ping area with some type of tourist at.- traction theme. Tbfl original suggestion was a Roaring SO. theme, wblch Vince Moorhouse, director of harbor& Ond beacbea, ,.YI hu been dropped. "We DOW bave e& percent el the pro- Connally Slates Lockheed Funds Decision Soon HOUSTON (UPI) -Tr ea 1 u r y Secretary John B. C.Onnally said Thurs· day he will decide within 10 d a y s whether to ask President Nixon to loan $250 million to Lockheed Aircraft Co. to aave the nation's biggest defense con- tractor. Connally told an appropriaUons 1111b- committee in Washington earlier this week 5ucb a Joan is euentl1l to keep Lockheed from going bankrupt. He 11Jd the firm is in serlowi trouble because of high coat overruns on the C5A cargo- transport plane It L! building for the Air Force:. "I will make a recommendation one way or the other 1n the oext few days," Connally said at a news conference in bis hometown. "I should say within the next 10 days." The rormer Texas governor and on1y Democrat tn Nixon's cabinet 1ald be sup- ports the three economic aim! of the ad· ministration: perty owners with 80 percent of the pro- perty in agreemetit on thia apeclalty shop area," Moorhouse said. City official! are organizing the shop- ping area now, but once the merchants and property owners are ready, they will take over the project. "Six months from now, we expect to have nearly everyone in the project and 18 months from now the city should be out of It and some conltrul:tioll caa be started," Moorhouae rep6rted. He aald two or three property owners have indicated they want octhing to do with the village project. "A new theme for it hass't been pick- ed, but in New Orleans (the Urban Land Institute meeting last weekend) most developers thought we ought to u.se an (S.. DOWNTOWN, Pap Z) Two Senten~es Convict Gets Prison, Bride· By TOM BARLEY • Of ... °"" ""' '"" 'II·:., niiimo. ~ Coirl derk .,my hummed !be woddllll 111arc11, a womu 1pectalor bt the Crowded ...ntoom dabbed her -wtlh bk hudker, c:blel and a beaming jullfle admltlOd ft was the first um. bo llad ,..lale:ed 4 man twtoe 1n thei same day. , ,II w11 Thuraday, April 29,. 197L And Jt -the. very llDUIUal weddJnc dayoUl'lcbael Joaeph Walsh and Madre Arllnellllllbar. CoafetU and cake were 1 Jon( way from Jwije McMll11t1'1 thoughta a few minute..s earlier as he aentenced Walsh, 36, Anabtlm, to. five years to Ufe for the anned robbery Jan. 22 of a cocktail lounge In that clty. THE GRIM·FACED jurist had just read a file which contained Walsh'• reported comment that he would "kill a cop." Tbe delendant tried very hard in a gun battle in which he bel4, besieging officers outside hJa •partme:nt for more than three hours. But that was three months ago and the Judte relented loog enough after ientenciDg to impose bis sceond sentence on Wai11h ln his chambers 11 the ClO& vJcted gwi.man, wearing his wedding suit of Orange County· jail denims, re- dted the VOWI with MW Dunbar. "Okay, Mike," said the. bailiff, i'that's it. Let's go." Walsh went back to the holding tank, his bride went back t.o the apartment she aham with a girl~ friend and Judge McMillan went back to his criminal calendi.r. MICHAEL JOSEPH Walsh didn't get his cop. Bui be.got bl.I lirf. • New Air Quality Conttols May Change Life in U.S. WASlilNGTON (UPI) -. The govern· ment announced today final air quality standards that are likely to force sharp limits on driving in cities and put tight restrictions on emissions by every in· dustrlal facility ln the nation. Adminlfltrator William E. Ruckelshaus of the Envtronmental Protection Agency (EPA), which issued the standards, said they must be hnptemented by July 1, 1975, and would change some upecta of Americana' daily lives. "We've got ·to make some changes in transportation 11ystems, in closing hours, and when we 10 to work," Ruckelshaus told a newa conference. He 1ald big cities would have to prC.: mote "rapid lrart!it, car pooling and 1taggered work hours" in order to reduce • automobile ernfuio111 ~ to comply with the stand.atda:. "It may even require the closing of some sections r:I. these cities to auto traf· fie at certain houn," Ruckelshaus said. The 1tandai"d8 establlah limits for eb: major air pollutanls -sulphur oxidea. particulate matter. carbon monoxide. photochemical oxJdentl> nJtrogu. oxidea and hydrocarbon•~ 01'11Jlf e w .. t11er Glimpsed briefly with the P~t;'ident at El Toro were bis daughter Tr1c1a, wear- ing an aqua. floral -print suit and her fiance Edward Finch Cox, who 1ported a brigllt red and yellow tde. The President waved to a crowd of 150 with a gesture indicating he didn't have tim• to 1top and chat. Commission Nixes Oil Permits Hazy sunabine will areet Wef.lk~ end · beachnib, wJth little changt in CO&!tal temper1tW'1!S. Mercury readings are pegged in the low· er 60s locally and up to &a furtbtt Inland. The President, here for a plaMed long weekend at the Western White House In San Clemente. presented the 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton with the se. cond unit commendation it has received since the division entered the Vietnam oonOict five years ago. Tbe group of Leathernecks participating in today's ce.r~n:ionies, i1 the Jast contingent of the divlSlon which wUI be disbanded -Its troop1 ab90rbed tnto other units. Although the ceremonies were not plan- ned for tht gtntrll public, ICOl'tl o( civilians alt.ended. The qtirt eigbtll arade class of Marco • Action by ~ state I.Ands Commlaslon In 5acramento Thursday mean1 that ne seismic or oil drilling survey1 are permJt,.. 1'd In llat. tideland•. The commiulon denied on a 2-l vole e1tenslon of eeological •permi ts for nine major oil companies for e.xploration work off tht ltate co1stline. (See story, Page I.) Tbest perrnill would hive sanctioned the UM of undtrwater explosives in localing oil pools. No geophysical permito, which allow t.st drilling, hove been aranted by the commission since tht Santi Blrbara 1i1 spill . · A letter from t.ht city of Huntington Beach and a telegram from Seal Stach Mayor Morton Baum opposing exten1ion o( the geological permits were read at the Sacramento hearing. Seal Beach councilman Thomas Hogarcf apoke in favor of erantina the permits. The petmiys Would have 1uthoriled seismic survey5 off most of lhe CO&ltline with the exception of certain preeerves, such as the stretch from the Senta Ana Rlvtr south to San Clemente 11'1d the San· ta Barbara preserve. 'nit state's aollon doea not neces11arlly mean lhat DO tee.an e1ploratory work will . ' , be carried out by the oil comp1n~. "All the st.alt hos done la deny Uatlf the data that the oil tomp1nJe1 may learn.'' Hogard commented lbis momlng. "The permits really oal)' related to the use of explosives:. There are ether means of galrih1g tbe knowledge open to the comp1tnles, such 11 the uae of eleCtronic detecting devices. They don 't JMled the st.ate•s permiMion to make theae teslt." 0. J. E\rerltb, assistant executive of· fleer with the lands division, confirmed Hogard's contention. "Now we \fon't gel the dall or know where they are worklng,""he commented. Ev-·itt.s doubted. Mwever. wtietber \bl companies were tnttre1ted in pursuing offshore explorat.ion or drnline ln Lbe preaent political climate. He pointed out that only one company. Humble Oil,. sent a representative to Thursday'• bearing to push the case for extension of the permits. The ata'le Janda sll!f had rte0mmended approval of the permit!, claiming that Calllomt1 as 1 state is deficient In botb oil ·and gas. State Flnaoce Director Verne Orr and Lt. Gov. Ed Rel1ecke voted to deny the pennitr. They were opposed by !late C<>ntroller HOU!lon Flournoy. INSIDE TODAY Tkt UCl Town and Coin mu.tic group ia bUftl with plant for its 1tudfnt · ond /acult'I/ spring concert Details aM ptc. turcs art in todau'• Weektndc-r. ... •• 1111 11 CtllfMllt 1 CMclll119 Ut 1 Cl .. JlllM """ Cemlci u Cnt•-"' n Dtelfl "''"" t l•ll'frltl ,... ' ""'-• •n "-... 1• .&.1111 la"'"" 11 ""'*)! ' ,...,... n-tt 2 DAil V PILOT K Goast Avoids A k>opbole ln election rtqulrtments f~ Coot COmmullll)' O!llel• D I 1 tr I• I lnlllee• <Ollld bavo COil topayen $10,000 for a a:peclat eleetlon, county school officials have revealed. The problem stems from a longstan- ding "genUelll•n's agreement" within the junlor college diltrict that candidal6 for tt.'I governing board mUJt reaide in lhe portion of the district they expect to represent. Apparently, that requirement, although observed for the ~ yean In the dl!trlct bu been In eliltence, haa never been put In wrltlq. Robert Mellhtw, dlr....,. of ecl- nlinlatraUve •rvi<ff for the Onn1e County Departm'"t of EdueaUlll\1 BIH the hitclt Cllme to light durtnf thll mtlnth'• ac:bool board elec:llolll. Tht l.uue wose when the residence listed by one candidate, Williun Ungl!r, an Orange Coast College student, was questioned. Under the district's unwritten trustee area setup, Unger was ttlought to be challenging incumbent Rob er t Humphrey• for the Costa Mesa seat on the board. From Page J HOSPITAL HASSLE. • • hospital but only on 1eneraJ compatibility grounds. -Road department enJlneer Murray Storm told them that the~ would be no trafOc problems created by the hospital. t1bis lll'U onf: of Forde'• bigbly publiciz.. ed "naggin& doubta.") -DeWJtt Bishop, adml.nlstrator of the Southern Callfornla Regional Office of ComprebeDIJve Hellth Planning told them that the action of a local ad hoc health planning committee Tuesday had no bearl.ng on the decision; that the regional agency had long ago approved Saddleback Hospllal. Desi>lte these auurance.s that there were no logical or legal roadblocks to granting the use permit, the followln& 1ix 11plit votes took place: The first motion by Smith was for ap- provaJ. Smith and Commissioner Dan Foley voted ''yes'' while Butterfield and Jefferson yoted ''no". The s~ ~ by Butterlleld "" to deny Tbe.l't'Slilt wat another 2 to ~ deadlock.. Foley tbtn·TCV~ tl'tt tl~ld and mov· td for denla1,, "Co eet thl!: matter befdr• the Board .ol'Sujlt"llor1." JefterlOD and Butterfield · ,-.~ly re Ver• e d themselves, and vi>led' 11alnat the motion. Foley tben moved for simple denial. The re!ult was. She same. peared for the nlght. Smith, acting as chairman pro tem, called the meeting to order after about a 20-minute delay. Leg11l questlOIIJ then jumped up to con- front the two remaining co1:11miuloner1. Could two (lf the five «imnili11kl!lers act on the permit if the meeting had not been Jega11y adjourned? Could two commi111ioners legally act on the matter in as much u there had been no call for a quorem? Attorneys present disagreed on the Issue and a 45-rninute recess waa called to research the law books. Reaaaembled at 7 p.m., the attorneys said they had been unable to make a determination. Foley then agreed to the request of Saddleba.ck Hospital attorney Michael Collins and moved to deny the permit. Smith agreed. Collirui explained that this way, the Issue might let before lhe supervisors in u much u thri wu clear indlcaUon tllat the mminlui<m-opposed the permlt, whereu a vote by only two member3 to approvt might be subject to legal actlon b~ the opposition. Foley then made another attempt lb resolve the -Issue by moving to refer tht. , matter to the supervltol'I without com- ment The same 2 to 2 vote followed. T1ll conuovusy 1urf1ced earlier thll week when it wu reported that Com- mislioner FOrde, an appointee of Supervleor Ronlld Caspers of N<wport Beach, had Ileen lllltrumental In delaying the approval of the permit for the Sad- dleba'ct Horpltal. Aasemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) wa1 advised of the situa- tion a,nd moved Into the controveny with a PfOmised bearing before the Assembly Butterfield then moved t.o adjourn the meeting. Thia failed by tbe SAme tie vote. At this pOlnt, llullaileJd declll'ed I 10. minute reoeu. He ahd JeUer900 diaap. Termite 'Control Busip~ q~sed . ' . 4.. . • ~· • ' .. Over Fraud Rap A Corona del Mar J1llJl will be out of the termite control ' l>ullnK• !iitunlaY becauoe of the ll!eged dllreputabU Iii'" practices of twci of 1111 tohner emPIOYU. Callfornla . Cioniumer Aft'air1 :Depart- ment officials .1a1d today the re\IOCaUon stemmed from a four-year-old criminal case against e Huntington Beach man, Edward W. Peru¥t and a Fountain Valley resident. Theodore W. Layman. Both were C011vkted or attempting to commit a felony on charges that they misled a 77-yW-o!d'woman and a nearly blind 74-year~ld woman by Inducing them to sian pest control contracts, of· ficia\s said. The spokesman aald the lkense11 both of Layman ~Dd Peruase were revoked as was the llcente of -the ownu of the com- pany, Robert M. Koop, 4527 Fairfield Drive, Corona del Mar. Commtttee on Health. . Lutbtran Hoapltal Society leader3, who plan to build the nonprofit facility in Laguna mus, said further delay granting the permjt wou1d jeopardize t h e ho!pltal'1 Yitai ellgil>ll!ty for the 11.0 million federal grant. ~.al.I on file in the county recotder-'s offi~ show th.at Forde and · ~ •ttrlnin"ltul F • .Marx art lhe I· :jirbi!lpOJ "¥lldill' 'In the Viejo Capital Company which purchased a 11lte last year In the .Mlulon Viejo area for the privately U.OCed MWion COmmunily llcapital.· --' ~ V!cJo ·~·Comr,any is llld llltel u Cite .. f 29 partner1 n the Mission Viejo Mtdlcll 'Company which ls building Uie .. ijllulon hospital. The balance ore lllOIUy doctors. • Forde has been on a tour of Europe and the Soviet Union with Ca11per1 but ha1 been advised of the uproar and ls ex· pected back this weekend. Sa.ddleback Hospital is planned to <lpen next year with 150 beds and an u1Um1le capacity of 500 beds. It has an associ1te relalionsbip with South C:Oast Community Hospital in South Laguna to avoid duplication of major and cosily aervlces. Miulon hospital Is slaled to open this summer with 126 beds and an ultlmale exp.anslon to 250 beds. Costly Unser llsted an addreu in College Park nw tbe OOC c:aq>pwo In CO.le M .... It wu J1ter det.ermtned that Unger, had !liifflH ta ll•WPtlll BtACh. But the Newport Beach 1e1t on I.he board wn not up lhLs year. Thal wu the bull for the question about Vnger's residence -It ap- peared he had disqualified himself tiy moving. No so, said the rounty Department or EcuaUon'J Matthew. He said the only requirements a coast college candidate must satisfy under the state Education Code are that be be a U,I TtlffMM 'WON'T BE INTIMIDATED' Nixon on P••c• O.monlfrators From PUIJe J DOWNTOWN. • • early'Callfornia theme,'' Moorhouse ad· ded. Another suggestion made in New Orlean11, according to Moorbouse, were that lhe ci(y should cmsider building a convention center early to attract hotels and reslurantB. 'Moorhouse and Miller were to discuss the total cost or the parking aulhorlty project -five ocean front blocks -to- day. They hope to complete the parking lot and the village about the same time, 11Flnancial suceeM of the parking Jot depends on compleUon o( this village shopping area for yearfllund use," Moorhouse explainedi 111When we told all our city 11lam In New OrJBans, we were giv-en 1 slandlng o~aUoD," Moorhouse 18id • It was an Urban Land Institute com· mlttee In 1965 which made many of the suggestions cltY leaders are now trying to implement for the rebirth of Huntington Beach. A lhree-man team of Moorhouse, former city councilman Dr. Henry Kauf- man and Bill Reed, city inlormatloo of· fleer, presented the Huntington Bell.ch story to the ULI New Orle&ns meetlng. Moorhouse uld a dozen developers ex- pressed interest in studying the Hun- tington Beach downtown j>roject, perhaps with tboughta of becoming a part of It. Koop, according to investigations dim:· tor Macon Bonner. was the owner and gent.ral manager of Countrywide Tmnlte Control. Inc., dolng business mostly ln Cypress. Guard Vehicles Torched; Bonner 1akl legal technicalities follow· ing the crlrnJnal conviction of the salesmen delayed the flepartment'1 formal revocation of their Ucenses. DAILY PILOT OIWtOI Q)Ar1' f'UIUIHlltCt COMrAN1" l•Ntt N. Wi.4 Prttldfllf _. PUlllllW Jee.\: I. C.rfe'( Vkl ..,....,, ... °"""'' ~ n ..... , r • ..ic ... ,..,.. n-•' A. M•t,liiK ..,,..,.... l.fltW Al111 Dir~h1 w.t OrMIO c-il1 M IW JJMrt W. '•'•• _ ..... HWllstl .. .._. Offke 17171 ... di ···'•••t4 Melli111 AJ•rHll P.O. a.. 7t0, 91141 .,_.,_ L..-a-o.1 m '*-' A"""' Colhl ..,,_.l .. W.I .. , '''"' .. ....,., -..01 .. ......,, --~ &a. '*"9Ul1 • ...,.. II C..m!M a.t 0.t.ll Y PILOT', ...... •ktl II ~ "-·-~-.. ,,.,ltl* .. llY --'-"'' "' ... ,. .. •m.. ,., \.efllne ...... ........., ... d\, C..!e ,_.,., .._._,. ... ..... .......... lf•llft' .... ~ <.llflhtrW ............. iii_ ....... -.............. "11<1"1 ~ ..... . ... ~ .. 1 ........ c-w. ...... TA•J•111 (7141 642-4121 CulW Al:e:lll I '4W11 ~. """ ~ OMll ............ ~ ............ _,,.. ...... ..................... ~-----­_, .. •• , elf '""""' IPldll ,.. ........ .. ..,..,...u ...... . ~c-. .................. ..... ..... ,. ~. c:.1 ........ ,., ... .... "' ~ IUJ _.,111111 ..,. -· a.n IMIHlllY1 IOllHtery MllMtltnJ, lUll ,,_...,., 2 More Bombs Hit LA Area SAN JOSE (AP) -Several National Guard vehicles in San Jose were burned by ar9001sts today and In &>uthem California two more bomb bl1sUi h1t the Los Angeles area Thursday night, ooe 1t a Bank oI America and another in a supermarket contalnlng 15 aboppers and employes. No injuries we~ reported. 'nit bank bombing was the 17th at branches of the Bank of Amerlca, lhe world's large.st, since February and the third lh1I week. Police and fire olficials at S4n Jose !aid arsonists pulled gasoline tank pluas and .lgnJted al least sll: vehlcle1 of the type used for carrying personnel. Damage was set at about $3,000. Police issued an alert for a 1951 model car con· taining several personi seen leaving the area. In the community <lf Mill Valley, across the Golden Gate strait from San f'ran- cisco, police arrested a high school sophomore Thursday for invuli11ation ln the bombings of two Bink of America branches and 1 high school rest room. Police held Bruce Paul Lohmann. 16, a student at Tamalpais ltiJ(h Scho<>I, for ln- Vesti&ation of inU!nt to Injure with dtstn.icUve devices. They said hiJ arrest stemmed from Tuesday's bombing of a boys' rest room at the school, the March 23 bombing of the b1nk·s Samalllo branch and the Aprll 23 bombing (lf the branch in MJll V1lley . Offlclals em· phasized that there was no Jn. dlc.1Uoo that the youth had any con· nectlon with any other in the receat aeries <lf bomblngs In California. Bank or America officials 11ay they h&\'t llO kle1 why lhtlr bank 1hould be at- tacked. They ha~ estimated that total d1m1ge to lheir lac:.Ulllu has amounted to mort lhan a h1U million dollara 1lnc• Febnuiry. After some of the bombings persons calling themselves youthful radicals have written letters claiming responsibility. The letters aaid the Bank of America has beeR singled out because it symbolizes "the capitalist exploitation of the UtUc mao." Noile of the recent Incidents prior to today's truck burnini involved the Na- Uonal Guard. A Bank ol America branch lo Oakland was bombed early Wednesday. Then, for the second consecutive night, anolher branch was hit Thursday. Police In Montebello, Ill miles east of downtown Los Angeles. said an explo.slon knocked out glass iD the rear door and windows <lf a tvoo story branch. ''It was a pretty good blast," police said but damage was relatively slight. The explosion It Safeway supermarket in East Los Angeles came an hour earlier. Mrs. Pike Talk Time Changed A change in speaking schedules brought Mrs. Diane Kennedy Pike to Gcilden West O:lllege nine hours earlier lhan announctd Thursday. Several Huntington Beach resident! were dlSlpJ)Ointed when they went to the college al 8 p.m. to hear the wife of the late Bl.shop James Pike speak, ind found no one there. College officials said t.1rs. Pike 1poke In the Forum al 111.m. Thuraday. lier 1c.hedule was ch1nged t.oo lite to notHy new1p1:per1 whlch had already printed the 8 p.m. appcaranct, officials iald. Special resldeot or the d1ltrict aitd a registered voter. Under thole criteria, tbttl, all can- clidates actually wu. running al large with the I.Op three \/Ote-getttrs winning election to the dlree open seats. As the election turned out, all three in- cumbents won by large majorU . .if:s. All lhree represent different parts of the district se t up under the old unwritten agreement. But Mathew orfered this hypc>lhetical case: U Unger had won, unseating Hum- College Vote phreys', his win would have been leg1I. But, lbe CosUI Meaa. attort'ley ml&ht well have flied a tnpayer•1 au.it cballenglnc Unger for allegedly mlsrepresenliftl his address. If the court ruled f~ Humphreys, In ef· feet negating Unger's ·election, a special election would be necessary to fW I.tie vacancy, The cost or such an elecUon would run ab<lut $10,000, Matthew esUmated. Of!lclals of the community colJetie dlstrkt are at a loss to eJPlain why the election procedure they have followed all these years was nevtr formalized. Meanwbl.le. Humphreys ll prepa.rlnc lo 1sk his coUeagues on the hoard to di> !U>L lhlt 1s soon as poNible. The trustee ·district arrangement. which is legal provided it i3 adopted formally by a scbOol board, has ~n U&- ed' in the coast dlstrlei as a JJ11.11nl of guaranteeing representation orl the bc),rd from various sections o( the di1trlc\. The coast district covers Seal Beach, 'Vestminster, HunUoiton Be1cb,, Foun- tain Valley, COsta Mesa anli Newport Bead>. Rapid Withdrawal Out Nixon, 'Won't Be Intimidated' by Demonstrators "" ' WASffiNGTON (UPI) -President Nixoo said Thursday night be YlOuld not be "inUmidated" by anti w a r demonstrators in Washington but would sUck to hi!: policy of attempting to win a lasting peace in Indochina. Jn a televised news conference, the President said a more rapid withdrawal from Vietnam advocated by his critics would lead to a "very dangerous situa- tion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers of war in the future." He said deroonstrator1 who break the law will be prosecuted. Nllon also bid to further improve American relations with Communist China, saying "I hope and I expeet to visit mainland Chlna ••• at some time in my life, ln some capacity." Related story page 4. said it would have the effect of saying to the North Vletumese, .. we quit, regard· Jes sof what you do," The 11etting of a definite date, Nixon said, would destroy any Incentive the other side might have to negotiate and would destroy the American bargaining position on prisoners of war. ''Therefore, the setting of a date is not something that's in our interest; it's only in the enemy's interest." Nixon said. To get its POWs back, Nixon said, the United States will keep a residual force in Vietnam "no matter how long it takes." He repeated that the other condition for a total U.S. withdrawal is the ability of the South Vietnamese regime to defend itself. Nixon also: -Said he intervened in the case of Ll. \Yilliam L. Calley because there was .. great concern" across the country. He said his action announciRg he would have the final review of the officer'• cof!victlon of murdering civilians at My l..&i had •·cooled down'' the public outcry. -Promised his administration would cOmply with the Supreme C.ourt decision that busing and other means would be used to eliminate segregation in southern schools. Related story page -4. -Asked if be would think about naming a court of inquiry to .see who got the United Stales into .\he Indochina war, said he was ;'not going to cast the blame for the war in Vietnam on either of my predecessors." -Said the possibility at this time or new operations in Indochina comparable 10 the invasions of Cambodia aAd Laos was "quite remote'' and that when the v.s. troop leveJ reaches lM,000 Dec. 1 it would be "completely remote.'' Refe1Ting to anUwar demonstrations in Washington for almost two weeks, Nixon said be wanted to correct an impression from teleW.slon accounts that uwashlngton is somewhat in a state of :siege." Trio Arrested in Mesa "The Cong~1s Is not intimidated," Nixon said. "The Pres.ident is not in· timidated. Th.is government is going to go forward." For Dope, Bomb Threat But he said he did "not want to leave the impression that those who came to demonstrate were not listened to." Nixon repeated that he would not set a definite date for the wlthdr1wal Of all American forces from swaf .VltlDam. He -' Carnival at Zody's For Little Leaguers Clmlval ttlrllll ' are offi'!a tonight through Sunday on the park1ng lot of Zody's shopping cenW Edinger Avenue and Golden West S~t, Huntington Beach. ' The occasion is the third annual spring carnival sponsored by the Ocean View Little League. Profits from the carnival will help buy uniforms and eqWpment for league players. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ot 111t O.llY ,llft Sl•ll A cloak and dagger case which police allege involved negotiation for up ta $3119,000 in narcotics, a related bomb threat emptying nearby courtrooms and agents prowling the area with guns drawn, finally ended early today in Costa ~tesa. Tbe bizarre episode left three suspects including a professional race ca r driver from Aaahe im arrested on a multitude of charges. Officers claim only a small amount ef contrabaod waS sei:zed at 2020 Wallace Ave., to climax the case originally irr itiated by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, due to the poten· tial scope involved. The arrestees and charges against them include: -Robert 1t1. Gavonl, 24, of 3204 Sptn. naker 1 St., Anaheim, conspiracy, plui transporatation and sale of marijuana. • -Jam.ts V. Mamara, 25, of the Wallace Avenue address, conspiracy. transporta- tion and sale of marijuana. plus possession or an unlicensed firearm. · -Talbot 'P. Simmon1, 25, a transient artist and musician, conspiracy and mak'· ing a OOmb threat. A search v.·arrant allowing full entry to tbe Wallace Avenue apartment where the alleged transaction5 v.·ere negotiated ovtt a nine day period was issued Thursday night. Costa Mesa Police 'Detective Sgt. Jobr! Regan said today he is uncertain what - if anything more +-\Vas found . Local investigators were contacted by federal agents Thursday afternoon and told the alleged deal was established and the stage set for a raid. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! A Gr••• S•l•ction of Qutlity Uphol1t•r•d Furniture et .. ,_,tcntlc Scn1n91! Choose from th•ss qu•litY. n•m11. Slitn"R~ M•t• Canon, Landmllric, Hlbrfton, Ncitfoeol, JamestoWll West, m1ny oth1r1, SAVINGS UP TO 20o/o Newport lea<h SHEHILL LOVI SEAT & SOFA 11'1 m1tchlng y1Uow •nd trMn print. Sof•-Rltf. $550 ··--..... --............ 5ALI l.oljuna leadt SOFA INutlful v•lv•t 1of1. llltf. $125 -................... -... -.. -.... --IALI SHERRILL SOFA $625 Lev• lttt-R ... $Hr -· .. --..... -.. SALi MARIH CARSON SOFA $469 $319 :::.• ~~;'.-~: .. ~ .. ~~.~.~.'.~.~~~~~.-~~~~-· SALE $505 In 1 textur&cl ollv& 1trlpe, Reg. $770 ... ·-·· .. ---····-···""'"'""··-···-··· SALE $499 MARGI CARSON SOFA 11'1 llm• I'"" ptlnt with whit& vinyl SHERRILL CONnMPORARY w1Uln1. ll1t9. f,500 ,_,,_. __ ...... -....... SALE M,\RGE CARSON 9u1LnD SOFA In airt1ht, nlW coltn. $399 =~~~s~"t ~ .. :'.~~ .. ~~.~~.~.' ............ -...... SALE $475 .... SSH ......... -----·-· SALi $499 MARliE CARSON HERCULON SOFA =~:~is~o y~~~.:_, _____ ,,.,,,._ .. -·-·· SALi $439 MAR!il CARSON LOVI SEAT ~n"~o~~·~~ .. ~.~ .... _ ......... -.... IALI $259 MARGI CARSON CHAIRS ~"..~'$i';J ~~~~.-~~ ..... -.. -·-SALE $169 EA. MARGE CAISON LOUNGE CHAii 11'1 ,., ... llet. $309 -............. -............. -........ SALE SHERRILL SWIVEL ROCKER In vr•n Hffc1i1lon. .... $2SS _ ........... _ ............ ,,,.,, __ ,,,. SAL( NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DR EXE~ -HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOll OPIN NIDAY 'TIL t $209 $215 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wet1cllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 Prohiulon11 lnterlor D11l9n1rt Avall1bl1 -AID L,\GUNA BEACH 345 North Co1•t Hwy. Phona: 494-6551 INTERIORS I I I 'PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE' Buckley, the Chine W•tcher DAILY l'ILOT l'MM1 •r Lff l'•r .. 'A FORK IN MY POCKET' Buckley, the Perfect Gue1t Bu~kley Talks Crowd of 1,800 Hears UCI Speech By GEORGE LEIOi\L 01 IM o.i1y l'llet Sl•ff A roly, washed, clean cut, courteous and attentive audience of 1,800 listened to conservative spokesman William F, Buckley Jr. Thursday night at UC Irvine. \Vhile the Crawford Hall capacity crowd was dotted with long-haired young people. no bare feet were observed. There were many middle-aged persons present. The hall's inadequate sound system fre- quently made it difficult to follow Buckley. In his opening remarks. Buckley pro- moted vice chancellor Jack Hoy to chancellor and confessed his em- barrassment al having discovered a fofk fro m the Hoy's silver flatware in his pocket. "That's tht. minimal exaction from a pre-lecturetf dinner party," Buckley jok- ed. The audience roared at the remark. evidence it did not think Buckley was ad- vocating petty thievery. On othe.r criminal issues. Buckley. in answer to a queslion from the audience, said he is "against killin( of men. women and children." " "Killing sometime is ju!tified," he ad· ded, "ip the effort to rid oneself of a tyrant or lo free prisoners of war." Noting that he asswned the question was meant to elicit some response to Ole charge of "American savagery" in , Viet- nam. Buckley said dove! have charged six times the number of bombs had been dropped there than were dropped in Europe during all of World War II. I-le di6COUnted that such was evidence of American savagery, in that the bomb· Ing mis sions 1A•ere directed at military Installations of the enemy. "If 'A'e had dropped one hundredth of those bombs in search of people, there wouldn't be any people left," he said. Asked to update hi.'i views of President Nii:on's foreign policy. Buckley said he Jhought Nixon "has done well in some areas." "He's playing with dynamite in China," Buckley co11tended noting wryly that if Nixon v:ere not a Republican he'd be an "instant liberal hero" for opening the door. "Conservatives place t.oo much reliance on Nixon.'' Buckley said. He warned against such blind faith In Nixon's handling of China ''not because of any lack of integrity" Nixon has, but rather "his ability to pull it off." Among the propositions Buckley of· fered in his remark! we rt: - ' ' T h e opinion-making community misunderstands the power of repre1!ion." -"The absolutizers in their struggle against repression are doing their best to make the constitution incoherent. -"Our self-proclaimed revolutionisU ... '' shouJd be hung. Buckley argued that the "state has a primary. ontologic11l right to protect it! righl to survive ." In order to survive the state must employ "sanctions o f stability''. Affii>ng such sanctions art the removal of Bobby Seale from his own tri-1 and. a "cop's disbanding of a demonstration he fears may lead to violence." Both, BuckJey said, may be done today wilhout violating the Coll.'ltitution. During the question period following his talk. Buckley said "welfare is not aipro-- blem that can be settled by investing the state with the power to reguJate the siie of families." The remark was in response to a que5· tion from the audienct, "How can we st.op breeding a loser race:'?" 4 l11dicted n1 $28 Million Chicago Bank Fraud. Count WASHINGTON (AP) -Four men, including the fonner vice president and bookkeeper of the Cosmopolitan National Bank of Chicago. were indicted today on Lawrnaker Seeks Gift of Beach Land to State A San Diego assemblyman who sit! on President Nixon'5 Committee on Environ· mental Quality has introduced a resolu- tion in the Legislature to urge Congress to donate 3,400 acres of San Maleo Can· yon near San Clemente to the slate for recreation purposes. Republ ica n Pete Wil:son introduced the measure in. an attempt lo block the possibility that the land -dec~ared surplus to the military by th~ Pres!dent earlier this year -would fall into private bands. The canyon -along with 6.S miles or prime :swimming beach -was declared ex cess In 11 surprise move by the Presi· dent during his last visit lt the South Orange Coast The chances that the state 'vould nceive title to the: land are quite good, o!ficials have said. Only if no other goYernmental agency wanls the land does it go up for public auction. Wil50n. however. 5ald there ''was a possibility" that the land wouJd faU into private ownership -thus hiJ interest in placing official pressure on the Congress. Ont stipulation of the IUrplus declara- tlon for the beaches and the upland acrtage is that any goYernment agency assuming ownership must use it for the benefit of tbe general public. Top stale parks officials already have suggested that the canyon portions which are not now farmed could be used for campsites lo augment the usefulness ef the beaches nearby. .. charges ef defrauding the bank of m million. The indictment :said the bank suffered an actual lo:s:s of Sfi.7 million, including $550,000 that was sent to a Beverly Hills bank account of Albert Parvin. Parvin was identified by a Justice Department oHicial as a Los Angeles financier whost holdings included casinos in Las Vegas. The indictment gave no ex· planation why payment would go It Pa rvin. Named in the indictment was Dena.Id Santowski, 42, the former vice president and bookkeeper of the Chicago bank. He lives in Wheeling, Ill. Others named in the indictment were high officials ·of a department store chain which had an account at t he Cosmopolitan National Bank. They are Frank Baum .• president of Steinberg Baum Co.: Louis Steinberg, a former vice president of Steinberg Baum : and U,onard Freedman, general manager ef Steinberg Baum. The indictment charged that 92 checks for amounts ranging lrom $100,000 to $900.000 were written on the store'• checking account "when there were in· sufficient funds in the company's ac- count." Through a complex series of steps, the checks were withheld from being charged to the store's account for periods of up to a year by Santowsi.i, the indictment said. Checks totaling $28 million were withheld and $6.7 million of that amount was never charged le tbe Ste.inhere Baum acrount. the Indictment charged. The 30 count indictment wu returned in District Court in Chicago, charging conspiracy, mail fraud and em- bezzlement. 11 was announced by the tf· lice or Attorney Gen. John N. Mitchell. The indictment said that a1 part of the alleged oonspir1cy Steinbt:ra and Baum deposited a check dated March I, 1970 for .$550.000 in Parvin'• account tl the Bever· ly Hills Bank of America. The indictment said the sum represented the proceeds of one of the checks written en the Stein· berg Baum Co. account at the Chicas& bitnk. Nine Police Groups Back · Arbitration Nine Or111nge ColUlly police associations have reaffirmed their support for,a state Senate biD which would. fOrce biOOln& arbitraUon on cities :involved -in. salary disputes wifb public safety workers. Spokesmen for the poli~ a590Ciations met Wednesday night to oountei:ect a campaign• started by slx .north Orange Cowlty cities against the arbitration bill. Representaliv~ from palice assi;icla- lions • in l{untington Beach, Newport Beach, San Clemente, We!lminster, Stan· ton, Anaheim , B~ Park, .La Habra and Orange signed tbetr names'to a' letter af. finning support for Senate Bil 333. 1The bill is sponsored by Se:nator Ralph Dills (0-TorranceJ. and would replace the ~fyers·Millias-Brown Act or 1968 which set up "meet and confer" pro- cedure! for salary talks with police and firemen. Senator Dills said of the bill : "Those employers who have negotiated in good faith with their pu~ic safety employes do not fear this legislation. Those who, for whatever reasOns, can not solve salary disputes or impaSse1 will find that com· pulsory arbitration is prtferable to strikes. slowdowns. sick.,uts, and other- job actions which result iii. Ion~ lasting ill feeling." The nlne police associations supporting the bill are members of PORAC (Peace Officen Research Association o f California), Orange C.ounty chapter. Fourteen of the county's 21 police departments are members or PORAC. .. Hero Slain as Bandit: Store Owner Kills Medal Winner From Wire Services Mlcbgan'1 first Vietnam Congrts!lonal Medal of HonOr winner. an Army recruiter who was "loved" by school children, wa.s shot fatally around , mid- night in a Struggle with a par st.ore owner he tried to hold up, police sild.to- day . · Police said DWight H. Johnson,,23, was 'killed in a shootout with Charles L. Van Landt.11ham, ZT , who was alone In the ()pen 'Pantry Market on 1be_ n2rtll__west :sidl when Johnson walked in aod .an- nOunced a holdup. .. Lt. Geoffrey Gieske of the U.S. ArrnY main rten1itin1t station said Johnson -Ron the •tecjal or Honor, the nation's highest award for combat bravery , in Vietnam. Gieske said Johmon. who held the rank of Se~ant E-5. had been assiJ!'necl to the recrultiii.g station shortly after bting a'warded the medal by President Lyndon Johnson in ceremonie.!I at the White House in r{ovember, 1963. Gleske described Johnson as a "very fine individual , very intelliRent. a '!ecy 11'.ood·appearing young man.".Gleske said JQhn~n spent a lot of time on 1pecJal projects, esoeclaily at schools where "~e kids loved hJm. "· Johnson recenUy had been placed on conv11.lesce.nt leave for a bleeding ulcer and had been reassigned to the Valley Forge Veterans Hosplt.1.1 at PhoeniJville, Pa. . .. knew Johnson Wd "J thought very highly An Army spokesman in Detroit who or him, this Ls just a damn shame." · JohnsOn received · the Medal of Honor for action at Oak, To, VJ~.tJiam •. on Jan. "JS, 1968. The citation said Johnson, a tank driver with. the Fourth Inf~lry. braved enemy fire, left his disable~ tank and, anned with a .45 caliber pjsuil kill'ed seven North Vietnamese. ' · The citation said he, returned to his tank for a submachine gun ag~in risli:ed his life to kill more of the enemy. pulled a wounded GI from another tank and continued firing at the North Vietnarnm. Tht Army said Johnson had been undergoing psychiatric treatment at Valley Forge Army Hoapltal. Van Landegham told police that-~ JohnSon walked into his · stpre around midnlght, pulled a gun and 'aMounced a · stick\lp. · ·· Police said Van Landegbam pulled a..· gun and was struck on. lhe head by· Johnson who then shot' Van· ·Landegham in the left arm just below the shoolder D! he lell.. The grocer told police' t6at he then ·· fired rour times at JohnsOn hitting him eac;h time, three tirne.s in the chest and once in lhe fa ce. Johnson died about four hoW'I later. The men and a woman found 1ilUng in a car parked near the store were ar- mted for investigatk>n when they told pol.ice Johnson had left their car to visit a · friend . Laguna Attorney; Resigns After almost 31 years of service to the city, Laguna Beach City .AttOrney. Jack Rimel has submitted his .-cslgnation. ef. fective May 31. Rimel . who became deputy city al· tomey in t!MO'and has been full thl:le·c"ity attorney since November, 11M2. Yid In a leller to Mayor Richard :Goldberg, "'Ills constitutes my resignation .and that of any of my partners and associates who are dep~tles from the offices of City At· torney and Deputy City Attorney• of Laguna Beach ." The resignaUon thus appeared to In· · · elude that of attorney Georae Logan, an - as.sociate in Rimel 's Santa Ana law firm. : who ha.s servec;f as deputy city attorney for Lai:una Beach. specializ.in& in Plan· Ding Cornntjs.!~n mailers. Volkswaclenannou111CesalleWklnclof Vof'"-a1e~Blg. Who'd ever believe ii? A Volksv.<igen that's big. And lool<s like o regular car. And has f(lUf b;g doors. . And more room ond comfort tho n yoo've ever""'° in o Volkswagen. And more power and ocaolerotion. From the most powerful air-cooled en- NEWPORT BEACH Chick lv.rson, Inc. 445 E. CNol Hwy. 17141 673.0900 gine we've ever built. And """'features as standard equip- rrent than you'd ever expect in o big car. like on automatic transmission Rodia! tires. Froot disc t.okes. Electrooic fuel injec:tion. Roorwindow defrosrer. And more. So, oiler on these years, roN yoo con SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Bill Y lies Inc. 32852 Ville Rd. 1714) 499°2261 buy a big air as good as our ~Ille car. The new 411 Vollcswogen 4-0oor sedan. . Priced with our usual Vollmvagen frugolfly. You know who!? You just ran out of excuses for not buying o Volkswagen. HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volkswegen 18711 Beach Boulevard 1714) 842-4435 4 DAil l PILOT \ \ •• I ~ps Putting Horse Before Cart BY THOMAS MUllPIDNE Of tk DfllY l"li.t $tiff DREAMING DREAMS DEPT. -AJ everybody in these parts knows, the lrvtne Ranch is as big as all outdO(lrs and maybe· more important. Orange County sorl of dribbles around its edges The Irvine Ranch has housing tracts, industrial tracts, a couple or three Islands in Newport Bay, some PRD zone,. orange groves, tomato fields, a few cows and a lot of trouble. Despite all this, there is still enough room on the place to fire a cannon and bit nary a soul. As a matter of fact, it would Lake an awfully big gun just to get a cannonball find acres.. the Irvine spread. ANYWAY. BACK to the main thing, which is why the Irvine C.Ompany, with all of its assets, has trouble. Some J>eop1e says it's politics. And in Orange Cou~ty you coold believe that. Other folks t~k it's because the ranch is rich. People ]Ust naturally are suspicious of your motivtll if you have full pockeb. Frld11, Ap!1'.I JO, ltJ71 Duvalier Makes Up To Exiles PORT·AU·PRINCE !UPI) -The teenage president of the Western Hemisphere's oldest black republic - and it& poorest nation -pledged Thurs- day to "build a new Haiti." Ht invited the country's 200,000 exiles lo come back and help in the reconstruction . Jean.Claude Duvalier, 19, told the Na- tional Assembly in his maiden speech his mission was "to improve health, educa- tion (and) abolish hWlger" -the legacy of this Caribbean nation's 5 million residents after almost 14 years of dic- tator11hip under his late father , Dr. Fran- cois "Papa Doc" Duvalier. Papa Doc. who died last week at 62, had amended the cOnstitutional age re- quirement for the presidency from 40 so bis son might suceeed him. Duvalier received a large cheer when he told the packed assembly hall he was "offering an olive branch of peace to the exiles." He drew an even bigger ovation when he stipulated moments later that his offer excluded C-Ommunists and "trouble-makers.'' "All Haitiam living abroad are free lo come back and take part in the national regeneration," Duvalier said in his hour- long speech. ''My mission is to improve health, education and aboli sh hunger and build a new Haiti that is generous and progres- sive." The husky young ruler spoke of a new understanding between Haiti and the Untied Slates and offered Wuhington his help against communism. , Been Fislain'? China Watcfalng Nixon: Go Easy On Speculation WAS!!INGTON (AP) -Some of the,... cent 1peculatlon about further easing of U.S. Cblna relallons ha! gone beyond reality and oeuld endanger progress alrudy made. according t<> President Nt.on. He told nporters at a nationally broad- ca$t news conference Thursday night he felt 'it necessary to put the diBcuasion of what his China policy means in perspec· Uve. There has been movement in recent months toward the goal of a more normal situation between the twci nation.s, Nllon ald. Nixon was responding to a questian about recommendations of a presidential commission that the Communist govem- mtnt in Peking be seated in the United Nations. The conunission, appointed by Nixon and headed by his 1960 vice presidential running mate, Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, said the American people are ready for a U.N. seat for Peking as long as the Nationalist government on Formosa remains in the world organiza· ti on. "That recommendation by that very distinguished committee, of course. is being ,given consideration in the high councils of this government," Nixon said. But. he added, other recommendations under consideralian call for recognizing ane or the other -Peking ar the Na- tionalist.'! on Formosa -but not both. This is a complex situation and a deci:lion has not been made, Nixon went on, and until then "I am not going to apeculate an it now because I emphasize this is a very sensitive area and too much speculation about it might destroy or seriously imperil what I think is the significant progress we have made, at W bi I e all thia is a step away from the lsalaUon that has marked China'• reJa4 lions with much of the West and the very bot!llle U.S. China postures of the past, Nixon lnclicated normal relations are not yet al band. Nixon Vows To Support Bus Ruling WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon pledged to enforce the Supreme C.ourt order on bu.sing to integrate southern schools wit.h "cooJ)eraUon" not "coercion" but he stuck by hiJ at.and against busing pupils when segregation stems from housing patterns. He told a news conference Thursday that his strong antibusing, p r o • neighborhood, schools statement o f March 24 , 1970, was "moot and ir- relevant" now in the sou th in light of the Supreme Court's unanimous rulings April 20. In a series of opinions by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, Nixon's own ap- pointee. the caurt approved such weapons as busing and pupil pairing "to eliminate from the public .schools all vestiges of state-imposed segregation.'' Trouble for Irvioe ranch hand! usually surfaces evtry time d'ley try to do something. They want to build a city. for example, and right away everybody i;tart:; picking on them. The ranch company'• latest efforts came to public light this week with the unveiling of grand plans for development of Irvine's coastal holdings between Corona del Mar Ind Laguna Beach. They call the concept Irvine-by-the-Sea, which sounds a touch like Cardiff but that may not help anything. People are bound ·to put the knock on il Soviet,s Amplify Prior Proposal For ABM Curbs Jimmy Tasker. 6, found fishing pretty good at Lake Livingston in Texas Thursday. He strains to lift his catch of white perch, caught with jus_t a1cane pole and minnows for bait. Rainfall has been slight and Ille lake Is low but fishing couldn't be better. ' lea.st in the travel area, and possibly in the trade ma, looking to the future ." "Now that the Supreme Court has spoken," Nixon said, "whatever I have said that is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decision is now moot a11d Jr. relevant because .. nobody, including the President of the United States, is above the Jaw as it is finally determined by the Supreme Court ... " JltVINE PEOPLE always make lhe game m~ke an these things. They talk or conceptual planning, re 1 Id en t I a l densities, greenbelt!, public walkways and apen spaces. VIENNA CAP) -The Russians have filled in details here on their original outline concerning curbs of antiballistic missiles (ABMs} but they did not present a new proposal, an afficlal of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks said to- day after American and So v i e t negotiators met in their 66tb SALT 1esslon. Mideast. Figures Express 'End of Road' Feelings The speculation Nixon was criticizing, and the optimism, followed four dramatic developments in the past two months between Peking and the United States. The first was the announcement the United States had dropped nearly all restrictions on travel by U.S. citizens to the mainland, closed to most Americans aince the 1949 Communist takeover. Then Peking suddenly ertended an in- vitation to the U.S. table tennis team to tour the mainland, and the White House eased restrictions on trade between U.S. businesses and China. "And so we will comply," he pledged, "and we will work with the southern school districts not in a spirit of coercion but one of cooperation as we have durina: the past year in which so much progress has been made in getting rid of that kind of a system that we have had previOU&- ly." But Nixon said he interpreted the rul· ing to appl y only to segregaUoo as • result of governmental action. "in other words, de jure." He said, "Busing can be used under certain circumstaneea to deal with that problem." That's all tine. But what they really ought to be doing is worrying about where to put the gazebb. That's ri&ht, the gazeba. If they could do that, they could avoid all the trouble. .. ln way of background, you will recall that a gazebo is a turret.like 11.ttle buildWg !Onletimea: uatd on prnne coastal polnta 81 sort of an obeervation house. THE GAZEBO complet here on the coastline is about the same as the old park statue question bac~ in the Midwest or in Tens or places like that. It goes like this: Everybody wants to build a park for the town, you see, but there's the ques- tion of where to put the statue of old Charlie Smith, town founder. A great public battle develops. Even if they can decide whether the statue goes under the elm or aut on the grass, other argument.a will foUow. Like ls Charlie in bronze or marble and should he be wearing his Civil War unifonn? Pretty soon everybody's forgotten about the park and ils blueprints gather dust in city hall. SA>IE WITH GAZEBOES. Propooe a public park by the sea and right away there's a big public debate on where the gazebo goes. Or the stainless steel drink- ln~ fountain. Tmportant things like that. So the Irvine Ranch fl.'llks ought to take a lesson from the past to avoid all this trouble in developing Irvine-by-the-Sea. Make everybody agree where th~ gazebo foes. B\lild it. Paint it. Then draw some blueprints for tbe reet of the place. It was the 11th meeting in the current round, la.sung an hour and 55 minutes. It was held at the Soviet Embassy, with the next session set for Wednesday at the American Embassy. The official commented on a New York Times report which said that Soviet negotiators in Vienna have proposed a five-year Soviet American treaty limiting each nation's missile defenses to 100 in· erceptor missiles around Moacow a n d WashlDgton. The official said be was authoriied tti gay: "You need not accept this story in Us entirely." By Ullited Pre11 Internatlonal The well-informed Tel Aviv newspaper Maariv•said today relations between the United States and I11rael had reached .serious proportions over means of reachJng an interim agreement to reopen the Suez Ca11al. One high government of-1 ficial said Israel was unlikely to back down. In Ankara, Turkey, U.S. Secretary of Slate William P. Roaers said on the eve of his five-nation Middle East visit that agreement on reopening the Suez Canal could help reduce the danger of renewed fighting while pe1ce efforts continue. He said the.re must be a "strong impetus'' toward a solution. In Cairo, Mohamed Has!anein Heika1, an influential Egyptian commentator. said in his semiofficial newspaper Al Abram that Egypt will be forced to go to war with Israel unlesa Rogers' visit to the Middle East produces a peace set- Uement. Heikal, who often voices the thoughts of the Egyptian government, said Egypt and Israel had "ruched the end of the road" in the peace efforts by U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring and that Jf Rogers finds no solution "the whole world will be at the end of the road -there must be a breakthrough ar there will be force." r.1aarlv, quoting an unnamed J.sraen cabine! minister, bannered the story of the newest crisis in U.S.-Israel relations. 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The fourth development was the Lodge CommiS!lon report. ive The gift of 6W lV !ells her you care. tt says that you want her to watch only the sharpest, clearest, interference free TV Imaginable. ti lets her know yau want her lo enjoy all her favorite programs. Tho old movies. The MN movies. Th9 grealstars. The up and coming ones, that she can only get with the extra channels Cable TV offers. Give us a call and we'll make it possible to have Cable TV in- stalled for your mother or your chi I· dren's mot her by Mother's Day. Or we 'll i;iive you a hand- some gift certificate and she can have it installed at her con~ You won 't see a nicer present NEWPORT CABLEVISION 2624 W. COAST HWY, OUR REGULAR $14.95 CABLE TV INSTALLATION ONLY $1.00 You pty 011lv I mo11th'1. 1tt.,itt i11 1clv111ct , (liter GQ In NIWl>Ort IH(h CA&LEO ....... Only. DIAL 642·3260 I I ' Blnst 'Witness ' %f Flmvn to Seattle U,1 T Delre11 Weds Barbara Jane Mackle , the 1t1iami heiress v.•ho w11 kidnaped and bur- ied allve in a plywood box for more than three days in 1968. married her longtime boyfriend S t e w a r t Woodward in a quiet Philadelphia ceremony Thursday. SF.AT!'LE, Wuh. (UPI) - Leslie Bat.on. It-year~ld blonde from a well-to-<io Call!omia family , arrived here Thursday night tet appear before a federal grand jury as a material witness in the March 1 bombing of the U.S. C1p!IOI. Although waitina: newsmen could not ('(Infirm she had bttn whisked off the United Air Lines fiight which arrived here late Thursday night, several passengers said they h•d seen her aboard. She is the first person ar- rtsted in connection with the e:r:plo.sion which caused nearly $200,000 damage in a Senate wing. No one was injured. The government Implied during court bearinas that •ht knew far more about tile bom· bing than limply the "person- al k11owledge" of It that was mentioned in an affidavlt for her arrest. She was arrested Tuesday night by FBI agents on a war· rant she had knowledge of the persons responsible for the blast. Althouah her lawyers fought to keep her from leaving Washington, the way w1s cleared for .her t r a n s f e r Thursday by a decision of • U.S. Court of A~als. Two judges of the court heard • challenge of her ar- rest and detention under $100,000 bond then dismissed her lawyer's protests that she w1s illegally arrested and being htld under excessively high bond. The courl, as well as U.S. Dii;Lrict Judge John J. Sirica the da y before, apparently ac- cepted the government's argu- ment that Miss Bacon might CHAMI ITI l1"\A1r11rlc1NI M•1!1t Cll•rt• nee rather !..ban 10 voluntarily to Seattle. One ol elaht children from an Atherton, California family . Ml1s Bacon hu been livh11 ln an antiwar commune I n northwest W uhiftgton f o t some months. Pot •war~ Set U.S. to Fight WiUl Weed WASHINGTON CAP) -The Nixon administration plans a new war this summer on marijuana· 1rowln1 wild in farm fields and hedge rows 8C?'085 10 states, tnOlltly in the mid west. The proaram will use $15,000 allocated by the J u 1 t I c e Department to the A&rlculture Land Based In History TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) The Iaat re<:orded owner of four acres of land the 1tate of New Jersey needs f o r lnterstate 29S was Joseph Bonaparte, older brother or French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. So the state Thursday filed two condemnation s u i t s ag11-inst the "heirs" of Joseph Bonaparte, asking that three commlsslonen be appointed to fix compensation for Joeeph's heirs, if any can be found. Joseph was King ot Naples and Spain while his brother reigned over France and most of Europe. CHAl•I ITI Department. Grants will be turned over to farmers to help pay costs of eradicating the il- legal plants. Agriculture Department of- ficials acknowledged elistence of the plan Thursday only after repeated questions by a reporter. There had been n• public annoUneement. A spokesman said the cam- paign has tentatively been named WHEP. which stands for the \Vild Hemp Elimina- tion Program. St.ates on the WHEP list are Illinois, Iowa, I n d I a n I 1 Kansas, Kentucky , Michigan, Minnesota, Mis.souri, South Dakota and WilCOl'l!ln. Initially, ~,000 will be allocated to the slates for eliznioating an e 1 ti m a t e d 22,<W acres of marijuana In certain counties, stilJ unan· aounced. 'Ibe remainder will be 1pent "on the basil of need" as the season pro- gresses, the spokesman said. The department said the season fOr effective control i!I from May 15 to July IS. Officials said most of the Iola! budget, some $68,000, will be handled by the A&ricu\lural Stabilization and Conaervat!on Service. f:11y c.rtd!t ti'"'• e 1fulll1nt 11·· 1.eu11h •••n,.i.11 e u, .. I Z 1'11e11th1 •• ,,,.,, HAllOI IHOPPINCI CIMTll Jl OO NttMt lt.4. HUNTINITON CINTll ~·a 11n., H11tttt.,t•• ..... ltJ·llOI O,IN MON,. THUii., I Fil. 'nL 9 P.M. C..fo ...... 14J.9411 .. lflldnlfht Deadline '*Uil"' Court Backs Train Takeover WASHING TON t UPI) -The N1tlonal Association or were Inadequate and not in U.S. Olltrtct Judie Howard Rtllroltd Pas.sengers also uk· compliance with IJtttntate Corcontn refused today to td for a delay on the grounds Commerce C o m m t 11 Io n order a delay ln the ICbeduled that the / railroads hid not rtgu1alloni. Ukeover at midni&ht or moet followed proper procedure re-On Capitol Hlll Stnate of the natloo'! r al Jr o ad qulrlna I 30-day public notice Democratlc leader Ml k e pauenge.r service by a they would disco n t l nu e Mana:fleld threatened to try by atmlpubllc corporation. passenger service after sign-legislation to prevent the DOES MAMA WEAR HOT PANTS? J Think Mot •r's Ot'f Railroad wilons and a con~ ing contracts with AMTRAK. takeover, but there was no turner lobbying group made But the main suit was the chance Cot full C'Ongreulonal W•t1llff rra. -MJ-1444 Immediate plans to appeal the one filed by rail labor un1ons, action becaUJe lhe House wu' "'""""'"""'~·~-"""'~-"""'~•·~·"""'"""'!!!' decision in a last mlnute effort wbo charged that I a bo r not ln session today. l· to prevent the corporation -Secrttary James D. Hodgson's The Stnale Commerce Com· CHECK THI DAILY PILOT c1lled AMTRAK -from lm· order 1Upu1ating required pro-mittee refused Thursday to IYllY DAY FOR pleme.nllng Its plan to drep 101 tectJons • for laid.off or heed Mana.field'• request for ALL CURUNT of Uie nation'• intercity 235 otherwise displaced employes action. MAim INPOIMATION passenger trains be&inning"r----i;;;;-m:::O:-:=~~=---~~-;;;;;;-~~~.;;;ii;iiiiijii~~ s..:::,.n1a~ions hid charged 1ha; 11 MAY DAY lhe labor protection prov~ions of the AMTRAK contract with J1artlclpallng railroads were inadequate and would work CAME . A SP' ECIAL! e.i:treme hard.Jhlp on up to 25,000 rail worken, some of whom they 11.id could be cut off without• cent of severance l"Y· SATURDAY ONLY • MAY ht More Added To Jl.)hless Cities List Mamiya/Sekor-Vivitar SLR Outfit WASHINGTON (UPI) The Labc-r Department reports nearly one-thlrd of the nation's major cities are on Its: unemployment" list meanina: "subitantial unemployment" list meaning at Jeast 6 percent of the work force is jobless. The department has added HarUord, Conn., Newa r k, N.J., and CharleJlton. w. Va. It dropped New Orleans, leav- ing the number of ciUes with serious unemployment at 52. There were 25 cities added to I.he list of small labor markets v.·Hh work problems, bringing that total to 687. Assistant Labor Secretary Malcolm R. Lovell Jr. in All· nounclnr the changes T.burs. day said the 52 major cities on the list was the hia:best number since May, 1962, and represtnt more than one third of the 150 metropolitan labor markets In the natlon. There were 11 on the list in 1970 and 1ix when President Nixon look office in January 1969. • THE BEST ./ Check This for VALUE • 500 TL camera • lTL Sp&t ?>.teter!n1 e Fully lnterchlnre· able Lens e Fltttd Everready Cu• • 1 Year WaJTanty I PLUS I e VlvllAr 135 mm P.S. Trlepholn Lens I PLUS I e Vivlt..ar 2x Tflttonverter II>ouble1 Focal Lenrth of Lera) u,. Penn•y', Lty Aw•y I I All This For ONLY! AL!!a~!!~Y· U1• Your Pe""•y's c11.,,. lte1derihlp poll• P••"• "Pi.a· nut1" 11 ent of tht Wtrld'1 1'1101+ pe1tul1r Ct1r1/c 1trlp1. 11.te.I If .l1ily ht the DAILY PILOT. 24 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER ONLY I OUTDOOR CARNIVAL RIPEAT OF A COMPLETE SELLOUT! PER PACK MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE SATURDAY & SUNDAY e MAY 1st & 2nd lScyo OFF Bar-B·Q DEMO UNPAINRD MEXICAN POTTERY . by ''The Old Crab'' SAT. ONLY, MAY ht GARDEN CENTER FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Beach c I DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE It Could Happen Here It is a ,.a sign of the tlmet when the Huntington Beach Police Department feels ito·tnust condUtt a "bomb seminar" tc,> prevent loss of III~ .or damage to public institutions. Fortunately the city has been.si>ared Ir.om bombing . attacks. But that does not mean it couldn't happen here. Chief Earle Robitaille is to tie · cominended for his foresight in establishing the &emipar· wbidt culminated in a live demonstration of homemade bombs l~&t week at the police rifle range in the future Huntington Cen· tral Park. I.t is rrightening to realil:e that · explosive devi~es such as these can be produced for little money "1th components available from supermarkets or hardware store shelves. With advice given by Robitaille and bis ollicers during the three-hour •seminar, school administrators should be better able to avert panic during a bomb scare. They should also know how to assist officers in identifying ~~onymous callers. tt was a useful -if disturbing -public service by the police department. Prudent Oty Financing It will cost FOullt.in Valley about $63~.444 to ex- papd city hall, police.' headquarters.and the corporat1~n yards. City .officials expect to have the work done on all three racilitfes tiy the end of 1971. The nicest thing. about it is there 'von't be an~ call for bonds to finance the project, no new taxes will be found tn pay for it. That's an unusual situation for a ci.ty, but Fountain Valley has -a good record f?r plan· ningThat planning has extendfd qUite significantly iil· to the fiscal area. A few years ago City Manager James Neal and Finance Director Howard Stephens realiied they would have to build a bigger civic center to handle Fountain Valley's maximum population. So inst'ead of de-- Superficiality In Cultural Differences In France, there is nothing that goes by the name of French toast. There are no French fried potatoes. No French beans. No French dressing. No French windows. And no orchestra. hov.·ever large, con· tains a French horn. ln Germany, nobody ever has German measles. The Danish · pastry is Wlknown tn Denmark. There are no Dalmatian dogs in D.almat.ia .. J could go on, but you get the point. What we can "French" and so forth go by entirely different names In those countries, and are not part.icularly Identified with those countries. FRENCH BEANS, for instance, are a.imply "haricots vers" in France. A French window is a "porte-fentre.'' A French horn is a ''cor d'harmonie." And in Germany, Gennan measles are merely ''die Roteln," or rubella. Certain things become wociated with specific countries and are forever more inseparable. We think of the jinrikisha as quintessentially Japanese. but it was in· vented by an American missionary . Chop auey was wholly unknown in China until it was introduced by Western restaurateurs. And Irish stew, t am n:liably informed, was never indigenous to Ireland. THESE ARE JUST peculiarities of no consequence in themselves -except that Dear Gloomy Gus:· Did you know that the combina. lion of drugs and alcohol can magnify their separate ill effects from four to eight times? That"s what tests show. What a combina· tion for driving on the freeway! -H. S. V. f~I$ fM1ur1 "''-ell "•dtn' .,,......, ..., .ftl(tfWl11y fM .. ltf 1119 111-tfl .... ""4 Ylllf •ff _.,, tt Gltemr Giit. 0.111 ,lltt. they point to more important associations that we make all· the time, and with just as little justification. We aot only associate products with specific coun- tries, but personal traila as v.·ell. We look upo n the French as a "roman· tic" people. which ti as absurd as their view Of the English as "cold." We find Orientals "Inscrutable." simply because their mode of emotional effect is dif· fere!lt from ours. ·we look upon the dark, brooding "Russlan soul" with some awe -a11d fear; but as a famous German scholar once observed, "The 'Russian soul' is an invention of the German ·phµospphers." CULnJRES 00 HAVE differences, of course; no one would ever mistake an ef· fusive,,ItJ!lan for a taciturn Scotsman. But such differences are rar more superficial than we imagine -they are like different. accents blurring the fact that they all speak the same b a s i c language. As a living laboratory in anthropology, it is fascinating to see how a new state like Israel has, in a generation or so, con- founded the whole stereotype of the "Jew" as known in Western society. For the Israeli seems more like a Swede than a Jew, even physically. Leopards can change their spots when the spots have only been painted on by others. East, West California A new twist has been given the "split California in two" argument by Senator Randolph Collier, dean of the upper house. Collier's intriguing proposal -or in· teresting spoof -is to split the state into West California and Ea!t California, when all these years other split advocates have suggested states of Southern and Northern Californ,ia. Over the years the degree of en· . thusiasm for t State of Northern California and a State of Southern California has run up and down like a public opinion poll in search of'an issue. THE APP ARENT thesis b e h I n d Collier's West .m East California is that C the West st.ate, to include UM! 13 coastal counties from Marin in thl" North to San _,,,,.Diego in the South, would be an urbap -at.ate. The .\S counties not included Jn West California. but to become East California, would be: a morr rural, acricultural and recreational area. Thus. ly, perhaps the thinking Joel, the urbanologists and fhe evironmentallsts can each have the be.<11 of tv.·o v.·orlds. \\1est California. to 11 large extent, could wrestle "'ilh the problems of the melropo!Jtiin cities while East CaUfomla Wouldn't hi.,·e to get nearly so mixed up in rapid transit. regional government, water pollution, smog and all that stuff. It's beautiful - ONE Tif\.'V PROBLE~t might be th11t a heclt of a lot of \\'eat ca11romian5 v.·ould want to migrate to the Idyllic East !late 11 fast as the old jelopy and family rortune permltlt'd. Por Lile moment, however, lht major ( GueetRe~i:t' • ·' obstacles facing Senator Collier in seek· ing approval of East and West California are the tortuous legislative process a measure. of this magnitude must face, the ans"·ers to the questions of how to spilt lhe existing stale debt equitably between the proposed new states, the sanctity or contracts entered into by the existing state of California and how they would have to be reconciled between the new states, and the other old i55ues raistd whenever a division of the state has been broached. They are all arguments with v.·hich Senator Collier is familiar. ' 1N THE EVENT Senator Collier meets v.•ith legislative success, there of course ls sUll an enormously complicated pro- ~ure which must be followed before the tv.·o states come into existence. All lhc arguments aside, Senator C<llller is due kudos. Hts proposal Is fre~h. it is ingeniou~. it focu~s strong al· tentlon on many of !he critical issues con- fronting us 1111. If only bccau~ It suggests radical surgery of 11 new type as a sol u· lion. Could lt be that this ls v.·hal !he twinkle eytd \'C!ltrtn of a thousand legislative :iklrmlrhn has tn mind, « Is he jus t sayins that Ute pe<1pl~ who -art clos.sl to the problems they have creaited should bo tpore responstbll" for resolulion of them ? California fea1ur1 Setl'lcc pending on bonds or new taxes. they .wted ?•illr money early. Now the city has $700,000 avallalile for the expansion project. . TM money is going to double the •i•e of police headquarters. bulld more city hall offices and construct a new city council chamber with fixed seating for 90. It i,i.•Jll also build a large garage -the corporaUon yard -to house major city road equipment. It's all going to be done with little fuss or sweat. thanks to advance planning. A fe\v residents complained about the city saving up its money .in advance. Maybe they'll feel better when they see lbe completed civic center and realize they haven't been asked to vote bonds or special tax money to finance it. Formalization Needed The recent Coast Community College district trustee election revealed an unusual legal twist in trustee candi1 dates' residency requirements. By failing to set its trustee areas down in writing, and by failing to stipulate by board resolution that a candidate must reside in the trustee area he seeks to represent. the district risked being stuck for the price of a special election. One candidate, a student at Orange Coast College, met the state r.equirflments for being a candidate al· though he flunked the test of the district's long-estab- lished "gentlemen's agreement" in which, traditionally, candidates have lived in. the trustee area. He sought the "Costa ?tlesa seat." He lives in Newport Beach. But. apparently he could have been elected, legal· ly. Or, had he polled more votes, a lawsuit might have forced a special election on the ground that all candi· dates were running "it large." That would have cost $10,000. ! ! i ' Trustee Robert Humphreys, an attorney, is urging a formalization of the generally accepted residency rules in writing. The-proposal merits prompt attention by the board . I ),. C!D-1 ..... ~~~ i 'J T ~ BETTER TO Ll6HT A CANPLET~AN TO (URSE THE DMKNf55." I H Taxing R.etunaable Bottws Throughout County Assessor's Ruling Fosters Pollution To the Editor: It iii appall ing to believe that in this day of people working for ecology and en- vironmental control, and attempting to eliminate poUution of all kinds, an Orange County official would deliberately attempt to undermine ~ valiant ef· forts. The official in question is County Tax Assessor Andrew Hinshaw, whose efforts to squeeze extra taxes from the 7-Up bot- tl ing company can only result 1n adding more litter to our already suffocating streets. parks and beaches. It is Mr. Hinshaw's opinion that all returnable bottles of 7-Up in the county belong to the bottling company, not to the stores or the consumers. He has handed the "Uncola" people an assessment of S166,S70 for every returnable bottle in the: county. plus a demand for "escaped as- sessments" for the years 1966 through 1969 to the tune of $972,640. WE ARE. THEREFORE, talking aboul a million·plus tax tab to be forked over by 7·Up. Jn other words, Hinshaw is demanding that 7·Up pay tax on the bot· ties in our own refrigerators, in every bar and restaurant. and each retail market and store, which is a new pimple Mr. Hinshaw Js attempting to scratch in order to bring more tax dollars into the county. tf successful, in this venture, Mr. Hinshaw will undoubtedly attack the other K'ft drink eompanies for similar revenues. ( Mailbox Lt!l•r• f,..m •••lllro lrl wtlcOITtl. frftrm1tt"f •rlltl"I ll>oul' c111ny llltlr lftnl.ll•' 111 1" wern 1r 1111. Tllti ri1lll i. <•°'"~I.I i.tteri i. Ill 111co •• 111m111.i1 UHi h t•M""ff. Atl ltllt'1 mu1t 111- cluff 1l1MOIU,.. '"' !Miii"' ..idr1H, llul 1111nn ml"f M wltllllt!C "" '""'tt II tu!llcltftl rffMll h l fllrllflf. l' .. lt1 Will 1111 INo tUllMtll.r. structions to the Arabs in military forces: ''Be just. Do not break faith .. , Do nol kill children, old men or women .•• Do not cut down fruit trees. If you come across men in monasteries, leave them in peace.·• DESPITE THESE chivalrous ron- cessions to the enemy, the Mu!lim con- quests continued successfully for the neKt two centuries. encompassing much of the then civilized world, from Spain and France to the borders of China. Perhaps the United States would have fared better in Vietnam and avoided disgraces like the Lt. Calley episode if heads of state and armed services had followed from a page of Muslim history. ROLAND CUEVA Podtlve PosltioH• To the Editor: Your April 13 editorial comments on Agncw·s speech in Los Angeles ef· fectively demonstrated his point by not mentioning that in polling 10 years ago 24. percent of Americans wished to live elsewhere, "Rcductio ad absurdum" apt 1 y describes your coverage while in truth twice as many persons preferred staying v:ith the old girl for all her problems. The rest of the world has more! WE'VE FLAILED ours e Ive !!1 suf· flciently. Let's listen to the positive posi- tions of our prespicacious young and sup- port reordering our priorities to preserve our environment, correct inequities and support the cultural arl! as the essential humanizing ingredient in to d a y ' 1 technological society. 1 did not hear Mr. Agnew, but my hus- band did, and it wa!!I a tonic to him to hear a positive approach for a change. Your editorial is a case in point of com- pletely omitting the positive. VERNA JENKINS Prnlse for John Wafl11e To !he Editor: I have taken a short retirement from the Chicago Police Department after Ill years of service to raise my four chlldren here in Southern California ... I cannot help but write this letter to congratulate one or our finer citizens Jiv. ing in Southern California, John {Duke) Wayne. Aner reading the article in Playboy and studying the loaded qUestions he was asked, and after studying the answers he gave to these quettions, I feel that every flag.waving American should give this man a pat on the back. ... Jobn Wayne, a true American. A ltfAN WHO not only in his motion pictu res Is a hero to many, but also a man who is not afraid to stand up on his hind legs and shout to the heavens, "I am an American . . . I am agairuil anyone wanting to overthrow this country by force -from v.•ithin or from without." May God bless this true American. NEAL GRANEY ~fHd SU11gh1g To the Editor: Eleventh hour mud slinging is certainly nothing new in our society. Its far reaching effects and implications are well documented in U.S. history. Those who use this method must certainly be held accountable for their actions and those they represent are no less responsi· ble. 1 The recent front page article regarding Dennis Mangers represents a gross error and Jack of judgment on the part ()f Matt Weyuker and our state legislator. Mr. Burke. AS AN EDUCATOR, it is gratifying to see that the voters in the Huntington Beach High School District have rejected "7eyuker's allegations by taking a positive step in trying to solve some of their critical problems in selecting Mr, Mangers lo a full term on their board of trustees. · The irresponsible action of Mr. Weyuker will never be condoned. However, the faith and trust in Mr. Mangers is well placed. There can be no question the Huntington Beach School District will be11efit from his service. MYRON C. MORPER Now. what has all this to do with en· vironmental control, pollution a n d ecology? Quite obvious, I v.•ould 3ay. Whv should 7-Up pay this ridiculous new tax on returnable bottles. v.·hen they can save a million bucks by reverting to throw• aways?' Life's Good Days and Bad Days MOST BOTTLING companies have made a concentrated effort to stop using throw-away botUes. and return to the deposit bottles In order to clear the coun· tr.y of litler. Some companies have even raised their deposit in order to make the bottles more valuable. hence. worth returning to the store. rather than left on the beach . If Mr. Hinshaw is successful in this at- tempt. it could be one giant step BACKWARD for mankind . Although 7·Up has not even hinted about the possibility of returning to throw-aways. in the face of what ts happening. this would appear to be a logical and profitable decision on their part. And if this decision should be made. t hope Mr. lfinshaw wlll be ready for the war crjes: from the conservationists. not to menlion the many organizalions dedicated to e<:0logical and anti-pollution pursuits. Perhaps it might be a •sise time for these organizations and interested in- dividuals to make thtir wishes known to ~Ir. Jtlnshaw. And if they can'I get through. then tbe.re·a: always the next election! LEE C. MILLAR Letson From ~futllms To the Editor : \Vhen ordering the invasion Of Syria (62:1-a40 A.O.) Muhammod's successor. Kallph Abu Btkr, gave the following in- Life has its good days and its bad days. Not all our hours are lit by wine and roses. \\'e are not always a bonfire or a bou· quet to ourselves. Sometin1es a clinker in the eye obscures a rainbow. There are the bad days to keep even the largest ego humble . Such as when : Times were so bad that when you Jost a tooth you woke up the next morning and found a nickel instead or a dime under your pillow. You asked her for a date and she told rou frankfy t1lat she i t ·~I'S . ' I _,.1~;\ 1·~ ·~ rl "·as going to be terribly, terribly busy for a long. long time. It was the last hurdle in the race and you thought you were home ahead, but then your hind foot hit the hurdle and you landed on your elbow and when you got up your arm dangled OOdly awry and you fell dizzy and sick at your stomach. SHE SAID SHE'D meet you there but she never showed up, and you slood there trying to think that you looked as if you had an important mission in life while ~--------B11 George ---------. Dear George : Do you expttl us to believe that "New Husband" has a bridf' so la zy she won'l even lfEAT hi! TV din. SKEPTICAL Otar Skeptical: No -it was that she "·as too \3zy lo v.•11lk Into !he kitchen and kepi heating them lukev.·arm on Che pic- t11re lubt. Dear Gt."Orge : Is ii possible to get a book published without a lot of sex in it? \\' h a t are publishers thinking of these days, anyway? 0Lf).f ASHIONED Of'ar Old : You know. ynu keep answering your own question~ like that ;ind 1·m going to bl! out of 1 job. r '!l._,..... .......... ..-o; .. "'lt'..,. \ ' Hal ·Boyle " '-'--........ -"" . -i crowds of strangers went by and never thought of you at all. The doctor said the bifocals would give you a different outlook, but when you put them on and stared at yourself in the n1irror all you saw was another fat middle-aged man wear ing bifocals. 'llie nurses told you it was a fine boun· cing boy, but when you dropped . it ac· cidentally it just plopped -and later failed algebra In high school. She said when you married her that you could have all your wishes, and how does that bear on the fact that now you do all the dishes? '·Greetings. son" said Uncle Sam, and !.hen, "So Jong. boy, see you later.'• ALL THE ANTS ran Up your pants "'hen you stretched out to take a grassy snooze at the picnic. You thought the teacher's eye was upon you as you galloped around the kin- dergarten classroom, but when the piano ceased it was another boy she picked up and kissed as the best prancer of them all. You had never had acne in your life before, and then on the morning or the senior prom you awoke with a face that looked as U It had been bombarded by strawberries. You were sitting wjlh your .mothrr In the front porch sw1ng and you Idly rtmarked that you knew of other families that had done more kl help their son through college, and she broke into tears and Oed Into the house and the swing kept on going back and forth as you reali~tcl you had done a thing ynu could n~ver forgive yourself for even though life ~ho1•lrl l:illt fortver And you had not meant 10 do it at •IL FINALLY YOU GOT up your courage lo ask for a merit raise and were granted a S5 one, but the boss who gave it to you as he stared out the window painted such a bleak picture of the firm·s future he left you feeling like an ingrate because you hadn't volunteered to take a $10 cut. It looked like an able sable when you bought it wholesale in an alley. but when you took it home to your wife it dropped cat fur all over the rug while your wife was trying it on. ' Five years to the day after you told the boy you didn't want him as a son.in.Jaw. he and your daughter Look you and your \\"ife to dinner and shov.·ed you a paycheck twice the size of your own. And then there was the day that the third consecutive redhead in your life told you goodbye even before you had felt you had given her an adequate hello, and you realized that you were just one more of those guys doomed to be unloved by .a red·haired girl. Yes, there are days o" which the only reason to get up is so you can lie back dov.·n in bed again and count your wounds. -~-- Frid a y, April 30, 1971 The editorial pagt of the Daily Pilot seeks to inform otid 1tim- tdote readers by presenting this TleWsp<.tptr'! opinions arid C()m- mcntary on topict of interest a11d slg11ifica11ce, by providing a forum for tilt expres$ion Of 011r readers' opintot1.s. o-nd f1t1 prtsfnting the divtrst vftit point" of i11/orn1ed observtn and !pokesm(!n on topics of the day, Rob<!rt N. Weed, Publi•her I' I Ne EDIJ.I O N YOI:. M, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANG E COJ,ll\ITY'o CAtlFORN!il: WI CENTS OS ow s C:oa.st Virit 1 2 Planners President Greets Veteran Marines lWIT ..... 'WON'T II INT1MIDATID' Nixon on Peace Demon1tr•tor1 Won't Be Fazed By Protesters, Nixon Declares WASlllNGTON (UPI) -President N'"iroa said Thursday night ht would not be "inUmidated" by anti w a r demonstrators in Washington but woilld 1tick to bis polioy of attempting to win a J1sUng peace in Indochina. Jn a televised news conference. the Preside11Jl said a more rapid withdrawal from Vietnam advocated by his critics would lead to a "very dangerous situa- tion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers of war in lhe future ." He said demonstrators who break the law will be prosecuted. Nixon also bid to further improve American rtlations with Communist China, saying "I hope and I ex~l ~G visit mainland Chine ... at 10me hme 1n my life, in some capacity." Related 1tory page 4. Referring to antiwar demonstrati<>ns in Washington for almost two wee.ks, Nixon said he wanted to correct an impression from television a c c o u n t s that "Washington is somewhat in a statt of 1iege." "The Corigre& is not intimidated ."' Nison said. "The President is not in· Umidated. Th.is government is gcltig to go forw•rd ··· But he aaid ht did "not want to leave the lrnpr~lon that those: who came to demonstrate were not listened to." President Nlxorl's jet touched down at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station shortlJ after 11 a.m. today. Moments after his arrival in Alt F<wce One, the President and bis party boarded a helicopter to whisk them to Camp Pendletoo where be was scheduled to review 2,000 waiting Marines. 'Ibe Marines, fresh from Vietnam com- bat, spent tbe night shining up their brw in anticipation or the commander-in chiefs visil Glimpsed briefly with the President 1t e1 Toro were bis daughter Tricia , wear- ing 'an aqua, floral-print suit and her fiance Edward Finch. Cox, who sported a bright red and yellow tie. The President waved to a crowd of 150 with a gesture indicating he didn 't have time to stop and chat. The President, here for a planned long weekend at the Western White House in San Clemente, presented the lit Marine Division at Camp Pendleton with the se- cond unit commendation it has received aince the division entered the Vietnam conflict five ~·rs ago. The group of Leatherneck • participating ln today'i ceremonies, is the last contingent of the division which will b< 'cliabanded -lta troops absorbed into -anfll: ' • Although tbe C11-e1nonies were not plan- ned fOr the general public, scores of civillln! attended. · The entlre eighth grad! class of Marco Forster Junior High School -student.I from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -were allowed to attend. A San Clemente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Romig who recently received the Silver Star for heroism under fire in Vietnam. carritd the Presidential Unit commendation streamer back to his unit. After the ctremonie11 at Pendleton, the President boarded a helicopter oooe more for'the tr\ip upcout to La Cua Pacifica. Cambodian Tabbed PHNOM PENH (UP!) -Chief of State Cheng Heng awarded the premiership to- day to Choup Hell, a relative political unknown who has been serving as his counselor. He succeeds the ailing Lon Nol who nsigned. Str eets' Na me Chan ge OK'd Proposed street name changes of two main Newport Beach arteries were approved by the planning commissioa Thursday night. The name of Tustin Avtnue northerly of Irvine Avenue and Acacia Street, between Tu3tin and Palisades Road was chaaged to Irvine Avenue. The change establishes the oam• Irvine Avenue for the continuous thoroughfare between Cliff Drive and Palisades Road . Conditions Told LE FT IN THE HOT SEAT Chairmen Pro Tem Smith 'THI S IS HORRIBLE' County Planner lllolty DAILY l"ILOT Sl•ff PINIOI VOIC ES BIZARRE PLE A Hospital Attorney Collins ! Teacher Pay Impasse Ends Ne wport-Mesa Group Vows w Negotiat,e Solutio n By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. c*tr 1'1• lllH Tito t.acber-tcbool board 11 I or y ;.~~"U Aasoclation to meet and confer "momiq, noon or night" with the district. Bart Hake, execu.Uve secretary of the 7SO.mtmbet ~~. -tlie 1111-J>Al!e at an tnd. and said teachers' representatives ~·1tancfttady to meet and confer to di.scun any article" of their contract proposall. The d.istrlct bad not recognized the n:. istence of the impasse called against it nearly three weeb 110 lly tbe Repmen- tative Council of N·MEA, uid Ray Schnierer, bualneu manager for the Newport·Meu Unified Scbool DiJtrict llld tho -boon!'• .. _tetiv. to tho Cltlill<le~e·· f1!dlc!l· ~~;1··· ~ ···~·~ to like 1he .._ mstttt to SUperior Court for a rulinl en whether or not &\1 impa!!e in ne&oU•~ actually exirted, Al 1 prooti<ll liitler, the teacher 1noc1a11on leodenhi9 reallra· tllll seek· Ing I court rulinl """1d !ale time, Hike aaJd. •'Further. a court rulinc . and tbe fact finding panel lhat would !dlow would prohibit addillJ any furth'er input of tieachlra' view1 to ·negot:'atJons," he aaid. "Time ls on · tbe acbool board's side with the end ol d>e IChool yesr 1p- Night Street Parking Fee Pinn Said Illegal A proposal to charge Newport Beach residents up to $100 a year for overnight on-street parking would be illegal, the cl· ty attorney'• office reported today. The suggested ordinance designed to "get people to clean out their garages" and thereby relieve the parking burden on the 1treeta was advanced about a m0t1th ago by Planning C-Ommlssioner William Martin:' But Assistant City Attorney Dehnis O'Neil, in an opinion prepared for the commission, said "any auch ordinance would be invalid." Besides being illegal, O'Neil said the police department didn't like the idea. He: II.id Police Chief B. James Glavas "wa! concerned sucb an ordinance would create an enforCement problem requiring the additional employment of officers." O'Neil also pointed out that bilh influx of summer .tourists wouJd.creaLe a pro- blem. noting that many of them would be totally unaware or the law. He also m~ that. to service the tourist trade, It might become necessary to maintain a 2._bour facility to issue the permits. O'Neil said his ruling Ii based on prevlOUI court rulings and official opl· niM ot the state Attorney Ge'nera1'1 of· flee. He said It Is established that trillnlclpalitles have t.he legal right to in· llitute reasonable parking regulations. For instance, tie sa:id, "Requiring motorists to use the parking meters dur· ing. the heavy parldng hours in busineu or recreatlonal areu-i.s not an unreasonable burden upon. the public's right to use the streets when done for the: purpo1e of regulating traffic to protect. the health. safety and welfare of &11 citizens equally." proachlng," Hake continued. •·we feel il Is in the int. ..... of the ·di!trict ID dell· ,ttll the ~c>ndidly and lmmedi1tely 91 Uitt tiiClllir Jta1f fta:tlam 1i W.nl1 ' ~pOe;alf can ~ lncludtd." Sdmiertr said undtt tenn.-of the· Win- ton Act -the state law govemlng lelCbir•IChool board relatlona -,. Jbt teaclttr rtpre1entaUves to I.be negotllllag coWlCU must call the next meeting. Since the teachers presented their con- tract proposals Feb. I, the council has met 14 times for a total of 50 hours, Schnlettr said. 'tbe last meeting was April 13, the day after the teacher uaociaUon leadership declared an im- pwe. Three Arrested In Bizarre Mesa Drug Raid By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ,._ O.Hy l"li.t lt•ff A cloak and dagger case which police allege involved negotiation for up to $589,000 in narcotlcr;, a related bomb threat en'lptylng nearby courtrooms and •ients prowling the area with guns drawn, flnally ended early today in Costa Mesa. The bizarre episode left three suspects Including a professional ra ce car driver from A11aheim arrested on a multitude of charges. Officers claim only a small amount of contraband was seized al 2020 Wallace Ave,, to climax the case originally In. iUated by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, due to the poten· lial scope involved. The arrestees and charges against them Include : -Robert M. Gavonl, 2t. of ~ Spin- naker SL, Anaheim. conspiracy, plus transporatatlon and sale of marijuana. Nixon repeated that he would not set a definite date for the withdrawal of all American forc'es from South Vielnam. He 1aid it would have the effect of saying to the North Viet11amese, "we quit, reeard~ Jes sof what you do." The setting of a definite date, Nixon said would destroy any incentive the oth~ side might have to negotiate and wou1d destroy the American bargaining Cannery Revamp Approved -James V. Mamara, 25, of the Wallace Avenue address, conspiracy, tr8nsportB· tJon and sale of marijuana. plus pot:session of an unlicensed firearm . -Talbot P. Simmons, 25, a transient artist and musician, conspiracy and mak· ing a bomb threat. A search warrant allowing full entry to the Wallace Avenue apartment where the a!Jeged transactions were negotiated over a nine day period llt'as issued 'Thursday night. position on prisoners of war. . "TherefDre, the setting of a datt: ia not something that's in our inlerest; it's only in the enemy's interest.'' Nixon said. To get its POWs back, Nixon said, the United States will keep a residual force in Vietnam ''no matter how long it takes." He repeated that the other coDdition tor a total U.S. withdrawal is the ability of the South VietJu1mese regime to elf.fend Itself. Nixon also: -Said he Intervened in the case of Lt. William L. Calley because there was ••grtat concern'' across the country. He ta id his acti~n announcill& he, would .ha.ve fie final review of tht ofrlcer • convK:hon of murdering civilians 1t My Lal had •cooled down'' the public outcry. -Promised his administration would eomJMy with the Supreme. Court decllion that bu.sing and othtt means would be used to r-llmint1 te SC"gregation in soulhera 8Choola. Related •tor)' page t. Approval of a plan to demolish Newport Beach'• last cannery and rebuild half of it as a luxury restaurant and shopping complex was granted by the city Plan· ninR C.Ommission Thursday night. C-Ommissioners attached a long list of condiUons to their action, which came on 1 4-0 vote with two commluionera, Ul- cluding Chairman John Jakosky, ab- staining because of possible connlcts ol interest. Jakosky and Commialontr D o n Adkinson stepped doW11 becaUM: both cwn waterfront property in the area. AdklUOJ! also &aid be repreaented surety interest.I in the: development. The Westem Canners facility, located bet.ween Lafayette Street and the Rhine Channel, went out of business two yeal'I qo. tt w1s acquittd by Unger-Pacific O>rporatlon of Nt:wpOrt Beach. which Is owned by Robert Unger, former Costa • Mesa city manager, and his brothm-, William Unger. The former C-Osta Mesa offieial wu at Thursday night's public bearing: on the propoal, and detailed plans f1't' Ulia com- plex and a series of five othert he plans to build up and down the Paciifc Cout. Unger predicted demolition of the u - llllng bullding woold b<Sin within IO days, 11 9000 u lhe condJticns impoaed by the commi!aion can be meL Among the .Upulationl are a ....,. quirement thal an addltkJ.111 20 off-tlte parkfni places be 'prov\deti and 1 direc· live to meet witb the dty staff to dlJcuss a pGalble public waltw&J between the new building .and the water. Unger plans to 7'bu1ld the eastern half of the elistlOI otructure oo 11<\'0Mlghths ac1li, but wdtl to bloct •CCUI to lhl "'1lkw1y to alloW tbl fis~g neet to con-- tlnue to use It Jar .b ropes and other a.ear "to malntaln the mariUme at.mospbert. •• lruiltad of 1 walkway, Unger said he would construct a public pier utending all fttl out from the 30th Street street.. end, at the eulem end of the property. lie lllid if the flahing fleet should ·-don the area, he would 1gree: to opening up the waterfront welkway to lbe public. Ht uid he wants to keep tt. at It ls now becauae ''these guys pile thif!IJ an over the dock and 1 lhlnk that's • nice thing to look at." , OuUining plam for the re.ataurant com- pies, Unger Aid 7 .750 1quare feet will be d•voted to dining •pace, ICOOJ!ltnOd1t1n1 250 ptl'IOlll, While an additional 1, 1$0 aquare feet will bouae varlolll 1peclalty shops, "We wanl·the new cannery to look 11 much as po11ible like the old one," Unger tokl'the eommlulon, "We ttllJ wu.i"~ 1 pit to point IL" • Costa Mesa Police Oetettive Sgt. John Regan said today he Is uncertain what - if anything more -was found. Local inve!lfJators were ~ontacted by federal agents Thunday afternoon and told the alleged deal wu established and the stage set for a raid. Briefed at headquarle!'I, ~-Regan, plus lnvest111tor1 Norm Kutch. Bob Leo. nert and Don Casey went into !be area. along with five federal agents from t,o., Angeles. Othen wtre In the 1rt1, promptina one frlgtrttned woman to report a.i suspiciOUJ clmunatanees incident lnvolvlna lhrte armed men clalmlna to 1be federal 1gent1. Police reports allege the deal lavolvinf (Bee BIZARIU':, ... ,. %1 Flee Scene Of Meeting By JACK BROBACK Of ""' Dlltr "lit' ltaft Orange C.Ounty planninl mmmls.!ionen Thurllday denied a pennlt for Saddleblct. HO$pital in Laguna Hilla after six 2 to t tie votes and three hours of angry debate that ended w)>On, two commissioners !led the scene. Qimmission Cbalrn>ln Woodrow But. terfield llld his collep Fr<d Jeffenon vanished during ...,..., , A throng attmated at 100 perwo111 booted, clapped , llld· 1thTed during tile three boun. Veteran county polltical obRrvers said it was the most incredible cliali'I of events ever seen at a public meetillg ln the county seat. After commissioners Butterfield and Jefferson bolted from the session, the re- maining two . county planners voted to deny the SaddJeback Hospital permit. They aaid they did ao In order to get the en Ure Wue. sqlllrely before the Orange Coun'y Board of SUpervilon. When tile meeting llnllly adjourned, Chairman pro tom Howard K. Smith or Huntina1oo Bead! onlered the 11!1«1 transcript on the ltSalon impounded ii: the Sheriffs Olllce overnight ,for Ale keeping. A member ol lhe <>noge COunty Gl'lllci Jury, pr..oni dtlrinc tllo -. lllred plupiing dlrect4r P'cnot Diep.;. tor a -ol Iii< tr-lpl Dlckaion, when It WU 1D over 1a!ped, ''This hu never happened before in the planning commlsalon's biatory. I can Im- agine how thJJ wW be interpreted when the Jlllblli .reads •bouUI toJnorrow," 'l'6e basic blai~~ Lutheran Hospilal'Soclely wanta to build a hospital in Laguna Hills but to do eo It mu.I have a conditional use permit from the plan· nJngcommlsslon. lta application far that permit ba9 been delayed for several weeks by action ot three commil&jonet1 -Arnold Forde. now ln Europe; Butterfield and Jefferson. The permit nlust b< obtalnOd by May 18 or the hospital's feder•I grant r:I $1.1 million Hill-Harris Act hntds may be lost. The community Js raliing a similar amount ill matcbing funds lo build the facility. _Bu~~eld. an appointee of First IM!trid Superrilor RObert Battin of San- ~ Ana, set the ~ for tile hearing by calline the quoftion :•111mp1y 1 rell estate matter, one ·of economics." He and JefferlOl:I were to maintain that attitude through the: following incredible series o! events. In the next three hours. the four members commission heard every possf. ble reservation about sranUng the permit removed: -Deputy County COOMel Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach told them that they were not to rule on the need for a bo!Jflital but only on general compatibility grounds:. -Road departrnenl e.n&ineer Murray Storm told them that there would be no traffic problems cn!ated by the hospital. (This was one r:I Forde'• highly publiciz- ed "nagging doubt&.") -DeWitt Bi.shop, admlnlstrator of thC!I Southern California Regjonsl Office of C-Omprebenitve Health Plannlng told (See ~PITAL HASSLE, Pare I) Oraafe Coat 11'e•tller Hazy sunshine "'ill greet week- end beacbnlka, with llWe change in coastal te.m~rawm. Mercury readings are pegged in the low· er 60s locally and up to '8 further inland, INSmE TODAY Tilt UC! Toum · and Gown , muric grou.p U but~ with plana for ir.s ttMdtR& ond facwli11 .rpring concert. l>ctoilr and pic- turt• ore m toda1111 Wttknder. l l I I '! DAii. V PILOT N ,,ldff, Alril )01 1971 Avoids k loophole In eltcHon requirement.a . for Cout Qlmmunlly COUe1e D I at r 1 c l lr\llteel coukl have cost t.upa)'ll"I SI0,000 for a special eledlon. COUlllY 5Chool.orficialJ have revealed. The problem stems rrom a \ongstan· ding ''gentleman's agreement'' "'ithin the junior college dlstricl that candidates for its governing board must reside in the portion of the district they expect to represent. Apparently, that requirement, althou~h observed for lhe 25 years in the district has been in ex.l.ttence, has .ne.vtr been put From Pqe l BIZARRE .•. professional raetr Cavoni and Mamara, an elecrician, wu Lo have involved twe pounds or cocaine worth f l7,000 on the drug market. Federal agents inside the residence about 4 p.m. with Gavonl and Maman claimed 1n supplemental reports that Simons arrived boasting that be had just forced evacuation or Harbor Judicia1 District Court. Police said be was In for a minor marl· juana cue lnvolvln& posse11ion of three cigarettes Thursday afternoon and had the bearing continued. "Appa.renUy he didn't like the judge." Sgt. Regan remarked, saying authorities think Simoni simply walked to a nearby t.tlephone booth to mai.a a "threatening call. The complex wu emptied or more than 50 persons after a 3:57 p.m. bomb threat, but no explosives were found. Federal aaeritl, mean)l'hil•, cbar1ed they were alven • 1pmple. iram ol hashish -the pobW reflntd, form of~ marijuana -and told a qua,rter ton <OOld be bought for '7!0 per_poWid. · Negou.tlng for Ille orJgJnaJ two pc>1mds ef cocaine, -Oowever, they clalm \be suspei:t. all'ffd to band Jl over 1n • PIJ'k'" Ing lot al Uth and Chur~ stree!J after contacting • supPller by phone. Tbe contact was never made. In wrWn1. Robert )!Jtth<w, d~ of ado mWatnllw Mn"icet for the Oranae C0cmt1 Dfpallment of Educatloft, 11id tho hltdl came to lJ&hl durlni thls moath~ il:bool boanl elecUonl- The tuue arose when Uie residence listed by one candidate, \VUllam Una er, an Orange Coast College student, was questioned. Under the dlstrlct's unwritten trustee area setup, Unger was though~ 1G be challenging hrumbent R ob e r t Humphrey• for tht Costa Mesa seat on the board. Ungv umct u •-In C.lle&e Pvlt near the ore.._ In Colta Mua. 11 wu later dttmnined that Unger, bad movtd tq Jlt11'JO!\ lltaQJI. But Ille Newport lle&ch loal oo tho board waa DOI up thJa yur. Thal wu the boll& for tho question about Ungtt'!I ttsidentt -H 11>' peared he had disqualified himself by moving. No so, said the county Department of Ecuatlon's Matthew. He said the only requirements 1 coaal college candidate muat satisfy under the state Education Code are that be be a Two Senten~es Convict Gets Prison, Bride ' By TO~t BARLEY Of ,... DellY ,, .. llfff J. SMlblNG Superior Court clerk softly hummtd tho wedding m.arcll, a woman spectator ln the ttOWded courtroom dabbed her eyes wllh her bandku· cbJef and a beaming judge admitted it "·u the first time be bad sent.enefd a DWI twice in the aame day. 1t WU Thursday, April 29, 1'11. And u WU lhe very lmuaual wedding day of MlchaeJ Joaeph Wallh and Madge Arline Dunbar. Confetti and cake were • long way from Judge McMlllan'1 thoueht. a few minutes earlier u he sentenced Walsh, 36, Anaheim, to five yem to Ule for the armed robbery Jan. 2Z or a cocktail lounge in that dty. THE GRIM·FA~·ED jurilt had just re.ad a file which contained Walsh'• reported comment that he would "kill a cop." Tbe defendant tried very hard tn a gun batUe in which be held besieging officers oubide bia a~t for more Uwl three hours. But that wu three months ago-and the judge relented long enough afltr sentencing to impose hit 1ceond sentence on Walah in h1a chambers u the coo- vlctld gunman, wearing his wedding suit of Orange County jail denims, ~ cited the vows with Mill Dunbar. : "Okay, Mike," ..,aid the bailiff, "that's ll Let'1 co." W-ith went blck to tht lloldlng tank, hlJ b\'lcle went bad; to tbt apartment llhe dwa with a p!- frltnd lllld Judie McMiiian went batk to 1111 crtmlnal ealendar. MICHAEL JOSEPB Wa!Jh clkfii 't get 1111 cop. Bui be got 1111 rJrl .F~m Pqe l Speciltl ·-Coll _gf, Vote resident or t.bl d1ltrict and a registered l'oter. • • Under lhaoe crttena, thin. aii ..,.. dtdata ldllally w.,. running at lar1e .with &be top three vott-getters winnlnC elect.Jon &o the tbrte open seata. · A~ the election turned out, all three ln- cumbe•IJ won by Jarae inaJorlUes. AH three repreae.nt d.lfferent parts of the dlrtrlct set up under the old unwritten agreement. But Ma:thew offered thls hypothetical cast: lf Unger bad won, unseatin& Hum· Concerned Dog Owners • Stage Meet Do& owners In Nowport Be>dJ led by Mr1. Loi.I Irwio will hold an organlz.a· tlonal metUng of the Concerned Dog Ownera of Newport B<acb Wtdnetday night in city council chamben. Mrs. Irwin aaid the 8 p.m. meeUng has been called to enrourage the formation of a se.lf-pollclng dog owneni' asaociation to prevent the city from passing an ordinan- ce keeping all dogs off beaches. "Anyone who owns a dog and wbo has some ldeu on the subject ts more than welcome to attend," she said. "Basically, the idea is to organize dog owners on a citywide basis. 111.eo we could .be the onea responsible fpr seeing to 11 tbat doga-are not nutaaQCM, and the clty won.'l bav' to pas the ordinance. • ''But tho hWlng .. tbe oMJnance ls May 17, ao we blvl to move felt, ii we 're going to be eff«t1ve," tba aa1d: ·~veryoae ii welcome to"tbe meeting, but pleue, don't bring y0ur clop, I don't think the city would appreciate that," she 1ald. phs:'eys', his wln wouJd bavt been kgal. ttiese years was never formall&ed. iNI. tbt Colla Mtla attonioy mlll!t well • .¥ecu>whll<, Hwnphttyo II pttpaiio( to ~· l1ltd a ~Y•<'• Jiii\ •"'1!qln1 . #r his .. ueagues on the board to do ju>1 llrlger l<>r allegtdly mlsrepimntlng hi• that u soon as poulblt. address. . The trustee · d1acrlct arran1emenr, If the court ruled f~ Humphreys, In er· which is legal provided it is adopted feet negaUng Un•er'a elootlon, a special formally by a school board, hu bttn w· eJectlGn would be ~ry to fill the e<J • m lhf' coast di.strict u a c;neafll ol vacancy. g\\aranteelng representatioh on the board The cost of such an election would run f~ varioua sectiont-of the di.!tt)Ct;, about $10,000, Matthew estimated. The coast district covers Seal Beach, Officiall of tbt community t.11lege Westminster, Huntlngt.on Beach. Fauo- distrJct are at a loss to explain why the fain Valley, Costa Mesa IDd Newport eJectlon procedure tbty have followed all Beach. Gun Moll Rohs Motel • ID A Wr-comple:iianed lady in black with a chrome-plated .45 caliber revolver rob- bed a c.oata Mesa motel of $214 Tbu™1ay and today is believed to be the same one wanted in several area cities. She apparently checked inlo the Rodeway Jno, 1400 Pali.sades Road earlier and abruptly left after forcing night clerk Jack Miller to band ov• Uie money. "She was certainly cool about it all," Miller said a fl er the incident . The woman slipped out the door - followed at a cautious distance by the victim -who Jost her in the dark courtyards and corridors of tbe complex. One police official has nicknamed the suspect in about a dozen holdups -most of them late last year -Zorro. because of ber preference for black clothing . Mesa Officer Steven Nash said the Jb)'stery v.·oman is believed tt have stayed in Room 105, where a Ifpsflck..Sm!ared cigarette butt and two hair! from a pillow were taken as evidence. The woman also uses a variety (If disgill.ses and switches wigs, bu t generally sticks to her Jong-barrelled western sty le revolver, police said. She has hit several motels in Anaheim. La Habra, Santa Ana and other ciUes, plu! liquor stores in El Tore, Santa Aita, arid even a Coata Mesa drive--in theater. "She was very direct about what she wanted," said the lady bandit'1 latest vie· tim. "And I was very direct lot. I gave tt to her and she left." . Miller said he thought he kept CMI unW the lmpact o( the incident struck him. "I walked to the phone to call Ull: police and I realized I wu aha.iins and had Jost my veice. '' Last Rites Set HOSPITAL HASSLE ... eo1lins explained that thi• w•y. th• Newport-Mesa them 1}tat the action of a local ad hoc health planning commHtee Tuesday had no bearin& on lbe decision: that the regional agency had long ago approved Sadd1eback Hospital. Planners Okay Center's Second Movie Theater Berkeley, Youth . Held in Murders: For Costa Mesa Baptist Pastor Despite these assurances that there were no logical or legal roedbJocn to granting the U9e permit, tht following 11.J. Funeral services for a Costa Meu Bap.. apli.t ~tes toqk place: list mlnlllar who ooe»-wu a ,wMoUng The fint "motion by Smith wu for a~ uloon keeper wlll be btld 11 •.m. Sabu'• prova.I. SmJth and c.omm1aaionr.r Dan day tn Harbor 1!iDJJy jlaplllt ONrcli. Fplty ~ '?f w1"1e llutterfield and Rev. WllUO!nl..S..Qo ll'f>'. ,,,~ .. ~#olllil"]la'/. Anaheim·&.," ct.ta ·MeN1 who II JWI The 1tcond ,moUo.d by Butterfield was ago gave away hll Mflnphll ball to-to deny The result was another 2 to 1 become "a. vesael in God'• b&nda" ~ ~eadlock. • Tuesday at Coatl Mes• ~-r: Foley then revened the field ~ mov Hospital. , • Id r.. denlal, ''t!I ,.i Iha maltar ~ Born IA Oebum, Tel. 1n U'J'll', ·Jte.v.. 1JM BOard of Sap&vlaora.11 JefftrMl')lid: Clevel.00 cama tb CalJlorola In.UIS and !luttezlleld predictably r n e rs e d in 1937 established tbi Nei~bood ·:ttiemst1ves IDd voted agalmt the mouon. Church at the comer of wu.on Street and . • Foley then moved for 1lmple denial: Newport Boulevard. He alto built-two , The result Was the same. churchea ln Monrovia, one in Ramona Foley then made another attempt to and one in Oregon. re90lve the Issue by moving to refet the He waa active in tht Harbor Trlnity matter to the supervlJ<n without com- Baptllt Church until h1I death. ment. 'Ibe same 2 to 2 vote followed. He ls IW'Vlved by a dauahltr, Mn:. Butterfield then moved to adjourn the Margaret Madilon cf Hawaii; four meeting. This failed by the same tie vote. &randchildren and ei&ht g r e a t.. At this point, Butterfield declared a 10- &randchlldren. minute recess. He and Jefferaon dlup-Burlal wtµ bl 1n Harbor Rest Memorial peared for the night. Park, CoSt.a Mesa. Bell Broadway Smith, acting u chainnan pro te.m, Mortuary , 110 Broadway,_ Costa Men, ls called the meeting to order art.Ir about.a in charge or fuoer1l amnsements. ~minute delay. Rockefeller Divorce Ll'ITLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -Tilt ,..;.re of former Arkansas Gov, Wlnlhrop Rockefeller wa1 lf'&nted a divorce Thurs- day oo ground.a of "Central indignlUu. n Attomey1 for both 1Jde1 declined to disclose terms of the setUemtnt to which Mrs. Jeannette EdriJ Rockefeller aereed. OUMH COAST DAILY PILOT Legal questiODJ then jwnped up to cor.