HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-07 - Orange Coast Pilot17
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Muffled Blast, Then Ari. Inferno •
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Big Bla~e • ID Mesa
Meter" Busters
Nabbed on Coa~t
OAILY P'ILOT l"M .. W Rkh1~ ~ltf
COSTA MESA FIREMEN RACE TO BATTLE FLAMES AT EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
.. Ar$0n Suspected in Bl11e Thurs d1y Night 1t Orange Coast Firm
Cl1ina De1lla.-.Curbs Cut
U.S. Rern'O'Ves Restrictions on Money Transactwns
\VASHlNGTON (UPI) -The United
States removed all restrictions on dolla r
lransactions ""'ilh Red China today as a
first st.ep to opening up trade between the
two nations.
Treasury Secretary John B. Connally
issued a license allowing U. S.
businessmen and banks to transact
busi ness with the Communist g.overnment
and its citizens using dollars or dollar in-
struments. Previously there had been a
complete prohibition against such
transactions.
"This is the treasury's first step in im·
J)lementing President Nixon's decision on
Arson Probed
In Employment
Agency Blaze
By ARTHUR R, \'11\'.SEL
01 l"t Cllity Plitt S!lll
A mufncd expl osion sel off raging
flames within seconds Thursday night
after an arsonisl torched personn el
record files, causing Sll,000 damage to a
Costa Mesa employment agency.
No one was seen around the Orange
Coast Employment A~en~y. 1~4 E.
Broadway. but evidence 1nd1cales 1l was
undoubtedly set with intent to destroy the
documents and gut the building,
Fire Department Baftali?n C~ief . Ed
Lewis heading the arson 1nvest1gat1on ,
said t~ay certain item~ recov~rcd fi,-om
the charred scene are widerg oing crime
lab analysis.
Qv.•ner Graham E. Budd to I d
authorities he locked up the of~ice about 6
p.m .. at v.'hich time everything seemed
secure. . . Printer Beryl Maloney was working in
his adjacent ~hop at the rear of the
employment office when he heard what
geemed to be an explosion at 8:46 p.m.,
police said. .. ·
April 14 to relax financial and com·
mercial controls with respect to mainland
China." a treasury statement said.
"Treasury is now ·consulting with the
Departments of State and Commerce and
other intert>sted agencies on relaxi11g co n·
trols on imports of goods from China.''
The commercial move came after the
Red Chinese invited American table ten·
nis pl)yers to tour mainJand China last
month.
The lifting of the dollar reslriction
would also apply to foreign governments
and businessmen. the treasury said.
The State Department said a list of
itew that would be allowed in trading
with Red China was "under high level
review" and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department spokesman, Charles
Bray. was asked if there had been any in·
dications the Chinese regime would res·
pond to the U.S. trade oyertures.
"I don't know that there are," he
replied. "I assume th'tlt any reaction
would await t.heir opportunity to look at
the detaib."
Part of the new policy entails
permission by tbe traruportation depart.-
IS.. ClfiNA, Pap %)
Parl{ntg Meter Theft Ring
Cracked in Laguna Beach
By BARBARA KREIBJCH
01 IM 01111 ~llol St•lf
Laguna Beach police have cracked a
parking meter theft ring that involves
coastal and inland cities over half the
state.
Authorities claim the operation began
more than six month~ ago yielding "un-
told thousands" in small change from
cities from Ban Diego to San Jose.
In the process or maklng the final ar·
rests this morning, Laguna detectives
discovered that more than 100 metets
had been hit during the night by well-
organized thieves, operating w it b
homemade meter keys.
be the leader of the meter theft ring, is in
custody on another charge in Oregon and
will be held by authorities in that state on
the Orange County charge.
Confiscated as evidence at the Santa
Ana apartment were several bags of
coins, co in wrappers, locks believed to
have come from parking meters, a
number of home-made keys, pipe cutters,
files and assorted tools believed to have
bee·n used in the theft or parking meter
heads and_ the making of keys to open
metef coin boxes.
The roin& included a,number (If 0 Park
Free in Laguna Beach" token 1,
dbtributed by local merchants. A hasty
check of Laguna Beach meters revealed
that they had been cleaned out again by
the meter thievts.
Recurring-thefts of coins from the
parking meters over a perlod of almost a •
year had sparked Ute intensive police in.
vestigati(ln. Officers sa1d u much as
(S.. THEFTS, Pa1e %) . ....
8% Jobless
Rate Posted
In County
Unempldyment in Orange County
jumped five-tenths or • percent from
March to April to a seasonally adjusted
jobless rate or 8 pertent. the 1tatt
Department of Human R e 1 o u r c e 1
Development said today,
Although ~.100 persons had jobs ill
Orange County during April, represenUng
an increase of 4,4()1\ the ·Increased
''nu?nber or' employ~ person1 "w11 below
what ii normal f(lr this time of year, ac·
cordlDj to f•kr Force of the Santa Ana
~ researa1 and 1tatirtic1 section ()f HRD.
ln March (If this year there were .fil,400
petlOM without jobs compared to tht
38,400 who were jobless in April.
Jobs in construction-rose by 800 in
April, Force said, an amount less than
expected. Further, 500 aerospace jobs
were lost due to layoffs in April in
Orange County.
The Orange County unemployment
statistics paralleled those for Californla·
for the same period. For the state, the
adjusted jobless rate in April was 7.4 per·
cent. The total number <>f unemployed
persons, however, dropped 81,000 to
595,000 and the number of persons work·
ing. at some job climbed 51 ,000 to 7.99
million.
The 1971 unemployment rates for
Orange County continue to be higher lhan
in previous years. In March 1970 there
were 25,000 jobless for a rate ()f 4.8 per·
cent that climbed to 5.2 percent in April
1970 when 23,800 were wit.bout employ·
menL
In 1969, the March rate of 3.8
represented 18,400 jobless compared with
an April rate. that year of 3.7 percent
represen,l.ing 16, 100 jobless.
Force noted that "nonnally unemploy-
ment drops sharply at this time of year
as job opportunities increase." That
trend is just not happening in Orange
County or California, this year. he added ,
'My 3 Sons' TV Show
Baby Dies in Creek
OAKLA Y. Idaho (UPI) - A 2-y .. r-old
boy who played one of Fred MacMurray'a
grandchildren (lM the "My Three Sons'"
television show drowned Thursday when
lie fell from a pickup truck brtt Birch
Creek on his family's farm .
Brent Bedke Peterson and his twin
brQlher were· one set '()f twi~s used along
with another set or twins to'play triplets
en the popular television program. . ' Smelting smoke two minutes··later, .he
went to investigate and found the Job
agency a raging infer.no, . .
"He tried to usc a fire ext1ngu1she r but
~·as driven back by the intense heat,"
sa id Chief Lewis, whose men arrived
within moments from the nearby
Rochester Strce! stati on,
Arrested Thursday in an apartment at
801 South Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. were
Charles Leon Adams, 25, and a girl friend
Willa Dean Rotramel, 21. They were
taken into custody by Laguna Beach
Detectives Gene Brooks, Robert Brlscoe
and Carroll Bush, who bad obtained ar·
rest and search warrants from the office
cf the .District. Attorney {Qllowing their
investlgalion.
Authorities said the ring operated 11t
night. lopping off parking meter heads
with pipe cutters then f a s h I o n i n g
duplicate keys at their headquarters. The
next night, said. police, they would empty
at least 100 meters from dusk until dawn.
HST: No Medal
Only a few other items such as office
equ ipment and furnishings were
destroyed in the $11 ,000 blaze. $8,000 of
which 'involves structural damage.
"The records were naturally the most
valuable." Chief Lewis explained.
The agency's door was not locked. but
ell far investigators have nol determined
the arsonist's method of entry due to
heavy damage .
I
Pat Nixon Travels
WASHINGTON rl'Pl ) -Pat Nixon y,•ill
ny IO Tuls11 . Okla ., Thursday for a
luncheon in her honor spon&1red by the
Tu!sll Chapter of the American Red < ·os:;.
Bolh were booked on suspicion of con-
spiracy to commit a crime, a felony
charge , and bail was set at $12,500 each.
Two other suspects in-the case had
been arrested in Laguna Beach on Mon·
day night during a stake.out of parking
meters in the 400 blCICk of Cliff Drive.
They are David Stevan Perez, 19. and
Michael John Dinneen, 18, both of El
Monte.
Jones, Perez and Dineen were •r·
rested in ·HO:ntlngtoi'I ·lJeach Jali. 27 for
theft of a meter head. Perez and Dinneen
were out on bail awa iti ng trial on thi!
charge when they were arrested Monday.
Jones is !OU&ht by Hu11tinglon Beach on a
warrant for failu re t& appet1r on thi
meter then charge.
Police ~aid a fifth 5Uspect. believed I&
'Didn't Earn It,' Says Truman
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Pre!I•
dent Harry S Truman has told Congress
he will not accept the Medal ()f Honor -
saying the medal is for combat vslor 11nd
he doesn't deserve it.
"To deviate by giving It for any other
reason lessens and dilutes itl true
1ignlflcance," 'D'uman wrote in a letter
read on the House floor Thutsday.
"Also, it would detract from those who
have received the award because (If their
combat service.
''Thanks," Truman's letter concluded,
"but I will not accept a Congressional
Medal of Honor."
Truman'• letter w11 to R!:P· William J.
Randall (D· Mo.), (lne (If 14 Hou~
members who had introduced Jills and
resolutions to present the former
Democratic President with the medal Jn
connection with his 87th 'birthday Satur·
da y.
Randall noted Truman had often 1aid in
presenting the medal to rombat heroes
that he would rather have it him5elf than
be · President -but was now aa)'intt he
would not accept it 'without deser1ing U
fQ\. its ln,ten.ded ~mbat recognition.
The Senate, meanwhile, passed a
resolution extending best wishes to
Trum·an .
The resolution. was Introduced toy Sen.
Stuart Symington ID-Mo.J. and pwtd by
voice vote without op~tion. <
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 7, 1971
\101., +I, NO, lff, of SICTIONI, M l'Ae•I
Ensenada Race
Yac.hts Battling
Mounting Winds
By AJMON LOCKABEY
Dlllr l'lltl INllM •lffttr
Thirty.six yachts In the Newport to
Ensenada yacht race were reported
about ID miles south ()f the Los
Coronados Islands early today.
The yachts fought light !lOUth to
80Utheast winds all night. Velocities were
never more than five knots. Winds this
morning had increased to about 12 knots
from the south.
This would mean that. the yachts would
still be beating their way to Ensenada .
Another escort vessel reported that
Fish .Firms Tell
Finance Crises
In FDA Warning
about %00 yachts were Milin& aboot 25
mllea west ()f the C.Oronado.s.
Names ()f the lead yacht.. were Mt
available because of low visibility, Race
()rficlals said that of the SM yachta that
started the race, this morning there bad
been only JO reported dropout!.
At the start of the race off Newport
Harbor jetties Thursday at noon, dying
winds and sloppy, left-<iver seas created a
bumping match ,wit.& a nqmber of boata
being Shoved off the weather <end of the
outboard ·line.
1'he left-over sea was from an ta.knot
westerly t.bat had been blowing earlier In
the morning.
The catamarans, first fleet to ·st.art at
12 ,o'ck>ck, got the worst start. Many ()f
them Were caught far behind the line on
the dying breeze and approached the Une
10 to 15 minute.! late -amaclr Jn the
midst of the Class k. atart.
As the big Class A packet.a: crowded the
weather end ()f the line,. the cats Were
By BILL KOSMAN again shoved off the line. Three cat1 "•-!•ltd ,,..,. Sttff Wrtttr were at least a balf·hour beHind their
Industry spokesman said Thursday that ' acheduled start.
11ome Cslifomia fishermen will have to go The weather picture changed rapidly,
out of business completely and other howeveo.
firms may f11:ce large financial losses, as Just as the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet
a result of the ·Food and ~rug was croeslng the line at l p.m. the wly
Administration's warr}ing that s,wordtiib . 5tarters couJd be seen rail-dOwn as a
should not be eaten . w~alher fl"l.Oft t moVed acroas the fleet
Bay ·temai; president of tbe California bringing •taln. and .winds up to 15 toots.
Stalt · Fis)lermen:s Asaoclalipp, • ,,.;~ •·· 'foa •the~ hit the ·MOBF and late
owners of the-100 boat California! fleet. 'l~rtl~ iP.HRF .n,etl ·~~e , w;r~ franUe
coald convert for other kinds; of fisbi.Jii .. 1!18Jcbktiangmg &?Ina: f>D. •f?oi.rd'JDOS!i'of the
, but added: "The problem is that there 'is ya ts. , ; , :
no\·much fish off the coast of California There were reporta o~ t ;nWOOerc:il pro.
they could go·after1 so some will probably tests at. the~ and a num6er,of y~chta:
have to•go ou\ of·business completely.": , wer;:Jcross· ~-tine. eatly ~d 'filled to
California is one of the major soqrces res · · ·
flf swordfish. Some fish firms said they·
face fdnancial loss due to having large
stocks of frozen steaks. filets and ,chanks
that have been seized by the FDA. They
also stand to lose all anticipated sales of
the fish, spokesmen said .
The FDA advised public to stop eating
1wordfish1because, it. said, 95 percent. of
all samples examin,ed were contamina~
with poisonous mercury.
The FDA said that of 853 samples tx·
amined. only five percent contaln'ed
mercury below the FDA 's s a f e t y
guideline of 0.5 parts per million.
Flshennen harpoon the big blue gray
fish as the creatures bask in tl'le sun iD
wann waters. The California season,
which runs from May to November. was
about to (lJlen ~s the announcement was
m8de.
One f~h retaUer, Bob Roublan ol the
Crab Cooker in Newport Buch 1ald he
had 165.000 wortll of tilt fish ,.lt<d In
April and has another $12,000 worth in
1tor•ge be doesn't expect to sell.
Roublan said he sells abdut $110,000 in
awnrdflsh a year. ,
"T lose money, that's tough." saltf
Andy Fistonlch or Andy'1 Seafood Com·
pany in Los Angeles. "I'll still eat
IS.. SWORQFISH, Pore IJ
Or!U!lf• Cout
Weadler
Don'I let thl1 lhllnY ·iq>ell fool
you; it looks like r.m again tonight
and po.,lbly Saturday. But clear
skies should take over t~s ~
with lemperalures In ~high 118. .
INSWE TOD~Y ·
Art bv st..Unu of th• N..,.
POt't·Mesa. School Discrlct ioiU btr
on dilptau next w~ek ot Ft11hioB
lslaiid. For a .prtllilw of tho'·
1how 1ee todou't Wctkendn. .Mt.... ,,
C•llflrlllt 1 Clltckl1111 U, 1
Cl•HI,... .n-ti C•mln Jt
("'1•_,,. Jt
DHlll •tkft 11 Siii.,.. ,. ... I ,..._.. 11·11
Mertic.-11
A111 L•llffn' 11
Mtf!Ml I Mt'+'kl t7•!t
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• _J DAil Y PILOT s Frid11y, M11 7, 1971
DAILY ,.ILOT PM!•~ lllctltnl K .... 19r
ENSENADA-BOUND YACHTS MANEUVER OPP NEWPORT HARBOR JITIY BEFORE START
At the 1970 Starting Gun, Sloppy S11s, L lght Winds and Traffic. Traffic., Tr1fflc
Mcintire Leads Ht_"}ks
In Washington MarCh
Dr. Hartelius
Bacli in Court
On 15 Counts
\VASHl!\GTON {AP) -The Rev. Carl
fllclnlire and his Bible-carrying followers
11re planning a song ser\'ire on the
Capitol sleps tonight to warm up for
Sat.urday' 5 win the \\'ar march to the
\Vashlngton Monument.
Orange County's Rep. John G. Schmitz
(R.Callf.) will joln the march. along with
Sen. Strom Thurmond (R.S .C.) and Rep.
John R. Rarick (0-La.).
The Mcintire apoMOted marth, hl!1 se-
cond hert ln six months, will follow three
weeks of demomtrations by antiwar pro-
testera. The tall Cotlln11wood . N.J.. radio
preacher ii trylng to lie down 11-
f'rom Pflfle J
CHINA ...
ment for U.S. airlines to carry cargo
destitled for Red China.
They will not be allo'A'ed lo deliver
targo directly to Red China, only ~o a
transshipment point, a spokesman said:
Flying Tiger airlines is the ma~or
American air cargo airline now r.ervmg
the Orient. Treasury officials emphasized that
Connally'• order 11o·as limJt.ed to dollar
transactions, and in Itself did. not rem?ve
prohibitions against e11:portmg or im-
porting 1oods to or fro m Communist
China. But the atatement made it clear
that removing or rela1in& thle controls
""'as being contemplated.
Connally also removed a prohibition
against American-controlled foreign rlag
vesse\a from calling at mainland China
ports. but left intact a regulation baMlng
U.S. ll•i. vesaels from doing to.
CoMally'a order alao allows American
oil comptnie1 abroad to sell fuel to Com-
munitt Chinese ahips, e1cepl thoe going
to or from North Korea, North Vietnam
or Cuba . •
''The treasury 's forelan assets control
regulations now permit normal financial
transactions between the United States
and the P@Ople's Republ\c of China and
its nationals." the statement said.
"United St.ates banks may now act as
financial lnterm~iaries In these transac-
tion!, h1cluding remittances for fam.Hy
support . humanitarian and other
purpose•."
A treasury official explained that Con-
nally'1 order will permit American bull·
nessmen, for lruitance. to purchase Rtd
(,1\lnese good1 with U.S. dollars and 8ell
them in olhet nations, alnce they will atlll
he prohibited from Importing them Into
the United States. Or they can purchase
good• In other nations and sell them to
the Red Chinese.
OIANll COAST
DAllY PILOT
" ........... -·-.. Cl•utc
ou.Ho1 COAST PUllllMIMG COM,.......,.
l•"•rt H. Weel '""""'"' .................
Jttk ._ Cvrley
VICI PtalllW .,141 0-•I M9"""'
Tli•"''' x •• ,n "'"' lh•"''' A. Mvr,hln1
"'',..'""' l411W
C\1rl•• H. L111 11:;,1r.,,1 P, N:.11
Al.i&lll'll M.,...lnt l!:dlt.n
rangement1 for r a d I o transmlsllon of
messages to the Washington Monument
gathering from Chiang Kai·shek and
other aFr East anti Communis t leaders.
?t1cinlire told a news conference Thurs-
day he ·arranged durlng a lrlp laat
November tor the mtMaJltt in per110nal
talks with Nationalist Chineu President
Chiang, South Korean President Chun11
Hee Park and South Vietnamese Pre1i-
dent Nguyen Van Thieu and Vice Preato
dent N11uyen Cao Ky.
"They'll aend messages bul will be
standing by to d~llver them live If "·e can
5et through," he aald .
Mclnttre said tel ephone me1s1ge1 wlll
be delivered by Alabama Gov. Oeorge
Wallace and Georgia Ll. Gov. Lest.er
Maddox.
Mcintire laid he Is :;;ticking lo his
prediction that lhe \\'in the ·war march
from the C..pilol to the \Yashingtoo
:ftionument will attract a crowd out·
numbering the big April 24 antiwar
march. He decllned to say whether he
meant the 500,000 the marcher& clalmed
or the police figure of 175,000.
He used the figurt "350.000 to 500 ,ooo·•
earlier in the week.
MclnUre and a half dozen followers
presented a victory \\'rtalh 11t tJie Pen-
tagon Thursday afternoon lo Air Force
Brig. Gen. Daniel L. James. deputy assis·
!ant secretary of defense for public 11f.
fairs.
"We're al lhe Penlaaon to offeet all the
n1thy agitation that has been around ,''
Mcintire told James.
Later. a group of aboul 15 picketed
with signs at the downtown office• of the
Federal Communications Commiasion for
30 minutes. prote1ling the F'CC's equal
time doctrine. Mclnllre 11ald the policy
"is 1lrongly shaping our surrender slide
by making 1t impoiislble to speclflcally
name the enemlea of America.''
* * * May Day Tribe
Promises More
DC Protesting
\~'ASlllNGTON !UPI) -Declaring that
their .. spring offensive·• to shut down lhe
nat ion's capital Wll$ just a "y:armup,"
antiwar activists today began preparing a
new round of protesh1 lhis aummer.
"If Richard Nixon thinks this \veek wa~
hot," spokesman Rennie Davis said
Thursday, "wait unUI next time; this was
only a warmup."
Before the te1der1 of the r.1ay D11y tribe
and tht People'1 Co11Ullon for Peace end
Justice met to plan a new round of ac·
liv1tle1, the Justice Department Thursd1y
said It would empanel a grand jury to In·
vesl1g1te a poMlble conspiracy t.o lnclle
riots.
Deputy A.llorney Gentrsl R1ch11rd Ci •
Kleindlen1t 1ald the grand jury would be
formed after Davis and John R. Frolnes
apptAred at a prellmin1ry hearing May
12.
Oavl1, Frolnes and Abbie lloffman,
who wa1 11rre1ted In New York City, were
the most frequent 11pokt1men for the 11
days of Antiwar protests.
Hoffman 1Ald Thursday night In
Newark, 1".J .. Uiet the grend Jury will in.
diet up to 60 people.
Roffman llnd D11vl11 were convicted of
conspiracy to foment rlot.s In Chicago 11\
!he 1968 Democratic convention. They 11re
fret on bond pending appe11l. Frolnea also
was a defend11nt In the Chicago Seven
ca1a, but w11 acquitted.
By TO:t1 BARLEY
Of "'-0.111 P'llel Stitt
Dr. Ebbe Hartellus, cleared by 1 Su-
perior Court jury just one month ago on
arson and fraud charges, was back be·
fore the same judge to plead lnno.
cent to 1~ felony counts contained in 1
still-secret Orange County Cra11d Jury
indictment.
Judge James F. Judge delayed the
Corona de! Mar phy1Jcl1n's arraignment
to ~1ay 18 and ordered Hartelius, 50 to
poSl $5,000 bail.
He denied a plea that the defe11dant be
freed on his personal pled11e to return.
Hartclius is accused In the new indict·
menl of grand theft, bribery and the sub-
mission of fraudulent claims to insurance
companies. None of the charges was filed
again.flt him during his rec~t trlal, but
several, parUcularly bribery, were dis-
cussed during the four-wetJi: court 1e1-
sion.
Judge Judge ordered !he po s l i n c
of a bond after hearing Deputy Dltlrlct
Attorney Al Novick claim that llartellus
planned to flee the slate "possibly to
Denmark or Alaska."
Hart.ellua, whose new home is at 402
r-.1aanolia St .. Costa Mesa, reminded the
judg e that he has lived in the
llniled Stales for 21 years since his ar·
rival here from Denmark.
Defense attorney Tom Reilly a1ked
Judge Judge to recognite that his cllenl
had substbntlal property interests and a
practi ce in Orange County and wa11 "nev-
er tardy once during his four·week trial."
Hartelius was cleared in that trial after
lwo days of deliberation of charges thaL
he arranged the burning of his offices at
2J45 E. Coast Highway oR April 9, 1970.
ft \\'as also unsuccessfully alle(led that
he had earlier faked the theft of his car
and filed a fraudulent claim against the
insurance company to cover the IO!S.
Pro.'!eculion witness Jim Blevins. 1
brother of H1rtellu1' blonde mlstrts•.
testified during the trial that he 11et the
fire on Harteliu1' Instructions and helped
the doctor to 1ieal his own car.
Blevins alao alleged In tt'llimony that
the physician bribed him to leave the
state when invest.iaation into both crimea
intensified.
Harlelius, while and shaken by the
Grand Jury indictment. an gr 11 y re·
fused to comment to newsme11 on the new
char1es.
f'rotn Page l
SWORDFISH • • •
swordOsh Rnd 1'11 still Rrve It to my
ramlly. My dad Is 92 ind he 1tlll eat:i lt at
Jca.!lt on~ a week."
Flstonlch 1a!d he !!old more than
100,000 pounds a year, which amounted to
5ales of between $100,000 to $150,000.
l\.1ercury ls a.metallic poison particular-
ly injurious to the brain, kidneys and
nervous system. II hu been found
polluting the \1·aters of 33 slates.
Am ericans ate about 26 million pound11
of the rlsh last year, wt1h all but four
million pounds ~mporttd from Japan and
Canada.
The National 1\'arlne Fisheries Service
al nearby Terminal Island said California
swordfishermen caught almost o n e.
m!lllon pounds of the fish last year In
offshore water& from Santa Barb•ra, lo
the Melcican border.
Spokesman Tom Allen estimated fish
firms in Southern California have in
storage RbOut 100 tons of swordfi1h they
expect to be worth abOut '238,000 In retail'
sales.
Libera~e Beefed
Cook.in~ Critic Irritates Pianist
lfOt.l.VWOOD ( A.P) -A nl'\\'Sp!'per
food tdltor 1ald Llbe.race: ordered her out
of hl, home Thurlday after dilftrencea
over 1 photo and hill bee-f atr.o.sanoff.
The luncht<in. atlendtd b7 !\bout fiO
\\'r\tcrs. was to publicize Liberace'• open·
Ing today 11 the Loa Angeles Music
Cent('r. D!shts fronl hia cookbook,
"Llbcrnct Cook.'J," were served.
Virgin ia llefrlngton of the Ulna Beach
lndependcnt-Pres11 Tt.lea:r<i m 1 n Id
Liberace objected tQ a photo being t11ken
In hi!i kitchen bccaus'° It' "'as "loo
meny." She In turn objected to a photo
includlna one of his cookbooks, 1ayl111 it
\\'OUld be "loo commercial."
f\.llss Heffington said Liberat e told her :
•·\Yt'\I, then I think we should for11et the
photogroph .. ,
To which she rtplled: "\Veil. then I
th lnk we 11hould forget the ttt:lry because
)ou 're ll better pitlno pln_9er ihan you art
n coo k. Your beet •troganorf i.11es mort
like tanned beer ~ttY.'."
It "'ll$ lhen that htlsa lfefflnaton •aid
she "'l\.!I asked to lca\'e.
Planes Ral{e N. Viets
Two Phantom Jets Blast Three Gun Sites
SAIGON (UPI) -Two U.S. Air Force
Phantom llahter·bombers interrupted a
bomb1n1 r1ld over Laos today and
1wepl over North Vietnam to bla4t three
•ntlalrcraft aun sites out of action In the
&3rd Amerlc111 "protective reaction"
1trlk1 of the year.
Allied and Communist forces in Sooth
Vietnam prepared for weekend cease-
fires in honor of the birth of Buddha 2,515
years ago. The Viet Cong declared a 48
hoor truce beginning at 7 a.m. Saturday
and an allied cease·fire of 24 hours was
to bt!tin at t100flo. , . The truces were the 2m.h declarei:I by
South Vietnam and its allies, The United
Stalts. South Korea. Thalland , Australia
and New Zealand and the 19th by th e
Communists. The trucea do not apply to
Cambodia and Laos.
The ty,·o Phantoms made their Dro-
tecUve reaction strike into North Viel·
nam when North Vietnamese antiaircraft
jl\Jna opened fire from positions 1n the
Ban Karat Pata Jult acl'08a the border
while they wert on 1 m1J1lon over the Ho
Chi Minh Trail, military si>oltesmen said.
The Jets attacked with bombs, rockets
and 20MM cannont, knock.Inc out two
Communlat S7MM antiaircraft 1un pas!·
lions and one 37MM gun pos!Uon 33 miles
north of the Demllit1rl%ed zone, military
spokesmen said. Neither plane w1s hit by
the Communist ground fire .
Ther1 have been about 100 auch strikes
against North Vletntmese anUalrcraft
poslUont since Pruldent Lyndon B.
3 Orange (:ounty
Men Lose "Lives
In Road Mishaps
1'1lrte Orange County men wtre
reported today 11 traffic accident victims
by the coroner'• office. The dead:
-TU.1mt Fujiwara, 23, of the Bushard
labor camp. Fountaln Valley.
-Biiiy D. Meinert, 36, or $702
Trallvlew Place, Yorba LlndL
-Jo11 Jallan Feraude1, 33, of 1404 N.
King St., Santa Ana.
\Vestmlnster poUce a:a\d Fujiwara was
dead on arrival at We1tmln1ltr Com.
munily Hospital Thursday night arter the
car in which he WI.! riding collided with a
center divider light standard at Bolsa
Avenue and \Vard Street in Westminster.
Driver of the vehltle ldiguel ~1endez,
66. Santa Ana, was seriously injured, of.
ficers said.
l\leiners was killed early this morning
·when his car went out af control and
overtunied on the San Diego Fretway
one half mile ~uth of El Toro Road. He
died at 1:10 a.m. at South Coast Com-
munity Hospilal.
Fernandez, who police described as an
outpatient from the mental health ward
in Orange County Medical Center, died of
injuries received Thursday morning when
he jumped off the Main Street overpass
onto the Santa Ana Freeway.
Officers said he was struck by at least
one car. He 1uffered multlple fra ctures
and internal lnjuriea and died at Santa
Ana Community Hospital.
Jobn10n halted th• bomblna of North
Vietnam Nov, I, 181l Forty of the llrlkea
have coma 1lnct tha U.S. Com,mand
be1an 1nnouncln1 them May 2, 19'70, flnd
• command spokttman Wd thtre were
about 60 prior to then.
For the 1eeond day In 1 row the U.S.
Command reported no ground aclloo In-
volving Amer ican troopa but 852
Strat.orortresses bombed the Ho Chi Minh
Trail in Laos and Communist sanctuaries
in Cambodia . U.S. he1icopter gunships
flew more than 230 sortles in support of
South Yietnamea lroop1 operaUn& in
Cambodia.
Tbrte fonnallons of B52s Oew from
bases in Thalland for raids between the
abandoned Khe Sanh combat base "nd
the demlUtarlied wne Jn the northern
sector or South Vietnam 'fh11rld1y nl1ht
and Friday, the command s11ld.
South Vietnamese troops fqught a five-
hour battle with a Communist unit 22
miles northeast of Salgo~ Thur11day 111nd
reported killing 19 l'rhile suffering seven
dead.
The U.S. Command said 3,085 r.1arine!
began preparations for wilhdral\·al Fri·
da)' which y;·ould reduce 1'1arine strenatll
in Vietnam to 8,5".
White House Hotlr, Denies
Late 1972 Pullout Date
WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
Hou1e firmly denied Thuraday a report
attributed to mlllt1ry 1ource1 ln Vietnam
that November 1'72 hu bfftl •et 11 a
fl.11d date for total withdrawal of U.8.
troops from Vietnam.
Prtss secretary Ronald L. Zlealer aald
whoever the aouree of the report wa!
wouJd not have been aware of Prtaldent
Nlxon't t.hlnkinr and was "just 1peaking
from a foundation of total lack of
knowledge."
Zle11:ler said he had no idea of who the
source mlaht be but he added even more
firmly that the Individual was "•peaking
from a base or absolutely no knowledge
at all."
The pre1Jdentlal 1poke1m1n reiterated
what Nixon baa 11id: that U.S. troopa Jn
Vietnam will be reduced to a total of
184,000 by Dec. 1 and that the Pre1ldent
would make another a1ee11ment of the
1ltu1tlon and announce hit decisions
rerardlng any further troop withdrawals
by Nov. 15.
At the State Department, offlclal1 cau·
Uoned that no one abort of Prealdent NIX·
on himself has any accurate idea of what
the troop level \\'ould be in November,
1171.
Police Clear 2
Of Tl1ef t Count
Newport Beach police said today a
young couple apprehended Tuelday in
connection with an alleged burglary at-
tempt al the Orange Coast Yl\.1CA had
nothing wh•tsoever to do with the crime.
The pair. Jdenllfied as Kennelll M.
Frederick, 22, of 207 Abalone Street,
Newport Beach. end Christy Johnson, 22,
of 818 Palm Street, lluntington Beech,
were released at 4 p.m. that day without
charge• placed agaln1t them.
A story In Wednesday'1 D a 11 y Pilot
quoted police at saylna: bolh had been
charged with burglary. 'Ille Dally Pilot
regrets the error.
A projection of the present rite of U.8.
withdrawals from Vletnam would bring
the number down t.o 55,000 by that date.
From Pagel
THEFTS ...
$1 ,000 has been taken from Lal\lll&
meters In 1 1ingle nl1hL
No dollar e1tlm1te or the total meter
theft operation ha1 yet been made, but
officers said the thieves apparently had
meter keys for 23 cities between Mon-
terey and San Dle11:0. P1rklng Jots on the
USC campus alone yielded $500 a night,
police 1ald,
DetecUvea said the keys were made by
nmovlng. with pipe cutters, one meter
head in each city. From the lock on the
meter ll was possible to make master
keys to flt all the other meters In that cl·
ty.
A neJillY written schedule conn1eated
as evidence listed the key number fol"
each city and the best days to hit the
meters (just before the \\'eekly coin
pickup).
The coins were poured from the meter
Into men 's socks. several of 11o•hich also
\\'ere found \\'Ith the confJscaled tools.
The cit ies of 011:nard and Beverly Hills
\\'ere favorite targets of the meter
thieves police 1aid. Other cities hit by the
theft ring In the past year are said to
have included Lompoc, San Clemente,
\\'hich no\\' has removed its meters,
Ontario, Anaheim, Hennosa Beach, San
Jose and San Luis Obilpo.
Iowa Blasl Probed
JOWA CITY (AP) -A bomb blew out
a large plate glas.!I window and ap-
parently did foundation damage today at
the Iowa City Clvilc Center. which houses
the police department. pollce ·said.
There were no reported lnjuriet ,
although !Orne pallcemen y;•ert Jn lhe
bullding et the Ume.
Upholstery Sale!
SLllPH SOFA
SALi PRICED
STARTING AT
$239
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -OREXE~ -HERITAGE
NIWPO-T llACH
1727 W•1lcliff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
NIWl'OlT 1roa1 0'1" PllDAT 'TIL'
Profe11lon1I lnt•rlor
Dt1l1n1r1 Av1ll1bl1 -AID
INTERIORS
'"•"•Tell ,,.. M•tt ,, o,..,.,c •• 1tr-1-40.11•1
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Coast Hwy.
Phone: 494-6551
. --.. ----
Board Backs
·Suspension
Of Student
The Orange County Board of Education
Thursday upheld the Tustin Union High
School District's expulsion of a Foothill
High School girl for violation of district
drug policy.
Mrs. Arthur T. Cameron of 17931
Allegheny Drive. Tustin, appealed to the
county board to overturn the January ex-
pulsion of her 14-year old daughter.
~1rs. Cameron said her daughter "was
not a criminal but had helped aided
the conviction or the pusher , the real
criminal in this malter."
The distraught, widowed mother of
five. told the board she does not condone
her daughter's possession of the "whites"
the district contends she was carrying.
''She did a very foolish thing. Does that
justify depriving her of her education?"
Tustin assistant superintendent L. Jay
lnga ll told the board the district policy,
allowed by lhe Education Code, calls for
expelling students caught carrying, using
or selling drugs on ca1npus.
Ir ene Platt. deputy county counsel
represenling the Tustin district, noted the
·rustin trustees had reccnUv "liberalized''
their policy on drugs. Formerly, ex·
pulsion y,·ould result from use or sale
"'hether on or off school properly.
Mrs. Cameron told the County Board
her daughter had not been sentenced or
placed on probation for her part in lhe
drug inciden.t involving two other girls
and a boy. "Yet, since Jan. 14 she has not
been aJloy,•ed to go lo schoOI."
Board President A. E. "Pat'' Arnold
voted with lrustees in the decision to
uphold the Tuslin expulsion. but added a
ringing call for communication with
)'oung people.
s ~vordfish Ban
May Spell Doom
To Ancient Port
NE\V BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) -The
discovery of mercury in swordfish may
do to that industry in the old port of New
Bedford what the discove ry of oil in
Pennsylvania did lo the port's whaling
trade more than a century ago.
"I gu ess that just about does it for us:•
said Joseph J. Avila Jr. after the Food
and Drug Administration said a survey or
swordfish samples found 95 percent con-
taminated with mercury in excfss of
safety guidelines of 0.5 parts per million.
As a result of the survey, the FDA
Thursday warned the public against
eating the popular seafood.
The swordrishing business in Ne\V
England is centered here. and Avila. his
cousin. James F. Avila, and their uncle,
Gilbert S. Avila, accounted for most or
lhe 97,000 pounds or swordfish landed in
New Bedford rrom the southern New
England coastal waters last year.
Tht New Bedford whaling industry was
Bl its peak y,·hen the first commercially
success ful oH ~·ell was drilled in
Tilusvill, Pa.. in 1859. Oil products,
including kerosene ror lighting, became
cheaper and the whaling industry faded.
S"·ordfishing, likewise , seems about to
vanish.
VD Educatio n
Bill Advances
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Publ ic
schools would be allowed to teach
venereal disease preve nt ion \V.ithout
special pe rmission from parents
under proposed legislation which
cleared the Assembly Thursday.
Under the bill which moved lo
the Senate on a 5a-8 vote, VD
education would be exempted from
the present la\v which requires
parents to give written permission
fortheir children t.o get se~ educa-
tion instruction.
The bill's author. Democratic
Assemblywoman ~1arch Fong of
OaklAnd. says VD instruction
should be in the realm of health
education, not sex instruction .
A ~author, Assemblyman E.
Richard Barnes (R·San Diego),
said the measure "is aimed at the
fact that we now have an epidemic
:ondition among the young people
1f this st.ate.
Opponents lo the measure, AB
~50. argued the subject is important
wough to require parental ap..
~roval.
La91i 1iu Progra111
'Blue 1fater, 1f.hite Death'
''This is a shark apart from other sharks. It is the
ultimate shark. Comparing it to other sharks is like
comparing a Siberian tiger to a pussycat. It is the
perfect eating machine -2,000 pounq.s of stream·
lined death." These are the words of department
store heir Peter Gim bel, who. 'vith three others,
spent six months studying and photographing the
Great White Shark, deadliest predator in the 'vorld,
off the coasts of South Africa, Ceylon and Australia.
South Comity Schools Tal\:e
Top Math Contest Awa1·d s
~1ission Viejo High School and Mar.co
Forster InU!rmediate School U!ams took
gr\.nd prize trophies in the recent Sad·
dleback College invitational mathematics
contest.
t.1ission Viejo High teams placed first
in 10th grade and second in ninth grade
competition.
Marco Forster teams took first pla.ce in
eighth grade and third place in seventh
grade competition. l_
Eight schools participated, sending five
Touring Students
To Show Works
The May art exhibit at the Laguna
Federal Gallery includes the work of 17
artists who just returned from an art
tour or the South Pacinc.
The artists, under the direction of
teacher Joyce Oark , took sketching trips
of such island.! as Tahiti, Bora Bora and
Fiji and held painting sessions aboard the
ship West Star,
In addition to the South Pacific art, the
May exhibit features the worb o{
painters Stanley Gill and Cyllene Carr
and contributions from art classes at El
Morro Ele!'flentary School.
The gallery, located at Laguna Federal
Savings, 260 Ocean Ave., is open
weekdays during the business houri and
the art exhibit is free.
member U!ams for each grade level.
Teams winning first place honors were :
Irvine Intermediate, seventh grade:
Jeff Hassett, Mark Palley, Lauren
A-fayer, Tami Pen.er and Chris Peterson.
Marco Forster, eighth grade: Stuart
Holland, Eric Lucha, Jeff Easley, Bill
Hunt and t.1ilte Prelip.
Mission Viejo High, 10th grade: Kevin
Coan, Bill Colbert, Lee Mundy, Mike
Sorum and f\.1ii'rKTownsend .
Teams taking second. place honors
were :
La Paz Intermediate, eighth grade:
Steve Kostechico, Richard MaLsuoila, Jan
Hart, Ann McNeely and Tim Folkers.
Mission Viejo High, ninth grade: Karen
Fulton, Tim Mathews, Rick Tom sovic,
Calhy Connors and Kathy Hunting.
Members of the Marco Forster seventh
grade team which placed third were
Nelle Engoron, CUrt Wellman, Sharon
Hendrix, Marla Day and Joe Womack.
Heroic Girl Saves
Victim From Dying
SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP) -Because
Jessica Sanchez, 9, didn't run away, a lit·
Ue girl's life was saved.
An e.lectrical power line, knocked down
by a careening truck, fell across Cathleen
Alexander, 11, Wednesday night
Pollce said several people in the area
fled from the dangerous, live wire.
But Jessica stayed. She suffered an
electrical shock herself but managed to
pull Cathleen free, police said.
Ir vine Writer s
Receive JI onors
TIU'ee students al Irvine School in Easl
Irvine have received creative \\>'riling
honors.
Lauren ~1eyer. grade seven. won first
place in a contesl at Irvine Scbool which
was sponsored by READ magazine, an
educational publication.
The magazine will award a trophy to
her and recognition to the students who
tied for second.
Lauren's essay was entitled "The
Tree." Anthony Valsey, eighth grade, and
Jeffrey Hassett, seventh grade, tied for
secood with their stories "Limbo" and
"Twenty-Thirt y-Eight A.O."
The judging was done by a staff from
Irvi ne School.
Friday, May 7, 1q11 '.LOT :;
• Tustin District
4 Scho ol ( '
k ...
Plans
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 !fl• O.flr Plltt ll•tl
Four plans have bflen developed as
possible ways ·Jor a future spilt of the
present TUsUQ1 High School District into
three separate unified achoo! districts.
Superintendent RaJph Gates, of San
Joaquin Elementary School District ex·
plained the P,lans to bis Board of Trustees
Wednesday.
The state has mandated that the San
Joaquin. Tustin Elementary, and Trabuco
Elementary school districts hold a
unification election in June of 1972.
Voters will at that time either vote to
unify along the boundaries of the Tustin
Union High School District or will split
the area into three separate unified
school districts.
Gates explained that one plan, labeled
Plpn Four, appeared to be the most
feasible.
Plan four calls fur a split of the
dislt'lict into areas which include the
Irvine Ranch area, the Tustin area, and
th e El Toro-A-1ission Viejo-Ttabuco area.
"This plan meets the standards set up
in the State Education Code," said Gates.
''It provides community identity, and
equable distribution of property, and con·
tains no racial or ethnic segregation."
San Clemente's
P aper Recycling
Shift Idea Gains
Propo.~als to shift sponsorship of San
Clemente's successful newspaper recycl·
Ing projecl from a small group of
be!eagurcd volunteers lo a special
chamber or <.'Ommerce committee have
made headway this \\>'eek.
Lionel Burt, a spokesman for the Back
Yard Ecology Group. said his efforts to
''sell" the project to the chamber of com·
mcrcc ecology committee appear to be
"very success ful."
Informally, the committee has agreed
to welcome as a full member one
delegate from the ecology group. A
recommendation that the ch amber
assume sponsorship of the project will
come before directors next week.
A boost to the program also might
come from $3,000 now in committee cof-
fers. The money, raised from sales of
first.da y covers of la st year's an-
~ipollution stam p issue, have been
earmarked for local projects dealing wilb
th e environment.
Burt ori gin<1UY took his request for a
change in sponsorship of the program to
city councilm en, but the city lawmakers
decli ned to adopt recycling as a city proj·
e<t.
They agreed, instead , to recommend
adoption of llie program by the chamber.
The reasons for the request center on
the success of the project and the in-
ability of the small volunteer group to
control it.
Presently, the large van loaned by a
newspaper recycler remains on a tem-
porary basis at a loca l supermarket
parking Joi.
A young high school students work!:
each afternoon to process tons of donated
nev•sprint.
"It just got too big for us." Burt said.
The spokesman, personally, has spent
dozens of hours with other volunteers
bungling and stacking the donated paper
into the van. Burt said the major goal is
to fi nd a permanent location and
maintenance program for the project.
It also meets one other Important fac,
tor -the <Wessed valuation per studen~
varies only 15 percent, the maximurq
allowable by law.
"The cWTent assessed taxable vaJua,
tion per student in the Tustin High School
District is $13,200. So the variation can bq
from approximately $11,200 to $15,200,')
Gates explained. 1
"Boundaries of the Tustin Elementar}I
Distllct are not feasible for one unified
district because it.s assessed valuation i3
too low.
"The boundaries of the Irvine Rancli
are not feasible either becauae the assess·
ed valuation is too high, therefore, we had
to add to 'Nstin's area and trim Irvine'&.'.
· Under Plan Four tse assessed valuit
for student is $1.2,000 for Tustin; $15,404
for Irvine and $15,270 for El T~~i&sion
Vie it>Trabuco.
The boundaries in Plan Four for tha
Irvine portion would , if following a map,
begin in 1he northwest corner of the San
Joaquin District and would 'follow I.Ill
boundary east by Myford Road.
The line would cootlnue east alon1
Myford, tum south along the Santa Ana
Freeway, east again along CUiver Road.
south along Irvine Boulevard, west alonr
Jeffry Road, south along the Santa Ana
Freeway, west along the boundary of thfl
El Toro Marine Base.
The boundary ·moves south along tllf
railroad tracks to the southwest corner cj
the base then west t.o the Santa Anl
Freeway, jutting back to the north alont
the San Diego Freeway to the Lagun1
Freeway where it turns west to the Sal
Joaquin boundary.
Tustin's portion would include the arel
that is now the Tustin ElementaJ']
District, joining the Irvine bound.ail
where Myford Road meets the present
San Joaquin boundary. lrviJ1e and Tustjl
would share .a common boundary all thf
way to the edge of the El Toro Marint
Corps Air Station.
Tustin's boundary would then continut
east to the corner of the base, souU
along the base's eastern boundary h
about the center, then east again to th1
San Joaquin's current boundary line.
The rest of the area south of the com
mon boundary between Tustin an~
Irvine would encompass the Mission Vie
jo-EI Toro-Trabuco district.
The other plans are similar but eithe1
have too much difference between assess
ed valuation or too little community idea
Uty, the superintendent said.
Gates said selecting a plan will be tht
responsibility of the individual schod
boards. Jf Ule vtlte.n don't like the plu
that appears on the ballot they can vote t
down and the dmricta wW remain Bl'
they are today.
But he added that if some kind d
unifjcation is voted down three times, lh1
county has the right to decide on 1
uni!ication pla13.
The plans will be explained to the pub
lie during a meeling May 20 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Irvine School mulliJIW'PO.'e room
School District are invited.
Ali residents of the Tustin Union Higl
Wh at's Pink, Soft
And Has Good Body?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The descrip
tion reads. ''Delicate, clear, pink color,
curious nose, good body, relatively soft
finish. considerable character."
You say someone's talking about an ex·
ceedingly comely young chick? Wrong.
It's a description of a certain vintag~ in ·'
catalogue for the Nailonal AucUon 111
Rare Wines.
Police ID Seminar Slated
An estimated 200 idenlification officers
from police departments Lhrougbout
Californi a will arrive in Laguna Beach
Tuesday for a week-long seminar on
scientific investigation.
The policemen. members or the
International Association for Iden·
liflcal\on. y,·111 be hosted by Laguna
Beach Del. George Plclts. presi dent of
the C111lfornia division of the association.
In addition to a busi ness meeling, the of·
Heers wUI condu ct dally seminars 1n new
investigative t!Chnlque1 1t the Festival
Fonim Theater during the Tuuday lJtrou8h Frid>y conference.
The 11 lnstruction&I seminar• will
cover a wide variety of toplc11 Including
"How to Determine Time of Death and
Post Livldity," conducted by Orange
County Coroner's Investigator Gene
~1iller; ·'~fetal DetecUoh by Fluorescent
Lighting," conducted by the Orange
County Sheriff's Department, and
"Bombs and Inceildiary Devices," con-
ducted by the county Fire Departmeat.
A special equipment display wlll ac·
company each Instructional talk and the
public is invited to attend any or the
seminars. A achedule of the events may
be Gbtained Tuesday at the Fe1Uval
Ground.!.
Followiog the registration of delegates
Wednesday, the officers will be addressed
by several 1peaker1, lncludlng county
Sheriff Jim Musick, Mayor Rlehard
Goldberg, 8ctlng police chief Dave Brown
and county District Attorney CeclJ }fjcks.
Lovely Pe11 Sqtiad
Fifteen lovely Saddleback coeds will cheer the
Gauchos to victory next year. Six cheerleaders and
10 songleade rs were successful choices in lryouts.
From left in back rO\V are Becky Jean Carr, Becky
Jo Drury, Kathy L. Shower, Jackie Lynn Kaminski,
Dana C, Thomas, !Sherry Lynn Kobbins, Carolyn
Jensen, Chris Pellerltl. In front ls Judy E. Hau.au·
er. From left in center are Sheryl Jean Iverson,
Cindy Michele Grant, Judy E. Hausauer, Marilyn
Louise Miller, Randa Lea Kellern. and Pamela Rae ~
Stal Ile rt.
'·
'
I
i
I
'
•••
.-
• \
" OAJLY mol Frld11, Mu 7, 1971
Mideast Tour
• Rogers Ill Visit
\
\ •• I To .Battle Area
~ps '
Sneak Glance
At '76 Cars
By T""'' \Iii '.\IURPHIN!
01 tM DotllY PUM ... It
SfltOGSVJLLE UEPT. -The Federals,
II deYeJops today, are still taking the
hard line when dealing with the auto in-
dustry and ills proposed 1976 model year.
J say proposed model year because the
way the anti -pollution hearings have been
1oing v.·ith the auto makers i n
\Vashingt.on. there. may be some. question
as to whether or not there will be a 1976
model year.
The whole affair sacks up like this:
'1'he Federals haYe set up some standards
that diet.ate automobiles must plain quit
amoking by Jf76. The Federals have. done
thi5 because goYernme.nt studies blame
the mot.or car for nearly Ml percent of the
n1tion"s air pollution.
As a ruult. the U.S. Environmental
Prottction Agency held 10me hearinls
Thursday to ask the auto makers how
they are coming along toward a smogless
cir in 1971. 1be ruult4 were lw than
conYincina:.
DETKOIT'S FIN EST supested th a t
maybe the Federal• were a bit over-am·
bilious ,•1hen pointiing tow1rd car in 1976
that would haYe nothinl but air coming
out ezh1u1t pipes.
As a m1tler of f1ct. the Detroit fol ks
were pretty much unanimous in telling
the inYestlgators thal it couldn•t be done.
'Ibis mass technological di1elosure.
however, apparenlly falll to lmprus the
Feoder1l1 wno have aaid to the DetroiU,
"Well, y!IU11 just have to do it any·
11'ay . · ."
If this kind of an impasu continues
right up to 1975. we may aet JOmt noYel
new cars coming off the 'Detroit assembly
lines for the ton model year. Such as:
-THE JETSTREA.M II: This smo&iess
new car hu 1 big wale'!" tank fillin1 the
enUrt tn&ine compartment. A hu&e air
tank fills the trunk. Air preuure from
the' tank forces water out 18 jets al re1r
to power the car. Top speed. 6.4 miles per
hour. Ranee. 1 miles to the next air
pump. Sloppy goinc on dirt roads for at·
cond cir in line.
-THE ELECTRIC AGITATOR MARK
I: Very fast smogleu 1uto with speeds
up to 140 mile.s per hour'. Powered by an
air-cooled, turbo-tltctrlc motor. Very
powerful. Very quiet. Features a larae
take.up reel in the trunk for the extension
cont. Range. ene--quarter mile. at which
point plug pulls out of your wall socket
back home.
-TRE BUlWRAllD INVINCIBLEo
Actu1lly looks like a convertiblt until
1mo1ltu operations start. Top folds up
forward instead of to the rear, thus
btalmins a huae Mil. Depends on
windpower. Quiet, efficient and requires
enly a crew nf ei!lht. plus r1lley sl1Yes
for windlt11 daya. Strtin1 performer en
downwind leg of S1nta Ana Freew1y.
Shov.'I weakness on starbolrd tacks.
-TRE PEANUT TWO: This ont
rep\1ct1 those small foreign cars. A two·
Hi ter. Engine C(lmpartment conceals
-pedala with bike-type chain hookup to the
rear wheels. Smokeleu. Operat.cs el·
fici eftUy if you quit amokina ycurself.
Who knowa, Ottroit may come up with
aome evan more intertallnc alternatives
to Ult old reciproc1lin1 11soline engine.
J11detd , 1971 may be: an interu tinc
model year.
RUBBLE, SMOKE MA~K BLASTED COLORADO DYNAMITE PLANT
Four Men Died A1 Mystery Explo1ion Leveled Sm1ll Facility
DuPont Dynamite Factory
Blasted to Rubble; 4 Die
LOUV IERS, Colo. I UPI) -OHicials
say they may never learn the c1u5e of an
explosion that destroy ed a dyn amite
plant Thursday, apparently killing four
men.
The four were insidt the plant when the.
bl1st occurr1d, leaYlng only a pile of rub-
ble.
"'All that is lert is a hole in thr
ground," said William Elling, manager of
the OUPont Chemical Co. fa cil ity.
C h e s t e r Sheperd, clerical superin-
tendent of the plant. said it may be im·
possible to determine why the explosion
occurred .
"The problem is you haYe no
evidence," he said. "It's aone. Vaporiied.
If somebody made an error. you would
never know. becauM: they're 1one, too.
A photorrapher who flew oYer the site
in a helicopter s1id all that remained wa~
a circle cf "black ground with a small
crater in the center or it .''
Sheperd identified the vi ctims as Alvin
Oxnam, 54, or S11ida. Colo.: Claude
Mosher. 45. and Dewayne Garlow. 41. of
Wicks
Littleton, Colo., and Max ConYerse, 47, of
C1stle Rock, Colo. Two men working
outside the building were injured.
Hope Abandoned
For People Lost
In Huge Ca ve -in
ST. JEAN VIA NNEY. Que. (UPI ) -
Quebec officials gave up hope today of
finding aliYe any of the more than two
do~en persons still missing in one of the
worst landslides in the proYince's history.
"It will be a miracle if any more
persons arc pulled out aJive ," a
i;pokesman for the Quebec polict said.
"There is nothing there now but mud.''
Police reported five bodies haYe been
recoYered, although coroner Dr. Rich21rd
Authier said he could account for only
four. That would leaYe either 26 or %7
persons missing in the disaster area
v.·hich late Tuesday night collapsed 300
feet into the earth along • one-mile
stretch.
"I "''ould be shocked and surprised if
any more victims were found aliYe."
Authier said. "I was up in the air aboard
a helicopter Thursday and the damn
place is just a catastrophe."
Frogmen and crews in steel boats pl ied
the muddy pit Thursday as wa lls of the
1iant crater continued to crumble away.
The search will continue today just in
cast. more bodies can be found .
Dr. Cameron Kenney. a soil expert and
chairman of the department or engineer·
ing al the UniYersily of Toronto, Thurs·
day gave three possible reasons for the
sudden cavein.
They "''ere the area's clay subsoil.
which becomes inconsi5tenl w he n
disturbed ; the slope from the town tG the
Saguenay River. which could produce a
landslide chain-reaction : and w1ter
pressure that could have built up in the
clay making it un5table.
Midwest Soaked by Rains
Much of Nation Wet; Some Late Spring Snow Falls
Te111peratnrc1
.~
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TEL AVIV <UPI) -lsraeli mi111¥Y
chief1 took Secretary of State William P.
Ro1tr1 on an aerial tour OYer their
fortltst at Shann el Sheikh in occupied
Egypt today and the American diplomat
dtclllfed:
"I haYt a much better undtrstandina of
the whole problern. I have a better
underatandln1 of the area."
The plane k>ur of Israeli installations
came after Ro1ers conferrtd Thuraday
with Israeli Prime Minister-Golda Meir
on avenues toward Middle East Peact. A
U.S. spokuman described. the talk.! as
"animated," indicating that Mrs. Mtir
and her aides were reaiating Rogers' e.f·
forts to obtain some softening in hr•el's
stance on P'ace terms.
"Any time you see. s emething
per10nally, you haYe. a better idea of the.
whole problem," Rogers said after
viliUn1 Sharm el Sheikh. "Certainly from
the standpoint of the. terrain I h1Ye a
much beUer idea."
Roa:ers was taken on the tour by th,e
chief of staff of the Israeli armed forces,
Lt. Gen. Haim Bar-Lev, and the. in·
telli1ence chief, Maj. Gen. Aharon Yariv.
The group new fn Air Force 2. the. silver
and blue jetliner which serves u a
Dollar Crisis
Less Critical
In Europe
LONOON (AP) -Pre:uure on the
dollar eased •ll&htly Thursday and Eur·
opean Common Market finance mini5ters
scheduled meetings Saturday to e1plore
\tays to stem the flood of American cur·
rency that is undermining European
economies.
In some platts American tourists found
It difficul t to e1chan&e larae a.mounts cl
dollars fer local currencies.
They dl1covered meals and taxi rides
were 1 bit more expenaive in West
Gennany. Bul in Britain. "'here t h e
pound lost value in the selling wave of
dollars. Amer icans found some items
were cheaper.
West Germany , a key to the world crisi!'
because or its exceptionally strong: cur·
rency, does not plan to reyaJue the mark.
government spokesman Conrad Ahlers
said. He added it was unlikely tht five
other Common Market countriea would
reYaJue their cu1Tencies at the meeting in
Brussels Saturday. "There won 't be any
agreement on that point," he said.
West Gennany , Ahle.rs said, will decide
nn what measure it v.1JI take at' a special
cabinet meeting Sunday morning.
Earlier, West Gennan Chancellor Willy
Brandt outlined some proposals during an
hour long meeting with British Prime
Minister E<hvard Heath in London.
Sources reported the two discussed.
among other measures, a joint raising or
currency values by all six COf'!W~n
market members. This would mamta1n
the parity levels of their currencies with
each other and s1feguard the st.ability of
farm prices.
It also would tend to slow the dollsr
flow into Europe because the six cur·
rencie5 would be more expensiYe and
American e1port.s would become cheaper
in terms of European money and find a
readier market .
Fr1nce and .Italy an: reported opposed
to such a joint move and a unilateral
up"•ant rtYalu1tion of the German mark
would throw out of balance tht Common
Markel'! delicate farm prices.
The French argue th1t America, for in·
ternetional monetary solidarity, 3hould
reduce the v11lue of the dollar by raising
the price of gold to which the dollar. is
pegged. Washington haJ refused to hike
!he 0Hici1l gold price, wticll now is 135
an ounce.
Military Funding
At $204 Billion
For Year 1970
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Arm•
Control Agency said Thursd1y that
military spending throushoul lhe world
reached $204 billion in 1970 -roughly $6
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Subcammitttt, sai d the panel would
0' begin hearing5 on how to end the U.S.·
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. I ll-. SI
J llD 11 '"· I I IAfUllD4Y
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restraint.
ln its firlh aMua\ rtport, the 11gency
said roughly 80 pereen~ of tP.e increase
,vu cauatd by inflation. ..
The report said tht $204 billion figurt,
"'hlch campares with $199 billion in 1969.
11.·,11s "the equivalent in dollar ''aiut of a
year'1 incame productd by the one billion
.16 800 million peopltl ln tht PoQrtr hall of
• tht "'orld's population."
.M "In the six ye1r1 since the first world
survey. military oullays in current
dol11r5 have risen almost 50 percen t.·· the
agency Raid. "HoweYtr, about thret fifths
1,. of thi~ i11crease rellects price inflation ."
The agency said that In actual ex·
oe ~dlturts the increase in spending "''IS
tht sm1llest in recent years. It noted that
.o1 si nce 1963 I.ht international Gross Na·
lion,111 Product h11 grown faster than
• 1t military 1pendin&.
backup t.o President Nl1on'1 aircraft -
Air Foret I.
"Wt were very careful not UI fly over
occupied territory." Rogers t o I d
new1men, underacorlnJ lhe sensitivity or
the situation in tlU tlnderdox area of the
world.
The plane flew slowly south from Tel
Aviv to the Israeli port of Ellat on the
Gulf of Aqaba and then IOUth to Shinn ~
el Sheikh on the southern end of the gulf.
This was the area which provided the
spark for the 1967 war in which Israel.
seized and occupied the Sinai Peninsula.
Sharm el Sheikh overlooks the Strait or
Tiran and the Egyptian fortress there
blocked Israel! ships from appmaching
Eililt. Israel's only access to the Red Sea .
The late Egyptian president, Gama\
Abdel Nasser, closed the strait in the ear-
ly part of 1967 and the war followed In
June. Israeli troops took the Sharm el
Sheikh in the first hours of the war and
Israel has vowed never to relinquish it.
As Rogers new over Sharm el Sheikh,
he could see: an Israeli air base and
Israeli guns guarding the strait. The
plane the. circled back up the Gulf or
Aqaba. giYing Rog~rs a view on the right
side of the plane of Saudi Arabia and
Jordan, with Sinai on the left.
Israeli guns guarding the strait. The plan
then circled back up the Gulf or Aqaba ,
giving Rogers a vew on the night side of
the plane of Saudi Arabia and Jordan,
v.ith Sinai on the left.
The Suez Canal was not visible because
of the low nylng altitude ~ut Rc1ers did
see Israel's Medlt.erraniean coaaUine and
the cease-fire tine along the Jordan RiYer
in one swttp of the eye. Aides nid he
was looking forward to more talks \vith
Mrs. Meir later today.
More Marines
Will Withdraw
Soon from War
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
aMounced today the i m m i n e· n t
withdrawal of more than a dozen U.S.
Marine units that will red uce
Leatherneck strength in Vietnam by 3.~
men.
Their departure will lower the total of
U.S. forces in Vietnam to about 262.000
men, the Jowtst le.Ye] ia five years. Tht
last withdr awal target set by President
Nixon calls for American strength to be
cut to 18-4.000 men by Dec. I.
The Marine withdrawal annoWlCed lo·
day will leaYe about 9,000 Marines in the
country. All or these except a small
number of adYisers will be pulled out by
the end of this month or early June.
The majar units that are beginning to
stand down in preparation for return lo
the United States are the Isl Battalion.
11th Marine Regiment !Artillery). and
the 2nd B1ttalion, l!t Marine Regiment.
The artillery battalion normally his 660
men and the infantry battalion 1,155 men.