- front tho twu remaining commllllooen. Could two <>f the five commis.slonef"! act on the permlt If the meeting had not been legally adjourned? COuld two commislioner1 'legally act ·on the matter in 11 much a1 there had hloen QO call for a quQrecn? Attorneys prettnt disagreed on the Issue and • 45-minute recess wu called to research the law bookl. Real!embled at 7 p.m., the attorneya 11ald they had been unable to make a determination. Foley then agreed IG the requeft or Saddleback Huspltal attorney Michael Collins and moved to deny the permit Smith agreed. isaue migrt get before ~ sup_ervlsor1 in S, SI d Plans to rebuild a second theater ad· U much 11 there Ya.s clear indlcatfon 1gnups ate jacent to and as part of the existing Ed- that the comml!ltion opposed the permit, wards Cinema at Newport Center were Elementary schools in the Newport· apprGved by the Newport Beach Plan· whereas a vote by only two members to itesa Unified School District will register niAg Ciommiallon Thursday night. approve might be subject to legal action youngsters May 10-21 for kindergarten Edwards officials said they will erect by the opposition. • claues nelt fall. a 500-seat movie howe that will share The controversy surfaced earlier thL!I ln order Lo register,. a child must be the preserit lobby facilities of the 1,250----•l.. Id bef seat cinema built thtte years ago. week when h wu repcirted that Como four years, nine UWllll.la 0 on or ore In approving the request, the planning misaioner Forde, an appotntee of Sept. 1• l9'71. A birth certif\q;te or other c<>mmission required theater operators Proof of a chlld'1 age should be brought ddi · 1 00 k. SupervlJor Ronald Copen of Ntwport to the school when re~. lo secure an a ·uoaa I par rng 1pac. Buch. bad been inltrumental ID ~ ~.t.v-..~hll ~· =d f es for exclusive use by the theater after the approva1 of tbt ......... 11 for .I..! -i-"'""~..l ~ e proo 5:30 p.m. on wee.kday1 and all day Oj'I ~....... u.:: Of po and intn es urun 1.1.atlons. weekends and holidays. dleback H03pltal. These must be presented prior to en-They also directed that there shall be As.!emblyman Robert E, Badham (R· terlng schoOI in the fall,:1 .no matinee showing i• more than ' one Newport Beach) wredviJtd of ,Ult altu• . Michael Hill of ml district ad· .theater at one .Ume except on weekends tkl1 and moved 1n ' · 'eorltroVfnY~Wlth in!nit\raUve staff wm Ww';' questions and holidays. * prorhJHd bearln More the Assembly about registration, or ~ 9Cflool boun· In other acticm, the commission gra11t- Committee on Heallh. derles that determfne whl.cb 11chool a ed a permit to the Newport National Lutheran Hospital S:oclety leaders, who child will attend: He may be reached at Bank, 1666 MacArthur Blvd., for a drive- plan to build the nonprbflt facility ln 645-1100. up auto teller facility. BERKELEY (AP) -An Air Foree sergeant was stabbed to death today ~ an Air Force recruiting office, Pol.lee Lt. Henry Sanders reported. Sanders said a 21-year-0ld man wat seized and disarmed in the Shattuck Square office and taken into Clllt.ody. · The capture was made by a man who heard a struggle and rushed to the sergeanfs aid. Sanders said the man in custody to- da y gave his name as Christopher Cow- sar, of Berkeley. Sanders \.\·ithheld the name of the sergeant victim and the man who cap- tured and held the attacker until police arrived. Sanders s:Sid the sergeant was pl"l> nounced dead on arrival al llerrict Ho-spital. Laguna Hills, said further delay granting !---------------------------------------~ the ~t would jeopardlz_e th e JIO!pllal's vital eligibility for the •tf 1n1Uion federal grant. Document.. on file tn the ~only recorder 's office show that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul F •. Marx are th~ principal offi~als in the Viejo Capltal Compa.riy which purchued a site last year in the Ml!!lm 'Viejo area for the privately financed Mission Community Hospital. Vlejo Capital Company is 1lso lilted as one of 29 partner1 in the Mls.!loa. Vlejo Medical Company which ts buOdlng tho mission hospital. 'The balance are m01lly docton. Forde has be.en on a tour of Europe and the Soviet Union with Caspers but has been advised of the uproar and ii u· peeled bacl< this weekend. Saddleback Hospital is planned to open next .year with 150 beds and an ulUm1,te f?AP:BClly of 500 bed!. It bu an alSOclate relatiooshlp wilh South Cout Community Hospital in South Laguna . to avoid duplication of major and costly services. MWioa hospital is •lated to OJ>M !hll summer w1lh 126 beds .nd an ulUmate expansion to 2IO beds. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! A 6re1t Se1te+ion ef Quelity Upholstered Furniture •t • Falltastfc ScrrirHJll Choose from the1e q1.11lity: ri•m••• Aen'IU. M-.• Ccnoft, U.dmartt. Hlbrftoft, HetfOMI, Jcnnnton Wiit, meny other1, . SAVINGS UP TO 20% """""" ·-· SHIRRILL LOVE SIA T & SOFA In INltchl"t yell .. •NI ,....., print. $469 lef__._ ... S!Jt --SALi! lo" IMt-lltf, .... -·················· SALi $319 MARGI CAHON SOFA ~" .. ~ ~1i':~~~ Itri~-· ··--·· IALE $499 MARGE CJ.HON 9UILTID SOFA i..., ... ·-SOFA :::'."~ •.~!.~.~-.~~.: ..... ·-···········-··· SAL! $621 SHERRILL SOFA :::e {;);' .. ~~--~--~-~-~'.~.~~~~--~~~~: .. SALi $505 SHHllLL CONTEMPORARY =~'.~s~"t ~--~~-~~ .. ~~·~·!·~---··-···-IALI $47 5 d'lANOI COAST PVIWHrNO UIMPAX'f' ' a.Mtt tt. w ••• * * * * * * •• ....... .... ....... $499 R ... S.Sft -·-IALI MARGI CARSON LOUNGE CHAIR '"'lllW ............... J,.\ o. i_"!:L Vk:I'..,...., .. ~ 1' ... , l(,.,jr ..... 'n..111•• A. M11,,.hi11• .............. - L Ptler tl'.1i•t H..,...1 ~City l•W "---])Jl New,.n 1,,1,,.,4 Mail int .Y4ttHI P.0, lt11 11711 tJ•lJ --C-1• Mmlt1 DI Wllll &tV lll'Mt lt911111 htdl1 12? , .. , A--11tvn11 ...... ~ ttoKll~ t1'7S. ~ ...,..._.. a.~ a.n.t1Jt1 • H-1ft 11 'Cc"'N RMI Hospital Society Leader Tells Aim of Board Vote Samuel Tibbits, president of the Lutheran Hoapltal Society, said today It "'as at the request of the Society that At· torney Michael Collins sought Planning Commission denial or a land use permlt for lbe propo.sed Saddleb1clt l~O!pltal 1n order to take the case t.o the Board of Supervisors. The Lutheran Jlospital Society, baaed ln Los Angeles , is the intended builder of the new Laguna Hills facility. "It WIS ob\!low: to us that the PlaMilll Commission, after three sessions, wasn't goin& to act,'' said Tlbbltta. "Wt felt we ha.d to movt the requut out of com. mission and aet it before the 1upenoisor1 btt1use we have timt limUs to meet." Tlbbltb connrmed \hat the SI.I mllllon allocatlon of Hill·Harris funds for con- struction of the hospital would be lost lt permit.I ftre not M<'Urtd by May 18. "It setms ridiculous that Oran&e Coun· ty lhouJd Joae thb money," Tibbitts aakf. "Our plans are complete •nd wt are rtady to go "' soon a1 we get the land use pernllt." To arguments th~t • reduclinn In bed lllit of the proposed hospital had nulllfled previous approval of the fac.lHty by health planning authorities, Tibbit! said, "There is no reason to delay on the basis of a reduction in size. This does not ha ve to be rtvlewed by any plannlna body. On· ly if we were to Increase the size would review be required." Tibbitts said he hoped the matter would receive a "fair aod just treatment" when the appeal rt•chff the superviaors. Both faclltUes would serve a common area including El Toro. Laguna HUis, Mission Vftjo and Laguna Niguel. When Thursday's clrcut-llke session en- ded, veteran <Ximmluloner Foley 11Um· med It up, "It Is a horrible set of cirtUmslances when two commissioners dtsert a meeting during 1 supposed rrcess." To complete the blurre aspect of the whole situation, tM planning department this momln& requested the company of newsmen to pick up lhe taped tranacrlpt •t the Sheriff'• Office. Planning depMtment officials uld thlt this was done to verify that the lape had been untouched and Jocked up in the Merlfl's property locker overnight. NeW!men by request had accompanied Olckaaon to the Sheriff'• Office Th.unday ni&ht to depOSlt the transcript. MARGE CJ.HON HIRCULON SOFA ....... ~..... $439 R ... 1520 SALi SHEHILL SOFA :::~;;1, •.1.~ .. ~-~--~·~ ... ~'.~.~·-·~~I $479 MARGE CARSON LOVE SEAT ~" .. ~;~;·~~ .. ~.~-~~··-----·······-·---SALE $259 M.lRtH CJ.HON CHAIRS ~n .. ~esfli ~~:_'.~~············-SALi s 169 IA. ~ ... ~·~ -------·-·· IAU $209 SHHRILL SWIVEL ROCKER In ll"Mn Hercuten. $215 . ....... --··--··-···-.... NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE llEWPOIT BEACH 1727 Wutcltff Dr., 642-20$0 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL t HIWPOIT ITOll OHN NIDAY 'T1L t ProftulOMI Interior Dell9n1r1 Avall1ble -AID INTERIORS ....,. r .. ,,. ,_.., .t o.-tt ~e•1 ••t.11•1 LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. Phona: 494-6551 I I j f ,, Barbara Jane ;\tackle, the li1iami heiress \\•ho \\'al kidnaped and bur- ied alive in a plywood box for more than three days in J 968, married her longtime boyfriend S t e w a r t \Voodward in a quiet Philadelphia ceremony Thursday. I Blast 'Witnes s' .~ ... Fl own to Seattle SEATTLE, Wuh. (UPI) - Leslie B a L on , lf.ytar~ld blonde from a weU·to.dO Caliromia family , arrived here Thursday night to appear before a federa1 grand jury 11 1 materia1 witness in the Marth 1 bombing of the U.S. Capitol. flee rather than 10 volanlarily to Statue. One of tllht d1Udr1n from an Athtrton, Califomla famfly, Mlu Bacon bu been Uviq ln an anUwar commune i n northwnt Wuhi.rlcton for some monthJ. Pot '"War~ S e t U.S. to Fight WiUl Weed Although wa iting newsmen could not confirm she had been whisked of[ the Unit.ed Air Linell flight 'i'li'hich arrived here late Thursday night, several passengers said they had sttn her aboard. WASIDNGTON CAP) -The Department. Grants will bt She is the rirst person ar-Nllon administration plans 1 turned over to farmers to help rested in connection with the new war this awnmer on pay costs of eradicating the iJ. e1plosion which caused nearly mirijuana growln1 wild in legal plants. De rt 1 1 $200.000 damage in 1 Senate Agriculture pa men o • farm fields and hedge rows 1· · I cl<n-1-,g--' ... ; ••• _,, wing. No one was injured. 1CJa ! a v .. = = ~<.CJJLt The government implied across 10 st1te1, mostly ln the of the plan Thursday only during court hearlnia that aht mldwe11t. after repeated quest.ions by a knew far more about the bozn.. The prOiJ'IM will use $85,000 reporter. 'lllere had. been Dt bing: than simply the "person-allocated by the Ju 1 t Ice public announcement. al kJ1owlf!dge" of it that wa!I Department to the A&riculture A spokesman said the cam- mentionttl in an affidavit for palgn ~as tentatively been htr arrest. named 'WHEP, which 11tand1 She was arrested Tuesday Land Based for the Wild Hemp Elimlna· night by FBI a1ents on a war· tion Program. rant she had knowledge of the States on the WHEP Tu:t are persons responsible for the In History Illinois, Iow1, India n a, blast. Kansas. Kentucky, Michigan, C:.,.~c,~_,"r"' Althou1h her lawyers fought TRENTON, N.J. <UPI> Minnesota, Missouri, South ~ ·w" to ketp her from leaving The last recorded owner of Dakota and Wiseonsin. fr /Jilt Washington, the way was four acres of land the itale of Initially, $46,000 will be VI "'IP' cleattd for her transfer New Jersey needs. r 0 r allocated to the states for '11lur!day by a decision of 1 Interstate 295 was Joeeph eliminating an e 11 t I m a t e d .JiM.~'it&v'foHc....-U.S. Court of Appeals. Bonaparte, older brother of 22,000 acres of marijuana in aii(,M(fl Two judges of the court French emperor Napaleon certain counties, still unan· · ~ heard a challenge of her ar-Bonaparte. nounced. The rtmainder will rest And detention under So the state Thursday flied be spent "on the basis of :/KA.i., c§il(Nmsef $100.000 bond then dismissed two condemnation suits need" as the season pro- ' JIJ,tJJ.'IJJ.lrdliu(,r{~.(to, 'f/~~·HO'i ~. her lawyer's protests that she against the "heirs" or Joseph g:reMes, the spokesman said. _ l/rtutmlf.~ ~~ was lllegally arrested and Bonaparte, asking that three Tbe department said the f ~ being held under e:rcessively comml.ssionen be a-ppointed to aeason for effective control is .J/rtliaaL lfiv'iNxitl./ high bond. fix compensaUon for Joseph's from May 15 to July IS. "''(~ The court as \veil as U.S. heirs, if any can be found. Officials said most or the .7k Jl:uft. AAaiJI.(~ District Judge John J. Sirics Joseph was King of Nsples total budget, some $68,000, will 105 Jf~.~ the day before, apparently ac-and Spain while his brother be handled by the Agricultural t.-fr 1111l.~ cepted the government's argu-reigned over France and most StabillzaUon and Conservation ;~~~~~~~~~~~m~e~nt~th~a~t~M~is~s~B:•~co~n~m~i~gh~t~o~f~E~ur~o~pe~ .............. ~S.~rv~l"'~·------------,J .. • • CMAl•I rTI l t11kA111trl(tr4 M1tlt1 C~''I' CH.&l•I TT! l••Y &r•4it t•rlfl1 • 1h14•11f ••· <•u"ti •w1il•lilt • U, .. I J "''11th• t• J•Y• HVNTINITON CINTU t..clii •• ,, ..... H•ittt111 ... IMclt l fZ0llDI 0,IM NON,. TNUll., 1 Pll. 'Tll t ,,M. • HAllOI SHOft'IN• CINTll J)ft ""'* ltw4. c .......... ........ , Frldq, Aprn 30, 1971 DAil y l'lla:! $ -lfll dnlfilat DeaCDlne ~ CourtBacksTrain Takeover W.ASKJNGTON (UPI) -The National A!sociaUon of were inadequate and not In DOES MAMA WEAR HOT PANTS 7 U.S. District Juda:e Howard Raibwd Passengers also ask-compliance with Interstate Corcoran re.hued today to ed for a delay on the ground.! Commerce Comm I 11 lo n order 1 dell)' In the scheduled that the railroads had not rtaulations. takeo.,.er at mldni&ht of most followed proper procedure re-On Ca-pltol HUI Senate Think Moth:,'• D•y or tt,e nation's r a I Ir o ad quiring a 30-day pubUc noUce Democratic leader Mike passenger service by a Uley would d J s c o n t I n u e Mansfield threatened to try by J lntd semlpubllc <U'poratlon. passenger service after sign-legislation to prevent the C II ..,...,_ Railroad unions and a coo-mg contracts with AMTRAK. takeover, but there was no \A.Ill' I wrner lobbying group made But the main suit was the chance for full congressional W•tcllff ,... -642·1"1 Jmmed!ate plans to appeal the one filed by rail labor unions, action because the House wu1..,~~!"'-~~~!"'lu~~~ decisioninalutminuteeffort who charged that labor not, in 15ess.ion today. 1= to -prevent the corporation -Secretary James D. Hodgson's Tht Senate commerce Com· CHICK THI DAILY PILOT called AMTRAK -from im-order atipulatlng required pr1>-mlttee refll!ed Thursday to IYllY DAY FOi -plementing its plan to drop 101 tectlons for laid-off or heed Mansfield's request for AU CUlll NT of the nation's intercit y 285 otherwise displaced employ es acUon. MARklT l~FOIMA TION ~~~~!;~ trains beginningifi0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0"'":1~,.~~.--~1l~mii,".""_~----i0iii0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0;;;i;i0i0;;;;;;i0i0.;.i0f Th e: unions had charged that DAY lhe labor protection prov~lons of the AMTRAK contract with participating railroads were inadequatt and would work CAME . A SPECIAL! extreme hardship on up to 2S,OOO rail workers, some cf whom '!hey said could be cut off wilbout a cent of seve.ranct p1y. SATURDAY ONLY • MAY 1st More Added To J obless Cities List Mamiya/Sekor • Vivitar SLR Outfit WASHINGTON (UPI) The Labor Department reporU nearly one-third of the nation 's major cltiea are on lls ._ .. employment" list meaning "substantial unemployment" 1ist meaning at least 6 percent ot the work force is jobless, The department has added Hartford, Conn., Ne war k , N.J .. and Charleston, W. Va. It dropped New Orleans, leav- Jng lhe number of citiea with aerlous unemployment at 52. There were 25 cities added lo the list of small labor markels with work problems, bringing that total to 637. Assistant Labor Secretary Malcolm R. Lovell Jr. in ,an. nounclng the changes Thurs· day said the S2 major cities on the list was the highest number 1ince May, 1962, and represent more than one third or the 150 metropoUtan labor marketa Jn the nation. There were 11 on the list In 1970 and 1l% v.·hen President Nllon took office in January, 1969. I Check This for VALUE • 500 TL camera e TrL Spot ~feterlna: • Fully lnterchan1~ able U!ns • Fitted Everready c ... • 1 Year Warranty I PLUS! I • Vi\'i tar 13.'S mm P.S. Telephoto Lens I PLUS ! I e Vivit.ar 2x Teleconverter l!>oubles Focal Lenrth of Lens) All This For ONLY! OUTDOOR CARNIVAL REPEAT OF A COMPLETE SELLOUT! PU PACK MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE Us e Your Penn•y's Ch1r9• I SATURDAY & SUNDAY e MAY 1st & 2nd 1scro oFF Bar·B·Q DEMO UNPAINTED MEXICAN POTTERY by ''The Old Crab'' SAT. ONLY, MAY 1st GARDEN CENTER FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Beach c I • DA.IL'V PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Helicopter A useful tool for Jaw enlQJ'l:ement that helps cut crime and keeps our streets safe? · Or ·a pesky, noisy, overly-expensive toy for a police department? Police helicopters in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are subjected at times to one of these t.wo polar· iud views. Recent complaints in Newport even reach· ed the point where one councJlman suggests that IJl.e city should study the possibility o! ••!ling orr it• two- plane force and putting the money to use elsewhere. , \Ve wouldn't Jike to see . that. We feel the use of helicopters as a tool for law enforcement and rescue purposes will prove its value despite the sometimes ir· ritating noise generated by bur.zing choppers overhead. The problem with noise has been Jess acute in Costa .Mesa than Newport, probably because Newport ordered slightly larger and more powerful machines in order to be able to handle certain functions (such as \vater res· cues) that would not ordinarily be encountered in Costa J.fesa. And Newport's hills. ravines and darkened beach· fronts often require more intensive aerial scrutiny than the relatively flat terrain and regular street pattern ol Costa Mesa. · But both cities have had their share of complaints from citizens who have been annoyed by noise overhead. But W& have a feeling that if citizens were aware why the helibopters were circling a certain area or using their powerful ·floodlights at night. they \vould be a bit more tolerant o( the noise they hear. Jn fact, we sus- pect they would be grateful the ·machine was available for the mission it was pursuing. For instance, the Newport helicopter probably an· noyed hundreds of persons Tuesday night when it orbit· ed in the Hoag Hospital area for 40 minutes in tiresome noisy circles. What most on the ground could not know was that the helicopter had been called to the area to help seek an anned robber who had ned there. That is a typical example of hoW helicopters can be employed- arid typical of the reasons their operators are forced to follow a pattern they know is potentially ur,selting. In Newport's case, Chief B. James G avas has •&- surance thal improved muffling equipment wilt be avail· able for that city's helicopters. That would help. In the meantime, we suggest that men who fly these planes be extremely alert to the sensitivity of the issue and avoid any and all unnecessary maneuvers that dis- turb those below them. To the citizen who is annoyed by a particular period of overhead noise, \Ve suggest he find out the mission that brought the helicopter there. Very likely, be will find he was glad it came. Formalization Needed The recent Coast Community College district trustee election revealed an unusual legal twist in trustee candi· dates' residency requirements. By failing to set its trustee areas down in writing, and by failing to stipulate by board resolution that a candidate must reside in the trustee area he seeks to represent, the district risked being stuck for the price of a special election. One candidate, a student at Orange Coast College, met the state requirements tor being a candidate al- though he flunked the test of the district's long-estab- li shed "gentlemen's agreement" in which, traditionally, candidates have lived in the trustee area. He sought the "Costa Mesa seat.'' tie lives in Newport Beach. · But, apparently he could have been elected, legal· ly. Or. had he polled more votes. a lawsuit might have forced a special election on the ground that all candi· dates were running "at large." That 'vould have cost $10,000. Tru~tee. -Robert Humphreys, an attorney, is urging ~ forf!l~lization of the generally accepted residency rules 1n wr1hng. The proposal merits prompt attention by the board. N c.HINA 1\lAW 6 Superficiali ty ·In Cultural Dear Gloomy Gus: Taxi ng R e t u rnable Bot tles Throughout County _ Differen ces Jn France, there is nothing that goes ·b'y the name of French toast. There are no French fried potatoes. No French beans. No French dressing. No French windows. And no orchestra. however large, t'On· tains a French horn. Jn Germany, nobody ever has GermaA measles. The Danish pastry is unknown in Denmark. There are no Dalmatian dogs in Dalmatia. I could go on. but you get tbt.polal. What . we call "French" and so forth go by entirely dlfferent names in those countries, and are not particularly Identified with those countries. FRENCH BEANS, for instance, are simply "haricots vers" in France. A French window is a "pof'te..fentre." A French horn is a "cor d'hannonie." And ID Germany, German measles are merely "'die Roteln," or rubella. Certain things become associated with specific countries and are forever more inseparable. We think of the jinrikisha as qutnt.essentlaUy Japanese, but it was in· vented by an American missionary. Chop suey was wholly unknown in China until It was Introduced by Western restaurateurs. And Irish stew, J &m reliably informed, was never indigenous to Ireland. THESE ARE JUST peculiarities of no consequence in themselves -except that Js the new lighting at the Balboa Pier parking lot an attempt by the city fathers to make a setting for a scientc fiction movie? -D. L.B. rftl• ••lure nlltet11 ,..dtn" ,,..., 11tt MtttNr!lr f,,._ •I llM lllWNll Hr. ..... ~tllr HI -w• f9 0,..,..,. Gvt. D .. ,, Pltet. they point to more important associations that we make all the time, and witb just as little justification. We not only associate prod~cb with specific coun- tries, but personal ltalt& as well. We look upon the French as a "roman· tic" people, which is as absurd as their view of the English I! "cold." We find Orientals "inscrutable," simply because their mode of emotional effect i!!!I dif- ferent frOm Ours. We look upon the dark, brooding "Russian soul" wtth some awe and fear; but as a famous German acholar once observed. "The 'Rus.sian soul' ia an invention of the German philosophers." CULTURES DO HA \'E differences, of course ; no one would ever.mistake an ef· fusive Italian for a taciturn Scotsman. But such differences are far more superficial 'than we imagine -they are like different accents blurring the fact that they all speak the same b a s i c language. As a living laboratory in anthropology, it is fascinating to see how a new state like Israel has. in a generation or so, con- founded the whole stereotype of the "Jew" as known in Western .society. For the Israeli seems more like a Swede than a Jew.'even physically. Leopards can change their spots when the spots have • only been painted on by others. East, West Cali fornia A new twist has been given the "split California in two" argument by Senator Randolph Collier, dean of the upper house. Collier's intriguing proposal -or in· tft'esting spoOf -is to split the state into West California and Eut California, when all these years other split advocates have suggested states or Southern and Northern California. Over the yea.rt t.he degree of en- thusiasm for a ·State of Northern California and a State of Southern California has run up and down llke a Public opinion poll in search of an issue. THE APPARENT thesis behind Colliier's West and East California is that the: West state. to include the 13 coastal oountles from Marin in the North to San Die.go in the South. would be an urban stat~. The 45 counties not included in West California, but to become East Califomia, would be a more rural, airicultural and recreational area. Thus· ly. perbAps the thinking goes. the w1>Anologists and the evironmentallsts can each hn\'e the bt.ost of two worlds. \v~lt California, to a large extent, could wmtk with tht problems of the mttropolitJn cities white East California 1''ouldn't tu.ve lo get nurly so mlxed up in rapid transit. regional government, wlW' pollution, IOlOI and all that stuff. Jl'• buuillul - ONE TINY PROBLEM might be that a hlctl of a lot. of wen eauromians would ~l lo mlet.ttt to the Jdyllic East 1tAtt al fast u the old jalopy and family r.rtime permlUed. f'• U... mmnml. bowover, tbe major -..... -----.,. 1' Guest•Repor t ' . ; •I; ... obstacles facing Senator Collier in seek- ing approval of East and West California are the tortuous legislative process a measure of this magnitude must race, the answers to the questions of how to llplit the existing state debt equitably between the proposed new states, the sanctity of contracts entered into by the existing stale of California and how they would have to be reconciled between the new states, and the ot!'ler old issues raised whenever a division of the state has been broached. They are all arguments with which Senator Collier is familiar. IN TIJE EVENT Senator Collier meets with legislative succtss, ltK?re of course is still an enormously complicated pro- cedure which must be followed before the two states come into existence. All the arguments aside. Senator Colller ls due kudos. His proprnial ls fresh. it is ingenious, It focuses strong at- tention on many of the critical L'iSues con- fronting us all, If only becau5e ll suggests radical surgery of a nrw type as a solu- tion. Could it be that this is what the twinkle eyed veteran of a thousand legislative 1kinn1shes has in mind, or is he ju ii t saying that the people who art clostSl to the problems thc!y have created should be more responsible for rrsolution of lhcm! C.difornll Fta.Uire &ervioa Assessor's Ruling Foste,rs Pollution To the Editor; It is appalling to believe that in this day of people working for ecology and en- vironmental control, and attempting to eliminate pollution of all kinds . an Orange County official would deliberately attempt to undermine these valiant ef· forts. The official in question is County Tax Assessor Andrew Hinshaw, whose efforts to squeeze extra taxes from the 7-Up bot· tling company can only result in adding more litter to our already suffocating slreets, parks and beaches. It is Mr. Hinshaw's opinion that all returnable bottles of 7-Up in the counly belong to the bottling company. not to the stores or the consumers. He has handed the "Uncola" people an as.sessment of 1166.570 for every returnable botUe in the county, plus a demand for ''escaped as. sessments" for the years 1966 through 1969 to the tune of $972.640. WE ARE, THEREFORE, talking about a mi\Uon-plus tax tab to be forked over by 7-Up. In other words, Hinshaw is demanding that 7-Up pay tax on the bot- tles in our O\.\oTI refrigerators. in every bar and restaurant. and each retail market and store, which is a new pimple Mr. Hinshaw is attempting to scratch in of-der to bring more tax doilan into the county. If successful. in this venture, Mr. Hinshaw will undoubtedly attack the other soft drink companies for similar revenues. Now, what has all this to do with en- vironmental control, pollution and ecology? Quite obvious, 1 \\'OUld say. Wh.v sOOuld 7-Up pay this ridiculous new lax on retw-nable bottles. when they can save a million bucks by reverting to throw· aways? MOST BO'JiLJNG companies have made a concentrated effort to stop using throw-away bottles. and return to the de~sit botUes in order to clear the coun- try of liUer. Some companies have even raised their deposit in order to make the bottles more valuable. hence. worth returning to the store. rather than left on the beach. If Mr. Hinshaw is successful in this at· tempt. it could be one giant step BACKWARD for mankind. Although 7-Up has not even hinted about the possibility of returning to throw-aways, in the face or what is happening, this would appear to be a logical and profitable decision on their part. And if this decision should be made. I hope Mr. Hinshaw will be ready for the war crles from the conservationists. not to mention the many organizations dedicated tD ecological and anti-pollution pursuits. Perhaps it might be a wise time for these organiialions and interested in· dividuals to make their wishes known to Mr. Hinshaw. And if they can't get through, then there's always the oext election! LEE C. MILLAR Some Dog Facts To the Editor : May l call ~e dog fact! to your al· tenUon? Three montht flgo I came from Laguna Beach (in part, because of t~ dog situa- tion there) to live in Corona del Mar. I rented a house -a pleasant , redecorated, NEAT pJ.:ice -and I hoped .----B11 George ---. Dear Georie: What~ver became o( the big N11mc I.he Automobile contest you were having and who won? f .G. Dear F.G.: Don't you have me mixed up ~·Jth EdAtt Ford? NobQdy won. ; ', .. Mailbox Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages tn 300 words or less. TM right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail- i'rig address, but names may be with· held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. 'Poetry will not be pub· lished . to keep it that way. BUT THE DOGS CAME! All around the front lawn, all over the area back of tbe garage which was intended for guests or the house to park. I cleaned, sprayed, used dog repellants, all to no avail. Finally, I had installed a decorative wire fence about 2.5 feet high. but even that did not keep them out. I even have had people (children mostly who were sent to walk the dog) with dogs on a leash stop there when they thought no one saw them. At present tltere are brown spots on my lawn where "they" have left their mark. Somelimes I have felt like cancelling my subscription to newspapers because I have hated· to have them thrown on the lawn. AND WHAT ABOUT the dog owner.s \Yho do take care of their own? I've seen their lawns soiled, their garbage cans overturned by the rovtrs. In Laguna Beach, Heisler Park and even the beautiful grounds o( the Victor Hugo Inn certainly had their troubles with this pro- blem. \Ve hear talk of "erology" and of money, n1oney, n1oney, being spent to correct conditions. and perhaps some of those v.·ho are screaming the loudest about "Earth Day.'" etc .. are those who are letting their dogs on other people's property -""'i\h the lil1h. the nies, the smell, and later on the ants. Where do we go from here? ll has to impro\'e or get worse, VIOLA SAVELL BROWN Sug9esllo11. on Dog• To the Editor: In reference W the Newport Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Com- mission proposal that all dogs should be banned from all beaches. I would like to make a few comments from my personal observations. I live on the Ocean Front exactly halt way between the Balboa Pier and the Newport Pler. From my upstairs living room window I can see this whole vast expanse of beach. During the nine or 10 winter months the activity on the beach is very limited. Near the water I usually see a few surf fishermen and joggers and once in awhile someone running his dog. ALl\-IOST Al.L of the rest or the ac- tivity takes place on I.he sidewalks thal extend out tO"''ard the water at every street-end or that run parallel to the water next to the houses. This consists of people walking. bicycling and walking their dogs. The dog owners usually do nol like to walk In the sand so most of the dog messes will be found within a leash· length of these side"'·alk.~. ~IV SUGGESTION is this: The city of Newpari Beach has three very fancy and e r f i c i e n t sirti ng·lype beach-cleanlng machines. These machines ope r 11 t e almost every day ond spend m~t of their time going back and forth acr05$ the sand either near the edge or the ~·ater or in the center of the beach which is an area htllt u!Cd by anything except seagulls. If the operators of thi5 equii>- mtnt could 00 directed to operate their machines next to these sidewalks more of the time l think \Ve could solve the pr4; blem of our "dirty beaches'' and not have to ban the dogs. ANOTHER THOUGHT, since dogs are required to have licenses I think they should be accorded a certain respect. At least they are paying for part of the beach cleaning service· which is more lhan you can say for oor summer tourists. I certainly hope our city council will consider this matter carefully. J feel that banning dog.s completely from the beaches would be a case of pver-reacting to an easily solved problem. MRS. MARY WAGN.ER 'Compart tne nt a l Log ic' To the Editor: We have a strange sort of thinking going on in the city of Newport Beach. There has developed a philosophy called ''compartmental logic." This i3 a con- dition in which one part of the mind ig- nores the functions of another part. The case in point is the use of the new toy used by the police department -the helicopter. Admittedly, this is a very useful aid to ;ciime control and patrol work when "there is supplementary observation needed. It is a real nuisance when used for constant patrol for "deter- rent'' purposes. THE NOISE LEVEL of the machine is such that anyone committing a crime is forewarned adequately of the presence of the police. How anyone travelling at 300 to ~Oil feet above the ground at a speed of about 90 miles ap hour can possibly observe surreptitious actions is beYond my comprehension. The compartmental mind gives a cita- tion to some poor slob with a broken muf- fler, or to a kid with a noisy bike, but also is able to destroy the tranquility and actual sleep of hundreds of citizens with complete impunity. THE UNCEASING patrol of the helicopter, added to the tens of huge jet aircraft and the hundreds of small pl&nes. makes the former peace of this community non-existent. The indiscriminate use or the helicopter seems to be an unnecessary expense. It is also a vast nuisance equivalent to a patrol car cruising about the city at all times of the day and night with a siren going full blast. I think that it is time for us to ask for a restriction of the flights of the helicopters to emergencies, crime control, and olher necessary aclivities. WUJ..IAM 0. PAYNE Teacher E r ror To the Editor : Jasmine Avenue Glen, direclly north of Fifth Avenue in Corona del Mar. has for many years been a reserve of naUvt grasses. bushes. and cattails, cacti and various greeneries along the creek created by overflow of the dam above. In this creek could be found native life com- mon lo Ulis environment, such as polliwogs, fr!>&s. dragon flies, etc. This year iome class assignments were to brtng to class po11iwop:. etc. Unfortunately the teacben: did not ex- plain lD the students that this en- vironment can become depleted by misuse. AT ftRST SMAU. jan of poU]\\'Ogs were laktn to school by students. then gnllon jars. Now lhis 11rea has become a playground with nativt plants and bushe~ being trampled or torn up. Smttll cloth seines are employed to fill plastic bags of various life forms and then dumped alo ng Ftflh AvMue. The latest Is the catching and maiming or killing of frog.s. Another week will ha~·e clltlngrd ou' vi the few aative environment.a in Corona de! Mar to a combination of unsupervised playgroun'd and a city dump. T BELlEVE THE only solution to cor· reel this ravage of Jasmine Glen is at the source of the trouble, which is the school and its .teachers who started this well· meaning but unfortunate program. The way to accomplish this would be to obtain the names of the schools and teachers (other than those already obtained) and include them in a letter to tht editor: or perhaps a meeting with these teachers and a tour of the area would indicate to them what ta·ck of responsibility in assignment.oi cah produce. D. AMBROSE ARMSTRONG P ral1e for Joint Wa 11n e To the Editor : I have taken & short retirement from the Chicago Police Department after 18 years of service to raise my four children here in Sou!hem California ..• I cannot help but wflte thiS letter to congratulate one of our finer citizens liv· Ing in Southern California, John (Duke) Wayne, After reading the article in Playboy and studying the loaded questions be was asked, and after studying the answers he gave to these questions, I feel lhat every flag-waving American should give this man a pat on the back ••• John Wayne, a true American. A MAN WHO not only in his motion pictures is a hero to many, but also a man who is not afraid to stand up on his hind legs' and shout to the heavens ... 1 am an American •.. I am against anyone wanting to overthrow this country by force -from within or from without.·· i\fay Goel bless this true American . NEAL GRANEY Lesion Front ~luslims To the· Editor : When ordering the invasion of Syria (62H40 A.D,) !'oluhammod's 11uccessor, Kaliph Abu Btkr, gave the following in- structions to the Arabs in military kirces: "Be just. Do not break faith .•. Do not kill children. old men or women ••• Do not cut down fruit trees. If you come across men in monasteries, leave them in peace." DESPITE THESE chivalrous C(ln· cessions to the enemy, the Muslim con. ciuesls continued successfully for the next two centuries, encompassing much of the then civilized world. from Spain and France to the borders of China. Perhaps the United States would have fared better in Vielnam and avoided disgraces like the U. Calley episode if heads of state and anned services had follov.·ed from a page of Muslim hiEOOry. ROLAND CUEVA ---- Frid a y. April 30, 1971 The editorial page of the Da lly Pilot s•k• io inform and slim. u/ate repder1 by prtseti ting thb 11ew.spaPer's opinions and com- me11tory o-n topics of interest and significance, by providi11g a forum for the expression of our re~ders' opin1on1, a11d by prese11011g tile diverse vfew- poinu of informed observtri and spokennen on topici of the day . Robert N. Weed. Publisher 1' 'I I I I / I II I I 7 I I ' I . -.. ' . (;osia -Mesa ED II ION YOC. M, NO. 103, :t SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA OS Three Arrested In Mesa Raid By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM DlllY ,.HM Ii.ff A clClak and dagger cue which police allfjle involved negotiatien for up to 1389,000 in narcotic1, a related bomb Ulfeat emptying nearby courtrooms and {ienta prowling the arta with guns drawn, finally ended early today in Costa Mesa. The biurr1 epl.!Ode left thrte IUSped.I Nixon Greets Leathernecks At Pendleton President Nixon"• jet touched down at El Toro Marine C.Orps Air Station lhortly after 11 a.m. today. Momeot.s after hi1 arrival in Air Force OOe the President and hil party boarded a i,;,llc:op1tt to whisk them to Camp P<!!dletim where be ,... •ocbednlod ... review 2,000 wailing Mar~ The Marines, (resh from Vietnam com- bat. spent the nJgbt sbininl up their br~ Ln anUcipalion of the CODU!lfOder--U\ chief's vi!it. . Glimpsed brieRy with the P~~1dent at Et Toro were his daughter Tric1a, wear- ing an aqua. floral-print suit and ber fie.nee Edward Finch Co.•· who sported 1 bright red and yellow tie. The President waved to a crowd of 150 with a gesture indicatin& he didn't have time to rtop and chal The Prt!ldent, hert for a planned long weekend al the Western White House. in San Clemente, presented the lilt Manne Division at camp Pendleton wlth the se- cond unit rommendalion it has received aince the division entered the Vietnam conflict five years ago. The group of Leathern.eek.• participating in today's ce:~~orues,. 1! the last contingent of the d1v1sion which will be disbanded -its troops absorbed into other units. Alt.hough the ce.remonie! were not plan- ned for lhe gei\eral public, scores ol civilian! attended. The entire eighth grade class of Marco For.iter Junior High School -students from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -were allowed to attend. A San Clemente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Romig who recently received t!le Silver Star for heroism unde"!' fin i!' Vietnam, carried the Presldenti~l U~ commendation streamer back to his urut. After the ceremonies al Pendleton, the President boarded a helicopter once more for the trip upcoast to La Casa Pacifica. Countian's Body Found in Wilds SAN BERNARDINO (UPI! -The de- composed body of an Orange County man believed to be from Wtstminster was recovered ln the San Bernardino Mountains today. including a professional race car driver from AJl.ahe.im arrested on 1 muJUtude of charges. Officert claim only a small amount of contraband w111 seii.ed at 2020 Walllce r Ave., to climax the cue originally In- itiated by the Federal B11rtau of Narcotics Enforcement, due te tht poten- tial scope involved. Tbe arrestees and charges against them include: -Robert M. Gtvonl, 24, of 3204 Sp~ naker St., Anaheim, conspiracy, plus transporatalion and sale of marijuana. -James V. Mamara, 25, of the Wallace Avenue address, conspiracy, transporta- tion and sale of marijuana, plus possession of an unlicensed firearm. -Talbot P. Simmo11, 25, a transient artist and musician, conspiracy and mak- ing a ·bomb threat. A search warrant allowing full entry to the Wallace Avenue ap1rtment where lb• alleged transact.ions were negotiated over a nine day period wu iuued Thursday nigbt. C:OSta Mesa Police Dettctivt Sgt. Jobn Regan.said today be is uncertain wbal - if anything more -wu found. Loc'1 lnv..U.,.IJ ... 'I!•'" ~ ~1 fed8'ol ...... 'llilliodi1 -and told the alleged deal wu atablished and the lta&e set for 1 raid. Briefed at headquanen. s,t. Regan, plus investiJators Norm Kutcb, Bob Len- nert ind Doo Casey went into the area, along with five federal agents from Los Angeles. Others were in the area, prompting one frightened woman to report a su1picious circunuta.nces incident involvlng three armed · men clalmlng to be federal agents. Police reports allege the deal ilvolvl.nl (See BIZARRE, Paae II Last Rites .Set For Costa Mesa Baptist Pastor Funeral service.!! for a Costa Mesa Bap- list minister who once was a gun-toting saloon keeper will be held It a.m. Satur- day in Harbor Trinity Baptist Church. Rev. William E. Cleveland, 13. of 1925 Anaheim St .. Costa Mesa, who S5 years ago gave away his Memphis bar to beeome "a vessel in God's hand s" died Tuesday at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Born in Cleburn, Tex. in 1877, Rev. Cleveland came tu California in 1923 and in 1931 est.ablllhed the Neighborhood Church at the corner of Wilson Street and Newport Boulevard. He also built two churches in Monrovia, one in Ramona and olle in Oregon. He was active ln the Harbor Trinity Baptist Churc.b until bis death. He ill survived by a daushter, Mrs. Margaret Madison cf Hawaii ; four grandchildren and eigtit g r e 1 t - grandchildren. Burial will be In Harbor Rest Memorial Park, Costa Mesa. Bell Broadway Mortuary, 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa . is in chivge of funer1l arrangements. LEFT IN THE HOT SEAT Chairman Pro Tem Smith 'Lady in Black' Robs Mesa Inn Following Stay 4 Wr<0mplexioned l.1dy in black wilh a Qrome-plated .4f,Cll.i.blr. revolter rob- bed a cistr'M-m.N!'.t1214 Tbundly and today iJ btlieVed to be the ume one wanted in sevual aret cities. She ap~y checked Into lbe Rodeway IM, lfOO Palisades Road earlier and abruptly left after forcing night clerk Jack Miller to hand over the money. "She was certainly cool about it all," Miller said after the inciden~. The woman slipped out the door - followed at a cautious distance by the •lctim -wbo lost her in the dark courtyard! and corridon of the compleL One poll~ offtcial ba1 nicknamed the IU8Pfld in about a dozen holdups -most of them late last year -1.orro, because of ber preference for black clothing. Officer Steven Nub Wd the mystery woman is believed to have stayed in Room 105. where a lipstick·smeared cigarette butt and tWG bairs from a pillow were taken as evidence. The woman 1lso uses a variety of disguises and switches wigs , bu t generally sticks to ber long-barrelled western style revolver, police said. She has hit several motels in Anaheim. La Habra. Santa Ana and other cities, plus liquor store1 in El Toro, Santa Ana, and eve n a Costa Mesa drive-in theater. ''She was very direct about what 1he wanted," said lbe lady bandit's latest vie· tim . "And I was very direct too. I gave it to b"er and she left." Miller said he thought be kept cool until tbt impact of the incident struck him. ''I walked to the fbone: to call the police and I re.alized was shaking and bad Jolt my voice." 1,300 Jews Leave MOSCOW (UP!) .-The flow of Soviet Jews to Iariel burgeoned to a record 1.300 lhia month derpite the Soviet Union's angry anU·Zklnist campaign, diplomatic IOW'Cft uid today. The llOUf'Cell said the April exodus brought to 2.500 the total number of Jews allowed to leave for Israel thii year. ow 'THIS IS HORRIBLE' County Planner Foley DAILY PILOT Siert ......... : VOICES BIZARRE PLEA Ho•pltal Attorney Collins New Air Quality Controls May Change .Life in U.S. WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Tiie ,..,,,,,_ ment --toda y final "'""4lllJ 1ta'naardl tMt are likely ·to force ·abarp limits on drivl.Qf in cities and put U&bt reslrictiorui: on emiaions by every in- dustrial facility in the nation. Administrator William E. Rockelshaus of the EnvironmentaJ Protection Agency (EPA), wbich issued the standards, aaid they must be implemented by July 1. 1975, and would change aome aspects ol Connally Slates Lockheed Funds Decision Soon HOUSTON (UPI) - T rt 11 u ry Secretary John B. Connally aald Thur1- day he will decide within 10 · d • y s whether to ask President Nixon to loan S250 million to Lockheed Aircraft Co. to aave the nation's biggeat defense con· tractor. CoMally told an appropriations sub- committee in Wa!hington earlier this week such a loan Is essential to keep Lockheed from &oing bankrupt. He nid the firm L! in serious trouble because of high cost overruns on the CSA cargGo transport plane It ls building for the Air force. "I wlll make a recommendation one way or the other in the next few days,'" C.Onnally Ila.id at 1 news conference in hil hometown. "I should say within the next 10 days." - The former Texas governor and only Democrat in Nixon'• cabinet ae.id he sup- ports the three economic aims of the ad· ministration: -To use federal resources to stimulate the economy. -To create job opportunities and reduce unemployment. -To continue the fight against inflation while accompU&bln& the first two goals. Americana' dally llvei. . ""• .... IOI lo ......... ._ Ill trwftlJIOl!tlUol aystems,1ift elosin& hour1. an4 wbm wt 10 to work," Ruci.elsbaus told a newa conference. He said big ciUes woold bave i. p-o- mote .. rapid transit, car poollnf and staggered work hour1" ln order lo reduce automobile eml.s.sions enough to comply with the standards. "It may even require the clOl!lin& of. some 1eetlon1 at these. cities to ~uto traf- fic at certain hours.'' Ruckelshaus said. The standards establish limits for siz major alr pollutanta -su1phur oxides, part!culate matter, carbon· mooozide, photochemical 01idenl.I, n.itrogea oxldes and hydrocarbons. Ruckelsh!us said the stanclardl for wlphur oxides and particulates W'OUld force mauive changes in fuels used by electrlc generating plants aRd other ilt· dUlities, wlth a possibility the 1witch mlght fon::e "110me increase ln electric bills." High sulphur coal would be largely NI· ed out in 90me cities, he aaid For e1ample, he said , "We estimate that Lo bring air pollution levels down to the standard for particulates in New York wW require .a 300 percent increase in natural gas unge in the city." National Guard Vehicles Burned In San Jose SAN JOSE (AP) -Several National Guard vehlcles in San Jose were burned by 1rsonlst.s today and ln Southern California two mon! bomb blasts hit the Los Angeles area Thursday night, one at a Bank of America and another in a aupermarket contalnlng 15 shoppers and employes. No injuries were reported. Authorities identified the victim 111 Donald M. Alexander, 43. No local ad- dress was 1vailable. The body was found 11 tht bottom of a fro.foot ravine. Officers believe the victim lost control o( his station wago11 and plunged off tht cliff near Highway 18 in the Crest_forest area. Teacher Pay Impasse Ends The bank bombing was the 17th al branches of the Bank of America, the world'• largest. since February and the third this week. Police and fire officials at Sin Jose aald arsonists pulled gasoline tank plugs and Ignited at least six vehicles of the type used for carrying personnel. Damage was set at about $3,001. Police Issued an alert for 1 1951 model cu con- taining aevtr•I persons seen Jeavinl tbe area. Streets' Name Change OK'd Proposed street name changes of twn main Newport Beach arteries were approved by lM plaiinlng eomm.Wiol Thur.day Ncht. The name o( Tustin Avenue northerly of lrvine Avenue ind Acacia Street. between Tustin ind Palls11des Road w1s cha11ged to Irvine Avenur. The change establishes the name Irvine Avenue for the conlinuou.1 thoroughf1re bet•et.n Clift Drive and P11lt.ade.s Road. Newport-Mesa Group Vows to Negotiate Solution By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. o.llY PWM ... H 1 .. a teachtt«bool board s a I a r y negot.iatfona lmp1111t ended loday with the vow of the Newport..Mesa Education Aaoocl1tklo to moot ond confer "momlne. noon or night" with tht district. Bart Hake, ·~iecut.ive 1ttritary of the 751knember N-MEA. declared the Im- passe at an end •nd aaid teachers' representatives "stand re1dy to meet and confer to dlscua any article" of thfllr contriict proposals. Tht dlatrlct had not recognized the ex· lstenct or the impam called aaalnst it nearly three weeb ago by the Represen- laUve Council of N·MEA, 1aid Ray Schnlerer, buslneu man1rer for the Newport·M"' Unified School Dl!trlct and tbe acbool board's representative to the Ctrtificated Employe'1 Council. He noted that the N·MEA ....Wd have to take the Impasse matter to Superior CoOrt ror 1 ruling on whether or not an 1-in negotJatl<m eclilolly eilated. M a practical matter. the teJcber associltion leadership rultzu that aeek- inR 1 court ruling would take time, Hake IBid. "Further, 1 court rulinR and the fa ct finding panel that wou)d follow would prohibit adding any furt~er Input of teacher•' views to oe&otiltiona. • he said. "Time is on the ecbool board's side with the end or the ICbool JUl' lJ>' preaching," Hake conUnued. "We feel it ~ In the lntertSll of the cfiltricl lo deal willl the baua candidly ond lmmedlate11 ., that leachlnf atalf ttaeUom to boml propooala can be Included." 5chnler<r aald under fenna of the WU.. loll Act -the llate law iomnfDr teac:hlr -achoo! board relaUons -the teacher represenlativts to the negotiating council must call the nexl meeting. . Sioct the teachers presented their con- tract propoulJ Feb. 1, the council baa: met 14 times for a total or 50 houn, Schnierer said. The Ji.st meetina: was Aprtl 13, the day afttr Ole teacher Hooclltlon leadenbjp clecllred In Jm. P""· J' In lbe community of Mill Valley, 1aoa the Golden Gate strait from San FrlD- claco. pollC< armted a high achoo! aophomore Thunday for Jnvettigation tn the bomblnp of two Bank of America branches and • high !Cbool mt !OOl!I. Police held Bruce Paul Lollmann, II, I lludent at Temalpall Hlil> School, for r.. vutlgatlop o( lntent to lnjuro with destructive devices. They nld his arrest stemmed from Tuf!sday'g bombing cf a boys' rest rOom at the school, the March 23 bomblnr of the b1nk'1 Samallto branch and the April 23 -bing of th< branch ln MUI Valley. Offlcialr em- p bas I zed that there was no iD- dlcatlon that the youth had MY COD· nectkm with any other in the reoent •ni• ol bombiftp In CaUfornla. N.Y. Stoeks s 2 Planners Flee .Scene Of Meeting By JACK BROBAClt Of .. Dellr Pi• Sit" Orange County plllllllnc comml.oidonm Thursday derlled a permit for Saddlebact HD<pital in Laguna Hills after al> 2 lo J tie votes and three boun of. aqry debatt that ended when two commis&iooers Oed the ...,, .. CommJulon Cbalrmon W-But-loriield and hll c:ollegue Fred Jelf.,._ ·-during ,..,.,.. A throng estimated at llXI pmcma booted, clapped ...i atlmd during the three hours. Veteran county political observers Aid ft was the most lnettdible chain of eveirts ever seen at a public meeting in the county seat. After commis81oners Butterfield and Jefferson bolled from the session, the re- maining two county plannen voted to deny the Saddleback Hospital permlL They said they did ao in order to aet the entire issue aquarely before the <>rana;e County Board of Supervlsora. When the meeting finally adjourmd. Chairman pro tern Howard It Smith Of HUntlngtoo Beach ordered the taped transcript on the session impounded la the She-riff's Offlce overrll&bt for llfe keepin1. A member of the Orange County Crand Jury, -~·t ........ the --'•• -pl~dlnJ;'~ ~ fir a copy of the tn.necripl D~. when it wa1 all fNf!r ~ '"lbll bu ntm' .b.oppened beforo ID tt.i plaru!lnl collllllfillc>c'1 history. I can lm- aglne bow thll wllI ·be Jnterpnted when the publk nada •bout Jt tomorrow.•• The bulc Wue was that the Lutbera11 Hospital Soclety want& to build a hosJ>iiat ln Laguna .Hills but to.do ,IO it mU1t hM'e •. cooditional use permit from the pJ.an. rung commiufon. Ita application IDT that permit has 'been delayed for teveral weeb by actJon ot. three commla.iooen: -Arnold Forde. now in Europe: ButterfJeld and JeUenon. The permit mull be obtained by May 11 or the boopltal'a federal grant <Ii fl.I million HiD·Harris Act fuAdl may bt lost The community :Is nlsing a similar amount In matdlJnii funcll to build the facffity. Bulterfield, · an 1ppolnlee of Flral Dlstrlct Supervisor Bobet! Battbi or - la Ana, ..t the lone for the burin( by calling the quelllfon "llbnply 1 real estate matter, one of economics." He and Jeffmon were to maintain that attitude through U. followln& lncredlble series of events. In th• next three hours, the fout members commi!Slon beard every poss!· ble reservation about j1'antlng the permit removed: -Deputy County Coume! Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach told them that they were not to rule Oil the need for a hmpital but only on general compaUbillty: grounds. -Road d<pertment eng1neer Murny Storm told them that there would be no traffic problemr crtated by the hospital. (This was one d P'orde's bigh]y publicis- ed "nagging doubU.") -DeWitt Bitbop, administrator of the Southern Californle ll<glonal Office of Comprehensive Health Planning told JS« H<lm'ITAL HASSLE, P ... ll Oruge We•t•er Hazy sunshine will · creet wee.ir.. end beaclmlkr, with Utile change Jn coutal temperatures. Mercury readings a111 pegged in the low· er 60s locally and up to A further inland. INSIDE TODAY "' The UCl T-and Go.,,. mu.sic group ii bua11 with. plan.a for Ill alli<Unt ond /O<lA!tr iprb1g concert. DetaU1 and. pt<> fflrts. ere m iodav'" W t~kmd.tr, ... ""' 11 C.H..,,. 1 (fMdl)llf "" t Cltfflfl..il ..... '""'"' n (r.ftwtN zt c..i. Ntlkft t '""',.., ,... . •1•tflff .... , -" AIWI L..... 1) Mt1 .. l! I -..... • .. ,.. f DA.ILY PILOT c .Coast A loophole ln elt.elioo requiremenls for Cout Cwnmunily Collt&e D l 1 tr i ct tnmteet couJd hlvt cOlt tupaytn $10,000 for 1 special electlon, county achoo! oCflcials have revealed. • The problem stems from a longstan- ~in& "genUeman's agreement'' within the Junior ~neie district that candidates for its governing board must reside in &he portion of the district they expect to represent. Apparently, that requirement, although observea for the 25 years in the district bu been in en.teoce, has never been put Frld<y, April JO, 1971 Avoids Jn writing. Robert Matthew, dlreclor of ..i. minlatrative auvioea for tM Or&ftl'I County Department of Ed11<alloli, uld the hllcb came to ttiht durtq thll ll100th'• -boud eloct-. The issue ...,. whee the mldence listed by one candklate, William Unger, an Orange Cout CoUege atudent, was questioned. Under the di.strict'• unwritten trustee area setup, Unger was thought to be challenging incumbent Robert Humphreys for the Costa Mesa seat on the board. Costly Unger listed an addms In College Park near the OCC campus 1n Coal• Mesa. JL wfa laLtr determined that Unger, had mtftd to Nowpofl Boodl. But the Ne.wpll't Btacb aeat OD the board WU DOt up tb1J year. 'Jba\ was the baa1a for the question about Unger's midenOe -It ap- peared he had disqualified himself by moving. No so, said the county Department of Ecuation's Mallhew. He aa.id the onJy requiremen ts a coaJt CQUege candidate must satisfy under the slate Education Code are that he be a ttsldent of the diltrict and a registered voter. Under thoae crlttrla, thin, all can- didates attu.ally were running at Iarce wltb the &op three vote-getters winning e.lec::Uoo to the three open seats. AJ the election \urned out, all three in- cumbeal.I won by lar1e majorities. All three represent different parts of the distrlct set up under the old unwritten agreement. But Mathew offered this hypothetical case: lf Unger had won, unseating Huzn. ' phreys', hir win \lo'ould have been ltlfl. Bu~ tbe Colla ,.,_ ... •!lomey ~ .;u -filed • lupaye(1 9Jlt ~ tJnier for allqoclly milrepnotnllnc bli address. , U the court ruled b' Humphreys, lo tf· feet negating Unger's election, a special election would be neces~ary to fill the vacancy. 'Ibe cost of such an election wot.lld run about $10,000, Matthew estimated.' OOicials ·of the communily . l .. Ue1e district are at 1 loss lo explain 'by tbe election procedure they have follqwed all Vote these year'! '11.'aS never (ormaliztd. Meapwhile, Humphrey• ii ~~ to ask hll ~ ... 00 the board .. ilojUlt thalu _, u ~ble. The trustee . diitrict arrangement. which is legal provided it ill adopted formally by a school board. has been us- ed in ·the coast district IS I meaJll• of guaranteeing representaUon on the board from· vartoos·aectloms of the districli- The coast district covers Seal Bt1Ch. \Yestmlnster, Huntington Be•cb. Foun- tain Valley, Costa Mesa and 'Ne.'iflJ(ll"t Beach. ' Frotta Page 1 Two Senten~es No lntinaidation HOSPITAL HASSLE ... Nixon to Stick them that ~ action of a local ad hoc health planning committee Tuesd>y had no bearing on the decision; th.It the regional agency had long ago approved Saddleback Hospital. De.spite . these assurances that there were no logical or legal roadbloeb to granting the use permit, the following 1i1 split votes tGok place: The lint motion by Smith was for ap- proval. Sm.Uh and Commissioner Dan Foley voted "yes'' while Butterfield and Je!fersoo voted "no". The second mouoo by Butterfield was to deDJ The result wu another 2 to 2 deadlock. Foley then reversed the field and mov· ed for denial, "to get the matter ~ore I.he Board of Supervisors." Jefferaon and Butterfaekl ... preWctabJy rev er a e • them .. 1 ... Ind •at.d qaimt the - Foley ~ movocl for ~pie denial. The ...Wt .,.. the lame. ' . ' ' . Foley then madt another attempt \0 reoolve the IJSl>e by moving to ' rdtr the matter to the 1upervtacn Without co~ ment. The same 2 to 2 vote-followed. Butterf.ield then moved to adjourn the meeting. 'l'bl.s failed by the same lie vote. At this point, BuUerfle1d deelarocl a 10- mlnulA! ~." H• aM Jef!eraon dllap-· peared !or the nlgb_t. Smith, adlng as thalrman pro tem, callocl the -ilng to order alter about a 2o.mlnulA! clelay. · ugat quistloos tlltn jumped up to - lront the two· "'1Nlnlni commlastonen. Could two of the 'live c:ommlalonen act on the permft If the meeting bad not * * * Hospital: Gfoup · Pla't for "/Jopr;d Vote Explained Samuel 'nbbtl!, president of the Lutheran Hpspltal Society, said today Jt was at the request of lhe Society that ·at- tol'1l0y Michael Collin> IOIJlht Plamllng Commiuloa d~t of a land use permit for the proposed Saddleback HospiW in order to take the cue to the Board of &>pervi!oli. The Lutheran Hospital Society, hued in Los Angeles, is the intended builder of tbe new Laguna 1:Wls facility . "It was obviow: to u.. that the Planning Commission, after three aessiorui, was.a'\ going to act,:' said TibbitU. "We felt we had to movt the request out of com- ~. ·on Qd. get It before tbe aupervisor1 we have time.Um.its to meet." Ti itts codfinned that the Sl.6 mlllion allocation ol Hill-Harris funds for con- struction ol the hospital would be lost if pennits \\'ere not !eeured by May 18. ''It see.ms ridiculous that Orange Coun- ty should lose this money," Tibbilll!I SI.kl. ••0ur plans are complete and we art ready to go as soon a.s we gel lbe land use permit" OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OU.NG!: COAST P'UILlSHlttG COMP'AHY Ro8ert N. WeeJ Prn;ci.,,1 ond PvOI,.,_. J•c\: It Curley VICI '""'""' Md G-•I M....- Thorn•t koowil f:cmor Tho'"'' >.. Murph!"' MIMf\nt lllttw Ch•1lt1 H. loo1 Rich1rd P, .Nill AwlJt•"· M1n101no 1:1111era Co•tc. M .. e Otfk• ] JO Wt1f l•y Street Mtili119 Adcl,..J1: P.O. lolf 15110, '2&2' Orfller Offk• H-1 9~: ;m:i N""11Dfl lou~ lMi\IN 9Mdl! :l'1:: l"Orl"t A..,._ Mlt"ITlnfl0.1 .. tt;fl: 11.r.; a..c.11 '°""".,,, S.n c1-te: Jiii NW'lll I.I Ceminll AMt OAIL., PILOT, \otl lll ..... \di k ~ .i. N~ Ill pulllbh<d ll11t, U C.WT S- tltY _, .... rlM ld11 ..... to-U 9Vfll le1(1\,, .......... : 9Ndl. C.,U -1, ....... 11"'1M !.UCl'I. .. _1•111 \/t ile,., "'" ,...._ .. , c .. ltlfWW e"' 5,<1<1111rlndl,, '""" --r"llMI dlllM. ~ .... eirtMlfll """' • ti .lJO lVUl l1r StrMl, C..tt ""'""· f_,.._ C7141 641-4J21 Cl•.mM A'"'1'W.. '41•1471 ~ltfll, 1f11. Or•• Of•I PuM ...... Ctof'ofJll'I' .......... '""""' u ......... , ... ((llMrlol fl'loltlft' ... tdvC'f't~·' ...... """' Ito r~ w"""1t ..-111 ,.,. '"IUitl! o: C#'fr'lll\I ''""""· S.C0.-.11 ''"' """"' Mlf OI N.....,..rt le~ ,.., c111•• ,_....,, c.i111n1111. 5111:1t1;r19t1to1 b1 nNltf ''·" 1M.11Nr1 &'/' man u .rs ..,._,,, 11•111111'' d(J!lll•llOl!t, s:.u -'"''· been lf'gally ad)oumed'! Could two col1lJDisaioners legally act m the matta' in IS much IS there bad been no call for a quorem 1 Attomeyt present dlaagreed on the is.sue and a G-minute receu wu caUed to .....,,,b the law books. Reusemblocl at 7 p.m., the attorneya said they had been unable io make a detenninaUon. ' Foley then agreed to the request of Saddleback H05pital attorney Michael Collins and moved lo deny the pennit. Smith agreed. C.Ollins u:plained that thia way, the issue might let before the supervisors ln as much as there wu clear indication that the commission oppoaed the permit, wbereu a vote by on1y two membe~ to approve might be subject to legal action by lbe qipoaition. 'Ibe controversy surfaced earlier UtiJ "'·eek when it was ~ported that Com- misslonw Forde, ~ appolntf.9 of s_.,i,ar llooald eupen o1 Newport lleldl. bad been tnotrumental In delayln( the appronl of the permit· for the Sall- dlebod< lloopltal. . ~ Bober!. E. Badham (R· Newport Buch) Was advlsed of the situa- tion and iftoVed 1nto fhe 'controversy with a promi!ed ·bearing befoN! the Assembly Comml!tee on U.allb. Lulberan Hospital Sociely leaders, who plan to buUd the nonprotlt facility in Laguna Hills, said further delay granting tile permit wou1d jecpardiie t b e hospitar1 Vital eliglblUty for the $1.6 million federal grant. Docurncnll!I on file In the county recorder's office 11how that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul F. Mar:z .re Ute princlpal ollldw In tile Viejo Capital Company whJCh purchaltd a 11te lut year in the Mission Viejo area for tbe privately fioanced Mission Community ""1>1tal. . • . IVlifiClplWC. I oY 1a;'oloo llolod 11 ooe of 2t pu1nerl In the Mllslon Viejo Medical Coqa,paoy whk:h 11 buUdlng the lrlissJoa borpttaL The balance are m01Uy -.. . -~ . . ,. ' 1C-. • Fordil nu been on •tour Of El.D'Ope ind the Sovie! ·Union wltb ca.pen but hu been 1ctviled of the uproar •nd 1a es· pected back this weekend. "Saddleback Hospital is planned to open nest yec with 150 beda and an ultimate · capacity of 509 bed.I. It has an AMOCiate rtlltionship with South Coast Communttg Hoopital Jn Soutb Laguna to Hold duplication of major and coatly'aenices. Mlasioo hospital ii slated to open tbil summer with l2S beds and 1111 ulUm1te upansion to 250 beds. Convict Gets Prison, Bride By TOM BARLEY Of ftlt DOiiy Plllt l!alf A SMILING Superior Court clerk sofUy bummed the wedding march. a woman spectator in the crowded courtroom dabbed her eyes with ber handker· chief and a beaming judge admitted it was the fint time be had sentenced 1 man twice in \he wne day. tt was Thursday, April 29, 1971. And it was the very unusual wedding day of Michael Joseph Wabb and Madge Arline Dunbar. Confetti and cake we.re a Jong \\'ay from Judge McMillan's thougbt.s a few minutes earlier as be a.entenced Walsh. 36, Anaheim, to five years to life for the armed robbery Jan. 22 of a cocktail lounge in that city. THE GRIM-FACED jurist bad jusl read• file which cootained Walsh·s reported comment that be would "kill a cop." The defendant tried very hard in a gun battle in wb.icb he held besieging officers out.aide his apartment for more than three hours. But that VrU tbrtt months ago and the judge relented long enough after sentencing to impose bis sceood sentence on Walsh in bis chamben aa the COD· vlcted gunman. wearing his wedding suit of Orange County jail denims, re- cited the ..... with Miss Dunbar. "Oby, Mike/' said the bailiff. ''tbat'a H. Let's go." Watab went back to the bolding tank, bis bride wmt bod< to the opartment Ibo llharu with a gir~ friend ond Judie McMillan wmt ~ to hi! crlmlml calendar. MICHAEL JOS6PB WalJh didn't get hll cop. But be got hll girl. Fr0tn Page l BIZARRE ... pro!essional racer Gavoni and Mamara, an elecrician, wa.s to have involved tw o pounds of cocaine worth $17 ,000 on the drug market. Federal agents: inside the residence about f p.m. wltb Gavonl and Mamara claimtd In supplemental reports that Simons arr'ved, boasting that he bad just forced evacuation el Harbor Judicial DIJtrtct Olurt. PoHce aaJd be waa in for a minor marl· Juana case involving possession of thrte cigarettes Thursday afternoon and bad the hearin1 conUnued. . "Apparently be didn't like the fudge,'1 Sgt. Regan remarked, saying authorities think Simorui simply walked te • J'M'.!arby telephone booth to make a tbreattnlng call. Tht complex was emptied of more than 50 persoos after a 3:57 p.m. bomb threat, but no. explosives were found. Schmitz Charges Bias in Reverse \VASKING1'0N (UPI) -Rep. John G. Schmitz, (R-Calif.), called Thursday for an end to what he called "reverse dis- crimination" under government con- tracu. S c h m i t z in1roduoed legislation to amend the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to permit IO\'ernment cootndors to hire wOrt«~ ~ .. on thf .~ or, abillt;J" without fear of vlolatlnl the 1aw. - "The 1964 Ovil Ri&tJts Act supposedly mad~ i~ ¥legal to ~le on the bi!iJ n nee, color, reUglon ~ hational origin, but federal bureaucrats im- mediately interpreted this to mean they should give preference lo minorities." he said. Contractors, he said, are "pressured'' to hire mJnorilts on a pre.ferentia1 basis. To Viet Policy WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said Thursday night he would not be "intimidated" by ant I war demonstrators in Washingt~n but would stick to his policy of attemgting to win a lasting peace in Indochina. Jn a televised news conference. the President said a more rapid withdrawal from Vietnam advocated by his critics would lead to a "very dangerous silua· lion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers of war in the fut11tt." He said demonstratoB who break the law will be prosecuted. Ni.Ion alao bid to further' improve American relations with Communist China, saying "I hope and I expect to vi.sit mainland China .•. at some time in my life, in some capacity." Related story page 4. Referring to antiwar demonstrations in Washington for almost two weeks, Nixon said he wanted to correct an impression from television ac co unt s that '·Washington is somewhat in a state of siege." "The Congress is oot intimidated.'' Ni.Ion said. ''The President is not in- timidated. This government is gW!g to go forward.'' But be said he did "nol want to leave the impression that those who came to demonstrate were no\ listeDed to." Nixon repeated that he would oot set a definite date for the withdrawal of all American forces from South Vietnam. He said t\ wouJd have the effect of saying to the North Viet1amese, "we quit, regard. Jes sof what you do." The setting of a definite date. Nixon said, would destroy any incentive the other side might have to negotiate and would destroy the American bargaining position on prisoners of war. ''Therefore. the setting of a date is not somethlng that's in our interest; it's only in the enemy'!! interest," NiJ:on said. To get its POWs back, Ni.Ion sald, the United States will keep a residual force in Vietnam "no matter how long it takes.'' He repeated tbat the other condition for a tot.al U.S. withdrawal is tbe aQility of the South Vietnamese regim~ to defend itself. Nixon also : -Said he intervened .in the case of Lt. \Villiam L. Calley because there was "great concem" across the ODUnlry. He said his action announcillg he would have the final review of the office.r's conviction or murdering civilians at My Lai had ''cooled down" the public outay. -Promised his administration would,. comply with the Supreme Court dec.Woa.. that busing and other means would be used to eliminate segreption in sootber1 ' schools. Related story page 4. -Asked if he '\\'ouJd think about naming a court of inquiry to see \lo'ho got t.bo • United Stales into the Indochina war,. said he was ''not going to cast the blame · for the war in Vietnam on either of my~ predecessors."' • -Said the possibility at this time or nev.• operations in Indochina comparable. to the invasions of Cambodla and Laos . v.'as ··quite remote" and that when the u .S. troop lev'el reaches IM,tm Dec. l iL would be "completely remote.'' Tricia Invitations To Go Out May 10 WASllJNGTON (UPI) -The While House says nearly 400 invitation! for the· v:edding of Tricia Ni.Ion aod Edward Finch Cox wiU be mailed out May 10. The event is being termed a family voedding, with relatively few members of. Washington officialdom on the guest list. Tl was expected that cabinet members,. some members of the diplomatic corps., and family friends in Congress would be~ invited. Federal agents, rneanwhile1 charged they were given a sample gram or hashish -the potent refined form of m1rijua.D1 -and told a quarter ten could be bought for 1750 per pound. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! I A Great Selection ef Quality Upholstered Furniture 1+ • Fantastic S..lnpl Choose from these qu1lity n1me1. Sherrlll. M«t• Canon, Landmark, Hlbrltan, Ncrrio.al, Jamestown West, many others. SAVINGS UP TO 20% Newport l1<1clt SHIUILL LOVE SEAT & SOFA ~~~~~~ .. ~.~ ·~~~!'1~t5AL! $469 LOYO loot-0'1• $ .. f .............•... SALi $319 MARCOE CARSON SOFA ~" .. ~ ~-,;':~ .. ~~~~.~~-·--···--SALi $499 MARCOI CAISON SOFA ~~1:;. ';:' =t ~~~.:~~~ .. ~~~y~ALE $399 MARCOE CARSON t;)UILTtD SOFA ~~rllsh;; ~~ .. ~~'.~~-··-·-···-···-SALE $499 MARCOE CARSON HIRCULON SOFA ::;~ .. ~~1'.':: _______ ,_ SALi $439 SHIRRIU SOFA ==~~ ~~-~~~~~~ .. :~1~. $479 MAICOI CARSON L0¥1 SEAT ~:.~~;~;·~ .. ~~-···~--·~·--· .. SAL! $259 MARCOI CAISON CNAllS h• ••rm, llrewn tentl. $169 .... $215 ................. ·---·-··· SALi IA. LogulM leach SOFA INutlful velvet 111f.1. a ... $125 ·-·······-····-· ··········-·········-··· SALE SHERRILL SOFA Aqu• P'lnt In a tradltlcm1I style. Reg. $579 •.............. _ .......................... SALi SHERRILL SOFA Lovely, crucent 11'11pe In avocado ¥11wet. lteg. $4)t -.......... _ --··············-··-···-SALE SHERRILL CONTEMPORARY ltylelll In a nlc• stripe. ... $SSt ·······-····-············-·----·-SALE MARGI CARSON LOUNGE CHAIR In fMcL R99. $J.Ot -·-·--····· .. ·········-··--·--· SAL! SHERRILL SWIVEL ROCKER '" 9reen Hen;ul•n. Re9. SW .. ····-···-·-·--··--··········· SALE NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTll 9 P.M. DEALERS POR: HENREDON -DREXEC -HERITAGE NIW'°IT STOii OPIN PllDAY 'TIL. 9 $625 $505 $545 $475 $209 $215 Profntlon1f Interior 0.1l9Mt1 Avall1btt -AID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Cooot Hwy. Flipping for Scholars NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W01tclllf Dr., 642·20SO OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Phono: 494-6SS1 INTERIORS Al Di.Ion and Joyce Wood of Newporl·Mesa Chapter, California School Employes As.111ociation, practice for CSEA·sponsored pancake break· fast from 7 a.m, to 11 a.m. Saturday at Estancia liigh School in Costa Mesa. A $1 ticket buys breakfast and benefl1$ the CSEA scholarship fund. Non-teach ing employes of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District award scholarships lo two district ,raduates each year. • f-· 1 ... -.. . . . Blast 'Witness ' ~ Flown to S eattle UPI T....,._,_ Delr e•• Wed s Barbara Jane Mackle, the Miami heiress \\'ho was kidnaped and bur· ied alive in a ply"'·ood box for more than three days in 1968, married her longtime boyfriend S t e w a r t Woodward in a quiet Philadelphia ceremony Thursday. SEATILE, Wuh. (UPI) - Ltslle B a t. o n , lt-year-old blonde from a well·U>-do California fami ly, arrived here Thursday night to appear before a federal Kflnd jury 11 a malerial witness in the l\tareh 1 bombinc cf the U.S. Capitol. Although waillna: nev.•smen t.-oold not confinn she had been "''hisked off the United Air Unts flight v.·hieh arrived here late Thursday night, several passenger!'! said they had i1ttn her aboard. She is the fiMit person 1r· rested in connection wil.h the t~losion which caused nearly '200.000 damage in a Senate wing. No one wu injured. The government implied durin& court buring!ll that lhe knew far more about the bom- bing than simply the "person- al k110Wledge" of it that wa! mentioned in an affidavit for htr arrest. She '\\-'as arrested Tuesday night by FBI agents ·on a war· rant she had knowled1e of the persons responsible for the bla.st. Although her lawyers fought ta keep her from leaving W1Shington, the way was cleared for her t ra nsfer Thursday by a decillion of a U.S. Court of Appeals. Two judges of the court heard a challenge of her 1r· rest and detention under $100,000 bond then dismi!Sed her lawyer's protesUI that she was illegally 11rrested and being held under exceMlvely high bond. The court, as well as U.S. District Judge J ohn J . Sirica the day befort. apparently ac· cepted the govemment'll argu. ment that Miss Bacon might CHA.Ki m .... ., ....... ,1,.rl Ma1ttt O•tt• flee rather than 10 volunlarily to Statue. One ol eJ1ht chllctr.n from an Atherton , California family. Ml11 Bacon hu been. living in an antiwar commune i n northwest Waahln(ton for some months. Pot ·war' Se t U.S. to Fight Wild Weed WASIU NGTON (AP) -The Ni.Ion administration plaM a ne\lt' war thL! aummer on marijllana 1rowin1 wild In farm fields 111d hedge rows across 10 atate1, moatly in the mldweat. The proiram will use '85,000 allocated by the J u 1 tic e Department to the A1rteulture Land Based In History TRENTON, N.J. (U PI) The last recorded owner or rour acres or land the 1talt or New Jersey needs f o r Interstate 295 w1s J05epb Bonaparte, cider brother or French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. So the state Thursday filed two ronde mnation ll u its against the "helr1" of Joseph Bonaparte, aaking that three rommissioners be appointed to fix compensation for Joeeph's heirs, if any can be found . Joseph was King of Na ples and Spain while his brother reigned over France and mo1t or Europe. Department. Grants "''ill be turned ever to fanners to Mlp pay costs of eradicatina: the il- legal plants. Agriculture Department of· flcials acknowltdfed existenee of the plan Thur!llday only after repeated questions by a reporter. 'Ibere had been n• public announcement. A spokesman llaid the cam· paign has tentatively been named WHEP. whleh stand! for the Wild Hemp Elimina· tion Program. States on the WHEP list are Illinois, Iowa, I 11dla n 1, Kansas, Kentueky. Michisan, Minnesota , Missouri, South Dakota and Wi.scon!.ln. Initially, $46.000 will be allocated to the states for eliminating an e 1 t l m a t e d 22,<W acres of marijuana in certain counties, still unan· nounad. The remainder will be spent "on the basL! of need" as the season pro· gresses, the spoke11man said. The department said the season for effeetive control is from Ma y 15 to July 15. Officials said most or the total budget, some $68 ,000, will be handled by the Agricullur 11il Stabilization and Conservation Service. tM&l•l tTI l11y art4if t•rt111 e 11114•11• ••· r.•uRh 1w1ll1All• • Up ._ 12 J11•1ttll1 •• ,.y. Hl llOl IHOPPtN• CINnlt 2Jff MMer 111'4. HUHTIN•TON CIHTll IM&llli Wl..-r M•11tt ...... 11a..c.lrl ''2·1101 O"N MON .. THUi.i., & Pl l. 'TIL t P.Y. C..N ..... Ml--t411 Frld,y, April JO, 1971 DAILY P'llOl' 5 Midnight DeaClllne Court Backs Train Takeove r WASHlNGTON {UPI) -The National Association of were inadequate and not in U.S. Olatrfot Judge Howard Rallro4d Passengers abio ••k-compUance with lnterstlte COrcoran refused tod1y to ed for a dela y on the srounds Commerce C om m i 1 s Io n DOES MAMA WEAR HOT PANTS? order a dt11y Jn the acbedu1td O!at the railroad11 had nol re;ulat.ions. takeover at midnl;ht of most follcwtd proper procedure re-On Clpltal HJll Senate TitT"k Mot :i,., D•y of the nation's r a i Ir o ad quiring a 30-day public notice Democratic leader Mike passenger service by a they would d I s c o n t I n u e Mansfield threatened ta try by J ~ tnl\A semipublic corporation. passenger servi ce after sign-tea:l11laUon to prevent tbe Railroad unions and a con-ing cootracUI with AMTRAK. takeaver, but there wu no IUtne.r lobbyin1 group made But the main suit was the chance for full oonlttllaiontl\!~W!!_,~~1";;,,_;;;;";'!!'!!'444~~ immediate plans to appeal the ane filed by rail labor unions, action becaltle I.he House wu N...,.,.. 1" declllion in a Jut minute effort who charged that I a bo r not ln 11w1on today. lo prevent the corporation -SecrtU:ry James D. Hodgson's The Senale Commerce Com-CHECK THI DAILY PILOT c:alltd AMTRAK -from im· order atipulaling required pro-mltttt refused Thursday to IYEIY DAY FOi plementing iUI plan to drop 1n1 tections for laid-off or httd Mansfield's request for ALL CUllENT of the nation'1 intercity 285 otherwise displaced employe1 actk>n. MAlllT INFOIMATt9N ~::;:;'. traina b<ginrung:ir---;;;;;i;--~l~l:::i-A-§~1~-=~-==~;;;;;-~~~;~~~£~ The uniorui hid charged that DAY the labor protection provlsions of the AMTRAK contract with participating railroads were :~~': .. ~!ipwo~d .;'~ CAMERA SPECIAL! 15,000 rail workers, some of whom they uld cou1d be eut off without a ctnt ol severance pay. SATURDAY ONLY • MAY 1st More Added To Jobless G ties List Mamiya/Sekor-Vivitar SLR Outfit WASHINGTON (UPI) The Labor De partment reports nelll'ly one-third of the naUon'1 major cities are on Its unemployment" list meaning "substantial unemployment" list meaning at least 6 percent o{ the work force is jobless. The department has added liartford, Conn., Ne wark , N.J .. and Charleston, W. Va . It dropped Ne w Orleans, Jeav. ing the number of citie1 with 1erlous unemployment at 52. There were 25 c:ities added to the list of small labor mitrkets with work problems, bringing that total to 687. Assistant Labor Secrel1ry Malcolm R. L<lvell Jr. in an- nouncing the changes Thur1-- day llaid the 52 major citie!ll on the list wu the highest number since May, 1962, and represent more than oDe third or the 150 metropolitaa tabor marketa in the nation. There were l l on the list tn 1170 and six whtn President Nixon took office in January, 11169. THE BEST / Check This for VALUE e 500 TL camera e 1TL Spot t.1:1!terln1 • Fully Interc:han&t- able Lens e Fttt~ Even-ead.y CU• e 1 Year \Va rranty I PLUS! I • Vivll.a.r 135 mm P.S. Teli!photl'I Lens I PLUS! • Vlvltar 2x Telect'>nverter (Douhll!s P'C'!C&l Un1lh ot Lens} Ute Penn ey's Ley Awey I All This For ONLY! U1e Ye ur Pe nn ey's Chert• lt••d•r1h lp potl1 pro•• "P•a• 1111h" i1 '"' of tho worlf1'1 Moat popular c:oMic 1trlp1. Road If 4'1 rly 1.., th, DAILY PILOT, 24 FASHIO N ISLAN D e NEWPORT CENTER ONLY I OUTDOOR CARNIVAL REPEAT OF A COMPLOE SELLOUT! , .. PACK MANY VARIOIES AVAILABLE SATURDAY & SUNDAY e MAY 1st & 2ncl Bar-B·Q DEMO 1scro oFF UNPAINTED MEXICAN POTTERY by ''The Olcl Crall'' SAT. ONLY, MAY ht GARDEN CENTER FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport l eech c I • t BARV ·PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Helicopter Issue A' useful tooL for.law enlor~ent thal helps cut crime and keeps our streets safe? . . Or a pesky, noisy, overly·expeoslve toy·.for a police department? · , P9llce helicopters In Costa Mesa and Newport Be:acb are subjec,ted at tim~s to one of .tbese two polar·· lte~ views. Rec,ent compla1nta · in Newport even .reach· ad the point wnere one co~n.cilman suJgests t!l•i ,th.~ city should study the !f0ssibil1ly of selhhg off !1• lw~ plane torce.and p.utUng the money. to use elsewllere. We wouldn't like lo see that. 'Ve feel the use or bellcopters as a tool for Jaw enf~rcement and. resc~e J)Urpo$eS will i>tove it.s value d~p1te the sometimes 1.r· ritating noise generated by buz.zmg cbop,pers o~erhead. The problem will\ noise bas been less acute 1n Costa Mesa thin Newpor~ probably because Newport ordered slightly larger and mott: powerfuJ machines ln ·order to be able~to handle certain functions (such as water res· cues) tbat would not ordinarily be encountered in Cosla Mesa. And Newport's.hills, ravines and .4arkene~ beach- ' . .fronts often require more intensjve a~nal scrutiny than tilt relatively flat terrain and· regular street pattern of Costa Mesa. . · But both cities have had their share of complai.nt8 from citizens ·Who have·been anR&yed by noise overhead. But we bav.e a. feeliqg that if citizens were aw~re why tDe ·'belicopters Were1Circling a certain area or usi ng their poWerful floodlights at ·nigllt. they would be a b it more· tolerant ·of the noise they hear. In fact. we sus-r t they would be grateful the machine was available for the mission it was pun;uing. ~ · ..for instance, the Newport helicopter probably a~· noyed btindreds.of persons Tuesday ni.ght w~en ~t orbit· ed in the Hoag Hospital area for 40 minutes 1n ttresozne noisy circles. What most on the grOund could not know was that· the· helicopter had bttn called to the area t.o . , help· seek an, artiled robber who had fled there. Thal" • (ypical"examp\• ol1iow helit<1plers can be employed- and t)'plCal of the -reasons their operators are forced to ' follow a paltern Ibey know Is potenlially ur,setUne. In Newport's case, Chief B. James G avas has as- sura'.nce that improved muflling equipment will be 1v1ll- able for \hat city's helicopters. Th1t would help. Jn the·meantime, we suggest that men who fly the&e planes be extremely alert to the sens.itivity of the issue and avoid any and all unnecessary maneuvers that dis- turb those below them. . 1'o the citizen who is annoyed by 1a particular period of overhead noise, we suggest he find ou~ the missi~n lhal brotighl the helicopter there. Very likely, he will find he was glad it came. Fonnalization Needed The recent Coast <:f>mmunity College district trust~ election revealed an unusual legal twist in trustee candt· dates' residency requirements. By failing to set its trustee areas down in writing, and by failing to stipulate by board resolution that a candidate must reside in the trustee area he seeks to represent, the district risked being stuck for the price of a special election. One candidate, a student at Orange Coast College, met the state requirements for being a candidate al· though he flu nked ·the test of the district's Jong -estab- li shed ' "gentlemen's agreement" in which. traditionally, candidates have Uved in the trustee area. He sought the "Costa Mesa seat." He lives in Newport Beach. But, apparently he could have been elected. legal· ly. Or, had he polled more votes, a lawsuit might have forced a special election on the ground that all candi- dates were running "at large." That would have cost $10,000. Trustee Robert Humphreys, an attorney, is urging a formalization or the generally accepted residency rules in writing. The proposal merits prompt attentio n by the board: c s uper.f icia:lity In Cultural Differences Dear Gloomy Gus: Taxing Returnable Bottles Throughout County . • tn Pranc<, there Is nothing that goes by the name of French toast. Thtre are no French fried potatoes. No French. beans. No Freneb dress.in&· No Frencb windows. And -OC) orchestn, however I~ con- tains a Fffi>Pb IJorn. ' Jn Germany, nobody ever hu German measle.a. 1be Danish pastry is ufttnown in Denmark. There iire no Dalmatian dogs in Dalmatia. l could go on1 bl/t,you gel lhe PQ1i11. 'Vlllat we call .. ~Frtnch" and so forth 10 by enUrely dilferent name, In tho1e countries, and are not particularly idenUfied with lhose countries. FRENCH BEANS1 for irlstlnce, are simply "haricots ven'' ln France. A French wlndow Is a "porte-fentrt..'" A French bom ia a "cor d'harmortie." And in Germany, Gtnnan measles are.merely "die Roteln," or rubella. Certain thfngs become associated -with a~Uic countries and are forever more Ulsepar1blt.. We think of the Jirt;iki.5ha !l5 quintessentially Japanese. but it was m- \•ent.ed by an.American miss.ionary. Chop suey was wholly unknown in Cb.ina until it was introduced by Western nstaurat.eun. And Irish stew. I am reliably informed, was never indigenous to Ireland. TH~E ARE JUST peculiarities of no consequence in tbem:ielves -except that Did you know that the combina· tion of drugs and alcohol can magnjfy their separate itl effeel-' from .four to eigh~ Umes? That's what tests show. Whal a combina· tion ' for driving on the freewil y! -H. S. V. '"" fMtun Nf!Kh ,.,..,.,. ..,...... ... ---•ltr ,,... .i .... --· hlMll YW1' "' "*" " OllMlr en. D91tr , ..... they point to more important usoclations that we make all the lime. and with just as . little justlficaUon. We not only as~ate pt11C111cil with specific c.oun- tries, but per1om l tralt1 as well. We fool: upon the French a.s 1 "rom1.11· tic" people. which Is aa absurd as lheir view of the English u "cold." We find Orientals "iMcrUtable, '" limply because their mode of emotional errect is dif- ferent from ours. We loo~ upon the dark, broodirig ''Russian soul" with aome awe and ftar; but u a famous German scholar cnce observed, "The 'Russian soul' is an invention cf the Gennan philosophtn:" CULnJRES 00 HAVE differences, of coune; no cme would ever mistake an ef· fu.sive Jtallan for a taciturn 'scotaman. But such differences ate far more superfici.al~than we imagine -they are like diftereot accents blun-lng the fact that they all speak the s'°'e b a s i c language. As a living laboratory in anthropology, it is fascinating lo see how a new state like Israel has, in a geoerallon or :so, con- founded lhe whol:a. stereotype cf lbe "Jew" as known in Westem•aociety. For the lsraell seems more like a Swede than a Jew, even physically. Leopards can change their spots when the spots have cnly been painted on by others. East, West California A new twist has bttn given the "'rpm California in two" argument by Senator Randolph CoUier, dean of tbe upper 1iou ... Collier's intriguing proposal -or in- tuestlng spoof -is to spilt the stale into West Ctliforni1 and East California, whtn all these years other split advocates bave 5Uggesled states of Southern and Northern California. Over ttie years the degree of en- thusiasm for a S.tate of Northern California and a StAte of Southern California haa run up and down li~e a publlc oplnion 1 poll in search of an issue. 11:lE APP ARENT thesis b e h I n d Colller's West and Eai;t Califomia is that the West state. to include I.he 13 coastal counties lrom r.11rln in the Ncrt.h to San Diego in tbe Soulh. would be an urban Q.te. The '5 counties not Included in West Califom l1, bot to become East Cllifomil. would be a more rural, 1pic:ultura1 and rtert11lonal 1rea. Tbu"' I>'· perhapo lhe thinking goes, the utblnologl.SU and the evironmtntalists cm each have the best cf two worlds. West Californll. '° a l1rge extent. could wrestle wllh the Jl"'blem• of tMJ tnttropolit.an cltle3 while East Callfom!a wouldn't baVe to 1et ntarfJ IO mtxed up bl rapid tr1n11t. ttglonal aovemment, water poUIJlion. smo1 and all that 1tuU. JL'I btautlfUl - >ONE TINY PROBLEM mlg~t II< thal 1 beck of 1 Jot or Wtat Californians would ftlll to ml1rate to the Idyllic Eost mte u rut u Iha old jalopy and family fortune pennltted. Fw lht -· <lv>wtvtr~ major • . ~-..,.~~ff"!~ ........ ,') ._. K ' ·~ ~ r: ~ \ ·• Guest.Report ' , ! • obstacles facing Senator Collier In seek· ing approval of East and West California are the tortuous legislative process a measurt cf this magnitude must face, the answers to the questions cf how lo !iplll the existing state debt equitably between the proposed new states, the sanctity or contracts entered into by the exli;tlng state of caurornia and how they would have to be· reconciled between the new slates, and the other old issues raised whenever a division of the state has been broached. They are all arguments with which Senator Collier is fam iliar. IN rnE EV&~T Sen11tor Collier meets with legislllive succei;.s, there of course is still an enormously complicated pro- cedure which must be follcwed before the tv.·o stat.ts come into existence. All the arguments aside, Senator Collier 11 due lcudoa. JUs propoul i1 fresh, it is ini:eniou!'i. it focuses slron£ al- tention on many of the critical issues coo- frontlng-us tll. ir cn\y btcau~ it suggull radk:1I surgery of a new type 11 1 tolU· tion. Could it be that this is what the twinklti eyed veteran of a tbousand legisl1tlve skirmi3hes has in mind, or is ht j u 11 L sayk!ig that the people who are closul to the problems they have crtakld should be mort responsiblr: for resolution of them! Cili(onl1 Featar• St.rYI« • Assessor's Ruling Fos~ers Pollution To the Editor: It is appalling to believe that in this: day cf people working for ecology and en- vironmental control, and attempting tD eliminate pollution of all kinds. an Orange County cfficial would deliberately attempt to undennine these valiant ef· forts. · The official in question is County Tax Assessor Andrew Hinshaw, whcse eUor\s: lo squeeze extra lases from the 7-Up bot- tling company can only result in adding more UUer lo cur already suffocating streets, parks and beaches. It is Mr. Hinshaw'i; opinion that all returnable bottles cf 7-Up in the county belong to the bottling company. not to the stores or the consumers:. He has handed lhe "Uncola" people ·an assessment of $166,570 for every returnable bottle in the county. plus a demand for "escaped as- aessments" for the years 1966 through 1969 to the tune of $912.640. WE ARE. THEREFORE. talking about a million-plus lax tab to be forked ovtr by 7·Up. Jn other words. Hinshaw is demanding that 7·Up pay tax on the bot- tles in our own re(rigerat.ors. in every bar and restaurant. and each rttail market and store, which is a new pimple Mr. Hinshaw is attempting to scratch in arder to bring more tax dollars into the county. U 5\ICCeSdul, in this venture, Mr. Hinshaw will undoubtedly attack the other soft drink companies for similar revenues. Now. what has all this to do with en- vironmentaJ control, pollution a n d ecology? Quite obvious, 1 woold say. \Vhy should 7-Up pay this ridiculous new tax en returnable bottles. v.•hen they can save a millioo bucks by reverting lo throw- aways? ~10ST BOTILING companies have made a concentrated effort to stop using throw-away bottles, and return to the deposit botUes in order to clear the coun- try of litter. Some companies ha ve even ral!ed their depo!iil in order to make the bottles more valuable, hence. worth returning to the store. rather than left on the beach. If Mr. Hinshaw is successful in this at- tempt, it could be one giant step BACKWARD for mankind. Although 7-Up has nol even hinted about the possibility of returning to throw-aways, in the face of what is-happening, this would appear to 'be a logical and profitable Ctecision on their part. And if this decision should be. mad,, 1 hope Mr. Hinshaw will be ready for the war cries from the eo~ationists. not to menlicn the many organir.ations dedicated to ecolcgleal and anti-pollution pursuits. Perhaps it might t?e a wise time for these organizations and interested in- dividuals to make their wishes known to ~fr.' Hinshaw. And if they can't gtt through. then there's always the nc1t election! LEE C. MILLAR Poslth:e Posltlo11s To the Editor: Your April 13 editorial comments on A1new"s speech in Los Angele! ttf· fect.lvely dtmonslrated bis point by oot m'ntiontn• that In polling JO years ago 1~ pertent of Americans wished to live tJsewhere. "RedUciio 1d absurdum " aptly Bg 6eor!Jfl Deir George: l\llatever became of the big Na me the Automobllt contest you y,·ere having and "'ho won? F.G. Dear t·.G.: Don't you have me mixed up •·Ith Edsel 1'0crd~ Nobody wt>n . .. ( ·' Mailbo~ ~"·" ffWll , ... .,.. .,. W11luml. .,.,.,..,.", wtltwt Melli. <Nwr tMlf n'Msu1•s 11o • -• •r lf,H. no. f'lllll ,. ~ .. ltntrs l'9 lft - IM' rilrl!Mtt liMI k ,_,.... All letten llMISI llO- tllffko tltNf•,. ... 111.a... lllMlttUo llqf - "''" ... WllNIWI "" r-.1 " Mtl~l9tlf ~ Is ..... , ......... ,,.., .... ,. ......... , ....... describes ycur coverage while in truth twice as many perSClll! pre(erred staying with the cld girl for all her problems. The rest of the world has more! WE'VE FLAILED oarsel ves suf- ficiently. Let's listen to the positive pl'.l.'li· tions Of our prespicacious .,ioung and sup- port reordering our priorities to preserve our environment, correct inequities and support the cultural arts as the essential humaniting ingredient in t o d a y ' s technolcgical society. I did not hear Mr. Agnew, but my hus- band did, and it was a tonic to him to hear a positive approach for a change. Your editorial is a case in point of com- pletely omitting the pcsitlve. VERNA JENKINS Praise for .Joh11 Wo1111e To the Editor : I have taken a short retirement from the Chicago Police Department after 18 years of service to raise my four children here in Scuthem California ... I cannot help but write this letter to congratulate one of our finer citiiens liv· ing in Scuthern California, John (Duke) \\'ayne, Afler reading the article in Playboy and studying the loaded questions be was asked, and aflcr studying the answers he gave to these questions, J feel that every flag-waving American should give this man a pat on the back ... John Wayne, a true American. A l\1AN WHO not only in hls motion pictures is a hero to many, but also a man who is not afraid to stand up on his hind legs and shout to the heavens, "l am an American •.. J am against anyone wanting to overthrow this country by fcrce -from within er from without." May God bless this lrue American. NEAL GRANEY Le••oH Fron• /Huslinas To the Editor: Whea ordering the invasion of Syria (623--640 A.D.) Muhammod's successor, Kaliph Abu Bekr, gave the followia,g. in- structions to the Arabs in military forces : "Bt just Do not break faith .•• Do not kill children, old men or women ••• Do not cul down fruit lrtt!. If you come across men in monasteries, leave them in peace." DESPITE THESE chivalrous con· cessions lo the enemy, the Muslim con- quests continued successfully f'o r the next ty,·o centuries, encompassing much of the then civilized world, from Spain and France to the herde rs cf China. Perhaps the United Sta tes would have fared better In Vietnam and avoided disgraces like the Lt. Calley episode if heads cf slate and armed ser\fices had followed from a page cf Muslim history. ROLAND CUEVA Against AbortloH To the Editor: Jt was with indignation t.hat I read in the DAILY PILOT April 24 that the p~ ponents of Zero Population Growth had been invited to spread their propaganda at Estancia High School during their re. cent "F'iri;t Day" ecology cbservance. Three weeks ago. I took the trouble to ask the school if lhis group would be represented and was assured thai f 'Y would not. because of the controYe ial nature of thelr material. I have read some of thelr mat rial \vhich clearly advocates abortion as a back-up method of birth control. ls this what we really want for our children! TT SEErt1S STRANGE that at 8 time when society is becoming more and more consci<XU cf our abuses of nature -we care about the want.on destruction of the swallows' eggs ; we care about the killing cf animals with bow and arTOw: we are alarmed about the pos.sible esti~ of ' certain species or animals -yet we can justify , the kilting cf human fetuses (which simply means "yrung one") without a qualm. And ow-yowig.!iters who are i'ndeed sensitive to the needs o( others. who are aware of the injustices in our society, are told that this is ·not llfe in the womb, therefore. they need not worry about the repercussions.of what they do. They are relieved of all respomibility. God help them~ t WOI\'DER IF anyone has had the courage to point out to them that the human fetus is not a part o( the mother, but a separate. unique human being en· dowed from the moment cf cooeeption with all the genetic characteristics necessary for his development. Has anyone told them that the heart of thil'I little creature starts beating at four weeks and that mClSt certainly at tht- ~.abortions are permitted, he can feet It seems incredJOle to me that there are SCl many concerned about en- vironmental pollution and so few con- cerned about pollution of the mind and spirit. OL!VE M. MEEH/.N Wildlife Preserve To the Editor: I think the area around the Santa Ana river to Estancia High School shculd be used as a wild life presene with bike, horse and pe<leslrian trails. When I grow up, l don 't feel like driv- ing 50 or 60 miles lo :some zoo to see some almost extinct animals. and lhat'i; what they 'll be if y,•e don 't de scmething about our environmen t. WHEN I GROW UP, I want air and animals around. nol polluted air and anim al skeletons. With all those J(J(). storied buildings around , they won't be landmarks, they'll be grave markings telling how stupid cur race was. Listen to me, a future citizen; think of us, not just yourself. KlM PURINGTON Age 12 Canyon School Life's Good Days and Bad Days Life has its good days and its bad days. Not all our hours are lit by wine and roses. We are not always a bonfire or a bou- quet to ourselves:. Sometimes a clinker in the eye obscures a rainbow . There are the bad days to keep even the largest ego humble. Such as when : Times were so bad that when you lost a tooth you woke up tht ncx:t morning arn:l found a nickel instead of a dime under your pillow. You asked her for a date and she told you frankly U'lat she was going to be ttrr1bly, terribly busy for a tong, long time. It \\'as the last hurdle in the race and you thought you were home ahead, but 1htn )'Our hind foot hit the hurdle and you landed on your tlbow and v.'hen you got up your arm dangled oddly awry and you felt dltzy and sJck at your stomach. SllE SAID SllE'D meet you there but she never showed up, and you stood therr trying to think that you looktd 3s If you h;1d .•n imporlanl m~glon in lite while crowds of strangcrl'i went by and never U\ou1ht of )'OU at 111 . r -, I ' She said when you married her that you could have all your wlshe1. and hew does that bear on the fact that now )'i)U do all the dishes ? 1 "Greetings, son'' said Uilcle Sam, and then , "Sc long, boy, see you later." You had never had acne in your Ufe before, and lhen on the .momiJli of the senior prom you 1w~e with a fact thal looked as if it hid been bombarded by strawberries. You were sitting with your mother in lhe front porch swing and you kUy remarked that you tnew of Olber families that had done more to· help t.Mlr ton through coUql!:, and she broke into te1rs and fled lnto the hClulfl and the: swing kept on going back and forth u you realiied you had done a thing you could never forg1ve younelf for nicn though 1\fe should last fortvtr ind 7ou bid not n1cant to de it at 111. FINALLY YOU GOT up your courage to a~k for a merit raise and were granted ' » onr. but the bots who gave 1t lo you a:s ht stared cut the window painted 'uch a bleak picture of lhe firm 's future • he le(t you feeling like an ingrate becau~ you hadn't volunteered to take a $10 cut. F'ive years to the day after yo u told the boy you didn't want him as a son·in·law, he and your daughter too~ you and you r wife to dinner and showed you a paycheck twice the siie or your own. Yes. there are days on which the only reason to get up is so you can lie back down in bed again and count your wounds. -----Friday. April 30. I 971 The editorial page of the Dail u Pilot see1u k> iri/onn and 1tfm.. ulate reader.c by presenting this newspopcr't opinio"4 and com- mentary 011 topiu of interest and signlflcance, bV providing a foni,m for the e:r,wession of cur readf.rs' optnlott.!, a:nd by prc1tnti11g lhe diverse view- poh1tJ of informed cbservers 1111d spokesmen on topics of the da11. Robert N. Weed. Publisher I t 'I I I • N.Y. Steeks Saddlebaek ED IT.101'1 YOC. 64, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIC 30, 197 1' mi cmrs ' Police Ask 10-15% Pay Increase for Openers San Clemente's police officers have made an Initial request for a 10-to-lS.per· cent wage Increase for the next ~i.scal year -a hefty raise, they say, because the city's pay scale is the lowest in Orange County. Bargaining ses$ioos began on the large salary Increase latt this month, but wage.s. lhe officers stressed, are not the cmly bargaining point. They seek these other benefib and clianges: -Straight pay for all overtime with t.be exception of report writing time. briefing time and departmental meetings. San Mateo Canyon Gift Suggested A San Diego assemblyman who sits O• President Nixon's Committee on Environ- mental Quality bas introduced a resolu- tJon in the Legislature to urge Congress to donate 3,400 acres of San Mateo Can· yon near San Clemente to the state for recreatlol! purpo$es. ~Republican Pete Wilson introduced the measure in an attempt lo block the possibility that the land -declared surplus to the military by the Pruident earlier this year -wou1d fall l.nto privatil bands. The canyon -along with &.5 mile1 of prime swimming beach -was declattd excess in a surprise move by the Presl· dent during his last visit t.e the South 91"ange Coast. The chances that the state would rtceive title to the land are quilt good. officials have said. Only If no flther governmental agency wants the land does it go up for public auction. Wilson, however, said there "was a possibility" that the land would fall inte private ownership -thus his irittrest in placing official pressure on the Congress. Orie stipulation of the surplus declara· lion for the beaches and the upland acreage is that any government agency assuming ownership must use it for the benefit of the general public. Top state parks officials already have suggested that the canyon portions which are not now farmed coul d be used for campsites lo augment tbe usefulness of tbe beaches nearby. State Director of Parks William Penn Mott said the farming acreage a n d unused open space all could be In· tegrated into a plan for public enjoyment ef the canyon, which lies directly south of the boundary betweea Orange and San Dleao counties. Canthodian Tabbed PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Chief of SUll.o Cheng Heng awarded the premiership ~ day to Choup Hell, a relative political Unknown who has been serving as his coun.selor. He succeeds the ailing Lon Nol who resigned. «:out We•t•er Hazy sunshine will greet week- end beacbniks. with little change in coastal temperatures. Mercury readings are pegged tn the low· er 00s locally and up to 68 further Inland. INSIDE TODA. Y The VCI Tow~ and Gown music group i3 bus11 wilh plana: for it..T studtnt and faculty 1pring cunurt. Detail! and pic- ture! are in today'.t Weekender. ... ""' 11 c,n,.,.i. ' CIMU"" U• 1 ('""'"" ,,.... CNlllC' fJ cnn_.. n DMll ~ t •lltwJtlt ""' ' ~-· ,...,, -.. U. UMI" ti M•lllln 4 MoYIM ltoJI Mwhlel """' • ........... ,.._ .. , OrMM C-'J t .... -.im ., .• ~ ... ,. ltoldl "'-•h •n Tltll¥111M Jt ,.,,,..,_., ,,.,, Wt*!Mr • w.--, ....... ,,." ·~ ,...,, ... .............. !Wt -Educational and longevity pay in specified amOWlta as long as tbe employe qualifies. -The creation of the rank of polict! agent to replace the detective label. The rank wouJd be based on achievement and would apply to both uniformed and plainclothes officers. . -1be city adoption of an improved retirement pension plan with a. marked preference for the state-administered Public Employes Retirement Sy,mm (PERS) over a proposed upgr8ded version of the existing private pension plan. Spoktsmen for the San Clemente Peace Officers As.sociation, the o ff i c i a I bargaining group for~the officers, aaid the pay raise requests_ span lrom a 10-per-. ce nt increase for patrolmen to 12.S.per· cent lncreaaes for sergeants and 15 per. cent for lieutenants and above. The increases far exceed those receiv· ed after last year's spring bargaining sessions -increases rang.ing from about five to seven percent. San Clemente, association officials said, sharts the low 11pot in the county with the city of Stanton. The average monthly nluy for all of· OS ita t11••1 t ... ..,.. PRESIDENT ARRIVES Marln11 Ready Nixon Arrives To Decorate Marine Unit About 2,000 Marines fresh from Viel· nam combat .spent the night shining up their brass in anticipalion of a visit from their commander in chief at Camp Pendleton today. President Nixon was expected to land ,st the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station before noon. then immediately board a helicopter for the elabor ate ceremonies honori ng the Ist Marine Division at Camp Pendleton. The President, arriving fo r a planned long weekend along the South Orange Coast, was scheduled to present the se-- cond unit commendation received by the lst Division since it entered the Vietnam conflict five years ago. The group of Leathernecks participating in today's ceremonies is tbe la _ contingent of the division. which will be disbanded -its troops absorbed int• other units . Although the ~remonles were not plan· ned for the general public -scores or civilians -were scheduled to attend. The entire eighth grade class at Marco Forster Junior High School -students from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -received permission to attend the rites. And during the ceremonies, a San Clemente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Romig, will ha\'e an integral part in the citation ce remonies. Cpl. Romig, who recently rtctived the Silver Star for heroism under fire in Vie~ nam, will carry the Presidential Unit Commendation Streamer back to his unit. After the elaborate ceremonies at Pendleton, the President planned to board his helicopter once more for the trip upcoast to La Casa Pacifica where he planned to spend a working weekend. His aides aaid the return to Washington would probably be sometime late Mon. day. · No detaJ11 ef lbe weekend schedule bad been announced early today. Hahn Seeking Study LOS ANGELES (UPJ I -Supervisor Kenneth Hahn h:ts requested 11 salary 1tudy af top county leaden:, noting that Sheriff Pete Pitchess tams $4,028 more than the FBI Dtrflcior J. Edgar Hoover·- $40,000 annual ulary. Dana Point Priorities Outlined Dana Point needs -In this onier - planned , orderly development, fewer billboards underground uU11Ue1, in-corporatl~n Into a city government , it.a own police department and more park$ ge!Uon Tec6rtiy Of $0-0(-j manl\1 • Tbost c:bancler,~ ·~ leaden who bU<d their · ts a11cr • U,.long, apeclJ1 b\11 tour ol Orange Coal! c!Uta. ,,,. m:urtlon. rpomortd by the Dana Point Cllamber of CommBCe, toot the special guestl on a guided tour of parks. busine1s and recnational districts of several c:OUtal communities. At the end of the diy. the 1Uetts !Wed out questionnairt1, offering opinions on the de.!lirable and undesirable. point.a of the community surrounding a major new barbor. The colony not only has lb nte<b, tM guests determined, but it bas !ta fine. points as weU. The consensus praised Dana Point for Its rural atmosphere, c::lil.m1te, location, acenlc areas and the new harbor. The community a!IO bas an absence of "amog and hippies," thty 12id. Unanimous votes c::ame in several areas. All 30 persons supported a total elimination of billboards, plus strict con- trol over other signs, and preservation of wilderness open space and marine sanctuaries. Strong votes also c::ame for develop- ment of riding and hiking trails from the foothills t:> the harbor via San Juan Creek; most enrouraged a blufftop pro- menade along the ridges overlooking I.he harbor. Dana Point should be promoted a1 a tourist and resort town, they said, with the development of a downtown area atricUy for pedestrians, instead of automobiles. The questionnaire re.sulll showed strong support for diverting traffic around the central shopping district in· stead or through it. Les Remmers, who directed and organ- ized the tour, said the purpose of the en- tire excursion was to "show the people what can be done at Dana Point by poln~ Ing out artas of the coast. where land al· ready has beeJ'I planned and used correct- ly." "Guides" for the event included Ralph Hudson, a representative of the County Department of Harbors. Beachel and Parks: Newport Beach City C.Ouncilman Carl Kyrnla , the e:zecutjve manager of the Moulton-Niguel Municipal Water District; Stan Weintraub, a spokesman for Avco Community Developen, and Tom Severns, community development coordinator for the city of HunUngton Beach. Clemente CofC Names 2 to Post Two new cochalrmen have been named to head the rec:tntl)' org1111zed retail pro- mollon committee for the San Clemente Chamber ol Commerce. Jim Keister, the managtt ol a major downtown department store, and local businesswoman Sandy Stone will lead the committee. The role of the group it to devi.e retail promotJon progr.11ma and actJvlUes for the city'• bualnessu. Chamber dlrrctor1 set up the or&anhatioD lat& last year. I ficers ln Ille county, they aJ'l)led. la '925 a month. San Clemente and Stanton'• avtlage"wage 11 $883. The fliures are based on the exlitln1 fiscal year'1 statiatics. ~es in pa,y 11CaleS, they Aid. .. IOlr among wqes in the higher ranka 7. hence.the lncreaae ln salary requests tor higber ranking poUce oUie<n. The 15-peroent Increase for lleutenanta, as an instance, atill would mean m a year less than the county 1veragi!. San Clemente, association spolce!men said, oUen no ovutime or compensatory Um& oll, but Ill other cltiea IUfVe)'<d, l:I DAILT PILOT tflH ,.,,_ BEST DRESSED POODLE Got! Rldu Again Clemente Poodle I n Fashion Show Gogi. San Clemtntt's poodle with .an extensive homemade wardrobe. will make an inroad into showbiz Monday evening. The little silver poodle and its mistress, Mrs. Charlotte Petel'IOn, will present a canine fashion ahow for families ot Palisades United Methodi&t Church al 6:30 p.m. Gogi wears holiday c o st u m e ll handmade by Mrs. Peterson and her hus- band. The wardrobe consists of wits celebrating major holida)"S, including a fuJl .!ength Ea!ler BuMy getup. 1 The Monday evening event will be link· ed with the church's potluck supper. Those attending are encouraged to W1 their children and cameras. · Chest X -ray Van In San Cl.emente A mobile unit offering chest X-rays for a nominal fee will visit a San Clemente shopping: center Wednesday and Tb\D',.. day. Houl'I for the unit provided by California Chest X·Ray Surveyg will be from 2 to I p.m. etch clay at the Shorecliffs Shopping Centtr. The small fee will cover costs for U· pr.rt interpretation of each X-Ray by a llcenst<S radlologi.at who seeks 1i1n1 of tuni cancer, tuberculosi& and heart enlargemenL The project Is being 1pon80red by the San Oeme:ntt Junior Woman's Club. Chamber Singers Set Saddlebaek College'• cb1mber lingers will perform lor members of the San Clemente Artl and 0-afll Club May U at an evening meeting In Myers Hall ol the United Pttabyterl•n Church. Tbe event will belln at 1:30 o"clock. I of them, offered either straight Umt, Umw.nd-one-hall, or compem&tory time off for tlle overUme job performance. Some officel'I have aald recently a man's annual overtime figure can reacb 800 hours. The ~uest ill the polict agent iJsue ID- volvu no cban&e in aalary range, but stan<Urdiua "'!uirements r ... holdlnl Ille agent'• job. The "agent'' would split duties between uniformed patrol to plainclothes detective for a persoo having thf'tfl years' ~1- perieoce and 30 units of college credit in a apeclf.ied law enforcement curriculum Otllet teat relUlll and wpervialor recom- mendaUona alao would be included In the criteria. San C1emeote city COWtcilman have held studies on the pension segment of the wage-benefil package, but u yet the negotiations on wagu ,and other benefits have remained at the c::lty at.aft 1eveJ. Decisions on salarlea and fringe benefits for police and other city employe.s generally are discussed during budget study aeulons. This year's aeries of the aeasionl ta ex- pected to belln ln mid-May. s Permit Rejected; Officials Vanish By JACK BROBACK Of fM 0.1'1 Plllt Sti ff Oranae County planning comm15.'lioners Thursday dtnied a permit for Saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hiils aft.er •Ix 1 to 2 tie votea and three hours of angry debate that ended wben two commissioners fled the scene. Commlis.ion Chairman Woodrow Butr terfleld and h1a collegue Fred Je!feraon ~~-,I A llllnla1 utimat.d at 108 peno111 b!>otod; dajlped .... -d!irllli Ille three boUrl. Vetmm county pollllcal -mra a,ld II was ibe most incredible cllaln ol evenll ever aeen at a pubUe meeUnc In the county seal After commissioners Butterfield and JtU1rt0n bolted from the 1e51fon, the re- malnhig two coWlty planners voted to deny the Saddleback Hospital permit. They aald thef did so In order to get the entlre issue squarely before the Oranae Cowl\y Board of SUpervtsors. When the uietUng finally adjourned, Chairman pro tem Howard K. SmJth of HunUntton Beach ordered the taped tranacrlpt on the aesa.ion impounded ia · the Sberiff'1 Offiet overnight for 1afe keeplna. A member of the Orange County Grand Jµry, prelent during the aesalon, asted planning director Foreat Dlckuon for a (!()J)Y of the transaipL Dickason, when it was all over gasped. "Thi.& hu never happened before ln tht planning commission's history. I can im· agine how this will be interpreted when the public reads about it tomorrow." The basic:: issue was that the Lutheran Hospital Society wants to bulld a hospital Jn Laguna Hills but to do so it must have a conditional \Ille permit from the plan- nJng commission. Its application for that permit has been delayed for several weeks by actlo11 of three comm.Juionen -Arnold Forde, now In Europe; Butterlield and JeUerson. Th< permit must be obtained by May IS or the hospital's federal gr&11l ol $1.1 million Hill·Harris Act fuM! may be losL The community is raising a similar amount in matching funds to build the facility. Butterfield, an appointee of First District Supervisor Robert Battin of San· ta Ana, set the tone for hearing by calling lhe question "simply a al estate maUer, one of economics." He and Jeffenon were to maintain t altitude through the foUowing i.ncredibl 1erlel of events. In the nut three houn, the lout members commission heard every poss!· hie reservation about granting the permit removed : -Deputy County Counsel Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach told them that they were not to rule on the need for a hospilal but only on general compatibility grounds. -Road dtpartmenl engineer Murray Storm told them that there would be no traffic problems created by the hospital. (11111 was one d Forde'• highly publlclz. •d "nagging doubts.") -DeWitt Bishop, administrator of the Southem California Regional Offlct of Comprehensive Health PlaMtng told them that the ac:Uon of • local ad boc health planning committee Tunday had no bearing on the deciaion ; that Ille regional agency had Jone ago approved Saddleback Holpital 1 Despite these assurances that there wert no logjc.81 or legal roadblocks to gnnUng the u.. pcrml~ the following 11I spit& votea took place: The flm motion by Smith was for ap- pn,,111. Smltll and Commlaloner Dan Foley voted ''yes" while Butterfield 111d Jefferson voted '"no". The second mot.ion by Butterfield was to deny The rellllt waa another 2 to I deadlock. Foley then reveraed the field and mov· ed for denial, "to get the matter before the Board of ·Supervllol'I." Jeffenon and Bu\tertleld predict.ably r e v e r 1 e d thcmaelv .. an4 •!'led a1alnlt thc motion. Foley then ,...ed tor alnjple a.lal. 1bt mull WU tbe ...... FoJ.r Ihm made anolh<r' mla!PI jo raot.. tilt !wt hy moviJJ& 1n refer the ...im to lh~ ~ wllbout com-midi. 'l'lie .... n.-,-~ fi111om1. l!utt«fleld ui.. moved ln adjourn the meetfna. ThU: tatled by tbe same tie vote. At 11111 poln~ !lull<rfield declared a 10. minute teoe11. He and Jefferson disap- peared for the night. Smith, acUnr as chairman pro tem, called the meetine to order after about a 20-minute delay. Legal quellioos then jumped up to con- front the two mnaining commi&sioners. QMd two of the five oommissioners act on the permit if the meeting had not b,.. legally ad)oumed? Could two COllllllllll011<1'1 legally ad on tbe matter in u much u there bad been no call for a quorem? A:ttomey1 praent dlsagretd an the Issue and • &mhnde ftCe!I WU caDed to research the law boob. Reawmbled at 7 p.m., the atbney1 said they bad been unable to mate a determination. Foley then agreed to the request of Saddlebac:k Jbpltal attorney Michael Collin~ and moved to deny the permit. Smith agreed. Collins explatned that this way, the Issue might ·get befon the supervisora in a1 much as there. wa• clear indication that tbe commJsrlon opposed the permit, whereas a vote by only two memben to approve mliht be 1Ubject to legal action by the oppoalUon. The controveny eurfaced earlier thi1 week when It WU reported that Com- missioner Forde. an appointee of Supervisor Ronald Caspen of Newport Beach, had been Instrumental in delaying the approval of the permit for the Sad· dleback· Hoopflal, Aasemblyman Robert E. Badham (Jt. Newport Beach} wu adviJed of the sltua. tion and moved into lhe controversy with a promised hearing before the Assembly Committee on Health. Lutheran Hoepllal Socl<ty leaders, who plan to build the nonpnillt facWty In guna HUis, Nid turther delay granting permit would jeopardize th e boo '1 vital •lfilbWty for the II.& million al grant Documents . le In the eounty recorder's olfioe that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul . an.are._ e principal ofllclall In Ille Viejo Capl Company whlch purchased a site last year in the Million Viejo area for tht privately financed Mlnioft Community H°"pita). . . Viejo Capital Company is abo lbt.d as Oft< of 2t par111e<1 In . the Mission Viejo Medical Company wlllch. la building the m~sion bolptlol. The balance are moa"·· docton. "'· Fonte bu bten ma tour of Europe allcl the Soviet Unloo wllll C..pen but hu been advised ol thc uinar and la ... peeled back 11111 ~ Saddleback lloepllal la plamied to open neit )'Ur with llO bed1 and an ulUm.ate capacity of 500 beds. tt bas an aSllOClate r<latlonahlp with South Coal! C.1!11\lunity Hoapltsl In South Laguna to avoid duplication of major and coclly lttVice•. Mlsalon hoopllal_ I• 1latod to ope" thl1 IUl)Ulltr with Ill beda and an u!Umtte upanslao to 214 beds. :! DAIL V PILOT SC Frld&Y, Apr11 l01 1'11 Conservative Buckley Speaks at UC -lrvihe , . By GEORGE LEIDAL or "" o.lff ••• '"'" A 1rulJ. wuhcd, clean wt, courteous and altenUve audience of 1,300 listened to conservative Spokesman William F. Buckley Jr. 'Mntnday night at UC Irvine. While. the Crawford Hall capacity crowd was dotted with Jong.haired young people, oo bare feet were observed. There were many middle-aged persons present. The hall's inadequate sound S)'Slem fre- quently made it difficult to follow BuckJey. lo bia opening remarks, Buckley pro- Nine Police Groups Bacl{ Arbitration Nine Orange County police associations have reaffirmed their support for a state Senate bill which would force binding a rbitration on cities involved in salary disputes ~ilh public safety workers. Spoke.smen for the police associatioru met Wednesday night to counteract a campaign started by six nor.th Orange County ciUes against the arbitration bill. Representatives from police usocla- tiom in Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, San Clemente, Westminster, Stan- ton , Anaheim, Buena Park, L,a Habra and Orange signed their names to 3 letter af- finning support for ~nate Bil 33.1 ... The bill Lt •Jl'lll!IOl'<!4 by ,Senator Ralph Dill1 (D-Tonance), and "ould replace the Myers-MUiia&.Browit Act of l!IS& ' which set up "meet and confer'' 'pro- cedures for allary t8IU with poliC'e and firemen. Senator DIJls said of the bill: ''Those employers 'who have negotiated In good faith with their pubUc safety employes do not fear this legislation. Those who, for whatever reasons, can not solve salary disputes or impasses will find that com- pulsory .arbJlr14ti_on iJ preferable to strikes, slowdowns, sick-outs, and other. job actiOnJ which result i.n long lasting ill feeling." The niJal police. auoclaUolll 1Upporllng the bill art members of PORAC {Peace Officers "~. ~ilU'!!' of Califorru-r: .• °'*le Couty <'lliple'I Fourteen Of Ute county'& 21 pc:>Uce departmellls an member1 of PORAC. Policemen were reacting to a Sunday meeUng ti<t,.... . re~Uf<'!.1, of Buena Port, Li.·Pilma, S!Jnloni ,..a;• Garden Grove Jti>d Ao.afieim when they appealed to strte semitor James Whet- more CR-Garden Grove), a supporter of the blll, utJaa him lo change his posl- tlon. Student Struck By Car, Injured A 16-year-old San Clemente high school student suffered a leg rracturt and other injuries Thurllday night in an auto- pedestrian. collision on Et Camino Real. Terry M. Saccuet:i of 20 W. Avenlda Junlpe:ro, 1tu admttted to South Coast Community Hospital shortly after the 8:32 p.m. miahap on !I Camino near Avenida Mateo. Police uld ·the driver of the auto, ~ year-old Jerry Blanton of 238 A Mariposa told them he did not see the pedestrian on the darkened stretch of the roadway and skidded to a stop after the impact. The collision threw Saccucci onto Ille · hood of Blanton's car, poUc.e. said. The inj\lttd student wu reported in satis£actory condlUon early today at South Coul OIAN&I COAST , DAILY PILOl OltANG;J COAST 'UIUSHINQ CXIM,AN'f Wo"-t N. Wtttl ,,..llltllt ..... ,r.tllli.r.' Jotli l. Cv1l1y Vitt Pmw..t ""' "--' M.....,.. '"'•"''' tc ••• il '""' no111•1 ;.., M.r,hi11• "''"""" 1•11 ... ('Jiorl•• H. loot IU,hoNI '· Ntll Aulltom """"Inf •11..,. i..-a...k~ lJ2 ,..,,,,. A¥011VO Mtlll~g ot1t1,..11: ,,o. loir '''· '2651 s .. c1 ...... ~ 205 Herth (I Ctll'liRo Rt1I, f1671 OtW Offk• (Mi. ~~ DI WOfl ••t Slrnt .. _, ·-h: Wl "---' a.u i.. .... )11111t;,,ei•wt •ud'I: 111l'S h9dl lwl1¥0t'I moted •let dianceUor Jack Hoy to chllllCellor and coofdled hls !JTl- barraument at having discovered a tqrk: from the Hoy'1 ailver flatware Jn t\11 pock•!. "That's the mlnlma1 euctiOn from a prt-lectured dinner par1y," Buckley jok· ed. The audience roared at the remark., eviden ce it did oot think Buckley was ad- vocating petty thievery. On other criminaJ issuu, Buckley, in answer to a question from the audience, said he is •·agairut killing of men, women and children." 'PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE' Buckley, t he Chinil Watcher "KJJ.linl 10mttime is jUJtlfied. ff he ld- iled, "In lhe effort to rid .....U of a trrant or lo free prilooera of war_:_~--'•­• lloltai. Illa! hf ailtlnlod lite ,....mn WQ meant to ellcit IOme rttponat lo the chMge of "American savagery" iit Vltt- nam, Buckley said <loves have charged ab: tlmes the number of bombs had been dropped there than were dropped in Europe during all of \Yorld War JI. He discounted that such was evidence of American savagery, in that the bomb- ing m.issiom were directed at military installations of the enemy. "II we had dropped one hundredth of OAIL Y ''LOT "'°* h l.tt P"• 'A FORK IN MY POCKET' Buckley, the P•rf~t Guest Hospital Society Leader Tells Aim of Board Vote .... . .. ' Samuel Tibbits, president of the Lutheran Bo.pltal Society. said today it wasjt the requut of the Society that at· IDJ1':ey · Mlcjl.aej CQ1JJm sought Plaunlng commi..ton denial of a land "'' pennlt for tbe proposed Saddleback Hospital In order to take the case to the Board of Supervlaors. the Lutheran Hospltal Society, .based ln Los Angeles, ls the intended builder of the new Laguna Hil1I faclUty, "It was obvious to us that the Planning Commission, after three ses!lom, wasp't going to act," said Tibbitts. "We felt we had to move the request out of com- mission and get it before the supervisors because we have time limits to meet." Tibbitts confirmed that the $1.8 million allocation of Hill-Harrls funds for con- struction of the hospital would be lost 11 permits were not secured by May ]8. "II seems rldiculous that Orange Coun· · ty shou ld lose this money,'' Tibbitts sald. "Our plans are complete and we: are Tead y to go u soon as we get the land use permit." To arguments that a reduction ln bed .size of the proposed hospital had nullified previous approval of the facOlty by health planning authorities, Tibblll said, 1''Ilte:re ts no rta90n to delay on the basis of a reduction ln alu. This doe! not have UI be reviewed by any planning body. On· ly If we were to increase the slz.e would review tie required." Tibbitts s&Jd he hoped the matter would receive a "fair and jwit treatment'' when the appeal re1che1 the supervisors. Both facilltlu would serve a common area including El Toro, Laguna Hills, Mission Viejo and Laguna NlgueL When Thursday's circua-Ukt &esslon en· Emigrate in April MOSCOW (UPI ) -The flow of Soviet Jews to Israel burgeoned to a record 1.300 this month despite the SOvJet Union's angry anU-Zlonisl campaign, dlplnmaUc 110Urces said today. The .!IOUrtts said the Aprll exodus brought to 2~ the total numbtr of Jews allowed to leave for Israel this year. ded, veteran Commissioner Foley sum- med It up, "lt it a horrlble set of circumstances when two conunlssloners desert a meeting durinj i i ~ recess." <" To complete the blzarre upect of the whole 1ituation, the planning department this morning requested the company of newsmen to pick up the taped transcript at the Sheriff's Office. Planning department officials 11ald that this wu done to verify that the tape had been untouched and locked up In the sheriff'• property locker ovenllgbl. Newsmen by request had accompanied Dickeson to the Sheriff'• Office Thursday night to depOslt the transcrlpt. Laguna Niguel Firm Directors Replace Shares In a move to replace outstanding shares or stock with those of the new parent company . directors or the Laguna Niguel Corporation Thursday announced a 1 for 5,000 reverse stock spill. The action was taken to replace 29,756 shares of Laguna Niguel Corporation with shares of stock In Avco Community developers. Jnc., (ACDI). The two com- panles merged In December. 1970. A company apokesman 11\d the devlct of a reverse 1tock split la used to avoid having a few 1tockholders with only 1 fractional share of stock In a company. ACDJ a subsidiary of Avco Corporation , now owns 98.G percent of La,guna Nlguel's common stock. Under the stock split , ACOJ will pay $5.625 for each share of Laguna Niguel stock. The company previously made an offer of $2.75 per share plus one half share of ACDI stock for the outfit.anding securities, but a few people did not Uike the offer. The $5.625 figure appro1imate1 the $2.7$ figure plus one half the cost of an ACDI share, which closed at $6.875 Thursday. Santa Ana Man Arrested In $700 Pocket Heist A Santa Ana man, drivln& a newly purchased r.ar, wa1 arrested 'llrursday night after be 11Je1edly took seven •too bills from the pocket cif a sleeylng La~ Btac:h hottl guest. Polict Identified the 1lleged UUef 11 Carl Colby Struck, 22, of 511 \Y. Sixth St ., ;ind said he waa taken Into custody by Sanla An11 police at the request of Lagu na Beech aut.borftles. lnvt1Ug1tor1 said lhe crime occurrtd In room 108 ef the Vlllaae Inn, ue s. Coast }lighwily. at about 2:30 p.m. Tb~ day where the victim, Kevin P. Burkhardt, 22, tf Van Nuy1, WN vl!ltlng 11 friend. Officers clai m Strunk was the only other man In the reom '11.·hen Burkhardt, who had $700 In the pocket et bis jacket. went to sleep. Burkhardt later told police be awoke at 3.30 p.m. to find botti Strunk Ind his f700 missing. At abut 9:4$ p.m., Strunk was arl'f'sted in Santa Ana and tren~ported back I• Laguna Beach Jail. Det. Gene Brooks said Strunk only had about $85 on his person at the time of his arreil, but that the man h.ad purchased a used automobile earUer In the day. Strunk b: to be ilrralgned Monday in South County Municip1l Court 90 cbar&u of grand lheft, police said. , ~ . lhoae bombs lo IWd1 of ~le, there wouldn't be:rl peoplo left, • ho uld. Alktd to ate.hla view• of President Nisoo'1, fOrt go P>llcy, Bbckley said he ~ NI.Ion "has done well in some areaa .'' ·~·-playing with dynamite Jn China ... Buckley cool.ended noting wryly 'that if Nixon were not a Republican he 'd be an "instant llt>rral hero" for opening the door. "Conservatives place too much reliance on Nixon," Buckley said. He warned against such blind faith In Nixon's handling of China "not because of any Lacie or Integrity" Nlxan bas, but ratber "hls abillly lo pull tt off." Among the pnipo<!Uoni Buckley of- fered In hls rtmarkl were: -' ' T h e opiniolHJUlking community misunderstands the.power of repression." -"The absoluliurJ in their struggle against repression are doing their best lo make the constitution incOOerent. -''Our self-proclaimed revolutionlll.! • , . " should be hung. Buckley argued that the "atate has a primary, ontological right to protect ill right to !UJ'Vive." In order to aurvive' the atate mu.st employ "tl40Ctlons o f stabllily". "1Uooa: such aanctlom ltf Ute removal ol Bobby Stale hun hls ofrn trial and • "cop's dllband.ln, of a demof15l.ratlon ht fears may M:ad to . vtolence." Both, Bucklty said, may be done today without violating the ConsUtuUon. During the qlieJtjon pe{lod (ollowiog hls talk, Buckley said ••welfare la Rot a prQoo blem that can be settled by investtog the state with the power to regulate lbe siie of families." The remark was in response to a quu- lion from the audience, "How can we slop breedlng a loser race?" Rapid Withdrawal Out Nixon 'Won't Be Intimidated' by Demonstrators W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -Pre.; dent Nixon said Thursday night he would not be "intimidated" by ant I w a r demonstrators in Washington but would slick to his policy of attempting to win a lasting peace in Jndochina . ln a televised news conference. the President said a more rapid withdrawal from Vietnam advocated by his critics v.·ould lead to a "very dangerous situa· tion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers of war in the future." He said demomtrators who break the law will be prosecuted. Nixon also bid to further improve American relations v.·ith Communist China. saying •· i hope and I expect to visit mainland China ... at some time in my life, in some capacity." Related story page 4. Referring to antiwar demonstrations in Washingtoa for almost two weeks, Nixon said he wanted to correct an impression from television a c c o u n t s that ''Washington is somewhat in a stale of giege." "'l'be Congress is ilot intimidated.'' Nixon said. "The President is not in- timidated. This government Is going to go forward." But he said he did "not want to leave the impression that those who came to demonstrate were not llstened to." Nixon repeated that he would not set a definite date for the withdrawal of nil American forces from South Vietnam. J1e said it would have the effect of saying to the North Viet1amese, "we quit, regard·' Jes 80f what you do." The· setting of a delitilte: date, Nixon said, would de11troy any incentive the other stdt ~ bav,,. tq nqptlate and would destroy the American bargaining po1it3on on prisoners of 'far. "Therefore.Jhc settin(CU: a date is not sometqing that's in our ~teresl; it's only ih ,the enemy's interest.••·NIJ'OD said. To get its POWs batk, Nir<in said. the United States will k!tp a midual force in Vietnam "no matter how long it takes." Ht repeated that tbe other condition for a total U.S. withdrawal is the ability of the Stluth Vietnamese regime to defend itself. Nixon also: -Said he intervened in the case of Lt. William L. Calley because there was •'great concern" across the e»Wltry. He said his actio11 announcillg he would have Laguna's Women Chamber Group Seekin.g Smiks Kindness, courtesy and a friendly smile will pay dividends in Laguna Beach this summer. The ~Jermaids, women's div ision' of the Chamber of Commerce are sponsoring a summer "Smile" campaign, Chamber directors were advised at their Tuesday meeting, and quanUUes •f prizes will .await tbe winners. Mermaid Madeleine Milne said the drive will run from July 4 through Labor Day and will be formally launched at a pep rally for employes J une 28 in the Playhouse. Leading the rally will be speaker Fred J1erman, nationally known sales training expert who has ronducted similar cam· paigns for communities and business firms . "We're paying him $500 •ut of the 1'.fermaids' money for tbe program," ~1rs. 1'-1ilne told impressed Chamber directors. Herman also will appear at tbe May 19 Chamber breakfast, she said, to give a capsule preview of hi! pep rally smd e11- courage businessmen t& have their cmployes attend the rally. All employes In Laguna will be eligible for pri2e1, Mrs. Milne: said, from waitresses and store derks te police of- ficers and bank tellers. Operating details still are being worked out, but the basic idea will be to place ballots throughout the community so customers can vote for the friendliest faces they encounter. the final review of the officer's conviction of murdering civilians at My Lai had ''cooled down'' the public outcry. -Promised his administration would c0mply with the Supreme Court decision that busing and other means would be used to eliminate segregation in southef'JI schools. Related story page 4. -Asked if he would think about naming a court of inquiry to see who got the United States into the Indochina war, aa1d he waa "not going to cast the blam9 for the war fn Vietnam on either of my predecessors." · -Said the possibility at this time of new operal..iom ln Indochina comparable to the invasions of Cambodia afld Laos wa s "quite remote '' and that when the u.s. troop le vel reaches 184,000 Det. I it would be "completely remote." Laguna to Hold Guitar Lessons A new series of folk guitar lessons, spo nsored by the LagUna Beach Recrea- tion Department. will begin Thursday, J\1a y 6. 1'.1elanie Panush again v.·ill leach the popular classes held on Thursday e\'en- ings in the Recreation Department, ]75 N. Coast llighway Beginners class is from 7 p.m. to 8, intermediates from I p.m. to 9. Fee for the £ive-wetk coune is $5. New students are welcome. For further ~ formation call 494--1124, Ext. 45. Rockefeller Divorce LITl'LE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) ~ The wife of former Arkansas Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller was granted a divorce Thurs- day on grounds of "general indignities." Attorneys for both sldes declined tQ disclose terms of the settlement to which Mrs. Jeannette Edri.!I Rockefeller agreed. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! A Gr•tt S•l•ction of Quality Upholster•d Furnitur• at • Fcmtastfc Savlnttl Choose from th•s1 quil lity n•mts. Sflerrlll, Martt Canon, Landmark, Hibrftan, NotfOllGI, Jamestown Wnt, mil ny others, · SAVINGS UP TO 20% Newport leach SHERRILL LOVI SEAT I SOFA In metchlng yellow •nd 9rffn pr int. Sof~'I• SSH --···---···· SALE love SNt-R1t. $.uf ...... _._ .. SALi MARGI CARSON SOFA In • nxtur.,. ollvt t trl p•. Rtg. f770 ···--····-·-··-·-....... SA.LI MARGE CARSON SOFA In llm1 1rten print with white vinyl wilting. R91o $500 ··-····-···-········· .. SA.LI MARGI CARSON 9UILTED SOFA $469 $319 $499 $399 ~~.~'C:t ~~~-··-·---· .. SALi $499 MARGI CARSON HERCULON SOFA :::~s~y~~~---·-··-SALi $439 MARGI CARSON LOVE SEAT ~':,'.°z,,!;l~I~ ,, SALi $259 MARGE CARSON CHAIRS In.,.,.,"""'...,,.. $169 • ... $2\S -...• I ALI IA. SOFA INlttlful vtlvtf IOfe, R ... S12S -·-··-··· .. ·-··---SALi SHHRILL SOFA All Uil print In • tri1dltl11J11I 1tyl .. R91. $579 ............. ·-···-·····-··············· SALi SHERRILL CONTEMPORARY Styled In • nice 1tr1,.. R ... $5Sf --·· .. ·-·· .. ··-··----SALE MARGI CARSON LOUNGI CHAIR In ... d. R ... fSOt .... -.......... --IA.LI SHERRILL SWIVEL ROCKER In 1r1en Hwculen. R ... SUS ---··-··--.............. -.... SALE NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNT!l 9 P.M. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NIWl'OlT STOii OPIN •llDA Y 'T1l t $625 $505 $475 $209 $215 NEWPORT 81ACH 1727 Watt<llff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRI DAY 'Tll 9 Prof.ulonal lnt•rior Designers Avelltblt -AID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hwy. Phone: 494-6551 INTERIORS I I 1 7 Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Ft.al .VO~. 64, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF'ORNIA J'EN CENTS Laguna C.ity Attorney Sub.mi ts Resignation After almost 31 years of scrvlce to the city, Laguna Beach City Attorney Jack Rimel has submitted hls resignation, ef- fective May 31. Rimel , who became deputy city a~ tomey in 1940 and has been full time city attorney since November, 1942, iaid in a letter to Mayor Richard Goldberg, "Ths comlitutes my resignation and that of any of my parlous and associates who are deputies from the ofiicea (If City At. ~oas Brown Gets Temporary Chief Post Laguna Beach city manager Larry Rose today announced the appointment of CapL Dave Brown as acting police chief until the position can be f i 11 e d permanently. Brown, currently in charge of ad- ntillistrative aerices for the police depart- ment, will assume the dulies a:f chief on May 7, the date on which Chief Kenneth Huck's resipatiDn becomes efi~tive. Huck is leaving after almost two years as head of the Art Colony force to establish a police department ln Simi Valley, a community ti 65,000 north of 1.-0a Angeles. At 34, Brown will be one ef tht youngest men ever to hold the post. He tias been with the department for almost aix years and was only promoted to the rank of captain in October. A Laguna Niguel resident, the young officer is mar· ried and the father of a two-year~ld daughter. In -making the announcement ef Brown's appointment, city manager Rose described lbe policeman as "top fligb.t. ·~ Rose noted one consideration in assigning Brown temporarily to the chief's job was that the officer is not a potential can· didate for the permanent appointment. A native of Kansas City, Kan., Brown came to Laguna Beach in July Gf 1965 after one year with the Los Angeles Police Department After only three years as a patrol off icer, Brown was pr tr moted to sergeant, a rank which he he~d until recently being boosted to captain under Chief Huck's reorganization of the department . In order to find a permanent successor to Chief Huck, manager Rose said be will advertise in Jaw enforcement publica· lions. Applicants for the job will be screened In a series of interviews with an oral board made up of city and police of- ficials from other communities. Cambodian Tabbed PHNOM PENH (UPtl -Chief of State Cheng Heng awarded the premiership ~ da y to Choup Hell. a relative political unknown who has been serving as his rounselor. He succeeds the ailing Lo11. Nol who resigned. Orpge C.ut We•ther Hazy su nshine will 1reet week· end beachnlks, with lltUe change in coastal temperatures. Mercury readings are pegged in the low· er 60s locally and up to &8 further Inland. INSIDE TODA. Y The UCI To wn and Gown mu&ic group i3 bu.tfJ with, pions for it.! !tudtnt and focu./.tfj If.Iring cO'ncert De-taill oM pic- tures nrt in todall'& Wetktrnder. ...... .. -·--• .. ,_ ' --.. Cfltdlhtt U• ' .. _._ • (Ill~ .... •Mlllll"•llh ~-· ..... tt -· 1~1t ,~_. tt ·--/111.arlt•h •11 -·-• Ti'""*' " ....... , .... • --..... ....... .... WM-• -.. W_,.. ""'" l>-U """ L..,._ " .......... .. M1llmx • --..... ...... .... tomey a.od Deputy Clty Attorney• or Laguna Beach." The resignation lhm appeared to in· elude that of attorney George Logan, an associate in Rimel's Santa Ana law firm, who has served as deputy city attorney for Laguna Beach, rpecializing in Plan· ning Commission matters. Mayor Goldberg said today h e "a.uwned" lb.ls to be the case. Rimel was reported by his olfice to be out Of town until Monday. Of Rimel's departurt, Goldberg aa.Jd, "We feel he has served the city well for many years and wish him the best of luck." The mayor added , "We hope to have an appointment {for the city aUorney post) in the not too distant future -aomeOlle who ill very capable." He declined to uy u a specific CID· did ate ~ <eb_<ln& comidered !or tbe poaJ. tion, nohng, "This ia • mattu for the council to decldt.'' In his letter ol resignatlon. Rl.mel .uld it wa1 hl1 understanding that the city wished him and his staff to continue u special council for the city in all pending assesment district proceedings where a change in legal counsel .:t I.hi.I Ume would be. prejud1cial to the city. ··All lhlng.s wbicb are commenced muat at aome lime end,•1 he wrote. "but it II with considerable emotion that 1. write and sign th1a letter. I was just 28 yean or age on JWle 19, 1940 when lhe City eoun.. cU of Laguna Beach adopted Its re10h>- Uon appointing me a1 deputy city at. tomey ••• I was just past 30 years of age in November, 1&42 when I was appointed full Ume city attorney. As of May 31, I will have served the city almo.t 31 years. "U ~ p<rticularly araWylng to me that during this IM1 period of lime which has carried through 15 general city elections and many changes In crunc.11 personnel, I have been retained In office without any fixed term or tenure that could not have been terminated at any eouncll metting." The attorney concluded with an e1· pression of "tbe D)O!t fe"mt and sincere hopes and wiahes for a ccoUnued study, alow. conservaUve, and aafe growth through thele oomewbat troubled llmea." OS ow s DA~T PILOT ID" PMlt VOICES BIZARRE PLEA Hospital Attorn01 Colllns OillLY"'llOT lltff .... LEFT IN TME HOT SEAT Chalr~n p,. T•m Smith 'THIS IS HOlllllll' County Plfn1\or Foley Nixon Arrives • Ill County President Greets 2,000 Pend:leton Leathernecks President Nixon's jet tooched down at El Toro Marine Corps Air Stat.ion ahorUy .tfter 11 a.m. today. Moments after his arrival ln Air Force One, the President and his party boarded a helicopter to whisk them to Camp Pendleton where he was scheduled to Flood Contained In Water Line By Lifeguard A mini-Oood in one oi the control sta- tions on the big new waler line recently installed i11 Laguna Canyon WI! brought under control Wednesday when a life- guard diver was summoned to close a valve Inadvertently It.fl open. The mishap occurred in an underground control station across from the Fesli vaJ of Arts grounds. Workmen were chlorin- ating the stretch ol 36-inch pipeline be- tween the slatiot and a second control structure further out in the canyon near the lakes. Construction on both stations is still in progress. Wa ter nowi11g. out of a si x-inch clea"- out line through the open valve built up in the miall slructure to a point where Lifeguard Lt . Eugene dePaulls was sum- moned to help get the submerged valve closed. Water District manager Willia m Moorehead said the incident appare11tly was the result of a misundersllnding or instructions being broadcast on t r u c k radios to workmen cleaaing the line. F ive Killed, Planes Collide Over Laos VIENTIANE •. "-(AP) -A U.S. A;r Force offictr, an Am erk an charter pilot and three Laotl1n crewmen were !tilled Thur&day when two plant! co!Uded tn the air over a mountlinowi area In northern LaOI . An Air America plane carrying relief supplles '*'a& approaching the refugee village of The Thom , 95 miles northea!lt of VitnUane, when It collided with an Air Force obaervaUon plane used for 1pottlng bombing tar gel&, a U .s. EmbassY 1pokesman nld. There were no survlvon. review 2,000 waiting Marines. The Marines, fresh from Vietnam com- bat, spent the night shining up thtlr brass In i.ntic:ipalion of the commander-in chier'1 visit. Glimpsed brieny with the President at El Toro were bis daughter Tricia. wear· ing an aqua. Ooral-print suit and her fiance Edward Finch Cox, who sported a bright red and yellow Lie. The President waved to a crowd of IM! with a gesture indicating he-didn 't have time to stop and chat. The President, here for 1 planned long weekend at the Western White House In San Clemente, presented the tst Marine Division at Camp Pendleton with the se-- cond unit commendation it has received since the divi11ion entered the Vietnam connict five yeal'! 1go. The group of Leatherneck& participating in today's ceremonies, is the last cOntingenl of the division which will be disbanded -ii.! troops absorbed into other units. Although the ceremonies were not plan- ned for the general public, scores of civilians attended. · The entire elghlh grade class of Marco Forster Junior High School -student.! from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -were allowed to attend. A San (.1emente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Romig who recently re~ived the Silver Star for heroism under fire in Vietnam. carried the Presidential Unit commendation streamer back to his unit. Band to After the ceremonies at Pend1eton, the President boarded 1 helicopter once more for the trip upcoast to La Casa PacUica. Following a working wietend at the Weatem White House, the President is expected tc return to Washin&too on Monday. No details of the weekend 1cbedule. have been released. Rezoning Okayed In Laguna Hills RezonJng of 185 acres of land north of Laguna Hills Leisure World for develo~ ment inlo an apartment complex bas been approved by the Board of Supervisors. The request of Newport Investments Inc. of Newport Beach to change the r.one of the property south of the San Diego Freeway from agricultural use was granted Wednesday. Included in the development which la bordered on the north and aiouth by the Ridge Route and the future extension of Canada Road will be a buffer strip of landscaped property including an e:rtsting stream bed. The proposed 1partment.s are not directly under the El Toro Marine Air Station flight path but near enough 10 that aound attenua!lion is one of the con- ditions of approval. •oehut~ Concert Set for Stage in Laguna The Laguna llel!ch Hlgfl School mard!lni band will march rlabt onatage in the high school audiklrlum tonight tc make Its debut 11 a full~fiedged con. cert band. The 48-piece spring semester counterpart of the field band will be heard in a varitd program of ml.l!ic t!peclally written for theater performance. The pJO(ram, open to the publlc. will b<flln ata p.m. "c.oncert band music," said director Frederick Stoufer, ''hat llnally come or age. We don't have to play progrlll\s tall of SOUsa marches and weak classical transcripUoru1 1ny longer. We bate our own excitin& repertoire writ- ten for perfonnanct in the Jheater, not on the march. 'lbit means two IJ't•t bands with two great styles of muaic." Samples of the "new" concert bind mmlc to be beard klnight include ''Fanta1de on a Danish Theme," by Albert OliYer Davis, 1•Conctrt M&reb Lamar,'" by cutton Williams end "Rock Theme" by John Cacavu. • ' Permit Rejected; Officials Vanish By JACK BROBACK Of 1119 rt.Uy ,, .. , Stitt Orange County planning commissioners Thursday denied a permit for Saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hills after six 2 to 1 lie votes and three hours of angry debate that ended when two comntiS!lonera fled the scene. Commission Chairman Woodrow But. terfield and his collegue Fred Jefferl!IOn vanished during recess. A tbrol'lg tstlm•ted at 100 persons hooted, clapped and sUrred during the three hours. Veteran county political obae.rver1 said It WJ,J d.1e moat incredible chtin Of everrtf: ~'"l~.tl • pu~ ~tins ta 'a. Alter cmnml!llooera But)e!fleld and Je!IUIOll bolted fl'om the iuaton. tht ,. maln1nl two coanty plannet1 voted to dell)' tb6 Slddlebaek llolpltal perm1I. They uld they did "' In order to aet tbO enUre issue squarely before the Orange County Board of Superviaon1. When the meeting finally adjourned, Chairman pro tem Howard K. Smith of Huntington &ach ordered the taped trl.(llCript on the ses&lon impounded ia the Sherill'• Office overnight for safe k<\eplng. A member of the Orange County Grand Jury, preeent during the se.sslon. asked planning director Forest Dickason for a copy of the transcrlpl Olckuon, when it was all over gasped. ~ has ~ver happened before In the planning commlulon's history. I can Jm· agioe how this will be Interpreted when the public reads about tt tomorrow." The basic lsaue was that the Lutheran Hospital Society wants to build a hospital in Laguna HUis but to do so it must have a cond1lional use permit from the plan· ning commlnion. Its application for that permit has been delayed for several weeks by action of three commissioners -Arnold Forde, now In Europe; Butterfield and Jefferson. The permit muat be obtained by May 18 or the hospital's f~eral grant of $1.6 million Hill-Harris Act fu11ds may be lost. The community is raising a similar amount ln matching funds to build 1he facility. Butterfield, an appointee of First District Supervl!or Robert BatUn of San- ta Ana, set the tone for the hearing by calling the question "simply a real estate matter, one of economics." He and Jefferson were to maintain that attitude through the following incredible series of events. In the nei:t three houra, the four members commission heard every possi· ble ruervaUon about eranting the permit removed: -Deputy County Counsel Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach told them that they were not to rule on the need for a hospital btll only on general compatibility grounds. -Road department englneer Murray Storm told them that there would be no traffic problem11 created by the hospital. (Thia was one « Forde'1 highly publicil· ed "nagging doubts.") -DeWiU Bishop, administrator of the Southern C8.llfornia Regional Office of Comprehensive Healtb Planning told them that the action of 1 local ad hoe health planning committee Tutlday had no bearing on the decision: that the rqional 1gency bad long ago approved S.ddleb1ek Hospital. Delpite these auurances that there were no logical or legal 1'08dblockJ to granting the U!e permit, the following &it split votes took place : ~ The first motion by Smith was for ap. proval. Smith and Commluloner Dan Foley voted "yea"'whlle Butterfield and Jefferaon votlld •1no ... The lttOnd motion by Butterfield was to deny The result wi.I another 2 to 2 d .. dloclc. Foley then ,...ned the fleld and ,,.,.. td for denial, "to aet the matttr before the Board ol Suoervisonl." J dlorllOll ""' I • Butterfield predictably r e v e r 1 e d themselves and voted against the motion. Foley then moved for simple denial. The result wu the· same. Foley then made another attempt. to resolve the issue by moving to refer the matter to the aupervison: wtthout com- menL The aame 2 to 2 vote folloftd. Butterfield then moved to adjourn tht meeting. Thia failed by tht same tie vote. At thia point, BuUerlield declared a 10. minute receu. He and Jeffenon diJa.p- peered for tbe nilht 6m(tl!, actit!f "' <!iain!t"!' in tom, call~ the meetlnt to ordtr after about • IG-mlnule delay, Lepl qu..UODI tllen jumped up to ..,. ftoltt ... two re~ conuniasioners. 9Wld' two of $ !lye. conunlJlloners a<t on.file pernilt II the .,..tin& had not been J'1aJ1y ailjOoiroedr Could two commlSllionen legally act on the matter in u much u there had been no call !or a quorem? Attomeyi prt.1ent disagreed on the Issue and a 45-mtnute receu wu caned lo research the Jaw boob. Re&!.!tmbled at 7 p.m., the attorneys laid they lad been unable to mab a determination. Foley tMn agreed to the request of Saddleblck H<Wplt.al attorney Michael Collin.! •nd mov~ to deny the permit. Smith agreed. Collins erplalned Iha! lhll way, the lsrue might get before the superv!llOl'I in as much u there ·wa1 clear tndicltion that the commllsl<m oppooed tht pmnlt, whereas a 'vote by only two membet'I to approve might be IUbject to legal action by the oppoaJUon. The controveny ltlriaced earlier thi! week When it wis ~ th1t Com- missioner Fol'de, an appointee of Supervisor Ronald Caapers of Newport Beach, had been IMtnzmental in delaying the approval ol the permit !or the Sld- d!ebact Hoapltal. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (~ Newport Beach) wu advised of the a!tua· lion and moved Into the controverl)' with a promised hearing before the AJsembly Commltlee on "Healtli: • Lutheran HOtpltal Society leaders, who plan to build the nonprofit facility lo Laguna HUis, 1aJd further delay granting the permit wouJd jeoparc!ize t h e hospital '• vital eligjbillty for tht IU mttUon federal crant. Docufnenl3 on file Jn the county recorder'• office lhow that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul F. Marx are the principal oflidalJ In 1he Viejo Capital Company which purchased a aJte last year in the MJ11Joo Viejo area. for the privately financed Mlasloo Community Hospital. . Viejo Capital c.ompany ii also listed a11 one of 29 partners Jn the Mission Viejo Medical Company which IJ building the mission hospital. The balance are moatly doctors. · Forde bas been on a tour of Europe tnd the SOvlet Union ..ith Caspers but has been advl!ed of the upro11r ind 111 ei: .. pected back thlt -tend. Saddlebaek Hocpltal ~ planned to open next yw wltb 1.50-bedt and1 an ultimate capacity of SOl) beds. It has 1n associate re~tlonsblp with South O>ast CommWllty HOlpltal In llouth Laguna to avoid · duplicatlon o! major and costly wvicea. Mwion hospital JJ ~ated to open till• 1ummer with 12' beds and an ulUmate upwioo to 2IO bedl. Hahn Seeking Study LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Supmlaor K•nncth Hahn bu requ<"4d 1 Alary study ti top counly leaden, noting Uutl Sh<rlff Pele Plt<hta "'"" 14.Cll mo• than tht FBI Director J. Edlar -· •'O.Jlt'O ......i u1a.~ •I • • ! DAILY PILOT Fndq, Aor1no, 1971 Con·servative Bucl{ley Speaks at UC Irvine By GEORG!l LEIDAL Of .. Dlllf '411t ... ff A ndf, wubed, cleaa cut, courteoua and attentive iiudtence or 11800 listened to con.servative spokesman William F. BuckJey Jr. Thursday night at UC Irvine. While 11\e Crawford Hall capacity crowd was, dotted with long·haired young people, nu bare reel were observed. 11lere were many middle-aged persons present. The hall's lnadequ1te sound systen1 fre- quenUy made it difficult to follow Buckley. Jn bis opening remarks, Buckley pro- Nine Police Groups Bacl{ Arbitration Nine Orange County police associations have reaffirmed their support for a state Senate bill which would force binding arbitration on clties involved in salary dispute& with pubUc safety workers. Spoke.."D\en for the police associatlona met Wednesday night to counteract a campajgn started by all north Orange County cities against the arbitration bill. Representatives from police associa· lions in Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, San Clemente, Westminster, Stan-. ton, Anahlin1,,Bueaa Park, La Habra and .. Orange si&Oed lbe.lr .nam~ .to 1 letter .1£. firming suPJXN:t. for Senate Bil 33.1. , , The bill is-sponsored by Senator Ralph Dills (D-Torranoe ). and would replace the MyeB44U:Uaa-Brown Act of 1961 which set 11p 1'BIH( and confer" pro- cedures for· aala"iy""lalks with police ana firemen. moted vlc:o cbancellor Jack Roy lo chancellor and conltHed hlo em· barrQIDlent at b•vtn& dilCOVtrtd ' lqrk ff'OJll the Hoy's 1ilvtr ftatwart In IUJ pocltet. "That's the minimal e11cUon from a pre-l ectured dinner party," Buckley jok· ed . The audience roared at lhe remark, evidence it did not think Buckley \Vas ad-- vocating petty thievery. On other criminal issues, Buckley, in answer to a question from tlle sud~. aald he is "agairut killing of men, women and children." . 'PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE' Buddey, the Chin1 Witcher 11K.ll.ltna tometilne ii justified," he ad- ded, "In the effort to rtd onnelf of a tyrant or t.o free prllonen of war." Nollnt that ht 1-...I Ute quatlon WU mMni to eJJcit tome rtlponie t.o the charce of "American aavagery" Jn Viet- nam, Buckley said doves have charged six limes the number of bombs had been dropped there than were dropped in Europe during all of World War 11. lie discounted that such was evidence of American savagery, ln that the bomb- ing missions wtfe di.reeled at military installations of the enemy. "If we bad dropped one hundredlh of DAILY PILOT ,....... ..,. LM f'•T• 'A FORK IN MY POCKET' Buckley, the Perfect Gvt1t -bombs lo Ilardi or peopl•, there wouldJl't be ~ people left," ht uld. AIUd to u ata l\11 vie.'IVI of Prulde.nt Nlson't fotY policy, Buctr.tey Slid ho ttiouctit 'NlsoD "bu done weU in some areu." "He's playing wtth dynamite In China;• Buckley contend~ noting wryly that Jf Nixon were not a Republican he'd be an •·instant llberaJ hero" for opening the door. ··conservatives place too much reliance on Ni.ton," Buckley said. He warned against such blind faith in NilOn's handllng of Chlu. ''not because oI any lack or lnte1rity" Nlxon fw, but ralber "tu.a ability to pull It oU.'1 Amonl tht propootllonl Buollley of. fertd tn h1I rem1rb were: -' ' T h e opioioo-m.a.i.lng community misunderstands the power of repression." -·'The absolutl.ier .. In their struggle against repression are doing tbelr best to make ilie constitution incoherent. -"Our self-proclaimed revolutionlsta •.. " should be hung. Buckley argued that the "atale has a primary, ontological right to protect its rtgttt to survive." In order to survive the ztate must employ "sanctlona. o l stability". Amonc auch sancUont ani the remo•al of Bobby Seale f1om 1111 own trial llld a .. cop'• dl!bandln1 of a de~tlon ti. fears may lead to . violence." Both, Buckley said, may ba doue tod1y wit.bout violating the Comtltutlon. During the question period following his talk, Buckley said "we1rare is not a prG- blem that can be settled by Investing the state with I.he power t.o regulate the size of families." The remark wa., in response to a que~ tion from the audience, ''How can we stop breeding a loser race?" Rapid Withdrawal Out Nix on 'Won't Be Intimidated' by Demonstrators WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said Thursday night he would not be ''intimidated" by ant i w a r demonstrators in Washington but would slick to his policy of attempting to win a lasting peace in Indochina. Tn a televised news conference, tile Presideat said a more rapid withdrawa l from Vietnam advocated by his critics would lead to a "very dangerous situa· tion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers of war in the future." He said demonstrators who break the law ·will be prosecuted. Nixon also bid to further improve American relations with Communist China, saying ''I hope and I expect lo visit mainland China ... at some time in my life, in aome capacity." Related story page 4. Rererring to antiwar demonstrations in Washington for almost two weeks, Nixon said he wanted to comet an impression from televilion a c co u n t s that "Washington is somewhat 1n a slalt of siege." "The Congress b not Intimidated," Nixon said. "The President is not in· timidate:d. This government is going to go forward.'' Nixon also: -Said he lntentned ln the case of Lt. 'Villlam L. Calley because the~ was "'great concern" across the country. He said his action announci111g he would have Laguna's Women Clia1nb er Group See king S miles Kindness, courtesy and a friendly smile \\'ill pay dividends in Laguna Beach this summer. The Mermaid!, wemen's di\·ision 41f tbe Chamber of Cemmerce are sponsoring a summer ' ''Smile" catnpaign, Chamber direclon were advised at their Tuesday meetlng, and quantities t f prizes will ~wait the winners. Mermaid Madeleine Milne said the drive will run from July 4 through Labor Day and will be formally launched at a pep rally for employes June 28 in the Playhouse. the final review of the officer'• conviction of murdering civilians at My Lai had ''cooled down" the pubUc outcry. -Promised his administration would Comply with the Supreme Court decbion that busing and other means would be used to eliminate segregation In souther. schools. Related story page 4. -Asked if he would think about naming a rourt or inquiry to see who got the United States into the Indochina war, said he was "not going to cast the blame for the war in Vietnam on either of my predecessors." -Said the possibility at lhis time of new operations in Indochina comparable to the invasions of Cambodia a11d Lao~ was "quite remote•• and that when the u.s. troop level reaches 184,000 Dec. I it would be "completely remote." Lag1ma to Hold Guitar Lessons A new series or folk guitar lessons , sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recrta· tion Department, will begin ThW'sday, ~1ay 6. Senator Dills said -0£ the bill : "Those emplo)'ers who have negotiated in good faith with their pubUc 1ateiy employe:i: do not rear thi1 tegl1JaUon. Those who, for whatever reascim: can not solve salary disputes or lmpaues will Jlnd that com- pulsory arbltrat!On is prderable to strikes, slowdowns, sick-outs, and other. job action& which result In lone lasting ill feeling." . The rUne pollcc auoclatklns supporttnc the bUI are me'rnbenr rJf PORAC (Peace Offlcen . aeua~ch AuoclaUon 0 f California), Orange CoulilY chapter. Hospital Society Leader Tells Aim of Board Vote But he said he did "not want to leave the impression that those who came to demonstrate were not listened to." Nlxoit repeated that he would not set a definite date for the wit.bdtawal of all American forces from South Vietnam. He said jt woold have the effect of sayipg to the Horth Vietaamue, "we quit, regard- le9 IOf what you do." 'n.t setting of 1 definite date, Nixon said, would destroy any inctntive the Leading the rally will be speaker Fred Herman, nationally known sales training expert who has conducted similar cam- paigns for communities and business firms. "We 're paying him $500 eut of the Mermaids' money for the program,'' ilrs. Milne told Impressed Chamber directors. Herman also will appear at the May 19 Chamber breakfut, she &aid, to give a capsule preview of hi:!I pep r11Jy Md e•· courage businessmen te have their en1ployes attend the rally. Melanie Panush again '"'ill teach the popular clar;ses held on Thursday even4 ings in the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast llighway Beginners class 1.t from 7 p.m. to 8, intermediates from I p.m. to 9. Fee for the five-week course ls $5. New students are welcome. For further in. formation call 494-1124, Ert. 45. Fourteen A,11_11 ,~~ 21 ·~ • ~o·~°'li'"'ident or the departmeill!'U. YriiirilMlri li!IPOl«C:~ ' . !.Ulberan frlli!>l!AI ~ely, said today It Pol.lcrmen were rtactlng to a. SwJday wu at lhe request of the Society that at· meeting between representatives of torqey Michat lL·Colllna sought Planning Buena Park, La Palma, S~ton, 11~ ~mlqion dealaJ of a land uae pennit Garden Gi:oyo Ind An1btbJt ·w~-lor\lbe l"OJ!Ofid 8addlebacll: 8oapltal '" appealed lo ruo\e' l<Jlllot Jlmes· • order ti> 'lake the tht ~-d of .. more (ft.Garden Grove), a lup ol · case to ou&r the bill, ukine him to chani• i, pool· Suporvis!n. lion. The Lu_t.J:>eran Hospital Society, based Student Struck By Car, Injured A 1g.year"ld San Clemente high school student 1ulfered 1 !eg fr1cture ind other injuries Thursday night in an auto- pedeslrlan collilion on El Camino ReaJ. Terry M. Saccucci of 20 W. Avenld1 Junipero, wu admitted to Souttt Coast Community Hotpital lhortly after the 8:32 p.m. mithlp on El Camino neat Avenida Mateo. Police said the driver o{ the auto, 13- l·ear-old Jerey Blanton of 238 A Mariposa told them he did not aee the pedeslrian on the darkened 1lretcb of the roadway and skidded to a 1top after the impact. The collision threw Saccucci onto the hood of Blanton's car, police seid. -T~ injured student was reported in !ialisfactory rondilion early today 1t South Coast. OIANGI CO.UT DAILY PILOT O~ANO'! COAST PUIUSHIMO COMPAJY t.Nrt N. w.,. ,,,._, .,.,.. f"llMi.Mf J.~\ 11. c.,1.v Vk• Prt11kltnl ..., 0-11 MIMllt' The111•1 k11¥i1 f.<llllf 111111111 A. M11•11lrii•• M• ..... f"I ldltw Cl11rltJ H. L1•t "''"''' f'. Ht U Nlltlt"I Mt"'11i.., ltl1t1• 1 ..... t..11 Offk • 1J2 fo111f J.¥11111• M•lli~t •lllol1eu i P.O. I••'''· t 16&J ... c 1-11hl Offk• JOI H11tli E.1 C 1 111i110 1'11 1, 92672 in·i.os An&eles, is the intended builder of the new Laguna Hills facility. "lt was obviouJ to us that the Planning Commls!llon, after three 11essions, wun't going to act," !aid Tibbitts. "We felt we had to move the request out of com· mLsslon and get it before the supervisors because we have tlme limits to meet ." Tibbitts connrmed that the $1.8 mllllon allocation or liill·Harrls funds for con-- structlon or the hospital would be lost if PFrmits were not secured by May 18. "It seenu ridiculous that Oranae Coun· ty should Jose this money," TlbbJtll Ii aid. "OUr plans are complete and "''e art readY to go u aoon as we set the Land use permit." To arguments that a reduction in bed size of the proposed hospital had nullified previous approval of the facility by health plaMing 1uthoritle1, Tibbits 1aid, ''Th.ere is no reason to delay on the basil or a reduction in siu. Tbil does not have to be reviewed by any planning body. On-- ly ir we were to increase the 1iu would review be required.11 ·TJbbilts 1ald he hoped the matter would receive a "f&lr and just treatment" when the appeal reaches the supervisors. Both ficilitie1 woukl serve a common area includini El Toro, Laguna Hills, Mtuion Viejo and Laguna Niguel. When Thurlday'a clrcus-Uke session tn· Emigrate in April MOSCOW (UPJ) -The now of Soviet Jews to Israel burgeoned lo a record I,300 thb m-0nth despite the Soviet Union's -.igry anti-Zionist campaign, diplomatic sources 1ald today. The sourcts said the April exodus brought to 2,600 the total number of J1w1 allowed to leave for Israel th is year. other side mi&hl have to nqoUate and ded veteran Commiuioner Fo19 ~ woukl destroy the American bargalning med It up, 0 Jt !s 1 horrible Ii(' • 1po1itllc'1.-priJOMn,~ wtr.,:..;, . circurmtanets when two commissioners 'Therefore, the setting ot a date is not All employes in Laguna will be eligible ror prizes, Mrs. ~lilne said, from 'vaitresses and store clerks to police t1f· ficers and bank tellers. Rockefeller Divorce dese rt a meeting during suppos~ someth.ing that's in ourr' terest; it's only recess." _ 1 • in the enemy's Interest, Nixon said, To complete the b~ aipect, or tha To get Its P~Ws bac , MS:orr.said, t~e LITTLE ROC/(. Ark. t UPI) -The \vile of former Arkansas Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller was granted a divorce Thur> day oo grounds of "general indignities." whole situation, the planning department U.nitcd S~,tes Will keep a resldu~I force 1~ thls morning requested the company of Vietnam no mqtter how ldng !t. takes. Operating details still are being worked out, but the basic idea will be to plare ballots throughout lhe community so customers can vote for the friendliest faces they encounter. newsmen to pick up the taped transcript He repeated that the other rondit1on for a at the Sheriff's Office, total U.S. withdrawal is the ability of the Attorneys for both sides declined ID disclose terms of the settlement to which Mrs. Jeannette EdriJ Rockefeller agreed. Planning department officials said that South Vletnameae regime to defend Itself. this was done to verify that the tape had been untouched and Jocked up in the sheriff's property locker overnight. Ne\YSmen by request had accompanied Dickason to I.he Sherifrs Office 'Thursday night to deposit the transcript. Laguna Niguel Firm Directors Replace Shares In a move to replace outstanding sflares of &tock with ti>o&e of the new parent company. directors of the L&guna Niguel Corporation Thursday announctd a 1 for 5,000 reverse stock split. The action was taken to replace 29.756 fihares of Laguna Niguel Corporation with shares of stock in Avco Community developers, lnc., {ACOI). The two com- panies mergtd in December, 1970. A company spokesman said the device of a reverse stock split is used to avoid having a few stocltholders with onJy 1 fractional abare of stock in • company. ACDI a 1ubsidlary of Avco CorporaUon. now owns 98.8 percent ol Laguna Nlgue\'s common stock. Under the ltock split, ACDI will pay $5.625 for each abate of Laguna Niguel stock. The company previously made an orter of $2.75 per share plus one half share of ACDI stock for the outatandlnc securities, but a few people did not take ttte offer. The $5.825 figure •rpl'011m11te9 the f2.7i fiaure plus one hal the cott or ttn ACDI •hare, which cl08ed at ~.176 Thur!lday. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! A Gt•tt Sel•cticn cf Qutlity Uphoht•r•d FYrnlture at a ,__tic Scrwlntil ChcoJe frcm t h••• qu1li fy: n1 me1. Sllerrlll1 M•te Ccnort, Landmark, Hibrltan, NCltlOMI, Jmnllfon West, meny oth •r1, · SAVINGS UP TO 20% Newport leach SHIRllLL LOVE HAT & SOfA In m•fchln1 y•llow 1M ''"" print. Jofe-R'f. S5H -·-···--··-·-···· SALi Lov• S11t--a ... $S6t ···········--· SALi MAIGE CAISON SOFA In • ttxhlrM •live 1trl,-. .... sn o ···-··---·-·····--·----·· sA LI MARGI CARSON SOfA In llm1 green ,,int with whlt1 vinyl w•ltlng. l'f. PIO -·· .. ·-······-·-······· SALi MAIGI CAISON QUILTID SOFA In ltrl9ht, tlN ctlen. Rag. S5H •····-··----·--··--·· SALi MAIGI CARSON HERCULON SOfA $469 $319 $499 $399 $499 arown & y•llow, $439 R ... $520 -·-· .... SALi MARGI CAISON LOVE SEAT In aott. ligh t griten. Rtt. $:179 -··--·················-................... SALi $259 Laguna leoch SOFA l•utlful vt lvtt 1ot1. .... MU ·······-·····-···----IALI SHEIRILL SOFA Lov•ly, cretc9"t aha,. In avec1do v•lv•t. ll ... $6St ··-···-······"···················· .. --. SALi SHllRILL CONTEMPORARY ltylM In a nlc. stripe. .... U59 ·--·-·--··········-· IALE MARGI CAISON LOUNGE CHAIR In 1014. .... POt --···-· SHHRILL SWML IOCKEI In ''"" H..-culon. -IALI l'tl• t25S ------·--··-............ SALE NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTl l 9 P.M. $625 $545 $475 $209 $215 Otfff Offlt" (;)I.II '"'"' m Wn! ••t St,,.., ll"'!l'fl 11u~: nu NfWIW• 1o111 .... 11'f lilll'!!lnfltl'I fladu 11111 '"~ lwieNr• Santa· Ana Man Ai·1·ested MAIGI CAISON CHAtlS In w•rm, lltrewn ten& .... $215 ---·-·-··· SALi $169u. In $700 Pocket Heist A ~nta Ana man, drivlna: a newly purchased car, was arrested Thursday nlghl after he allegedly took seven $100 bills from the pocket or a llctplni L.a1r:una Beach hotel gue1t. Pohce identified the 1lleied thief 11 Carl Cosby Struck, 22, of 51 t W. Sixth St., and said he was taken Into custody by Santa Ana police at the request or Laguna Beach au thoritlu. only other man in the room when Burkhardt, who had $700 in the pocket ef bis jacket, went to sleep. Burkhardt later told police he awoke 1t 3:30 p.m. to find both Strunk and his $700 missing. At abut 9:'4$ p.m., Strunk was ams\ed in Santa Ana and tr1n1porttd back 11 Laguna Beach Jail. Del. Gene Brookt said Strunk only had aboul $85 on his pe rson Ill the llmt: of hi5 arrest. but that the man h11d purchased a used automobile earlier In the day. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•otcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPI N FRIDAY 'TI L 9 NIWPOlT STOii OrlN NIDAY 'TIL t Profe11lonal lnt•rlor Dt1lgn1r1 Avall able -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 Ncrth Co•st Hwy. Phono: 494-655 1 lnvesllgaton s11ld the crime OCC'UITtd In room 108 tf the VIilage Inn, 6911 S. Olast Hi&hway, al about 2:30 p.m. Thurt- day where the victim, Kevlri P. hurkhardt, 22, er Van Nuy$, wa., vlslUns 11 frlrnd. Offlctr! claim Strunk was the Strunli: Is to be arraianed M1nd1y in 6outh County Munici pal Court on c~arges CJf grand theft, pollce 1ald. •------------------------------------------- I I f 7 San CI~menie Capistran~ YOC. 64, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES r EDITI ON ORANGE COUNl'Y, CALIFORNIA • Today's Flnal • :rEN CENTS Police Asl\. 10-15% Pay Increase for Opener·s San Clemente's police officers have made an initial request for a 10-to-lf>.per- cent wage increase for the next f.iscal rear -a hefty raise, they say, because the city's pay scale is tfle lowest in Orange County. Bargaining sessions began on the large 1alary increase late this month. but wages , the officers stressed, ue not the !r'!ly bargaining point. They seek these other benelits and thanges: -Straight pay for al1 overtime with lhti e1ception of report writing time, briefing time and departmental meetmgs. ___ oas ' San Mateo Canyon Gift S~ggestfd A San Diego assemblyniafl who i;it.& DI President Nixon's Committee on Environ· mental Quality has introduced a resolu- tion in the Legislature to urge Congress to donate 3,400 acres of San Mateo can- yan near san Clemente to the 1llte for recreation purposes. Republican Pete Wil!on introduced the measure in an attempt to bloct 1he possibility that the land -declared surplus to the military by the President earlier this year -would fall into private hands. The canyon -along with 6.5 miles or prime swimming beach -was declared excess in a surprise move by the Presi- dent during his last visit to the South Orange Coast. The chances that the state would receive title to the land are quite good, 11fficial.s have said. Only if no other govemrTiental agency wants the land does it go up for public auction. Wilson, however, said there "was a possibility" that the land would fall inte private ownership -thus bis interest in placing official pressure on the congress. One stipulation of the surplus declara- tion for the beaches and the upland acreage is that any government agency asswning ownership must use it for the benefit of the general public. Top state parks officials already have suggested that the canyon portions which are not now farmed could be used for campsites to augment the usefulness •f the beaches nearby. State Director of Parks William Penn 1'.tott said the farming acreage a n d unused open space all could be in- tegrated into a plan for public enjoyment of the canyon, which lies d1recUy south of the boundary between Orange and San Diege counties. Cambodian Tabbed PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Chief of State Cheng Heng awarded the premiership to- day to O>oup Hell. a relative political unknown who has been .serving as his counselor. He succeeds the ailing Lon Nol who resigned. Coast Weatlaer Hazy sunshine will greet week· end beachniks. with little change in coastal temperatures. Mercury readings are pegged in the low- er 60s locally and up to 68 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Th~ UCT Toten and Gown mu3ic gro11p iJ bus11 with plan.a for its student and /GCW.t11 17Jring concert. Dttail.t end pieo turts or« in toda11~1 Weekender. ...... " ~lfftMll1 , C"""k" U• 1 CllnlllW ~ c.m1c:1 u (rft•..... 11 a..111 ... ,Ifft • •t11i.r1e1 ,,.,. ' 'IHM.• l't-11 -" ...,. .. ....,.. n ,..,,... ' -...... """ --. lf•\Mfl.. ...... .., 0..9!1M C..IY t •"'"'""' 1r.• s-tl l~lt lllKtl M"'11.th •ti Tl ..,._ 1' ~,..... "'" ·-. ._.. 1111..,. , ... , --... .,........ lWl -Educational and longevity pay in specified amounts u long as the tmploye qualifies. -The creation of the rank o( police agent to replace the detective label. The rank would be based on achievement and would apply to both uniformed and plainclothes officers. -The city adoptioo of an improved retirement pension plan with 1 marked preference for the slate-administered Public Employes Retirement System (PERS) over a proposed upgraded version of Ute existing private ~nsion plan. Spokesmen for the San Clemente Peact Of~cers Auocialion, the o ff I c I a 1 bargaining group for the officers; said the pay raise requests .span from a 10.per· cent increase for patrolmen to 12.5-per· 001t increases for sergeants and 15 per- cent for tieuteoants and 1bove. The increases far exceed those reOOv· ed after la.st year's spring bargaining sessions -increases ranging from about five to seven percent. San Clemente, a&SOCiation officials said, shares the low spot in the county with the city of Stanton. The averag~ monthly Wary for all of· ficers ln the """'ty, Uley arll'J<d, Is 1915 a inontb. San Clemente and Stanton'• average w11e is fa'. The figures are based on lhe exiBU:ng fiscal year's stalbUC!l. Inequities 1n pay scales, they said, aoar among w1gea-in the higher ranks - hence the increase in salary r!quistl for higber ranking police officen. ~ J5-percent ,lncrease for Ueuten@.11\S, as an instance, still would mean $.fl a year leM than the county average. San Clement.I, association ipote.smen said, offers no overtime or compenaatory time otf, but au other citiea surveyed, 22 ·OS U•I TtllPIMle PRESIDENT ARRIVES Mlrin11 'R11dy Ni xon Arrives To Decorate Marine Unit About 2,000 Marines fresh from Viet· nam combat spent the night shining up their brass in anticipation of a visit from their commander in chief at Camp Pendleton today. President Nixon was expected to land at the El Toro Marine Ccrps Air Station before noon, then immediately board a helicopter for Ute elaborate ceremonies honoring the 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, The President, arriving for a planned long weekend along the South Orange Coast. was scheduled to present the se- cond unit commendation received by the 1st Division. since it entered the Vietnam conflict five years ago. The group of Leatbernecks participating in today's ceremonies is the la ·. contingent o( th!"division, which will be disbanded -its troops absorbed inte other units. Although the ceremonies were not plan· ned for the general public -scores ef civilians -were scheduled to attend. The entire eighth grade ciclss at Marco Forster Junior HJgh Sc:bool -students from throughout the Capistrano Bay area -received pennisslon to attend the rites. And during the ceremonies, a San Clemente resident, Marine Cpl. David J. Romig, will have an Integral part in the citation ceremonies. Cpl. Romig, who recenUy received the Silver Star for heroism under fire In Viet· nam, will carry the Presidential Unit Commendation Streamer back to his unit. A1ter the elaborate cerimonies at Pendleton, the President planned to board his helicopter once more for the trip upeoast to La Casa Pacifica where be plaMed to spend 1 working weekend. His aides said the return to Washington would probablY be 10111ellme lat. Moo· da.v. No details of the wtdtend schedule 1wl been announced early todsy. Hahn Seeking Study LOS ANGE~ES (\)Pl) -Supervi'°r ~elh Hahn has requested a salary sludy 0( top county leadert, noting that SM:rlff Pete Plteheu tams '4:,028 mort than the FBT Director J. Edgar Hoovtr'1 W ,000 llllluai uilry. Dana Point Priorities Outlined Dana Point needs -ln Uris order - planned, orderly ·development, fewer billboards, undergrourtd utiliUes, in- torp0ration into a city govemrneol, ill own police department and more par~ Tboo• !!!W:·~ ;.•te '"~·· gestiori _,,tty ol io or~ cornMDI~7' leaders who !wed tbel!' 1adgmentl - A day-ton~.· aJ'td,al 1-loa bw: toar of Q-ange COast elUel:. "!,,. fuots1on; "6onsored by the - Point OlapJber of Commerce, took the speciAI et*ta on 1 guided tour of parkl. business and reere1t1on1l district! of several coastal communities. At the end ol the day, the guests filled out questioMaires, oflering opinions on the desirable and undesirable points of the community 1WTOunding a majOr new harbor. The colony not only has its needs, the guests determined, but it has its fine pointa as well. The consensus praised Dana Point for fls rural atmoapbert, climate, location, ICenic areas and the new harbor. The community allO has an absenct of ~smog and hippies," they laid. Unanimous votes came in aeveral areas. All 30 pttsons supported a total elimination of billboards, plus strict con- trol over other signs, and preservation of wilderness open ~ce and marine sanctuaries. Strong votes also came for develop- ment of riding and hiking trails from the foothills to the harOOr via San Juan Creek; most encouraged a blufft.op pro- menade along the ridges overlooking the harbor. Dana Point should be promoted 11 a tourist and resort town, they said, with the development of 1 downtown area striicUy for pede!t:rians, instead of automobiles. The quesUoMaire result.. showed strong support for diverting traUlc around the ·central shopping district in- stead of through It. Lea Renuners, who directed and organ- ized the tour, said the purpase of the en- tire excursion was to "show ·the people what can be done at Dani Point by point. ing out areaJ of the coast where land aJ. ready ~as been planned and used correct. ly." "Guides" for the event included Ralph Hudson, a representaUve of the County Department of Harbors, Beaches and Parks; Newport Beach City Councilman Carl Kymla, the e1ecutive manager of the Moulton-Niguel Municipal Water Di!trict; Stan WeJnlraub, a tpoi:esman for Avco CcmmunJty Developers, and Tom Severns. conununlty development coordinator for the dty of Hunttnrton Beach. Clemente CofC Names 2 to Post Two new c:odla1rmm have-been named to bo1d the .-.tli «ianhed retail - m<f!lon oomiOJW ~,th 'Sin Cl•-te Chamber of Commercr. ' Jim Xeister, the mariiie~ oC a ma)or downtown department at9ri. and local buslnHswoman Sa~.6Wne1wl11 It.ad the committ.tt. ' The role of Ille gr ... ~t'to devtse ttllil promoUOll Pf'Oil'ln'll 11\d acUvlQa for Ille city'• -· Qlllnbfto dlrnton set up thl or1an1z1Um lit.I lad 1f&I'•, BEST DRESSED POODLE Gogl RldH Aga in Clemente Poodle I n Fashion Show Gogi, San Clemiente'1 poodle with an extensive homemade wardrobe. will make an inroad into showbiz Monday evening. The little silver poodle and ita rnlstre:1s, Mrs. Charlotte Peterson,. will present • canine fa.sbion show for familieJ of Palisades United Methodilt Church at 6:30 p.m. Gogi wears holiday c o 1 t u m e s handmade by Mn. Peterson and her hus- band. The wardrobe consist! of suits celebrating major holidays, including a full·length Easter Bunny getup. The Monday evening event will be link· ed with th e church's potluck 1upper. Thoae attending are encouraged to brtog their chi.ldren and cameras. Chest X-ra y Van In San ·Clem ente A mobile unit offering chest X-rays for a nominal fee will visit .a San Clemente 1hoppin( center Wednesday and Thun- day. Hours for the unit proWded by California CheJt X-Ray Surveys will be from 2 to I p.m. each day at the Shorecllff• Shopping center. 1'he small fee will cover COits fOr e1· pert Interpretation <>f each X·R.ay by a lk:ensed radiolog:Ut who , seekt ., of Jung cancer. tuberculosis and ·heart tnlargement. . The 'proj<)CI 11 being tipOlllOred by·the ·So C1m111i. J1111ior Woman'• Club. ' " Cb.amhet Sing~rs ·Set Saddleback College'• chamber lingers will perform for 1Nmbtr1 ol the S.n Clemente Art. and Cr1ftl Club M., 13 11 aq evenill& .-Una In Mym Hill of lhe United •Prubyterlan Olureh. 'Tllo ..... •Ill l>efla.a~7:Jf1 Rlld. ol them. orrn oltller •tralght time, tlnle..a.nd-one-half, or compensatory Ume off for the overtime job performance. Some officers have said recently a man's annual overtime figure can reach "'° "°""· The request In the police agent issue U.. volves no change In salary range, but standardius requirements for holding tile agent's job. The "agent" would split duties between uniformed patrol to plainclothes detective for a persoo having three years' tx· perience and 30 units of college credit in a 1pecitied law enforcement curriculum Other test reaulta and·superviaor recam- mendations also would be !Deluded In 1ha criteria. San Clemente dty eoundlman have held studies on the ~ lflgmt:nt or the wage-benetit package, bu't u yet tbt negotiations on waees and other benefitt have rtmained at the c~ ltaff. level. Decisions on aalarl11 and frirtge bt:nelits for police and other citJ employes generaJly are discussed during budget study ll'U.lom. This year's aeritt d U., tesalona 1' n. peeled to begin ill'Jdd.Moy, s Permit Rejected; Officials Vanish By JACK BROBACK 01 tM 01lly ,lit! "'" Orange C.ounty planning commissioners Thursday denied a pennit for Saddleback Hospital ln Laguna Hills after six 1 to 2 tie votes and three hours of angry debate that ended when two commissioners fled the scene. Comm.isdon Chairman Woodrow But. terfield and bis collegue Fred Jefferson ·~ 4llrlnB ,..,..., ' • A, ·BlhnM>I '5iimlled at •lllO per'sons hooted. clapped and l)irred dm'lnl Iba three hours. Veteran county polilleal obaerver1 aaid It wu the most incredible chaln of event.I ever seen at a pllblic meeting in the county seat. After "comnUssioners Bulte(field and Jefferson bolted from the seMion, the re- maining two county planners voted to deny the Saddleback HMpltal permit. Tbey aald they d1d so in order lo get the entire issue squarely before the Orange CoUDty Board of Supervisors. When the nieeUng finally adjourned, Chairman pro tem Howard K. Smith ot Hi.intington Beach ordered the taped transcript on the session impounded l• ~ Sheriff's Office overnight for safe neplnl!. A ~mber Of the Orange County Grand Jury, present during the ses.sion. asked pla.Ming director Forest Dickason f<>r a copy of the transcript, Dickason, when it was all over gasped, ''This has never happened before in Ute planning commission's history. I can im- agine how this will be interpreted when the publlc reads about it tomorrow ." The basic issue was that the Lutherjn Hospital Society wants to build a hospital in Laguna Hills but to do so it must have a conditional use permit from the plan- ntng commission. lta application for that permil has been delayed for several weeks by action of three commissioners -Arnold Forde, now ln Europe; Butterfield and Jefferson. The permit must be obtained by May 18 or the hO!pllal's federal grant of fl.6 million Hill-Harris Act fUMis may b& lost. The community ls raising 1 similar amount ln matching funds to build the faclllty. Butterfield, an appointee <>f First Diatrlct Supervisor Robert Battin of San· ta Ana, set the tone for the hearing by calllrlg the question "simply a real estate mailer, one of eamomies." He and Jefferson were to maintain that attitude through the following incredible aeries of events. In the next three hours, the lout members commission heard every poss!. hie reservation about g:ranUng the pennit removed: -Deputy County Counsel Tom Conroy of Laguna Beach told them that tlley were not to rule on I.he need for a hospital but only on general compatibility grounds. -Road department engineer MurrRy Storm told them that there would be no traffic problems created by the ho!pltal. (This was one <A Forde's highly publiciz· e~ "na,ggill( doulJ!!.'') , . -DeWitt. 'BJ.sbop, adminlstrator of the soo11",,.. cau1mpi. R.gion11: ornce ol ~~·· ' llyllll ·~!Inning . t4d them tllai ifl< &ctlo'n of I lou] Id• hoc h411tllh ~1'.nnlng committee Tuesday hJd l'IQ btAi-log:, on the decision;, lbat. 'thfi rtgtonal ,,.gene)' had long qo a~ S.ddlebaci< HOlpltlL Despite these . auurances lhal there .,.,. no IOfllcal or legal roadblocl<a to granUng Ill• "" perm!~ tbe lnllowJng •ix t)>Jlt Nolel toolt place: Tbt !Im motion br Smllll wa1 for •Po prvval. &nlih .ncr Oommilllooer Diii -···-- Foley voted "yes" while Butterfield and Jefferson voted "no". The sec<:>nd motion by Butterfield was to deny The result was another 2 to 2 deadlock. -Foley then reversed the field and mov- ed for denial, "to get the matter bf.fore the Board of Superviacn." Jefferson and Butterfield predlctably r e v et i e d themselves and voted •calnst tbe motioo. Foley Ulen ·aiovld tor •Im.Pit douiaL Tbe result waa the ll!De. Foley then made another attempt to reaolve the i8sufl by moving tO refer the matter to the ~ without com--!. The same' t to I 'IOte followed. .Butterfield then moved to adjourn U>e meeUng. This falled by the ume tie vote. At this poln~ Buttorfleld declared a 10- mlnute recess. He and Jefferson disap- peared for the night. Smith, acting 1s chalnnan pro tem, called the meeting.to order after about a 20-minute delay. Legal questJons then jumped up to con- front the two remaining commissioners. Could two of jhe tive commissioners act on the permit if the meeting bad not been legally adjoumed? Could two commissioners legally act on Ute matter in h much u ther'e had beea no caJI for a quorem? Attorneys present dl!agreed on the Issue and a 45-mlnute recea was called to research ~ law boob. Re&.Ssembled at 7 p.m .. the .attorneys 1aid they bad been unable to make a determination. Foley then aere«f to the request of S1ddleback Hospital attorney Michael Collins and moved to deny the permit. Smith agreed. Collins explained that this way, the Issue might get before the supervisors in as much as ~ wu clear indication that the commis·sfon opposed the permit, whereas a vote by only two members to approve might be: subject to legal aetioa by the opposition. The controyeny llµfactd earlier this week when tt was rtpOrted .. that Com· missioner Forde, an appointee of Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach, had been instrumental in deJaying the approval of the permit for the Sado dlebeck H08pltal. Assemblym11in Robert E. Badham (R. Newport Beach) wu advised of the situa- tion and moved into lbe controversy with a promJsed h~&{lng before the Assembly Commit~e on Health. Luthe.ran HOJpital Society leaders, who plan to build the nonprofit facility in Laguna Hills, said further delay granting the permit wouJd jeopardize t h e hoepital'1 vital ellgtbility for the $1.1 million federal granL Documenta · on file In the county recorder's office . abow that Forde and Santa Ana attorney Paul F. Mari are the principal oftletala In the VJejo Capital Company wl'l!c:h purchased 1 1ite last year Jn the Mission Viejo area for the privately financed Mlsslon Community Hospltll. . Viejo Capital Company Is also I.lated as one of 29 partnefl in the Mission Viejo, Medical Compa11y which ii building tho mwlon boopllal. '!be balance are lllOlllY dodo<s. Forilehas bot!><>P·•ilmit ot:E-·~ tho Soviet ·l!nlil!l;'lli!Jl.C.8P«' but hn been ad•iled of tbe Ul'lfOU and ii e1· peeled back lll!J -ktnd. Saddleba<k l!osplt1i ll pl1nned to opai next year wlUI 150 btdl and an ul\hn•te capacity of 600 beds. It li.si an •~bite ttf1tionshlp wltb Soulll Colt! Ccimmunity Hospital In South Lagw11 to avoid cfupUcatlon of major and coatly l!Ol'Vlce1 . Mwlon hoopllll 18 tilted to open lllll 1ummer wtth 1211 btdl: and ID uJUmate Upulioll to 118 bods. ' . -· ! DAILY PILOT SC Conservative Bucl{Iey Speaks . at UC Irvine By GEORGE LElllAL Of .. ..,. ....... ..,. A .,q, wubtd, clean cul, COW1tOOI "'d attentive audience of 1,800 listened to d:inservative spokesman William ~·. Buckley Jr. Thursday night at UC Irvine. While the Crawford Hall capacity crowd was dotted with long.haired young people, no ban led. were observed. There were many middle-aged person! present The hall 's inadtquate SOIDld system fre-. queutly made it difficult to follow Bucklty. IJl his optDing r=arilJ, Buckley p,... Nine Police Groups Bacli Arbitration Nine Qran1e County pollct as,,ociatlons have reaffirmed their support for 1 state Senate bill w}l.ich would force binding arbitration on cities involved ln salary disputes with public safety workers. Spokesmen for the police associations met Wednesday night to counteract a campaign s~e4 by six nortb Orange County citle.s against the arbitr!tion bill. RePresentativts from pollce auocia- tionJ in HWltinglon Beach, Newport Beach, San Clemente, Westpilnster, Stan- ton, Anaheim, Buena Park, LI Habra and ' . Orange signed tbelr n&me3 to a Tetter af. firming sl6)POtt for Seriate Bil 333. . ~ The bill fa-Id by Senator IW.Ph Dills (0.1orrance), Ind would nplact the MYtrJ..MilHas-Brown 1Act of itea which set ap ''meet 8Dd confer" 'pro. cedures for salazy talkl with police and flremen. ~ Senator Diils Nld GI the bW: 1"Thote employers Who have· negotlated in good faith with their public safety emptoyes do not fear lbis legislaliol.l. Those wboJ . for whatever reasons, can not solve salary disputes or impuse1 will find that com- pulsory IJ'bttra.U91J.-ia: preferable to i;trikes, slowdowns, sick~t.ii. and other~ job actiona »bldi·HSfllt ID long lastJni ill feeling." The Dint police ·.-llllool 1Upportlng the bill m b)tmben of PORAC (Peace Officers "••·•-·.:~UOlt. o I . Calli I "'~"' ~. • Fourt°:. ~I th.,..l»tmfy'1 21~"< departments are members of PORAC. Poli«meo were reactln& to a Sunday meeUng between re~tatI,ves Of Buena Parlr; I.a p.Jma.,~loll /!IU• Garden Groye •nd' ~ wheP tiiey appealed to .st.ate ~tor Jam" Whet· more (II-Garden .Oro.,), a JUpporte; ol the bill, utlq him ID cbange hll post· tlon. · Student Stmck By Car, Injured A 16-year-cl<f San Clemente high school 1tudent suffered 1 leg fracture and other injuries Thursday· night In an auto- pedestrian collbkm on E1 Camino Real. Terry M. Saccucci of ~ W. Avenlda Junlpero, wu admlt!ed to South Coast Commun!!)' Hoopltal ahortly after the 8:32 p.m. mllbap on El Camino near Avenida Mateo. Police Wd ·the driver of. the aut.Gt 23- year-old Jerry Blanloll of isa A Maripo11 told them he did not ate the pedestrian on the darkened stretch of the roadway and skidded to a 1top alter the impact. The coUWon threw SaCCllCci onto the hood of Blantoo'1 car,.pollct said. The. injlD'ed lbldent wu reported 1n saUslactory mnd!Uon early today at South Coul. DAILY PILOT Oll.t.NG~ COAl1' PIJILm!IMO C'OM'AN'( t.•Mrt N, W"4 ,,.ldlM .... ,,..,. J.di. lo C11Tlt1 Viet ,.,...'"' _. ~ MtiMtlr n-·· r:,,,u ...... 1"°"''' A. M'"'~"• ~"''"" ~•!tor c>iarl•1 H. Lees kl1ti1..r I'. Ntll ,,..._..,. ......... IM/Wt ........... Offk. 2J2 f1otttt ,., ....... Mam'"J -.il"1r•tn ,,0 , ••~ '''· t2•11 S.. C'-N Offke JOI N1rth El Ct111i11t «••I, t2&11 --COJN Mnll• • W..I MY .,,.._. t.ltwPWI I-": DD _._, hll\INI.,, H\1'111111ttft -..di: 11'1S tleldt lfullv.~ DAl\,.T Pl\..OT, ""II lflllltclt i. ~ ,,,. N""·""''· It ,.,,..llthfll •ltlll' •-c.or s ..... ··~ 111 ..,..,_., .. l11oN fer L"""9 IN<"' ............ , '-II. C.N _., .,....,,..,.,.., aM>d\o ..-111 V1llt'f, ,.., (-It/ c:•"-..... ~ ... ·~ ....... Wll!I -,.,i.i.i "'411111. ....... .,. .... ~ ""'"' • .. a .., .. , ••rw1. °" .. ~ Taf4,t 1r lTI4) '41-4111 a..IAMI Al1oellll11 '42.U71 S-Cle ft Al Da• .,_,.., T1l:1• II "''J..44Jt ...... .... Al 011 IUSidlfU ' Tt111l111 4'4-'446 ~ on, .,,.._. o-r hllllllfrllr!ll • ~, .... -...... '"""' ... """'' .. l!Wit, _,_ ..... ..,.-"" .... ... _,, ... ....... .-lfMwt ..... .... ....:. If ...,,.... -· ~ (INI ... ,... .. w If .........,. .. "" .... ~' M ... Ctlll ..... hOo~•i.tlfll ~ _.,..,. IJ.1t _.,.l'or W "l•!I '1.11 .......,.,.,r mlll••rv llH!IMI-. •.u .-...i.. moJ.e4 vice dlanceflor Jack Hoy Jo chancelJor and confeaed hla em. barr.......n at ~•Vine clbcov....t a lor1r 1rom the Hoy's sllvtr Datware II lil.C pocket. 1;11at'1 the mlnlmal exaction from a pre-lectured dinner party," Buckley jok- ed. The audience roared at the remark, evidence it did not think Buck1ey was ad- vocating petty thievery. On oUier criminal issues. Buckley, in answer to a question from the audieoce, said M bi "again.st killing ol men, women and chlldren." 'PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE' Buckley, the Chint Watcher "KUlfnJ IQJ'Detime is justified," he ad- ded, "in the effort to, rid ..,.U ol a tyrant or to free pa:lsonen of war." 11•11•1 th•t "' -"*' l!lf ~....u .. wu meant to ellcl{ some respon.w to the charge of "American savagery" in Viet- nam, Buckley said doves have charged six times the number of bombs had been dropped there than were dropped 1n Europe during all of World War II. He discounted that such was evidence of American savagery, ln that the bomb- ing missions were directed at rr.il..itary l.nstallation.s of the enemy. "U we had dropped one htJDdndth of •DAtt.'t' l'llOT,,...... 1W UI P1.,_ 'A FORK JN MY POCKET' Buckley, th• Perfect Guell Hospital ~ociety Leader Tells Aim of Board Vote ~ : f • o;.-":!I( ; ' . -. Samue1 'llbblt.., pre9Jdent of the Lutheran Hospital Society, said today It wu at the reque1$t of the Society that at- tomey 'Mlcbael Coqlnl soulht Planning omunJllJ<in cl<nJel "i>r I Janel 1110 permit foi' thi propoud S&ddleback Hospital 'Jn order to take the case to the· Board of Supf~J9or1, ,The ·Lutheran Hospital Society, based lri Los Angeles, ls the. Intended builder of tho new Laguna Hilla lac!Uty. · "It w1s obvious to us that the Planning commission, alter tlu'te sessions,· wasn't going to act.'' nld Tibbitts. "We felt we had to move the request out of com- mission and get It before the supervisors because we have time limits to meet." TibblttJ confirmed that the $1.6 mlllion allocalion <1f Hill-Harris funds for con- struction of the hospital would be lost lf pennlls were not Beeured by May 11. "It seems ridiculous that Orange Coun· ty should lose thls money ," Tibbitts said. •'Our plans are complete and we are resdy to go as .900n .as we get the land we permit." To srguments that a reduction In bed slu of the proposed hospital had nullified previous approval of the facility by health plaMlng authorities, Tibbltl said, ''There b no reuon to delay on the b&s.1t <1t a reduction In 1ize. Thi! does not have to be reviewed by any planning body. On- Jy if we were to increase the size would review be required.'' Tibbitts said he hoped the matter wou1d rectlve a "fair ar.d just treatment" ·when Ute appeal reaches the rupervtsor.e. Both facllltits would serve a common area including El Toro, Laguna HWs, Mlasi on Viejo and Laguna Niguel. When Thursday'• circuB·Ute session~ Emigrate in April MOSCOW (UPI) -The ,;j of Soviet Jews 10 Israel burgeoned lo • record 1,300 this month despite the Soviet Union"• angry anU-Ziontst campaign, dlplomaUc SOUl't'tl said today, The sources said the April exodus brought to 2.000 the tota1 number of Jewa allowed to leave for Israel this year. ded, veteran Commlssloner Foley awn- med Jt up, ''It la a horrible set of circumstances when two commJRloners desert a meeting durlna 1 a sup~ recess." r ~ To complete the bilarre alJ)e(?t ol the whole situation, the planning department this morning requested the company of newsmen to pick up the taped transcript at the Sberlff'a Office, Planning department otflclals sald that this· was done to verify that the tape had been untouched and locked up In the &herilf'• property locker overnight Newsmen by request had accompanied Dic~ason to tbe SherUr~ Ofrlce Thursday night to deposit the transcript. Laguna Niguel Finn Directors Replace Shares • In a move to replace oulstandlng s.i:lms or stock with those of the new parent company. directors of the Laguna Niguel Corporation Thursday announced a 1 for 5,000 reverse stock rplit. 'l'he 11.ctlon was taken to replace 29.756 sh.ires of Laguna Niguel Corporation with shares of stock in Avco Community developers, Inc., (ACDJ). The two com· panies merged in Dectmber, 1970. A company spokesman said the de\"ice of a revene stock split Ls naed to avoid having a few 1tockholderJ wltb only a fractional share of stock ln a company. ACDI a 1ubeidlary of Avco Corporation, now owns 18.6 percent of Laguna Niguel's common stock. tinder the stock split, ACDl will pay $5.625 for each share of Laguna Niguel st('('k, The company previously made an offer of $2.75 per share pl\1$ one hair share of ACDI stock for the outstanding securities, but a few people did not take the offer. The $i.625 figure appro1imates the $2.75 rigure plus one half the cost of an ACDl iihare, which closed at $6.875 Tbursday. Santa Ana Man Arrested In $700 Pocket Heist A Santa Ana man, driving a ntwly purchaaed car, was arresltd Thursday night 1fler be allegedly took SC'ven tlOO bills from the pocket of a sleeping Lagun1 Btacb hotel guest . Pollet JdentlfJfd tht alleged thief 11 Carl Cosby Struck, 22. ef bl! W. Sixth St., and said he WR3 taken Into <:ustody l:iy S,nta Ana police at the requtat of Laguna Beach authorities. Jnvestl11tora said the crlmr-occurred In room lOI ef the Village Inn, 696 S. Coast Highv.'ay, al about 2:30 p.m. Thur• day where thf victim, Kevin P • JJurkhardt. 22. of Van :Vuys. ~·as vi$llln& a fr iend. Officer' <la1m S1 run k \\3S the only othtr man In the room whtn Burkhardt. who had S700 In the poekel tf his jacket, went 10 ~Jeep . Burkh11rdl h1ter told police he awoke at :1:30 p.m. to find both Strunk and his $700 missing. Al abut 9:45 p.m., Strunk was arrested Jn S,nta Ana and transported back t• l.aguna Beach Jall. Det. Gemi Brooks said Strunk only had about '85 on his person 11t the lirne of his arr<'sl. but that !he man had purthased JI Uffd automobile earlier In the day. Strunk is to be arralgTled Monday in South County Municipal Court .on char&u of i::rand theft, pollet said. those bombs ID aearclt ol peoplt, there llJIY lack ol Jnt.crlly" NIJOo has, but wou14p'lfi:. pt0pl1 left," he u1d. . nlller "hll abillly to p'"1 It off.'' Aobd ID y ta Illa vie,.. ol Pftoldtol Among the • propoaiUons Buckley ol· Niion'I .pollcy1 Buckley said ~e !•red ID his mnarliJ "'"'' t.boU&ht Nixon ''btu oone well ln some -' • T h e opi.Qioo.m1klng community areas." misunderstands the power of repression.'' ''Re's playing with dynamite in China," · -"The absolutizers in the.it struggle Buc.klef contended notlng 1n'yly \bat if against repression are doing their best to Nixon were not a Republican he'd be an make the constitution incoherent. "instant liberal hero" for opening the _ .. Our iielf.proclaimed revolutionist! door. • •. " should be bung. "ConservaUves place too much reliance Buckley argued that I.he •·state has a on NiJ:on," Buckley said. primary, ontblogical right to protect its He warned against 11uch blind faith in right to IUrVive." In order to survive. the NlJoa'1 handling of China "not because of state mmt an.ploy ''sanctiooi of stablllty". Amolll lll<h -... the rtmoYll of Bobb'y Seale from h1a iwD trial 1Dcr a "cop's disbanding ot a demonstration t\t fears mey lead . to . vJolence." Both, Buckley aaid, may be done today without "iolatlng the Constitution. During the q~tlon pe:r\od followlng bi& talk, Buckley said ''welfare Lr not a pro- blem that can be settle<! by investia1 the state with the power to rtgulate the size of families." The remark was in response to a quu- tion from the audience, "How can v.·e atop breeding a Joaer race?" Rapid Withdrawal Out Nixon 'Won't Be lntimidared' by Demonstrators IV ASHINGTON (UPI) -Presidenl Nixon said Thursday night he would not be ''intimidated" by antiwar demonstrators in Washington but would stick to his pollcy of attempting to win a lasting peace in Indochina. In a televised news conference. the President said a more rapid 'A"ithdrawal [rom Vietnam advocated by his critics would lead to a "very dangerous situa- tion in the Pacific and would increase the dangers or war in the future." He said demonstrators who break the law will be prosecuted. Nixon also' bid to further improve American relations with Communist China, saying "I hope and 1 expect to visit mainland China. , .at some time in rny life, in some capacity." Related story page 4. Referring to fintiwar demonstrations in Washington for almost two weeks, Nixon said he wanted to correct an impression from telev.is ion a c c o u v t s that 1'Washlngton is somev•hat in a stale of siege." "The Congress is oot intimidated," Nixon said. "The President is not in- timidated. 'Mils government is going to go forward ." But he said he did "not want to leave the impression that those who came to demonstrate were not listened to." Nixon repeated that he would not set a definite dale for the withdrawal of all American forces from South Vietnam . He said it would have the effect Of saying to the North Vlet11amese, "we quit, regard- les 30f what )OU do." The setting of a definite date, NiJon said, would destroy any tncenUve the ~o.tber side migbt·.hav,t ~i:Mi\>tlate and troald destroy th AmtrlC1ft1'Dargaining position nn prblontrt of war. "Therefore, the se.ttlng ol ~ date is not StlmeUl.ing that's in our ~teft.St; it's only in the enemy's interttt,,. N}sbli aid. To get its POWs back, Nixon said, the United States will keep a residual £orce. in Vietnam "no matter how long it takes." He repealed that the other condition for a total U.S. wllhdrawaJ 11 Ule ability of the South Vjetnameie regime to defend It.self. Nixon also: -Said he Intervened tn the case of Lt. \VilUam L. Calley because there was •·great concern" across the country. He sa id his action announciag he would have Laguna's W onien Cliamber Group Seeking Smiles Kindness, courtesy and a friendly smile will pay dividends in Laguna Beach this summer. The t-.1ermaids, women's division of tbe Chamber of Commerce are sponsoring a summer "Smile" camp~, Chamber directors were advised ai tbeir Tuesday meeting, and quantities •f prizes will await the winners. Mermaid Madeleine Mllne said the drive will run from July t through Labor Day and will be form.Uy launched at a pep rally for employes June ,, in the Playhouse. Leading the rally will be speaker Fred Jlerman, nationally known sale! training expert who has conducted similar cam· paigns for communities and busine.!.! fi rms. "We're paying him $500 eut of the itermaids' money for the program.," Mrs. Milne tllld impressed Chamber directors. Herman also will appear at the May 19 Chamber brtakfaat, she said, lo &fve a capsule ~eview al h1J pep rally Md ea· ceurage busbitssmen te have their employes attend the rally. All employea ln Laguna will be eligible for priu1, Mrs. Milne aald, lrom waltrtsst1 and store clerks t1 police ef- ficers and bank tellers. Operating detalls atlll art being werked out, but the hasJc idea will be to place ballots throughout the community so customers can vote for the friendliest fa ces they encounte.r. the final review of the officer's conviction o( murdering civilians at My Lai had "cooled down'' the public outcry. -Promised his administration would comply with the Supreme Court dec~ion that busing and other means would be used to eliminate segregation in 30lltherw schools. Related story page 4. -Asked if he would think about naming a court of inquiry lo see who got the United Slates into the Indochina war. said he was "not going to cast the blame for the war in Vietnam on either of my: predecessors." · -Said the possibility at this time or new operaUons in lndochlna comparable to the invasions or Cambodia aftd Laos was "quite remote" and that when the u.s. troop level reaches 184,000 Dec. 1 it would be '·completely remote." Laguna to Hold Guitar Lessons A new series o{ folk guitar lessons, sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recrea- tion Department, will begin Thursday, May 6. Melanie Panush again will teach the popular classes held on Thursday even- ings in the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast l~ighway Beginners class i9 from 7 p.m. to II, intermediates from I p.m. to 9. Fee for the five-week C<lUt!e ls $5. New students are welcome. For further ~ formalicn call 4~1124, Erl 4S. Rockefeller Divorce Llm.E ROCK. Ark. (UPI) -The wife of former Arkansas Gov. W1nthrop Rockefeller was granted a divorce Thura-- day oo grounds of "general jndigniliea:. '' Attorneys for both side.s decll.ned lo disclose terms of the settlement to whlcb Mr11. Jeannette Edris Rockefeller agreed. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY SALE! A Gr11t Stlocflon of Qu•lity UphohtoroJ Furniture at a '°"'°'"' SaYlnvsl Choo11 from tho10 qua lity nem11, Shtrrlll, Mcwt• Cal'IOn, Landmark, Hibritan1 National, JamtsfOWft W11t, mtny othor1, ' SAYINGS Ufi TO 20% Nowport ha<h SHEARJU LOVI UAT & SOFA In m•tchlng y•llow end tr .. n ,,int. Soft-R ... SSSO ···-·---·· SALE Lov• So1t-«09. SMt --· SALi MARGE CARSON SOFA In • te•tured oll\00 1trlpo. Rtt· $770 ·-.. ·-·-···--···-·-·-·--SALE MARGE CARSON SOFA In Umt lf'9111 print wllh wfllfo •lnyt w1ltln9. R~. $500 -.-...... -... · .. -··-··· SALi MARGI CARSON 9UILTID SOFA $469 $319 $499 $399 In brl9ht, nw c.Son. $499 Rog. ISH -· --· SALi MARGI CARSON HIRCULON SOFA ::;~u~y~~~-_._-·--·--·· SALi $439 SHERRILL SOFA lle•utlful bluo end '""" wlv1t llrlpe. Rot. S.SJt ----·-··-····---... R .. -··· SALi $479 MARGI CARSON LOVE SEAT In 1oft, llght t~n. R91. SJ7' -···-···-···-· Ull $259 MARGI CARSON CHAIRS ~"..~•s2i'J ·-~~~~-·-···· SALi $169 U.. IAt•na ,_,, SOFA INwtlM nlvtt Mfe. $625 ROI• IUS -···-·····-···---IALI SHEUILL CONTEMPORARY :z'.·'5~~ ~-~~~~~~!-~~.--... -SALE $47 5 MARGI CARSON LOUNGI CHAIR lntol•. $209 .... POf IALI SHIRRILL SWIVEL ROCKH '"I"'" H"'"''"· $215 llttt• f25J -·-··-"""··---··· SAL£ NEWPORT STORE OPEN TONIGHT UNTll ' P.M . DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEl -HERITAGE N!WPORT BEACH 1727 W1Jtclllf Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL ' HIWl'OIT STOll O,IN #llDAY 'TIL' Prof•11lonal lnt•rior D11lgntr1 Available -AID INTERIORS \ i LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coilat Hwy • Phone: 494-455 I ' I I I l ' \ I • Fr iday, Aprll 30, 1971 San Clemente Style of Play The A~ Pal mer Method College, Prep Net Resiilf,s Exemplified by Anderson STRIKE· SAND FIRST, TURF SECOND For ·orange Coast Area By PHIL ROOS Df ... o.111 ,.lift 11•11 U's linolher one of those low scoring Uffs . You know, the kind lhe San Clementt High baseball team ls constantly getting itse.U in- Ytilved In. The oontest is scoreless and it's the Tritons' turn to bat in the bottom of the M!venth in- ning against league-leading Tusti n. Up lo the plate strolls Craig Anderson, v.•hose e x t r e m e cool, poise and collectiveness are effective in belying his 17 years. Boom. On the first pitch of the frame , the Triton lead-Off batter is bopped in the ribs by the Tuslin hurler. He lrol~ down to first base. Two pitches later, after drawing fhree throws at- tempting to hold him to the bag, Anderson gets a decent jump and pilfers second with. out much sweat. On the ensuing plate of- fering, the ball eludes lhe Tustin c~lcher and the 5-1 1, 160-pound Anderson salls easi· ly into third a~ a result of a passed ball. He scores on an infield roller to the right side by mate fl.iark King and. wham-mo. the Tritons have a 1--0 triumph and are knotted for the loop leadership with this same Tustin nine. A hypothetical case. indeed. But it's one of those close calls that have typified the normal brand of cliff-hanging FV Seeks Soccer Pro grain By RON EVANS 01 IM DallY flllel S11ff Some 38 high sc ho o l s th roughout the CIF Southern Section officially compete in the sport of soccer, which sttms to have taken an o verwhelming g r ip everyY:here but in the Unitttl States. However. CIF' s occ er membership could 1 we11 slightly to include a 3Mh mem· ber by next fall if 18 Fountain Valley High stu dents get a break from the voter.!! in June. Si x l ee n-year-0\d Baron junior Matt Lynes. l he organizer of the Fountai n Valley 'High School Soccer Clu b, says, "if the tax ove r· ride election passes in June, we 've signed up for officially competing in the CTF prngram for the next school yea r." J But until the Baron grnuo does become an official ClP I participant , it is content v.·ith l pla yin.1t free laACe socce r against make-shift teams from 1 other schools and clubs. At the moment. Fountain Valley's soccer unit has a 1--4·1 I :seasonal record with the Ione v.'in and tie coming against a similar outfit from Corona del Mar lligh. The four losses \\'ere ac- crued in combat \\"ilh Corona and against separate club teams from Golden West College. Santa Ana High and Santa Ana Valley High. Lynes feels it was easy . to field a fa irly representatl~e soccer eleven at Founta in Valley in spite of the vi rtual Un -America n qualities or the sport. "One thing is that a Jot of sports are b asic all y American," he says. "But we've gotten a lot of kids interested in soccer who normally wouldn't be involved ! or interested in high school sports... I The main reason? "'Well ... Lynes says. "these guys an doing something they'd never be doing without a soccer club. "Also. all of the team members (incl~ing Lynes him self) have ext en s i v e backgrounds in soccer." The club membershio in· eludes four Chicanos, a Dutch st udent. a }lun~arian student and two Scots and three Ani::lo-Americans. Add Lynes ... lhere"s also a Yugosla Vian in school who v.·e'd like to have come out. But he has 11 parttime job now A junior who's bttn in California for two years, Lynes gl){ hi.!I baptism-of.fire in soccer in his early grade school years in N e w a r k , De.la ware. He a1S4l plave<I the sport in Washington, D.C .• where there rxi~ls a club type Pl'Oll!'am si milar to one which Lvnes h11" eoin~ at Fountain Valley. The Baron club , will N!new acHon 11talnst It s Corona counte:rpart on ~1ay IS at UC. lrvlne. CRAIG ANDERSON diamond action which has prevailed during the last two seasons u.nder coach Marshall Adair at San Clemente. And of course It's no real secret that Craig Anderson has been perhaps the biggest spoke in the v.•hee.I which has rolled to constant Triton suc- cess in hardball endeavors. An all-Orange Coast area guard in basketball who also handled the punting and split end chores for the Tritons' 5-4 football squad, Anderson Is rated as the Cres t vie\v League's premier shortstop by Adair. Actually. that's qui te a mouthful since last year's first-team all-league shortstop, El Modena's Ki m Carlson, is back for his senior season . Adair says, "A$ far as I'm concerned, Craig's the best shortstop I've 5een , in the league in two years. There's no-question In my mind that he's a better shortstop than Carlson. "Don't get me w r o n g . Carlson is a very good Pilot Pete Sez: baUplayer. CraW: I s e c o n d team all-league in I 9 7 0) should 've been the first team short.stop last season. "Carlson was just extremely hol with lhe bat," Adair adds. Speaking of sizzl ing sticks, Anderson is currently wielding a batting average in the vic- inity oC . 400 and Adai r fore- sees him climbing another SO pob1ts before the season con- cludes. The former El Rancho High and Cerritos Colle11e hotshot adds. "there's just no end to the things which Craig can do. "Ht has the most overall potenlial and ability of any player I've eve r coached and he plays shortstop like he \vas Some 1olfers don't know when to contact tb e ., .. ,.itr born there. wn1mhu1w 1111 10 s11111 A11• "In fact. ran 0 n 1 y sand on bunker sbols and the turf on shots from ara.ss. 8 iwi 1 t~i.i· , , 1 1 , 1 .W0.,11:.; 051 • WOOO • , QI • • remember tv.·o errors he's When in a trap (illustration #I) you win normally $C11•011 !WI ueo 1.1. -" 1-1. •o•• M. made all season." want to swin1 the clubhead under the ball so that it 'C'..O'"°!wi kl•• M . wooo •·1, "'''"l·•· •' A"d••so" ,·, als• •al-" as w.1,11 1w 1 ia.t '"'· wooo 1-t. 1011 1 ... " ... " u • = flies out on a cushion of sand. Therefore, try to contact won 1-s t he best baserunner in a San e. ..... , Clemente camp knee-deep in the sand behind the ball. Exceptions lo this rule are G••no.""" .n0 Smlm <wi 1a11 ""'· ... I. won l·J. 6-1 good running talent. on wry lon1 sand shots and on shots when the ball Joh!"