Both battalion! will go to Camp
Pendleton, Calif.
INJURED ABBIE FREE
Bail Met on Riot R•p
Abbie Hoffman
Fr eed on Bail
In Riot Actions
NE\V YORK (AP \ -Y1ppie leader Ab-
bie Hoffman was relea sed on $20.000 bail
Thursday on a charge of inters tate travel
to incite lo riot during antiwar
demonstrations in Y.'ashington this \\-'eek.
Hoffman, arrested Wednesday night in
the lobby of his East Village apartment
house by FBI agents, also was accused or
assaulting a \Vashington policeman last
Monday. . U.S. C.Ommissioner Earle N. Bishopri
set t.1ay 17 for a hearing on whether Hof·
,(man should be remoYed to \Va shington.
An F'BI agent . in ao af!idavit, said that
t'ln April 29 Hoffman encouraged studenl'I
al the University of Oklahoma lo join the
rlemonstrations 'that begon in Washington
la5t Saturday.
The agent sa id an informer in Norman.
Okla .. reported thflt Hortman told the
students the actiYities in Was hington
"will make Chicago in 1968 look like "
YAF meeling." YAF". the Young
Americans for Freedom is a conservatiYe
organization.
"We plan to do it. and "''e plan to do it
in the streets when the goYemment opens
next Monday." he "'as quoted as saying
in the government affidavit. ''\Ve·re stop--
ping the government -unles~ they ""ant
to stop the war . They·ve got 47 hours." '
One Woman Dead
In Mexico Duel
CHILPANCINGO. Mexico CUP!)
Marina h1arino. 38. settled a feud with
sister-in-Jaw Irene NaYa, •o . by knifing
her to death in a duel with daggers,
Guerrero state police said today.
•·rrankly, I couldn't stand my sister-i n·
law," P.1rs. ~1arino told police. "'When I
saw her \\'ashing clothes at the Yillage
\11ell, I challenged her to a duel withou t
leCQnds or witnesses ...
Mr!. Marino said h1rs. Nava selected
the weapons -curved dagger~ -and the
place for Thursd11y's enc<iunter, a field
about 12 miles north of this state capital.
Antiwar Girl Ordered
To Give Bomb Answers
SEA'M'LE IAP) -Leslie Bacon, ar-
rested a! a material witness in the U.S
Capitol bombing, faced a feder1I grand
SHE'S 'MAD ENOUG H'
Activist Leslie Bacon
jury aga in today after saying she would
only answer questions concerning the al·
tempted bombing of a New York City
bank.
.. If they have s case againsl me. Je1
them prove it without n1y help ." !he said
in a typewritten statement giYen to
newsmen by her attorneys Thur:iday.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge George Boldt
granted a goYemrnent motion Thursda y
to compel the 19 year old antiwar worker
fr!lm Atherton to an5wer rurther ques·
lions about the attempted bank bombi11g.
He turned down her attorneys· motions l<t
release her or reduce the $100.000 bond
under which ~he is being held in cnn·
nection with the March l bombing of the
Capitol .
In he r statement Thursday, Miss Bacon
said. "Today I will refuse to answer1al1
question! put to me before the grand jury
except those that the federal district
caurt judge has ordered me to ansv.·er."
Her attorneys sa id she rerused In
an:iwer some quetitlons other than tho~e
about lhe New York incident. The natur1
of the queslions was not disclosed.
Six persons have pleaded guilty to al·
tempted arson and 11re a"'aiting .'.\en-
tenci ng in the altrmpl to firebomb a
MsnhaUan branch of the First National
City Bank.
In ordering t\ti ss Bacon to testify
further on the bank attempt, Boldt sai d
she previously had told the grand jury
''at least rive limes that she sat in on
plannlng of tl'le bombing. that she wen! tn
lhe place twiCf' as sort of a dry run , and
e\'en gave some opinion as to the type or
explosives that should be used."
In her statement., Mis! Bacon said. "I
partlcJpated in some early discu~5lon1 nf
lh()S( plan! but withd rew from all plans
more th11n a month before the actual al·
tempt.
"'There was an infornler lnvotYed in lhr
plans an along ind the government
kno"'" in fult detail the extent ef my
pa rticipation," sbt.ssid.
hliss Bt1con st~rted tesllmony before
the grand jury one "·eek 110 after being
nnwn to Seattle from Witshlngton. D.C.,
lt'.here she was arrested April za .
:
" I
Huntington n·e-a~h
·Fountain Valley
•••
. .
T~·~ ......... ··-----
•
I VOL 64, NO. 109, • SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
:/ U.S. Lifts
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1971 . . TEN CENTS
,.
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I
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States removed all restrictions on dollar
traruactions with Red China today as a
first step to opening up trade betw~en the
two nations.
Treasury Secretary John B. Connally
issued a license allowing U . S .
businessmen and banks to transact
bwiness with the Communist government
and its citizens using dollars or dollar in-
struments. Previously there bad been a
Dollar . Transactions With China . .
complete prohibiUon against s u c b
transactions.
"This is the treasury's first step in im·
plementing President Nixon's decision on
April 14 to relax financial and com·
merclal controls with r~pect to mainland
China," a treasury statement said.
"Treasury is ·now consulting with the
Departments of State and Commerce and
other interested agencies en relaxi11g'con-
trols on imports of goods from China."
The commercial move .. tame after lhe
Red Chinese invited American tabJe ten-
nis players to tour mainland Cblna last
month.
The lifting .of the .dellar' restriction
would also apply to foreign governments
and businessmen, the treasury, said.
.The State Department satd a list of.
llems that wou1d be allowed in trading
with ~ed China was "under high level
reviewl' and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department spokesman, Charles
Bray, was asked if .there had been any in·
dlcatlons the Chinese regime would res·
pond to the U.S. trade overtures.
"l don't know that there are," ht
replied. "I assume that any reaction
would await their opportunity to look at
the details." ' •
Pj\rt of the new policy entails
permission by the transportation depart·
ment for U.S. airlines to carry cargo
destined for Red China.
They will not be allowed to dellvtr
cargo directly to Red China, only to a
transshipment point, a spokesman said.
Flying Tiger .airlines ia the major
American air cargo airline now 1trving
the Orient.
Treasury officials emphasized . that ·
Connally's order waa limited to dollar
transacUon1,' and in itseU did not remove
prohibitio~ against exporting' or im·
porting goods' to or from Communist
auna. But the statement made K clear
th1t removinJ or reluinJ thse coil:trols
Wll beinC CO(it~plj:~.
CoMally also removed 1 prohlbiUon
agaiiiat. Amerlc~rolled foreign a.a
vessel! from canine at ·mainland OUna
porfl, but lefflnta~ are_gulaUon,~
U.S. 0Jg v-11,from <19\1>8 IO.
Connally'• o'*t, allo lllow:s American
oil companlea abi-Oad to sell tuel to Com·
'l')IJli>t Cllinue.lhJps. except -g~Jng to or from North Koiea, North Vietnitn
... Cuba.
•
Larwin Co. Lashed
Councilman Hits 'Freeway Homes'
By TERRY COVILLE
01 tl\9 01lly l"H•t SllN
An angry Fountain Valley Councilman
Ron Shenkman today charged the Larwin
Company with "total disregard tor the
public welfare" tor building and selling
homes in the path of the Huntington
Beach Freeway. ·
"They have been asked by the city to
stop construction of homes that may fall
under the freeway right-Qf-way. They
refused," Shenkman charged. "The worst
part is they have never given prospective
buyer~ any warning their homes could be
lrnst to a freeway in seven years."
Michael Temer, executive vlct pres!.
dent of Larwin Company said this morn·
Ing he has not seen Shenkman's charge.s
and would prefer to see them in Writing
before commenting. "It's an impart.ant
matter and not one to which we would
want to respond off the cuff." .
Shenkman leveled his attack. on
Larwin'1 Greenbrook development west
of Brookhurst Street between Talbert and
Ellis Avenues.
It was a controversy over this same
Larwin Tract -originally proposed on
much smaller lots -which launcht<l the -
rec.all campaign In 1969 when three Foun-
tain . Valley councilmen ·weli re.moved
from office. ,
The total di!velopirient covers.JOB acres
-1 propoRd 1811 ·h~. Moot of tho
traol -Including hO!llQ MW occupied -
Is mot affected·bY ·the· propo.ed freeway.
However, tf'.7 . acres west of thl
Southern Calllornil ·Edison eo~··,
easement falls in the freeway 1:'1'~-o/·
w4y as . c~ntly j)roposed. Sixteen
homes are now under construction and
another 67 are planned on that western
property.
"Larwtn Company was warned about
(See LAJIWIJl1, P•1e II
Opinions V .... ed 01~ .
STATE SCHOOL CHIEF RILES !LEFT) CHATS WITH OCEAN VIEW SUPERINTENDENT CLARENCE HALL
Beach Pilot's
Body Found
Near .San ltUts ·. ;St~riu .w ~n~~·~r~~J.r?t~ ~e.t~~.nea, Vist• View Seventh Gr1d1r Ron MIJ11y (c1,n~1~) Ch1~ronec:t th•. Yt~ltln9. Dl9nl~1~I 1 'I .· ~
· · ~ •BJ ·ALAN 1>1111Wi . . 1 • ' • • • • •
Aerospace Job
Rate to Decline
Twelve Percent
WASHINGTON (AP) -Employment ii
the aerospace industry will decline
almost 12 percent during 1971, · the
Aerrnspace Industries Association said to-
day.
Karl G. Harr Jr., AIA president, said
the industry is gravely concerned at tbt
continuing loss of highly skilled person·
nt:l, accelerated by government can-
cellation of the supersonic transport pro-
gram. . . But, be said. this year's esumated
decline is much less than the 171.k percent
job loss last year.
"The downward trend of the past
several years appears to be leveling off,''
Harr said. "This lends support to our ex·
pectations that 1972 will see a reversal of
the declining employment trends ex·
perienced during the past three years."
The AJA forecasts the industry's
payroll will shrink by the yfar's end to
943;000 persons , the first drop below o~e
million since record keeping began 1n
1959.
"During the three year period 1969 to
1971, the industry has been forced to
release nearly hall a million people, or
slightly tl)O!'t than one Uird of its labor
forc.e ," Harr said. "Despite this,
aerospace continues to be the largest
manufacturinc employer."
Scientists and engineers are expected
to experience the smallest decline, 9.6
percent, to an end of the year total of
151 ,000 compared with a 1967 peak of
2.15,000.
Orange «:east
Weather
Don't let this sunny spell fool
you ; it looks like rain again tonight
and possibly Saturday. But clear
skies should take over this weekend
with temperatures in the high SOS.
INSIDE TODAY
Art by students of tht Ntw-
port·~lesa SchooL District will be
on display ne.tt week at Fashion
lslttnd. For a preview of the
.show see today's Weekender.
... tint " M<INll 1"•111111 " C1llfltnlll ' N.il9n1I New. •• Clltdlhll U• ' °"'"" Cellll"
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M.-n ....
Wilson Riles Praises New .. ,
Valley Vista View School
Wilson Riles , atate superintendent of
public instruction paid a visit to Orange
C.ounty this morning, He made a 45-
minute tour of Fountain Valley's Vista
View School.
Students and teachers of the Ocean
V~ew School District's newest, open-space
design campus warmly greeted the
superintendent at 9:30 a.m. and then led
him on 11 guided tqur of the various
classrooms.
"This, I have to say, is one of the mos(
exciti~g operations I have seen in recent
years," Riles said at the conclusion of his
visit. He added that he would like to see
this kind of school in each of California's
school districts.
The recently-complet.ed Vista View
U.S. Ship Damaged,
Collided With Russ
SASEBO (AP} -The U.S. destroyer
HllMOn pulled in to the Sasebo Naval
Baee today with a six foot dent in its star-
board bow after a collision with a Soviet
tug.
campus was praised by Riles for in·
volving parents, college r;tudents and
other volunteerfi In assistance to the
educallional program.
He said this type of involvement mighl
be the answer to the connicts some
schools are experienceing be t w e e n
educators and parents.
"The schools need to open up and invite
pitrehts to jM,. in a team for the children.
The team aj>proach is what we have to
have," said Riles.
Addressing himself to financial pro-
blems experienced by many school
districts, Riles said there Is a finance bill
now before the slate Legislature which
hopefully will alleviate these problems.
He said the bill, commonly known as
the statewide property tax proposal,
would be "tough to get through ."
"But lif we don't get some more money
from the state level, these school
districts are going to go broke," added
Riles. ·
Riles pointed to the inequity of the cur·
rent method of financing school opera·
tion. He said taxpayers in West Covina,
pay more property tax than those in
Beverly Hills but get less education for
their money because of a low tax base.
The body of a Huntlngton Beach pilot
whose plane van.I.shed alter taking off in
b~d weather 1ix nionths ,ago has been
found near San Lui! Obispo.
The pilot, Darryl Bandy, 36. 3231 Sttrl·
ing Ave., took off in heavy mist and fog
from Paso Robles Airport Dec. l to fly to
Orange County.
The wreckage of the Cherokee 140
plane and the body of a woman passenger
-Martha Easter. 57, of Tifton, Ga. -
was found last y;eekend in a wooded
stretch of the Cuesta Grade in lhe Santa
Lucia mountain range 200 yards eallt of
Highway IOI.
Bandy, a bachelor who worked as a
motorcycle escort for a private compa111y,
had reportedly flown from Van Nuyll to
the S.an Francisco Bay area to pick up
the woman. He was returning south when
he stopped at the Paso Robles Airport for
gas .
The airport manager advised Bandy
not to continue the night because of the
bad weather but the pilot repor tedly
rCp~ied that he would ny low and follow
Highway 101.
Domestic Air Fare
Hike Takes Effect
WASHINGTON (AP) -Domestic air
rares rose 6 percent today on most routes
and may go up another 3 percent in July.
Of "" caur ftllft tt•ff About 2S students from Wlnttrshurg
C.OntinuaUon High School picketed I.he ·of.i
fices of the Huntington Beach Union H!Jl!
School Di1trict thie morning prOtesttn;
the fropo.sed reassiinment of ·their prln·
clpa. Roy Miller.
They carried signs eaying. "We Want
Miller" and "Why ls Miller Leaving?»
The principal, who has been in charp
of the 37S-student campus since it was
opened 21.k years ago, 1a being assigned to
teacb.ing duUes next 8tp\ember.
After three of the students met with a
district official the pro{esters were urged
to return to school. Miller himself we nt
down 'to the district Gfficies oppo11ite tht
HunUngton Beach High School to urae'ttJe
student.s to return to ·the campus.
They all went back to Wlntersbura
whert: they held a questioD-and·answ~r
session with tl)e principal on the lawn for
45 minutes. Then they went to their
classes. ·
At the d.is'trict offices, .Or. Jay Settlt,
a9Sociate superintendent for operations,
met with t.hrt:e representatives of tbt
protesters to hear their complaints.
Dr. Settle e?!:plained that the change
was made in response to community
pressure to increase efficiency in the
district and ·In response to a recent Na·
tional Educatio11.i1l Planning Associates
personnel report.
Dr. settle said lhat next fall a CUid&nce
resource center, speech therapy pro-
gram, and a program for expectant
mothers would be established at the cam·
pus.
Dr. Walter Winters, district direct.or of
pupil assessment and guidance, who cur·
rently works out of the district offices
would head the Wintersburg center.
"The change is designed to Increase el·
ficiency," · Dr. Settle aaid, addlna,
..
, • '4tL~ l"ILO,T sterf>Plltlll
. REASSIGNID IY DISTRIG:t'
Wlntol1~1'9,Hlgh'1 Mllltl"
however, that the. studtnts UM:licat,ed. t.hey
might 1UU protest .!bO relislgluntnt at
the next board of. lnlJt.a meeting.
Miller ,COl!Feded he w~. ~
with the reassjgnm,e~, ~ conlmenttd,
"These things bl.ppen ·all the tin)e. Yoo
have to make tht"'b'tat or·tbem."
He Qld tho.I )le ho'! urged 'the students
(i!ff•MJtlZR, Pife•I) .
U.S. Navy authorities said the accident
occurred Wednesday night tn the Korean
Strait, about 80 miles west of Japan, and
there were no cuualties.
Under the new bill, property taxpayers
would pay the same amount, $3.75 per
$100 of assessed valuation. The funds
raised would then be distributed to in·
dividual districts on a more equitable
basis, said Riles.
The increase, approved last month by
the Oivil Aeronautics Board, are expected
to give the 20 airlines involved an ad·
dltional $200 million this year. They
reported losses of about $1$4.9 million
last year. West Germany u>·s·Imv . ' . '
Cultural Art Week on Tap Flow of 'Choop Jj~J,~rs'
Activities to Start Monday in Fountain Valley BONN (UPI) -The West 0.rman
cabinet ls reported to have agreed today
to let the value of the .Deutschesmark
A new beauty queen, a pioneer picnic
and more than 30 displays and activities
will highlight Fountain Valley's second
aMual CUiturai Arts Week. May 1()..16.
The week·long show opens Monday
when a California historical trailer
sponsored by the state parks department
goes on display in front of tht: community
center .
The trailer features seven display cases
depicting varlou! stages of California
history. lt will be Open from JO a.m. to 5
p,m .• Monday through next Saturday.
The Miss Fountain Valley pageant will
treat onlookers to 14 young beauties
vying for the city title at 7:30 p.m., Salur-
day, May' 15. In the community center.
And on Sunday, May J6, lhe week or ac.
UviUes wW be topped ofJ with 1 pioneer
picnic from noon to 5 p.m. In Harper
Park, 8675 Bluebird Ave. C
Families are invited to bring their own
picnic food to watch entertainment
brought by Indian, Mexican and Japanese
dance groups as well as square dancers.
PJe, cake, coffee and punch will be
· served at the park. ..
Special activities are also planned dur.
Ing the week at 13 Fountain Valley
elementary schools. For information on
that, check with the nearest school. ·
Activities planned during the week at
the community center Include : meuo-
soprano Mi!s Patricia Centofanle. 7:30
p.m., Monday; An alt-day display in the
library, Tuesday: A Japanese luflCheon,
11:30 a.m., Wednesday; movies on J~_p~
at 11 a.m. an~ 1 p.m. in the llbt9l'f;
WAdneSday: beilinners duplicate bridge
tournament, 7:30 p.m .. Thursday: ballel
"'cital, 7:!0 p.m., Friday, May ti; MIJS
•
• float upward in a move'to haltthe flow of Fountain Valley Pageant, 7:30 p.m.. cheap dollars into the country. It will go
Saturday, May 15. ahead Whether or not France agrees.
From 10 a.'m. to S p.m., Saturday, May Chancellor Willy Brandt conferfed with
15, there Will' be hobby, art. fl<>wer and his Cabinet all · da)" in; urgent aes~On· t'.o
group showa at the community center. follow up q>e German .. deci$1on · on
Other special events planned include a Wednesday to stop 'aupporUng the dollar
Mexican luncheon at Tamura School, with official purchases to , keep up
11 :30 a.m .. Tuesday; A band concert et its value. Earlier Story Pagt: 4.
Fountain Valley High School, 7:30 p.m., The cabinet laid down the instructions
Wednesday: a modern dance concert In that Foreign Minister Walter*'' ind
the Fountain Valley High gymnulum, economics minister Karl Schiller wt t 1
7:30 p.m .. Thursday ; a talent 100w at takt to a European common Market
Ethan Allen School, 9:30 a.m., Friday. meeting Saturday In Brussel! to aetk
May 14; and a repeat of the modern joint action to meet UM! crisis. Tbe pltght
dance contest at Fountain Valley Hi&h, of the dollar and the rush to buy Cold has
7:30 p.m., Friday. touched off one of the worst monet.Jry
Th1rt wtU be a bua tour of tht city crises· fn years.
from 2 p.m. through 3:30 p.m .• leaving Schiller baa proposed U..1 West
each half ho11r from Ute community Germany let the mart float.,.and seek ill
ctnter. own le'el bf freelna the uchan&e rate
.. ··l .•
ond lo -pl• •fllla-Witb .Idema! ltlbiU-
'4ilOO miliurai. .
.:£""'ad'Ahlili,. lllt' olfidal ..........,,i
·~tnMlft, ,, ... qJaeltloned· by~nnanen
on thls,polnt. .
0"Did Schiller wt tlle 111ppor\. of the
dbinet?" Ahlm waa asked. ..Yet,''
Ahlirs rep11ed.: ·
'A floatlnf .. -1d ,..k lll own
!eye! ·111!11\0POM!Y•"ltol> the apeculatlon
whldi b'°"811t dOIJai:1. floodJlla1n here to
buy :mua, · · · -
Ahhrs :Hld Brtri9t, tr Jhe cablliet
nlfflina \<Idly, told l!chO!!I. an<! Sch!iler to
gel -Joint .. ction;by the 111 members QI
the Comnlon Motut -West-G.nnany,
France, 1~,;Balalum, tJ:>e Ne\ll<rlandt
and Lu1emb0iir1-But he mado It ci.,r
Gerin111>.-'""11d Oct< alorte ·ff Frtnct clJI"
tlnued lo ball. • • : '
"W•'•lm'ftir ~ •wnlv,rnt
!eut toler~ ,of . Wo me1111R1 Ibo German ·~' llll&ht • 1'ave It ... i...:cn .. -... '1::..·-i:11 • • ...,. •a-.;_, NU..-.1.,....., • A
..!--
,
% DAILY PILOl H Frld,ay, MQ 7, 1971
Ensenada Race Fl'om Page J
.
Yachts Battling·
LARWIN ....
the frttW•Y route 11 ell1y as J111Uary,:
1970, but started con.structlon last Marcti
any'l\'ay," Shenkman cbar&ed. I
The angry councllman called Llrwln'I
_ actions "-au-injustice to lhe eltizrna .and
prospective citizens of Fountain Valley." Mounting -winfls -· He said La.rwin o(flclals agreed Thurs·
day to amend their public report for
those homes to lodlcate that a freeway
would be coming through the area .
By AIMON LOCKABEY
Deoll\l'"Pl .. 1 ... .,.., ·~ Thirty-six yachls Jn .the Newport to
Ensenada yacht race were reported
about 10 mlles south of the Los
Coronadoa 1sla.lids earlytocray.
The yachts fought -lighl south to
southeast winds all night. Velocities were
never more than five knoU. Winds this
morning had increased to about 12 knols
ftom the south.
This would mean that the yach ts would
Et.ill be beating their way to Eruenada .
· Another escort veuel rtp0rted that
about 2lCI yachts "'ere sailing about 25
miles west of the Coronados.
Names or the lead yachts were not
a vailable because of low visibility. Rice
offlclaJs sa.Jd that of the 550 yachts that
started tbt race, this morning there had
been only 10 reported dropouts.
Tricia Names
Bridal Party
For Wedding
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
has picked her sister, two of her cousins,
and the sister of the bridegroom to be the
members of her bridal party for the
White House wedding June 12.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower will be matron
or honor.
Bridegroom Ed cox's sister, Mary Ann
Co1, 15, who ts graduating this month
from Yale's school of architecture, will
be the bridesmaid.
Aod serving as junior bridesmaids will
be two young cousins, Amelie. 13, and
Elit.abelh, JI, Nixon, the daughters of the
president's youagest brother, Edward
Nixon of Seattle, Wash.
Press secretary Constance Stuart said
the groomsmen for the wedding will be
announced shortly.
Th& While Rouse provided photographs
of "Amy" and ''Beth" Nixon as they pos·
ed. on a recent visit to the White Hoose,
wearing some of Tricia's fonnat gownt
and practicing wa lking· dbwn the (rirld
staircase 0in the White House.
The two girls came with their parentJ
for a White House visit early in Arpil.
P,trs. Stuart said they had a "fun ar.
ternoon" dresslng up in Trlcla'a clothes
and pracilclng for the rweC:lding. Belh
wore 1 grown Tricia used when she wu
queen ~I the Azalea Festival in Norfolk,
Va., in April 1969. And Amy practiced in
the drtas Tricia wore at 1 masked ball
ishe gave in the White House on
Hallowe'en 1969.
The wed<ling fnyllaUons to XIO or 400
guests will go out next Monday, May 10.
From Page I
MILLER ••.
.
not to be disruptlve lo their protut.
"I don't want them to destroy what we
have built up bere. They are a darned
good bunch cf kids. Still we. teach them
that they have the rlgh of redress and
they are entitled to fiOmt eipressloa of
their convictions.
One 1tudent, Buffie Holding, 16, 1ald
&he worked unUI 3 a.m. making posters
protesting the change.
"Mr. Miller has made this campus
what It Js today the most clouly knit
school ol all the high schools," :she said.
••we don·t want to lose him."
DAILY PILOT
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At the start of the race off Newport
Harbor jetties Thursday at noon, dying
wind! and sloppy, left-over seas created a
bumping match with a number of boalJ
being ~oved off the weather end of the -rd line. ' Tbe left-over sea was from an 18·knot
ft!terly that had been blowing earlier in
the morning.
OAIL Y PILOT l'flf .. 1W •1<11.n KtltflLM'
"But that isn't satisfactory ,''
Shenkman continued. "It still doesn't
solve the problem."
"At this point J'm n"Ot sure there was
anything striclly illegal here. but I am
going to confer wilh our city altorney t•
see.if there js any way the city can stop
construction of those homes,"·S~kman
added.
Another factor touched by Sl\tnkman,
was lbe cost to stale taxpayers. The catamarins, first fleet to start at
U o'cloCk, got the worst starL Many of
them were caught far behind the line on
the dying breeze and approached the line
10 to 15 minutes late -smack in the
midst of the Class A start.
ENSENADA·BOUND YACHTS MANEUVER OFF NEWPORT HARBOR JETTY BEFORE START
At th• 1970 Starting Gun, Sloppy Seas, Light Winds 1nd Traffic, Traffic. Traffic
He said the Larwin land is worth about
•25,000 an acre vacant. Bot Larwin Corn·
pany is building $40,000 homes, four-to-
.an-acre, which the state would have to
condemn aRd pay for.
The cost of vacant land -16.7 acres -
would be about $420,000 to the state uader
condemna1ion. But with U0.000 homes it
could run as high as $2.7 million.
As the big Class A packets crowded the
weather end of the line, the cats were
again shoved off the line. Three cats
were at least a half-hour behind their
scheduled start.
The weather picture changed rapidly,
however.
Easier City Annex Bill Dr. Hartelius "Certainly the homeowners wauld be
fairly compeasated,'' Shenkman •aid.
''But they are not moving here with lbe
intentior. of leaving in a few years. And
the cost to taxpayers is clear.'' Just as the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet
was crossing the llne at 1 p.m. the early
starters could be fietn rail-down as a
w'eather fr on t moved across the fleet
bringing rain and winds up to l& knots.
Passes Committee ·Test Back in Court
On 15 Counts
Shenkman outlined the previous actions
taken by the state, tbe city and the
Larwln Company.
As the squalls hit the MORF and late
starting PHRF fleet.! there was frantic
&ail-changing going on aboard most of the
yachts.
There y,·ere rtporls of a number of pro-
tests at the start, and a number of yachts
were across the line early and failed to
restart.
Arson Probed
In Employment
Agency Blaze
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 1111 01nr 1"1111 11111
A mulfled explosion set of( raging
flames within seconds Thursday night
after. an arsonist torched personnel
record files, causing $11 ,000 damage to a
Costa Mesa employment agenry.
No one was seen around the Orange
Coast Employment Agenry. 124 E.
Broadway, but evidence indicates it was
undoubtedly set w:lth intent to destroy the
documents and gut the building.
Fire Department Batlalion Chie f Ed
~wis, heading the arson investigation,
1aid today certain items rte0vered from
the cb,arred .ec.ene ar undutoing crime
Jab anMy1ll. 1 "
Owner Graham E. Budd t o I d
authorities he locked up the office about 6
p.m., at which time everything seem ed
secure.
Printer Beryl Maloney was working in
his adjacent shop at the rear of the
employment efflce when he heard what
seemed to be an e1plosion at 8:46 p.m.,
police said.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legl!laUon
making it easier for cities to anne11: new
territory has passed a key committee
test despite emotional opposition from
homeowner groups and residents of unin·
corporated communities.
The controversial bill by Assemblyman
Jolu1 Knox ([)..Richmond), V.'as sent lo
the Assembly floor Thursday on a 6-1
vote of the Assembly Local Government
Committee.
The comple.x 39-page bUI revises almost
the entire city anne1ation law, Knox said,
"to bring aome order out of the crazy
qu ilt of mlDllcipal government and give
cities .•. tools to cope with some terrific
problems."
Victim of Auto
Accident Dies
A 17·year-old Huntington Beach youth
has died from injurie1 suffered in a road
accident Tuesday.
Keith A. Wilson of 464l Minuet Drive
received head injuries when he was
thrown from bis car by a collision with a
van on Edinger Avenue neir Beach
Boulevard. lie died in Huntlngton
Int~ H0$11ll ~.
The driver of the van, Sidney 0 .
Morgan, 69. Ana.helm, suffered only
minor injuries.
Graveside services have been set for
10:30 a.m. 1.1onday at the Peek Family
Colonial Funeral Home, \Vestmlnster.
The youth is survived by his parent!. Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Wilson, and sisters, Toni
Marie and Yvonne.
White House Hotly Denies
Late 1972 Pullout Date
WASHINGTOl'I (AP) -The While
House firmly denied Thursday a report
attributed to military sources in Vietnam
that November 1972 has been set as a
fixed date for total withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Vietnam.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
v.·boever the source of the report was
v.·ould not have been aware or President
Nixon's thinking and was "just speaking
from a foundation of total lack ol
knowledge."
Ziegler said he had no idea of who the
source might be but he added even more
firmly that the indiv idual was "speaking
from a base of absolutely no knowledge
at all ."
The presidential spokesman reiterated
wbat Nixoa has said : that U.S. troops in
Vietnam will be reduced to a total of
184,000 by Dec. 1 and that the President
would make another assessment ef the
situation and announce his decisions
regarding any further troop wilbdrawals
by Nov. 15.
At the State Department, officials cau-
tioned that no one short of Presi dent Nix·
on himself has any accurate idea of what
the troop level would be in November,
1972.
A projection of the present rate of U.S.
withdrawals fr om Vietnam would bring
the number down to 55.000 by that dale.
Segal Se~luded
'Love Story' Autlior Sounds Sorry
NEW HAVEN. Conn. (UPI) -
Erich Segal, lhe Vale University
profeSJtir of clas,\ics who rose to
rame and fortune by authoring
''Love Story,'' says he has had it
with the public life.
"I am going into hid ing," Segal
said Thursday •
Segal , 34, who ha! given lectures,
appeared on television talk show•
and hid numerous magaz.ine and
newspaper arUcles written about
him since the success of his book
and a movie of the ume title, aald
"l am returning to the scholarly
llfe .i•
Segal said he was "sick or
reading about Erich Segal, the
monster." and of met ting airline
steward!S$es y,•ho &lip him their
apartment keys and believe love
means ''nev'r having to say you
art sorry.''
Seg11rl aald he ~·as leavlng Yale,
"with the hies.sings of lhe universi-
ty," al the end of the cu rrent
semeiiler.
"f can't tell you where J am
going." Segal lald, "but I Imagine
wherever l co, It will be •lone. 1
boPf."
""' ,-,1 ........ SICK OF SUCCISS
Y1le'1 Profeator S.g1I
He said the measure would be toughest
In forcing ao<:alled islands of unin-
corporated neighborhoods entirely :sur·
rounded by a city into the city.
"Ou r biggest urban problem is plan·
ning," Knox said, adding that •·more
realistic" anne1ation laws are needed lo
make urban planning work.
A p a rad e of witnesses called the
measure the "taking away of what UtUe
constitutional bargainlng power we in
unincorporated communities :s t i 11
J>O.'S'SS" to fight off city annexations.
The most controversial provision of lhe
bill would start an annexation proceeding
on the petition of the annexing city itself
or five percent of the voters or property
owners of the area. It would take 25 per-
cent to call a public referendum or 50
percent of voters or property owners to
halt it outright.
That "infringes on our rights to frtt
elections" and substi tutes "protest as-the
means of gaining right.s we s h o u 1 d
posses! in the first place" said H. D.
Bryan of Burlingame, reprtseatalive of
homeowne.rs groups.
"Isrl°t this denying the right of selt-
OelenninaLion ," said ·1'.lrs. Haro I d
Jack:soo of Altadena. "We've lost our
perspective."
Knox, who agreed in the bearinl to
lower the percentage needed to force an
election from 35 percent to 25 percent.
said the low percenlage V.'as justifiable
because it would be raising on ly an irn·
precise idea that must be acted on
fnvorably by a Local Agency Formation
Commission before the referendum pro-
cedure would come in force.
He said the anne xation proposal would
be specihc then. and in the small area s
involved the higher percentage required
for a referendum would be reasonable to
protect against calling elections to satisfy
"trivial" oppru;ition. '
By TOP.I BARLEY
Of !"-OIHY ~1191 Iliff
Or. Ebbe Hartelius, cleared by a Su·
perlor Court jury just one month ago on
arso11 and fraud charges, was back be-
fore the same judge to plead inno-
cent to 15 felony counts contained in 1
still-secret Orange County Gra1d Jury
indiclment.
Judge James F. Judge delayed the
Corona del Mar physician's .arraignment
to )..Jay 18 and ordered Harteliu!I, 50 to
post $5,000 ball.
He denied a plea that the defetdaut be
freed on his personal pledge to return.
Hartelius is accused In the new indict-
ment or grand theft, bribery and the sub-
mission of fraudulent clalms to iasurance
companies. None of the charges was filed
against him during his recent trial, but
several, particularly bribery, were dis-
cussed during the four-week court ses·
sion.
Judge Judge ordered the post Ing
of a bolld after hearing Deputy District
Attorney Ai Novick claim that Hartelius
planned to flee the slate "possibly to
Denmark or Alaska."
Hartelius. whose new home is at 402
Magnolia St., Costa Mesa, reminded the
judg e tha t he has lived in the
United Slates for 21 years since his ar·
rival here from De11mark.
Defense attorney Tom Reilly asked
Judge Judge to recognize that hi! client
had substantia l property interest• and a
practice In Orange County a11d ¥.'as "nev-
er tardy once during his four.week trial ."
tlartelius was cleared in that trial after
two days of deliberation of cha rges that
he arranged the burning of his offices at
2345 E. Coast Highway o• Aprll 9, 1970.
It was also unsuccessfully alleged tha t
he had earlier faked the theft of his car
and filed a fraudulent claim against the
insurance company to cover the loss.
"The freeway route was adept.ed by the
State Highway Commission on Oc:L 21.
1968. On April 18, 1969, Fountain Valley
received three proposed routes within our
area.
.. On Sept. 3, 1969, the Larwin tract was
approved by the city planning com-
mission. A spokesman for Larwin 1aid
the portion of the tract west of the
Edison rigbt-of·way would be devek>ped
last. hoping by then the stale would
determine the precise 1lignment of the
freeway."
Shenkman then c~ed Ulat Lanrin
sy,·itcbed ita plans a'fi'd began building,
this March, the part west of the :Edi.loo
easement ahead of schedule.
"They have another ISO acres nowhere
near the freeway route which ceuld be
built first." Shenkman said.
"I t~ink lt's a councilman's
responsibility to protect the rights of ~
pie either living or moving into our com·
munlty," Shenkman said. •
He and Councilman Al Hollinden uld
they learned of the problem just this
week, when citizens phoned to complain
aboul Larwin tactics.
"l was ama:z:ed when a resident told me
they were selling homes aid not telling
people about the freeway," Shenkman
said. "I didn't believe it, but then I
cbecked the facts."
Shenkman announced his cbargea: and
Cletails of the Larwin transaction at a
press cooference in city hall called early
this morning ,
"We ·will be looking into this further t•
see if any more can be done," he warned,
"But for now we just want to te\1 the peo-
ple who will be looking at those homes
over the weekend."
Pat Nixon Travels
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pal Nixon will
fly to Tulsa, Okla., Thursday for a
luncheon in her honor t:ponsored by the
Tulsa Chapter of lbe American Red
Cross.
Upholstery Sale!
SLEEPER SOFA
SALE PRICED
STARTING AT
$239
\
Our upholstery 11le continue• fe1turing a large 1el•e·
tion of qu1lity sof11 ind c:h1ir1 at exceptionel price•.
Sile if1m1 1lio include this h1nd1ome 1leeper·1of1 at
a 1t•rting price of ,239, M1ny floor simples in Hercu·
Ion. ·
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEC -HERITAGE
NIWPOIT ITOll onN PllDAT 'TIL t
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wellcllfl Dr.,'642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9
Prof•11lon1I ln .. rl.,.
D•tlgn•r1 Av1llable-AID
INTERIORS
rti, .. T•ft ""'9 M"' .t o,_.. C.1••fy 14 .. IJlJ
LAGUNA B!ACH
, 345 North Coast Hwy.
Phone: 494-6551
I
I
I
I
I
f
I
j
Slight .Jt1111p
County Jobless
Rate 8
Unemployment in Orange County
jumped five-tenths of a percent from
March to April to a seasonally adjusted
jobless rate of 8 percent, the stale
Department of Human R e s o u r c e s
Development said today.
Although 488,lpo persons had jobs in
Orange County during April, representing
an increase of 4,400, the increased
{:{ * * U.S. Jobless
Rate .Rises
To 6 Percent
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Unemploy-
ment rose in April to 6.l percent of the
work force and the jobless rate for Negro
workers reached the highesl point in
more than seven years, the government
a;aid today.
The April increase from the 6.0 percent
rate Jn March put national joblessness
just under a nine-year high of i .2 percent
reached last December.
After holding steady at 9.4 percent
since December, joblessness for Negro
workers rose to 10 percent during April..
This was the highest since January. 1964,
the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor
SLatlslics said.
The increase in black unemployment
resulted mainly from i n c r e a s e d
joblessness among adull women. The
unemployment rate for white workers re-
mained at 5.6 percent.
Although the jobless rate moved
upward , the BLS report said "the
employment situation· was essentially
unchanged in April" because the 6.1 per-
cent unemployment rate was "not
significantly different" from the 6 per·
cent figure in March.
The BLS said the number of jobies,,
workers declined in April while total
employment went up.
Labor Secreatary James D. Hodgson
issued a statement acknowledging the
unemployment rise was a disappointment
because he felt other economic indicators
had been poinling toward a drop in
joblessness.
Hodgson specifically cited fewer initial
unemployment insurance claims. He said
initial claims fell 9,400 to 248,500 during
the weekended April 24. This was 17 per-
cent under a year earlier.
"We feel sure unemployment rates will
shortly be coming down, but we are
evidently now observing a pattern that
has marked previous periods of economic
resurgence after a slowdown -namely
I.hat. a pickup in employment always
follows by :some months an improvement
in other economic indicators," Hodgson
said.
The number of unemployed persons
dropped by 480,000 last month to just
under 4.7 n1illion, which was about
average for April.
The number of workers with jobs went
up by 700,000, slightly more than average,
to reach 78.2 million, primarily because
of increa1'ed agricultural employment.
The BLS said jobless rates for most
major groups in the labor force-showed
little or no thange in April.
"Over the month, employment gains in
1tale and locargovemment, contract con-
struction and finance, insurance and real
estate were largely offset by declines in
manufacturing and transportation and
public utilities," 1he BLS said .
3 Orange County
Men Lose Lives
In Road Misliaps
1'hrff Orange County mtn were
reported today as traffic accident victims
by the coroner's office. The dead:
-Takaml Fujiwara, 23, of the Bushard
labor camp. Fountain Valley.
-Billy D. l\lelntrs, 36, of 5702
Trailview Place, Yorba Linda.
-Jose Julian Fernandez, 33, of 1404 N.
Pe·rcent
number of employed peraoos was below
what i! nonnal for this lime of year, ae.
cording to Peter Force of the Santa Ana
research and statistics section of HRD.
Jn March of this year there were 4J ,400
persons without job! compared to lh1
38.400 who were jobless in April.
Jobs in construction rose by 600 in
April, Force said, an amount less than
expected. Further, 500 aerospace jobs
were lost due to Jayaffa in April in
Orange County.
The Orange County unemployment
statistics paralleled those for California
fOr the same period. For the state, the
adjusted jobless rate in April was 7.4 per·
cent. The tot.al number of unemployed
persons, however. dropped 81,000 to
S9S,OOO and the number of persons work·
ing at some job climbed 51,000 to 7.9!l
million.
The 1971 unemployment rates for
Orange County continue to be higher than
in previous years. In March 1970 there
were 25,000 jobles.s for a rate or 4.3 pe_r·
cent that climbed to 5.2 percent in April
1970 when 23,800 were without employ·
rnent. •
In 1969, the March rate of 3.1
represen~ 18,400 jobless compared with
an April rate that year of 3.7 percent
representing 16,100 jobless.
Force noted that "normally unemploy.
ment drops sharply at this time of year
as job opportunities increase." That
trend is just not happening in Orange
County or California, this year, he added.
May Day Tribe
Promises More
DC Protesting
WASHINGTON (UPJ} -Declaring that
their "spring offensive" to shut down th•
nalion'11 cepllal was just a "warmup,"
antiwar activist.! today began preparing a
new round or protesLs this summer.
''ff Richard NU:on thinks this week was
hot ," spokesman Rennie Davis said
Thursday, "wait until next time; this was
only a warmup."
Before the leaders of the May Day tribe
and the People's Coalition !or Peace and
Just.ice met to plan a new round of ac·
tivities, the Juatice Department Thursday
said it would empanel a grand jury to in-
vestiga te a possible conspiracy to inci te
riots. •
Deputy Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst said the grand jury would be
fonned after Davis and John R. Froines
appeared at a preliminary hearing May
12.
Davis, Froines and Abbie Hoffman,
who was arrested in New York City. were
!he most frequent spokesmen for the 18
days of antiwar protests.
Hoffman said Thursday nigh t in
Newark, N.J .• that the grand jury will in-
dict up to SO people.
Hoffman and Davis were convicled of
conspiracy to foment riots in Chicago at
the 1968 Democratic convention. They are
free on bond pending appeal. Froines also
was a defendant in the Chicago Seven
case, but was acquitted.
Davis said demonstration leaders would
reveal Saturday the preliminary plans for
the summer protests -probably cen-
tered around July 4 -with final details
to be worked out at a meeting in JWle,
possibly at Madison, Wis.
The protesters. worn out by nearly
13,00farrests and the maneuvers of 5,100
police and 10,000 federal troops , ended
their effort! when a small band of
demonstrators became Jost in Rock
Creek Park while trying to find the South
Vietnamese Embassy. The final 4,000
lroopa left for their home bases.
Parking Meters
Frid''· May 7, 19n
Viet Gun
• •
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'Blue Water, White Death'
"This is a shark apart from other sharks. It Is the
ultimate shark. Comparing it to other sharks is like
con1paring a Siberian tiger to a pussycat. It is the
perfect eating machine -2,000 pounds of stream·
lined death." These are the words of department
store heir Peter Gimbel, who, with three others,
spent six months studying and photographing the
Great White Shark, deadliest predator in the world,
off the coasts of South Africa, Ceylon and AustraliL
75,ooo Expected Mcintire Leads Hawks
At Scout-0-Rama
Event Saturday In Washington March
Final preparations were being made to-
day for the giant Orange Empire Council
Scoul.Q.Rama expected to draw 75,000
persons to the Orange C o u n t y
Fairgrounds Saturday,
Beginning with a 9:30 a.m. parade at
the sprawling C.Osla Mesa facility, the
grand showcase of Scouting skills will run
through . 7 p.m .. according to General
Chairman Joe Metcalf.
Not only 350 exhibits by scores of coun-
ty Cub Seout, Boy Scout and Explorer
Scout units will be featured, but also
marching bands, Indian dancers and rock
music.
The opening ceremony is set for 10:30
a.m., after whictt booths will show cook·
ing, kJ'Jot-tying, tenting, woodcraft and
many other aspects of scouting.
Space technology will also be featu red.
since tJle Boy Scouts of Am erica keeps up
with changing times through its specializ·
ed Explorer troo~.
Scout-0-Rama tickets may be purchas-
ed at the fairgrounds and Metcalf notes
more than half the revenue ls returned to
lndividUal uni.ta to support varlous ac·
tivitits.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Rev. Carl
Mcintire and hls Bibl~arrying followers
are planning a song service on the
Capitol steps tonight to warm up for
Saturday's win the war march to the
Washington Monument.
Orange County's Rep. John G. Schmitz
(R-Ca lif.) will join the march, along with
Sen. Strom Thunnond (R-S.C.) and Rep.
John R. Rarick (0-La.).
The Mcintire sponsored ma rch, his se-
cond here in :six months, will rollow three
weeks of demonstrations by antiwa r pro-
lesters. )
The tall Collingswood, N.J ., radio
preacher is trying lo lie down ar-
rangements for r ad i o transmission of
messages to the Washington Monument
gathering from Chiang Kai·shek a n d
other aFr East anti Communist leaders.
Mclntirt told a news conference Thurs.
day he arranged during a trip last
November for lhe messages in personal
talka with Nationalist Chinese President
Chi ang, South Korean Pr~dent Clung
Hee Park and South Vietnamese Pres!·
dent Nguyen Van Tb.leu and Vice Presf.
dent Nguyen Cao Ky.
"They'll send messages but will be
standing by to deliver them live U we can
get through," he said.
Mclntire said telephone messages will
be delivered by Alabama Gov. George
Wallace and Georgia Lt. Gov. Lester
Maddox.
Mcintire said be is sticking to hi1
prediction that the win the war march
from the Capitol to the Washlngton
Monument will attract a crowd out-
numbering the big April 24 antiwar
march. He declined to say whether he
meant the 500,000 the marchers claimed
or the pollce figure of 175,000.
He used the figure "350,000 to 500,000"
earlier in the week.
Mcintire and a half dozen followers
presented a victory wreath at the Pen-
tagon Thursday afternoon to Air Force
Brig. Gen. Daniel L. James, deputy assis-
tant secretary of defense far public af·
fairs.
"We're at the Pentagon to offset all the
filthy agitation that ha1 been annmd, ..
MclnUre told James.
King St., Santa Ana .
\Vestminster police said Fujiwara was
dead on arrival al Westminster Com·
munity Hospital Thursday night after the
car in which he was riding collided with a
center divider light standard at Bolsa
Avenue and Ward Street in Westminster.
Big Theft Ring Cracked in Laguna
Driver of the vehicle Miguel Mendez,
66, Santa Ana, was seriously injured, of·
fices satd.
Meiners was killed early this morning
when his car went out of control and
overtuned on lhe-San Diego Freeway
one halt mile south o( El Toro Road. He
clled at 1: 10 a.m. at South Coad Com·
munlty Hospital
Fernandei, who police described as an
outpatient from the mental health ward
In Orange County Medical Center. died or
lnjuries rect?\ved Thursday morning when
he jum!)'d off the Main Street overpass
onto the Santa Ana Freeway.
Officers said he wa!l struck by at least
one car. He suffered multiple fractures
and h1temal Injuries 11nd died at Santa
Ana Community Hospital.
•
By BARBARA KREIBICH
OI ,._ OelfY '"' llllff
Laguna Beach police bav~ cracked a
parking meter theft ring that Involves
coastal and inland cities ever hall the
state.
Authorities claim the operation be1an
mort than aix months ago yleldJng "u~
told thouYnds" in small thange from
cities from San Diego to San Jose.
In the process of making the: final ar·
rest.t this morning, Laguna delecllves
discovered . that more than 100 meters
hRd been hit during the night by well·
organized thieves, operating w 1 t b
homemade meter keys.
Amsted Thursday in .n apartment 1t
801 South Harbor Blvd,, Santa Ana. were
Charles Leon Adams, ~ Jnd a girl friend
Willa Dean Rotramel, 21. 1bey were
taken into c:ustody by Laguna Beach
DelectJve1 Gene Brooks, Robert Briscoe
and Carroll Bush, who had obtained ar.
rest and search warrants from the office
of the Dia&ict Attorney followtna: their
investigation.
Authorities said the ring operated at
night, lopping off parking meter head!
with pipe cutters 1hen f 11 s h J o n I n g
duplicate keys al their he11dquerters. The
next nlghl. saJd, police, l~ would empty
at least 100 meters from dusk until dawn.
Both were booked on suspicion of con-
spiracy to commit • crime. a felony
charge, and bail wa1 set at $12,500 each.
Two other tu!pee:ls In the case hid
been arrested In Laguna Beach on Mon-
day nl&ht during a stake-out of parkJnc
meters !n tbt 400 block of ClUf Drive.
1bey are Davld Stevan Perez, 19, ind
Michael John Dinneen, 18, both of El
Monte.
Jones, Perez and Dineen were ar·
rested in Huntington Beach Jan. 2i for
theft of a meter head. Perez .and Dlnnffft
were out. on bail awaiting trial on this
charge when they were arrested Monday.
Jones la 10Ught by Hu11tington Beach Oii a
warrant for fa.llure to appear on the
meter theft charge-
PoUce said a fifth suspect, believed to
be the le1der of the meter theft ring, Is In
custody on another charge in Oregon and
will he held by authorilies In that state on
the Oranae County charge.
O>nflscattd 11 evidence •t the Santa
Ana apartment wert aevtral 'baga o(
coins, coin wrapper1, locks believed to
have come from parkin1 meters, a
number of home-made keys, pipe cutters,
filea and aS®rted tool! believed to havt
been used In the theft of parking meter
heads and lhti making of keys to open
meter coin boxes.
The coins included a number of "Park
Free In Laguna Beach" token 1,
dh~trlbuted by local merchant.a. A haaty
check of Laguna Beach mettta revealed
thAt they had been cleaned out again by
the meter thieves.
Recurrln1 thefts of coins from I.he
parking met.era over a period of almost a
year had sparked the lntfnalve polkt ln-
vestlgaUon. Ofllcen aald aa much 11
$1,000 hu be<n taken lrom Lquna
meltrs in 1 alnglo nlghL
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H DAILY PILOT !f
I • SiteG
Both Sides
To Observe
Cease-fires
SAIGON (UPI) -Two U.S. Air For<t
Phantom fighter·bombera intemipted a
bombing raid over Laos today and
swept over North Vietnam to blast three
antiaircraft gun sites out of action in the
33rd American .. protective reaction"
strike of the year.
Allied and Communist forces in South
Vietnam prepared for weekend cease •.
fires In honor of the birth of Buddha 2,515
years ago. The Viet Cong declared a 41
hour truce beginning at 7 a.m. Saturday
and an allied cease-fire of 24 hours was
to begin at 1t00n.
The truces were the 20th declared by
South Vietnam and its allies, The l;Jnited
States, South Korea, 11lalland, Australia
and Ne1' Zealand and the 19th by the
Communists. The truces do not apply to
Cambodia and Laos.
The two Phantoms made their prG-
tective reaction strike into. North Viet-
nam when North Vietnamese antiaircraft
guns opened fire from positions in the
Ban Kara! Pa~s just across the border
while they were on a mission over the Ho
Chi Mlnh Trail, military ~kesmen said.
The jets attacked with bombs, rocket..
and ~MM cannons, knocking out two
Communist 57MM anUaircraft gun J>Mi·
tions and one 37MM gun position S3 miles
north of. the Demilitarized iooe, military
spokesmeD 13.id. Neither plane was blt by
the Communist ground fire.
'111ere have been about 100 such ltrfkes
against North Vietnamese anUah-cnft
positions since President Lyndon B.
Johnson halted the bombln.-of North
Vietnam Nov. 1. 1968. Forty of the strike•
have come slnce the U.S. Command
began announcing them May 2. 1970, and
a command spokesman said there were
about 60 prior to then.
-For the second day In a row the U.S.
Command reported no ground action in-·
'folVlPIR American troops but 852
Stratofortresses bombed the Ho Chi Minh
Trail in Laos and Communist sanctuaries
In Cambodia. U.S. helicopter gunships:
flew more than 230 sorties in Sl.Jl)port of
South Vietnamese troops operating ln
Cambodia.
Thrte formations of B51s new from
bl"' io Tha~d for raids b•lw!<q tho,
abanaoned Khe Sanh combat base and
the demilitarized i:one in the northern·
aector of South Vietnam Thursday tUght.
and Friday, the command said.
South Vietnamese troops fought a five-.
hour battle with a Communist unit 22,
miles northea!t of Saigon Thursday and.
reported kill ing 19 while suffering seven..
dead.
The U.S. Command 1ald 3.085 Marine~
began preparations for withdrawal Fri·.
day which would reduce Marine strength:
In Vle!nam lo 6,653.
Swordfish Ban
May Spell Doom
To Ancient Port
NEW BEDFORD, MaH, (AP) -Tbl<
discovery of mercury in 1wordfl.sb may:
do to that Industry in the old port of New
Bedford what th• discovery of oil in
Pennsylvania did to the·port's whalln&
trade more than a century ago.
"I guesa that just about does it for us,"
said Joseph J. Avila Jr. after the Food
and Drug Administration said a IUJ'VeY of
swordfish samples found 95 percent con
taminated with mertury in excess er
safety guidelines or 0.5 parts per million.
At. a result of the survey, tbe FDA'
Thursda y warned the public qain.st
eatin g the popular seafood.
The swordfish.ing business In NeW'
England Is centered here, and Avila, l\ia
cousin, James F. Avila, and their uncle.
Gilbert S. Avila. accounted for most of
the 97 ,000 pounds of swordftSb landed ln '
New Bedfonf,
VD Education
Bill Advances
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Public
schools would be allowed to teach
venereal disease prevention without
special permission from parents
under proposed legislation which
cleared the Assembly Thursday.
Under the bill which moved to
the Senate on a SG-8 vote, VD
education would be exempted from
the i:nsent law which requires
parents to give written permission
fortbe ddldren to 1et 11:1. educa-
tion iQitu<llon.
1be W's author, Democratic
blywom&n March Fong of "
and, ny1 VD in!tructlon 1 hould be in the realm of health
tduc:aUon, not 1ex instruction.
A co-1uthor, Assemblyman E.
Richard Barnes CR-San Diego),
said the 'measure "la aimed at the
fact that we now have an epidemic
!OndlUon among the you111 people
)f this 1tate.
Opponents to lht measure, AB •
llO. arl\l<d lh< subjed Is Important
enough to ttqulr1 paren~ 1p. '
p:roval.
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4 DAIL V PILOT • ltlldeast Tour
• Rogers Ill Visit
\
\ I To Battle Area •• 1iPS
Sneak Glance
At '76 Cars
By T '. • '~ ri.tURPHlNE
ot ""-Oall'I' Plllil 11.tf
S~tOGSVILLE DEPT. -The Federal!,
It de\·elops today. are still taking the
)lard line when dealing with the auto in-
clustry and its proposed 1976 model year.
I say proposed model year because the
way the 1nti-poltuti<1n hearings have been
1oing with the auto makers in
Washington , there may be some quest.i<1n
u to whether or not there "'ill be a 1976
model year. ,
The whole affair sacks up like this:
'nle Federals have set up tome standards
that dictate automobiles mmt plain quit
amoking by 1976. The Federals have don•
this because government studies blame
the motor car for nearly 50 percent of the
nation's air pollution.
As a result, the U.S. Environment.al
Protect.ion Agency held aome: hearings
Thursday to ask the auto maktn 00-....
they are coming along toward a rmogleu
car ln 1976. 'Ibe results M:re lw than
convincing.
DE'11101T'S FINFSr llUUest.d l h a I
maybe the Federals were a bit over-am·
bltious when pointing toward car in 1976
that would have nothing but air coming
out e.1haust pipes.
As a matter or fact. the Detroit folks
"1'ere pretty much unanimous in telling
the investigators that it couldn't be done.
'Ibis mass teohnologlcal disclosure.
however, apparently fails to impress the
Federals who have said to the Detroits,
"Well, you 'll just have to do it any·
way ... "
1f this kind of an impasse continues
right up to 1975. we may tee aome: novel
new can coming elf lhe Detroit assembly
Jines for the 1976 model year. Such as:
-THE J£1'S1REAM 11: Thi! smogless
new «:It bas a big water tank filling tbt
entire engine compartment A huge air
tmk fills the trunk. Air pressure from
the tank forces water out 15 jet! at re&r
to power the car. Top apeed , S.4 miles per
hour. Range, 2 miles to the next air
pump. Slappy going on dirt roads for &e·
cond car in line.
-THE ELECTRIC AGITATOR MARK
T: Very fast amogle.sa auto with speeds
up to 140 miles per hour. Powered by an
air-cooled, turbo-electric motor. Very
powerful. Very quiet. Features a large
fakeup retl in the trunk for the extension
cord. Range. one-quarter ntile, at which
-point plug pull! out of your wall socket
back home.
RUBBLE, SMOKE MARK BLASTED COLORADO DYNAMITE PLANT
Four Men Died As Mystery Explosion l eveled Small Facility
DuPont Dynamite Factory
Blasted to Rubble; 4 Die ·
LOUVIERS, Cola. (UPI) -Officials
aay they may never learn the cause of an
explosion that destroyed 1 dynamite
plant Thursday, apparently killin& four
men.
The four were inside the plant when the
blast occurred. leaving only a pile of rub-
ble.
••AIJ that ls left is a hole in the
ground," said William Etling, manager cf
the DJPoot Qwnical Co. facility.
C b e 1 t e r Sheperd, clerical suptrin·
tendent of the plant, said it may be im·
possible to determine why the exploskln
occurred.
"The probh!:m i!! you have no
evidence," he said. "Ifs gone. Vaporized.
If somebody made an error. you "'ould
never kM\Y, because they're gone, too.
A photographer who flew over the site
in a helicopter said all that remained was
a circle of "black ground with 1 1mall
crater in the center of it."
Sheperd identified the victims as Alvin
Oxnam, 54, cf Salida, Colo.: Claude
MGSher, 45, and Dewayne Garlow, 48, of
Wicka
Littleton, Colo., and Ma.1 Converse, 47. of
Castle Rock , Colo. Two men working
oul!ide the building were injured .
Hope Abandoned
For People Lost
In Huge Cave-in
ST. JEAN VIA.~NEY, Que. (UPI) -
Quebec C1fficials gave up hope today af
finding alive any of the: more than two
dozen person!'! still ntissing in l'lne of the
worst landslides in the province·!'! history.
''It ~·ill be a miracle if any more
persons are pulled out alive." a
apokesman for the Quebec police said.
"There is nothing lhere now but mud."
Pollet reported five bodie~ have been
rerovered. although coroner Dr. Richard
Authier said he could account for <1nly
four. That would leave either 26 ()f 27
perscns missing in the disaster area
which laU Tuesday night ccllapsed 300
feet inte tbe earth alcng a one-mile
stretch.
TEL AVrv (UPI) -Israeli mJllUty
chiefs took Secretary of Sta~ William P.
Rogers on an aerial tour over their
fortress at Sharm el Sbeiktl in occupied
Egypt today and the American diplomat
declared:
''I have a much better understanding or
the whole problem. I have a better
understanding of the area."
The plane tour of Israeli installations
tame after Rogers conferred Thursday
"'ith Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir
on avenues toward Middle East Pea~. A
U.S. spokesman described the talks as
"animated," indicating that Mrs. Meir
and her aides were resisting Rogert' ef-
forts to obtain some softening in Israe1'1
atanre on peace l.erms.
"Any time you see s emething
personally, you have a better idea <1f the
whole problem," Rogers said after
visiting Sharm el Sheikh. "Certainly from
the standpoint of the terrain I have •
much better idea."
Rogers was taken on the tour by the
chief of staff of the Israeli armed forces.
Lt. Gen. Haim Bar-Lev, and the in·
telligence chief, Maj. Gen. Aharon Vari\'.
The group flew in Air Force 2. the silver
and blue jetliner which serves as a
Dollar Crisis
Less Critical
In Europe
LONDON (AP) -Pressure on the
dollar eased slightly Thursday and Eur·
opean Common Market finance ministers
scheduled meetings Saturday to explore
"'ays to stem the flood of American cur·
rency that is undennining European
·economies.
In some places American tourists found
it difficult to exchange large amount! of
dollars for local currencies.
They discovered meals and taxi rides
were a bit more expensive in Wesl
Gf:nnany. But in Britain. "''herr th f'
pound lost value in the selling wave of
dcllars. Americans foond some items
were cbeaper.
West Germany, a key to the v.·orld crisis
because of its exceptionally strong cur-
rency. does not ptan to reva1ue the mark ,
government spokesman Conrad Ahlers
said. He added it was unlikf'ly the five
othf'r Cornman t.farkel countries would
revalue their currencies at the meeting in
Brussels Saturday. "There won't be any
agreemen t <1n that point." he said.
West Gennany. Ahlers said, will decide
nn what measure it u•ill take at a special
cabinet meet ing Sunday morning.
Earlier. West Gennan Chancellor Willy
Brandt autlined some proposals during an
hour Jong meeting "'ith British Prime
Minister Edward Heath in London.
Sources reported the two discussed.
among other measures. a joint raising <>l
currency values by all si.1 commcn
market members. This would maintain
!he parity levels of the ir currencies with
each other and safeguard the stability of
farm prices.
-mE BLOWRARD INVINCIBLE'
Actually looks like a convertible until
~mogless aperations start. Top folds up
forward instead or to lhe rear. thus
beroming a huge aa il. Depends on
windpower. Quiet. efficient and requ ires
only a crew of eight. pill.I galley slaves
for windle.sa days. Strong performer on
downwind leg of Santa Ana Freeway.
Shows weakness an starboard licks.
-TRE PEANUT TWO: 1'his one
rtplaces those 1ma1l foreign ears. A two-
seater. Engine compartment conceals
pedalg with bike-type chain hookup to the
rear wheels. Smokeless. Operates ef·
ficienUy if ycu quit smoking yourself.
··1 ~·ould be ~hocked and surprised if
any more victims were found alive."
Authier !aid. "I was up in the air aboard
a helicopter Thursday and the damn
place is just a calastrcphe."
Frogmen and crews in steel boats plied
the muddy pit Thursday as walls of the
giant crater ronlinued to crumble away.
The search will continue today just in
case more bodies can be found.
Jl also "·ould tend to slow the dollar
flow into Europe because the six cur-
rencies would be more expensive and
American exports \\'Ould become cheaper
in tenns of European money snd find a
readier market.
France and Ita ly are reported opposM
to such a joint move and a unilater8!
upward revaluaticn of the German mark
would throw out of balance the Common
Market's delicate farm prices.
Who knows. Detroit may come up wilh
some even more interesting alternatives
to the old reciprocating gasoline engine.
lndetd. 1976 may be an interesting
model year.
Dr. Cameron Kenney, a soil upert and
chairman of the department of engineer·
ing at the University of Toronto, Thurs·
day gave three possible reasons for the
sudden cavein.
'l'hey were the area's clay subscil.
which becomes inC<1nsistent w he n
disturbed; the slope from lht town to the
Saguenay River. which could product 11
landslide chain-reaction : and water
pressure that could have built up in the
clay making it unstable.
'l'he French argue that America, for in·
lernational monetary salidarity, should
reduce the va lue of the dollar by raising
the price of gold to which the dollar. is
pegged . 'Vashington has r~fused t~ hike
the official gold price, which now is S3:t
an aunce.
Midwest Soaked by Rains
Military Funding
At $204 Billion
For Year 1970
Mu ch. of Na ti.o n W et; Some Late Spring Snow Fal"ls WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Ann•
c.ontrol Agency said Thuriday that
military spending throughout the world
reached $2M billion in 19i0 -rcughly $6
for each man . ~·omM and child alive.
California
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I.a d .Of
Al the same time. Sen . Edmund S.
ri1uskie ~D-i\la1nc l. chairman of I.he
13 Senate's Arms Control and Disarmament
Subcommittee. said the panel would
·'' begin hearing5 on how to end Lhe lJ.S.·
Soviet arms race through mutual itelf·
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restraint.
" In it..s fifth annual report. the agency
.el said roughly £i(l percent or the increase
wu caused by inflation.
·" The report said the S204 billion figure.
which compares with $199 billion in 1969,
"''"s ··the equivalent in dollar value of a
year's il1C{)me produced by the one billion
.I& IOO million peoples in the pc>Orer half er
,JI\ the y,·orld 's population ."
"In the zix years since the firsi ~·orld -~
sur\·ey, military outlays in current
,, dollars have rise:n almost 50 percent." the
: aiency said. ''However, about thrct fifths
" 1.n Of this increase reflects price inflation."
Tht agency sakt lhat in actual ex·
M pendltures the increase In sptnding was
the smaUest in recent ye1rJ. It noted that
... since 1968 the international Gross Na·
llon11I Product has arown faster than
.• Jnllilar)' 1pendJnC.
" " • .. .. •
backup to President Nll:on's aircraft -
Air Forte 1.
"We were very careful not to fly over
occupied territory." Rogers t o I d
newsmen. underscoring the sensitivity of
the a.ituation in this tinderdoz area ol the
world.
The plane flew slowly south from Tel
Aviv to I.ht" Israeli port of Eilat on the
Gulf of Aqaba and then south to Sharm
el Sheikh on the southern tnd of the gulf.
This was the area which provided the
spark for tht 1967 war in which 1srael
seized and occupied the Sinai Peninsula.
Sharm el Sheikh overlook,, the Strait or
Titan and the Egyptian. fortress there
blocked Israeli ships from approaching
Eilat, Israel's only acceh to the Red Sea.
The late Egyptian president, Gamal
Abdel Nasser. closed the strait in the ear-
ly part, of 1967 and the war followed in
June. Israeli troops took the Sharm el
Sheikh in the first hours of the wal' and
Israel has vowed never to relinquish it.
As Rogers flew over Sharm el Sheikh,
he could see an Israeli air base and
Israeli guns guarding the strait. The
plane the11 circled back up the Gulf of
Aqaba. giving Rogers a view on the right
side of the plane of Saud i Arabia and
.Jordan, with Sinai on the left.
Israeli guns guarding the strait. The plan
then circled back up the Gulf of Aqaba.
iziving Rogers a vew on the night side of
the plane of Saudi Arabia and Jordan,
with Sinai on the left.
The Suez Canal "'as not visible because
of the low flying altitude but Rogers did
see Israel's Mediterraniean coastline and
the cease-fire line along the Jordan River
in one sv.·eep of the eye. Aides aaid he
was looking forward to more talks wilh
Mrs. Meir later today.
More Marines
Will Withdra'v
Soon from W ar
SAIGON (AP ) -The U.S. Ccmmand
aMounced today the i m m i n e n t
withdrawal of more than a dozen U.S.
Pltarine units that will r e d u c f'
Leatherneck strength in Vietnam by 3,085
men.
Their departure will lo~'er the total of
U.S. forces in Vietnam to about 262.000
men. the lowest level i• five years. The
last \\'ilhdrawa\ target set by President
Nixon calls for American strength to be
cut to 184,000 men by Dec. I.
The r..tarine withd rawal announced to-
day will leave about 9,000 ~iarines in the
counl.ry. All of these except a small
number <If advisers will be pulled out by
the end of this month er early June.
The major units that are beginning lo
st.and down in preparation for return to
the United Stales are the 1st Battalion,
11th t.1arine Regiment (Artillery ). and
the 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment.
The artillery battalion nonnaJ\y has 660
men and the infantry battalion 1 .1~ men.
Both ballalions v.i\I go to Camp
Pendleton , Calif.
INJURED ABBIE FREE
Bail M.t on Riot Rip
Abbi e Hoffman
Fre ed 01i Bail
In Ri.ot Actions
NE\V YORK iA Pl -Yippie leader Ab·
hie Hoffman was released on $20,000 bail
Thursday on a charge or interstate travel
lo incite to riol during antiwar
demonstrations in Washington this week.
Hoffman. arrested Wednesday night in
the lobby of his Easl Village apartment
OOu.se by FBI agents. also was accused of
assaulting a Washington policeman last
liicnday .
U.S. Commissioner Earle N. Bishopp
set lifay 17 for a hearing on whether Hof·
Iman sh<luld be remcved to Washington.
An FBI agent, in an affidavit, said that
Cln April 29 Hoffman encouraged students
at the University of Oklahoma to join the
demonstrations that began in Washington
last Saturday.
The agent sa id an inronner in Norm.an,
Okla .. reported that Hoffman told the
students the activities in Washington
•·will make Chicago in 1968 look like a
Y AF meeting." Y AF, the Y a u n g
Americans for Freedom is a conservat.ive
organization.
"We plan to do ii. and we plan to do it
in the streets when the government opens
next lifonday." he was quoted as saying
in the government affidav it. "We're stop-
ping the government -unless they want
to stop the war. They've got 47 hoon."
One Woman Dead
In Mexico Duel
CHILPANCINGO. Mexico /UPI)
Marina Marino, 38. settled a feud with
sister·in-Jaw Irene Nava. 40, by knifing
her to death in a duel with Jiatgers,
Guerrero state police said today.
''Frankly, t rouldn't stand my silter·in·
law," Mrs. Marino told police. "When 1
saw her washing clothes .at the village
well. J challenged her to a duel without
seconds or witnesses."
Mrs. Marino said Mrs. Nava selected
the weapon! -curved daggers -and the
place for Thursday's encounter. • field
about 12 miles ncirth ol this state capital.
Antiwar Girl Ordered
To Give Bomb Answers
SEATTLE (AP) -Leslie Bacon, ar·
rested as a material witness in the U.S.
Capitol bombing, faced a federal grand
111'1 Tt lll!ltlt
SHE'S 'HAD ENOUGH'
Activi1t L111i1 81'°"
jury ag ain today aft.tr saying she WClllld
only answer questions roncerning the a!·
tempted bombing e>f a New York City
bank.
"If they have a case against me. lei
them provt it \\'ilhout my help ," she said
in a trpewritten statement given to
newsmen by her attorneys Thursday.
U.S. Dist. Ccurt Judge George Boldt
granted a government molion Thursda y
to compel the 19 year aid antiwar worker
from Atherton to answer further ques-
tions about the attempted bank bombi•g.
He turned down her attorneys' motions ttt
release her or reduce the $100,000 bond
under \\'hich she is being held in con·
nection with tbe March l bombing of the
Capitol.
In her statement Thursday, ltliss Bacon
aaid. ''Today I will refuse to answer all
questions put to me before the grand jury
except those that the federal distrir.t
court judge has ordered me to answer."
Her attorneys said she refused 11"1
answer some quesllcns other than tho.!ie
about the Ne\v York incident. The natu rt
of the question~ was not disclosed.
Six persons have pleaded guilty lo al·
tempted arson and are awaiting sen·
tencing in the attempt to firebomb a
lifanhattan branch of the First National
City Bank.
Jn ordering ~t is! Bacon to testify
further on the bank allempl. Boldt said
the previoosly had told the arand jury
"al least five times that she sat in on
planning cf the bombing, that she went to
lhe place lwict as sort of a dry run. and
even gave some opinion as to the type er
uplcs.ives that should be used."
In l'ler statement. t.liss 811con said, "I
participated in some tarly discussions or
those plans but withdrew from all plan:i
more t.han a month before the actual al·
tempt.
..Thtre was an lnlormcr involved in I.ht
plans all along and the aovernmtnl
knows in full detail the extent ef my
participation ,'' she said.
h11ss Bacon started teslimony before
the grand jury one week age arter being
no .... ,, to Stattle frt:1m Washington, D.C.
~·here &be was arrested April 2&.
(
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U,I TtllPMi.
• '
Gls Face 1916 Deadll~
Frisking
On Drugs
GM Pessimistic
W ASHmGTON (AP ) -Tbe
On Smog Cutdown
Custorrui: Bureau 1ay1 a 1
crackdown on lhe flow of 11-·WASHINGTON (UPJ) -
legal drugs from Indochina GeneraJ Motc:rs Jolntd Ford
means retumlnr st:rYlcemen today 1n clalmlng Jt bu found
can e~pect to be searched no way to meet exhau1t
thoroughly when they enter cleanup standards. lt also
the States. diaclO!ed an t I po 11 u t I o n
Commissioner Myles J . M!search expenditure! that are
Ambr05e announctd the in· well below ita: outlays for
tensiJied customs e f r 0 r t advertlslng.
Thursday, saying the problem In p~pared tttlimony, GM
of illegal drugs f I o w i n g President Edward N. Cole uJd
through military personnel his firm was "hopeful" it
and post offices had reached could meet the required 90
lierious proportions. percent r 1 duct ion in
HenceforUt, he said, all mail hydrocarbon and carbon
package!! from Sout heast Asia monoxide emissions for 1975
will be closely examined. models, compared with 1970
COle testUled I.hat GM spel'lt
$119 mllllon on ex h aust
cleanup research In 1170 and
would .spend at least $124
million this year. The flrm'1
1970 sales and profitJ, both
reduced by a strike, Wef'il
n:1pectively $18.7 bllllon and
$609 mJlllon.
Advertising Age, a Ir ad e
publication, estimated GM'a
advertising outJa)'S at $171.5
million in 1!169, the latut year
for v.'hich figures were avai·
table. GM's 1969 saln were
$24 bllliiln anC: IUi profitl were
$1.7 billion.
Ford u.id it spent $66
mllllonon anti po l Iut Ion
research in 1970 and la spen· "Well, If It'• not polluted, why do they...,., IO
anxioua to pt out!" ·
GOVERNMENT WORKER IN BOSTON GETS HELPING HAND FROM POLICEMEN
100 Arr11ted 1t J.F.k. F.cler1I Building Att1mptln1 to Dl1rupt 8u1ln1H
He sajd military base com· model!. But he added:
manders would (.'()()ptrate with "At thlll point in time we
Customs officers in checking tiave no way of controlling ox·
servicemen's baggage, thetr ides of nitrogen to the el ·
personal belongings , and cargo tremely low levels which could
returning from S o u t he a • t be required by the clean air
Mia. amtndments oC 1970 for 197& The crackdown means all models."
mail parcels going through
ding $132 million thla year. ---------,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;-. .
U.S. Steel Cost Boosts lJNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
!RANCH
Alcoholism Police Arrest 100
Funds Asked Boston Protesters
military post office! will be The law requires a 90 per·
&ubject to "100 percait ex· cent nitrogen oxides reducUon
amination," Ambrose said. for 1976 car!. Ford testified Matched by 3 Big Firms A Cu.storm spokesman said similarly Thursday. American
that me!lfls they will be open-Motors and Volkswagen e1·
ed. Up to now, all parcels pressed even more peS!imlsm.
haven·t been. only th 0 s e The hearings before the From Wire Services do not mean wage and price
!uspected of containing drugs. Environmental Protection PITI'SBURG}I _ Ma J 0 r controls were necessary.
NOW OPIN
SATURDAYS By Nixon
WASH INGTON (AP) -Tbe
Nixon administration has an-
nounced a "major national ef·
fort" to treat alcoholism and
has asked Congress to provide
$34.6 million for I.he program.
Thi! figures out to about
$3.90 a· year for each of the
country's SI million alcoholics
or problem drinkers.
Two senators contend lhis is
not enough.
Dr. Morris E. Chavetz,
whose appointment as dirtctor
of the government's new Na·
tional Institu te of Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism was 11n-
noun c e d Thur sday ,
acknowledged in an interview-
the $34.fi mill io n ad·
ministration request f o r
alcoholism programs n e :x t
year will fall far abort ci lhe
need .
"The country is ambivalent
&bout alcoOOlism and doesn 't
appear rudy th r o u g b.
Congress to provide the need·
rd funds," he said.
By The A1socialf:d Press
Police arrested at least 100
persons during an antiwar sil·
in. in Boston Thursday during
a day otherwise marked by
waning o f demonstrations
against 'the Indochina war
around the nation.
The sitdown lasled more
than seven hours outside the
John F. Kennedy federal
building. About 2,000 marchers
came from a Boston Common
gathering with the announced
intention of stoppin g the
building·s operatio n by
prevf'nting its 4,200 employes
from entering.
Police at the University of
lllinois said they arrested 30
persons for failing to leave a
lobby where they conducted a
sit in protest again s t
re cruiters on campus.
Clapping baads and chanting
"We want peace now,'' about
50 antiwar protesten: paraded
in a circle at the entrance to
the federal building In
downtown Buffalo, N.Y. There
was no attempt to block peo-
ple from entering er leaving
the building:
AL the Wayne State
llniversity campus in Dd:roil.
about 350 persons gathered for
an antiwar rally.
Ambrose said the: stepped up Agency (EPA) are to steel producers are fall ing In Other major producer! said I
enforcement action is deslgned determine how the indUJlry i! line and matching $8 to $13.50 they were reviewing thelr
to skip what he called the dolng and wherther,,it ifs( ma~ per ton price increases an · prlclng ~licies in light of the
"flood of hi"" grade heroin ing a "good alth e ort d b US St IC 111crease1. 5 " meet the standard!. nounce Y · · et orp. on Whetlinf Pittsburgh Steel and other hard narcotic drugs EPA Administrator William steel used to m1 nufacture
into the United States." automobiles, appllancea and Corp., another &f the nation's One shipment of illicit D. Ruckelshaus can grant a other consumer goods. bla: producers, said it was
heroin was baooed recently, one-year postponement of the . 1 doing some "new figuring" on ee standards In the event of a Three maJor ·&tee cor-f'· pn·-atructure in Ji .. i.t of
t .. ' P.M. MON.•THUU. 10-1 P.M.
PllDAYI 10-6 P.M.
17141 140-1211. Lec-..4 t.: k . c ... ,..... c .... ,._
.t.nr. Vkl ,.-..M11..-r
A handful of diebar d
demonstrators remained in
front of ROTC headquarters at
Kent Slate University in Kent,
Ohio. The building was &pen
after being closed during mo.st
of a four day memorial
observance for the deaths a
year ago of four students in a
confrontation with Ohio Na·
tional Gua rdsmen.
the commissioner disclosed, t' J & Lauahi:n 1.6 "'" au "good faith" effort that fails. pora tons, ones e "' • the rpreading price bike
when special Bureau o l He announced Thursday he Republic and Armco Thursday movement. !~~~~~~~~~~~
Narcotics and Dangerous would evaluate efforts partly matched hikes announced by But Bethlehem Steel Corp .1· Drug agents selted 17 pounds US Steel Wedne·•ay Tbe 1'n Th O Th t ,._
H. M. STOLTE
of heroin in a piece of military by comparing antipollution c · ,· •• ,averaged':',,, ;..rcent • the No. 2 steelmaker, seemed • ne I '-'41NI
research spending with 11les, re ~ u7~ r-· to be shying away from the y OT mail April 5. i The products account for The DAIL PIL -The package was seized at profits and ad ve r t 1 s n g one-third of industry ahip-.• __ tr_en_d_. __________________ _
Ft. Monmouth. N.J., and came ouUayi. ments and equal about one·
from Bangkok, Thailand , he half of Jones & Laughlin·s pro.
said. Customs estimated the duclion. The increases may
SI G • heroin i.s worth about $1.75 Air Crash enable J&L to reverse the $21 ow ams mill ion if sold on the street. million loss it posted last year.
The seizure was no t In Wash ing ton. Treasury
Ill Economy previously disc Io s e d to Claims 12 Secretary John B. Connally
"preserve the security of the said he ~·as very much
-investigations," Customs said. COOLIDGE, Ariz. (UPI) _ disturbed by the round of in. R d No arrests have been ma de. 1 creases. He aald steel pr• eporte The heroin, in 20 plaslic An Apache Airlines pane, duce r 1 ''ar e pr I c in I
described as "coughing and ..i. ....... elves -·t of the -Id bags in a metal box, wat11 u111::""" "" Sp mGS V (AP) encl"'ed in styrofoam and sputtering," crashed into a k t., HOT R , a. -cotton field during an air mar e · The economy is making slow wrapped. In multiple layen of parent emergency landing at-Connally' a rtactioa w a •
but fairly 1aUsfl\ctory gains, brown paper. tempt Thursday, killing all 12 stronger than the "disap-
From March 1 to April 24. a -rson!l aboard. polntment" ezpressed by
1' M,,.,. .... ..._.._
..... 1 .....
$164.88 ""::'~ ...
v. "·'· ...., . ._*Ma ._. ''"·'· tap industry executive! aald Customs spokesman 1 a I d , r-"They didn 't stand a Pre!ldential Preu Secretary
toda y, and the government Customs made 248 such drug cha.nee." said Ramon F1ores,;1_~Ron~Z~i•~il~er~ear~ll~er~.~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~======~~~~ should avoid any action that seitures through Army and who saw the two turbo-prop Connally u1d the Increase•
might rekindle inflation. Air Force post offices alone. De Havllland Dove strike a
Member! or the Business concrete irrigation ditch and
Congress Approval Seen
For Loans to Lockheed
Ccunci l, openlng their gpring KIDS LOVE its front porUon di>int•grate in
• . flames a! It careened 300 feet meeting here, told newsmen Into the field.
inflation continues to be the UN CLE LEN Flor" said the pilot, Ted
country's foremost problem. Huntington, who took off about
damaging to the confidence of Saturdays· in ,20 minutes earlier f ro m
consumers af home and con-Tucson, appeared to be trying
CEMENT BOATS FLOAT
~ W••• Mcc:latdlla Matfoa lolld o Camaot
-ot R-loo Sllow ttoru Moy I.
loath Coast 'Plua '" Costa -. WASHINGTON (AP)
There are Indications
Congress will approve loan
guarantees for L o c k h e e d
Aircraft Corp., and perhaps
other companies as well. But
oce congressman attacked the
move as an attempt to bail out
the Lockheed chairman and
"his merr y band of thieves."
Rep . William S. Moorhead
(0..Pa.), lashed out Thursday
1t· the Nixon Administration,
which asked the guarantees.
and Lockheed c ha i r m a ll
Daniel Haughton.
"One has to adinire Daniel
Haughton who by sheer gu~
and balling wire has kept hts
group of incompetents afloat
by Intimidating the federal
government with threats of
corporate suicide and then
walking out with the lax·
payers' money,·• Moorhead
said. .
His .11tatemenl fo\loy,·ed a
nev.·s conference at which
Secretary of Treasury John B.
Connally announced the ad·
ministration next week will
und Congress 11 bill seeking
$250 million in guarantees to
keep Lockheed from col·
lapsing.
Co n n1 ll y aald hls
prelimlnary soundings indicate
the legislation will be ap-
proved.
tl'I Ttle~"-i.
LOCKHEED HELPER
Secr1t1ry Conn1lly
The consensus of several
congressmen queried Is that a
gti ff fight over the Nixon ad·
ministration plan will be
follow ed by approval of AOme
type bill embracing ether
i;haky businesses whose
fa ilure could have severe ef·
fects on the national economy.
One key Democrat said.
ho wever, thal If the bill Is e1·
panded. "The whole thing w:IU
sink. Why not put on the end
of if, 'Capitalism Ji1 dead.'"
h I Ly Pl LOT to make an emergency landing fidenco in the dollar abroad. T e DA . a half mile away at Coolidge
The council's panel of 20 Airport.
private industry economistl, itl~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;,;;,;;,;~~;,;;,;;,;~;,;~~~;,;;,;~;,;;,;~;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;,~ wa.s learned, has submitted a]
=~~::~ut;:r:~n 1~~1':t~~ Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores!
Ue under $1.050 trillion l h ls
year.
That would be well short of
President Nixon·s eslimate of
$1.065 trillion, on which tlle
administration's fiscal 1972
budget estimate was based.
In February, the council
predicted price I n c r e a 1 e 1
across the entire economy
would average 4 percent this
year; now It! judgment 11 4.4
percent. That reprtsenta a
slowdown from last year's 5.3
percent rise, but a leu im-
pressive improvemen t than
had been anticipated.
===-----1
use~ cars
used
but not abused
,
•
,,
••
...
' ·•
. '
!
' . •
' • DARY P "°T E DITORIAL P AGE
Smoother Welfare Plan
GetUng foster cbUdr~. the handicapped. the aged
and some mentally 'retarded out of institutions and
Into a home environment \vherevei: possible is the de-
clared goal of today's social welfare leaders.
Many famiUos are anxious to take these persons
into thelr homes for the token upkeep payments they. re-
ceive. The trend has. been sJowed, however, by municipal
ordinances limiting the number of non-related persons
in a household. . .
Different cities have different limits; in one city a
famil y may have three ~on·relat.ed perso.ns. i~ the home
but if the family moves 1l may find the l1m1t 1n the next
community is l\\'O. A child will be lost on the \\'ay.
City employes in Huntington . Beach have .sl?ent
months \vorking on the problem 'VJth count.r off1c1al~.
The result is an ordirill}Ce, approved by th~ city cOUJ'!CI\
this "'eek. that increases-the size of a family from five
to eight persons. six of whom . m~y be non-rel~ted . ~tany provisions we~ bwlt i.nto the law in th.e_ hoee
tt would become a model ardinance for other c1ttes in
the county. · • . Huntington Beach is to be commended for making
this effort. Other cities should be encour~ged to .con·
sider the ordinance to achieve the conformity that 1s so
obviously desirable. ' '
The Hard, Bitter Truth
D~g education programs in high schools have not
always met ·with the success they should bave. Too often
they are taught by adults who often know less about the
1ubject matt~r ·than the students. . .
There is ·one program. however. where tins cred1·
bility gap between two generations is not found -the
''Prison Preventers." · La5t week, at Huntington Beach's \Vintersburg Con·
tiouation High School, three Chino in~at~s who are me1n·
bers of the volunteer group sat dO\\'D v.11th the students anJ1:io1d them bow drugs destroyed their lives. And the
students listened.
They learned how one youth bc<:ame a high·stakes
dope dealer, how aoother spread heroin to kids. and
hO\V a third under the Influence of drugs used a lire iron
to knock out a man's teeth. Their message was simple:
drugs lead to prison. ·
1'he Prison Preventers Lalk seemed to carry a Jot of
\velght \Vith the students since each of the convicts had
taken drugs. knew \Vhat they were talking about. and,
most importantly, were of the same age group.
In ihe hope or reaching mor~ stu~ents. admin~s
tralors of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dts·
trict should look for ways to bring this excellent program
to the other five campuses as \\•ell.
Dollars Flowing In
Recent figures on retail sales in 1·1untington Beach
indicate that the city is coming of age from the shopper's
vie,vpoint.
For some time now. Huntington Beach has been re-
garded as a big cilY: largely .because _of its geographical
size and its population. But 1n boom1n~ from a popula-
tion around 10,000 in 1960 to 124,000 today, the city
raced ahead of itsell in some ~'ays.
Houses sprang up and son1e neighborhood shopping
centers were built. But few large stores v.1ere put up and
consumers often were forced to go to neighboring com·
nlunities for major purctiases.
No\v the situation is being reversed. Last year there
was a $25. 7 million increase in retail sales in 1-lunt.ington
Beach with the rise reflecting the number of food. drug,
furniture. general merchandise , hardv.•are and depart·
nlent stores that opened during t 970.
Brightest aspect of the increased sales volume is
the shot in the arm it gives the city treasury. Every one
of those dollar sales puts one cent of sales tax into the
pot .....: a quarter·million·dollar increase in one year.
Good ne\vS indeed! H
-~--
~r1 fl, ~ ~U.•~I JO:l Jfll'.•"~I.
TX Ji AU ·np~t .. u •od ltll
hWW.UWioll !i1ad><&i.
He Calls It Sheer Co1n1nereialis1n
,·
THEY DID! Tl1AT'S
"TH~ FBI!
. Paper Drives
~ Can '·t Absorb
Refuse Piles
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: Critic Speaks Out on 'Irvinese'
'the emotional play upon legitimate
public c o n c e r n for California's en·
vironment appe~s to be leading those
... charged wlth al least one phase or the
• problm Into a crisl& situation.
This i.s in the field of !Olid waste
• disposal where the tenn "recycling"
: &eems· to have become ti.e magic word
~ with envlronmentalisll. Witness the cam-
: palgn& a( conlalntr '1Uppliers to buy back
; lhelr nsed product! ,and the proliferatio~
.. of volunteer manned "ecology centers r throughout the state.
I AJ ls SCI often the case with faddist
causes zeal for recycling seems to be
oot.dlstAnctng the economics a n d
technology of salvage and reuse ais a ma-
t jor farce in solid wasle, management. • • : THE NATIONAL MAGAZINE for the
: sanitation indust1}'. Solid w a s t e s ~ Management, reports t~l it least th~
' Southern California · communities are
halting separate ~ll~Uon of o I d
newsprint and other ·types• of paper. Thb
be<:ause waste paper processors art
1wamped beyorid thelrcapaclty and the
price o{ waste newspapers alone llas
dropped from # to $t a ton in ala
months. Commenting editorially lhe
authoritative journal decla~: ''Add 1o
all th.is tht reporU from the Goldtn Stale
from refme contractors who have their
yards plltd high with salvaged cor-
rugated papen aod cardboards, and Ult!
irrilation of all those community-mlMed
folks entrapped in tbe recyeling illusion
can be welf·Understood •..
"This entire sad and sorry story Is
1tartll"CIY reminiscent of World War II.
The:n. great nlvage dri ves were organ\z.
ed by patriotic stay-at-home citizens.
Impressive mounds of paper. metals and
cloth were assembled. And mo.st of lt
After last week's local rock fes-
tival. it would seem thal from
Death Valley to Fountain Valley,
the music sounds the same.
-0. D.
flllt ,..,..,.. ntltel'I ,. ... ,.. vlnn. .,.,
_.....,llr Jiit• ltf Ille "tWNI'"'' ,.,,.
,_ f'lt ... .,. M Ol1tlllf 011 .. D•llJ 1'1111. ..
1t.a,yed riahl there. because there was nG
demand ror-ii."
~T RECYCLING as it is now being
undertaken can only serve as a small tool
in the overall funclion of solld waste
disposal was made c\~ar in a recent
study in San Francisro.
There oollectiGn and disposal of refuse
is the .resJ>l?nSlbilily of two natlonally
r:~gnlz.ed . f~aders in the field. Sunset
SCavenger Company and Golden Gate
Di.sAOSal O>mpany. To accurately p1an
the role of reclamation, Sunset ran an
analysis of • how much of an average
household's \lo'aste was a c l u a 11 y
recyclable.
One ton of typical refuse was collecLed
from three separal& residential areas in
the city and hand sorted inlo 10
categories. The highest yi eld o f
m:o.verable products -prim a r i 1 Y
marketable paper, metals and glass -
comprised less than a third of the col·
Jected nifuse.
Bundling this newspaper and sending
back lJ>e beer can you emptied wh1le
reading It may well be regarded as a con-
tribution lo enhanoement or the state's
ecosystem but support of efforts to Im·
prove long.range waste d I s p o s a I
technology will be an even greater one.
Mike Abram50n
California 1-~ealurt Service
To the Editor:
The articles concerning the lrvine
Company's coastal developmenl pla ns
(DAILY PILOT, April 2S and 29) con·
tained a number or passages in pure
Jrvinese, \vhich I define as a corporate
dialect wherein the public statement
completely masks the thought behind it.
For those unfamiliar with th is linguislic
varianl, I offer my translation of a few of
the remarks of Richard A. Reese. Irvine
vice-president of plann ing:
STATE?-.lENT : "Our eco nomic studies
indicaLe a critical growing need for a true
coastal reso rt community." TRANSLA·
TION: "We hired a study group and told
them to come up with that result, or rl~.
They delivered."
STATEMENT: "\Ve don't wan t an
undesirable auton1obile-oriented en·
vironment." TRANSLATION: "We've gol
to make them forget that all those people
will have to get there by car. Jf that com·
pletely clobbers Coast Highway in both
directions, it's npt our problem."
STATEMENT: "Econ,gy ol tidepools
and undersea gardens is currently un·
protected from irresponsible public
desecration ... we have learned thal the
absence of development alone doesn't in·
sure prote ction of lhe e c o I o g y . · '
TRANSLATION: "ff they'll S\\'allow !he
idea that a few hundred thousand more
people around those tidepools will save
them. we're home free ; they'll believe
anylhing."
STATEMENT: "We can always do
another Cameo Shores. and !his would
~atisfy our economic. needs, but it is the
sort of thing people object 10 because it
cuts off the coast" TRANSLATION:
"Cameo Shores v.·as a bummer : wr could
have gotten a hundred times lhe return
from that land if they'd have let us go
high-rise. We've got to keep trying."
Piz za as GI Fertilize r -·
OTHER FACETS of the Irvine pro·
posal, while expressed in somple Engl ish,
are no Jess disturbing. The sug gestion
that Coast Highway be relocated al the
expense of Orange County taxpayers. to
accommodate the i r profit-oriented
development, is almost unbelieva ble
Their magnanimous offer to dedicate two
canyon areas as public parks amounts to WASHI NGTON -Our stories about.
mbmanagement and malfeasance in the
Army's worldwide, $2.S billion-a-year
commissary system has stimulated a
JU11tice Department investigation.
Government sleuths, in search of
e:vldence to present
to a grand jury,
have poked around
mainly in Washin1·
ton. We suggest they
also look into the
garbage pit$ and
1anltary fills of
Europe.
They will find that
f11rtive commissary
orrlclals have tiitd to cover ·up their
buylng blunders by dumpJng food into the
1arbage. They have disposed o f
truckloads of frozen goodies and piua
; pies that 11polled in CC!fDmi.ssary freezers.
• • AN A R r-1 V OOClJ!\IENT in our .a poueaslon, for eaamp~. tells about how
the Army bou5ht HIOUgh Raund ·lhe Clock
Apple Snack· lo ulisy its commiw.ry
rustornen tn Europe for thrtt yean and
e-nough Round-the Cloek Be:ny Snack to
&alt ror ' fiti!i yt.&rL Yet lhete frozen
delectablts hlVt a rreezer life of anly six
~· months.
' The: commiss•ry fiifflcial&, In the
deepest of secrecy, ;r trucked lens of
thotuanda of ap~ and btrry snacks to
Gtrmu unitary nns. lhtreby enriching
tht toil 1t J7 ce&lls a servln&.
A three-year supply or piua piet, which
1J110 became talnttd ftfttr sl-x month.1 in
commluarJ free:atrl. was convtrttd
1imllar1.Y Into Gtrm111 !•rtlllier.
-ON A{'IOTIIF.R buying APre• com· "'1liuarJ olflcllla bou&bl l5;1IJO CllJIS ol
• ' • • • , Jack Andel'iOD
• •
, ' throwing us a fish . since I suspect that
acreage is too precipitous to profitably
develop anyway . •
Del ti-1onte white cream com. Thls was
enough to last 30 months, II months
longer than the cans should be kept on
the shelves. To get rid of them. the com-
n1i ssaries reduced the price from 19 to 1 l
cents per ca n and sold them off at a loss.
We have b4?en unable to connnn reports
that son1e cans were simply thrown
away. ,
We have traced some of these wild
purchases back to Col. James McDowell,
wbo !hen headed the purchasing board
for the ·European commissary syslem.
Far from being censured for his waste,
"however, he has now been given an even
more important comm issary job. He is
now deputy to Maj . Gen. John ri.tcLaugh-
Hn, who runs the quarn.rmast.er center at
Fort Let, Va .
rttY ASSOClATE L6 Whitten reached
the extravagant colonel at F'ort Lee and
asked why he bought so much food that
had to be plq_wtd under. lie snapped,
"No comment. ' to-ill questiom.
Whitten alliO tried to qu@sUon him
about reports that he showed unu sual
fa,·ori1tsm for Rockingham Chicken.
Af\er certain Rockingham products were
dKlared unsanitary by government in-
spectors, the Pentagon gavt Eur~
pean oommlssarte.'I the option of buying
olller brands.
M c D o '" e 11 accepted a Rock·
lr.gham proposal to continue stocking Us
produeta in dlffererit packagts which h11d
not betn faund un!lanltary. The end
roull, however. waa ljat the good! were
Wlpopular with mllllary hoosewtves.
Despite all the self·laudatory
statements about development of Us land
in I.he public interest, the Irvine Cqmpany
continues to base its planning on sheer
commercialism.
Pare11tal
To the Editor:
ROBERT D. RIES
llespo11d bl/.ltu
Referring to the letter from "Cathy
Hoad" (Mailboii:, t.1 ay 4):
She asks In her letter. "Ho\v can you go
Into a crowd of kids and say •yau're cle.an
and wholesome and you're not'. As a
teenager l know for a fact you c1n't."
The ansv.·tt is simple. U a youngsler is
engaging in sexual intereoum (and you
dan'l get V.D. from toilrt seab) at the
age of IS or 16. she bas classUicd herself.
If she doesn't, she doesn't worry about
V.D.
AS ASSE~tBL ThtAN Robert H. Bur'll:e
pub it. those parent.I who care, and raise
their children infol"maUvely :r.o th at thty
too care. should not have the.Ir children
subjected lo tht problems tMt are
created by parents and children who do
not care:.
?-.ty staleJnent is brul.al U it referg to
Cathy. or anyone like he:r. But may ou r
country reserve to the parents lhe right
to raise thelr children In accrirdonce 'vlth
proper sexual standards that prtelude the
unne«:S$11ry education by our public
schaol1 In the art of enjoying extra·
marital h1ttrcourse without the danger of
" doing!
~l\' CWLDR.b also ~n coin~ to me
I •
' ' ' Mitilliox ··
lt1ter1 trem r.-0.rs are Wtltt,.,.._ Htrm•Hr wrll•ra 11t.wMI aoo.,.,. !Mir ~" Ill Jiii .,.,,,
tr ltH. Tiit r\t\11 "' o;MllitflM ltll,r1 le flt .. ttt ., t Umln•hl lll>tl k ,_ .. oil.II 1-'hlrl m11H 1~,...... 11,,..n.,.. '"" melllfltl Ml&rels. IMlf ~•m••
_., M wltMWMI tft •-II it Miff~! rM-k
.,, ••• "'· l'Mtri' will NI M .... ooMC.
about sex. They don't need to go to the
schools because this is a part of my job
as a parent l,..et UlOSe of us who still feet
parent,, should tai.se children do so,· and
don't classUy us all with the quoted
statistics. My children .... 111 know without
school education.
DONALD A. JONES
Survival of Life
To the Editor :
J( one looks behind the so-called
"obstructionism" of which the Sierra
Club is accused in the April 29 Gtiest
EdJtOrial by the California Water
Resources Association. a concern for lhe
survival of llfe· itself emergts.
To whal end should we dam the Trinity
and Eel Rivers in northern California ,
flooding food.yielding agr.icultural land
and destroying valuable fishing streams
when recycled water can be. obtained at
less cost? To what encl should v.·e tum a
la rge share of our water, as polluted
se"·age. into rivers and oceans to kill the
marine life. eliminating another food
source. and enda~ering our use of
beaches when it could be recycled and
used ~ght here?
DA?-.1S IN THE Colorado store most of
Oran ge Count y's water until it is Ml salty
and mineralized, that even when mixed
with our rapidly dimlni!!hing undergroWld
supply. its quality is far from satisfac·
tory. Yet that source af water was once
though~ to be a perfect solution to our
v.•ater needs.
Has the \Valer Resources Association
taken al\ these and many more side er-
fects inlo consideration?
HAO THE RECEl\'TLY enacted federal
Environmental Protection Act, requiring
a full study of the environmental impact
of a development before any act.ion was
authorized. been in effect, man y
detrimental constructions and pracllces
might have been stopped.
Look behind the curtain. ts the need lo
criticize the Sierra 1...1uh based on the
desire of a development-minded giant to
justify some of its biased interest proJ·
eels.
MARY SCO'IT
Fa cing Up lo De allt
To lhe Editor :
It is good to see ille DAll.i Y PILOT
report on lhanatology (Comment Page,
?-.1ay I ). On the other hand. the report -
and thanatology itself -is really not
complete. There is something \•ital miss-
ing from the discu ssion : a C1>nsideration
of the nature of death itself.
Death is not a passing , transient thi.ng.
Death is permanent. ll is not a matter of
lving dO\Vn and saying, "I'm dead ." and
th'en gelling up again and going on to
something else. Death is the last word.
Nobody seems able to appreciate this.
There can be nothing worse than eternal
nonexistence. Ir you don't believe me,
you don't unde~stand the nature of YOUR
death. Death is not an abstract thing that
happens to everybody else but not you -
the crushing fact is that it happens to
YOU.
ONCE YOU understand this you will
real ize no "divine plan'' can make your
death a~ptable -v.•hether it occurs in
Vietnam or in a nursing home. You will
realile that the object of thanatology
should not be to make us accept death
but to fight it -to the death!
"The living ... (st.ow) their unwill·
ingncs s to come lo terms with their o.,..·n
mortality." Js this supposed to be new?
Is conventional per!:Uasion going to
change the fundamental fact !hat man
deep down insi de finds dealh unac·
ceptablc? JI hasn't \vorked in lhe past -
or the article v.'ould not have appeared -
and it can 't \York now. Jt is time ror man
to grow up oul of his cosmic inferiority
complex (dust thou art. dust you will be)
and seir.e death itself by lhe throat. lt Ls
t.lme ror death itself to die. ~
GREG FAHY
Treasurer Calilornia Chapter
Student Cyronics Association
Ea al"fl Court Pressure
To the Editor:
Our judici~I system caAnot efficiently
handle the vast number of cases now In
the courts. Due to the sharp increase in
trin1e, the courts at every level are j~m
med. The sheer volume o( cases often re·
quires the defendant who can't post bail
to "''ait for long periods of time in jail for
his case to come up.
The system would be TTlQre producti\'e
if it were relieved of ''vi ctimless criml!!s"
such as drunkenness, prostituUon,.g~mbl·
ing. homosexuality anci drug abu~.
VICTIMLESS OFFENSES could be
dealt with by fines . Such a reform wouTd
result in greater manpower within U1c
system and better use of the taxpayer·~
dollar. Jt would take the necessary
pressure off the lower eou,,rts and reduce
the overcro\1-·ding in the jails.
RICHARD MISSLER
Jails Need 1lefor111h111
To the Editor :
The purpose of this letter is based on
my r~nl studies of the conditions of
jails in the United States. Hwnane living
conditions in prisons cannot be reache~
unless proper refonns are made.
Jails have been shown to be a. collegi:'
for crime . Not only is a small-time sneak
thief susceptible to homosexual rape an·l
drugs, but also a prison can be a trad ..
school for crime. A young inexperiencer.
crim inal can be turned into a yaung,
highly proficient burglar.
EIGIIT-FIVE PERCENT of all crimes
crimmitted arc CQmmitted by those who
have been "rehabilitated." Without pro-
per separation of criminals, the curren',
penal system is surely not a correctiv.•
one.
I am proposing two proposilions. J arr.
advocating reconstruction and building af
more and better jails. 'This reconslruc·
ting and building of new jails would hav ~
a ho,·o·fold purpose. ,
FIRST, TJIE LIVING conditions wouli!
be inlproved to human slandards. Th~
jails no\v are overcrowded and rillhy . The
reconstruction of the old and' lhe buildintt
of the new would enlarge footage pc;-
prisoner.
A second hnportant result of th~
reconstruction would be to segregate the
prisoners according to criminal offense.
This "'ould reduce lhe poss ibility of a col·
Jege of crime developing.
I hope you will take interest in this ap·
palling problem and give our prisoners a
break,
JlM SUNQUlST
Estate Planning Needs Experts ·
Some years ago a cltrk In a bookstore,
unpacking a shipment of new books,
found one on the subject of "estate
planning." Thinking it must be a~l the
land scaping of large homes, he placed it
in the gardening section.
He v.·ou\d hardly make that mistake
today. Estate planning has come into its
own, used by thoughtful p e o p l e
everywhere lo preserve assets during
their lifetime and to pass them on wisely
-end economically -at death.
One reason for the growth of estate
plannina: Is the growth af estates.
Noy:adays even the ardin&ry ciUzeo Is
likely lo have an estate of substance. ll
may "'ell include not anly a home and a.
savings account but also ptrsonal life
insurance. group Insurance. stocks.
pension plan benefits. profit-sharing
optJons. and social ~urlty ri~hts.
ANOTUEI\ REASON is lhet esla.te
plannlng hn:~ become l8r m o t e
sophlsUcated. Its techniQurs ha ve gone
"'ell beyond the tr1d l tlon1l
"lestamcntar')' trusl" for a rich old lady
and "spendthriR trust•• ror a rich young
1nan.
Unfortunalely, the.re art pi If a 11 s
ap~ly r~ tht amateur planner, For
tx:unplt : ~ many people think avoiding
• Law in .4.ctiou ..
'
probate Is the same as avoiding laxes.
But the federal eslllte ta" is based on U1e
entire estate, whelhtr It passes through
probate or not.
t.lkewiae, many people think life
insurance Is not taxable. BuL life
insurance proceeds are included in
fede:raJ estate tax p1.1rposes unless he has
rttalned none of Ute incidcnlJ or
ownenhlp of that policy.
TRUE, IT MAY be sensible in ctrtain
circumstances to svold probate. And It
may bt possible in \.-trt3ln cirtUmslanC'.&
to avoid taxes on life insurance-But
clearly this Is 111 field in which tht layman
needs expert help.
i\fuch fnformallon Is available from
trust department!, a c c o u n l a n t s .
in!luranct men, and I n v e s t m e n I
counselon . The ultimate ad v I s e r ,
ho"'C\'er, should usually be an attorney,
since he alone 111 Jully (IUAIUled 10 gtve
lhe personal le.gal guidance A program
shoi,1ld have.
Some people shrink from the iliou&ht Of
estate planning. But. like it or not, som~
plan is going to govern the care ;ind
distribuUon of your possession. 1lle plan
could be yours. tr you make one. If you
don't, state and federal laws--0bllvious or
your wishes-will do il £or you.
AIJ American Bar A.<1ociation pub·
lie service /e(lJ.11re by \Vilt Bernard.
-~---
Frid a y. May 7, 1971
The editorial pagt' of &he DaUy
Pilot ittlr.t to in form and ·stim-
ulate. readers by prest11ting thil
newspaptr's oplnfons and com-
mentnry (HI topic1 of fnttrtst
ari d signt/ica»ce. by providing o
forllm /OT I.he erprt1.tton of
ou r readt rs' opin io?l.t, 011d bu
prtse11ting the rllvers e 'Oitw-
pafnts of i»Jormed obterver1
nnd spoktsrften on topicJ of t1tt
da11.
Rober\ N. Weed. Publi.sbor
·'
----. -• ----
Cultural' Activities
A PICNICKING THEY'LL GO -'Preparing to dine al fresco for Foun·
tain Valley's Pioneer Picnic in Harper Park are {left to right) Mrs.
George Minney, Mrs. Clyde Story and Joe Quintana.
•
'Make the Scene'::
A grand finale for a grand week In Fountain:'Valley will be the
space-age style Pioneer Picnic -a "pioneer" being anyone who lived
in the valley more than nine years ago.
Beginning on 1'1onday, A1ay 10, and culminating \Vith the picnic
on Sunday, May 16, Fountain Valley residents are ~oing to be over·
whelmed by a burst of cultural activity ranging from a Japanese
luncheon featuring delicate Oriental dishes to a floral sbo'v called
Living Plants for Life.
In. fact, Cultural Arts \Veek is seeking to prove that a youthful
city, with determination, can swifUy grow in accomplishments and pro-
vide a receptive atmosphere for.artistic achievements.
All 13 of the city's schools will be presenting special programs,
stressing such themes as Appreciating Art and Music Through Culture
Week, Science in Our Culture and CUiture -No Deposit, No Return.
A highlight of the week will be the fifth annual Garden Festival
sponsored on Saturday by Golden. West and Huntington View branches
of the Women's National Farm and Garden Association. Floral ar·
rangements. house plants, hanging baskets and many other displays
will be on view from 1 to 5 p.m. in the City Hall.
ORIENTAL DELICACIES
Gourmets will have a Particularly delightful experience on Wed·
nesday when descend;tnts of early Japanese settlers in Fountain Valley
plan to cook and· serve such luncheon dishes as "sushi" -Japanese
rice in seaweed rolls -beginning at 11 :30 a.m. in the Civic Center.
Films on Japan \Vill be shown in the library preceding and following
the luncheon.
To sho\v that cultural arts include hobbies, the Fountain Valley
Jaycees and Jaycettes are sponsoring a variety of hobby exhibits in
the Civic Center on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Also on Satur·
day. me1.1Uers of the Ne\vcomers Club will host bus tours of the city /
from 2 to 3,30 p.m.
The Fountain Valley \Voman's Club is sponsoring the Pioneer
Pirni e on Sunday Crom noon to 5 p.m. in Harper Park. and more than
250 invitations have been issued to former residents. Some of those
indicating that th ey \''ill return for the get·together are a former rural
postman, the city's first manager and at least 10 former teachers.
11-frs. Al Krukenberg is general chairman for the afternoon,
with 11-1rs. Lorin Lammers and Mrs. Alvin Fonda assisting. Although
those attending are asked to bring their own picnic lunches, the
\Voman's Club will be selling coffee, punch, pie and cake.
MULTIPLE ENTERTAINMENT
The Fountain Valley Recreation Department will send groups
of Mexican, Indian and Japanese folk dancers as well as square danc·
ers v.rhirling across the grass for the picnickers• entertainment, and
v.·inners of the Fountain Valley Exchange Club talent show also will
perform.
li-1iss Fountain Valley o( 1971 and her court will be .introduced,
and Las Brizas del Mar Auxiliary of the Children's Home SQciety plans
to sponsor a contest honoring "'inners in various categories such as the
largest ftmily present, the oldest person, and so on. A boy and girl
between 3 and 8 years old also will be named Little Miss and Little
11-1astcr Pioneer.
' Other activities during the busy week -to name but a partial
6m .en list -include a demonstration in the Civic Center of party ideas from
the Southern California Edison Co., a Mexican luncheon at Tamura
School, and two bridge tournaments in the Civic Center sponsored by
the Woman's Club.
On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings at 7:30, the high
school's band and members of the modern dance classes wiJI be ap-
pearing in concert ln1Fountaln Valley High School gymnasium.
READY TO HARVEST -Gloriously colorful
iris for the Garden Festival are being reaped
by (left to righl) Mrs. William Roberts and
Mrs. Charles M. Cochrane, presidents of the
sponsoring groups, and Mrs. M. C. Beatty,
chairman of the festival. .
llE'A ANDERSON, Edilor
,,.,.~, Ml, 1, 1'71 H Pitt U
DELICATE AROMA -.Japanese cookery will fill the
kitchen as Fountain Valley pioneer family representa·
. .,
tives prepare the luncheon menu. Sampling the fare are
Oeft to r ight) J\olrs. Masaru Kato and Mrs. Joe Quintana.
Weekend -Farmer's Crop Ruined From Seed of Disc·ontenf
DEAR ANN LANDERS: J am a mar·
ried man and a father ~'ho 11etds help
with. a problem. My Y,'ife was spending
mooey like il grew on trees and Yil! have
many arguments abOut it. finally r
became so desperate that l ran an ad in
the newspaper saying I would not be
responsjble for her debl.s.
} live in Indiana and work in Chicago so
I get home only '<ln weekends. The Satur-
day after I ran the ad in the newspaper I
went ·home and discovered that my wire
had takep all the furniture agjl left \Vilh
our two chlldren. I'm sure me went t<l
her m<>ther'I.
I don't care about the furnitu re but my
Mildren mean the world to me. Plea11e
tell me what to do, -TROUBLED MAN
0
ANN LANDERS [f]. :
DEAR T\IAN: You 1hould ba\•e written
to me BEFORE you ran'tbat ad, Bab., bat
what's do1e 11 done, 10 let's 10 from
)Jere. ·
Contact your wife J and 11k her to sit
down with you and a counselor or a
clergyman and HUit 70ur dlHerences.
Ea~b of ynu ba1 a legitimate btef. It
might be that your wire 1pend1 mooey
like craay to l(et even with you for le&\'•
Ing her ak>ne five d11y1 a week. Tlte 10IU•
tion might be for you to work In JadiaM
or move ytur family to C!tlcago.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a If>.
year-old high school boy who lives in
Dubuque, Iowa. Dubuque jsn't exactly
New York City so hljh school kids here
don't know a lot of sophisticated stuft.
· I have never~ kissed a girl but I am
planning on doing it soon. ln fact 1 have
the girl picked out already. Don't laugh,
Ann. I really need help.
Please tell me -when a guy kisses a
girl wherr does his l106e belong?·J don't
want anything to go wrong. Thank.! a lot.
-PLANNING AHEAD
DEAR HEAD: Tbe nose gees rl1bt
aloa1 wlill' the rest of tbt face and It
belongs wherever It lads. Please let me
know bow you did. I worry ab<ld& k!ds like
you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am 48 years
of age and fee.I foolish writtbg to a paper
for help, but I am terribly confused.
My husband died when out son was 4. I
raised the boy myself and he Is very
close to me . Jerry iis now 14. Last year t
met a widower who brought real hap-
piness into my life. After 10 years of
loneliness it was like a miracle. I am
sure y,·c could have been very content
together, Financial security was no pro-
blem. We are both comfortable.
When J told my &On I .wa:s considering
martying again he became angty at first
and later 1ulletl. finally he told me J had
to choose belween him and the man. So I
atoppoo seeing my friend.
1 fim very depressed. I reel that
perhape I ~ave made the \\Tong choice.
Yet the mother in me says my first
responsibility is to my son, Please give
me your views. -StJELDY MRS.
DEAR SHELBY: And bnw long bas tbls
kid beea dlctatln& to )'Ou? My 1ues1 ls
from I.be time be Jearaed to talk. Rua,
don't "'alk, le the neara& plttH. Get Ute
man ba~ if yoa· can. It woald be ·a
bealtby move for botll you aad yolir' *
-unless, of course, the tld pla11 M
lipend the rest of bls lire bos1ln1 yvi
around Instead ol marrying: aome atri' Irie
can tyranlze. In whlcb case, m1 con.
dolences lo you both. · .
How will you know when the rtal ll\lof
comes alo,ng? Ask Ann Landers. Stnd·t>r
her booklet "Love or sex and How \0 Ten
the Difference." Send 35 cents ln coJn M!4
a Jong\ sclf-nddressed, atam'pied tnve11'Pf'
with your request In care of the DA1LY
PILOT.
' '
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'
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DAILY "LOT Friday, May 7, 1971
MADRIGALS -Richard Countryman and Vicki
Schwartz, h1adrigal Singers at San Clemente High
School, entertain Mrs. Wales Wallace of the Opera
Leaeue after getting their cue from director Rich-
Opera League
ard C. Dastrup. The choir will entertain during the
annual spring luncheon of the Opera League of
Laguna Beach Tuesday, May 11.
Lends Ear •
LEGAL NOTICE LEG4L NOTICK
, ,1 •
..... 1111 ,ICTITIOU• •UllN•ll
CllTlfllCAT9 Of' ll,ltlNlll NAMt: ITATIMINT
l"ICTITiOUI filAM• Tiie tall<owlnl ,..._ wt ftll'll
TIM Uflf.,•ltMll .._ ctr11rv tie tt..,. bu•~ 'lHo .. 1.s. uot s. c..tt Hwv. dVdlrw • M l-.. alM Ytl!OM,_ L•9<1M ll•Kfl Oriw.. Co.t• MfM, <•. fMM. ~ 1flt D ~ ·~'--------------------...1!!0: lkllllol.lt. flmi """"' fl COloMllA (.Oji. ltldltnl · •11rt COtll. fltrtMrthl., 1 -... l'EE &AL.II 6 l!.ltlllCI! w4 f1>1I Mir. ~'!,.=•Ml(:=-L-::;:!:.:;· ·~~
U ~u are lookln~ for the ........ t wah to make 11'"' '-~ " t111 1e11ewi111 .,..._ "'""'' or""' ''"'' ... ,.. ~"' ~ ll'llOM ,.,._. IPI fU• 11'1111 'ltett ef 'T11!1 Ml""" 11 1111"' ~ b¥ I your contribuUon to e communi'1. w y not let l'ISIW!c• .,, •• to1i.n: ,,,..,. ... 1,
lb V I h I lftlollllil I', ~ >1$1 Vt!.......... l1'9t!I Wall1Mr1 e o unteer Bureau of South Orange County e p 0t-1,,.. c°''' M-. <•· m• M1ri. •lcfl•ni 0 ,11,1
You f'·d J"•t lb rigbt lunleer job' ,.,.. ~. 11"' Y•llewl'-~1111"*' 0r1~ '°''' o.n., ~11o1 u' ..... e VO • Drlvto, C•I• Mtv, C1. l'N:M Nrll lO 111111 IM•f f' It. ti 1''1 lllOf ,Jj Call the bureau any weekday between 8:30 D•1" Nru :n. 1m • • ·
d '*14 '· s.r11o11tt1t LEGAL NtmCE a.m. 1n 1 p.m. at 642.0963. Mtri. T.,... Wbol.lstt
WATED SAFETY Sl~l• 01 C•ntw11!1. °''"" counh': "° On APl'll "' lt11, btftffo mt. I Hotft'I' l'-41111 Orange County Association for the Retarded is ~.,..1c-•11 ,,.,. ,.,.. wlf 5""· "'-1"' c111T1,1c•T1 °' '"""au ,_,..,.. Stbll4 I". krbout1k 11111 Mfrlt l'ICTtTIOUS MAMI in need of volunteers with water saiety instructor Ttr•1• i.r11out1t k-n.,. ,,,. to M ,,,. Tt1e undlrtl•Md ... ,.,11,... w "
ti!' I I be 11! d An "01 I " Wim "._. .,_. ,...,,_. 1" Mibtulbef to COlldUCtlnt • bl/11,.,.. II 1.0. Mlr!MI cer ICI es 0 eguar S. ymp C ! IN wtllll11 lr.all'!Ml'llftf llM 1cktlowltdtld Or1v1 "h.1nflniloll ll•tdl C11t•nli ~rogr.m I d I 11 h Tb d 1-~ l•-ted 11'11 Mml. -· -fl ,,, ... •I • f s sponsore a a.m. eac urs 1y "" 1011111ciAL SEALI u •n• c • ,.,.. """' " L<A
erome Park, Santa Ana. J..-i E.. Dlvl• ~=Y., ::: ,..~1"' .. :.-!'.":t-':
PATH TO MATURITY =~!:7.!~~·~ten\I• ;::..i.n tull 1M 111e1 fll ~la 11
Big Siltera of Orange County is a program pro--~:~.k lxfl•tt I!'"'*' M. """'· 1..a Mtr lnw or.
Viding dull f • da f • Jg h d d '" d JUf'll 21 1974 HllH'ltll!Jfw\ lllCll. Cllll. a rien or gir w o nee un ers ... n • ~utitllhlCI o.:.-c...t o.u... ~1101 0.1.-"""" u .. 1r11
ing, acceptance and companionship from someone -. ... u llD -i Ml'i' 1, '" 21, un 101J.11 STATI' 011 ~~~0~1~""'
outside the home. LEGAL .NOTICE 01J1•HGE couNTY: Oii ""'II JS. 1'71, bitfwl m1, • Ne!tro Friends are needed who will help girls find l'Wnc In ,.,. 1or wi. 11111, ,.,..,,,111
their be!t path to maturity. U you would like to l"-4un :,-:;" ~··:;..:; ·~k"':,.~· 'f:
tile on a real challenge consider being a big sister. ca11T1f11cAn o• 1usnt1ss ll.lbl<r11rM ,. thl w1111111 in.1rvm1111 '"'
Suuuen SIGN·UPS ,ICTITIOUJ MAM• Kk-llOtN 11'11 UIQllld Ille Hml. mm ~ Tiii ulldtr•ltMd doll certify 1141 ti con.. tOfl'ldll S111l
T .. n~. Volunt air d "gnln f d11Cll ll9 • 111111 ....... .-ns.s "''"°' lllv1:f.. Mirr llttl Mortell eers are ea Y SJ g up or CNl• .MfN, c.n1or.11, ullder ""' fk· ~1"'1 ... 1 otrk• 1n
summer vo unteer placement, and more requests for 111iw. """ ,,. .... o1 JOHN'S flACING °'•"" counlY CYCLES 1111 Ill.II Hid f111t1 11 comPOMd .Mr Cemml .. lon 1•11{ .... their help are coming in each day. Do something o1 tM toUow1111 -"°"· wttOM n.im• 1n AIH'll r. 1r1i
diff.'eDI '"· summer, tuU 11111 ... act ol rnldtnct II II toli-i: l"llblllhtd Or"tntl Cu1t O.ll'i' l'llc! -. u""' John C1llcd'li.. aon Ftfftl'll&lfl LTI. A,prll I&. 2J. :io 111111 Mir 7, 1rn .,._"
EASTER SEALlltS g:.'t;. ~::ll· a. ,,71 LEGAL NO'llCE A newly formed aocial-recreationaJ group for Jo11n c111cc1110
adult patients at the Easter' Seal Rehabilitation Cen· s1111 °' c1n1111rn11. or1ntt couritv: ""'" 011 Al>l'll 21, ,,n. blllll'• mt, I "'"'..... ,,CTITIOUS IUllN•Q ter in Orange, Easter Sealers have activities rang. ~vbnc in 1..d "°' 111d s1111• """"111r NAM• sTATIM•NT
lng from chess 'to painting to candle· making. ::"n!!':.~:!n ~~d'ln~..:'":°i:'"~~~~~ ~I'll 11now1nt Htaen 11 •01n, bu1ln111
Volunteers provide instruction in handicrafts ::·t;:': :~~,!n~u=~~.·nc1 •<kllowlld•· ··~:ct'i~~~~se: 1 s T • u" ANT •
and hobbies which give a new dimension to therapy 1oFl'ic::.Lrvs~~1 Morton ce111 Mew • riu 1'1't1>1 11'"1•
Programs and rehabilitation NollrY Pulllk<•lll11tnl1 Souln Co1•I ll••l1ur1nt • n d • PrllltlNI Office Jn 0.llt•ltHln, Inc.. I C1lltornl1 ~Ir• TELEPHONES RINGING O•lt'lfl c11inty -•lien, llH lrl1t•I 5tr"I, CO.II Mel~
The Orange County Council on Alcoholism, :t;,1fi,;';~~llon ••P1'" c.i:..~.11eia 1• bllnt c:Dllduel" "1 ~
Santa Ana Is seeking volunteer telephone aides who Pu1111J11H o''"'' C0111 D111, •11ot "~••h•"' Kffl•n
will handle incoming calls. ""'11 30 •na Mir 7' "· 21• 1'11 1Qllil.71 T1111 ~;:,'!~",;, tntd w1111 th• c111~t. '---,.-,c=-=-,===---l'ilfk ct Or111" County on: A•rll ZI, 19il ' LEGAL NO'llCE l EVEllLY J, MADDOX 0•...,lr C11in1r Clerk AIJllC,I" AND WllllMAN
A"""-YI 11 LIW NOTICI 01' l"UILIC MIAIJllNO •7M VMkl It¥•.
Spring Sing Scored Vows Said
In Oregon
NOTICE ll Hl!llEIY GIVEN 1~11 I C11Yw CltY, CIH ..... MlJI l"Ubtlc h .. rlnt w!H M ~•Id bY !hi Cltv T·7U74 C11111>ell ttt 1111 Clh' of Cottt Mell on Ml~ Pulll!.rtlf Orin,. COiet 0.11~ l"ll•I
17. 1rn. 11 1111 hit.Ir ol 7:30 tm., or •• ...,.,LIU.*' •fld Mir 1, u , 1'71 fil.11 -1Mrt1n1r •• tht mtnll' m1r Ml------'--'--'----...C--
hl•rd. In lfl<I Council Otll'l'IM• It lfl<I City LEGAL NOTICE Hin. 77 ,.,Ir Dl'tw, C01!1 Mffl,'--==~~--------
CAROL $KILLION
To Join Brld15
Pasadena
Setting
For Rite
Carol Rae Skillion will
become the bride of Richard
Allen Coffinberry d u r i n g
August rites in the First
United Met.bodlJt Church 1 Pasadena.