°" 1nd Kfo~er !W! 10•1 ,.,,won ,.,, 6-l. 1·1 "lie's our best stealer and is buried or plugged in the sand. . "'''"¥ gets the best jump," says Normally from grass (illustration ,f 2) you should coa•• M• .. 1;~~1~~'"'1 Ei1•~1• Adair th b II d h h f ;fh' · . EncUleY CCI !!Iii t~ M.1~11>11 \'\ ><. · meet e a an l en t e tur • 1s insure s lja.Jnst 11e1. ll.'11• !El 6-l . 11t1. s11nton E 1-1. "There are probably a cou-· 011. ~om••lfl•d IEJ .. , p!e of kids who're faster but sticking your club in the ground behind the ball ; w~i:1etei~.11~-~~:~ <,\\ ~. ~l: Craig is just very smart and Simply memorize the words, "sand first, turr sec. H~e':·~c\EL:.1,., :M•''°" tE I '"'· knows what to do out there." ond ," _and you'll never forart the advice I've given. ~ l:.r'~.,H1!:,.t:;_~0"~'r~·n•°" (Ei Ande rson's father, a con-yo" today.. e.o 1'n *''-~1p.-· c1rr1co 1ci io.1 to •uon tEI•'•· u k>SI lo Wiiii !El 1-6, cir!. Sr.nllH' C I a- SlrUClion executi ve, is slated ~!::::'::::':::'.::'::=:::=====~======:::=::::::~_:__'•~"'~'~'~'£·-~~"~~~·~·~;,,c,.~~.:_.: to movt lhe family to the Easti Bay area after school is finish"' ed . Although Adair figures that hi s star performe r \vou ld fit right in at a place like Cal State 1Haywardl. he adds that Anderson would be able to cut the mustaro almost anywhere he ven tur e s. b oth academicalt)r and athletically, ''In addilion to being a gifted athlete," Adair says, "Craig is a student leader \\'ilh about a 3.5 grade point average." So, it seems, wherever Crai_g Anderson goes, success will follow. General's Best Jet Jet-AirU Get all these exclusive Jet-Aire 11 features: Twi n tread traction design. Long·milcage Duragen tread rubber. - _Curve c;ontrol sho.ulder" design. ,.er--.Chtwy-'ly""u-ltembi.r-T1m,.11-1t~ •~• 775. 15 F78 x 15 BETTER HURRY OR Set Your Cap for a Bargain DAILY PILOT 2-for-1 Day At Angel Stadium Sunday, May 16 at 1 p.m. TENNIS BALLS G~neral -(11em1I. v isib ility ysllow tsn· b•lls in ••cuum pack· cen. A COAST GINlllAL S'ICIAL Oflfll!I! 3 FOR $198 rlRES 600.ll f.E.T. 1.71 WE HAVE BOAT TRAILER 'TIRES EXPERT WHEEL BALANCE U.S. INDY MAG WHEELS Set of 4 $9900 flOI D-CMIEY-flL Y MOUTM-OA TtWl-TOYOT A ..... \11.-.tm •n(I ·~"'" !Cl 11.0 Ge.,,.., •rid Wtllf (El 1•1. won t-1; iott .. MOrrl1on ..nG llh11Mll !El •t.·).6 G•!'<HI 11\d ICffl!I~ IC! IMI IO Gt •llO<" •ncl W•~ fl!I 0.1, 1-6,..INI lo MO<"ri1.on •nO llllUll IE> U . t-1 ~wflllr Vlf"1ltr CMtl Mtt t ll'•I flt-\.ol IU1•ll l lnt lft l•r•f IC! loJI to Ntlltl IE) f.6, lint to ~r0.,!!11 Ce'I 1-6 ltlu IC! 1011 lo Ntlltl U:I 1·6. clpl Mro~u .. !l'"l 1-1 • G•fiNt IC• loll kl OetnlMcl> l E1 1-1. '""' " fl•rn•1 /El ~ '~' j Cl lot! to Otrnb•<" IE! 11. !011 lo 1•111t CE I 2'4o ....... l•1lnt ind O•lllt~ /() last "" IC1nd•I A"' !ew1 .. 1 (ll l·IT ~-llo¥e '""" En"•I'" !Fl 1-l " " F. Mr•" 1"'11 fl. MYef\ (Cl titd Kindel •l'ICI S.wl•I (El 7-1; 1o,i !o •• .,,1tt-E~I-IJf\;l (11,f SA Vtller Sllot!n °''"°"" IE! won !hi. 4-1. ''°· 6·1. ,.,,,.At<! rf ) !04> M ' WO" I-ti I·• ~-I ltlre !fl to.I ...... -1-1. l•I. 1-l Wtl!M !El loll I.,\; WQft l•J, 1-1. 1.0 DW~ltl P•lt• '"" McKlnntr IE\ l01t 1-1." -n I 0 I I, 1-1. "-""" •l'ICI H1mll1cn iEl losl 1 1, 1-1: W1lft 1-1. l.J. Junlw v1n r11 EdlltA IHI l~I SA Vat•r s1 .. 11n Pt1e•1on JFl won •·l . t-7 '"ll•lt• IE I lo•• M ; won 4-1. IUnck (fl roil or-11 -n I·' lAllC fE ~ 1011 1-6 ; WQft 6-• Olvbltl Hyni.r '""" S1eien10n won 1-1, 1·1. H••o end 80Clme<" won 1-4, 1-<1, \ltnltr L•1un1 lf1\;/ fU~I v1i.nclf s .-.1e1 • l\l'd•ll tll we.. l·l. I·'· 6-1. 1-1 81tr.nl1t !Ll won l--0, 1-(1, 6-1, 1-1 8 ro1~frton !ll loll !-1. ,.,; won l•I. .. , JtY l~l won 1-l ; !011 0·6. l·'· 4-1 Dtubltl s1eer-Redw111 (L) -ft 1-1; la•t s.1. I· '· rlt c1r1er-J1cabllln fl) won l·l,. 1-4; 1011 t-4. 1-1 Jwn!K V1nnw • L11un1 •••t h Clll 1111 V1ttt1ei• 11 ... i.1 Ptltl-01 (Llwon t-1. 6-l, l·J, 1-4 T911Tift.llt ! l won '-l. 6-l; ~r CM,°'" General Tire BRAKE SPECIAL DISC BRAKE· RELINE (Front Onlyl ONCLUDIS, only New 1ran• br •~· p1d1 •• ·s ln1pecl c•lipen ind . , 1olor1 .•. R1p•cl i n~•r l o "te1 ffon"t wh1tl be1ring; , , . ln1p1i:I rc.11 '''•· bre ~1 linin91. .., Atrterk;11 ... SMALL CARS & IMPORTS WHITEWALL Thi DAILY PILOT wnl 9i•1 you one fr1e 1••1 !01 •••rv edj•c1nl 1e1! vou '''''"' to ''' lht C1tiforni1 An91l1 pl•v tli1 Milweukee 8rewer1 . I-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for 'I• t0n C1mper•·•nd Pick-ups, slightly.higher. D1t1un-Toyot.1- . Opt1J-fl"l.1t 'OOl l 2 560xl l 600.11 520xll TIRES s13~~.'~ 2 TICKETS FOR $3.50 or $2.50 You ''" t•t•r•• lwo 11•!1 or th1 whole b•ll p••k. Simpl'f 9•! your P'"''" !09eth1r ""w i nd m~a t he 01d1r blenk b1low with chi ck or "'""•Y order !no c11fl, pl 1e11 l l ftd hurty. 01.dli~e fo r •••I re1er•elio"1 it 5 p.m. on Th11rid1v. Mev 6. Bring a Busload ... 2·for-1 offer good for graups, too • Little League teams • Sunday School classes • Tlie office gang • Your neighborhood BUT YOU MUST ACT NOW r -;,;.;:Jl~h ::-. ::_;:,~.: -1 12 ·f""·IA119etD-v I Or•lllfe c..,t Dellr Piiot I C/O ••-fie hr.tee o.,,. JJt W. hy Strnt, Cost• Mn•, C111ff. •l627 I I Metie cJtecllt 11syattJ. to tho DAILY ,ILOT f P'LlASI ••INT> I ······· ······· ......................... ······· 1 .............................................. ............................................. , 1-···-·························-········· I ............ ef J. 4, '· •• 10 ICln1.I• -., Wl'IM ll•111Nr I I ....,.. ...... , , ff yo• w9"' 1110NI ,..,.,.... ..... •II M-.4 ~.el tk ... ., ,, .... "· Mii••••" .. ,... el .... I I klM ltffl••· '°' MCh tkll:et ,.,,11ete4, I wltt Neel.,. ff *4• ~'"' ,,._ fro• tti. DAILY PILOT, I wnt SJ .SD/SJ.II I I ICinN oMI tlclr .... IMI ..... II S ••.••.. -le P•YIM .. for IMilf tM 11e1111ter ef ticllett I Ntt. re1111 ... ...i. I •ll4•nfH4 I tklre+a wlll .. Mtlf ,. Me ~ -"· I eH.ntelHI tNro , .. M L:-:..-~ ·~~ ... ~-~ = ·~ - · Radial Tire GEN~RAL JET RA1>AN .------.FRONT END ~ALIGNMENT LIMITED TIRES WHITEWALL fSlltht lle""I Gil 71·1i Hit 71·1S ~ l'°""IM~ lMJJ fHlOl.TIVICAIRf: .. (HJ (f(!(.c\11) Crooked ,meets rob yoc:-car or TIME maximum performance, rkle, ateer-. ' • · log and tire wear. We conect OFFER easter, camber, toe.In, to.out to your car manufacturer's epeclflca-li••••••••••••••••••il tlons, and safety check and adjust ' your11eeriog. • · SHOCK ABSORBERS $29'5 .. u . SI ,t, · DE).~b only $85~ Our .,...i.nm '-tell ,...· t.. -" ......... , .... ltef .. D•'t tel• dtastil ht ,..,. tfft ........... , . ' INld COllllPKt ~. AllliHlcllllGe~ ....................... . IANKAMHICARD . MASTll eltARGt _. Don -Swedlund CLOSE OUT ON ~AMPER &. PASSENGER TIRE CHAINS 50o/o OFF! Take Your Pick! USED TIR~S lots of non-skid 11ead $595 each , COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7tl0 to ·6:0I Daily 'PHONE : .. r. If D.l.ll Y "LDT SC frld11, •IJ'fl 30, 1971 Industry Declines In State KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN •, n ·' I You can find out fast through your Yours in next Saturday's DAILY PILOT OVER THE COUNTER *TOT AL TELEVISION Complete-New York Stock Lis t - f ' -... """'' ..... I.ft a.°"",.·---------=-·--------··"' I i.1'9 !4\'J t~ -" f\'lw Cot• JI 14 ,,.... 11fill + .... ~ i ~·~ fi:~;: Market Lower "'"'~ -~ 1.YJ ,!:: • u ~;,~~., • ., ' " ,fl .a~:::;~ UOI Co 1.N ,., ~ fm~••• In A T d UMClnd ,n ~ ~~ •::.~ cti"ve ra e ::".:,~·~ .. H I lat~ ..:· UllllNV .... ~~~i~ :i~. ~l ffil H~ '°!,:~ .t ~ NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks were lower in ac-*:~lH11 111ll '# '!i 1211o 1*\·· i :: tive trading late Friday. g" .f1'~1j. 1~ ii~ r, n~+i; With less than an hour of tradlnl to go, the u11 •cco1 l!'O 7"'" 21·~ 11"• + ~ Do J I d . I If 7 9 I 0 10 56 ~~1r.!:t1~J n ll~i ,.,,., 31111 _ \.\ w ones n us tr1a average wu o . . a ~ . . u11ioi..[ ., 10 711v. "14 ,.""' -v. Standard & Poor's ~50 stock index &bowed a loss o(. unirtiv• .10 115 1''4 11t'o 11 ,, Unl...,v1 Pl I • •• ... ..., .alli -" $>.64 at 103.99. Declines outscored advuce.s by 1nore u111•"-. .io sl Uy, u;z ?!:~ :.:,... Unit Al• I.II) .rt tJ>.a ~ 21\\ _ •• .than a two-to-one margin, 930 to 408, on 1,644 issues un•••nct. .10 m 1N ,,.,,. :Ill\_,;; crossing the tape. 8 .. '\~P ~~to l1 :It tti;, ''"' -,.._ Vn•lf J'!".' C11 " •11.\ '°'-~ '°"' -1" A four·hour turnover of 12,770,000 sbues com· u ........ .-1~ ;:'"" ~., ;:1, + \\ pared with 15.640,000 shares traded at a compar· ~~l /::"~r.ti 411 Xli '''~ 111\ -Vo 011Jtfi&k1 1 1 1'1~ 1P\ "" ... \\ able period for the previous session. 1.11111 MM 1JO 1~ ~~ ~~ ~.:: ~ FJectronics traded In both directions, while 8:n"'.;1 'M1n """',. 14 -1\ . . d d "!'klG 2.20 ~ lru. 1Ni u·~ _ " L<tuisvWe & Nashville R.ailroa came un er pres.sure u r:1111 .ili 1l,1144)l"'l"'--lft · al · h I U UForS) . .. 41 ,,,,. .u .. _ .., in its group ter rising s arp y recen fi· us F•"' 1. '"" ~ ""' :it1•\ + '' Vil! Ind tr• th t l NYSE u' G-l 13 nv. ,, 11~ _ "-ager us its was ano er so spo uSG .... ""., ,. 1'111 ,, .. ,,,, •• I t d tr di . th t • be! M 10 U$ lt'llWtl .liO s11 ,, ,~ 11•. _ ·~ p ans o suspen a ng in e s oc... ore ay . us l•••• .?t u "JG i••• 19•l -,, SI I •-d h . al ~ erall d us ""....c:" .u "JG' 1)!, n• 11~ _ ·~ ee s. mo"'rs an c em1c s en y move usl'C" p/1.to 5;? ~ ~~ ~~ = }l narrowly, while airllnes and itrcr ts tended lower. tl~ ~ i'' 1~ ''14 ~ "'"' -.. Prices de<:lin-"" In brisk trading on lb~ Ameri· vssrne ,,rs.» 3' Jl 311'1\ '.'ID"li-l'o ~ USSl"' 2.olO ~ tl'"" ~:"" ~;\•-vi can Stock Exchange. vsroblc: 1.20 10 l7'~ :lol'l '' _ ,, Vnr. UIH .tt ' • U11t Ulll '"' lU 41~ '""' II ~ -"iw···························IU" VI cl.11 1~ = ::w = ·;" r U Ltt, 1.50 ,,. lr'\ 17 •nt ;. ' Unl...011 A ,,, ll!i '''~ uv. _ ·~ u111,,., c- SC DAILY PILOT 21_ Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List Briefs I' LOS ANGELES -Republic! Corp.. a conglomerate bullll around the! oJd Republic Fiim: Studio. said it has !Ired oncl lh!td ol il'I corporete stall ex.: ecuuv~ and thereby cut lht-; payroll $1 million a year. : • • ' • NEW YORK -Around 7:J: million aluminum cans were: collected for recycling during! the first quarter of lhis yea~ compared with 115 million for, all 1970, the Alum lnun~ Association reported., Charit111ble groups and Jn..: dlviduals collected $365.000 for! turning the cans In to stallons.: Th& 73 million cans reprtsent: a saving of 3.1 million poundsi or aluminum. ~ ' KANSAS CITY -CrownS Dru1 Co., operator of a chain C of rttall drugslons, hu !111<1( to rt10rganlie under chapter 11 • of ll!t Ftderal Banhupteyl Act. Trading in ttOWD she.res In the over-lh~unter market~ wu 1113POOdtd lut monlli. • • WASIUNGTON (UPI) -! Dynalectron C-OrJI. uy1 115 I 1 u b s Id le.ry, Hydrocarbon: Research, l11e., hu Uctnat:d ! Ill hydroealkyl1tlon proctss : for the production of beniene i ror 1 new '20 million plant ta • be built at Chiba, Japan. I I __ , %%~LY PILOT DICK TRACY T).{E N\OL..f, MIMSELF. ·SQUEALED TO M~ TMAT MOUNE~ eoss 15 A BLAST l!XPERT. TUMBLEWEEDS ACTllALtv, ~ GI.All VER 1.AY!N' ME OfF A WlilU:, ClilEF ••. rfU. GIMME TIM E 1ll WRITE MY rM Pl.ANNING A FRANK, ACTJON- PAOlfl15/>fJA (j//'!{ sumRRANEANI ESCAPADES. MeMOIFIS! Ufl .•• 'ACTION PN:l'ill"? ---;], ..... iS .. lfOd MUTT AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER j r t Plc.tED llP $0ME 50Rll:Y, MA'AM .. r ~ VOi EVER I I 2E"L 6000 lrl85! ev 6DE&S I 9K>GL.P ro, I 'LL NEVER Tl-IE WAY, HOW MA.tl'f HAVE 158' SPE"I( ro WILL lllERE eE AT TWE SERVICE w:>tl .A.G"UI. PIMMEil? .• YOO,JtlDGiE" EVTDHC.E ! JOMNNY ~ MID llt.RS. P.u!CE2, -"EY/voLl CAN'T DRIVE WITt-l'>OUR SAM WONT BC 1-IER'E~ ME 1-IA.S 10 C:O TO A. &A.Ii! A5SO{IA.· TION MEErlNG! FEET!! ['M SORRY TO ~E.U: n.lA.T~ THE~ n.lEli!E'LL 11sr !IE rnREE! lt';:;;:;:TII\ ,...<=;;o. .,.;, 0111ve-•·.-· .c:_L=:'..I-::"1 By Tam IC. Ryan '(Cl) roN'T IWJ< YER WAY llOWN1l!RU I> FT. O' SOIL WTTH YER HANPS IN YER FOCKE15, FELLA! By Al Smith ~.= •. C> ',O ... . . · .... -~~<::;.~-~ ,;;;._.~ . ; . c ' •• U'L ABNEI SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ·~-- ANIMAL CRACKERS . · ........ .,. :. -· .~ . I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER I ACRO SS 1 Ont •ho 1s oppostd 5 Fool: Slang 'f Spttd comptl1tions 14 Plt dgr 15 Burfalo or Ct!tbrs lb Gol up 17 Formal po r111 18 Prot rtd 1n9 at • low sprtd l 't Scrnt 20 01sunlttd 22. T il!r of rtsprct 2J Ditch pro\t tling ;a town 24 Oirrctrd to 90 011 ii mission 25 Vr9etablt 28 Str1attd )2 Srau11ty )) Mi lt C) Stifltd 44 TrttS 45 Gt 0t9t Bt1n1rd 4t. Hori1onta l laytfS 49 Newspaprr traturrs 5) lncl!nrd 54 Spttch P1rl1x 55 Out o! Sb External ')7 Uttr1anc t lo altricl attrn\1011 ')8 Card 9an1t 59 Crocod1l f !>O Sit for a p1ct11r t bl Volcanit rtfusr DOWN 1 Copied 2 Back o! the nrck 3 R1d1cult 4 In setrt t Yts!trday's Pu12lt Sol~td : !1 0 1£ TU ~!Jj( liEl A l lr,51 ~ q Deep, nan ow gorgt~ 10 Awa 11 Penalty 12 This· Sp. lJ Ory up 21 Cause of foot d1 scom!ofl 22 Btrnd togt\ht r 24 Grew tn oi vertical pos1t1011 25 WJs " 31 Pa s\t 33 Locations 31.o True skin 37 Exhibitionists 3 ~ Stammrrs 40 Co11ve1sr 42 Storr in hors e- shoes 43 Pi9111tn! in9red1tnl 45 W 1st mtn 4b Posil!on t7 Not fllO!ltOl.IS 48 Roll call. Bt1t1\h 4'1 Pac1tic salmon PERKINS MISS PEACH . ·~l•<l .'11-...-_.,ht~:H~I~ •. · .. --·. YOU ONCE HADA LOI/ELY SMILE- z:Z.ZZZ:zz:z:ZZ z z ~ • • -ANO '>Ol.J F01'ME'1:LY R'ADIATED A \IEJ<Y SWEET J>E.qSOPJAIJTY. -ANOT~ WAS A TIME \OU HAO THE MOSY-. GOll:GEOUS FIGUl<f. ... .,_ ... __ -·· .. - ' . . ' STOP 'Jl.llNKJNK AND DOA LIDDLE , ICIWNK! • .. .,, ___ ... -·-- C'lolOll, l-00151 EM AU. i;ro<:' RXl) /.J,J> <.tlYU. ~ u> 10 &. vusr U Kl!. IJIJCl..e L.l,>J..E 1- lHI SllANGI WOILD ' ~ I \ t By Al Capp YOU'VE BEEN DOUBLE. CRUST? By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson. By Ro9er Bollen By John Miles • MR. MUM-+-· -- By Men Cl'YIN& IU.READY / CAN'T YOU EVEN WAIT UNTii. :C UPQ<TE THE Cl!mQUE? ~ " ii '1 DENNIS THE MENACE ;anim 1!s ,. ]4 Pal m tOCk i \OO JS City ol Li\Vll )It Gui's namr )7 Brit t. pt lly qu;irrtl s•ssion 2 t1ords S Flounc~ ln!orm~l i. ll~rrow chan11 rl of wattr ccncrrntd lb Romin ol!ic lal ot old 27 Sys\r"' or rcasc11•ng 28 Rrservtd 1n ma1111tr 2q F 1brr used m pillows 30 Rtmov t ~O E var1or I is 1 Roberts STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Over9ard J.1 J udgr ot lsratl ]'I Foul- sm elllnq .. o Elrctt d 41 Proc!a 1mtd ' , ] .. . " " ll' " " 11 " lS " ~ " . " ' " - • " ' ., 7 T rmpor.uy \l~le ot n11nd I An•m~1·~ loot ' • ;! " '. " " ]] '' " " " " " ·, 60 1 " " ' I . ,. .. _i,; ' " " ' ,, ' n 51 Actrt~~ ···--Ba~t ~ ~2 Polluted atmospher t 54 Wind around somr!hinl} " " " ' ,, " lO " " • ]1 ~ , " " " " ... " ' " " YOO SU!lf PUT arr A MfAL., P£G6Y/- FOR. A ~Kit.I" GAL/ PEANUTS YES, rM (Qt.ISIDEoilED AN EXCELLENT COOK .1-.. BUT- SHALL WC FIND A MOA:E COMFOR:TABLE PLACE TO TALI(~ IT 15'/T? ~o~ ~ 51X? ---- By Charles M. Schub ~~~~~~~--; .. l I t I l f, I I I ~ •I I . ' I • Flower Power Cinco de Mayo is coming to Missio n Viejo on May 2, Sunday. It will be the fourth such community celebration for the planned community. The fiesta will be at the high school campus from noon until 6 p.m. One of these girls will be crowned queen. From left to right are <;iney Gabriel, 16; i<athy Smith, 16; Carol Baker, 16i 'Pina Whitlock, 16; and Tina Richardson, 15. 4 Indicted in $28 Millio11 Chicago Bani{ Fraud, Count WASHINGTON {AP) -Four men. including the former vice president and bookkeeper of tbe Cosmopolitan National Bank of Chicago, were indicted today on charges nf defrauding the bank of $28 million. The indictment said the bank suffered an actual Joss of $6. 7 million. including $S50.000 that was sent lo a Beverly Hills bank account of Al" .. rt Parvin. Parvin was ldentuied by a Justice Department official as 1 Los Angeles financier whose holdings included casinos in Las Vegas. The indictmeat gave no ex· p\anation why payment would go to Parvin. Named in the indictment was Donald Santowski, 42, the former vice president and bookkeeper of the Chicago bank. He lives in Wheeling, Ill. Others named in the indictment were high officials of a deplrtment store chain \vhich had an account at t he Cosmopolitan National Bank. They are Frank Baum, presidei:it of Steinberg Baum Co.: Louis StelnQerg. a former vice president of Steinberg Baum ; and Leonard Freedman, general manager er Steinberg Baum. Friday, Aprll 30, 1971 S DAil Y· PILOT 3 Her·o Slain as Bandit Store Owner Kills Medal Winner From Wire Services Miehgan's first Vietnam Congressional Medal or Honor winner, an Army recruiter who· was "loved'' by school children, was shot fatally around mid- night in a struggle lvilh a party store owner he tried to hold up, police said to- day. Police said Dwight H. Johnson. 23, was killed in a shootout with Charles L. Van Landegham. 71 , who was alone in the Open Ffn.trY Market on the northwest side when Johnson walked in and an- nounced a holdup. i.t. Geoffrey Gieske of the U.S. Army main recruiting slation said Johnson won the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest award for combat bravery, in Vietnam. Gicske said Johnson, who held the rank of Sergeant E-5. had been asSif!'.ned to the recruiting station shorUy after being awarded the medal by President Lyndon Johnson in ceremonies al the White House in November, 1968. Gieske described Johnson as a "very fine individual, very intelligent, a very good-appearing young man ." Gieske said Johnson spent a lot of lime on spe¢al projects, especialb' at schools where ··t~e kids loved him." Johnson recently had been placed · on convalescent leave for a bleeding ulcer and had been reassigned to Ute Valley Forge VeteraM Hospital at Phoenixville, Pa. Knew' Johri.son aald "l thought very highly An Army, spokesman in Detroit who of him, this ls just a damn shame." Bail Reduced On 3 Suspects t In LSD Factory I Bail for three n1en acc~cd of operating an LSD factory In Laguna Beach has been redu ced rrom the $125,000 figure set at the time of their arre$l. One of the men is now free while awaiting his ~fay 7 trial. South County ~1unicipal Court Judge Richard Hamilton reduced to $2.500 the bail for Joseph Sachse, 18, of 30628 Calle Chucca, San Juan Capistrano, and the youth posted the bond. · The other two men arrested in the April 3 raid of a Woodland Drive home by narcotics agents are being held in Orahge County Jail in lleu of $6.250 bail each. 1'hey are Gary Ray Allen. 23, of Long Beach, and David \Vllliam God\\•in, 23, of Las Vegas. The three men are charged wlth possesston of LSD for sale and possession of marijuana . Nart'Olics orficers claim they confiscated over $350,000 worth of liquid LSD al the residence. Johnson received the Medal of Honor for adion at Dak To, Vietriam. on Jan. 15, 1968. The cltatlon·said Johnson, a tank driver w_ith the Fourth Infantry, braved enemy fire , left his disabled tank and, armed with a .45 c~liber pistol killed seven North Vielnamese. 'I'he citation said he retumed to his lank (or a submachine gun again rLsked his life to kill more of the enemy, pWled a wounded GI from another tank and continued firing at the North Vietnamese. Tl1e Army sald Johnson had been Undergoing psych,iatric treatment al Valley Forge Army Hospital. Van L.andegham told police that Johnson v•alkcd into his store around midnight, pulled a gun and announced a stickup. Police said Van Landegham pulled a gun and v:as struck on the head by Johnson who then shot Van Landegham in the left arm just below the shrulder as he fell. The grocer told police that he then fired four limes at Johnson hitting him each time, three limes in the chest and once in the face. Johnson died about four hours later. The men and a woman found sitting in a car parked near the store were ar~ rested for investig~tion when they told pc;lice JOhnson had left their car to vi.sit a frir:nd : Little Leaguers Open. Saturday In Laguna Beach The indictment charged that 92 checks for amounts ranging from $100,000 to $9(l0,000 were written on the store 's checking account "when there were in· sufficient funds in tlle company's IC· count." Through 1 complex se\)its of &teps, the check! were withheld from being charged to the store's account for periods of up to a year by Santowski, the indictment said. ... With the players of eight major league teams all sporting brand new uniforms, Laguna Beach's 19th Little League season will get under way Saturday at Riddle Field. This year for the first time. eight teams have been put into one combined league representing all of Laguna Beach. ~lillOr league teams vdth more than 100 players also have been formed under the direction ef the city recreation depart· men\. The cnn1bincd major and minor leagues this year \\'ill offer more than 200 lxlys aged 8 to 12 an opportunity to participate in the traditional baseball program. \Vith 'a t-.1arine Corps color guard and di stinguished guests leading t he aremonies. the season will open prompt- ly at 10 :30 a.m. F o 11 owing in· troduclion of the teams. play will start at ll: 15. All eigh1 major league teams will narlici pate i'n the Saturday play with Sports World facing Kiwanis: Lions vs. VF\V; Laguna F'ederal vs. Rotary : and Beach Construction vs. Pottery Shack . As usual former r.1ayor Jesse Riddle will be guest of honor on opening day, along "'ith ~1ayor Richard Goldberg. City ~1anager Lawrence Rose and Police Chief Kenneth Huck. Mr s. Amy Norworlh again w i 11 distribute Crackerjacks to all the player!'I and lead the si nging of the baseball cla r.sic. "Take Me Out to the Ball Game." wrillen in 1908 by her late hus· band. Jack Norworth. Checks to~aling $28 million were withheld and $6. 7 million of that amount was never charged to the Steinberg Baum account, the indictment charged. The 30 count Indictment was returned in District Court in Chicago, charging conspiracy, mail fraud and em· bezzlement. It 'o\'as announced by the of· fice of Attorney Gen. John N. Mitchell. The indictment said that as part of the alleged conspiracy Steinberg and Baum deposited a check dated ~!arch 6, 1970 for $550,000 in Parvin's account at the Bevu- ly Hills Bank or America. The indictment said the sum represented the proceeds of one of the chetks written on the Slein- berg Baum Co. account at the Chicago bank. Coast R esidents Vie for Prog ram Three South Coast area residents have taken qualirication tests In a J a y c e e • sponsored scholarship program for courses at Ute Control Data Insti tute. The three person! vying for the full-tui· ti<ln scholarships are David Heff of San Clemente, Jeff Havaux of Laguna Niguel and Ken Birdz.ell or San Juan Capistmo. All three are sponsored by the San Clemente Jaycees. Winners or scholarships to the com· puter technician courses will be an- nowiced JWle l. Chaniber Unit to Take Paper Recycle Project San Clemente'! successful newspaper recycling project -in danger of becom- ing an orphan this week -apparently will not be 1 formal city project City councilmen agreed, instead, Tues- day that the chamber of commerce ecology committee might take the project over from the small , beleaguered Backyard Ecology Group which organiz· ed lhe succtssful eUort two months ago. Councilmen voted to recommend the projerl to the chamber committee which recently re«ived about $3,000 in "seed money" for ecology projects from proCits a:ained In last year's ecology stamp first- day·issue project. City Manager Ken Carr reported on the fea!libility of c!!l. ~rnption of the con. tinulng recycling effort, saying It would be practical to some extent to collect the pulp paper in large bins. lhen hire a disposal company lo haul the material to a S1nta Ana recycling firm . Carr said that procedure would mean $70 revenue rrom each bin 1nd a $50 cost for each to be hauled to Santa Ana. The extra $20, the manager suggested , would still not cover the cost for manpower to keep a continUOU!I watch on the bins. Problems arising occa!lionally in the project. Carr explaned . included citizens dumping trash in the recyc ling con- tainers. Manpower also i!I needed to bundle and stack the papers. he said. Mayor Walter Evans, joined by some or his fellows, said he W8.!I not in favor of the city assuming the task. The decision, in one sen!lt, threatens to place the project In llmbo for a time. The exis:Ung van donated by 1 recycling firm for the past two month! wlll leave the city for good Friday, and ecology group spokesmen ha ve said they are wor- ried thnt citizens \\1111 s!IU bring nl!'wspaper11 tn lhe collection point deaplle the absence of the van. .. "• ' . ">--.. ' . ""· """ VolkswaGenannounces a new kind of Volkswagen.Big. Who'd ever lx:lievc 11? A Volkswagen that's big. Ard looks like a regulor cor Ard hos four big doors. . And more room and comfort tha n yoo've ever 5een in a Volkswagen. And more JX>V"Cf and accelerolion. From the roost powerlul air-cooled en· NEWPORT BEACH Chick Ive rson, Inc. 445 E. Coast Hwy. (7141 673.o900 1 gine we've ever built. And more features as stordord equip· irent thon you'd ever expect in o big car: Like an automatic transmission. Radial tires. Front disc brakes. Electronic fuel inject10fl. Rear-window defroster. And more. So. ofter ell these yea rs, oow you con SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Bill Yates Inc. 32852 Vallo Rd. 1714) 499·2261 buy o big car as good as our little car. The new 411 Volkswagen 4-Door sedon. Priced with our usuol Volkswagen frugohty. You koow what? You just ran out of excuses for not buying o Volks""90" HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volkswagert 18711 Beach Bouleward 1714) 842-4435 . ' • 1 \ \ -. - •' I ~ps Putting Horse Before Cart BY moMAS MURPRINE Of ... °"" .... , •• IDllEAMlNG DREAMS DEPT. -As tJll rybody in thele parts """"· the 1lvtne Ranch b u biC u all outdoon and maybe moro lmportalll '0r...., c.wity sort of dribblea around Ill ed&" ~ 'lbe Irvine Ranch hu houllng tracts, b\ctustrlal tract.a, a couple or three. l.ilandl l'n ·NeWport Bay, some PRO 2*>nes, orange eroves, tomato fielth:, a lew cows and a lot of trouble . tD-splle all tllJs, there Is atlU enoqh room on the place to fire a cannon and * nary a soul. .As a matter ol fact, it wtNld take an liiriu!ly big gun just to get a ClMC!llball tted across tht Irvine spread. ' IANYWAY, BACK to the main thin(, Wtueb is why the Irvlnt Company, with a11 of ita assell, bu trouble. Some peuple •Ys it's politics. And in Orange Countt yOu could believe that. Other folks think it's because the ranch ls rich. People just naturally are suspiciaua of your motives U you have full pocket&. Trouble for Irvine ranch band& usually surlaces evtty ume tlJey try to do aomething. They want to build a city, for example, and rl&ht away everybody darts plcldni on them. , The ranch company'• latest eUortl c;ame to public lllhl thla week with the mveiling of grand plana for development of Irvine'• coastal holdfnp between Oorona del Mar and Laguna Beach. They dall the concept trvlne-by·the&.a, which aounda a touch like Ctrdiff but that may mt help anythln1. Peopl< are bound to l\"t the lmock on It. : JRVINlC PEOPLE alwayt mob the .,.me mlxllu on thele thinp. They tallt ol conceptual planning, r e 1 I d e n t I a 1 <1<ns;u,., s-beJta, public walkwa)'I &nd open spaces. , That's all fine. But what they really ought to be doing ii worrytn1 about . where to put the p>ebo. That'• riili~ the gaubo. Duva lier Mak es Up To Exiles PORT·AU·PRINCE !UPI) -The teenage president of the Western Hemisphett'• oldtat black republic - and its poorut nation -pledged Thurs- day lo "build a new Haiti.'' He invited tbe counlry's 200,t'Ol uiles to come back and help in Ult reconstruction. Jean-Claude Duvalier, II, told the Na- tional A.utmbly in bis maiden speech hit miukln wu "to improve health, edcca· tioo !and) abolllh b1111ger" -the 1tcacy of this CanDbean n1Uoo'1 5 million realdenll after almost 14 years of dlc- tatorshi:p under hls late rather, Dr. Fran· cob "Papa Doc" Duvalier. Papa Doc, who died last week at U, had amended the cOnJUtutlonal a1e re- quirement for the presidency from 40 so his son mtght succeed him. Duvalier received a large cbetr when be told the packed usembly hall he waa "offering an olive branch of peace to th• e1ile1." He drew an even bigger ovaUon when he aUpulated momenta later that hiJ offer ucluded Commwlists and "trouble-makers." "All Haitians Uvin& abroad are free to come back and take part In the natiooal reaenerati.on." .Duvalier aald In b1a how-· Ion& speech. "My mi!sion ls lo improve health, education and abolish hllllger and build a new Haiti that is generous and prog:res- s.ive." Tbe husky young ruler llpOU of a new understandlng between HaJU and the United Slllea &lid offered Wuhlnatoo hlx belp apinst communism. Soviets Amplify Prior Proposal For ABM Curbs VIENNA (AP) -The Rwolana hive filled In detallx bere on the~ original ouutne concerning curbs of anUballl.1Uc ml11Ut1 (ABMs) but they did not p.....,.t a . new proposal, an official of the strategic Amil Llmilatioo TalU &aid II> day alter American and So v I e • negotiators met in tbe.ir 66th SAL~' aession. Been .Fislain'? Jimmy Tasker, 6, found fishing pretty good at Lake Livingston in Texas Thursday. He ~trains to lift his catch of white perch, caught with jwt a cane pole and minnows for bait. Rainfall has been slight and the lake is low but fishing couldn't be better. Mideast, Figures Expres s 'End of Road' Feelings BJ Ulllted Pm& llllermtiooal Americans, that the Israelis pullback from the canal so the waterway can be opened. • Claina Watelaing Nixon: Go Easy On Speculation WASlllNGTON (AP) -5ome of the, .. ctDl speculation aboUt further easing of U.S. China rtiatfona bu IOlle beyond reality and could endanger pi:ogrus already made, according to President Nixon. He told reporters at a naUOcally bfoad.. cast DeWI conference Tbundly night be felt it necesaary to put the discuaicm of what hi.I China policy means in penpec· Uve. There bu been movement in recent monlhl toward the goal of a more normal situation between the two natiom, Nixon aaid. Nixon waa responding to a question about recommendations of a presidential commission that the Communist govern- ment in Peking be seated In the United Nations. The commission, appointed by Nixon and beaded by hia 1960 vice presidential running mate, Ambusador Henry Cabot Lodge, aald the American people are ready for a U.N. seat for Pekin& u long u the Nationalist government on Formosa remains in the world or1amu· lion. "That recommendation by that very distinguished committee, of course, is being given consideration in the h.igb councils of this government," Nixon said. But, be added, other recommendations under consideration call for recognizing one or the other -Peking or the Na· tionalists on Formosa -but not both. 'Ihi! is a complex situation and a decision has not been made, Nixon went on, and until then "I am not going to speculate on it now because I emphaJiz.e this is a very sensitive area and too much speculation about it might destroy or seriously imperil what I think is the significant progress we have made, at least in the travel area, and possibly in the trade area. looking to the future ." The speculation Nixon wu criticizing, and the optimism, followed four dramatic developments in the past two month! between Peking and the United Slates. The first was the announcement the United States had dropped nearly all restrictions on travel by U.S. cilizeng to the mainland, closed to most Americans since the IM9 Communist takeover. Then Peking suddenly extended an in- vitaUon to the l].S. table tennis team to tour the mainland, and the White House eased restrictions on trade between U.S. businesses and Cblna. The fourth development was the Lodge Commission report . w h 11 e an lhls ts a st.pa..., from the bolation that bu marked China 'a nla· tions with mud> of the WU\ &lid the very bootlle U.S. China poalw'" of the pail, Nlxoo indicated oormal relatlool -not yet at hand. Nixon Vows To Support Bus Ruling W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Pruldenl Nixon pledged to t!nforce the Supreme Court order on buaing to integrate southern schools with "cooperation" not "coercion" but ht stuck by his stand against busing puplla when aea;reaaUon stems from housing patterns. He told a newa conference Thundly that his strong anUbusing, pro • neighborhood , schools stattment G f March 24, 1971l, was "moot and Ir· relevant" now in the south in liibt of the Supreme Court's unanimo\lJ rullnp April 20. Jn a series of opinions by Chier Justictl Warren E. Burger, Nixon's own aP' pointee, the court approved such weapo!l.1 u busing and pupil pairing "to eliminate from the public schools all ve1tijes of state-imposed segregation." "Now that the Supreme Court has spoken," Nil:on said, "whatever I have said that is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decision is now moot ud ir· relevant because .• nobody , includin& the President of the United States, is above the law as it is finally determined by the Supreme Court ••• " "And so we will comply," he pledged, "and we will work with the IO!Jthem school districts not in a spirit of coercion but one of cooperation as we have during the past year in which so much progre:M has been made in getting rid of that kind of a system that we have had previOIJJo ly." Bul Nil:on aaid be inta-preted the rul· ing to apply only to ~gregation as a result of governmental action , "in other words, de jure." He said, "Busing can be used Wlder certain clrcumst.ancta to deal with that problem.·• , If they coold do that. they coold avoid " the trouble. 'In way of bactpound. you .W recall ljiat a pzebo ts a tum~Mu UUia bulldl'lg ...,.llmtl 11.-d on prim• ;!e~ pointa u 1t1rl of an obwvauon It WU the 11th meetlDJ in the current round, luUng an hour and 55 minutes. It wu,beld at the IGviet Embassy, wlUI the Mil aeuton set for Wednesday at the American Embassy. The officlal commented on a New York Times report whlcb said that Soviet negotiators in Vienna hive proposed a five-year Soviet American treaty limiting each naUon'a missile defe nses to 100 In· erctptor mlulles around M01cow a n d W11biqton. The well-informed Tel Aviv newspaper Murlv said today relations between the United States and Israel had reached serious proportiom over muns of reaching an Interim agreement to reopen the Suez Caaal. One high aovenunent of~ ficial said Israel was unlikely to back down. In Ankara, Turkey, U.S. Secretary of State William P. Roget's said on the eve of his five-nation Middle East visit that agreement on reopening the Suez Canal could help reduce the danger of renewed fi&hting while peace efforts continue. He said there must be a "strong impetus" toward a solution. IY8 THE GAZEBO comptu here on the i;oa11Uine it about the same u the old i;ark statue quation back in the Midwte:t or in Tena or places like that. It 1oes like this: The official uid he wu authorized to aay : "You need not accept this story in Its entirety." Everybody wants to build a f)lrk for the town, you lff, but thert'• the ques.- lion of where to -put the statue of old Charlie Smith, town founder. A great public batUe develops. Even if they can decide whether the at.a.We goes under the elm or out on Ule grass, other .arlUfllenls will follow. lJb IJ Oiarlie ln bronze or marble and should he be wearing bis Civil War unlfonn? Pretty 1 o on everybody's forrotten about the park and its blueprlnta gather dust in city ball. SAME WITH GAZEBOES. p,_ a J>Ublic park by the sea and right aw1y there's a bla: public debale on where the gazebo goes. Or the atainless steel drink· Ing fountain. Important th inp: like that. So the Irvine Ranch folks ought to take a lesson from the put to avoid all this trouble in developinl Irvine-by...che-Sea. Make everybody acree where tht gazebo eoes. BWld il Paint it. Then draw IOIDe blueprinll for the mt of the plact. In Cairo, Mohamed Hassanein Heikal, an Influential Egyptian commentator, said in his semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram that Egypt will be forced to go to war with Israel unlw Ro1ers' visit to the Middle East produces a peace at. Uemenl Heikal, who often voices the thoughts or the Egyptian government, said Egypt and Israel had "reached the end ol the road" in the peace efforts by U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring and that If Rogers finds no solution "the whole world will be at the end of the road -there must be a breakthrOQ&h or there will be force." Maariv, quoting an unnamed Iaraell cabinet minister, bannered the story of the newest crisis in U.S.-Israel relations. Jt 11ald the Israeli leadership was deeply worried about the currtnt state or rela· tions and quoted Deputy Prime Minister Yigal Allon as saying the American con-- cept of a partial settlement would be a "catastrophe" for Israel. The major stumbling block la a" Egy~ tian demand, suppc>rt.ed by t b t U.S. Skies Sunny, Mild Scatt.ered Areas Get Show ers ; Rest of Nation Warm Cellforttla H11r arltrNOrl auml'l'IM !N'OCtdof lw l!IOl'lll"9 fl9 allll law Cl"1111 .... vt lMld -n.. kM;t...,11 C1lllomll COiii to61W 01 t11n1>1r1tur11 llavti•ed 111 11'111 11111'1 40I wllh w1rm1r rffllll'ltt .,.,lllld. LOJ A""lfl lllf wk:;l111fY li.wtof l ittle t-1!ur1 di.,,... Hie,. ..,..., hi! I hall' ;It wltfl • t~ll1r re.411'11 u:Pf'C,_. 51lur1M1'. 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GU• 1Ul1"t1 "'"'"°'''' 8<U1"" ·~1111o C/11(1"' Cl!>el-11 Cl l ¥tl1nct 0.1111 0...•t• Ot1 Molne.t Det'l!il lnctl111...i•1 "'" ... ''"' l11 V ... 1 l11Ula¥1iltl Ml'l'l'lalllf Mll m! MllWlllkH ............ "°'" "'""' °''""' Ntw 'P'&tt Ol;l1"-'11 ''"' °"''~ l'11m s ... ,.,., l'!'li!MMl11\o1 •l'Of<l;i ••llibut""' l'll'lllncl lh11l!Clf\" 11.,, a1u11 ··~ •ltllm~ S.t••"""'IO $! 1.1111• s.u Lii~• c"' ~·" 01-S111 Frt l'W:hta '••It~ IPC111,,. Wltfllntlffl I fllwll law Pnc. M '° 73 S4 ·'' 3' " .u " . ~ JI .el .. " " . Jl •• 06 '' .n .. » Jt I I Jl lJ " " 6) 0 " " " " " " . " " . " . " " JJ II " .. " . : ! • " " " fl ,, " • IJ " " " " . ,, f t M • u • ~ " " . ~ . n " " . ... " ·~· The gilt o! cable TV tells her you care. tt says that you want her to walch only the sharpest, clearest, lnlerference free 1V imaginable. tt lets her know YC1J want her lo enjoy all her favorite programs. The old movies. The new movies. The greal stars. The up and coming ones, lhat she can only gel with the extra channels Cable 1V offers. Give us a call snd we'll make ii pC>SSible lo ha\ie Cable TV in· stalled for your mother or your chll· dren's mother by Mother's Day. Or we'll give you a hand· some gill oertfficate and she'*' have it installed at her OOl'l¥9l\ienCe. You won't see a nicer presei 1t NEWPORT CABLEVISION 2624 W. COAST HWY, OUR RE GULAR $14.95 CABLE TV INSTALLATI ON ONLY $1.00 You P•Y 011ly I 111011th'a 1on•ic o ill •'w•"''•· DIAL 642·3260 • •.• ~ ...... h ... _<QO "" Blnst 'Witness ' Flown to Seattle Barbara Jane 1.·lackle, the Miami heiress '''ho was kidnaped and bu r· ied alive ln a plywood box for more than three days in 1968, married her longtime boyfriend Stewart Woodward in a quiet Philadelphia ceremony Thursday. SEATrLE, Wull. (UPI) - IAslle B a c o n , 1,_year-old blonde from a well-to-do California family, arriv~ hert Thursday night to appear before a federal grand jury 11 a m1lerial witness in the t.1arth 1 bombing of the U.S. Capitol. Although walling newsmen could not confirm she had been whisked off the United Air Unes flight which arrived here late Thursday ni1ht, aeverll passengers said Uley had seen her aboard. She i! the first person ar~ rested in connecUon with the uplosion which caused nearly $200,000 damage in a Senate wing. No one was injured. The government Implied durinc court hearings that she knew far more about the born. bin( than 1imply the "person- al kflowledge" of it that was mentioned in an affidavit for her arrest. She was arrested Tuesday night by FBI agent~ on a war- rant she had knowledge of the person.a usporuiible for the blast. Although her lawyers fought to keep her from leavtnc Wa1hinfton, the way was cltared for her tran1fer Thursday by a decision of a U.S. Court of Appeals. Two jud1es of the court heard a ch&llenge of her ar- rest and detention under $100,000 bond then di.ami~ed her ltwyer's protests that she wM Ulegally arrest4'<1 and being held under txceM!vely high bond. The court. as well as U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica the day befon, apparently ac- cepted the J(lvernment'1 ara:u· ment that Miss Baron might CHAl•I "I l111~A111t1l1 1,.. Mtlttr O.trt• nee r1thlr than 10 voluntarily to St1tUe. OM of tll)lt children from an Atherton, Callfomia family , Ml1.a Bacon Jw been livfna in an antiwar commune I n nor\hwett Wuhlniton for some monlha. Pot ·war' Set U.S. to Fight Wil.d Wee d WASIDNGTON (AP) -The Nixon admlnl.ltratlon plau a new war this sum.mer on marijuana growing wUd in farm fields and hedae rows across 10 1tate1, mostly ln the mldwe1t. Tht Prosram wUl use '85,000 1lloc1ted by the Ju s t I c e Department to the Aj:rlculture Land Based In History TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) The l11t recorded owner of four acrts Of land the state of New Jersey needs f o r Interstate 295 was Joeeph Bonaparte. older brothtr of French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. So the stale Thursday filtd t\lo'O condemnation s u i t s against the "heirs" cf Joseph Bonaparte, asking that three ctlmmlssiooers be appointed to fix compensation for Joseph's heirs, if any can be found,__ Joseph was Kina: of N1ples and Spain while his brother reigned over Fr.nee and most of Europe. CHAI.I IT! Dtpartment. Granta will be turned cvtr to farmers to help pay costs of eradicating the IJ. legal plants. Agriculture Department of- ficials acknowled«ied existence of the plan Thursday only after repeated questions by a reporter. 'Ibtre had been ne public announcement. A spokuman said the cam- paign has tentatively been named WHEP, which stands for the Wlld Hemp Elimlna· Uon Program. St.ates on the WKEP llat ire Illinois, Iowa, 1 n d I a n a , Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, l\lilltle!IOta, Miuouri, South Dakota and Wi!COll&in. Initially, $4&,000 will be allocated to the state• for eliminating an e s ti m a t e d :22,000 acres of marijuana in certain counties, still unan- nounced. The remalnder will be spent "on the basis cf need" as the season pro- gresses, the 1pokesman said. The department said the season for effective control is from May 15 to July 15. Officials said most of the total budget, some $68,000, will be handled by the Agricultural Stabllb:ation and Conservation Service. -' lt1y crHit t1rwu e 1lud111f ••· 11u11h , .. ,u.1t11 • U11 t• r 1 111111tlri1 .. , • .,. HUffTtN•TON Ctml 1nc• • 1411191" ~1111tlllf"I 9McJI . ,, .. ,,, O,.N MON,. THUIL, I fll. 'Tfl f P.M • MA.IOI I MOPPIN• CINTll UOO Herhr II ... c.,. ...... J.4'-N ll f'r ldlf, April JO, lt71 Mldnlg_lat Deadline Court Backs Tr ain Takeove r WASHING TON (UPI) -The National Aslocl.atlon of were inadequate and not In DOES MAMA WEAR HOT PANTS 1 U.S. Dlstr~ Judie Howard Railroad Passengers also ask-compllance with Interstate Corcoran nfUltd today to ed for a delay on the IJrOWlds Commerce C o m m 11 1 Io n onkr a delay In the IChedultd ib4t the railroads had not reau.lauona. J takeover at midnight of most followed proper procedure re-On Capitol Hill Senate Think Mother'• 0.y of tht. nation'• r a 11 road qulrlng a »clay public notice Democratic leader Mt k e passena:er service by a they would d I s cont I n u e M1n.afleld threateDed to try by J f41n tnhl Hmtpubllc arporatlon. passenger service after •ten-leatslation to preverit the Railroad unlom and a con-1ng contracts with AMTRAK. takeover. but there wu no wmer lobbyln& group made But the main 11ult was the chance ror lull congressional Wa t1llff ,._ -'42·1444 Immediate plans to appeal the one filed by rail labor unions, action becaUJt the House wu1'!!~~!!·!!-~~~··!!• ~!!!!!~ declslon Jn a last minute effort who charged that I a bo r not ln session today. I· OJ t.o prevent the corporation .-Secretary James D. Hodgson'a The Senate Commerce Com-CHECK THI DAILY PILOr called AMTRAK -from tm-order stipulating requlred pro. mill.ff refused Thursday to IYll Y DAY FOi plemenUng Its plan to drop· 101 tectiona for laid-off o r heed Mansfield's request for AU CURllNT : of the nation's intercity 235 ot.Mrwise displaced miployea acUoo. MAIKn INH>IMATION .... ~~::;:;'. tr.in. beglnningrr-------l=o:l~A·=-=,,~-~-;;;;;;;~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-------~ The union! hid charged th1t DAY the labor protection provls~s of the AMTRAK contract with participating railroads were inadequate and would work CAME . A SPECIAL' ea:treme har<Wllp on up to :15,000 roll worken, .Om• or e whom they 11ld could be cut off without a cent of severance pay. SATURDAY ONLY • MAY ht More Added To Jobless Cities List Mamiya/Sekor-Vivitar SLR Outfit WASlflNGTON (UPI) The Labor Department ~ports nearly one-third of the naUon'1 major cities are on Ila unemployment" list meaning "sub.aWUial u.nempklyment'' tis-t mtaning at least 6 percent a( tht work forct is jobless. Tbe department has added Hartford, Conn., N e w a r k , N.J., and Charleston, w. Va. It dropped New Orleans, leav- inJ the number of cities with aerlous unemployment at 52. There were 2S cities added ta the list of small labor markets with work problems, bringing that total tc 637. Assistant Labor Secretary Malcolm R. Lovell Jr. Jn an- nouncJn1 the chan1ea Thurs. day said the 52 major cities on the list WU the highest number since Ma y, 1982, and represent more I.ban one third of the 150 metropolitJ.n labor market.a Jn the nation. There were 11 on the list in 1J70 and ala: when President Nlxon took office in January, 11169. THE BEST ...... ,.hf, pell1 preV• "''••• 11ub" 11 1111 ef fht world'• rn•1f ,.,.,,,, cemJc tfr1,,, lt•ed it d•lly 1~ the DAILY 'ILOT. ' t/ Check This for VALUE e MO TL Camera. e TTL Spct fl.t etf'rin&: e Fully Interch&nse· able Lens e Fitted Everready CU• e 1 Year Warranty I PLUS! I • Vlvit.ar 135 mm P.S. Telephoto ~ns I PLUS! e Vlvltar 2x Tel~nvert•r (Doublea Focal LeniUl ot Len1) U1• Penn •y's L•y Aw•y I All This For ONLY! OUTDOOR CARNIVAL RIPUT OF A COMPLITE SILLOUTI ru PACK MANY YARIETllS AVAILABLE U1e Yeur Pe nn ey's Chart• I SATURDAY It SUNDAY e MAY 1st It 2ncl lS~o OFF Bar·B·Q DEMO UNPAINTED MEXICAN POTTERY by ''The Olcl Crab'' SAT. ONLY, MAY ht GARDEN CENTER FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Beach c I ' ' ' . ' -• .. • 4 • :· :~ l · • ,. .. , l • r •• •• •' i~ l .. ,. ,. t: I i l •• • • ~ ~. l • • • < • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA,.E A $24 Million Ziggurat A ziggurat is a Babylonian temple tbal look! like a tiered cake and there's a big one in Laguna Niguel. Its seven ''layers" house a million square feet of f(oor space -more !hon 20 football fields. It cost $24 million and nobody wants it. \Vhen plans for the. zjggurat were unveiled a few years ago by county leaders and officials of North Amer· ican Rockwell , which owns it, it was hailed as the great- est bOon in the history of southern Orange County. It was supposed to ho.use 7,500 workers, which. in tum would generate a community of 57 ,000, expandlng to 15,000 workers and a community of 135,000. But things got off to a bad start. Construction was delayed by floods and strikes and timetables were con· stantly revised. Then the bottom fell out or the space program, North American decided 1t didn't need a ziggurat and it was put up for sale. For a while it looked as if the Fluor Corporati11n might buy it, but that fell through ·1oo • Rumors that North American will mo'le In alter all have been denied. But obviously something has to hap· pen. You don't just leave a $24 million ziggurat standing about empty forever. This One Was Fun. With the exception of a minority who apparently thought the whole thing was a Communist plot, most Lagunans who attended the recent Festival of Life-in· Laguna seemed to find it interesting and enjoyable . The exhibits by local groups were enlightening and the presentation of "Lagunagrins" drew chuckles \vith its satirization of Art Colony problems. There was un• derstandable criticism of the apparent film trick of pre- senting the mayor's pro-high rise comments in black and white, contrasted with glowing color for the opposition . The mayor hln!sel.C apparently found it :sqmewhfl amusing and cheerily introduced himseU at the next Chamber or Co{Jlmerce meeting as "coming to you today in glorious black and white." , Lagunans being rather independent aouls. there were those who took exce ption to the idea· of having an out-of-town planner scanning the community and its ways. Others questioned the expenditure of government funds for a project of obscure value. Whether there will be a repeat performance re· mains to be seen1 but in any case, this one was fun and not really as ominous as some had predicted. Pension Plan Problems Nearly a ·year has elapsed since San Clemente's public safety employes first began seeking a changeover from an inadequate private insurance plan to one ad· ministered by the state. The proposal was turned over to a staff study, \vhlch finally appeared pomplete earlie·r this year. When bidders were culled out and comparisons dra\l'n, it was reported the showdown was between the employe·preferred Public Employes' Retirement System (PERS). run by the state, and an upgraded vers!on of the existing pension package by Franklin Life Insurance Company. Then this month. while on the verge of a decision, city councilmen threw the entire matter back onto the city staff for a gruelling task of draftinj!: item·by·il.em cost comparisons on· elaborate tables, despite fairly solid indications that city costs would be about equal for either plan. The matter is a complex one· and was made more so by new information from the insnrance company. However. if costs to the city seem close, the council should certainly give heavy weight to the feelings of it$ employes. s "' c:D_l'h•~~~ 'IT~ BETTER TO ll6HT A CANPLE THAN TO CURSE THE DARKNf ss:' Producers now say this was inadvertent. .. J ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· : ~;Superficiality i In Cultural • -t Differences • • . ••• • • • • ~, ~ • j-, In France!, there is nothing that goes by Jhe name of French toast. There are no ;..French fried potatoes. No French beans. r.JNo French dressing. No French windows. -"And no orchestra, however large, con- _. tains a French horn . :· ln Gennany, nobody ever has German • measles. The Danish :.i pastry is WI.known ~ in Denmark. There are no Dalmatian •• ~dogs in Dalmatia. I !• could go on, but you ~ get lhe •polnJ.. What -f we call •'Ji'i'eneli" l. and so forth "go Dy :"~ entirety · different -:r names in tho s'e i , coontries, and are not particularly +' 1dentified with those countries. .,. ;: FRENCH BEANS, for instance, are :!~1lmply "haricots vers" in France. A ~.French window is a "porte-fentre." A ~ French horn is a "cor d'hannonie." And ~ jn Gennany, German measles are merely : ••die Roteln," or rubella. ): Certain things become associated with apecific countries and are forever more inseparable. We think of the jinrikisha as quintessentially Japanese, but it was in~ vented by an American missionary, Chop &uey was wholly unknown in China until it was introduced by Western restaurateurs. And Irish stew, 1 am reliably informed, was never indigenous to Ireland. THESE ARE JUST peculiarities of no consequen~ in themselves -ex~pt that Dear Gloomy Gus: Did you know that the combina· tion of drugs and alcohol can magnify their separate ill effects from four to eight times? That's what tests show. What a combina· lion for driving on the freeway! -H. S. V. Th~ fMl11r1 rfflech .....,_, ¥1trwt. Mt flftt1urllr '""N 11 t111 "'w''""'· Stllf r1111r ;>11 '"wt M Gl•mr G111, D1llr ,Utt. they point to more important associations lhat 1ve make all the time, and with just as little justification. We not only associate products with specific coun- tries, but personal traits as "'ell. We look upon the French as a "roman· tic" people, which is as absurd as their view or the English as "cold." We find orleiltals "inscrutable," simply because their mode of emotional effect is dir- ferent Crom ours. We look upon the dark, brooding "Russi.an soul" with some awe and rear; but as a famous Gennan scholar once observed, "The 'Russian soul' is an invention of the German philosophers." CULTURES DO HAVE di(ferences, of course; no one would ever mistake an ef· fusive Italian for a taciturn Scotsman. But such differences are far more superficial than we imagine -they are like different accents blurring the fact that they all speak the same b a s i c language. As a livin g laboratory in anthropology, it is fascinating to see how a new state like Israel has, in a generation or so, con- founded the "A'bole stereotype of the "Jew" as known In Western society. For th e Israeli seems more like a Swede than a Jew, even physically. Leopards can change their spots when the spots have only been painted on by others. East, West Calif ornin A new tw ist has been given the "splil California in two" argument by Senator Randolph Collier, dean of the upper • bouse. CoUier's intriguiliji: proposal -or in· teresting spoof -is to split the state intG \Vest Ctlifornia and East California, when all these years other split advocates have suggested state5 of Southern and Northem California. Over the years the degree of en· thusiasm for a State of Northern California and a State of Southtrn California bas run up and down like a public opinion poll ln search of an issue. ntE APPARENT thesis be h Ind Collier's \\1t.'it and East Ca1lromia is that the West state. to include the 13 coa stal counties Crom Marin in the North to San Diego In tht South, would be an urban ttate. The 45 counties not included in Wot California, but to become Eas t Cl.Ufornia, would be a more rural, agricultural and recreational area. Thus- ty, perhaps the thinking goes. the urbanologists and the evlronmentallsts can each have the best of two worlds. • West Callfomi111, to a large extent, could wrestle wilh the problems of the metropoJJtan ciliea while East California wouldn't h~ve to get nearly so mixed up ln r1pld transit, regional government. water poOuUon, Bmog and all that stuff. ll'• beautiful - ONE TlllY PROBLEM might bf lhol a W Ill a lol ol Wtll Callfomlani w"'ld 10 ....... to lht ldylll< E"'l mlJo M N4 M tlio old jalopy and family ~, .. ~ "*' ~ -.......... lht 1111,tor f ! . Gucst·Report 1 obstacles facing Scnalor Collier in seek- ing approval of East and West California are the tortuous legislative process a measure of thls magnitud e must fa·ce, the answers to the questions of how to split the ex.isling state debt equitably between the proposed new states, the sanctity of rontracls entered into hy the existing state of California and how they would have to be reconciled between the new stateS~ and the other old issues ra ised whenever a di vision of the .&tab~ has betn broached. Tht'y are all arguments with 'A"hich senator Collier is familiar' IN THE EVENT Senator Collier me~ts with legislative success, there of course Is still an enonnously cotnpllcated pro- cedure which must be followed before the t"'·o iitates come into exlstenct. All the argument& aside, Senator Collier is due kudos. His proposal is fresh, it is ingenious, it focuse11 strong at· tention on many of the critical Issues con- fronting us all. if only because it suggests radical surii:ery of a new type as a solu· l ion. Could It be that this is What the {\Vlnkle eyed veteran or a thoUMnd legislative 1k1rmlshes has tn mind. or Is he j u s t .. yinR th•t the people v.'ho art closest to I.ht problems they Mvc created should be more rtsponslblr ror rtsoh1tion or thern? C..lifomla Feature Serl'lce ,_ Taxi119 Returnable Bottles Throughout County Assessor's Ruling Fosters Pollution To the Editor: It is appalling to belie ve that in this day of people working for ecology and en- vironmental control, and attempting to eliminate Pollutlon of all kinds, an Orange County official would deliberately attempt to underm ine these valiant tf· forts. The official in quest ion is County Tai Assessor Andrew Hinshaw, Y:hose efforts to squeeze extra -taxes from the 7·UP bot- tling company can only result in adding more titter to our already suffocating streets, parks and beaches. It is Mr. Hinshaw's opinion that all returnable bottles of 7·Up in the county belong to the botlling c0mpany, not to the stores or the consumers. He has handed the "Uncola" people an assessment of $166,570 for every returnable bottle in the county, plus a demand for "escaped as- sessments" for the years 1966 through 1969 to the tune of $972,640. WE ARE, THEREFORE, talking about a million·plus tax tab to be forked over by 7·Up. In other words. Hinshaw is demanding that 7·Up pay tax on the bot.- Hes in our own refri gerators, in every bar and restaurant. and each retail lT'arkel and store. which is a new pimple f\.tr . Hinsha\11 is attempting to scratch in order to bring more tu dollars into tDe county. If successful , in this ventw-e, Mr. Hinshaw will undoubtedly attack the other sofl drink COOlpanies for similar revenues. (if • ' Lt"1rt tf'tftt r.-..n •re wtk9mt. Htrm•I"' wrlltf'I .....,"" C911.,., tlltlr m11w..-i 111 .• "Mir<k tr ltU, Tiit rllfll 1e allflfl" ltlttrs t. flt _. tr tll"'INM llllotf h l'Htrvff. All ltlttn mu.I ln-dlldt llluture •M m•lllnt ..,,..,,, but ft-• "''' R Wllllfltld 111 _., II suttkltnt ,..'°" 11 ''"""'· PMtrY wm Mt " ,,..a,11ttritf. raised their deposit in order to make the bottles more valuable. hence. worth returning to the store, rather than left on the beacb. If Mr. Hinshaw is successful-in this at· tempt, it coUtd be ·one giant step BACKWARD for mankind. Althougb 7·Up has not even hinted abo.ut the possibility of returning to throw·aways, in the face (If what is happening, this would appear to be a logical and profitable decision on their parL And if this decision should be made, 1 hope Mr. Hinshaw will be ready for the war cries from the conservationists, not to mention the many organizations dedicated to ecological and anli·pOllution pursuits. Perhaps it might be a wise time fo r these organizations and interested in· dividuals to make their wishes known to ~1r. Hinshaw. And if they can't get through. then there's always the ne1l election~ LEE C. MILLAR Lesso,. Fro111 1U111llms To the Edltnr: \Vhen ordering the invasion of Syria (623-MO A.O.) Muhammod's .successor, Kaliph Abu Bekr, gave the following in· structions to the Arabs in military forces : "Be just. Do not break faith .•• Do not kill children, (lid men or women , •• Do not cut down fruit trees. If you come across men in mog.asteries, leave them in peace." DESPITE T~E chil'alrous con- cessions to the enemy, tbe Muslim con· quests continued successfully for the next two centuries, encompassing much of the then civilized world, from Spain and France to the borders of China. Perhaps the United States would have fared better in Vietnam and avoided ' disgraces like the u . calley episode if heads of stale and anned services had fj}llowed from a page of Muslim history. ROLAND CUEVA Poslth:e Positions To the Editor : Your April 13 editorial comments on Agnew 's speech in Los Angeles ef· fectively demonstrated his point by not mentklning that in polling 10 years ago 24 percent of Americans wished to live elsewhere. "Reductio ad absurdum" apt I y describes your coverage while in truth twi ce as many perions preferred staying with the old girl for all her problems. The rest of the world has more! WE'VE FLAILED ours e I ves suf- ficiently. Let's listen to the positive posi· lions of our prespicacious young and su p- port reordering our priorities to preserve our environment, correct inequities and support the cultural arts as the essential humanizing ingredient in to d a y ' s technological soeiety. J did not hear Mr. Agnew. bul my hus· band did, and it was a tonic to him to hear a positive approach for a change. Your editorial is a case in point of com- pletely omitting the positive. VERNA JENKJNS Praise for Joh11 tl'ay11e To the Editor: I have taken a short retirement from the Chicago Police Department after 13 years of service to raise my four children here in Southern California ... 1 cannot help but write this letter to congratulate one or our finer citizens liv· ing in Southern California, John (Duke) Wayne. After reading the article in Playboy an~ studying the loaded queslions he \Vas asked, and after studying the ansv.•ers he gave to these questions, I feel that C\ E'"Y flag.waving American should give this man a pat on the back .•. John Wayne, a tru e American. A MAN WHO not only in his motion pictures is a hero to many, but also a man who is not afraid to stand up on his hind legs and shout to the heavens, "l am an American . . . 1 am against anyone \\.'anting to overthrow this country by force-from within or from without.•• May God bless this true American. NEAL GRANEY Now, what has all thi:s to do with en- vironmental control, pcillution a n d ecology? Quite obvious, 1 would say. Why should 7-Up pay this ridiculous new tax on returnable botlles, when they can save a million bucks by reverting to throw- aways! MOST BOTTLING companies have made a concentrated eCfort to stop using throw·a\l'ay bottles, and return to the deposit bottles in order to clear the roun• lJ:y of litter. Some companies have even Life's Good Days and Bad Days Prized Liberty ( Press Cornments '•u Llbtrty, N.Y., Press: ''While work can be bothersome and a great nuisance at times. ii would be a mistake to consider it an evil custom of mankind. In fact. the opportunity of an individual to work for his ov.'n adl'ancement is one of lhe prized IU>erties of modem civ ilization. The satisfaction that comes from work well performed is likewise one of the basic motivations and pleasures of human conduct. \Vhile it may be advisable for men and women as they get up in years. to slow the hectic pact of modern business. it is often a mistake for workers to 'retire' Jn the blissful expectation of a joyful existence until death. In many cases lhe grim reaper arrives much earlier than anticipated and there is evidence to support the belief that the early visitation is, In part, induced by a radical change in the person's mode of life." Life has its good days and its bad days. Not all our hours are lit by wine and roses. \Ve are not always a bonfire or a bou· quet to ourselves. Sometimes a clinker in the eye obscures a rainbow. There are the bad days to keep even the largest ego humble. Such as when : Times were &0 bad that when you lost a tooth you woke up the next moml11g and found a nickel instead of a dime under your pillow. You asked her for a date and she told you frankly mat she \\'as golng to be terribly, terribly busy for a IOl'lg, long time. It was the last hurdle in the race and you thought you were home ahead, but then your hind foot hit the hurdle and you landed on your elbo~ and when you got up you r ann dangled oddly awry and you felt dizzy and sick at yoor stOmach. SHE SAID SHE'D meet you UlCrt but she never showed up, and you stood there trying to think that you looked as If you had an Importa nt mission in life while By George Dear George : Do you expect us to believe that "New Husband " has a bride so laey she \von "t even HEAT his TV din· ners ? SKEPTICAL Dear Skeplical· No -it "'3$ that she v.'as 100 la:iy to v.·alk into the kltchen and kept healing thtm luk ewarm on the pic- ture lube. Dt.tar George : Is it .i>Ossible to get a book published without a lot of sex in it? \V h a t are publishers th1nklng of these days, anyway! 01J).F ASHIONED Otar Old: You know, you keep Jnswering your own que!l.ion11 like that and f' m going to be out of • job. • (· r crowds of strangers went by and oever thought of you at all. The doctor said the bifocals would gi l'e you a dif ferent outlook, but when you put them on and stared at yourself in the mirror all you saw was another fat middle-aged man wearing bifocals. The nurses told you it was a fine boun· cing boy. but when you dropped it ac· cidentally il just plopped -and later failed algebra in high school. She said when you m&.rried her that you could have all your wishes, and how does that bear on the fad that now you do all the dishes! "Greetings, son'' said Uncle Sam. and theJI, "So Jong, boy, see you later." ALL THE ANTS ran up your panl~ when you stretched out to takt a grassy snooie at the picnic. You thought the teacher's eye was upon you as you galloped around the ltin- dergarten classroom, but when the piano ceased it was anOlher boy she picked up and kis.wd, as the best prancer of them all. You had never had acne In your Ufe befort, and then on the morning of the senior prom you awoke with a face that looked as if )t had been bombarded by strawben-jea. You were &itling with yout mother In the rront porch swing and you Idly remarktd that you knew of other ramilies that had done mort to help their SCln through college. and she broke Into tears and fled tnto the hou.1e and the &wing kept on going back and forth as you realit.ed you had done. a thing you ceuld rie\'er forgive Jourtelf for even though life sbould last forever and you had not mean1,~: do it at all. FINALLY YOU GOT up your courage to ask for a merit raise and were granted a $5 one, but the boss who gave it to you as he stared out the \\•indO\V painted such a bleak picture of the firm 's future he left you feeling like an ingrate because you hadn't volunteered to take a $10 cut. It looKed like an able sable when y()U bought it wholesale in an alley, but when you took it home to your \\life it dropped cat fur all over the rug while your wife wa s trying it on. Five years to the day after )'(JU told the boy you didn't want him as a son-in·law, he and your daughter took you and your \Vife to dinner and shO\l'ed you a paycheck twice the size of you r own. And then there was the day that U1e third ronsec utive redhead in your life told you goodbye even before you had fell you had given her an adeq•ate hello. and you realized that you wert just one more of those guys doomed to be unloved by a red·haired -girl. Yes, tbere are days on wbich the only reason to get up is so you can lie back ®"'n in bed again and count your y,·ounds. ---iWWW- Friday, April 30, 1971 The tditoricd pagt of the Doily Piloc seeka to i11 form and siim. ulou readers by presenting this ntWSMptr'1 opinions at1d com· me11taru an. topics of interest and 1ignifico11ce, by providing a forum for cJLt e:i:presrion of our rtddtrs' opinions, and bv presenting tht divtrst vitw- poinU of inf~d obstrvfn and spokumen on Copies o/ th# day. Robert N. Weed , PubWhel' . CHECKING · • uP ·• . ·Bridge Humor I Travel.ers Take Toll Shouldn't Doctor LOS ANGELES (AP) -The grace.fill ·Vincent Thom as Bridge spanning the main channel ol Loi Angeles Harbor, never c~ since opening day Nov. ts, 1963, gives Southern C&IUornians one of the rare oppOrtunities to toss a quarter, a quip or a question at toll oollectors. · ·How do we get to the Queen Mary!' We're thinking about applying for 1n excursion rate over tbe~ The ch o co lat«:ove.rtd quarters? Oh, yes. Renew License? 'Ibe collectors have their problems wllh all three. On Sundays and hoUdAys families gO for drfvu, CJ.· plains Miller, and the toll col· lectors start lookina (rim. "They know what's coming." By L M. BOYD SHOULD a doctor's license to practice be good for life? Or shoukf lie be required to take examinations from time to time lo renew? Say every five years. A movement is afoot among a scatter of citizens to force this. And one 11uch declares, "The practice of mediclne has changed a lot more in the last 25 years than the drlviog of a car. But a doctor does nol need to renew his license, yet a driver does. l\'s ridiculous." HOW DO YOU account for the fact the average age of school teachers in the Far West is oonslderably lower than the average age of school teachers along the Atlantic Seaboard?. .THE AARDVARK can dig a deep hole into hard ground so fast. that nobody can dig it out by hand. Not even a rirst-rate shoveler with a shoveler's helper ... A WHOLE.SALER of men's hairpieces says his rerords show ins uran c e salesmen seem to b e particularly likely prospects for such merchandise. WHO WAS the greater lover, Paul Newman or Clark Gable? The greater hero, A u d i e Murphy or George Palton? And which was the most popular medical fellow, Young Doctor Kildare or Marcus Welby, M.D.? So go the in- quiries. I'd take Gable and Murphy, respectively, in love and war. That's just a notion. It'! not a mere notion, how~ver. that Dr. Welby out- praclices Dr. Kildare. The raling boys say Welby now Ne'v Use Of L-Dopa Indicated "'lbe worst is chocolat.e- beat.s all TV doclors. Kildare. covered quarters. oo Sundays Casey . Gannon. Every one. By and bolkiays," contends Fred Miller, a 2&-yeaM>ld toUrnan. far . The collectors say 35 million CUST0~1ER SERVICE: Q. cars have crossed the fou.r- "How long woold it take a lane bridge and Miller says blind man to listen to tape they have handled 35 million recordings of the entire Bible questions. read aloud!" A. A little more "Our regular commuters than seven days ..• Q. "What know where they'tt: going and does the Bible say about pay their quarten and drive alcohol?u A. Quite a bit. on," be says. Checked this out with a "Visitors and tourists make biblical scholar who said it 's up for it. They bubble with mentioned 165 timei therein, questions. We get the same favorably more often than not. quesUons over and over. We 're ABOUT THAT t.xpectant suppo!ed to keep smil_lng. I Parents take lids t o beachc:, drlve--irul, amusement centers, tourist attractions, The Jcids stuff themselves with hamburgers, ice cream, can- dy. "The good kids get reward- ed," Miller says, "by being allowed to hand tbe man tbe quarter." Eight thou.sand, I~.ooo. even 12,000 times ia a day , says Miller -an expert either at figures or-uaggeratlon -a small sticky hand reaches out toward the toll takers. Marriage Ban Will Remain know my smile geb glassy. mother, if she carries hiJh to "I feel my smile weakening the right, it will be a boy. If when for the 50th time .:>ince low to the left. a girl. Our Old noon someone cracks, 'We'll Superstitions man says that's have two burgers and a Coke,' DETROIT (API -The na· the common belief still among or asks me. 'What time's the lion'~ Roman Cat ho I Jc some elderly Europeans .•. IT show st.art?' hierarchy has indicated, at WAS NONE OTHER than that ''When a driver a sks. least indirecUy, it intends to literary f'(l3.fl of the cloth, 'Where. am I going?' you know stick to its position against Jonathan SWift. who proposed he1s 8. tourist and he's Jost. If pennitting marriage r or it: "Let the rich fatten up the he asks, 'Where's Tenninal priests. children of the poor and eat Island?' you probably find he's Signs ol that conclusion them," sugges ted he, ''thus lo looking for the Federal Cor· showed up Thursday in com- curb both starvation and over-rectional Jn st it u ti 0 n on ment.s: and actions as the ap: population." Moralists demur-Terminal Island and Is shy proximately 250 bishops went red. about saying so. into the final day of their se- FIRST OISTJNGUISIDNG'.::="F=o=rt"=y=oc=50=a=d=ay;;;:a=s=k,=m=ia=M=U=al=m=,.="=·n=g.==== CHARACTERISTIC you notlct 11 about some stranger you meet is the only thing about said party You'll never forget , no matter wha t. It's the gender. Whether the person is a man or a woman. Obvious? Sure enough, But you'll always remember. Nothing e I s e. , nothing will fix itself so firml y in your head . Our Love and War man points this -out to prove bis work is basic. RAPID REPLY; No, Sir, am not qualified to expla in wh y the airlines are in financial lrouble. Now. five out of 10 citizens nationwide have rid- den in planes. Just five years ago, only two out of 10 had done so. ti.1ost mysterious. ft•w lo.ris • p•tch poc~•t 1 .... is ~•nli•"'••ic•rd 9 "'••t.r di•r9• 7 fa,hi•ll itla11d, "wporf c.11t•r 644-5070 Your question! and com- ments are. welcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wherever possible.. Ad- dress letter1 io L. M. Boyd, LOS ANGELES (AP) P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Medical researchers have. Beach, Calif., 92660. discovered that I-dopa, the, li"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiii= powerfu l new drug ror treat· PACIFIC GOLDFISH FARM ment of Parkinson's disease.. . :~':.;":!, ~g~~gm:~~k";'~~ heart attacks. s p RING Dotto!"! estimate tha! , · 250,000 people die each year in the U.S. from cardiop<>nir 1hock -a baff ling side effect of a coronary attack lhal con- tinue1-lo resist treatment. Prese.nt drugs are effective only 10.15 percent of the time. said Dr. Eliot Corday. clinical professor of medicine at the l University of California at Los Angeles. Corday and three doctors at Ced a rs · S i n a i Medical Research Institut e discovered the possible new use of I-dopa in tests \\'ith experimental an imals. "We haven't tried it clinica lly with humans yet, hut in animals it appears lo be very effective," Corday said. The clinical tests. just now beginning, are expected to lake six mnnths to one year. In the animal studies, th e doctors found that 1-dopa went ta work in 3-5 minute5 and braught dramatic results in 15 minutes to animals dying of ca rdiogenic shock. The drug is qu ickly converted by the body to thrtt substances - dopamine. adrenalin and noradrenalin. Adrenalin and noradrenalin are used now to treat shock . "\\'e're realty gettlne: the benefit of three different drugs." Corday said. "It's like 11 shotgun treatmenl . w,, might get the same effect if we injected all three in a pa - tient. but this is nature's wav of handlin,I( it and it's much mare efficient" Cleared for general use last vear by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 1-dooa has broo1ht dramatic results. to victims or Parkinson's disease. neurololtical disorder often treated through brain 1urgtry. BEGINS APRIL 30th-ENDS MAY 9th Kol ..... ,,, 2 0 CARP ~JJ~~~· 5.5 rt/o n•tk col•11. Q f f WATER LILLIES 2 FOR $5 Water Hyacinth 5 FOR $1 AQUARIUMS 10 Gal. ':,.':" c~~!: $9 .60 26 Gal. Wlttt LltM •114 Coftr ll.09. SJi.11 40 Gal. l"'I•"' t11t6i, c•¥tf •tt• ........ ..,...,., lt•ll •tw4. LOW PRICE SPECIALS $27.00 $99.00 GUPPY 59' BETTA · $1 '95 BREEDERS BARRACKS • SUCTION 99' S. P. CORNER 95' THERMOMETER FILTER PACIFIC GOLDFISH FARM 14842 EDWARDS ST., WESTMINSTER OH f1lit S.11 Da.,. frww.y .r •ol ... Wn t •114 lolM, 'ftft tt llw•t4t. tit 1hj...t "'"' tJtllt, 'fa Ml• ,. lftt, tlln tftM ,. tM dt•· -H•ortl 11 e.M. ,. I ,.1111.--C ...... ,....,,. a•a.1105 frldi.J, Aprll 30, 1971 DAJLV PILOT ~' '' The Word Used 'Round the World •••• Young And Old -Alike Teen.s -Youngsters -Oldsters No Matter What The Age Wear The New Love Ring! 14K WHITE OR YELLOW GOLD ENHANCED BY A BRILLIANT DIAMOND THE RING ALL THE WORLD SHOULD WEAR • ESTABLISHED 43 YEARS "The Stores Confidence Built" HARBOR CENTER HUNTINGTON CENTER 2300 Herbor Blvd. Beach 81vd. & Edinger Huntington Bt•ch Costa Mtu 545.9495 892-5501 OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. Easy credit terms • student accounts avalJable • up to 12 months to pay • BankAmorlcard • Master Cbar11e • - • . .. . . . J :iAJLV I'll.OT Frld11 , Apr1130,1971 ~All-American' Student Held State Poverty Agency Under Fire )l: Y.· 1it 3 Girls' Knife Slayings SACRAMENTO (AP) State Office of Economic Op- porw.nity officials are stwt_ying ._.. a coofideaUal federal report .,.. tliAN JOSE !UPI\ -A tjean-cut. hard·'o\ork.ing col- ~ freshman who underwent ,.,Y.Chiatric evaluation three xetrs ago i.!i charged with \be tnife murders or t h re e teenage girls. 11ainsl Weroer and com- mitted hlm to Yt'estboro State Hospital for S5 da)'!' obterV•- Uon. Sa nta Clara County Undersltiiff Tom Rosa would not elaborate on the evidt.oce WlklentUltd teenaae 1 l r I l.Oday cl1iming their $800,000 grant was used to harass and reported thlt she: w 1 s spy Oil antipoverty groups in frightened In the 1ame part California. jurt two d1y1 before the Lewis K. Uhler, director of murder by 1 young man the slate OEO office, and --,· Asst. Dltector John Sawicki m1tchlng Werner's description have been unavailable for who became angry when 5be comment but a federal OEO 111.inst Werner, a lanky &-foot-ttfused to go for a hike with spokesman confirmed they 2 freshman at San Jose City him. received a copy of the report. College v.1ho worked six nights The undersherif! described uP1 ,, .. '"'* The report allegedly was a week at a hamburger sla.ud MURDER SUSPECT compiled by a team appointed 'il'here his boss described him the bespeclacled suspect as by H. Rodger Betts. San Fran- as ··very sincere, herd-work-"an all-American type." Karl F. Wer ner cisco regional director for the ing. quiet. of good chuacler."'-------'--H-A_V_E_Y_O_U_V_l_S_IT_E_D_O_U_R_N_E_W_STORE AT: federal OEO •• _ mends the .f.ederal government \Jhler '1 o(rice conducted a Lou <l:lurcbvllle, OEO dlrec-w!Wlold ald to Ubler'a office month s·long inve!Ugallon I.or o( public &flairs In after Junt: 30 and that Uhler's leading to Gov. Reagan's veto agency be abollabtd unleas of a $1.8 million federal grant Washington, D.C., telephoned stiff new requirements are for !97l to California Rural The Aslodated Presa Thurs-met Legal Aasistaoce. day from Kansas City to COil-:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;~;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;~ firm that Betts "forwarded a11 confidentiJI evaluation to the Calilorl'lla slate office. . Jor review and comment by it." But the report i.s incomplete "unUJ the state responds to it and the slate response is reviewed by OEO .'' Churchville said. "Until that time, OEO will have no fUrther comment." The Sacramento Bee said Thursday the report recom- WATER BEDS at PUEBLO MOTEL 1501 N. HARBOR -SANTA ANA Th• flrat m.t•I In Or•n .. County with thla 1Mt1t5-n1I, Hnuou• MW Invention. $1 S.OO Per Day ...... ,,,o•s A MUST rt.one (714J Sll-7100 P:OUMTAIM VAlll:Y-ll'tN Mott .... ltl St. •t TllMl't COSTA Ml!S-UM HI-11'1'11. 11 WHIM SI. <OITA Ml:SA-2'11:. 1"111 SI. POUNTAIM VAl.Lll'-lil41 H .. 1 ... llwl •• 1-'19tW Karl Werner. 18, described a "an all-American type" and ~the typical boy next door," ••~ booked Thursday for the tnurders or Deborah Furlong. 14. and Kathy Snoozy, 15, on Aug. 3. 1969. and the murder ~f Kathy Bilek, It, I a .s l f:aster SUnday. : All three victims were slash- t:d to death. Deborah wlth 200 tnife wounds, the Snooty girl p;it~ 100 and Miss Bliek with '6 .. ~ Rosa did say, however, that ~:.:;:"';';th'"~~"°':::. bv~ 5881 Warner at Springdale in Huntington Beach l!l TOll.~EI T-•I 11.Kllllel.i II.Hiii HUNTIHOTOM •l!ACH-211Jl INdl IM. II All•lllt SANTA AHA-I• W, l:lllllllltf' 111111 1•1•"91 SI. WIS1MIMST•ll-6f11 W111111111lol1r •I ~ W .. f HUMTINOTOM llAC,._,..1 A'llM 11 lreKl'llll"ll MUMTIMGTOW lllACK-lffdl 6 l,int.,. nUNTIMllJTOM llACM-Wtnitr • ,,~ .. : Jclice in Marlboro, MaS!., ,.·tire \\'emer lived before pioving here t-.'o years ago. p_aid the youth was arrested ptere at the age of 15 on a ~harge of assaulting a woman M·ith a knife. She was not ;eriously injured and juvenile ~.Lj_l.horilies dropped the charge Urns and lived in the same neighborhood where t h e i r bodies were found on a sunny hillside a few blocks from their homes. He said Werner was also known to frequent the 'o\'ooc:led county park where Miss Bilek·s body was discovered by her father April II. He said \Verner became a suspect a few days arter the killing of fo.iiss Bilek, when an 1ff !'State Bans Further • !Coast Oil Surveys ' SACRAMENTO (AP ) :California has told nine 011 ~ompanies to stop looking for ~I along its 1.100-mile coast- bne. scoring a victory for ea- vironmentalist.s who c I a i m geophysical acliv ity wookf in- evitably lead to drilling. extend the com pani es' geophysical survey permits unlil next Jan. 31. State Controller Houston 1. Flournoy, chairman of thf aeency which regulates mineral exploration and pro- duction. said he was not con- vinced that drillintl for ell waa an inevitable step following seismic operations. Only one member or the three man State Lands Com- ~ion differed Tbu r sd a y flf!n the agency refused to ' \Yorty Says 1He Makes 'East Gains However, Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke and Stale Finance Director Verne Orr 1lded with conservation groups 1 n d legislators wbG con t en d e d further geophysical acUvlty was inconsistent with effort! to pre.serve the coastline. The commission already had declared portions ef t be coastaJ waters off limit!: to such eiploratlon, but permits art in effect for such opera- : LOS ANGELES (AP) lions in federal waters beyond Mayor Sam Yorty has return-the three-mile limit e1 stale ~d from a five-day visit to the jurisdiction. East Coast aimed al testing 1'he commission's ewn staff Public sentiment in New had recommended approval of IJamp.shire for a run for the tbe extension, saying the "tihite House and drumming knowledge gained would ''have tip business investments in the potential value to the state Los Angeles area. beyond that ef determining ; At a Thu!'!day night airport whether oil er ga s does or ~ew1 conference, y 0 r t y does not exist .•. " declared he had picked up However, a stale geologist, fresk!enUal supporter• during Edward Welday of th e Ii.~ two dart _ Monday and Dlvl1ion ef MJne1 1 n d Tuesday -in the Granite Geology. said little of the ~tate but declined to name dlvilion'1 knowledge l't( fhem. "I could ve; y easily, but offshore geololY has J'm not going to," he said. ;;;;fr;;om=o;;ll;;co=m;;p;;an;;i•;;•====;I ; Yorty. aconse r v a tiVe" OemOcrat u·ho favors Presi- c'!ent Nixon 's Vietnam policy, iay.s he may run In New Ba mp s hire'.s presidentia l Primary as a challenge to Oemocralic candidates who [avor immediate and total L.S. wii hdrawal from Sooth. fast Asia. : Asked if he 'o\'ould enter the (ace. Yortv sai d. "I don·1 know ye t. The recept ion was tery good. The cro"'·ds on the: ttreets Y:ere very friendly." Like Salling? c .1 25•, ., low ., $14.00 h1lf.d1y Low Monthly Du•• LIDO SAILING CLUB NEWPORT llACH (714) 67.Ml27 You've got a lot riding on your. BRAKES I Getyourlr1k11 checked where you get tbl FACTS I CAM AUTO PAltTl. INC. "°''1 M•1M I .. SI , W"'!"'lll'l"• (•Ill. ,._ -01'1 ..,....., "'""'"' .. s311 bl•nd•_d1 ,,. Scotl•'""· A """" -Ill.._._ •t .$1.00~ 1 ' 75' Reynold$ ,..,_Wrap lcOll:OhlJ loll ·( ladyYmity 4 ta 12-CVp Pett "-·· ,_, ..... $9" ~~"*"-p..-,. ta! 'WFDpDround c:ord 110'00'. 8b:lt (T WhltL "CMl2. Reg.•111 ta. llouseHld Bn1shes 2:$1 T ~'Motlier·s Da,fGifts Diseount Prieed T''Ca•on lo Iron Prilt!laslin Sheets T.lrlW • 1'1111<1 , ..... ...... ., Dtlignedl .... •5" 4 Pftco Tny Tait.le Seti ............. $4rl 21.x1S~"' ~ -"' ,OrqU1t lootr. .. n-1 .... -- ..... , .. 10 Piece lllllr Cllpper Sets '"""" """· $54" Shu" off of· ,., loot rte• ood, <!~RPM JPino;lle.Wol· ·-'!J: !:::.<:: ....... $5.44 :.=,1no ""'rvc.- nu! color. 167P51. 25 Ft. M011sanlo •1.n Gt!rde• Hose ~ hc.e b.lllt for ,,_n af i«YkL \.'J:,. tllo!Mter, btan cgu.o t: J '11 pllrlQs. fulfr guor-'( twd. Ladles' ltliR• Straw Hots =-:: 1:7; $24' $12'5 Yll1tl Watches '22" Clairol "20" Custom Hair Setter ... c..... ...... ~-.;.~:,:·:.;: $1911 fop 111v1ry holr ttytt. MocW !WOO Reg. '2411 G.L litllted Mirrer :..=r-~$1811 las, g~f,..; Sclil'lfll11 &lld Chest WhHm1n lhmnpr Chocol11ts ~ Chocol1l11 :: .. --~~~-• ~ :~~ .. ~.!~~ . .!.II 4;;).~·;; For The Record • Dissolutions Of Marriage l"llell 4'111 " Httt, Juu. llH!l•betti Ind ..... ..._ \.at ~ll'lltW, Ctlarltttt Alflrt. Ind /11116<! ... C1rr, Htnar Ri;lh and Oitnw.,. OeY1,. •"'"""""· Jttfltffe M.. .ind 11..-1 M tok!I, Le!.lrt Ditnllf tnd St111tey lltY' Lvctnt. Ron f . tnd Coli..n D. Mtlnl'k. l.Urttret IC. t nd SltYtn Jltlton. tiCtttorirl Glori. trod Meurl(t Fr..S.rkk ltl«, J"'" C. W Oeniel P. .-.1un..-1, Jtl'llee M. •nd Jose lt.,ben Sykes, U"'i M., Jr, tl'ld 00rol1\y L Dvvtlt, Frank J . -GrKt L, · CltYtltnd, Ell-M. and Roland A. Wlllttlr.rr, H.ney \.. tl'IO Ltlrd S. .... ,.,,..., Jud¥ A-1tld Don w1mam Furu,.1, Shtl'Oll U.von tM Hl11Jhl Demko. MfiY V. -Jtmes w. M~i. Norma M. arid Ournlllflo Pone" JQllPll A, tnd C1rol Yvtfft INTlllLOCUTOllY Dl!Clllf -,....,..,. Alr11 2' Hutrft, Loreen Javce tnd Ctrloa ,,_ O.nt, /MrH'f'ft F, •nd WUlltm 11. MCG'9, Jtl\l'le t1'14 Jerrv A. Mffhffon, 1(11t11t1... tnd IC1111nelt! ....... ,,., .. Horlk-, Ltwll At'ltlur Md Ufttt flltn t.11w, Olrl$11roe M1rl1 and Ttrrv Gene Valldti, M1rl1 G. tnd Juan A. ltiddlt, Cllr!tl!tll ICtlllo and Ctnctvct Lynn Doltt, M1r1ar.t Mtrlt Ind OtYld W11nlwd \.!'1clmen, Judith Ann and Artl'lvr Lid-'"' SNJI, ~ JIM Incl Homs O«lnlt Speneer, llett!1 C1r¢.1 Ind Wllt!1m Fr•cllrldi: S"-PPl!I, Julllo I. -Lei.nd A. Rlcl'\4rcllOll. ti, Dllllt I". 11111 SHr.ctl'" w. Noadt. Ml,... K. •nd Mlcl\fel P. Re,_, Jo .. Atulla and ••-• Oonllcl50f'I, P1lrlcl1 A. ll'ld 1Eclw1rcl l , Hefltln, Robert W. Ind All~ llruct, E. J. llrvce, Jr. Ind J..,.11 Hl1m, OolothY E. R. 1nd Geo•lt Rldo lrcl, Bt11Y' Ann Ind Robert MIX Sio.uldl111, Myrn. Anti Ind Jtf'fY o. MOr•n, Mfdlfitl Norm1n 1nd Fr1nc11 El11l1 liln, Ledl• M•Y Ind Tllft'ltd9t: Rov Lvndon, R~ w. Ind M .... r"" O. Rich, llr11ee <;ooc11Pffd l!ld Gloria 111 .. Owens, Mary A. Ind EdCllt I . Froelllldl, Betit Jo •NI Mturlce A. ,1HAL Dl!C:Rl"ES l.,_l'tllllf A1tJf l J IEd:erl, Rlll I. Ind W1d1 R. 1!111 ...... Aprll :N Smlm, Normt tl'ld LIC"rd E. Bruce, P1!rlcl1 L. and R1ymnr>d L Detanorv, J1101uetvn R. 1nd J1me• E. Suohell, Eileen C:. 11'1d Wlll06m G. M1W<11, J1ne-Y L. 1nd'Fr11'1k Y. Coc/\ran, Lue A"n a<ld Clltrles Eutene !lrow,,. Julllh Lrnn and JIJ'nm11 Jo/IMOl'I, Ctrolvn trw::I Loult T-ov Sulton, Btltv JtM 11'1d King W. Walson, t•I• G. Ind Lnlle J. Dunne, K1llllttn MltMll1 111(1 Tlmol!IV '· Ow..,1, J1nlc1 M.lrltnt and HtrK.htl CH Oon1ld...n, Halen tnd WllUtm F. Sebtst11n. $hlrlty M•Y llld Dtr,I Lt Roy Johl'lsfltll. "'"'IHn Ann Ind Ron11d Wlllltm Ptlrofl, Jr .. C/\rlstv L. and Fr1nds 01lrtvs•~· Jer(me E. ind M1rcl1 e. EllJolf, Kl'"' A11n and Donov1n v. R.O-, M1rl1 El1lne 1nd J1mu Wllllam J.,..., Toni C. Ind Garv LH MIMfV, Nancy E. Ind Doulllti P. Mlklehld, Robert E. and Mary E. N!choll, Ma'*'-U. Ind M1rvln DIY!ll. 11."ph How1rd and P1mel1 J\11\e. Murr1Y, M.iri Lou 1nd Roy Ntwll!fl Mrf'Hk-, Donni 1rw::I Pt!er Nlck•IMn, e111nore tnd H us I a,.. l ld'llrcl Death Notl.,e• aURKE Pti(ll Hltllr'Y "-'•kt. ~$1 A.ittr st .. L.- 911n• IMC/\. OtM ol lltllh, A.1>rll 21. Sllr· YIVtd bv 6futMtt, Miss Ml,,, Allc1 Burki; .ori, '•Seti H. Burk• Jr., boll! f!ll La.vn1 B1Kh. Pr;v111 tuntrl! serv· ICH w-Mid ,, Sht-1111' LtlYlll Beac~ .V.Ortu1ry, Thurtdfy, Aorll :tt. Prl1t1!1 lnur ... ment 11 Mtlrott Abbey, $1nr. An1. Shalltr Ullunl !leach Morh11n, Olrtc- tars. CLEVl!LAND Rev. w11111m E. c1ev1l1nd. 41e 93 .... tired minister of 1925 An1~tlm St., C011t Meil . °"~ of detltl, Aprll 11. SyrY!Vtd bv dluoMer, Mtr11r1t Medhon; «iur grendcl1!1dren1 el11M 1retl·t•lnllc/\!ldren. Funtr1I i.ervlce•, S1Turll1v, 11 AM. Hlf• bor TrlnlTv Bap!IS! Chu•d'I. ln!trmtnl. Harbor ll:HI Memorltl Park. lltll BroaO. WIV Mar!u1rv. Oi•KIOrS. CONROY M1•lne M. Conroy, )all Hamlnllf', COsra Mesa. O•le ol dtt!h, A~rll 19. ~rvlvtci l>Y nu,band. JC>hn J_ Conrov. Of M111.- <;~u1e11s; l!tuOh1ers, Corrina !lolhen, co''' Me111 SMlla sroo;an, Penn!vl· "'"'~; 1on1. JGl\n L•lftro. of M&n.ochU· 1ett~, •<>d Robert Leztro; U 11r1ndchlJ. "''"· S.t,.,,lcn. 1od1v. 1 PM. Wtsttlltf Ch1pe! wn!'I Rev. verno" Nlchoil"" o!ll· cl•!lng. tnterm•n1. F1\rh.ove<> Mtmorlal P&r~. W•1!C1IH ChflP91 Martutn-, 11.1,6> ..au. Oirec!or•. EWIHS Gto''' F. Ewe"1. ll:ul<1ent 01 Cost1 Me••· Oet• ol dtllfl, 4prll 2'. Survived bv $()1'11, Gtor'll• G. 1nd Terry L. EwtnJ; ll•uthter, Cheryl A. $aul1lace; &rolfltr. ~trl>ert E~n•; sl1!lr, El11nor Wood- ward: 1aven orar>dchlldrtn. Strvkn, Moroday, 10 AM, Olldt V Sro!Nlr1 HU"I· ;,.~IOI\ l'IMCh (hlPtl. ln!ermtnl. GDOd S.h~trd Ceme'l&ry. Dll<llY Broll'ltrt Martu1rv, &l'l·1ni. Dlr1C!ars. FOWL•ll: W11!1r L. Fowl••· All• 1•. ot 1·N Avenld1 C11ti!!1, l.4111111'11 Hllll. Datt ol dMlh, Aoril 11. Survlvtd bv wilt, F!ort nct IC. Fowler; d.ou11h!lr, Mrs. Madly" Mergon· 1wic~. ol SI. Loul1, Mluouri: ont 11•1,,.,. <HUGhltr. Funtr•I ..... 1c ••• St!urd•V· l PM, A<>•<Ollll Unlll'd Mtlhodb! Ch~rch, W••hln111oro, O.C. McCormick L11un1 l'leach Mortutrv. k>c•I dlr1c!ars. PDll.Tl!LLO Ellen o. Portetla. JOOO Midi.on, Fullt•· ~. 0111 ol 1111!/\, April 2t. Survived bv huslur>d, G1r,; dlutMer1, Oebt'I •nil !lec~v; mother, Mrs. Anni Sh1w1n, Fu•· ltrton; ~ brothers, Frank S.•ock1, Hunt• lnl!on &tach tnd f(m S.locks, Fulltrlon. Mtmorit l 14rvlct• will bl htfd S..tur111v. M~v !. l PM, Btll Brotdw1Y ChtP91· lltli Sroedw1v Mortu1rv, OlrKIOrs. ----~ ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th St., Costa Me•• 14M'88 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar . . . 6'7s.t45G Cost.a Mesa &46-tu• • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY ' 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 11-ml • McCORMJCIC LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17H Lapna canyon R4. 4M-Hl5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel UGI P1clllc View Drive Newport Stach, California 1«4711 • Pll:EK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Boin Ave. Westrnla11ter U3-3.W • SMmrS MORTUARY sn Malo St. 53Ui3t Hn11Unaton BHU Frldl1, .\ll"ll 30, 1•71 DAIL V "LOT 9 <l MECBA Program License Fees Due For Dogs ···~············ Chicano Week Set XEROX COPIES c ...._ II On Irvine Campus- SANTA ANA -More than 71,CIOO Oranae County dOJ owner1 are recetvlag 197t·n DOUBLEQUICK 10274 Wfttftll•thr Ave.1 Gercln ... , NO MINIMUM IRVINE -La Semana de la Rlu, a week.long program pres<DlinJ upeds of Chicano culture, opens Monday al UC Irvine. Panel discussions. films. entertainment by mariachi and lheater groups and dan· cing are included in the schedule arranged by MECH.A, a Ollcaoo student organization, Each day's events, open to the public without charge, will begin at noon in the Gateway Plaza. An art exhibit will be on display on the first floor of t h e I i brary-administration building. The week will be climaxed b y "COmmunlty Day" from noon to 7 p.m. Saturday in Campus Park. Here is a schedule of events : Monday, "The Chicano and the Legal System." Main speakers will be Phil Montez, western regional director of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and Richard Alatorre, former UCI faculty member, now a consultant to tbe state Legislature . A panel discussion at 2 p.m. on the third floor of Gateway Com- mons will feature Montez, Alatorre, a representaUve of the Brown Berets ind two Bank Fraud Suspects Fil,e Pwa SANT A ANA -Three of four men accuaed of defrauding the Newport Na~ tional Bank of at ltast $100,(100 in a series of auto contr:tct swindles have been ordered to file pleas May 2.5 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan set that date for Robe.rt William Dunlap, 37, of 17099 Westport Drive, Huntington Beach, John Stuart Hamilton, ~. of 1994 Camwood, Rowland Heights and Ronald Ros.si, also known as Ronald Clarence Bates, 35, of La Mirada. He issued a $10,000 bench warrant for the arrest of Frank Perry, abo known as Michael Wazney, 36, of La Mirada. Perry has been sought by FBI agents since the four men were named last week in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. Dunlap is the former owner of Bonded Cadillac in Alhanr bra. Hamilton is the former assistant manager of the Newport bank's dealer finance division and he allegedly used his position to push through a number of phony auto con· tracts. The Grand Jury approved an indictment on charges of grand theft and forgery after hearing testimony that the group got $100.000 from the bank by submitting auto sale. contracts which bore the iden- tification of non-e.ristent cars and the names of non~xistent motorists . A municipal c o u r t 11p- pear11nce is being scheduled for James Curtis, 41 , of Los Angeles, the owner of the Surety Acceptanct Corpora- tion in that city. He faces identical charges and is tree on bail. Dunlap and Hamilton are free on $6,250 bail. Rossi's bail is set at $18,750. Democrats Host Solon In Anaheim ANAHEJM -Sen. Harold E. Hughes (0.towa) wl.11 be the guest speaker tonight at the Orange Co un ty Democr11ts' Jefferson.Jackson cocktail party in Anaheim . A traditional Demoeratic function, the Jefftrso l'J· Jackson celebration wUI bt held at 7 p.m. in the Skyroom of the Grand Hotel . Sen. Hughes is one of many potential presidential ca n. didates in the Democratic party. Prior to his election to the S.nal<, he oernd OU.. terms II Governor Of fOWJ. Reservations for the affair 8rt $25 with proceeds 4oing to th e county organlza. tton . Further information is available by calling 63$-4940. STARS Svd"ay Om111 f• en• ef th1 wtirld't 11r11t 11trole91r1. H1t i:olvl'l'lll it on1 of tha DAILY l'ILOfS 9 r11t f11t11r1t. Louted ht Cr1l1 Sh.,,lnt C•""1' ta-lllt former convicts. The East Los An&elea Teatro Group will perform at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village COncert Hall. clog licetUe application formsl '1il*h*.,.,* .. ***** *** * ********** ****** ****"' in the mail this month. TDesday, "Lettuce Boycott. Day." Speakers will include Dolores Huerta, vice pre.ldent of the United Farm Workers Ortaoiilnt Commltte., and Fernando Chavez, eldest son of Cesar Oiavez and • former OFWOC field organizer. Wed.rtelday, "Cil)C(I de Mayo." 11le program will in- clude a panel discuasion by Fernando HemindeZ", lecturer in comp.arative culture at UCI; Joaquin Sancbe:, assis. tant to the dean of 1tudents, UCI, and Sal Castro, former instructor 1t Lincoln High School, Loi Angeles. The UCLA Teatro Group Will perform in the Vill1ge concert Hall at 7 p.m. Thu rs day , ''N ative American Day." Ha rvey Well!, Native American spokesman, will speak on "The Indian" at 12:15 p.m. in Gateway Plua. The Alvin Deer Dancers will present a program at a p.m. in Mesa Court Cave. Study of OC Worth. $100 To Author FULLERTON -Wanted: Orange COunUana. The Patrons of t1ie Library, C.J State Fullerton and the Orange C o u n t y Historical Society are sponsoring a con- test for student work in the. study of Orange County. First prize is $100. There will be two honorable mention prizes of $2S each. Contestant! must have been enrolled as a student Within the past year. This includes high schools, Junior colleges, colleges and unlveniUes. Ap- plic11tlon forms art available through the Patrons or the Library, Ca1 State Fullerton, 800 N. St.ate College Blvd ., Fullerton 92631. Any field of interest may be covered in the manUM:ript, as long as it pertains to Orange County. Manuscripts which are submitted must be u~ published. contestants will re. tain publication rights. The appllcaUon r o r m s enable rtsldents in areu of the county served by the Orange County Animal Shelter to obtain new doe licenses easily through the mail. The applications art being sent to dog owners whose pets were licensed during 1970-71. Dr. Rubert H. Hai41:hl, coun- ty veterinary officer, em· phuized that a valid rabies vaccinalion certificate issued by a li~sed vtterlnarian must acoompany the ap- plication torm. The vac· clnltlon certificate will be returned by mail with the new UceMe. "Any person ow nine a dog lour mont.hs of age or older ls required to obtain • dog license," Or. Hai 1 b t ex- plained. Persons living in the follow· ing cities are required to o~ t1ln dog licenteS through the Or~nge County A n i m a l Shelter: Anaheim, B r e a , Buena Park, Costa Mesa, Cypress, Fountain V a 11 e y , hllerton, La Palma, Orange, Placentl•, San Clemente, San Ju1n C.pl1trano, Seal Beach, Stanton, 1\i1tln, Villa Park, Yorba Linda or the unin· corporated areas of Orange Countv. The. li~!lSlng fee is $5.00. New residents of Orange Coun· ty or peraons acquiring a new do& also should send a $5.00 check or money order for their ,, .. .. .' ·, •.. ' ... .. ' Friday, "Movement Day." speakers will include J~ Angel Gutierrez of the Rua Unida Party of Texas, Rosallo Munoz and Moctezuma Ex- pan.a of the Chica no Moratorium Committee and Carlos Muoo:, lecturer in romparative culture, UCI. The Ballet Folklorico of Lincoln High School will perform at 1 p.m. S a t 11 rd a y , "Community Day." Manuel Mendez, member of the Orange County Human Relations Council. will speak at 12:30 p.m. in Campus Park. Entertainment w i 11 make up the rest of the day's program. Food booths will be open and an open-air dance wUI be held from S p.m. to 7 p.m. All manU!Cripls must be submitted before: Oct. J, 1971, to the P•trons of the Libr1ry. d~'1 iicense to: Orange Coun-J=================================== ty Animal Shelter, 581 s. Man. chester, Orange, CaUfomla Rad 92!M. ioactive Dor owners living tn cities not mentioned above must ct1nt1ct their City · Hall for Level Higher ru•·ce;;;;JU;;;;ln;ii.1 ;;i;inf.i;;oriiiim•iiilioiiin.i...iiiiiOI Kathy Delgado ii chairman of the week's program. Ex-officers Hear Talk At El Toro SANTA ANA -Radio1c- tivity was somewhat higher in the air sample colleci.ed from the roof of the Oranie County Health Department Bulldina during the month of March. One air sample of 24 hou duration was callected and reading or 0.31 picocuries pe cubic meter of air was rtc0rd- ed, February'• reading in Orange County was 0. pieocuries while the statewide average was 0.32 pjcocuries pe:r cubic meter of air. EL TORO -''Booze, Pllls A picocurie is one millionth and the Generation Gap" '"ill or one millionth of a curie be the topic May 8 when Dr. VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH HOW OP'IN SATURDAYS ttet ·P'.M. MON .•THUIS. 10.I P'.M. NIDAYI 104 P'.M. C114J 140.1211. WcetM Ill: s.. C..t ,..... c ........ A.u.t. Vic.I Pr11 . .MIMtw H. M. STOLTE Max. A. Schneider. an a curie is the amount 0 Anaheim physician and an in-radioactivity associattd wi structor at UC I r vi n e' •-~'"~':.!''~am~~o~f~r~ad~l~um~.--_.J,..,..,,.,..,.,...,..,..,,....,~I Medical School, speaks at a meeting of the Orange County Chapter of the Retired Of. ficers Association. The dinner meeting I s scheduled for 7:30 a.m. at the El Toro Marine Corps Officers Club. Retired officers from all branches of the service are welcome. Reservations are required and can be confirmed by con- tacting chapter P r e s i de n t Gene Chittenden, 320 S. "A" J St., Tustin, telephone 544-4636, · or chapter Secretary Matt Kenney, 602 Larkspur Ave., Corona del Mar, telephone 17~ ~ 1 7953. )l'" UCI Talk Set 6 CAN'T THINK 0' A THIN• POI MOTHll'S DAT1 No m•tt•• ltow muelt •r lt1w Ut+ta veu lt1v1 te sp1rtd, wa c1 rt ltelp veu clta a•• fro111 111 ""· u1u1I 11l•clien ef •<••wt•. belh, h1ndb1t• 1111' j1w1lry th 1t &hY "'etlt•t will b• ,ro11d to h1w1 , • • COllll Ill Ut tf • • , Come in ••• enjoy apeclal annivenar:r pricee on Stereo Portablee and Component Systemt ••• Radios ••• Tape Recorden • •• Monochrome and Color TVf SUPERB 18" dl1gon1I m111ure COLOR PORTABLE An ideal second 11t-modtl 6272 will bring you yeara of wonderful viewing with Ul1ra·Bright 1801q. in. pictures ••• plus built-Jn Magnavox quality, performance and lasting reliability I Its receued handle permits ee1y carrying-or enjoy it on lt1 optional mobile pad11tal base. Annlver11ry Priced NOW ONLY s329 · Pedestal B11e Optional •t alight extra cost • ' ' On 'Fair Sex' IRVINE -"The Natural Superiority of Women" will be the subject of a lecture by anthropologist Ashley Mon- tagu Monday at 8:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall, UC Irvine. Dr. Montagu's appearance at UC Irvine is sponsored by the Committee for Arts and Lectures. Tickets ire $2. For further information call the Fine Arts Box Office, 833-8617. 3467 Vii 3b BIDTIQUE TOVATTS 3 BIG LOCATIONS e GOLDENWEST I. WARNER ISALIS ONLTI Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN OfftCl:9th l HUI, LoaAngelte• 623-1351 * wtLIHlftl ll GAAMrRCY PLACl:S»WJlll'llre Blvd., L.A. • 30-1285 L.A. CIVIC CINTlll: 2nd & Brotdway • 121-1102 * tfUMTINGTON llACH: 11 Huntl,.ton Ctnlrlr • (71-4) 117-10-47 8ANTA ANA LOAN llJMCI AGENCT1 1905 N. M1ln St.• (714) 641-0251 * SANTA MONICA: 711 Wlllhl,. Blvd.• 39$-0741 * IAN PIDRO: 1oth I. Pacific• 1314341 * WllTCOV1NA! e.t1anc1 lttopplno Ctr.• 331-.2201 * PAllOUllA CllYi 1111 Yan Nuys 81....:1. • Uf.1171 * TAllZAHA: 11761 V..WUraloulev•rd•Ms-1814 * LONtlllAOHt Srdlloc..-t•437·7481 ~ * flpla-.,.-t., 111,_ DI!~ Hon-t., to• !Ill ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join 16· Wllh a $2,500 balance In your uvtnga account. )"Ou art tllglblt 10 bteome • membtr. Sublt1ntlal 11vlng1 art available when purcfla1Jno many Items Including automobilM, fUmlture, appllanc11, }twelry. Pfua many lrH 1ervlcea-money ordera. ttfe depot It boXM, etc. COAST ~---~ -- ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS I -~--~-· e BRDOKHURST A WARNER ISALU ONLTI e 401 MAIN ST., H. B, !SALIS l SllVICIJ Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COlllflOUNDID DAILY AND PAID QUAftTIJU.Y.' 5.00"le-5,13o/o P ... boolr. No Minimum. 5.25 •1o.5,39•/o Throe Month C.nlflcate: No Minimum. 5.750/0 -5.920/• On•Y.,.r Certificate; $1,000 Minimum. 6.00°/o-6,18°/o Ttttc>-YMr Ctrtlrlcate; $5,000 Minimum. • Elleotlve Annu•I E•mlflf• • INSURANCE TO $20,000 I Jf DAILY PILOT Fndl), Aptll 30, 1•71 LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE """''" 111c1n1ou1 SUSIN•ll HAMii JTATllMllNT lollowl11t HrJM II 1Soln9 llutlne'5 LEGAL NOTICE 11-41611 CSllTlfl lCATll 0 11 aUllNllSS 111cnTtoUS HAMii 'Soledad Boys' .Keys · to A ngels By DUSJ'ON HARVEY Aid ~1iss Dav~ bought all court hearing for tht convicts dictment, a San Quentin prison Jackson recently aMounce~ SAN Jo~RANCISCO I UPI) four guns and was seen ln the at Salinas, the Monterey Coun· guard s.:iid the accompanied he had been a Black Panther On tbt new left'$ lengthy list vicinity of the courthouse with t~ seal JonathlUI Jacbon to the for "a couple of years'' with 1 of "political prisoner11." the young Jackson the day before ln lht Collowing morilha. she prl&on while he made two special asslgnn1cnt In the Soledad brothers fall several the shooloul. She was can. spake and picketed on their visits with his brother two and prlsorus from party founder h bel bl ,, . 1 '1 r behalf at raJlles throughout three days before Uic shoot.out. lluey Newton. James A. A not<:eles 0 ° 1 w llC• mi i•ant lured two 1nonths lalflr in New the st.ate, exchanged letter$ The Soledad Brothers were McClain, lhe fourth man killed ng a av 5· York City by the FBI . with Jack.son and worked bom outside California and at the ahootout at San Ra.fae~ But without them, Uiere b · fl ed I ~-Lo An I ls p h "'OUld be no inurder. kld· Jackson, Clucbette ;ind r1e Y for hls defense al· mov o uoe s gees area a o v.·as a ant er. naping and conspirJcy charges Drumgo were lndicted by the torney. In thelr youth. All three have CI u ch et t e. a husky against her . Mont~rey County Grand Jury Several of Jackson'i letters been in trouble repeatedly weightlifter who had a parole The bro,._ tbre bla k to her were Included in a col· with the law since their early date set prior In the Soledad uK"rs -e c ln 19'10 arter olber prisoners t All thr b convicts charged with slaying lection of bis correspondence eens. ee ave spent killing , was born in Houston 1 Soledad State Prison Guard te.stlfled they saw the three published last fall as "Soledad much of their adull life in and taken to watt5 by hil -provide the motive in the men beat guard John V. Mills, Brother : the prison letters of prison. parents as an infant. He was state's case against Pt-tiss 26, into unconsciousness and George Jackson." Jackson was born and raised the eldest or six boys and l\\'O Davis, the 27·year-0ld former then throw him head first off a On May a, Jackson asked In Chicago where, according to girls. UCLA inslrUCtor. th ird-floor balcony. that Miss Davis be given an autobiography published His juvenile record started She is accused of help ing visiting aod mailing privileges v.-ith his •·Jelten," he. engaged at age 12 and he served Um• plot and of providing the guns The prison slaying occurred al Soledad. He idenli!ied her in petty theft and muggings at Tehachapi and Soledad on for a kldnaping ant escape at· an hour alter the Grand Jury u his cousin. before his father moved the two separ'ate occasions. He tempt that erupted into a cleared Soledad guard o. N. Attorney John Thorne or San fam ily west to Los Angeles in was jailed for the second time courthouse shootout, leav ing Miller of the fatal shooting of Jose, Jackson's attorney, an· l95G. in 1966 after pleading guilty to four persons dead. The goal or nounced on July IS be had At the age of IS, he was sent charges of stealing a television the allegetl plot Was freedom three black inmates during a hired Miss Davis as all in-to reform school following a set. for the So~dad brothers. brawl. vestigator and asked San department store burglary and lie sai d later he was i~ The three coavicts · '"One down, two to go," said Quentin authorities to allow attempted hijacking in which nocent and bought the set George L. Jackson, 29. John a nole dropped beside Mills. her to question Jackson. The he was shot twice during on lrom the n1an who stole it, bu t Clucbe.tte. 2.8.' and Fleeta 'l'wo other guards have sin~ request ~'as denied and Thorne altercation with a policeman. pleaded guilty on his lawyer's Drumgo. 2$ -were indicted unsuccessfully went to court After his release, he was ar-advice. He would have been on charges of killing a young died" at !he penitentiary l50 seeking an order forcing rested in Bakersfield in con· released on parole April 2fl, white prison guard on Jan. 16, miles south of here. prison Qfficials to allow the neclion with a series of rob-1970. if murder charges hadn't 1970, as revenge· for the The state contends Cluchette visits. beries but escaped from the been brought against him. slayings of three black ill· and Drumgo grabbed A1ills "She did a little work -bul county jail. Drumgo. a native of mates by ,another guard three "'hile Jackso n clubbed him not very much.•· Thorne said. He was sentenced to 1 to JO Shreveport. La .. moved to Los days earller. , , senseless with a flashlight. "We "·ere just putting it years in prison in 1960 for a Angeles at age 3 and has heel\ 1'-1iss· . Davis, stUI on the Defenders of the convicLc;, together and working on ap. f70 service station robbery . in and out of juvenile dete~ UCLA fa,,culty at ·the time, who dubbed them the Soledad peals when she \\'as charged Jackson insists he was in· lion homes since he was 13. HI! became their public champion, Brothers, claim the charges and ii became nuio l." nocent but pleaded guilty on was sentenced to Soledad in part-time private investigator are an attempt to "[rame'' In the grand jury testimony the promise of a light jail 1967 for a television store and pen paJ..The revolutloDary and ''legally lynch'' three that led to Miss Davis' in· sentence. burglary. rhetoric of her speeches -in-black revolutionaries. They\-;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;.;~;;;;;.;;~;;;~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, eluding those on their behaU accuse: prison authorities of I -was the principal "a"'" bribing .,. threatening other We are proud to invite you to our cited by University of convicls to testify against California regents \\'ben they them. COOKING DEMONSTRA I fired her last June. "These three young men are T ON George Jackson's younger being routed to the gas bcolher. Jonathan. 