Parents of the betrothed
couple are Mr. ind Mu. H. R.
Skillion of co.ta Mesa and Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence M.
Coffinberey of Parker, Ariz.
Miss Sk.iWon ls a graduate
of John Muir High School,
Pasadena and Pasadena City
College. Her flanct is a
gr1duate of Pasadtna City
College and has aervtd four
)'ears in the U.S. ?t1arinea.
Chefs Flip
Flapjacks
In Patio
The patio aeuon will open
on Satun:lay, M1y 8, as of-
fic ials of the San Clemente
Interfaith Se rvic em en' 1
Center serve a pancake·
breaklasl from 8 to 11 a.m.
Honorary host and chairman
<1( the event will be Ken Carr,
city manager, who wlll share
hcMrt duties with William G.
H <1 r n , newly-appointed a·
ecutive director of the center.
Cher~ will be a corps Of
young Marines known as
qteen Badgers who assist in
dally operalion ol Ute faclllty.
Junior hostesses will serve.
Sa Clemente area residents
are vit.ed to enjoy the
btt rast, meet the staff and
lhe facility.
Sale Tags
Attached
The conference center of
Hooi Memorial Ho 1 pl I• I. Prubyterian w111 become a
ll1il>!uhlon &hop !or 1 day on '1lna1d«7, M1y 13.
Pl-om noon to I p.m. a
•1r11t1 of new clothing lo-
cludlna dres.te•. b I o u i t • ,
•lids, panllults and teen
fa~ons w111 be sold u a
bentlll !or the b 01p 111 I
bulldll1C !Und.
Ac:cordin& to Mn. Jame•
Laf11mmt, vice pre&ldtol,
wayt and means, the all·
n1me-brand clOthln& w a 1
lltCUrtd at dilcount prices.
El Adobe restaurant In San
Juan Capistrano will provide a
colorful background for the
annual spring luncheon of the
Opera League of Laguna
Beach on Tuesday, May 11.
Members and guests of the
auxiliary of the Lyric Opera
Association of Oran&e County
Including the Opera 100 of
Leisure World will gather at
11 :30 a.m. for .a social hour.
Following lunch. Mrfi . Stanley
Eichstaedt, pre!ldent. w i 1 I
conduct a brief business
session ,
Entertainment will be p~
vided by the Madri1al Singera
of San Clemente High School
directed by ruchard c .
Dastrup. The group will be tn--
troduced by Cyril M. Ga\lick,
district music direclor.
C1Ulorl'll1, on 1111 folllM'lftl 1111'1'11: 1-PAOPOSlO SPE Cll'IC l'LAN lo!' 1111,.. IUl'llllDI COUIJIT 01' THI
!Nftf of \tlfttlllrd W1r 1tu!l\lr1Y incl STATI 01' CALl l'OllNIA.::00 ...... Alice Speer .._,,, C\lf'llnt In ... Hlltrlr dlrtclltn hi llM UP TM• COUNTY OJll OllA •• ~ ~•mt wllll S•nll INlltl. N•. A-6.11:2' the bride of Peter Thoma llZOHI: ~EfLTIOff NO. IJl.71.7, Cotti t!1t11t flt PITI• ~II!: T 111 11 N'
r ~ Pl1nnrne Com1t11111o11. n ""' OeeNNd. Reed 0 Newport Bee.ch durln Dl'lvt. CISll Mf11, ,., Pl!fmblkln lo NOTlC( IS HlltE'•Y OIVEN ,. th•
.,,--0n·1., performed b lh r11on1 pr111>1rlv 111:111t1 11 112, !11, no, crltllton o1 l~t ''°"" 111r11M t1KM1111 '~u . Y 8 'ZI•, 211, 2'!, 1M, IA!. 1rwl U• ()tit 5trMI. 11111 I ll 01r10n1 hl~llll d1lm1 111lnll !hf Rev. Orville A. Coal! In the Coot• M111. from Cl·S. $hoppln1 Ctnt1r 11ld dtctdtnl 1r• rHulred te> 1111 lllem, · thodi Ol1trlct, 10 Cl.Cf', L0<:1I 1v1itlfl1 with Ill• n.ec1111rv ~ovdo.,.,, In lh• ofll<• First Me It Ch Ur Ch , Olitrlct·Condlllfn•! l"trmll. of th1 cl"k 01 11'11 •bo"' entltlM cour1. or Albany Ore •eZONE PlT171QN NO •·11 ·•· '' prfJtftl !~em, wllh 1n1 l'\eCIU•rf ' · RIGh&•d L....,t1 D••n LrNl• il'l'llllrll 196' ¥11Uthtrs, lo Ille undt11ltned 1! !ht ofllct
Th b 'd d hi I M ' c ' of htr A1111rn1¥ John G111rln. 111""
Santa Monica Church
Chosen for Nuptials
The spring affair is under
the direction of the Mmes.
Robert H. Crowell, Wales
Wallace, Thomas Arm strong
and H. Donald Outmans.
Reservations should be made
by Friday. 'ftiay 7.
During the luncheon, four
ticket:; to "The Music Man" to
be presented by tht Lyric
Opera in September, will be
awarded. Four performances
of the musical are set for the
weekends of Sept. 10 and 17
with tickets now available at
the U!Odation oflfce.
·.~j
-\ I
e rJ e, aug er 0 r. Hflbor Bovlevtrd, 6'll Melt, for Ottan, Hunllnl!on lltl<h, Ctlllornl1 11'/6,jl,
and Mrs. ~1erwin H. Spee r of pormlulon lo r11ont .-ooeriv '"' •M whlCh !1 1111 pl•tt cr bl.r1ln111 ot 1111 . Btrnard S!retl. Cost• Me11, from Ill , undttllllntd in tll mit!tr• P1•11lnlnt It .A.lbany, v•as attended by Miss Two-F1ml1v Rn\o.,nl\1! Ol$1rlct, !1:1 C1· l~t t•t11e of uld dtctdtn!. w1111111 i.ur
C. d Lo H 'd r CP, Ci•llf••I Commertlll O!!lrlcl·C0<1" mon"'• •Htr tht tlr1t 1111blk.1llon If 1111• in y u aggren as ma1 o 0111-1 P1rm11 . Mtl ce. honor. NOTICI! IS FURTHER Gl\tEN Ir.JI I I Oiled "P•ll 21, 1'71
1111 !ltn1 1nd ol1c1 tbcwt mtnllont<:t. 1nv Nini M. N1wm1n Her husband is the son of '"" •II P'""''" 1n1ere11~ mtY •Poe•• ,.,dmlnlst•1tr1x
nd ed Ind M hl•nf br tl>e CllY CovllCll ol ffi• of 1111 E1!1tt ., !hi 'ftir. a Mrs. T Reed of Clh' o1 COit• Mt11 on 1111 1toremen11ontd Abo¥• "'med ckcedlnt
Newport Beach. He uked 1t1ma. EtLEEN P. l'HINNEY :~: :.'!.~~'~..,, Nlt11w1r St. Tim(]!hy'1 C I t h o 11 c
Church in Santa Monica was
the setUng Jor afternoon rites
linking Susan Rebecca Gabe,
daughter of the Robert Lou is
Gabes of Santa Monica, and
Richard Ellard Gouin II, son
of the Riehard Gouinl of
Laguna Niguel.
The bride's r;ir;ter, Miss
Robin Lynn Gabe was maid
ot honor with bridesma.ida the
Misses Lauren Rogel!, Debbie
Rothaus and Pri.scllla Prit.
chetl. Bridget Gouin, the
bridegroom's sister, w a•
flower girl.
Allan Unillo served u best
man while Frank Bitsko,
R<lbert Peairs and Richard
Fuller seated rue1ts.
The new Mrs. Gibe was
graduated from Santa Monica
lllgh School and attended Cal
Western Univeralty and San
Diego State College. Her bu~
band is a graduate of Pomona
Hl&h School and Cal Western
LINDA BARTEL
To M•rry
News Told
At Service
The engagement of Linda
Barte.I to David to.t Cowie has
bten announced during a
traditional candlelight service
in the "·omen's residtnce o(
Southern California College.
Costa Men.
Miss Bartel, a &:enior at the
eoUea:e, is the daughter or the
Rev. and Mrs. Harry Barttl,
missionaries in ~1ei:lco.
Her fiance, son of the Rtv.
and ?itrs. A. P. Cowie of
Lttston. Christ Church, New
l.ealand, Is 1 theology student
at the School o( Evangdlam,
Lancuager; and CUiture In
LausaMe, Swtturl•nd.
Tht couple met In Kenya,
Easi Africa lut •ummer while
both were enRA&ed I n
missionary work. No weddln&
d1te his been set.
and attended San Dieao Statt.
The couple will live In Min·
nesota, where the bridtgroom
plays profu&lonal baseball for
the Minnesota Twins.
LANA VOCK
To W1d
Jtmes E. Rieger to be tus best city citrti H1u111M1111 •Md!, c111ftf1111
and b D. k l'vb!fahtd 0r..... c-t 0.11\' ~!lot. "'41 man, w ers wert 1c ,.,,..1 1, 1,11 1ou.n T•h c1141 '*'"' Speer and Tom Corsey. AlfwMr tor Atm1111t1 .. 11111
Pvbl!lllld Or•nt• c.111 Diii~ ~llut. Candlelighten were Miss LEGAL NO'ttCE ,,,.,.11 u. » •nd Mn 1. , •• 1'71 ''°"
Carol Balskenseo and MW
Laurie Balskensen. SUl'llJllO• COIJIT o~ TMI ITATI 01' CALl,Ol:N IA ,OIJI ~..tUI)
LEGAJ; NOTICE
St. Andrew's Setting
June Day
Selected
The bride attended the TH•, COUMTY .. 01' .. o.~~.N,o• C•lTIP1CATI 01' I USIN•J•
Uni •t ~ n.-and \.-lilt Nu"' ' _.....,. ,ICTITIOUJ NAMI vers1 y UI. """6"''1 11er SUMMONS fMA llllAOI) Th• llnd•t•ltntd dot• c1r1lty 1111 II ~ husband '"""dU8led from the In ,.. 1111 m1rrlHI of l'llllltnt!" J1111 lllU(llflll 1 blltlf'llH I t lotS W tltl! It . .,.-fltlllOf' Mol111nl Hid ll•1PD!'ld'lnt: Jl"1tl Cotti Mfll, Cil/lornli, vnot; the fl;,
Nuptial Vows Read Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Vock <1f San Clemente have
Announctd the engagement of
their daughter, Lana Rae
Vock to James F. Robinson,
son of Mr. and 11rs. William
Unlvers.ity of s 0 u t he r n Ulehtoe1 Mort11nl Tlllllu• firm n1m1 ol (1) WIL·MAC PllQ.
California He spent five years T~rti.P•~ri~.:'_:; ,11ed 1 !Nfltlcln con.. cucTs. in sTlllCTLY c111:M"N 1Nc.
In ••· N . Ith tw to I C••n!nt veur m•rrl•"· Yotr m•r nit 1 ind "''' Nld llrm 11 com-H ol t~t "91• '""" avy W 0 .Uri 0 wrltl•n reto0l!le wl"'I" lt.lrty dlYJ of the lowlnt per~, whu• "':tl' 111 !vii ind duty 1n Vietnam d1!f th11 t~I• 1um""°"1 11 Hl'V~ on ~°" P1tc.1 ol ••1ld111C1 11 11 1e lows; • II ~Oii ft\I fo tilt 1 wrlttln rtlPOflff Wllll1m 0. Mll!lr, 1021 W. 1111 ltd,. wllhln 1veh llmt, tour dtf•~tt m11 bt An•htlm. Ct.
St. Andrew'• Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach was
the setUng for the double ring
ceremony linking Stephanie
Allen and Frank Polk Benoett.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
Dlertnfleld read the rites for
the daua:hter of Dr. and Mr•.
John S. Allen of Balboa and
the son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Bennett of Huntington Beach.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride uked Mrs.
Thomas Clrello to be her
matron of honor and Miss Pal·
te Landusky, bridesmaid.
Pete Poitras served as best
man, while ushers were Kyle
Pett and Robbie BeMett, the
bridegroom's brother.
The bride is 1 1raduale of
Newport Harbor High School
and attended Orange Coast
College. Her husband Is a
graduate of the Anny-Navy
Academy. The bridal couple
will reside ln Costa Mesa.
R. Robinson of Arcadia.
A June 26 wedding in th~
San Clementt United
Presbyterian Church is being
planned.
The bride-to-be is a graduale
of San Clemente· High School
and attended Sad die back
College, v.'hilt her fiance
studied at Arcadia High School
and Patadena City College. He
terVed lo the Navy.
Ayudantes
Auxiliary
Takes Vote
1nt1rld 111d lhl c;ovrt m1v 1nttr 1 lud•· Dllld APrll 2Z, 1•71 m.nt c011l1ln!111 111lvncllv1 or "'1\tr .,dtr• Wllll1m D. Mllltr conc1rnl111 dlvl1I011 of P•OP1rty, UOlllll Stitt ol C1!1lornT1. Or1n11 Ceuntv:
IUP-1, c11114 (Ullod"f, cllilG ll<l>l>Orl, th On APril n, 1'11, l>lfore I'll, I Nltlt•V
lo• ... vl' fff1, COiis, '"" IVcll clllt• r•ll•f Publk I" ..... tor llld Sltlt, ltflOftlllV 11 m•Y bl 1r1llllCI tw the eourl, •l>l>l••ed Wll111m D. Mllllr kM..,.n lo m1
It '" wl• ..... ti.. .... le• ltf IR II· fo bl lhl ""'"°" wheM ... ,... II 1ull1ulb· '''""" In thl1 111•"9i', ,.., thlllld di 11 eel to tl'te wllhl11 lnl!rv,...nl •NI ,,......,,IY .. tlllt r1ur wrlH111 "'"1tia. If •cknow!eGted 111 ••Kiiied lhl Mini.
••'• '"'' Ill lllH 1n llrl'll. (OffF ICIAL SEAL) OlllCI M1rdl 22, 1t7l. Mlrv 1•111 Merton WILLIAM IE . ST JOHN, (lfrt: NottrY Pvbllc.C1lllornl1 ., Wm. D. Kt .... nt. Oewtr Prll'(IPl l Otflu rn CSEAll Or1n11 COVtllv l'utlllo.hld Ortnte C011t DtllJ l'net, MY Com""l"lon IE~lrfl APtll JO lrtG Mir 1, lf. 21. 1'71 100t·1! Alll'll t, lt1S Mrs. Don Clarence will ~ubllstitd 011n11 C011t 01111 ~lint l ---,CF.;::;:r:-NiiTiiCi.----1~·~··~"~"'":.:"~·"'~M~··c'~·c"~·c"~":..._·~·~'·'.'." r;erve as p r e s J d e n t of the LEGAL NOTICE
Ayudantes Auxiliary of the LEGAL NOTICE
Children's Home Society for SUl'llllOIJI COUIT 01' THll ~-41U4 the coming year. STATI 01' CALl,OIJllttA 'Oii ClllTll'ICATI a .. IUtlNltl THI COUNTY 01' OIJIAN•I ,ICTITIOUS NAMI The new officer was In· N•. A4m' T1!t u11C11r11tf'lld ~•on clrllty 111 11 -
tailed 'th h bo d d I HOflCI 0, HIAIUNO 01' PITITION 01Ktln1 1 llu1tnt11 1t 210I SO. Wrltlll s Wl er ar ur n1 1'011 PllOtATI 01" WILL ANO l'Ol '''"'· S1nf1 ... n •. C1tll'll'nl1, Vndtr ..... a dinner meeUng In the Jolly LITillJll TllTAMINTAllV llctlllout flnn ... m. ol (1) ASSIEM8Lf0 Architect or Agent?
0 I in Ml I Vi j 1!11111 o1 OQMIENICA JllOLLl!TIO, alto OEVtCES U) IJllS50N 111 ll!SWN x nn Mon e 0. •-n •• DOMENICA POL ETTO. lllO AMPLIFtlfl co. ,,, 111 s $ 0 NI
Functions Scrutinized
Also taking office were the k-•• MACSAIJllO PALIETIO. &llO AMPLIFtEIJI INC. 01 RISSON SALES known •• t!OM(NICA PALETTA, tllO co. Cl ! RISSON SALES tNC. (1) llLUe Mme!. John Walz , Robert k110wro 11 OOMINICA l'OLli.TJO, alio STE'IELE •NI "''' 1110 firm 11 comPMld • -·•·r and Roger Taple vice known •• OOMli.NICA l'Ol&'TTO, DK••~ o1 tt>t 11tllowlftl 111•JOn, w11o11 n1me In ~io; ey, Id lull •nd pl1t1 or ,111d111C111 •• lollcw1 ; presidents; Edward Mitchell NOTICE IS kEREllV GIVEN Th1I flotltrl A. Alltl, 114.i S.vllll, PIKI"'
Functions <1f the nation 's
law-miking branch or the
government: Is lt the
architect of compromise or
agent of chi&ilge?
This and other quesUons wlll
be answered when Oran1e
Cout League of Women
Voters begin their evaluation
and study of U.S. COngre1s
thla lmllllh.
Delegates
Traveling
d J R 11 £•"''' 1"1ncl1rtcn h11 lllld hertln • M11· 11•, C•lltwnl1. The first unit meeting will dent pro-tern of the Senate, an am es u 1 Se • no" 1or prob••• of w111 •nd ,., 1nv•11Ct of 011tc1 Aorll JI. itn secretaries and Stuart Lt11111 T1111m•"'''' io P.tl!lo..t1, floblrl A. •int
tak. Place T"•sday, May JI, who e1pla'1ned the f1'nanc1'ng of . . . rl11r~"CI .. whlC. !1 midi 1., lurt~f. Sltlt Of t1Ulornll, Or1n1t Ceuntv : ~ Gibson, treasurer. o1rncu!1ri. •"" th•t 1111 t!mt 1nd •!ece On AP•lt 71, 1t11, 1>11or1 me, 1 Not1rv at 7:30 p.m. Jn the home of public transportation. Th I t r ded . ol ht1rl111 !ht ll"'f .... bffll '" I~· M•v l'Ulllc In Ind !Dr ••Id Sltll, Pf'ritn•llY e !IOC e Y WBS oun ln )), 1'11, 11 •::Ill 1,m,. In the tourlreicm of l°"tlrtd fletttrl A. l lul 11,..wn to mt to Mrs. Eda:ar Scheck. Other Area de legates attending ii · 1891 for the purpose of pro-De•••tmtnt No. s "' ••Id coun, •' 100 tw th• "''°n w!\ose nam• 1. 11<ll1trloed "-·-b d I d r eluded lb• Mmes. Edward 'din r . I I ta Cl¥1C C111t1r Drlvt Wtll, rn lhl City Cf 10 ""w\lhln l"11rvmtnl Ind ldcnowltd~d meew .. ugs are ~ e u e or v1 g pro ess1ona ass s nee s."1' ""'· c1111or"11. ht ••Kut.a "'1 1•m1. Wednesday May 12 at 9:15 Drollin1er. El Toro: Scheck, f""' natural parents the child 011ed M•• '· n11 coFF1t1AL SEAL> "' ' W. IE. ST JOk N, Mery lleth Mlrtllft a.m. in the resldenct of Mr1. Newport Beacb: J ohn Feeley. and adoplive parent:;. Ctvn1' ciert. No11rv 1"u1111c<1Htorn11
J R Lo I d M A 'I ~-ta M H be l p· kl An'lfrlcl1. 0.1 V1llt & 11111111 Prlnclo&I Offlu In . . ng ey an rs. . 1• • ~ esa; er r 1r e There are more than 200 m *"' llN'lttl 11'"'· Or1n11 c11.1m1 Mood also will open her home and David Gilbert. Corona del auxiliaries in the state which L11 A1'tt1t1, c1111wn11 HtH Mv comm1111on 1x.ir• fel: !211) '2141U ~rll '' lt1' at 11:15 p.m. the same day. Mar. and Mrs. Ke ith Swayne, implement the adoption pro-AtterMn flt: l'lt1111nw ~ublloMO or1n,. coe1t o.nv "ltel. ~ mee"·gs have beeo 1r-La1711"'a Beach. gram through volunteer work ""-+M A••11 21' • •ncl M•r 7• u. 1'11 •.u.n l WU WI o-· Pulll!Shld' Dflnll Cttrf Dell\' l"lktl,
ranged for 9:15 a.m. Thurs-A strong tupport position for and fund raising. M•' •· 1, n. ln1 11)6.).71 LEGAL NOTICE
day, May 13, with one In the the school aid tax reform1;;;;;;;;-,;;-:;;-.~,.;;n~;;;;;;;l----,-=,..,--,,,.,-,,,..~--l·----,,;;.:;;, ... ;-----
home or Mrs. Thom 11 recently introduced will be the CLOSEOUTS LEGAL NOTICE c1•T1,1u.T1: o,. 1u11M1ss.
G h d ··-th t be 1 · J 1 1 1 t. "AINTIN~s "''TITtous NAM• rasme r an .. ..:: o @r o eaiiue s m a o r eg s a 1ve r-w Thi vnderii.-:1 .,. ce..i1,., '""' ...
conducted by Miss Bea Whlt· priority for this session with WHOLESALE MOTtc1: 011 tAL• 0, conr:1<1Ct1n1 • bus1.,. .. •' l:ion s11t1"*''·
Uesey. an evtlaution or the state's OR LESS! •••soMAL "•0•1RTT AT ~1~~':~~'!'~~·icEvi:nc1:~0';'.'c~1~'~\':'~
Ch role 1'n educa"on ••e main THI K MO HI • o y "11VATE SALE SERv1ce 1...i th•' ••Id 11rm 11 c111"np1:11td Who'• In arge, the coast .. LU N T Its A HI .......... , M tl>f folltwlnt per.on1, Wi>ost f'11m11 In lea'"""'S newest ana publics· study item for the next two nu ,..,. ...... c1111 M11• su,.11110111 cou•T 011 THE 1u11 1...i Pl•t•• 01 ,,,1aetlC• '" 11 .. -~ Tnt.·111.·10 1.m ... S ,.m. Sf.t.71: 0, CALl,OIN1" l'Qlt IOllowl ; t Io n providing information years. '!~~~~~~~~~~i!I THE cotJNJY orr ORANGE Denni. o. McKtt . .,01 srr1r1 •••, Orange Co.alt resldantt will about governmental Optrl· ------------~~ In 111. M1ttt• o11111 e1111• ol GEOlllGE Or1nt1. Kenn1111 w. Mclc;H, uan Sllft.
ljiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOii;;I"· 0111,.V, Jl., DK11ltd. mani. 0,,,.,, be att~ndlng the 118th annual tlons in Newport Beach, Costa 11 Not1c1 11 11u111v 11..-tn ""'' "'e u11· 011tc1 A1rn 22, 1tn
I I I. I th p E Q '1 d L B h 0 d'nlontd wlll 1111 11 prlve!e 11lt. °" er O.nnh D. M<l(!!f s a e conven ion o e · . . i• esa an aguna eac , was F R MOTHERS' DAY •fl•r 1~1 11"' 01v 01 Mt~. 1011, ~1111t cl· Kenne111 w. MtKt• Sisterhood Tuesday through presented to Assemblyman Ii<:• ot Eric 111:~ner, uot Men,.cev, Stttt 01 c1111orn11, O••net County:
h ~• R bert B CUSTOM MADI ke•mo•• Bee'"· Counir of L11:1 Anv•IU , o" Aorll n. 1tn. IM!O•• mt, • No!e.., T U1;)Uay, May 11·13, in the 0 Adham by dtlegate! JEWELRY s11tt"' c1111arn11, la'"' ~!111eu 1nc1 bell Public In ""' to• 1•ld s111~. 111r1611111,.
B.v.rly Hl'lton Ho'·I, Bevtrly attending the 44th bllMUll 11111c1er, •nd •v'IKI te C011flrnf11lon b¥ 1otot•rtG Otnn\1 D. McK•• ,...., .i:tnr11111 ~ 11ld Svtotrl., Court. 111 ll'lt rlthl, l!lll lrtG W, MCKtt ~ftflW" lo I'll• fo ltt IM P@•Jflf't Hills. league c o n v e n t Io o in ""''' ""' """' Mttll"' 6 1nt1r111 o1 111d dK•11ea 11 1111 11m1 o1 w11a1e n1m11 ••• 1ublvlt1tc1 to "'' w11~1 ..
Sacramento. dtl"' 1nd 111 lh• tltM, lltlol 1nd lntwr111 l""lrUt"ntt'll tncl •<k-ltGttCI !flt~ f(• A philantropic and educ&. •1-1 -., ••IM• ''"" ,,..., ,,.,1 "'' rst•1e of 1110 dece11td "'' 1c· Kvlt<I '"" .. m •.
!lo I . ti r nd d . During tbe conclave !hey plec:t11"" .i1p1.11. llUk llll bV -·'""' ol l•w or glll~rwll<t. !OFFIC IAL Sf ... LJ na organ1z.a on OU e 1n cl,,.• """ ... In IOGlllon lo "'II " lll4 MARY llETl'I MORTON
1869 as a aorority at Iowa heard Robert Mo re t t t, I •••lid. 11 '"'time 01 tlfflll, 1n •rod to Nit!•"' Public. cau1orn11 ••·•-bly -·'er, d'•-••• '""I INOAGIMINT 6 WIODINO IANOI 111 t1>e ctrl1ln otr'°"'I o•-t¥ 1111/Jtt In '•l11CIP1I Otlltt I~ Wesltyan c 0 11 e 'e • the n..»e.IU ~r--l;J\;lj.N .. le • 1111 Coo.mh' (II Dl'en", 51t1• of C1tlt..-nl1, o, ..... Count,
ta r th d restruduring of the ta 1 1 M w u. MlftnlLJit .,._ o.. ,....,.,.., "'"""1111v de10!Hd •• 1o1t11W1. •• wll: Mv comm111.ron 1 • .i,.. •ecra ry or e state an ~ .,. '-ffV ,...... nt ...., -• en. 1•st s1>1rten Hwst1"11i.,, cw.11 ""'11 •· n1s ch~rs lnttmaU<1nally and 11stem: Senator Albert Rod·I o •.M .• Ty111 vk. ar, Lie-.... '"'11111" °''"'' c .. it 01n, •tttt
2 Ii dt, Spt81tl...,. On ten Q re, 5 ems !!'.':"'-· u ,•,ffllll ....,... M CO.SU. AHll J). » llld MIY 7, 14, 1171 t•ll
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NO. I ON
THE COAST
Your Hometown
Newspaper Is
The DAILY PILOl: trea will bfl the Mmes, Loyt . loatlt lio st '1ua M-ttMfl. C•t,•. ""'
Everett Nunan and G. H. ---=~~!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!i!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!~!!l!!l!~!!l!!l!~!!l!!l!~~~!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!!!l!!l!~~:_ _ _I ''"oc La.nphc1r. P\.lllHll'lld OP•i'tfl (Ml! O.lr, ,,!tot,I::===========~ M11 6, I. IS. 1t11 1011·11 J •
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Ne rt Beaeh _ Today'• Flnal
·-N.Y. Steeb
VO(. 64, NO. ·109, 4 SECTIONS, ~ P;(GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, ~A Y 7, 197f TEN CENTS
'
Newport G,roup to Ask Tough Buildillg .Curhs
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of "" DlllY l'llM Sti ff
New and even tougher building con-
trols throughout water-oriented areas of
Newport Beach will be recommended to
the city council by its Lower Bay Civic
District Study Committee.
The paneJ is now propos.i•g lo require
a special permit for all coostruction
within the district boufldaries tfiat would
be more than 35-feet high.
An earlier proposal had called for spe--
ciaJ pe.nnjtl ln the Mariners Mlle area
la< buildiap higher thin Jo r .. t.
The committee also will propose the
creation of two new zones throughout the
district, one for property directly on the
waterfront and the otbu for propety not
bounding the shorelile. ·
Under the 1tew ·plan, building height
limits would . be COil troiled· by tbe limits
in the various esi!ling zoheS, but the new
controls would pla~ strict requirements
on open space.
They would require waterfrOll proper-
tle.s to have at least 40· percent of the
sideyard undeveloped for a "view cor·
rkior." Other properties wJthin the dls·
frict, but not on the water, would be re-
quired to have 40 percent open space,
but not necessarily on the sideyards.
Any parking Jots built on waterfront
1ot.s that woukl be with.in the-"view cor-
ridor" would baxe to· be de,i>ressed at
· least 42 iJtChes, a'ecording to the proposal.
HJgh-rise construction within the boun·
DAILY PILOT P"-19 '°' ltldl.,. KMlllw ENSENADA-BOUND YACHTS MANEUVER OFF NEWPORT HARBOR JETTY BEFORE START
At the 1970 Starting Gun, .Sloppy .S.as, Light Winds and . Traffic, Traff le, Traflic
Sea Bird .. b~ .. t() Enseµt\da .
Newsboy Close B,ehind; R~ugh Seas Batter Fwet
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O.llW Pllfl ... 111111 1.itw
ENSENADA -THe catamaran Sea
Bird was first lo finish here today in· the
traditional Newport Beach to E11senada
yacht race with Jack Baillie's Newsboy
out of Balboa Yacht Club close behind.
First sail! were sighted off the En-
aenada jeUy today at 11:25 a.m.
Skippers were enjoying sunny weather
with winds shifting to the south aouti\.
west as the neet of more thu ~ yacht&
moved toward the finish line.
The ordtt ol finish at press time was
Sea Bird, 23 :4305 ; Newsboy, 23 :7635; and
Pattycat, 23 :7650, Damn Yankee fin ished
but was dismasted. Another yacht in
. trouble, Seasmoke, reported only two hal-
yards left but the skipper ,;aid he hoped
to fh1ish under his own power.
Earlier today. the first segment of the
racing fleet, some 36 yachts. were re-
ported about JO miles south of the Lo!
Coronados Islands. ·
The yacht& fought light JOUth to
southeast winds all night. Velocities were
never more than five knots. Winds this
morning had increased to about 12 knots
from tbe south.
This would mean that the yachts would
still be. beating their way to Ensenada.
Another escort vessel reported that
about 200 yachU!: were sailing about 25
miles west of the Co~.
Names of the. lead yacht& were not
available becau.se ot low visibility. Race
orficials said that of the S5ll yachts that
1tarted the race, thi!I morning there had
been only 10 reported dropouts.
At the start or the race off Newport
Harbor jetties Thursday at noon, dying
winds and sloppy, left-over seas created a
bumping match with a number of boats
being shoved off the weather end of the
outboard line.
The left-over sea was from an 18-knot
.,.,·esterly that had been blowin1 earlier in
the morning.
The catamarans, first fleet to start at
12 o'clock, got the worst 1tart. Many or
them were caught far behind the line on
the dying breeze and approached the line
JO to 15 minutes late -smack in the
midst of I.he Class A start.
As the. big Cla u A packel.!i crowded the
weather end of the line, the cats were
again shoved off the line. Three cats
were at least a half·hour behind their
acheduJed start.
The weather picture changed rapidly,
however.
Just as the Midget Ocean Racing Fleet
was crossing the line at 1 p.m. the early
starters could be 1ee1t rail~wn u a
weather f r o n t moved across thl' fleet
bringing ra;n and winds up to IS knot&.
As the squalls hit the MORF and late
1tartlng PHRF fleet.a there was frantic
1ail<hanging going on aboard most of the
)'achll.
There wert. report& of 1 number of pro-
le!!ls at ~ 1tart, and a number of yachts
"'ere 1eross the line early and failed to
restart.
OAILY Pit.OT ..,._.. ... A""911 l.M&eN'f
BUMPING AND GRINDING NEAR THE WEATHER MARK
Ena.nada R•ce St1rt Frays a Few Nerve Ends
'
Newport Car .'Salesman'
Receives Prison Term ·
A Newport Beach tervlce 1taUOn
operator who allegedly pumped S•00,000 ,
into hi1 bank account by promilin.g
customers Cadillac and Lincoln · cars at
di9count prices today drew a state prison
term of 011t to 10 yun 10< grand !hell
Orange County Superior Court Judge
James F. Judge ordered that term for
Thomas Browning, a, after Browning
pleaded · aullty •to one COUJ'lt of grand
lhell
Browning. the co-owner of a service
station at Dover Drive &nd We!t <:oast
Jllghway, was arrut.&d after he allegedly
defrauded • number of customera ref!r-
red to lhe station by molorist.s who had
p..ircbAM!d Ced.Hlac1 and Llncol.na 1t
bargain pricet.
Investigatora-M.id Browning · actually
bought lu:rury cars at a discount and sold
them at a km to make good on bJs
previoul aales in what they described 11
a "downhill pyramid" that ended wUh ~
filing of grand !heft and forgery chargea.
Brownin,g was named as a defendanL In
a civil action filed in Superior Court this
week b7 Dover Short.I resident Rudy
Bolich, lormer qlllrttrbllclt lor the
Chicago Be1rs. . .
Buldch wants $6,500 from the Convicted
Browning for ·what he cl alma was hi• lol8
on " 1971 Llncoln Continental.
He askl turlber d1m11ts of $30,000 ror
Browning'• ,faJlure to deliver t h •
1utomobUt.
daries ol the d.isttM:l bas bee.a at a halt
for nearly 90 days as a resul& of ~ mor·
atorlum impos«f by the council while the
study committee compiled it.s report.
A public hearlnl II acheduled by the
council Monday .alght on a request to con.
tinue the ~atortum anothet 90 d.lyt.
Councilman Carl Kym.la, chairman of
the committee, uid at leaiat a prelim-
inary repbrt wm· be ·ready by May 17
wlth a tinsl report to be prennted to the
COUICil May 2•.
He said the 90-day eJtention Is bein1
sougttt to allow both the planrun1 com-
mis.siOn and the council to conduct full·
scale. hearings on the. civic di!ltrict con-
cept.
Kymla also !lid ru.. panel bu dropped
plans for a new city committee to over-,
see building WJthin. the district.
"~ause of the proposed overlappi.nr
Ionei," he 1aid, "it is felt the pl&IJlin&
commission ahould be given review au-
thority."
AU pennitl !or l!i"1-rite buildinp
would be subject to fwal approval by the
COl,lncll. .
KytnJ.a expll.ined that the civic dLsttict
concept is 1olng to allow biih-rbe deo-volopmen~ bu! Poloted out. "II lt i.· , ..
ing to be allowed, the ground rules .,e
being chaqed to re<oinlze ,public Jn.
terest.11
on. project' to be tmmedlallly alll!Cl..i .
by the new rules will be the ex;pamlow
the CQNTROLS, Plp•I) •
Dollar Dilemma
'r
W. Germans Try to Quench Crisis
BONN (UP!l -The West German
cabinet ii nported to have agreed today
to leL the value of. the Deutschespark
float upw1rd in a move to halt the flow of
cheap dollars into the country. It will go
ahead whether or not France agrees.
Olancell~ Willy Brandt ~nferred with
his cabinet all day in urgent session to
follow up the German decis.ion on
Wednesday to stop supporting the ·dollar
with official purchases to keep up
its value. Earlier Story Page 4.
The cabinet laid down the instructions
that Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and
economics minister Karl Schiller w i 11
take to a European Common Market
Bla7.e Ravages
meeting Saturd1y Ill BrulSels lo aeel<
joint action to meet the crisit. 1"e pli&bt
of the dollar and the rush to buy gold hu
touched off one of the wont monetary
crtse1 .in years.
Schiller has proposed that West
Gtrmuly let lhe mark float and seek its.
own level by freeing the exchange rate
and to couple this with internal .tabili·
zation measures.
Conrad Ahlers. the official government
spokesman, was questioned by newsmen
on lhis point.
"Did Schiller win the support of the
cabinet?" Ahlers was uked. "Yes,"
Ahlers •replied.
~~'1 ~UW:aJJY .
After Blasl
. ly .ARTHUR It. VINSEJ. .
. Of' .... Dal" ,,. ... ...,, '
A muffled' explosion "aet · off r-aging
names within seconds 1burS$fay .nl&ht
al'ttr an arsonist torched perSOl)DeJ.
recotd files, causln1 $11,000 damap to a
Co!ta Meaa emp~yment aaeocy. ,
No one was seen arourid tbe Or1111e
Coast Employment Agency, 124 E.
Broadway, but evidence indicates it11.ru
undoubtedly set with intent to destroy the
documents and gut tbe building.
Fire Department Battalion Chief Ed
Lewis, heading the tnon invesUgatim,
said today certain items recovered from
the charred scene are undergoina ·crlme
lab analysis.
Owner Graham E. Budd told
authorities he locked up tbe office about 8
p.m., at which time everything 1eemed
secure.
Printer Beryl MaJoney was working in
his ad jacent shop at the rear of the
employment office when he heard what
seemed lo be an expl O!ion at 8:46 p.m.,
police said.
Smelling 11moke two minutes later, he
went t.o Jnvertigate and found the job
(Set ARSON, Page Z) '
Aerospace Job
Rate to Decline
Twelve Percent
WASHINGTON (AP) -Employment I•
the aerospace industry wlll decline
almost 12 percent during 1971, the
Aerospact. lndustries Association said to-
da y.
Karl G. Harr Jr., AIA president. said
lbe industry is gravely concerned at the
continuing loss of highly skilled person-
nel. 1ccelerated by government can·
cellalion of tl\e sUper!IOnic transport pro-
gram.
But, he. 11ald, this year's estimated
decllne is much less than the 17\\ percent
job loss tut year.
"The downward trend or the past
several yean appears to bt ieveling off,"
Harr said. "n'l.is lends support to our U:·
pectaUons that urn will see a reversal of
the decltning employment trends tz·
perl.-d cluril1g the pa&t tbree yean."
The AJA forecasts the 111dUJtry's
payroll will dnink by the year's end to
943,000 pen!Olll. lhe lirsl dJ'Ot) below one
mlllkln 11nce record keeping began in
1959. "Durinf lhe three year period 1169 to
1971, the lndusity b11 been forced to
release nearly half a miWon people, or
slightly more than one third of Ill labor
force," . Harr said. "Despite t b t 1 ,
auospace continues to be the largest
manufacturing employer."
Sclentlsll and engineers are expected
to experJence the smallest decltne, 9.8
percent. to an end of the year total or
1~1.000 compared with a· 19&7 peak of
W ,000.
,. '
OAIL.Y PILOT SMll'•..._.
' ' ., I
MOVES TO H'ARBOR VIEW
khool Prlnclptl Mlll9 r ·
Robert D. Miller
Named Principal
At Harbor ·View
Harbor View Elementary School · in
Corona del Mar will have a new principal
begiMing July 1.
Robert D. Miller, 39, of 2012 Pomona
Ave., Costa Mesa, was appointed by the
NeY1port-Meaa Unified School District to
replace John Case. Cue assumes Miller's Post as principal of Adams School in
Costa Mesa.
Miller has been with the district 10
years as principal of Adams School. He
came to the district from the Torrance
Unified School Dl!!trlct where be wu a
teacher.
A naUve of Fannersville, DI.. Miller
has a bachelor'g degree In education
from Shurtleff College, Alton, DJ .. and a
master's degree in e d µcat Ion ad-
ministration from the Universlly of
Southern California. He has~ done other
graduate study at USC, Cal State Long
Beach and l.be Universlty of Illlnoil.
He and hia: wile, Clara, have tbrtt
children, Pam, 18, a graduate of f,stancla
Hlgh School: Robert Jr., 14, .a freshman
at Estancia, and Mark, 9, ln the third
grade at Pomona School ..
Domestic Air Fare
Hike Takes Effect
WASHINGTON IAP) -Domootk: air
fares rose 6 percent today on most rout.ea
and may go up another 3 perctlll in July.
The lncre~se. approved last. month by
the Olvll Aeronaullca Board, are eipected
to give ,the 20~Atrllne1 ln'/Olvtd an ad-
dltlonat l2flO million this year. They
reported I°"" of about lt5U million
1111 year.
A floatjog mirk would oeil HI cwn
level and · boptlully atop the opoculttioa
which brought dollar• fioodint Ill here to
buy mMb. .
Ahlers aatd Bn:ndt. ·at the cabinet
meeting today, told Scheel and Schiller to
get joint . action by .the m m.-n "'
the C0tnmon Market -West. Germany,
Ftance, Italy, Belgium. the Netherlands
and Luxembourg. But he made It. clear
Germany would acf a]one if France con·
tinued to balk ..
"We aim for community approval or al
least tolerance or any. measures the
German government mJght bava to
take," Ahlers taid.
U.S. Removes . .
,. China l'rade
Restrictions . .
AliiJNGTON . (UPI) -The Uollld
ved: all rotrictlon1 on dollar
. li\f211W O!l1I! tocl1y ...
IJnl' openm; lljl tr1de between tho
t"" ..
Treuw-y 5ecretary Johll B-Connally
f11ued a lictnae allowing .U'. S.
bulineWnen afld banks · to transact
buaineil-witb the CommWllat government
and ill citiuna,Uling dollars or dollar ln--
ltrCmelrta. Pre'llous!J there hid beell a
complete prOhtbiUon 'ap.lnst · l"Q l 'b
trannctlons. •
"'l'htJ is the lA•llllr)l'Lfint step in lm-
plementin1 Preaklen& Nq;on'a decisiM on
AJJ'il 14 to ttlu flt!uclal and com·
mercii.1 controls with respect to mainland
Chi.DI," 1 trtasury·statement a.a.id. ·
"Tteasury is now mrftultJ.ng with tba
Departments of State and Commerce and
other jnterested 'a1encier on rela1i111·coo.
trols on import.a of good! from China.."
The commercial 'move came afte:r lhe
Red Chinese invited American table ten-
nis players to tour mi.inland China last
month.
The liflinl of the dollar restrlctJon
would also apply to foreign governmenta
.and busineasmen, tlle treasury aatd.
'lbe State: l>epfirtment aaid a list of
items that would be allowed in tracJing
wt!h Red China WIS "under high lev•I
review" and would be ready for rele111
in PJming weeb. .
A de.Pariment spokesman, Charles
Bray, ·wu asbd if there bad been any in-
dications the .c:hinae regiine would re1·
pODd lo the U.S. trade overturM:
"l don't know that there are," be
replied. "I as.rume that any reaction
would await their opportunity to look at
the1 deta.lb."
Part of the new poUcy entails
pe.rmis!lon by the transportation depart.
(See CHINA, Ptp I)
Wea tiler
oOn•t let UUs sunny spell foot
you ; it. loob Uke rain again tonight
and poaslbly Saturday. But clear
skies sboUld lake"OYtr ibis weekend
with t.mperaturea In tho bigb !Os.
. INSmE TODAY
Art bv rtudrnll of u.. Nt,,,.
porollc"' School Dictl'kt will be
on d~latfnuc week cc Fa1hion
lslaM.. For a prcvU10 of CM
show see toda»1'• Wcclunder.
I
t DAILY PILO T N fr1d.ay, M.ay 1, 1971
Ffrsi-Step
Easy City Annex
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Leg~laUon
mak!At it ualer ror cities t.o ann1:1 new
territory has passed a key committee
test despite emotional oppoi:ition from
homeowner ff'OUps and resident.I of Wlin-
corporated communitier.
problems,"
He said the measure would be tcughest
In forcing so-<:alled islands cf unln-
corpcrated nei&bborboocll entirely IW'-
l'OWldod by a city Into the city.
The controversial bill ·by A&sernblyman
John Kno:s: ([).RJchmond), wu sent to
the Assembly noor Thursday on a 6-1
vote of the Assembly Local Governmtnt
ComnUUee.
1bt complu 39-paae bill revl!es almMt
the entire city annexation law, Knox aald,
"to bring some order out of the crazy
quilt of munlcipa] a:overnment and 1tv1
cities .•. tooll to cope with some terrWc
Tricia Names
Bridal Party
For Wedding
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricil NIJon
has picked her sisler. two of her cousins,
and lhe sister of lhe bridegroom to be the
members ot her brid1J part)t for the
White House wedding June 12,
Julie Nl1on Eisenhower will be matron
ol honor.
Bzidesroom Ed Co1'1 1l1ter, Mary AM
Cox, 25, who 11 gr1du1Un1 thil month
from Yale 's achoo! of 1rchlte<:turt, will
be the bridtsmald.
Aad .HrVinc u junior bride1m1idl will
be two YOUDI cousins, Amtlle, U. and
Eliubtth, 11, Nizon, th• d1u1hter1 of tht
prtaldent'1 )'OUnSest brother, Edward
Nixon of Se1tUe, Wash.
Press secretary Constance Stuart iald
the lfOOD\lmen for the wedding will bt
BnDOUnced ahortly,
The While Houae provldect photogr1ph1
of "Amy'' and "Beth" Nii:on 11 they J)O'"
ed on a recent visit to the White House,
wearing some of Tricia's formal a:owns
and practictna walkin& down the Jtllld
1tairca11 in the Whilt Houtt.
The two girls-came with their parents
!or a Wh1t.e House vlalt early in Arpll.
Mrs. Stuart, aald ~ey had a "l\Ja . al·
ternoon" dressing up ln Tricia's clothes
111d practicing for the wedding, Belb
wore a gow1 Tricia used when the wa1
Queen of the Au.lea Festival in Norfolk.
Va., in April 1969. And Amy practiced in
lht drtM Tricia WOf1 1lt & fl'lalktd bill
di• save· P1 '¥ Whitt HOUM on
Rlllowe'en lllf.
The wtddinl Jnvitatioru: to 300 or 400
suesta: will go out next Monday, M1y 10.
Girls Gathering
For Scout Fete
Girl Scouts represenlina: troopa fron\
luvupout Orange Cowlty were HIU.,,
Ip camp today in the Harbor Atta for 1
~eetend Gf nauUcal 1etivtU11 It Newport
Dune•.
The 500 glrh will Include tome from
f'r1ano'1 Golden V11ley Council and the
IP1nllh Trail• Council of Pomon1, 10-
:ordtns to Mrs. JOHphlne Alleman, a~
tdvisor.
Triton Troop 98, 1 mviner thip of
ienlor Girl Scouta will hoat the two-day'
!vent, wh1ch lncludet 13 naut.lcal 1klll1
:la!Sts an Saturday.
Sunday events will involve puttin1 what
hey leam to pracUce, plus a clostn.c na1
:eremOfty and break.Ina: up c1mp.
DAILY PILOT
"Out bJ&gea:t urban problem ls plan.
ning," Knox aakt. adding that "more
realistic" annexation laws are needed to
make urban planning v.'ork.
A p a r a d e of witnesses called the
measure the ''taking away of what little
constitutional bargaining power we in
unincorporated communities 11 t 11 I
possess" to fight off city annexations.
The most controversial provision .of the
bill would It.art •n aMexatlon procetding
on th& petition of the annei:ing city Itself
or five percent of the voters (lr property
(lWJltra of the area. It would take 21 per·
cent to c1ll a public referendum er 50
pement of voters or properly (lWDtrl to
bait it outright.
That "infringes on our righls to frte
elections" and substit utes i•protest as the
means of gaining ri&ht.t we s h o u I d
po.ue.ss In the first p11ce" said H. D.
Bryan of Burlin11me, rtpresentative of
homeowners sroups.
"Isn 't this deny ing the right of self·
delermlna4on," said Mrs. ll a r o Id
Jackson cf Altadena. ''We've lost our
perspective."
Knox. wh<> agreed in the hearing to
lower the percentage needed to force 1n
eltctlon from 35 percent to 25 percent,
said the low percentage was justifiable
be.cause it would be raising only an im·
preclle Idea itiat must be acted' an
favorably by 1 Local Agtney Formation
COmmllllen before the referendum pro-
cedur. would come In forei!.
He said the annexation proJ)Olal wt11.1ld
!>. apicinc then, ind in the ama11 1re11
involved the hJaher percentaga requ ired
for a rlferendum'would be reasonable to
protfct ql1n1t calllnJ electlons to satisfy
"trivial" opposition.
Fro1n Page J
CONTROLS ...
ol apartments at the Balboa Bay Club.
Dan O'Farrell, d.ireetor of real estate
development for the club, pred.Jct ed the
new 1i1Ddards, 11 adopted, would mike
the COit of wate.rfrwit development vlr· tu.ally prohlb!Uve.
"Wt beUtvt that th• HCOmmtndltl0t.1
ol thll <Olllltllllet _,, Wlhll!IUo for ~ ...,,... Jn lfewpolt l!eacll. ~ '"nlt.lncentJyq belnr offmd to coma
In with a planned develGpmnt are not
worth the dllla1troo1 economlc l011 th1t •
will bt 1ulfered by the propertJe1 ·due to
the Jack af 1ny type of development that
would provide the density needed to
make 1 project feasible."
O'rarrell 1dded, "Wt allo think thal
the formul11 will allow cnly short,
sq~tty bulldla1s which wilt do just as
much dlnervlce ta th1 community from
a view 111ndpo1nt 11 any 10nin1 tbat now
e.ii1tf 1llow1.
"Il'1 ioln1 to bt wone,11 he said.
H1 ukl..Jlt-thinkt the planltd-devtlop-
ment reccmmendetlon tr meanln1l111.
"Wt thlni that thla wlll be JUbject to
the whlm1 of num .. oua planatn1 com-
miulona In future :r•af'J ind not worth a
dev1Joper11 tlmt to p.ll'lut. •1
Mother of tl1e Year
To be ToJd Saturday
The Harbor Area 's "mother of the
year" will bt named Saturd1y at 1
luncheon 1t the Hoat Memori1I flospital
conference room.
Tht 1% flnalista for the honoc, which
carriu with it 1 fret trip to Hawaii,
were. named two weeks ago by the hos-
pita l, which aMually sponsors the con-
test. Jud1ln1 ii based on enay1 writte1
by Harbor Area elementary school stu·
dtlltl.
DAILY IJILOT '"'It 111 ltlt~•NI Ktt~lllf"
From Page J
CHINA •••
ment ror tJ .s. airlines to carry car10
destined for Red China.
They will not be &!lowed to dtliver
cara:o directly to Red Qilna, only to a
lrannltlpment point. 1 1pokesm1n 1ald.
Flying Tiger airlines is the major
American air cargo airline now serving
the Orient.
Treaswy officials emphasized that
CoMally's order was llmll~d to dollar
transactions, and in Itself did not remove
prohlbltions against e1porting or im·
porting goods to or from Communist
China, But the statement made it cle1r
tb1t removing er reJ.ai:ing thse controls
was being C1'.lntemplated,
Connally also removed a prohibit.ion
against American-ccintrolled foreign :1ai:::
vessels from calling at mainland China
ports, but left intact a regulation baMinC"
U.S. flag vesse.ls from doing so.
COSTA MESA FIREMEN RACE TO BATTLE FLAMES AT EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Araol\ Suspected Jn 81111 Thurs day Night 1t Ort"SI• Coast Firm
Connally's order also allows American
oil companies abroad to sell fuel to Com·
munisl Chipese ships, e1cept lhOse eoing:
ta or from North Korea, North Vietnam
or CUba.
"The treasury's foreign assets coatrol
re,Wations now pennil nonnal linancW
transactions between the United State!
and the People 's Republic cf China and
its natk>nals ," the atatement u.id. Laguna Council De"lays From Page J
ARSON ... "Unttt:d State:t banks may now act as
financial intermedlartes in these trJnSIC·
lions, iacludlng remittances for fanUly
support, humanitarian and o th e r
purpoaes." 'Truth in Selling' Law a1ency a raging infer no.
"He tried ta use a fire extinguisher but
\\'i S driven back by the intense heat.''
said Chier Lewis, whose men arrived
v•ilhin moments from the nearby
Rochester Street station.
A tre•sury cfficial explained that Con·
nally's order will permit American busi·
nwmen, for in.stance, to purchase Rtd
Chinese goods with U.S. dollars and aell
them in other nations, since they wlll 1till
be prohibited from importing them into
the United States. Or they can purchlH
iood• in other nationa ind aell them to
the Red Chinese.
The La1una Beach City Council this
·week postponed action on a proposed
''truth in selling" ordinance affecting
sales of residential property pendin1 con--
ferencts with the Board of Realtors.
The ordinance wou1d requlre aellert of
residential properties to provide buyers
with building deparlment records on each
property oold ..
'!')lest would Include mn!ni <hugu
v1rlance:t obtained, permits lulled and a
statement 11 to whether any non·
conformln1 use ei:l1ta on the property.
In a Jetter to the council, Board of
Weatherman Sees
Clearing Skies
Realtor• pre:tident Robert Turner pro-
poaed that aucb lnform1tlon should be
provided on a voluntary, rather than
compul:t<1ry buis and asked that 1 coun·
cil committee bt namtd to dlacuss the
matter.
Councllm1n Roy Holm commented,
''That would take the teeth out of the
(lt'dJnanct. I.rt thrff yevs on the council I
have lffn many inlltances where an
cwner has had to seek a variance
because he was unaware of restrictlon:t
exl1Ung on property he had bou&ht In
Laguna."
Only 1 few ether items liUCh as office
equipment and furnishings v.· e r e
destroyed in the $11 ,000 blau, $8,000 et
wbicb involve! 1tructural dama1e.
"The reCGrds were naturally the most
valuable,'' Chief Lewis e!plllned.
The agency's door wu not IGCked, but
so far fnve1tlg1ter1 have not determined
the ar1&nlat'1 method tf entry due to
heavy dam1ge,
Citation Powers
Eyed for Three
City Employes
Holm Hid he would favor a mettlnr Alfred W. Jones
\vith the reiltor1 however. Newport Beach city councilmen are
Councilman Edv,.ard Lorr said he S , SI d carulderlng a proposal to add three city
agreed with Holm as to the necessity of ervJces ate employcs to the roster of those aulhoriz-
the ordinancr. "I dan't think: it's the part ed to issue citation.!.
cf government to step ln and forte such a Funeral services will be held 11 2 p.m. The matter will come before tbe coun-
A 50-M chance of ahowen or thu~ reve lation unless, as in this case, it's cos-Saturday for Laguna Hills resident Alfred cil May 17 for final action.
dershowen tonlght will diminish to 1 IO ting the taxpayers money as -ple an.. City Attorney Tully Seymou r said the r--r· W, Jone!, a native Californian and d t t th ·1 d" ·11 dd percent probability early Saturday as an peal for relief," he explaifted. amen men o e CJ Y or 1nance w1 a
on _ again, <l(l • again low pressure Holrn and councilman Peter Ostrinder retired macbanic whci died Thursday at the Marlnapuk manager. the city license
system mov~and irom 1be OrlnJt were pamed to confer with the redtors. St. Vincent'• Hospital in Los Angeles. !-le 1upervl10r and Ucense inspector to the , .cout: 1.,.. w:.·:, -f-+ ., wa1 75. group of city employes who are authoriz·
The Nationa Weilhtr Semce aa)'I 'c The services will be conducted at ed to issue citation,, for litter, safely and
weekend weather for Orange Coast cllle1 Water Competition Pacific Vlew Chapel in Corona del Mar parking violations.
1hould ae\ w1rmer 1nd c I e 1 re r. ., by Dr. Edward Caldwell of the IA:lsure The municipal code l'IOW grants that
Slturday'1 high will be around 68 degree1 World Ma10nic Club. Interment wHI power to humane officers, parking con·
along the coast under parUy cloudy akies. Set for Girl Scouts follow at Pacific View 1'.lemorial Park. trol officers, the Marine !afety director
Sunday the hiJh wlll be in the low 70s Mr. Joner, who lived at 249-C C1illt and all lifeguards.
under clear skies. Newpcrt Dunt1 11 the settlnr for Ara1on, is survived by hl:t wife, "Pormerly, there ~1a1 .11 1tate law
Winds along the coast will be westerly marine competJtion between 400 Orange Chrlstlna ; a dau1hter, Mrs. Kathleen ·which aaid the city maaage.r had the
In the artemoons ringing: from 10 to 20 County Girl ScouU, tod•Y through Sun· Youna: cf Newport Be•ch and 1 brother, power to grant th is authority to any city
.knot1. day. Clyde of Laguna Hills. employe he deemed necessary, That was
The tow pre11ure 1y1tem that has The 1lrl1 wlll pitch camp lonllht Jn The family !UQtlls that memorlala bt a pretty broad Jaw,
rested aver the 1re1 for the put few preparaUM f(lt ~ weekend of boa ling made in the form of «ntrlbution1 to the •· Jt w1s amenMd so that the power
days ii npetted to move on to 1<1uthern and awlmminS r1cu. a1 well 11 lnstruc· Shrintrs Crippled Chlldren1 Horplt.al or e<1u1d only be granted to enumerated d ty
Nev1da and Utah improvJ.n& tbt Oranae lion in n1uUc&l aklll1. lG any other charity. employu," Seymour e1pla.ined. CONtweatherouUook. 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"-~~~....:...~~~~~~~~-'--'--'-_;'--'~--'__.:.~~~~
Police Clear 2
0£ Theft Count
Newport Be1ch police aaid today 1
youn1 couple apprehended Tueaday in
connection with an alleged burglary 1t..
tempt at the Orange Coast YMCA had
nothing whatsoever to do with the crime.
Tbe pair, identified as Kenneth 1'.1.
Frederick, 22, of 207 Abalone Street,
Newport Beach, and Christy Johnm, 22,
of 818 Palm Street , Huntington Bt.ach,
were released at 4 p.m. that day without
charges placed a1alnst them.
A story in \Vednesday's Da i I y Pil1>t
qucled police as saying both had been
charged with burglary. The Daily Pilot
regrets the error.
U.pholstery Sale!
Our uphol1tery sele to"tlnu11 fHturl"IJ • 1•1'9• ••I•~·
tlon of quellty 1ofe1 tnd Ch•irs at 1xc•r,tionel pric••· s.1. items aho Include this h•nd1ome I ••pe,..1of• •t
• 1t•rtln9 P.tlct of •239. M1ny floor 1•mpl11 in Hercu-
lon.
daANll COAST •u•LnM1N• COMP.AMY .
l•Wt N. 'Wt•I '"'*"' .... Pvt!llW
J.a•\: 1. c11,r., Vlc:il" ,,_._.., W Gtlltr1t Mt>....., Segal Se~loded
"'••' '''"'' lfltw
1\••H A,, M11,t.! ..
MtMt1 •ti""
L. P•••• krl•t
N..,.,. .. ell 'II)' llfllW
,.~ ...... Offke
J)JJ N••p11t l•uleMr4 M·.m., Addr111: r.o. l1a 1111, 926lJ
OtW-
Ceit• ....... W..t ..,, '""" L..-l•cll1 DI P••I olllWlvrf W.lllli.it ...... 11Wt ~ ...,_,.. ..... '*"-"' m HW'lll Cl CMWlt •••I
'Love Story' Author Sounds Sorry
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI ) -
Erich Segal. the Yale University
professor of cla111lc1 who ro1e ta
fame Rnd fortune by aulhorin1
''Love Story," 1ay1 ht haa had It
with the public life.
"I em going into hlding ,'1 Segal
1ald Thursday.
Se1al, 34, who hu 1lven lecturta,
1ppeared an television tali ahowt
a:nd had numerous mai:atlne and
newJJ11per articles written about
him since the ruccus of hia book
and a moYie of the same title. said
"l am retumin1 to the scholarly
lite."
Se,llal said he v.•11 "sick cf
reading about Erich Segal, the
monster," and of meeting airline
stewardwer who 11lp him lhelr
apartment keys and believe love
means "never havinJ to 11y you
are sorry."
Secal said he wu lcavina: Y1le,
1'with the ble uin&s of the univer1l·
~."at the end or the current
lemtSltr ..
"I cazl't tell you w~re J am
1oing," Se1al uld, "but I Jm .. lne
whtrevtt I 101 it will h alone. J
bopa."
"''' TtlMI SICK 0, SUCCISI
Yalt'• 'rof•1Mr hgal \
SUIPll SOPA
SALE PRICED
STARTIN• AT
,239
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NIWPOIT ITOU 0PIN PllDAT "TIL t
NIWPOlT BIACH
1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY "TIL 9
,.,., ... lonal rn .. rlor'
O.slgntr1 Av1llable -AID
INT!RIOltS
,.. ... Ten,,_ Mw ef 0,.... C..•tr-14 .. 116J
LAGUNA llACH
J4S Norlh Coaat Hwy,
"'""" 4944$51
. ,
• Ul'I T•""°" ..
-
Gls Face 1916 DeaClllne
Friskin g
On Dru gs
GM Pessimistic
W ASH!NGTON (AP) -The
Cwtoms Bureau says a
On S1nog Cutdown
crackdown on \ht flow cf ii-WASHINGTON (UPI) -
leg.al drugs from Indochina General Motors joined Ford
means returning servlctmen today in clalmin& it has found
can expect to be searched no way to mtet exhaust
thoroughly when they tnter cleanup 11.andards. It also
tbe States. dlsc103ed a n t I p o 11 u t I on
C'.ommissione.r Myles J. research expenditures that are
Ambrnse announced the in-well btlow ill outlays for
ten.sifiai OJ3tol'll.'I e f f a r t advertising.
Thursday, saying the problem In prepartd te.tlmony, GM
of illegal drugs f Io wing President Edward N. Cole said
through military persoMel his firm was "hopdu1" it
and post offices had reached could meet the required 90
11eriou.s proportiont. percent red u et Io fl ~
Henceforth, he said , all mail hydrocarbon and carbon
packages from Southeast Asia monoxide eml!slons for 1975
will be closely examined. models, compared Yi'ilh 1970
He said military ba.se com-modt.111. But ht added:
manden would .. cooperate with "At th1a point tn time we
CUstoms officers in checklng have no way of controlling 01-
Cole lesUfied tllal GM spent
•$119 million on e1hau1t
cleanup research In 1170 and
would spend at least $124
million thla year. The firm's
1970 aales and profits, both
reduced by a strike, were
respectively $18.7 billion and
$609 million.
Advertili.ng Age, 1 t r a d e
publication, estimated GM'11
advertising outlays at $171.li
million in 1969, the latMt year
for which figures wert avai-
lable. GM 's 1969 sales were
$24 billion and Ila profits were
$1.7 billion.
Ford said It spent '65
million on a ntl po I lull on
research Jn 1970 and ls spen-
,
DAILY I'll.fir $
By Phll lnttrlandl •,
..
''Well, If it'• not pollui.I, why do tboy -IO
&nXIOUI to aet out!"
GOVERNMENT WORKER IN BOSTON GETS HELPING HAND FROM POLICEMEN
100 Arrested at J.F.K. Federal Building Attempting to Diarupt lu1ineu
-servicemen'11 baggage, their Ides of nitrogen to the ex-
personal belongings, and cargn tremely JOw level! which could
returning frotn S o u t be a ' t be required by the clean air
Asia , amendments of 1970 for 19715 The crackdown means all models." mail parcels going through
ding $132 million t.h1s year. ----------Ii'•••;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=-.
U.S. Steel Cost Boosts
Matched by 3 ~ig Firms
ll NITED
STATES
N ATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
Alcoholism
Funds Asked
By Nixon
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe
Nixon adm inilltration bas an-
nounced a "major national ef.
fort " to treat alcohol.ism and
has Mked Congress to provide
$34.6 million for the program.
This figures out to about
$.1.90 a year for each of the
country's 9 millio n alooholics
or problem drinkers.
Two senators ronlend this is
not enough.
-Dr. Morris E. Chavelz,
whose appoinbnent as direct()r
of the gnvemmeol's new Na -
tion.al Institute of Alcohol
Abtae aM Alcoholism was an-
noun c e d Thursday,
acknowledged in an interview
the $.14.15 mill io n ad-
ministration request for
alcoholism programs n e x t
year will fall far short of the
need.
"The country is ambivalent
about aJcOOolism and doetn'\
appear read y through
Congress to provide the need·
ed funds," he aaid.
military post offices will be 'Ibe law requires a 90 per-
Police Arrest 100
mibject to "100 percent ex-ctnt nitrogen oxides reduction
amination," Ambrru;e iaid. for 19715 cars. Ford te,,tified
A Customs spokesman uld similarly Thursday. American
that means they will be open-Motors and Volk.swagen ex·
ed. Up to now, all parct"L! pressed even more pessimism.
haven't been, only th 0 s e The hearings before the From Wlre Strvlcea do not mean wage and price
suspected of containing drugs. En vi ronme:ntal Protection PI'ITSBIJRGH _ hf a j er controls were necessary.
NOW OPIN Boston Protesters SATURDAYS
By The Asliocla\td Pres•
Police arrested at least 100
persons during an antiwar sit·
in in Boston Thursday during
a day otherwise marked by
waning o f demonstrations
again!t the Indochina war
around the nation.
The sltdown lasted more
than seven hours outside the
John F. Kennedy federal
building. About 2.000 marchers
came from a Boston Common
ga!hering with the announced
intention of stopping the
building's operation by
preventing its 4,200 employes
from entering.
Police at the Univer!iit y or
Illinois said they arrested 30
persons for falling to leave a
lobby where they conducted a
sit in protellt against
recru iters on campull.
Clapping hands and chanting
"We want peace now," abeu\
50 antiwar protesten paraded
in a circle at lbe entrance to
the federal building in
downtown•Buffalo, N.Y. There
was no attempt to block peo--
ple from enterin g er leaving
the building.
Al the Wayne State
University campu! in Detroit,
about 350 persons gathered for
an antiwar rally.
A handrul flf dleb1r d
demonstrators remained in
(ront of ROTC headquarters at
Kent State University in Kent,
Ohin. The building was epen
after being closed during most
of a four day memorial
observance for the deaths a
year ago of four students in a
confrontation with Ohio Na·
tional Guardsmen.
Slo'v Gains
In Economy
Reported
Ambrose: said the stepped up Agency (EPA ) are t 0 steel productrll are raJlinr in Other major producers said
enforetment action is designed determine how the indiu;try is d hin .... 113 K"-they were reviewina: their doing and whether It is mak· line an mate g "" w .N pricing policies in ll&bt ef the to stop what ht called the ing a "good faith" effort to per ton price increases an-increases. "flood of high grade htro\n nounced by U.S. Steel Corp. on
and Other hard narcotic drugs meet the standar~. steel used to manufacture Wheeling PJttsburgh Steel
into the United States." EPA Administrator William b'I li d COrp., another of the nation's D. Ruckelshaus can grant a automo 1 ell", app ances an big producers, said it was One shipment of illicit ... o"•umer goods one-year poslponement of the 0~uer c ,,.. · doing so-· "new figuring" on heroin wall ba0 0 ed recently, Thr e major sleel cor .. _ the commi.ssione:r disclosed, 1tandards In the event of a e • Its prlce structure in light of
f n 1 P.111.
lllON.·THUIL 1 .. 1 P.M.
'l lDAYI 1M P.M.
17141 140-1211 ........ S.1
k. CMlt ..... c.... .. ..
AMI. Vke ,,_,~
''good railh " effort that fails . porations, Jones &: Laughlin, the spreading price blke
whtn special Bureau of He announced Thursday he Republic and Armco Thunday movement. 1'2!~~~~~~~~~~
Narcotics and Danger o u ll Yi'Ould evaluate efforta partly matched hikes annouoced by But Bethlehem Steel Corp ..
Drug agents: seized 17 ~nd! by ct1mparinf antlpo\lution U.S. Steel Wedne!day. The in-the No. 2 steelmaker, seei;ned The One Th1t C.NI
H. M. STOLTE
of heroin in a piece of military re.!ltlarch spending with sales, creases averaged 6'f, percent . to be shying away from the Th LY ILO
mail April 5. f"· d d t 1 . g The products account for trend. I DAI P T-
The package was seized at pro 1"" an a v er sin one-third of industry ship-·.-----------'-----------Ft. Monmouth. N.J .• and came outlays. ment.s and equal about one-
rrom Bangkok, Thailand . he half or Jones & Laughlin's pro.
said. Customs estimated the duclion. 'The Increases may
heroin is "'-orth about $1.75 Air Crash enable J&L to reverse the $21
million if 90Jd on the 11treet. million loss it posted last year.
The seizure wall n o t In Washington, Treasury
previously d I 1c1 o s e d to Clai:tn.S 12 Secretary John B. Connally
"preserve the security of the said he was very much
investigatlon.!1," CU!ltoms said. p disturbed by the round or fn.
No arrests have been made. COOLIDGE, Ariz. (U I) -creases. He uld It.eel pro-
• lA•l' An Apache Airlines plane, 1 The heroin, lll 20 p._ 1c described 81 "coughing and d u c er s • • a r e pr I c n I
.G..ENIEi
DAY $99.18
c.. ... '" , ... ~ .... '\'!'_ ~...... b9-11'9." .. ,
bags in a metal bot, wa:ii i..A.. themselves out of the world •-! nd 1putlering," cru1~ into a HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) -enclosed in ''.1'" oam a cotton field during an ap-market."
The economy Js making ilow wrapped ln multiple layer• of parent emergency landing at-Connally'• reaction "I I
but fairly 11Usfactory gain!. brown paper. tempt Thursday, killing all 1J stronger than the "disap-
~,~1!~~ .... a, .....
.$164.88 ··:...-
ld From March 1 to April 24. a persora aboard. pointment" expressed by
top industry exeeulivet 11 emtoma gpokesman a 1 Id , "They dldn't aland a Presidential PreSJ Secretary
1hould avoid any acllon that seiture11 through Anny and who saw the two turOO.prop Connally 1ald the increases
mlght rekindle inflation . Air Force post offices alone. De Havilland Dove strike a
Members of the Business concrete irrigation ditch and
"'"·'· ....... --...... ..... , ••• ff
Congress Approval Seen
For Loans to Lockheed
today, and the gove rnment CU!toms made 2tll such drug chance," said Ramon Flort!:,r-Ro~n~Z~l~eg~I~er~e~ar~Uo~r~. ~~i~=~~~~~;;~~~~====~~~~!
Council, opening their spring KIDS LOVE It. lronl porUon dislntegrote In • flame! s.s it careened 300 feet meeting here, told newamen into the field.
infl ation conllnu'8 lo be the UNCLE LE N Flor" said tile pilol, Ted
country's foremost problem, Huntington, who took off about
damaging to the confidence of Saturdayi in 2Q minutes earlier f rom
ct1nsumer1 al home and con-Tucson, appeared to be trying
CEMENT BOATS FLOAT
~ Wotch McClatchle Morloe .. lid o e ..... ,
-ot bcrootloo Show ttiru Moy I .
loath Coast 'Plua '" cotta Mooa WASHINGTON (AP)
There are indlcation1
Congres1 will approve loan
guarantees for L o c k h e e d
Aircraft Corp., and perhaps
other companies as well. But
one congressman attacked the
move a! an attempt to ball out
the Lockheed chairman and
"his merry band of thieves;."
Rtp. William S. Moorhead
(0.Pa.), lashed out Thursday
at the Nixon Administration,
which asked the guarantees,
and Lockhetd chairma n
Daniel Haughton.
"One has to admire Daniel
Haughton who by sheer gu~
and balling wire has kept his
group of incompetents afloat
by intimidating the federal
government with threat.s of'
corporate suicide and then
walking out with the tax-
payers· mone y,'' Moorhead
1aid.
His statement followed a
news conference al which
Secretary of Treasury John B.
Connally announced the ad-
mini.stration next week will
send Congreu a bill seeking
$250 million in guarantee.s lo
keep Lockheed from col·
lapsing.
Connally 1ald his
prelimlnary soundings Indicate:
thf: leglslation will be Ap-
proved.
Th ILY PILOT to make an emugency landing fidence In tile dcllar abroad. e DA , a half mile away al Coolidge
The council 's panel of 20 Alrporl private industry economists, tt1L,,=========~.:.::!:::.::__ ______ c_ _______________________ -=====:-
wu learned, has submitted a
conllell!US report indicating
national output will total a lit-
tle undfr $1.0SO trillion this
U'l Ttltl>Mll LOCKHEED HELPER
S•cretary Connally
The consensus of several
congressmen queried ls that a
stiff fight over the Nixon ad-
mlnistration plan will be
followed by appn:ivaJ of 110me
type bill embracing other
shaky businesses w h 01 e
fa ilure could have severe ef·
feels on the national economy.
One key Democrat said,
however, that if the bill I! ex-
panded . ''The whole thing will
sink. Why not put on the end
of it. 'Ca pitalism is dead.'"
year.
That would be well short of
President Nllon·s estimate of
$1.065 trillion, on which the:
admlnlstration'1 fiscal 1972
budget estimate was based.
In February, lhe coundJ
predicted price I n c r e a 1 e 1
acrosll the entire economy
would average 4 percent thl!
year; now its judgment Is 4.4
percent. That reprellentl!I a
lilowdown from last year's S.3
perc:ent ri1e, but 1 Jes• Im-
pressive Improvement than
had been anticipated.
used cars
used
but not abused
atventy-onn 11
<iMst"be4' ..._~CADILLAC
lllD -~ UV!!. I COITA MOA (M4) 640-IHIO
Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores!
•
t
' ,·
• ~
,. ,. ' .. ..
. • .
s. .
t
•
•
' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL .PAGE
Another Empty Chair
All of a sudden Newport Beach city government has
found Itself having to fill three key jobs.
Two months ago there was a new community de-
velopment director's post with no one ·in it. Six weeks
ago the city n1anager resigned. And now City Attorney
Tully Seymour has called It quits.
Seymour's resignation \Vas probably least expected
but certainly not bard to understaDd.
' Seyni"ouris young (35), and will lake a $7 ,000 salary
cut moving to a part·time city attorney's post in Laguna
Bea.ch. This \Vill free enough time for him to open a
private practice. '
Seymour, in his own low-keyed manner. has demon·
i;tratcd superior ability and genuine sinceriiy in hi s y;ork
in Newport Beach.
That dedication was particularly well exhibited only
last month when be convinced a reluctant' council that
his office' should investigate the possibility or institutin~
legal claims for the public to properties along the Balboa
bayfronl.
It can only be hoped this project, for one, will not
be forgotten when his replacement is found.
The departure of Seymour, coupled with the vacan·
ties in the other two tof positions, leaves Newport Beach
govern·me:nt in a virtua state of question. however .
\Vltb three new chief administrators coming up,
thtre unquestionably will be new directions ahead for
the city.
The' air or expectancy cannot help permeate all who
are concerned ~·ith city government. For these new dircc·
tlons perhaps will be the most crucial in the city's history •
Today there is a veritable laundry list of C'ritical is·
1ues dangling over the future course of Newport Beach.
Upper Bay development, Lo\ver Bay development,
downcoast annexation studies, a m·aster plan, a freeway,
•
the airport Issue a.re but a few.
Interviews for the position of community develop-
ment director will take place next week. Acting City
Manager Philip F. Bettencourt said the five men invited
are each outstanding.
Applications for the position of city manager close
~1ay 21 . It is conceivable both positions could be filled
by July 1, definitely by Aug. I.
How \vell the city functions in the seventies will de·
pend in great 'measure on the quality of these hirings.
Keep the Search Broad
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees are
continuing their search for a replacement for Or. Wil·
Jiam CUnningham, who js leaving the district after three
years as superintendent.
At least one district official has been endorsed for
the job by a group of parents and teachers. The en·
dorsernent is a credit to the man, but t.he board should
continue to review the qualifications orany .and all can-
didates for this important job. Residents of the district
have come to expect the highest level of administrative
leadership that it is possible to find. That talent may
\veil be found within· the present administrative staff of
the district, but the search should be as wide as possible
to secure the best talent available -an}'\vhere.
By selecting from a field of top administrators, the
district. its teachers and its students are assured main·
tenance of the high level of educational offerings the
Newport·l\.1esa district has come to expect.
And the competitive selection will of itself be a
testimonial to the man who is selected. N
I THClJGHT THE PEACE
M~RCHERG WENT HOME f>UNDAV/
THEV DID! THAT'S
THE FBI!
· Paper · Drives Dear
Gloom y
Gus:
Be Calls It Sheer Cotnnaercialisna
·Can't Absorb . '
, Refuse Piles
Critic Speaks Out on 'Irvinese'
: The emoUonaJ play upon legitimate
public concern for California'11 en·
l vlrorunent appears to be leading those
·: charged with at lea!l one phase of lhe
': problem into a crisis .situation.
This is in the field of solid waste
: disposal where the terTQ "recycling"
: 1etm1 to have become the magic word i with environmenfalista. Wlt'ness tht cam-
; paigns of con~ner tuppHers to buy back ~ their used products•.and the prolilerattcm
! of volunteer maimed ~logy ctnters'' r throughout the state.
: M is so often the case with faddist p call.!t3, zeal for recycling seems to be
• outdiatancing the economics a n d r lechnology of •alvage and reuse as a ma·
: jor fol'Cf: In solid waste management. .
THE NATIONAL MAGAZINE 10< the
lanltallon indu.slry, Solid w·a·s t es
~tanagement, reports that at leaat three
Southern California. ,communities are
halting separate c<>lleCtion of o 1 d
newsprint and other. typea ·of ,p,aper. This
becaU5C waste paper processors are
1wamped beyond their ·capacity and tbe
price of waste new:1papers alone has
dropped from $ZO to U a ton in si:z
months.
CommenUng_ e~ltorlally the
authoritative )OUrnal declared: "Add to
all this the reports lrom the Golden State
from rtfuse contractors who have their
yards piled high with salvaged cor-
rugated papers and cardboard,,, and the
irritation of all those community-minded
folks entrapped in the recycling illusion
can 'be well understood .••
.. This entire sad and sorry story Is
!tarttingJy reminiscent of Y.'orld War IJ.
Then, great salvage drives were organiz..
ed by patriotic stay-at-home citizens.
Impressive mounds or paper, metals and
cloth \\·ere assembled. And most o! it
How come the isupervisors are cool·
ing their heels on the Orange
County Airport study? The Parsons
Report has been done for at least
three months and still we 've
beard notblng.
-L. R. T.
?Ml ... ._ refltch .......... ....... .... -.........nr lhtM M" t111 ,.. • .....,.,. s.n11 ~,,.. Ml -•• .. 01-r 011i. e>.Hr ,1191.
!ltlfed right. there, because there was na
demand fcif'H."
THAT RECYCLING as it is now being
undertaken can only serve as a small tool'
in the overan function of solid waste
disposal was made clear in a recent
study in San Francisco.
There collection and disposal or refuse
is the responsibility of two nationally
recogni:iid leaders in the field, Sunset
scavenger Company and Golden Gate
Disposal Corqpany. To accurately plan
the role of ~amatlon, Sunset ran an
analy!is of ·how much of an average
household'! waste was act u a I I y
recyclablt.
One ton of typical refuse was collected
from three separate residential areas In
the city and hand sorted into JO
categories. The highest yield o f
rtcov-erable products -p r i m a r i I y
marketable paper, metals and glass -
comprised less than a third of the col-
lected refuse.
Bundling this newspaper and sending
back tbe beer can you emptied while
reading it..rnay well be regarded as a con-
tribution to enhancement of the state's
ecosystem but support or efforts to im-
prove long-range waste d Is po s a I
technology will be an even greater one.
A-tl.ke A.br1mson
Califor nia Feeture Service
To the Editor :
The articles concerning the Jrvine
Company's coastal development plan.'!
(DAILY PILOT. April 28 and 29) cof'l-
tained a number of passages in pure
lrvlnest:, v.·hich 1 define as a corporate
dialect wherein the public sta tement
completely masks the thought behind ii.
For those unfamiliar wilh this linguistic
variant, I offer my translation of a rew of
lhe remarks of Richard A. Reese, Irvine
vi ce-president of planning :
STATEMENT: "Our economic studits
indicate a critical grO'A'ing need for a true
coastal resort etimmunity," TRA NSLA·
TION: "We hired a study group and told
them to con1e up with that result, or else.
,They delivered."
STATEMENT : "We don't wan1 an
undesi rable aulomobile-oriented en·
vironmenl.'' TRANSLATION: "We 've got
to make them forget that all those people
will have to get there by car, If that com·
pletely clobbers Coast •lighway in both
directions, it's not our problem."
STATEMEN't: "'Eco;~y ol tidepools
and undersea gardens is currently un·
protected lrom irresponsible public
desecration .•. we have learned that the
absence of deve lopment alone doesn't in·
!Ure protection of the e c o I o g y . ' '
TRANSLATION: "11 they'll swallow the
idea I.hat a rew hundred th ousand more
people around those tidepoo\s "'iii save
them , we're home free; they'll believe
anything."
STATEhlENT: "We can always do
another Cameo Shores, and thi5 would
satisfy our econom ic needs, but it is the
sort of thlng people object to because it
cuts off the coast." TRANSLATION:
"Cameo Shores was a bummer ; we could
have gotten a hundred times the return
from that land if they'd have lei us go
high-rise. \Ve've got to kee p trying."
OTHEfl: FACETS of. the Irvine pro·
posal;"·h1le expressed 1n somple English.
are no Jess dlsturbing. The suggeslion
Pizza as GI Fertilizer that Coast High\\•ay be relocated at the
expense of Orange County taxpayers, lo
accommodate t he i r profit-oriented
devel opment, is almost unbelievable.
I
WASHINGTON -Our stories atx>ut
mismanagement and malfeasance in the
Army's worldwide, $.2.5 billion-a-year
comm issary system has stimulated •
Juslice Department Investigation.
Government sleuths, in search of
evidence to present
to a grand jury,
have po)WJ around
mainly ih 1 \Vashin1·
ton. We suggest they
also 'ook Into the
garbage pils .11nd
sanltaryfillsof
Europe:.
They will find thal
furti ve comml~sary
orflcials have tried to cover up their
buying blunders by dumping food Into the
garbage. They have disposed 0 r
trucklo11ds of frozen goodies and piua
plea that spoiled in commissary freezers.
AN .4 J\ M Y DOClJMENT in our
pouesslon, for example , tells about how
the Anny bought enough Round-the Clock
Apple Soact to salisy its commissary
customers In Europe for lhrtt years and
enough Round-the Clock Berry Snack to
lut for five years. Vet these froten
ckledlblu have • freezer life of only six
moalhl .... 'rite-commlssal'}' ofOcial~. in the
.detput ol .wcrecy, Ltucked lens of
thoua.nch of apple and ben, snacks lo
CJ<d"llil!l'hlrilery m11. lhmby tnrldtinc
tbt tl\Stl a'l f1 etnU. a 1t:rving.
A three-ytlr supply of pin.t pies, which
al&o became tainted •fter sl• month, in
commlBAJ')' f~r1, wa.s conve~
1lmllarl7 lilt. Gmn1n •irilflw.
ON ANOTHER buying sprte com·
milwJ allldab ltotJiltt 91,000 cana of
Their magnanimous offer to dedicate two
.~-~;-~ ,.~ 1• canyon areas as public parks amounts to
'" throwing us a fish, sin~ I suspect that k. .... J aek Aiaddloh acreage is too precipitous to profitably
_ ~.;. , , develop anyway.
....,. Despite all the self-laudatory ~ .-...I·"""""'"''" """' statements about development ar its l11nd
Del r.tonte white cream com. This was
enough to last 30 months, 18 months
longer than the cans should be kept on
the shelves. To get rid of them, the com·
r.tls.sarles reduced the price from 19 to 1 l
cents per can and sol d them off at a loss.
We have been unable to confirm reports
that some cans were simply thrown
away.
\Ve have traced some of these wild
purchases back to Col. Jame$ P..1cDoweJJ,
wbo lhen headed the purchasing board
for the European commissary zyslem.
Far from being censured for his waste,
however, he bas now been given an even
more. Important commissary job. He is
now deputy to Ataj. Gen. John fl.1cLaugh-
lln. v.•ho runs the quartennastcr center at
Fort Lee, Va .
l\tY ASSOCIATE Les \\'hitten reached
the e1tra\•agant colonel at Fort L« and
~sked why he bought so much lood ttult
had to be plo.,..·ed under. He. 1nap~d.
"No commenl, '' to 1U questlOflll.
\\'hitten also trl~ to question him
about rePQTIS th11 t tie showed unusua l
fl\'OriUsm for Rockingham Chicken.
After certain Rockingham products were
declared un~anltary by government in·
1pectors, the Pentagon gave Euro-
pean contmissariu the option of buying
other brands.
• f\.t c Do w.e. 11 acce1Jltd a Rock·
1r.gham proposal to continue. stocking its
products In different pacltaii:es "'h\ch had
not been round unl!anitafy. The tnd r~ult., however, was I hat the. gOOds were
unpopular 'Aitb mlllt&I')' housewlvts.
in I.he public interest, the Irvine Company
continues to base its planning on sheer
cornmen::ialism. ·
' ROBERT D. RIES
Parental lles po11slblllty
To the Editor:
Referring to U1e letter from •·cathy
Hoad" (f\1ailbox, May 41:
She asks Jn her letter. "How can you go
Into a crov.ld of kids and say 'you're cl@an
and wholesome and you're not'. As a
teenager T know for a fact you can't."
The answer is simple. lf a youngster Is
togaging in sexual intercourse (and you
, don't get V.D. from toilet !eats) at the
a~e of l!t or 16, she has classified herself .
lf she doesn't, she doesn't worry about
V.D.
AS ASSE)tBL Y?ttAN Robert ff, Burke
puls it. those parents who care, and rab:e
\htir children informatively SQ that they
too cart. sbouJd not ha''' thclr children
aubjecttd to the problt>Q'!J that are
created by parents ind children Y•bo do
not cart.
Afy .statement Is brutal If It re:fers to
Cathy, or an)'flnc like her. But may our
c:ounl.ry reser\'e to tbe parents the. right
to rsise !heir children in accordance. with
proper sexual standards I.hat .prtelude the
unneceas.ary ~ucaU011. by our pub1'c
&ehools In the arl t6J. enjoying extr•
marital lnltrcourse without the dangt r or
ao doing!
~JV CHILDR• also an wme to me
(
· ~failbQx '
\.•tit" !~111 ,. ... r, &r1 wrictma. HttPMll1
wrlltrl tM\rl~ C•"""' ltttlr IMllla,..1 ill )Of -•d•
..... u . Tiii rl1lll .. 'tHfflla lltt~ ft fll •11c1
It '"11'1\lltlt llkl h f'tMf\'ff, All ltthn mijtf ill· ,,~ , • ..., •• ".. .... 11'11111111 ..uni.. MJt tll l!ltl n,., M wlrt'lltt lll WI """"'' tt i.utftci•nt , .. _ It
-WttlL 1'"4TT wf\1 w1 k nlllhllW..
about sex. They don't need to go to the
schools because this is a part of my job
as a parent. Let I.hose of us who still feel
parents should raise children do so. and
don't classify us all with the quoted
stalistics. ~1y children will know without
school education.
DONALD A. JONES
Survival of Life
To the Editor:
If one looks behind the so-called
''obstructionism" of which the Sierra
Club is accused in the April 29 Gue.st
Editorial by the California Water
Resources Association , a concern for the
survival of life itself emerges.
To what end should we dam the Trinit y
3nd Eel Rivers in northern California,
flooding food-yielding agricultural land
and destroying valuable fishing streams
when recycled v.·ater can be obtained at
less cosl? To what end should v.·e 11,1rn a
large share of our water, as polluted
sewage, into rivers and oceans to kill the
marine life, eliminating another food
IOW'Ce. and endangering our use of
beaches when il could be recycled and
used right here?
DAMS IN THE Colorado store most or
Orange County's water until it is so salty
and mineralized. that even v.·hen n\ixed
v•ifh our rapidJy diminishing underground
supply, its quality is far from satisfac-
tory. Yet that source of water was once
thought to be a perfect solution to our
\Valer needs.
Ha s the Waler Resources Association
taken all these and many more side ef-
fects into consideration?
HAO THE RECEJ'lr;'TLY enacted federal
Environmental Protection Act. requiring
a full study of the environmental Impact
of a development before any action was
aulhorized. been in effect, m a n y
detrim~tal constructions and practices
might have been stopped.
Look behind the curtain. Is the need to
criticize the Sierra L1ub ba.o;e.d on the
desire of a development-minded giant lo
justify some of its biased interest proJ-
ects.
MARYS.COTT
l 'acl11g lip lo Deull1
To the Editor :
It is good to see the DAILY PlLOT
report on thanatology (Comment Page,
t.1ay 1). On the other hand, the report -
and thanalology itsel f -is really not
cornplele. The~ is something \"ital i;niss-
ing from the discussion : a consideration
of the nature of death itself.
Death is nol a passing, transient thl~g.
Death is permanent. l t is not a matter or
lving down and saying, ,;I'm dead," and
then getting up aga.ln and going on to
:;omething else. Death is the last word.
Nobody seems able to appreciate this.
There can be nothing worse than eternal
nonexistence. If you don't believe me.
you don't under stand the nature of YOUR
death. Death is not an abstract thin'g that
happens to everybody else but not you -
the crushing fact is that it happens lo
YOU .
ONCE YOU under.;land this you will
realize no ''divine plan" can make your
death a~ptable -\\hether it occurs in
Vietnam or in a nu~i.,-: h'"Tl'~ Yr11 , .. ;ii
realize that the object of thanatology
should not be lo make us accept dea.n
but to fight it -to the death!
''The living ... (st.ow) their unwill·
ingness to come to terms with their ov.·n
1nortality." Is this supposed to be new?
Is conventional per::uasi on going to
change !he fundamental fact that man
deep down inside finds death unac·
ceptable? It hasn't \vorked in the past -
or the article \\'Ou\d not have appeared -
and it can't work now. It is time for man
to grow up out of h\1 ct>Smic inferiority
complex (dust thou art, dust you will be)
and seize death itseU by the throat. It is
Ume for deaLh itself to die .
GREG FAHY
Treasurer California Chaplt>r
Student Cyronics Association
Easing Co11rt Pressure
To the Editor:
Our judicial system caooot efficiently
handle the vast number of cases now in
the courts. Due lo the. sharp increase in
<rime. th e courts at every level are jam-
med. The sheer volume of cases ort!':l re-
quires the defendant who can 't post bail
to wa il for long periods of time in jail for
his case to co:ne up.
The system would be more productivt.
if it were relieved of "victimless crimes"
~-uch as drunkenness. proslllution , gambl·
lng, homosexuality anti drug abuse.
Vfc."fmtLESS OFF'ENS~ could be
dealt with by fines . Such a reform would
result in greater manpower within the
system and better use of tbe taxpayer·s
dollar. It would take the necessary
pressure off the lower courts and reduct
the overcrowdir.~ in the jails.
RICHARD MISSLER
Jails Need R e for1ni11g
To the Editor :
The purpose of this letter is based on
my recent studies of the conditions of
jails in the United States. Humane living
conditions in prisons cannot be reached
unless proper reforms are made.
Jail~ have be\!n shown lo be a ·cOllegt:
for crime. Not only is a small-time .sneak
thief susceptible to homosei:ual rape: and
drugs, but also a prison can be a trade
school for crime. A young inei:perienced
criminal can be turned into • young,
highly proficient burglar.
EIGHT-FIVE PERCENT of all crimes
committed are commilted by those who
have been "rehabilitated.·• Without pro-
per separation of criminals, I.he current
penal system is surely not a correcti\·e
one.
I am proposing two propositions. 1 am
advocating reconstruction and building of
more and better jails. This 'reconstruc·
ting and building of new jails would have
a hvo-fold purpose.
FIRST, THE LIVING conditions Woulrl
be improved to hlltnan staJ'id8rds. The
jails now are overcrowded and filthy. The
reconstruction of the old and the b11ilding
of the new would enlarge footage per
prisoner.
A second in1portant result of the
reconstruction would be lo segregate the
prisoners according to crimin.I. offense.
This would reduce the possibility of a col·
lege of crime developing.
I ~ope you will take interest in this ap·
palling problem and give our prisoners 1 break. ·
JIM SUNQUIST
Estate Planning Needs Experts
Some years ago a clerk in a bookstore,
unpacking a shipment of new books,·
found one on the subject of "eslale
planning." Thinking it must be about the
landscaping of large homes, he placed it
in the gardening section.
He would hardly make that mistake
today. Estate plapning has come into its
own, used by thoughtful p e o p 1 e
,.everywhere to preserve asseLS during
'lheir life.lime and to pass them oo wisely
-and economically -at death.
One rtason for the growUt of e.state
planning i5 the grov;tb of estates.
Nowadays even lhe ordinary citizen is
likely to ha\'e an estate of substance. It
may well include not only a home and a
savings account but also pefsonai life
Insurance. group insurance. stocks.
pension plan benefits, profit·sharing
opllons. and social security righta.
ANOTHEll REASON is thot estate
planning has become far m o r c
soohlstlcated. lts techniques have gone
\\'1!)1 btyond the trad i tional
"testam entary trust'' for a rich old lady
11nd "sptndthrln trust" for a rich )'Ouna
man.
Unfortunattly, there are pi t fa 11 s
11p\t.nty (Or the amateur planntr. for
•Xlm)>1': -cna1t7 people think avoidln1
taw in · Ac!tlon . ..
probate is the same as avoiding tnes.
But the federa.I estate tax is based on I.he
entire estate. whether it passes through
probate or not.
Likewise, many ptoJftt think life
Insurance • i5 not taxable. But life
insurance Pf'OCttds 11re included ln
federal estate' tax purposes unless he ha s
retained none of the incidents o[
ownership of .that policy.
TRUE. lT f\IA 'i' bt sensible in certs in
c:lrcumstanees to avoid probate. And it
may be pos.o;ible In certain circumstances
to avoid taxes on life Insurance. But
cte11rly lhis is a field in which the layman
nced'l expert he.Ip.
Much lnformaUon is available from
trust departmen ts. a c c: o u n t a n l s ,
Insurance men. 11nd I n v e s t m t n t
counselo~. The ultimate ad v i, er,
hov.·evcr, should 11su111ly ~ an attorney.
since he. alone ts CUiiy qualifled to give
lhe ~rsonal legal auldance • program
should ht1\'t.
~ pt<>plt ahrlnk from Ill• lliou£ht 01
estate planning. But, like It or not. 3ome:
plan is iOing to govern the care and
distribution of your possession. The plan
coul d be yours, if you make one. If you
don't, state and federal laws-obliviow of
your wishes-win do it for you.
.4n American Bar Asockition pub-
lic sen:ice feature by \Vilt Bernard.
-----iliAiiiil-.
Friday, May 7. 1971
The editorial page o/ the Doilu
Piloc seek.! to inform and scim.-
ulote readers by pre$entlng thi.s
newspoper's opinions and com-
mentary oti topics of intrrt.rt
and stgnfftcancf, btr providfrig a
forun1 for tht tXpr8$1ion of
our rtader.t' opi11foR1. and b11
pre1entina t111 dfv1rtt vit!D-
point! of informed ob.~eTvtrs
011d spokts111tn on topics of the
da!/.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
I
\
, , , . -.
Shining Ho.or
A golden hour has just passed for . Copa de Oro patronesses of
the Auxili ary of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian. .
The 'vomen, who shone in the spoUight during th e 2 p.m. event
yesterday 'in the Linda Isle home of Mrs. Hansel Benvenuti, give gifts
of..gold to th e hospital rather than golden hours.
The tea is the annual occasion when the patronesses. who are
dedicated to financial assistance to Hoag, are given a special "ttiank
you."
Greeting guests were members of the executive board of the
auxiliary. Mrs. Charles W. Clemens Jr. was tea chairman.
William Hudson, hospital administrator. spoke on Future
Growth of Our Hospital, and Mrs. A. Vincent Jorgensen, chairman of
C-Opas, introduced 28 new members.
Joining the ranks of the Copas are the ?limes. Harry Axene,
Robert E. Badham, Roland S. BaU, Richard E. Barrett, Ralph Bjork-.
lupd, Charles Boice, John F. Buchanan, Arthur R. Costello and \Vatter
\V. Cruttenden.
Other new members are the ?ltmes. Albert DeYoung, Nelle
Duna\\'ay, William J. Durkin, Tom Evans, Castendyke Fay, James L.
Gray, Richard P. Housman , Earl Hardage, Jack D. Hensley, Dana
Lall1allH!!ld W. E. Langston.
· Completing the list ar~ the l\1mes. Alan A. Pi1cCray, Ala n
J~elyn Mickle , Edward I. Miller, Lindsley Parsons, John Store. Ne ttie
V1gman, Edward G. \Varmington, Joseph M. Thomas and Samuel James
TUffree.
lntr.oduce~ <luring the , tea \Vas a new type of Copa de Oro
membership, a life membership to be given ·to any woman making a
one·time $1 ,000 donation to the hospital.
The first member in the new category, Mrs. Burton Romberger,
\\'as introduced by Mrs. Joseph Beek.
Funds contributed by the patronesses will be used for th e Hoag
'fowers building fund.
Reflects Golden -Gift~
•
I •
"
I
~men GOAL SIGHTED -Getting a new perspective on their work of
financially supporting Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian are
Oeft to right) the Mmes. Ralph Bjorklund, new member of Copa
de Oro, l\lrs. flan sel Benvenuti, hostess for the annual "thank
you" tea, and Mrs. Lawren~ E. _Br.OJVn .• _1we:nty-eight new. mem--
bers were welcomed during the affair in Mrs. Benvenuti's Lilida
Isle home.
BEA ANDERSON, Edlto•
Frldty, 'MY J, 1'11 M , .... II
Fruit of Year's Labor a Bumper Crop
The harvest is past and a fruitful crop has been
garnered for the Florence Crittenton Services of
Orange County by Mesa · Harbor Club. Two
events were responsible for the successful accymu·
lation of fund s. as illustrated by Oeft to right) the
Mmes. Philip Evans, Duane M. Steputis and Donald
Beall. A check 'vi.II be presented to the Crittenton
Services during a luncheon mee!ing Thursday, 11-tay
13, in the Pi1esa Verde Country-Club. Election of
officers also will take place, and a program will be
presented by Miss Carole Powell. vocalist. Pi1iss
Po\vell will sing selections from Lerner and Lowe
and Rodgers and Hammerstein.
Anglers
Fishing
For Fun
Before the rish stan biting,
and Lady Anglers .go in search
of the "~ig one" that won't get
away, they will bait some
hooks for handic ap ped
children from Orange Counly.
The ch:lldren will gather in
Costa l\tesa Park Wednesday,
1\fay JZ, for a day of fun in-
cluding hot dogs and albaco re
sandwiches. along with fun
and games. provided by the
Lady Anglers.
Clowns will be there to
entertai n and give gifts of
balloons and brightly colored
hats, and the Costa Mesa Fire
Department will bring an out-
dated fire engine for the en-
joyment of the boys and girls.
Mrs. Robert Bryton is
.chairman of this year's event,
assisted by the Mmes. John
Harris. co-chairman. Cha rles
i;oss, Dan l.1cMillan, H. A. ~ f
Schmidt and Thomas James.
Picnic expenses are covered
with proceeds from lhe Lady
Anglen' spring I u n c h eon
"'·hich look place lhis year in
lhe Alrporter Inn. Equipment
such as leg braces. wheel
chairs and audio visual aids
also are P\l{chased · for the
sc hools with the luncheon pro-
ceeds.
The firsl picnic took place in
1951 with 125 childrer. at-
tending. This year, 2 7 5
children will be at the park
aloog with their teachers and
supervisor s.
FUN LINED UP -Newport Harbor Lady Anglers have reel~d In a whole, da7.,
of fun for as many handicapped children as they can squeeze into Costa· ~1es1
Park Wednesday, lr1ay 12. PreyieY.1i ·l~ I he annual event are Oeft to right) Mrs..,
Frank Keeler, Betsy Williams and Mrs. Charles Foss. ·:.
·Weekend Farmer's Crop Ruined From Seed ·of Disconten.t
' ~
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a mar·
ried man and a father wbo needs help
with a problem. 11.fy wife was spending
money like It grew on trees and we have
many arguments about It. Finally 1
became so desperate that I ran an ad in
the newspaper saying I would not be
responsible for her debts.
I live in Indiana and work in Chicago so
I get home only on weekends. Tht satur·
day after I ran U1e ad in the newspaper I·
went ho~ 11nd disoovered that my wife
had lBken all Lbe furniture and left wUh
our two· chlldlf!n. I'm sure she went to
her mother'a:
i-1 don't cal'e about the furniture but my
children mean the \\'OT'ld to me. Please
teU me what to do. -TROUBLED MAN
ANN LANDERS
DEAR MAN: Yot no.Jd tt1ve wrlHu
to nie BEFORE yoa ru U.11 1d, Bab, bat •••tit done ii done, '° let'• 10 from
~· CO.tad roar wUe 1H 1Jk lier l• sit
dowp WI" lOll altd I (!OUH:lor or 1
clugym11 11M1 srttle JOV dlfferenca.
Each •of you. lla1 • lfllUmate beet 1t
might be that yo11r wife 1pe11dl mtaey
like craty \o get even wltll yot1 for 1ta'v·
tag her alone five dl)'I 1 week. TH toht·
UoD might be for you to work 111 lDdlua
or move Y• f1mdy to CJdca10.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a is.
year-old high school boy who l\Yes In
Dubuque, Iowa. Dubuque isn't exactly
New York City so high school kids here
don't know a lot of sophfstlcated 1tUfr.
1 have oevl'.!r kissed • girl but .I am
planning on dolng It IOOn. In tact I have
th• girl picked oul already. 0...'1 laugh,
•
Ann. l really need help,
Please tell me -whe.n a guy kisses a
girl where does his ~ belong? J dOn't
want anything to go wrong. Thanks a lot.
-PLANNJNG AHEAD
DEAR HEAD: Th! ..,. goet right
aJoq wttti the rest of Ute face and It
beloap wherever It landt. Piute kt D'':
kMw llow 1" did. I worry lholll kldJ like
you. -DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 48 )'<an
of age and feel foolish writing to a paper
for help, but J .am terribly confu1e;d.
My h.u1band died when our son wa1 4. t
raised the boy myself and he b very
close to me. Jetry J1 now 14. Ll'Jt 'year J
met a widower who brought real ·hap-
plness Into my life. After 10 years of from &be lime h 1earotd lo tatt. J6rc
loneliness it waa like a miracle. I am doa't walk, to lbe nearest pl!looe:. Gd *"
man bae~, Ii yo11 'CID. II w~W . W • .j.
healthy move ror bot). yoa ud~ll!I
-unless,. of count, &M kid. ,. .. ; ti
spend tbe rnt of bis life betllll ~
aroand bu:tead of ma"J\llC tome Clrl t;:
can tyran!ie. la wlllel Cite,) my ~
sure we · could have been very content
together. Financlil securl~y was no pro-
blem. We art both comfortable.
When 1 told my 30n I was considering
marrying 11~ln he became angry at first
and.later llilltn. Finally ht told m• I had
to choose between him and the man. So 1
1topped ,..Ing my friend. ·
1 am . very depreMed. t feel that
pcrha·ps I have madt the wrong choice.
Yet the mother · la me says ,my f\rst
respon11lblllty Is to my son. Plea!e al-ve
me your views. -SHELBY MRS.
· OEAR•SHEt.BV: ADd bow lo"I has thl1
tld btea dlctatlaa to 1oU.f My 1uesa II
dolences to you bolb. • ~
' .~
HO\f will you know Wfien llitft1t t?ildf-
comes along? Ask Ann Landeri. Selldf«
her booklet "Love.or sex and Ho•·to ~
the DUlerence." Send '5 centa In coll'~
a Ions, self-addressed, 11llmped enve~
with your reqU<SI In cart' of Ille llAIL\I PILOT. I ' ; •
' -. . "'
FrldQ, MQ 7, 1971
.. fil> twe To Gire·
If you are looking for the best way to make
your contflbution to the community, why not let
the Volunteer Bureau of South Orange County help
you find just the right volunteer job?
Call the bureau any weekday between 8:30
a.m. and 1 p .m. at 642-0963.
WATER SAFETY
Orange County Association for the Retarded ls
In need of volunteers with water safety instructor
certificates to be lifeguards. An ''Olympic" swim
program is sponsored at 11 a.m. each Thursday in
Jerome Park. Santa Ana.
PATH TO MATURITY
Big Sisters of Orange County is a program pro-
viding adult friends for girls who need understand~
Ing, acceptance and companionship from someone
outside the home.
Friends are needed who will help girls find
their best path to maturity. H you would like to
take on a real challenge consider being a big sister.
SUMMER SIGN-UPS
Teenage volunteers are already signing up for
summer volunteer placement, and more requests for
their help are coming in each day. Do something
different this summer. . \
EASTER SEALERS
A newly formed social·recreational group for
adult patients at the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Cen·
ter in Orange, Easter Sealers have activities rang·
ing from chess to painting to candle-making.
LEGAL NOTICE U:OAL NOTICJ: . ~-,...,. ,ICTITIOUI IUJUIDI Cl•T•,ICATI Oil IUllMlll NAMI ITATaMDtt lllCTl'rlOUI MAMI The follow\M --tAI RI,.. 'TM U!MltJlllMoil .... Ctriltr M ft -llu1lntt.t II: ~l"f 1 .,_,I/Mii 11 31"4 Yttlawitont TH. SHOAi.$, 1'01 S. (blot HW1'. Orlw Cella Mell Ca. fUU. u,,.,., .,.. L-fll .. ldl HUit~ flrfl! n-~ o1 COLOMllA COi'• •lcl'ltlll D. l urf !Gan. "'rt!llf'loltllll
Fl!• SALES ~ IEiltVICE 11'111 "''' .. io ltl 1!"*'1ld ll•v. L•fUlll ellCll .•• , ... l!rrn It__.. of Ille followlnt H rMnil, Wtl\!""9 tOan. '°lf'll'llrtl'l'-1 11,jj
W"°9I ........ Ill "'" ...... Pllut Of lllwltre Otlvt. S1nl1 AIM rulOIMt 1rt 11 t.fltwt• Tlllt Minni II btlflt ~ "' I . l'trtnlnlllp 5"1111 F. Sttbou..._ '1U Yttlowlt-lr11nt Wllllbtrt Drtw, Cot!t Mtu, Ct. '262' Ml•!• '1.ldltnl o llll'ff Tll'IU StrflevHlr, :nu Vt!~ •lllllllilllld Orar,... Cotll D•lly "I~ Drive. C:•lt MeM, Ct t"1f, AIN'lf 30 Ind .. _ 1 I' 11 ltl• ,,.._ Dtltd A1rll 2', ltn . ..,., ' .. • Stlllld I', $1r11ouM11 LEGAL NO'l1CE Mtrlt TtrfH St'"°"'" t11tt el Ctlllornlt, OrtnM Coun!Y: Oft All•ll 2t, 1'71, ~ ,..., t Not1rv •·UJ7f "ubllc Ill , ... lot Mid Sltlt, -MllllllY Cl'1.TlltlCATI 0" AUSINlll lpPHrH Stbtld F. S.,boulllc tfld M1rl1 JllCTl'rlOUI NAMI
Ttrtll llrllOuMk lcnow" IO fnf le "' IM T"" u"41tr1itntd ... c ... llh' "" ft "''""' .,.,.._ r'llrnH 1r1 Wblcrlbld lo · ,,.. wltt.111 lnt!Nfl'Mlnl Ind Kknowltdffd Cll'ldudlftf • 111111-• ., 160• Mt•IMI ,...... ueculld tt.t .. mt Drive. HunllllllOfl lttch, C1Uflr11l1 IOl'l'ICIAL SEAL) . 111\dfr ""9 f'lct1llwl ffn'll 11el'!ll ol IL.Cl JIHJlll IE DIY1 COM•AHV ...., !ti.ti ulcl lln'!I N Nt11rv ,Ubi1c.c~11f!lrnlt ctn1-.ll of 111t tollo'llll111 "'""· WflDI ,.,lllc:1"1 Offl« In l'lln\I In fvll tnd ,.1(1 {/4 r11tdlf!Q II 11 OrtnH COlllllV ttrlew11 MW Comflllnlon ~''" E..._ M. S.rotr, 1..-Mtrl!llf' Dr. JUl'll 21 111' Hut1tl1111lori lff(ll, C1ltl. •ubU..,.,. o;_ CMlf Dtllll l'llol D1i..1 APrll 15. 1111
APrll IO tnd Ml"/ 7, U, JI, 1'71 111J.11 STATlf OF ~t':~:'Ni~rllff
OltAHGE COUNTY;
On A .. 11 IJ, 1'11, .... mt, I Nett,, 1-------------11'<.tbllc In 1nd lot 111111 s1111. per ...... 111
•P"''" Ele•nor M. St•Off •-n II "'I
LEGAL NOTICE
"-41Jlf lo bt lilt 11rion wftaff """' 11 ClllTLl'ICATI! 01' IUSINISS 1ub1(rlbtd lo tlltl within LllllfllfMnl tnt PICTITIOUI NA.Ml 1c•~1ed IM utcvl .. 111t 11mt. The lllMltnlllntd 6oH ca"ltr h1 It econ-(Offlclll Sttll dUCllM I builMH ti :1215 Httbor llvd., /!At,y Bttn Morlofl Cotlt MtH. C1lllwlll1, ...,,.,, ""' lie· ll'rlncl~I Ottlca In lll1Mt1 fir"' ntmt o1 JOHN'S RACING Or11111 Cauntr CVCLl!S Mid lhtl ltlcl """ 11 C<IM-.d My Comrn~Lrw! E•Plrn
of 11'11 klollowlne Nrton, ......... "''"' I" Aprll t, 1t1J fu!l tnd ,.IOI of ,.._.ffnct h 11 tollf:Mtl: •ubllthtll Or1nt1 Cotti DIHJ' ,.llOI Jd'l11 Ctllcdllo, :1011 Ftrnl'tetlll Ln. A~rU 16, JJ. lO Ind Mtr 1, 1'11 IJ&.71
CM .• Cttfl. n1lld April 21, Tf71 Jat.11 C1Ucr;tol" LEGAL NOTICE
Stilt ol C11llor1111, Oranff tountv : Jl-4ln
Ofl Mr/1 ~I, 1~71. blffltt ""· I Nlllt'1' l'ICTITIOUI IUSINllt ll'utl llc In lnol tor Mid ·Sltft, par-.11tv NAMI ll'ATIMIN't tPHtrtd JOJln C1llcr;tolo known t• "'' ht Tl'll follcrwl I , ., ' b<i lht 1Mr1on wll°" n•mt It ...,l,.c•lbtd II: "' l'lfton I l!o "' • 11'111 to IM wllnln ln1lrum1nl Incl telu·-ltdt· KAl'lANS ll E ST A u • ' NT I
MADRIGALS -Richard Countryman and Vicki
Schwartz, Madrigal Singers at San Clemente High
School, entertain Mrs. Wales Wallace of the Opera
League after getting their cue from director Rich-
ard C. Dastrup. The choir will entertain during the
annual spring luncheon of the Opera League of
Laguna Beach Tuesday, 1fay 11.
Volunteers provide instruction in handicraft~
and hobbles which give a new dimension to therapy
programs and rehabilitation.
TELEPHONES RINGING
The Orange County Council on Alcoholi!m,
Santa Ana is seeking volunteer telephone aides who
will handle incoming calls.
td flt t•f(ll!ecl 11'11 Mfl!L OE C !OF FICIAL SEAL) LI ATE!SEN, :DU llrltlol Mtfft, M•rr lletll Merten Co"• Miu Nolt,., •ubllc·Ctllfcrnl• 511Ulll C111t 1t11t1ur1m • n d Prln.<lpa! Offlct In D1t1c1ttu1n, Inc., t Ctllfornlt ~o•· OrtnOt Coun!V -·I~ JfU lrls!OI SlfHI. COS!t Meu Mr Commlnlon EXplrl!S Thl1 Diltlntll I• bt/119 CCNlll(hd b'I I APl"ll t, 197S CtrPOl'lllon. l'ublllh.. Or1~1e Cotti DlllY •Hll Abrlhtm ICtPltn
CAROL SKILLION
To Join Brld01
Pasadena
Setting
For Rite
Carol Rae Sk.llUon will
becorile the bride of Richard
'Allen. Corflnberry du r Ing
August rites in the First
United Methodist C h u r c b •
Paaadena.
Parents of the betrothed
couple are Mr. and Mra. H. R.
Stillion of Costa Mesa and Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence M •
Cotfinberry of Parker, Ariz.
Mia Wllion is a graduate
cl John Muir High School,
Pasadena and Pasadena City
College.. Hu fianct i! a
graduate of Pasadena City
C.Ollege and baa: served four
yean in I.be U.S. Marinea.
Chefs Flip
Flapjacks
In Patio.
The patio aeason will open
on Saturday, May 8, as or-
ficJ.aJs of the San Clemente
In'lerfaith Servicemen's
Centu serve a pancake
breakfast from a to 11 a.m.
Honora:y bolt and chairman
Of the event will be Keri' Carr,
city manager, who will share
host duties with William G.
Ho r n • newly-appointed e1·
ecutJve director or the center.
Chefs will be a corps of
young Marines known as
Green Badgers who as~lst In
daily operation of the facility,
Junior hostesses will serve.
San Clemente area residents
ere invited to enjoy the
breakfast, meet the staff and
tour the facility.
Sale Tags
Attached
Tbe conference center of
Hoag Memorial Ho1pit1l,
Pre.tbyterian will becomt 1
~fashion abop for 1 day on
'l'llunday, May 13.
From noon to g p.m. a
v1riety of new clothlna ln-
cludlni dresse5, b Io u 1 e ' ,
1l1ck1, ps,ptsults and teen
fublom: will be IOld 1$ I
beotlll 'for the h " p It • I
bulldJna fund.
Accordint to Mn. James
LaFlamme, vice prtsJdent,
WIJ'I and means, the Ill·
name.brand cJothJn& w 1 1
ttcured at discount prices.
Opera League Lends Ear
Aprll JO tnd Mtr 7, U, 21, 1911 ll:rN-71 ll'r11IGen1 Tlllt 11111ment 1uec1 w11n f~t c11111t · 1-------------1 Cltrlli GI OtlMt CauntJ on: APrll 21, It/I
LEGAL NOTICE llEVEllLV J, MADDOX DtPUll' Caunl'f' Cltrk 1-------------IAllKIM AND WllllMAH Alttr•IYI II L•w NOTICI OJI "UILIC Nt:Allll'fO t10I Vt11lct l lYG.
Spring Sing Scored Vows Said
In Oregon
NOTICE IS HE'1.E9V GIVEN tl'ltl t CulYw Clh', C•lllcrlllt "2• p.ubllc l!nrlnt will bt htld br IM Cllv T·12174 Council Ill !ht Cll'I' 111 Cost1 Ml-11 Clfl MIY "llb!llhtd Ortnff Cotti Dlllr •llol
17, 1971, ti l!'>e !>our 01 71JO c.rn., or '' ~ U. JO u1d Mir 1, •~. 1n1 HS.71 ,._, lhf,.tlter 11 lht mettfl" mtl' bel---o-=c=-cc-~~~~---he•r", In !tit Counc!I Clltmbtr ft th• Cl!'( LEGAL NOTICE Hin, 71 F1fr Drive, Cc1t1 Meli.
El Adobe restaurant in San
Juan Capistrano will proyide a
colorful background for the
annual spring luncheon or the
Opera I&.aeue_ oJ Laguna
Beach on Tuesday, May 11.
Assodatlon of Orange County
includlne.-the Opera 100 of
Leisure World will gather at
11 :30 a.m. for a social hour.
.Following lunch.-Mrs.--St.anley
Eichstaedt, president, w 111
conduct a brief business
session.
Entertainment wilt be ~
vided by the Madrigal Singers
of San Clemente High Schoo! .
directed by Richard C •
Dastr.up. The-group-will be~lr..
trocluced by Cyril M. Gallick,
district music director.
Ctllfam\1, on tne followlnt 1ttm1: ·--=~1~-~~""==::::--==--c::--==--PROPOSED SPECIFIC Pl.AN fol' 1n1n· S'O•lltlOlrt COUllT OJI THI "'ent of V1neu1rd WtY 10Ut!Mrl\' Ind Sl'ATI! 01' CALIFORNIA 1'0111: Susan Alice Speer became cu,.,ln1 '" 1n e11t1rlr dlrtcllon 1o u"" uo THI COUNTY OI' OllANttl "'llh S1n!1 lubel Nt. A-'Jnt the bride of Peter Thomas REiONt: •ETJ.TIOJol NO. R·71·7. Cotti "''''' ol' PETER p I! T E 11111 H.
Reed r N B h d . Mftt Pltn~1M Clofflml11lon, 11 Ftlr Oecttltd. 0 eWport e&C ur1ng OrlVI, CHll Me~ for permlulorl hi NOTICE IS MEllEllV GIVEN ht lht tereJilon~es ~0 by the rt1on1 p1-rty loCIMI! ll 21', 211. ·m. crl!dlllrt ol !flt lbow n1mtd dectd<!nl ...... ' :12L tlf; 2ff 23' 212 tlld '~ ~It $trtt1 llltl I ll H •Mll• h1vln1 C11lm1 111!1111 !ht Rev. Orville A. ts in the Cott• M1H: ,,.;,, c'1.s. Sf'Kip•lnt cent•; ••Id decedent '" reo111Tre<1 to 1111 "'""· Members and guests of the
auxiliary of the Lyric Opera F. t · Ch h Dl•!rlcl, to Cl ·CP. Loctl lu1lne11 Wit!! Ille nl!(llHrv vouChera, In !lit Ollltt \r.i Ur C 1 Dl1trlct.C"""l!10~1I Permit. of 1119 Cl!r-OI !~t tboVt ..,!IUed C!Hln, Of Albany Ore. REZONE PET IT IO,... NO .• · 11 .'. lo or1w111 '"'"'· with ·~· ntCIUl r>f 1 Rlr;l<l•rG L-11, Dean L~lt lm<>Orfl, 1.U V01.1tlltr1, lo 11'1• u"41frtltM<I 11 lilt olllct
Santa Monica Church
Chosen for Nuptials
The spring affair ls under
the direction of the Mmes.
Rnbert H. Crowell, Wales
Wallace, Thomas Annstrong
and H. Donald Outmans.
Reservations should be made
by Friday, May 7.
During the luncheon, four
tickets to "The Mll!ic Man'~to
be presented by the Lyric
Opera in September, will be
awarded. Four perfonnances
of the musical are set for the
weekends of Sept. JO and 17
with tickets now available at
!he association ofifce.
The bride. daughter of Mr. H•rbor lloultvtro, Cotl• Mna. tor of hlr AllDf'MJ JOiin Gut•ln, 111 .. ,., · oerml11lon le rtl-pr-rb 11 •.54 Octtn, Hunlln1ton Beien, Ctllklr"lt '1'4. and Mrs. Merwin H. Speer or Btrfllrd St•HI Co1t1 Mtll tn:m R2 whim !1 thl pll(I ol bollnt!ll of !hi
Alba . ' ' ' underJll-In tll m11!1r1 Ptrttlnlnt to ny, was attended by Ml!S Two-FimllJ Rnl.,enll•1 Ol11r ict. to C2· the 11111• or aald dee"'"'' wll!lln four
C. d Lo H 'd £ Cl', Gtnfral Commercltl Dl1trlct.Con-mC11tni il!u tilt llr1t pVbllctlkwl ef It'll in Y u aggren as ma1 o "111ont1 Ptrmlt . netlce. 1
honor. NOTICE IS FUllTHER GIVEN 11111 •t Dtll!d Aorll ,,, lf11
11>1 llmt Ind pl1ct tbovt mtn"-<!, tnr Hllll M. Nf""1ftlll Her husband ls the son cf tnd au ,.n.on, 1nt1re11ec1 mtJ •-•r Adm1n111r11rix
Mr .nd Mr' Ted Reed of ind bt l>lt•d llJ 1'h• Cll\I Cauncn of "" Of !I'll E•l•ft el 11'11 • • Clll' of Cotll ,,.,. .. Gn 11\t tfor.i1111tlonld Abovt lllll'llld dKHHll
St. Timothy's Catholic
Church in Santa Monica wu
the settint for afternoon rites
linking Susan Rebetta Gabe,
daughter of the Robert Louis
Gabes of Santa Monlca, and
Richard Ellard Gouin II, son
or the Richard Gouins of
Laguna Niguel.
The bride's sister, :r.us1
Robin Lynn Gabe was maid
of honor with bridesmaids the
Misses Lauren Rogel!, Debbie
Rothaus and Priscilla Prit-
chett. Bridget Gouin, the
'bridegroom's sister, w a 1
flower girl.
Allan Ursillo served as best
man while Frank Bitsko,
Robert Peairs and Richard
Fuller seatai guests.
The new Mrs. Gabe was
graduated from Santa Monica
High School and attended Cal
Western University and San
Diego State Collq:e. Her hus-
band is a graduate d. Pomona
High Scllool and Cal Western
LINDA BARTEL
To Marry
News Told
At Service
The engagement of Linda
Bartel to David 1'1. Cowie has
been announced durlng a
traditional candlelight service
in the women's residence of
Southern California College,
Costa Mesa.
Mias Bartel, a senior at the
college, is the daughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. Harry Bartel,
mlssiooaries in Mexico.
Her fiance, son of the Rev.
and Mrs. A. P. Cowie of
Leeston , Christ Church, New
Zealand, is a theology student
at the SchQol of Evanaelism,
Languages and OJlture in
LausaMe, Switzerland.
The couple met ln Kenya,
East Africa last summer wh ile
both were engnged i n
mtarlooary m>rk. No wedding
date has been set.
and attendai San Diego State.
The couple will live Jn Min·
nesota, where the bridegroom
plays professional bueball for
the Minnesota Twins.
LANA VOCK
To Wed
Newport Beach He asked 11em1. JOMM ou1111N , · , l!ILEEN "· ,H INNEY 1111.l •Kfllc C11tt MllllW111 James E. Rieger to be his best c11y c1.,11; H•~'""'" 1t.oi. c1IJ11flll• man and ushers were Di'c'-l"vtllllhtd 0r11111 c-1 D1111 •1111, ~ • • MltT 7, 1'11 lOlJ.n Tit: 17141 h'-""
Speer and Tom Corsey. "''"""' "' M1111 .. 1tr111m: ,ublW..O Ortfllt CNJ1 Dtl!r l"llet. Candlelighten were Miss LEGAL NOTICE APtll u. • ,,.. M..,. '· 14. 1t?1 1•n
Carol Balskensen and Mias
Laurie Balskensen. sul'.-111011 c:ou•T oil TM• STATI O" CALll'OlllMIA '011 Jl-41tp
LEGAi; NOTICE
St. Andrew's Setting
June Day
Selected
1be bride attended the THI COUNTY 0,. O•ANOI C•'1.Tll'IU!TI 0, IUSIMISI
Uni 't J 0 and he Ctst MuflllMr G-4NfJ l'ICTl'rlDUS NAMI ven1 y ..... regon, r SUMMONI IMAll'1.IAOI) Thi lll'llltrtftnH ,,.... Ct•lll'( '"' II,..,..
husband graduated from the In " ti. '"'"'"' o1 hll!klrl•r: JtM dUc11n1 a 11u11ntt1 11 1m w !Ith st Elffn&r MOllllnl Ind Rttpondenl; Jim•• c t . .. Universlh· of So u t b e r n t~khlo.1 Mot1u111 °1 • "'"'· c111torn11. """'' 1111 11,.
Nuptial Vows Read Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Vock cf San Clemente have
announced the engagement of
their daughter, Lana Rae
Vock to James F. Robinson,
son or Mr. and Mrs. William
R Robinson of Arcadia.