11, beeame chamber for relusing to bow her bodyguard and constant down, for trying to save their companion. identities and self.respect," Ant 0 A , t.,o said the Soledad Brothers n ug. , . young Jackiion walked into a Defense Committee. ,. .. ~ courtroom at San Rafael in Their trial to be held Aug 9, ~ .. •• .. @ neighboring Marin County. was moved from Ptlonterey pulled out one of the four gun~ County lo San Francisco hidden beneath his overcoat. because of publicity. The and fteed three black San suspects are lodged in San I Quentin inmates awaiting Quentin Prison. jusl a few M CRQWAVE OVEN trial. miles from Marin County Jail They kidnaped lhe judge, "'here Miss Davis awails her prosecutor and three jurors trial. and marched lhem at gunpoint Angela Davis became in· lo a rented van outside . One of volved v:ilh the case last the kidnapers told police: spring when she attended a "Rtlease the Soledad brothers ===========ol( by 12:30 or they al\ die." As the van started rolling out of the parking lot, a gun· fight erupted . Judge Harold Haley, young Jackson, and two ol the escaping convicts \\'err LOCAL EDITORI ALS killed. '-1iss Davis and Ruchell Magee, 32. the survivin g escaper. were charged a week later with murder. kidnaping and conSpiracy. Authorities The DAILY PILOT Quite Often Fi ghts City Ha ll HARBOR CENTERS SIDEWALK SALE (One day only) SAT. MAY 1st DON'T MISS THIS ONE ! Over 150 Tables Piled With Thousands Of Price Smashing Values PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 2300 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA SAlUROAY MAY lst 1·30 to 6 P·""·• from · \ • n • &randt, D • t Hon'I• Econo- Am•na ou • t will shoW y ..I. n'\ll, •"'"" ho"' fast, e•t.Y \( •t is to c.00 I;\ t an I * Porta ble * 11 5volt ope ration * no expensive installat ion e\&i;tron\c.allY· . ••••• Stor• c0••• ~ ~Cook a 5 lb. Roast ... _ ~- in 37 Minutes ... Bamburger (on the Bun) in I! No Stifling Beat, No Pots or Pans to Clean ••• Portable! And Completely Automatic! SAVIS TIME by cooking foods inside and out at the same time -FOODS TASTE !ETIER because there's less drying and Jess loss of natural juices than you get with conventional d1y heat methods of cooking. COOKS COOL with micro (radio· like) waves that create heat in the food -doesn't waste heat on space i'1 or out of the range or on utensils. EASY TO CLEAN because splatters and spills can't bake on -oven surface never gels "baking'' /lot. EASY TO USE set the dial touch the start switch and cooking be'. gins immediately. A Gift from AMANA FREE! Beacon Hill Bremen Crystal pitcher •nd b h•avy based IS 01. ic• tea glasses. Per1onal- i1ed-ftand crafted, hand cut with your initial etched on pitcher and glasses ... You can even )1"'\i);jJu1e th is fine crystal i" the Rad<11rc1n9e oven if you want! YOURS FREE WHEN YOU BUY A RADARANGE MICROWAVE. OVEN -:--·-·--.. -·-An I . • -• -• . • • I . I l nte9ril9 a11d De p endabilll 9 S h1"e f 9.f7 '11 E. Seventeenth Strt&I L1gu!'la Hill• Pla11 fN1•t 10 Se,·a•I 837.3830 Daily 10·6, Thur1., Fri. 10.9 646-1684 Dally 9-9, Sat. 9·6 ' Frld&r. A.otll 30, 1971 DAILY PlLOT 11 . QUEENIE By Phtl lnterlcmcll Students Apply for Spa~e Ins1i1u1e • lj-~" " "Guess what---Our office manager in an art musel1Dl .... " Teen Jury Sentences Youthful Off enders ROGERS. Ark. (AP) - A teenager convicted of a mjsde· meanor had to draw a map of ~ all traffic signs in one area of 'town. necessary for the jury to hold its weekly meetings. Any teenager under 18 who appears before Duty and is found guilty of a misdemeanor Estancia l!istt s c h e o 1 applications from promWng aclence student! throughout Orange County for particlpa· lion ln a 19-day 1wnmer apace science lnsUtute. Deadline for appllcaUons 11 May 14. Michael Landino Jr. and Gilbert Collins, both or the Estancia faculty, are In charge -0£ the Newport-Mesa OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10; SUNDAY 10 TO 7 Unified District pro Br am which will involve 4$ atudenlt selected from the countywlde applicants. The filth annuaJ space Id· ence institute will be held morning, at Estancld from June 21 to July 16 and will in- clude field trips to area sci· eoce installations and aerc>- '""'" firms. ,•), • Another youthful offender had to wash the city's four patrol cars for !our weeks in the winter. hag the option of receiving the normal fine and OT" im· .. prisonment -0r of appearing ~_i before lhe Teen Jury. .... , A third was directed to ~ write a theme. If the offender chooses thejl!:=:!. jury, Duty prepares a written The punishment for each , was meted out by peers who sit on the Teen Jury In this ·_1 small, northwest Arkansas . town . statement of the offense for the Teen Jury. Duty said 30 to 4fl persons have appeared before the jury. If the punishment seems DANISH DESIGN LAMPS Our Recj. 2.86 1 Day Only 1.96 Teenagers found guilty in Municipal Court can receive their punishment from classmates. unreasonabl~ to a teena~er, he For th• room d.cor thot d•mand th I I d Ii can refuse 1t and receive the . • •. ov• y, mo •rn nea unishment he would have of Danish d•~1gn. Tobie lomp hoa c_yl1ndrfcol shape. bo_•• ~eceived in Municipal Court. ho1wood9ro1n look . lncholc• of white, ovocodo, pumpkin. J\.1unicipal Judge Davis Duty ~ said the Teen Jury was form- ed to avoid any teenage crime ' problem that might arise as Roi;:ers grew larger. He said there was a chasm between "adults and teena~ers as acutely here as anywhere else. The adults are not reaching the teenage r s. Instead of overlookin.R It, we decided to bridge the gulf • now," he said. The Teen Jury is dcman· ding. Duty said one jury member explained that for lhe adults of the community to allow the jury to function "our stan- dards have to be higher." Duty said the jurv seems to llave helped reduce t h e number of teenage -Offenses. He said there \\'<IS one three week period when It was not Once a teenager has carried out a punishment to the satisfaction of teenage "parole officers," Duty expunges t~ court record of the conviction. Only one teen has refused the Teen Jury punishment. He was a member of a rock band that practiced on Saturday mornings and he could not work out his punishment. Three juries. composed cf nine members each . are drawn from lots to serve three one week terms. After their jury service their names are witlileld until ell teenagers in the progratn have had a chance to serve. Duty said that no regard Is made to the background, citizenship or scholastic Tl!cord of the teen age jurors. "We want a cross section," he said. ANNUAL PEARL EVENT! NECKLACES ... ""' NOW s2995 RINGS ,., m~ NOW s17ao ALL PEARL NECKLACES .................... 20'/o OFF ALL PEARL JEWELRY .......................... 20'/o OFF e FREE 14K CLASP e FREE RESTRING e FREE GIFT WRAP WISTCLIFF PLA.IA STOii Open Monday •rwi Thursd•y 'tll t ,.m. CHARLES H. BARR 30".LOI& TUNIC ~i)) TAil TOPS FOR · SUMMER WEAR $1>9clol furchose 100 1 Doy . Sbme.be lted,W,'ashobl• "bl•nd of nylon/oc•tote. 8~ In o wld• orroy of pol• t•l1 to mix and motel-I your 1port1weor. S-M·L, ·• 11MR. BUBBLESV •. CORll BROOM Rog. 41c 27c 1 Doy "Mr. Bubbl•1f" bubbl• both toft•n• both woter and skin, leaves no ugly both tub ring. 12·01: fomlly••il• pock~•· llrftlt.c! llWl'llitp. ftOl'f told to deal.,, •1r1t1 .... "' Rog. 1.67 97c 1 Doy S·sewn corn fil>.r 1-.ouaehold broom with 1mootl-.ly finist'I· •d hardwood 1-.ondl•. Save! l •mit.ct Qu.n11t,. -told 10 d .. le•I TEFLONlrFRY PAM Rog. 1.11 1 Doy Only 1.27 10" aluminum fry pon ho1 Krotch-re• 1l1tont T•flon II firii,h. No-stk:k fry ing, no-acowr cleonlrtg. U1e m.,ol apoons. 11111 ~ ,..,,, •.... T frill Lllttlf*l llUl-lll~.-Miid 1o cHo9t.,~ The J.nslltute was begun under a federal grant which hu expired. Costi an: carrled by the Newport.Mesa district, which screens the •PPliC&nll for interest and mollvatlon on the basis of grades and science t e a c h e r recom- mendations. There 11 no charge to students enrollin( In the in- stilute other than costs for oveml.ght accommodeUorui: or food. Slttdentl may nm five units of social credit ind certificates rtc<lgnlied b y universities. The program offers chances for sludents to rub sho1Jlder1 and share ideas with sclen· tisls, Landlno said. Among aclivitie! alrtady planned are a tleld trip to Tessmu Planetarium In San· ta Ana, a trip to Paloihar Observatory; a tour of Collins Radio Co., Newport' Beach: trip to Vandenberg Western Test Range, St an f o·r d Unlver1lty, and Ames · Research Center in San Jose ; tour ol NAsA and Air P'orce facllltle1 ar Edwards ~lr Force Base; Philco .Ford h• Newport Beacb : J~t Propulsion Labs, Pe.51dtna'; UC Irvine and UCLA. • Applications are availabf4, from the Orarrse Count)f Department or Education science a n d malhemaU~ coordinator or trom hlgli school principals. SATURDAY ONLY • . ' ' .. COSTA MESA & HUNTINGTON BEACH STORES ONLY!•;i I i ! ' • c; l ......... H 11 ~ . "' "'.!.:· ""'.i,.lli'""r ' 1 • •" ~ • •• l ' • T ' • ' i ~ ij t, ' . ~ •·. . *~--r Ji: i . ~Kj , r"' ·. 17-GALLON PLASTIC OUTDOOR TRASH CAN Reg. 1.57 c 1 Day Sturdy polypropylene plastic outdoor trash con In big 17-gallon sire hos tighf·fittlng cover. Weother·ond rust- reslstont, easy to cl eon. In ovoco.do. LilfHl.0 Q .... l'll<lp. "°"e tOIO 10 dellwl ' 5' ALUMINUM LADDER 1 Day Only 711 St11ttfy-c:o11ttrvct1d ti· 11"'l11u..; ,tt~p ltdd1r ii h1ndy r., j11b1 11ou11d the heu1e end gerit•· X15 I Doy Only [l . " . ,.__ -,._ . PROFESSIONAL HAIR DRYER . Our Rec.i. 19.24 14 97 1 Day Only • . ' "Solon·ttyl e"' hard-hot portobl• hoir dryer with lour drying 1•ttlng1. Flt• ovtr ony style hairdo. Wh•n closed it's o ~ compot:t co•• wilh carrying hondl•,Jult soy, .. Chorge it.M ·~ BOYS' iO~IROI . . . LOl&-WEARllfl KlllT SHIRTS -1 Rog. 1.97 -1 Doy' Exc•ll•nf ~uollty, per- mon•nt pr••I cottori/ poly••ler knit1, popu· lor hl-cr•W n.ck. In solids 9f' print&. 8· 18. TASTY TORTILLA CHIPS • 33c PKG. Crackling fresh le crunchy~ Tempting, T •sty & "Awfully Good'' •nywhere! Oi'W.-iiScO.ii'CM------i WOOD TOILET SEAT 2.24 Wliife or bt.ed 011111111 11:1111 r11l1t1~t E11y to l11t11ll. I I 211,...,... ... ._. ---COSTA MESA I HUNTINGTON BEACH ' •• 2200 HARBOR BLVD . (ot Wllcan) • 1,9101" MAGNOLIA <"• Gii-,:f191 d ) ' I \ I i --. J :11 DAILY PILOT Fr id•y, Aptll 30, 1971 All Items On This Page On Sale For ONE DAY ONLY ' I Sears SAVE 503' Little Boys' and Girls' Crew Socks. Regular 3 prs. $2 Boys· crew socks or girls' anklets. White or asst. colors. Always look neat. S-M-L-XL lnfo111s'-Childr.tn'.r Dtpt. ' Boys' Flex-Roll Sport Shirts Regular $2.99 each PERMA-PREST•short sleeves, flex-stay collar. Plaids and stripes. 5 Sizes 6-12. 3 $ B.,t W,., Dl/Jt. f~r Sturdy Long Handle Shovel Sean Low Price 44-in. hardwood han- dle. Round point. 7\1- io. x 10!1.\·in. rolled footstep blade. Buy now and save! STEER MANURE ·--ec-rv.-. ......... SATURDAY ONLY L1m1 fr d quonf 1f y STEER MANURE ·--•'*""'.,.. ·--........... . .. -- For Mother's Day Gifting--Sears Deep Fryer, Toaster, Coffeemaker '4-FL Wrought Iron Railing Regular $5.99 4-fr. railing section. Use forplatform raili ng or slant to correct pitch. $7.99, 6-ft. Railin 5.97 Bui /Jing hfattrials D1p1. 1 Cubic Foot Natural Organic Steer Manure Sous Low Price Narura.I, ors anic steer manure js weed free1 helps to hold moisture. For lawn and garden. c.,,;,,,, Shofl YOUR CHOICE each Deep Fryer with large 5Y.z-<it_ capacity. Automatic thermostat, heat selector diaL' Signal light, guide. Avocado trim. Two-Slice To&1terwith shade selector, snap-out crumb tray. Automaric thermo-· sw control Chrome finish, avocado trim. . . Aluminum Coffeemaker 10-cup, with flavor. selector, signalligl!t.Easy grip cool han- dle. Fast perk; ing. Amado. E/tcln"ud Dtpt. Round Plastic Wastebaskets Were $1.19 17-qr. capacity. ·Soft, . unbreakable plastic. · Seamless, easy to clean. White, ·sandalwood, yellow. Ho111tU111ru D1pr. SAVE 20c pr. Cling-alon• Knee Higlts Regular $1.19 Mesh knit With rein· forced heel and toe. Stretch band top, per- fect for pant suiu. 99c Calf High.__77c H01iny Dtpt. , AM Pocket Size Portable Radio , Regular ·$3.88 Solid swe with big 2-in. speaker. Break- resistant plastic case. Earphone. Bartery ex- ·tra. TVD1p1. '._ . . \ · Cotton Filled Mattress Pads Regular $3.99 Twin size with anchor band. All cotton cover and filler. Sanforized"'. $4.99 Fµll Size_J.4 7 DoMtilics D1pt. 247 SAVE '5 on Deluxe 3-Tray Tackle Box Regular $14. 99 988 Unbreakable cycolac wit.Ii 17 compartmenu. Rust·proof. Safety larch. Ideal for fresb and salt waier . . . . Sp.niwi G..Ji Dtpt. Sears IUINA , .... K lA •·••oo, 121-4SM I\. MONTI 01 a -1911 lONO llACH HI 1.0121 POMONA NA f.lltl JOUTH COAST PLUA H04UI THOUIAHO OAKS 4t7•4S .. TOUAHCI 142·1111 CANOG A PAIK a40.0U1 OLINDALI CH s -1004, Cl 4-4611 OLYMPIC a IOTO AH 1·1111 COM"°" NI 6-ISll, NI 2•1761 HOUYWOOI HO f·S"l 01 ... NOI ta7•2l00 IV.U.lOllUCK AND CO. COVINA fH-Ot11 INtuWOOD OR l ·lStl , ....... DfNA 611~211, ilt ... 211 Shep l"n4•)' 12 NM1t MS P.M.,. Me•. thr• S.t~ tiaO A.M. te ta30 P.M. • •. knte AH O.ty, cleMI 6 P.M. T•l&w Th•n., S•t• P1CO WI t ... :161 SANTA ANA ICI 7·U71 IAHt'AntN....S ....... 11 ' tAH'f'A MOHtcA IX 4"411 t YAU.IT' PO ..... ,, f14·2UO VIUIONr" f •1fl1 1 • • I • . Ensenada Race? It's a Breeze 'Aweigh' .. . . 11 I 11 ' I • " I' •I I 1 ii I II ENSE NADA BOUND -Sailors Oeft to right)' George E. Hoedingbaus and Herb Riley. Bal· boa Yacht Club skipper of Encore, 1970 En· senada Race overall winner. wave adios to Mrs. Edwin Steen Jr. ~nd Mrs. Herb Riley who i9 ready to cast off. Wind permitting. family and friends will join the seafarers Friday. ' • • r • ' .> INTERNATIONAL RACE -Winners will be re\varded by brightly polished trophies. Mak· ing sure everything is shipshape at the Bal· boa Yacht Club are (left to right) Mrs. Ken· nelh Ross, Ross, race committee vice chair· man, and John Payne, general chairman of the racing association~ At the sound or the starting gun Thursday, May 6, sailors pa!"- ticipating in the wotld's largest international yacht race will leave NeW• port Beach with sails trimmed for Ensenada. In anticipation of the 24th annual Cinco de Mayo race, mem· bers of yachting circles are engaged in plans fO( prerace festivities be- ginnlJlg with a Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club dinner tonight and culml· nating with the official send-off dinner Wednesday, May 5. A ~rgarila and cerveza hour will begin t.onight at 7 followed by a. special Mexican buffet in the yacht club. Tony Guerrero and his marlAclli band will play for dancing for members and guests dressed in ellber Mexican or nautical attire, according 'to Mr. and Mrs. Ray F. Bulloch, chairman of tbe event . Newport Ocean Sailing Association's o£ficial dinner will begin with a 6:30 p.m. cqcktail hour Wednesday, May 5, In the Newporter Inn followed by dinner al 7:30. Festive soulh·of·lhe-border decor has been arranged by Mr:s. Cooper Johnson. HONORED .GUESTS . Af!tong. honored guests will be Raul Sanchei Diaz, governor ot BaJa Cahforn1a, RauJ Gonzales Galarza, consul general of Mexico, lgnacio Pesqueira, Mexican consul at San Diego, Guilevaldo Silva Cota, presideote municipal Ensenada, and John F. Fitzgerald, consul gen· eral of the United States, and their wives. Others will be Gen. de Brig. 0. E. ri.1. Rudollo Aceves Garcia, commander, second military zone, Commodore Guillermo Soisson Jr .• Club de Yates de Ensenada, Francisco Morales, fleet captain, Club da Yates, and Emelio Mendez of the Ensenada Tourist Bureau, and their wives. Still others will be Rear Adm. Joseph \V. Williams Jr., com· mandant, 11th Naval District, Rear Adm. James W. Williams, com· mander, 11th USCG District: and Capts. Benjamin Chiswell, George F. Thors:tz Jr. and J, S. Laney, and their wives .. More guests will be Lt. Rick Larrabee, Lt. R. W. Mullican . Lt. Crr\dr. Charles F. Gailey Jr., Ne\vport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth, Ken Sampson of the Orange County Harbor Department, A1 Oberg, New· port Beach harbormaster, Ed Carptenler. NOSA president, Stephen C. Stewart, NOSA judge advocate, and Converse V. Wurdemann, NOSA 1s .. ENSENADA RACE, P•s• 14) • 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor Prld1y, ~rll Ill. H71 ,. ... 11 BAHIA BOUND MMES. JAMES BEASLEY !LEFT), RODNEY SCHAPEL. Mission Impossible When Prescription · Draws a Blank DEAR ANN LANDERS: It's a standing joke that physicians have illegible handwriting. To those or us who musl decipher it, il's no laughing matter. l speak for pharmacfsts, nurses. hospital employes., etc. It's time-consuming as well u nerve-wracking to figure out whether it's "o" or "a", "r" or "c", "j" or "y", "2" or "3". ''7" or .. 9". f\.1.ore than once I've given up in despair and spent hours localing a doctor to check out his instructions. Your column has a high readership among doctors. Ann. Please tell them. - TAYLORVtLLE DEAR TAYL: I'll try: No~· bear llU1, •11 docs who ha,·e rotten ho.ndwritlnK· - whlcll Includes mo!l or you : Ple15t take 1n ertr1 minute ltl write prescriptk>n8 ANN LANDERS ~ and Instructions leitbly: Tbanks \'try much, -on bthalf of them wbo must read yodr handwriting, and tho se wbou llvts depend on It. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I fell sorry for the woman who married her huMland ror hili hair and lcelh. She wrote that a gum condition is threatening his teeth and his hai r is falling out. The woman confessed. ''I know it isn 't right. hut I'm lo.'ling in- terest in him and I don't know what to do about it." f\.1y husband always joked about having fallen in love with MY hair and teeth. 1n my youth, everyone remarked on my beauliful, suburn mane. My husband was so proud of it he wouldn't let me wear a hat -or even a head scarf on windy days. ~ly teeth ~·ere unusually beautirul. I once won a prize for the prettiest smile. A toothpaste company asked me to be a mrxiel. Ten years ago I was In an automoblle accident -bead-on collision wtth a d.nmk driver on a one.way street. My frot teeth were knocked out and I sustained a head injury. They had to shave my head to operate. My hair grew back thin and i!cragg ly -a mousey brown . Lucky for me my hu8band saw something in me worlh staying around for. I hope the woman will also find compensatory ~irtues when her husband's hair and IA!eth go. -SYMPATtCO . DEAR SYM: I'm wlli yea. nub for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We hear a great deal about the bad manners of lhe young. What about I.he bad manners of the elderly folks past 70? A relative recentl y decided to roake her l'lome with us. She ts a semi-Invalid. but mentally alert, sharp-eyed with 1 tongue to match. We help bu In and oul ol tile 1hower. ' We serve her meals on a tray when she prefer1 not to come to the lable. We drfve her wherever ahe wishes to go. In short, we ~ail on her hand and foot. We do it because we want to. not so she will thank us, but it would be nice il she'd say "Thank you" -just once, When she offers our grandchildren a cookie or a piece or candy she always snaps, "Now what do you say?'' Jnterelltlng how she irullslJ on being thanked for every Uttle thing, bu\ she never thanks anyone. What do you sug· gest we say or do? -1iAD tr JN SEAT· TLE DEAR HAD: Say tltd do it0tliolng. It's awfull y hard to train a per.ea past 71. &>me tlderlJ fcilkJ fl~re they are e11o tltltd to mwke and respect merel1 becatt5e they bnve lived a lone Ume - and they are. Elderly people often develop tellies Uil pains and It's • 1trugg.Ie ror them to keep 1olng. Nat11rally they aren1t alway1 hi a jolly mood -In lad at times they are sour ucf crotchety. So coadnue to be belpfuJ and kind u4 don 't aped lo be lban.ted. Do It bfl:aue · you want to. AlcoOOI is DO shortcu t to IOC\al IUC'- cess. 1( you think you have to drink to be accepted by your friends, get the facts. Read ''Booze and You -for Teenager1 Only,1' by Ann Landers. Send 35 cenlJ 1n coin and a Ieng, self-addressed, stamped envelope with yoW' request ln care of the DAILY PILOT. . ' • ( '• .-. ----~--.. . . . .... --.. -· •• oF .•; • -..~ ••~·• -Y•• " ................ ' J .f DAILY PILOT Friday, l prll 30, 1971 Showy In stallation Yo ur Ho roscope Tomorrow Board Bills Fashion Capricorn: Protect Interests you may be in line for new •Nlfnment, adventure. f'uhlolll for all aaes and oc- cu1cn will mUe a bright background for the 1nstallat1oo meeUna of the Laguna Beach Gsrdtn Club at 12:30 p.m. on Friday. MIY 7, In Irvine Coast Country Club. Heading the new esecuUve the Mme•. Paul E. Ham\egnles, trtasurer. and Leonard G. Davis, Lawrence L. Lantz and Ben L. Hartley. secretaries. SATU RDAY MAY I By SYDNEY OMAR.R AllIES (Mardi 21'April It): Acetnt on how you rel1te to chlldren. AliO, you are pqt to test Involving member of op- Busy Month poflle ~· TAtJlltlll (AprU ~f!llY II): St•Y wllblo legal llmttellona. 0qe WllO 1<!Voc:ele1 Olherwlle dOCI not mll!d rlJklni your ~'---.. Gifllllil (t-llY 21.June 20): Accepl on nelsl>llon. releUvOJ, Be ver,atil1. Your "4tur•l at- trlbut.1 lllloe. CANCllR. (Jll!'" 21.July 22): Show olbtra that you know how lo evaluat. qta. Means L&0 (July 23-Aug. 22): L&lnar eyole hiJh; where you were dtprused. you now shlnt. Personality is 1p0t!l&hted . VIRGO (Au1. 23-Sepl. 22): Son\t who talk with confiduce may llick real knowledge. Ask q~11~0~; ~ facts 1 n,um. ~-board will be Mrs. Gerald B.1 Hanna assisted by the Mmes. Howard C. Judson. Nell H. Lewis, James R. Cavitt and Frank N. Benham, v ic e praidents. others on the board include Mrs. Paul T. Silvius, past difector of the Orange Coun- ty District of California Garden Clubs, wtll be in· stalling officer. Mrs. William T. Robb, outeolng prWdent will welct1me rnemben and auests. Showing fuhions will be a quartet of arta shopa -Qie Caribbean s bop • Deauvllle Ungerle, Glad Rags and Peden's. Altrusa on Schedule Heritage On Review Am"'1WI betltage •• ii t1lata1 lo early C4lltomia hjsln!Y wlll be lhe topic for JJ1tmbtrs of PaUeoce Wright Chlpler of !he Daughlm of tM American Revolution d11r- ln1 a noon Juncbton on Tue> day, May 4. l4M (811!'1. :is-Oct. 22): Spotllaht on fulfillment of ma- jdr -wi 1bt1. You have some dlllllii to iron out -but bulc 1UCCe11 is indicated. Cotillion Poised Newport Harbor Cotillion l• vitaUona have been received by prospective particlpant.s in the 1971-72 season whlcb will open ln October. Acceplances are lo be made. by Saturday, May 15. 1be series of el&ht dances take place monthly in the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Dancea are opeD lo students in grades three l.brough ten. General chairmen are Mr, and Mn. John Murray Wilson Jr., and individual grade cbairmtn are the Messrs. and Mmes. Richard FI a ms on, third; Paul C. Bernhart and llalph E. Bernard, fourth; John Denton Kerr and G. William Grundy, filth; Rex R. Reno and Leslie G. Bruce J r., sixth; Robert S. Hirsch and W. David Joye, seventh, and Thomas W. Queen, eighth. Gavel Retained Mrs. D. B-Bravo will be in- stalled as president of the Huntington Beach Business and Professional Women 's Club for a second term at 7 p.m. Monday, May 3. The installation dinner will take place in the HunUngton Seacliff Co u n t r y Club with Mn. Janice Haloes as in- staOing orncer. Other officers Include the Mmes. Homer Calendar and : Catherine Svendsen. ., i c e proifd.mls; Sol Benvenlste 1nd lune Elliott, .ecn:tarles, and Lucille Allaire, treasurer. Entertainment will be pro- vided by Phillip H a I n e s , 10lolst, accompanied by Dr. Paul Berger, pian!Jt. Women To Wing Two Harbor Area women will be competing in thf: 2700. stitute·mlle, croSl!I country air race belinning Monday, May 3. Mrs. Mara CUip of Balboa and Mrs. Shirley Tanner of Newport Beach will participate in the lt71 Angel Derby which begitul in Colum· bus, Ohio and termln•tes in Managua, Nicaraaua. A field cf 74 international women pilots will vie for $5,000 cash prizes in the race cC>--sponsored by th~ Flcrida Women Pilots A!sociaUon and the Nicaraguan goverment. Mrs. Culp tied for fir5t place in the 1970 derby with Mrs. Margaret Callaway. It wUI be Mrs. Tanner's first entry. Sermon In Rhythm The use or dance during a sermon will be demop.strated when tbe Women Associates, UCI InterfaJth Foundation gathers for its cJoglng pro- gram of the year at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, May t n>e annual brunch Will take place In the University United Methodist Church, Irvine when the Project Vangu a r d performs. A group tram the San Diego We1tmlnster Presbyterian Church led by the Rev. Mikel Taxer, It pro- motes the use of dance in worship. Reservations are to be plac· ed at Ille Inlerflllh ofllCf., Program Defined A Plus for 'S' Club It's SOS for fund raising as members of the Sorop- timist "S" Club present a public buffet luncheon and fashion show from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, May 1, in the Hotel Laguna. Flowers in baskets will brighten tables as the junior service group brightens the afternoon with the newest in teenage attire. Modeling polka dot separates are (left to right) Jan Sizelove and Monica Richards. From Page 13 • • • Ensenada Race treasurer, and their wives. Cinco de Mayo truly will be a full day of festivity as Bahia Corinthians and their 11uest.s open the clubhouse palio fer a fashion luncheon. Munecas en Parada will be&in at 11 :30 as an open house for yachting women. Ar· rangemenl!I are being made by Mrs. James Beasley with program and posters designed by Staff Commodore Wynnett E. Bedall Jr. Club mannequins will be the !.,mes. J1ck N. Bostwick., Henry Crane ~-. Skip Crane, James W. Hines Jr., Arthur C. Patch, Rodney Schapel, Cecil H. Shirar, G. Lee Smith, Robert V. Staats Jr.. S. McKee. Thompson and Miss Official Visit An official visi t by the stale pre1ldent, Mrs. Kenneth Lee is anUclpattd by the Woman's Auxiliary to t~e Orange Coun· Cathy Cbichester. Commentator Mrs. Florence Smales will describe fashio"s from Jean Dahl, Vel11'1, Lor- raine Sutherland, Est e 11 e Allerdale, Sax and Foreian Intrigue to background music played by Mrs.-Ralph Tan- dowsky. Air Pollution Under Scrutiny Water and air pollution will be the topics of discussion for the San Clemente Toaa:tmistress Club at 9 a.m. on Monday, May 3, in the Municipal Goll Cou r se restaurant. Mrs. C. L. Burgess, toastmistress, will introduce speakers Mrs. L i 111 a n Rutkowski and Mrs. Leslie Denison. Hosting the meeting will be the Mmts . Frank Clewell, Harold Markham and J ohn Green. Allrus& Club membtrp of Lquna Beach -have a bUly M•Y schedule openln& wltb Qie regular .esslon at 7:• p.m. on Tuesday, May 4, in the home of Mn. Ruth °"1111ll u. Susan Roley, a club member. wUI d1lcuJa a recent trip to Europe followed by an-- nual reports. On Thursday, May 8, Mrs. Dera Mary Macdon1;1d, VOCI· Chocettes Add Style May Day wUI be w"lcomed in fashion with 1 shewtng ef teenage atUre during an it a.m. brunch sponsored by the ChoceUes J~lor Gulld of Tres: O.Os of the Children's Hospital of Orange County. Tomorrow's event will feature clothes from the Jealous Ear, Jabberwoc~ and carousel Children's shop modeled In the Montanoto Recreation Center, Mission Vi ejo. Tic kets may be purchased from members <>rat the door. Proceeds wlll go toward a part-pay patient pro 11 ram available at the hospital. Show chairman is Cheri Ginger with decorations by Dawn Wall!:tt. Ebel! Membe rs Elect Office rs .... , •• fet' ....... ••• wltll ..... 11 MJIHI! GUDUATE COR.SETIEll.ES D'1 '"d 00'1 ''I• eomtortablll In Y111,1r c..,,.J College Group Learns About Chinese Study Chine.ae culture and ex· perlencea ln Taiwan will be the topic chosen by Mrs. Emi-- ty Optometric Society. ;=========::;!( Malting t~ e government The group w\11 host theslsle The DAILY PILOT-S1ndy'1 Fluff 'n Stuff more respon1ive to the prob-official during a d i n n e r ue 1. "'" s1M lems of Its ordinary cltiu:DJ meetlna: Monday, lt1ay 3. in The One Thtt C.rn Cnt• M~ .o.:."~ Ml••n is the goal or a Southern _tlhe~B~r~1n~dl~ng~l~ro~n'.,, An~•"'_h•~i~m:_. __!.,=========~~~~~~~~~~ -1y Abeme, American AMocia- tlon of University Women fellowshJp fund reClplent, ror the Laguna Beach Branch on Tuesday, May 4. The doctoral candidate at Cornell University will ad- dreas a 1:30 p.m. session in the Community Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach. The program al10 will In- clude reporta: or special pro- jects and study groups. Mrs. Harold Forsnu, fellowstiip chairman . Is 1n charge of ar· rangements. Benefit Plans Ouistmas in July, a lun- cheon benefit, will head the discussion agenda when the Orange County Alumnae Club of Alpha Xi Delta sorority meets. • Mrs. Jame& Delndoerfer will open her Huntington Beach borne [or the session, planned al 7:30 p.m. Monday, May 3. Member Tea Democratic Wom«>n of Orange County are invllin& all interested women to a membership tea from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, May 2, in the Orange home of Mrs. Peter Pelkofer. California ndio .staUon pro-1- gram. Heading the country's only such radio program is Dr. Michael Sommer who will be the guest speaker w h e n Orange Count}' Club, Theta Sigma Phi has an tnttallatlon brunch at 11 a.m. Sunday, May 2, in the Saddleback Inn. Mrs. Robert F. Sanden will be installed as pnsldent of the women journalists gr o u p . Assisting her will be the Mmes. Halliburton Swedlow, vice president, Herbert A. Moss, secretary, and Harry H. Casey, treasurer. Mn. Don Smith is pr~am chairman. School Cho rus Spa rks Agenda A prOJMlm present.d by !he Laguna Beach High School Madrigal Singers under the di~ction of Fred Stauffer will entertain members of lhe Three Arch Bay Women's Association i.l 10 a.m. Thurs· lay, May 6. Assisting with decoration! and refreahment.s for lhi sess!on in the clubhoute will be the Mmes. Phlllip Tiernan, chairman, George Ernsberger, James Shea and Jo se ph Tieman. ••• our very first clearance oodles & oodles of defightfully different QCCISSOl'its - Sofa1-Cha lr1-Lamp1 & Tabla The Elegant Barn Interiors 447Vt '1. 17th -Costa Miu -645-2555 f ... I .. Art.tk Mak & -.fly TM,a.t .. •1 s.J .. ) ll.1¥eh·l11t Clri1r91 -M•1l•1 Clri1•91 -l&nlrA1T11rl1;1rtl DOUILI! & SINGLE KNIT from $ 10 yd POLYESTE.11.S, NYLON, conoN, ACETATf ONE DAY ONLY SATURDAY, MAY 1st T·SHllT SfWING DIMONSTIATIOll ID A.M, -1 P.M. -l:OO P.M. lll!llllOOM IOlllttOP CLUlll !IOI ~Miit& lNlOll NOW -J l ·HOUl SESSIONS SWIMSUITS -LINOlll.11 -5HllTS - CAPlll~TAILOR;fD OR;ESSES 142·6225 • S·T·R·E·T·C·H AFFAIR I l'OINTS SHOPPING CINTll 11555 MAIN ST,, HUNTINGTON BEACH Pl lCU l'NCTIYI AlllL 21, Jt, JI, MAT 111 ·tlonal servicu chainnan, wm COGduct Vocational Ve~turu Day at Lquna Btaab IDll> Sclloll. The fll"ll'am, tp Ila 1111!1 yn r, ipllll l!rll in .. 1..,U.n of a c.trter. Proleaalonal woqitn w111 de1ertbe their varloua 11•1<11 lod t ~ • qulllflcaUons ~ schooling required for each. On '!\illdey, M1y ti , memben will 1ather in the Outria&er restaurant at 8:30 p.m. for a aocl4) hour Jollewed by dinner. Jilek Baller wlll discuss the propo,ed Greenbelt project for Laiuna Beatjl. Ova I ti~nors Designated Both hu1band.s and mothers will be sblring !he ipO!llgbt of Bela Alpha xt Chlpter of llele Sisma Phi thla weekend. Tomorrow nlitit is dt11&ni ttd u hueNnda' nJtht during a 1atherinr 1 n Westmlnllter Lines at 8:30 a"d bighllghtin,it: the evenln& will be the naming of the Man- of-the-year. During a tea Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Donald Varnado, mothers will be honored. Mn. Earle V•ughn of l.oll Angelu , a lon&-t1nie prnitlent of the Loa Angel• Cultural l{erlLage board and a member of the National Bicenlennl.11 committee, will address the gatherin1 in the Hot.el lAguna. Mn. Lowry Gallinger, resent. will report on a recent a~ate confere.nct in San Fran- cts<;o. Hema for the metUn1 will be the Mmes. Rowland A. Prlealng, Harry W I 11 a t 1 , ~nor J. Manin and Wllliam IL O'Connell Activity Day Raises Funds A Sunday of tenn!• and swlmmtng will be hlgbJlghte4 by a aummer fashion show l when Junior Tennia of Orange l County meel.$ at lhe Newport Beach Tennls Club as a f\Jnd- ralsln1 event. Attlvity begins at 11 a.m. Sunday, May 2. with junior tennis matches and a feature pro-match at 2:30 p.m. It it open to the public. 5COl\PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211: Advancem9nt Indicated if you are wllUng t.o accept change of routine. Specltl honor ctu1d come yaur way. SAGITrAl\IUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Favorable lunar aspect now la indicative of unlque lna:ljbt . You ga in knowledge in unsual m&Mer. CAPIUCOR.N !Dec. 22.Jan. 19): What appe1red to be a dead is.sue could be revived. Protect your interesls. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11): Exchange informaUon. Ne,1otiate dlffere.nces. Realize those ln authority will back your position. PISCES !Ytb. l!>Man:b 20):· Hean~ matters require at· tontlon. Avoid ucus, strain. Nei1hbor in transit could make special request. DOES PAPA LOVE MAMA? JEDJotnhl W•tcllff Pion -642·2444 H••pol"Mf 11111 FOR MOTHERS' DAY CUSTOM MADI JEWELRY ' Cinco cl• Mayo SPECIALS HOT TAMALE I $ CAPRI SETS ................................. 20 A"ER FIVE MARGUERITAS .............. $10 • LONG & SHORT ,,,, •. ,,,,,,,,.,, ... $5 CHILI PIPPIR$1 JR. DRESSES STREET DRESSES ... ~ ......................... $15 FOR SAILORS lo THEIR MATES: 10% Dl1<ount o~ 111 •19ul1r mercha"dlM uptn pretentation of their yacht clutii mtmlMrshlp •rds. 3424 VIA LICO e NI WPORT llACH ONE OF THE LIDO SHOPS & UP & UP & UP & UP ' ' F'r\day, Aprll 30, 1971 DAILY PjLOT JS Powerboats Poise·d for Long Beach· Race T·JaM OlftAlltG• COU,.TY, U.1.lll'OaHLA Hone• TO c••o•TO•• HOTICI INVITIN• •IDS tUl'llllOlt COUllT 01' THI NOTICI! II Hl!lll!IV OtVl!H ~ _._ ITATI 01' CAl.ll•OltNIA M pr-I• WlH bf rtctlwd tw !tit (th' l"Olt THI COUNTY Of' OIAHOI ol (911!• MoQa ft Ille llftlc:• -' llM City LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Wh~n third annual Powerboat Mag a zi n e ~tarathon of Champions gets under way at Long Beach P<i1arine Stadium May 9 it wlll be a test of the topflight stars of powerboat speed racing plus an outboard manufac- turers team effort. Termed the "Indianapolis of boat racing," the event will be a 225-mlle battle over the nar- row 1;• mile Long Beach Lagoon course recognized as tbe most sklll-demanding in marathon racing. lt is also the most comfortable and most easily reached by speed boat racing fans. The race Is scheduled to open with the exciting L e Ma n s-style dead-in·the- water start at 12:30 p.m. It will be the first of a projected national series for single- engine outboards. He. A"*"' Clerk •I lfll City "911, 1' l'tlr °"'"" l!t!tlt !If l'AUI. ll CU.Ill( C.C......i (09!1 .W.... Cell,.,...lt . lltltft ........... .t NOTICE IS H1!1tl1v Gt'''" ~ iM 11:ot ....... °" ~ 11, rtn ,., wllldl ..... .._.,. will IMP °""""*' ....WklY tM ..... er..illw• 1111' Ttlt 1boY1 11e1Md d9can1 11ou111 111 .,.. CGuMH c~ ,., "'-I tll ,._ 1\41Yt ... Clllm• -l11111"UllNll+llNO All. lAIOll . Ille MW~· 1r1 '"ufrlld fo tl!tMATElllAI..$, IQUll'M'INT, "*"-wllll Ille MC•tu•Y vouchen. In TR.ANSPOllTATIQlll ANO SUCH OTHlll .,.,. etflct ot IM d«k ol IN .tlow • l"ACll.ITll!I Al MAY 81! R.IQUllllD !lrltcl COUit, tr to tr-I 1"4om, wlttl IM FDll THI! IMl"llOVt!Ml!llfT 0 I' nKtlM"' ~'I. IO 111t lltlderl ....... Nl!WPOllT llC)Ul.EllAllO MI! DI AN I tl 1M tttl<t oil "'-' tllwfltY, AKl!l.l!'Y FR.OM 11TH .STR.EET TO 1tlH ITlll!l!T, '" QUIR.K, 612 Sotl!h l"lowt • Slrett, A 1t1 GI 11t1n1, -Ulc"1lkln1 tnd elht' Suitt -1.ot. AnMI .. , C1lllOl'n!1 t0011 CO<llfl(I CIO(umtnh mlY bt Clllltlfttd ti wtllc:lt i. "'' lllKt GI bo.11/nff.1 GI 1111 111t offl<t of "'' CIW ci.r•. 11 ,ti!' Orlw, U-rllOfttd In t11 mtltltrl Ptrl•lll\l'lf IO C•••• Miff. C•ll~nl• UPOft t ..._It., tr. .. 1111 el uld dKl'dtnl, wl111111 four 115.00. A cht•Ot Of '1.IO wUI M IMOI If "'°"ltla tfttr rM fin! PIJllll<ttlo!I tf tllll ll1nd!H bl' milt. 1"1.EAll: MAii. SEf'AllATE CHECKS. Mllct. I! ldl bid .... u N """ tft the -· D.11'4 Aprll 'Jt, ltn. """' 1nd In "" mtnner ...ovldtd Ill ~ HELIN Ol!NGHAUSEN (t.AllJ( e<inll'KI documtnll. tnO Wll tit ~ EllKUtrlx •I t1M Wiii of llM eornp111lld bY • c~Uled ... cntller'O tboW nlrMCI llendlnl. (tl.-c;k "" 1 bid llonCI ..,.. Ml leu ll'Mlll 1~ AICILl!Y ft. OUlllK OI Ille amounl of 1111 llld, m.O. HYllO!t No '11 IHllllll , .. .., 11 .. S11lho tM tM ClfY of Cotll """'· LM A""lft. C.11"'"'11 •17 NOTICE IS FUR.THEii: OIYllN tlltf ~ Ttl1 (IU) MA41-.. HU C!h Counc.11 ot uld City 1111 Mrwtofol'O A........, fw 1.~..currtx HT•bllaM<t I ..,r.11!llnt rile 1nd .Ule "' Publl1hed Orl'l.tt CC!lfl ()olllV llllOI. WtMS.. 111 auord1nc1 wlltl .. w, M tit'°" A11rll JD •nd Mir 7, l•, 21, 1'71 1016-11 In 11\e ~nic:lloll of 11\e I~ "''""°' 1c:.cc::..:...c _c.:_c..c.. _______ l1m....-Tl. Tt1t1 1111t rei. and .i.uto .. NOTICE Wl1 tdoPttd by "'' City C:O..-H .. LEG,,..,. RHOlutlon No. ~lu on -tllf •n ., 1itolinari, SOn Of the developer O~bH. UJO. '"" II Oii II .. In the el'· ll I C•ITl l'tCAT• 01' aU llMl11 fke o1 11\e CITY Cieri! o1 111d CITY. Ttltt of the revolu1loaary Mo nar l'ICTITIOUS "'"~' u !d r••• 1nd x•lt 1, ,...,1 .. r4tf1rrild tro u.. TM undtnltned don c•rllfY "" i. co.. 1nd ed<>PIM 1111 11111 nolke 11 "'°""' futlY hull which dom1nates u11; 11111;1'"9 , bo.o1t,..11 et l li-1 Yt1lowl--como1ir1e1v .., hlrth Mreln, 1nd "'-' ' H ·u •· cir! · I Drlwo, Co.i• """'· C•. t'l'1t. U'lllkr I'll• wld l(1le, 11 ldolll9CI by uld lll:Ullutltn. spor ' e WI UC vmg or llctltlout firm MIM ol COLOMBI• COF-It miff • "" "' 11'11• nollct w ...... enc: •• Mercury 0th.-are· FEE SALES ' Sl!lll:VICE Ind ""' Hid Tiit ConlrlclOI' ltltll. ... 111. • '" · nm1 11 ~ el tM lollowlnt °"''°"'' Mrlorm1na. or 111e ....,nr. •nd 1..,.. Bob H ' 5• bo w-"""" In fllll tl'ld •lt<tt ol prov""'n~. COl\lorm tro rt.. Llbor Code er 1 D g , ue ygan, ,,11c1enc1 er1 ,, fvltowt: of 111e s111t oA c.111J01'11i. '"" """' lews or W. le d' I I · Sttllltl F. StrbOul.lk, 11i-I Ytl~ me Sl1!1 ol C1IUOn1te •lkeble lSC., a 1ng S ng e-eng1ne Drtw. Cost• M4ilt. C•. t'HM M•r11 1t..rtto. wllh '"' nc11111on llNllY o1 1uc1t finisher Mercury T1r..,. s1rllou1tk. 11~ Ytl~t-v11rl11T1on1 '' mt¥ bt ,..ull'td ul'ldtf ""' • . Drtvt, Coal• MIU, Ct t'Hll6 Sl)Kltl llltYIH llUl'tutfll to ...tlld'I 11ro- Jerry Craig Baytown Tex. D11.i A11r11 "· 19n · ("'1119• htr1<Jnd1tr ,,, i11<t11 111d wflkft 1 ' ' Sebllld F. Strbovtelt h•w not bttn 1u11trt.ldtd bv ll>t II..,. • an San Bree:y Start Clemente Race Thirteen drivers have been entered as official "factory teams" representing either Klekhaefer-Mereury or Out- board Marine Corp. (Johnson and Evlnrude). The other 12 entrants will be race-proven independents. Johnson M1r111 Ter111 Strtiou•H v111on1 ot 1111 L•bor CClll9. ,.,,,,r_ "' · st1te et. C1lltor11l11. Or•llft countv: 11bor. 111111 bt 1lwn .,.,1, 111 tllt m- Tom Stickel Oshkosh, Wisc.. 011 A•rll "' ltn. btlott m• •• Noflrv provlcltcl t>'I' 11W. Reefed mains were the order of the day last Satur- day as IOR Class C fleet gets under way in what turned out to be a stormy race of survival for a number of entries. Tom Schock's Bettina rv leads the class across the starting line. Toward the rear is Sanderling (No. 7909) which was later involved in a dramatic rescue off Catalina Harbor. ' ll11bll~ In Ind for 11ld S!llf, -50rl•llV Tht ConTr1ctor •11111 llM onlY U,.. Mercury. 101>11rld Stb•ld f . Strbo1111t 1nd M••I• minul1ct11rld mat1ri.11 Pr'OCIU'Ctd 11'1 tllO Ttre•• SttbOu°"' •-lo m1 to bt "" u1111..:1 St11n 1nd onl¥ 111o1nutacl11rld Tom McCune, Denver, an 111r10t1• wnos1 n1mn ••• 1111>Krlbed to maT.,1111 m111uf11<1ur.i 111 11111 un11141 • !ht wlll'lln l111trumirnT -Kkn0wledt4td SllMS, aublt1ntt1llV 111 '""" ""'''"' independent using a J ohnson. ll'llv 1•..:u1tc1 "" urM. 1111 i>N)OllC9d 1"' ""' u1111M , .. ...., Bill petty Wapakoneta 10FF1c1•t. sEAt.1 111 1111 "'rt"""""'' of ""con1rte1. • t Jostllh !. 0.1vl1 No bid Slllll bt con11dtr1d unllN It Is Ohio, 1'1ercury. Nol•f"I' Pub!lc.C1lllOl'1111 mo"' on • lll•llk form 111rntthed ., "" D, k s• Se j n-b Pr!"'k>ll Olllct In City ol Cost1 MHa, Ind It m11de In -IC nerrer, a .IK:aC • Or1Mt counf'I cordtnet w1111 !ht provlllon& e1 111t ,,.. Race Fans Can Watch Transpacific Race The factory drivers. led by outboard world champion Bill Sirois of Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. for Mercury and r e c e n t Parker 9-}lour Enduro winner Johnny Sanders of Irving, Tex. for 01i1C. will use engines termed better than 1 5 0 horsepower by their builders. independent run n Ing a Mv Commllllofl E•olre• powl requlttmtllll, Ju111 21, 197' l!•Cll bld69" m1111 bl tlunMd tnlf tile Mercury. l'ubl!11>1d Ol'•MI Cot•I D.111¥ Piiot pr .. u1llflld 11 ,...ulr9CI by .. w. Rudy Ramos (Gardena) AO<fll JD Ind M.r 1, 1.t. 11. 1911 l01S.I\ T"" Cllv Caurw:H fll lllt CUy " C.lt From Queen Eddy Runs Taut Yacht The two giants of the out- board engine-building industry are engaged in a constant bat.. tie for prestige and sales. Their development engineer- ing departments are con- tinually imroving r a c i n g englnes to the point that they now are producing close to 200 horsepower. They are using the Marathon of Champions to test ideas before incorporating them in engines built for the public. d R , _ ( L ' Mn• , .... ...,.. Tiit ,Ill!! IO rtlKt '"" or an on uorsen on g LEGAL NOTICE an bkh. Beach) Jones Sprint-Mercury 0111111 """1 "· 1t11 1 ' tU,.•lltolll: COU•T O' TH• eY OR.DEiii: OF THlf Bill Wiles (Kansas City, ITATI OP Cl.t.IPOllNIA PO• CITY COUNCii. OP THI! Mo) and Alan Stinson (Con-TNI! COUNTY 01' OR.A.NOi. CITY OF COSTA MI I A' ' NI A-4St7 CALIFORNIA cord, Tenn.), AllisoncralV t«ITICI 0,. MaARING op l'ITITIOM TO l"ubll!hed 0r111 .. coast o.ur l'lkrl Evinrude 1.1T1.s1.11t1 11MULTAM•ous 01.ATM AllN'n 2:a. :io. 1'71 ti,.n An historic spectators gallery will be provided for the start of Long Beach Yacht Club's third biennial La Paz race next Nov . 6. Race chairman Haskell announced Mort that the start will be from the Queen Mary a1 her new permanent berth at Pier J in Long Beach Harbor. Spectators will be in- vited aboard the Queen ~1ary to v.•atch the start. Previous La Paz races have bet'n started in mid·harbor off Belmont Pier. "\Ve feel we we'\'e added prestige, increased the race's international f r i ends hip aspect-and most important of all-made the start more easi· Iv observed by spectator11.'' sBid H~kell . The new starling increases the distanee of the race from 960 to 967 miles. The race will be sailed under the fntcrn;i- tional Ocean Rule measu re- ment system. The 1,019 Queen Mary, once queen of the ocean liner~. moved lo her pcrm:-nent berth at Pier J. last Feb. 27 to undergo final preparation for her ne\v role as a museum of the sea, specially shops and restnurants. "We expect to have hun- clreds of people on !he Queen's deck~ ancl lined un on Pier J to witness the kind of a spec· tacle a major international sailinl! event provides," said Haskell. • A v.·ell-known S o u t h e r n California yachtsman who has the reputation for being an ad- ministrator as well as a deep- water sailor holds top rank this year as the 26th sailing of the Transpacific yacht race nears its July 4 start. He is Gould Eddy. now com- modore of the sponsoring Transpacific Yacht Club after serving 10 years as a director. As leader of the organiza- tional task force for the 1971 Transpac. Eddy is runnig a taut ship, based ort first hand experience not only in the Honolulu race but in other major offshore events. Among his administrative duties have been those of race C()mmitlee chairma n for the Transpac and San Diego lo Acapulco races. He has also raced in both races as well as in the Whitney Series and other events. Eddy currently has a 54-foot steel diesel yacht. Y Como. \\'hich is based at San Diego Yacht Club. Since switching from sail to po~·er he has put 35.000 miles or ""ater under Cashing lo HOLLYWOOD (UPTl Johnny Cash. on leaming his weeklv TV musical series was canceled, said: "I'm almost glad it's over,'' and began a personal ap~arance tour of New Zealand and Australia. OCC Clinches Series Skipper Peter Parker :.ind his ere.\~· F!ctcher ~e~ch sail lhcit Flying Jr. acro~s the !hush hne at M1ss1?n Bay to "·in the final rare and lhe Southern Series chanlpionship ror the 111.h li1ne In 13 years. the keel of Y Como in cruising fron1 1texico to Alaska. Eddy started sailing in 1947 wilh a Luders-16 sloop. He first became involved wilh ocean racing in a 30-foot Oun· nigan sloop. He later moved up to a K·38 and the last sailboat he campaigned was a 40-foot Owens Cutter. Eddy is a lso a past com· modore of the Santa 11onica Yacht club and was the first president of the Ocean Racing Fleet. He is also a staff C()m· modore of the Los Angeles Yacht Club and Wa.5 rear com- modore of the Southern Gali!ornia station of lhe Cruis- ing Club of America. "It takes organization to make the Transpac the ocean racing classic that it is," says Eddy. Every starting skipper and his yacht will be required to undergo strict scrutiny as to his ability and the seaworthiness of his yacht. Art Ke~ (St. Louis) and o!~:~. °' tu.llELLE tTEWAAT, LEGAL NOTICE Johnny Woods (S I Louis) NOT1C'I! IS HElll:l!IY GIVEN Th•I ,,,, •• , .. , ••••• ' ' Crodur Clll1'11l N111on11 l11nk, Jolln M. Molinari-Johnson. Mlnnolt. A11l111nT Trull Ollktr II•• filld OllANO• COUMTY, CALll'Ol\,IUA B'JJ p j t (W k t ""'"n 1 11tllllOll ~ t1llblllh 1lm11~ MOTICI !NYITtMO 1105 I e y apa one a, ,,_, ddlh. rettrenc1 lo wll\cll h HOTICI! IS HElll:E8Y GIVEN ..... •••" Ohio) Molinari-Mercury. m..:10 for 111r111tr ,.rtku11r1, 11'1d "'""" tt """"""''' wlM 11t rec11v1c1 11v "" CITY ' · 11rM end .,r~ If Mtrlnt the 1tM4t 1111 of Cott• Mn.1 ti lllt otllct of !Ill Cltf' Kenny Kitson (Bridgeton, be<ln HT tor Mn 14. 1w1, ,, t :30 1,m., In c1trt 1t 11141 ctrv H111. 11 f'lir Drlvw. Mo ) Miles Master/Mercury !ht court,_,, o1 OeP1rTmtnT No. l ot ccn11 M111, C•Ulornl•, un111 "'' hour fll · ' ' ultl COIJl'I, et 100 Civic CHlltr Drlvf 11 :00 1.m. Oii ,.,.,_v 11, 1t11. II wtlkfl tllM Carl Asmus (Van Nuys), w11t. In 1111 CllY of S•11t1 ""'· c1111orn10. lhtY wm bt ~ oubllclY Ind rnf GI lro M I. hf-\o~ Dtlld AGrll n, 19n •I-Ill "'-Councn Cll""btn tor as n· 0 1nar 11u.uson. w. I!. ST JOHN, FUll.NtSHING ALL Ll.8011:. MATfilll:IAl.S. Johnnie Sander! (lrvlng cour11y c1enc. EQUIPMENT. T111:•NSPOt1TATION A.ND T ) d ' A. ll• AOAllll: SUCH OTHER PACI LITll!S AS MAY 1e ex. ' an Tommy Posey Ull Wtlk.111'1 Dr .• 111111 nt REQUIRED FOii! THE IM,.lll:OYlfMl!NT (D a 11 as Tex) Molinari/ N..,..rt kffll. c1111wft11 nu• OF suNFLOWE111: 1.vt:NUI!' l'lll:OM J h ' . ' Ttl1 1110 4"tt·IDI FAIRVIEW lll:OAO TO MO "El!'T EAST 0 nson. AlltrMY .... l•Kllhr . OF FA1AVIEW llO AD. Bill Sirois <Ft Lauderdale ,.ublltl>ld Ore1>11 c .. ,1 0.11.,. ,.11ot. " 111 of Pl•n1. 111Klncat1on1 •lld el'hll' • ' AP<il :io 11cf M J ' 1f11 10\2 11 COl'!rllct dOCumt~ll mt'!' be oblllned 11 Fla.) and Tinker Colllnge ' •v ' ' · tM otflc• of "" CllY c11rk. 11 P11r 0r1vo, 'A h I C ) 'I 11 I G" NOTICE C111t1 Mna, C1lllornl1 -1 M!lnll ot na e m. a. , " o n a r LE ,... 11!.oo. A c11 .... 11t o1 11.00 .. 111 t1t ll'lld<I 1r Sprinl/M~rcury. flOTIC• Cl' TllUITl!l.'S IAL• ~s~":~e:...T:ycH;;;·~·s. PLEASE MAii.. Record 571 Yachts "That's why the factories have gone to single-engine events this year," race direc- tor !\lei Zikes of the co- sponsoring Marathon Boat Racers Association pointed out In announcing the entry list, "We ngure that it will take an average of better than 80- miles per hour -including time in the pits -to win here. The leaders will be pushing 100 miles per hour in the straightaways." Bob Witt (Baytown, Tex.) Ml. 171.J E•U. bid 111111 bt miff 1111 "'' .,,_., and Jerry Craig (Baytown -On l'rld•Y· M•v 11 . nri, •' 11 :00 1..M .• form ,.,., In 1111 m•11111r ,..ov1dtc1 1n "" • CAL Fl!O ENTEll.,.A.ISES. t Clllfornlt contrld doc~nll, llld 111111 be «· Tex.), Schub:e/Johnson. cor-1non •• ctuty •1>110l11tld Tn11Ttt companlM bv • ctrtll!ld "" ''"'""' Dave P k (H I 1 undt• •nd ourtu.ant lo D""' d Trutl dltck Olf 1 bid bond for not !tu Jllen lCl"l. a c er ono u u, d•!R M•~ "· i"' ,,""uTtd by JOHN w. o1"" """""1 of 11141 bid. m.ld1 ...., ..... to Sign for Ensenada In order. the entry lists in- cludes ltaly's colorful Renato Hawaii), Jones Sprlnl/1'1er-MDlll:G1.N. Jiii:. AND EVAN L. MOAGAN, "'* c11¥ o1 cent• Nl<!11. Cur ~111b1nd •nd wilt tnd recordld Ju,. 11 , NOTICE IS FUflTH!R. GIVl!N 11111 1111 y, 1"4. •• IMlr. No.. IOllJ. In baolc JOfl. Cll'I' Council of uld City 1111 "".totort Joe Fielder (Auslln, Tex.) -ns at Olllcl•I llonird• 111 111, offl<• nT1b111111111 1 11rov11tl1>1 rt11""' tctle et GI I. . ' o! Tiit Clllll'llY lll:te0rcltr o1 Or1nft Counl'!', w1-111 •«ord•nc.t wllll llw, It llt o•WI astro11/fi.fo 1nar1/~1ereury. Ct ll lornll , WILL SELL AT PV8LIC .t.UC· lfl -(811Slr\lcllon .. .,,. ·~ •nllllid Late enlries have swelled the Newport to Ensenada yacht race to 571 , a new record tor the 24 year old event. The previous record was 568 in 1969. The race starts next Thurs- day at noon with the first classes of Ocean Racing and Pacific Handicap yachL!I get- ing the starting signal at noon . Starts will be at 10-minute intervals until the five classes of OR and PHRF". MORF and ocean racing catamarans are under way. The last start will be at I p.m. ~l eanwhile £kippers a n d crtws are working fr antically to gel their yachts ready for safety inspection required by the sponsoring Newport Ocean Sailing Association. Newport Harbor will be alive with boats starting this weekend as fleets from San Diego. Los Angeles. Marina del Rey and Santa Barbara convergf' Ofl the area. Several clubs are holding races with the terminal point at Newport. Most prominent is t h e Mayor's Trophy race from Marina del Rey which Is part of California Yacht Club's Overton Series of offshore roces. Harbor Club ' r .I , ,. • , •• I Johnson Freeman (Garden TtON TO HIGHl!ST 111DO'l!A. FOfl CASH l'llPf'DYf!mHITI, Tll1l ••Id rtlt tnd Kiie !Ptvlblll 11 tlml el 1119 In lawful _, wit ldoolld by 1111 Cl!'!' Councll bv Grove) and Pat Murphy (Long af"" un111d s111•1 ,, .,,. SGi.rfll '""'' stno1utt1111 No. 10-1u"" -'"' drr" ., ... 9'..... Beach), Westbrook SprinV ~~~Cl~ of o;:::: A;.°:'17.1. "*..: ~~~ 1r:~:r: 1!.~ ~~ly~~:::.-:: Johnson. co111orn1,, 111 r1..,1, tlllt 1M Int•,...• (Oii. r1t1 tnd .ctlt 11 l'llrtln rttlrrtd tro 1n11 --------------·lv"ed to 1nd rtfNI Mid by II under u ld ldoriled 111 11'1!1 notice 11 l'llOllt~ full¥'"" _,-O.td ot Tru1t In 111t o..-rlY tllulltd In complri.l'I' wt Wiii IMrtln, •nd !till 11/d ;:...--~ LEGAL !+It Ortllff C1N11ty H1rbor Judld•I K•lr. 11 ldOPltd by 11!d Rr90!vtlon, It ~ 1 ' • l-------N'--'OTl-"CCE:.:: ___ .JDl1trlct, In 11ld Cot.tnlY 1nd s1111 deK•lb-midi• P•rl ot 11111 nollct by r~1trtnc1. .. ) ed 11 : Tiit (anlrlCIO<f 1h1ll, 111 I ~ I ~ • \', I CITY Of' CCllTA 111\l"SA Loi '1 ot Tricl No. '43', 111 tht C1N11h p1rtom11nc1 of 11\e wor1I: •nd Im. :~( OIANO• COUMTY, CALl,.OllNIA f11 Ortr>ff, SrtTe o1 C1llfor11la, 11 per provemt11!1, conlorm lo 1111 t.1bor Codt af ' NCITICI! INVITINO llDI ,.1111 ricorO.d 11'1 lloo~ 1!4 Plllt 37 •nd 1111 STiit ol C1lllornl1 llnd olhtr ltwo af •' I NOTICE 1$ HEAEIY GIVEN 1~11 NI~ 31 ct MIHell•n...,ut MIOf, I" lllt olll<• 111t 5111• ot C1llfornl1 •1>Pllc1blt ed PtOPOUlt will bl r.ulv.d D'I' tht Cllv .,, IM Countv AKorll•r of 1ald Counlv. thtr1to, w!lll l~t t•CePTlon ""IV ol tU'Ch ol COil• Ml•• •T 1111 ollltt ot 11'11 Cltv Mori c:ommonl• kl'O)Wn II 1511 llHllUI ~ .. rlalk:'"I •• m•v be r1<111lrld UP'ldet' "" Clerk ti lllt Cl!v H•ll, 71 Fllr Orlvt, SlrMI, 5111!1 Ant, C1llfor"ll. tJ>«l•I 1!1l11lt1 p.urautnl lo whf(ll pro-Cosla Mt••· C1llfornl1, unlit 1111 hour ot Stld 1111 will be midi, buf wllllclll ctedlnt1 herl'llndtr l rt l1kt11 •nd wi.10. 11:00 •.m . ..., M1v I!, nn 1t which flm1 cov.,..1'11 er w1rr1nf'I, tx11r1u"" rm11Uld. h..,t n:it -n tUPlrteded bv 11'11 •r• 1~•'1' will bot -Md 1111bllc!Y •'Id r•..:I rnirdlnt 11111, IOIHUfon or ,,.. vl1lon1 ot !tit Ltl>Or' Clldt. l'rtlt'f'fl!Ct No lloucl 111 ll'lt Cwnclt Ch•mbort lor cumbrtl!Ctl. lo llV lhl re.,...1~11'19 prl,,. labor 111111 bt 1Jvt11 onlY 111 -m1nner " F U A N I S H I NG A L L LA II 0 Ill: , cloa! tum of the llOll 11c11rld bv Slid 11rovldtd bY ·-· MATER I AL', E 0 U IP MEN T, Owl! of Trllll, lo-wit : 1]6,Sa.1.4, wllll I,,. Till C0<1lr1ckll' 111111 It .. onlY Ul'o TRANSPORTATION I.NO SUCH OTHElll: tttttl from Stpl...,blr 10, l nO, ti 111 Mid m111ul1C:l11rtd fllllltr11l1 prochtCl<f I" !hi F.t.CILITIES AS M>.Y llE AEOUIR.EO f1ott pnwldld, adv'"''" IP •11v, undtr lllt U11lled St11ln Ind onlv mtnvl!K-FOR THE CONSlR.UCTION Of' A ltmll GI ••Id D"°" ot Truil, ftpt, d\lffff tvr..:I tnllt'f'lllt mlf>•lf•cillrld 1n 1111 l'UMPER TEST l"IT AT ,.LACl!NTJA Ind tXPlnlH of tllt TrUlltt •nd of 1111 Unl!ed $1tltl, lultl!tf'lll•ltV •M '""" AVENUE FIRE STATION. trut~ crttTld by ltld t>teo ot Tn11T. m•Tttl1l1 produc..:I In 11>t Uf'lllH l !•ta. A M'I ol Pllnt, -IHUtlOl!I •nd O!Mr T~t bellt'llclirv undtr 111d o..cr of Jn 111t _.1onn1nct of Tiit contrKt. conl•KI clo<<1..,.11!1 m•v be obl1111\tO 11 Truit, bv ''''°" af 1 br••Ch or lldault In No bid ""ti bt c-ldlrld u111tu It It 1111 ofll<e of ll>t City Cltrk, n Ftlr Orlvt. tllt obl!tlllonl 11curlHI t ~Ir t 11 '. m11de on • blink •m ~1'111d bv 11\e Cos!t Mt••· C•llfornf1 llPOft 1 d•-11 of ~eritotore e•ll'<Uled •NI delivered "' tM crtw of Costa Mott•, 1nd 11 mldt In K-11s.oo. A c:h1roo ol 11.l:U win be ma61 U ufldtroltntcl 1 wr llltn Dt(l1r1Tlot1 ol con11nc1 with "'' lf'O¥ttloM fA Jiit ,,.. lll""lld bv min. Ill.EASE MAIL ~!1111! Ind ~m•nO tor Slit. Ind -ltttfl postl req11lrtmtftfL 5EPAA.ATE CHECKS. n:itlcll "' brtldl Ind fll tlllctlOll lo CIUMI EKh blddlr PYWll bt n(tftllld •"" 1111 Elcll tlld 111111 N miff on ll>t P'-111 1111 undtnllned to N II 11ld pr-riv lo pre<1111lllltd 111 rtctUlrld by If'"· """' '"" 111 "" m1n ... r P<'O'lldld 111 "" u!llfv ••Id obllt•lloni, '"" lhl•t•lltr. on Tl'll CllV Council Clf the (lly at C•!t conlrlCt docllmtnll. ind lh•U bl K· Juw•rY 11. 1tn, It'll undtrtloned c•ultd Mt•• rtHrwt Tiit rl9'11 ti rtltc:I ttn' M' com1>1n!td Irv I ctrtlflld O<f C1Jhl1r'1 ltfd notlct of 1>•t1cll '"" of 1!ffilon IC Ill 111 tlld!. Chtdl: or • bid bond tor""' ltu 111111 l~ •ll'<tnltd 111 book t521. oa11t 11:1, ot Hid 01ltc1: ,t.prll lt . Im ol 111• -n1 ot !ht bid, !'IHI• PIVlblt lo 010<.111 A.Kord1. llV ORDElt OP THE lhl City ol Co1!1 Mt11. Dil•: Aorn n, 1'11 CITY COUNCIL OP THI! CITY HOTtCE IS FUR.THEii GIVEN 111t! lllt Cil Ffd EnltrprlMI OF COSTA MESA, CALIFOlll:,.tA City CDUl!Cll ol illd City ~·· ~•rtlolort •• 11ld Tr111ltt llllb!IJhed 0••!19• (Ollt D•Ur l'lkrt, t1l•bfl1htd • Prtv1llln1 r1Tt 1nd Ktlt of ev l'•lrlcl• 8t•rd AP<!1 2J, 30, 1'71 f2S.11 w ..... I" ICCO!'d.,l<t wit~ llW, to be Plld ll'S )6111 111 !ht conllructlOll ol 11\t •bl!Yt tnlllllld ,.ub!ltlltd Orantt Cotll C>1lly Pilot LEGAL NOTICE lmprau1m1nT1. Thal 11ld rift 11111 oc11t ,t.orll, JJ, :io ind M•v 1, 1911 90-11 ,., ... w11 ldopted tiv lllt CUv Council by Ro1oh1l!or< No. 7t.114 °" !ht 2111 d•v ot LEGAL NOTICE Cl.lll:TIPICATll POlll: Tlll:ANIACTI01' December. 1t10. ,..., 11 on Ille I" thl 01· OP I Ul1Nl!ll UMDl!R. !Ir• ot !l>e Cllv Clerk ot Hid Cl!'!'. lhlt ,..(Jll, l'ICTITIOUI HAM• 11!d r•Tt •fld ICllt II h1r11~ reftrrtd lo CaR.Tll•ICATI 01' •UllNl!SI THI! UNOEA$1GNEO do"'""' eertlfY •nd IOOP!IHI 111 Thll nollc1 ti tl'lougfl fully ll'!CTITtOUI NAMI! "''' lhtv •rt ccnou"'"' • m1!1-ordtr '"" ind com1>i.ttly 1et tori~ htr1I", 111d lhtl Tht undtrlltntd ~t c•rlllY rht 11 wlloln.111 busl ntu klClll'd •I 1'.0. Box 11ld 1e.1l1, •t t!IOPtld by 11ld A.11al~llcn, ccn<1u~·!lnt1 1 builneu 11 11J Doutr Or .. 142. South L1oun1, Ortntt Couf'llv, I• mede I Plfl of lhll Nolk.e by N-PDrl 8ttcll, C•ll~n!t, un<ltr 1111 C1Jltorn11. under fllll Jlclllloul l!rm nlmt refertn<t. lldlllou1 firm ntmt ol HOl"E GEARIE ol llUTTERFLY Ind "''' ••Id nrm "' The Con!rtctor sh1tl, 111 I h 1 llEAL TY tnd lhil 11ld nrm 11 coniPOltd <Ol'lll)CWd ol lllt followl"' ptr.Oftl, ~ ptrlormll!C• cl 11141 work tr>d !m-of 111t fot!C>Wll>I 1>tr,..,, whetl ntmt In 11111\M lfl fyll '"' 1111<11 t11 rftUlllct t,. P•ovttntnlJ, con!orm To lht L•l>Or' Codt full •1111 plict ot rnldtnct 1\ •• tot1ow1: II l0Uow1, lo-wit: el' lhl STiit d C1lltornl1 Ind alhtr l1w1 Ho11t Gttrlt, 2024 Alturt Dr., (0<ron• Z•""'' K11utSP11, 105j LI Nllred1, ol !ht Stahl o1 C1IUornl1 11>1>lk1btt Otl M.I•. f16H l1tu111 lltllCh, t'li51, C11ll,1 ICtNielh J. lhertto. wllll "'' fl(tl>llon onlv ol "'"' D1ttd ""'It'· 1'11 K1111t1on. 1051 LI Mlrld1. L"""' v1rl111on• I• m•v 1M! r1<111lttd u""'" !flt HOH Gerri• 8uch, 126'1, Ctl!I.; lll:kll.,., I... atc:-Mf' ,.MIO 1~111 1!1lultt wriu1111 It wlllch pro-SttTt ot C1llfom!1. Or1rtM CINl'll'I': Lawrffl(t, .cMI D•hl/1, C0<t-dcl M¥o il d cttdl ne1 htrtunder 1r1 l1k1n •l'ld wllkh 011 Allf'll J, Jt11, De!Ort me • Nol•f'Y C1tll. READY FOR MAIDEN VOYAGE -She a an ~IYf l'O)I bMn IUl>tr...itf l>v I ... "'"' llubllc Ill 1nd "°' ••Id Stai.. llt•IOlllll¥ WITNESS our hll'ldl Ihle 22N Nv ., Barry Wood 01 Newport Beach Celebrated the cbriS-vl1l0111 of Int L1bot Code. l'relt•t'nct to 1pp11red HoP1 Gtrrlt ~"'°'"~to me to be A11rll, 1971. lebor Jhtll be tlYtll only 111 tilt m111ntr .,.,. peroon wlloll llllM 11 tubtcr1btd lo Z1ndr1 ICnu!IOtl tening of their new Coronado-35 sloop Conquistador "':;!"""c!:i.~,io.. •h•H u ... 11" 11,.. :,~ ;~:::,~n~ur:.;.',.•nd •ck-1«tted =~= ~· ~.'::!:. with a cruise around the bay. lttaiden offshore tes t m1nut1c1ure<1 m11.,1111 P!'oducld •n "" coF1'1c rAL 1EALl STAT'E OF cALtFOA.NIA d 'JJ be lh N j L E U"lle<:l STiits Ind Gnl'I' mtnllft(lured J011,,,.IM M1r1rtle lloulh COUNTY OP ORANGE I II. for the Conquista or WI e ewpor o n-m111eri.11 m1111111e111r.c1 In 11141 unnld Hot"" Put111c.c.u1om11 ON April 22, 1tn, t1ttor1 ""• w. senada race which starts next Thursday at noon. 5tun. 111b1t11111111v •11 from "'''"!•II l'rlncfP.11 OlllCI In undtl'$11ntd, • Nol•ry l'ubll< In •nd for produclld In tht United Sl1tt1, i., 1111 "'· Orlrttt Counl'I ••Id ST1!1, rtsld1M lt'ltrtl11, dulY ~ \Vood is owner of Yachts Royale, the Ne~rport 1orm""' of 1111 n nt••"· Mv c""'m1u1on E~•l•t• mlni-d 4tncf oworn, Pf'""''n.,. •P11•rH1 No bid theU be con11dertd u"ltN II h Aut H 191' Z1ndr1 Kf'lllllOll. Kenntlll J, Kf'lllhOfl, •"" Opening Race Slated dealersh ip for Coronado Yachts. midi on • "'"* lorm lurn!lllld Dy 1111 "ubtlMed . O;lntt CNtt D•!IY Pllot A.ldl1rd L. L•Wl'tnc• known lo -i. bl ··-----.:..-----·---.-;., ___ ----~---·····---~I CllY ol Colli M111, '"" 11 m•de In •c· April U. 2l, :io ind M•w 1, 19n m.11 111<1 ptrlOM wlloH n•mtl 11111tultltd ti II cO<fdtnct wtlll lht P<'1Wl1lon1 of lllt 11ro-111t within !11sfrum"'I 1nd Kknowltdeed l>Ol•l rf'llulrt"'tn!I. LEGAL NOTICE lo mt Thal l~tY •~Kullld IM 1-. E•c~ blddt< mull bl llctntld 1nd t lto WITr.!ESS mt lltnd 1nd efllcJ•l lffl. 1>rt<1u1!lllt<I •• re<>11!r0<! l>v 11w. Jo Annt M•lln Tl>t C!l'I' Councll of 1111 City of COl!I NCITIC• TO CllDITCll.S Notary Public . Ctlllorn11 Mt•ll rtservt1 fhl rl9'1T lo r•IKI l~r O<f SUl'.111:10111: CCIUlll:T Cf' TH• PrlnclPll Ofllc• 111 •II bkh. STATt 01' C,1.LIPDlll:Nll. 1'01. Or1111M CounfV D•!""': April 1t. Un TH• COUMTY Of' Oll:ANOa Mr CammlHlon ER1lr .. APRIL SERVICE SPECIALS N I' bo y h 'I ev ORDEA OF THE CITY NI. A •1:5'1 M•r "· 1'14 ewport 1ar r a c COUNCIL Etlllt of ISA8ELLE STEWART, l"ubllllltf O••ntt Cctll OtllV l'tlot, Club's Opening Day race OF lHI!: CITY OF Ol<:t••ed. A••ll n. ao Ind Mflr '· 14, ttn "'·" Salurd.y. May 8. Will •• ·ne COSTA MESA. U.L1FOlll:NIA NOTICI! II Hl!lll:EllY GlllEN lo ""1-------------- R,..~oluUonory nuw opi:rot1onot ml.'T~od1 meo11 0 10119c Count'('! No 1 l i~c ol11 M('tcu•y dcota• "o"' offan frJc lory outhori tl'd llH• ¥•Cl' ot ~·1ce1 com porobl< I<> »lo•t' ~~O!!Jt'd by •l'•v•C<' •totion1 ond othl'• no"·lp<'c•o l•:t>d rt>poh (t•n ll'•I !o<·rv•C<' by oppo1nl· ue " F'uDITtlllHI Or1not C..11 D1llr l'llot. crtdllol'I ol IM •boll• n•med OIC.tdt!ol LEGAL NOTICE cf the highlights of lhe club's AllN'll n. xi, 1t11 .., .. 11 ""'' 111 "'"'"' nr.1,,. d1Jm1 •••'"'' "'' li-_:_;_.:;:__::;__:.: ______ :.:.;CJ1tl4 lltttdelll t rt rt<IU!rfd ti II .. tl'>tnl.1-------------- 8 n n u a I o p e 11 i n g d a y LEGAL NOTICE w1111 "'' 11K11wrv VOl/Cl'ltrs, 111 '"" ot1Jc1 T-nu1 h ' $3 $ R $8 50 of !111 c!trk o! the •bovt tntlt11d cowl, or SU,.1111:10111: COURT 01' THI! ceremonies and yac t In· R•SI· . 0 •8· • "·--------------'lo prtt•fll """'· wit~ Int !'IKnur' ITATI 01' CAl.ll'OIMIA POil speclion Salurday and Sundnv 1 S · I Whffl B11rinn & Brake sul'Elll:toA cau1T a11 THI. vouc.1>e•1. ~ "" un11tr11.-i 11 croc~1,. ™• COUNTY Of' ott.1M•1 Brak• pec1a • STATE OP C,l.Llfl'OllMIA 1"0111: Clllh'lll H•lloNI •• ,.. ••o NO<tl~ Mt. A-4llM The race is traditionally Combo. TNI COUl!ITY 01' OR.AMOI 8roldWt'I'. S1nlt ""'· C•lttorfll•. w!llcft •• 'Etl•lt " CHAlll:LOTTI! c. DUii.AN, 1-m Los Angeles Ya cht Club lncludin9 in1peclio11 I fut! 1d· 1 ._ ~ No. A'*"' 111e 11111<•"' "11lnt11 ct"" ~r1!..wd tft Otclff.ld. •" l11cl, cl•1 n, u11dr.1I• I •ofud NOTICE 01" HEAlllNO 01' "l.TITIO# TO t!I m•tltri Ptrltlnltlo !ti 111t tlltlt o1 t•ld NOTICE 15 HElll:EIY OtVIEN le lllt lo Newport. The C()Urse i~ 11117 jw1tm o11t. Juot whiol botrint•· Co111pl•I• fSTl.ILll M StMULT•M•ous Cll"l.TM dt-c11111111, w1111111 '°"' m.,,.,,,. 1ntr ""cr1111neni ot tt>t •lllYt ,...,,.. lflcodtnt m''les. cu r r. n' North • • . I • ,. ' J ' E1!1l1 of WILLIAM M. STEWART. llrtl oubllc•'"" af 11111 l'IClllCI. llltl 111 "'"°"' ""Yll!I cltlnu Hllnll ,,,. 11rt•• tn1p1< • 191111 • ~I Dtttlttd. Otltd MtrU. ''· Jt7l 1•ld dK;ldt~I tr'I ,..ulr9CI t. lilt "*"" American Yacht Racing Union 99" $ 50 NOTICI! IS Hl!lll:l!8Y OIYl!N Tiit! Crocktr..Clllr•~· wllll "'' f!KHJ.tr'V _.....,, '" ""tll'lw "' 4 CAOCKER CITl?ENi N,t.TIONAL IANK Nlllonll l.,.k of 1111Cllr-et1t>t •btYt '"'111ed wurt,., rules will apply and the race JOHN M, MINNOTT, ""''""' Trvtl Of. I v: Jol\11 M, Ml-I to ""'""' lhtm wlltl ,... ""'""" will be sailed under the Cruis-1 11(•r ""' 111ec1 ""'111 • '"'1'1on to E•KlllOI' et"'• wm 'l'DUCfttr•. ro 111t uMtt11t1 .. 411 tN """ ttt..011111 11""1UllMOUI lltll'h. A>ltr111<• t. ot TM lbovt fltllltd dtctdtnl of Mr lllOl'noy, MIKI! MAYO, 111 leutll Ing Club of America measure· I .,...kll 11 m.o. tor 111r111tt 11rtku1 • ..., •nd A. w. ., .. .,, G1rtrt1t1 l.vtf!U'I. ""°""""'.., C•llfllml• t I y S 12 51 You Save $4.00 "''' 111t ttmt •nd PIKt o1 ht1r1111 111t ..,, ....... , ,, .._ '°"°· wlll(ll 11 "" 111.ct " ....,,,""' .. men rue. I OU 6YI • umt 1111 bttn .. 1 POr Mn *'• nn. 11 U•l w.11<11" .,,..... "" urtcttr1/fntd In 1tl mo~ 111111.-Jne The race will be splil 11p 9::D 1.111., In 1111 courtroom ot DH•rt· 111111 m """••'•I• of 111d <Neldf.nt. w1111111 i.uf I ment No. J " H'11 court, ti 1'IO Clvk M..,-1 lf.ldl, c1lll9tttl1 ru.. mont111 '"" lllfi tlnl Mlkttl.,. fJf ll'tlt between the Ocean Racing) A ANA c ... 1,r 0r1w w11t, w. "" Cl!'!' "' ""'' '"' 11141 ..,.UM notlr•. (CG A 1 Pacific Jfandicap Ric. SANT .An•. c1u1or111•. ..."_' 1w ••enttr 0.194 ""'" •· '"" I 01tld APfll "· I"'· l'~blltl>ld Or11111t Cottt 0.Hv ll!lol $oo1111 l.fmllc. l1tcvt11Jr; Ing Feet and Midget Ocean LINCOLN MERCURY w. E. ,, Jot1N. 1.11ru )0 '"" "''' 1, 1" 21, '"1 1011 .11 ,, '"" wrn of 11141 Rl'ICi n" f1eet yachts. CounTv Cllrk. •llOY• ,..,.... H<tdtllt. n I., LI!& A.D,t.tl MIKI MAYO Trophies for the winner~ ~;ill 1l01 NO. TUSTIN AYE., SANTA ANA M7-084l IHI W•ttcllff Or., 1¥itt"' Th OA. ILY PILOT 1111 '""' ••rtlftl Aw. •• [ d [ h ( J NtwMrf at1 Cft, Ctlll.,"11 "'.. I -Mlnltikl1•, (•lferftll ..... 1)1; presen e a t e orma T••1 01•1 «t·tJH T•h 011, JT>.llJS opening Day ceremonie~ on .. WI APPRECIATE YOUR IUSINESS" 1i rt•rft" ''" ••~~ttt Tops in Local Sports ..._,..., ... .,..., ••tcvlfl• Sund.y. '"--------------------------·•! Pvt.11,~IHI °"'"" (Oflf DI!!' Pttof, PubUtlofd Cl•tflff Cati Dlllr ""-'• " Allrll. Ind Nit'!' I, .. 1'11 10!).'1 AMII'· It,,,, )Q. 1'71 nJ-1'1 ml'~I ~o•l'1 you furth111 '""'l' o~d mo11!'~ • -.. l I I -.. 1 f . D.111. Y "lOT F'rldly, April 30, l9n 'Streaking Angels Clash Wit·h Tigers " Ram s Not ' ' For Sal~ Says Barnes LOS . ANGELES -The Los Ange~ Rama an not for sale and are "1oin1 (or tne champiOnatllp," uys the National Footbill League team's new president. Wllliam A. Barnes, 1 close personal trtend tnd a longtime business aS10Clate of the late Daniel F. Reeve.a, was named the-t1Ub'1 preaidmt Ind 1ener1l mitnager 'l1naada)I by tbe bolnl of director!. It bad been rumored th1t the club might be put Oft the auction block but Barnes oquelched tbe Idea. '11be Rams are not for sale," he said taUy. Before Reeves died In New York of cancer two wetU a10, atoriea: had circulated that he WU trying to sell the team for about PO mlllloo. Barnell uid the team would remain in the farttlty, so to .ipeak. Referring to Rttves' widow, Mary. he said. "Mn. , Reeves has always been • devQted football fan. The Rams are an h'ilpOrtant part of her life just as they wen to Dan. We will be the 'Reeves Rams' in every way. Dan was a gentus tn this came and we 1hall try to operate wl&h keen rupect for hiJ ideas and kleala." e T-Sh•re l.e•d NEW ORLEANS -Lou Graham &aid ht jast• couldn't believt the scores were eo low. Jacky Cupit aa14be wae jult hap.. py. they were. And BWy Cuper just said so Jong. Casper, winner of two U.S. Opens and more than 40 other tour events had to pull out of the $125,000 Greater New Orleans Open Golf Tournament Thursd ay w)len ht developed bursitis in his left hip. H~ shot a 74 and then withdrew. Graham, a drawling native of NJl'hviD•, r ..... and the stocky Cupl~ mired deep in a slump for several years. ahared the first round lead in the chase far the ~,000 top prlu with seven under par ass. e C-Uleas Win ·sr.' PAUL -MINNEAPOLIS -The television replay aod an automatlc Urning device supported referee BUl Frid1y's -ruling that dlaallowed a MiMesota goal after .the final horn Thursday nij:ht as the Mcintreal Canadieru: defeated the North Stars 3-2 and won their Slan1ey Cu p ..mlllnall. The Canadiens, winning the NatiOl)al Hockey League semifinal series in all: games agaln!it the persistent North Stars, will meet the winner of the Chicago.New York' semifinal series, e ft•"9""• Triumph NEW YORK -Pete Stemkow1k111 sud. den' death goal in the third overtlmt period 1ave the New York Rangers a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Black Hawks· in the lixtb game of their ttmiflnal series. The victory tied the series at three games apiece and sent the series back to Chicago for the seventh and decldlng game Sunday afternoon on national television. e LClkera Sl9n Brown LOS ANGELES -Roger Brown, the g. foot-lOYa center from Kansas University, algned. a three-year contract with the Lbs Angeles Lakers of the National Basket-· ball As!oc:lation Thunday. , · Terms of the agreement ¥:ere not dl.\'.l)lged. Brown was the fourth round dralt choice of the Lakers. He averaged tl.2 poln~ per game and 11.1 rebounds. Kansas reached the Natlonal Collegiate Athletic Association semiftnals this past &eason. e Alclndor to /tlorr11 MU.WAUKEE -Lew Alcindor, the 7- foot·2 dominating center for t h e Milwaukee Bucks, ii getting married this swruner. according to team president l\'Y Patteraon. : "I have some news for you. Lew Alcin. ci>r plans to 1et married this summer, and he Is looking for a home here." Patterson told a diMer mtttlng \Ved-- !tsd•y nlgbl. "He ls proud to ploy tasketball for the Bucks and to rt:present ll!llwaukee ." , Hunt Seek• Terms DAIJ.AS -Lamar Hunt, millionaire owner of mmierous sports enterprise•, saiil· 'l'hurtday that he and others will IOOk into ·the possibility of buying the Cleveland lndJans ba&eball club. "We'll definitely follow up on ii," said Hunt. "We'll have to pursue it to see how 1lnctre they are. I presume they're stncere or they wouldnt have opened the IDbject." Vern Stourfer, owner of lhe Cleveland club, has nkl he U willing to sell for $9 million. By ROGER CAR130N Of .. .,, , ......... Jt'1 boen aald that all the Ctllfornla Angell needed were • few simple ad- jwtment.s here and there to right an anemic team batting average. And It appears that third baseman Ken P.tcMullen •b-one of those who has found the mafor problem. The 11-3, !!IS-pounder baa been aocklng the ball at a .306 clip on the. c:wnnt homestand, has a fiv~ame hitting streak, has hH &afely In etght of the last nine garnet and smacked a pair of hits Thursday nlghl ffili finit safety of the night came ln the third stanza and the rbl slngle drove Cleveland starter Alan Foster from the mound as McMulltn and his Anu:cts matea: came from behlnd to pan an M · victory over the slumping Cleveland ln- diw before G,205 at the Blg A. Roger Repoz followed McMlllen with a DAILY PILDT '2·hl r·I Doy' SK Cou pon Pogo 19 double to SCOI"(! a pait and up the margin to 5-2. 'Iben knuckleball speciallat Eddfe Fl!ber finished oU the Indians With a suoerb 4VJ innings of no hit relief work. The verdict pulled manager Harold "Lefty" Phillips' Angels lo within three games or American League West leader Oakland. · The Halo skipper says his blg In- fielder's comeback of sorts has come about by not commltUna hlmHll too soon. "He's been blttlng good all week," old J..lly. McMulltn'a key hit in the third came o[( a slider, wblch scored Tony Gonzalo. "I went with the pitch, I didn't try to pull it. That's tbe main tltlog that pullln1 down and in on the bat will do for you. "And I have been choklng up a little IO a1 to not pull the ball," said McMullen afterward. McMull@n was batting . 195 prior to the current home stand, but he say1 he's been swinging good since the atlrf ol the campaign. ~ "There ii a lilUe bit of lock Involved, too.. We've all hid ane abotl right at ATlANTA'S PAT JARVIS REACHES DOWN FOR HIT THAT BOUNCED OFF KNEE . Giants' Wlllle McCovey Streaks P11t the Falling Jarvis. S.n Fr•nclKO Won, 3-2. Dodgers Win, 2·J. Relief Star Mikkelsen No Longer Wild Man ATLANTA (AP) -For a guy who once led the league in wdldness, the start of the 1971 baseball season must be a pleasing surprise. Pete Mikkelsen spent six years with eight dlfferepl minor league teams trying to make the majors. Today he can look back on seven fine major league seasons inW:rspersed w.ith a felY more seasons in the minors. The wildness factor, ho\\'ever, is gone ,o\prll Jet M1y I M11 2 MtY 4· M1y I Dodfler Slate AN Ol lllff e• ICl'I IMO) OOclotl"I II Atl1nt1 Oocl.,l"I 11 All1nt1 DQ1r1 II All1nl1 ''°""I••• v1. (l~(lnn•t! Ood11ra va. Cl"clnn•ll J P m, J p.m. 11 :10 1.1!'1. 1:" o.m. 7:55 P.rn, and that's one of the reasons he has bttn so effective for the Los Angeles Dodgers as a short relief man. Thursday was a typical example. He came in for starter Al Downing in the eighth lnriing and retired eVeryone he faced . Jn the process. he earned a 2·1 victory over the Plt~burgh Pirates, his third triumph without a defeat. He also has two saves end an t:amed run average of 1.21. fdlkkelsen's first complete season in organized baseball with one team wa s 1960 whM he · pitched in 30 game& for ~loorhead-Fargo. He started 24 games that season and in 181 innings allowed 118 v.1alk!. highest -011 worst -mark in the league. The wildnes• factor appears gone. In his seven relief appearances for the Dodgera this seaaon, Mikkelsen llas allov.·ed no walks in 14 Innings, He's also aUowed just seven hits and .two ru!lli, both 0( them homers. In fact, in the game In which he allow- ed the two homers -one to Richie Hebne.r and another W \Villie Stargell of the Pirates -he earned a :save as the Dodgers won the opener of the three· game set 7·5. Thursday's victory kept the Dodgers in second in the National League. West, 41h games back of the flying San Francisco Giants. Tonight, the Dodgers tackle Atlanta's Phil Niekro, 1·2, by sending ace Bi 11 Singer, :M, to the mound. Singer has set· tied down after losing his first four games and has now won two straight complete games. Back to ?>.tikkelsen, however, who may well appear again tonight. He was purchased by the Dodgers from Tulsa late in the 1968 season. In two full champions with the Dodgers, he has ef- fected a 2.77 earned run average and walked just 50 in 143 Innings. His record, including thi& season's, is 14-7. LOS ANOl:LIS ,ITTSaUllOH 1t; r 11 .. 1 1t;rllt.i Runt ll,cl tlltC11ft,7lt 'ooo Mall, rl ' I J 0 Htbner, lt) ' 0 f 1 W.P1r1ttr, 111 ' 0 I 1 c 1 ....... 1w, rl ' 0 0 0 111,Allfn, 11 l O O O S1•rOlll, rl t O I O w .o.v11, cl o o o o l ,llobtrhon.lb ' o o o Slld•kll, t ' o o o S•noul!1tn, c t o ' o Sim•, c 1 0 I 1 111.0llwt r. d ~ G 0 0 G••vt y, .lb I 0 I G Allev • ., , 0 0 0 Lt1Hwr1, JI J 0 I 0 Walltr. 11 1 0 0 0 V1l"'11"'• 11 1 o o o P•o•n, 1)11 1 o 1 o Wllll.H J OOO Cl!nn .Pf' 1101 Dctwn1<'1Q, • 1 0 I I G!111tl, p D I I I Ml-~tl•tn, p O G 0 0 TOl•l1 31 2 1 J To!1l1 n t 6 I Los Antt le$ PHii bur Oft lot 000 OOt -2 000 000 Oii -I E -(11ft, Vl ll'li!l"I. OP -lei A"lltlft I, Pllh t>Ut'fth '· LOI -L"' Anot lH •• Pl1!1but11'1 '· 21 -ll unt!l, S1ngulllt n 2, w. P1r~tr. $ -C..lh. Oo'll"llft{I: Ml-ltlt"' (W,J.01 W1lktr GM •I U,,1·0 Pl -IUllllll, s.n:n. ll'H lt llt ll SO 7-1/J 6 I I l 7 11/I O t I e t I ~ I I 1 1 1 f I I J 0 Time -J:t1. AT!ffill1nc1 - Laver Upset By Riessen In Net Classic DALLAS (AP) -Marty Riessen ousted Corona del Mar'& Rod Laver 6-1, 7-6, Thursday night in a stunning upset at the Rawlings Tennis Classic and Bob Lutz shocked Aussie Ken Rosewall, 7-5, 7-6. Lutz and Riessen club today while second-seeded Arthur Ashe takes on Rob Maud. Cliff Drysdale lalces on Tom Ok- ker in another quarter-final bout while John Newcombe the No. 1 seed, go e 1 against Mark Cox. In other singles baUles Thursday, Ok- ker beat DeMis Ralston 4-6, 7-5, 6·2 and Newcombe cut down Fred Stolle 7-5, 6-3. PORTOLA VALLEY Stanford University Senior Stan Pasarell used a powerful serve and . strong forehand Thursday to defeat veteran Tom Brown in the California stale tennis tournament. Pasarell, a former national junior doubles champion from San Juan, P.R., beat Brown, of San Frandaoo, W, 6.1, to advance to the tournament Jlllirterfinals. Pa.sarell faces favorite"'llm McManu.s of Berkeley today. McManus ousted Henry Kamakana, Los Altos, M, 6-l. Defending champion and second seeded Barry McKay of Ro!s advanced 'Th~ day by lutning back Bob Sisk.a, San Fran- cisco, M, 3-fi, 7-5. Other quarterfinalists are 111 i k e Machelle and Tom Leonard, both of USC, Roscoe Tanner and Sandy Mayer, both of Stanford. and Jeff Borowiak, UCLA. Eliza Pande of Palo Alto, who won the v.•omen's division title last year in the tournament, moved eully through the se- cond ~round, beating Judy Louis , Sun- neyvale, 6-1, 6-2. Solidified Bucks Bid for Clincher BALTIMORE (AP) -The Milwaukee Bucks, a 3-year-old expansion team which sp!•t'tcd a.bead wlt.b Lew Alcindor and sr> ·':fied under OtClr Robertson, goes a1 ... r the National Basketball Auoclatloo champlonlhlp tonight. A vktory over the shackJed Baltimore: 8uUdl would &IY& the Bucks a four-gam& netp, onty the teeond In the JS.year ~llUiry of tht NBA llld tbe first •Ince the Jtllt69 a.uon. Mllwaukee bal avtta&ed only 102 points lit the thrte previOUI 11me1, yet dectlionJ havm't been ckM. The Bullell ha,. averaged jull to polntl a g1me, •Ith Robtriloo doUilll Earl Monroe evm lttp of lbc way and ,_ Alclndor taking away Baltimore 's inside game with' his shot blocking and in- UmldaUon. Even th~ eternal optimism of On TV Tonl91tt Clulnnel 7 •t 5:30 Baltimore Coach Gene Shue sttmed to • have lost Its Map. "J 'ye •lways felt a team bu to have four wins before anythlnc happens." Shue said, ''1nd they only have three. There·1 only one place for lll to go -up." But the Bullets will be without the services •Rain or All.Star forward Gus Johnson, who will be sidelined with ailing , knees which are due for an operation next month. Without Johnsoo, center Wes Unsekt has been forced lo do most of the re. bounding for Baltimore. lie tuis tried mightily. but at &-7~'.t he is some eight Inches shorter than Alcindor. "t.11Jwaukee has taken away our ilUlide game compltttly," Shue Ja,id. "When we go in. I.bey clOSt up the lane and Alclndor haJ been blocking more !>hots than eve:r. They've played excellent defen9', with a lot or good work on Earl -double team· ing him and other things." Shue sat~ Baltimore extt'Uted Its pl1y1 better In tilt third game than pn:vioulily, "but we turned the ball over carelessly too much, and missed a lot of shots we should make." Jn addition to three straight in the best- (lf·7 series, the Bucks whipped Baltlmore four out of five during the regular season. Two years ago, in their in1ugw-al season, the Bucks finished with a 27-55 record and then drafted Alcindor. \\'Ith big Ltw acortng at a 11.f.point avera1te. Milwaukee improved to 56-26 the following year, and then obtained RobeNon In a trade with Cincinnati afte:r Otcar nb:ed one which would have sent him to Balllmort. Dtrrln1 the rtctr1t seuon, Milwaukee pogted a 6&-16 record. and has loat Just twice In 13 pl1yoff aames. IOmtbody and now tbey'ro llarlltll to drop in the right spot," he says. A rib Injury slowed him down wt June, but Jt was a muscle pull wblcb cc-. cWTed late In the ....... that baa -a lingering bandlcap !or tbe Angel aluggtr. 1bt vk:tory gave the Angels the serie11 over Cleveland, three games. to one. The latter bu now lost eight of Its laat nine. Tonight the llaloa entertain DeLroll (I) wtth Ruly May . (2-0) lacing the Tigon' Joe Coleman (0-0). It's bat night and Ala Jolwon will receive a silver bat from American J..ague pmldenl Joe Q-onin, tbe trophy r~ the 1970 AL batting Utle. . Phillips will lleld a starting lineup mlOU! ahorUIDp J im Freaosl (brulaed len • loot), Tony Conigliaro (bni!Md lhouldtt( and Ken Berry (aore leg). (l.IYIU.NO c.\Ll,ffNIA Hr•r91 mllrtl,_. l'lf'CI, rl s o t I Ale1ner, 211 S I ' Ot l>l'llt.,..,, II 4 t I I GciruAlei. d J I 1 ,.ir-. d , • • • lhrf'Y, d •••• Herr1IM11, lit 4 1 I I A.Jofllu,M, H 4 0 t ... Nertla, • I 1 I 1 S~tr, 111 I I 0 0 "°'M.( 4111Ftt0Dfl,11 1100 L...,211 J1010'8rlM,u Jiii H~, 11 t I I 0 MtMuli.tl, ,., 4 I J 1 L-ttfn,plll t O I It.., l'f JI 2 J #i,F .. ,.r, p O O I I Mfffs, c 4 0 I I A1111Ln. I' 0 0 0 0 T,Murplly. I 7 I (> It H ... tan. pit 1 0 I I I!,,...,_, p I 0 t t Coll>e<t, , 1 I I I ~.pit 1011 To1111 JO 4 4 4 Tot1ll '1 I t I Clwtltnd ~ 020 000 -4 C.l.,_,,,lt OU to2 tao -I E -A!Dllier, Htlll-l'WI. 0,. -C.llfonll1 1,, LOB -Clr.19IMCI f, C1Ufw11l1 I. 21 -illt1pot, t OONllU:, HR -Ntlllel (J), O'lrletl (II. SB -1"1nM!i. AIMIAr. SI' -A. Fllllt.r. HIP -., T. Nwr"''I IHtkltfl)Nl)lJ W,. -T. Munitty, Tll'M -2:Q, Atthf~ -.,to&. • 0 Pristine Pleasantness Pampered Life Enjoyed at Derby : LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Kentucky Derby horse& lead the good life. But none are quite so pampered in pristine pleasantness u til05e of Calumet Farm, the breeding grounds, training grounds, burial grounds of some of the world's finest thoroughbreds. Barn No. 13 is where life begins for the fleet, fragile animals such as Derby hopefuJs Eastern Fleet and Bold and Able. "Both were fine looking foals, they were, indeed," recalled Ishmael Moore, Derby Fects, Flgur11 J'!t t • -(h..,,thltt C>Gwn•. Olsllna -111. mun . ,..,., time -2:Jll p.m. Pttlfic 0.ytlgMt Time. Entrla -:to_ ~_rtar-0101. Pu,.1 -IU~ .,;l<lld IO nomln&llon Incl 1t1r!lng ffts1 I OCI pe;J'I tor 22111'0nllni1110r>!o / Sl.000 for N d l of 20 enrr n eftll sr.ooo tor 1K111tar1..,., Vllue -SIN.000 (1 Derby rtcorcl) fl ro 1t&rt, wllft SU.5,000 j• 0.rby record! to Tl>e wlnl'ler, tlJ.000 lo 11-cond, 11 ,500 lo !lllrd •tld 15,DOO to to11r!1'. F1vorlt1 -C1l11me1 F•rm tn1ry of E111trn Flttt I ncl Bold •ncl Abll. Lall VNr'I WIMl!t -Oull Commtncltr. Lall Yllr't llmt -2:03 2/J. Rtcord time -Hortt11rn Oonce, I HI~. 2:00. !JS: -n!lmtled by Ch11rchlU C>Gwn1 II lt>oltl 1~ . HIP\tr -111rtty clouclv Incl flllld. ProlNble tr.ck Ul'ldtllon -f11l. Ttlf'Yl1lan 111<1 rldlo-CIS.TV 2·3 ~.m., rMllo 2: ... S p.m. who hovers like a mother hen over the foaling barn, complete with medical closet. "But they get no special treaunent," be said of Eastern Fleet, winner of the Florjda Derby, and his stablemate at Churchill Downs in Louisville. "They all get the best here." 'I'he best means 24-hour watch oo mares about to foal. "None of 'em ever are born during the day," said Moore. "They're just like people." It also means a cast on the front leg of a 16-day-old lilly. "She broke it when she was tv.·o days lleavy oak door from the Porlicoed main·'· office. . 1 There for stud are four stallions, In-.l eluding the famous Tim Tim, winner o the 1958 Derby and Preakness who miss-.. ed the Triple Crown by coming in second to Cavan in the Belmont Stakes. It was there, too, that Bull Lea once lived. " "That's the big daddy of 'em all," said Moore of the horse t!tat built Calumet , Farm. , Purchased for $14,000 al public auction in 1936, five years after the fann was opened by the late Warren Wright Sr., he earned less than $100,000. But he sfrtd> twenty-eight $100,000 winnen and in a~. year span his get earned more than $13 million. He's legend now. He 's buried in the Calun1et Fann Cemetery. But Bull Lea'S"· statue dominates the well·manlcured · burial ground!. Even Cllallon, Bull Lea's best son v.;ho was thoroughbred racing 's first million · dollar winner, rates only a simple granite ·' marker llstlng, like all the others, on!~ his vital &tatistics -ind that one• statistic pecullar to racing -his career · earnings. Moore says it costs more than fl" million annually for Mrs. Gene Markey, .. widow of \'fright, the former bak·· ingpowder tycoon, to operate the hardly profitable, but piestlglous Calumetii Fann. "It takes a lot of biscui~ to run a plac~ like this," he said with homespun humor,<· Gamhril Selected '. old," said Moore. who when not confined BOSTON -Don Gambril, 37, s1vim-, to his mares acts as the farm 's unof. ming coach at Cal State fLong Beach) ficial, but folksy, host. "But she's a game the last five years, reportedly is the new little thing. She just goes a runhin ' with coach at Harvard. that leg held out in front. The Herald-Traveler, in a story by col-· The antiseptic atmosphere t h a t lege writer Brian Beaulieu, says in its pervades in the white barn trimmed in Friday editions that Gambril has been • red reaches to each of the other big oak-chosen to succeed Bill Brooks, who is '. paneled, heated abodes -for brood-retiring. mare&, yearlings, those in training and Gambril, assistant coach of the U.S. , those just living out life. men's team in the last Olympics, is a. But the focal point on lhe 846 acres of nominee for the head coaching job in the bluegrass section~ into paddock! and 1972 international games. He has directed pastures by glistening white rail fence, is Cal State (Long Beach) lo a fifth place the white brick stallion barn roofed in finish in the NCAA championships in· green tile, which is entered through a each or the last two years. \• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· CORONA DEL MAI\ VISITOR -Pro tennis star Rod Laver poses with hl5 mother who \VU a recent visitor to the Laver home in Corona dcl Mar last week. Laver was upset by Marty Riessen in Rawling• Tennis ClaS>lc in Dallas Thursday. I • Five in Line For Anteater Spike Job ''Ille tnclc and field melT}'·fO-round Is 1\0w!nf dOwll at UC lrvlM and a doclslon ti erplded nut wttk on hirln& 1 new ltll<I: and field coach, Athtetk: dlrector Ray Thornton ii ltlll ftOl'l<!Ommltt.11 on the Hnat decl1lon but 1tatu th1t the field h11 blen n1n-owed to about five pJ'OlpeclS. Ob3erven hive seen such former cinder stars 111 Rafer John!IOO. -Olis Williams and Steve Simmons tin the UCI campus in recent week!. This ctoesn't HOWARD HANDY ~an any of the thret is the leading can- didate. Or in thl!. top five . for that matt.er. Johnson is a former student body l't'eai-- dent and world decathlon champion from UCLA. Williams attended Compt.on hi.ah and Arizona St.al.I!. and still holds the in· ttrscbolastic record for the 44<t al 46.t. Simmons is an assistant coach al Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo). lncidentally, the UCJ Taran surf act track will be the scene of the SP AAU meet on Sunday. M1y 30, same weekend aa the Modulo Rtl•ys. The meet al UCI is the final chana. for area 1th1etes lo qualify for th!. National A.AU meet. * * * Ail the marb\u may be in the pot Saturday when coach Gary Adams and the UC Irvine baaeball te1m trek to th" University of San Diego to contest the Tor ere~ in a doubleht.ader. UCI is currtntly 25-13-1 for the seasoo ~mpared to 23 .. g for tht Border City nine. lri the only meeting cf the twc team.1 to date, USO wan . 4-3. UCl is traveling In e:1tremely rare al· mosphert lhl!se days 'Wlith a Jofty team batting average of .302 and mind you, that's for every pl.Iyer who hA1 ))lrticipated in a 1ame or portion thereof this season. While the battle for a possible NCAA western regional playoff berth takes -pl:aCI! on foreign soU Saturday , Adams kncws full wl!ll the needs for ne"Xt year. "We could use a coupll!. cf pit.chera:· he ••~s and let'~ it go at thlt. This dces"'l mean that every other ,._iuon Is wr1pped up. "F'ar from it. But the freshman-tophomort crop, alona: with aeveral juniors who will return. Jooks mi•hly good. Behind the plate. :wo-year veteran Joe Anderson will be I junior nest ye1r. He will be backed by freshman Scott Sander~. At first b1se. freshm•n Jeff Malinoff is hittinf .352 for 3tl 11mes and appears ready to take nver fM dep1rlin1 alui1er Tom Spence (400). Jim Greenway and Dan COronado h•ve aplit duly at 8"C'Ond base and both will bt elil{iblt to return. Dan Hansen has bten a mainstay at ahortsttlp for twn se11ons and has twn more years 11! UCI. He st1rt.ed as a freshriian a year 110. David Lyons. a freshman. has been nud1lna: Mike Syktlra off third basl!. and 1p1itUng time at that position. He is hit- tin1 a. fancy .386. several posiUons will bf cpen In the nuUield and outside of the pitching need~. this could be tht big question mark for tht third UCJ campaign. Rocky Cr1Jg (center field) led the team In hittiing a year ago and is cur· rtntly tied with Spence it .400. HI!. •IM'I C(IVtr1 a lot of ground on defense a.nd will be hlrd to replace. 11\lh~gh Adami feels he has • red-shirt (Rich Molina) player ready to step in. &bby Farrar moved from tilt infield tn 11!.fl and ha.11 held the rpct for two years. "Res: Snyder and Chuck Spa.nski, a pair of aophomores this seuon. wilt pro- bably ••It a batUe for that atart1.n1 poli- tien . Jack Tedesco. 1 juninr. has played parttime In rilht fieJd thi! year and ~ take over In Ui1t apot from Mike Sask.I. A pMty f1lr mJCll!.US lG sllrt a third basebell campaip . Oh y11, don'l lor1et that Tom Dodd and Bob Barlo•. both front-line st.1rter1 thiJ atason, hive l•n mart yeara cf pitching for tht UCT team. And Gree Penninfton 1nd Skip "Redondo. ace relief attn. •re both juniors. DAILY l"ILOT "1!9fe b'f U. l'•Y"t WESTMINSTER'S ERVIN RUZICS EXCELS IN HIGH BAR .•.. , , , , AND HE'S ALSO DANGEROUS IN LONGHORSE COMPETITION. Rustler Swimmers Second CUPERTINO -Gclden West Colle&e. behind aome top performances by Don Lippoldt. Xe.ith Donaldson and the 400 medley r1lay team. urned a second pla.ct tie in lhe team standings after 1'1ursd1y'1 first round of th! sllte JC 1wirnmina: and diving ch1mpionshipa at Ot Ann CGllege Coach Tom Hemut.a.d's Rustlers w!re tied with tullerton (SS ). U points behi~ P1aaden1. Lippoldt nearly upeel Fullerton"• Byron Reldtnbaug)I In the 200 indo before. run- ninJ: tKrl cf 1a1. Uppoldt had 1 clockinf of 2:01.4 (teeond) behind "Rlidenbau&b'• timt ct 2:00.t. Llppcldt'a previous best wa1 2:0S.7. DonaldlOl'I wa1 1 third plac• finisher I.a tht r.o trff (22.CI ), also a lifetime best. Santa Monica '• Tim !:Illa won It in. 21.t, nie medlty rela y team of Grtg Felnber& . .ROP Mcintyre, CllTia Souahera and Donaldson clocked 3:43.0 to tie Fullerton for aecond behind Long Beach (3:42.6). Tbt Ume pared 71,i seconds of the previous Rustler ~t. Jim Oberg produced Oranae Coast's top performance wilh a sixth placl! finish in the one-meter diving compet.ition. Golden Wtst'I Joel PtMe was eighth. The event was won by Cypress' Jim Bor- ing. Area Calendar ' Orange eours medley re.la y team placed .eventh while the Pirates' Steve Schwer was 12th in the .500 free in ~:03 9. tn the only other event. Joel Naret1wlch of Pasadena captured the 500 free in 4:41 0. The meet continues throu&h Saturday. • Frt4•1. ..... JO. 1'71 DAILY 'ILOT J7 Area Sprinters Sparkle In Final Dual Meets ...... (111 llf'\..-.\'' IWI VtOly V - l. S-v (LI l . Mee.""' ti.I M .-1r111, Area aprintara warmld. up for ne:d wttk'• leap prtlitnin&rl., b\ tJ\e ftnl1 day of dual meet track and field action with t0me clauy marU on aome fronta Thunday. 1• -1, lklMrt 11'\.~ tl l l, MM ti ). Time: It./ 116 -, l\lcl\trt (II L INll" (I) J, flull\lrtlrlll II~ l~~' 'r;:tl .tltllll 111 J, Mtrnf!!ffllll Ill 1. ... { ). l t : •J ·' ~m -. \$".(I) J. Jt!'llll• ti ) 3. McG...W•lf t.J -i . .Hrwa !•l 1. U9f\11'1 (Ll .J. NtlMft (L). .. ,11.w.: ·~ "~"!:' ' _..;. . •r•wtr <I J I. ICl•t•r!ftll" Ill 1 MUll'ltw1I oi.t .... , 4)·1111 te_l(a -I •• ,...,., (I) 1. MurntWlll {LI .J. Dun .. , ( ), l>llltflU: 1»-1 Fountain Vllley'• Phil Mus pulled off hi1 uwal dDuble 1orlnt win In U (1110) and D.D 1220) whllt allo .uehorln& a wln- nln& '40 rtl&y squad to a 44.0 clockitl& u the Bll'IW tinlahed out their Irvine lAque dual slate with a perfect t7.0l record in an &s-44 triwnph over vll!Un& arcbrivtl E4110n. ·~~ll,T'...:_ f: ,1ut Cll t. Wllltu<nll \,J l , Gtt1 tllJ, 11 : ~· II: v-. Ill • l l . "·' M -1o1iJiJ tlf 2, 'mf11 ll ) l. lr.w~ Cl ). Ht,"~~ f.~~ (I I t. A .. 11 ill') l. ll:llllll!'lllW ti.I. Ol~I~~: ,1~r111 (l'I l. RIM* tl'l l . MtlMt tl'I. H•,IJ"f.:_ +' C1=I Ill t. ,.., ti ) l. ilklllll ... '" J. Ollll•-: "•""" C..111 M.e {I)) tMI .... U. VltleY The Baron apeedJter wu &lven a run fer hla money by Edison'• Joe L&Ca.scla ln tM 100 aa the lalter wu juat a 1tep behind In 10.0. EltancL:. IOphom.ore Bruce Glruole upaet Corona del M&r'a Carlo TMU with a 1.1 wlnn!nc effort In their lon&-awalted duel but it wu to no 1vall u hoat Ccrotla e11ily won the Irvine match.up, 82-4$. Junior Rick Deamtt'I twin sprint vic- tory (10.1 , 23.1) wu atmoet enou&h as his Costa Meu. Muitano nearly dumped heavlly iavc~ hoat Santa Ana Valley bel<> .. be)ftl ed&ed. -· COM I" ·1 •t:J"' , ..... 1llO -I . Glr11ll• I t . 2. •II (~) 1. Mii• (Clo Tl.,,•: ••• nt -1. C. T•ll IC) 1. Ml .. lC) l.. J . T•ll (CJ, Tl"": ti., "° -, Ollflll Ill I. Cu fC) I. Gltl"ll Cl!. Tl"'t: tlA 110 -1. Ill-IC) l. 11.lllllfl"tlfl ·(C) l. Heyl t•l. '~:1:•.1 I -1. G~,,_ ICI t. H11,111 11) l.. SC"WllNll I !. 1m1: " ,, """1 -l . y fCI 1. M•1MrMll IC) J, Gr .. 11 l lt. Tl....,: :Jt.I 1» MM -I. Cll• If ) J. ICl!lt !Cl J. ltutid';I CCI, 1111\t: 1'.t 1'IO Ln -I. '•I• Ill 1. IC-y (Cl l.. (.111111 CC), Tl.,,.: I .I .. Olll Y -1. (....,.. 111111 Ml•· Tlf!W: .U.J Ml•• tl•v -1. cer-1111.i M1•. Tllftf : J :U.6 HJ -I. IClftt ((I 1. 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Jtey"" T l.!!;f1.f ..... •Mll l l ) 1. Mltftll fl) J. Sl...,tM (L,, ue - 1. Dllttl (II t. MHl•nl Ill J. Sl•Vltftl IL). 11 .... : 1: ... 1 ""! -I. lt~ckt ILi t. Wololl Cl) l. Ill .. ,_I\ Rv ! I 111111 M-). "J""' ~:tt.1 ('l4!'-fr,.:;;, 11S~ I (I ) t. SIMll'\ll Ill 3. ,,..,, ... 1111 MN -I. 111 (I.) 1. LtMrelll IL.) J. Vllll't Ill Tl'll': 14 • <it ij -l. Ul'l6rflll (Ll 2. ''" IL) J, ll:ltltr CL)1.T 1: tt.t -llY -1. I I Dlrtff. T:e; 16.1 Mii i .... -1. If 0.-.... lmt: , .I MJ -I. MMtu Il l t. Mii IL' r. M-!I I. ~tit.I'll! '-2 U -I. l)tW-Ill J. Rh' Cl ) l . Ntt'lllll .... ILi. O'J.1-'fl(I' »II H i/M"?° 1\ . .,.l'lllN"' (I!) L MtNelr (L) J. l"IN"I I l l. 1'1 -I. De•.,,Mff Il l 2. K1l1Jyi."1 (LI S. Lw!'ltll ··=· tlllla: 11..f.lo ... -,, •.• ~11111• Cll I. ti:tt11Yl1nl tLl I. tNI I . ..HM" U~t\'I ':"'!=: ·~·" ,m ,., ., ..,, .. TJIOO: 1 .. ~ '" ( ) t. •rtw1r (I ) s. UIMMm ILi. ' 111,-1 '• 8tttl• tLI 2. J ..... 1•1 J. ICIMttrm1n !Ll. 1...,.. I, TlloMl·J : l .. i'lllM Ill J, l1nt1111 (II J. Mlrrll 11 ). flli -'f. l'rk:k•lt ILi I. Wt .. r IL) l. H*lll tLl. Tl :11.1 (f1. T~.::.,-u!t Htll ... l LI t. w1 ... ri11 fl) J. 11i.11 11f LH -I. Nt/M" tl) I. Lfll'llNl1 ILi l . Wln1lllJ "ir,'I"'" 14.s Mty -1. L• -c 11 1: 1:J1., H ' ',-:-1-,HllNll (l) t. ~tt:~I. In l. A!Nlll9!1 ILi, t I I . .,.., SADDLEBACK ACE CHOOSES 49ERS Erie O\rltttnltn. a two-year llken· ferenet aeltttlon. at Saddleback COUeae. will play ba1ketball at Cal Stllt (l.oftl Baach) nert ... ton. The former San Clemente Miah ttar has accepted • tchola.raJ\lp to play fM coach Jerry Tarkanian's 4ttra. In two yeara under Roy Stev1ns at :Sad· dleback. Chri1tenJen (1-11) -1.1113 poinU, • t'iaucho rteord. He etrned AJl- Dtaert Conference hot10r1 in the IMA-70 1eat0n and wu Hllded to tht all· Mi••IM circuit team 1fttr the tt70.11 campaJfn. Baseball Standings Montreal New York Pitt.sburah St. LoWs CNe110 Philadelph.i• Nadolal Leapt £111 Dlvt1lol WMI Lott • • It 7 ll tn 11 11 I U I II llul DlYillol San rrucitco 17 5 Ood1en 11 11 Houaton 11 11 At11nta t Jl CUteinnati I 11 San Dieao 5 15 ,,..,.....,.. •-111 Mlo'llrll l 1, (Mette ' H-vn· 1. 11. Leul1 11 C!~CIMlll 4, Sift tlltll t """" 2. l'11'11Mlrt~ I Pef. ,Kl .•11 .521 .m .400 ,333 ,773 .IU ,560 ,llO .421 ,IS/I JI" ,,111(11<1 J, ,&tt1M1 f (If t11~l11•~1 OrllY .. IMI llt.flllll\llll, ....... ,.. ·- GB tll Ill • I •11 • 7 7\1 It l'Pllllllltlllll• !""'1 l·J! ,, Cfll-,,..,... .., I t" 01199 (l ... rl1 t.JI If 1'1111 .... 1"1~ (Jtfl- 1·1\, 111411t ......,, !SI....,. 2") et Allltftte (lollf!I .. 1·1), """' 1t11 'rt lldltl IMlrldMI a.u .t Clllcln""1 !Mtrrlt! •IL "1411t NN Vfrt.' (MCArlirfW .. II 9t M_,... <••lfflll 11-31. ft1t l'rl Miii""'" fl..,,..~ t ·ll M ''· LWll ICff ... ..... 1.11. "It"' AntorlcuLI .... Eull>Malto Wn Lelt Pc<. QI Aaltimort ti • .131 -It 7 .fll II Waahlniton II t .S7J 1 Daln>(t I I& .47f J New York 7 te .llJ • C1ev1laJd I I! .Ill I w .. r Dhi•Mtl Oakland ti • .917 Ariiel• u II .IU J Ktnau City " II .471 .. ,, Mlnnulltl • 11 .411! Ill MilW'aukee • 18 "" I Chiea10 7 I! .!IO 7 T11t,..,.I l•lti ••Ill-J, Olil .... ' CPl!•eff 1."Wtt111~t""' .a AMiii t, ClllWI•...,' Ml ........ If ... 1'tll, riff\ O!tly •-KllHulW. ., ... ,....._ CPl!UH fW.W •11 II Wlai'lf/111111 fJt....tr.1 1-1). "''"' MJMMtlt llCll! t•I t i ... tllll INHY 14), ,.., Mllw•'*• (ICl'\ll11tM .. t) .t Mlw Vent flCll"" 2·11. a1t11!Mff IDIMM l•tl I t r.-1 Cltll' IHtllf. Nn!I :Ml, """' Cltwel1111f IMtrt•" 9-ll 11 Ottl•M llM J.IJ, ··~ Delfotlf (C11MM11 N J 11 Allllllt IMW t .. ), , .. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HAltlOlt ILVD., COSTA MESA '46·9JOJ Stnlce an4 l'artt fer All lrnJ10rlad Cara ~"' lo4y She, for All Ca11 Oran1e County'• Llr1ut and Moat Modem Toy<>ta and Vol•• Dealer OYUSIAt IU.IYllf IPICIALJSTI 100 -\~~~)ft}! :Jlrr,:..Tii. CMMf tl l. Tlftw: 16]" llO -I. A6.1-Cl l 1. :f!rr!Mr H .. l I. tit Ml (LJ •11111 S rwo ( . Tl : It ~Sf:v~ U .. l 2. J!1rt..-"I en's. ~ti.we-., ,11~};.~·l~~l!t tL) 1. Gw11•lM IL) l. H•~•rr• • 9 ~H 1- 1 'r· f ICW.r.ttll IL) 1. Sllfrll ILi I. ........ ... ). ml: ·14.a .. '"'r-1. L~~ ... ~Pl. Tlo'M; D.J Mru_.,;;. llJ~lt/Qi'M:°~ lLI l. OMt fLI .l. S. .~u -L ,"', rrl111r cl1 t. Sr'l'Mft tL) J. GorM11 tll. it.Me; .J MllVM;-.J· NIM IL) I. ioMfwj1r-CL) !)I tti!N, oi!~M.: ';,!"'-'" (LI I. Sll\lfY Il l l. ·-(I). II~ n> JJSH( ..~. cm.~,1.111s.""fr£ ''· 1 2. Jc'R~',:t 1i1 a. cJJP.-.r'(11.'1t:.V: j~l I. MclCMI'-(II l. Ull -1. Afllll" !I I I.,,.,.,,_ (S) 1. W1,_, ll), 'flml; .$1.0 ' ... -l. Jrt•tll (I ) 1. C11r<l1 ($) l. ,,.._,., (I), "'°": J:M.I ' Mlle -I .• .,..,. ti ) J. •· l"llfl" (l l l. l"llte Cl). 1,..1: •:e .o 'fl~U, -I. Sledt fll 2. S"'ll~ CS) .1 ll"IWll 111. ""' o:oa:.t '.!"Tr.M .-1! Nl!llc fl) 2. Wfl19'1 (fl I. I . l"tllf' ..... 1J. MT\H -1. 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It.Ml' fl' . 0 lllMe: 14'-!! ~ Ml1111!1 V II ,;'\', IUI l'eltlllll !00 -1, Wflfr (M" 2. H .... 11 .. 11'1 J, ICr...,. (M). Tl~: 18.1 m -I, HvtPI• (l'J I. Lotl•o 11'11 I. ICl...,1 !Ml. Tl,.,.: J4., Me -I. M11tlleft (Ml t. ........,_, {Ml J, L.lt!N (Ml. l lmt: 1:2'.I IU& -•' ~·••jl!tlr IM! J. Tlllffte• (Nil .( Cl 1111111 I . 1..,..: : t.4 1~ HH -1. llmtr l'J 1. W1t11'1 fM) l. Ill• 11'1, Tl,.,.: ".J i r: -> r ur\l!tlrl (Ml 2. W""1" IM) l. ~ I J, ,,,., ,,. fllV -1. l'eot Ill. l l-: J:•.t -I. L•dl'.IY ~Ml 1. llillMllCllfl" (Ml l. A ,..., Cl'I. Hllll!t: )-11 ~ -1. Ml lVI (M) J. MtmlClltr (M\ l . C-lwtlll ,, °"''~' 11.ai,, V -1. M6r-(Ml t. WeWr (M), Ne "'IN. Mtl4111: M ,,. -I. IC1"'1k (I') 1. M11111 (M) I. a1N1 !Ml. OlttlfloU: M-lfl Ol.cw -I, Mt Gui,. fl') t. W•IT'lffl tM) I. V.,._ IM). Ollttt'ICI: Ut·t\.t Mtttlell Vltll ~I 1111 1191fft111 100 -1. Ml•"' 11') 1. ll:llev Cl'I t. Hlfd\Mr (M). Tl.,,t: lt.1 I• -I, Rlfto/ fl') t. HNllll (II) J. NI~ (M), Tl..,.: 11,7 '61 -I, N-!Ml J. LldlWllllf 111111 J, Grtloe IM) .. Tl"'f: l :!t.t 1220 -). MtllMI !l'l 2. H-.11 !Ml l. Ll"'llll (I'), Tllftf: 1·•.1 · ' 121 LH -1. •••Ila CM) I. •VO'dllrt IM) l. •Wtr( "!..fl,,,.: 14., 1tJ letn -I. "oofl!Jn. Tl-: .... H,, Ill;",,_, Meet~ fl') 2. Wlrlll (M) J. IMtll fl'), .'~' -1.,Tlll4fl (,) 7. Rll~ !ll'I J. •vritmete IMI, 1Si'111e1: 1·1Vt SI" -I. Hl(-h' (Ml J. Jel!"Mn (M) 1. YMW' II'), C1!1!111C1 : O·t DUN LIWll APRIL Sl'ICIALS COROLLA 1971 .,ICIAL $, 171 VOLVO UllD CA• lnCIAL 51295 lt6t TOYOTA COIONA H.T. l&M. 4 1,1.4 .. tYCMOI 1) - I l I I I ' I --~ ,. . ~, .. · , ' . • J.• DAILY PILOT ' fr ldQ, April 30, 1971 WHAT'S IN-- OUTDOORS? . ' Gauchos Zip Past Owls, _9-2 Chapman Spike Post Set; Polo Aces to Pac-8 Sclwo"ls · Bob ft1aimbourc. 28, head and fourth Wednesday each ceecls golng to the alhletlc track and fleld coach at San-month at the VWage Inn ln fund. Tipoff is at 7:30. . ' Frt'lh water angltn who intend to fisb the openin1 of the mp Sierra trout season Saturday, can expect fair to good fish- ln.1 at all lhe lakes and streams lying below 9,000 feet. The mild winter and early thaw should have put the trout into a &ood feeding mood. Guides forecast excellent fishing for Crowley, Bridgeport, and the Twin Lakes area. Blake Jones of Bishop, a veteran gulde, ls opUmiStlc about some big browns being taken out of all thrte of the more popular lakes. AI\ 11-t:azht losing streak ca1nt to an end for Saddltback College's baseball team Thurs- day as the Gauchos stopped vialUng Cilnl!, &-2, in Mission Conference play. Caach Doug F'ritz'a Gadchos parlayed aix Citrus erron wkh some fine defensive play Into thtir fourth victory of tht 1971 campaign. Saddleback has lo!\ 23. tiag9 High School in Garden Balboa. For f U·t t be r in-Marina coaches Grove for tht past three formation, contact Carella at Henigan, Dave Okura, Jim year.a, will be named head MM35Q; Eileen Newman at Stephens, Jim Coon, Ron Byrd spike mentor at Chapman 96U950; or Betty Nott at 842-and Frank Infuslno will' be College, effecDllvA•lLYin Pl~ 1834. challenged by senior Jet· tember, the termen. And ht feels the ave:rage 1ize of stocked rainbows in the: lakes will be larger than in tht past few years. Birchem C&nyon, just below She.rwin Grade, will produce excellent stringers for large browns for anglus familiar with the are:a. Weight limits in three trout are common for Otis high· Ix productive but inaccessible area. The: weather outlook for the opening weekend calls for clear skies with 10me wind and the early morning temperatures in the mid thirties. Anglers should come prepared for any kind of weather change and all vehicles should carry chains. 1be. Department of Fish and Game has already started its stocking program for all roadside streams and lakH from Lone Pine to Bridgeport. There are plenty or camping areas available at. all the more popular fishing grounds and motels are not yet booked up for the opening. There are rental lrailers in tbe Bishop, Mammoth and June Lake areas for anglers who do not want to slay in motets but want protection from any sudden changes in the weather. The trailers. will be spotted close to the lakes and slreams at tht renters request. The Ra inbow Club of Inyo-Mono Counties will hold their 51st annual trout contest. The contest will start. Saturday morning and conclude Saturday evening. All anglers catching trout on opening day should enter their fish in the contest to become eligible for awards In 1.11 categories. * * * HEFTY BASS NUMEROUS The now famon1 Saa Dle&o Lilt• conll.aot to gjve 11p bll Florida l•rgemoutb bass. The lloJ lakes currently are Otay, Su'tberland and El Capitan, wllllcli .U 1ave up bass in excess of tt pc:M1nd1. Otay ia rated the btst for big bass •• tbt brome~ bttks are beln& caught 011 crayflsll. Smithwick Water Gaters are "U>' bot plag1 al the likes. Vall lake Is provtdtn1 an1lert with Jots of action on pan nab azid bass fishing: Is on the llptWlnl followl.a1 tbe cold weather and wind. A sb:-pound. oa,.unce nortben ba11 fell victim to a Bomber plu1 over the weekend. Big Bear Lake 11 slow due to cold weather and 1tron1 winds, but a few hardy anglers are pkking up, small trout from shore 11sln1 TNT and Ylmon e1gs. Small bass are llltlll'lg in shallow water, but should be returned to tile lake to grow up. Lakes Sherwood, Casltaa and Cacbuma continue to offer good fls1W11 for trout, bats and blue1D with catflslt listed as only fair. Wann weather wW help flsbln& ta all tbe lakes LI Southern California, Including Irvine and Elsinore. * * * HIG \\'HITES HIGHLIGHT DEEP SEA PICTURE Whitt sea .bass have taken over the Coronado Islandl and aalt water anglers are picking up some very big fish. Ont of the largest whites to come out of k>cal waters in a Jong lime was picked up last week by Bill Harvey of Westminster who weighed in a 71 pound, lf>.ouncer. A number of other large whites in the 35 to 40 pound class were also tta>rdtd. The absence of the more colorful yellowtail at the Lslands is puzzling to the skippers. In most yun: the yellows have started to show long before now, bul dirty water and cold surface temperatures are respons· Ible for late arrival. Jt could break loose any time now, a11 other conditions are right. Locally boats out of Davey·s Locker, Art's Landing and San Clemente are fishing for bass with a few bonito and other sur· face fish showing rip in the sack!. Fishing locally is still rated as very slow. The outer islands are the best bet. but action at Catalina and San Clemente is a!IO spotty. although a few nice white sea bass and yellowtail have been taken by party boats running out ot Umg Beach. Good bass and rock cod fishlng are the prime targets ot boats heading ouUide. * * * MEXICO FISHING GOOD In the company of Anton Garnier and bis brotbtr CamUle, both from Newport Beach, tbls writer enjoyed some fantuttc salt water flsblo1 at Punta Cblvato, located across the bay lnm Pi1ulqt. The llottl on Puta Cbl•ato is accessible oaly by air and _boat azid offers anglen greal flsblng all year round. Our party'• catcb Included lots of yellowtaU, sierras, lf'OUptr HI bass and dorado. There were. plenty of rooster fish ln the bay but were uncooperative as tbey played acroas th.t 1orface of lbt very prolific fisbin1 grounds. Camille Garnier picked up tht only roost.tr fish on the trip, • nice 41-poondtr. Tbe best fishing wa1 ck>se to the off shore bland• over submerged reefs where al time the actkln was unbtllevahle. This writer saw more yellowtan in lbe water at one time, than lie lla1 seen In more than !O years of flsblng off our iouth coastline. The best, enticer for tbe party were Straggler jigs ca1l into cbumln& ldtools of feedln1 fish. JI&• accounted for more than 95 perttnt of aU tht 11111 caugbt on tile lw• 4ay trip. InflN'ftllUon on Panto Cblvato filhln1 arMt al.I other flsblnc In Mexico can be obtained by 1lving "Whitey" a caU at An&ltrs' Center ta Newport Btacb, 173-7091. L A, St. Louis Clash In Cup Socce r Final The Jong awaited Western !tOCcer final of the U.S. Na.. tlonal Open Cup tournament. takes place Sunday when Los Angeles faces St. Louis at Rancho Cienega S ta d i u m . Rodeo and Santa Barbara in Los Angt:les at 2 p.m. Both cilit:s won their right to Utt final by winning their re•pective divisions, u wtU as the.tr re:gklnal playofJ1. Repre...,Un& Los Anstla will be the well known San Pedro Yugoslav•. winne:rs of the Pacific Coast crown. They conquered StaUle 1·1 in a two 1.ame total goa.11 1 e r i e s , played Ja5t Much lt. The mldw.eet ii repmented Courts Closed 'lb! Orange (',oa.lt Colle1e ftnnls courts will be closed to tbt 1ener1l public S#Jturday because of 1 toumame:nt. by St. Louis Hamm·s, tiurpris- ing 1-0 winner last Sunday over Chicago Sparta in tile -y,·indy city. Sunday's program at Rancho Stadium will start. al 11 :30 a.m. with a California State Cup first round game betwttn Club Leon of Eaat Los Angeles, tangling with Slavia Club ol San Pedro. The National Optn Cup battle bttween San Pedro and Sl. Louis will bt youth and speed v e r s u s experienced 5mli-Pf'O$, and eoccer fan1 can be assured of an t.lcltlng <On- t.est from start to Unish. The winner will be crowned Western Olvlston champion and will hos! tbe U.S. Grand Final at ill home city against the Eastern winne:r for the ti· Ue of United Stites Optn Cup Champion of 1971. 1t is 1late:d for Suncla)'t May 11. learned today. Donke11 Cage Tiit Th• lattec Is 8 heavy ,,_talmbourg will take over Marina Hi"b's lettermen's favorite. the head reins at Chapman 11 d 1 from Ed Keswick, who will club is sponsoring a do11key Admission ls St for a u l3 o;,tt111o111M II)' Th•Alfr.O H•rJ: Com~PJ. '°Proof .100•4 c;,r.i~ Ntulf1r s.irn. Saddleback: scored all of its runs in the first five Innings. continue on as athletic dlrec-v·k· • "th under 12.-l.__;ba~s~k•;l~ba~l~t1;ame~~M~ond~a~y~n~iglll~_Ja~nd~~7~S:::c•:•:~:_:ror:_~c=hU:d~r:••J:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: tor and as a track aide. at the 1 inrs gym wi pro- Jn tht first. aingles by Gary Jackson and Eric Christensen. a walk lo Jim Campbtll and a wild pitch ran the sp>rt to 1-U. Tbt Gauc.hol got two each in the second and third framea. A bead track coach at r~ater Dei for two years prior to coming to Santiago, Maim- bourg still holds s c h o o I records in the 100 yard dash ~-----------------------------------------! (9.6) and pole vault (14.0) al Garden Grove Hlgh, from where he gr11duated in 1960. Singlts by Bruce Boyle and Howard Hoyt and B o b Black.lidge's double plated two In the second and two walks, coupled with a pair of Owl miscues 1C1Jrtd two in the third. Steve Smith's triple and Christensen's aacrifice fly ran the score to &-2 in the fourth and single111 by Steve Hazan, Hoyt and Blacklidge, two er- rors and a one-base blow by Christensen plated thrte in the filth. Blacklidge went the distance on the mound, striking out eigbt and walking JO. He rtetived excellent defensive support from his teammates with the. Gaucbos cutting down a pair of Citrus rallies ln tht first two ir.nings with double plays. Saddleback has two more lilta !tit on It.a schedule, traveling lo ruversidt Tuesday and boaUng Chaffey Thursdily. Cllrn ftrllrillt IC•m•, "' ,1 0 o o '~""'· .. • • 0 lltt. lb l '• • • Wlenekt. rt I • • W••!!J!!! If ti • o ~~'di1~· Cd ! f l : -~lft,lb 2. 0 0 Oth!,lb JOO I WHiie!. ill l 0 1 0 ~1111-.,11. ' !: : : L~=.-o tlO 'i11111 ll 1 • .... llNC-~) r II' fM JKI<-. "' l ' ' • 5mlltl. c i l 1 ~:~="-.. ~ 0 : i Ml!ltn. 1/ • 1 0 0 HIT.,,. lb l t , 0 kY-111. cf l I o H""'1.rt 4 120 "1d•'!lo!H. • ) I l ' flt•ll l,ltl• Jc9'1i '1 IMhtfl ' .. ~-{' 1()B 1~ ::::1·11 t McEwen's Dragster To Debut Fountain Valley·1 Tom (Mongoose) McEwen w i 11 CW.but his Hot Wheels dragster In the Big Four Funny Car Oiampionshlps Saturday at Orange County Internal.tonal Raceway. EliminatKins are penciled in for 6 p.m. A total or 32 qualifiers v.·ill be vying for the manufac. turer's title and $10,800 in cash and contingency money. Four different m a k e s (Chevrolet, Dodge, Ford and Plymouth) will be vying on the 31-race card to try and determine the manuracturer's title. The top eliminator of the meet will earn the driver's championship and $2,000, with the balanct o! the purse-being distributed among tht losers aceordin& to their relative progress in the five rounds Gr Polo Stars Sign Appan:ntly waler polo slats Greg Loltz of Corona del Mar and Ron Misiolek of Costa ·Mesa wlll be content with competing against each other for another four years. Loilz signed a Pacific Eight conference Jetter of intent to perform at Stanford Universi- ty while Misiolek, the Irvine League's back.stroke titllst in addition to his polo talenls, has cast his lot with UCLA. Tht only other Orange eoon. ty athlete to pen his name to a recent Pac-8 letter of intent is Anaheim Hiib baseball player Dave This. Asher Triumphs Barry Asher of Costa Mesa won tbt Professional Pacific Coast Bowlers tournament at Champion Lanes last weekend w,ilh 6,355 pins and a bonus of 550 to give him a total of 6,90!!. °For his victory. Asher won $1,000 first priit with Tim Harahan of Canoga Park se· cond with 6,752 pins, good for $S25. •Lamar Keck, tw1rtime win- ner of the West Coast Match Game Eliminations at Kona Lanes. finished ninth with 6..148 pins for $240 in prize money. S1olm Meet Set 'The Huntington Be a c h Aquatic Club will hold its third annual 1 p r i n g invltaUonal swim meet Saturday and 'Sun- day at Marina High. At least 500 competitor! ranging ln age from five to 17 years of age wtll converge on the meet from all sections of Orange County. There will be l50 different relay and individual events. Skier• Meet The Costa Mesa Golf and C<>untry Club will be lhe scene of tbt first spring·summer ac· tivity for lht Orange County Ski Club Wednesday night in the form of a rock band dance. Jot Carella. president, and his group of officers have also plaMed a waler skiing trip to the Colorado River on May 14· 111: a trip to Rosarita Beach in Baja Califomia, Mexico June 4..fi ; and other activities such as scuba and skin diving. Sier· ra back packi1g, fishing, camping, volleyball and pic- nicking. Informal gatherings have been planned for tht second Baseball Standings eliminations. MllllON (ONl'l[ltl:HCI Dtfending champion in the " L r •• C"'"" 1 4 I l '1 Big Four mttt is Anaheim's s," &trNf'dh10 1 5 o • Grou....ont ' ' 0 ! Dave Beebe, who'll return in a Cl>•l1•Y ' • o "-'• ~--d b P11c••11r 5 1 e 1 new """'tit ....... gtr OY.'Tlt y 111vu11o1e l • 1 r1 Fresno's Ed Wills. Last year ~~vg,~~~clltm•lon'h" 1' e ' Beebe was victorious in the ntu1'1111•Y'• 5c.rft S6d<ll1~rt 9, CllN\ J Dodge Challenger owned by sin &ern ... o11..., s, 1t1v1r•ld1 l bis brother Tim. f.,~1~.:.1::..·~·;:r~31, 4 Among the other top en· "1.,..,1,,. :rt"r:~. G- lranU In the fitkt along with ciiru• ,, i=-.~''' 01"'" McEwen and Beebe art Whit· s1dd1_c_ 11 A1v1r11,,. tier's Richard Siroonian, Jim ~~:':'~:W,~' .~~~,;:~~~ Dunn of LI Mirada and Sush SOUTH C0A$T COMl'IJllNCl Matsubara of Los Angeles. Fu!l•'1&n ~1 L4 •• Saturday's will be ~~"'~: Anionlo U : ,:~ Matsubara·s first competition sin 0 1"'0 ~w • t ~·· h. b th O•"'f CO.II 1 ' !''I since 1s eras at e 1uperna-i:" o "° ~ ,, t't tionals al Ontario Motor n•• ""' 'Til••IMl•t'• k~ 1' 10 Spttdway last November. Ctrruo1 '·./~~·:':.~ Exhibitions in between fun-•ull••'°"s:l~~~'• "O't-ny car rounds will be ajven by s..n 01"° iM•• 11 °''"'' c .... , 111 a Ml. Sin Anl&tlle 1t 51n OlffO UI motorcycle expert Ken Browo-;;:c;::'"":=;;";;;' =======,I of Costa Mesa and whetlsla..-.1 ding artist Oluck Poole. The third aMut1l American P.foton' AMC Olallengt Day cwnes to OCIR on Sunday with lime trials btginnina at t a.m. and eliminations slated for 1:30 p.m. GOLF TIPS IAW k9re IM...... I .... U..rt .. _ -,..,Klk• II tltt , •• NEWPORTER INN 3 PAR GOLF COURSE 11 .tl wttll tWI ., ...t 4sp THINKING OF A POOL? 17(; CAL L 772-6866 J,, ,, ... ,, o ••• ,~t., pools 1237 S. BROOKHURST, ANAHEIM Mercury Comet. ' Thes2400 car that grows on you. Maybe you think looks aren't so important in a small economy car. But maybe you haven't taken a close look at Mercury Comet, the better small car. For example, wilh a full I 0 cubic feel of luggage space, it sort of looks like this when you compare it with some other, small cars. And with an optiooal 210 horsepower VS engine, it tends to look a lot like !his. But with a 4-0oor option and extra roominess inside, it looks more like this. Until you go to park it. Then, with a wheelbase of I 03 to 110 inches and opliona! power steering, it looks p(elty much like this. (This is how ii looks to gas station operalors, 100.} Gel your Lincoln-Mercury dealer"s deal on Comet, 1he better small car, Joday . You'll like the· looks of it. Comet. Under $2400 111trs. suggested retail price. See your Uncoln·Mercury dealer for his price. 1"9 • • • • • " • • • • t f· i San C"lemente Style of Piny _Exemplified by Anderson By PHIL ROSS ,It .... MIW Hit SMiff It's another one or thost low scoring titfa . You ,.,,.w, the kind .tht San Clemente High baatba 11 team It coruitantly a:etting ltself in- \lolved In. Tbe contesJ ls scoreless and It's the Triton.s''·turn to bat in tbt hottom of the sevtnth in- ning acairuit league-leadtna: Tustin. Up to the plate slrtl11a Craig Anderson, whose e x t r e m e cooJ, poise and collectiveneu art: effective in belying hls 17 yean. Boom. On the first pitch of the frame , the Triton leadoff batter is bopped in the ribs by the Tustin hurler. He trots down to first base. Two pitches later, after drawing three thro"'' at- tempting to hold him lo the bag, Anderson gel!! a decent jump and pilfers second witA- out much sweat . On the ensuing plate of· fering, the ball eludes the Tustin catcher and the ~II, 160-pound Anderson ialls easi- ly Into third as a result of a passed ball. He scores on an infield roller to the right ride by mate Mark King and. wham- mo. the Trltons have a 1-0 triumph and ~e knotted for the loop leadership with this same Tustin nine . A hypothetical case, indeed. But it's one of those close calls that have typified the nonnal brand of cliff-hanging FV Seeks Soccer Program By RON EVAN~ Of Ille Dalll' l'li.t S!eff Some 38 high schonls throughout the CIF Southern Section nfficlally compete in the sport of soccer. which seems to have taken an overwhelming grip e\·erywhe.re but in the United States. However.· CIP 1 o cc er membership could s we 11 slightly to include a-39th mem- ber by next fall if 11 Fountain Valley High students get 1 break from the voters in June. Si x teen-year-old Baron junior fi.tatt Lynes. t h e organizer of the Fountain Valley High School Soccer Club, says, "if the tax over- ride election passes in June, we've signed up for officially competing in the CJF program for the next school yea r." But until the Baron grouo doe5 become an official ClF participant. it i~ content ·with playin2 free lance soccer I against make-shift teams from other schools and clubs. At the moment, Fountain Valley's soccer unit has a 1-4-1 seasonal recnrd with the lone win and tie coming against a similar outfit from Corona dCI Mar High. The four losses were ac· crued in combat \\'ith Corona and against separate club teams from Golden West College, Santa Ana High and Santa Ana Valley High. Lynes feel s it was easy. to field a fairly representauve soccer eleven at Fountain Valley in spite of the virtual un-American qualities of tbe sport. "One thing is that a lot of sports are basically American." be says. "But we've gotten a lot of kids interested In soccer who normally Yl'OUldn't be involved or interested in high school sport!." 'l1le main reason? "Well," Lynes !ays, "these-guy~ are doing something they'd never be doing without a soccer club. "Alsn. all nf the team members (including Lyne! himself) have extensive bacltgrounds in soccer." The club membershio in-clude~ fnur Chicanos. a_ Dutch studerit. a Hungarian student and lv"o Scots and three An&le>-Americans. Add LyMs, "there·s also a Yug03lavlan In school who v•t'd like In have come out. But he has a parttlme job nnw." A junior 'A'ho 's been in California for lwn years, Lynes cot hi! baptism-of.fire In IOC!Ctr in hi11 early grade !K:hool years in Ne w a r k . Delaware. Be also played the spar! In Washington. D.C., when there t:irlsts • club l)'l)e Prt>RT"am similar to one which Lvnes ha.• 11otn~ al Fountain Valley. 'nit Biron club. will renew action aas\n!il I t s Corona rounterimrt Ofl May 15 at UC. lrvhtt. CRAIG ANDERSON diamond action which has prevailed during the' 'last two seasons WKler coach Marshall Adair at San aemente. And of course it's no real secret that Craig Anderson has been pe.rhaps the biggest spoke in the wheel which has rolled to constant Triton suc- cess in hardball endeavors. An all-Orange Coast area guard in basketball who also Jl4ndled the punting and split end chores for the Trilons' 5-4 football squad. Anderson is rated as the Crestview League's premier shortstop by Adair. Actually. that's quite a mouthful since last year's first-team all-league shortstop. El Mod'ena's Rim Carlson. is back for his senior season. Adair says, "As far as I'm concerned, Craig"s the best shortstop I've seeo in the league In two years. There's no question In my mind that he's a better shortstop than Carlson. "Don't get me 1v r on g . Carlson is a very good Pilot Pete Sez : ballplayer . Craig ( s e c o n d team . aJl.Jeague in I 9 7 0) !lhould've been the first team shortslop last season . "Carlson was just extremely hot with the bat," Adair adds. Speaking or sizzling sticks, Anderson is currently wielding a batting average in the vie- inlty of .400 and Ad.air fore- sees him climbing a[¥lther 50 poiAts before the season con- cludes. The former El Rancho High and Cerritos College hotshot adds, "there's just no end to the things which Craig can do. "1~e has the most overall potential and ability of any player I've ever roached and he plays shortstop like he was born there. "In fact, can only remember two errors he's made alt season." Anderson is also rated as the best baserunner in a San Clemente camp knee-deep in &ood running talent. "He's our best stealer and gets the best jump," says Adair. "There are probably a C<>U· pie of kids who're faster but Craig is just very smart and knows what lo do out there." Anderson's father, a con- struction executive, is slated to move the family to the Ea.St Bay area after school is finish- ed. Although Adair figures that his star perfonner would fit right in at a place like Cal Stale (Hayward ). he adds that Anderson would be able to cut the mustard almost anywhere he ventures. both academicaUy and athletically. "In addition to being a gifted athlete." ,.t.dair says, "Craig is a student leader with about a 3.5 grade point average." So, it seems, wherever Crail! Anderson goes. success will foll ow. BETTER HURRY Set Your Cap for a Bar9ain DAILY PILOT 2-for-1 Day At An9el Stadium Sunday, May 16 at 1 p.m. Th• DAILY PILOT will 9iv1 you o~• fr•• 1t1l for 1v••Y 1dj1c•nf 111t you r111rvt lo 111 lltt C1lilorf'it A"91l1 pity th1 Milw1uktt l r•wtri. 2 TICKETS FOR $3.50 or $2.50 You tin r111rvt twG ttlh or !ht .. holt b1I! p1rk. Simply 9•1 your p1rty to9elhtr now tf'd mA il !ht orcltr blink b1l11w with che ck tr mon1y orcltr (110 c11h. pl111t ! '"cl hutry. D11cll;.,, lo•' •••I r111rv1tiG111 it 5 P·"'· 011 Th~ncl1y, M1y 6. Bring a Busload ... 2-for· 1 offer good for groups, too • Uttle League teams • Sunday s,hool classes • The office gang • Your neighborhood BUT YOU MUST ACT NOW r -~-;:"~ ::-. :-:.:,:,~.:-1 (2 . ..,., ........ .,., I or-.. c ... t D•llr Piiot I C/O ''Mk Senlc• Dt,t; .I.I 1 , 1 ' lJO W, a., Strfft, C11t• M1M, C9.11f, t2•11 I ._. ... &kecb ,.,e.~ ..... ·•·ltt DAILY PILOT I I I PllASl Pl INT 1-, ................................... · 1 I ~":: ............................................. . .--,., ••••••••••.•••••.•••..... Dote ·••••··•··•·• ( I ~ ·: ·;~~ ·~· ~~ ·4· •. ~ .. ~: ·,·~ ·l~l~I~· ~~ . .,11~;:; ~~~~ I I "'9 , ... , ... M '" ,,..., .,.,.1 ,_..Ml .. en. tll ...,.; ~, « tllt M., 1' A._ "· Mllwe11llff '"" 9t •-I I ...,._ s..I.., ht ffCll tk•et Jttlnl"-H, I wtll ,..1 .... .;. ......... ,._fr-N DAILY PILOT, I_. SJ.IO/SZ,101 I ICtrti. .... rklen. fMl--.4 h S •• , , , ... It peyMfft +tr Wf t11t ""'"" itf tkklfft I Nff 19411-r.4. I 11effnt.M I tk'9tl •lft .. Witt t'I .. .,. M911. I 111Mnt""4 Htert <•I W t :::-.. If·~ .... ~.,~= tl~tt. - Friday, .. prH 30, 1971 DAILY ~LOT The A41UJ!d Pal mer Method College, Prep Net Results STRIKE SAND FIRST, TURB SECOND For Orange Coast Area Some aolfcrs don't know wbcn lD contact the sand oo bunker shots and the turf on shots from gra:,s. When in a trap (illustration J I) you wiU normally want to ~'Wing the dubhead under the ball so th1l it flies out on a cushion of sand. Therefore, 1ry lo contact the sand behind the ball. Exceptions to this rule are on very long sand shots and on shots when the ball is buried or pluaged in the sand. Norinally from arass (illustration #2) you should meet the ball and then the turf. This insures :igainst sticking yo ur club in the around ~chi nd the ball: Simpl y memorize the words. ":,and first, turf ~c· ond," ).nd you'll never forget the advice I've given ' you today. •ti: ,,,, HAl'L"'-'""-.. General's Best Jet Jet-Airll Get all these exclusive Jel·Aire II features: Twin treail traction design. Long.mileage Duragen tread rubber. Curve Control shoulder· design. OR Vt<tflY ""'""'1'"'" nn 111 11«11 o\R• . ...... &~rM fW I loll l-6. WOf1 f·I. IOSI ..... -H Scftroll fW) lif<t 1·1, WOii 6•1, IGI! M. won 4.(1 C"°I !Wl IOS! M , WO~ .. 1. 1011 ].,f, •-4 W•l!ft !Wl IO!ll •.a, won 1.e. lot! 1·1. won 1.5 l>Mltlt• Grtnl)a\l<lft '"" s.tohn !WI kt5l •·I. •· 1. won 6-l, 6-1 Job.....,,, tnd l<•OYer 1W) lctl 5·1. woo ,.~, 6.J. •·l V1rlll~ Cotll M .... Ito\<) l(ll\111 e111ncl• Slnt1tl ·EndlltY !C) ..,SI lq" MllfOlf I'\ ,., Ott. Wlll< !El 6-J. dtl. 511111011 E 4-), def. HomtlltaO lEI ·a.1 S1>1tr (Cl !IN Mtuon lE) J.J. "''· Wiii< l£1 6-(l, dfl. SlonlM (E) H , Ott, Homtslfl(t 1•1.•> Cttter CC 11 flt MIHM IE! fHo, loll fo Wiit -IE) 4'6. lml IO $l1n!M !El H . losl: lo Homt>lttO (El J.6 C1rrlco tC! !Of.I In Mtuon IE! 74. lo1l lo Wlilo; tEl 1-4, Ott. Sl1n1on (El .. 3. lotl lo HomHtttO CEI l..a TENNIS BALLS Gener•I lllem1J High visibility yellow ten- balll5 in vacuum peck- ti RES e•n. A COAST GINllAL sp1c1•L OfF-1•1 ,,a """'-r"°' I ·.---..::•• 600113 F.l.T, 1.71 WE HAVE BOAT TRAILER TIRES EXPERT WHEEL BALANCE ,_ ... "ICll't"" tnd 11'\C" !Cl 119d G.•Yr>flf' •l"ICI W-!El l·I, -1 .. h IO!ll IO Ml:ltrl!IOll -11.,....,11 IEI 44. M G~• •lld kHMn cc~ 1os1 to Gtvnor •1111 Wtdll !El .... 14; Niii It ""°"'hon •f!ii llU&Hll ,Cf.J W,. l-6 . JuRler \l•nltw Ct•lt ""'' (11•) lll•l &st .... 51nt•u ll<'r (Cl l~fl TO Htllt1 4El , .. , IMI to Mc()ulllt IE) 1-6 llltt tCI llllt to N•ll•t (El 1-6. dflt M•O••lfft IFJ 6-1 Grol""' IC) lo"1 I" Ounbt(~ <El 1..f, 10"1 ln fl•m•• IE\ 1"" tt=ort !Cl lo.ti ·to Otrnbtdo 4EI l..f, lot! lo Stmft (I') 7..a _, ... lv•ln~ •nd fl•lllth !Cl IGll "'lttnd•! • ..., 5tw••~ IEI Ml clil!I. Ro•t tnO En~1a• !Fl 6·1 " Mve•• tnd " MYe" (Cl !le<t 1(111<111 tncl s.tw1v1 IE! 1·1; lctl lo Vt!"lh I•!-IM\'tl !Jl:ol SA VltleY ll"'ltl Orttw>od !FJ wort ... 4. i·I. ~.ct, i·l A""'°"' tEI ""'' i-41 "'fW> 6-11 6-J ~.! lllce tE! ''"' 1~: won,., ... , .... .._ \Yllsan (E l ~, 1.6: won •l. i·I. 1-t """" Pde• ,,,., Mckln!>tY !E! ,., •• 1-4; WO'\ 1'4. •L ,.,. AnctertOll 11111 Htmil!Otl !El 10$1 1..f. J-4: won t--.l. •l. E411Mt Jr,;1r 1~:"~: VIiie• Slfttlfl Pr!•rwn t"l w°" f>..J "' F"rU111<" ~El lo\I ,,.,.,..on 6·l !!Inc-!Ef lo1• •·6: """',,., llll< I El Iott I .. ; won 6-4 ~ltl H11n1t• tnd siew•i.on _,, 6·1, "'· H11q tnd flOO<nt• won '""· 1..r. LllVlll (IS\~r'il~J Vilt"Cll Sllltlfl fl"°"ll (l~ WOii ..... 1·1. i ·I, 1·1 fl•nv h!H ILl -1 6·•, .. 0. i•l, 6·1 flrorh~r!on (L) 1011 J.I. S·I; won l·I. .. , J1 v Ill won 6-1: lo•r 1).6. '°'· l·I .. Doulolll . $!tt.r-llfl110-lt1 (Ll won 1·1' lost S·1, " '· J1c1rte•,.J1CDl»on (Ll ""'" i·'· l·O; .... , , ... , ... Ju"ltt Vt"lfy l11u"1 •••ch 1111 011 v•1t11cl1 ll~t•u Pt••"°' (Llwon 6-1, 6-), i•J, 6-11 'l"tn•lr!'dl { I ""on 1-4. 6-J; IOsl IM, O· DISC BRAKE RELINE Cfront Onlyl INCLUDH' only .N~ .... 1.0,,1 b •• k, p•cl• •• ·s ln•p1,1 c1!iptll i nd rotors ••• Rtp,..,k inn•• & o"ltt front wh11I l:t11 ri11111 ''. l111p.,i ... , t~lt, brtkt linjn91. 3 FOR $198 (:Jilyf, o~, Sp1ci1!i1h JUST $250 Pr1d1io11 8•1tnc• 8o+h ''""' w,,.,, ' ' . . . ... U.S. INDY MAG WHEELS $9900 l'OllD-Cllfll-Jll YMOUT1't-DAHUM-TOYOTA B·HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for 'I• ton· Cartiper1 and Pick-up1, 11ightly higher. -FRONT END ~ALIGNMENT LIMITED ~ 4"*'"" CWl!ftlll Crooked wheels rob your car of TIME maximum performance, ride, ateer4 SMALL CARS & IMPORTS D•t1un--Toyot•- Opel-P'l1t Radial , Tir!! GE~ERAL JET RA DAN 600~1 l 560~1 J 600.13 510~1) WHITEWALL TIRES s13~~[. CL~SE OUT ON CAMPER f. PASSENGER TIRE CHAINS 500/o OFF! TIRES TakeYourPick! ~~:.:e:.:~L USED Tl RES $2995,_,,_ SI .fl each ~ .... ''"• '"° IOC•I !a• fHJ INIOAllft ~llltllll Ing and tire wear. We coirect OFFER caster, caml;>er, toe-In, tO&OUt to your car manufacturer's apeciflca· t••••••••ill•••••••••I tlon11, and safety check and tdju1t CM "'"""' your steering. only $85~~" &111'41r' t tld COllll>KA A~•- IANKAMfRICARD MASTER CHARGE - COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Houri: 7:30 to 6'00 Dilly PHON~: I ' i •( I I r • IO DAILV PILOT 5 Frld•Y1 AIH'lt 30, 1971 • In State KmS LIKE UNCLE LEN y ' I You can find out fast through your Yours in next Saturday's DAILY PILOT OVER THE COUNTER *TOT AL TELlVISION -. . . \; . ·'':.,1'; • ~ y-I • • • • I • &prtl . , 1m Thm·sday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List " . DAllV PllDT - • NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Strauss Stores Corp. include4 a coupon in its annual repor~ that ofrers a 10 percent di5' count to reader!! of lhe repo~ who shop at S!rauu store~~ The company sells auto part~ and accessories and hardware~ The idea. the company said~ ls to get more slockholders ~ vi11t the stores and beetim"'i customers. j MIAMI IUPIJ M•r;n I E1plorallon Co. said it ha~ completed repairs and lhef 1alva1e operation on a :m.foo~ hlr1e loaded with butane ga ~ that threatened shipping an shoreslde industrial plants a Fort Lauderdale. The bar11c was listing badly alter bting damaged while ~Ing to~·ed from 1 Texw! rtlinery toward a New England dtsUnatlon. In the • damaged condition, •he waa' like • huge noaUQJ bomb. "It I was one of the rllltieat lllva1e l Jobi we ever undtrt.ool:," a JpOktsman ror Al1rtne Es· pteration said. • ... ,• 22 DAILY ':;'~;::O_:_T ________ ,_,1da_lc_·_•c_P<_ll_3'l~,_l_971 U'L AINER • • ' " DICK TRACY ~E N'ICA.E, MIMSl!LF, sQ\,JEALEO 'TO ME TMAl' IY'O\..ENE's BOSS IS A BLAST EXPERT. I WORECFAM!GHN MUNTER THAN A MlGHN THINKER·· -&JT··ITHINK-·· STOP TI41NKINK .AND DOA LIDDLE. f<ILLINK!f TUMBLEWEEDS AClUAllV, rM GlAP V<'R !.AYIN' ME' OFF A Wtl!lE, CH!EF ... li'U. 6iMME 1lME lV WRffE MY By Tom IC. Ryan SALLY BANANAS ...... -.... -- Mt'MO!FIS! -.-·;1, -. '·"'··11~ MUTI AND JEFF l 'LL BE GLAD ""TD GET HOME! "'EY/vou CAN'T DRIVE WIT>!~R FEET!! 'l'OU ror<T HACll 'ietl WAY l'OWN11-IRl.I b fl: O' SOIL Wl'"Uf 'iEI! HANPSIN'il:R fllCKel5, F£UA! By Al Smitfl GORDO JUDGE PARKER -~ r>-=:--:-::-:=--or=:By=-.Harold Le DOIDI MOON MUWNS j r I PIC.XEP UP ~ sour, w . .'1<.M •• r 1~ vou EVER l I .REAL 0000 eiss! ev 611E% I SMOULD DO, I'LL NEVER' I nlE wr..v, MOW liAJJ('f i.i.t.ve 11sep SPEAK TO 1 WILL nlERE ee 1.r TME SBN1CE YOU "GAIN, t11»NER'?' •• YOO, J1106E ENTR>.Nc.E: JOMNWV '. MW llt.15. PAll:KEIZ, lt:::=c-1• ,L.~:>. ...... """"' ... S-'M WOHT &E I'». SOf5'Y MER'E! ME MA.S TO M0.11: THAT! 10 GO TO A TMEN TMERE'LL &At AS'50(1A-JllST BE TMtEE! TION MEETIN6'. PLAIN JANE By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by •• POWER I ACROSS l On e who 1s opposed S Fool: Sling 'Spttd compet1\io11s 14 Pledge 15 Buffalo o! Crlt bts lfi Got up 17 Formal por~ 18 Proc eed 1n11 at " low ~peed l'I Scent 20 01su1111td 22 T 1tlt ot respecl 23 Ditc h ~ town 14 Dut cltrl togooua 1'11\SIOn 25 Vtgttabl t 28 Strialtd 32 Btalll1!) 33 Malt ~n1m,1s )4 Palm toc~atoo 35 City ot l;Uv1a ?~Girl'\ namr 37 Brit!, pt\\~ quarrt! )8 J 11d9r of 1sratl )'I Foul· sm elling .(Q E.ltC\l!d 41 Proc la1n,ed ' ' ) " " 10 " " 11 " " .. ~ • a .. ' " " " •3 S!illtd •4 T1tts 45 Gt otgt Btrnard 4& Horizonl•I lay ers 49 Newspaper feature~ 53 Inclined S~ Speech: Prefix SS Out of 56 (xle1nal S7 lltterance tc al!ract <11lent1on 58 Card gam' §'I Crocodil e &O 511 1or 1 plc111r t bl Volc1n1t rtfusr • ll DOWN I Cooitd 2 Back ol \ht nt ck l R1dicult 4 In St trf't StSS•Ol1 2 wGrd~ 5 F1ounct : ln1crmal ~ Narrow channtl of watr t 7 Ttml)o•ary ~la\t ot mind •Animal '~ foot ' • " " " • ll " " ,, " I ii " ". " .. - I Yrstt1diy's Puzzlt Solv rd: R 0 ! £ U ,;\N "'-El A Y -Ii.Si l 1"1 0 ll1C A 1-~E N A OONI~ f(S l[~ 0 • 't Ottll. narrow qorgt ~ 10 Awn 11 Penalty 12 lhis' Sp. 13 Ory up 21 Caust of loot discomfo1t 22 Bltnd \Oqttht r 24 Grow in ~ vtrtica l l)OS it1on 25 Was conct1ntd 21:> Romau ofl 1c1al of old 17 System of rtaso111 n9 28 Rtservtd in ma11ntr 2~ F 1btr ust d in pillows 30 Rtmov t 4/J0/71 11 Passe }l Locatio11i. Jb True skin 37 Ewhibitioo\i!S 39 StamM trs 40 Canv t rs t 42 Scort 1n shot s 43 P1gmtnl 1ngrtditnt 15 W 1se mrn 4& Position 47 Nol trTOfltOl>S •8 Roll call. British 4'1 Pacil1c salmon SO Evangtl l~l Robt rts S l Acurss ····· 8~~f S 52 Polluted atmos plle1e 5~ Wind 1rouod i omelhing I ~ . " " 1l " , ;,' " . ~-" l1 • " 11 l9 "' " " 1'-p II .. ., " ,. •• " " " 4.' "' " " PERKINS zzzz:zzzzzZ z z z • • MISS PEACH F~ANCINE, YOU USED 11> SE; \/£RY ATTl<ACT!VE ... STEVE ROPER YOO SUllE PUT OUT ;. MEAi., PEGGY/- FOR A WORKllJ' 6AL ! PEANUTS YOU ONCE HADA LOVELY SMILE- YES, rM COWSIOE~ED AN EXCELLE"'1T COOK! -~BUT·· SMALL WE FIND A MOQE COMFOf<TA6LE Pl.ACE TO TALK! :;m:::ZZZ:Zzzz::ZZ z z z -AND '\OlJ FOll!MEll!L 'f ll!ADIATEO A VERY SWEET Pe.c<SCNAUIY. -ANO Tl-IEl<E WAS .. TME \OLI HAP Tl-lE llOST . GORGEIJUS FIGLRE. By John Miles By Mell CRYING-AUlE.M>Y ! CAN'T ">'!:)I.I EVEN WAIT UNl"IL :t UPP'ITE THE CRmQUE? By Saunders and OverCJClrd ly Charles M. Schub ..-------, 110 llOtJ HAVE 1HE FEEU>i6 1HAl" rM. 6VESSIN6? I " I f, ~ il " ~i " I It Al Capp By Charles Banotti By Gus Arriola By Rog• Bollen -!-e ",,., .. 1"1.-·""' ... :r DIOO•r SJJ.; A I ~01\'D-- DENNIS THE MENACE ... ---- • DAILY PILOT 111 All-out Elf ort FAMILY CIRCVS China Thaw Bea ~tion Told b11 BU Kenne ~--~ Texas Going Big By PIUL NEWSOM N • ' R R ft Is a quuUon certain 1o be "" ""'" .,., '""'" UtlOUS esponseS ange opened should dlplemaUc nla- In Ecology Drive The ~rican public seems home from International first Ume a party held by lions be establiihed. to have taken with remarkable Taiwan, saw lbe viJJt of the lo b lh dd bl. matches in Tckyo, found the Prime Miniater Elaaku Sato to ap m e su en c.rum 1ng American table tennil team as of policies which for more Nigerian team in Taiwan. The view the cherry blossoms. "unwl.H" and "rt&r!tlai'Jlt." than 20 years divided the Nigerians accepted the in-Newsmen promptly dubbed peoples of the United States vitatioo with such unseemly their action "cherry blossom" MOICOw's forela;n affairs HOUSTQN, Texas (A.P) -A being used by the Texas Water and Mainland China. alacrity they did not even diploma cy. wetkly newapaper, New +year-old boy struts across Quality Control Board. But if the American pubUc h I bid Tlme1, denounced the Cl\lnese tbt Texas Tech campus in ave t me to an official The Tokyo government wor- Lubbock. He picks up a dis· Another Texas A & M. could greet with calm what farewell to their Nationalist ried about the effect Improved Communl1ts "for (lWckly com• carded cigarette pack, puts it scientist has conducted Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai Chinese. host:.. U.S.-Red Chinese ties might ing to term.a with those with in the Utter bag he's carrying feasibility studies on using described as 1 "new page" in In the midst of the new thaw have upon trade, especially if whom it had jwt called and toddles on. ground-up rubber tires, bottle relatlorudbestween the t1woS na-Australia felt it necessary to the end result should be 'enemlet'." A San Antonio housewife glass and waste plaslics to tions an ecretary o tate reassert k>yalty to illl Ues with dllllomatic re c 0 g nit I 0 n plants 11 tree at ihe edge 01 a build streets and highways. A William P. Rogers. more ex-Taiwan -a loyalty which between the two aovemmentl. Before anythln1 like good long strip of concrete. She stretch of road in College Sta-pansively, saw as lhe h.opeful may prove costly. Th.e Chinese Japan now supplies Red China relation• could be utablisbed believes the highway under lion using the new material begiMing of a "new chapter," Communists have not renewed with 20 percent of its imports between the United States and c 0 n st r u ct i 0 n will ruin already has been laid. other reB.ction was less than an order for Australian wheat but the two nations have no Red China, the Chinese would parklands. Citizens in Fort Worth are calm. and the Australians believe diplomatic ties. Nor are the have to relax their unyielding Ip Hoillton, several garbage backing a plan to dam a long It ranged from alarm in their ties with the Nationalists Japanese eager for them. attitude toward tbeir claim on dumping 'sltes near residential section ~f the Trinity River Taiwan to anger in Moscow. on Forrnosa may be responsi~ Japan so far has paid out $4 Fonnosa and the United areas are closed or moved. near the downtown area and ucan I turn on television, Mommy? Kitty-cat Peking's in vita ti on to ble. billion in wartlme reparations States would have to re.lax its Some residents had picketed turn it into a park and recrea-k assorted table tennis teams to In Japan, Chinese Com-but nothing to China where attitude toward a United Na-" le wants to eep warm. 11 • ., th · 1 d 1 · · · f h and blocked bulldozers and L.40n cen r. v1s1 e mam an enrou e mun1st newsmen JOlned or t e she did most oI her damage. lions seat for Red China. trucks. forcing the City Coun-'1 ----------------------------------------,.,-, ---.,.-------,-.,-'-,.----" -,-,-;,,-.:11-.-.-'=====c::'=-==-::.:::.:.:::.:..::::.~ .. =.~==-=- d ~~ I ·~ Throughout Texas, many people are concerned about damage to the environment and they are doing something to stop it. College students are testing water, staging rallies, maldng ' · speeches and writing letters. Women's groups are but- t o n h o I i n g le11islators, a~ pearing before city councils and forming ~udy , greups _ 'l.'Hnagers forsake M1lued wtekends to make posters .vid collect reusable cans. Sclen- tilts are wing test tubes, com- puters and newly developed ._techniques to analyt.e pollution problems. Professional men and women attack industries and g(lvernments through the courts and the news media. Many of their efforts have failed. In San Ant<>nio, construction has started on a freeway that has been actively opposed by conservation groups ~"'rover a decade. The route \":.llld take it through Brackenridge Park, home of the city zoo and the SUnken Gardens. · Citizens in Corpus Christi, Houston and San Antonio have lost nearly all their battles to keep the Texas Water Quality Board from granting local in- dustries exceptions from i;tate antipollullon standards. A Dallas group fighting pollution from a lead plant has I01t round after round. But despite the defeats and the discoveries of more causes of pollution, the fight goes on and groups form to attack the problems Crom new directions. A Houston group called Help Eliminate Pollution presented a fa ctual report to the Texas Air Quality Control Board on the rnutton from a fertilizer plan . The facts, which had ,' ' \ ' Porsche. • f ~ • .. ·~ , •: ' ' ' ' ., ~u di. ' • • -~ • ' ' ' ' : ~ • • . ' ' . . never been presented to the ~~ ...... .........., ..... ~---...... ~··~--··--·-··~·-..... ~-~,~ .... """"-~· board by local government ~agencies, so impressed the , board that it refused a pollu· · tion Variance. The fertilizer Jllant, which had been putting pollutants into the air for years, was shut down. Midwestern University students in Wichita Falls are establishing an e c o I o g y laboratory at a lake near Iowa Park. Once in opera~ion, the lake will be a classroom for pupils from the nearby public schools. The youngsters will learn of their environment and about conservation from 8 natural setting instead of out of a book. Boy Scouts in th.e Rio Grande Valley each summer ztage a massive drive to clean up the beaches of Padre Island. The youngsters gather and remove tons of refuse. Two chemists at Angelo State University reported fin- din&: excess mercury in can· ned and lake fish . The report led to an investigation by the Administration. ln Dallas, the Air Quality Coalition of North Central Tex· 8!!1 defeated an attempt to turn p<irt of Meridian State Park into a golf course. At Texas A&M. a research team has developed a system for studying water quality in rivers and stream!. New data , pined from these studies are -~: .. Now, For Your Convenience, Chick Iverson Has Centralized All Three Cars At One Modern Faclllty Because Chick Iverson is one of the largest dealers for Volkswagen, Porsche, and Audi in Southern California, he has been able to bring all three lines to one central location -his new, modern headquarters on East Coast Highway at Bayside Drive. Here, the discriminaling car buyer can shop at his leisure, matching his choices to his budget. Compare the economical Volkswagen with the sport-styled Porsche. Evaluate the sensation of European highways-the Audi. Test·drive any of these fine cars, and find the one that feels "just right" to you. Courteous salesmen and expe- rienced finan ce experls will make your purchase a real pleasure. While there, take a tour of the most modern and complete service facilities in California. See the very latest in service and diagnostic equipment and know that any future service re- quirements will be handled by factory-trained experls, using the finest in electronic and mechanical devi ces. Once again, Chick Iverson has put you, the customer, first! Now open Sundays 9 am to 6 pm. PORSCHE AUDI C stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor _Jd~~7 youve never heard it so good· ·' " l t 1 ' I , .. .•; • l ' i • • Friday, April )0, ).'f/i ~4 OA!l Y PILOT mr .Second Bananas Aid Nixon With Golden Touch ' Indonesia's President Tours Isles JAKARTA, Indonesia iAP~ -To millions of Indonesians the president is almost a mythical figure in faraway Jakarta. President Suharto, ·with a 4.000 mile trip through the eastern islands, has con- vinced many he is a friendly reality. Fo r the six-day trip Suharto used an infonnal style that was warmly received. He was smiling and dressed in a gray open neeked suit as he walked slo'A·ly to the podium at each rally. ''Merdeka!" hes ho u t e d, thrusting his right hand into the air. Freedom, a call that remind1 llle people of their in- dependence 25 years ago from generations of rule by the Portuguese, Japanese and Dutch. Inevitably a wave of en- thusiastic voices swept back over him. "Merdeka" they responded. Speaking slowly, without notes, the 49-year-0\d presi· d2nt called for stability and unity and cooperation in bring· ing about a peace ful parliamentary election in ear· Jy July. His style carried none oJ the flamboyance of his predecessor, the late Presi· dent Sukarno. At the end of a 4a.minute speech, be individually called up several cabinet ministers and two foreign ambassadors traveling with him. Th e presence of the ambassadors from Australia and the Philip- pines gave the impression tiley strongly support Suharto and his governmtnl. Finally, Suharto introdi.ced his wi fe, Ibu Tien, who was warmly cheered. He pro\'okerl a gentle laugh v.•hen he said she is a most important helper. but receives no pay because she is not officially a m~mber of the government \Vhen he took over power in 1966 following an ill fated Communist coup a t t e m pt . Suharto was a hvo star general who stiffly read speeches. It was difficult for him to relax in front of a crowd. five years as president have changed that. but Suharto doe s not mingle ""ith the people. "Pressing the flesh" is alien to most Asian leade~s. His visits consist of motorcade tours of the towns. inspection of projects. speeches before , mass ra llies and discussions and briefings ..,.,·ith lo ca I leaders. At Ternatc, in the North 1'loluccas, \\'hich had not seen a President since Sukarno .... ·as there in 19a3. Suh a r Io dedicated an oiled dirt air strip completed a fe\v ..,.,,eeks before. In ~lakasar, the capital of Sulawesi. a Is o known as the Celebes. Suharto dedicated a h}'droelectric plant built with Yugoslav aid. inspected a ne1>o' Japanese Indonesian shrimp processtng plant and a waterworks still under construction. In all these areas, the people seem well fed and· cleanly dressed. There 1s I i I t 1 e evidtnce of sickness and ,,qualor so common i n l'l\'ercrowded JaYa. The shops offer Japanese radios, Chinese cloth and Australian canned goods. "This is actually a ..,.,·orking trip into the provinces to see for myself the deYelopment ef· forts of the people first hand :· Suharto said. "What I ha ve !'ieen is thal the climate for development is very favorable indeed." NO. 1 ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT Wbo'~ u.nder~cretary • f JlEW'! of ltUD? 01 Labor An- nonymous, !hut's who. Here's • rtport on S-Ome llttle known but very important people. By G. C. THELEN JR . Af.Mdlled p...,p Wrilet \\'ASHlNCTON -IAP l - President Nixon has entrusted the job of winning passage of his No. 1 domestic legislation. welfare reform, to an .ad- ministration second banana with a gold~ touch on Capitol Hill. The assignment for John G. Veneman, )Jl1dersecretary of Health, Education and Welfare, casts a rare public spotlight on some of those No. 2 men in cabinet.Departments \vho sh.are the workload but oot the visibility of their bosses. Few people outside the capital know, for example, the name Richard C. Van Dusen. housing undersecretary; or Laurence H. Silberman, No. 2 man at Labor; or James M. .Beggs, undersecretary 0 r Transportation. Veneman, for his part. was virtual co-secretary when his close friend Roberl H. Finch headed HEW. Finch engaged Veneman in every problem from the lowliest department personnel squabble to the intra a d m iruslration donnybrook over s c b o o I desegregation jlOllCy. Finch has since moved to the White House staff. The new secretary, Elliot L. Richardson has n a r r o w e d Veneman's assignments to make best use of his deputy's skill as a tacUul and effective lobbyist with the Democratic controlled congress. "Jack's not going to like this, but I think he and Wilbur C.Ohen have a lot in common," said Thomas L. C. Vail, chief 12xl2 FT. DINilfG FLY AND CANOPY KIDDIE INFLATABLE CHAIR W• IOld a ton of th• big Oii•• for od11lts and now•• ha't'e a b11nch lof th• kid1. Air choirs tor lh• h•ir•. counsel or the Senate Finance C.Ommittee. The comparison is a compliment. De m o c i' a t Cohen, the father ot Medicare and HEW secretary in the late Johnson years, ia considered a legislative master. Veneman, a 45 year (jJd Peach farmer from Modesto who teamed his legislative lessons during seven years in the California assembly, is "a constructive compromiser," said Vail. The praise from Vail was echoed by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, ([).Ark), chairman or the Ways and Means Com- mittee, and now locked in a bitter dispute with the \Vhite House over another key Ni,lon proposal, revenue sharing. Mills' committee is back <.:l work on the welfare relorm bill, which passed the Rouse in the last Congress, b u t foundered in the Senate. 'fbe chairman called Veneman "an extremely able man, a l'eal tactician." BUDDY L GAS BAR-B-Q If you CCQI buck 11 thl• is th• b.ltti' wcry to borb.eu.. No m•••· no slo• •larti.og. X•ttl• IVJMI fM smoky lirolli.osz. S.ll· tloring. 6987 A biggi .. 7~'"x15 ... 11'1 a •larl on your own SukiyQJd place. 89avy cul lron. la•I• a JU•tim•. 487 & LITE LOW VOLTAGE SET "He knows how to win his points by giv ing on some mat- ters wben it is neceasary ,'' said Milla. "He. has made an extremely favorable im· pre.SS ion on the committee ... Veneman's standing on Capitol WI! is noteworthy because other administratio11 lobbyists have not '}'On big marks rrom members of Congress. The u n· dersecretary's willingness lo compromise would appear 1o be the key. Corky. Vera: cand th• Mob BURRICARE LAMP 1 coll lh•m 'railrOC11d' k•ronn• la111pt. but today •"'•rylhing bar la hen• a 11111• el•m•nl ot dang•r and glamof, rlgbt. Miity, no big i.ostollalion dKI. Sal• 12 't'Olt. lay th• cobl• a nywh•N. Compl•t• with tf11Dlfo~•r. I AdY.m.ed •p«ial1 good tJuu May S. l!?J (aad .ome laat lo119er than !bat too.) 1'7 By Malibu 4987 YOO ALL NEED A NEW FENCE? " ' ; 11 I : I r PVC SPRIKKLER PIPE .. .. 19' 1/2" ILL 9' 3/4" ILL 11 ' 1/2" TEE 11' 3/(" TEE 13' STAIH-X CARPET STAIN REMOVER At. YO\I rllO:df for this? 11 Nally work1. W• tri.d it eu1d the shoe& hoto.'t •om olf y.t. Good 1t11fl. DOOR MIRROR full kftgtb.11 ,,,. •t.p bee• 4 poc•. ~ incbn high. Ff01ll'4. C1JP I •o• wheal took this )ob.) 287 BARRACUDA GARBAGE DISPOSER ! _,.__.., ~ \, \- ' \ \ 4' BLACK & DECKER ~- ELECTRIC 3/8" POWER LAWN MOWER DRILL II JI yo• hCP• o lot ol barraeuda l•!t .,.,,, thi1 i• on• 1ol11tlon. 1/3 horffpo•••. 11ll·cl.a:alng. 1887 . . I ~ !-.: .. i " ,,( 4999 lt poll\ltlon g•I• to you. lhi• i• a nk:• chcznv•. Qui•t too. Pow•r !or th• Oigg•st ;ob. Who moke1 a h•lt•r drill? No on• con louch B&D quQ\ily. Jor any pric1. 999 JOHNSON'S CREW BATHROOM CLEANER Sm•llt nle•. g•t• th• •laili• and tnid olf, and leov•1 lh• t lnk• thiny. Spni:y eqn to g•t in und.r th• lcruc•t. AUTO COOL CUSHION l Mp yaur Tun·Tuo eool. Spring body permit• th• crb lo cln;ulal• all crrollild you. a bow th•r•• CJ sood Hot Pcrnl• Jok• h•re. but I COD.°I fiJld It.) '·~,,.. VINYL RUG RUNNER fffln"T duty. wilh lhe Utt!• l••lh to k"P ii from 1hUUi:tg aTOund th• ccnpet. Who lit•• a shllty nig runn•r, anyhow? 57ifN.rr, MR. PLUMBER DRAIN CLEANER Hecrt"i•t th111a wal•r 10 it worh b.tter. !So 1#9 roc:ks. bu! that l1n't 1aylng much.) ?her gucumtlM U "'orb. or -1••· 1971 DAILY PILOT EIKE. DER A Comple te Guitle • • • Where to go • •• What to tlo • •• • CAROLE BOELTER AND KATHY MONAHAN IN MAD SCENE FROM LUCIA DI 'LAMMERMORE' OR. H. COLIN SLIM AND ALAN MOORE, PLAY DUO-PIANO 1\IEEKENDEll INSfllt; FEi\TUlll\S Frlduy, April :io. 19;1 Cinco de rtlayo is being cch·· brated th roughout Orange County this weekend and progra111s of tY,.O popular amusC'men~ park3 are ttighllghted on Page 26 toda y, Stan Jklaplane Intermission Setlsawa Exhibit Out 'N' Abe111 Guide to Afovlts Ttlt\'lslnn Log Page %6 Page ?6 Page !6 l'Olge5 %7 -23 Pa.it %9 Page t9 Page tt ra1e 3G ra1e 31 0C Pbllbarmonic "P'l1aro" at Fullenon ~faslerplecc Thcalt'r lr1 the Gallerlts PAgc 311 r 11r,e 30 Pei;e :ie Page :11 Last Trtln Rlrlt' Sn. Amerlc:iD Exhlhil Gulde ln F1111 Uve Theater Jan Mass Pa•c :n Page 31 • Conuucntalor PJav~ Hin1sclf In Ca111! Spoof t\l•wi; comn\pnta\or ~ar11lf'r Venocur 1\ ill play h1m~f'lf, an NllC nc~·s corn- menlator in ··The Gang Thal Couldn't Shoot S1ra1~h1." erl;iptc<l hy \Valdo Salt rrom Jimmy Hrri;linifL bP~t-~clling novel or the same ruim?!"' \1 hir h tak"s a tnlanously on target look at ~angland 11 ;irfarc. \lanooir's new'< Mmmentary hrlth open!'i and closec the h1m and 1s spo!lf(I lhmu~hout. as li!ang 11•ar "development s ' <ire awaited. Concurrent w1lh hts hr.;\ n1nt1on picturl' appearanct' Vanocur assumes a new a"111gnfTl('nt a' com- rnC'ntator-host or NBCs new and 'x- p;iorted 6lh tlour New!'i, 11.·hich will be 1,.Jp\•icNI rrnm NP" 'i ork C11.v at a p.m. on wrekd:1ys. Tile film slars .Jerry Orbach .. lo Van Flt•Pt. LciJ;h T::i)'\Or-Yuung, \,i on el Slander and Robert ll\•Niro, :ind 1~ being produce<! by lrv,.1 n \\'inkier and Robert ('harluff for l\1Gl\I. UCI Students, Faculty In T&G Concert By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 I'll• Diii.-l'!WI S!l ff The UC lrvine Town and Gown music group celebrates the joys of. spring with a May 8 faculty and stude nt concert to benefit a music student scholarship fund. A varied program of musical offerings is planned for the 8 :30 concert iR the Fine Arls Village Concert Hall on the UCI campus. Tickets at $2.50 each are available by calling l\lrs. Winifred Smith at 673-244:>. Student Alan Moor!:' and H. Colin Smith, chairman of the music depart- ment faculty, will open the program with Schubert's "Heroic March in C major for Piano, Four Hands .•· The Uni versity \Voodwind Quintet follows with Rei cha's ''Quintet for \Vooclwinds ." Members of the gro up in- ("lude Annelle Bork, French horn; Eric Ei!ar. bassoon : Guy Hardy. oboe : !\1arsha Gemmill. rlutc, and Judy Glickman , clarine t. Peter S. Odegard , of the UC! music faculty· ·will perform Darius Milhaud's "Sonata for Viola and Piano" with former student Lawrence Gordon at the piano. The mad scene from Donize tti's "Lucia di Lammermoor'' will be sung by Carole Boelter, soprano faculty member, ac- companied by Kathy Mona han, flute and Kate Whitney, piano. Lawrence Moss' "Omaggio for Piano. Four Hands" will be performed by Kate and Tom Whitney. The faculty couple will also perform a fl.1ozart sonata for piano, four hands. The omaggio is an unusual work in which the pianists alte rnate between playing on the piano keys and plucking the piano strings. Whitney is a lecturer in music theory at UCL Associate professor Maurice Allard, baritone. will sing Poulenc's "Le Bal ~1asque'' accompanied by members of 1he University Orchestra. conducted by graduate student Kerry Grant. The concluding work on the Tuwn and Gown concert program will be Ravel's "Jcux d'Eaux" perlormed by pian ist Arnold Juda who is a UCI lecturer in music. The C1lnct.rt Is the second such venture by the music group of Town and Gown, an organization which provides OP- portunilies for universtiy end community women to share in activities including lectures, art tours, modem dance, tennili, golf, books, student activities-roreign language study and support services for Coreign students at UCL The fl.iay 8 ('OOcert program ~ open to 1he pubilc. Town and Gown hopes Lo rai!Je $500 to contribute to the music student scholnrship fund. 't'llCY.ie attending the program art i"n- viled to a rereplion, which wiil follow !ht concert, LI the Gold Room at Mesa Com- n1on1. Ice Capades to Open 6·day Run Begins May 11 at Long Beach "Life In a Three Ring Circus .. will be the opening number in an original two- part musical fantasy of the Yoe Capades when It opens in the Long Beach Sports Arena May 11 for a sii: day run through May 16. Tbere will be wonder in every act 'as the Circus Swinge11. dressed in metal gold costume!', with mod hairdos tran.'1- cend to worlds unknown in an out-of-sight number: "11-1r. Imagination" (\Valler Hypes), reveals the magic of circuses of long-ago with the big parade, clowns with big red noses. animal trainers, prancing ponies and beautifµJ majorettes. Brilliant performances by Billy Chapel as the wild panther v.'ho is tamed by Cherrie Moritz as he struggles for freedom and comedy routines by Han s and Pepe, a dancing team from the Ar.izentine Pampas are sure to tickle the children in the audience. Another delightful fairyland production w!U be the "Legend of Frozen Time" with Tommy Litz. Linda Carbonetto and Walter Hypes skating in the major roles. The second half of the show is devoted to the mystical world of astrology in which the corps de ballet explores the characteristics of the 12 rlgns or the zodiac with heavenly forecasts for e1Ch in "An Astrological Affaif." A swinging baseba.ll game will Involve intricate skating patterns as the 32 Ice Capels perform In "Sporting Ariens. ·• Tim Wood, 1970 U.S. and World Cham- pion makes hls professional debut with the show this year and pays tribute to the: fire sign 0£ Aries skating with Linda Carbonetto. Canadian Women's Cham- Dion of 1969. The final number will be a giant zodiac wheel bringing together the 12 signs in ''Tribute to the Age of Aquarius." The lee antics of C1lmedians. headed by Freddie Trenkler as the "Now Clown·· with a special message for Virgo: funny man Terry Head and Dave Pitts with his skating chimp Spanky will be highlighted th roughout the show. Tickets, $2.50 -$5 may be purchased at the Long Btach Ar,ena or through mos t ticket agencies. ' . . • BILLY CHAPEL DISPLAYS POWERFUL SK ILLS IN 'CIRCUS' PRODUCTION NUMBER .-. ft DAll.Y PILOT Friday. AP'it JO, 1•71 . Cinco de Mayo Celebrated at 2 Coast Parks Latbt-flrc Fiesta At Disney All ol the almosphere, r:~~~ charm and Latin.fire ex· citement of a soulh-of.the- border fiesta will be recap- tured this Saturday and Sun- day when Disneyland stages its colorful "Viva Mexico" opectacular. More than 150 Spanish- American . ·rformers. many top-name motion p I c t u r e , television and reairdlng stars from Mexico, will lend their talent.! to the gala festivitie$, offered as a salute to Mem.ico's national holiday, Cinco de Mayo. Latin singing sensation Julio Aldama, vocalist Q u e t a Jimenez, l asl·rlslng en- tertainer Nelson Velazquei, and Pedro Rey and the Los Gallos Mariachi Band headline the cast for the special '"Saludos Amlaos'" showo on LOS GALLOS MARIACHI ONE OF SEVERAL AGGREGATIONS AT DISNEYLAND Tomorrowland Stage b oth 'Viva MeJClco' Celebrition Takes place All Day Saturday and Sunday Honoring Cinco de Mtyo da~. ~~~_:_:.:..::..:_:_:_:_:_:_:_~~~~~~~~.:._~---''--~~--'-~~-'---~~~~~~~ On t.hP same bill will be the Travel Internationally 1 c c I 1 i m e d .. Ballet FolkJorico Esplendor" danoen from Mttloo, under the dlttctlon ol choreographer Florenc:ia y esc.u. . MWcan-Americain I ho w buaineu personality Antonio cit M1rco will emcee the fast· TS Hamburg Roomy Caribbean Liner. p1ced revues. Adding even more Latin ABOARD TS HAMBURG -On a Sunday noon By STAN DELAPLANE navor will be aggregations or (wet winter still hanging on in Baltimore) we got Me1ican musicians pl1ying aboard the spark.ling white, new TS Hamburg and at.rolling serenades throughout sailed off to the warm Caribbean. It's the first big the Park. On hand for a passenger liner built in Germany since World War be •peciaLal mvarilchi festival will 11. s aqueros, Mariachi The Hamburg was built to be a one-cl ass float- Arplla, Lot Che.nglt.os Feos ing hotel. Hotel·size corridors instead of squeeze· de Tucson and on Sunday only, throufb, pardon me, ship passageways. .Los Carnperos. Jk d o t h e r south-of·the-bon::ler " want room enough so a man can wa own entertainment will be provided a passageway with a glrl on each arm," the Presi- ~.Y the Marimba Band of Los dent ordered. (A romantic thought. But on these _Hermanos Melgar, Conjunto Jong cruise ships, most passengers have quite a bit • Papaloapan, and the Conjunto of mileage on. Maybe need a girl on each arm to l Norteno "Los Avilenos de support them to their cabin.) t Alamo Te us." * ? Appropril.tely, three MW A buncb of newsmen were asked along lo audi· t Disney characters, Jose lion the Hamburg. We started off with the three Carioca, Panchito and Senor ship's resburants. Food is on a heavy Germanic I Donald Duck -collectively side. Reminded me of Chicago's German reslau- • known u the Three Caballeros rants of the Twenties. Sauerkrautplatte cooking. ~ -make their Disneyland Service is "correct" -as the Germans say. ~ debut during the "Viva Mex· Occasional surprises on the menu: Black Forest : tco" celebration roebuck and pheasant. : All "Viva . Mex ic o ' ' Like all German restaurants. the desserts are ~celebrants and many of the out of this world. Rich enough to keep a heart doc- : -'famous Dianey cartoon stars tor in the upper income brackets. A dozen differ· : wW participate in 1 1 p.m. ent ones on the menu each day. parade on Main Slreel each * :day. Henry Darro, w h 0 Ship carries 600. Has ballroom. Theater. Ni~hl • portrays Manolito on the :: television series • • H 1 g h club. Bars. Swimming pool, Sauna bath and c iJ. :· Otiparral." will serve a!I dren's playroom and a place for yoga exercises. •• d sh 1 1 (Stand on your head, Max. Now doesn't that look .. gran mar a . ·~ Even the Disneyland chefs different?) , will capture the spirit of the Alter this year in the Atlantic, the Hamburg •event, creati ng "E!lpecial begins tours from the West Coast: Two Caribbean • Par• la Cdebracion de! Cinco runs, 28 days. A South Pacific-Orient cruise, 61 de Mayo," which is a special days. \Vest Coast via Mex ico, Caribbean to Scandi- Mexicain breakfast served at navia and Russie, two months. Not cheap. The fares : tht Casa de Frltos re.staurllnt BEGIN al $1,500 for the short ones, $3,000 for In Ftontierland. the Iongies. lntennission Season Closing • ,. Dy TOM TITUS CM ""' 0.ilf l"llet Sll'ff Comes now the proverbial homestretch -· "1 for Orange Couaty's many and varied ~ theatrical groups. rounding out an in- ~· teresting ind, in some cases. innovative aeawn. : Ahead lie another dozen productions from thf! county's community, collegiate and professional pta yhbuaes, the lone tt· (.~ ample of the latter being Costa Mesa's Sooth Coast Repertory company. And, as ~-hss been the ca11e all season, the bill of ~ fare is spiced with much that is new and : differ ent, a1 well as some warmed over versions or recent offerings. Starting off the final round or stage ac· tiv\ty nert week will be a couple old fami liar scripts which have made the rounds of the community circuit. One is "The Marriagt Go Round... the San Cleme.nte Community Theater's curtain closer; the other , surprisingly, Is "Luv" from South Cout Repertory. Abetting these two comedies for a well- roundld weekend will be the opening of a dram• ind a musical, "The Big Knife ." from the Weatminsttr Commun i I y Theater and S1ddleback College's revival of that eternal favoritt , "Ouys and Dolio." A PAJR Of vtnt1ae comedies which hive bffn on the boards long enough to be l'lf:W to mosl local theatergoers arrive oo M1y 14 -the Ana ·Modjeak.a Pl1)'tr1' production of "Lldlet in ReUrement" and the I.Ang Buch Co mmun ity Playhouse's "Three Men on a Jtorse." 'lbe latter will btl directed by Ron Al~n. who has one or the season's blpe.sl hits in lhe Huntington Beach Playhouse's current ''Rashomon ." The fourlh week of J\.fay will find Orange Coa st College staging an offbeat drama, "The Firebugs" while SCR moves "Luv ·• into the background to make roo m £or its ne1t show, "The Ginger Man." Two simultanrrus produ ctions of ''The Pi.fan Who Came to Dinner'' by I.he Laguna Moulton Playhouse and the Fullerton Footlighters wind up the merry month of May. Joining them will be another old timer. "Arsenic and Old Lace" Crom the Irvine Community '1'heater. with yours truly playin&. or all thin&s, a drama crilic. On the June horizon. "Man of La Mancha" will complete the season for the Long Beach Civic Light Opera. the Costa Me sa Civic Playhouse will lock up its season with "The Beautiful People" and South Coast Repertory will revive "Charley's Aunt." After which, those producing groups not planning children's shows or summer musicalll will take a welt-earned vacation until the whole business starts all o\·er a1ain in September. BACKSTAGE -'Ille J.ldo Tsle Players have issued a call for directors. resumes and preferred manU.9Crlpts for con- .sideralion for the ir 1971-72 season ... the group stages two shows annually, in the fall and the spring ... in<Tulries should be tt:ent to the pla yers al 701 Via Lido Soud, Ne"1>0rt Be1ch. Up for (fibs after M1y 15 will be the downto~11 llunUngton Beach buildirtg which for iht last year has housed the Nifty Theater ... anyone looking for the facilities to st11rt his own theater group can get further parllculars from Elliot fncd at 847-~13. * "C1n yau .tell us the rules for tipping on crulP ships?" . EVERYBODY'S got a different formula for 1t. Main people tipped are your room steward and ;:our table steward. On this ship (an d a French ship I was on earlier) the c r u i s e directors suggested a couple should tip each one $3 a day. {Tip at the end of the voyage.) Wine stewards get a couple of dol· Jars each week "'hen you settle your bill. I don't see any reason to tip the maitre d' -~ut .some people do it. (Also I think that $3 a day 1s h1gh- one man's Scroogey opinion.) * Hep doctors are warning friends headed .for r.tediterranean countries to stay off raw she!Jf1sh . Pollution i.s bringing hepatitis. ', * 1 nevel\ ~ew until I was told: Discount.Ii are given by HaWaij car renlal people if you show CE~­ TAIN credit car4;s. Hertz discounts 20 per cent if you show Air Travel card or a Hertz credit card- wbich should be eisy to get. Avis gives it on an Avis credit card. National on Air Travel card or a Hertz or Avis card. * \Vhat burns me is I've used so me of these cards before without getting a discount. It seems you have to nudge them when you sign up. How about that? * "We want to stay out of Landan this time ind just cruise th1 green countryside of Englend ••. " For your glove compartment (call it cubby locker in En gland): British Travel, 680 Fifth ave- nue, New York City \viii send you valuable FREE material. At London Airport's magazine stand- or a book store-get Egon Ronay's Guide to Hotels, Restaurants. Pubs and Inns. A fat paperback, load- ed \\'ith exact information . * Stay off small number roads: r.11 , A3 are sup- erspeed freeways "'ilh middle-age hot rodders: play- ing chicken v.1ith each other. Even A35 types are too cluttered. Get four-n umber roads like B4036. Those are the quiet country Janes, between hedge- rows. with a leaded glass window pub and village around the bend. * "We couldn't git into the par1dor at Granad1, .• Spein ... " The paradors in Sp<iin. pousadas in Portugal. are Government operated. But you can't seem to reserve through a central point -you "'rite each separately. Get li sts fret" from both tourist offices. They are small . Some only 15 rooms. Popular - they're the best in the cou ntry. I guess you start early and keep trying. * "We are landing at Honolulu and taking a loca l pl1ne to Kau1i. Can we check our b.ggage all the way through?" You do thi s "'hen you board your plane on the mainland. \\'hen you ge t off at Honolulu. there's a shuttle bus to the don1estic side of the airport. But -I go t off at noon . and mv baggage didn't catch up with me until t0· 15 that night. * I heard there v.•ere 166 pieces of mispla ced luggage from two jumbo flights that day. (One woman in tears was expla in ing to the a~Qt she had $9000 worth of jewelry in her suitcase.) • I• 1111 HUNTER'S BOOKS THE WEST'~ FINEST IOOKSTORES FOR 120 YEA,S-SINCI 1851 Loc1ted At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (71 4) 543-9343 66,500 loekt l Poperbackt ll,000 u ...... 1 GrHtlnt ~ IARGAINS Ci•LORll OPEN EVENINGS ''.l'IL 9 P.Jtl. l••ttly Hll11 e l• Jolie e 'hoe11i1 e Se11 f r•11cl1co ,, .. Knott's Hosting Viva Day ... "Viva Mexico!" will be the cry at Knott's Berry Farm when the great Mexican holi· day, Cinco de Mayo, is celebrated April 30, May 1 and 2. Appropriately staged i n KMU's Fiesta Village, the oc- cuion calls for gre.at revelry and celebration. With much feasting and dancing, Cinco de Mayo recalls the important Mextcan victory over French invaders in 1862. Jt al9o honors the friendly relations between MARIACHI LOS CAMPEROS AT 'KNDTT'S Mexico and the Unlted Stat'5. ___ c_i_nc_o_d_o_Ml_y_o_F_i1_1_11_T_od_•_Yc._T_h_ro_u_9c..h_S_u_nd_•_Y __ Koott's has lined up an nr· ray of entertainers which will represent many of lhe cu1tures of Mexico. Fiesta Villa1e will b e decorated in green and white bunting and streamers. Special plnaW have been ordered for the fiesta. Across the lake Ind throup the village, the un- mistakable air of celebraUon will prevail complete with magiciana and fireworks. C Mtumed revolutionaries, dashing dona and senoritas, and an Aztec Indian will head the list of Mexican characters parading the streets. The great Latin-jazz-rock group, the El Chicano, leads off the entertainment this Fri- day ev ening, with their ethnic and contemporary sounds. On Saturday the fantastic Mariachi Los Clmperos bring on the best mariachi music this side of the border. Saturday afternoon the only formal ceremony of the oc- casion will take place in the Wagon Camp wit h en- lertairunent and a special dramatic presentation. At-- tending will be the Honorable Antonio Caslllas, vice-consul for the Mexican Consulate. A prominent Me.xlcan-Aroerican television personality, Mario Machado, of KNXT a n d KMEX, also will be a special guest. Other entertainers on tap for the Cinco de Mayo weekend are the Pedro Lorca Dancers, the Fred Hernandez Trio, El Conjunto Papaloapan, Los 'l'res Latinos and the Ballet Regional de Mexico. Knoll's Berry Farm is located in Buena Park at 8039 Beach Blvd., two miles south or the Santa Ana Freeway . Replacement HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Richard Fleischer signed with MGM to direct "The Last Run," replacing John HU!ton who encountered s c r i p t difficulties with star George C. Scott. Japanese Art Slated At Sherman Gallery The Sherman Foundation Gallery, 2625 E. Coast Hi&hway, Corona del Mar exhibiting the art work of Sueo Seri.!lawa and floral art by Riho Ta11aka through June 3 from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. daily except Sunday. Sueo has hung vertical scrolls (Kakemono ), black ink paintings (Simi. E), and wood block pi:inl.! in the show. Serisawa, who was born In Japan, came to this country when he was S.years old. Although his education has been American he has been instructed by his father, Yoichi Serisawa, in the art of his ancestors, and has a deep interest in all of the traditional Japanese arts including music, dance and the theater. While his w o r k is contemporary, there is an evident discipline drawn from the JSth and 16th century painters. He is influenced by the ancient and m ode r n Japanese cu1tures and draws from the classical as a foundati on for his own cWTfnt expression . He studied in Los Angeles at Olis Art Institute and at the Art Institute of Chicago, has been the recipient o f numerous awards and has had one·ma n shows in almost every major city in the United States as well as in Tokyo and Sao Paulo. Brazil. Serisawa who ta ught at Scripp's Graduate School, now lives in West Los Angeles where he teaches a few private lessons. Riho Tanaka, whose noral art llkebana) will be on display to complement the works of Serisawa, was raised in a traditional Japanese family in Kumamo to Prefecture. Being the first daughter she was expecWd to learn floral art and the tea ceremooy. She studied in three sehools of Ikellana before she entered the Sogetau School where ehe was a !lowed e:ipresslor1. She uses any available material such as glass, metll, dried flowers and leaves, and rocks to achieve sculptural dimensions. Miss Tanaka wUl give a special demonstration of her art to membeir1 and fri ends of the Junior League on May 13 in the gallery. Reservations, which are very limited, arc being taken now. 'USA' Set For KCET May 4-8 Hollywood Telev isio n Theatre's producUon of John Does Passos's "U.S.A." with an all-star cast airs May 4-8 on KCET, Channel 18. Peter Boner:z, John Davidson, James Farentino, Joan Hackett. Shlrlty Knight and Michele Lee star in the topical musical revue which takes: place in Amer ica between 1900 and 1930. Adapted by Paul 5ayre and John Dos Psssoe:, "U.S.A." was directed by G e o r g e Schaerer and produced by Lewis Freedman THE VILLAGE WEST FINE ARTS AND CRAfTS C!NTER LIMITID SPACI STILL AVAILAILI FOR FESTIVAL OF AlTS 7tJ lo9un• C.nyo11 Road -,,_ P•rllAt -4f4·91ff r t""taLif&iffL '"' •• • l iA#b'Y .._'IW''=-Wi', ...... SPRING IS HERE! ij • l • ' '• Ii ' '~ ~ Now is the time lo enjoy the great outdoors! It's great lo sunb•lho, pl•y tennis, 9olf or whatever. But when you 91t home it's hurry, hurry, hurry! Here '• where we come in ... here at NEWPORT PRODUCE the work is done! THE SALADS ARE READY TOSSED! THE POTATOES ARE FOIL WRAPPED! THE COLE SLAW IS READYMADE! THE CARROTS ARE IN STICKS! THE ONIONS ARE OICEOI PLUS MANY MORE REAOYMAOE FOODS! OUR FLOWER SHOP IS THE BUSIEST PLACE WEST OF OSHKOSH. COME SEEi COME SAVEi ~~= WE'RE HEAD9UARTUS FDR THESE! • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • SAVI WITH THIS COUPON. SAVI WITH THIS COUPON • IA.YI WITH TMIS COUPON • • CHULA VISTA • GOOD SIIf • .IUICY-VALIHCIA • • CUCUMBERS • AVOCADOS • ORANGES • • • • • • ,, • 5 $100 • $100 • • EA. • FOR • 12 LIS. • • llMIT--6 • llMIT-5 • llMIT-12 LH. • • WITH THIS COU,ON • WITH Tlotll COUPON W WITH THIS COU'°N • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS UPIRE MAT S Th••• restaur1nts d1ma"d th1 finest for their c.ustamers. Thet's why they fe•- tur• Newport Produce! Patroni~• them! The Arches, Newport; SaUor loY, Sel- bo• liland; Delney'1 Seo SMnty, Newport; Alley Wnt, Newport: Dlha1's. Ba lboe, •nd a.-1r 200 ather1. How •bout your callin9 us 1 0 0 rangc County's Fas!est Growing Produce ond FJowtr Organttotkm" e NEWPORT PRODUCE (1 Op'" 7 Doyt a W11k 7 a.m. ,. I p.m. 261' Newport loulevard 011 tt.e Pttdn111la .. JS Y car• of PTodt1e1 Know II ow" . "Wh1:ra quollty f.f th• OrdeT of fha House"' • Frld1;)', April 30, 1~71 DAILY PILOT 27 WEEKENDER OUT ' N I ABOUT Bg NOR1'J STA.NLEY ORANG E COUN T Y 'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE l\1other's Day Looming only one week from the day after tomorrow -on Sunday, May 9, to be precise -i .... that annual tribute to everybody's favorite lady. That woman receiving all the honors, of course. will be mother as she rides the once-a·year crest of recognition that comes with Alotber's Day. Stepping into the spoUigbt for a well·deserv· ed day o! homage, mother, with· her customary modesty, will probably try to downplay her role as the object of special consideration. Don't be taken in, however, by that unassuming facade. LOVES FUSS Deep down, in all those quiet and unseen but important li tUe alcoves of appreciation, mom is highly receptive to the fuss and bother. And why shouldn't she be seeing as bow there often isn 't much said or done to stock those niches the other 364 days of the year? Part or the bill can be filled, May 9, by letting the household heroine take her ease as other mem· hers of the family prepare and serve breakfast - 'vith a further guarantee or promptly and efficiently cleaning up the mess afterwards. Lots o( t i me should be allowed next to admire the cards, flow· ers, gifts and candy that have been of{ered as tes· limonals. BIG TREAT But the biggest treat doesn't come until mother has been triumphantly escorted to her favo· r ite restaurant for a deluxe repast. The day's activi· ties reach their highest point as she's feted to the toothsome delicacies of a feas t that embraces every· thing from an appetizer to dessert. Since most dini ng establishments hos t the year's record cro~·d on ?i.iother's Day, is it not too 8 ffil~RKO J.uocheon Dinner Cocktails Open 7 days jJ9 So. J,os Robles, J>asadena • 195-7005 33 Town A-Country, Orange• 541-3303 early to start making plans for the occasion. Those restaurants which take reservations already are geared to 1Ueet your request. The important thing is to not let matters go to the ~st minute. Without some forethought you run the embarrassing risk of ending up ail a hot dog stand where there's even a half-hour wait for coun· ter seats. Quite a letdo\vn for mom if she had been counting on a relaxing meal highlighted by a little more distinctive entree. The Moonraker Heretofore the v.'ord "moonraker" tbs been primarily associated with nautical terminology. As a consequence, any everyday usage has been pretty much restricted to the world of seamen, navigation or ships. For the enlightenment of landlu bbers, a moon · raker is a tiny bit ol ornamental sail riding above the skys'l -or skysail -~'h ich is the topmost sail on the center mast of a (ull·rigged vessel. Among old salts a moonraker is also called a moonsail. Outside of maritime parlance. there's a second --even less common-meaning for the term. In that connotation to call so meone a moonraker is to label him a simpleton. NEW ARRIVAL Another kind of moonraker has arrived in our midst that's bound to give the ~·ord much wider currency. It's the recently-opened ~1oonraker res· taurant opposite Orange County Airport. This attractive spot is the latest offspring in the ever-burgeoning family ol dining establishments op- perated by Far \Vest Services. Inc. Right off. though, it immediately asserts a strong individual· ity along with its di stinguished lineage. 511 JITH ST. NIWPOlT IU.CH WE WILL OPEN IDllYATIONS 67S·OJN MOTHER'S DAY AT 3:00 r .M. A Three Generation Family Tradition -Est. 1921 t~" FLING- ENTERT AIN MENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK , !~;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;~f I P.At.IC•NG MON .. TUU .. WED.~ * HAP HALL DUO * Lury L•k• .11~ 0.1 "'••~ '" 11u Singe?' Guitarist n.., . ..,.,. s... ~ For Earl y Ril tr1 and Lite Pl1y1r1 Open 01ily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. Rt1r-Mes1 Theater S:uE.i:e Costa Mfta 141 L 1 ftll 5,, Jus' .tt N...,.,. UM. IB1II<G WATCH FOR BIG T ofl4 AMlalCAN CUISINI lROPICAL COCKTAILS CONNIE COMrELL AT THI PIANO IAR ~OLYNESIAN SHOWS-FRI. & SAT. 1•61 ADAMS AVI. let Motfl•fl•J HUNTINGTON llACH 968-5050 JOIN IN ON AN "INN" THING THE SUNDAY SWI NG SAN CLEMENTE INN \Viii F•al u~ JOHNNY SMITH And Tb.- Ai.l'HAIETICALS May 2 I 9 5 to 10 P.M. 125 AVENIDA ISrLANDIAN SAN CLEMENTE 4U-610J le 18700 MACARTHUR ILYD. NEWPORT HACH cAirportcr qnn "Hotel oppo1it• O••n•• Co~nly Airport llJ-2770 \VI.,.. Ti,.. Jl'N Peogi~ i\l•~t Mother's Day Bruncl1 11 :00 A.M. to J:OO P.M. IN THE MEDITERRANEAN ROOM Dinner From '4:00 P.M, BREAKFAST. LUNCH & DINNER AT THE CAPTAIN 'S TABLE 'lj ~ Claeese Cake We Jtloke Fre~h 111 Our Own Kitchen DON JOSE' NOW APPEARING ELLA MAE MORSE Recording Artist With Tho HAYDEN CAUSEY TRIO Enchil ada and Taco ••.•• , •.••. , ••• , . $1 .35 Chili Relleno ·Enchilada ..•. , .••••... $1.50 '-'"4 witti lJc.., a.-. TeetM'ita -4 S.tt. ,INDT MIXICAM ,OOD AT UAIOMAIU PllCIS e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams (at Matnoli1} Hunt. BMch f62·7911 There's no mistaking the kinship of Far Wes t's Reubens, Cocos, Snack Shops, Re uben E. Lees. Plankhouses and other enterprises. But the Afoon- raker is a novel addition to the clan -and one that can stand on its own without the support or any rel· atives. Evidently word bas gotten around quickly that this new restaurant merits an early visit by out 'n' abouters. It's only been open a few ~'eeks and our initial call the other evening \\'as made in the com· pany of ~evera.l hundred other diners. ·• • INDEPENDENT DECOR A restaurant with a nautical name located by an airport easily leads one to \\'Onder about the de- cor. Surprisingly, neither the moniker or place have much bearing on the finished result. To be sure there are a few touches in the over· all atmosphere that relate to the seafaring tiUe. But by and large the mariner \\'Ouldn't be able to pinpoint too many objects characteristic of his sur· roundings. SCALE MODEL Foremost among the sailorly items utilized in the decor is an intricately detailed scale model of the "Young America," an American clipper ship of the year 1850. Displayed in a glass case adjacent to the cashier's stand, it's good for a long period of close scrutiny iI you're as fascinated with such handiwork as we are. • The absorbing facsimile, we learned, was rash· ioned through the gkilled artistry of Ed Sims or La· gu na Beach. Noted for his work in this field, he's been called "the Captain of a Thousand Ship s." ~ Hailed as one of the world's foremos t model ship builders. Sims has created \\'ell in excess of a thousand models ranging in style from the Kon Tiki raft to the Queen Mary, and in size from one inch to six feet. He was especially commissioned by Far Rul C1ntonese F11od eat here er t•k• homt. STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport llouh ORiol• 3°9560 o,.. T ... .,.._. D.n, 11·11 -Fri. •Mil s.t. 'ttl l 0 .111. rRIME Rll e S!AFOOD STEAKS e COCKTAILS OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH 11 to 2:JO DINNER 5 to 12 SU NDAY BRUNCH FROM ID A.M. Ent•rt1lt1m•nt W•dne1d•y thru Sundey lOJ N. IAYSIDI DR., NEWrOlT IEACH In The M1r ina Oun•1 '44...fOJl FI NE FOOD • ENTERTAINMENT Co111hag Attroetlo111 STAN KENTON-MAY 25 COUNT BASIE-JUNE 9 M•k• lestnatlottt Early 2121 mt C-t Hlg~way Cor ... do! Mar 675.0505 FINEST SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675.0100 TEMPLE GARDENS ~MSSSRestauront LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~?~ • f ieaturlns ExoUe Tropica.I Dl:i nka IUFFIT LUNCH 11:i .. 1:H M•nl&aJ thrv rrN•y o.-•• 11iM •.111'1 .• II '·"'' s..., Ill,. Tll- ll:M •,111, • t •·"" '"-.... ~. 1500 ADAMI (•t H1rMr) COSTA MllA 540-1f)7 140-1'21 \Vest Services. Inc. to construct the "Young Amer- ica" for the Moonraker. MOUNTAIN LODGE The total ambience, in our judgement, gives the reeling of a luxurious mountain lodge. This im- pression stems. no doubt, from the bold a.rchitectur· al design more than any other factor. . ~ The rambling interior is constructed on var· ious levels to provide a scattered series of dinine: and lounge areas at different elevations. The top- most section -reached by an impressive l.rshaped staircase -is open to view from a n um b e r of points on; the lower levels. Seated on this particular level, as we were, was also a bit like belng suspended on a balcony over the diners below. Further, the openness greaUy en· hanced the prevailing note or spaciousness. MENU Turning to the 1'-foonraker's evening bill of fare, the five members of our party gave due considera- tion to all ten entree possibilities. These range from ground sirloin steak, $3.25, to Australian lobster tail, $6.50. All dinners include a choice of soup from tht kettle or one of a large variety or salads and dres-- sing s. Still another accompanying item -and one that rates a special salute for its very satisfying con· tribution to the meal -is the loaf of freshly-baked sour dough bread with a generous supply o! butter. \Vhe n the final decisio ns were in, t\vo mem· bers of the group opted for steak Oscar. a broiled rilet mignon decked with cral> legs, asparagus spears and sauce bearnaise, $4.95. The third nod wen t to scampi. Ital ian style, giant gulf shrimp sauteed in a rich sau ce of lemon butler, garlic, chopped parsley and capers, $3.95. Continued on Page 21 Fine Jtoliot1 Ct1islt1e Cocktails 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-1267 lewn.tleU o,u D•lly -I , .... t• Z •·•· CLOllD MONDAY SEAFOOD CONY!RSATION l•1ryon• 11 tal~lnt about ..,, tltfl· clOMs steomftl cloms and 9J.t { 16· ZO oa.J Austrian Lobster Talls. SUNDAY IRUNCH s .... od "°'" 10 A.M .• J r .M. E11!1rt•i11111•nt I D•11cint HA,PT HOUI M•"· • fri. S r. 7 I'·•· wltti Hen 4'"""" IAN9UIT FACILITllS 117 PACIFIC COAST HWT. HUNTINGTON IU.CH O'l!N r OAYI le1•rvetio111 Acc•pltd ,.H P'tl'llM tf J H ""'' VALUABLE COUPON OFF GINO'S PARTY * GINO'S PARTY -15 pc:1. goldan lriod chicken, ' dinner rolls, honey. REGULAR $4.20 GOOD ONLY MONDAY & TUESDAY WITH THIS COUPON G • / 19051 Brookhurst St. CAt Gerlt.NI 1nos HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-7666 MLBM fMILIDll Special Mother's Day Menu ROAST LAMB and ROAST PRIME RIB l'U NTY OF PARKING IN.NEW MUNIQ PAL LOT NEARBY TAtE 1kWHAtE "100 MAIN, BALBOA PE INSULA • f71Cl 173433 • " • • • • . .: • DAIL V PILOT 28 .... ....................... 1!11 ..................................... ~--- ftP1 p i!'ft'. -~= ..... ----'"""' MOTHER'S DAY TRY A SAYS ON LITTLE TENDERNESS MENU SELECT IONS INCLUDE ITIAK & LOISTll, T~IONI er N. Y. STltl, I OZ. PILIT 0 ' SIRLOIN . $3.99 $2.19 CHIC KIN-SEAFOOD All St••k• Ar• u .s.D.A. CIMilc• P1rfKtty-AtM Corn-FM lfff SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU ALSO : A pewee pl1te fo r th e Little T ot1 -2tc OPEN DA ILY 11 A.M .• 9 P.M. 22'7 FAIRVIEW IAT WILSOMI COSTA MHA 548-0361 (Continued from P1ge 27) Slulled mushrooms. $4.95, was the lourth sel· ection. For tbis entree, Vant mushrooms were filled wtth deviled crab, dressed with hollandai&e and served \Vith a broiled tomato. Tbe final order went to the Australian lobster tail. Also served with a broiled tomato, it created quite a stir by proferring one of the largest and most succulent pieces of lobster meat in r e c e n t memory. A LA CARTE A la carte dishes, a different one for each per· son at the tabJe, were fresh artichokes, 95 cenl1i; skillet of mushrooms. $1.10; Idaho baked potato. 60 cents; clam spaghetti, 60 cents; saucy meat spag- hetti, 40 cents. The three heavy e;.acrs rounded out the night's fare \\•ilh schooner sundaes, 75 cents each. It was the verdict of all that these mammoth concotions contained enough ice cream for an average week's intake. BROILER SELECTION Other broiler selections on the lfoonraker PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHA1:'.-IGED A LOT sunday BQunch SINCE THE OLD DAYS HENRY'S AEROPUERTO Cinco De Mayo Fiesta May 3-4-5--6 to 12 P.M. Sa l•d SPECIAL DINNER ll<tvtr•g• HENRY'S COMBO ........................................ $1.00 ................. TWO POR $5.00 EL GENERAL ...... $3.75 TWO POR $7.011--CREPAS ...... U.00 TWO POR $5.00 TWO TACOS OR TWO ENCH ILADAS AND IEANS ................................ $1.50 Gla11 .t' WIM Witt> DlnHr M11r91rlt11 tic: S'ECIAL INTlltTAINMINT llSllYATIONS PLEASE IA.LLOONS 2122 PALISADES ROAD, Corner of lirch Near Orange County Airport 545.5579 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR "" " ua.m. to 4 p.m. ·!FllW~ 3801 &\ST C:0AS1' Hr••••.,. CoaoNA. DU. MAl, CAl.1J011tl.l P1tor.ic: (11•) 615·1374 NOW OPEN 421 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 645-5410 PRlttCE lt!Wes RESTAURANT ----TM •• Wt&, Tll~r. o.-4 "" l"rl., S.t.. Sllll. 0'911 U '"' (Cleltll M..,._V-1 SlN'TA AHA: ism """' sw. an.mo (l •fffll II, el C""""tl OUT 'N ·ABOUT menu include tt.rlyak.i brochette, $4.25; lOf sirloin steak, $4.75; New York steak, f.4,95. There s also a plank steak for two, a large two pound sirloin steak broiled to order and carved tableside, $4.75 per person. Breast of chicken, Marco Polo, completes the enlree choices. It consists of a comblnaUon of boned breut of chicken and smoked ham, saddled with fresh broccoli topped with hollandwe and garni>h· ed with broiled tomato. - The Moonraker's seating capacity, we were told, is approximately 225 Person11. This is divided roughly at 165 in the dining areas and 60 in the lounge. The restaurant is open seven days a week for dinner. Monday through Thursday the hours are 4 to 11 p.m., and on Frl8.ay food service continues to midnight. Weeke11d dinner hours are 5 p.m. to midnight. Lunch is served from 11 a.n1. to 4 p.m., A·tonday through Friday. The lounge is open until 2 a.m. and features entertainment nightly except Sunday. The Moonraker is located directly across from Orange County Airpor t at 18542 MacArthur Blvd. ~ At the Tiki Loutage Guitarist·vocalist Paul Calvin, '''ho hails from the !:!~~~~ ~ Island ol Maui, is appearing al the Tiki Lounge al a.\ --;J. the Road way lnn, 1400 Palisades Road, Cos ta A1esa, ~ ,A VOLCA NO HOUSE ~1 _f_rn_m_a:_30_P::..·_m_. _Tu_e_sd_ay_lh_ro_u"-gh_s.a_lur_da_y. __ _ ~ • MDTH~~ ••. ~~! .. ~.E~~ , ~ lllAST Of CAPON IU•INll ••••••••••• ,, ••• $4.JI llrH•t ., c•POl'I poKl>fd in ,..,.n, w!1141 U llC• flllT Of SOLi IONHI flMMI , • , ••••••• , , •• SJ.ti l'lltl ol frR$11 .oi. poe<.lled !ft "'""· lt<lld wl!ll mr.11/lfOO,.,.. U UCI ~\Orft•Y PllMI 1111 Of IEIF ••..•..•••.••••••• , •• , , . Sl.•S 51ow ro•ul..:I pr!mt bMI, tcccm~nled .-,. Yort.alllrt "*!1111 1MI I•'·,· ;.:;~l:~;t ~;:: •• , •••• , •••••••••••••••••• SS.ti (llOklt H-Yori< •l•lfl alrkllll •1'ffk Dorcired Ind crown.ii wJt~ crisp onltll 1tr1ws, Wown tivtrer All lllMIA St r'tllol wttti choice OI CrHm Of fTIU1,f11Wm --... mb; ... ''"" ui..., °"~..i P'Jf•to 1nd lll'Occtll 11e1i.nda1M. ................. ..,. .. c ..... '"' i~ 1400 PALISADES ROAD· COSTA MESA • fNnt '-t11e .... .,. 111111 117°1411 !)~~~~;,, Orange Countu's Most Beautiful Restaurant PROUDLY INTRODUCES !\'ewl" Ea:pa11ded And Ea:clth19 Di11ner And L11nch itlenus SAYOIT NIW INTlllS IHCLUDI: •i..t k111111111,.,.rtH f, ... s,m111 -Ft-.U Le .. .., •• 11 °" .. " ...i ca.r,.,. ..... CleJM •• tile "-IMMH -Ai.A• ll .. Crct. 1 .. 1 - le11lllebeue Me~ll•-Mn'9ll ffllr -leat PrhM l lt.1 ef Enterc IMf, •• In -fle"'litt 4w... IMldlitt h141•1· "Y•I Rec k ef le111b ,,. ....... OINN!R·DANCING IVIRY NIGHT TWO BANDS 311 06 COAST HWY., SOUTH LAGUNA I Rewrv1tlons 49'-2663 J Mother's Day Su nday, M1y 9 Dinner Served From I P.M. Early Res~rvalions Suggested Th• Dry Dock PR.ESENTS TH E MARK DAVIDSON TRIO WM. t•n1 Sucley -f te 1 SUNDAY JAM SISSION 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT COO£R .. ~n •lolffYnt• & .N .. WI A111ple P1rllln• .. _...ltllM ...... 2030• MON. & TUIS. HITIS -f .. 2 Nick Anthony & Company HOUSE SPECIALTY ARMENIAN LAMB-KABOB TRY OUR "DAILY OOUBLE" 5 P.M. • 7 P.M. Tw• Dl1..,. ,_ n. Prke ef o..-1w .. 114..,.1 SAT. I. SUN. BRUNCH CMlct ef 1. """" ... c-.. s 175 ··-·-J. 1tP'-4kt Aa111M l'I .. w C..11elll1111 aat•ft 2601 W. c .. t H~lnrrey Newpert S-.•-1•1·11•6 • French Fries • French Fried Onion Rings ftMEftA II~ ftt&TAUftANl' SUNDAY, MAY 9 • Tossed Salad • Roll and Butter Iring 1 friand! T1ke 1dv1nt19e of thi' clelic.ieu1 cl iR· ner for 2, 1t • just right price. 1/t lb. t en••r cheic• 1te1k, cut to Br1dford Hou111 spec.i fic1tion1. le 9oetl t o 11 friend, or m1 ybe the f1 mily7 This me11I, i1 I fevorite with •II , .. you'll be • wil'lner! •) OIM'" 01llr M.,._ tht• lat. - t :JI a.m. te f ,.,,.. SuM11 rllOJliIJ KNOWN FOR VALUES 11 '·"'· •• ' '·"'· GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST I. ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH Continental Cuisine Cockt1il1 Servino f,unchcon and Dinner Mondav lhro1'Qh Sotufdav. Closed Sundays We are lo catecl next t o the M1y Co. in South Co1st Plau. JJll I . lrht9I c.... .... 14 .. l a.41 STOP BY ON YOUR FOOD fO GO WAY TO THE MOTORCYCLE RACES TERIYAKI STEAK $1.85 2698 Newport Blvd. ,., M-••. 1 Cos~a Mesa ACROSS 'ROM ORANGE COUNTY. FAI RGROUNDS • Enjoy MOTHER'S DAY Al THE BERLINER German Family Restaurant F1mou1 For SAUERI RATEN w;th POTATO DUM PLING S OPEN AT 1,00 P.M. COMING ATTRACTION SUNOAY, MAY 16 BegiM lng Al 4:00 P.M. BOCK IEER FISTIVAL With Th• TRIO AUSTRIA Dlt"Mt ''°"' Vlen.,ai You Hs..-~ To Stt and lff!llr Them Onl}' OM Appearanee Per 1taMn 1tlen1 C1ll Now 11512 IEACH ILYD. Tewn & Cevntry Cenhr HUNTINGTON IEACH • '61·1100 CHILDllN'S MINU IANtUn PACILITIU ,. c,-. •• COU~l-T G_,!TifUI ... Friday, Aprll 30, 1971 ~y PILOT _i9 Your Guide to Movies ' Tl Walter Matthau Stars in 'A New Leaf~ Friday Saturday Evening Morning APRIL 30 MA't' 1 6:00 IJ Ila Ntn JtrlJ Doopfty. 7:00 fl JIN~ ,.._ ..,.. (j)AICN.-iR1uoner,S111lth. Cl dl crJT......, .... f!I QllC N""9R'lc. Tom Snyder. (()TV at..... 8 Th AllM Slllw m hMlc Aftalrl Q Cl) m NIA hlkltNH (cont'd. m ...... SW-ttt lrom ~:30 PM) Mllw1uk• lucb 'ft. 7:JO B .....,., ,,...._ a..ttirnort Bull eta. D m Mlcllt a *"" fJOiclY•"DPe (j)._.., ID™~ o l&lc* ~· ID st. TM 9 u.dl ... fDlll•ftilitllll/MSbldie atn1al1*l6t enm.r1.itr l:OOIJltp ,...,, .... ._ .... fENltkler9J4 am...,••., .. ~ .. .,. Ill "'• ,..., ..,, 0 (J) (J) ~ "" I Lt lllf1I ft•ililf .. C..• (j) ca..-...... 1:.JO Nl'n Bill H~. G llw6r. CC) ..,,. lllt" (tcl·IO en ,._. watttr Ctonki11. •51 -st ... lkiQIMft. D c..Niit c;...,., ID, .. " W6 r.,.. o nc ..... omd 11r111t1.,. 1:>0Daen. ._.. m • flydi1 "" a c...,.. """ m ..... .,.. .. Llclrc ma.. QI GI SlltctH Fii•• m ,..., a;).DtMrt 1tpert t:GO 11 (II~-& t11e ,,.._. •• lilil"' °"""" .. 7:00 D ca JINS Waltat Cronkite. a a m~ .... 0 ml NIC Nm David Brinkley, 0 Mft!I: "'Sci4llM YM 1..-. flJ Whll'1 Mr UM? ..... (mrsteff) '52-Cesar Romn. 0 Didi Ya11 Dl't D CIJ (I},_., LNie a.. ID I LM L11q m A.IL ""ill: "ClfAlil c.tle.-Q) ()) Dnptt (1thent11r1) '40-Ala11 ladd, Vktw fD TtllrtJ llllnut• Witfl • • • M1tur.. "l'9J lM ., fllPl"' (fr•· m CIHitl ... Uwiq Wtnl "11} '49 -F•rle7 en .... m..,.,,,..,...,_ mr ... -GI!l S111t1M•le Maril l!I Cm"-J • .,,_ G) Mlril II• Im,_... Lau. 7,3118 n. 1,..,. <'1 1:30 D iii &l n. "" - ' (]) Ml'ril: IC) (Zllr) "lll1n:dl" (dra· D CI! Cll n. ............. m1) '64 -Stan Connerr. D ~ """-" 11"'""' D 9) I:) MiJ11 Cllt"'111 (R) (wtthnl) '41--Dlmlll' Morra111. e 'firlinla Cr1M11 SllfW CD MMr. .,.. flMM ... (lllrl• (I) llltw11: "furiea fra .... • John m1) '~Wiiiard rMW. Voi1ht. Monlqu1 Yan Yonin. ..-!~~~ =-=-0 MtliH $ Mtrie: (t) (2't) "ltlf lv;w - - ColtdtH· (weslltll) '64 -Richard D m ILi. ....... Boon•. s1uart Whitman. W0.,.CD.=;:.. ._... m Tnrtil " Contlq1r111C1• , ........_ • ...._ aJ Ptt7y Muoi II).__ .._.. _ m R•ppl111 Up tile Wttk A look ,, JO:JO II CJ) ...... II .. lbs.•• mtjor ntwi M ftb ol !ht WHk, with CJ Oi m lert C.. 11111 ltu., Les C11nt 11 host. 8 llhril;: "R...UW. ANrw"' (ID Cl11t1111 30 (drama) 4Z-WU11a11 Holdtn. ID btrtll11 Mnk:llls 11:00 = iE: "'::... ....,... '=" m cwut1t11 d• s. .. ,.. 0111 m .. ., i.,. a..w •:oo D t1l m Tiii ''"' 1111ch Mlnnuoll Twins It Iott• •• Sox. ID r. Ttl/ u.. TM' (jJ ..... , ...... " ........ Editor'• Noit: ThU, '"°"le gulck ,, proportd b~ the /il'IAI committee ot Harbor C011ndJ PT A. Mn. Nfl/d Ball<v u prUl.Unt and Mrt. Btuc1 Nordlond fl oommltwt chairman. It ts fnttndtd cu a refer~• jn dtttrmini'ng .t1dtablt I i J m s for certain agf group" and toill apptllf' w•tkl~. Y o u r oftw• art soJidttd. Mail a&.m to Mo- trlt Guklt, car1 of th1 D.ULY PILOT. * ADULTS Diary •f a ~lid Housewife (Ill: Slory about tllt dbin· ttrratlon of a New York at- torney's marriaa~. Richard Btt1jamln portrays the poln6 pous husband and Carrie Snodgn:u play1 tht bored wife wt.> finds an affair with an uninhibited writer u a t~ porary anUdote. Ft" Euy l'tec:<J (RI: Son MOVIE RA1NJB RJR f1MEM'8 AND 'WOUNOHDU ,........,..., .. ,.... .... .... ,,.._ ............. ,,, .............. ,.,....,., .. .,.,...., -------------------- ®II M Mii 17 M*ITTlt (Ate hMll NY 'al'Y '" llPtliol MM) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... •-is ....... _ --~ .. ... ---·-··- ol -ltlly m\IJlcal famil y Juvta borne lo be eome itlnerant worker. lJves ~ tentodly with wallnll - drlnU and braw11J wl\b new hlllbUJy lrltndl. '"JO.IC" (R)i loe, • crude f1ctory worker and b I s wealthy adverUlln& execuUve lrtond, BUI, share halnid ol "Blickl, Uberall, w e I f a r e bums.." Vk>lenee er\IPla whtn Blll'a dlu.ghter be co m e s enmeshed in b Ip pl e en- vtromnent of .e:i and dr..?.gs. M*A-rH (R): lrrevennt comedy about the '-foblle Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War. Spoof on nurse-doctor rtlaUonahtpll and the "La!t Supper." Stars Elliott Gould and Donald Sutherland. Loven and Otber Strangen (R): Havln1 lived together for two years, Suman and Mike deddo lo marry. Comedy about the Interplay of her Irlah rtJaUves and blt-' Italian family -pl\IS the aide allllrl of "Daddy," an4 .. Ute usher who t1 alter the bride bmelf. Tff Prle1t11 Wife (GPI: Black comtcly 1larrln1 Sophi• 1.Dren u an ov~td rock slnger who attfmpb suicide over unhappy love alfair. She la 11ved by a prlat, with whom abe take1 lip apartment-Uving. Plot thlckem when she becomes pngpant wb.lle a w 1 i t i n a: dispO.\al of bla cue be:lore the VaU can. 'Ille Slahl< (R): story of a male's preoccupilion with the size of bla reproductive orians. Vaalt!Wi1 Point (Rh Slory of anti-establishment hero, Korean War vtt, ex.cop, ex· rice drin:r. Speeds from Denver to San Francllco wllh MacGraw and R)'an O'Neal police in pursuit, enCOW'1ged star 1n romat1UC', blUenweel by Black radio dllc jockt)' f1ble of today's college youths aaatmt bard rock music a.od the eeneraUcn gap. Told background. In ~Ir 1-&'e. womea ID Love (ft): Screen Cold Tlu'tey (GP): S25 adaptation of D. H. Lawrence million 1s offered to small novel set in the England of • Iowa town U residenta stoi> 1917. BlrkJn reject! the love of amoklng. Story of how ~reed an aristocraUc intellectual 1ttecta the town mi.niJter. doc- choosing Instead an earthy t.ar:, rtahtwlng fanatics W1tl misttus. He alao becomes in-t the en!orclng police. Local ~Iv~ Jn . a .sell!Ual rela-b«n anct munge parlor do tlonship with hia best friend , thriving bualness d u r i n g Gerald. smokera' "withdrawals.'' MATURE TEENS Darlin U!I (GI: J u 11 t AND ADULTS Andrews plays a music-hall A.1.dromtda Strala ( G ) : German spy In tbh1 romantlc Suspenseful story of r•ee epic of World War J. Rock against time, where sclentlstl Hudson is the Allied flyer ...,. in underground Jab In desert . her espionage assJ.&nruent. try to isolate rare disease 'l\e Great White Hope transported to earth from (GP): FicUonali:zed account of another planet. We of Jack Johruon -first Love Story (GP): A 11 black heavyweight champion or 1910. Trqedy result! es UCI Concert Slated prejudiced box.Ing establish· menl ruds to b1s victory and hls publicized affair with a white woman. Holland Orclr.estra The Oraflie C o u n t y Philllannonic S o c i e t y is presenting the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amaterdam. Holland, in a concert al UCl'a Crawford Hall on May 5 at 1:30 p.m. to Perform on May 5 P1tiOn : Salute to a Rtbel (GP): Film portrait ol the Wwld War ll general known u "Old Blood and Guts," showtng him capable of in. tcme profanlcy and as a brtlllant war 1tr1te1t1t . George C. Scott -portrays Pat- ton, Karl Malden is General Omar Bradley. McKtmle Break ( G P I : Suspenseful World War II prbon break story with M unumal twist. Prisoners are Gtrmans escaping from a Brltilll. camp. Helmut Griem portray• tho llDlUcal u captain who rutbl111l or1anlzes the Ne.z.la. A New Leo! (GP): Wo Molthau ii a luury bW>I bachtlor down lo hll I quarter-mllllon, Elaine Ma play1 the rkh love lnterut t b f I sllpolfcfHtyle CO temporary comedy. rrtme of Ml11 Jeaa lrod (GPJ' Maule S 'l 11 ii portrayal of an older. u convenUonal t e a c b e r m.lU.ed to • rom1ntl distorted view of Ille. Story her two aborted love atfat and tragic Wh1t""" she b on her students in Ulla co servative Engllsb gtrb' of the tblrllu. RYl"''• lla•1~ler ( G P ) . Rober! Mitchum and Sar Miles star in a low at«y s. In acenlc lttlond of 111 RestleP, beautlful wife m1ddie-agld school teach has affair w:ith Englllb majo Tragedy for all results. Sudden Ttrrtr (GP): Ele en-year-Old boy on Mediterra ean lSland la on)y wttneu cb'lllln1 muraer. ,.. lgnoru bla plea !or beco""' ol hll lltqutnl I tasles. ZIUY la lttt alooe ~ 6<:ape from the relenUec police who bunt him down. * Thi l<tttr lmmcdloltl7 afUr the titl1 fftdicaCa tM ro~ng ¢vn tllc pl<me &II th• Motiofl l'iclMT1 Code, The Code And Rali11t1 pro. gmn may bl foMftd olt olU of lh• motiofl pielllra ~ 1 .. SHw Item 7 P.M . c ........... --····· 89 LM111 look 1111," Fi"lnll C:ordlln, Gloflt c..t.Ho. UL! SJtyi1 J Enrillut D (]} lllt'11r ..._ i~iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;ii;iiii;iiiiii~I Roberto B e n z I , principal guest conductor of l h e 1orchestra will be on the Podium for the sixth in the .society's series of seven. con- cert,, this season. The pro- gram choosen Includes Good Friday Spell from Parsifa1, Richard Wagner ; Symphony No. 4 in A Major, Italian; Felix Mendelssohn· Bartboldy; Pastorale d' ete, Arthur Honegger, and Suite from "El Sombrero de tret PICO!," Manuel de Falla. SHOULD A PRl&ST MARRY? l ;OSQ,i)Llldl1 Ubr1 Olllftlt:...W.htftr¥1•1not" l :JO 1J AndJ Griffith (~ (west1r11) '57~ Clllloun. D 91 m N•MI ., Ult ..... (R) m lll'llt: .,__ " Lift" (dnlNI) 8 JITl'O '56-Aoblrt ODMt, ll)' WllM. u Cil m H111111 ' n1 ,.,....,. m n.. ~ 0 THE SUPREMES & ll:IOO (J)Tlo -~ * Ingrid Bergman join Frost IE 111 ... • MIM....,. m Dl'lid Frotl ~ . GL11sb .,. A~amoon T~ Supremes ind ln1nd B1r1m1n. m 0r1111tt IZ:DOD Cil OJu.tc. ....._. Elli Solll! fB Hi&ll SdtMI rr.W.. iI:) httlf• fOJ Liwin1 el Cr11 Tfltrt t :OO I) (I) CIS frid.,. 1111Yi1: (C) (Dir) Eil) Drl• •&a S-- .. Jldl If Dl1111011ds" (suspenw '67 11:15 IJ lllMe: "'CWN" (dralM) '54- -Gaor11 Klmlltbn, Joltpll Cottlft, Al• ~,1.lflftl YMlftl. M1rfe l1For1t, M1urict Enl'll. lZ:lO Cl) lllllllii ..... sa.. U l\e f•litl¥t Olill*......, •Mr llct" CIJ F11lur1 TBA (dr11111) '57 -C.111 .. Mitdltlt. 0 Mo.It: (C) C2h1) "1lMI C.urtall!J ID !Olp ., c...,, ti lddlt't fltll1r" (comedy) '63-1:00 e DatntJ I lllftllr .1.1.1.n WllT PREllNTS The Sen,1tlonel TONY FLORES Gultarlot/Vocalfot F•lk, Cl•••lcel, Spt1nlsh TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Me~•1 Nl1htt m ftlony Sq11M LMrJ 1111 a.. FIATUllNCJ DINNllS Git Rn Ferd, Shlr1ey Jots. w .._ Pnll~ l!J 30 Mlnirtts Mflll: (C) -!tit ....... llt 111 th1 $111 Fttncl1c1 M111ut ~Lt Criacli llt11 Critda llnu" (drtll'll) '5Z-G,.,.,, Piel. UCI o• U.MI Ql) Nltldui ([)TY I I.Mb at ~ ITIAQ e llAPOOD &)flltwt TBA UJ,.... "-t 1 lO II NIGHTLY l ;JO D JoJa I l1rtr1ra: f11 Adutb Ollly Ill Lt """™" aJ Qullt !tr AM•t1111 E!) Htl """' IUllNUIMAWI LUtfCH EI\'!Sin f11nd1C1 Mil l:>O IJnt.....,_ 11 :00 TO I t1'.i) Mukl1t/r11ttr't Ouk {])Ylkl If ..,,.Clftn III u Cru o. llllfiu C..llW ()) MdttW1 11.., SATURDAY-11 to 5 The Concertg:ebouw Orchestra gave ita first con. cert In 11188 under the baton of Willtm Ku who soon shaped the en1emble to one or great promise. The people of Amsterdam did not at [int take to the young conductor as be set about educaUng his audiences. Latecomers found the doors locked. Talking during the performances (until then a usual thing), brought the music to a 1top. Serving ot refreshments during the con- cert also was declared t.lboo. POND GOLDFISH ROIElTO BENZI GUEST CONDUCTOR Conctrtgebouw Orche1tr• at UCI ~ ~ j. It was an uphlll climb for Kes. 1964 became the IOll but -he won out in the end and ductor. the people appreclattng the Roberto Berul wa1 born in orderUnes1 ~g.an to give Marseilles, France, of Italian whole·hearted attention to the parents. He 1tarted 1ludylnl music. He left in 1195, was piano when he was four ; made followed by Willem his first public debut on the Mengelberg, who remained for concert platform in BayoMe almost ha.If a century and was at IO and the following year followed In 1'45 by Eduard his first appearance in Paril van Beinum, then second co1>-as a conductor. He gahfed doctor of the or c hf: 9 t r a · some acclaim as a child actor Bernard Haltlnt later becllme · and musician in French filma co-conductor of the orchestra which were made in l!M&.52. with Eugtn Jochum and in In hia early 20'1, after com- 101 CAR,, LILLlh WAm HYACINTHS POND flLTIATION UNm W• MAV• l'V•tYTMIMO l'Olt TM• 90\.Dl'llM l'OND SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH lO:ooooim llflC!AI n. ...,., ~llMt: .,.,..., fl .... ..., LUNCH OR IRUNCH -...... (~OM 55-"""' -"'"~" -.. ~ rJ .,_ •• °""""" "~"" . ..... ... SUNDAY-BRUNCH PICIWICI . -411 r111rded 11 pct1nu.! Preti· Cl Al Klilb ''""'' ,.,,;,,, .. ·~ '""' """' ""'a· KENTUCKY DERBY on11 nm •n BOOISBOPS ' r10m1n1tion-111 ll'llflllld br Rich-OM Tlla oc•u AINA.Cl"' lid Sc1mrno11 (tlec:ticn COllSUllantJ * FIRST CLASSIC IN TO .. ........,. •Mell ..... tll w. wn.SOfrt. COSTA M•SA ~! fJll) m.:mo 111d UNTllPOndenl Willl1lft Monrot. THE TRIPLE CROWN 2106 W. OCUM NONT t.., ••"""'-••.> .,...,.,., IOUTH COAST ''"u. °""" pleting his educaUon, he participated In several EW'l)o pe.an musl c festlvalt and made concert tours of North and South America and North Africa. Tho11 r1¥iew1d lnclud1 Hvbtrt H. •Cll n. ...._., ..., 1IMi NIWPOIT llACH Ml AnMM. ::•TOM •IACH c .. ,. "-•. t'Pl4J U..21fl r-.... Humph rey ol Mlnn1sot1, GfOf)t Mc· 17ttl rv11111ft1 If tllt R11'h.d1 DMb ~~;;;;;~;;~~~:=::=::=:~~~:=::=:~~~~~~~~~~~, Gmm ol South D1kot1, Edmund S. from 011rrd1lft 0... 111 Ltu!Mllt. .~ Muski1 of M•IM, Bird! Bl)'h of In· Kr .. is ttl• flllt If tflM ,.... .. d~n1, Htrold E. Hu1hu ol IO'Jr• 111d ttle Trtp1t Crown rl herle nd111-• H1nrr M. Jackson of W•shiftltoll. (})Aam tfll f .... O ,. ... SlndMt/Mortis. 0 Dlalllt Ftthlrr. ....., ..._. 1J llltlf wn Nm lq" (dr1m•J '47 -Humplwtf "' m Jhwt Plltn1mfFlshm1n. 1art. '1'I DICtlf T .... • WIW' Free. ID 1 lf•CIAL I Ln Fllrlltn Htld· (comedy) '40 -l.atlttt 'fOlrns. dma 11111 BUI Burtud 111C1 Ruta l11 8 0111 Nllfrt stllld co·hosl th i• live Horal llt1ddraa (j) F1l11 Fhtllrt 1rackdown." competition from 1111 Bevlfly HlltOn ID hller Dlfbr Ho\11. @l ~ l• llblt When he was 21 he con- ducted "Carmen" In the Na- tional Opera Theater In Paris, and ahort1y thereafter married the your1g French opera ntar Jane Rhodes, who wa1 singing the lead role. The young Coll· pie went on tour with the opera to Japan. He has conducted nearly all the main symphony orchestras In Europe including thole of ' SOPHIA LOREN MARCELLO MASTROIANNI IN ) "The Priest's Wife" . . •• .. 'CUNT· USTWOOD • DON SUTHERLAND, "Kelly's Heroes" ' ' fD AIHricu fit• lllltltllll ntutr1 m Mfltl: "M1nM1tlt 1111 ........ m ltltllllH4il (dram•) '34 :-Cl•rll c;;,~1 .. 10:>011 MMll: (lllr 4511) "l.Mt CN1ti-m TM A111nt1" Wiil n111r (~·Ii) '51 -Cttar 1!:01111ro. ail Yafildtd• 11 .... m lladl )Mtul m Mtllr Mont m CIMlll .... ,.... t :lO rn utewtldl • ll(J)lll • Ol>nJ--l l:OD ... (1) 1uh1a r,..• otfnlpk a a m"•.. I""""'..,. CJ]~ Y1llry 0.,. ..... Ii ,_ o mm• ... c:J Mtorie: "JM Qildrll'I MHr" &) Nftr ..,. ache relief and help to sleep. Berlin. Prague, M o s c o w , Warsaw as well as In Japan and North and South Americ1. (dra1111) '6Z -Shhlty M1clain1. 3:00 IJ Ardll1'1 f1111._. muwt1: (C) "All 1M ltlUlen CIJ SMl l•n• Wtn1 VlllMr (dr1m1) 'S.1-Robtrt fJ llflllls: °'Cfulwl ,,.. ... tifd: Taylor, Ann Blyth, 5!1wart Gran1tr. lJttW' ('*'°') '54-lklll~ Ctr!· Q) 11111 Johns NIWS »11, Julll Mtm. 34 Cl) 1ni111hlli Ills 11:15 m Cin••• . 0 w.tr. "1lt n.,.... (...t.-> ll::tO IJ CJ.) M"' Criffi" '57-Htnry folldl. Mttiorty h rl1111. 0 \fiil m JohnllJ c..,... 9 IM!t: fC) .......,, , ... o m oo m ~" """ • .,... <"'·"' . .._... "'"· Cl) Moril: NAt W1r Wlttl Ute A1111, m ....... : .,... ,..... ...... D!1n M111!n, Jtny l1wb. Frid (d111M) '42~ lier · m ... 1111 Cloct ,.,. Conltlo C11111ml• fl) Cofl¥tnltfln1 WKll I r.,clllt· Iii ... Mlllial hist tD "' 111 ,.,..... 12:00 W Mwil: "Tiit Honibl1 Dr. Hltdl· eI'i] T•ll1 *' ..... clldt" (horror) "64-Rotiut rltm:tftl· m St1dl111 Tltlth 12:15 0 Mwif: ''St Darllna. SI 0.NIJ" J:JI (]} M"4t: "ftl fW ( .. IM) 'IS (d11m1) "67-811d Harrl1. -Jtfl Ckln41tt, Jaftt ...... 1:00& ..-: (C) '"t!M1 ._... (d1•· 11 111 l'lltlllt......,. • fl\1)"'51-lhnd• n.mma. (I) ........... ~ cwt ao-""""'-o ...... ,. , .... ...,.., I CllMril'• ........ m M·"'&trl Sin: ..... ti Ill," lldll • ,..._ '1t1 Mllllf" ind "Rt ,.,.,__. TM ...... -· For Advertising in Out 'N' About Phone Norm Stanley 642·4321 SAT. Ir SUN. MAY 1 ond 2 AU SEATS 75¢ S!:IOWS AT. 12:00 •n<I 2:00 P.M. ( :r,; ) lfil ntl WllTMlfflTll C9'Tlla ... CD2 ........... ,.,. ......... ~ ........ .,,..a .. ..... • \ \. ... --. . .. 30 DAILY PILOT Frld11, AJNll 30, 1971 Mozart's 'Figaro' AtCSCF 'The Possessed' Set For Six-week Series ''The ro.tarrlage Of Figaro," Wolfgang Mozart's com i c opera. will be presented al CaJ!fornla Slate C o I I e g e , Fullerton through S u n d a y , May 2 by the Associated Students and the School of the Arts in the Little Theater on' campus, 800 N. State C<lllege Blvd .• Fulle.rton, at 8:30 p.m. nightly. • "Tbe Possessed," Fyodor Dos1oyevsky's monumental epic of revolution, corupiracy, murder and madness, will be featured in six we e k I y episodes on Ma sle r piece 'Theater starting this Sunday at t p.m. on KCET, Olannel 21. Tickets for the production CLIFFORD W. REIMS may be purc_hased fr~m the Cal State 'Figaro' Director on-campus hcket office or Set J n pre-revolutionary Russia, Do!toyevsky's novel about political r a d I c a 1 s dedicated to the overthrow of the Czarist Russian monarc h is a bold, scathing attack on RlWi.an polJtics, 8! well as an ornate and ambitious portrait of Russia in the 19th century. reserved by calling 870-3371. .. Admission is $2.50. The foor-act o p e r a , p~sented in English. y,·iJJ be dire~ted by Clifford W. Reims with Alberto &let conducting the CAI State Symphony Orchestra. Richard Odle has designed tbe costumes and .... The student cast includes : Barry Biggs and Judy Berry, Anaheim ; Christine Tyszk.a, Huntington Beach; Eugenia Hamiltan, Downey: Sharon Beardsley, Silverado; Paula Haines. Rowland H e i g b t s ; Michael McCormack, Garden Grove ; Jim Brown, Rialto; Sherril Senne, Tustin;. Diane Elias, Newport Beach; Daniel Aulwrum, Glendale; Don 1'1artin, Yucaipa; C 1 ark ~1allory, Palm Springs; John Catanzaro. Covina; and Leslie A1orgap, Ventura. In the opening segment. h-iadame Stavrogin (Rosalie Rodeo Dran1a HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Gene Hackman is col- laborating with Norman Twain on a script dealing with the drama of the Mont a na , Oregon, CalifornJa r o d e e circult. "WOMEN IN LOVE" COLOR ' ,fl;j~ ~~~~-·~ ·c< • ~ •• "-.'~ .. ~ ?.,,.·:.. ~ r1r~ Mw;J ,./l/ZS . ~ '.' ~ "'"'" l!!l - . ~PL~~ ACADEMY' ~~ARD NOMINEE. MB.VYN UU\J'l>\A-'I =.,...=,.,..;:.•,:.;:-In '1 NMR SANG FOJ MY FATHER'' (GP) BARBRA STREISAND I. & JACK NICHOLSON Ill "On l Clear Day =· Meel Henry Be Henrietta _ the laugh riot of the year. .. A neC1J Leaf" [t;j COO. l7f MOl/1ELAB ~ A Paramount Picue ........ .Jott .: Wolter Mcrt1hau -9oint Moy Weston "LOVERS ANO OTHER STRANGERS" CAC ACADEMY AWARD WINNER SAT. MAY 1 ClOR•S lf.ACHMAl'I COLOR 1!)CD BEST "fOR AU 1£ 1!01" saw; 111 "\OYlltl A•D -1'1.US-OMtSftAffllS" "dlaryota mad hou-wHe' ; • richard benjarnin ... ' ·~.~arrie snodgress BEST ACTRESS NOMINEE · "JIMMY" •!!!I -,_ CHiLDREN'S M1\TiNEES AU SEATS 75c Box Office Op.n& 11 :45 a.m. -Show Runs from 12 Noon 'tll 3:30 ADYINT'Ull "AND NOW MIGUEL" Crutchley} and her son's tutor Stepan (Joseph 0 'C o n o r ) , leaders of society in a Russian provincial town, are eagerly awaiting Nikolay (Keith Bell), Madame Stavrogin'1 son. Nikolay is an arrogant and d isdalnful aristocrat com· pletely bored with life who repeatedly scandalizes t b e town. His regal and overbear- ing mother attempts to quash one o( his affairs by marrying her ward Dasha ( A n n e Stall)•brass) off to old Stepan. When Stepan bears of the gossip and scandal, be thinks he is being ·'sacrificed" for Nikolay 's sins and in a panic, writes to his son Peter {David Collings) for help. 'nte six-week series in color will air on Channel 28 Sundays at 9 p.m. and repeat Wed- nes d ays at 10 p.m. 1t1a5terpiece Theater is made possible on the public broad- casting network by a grant from Mobil Oil Corporation. Boom for Dyan HOLLYWOOD tUPI) Cary Grant's ex-wife, Dyan Cannon, has fonned her own independent company, Boom Productions. to acquire film properties in which she will star •. ; ........ SHDWlllG -.. ~······· NOW! . llO'llDllFrt& 0,-111,-f":O• JI ••. "•NO" f'T,\lllllJ AT OU$1U IA11D G IUT llAY BE TOO ll!JD!Sf FOi YOUN&ER CHllDllDI. ·---~ llCllmlClt'-·,A...._,.$_.,.-......... _.,... loll SfUI 49<> ... , .. A.1.LCOWC rrrOGIUM! -1·-.. -·-'"WOCIOSlocr fl> """•~Wt.lll1 "t1-..... Al.Jn L ,..,_..II> All'*'-e.1 ... n. o,.;.,..1.J-.._1 _,,_ .. __ 'iHKTOtt' WIVU'" Ill "U$•rfmtMUl•i -n-··· ...... 11ys..,·t11 _,,_ .. __ '"fSVl lAST 'll(UH llJ P\US •MllVIOIDOUGIAS ., ._ s.,.. '" -.. fW"' IWl AIC_f_,,,_,,,._,,.~ _,,_ .. __ "Uftt• , ...... lie •hr". -·-Molo .. ·-~ "'l•ILAtlOlOIO• LOCAL No 1!ht r lllt wtpt ,•r t•ll• 'fO• .,..,,, 1..-.ry tlty. •howl wht t't 1ol"t "" 1111 the1Sr••''' O''"'' C:ot•I fh t 111 tht DAIL't PILOT', . -. . . . . ' . .. . IMPRESARIO HUROK S.t1 San Diego Sea1an Hurok Tells 1971 Plans In San Diego Impresario S. Hurok has announced plans for h i s activities at the Civic Theater in San Diego during next season (1971-72). He pre- sented pianist Va n Cliburn, April 11; guitarist Andres . Segovia is set for February B; y,·orld famed Vienna Choir Boys, !"ebruary 12; two performances by ro.texico's outstanding Ballet Folklorieo under the direction of Amalia Hernandez on April 1 and 2, and, "Tyrolerfest!," Auslria's leading folkloric c om p a n y malting iU!i American debut tour. October 31. Other attractions are being planned and will be announced at a later date. Hurok added that, in spite of sustaining sub.!tantial losses during the past season, he feels an obligation to the San Diego cultural community for its past and cont i n u i n g support, and to an association with the city dating back to the early t\\o·enties. ''THI ANDIOMIDA STRAIN" Ne leMn'ittl SMh oeuv 11 7:• 1 lt M•llrlln Sit. a s- 11-1:•. J Wlft"'r 1 A~H. Aw1m "'IYAN'S DAUGHTll" ... Ol'lk t ~ l l N--t l'.M. DlllJ SMwllmn M .... lflni TIMI~. • I I' .M. l'rl, · 111. -11• P.M. MltlMft Sat ....... t ,. M. .... .,.., kllb . .. .. . Last Ride On Rails Televised Another chapter in U1e romance of the rails closes Monday nighL at 7: 30 <ln KCET, Channel 23, when Cttywatchers Cbarles Champ.. Jin and Art Seidenbaum ccver the last run of Unioo Pacific's crick" passenger train, "City of Los Angeles." Filmed on board en route to Los AngrlesJrom Chicago and taped upon arrival at Union Station Sunday, the "City of Los Angeles'· and other rai l passenger trains will be cut in half u nder the new government-sponsored Ra.ilpax plan. I n t erviewe d between Barstow and Los Angele& \\ill be avowed train buff James L. Loper, president and general m an ag e r ol KCET, and others bent on savoring the final nostalgic ride aboard the popular train. Seidenbaum, who will greet the train on arrival, oomment.s on the former grandeur of Un.ion Station and its once- bustling main lobby a n d ramps and speculates with Loper over the future of the new passenger plan v.'hich virtually all private railroad companies have joined. Citywatchers, produced by Price Hicks and directed by Jerry Hughes, repeats Monday at 11 p.m. and again on Tues- day, May 4, at 11:30 a.m. S. American Arts, Crafts Set at CSCF A Wlique exhibit of arts and crafts from -6ou th America y.·iJI be on di.!play at California State College, Fullerton, April 29-30, and May 3-7. Profits from the sale of items will go to Camp Titan, the Associated Studen t s - sponsored sum.mer camp for disadvantaged Orange County children. On display "'ill be panchos, shepherd coats, La Pushka handspun alpaca yarn, pillows in Ecuadorian des i g n • rnacrame handbags, straw animals. f Io we rs and ornamental pottery p i e c e s from Costa Rica. In the Galleries Festival Art Shown NB CIVIC CENTER GALLE RY -3300 Newport Blvd., New- port Beach. Currently on exhibit in city hall during regular business hours, paintings rrom juried Art Festival, through ,.,_lay. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High- way, Corona del ,.,_1ar. fF<lrmerly Coffee Garden Gallery.) Hours: ll a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon . ..sat. The Junior League of Newport Harbor exhibit will feature vertical scrolls, black ink paintings and wood blocks prints by Sue<> Serisawa, and floral art by Riho Tanaka, through June 3. S~"TA ANA COLLEGE GALLE RY -Gallery 45 on the Santa Ana College Campus, 15.10 \V. 17t.b St., Santa Ana hours are: Mon-Thurs., 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Fri., 9 a.m. to noon. CurrenUy on exhibit. Ceramic Invitational Show with 11 artists participating, through April. PACIFJCA HOS PITAL -18792 DeJay,•are. Huntington Beach. On uhibit in the public room areas, oil paintings by Pat Jenniches throu.gh April. BOWEM MUSEUAI -2002 N. Main SL, Santa Ana. Hours: IO a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues . ..Sat.: 1 to S p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed. and Thars. No chargt. On exhibit through April, ph<>to exhibit of Calif. Sea Otter. OCC G.f.u.ERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours: 9 a.m. to t p.m. Mon.-Fri.: 6 to 9 p.m. Wed. No admission charge. On uhiblt through t.1ay , work of Bruce Piner, OCC associate prof. of art, in library. Student art in Gal- lery May 4 -28. MARINERS UBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular library hours through April, paint- ings by Eve Thompson, J unior Ebell Artist of the month. MARINERS SAVINGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit regul2r business hours photography by Riek Malmin through May. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours , through April , photographs by John H. Atkinson Jr. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Dr ive East, Costa i1esa. Currently <ln exhibit through April , <lil and acrylic paintings by Lucy Sanford. AVCO SAVING ;-3310 Bristol, Costa Mesa. On exhibit dur- ing regular business hours, watercolors and oil paintings by Clay Campbell, through April. LAGUNA ART ASSOClATJON---307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours: noon to 5 p.m. daily. Docent tours, 2 p.m. Sun. On exhibit through April, Calif. Watercolor Society Show. Admission, non-members, $1, students 50 cents. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd.. Costa :P.1esa. On e.xh.ibit during regular business hours through April, oil and acrylic paintings by Alice Grafe. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil and acrylic paintings by 1'1ary Long. through April. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast llighway, Corona del Mar. Hours: 11 a.m. to S p.m. daily. Oo exhibit., through April, conceptual art by Allan rifcCollum. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY--42{1 1'1arigold Ave., Corona de! Mar. currently ()n exhibit during lrbrary hours, rice paper collages by ,.,_tarilou Taylor. through April. DOWNE Y SAVINGS -360 E. 17th Sl., Costa ro.1esa. On ex- hibit during regular business hours. oil paintings by Marve l Coleman, through April. TRANS AAfERICAN TmE -170 E. 17th St., Costa ritesa. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil paintin@. by Ruby Alvord, through April. UCI GALLERY -The F'ine Arts Village Gallery on UCI campus is open 1 :30 to 4:30 p.m. Tues. Sun. Closed Mondays. On exhibit through ro.iay 3, recent paintings (1970-71 ), by John McLaughlin. FJRST WESTERN BANK -18022 Culver Drive, Irvine. On exhibit during regular business hours through April, oil paintings by Hilda Allen. Ce111th11rea Sllow Sot. ••" S1H1. fre111 4:30 p.111. BARGAIN MATINEE JACK NICHOLSON "FIVE EASY l"IECES"-fl l plu• Mtl~I" oouv1~~ "I NEYER SANG Fon MY FATHER" IGPI Ca"'· Sund~y , PM. ft'l=lii•1=•• BURTUNCASml • llWMAmNl . JEAN SEWIG • JACQUBINE BISSO w TmlNICOLDll" ~ SECOND BIG HIT "DARLING LIU" Rock Hudson -Julie Andrews OSCAR ACADEMY AWAllD WtHNf:"- l ••I S~PPllrl- 1.., "clrn• WIN FREE PRIZES SATURDAY AFTERNOON c:allh10ftw• .... .._. Continuous Sat. And Sunday From 1 :45 pu:auu:a:zmlDDICIDDIC......,......,ID:llll=EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT'""" • • The8'ory co...s Ill OI fM1 _, crllit:al ltocn a.,,.,, .. trii:flotyL ,.... . ..,.,. .. ..... ~,,.~ 111 Offlco 0,... 9t 7:11 P.M. "ANDIOMIDA ITU.IN'" et I -4 11:ll PACll'f I LINCOLN DRIVE IN GN 11-,C01 t; A'li l \1 :\jultS l'lfSI 01 IH A~H 8lVD A<li'"" ~q ·•···~VI NA PAP~ OOIV f I N (f4•(()1t£N U"'l (tlf.' '<HNI P><\)".11 >1~ Cl' lllJ . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SHOWING NOW!! ''FASCINATING! . .. TIE PUREST SCIENCE FICTION THRILLER TU COME TU THE SCREEN IN YEARS ! · ....... ,.,..."°', ... --·- • lllllRJ WI ""°'"°"'" =AIDROttEDA STRAIN Your Gulde to Fun Concerts Abound on· Coast Live • Theater APIUL It AND MAY I OONCEl\T -The UCI University Ol'cbestra under the dlr· ectlm of Peter Ode&ard wW present a free concert 1n 'Ille Fine Arla Villqe Theater on the UCI Campus, Friday, April 30 and SUnday, !Uy I al 8:30 p.m. APRIL JO· MAY 1 DANCE CONCERT -The 0CC 0 a n c e Department wUl perform dances In concert in the Orange COut College auditorium, 2701 Faitvlew Road, Costa Mesa, at 8:311 p.m. on Aprll 30 and May 1. Admission •1 at the door. MAY 1 CONCERT -The UC Santa Barbara Rep:irtory Chorus and Orchestra will present the Dvorak "Requiem" in the Fine Arts Village Theater, on UCI campua at 8:30 p.m. S.turday, May 1. The !Ne CODCtrt II 1p011SOr.d by the COmmltle< for Arts and Lectures. MAY I TEEN DANCE -The Westminster Teen Club will bold a dance for tMM (most Sat nighta) 15 through 18 years who Uve in Westminster or attend Bolsa Grandi'!, Fountain Val- ley, La Quinta or Westminster High School!:. Admission for members $1 ; non members, $1 .50. May I, "Sun" will play for danclog. MAY l·I RAMONA -Early Ca1lf. history with gay fiestas and old world f11m&nce will be recaptured with the 44lh season of the famed Ramona outdoor play in the Ramona Bowl, Hemet, on SaL &·Sl.lfl, at 2:30 p.m. May 1-2 and 8-9. Tickets by mall to Box 755, Hemet, Ca. 92343 or phone (714) 658-3111. MAY% SPRING CONCERT -The annual Spring Concert by the Orange Coast CoUege Chorale and Chamber Singers will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the school auditorium, :mil Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, May 2. The program will be under the EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ·-· ___ ... THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE! "OISNErS GREAT PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASON'S HIT REVIVAl!" • .......,, "AN INCREDIBLY REVOLUTIONARY FILM .