':1 T !'l'lt '1. llOlld t llllau1 flrm 111"'1 II CU WIL·Mo\C 1'110-CaJjfomia. He spent five yean ;.11, peti::'-r ~".~ ,11.., 1 .,.i111on (Oflo DUCTS. 121 sT111tTLY cl!RMAN 1Nc,
In '"· Navy with tw to -f «rnlnt vevr ,,.,,,.11,., You mtv f!!e • Ind ll'lat Hid firm 11 ttfn-H Of 11'11 fol· """'. . 0 u,~ O wrllttn r11.,.naa wlll'lln ll'lll"fy dl'(I ii !hi lowln1 1>1•ion, whoa• ntmt In lull anlf duty Ul Vietnam. dtt• "''' tt.I• """'ll'lllfll 11 HrvlCI' on vau. •l•cw flf rw11d....:1 11 11 tollowa; II TOU lttl to Ill• • wr lntn ... pen.. wu11 .... D. Mlfl•r, lOH w. ••II lld ..
SI . Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach was
the setting for the double ring
ceremony link1ng Stephanie
Allen and Frank Polk Bennett.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
Dlerenfield read the rites: for
the daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
John S. Allen of Balboa and
the son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Bennett of Huntington Beach.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride asked Mrs.
Thomas Cirello to be her
matron of honor and Miss Pat-
te Landu sky, bridesmaid.
Pete Poitras served as best
man , while ushers ~·ere Kyle
Peet and Robbie Bennett, the
bridegroom's brother.
The bride is a graduate of
Newport Harbor High School
and attended Orange Coast
C".ollege. Her husband is a
graduate of the Army-Navy
Academ y. The bridal couple
will reside in Costa Me.sa.
Architect or Agent?
A June 26 wedding in the
San Clemente United
Presbyterian Church is being
planned.
The bride·to-be Is a graduate
of San Clemente High School
and attendai Sad d I e back
College, while her fiance
studied at Arcadia High School
and Puadena City College. He
eerved in tbe Navy.
Ayudantes
Auxi I iarv· ,
Takes Vote
within 1um !lf!lt, vour dri111" m1y bt "-"t!'>elfll, Ct. tnt1111! trod lhl court mtv tnltr 1 lud• Dtl..S Apr/I 2!, 1'71 """' conltlnl"' 1ntunc11,.. or ollltr ordtrs w11111m o. Ml!llr
conc:1ml119 dlv!•lo11 Ill PraPlrtJ, IPMllll SltN of (ILlfornl1, Ortntt Countl'~ 11111PGrt. m1111 cu1lodJ, dl!ld 1u""°''· 11. O" APrll 72. 1t11, btklrt mt, 1 Hot1rv tor .... ¥1' IHI, tasl1, Incl ...,," otnt• r•ll•f l'ub!lc: Iii Ind for Hid Sitt•. PSr11D111llv 11 ,..,.,. bf G•tn!ld by fl'I• cllOfl. •DPttrlld Wlllltrn D. Min,, lcnown lt m1
II '" '"''"' It lltll !flt ..... IC• " '" II· " bt .... otr-w11o .. Ml!ll ,, aubK•lb· 19•""1' I• lhll """"''· ,.., ll!lvlf ff " Id to lh t wllhln 1n1!rumtffl and 11....,ptt11 11 ,,.., Y11t1r wrrtt111 "'"""' 11 1c.h-lll!1td ht ••ecut .. lht """· 1111', mtr 1M 111111 111 fltnt. COFFIClo\L SEAL)
DttlO' Mire~ n , 1tn. M•,., ll«lh Merton WILLIAM E. ST .IOHN, Cltrli: Holl,., l'ub llc·Clllllrnlt I r Wm. O. ICrftllM, 0IJIUl'I' l'rlnclotl Otll<t In (Sl!ALI Ort,,.t Caun!V Pvb11thH 0rt'1H Cot1! D1ll1 •llol, Mr C111nmlultn IX.l,... AP<ll lO tl!CI Mir 1, 1" 21, ltJI 1ooe..n April t, lt75 Mrs. Don Clarence will ,.ublllMd Or11111 Coe11 Dtltr l'llof i---l:iiGAi:rii<YiriC:E"---1~·~~~"~":::~~·"'""..:"'~'c'~·~··'c'."~"~.:..."'~·~" serve as p r es: t d e n t of the I LEGAL NOTICE
Ayudantes Aw:iliary of the LEGAL NOTICE
Children's Home Society for su••••°" cou11T o" THI ,..41414 the coming year. ITATI 01' CALll'OllNIA l'Oll CIRTl!l'ICA'tl o" IUllNIU THI COUNTY OP OllANOI l'lCTITJ011$ MAMI The new officer was fn-N•. A"m' Tiii unc11rs11ntd ..,.. c.-rtir, "" 11 -stalled with her board during NOTICI o• NIA'1.INO o" ••TIYION l!uclln1 I !K/1111111 11 210I So. Wrl9"1 !l'O• ,.OIATl 01' WILL AND 1'01 Slrttl, S1nt1 Ant, C1Hfornl1, uMtr 11>1 a dinner meeting in the Jolly L1n1111 TllTAMINTAllv nct11tou1 11rm r11m1 111 OJ A!SEMllLl!o
Ox JM l'n Mlss1'on V1'e'o Elltlt ol DOMENICA POLLETTO, tllO CEV ICE! Ul lllSSOtrii (Jl ll LSSON
Functions Scrutinized
J • •nown 11 DOMENICA POLETl'O, aloo AMPLIFIER CO. (0 Ill t SS 0 N
Also taking office were the ·-" •• MAGAllllO ""-LEl'TO, l llO o\MPLIFIEll INC. U! llllSON SALES --n ti DOMl!NICA PALl!TTA. tllD CO. (l) llllSSOH !ALES IN(. (II llLUI! Mmes. John Watz, Robert •nown •1 DOMENICA l>OLETTO, 1190 STEELE •1'111 11111 ••ld "'"" 11 ~1111ed Lester and Roger Tapley vice t110Wn •• DOMEHICA POIETto, ~c•••· of 1111 1011owine otrsan, '"'"° .. n'""' 1~ • td lull Incl PIKt of •ttkltnct II •• tol lowl: presidents; Edwa rd Mitchell NOTICE ts HEllEllV GIVEN Th1t llobort A.'llrtar. 1JM s.~1111, JllK•n·
Functions of the nation's
Jaw·making branch of the
government: Is it the
architect (I( compromise or
agent of change?
This and other questions will
be answued when Orange
Coast League of Women
Vote rs begln their evaluation
and study of U.S. Congreu
this month.
Delegates
Traveling
The first unit meeting will dent pro-tern of the Senate,
take place Tuesday, :r.1ay-11. who explained the finaooing of
at 7:30 p.m. in the borne of public transportation.
Mrs. Edgar Scheck. Olher Area delegates aUending i1·
meetings are scheduled for eluded the Mmes. Edward
Wednesday May 12 at 9: IS Drollinger, El Toro; Scheck,
a.m. in the residence cf Mrs. Newport Beach; John Feeley,
J. R. Longley and Mrs. A. :r.f. Costa Mesa; Herbert Pirkle
Mood also will open her home and David Gilbert, Corona def
at 12:15 p.m. the same day. Afar, and Mrs. Ktfth Swayne,
Two meeUngs have been ar-Laguna Beach.
ranged for 9:15 a.m. Thurs-A strong suppcrt polition for
d J R l l E11h1r 1"1ndtr1Gn h11 !tied htrlln e H tl· llt, C1tltorn!1. 8 n am e S USS e t llOn for prtlbelt of w!I! Ind !er IHutnc1111 Dtf1d APrll 21, 1t11 secretaries and S l u art L1n,r1 T"'•mtnl••v 11 P11111on1r, R00tr1 A. 111111
Gib ' "'''"'" IO whlcn i. mt.,. ,., fll"tht~ st1t1 of Ct lJtorn11, Or1"91 COll!lh • I SOn, treasurer. p1rtlCV!1r1, 11'111 lhtl 1M llfllt 1"41 ~lac• On A1r!t ,., 1'71, btlort 1'111, I N011rv
Th · t { ded l OI htt•lfll Iha stme htl bffn 1fl tor M•Y ,.ubllc It> llld tor 111" $ttlt. ,.,...,•11~ e SOCle Y WaS oun n 21, 1t11, 11 t:JO 1.m., In 11\t courtroom 01 •-••Id Rabtrt A. lllul ·-to mt 1<> tlllll for the purpose of pro-Dto1rtm1n1 N1. i ot 11111 cour1, 11 7to ii. "" --wllGH n1m1 11 IUtltcrlDtd !:"din rof · I · ta Civic Ct1111r Drl\'I Wt1t, In !tit CllT of to !flt wltnln l111lr11rnen1 •1'111 .OCnowll(IDfd v1 g p ess1ona asa1s nee s.n11 "'-n•. c1111arn11. ~· ••tc~tld 1111 ••m•. for natural parents the cbUd Otlld Mir J. Tf71 !OFl'ICIAL SEAL)
• ' W, E. ST JOMN, Miry lrlh Mllr!Oll and adoptive parents, CIUntT Cllrk. Ho1t'1' "ubno<t1llorn!1
Th th 200 Arlllf'tcti, Ott VIII• a Sll'll'lr• "•lroc1Ptl Ollie, '" ere are more 1n m 111r111 s1111n1 11rt11. or1n11 CGUfttl'
auilliaries in the state which LM Alllll"' c111tor1111 t111• Mv c111nin1111cw1 ••" .... . Ttl: (llJ) '21.-.S A1rll t, 1111 implement the adoption pro-AlllnWn "'' PlllllDllll" "1lltrrs11tc1 0r1n" COfrt o.nv •11o1,
gram through volwit.eer work ~bll.tlM °""';:~ .. c1 11 ... •11o1, Aeru •1. • ,,... M•• 1, 1L 1111 •~11
and fund railing. ~,. '-1. n. 1tr1 1oun LEGAL NOTICE
da y, May 13, with one in the the school aid tax reform1;;;;;~~r\."t\im~;;;;;;,l---:-::=-:-:-~==:---l--:-::~~j,;;.:;:, .. ;;;-----home or Mrs. Thom as recently lotroduced will be the CLOSEOUTS LEGAL NOTICE c111T1,.1cAT1 o" 1us1wiss.
Grasmehr and the other to be league's major legialative PAINTINGS 1'1cT•T1ous NAMl" Th9 u,,.,.rlltMd di! cfflilY ,,..., .. , conduc~d by ~iiss Bea Whit-priority for this seuion with WHOLllALI NQTic• 0 ,. U.l• 0,. <•flll~cu"' • 1M1neu •' non simmo" .. tlesey. an evslaution of the state's OR LISSI 1'a1tsoNAL ""Ol'lllTY AT 0••n11· cit1torn11. une11r ''" 11c1111111,11 flrm ntmt of MC KEE 111103. GRADING Who's In Charge. tbe coast role in education the main THINK MOTHIR'S DAY ""~!,Al~J:;LB !Ellv1cE ''"' "'•1 1111111,m 111;GmP01td
I • t bl' study Item for th• ne•t two , ... l'trtl A'tt., C.1l1 M111 IUl'llllOll COUltT O!I' THI ~1,,••.,1•11ow,1n• ":!'"'· wfllll n1n"' I" eague s newes area pu ICS• ... TWM.·S•l.·I• 1.111 ... J I'·"'· JTATl o" (ALll'OllNll• l'Oll l~lktW'1: p ICll "' rnlGtnct •••••
ti on providing information years. llltill"lill'!lill"lill"lill"lill"lill"lill"lill"lill"l~I THI! couNTY OI' OllANGE oinnl• D. M(KH. nm ll•ui ~·•, Orange Coast resident& will about governmental opera---------------In tfl• Mtti.r ot "'' E11111 oi c1011ce Or1n11. K1nM111 w. Mel( .. , 1:11!12' llm·
b H. OlllAY, Jf//,., 1>1(11-.d, Mon1, Or1n11 e attending the 68th annual lions in Newport Beach, Costalj0i0iiOiiOii0ii0iiOiiOiiOiiOii0i~ii0i0iiiO~iiO~~~~----Ojl Hatl~• 11 ~1r.t1y ,1.,n "''' 1n1 un. D11ec1 A~r11 n, 101 state convention of the P.E.O. Mesa and Laguna Beach, was FOR MOTHERS' DAY lltttl•M!I w111 ••I! it pr1v111 ''''·on or Oennr1 D. Mcl(1• 11t1r 11>1 11th city Of MtJ. 1911, ti 1n1 Ill· Ktnnetll W. McKtt Sisterhood Tuesday through presented to As.semblyman CUSTOM MADI lit• ot E•lt PtaN••· u09 Mo<tff•f'f', s111r 01 c1111orn11, or•n•e counl'v :
Thursd • R ~ B dh h Hrrmo1t ll1Jd\, C11Untv ot Lo1 An11le1, On A.,n n. tt11, btllll't mt, • NO!trY ay, l•1•Y 11·13, in the o~rt a am y delegates JEWELRY S11•• 01 c1111or1111. 10 1111 hl1hn1 1nc1 1>e1t Pubtlc In '""' 1or 11!<1 s1111. ~,.,,.,111,
8fi11erlv Hilton Hotel, Bever)" attending the 44th biannual bidder, •nd •llbltct i. ton11rm111on "" '""''t<t D1nn11 D. M'"'' 1n11 K"'""'" I I Mid$""'.., Courl. Ill IM,,.,,,, flllt 11'111 w. M(t(t1 •nawn" "'' le bf,,.. .... IOI\. Hiiis. league c o n v e n l Jo n Jn 1 C'llMN ,..... ... Httt...-• '""'-' tit 111c1 0tce1'lf'll 11 1111 11'""' o1 ....., .. 111m11 ••• 1ut11c•lbtd 111 "'' ... 111>1" Sacramento. 1tt1111 w 111 1111 ,1.,,t, 1r111 .,,,.. 1111tr111 1"'1"""m 11111 1a.-1..:t1M 111e~ ••· A philantropic and educa-"''"' -"' 111tct ,,_ """'' "''' t1'HI 111111 of .. 1<1 dK4!11tc1 1111 ac-ecutfll 1i. ••m•.
t. I I . r-·-'ed During tho conclave thou .. IC" ... fll~'(. <Nlrtd bJ -••Hon al ltw or Ott.erwl11. IOl'F lCIAL SEALl Kina organ U1t1on VUIN in I crthtr 11\an •• Ill tddl!!On lo '1111 Of llkl MAlllV llEl'H MOlll'O"' 1869 as 1 sorority at Iowa heard Robert M o re t t I , I c1KN1t<1, '' ,,.. 11me 111 Clfftll, 1n ,.,. " Not••,. ,..,bl1c, c111t0t11t1
W I I Assembly speaker, di•-••• the INOAGIMINT & WIDDINe IANDI ttl 1M c1rl1l11 ... rtontl .,_,IV 91tulle In ll'rlroclHI Oltlct 111
es t yan C o I e g e , the ..... __, . ''" coun"' o1 °''""· "'" o1 cti.,.,1111, °''"" c"'"'" secreta~ for ·•· state and restructuring: of tbe tax M Lttt U• "'*"'In,._ 011 J"""' pert1cu11rtv o.escrlbed" fan-. te w!I: Ml' Gammlui.r. 1:.,1,.. .,, UK: ,.....,.. ...... ""...... Ofle HJt SNrltn Hou1tft"tl .... , CllH Allrll ,, ltll chapters internatlonallv and system: Seoator Albert Rod· -~ ~a .-'·"'" TY111 v1c. o11T, L1tfftMI Ho. ~bnofltd °'•"" COf1t 0,11., •1111
21000 C Ill I da , $""'''1•l'"'g on tenUrt , ... "';>' ems !!.~.-·'","" ....... lit CG45". AprllJJ,IOll'ldM.tTf,U."11 ..... 11 , a uomia members. ~ ~~.,. _..,, T1mi1 o1 itl• c1i.11 In 1-iu1 _.,.oft~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;;;:~ Attend' vouchers and school flnlnee ...,... Ille UfllTM s111n on c.nflrm1111n of u11. mg the convtnllon and Sen. James Afills, presi· 271 L 11'11 St.-Hm.,..141., Coste M..._..41·1tlt er wcll ,, may t.e ecc1trtibtt 11 !ht
wlll be Mrs. R. L 0 r. n;,-==~~~~~~~~~~~;~::::::::::::::=~====~~~,ulldtrtltMO '"" HI" luptrlOI' C_., T ... L 1t~n1 f/f •mount blcl to bt ,,_lllld a n g made, corresponding wlfft bid.
•• Cr.ta~ { th I t and lldt II' efltf• l'O bt 111 W•ll lnt lfl4I wltl
• 1 or e s a e "' ""''"" 11 ,... ''°"'11ld eniu •t '"'
three past state presidents in· TEACH YOUR INFANT TQ SWIM """ 1tttr"" ll•M Mlkttllrl "-"' •l'ld eluding the Mm eg, C. B. , "':,';~~;',:~~n WatSO!\ s c SM d c 'I JU Hi! GllAV GLAHTt • . · wner an . " . Actm!11i•"•'rhr w1111
t.1CCollouah. ti Heir from export Vlrgl"I• Hunt Newman T111w 11 """'~H o1
.
· . F mt ''''" " 1t1• dtclftllt. OUlrn traveling from the rl. incl S.t., Mly 7th & Ith, C1rouMI Court. '"' ••""
Ii U" IM~ftm area wl be the Mmes. Loya f: _..,.._ (j sf ?I .. ...-. '"(Ill, c.tllf. "™
Griswold, D. W. Bl 1 c le, CJUIUll 0~ IZI fn Co1t1 Meu ~~: .. A:::::~·'"~
NO. 1 ON
THE COAST
,Your Hometown
Newspaper Is
The DAILY PILOT
E11ereti Nunan end G. H./ __ :::~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~:___I "''« ~nphear. •u•u•"" Or•n1t Cotlf D1JIY l'llot, I===========~ Mir'-1, 1), 1'71 101t •TIJ
I
I
I
Cosia Mesa .! .... ·
ED II ION · N. 'l'. St.oeks
VOL 64, NO. ·109, 4 SECTIONS, 4' PA&ES ORAN&E· COUNTY,. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1971 TEN CENTS
U.S. Lifts D.ollar Restrictions With China·
WASHINGTON {UPI) -The United
States removed all restrictions on dollar
transactions with Red China tOday u a
first step to opening up trade between the
two nations.
Treasury S~retary John B. Connally
iasued • license allowing U . S .
bw!linessmen and banks to transact
business with the CommuniSt gov~nmenl
and its citizens using dollars ar doltar In-
strument!. Previously there bad been a
)
complete prohibition a&ainst 1 u c h
transactions.
"1'lis is the treasury's (irst Jtep in im·
plemenUng President Nixon'1.decls.i9n oti
April 14 to rtlu financial · IDil com-
m~rcial control• with respect to• mainland
China," a th:asury statemel)t said.
~ "Treasury is now consuJUng with I.he
Departments of State and ·eommerce and
other interested igencle1 on refaxlag con-
trols on·imports of goods from etrina."
The conuntrclal move came aft.tr the
Red Chinese invited American table ten-
nis players to tour mainl!Dd China last
month.
The lifting of lbe dollar restriction
would also apply to klreign governments
and businessmen, the treasury said.
The State Department said a Ii.st or
items that would. be allowed in trading
with Red China was "under high level
review" and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department spokesman, Charles
Bray, wu asked if lhere had been any in-
dk:ations the Chinese regime would res-
pond to the U.S. trade overtures.
"I doo't know that there are," be
replied. "I .awnne that any reaction
would await their opportunity to toot at
the detaib."
Part of the new policy erita.111
permission. by·the transporta.tion depart·
ment for U.S. airlines to carry car10
destined for Red China. · ~
They will not be• allowed to deliver
cargo directly to Red China, only to a
transshipment point, a spokesman uid.
Flying Tiger airlines Ls the major
American air cargo airline now serving
the Orient. ~·
TrtasW')' officials emphasiJed that
Connally'• order was limited to dollar
transacUons, and in itsell did not remove
prohibitions against ezporting or im-
porting goods to or froin Commun.fat
Cllina. But the statement made it clear
that removing or re!Wn& t.bst controls
wu ·being contemplated.
Connally also removed a ~iUoa
against American-aintrolled lorelgn nae
vessels from calling at mainland China
portll, bul left Intact a ttgulatlon bannlnl
U.S. flag vessels from doing IO.
Connally'a.order alto allows American
oil companies abroad to aell fuel to Com·
muni!t QUne,. ahlpo, except thole JOlng
(See CHINA, Pap I I
• ire uts 0 esa
'
Mesa Studies Law
Punish Parents,
Councilman Says
A study of a Michigan community's
tcu&h law U!at can punish pal"ftlts for
repeated offenses by their childreh bas
been initiated in Cost.a Mesa, but chanct:s
A ero space Job
R ate to Decline
T welve Percent
WASHINGTON (AP) -Employment ii
the aerospace Industry will decline
elmost 12 percent during 19?1, the
Aerospace Industries Association said to-
da y.
Karl G. Harr Jr., AJA president. said
the industry iJ gravely concerned at the
eontinuing loss of highly skilled person-
iiel , accelerated by government can·
eellation of the supersonic transport pro-
rram.
But, he said. this year's estimated
decline is much less than the 171h percent
lob loss last year.
"The downward trend of the past
.ever al years appears to be leveling off,"
!iarr said. "Th is lends support to our ex-
)ectations that 1972 will see a reversal of
:he declining employment trends ex·
M!rienced duning the past three years."
The AJA forecasts lhe industry's
'3yro11 will shrink by the year's end to
~3.000 yersons. the first drop below one
nillion since record keeping began in
l959.
"During the three year period 1969 to
1971 , the industry has been forced to
•elease nearly half a million people, or
1Ughtly more than one OJ.rd of its labor
!orce ," Harr said. "Despite this,
aerospace continues to be the largest
111anufacturing employer."
it will be copied are slim.
Councilman William L. St. Clair has
submitted a copy of the Madison Heights.
Mich., ordinance for City Attorney Rtiy
June'• evaluation, with a July 19 report
due .
Capsuliied, the controversial law that
made budli:Du •cro11 ib& Q&Uon when it
beeAm.t' eftiCuve Feb.· i: 1m,· provides
for conviction ori parental nealect
cli.argts.
Mothtr1 and fathers o! habitual
juvenile offenders can be aentenced to 90
days in jail, a $500 fine, probation or any
combinaUan of the lhree.
Ha bitual offenders are detined as thost
committing two or more criminal ads or
four or more moving traffic violation..s
within a I2·mont.b period.
'1be philosophy is that parents earl and
mwt u:ercille pfoper control.
"Alf n!porls indicate tt has been ef·
fective in reducin,r juvenile delinqut.ncy
.and property damages," says CoUD-
cilman St. Clair ill hl:S merno oo the sub-
ject.
"The latest report I saw slated the
ordirlanCe is achieving its goal -and no
proseeution has yet been required," he
points out.
ID other worch. pareni,, crick down
when they may be in trouble instead of
their Children.
Police Chier Roger E. Neth endorses
the concept, but concludes enactment of
a similar law would pre.empt legal
jurisdiction already claimed by California
law.
"I agree with the basic idea of the
ordinance," added the chief, who review-
ed it Thursday iD a weekly staff meeting
of ranking police adminiJtrators.
"Tilt concept is good but I don't think
we call legally do it," he said.
Segal Se~luded
'Love Story' Author Sounds Sorry
NEW HAVEN, CoM. (UPI) -
Erich Segal, the Yale University
professor of classics who rMe to
fame and fortune by authoring
"Ulve Story,'' says he has had it
with the public life.. ·
"I am going into hiding." Segal
said Thu rsday.
Segal. 34, who has given lectures.
appeared on television talk shows
and had numerous magazine and
newspaper article! written about
him sinoe the success of his book
and a movie of tht same tiUe, said
"l am retuming to the ICholarly
!He."
Segal said he wa1 "sick or
reading about Erich Segal, the
monster," and of meeting airline
1t.ewarduses who slip him Ulelt
apartment keys and believe love
means "never having to say you
are sorry."
Segal said he: was leaving Yale,
''With the bleutngs of"the univml·
ty," at the end of the current
semester.
"f can't tell YoU w~ert I am
going." Segal 1aid, ''but I imagine
wherever I go. It will be: alone. I
hope."
Ul'I 1'•Mlltle
, S.ICI< OF SUCC ESS
Yak.'i' Profa1sor hg1f
'
OAIL Y l'ILOT l'lloho W ll:lc~tl'C Kotliltt'
Structure
Damage .Set
At$8,000
By ARTHUR II. VINSEL
Of tlte IHlllY l'lltt .....
A muffled explosion set off raging
names within seconds Thur.day ntgbt
· after an arsonist torched peraonnel
record files , causing $11 ,000 damage to I
Colla Mesa employment agency.
No one was seen around Lbt Orange
Coast Employment Agency, 1U E.
~. Bnadw,-:. but piAltnco lndlcalel It wu
-. undoubtedly set wltl'l Intent tG destroy the
documenll and rut Ibo buJldlni.
Fire Departmeit Battalion Chief Ed
Lewis, he1dlng tht art0n lnvestl1atioo,
1ai d Wjlq,ce.rt.IJJl Jtlnit recovered from
the chaired scene trt undertoing crtn\.1
lab .llllly1ir.
COSTA MESA FIREMEN RACE TO BATTLE FLAMES AT EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Arson Suspected In 8111• Thur• day Night 1t Or1n1• Coaat Fl.rm
Owner Graham E. Budd to I d
autho rit.it1 be Jocked up the office about I
p.m., at which time everything 1eemed
,.cure.
Fairs Ma y Fall
Under State
Finance Control
Sea Bird Finishes First
In Wet Ensenada Racing
.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -California 's 76
st.ate-supported local fairs should come
under the fiscal supervision of the State
Finance Department rather than the
Agriculture Department, the i;tate's ''Lit-
tle Hoover" Commission concluded
Thur5day,
The fairs should seek to improve their
invididuaJ tconomic positions, too, by
adopting admission charges, st.ate-local
matching fund arrangements and through
mort interim we of the fair grounds.
These are the key recommendations of
the 13-memfer Commissian on California
State Government Organization and
Economy after montlls of study of the
fain which can draw up to $5.4 million in
state fund!.
A storm of protest by rural area
legislator• greeted a c o m m I s s i o n
hypotheUcal 33-fair consolidation plan
and the commission report made public
this week admits the plan •·made a great
number ol people defens ive."
The commission, on a budget of about
$50,000 annually, seeks to find and recom-
mend cost and efficiency improvement.s
to state government.
The commission held four public hear-
ings where "the preponderant majority of
the testimony recounted the beneficial ef·
rects that rairs have had on the youth of
our state.
"The opponents of consolidallon or
elimination \tated that local fairs are a
By AUt10N LOCK.ABEY
0.NY l'lt.t •..il111 •lllrw
ENSENAOA -The catamaran · Sta
Bird was first. to finish .here today in the
traditional Newport Bea.ch to E111senada
yacht race with Jack Baillie's Newsboy
aut of Balboa Yacht Club close behind.
First sails were sighted off the En-
senada jetty today at 11:25 1.m.
Skippers were enjoying sunny weather
with winds shifti ng to the south south·
moved toward the flnish line. 1 The order of fini sh at press lime wa1
Sea Bird, 23:4305 ; Newsboy, 23:7835; and
Pattycat, 23:7650. Damn Yankee finished
but was di smasted. Another yacht in
west as the fleet of more tha.a 550 yachts
triluble, Seasmoke, reported only two hal-
yards left but the skipper said he hoped
to fi11ish under his own power.
Earlier today, the first segment of the:
racing fleet, 10me 38 yachta, we!e re-
ported about 10 miles sooth of the Loi
Coronados Islands.
The yachl.s fought light south to
southeast winds all night. Velocities were
never more than five knots. Winds this
morning had increased to about 12 knot!
from the south.
This would mean that the yachll would
still be beating their way to.£n1e11ada.
Another escort vessel reported that
about 200 yachta were sailing about 2S
Whoa , We Goofed
On Open House
part of their culture and are mmprlsed of One Daily Pilot staff member's face is
human values which are not readily as red as old Englne Number 9 over a
meuurable in financial tennl," the com· Costa Mesa Fire Department open house
mission reported. story.
The commiak>n "does not dispute Firemen uid they wouldn't be teo
these views, 0 the report stat.ea, but does • ..,med up if It was pointed out the enot
recommend budgetary review could bt It Saturday .. u all four llitions observt
Improved by switd!ing tbll fllnctlon from Fire Strvlc.1\ecognilion Day, not loday.
tho Airlculture Departll"'11 lo the 111· ll'be error ttsulted from open. b«ise at na~ Departri>enl. • · Ille· Oolta oM... Police Department -
To ptovlilif lncenUver I~ more whtai I0-1001y -Oil! U.. 10 a.m. Io I
economical fair man•gement the. com-p.Jl't. dlrnonrtratlon!i and &bows by
mluton recomrnended -lf:Veral concepll, firemen. were Htted prematuttly.
among then provision for state and lociil !Yleltor• w\11 .be welcome durln1 thole
matching fund arrangements 111nd greater hou ri at 2300 Estancia Ave., 121
use of fAiir faclllties on a rental ba1l1 dur· Rochut.ti' St.,· too Baker St., and 2803
Ing int.trim perloda to 1eQel'11te more fair Royal Palm Drlv,, 1ccordlns to Battalion
revenue 19Cally. Chief Ed Lewlt.
• ' . • I
miles west of the Coronados.
Na.me• of the lead yachts were not
available because of low visibility. Race .
officiala said lhat of the 550 yacht! that
started the race, this morning there had
been only 10 reported dropouts.
Al the start or the race off Newport
Harbor jetties Thursday at noo n, dying
winds and sloppy, left-over seas created a
bumping match with a number of boats
bl'iing shoved off the weather end ·Of the
outboard line.
The left-over sea was from an 18-knot
(Set RACE1 ~ace %)
Gig antic Peace
Candle Readied
SCAPPOOSE, Ore. (AP) -Darrel
Brock's "Peace Candle of the World," a
SO foot wax enc rusted silo, will be lighted
Sunday by Oregon Gov. Tom McCall us-.
ing a 60 foot match.
The $18,000 candle, a hollow silo coated
with 4,500 pounds of wax eight inches
thick, is ''really a beautiful thing to see,"
Brock says. "Jt couldn't have been bet·
ter. Ifs the dream that came true."
The candle ls a cylinder, 18 fee t in
diameter. Wax drips down the. outside
like big icicles. The main color is yellow,
but vertical stripes of red, blue, 1reen
and pink are Included in the top half ..
Brock, 39, a candle maker In the small
Columbia County town or' Scap~, 11ys
the candle "will bur1 forever so lon,r as
we keep pumping wax up there."
It took Brock and eight employes of his
candle factory 800 man houra to build It.
U.S. Ship Damaged,
Collided With Russ
SASEBO (AP ) ·-The U.S. deslnJytr
Hanson pulled In to th\!: Sasebo .Naval
Baae today with • six foot dent in ita 1tar·
board bow after a colllsloo with a Sovi&l
tug.
U.S. Navy authorltie11ald the tcddent
occurred Wednesday night In the Korean
Strait, about ao mlle1 we1t of Japan, and
there Wert no casualties. -
•
PrlDter Btryl Maloney wu wortfna ill
bis adjacent sbop at the rear of the
employment cffice when be heard dat
seemed to be an eij)loeloa at 8:4' p.m.,
police said.
Smelling smoke two · miDutel later, be
went to investigate and found the job
agency a ragin& inferno.
"He tried to UR I fire extinpilber' h.lt
was dtiven b<lclr: by . lht intense-beat,"
said G?Uef Lewis, whose men arrived
within moment.a from the nearby
Rochester Street stalioo·.
Only ·a few other Jtems 1uch as office
equipment and furnlstlinp we r t
destroyed in the $11,000 blue, $8,000 ef
which Uivolves structural damage_
"The rtcorda were naturally the most
valuable," Chief Lewis explained.
The agency's door was not Jocked, but
so far investigators have not determined
the arsonist's method of entry due ti
heavy damage.
Domestic Air Fare
Hike Takes Effect
WASIDNGTON (AP) -llnmestic air
farea ro&e 6 percm.t today on D,lO!t routes
and may go up another,3 pen::ent in July.
'M>e .increase, approved last month bT
the Civil Aeronautics Board, art expected
to give the 20' alrllne1 involvtd an ad-
ditional $* million this year. Thty
reported 1099t.S of aboi.lt $1M.9 million
last year.
0r..,. C::Out
Weatller
Don't let thi& 1111111)' tpell fool
you; It looks Uk~ rain again tonight
and possibly Saturday. But clear
akles lhould take over this weekend
with temperatures in the high &Os.
INSmE TODA\'
Art bl/ 1tUdenti of the Nc1D-
1JO!'l-Mc14 School Dlllrid will be
on displo11 ntU toetk at Fa.shlon
Island. For a prrvicio of the
1hoW se• todo.11'1 Weekendtr.
l
% DAIL v PILO~T=~--c __ ,_•l~'".:.·-"",;.,7.:.'..;lr"-'
FDA War.,nitag .
Swordfish Firms
Cite Deatliknell
By 811,L KOSMAN
A1-l1tt4 ,AU Jl1n Wrllff
Industry spokesman said Thursday that
aome CalUornla fishermen will have to go
out of bwiness completely and other
fimu may face large financial iolses, as
a result of the Food and Drug
Administration's warning that swordfish
&bould not be 'ealtn.
Ray Lerno!, president of the California
Slate Fisherm en's Association, said
owners of the 100 boat California fleet
.could cc.overt for olher kinds of fishing,
but added: "The problem is that the~ ill
not much fish oft the co.a.st of California
they .coWd £1:1 after, so some will probably
have to go out of business completely."
W.Germany,
May Raise
Own Money
BONN (UPI) -The West Cerman
cabinet 15 nporttd to have agrl!!ed today
to let the value of the Deutschesrnark
float upward in a move to halt the now or
cheap dollars into the country. It will 10
ahead whether or not France agrees.
·Chancellor \Villy Brandt conferTed with
his cabinet all day in urgent session to
follo\v up the German decisi on Oil
Wednesday to stop i;upport ing the dollar
with official purchases to keep up
its valut". Earlier Story Page 4.
Tricia Names
Bridal Party
For Wedding
California is one of the major source.s
of swordfish. Some fish firms said they
face financial km due to having large
stocks of frozen steaks, filets and chunlu
that have been seized by the FDA. They
also stand to lase all anticipated sale.s of
the fl.Sh. spokesmen said.
The FDA advised public to slop eating
swordfish because, it said, 95 percent of
DAILY PILOT ""'"' h' •ktlfnl tl:totlllv ENSENADA·BOUND YACHTS MANEUVER OFF NEWPORT HARBOR JETTY BEFO,RE START
At the 1970 Starting Gun, Sloppy Seas, L lght Winds •nd Traffic, Traffic, Traffic
The cabinet laid down the instruction!
that Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and
economiC!!I minister Karl Schiller w 111
take to a European Common Market
meeting Saturday ill Brussels to seek
joint action to meet the crisi.s. The plight
of the dollar and the rush to buy gold ha!
touched off one o( the worst monetary,
crise.s in years. 1
all samples examined were contaminated
with poisonous mercury.
The FDA said that of 8~ samples ex·
amlned, only five percent contained
mercury below the FDA 's s a f e t y
From Pqe J
RACE .••
guideline of 0.5 part! per million. westerly that blld been blowing earlier irt WASHINGTON CAP) -Tricia Nixon Fishermen harpoon the big blue gray the morning.
hu picked her sister, two of her cousins, fl.Sh as the creatures bask in the sun in The catamarans, first fleet to start at
and the 111.!ter or the bridegroom lo be the warm waters. The California season, 12 o'clock, got the worst start. Many of
members of her bridal party for the which runs from May to November, was them were caught far behind the line on
White House wedding June 12. a.bout to open as the announcement was the dying breeze and approachtd the line
Julie Nil'on Eisenhower will be matron made. 10 to 15 minutes late -smack in the
of honor. . Ooe fish retailer, &b Roubian of the mid st of the Class A start
Bridegroom F.d Co1'1 si.ster. ~ary A~ Crab Cooker 1n Newport Beach said he As the big Class A pack~ts crowded the
Cox, 25, who Is graduatinh~ this mon~ll had $65,000 worth of the fish seized in "'eather end of the line the cats were
from Yale
1
1 sch.ool of arc itecture, wi April and has another $12,000 worth in again shoved off the 1ine. Three cats
be the bridesmaid: 1 b .d "d .-11 11torage he doesn't expect to sell. were al least a hall-hour behind their
And 5U'Vlng as JU~ or Arnn ~~mal3 s =~d Roubian said he sells about $110,000 in scheduled start.
be two young coos.ms, e ie, ' swordfish a year "··-· cb di Elizabeth, 111 Nixon, Lbe daughters of the "I Jose money. that's tough ,. said boTbe weawu picture anged rapi y. sJd t' gest brother Edward • • wever.
Npttt · enof :. ytt(Rll "w ·'--' Andy Fistonich of Andy's Seafood Com-Just as the MiA"et Ocean Rarina Flett xon .xa e, a:.u. . Lo • • I "I'll •U I .. -~ PreS!!I secret Constance Stuart said pany ~ s ~ge e.s. s ea was ttossing the line at 1 p.m. the early
the rnlll3!'8:1-r the wedding will be swordfish and 111 still serve It to my starten t'OUld be ieen rail-down as a ~-~:"" family. My dad b 92 and be sUll eats it at weather f r oat moved acrou the fleetl ~~White H~~•lded-pboMF'~~ 1.wt ~nee a week." ~brin rain and ,winchi up to 15 tnota. -or~'.Xmy" ~~· Nl1on as they pos--~id----he_, sold more _ tbe~bit-the-MORJl-ancHate
ed on 1 re: t visit to the Wh ite House, 100,000 pounds a year, wh.lch •moun ,lo , starting PHRF fleets there wu frantic
wearing som ( Tricia's formal gowns sales of between $100,,000 to $150,080_~ '-ftil<banging going 011 aboard most of the
and practicing walking down the grand Me:CU!Y Js a ml!!tall1c poison parUCufil"' yachts.
staircase in the White Hoilse. · ly in1ur1ous lo the brain, kidneys and There were reports of 1 number of pro-
The two girl! came with their parents nervo~ system. It has been_ found tests at the st.art, and a number of yachts
for a White lfouse Visit early In Arp!!. pollutJng the waten of 33 .states. were 1crou the line early and failed to
Mrs. Stuart said they had a "fun af. Americans ate about 26 mlllion pounds rest.art. ternOon" i!reising up in Tricia's clothes of the fish last year, with all but four
and · practicing for the wedding. Beth million J>OW1ds imported from Japan and
wore a con 'Tricia used when she wa.s Canada:
queen of the Asatea Fntival In Norfolk, 'Ille NJUonal Marine Fisheries Service
Va., in April 1969. And Amy practiced in at nearby Tea:mlna.J Island said California
the dttu Tricia wore at a masked ball swordfilhermen caught almost one
ahe cave in tbt Whlte House on million pounds ot the fish IA!!lt year in
Hallowe'en 1169. off!hore wa~ from Santa Barbara, to
the MeDcan border ..
!Deadline Listed
For Application
To Mesa Panel
Deadline for new applicants has been
set for May 10, following temporary reap.
polnttnent of two Costa Mesa Planning
Commlstlon members who.!e terms have
es:pired. . . ·
Mayor Robert M Wilson 11 urging any
interested cltluns to submit resumes to
him al City Hall, listing personal
background on quallfieaUons for the five-
man advisory panel.
Councilmen will 1cr«n t be ap-
pllc•t.iona, including thoa.already on file
from prior years, selecting the most pr•
misl.n& for an or~I lnterYiew.
He extended terms for c u t rt_ n t
Chairman Charles A. Beck, a~hltect,
• and C. C. ''Orie" Clarke, banker, at Mon-
day's council meeting to provide a full
commission quorum .
Beck Is a longtime commissioner, while
Clarke was appointed 11. year ago to fill
oul educator Don Hout's unexpired term
...,.he"n a school district promotion forced
him lo resign due to workload .
Special qualifications should be con·
sidertd, relative to applicants' abilities ti»
help gutde good city planning.
OltANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ou.HG£ COA$T ,U9l1$HINC. C'CM,AHY
l•b•rt N. We.d
ft"':clfl'lt •nd ,UOHlllw
J ec.11 •· C11r1•'1 Viet ftl'tlldtnf e...i C.-11 Mll\tf#'
Tho"''' K1t~il Edl!or
lh1111111 A. M11•phi~t
MIMglr.g E ct116<
Clitrft1 H. Loo, Ric~1rd P. Nill
Anlsltn; M1.,.otntj Edllo~
Coit• Mo1• OHko
1)0 W11t 8ty 5tr11t
M1ilin1J Addreu: P.O. lox 15&0, '1261' °""' Otlluo
Spokesman Tom Allen utimated fish
!Irma in Soulhml Californl1 hue in •tMoct obiiut• 100 too.s of Mdllab they
upect to be worth about 1238,000 In tttall
sale.-.
Girl, 18, Hurt
In Auto Crash
Braking to avoid a swerving reckless
driver,.. a Santa Ana girl was hurt Thurs -
day when her French sedan skidded on a
rain-slicked Costa ?..1esa roadway and
rammed the rear of the other car
anyway.
Debra F. Rhinsbeck, 18, of 1706 S.
Towner St., was taken to Costa 1.1esa
Memorial Hospital by Officer Al ~1ulr
and tttaled for a laceraled lip.
The oU.er teenaged male driver, listed
as a felony hn and1 run suspect , sped
away from lht scene, ICUthbound on
Bristol near the Sa.a Diea:o Freeway.
Thief Uses Loot
In Mesa Break-in
A burglar used a vacuum cleaner taken
in a prior theft to smash a Costa Mesa
tinsurance agency window Thursday, tben
stole $2,SOO worth of office equipment.
Taken from Bob Paley & Associates,
474 E. 17th St ., we re four electric
typewriters, according to Patrolman Roi
Veach.
He said the vacuum cleaner llsted
stol en in another report Thursday was
returned to its proper owner.
Iowa Blast Probed
JO\VA CITY (AP) - A bomb blew out
a large plate glass window and ap-
parentl y did foundation damage today at
lhe Io"·a Cit y Civ:ic Center. which houses
the police department, police said.
There were no reported injuries,
although some policemen were 1n the
building at the time.
Easy City Annex
Bid Passes Test
In Sacramento
SACRAMENTO (AP) -LelltJatlon
makinc it euier for cltiea to annex new
territory has passed 1 key committee
lest despite emotiona l opposition from
homeowner groups l:nd nsidentJ of ~
corporated communities.
The controversial bill by Assemblyman
John Knox (0-Richmond), wu sent to
lhe Assembly floor Thursda y on a 8-1
vote of the Assembly Local Government
Committee.
The complex 3~page bill revises almost
the entire city aMe1ation law, Knox u ld,
"to bring some order out of the crazy
quilt or municipal government and give
cities .•• tools to cope with aome terrific
problems."
He said the measure would be toughest
in forcing so-called islands or unin -
corporated 11elgbborhoods entirely 1ur-
rounded by a city into the city.
"Our biggest urban problem Is plan·
ning.'' Kno:ii; said, adding that "more
realistic" annexation law1 are needed to
make urban planning work .
A p a r a d e of vdtnesses called the
measure the •·taking away of what lltUe
constitulional bargaining power we in
unincorporated e-0mmuolties 1 t 111
possess" to fight off city annexalions.
The most controversial provision of the
bill would atart an aMeiatlon procteding
on the petition of the anne1ing city Itself
or five percent of the voters or property
owneni of the area. lt would take 25 per-
cent to call 1 public referendum or 50
percent of voters or property ownm to
halt it outright.
That "infringes Ort our rights to free
elections'' and substitutes "protest as the
means of gaining right! we s h o u I d
possess In the flnt place'' said H. D.
Bryan of Burlingame, representative o{
homeowners groups.
"Isn't this denying the right of !lelf-
determinaUon." said Mrs. H • r o Id
Jackson of Altadena. "We've !oat our
perspective.''
NirwPOrt lll1d1: DI;! "'""'°" IS~U'rYtfll
ltt""' IMl;il; :n: l'o•.,! "'""""' Mvnt .... i.; ltl(~: 1'11:, ll•K~ lo~lt•t'll
$tt1 Clfl'llll\lt: XII H0tfll f.I C..l'fllM kul HST: No Medal
'Didn't Earn It,' Says Truman
WASffiNGTON (AP ) -Former Presi·
den! Harry S Truman has told Congre.u
he will nol accept the ~ledal of Honor -
saying tbe medal is for combat valor and
he dot!n't df'serve It. "
"To de"iate by g1vms it for any olhe.r
tC'ason lessens and d1 lute.s lt.s true
significance ,'' Truman \I rote in a letter
read on the House floor Thur!da~·.
"Abo. It would delract from those: who
have received the award because of tht:ir
combat service.
"Tha nks." Truman 's let!cr concluded,
1'but l will not accept 1 Congrtss lonal
Medal of Ho nor."
Truman's lt:tter was to Rer. \\11lliAm J.
Ra.ndaJi (0 · ti.tu.}, one o 14 Ho1a11
members who had introdUced bills Ind
resoluUons to pruent the former
Democratic President with the medaJ in
connection with his 87th birthday Satur-
day.
Randall noted Truman had often sald In
prellenting the medal to combat hero!•
that he would rather have It him.self than
bl!! Presldt.nt -but wu now saying ht
would not accept It without deservin& it
for its intended combat m:oa:nJUon.
't'he Senate, meanwhile, pas.std a
r~Jullon utend:Jng bes\ wlshta to
Truman.
The resolutlon was lnlroduced by Sen.
Stuart SYminilo• ID-Mo.), and pwed b7
volet: vote: without opposition.
White House Hotly Denies
Late 1972 Pullout Date
WASHING TON (AP) -Th< White
House firmly denied Thursday a report
attributed Lo military 1ources in Vietnam
that No\'ember 1972 has been set as a
fixed date for total withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Vietnam.
Press seerelary Ronald L. Ziegler said
whoever the sourct of the nport was
would not have been 1ware tf President
Vietnam wlll bl!! reductd lo a tolal or
184,000 by Dec. 1 and that the President
would make another assessment of the
situation and announce his decisions
regarding any further troop withdra"'a]s
by Nov. 15.
At the State Department. officials cau-
tioned that no one short of President Nix-
NIJ011'1 thinking 1.11d was "just speaking en himself has any accura~ idea of what
from 1 foundltion ef tetal lack of the treop level would be in November,
knowledg•." 1972.
Zlea:ler aald ht bad DO ldta of who the . .
IOUrce ml.ght bt but be added even more A proiect1on of the present rate or U.S.
SclllUer has propo!!ed that West
Germany let the mark float and seek its
cwn JeYel hy freeing the e1change rat_e
and to c<iuple Otis with internal atabili·
zation measures. '
Conrad Ahlers , the official government
spokesman, was questioned by newsmen
on thU point.
"Did Schiller win the suppo rt o( the
cabinet?" Ahlers was asked. "Yt11,''
Ahlers replied. .
A noating mark \vould seek its 0~11
level and hopeful ly stop lh e speculation
which brought dollars flooding in here to
buy marks. . 1 Ahlers said Brandl, at the cab1ne
meeting toda y, told Scheel. and Schiller to
get joint action by the SlX memben of
the Common Market -West Germany•
Fra.J1ce, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands
and Luxembow-g.
(!rmly_t.bat-tbe-tndiridtJatwu-"spea:liiig wlth-drlWili ffiim VJf:tlftnrwou.Jit'brln~--------~
:;o:1.~· bue •f •btolutely"' knowledg• th• ••mber dow• to ss,ooo by th•t date. Mesan Sentenced
The presidential !pOkesman reiterated F p J
wbatNbonbu said :thal U.S.troepsin rom o11e To Year's Tenn
CHIN A • • • A Co~ta Mesan accused on arrest of Tree Planting
At Fairgrounds
A cooperalive U...ptantJnc and general
beauWicaUoo proa:ram ii now under way
on the Orange Coonty Fair(n>undl In
Costa Mesa.
Selected for both llhade and beauty, 63
'Yarietles of trees wlll be located
ltrate1le1lly around the &rOWldl by 32nd
DI.strict Agrkultural A s 1 o c I a t I o n
employes and city worken.
About half wen removed recently for a
city widening project on Arlington Drive,
while 30 more were purchased by the
Fair Board.
Choice Of trees -planted In April for
best rooting and growth -was done by
city hortlculturista in cooperation with
Mrs. Weston Walk.er, executive secrelary
of the Orange County Memorial Garden Center.
to or from North Korea , North Vietnam
or Cuba.
"The treasury'1 foreign asset! control
regulations now permit normal financial
trarwctions betwl!!en the United States
and the Peoplt's Republic of China and
its nationals," the statement said.
''Unittd States bank! may now act as
financial mtermedlartea in thue traosac·
tlons, iacluding r!mltta.nces for family
support, humanitarian md o t b e: r
purposes."
A treasury official explained lhat Con-
nally'1 order will permJt Amerlcan bu.si-
ness men. for Jn.stance, to purchase Red
Chinese goods with U.S. dollars and sell
them in other nations, since they will still
be prohibited from importing them into
the United States. Or they can purchase
goods in other nations and sell them to
the Red Chinese.
shooting and wounding his forme_r buddy
in an incident thal Jed to police sur-
rounding his Fillmore Way apartment
has pleaded guilty to lesser charges ill
Orange County Superior CoUrt.
Judge Byron K. Mc~llan 1ent.enctd
Paul E. Weaver, 30, of 3002 Fillmore
way, to one year in O~ange Countr Jail
after accepting Weaver s plea of guilty to
charge!! of receiving stolen property. He
dismissed charges of burglary ~d
assault and 'Placed the defendant on live
years probation.
Weaver was arrested last ~1arch 4
shortly after John W. Golden Oed from
Weaver's apartment with a bullet In the
left shoulder and told officers that his
former friend shot him during an ar·
gumenl.
\Veaver allowed police to enter the
premises after a long .11rgument that e~
ed when officers threatened to flush him
out with tear gas. Police said aeveral
stolen weapons , among them an M·l
carbine, were found in the apartment.
Upholstery Sale! •
••
•
"
•
,r .!'-SLllPH SOPA ......,,
SALE PRICED
STARTINCi~ AT
$239
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT BEACH
f727 WHtcllff Dr., 642°2050
O~EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
NIWl'Olf ITOU OPIN PllDAY "TIL t
Profe11lon1I Interior
0.1lgnor1 Av1ll1bl1 -AID
INTERIORS
Phi.,. Tell Pr• M ... et 0,..,. Coutp-140·126)
LAGUNA llACH
345 North Co11t Hwy.
Phone: 494-~SS l
I
J
J
j
Ul'I Tti._,,."
Gls Face 1916 DeadUne.
Frisking
On Drugs
GM Pessimistic
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
customs Bureau 8ay1 a
On S1nog Cutdown
crackdown on the now of ll-WASffiNGTON (UPJ) -
legal drugs from Indochina General Motors joined. Ford
means returning servicemen today 1n claiming it bu found
can expect to be aearehed no way to mett exbauat
thoroughly when they enter cleanup standardJ. It also
the States. disclosed a n t l po 11 u t 1 on
Commissioner Myles J • reMareh e1pendltures that are
Ambr05e announced the in-well below ill outlays for
tensified customs e f f o r t advert.Ising.
Thursday, saying the proble.m In prepared testimony, GM
of illegal drugs f I c. w i n g President Ed'll'lrd N. Cole st.id
through military pcrsoMel his firm was "hopeful" it
and post offices had reached coo.Id ~et tht required 90
serious proportiorui. percent r e d u c t I o n in
Henceforth, he said, 2111 m211l hydrocarbon &nd carbon
packages from Southeast Asia monoxide embsions tor 1975
will be closely e1amlncd. models, compared with 1970
Cob tutilied that OM 1pent
$119 million on t :r: h a u at
cleam.ip rwarch in 1970 and
would spend at least $124
million this year. The firm's
1970 aales and profll!I, both
rtducM by a strike, were
rupeetlvely $18.7 billion and
$609 million.
Adverttsing Age, 1 t r a d e
publication, estimated GM's
advertising outlays at $171.5
million in 1969, the latest year
for whleh figures were avai-
lable. G~1's 19ft9 11les were
$24 billion and Its profits wera
$1 .7 bllUon.
Ford said It spent $6&
million on anti po 11 ut Ion
re1e1rcb In 1970 and la spen-
Frill}', Mil' 7, 1'11 •Ally "1.111' s
'°"" p: ' t. ,, ...
"Well, I! lt'a not polluted, why do they_, IO
anxious to ret out?"
GOVERNMENT WORKER IN BOSTON GETS HELPING HANO FROM POLICEMEN
100 Arrested at J.F.K. Federal Building Attempting to Disrupt Bu1lne11
lie said military base com-modell, But he added:
mande.rs would cooperate with "At tl'lls point in time we
CU!itoms officers in checkln& have no way of controlllng OJ.-
servicemen's baggage, their ides of nitrogen to the ex-
personal belongings, and cargo tremely )ow levels which could
returning from S o u t he a s t be required by the clean air
Asia. amendments <Jl 1970 for 1978
'fhe crackdown mean1 all models."
mail parcels going through
ding $132 million thla year. ----------,i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;ii
U.S. ·Steel Cost Boosts
Matched by 3 Big Firms
VNlTED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
Alcoholism Police Arrest 100
FundsAsked Boston Protesters
military post offices will be The law requires a 90 per-
subject to ··100 percent ex-cent nllrogen 01lde1 reduction
amination," Ambrose said. for 1976 cars. Ford testified
A Custom!t !tJ>Okesm~n said similarly Thursday. American
that means they will be open-Motors and Volkswage_n. e1-
ed. Up to now, all parcel:ii presstd even more pessimism.
haven·t been, only th 0 5 e The hearings before the From Wire Services do not mtan wage and price·
swipecttd of containing drugs. En vi roninent.al P rotection PrM'SBURGH _ Ma J 0 r controls were neeessary.
")(ow OPIN
SATURDAYS By Nixon
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Nixon administration has .an-
noonced a "major national ~
fort" to treal alooholism and
has asked Congress to provide
$34.6 millioo for the program.
This figures out to abput
$3.90 a year for each. of the
country's 9 million alcoholics
or problem drinkers.
Two senators eontend this is
not enough.
Or. Morris E. ChaveU,
wboge appointmt nt as dlrector or the government's n~ Na-
tional Institute of Al cohol
Abuse and Alcoholism was an.-
noun c e d Thursday,
acknowledged in an interview
the $34.& mill i on ad-
ministration request f o r
alcoholism programs n e s: t
year will fall far short of the
need.
"'fhe coontry Is ambiv alent
about alcoholim and doesnl
1Pptar ready through
Congress to provide the need-
ed funds," he 1aid.
By The As1ocl1ttd Pres•
Police arrested at least 100
persons during an anliwar sit-
in in Boston Thursday during
21 day otherv;ise marked by
waning o f demonstrations
against the Indochina war
around the nation.
The sitdown lasted more
than seven hours outside the
John F. Kennedy ftderal
building. About 2,000 marchers
eame fr()m a Boston Common
gathering v.•ith the announctd
Intention of stopping the
building·s operation by
preventing its 4,200 employes
from entering.
Polict at the University of
Illinois said they arrested 30
persons for failing to leave a
lobby v.·bere they conducted a
sit in protest against
recruiters on. campus.
Clapping hands and chanting
"We want peace now," abeut
50 antiwar protesters paraded
in a circle at the entrance to
the federal building in
downtown Buffa1o. N.Y. There
was no atlempt tc block peo-
ple rrom entering er leavin1
the building.
At the Wayne Slate
University campus in Detroit,
about 350 persons gathered for
an antiwar rally.
Ambrose said the stepped up Agency (EPA) art t 0 steel producers are falling in Other major producers aald
enforcement action ii designed determine how the industry is hi .... 113 u.. they were reviewing their
do!no and whether it is mak· line and mate ni .., w ·"" pricing pollcles in Jint ef tbe to slop what he called the •-e pe to pr' e increases an au •·nood or high grade heroin lng a "good faith" effort to r -~ b 'u' S s•··t Corp o~ lnereases. meet the standards. nounccu Y · · """" • Wheeling Pittsburgh Steel and other hard narcotic drugs EPA Administrator William steel used to manufacture into the United States." automobiles, appliances and Corp., another ef the nation's
One shipment of illici t D. Ruckelshaus can grant a other eotllllmer goods. big produeer•. said it was
' .. t .....
MON.·THUU. TO·I P.M.
PllDATI TM P.M.
(1141 140.1211. LM...., t.: s.. c-• "-· c.... ....
""'· Vkl ':"--<M ......
A handful ef diebard
demonstrators remained in
front of ROTC headquarters at
Kent State University in Kent,
Ohio. The building was CJpen
after being closed during most
of a four day memorial
observance for the deaths a
year ago of four students in a
confrontation with Ohlo Na-
tional Guardsmen.
heroin \\'as baggtd r ecently, one-year postponement ()f the Three major steel cor-doing some "new figuring" on
the commissioner diselosed. standards in the event of a •-, _ hll Its price structure in light of H. M. STOLTE
"good fa ith" effort that fails. porations, Jones v ""ug n, the spreading price hii.e 1~~~~~~~~~~~ when ~ial Bureau of He announced Thursday he Republic and Armco Thursday movement. r: ~~~~~:n~d~~f7e~~~ wou1d. evaluate effort! ilartly ~.~t.c~~!1h::n:::y~~ ~... But_B~eb.ero Steel Corp.... Th~"'n·o -lhot·"'-,..-C mill la by comparing antipollution the No. 2 steelmaker. sterned • v '-A ~a~~~A"5~ pleee
0
ry reaearth spendin& with sales. cr~:s :::uac~!d ~~~~~~enft~r to be shying away from the The DAILY PILOT-
The paekagt wu seized it profits and 1 dvert 111 n g one-third of industry ship-_t_re_n_d_. -------------------f't. Monmouth, N.J ., and came outlays. ments and equal abnut one-
from Bangkok, Thailand, he hall or Jones & Laughlin 's pro-
s1id. Customs estimated the ducllon. The lnereases may
SI G • heroln ii worth about $1.75 Ai1• Crash enable J&L to rtverse the $21 0 W 81llS million if aold on the street. million loss It posted last year.
The seizure was n o l In Washincton. Treasury
In Economy pr.,iouzly d ''" o,. d to Claims 12 Secretary John B. Connolly
"preserve tlle security of the said he w11 very much
Investigations," Customs said. COOLIDGE, Ariz. {UPI) _ disturbed by the round of in-
R d No arrests have been made. ase He said steel pro-eporte Th. •·rotn, In 20 plastic An Apache Airlines plane, ere: •· ' • . I I I
lllC" described 8S "coughing and duce r I are ii r c n biigs in a metal box, "'as them.selves out ot the world
HOT SPRJNGS, Va. (AP) -enclosed in 1tyrofoam and sputtering," crashed into • market." f cottcn field durlng an ap-The economy is making alow wrapped ln multiple layers o parent emergtncy landing at-Connally'• rtactioo "a 1
but fairly satisfactory gainl, brown paper. tempt Thursday, killing all 12 stronger than the. "di.sap-
. 'd From March 1 to April 24. • persons aboard. . polntment" eIJ)rtssed by
""·'·~ . ._ ...... ..... , .....
$164.88~-
~ "·'· """· ._..,.. ..... '"··· top industry e1ecutives 11a1 r.·-toms ~kesm•• 1 a i ~ , Pr 'd ,. t -•• , •-retary ..,...,. ~"'"' ""' .. They didn't &land a es1 en 1a ..-.~ ~
today. end ttie government Customs made 248 1uch drug chance," said Ramon Flores.,r_:Ro~n~Z~ie~gl~e~r ~e.,~ll~er~.~~~~~~~~;;;;;~:::::::~~~~ should avoid any action that seiaurea through Anny and who aaw the two turbo-prop CoM1lly 1ald the lncrtase1
might rekindle inOatlon. Air Force post offices alone. De Ha vUJand Dove strike a
Member• ()f the Business concrete Irrigation ditch and
•
Congress Approval Seen
For Loans to Lockheed
Council, opening their spring KIDS LOVE its front portion dl1lnlegrale In
'meeting here, told newsmen flames as It careentd 300 feet Into the field.
innstlon c:ontmues lo be the UNCLE LEN Flor" sold the pilot, Ted
oountry'1 foremost problem, Huntington, who took off about
damaging to the confidence of Saturdays in 20 minutes earlier from
consumers at home and con-Tucson, appeared to be tryint
CEMENT BOATS FLOAT
"1 Watch McChrtulo Mori•• lulld o c.., .. ,
-ot Recrootloa Show tllru Moy I.
South Coast 1Jua 1. c~.,. -.
WASHINGTON (AP)
There are Indications
Congress will approve loan
guarantees for L o c k. h e e d
Aircraft Corp., and perhaps
other companies PJ!I ·well. But
one congressman attacked the
move as an .attempt to bail out
the Lockheed chairman and
"his merry band of thieves.·•
Rtp. William S. ~1oorhead
fD-Pa.). JaMled out Thursday
at the Nixon Administration,
whieh asked the guarantees,
and Lockheed chairman
Daniel Haughton.
"One has to admire Daniel
'Haughton who by sheer gu~.s
and balling ·wire has kept h1!11
group of incompetents afloat
by tnllmldating the feder;i1
government ,,,.it.h lhreRls ()f
corporale ~uicide and then
walking out wl1h the tax-
payers' money," Moorhtad
said.
Hi! statement follov.•ed a
news conference at which
Secrtt.&ry ()f Treasury John B.
CoMally announced the ad-
ministration nett wr.ek "i ll
send Congress a bill seeking
$250 million In guarantees to
keep Lockheed from col·
lapsing.
Conn ally said his
preliminary soundings indicate
the legislation will be ap-
Jlrovt'd.