•. THE MIND CAN RUN RIOT!" Th• NYU "''" "FAR AHEAD Of ITS TIME ... BESTAUDID·VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN!" William Wolf, Cuo ''BEST FAMILY FILM!'' JouphGelmi1,NeWld1)' "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND AND COLOR ,,, MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" Bob S1lrnaui, Group w Ntt'll'Ork STARTS WEDNESDAY MAYS ... ' / ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTRESS OLINDA JACKSON ,~w~:,~~ lMllY IUW(.R.., t.IARTlf 111'.lSOt,.... ALAN BATES OLIVER REED GLENDA JACKSON JENNIE LINDEN '~ D. H. LAWREHCE'S "WOMEH IH LOVE " •""""''"" LARRYKRAMER KEN RO'~ELL ..... """"" ~ C. ..... lr ROY BAIRD MARTIN ROSEN COLOR by Deluxe' IRI ~9i'"e--;+. lntld Arlllil -ALSO PLAYING- The Great White Hope Starring James Earl Jpnes, Jane Alexanller. uc:ed by u..rence Turman. Directed by Mart;n Ritt. eenplay by Howard s.ci<le< based on his play l'n:tlM:ecl"" ........... ~ llr .... \Mlt ~llrlX ~ dJrecUoo ol Wallor Gleckler and lllcllard ll&Qb. No a- 1ion cbara;e. MAY I MONT AGU LECl'U8E -Dr. Ashley Moolalu, antbropol .. gtsl and author of over ~ boob will ~•peak 1n Crawford Hall on the UCI Campus at 8:30 p.m. May I. Ttcketa:, $2, may be purclwed al the Fine Artl box office Ori campus. Phone 83U817. MAY I CONCERT -Arnold Juda, lecturer ill mw.ic at UCJ aQd his brother, Jo Judo, violinist with the Coocertcebouw Qr. chestra of Amsterdam, will perform violin .and piano ~ atas of Beethoven, Brahms and Debussy 1n the Concert Hall on the UCI camp\UI, at B:ill p.m.1 May 3. Thtrt is no ad- mluk>n charge for the event ipon90red by the CommJttte for Arts and Lecturt:S. MAY 5 OC PIULHARMONJC -'Ibe Orange County Phllbarmonic Society will present the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Am- sterdam In concert at Crawford Hall co the UCI campw:, May 5 at 8:30 p.m. For Ucket information phone the QC Philharmonic o(fice, &t&-6411. MAYl·7 FOREIGN FILM SERIES -The South COaat Cinema f">. clety is showing a series of foreign films. in the Forum. on the Festival of Arts grounds, 8SO Laguna Canyon Road, La- guna Beach. On May 5, the Japanese film, uyojlmbo.'' wlll be shown and a bonus program, May 7, will sMw "The Red Balloon" and "Louisiana Story." APRIL Z8 TRIP TO NORTH POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa AJ}JI Colle1e, 1530 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, !.! having a aeries of public shows each Wed. at 7:15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.m. The film, "2001 B.C.,'' will be shown through May 7, and 1'Sbadows in Space," :fi.!ay 19 • June 11. The performances are free but reservaUons are requested. Phone 547-95'L MAYf·l7 STORY BOUR -A story hour for pre«bool childr<n will be held in the Mariner's Ubrary, 2005 Dover Drive, N41w- port Beach, each Thursday at 10 a.m. The Corona del Mar Library, 420 Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar will bold a 1tory bCKlr for prwcboolers every &eeood and fourth 'lbUrt- day of the month at 10 a.m. MAYI TOWN AND GOWN CONCERT -The UCI Town and Gown will sponsoD a spring benefit concert by the faculty and stu- dents of the University on Sat., May 8 at 8:30 p.m. in the Conettt Hall of Fine Arts Village on campus. Performing will be Alan Moore, H. Colin Slim, University Woodwind Quintet, Peter Odegard, Lawrence Gordon, Carole Boelter, Kathy Monahan, Kate Whitney, Maurice Allard, Kerry Grant and Arnold Juda. Tickets, f2.SO, may be reserved by calling Mrs. Smith, 673-2445. Flmda wUl be used for music scholar· shlpa: MAY 8 FOLK CONCERT -The Associated Students of UG.J are presenting a folk conctrt with John Stewart and Jennifer in Crawford Hall at 8:30 on May 8. Tickets, $2.SO, may be pur. chased at the .u.ocfated Students Office. Phone W-SMt. MAYll ·•sp&c1e:r'1 Web" An Aaalha Chri1llo comedy. murder la on st.ta-e at the Ll- guna Moulton Playhouse, 806 Loguna Canyoo !load, Lquna Beach, at l:IO p.m. TUea. ~ Sat., throuch May •• Jiu. ervaUons -Ut-010. •'Ablt'I ltilil Niie'• '"Ile Nta't Blfore ~••" Two ope act pltys on stage •t the Nlity Theater, I07 Main St., Hunlington Beach, at 1:30 p.m. Fri-Sat., through May 15. Reservations W-9158. "Mother EatO" On st.11e at Sooth Coast Repertory, lat7 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, at 1:30 p.m., "M ot be r Earth," Fri and Sa.l., closing May I. Reaervatlo....-13'3. "P•«ents" Rod Serllng'a d r am a on rt.age at Long Beach Com- munity Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim Ave., Long Beach, at 1:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat. through May I. ReservaUona -(213) 438-0536. "Tbe Maa Wllo Came to Dluer" ,.Kaufman-Hart camedy on stage at the Costa Mesa clvtc theater, Orange County Fa.lr- i:rounds, 81 Fair Drive, c.osta Mesa, Frl.-Sat. at 1:30 p.m. through May 1. Relervallons- IU-5.lOO. '"Ralhomon" Japanese-style drama on rtage at the Huntington Beach Playhotl!e, 21 10 Main St., Huntington Beach, Frl...Sat. at 1:30 p.m. through May 1'. Jiu. uvatlons--536-8881. "Claude aod Manoi" An original play oo atage la the Patio Theater, Golden West St., Huntington Beach, Fri. -Sst. at B p.m. through Miy 1. Reservati~1711; Ticket.a at the door. SURFER JR. DANCES -The Wet:tmlnster Surfer Jr. Teen ~ Club will hold a dance on the second and fourth Friday of "67J41Hf the month for 7th and 8th graders.. 11ie 7:30 to 9:30 dance ... 'Ill will be in the Community Center, 8200 Westminster Ave. • l;=A=d=nu=·"=lon==llO=cen=t.=.============;ll ,ries3 ~a=.t' o'Jt'~:'· FINAL WEEK ~~u!:~~ E••l••l•• Sho-'ot "MOTHll UlTH lui't fllet'•lr ot:lfllNllWe • , , lt'1 e lirtie .., tofll .. litt." -01,. 5ulli11•n, LA Timts '" ... • •tt tflat w•fl't 11•h -111oro tllu • flM 111nlc.I •• - • r,.at for tho oyo • woll n ttlo ow." -Tom Titw1, Olly Piiot "':.;:,•';:~.:.ir;''"MOTHIR URTH" ~' .Jbuth Co::ist Re1Jr·1 t<ir,v BALBOA NOW SHOWING 673-4048 2 Of The OPIN .... "9Llo-ael .... PfAlntU!a Year's Best Films In Color -''R" e Also -David Niven • Vlrna Liu Dedicoled lo the proposilion 1ho1 all men ore nol creeled equal v...,...;:iu The Spy Who C.mc Out Of The Kitchen. A f'1E!lt4J< .._,.. """""""' l!!l a> OOLOll"' ....... . 11111111 .... --4,LSO PU TIN._ ""' , .. , ........ .t rour lffttl "SUDDEN TERROR" Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 For 1 llHMllll ~lllllSKf ·lllHUll lll.LEll ~- ... oma ..... 6 ,M Co-F-.ot .. _ P-11 "DARUNG LIU" John Marley & Ray Milland OOi sK1L i.iiim lf.LlR -· ----· •<a~ IA !WI/Ill atl1Hsrf DMO !OCOOI FRllHllS Lii •-'"'* 1 ,_ -..t•f'IWllU'l•COllll ID!...:.a...~ SHOW ST.Un Al DUSK Coofwtn et Marlo Thomu-Al1n Aid• "JENNY" DAILY PILOT SI GWC Slngers 'Jazz Mass' .'Slated ...... ., Aweul Wi...., "Toiz:..!ml an" Sunday Qn!y 12:30. & 2'30-Spoclil Children'• Mttlnn Sale Pea~uts HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Twentieth Ceotruy-Pox gained $314,480 from lta auctton of memorabWa earlier thla year which is 1eu than Jt was paid a single star for a movie role. -/Jj-M•·•rw-.... ,.,ilf: ~ lht fibu/ofli 1')',lr . •• BIG JUNIOR MATINEE SAT And SUN. At 12 And 2 P.M. ALL SEATS 75c "FLIPPER SPECIAL" ALSO FrH Bicycle And Other Print Given Away Sllurdjly Mttlnu Onlyt ' ft MESA THEATRE 1!J .wll• 41» ..... "' -... ..,rt..tfMl1t,,_.ln4lt" f' .... I...,... FAIR f•1t, felr, fa.+iitl. 'nl••• "''" -nh IUM ., f•d•n 1 .. .,.,•fl•• 011 ~ DAILY PILOl otitorl•I P•t• ..... ry 4ty. mm±~ DRAND PRIZE Win your dwn portable TV SET plus ••. more thin 80 FREE TOYS! M1de by: Ideal • M1rx • Mattel • Remoo plus ••• a apeclal lilt for ""'Y child! ~ """""""'"....., .......... ,. ........... ... ~TURtNO liv111 on •tege tn. World femoue Meglolon ... '• ' ' .. r 3% DAILY l'ILOT Frldq, A,wU JO, 1971 .A.TLAS' ~ • .• • r CHRYSURIPL'YMOVTH/IMPERIAL BRAND NEW '·71 CRICKET • ATLAS SEltYICE DEPARTMENT welcomes and honon all Chrysler Corporation vehicles r.quirin9 service. and warranty work, .nt,CJardless of where car was purchased. We ho n o r Master ChafC)e, BankAmeri· card, Cart.• Blanche, American Express and Diner's Club. THE ' GREAT NEW 1971 CHRYSLERS AND PL YMOUTHS ARE SETTIN!; AtL-Tl~I SALES RECORDS AT ATLAS. FINt ·SE'tECTION AND OUR ALWAYS LOW, LOW PlllCES MEAN VOLUME SAVINGS ON · ALI< MODELS. . SEt.~ \IU911El20577 BRAND NEW '71 DUSTER $ THI COMPACT LUXURY CAI WITH THI ICOHOMT PllCI TA6 • . FABULOUS FURY SAl£! d •th all • over-loade w1 Our inventory is • • f the fabu• models and color comb1nat1onts o be moved. 1 Fu ys They mus lous 197 r • • • for the riqht .. If . u've been wa1t1n9 • h yo , F Now is t e ;n ew ury • • • deal 0 "~-n • v.ou're the boss! time. Co~ o,n in • · • • ' . 3 BLOCKS sour~ 2929 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ph. C714J 546•1934 or s:,rj DIEGG F!ll AMlllCAN SIDA.N SIDA.N USED 1s1 courr 440 WAGON ' cyti11d•r, •11t.111•tlc, Auf•M•tlc,r•dio Fully oquipp1d. Nico 1;9 6, outom1lic, r1dio rodio, h1ol1r, low, low ll11tor, exc1l1ent con• tnil ... IOXC 115l dilion. !TEN 1161 CAR cir. (Ol-41120) tncl httf•r. !TIP69JJ $595 $895 $995 . $1095 '66 FORD '61 Pl YMOUTH '61 OLDSMOBILE '68 CHRYSLER '61 CHRYSLER '69 CHEVROLET '68 CHRYSLER . '69 PLYMOUTH '69 FORD '69 Chevrolet YIO CUTLASS SUPllMI NIW TOllll 4 Dlt. FAlltLANI SDI MUST AN• 2 4r. 1port c•u,., VI, NIWPOllT CONYlllT. MALllU H.T. CPL NIWPOltT F~IY Ill H.T.,COUPI 2 cir. H.T., VI, t ut•· CA.MAIO SUPll sn. YI, •ut•1'rl•fic, p•w•• •ulo1111tic, r11U•, ht1t-VI, oulo111•tic, r11iio, FvU powt t, f1clory •it, VI, 1ulom•tic, r1clio, VI, 1ulom1tlc, r.dio, YI, 1ulo'"1tic, ,;,lio, '"'tic, ••dio, ht•hir, VI, •ulo1111fic, r1dio, VI. 1ulom1lic, r1clio, 1lt1rin9 -"•1kt1 •win-1r, P'OWIM' 1!1tri11t I ht1!1r, power 1l••rin9, AM ·FM, tilt t1l11copic ht•t.r, pow1t lt .. t t-pow1r 1+.1ri119, whit. h1.t1r, P•wtr 1l1tt• h••™• powtr 1+1•ri119. tl ow1 • 1t1h, 1ir c1n-"··k··· whit• w•!l1, & "'••••, 1ir condi-whit!, po.,..1r door h••*•t, pow1r 1lttri119 ht•ltr, powor 1lt•t· will,, •i11yl lop, 1ir i119, P,uck1t 111h, co11-cllti•11int •i11yl tool. lock1, ITYHt 64 1 I "•••••· •i11yl top. i119, •ir cortditio.,;119, i119, •inyl top, 1ir con· ITEA704, IVIJ4011 .,;11yl top, 1lr conditioll· lio11i119 ind "'or•. IYPLUSI ,inyl top. IW'6PJ16l clitio11i119. IXltV694 >' comlitionin9. IXY&. 101•. 'i11yl t.p. IXSK· i119. IUOW0701 IVTS 491 J, 61 ll 761) ,195 $1395 $1595 $1695 $1695 $1995 $2095 $2195 $2195 $2295 ' . t; ' •• • •• . . •. ; ., . • • ' $. FULL P'ICE IMMEDIATE onm•r At WllSOll fOIO ••• OR IF YOU PREFER.OU~ EASY TERMS DOWN MONTH LY PAYMENT PA Yfl.1E NT '67 ~~~~~~~!~~.~~~!~.~ .. ," ss aa '65 ~.u~~~::. .. :..... s4aa .. . . FrldaY, Aprll 30, lq71 ·oAIL v PILOT 33 :FACT· SAVE ON A ... <· ..... NEW 1971 $ • FULL PRICE ' (1K91 4199703) IMMEDIATE DEUVERr'AT WILSON FORD ••• OR IF Y.OU PREFER OUR EASY TERMS $65 TOTAL $65 :OT Al 36 MCtiT li ~ us ';.'"" i:...i ,,_ po;..:i °"' 165 it ..... '°'"' ... ;~ .... ¥"'•"4 '6 5 !~t~~~~~~,~~~r~! ••. , ••• , •t••rl~~. $ 5 8 8' . . . ' ln<i, IO•, 7 l "IK•n•• ond ol! -....c...,9e1 Mi --.cl'c,.,;il te• 34. • ,..1111•, ltnter (PJl:JIJ) , ..... ,.,.,.."""_..,.,._ ......... _,._,.,_ ~ - "'""""'· DtofHtMI PY""· pri<e ii 52..05 ;,,,:L .. ,flnef><e <M 'I''• IO•M, -::.:::.•; ... ~ r,1~:..:,::•:;-.:...,":";:;:.:::i..'.;,!::;"'.;·.~~",:: '71 lk_., if)""' pref..-.. ,...;:cooh, lwl c<. ... ,.;., Jo 11052.95 iMI, ~ _ ... _ •. ,,~--""'0"""~' '67 PONT TEMPEST c $688 ~~:::.:_ ... , ................. ,,,,,,_.,w, ..... _,M,._ ..,,,=--~,-~~· .,;•-··-··-· .. _ .. o;;, .. ;;;T;;.;";;.;'IA;;.;T.;.;11.;.;;"'•· ~-----1 :::I•,"'"~''· ••c•llMt ...... ,. ~~-..... ~ hn~·--··_ .. _ .. _ .. _.,_ .. r_ •• _. _ .. _"_"·-'"-'----FA C ~ SAVE ON A . • . . . . . • • SAVE ON A .....•.. NEW '71 MUST ANGH~=:. '68 ~~.~?.~~~~~.~~~!., ... ~ .... 15• $J 88 BRAND NEW 1971 ' ~ s2sssURLICLE '66 ~.~.~~ .. ~~!!!~.~~~kTS~ln SJ 88 ~:~~~~~'~"~'~:q~~~~l~Y~,~~~~~~~~. queen s11e bed & much mOJ'e. No. 111087 . 1~;:~~~:1on1vERY . '6 7 ~~~!~~~ .. ~~~~!~, ..... _. ... $988 & LONG BED FORD PICKUP . ·.FACT• SAVE 0 N A 1---~'"~"~"~"··~·.,.~"~=,,.,,..--__.__.~..,.....,,..t '68 Ford F-100, V-8, 4 _speed, radio, heater, step rear bumper. FlOYRDJOOl3 CaUf. 7l896A. NEW ,71 GALAxil · · · '61 ~t~1~~.~;~!~.~~~'"'"· s 108 COMPLETECAMPERPACKAflE 17J!~,,f~;1 ... , .... 4 ....... UH, s17 WSW, ,..,..llrio"'1' MW ....... (lfllH· . ' 629141l ' IJMOM ~2~~.2~~.~~1.-:.~~ ........ $1 288 $ rr 1lr ct1lllltlt1l11, '•w•r 1tttrl11, LI· c111t Mt. WTY·O•J '69 F RD Ga axie 500 SfOAll Y.j, 11tte. tr'911,. feet..-, 1lr cHllli- tl11l11, ''"'' 1tt1rl11, r1llll1, ai11ttr, llct•1 YW '69 !.~.~~~~~~.~~~!e~, .. s228 Mlltw, ...... , NClt. °!'IW7». . . . ORDER YOURS NOW '69!~~.~~~~ .............. ~·· ... 11Jt54lJ . EULL . • PRICE I ' .. OA!LY PILOT Frlaay, April JO 1971 • ' '. Everyon·e Has Spmethin9 That Someone Else Wants .·DAILY PILOT ;ELASSIFIED· ·ADS You Can Sell It, • Find It, trade It · ' The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results Wlth a. Want Ad General CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. A SUN. LIDO ISLE-REDUCED Bayfront home w/pier & .slip ~ immaculate, w/custom decor :,lhruout. 4 Bdrms.1 fam. rm., din . rm. Owner can't use & says "sell" · just r~uced to '198,500. G. Vreeland BA YSHORES-OPEN HOUSE 2511 CRESTVIEW. Open Sunday afternoon. You'll be pleased \\'1lhis custom hom e \VJ oversize Jiving room & separate dining-rm. & garden patio. Only $39,750, 11ary lfarvey ·WHITE WATER-IRVINE COVE EUerbroek Design with white water views from 4 rooms. Steps to surf. Formal dining room. 5 bedrooms, Jlfi baths. One of area's finest ocean view homes. $210,000. George Grupe BROADMOOR-HARBOR VIEW 4 Bedroom, 3 bath, separate din. rm.: lge, !am. room . 1-larbor view from everv room. Corner location. 3 Car garage rwtth. electric opener. Communify pool. Only $77,900. 41 \'. ~a Burns UDO ISLE-POOL Ior the sophisticated buyeri tbis custom buUt home wit,h 4 bdrm s., dining rm ., large master suite. is one of the 'most dramatic homes on the L<iland. h1any luxurious extras. A MUST TO SEE! $139,500. Kathryn Raul- iiton · VIEW LOT5-EMERALD BAY 1. Beautiful ocean view · 74 X 108, w/gentle slope· short walk to beach. $27,500 · Fee. 2. At the top of the hill · panoramic view, 100 X 90 \\1/level building pad . $49,500 · Fee. Carol Tatum BREATHTAKING VIEW!! Of scenic boat activity. Peninsula Harbor & ocean. Choice Corona Del Mar Loe.; 4,000 sq. fl home \V/3 BR .. 31/.! ba., den. fam . rm ., deck. $185,000. M. C. Buie PRICE / / SLASHED Owner's transfer causes SACRIFICE -see this charming 3 bdrm . home on quiet street with custom, heated & filtered P 0 0 L . $47,500. llarry Frederick GRACIOUS + SPACIOUS Most charming con te1nporary 2700 sq. fL . 4 BR .. pool home, on private street · great family home · 21,-(.z. bath~ · ne\v shag cpts. - lge . Cam . room -40 ft. htd. pool • choice Bay· crest Joe. $79.950 -EZ Terms. Art Gordon HOME MUST BE SOLD! STOP BY 1007 DOLPHIN, SUN. 1-5 AND SEE this exceptional 4 BR. · pool ·view home in EXCLUSIVE IR\1li\'E TERRACE. Owner leaviug area and tnust sell this u·eekend. Sut>- mit offers to · Bud Austin TREES-TREES-TREES Want sec-lusion on heavily \vooded lot? See this rustic rancho ,,·ith huge pool. tea house & private patios. Baycrest. NO\\" $67 .500. BiU Comatock - EXCITING NEW LISTING $44.500 · 3 Bedroom. l :~ .. bath , lanai • heated 18 X 34 pool ; beautiful trees & landscaping. Lot 65 X 150. Near \Vestcliff ~hopping, in Neu,port Beach. ('a11 J\1ary Lou 1'1arion to see. WOULD YOU BELIEVE? a 4 BR. home. v.·alking distance to beach for '34.500 PLUS comn1unity clubhouse, 2 swim· ming pools AND tenn is courts. It's true. Call Cor app't. to see . Cathryn Tennille ll"S YOUR MOVE Into this lovely 3 BR., fam . nn. Univenlty Park home· priv. pool & jacuni. Near U.C.I., close to all commun. acUon · owners moving to Hawaii • ju1t reduced greaUy lo '43,950. "Chuck" Lewis. J33-0700 644-1430 Coldwell,Banker AllD COMM•Y 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11. GOLF COURSE VIEW '.f'his very auraclive 3 bed- room home has a picture ~·indow view of !\1esa Verde G<.IU Courlf'. Great location for relaxed living. Excel· lent ter1ns avatlabie with only S3.495; 1to11.·n payment to 11wiflg II. Priced Just for you ., $34.950. • co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS --5#-4141- {0ptn Evening1) Take Your l'lck $2-l.<XXI 4 BR. -Ji,\ Ba. 721-D:? $27.~ 4. BR. -2 Ba. Goodie Sll.SOO 4 BR. • 2 Ba. Pool SJO.jOO '1 BR .. 2 Ba. Sleeper $32,00J 4. BR. -2 Ba. Beauty COLLINS A W.t,TTS 962-5'23 EASTBLUFF BUY Larae :: BR., 2~ ba. Lusk homr-; fflmily nn., 2 frplcs. plus dirnn.i: rm. High quaJ. lty, low p1·1ce -$50,000. Hope Gerrie Realty 66-4400 fi.lj..3J20 General - IOR l.\l [ OL \0\ '" R£;1J.TOP S OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MESA VERDE BARGAIN lrln, A PalM ••Ill \VO\\·~ Just llstcd below rnarket. Somr l'lbow grease a can or hl'D of peinl and shl''ll look like ne\\'. Spanish tile entry. Ankle deep shai 1:a.:i·flf'lS. \VAL l. T 0 \VALL FlREPLACE. 4 bt r~I' bedroo1n~ PLUS Jib1·11ry. Forn11tl dining roorn. lfnbclicvablc low pr!N.'. Vets move in for as little as :51.000. liurry it's a bal'Rain. Dial 645-4303 HOLD ONTO YOUR HAT! No 9uolllyfn, At 6114°/o I Your chan~ to take ad. vanlaJ{e. O.\lner just up and movt'd 8\l11.,)'. Gor· i;:eous SPANISH STYLE homt'. Nf'wer. Bright <"hrf'ry living room. CRACKLING A D 0 8 E ARCHED rmEPLACE. Thick lush carpets. F'am· ily room. 50 fl. of kltch- ~n counter. Extra larg• back yard -aJJ fenced. Ttlke over fi% annual % rate loan. nn quallfylne:. I t-.1MEDLATt; POSSES· SION. Dl11.I 645-0301 YOUll NOT TOO LATE U Yf'l\J ·1.1;ant to livf' nt11r the bet.ch. But 'Nt:"ll ™'t I the prlcn give you 2nd thought£! 5tt th\a OM. Owner mu1l ul1 Cutt u a bup ur. s r-clow bedrooms. Ce.ndll~light dlnlna: room. Bright chffO• kitchen. Year ..-ound poU.. Only 2 Jttri old. ~ort'l IML H~dlal ~ IOlll.\I L 01\ll\ ' <' r " c ,, I 2299 mi.rbat, 0.ta MK& Dally P\klt Want Adi b&v- be.rpin1 &a.JOH'. Salisbury Re;ilty 315 MARlNE A VE. 673-09«! BALBOA ISLAND BEACON BAY Two story living room -3 BR - 2 FP - Lanai room -tiled terrace -all thiS with private beach & tennis courts. $73,000. VIEW · BAY A OCEAN See this exciting view from the 2· BR. 2 bath, "Country French" kJtchen, 3 level home - $54.500. Open House Sunday 1-5 22JlS Cliff Drive, Newport. Heights. BLUFF CONDOMINIUM 4 BR charmer -near the pool. Finest view of greenbelt and ocean -$52,900. . JCia.. co:~. ~ WALi.ACE REALT01!5 O.,.n Evanlnsi1 • 962-4454 • COLLEGE PARK -BEAUTIES- (1). 2366 Colgate • 4 BR + : family rm.. sha&: carptg,, .. raterfalJ in ,.ear yard. j $JO.SOD :· I f2.) 338 \\'estbrook -3 BR w/, pool, large COmt'r lot. i $32,500 ~ (3.J m Tulane • 4 BR Cl.JS· tomized home. 2200 &CJ. rit. / or luxury Jl\ling. See the very best. ALL PURPOSE RECREATION ROOM EASTSIDE COSTA M.ESA Jo. cation • active family addi- tion. You'll enjoy the 1Tx22' high beam Cf!iling Fam. Rm. with indirect lighting. built in sey,ing cenler and ma.ny other extras. Add to ·Uri.s a three B<lnn. 1% Bath home w/fireplace and de· tachro Dbl. garage w/alley acc:es~. Centrally located kitchen • service porch. Call this evening for appl. to see. HOMES FROM $27,500 TO S44,000 S BEDROOM SPECIAL TYi New~t at ' F•lrview 1 * * * * * General General * * * * * LITTLE BALBOA ISLAND CHOICE DUPLEX 1602-4 BALBOA 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths upstairs 2 Bdrms .. 1 bath downstairs Frplc. each unit -double garage OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-5 Must see to appreciate -$79,~00 HOME & INCOME * * 3 BR. house with J ~ baths. nearly new built· ins incl. refrig. Lge. liv. rm.; 2 BR. Cum. 1--pl o>er dbl. garage. Sh own by app'l. only. $86,500. NEWLY LISTED -HOME A INCOME 3 BR., I ba., with frplc. 2 BR. apt. plus guest rm. & bath. Single garage. $63,500 COIY COTT AGE 2 BR., 1 bath, lrplc. Ii Lot -prime location. Lowest priced I.sland home -$32,500. , ULTRA MODE RN BEAUTY 4 BR. 2 Ba. Garage stressed !or extra uniL Perimeter heating plus many other corttemp. leatur ... Shown by app'I. only. '79,500 STEPHENSON REALTY 306 MARINE, BALBOA ISLAND • 675-4000 DELUXE two STORY Sandpoint home, now vacanl ruxl n.•ady to be lived in. th(' 1800 sq. ft. comistJI cf 4 large bedrooms. mastE'r bed· room suite hiU a private term('(' and bath with &el> aratr vanity, it hu ne11.· carpc-1 lhroughout and UJ>" p-adf>d drapery, it's only 111 mos old and the owners want it !'ICl!d, m11ke a deal, call now. :l'l&-a640. I ai29 Harbor, C.M. SALE OR LEASE Almost 1mmed. possession on this spacious 3 bedroom. 2 bath home. Cozy fi replace, family rm .. all bit-ins, and jus1 around the comer from theatre, shops It marketing. $ZJO/mo or $31,950 -which A rarity at $44,000. Especially with FR & DR. and 5 lg. BR's Separate work shop & pool sized yard. Breakfast bar. \Valk-in clo- sets. Need v.•e say more! ..-. BEST IN AREA Immaculate, beautifully deeorated -every· thing for carefree happy family living. 4 BR . 3 baths, FR. formal DR. Landscaped to per- fection. Room for pool. S43.500. Open House Sun. 1-5. 2300 LaLinda PL. Costa J\•Iesa. A MOTHER'S DAY GIFT \Vhy not? A roomy S BR, FR. Back ya rd. for the children's-sumrtier fun . Near clubhouse. pool & tennis Odurts-> She will be delighted at this $27,500 gi!l from you. · YACHTSMAN'S COVE . \Ve are privileged to oifer Southern Califor- nia's most exciting ne\v Bayiront Develop· ment. Close to the Harbor Entrance, Yachts· man's Cove otters tlie best JOcation for sail- ors in Newport Beach. Lots SO'xlOO' n1inimum \\'ith slip privileges to a 45' pierhead line. From $121,000. Construction starting on 4 custom homes from $226,350 Low down payments and excellent long term financing provide for lax shelter for the owners of these exciting homes. MACNAB 0 IRVINE ""' rom" fin!. C •II 675-3210 642·8235 5r.r842.J 901 Dover Drive 1080 Bayside Drlvt ~ C I Newport Beith it>·fil!MSti11 l!l!!!I!!!!~ I"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'-I General General 2STORY, POOL \.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;; ONLY $23,500 Hard co bei!eVP! That's right, only $13,500. 3 kini;:· siu bedrooms, 3 baths, partially furni!lhed in excel- ll'nt taste. Gleaming gour- met kitchen with wall of glass. Sp&rkling POOL in carefree atmosphere. town.. I house luxury. Walker & Lee Realtors 7682 Edinger f7t4 l 814-4455 or 54-0-5140 N.B. Open dally 1·5 44ll RIVER AVE. -VACANT Near ocean, 3 BR, 2\.i Ba. new crpts l: redl'coratf!d. f irept in lhl' mast('r bdrm. lrg. liv, rm w lfirepl, blt1111, dbl gat. Good financing avail. Owner will trade for land in ~dd.ing, or submit. Lachenmyer Realtor CALL 646--39'.!8 Evet: 838-to88 SMALL JfOUSE BIG VIEW PRICE cirr CALL TO SEE 624 Ramona, Irvine Terrace efinda J6£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 26 Linda Isle Drive Decorator furni shed. 5 Br. 5 bath borne fac- ing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready for immed. occupancy. W/dock $200,000 53 Linda Isle Drive !"lome _on lagoon , 5 BR., 411.i: ba ... w/4 frplcs., Jacuzzi tub, hdwd. flrs., sep. 11v. rm .. din, rm ., fam . rm. & brkfst. rm . $175,000 12 Lind.i Isle Drive Elegant ne\v 5 BR. 4'h ba. home w/forma1 din. rm .. Cam. rm ., "'el bar . Impressive en- try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500. 52 Lind.i Isle Drive Cust. 6 BR ... ,;tudy. ~ bath hon1e "'/4 frplcs ., circular stai r\vay. derorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appl. ....... , .. $215,000 Waterfront Lots No. 44: 108 Fl. on waler .. , ..... $125,000 No . 76: 3 car garage. Reduced to .. $ 77,000 For Complatt information on all homes & loh, pie• .. c1ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8,' 642-4620 CURT DOSH, Realtor General General ~Z-6472 Evcs.6'1J..J468 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1730 W. Coast Highway INCOME UNITS <S/ 2 Bit unll" -money mA'5tt· Met area 1n Costa Mtl&. • $83,500. Virico Re•ltY 2029 Rltbor. CM , 6t&®l EVEN THE FIREPLACE .DRAW~ AH'S The Mooney's love their canal-front home (70 (l) but alas, they must go! II privacy, com!ott &: location are important to you - call today! Low-care 3 Bdrm, den, boat & all !or $49.500. . UNIVEllSITY REALTY JODI E. Coe1t Hwy., Cdm 67M510 * * ? FAlrf. rm., 2 ti.,. 2 car gar. * * * * Astumt VA lotln of $26,2'0; -"-'=--=="----::~--'~--'~~~=-I $1500 Tor&J down Read Daily · Pilot Classified D II Piiot Cl lfl d Call : Pat Wood 545-2300 a y ass e ,.,.,;c ""'"'"" .,,_.,,. --~-""--~---~---~• 646-8811 (•nytim~) 6 Bedroom • 4 Bath JW1t listed • Beall!. 3000 11q. rt. horn€', complete w/S BR. fan1ily rm., 4. Ba and plenty of storage area. Vacan1. less than l yr. old. Cust'm crpUi & drps. Located in the heart of the Irvine Ranch. Priced less than ov.•ners inYtttment at $45,CXXL incllld.i.ne the land. C:.au 546-SB80 , (open eve~. I 1• -~-l''OUR PLEX Sharp. Sh11rp 2 b!!droom, '2 bath spacious apartmen!~. Extra large s1ep down liv· ing rooms with tireplaceli. Built-ins of course. No va. cancy faclot·. Close to shop- ping and Jree\\·ays. Priced right al $63.500. For an ap- pointment to in15pect c a 1 l 675-4930. •COl.£SWORTIIY&CO,. REALTORS _,._ ..... IJf.MM SPANISH VILLA 4 BR plus fam rm Reduced to $34,250 l yr old beauty, cath'drl ceilings. fpJ , w/w crpta, big, h1g tarn rm, form'! liv rm 3 c gar. Nicely Jdscpd. lde11.l home for entertaining. GT or FlfA !errns. Call 847-lM SEYMOUR REAL TY .- 17141 &ach Bl\-·d .. lll&n &h Open 'ti! 9 P~f • LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.-320 LIDO NORD $140,IXK> Pt1ce WI.th 7% l.!rt ! T.D. 6 Bl'aut. turn. unill;; I 6 car garages &-uW. room,. I 80 'Ft. on swlmmina: beacf\. \\'ill consider trade for boat or maximum $85,000 lte. 4 BR. house, ' Bill Grundy, Rltr • .' 833 Dover Dr., N.B. ~ I -: z r ---,=-r ---- 1 VETERANS NO DOWN FHA -LOW DOWN Near Harbor High. 3 BR, 1% BA, aervi~ porch, Ira:. Jly. rm w/tlrtpl. Obi. aar. Back yard sum:iuntleg with btocJi: v.'8.11 Jenee. Lachenmyer Realty CALL &t6.J92a Eve.: 673-<&517 . . lBR. -2 LEACHES Lp. s.rihOreB Cape Cod v.•/ dinlnc rui., family -rm .•• J ba.'1,, & beaut. brick patio. 185 Stt'pl to belt beach &: only $Qi.5DO. Hom• Show Rt•ltor1 "ArmcMLt HOUMbuntlni;: .. 3535 E. OJI.JI llwy., Cdi\I 67S.721S TOWNHOUSES 2,.J .. I BR.. pnge, pntlo, pool, hl1ns. carp .. drapes. Prlctd 10 aell $21,(0) And Up COLLINS A WATTS '62-5523 FrldU, AprU 30, 1971 OA!l Y PILOT 35 NO ONE OFFERS MORE! . • .. . ~ THE REAL ESTATBRS No. 1 No. 1 No. 1 ' '" lervlc~•et.,. •M 1ftw the Mle. 4t ttal,...I NIN,..,le 11'1 J •fflcM te f.il.w tlit~ I '" Mnrtl1lnt-CIM'l'litl•te <••., .. • ef the H..,.' Mr ArM ...,.., 4•1· / 11'1 Sil• In the Heritor Are,._,,r'Mf ,..tttv....-1 Thia It wMre "The Actl911 ..... j '" ~=~~~~--:-::-::-::-:-=~:-:-::--:-::-=---=--::: WANT YOUR HOME SOLD NOW? ., •• . ; . . . ' •.• . ; '-rha clitnt h43 a: right to , tnoto evtr11thing concerning ''file transaction btfore ht ' acts ... " RANDALL R. MC CAROLE ' Pra1idant of Thi Real E1tat1n: t : ,):0U19a real a1tala in1tr11ctor and · •krrar: autloior of Iha liook "Real ' l:1l1t1 Tr1inin9 in California Col· 1 J ... 1"; a Rial E1taf1 ,olumn;t+ for Iha Daily Pilot; 1t1t1 diraclo• of ... ~AREY. HUNTINGTON BEACH LOVELY .CM•ner is leaving are:a and must ~ell this nearly pe'" .f B('droom 3 Bath beauty on cul de sac \vith rxtra lari;i:e yard with gale for boat or trailer '$12,000. Phone 842-2535. .. " f l ; 2 story ele~ance Ff.IA-VA 5 bedrooms. 3 baths, family room, large living room, walk to: All achools, the park, shoppin.:;. lt'a sharp • sharp. }riced $38,850. call 546·2313. TWO STORY 3 BR -2112 BA NEAR BEACH :=11eautiful, very sharp ho1ne throughout. ; Jeatures formal dining area, large family : .room with brick fireplace, upgraded carpet· ing, Jaf'ge Jot. Excellent location near all sc hools, shopping and beach. Price $36,750. Call 546-2313. MEREDITH GARDENS 3 BEDROOMS 2200 S9. FT. : Extremely sharp home in prestige neighbor· hood. Features 3 bedrooms, 21h baths. formal dining room, huge walnut.paneled · family room with PV stone fireplace. Situ· ated on quiet cul-de-sac. -close to schools, &hopping and beach . Full price -$42,500. Phone 546-2313 to see. ROOM AT THE TOP 1475 s9. FT.I Charming two· story, 3 bedrooms, family room and 2 b alb s. Hui;re 19x25 rumpus room with rough plumbing installed for additional bath or wet bar. Excellent north Costa fl.1esa location. Price $34,500. For ad- djlional information call 546-2313. SUPER SHARP ;&.n extra nice 4 bedroom and family ronm Sol Vista home in Westminster. Profession· , illy decorated and landscaped and on a . quiet cul·d~sac street. What more couJd ·you want for only $37 .950. : $37,950 142-2535 or 673-1550 IT'S SPACEY , A large 5 bedroom home in Eastbluff on a ! huge irregular lot. Room for off· street : boat and camp trailer parking. Pl US a :nifty, completely safely fenced pool. Only ' $52,000. CaU 673-1550. OUR BUSINESS IS GREAT! We 've doubled our size and we need your home to sell. So, if you 've been thinking of selling -let's talk about it. I guarantee, you 'll receive courteous attention and professional guidance. We are the only company that offers complete coverage of the entire Beach Area ... More offices here -ex- posure where it helps you. We 're worthy of your confidence -ask any of our former clients or make us prove it to you . CATHOLIC CHURCH & SCHOOL Clos(' to St. .Johns. You'll find this neat u 11 riin 4 BDR, 2 bath homr. All roomi; are large includ· ing extra large family room. This Is the ideal lo· cation for all school.~ and ~hopping. AJJ term~ available. No down VA & F'HA. O\vner tran!'· ferred to Florida and home is vacant and ready to movr in. $33,750. 546-2313. BEACH TRl-PLEX Completely remodr led throughout. 3 bf>droom house in front and duplex in lhc rear. Homan bath~. Rhag carpeling, wood panelln1; -very plush. N PIV TOO ( and freshly paintrd E'.ICIPrior. Tv•o bloc ks to thP beach, one block to stores. A real beauty. $76,950. Phone 6116-7171. NO DOWN PAYMENT hlonthly payments less than rent to quali- fied veterans. For a deluxe pool home with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. I need a little work but I can prove my worth. $27,950 842-2535 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX 2 . 2 Bedroom houses in one of our best south . of · the · high\\1ay locations. Excel· lent income, and can be seen almost any- time. $45,950 CALL 673-8550 IN CORONA DEL MAR South of highway location. How about this? A sharp, 2 bedroom , 2 bath home onl y a short walk to the beach. A surprising value al only $43,900. For an appointment to see call 673-8550 today. DAD & MOM \Vhy not help the kids buy th eir first home on terms you both can afford. A charming one-bedroom home in Corona del Mar PLUS a guest apartment for income on a well located R-2 lot. Only to<;,, down to qualified buvers. Full price only $32,900. Call 673-8550 for an appointment now. LOOKING FOR THE VERY BEST? IN NEWPORT HEIGHTS This one is in model home condition. Fresh, bright, clean. melieulously maintained in· side and out. Tastefully decorated and land· scaped. 2 BDR with studio a·nd bath adjoin· ing the garage in the back. This one will seU quickly to the discriminating buyer. Only $34.SOO. Phone 546-2313. SPECTACULAR VIEW HOME Beautiful custom built homr with fantastlr pan· oran1ic vie\v of ocean and cOMtlinl', plus moun· t.ains and canyon. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, dining and famil y rooms or party entert11 lnment room with builtin bar. Custom drapes and carl)f'ling, many mnrr special fe11lu1"f'!f. Priced right at just S69,950. A must •ee! 546-2313 . , LUXURY AT A PRICE v.•ilh this fine family home! In !'.1esa Verde. 4 blr bedrooms plull a den. Quality shag rugs throuizh· out. Attrac1ive landscaping. Lots of extras. En· joy many "nice day11" In 11. nice house In a nict: neighborhood. Priced rii:ht $39,950. 546·2313 ATIENTION VIEW LOVERS \Vould you enjoy view of \Valer or sparkling lights while dining. entertaining or just re· laxing? See this spacious 3 bedroom. 3 bath home \~1ith view from family, living & form· al dining & break!ast rooms. Call 646-7171. EASTBLUFF 5 BEDROOM POOL HOME On a huc:e lrrea:ular cul -de-sac lot in East- blufr. An outstanding 5 Bedroom home with a completely isolated and safet,v fenced pool. Only $52,000. Phone 673-8550. COMPANY SAYS "MOVE" Owner forced to sacrifice this 3,000 square foot brand new tri-level , top quality home. Deep shag carpets. etc. 4 bedrooms & Fam- il y room . Di ning room . Large patio kitchen and 18 x 30 Game room . 3 car ~ara2e . As- sume $37,000 VA Joa n. Phone 646-7171 . HUNTINGTON BEACH BUY Just listed. This South Glen Mar 4 bedroom, 2 bath home has new shag carpets. wood kitchen cabinets, 2 car ga~age. builtins and a rear patio area. Price iust $28,500. Call 842-2535 for appointment. SPACIOUS MASTER SUITE Beauty. e I e ~a n c e and charm radiate throughout this lovely two-l!tory home situ- ated on large lot in outstanding lt1esa Verde loca tion with privacy and quiet. Features 4 bedrooms, 2•h baths, very large master suite, sunny kitchen -family area and 3 car garage. Price $52,500. Phone 546-2313 and see to appreciate. BOAT OWNER'S DELIGHT \Vidf', •.vidt' 75 ft. lot. Room for boa1 nr tr11 ilf'r. At tractive 3 brdroom. 2 b11th In n1uch \.•oantrd NC'\Vport Heights area. Jusr $33.500--Call 6'16· 1171 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Freshly paintf'd two story on cul-de·KaC-EXl'Pl· lent nrighbnrhood. 3 hM:lroom. 2 bath family room and livini; room with brirk fire:placc. Land- i;capinJ!, 3 car garage. Something to see. $41.500. 646-71 71 EASTSIDE 5 BEDROOM Shin y, clean and ready for immediate occu· pancy, a roomy 5 bedroom, formal dining, family room home with laundry room, tons of storage. Huge master bedroom and easy boat and camper access. 24RO sq. ft. of liv· ing for only $45,950. Call 673-8550 to see. OWNER SACRIFICING NEWPORT DUPLEX T\vo large 3 bedroom unils. Five years old. Owner giving up all equity. Walk to beach. clubhouse, tennis & 2 pools. $43,950. Phone 646-7171. NEWLYWEDS - THIS IS FOR YOU Cuddle up in th i!i cozy 3 bedroom. 2 bath hou se close to shopping and beach. Shag carpet lhrou ghout. Luxury kitchen over· looking hu ge patio -1o r;c doY.'n. $25,500. Call 646-7171. EVERY DETAIL PERFECT Quality custom constructi on ~ Better than new condition! Trul y minimun1 care yard! Located in mu ch desired Newport Heights! 3 Bedrooms. 2 full b a t h s Huee Family Room. Priced Right al $47,900 -Call 646-7171 . Let us show you this very special home today. ON BALBOA ISLAND Remodeled and expanded 3 Bedroom - 3 bath -10 steps lo Sandy beach . ;\sh panel· ed -new kitchen and baths -and storage space galore -2 car garage. $81,SOO - Call 673-1550. EASTSIDE DUPLEX Exceptionally sharp -on large 60xl35 lot -· Built-ins. shakr roof. Sr1Jarate garages. JUBt a atC!p to all shoppin~. 10f,;, Down. $34,900. 646-71 71 NO DOWN TO VETERANS 4 nirc bedroom~. 2 balh~ and a family room. Ju11t !ilepir; 1o golf cou1'Se. Bllt"y rntran~ for boat or trailrr. Conic ~f'l"--Comc save $36,950. Phonr S42·253S. SWINGING SINGLES This is for you . A charming 1 bedroom col· tage plus $80 per month income for onJy $32,900 in an excellent Corona de! Mar loca- tion . PLUS super terms. Call 673-8550 now for details. HOW ABOUT!! A \V a r m sun1mer evening walk on the beach. All the day crowd is gone and now it's just you, the seagulls overhead and the thundering surf. Corona del l\.1ar duplex t>outh-of·the·hi ghway, 2 · 2 bedroom units. only $45,950. Call 673-8550. SUBMIT OFFER ! Notice of default has been filed on thi! big, beautiful sµht level home in Mesa Verde. Perfect for large family with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with fireplace. Loaded with thousands of doll ars in Im· prove1nents and extra leatures, including complete foundation for 2-story addition. Priced below market value at $47,900, but submit all offers! Phone 546-2313 for infor- mation. MOVE UP TO WESTCUFP Here 's your great opportun ity to buy great location, great fea t:ire.o;, fine quality. Trans· ferred O\vner ha !'i added recreation room, study, laundry and built·in shelves in the ample closets. 4 bedrooms. family room , 2 baths make this a great fa mily home with more features than v.·e can enumerate . $63,900. Let's go sec it. Call 546-2313. SHARP COLLEGE PARK This is the sharpest 3 bedroom home in this great area. lf you have looked before and wanted someth.ing extra -This is it! New carpets and tile. Fresh paint inside and oul A big assumable 51A o/ri Loan. Better hurry -it won't last long al $21,750. S46-2U3. THE REAL ESTATBRS NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7171 r COSTA MESA 2790 Harbor Blvd. 546-2313 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17931 Beach Blvd. 842 -2535 CORONA DEL MAR 332 Mar9uerite 673 -8550 INVESTMENTS 27 84 Harbor Blvd., Su ite 201; Costa Mesa 546-23 16 I DAILY PILOT Frldoly, April JO, 1971 -·-I~ I _..... I~ [ _,,,.. l~I _..... I~ I _,,,.. I~ I -.... l~I -.... I~ I _,,, .. J~ [ _ ..... J llonor•I Gener el 0.ner•I TREES -TREES TREES II Pool Hame Generel Gentrel 0.Mr•l , Cost• Mue ~il~Y~OWOWiN~EEFR~~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,i ASSUMABLE >II" VA LOAN -DO YOU HAVE S rMmber1 fn your Fount•ln Volley " •• 3 Bedroom. 2 Ba, hrdwd llQon, c•rpelg, drpl, lr1. kitch. hua:e i;ep. family rn1 . plus pool. N.E. Cost11 Me51 . $29,!500. Belt ol ttrl'J\I. Lara;e CORNER I 0 T au.r- rounded on two aide~ by beaut.IM Myoporum Trtts. Spacious Three Bdrm. Two &th nomc wilb tcpa.rate P ete Barrell Realty pt'i!:Jt1nLJ S140 mo. include• all 3 BR, 1 ~ BA. Hdwd tloon, w/w cpt1 ln llvtnc rm, b&llwa,y & 1 BR. i'"!UJtom dtPI ln living rm, dlnlnc area. ma1ter BR and 1 other BR. mi.In range A-oven. Nr new dlahwuher, Fia.r· 1tont patio, bit-In BBQ. Redwood fenced yard. Acros1 from new achoo!, K-Bth grade. Bu. lo nearby Jr-Hi&b &. hl&b tcboo.1. 2 blkl to ahopplna &: SD frtt· way. Aakina 524,llOO. \Yi!J consider all ''TERrttS". &.17-7187, oo Sat. ca.111 please. % 8AY & BEACH REAL TY, 22 YNn of S.rvlc. In The H1rbor ArN Inc. EXCE~TIONALL Y ATTRACTIVE Cameo Highlands • 4 bdrms., 2~ bath home. Vacani -ready for quick occupancy. 80 X 100 Let. Price just reduced to $52,500. f1mlly?7 If IO, we ca.n sell you thll if"eat 4 bedroom home on G•rdtn Grove ~ the "NEW 1'.H.A. Program" • • ::::• for juat $100.00 u down pe.y-G'AR.oEN .Pk.' Imm~cJ Dft'.2 ment. Thia borne l:I read,)' to BA. tam rm. Auume~ occupy. Carpets, 2 luxurioua 1..::1'"::":::·.!""::::·"°:::..· °""'==-;.,· 891"--+· I bath&. FUU price ls $23,900. Huntington a .. ch :~ '. Bac:k lay Area '""' • "d '"" pattos. FAMILY CONCEPT Completely ca.rpeltd and AND THE UNUSUAL ch·1· 4 Bedroom, 1% Bil, family rm, dlntni;: rm. 2 ll~pl'~. modern ki1<'h. All lhi~ and /I. VJF;\\' TOO for S.10.T:;(}. draped Located in beautiful , -ar Harba;: Eatatt>S dose 1o te<:l des1iltn. to take advantage ~ ::" .M"'~;::: ': FHA·22i 02 PROGffi schools 11.nd shopping. ONLY ol this tl1mate & local, outdoor-i:M 500-NO DOWN TO VET· Jndoor living. Separate activity OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 """'"'"'· ' r.R.ANS. centers surround this 4 bed· 54 BALBOA COVES WATERFRONT. Ideal location for power boat. Your own slip & plenty of privacy. Cus· tom home with 28 ft. living rm. Price • only $77,500. (Private entrance off Coast Hwy .• next to Howard's Restaurant.) Walker & Lee 4 BR-CHOICE or~ Roy McC•rdle Realtor 1810 N('~·port Bh·d .. C.~1 . J l4B-n2t ........ , LIVE IN ONE, Ir! 2 apl~ pay thr bill Buy A triplex. V.A. TERMS.< BR. 2 ba.1220f.17tH hofllf'. xh1I l<X'. SEE LEE Bf\R ~f>..1698 Evenlna:s Call 64.>«Sl Sell idle irems now! I Call 642-567S Now! General General Open Houses THIS WEEKEND r.., fflb Mlldy dl,.ctory wltli yot1 tt.11 Wfflitttd es y•11 •• tt.11...i.111ttl11t. All tt.e locottOM lilted Mlow .,. Mtcribff 11 1....tff detoH tiy oclMrthl .. •lteo- wMt. I• to4-r'• DAILY PILOT WANT AO$. ,..,.._ .-w1.-. .,.. h••-,., ........ ,... ... ,,... ,. lltt Nllh ,.,.,_.,. .. i. "is col•IM Md Fridoy. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedrooms) t Crestview (Bayshores) NB 833-0700 : 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) 2205 Cliff Dr .. (Newport Hghls) NB 675-3210 (Sun) (2 Br. & Femily or Den) 686 Hamilton, Costa Mesa 646-0033 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ( l Bedroom•) 1871 Catalina, Laguna Beach 494-9704 (Sal & Sun 12·3) 000 Polnseltia, Corona del Mar 673-6510 (Sun 1-5) 19771 Gloucester Ln .. Huntington Beach 968-4896 (Sal & Sun 12·5 ) 323 Lugonia. Newport Beach &!i>7171 *2867 Velasco (Mesa Verde) 644-7270 8921 Comet Cir., Westminster (Sat 1·5 ) CM (Sal 1-4) 847-7187 (Sun 9-5) 801 Kings Rd ., Newport Beach 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) 216 Poppy, Corona del Mar 644-4910, $117,500 (Sun 1-5:30) (3 Br. & Femily or 0.n) **300 62nd St., (Newport Shores) NB 67:1-tililO (Sun 1·5) 1657 Oahu (Mesa Verde) CM 546-9702 (Sal & Sun 10.6) 16061 Tellim Ln., Huntington Bea ch 842-5918 (Fri. & Sat. 1·7) 606 Gary. Newport Beach 1146-7171 906 Alder (Eastblufl) NB (Sun 1-5) Bm700, $43,950 (Sun 12:3().5 :30) 4102 Brisbane Wy. (Univ. Park) Bm700. $32.950 (Sat 1·5) *18021 Aspen Tree Ln (Univ. Park) Bm700. $43,950 !Sun 1-5) 22'21 Arbutus (Easlbluf!) NB 6'!4-2024 !Sal & Sun 12-dusk) 430 E. 20th St .. Costa Mesa 6'!2-8235. $34.500 (Sat & Sun) 1014 Santiago (Dover Shores ) NB 6'!2-8235, $117.500 (-4 Bedroom) 17421 Almclo Ln .. Huntington Beach 846-0066 (Sun 1·51 * 1007 Dolphin (Irvine Terrace) CdM 833-0700 : 6'!4-2430 (Sun 1-5) 2015 Kewamee (Irvine Terrace} CdM 675-5930 (Sun 1·5 1 14 Br. & Family or Den ) 9772 La Cresta. Huntington Beach 6'!6-7171 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2056 Port Weybridge. Newport Beach 646-7171 {Sat & Sun 1-51 **505 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB 6'!2-8235 (Sal & Sun I 2057 Commodore (Baycrest) NB 642-8235. $74.500 2300 La Linda Pl ., Costa f\1esa 642-8235 (Sunl 4500 Orrington Rd .. (Irvine Terrace) 644-4910. $175.000 !Sun 1-5 :30) 410 Morning Star fDove r Shores) NB 644-49lD. $105,000 (Sal & Sun 1-5:30 ) 2612 Lighthouse I Broadmoor) NB 644-4910. $61.500 !Sat & Sun \.5,30) 20251 Craimer !Meredith Gardens ) HB 644-4910. $45.500 !Sun 1.5 ,30) (S Bedroom•) *1033 Mariners Dr .. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Daily! **210 Evening Star (Dover Shores\ NB 642-823.1 (Sat) (5 Br. & Family or Oen) ~O Java Rd ., I Mesa Verde ) CM 546-2376 !Sat & Sun 1-51 1900 Port Weybridge Pl.. Newport Beach 644-4960 !Sat & Sun 1·5) DUPLEXES FOR SALE (l Br. & 2 Br.) 1602-4 Balboa, Little Balboa Island 67~ !Sat & Sun 1·5) APARTMENTS FOR SALE 12 Br. & Bach. Apt.I 3507 Finley Ave., Newport Beach 675-5200 IS•t & Sun 1-1) HOME & INCOME (2 Br. hou1• + 1 I r, •pt.) 718 Orchid Ave .. Corona def Mar 548-4957, $45,000 ( t2-5 I room plus 4 bath home, giving privacy yet togetherness in the family/dining room and lovely, large patio. Bay view from up- per story. 3 car gara~e on quiet cul-de-sac for children's trikes or teenagers cars. Boal door thru garage for handy boat or car work. $69,500. 231 Kings Piece Open Sun 12·5 (Clillhaven -just off Cliff Drive) LOVELY BAYCREST smlNG THIS ADULT • OCCUPIED, beautifully maintained home has just been offered for sale., 4 Bedrooms, dining room and large family room on oversized lot. Call and let us show you thru. Very well priced at $68,. 500. CHOICE LOTS BONAIRE -Newport Beach. Good financing available. Call for particulars. Office Open Saturd•Y• & Sund•Y• j PET~60~!~~17J;;r.,RJ.~L TY .~ 642-5200 ---. - Gener ii CAMEO SHORES Traditionally styled home with magnifice.n,t ocean &: jetty views. 4 Bedrooms, formal din· ing room, neat paneled den with noor to c~il· ing used brick fireplace. Pool enclosed wtth see-thru fence. $89,500. UNIVERSITY PARK 4 Bedroom home (not tov,.nhouse) with nicely landsc aped yard, family roo m: near clubhouse pool . $39,950 • 10% Down. COMMERCIAL BAYFRONT LOT 75 FT. on the bay, zoned C·l, bulkhead & piers already in. $195,000. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 1944" 673-4400 ;~~~I PA0-$140 MO. IGeneral (j)UIET POOL -$17 ,900 Wow ! Just listed &: it! great. Relax &: enjoy life. No up- keep worries. 2 lg. BR. 1uite. Gourmct 11.ll elf'c. kit- chen incl. dryer & ttfng. Private 20' patio. 2-car ga- ra~. ommunity clubhouSf'. tennl.5 courts & pools. Very low down ~·ith payments much chea11er than rent. Hurry -won"! last. Call t71<1) 962-5585. IOHISI l Ill.SON "· NrAL ro ,r;rf 1913 Bmokhurst A\'f'. llun\ington Beach I Shorecllffs $4500 On. I I On VA Joan. 3 BR.:! ba .1..gc. O\\'n your own lot. Short v.·11lk to 1 bf'aches. Hom• Show Realtors ··ArmcMir HousehuntinR:'' ~ E. Coa~f HI\')'., CdM 67S.7225 Little cul-de-u.c street. Sharp 4 bedroom home with din- ing rm. Jfa.rd 10 find but here 1t is! Eastsidf' Costa Mesa. \Valk lo shopping & church. Taxes only $287. Full price $22.500. It's a dandy, don'1 mi!s it. For details call 54D·ll51. Open ¥ H!R~AGI ~ · l:lll EJT•n * MESA VERDE * Lovely, immac. home. ls! OHer1ng. Beaut. grounds. Cov. patio. J BR. & family rn1 .. 2 baths. $37,500 Georg• Wllliam1on REALTOR 6-15-1564 Eves, 1:-sidr C.~I .. open daily 1-5. 366 \\'alnut. 3 BR, 2 Ba, lrg. lJv, rm .. plus added ram. rn1. dbl gar. Stop in right away?! Only $28,450, Lache nmyer Re•ltor CALL &46-3928 Ews: 642·&453 Tax Refund Coming? Invest wisely Jn another home u a 1pare. We hive a very lovely home on E&Jt. 1lde of Cocta Mesa that would be Ideal. G.I. loan ol $23,000 with 7'Ai % annual percentage rate with total payment of $210.00 leas tax savings of approx. $60.00 per mo. Thia home shows like a Doll boUa:e, Call. Walker & Lee Realtors 7790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-9'191 Open 'Ill 9 PM DUPLEX OPEN SUNOAY 1-5 4539 ORRINGTON, CAMEO SHORES 4 Bdrms., 3 baths. Tip-top cond. Tremendous view. l'rice reduced $4,000-now only f74 ,900. OCEAN BLVO. DUPLEX 4 Bdrms. & 1-bdrm. aots .• fabulous view! Price just reduced to $99,500 • you own the land! EXCLUSIVE 1915 BAYSIDE OR. OPEN SAT/SUN . 1·5 Waterfront • beautiful beach . 3 Bdrms. &. family rm. 65 X 115 Loi. 2215 Sq. ft. of living space. $97,500. A LITTLE CUTIE 606 Narcissus, CdM • Open Sat. &. Sun. 1-5. 2 Bdrm. home • poolsize R-2 lot -build an ad- ditional unit later. Only $33,950. "' 675-3000 === Realtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adami M5-046S Open tiI 9:00 PM French (j)uart9r 4 Bedro0ms $22,500 Sell or lease option Never agaln at this prict! BY OWNER. TERMS FLEX- lBLE. Heat£'<! pool &-du~ house. Double garage, cov- ered patio. Upgraded cat· pet, biHns, complete exter. maint Aisume 5%. FHA loan, payments $161 per month, cheaper than ttnt. 5-23 3175 College Open Sat. & Sun. 1o.6 JUST LISTED 4 BDRM. -$29,950 Newpon Heiithts area of Co!!ta Mesa. Owner anxious to sell! 4 BR. 2 bl.. on quiet stttet. Lge. ft...2 lot w/alley, Great borne tor improve. ment " value. CALL e 6•6·l•l4 'Pa~ N1 1r Newport Po1t Offlt1 JMMACULATE2bdnn Townhouse. Like new. Many extras, Dbl. pr. attached. Close to all convtnle~s and bch. $21,950. 54Goti:i06 or 54()..9365 e MESA VERDE -Spacious 4 br, llv'g rm w/frplc, fam rm, aU elec kitchen, crpta, drps, 2 ~tios. $34,550. ~7-7142. COLLEGE PARK AREA . Art there 5 in ymr fumiy! You can ptobably ~· Very low dn . 4 tull b!O· rooms. Built·ln kltc~ Clrpetl I: drtptL 2 ha~. Your choice ot home ·~~ cation. Call tor de!&ilL :~ vt•tipte then .invt at! * WOlll't lul! Dial ('~) 912-. 11 101!1\I L fll \O \ ... ,., 1 ,, • I,.,. ' 19ll1 Brookhurst Av•~ ; Huntinr~n Beach :: : WALK TO BEACH:· 4 BR + 2 11 •re~: $24,000 ~· Cheery kilcb w/b!Hn ran&ti, oven &: d!lbw&hr in thla Jt:: tr Sandpiper home, loca~ on Irv eomtr lot, juat 2 jifi younr. Lesa than 1 mo. riictt moves ycu Jn. Call &t.7-~l SEYMOUR R!AL T'i=.: tntl Beach B.lvd., Htan BC~ Ope.n 'W 9 PM :• -~--= -:<""" ==- $11,750 ·:· 4 BR+ 2 BA . CLOSE TO OCIA~;:: 1500 Sc;: ft home, hup cu14~ sac lot Crpt&ldrPll, fornJN dln., elec bibll:, nicely Id+ scpd, Irr covered patji; $21,750. Submit. Call 847 .tJ:ii SEYMOUR REALTV.:: 171£ Beach BJvd ., Htan Bei Open 'tli 9 PM ·: '. SPANISH TOWNHOUSE ~ Sharp 3 lg Br. home 2 Ba. in Green Valley. 4 &R ~ &: lam rm. shag carpet. BA. tam rm, cov'd ga'.rdii Sl3.DOO 546-5780; 54&-5797. patio, crpts, drpa, tire~, 3 Br + den. 1~ ba Condo. pool & clubhouse. Auurifi!; REALTORS 644-7662 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"IOwner5 of this dlarp 4 bed· FHA OR VA room condominium ~ help. Dining overlooks fan-NO DOWN tastic patio area & sparkllna NEWPORT BEACH'S BEST! Charming 3 b@droom with 111dded den. cozy brick fi.repl , modern bit-In kitchen w/ B·B-Q, and ll'ees every· pool. modf'rn k!tch. &: 2 gleaming baths, $27.@. or trade "what have you". Call 545--842-4 SOUTH COAST REALTORS. whett! Westcli!l shopping. I"""""""" __ .,...,..,. $34,950. Call 545-8424 sourn OPEN DAILY 1-6 COAST REALTORS. 299 Broadway, C.M. _____ ---·--3 Bedrm , 2 ba, lie living BAYFRONT DUPLEX room, fireplace, new crpt&/ Pier Ir fioat; on big bay; drps, newly decorated, dble 2·2 Bdrm. units one w/2 garage. Immediaie posses- baths. $107,000.' Call for slon. S26.SOO. t1.pp'1. Leon Vibert, Rltr. Call: 673·3663 96S.7DIS Eves 548-0588 Eves; 673.6534 associated BROKERS-REALTORS %01S W Bo1boo &1J-J&lJ * CANAL FRONT * 3 BR. 1 ·};, ba. A·Frame 2 sty. Sandy beach, boating & fishing at your door! $37,500. CAYWOOD REAL TY $24,950 4 BDRM. + DEN 6306 \V. Coas1 Hwy., NB FAMILY ROOM 548-l29o In beau!ilul park like yard. DOVER SHORES tree~. flowers, pi cturesque View home. ll-18 Santiago Dr. setting. Enl.T)' hall. full din. &st buy· spac. 5 BR. 4 ba. ing room. Large rooms. AdaplAble Door 1 Ian for central hall plan. No down couple or Jge . family. Newly tenns available. Ofien ti! 9 deairated. By app"r. $91,000 P:\1' $4()...lrlO. Biii Grundy, Re•ltor TARBELL 2955 Harbor S3J Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 SPANISH STYLE pool home. • NO DOWN e $22,500. Redmon r.eallors on VA loan or small dn. with Call 63&-1530 · FHA Darling, spotless 3 BR Near new. Pool. Nr OCC. 71Ai% FHA, $29.900. ftOf By owner. 546-4760 days; price, call tor appt to see.::: = ..... I' ... • BY owner-3 br home w/!am rm, cov'd patio, Jun-962-4471 ( =J 54M1U ch bar, l~ ba. $25,000. 1 -~~~~~-~--1 1i1Jge Re.11 Est JI: .....,,,._ TOWNHOUSE ; ...... -------..... ~in · anyone can assume the Gl loan of ttcord -no other loans -no other coat! • Beautiful 6 RM Dome·l year old · surroundt!d by new hOmes. Sorry, no telephone information. Key at 1871 Harbor, Charles .Quintard, Realtor B:Y OWNER MESA Verde by owner: 3 bdrm, fm1)' nn, 2 ba. patio. Open daily $29,950. 545-3'.175 .( BR, 2 BA, comer lot. Partly fenced, By owner. Firm $23,000. 54&-5750 0\VNER' • 2 BR, fun, 1% BA, cor lot, xlnt nbrhd, 252 Sierks. 548-0354 D•n• Point vnERANS! Will Sell VA Loan on thl.s beautiful 4 br. 2 ba. Located on quiet cul-de-sac. Large back yard w/brick patio. Valley & ocean view. 1 mile from harbor. $32,too. POINT REAL TY 3'1156 Coast Hwy. Dana Point CTI4l 496-5323 Dover Shores FOR SALE BY OWNER Custom built executive type Dover Shores view. 4 bed- home. lmmac! fl BR, 4 BA, room. 3 bath home + lam· gigantic rec. room w/wet bar. ?. !rplcs. On 17th lair-ily room with tunken wet way of Mesa Verde Golf bar. 2 fireplaces, form.al dining room, Rparate Course. Lgf' lot w/room for brtakfast room. Valentine pool. 546-2376 built, 2 yeara old, 3200 sq. WESTCLJJ.'F ARE A It. 3 car garqe. $89,500. $27.500. Harbor High dist 543.1455 Walk to all &chis It WeatcliU I ~-~~~----­ shoppin&:. SHARP. W /2 lrg;. East Bluff BR. plus convert. den. Din. I -E-a_s_t_b_l_u_ff __ --V- 1 .-.-W- rm, Ip!., lrg lenc"d yd, trtts, last possess. C&Jl Large Lusk 3 BR. 21,1 Ba Ownr/Bkr now. 54&-85.37 2221 Arbutu.s • 644-2024 SALE or Trade. 3 BR. 24 By owner -Make offer BA. French Quarter Con-OPEN Sat/Sun 12·d&rk FHA. VA S1000 dn. Su~ abarp 3 BR 2 BA, blt in rana:e-It oven. diahwshr, malnt tee $25. 1300 1q rt o! living area, dbl itar. pa~ prl~ right. S24,7!'JO. ;;; I' Gih@lj!!!l!l!lll Hz.4471<:::!.)546-81~ BY owner -tti levtl "" bdrms, 2~ hatlu:, Dutch Haven Country C I u. b . SUnken fmly rm, lrg; patlO, beaut. euy care landsca~ ing, m mow Kottan er.us. 61,{ % FHA SJS,5 00. 846-006<. 3 BR., 1" Ba. Fam. mi. Shag carp., drapes. Pat'a, fenced nar yd. Ui.00!. Assume 6% IBA WO. pymt. fl.89 mo., taxes, up. incl. ·: Open Fri/Sat. l·T P.M. ;. 16061 Telllm Lane 842-5918 V.A. RESALE J queen -•lied bedroom1. Great extra larite cul-de-sac lot. Anyane can take over subjeet to VA Loan with a little dab of cut-and pay- menu of $164 iitr month - includes al.I, GO MAN GOt· Walker & Lee 279o Harbor Blvd. at Adanit 54S.S491 Open 'til 9 PM: BY OWNER - Fast resul!s are just a phone r·or that item under $50, Sell Idle Items now! 2 BA . firepl, all bll ins. II ""5678 t Ih p p· h Great art!a. Just ttdu~ do/private .back yard, end 2 BR, 1~ Ba, frpl, patio, unit, 2 car gar. All Elec. pool. Adi.lits. $225 mo. Sl46 month total pym't. 644-U62, 8J.fi.Jf05 work. CONDO . .C BR, ~~ Ba. Xlnt. cond. Crpts, dl'Ps, fittpl, elect. kit. Wik to beacb. Avail June 2Sth. Rea!tot. 847-8507, Eve1. 968-1178, • BEAUT Glenmar borne wJ3 bt, 2 ba, frp!c & 11.ll blt1i4 incl chhw.tir. Sptinkl8ts tronl A: ttar A 111 lae cov):t ca al'>·ay · .,.._ ry e enny inc tt Call 642-5678 &: St.vt! $@1\~lA-LGitrs• The Puzrle wilh the Bui/I-In Chuckle 0 Reorronge lell1n cf thti ;--... • ..<::::--......--.... rour xrambt.d words b .. low to form fo11r simple words. L LAXHEE 111'1 '11 I ADEHA I 11r1· l I I I SATEE ' I I I ' I Commerit obout a bam- boozler: "He ~ olong fine. He li .... s off the -of th• f · E X N A L 6 "°""'"" lloe dwdol• ..-1 '"I ______ .,I lond." ~.·J~ .'I I I l•t:::..::Tr~~~p~~. e r:~~;.~y~~~.,s r 11 r ,.. r r I' 1· 1 6 UNSCIAM81.E UTTEtsl 10R ANSW[lt I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 $1500. Chvner mus1 sell. JEAN SMITH RLTR. 400 E. 17th St., C.M. 646--32$ Coron• del Mar lit Time Offered For Sale In Cameo Highlands Besut landiicaped executJve. type homl'." on corner lot w/ 1so• view or ocean. 3 br, den/wee hAr & d in'g rm. ASKING $60,000 Call owner, Mr . Smith. 645-1922 daya; 673.-0431 evea. 2015 KEWAMEE OPEN 1·5 SUN. Charming family home. Spac. llvlna are1s, w / ga.rd('n room lanai. 4 BR., 21,1 ba., 1n de!.lr11.hle Irvine Temce. BOYD REALTY 3629 E. Cou1 Hwy., CdM '7S.59l0 WON'T LAST Waxed &: polllhtd, neat AS a pln, Very lowly 2 bdnn. non1f', has dlnina rm. & eat· Ing nook in kHc h. Llv. rm. has Sp•cloua trplc. Beach aide of hwy. R-2 f..01, $39,950 MORGAN REAL TY 67U642 67S.6459 Wl the old atuU $2400 or trade for equity in 3 F I V II BR, 2 BA bouse. 545--4301 ount• n • ey Owner EARLY ~ .. tl~;,.!or appt ph owner .. t ERICAN Abolish Slavery ~ AM BEAUTlrtlL '0" d •. ... Charmin& 3 BR ~ BA, tam· N< yard work. 00 outside octan, 35' entertalnlni arel, ily rm. $31,91Xl, Owner. maintenance. Spanish style 2 BR 1-den, 2 ba, Pool$, Sf6..2803 condominium, 3 bedrooma, Sauna, tennil, S ~ 9 , 8 0 0 . *SALE OR TRADE* double enclosed 1arage, lSX ~1 UNDER $30,000. 18 enclosed patio, forced air 11'-TMAC. Sol Vi5ll 4 br, 1" Charming 3 BR 2 BA. comp. heatint. dishwashtr and ha, tam rm. Bci,:t 11ha1. all crptd, flttpl, f11m . nn, din built-In range and oven. extra•. Auume 51.4 ?'. 2 2 I ti..... Plentv of cablnt!j and 1tor-$29,995 owner. M7...W50. • nn, car a:ar. rg. pa .... ,, Low down paymt l\Jtr. tie spaet. Wall to Wlll car. NEW exec 6 Br. 2~ Ba, flh\ 642-8400. pet.Ing, drapts, •wimrninl nn, nr p11bllc I pamc lebl. pool and clnbhoUse. 1 min-•u 1'0 "" ,.._ __ '"'" ·-VACANT 3 BR, 2 BA, all ...,., · "' v"''""'. ~...,.,. bltlns, crpb tbruoul. Cov'd Ille l.rom San Diego l"rM· 4 BR, 3 ba CbDdo w/blO.. way. Low do\\.n FHA or ex· $2 pAtio. Asaume FHA. no LIUna: FllA loan Sl.58 per 4.500. 8122 O!-erUeld Or, qualifytnc. $.1.IXI dn. m.o th. T . A_,.. H.B. 213/~85. J-•-1 · • mon otal pnce ~ full price. Ulu• rw1n LOVELY 3 Br pool honie, A'·-·~ .. 10 $22.500. R.t!dmon Rea.ltot1. ........ ...,.......... lrpl, Ii back yd, CPI. d~, BY Owncr·l br, 2 ba, lam Call 6JS..1S30. $39.950. Owner n4:892-16&1 rm. Nr S. Coast Plua 1r , .,,....:'-~-~-~-!:'-!:!-"'!-~-~=I!!!! POOL + 4 br, S52!lO cash .t tchoola. Immac C()nd. XJnt 1' MOST FOR THE take ewer GI loan. $214/mo landtc. t7xU worluhop, 14 MONEY I total. Prncpla only 842-8434 cov patio. 4 yrs. m.oc.>. PA S tt•= A"um•. ,.._.3781. NTA TICI • WA ~ nONT • 3 BR, l ONLY $30,SOOI BA, wtt bar, 40' doclr! EASf SIDE tll'I ,._ "---· ••~ 4 BR. 2 BA. <Vd .,11o. VACANTI 4 BR , 2 BA I ~-"·-,,~,.,-~~,.,-'~:;.r-c--;:,-:1.::<SI.:__ C&rpetlng, d,._pl'S. l'lullt ins, Paneled d r n. sp.rinklen, Huntington H•rbour dishw.ul'ltr. $29.950. s14i;t, block ~·a.11. VA/ntA term1! WATERfl\ONT l BR, 2 bt 1011.n. 646-54U. HAF FDAL REALTY "'l&•rdtn iundf"Ck & boat sen idle Items now! 142-4405 dock. SSI,000 nr lr11.Je/np- Call 642-~73 Now! 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""' Ht Trvtil• , , .................. tn Avtt Lttt!llt .. .............. ff' ,. ....... , .................... . ... .,, ... ,_,... _,, ............... ... """*"-................... "' ...... ,. ._.,.._ UMtl .......... , ......... ,'9t I rvlne Met• del Mair TUJtn.E Rock, 4 BR. many OPEN hoult S.t a. &tn, J~. extru, v)tw. Upper Sto's. 4 BR. 2 ba., new cpl.I & New,.rt h•c:h W!:STCUrr -1st time of· ftl'fd, Suney 3 br, 2 ba •• DAtl Y PILOT 37 Busln••• -Unlvm. 100 Opportvnltr 200 Oener•I llmOiiwilou~. ll!-~~20~3~7~~-iill decoratlna. Let cov'd patio, nr sdlool, $32,:IOO. By 5 BEDROOMS ,.,,." principal> only. 910 On ane floor : io'"onnal dinins SMont, M7-8689 home w/HJ)er&te din· J JLLNISS llOlt.CIS SALE L.ARGE 3 bedroom, Jult .,... + b"&krut bu. El« OF LITE MANU,ACTURING BUSINESS J>&ln•td, """'" A ..._ hltns w/dlhwlhr, lndry rm. Ideal opportunity for a&are.ssive man or wo-ltnc«d )"Ml, family ft)Oll\ I rm .. tam. rm. w/wet bar; M11i1 Verde cul de 11.c Joe, View of hilla -·- "-much more ls ottutd v.ith this one, ttfu1t 1tt to &JI· pm:lare. ~.l!OO. ired hill _~~~~~~ction, Univ. Park Ctnlr:r, lrv1nc be.aulltul appolntmentJ., on Ca.ii Anytimt m-0820 tbt: ta.lrwa.y . location with •"'"'"""'"""'"'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j maximum JKivacy. Sp.aclous pme room a n d elea:ant La1una Bueti rn&.11er bedroom suite. Thia L..t.rre roonu:, bla c'°"ts & man to take over wholesale arts & crafts children " "11 OK, 2lO lot& ol 1ton,re. Spacious p/m, Walker Ir Lee. Rt&l-custom patio 1 tarae yard. accessory business. All or1~al design mdse tors, (llof) W-4455 ot Walk to e v try 1h1"1 . -some lovely imported · gs that sell in 540-fil~. SpolleuJ.y clean. $47,500. the best stores. Facility located Nwprt Bcb. NEED a bJaer home ttJ 642-2049. All set up with complete inventory, equip., beaut!lul oUices & showrooms. rent? 3 bedroom, 2 bf.th, PANORAMIC VIEW carpets, drapes, dbl. rat· ot jetty ,. mam c~l. 3 Great mail order btlsiness potential. Present ·~. bll: yard, mo. to mo. BR., f ba. horn• w/tormal owner in ill health but will assist in teaching at s19:5.oo, c..u Broku din. rm., 1tudy: 2 frplc1, the business. 5'1~. wet Mr. Newl,y tedecor. Total investment $14,500. Part cash, balance On wldy beach. $169,500. on tenns to responsible people. Everytblng Li1ftdloNf..OWnars 2001 Bayl.lde Dr. By app'L available to work with. Must sell now. Please \Ve will refu teM.nts M fOll Biii Grundy, RHlter write for appt: MANUFACTURING, P.O. ~~REE of chara:•. · · Ml.111 .... Dove' O•., N.B ...... -Bo 1~ N desirable ttnanta: on OUl ~ · --x ·~. ewpcrt Beach, Calif. 02663. * OCIANFR0NT * ~~~~~~. e 64~J;JG PANORAMIC * DUPLEX * Buoinou S'4S. Lovoly 1...,., ,,.000. 213 VIEW 2 Up • 2 down. Owner aruc-0-rtwtlft. 200 home would be perfect tor goU lovlng COtJple. $64:,950. Excellf'nt terms. Jo od .,._, "-' £•t.tt' •' bdrms, 1 ~~ batl\li, cati'fll, 3 Bedroom hOme perclle-d on UA -muat sell 1 13, ••7 0.Mtll LAUNDRAMAT bit-ills, nc faciUtir:11 clo.w ~"""' hill•id•. Unob. 1358,000U.RR WHITE BY OWNER to ""°'"'· btaoh, ""'•· structed <>eellll view lrom West Newport. New wa1h-~902 all rooms, yet walking dis-''!!'~~!!'!':!""'!'!'"'""!!""!! REAL TOR Lott Nr Sile 170 E bl d ,, 9~ 9 CAREFRE:E • 2 Br. bllra, be 0eci.-1~ en. at . t:ra e. ; , .,,,. tance to ach. ... .« SY OWNER. Mesa Verde 2901 N1wport Bh•d., N.B. FOlll!CLOSUftE 83T..&4.17 or MJ..3963 encl car__. 11 yd, lddl/pttt. I~ terra~ Y~-Bullt·ln Enjoy frtih clta.n air in a • 675463o 6TJ.<W.9 Eve1. ,..L it 75. k1tchr:n with di.shwasher. BR home with electrnnic air BALIOA COVES .. ==:::: =~ ~= ~~~11&: l~~rtiat~!'j~ln~ Al.A. Rentl.ls • 64~ $42,500. Cal.I -tiltr:r. custom decor WATERl'RONT ll*C9 employee now avail-cost or flxtu~1 Ii: Inventory. JllS.MiNI RANCH 2 Br, w/ thruoul. Frplc in living A Transferred • MUJ:t Hill able at dt~ COit. 3 yrs old. By ownr:r. Evt1 frplc; huge yd tor kida l<. AO Ian lam room. Din. ,100m, all Prime loc. 3 BR. 2 b&. alnaY SA.VE $3000 213/592-203S Pf'l!, ~~ck~, 3 ~· ~.;~· 2°if:~ atory, Newly decor. F~ on the .. fabuloui, oa.k atud· OWN your own businesa -Blue Beacon* 64$..0111 Phalarope-Ct. 54G-WT >tt. 30 ft. boat .Up. fl'S,500 ded, rtnch W. 1preada. Calif. Co. has openln1 for e INVITING 2 Br, REAL ESTATE 1190 Gienneyre St 3 BR ..,. / din'i rm & den, :.;1~ Gru~yN Re~~~-~~~ .: ~s: dlst?ibutonhlpa 1n this area. cpt/drp!, 1tv/rtl, kids .l f94-M13 349-0316 custom bltns thru..out, 2-car ver VT., .B . .,..._., Good tncom~. In .. est. sr:cur-pets. 1150. srUNNING vlews 01 blue garqe w/woriaihop. Im-BY OWNER, view of ocean !::. ~: ~~:~ ed. 497-1319 for appt. ALA Rania!~ • &t>-3!00 P•cillc from every nn. o! maculate cond. 540-9102. 8•Rbay3. ~~ )'d-1trH1, ~'~-5 rot.d &nd locked pie auar-USED car lot • otfice-lirbta. $165-~l'CDR. J Br, 2 fia, ~i1 2 BR. hillJide home. 5 BR, Tri-level Rtpublic by • ...... P aynn, -· alll.te ti. natural btauty ot ~· x 19)' nr:ar Harbor a: RIO, children welmme. 152,500. O\\'NER. $49,500. Principllll ment. New Joni •hal: crpt, . thia formu Spania:h Grant B1y St. See 2136 Hubor, Blue B•acon * 64$.0111 BEST BUY in Monarch Bay.1.E~!::>:·:..U~<;~~"----1 e:"., .... w;;·,,•,12c,""';w;·;..,.,.-;;;;;-;;";;;;;;c; Cl\f .nu-JOO'I aum:iunded by • beautitul • RURAL! • 3 Br. 1tv. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Hua:e octan BALBOA Co~s bay lrcnt. 3 COIN OP • -nd • t/•-· ~d • Ho•-• view dr:ck. Only •u: 000 Newport Beach BR, 2 BA, -1c, t&ndy Oett!and National Forest. · .... u ry, J yn. c1t.., ... ...,, "' s n..'.)LI), ....., .. t< All udlitiet &Vllilable. old. Small• 1hop'1. center. ,...,. OCEANFROt-.'T Ap.t. 3 BR. 2 $21,900 FULL PRICE blPach, ,,lip, view. m.soo. PJ\ICED FROM ,9,950 Responsible party. 8&2--2516 ALA Rtntals e M;)..3000 &. 011•ner w/l1nan cc. 1 ihl 1 3 .. _ .. __ Prin. only. 673-1828 LOW DOWN-EASY-·-$59()00 or I IT"• u~u.n....,mt~===~===== ~~.,., lnv11tm1nt Jl75-NeWportHtt12 +Den. roP OF THE WORLD 3 BR. be11uty_. Lots o! carpets with LUXURY BAYFRONT Orcwmtances to~ the tm-Opportunity 220 Frplc. Bltns. Nice yrd. &: !am. rm. over-lookifllt match1na: drape1. Modf'm 1 BR-apt. $39.SOO. Stll, Least mediate dllJJOl).tion ol theH Blue Beecon * 64J...0111 lovely v&lley below. $37,500. built·in1 are Jn thl• oounrry at part trade, Owner: few choice parceh1 whose INVISTMENT Br-l'UKE REALTY 494--2858 style kitchen; also a dlsh-673-MOO. Lido Shol'ts Hottl former ownen LOSS ta your CONSUL TING 3 BDRM., Family rm., Pl.l'lc ~ 1 n like yard. Calla Mna. Kids 15Q.I s. <:.gt_ Hwy, Laguna washer. ~to\'e-ln condlUon. UPPER BAY, Charming 3 GAIN!! Call ar writ. for ON HOURLY BASIS OK, brk., $21> a month. NO * HARD TO FIND * At thi11 prltt, YOU CAN"l' BR, 2 ha home on quiet compJt te detlil.s and color Will undertake with you dttp FEE. ~t110. 'St bd ' • b h AFFORD TO RENT. Call ua 11trtet. Term11. Owner/alt on-site photos. Buy dlttcl A probina: analy11is of all I ~-~=~==-~-·• • ory; 5 rm&., ·11. at &, e AT TirE BEAOI • tlltM. Ite. kitchen w/brklst. ares. and we 'll qu&l!!y YOU, 548-9'71 trom the developer: pendlnr investment dr:<:is-cpt, drps, Irids, util pd. Sl.11. Formal dining rm.: ift. Jiy. Walk~r & Lee 5 BR, 4 BA. H/F pool. RANOIO CAPISTRANO iona;, Richard NtllOn, P.O. ALA Rentals • 645--3900 F 8 ~.. ••2-Box 403, Corona d~I '-far. inz rm. w/trplc. Nice tam-am rm. Y u .. ntr . ..., ·""" 2172 DuPont Drive, Rm I 3 BURM. + tamlJy l'ID,, full ily home on quiet cuJ de 1190 Harbor Blvd. al Adbnll 1 ,.,-'-""-"_,...0,."•c'io~D.,'~··~N-B_ NewpoJ1 Beach, Cal 9:2664 Money ta Loan 240 dlnlna: rm., bullt-lna.. brk. sac 1treet ln &ood nei1hbor-54~ Open 'Ill 9 PM Newport Height1 &\J.3223 1 $39(1 a month. NO FEE, hood, "'·""'· • BR. BAYCREST NEW HOME • 3 B•. ' ••• Mo~ll• Homo{ st TD Loan N•wport, .... !1"'. ~ New li&ting. Owntr goilll' built tor Indoor/outdoor llv-Trailer Pi1rk1 172 • MOVE UP! J BR, 2 BA, ~ t 8.'ll, mu11t 1ell Baycrest Ing. Landscapr:d . Close to l----------S"-% INTEREST cpl/drp1, bltnl, kid1/pet1, :..~=-~a 4 bdrm1, family rm. 1chls &: 11to~1. Reduced to BEAUTIFUL 2"" acre 2nd TD Loan $165. __ ._c:-dining rm, 2 bl.th.I, 2 trplci, S37,00l. Ov.oner _ N&-4080 mobile home sites. Tret1 & ALA R.entaht • 6-\~3900 * -t99-2f!OO * tile entry, latter dbl au-1 cu=S'l'O=~M~ho-,-.,-.-,-yn--o~ld-,-,'1 ;~~·m!~C a~I ~w;·:~ Terms bbed on equity, Stl~VACANT 2 Br. Bltne.\ -==~~=-=c-,.,,,-·l •ge. Lot 80' wlde. Aiklnf bdrm• " den. 2 full baths. 2ll/S14-IS3J. '42°2171 545-0611 Crpts, drpa. Kida ol •. EMERALD IA Y ;39,000. S<pant, dbt ..,.,.. N"'r Sttvloi Hubo, &ft& :n yn, Bluo Bo1con * '4S-0111 Aapacious3bdrm.homr:w/ CALL G) •••·1414 Cllf.f Dr. SlS.950. Owntr. Mounteln, Desert, Settler Mort9ege Ca, • BRIGHT k AIRY .• charm? Opr:n beam living ;J,•"'!.EA~L~Yf""'L 64&-279.1. Retort 174 33& E. lTth StNet Cpt/drps, atv/ref, fncd yd.I rm .. extra 11•. dining rm.: ~ ..., University P•rk SPACIOUS recttation or $145. 1 2 baths. Lowly M'cludl:d pa. Nt1r N••••rl •••t ortlc• retirement home1llP1, \deal Cash Fast ! ALA Rentals • &l:>--3900 tio -$89.500. HARBOR VIEW HOMES on BY OWNER, Irvint: f BR l Sierra location in heart of Sl~DOUJtOUSE at beach. Turner A1soclet1& the park by I.he pool. den, $31.~. 1• dn, Swim scenic mothertode: IClll'le on 1st &. 2rwl Trust DHcls Sm! pet ok. Bltni. 1105 N. Cofl.&t Hwy., l.a(wla Panoramic vltw or moun-pls, tennis. roll courtt; enjoy Miluntaln FR.EE APPR.AISALJ) Blue Bei1con * 645--0111 1 49~11n Anytime ·~; Ob 2• b •-• 1 l33-0692/&M-4564 livina: at \bl vtry bett. The Cott• u-,. lnvootmont -.,.~=,.-,~=~=c--,-1 .... ns. r, ~ a, caf1ro::"n. Charlei Wolcott Co., lSlT E. ,..,. e FAMILY WANTED! 2 Br, * 1171 CATALINA * liv'a: & dln'1 rm. pantiled 541-7711 1nytlrne cpl drp1 encl gar SlGO Open Sat., Sun, 12·3 family rm, 2 Irplcs, wet ~ !~1055~·· ... ft'~;ta for AMna~~ ALA Renl.11 • ' 64~ \Voods Cow atta. Lovely bar, lu5h crpts & drps thru· "''1 (stat•. Meadows Ettale11 B•lboi1 Penln1YJa Olde English style home, out. Choi~ o! leue-hold or ~--""'--"-"---' r-------.~ bu! young in years, 159,500 !ee. For We-by owner for SACRlflCE l -IW-] fl! I-BDRM., $145 l.tonth on PLACE REALTY 49-1-9704 limited lime. Open houll! Golt ooune lot. Apple Valley ~;;;;;;;~;; yelrly leaae. Utll incl. 2969 So. Coaiit Hwy., LB Sat I. Sun, 1-S p.m. 1900 Acreage for ••le 150 Gs113.000. M~r must 1tll 1 . N'pt Beach Rlty 6l5-I"2 P<lrt Weybridge Pl, N.B. nny om.on, a 1 en HELP! NEED 6#-4960 HAWAJT _ 2 ACRES 540--2236 Housa fumfshec:I 300 Corena lfel Mil~ TENDER LOVING CARE WOW-WHAT A VIEWI $4,900 =20,-..,A°'CR=E"S_IU'_Io-o'°"-",."-,,.,~1~0. ChMrll 2 Br house, crpt1:/drp1, In ~v~y fm~r~d 2 e;k ~ !rom every room. 4000 1q. fl. ) Trr:es--Fems.Orchld!. B 11 Oranae County. $300. per ac. frplc. pvt patio. S225. m "•" " 0 1 P"!.;""" · luxurious split-level. 3 br, Island 16 mi to Hilo. Call or In>. down, $M mo. To O~hld. ()pf!n w It n d 1 • en hOme or ....,,,,.,.,, 4 ba Mute . ,12 Write owntr today. Write reli.ablf' party, Owner (2U) 54&-4957. (1) 523--6534 ENGLUND REAL ESTATE . .r auite -"" Oa.uitled ad No. 155 Daily 2f5-305CJ 318 Thalla 494-8093 b:'thl, 2dttu1n1.rms, king. Pllot PO Box 15e0' Costa ,.=,,"""~.~LA~KE=,.A-.-,-o---.h-,~.d RENTAL FINDERS e CHA1t.MING 2 br, 2 ba. ====c-----~-1 sized beamed living rm, 10' >I ' ,,.· ~ • ~ • .. F T L •t d fireplace, patio & yard. CHARttfTNG ocean view r· I · b u · esa. ""or cabin, rum. Natural .... rH • en,. tr t ........ /mo, _ 1,,... -· 1re:p ac1P, sp.ICl()Ug u f-rn 213 4~9 ·-...,,,., J• "'" MU home + 2 l'l!ntal1 perched kilchr:n with bu, extra larxe paved rd. Secluded. Ml-2857 MS.0111 Wa!erfronl Dr. 673-34!ji proudly on the rim of covel'td p.atio & dttk. By 180 ACRES w/T7tl' on Out of State Prop. 171 ~~!\;4J~l~W=-·'-,,.,~-C:-.~~"~--l3 Br, 2 ba, l blk north of do\l'ntnwn Lagun11. Only appoiotm•ot O"ly. ~ KJ.""' l•fl.lna Csnyon Rd. H1111 " ~ ... C<m1t Hwy. 2 chll~n ok. $69,500. Hilly McConnack. Place. 6'12--0590 Brokf'r. "''ater, l•U, eltt, ttc. + HAWAII-OAHU • RARE-Stach pad! Clean $rill/mo. 673-0041 Realtor. view of octan. $49li0/acre. 190' choi~. rare wtrtmf tot. A quit!, uU pd. Yrly Sll5. * * 494-75Sl * * By onr, Si1vt RE Comm 673-1784 25,000 plus sq tt. Bf!au! AL AAen1aJ1 e 645-39m \VATEJlFR.ONT 3 BR. 4 Ba. ** EMERALD BAY ** J BR. 2 b&, ~rdwood !loon:, 10 ACRES Rlvr:nide Count)' Kaneohe Bay 25 min to Wai-e BACHEWR BUDGET home, newly redrc., on aan- F'it1t O«erlnr fully crprd. indoor · outdoor nr Intent.ate 10 trwy 12950. 'kiki. Urm,nd vu. New 99 )'t' BOOSTER • N.B. Utl M . dy beach. $l,000 Mo. . comm1 crpt dln'1 rm. kitch--.,.... BUI Grundy Rltr. 642-G Charmin~, cus!om, v 1 e w en both ba.throomi. F/A f/p. Low dawn, eal)' terms ™'· SS'S,000. Ownr. 548-ll57/ $&5. home with pool. $97,500. . to n llable party, Owner 61'5.3S82. ALA Rental1 e 54>3900 2 8 R houae--Frplc, J1r: ff'nctd 497-1537 499.2974 hr:at, 11pnnklers, 6 blka to l213l 26-3000 'R~o-o_l _E~,-,-o-to _____ SUJ\fMER .t. yr"·. Roo•-•··, yard. 3 bib lo btach. $250. ' btach. Oose to »ehoois, I ~---~~----I v .... 673--Stlt9 LAG Roye.If', S. La.tuna. 1 br Newpon \Vest tract. Must Comnwrcial Exchen,. 112 finer home• In beach ana. S3T,OOO, z BR $48.500, 3 BR stp to 1.pprtclate. Aasurne Pro,,.rty 151 _H_A_V_E_.._ ____ 9111 Grundy Rltt. 642-&520 1 .c.,.o_n_,o_Mo_•_• ___ _ pr:nth, ;&5,000, 11ll on bch, 6';ti VA loan, anyone qua.J. $150-DOLUIOUSE at beach. CUTE, Ml.SA V&RDE ocn vu, pool. 499-3TI5. iii~. 9432 Molrihana Dr, ACRE for O>mm'l Stablt1 N!:W Ottiee Bulldlnt Sml pet ok. l!llnl!I. J 81!0ROOM. La9una Ni1u•I H.B. 967-2I7a. Bu~. leue ba~k w/I~ nr:t net \V/Cl!XI K equity, Blue Beacon* '45-0111 AVAIL. SAT. net. 67~2 or itl-S123 ~ N t I -3 BDRM CHARMER ~··n. e neflme lalboi1 l1land Newly painted. huge coVl!M!d PRIVATE ROAD Condominium• WANT P&tio.Lo"or.,...,.Kl<b ok. lmmacula1e • Just move in. CUstom drapr:s. Lush land· scap1ng. Near ntw Niguel i;hopplng center. $32,500 . Good terms. lmm1c. 3 BR, den, din. rm. for llll 160 ./ 2 BR newly df'COrated turn S2l5. Stan Mey•r, Realtor. 3 bath home on lge. ftTICIPd BAYFRONT HOUSt or Lot. apl. $175/mo. tll June 13. ~588o or 549·l366. lot. Light a iry rooms, mani-CAREFREE LIVING W.R. OuBola: 5'5-TI66 Sf:f' Silt, 205~' Diamond. VERY CLEAN • VACANT . cured l11wns &: h1?aut. i:i:ar· C M Sp11ciou~ ?: stor" Condo. 2 R11I E1tet1 Wanted 114 01te eta wilh J f•-r: bedroo-· ._ POINT REALTY dens; dbl. £a.rage &. shop. -' 1,-.,..,---------• ,._ • A&soc. pool~ pulling J:Tf'en. BR, l'~ BA. F'inoplace. All .... 500 DOWN 2 8.R attract turn ho Cl: family room. Ju1t reduced 3~156 Co11"t Hv.·y, Di na Point (7lf} f96--5323 Bll-iM, \V /\Y <'Pl~. drp1. -mr, to $270 per mo. ramllle1 ~ Best buy in area . S&i.500. Want 3 Br or 2 on lot CdM. D, Frplc. Beam ct !lln(,· ly. "·II •i•"I 0 ,. 'l<t Priv&!f' patlo. H11J?t pool, ..... .. .,.,..... Call MZ-4620 for 1pp'1. recreatio n room. Laundry Will pay S~ mo. 7'3 intl'r. wuher, dryer. xtra lge • LOVELY 4 br, Z b1, fam rm, vu o! v11lley, clott to 1ho~ Bill Grundy, R•altor facilitiei. O\VNER l\lUST Nttd J'Xl!IBtBS\on June lst yard, tru!t tn.1. $225. LARGE 2 BR. 550 "-· fl SELi.! 549-{1674 1!17L P. O , Box 1237, AJ. fte3pon1lble married cpl. family nn, dining rm, Jae ping, M5,000. 49'l-{)422 OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-4 ~L-ldo~l-1-lo _____ , ll07 FINLEY AVE. -~_,.-_,.,.,....,.,_~-149 FT. Watr:rfnint w/p~tr A. Prim• Licle Nord float, 2 Bdrm. ap1 , p!ut S BR. 6 ba. w/r:!evator. 52 bach. unit. Room tor addt'I ft. lot. Pltr &: 1l0tt. $175,000. unir. Tip ol Lido lolo W•lk0< Rlty. •US-5200 Beaut. 4 BR., 5 Ba. home 2 3336 Via Lido. NPWJ1Qrt Beach frplcs. 56 ft. v.·a tr:r tronti.ge. Westcliff Bargain ~m for large boat ahpt. Thrtt bedroom C:I~ CM Pnce 1.100,000. t h , -r 11 Biii Grundy, Rltr. w 1 ...... r11:e am 'I rot>tft. Ill On Dr NB 6424620 Nr:tds redecorat1n1. Prl~ vtr ., hi-low market at ~.500. WILL LEASE """" "" thl• """ Votd $800 Per month wl!h firm Co. Reallort 2007 Ea11 Coul cpfion. 5 Bdrm~. J Baths. Hwy, CdM 67l-2020 . $93,7:.0 DOVER SHORES AREA LIDO REAL TY INC. You ov.•n tht IMd 33i7 Via Udo 613.-7300 Lc:rvf'ly "eleiant I BR home, 2.&.50 sq fl. Din rm, l•m rm. ~M_o_•~•-4~•-l_M_•_, ____ 1 breakfas1 art•. &a11t. y11rd. Outst•nlllng Locatlen Set kl 11.ppn!rl111r:. $72.SOO. 4 br, l ba. lge kitrhtn/dln'r i~°""'=='~64=i..oo&l~·~~..,,,.-~ a.rea, lrplc, brick patio, BEAUTIF"UL 5 br. 4 iv., 111.m trettt, COrTM"r hou.se -w/1ide rrn home in Dovror Shono~. yard for boat or trailet. 2 Le pool l psllo rtsrdrn, minute• to mtjor shop's n .ooo C.ll OWM!' 842..:1203. crnter, fr-et•~. ttthtltllt, Lii' WA+ERi'ft67'fT. Beaut. 50 llCrt park. $31.~-CUit. bl!. 4 BR. :! 'BA . lovely 54&-:m6. patio. Ownr:r. Sf5..ll~ BU~ marke:-t>lace in 3 BR. 2 RA, Fam rm. 2 - klwn. Thi DAIL\ PILOT flrepl'1, Crpts, ~. Pool. ctu.lt\ed llK'tl&n. Savt \\'f'ifcl\tf. Ownt'!' 8'2--106T money, limit il etklrt by Turn unultd lleim lnto quick o,rmelt&lr. ,... coll 64Wl'll Income Property 166 hambra, Ca 91802. ~ kitchen, l\ii BA, 1u-per l kOOM hou~e. blt·in 1tove" (tll.llo, ni« yard. $275 mo.' tttrig. Partly tum. Ulll pd. :2al Santa l1abel, C.M. ) --·---" . ----- l DELUXE jiliiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiii;;J;l•iiiii) _s,..111.,.;·1;-;m_o.,. ----.,....·..,---N1Ct 3 BR. holW, crplll.1 4-PLEXES . Huntlngien a.ach drpR, frplc, prage, fncd 2 BR and 2 BR apts. Nr:w. yard. E-side on pvt 11rfft, port &ach. 112.000. dn, 2 BR, turnllh~ hoult', adult• ~2,u~I~~~ oo ptt1, SUO mo. $72,500 Butln1t1 only. 11~/mo 2317 Encland. _......,,... PERRON REALTY &\2-lm Ojtp0rtunity 200 HB. 53&-3509. STORE, Officf', 2 BR houM, room to 11dd, C-1 zoned, SO" TO 8UY Olt 2 BR, partly tum, 2 tti>lci, l!I> corner, S42~· lSth ~'-SILL A BUSINESS nr Otrlatiln Science Oiurch. near Jfitrbor, C1if. Will S Sl.95 IR. Adults. Refs. Wrlle b'adt. Brokrr 49'-9659 ee ~-~~~---~~ HOLLAND BUS S'LES 2400 Strand, l.1anh•tta11 lots for S•I• 170 '"nMI Broker with F.m';.1111.. Belch M" ph Zll: )4~941. f BR Eufllde. f'rwshly paintt4, bltln 1tove. fenced yd. 1195. 226 Sluka ,It ........ 3 BOA.Al, 2 ba, frltlc, patio. Close to ac:hools I: thopplna. AvaU. •I your convr:n!tncc. SZIO. 5a7.Jtil1 1n6 Oran1e Ave., C.M. Lido 1111 QUIET -·I•..,. 3 !R ~ CHOICE lot. 100 :x 135 R-2 MM17'0: 540·0608 an ... llne '"" -u c • "11;\.1 paved aUt y. ~II E . 1 ' "BEAUTIFULLY fW11l•htd, yd, Z car rar, <'hlldNJn/ptll Roc::hesttr St. CM clt\9t to NEIDED: extra It. 2 BR .• 2 Mth. 2 ok. $210/mo, 648-7Tl1 , t7rh St 11\opplng are• WORJONG PAltTNER OR. patio home. t.fnd. ele:c. kl!., •'"'""=,.=~~~~--~-! S2'2,00'> flY.l-9009 I PVT INV!m'OR Subatanl· DW, walher A drytr. Dbl 4 BR, Frplc, 2 ht., Lee~ R1 LOT 7.nn,.d for 7 M 111i la.I return on moMy '"wit· JU. $&00 Mo yr leate" ylrd, l>et-. '-children Ok. unh•, folh;10$' Nr enuntry td, ~ w/eollattra.L. M•cnab-lrvinf' $291 mo. 1st ,l Jut. • rlub. C.1'1 Rriltnr, f2l!J J."or ~ Info write P.O. Rialt)' Company 6i..>-3210 Redwood, J\.lesa Verde ~7-1-14111 rnllecl ! Box 111!, Santa Ana. Newport leach 3 BRM fr. Ntar OCC q>tl. LAKE El•innrt 2 hUIA!de tlOUSEWIVES • Good w•• t drp1, COv PtUo, tit bl!t() ...,, W EK or w1ebnd J n I«IO .. fl sm. ~'"-.. l('lfl, Sl.-00 f11r both, SSM f-'--·oewlvt• tom•" x-Nt--H .. --·~ "' r1Vl.I ,... ~,.,.., . ._ OU on •nt ! <11N l'°m •-1-• l -MW71. G-tZ-2657 US ESPECIALLY GJ\!AT bft.rh by Nf W'port jetly n ""' "" a.n. for women who holl ptrty t:r.rn April llth 'Tl. Sl11ps Mlis« " l'•tqr,, $245 me. Why store It In the attic p\tN. Mdw direct from T, •ttlO. MSQ.,96, mll Columbia ~. when you ctn tuni 11 blto f1ctory. For full Into call "Mlkf! Rcom ro;: Dad-LARGE l Bedri0r1t, ELinv W..23'4 dy'' ... cltan out tht l1dy,Nopett.St6rno.• moMY throulh a DAILY IGOO ·~~o""~i...,-~bt-&-,-.,-~, ... -~-.)1>Ut ~ la CA!H P'ulltrton. 541-3933 PILOT wut >A. Cft..3Q1 1'1•. Thur .• rn. i wtlh 1 Dall.Y PIDt Claullltd r11t resultl ut Jtist a ph09e _________ &_•_· -mornlnp--"--· ----. od. tall·-. - , . . . .. • ~ ~3a~~o~~~L~Y~P~i~lO~T~~~'.T!~~~~~r·~'·~~~-~·~~~"~"'~·!1!..,.,!!'"!!!'!!!!!!! u I -.. -1~1 ;.I .. -..... -~l~~ll~ ~-~ ... ~-~l~=i';;·~ .. -;; ... -;;l~!!l I .... ,_ ... ,,., ... I~ I ---lltl ,., ··* ..... -l~ -Unlom. 305 HoUMS Unfum. 305 HoUMI Unfum. 305 Apts. Fum. 360 Aph. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfurn. "5 Apt. Unlum, :l'5 r.: Cott• M•MI H::::;:un:;:t~in::!g!!ton::._:Bo::;:•:;:ch~-,li'S.-i;n;;..,;C;:;:l•;;m:;:"on;;:t;:':--::;;;:::::;:i 1_c_ .. _,_•_Mo_ .. _____ Coit• Mesa Newport 8udt 1; 3 Bechoom. ' bath coodo. 3 BR, 2 ba, pvt back y...t, SdBR.ln Ocean ~~w,. w/fOml~ CASA de ORO Unboliovably Boautifol ''~ Retrlc bltna.. rt.nae Joel wubtr & drytr yard rm, paM am rm, VALD'JSERECardenApUI. r' ·, dis~. d I 1 h w a 1 h. er' tool~ rtlriJ: crpls k drp& p&lioe, sundk. drps l bltnl, CASUAL ca.tit. L!Vfne in • Adults ~ no pets. Flowers NOW YOU CAN AFFORD drapes. Very nice •lith 2 NI' ''schools' I: beach '. frplc, fncd yd, Water Ir. wannMedit~anatmos-everywhtte. Stream & NEWPORT BEACH adult awlmmin( po o t 1 $250/ino 9 6 8 -3;, 5 2 or truh ~· $300 8 mo lease. phett, SpaclOUs color co-\Vaterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, •"f· available. alao large fenced !!62-8028: 492--0960. ordinated apls • designed Ii Sauna, Sgls 1-2 ~Furn-"f:""" yard, ExceUent location, CONDO-Dec 2 BR d Sin Ju•n C1pi1tr•no fumiJ~ for style A com· Unfurn. from $].3;i, SEE IT: Enjoy $750,000 health club '& spa; 7 pools, 7 tenms courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also 2· story townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elec. kilch .. ens, private balcony or patio. From $175. 51,lbterranean parking, elev, maid service. Full .. line food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon wlthln complex. 7 beaut. model a pts. V am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. of Fashion Island. 714 : 644-1900 !or leasing info. , " near schools. shopplna;, 'Z ' • + en, fort • Heated flOOI • Kitch-3JOO Panon.1, 642-3>70 I ftoeeways. House hu 2 car 1'l BA, Cl'Pli. d~, bltrui, 4 BDRM & !Am rm, brand en \V/ indirect llghtln&: • of "'' --.. c. patio It: upst&'-wa:ihr + dryer, 2 car ;ar. new TROY hOme. Bltlllll, Deluxe R/O. Adultll. No peis. FURN bachelor, beam et:il'&, .. :· ·--... Quiet Le.ase mo 968-5732 i..1 t 11 lrpk, tub/1hower, dispow, balcoey. $225 mo. f>a~2623 · · «a 1wsr, cp 5, Pa o, 1 SR...$175 fUrn • 1M _,,, eves & wknds. sprinkJen. For only $215 per Bachelor _ Sl<IJ cpta, con1pl fum £.'(Cept " S.'1.ALL 3 br noose, near caU 943-1936 linens, Jmmac. Resp. adlt Count" Club. 1'~ am 11 I e • $350; Orjg i·ashlon Shores, mo. or 2 )JR • SI!G only. bl Ii last mo' a + ~ ; .. ,. !~ ~·. . "' ·-· ' . :.>t •. I ' • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' "' '' i ' ! ' . . . .. .. ' • • . • • . ,• • .. .. •• •' .. ' ' .. •\ ' walk 10 beach: 4 & fam. -493-lMl UTILITIES INCLUDED only! $150 mo. 837-1789. cpl&. drps, med. Fri/Sat: 4 BR & family rm. Brand 365 W, ,Vibon GU-197l tttundable clean'& de p. J BDRM ho . $125, avail May l. 548-4093 me v.• 1 I h 213: 360-0074 Sun. 962-5180 new Troy home-. Bltiu, dsb-1---~==~~-- l ire p I a C' t'. s~. 20:rl ....Ont.I *SUNNY* * SUS CASITAS ~lo11rov1a Ave ., Costa Mesa 4 BR, 3 ba C.Ondo Wfbltns. v.·sbr, cpts, pelio, sl":.. ..... eni. * ACRES * PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS EHi Bluff $220/mo. 8122 Deerfield Dr, For only $215. per mo. Call Lq, nlceJy furn Bachelor & Htg Sch. 213/823-648S 493-1936 or 493-3041. * Motel-Apt&. * 1 Br. Furnished mode>s Studio It 1 Bedrooms 1----------CLEAN 3 br / 2 ba, w / w University P•rk LOW RATES o~n daily. New rental rates I !'!'!'l!'!'!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!'!!!!!!!!IJ!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!l M;;: ~~To shag,!!F, bltns.$2Great loc. S15 Week-$100 Mo. ZllO Nev.,port Blvd, C.\f Apt. Unfurr.. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 S ~ •~-Rent 35. 17342 \Ve have UNFURNISHED & Daily Rates Avail. SPAC. y.·ell furn 2 br apl in Chappan! Ln. 968--34.54 aft FURNISHED r-entai. in e Color 'JV Air-Olnd triplex unit. Privacy. Adlts, B•lboim Peninsul• Cost• M••• Several choice prlva1<' ov.·ner 6 pm or bet. 10 am. University Park le Turtle e Pool p~ Table no pets. 7G8 Scott Pl. 1---------- Bluffs homes for lease on • CLEA:'i 3 br, family rm, Rock A would conskler it a • Soun& 646-2322. BRAND new DELUXE 3 Br. 3 Hedrooin, 2 bath i..vnclo. ~U.·11:., blt1hi., c" n i e, dispobal, d1shwa:;Ucc, W·.i.pes. Very ruc.-c v.·1th 'J adwt sv.·1nuning pools and ro:creatlon hall. (.;hildren welcoinc, twu children• :;win1nuzig pool:; ava.llable, also lar~c leni..'ed yai:d. £x. ~llent location, n e a r scn1JVl5, s huppinJ.::, :.l I.n:cw:1)'S .. HoUbC has 'J. car garage, pallo & up~-tali'l!i l!ak.'IJny. $:.l:l;. 1110. ~~'5 a yearly basil! 2 Ba apus. 1600 block E. · trplc, bllns. Fenced. $220. privilege to help you solve 2376 Ne\vport Blvd. *QUIET 2 BR duplex, bltru, Balboa Blvd: close 10 ocean * Theo Big "E" • 2200 sq. fl. J BR, + fam., on Tilt Park • baN!ly used • va- cant, clean & ready a.I $48.~ Mo. 962-5US )'OW' houain& needs. S48-9T:i.'i gar. patio, £.a.ltk. Adults, or. bay. 1 yr lease. Incl ' -BR. ., -1y. ~~ •tonth. NE\V O\VNER-under no pet1. 360 16th Pl. 645-4285 ~ -" GE MEN Dl\V, drps, frpl &. crpt. Pacific Saod•, nr. Be•ch •-NEW l\1ANA • T or 642-1298. 61 °" 644-41 days, 673-0253 eves Atlanta. Call 675-3254. * $130 UP * CHAR.:\ffNG J BR, Patio, !or appt. HuntingtOl1 Herbour GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM! Quiet. No children or pet.s, 10C-EA-N"-->.-R-O_N_T--j-,,,-1-,,.,-il-l-J Go ..... eous. ft~..i..like selling. 11~ 64' 1848 ... ycun. ""'· .>-sty-fantastic bay view. 2 * Ele&!inl Oay view 3 BR '~ BEAUTIFUL watertrnt Closed garages for max· 2 ba dl ' " 3 BR, 2 ba wfsundeck & "SINCE 1946" imum security. Quiet stteel Dan• Point Br, 2 Ba, tam rn1, sun rm, • " "·.rm._ .sundeck. dock. lease or optiori. '"t \Vestern Bank Bkli Adulls, no pets. 2020 SINGLE TV I •-k patio. suodcck, dshwh r , 1' ~shly painted. New car-., ••• ,.,., .,._, "221 ~ Full ("··bo ' ' poo' pe .... 0 · bit d •-Ad I peling. S-12.:> ~lo. -~--~--~~------1 Univet!ily Park erton Ave no!' r to S25 & up wkly. Dana Marina ns, rps, crp..... u ts, no Irvine D•y1 133-010)_ Nights Bay, tbe.n So. until 2 blks Inn, 34111 Cout Hwy. pets. $500/mo. I.st. 6T'r5034 • On the greenbcll • ,,xec. homr, i;plit level ::: BR., 2~ ba, Decorator jtems. S4Z5 Mo. l~~=~~~=~=ti'°~·i'.ol~N=•~w~po=rt~B=l=vd~.~642-= H ti -•-...... e 2 BDR.:"\f. Yearly. Like I~ 8690 =.;;;";";:;;n;•;:'°";i;;;;-;,;;•;~;;;,;;;;_0 1 ne\,. ~lature adults. 419~ I NEVER, .. "''-::t '.:-• bcTu. 'rt'm1 • BR. with lamily room NEW LRG DELUXE AP'TS • E. Bay. Call 67f>..<172 all * Span1'sh Elegance rm.. . (; a ... ums. e TurU Rock $375 ...L.f $1-SO La Q . fa He ' knd Rock. A"il ,.,, " ., BR ' .••...•••. $.125 B•~ "'" ... um rmosa pm, w ' I before. I.st $ 3 7 SI mo . 3 · 2 baths ••• ••••••• 1 BR-furn · · · · · SICf.50 CororMI del M•r Seu 'lhe ltouu r 01• * Easipark pl•n "\V". 4 BR. 833-1411 4 BR. 2 bath!. ........... S300 2 BR-furn ..... $179.50 Spanish Country Eslate Liv- 21; ba. end un11. lmmed. l .L~a~g~u-n_a_B~,-.-c~h-----ll BR. 2 baths; f\lnnshed UNFURN AVAILABLE ing le Spacio~ Apta, Ter-Quiet Adult Living Snai;: CPI • dcp:i • bill\! l:SeaulifuJ !-'ool posseu. S380 !\lo. avail. AIJl;. l.st '' ·' · ··• $400 ADULTS ONLY. NO PETS raced pool; 1unken a:as BBQ i eel h•111760 Pomon• 642·2015 Unbellevablt" Living • Only --~~!':~ * Brand Ill'\\. never OCC'U• pied; 2 ·Sly. 4 BR. 2% ba. Esp.ania homf', $385 i\lo. * 2 BR. 1 ba. Plaza home, on greE>nbell; having "face lifting" • offered at $250 i\lon!h Several 11·eJI short lt'rm availablt'. aripl'd. rentaJ\'I furn. .... 2·114 Vista Del Oro Ne11'port Beach &M-ll33 Fountain V•lley GREEN VALLEY -Spanish ~ Br. 2 Ba, cpltdrp. bl~s. gar, lg patios. $2j(J, 968-2647 For that Item under try the Penny Piocller CLASSIFIED HOURS i:;o, 8 :00 a.m. to 5 p.m. J\.1onday thru Frida)f' g to noon Saturday Advertisers may place their ads by telephone COSTA 111ESA OFFICE 330 w. Bay &12-5678 NE\VPORT BEACH 3333 Ne\\·port Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON" BEACH 17875 Beach Bl'ICI. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH m 1'"ore;t .Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEr.tENTf.: 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 N0nTl! COlJN'T·{ dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Dcadllne for ropy &: kills is 5:30 p.m. the day bl'· fore publication, except Io r Monday F..dltion when deadline is Satuc· day. l:l noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Adve.rliSf'T'!I should cheek their ads dally & report "ITO~ immediately. THE DAIL 'l PlLO'T' :i.Mumes liability for thl." rint in· correct. insertion only. CANCELLATIONS: When killinL:" an ad be sure to ma.ke a record or the KILL NUMBER given you by your ad tAker as receipt or your canCf'IJaliun. This kill number must bl-IJl'f'· sented by the advertiser in Clllie' of a dispute. CA.NCEU..ATION n R CORRECTION or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNJNC':: Every l'ffort ill' n111dt-to kill or rorrt'Cl a. n~· Ad tha.l hllB l:M-Pn ordrrrd, but we cannot ~anr.n­ ttt to do so until the ad hu appeared In the pa- per, - DIM&.A-UNt; ADS : 11lCR ads a~ strkU;.o cash In edvanct" by m11ll or at env one of our or· (kn. NO phon" orde~. ?1-IE "DAILY PILOT re· lerwl ~ rhilhl to clt1 8· stry. t!dlt. Uns«' or ~ fuse any advetrUae~nt, •nd to cN.nre lta rat~ A re~latlons without prior noU«. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box 1&00. Colla Mese 112626 • VIE'V HOt.tES * LAGUNA BEACH r I 1 Br unf $150-furn $175 GARD.EN LIVING 2 B• uni $175 lorn $210 4 Bdrm. & lam. rm., exc. n..; I Util ALL UTIL INCLUDED ..... et, attrac .. peasant. . ocean view. fireplace, 1v/w REALTY paid. Heated Pool. Special Bonus; a s:Uver- ccrp .. bit-in kilch. incl. re-Univ. Park Center, Irvine 2 BDRMS •• $170 plated candJe snuffer i!I frig. 1 yr. lse S3:JO mo. Cali Anytln1e 833-0820 Adults. Small pet OK yours Lr you bring this ad 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home, exc.1 .,.,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I · \VI &I~ 740 W. 18th St., C.Af. 11•hen you visit our models. ocean view. w carp. 4 BR, 2 BA Culverdalc. Pooll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,;!!!!!!!!!!,.... 4 blks S. of San DICK<J Frwy d~'Bpes thruout. Neat as a privileges. $275/mo. * 5 d' A $115 Be h 1 blk \V Holt ON TEN ACRES 1 Ir 2 BR. Furn A: Unfum. Fireplaces I Prlv. patios. Pools Tennill Contnt'l Bldst. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644·~ (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) pin! S300 mo. • Call 64j...2996 • tu JO pt. ~: 1~~1 · Parksid~ onLane. Dix. l BR. Z ba., North end Hous 1 Furn or * 1 Bedroom $130 c714) 8.17.5441 * COROLIDO APTS * loc., xlnt ocean view. All • · bltn. kit .. trpl., open beam , -~U-n~f~u-•n_. ____ J_l_o_ 1 .!\1APLE ST. NEAR 19'1lf .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Z Br. studit>s & street levels, cell's. $375 mo. , .. L.d 1 I 64~034t l1gun• Beech $185 & up, Dsh"l'hr, !rpl, dbl 1 o s e carport. L A R G E Pool. 1.flSSION REALTY 494-07~1 SPECIAL Low Rates !rom PENTiiOUSE, pvt gtep• to 673-3378 FOR lea~. contemporary FOR R~NT ~R FOR SAL.E: $25 1\•k. Kit. avail. !\laid beach, 1 BR, 11~ BA, gar. Langv..'Orlby designed 2 BR, 725 Via Lido Nord. Lido serv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark "'Ash/dryer. Adlts. 6 mo. NE\V untw"l\ 2 br, :! ba 2 BA home. Sv.·eeping ocean Isle. Call \V~. "',ter ~ or l\fotel, _2301 Np! Blvd, CM. lea!e. $275 mo. 494-1668 duplex. 2 blks to beach. Brighton 1)..-64 646-744a Upstairs w/view. Pvt patio. &. coastal vie"·s, yard. deC'k. Newport S.•ch S28:i mo. 494-0061 or 213: Condominiums • FURN. INCL U ti I. Yearly lease. 714/675-2506 597..o286 6 pm or alter. Unfurn. 320 DELUXE bachelor I< 1 br OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, I ~·~'-213='~3'9-0=-~™::::·c_ __ _ 2 BP., N. end, ocean view, Ap~. $35 1\·eekly & up. Mo. $250 mo. til 6(15. Adults on-e FOR lease, deL'I:, &IJ elec. L1gun1 Hills rates. Terms Avail. 998 El ly, no pet.s_ 673-8088 lge, new w/w, vie\v, 2 BR, adulls. no pets, stove, re!r, Ca "" .,.1 1 BA All bl · · cl 1\'/\I'. $250 incl utilities, NE\V dlx sngl •ty 3 BR 2 mino. ~;.i:.::.. ___ \\'ESTCLIF'F Drive • 2 Br. apt. t-1ns Ill drapes. 494-2815. BA. cn>Us. drp~. bltm, ~I. LARGE 1 BR. centrally Newly decor. Bllri a~ dishwshr, dbl gar. AdulUI NORnt end, 2 blocks 10 Children OK. 2 c enc gar. located. Pool, ~rt. adlts, pliances. Pool. • 642-6274 only. 67J.....699'l. beach a. park 2 bdnm, grd &; trash pkup inc $265. no pets. Sl35. 560 '"'-1 BED., block to ocean, pool, SHARP 1 BR., cpLc;, drJ>s, blt-irnl_ , $250. J>i-inciples only Bia. 837-5506. ~~~i1t60ton. 646-4160 or single adults, sm. ~. priv. pa.Uo. Grnd. fir. Sl85 494-5298 e .,........, 644--0637 eves. Mo. Sce:nic Pro per t i e 1 ves. Newport Be•ch 6JS-5726 Laguna Niguel AVAlL May 8th. Attract. 2 • WINTER RENTAL.5 • e CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE e Br. completely furn. Extra Rent NO\V tor Sept.! 2 Br, 1 Ba, irpl, shiig cpt. .,_..,..-,-...... -----1:3 BR. 2 Baths. SlSa Month, spacious. \Valk to shopping ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 drps, bltns, htil"l')' $210. L.5E_ or lse/OP'I' J Br, 2 Ba, lease. Call: 548-70:>2 center. Child ok. $139.50. Btwn 10-5, ~2062; att 5, $285. Fplc, Yard, Gar, S49-364l r.iAY-June at the beach! t.ge 213: S9S-ln9 Bltin.s. 4~1331, 494-4746 Duplexes Unfurn. 350 'J, BR, p••tly fu•n apl. ,, 1~... 3 br. 2 ba duplex avail now. • • " .., $245/mo. M9--0844 3 BR. 2~~ BA Deluxe apt. So. Newport Beach Coron• dtl M•r ried couple only. lntant OK. C,;L~E;AN~~l~Bd~nn=.~,~,-rn-.-,p~t-. I of Hwy, See Mgr. 32'l-:: ._..,..,,.,~------I· , 2 b $lj() mo. Nr Fairgrounds. Noac •to-·. •nd ,,· •. •. 1 Marguerite or ph. 673-7127. e NEW unlurn :.. br. a 646--8226 ·~·' • BEAUTIFUL 4 BR custom dupl<'x. 2 blk.~ 10 b<'ach. _ adult. $145 mo. Ph. 673-6527 PVT, patio, 2nd floor. 1-2 home, Adults, Rtrs. $300 Upstairs w/virw Pvt patio 1 BR spac. Adull~. $12.i le. Apt. Unfurn. 365 BR. Auto garage door. mo incl gardener, Will be y 1 1 714;67 .. ?JOii · $130. Pool. Ideal Io r Adults, No pets. 644-8208 shown Sun U-2. 2 212 2~j3~~ »-~ or bachelors. 1!193 Church St. Generel Cost• Meu }'.targarel Dr, or ca 11 · 548-9633 540-6761 or 714/75.1--0393 col-1C_•_•_t_•_M_•_•_•-----t'Q~U~t~ET="~,~,~-,-,-,-tu~d~io-,~ll~l75 . if.'CI, NE'V l Br. brick la-\ frpl, 1 ~r. $125. Adlts, no pell!. LRG. 2 br, 2 ba, crpts, drps, ~ams pa!io, w/w, Dltn.s. I 2135 Elderi, l\lgr Apt 6. bit~ bbq, elec. gar._ pool, ad\t. v'rly. $136. 642-s51.0 SHARP 2 BR. $155 ~ice Bl~ Joe. S350 mo. Hid Pool. Adults no pell. incl ma1nt. Reis re q. ......., i\I _, 64°?."~-644-l£2l ~ ~·· ' a.,,e or -;J.UU. I Apartmentt tor Renl g 11 BR. lurn gas & v.·ater pd. O\\INER • Blutf home, 4 BR, L._ ~ No children. no p e 11 . 3 BA, tlj. crptd, drpd. flrepl. $12{)/mo. MJ-j991, 646-70;i8 Yrly lse $38J mo . 7141892-1684 Apts. Furn. 360 PRIV. ne\\' studio w/yard, o-park"J:. all util pd. Orange 1009 \V. Balboa. och\·ecn G I Ave, Nr 16th. SLlO. 642-0jJS. VEN DOME IJ\B1ACULATE APTS! ADULT a.nd FAl\rTLY Section Close to shopping, P•rk * Spacious J BR's, 2 ba * S1vim pool, put/green * Frpl, Jndivllndry lac'ls 1145 Anaheim Ave. COST A J\1£.SA 642-2824 ocean k bay. 1 bdnn1.;.~'"°;;;.'~·~------l -~==~7'=~~=~ I do!lhou!!e. 642-5851. Yearly Ren! Beautiful Furniture NICELY FURN l BR 20-IS TUSTIN Ave, upper 2 2 & 3 BR on Shalimar-Crpts, drps, bltns. $135-$150. ChildN!n ok. Call 5,;i7~ aft 4 p.m. NE\V I Br. lrplc. beams, patio, w/1Y, bllns. 1 adult. Yeiil'ly. $136. A\'l l\lay 1. &-12-8.j20 SHARP 2 BR $144 Htd Pool. Adults, no pets . Eastside • 642-<>520 2 Br. $170 incl all util 1\duils only-no pets. 2-ll Avocado ~1. &ki-0979 \\llWVN liAKUt.N A.!"'1'.S. 2 Blt Uniut11. Newly dee. New cpl:ildt'ps. Sp a c gi'Ounds. Adlls, 110 pets. ~J.J()/mo. 2'l!l3 .foun t a 1 n \Vay .1::. lHartxn-. turn W, on Wil.sonJ SPAC 2 Br apls U:om $1.\U. H.ld pool. !-'lay )'<I. Crpts, drp~. blLns, pauo. Newly det:urated. Kius uk. 1~ ~:aple Nu. J &l:.l--b34·1 Ul~ C.:Olu:i;e Nu. :.l ti-llH!titl NEW l BH. apt, ;150 All uW included, Crpts, tkps. All bltns & dshwsr. t'ool 1 ctuld OK. 307 Avocado, 'No. 9. IHS-WS-1 --~~~--HARBOR GREENS uAJWw 40;. ::,~ruu1u Af"TS &:.ch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. lrom $ll0. 27ou Pele.non Way, C.M. ~70 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, bllnS, v.·alk to school, chw'Ch & 1>tores. $175 + util. Open Sal & .Sun 12-5 1010 El Caniino, Ci\t. ~b7·14 . e t.:IESA VERDE area • deluxe 2 & 3 Br. 2 Ba, encl gar, $145 & up. RentaJ Ole; 3095 J\Iace A v e, ~ti-1034. LRG 3 Br, I ~1 ba $275. 2 encl gac, lrg palio, .1 nag crptldrps, bltns, lrplc & laund Iacil. 64ti-5476. 2 BR. unlurn apt. Stove & reirig incl'd. Garage. Pool. all ulil pd. Adlts only, no pell!. A1gr No. 9, 383 W. Wilson it 2 BR, Crtps, drps. Con- venient location, Nr shop- ping t-cntcr & schools. Su.:>. 673-8145 2 BR, cpVdrp, bltns, closed gar + prk 'g. Adult s . Sl351mo. 2':210 Rutgers Dr. 646--6919 !ease only. lor as lltUe as e Sllj-$l30 e BR duplex wflrg 11undcck, 4 Br+ lam rm, !rplc, fenced ONE MONTH 132 \V. \Vi!son 54&-9577 ~~~ i~:solndry hookups, DIAL direct 64Z-567!:, Chara:e yard, on cu 1-d c -s a c . Turn unused items into quick Daily Pilot \Van: Ads have your ad, then sit back a.od $350/mo. 64S-1976 or 557-6937 cash, call 642-5678 Balboa lsl•ncl bargains galore. listen to the phone rt.I\(! DUPLEX-2 br , bltns, refrig, crpts, <!rps, garage. Fron! & back yards. $160. Avail Im- mediately. 962-6379 BLUFFS O:>ndo: 2 BR/2 BA, complete -:Ith Apt. Unfur.,. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unturn. 365 den pools Nr Elem .tr. Hl your lOO Y. · _________ ..:;. __________ ;._ _______ ~-'--:-:::----0---- schis. v.oo"tmo. 644-1395 Purch•1e Option Newport Beach Newport h•ch Newport Be•ch Newport Beach Intl. iten1 sclectiou. 2 Br nr beach. Garage. Year \sc, S18.l. 'Viii sho1v Sun & i\Ton. 128' 4lst St, HB Newporf Heights lC Hour Cely. CUSTOM Furniture Rent•I 517 \\', 19lh, C.l\f. 548-3481 ----------!Anaheim 774-2800 NEWPORT HEIGlITS LaHabra 69<1·3708 3 Bedrooms. 2 bath hom~.I=~=~~~==== &pecial antique decor, ce· CHATEAU LAPOINTE men! drive, double garage, UJVELY 2 BR a.pis. Furn &. $250 pr. month. No pets. Unfurn. Shag crprg, htd RLTR. 646-0J.')5 pool. Carport~. Adults, no pets. 1''rom $140. l!Ml Pomona AV(', CM, HOLIDAY PLAZA DELUXE Spacious 1 BR turn apt $13:>. Heatl'd pool, Ample parking. No children _ no pels. 196.) Pomona, C~1. OCEANJ.~RONT, decor. furn , J an. cl<'n, Adult m11rried couple, no children. no peU. $250 mo, yea.r'a l1e. J.17-1641 'i1f:ARLY ~ I br. Block to TIME Fo R bay or ocean. SlJO. SpoUeu. Ad""'· no Jl'I•. Inq"i"' 512 \\'. Ba.lboA Bl\'d, 673-6244 Qu ICK CASH m \VK--OCEANFRONT J..ov.ly e.ch<lon. I ·BR , TH R 0 u G H A ·~·~·""~"'-'-';;""c::..,,:..:..,:;':.:..:,I . _uw_. -1 BALROA ISLAND house DAILY PILOT '~:3 ~i'""· Coron• del M•r WANT AD 642-5678 BY ocean k stores, 2 bdrm, patio, frpl c, lndty. $210. l..r11s1>, adul!J, 642-1776 ANY Day ii the BESJ' day to run an ad! Don't dt'l11y .. Cllll today, 64l-5618 mar«e- square apiM b11e11ts ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF TWO AHD TlfREE BEDRQOM UNITS FOR ADULTS DESIRING TO LIVE AMIDST BEAUTY BY TlfE SEA IM THE PRESTIGIOUS WESTCLIFF AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH ........ FROM $230 For lnlomutlion telephone Mr. Robert M. Buckley, M1n1g1r 11 (714) 545-0252 or write lo Th• Office Of The Manager, M1rlner Square , Apartmenlo, 1244 Irvine Avenue, Newport Bead!, cauromla 92864 I Buy a Border to Border Bargai .. Every cla,.ified want ad in the DAIL 'f PILOT appears in every edition every day. That means your ad will be seen in papers delivered to homes and sold from ne wsracks from border to border all along the Orange Coast ••• all the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All • • • Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Lag11na Beael1 Saddleback San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A DAILY PILOT Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 • I l ,• '• . . . · ,• . : ,· • " Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts., l'urn. or Unfum. Apts., 370 P:urn. or Unfurn. 370 Costa M. .. I Newport a.1ch l-=FAl=Rw=ay -1 VILLA APTS. Newport a.1ch 2 & 2 a~·· Private patio, pool • lndlv, laundry !I.e. Nta.r Oranae Co. AirlJClrt .ii UCL Adult1 only. ))122 Sa.nta Ana Ave. Mir. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A ;.i~21s *BRAND NEW* LA COSTA APTs. l &: 2 BR. Bllnl, 1wimmlng pool .ft gill'• •a;e. All Util pd. $150 to $170 rno. Adult.!, na pe/~. M4 Avocado, CM. 642-9703 FROM $135* Olympic iii • pool-8illiarG1-S•u"••-T •"nis r.ro shop-Color TV /ounge--H•alth Cluiii•- "cloor goH drivin9 r•ng.,_Party Room-Full tim• Activiti•s Director. BEA UTIFUL APARTMENTS: Single•, I & 2 Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished. REASONABLE RENT•: Singles from $13.1. 1 Bedrooms froim Sl45. 2 Bedrooms from $200. Low move in charges. No Jease req'd. Mod•la Optn Da ily 10 am to I pm SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Apartments (jusl for stnile people) Irvine l J6th 71 4, M~DllD Apartments {resort llvina: for 1in1le A: married adulU I 16th btwn Irvtne & Dover 714: M2-117D "Rent subject to location SPACIOUS 2 brdroom 1 & 11 ba1h 2 itciry. Jo'lreplac'". dishwasher, built-i ns . Enclostd, sgle aarage, Pool, recreation from 11.nd l&un-1 '!"•'!"!1"!'1•••-"!!,!'"'!"'!"'!'!"'l' ... ••-":!:Z~ dry. Adults, children over Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. ~ 13. $185 plu11. 1e c uri1 y deposiL 549--0674 Coat. M••• Lido lale . . HUGE l BR, 3 b11, new crpr. drp~ ~ p11.int. Central hlj; Bll·i ns. 1600 ~· ft. $:.n'.I. mo, Av11U 5/17 645-1~9fi . :: •, •, ' ' ;· :· . ' * BEAUTIFUL 1 I. 2 BR. Contemporary Garden Apts. Patios, Ir p I c .~. pool. $150-$165. Call 546-."i\63 •Deluxe 1-2-.1 BR. All bltns. Cr-pis, drps. Gar. Nr. S. CoAst Plaia. 54;....2321. W11.lk l blk.~ lo Beach! or· Unfurn. PALM MESA APTS. 2 BR, <'Pis, drp~. bltnfl., 81"11ul. big 3 BR 11pt. w/w rl!ihig, upstrs, infant nk, r.rpt.'l, rlrps. hltns l';XN!pl lndry fac. Sl~. 548-771.l, refrtg. S22~. Nn petit. 5.'\6-1711 968-i-43.~. 1 BR, refrig. blln11., crpts, 1 BP. unturo ........ SlJS.(1(1 LG 2 Br, 1% BA atudio 11p1. rlrpll . Sll"> mo 1rn'I util. l BR tum .... · · • · •· · Slf9.50 No pets, famUies only. Priv. Arlulllt onl;.-. Tr11rlewind1 Bachelon Fuml1heo1 p11.lio. 726 Joarui St Sl~O Riiy M7-8.'ill: E vc•; from Sl~ E-SIOE 2 BR. bJUns, C/0. 5.16-761\t. 2 BR apta Sl7S mo. 2 BR 2 b• .,.,,1~, N'"w k mo.Imo. OK star. h1.und . t1r. Nn p!!IS. ·I" e POOL Child OK $155. 646-4104 wilt1(~ l mi of h.-11r h. Crpts. 1 ..::::;;c.,,~'---cc-ce'-rirpg. g11n.p:'" w/l"lPC openf'r •SAUNA 3 BR. 2 ha, ne 'A·ly decori:ted. &: 1111 kltchrn bllna. 21642 • JACUZZI Nf'W erpl.$, drps, blt.ru.. I 'I 8 """e ..... ~. 1561 M!!sa Dr. p.1100, S165/mo. .,.....'"1. :: . • 6'" .,,,.-Brookhun . r ..• ......--""""' , .......... ""!""""'""'""""' LGE 2 br upst1ln1. Crpr11. BE ACHBLUFF hApt1 I B•lboll Island rl r ~11:e <'ArJ>Ort. No Nt-A' 2 Bdrm. rlshw r, poo . 1:· Sl~ 673-7178. I p•tk>. ~JI F:lll~ Pf! · • . Sfl-R.477 or M7-:t!f.i7 $1~2 BR. p:11r. ~fmtt . f"f'fni.. ----.--~~~- 3 bdrm 1pr. V1"1.r if':11.!lf' • 21 .l ~~37111 • I or rlderly person, nn Nr Huntington H•rbour ~Ill. 548-7237 Tr•plf'x qui'"' 11rr11 Lr1 l 'Coat• Mt•• 2 B 2 & Stud in Ar. $140, 3 BR • 1240. Pel! ,;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;; !'-S~t~ drp:"JMoo, ••r. ~I nk. 1714 1 846-0071. * * • • ! Qa:le. 548-8301. NEW 2 br, I b1 , unturn. E l P uerto M••• Apts :. LRG J BR 2 BA nl'"'' ahut Pillo, frplc. 1n blk lo hf-1rh. • * * • :: · st69 mo ~twly nee. 1• dupltx. S195/mo, Al1uH-5. 1 Bedroom Apts, crpl~. · 536-(227 f'Vl!I Nr occ. carport 557-4151 • • :· 2 HR. I ba 4-Pliex Xlnt )oc1- :: 2 801\M duplex, p11.t1n. tlon norm Hts &h Sls..\ _ E•f'l'ie, yll.ni. Adulta nnl). ,..11· .,,__ · :: S150 ~-883.'i ~days 11.rt ~ .... .,., :· p Vd NEW I BR, ttfll.'l, drp~. • + LG I 4 2 BR aflo, • w/.1raf(t, Near M'"A n, Sl-45 •• P11n .. 11lng, a:•~ ~ wit pd , in-incl jt:A.'l & w1!tr. 963-4544 •• f.11n t OK. 1'192 ,..:dlnrer -l'lr SJJO It up Incl, uUJIHt~. AJ80 rurr Pl':lnl 6 R'"cnallon 11re1 . Qui'"t Env1rnnment. Ott 1treet putin1. No QliI. ·dren, no pcir... 1959-1961 1ol11pl'" Ave, Cott• P.1~SI :· H"""' 2 BR. $1'40, 8~2-8365 • 2 BR l li Ba. Pool. Nr &hOPl.1 ;-L-:::=::as.:.::c;,h~---: '!!!!'!""""'""'!!!!!""'"'.".'""" Adi!~. no pefl. 1162.!iO Uri! agun• ! l BR unturn/tum. Sill pd 1834 Monrov\1. S4µ).,tl6. COASTI.tNE Ww. mnMrn 2 Poot . Lllundr:¥ 1 R 2 BA bl" ' k I blk Cenl"r St. No. UPPER 2 :Br, 2 Ba, pool . No B . • uni, nee . 2lll pets, 2 childttn. S175/mn. heh • lhops. Multi. Nn ,64,_,,.2-,,__·r.--,-,,---- lt94 ),lisskln 5"4~1882 fl"l1. $ZIO. t94-30.'\4 S..ll the eid stu1f Apts., Fur!'· or Unfum. 370 Huntington S.ech Huntington &tech DON 'T MISS TH! IE5T Apta., fl'urn. or Unfu rn. 370 Coste Mtt • BAY MIADOW APTS. Bram c.Jllna1. ~t\e'llnJ, pr1v palktt, "'crea1ion 1acUltie1. All 11dult1, na ~I~. • Bac~or ap1 • • 2 BR from Sl6~ • • J Bt<lroom • • I Br, den, w'"t bar. 2 811 3A7 W. Bay St lbtwn Harbor Ii N'wport Blvd, !ill ml. N. ot l9th S11. CALL 646-00l~ Huntln9ton Boech '·~11. "-'11 io. an FURNlSHED Room tor l'f'nt YEAA round in Lquna Beh. SU per wetk &. up. Nn ClOM: In. l hr. Aui. nr Sept. 11ludtn11. 99& £1 Camlm. Forel.cn family, Up to $250. 546-04!.t. 133-1905. BiGBdrm, pvl 'olth &. f'n. SMAU.. 2 BR. hOuae w/yard traCf' ' aar. TV. n1d ,r for )«11\f couple w/2 yr. l'mplo)'f'd 1en t on I y , nld by S/1 . Rl:a1M1ble. 66-t~ ~36. UPST AIJ\S ~ Pvt. llv'1 rm, bdrm & bath. ~paralr. ,,.. 1 lry, No cool<'a;. $M/mn. ~:ll&'i . A~tt I~ --------- DAILY l'ILOT fNO: CM, l9lb • -Ftm. blk Oo :sl 1 &: Chihuahua mi.x, hrn A: wht 'eet, anxlou1 fm-owniar. 542-709l!l. 548-!1682 MALE Irish Sett.tr 1boot 1 yr. 9r mllar wl1t1 ta: bran stetd1, Vic Mtu. HI~ Sch. 5'51-9679 Schools&. ln1truction1 AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACl~IC Day • NiJht Cl11.ue.s 543.6596 lll 175 610 E. 17th SI., S&nlll Ana * Trader's Paradise Coat• Me•• Costa Mei• I BEAtrr pvt, t'l'ptd, exec de11k ------------------------------ru rn "'/h.tlhrm, Bal. Isle. Sw•p equity Jn nr 2n 11cre,. ~nbl. f\75-2335, 838-64~ be•ul. aecluded Rancho Cal~ I l:l60 S F'T • Offic.! or .11fnn!. lfornla, fnr 1tock, older ~unnab!~. Cti.11ta Men. &pU, beach hou~. etr.. Amazing Adult Living UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS Featured in PROFESSIONAL BUILDER'S MAGAZINE "SHANGRI LA" as Liveabl e luxury with ell t he co nveniences: Clubhou se -Social Life -Indoor & Outdoo r Sports-Walk lo •lores, ba nks , mov ie a nd co lle9e. 1 & 2 BEDROOM Apartments with Terraces FROM $140 te $295 MODELS OPEN DAILY Merrimac Woods 425 Merrimac Way, Costa Mna ca.tween H1rbor •nd F•lrvi•w) Mr. Pope 64:>-2820 M2·9:'i05 167Ci SANTA ANA AVE, CM Have gnlt course !11 lrw.11y Frnm 300 sq/fl, 35c •q ft . lnt11, Gold'"n Hll!.'l C.C., Te- .. f\75-2464 or !Wl-5032 h11ch•pi, Trd ~ ( 11 r bell LUX pvt nffc, own Pnt. hou11 ... olril'r apt~. dl11.nll)nd, Westclill Dr, 5lx17. C'pl, nr srork. 642-9505 ~l'JM. S85 util pd. 548--t.'>86 Up 10 40 11.ctf'll w/Gl'01hf'r- 3100 NEWPORT BLVO, NB rMI pot"ntilll in Jmperi11l * ON THE BAY* Vl'lllf'y rnr boll.II, inl'nme 67!>-'46( or 541-M.12 prop or! nf f'QUlll val~. Busln••• Rental 44S Mr. KwRn, 1714 ) !rti·M"ll FOR ltue, 900 1Q fl, 1\f·l Nwpl, Bch. T'"nnb I. Swim bldr for m11chi,.... 11Wlp, Oub Family Mtmbrrwhlp f(ar11t:e or llDholattry 1hop. worlh S4.'i0. w\11 tr11df': for 5'1M797 l11milui?, r11r. mnlon"ycJ ... 1112 11q fl on 32nd St NB ld'"lll rlr. 645-®I 111! :'I Or 542-tl02!'! for 1tore '-offices. P1rk'i · HAVE 2 1tory bldg, 26ol\ .~q. ~llM'. 8l8--M89 fl .. C.M .• rhnil'.'f': rorl)l"r. SHOWROOM. mr1 . .It offi<'e S48.000 ,.q . Ji'or hnu u, rl11· •P•Ce. P11rkln;t:. Cloae-ln LA-plex. Th .. fo'nK °'· Rt'RI· tun.1 . IR.S.$39-S Mo. 494.-465.1 tl'lrll, 67J.949:i. Rent•I• W•nttd 460 Wi.JJ 1nde S28,000 lnvf'tl· :-::°":----:-:-'"'.",-tm'"nt ln hind llmlll"d p11rt- LOCAL ex~. needa 2 or l br. ne~hip •r 8uh1t11nrial dl~­ houae with 2 btllh1 In ('()Uni for incorn~ pn'.lp nr Newport or O!ro11& del Ma.r T !!' 644.-tl97 11t?11. No chlldrtn, yearly oc--~""'--,,,--,--,- 11:11.Sf', lurnl.11hf'd or un-Havli' '4·Plf'x -pool Ir rec rurni11hf'd'. Wilt mov, in 11 room, Pride nt Ownt:nr;hip f'nrl nf Jurw. Wiii can! for In Tu1tln, W11n1 F"ree l Ilk" it wu our awn home. Clear hnu!W', 548-Sf75 C&ll fi73-31111 A(I RESIDENT~ nr I. Id l'I, Wint '~or later~ rlr ht,, or l"f>lpoMibl,, mii.lur'" coupl,. !'. Have 40 11c. r~ morr •-oultt like tn nnt Ir care rnr 1v1H1 N, Cal lake 11.n'11. •pl nr Mm1 I. P"l8 tor aum-S4fiOO pq '""· P'pd Int OK or ml"r or part. C11ll mornln11 SIM dn. Meyer ~6.M3(1/ belon J nr aJtll'r 5 pm, 5'49.J.a STh-1892. Stll thl: old tt\llf Buy tf'le l'leW &tutf * * * lines times dollars 1~· S KIP JACK $.AIL . BOAT WITTUJt. XLN'T COND. TRADE FOR CA1'. OR SABOT, 135() VAW!:. 64.l-011.1. 28' SLOOP. Rhodes des.tin- ed d11.y sAllor, C.ood cond. Allking Sl900. Trade fnr 11utn. CAii 645-3376 Cf' 642·521R 11nytimt>, 19500 '"qty nrow 4 br, 2 bl, .11ir 1·nM . Cnm m acre, Rlver8lrl,, W11nl l.lllr' model 11u!o Tn·~ ,m11tl tncome OC. 496-43.\.) l"Vf'~. 1969 vw Bua. Excell~nl Mlnd lflon, Tr.11de tor 2 trana- f)(lrl11llon c&r11 or r ! 1!1fi9 D<>cti~ CllmPf'r tr11.de /or lor ttr ~~ '496-2445. .~~-1 H11 v" H11w11.11 KAllua K'l)na ~ .-r lot, White Sands Bch. SlOM t<!. !pd t11xe11 &. '1eAd mnnry) Wan1 : Inc prop, NB 11.rta. 646-6..lOO, &l6-0231. Mnlorhnm~ -loAded w/ez~ 1ra1, 21' ot IUXUI)'. A1Jo .m Spanl&h "°'"'"· dwntwn P•lm Sprtng•. Trd ft1r to11t r'•l "111111 ... 538-36$2 Wil l tradro 19M VW campu_ f'Xctllen1 oondition, tor aood runnfna '&f or '6.i FWtche. Call Wllllt, )48-04ll at11r "p.m. 10 -2 BR un lti C.M. S121SM. l.nan $.\lM uaum11btfi at fi.6":f.. Trrl tor clr hln, 'flits a.re• S25-UIM 4 ownr Will Cll.1T)I 2nd. Ast 549...onf * * * I .. ~~ ....... •• Do\!LY •i<OT .f,Jdti, •••il . .lO, 1971 .. ........... J[Il] I .,,..,_. J[Il]I ..__ -_-_l[Il].1 ..:;[ ;;;Mar;;; .. -;;;. ~!~~I ;;;;;;-~~;;~1 H•lp W•nlod, MI F 710 H•lp W•nt<d, M & F 710 H•lp W•nl<d, MI F 710 H•lp W•ntod, MI F 710 Antlqu., IOO AntlquH ltlil JI IJ I G.,.cknlnt Tll• ~A»L.Ei •ccta: i: bklcPi COMPLETE lawn "Cf;RAM1C tne new le CEMETERY & HOUSEKEEPER !or MANAGEMENT trainee R.E.SALES:\\'ea:pec.lnln--~.