~:RtiinMM~ -""'~.a.a.• ,,,,. ........ .....,
h D ILY PILOT tomskean emergencylandlng
fidenc:e in the dollar abroad. T e A a half mile away al C.OOlldge
The couneil 's panel of 20 AlrporL
private induatry economists, lll~=~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;1 was learned, has submitted a I
::~:t":u.;i::n ::1':'~~ Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores!
Ul'I Tt'-'l"lt LOCKHEED HELPER
Secretary Connally
The consensus of several
congrtssmen querled is that a
stiff fight over the Nixon ad-
ministration plan will be
f()llowed by .approval of aome
type bill embracing ()ther
shaky businesses whose
failure could have severe ef-
fects on the national economy.
One key Democrat said,
however. that Jf the bill ts er-
panded, "The whole thing will
sirik. Why not put on the end
of ii. 'Capitalism Is dead.' "
tle under $1.05Cl trillion this
year.
Thal would be well short or
President Nixon's estimate of
$1.~ trillion, on which the
administration's fisea\ 1972
budget estimate was based.
Jn February, the council
predicted price i ri c r e a s e 11
across the entire economy
would average 4 percent this
year; now its judgment is 4,4
percent. That represents a
slowdown from lasl year's 5.3
ptroent rise, but a leu im-
pressive Improvement than
had been antleipated.
used cars
used
but not abused
'
I
I
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. • • .
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• •
•
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•
•AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Grand Plan for
U a park concept now under consideration could
become a reality, Costa Mesa may have one of Southern
California's unique recreational facilities.
Admittedly. the "if" involved here. is a big if.
A group of young people is urging city action to
aeate a network or bicycle trails for practic31 travel
ind simple fun. One new developn1ent may hasten it.
Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley has suggesLed the
eorumittee assigned to study it consider incorporating
the bike trail concept into a proposed 300-acrc \vilder·
ness park on surplus state land 1vest of FairviC\\' State
Hospital near the Santa Ana River.
Rich in prehistoric California lore. tl1e area encom·
passes the largest lndiaq burial ground bety.•een Santa
Bar bara and San Diego, site of recent arCheological
diggings. .
The combi nation is intMguing, but the state needs
cash and the property could bring $12 million if sold , a
fact which legislators Y.•ill doubtless consider.
California's leaders are CQ.mlnitted to developing
whatever sources of funds they can, a fact underscored
this \veek by announcement the state is literally broke.
fl.tany 01 them are also committed to preserving
open areas and preserving our rapidly diminishing re-
sources for pleasure and recreation. Unrortunately these
l\VO commitments pose a painful conflict or desire and
demand.
Jnitiative. too -neither of which ls lacking on th e local
front.
Considering the envisioned green belt up the S~nta
Ana River to Santiago Creek, plus the nearby Diego
Sepulveda Adobe which is now a State Historical land·
mark, the total package wouJ~ be significant to promote
and pursue.
The most regrettable point is tq,t it may be too late.
'fhc most encouraging is that people are willing to
lry.
Keep th e Sea rch Broad
Ne,vport-f\fesa Unified School District trustees a~e
continuing their search for a replacement for Dr. 'Vil·
liam Cunningham, who is leaving th e district after three
years as superintendent. ,
At least one district official has been endorsed for
the job by a group of parents and teachers. The en·
dorscment is a credit to the man, but the board should
continue to revi ew the qualifications of any and all c~n·
didates· for this im portant job. Residents of the district
have come to expect the highest level of administrative
leadership that it is possible to find. That talent may
\11ell be found \vithin the present administrative staff of
the district. but ithe search should be as wide as possible
to secure the best talent available -anywhere.
By selecting from a field of top administrators, t~e
di strict. its teachers and its students are assured main-
tenance of the high level of educational offerings the
Ne,vport-r.fesa district has come to expect.
And the competitive selection 1vill of itself be a
testimonial to the man \vho is selected.
' . I THOOGHT THE PEN:E
MARCHER"> WENT KOME S~~DAY!
THEY DID! THAT'S
THE FBI!
-Despite the idealism of saving the old burial
ground and establishing added park space, the financial
realities would require some difficult decisions in
"Sacramento. The campaign Yt'ill require energy and
'IM ~ All ridii. ·-~O<I U il J'atiUaon-JhJI Sn<llcat. c
Dear He Calls It Sheer Comniercialistti Paper Drives
----.--.€·an-~t--A-bsorb-1 g~:~m~-~-c-.-iti -,,.--to,._eaks t>ut on '1rvinese'
Refuse Piles
The emotional play upon legitimate
public concern for Callfornia's eito
vtronment appears to be leading lho8e
charged with at least one phase of the
problem into a crisis situalion.
This is In the tiela or solid "'·aste
disposal where ~ term "recycling''
seem.a' to have .become. the magic word
with envtronmc:ntali5ts. Witness the cam.
paips of container .uppllus to buy back
Costa 1tlesa 's city traffic light
people ought lo do something
about that signal at Fairview and
Adams. Very often, i~ causes need-
less time delays in all directions.
-1ttrs. R. \V.
fflh 1Mhll'11 f'11llt<IJ r'11Htrl' VltWJ, Ml
-llY "'9N .. 1111 Rl-.. fl'. ltfll f-Mt -111 te Gl•MP Gift, Dlllrr ,1191,
• stayed righl there. because there was no
demand for it."
To the Editor :
The articles concerning the Irvine
Company's coastal development plans
(DAIL Y PILOT, April 28 and 29) con-
tained a number of passages in pure
Irvinese, 'tl'hich I deline ru a corporate
dialect wherein the public statement
completely masks the thought behind il.
For those unfamiliar with this linguistic
variant. J offer my translation of a few of
lhe remarks of Richard A. Reese. Irvine
vice-president of planning :
STATEMENT: "Our e<onomic studies ~ their u.ted products 'nd the proliferation
:. of vohpiteer .. ·manned' "ecology centers"
.. throughout Ule' state.
As is 10 oltea the. cue with faddist
cauaea, seal fOr recycling ~ms to be
t outdJstantlng the economi cs and
; technololY of'ialvage and reuse 3! a ma.
jor force ln solid waste management.
THAT RECYCLI NG as it is noy,· being ~
undertaken can only serve as a small lool
in the overall funcllon of solid waste
disposal was made clear in a recenl
study in San francisco.
indicate a critical growing need for a true
coastal resort rommunity." TRANSLA·
TION: "We hired a study group and told
them to come up \Yith that result. or els¢.
They delivered."
STATEMENT: ··We don't .,.,·ant an
tJ n desirable automobile-oriented en-
"ironment." TRANSLATION : "We've got
to make them forget that all those people
\viii have to get there by car. Jf that com-
pletely clobbers Coast Highwar, in both
directions. irs not our problem. ' •
TUE NATIONAL MAµAZINE for the
sanitation industry, SoliQ . Wa s tes
M11nagement. report! that at least three
Southern California · Communities are
haJting geparate O?Jlection or o I d
newsprint and Othlr "types of paper. This
became wutt paper processors are
twamptd beyond their capaclty and the
price of waste -newspapen alo~ h~s
dropped fmn #0 to $4 a ton 1n six
months.
Commenting editorially the
aulhoritative journal declared : ''Add to
all this the reports from the Golden State
from refute contractors who have their
yards piled high with sa1vaged cor-
rugated papen and cardboards, aDd the
irritation of all those community-minded
folks entrapped in the recycling illusion
can be well understood ...
"This entire sad and sorry story Is
startlingly reminisce nt of \Vorld \Var II.
Then. great salvage drives were o~~aniz
ed by patriotic stay-at-home c11Jzens.
Impressive mounds of paper, metals and
cloth were. assembled. And mosL of it
There collection and disposal ot refuse
is the responsibility of two nationally
recognlzeQ !ei ders in the field. Sunset
Scavenger 'Coriipany and Golden Gate
Disposal Company. To accurately plan
lhe role of .reclamation. Sunset ran an
analysis of bow much of an average
household's waste y,·as a c t u a 11 y
recyclable.
One ton of typical refuse was collected
from lhree separate residential areas in
the city and hand sorted into 10
categories. The highest yield o I
recoverable products -p r i m a r i I y
marketable paper. metals and glass -
comprised less than a third of the col-
Jeeted refuse.
Bundling thJ1 newspaper and sending
back the beer can you emptied while
reading it may well be regarded as a con-
tribution lo enhancement of the state's
ecosystem but support of efforts to Im·
prove long-range waste d Is po s a I
technology will be an eve n greater one.
Mike Abramson
California Feature Service
Pizza as GI Fertilizer
WASHINGTON -Our ste>ries about
mismanagement and malfeasance in, the
Army's v;orldwide, $2.5 billion-a-year
commissary system has stimulated a
Justice Department investigation.
Government sleuths, in search of
e.vidence lo present
to a grand jury,
have poked arouDd
mainly in WaShing.
ton. We suggest U1ey
al.so 'ook into the
garbage pits and
i an ita r y fills of
Europe.
They will find tha t
rurtive commiMary
officials have tried to cover up their
buying blunders by dumping food into the
ca.rbage. They have dil!iposed of
truckloads of froien goodies and pizza
piea th.at 1poll'd in commissary freezers.
I ' , . ' ··Jack Andereou
' ' •
Del ~fonte white cream corn. This was
enough to :ast 30 months. 18 months
longer than the cans should be kept on
lhe shelves. To gel rid or lhen1. the com·
r.1issaries reduced the price from 19 to II
cents per can and sold lhem off at a loS&.
We have been unable to confinn reports
that some cans were simply thrown
away.
We have traced some of these wild
purchases back to Col. James McDowell.
who then headed the purchasing board
for lht European commissary system .
Far from being censured for his waste,
however, he has now been given an ,ven
more important commissary job. He is
now deputy to Maj . Gen. John h1cLaugO.
AN AR l\t V DOCUJ\fENT in our Jin. 'tl·ho runs the quartermaster cent.er at
posseSJlon. for e:1ample, tells ahout how Fort Lee, Va .
the Army bought enough Round·the. Cloc.k itlV ASSOCIATE Les \\'hlttcn reached
Apple Snack to utlsy ills commissary !he extravagant colonel at Fon Lee and
customers in Europt for three years and asked why he bought 80 much fllPd that
enough Round-the Clock Berry Snack lo had to be plo'tl•ed under. lie sfapped,
last for five yean. Yet lhese rrozen "No comment.'' to ttll questlOrlll.
delectablu: hlive • freezer life of only six Whitten 111so tried to ques.tlon him
monLhl. about r<'ports that he shoy,·ed unusual The commi&sary officials. in lht fn,·oritism for Rockingham Chicken.
dee.pest of secrecy, trucked t'ns of Afl<'r certain RO<'kingham products were
tbouuNk of 1ppl1 and btrry snacks to declared unsanitary by go,:ernm<'nt In.
German aanllary fills. thereby enriching •peel.ors, the Pentagon gave Euro-~ soU al 11 c,.-iu. a serving. pea n commlssarlea the opUon of buying
A tbref.year aupply of plr.z.a pies, which other brands.
allO became-tainted arttr 111 months in M c Do w e 11 acet1pt~ 1 Rock·
commlauJY tr.ezen, was converted lr.gham propo~al to continue slocklng i1$
almUarlf klto C"'9nn1n fertillier. products in dlffrre11' ... · · , 't\l1lrh had
. not betn found 11 1"hc end
OH ANOTHER buying 11prte corn· rei;uJt, however, wa:i. ...... lne goods were
mt.sary ofllclala boua1rt ~GOO cans of unpopular "ith mUltary bousewlve1.
STATE~fENl : "'Eco"n..1gy or lidepools
and undersea gardens is currently urr
protected from imsponsible public
desecration ... Y1e hal'e learned that the
absence of development alone doesn't in-
sure protection of the e co Io g y . · '
TRANSLATJOK: '·Jf they'll swallow the
idea !hat a few hundred thousand more
people around those tidepools will save
them, we 're home free : they'll believe
anything.··
STATEMENT: "We can aJ.,.,·ays do
another Cameo Shores. and this would
satisfy our eeooomic needs, but it is the
sort of thing people object to because ii
cuts off the coast.·· TRA NSLATIO:'i :
··cameo Shores ~·as ;i, bummer : we could
have goltcn a hundred times the relurn
from that land if fhcy'd ha ve leL Us go
high-rise. -w·e·"e got lo keep !rying. ''
OTHER FACETS of the Irvine pro-
posal, while expressed in somple English.
are no Jess disturbing. The suggestion
that Coast High\\'BY be relocated al the
erpense of Orange County taxpayers. to
accommodate the i r profit.oriented
deve lopment. is almost unbelievable
Their magnanimous offer to dedicate two
canyon areas as public parks amounts lo
throwing us a fish. since t suspect that
acreitge is too precipitous lo profitably
develop anyway.
~pile all the sel f·laudalory
statements about development or ils land
In the public interest. the Irvine Compan)' ~ntinues to base its planning on sl'leer
CQmmercialism.
ROBERT D. RIES
Parental Respo11slblllt 11
To lhe Editor :
Referring to the letter fro1n ··Cathy
11oad'' !Mailbox, May 4):
She asks In her leller. "How can you go
inlo a crowd of kids and say ·you're clean
end wholesome and you·re not'. As a
teenager I know for a fact you can't."
The answer is simple. If a youngster is
engaging in sexual intercourse (and you
don 't get V.D. from toi let seats) at the
age of 15 or 16, sht bas classified herself.
If she cfoe5n't. she doesn't worry about
V.D.
AS ASSEtdBLYltfA N Rober! H. Burke
puts It. those: paren~ who care, and raise
their children Jnformati vely so that they
loo cart. should not have their children
subjected to lhe problems that au
created by parents and children who do
not c1re.
Aly statement is brutal If it rtferi; to
Cathy, or snyone like her. But may our
country reserve to tho parents lhe ri,ht
to raise their children Jn accordance with
proper se1ual standards that prtclude lhe
unn~ssary education by our public
11ehools in the art of tnJoylng extra·
marital Intercourse wllbout the danger of
ao doina!
~1'' CHILDREN also ca.n come to me
-.
Mailoox
'.~
L•llt" 1,.111 r-•" .lrt Wtkfl'll. Ntnn111tp wrillrt. ..., .. (.-!....., lllNr ""UIHI Ill ii" __ ,
... kn. Tiit rl9M "' c.H ..... lttt." ti Ill lPKt
tr •llll'llN11 llbtl Ii '"'"'"""· .111 19ttln "''"' itl· c~ llt,..1U'11 1..i 1'1111111111 aff>-ns. l>uT ftlMeJ "''~ M wlll,•111 .,. '"'"'"t if. wffldtll r•-Ca IHUlftf. '""'"" win .i bl ,..,Milfltt.
about sex. They don 't need to go to the
schools because this is a part of my job
as a parent. Let those of us who still feel
parents should raise children do so, 'and
don 't classify us all with the. quoted
statistics. My children will know without
school education.
OONALD A. JONES
Survlv ul of Life
To the Editor:
If one looks behind the so-caUed
"obstructionism'' of which the Sierra
Club is accused in the April 29 Guest
Editorial by the California Water
Resources Associalion, a concern for the
survival of life itself emerges.
To 'tl'hat end should v.·e·dam the Trinity
and Eel Rivers in northern California.
flooding food-yielding agrjcu\tura\ land
and destroying valuable ·fishing streams
whe n recycled water can be obtained at
less cost? To what end should we tum a
large share of our water, as polluted
seY:age, into rivers and oceans to kill the
marine life. eliminating another food
source. and endangering our use of
beache!i when it could be recycled and
used right here? '
DA!\IS IN THE Colorado store most of
OrRnge County's water until it is so salty
and mineralized. that even when mi1ed
"'ilh our rapidly diminishing underground
supply. its qua lity is far from satisfac·
lory. Yet that source of \\later was once
thought. to be a perfect solution to our
"'ater needs. ·
Has the \Yater Resources Association
taken all these and many more side ef-
fects into consideration!
HAD THE RECE!\i'TLY enacted federal
Environmental Protection Act. requiring
a full study of the environmental impact
of a development before any action was
aulhor!zed. been in effect, m a n y
detrimental ronstructions and practices
might ha\·e been stopped.
Look behind the curtain . Is the need to
criticize the Sierra l.1ub ha sed on the
desire of a development-minded giant to
justify some of its biased interesl proj·
eels.
MARY SCO'IT
l'a ci119 ()p to Death
To the Editor:
11 is good to see tile DAILY PILOT
report on thanatology (Comment Page,
lo.fay 1). On lhe other hand, the report -
and thanatology itself -is really not
ct1mplete. There is something vital miss-
ing from the discussion : a consideration
of the nature of death itself. , ,
Death is not a passing. transient thing.
Death is permanent. It is not a matter of
\v.ing do\vn and saying. "I'm dead." and
then getting up again and going on to
something else. Death is the last 'tl'ord.
Nobody seems able to appreciate th is.
There can be nothing worse lhan eternal
nonexistence. If you don't believe me.
you don't understand the nature nf YOUR
death. Death is not an abstract thing that
happens lo everybody else but not you -
the crushing fact is that it happens to
\'OU.
ONCE YOU understand this you y,·ill
realize no "divine plan" can make your
death acceptable -\\'hclher' it occurs In
Vietnam or in a nursing home. You \Yill
realize that the object of thanatoklgy
should not be lo make us accept death
but to fip:ht ii -to !he death ~
'"The living . , . 1st.ow l their unwill-
ingness lo come to lcrms 'tl'ith their own
mortality." Is lllis supposed to be new?
ts conventional pcr.;uasion going to
change the fund11menta\ fact that man
'deep down inside finds death unac·
ceptable? It hasn't ~vorked in the past -
or the article would not have appeared -
and it can·t 'tl'ork now. It is time for man
lo grow up out of his cosmic inferiority
compleot (dust lhou art. dust you will be)
and seize death itself by the throat. It is
Lime !or deaLh itself to die .
GREG FAHY
Trea surer California Chapter
Student Cyronics A$0Ciation
E asl119 Co11rt Press11re
To the Editor :
Our judicial syslem cannot efficiently
handle the vast number or cas'!s now in
lhe courts. Due to the sharp increase in
trime, the courts at every level are jam.
med. The shecf volume of cases often re-
quires !he defendant who can·t post bail
to wait for long periods of time in jail for
his case to co:ne up.
The system 'tl'ould be more producti\'e
if it were relieved of ''victimless crimes"
such a's drunkenness, prostitution. gambl-
ing, homosexuality anc.i drug abuse.
VICTllltLESS OFFENSES could be
dealt with by fines. Such a reform wou ld
resull in great.er manpower Y;i thin the
system and betlcr use of the taxpayer·s
dolla r. It would take the ncces.!5ary
pressure off the lower courts and reduce
the overtrowdir.g in the jail!;.
RICHARD MISSLER
Jails 1\'eed Re formb19
To the Edilor :
The purpose of this letter is based on
my recent studies or the conditions or
jail~ in the United States. Jfumane livin;;:
conditions in prisons cannot be reached
unless proper reforms are made.
Jails have been shown to be a colleg-:
for crime. Not only is a small-time sneak
thief susceptible to homosexual ·rape and
drugs. but also a prison can be a trade
school for crime. A young inexperienced
criminal can be turned into a young.
highly proficient burglar.
EJGHT-FIVE PERCENT of all crimes
-comn1itted are committed by those 'tl'ho
have been "rehabilitated.'' Without pro-
per separation of crim inals. lhe current
penal system is surely not a corrective
one.
I am proposing two propositions. I am
advocating reconstruction and building of
more and better jai111. This recon stru c-
ting and building of new jails would ha ve ! t'tl·o-fold purpose.
FIRST, THE LIVING conditions' would
be improved lo hun)an standards. The
jails no\v are overcrowded and filthy , Thi'
reconstruction of the old and the buildin~
of the new would enlarge rootage per
prisoner.
A second important result of lhc
reconstruction would be lo segregate U11'
prisoners according to criminal offenst.
This would reduce the possibility of a col·
lege of crime developing.
I hope you will take interest in this ap-
palling problem and give our prisoners a break. '
JIM SUNQUIST
Estate Planning Needs Experts
Some ye ars ago • clerk in a bookstore,
unpacking a shipment of new books,
found one on the subject of "estate
planning,·· Thinking it must be about the
lands caping of large homes, he placed ii
in the gardening section.
He would hardly make that mistake
today. Estate pla nning his come into' its
own. used by thoughtful · p e o p I e
everywhere. to preserve assets during
their lifetime and to pass them on wisely
-and economically -at death.
One reason for the growth of estate
planning ill the growth of estates.
Nov.·adays 'ven the ordinary citizen is
likely lo have an estate of 15Ubst.ance. Jt
msy v.·eJI include not only a home and a
H.\'ings account but a.I.so personal life
insurance. group lnsuranct. stock$.
pension plan benefits, profit-sharing
option.!i. and social security rights.
. ANOTHER REASON is that estate
plennin1 has become far m o re--
sophisUc.ated. Jt.s techniques have gone
well beyond the trad itiona l
"ltlltamentary trust" for a rich old lady
and "!ipendthrlft trust" for a rich roung
man.
Unfortunately. Ulcre are p It fa 11 s
aplenty for the amateur planner, for
example: many people think avo1dina
' '
1 Law .in Action
probate Is the same as avoiding taxes.
But the federal estate tax is based on Ille
entire estate, whether ii passes through
probate or not
Likewise. many people think life
Insurance is nol taxable. But life
insurance proceeds are included in
federal estate tax purposes unless he has
retained none of the incidents of
ownership of that policy.
TRUE. IT t.fAY be 5tnsible In certain
circumstance:s to avoid probate. And it
may be possible In certain rlrtUmstances
to avoid taX<'I on life insurance. But
cJ!arJy thii; is a fie ld In which the h•yman
needs expert help.
Much inform&lkll! is ~vailable fl'on1
trusl departmenu. a c c o u n t a n t li ,
1nsµrance men, and Inv e s I m en t
counselors. The ullim&t!! adv i !'!er ,
however. should usually be a11 allorney.
sint" 1 , 11lonc is fully qualified to gi\·c
the.• tli l !ea,al guidance. a program
1hfi1,,,, , .. ,1C.
Some people shr ~n~ from the thOU&ht of •
estate planning. But. like it or not. somP.
plan is going lo govern the care and
distribution of your possession. The plan
could be yours. if you make one. If you
don't, state and federal laws--oblivious of
your wishes-will do ii for you.
An American Bar Asociat-fon pufr
lie service feature b!J \Vilt Bernard.
-~-1.11
r'riday, May 7. 1971
The tdl:~rial page of the DafJ11
Pilot sef' s to i.11/orm and atim..
ufott readers by pr1s111ting 1.hi1
ne ius(l<l(>tr's opi11io11s und com-
mtttlary on topic! of h1tereit
n11t1. slg11ijica11ce. by providing 11
forum for Liie e;rpre.!.tlon of
our readers' opi11io11,t, and by
preseu1it1g tlte di v1r11t view·
points of iufnrmtd ob.~er1~rs
and spokesnit-n 011 !Opie! of tht day,
Roberl N. Weed. Publisher
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Saddlehaek N.Y. Steeb
,VOL 64, NO. 109, ~ SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA f RIDAY, MAY 7, 1971' :rEN CENTS
South Coast Dump Issue Raises Big Stink
By JOHN VALTEJIZA
Of tlle Dll" ,lltt Stefl
The South Oranee Coast produces so
much trash and garbage that in tittle
more than a year its only dump will be
full ta the brim.
And in an urgent drive to find a new
dwnP. capable of handling the rubbish of
20.yurl, the County of Orange this week
brought gasps from some South C<wt
xuldenta and confuaion to city leaders.
This news came out on Wednesday :
-Orange County proposes to buy 1,362
acres deep ln the hlll1 behind San
Clemente to develop a dump which will
hold the rubbish of the entire South Coun-
ty region for the next '1l yeirs.
-The land cost aJone la aet at $3. 4
million.
-Only two major accews are pro-
posed to the large canyon area, one or
which (Camino Los Mares) already has
stirTed howls of protest from homeown-
ers, the developers of San Clemente' first
hospital ahd San Clemente City coun·
cilmen.
-At the end of 20 years, the dump wlll
be developed into a major county
regional park, probably with lakes in-
stalled as well.
The entire matter will receive its first
airing May 18 when official South Coast
DUMP PROPOSA L RAISES SAN CLEMENTI HACKLES
Re1ident1 Fe1r 20 Y11r1 Dumping, Then Recreation
Surprise, Shock Spawned
By Oemente Dump Plans
The news this week of county plans tG
develop a 1,362 ecre dump in the hills
above San Clementt: has brought anger to
aome homeowners, surprise and shock to
developers of the area's first hospital and
1 wave of mixed emotion from city
County Jobless
To ta ls Take Big
J ump-8 Perce nt
Unemployment in Orange County
jumped five·tenths of a percenL from
March to April to 1 seasonally adjusted
jobless rate of I percent, the' state
Department of Human R e s o u r c e 1
Development said today.
AlthOU.gh 488,100 peson.s had jobs . In
Orange County during April, rep.resenting
an increase of 4,400, the 1ncre~sed
number of employed persons was below
what is normal for this time of yea r, ac·
cording to Peter Force of the Santa Ana
research and statistics 11ection of HRD.
In March of this year there were 41 ,400
persons wil.hout jobs compared to the
38,400 who were jobless in April.
Jobi in construction rose by riOO in
April Force said, an 1mount less than e1~ted. Further, 500 ar:rospace jobs
were l05t due to layoffs in April in
Orange County.
The Orange County unemployment
statistics paralleled those for California
for lbe aame period. For the state, the
adjwted joble" rate in April was 7.4 per-
cent 1be total number of Wlemployed
peraons, however, dropped 81,00ll to
695,000 1nd the number or persons wor~
ing at tome job cUmbed 51,000 to 7.99
mllllon.
The 1971 unernploymtnt rates for
Orange County continue lo be blgher than
in previous years. Jn Mar~h' 1970 there
~ 25,000 jobteu for a rate of 4.8 per·
cent th1t climbed to i .2 percent in April
1970 when 23;800 were without employ·
menl
leaders In San Clemente.
Residents along Camino Los Mares,
proposed to be tht: major collector road
to the dump. are angry and bitter.
One housewife who tias led a battle
over alleged air pollution and noise from
trucks at the CresUile aggregate pro-
ducts plant. views the idea another front
ready for an assault.
Several neighbo rs contacted in the area
above Shorecliffs Golf Course vowed to
attend the supervisors meeting to pro-
test-even though no public heating 11
planned. \
Residents in the area all said they were
angry over "paying higb taxes on es·
pensive, new homes and being singled out
to have garbage lrucks and tractor·
trailert roaring by day and night."
Dr. Ralph Graham, the head of the
group developing San Clemente General
Hospital, learned of the dump proposals
from a DAILY PILOT reporter
Thursday. His only response was a mo-
ment of silence followed by, "And here
we're building a master-planned hospital
on a street we thought would be nl~1nd
qu.iet."
San Clemente Councilman Thomas
O'Keefe . who represe nt!!!, Jn a sense,
residents of the affected area also was
concerned over the choice of Los Mares.
"We already get hundreds of pounds of
CresWte material on our beache1 after
rains (the road.!lide debris is carried to
the sea in nood control channels)," he
said.
"Now It loob like our roads and
beaches will be covered with the area's
trash as well."
San Clemente's other councilmen all In-
dicated mixed emotions aboul tHe
site-eooctmed DOl llO much with the
selection of the acreage 111 with the
choice of access.
"You Ju.st can't trmt the county
somelitnef, '• uid Mayor Walter Evans.
''They might promile lo bulkl lhe
Ortega road 'lt the same time and ease
tilt traff ic on Lot Mares. They also will
promiae. to develop the recreation area aa
they go along.
"But bow can you trust them11'
city positions will be presented to county
1upen4sors.
And already the select.ioa of Cimino
Los Mares a.s the major collector street
for the region's trash i8 creating shock.
Las Mares is a key road in the crowing
development of the north end or San
Clemente.
Within the · next year it will have the
new hospital on its flanks, along with
hoUBing and apartment developm~ts,
more major health<are facilities and
possibly some businesses.
The roadway connects to Camino de
Estrella where the region'• first major
ahoppillg cent.er will open Ila doora In
June.
The road also la 1 key to development
of IWTOU.Ddlng land in the ClpistrUO
Beach and San Clemente area.
County planners have earmarked IM
Mares as one of two prime coUector
roads. lt would link up in the middle of
the dump site to another proposed
roadway stretching out to Ortega
Highway east of San Juan Capistrano.
On those two roads, TUbblsh 'trucks and
private duinping vebicle1 would rumble
seven days a week.
County planners have stressed thal the
dump project ls a critical one because of
the rapidly filling For$ter Canyon landfill
which will be futt in September of 1972. It
lie1 in bills behind Capistrano Beach.
The nt:w one would be planned lo ac-
commodate Sl million tons of solid waste
produced by the re.s.ldents of Laguna
Beach, San Clt:mente, San J u a n
Capi!trano, Capistrano Beach, Dana
Point, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Hills,
Mission Viejo and parts or El Toro.
According to lhe federal-county aolid
waste study leading to 1he pro~. the
service area'• population by the year
2,000 would 1oar to 1bout a half-million
persons. The , population thJs spring . is
about 95,000.
The neWll of the proposed dump came
so late that San Clemente councilmen will
not have another meetblg in which to
study and act on the plaa 1n time for the
May 11 supervisors meetln1.
Instead, councilmen Wednesday agreed
to drop the matter into the laps of plan·
ning commissiont:rs for • recom·
mendation next Wednesday evening.
The City of Laguna Beach acted on the
matter. Wednesday and irudginglf •p-
provecj the project.
San Clemr:nte'1 councilmen viewed the
proposal with initial mlstrult, fearlng
that Lo8 Mares would be the only initat
collector road for the huge dump, and
that the recreation area would JK>t even
begin being developed until the landfill
was complete aomeUme near the tum of
the century.
Germany Raises Value?
Chancellor Meets With Cabinet Over Money
BONN (UPI) -The West G<rman
cabinet ii reported to have agreed today
to let the value of the Deut!chesmark
float up.ward in a move to halt the flow of
cheap dollars into the country. It wlll go
ahead whether or not France agrees.
Chancellor Willy Brandt conferred with
his cabinet all day in urgent session· to
follow up the German decision on
Wednesday to stop supporting I.ht dollar
with official purchases to keep up
Its value. Earlier Story Page 4.
Down the
M ••
·J8810D
·Trail
Joaquin School
Contract Let
EAST IRVINE -Truatees of the Sari
Joaquin Elementary SCbool Di1trict have
awarded a contract to the J. A. Campbell
Co. of Pl!ldena for the a>nstruction Gf
the new Irvine intermediate school.
'I'ht: low bid was $1,414,&65, lower than
the r:stimate anticipated by the. school'•
architect. Tbe high bid was $1,5S5,<XXI.
All bids were below the state: allowable
for the project.
e Be autle• Sought
LAKE FOREST-Girls between the
ages of 17 and 11 may enter the Miss
Lake Forest contest.
Entries are being taken al the: Beach
and Tennis Club. The winllflT will rece.iva
a trophy and a $25 savings bond.
The cont.est will take place June 1
the clubhouse. Entrants will be judged in
evening gowns. Ma y 21 is the 1ign up
deadline.
The winner will reprt:stnt the com-
munity in various functions and will ride
on the Lake Forest Doat at Angel
Stadium on June 10.
e OOP Fun.& Laul«'hed
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Sad·
dleback Valley Young Republicans have
announced that fUnd raising for the Larry
Allyn Headlee Scholastic Achivement
Fund has been launched by Walter Knott,
founder of Knoll's Berry Fann.
Knott has donated funds to cover all
the printing costs for the fund which
honors a marine geologist and cofounder
of the Young Republicans who Jo11t hi1 life'
in a submarine accident ln 1970.
An achievement aw1rd w.111 be
presented aMually to • 1tudent ln a Sad-
dleback Valley high school who has ex-
ctUed in science, particularly geologjcal
or marine aclence and who shows con-
cem for citizenship. patrk>Usm, fret
e'nterprlse and moral courage.
ConlrlbuUont can be sent to the club,
Box 124. El Toro.
e Llbrar11 Fr iend Named
SADDLESACK V AU.EV -R a Y
Coopt.r has been tlecttd to serve 11
pruldent of the Saddlehaek l'rlendi of
the Mission Viejo Ubrll')'.
All!O eled<d ...,. S.rban; Blaler. ftr1I
vice preildenl, Haul SlepbWoo, oe<Olld
vice pretident; Mary Norris, Wrd vk&
president ; Carolyn Carpent.el\-feccrd.ing
and Mike Mlcheela. , •
1ecretery, anl{Walter Neal. treasurer.
Members 1l llra• "'ii! be AUcla Cooper
The cabblet taid dovm the tnsttUctions
that Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and
economics minister Karl Sch:iller w i 11
take to a Europeantommon Matket
meeting Saturday in Brussels to seek
joint action to meet the crisis. The plight
of the dollar and the rush to buy.gold has
touched off one of the worst monetary
crlses in years.
Schiller has proposed that West
Germany let the mark float and seek its
own level by freeing the e1change rate
and to couple this with Internal stabill·
u.lion measures.
Conrad Ahlen, the official government
ipokesman, was questioned by ·newsmen
on tbls point.
"Did Schiller win the support of the
cabinet~" Ahlers was asked. "Yes,"
Ahlers replied.
A floating mark would seek its own
level and hopefully stop the speculation
Which brought dollars flooding in here to
buy marks.
Nickle, Dime Thieves
.fqrff..illg,-Afeter Thefts
BrokeninLagunaBeach
By BARBAllA KREIBI Cll
Of ,,,. Dtlt'f ,,..., '"'"
Laguna Bt:ach police baye cricked a •
parking: meter theft ring that involves
coastal ind inland clues over baU the
state.
Authorities claim the operation began
more than six months ago yielding "wi-
told thousands" in small change from
cities from San Diego to San Jose.
In the process of makinl tbe final ar-
rests this morning, Laguna detectivea
discovr:red that more than 100 meter1
bad been blt during the nigbt by well·
organized thieves, &perating w i t h
homemade meter keys.
Arrested Thursday in An apartment al
801 South Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, were
Charles Leon Adams, 25, and·a girl friend
Willa Dean Rotramel . 21. They were:
taken into custody by Laguna Beach
Detectives Gene Brooks, Robert Briscoe
and Carroll Bush, who had obtained ar·
rest and search warrants from the office
of the District Attorney follOwin1 their
investigation.
Authoritiefi 11akl the ring operated .at
night, lopping off parking meter heads
with pipe cullr:rs then fashioning
duplicate keys at their btadquarters. The
next night, said, police, they would empty
at least 100 meters from dusk until dawn.
Both were booked on suspicion af con-
apiracy to commit a crime, a felony
charge, and bail was set at $12,500 each.
Two other suspects in the case had
been arrested in Laguna Beach on MoJt-
day night during a stake-out of parting
meters in the 400 block of Cliff Drive.
They are David Stevan Perez, 19, 1and
Michael John Dinneen, 18, bolh of El
Monie.
Jones, Perei and Dineen were ar· "
rested in Huntington Beach Jan. 27 for
theft or a meter head. Perez and Dinnee:n
were out on bail awaiting, trial on this
cherge when they wr:re arrested Monday.
Jone1 l.! sought by Hu11Uogton Buch on a
warrant for failure to appear on the
meter theft charge.
Police said a fifth 1uspect, belle-ved to
be the leader of the meter theft ring, Is in
custody on another charge in Oreg&n ind
will be held by authoritle11 in that state on
tbe Orange County charge.
C'A>nllscated as evidence at the S&ntl
San Clemente's Chief
Returns to His Post
San Clemenle Police Chief Cllflord
Murray ofUcillly resumed b1s dutiea to.
da.r alter uncleraolng ~ ~ OUIJery
sevenl-wfeks ago m" st.-1ncen£"1
Hospital ln Los Angeles.
Murray, who made spttdy recovery
from lbe arterial bypasa 1urgery1 had .
beto workina several houn a day
recentl.v desptte ef(icial 1ickluve 1tatu1.
'
Ana apartment wire several ba1s ot
coinJ, coin wrapper•, Joe~ believed to
have come Crom parking meters, a
number of home-made key1, pipe cutters,
files and as30rted tool1 belleved to have
been used in the theft of parking meter
heads and the making of keys to open
meter coin boxes.
The coins lncludt:d a number of "Park
Free ln Laguna Beach" token••
distributed by local mr:rchants. A hasty
check of Laguna Beach meters reyealed
that they had been cleaned out again by
the meter thieves.
Recurring thefts of coins from the
parking meters over a period of almost a
year had sparked the intensive police in·
vestigation. Officer• said as much 11
$1 ,000 has been taken from Laguna
meters in a single night.
No dollar estimate of the total meter
theft operation has yet been made, but
offiicers said the thieves apparently had
meter keys for 23 cities between Mon·
terey and San Diego. Parking l&ts on the
use campus alone yielded $500 a night,
police said.
DetecUves said the keys were made by
removing, with pipe cutters, one meter
head in each city. From the lock on the
meter it was possible to make master
keys to fit all the other meters In that cl·
ly.
A neatly written !chedult: confiscated
11 evidenct U1ted the key number for
each city apd the best days to hit the
meters (just before the weekly coin
pickup).
The coin! wr:re poured from the meter
Into men's &oek&, several of which il&o
were found with the conliscated tools.
Joaquin Trustee
Seated, 'Quits'
The newest trustee of the San Joaquin
Eltmcntary School Diltrict wu sworn In
and quit all in the 1ame night.
Pre1ton Howell, who will fill the unu:·
pired tenn ·of Edward Berry of Mission
Viejo who reaigned, war sworn in
Wednetday by Superlnlendent ll>lpll
Oates.
,And one of hl1 first actions wu to
terminate the employment of a aubsututt
teachtr-PN!ston Howtll.
"I'd prtfer to resign.'' he quipped.
The rt1t of the board accepted his
rest&nation II i:n empJoye and Wt:lcomed
him II I "boa."
H°"ell, 48, ~ mlniotar of th< Ftr11I S.p-
tl&T Chureh of MJlslon VlejO. Rt rtsJcfei
at 26495 Naccome ln that community.
He J1 married and hu .alx cl'Uldren.
Howell holds an eltmentary and secon-
dary teaching credential end once 1trvtd
aa 1,prtnclpal In 1prlv1te ,IChooJ.
•
Ahlt:rl 1aid Brandt, at the cabinet
meeting today, told Scheel and Schiller to
get joint action by the Iii: members of
the Commog _.Markel..=-West Gennany,
France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands
and Lu1t:mbourg. But he made It clear
GermaJ'!Y would act a1one If France con-
tinut:d to balk.
"We aim for community approval or at
least tolerance of any measures the
-Gennan government might havt to
take," Ahlers said.
* * * U.S. Removes
China Trade
Restrictions
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Unlled
$t.tte1 removed all resttlcUons on dollar
transactions with lied China today as a
first step to opening up trade between the
two nations.
· Treaswy Secretary John B. Connally
Issued a license· aUoWing U.S.
businessmen and hanks to transact
bu.line!! wlth the Communist government
and ita ciliunl wing dollars or dollar ln-
1.trument.s. Previowly there had been a
complete prohibiUon against a u c h
transactions.
"'D\ls is the trel!Ury's first step in Im·
plemt:nting Presldt:nt Nixon's decision on
April 14 to rela:r financial and com·
mercial control1 .wlth respect to mainland
China,·· a trr:asury statement said.
"Treasury ia now consulllng with the
Departments of State and Commerct and
other interested agenclei. on relaxi11g con·
trols on imports: of goodl from China."
The commercial move came after the
Red Chinese it1vited American table ten-
nis players to tour mainland China last
month.
The lifting of the dollar restriction
would also apply to fo'relgn governments
and bwinessmt:n, the treasury 11ald.
The State Depart~ent 1aid a list of
Items that would be allowed ~trading
with Red China was "under high level
review" and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department iipokesman, Charles
Bray, was asked lf there had been any in·
dlcati0Jl5 the Cllinese regime would res-
pond to the tf.S. tr1de overtures.
"I don't know that there are,'' he
replied. "I wume that any rt:action
would await their opportun.Jty to look it
the delai!J."
"
0r .... Coast
Weat•er
Don"t let· thltt 1unny 1pell fool
you; it looks like raJn aaalo tonight
and possjbly Saturday. But· clear
1kle1 should ·take over this weekend
with lemperahjru In the high ~.
INSmE TGDA l'
Art bv studcntr o/ the Ntta-
port.Meso School District will bs
ora di.spla11 nt:t Wttk at F01hion
Island. For 11 prcvitw of tht
1how ltt toda'°''' Weektndcr. ... ,"" " C•Uf9nlle P Clttdllllf U. 1
l•t.m..f ,. ...
Ctmkt :n
• Crw1-"I :at °"" ........ " l•tttrt•I ,... • 'llf•-11•11 Hef9K... 11
.\ftll L.-n 11
Mal"'9ll ' Mrthn »·•
Mt!Mll ,.... ti .. ~"'"' ... Or-C-" It ...,_ ....
'""" 1NI jJtClt ......... 11-11 ,..,..,.. . -" .. W•tMr I ..._.. H-It.tr .., .. ,._ ... -....
\
•
'? DA ILY PILOT SC rlid.,, M.11 r. 19n
lS Felo•ay Counts
Hartelius Back
In County Court
By TOM BARLEY
Of .... O•lly ,1191 IT•ff
Or, Ebbe Hartelius. cleartd by a Su •.
perior Court jury just one month ago on
ar.901 and fraud char&es. was back be--
fore the 11rne judge to plead inno-
cent to IS retony counts contained Jn a
slill·secret Orange County Grand Jury
jndlctment .
Judge James F. Judge delayed the
Corona de! Mar physician's arraignment
to May 18 and ordered Hartelius, 50 to
post 1.1.000 ball.
He denied a plea that the defendaut be
freed on hil peraonaJ pledge to return.
Harteliu1 ii accused in the new indict-
ment of grand theft, bribery and the 1ub-
mission ol fraudulent claims to iaaurance
companies. None of the charges wu filtd
111inst blm during h11 recent trial, but
aeveral, parUcularly bribery, were dis-
cuued durln1 lhe four-week court 1eJ.
alon.
Judie Judge ordered the po 1 t Jn r
oI a bond after hearing Deputy Dittrict
Attorney Al Novick claim tha t Hartelius
planned to flee the state ''possibly to
Denm1rk or AJaska."
Hartelius, l''hoU new home ls at 402
Magnolia SI ., Costa tt1esa, reminded the
j u dge that he has lived in the
United States for %1 years since his ar·
rival here from De nmark.
Defe.1:11e attorney Tom ReiUy asked
Judge Judge to recognize that hls client
hid substan tial property Interests and a
practice in Orange County 8Rd was "nev•
er tardy once dur ing his four-week trial.''
Harteliw was cleared in that trial after
two daya: of dellbera!lon of charges that
N arranged the bumlng of his affice.!I at
2.145 E. Coast Highway a" April 9, 1970.
It was also unaucceufully alleged that
he had earliu faked the theft of his car
and /iled a fra udulent claim ag,alnst the
in!urance company to cover the loss.
Prosecution witness Jim Blevins, a
brother of Hartellus' blo11de mistress,
testified during the trial that he set the
fire on HarteliUJ' inrtructions and helped
the doctor to steal hi!1 own car.
Blevins allo alleged in testimony that
the physician bribed him to leave the
state wht• inve1tigation into both. crimes
intensified.
"Hartellus, white and lhaken by the
Grand Jury indictment, an gr i I y re-.
fused to comment to newsmea on the new
charges.
HST: No Medal
'Didn't Earn It,' Says Truma1i
WASFllNGTON (AP ) -Former Pres!· members who had introduced bills and
dent Harry S Truman has told Congress resolufions fo present the former
he will not Ketpt the Medal of Honor -DemocraUc Preiident with the medal in
saylnl: lhe medal is for combat valor and @nnectlon with biJ 87th birthday Satur·
he doesn't de.serve Jt, day.
O'le Get,s Mtul ,
Thwf Yumps
SUMNER, Wuh. • (UPI)
Somebody lpJ>lttlltlY look Ole
Noliooo ,i ~ WGnl ,_ tho burly bilir-...,..i to gel the culprit wbo
toro ·VP bll l'Off blllhtl and
Japanese cherry trees.
Neilson had planted the bushes
and cherry trees around his park-
ing Jot as his contribution to
Summer's urban renewal program.
He came to work recently to find
the bushea and trees gone. Neilson
vowed then to "go alter" the van-
dal wllh bis rolling pin.
Thursday when Neilson showed
up to work he found the rose blllhes
and cherry trees carefully
replanted, watered and fertilized.
Tricia Names
Bridal Party
For Wedding
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nii:on
has picked her sister, two of htr cousins,
and the sister of the bridegroom to be the
members af her bridal party for the
White House wedding June 12.
Jullt Nixon Eisenhower will be matroo
of honor.
Bridegroom Ed cox's sister, Mary Ann
Cox, 25, who is graduating this monlh
from Yale's school of architecture, will
be the bridesmaid.
And aerving: u junior bridelmaidl will
be two young cousins, Amelie. 13, and
Elizabeth, 11, Nixon, the daughters of the
pre sident's youngest brother, Edward
Nixon of Seattlt, Wash.
"To deviate by glvln1 tt for an~y_.!otlle~"'.'-~Roo•"QUldl'lalicl on!oted..l'rwnan_had often aaUl jn
'==---1rt<uon. leuens and-dllotes-fts tfue presenting the medal to combat heroes
llllftl/lcance," 'n'uman wrote in a letter th.at he would rather have it hlmaell lhan
Press secretJry Constance Stuart said
-1he groomnnen-far the wedding--w:lll be
announced shartly.
l
read on the House floor Thuraday. be President -but was now s.11ying he
"Also. It would detract rrom l.hoae who would not aceepl It without de.serving it
have ·rteeived the award because of their for its intended COmbitt recognltlan.
combat service. · The Senate, meanwhile, passed a
"Thanks," Truman'1 Jettu concluded, resoluUon e1tendin1 best wishes :o
"but I will not •ccept ' Consre1slonaJ Truman.
Medal of Honor." The resolufion ~'as introduced by Sen.
Truman's letter was lo Rep. William J. Stuart Symington (0-Mo .). and pwed by
Randall (D· Mo.), one of J4 House voice vote without opposition.
lWlrite House Hotly Denies
'
Late 1972 Pullout Date
WASHING TON (AP) -The White
HoUM firmly denied Thurlday a report
attributed lo military sources In Vietnam
that November 1971 has been aet as a
fixed date !or total withdrawal of V.S.
troops from Vietnam.
Preas secrelary Ronald L. Ziegler .said
wboever the source al the report was
would not hive been aware er President
Nixon's thinking and was "juat speaklna:
from a foundation or total lack of
knowledge." ....
Zitaler said he had no idea of who tha
source ml&ht be but be added even more
firmly that the Individual was "speaking
from a base of absolutely no knowledge
at all ."
The presidential spokesman reiterated
what Nixon haa said: th•t U.S. troops in
Vietnam will be reduced to • total af
1&4,000 by Dec. 1 and lbat the Pre•ldent
would make another asseasment cf the
1itu1tlon and announce his decl1ion1
re1ardln1 any further troop withdrawals by Nov. 15.
At the State Dep11rtment. officials ~au
tloned that no one short of President Nix·
OIANll COAIT
DAILY PILOT
OUJrfG;! c,oAST ,U.LISHJNI) COMl'AHY
aeMrt N. w,.4
,,...., """ htllllW
J •• 11 a. c.,1.,..
\'kl ,,.lfeM """ ~-1 MtfltlW ,
Tiltfll•• IC1el'il
•• 11 ..
n ...... A. M11,,1r.r~•
Mtn~lltt f d"l!r
Ch•rlt1 H. Lff• l ich11i '· Nill Aul1lt"I M....,lnt Etllll"•
lat••• ..... Offke
212 For11t J<.,.•~u• M~ilint •clclre111 r.O. l o••••. !2612
s ... c~OHk•
on himnlf has any accurale idea of what
the troop level would be in November,
1172.
A projecUon of the present rate of U.!.
withdrawals from Vlelz11m would bring
tha nwnber down W 1$,000 by that date.
May Day Tribe
Pro1nises More
DC Protesting
WASHmGTON (UPI) -lleclarin1 tbol
their .. 1prin1 offensive" to ahut do\\11 the
nation'• capital was ju1t a "wannup,''
antiwar 1ctivlats today be1an preparing I
ntW round of prote1ta this tummer.
1'Jf Richard Ni1on thinks this week w11
hot,'' spokesman Rennie Davis said
Thursday, "wait unlil next time ; this was
only a wannup."
--Before ·the-leaders of the May Day lrlbe
and the People's Coa\!Uon for Peace and
Justice met to plan • new 1"0Ulld cf ac-
tivities, the Justice Oe1>1rtment Thuraday
sald It would emp1:nel a erand jury to In·
\'etUgate a possible conspiracy to incite
rlota.
Deputy Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst 8ald the grand jury would be
formed after Davis and John R. Froines
appeared at • prellmJnary bearing M•y
1.'I.
Davis, Frolnes and Abbie Hoffman,
who w1s arrested In New York City, were
the most frequent spokesmen for the ll
day1 of anUwar prote!!lts.
Hoff man 1aid Tburaday nflht In
.Newark, N.J., th11I the grand jury will in· 'Cmt up to 50 people.
The \Vhite House provided photographs
of "Amy" and "Belh" Nixan as they pos-
ed on a recent visit to the \Vbite House,
wearing some of Tricia"s fonnal gowns
and practicing walking down the grand
staircase in the White House.
The two girls came with their parents
for a While House visit early in Arp il.
Mrs. Stuart said !hey had a "fun af-
ternoon" dreuing up in Tricia'• clothes
and practicing: for the weddlng. Beth
wore a gro"'·n Tricia used when she was
queen or the Azalea Festival in Norfolk,
Va., In April 1969. And A.my practiced in
the drtu Trtci1 wort at a ma1ked ball
she gave in the \VhJte Houst ·on
Hallov.·e'en 1969.
The wedding invitations to 300 or 400
euests will go out next Monday, May 10.
Pendleton Tour
Slated Saturday
Members and friends or S • n
Clemente's Hospitality Center {or
gervicemen are ~·elcome to take a guided
tour of Camp Pendleton next "''etk.
1'he tour will include a noon meal at
the b1se mw hall for a cost of llO cents
to each guest. 'Mle Junchecn tab U the on·
ty e1pense requited durin& the day-long
excursion.
Transpo rtation will be provided free by
the Marine Corps.
Reservations ~·ill' be. accepted at the
center until Saturday.
1'he excursion itself will begin at 8:30
1.m. in front af the center •t 101 N. El
Camino Real on May 13.
Ed Ferrone is in charge of the event.
More information ii available by callin1
him 11 ~12-1792.
Police Clear 2
Of Theft Count
Newpart Beach police said today •
yaun1 couple apprehended Tuesday In
connection with an alleged burglary 1t-
tempt at the Orange Coast YMCA had
nothing whatsoever to do with the crime,
The pair, identified as Kenneth M.
Frederick, 22, of 207 Abalone Street,
Newport Beac.h, and Chrbty Johnson, 2:1,
of 118 Palm Stree t, Huntington Beach,
were released at 4 p.m. that day without
charges placed aga ins t them.
A story in Wednesday's 0 a I 1 y Pilot
quoted police as saying both had been
charged v.'ith burglary. The Daily Pilot
regretl the error.
lOS North fJ C1Mln• R••I, !2672
o .... °""" (_or.I• M-1 m W•I •• ,. S!rloet .,,,.,..., IN<ll~ U» H._1 1w: ... m
h...;tl,.. JUdll 1111S ._,. liovltY•rf
Three Countians Killed
In ~utiJmobile Mishaps
Tbree Oranae County men wtrt
nported today u traffic accident vlct1m1
by the coroner's arfice. The dead:
-Takaml P'aJtw1r1, is, of the Boshard
labor camp, P'ounUlln VaUty.
-Billy O. Afefttert, 38, cf 5702
Trailvlew Plaet, Yorbl 1.lnd1.
-Joie Joll111 Fenaade11 S3, or 1404 N.
King SI .. Santa Ana.
Westminster police said Fujiwara wa•
dead on arrlva1 at Westmintter Com-
munity Hotpltal Thurtday night after the
car In which he WQ riding collided ·wttb •
center divider tta:ht tt•ndard 1t Bolla
Avenue and Ward Street Jn Wtstminsler.
Driver of tht whlcle Mleutl Mende1,
66, Santi Ana, was ttrlot11ly Injured, cf.
ficerr said.
Afelners was killed early this morning
when his car went aut of control and
overtU111ed on the San Diego Freeway
one half mile sou th of El Toro Road. He.
dted at t:IO a.m. al Soutb Coast Com·
munlty Hospttal.
Fernandez, ""ho police described as an
out p1Uent from the ment•I health ward
Jn Or8nge County Mf!dlcal Center, died ~r
injuries reCilfvtd Tbursd1y mominR when
he jumped off the Main Street overpasi
onto the S8nl.3 Ana Fretway.
Officers !J:tld he was ~:truck by 1t 1e1st
CM c•r. He .uffered multiple fr1cture1
and Internal lnjurtes and died at Sant•
Ana Community Hoipltal.
12 Percent
'
DroP. Seen
In Aerospace
WASHINGTON (AP) -Employment ia
the aerospace Industry will decline
almost 12 percent during 1971, the
Aeroepace Indmtries Association said to-
day.
Karl G. Harr Jr., AIA president, uld
the tnduslry is gravely concerned 1t the
continuing loss of hJghty skilled person-
nel, accelerated by government can·
cellatian of the supersonic transport pro-
gram.
But, he said. this year's tstimated
decline is much less than the 17*n percent
jab loss last year.
"The downward trend cf the put
several years appears to be leveling off,"
Harr said. "This lench support to cur es~
pectalions that 1972 will see a revers.al of
the declining e_mplayment trends e1·
perlenced during the past three years."
The AJA forecasts the industry's
payroll will 11hrlnk by the year's end to
9'3,000 persons, the fint drop below one
mllllon since record keeping began in
!!!Ml.
"During the three year periad 1969 to
1971. the industry has been forced to
release nearly half a million people, or
slightly more than one third of its labor
force." HaJT said. "Despite this .
aerospace continues to be the largest
manufacturing employer.''
ScienUsts and engineers are ei:pected
to experience the smallest decline, 9.6
percent, lo an end of the year total of
151,000 compared with a 1967 peak of
2J5,000.
Weatherman Sees
Clearing Skies
A 50-50 chance of sho\vers or lhun--
dershowers tonight will diminish to a 20
percent probability farly Saturday as an
on -again, alt • again low pressure
syslell'lo moves Inland /rom the Orange
Coast.
The National Weather Service says
weekend weather for Or ange Coast ciUeJ
should get wanner and c I e a r e r •
Saturday's higtt will be around 68 degrees
along the coast under partly cloudy skies-.
Sunday the high will be in the low 70s
under clear 1ll.ie1.
\Yinds along the coas-t will be l\•esterly
in the afternoons ranging from 10 to 20
knots.
The low pre1sure system that has
rt.11ted over the area for the ·past Jew
days Is expected to move on to 30uthern
Nevada and Utah improving the Orange
Coast weather outlook.
Building \Vages lJ p
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Bureau ef
Labor Statistics said today the average
hourly "'ages of union construction
workers in larger urban areas rose 12.3
percent during the 12 mootba ended April
t.
COMMUNITY LEADER WORKS WITH SCOUTS IN LAGUNA
Hayden Ringer Receives Outstanding Servi ce Award
Firm Honors Laguna Man
For Community Se1·vice
A Laguna Beach man has been cited by
Ford Mot.or Co. for out.standing com·
rnunHy 1ervice.
Hayden N. Ringer of 366 Heather Pl ace
Court Orders
Sanity Hearing
A sanity hearing "'as ardered today Jn
Orange County Superior Court for a
Capistrano Beach man ruled to be insane
six yea rs ago after he allegedly killed his
father \\'Ith a butcher knife.
J udge James F. Judge accepted the
plea of innocen~ and Innocent by reason
of insanity filed by Richard Glenn
C"rorman llT, 28. of 35036 Camino
Capistrano and ordered the defendant to
ret urn to his courtroom June Z3 for sani·
ly proceedings.
Gorman \•1as recently returned from
Atascadero SI.ate HOspltal as sane and
able to face 1he murder charges set aside
by his commitment to the facility in 1965.
Gonnan was accused of the killing on
Oct. 8. 1965 of Richard Glenn Gorman
Sr .• \Vhose body we!I fou'1d on the kitchen
floor of the family home,
is program marketing manager ln Philc.o
Ford Corp. Aeronutronic Div i a Ion,
Newport Beach.
r1e \Vas an1ong fi ve Orange County
employes of the firm to be commended
for community service in 1970. The group
'~:ill be honored al an a\vards banquet
Thursda y, f\1ay 13.
Ringer \Vas selected for service to
scouting and his con1munity of Laguna
Beach. a company spokesman said.
He is scoutmaster of Troop 35 and has
received the Order o( ~1erlt and Silver
Beaver Award -two of the highest
a~·ards to scouting volunteers.
Ringer Is an elde r In the Community
Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach
and a member of lhe Citizens Town Plan-
ning Association.
He also ~s a member of the Sierra Club,
the Audubon Society, the \Vildernesa
Society and the National Parks Associa·
lion.
Officers of the Orange C.ounty Grand
Jury comprised the panel of judges mak·
ing the community service award selec-
tions.
Upholstery Sale!
.,
SLllHR SDfA
SALi PRICED
STARTIN• AT
Our uphohtery tile continu es fe1turin9 a l•rge t•l•c·
t ion of qu1 lity 1of•1 •nd ch1ir1 at exc1ption•I pric•1.
Sele itel'fts elso include this handsome sleeper·sofe •+
• starting pric1 of $239. Many floor samples in Hercu.
Ion. · ·
$239
~_..~~--:-::"".'"......_ __ '."'.'""." __ ~~~~~~~~~~-~
DEALERS F.OR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE
N!WPORT BEACH
1727 W1Stcllfl Dr., 642·2050
OPEN fRIDAY 'TIL 9
NIWPOIT STOii or•H PllDAY 'Tll'
Proft11 iona ._ lnttrlor
Dt1l9ntr1 Avall•bla -AID
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Coast Hwy.
Phone: 494-4551
Phe11e Tell "-M•tt •' at-.. C.•ttty-J4t.12•J
~
i
7
i
•
Lag1111a Beaeh . Today91 Final
N.Y. Steeks
VOL. 64, NO. 109, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
Special
By PA1111CK BOYLE
Of .. DAllJ 1"1191 ll•tf
for 14 Laguna Stach school students,
1n eduealion is a great deaJ more than
climbing on the yeUow bus every mornipg
to 10 and learn the three R's.
In learning these basic subjects, these
y()ung.sten are also overcoming han-
<licaps which several years ago Would
have prevented them rrom even at·
tending school.
These students. ranglng from first to
12th grade, are part of lhe special skills
Skills
program In the schoob, which may seem
somewhat of a misnomer.
lt is the select group of teachen the
name should apply to, for they possess
the special faculties to help these
children overcome their problems.
Speaking at Tuesday's school board
meeting, Mrs. Pat Nunnikhoven, director
or the program , described the learning
problems which these teachers are train·
ed to cope with.
Although some of the youngsters suffer
from physical handicaps which affect
Segal Se~luded
'Love Story' Aut1i.oi SOunds Sorry
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) -
Erich Segal, the Yale University
professor of classics who rose tn
fame and fortune by authoring
"Lllve Slory ," says he has had it
with the public lire.
··1 am going inlo hiding." Segal
said Thursday.
Segal, 34, v.·ho has given lec tures.
appeared on television talk shows
and had numerous magazine and
newspaper articles writte n about
him sinct the success of his book
and a moViie of the same liU&. .said
•·t am relumin& to the acholarly
life."
Segal sllid he was "sick of
reading about Erich . stgal, the
monster," and of meeting airline
gtewarde!lses who slip him their
ap artment keys and believe love
means "never having to say you
are sorr y."
Segal said he was leaving Yale,
"Volith the blessings of the universi-
ty," at the end of the current
semester,
"I can't tell you where I am
going ," Segal said, ''but I imagine
wherever I go, it will be alnne. I
hope."
~. ' .
Ul"I TtlffM!el
SICK OF SUCCESS
Y1le'1 Profe1.or S.g1I
Orange County Jobles s
Jumps to Eight Percent
Unemployment ln Orange County
Jumped five-tenths of. a percent from
March to April to a seuonally 11djusted
jobless rale of a pe"tcenl, the state
Department or Human Re I o u r c e I
Development said today.
Al though 488,100 persons had jobs in
Orange: County during April, representing
.an increase: of 4.400, the increased
number of employed persons was below
what is normal for this time or year, ac-
cording to Peler Force o( the Santa Ana
research and atatistics section of HRO.
In March of this year there were 41 ,400
persons without jobs compared to the
38,400 who wert jobleM in April.
Jobs in construction rose by 600 in
April. Force said. an amount less: Ulan
expected. Further, 500 aerospace: jobs
Oruge Cout
Weather
Oon'L let this , sunny 1peU fool
you ; it Joob like rain again tonight
and possibly Saturday. But clear
skies should take over this weekend
wilh temperatures in the high 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
' Art by .!ludents of the Ne w-
port·Mesa School District w1U be
oh. di.!play next week at Fashion
lslttnd . f or a preview of the
1how .!et today'• Weekender.
... ,lllt ti
C1/l!oHtlt '
Cllff'""' U• 1 CllulftM 11·~
Ct111k• Jt c ..... ""' n Dtlltl N91k.. It
••1'*"1•1 ''" • ll'ln111Ct ll•ll ~K-11
..... l.tl!f.... 1J
11\l tllln •
M11tv11 """"' 11 "''""°''' N-. ... Or"1it C-IJ U
llt•IAllflllfl :U.H ,...,. llMt
SI«' 11111•-ttt 11·11
Ttltvl.11911 • ™'"" ti·" WM!Mr 4 W-•'• lollWt 11-U WtrN Nfwt t4
WIMeMt' tJ."