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .:rvice rhru P/L I bal prdl!nlng urvlce. ttrnodel. f'ree eat. Sna..11 MORTUARY mDtherleas home. No amaU Service St.aUon. F.xper, It~ oome prop. Srnl, aa:n:ulve ANDREA'S ANTIQUES JM.t. all taxes, my homl'! Jim 548-0«)., jo~• \\,.!come. ~2-126. COUNSELING cllildreu. ~rlle cl&ultled ad ~ lmowledp. Tune brlu co., needa top m&.n to join ,...,, "''· •"" up • ••L LAWN Mom[ Ra~ .... TrH Serv1u No. 44 Dail> PUo~ PO Box '" Neat in ''""a""' our ,.,.. teom. Lrg. '' JUS·J RECEIVED NEW SKIPMEHJI 64"-0313 I ht.Yins, clean-up, prunlnr. ----------2 New people will be tni.lned J:lGo, Costa Mesa, Cali!. Apply \\'kdays 2'"J90 Newport bodget. Re J e r r a I • l • S•bydttlng F"'4: ett, Call 646--73'19 TREES, Hedges. Top. Ttlm. & littn1SCd 11 9'..!G'..'6 Blvd. C.M. specialized tralnlnc. ~fr. BEAUTIFUL AUSTRIAN, ENGL J S H & ~ ha··"" •·· llOUSEC' ~·"ING •·• E•'ing. FOUR ST An FRENCH P IECES. GREAT SEL!;:CTION. General S•rvictl cul, ~mo\'<:U, l,l.ICU, ... n . .....,,...,.. win""", MAR.RIED! 1'oo ma11y bills! REALTY 835-4412 S 0 li10THEnw1.mt1tocareior 642-4030BigJahn PACIFICVIEW S2perhoul'Jor1Br~n~lnp~nt part-time • ALSOCLEARJNGOUTODDS&END T 2 to 3 yr old child In iicen,,.1-H-u-,-band--B-u-,y-?_C_a!_l_>_l<_>o"" 1.G,,:E.::Nc.'E;;RA::,;L=,,..=,.::..,.,,'---.. ---MEMORIAL PARK Cdlt . 2 hl'l dt.lq Mon thru employment See !.tanager REAL ESTATE aalt>a people MAKE ROOM FOR ANOTHER EUROPEAN ~ hOlne u o>IJU)l.nkln for ~ alter $..Jle1>4ir clr11.nup. All around l\an. F"ri for working wile, re.ta Mon tbru Thur aft 7 ' needed. Jo'lnest Io cat Ion. SHIPMENT ON THE WAY. BEST PRICES 21~ .... '"''d -· Nr B"·io1 • -··-·-alt 6. ~-CAll& pl pmP.ulno Cd.t\f. Bill Haven Reallor TO DEALEn'S! ·-1 ·"' .,.,.,, ' ,.. Bulld-Serv MOii Thi"'"' l ~d~y~ma~~~"'~"~&l~&-~5'48~~~1 A Bt11.11tltu1 • -at'-n In The ·~~ .,.,,_,,,,.... •·-~ Paul&rlno. !>19-4038 ... ~ ..-"' ease. a 0 673-321 l or .J.tJ..,f,613 *LABOR UNUMrtEDT Coron1t del tatar Hlll1 Over~ HOUSEKEEPER • live in, Drive-In Theater. 3051 ANDREA'S ANTIQUES BABYSIITING ·n my home HANO~'"" [Ill 1 co k i n'i the PACIFIC small guest ~me, own Nev(IJtf1 Blvd. C.J\L R EC E PTJONISTtrYPIST· 2'80 N• I Bl d C M 6's..tl70 any age ,,.,-e come. ""'J!.. \Vold•'"• -..... _.. .. ..., .,..!,,, OCEAN·. "'" .......... ....., ....... M'TURE -~ 0 D II 10 t S * S Noon tli S I "·f • ·~ I , ,. f pri•-.. -. >la•·-. -· 3 Days wk. Phone ~"""l'"l, wpor v ·• • · 6J6..3432 -,,,_,.,.. ....... .,,,,.... ~)'INftl gehlal, noi.-smoker. Ref's. ,.. woman fO!' U-7 ext 397 pen • y a .m . o p.m. un . .,,;.,.,.,,.. .. , A. Femhart Wood-carving, S!Jlh!t225 am Ahift. Say,')'q Home, REU.ABLE l-81""1VIU'luRST &: Atl1nta-wood-lurning, sand-bluted For An rntervll'\V ,;:;::,::::::-------1 ~6 2619 Orange Ave young man .a .. II .n: Fenced yard, friends toys, . 64&-l Phone DatTell \Varrl HOUSEKEEPER ~i'lo dol!s C.M. ' ' wanted-Neat appeara.nL~. [Il] r'Of"P anc•• lunches. delli. 9614819 lllgllS. l'.12, 6f6--0.t23 Job. W•nted, Male 700 644-0112 pracllcal nur1ing to llv@.in. 1,.,., for full time gardenini:; I fti~ I t I KEJ ·-N-M_O_R_E-.-,-,-,-,,,-.-.,,-.tt"",I llc'D CHILD CARE Hauling l\tust be honest, dependablto, ~D \,.l.l.J,, asaist~nt, part u·ork. Ai:t-23-28. Hard f ~'""._,..-.,---.,..--I LIQUOR STOltE mgr in-COOK/HSKPR, for c:<1uple. s 1 e a d y , g 0 0 d c 0 0 k . tim~. Mission Viejo area. worker needed. 962-S&l2. $350: Colds pot re fr Ii Harbor & Baku. CM. 5 yra. TRASH A Garagl' cl.O:an-up. tl'~sted in relocatini:; to Live in er cut. $400. mo. References 548-56j2, Exp d all back office pro.·liiiiiiii.iiOiiii.iiii.iiiiii;Oii W/auto lcemakt'r, •$250. ~ exp. Rl-!s, M.>-2943 1 dal'o $10 a toad : Pree e11 . beach area. 1j Yn exper. Staie aie qualifil.•alion!I & [s;KF"";'Eo;;;;;j;:iC';;;;;-t;;:I;"'~.,.,~~· ~83~1~-<>l":!!1'~al~t22Jp~m"C..I Help W•ntH, M & F 710 brand ne\\•, New ?iledfl, Anytime. M&-5031 53G-038l £..lo PM Ref's Wrlle Classified ad • HSKPRS Empl)T m s fee . 8 3()...:1 M · Bas""lt 5 piect bdrm suhti Build•n · · George Allen Byland Ai'!n-: • 0 n IF r i for R. t ' \vi twin beds It klng he&d-Llght Hauling. Anythi.n&! S'E M 1-tttimf accountant 36, Daily Pilo!, P.O. Box cy l~B E. 16th, S.A. ~usekeeplng, SO!M babysit. · \\'ANTED: Pl·llme driver I board $300 644-6329 NO Job Too &.n.all! Brick, An}"'·here! Yard Cl.ean-up look ing !or fl.Ill or pt/lime 1560, .Costa ].leaa, Callf. 547--0395 llJI&. 546-4531 eU l'll 6 for char1er bus, Class-2. i --~~·~~· ------t block, roncrete, carpentry, Low rates MS-0919' worll. Bkkpg or ivh11.t have 92626 l\IOTEL l\f 'd 'd 1 Costa Mesa license req'd, \\'ill train. GIBSON "ith c r o 11-to P add a rm, hoUMi leveling, YAri"i.>:--Ga.ra,., cleanups. you. F'hooe 642-65-19 . -COO--K-.-f/-1-im-,--.-,-t/-t-ime-. ' e HOUSEHOLD ht' I p . a1 ll, exp . App Y 6-16-SZ'..S trttzer, Approximately t5 ~~~-~~---~ W/transponation, 2 dayl!. in person, Costa Mesa Inn, yrar~ old, Good condilion ;u. door repain.. Free est. Remove tree 1, dirt, Job Wanted, Female 702 Park L 1 do Convalescent Lldo Call 673--0629 C ~ $100.00 \VEEKLY po~sible· \Voody, ~-sklploadtt backhoe. 9fi2..8745 Center, 642-8CM4 . . .. . Now lntel'viewing addressing maU for tirms. I $511. See al &921 Comet COMPANIOM & light--~-------I HOUSEKEEPER, livl'-in. 1 NURSES AIDES Details 1tend s1amped sell Circle. \Vestmlns•e r . Car-t •-rv1·ce MOVING, G•"""e clean· up COUPLE lo n1anao-e 25 unit <."~w h.ld Pvt b FULL TIME 817 ~87 r---..... housekttpino for elderly "' """ age c 1 . room, a Full T'rme adch-essed en,·etvpe I Cl -~·'°'-"~=====~-I It lite-hauling. Reasonable. .... apt bldg •1.1u-., ... , ha"• & oo.-·~ Cati w ~·• FrH' eitlmates. M>l602 lady exper & ·r:l&..&t '~S:.1260~ iu. ~· ~ DAY-BUSBOYS D~isbach, Drawer B D, RECONDITIONED Diamond Cal']>l't Cleaning Avg size room 1'8 Repairing A installations • 546-4198 • HOUSEKEEPER 3-4 days a Huntington Beach Anthony, New i\fex lco . WASHERS $25 Hous•cl•anlng BOOKKEEPER / Seererary, DENTAL Exf'C. Sec'y Ocf week. Good wa~ii. Ref~ren· C 1 H l,08802!:;;;~·~-,---,,-,-~-°"'""'°"'""'""'...,..,...---I P.1gr. Dlver.oified du 1ie1 . _ 671 0715 Aft :\ onve ••C•nt osp. 5 Dayi; • !\Ion. lhru 1''rl, HOUSECLEANING teim . 5yrsall-ait0undoftlcetoxp. ~ tts ,.,q. ,,...., · · 18111 Florid• Av• * Apply * WOMAN to \11ork in donut Sec'y skills .. bk k p n a:, ho •~ ho -'I I By !he job, reliable. Free Pref~r Laguna. 49-1-39&1. mature. Good ,penonality & l~rn.1ED. op~ n in g for H .B. 14l-l5J5 3 to 3 pm for lntv. 5 P· '"" P Ill' C;u s Pease. estimate. CaU Jo a n n EXEC secy, d l v er~ i f I e d judgmefit ~q'd. To 45. Top Seam11tre~s.tn1T!f"I" or ex· 1~5 W. Adams ~·iricbohel~~ Dod "c~'wf Shop, 2947 CARPENTRY 673-93.22 bkgrd exceJ skills re.t. sal!ll'y. 5-~J(W per. Apply !lXJ W. 17th St, ORTilODONTIC 't Costa f.1esa a.I' r v ' ·1 • MINOR REPAIRS. N J b ~~==------CM 646-3909 ass ' over1.,,.,..,..,.,...,..,..,. ... .,. WOULD YOU ' o O JAPANESE \\t0man for Career de!ittd 6-i+6496 DENTAL A.!st./Recept. 2(). • • 20, Exper pref'd . not nee. I! Too Small. Cabinet In iar-housework. Nttd transpcr-LADY wanls l)ouse'cleaning, 40, exper. 1 e INHALATION \Viii train. 548-3737 SHOE SALESMAN BELIEVE a.pl &: o the r Cllbinets. latlOll. exper., own transport1llon. Call 546-3000 THERAPISTS e PERSONNEL or Salein~"Oman • E.xp'd in $70,00 54S.8175 it no a111wer le.ave :i40-1332 $3 u IDur 847-3637 alt 6 DRUGSTORE clerk, mature F/Time Z.ll:Jo &: ll:J0..7:30 COUNSELORS high · gl'ade lamUy shoe&. PER DAY? nu;g. al 646-23'72. H. O. Bay&: Beach Janitorial PRACTICAL m[RSE lady, for Laguna store, full Mt Graduate o( inhalation tilust be SUpf'rsharp! Hemphill S~ 5'I Fashion AndttM>n. Crpts, windows, Doon etc, Day or night duty. Exp'd. tJme. 499'-2205 therapy school or min. ol Immediate Openlni:s Island, 64+4223: Come with me & see. i\lusl PROBLE.,JS? Repair & l Res. &: Comm'!. 646-1401 Gd. refs. ~7733 aJt 5 -=---~~'=-~--112 yrs l\'Orklnit exper. Good Pay Call Now SALES.\1AN, Service Sia. be nt'at appe(\rlng & ha~"e .remodeling serviCf'. ~1a.ste1· 1 J\lesa Cleaning Service HOUSECLEANING, d a Y s . * DRIVERS * Knowledll;e of all equip. & 9A:it-9PM , Sa.I 9A.\1-6PM Part lime. Neal in ap-oll'n transportation. To ar· Carpl'nter. "Anythitli in 'Carpet, Wlndo FI-• tc Ow > · E R I' ·r No Experience as""c\s ol resuscitation. Orange Coast -pearance. Apply 2 5 90 range a pel'sonal interview Wood" ....,., ,,.,..,. , ws, ....,.a to . n rans., xper, e s 1 .. -E 1 :><><>-.U~ Resid. &: Commc'l. 548-4W needed. 968-6402 • WESTMINSTER COM-mp oyment Agrncy Ne\\·po11 Blvd. C.i\1 . cal! Mr. r.tartin at 539-2141 rree Est. &15-1317 C•rpanter B & J FURN!TiffiE 838 E. First St., SA Open 9-9 7 Daya \\'E STINGHOU SEauw \\'ASher & t'lf!C dryrr, $$), X!nt <-'Ond, guar & delivered; 5-16-8672, 847-81.15 1 Colclspol freezer, 15'; J An1anna all retrig 15 cu ft; 1 f>·rigidaitt t"lec. dryer. 'fl Ford Falt..:in. &16-4767 REFlUG/F'reezer com b o. l'"rosl·ff'f'e, bonom freez~r holds 300 lbs. Good cond tlS. 496-3920. Cement, Concrete Exp ER . L • d Y. 0 w 0 Necessary! l\ruNITY HOSPITAL • Per· 12~ Broad~ Costa .Me~ SALES ~1 ..... for C.i\1. ::-..1nt behl't'en 10 am & 2 pm. Help Wanted, M & F 710 L"•~3111 .. ~ •lJ2 °""llJ •· transportatio". By day. 1\fust h.a\'t-clean Calif. driv. liOnrll'I Dept. 17172 Beach ~ ..,..., .........., oppty lor hi eamlnas. Fuller YACHT SALES~tAN -Ex· SEARS 30" gas 11u11e Sl40, I ARTJSTJC Concrete or Brick " Bl d H · "' h 'v k b M , , ____ _. a.IS..7801 an 8 PM ACCOUNTING b ck gr n d, ing record. Not under 25. I v ., unt1ngton ac , Brush, SIJ6-5745. per. in new &: used boats, yr old. Sun, 1-6 only, K1 or Y ax . .......,,......, EL W Cal 841-0>ntractor. 644-0681 ---~B-,-0-,-y-.----1 gen'] olc. 3 lln. 5 days a Y LO CAB CO. or l ........ PT &: ti time emp. Sal. ·SARAH Coventry needs n. or power & !'\ail. Apply, Schock Dog"uod St.. C.M. Own Transportation. wk. S3 hr. 642-3472 186 E. 16ti1 St., C.l\l. INSPECTRESS comm. Cd. advancement pt time help. No in· Boats, 2900 Lafayette St, "c~.-m~.-,.-,~,-----· I •• CONCRE'l'E. Floors. .,.,,., ~·s ADVERTISING Lel\rn a tascinaLing new I Hotel exper. prel'd possible. Tom Sharp Union, vestment Will train min N.8. Equipment IOI n11tlos, drives, sld\\•alks, I -====~=~~~=~ 2201 E Co"t flwy Coro . ' ,... ~kill. Pleasant cheerful • 646-1956 * · " na age 20. 5'10--0614. YOU NG college .:irls. Tl'y --'---------1 slabs. Reas. Don &lUSlf DEDICATED CLEANlNG TRAINEE de! ~1ar. OR 3-33a'J CO:'lfPLETE Phoi hi wo1·king conds. Llt~ y,·ork, SEAi\fSTRESS . Uphol!itery. oui for hlgh promolion sales · ograp c ~1ENT WORK,' no job loo \Ve do everything. Free High i«:hool senior migbt quick raiRs. Start $1 .70. PR.0.FESSIONAL phone Exp'd only. apply 837 \V. job. St.arting salary equipmen t !or amateur - sn1aU. reasonable. F re e e1timate. Call 673.-4012 qualify. rr you're al least 1.S Call Sally Hart, 540-60~ &ohcitor • Dana Point, San 18th St. Costa l\fe!'\a . SJ00/11•k. Call for intt>rview enlarger • tanks, tray~. trl· Eltlm. H. Stullick, 548-8615. lnsuranc•_ and Interested in Jearnln,1t COASTAL AGENCY Clemente. Capistrano .area. , on ,,ton, \Yed or t"ri, pods, 42.l Fullerton, N.B. CGSTOM CONCRETE d . · I 2790 J-larbru; BJ at Adams \Vork in your own home. , ¥CRErA.RY 71.t/&16-9617, aRk for Stc\'r. Furni'tur• 110 P A'I'l(}.DRJVES-ETC. WE insure your business. newspaper a verusi ng bl.ill· J;:::_, Be-t deal in area. Phone Ne'tl· offices • .Airpo11 Loe. I Pree e1t. 531.'1968, 675-5516 car . .aJrplane. boat, home, nes1 from ground up on i;:scrow Se~retary ~ • -835-1465 belwet!n 9:00 a.m. Good opporlun11y lo~ alert ----0.,-W_N_E_R ____ I life, etc. COM Ins. Arency pa.r1.1lme ba..!is there could Typ,·ng ~. SH ~ bu• nol and noon. set'retary, to work in fa.st I l!~I DESPERATE'. Contractor 67~2000 be a position for you at the U1J >;""" • paced N.B. adv e rt i s i ng Mercllandls:i · .,...~~~------i DAILY PILOT. !>.lust be neat necess. Ap litUde for mat/L R.E. Sales agency All skills including From motion p1c1ure ex. ADDITIONS/ Janitorial . h F..xper. wl tract. Leading or. • LARWIN REAL TY INC. sn i~q'd .... 1670. ecutives lu.'l:urious Tustin . appearing, av" own lrans· ( N R I 00· ~ ...,,,.. hon1e. Sat'rifice 7 rooms of A ~~M~~tion s~~~~:rs:-:::~· ~~~ :;~~n ~~;;'oJ:! M7Ss CE~i~m:G~·NCY l~NE PERSO'JNEL 21:.; Bre::khurst 1~~~ D~~E~ui:~v;,~~~~~ I Antiques 800 :~~:~au~~ ~~fd~;i~~:~:~j'!~ SJ0-7560, 544.~ all 5 cleanup. Carpet shampooltJJ. won't in!erfcre "'ith 11thool 410 \V, Coast ""'Y·· NB SERYICES•AGENCY Huntington B•ach Newpo1·1 Beach, Calif SCRAM LETS objl'cts, line livin:z room WA'l'ERPRF 'Y1nyt deck A complete comm'! serv. or surfing and \\ill continue 646-3939 Openings for 2 e.<tp'd. full SENIOR ci(izens, 2 older , • pieces. King 0Cdroon1 suite. IC'OatingB, all types. Lee For Free est. call, 962--0672. through summer. Ponillte I Ins. Girl to $600 time general ttal estate men for par! lirne service pecan 111tile~. lampll. Muell iRoofing eo .. C!M. -642-7222 Electrical permanent employment for EXEC. SEC'Y Prefer agency expe.r., strong sa.Jeiimen, who are looking 1uation work, Eves 5-10, 2·3 ANSWERS more. ~ f'ri-Sun 10 to 5 fret' esl ~---------I r 1 . ii;,hl person. Good opportun. 1;: Mo'• tompo--y o••gn· . for advancement oppcy·s. nite.s per 111eek. $2 per hr. only. 13071 Red Hill, Tustin. I ~ ..., ,, '"' ""' personality, good !)'ping, lite N · 1 · r.·· • L'...t-n :..l.•· Jd 3600 ROOM Addiliona. L.. T . EL E CI'RJClAN, licensed. •3 • men1 , NeWport. Beach Area SH ew primt' oc., lilter-com· n.ing .s 1"" ,...,.,,uJe · Exhale -Ahead -Tf'ase -DEACON'S Bench. Desk , Construction. Single story or bonded. Small jobl, mainl &. Apply Ptr1onnel Mgr. AMERICAN GIRL . . pany controlled li1tings. ,r.;e\\'flOrl Blv..:. lJB, 673-9950 Flaxen -rATHEADS I i\laple lamp I.Ible. Birch 2. Estlm., ,plans I. layout. repain. ~. MS-9561 Thbet"·ren 2 &IL;YMon. -0rri. 2172 Dupont Dr. 488 E. l7l.h fa! Irvine) C.M. Free major medical ins., an· SERVICE Slation 1ttendan11 Co1nment about a bambooi·, sidebo!lrd. Antiques: \VAi.not M7-b'1.1 Painting & e DA PIL T (Near I.tie O.C. Alrpo!}) '42·1470 nual bonus & monthly in· \\'/exp. full time days. Also, ler: "He gets along fint-. Ht'' chest, cherry hall tree, MY W uaJ' ho p h I 330 \V Ba s c M ~~!!!"""""-""--~I ~""""""""""""""""""'! tt"ntives. exp. f/time lube man. Ask li\'eg of( the FATHEADS of hanging ILxture, bin table. ' 13, q lly me aper ang nf. ' y I., .. · ::; , ACTION*ACTION •ACTION for Tom, Richfield 19lb &. repair. Walls, celling, floors AOV!:RTISING ART I S T EXPER h ouse k e e P • r JEWE, LRY store sales/sect y, plu1 -ne1"0us comniissk>n. Newport, CM ihe land." I i\lany pine piel't's 6~2-iUS .'' •·o job too •mall No WUti"" ,,.,,,,,,., •·an•-• f<n' d ~·-"--1 , t •· ·~:::::!:::C.::_:::::c_ ____ NTIQ'~ 1 PL"MOU'fH 0 --k I · " · WA LP ··~ Production Manager for hot ...,,. exp ........ ul<UI ng, ecora · CALL SHJRLEY AR.:\1.r· . A vc..S by \'anda Hull· •1 n.vi.; map e 54,7-0036, 24 hi ans. serv. * L APER * Ne\\'J')Ort Beach a ge n c Y . bea.ulilul N.B. home. Exper in&', etc. Fine shop, Lido. STRONG !>.tGR FOR CON· SERVICE Stauon Alie~. man 8181 Bolsa, i\lld"·ay formal dining ~ set. ;>"''' Additions * Remodelin.r When you cal.I "Mac" Mui;! have good bofll'{I iv/smaJJ children ne c . Must type. 673.933-1 FfDENTiAL INTERVIEW MAp'p~y"'·Ar•~,ra;:;,,11rctE. Cs~~f•lt. City 89Z-3622. Spec. in dcp "1de, extt-nds to 7. 6 ch&1rs. ~rwick I: Son. Lie. 548-1#4 646-lnl skills. Know prln1 ing, pro-S8h1ry dependf'nt upon '"' .....,., ...... g!n.~s. J Very good cond. S 2 00. fi7l...&:).t]. * SD-2170 CUSTO,\f HOUSE PAJNTINC duction and ""bedulfna. Xlnt ~ua.l\ficatlon!!. 673-!433.1 ~MU. Hivy, CdM'. I fl7H3(J2 ~ ·~ J. W. ROBINSON'S ANTIQUE pump Organ, xlnt ~==~~-----1 Lic•d Contl'. Remodeling We paint your tDme: Mt ,., opp o r I un i ty. DU REL EXP'D .all-around mechanic. • .NE\VPORT BEACH • REUBEN'S SERVICE Sta.. Salesman fuU rondlUon. Best offer over 2 NAUGAHYDE (pl'l'Sim- Add itlons, Plaru., Layout house your siie .• l\1att>ian £. ADVERT ISING, 2.172 Du· 011•n tools. Plenty o~ work. time. i\1ust be neat in ap-iro(I. Call aft 6 pm, 49-1-1.:"ilO n1on) divan~. :\1 a Ith i n g Karl E. Kendall 548-lli37 Matoian 5f4.-57!M ponl Dr .• N.B. Sl3--l670 1747 Anaheim Ave, C .. \f. LAGUNA HILLS pearance. Apply 2 5 9 O chair. Bookcase, col f e e PAPERHANGER, flock. !oil, AIDES For convalescence, FACTORY HELP \\'ANTED H~~~o~lt! lntervie1\•ing For l"ewpor1 Blvd. C.M. Appliances 102 tablf', comt-r table. :H6-JTI4 vinyl, guar., ~stimates, The elderly care or lamily care. Apply 32972 Callt' Perfecto SERVICE Slalion Salesmen. e REBLT wshrs-gas dt;·rs ,'~'~'~'=~~~~~-~! F\lt'n.iture Strippi°' Hang ma n . 547.5846 Homemakers, 547~1 San Juan Capistrano COOKS Salary + commis~ion, 3195 $51) Guar-Drlv, l'vlstr Chg. ].IOVING sale: Fri., Sat. 9--4. SpeciaJ kitchf!n cab. door! Schwartz ALTERATIONS &: f \ t fer FIBERGLASS SALES 1-larbor Blvd, C.l\I. Full &: May 1 a g rep 11 i rm an . Uphol bar $150. Bar stools, stripped $3 ea. Avg chairs PAINTING, profesilional. All p / timr. l\lusf have store Gel-coaters, touch-up. Expcr 1-'pan:=.:....::"=m=•~· ------714 :531-8637. \'ictrola, d1she.;:, portacrib, $5 ea. Gluing. 64.2-3445. work 1uarn. Col e r exp. for better dresses. Only, Apply, f.fanu-Plai::l1cs, • t'ULL TL\IE Apply in Person SU:\·li\1ER helirHigh school TOP SS PBirl for rel.rig .. head bd, nitr stand, etc. 8-17 Gardening 1pecialist. 962-6141 547.14~1 673-2990 19-13 Bldg: B. Placentia, 2-100'1 A\·e De Lacar!ota or college age girl w/car . .:: stovrs. l\'as~er & dryers. [ ~'°=''°~'~"=C="=· ~~--~ . PAJNTING/pape~. 1! )'f'!I ASSISTANT HELPER • C.l\1. Exper. pref'd, Laguna Hlll1' day \\'eek. Lido. 6i3--06l9. &15-4lll, Eve.Ii 5J6.-40.\l C 0 :\1 PLETE Thom11sville * LANDSCAPING * tn Harbor area. Lie &. j Full or p/lime ror stereo (FIBERGLASS 1\'0rkers nef'd. but not necessary. (At lhe El Toro of! ramp Telephone Solicltor1 LARGE REl''RIGERATORS bedroom s.rt & malctiing N-:-w Ja\\'J\S, lrel' removal,' bonded. Ref's tum. 642-2356, I firm. $3.1\5 hr. salary, Cal! ed -Rate of pay depencll"" • ~lens Furnishings S. D. h't'e\.\'ay ~ Location; Laguna Beach. •?",I ", 1715 hookca~e. like new. Other •·• d ~ C ·~ E.'l:ceplional Co. Benefits .,..... ...., misc &14-51?-spnn .... ers, rains, a ....... rs, p A IN TlNG/ rl 18 ~Ir. apps ITI41 :Nr9862 upon e.-.:perienet>. l\ppJy al Company Will train. Good =~G~u~u~'~"~"~""~*-"""~"'::'7~S:"'...''-l sor·:\·t;dii>;-'";;;;-,;;;w;;;;:i pa!1011. fences. Lic'd con tr. Yr~. in I-lart!:'~re~·Lic & AQUARIUS 837 \\'. 18th St •. C.~I. Apply in person IO.S p.m. RN for full lime GP office, i;ala.ry + bonuses. Can \\'Ork f"RJGIDAIRE flu t 0 ma l i c SOfA bed like new S9j, \\1ill£' Use Mut!r Ch.l.rge. 13 yn: bonded. Rers furn. 6"2-2356. F'URNITURE "·oodii·orker, • 2 Fashion IM .• N.B. Send ttaume lo: P. 0. Box from home or offlce, Call 11.asliing nHLC'hine, S30. Runs chair. <'h in11 ~et of 9 ea. loc. exp. SJ&.tm. production. E'.'l:perienced on· 2255, N.B. 92660 oollect 837.J800. ood 642-6432 Holly11·ood bed. Le isu r e PROFESSIONAL Pruning, P_AJ1''TIN9lpapenng. 18 Yf'll ly. 2013 Placectia, C.i\1. Equal opportunity employer I ~R~ .. ~~;,~,.;;;;.,,"-"'-----l•iiiiiii;iiiii.i~:.,........... g · · \rorld Seal Sch. 90 G I-rk · ···••-in Hll'bor aiea. Lie & Fiberglass S•ilbo1t1 -,;:;;;,,,;;;;;;---;'-'-:,,;..,= 1-----------1 Tr•vel Cl•rk to $450 KEN:\·fORE washer & dryer F~RCED 10 ··II·, nr -w '"" wo · sprin ...... , at"ra· bonded. Ref'• turn. &n;2356 GARDENER & ~tAlN· ·v ""' '"" I • •· d' __ _. KEYPUNCH R b E l Ideal ,, __ _.idai•. 21.~ yri, 2 4 yrs old, xlnt e.:ind S7:i ea ••·-ado .. ,1,,,1 ··ta i '°"· pes.... 1sea.se. i\·~ & TEN A NC E ~IAN-Exp'd, eu en ee -~~ Q 1•-h ~·· ~• "" v nu control. Clean .up jobs. INT Exlt"r. Pa.intini:;. NO\V HIRING L£"e apl complex. Newport OPERATOR • yni agency exper., a ttrac-or u..:i bol · .,..,,>-.,,..&') lo1·escat. Call now. fliJ-6926 Terms. ~r&e. 646-5893 ~!:..~. ~~~~ 30 yrs • LAMINATORS C('n!Pr PerinRri rnL jl= day. to work In IB~I Dept. Rl'q: ti\·e & !X'rsonabif'. \VESTlNGHOUSE . fridge.· •• GOLD quiHrd much & AL'S GARDF.N1NG ....... Pleasant l\'Otkitl{; CO'nd . HSgra.d,2Jl'Sexper.inlike NEWPORT freezer CCPfM'.r. ZO, 10 yrs 1 !ol'eseat. 6 mos old $300. !or · gardeninz " small PA INTING; llone!l1, guaran. • GEL-COAT PRid vacation &. in~ra.rK.Y position. Or grad. or Key. Now interviewinq P•rsonn•I Agency ffi.00. 4!M-9J.il Ph. 64&-9166 · Janclscapi.ng service~. call teed "'Ork. L1c'd. LocB.I ref's. TOUCHUP Specify agt>. "XPt"rience ;t. punch School + so~ work 133 Do>1er Dr., N.B, KE:\:\IORE \l'ashe~. S 3 5 ,, * 9 Big bea.utilul Danish MG-5198. Serving Ne~'J)OI'I. Call 675-5740 afr 5. t>e!erences. Write Cla.ssilied cxper. Please call tor inter. _NIGHT_ 642·3110 f'Xceilent : Al so \\asher & 1 i\-lodt!rn dinlng !able Cd~f. Qi.sOI hfesa. Dover PROJo'ESSIONAL painting _ COASTAL RECREATIO:'ll, arl No. 117, Daily Pilot, P. vie"' appointmenl, 492·1.l53, Dryer Bel. 5-W-1095 I s.i2.53,;.1 · Shares. Westclitt. l•ler/o>••r. Ho-•• work. INC. 0 . Bo" 1560 Cos111 Mesa Mrs. Gol17.alez. DISHWASHERS TRUCK DRIVERS HOOVER bl .. " .• c ~ . · 1 porta (' l''IShf'r, LO.VELY a· ~fa. nr .... w ONE glop Japanew ~arden-Lie. &· i1tt.. ~.•o -.n ..... -..,,1:n. 940 \v. 17th St.._ , a. "...,..., . KITCHEN help, dishwasher Tran~ Continental. Exper. coppertoTM" neu n .-en '"' .J'<O""'"" .,...,............, Co i\1 642-0042 .· ew . ..,.,, I $1 3.5. Lnve .~Pal $8.i. HI-back ing & minor landscaping. *PAPERHANGER* Sta l l'S8. I GENERAL HELP & \\'ai!re.sses. exper. Apply * APPL y * i\lacCrcgor Yarht Corp. Call 642--0:lM chair ssa. l1;...19il '. F'l'ft t"sl. 839-.3917. Harbor . BA.13\"SITI'ER fll'!Med • Qc. Slereo Co. needs full or 1 in person 9am-12'pm, Open l ~J E. COAST 11\VY. ]6::t Placentia, C.M . E' re I Su !)f'r1or Craftsman Reas / · d 1 o-2,,. I" Coa ~ dryer, FristidaiN', SELIG o,,,.,h •·alnui _1.,. Vil'!W & Turtle Rock · · ca~ional day.~. afternoons, P time rpen< ablr. Sl,8j 'hr ""'same, ...,., •· st NE\\.PORT BEACH TYPIST · rrceptioni~. 80 Runs on 110 volt, 145. Pvt . h . '" '" ' Ratea, C. Rebko &K-2449. ,.,,,, .. Call •1r. S1-k ~41 H•1·y, N.·B. I '"' c •tr and o•tom " AL'S Landscap'"" Tree , • e1·rs. Preferably my ho!Tll'. " ..,,_ 111 \VP~l IBi\1 E"ec Ty~writer. ty :»S-2635 f , an, nu.~ --Pl It P tch R 546-9862 ''fii::JfE'N"H.ij;;c-&~;;;;;o;:IOiOiiOiiOiiiiOOii""iiO""iiOI p · any imr. h>• bei''· $.15. 495-5696 atlor removal. Yard ~modeling. a itr, • , •p11r \'lC 811lhoa Bh•d & River. _ KITCHEN Helper de. Janitor Oict11.phone • lyping man· 0 •2-0•·1 REUBEN •. iu· * FRIGID.AIRE 16' Cop-1 5 "'<'rkda.v.. Tra1h haulina:. lot cleanup. * PATCH p• "STER!NG ...., .>.l GIRL fR1DAY: t'antutic needed. i\tust be o\•er 30. 'S uals, 1a~ams, 11111:, etc. 1 k °"=°'"-7--,-c---~~I ~ I . A I B . C I 0·1 1::.·.11 "'d pertollf':, 1 f' new, SIBa. Tl"rN "·d · Repair sprinklen:. 67l-11Eli All type.~. Fret' estimate' BARl\11\ID, p time. Easy oppor. or the &Al v.·ho pp y aptist onva toscent ""'ary .,,,., per mo . .,.,n{j re· 5-1&-8~. · ' v 1 ·~ "·uh franll!, Good P.;X J . 11 I 5 B 7712 Ed' ,,.,•anls lo u a e hPr skills. Hosp, 661 Cenll"r St. C.M. LAGUNA HILLS sun1f' to Merman Sn1ith As· .:.c~=~------) coru;litlon, SJJ. 67~ a.Iler ?~r. ~=r:~:~c:~ PLAm-E~ -~h-Rm . H;:\n te"~iews bel W~rg I ra~~'.'" bkkpng 1n11olved. ~~c;~~~~ WAITRESSES :;~ ~.Sa~e~!~' :h: ~~~.OR~gu e:3:~r ~~~ ,'~' ~'~m~. ------- mg !l'l'VICI! c eanup. I Addi:. New V.'Otk. Fl'ff , am noon. ---Call J('an Bro\\·n, ;,in=·,; . Cali I. 9~". NO PHONE cages. Call 67»159. NEAi~ ne1Go• I con~rmport1.ry . 1""-01.\0 e BLUE DOLPHIN e ., V""VV.,., Tmmediate Opening~ """"" rec 1ner. d vinyl. t l20 I~==~-,,.-~,,_,-,_,, l f'Sfim&tes , j.1.)-4~ Afl 5 COASTAL AGE!'\(.'\' Good P1y Call Now! Now intervit"11~ni: CALLS. The lutes! drav.• ln the \Vest nC'IO.', no\\• $60. 9fi2~29&f l c.LEAN u.p Speciali!!t, haul. Plumbing \\'aHrl'!!lW!!i, t'"Pf'r. ovf'r 2i. ! 2790 Harbor Bl at Adam~ 9Ai\1-9Pi\1, Sal 91\~f-6P~I 21 Yrs or more 1;.:;;::o=:;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;==~_::::::;::::;::;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;:;;::;;;;;;;,.:..::=:;:=;;:;;:;:;:~====;j uig odd 1obs, new ft-nee & I Appl11 J.ti.l Via Lido NB. HAI RS TYL IST Orangt' Coast ~palr. Rea~.~ LEW TsJw: &: Son'1 Plum·j B.OOKKEEPE.R · h 1 Em•loymenl Ag<noy BUS BOYS <; b. n-.. al Wit 1t0me c lenrele, Salary ,. 1 ·;~ ~ Gardener. Yl.J'd clean-up. ll1I' "·"'i--r Re Pi Pe I F IC thru T.B. Con!tr de. tract / lli Broad"-ay O:>sta i\tf's.a 1.' ''t.i "I •. ST' lll<UJ' ~1 GA,.,,E~"1C~ PlanlinJ. ~nlders. Remodel Frte Estimates or comm., 1.·ac. pay. 17..S shift Piton·fri. :l' r"' ~ . . . _ .M ~ ,. ""'" 646-8340 exper. ~1U1il type. Salary MALLIE'S Wig k Beauty 645-311.l, 645-3112 6"~113 Exp'd. 646-5469 open. Call 642-l432, NB. Salon, .>13.3446 LICENSED Pliychiatric te-ch A .-."'110! )( y_.~L&A.Gllcl. w u•u EXJ'ER. Ha""'l>lla.n Gankner PLN~i\~ING REPAffi CAR hop1 or "·aitn>sses. At· 'l\'/aJ least 2 yn exprr. to Apply in Per~on ~oz Y' A~ ';'tr;! ,s._ ~ CO:· al rh Complele Gardening Ser· o JOb too small I r ll rt i ve w I bub blln.it: ~R 11yllsl with follo"·1ni::. J \\"Ork \\'/retarded children. .UOO! Al'e ~ Lacarlot.tl To~ messogti fct Saturday, o:c!: n ~ \•ice. 1Camalan1, 646-4676 • 642.-3178 • _, 1 T ~ opportunit! for right Do not 11.pply 11nlrss you Laguna Hill~ reod ~mn5patdtio1on.nm.,. .,,_ ,. t..AWN maintenanct an d $8 HOUR ~rso~;'.\1,Y·,~:n;:~'Y ~ person. Attractivt.' percell· hal'f' 2 yrs rxper. j2J:H (Al the El Toro off ram[) ~TAUIVS of1.:t!:!!._7.aJ¥Jc31~~ ......... ,, .. ~ ~ praae clean-up. Call Jim, P\11mbin,g/elect:ric1l rep11ir ~fcArfhurl ':es~n So .. Lagun:i. 2~hr ~I or 391-<H31. 12121 ~.D. frttil'ayl ~-2n;;-l2.59dl 62 ~ ocr.v ti42-l£9..'i H-12-27;;;; &U-1403 a · n • .. a.ir co • rte 1 -~W~W~a~"'~ln~g~t""~B~l~'~d:_.".L~A~l~====~====!I ~ NAl'll :JT• lJW. 63To • I CARF:ER OPPORTUNITY prkg, Call '199-4(XXI. 31711 . • . . ~l· •A J.4t-t40r N0r.i 1 *Harbor La•'n l.fainl . * Rooflng t..arget'"pandinrco. needs 17 Coast lf~·y. s. Laguna LIVE in Cook & • !SYau'I 35"""1 .sn.r.., 7·19-3.tfl ' Spri11kleN1, la.-iscaptni. f'ree LEE Roofing Co. Root ing or gals for me~lRing. Full HELP !!i~~!~=.P"~rs:-Os.':~: JI} I ' Wlft _ ~~ ~I::! ~~ ~ ..... ~~ .. ,:,\.,. nt. 675--6445 all typei Recov . or p/timr. $3.25 hr Sa1ary. l am in a rast growtng 541)..2.'162 f'eu.ben. ~ c;Q,,lo(Al'if •S-. ll'Y• 61 tt #(1lf. n.Ji.• L)l&:Ed1eLa .. ·n theNnO~fco.a~.;g~i:!'~~~I Call ~Ir. Brown 546-9862 buslntt-. •nd need hclp, If .::..:::..:='----~--1 12"<"~~-~ 1:= ~! ~~ P«i >t ~ Matiflenanoe, Uc'd, lr1¥Ured I & ct'llor. Lie/bonded •lra.1CLERK. remalt-, Your choice yoo hil\·t' teadership ablll!y B 1 LVCoN'S '1 RN'St 1,_ Costa Mesa .!'~-. ~~~ ~!~,_ 7271~~ 1·1"}5..36 ... 548-4808 flt 4. '.47. 6.42-7222 I -211 10 J.~ hr \\~k Incl: Fri, .l l\Wld llke rn f'llm more ~ e;hwi~~~~tce~2~P· _..,V' ~ ..,..._ "'.JIMP -• JAPANESE Garden l ni'IT. GtJy Roorlng, Desi Oirf'cl thru ~fnn, or Tut,, Ex· motlf'y, phonr me for lnrer. No-..• lnll'/'Vlt11·1n2 CA.~' Jf !!$._~;: ~~ .. · _,_,,. Servkt. Nft.t W'Olric. Cleanup 1 do my own work. G4.>-2T80 perirnc'f' not n,. c e ~•a r y "''"" ~figs R Jc hard 1 . }.IAN to auist manager in lfRI :a; ,,,,,..._. "6Abmrr 7,C-,".J.",,~ yd. m..lnt. ~ ,:Pl!.-!t:lOO · Prrn1anent ""'Ork. Good &i~ locAI. appli&lle(' ir.ales. ~lus1 PART TIME EVES. ~ ..... ~ 171"• •7Y-nu, .... bl"nrli1,,., Ph 4!H-4Sla rar ~-~-------be neat 11ppee.rlnr. Pret"r ~~ ••~ 4Go.ot nco.-J.ta.»:«t JOHNSON'S GARDENING Sewlng/Alt•r•tlon1 appt. HOUSE\\'IVES It 1'eachen. over 25. Call ]1.fr, Sobrlf!J at HOSTESS "~ ..,,...,.. 7'0r t.:n Yard cart, clc&MIJJI, pl&B-COLLEGE Field_ Enlf'rpri~. Educa· 534-098-1, SAt'd-10;30.ut. O'+lc • 21 ~~ii .:~1c i?~ ri ~ AQUA.IM tJq, aprlnklen. 962--zm. ALTER.ATTOl'iS £. tallorin; girl fCI h"lfl 111.lnau Corp. 1,i; "mploying I . , ZIN D!'T . ll.. J.ut.•~ , .,.~, __ • -..i·n work. 1 dlly lk"rvlrf' mothrr. Sal 9 am tn 1 ,,m. h•achen; &. homemakcn1 in 1\tAN to r!ll'n pw:ture fram· M&n j~~ $JDIMf'W IJYw Rl.Jt· ";";~:'~ -~"uJi .... ~£.x., \d , * s.cs.n10 • Gt n·1 hst'work. Dfopendl!bl". Oranef' o,, to work this Ing .\ aale~. Must be neat . • ,\ppb· t: ~~~j,.lS .W ~= =b:.,~ ;,tR~,. ........ ~l ~ EUROPE\N 0 kin: :>m-st&j afl S;30, \Vestclilf summer drmonRtrarlng the ablt to \\'Ork "'/hand!. JOO &f\'lre ti A.\I or .j.j Pr-.f ~ 2'0f :i.r~ 16""""* R.cuon&bll'-. E.xptrtl; CuetC:.u~itted: llrea. \Vorld Book tncY<'lol>f'diA, R Ct1llt ~lv.)','LaJ[\11\l 1SS5 W. Ad•ma "',:..n ,'I~ ~~ =~ ~":11 ~i::.!~~::. :i ~I~ AIA';"" ... ~.:: ~-~~r-~r L~tr';;11~:!0~1u~nui: ~~!11111~; :/11:~ :,.v;~: %1~':u1~ ~th~'°:~&1 ........ c~0~·~·~· ... "'~·~·~·..,~ ...... 1 ' mr. • F ®~~ f:t::' ty PUot O..i.ntd now! _,, .;io....., for yl)U! s unes, !i Days tor ror tntervw call 839-2921,).. Pilot Cl.asaltied Ad . .D.lal Dally PUot Want Ada haw 1 • ... ..,\,S1Gool ~ ()~1 ~ - _ N~_&OCUrlt., :aQ)'e:ar.exp. $;>.Cab tod•1·. M2-SG71. ~P~I l~d.'!lftct~~604'll~!!!..:.-~N~O~W~l-_i~barpl~~"'!..!l'kn~!;·'----_l·---,-,~========:=======~=~~~---r° Fumltur• • ' ' rrldiy, AorU ~. 1911 DAILY l'l.LDT fj -1~ 1 · ,... .. v.. 1r1 t~1 ~~-~-~1lEJ~1~1 ~-....,"'?.~,""~--~· 1~~·1 1 1 -·-lliJ1~r · ~ ....... ;;; ... ;;;;;1~;;:~1 TV R dlo HIFl Nt£!> ~ .bome teiicM yd Morie• 1 15' So.tt,4 tin g I tot Cycles, llb1, Spoth, Race, Rods tst ' • ' ' for lovabl• bll l'OCkapoo "" 1 Scooter1 t2S ~. J\IOVING SALE. Old Wltktt SteNO U6 w/--.iit rt.... ~ pt!. l6 KAND d&rtt b • Y MUST S~ 'Jltd MARIN· ---------/LOOK at thlt II «6JlaJO .Atr, .50fa ~Chain, round oak la-SUPER iltrto l)'Sltm teac. Xlnt IOr-chtJdr.:n, htbrkn. ~bftd ft~ I l'.'1 ER 19, Joldcd, tu.II co .... r. 4 mpd. 'TO GTO. A 11 I~ I 110 Miace.lleneous Ill Ml~l•rMOV• ~~~o~.-..,,~....,..,,--~,~m-~1 -~-...,.,....""",_.~- ,..., .i. clod<, 100 " old e CARPET e '" aquariun1 6' ·~ dro11 b:Ont deskl, &Id Sp&nl.s.h atyle turn. New deoon..tor lampa. 646-73.15 ble, antique Crandmolhtn ia-dttk, Scott uo wart 871-4319, 836-t49l. ~/JO ' ~n tqUJ !WU>-Lido 14 fuU f'aC'e THIN.I ~ •tu Ip ped. .Spring Sheg Specl1I Clock pre81ied al.au. bot. ,,;;:,Emp!returntablfl, NEED lovlna; Catt lor ~l~tnlle di•poation. Erieaon' 26, IOlded, d•Plh HONDA $2795 ......... Aft.tr '" OUTSTANDING tit's. Hamn10tld orea.n, Mink Planar spkn, 2 Madphones, wounded stqul.I. HaVf! too I ~!ii!!~ 91)Ufl(jer, r&dk>, etc. 1_wc:;kff<I=•;..· ----- stole, VlctoriAn doll car~ 2 mikes, ~ tapes, records & m11ny y<>Ung c:hlld~n & ! ; Coronado 21, Demo ntver W Trucks t'2 G•r .. •.S•I• 112 VALUES! rlagt', old bOOks A maa:a· !n'e sta.ndlni "'alnut .... ·all animal• to ~rly care ror [ ht• llld ll• JP) aaUcd • "fRIEDl.ANDBr 1ines, etc_ 33801 Uri.ito Or., uni! -cost $1500 sell J&lO O!· ll, M~21J!t 5131 ~;;;;-~~;'qf~'o~m~•~·~~lC.~~ICoronado 30, Beautiful -·...a"""· 91 2 TWIN mallrt'IHI, m11.I -OVER 40 COLORS Dana Point ler. ~ l YR old PITI Noiwt"gian Co=do 35. Olmo, Ave 5.TI'-6824 • SCS..'r.iti6 chlni; box 1prlnp A: fra.mes to chooH froml UNION MEMBERS BRAND new Zenith 23 .. color ElkhcMlnd dos. mtd. size, G I 900 BIU BARRY 11ew, $flO ta. tel: Danish • Call For JOIN UNION BUYING SER-J)Ort TV. full ~mote cont. cream colored. very IOOd IMffll O>.ronado 35. rull race, lolded fo.todern divan, 2 chait'$, cof-FREE ESTIMATES VICE. ME~1BER SAVINGS \\!/sell for $500. 644415.1 alt w/children, 39Z-l67l 5/3 ' CAPTAIN All boa!& open to otter Crown V•lt•y SUJukl **FREI!** PONTIAc-GMC-P'lAT NEW '71 CiMC f•"·hl 2 ·• •-b'--5 I ~-ENS ho .. _._ •--er dlarfft'. ,8&nJc ttrma. c-.: ... e, ei.u .. ~, new. Jn )'ottr home 01'-' NATIONAL BRANDS \~~~~~~~~=~ zu • • -lllew..,..en • Unllm.lted (jcenae. any groaa Trade R11lme1 or Metric Tool Set l/J T. P fckup •I Ft. Sell as ~I ot· separare; OF APPLIANCES FURN!-we&ned. I wkJ, old. Varltty tont.. 30 Years experience YACHTS ROYALE INC ttcli®r, $25; B/\V col\IQle 842-914] TURE, BEDOJNG"' STER-[ If I Of col.ors. M5-4449 aft -9 iall A: poVo·e.r. Proteas~nal •2912 W. Cout tlwy N.fi. 'Vlth Pun::hue of New Bike. (imper 21601 Torbe< Road Fully tqulpptd £Z1136&11. TV. S». mliic. 1-J Sal &:1--JO=-H-N-'S_B_l_K_E_S_· ED. PHONE: 967-0101 ftHto'i'ou •m Sfl 1portriah!.nazuide;Me.xican * ~'"'""lO ;. sun. only. 2:381 C..rlton. c u tl bl k -·• d p ctt -ANTIQUE poprorn booth -1 ,~;;;;mmmmm;:.:.:~ NJ E t e at ,. .... e Oi. le Central A~rica &: a ·1-====-=7."-o=- IAruNL Nigue,1 8.'ll-1621 Tlnled 11&1&.-Htavy duty Norton, AJS, Rickman too. f'&R sprinp, brake boolter. HONDA '67, new CU$l tank, 3.7 rear axi,,, l •Pff'd •UIO- palnt, knobb, 419. Chrome maUC traos Ii pu1b button l!-ndl!:l'$, xtra p&rtl le tires. ndio, Mumbln& throuihout. Must tee $400. Gary FertM'-Five gallon bijjane tank man &«·Ul.2, 6#-6130 Pi· complele insulation. Torque Nn. 43. windows. TwelVfl ~It li&ht- 1971 TRIUMPH T R 6 R, Ina aysi.m. F'ourteen &allon Jtct"nst'C:I, thrff wttlm old. plastic water tank, tif!y r inanc!al hardship, 3 6 0 pound insulated kLe box, t\'-'O miles, ne\'tt dropped. Paid plate bllt'net, 110ve, hind Sl,495 1ellini lor Sl.19.). tallo~ draperies_ Sleeflll 494-5808, Laguna Beach. six w-optionaJ Juae table '69 % Yamllha 125MX. Xln1 . que'n giie ~ arrupment., APP"'OX 1,000 mi. Not raced. Partitioned drawe,ra. ldan.Yj COl!la Mesa. • NEW L k'"-VENTURE 21 No 1111 - -Perfect open1ting cond. $100 11,~ yn old. lke1 iu.a. ic Ccut waten • Instruo-. · * RUfo.IMAG E SALE <A: 10 ~?N!d ,\lens S7J.50-$i) ~r day incon1e 11.t good LDVELY o ran I e I w h t Needs good h nm e Im-don in boat handl.ing, 1ea-Equip.Jl@d c r u I 1 e I r a c ' · * "THE BIG ONE" * LaiJi~ JO-spd $136 location. Trade for car. boat longhalttd kitty shots & medla.tely. 536-1819 4/30 mansh.!p, OR & celestial Lllehne•: baw pulpit com- s&int Johni Church J lpd ,\Jens & Ladi~ $4.).$60 or ~-ill lease &U-0010 or allel'l'd. Moved where pet.II 2 DARUNG 1mall bn!ed, navlption, PICK UP & pa••: hinged mut. head, ~•3 0 A C t '' II ·• h 11 d DELIVERY ANYWHERE·. cu1hKln1. m_any ex Ir a a . .,.. ran&e ve, as a 1 esa Ladies 5-sl)('t'd bikes 494-4977 aren't a owcu, c r e n short-hair , female pupp~1. : . Owner nf/540-llSS ews. • f\Jmiture • Housewares US D heartbroken. ~tr'!. McKee. .iso 2: lttY tiger kiUPns, captain 4 lll'Jfe •vailable forl,..--==:--=,.,--,=~ e Clothes, etc. -E -A'.'-:TIQUE Diamond cluster 645-1100. 4/30 MS-2"139 4/30 txtencled m.tlsinr. Exten-26' WOOD Sloop. Equip. AprJI 30th l ~tay I iO Speed $45-$80 ring. Total weight appx. 3 DESPERATELY need fo.slf'r AfOTHER Calico cat, -4 kit-aive administrative experl-w I absolutely ewrythina ffri It. Sal 9 10 41 3 Speed S28·S40 carats. Ins. appraisal $850. homes for pregnant & re-lens_ 2 !em. ullco, 2 male ence 646-2977 incl bx! for So. Pacilic Sling Ra}'s $18-$30 Asking $650 or best orler, ,.,,, moI'·r '"'· Will help ,..,. ' Cru!st. ~1usl sell $4500/ot-GARAGE Sale: Oil pa.inllng, Phor.e belween lO A~I &_ 6 • ""' yel/01' 11lipe-• ~~ 1.fERCURY props, steering ftr. 8-46-9552 11.ntique l'ffd church organ, -REPAIRS-Pfo.t 6.\2-323(1 place mother & kittens betwn. 10 am-2 pm 4130 cable1, sinil!i lever controls,1,_,0 ;;;;-;;:o=::-;c:c:=;-,= 10· pram Mal and motor, 2340 NEWPORT BL VO. l'l'ht>n '''l'aoed. &46:7308 4!30 G Shep female. Walch dog, In slnlments lli ndshields CAL 28 Racer. LoadM. SIS 'i"JJ Stud~baker. Zigzag ite"'-COSTA·MESA BEAUTI,F1JL Pe11.u <le So1e, LOVABLE. obedienl. house adults only 955 W. 16th S1. etc Phone 5.tg...().\)) ' rad. Dinghy. 91.l Evlnnide. Ing mac h In IP:. mlsr.:. OP N K AYS laet' & pearl lrin1mf'd .,.,·ed-dog looking tor a kind CM 4130 · ' Rlcy!lleon spdmtr. Spin rlt". r"t'nlture &: househohi. 298'1 E 6-IO W D • d!ng iO""· size S-10, Very Do · SABOT S~ILBOAT $9000. N\\'PI pier avail. R·,, .... ,, C,I, 54 .. 197, SAT. & SUN. 9-6 maslrr. I'm part xito & LG. road Island rooster and $73. 494--04:,1 .,~ 0 rl'asonable. 57;....1392 bl'fo«' in'fllgh under 20 lbs. Call h "'" W 16th S 540 ~1s ,,,,....=~~~---= 645-472 9 or aftf'r 5. en . ~ · I. _ ......., '24' COL. r.hallenger 192 $1~ or otter. S3&.-6880 other reature1. • Mobllo Homos 935 SALE $3890 I GARAGE Sale Sal&: Sun. 208 -\\'ill take 'i'l'ade-lns-"Snoopy", 968-4688 5/3 C~1. 4/30 8CNt1, M1lnt./ 0/ 8. 8'•·•tltuJ\, m•I• G,neva St, H.B. """ •12;, or Pool tables-Slate AKC F•m·'-B<••I• •P•Y<, • "' $49 ~ DON'T GET 4'8 romplot' -.~ ~< -"· FREE 'I R""''" Bl"' kit· S.rvlco 902 tal,... P,t pty. "''"'· ,,.. INSTANT HOUSING 9 DN. • !>36-1274. Antique bed "-~ ~Int 1''Alch dog for family trns. Housebroken . 133 E -""--:----,--1 1836 dresser, din's tables. chain, MARRIED IN Also custom &. antique:i; w/older child or couple. 16th, Spa.ce 19, c . ~1 . &:pert Crattsmaruhlp 19 , M . 51 . $95.40 MO. clothing, 1teret1 phonn, bab}' JUNE I I 213/ 4249228, 12 lo 6 pm 839-6156 5/3 646--0816 fl/I by land or sea 1 anner ~p: Sacrifice! WHY WAn? S49S 11 the total doWll p.ay- t h I n&.s . lamps , fine ~take it Thursda}', May 77th L.'.RGE c.anred Spanish ex-6 MO. old m.11le pa.rt Afghan Frtt eallmate. Call Bill Race or CnJ11e, 2 berths, ment. $95.40 ls the total bedspreads &: many misc. at \Vestcliff Plaza Hawaii an tcutlve desk and chair, lo family "'ith children & OX'KAPOO PUPPY · Lllw guar ratts. 644-7199 ~~~~,.'i-~u:~ ~~· 1tlp. Xlnt The all new Village Hou.st thl !nclud. D · ·r·· Black, brown &: .,.,,hlte 6 wk ,,,,..., ,..,., ...,.,....._..,,,, by 1 evitt 1.Iob"-S""tems mon Y payment llli GA.RAGE We, Sat & sun. style. ress, music, g1 ,,.. value ss;,o -St'l1 $350. I a r" e fen ced y 11 rd. 1 ,, ~· Fl 1 B t /M f ~ ,. ..~ 1· •• , • ~lay I & 2. Baby furn. Honeymoon In Hawaii pro-7i8-4;,.t2 ~29sa 4/30 ° d mouf'. "'JOo> am nan. oa S fllr ne 19' LlGl-ITNING w/b'Aller. with a.loping shake roof can ....... icenie -..~ 41n&l>Ce I I I Id·• c 1 D•' k y m-=~~~-~--=~ C.!\t. 546--o'L~9 5/1 Equip. 904 N--•, •-"· l _1•1 ...,.,:t\ .. _ ..,...,_ now•, Model• on charges on •pproved credit c oth ni, awn mri .... er, n1any v cu on act r.: e PDLLY p 1 I 17· i 0 1. 1 1 ..• h b ,_, "'"'' .,.,,. •-" ..,..,.., ~ ~y-· .. "---h C . I H·'l.d , an'O n cage "· T\\' 111 l' p ayfw a YI"-'!-LGE. Gecman Shep>mt, I LIFE RAFT 4 MAN 64' ~16. ••play at , . for monh"'-•uc cu misc. 9141 El Vl'rrl" lrclt', on's. Jean Dah · ilJ 1 ay s mini couches $30. DuaJ bed, tens, darling faces, ong '·'r. old m .. Je needs room. i----~-=~~=---'BAY ·HARBOR price includln1 tu A: license Foun1ain Valley, nrat' Slate!' ~r The Storekeeper, aL \Vest-rompl s;;o, 45-pc set China hair. Blk & whl. Some t!ger, 842-1573 ·•-!./l \Vlnslow Stlf-infialine AQUA CAT MOBILE HOMES i..I $41~.75, Deferred prlce ~-~tai:nolia. t·liff Plaza. SlO. ~ fi•, wki; old. !)46-j242 514 ~~====-,--~ Unused~ SAYE $58. * Ne.,.,. deck * lot1 or run is $5018.20 includin&' taxes, GARAGE ~le: Sat-.\la.)• I. DIA~IONO, ne.,.,, ""edd ing sel FOR !ale, patio heater anti BEAUT g mos old Iii 6' DAVENPORT &. cur.red ~lan-o\•erboerd Pole $495 ** 673-6257 1425 Baker St., Costa 1ife.sa license j; finance charp. Sun-~lay 2: Bali}' aceess, Guar. p('r[ecl, fl a 1'' l rs s · 1 bass accordion. Call aft 5. Coyote-% German Shep, sectional. Needs ~COVl'rin5:. F1berglaas ONLY $35 I Just S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor An al 1 ne"' & ust'd. Furn. Lamm. Have 2.39 eta. total Guar. ~~7 o•i·, You llaul. 543-0054 511 JOHN GRANAnt 613-l5TO BCNh, Sllps/Doek1 tlO U4/540-!M70 nu,,,, pereentaae n e JJ """" ~cn!le. smart & loveable. 11.4070, Toys. Books. Guitar k misc appraisal. S3.0CO. Sell $950. ~.-co=LO~R~TV=~u~H=F---~8-4783 3/3 AOORABLE free puppi,1 to It's Not a. S~ial SLIPS available. Finest in e THE MEADOWS • Over 135 New A: Used Can ~ iJems. 49'2 fo.la.gnolia ~t.. Diamond .... 1de wedd i ng j _,1 1 _,.,. • 11 .~ · ex 1 Kood home 642-4818 t/30 .,,., ,, oz ,,,·---"er Newport, best f11.c!IJUes, Finest adult community ·To c-From C ~I · 2 ta1 1 s1750 u::.< en couul ion. ...,, CUTE male pupp)', Col ie & .JI' , •uWU1. ·-· ring, cts 10 ' ros ' * 646-152.'i * German sh 0 r 1. h a ired 28' % oz spinnaker tree pa.rkine, S 2 · 2 5 I r l . in So. Ca.ill. OPEN 'TIL 10 P){ G"RAGF. •·I•. all ., ....... ftf sell ~. Diamond pierced • PRICE * "' -10 Phone 613-8Tll til 10 pm e •~"" 000 Rec c en t e r -,,, 1 S •·· A "-.yi '"'" " Pointf'.r, 8 "·ks old. 636-2.108 I lEl " * U'hl"llO ' ...,.,.,, • 11',NU c;. st t., -..•ta na sluff. Rerrig. au1n pRrt.~. ean·ings cos! Sl150. sell Miscellaneou1 .. • I~ . D--1 s-J .. s•1 911 S1'immlng pool • La1''n {" ,,. tS A ~ ... , $350 P rl bl h·1 llO or 17141 633-Ij()5 ;v3 ts arid~ M ERCRUJSER converskln -s, ,.._ 111 bowll•r e Mu~ Mo-. qt ·a · • ~ • -r· , clnthei;, etc. Sal"-Sun. 11 -5, · e eel ue·"'' 1 e. Wanted . " en •'C 5!i8-1Q)) 313 R h r '1 675-411 l. ·--------,.-VERY. \'ery tiny 1~ SiameM' ~liiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliii;;; rqulp'l. tor 3261421 Chev,· 2 l'1' Gavelln <t.'lth 'trailer 70 On JeUrey Rd Between S.A. •-~~~=~-'co~=~ 0 r.: !!'~I" I'. ·" . --~----=~~-. I t <.:7-tt'6 ' Jfl TON GMC G.iZ>-1082. 6~2-7811. *AUCTION * \VANTED: !lxl2 Per"1R.n ki!len.~ to exceptlona H1. -. h.p. Mere. Mark 78, ski &: San Diego Fwy,(~ ml 74 SAT & Sun-To.vs & :tames, Ori1?nlRl rug. also ~mailer ho1nes. aJ6....(H76. S/J P1t1, G•n1ral 150 Boats, Power 906 rqulp. Inc. S750. 646-9495 So. ol S.A. Fwyl -Camper fYPe pickup.: speed i Fine F'urnilure sizl'~. in good con d . DARLING kitl'n par 1 iii!ijiiii!ijii!ijjjjpijii!ii * TI4/832-3585 * to ll vs.~ h ' child'!!' table k chair vl. & Appliance 494--93.12, 494-5382. Siamt-se. Call after 6 p.m. CQCKATEJL, 3 month old MARUNEIER 40( I 0 . au ma c, H Dp. power: mrJs al" hike, n~nish cllftk', • · F ·d 7 00 -"• wltb -·•m'nr .... S"'. l[i] BUILTM RE, wlalum1num disc brakes, . . ttar1 ... ,.ucbons ri ay, : P·111• \\'ANT!':D older modrl sll'r!'n 549-0126 4/30 ,,..._, uou " ... Q rh 1 1 '" Ilk · dlx b misc ilerru. 2929 Bakl'l' St. w· d ' A ct• B le.:inco;;;;;;;;,:;tt,;;;;3m.1;:l ..!"~5-04~~"'~.,.------Tr1Nf*1•tion .. awn ng: 0 ){ ....... e new. sprm&"•. ' ca • 1auit:i;, 1 C.1'11. 546-4808. in Y S u ion arn AM/Fi\1,, radio64. • ~\1'9o3rki ng PART calico kittens 3 male, N ., Cond!tlo 1,;;;;;;;;;;~:~: I Jncludina: 1tove, re I rl g , tool box. 875 x 16.fi wide ' 2{)~1,1: Neunv.rt. CM 646.8686 cond. 3l max. .,...,, · · J female. II "·ks. To ,_..,.... C•ts 152 ear-.. ew n drape,, "'all to w a I l bale tireo "''"Y to haul • PRACTICALLY it?vin~ away ~,..... 6"""' lurniture, knick·knacks. likt: B~od Tony's Bldg. Mal'I. WIDE r!ms and camper tires home. 67;)...;.873 4130 --..-----"'---carpeting. Adult parJ<. No 10\11' camper. new clothing, fi('t tJf china. y DIAMOND Solitaire \\'edding to lit Chev 1~ ton Pickup PUPPIES to good home~. e BURMESE kilt'ns -13 ...___._ '4107,,lOOoJ•~'. boa!. Campera,·$•l1/R1nt t20 pet11. ~2418 $]295 642-3683 eves · "'·ttks, CF A, papers, box • •«uc ua-W · h otns cnsa.11. Sun, 109 E. set S15Cl. Diamond dome __ . ____ Ca 11 at t er 5 Pm -trai~. shots. 962_7480 '67 Ch'vy 292 STICK % ton MOBILE HO~tE 1 t We'll set :you a new campt.' BalbOa Blvrl. cocktail ring. ~ cts. T\\' .. M_u_s_i_•_•_l_l•_•_•_•_u_m_•_•_t_•_'22_ 1, ..... =;:-;-;16=1-;:::=c:-;c::;::-::;:;4/3-;0 's~E~AL."°"Po=in~•"ki"·=n·",.-•• ,-.,.-,,-la, Oayt: 714-6110 Mrs. Bro"-n w/3' C11.bowr camper. Ne111• cabana.. Near beach. ~~~Its. any make ii tinam::t It on APPLIANCES r u ch 5 I a ft flawless pcrtect, certified DARK faced lender dl'C a.mp 2 ~tALE kittens, Ii v;ks old. 1 l mall'. 2 remal"e. S20. each. l ~E~"!!!!!'' ~6?3~·~9!~9!1 !M~c!.!J!o!m!•!•!I load Je~lf'rs. tmrr;ac It ex-ti_~r offer. 536-....,. or !On1t -loni 1erm1. $1-$3. 15 gi) planten. of appraisal $3,000, sell cash $60. Old cra.ft.'lman box blk I grey striped . tn 11harp, 33,000 m1. Extra•. =~=====-;=cc-I GMC citrus S5-S8. Sola & t•h11 ir $1.000. Diamond pi~ guitar \I/case S-ICI. GibS()n 64fi.4268 4/30 ,67~""-'=1"=· ~=--~-Z'l' · OWENS Exp r es s1,.,l2500'"'"_1=. "6"7>-=17-00~~-.,.--1957 PARA.i\10UNT . Trailer, TRUCK CENTER no. fo.tisc. Sun 11 only, Ml f'arrings, studs, fl;i!). Estate F irl'birrl sllgnle pi r k-up 3 ABORABLE kittens. 2 SIAMESE Killens, blue & Cnii3e.r • single Pngine '6 7 D 0 D G E Cu" lo m 8x40, fully contained. In 2t50 Hatbo Blvd ~··ood S• C'I Sale1 673-3600 ,,~ 2 ~ C 1 1 •• 1 •.• Id seal11. $20 each. •--my. W•ll m•'•ta•·-d. Spo•·m•• Va•. A"--•. 2 ........ cond $1100 or make r · ...._,,P, • -' · ---$1.W. 49 E. ~th, .l\I. ma l', fem ... e, w...,, 1J "v"" ,,_, ,,,.. •"' •• " 11· "v'"' 6 0"""".,,, w ;...,. Ed. Druhe Cost.a Meq, 546-6750 0 E ~lo LI s HING SALE ~IOVll\G out of slate -I •Off=i-c-e-F""°u-m-,~.,~.-,0-1.,---free. 839-3396. 4130 ===*~"-t.<=t-11.l_•_~-Ju•I hauled &: b o It om way, camJ>l"r, s1ove, lc• 1 ~~.,~~-=.:;::'.:!~.:;:~'="'7'-~l·""".*;--lT~R~UW°CiK~St'jr--1 Sto\'eS, he:alel'S. fixtures. miscl'llaneous items for Mle Equip. 124 Cti'TEbl11.ck or brown 6 wk SlA.\IESE kittens, Ion g painted. List than 20 hr box, etc. Phone M7-6ll~ a.ft GOLF CollrJe locat i on Misc. E\·e...ithin... _;i;o,. 11 -dishl'~. pictures, 111.mps, Id . ~ ood haired &. short Bluepoint & 1ince eng o'bauled. $-l5()(1. 6. Mobile J~omes. Nr beach. '69 Chev. 'ii: ton PU $1995 ., ·~ "·d ,., "·d ·" tur 0 puppies 1K'~ g C'-·• I t II' · $25 54°7570 4 .-.;-,;;-;,=-==-c=c: •·ady to mo·•• In. lnqu..,· '68 Chev ~ ton PU 119"J5 oh,.p.Sat&Sun9-J.~ ""'~ .. ie-a-""' couu•--OFFICEDESK$7$ ho .,._ 4/30 ""'"'pon. J • · 1r-Lidolsie:di,·p.642-015. '71 PACE Arrow Motor we • 711 bl nd mes . ...,.,.,.,...., "'~" ,.,·11 '00 Chev 1 ton 11lake $2695 Onyx, BalhM Isle. 6134i26 qUDise, ta "5· a ac-846 9.124 Onns 154 '69 BERTRAM 25• sport Home, SIJ>!I 6, self l"Onl., Jo1V"'!:j cumu!a1ed bric-a-brac. CaU -3 PUPPIES, German Shep. 6 -• d '69 Dodgl' Van " Ion $2295 APPLIANCES TV f··m 1 S F•'•"·r, \' D"•••. •hip to gen-air, 1ummer 1 I es Mot H ••• • • u ' to·-•••• fime. S.'6-4063 STANDARD oflice desk &: wk.!I. 955 W. 6th t. BEAUT s · s 1 I blk "" '' or omes "" '70 Ford 1 ton , .. c, I d 1 lhl' """"" "' -pnneer pan' shore radio trim tab1 151 ava.U. 832-7840. ..._.. Chri• eye e, l'ap!S, c 0 5· TA'"ES f • I A 1· chair, S6.i C~t. 4/31l & wht, needs gd home & ' ' _, --1''ith lift 1a!e S349;; misc. Sat & Sun J{)..3 9-ITI I '" ' orct sa l'. n ique 644-2127 hrs. $15,000. Wkdy1 Oruy, '68 Starllne can1per, ~ QUADS 18', self contained. Tlk·, Cl-I• HB 9'8-67!' 271 stone dlamood cluster ~--~----~= 1 YR old female cat, nds loving care. 20 mo·a, 11payed 54• •m "·f , PM kS<! bo 1 4 X 1 51,.P' '· -w H-•. '<ust be Mac Howard L1a1in9 ,. = O 26 ho 1 ~ l<m. O"·•,·,~ lr•l•••.d. ~'""Ott,, 1 w s ca ver, s J>!I , ITI c ean. '"' ·~ " IC '· & H bor) ' · ring. Appx. 3 carats. Value Pianos/ rgen1 8 me, very gen1 r, 6""'' u.ru """' · •· 642-5607 Pvl ty $700 !>46-S398 Al!en. ls! S-IOOO takes! Phone orner ..,.1 a.r GAR~GE SALE: -~Pt s\z~ $850 plus. As.king S600 ur -------,---1 wlchi1dren & <logs. 5-$8-0813 AKC l'l'j!'. i\1oncy not im· p · · &16-00Z2 839-9600 531--0607 Santa Ana ttfr1g, Furn k l\11sc. 2165 I be~t oNl'r. PhonE' tor ap. Factory Authorized LOVELY, healthy kittens i ~"~"~'~"~·~"-.. ~71_1_6~---14' F'JBERGLASS tri-hu!I . TUCK ·A-way le!escop!ng 8 & 6 ol--r moto' horn• for • Raleigh St .. C.~1'. poinlment hl'twttn 10 & 6 Distributor tor Cree t good h 0 me 5 SILKY Terrie r Puppies • Safe, roomy, lut, c:an't camper, almmt new, !$550. L ... ,..,.. IH. * 64C-003.i -Ir P'l . .,,_,3....,n Yamaha * Klmball 0 • alnk. f"rom $575. Sta \Vltch ~2693. ttnl. S200 per week + .05c. a ~N 544-M24 J/l AKC. Lovab!,, ~heelless, M , 26&4 S G nd SA I•-;;--,-,=-----per mUe. 5.34-8892, 962-8991 MAPLE furn. braided ru2. HALF PRICE SALE Conn * Thon1as WOULD like honil' for 9 wk odorle$.~. Reasonable . ~. Thu~•Frira4_'t, Sat: Cy 5 clet, 8 ik11, -• . anUque lamp, 1V. clothing, Serra Thl'in Shop, 113 t.lain .Kohler k Campbell male kitten. Wht & gray br 962-8.~77 Sun noon-6. coot•r• ..,~ CONVERTED hu.s, beaurilul RECREATION CENTDt chin, a. miS<'.. Salr fri & Sal, St, H.B. Sat. lllay lst only! fabulous selecllon of new & b &45-284.7 511 LOVABLE female fawn in1erior & !:st class running' ROY CARVER I Sl3 .~ Ja1m111e. Cd~!. S · I l hr ~ am tn ll~ grands, spine1•. con-tab y. Chihauhua. 9 mos, T lbs, nds DOCTOR must sell 25 f!. HOOAKA '70 enrine, hi-com-order, 540-8059 , ftC. PLAYER . Mpi"mith · pecia sa e 5· · . 110le~ & organs. only at LHASA APSO!Terrier pup--1 . ho lncd !lf'd 01'·en1 Exp. Crui1tr. Good pression head~yio;e1 ring &: Tr•ll•r•, Tr•vol 945 2925 Harbor Blvd. piano, s 3 pm. Shop full of lurnuure COAST MUSIC py. Adorable malf', 3 mos oving me Y · cond. Bargain pric-ed $3000. piston, extendl!d 1wlngingl ----------.-..,·l~Co<=lac:~M~•~"'i-c"""-"'54~6~•7•~•~•1 tbl. SIW. Lot.ii: nr fu rn l· 1 I< sunlmer things. NE\VPORT I< HARBOR 962-D512 l/778-0677. 5.19-71Bl 4124 Evf! 642-8062. arm. Cerianl front forks, TENT Trlr '67 A...,che. S&SO. 1967 Chevrolet Van-X I n t misc. 2341 Azure Santa Ana 3 ti.IALE ,\lalleSf' Pups. 6 "";-;;""'==~-,,,,,--,-.,-I 21 " f t 18" k b-,...... H~ •. ">7-7•..,. BEIGE 4 dra"·tr d1'1'sser $.18. Costa :1\-fe:q * 642-28$1 ONE "'' Rhode Isl red 1958 26' CHRIS Connie, rn·!n ron · n!ar • .l'IO Sleeps 6, range. sink, ttlrig, cond. SlOOO. Call 646-9647 "'"' "' .-"' 4 SI 2 "•eeks old. AKC. XI n t bil'1 Akront whl CU!!tom d rin kl hn. ..... Slel'f'O tape & tapes a. e 300 p· & Organs 1'00Stf'r. l male & 1 ff'm. screw. Xlnt rond, $3250. · JI. • htr, tbl, water tank, storm u g ll'Or ng ·~· OI' SAT. only_ ~loving T.a!'t. Everythint" ~oP!';! PriC'f'll clieap~ 3039 T)ll!r \Vy, C~I . ~.HIT.1 ANTIQ !urn. glassware. trlr, water skis. 2 trail hikl's, xln'1 cond + part.• It ac- ce~s. ~fist. !168-67.f.t. pr v•ood likiis $5. pr Size 8~i NEW-USE~~~lng out for Dutch bunny. 64~55 5/3 ,P:',,f':rz.~ $250. After 6 pm. !>)·~: 547~; Eves 673-7257 Petty r,nden;, t.esert ban, wlndowli. Front canopy, lots 4!5-4213 a rt 6:30 ml'n's ski bnol!!, $25. Site ....... """ -quick throttle. $550 or bsl of !!torage. Very clean. •n Che"" Van, slide door. V-6,~ gold \\'edding h11.nd Sl5. business. Rentals SID 11. mo. FRIENDLY gf'ntle male G. * AIREDALE * 21' Chris Twin '66 oller. 536-2307 )Jl-8031 .,, -Si<•'n••·•" "·Jdw,·n & K•w.,· s~. I ~. F-to ~ 1 ~ -• 3791 •----------8, aulo. O"'ner at1er ' pm, &t5-i77.1 or 64&-14:i6. " 3• °" '"'" 3• ''"" &""" AKC l yl'ar old female". owner. t ........ -· 1 '" 8 II .,,.364 Chickering. Yamaha, etc. home 64&-1218 5/1 1 ' Terry trlr, se con-,,.._... SELLING out-Ne"" on<.'f' FIELD'S PIA.i";O CO. KITTENS 6 "'ks old lg ha.ir * 644-1763 * 12' Gl.ASPAR boat &. trailer, ' talned, all kitchen util. Slp1lc.59~~E~L-~C-om-ino--N~,-w--.-,.-.1 worn clothing. f\1any nice Co•!• 'le•• G-~--Gro·-e BEAGLE p UP p I ES. 22 HP fo.ferc., Reduced to ~ Xlnt rond 645-0629 ... ~ d H 1 M 1 1• ""' ...,""'" ... Siame.<;e pure "'ht calico 2 ,,.,, ......., · • · .. ant, ..-spef' Ul'li . I.II !!"'l'aters, knits, dresses. 1 1714) 645-3250 (714) 633-1170 !162-306ll 513 AKC , fl'male, c h amp lo n $.1 5 for quick sale. """'"""-,70 F1ELD A: Stream 15• ilps tell. 613-0034. wk tJnlv. call Pam at HAMMOND S I ~tock. S50. 892-5812. 28 LUHRS F .B. Sedan, glass, • • • • ' 7 elec brka xlnt cond '"G6~FO~R~D'-"P~U~~V~~~~,~.-. GARAGE Sale~ Ooth!ng & I 645-4;,31,-1 • t e n wa y' FREE kitten~ ST B ~ c · AKC loaded. Unbelievable $9,950. • s·uso "" ••a' . . ' . · r • Ya.maha. New & used !162-iG92 . erna1'\1&-1a.nl, , "'N-...,, ipd tran1. Good cttid. mi11e. items. 718 '''· l8th SI., I BASS t N ET S.· baby pianos of moEt makei;, Best 513 pups. ShOI~ & "'Ormed. SUIO 544-4309. Triflera, U.tllfty '47 Sl200/be1t ofr. 64&-8163 ' 01 cltlthes. $20; ::. d~"·er buys In So. Calif. at Schmidt l FREE k"f! 1 &. 1 f I le. up. (213) 352--3624 \1 'ij!~' ~THi'Hi01'MoPMSO~NN;;k-,T~"~i~l•;r./50;;,N:==i"=l=o,=J=,=,.=,,=1.,.==,=-;!0 IC' T•n•-m Tr•llor Auto li•ilnn '64 SALE _ Girl Scau111 Troop dresser. $8.50; a n 11 ti u e Muslc Co., 1907 N. fo.11'.in, 1 • 1 rns, cue Pay u FOR SALE BEAGLE mlx &.: tlOhp Evlnrude. Many xtras. Honda 750, showroom ~nd, ue -·• 1202 at 1612 Anita Lane, drrssf'r "'' mirror Sl fi. Santa Ana. fi wks. All ~ "-\\lt"ekend-, Poodlr n1ix puppies. SlO. $1600. 673-2164. 10 mi's, 54~3586 aft 6 pm With 4 wheeJ1, All ateeJ weld----:JI LEASE \Veslcliff. Sal 10-3 only t64;:::i-~:"'~"~-~--,-co=·f iUPiJPRiUcJGlJJ~lTrpp:;;i,~•~o;w;;/-hoban<;:h;;:. !Q.47l8 511 each. 642-9161. 14 FT p M ti~ gl 11 ed consttuctlon. 1-'." Steel ~ • --C 1s· FREE hlark kittens -6 wks. · &e ar r a s '70 HONDA CB 450 dl1tc d-k p""·g. Will .,U or 24 ,mo .s w/purchue opt:Son APT of furn. Incl. Riviera f! IT. l!Ofa xlnt rond. S ·1• Go od r on d . 0 r n a I e ... BOX"R m•I• y• old AKC w/rlot11.tlon M HP Mtr 11ki b-'-' '"" ,.....,, 7 ,, '"'' K \II L Ht "·h r~ ' '• · · · ·""' " , .... e, clean. SS95, a.h. Ira'·~ pl·~·p 3!&6 s1..n.. O Maverick, I"' mo, -·"h. t"·in herls. 1ables. Drexel ~nd Ibis, pecan, $..., ma..,.,.ra.ny. Sl i5. Ca 11 e 'r n., g. oc · Crop-d & •"'l•.1150. -fish •A25 •"-962-3513 .,.,, _,..,...,, ... ue w'° ""u • A.U.T .......... '"'"' 847-9524 5/1 ,.. ~"" '" · ... •u:• · · · ,,............. ...,tween 10-2. (Mesa Vm:le) C.M. ' '69 Cad El Doradt1, $179 roo. chair!, 962-9~Ai8 •"-SJJ: rlrapes: Orif'ntal leak ~9&-3920. * &46-6979 * 17' CHRIS Craft utility * * HONDA CB l~Xlnt '68 C.d Cpe de Ville, SSS mo. Hou--Lold G--,-, 114 ~fief' lb!. s4;i: elec. O\·en, ALLEN ORGAN~ exclusively FREE: One rock-a.-poo, ll C C -~-1 ~-I '"--rd 160 h Auto S.r¥iC P•rll 949 '67 ~ G ..., uuu misccll. 67:>-2214 ·1 .,.,·ks. Hou.sebroken. 646-842J Bl.A K LABRADOR, AK , ,.......,.. · .._,,.,v n....,. p. condition. e, c .d-alaxy 500, $39 mo. RCA B/V.' 23 .. "·aln1.1t con- 901' UHF SIM. \ralnu\ bookcaM! ~· x :\2" hi Sl:l. [)ll':l.ux, BiR" B.-"· Bar-B-Q, oven, spit. lools SJ:I GE r!rr bttlilel"<l'"'n mtisseri~ $al Patio umhrt"Ua k stand sro Typewriter !I t a n d S.'">. Lamps. luuage. etc, 5.l9 Vlala Flora., l'J'ht' Bluff!!I Also CONN &; \VURLITZER I 12 month old male. SSO. Call $-t95 firm. Call 644--025'9 Call Linda MU740 a.ft I VW ENG-s '67 Cad El Dorado. Sll5 mo. S\VJM~flNG LESSONS Gould Music Co. &inct' 1911 Aft. 6 p.m. 5 l 846-7168. .,,__ 5 II 909 u,c. ANO OTHERS \Viii leach in your home ~~N.!\fainSA.547~1 FEMALE baby killtn , -ts, a '70 HONDA fSO cc Rt.bull! VW tn&lnt1 , rhilrll'f'n 6 mo. & up.1 ---~~---~~· 1 0 r 11 n g e t. w hi 1,. ?>i1ALTESE pup, AKC, U LEARN to .. n on CAL 2.')'s Scrambler-lo "'!i. Xlnl cond. severa.l-1t1.1arant~ Arne's All ca.rs w/AJR bu! Mavtrlck Reasonable rates 64&-t9JO H8~~A~i;,~~~~'."s1~P~~~t; 64U639. 5/1 "'ttks. ~~~' =~· for u lillle as $6.2Slhr. Npt (all ~tll~ vw Center. 213: 111' ~~·~TrEi~f~J -•~Int 07~P~m~.I.;;;;;:h,;>Q;;;;;j;:; I .~"~'~"~1"'1~·~"''.'.:':;.oo.t~~l~~~ I ADORABLE nib:~ German Salling' Sehl. 645-nJO. 197» HONDA SL 100 FORD 3»2V Engine. !...ess CARPET Llly'r hR.s quality Shep. &: Collie pups, 8 wlrs. AKC -St. Bernani Puppies, FIBERGLASS sailboat k $30.J. Ca. 11 alter 6 pm, lhan 5,{KN} mlles. As new. 300 W. Cst Hwy, NB 645-2112 " "·-& Hi-1..tl 11.t di&('(lunt • HA.\f~IONO ORGAN • a_,,,51,0 511 l~mal,. Bom ?>ifarch 17. '71. lrlr. 13,. .. rood ··"·. -. 968-9635 or !136-f,001. $500, 642-8711 betwn s am & $25 '~•· yd "" GOOD COND * S295 .....,... '"'· Call 642--4"""' eves/wimd1. ~ 5llWI ~"'01 4· '" pm kda price11 from S2 .50 a · ~ ree * 646-923S * 2 GROOVY pupi::. 3 mo&. old. """ 714/ill-45l1 1tsk tor AJa.n 1954 45 n1t1head Harl~y-...... w ya. Rtserves )'OUr Camper Truck Est. !I.tr. Ed (714 ) 811-9958 ~=----~~~~·I ~lull! M'e. 548-5373 511 CUTE German Shepherd-18. RACING Sa.Uboat. Wood. Davidson l "'httl chariot. VW BUS seats for '68 or or Motorhome for your Va· HAND LOO.\t 36.. maple PIANO-Andre.,.,• Kohler Biby Husky puppies. 6 ... ·eeks old. New ma.ln111.JI. trlr. Dock in-$450/best ofr. &46-7930. later. Best offer. catkin. Call now 24 hour ANTIQUES ·. full view mir-0 G-ndl'. •"""-.Call art 4 pm FREE puppy to good home. 110 e11 64-" A962 ** ~01210 ** noor mod11I 8 himies.s 1 '" _,.., · .,..... eluded. SSOO. 673-7402 'SS BULTACO Pu rs an 1 . ;JQO-phone ~750 lot Fru 1Jt. ror, Mahog:. tram,, Sl'I: 4 ....,.,~ wkda.ys, MS-912-1. 836-5658, 523-8849 S/1 1 .~~,~h"J~k~!,......,.{ -"L~b ~-e MUNCIE 4 d . "· k h treadlf!. many acce!l9., •""·I ~-'-",-'~-.,---=.! · Pma r a • FLIPPER-Llk• -w. ·~ "',~ l1'Y r.:ond. Ntvtr raetd. • 11 pee erature. I•""• hJstre fie.,..c no s. 7 Sporting G··'s 130 4 Blk & .,.,,ht ...... sian kittens 7 t · Al<C I ·--15 5 ,.. .. oo I · 11 k -• 714!6T.r358 -1Y ,~. re r1evers, rt'1I: s. for qul•k •"•· . .......-.noo transm s11011 & n a z e , GMC $20; pd frame mlrror.:2'1 x .:.:.:-:;::::..:=-~-~--c wk!.. 673--4873 513 • 492-J338 • ,_ ..., 1100 ~" .,. '"" 23 I '" 30 h ad a1n!t'd :39 diE:VY P/U lnlrk. parts SURFBOARD 6'R'' Chuck ' Call 673--0629 '70 SUZUKI 00, like new. 150 · ... ..,. ~· TRUCK CENTER ' ..... ; a p ""'" t•-bl · BLK male puppie IRISH Seti · AKC •lec.t. oil lamp., S.'la; '' rir wholr Sl5. '61 ..... m er ()font. ·Good corwt, only 1 t.•R-IB3l 51 1 Ch l'~ PUPP1'll, STEAL my ltOBY CAT! for mi. only. Under wart. Sac JEEP canvaa top, blk. Doors 2850 Ha.rbor Blvd. wrouiht ('(lpper kellie. S75 ~In "'aKQTI. n1nl! 175. Nie! rilng . Fin hoJ!t, $6.1 or ofr . .,,.. re·'· MRmlp1on 1lll'!1!. ,,S:7w S890 $325. Cash 673--2191. Ir hard~. $75. & roll bar Costa M'sa S46-67M and othtr Items: ~1t.-I C(lnd. hird c11i.:e $Hl. 511&-0988 ,1-:fark 142.-602'.I G wk! 6 frf'e !n!IP.ns lone hair P"1· a "11 on Y ___,...,..," · •G73--Sl99e HO[)AKA ACE 100, '68. Lot• SJD. 646-4706. LEASE a n'w ,71 Pinto $50 5.19 Viii• Flora llhe Blulfs) betf d e and C\lte a48-&796 5/3 I s rLKY TERRIER STUD f tr S225 Ort rl FOLD-UP s. ra P s. W·IND Ir. J:ira 1ourf boerd K • e LIDO 14 No 914 all o rx I.JI, • se r11.e-mo. (36 IM.J open end. R.UG 12 x 1-r,-Karas\&JI Good CQndition. Other 7'-S30. Q)f'Kl oond. 3 MIXE[I breed pupple~. AVATL. A C. PROVEN. (quJpment, cl'~ SSGS tnr 962-3513 1 ll~•l RENT a n,:w 'Tl Pinto $4 ~llow 1hat', UM<! l mo~. i\f l 1~ellaneou 1 iteml!. f;44 -1j()6 R9'1-2.171. 5/) * 64fr.7l15 * 61l-3381, 646-0885. 1968 BSA Starlin. Excelltnt . Aulot forSlf1 day and .4c mllr. Put a Nt'w prlct $4JO. Asking $27j. M~ NEAR ntw i1b.1Vl1Jl'fl pno1 FRF.:f. kiUc:n~ -6 wks. 'A~K~C.-.S'°llkycc-.-m-•~1,-. ~3,-mo.o--,&: LIOO 14 No . 266:1, wltnilt'r, condition. $435. • lltUe kick in your life. 644-U92 f"R0$'MNG S16. Ble"ch + i.blt, hP1r. WM>. All equip-6'l2-+499 Sil Pood!r1 ~142, 3S.1 E .. SI09'5. I.Ass trailer, $94S. !i40-5383 THEOOQRE l ·M:;:.;•_;ch;:cl~no-ry----;116 l-0ner + "' flD. 300 "'.· ment lndudrd. 67>3Ml2 MALE ltlttf'n trtt lood 8 lTth St.. C.M. Eve•. 644-2601 , 1967 Sutukl scrambltr-~ Cffntr1I 950 ROBINS FORD NEW rear mounl •ngle if'lllll#r blade fnr wtlttl tnc- ""· 1!!5 ..... :i«i. M'lsceil•MOU• 111 Coast }twy. M2-G844. Sham-7"l" SURFBOARD v.·ka, 6-l5-«T6 Sit YORKSHJRE Terrier pupi: 21 Fl Venturt. Sle.ps 4. twin. Complete overhaul. -HARBOR BLVD. pno &: 1t!s by Laurie. S3.!i0. 96&-1861 11ner 6 pm 3 LITTLE kittens, g ,,-eeks AKC Champ Sired. M·r n-.uu, motor. All ser for $32S. 496-3920 1:7aron~i!s°'!..nc~~t~~ CDSrA MESA Nl.omD SEARS Hearinlr Aid. iuptr Storo, Rostouront, I old, real c:u(e. 346-6315" Sil TERMS!? * * 5.11.$127 n.cing. 531-<&11 or 557.2334 1969 KAWASAKI, 250 cc=, dirt mnd1Uon1 ..... ~-" 847 ,,__, Autos Wanted Ml i1~ngth, Ilk' MW S100. Aft YR -'d •·-, --•-.... _ · _.. • "--1-.. ,. ....... ~ ~m : S45'-5!»1 B.r 132 SEVERAL young adull ca!A. "' s.-..., ern.,.,,. .......,,., HOBIE Cal l~l yr old, Sall tq~ipvcu-........ ntw w '-al*r 4:00 1~;ttJcd~ and .all IMPORTS W.t.'--l ,;"'~=:;,c°".:;-;;:::::;:::;;;:;;;;\.-:;.:;. ______ .;..:. 5o!Tlt>Mute~.546-7Dl4/30 Good •/children . No l274. W/trailer. $1(195, 96 mla. SU-1536 day WHk.ends. n-.. _ ,..._:,; 1 :7 NEWPOltT SCH TENNIS IR .. ir!..~C:~~n:; ~~ GROCERY. llt>N' tqiupmc:nt, ! 5 PLAYFUL kit!ell.1 to good llou~l)roken, 53&-7045 4113 138-~ aft 6. l ' HUSQUARNA 2 50 t t USED car lot -oUi~ li&htl. TI:>P .. i BtiY'ER CLUB mrmlx~hlp klr ult'. Call 673--0629. reuon11blr! 8-47-6177 or I home. 1i73-0925 513 DAL~fATIANS-AKC. beaut. UDO 14 No. im, Xlnt oond. SPOR'ts.~AN-$400. Cati '75' x l60' ntar Harbor I BllJ.. MAXEY 'roYOfA RtasoNlble! 573-3004. 536-l!'llll I FREE k'th!M t good ho iponf'd, chimp ilred. pups, Pritt tlnn SIOSO incl tn.lltt'. 543-12&1 ~ Bay St, Stt J'JJ6 Harbor, 18881 BlaQ Blvd. ~·-SMAN ,,, •• ,,.,r SIG~S; smrerronts ' wl.n· TV, R..tlo, Hl,1, 7 -· 'o1• .• ,: •1>< ,m,30('. 3 wks, rre•t temp, 493-1740, Pvt .... 644-6579 1967 'T'JITITM'DU TRUO _,... CM ... OJU' 1 dows. bollls, truck~. f'or .....,... ""' ·•· '·--r · '' ...... -· H. Betleh. Pb. 8'T.a915 lawn awuper, like new . .SSO. estimate tall: 962-3887. SterH 136 BROKEN cc:mr.:nl for fill SCHNAUZER PUPS. Male 11 '6.. PENGUIN sailboa.t Ct', 1500 ortc mi, Kini con-Dun. 6vgi'9s 95' WE PAT TOP DOLLAR Call ~ J AL'tEC Voice 6r Theatrr 962-72}2 4/30 at '";':!· ~m. w I trailer. S'.ll5. Ca I l diOon. $TTS. 496-3632 ro TO Bl..Al"L" 1Joaton J'l'>Ciltr \\'lth ASTROLOGY CLASSES ~ ~&-2J!i29 YAu .1.u~ ••Jo I "•duro. DUNE Bun;y, i150 or be:i;t R p USED (:AQ.'· ma;;;\no-tiwtnc ct.b\lll'I Btcinnln1 May ~th !pe11ktr1. SJ~ lor both. Call LGE rabbit hutch_ Call H 156 '&-::;,""' 111xl c;,. ntler. Many xtra parts. Tow U your Q.r I.a extra ~ ·~ 545--0645 M fM.2-0954 !t.>,•2416 962-'J:'l94 4/30 orses • 1970 HOBIE c AT 8.111,1 new. nt cond. $2M. btr Included. 962.-J.931 IN u, firlt, !35. '94-tl33' =e"AU30,.:;;,A;::_;Bay::""'o"uJ:~C-.MO:em=--EICO SSB TR r ~BAND FREE ftrtwood. Ml-3176 ~/l --,-,!-UST-,-,-;u,_N_O_W_I_ w/traU~r. Reel Sharp. Call '* ti7S.i92!f * 5 t R Rod fJ 9 BA'UER SUJQ{ VW Bus car 10~ enclM«i lll8:-bersb!p. Trantffr ' tu TninACtive r. ani~nna. Misc. RPfl:ISttreri n1nnlr11 QuA.rter 67:..-1340 or 615-8U9 • 1'10 KAWASAJ(J 350cc por s, •Cir 1 2S4 It 1Ttb St. P~ rack. aid ~.' titll Incl. p~. MS-55.'l llam sear. 644-4'TI6. Hor.ii m,11.nu~ !i40-092S 1· llotll(' \5.2 ci,.ost:nut mal'e. 14 ' CAT. wilh traller, fully AVENGER. SSOO. Xlnl tond. 1965 MUSTANG 2-+2 Bull! Colta Mua 541-771! m . S4&-U16,, Sell 1.,1, items ro~1 r a1t reaults •re jwit a phont" FREE pipe 548-3G2T 41~ ll11d lr11Jn1na. C'nn1!11tfnf equip, $MIO. fi73--0?S4 289. Extru. Stick ahift. Pvt Daily Pllol Want Ads ..U~'t SVI thl old 1rufr ""·U &U-!i6'1fl Now! call·~ ... M)..'i8'7A Call 642-6678 Nowt lwnper. $'100. 6'll-4st6 , Aflfr 5, 6t2-346I Sfll Idle Urm• now! pty'. S6M EvQ 213/562-21«5. _,,barsaina pJoN. ' !"""~~t~ho!_!!M~w~ll~u~nc__~~';:~~:::::::;::.;"""-------~-~-~~~ _ _ - I l 1 • • • • • • • • . . ' . . • • --• • . • • ; .. • """" Wantocl HI Autos, Imported •--w ..... E_P_A'"'v""ro=P-BMW '70 Autoo, lmporlocl FIAT ]§) ~I .___, ....... _ .... ___,/~ ~' ~_ .... _"'·~]~ _[ ._ ...... _ .... _,~_._ 1 ~1 -·~ .. '-M"'';;;;;J~~~I '70 Autoa, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 TOYOTA TOYOTA ·~ ........ I~ I I~ I f70 Autos, lmportocl CASH fix' Ull!d can • trueks, ju,t call Ui .tot fret Ntim.lfe1. GROTH CHEVROLET ROY CARVER, Inc. BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT NEW '71 FIAT ISO SEDAN 21T3niT JAGUAR I MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE I '62 ~8 SEDAN, whlto, "" '69 M"""'" 230, Xlnt rood, '62 p h C b I t leather inttrior, kl rnf. '900 Air cond, Auto tn.111, Radial orsc 8 a ro e for quick We. 830-6131. tires. $3900. C.94--0232 JENSEN MG 1131 Bl..01 $1699 Alk b' Slk1 Manqer 2925 Harbor Blvd . SALE $1388 JENSEN AUTHOfUZED SALES :, SERVICE MG AIJTIIORIZED SALE$ &: SE.RVICE IQ0 lS21l Beach Blvd, Co&ta 1'1eu. 546-4.«t J}rlllPOrl 31t!lpL1r!•:, !?rtupnrt ~I Ill p L1 ('( ~; --. ..... HlltltinrtOn Beach '70 BMW 2800 Sedan. &11 Op- N7.m JG ~ tiom incl l.ir cond. Co•t Autos, lmportM 970 $OX!. 13,('Q) mi's. Perfect. $299 DN. $37.96 MO. YATES A steal at $5500. >:>ay1., ALFA ROMEO """""'· ,,,.. 64&-1040. $299 it ll'le tol&l down pay. W •--H 328.52 Valle R.oa.d 3100 ' ....... st wy. 3100 W "·--H ment. $37.96 is Ole total Newport Beach . .........,., wy. San Juan Capiit.rano &9 Bt.tW 1600, AM·FM·SW. '67 DUETTO 77,000 orig. ml!... Xlnt cond. Sacrifice, nooo. F>ri. Immaculate'. 5 1pd. dlr. l 1 =-~~· ~ .... =,.,.,,.__..,...._,.= owner, factory hardtop. '70 BMW 4W2 sedan, 1tereo (ZXU9881 tulJ pnce $1995. radio, A/C, $3300. Small down. Will tin.a.nee pvt --"'*~'"'=2363~;;:*.,--- pty. Call alt IO ... ""3100 DATSUN or 494-1306. ... , .. ;~1 "~~nd;tion '70 DATSUN PICKUP monthly payment incllJd.1111 Nf'wport Beach 837..4800/493--0U/$2261. '"'· 1;,,,.., """ """"' KARMANN GHIA chata:e• on approved credit • 63 Porsche Super "'' " montla. "" """ 1960 GHIA • 'f!l~IHG~ ep., Bahama yellow With""' price includtn1 tax ii-lie-LDtt or mile.!i er tramporta-interior, A.MIFM, Chftline ef\le i& Slf90.40. DettrTtd tion Jelt. Speci.ally pnced whee.a, recent • n a I n e price i& Slll6.5.56 includlna for quick We. QOF325 PXW9&2 .... ""'"" • tinan" LOOK • $499.0() ''FRIEDLANDER" $2399 ::;:s;li~"" .,..,. • ._ CHICK IVERSON '"" """ ,.....,. •• CHICK IVERSON Ovtr l3S New ~ Ulftl Can VW 893-75fi6 • 5.17-6824 $400. ,,...9586 1967 Alfa Romeo OUEITO Conv. $1495. To Choost From I l!£; MG Mldaet. Xlnt aind. VW with camper lhat '1eeps 6 OPEN 'TIL 10 PM 5-1g..30J} Ext. 66 er 67 I !WU up windoWI. $850. Call MS-30.ll Ext. li6 or 67 people. Don't misa this one. XlOO E. 1st St., Santa Ana 1910 HARBOR BLVD. ~9&5. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Full price $2199. (651AVB) 1111 St. at S.A. Frwy.l COSTA MESA I COSTA MESA * Ph. 673-«MS * AUSTIN HEALEY '61 BUG EYE SPRITE Barwicl< Imporu 991 So. 5.\8.1000 CL"' KAK.'llA.NN GHIA MGB 1965 PORSCHE S.C. Coast Hwy., Laguioia Beach. /IJDll'll '63 b ~t G~e je;7~ ~'1i' ! MGB GT '67 Xlnt cond. Racing ireen with ~Jectric 546·4051 or 494-9771. A ~~·~r. 4~-isJ.9 S.t, Sun.r · ! ~1~ctw1. A·l. Ne.w tirts. sunroof. Clean ~nd recent. DOT DATSUN -----=. --paint, clutch. Qwck .!ill.le ly overhauled. Priced to sell. OPEN DAILY nrnt s.. l9Til KAR?olANN Ghi.a, auto Sl650. 673-8008. YCC525 1'u1l pnc. $.199. fJTA 2131 · ·-"FRIEDLANDER" tra,,., ll.OOO mo'~. M;ot "'""'· MORRIS ONL y $2•799 Buwkk Imports, 991 So. SUNDAYS ~~ o:~,.,~TJ.-7"' CHICK IVERSON Cou! Hwy., Laruna Beach. USM Be&l.h Blvd. l JJJO IUCH ILVD. ,69 KARMANN Ghia . Xlnt I WOODY \Vqon 19SO, b!ue vw stS-4051 or Of..!'m. Hun~on Beacb I Hwy, Jfl Very clean. $495. _, _ •• ,7 .,2, cond. Low MUeaie:. *Mt-UTI * '6'. HEALEY 3000. Loolct, 1 ~~"'_,,.:r=m,,or,,.,-><_,1>4<'2==--;-;~,....·~"'°"~ni'~O:C.:l --'S::l::.S50::·::Firm,::' :;:.,· ,:......m;::'.'.:=-- nw &OOd. """" '"""" '68 DA"'UN SEDAN '69 FIAT s P 1 D E R -Lo LOTUS OPEL 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ..,k, I W&nt "'w" """ ' I .l mil•.... Xlot a>nd. S1600 ' '65 PORSCHE C Will ell th.a tor $800. Call 5olg..()91.9. scg..Xt50 14 Door. 4 speed, radio, hf'a !· 1970~~'°'r"°IA'°'T=""'511~S-p;~,,.-,.-S~18'0= ~---L-O_T_U_5 ___ OPEL '64 \Vagon w/headen, er, air cond. Like new. $1399 rtblt efli, new clutch. water BMW full price. fUQD312 ) Sar· call 494-5~ or I e • v e AtrrHORIZED pump. fuel pump, battery, White with red interior. Ex· "\\'iclc Importa;, 998 So. Coul m•s&l.P at 642--01~. SALES & SERVICE pllJ&"s. etc. $500. 968-3525 ceUent conchtion. ITZP 8081 ,M vJ • ••• •• • Larie1t Se~tion of New &: Uled BMW's e Southland's Most Mod- em. service Facilltie1 • Complete Stock cf BMW Parta • Ovtneas ow~ry Specialists; Hwy., Lapna 8 each. '69 FIAT 850 Sport Coupe, PORSCHE Full price $2495 or take ~l or 494.9m. Bf low blue book, $995. trade. Call 494· 77«. J?rtt1µor1 31tnport:; I =~==~=~--1 557-3'.lll. 'TI DATSUN. R/H. Heavy 1 --~~~~-- duty bumP'•· N"" ,,.u;ty JAGUAR $500. & take over payments. ""18 .. , "'°""' ..,...,,, '71 JAGUAR Yl 2 aJtS Aulllmatic, alr cond., w1w, TC. Pwr. St. dlr. MllSt 1eU. Ul'llXr factory w&n'l.n!)'. Take older trade. Will fin- ance pvt. pty. Cal.I ~o.3100 •157-0627. ' LATE '61 JAGUAR ...,.,'00'"====""~-'59 Por. Cpe, ~bit eng & 19'3 PORSCHE S.C. trans., Radials, Ar-1 I r~t. Bahama ydl"lw • Detle1 de. Chrome whJs, I a c q u e r . 3100 W. Coast Hwy. scriptlon, Th.is one excel-684-7118 Newport Bfach Jent thru 001 . PXW-982 1~-=--.-,~u~o,.;~·-JOMl~-0-w-.,.-r. MERCEDES BENZ LOOK • $2,399 S4!Kl0. 8.l>-3535 or ~7 CHICK IVERSON 1"'"""'"'· """"""""'~-,,.- (1, >11')<'.' C ount ~ \ L .• 1,J~''' S"k•tlH111 N,·w & U~ed t.\••r(•·d·~~ Rt'llI Jim Slemons Imps. VW PORSCHE '70 911-S, silver li\'/blk !nter. am/fm, driv· ing lites. 557-9159 aft 5PM S49-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '6,; PORSCHE C, Iris:h gref'n, NICE '61 PORSCHE &st offer. TOYOTA '70 TOYOTA, bluto, heater. Xlnt. corn:!. -t!H-2021 befol"f 4 radio, $1425. f11.st reaults are ju11t a phone call away· 642-5673 '69 TOYOTA WAGON C. "1r'hffl drlw. (ZMR-4901 full price $2799. Barwick fm· ports, 998 So. C.oa.111 Hwy .. Laruna Stach. 546-4051 or .f94..9m. A Sports Car '71 CORONA 2 Or. Hari:hop. t..oaded, 4 apd. dJr. f"'ul! price $2383. 100~ lin1ncing. Ulw pay- ments on approved ottdit. Plu11 T&L. (•Ofl.1500) Calli' :W0.31o0 11tt. !O 11.m. You Can Afford While You're Still Young Enough To Enjoy It . The Fiat 850 Spider is the I o w e st priced true sports car on the market. The red line on its en- gine is all the way up at 6,500 rpm. It has disc brakes in front and pendent suspension round. And , for many people, it's the best-looking sports car under $I 0,000. LIST FOR LESS THAN $2400 aasa Visit our complete outomotive service facility - 16 stalls -Expert staff of highly trained mechanics. Complete body & custom paint shop too ! Bill Jones' 8. J. Sportscar Center Inc. 2833 Harbor, at Adams, Buy Or Lease At C. BOB AUTREY '67 DATSUN. Au.to. RIH. Ex. cond. Sacrifice below Blue Book. ~16 eves, wknds 1969 DATSUN convt-White w/blk top. Good cond. $1400. 644-4641 alt 6 pm. 1964 Datsun Fair Lady Convt. Nev.· eni. block M6--0223; 646-43&1: 645-4633 FERRARI XKE 4.2. Xlnt cond. Lov.• mile~. $3200. 67~ . '69 Jeguar XkE ..t.2 Xlnt cond, $39.'JO. M6-i959. 8-5 VV lrner & fli.lin St. S.lnf,, Ana 546-4114 I black interior. Imm a c . Autos, New S3200. s1:;..n10 iiij~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii I * CONCOURSE * U6o LMc Beach Blvd., Lone Beach Phono (213) Sfl .. 721 °""""'"""' NO matt.er wtl.lt u ls, )'at.I can ..U ft wit~ a DAILY Pll.OT WANT AD! MJ..S7I FERRARI Al.1I'HORIZED SALES & SERVICE J1rtupot t 311nport •, 3100 W. C.out H-..y. Ne-wport Buch ) QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD '69 MERCEDES 230 SPEEDSTER Xtn. tine. Automatic trans . 673-3756 pov.·er Sltt'Mfli, AM I f)1. • '67 PORSCHE 912, very YCD!l3 I clean. 5 spe~ PTiud lo S3S95 1ell S3295 673-3381. 646--0&85. Mac How.1 rd Ltesing '62 Po~·R.eblt ena Best (Corner 1st & Harbor> I oiler · 839-9600 Santa. An! * Call 673-739'J * '63 190-D, $995.-Weu main- 1 '69 912. AM /FM, OiROME tained, by a little old lady WHEELS. lrom N.B. 644-1B69 + ~5-4767 * Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 1 Autos, New 980 ROY CARVER, INC. NOW YOUR AUTHORIZED B.M.W. DEALER • the NEW BMW BAVARIA Germany's Finest Product BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS ALL MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY Complete Parts & Service Ask about European Del ivery Plan. ROY CARVER, INC. • AUTHORIZED BMW DEALER 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-441441 BIG DEMONSTRATOR SALE Several models & styles to choose from Including the Lincoln Continental. Demonstraton have 6,000 to 7,000 miles only. Some with less. JOHNSON & SON Lincoln Continental• Mark III• Mercury•Cougar 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540-5630 642·0981 • r I •, • " ·-·-. :· ,. '• " ~ ' ' . .-~: •, :· ;. : . . • • ' . ' • . • • . • • • :~ • ::. ., " :· . :· ':· :· ;. . Auto1, New Friday, Aprll 30, 1911 980 Autos, New DAil V PILOT 4/l' 980 Autos. Now 986 1 §]1~~~~·~~~-~~~1 .. ,,.,~... l§l [ ..... ~... l§l I .. ~-... l§l I ..... -... l§l [ ..... ~ ... ' Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmporttd 1-.....,,,-='=':,,.----970 Autos,. Imported 970 Autos,, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 9il Autos. lmPorlod 970 TOYOT A TOYOTA TRIUMPH $2795 ------~ TOYOTA NEW '71 '71 SPITFIRES 1970 Toyota Mk ti 81. Wag. NO DOWN NOW ON DISPLAY R .. Ji., Autonauc, fattory Come in for • tesl drive! A1r Cond. 23.:iBQC p YMENJ FRITI WARREN'S DEAN LEWIS A SPORT CAR CENTER l:\IPORTS 710 E. b f St, S.A. 547-0764 &t<-9111.J $69.0I MONTH* o d ily S.9 1 Su "' 1~16 Hat·bor Blvd . 36 n1os. De(. P4l' price. _P'_•_!__ ; cosed 1 ay "°'" M•" 124>l.36 or ouh '''" VOLKSWAGEN '69 TOYOTA $2003.55 incl. Tax & Lie ,-------- j2i Coupe & '10 Corona Se· A.P.R, '1t54%. SerlaJ No.11960 KARMANN Ghia ronvt. l:W347. Great cond. Alust seU. 30 rian. Boih au1on1<ttl{', radio. •0 _ .. _.,.1 mpg. $425. &14--6316 heater c1c 7.ADB10 n approv~ u-.:ul . sAve 'Bill Maxey Toyota I '60 V\V. Wide tires, chronH! M . wheels. \Vrecked. ri.iakc of· ac Howard lea11n51 ~I BEACH BL 847..&155 fer . 897-498l VOUCSWAGEN LEASE A NEW '71 VW $51.89 Per. Mo. +Tu AT YATES VOLKSWAGEN Lorge Selection Of VW Campers, Vons, Kombls, Buse$, New & Used lmmedlat. Delivery CHICK IVERSON vw 54"3031 Eirt. 66 or 6'l 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA 1.t:E.U 1968 vw VOLKSWAGEN '68 VW SEDAN AutomaUc, radk, healer, (QUA 564.) $999 YATES !Corner 1st &: Ha1bor, HUNTINGTON BEACH ,71 o.. B 1 ti k 839--"'l-Otitll " I A uuper ug, au o s c , ""'°"" V"" Road l=~~""""~=~c-Ooan=a na TOYOTA Cll'mcntine. Like new $1995. ~ .....,e 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-t&:xl/ 493-4a-W 499-2261 Diamond blue wtth black in- terior. Ii.lag \\'heels and ra- dial tires. XSP31.t Real buy, ONLY $1099.00 1960 V.W. Conv. '71 MARK II SEDAN DEMO SALE Coll 962-"67 83~;.,;~:,r;_.~~·.i;;:;., $177 7 ;62=V\~W~.-,,.-,-, °"lic-,.-.. -,,,"'°bl°"t ,-,.,,.-,-, I ---Ocean blue, fiared tinders, CHICK IVERSON mag whoel•. Great '"m-4 Door. Au!oma!i<· filr. Ra-197l TOYOTA new brakes, ne1v inter., '68 YW BUG • dio, heater. Loaded. fa 197- 1 Demo #9206 Low mil's Sacrifice best oiler. 6-12-3391 VW mers fun. JLZ407 2.371 Take older c<ir 1n h'adc full factory ~uipped, ' '65 V\V , xlnl cond. Headers. or SITl.B.IJ down. Under 7.000 8 O'fllER DEl\105 ON SALE very clean. $800. (I) 12131 miles. \\'ill finan~ fll'I. pty. 592-2772 1tfl 5 Pl\1. Call =~~~~~~~ ~€41tJOYLOeUJt4JA • 19;;n~: :~;~:cellent cond. CO!\IE SEE OUR • e &12-7536 e SELECTION 01'' '65 V1.V, t'hcrry cond. New TOY~As 1966 llart.ior. C.M. &JS-9303 v• eng, clutch & brakes. f\1any Jim Slemons Imports **1910 TOYOTA -Radio, ~t.ras & lo mi's. 673-83M aft 140 W. Warner air, automatic transmission. 5. Santa Ana 1'r833-l29l * -.63-V~W~s,-.-.-, -ow-,,.,-_-;EX=- Open Eves. & Sun. • '66 Cro,11n Wagon. 6 cyl. TRA CLEAN. Very good 540-4125 auto. Good conditlon. $875. mechanically. 968-6065 CnU 67;)..3&.'iJ Sell idle Items 642-5678 Now! now! Cs.JI DAILY PILOT !or action! Call ~2-:£78 & Sa Vi!! DAILY PILOT for action! Call 642-5673 & Save! Autos, New !'>19-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 ~lARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~1ESA Must :sell! <VS'IJ.87) Call Barwick Imparts, 998 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach, ~"'-'~~=°'~'~o='~"~"~·•~n~1~. ~-V\\' Camper. Converted from VW SEf\11-CA;\l PER early ''an y,•/db1 Sun Dial Clean, Smooth. 673-5672 inter. Corva!r cngi!M':, mag PRICED $599.00 CHICK IVERSON YW 549-3031-Ext. 66767 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA George, 67:>-2372 P at, y,•nJs etc. at a cost of $5000 . 675-6216 Lee Sensational. See 10 apprec.l---;W=A=N-=T=E"D~-- ·"'°"='"""-,-,-=d"J -,-, °"OOO, 1 \Viii &ell for 1/2 or oln. '66 VW-Sun~f. rGooda o, , d Days 6 4 6 -4 4 :, 5 eves rn pay toP dollar for !-'OUI' on new engine. con . · ' VOLKSWAGEN today Call $800. 673--2196. 646--7040. and ask I-Or Ron ~hot 1967 V\V-Fantastic shape, lo l\10VING Must ~ell \Vht 7{) 549.3031 Ext. £,6.67. 673-0900'. mi. $1050 Leave message, V\V squat"C'back. l..o\I' ml.1"'°'"""=-'77'"""'---,-c-w,'.;H~l ;;"'c:'"~'"~'ol~l~<C'.9-l-<~736~. =I ;:':'A°'M-;:F~';;:' ::$2::100'::;:64-:-2--7-;:Jn;;;;--;;;;;l1967 V.\V. sq .. bk. Tape d_cck, ::::-Al\1/F~1 radto, radial tu-es. Call Pat \Vood !'>45-2300 Scenic Proper ties 675-5726 Best otter, must s e 11 . l ~---,--.,.----.-9· 0 N 980 6'f>-J05S -8 Autos, •W '66 V\V 1600 eng. FM & tape. $750 . • Call 6r:>-1228 • JOHN CONNELL WE'RE LOADED '70 VV.' Adventure cam- per-Lo mi. on warranty, Call 548-1318 '70 V\V Conv, 11,500 mi. Mint. Under warr. $2100. ....-. WITH THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • The rear window goes up and disappears into the roof. '64 VW Sedan. 1 OWl>l?r. $615. or make otter . • 6fl..336i • 'Ga VW-SUnroof, mags, new brakes, tire5, I u n e -u p . $850/b«t oUrr. 847-7402 '10 While VW Squareback station wagon, Good cond . 830-8)95 r I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I "No Gimmitk1, No Giv1•wt y1, J u1t 21 Yr1 . Hon11t S11Jin9 The tail gate goes down and disappears into the floor. '711 VW Bus. xln't rond. Carefully mainta.lned. $2600 1 673--0663. MUST SEU. ALL MODELS • .E9UIPMENT AND COLORS AVAILABLE! NEW 1971 VEGA OVER 50 VEGAS TO or--... ~CHOOSE FROM Best Finest Named Car of the Year 1971 MOTOR TREND Handling Car in Am e.riea Regardless of Price ROAD & TRACK Out Of Comparison Tests of the Six Small C•rs CAR & DRIYIR ORDll TODAY IN TOUR CHOICI 2 DOOR SEDAN OF 10 COLORS 1970 Volkswagen•Bug I 1,000 Miles, 6'13-<546 '69 VW, 23,000 m I's , Ai\T/FM. ?.tags & otht'r f'X· lras. Sl:>JO or make ofr . 968-63.iS ---------·10 V\V Artventur<>r cam· per-Lo mi. Llke new. Under Wll!Tanty. ~. 673-7008 196" vw v •• $1900 • Call 673.-0770 • VOLVO VOLVO DEMO SALE 144 Autom & air. 142 Autom. 144 4 speed, 164 Aulom. ~Ve Speciali1'! In Overseas Delivery Ail)eoJt LemiA 9 VOLVO 1946 Harbor, C.i\f. &46-9303 '61 VOLVO SEDAN I I I I I -·· I !! OVERSTOCKED !! BIG DISCOUNTS ON All 135 BRAND NEW 1971 PONTIAC'S Also must move 12 low Mileage Executive & Demon· strators AT ANY REASONABLE OFFER 1971 GRAND PRIX DISCOUNT $ • Auto. Tn1n1. • AM/FM radio • Tinted 9loss • 1octory air cond. • Power windows • Whitt wall tlr11 FOTUIA l 5Pf'd, radio. hlotw . .IAf.413 $588 '65MUSTANG 00 Ser.1117429 '4809" +Tll • landa1to' • Power stetring • Power disc brakes • Remote mirrors • lmmtdlatt dtllwery • Plus many otherta:tras I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • 2 Door, 4 5Jl('ed, radio, heal-I er. ILXZ73l) s,199. full price. Barwick Imports, 998 So. I Coast 1-lwy., Laguna Beach, 546-4051 or 494-9771. 6 cy1~ wto irurn... rodio, heol•, whilewall tires. ""''· '64 RAMBLER I 770CLASSIC Am• ._iiiii"''>n' I WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW ~ THIHI 'BTYO~o· "FRIEDLANDER" IJ1M laACh fHWY. 1'11 893-7566 • 537-6824 $888 '68 DART 2 DOOR H.T, Y·I, C1.1tO lrunl.. loc.tory oir, radio & heot•, YWry1 roof. fXDWW} $1895 '70 OPEL G.T. I 102 H.P .. outo frllnl.. rudio & hlalw, anty 10,000 miles. SSS8QH s2795 1971 VANS! CAMPER VANS-SPORT VANS • '70 Volvo 144S-..Lo ml, 1:1 ir, auto. W:il. Call 557-3420 after 6 I '69 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Sta Wog V·4, oulo. lron5., foctor1 oirconditioni119, full '66 CHEVROLET I CAPRICE full pavm, factory oir tOlld. ltldiGI tirn, No.I 02396 HUGE DISCOUNTS TRUCKS-THU S-TRUCKS LOTS OF HEEL DRIVES Pickups-Carryalls-1 -Blazers. BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVY 1 /2 TON B' BOX PICKUP 16396781 Immediate Delivery $2569 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200 68 VW Immaculate priced to ae!J fast 673-1131 aft 6 PM Autos, Ultd 990 * TRADE INS * SALE AT WH OLESALE '66 Lincoln Cont. $1495 '66 Olds Toronado $1495 '67 Pontiac c.atalina Sl.395 Mac Howard Leasing fCorner 4t & Harbor) 839-9600 531-0607 Santa Ana BUICK '69 BUICK 23,000 actual miles, full pow. er, factory ,pir, !lit away Wheel, alm<>st factory fresh & fac1ory warranty I o r 27,000 more miles. to.lust see lo appreciate>. ZAE618 $319S Mac Howard Leasing (Corner ls! &r Harbor J 839-9600 5.11-0607 Senta Ana '67 Riviera, ~tint cond. White w/black l<"ather interior, bucket seats, conaole ahift. Air. tinted glass, lull power, 5 ney,• !Ires, 1 ownrr car, $2295. MttV: 67J...ltl0, alt 6pm: ~S-5158 '67 BUICK La Sabre 2-dr HT. Alr cond, P/s, P/b, P/win- dows. R &: H, vinyl lop. A·l cond. $1750. Call eves or wknds, 847-502i. l.968 BUICK Rlvit'.ra-Xlnt rond. St~I wh!J, Landau top, ai r, ]() ml. 544-479l. ·66 Riveria, full pwr, xln'I mnd, Alklng ll700. Pvt ply, 1-14-1."IOO. I i35-ii '69 OLDS CUTLASS Auto. lrdns.. fotlory air -(oficl.. power •fttrin!I " ilrops, vTrff roof, SleJto '°!" ploy«. (079SQE) $2388 '68 PONTIAC $1295 ~;:.~~;,,~i~~~~:=-·· "-'$1888 '69 v.w. I 'I , DAVI 10$1 roNnAc 2480 Harbor llYd. ..... ..... -546-1011 ' I • ••• .... ... " .. \ .......... ·~ ' ........ ·~ . . .. . . • DAILY PILOT Friday, Aprll 30, lq7l .......... §JI Autos for s.1• ............ !§JI Autos tor s.!1 l§J I !§JI Autos !or SI!• l§J [ 1§1 ;;I ;;;,;'""'~;;;,;"'·~l§J~"1 990 Autos, UMCI 990 -.......,..,FO,....R-D--1 Autos, Used 990 Autos, U19CI t90 Autos, Used t=::.!.=u~IC-K~..::'.1--;c~H .. E~VRB.O~LET;;;-- Autos, Uljld 990 Autos, Used --,c""'o--R-VA.,..l"'"R-CORVAIR 990 Autos, UHd 990 Aut .. , Used 990 990 Autos, UMIS '70 S'lN .,.,.1n, like new, All '69 Chev. Station W9n. xtru. cost $5tm, price H~ to tl.nd !I pugenrtr SJ9T5, temu. ~ Kiti,py,'OOCf_ ~ h)-droma· , , ~ tH.", powtor stttnn&: &-bta.k· 69 BUICK Riviera, aU es. Factory a.it. Excellent (IO'A~r. Stereo, Mac v.'hHlJ, condiuon ~ 'Be.autiful, $3400. 646--1087 · $27'5 CADILLAC Mae Howard Laulnt tCorMt Ut I Harbor) CONTINENTAL 1'70 MARK 111 50,000 mi, 5 yr wa.rranry Elea;ant blue. ""hite Broua· ham top, blue h~at~r inter· ior. Every deluxe extra, incl ste~ radio & t&pe deck, ~lichelin steel-belted urea. For u.Je by O\\'MI'. 6-17-SllS '66 CORYAIR 2 DR. HJ. /'"'omatJc, radio. healer. tSUA 253) $699 'M J\IONZA 4 Door 140 HP. 4 1peed. I owner. ena: l. body rood. 36,£XX> mi. Bucket a:eatli. $44~. 67~7. '63 Corvair Spyder • rood condition. 4 1pd, MLllt stlll Ever;. 642--6832 1963 Corvair t.tonu, &oocl cond, $450. DODGE '70 ~r • Loaded! sell. $265(). 67>-3369 :i.lust 1968 DODGE van V-8, auto, l'l!l.l'J>l!I & ~ling. Excel. n950. Firm. M0-2971 1960 DODGE 9 pus \Vag. Good cond. $150. Call Sttve btv:n 9-a, ,,·ork ph. 548-2288 FORD '62 FORD WAGON Auto .. R&M . (~tDE037J ~299 LINCOLN '69 rord Torino GT. A·l con· I :&.i UNCO~ Oocall. Nrw d.1Hoo. 351 cu tn., auto trani;. brakes, fd. titts, loll mi"1. au-, pis, p/'o, ndio. Best I lt>!t in thlJ; classic model o!fer O\'f'r $1900. ~ or i All pllT .• leatMr int., air. 879-4651 Any rtas. otter to right PIY· '67 FORD Mw:ta.n& 300 ll'll.h 4 for u.le by owntr. Aak 1or 1pecd, Custom chromt i1hls. J Catherine. &M-1 133 Larvost S.loctlan OF 1.UXURIOUS .,....,. ,.,,...,, ...... .,,. CORVAIR SALE OR TRACE I~ .. 642-7578 • CORYmE e 1960 DODGE .- Wi!I .. • • 545-6774 YATES Sl350 or best of1t>r. 962-4730 I '6.l CONTINENTAL 4 dr., JAVELIN A/C .. all t:tlra.s, new tlrts. Excel. condition. $ J O 5 0 . JAVELL'I 1970 ssr. Air, -'6#-"-UOS==~==c:---1 CADIWCS in On"I" County 1963 thrv 1970's ~ """""""" """" 2600 HARBOR BL., 1961 °"•· ' "'· rmp&1• 283 1-,6-1 -CO-RY_A.,....IR_W..,..AG""O""N «'I'!&-· Auto • Po'At>r -MH - 'fair nibb • Nt'll" ban. $200. or 1111~ for P U tJ"UCk. pink tor pink. 645.21'1 aft 6 PM. 01 Sat It Sun. '69 CAPRICE 2-dr hrdtp, Full J!Oll'f'r. Air, Ta~. Cltan. 36.00:'.I ml'5, $2575 r.P. 6#-l670 or 615--n82 Auio., R&H. tCJC94~) $199 ...... YATES 32852 Va.Ile Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 493--4511/ 499-2'l61 ,.., CORVE.TI'E ENG ""· FORD '''" Vall• .... clutch, Be.U Housi.nz Muncie I '.'::~".:':'.':"::------San J uan Capistrano 4 A]'Jd. Complete. Perfect 1963 FORD atatton wagon. 837~800/493-4511/4£1'3.2261 1 ~f"-nd~IU_•_n_$400 __ ._ .. _,...., ___ .1 Country Squire - Air cond, '68 FORD CORVE'ITE '67 Sl iver new titts &: Pl.int. $595 or STATION WAGON .Futback. 4-.t.pcl, 327/350 make offer. Pvt PI Y · faetory a ir. automatic trans. I hp, Air, AM/FM, pwr 962-5ll6 b k power steenng, powtr ra . PIS, whil•/l.ondau. 11.800 MERCURY miles. Owntr. $ 2 8 SO, 897-f.tll 1--------- 1970 J,.•lin ssr. 360 cu '"· BILL BARRY air'"{."Ond, tape deck. radials. ~1287 or 531-3028. JEEPS PON'TlAC-G~C-FIAT '66 MERCURY COLONY PARK windows. Xlnt cond. Pvt e '71 LTD 4-dr. Pl•. P/b, Good J93BND 12300 en.I .... ~ ~-es. cond. V-8 FORD Jtep 289 'o\'i lh 4. COSTA ?.1ESA 51().91()() Open sunda,y ·a; OiEV Caprice v.'QOn. 1:.:cccc=-~~~~7-,=c"-I fUlly equ.ip'd. \VholeM.ie or '66 CADILLAC m.i.. ..... ..,_,.,, _ YATES 328.l2 Valle Road e '63 CORY AIR BUS, New tiNis. Clean. Extru. $400. Aft 4 pm: 8J5..3870 DCr'"T JUST WISH tor pty. · O'fO'-\U;J,) P/windows, auto, air, Jan. . $1995 ·57 Corvette Classic 283, Dual dau top. 1800 local mi. New spd., new shock!;, king pins. 4 barrels, 275 HP, Body 3 mo l!.l'J. 548-Z70S. M•c How•rd le•sing carp'!, 1oteer bo:t. Runs quiet I 968-~" I "°.--=7-.,,-~-~--. \Corner 1st & Harbor) &. good. Grez 536-4669. party reslored. ...,.,., '67 Ford Squ~. Original 839.9600 531-0607 Santa Ana 1 --=-~L~l'°N'"c~o=L'"N.--- Radio. heater. pwr strerin&. auto trarui. 1RUG60l) A lot or v.·aion. SPECIAL Sl 195 Over 135 N~ &. Used Cars To Choo~ Frem OPEN TILL 10 P~1 • '66 VETTE * owner, Xlnt .... ond. e I?vt~IAC COND e * 646-6006 * '&I FALCON coupe. 6 cy\, Coupe D• Ville Th.ii aorpous luxury car hu CHRYSLER '1most all of CadUl1c"1 fam·l---------o-. oua pov.·er fea.11.l.rea and lJ 1968 300 Convrrt. Air. 23,<n> JU&t rtady to go (VDV144) mi. 1 ownt:r. 129)) will take $1288 "'"'· 66-l395. San Juan Capistnno &17-4800/ t93-4511/ t9S-l261 DAILY PILOT for .Ction! Call &ll-5678 & Save! furnl&hJnp tor your home, find ,reat buys in tcirlay'a Oualfted Ads. Rtll. Good mi'1, $675. 892-0087 aft 5 & "'knds '61 FORD ECONOLINE 675-3853 alt4 pm. HOUSE HuntJ.ni:? \Vatch the VAN, $600. "r~~ ... ---~~~., ~o ~=.-OPEN HOUSE oolumn. * 5-49-4)70 aft Spm * or t results! .............,, '70 ?\tARK Ill, bro"'" 1 .... ·hile I 2000 E. ht SI.. Santa Ana top, uddle interior, 500'.l (1.st St. at S.A. rr....')'.) miles. 673-6813 558-l{XX) COURTESY DOOGE 2888 Harbor Blvd. Coista M.!sa S.,"1-9220 '69 CADILLAC Coupe ~ Ville. Full power, f&etory a ir, automatic door locks, etc. Gold with black landau. 06lAGC $4395 Mic Howard Leasing (Comer ht & Harborl !39-9600 Santa Ana '69 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, 24,COO mi'1, Pvt owner. Full power & air + AMIP'M 1ttte0, vinyl root. lea.tber inter., tilt wbttl, p::nr.'U door locks, Perfttt oond. 64~2182 '62 Cad. Sharp. Ste at Hunt· ineton Valley Arntt. Oil Sta.. Hon. 17t72 Beach Blvd, HB.. $550 or best ofttr. M7-93i5 er 8t!·266.f. 197D El Dorado-Owner leav- illl state-MUST SELL ! Silvtr Grey w/wht int. 17,IKXI mi. Loaded! Mint oond . Best oUer over $5000. 642-3121 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE 'f\\o'O TO OiOOSE 9 t : '10 Both have Ml pow· er &. factory air, lifht sen- tinal, door locks, tilt le tele~ toope. A.\l/F)1 steno. leath· rr interior, l&ndau top, fac- toey warranty. Priced for quick We. Mac Howard Leasing (C.Orner lst & Harbor) J39.9Ql) 531...()6()7 Santa ·Ana '62: CAD. Sedan de Ville Full ~-er, $500. Even ln 1 : 5'8-2318 CAD n Coupe De Ville fl'.lr sale or take owr lel!l.54!. * 673-3621 * CA MARO 1968 CAMARO. 1 owner, low Blutbook. ~lust 1oell. 6 cyl. R/H, power, auto. ~3634. CHEVROLET '67 EL CAMINO 4 ~pd ., 396 engine, mags. 1Q75046) $1499 YATES 328.52 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano &TI-4800/493-45111499·22fi1 19&& CHEV K i n11wood 11)..pa.ss &tation ,.,.,n. Gold in color, wlblk int. Fully load- ed. Luua1e rack, P/s, Plb, air, radio w I ~ar spkr, 3rd seat, auto t1"ans, ~ eng, 4 barrel carh + many extra1. titust see to believe. $269j. Pvl pt)'. Ph ~l~ or .>l~n3 '69 CHEV. IMPALA Coupe. Automatic, pov.-er 11eering, poy,·er brai<es, lac. tory air. low mileare one owner. Sale priced. Will finanee or trade. ZDV20t Mee Howard L•asing (Corner lat & Harborl SJS.9600 ~l-0607 S.nta Ana • '63 Chevy Impala Fae a.Ir, Pih, PIS, V8 VERY CLE.Ai'l * S8X1 * &M>-lWI * '69 lrlalibu Chewlle 2 dr, Landau lop, auto trans, au-, pis. vin 1eats. On1. 0....-nr. im:i. 833-~nos. '65 IMPALA, 327, PIS. PfB. A.C, RIK, New radiator &: water p.1mp. ~.019~ M OIEV. NOVA XI.NT CONDITIOS! $450 * .. s-15-3737 '63 Chevy t-pua wacon·R&.H, cw;tom wh.la. $350. Cell 897-4981 '66 IMP.A.1.4 2--dr hrdtp, ALI". Good cond. sm. •642--1005*" '69 O{EVY Vaii. new Sundial Ca.mptr. Low mUts. $ll00. or makt otJer. 673-flM '69 VAN V_., auto. Stereo tapl!, pe.ntlltd, new tirtl. 12195. '642- 980 Autos, New 980 Auto1, New 980 Autos, New 980 ' Autos, New 980 I Auto1, New BAUER BUICI{ IN COSTA MESA ''SPECIALIZING IN UALITY'' BRAND NEW 13193744561 READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY • LARGEST SELECTION ALL MODELS-COLORS-EQUIPMENT OPTIONS AVAILABLE BUICK ESTATE WAGONS!! i ! ! FINALLY WE HAVE NEW 1971 6 and 9 PASSENGER-ALL FULLY EQUIPPED AND ALL ARE AIR CONDITIONED. ALL COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM: . PRESTIGE CAR SPECIALS Coupe DeVJne Red with white roof and leet her interior. Full pow. er •nd f•ctory e ir c.ondi. tioning, AM-FM radio, tilt.tele1coplc wheel. Re- ma ining factory w1rr•nty on over 25,000 miles. IZC P432 1 QaAUIRS,_ Cu&tom 2 Dr. H.T. Autom•tic, radio, he1ter, power steering a nd brake1, factory 1ir, vinyl roof. Over 25,000 mil ei of fac· tory warr1nty leff. Be•u· tiful c er. l665APR) RIVIERA Full power a nd f•c+ory e ir c.onditionin9, AM-FM stereo radio. Silver 9rey with bl"ck interior and blac.k vinyl roof. Factory werr•nty 4'V1ilable. I YSG ~ 16 1 LIMITED 4 DR. H.T. Ch1rcoal e .. terior bl•ck interior & vinyl roof, full power, f1ctory 1ir c onditioning, AM.FM 1fereo radio, cruise con. trol, power trunk lock, warranty aveil•ble. I VVM 843 I CUSTOM SPORT ROOF VS e n g i n • , 1utom1tic tra nsmi1sion, power steer. ing, powar brakes, fac· tory a ir conditioning, vinyl roof . Gold with mafchin9 inferior end fop. Fectory warr•nty ava il•ble. ! 662 ASQ I BUICK.IN COSTA MESA BVICK·OPEL·JAGVAH 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa "Sl'ECIALIZING IN QUfd,ITY" 5 4 8-7 7 6 5 WE LEASE CARS • 2 + 2 Autom1tic tren1mission, •ir condifionin9, chroma wira w h e e I s , loca lly owned. Sold a nd serviced by us . Beautiful black & fan. Very low mileage 9•1rt. f9468EJI • .. FrldJY, ~prll 30, 1971 DAILY PILOT 45 J§]1 ~1 _ •• .,_ •• ;,_""~!§] I ·.,, ...... ]§! I_._ ..... _ ..... _. 1~11 ~ _.,.._ .... _ .. ,·~!§] ;;-[ ;;; •. _ .. _···.·_"·-·~!§1_1 ,I _· _ ..... _ .. _ .. ,·_1 §:_1 ~1 _ •• _ ..... _ ... ~l~iiii:I BILL BARRY BILL BARRY Autos, u,.i · ·' 1~ '"° Autos, UIOd 990 l•,6•7 •RA•M•BL•ER•W•AG•o"'K1 RAM.BLER ~ONTIAC __ P_o_N_n_A_c __ ·•.utomaue. power ,, .. n.c.r"'6,...4_RA..,.M""8'""l£,..R-W""A"'"GO""N '69 PONTIAC '69 2--0r HT LeMans. Hia"her radio, beater. (WBJ 952) ' [ ~"bSMo ]§] [ Autos, UMCI Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used MUSTANG STUDEBAKER T·BIRD . POrJTlAC-GMC-FlAT PONTJAC-GMC-Fl AT ' o-PONTIA<; ' '67 MUSTANG '61 T-BIRD V8. J.,.s, T "'hi'el, 11lr cond., LE MANS '69 PONTIAC' BONNEVILL E 2 OR. Air cond., auto trans., radio, heater. vinyl top, Jo\v 1niJe. age, (486AUJJ GRAND PRIX mil"&•, beaut """"· .toaded $999 wteve r yt hinr. n895. 557-4686 days; 644-0714 F'uU po\11er •• factory nlr con- dition, AM/F!\1 stereo J'a· dio, padded top. Lots o! fa c- tory warranty. XTRA NICE Wil! finance YOU675 R & 'H, (TGX842J '299 .,, 194& STUDEBA KE R COMMANDOR, 4~r. 6 stick. Stored 18 Years, 15.COO orig miles. Wke New In & out. $650 or Trade. 645-4687 Factory air condltloblfll. Me- chanicall_y excellent. Ue. IGN 137 Stet't'<I, I l lop <>llV(' l'QIOJ' H. I l I 1-'ull 111•11.,. $1.17:, il 'TS671 ; ~u Q, ieater. \' nyl toµ, ar Barwiclt I J"•' , l-Ol ., aulo !runs bucket n1puris, ! "" ~. It'll. s. IZSZAPT) ' eves. 1970 GTO, 455 cu. in., 4 spd. All performance equipped. $279S. For more in!Q call 64&.4665 after 4 & wknds. $395 CoasJ H wy .. ·~'-~'" "'"1" s ECIAL $2795 ~Jl or .f!H-!1101 SPECIAL $2499 Over ll> New & Used Cars TO CHOOSE FR0:-01 Opt>n .tiU 10 p.ni. T·BIRD Harbor American ,4/. 0161 '65, RI H, 'P1s-:-·1S~t~-... ~r. 0\'('r ~ Ne~ & Used Car!! needi; minor brnh work + TO CHOOSE FRO~! Mac Howard Leaslf!9 ICol'tlt'r \st & }{arbor), 839-9600 531-0607 &anta Ana '69 firebird, overhead cam 6, 3 spd, Rill. nt'w tires, xlnt cond. $1900. Owner £4&.-5346 Dime-A-Line 642-5678 Autos, New YATES GOOD BUY 196'1 l-IJ\RBOll CO$TA ME~A pai11t. SJO + lak~ l)lQ'. $"6 Oi~n Till W p.m. mo, 11 lf'fl. Tina &M-1007 20001' •. lstSl.,SantaAna 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana C1't St. & S.A. FrwyJ 558.JOOo RAMBLER YATES '55 T ·Bird, Need! some lx>dy work. 1 owner 675-2697. '55 T-BIRO, n blt eng. Body restored. New orig. interior. lmmac. 8J9..8'984 32852 Valle Road arzyl11111• I lst St. al S.A. Frwy.) '63 An1basliadol' v.·agon-V8, auto, Ps/Pb, r&h. X!nt cond. S-125. 644-4384 San Juan C;1pis!rano 32852 Valle Road T-BIRO '55. Clean. 20,000 mi MU~J ~~u 'ti!! l\1u,;1 ane GT ~'58-1000 837-4800/493--4511/499-2'261 San Juan Capistrano on eng & trans. $2100 firm. 1964 T-BIRD FAlR-SHAPE. M&$16 Lln1r ~ol1t F~tbk :; :, l _ DAJLY PILOT for action~ I \Ve'll help you liell! 642-567!_ 4V /au10/P.~/Ph d I s rs . A N 80 N 980 am/fn1 sri·i" tf.lti--tiJ91 wkn•J utos, ~w 9 , Autos, ew \\'e'U help you scll! 642-5678 8314800/~-45ll/499-2261 540-2560-M 675'-4fi.45 Autos, New 980 l Autos, New 980 I Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 980 Autos, New 980 or aft Ii '65 Mustang fa:stback, pv.·r ~lrg. disk brks, VB au1orl'. Good rond. 4!»--760j '65 M•1st11.ng ~9. Low milf"., xlnt rond. $!!50 or best offrr 968-6219 * 1967 MUSTANG * $1150, ·192-9747 S,C. OLDSMOBILE '61 OLDS WAGON Auto., R&.H. (8 DS102) $1 99 YATES 32852 v alle Road San J uan Capistraoo &17-48001493-4511/ 49S-2261 '67 DELTA '88' Full power. Air CondiLioning. dlr. TID'087. ~fust sell, '\!ill take trade or tinan<'e. Call 494-n«. '65 OLDS Cutlats 442. gray sports coupe, clean and in top running condition, po1ver steering, air, bucket seats, black interior. $675. 495-5696 alter 5:30 p.m. '69 SILVER Olds Vista Cruiser, air, all pwr. Like new, lo mi's, $3250. Call 642-9-160 Y.'kdays. 66 Vista Cruiser-Lo Ml, good cond, air, 9 pass. Luuage rack !WfrTI68 PLYMOUTH '64 PLYMOUTH WGN. Au to., R&H. (0Rfti86) $299 YATES 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 493-45ll/ 499-2261 1962 Plymouth station v.•agon. New tires & brakes. $295. 646-fi972 '56 PLY nIOUTH Suburban Station \\lagon, Xlnt cond. * 646-1773 • '47 PLY~10UTII. Good con- dition. Needs brakes, $250. 646-6979 PONTIAC BILL BARRY PGNTIAC-G':C-FIAT New '71 Ventura II FUU.Y FACTORY EQUIPPED \\1226405 SALE $2288 $299 DN . $63.80 MO. $299 is the tot A1 do\\'Tl pay- ment $63.80 is the 1 o 1 a I monthly payment including tax, license and finance charges on approved c:t'l'dil tor 36 mon ths. The cash price including tax & license i!I $2447.40. Defe~ priC't' 111 $2595.80 lncludlng tnx. llctnae &. tinance charge, Annual percentage r a t e 9.31%. OVER 13.5 NE\\1 & USED CARS TO QIOOSE i;'RO~t OPEN 'TIL 10 P~t 2000 E. lst St., Santa Ana (1st St a! S.A, f"N')'. l 558-lCOO '66 PONTIAC WAGON Auto., R&H, PS, Air. (X\VY- 863J. $9'9 YATES 32853 Vnllc RMd San .luRn C11pl1trann 837-4800/493-t~l I· 499-2261 "THE JUDGE" 1969 GTO Good cond. $2'JOO. C&ll afltr ~. 8.1>-SJOS '64 BONNEVu,.LE Sia \\'an. Very cll!&n. t.'195. • 49.1-331 4 • Turn unUlfld Item• Into quick Cllh, call 6').$11 BIG DEALERS HAVE BIG sTocKs BETTER · s·ELECTION GREATER BARGAINS 100°/o DEALER 30 DAY GUARANTEE PARTS & LABOR No Exclusions. '70 ·CAfRICE 2 Dr. er.. 17,.,000 n1iles. Vln:tl roq, tilt Wheel, Al\t- ' FM stereo. P.S., auto., needs careful o~·ncr. (605- AGC) $3399 '70 PLYMOUTH Suburban 6 pass. wagon. factory 'varranl,)', P.S., au- to., air cond., radio, (37 1- ADHI $3499 70 Monte Carlo 2 Dr. Cpe. 350 cu. in .. vinyl roof, gorgeous. Air, rRdin, auto. New rubber. Only one. (146AGK) $3699 '69 NOVA 4 Dr. Seel. 6 cyl., radio, P.S., auto. Beautiful fresh Ill'\\' car trade in. Factory v.·ar- ranty too. {849CPEl $2099 4 Dr. Seci. Radio, auto., 6, P.S .. Isn't quality more im- portant than price. {35(). ASQJ '69 IMPALA 4 Dr. Scd. Beauti!uJ blue car hali auto., P.S., radio. Che~p. (Y0S542) $2299 '69 MALIBU Spt. Cpe. 2 Dr. H.T. Radio, auto., P.S., vinyl roof. (P2359) 2 Or. H.T. ~t a ~·inner. Vinyl roof, air rond., P.S., radio, low mill'S. Last time around 50,000 mi. warranty. !883ACD) $2999 "67 CONTINENTAL 2 Or. H.T. Nev.• color, vinyl roof, in exC<'llent cond. Elec. seats • windows -air cond .. radio, P.S. Has to be' the most beautiful. I P2350l $2699 '69 CAMARO 2 Or. H.T. P.S., auto., radio jcar sold n<""" hrre, 100% dealer guarantN:.) (YCf\1- 831) 2 Dr. H.T. VS, 350 <'U. in. Air cond., radio, P.S., <'US- ton1 inter. Low mileage. 1st. ownf'r factory privileges. 1317AZVI $3099 '69 JAVELIN 2 Dr. li.T. 12,000 mile c•r his auto .. P.S., Ml.dlo, 1mall VS <'ng. ln imptceabl,. con- dition. t449BBJI $2099 '68 NOVA 4 Dr. SN!. V8, auto., P.S .. radio. Ready for thl, figure. (VSR5661 4 Dr. H.T. Air, P.S., auto., radio, 14.624 miles. Last time around 50,000 ml. war- rnty. {349ASAJ $2999 '68 OLDS 442 2 Dr. Cpc. 22,158 miles. ra- dio, 4 Ii~ and it's cheap. <956CUCJ $1199 '68 CAMARO 2 Dt. H.T. Cpe. Radio, auto., r.s .. 6 cyJ.r rls::h t car, right price. (WIE352J . 2 Dr. H.T. Spt. Cpe. 13,&0Q miles. Fresh car. Careful miles. Auto., P.S., radlo. lit owner factory warranty. (7021 . $2799 '66 ELECTRA 225 Buick 4 Dr. Sed. Perfectly beautiful car, vinyl roof, elec. seats &: windows. P.S .. air cond. Dead sharp. (RPR· 616) $1899 '68 CAMARO 2 Dr. H.T. Radio, stick shift, 6 cylinder, Sure a nice car. (ZVE930) WAG ·ONS -WAGONS -WAGONS '70 FORD 10 PASS. Cntry. Sed. Radio. P.S., Rulo .. air. Right ('ftr, right miles. ( 134- AGCI $3999 '70 FORD LTD Ford's fin~l wal>":on. A.M-F~I stereo, auto., 12,()((1 mlle1, air, P.S., P-windows. You shouJd see. (989AVB) $389..9 '66 CHEVY II WAGON 6 cyl., 47,000 ml. Air, auto., radio. J\.ly, my how Jong has it been since we've had one of these so nice. (SBC744) $1399 '68 FORD 6 PASS, Fairlane 'vagon. Auto., P.S., radio, air conditioning. Strong. (81795A) '67 FORD 9 PASS. Cntry. Sed. Auto., VS, rad.lo, P.S., bargain-bargain. (P2343l $1499 '67 OLDS 10 PASS. Vista Cruiser, VS. P.S .. auto., air. fresh new color and pretty. (P2365J '69 CHEVY 6 PASS. Bel Air 1\·agon. V8, radio, auto .. P.S., air cond. New color. dead sharp. \P236J; $2899 '66 SKYLARK WAGON Buick 6 pass. Auto., radio, P.S., air rond .. bargain. (292CQT) SPECIAL TRUCKS TRUCKS-EL CAMINOS 1964 FORD 2 TON '70 FDRD z1;, TON F..00. Ttvck w/t lo-c;, 2 11)(1, r11r tdes. F..00 VI trvck, 1'1 wD, lla1 11 II. alum. ~ spff<I !ral\S., ha1 16 II, olum. v•n v1n wltld• do<>rt, solid sHdln11 '"' -Y w/!<llld r"' doort. H'(Graullc UDO doors, IJOG 111. !Old• 1111, hydraulic 1111 Ill. light mr 11111. Hid 1Jrpart c1rt~1 •II•, ' 11)ffd Irani., 1lec. 2 speed '"' 1111 wlll.000 milts. N'w COIOr. G1,;9r1r1-1111, 12,000 mllll. HIQll rubt"'· Hurry, reto'l JO d•Y 1>1<'11 & l•bcr, ccnol!lo!I. !llt4C! (5'62211) $2399 $5500 VANS -VANS 3-New Sundial Camper Conversions-3 rives like • station wagon -built in campe r -sleep-eat leasure car tool '68 CHEY. y, TON VAN V8, stick, 4 spef!d, new rubber, 11r1\' l'ar condition, color too. (85300Al $3499 'H CHEVY V1 TON VAN Au to .. radio. nev" rubber, 24.- 000 miles. Has sun dials d!x. trim inter .. \\'hlfe or 1\111 paint to n1atch elile interior. 1P2375J $3799 '63 CHEVY 'I• TON Auto., VS, gorgeous thing w/ ma.tchini:: inter. Sure perfect for that trip or vocation. (163- 69[) $3699 '69 DODCOE SPORT VAN 8 paSJl('nger. Rod\o and auto- matic transmission, IUPS376J $2699 '57 CHEVY :V. TON $1099 '61 FORD '/2 TON E•celi.n1 cond. 6, 1t!c~. r.Olo. !•!IBSW) $699 "64 FORD '/• TON Shl!rp, EJ!ra good cof'ICI. R•dlo. ~ •Pied canwe• •~•II. 4G2'5tt> $1299 '57 INTE RNATIONAL 'h !an. 51ock. 6 cyl, •lvt.t 1ruck, ••· ctlltrl! e<il'ICI. fJl7U.) $599 '64 FORD 1;, TON Pk~up. Sharplt . ll:adlo, eulO., VI, (P,1· ,., $1199 '66 FORD •;, TON H.O. c1mp1ir 11<1. Cult, 'eb, 6. ' 11X1., rldlo. e<i..,. iM. !UJf7'Tl $1599 '67 CHEVY V2 TON Pldo:up. I cyl., t!IO;, radlO, •h•rp. (V.OlllJ) $1699 '67 CH EVY :y, TON Pl(tcup, I cvL. 11tc-. H.0 , c•mPtr l'Qulp. IUSl'UOI 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • '66 CHEVY :V. TON R11!10, •uto, llr. Camper e<1. 1111 rl!lht o~•. (US-11151 $1799 '68 CH EVY V2 TON Plc~uP. Radio, P.S, •uro, (P21&!! $2199 '69 CH EVY V2 TON SllPtidl plck\IP. Auto .• , .. , . •Ir. ' NOC1. $2599 '69 CHEVY :V. TON Plck111>. 6 cyl., 1llc• 1til!I, (11U01 $2599 '69 CHE VY :y, TON VI, lllc;ll, l)(ltll!ng n fct•. (16':16F) $2699 "61 FORD RANCHERD llo~• Ilk• • g~m A~To_. rldk>. (HTOI06) $399 El CAMINOS '64 EL CAM INO vi, r1dlo, •uto., 1rroiit. (NUWl $899 '67 EL CAMINO VI, eulo., P.S .. ~~w color, rldlo, {QMlD) $1699 l '69 C"EYY CONCOURS Chevelle 6 pass. Our most beauti- ful car has radln, P.S .. auto., air. Nice 'vagon. <ZBS896) $2999 '68 PLYMOUTH 6 PASS. Sal('llite spt. 1vagon. Air, P.S .. auto., rad.Jo, Best buy this week. tVSAJllJ '68 IMPALA 6 PASS. \Vagon. V8, auto., P.S., radio. Priced right. (WXE343} $1999 '70 CHEVY CONCOURS Chevelle 9 pass. P.S., auto., radio. low, low miles. Uke showroom fresh. i 160ACG I WANT TO BUY A . BARGAIN? '67 CHEVY 2 DR . $1199 '64 CORVAIR 2 Or. CPt. $Tick, r101o. IOP'wl111 $499 '63 COR)IA i R i Or. Au!c., ••53 99J~ll '70 MUSTANG ' 111, ~ 1~, rlCllo, PJi., M1dl I J Ot. CPI. 062AKIC) 52399 I~~ '68 MUS TANG 2+2 Fl llbtck, P.S., 11110., r•nlo, •Ir. IXOZ9") $15~9· . '67 MUSTANG 2 Or. C.Pt . .Auto., r8dl0. •Ir, fTll:IUl2) $1499 '65 MUSTANG '"··' cvi .. •!l(k, IJKW2l0) $699 '66 MUSTANG 2 or. (Of!, Auto., P.S .. ••dlO. IA:IN5'-I) $1199 '66 FORD GALAXIE • '65 CONTINENTAL ' Or. 111.H, P.S .. 1!r. P..tHh I. "ll'ldoWI, (HOZ-4ft) $799 '66 GRAND PRIX Co.. Au«>.. R&H, 1lr, IHIJ. !TEZ~97) $999 '65 PONT IAC CPE . VI, radio, P.S., 3 •Pttd, (J:l,ll!K) $799 '68 OPEL KADETTE Ci>e. ~ sl'ftd, radio. (X5Rta~J $699 '65 BUICK Wlldc1r 2 Or., H,T., :>.s .. •ldlO, P.w~ naw1, •Ir. (0Xl816) $999 '66 OLDS CUTLASS Cpe, Auto .. P.S .. rtctlo. (JI PM"'l $899 '64 BUIC K 4 DR Std. ll:ldlo, P.S., Iulo., llr, (JllPD4J $499 '62 CADILLAC (pe, Aj,/lo., P.5., P·Hl'1 .. Wlr.dGWI, t !r, (WEEUn $499 '67 DODGE CHARGER 2 Or. CPt, ll;ldlo, P.S., VI. IUNC1Ml $999 , • • ·- I ' Bainess Is Good. At T"faeodore RolJins fi'ordl Tlae Reason Is Simple , . . ' TIME m_ THIS w·E·E.KEND PU~SUSON • CAMPER SAlE -ONLY- Time M-.a&IM QUlillty· o..t ... Aw.4 fw 1'71 BRAND NEW CAMPER, IN FACTORY EVERY NEW 1970 $75 OVER .. TfiRODOl.I ltOllNI JI. 1971 THUNDERBIRDS STOCK SLASHED TO, INVOICE IMJOY CA11Nu SU.MMll DIMMGI GUI $.l.. llllCMOSlJC . COOER Gi"' your car owr· 130 vit1l • 18 ST~CI TO CHOOSE FROM . ., ' •, II• SILICrtON -MO AIDID DU.Lii CHAl•U W• 1rt tht Or•rtiti CMty ltt.w ca .. Dultn ,.,. IJ Dwalf• Carn,.,..1 . . RENT A CAMPER mts for rolt.bllity, porformonco .Jt'.995 ·Ind uf•ty, in Just 30 mlnutU. "'"71 Pull written report 11 incf.u4eil -~,, PllCI lo I .• --~---~·· r on y . . , . . . _ i' :\•-:-. \• -. -·. JUU. ~(). ~!.~MICK~O ADD ONS-NO ORDERS ·, RISHVI JODAY FOi ASSURED DATES. .. NEW ~ ; ! ~ -TORIRG· ~i~ FORD -'71 New .. Dr. $eda_n ·. ' SAVE NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brough. SAVE 351 V-8. AT., blt tues, P.S., P~ca. . . , H.T. 429 VS. vinyl root, crulso., WSW, , m, rad, T·il .... whl ovn, bdy mould'. t6os• vi'-gcp .. P.S . ._ dlx .. '"· whl., P·•tn., $1100 inc. etc. (103052) •39 ·~ f. P-dr. Jocks, air, .al.l~J!mp. control, . '\ ,.1 , AM-FM, P.W. etc. (uor08). •455 W•lfh, $40IL2S o., P'rke S~j h W-Stkr. $6041 Ow rriC. $4941 New 2 Dr. Hdtp. llrough. s• vE NEW LTD SQUIRE SAVE 351 VS. A-T, bit tires, ""*5· 111' Prfi,.,, ~ · . 1 .. 6 pass. wagon. 429 VB, Cruis~., WSW, . P-di"", ale, rad, whl cvn, <to (124· $68162 v;, . .,-p., P.S., dJx. •ack, au-''""'·· $1101"" 356) •236 · AM·FM, H.D. slJlp., d1x. whl. covers. UV . . (14234). •862 W·Stllr. S442J.2S O.r Price 53741.71 W-stkr. $5785 Our Price $4614 . . New 4 Dr. Sedan . SAVE va cruoo, WSW. Ylit!·"llo"~P.S, ~· P .B., air, rear wind~n .• -T • • tllil glass, whL covers.·( '4Zt .ti : (.. W·Sttr. $4031.21 011r l'rtc. $3431 .21 ' New 2 Dr. Hardtop SA VE V8, crubo., WSW. P.S., P.B.. ·m, ''" $6Q' 1 .. dio, tinted alass. wheel covers. (161· U9 598). •f98 • I . • W·Stllr. S4116 °''Price $3514.42 NEW RANCMERO N~~ ,!.l_!, ~w~~.;.,H!!!: and SAVE wind°"'.,· a.Jr, elec. defrost, AM-FM ... ,72°° Vis. grp. W/W, Tint. glus, whl. cvrs. , {100017), •660 I w .,111,. $5267 Oow l'rk:• $42'5 · NEW GALAXIE soo s· AVE. · 2 Dr. Hd Tp. 400 v..s_ V~l rt .. J./T, • PM-. Su. and """"' m, ,...o, whl. $92300 cvrs., tinl glus, elec. deloga:er. (0001~). •661 w .. tkr. $4922 Our Prlc• $3Ht ·., "-~~ BRONCO NEW BRONCO WAGON SAYE NEW MUSTANG '71 EW MACH I SAVE 429 VB, AJT, Sport.A inter., c::onven· lence grp., pwr. steer., brakes, win-$90 OO dows, a.ir cond., tilt whl, Spt. deck. 1 elec. detrosL, A.M:FM..... console, tint. '1au. (10CKfi9) ·~ . w ........ $555' Our Price $46.51 ... . tfEW 2 DR. Sl'TS'. ROOF 'SA VE 3-'l V-8, hi bkl, bit ti"• A·T, P· $57651 1teer., P~ radio, dee. &rP·· T· '1iw. wbl cvra. etc. (131869) •375 , w ........ $lf11.25 Our~·· $l334.74 ' ' N~ •. 2,;.~.~p~!. ~"~!~~: SAVE hit titt<. tilt,,,., .. A·T, AM·FM, con· $750' 16 1ole. P-window1, 11pt whl. cvrs~ T· . glas.s etc. {102430) •31 w .. rtc... $4784.75 Our Prlco $4034.5' · · NEW MACH I SAY( 351-4V, auto. tranl.., rad, pwr. 1tr .. A: $ •oo dlse brks., 1pt&. Int~ .. wide ovall A 701 more. (100060) e665 ~ , w .. rtc... $444f.OO Our l'rico $l74t.OO N~ Fl 00 PICKUP N.E.W f;.UIO .. STYLE$1DE . SAVE , . NEW 1971 ' . . .. . ,..., ..... .-4 ........ c.c. -.... - ...... ,, ,,,,, ............ , ...... 111-lewl ... ~ .,, .............. ....._ •.... , . ..-... ..,..... ..,,., ~ pMI. -.......... ,,.., • -· p.u.4 \'fief a ~ l.aiet ....... c.i.... .... ., """5-°"* ,.., A t.nit.E BIGGER •• ', • • • FOR A LITTLE MORE 1• M·AYERICK ; OlS.1-4 DIS.-..:.U.llllS--Y.IS • af ( I NEW '1971 FORD F-250 S'AVE EmiPJon <X>ntn>l .,....., E7Xl4 th-tt, $68388 AM radio. {119131). W-$3H6.12 Our l'rlco $2712.M vs, Spt. Pkg .. conv . .,..., H.D. Rad!•· $67123 tor, aux.. tuel tank. Stlc. •076,4 (700121 w .. rtc... $4522.44 Our Prloo $3151 .21 P.U. ,,_ cyl •nr.• S..pd., radio, $ 97 tint. glass, H.D. 'Rear Sp .. pages, ci&. 643 lighter. Stk. •T63 (2638). W•ltkr. PJl.t7 Our Price $2'fS.ot ~ ~per special Sport ~tom cab, • 1 • ~~.~:=';;; ~ $96531 VS. radio, extra gas tank. e 16, motor •2158. Ret•ll $41U.11-&aihl PU7.71 NEW -RANCHERO soo . ·sn• NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE NEW F-TOO CUSTOM SAVE S'i)'lald.!. V8 eng., Ranger pkg, x.lt, · NEW ~250 CUSTOM 5ay1 3:51 VS. cruisomatic, vis. lf'OUp. P.S .. $ ~ - ...... r -_ .. dio. tlnC -·a1ra .. • H.D. susp. (WMS). 00 . W-$4284.06 Our P•lco $ll'5.43 · VS, bucket its., tract!on lock R-axl!!, $70616 Ltd. llip...front ult'!. Spt. pkg., awt. fuel tank, radio, frff runninr hubs. Stk. •T20CH80l41 "'4tlir. $46I0.2J Our l'rlco $lt7J.46 omp • oil ·gaugn . tool "°"' crullo-$95389 made::, opt vacuum booster, AM-FM atl'!?'l'!O, P.S., G78x15 tires, etc. (0651 ). w ....... $4150.20 Our Price Pn6.ll • DI"' 2 tone, 360 VB, ranier pk(., cm~ ... , opec, cruloo., P·Dhco, m, AM. I 091 DO 1tet'IO, P.S., Z pl tank. IJIU'e titt. (809Sl). Stk. •TIS. W""" $1415.'7 Our Price $4324.t7 10 to choose from. 165 thru '70 mod1l1. Coupes, hardtops, C0'1Yertible and 2 + 2 F1stbilck1. Son'MI: with 4 1peed1, •Ito 1ir conditioning ind •utometic: models with power 1t11rlng. · EXAMPLE: 1967 MIJ~TANG HARDTOP &ood mil••· rttHo, hHt.r, ftclory,.qlfAPt;d• ITWA715) Sp•ci•l wh••'• OUR PRICE ·51096 • '70 MUSTANG H.T. $2696 '68 Y.W. SUNllOOF $1096 Loaded. vs. s uto., P.S. Ra~ and heater. R&:H, fact. air, \varr. 11.vail· IX P307f ·able. Low mlles. t621AVPI '67 PLYMOUTH $996 Spt. Fury 2 dr. H.T. VS. auto., R&H, P.S., vinyl roof, good miles. IWCR8901 ' '1296 '69 Y.W. JUG ~~uipp<d. m1 es. (XWZ86l l SALES . DEPT. HOURS ' ,. '6' FALCON SID. $1496 6 cyl., auto., R&H. good miles. {XSV797J '6' FORD LTD , . $2396 1 2 dr. H. T. V8. auto .. RAH, ~ P.S., P.B .. fact. &Jr, vinyl · . roof. (XSR897) I AM TO, t 'M MON-RI I AM TO 6 l'M SAT 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I -~ . ALL O,FERS C~NSIDERED . 1RAD~ ACCEPTED : PAID FOR OR NOT' ~ $ I 63 MERC. COMET 2 Dl. H.T • VB. auto., R&:H, powl'!I" 1teerin1. COSY925) I 64 IUICK SKYLARK VS. automatic, R&H, al~itiontn&. ( ) Factbr)' .equipped, radlo, I 65 MU:f?ANG H.T, heater, rood miles. I 64 FALCON 2 DI. 6 ~lnder, rad.Jo and buter. (0 V613l • SAL MMJ ......... -· '65 ..... '70 Mod•ls. Sport -1o. fonnols. 2 -l 4 -hardtops l Mdail. full P""•r. air coocfl~onlng. W..,..tlos ... 11a111e. . EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD SEDAN VI, •ute., R&H, pewer •+•••i"'t I di1~ kir•1'•1, 2 fe11e, c:hre1n• fri1n ,09eocl mil•t. (!05J241, OUR PRICE $1696 • '" FORD COlllA $1796 '6' OPEL WAGON $1396 Spt. rooJ, auto., R&H, Automatic::, radio, btater, P.S. CZDV707) rood miles. Immaculate. (2398NPJ Bel Air. VB, auto., Rl:H. PJN air, good mllc1. ( 1.55) $796 '" COUGAR $2196 Auto., R~wer 1teer-Ing, air, miles. (XURl96l 'if HNI.ULT 110 $896 . '6' CHEYT MALllU HT $2196 V8, auto .. R&H, P.S., aJr cond. (807BSI) PARTS-SERYICE - HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI ( • ' I ' , • , ' • -, • ..