Mtvl" 11·2'
were lost due to layoffs in April in
Orange County.
The Orange County unemployment
statistics paralleled those for Cali(ornia
for the same period. For the state, the
adjusted jobless rate in April was 7.4 per-
cent. The totaJ number of unemployed
persons, however, dropped 81,000 to
595,000 alid the number of persons work-
ing at some job climbed 51,000 to 7.99
million.
The 1971 unemploy ment rates for
Orange: County continue to be higher than
in previous years. In March 1970 there
were 25,000 jobless for a rate 1of 4.8 per-
cent that climbed to 5.2 percent in April
1970 when 23,800 were without employ-
menL
In 1969, the March rate of 3.8
represented 18,400 jobless compared with
an April rate that year of 3.7 percent
representing 16,100 jobless.
Alfred W. Jones
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday for Laguna Hill!! re!lident Alfred
W. J ones. a native Californian and
retired machanic wbo died Thursday at
St. Vincent 's Hospilal In Los Angeles. He
wa s 75.
The services will be conducted at
Pacific View Chapel in Corona de! Mar
by Dr. Edward Caldwell of the LeiJure
World Masonic Club. Interment will
follow at Pacific View Memorial Park.
Mr. Jones, who IJved al 249.!C Calle
Ara~on, ls survived by his wife,
Christina; ' daughter, Mrs. Kathleen
Young of Newport Beach and a brother,
Clyde of Laguna Hill!!.
The family suggests that memorials be
made in the form of contM bulions to the
Shriner!! Crippled Childrens Hospital or
to any other charity.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIPAY, MAY 7, 1971 .TEN CENTS
Program Aids Handicapped
their learning .tlitity -auch u cerebral
palsy or epilepsy -Mrs. Nunnikboven
said most educationally handicapped
students are no different in appearance
lhan their cl88!1mates. Some have what
she called developmental deficiencies.
meaning they are not ready to learn.
"The child tries and want! to learn,"
she said, "'bot just does not make ll" She
likened this difficulty to. the devel opment
of a premature baby. Other studenti may
have behavioral problems, wh ich would
lead them to disrupt a class to &ain al·
tention after not being able. to de well
academically.
She said the special skills program !!I
''integrated." The student at t t n d 1
regular clas.!tS along with cluses desicn-
e:d to overcome his special problem. such
as individual tutoring for a slo' reader.
''Our goal ls to get the child back into.
the regular class program." she noted,
''and this integraUon provides for a bet·
ter transUion."
One 1pecial 1k.ill!I teacher, Mrs. Chris.
Wyman, told lhe board lhi.s integraUon of
•
I
the reeular and special program also
takes away the stigma of being educa-
tionally handicapped . Mrs. Wyman, who
teaches at 'Ibp or the World Elementary
School, said many youngsters' .learning
difficulties are related to visual percep-
tion.
"A studf'Jll may recognize a triangle in
one: position," she told the school board,
"but ii the object were moved to another
position. it would not be recognized as a
triangle." Mrs. Wyman noted that even
the games and the art projects &Nigned
to the students are aeademk:ally geared,
IO that the: ypung1ten ire constantJy im-
proving their learning ability.
A special 1kills teacher. :rt. the high
school, Miss Susan· November, told the
board many of the problems 1he handled
were related to drug abuse. She aaid that
after 5e.s5ions of counseUng and academic
help, heavy drug users hBd sUljlped µsing
narcctica and were making .Waight A'I
in school.
"We are salv8'ing 1tudu~ who tradi-
tionally fail ·and drop out o( bi&h acbool ,'0
Miss November uid •
e Ill .......... rac e
W.Germ~y
May Raise--.
'
Own Money
BONN (UPI ) -The WeJt German
cabinet is reported to have: agreed toda)'
to let the value: of the Deutschesmark
nOat upward in a move to halt the now ct
cheap dollars into the country. Jl will go
abe:ad whether or not, France a~.
.Clw>Ctlfor. 'iilb' ll!"*'<F.O"I•~ .-
hi.S cabinet all day bl 'j0'1ent ..... to
follow up the German decWon en
Wednesday 'to atop avpporting the dcll1r
wiUi official purchases to • keep up
!IA value. Etl'IJe!' Story Paae 4.
The cabinet laid down tflt instructions
that Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and
economics minister Karl Schiller w 111
take to a European Common Market
meeting Saturday in Bruasels to seek
joint action to meet the crisis. The plight
of the dollar and the ruah to buy gold haa
touched off one of lhe worst monetary
crises in years.
Schiller has proposed that West
Germany let the mark noat and aeek its
own le•el by freeing the exchange: rate
and to couple this with internal stabtli·
zation measures.
Con rad Ahlers, the of£ic:ial government
spokesman, was questioned by newsmen
on this point.
"Did Schiller win the support of the
cabinet?" Ahlers wa!I asked. "Yt!,"
Ahlers replied.
A floating mark would seek its own
level and hopefully stop the apeculation
which brought dollars flooding in here to
buy marks.
Ahlers said Brandt, al the cabinet
meeting today, told Scheel and Schiller to
(let joint action by the six members of
the Common Ma rke t -West Germany,
France, Jtaly, Belgium, the Netherland!
and Luxembourg. But he made it clear
Germany would act alone if France con·
tinued to balk. .
"We aim for community approval or al
least tolerance o! any meuure!I the
German government might have to
take," Ahlers 1aid.
* * *
···-' . ' . DAILY l"ILOT 11111 , .....
LAGUNA DETECTIVE CARROLL BUSH T-AKES INVENTORY.
Coins, Keys, Pipe Cutter, Flies ind Sox For Goin1
Laguna Council Delays
'Truth in Selling' Law
The Laguna Beach City Council th is
week postponed action on a pro_POsed
''truth Jn se Uing" ordinance affecting
sales of residential-property pendin& coo--
ferences with lhe Board of Realtors.
The ordinaDCe would require sellers of
residential properties' to provide buyer!!
with building department records on each
property aold.
These would include zonini changes
variances obtained, petmit.s Issued and a
statement as to -whether any non·
conforming use exist.s on lhe property,
In a letter to the council, Board O{
Realtors president Robert Turner pro-
posed that auch information should be
provided on a voJuntary, rather than
compuJsory basis and asked that a coun-
cil committee be named to discuss th~
matter.
U.S. Lifts All Dollar
Councilman Roy Holm commented,
"That would take lhe teeth out of the
ordinance. In three years on the council I
have seen many instance..s where an
owner has had to seek a variance
because he was unaware of restrictions
existing on property he bad bought in
Laguna." Curbs for China Trade
WASffiNGTON (UPI ) -The Unlled
States removed all restrictiorus on dollal'
transactlol'll with :Red China today 11 •
first step to opening.up trade between the
two nations.
Treasury Secretary John B. Connally
issued a license allowing U . S .
businessmen Ind banks to transact.
b1J11iness with the Communist g.overnment
and ill citizens using dell a rs pr de liar In-
struments. Previously there had been a
complete prohibition against a u c h
transactions.
'''ntis Is the treasury's fin:t step In Im·
plementin& President Nil:on'1 decision on
April lf to relax (inlndal and com·
me.rclal controls with rtSpect to m1inland
China,·: • treasury l<.trDtllt said.
"Tr•Uti.l.Y IJ """ ~ wllh tho Departm .. 1,1of51'14~ Comm.,... •nd
other intere!lted ageoC!el en relaxh11 con-
trols on imports of aooda from China ."
The commercial m6ve came after the
Red Chinese invited American tablf ten-
nis players to tour mainland China last
month.
The lifting of the dolla:r restrlction
• •
would also apply to foreign government!:
and businessmen, the: treasury a.aid.
The State Department said a list of
Items that would be allowed in trading
with Red China was '~undtr higt> level
review" and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department spokesman, Charles
Bray. wa!I asked if there haa been any in·
dlc:ations tht Chinese regime: would re!-
pond to the: U.S. trade ovtttures.
"I doo't know that there art," he
replied. "I asaume that any reaction
would awall their opportunity to loot at
the details."
Part· ·of tne· new policy entails
ponn1'sk>n by lhe transportation. depart•
mf:nt for· U.S. airlines to carty cargo
disllned ror lied China.
They Will not be allowed to deliver
cargo directly to Red Chlria. only to 1
lransshl~t point, a apokesman 1ald:
Flying Tiger airlines la \ht ·maior
American air Car10 airline now tervlna:
lh1 Orient.
• t '
Holm said he would favor a meeting
with the realtors however.
CouncilrJ\an Edward Lorr aaki he
agreed with HOim as to lhe necessity of
the ordlnance. ''l don't think it's the part
of government to step in and force such a
revelation unless, as in this case, it's cos-
ting the taxpayers money as people ap-
peal for relief.'' he e.1plal1ed.
Holm and councilman Peter Ostrander
were named to confer with the real tors.
Laguna Post to Show
Pilgrimage Photos
A ll'<Ci•I show of slldes depictlna lhe
rtctnt ,Easter pllirlm1ge to Deai.tr Valley
wjil bt shown at• o'clock 10Dlg/lt.~I the ,
Laguna Beach Voluntttr Post, 334.fort$t
Ave.
The 75 slides, t111ken by ' arUst Dion
Wright, ahow featlval partlcipanU at the
desert community of ·Ballarat. A
ditC1111lon w!U follow lhe pt.,.nl&lJ!!n.
. '
Raid Curbs
Coin-Clout.~
·In, Laguna
By BARBARA KREIBICB
ot tM DIUr 'Ill! l ltff ,
Laguna Beach police have cracked a
parking meter theft ring that involves
coastal and inland cities over half tbe
state.
Authoritiies claim the operation began
mo~ than •ix moathl ago yiehUnc "on·
told thousands" in 1mall chan&e from
cftie1 tram San Die10 to San Jose.
• Ill ~=-.,·-final .,.. reatl rn.tnl. Laguna deteclive:s
discovered that more than 180 meters
hid been hJt durlnc the night by well-
oreanized thieve&, operating w i t b
homemade meter key1.
Arrested Thursdly in an apartment at
801 South Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, were
Charles Leon Adams, 25, and a girl friend
Willa Dean Rotramel, 21. They were
taken into custody by Laguna Beach
DetecUves Gene Brooka, Robert Briscoe
and Carroll Bush, who bad obtained at·
rest and search warrants from tbe office
of the District Attorney following their
investigation.
Authorities said the ring operated at
night, lopping off parking meter heads
Wi.Ui pipe catter1 then f a 1 h i o n I n g
duplicate keys at their headquarters. The
next night, said, police, they would empt)'
at least 100 meters from du!k until dawn.
Both were booked on ausplcion of con-
spiracy to commit a crime, a felony
charge, and bail waa set at $12,500 each .
Two other suspects in the case had
been arreated In Laguna Beach on Mon·
day night during a atake-oot of parking
meters in the 400 block of Cliff Drive.
They are David Stevan Perez, 19, and
Michael John Dinnee~. 18, both of El
Monte.
Jones, Perez and Dineen were ar-
rested in Huntington Beach Jan. 27 for
theft of a meter head. Perez and Dinneen
were out en bail aw1ltin1 trial on this
charge when·they were arrested Monday.
Jones is sought br HuJtington Beach on a
warrant for failure to appear on the
meter theft charge.
Police said a fifth suspect, believed t&
be the leader of the: meter theft ring, is in
custody on another charge in Oregon and
will be held by authoritJes in that slate on
the Orange County charge.
Confiscated ' a.a evidence at the Santa
Ana apartment were 1everal bags of
coins, coin wrappers, locks believed to
have come from 'parlttng meters. a
number or home-made lteys, pipe cutters,
fi les and assorted toola believed to have
been Used · lh the theft of parking meter
heads and the mating of keys to ope n
meter coin be:xes.
The com1 included a number of "Park
Free ,in Laguna Beach'' token s,
distributed by local merchant!. A hasty
check of Laguna Beach meters revealed
that lhey had been cleaned out again by
the meter tbleve.s.
Recurring thefts · ot mini from the
parking meters over a period of almost a
year had IP8rked the lntemlve police in.
vettig'ation. Officers &aid aa much as
$1,000 hu betn taken from Lquna
mettrs Jn I rlJWe night.
No dotlir estTmate of the total met.er
theft operation bas yet been made, but
officers 11ld the thieves apparently had
meter keys for 23 ciUea between Mon-
terey and San Dieio. Parking Iota on the
USC campua alone yielded ISllO a nlgb4
police· safd. · · ' • . . . .•
Dctectiv.,;, ta\9 lhe tey1 wide m,de by
removing, with l,J)tpe: cutters, nne mew
head in each city. From lhe tock on thtt
meter it w11s poutbte to make master
keys to fit all the other meters ln that cl·
ty.
\
'? o" IL y p IL OT ___ s.'-c ______ F.:.~.cd";:;'c..M.c"::...:7.:.• -'-I 9_n_;_
15 Felo11y Cot11ats
Hartelius Back
In County Court
By TO~I BARLEY
OI .. ~ l'llff •s.H
Dr. Ebbe Har telius. cleared by 1 Su·
perior Court jury just one month ago on
arso1 and fraud char&e1. was back be-
fore the sa~ judge to plead inoo-
cent io 15 felony counts contained in a
slill·secret Orange County Crud Jury
indictment.
Judge James F', Judge delayed the
Corona del Atar phyaiclan's arr&lgnment
lo May 18 and ordered Hartelius, 50 to
pos! 15,000 bail.
He denied a plea that the defendaut be
frttd on his personal pledge to return.
Haf\tlius is accused in ihe lleW' indict-
ment ol grand theft, bribery and the sub-
mi&sion of fraudulent claims to il'ISUrance
companies. None of the charges was filed
.against him during his recent trial, but
lif:Veral, particularly bribery, were dis-
cussed during the four-week court ses-
sion. \
Judge Judge ordered lhe po ! ting
of a i>ond after hearing Deputy District
Attorney Al Novick claim that Hal'ttlius
planned to flee the state "possibly to
Denmark or Alaska."
Hartelius, whose new home Is al 402
Magnolia St.. Co!ta Mesa, reminded the
judge that he has lived in the
United States for 21 years since hir ar·
rival here from De11mark.
Defense attorney Tom Reilly Jl!krd
Judge Judge to recognize that his client
had 11.1bstantl1l property interests 11nd a
practice in Orange County a11d was "nev·
er tardy once during his four ·week trial .''
Hartelius was cleared in that trial after
two days of deliberaUon of charges that
he arranged the burning of his offices at
2345 E, Coast Highway 011 April 9, 1970.
Jt was also uruuccessfully alleged that
he had earlier faked the t.he!t of his car
and filed a fraudulent claim against the
insurance company to cover the l0611.
Prosecution witryess Jim Blevins. a
brother of Hartel1us' bloftde mistresr.
testified during the trial that he set the
fire on Hartelius' instructions and helped
the doctor lo steal his own car.
Blevins also alleged in testimony that
the physician bribed him to leave the
state whe1t investigation Into both crimes
intensified.
Hartelius. white and shaken by the
Grand Jury indictment. an gr i I y re·
fused to comment to news.me• on the new
charges.
DST: No Medal
'Didn't Earn. It,' Says Truma1i
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Presi.
dent Harcy S Truman has told Congress
be will nol'-~ccept the Medal of Honor -
saying the medal is for combat valor and
he doesn't deserve-It.
"l'o-d.vlate-by-givtnf tt-Yor ll1Y Oliff
reason lessens and dilutes its true
a:ignificance," Thuman wrote in a lettl:!r
read on the House floor Thursday.
"Also, it would detract irom tho!e who
have received the award becaw:e or their
combat service.
"Thanks," Truman's letter concluded,
•·but I wiU not accrpt a Congressional
Medal of Honor."
Truman's letter was to Rep. Willi am J.
!WxlaU (D· Mo.), one of 14 H...,.
members who bad introduced billl and
re90lulions to present the former
De~!tic Prta:ldent with the medal in
conliecf10n with bis 17th birthday Satur·
day."
-Riiiaa---U-noted Tntman bad often said in
presenting the medal to combat heroes
that he would rather have it hinw:U than
be P_relident -but WU DOW uylng he
would not accept it without deserving it
for Jtr Int.ended combat recogntUon.
Tbe Senate, meanwhile, passed a
resolution at.ending best wisbe1 to
'I'n!nwi.
The fesolution was introduced by Sen.
SttW:I Symington (0.Mo.). Biid pwed by
voice vote without opposiUon.
~te.House~~~y Denies
Late 1972 Pullout Date
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Whlte
How:e firmly denied Thursday a report
attributed to military sources in Vietnam
that November 1971 has been set as a
fi.J:ed date for total withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Vietnam.
Pren secretary Ronald L. -Ziegler said
whoever the sourct of the report wu
wouJd not have been aware ef President
Nls:on's thinking and was 1'ju!t speatin1
from a foundation of total lack of
knowledge."
Ziegler 1aid be bad no idea of who the
source might be but be added even more
firmly that the individual was .. speaking
from 1 base of absoluteJy no knowledge
1t all.''
The prt!idential spokesman reiterated
what Nixon has said: that U.S. troops in
Vietnam will be reduced to a total of
184,000 by Dec. 1 and that the Pres.ident
would make another assessment flf the
1ltuation and announ~ his decision!
regarding any further troop withdrawals.
by Nov. 15.
At the State Department. officials cau·
tioned thal no oae short of President Nis:·
OU.lMI COAST
DAILY PILOT
()ilA1tC:i. COAST l"UILl~IMO COM'AK'f
Jt..Mrt N. W.H ,,... ............... l&W
J•clt Jt. Cllfl•• Vkll ~ .... ~.i ,,.......
n-·· 1t.,,a
t:dllW
Th1t111•1 A. M1rplii111 ,...._,,,. E•1-
C1itdet H. t..1 Jt.ic.lt1.l P. N•ll
/.MlllMI IMMl1"e EllW.
........... OfRcoe
222 for•d J, ........
~•ili119 edllt10: P.O. l&:ir; 66,, fl652 ---
on blmRU has any accunite idea of what
the. troop level would be in November,
1972 •.
A projection of the present rate of U.S.
witbdriwals from Vietnam would bring
the number down to 55,000 by !bat date.
-
May Day Tribe
Promises More
DC Protesting
'VASHlNGl'ON (UPI) -Declaring that
their "spring offensive" to shut down lhe
nation's capital was just a "warmup,"
antiwar activist.a today began preparing a
new round of protests this summer.
"If Richard Nixon thinks this week was
hot," spokesman ReMie Davis said
'111ursday, "wall until next time; this was
()fily a warmup."
Before the leaders or the T\iay Day tribe
and the People's C'ilalitlon for Peace and
Justice met to plan a new round or ac-
tivities, the Justice Department Thursday
said It would empanel a grand jury to in+
ve!l.igate a possible com:piracy to incite riots. ·
Deputy Attorney General Richard G.
JQeind.ienst said the grand jury would be
formed after Davis and John R. Froines
appeared at • preliminary hearing May
12.
Davis, Froines and Abbie Hoffman,
who was arrested in New YMk City, were
the mot~ frequent SJ)()kesmen for the 18
days of antiwar protests.
Ho!fman !aid Thursday night in
Newark, N.J" that the grand jury will m.
djd up to 50 people.
O"le Gets Mad,
Th~f Yumps
sUMiWt, Wbh. (UPI) -~ 1ppareat1Y loot Ole ~-.It liio WWII wlMn the borly iloW, ~lo Ill ·1111 tUlprU who
·-up bis .... -and Japanese cherry trees.
Neilson had planted the bu.shes
and cherry lrees around his park·
in& Jot as his conl.ribuiion to
Summer's urban renewal program.
He came to "-'Ori: recenUy to find
the bushes and trees gone. Neilson
vowed then to "go alter" the van-
dal with bis rolling pin.
'Ibursday •·hen Neilson shoftd
up to work he found the rose bushes
and cherry trees carefully
replanted, watered and fertilized.
Tricia Na1nes
Bridal Party
For Wedding
\VASH INGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
has picked her sister, two of her cousins,
and the sister of the bridegroom to be tlie
members of her bridal party for the
'Vhite House wedding June 12.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower will be matron
of honor.
Bridegroom Ed cox's !l!ter, Mary Ann
Cox. 25, who is graduating this month
fr om Yale's school of architectu.re, will
be the bridesmaid.
And serving as junior bridesmaids will
be two young aiusins, Amelie, 13, and
Elizabeth, 11, Nixon, the daughtm of the
president'• youngest brother, F..dward
Nixon of Seattle, Wash. e,.,. aecntaey Con1tan<e SbWt saiL
the groomsmen for tbe wedding will be •
8lUlOUll«d &hortly.
The White House provided photograpbs
of "Amy" and "Beth" Nlion u they pos..
fJd on a recent visit to the White House,
wearing some of Tricia'• fonnal gOW'D!
and pnicUcing walking. don the grond
staircase in the White House.
The two girls came with lhe.ir pattnts
for a White Houat visit urly in Arpt1 .
Mn. Stuart s.aid they had a ''fun af·
t«nooo" dressing up in Tricia's clothes
and practicing for the wedding. Beth
wore a grown Tricia ~ when ~ was
queen ol the Azalea Festival in Norfol~
Va., in April 15169. And Amy practiced in
the dress Tricia wore at a muted ball
she gave in the Whlt.e House on
Hallowe'en 1189.
'MM! wedding· invitations to ~ or 400
guests will io out next Mooday, May 10.
Pend"leton Tour
Sl.at.ed Saturday
Members and friends of S a n
Clemente's Hog>itality Center Io r
servicemen are welcome lo take a guided
tour of Camp Pendleton next v.•eek.
The tour will .include a noon meal al
the base me1s hall for a cost of 80 cents
to each guest. The luncheon tab is the on-
ly expense required during the day.Jong
excursion.
Transportation will be provided free l>y
the Marine Corps.
ReservatM>ns will be accepted at the
center until Saturday.
The excursion itself v.·ill begin al 8:30
n.m. in front of lhe center at 101 N. El
Camino Real on May 13.
F.d Ferrone is in charge of the event.
More information is available by calling
him at 492·5792.
Police Clear 2
Of Theft Count
Newport Beach police said today a
young couple apprehended Tuesday in
ronnection with an alleged burg\~ry at~
tempt at the Orange Coast YMCA had
nothing whatsoever to do \l•ilh the crime,
The pair, identified as Kenneth M.
Frederick, 22. of 'JJ1l Abalone Street,
Newport Beach. and Christy Johnson, 21.
or 818 Palm Street, Huntington Beach.
were released at 4 p.m. lhat day l\'ilhout
charges placed against them.
A story in Wednesday'! D a i l y Pilot
quoted police as saying both had been
charged v.·ith burglary. The Dally Pilot
regrets the error.
301 Not+li El C•111i1tO k••I. tl''T? o,....,.._
QI.Ill M-: ll:I Wttt ... S1.-• ...,_,. aeedl; ~ ~._.. ....,i......,
k.lllU1111101t ...-: VU!._,. ~
Three Countians Kil'led
Mf\..Y l"IUJT' • ....,.. ~ k _..,.. IM .. _.,.,..._ ......... ~ ... '-
.. , "' _ .... i. ............. ~· lttt:ll. ............ -.di, a.t• -. H.,.11,.,._ ~ "-"'" V•Brf, .S... C...._...I ~-.... SrN1"1'dl •• ...._ - -, ......... It....._ ................... ~.
.. .aM Wat .. t lll..,l. COIM Nona.
Te'> f7141 661 .. )11
Cl ....... A.11•1\11 I 642·1671 s. Cl •• All .......... ?
Tll11l 1ar 4'2-4411
................ e .. ·-•st 1 Trt.11111 •t+.tm
~'· 1'11. Ot'M99 (1111 " .............. c.n..,. ... -.-. lllvttnt""'" .,.,.., -· ., •lll'nrtl-•• ....... _, .. ,,,_ ...................... ......
""~-~-· s.-.. ~ ,..-.., !!Aid .. "-' .. ldl .... 0.-Mlitlo Ct........_ ~'9rl .,. an1iW a .. -~._..,, w -n 0 .1,
""""""'' 11\'""'T ••1IMtltM. t:t.2l _...,,..
In Automobile Mi-shaps
Three Orange County me.n were
reported today as traffic accident victims
by the corontr's office. The dead :
-Tatami Fajlwan, 23. of tM Bushard
labor camp, Fountain V11lley.
-BWy 0 . Meinen, 3S, of 5702
Trailvlew Place, Yorba Llnda.
-Jose Julia• Fcnudq, 33, of 1404 N.
King St., Santa Ana.
Westminster police .!!aid Fujiwara was
dead on 1rrivt1..I 11.t Westmlnster C'ilm-
munily HO!tpital Thu~•Y night after the
car ll'l which he \li•ai; riding fX>llided with•
center dlvtder llght standard at Bold
Avenue and Ward Slrttt in Westmloster •
ficel'l'I 11aid.
Meiners was \illed early this moming
whrtn his car went out of control aod
overtunted oa the San Ditgo Freeway
one hall mile south of El Toro Road. He
died at t:IO a.m. at South Coast Com-
munity Hospital.
Fernandez.. who police described as an
()Utp1Uent from the mental health ward
In Orange County Medical Center,~ or
Injuries received Thursday morning when
he jumped off the Main Street overpass
onto the Santa Ana Freeway.
Officers ·said he was •lruck by at least
one car. He suffered mulUple fra ctures
and Internal Injuries and died at S&nta
12 Percent •
.DroP. Seen
In Aerospace
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Employment !Jo
the .......,... industry will decline
almost 12 percent during 1971, the
Aerospace lndustrles1 Association said to-
day.
Karl G. Harr Jr .• AJA president, &aid
the indu&try is gravely concerned at the
continuing loss of bighly skilled person+
nel. accelerated by government cani.
cellation of the supersonic transport pro-
gram.
But. he uid, thi.9 year's estimated
decline is much lw than the 17th pereeot
job loss last year.
''The downward trtild ()( the past
several years appean to ht leveling off.'•
Harr said. ''1'his lends IUppOrt to our u:·
pectatiOIIJ that 197% will att a reversal o(
the declining employment trends u:·
perienced during the past three years."
1be AIA forecut.s the industry's
payroll will shrink by the year's end tQ
913,000 persons, the first drop below ooe
million 11ince record keeping began in
1959.
"During the three year period 1969 to
It'/'1 , the industry has been forced to
release nearly half a milion pe<iple. or
1Ughlly more than one tmrd of its labor
force." Harr said. "Despite this.
aerospace continues to be the Largest
manufacturing employer." •
Scientists and engin~ are u.peded
to experience the smallest decline, 9.6
percent, lo an end of the year total of
1.51.000 compared with a 1967 peak of
23.\,000.
W eatlierman Sees
COMMUNITY LEADER WORKS WITH SCOUTS IN LAGUNA
H.)'dtn Ringer Receivu Outst1ndin9 Service Award
Firm Honors Laguna Man
For Community Service
C"lea,_Jjl)g_5kie~~--.. -~..A.l.aiJrn-Be.ch man has been cited by-is program rnal'kelling manager-in-Philco
Ford Corp. Aeronutronic Di v j 1 Io n ,
Newport Beach.
A 50-50 chance oC zbowers or thun-
dershowen toni&ht will diminish to a 20
percent probability early Saturday aa ao
on • again, off -again low pressure
system moves ln1and from the Orange
Coast.
The National Weather Service uy1
weekend weather for Orange Coast cities
should get warmer and c I ear er.
Saturday's high will be around 68 degrees
along the coast under partly ck>udy l'lkies.
Sunday the high 'i\'ill be in the low 70s
under clear skies. _
Winds aktng the coast will be westerly
in the afternoons ranging from IO to 20
knots.
The Sow pressure system that has
re.sied over the area for the past .few
days is u:pected to move on to !Duthero
Nevada and Utah improving lhe Orange
Coast weather oatloolt.
Building Wages Up
WASl-DNGTON (UPI) -The Bureau of
Labor SlJlti!tics said today the average
hourly wages of union construction
v.·orkeA in larger urban areas rose 12.3
percent during the 12 months ended April
L
Ford Molor Co. for outrtanding c.om4
munity service.
Hayden N. Ringer of 365 Heather Place
Court Orders
Sanity Hearing
A sanity hearing was ordered today in
Orange County Superior Court for a
Capistrano Beach man ruled to be insane
sis: yea rs ago after be allegedly killed his
father with a butcher knife.
Judge James F. Judge accepted the
plea of innocent and innocent by rtason
of insanity filed by Richsrd Glenn
C'r0rmaa 111, 2!. CJ( 35036 Camino
Capistrano and ordered the defendant to
return to his eourtroom June Z3 tor sani·
ty proceedings. 1 Gonnan was recently returned from
AtascaderQ State Hospital as sane and
able to face lhe murder charges set aside
by his commitment to the facility in 1965.
Gorman was accused or the killing on
Oct. 8, 1965 of Richard Glenn Gorman
Sr., whose lx>dy was found on the kitchen
floor of the family home.
He \\'as among five Orange County
employes of the firm to be commended
for community service in 1970. The group
"''ill be honored at an award! banquet
Thursday, May 13.
Ringer y,·as selected for service to
scouting and his community or Lagunii
Beach. a company spokesman said.
He is scoutmaster or Troop ~ and has
received the Order of Merit and Silver
Beaver Ay,·ard -two of the highest
a1\'ard! to SC()Uting volunteers.
Ringer ls an elder in the Commtmity
Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach
and a IfM!mber of the Otizem Town Plan-
ning Association.
He also is a member of the Siemt Club.
the Audubon Society, the Wilderness
Society and the National Parks A!SOcia·
lion.
Officers oC the Orange County Grand
Jury C()mprised the panel or judges mak·
ing the. community servlce award selec-
tions.
Upholstery Sale!
Sl.llPll SOFA
SALE PRICED
STARTIN~ AT
$239
Our uphol1tery s•I• continues feeturing • large selec.
tion of quelity 1of11 •nd cha irs at e:ir;ceptionel prices.
Sale items al10 include th is handsome 1leeper-1of1 at
• 1t1rtin9 pri'• of $239. Meny floor 11mple1 in Hercu·
Ion.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE
NIWPOIT STOU OPOI PlllAT 11L t
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 WHlclllf Or., '42·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
Prof•s1lonaf tnt.rlor
O.slfn•r• Avall1bl1 -AID
INTERIORS
,... ... tell ,, .. M•st •f o,..,. c_,,,_...0-12'1
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Co••t Hwy.
Phone: 494-65S I
Driver .,, the vehicle Mipl Mendei.
66. Santa Ana, wu .erlously injured, of. Ana Community llospital. !----------------------------------------
-·
•
7
San ·Clemente
Ca istrano
VOL 64, NO. I Ot, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
i
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA '
'
I
.
·N.Y. Sto'eka
FRIDAY, t..IAY 7, 1971 :rEN CENTS
South Coas.t Dump Issue Big Stinl{
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of·tlte Dlllr f'li.t 111tt
The South Orange Coast produces so
much lJ'.ash and garbage that in little
mort than a year its only dump will .be
full to the brim.
f'.nd in an urgent drive to find a new
dwnp capable or handling the rubbish of
20 years, the County of Orange this week
brought gasps from some South Coast
residents and confusion to city leaders.
This news came out on Wednesday :
-Orange County proposes to buy 1,362
acres. deep in the hills behind San
Clemente to develop a dump which will
hold the rubbish of the entire South Coun-
ty region fOf' the next 20 year!!.
-The land eo1t alone is set at $3.4
million.
~nly two major accesses are pro-
posed to the large canyon area, one of
which (Camino Los Mares) already has
sti"1!d bowla of protest from homeow.,..
ers. the developers of San Clemente' first
hospital and San Clemente City coun-
cilmen.
-At the encl of 20 years, the dump will
be developed into a major county
regional park, probably wJth lakes in-
stalled as well.
The entire matter will receive ils first
airing May 18 when official South Coast
DUMP PROPOSAL RAISES SAN CLEMENTE HACKLES
Residents F11r 20 Years Dumping, Then Recreation
Surprise, Shock Spawned
By Oemente Dump Plans
The news this week of county plans to
develop 1 1,362 acre dump in the hills
above San Clemente has brought anger to
some homeowners, surprise and shock to
developers of the area's first hospital a!'d
a wave of mixed emotion from city
Cou1ity Job less
Totals T ake Big
Jump-8 Percent
Unemployment in Orange County
Jumped five-tenths of a percent . from
March ID April to a seasonally adJU!ted
jobless rate of 8 percent, the . stale
Department of Human R e e o u r c e s
Development said today.
AlthOugh 488, 100 perso~ ~ad jobs. in
Orange County during April, teP_r~nting
an increase of 4,400, the mc~d
number of employed persons was below
what ls normal for this time of year, ac.-
cording to Peter Force of the Santa Ana
research and statistics section of HRD.
In March of this year there were 41 ,400
persons without jobs compared to the
38.400 who were jobless in April.
Jobs In construction rose by 600 in
April , Force said. an amount less than
exprcted. Further, 500 aerospace . jo~s
were lost due to layoffs In April in
Orange County.
The Orange County unemployment
statistics paralleled those for Californl111
for the same period. For the state, the
adjusted jobless rate in April was 7.4 per-
cent. The total number of unemployed
persons. however, dropped 81 ,000 to
&95 ooo and the number cf person:ii work-tn( at some job climlxd 51.000 to 7.99
miUioo.
The' 1971 unemplcyme.nt rates for
Orange County conunue tc be higher than
in previous years. ln March 1910 there
were 25,000 jobless for a rate er 4.1 per·
(ent that clirnbed to $.2 perc~ in April
1970 when 23,800 were without employ·
menl.
' leaders in San Clemente.
Residenl.s along Camino Los Mares,
proposed to be the major collector road
to the dump, are angry and bitter.
One housewife who has led a battle
over alleged air pollution and noise from
trucks at the Crestlite aggregate pro-
ducls plant, views the Idea another front
ready for an assault.
Several neighbors contaded in the area
above Shorecliffs Goll Course vowed to
attend the supervi!ors meeting to pro-
test-even though no public bearing i~
planned.
Residents in the area all said they were
angry over "paying high taxes on ex·
pensive, new homes and being sing led out
to have garbage trucks and tractor•
trailers roaring by day and night.''
Dr. Ralph Graham, the head of the
group developing San Clemente General
Hospital. learned of the dump proposals
from a DAILY PlLOO' reporter
Thursday. His only response was a mo-
ment or silence followed by, ''And here
we're building a masler·planned hospltal
on a: street we thought would be nice and
quieL"
San Clemente Councilman Thomas
o·Keefe, who represents, in a sense.
residents of the affected area also was
concerned over the choice of Los Mares.
•·we already get hundreds of pounds of
Crestlite material on our beaches after
rains (the roadside debris is carried to
lhe sea in flood control channels)," he
said .
"Now It look3 like our roads and
beaches will be covered wdth the area 's
tr~sh as ¢-ell."
San Clemente's other councilmen all ln--
dicated mixed emotions . about tbe
sit.e-concemed not IO mu:cb with tbfl
~lection of the acruge as with the
choice cf access.
"You Ju!!t c11n't,. trust the county
sometime.11," 5ald Mayor Walter Evans.
"They might promise to build the
Ortega road at the ume time and ease
the traffic on J..os M1tus. They also will
promise to develop the recreation area as
they go alone.
"But bow can you trust Ulem?''
'city positions will be pruented lo county
1upervisors.
And already the selection or Camino
Los Mares as the m11;jor collector street
for the region's trash is creating shock.
Los Mares Ls a key road in the growing
development of the nprth end cf 'San
Clemente,
Within the next year it wiU have the
new hospital on ils flanks, along with
housing· and aparbnent developments,
more major health-care facilities and
possibly some businesses.
The roadway COMects to Camino de
Estrella where the region's ftrst major
shopping cent.er will open lta doors in
June.
The road also ls a key tc·developmenl
cf surrounding land in the Capistrano
Beach and San Clemente area.
County planners. have e8.fJllarked Los
Mares as cne cf two prime collector
roads. lt would Unk up in the middle·of
the dump site to another propoaed
roadway stretching out to Ortega
Highway east of San Juan Capistrano.
On those two roads , rubbish trucks antf
private du?nping vehicles would rumble
seven days a week.
County planners have stressed that the
dump project is a critical ooe because of
the rapidly filling Forster Canyon landfill
which wlll ·be full in September of 1972. lt
lies in hills behind Capistrano Beach.
The new one would be planned to ac--
commodate 51 million tons of solld wlste
pr¢uced by the . residents of Laguna
Beac.h, San Clemente, San J u a n
Capistrano, Capistrano Beach, Dana
Point, Lagµna Nilllel, Laguna Hills,
Mission Viejo and parts or El Toro. ·
Aceording to the federal~nty 110lid
waste study leading to the proposal. the
aerv!c.e area's population by the year
2,000 would soar to about a half·million
persons. The population this spring is
about 95,000.
The news of the proposed dump came
so late that San Clemente councilmen will
not have another meefuig· in which to
study and 1,.ct,on th~ plan in time for the
May 11 supervisors meetjng.
Instead, councilmen Wednesday agreed
to drop the matter into the laps of plan·
niilg commissioners for a recom•
meOdation nen Wednesday evening.
The City of Laguna Beach acled 'Oll lhe
matter Wednesday and grudgingly ap-
proved the project.
Sah Clemente's: ccuncilmen viewed tht
propouJ with initial mistrust, fearing
that Les Mares would be the only lnitaJ
collector road for the huge dump, and
that the recreation area .would not even
begin being developed until the landfill
was complete aomeUme near the·turn of
!be cemury. '
Germany Raises Value?
Chancellor Meets With Cabinet Over Money
BONN '(UPI) -The West German
cabinet is reported to have agreed today
to Jet the value of the Deutschesmark
float upward in a move to halt the flow of
cheap dollars into the country, It will go
ahead whether or not France agrees.
Chancellor Willy Brandt conferred with
his cabinet all day in urgent session to
follow up the German decision on
Wednesday to stop supporting the dollar
with official purchases to keep up
I.ts value. Earlier Story Pag.e 4.
Down the
Mission
Trail
Joaquin School
Contract 1'et
EAST ffiVlNE -Trustees of the San
Joaquin Elementary School District haVe
awarded a contract to the J. A. Campbell
Co. of Pasadena for the construction of
the new Jrvine intermediate 1ehool.
The low bid was JI,414,665. Jcwer than
the estimate anticipated by the school '•
architect. The high bid was $1,SSS,000.
All bids were below the .111.ate allowable
for the project.
e Beautle• Sought
LAKE FOREST-{;ir\s between the
ages of 17 and 21 may enter the Miss
Lake Forest contest.
Entries are being taken at the Beach
and Tennis Club . The winner will receive
a trophy and a $25 savings bond.
The contest will take place June 1
the clubhouse. Entrants will be judged in
evening gowns. May 21 is the sign up
deadline.
The winner will represent the com-
munity in various functions ·and will ride
on the Lake Forest float at Angel
Stadium on June 10.
e GOP Futtd Launched
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Sad·
dleback Valley Young Republicans have
announced that fund raising for the Larry
Allyn Headlee Scholastic Achivement
Fund has been launched by Walter Knott,
founder of Knott'• Berry Farm.
Knott has donated funds to cover all
the printing costs for the fund which
honors a marine geologist .and C<1founder
of the Young Republicans who lost his life
In a submarine accidebt in 1970.
An achievement award wlll be
presented annually to a student in a Sad-
dleback Valley high school who has ex-
celled in science, particularly geological
or marine science and who showa con-
cern for citizenship, patriotism, free
enterprise and moral courage .
Contributions can be aent to the club.
Box 124, El Toro.
e Llhrar11 Friend Na m4?d
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -R a y
Cooper bu 'been ltlected to serve a1
pre.,ident cf .the S.ddJeback Friends of
the MIHlon VieJO Llbmy.
Also tlected Wert Barbara Slater. first
vice president, Har.el Stephenson, BtCMd
vice president; Mary Norri!, third vioe
president ; Carolyn Carpenter, recording
and Mike Mlcbaeb.
RCTetary, 111d Walter Neil, trtasuter.
• _Memb<rs al 1•11• will be .Alicia Cooper
The cabinet laid down the Instructions
that Foreign Minister Walter Scheel a11d
economics minister Karl Schiller w 111
take to a European Common Mar\ret
meeting Saturday in Brussels to seek
joint action to meet the crisis. The plight
of the dollar and the rush to buy, gold has
touched of£ one or the worst monetary
crises in year.11.
Schiller has proposed that West
Germany let the mark float and seek its
own level by freeing the e.1change rate
and to couple this with internal stabill·
iation measures.
Conrad Ahlers, the officlaI government
spokesman, was questioned by newsmen
on this point.
"Did Schiller win the support of the
cabinet?" Ahler.! was asked. "Yes,"
Ahlers replied.
A floating mark would seek Its own
level and hopefully stop the .11peculation
which brought dollars flooding in here to
buy marks.
Nlekle, Dime Thieves
: .J!q,r~iri;_Meter Thefts ·
BrokeninLagunaBeach
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of tllf O•JI>' ,.llet IMllf
Laguna Beach police have cracked a
parking meter theft ri.ng that involver
coastal and inland cities over half the
slate.
Author'ilies claim the llperation began
more than six months ago yielding "u~
told thousands" in sma!I ch8nge from
cities from San Diego to San Jose.
ln tbe process or makJng ·the final ar-
rests this morning, Laguna detectives
discovered that more than 100 meters
had been bit during the night by well-
organized thieves, operating w i t b
homemade meter keys.
Arrested Thursday in an apartment at
801 South Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, were
Charles Leon Adams, 25, and a girl friend
Willa Dean Rotramel, 21. They were
taken into custody by Laguna Beach
Detectives Gene Brooks, Robert Briscoe
and Carroll Bush, who had obtalned ar·
rest and search warrants from the office
of the District Attorney following their
investigalion.
Authorities said the ring operated st
night, lopping off parking meter heads
with pipe cutters then f a s h i o n i n g
duplicate keys at their headquarters. The
next night. said, police, they would empty
at least 100 meters from dusk until dawn.
Both were boobd on suspicion of con-
spiracy to commit a crime, a felony
charge, and ball was set at $12,500 each.
Two other suspects in the case had
been arrested in Laguna Beach on Mon·
day night during a stake-out of parking
meters in the 400 block of Cliff Drive.
They are David Stevan Peret, 19, and
Michael John Dinneen, 18, both of El
Monte.
Jones, Perez and Dineen were ar.
rested in Huntington Beach Jan. 27 for
'theft of a meter head.,Perei and DiMeen
were out on bail awaiting trial on this
charge when they were arrested Mcnday,
Jones is sought by Hu11tington Beac9 on a
warrant for fallure to appear on the
meter theft charge.
Police said a fifth suspect, believed to
be the leader of the meter theft ring, Is in
custody on another char1e in Oregon and
will be held by authorities in that state on
ihe Orange County chfrge.
Confiscated as evidence at lhe Santa
San Clemente's (;hief
Returns to His Post
Sin Clementt Polict ' Chief C1lftord
Murray offict1lly resiimed ·hfs dUtiet'to-'
daf alter'undergolng open heart surgery
several weeks ago ln St. Vlnctnt 'a
Hospital ih Les Angeles.
.Murray, who made speedy recovery
from the arterial bn»ag: surgery, had
been working sevtral hours a day
r«:•nUy·t1esp1i1 •ffidil 1lck\tave 1t1lus .
, . '
Ana apartment were several bags of
coin11, coin wrappers, Jocks believed to
bave come from parking meters, a
number of home.made keys, pipe cutters,
flies and assorted tools believed to have
been used in the theft of parking meter
heads and the making of key1 to open
meter coin boxes.
The coins included a number or "Park
Free In Laguna Beach" tokens,
distributed by local merchants. A hasty
check of Laguna Beach meters revealed
that they had been cleaned out again by
the meter thieves.
Recurring theft.II or coin1 from the
parking meters over a period of atmo1t a
year had sparked the intensive police in·
vestigation. Officers said as much as
$1,000 has been taken from Laguna
meter!! In a single nighL
No dollar estimate of the total meter
theft operation has yet been made, but
officers said the thieves · apparently had
meter keys for 23 citie.5 between Mo~
terey and San Diego. Parking lots on the
USC campus alone yielded ~ a nigh t,
police said.
Detectives said the keys were made by
removing. with pipe cutters, one meter
head in each city. From the lock on the
meter it was possible to make master
keys to fit all tbe other meters iri that ci·
ty,
A neatly written schedule confiscated
as evidence listed the key number for
each city and the best days to bit the
rrieters (just before the weekly coin
pickup). '
The Coins were poured from the meter
Into men 's socks, several or which also
were found with the contucated tools.
Joaquin Trustee
Seated, 'Quits'
The newest trustee of the San Jo111qu.in
Elefllentary School District Was sworn in
and quit all in the same night.
Preston Howell, who will ffil the unex·
pired term of Edward Berry of Mission
Viejo who resigned, was sworn in
Wednesday by · Suporlntendenl Rolph
Gal<>.
And one O! bis tirst actions WIS to
terminate the employment of • 1ubstJtute
teacher7 Prel!ton Howen.
1"J'd prefer-to resign," he quipped. Thf, re.i of the ' board 'accepted his
reslgriatlorf as ·an 'tmpJcye·and welcomed
him as a "boss." · · ·
ttoWell, 48, is. ffiinM!ter of the First Sap'.
tisl Church of Missfon Viejo~ He resides
at 25495 Naccome In that oommunlty.
He Is. married and his 1!x children .
Howell holds an elcme.ntarj and teCOn·
d1ry teaching credential and qnce &erved
11 a prtbclpal In 1prlvate 1chool.
Ahlers said Brandt. at the cabinet
meeUnlJ today, tcld Scheel and Schiller to
get joint action by ·the six members of
the C.Ommon 'Markel -'West Germany,
Franc;e, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands
and Luxembourg. But he made it clear
Germany would act alone if France con-
tinued to billk.
"We aim for community approval er at
least tolerance of any measure! the
German government might have 10
take," Ahlers said.
* * * U.S. Remo ves
China Trade
Restrictions
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States remov«t an restrictions on dollar
transacUons with Red China today as a
first step to opening up trade between the
two nations.
Treasury Secretary John 8 . Connally
Jssued a license aUowing U • S.
busintasmen and banks to transad
business with the Communist government
and ita citizens using dollar.! or doila.r in·
struments. Previously there bad been a
complete prohibition .against s u c h
transacnons.
"'nllt is the treasury's first step in im·
plementing President Nixon's decision on
April 14 ·to relu financial and com-
mercial controls with respect to mainland
China," a treasury statement said,
"Treasury is now consulting with the
Departments of State and Commerce and
other interested agencies on relaxb1g con-.
trols on impor,ts of goods from China."
The commercial move came after the
Red Chinese invited American table ten-
nis players to tour mainland China last
month.
The lifting of the dollar restriction
would also apply to foreign government.s
and busineasmen, the treasury said.
The State Department said a list cf
Jtems that would be allowed in trading
with Red China was "under high level
review" and would be ready for release
in coming weeks.
A department spokesman, Charles
Bray, was asked if there had been any in·
dications the Chinese regime would reS.o
pond to the U:S. trade overtures.
"I don't know that there are," he
replied. "I aS!ume that :any reaction
would await :their opportunity to look at
the det1ils."
0r .. 1e Coast
Weatlaer
Don't tel. lhis •llllllY apoll fool
you; 1t looks like rain again tonight
and poss.ibty Saturday. But clear
skies should take over-this weekend
with temperatures in the high 60s.
INSmE TODAY
Art by studtnt.s cf the Ntto-
port-Me.sB School District Will b•
on· dflplay 11e.it week ot Fashion
Jsland. For a ~review of th1
'!how see toda11 s Weekender.
a.a111te JI I C•lllMW• ,
Cflfdllfw "' J ci.11/flM , 11• c-kf • It
Cf'Ht_.ii »
o..ttl Hfflc• lt ••ll•fMll ,.,. ' •!flt• H·ll .... PM(.... 1,
'41111 ........,. tJ ""''"'' . -u ...
! OAIL Y PI LOT SC -.r....,, M., 1, 1'n
JS f'e lon9 Co u11ts
Hartelius Back
In County Court
By TOl\f BARLEY
Of tllt Dalllf '1'-' 11111
Dr. Ebbe Hartelius, cltared by a Su-
perior Court jury just one month ago on
art01 and fraUd charges, w1s back bf..
fore the same judge to pield inno-
ttnt to IS felony counts Contained in a
still-secret Orange Counly Grand Jury
indictment.
Judge James F. Judge delayed the
Corona del Mar physician's arraignment
to May 11 and ordtred Hartelius, 50 to
Polt IS.000 ball.
He denied a plea that the defe11da.11t be
frud on hil personal pledge to return,
Harteliut ii accuaed in the new indict-
ment ol grand theft, bribery and the tub-
ml!sion of fraudulent claims to iuurance
companiu. None of the chargea was filed
against him during hi1 recent trial, but
.ever al, parlJcularly bribery, were diJ..
"cuued during the four-week court 1e,.
·aJon.
· Judge Judge ordered the p o at in g
of a 00..d alter hearing Deputy DlJtrl l"t
Attorney AJ Novick claim that Hartelius
,planned to !lee the state "possibly lo
De.nmari: or Alaska."
IW1eliui, whose new home is at 402
Magnolia St., Costa Mesa , reminded the
judge t h at he has Jived in the
Unlted Statts for 21 years since· his ar·
rival here from Denmark.
Delenlf attorney Tom Reilly asked
Judce Judae to recognize that his client
had substantial property intere!ts and a
pracUce in Orange County a11d was "nev.
er tardy once during his fou r.week lrial:'
Harteliw: was cleared in that trill! al ter
two days ol delibtraOon of charges that
he arranged the burning of hU offices at
2345 E. Coast Highway 011 April t, 1970.
Jt was al9o llll!UCCtssfully alleged that
be bad earlier faked the theft of his car
and filed a fraudulent claim agaimt the
insurance companf 1G cover the lt>!s.
ProRCUtion witness Jim Blevlru, a
brother of Hartellus' blotide mistress,
testified durinf the trial that he set the
fire on Hartellus' lnstruction1 and helped
the doctor to aleal his own car.
Blevins alAO alleged in testimony that
the physician bril>ed him to leave the
state whe11 inveatJgaUon Into both crimes
intensllied.
Hartelius, white and shaken by lhe
Grand Jury indictme11I, a n gr i I y re·
fused to comment to newsmeJI on the new
charges.
DST: No Medal
'Didn't Earn It,' Says Truman
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Prtsi·
dent Harry S Truman has told Congress
be will not accept the Medal of Honor -
· saying lhe medal la far combat valor and
he doun't deserve IL
"To deviate by givin1 It for any other
· reuon leuens and dilutes its true
aignlficance," 'lhlman wrote in a letter
nad on 1he Houae floor Tburlday.
. "Al.so, 1t would detract from those who
• have received the award becaUN o1 their
, combat service.
• '"Thanks," Truman'• letter concluded,
"'but I will not accept a Coflll't ssional
li-1'.edal of Honor.''
, Truman'• letter wu to Rep. William J.
Randa!J (D·Mo.), one ol lt Howe
members who had introduced bills and
resolutions to present the fonner
Democratic President with tht medal in
connection "'ilh his 17th birthday Satur·
day. ·
Randall noted Truman had often 1aid in
presenting the medal to combat heroes
that he would rather have It hlnuelf than
be President -but waa now 111ylng he
would not accept it without de1erv1n& it
for ill int.ended combat recognition.
The Senate, meanwhile, palled a
reaolution atendinf best wis.bea to
Truman.
The resolution was introduced by Sen.
Stuart Symington (0-Mo.), and passed by
voice vote without opposition.
lWhite House Hotlri Denies
Late 1972 Pullout Date
, WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
Houae flrmly denled Thursday a report
attributed to military aourctt in Vietnam
that November 197% has been •et as a
filed d1te for total wilbdraw1J of U.S.
troop• from Vietnam.
. Pren secretary Ronald L. Ziegler 11KI
whoever the IOUJ'eti of the report wu
wouJ d not have been aware of President
Nixon'• think.inc and WU ''just •peaking
:from a foundation of tot.a.I lack of
'knowledge."
Ziea:Jer said be had no idea of who the
-eource michl be but be added even more
firmly that the individual Wal "speaking
from a ba1e of absolutely n• knowledge
a~ all."
The presidential 1pokesm1n reiterated
what Nixon baa said: tbat U.S. troops in
Vletnam will be rtduced to a total of
l8t,OOO by Dec. 1 and th1t the President
would make another assessment of the
altuatlon and announce his decisions
1'g&rdlng 1ny further troop withdrawals
by Nov. IS.
At the State Department. efflclals cau·
lloned that no one ahort of Pruldenl Nix·
OIAN•I COAIJ
DAILY PILOT
OAANG~ COAST PVBL1SHJH0 CIJM,Nf't
••Mtt N. 'W••' P,.liMftf ... hit! .....
J1ck I. C1ttl1y ..,.. ,.,._ .... O.....lf ~
n.111111 1e •• ,.11 .", .. n.,,.., A. ,,.,,,,.,ft.
,,,...,,i,,. fOI.,.
a nt .. H. I.ff• Ire~•"" r. Hill Auls'-'tl ..__,..,. E~llwl.
a..--'"'" ()fftM 122 For11t A"•RM• M1lU11t ,,.,., •• " r.o. •~1 ••6, •2•st s..c i..-.Offlce
&n himself bas any accurate idea of what
the troop level would be in November, im.
A projection of Lbe presen t rate of U.S.
withdrawa11 from Vietnam would bring
tbe number down to !5,000 by that da~.
May Da y Tribe
Promises More
DC Protesting
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Dtclaring Iha!
their "spring offensive'' to shut down the
nation"• capital was just a "w1rmup ,"
antiwar aclfvlsL! today began preparing a
new round or protests this summer.
"If Ric.hard Nixon thinks this week was
hot," spoke1man Renn ie Davis said
'Illur1d1y, "wait unUI next time; thi1 was
only a w1rmup."
Btfore the Je1der1 or the ~1'.ay Day tribe
and the People'1 CoaUUon for Peace and
J'ustict met to plan a new round of 1c-
tlvltie1, the Ju1tlce Department Thuraday
11aJd It wouJd empanel 1 grind jury to in--
vest111te a poaible tonsplracy i.· incite
riot.!.
Deputy Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst &aid the grand jury ~·ould be
fomwd after Davis ind John R. Froines
appeared at a preliminary hearing May
12.
Divis, Froines and Abbie Hoffman,
who wall arrested in New York City, were
the ID01t frequent apokumen for the 18
daya "Of 1nUwar protest..
Hoffm1n 11id Thursday nl1ht in
Newark, N.J .. that the grand jury will in--
diet up to 50 people.
Ole· Gets Mad,
Thief Yumps
SUMNER, Wub. (UPI)
somebody 1ppareoU7 took Ole
~ •Ilia,,.... ,...._the burly baker voW.d 1o ,.i u.e <UJpdt w11o
tore up his rose bushes and
Japanese cherry trees.
Neilson bad planted the bushes
and cherry trees around his park·
Ing lot as his contribution to
Summer 's urban renewal program.
He came to work rect:nUy to find
the bwhes and trees gone. N"eilson
voy,·ed then to "go after" the vait--
dal with his rolling pin.
Thursday when Neilson showed
up to y,·ork he found the rose bushes
and cherry trees carefully
replanled, watered and fertil.iud.
Tricia Names
Bridal Party
For Wedding
' \VASHlNGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon
has picked her sis ter. two of her coual.n!,
and the sister of the bridegroom to be the
members ()f her bridal party for the
White liouse wedding June 12.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower will bt matron
ol honor.
Bridegroom Ed cox's sister, Mary Ann
Coi:, 25, who is graduating this month
from Yale's school of architecture, will
be the bridesm aid.
And servin1 as junior brldesmaidl wtll
be two young cousins, Amelie, 13, and
Elizabeth. 11, Nixon, the daughters of lhe
president's youngest brother, Edw1rd
Nixon ol Seattle, Waah.
Preas aecretary Constance Stuart 1aid
the groomsmen for the weddln1 will be
announced shortly.
Th< While HOUJO provided pholograph!
ot "Amy" and 0 Beth'' Nixon u they po•
ed on a recent visit to the White Hou.e,
wearing tome of Tricia's formal gown~
anll pr11cticlng walking down the grand
staircue in the White House.
The two girls came with their parents
for a White House visit early in Arpil.
J\frs. Stuart said they had a "fun af·
temoc>n" dressing up in Tricia's clothes
and practicing for the wedding. Beth
\\"Ort a grown Tricia used whe n she was
queen of the Azalea Festival in Norfolk,
Va., in April 1989. And Amy pracilced in
the dreu Tricia wore at a mallked ball
she gave in the White House: on
H11llowe'en 1969.
The wedding invitations to 300 or 400
1Uflls wlll &Gout neit Mocda:y, May 10.
Pendleton Tour
Slated Saturday
1ifembera and friends or s a n
Clemer11e·s Hospitality Center for
servicemen are welcome to take 1 fUl.ded
tour of Camp Pendleton nut week.
The tour will include a noon meal at
the base mess hall for a cost of llO cents
to e.ach guest. 'nle luncheon lib h the Oll-
ly expense required during the day-long
excunkln.
Transportation will be provided 1rte by
the Marine Corps.
Reservations will be aceepled at the
center WlUI Saturday.
The excursion Uselr will begin 1t 1:30
11.m. in front of the center at 101 N. El
Camino Real on May 13.
Ed Ferrone is in charge of the event.
More infonnaUon is available by calling
hlm at 492--5792.
Police Clear 2
Of Theft Count
Newport Beach police said today a
young couple apprehended Tuesd1y ln
connection with an alleged burglary 1t-
tempt fl the Orange Coast YMCA had
nothll'lf whatsoe vtr to do with the crime.
The pair, Identified as Kenneth M.
Frederick. 22. of 207 Abalone Street,
Newport Beach, and Christy Johnson, 22,
of 818 Palm Street, Huntlnflon Beach,
,.,,ere relea1ed at t p.m. that day wtlhout
charges placed against them.
A story In Wednuday's DI I I y Pilot
quoted police as saying both had bttn
charged with burg lary. The Dally PUot
regretl the error.
lOS N0tth El C.111h1e «••I, 92611 -0-(9111 ,,,...., • ,,,.,, •rr '"""' .......... IMc"'~ as» H-1 ... 19'111'
Three Countians l(illed
....,.._ 9Udli ll'OS a.di .... lf'tllCI
In Autonwbile Mishaps
Three Oranie County men were
reported today as traffic accident victimJ
by the coroner)• office. The dtad :
-TU.ml hjlwua, 23, of the Bushard
labor camp, Fountaln V1lley.
-81117 D. Meinen, le, ol 5702
Trailview Pl1ce, Yorba Lindi.
-J•M Jall111 Ftrnudt1, 33, of 14ot N.
King St., Santi Ana,
Weitminster police 1ald Fujiwara was
dead on arrival •t We&trninster Com -
munity H01pil1l Thurtd1y nl1ht after the
c11r in which he w11 riding collld~ with 1
center divider lifhl 111nd1rd it Bol1a
Avenue and Ward Street In We1tmlntter.
Orfvrr of the \.'thlclt MlRutl Mendez,
6fi. Santa An&. was serloosly Injured, of.
firers said.
1'1einers y,·as killed early this morning
"'hen his car went out of control and
overturned cn 1he San Diego Freiew1y
one h1\f mile 50uth cf El Toro Road. He
died at 1:10 1.m. Ill south Colst Com--
munity Hospital.
Fernandez, who police described as an
cutpallent from the menial health w1Nt
in Ora nae County Medical center, died of
lnjurle1 reet>ived Thursday morning when
he jumped off tht Main Street overp1ss
onto the S11nt1 Ana Freeway.
Officers ~aid he was struck by at leatl
one car. lie auffered multiple fracturts
and Internal injurle1 and died 1t Santa
Ana Community Hos pital.
12 Percent
DroP. Seen ·
In Aero space
IV ASHING TON I AP) -Employment i•
the aerospace indll!lry \\111 decline
11lmost 12 percent during 1971, the
Att0ePace Industries Association said to. .
·cta y.
Karl G. }!arr Jr., AlA prealdent, 11id
the lnduslry is gravely l'On<:erned at the
cOntinulng loss of highly skilled person-
nel. accelerated by government can·
cellatioo of the supersonlc traNiX>rt pro-
gram.
But. he said, this year's estimated
decline ii much !us than the 17'ii perctnt
job !OSI last year.
"'Ille downward trend or tht pa!l
several years appears to be leveling off,"
Harr slid. "111.ia lends 1up'port to our ex·
pectations that 1972 will see a revenaJ of
the declining employment trends ex·
perienced during the past three years."
The AlA forecMts the industry's
payroll wtll shrink by the year's end to
943,000 persons. the fint drop below one
million sinct record keeping began in
1959.
"During the three year period 1969 to
1971, the industry has been forced to
release nearly half a million people, or
slightly more than one third of it• labor
force," Harr said. "Despite this ,
aero1pace contin uu to be the tariest
manufacturing employer."
Scientiatl and flllgineera are upecled
to experience the smallest dee.line, 9.6
percent, to an end of the year total of
151,000 compared wilh a 1967 peak of
235,000.
W eatlier1nan See s
Clearing Skies
A 50-50 chance of shower• or thun-
dershowers tonight will dimlnisb to a 20
perce.ot probability urly Saturday as an
on • a&ain, oU • again low pressure
syatem moves inland from the Orange
Cosat.
The National Weather Service 11y1
weekend weather for Orange Coast cities
should get warmer and c le a r er.
S11turday's high will be around 68 degrtts
along the coast under partly cloudy skies.
Sunday the high "'ill be in the Jow 70s
under clear skies.
Winds along lhe coast will be weste rly
In the afternoons ranging from 10 to 20
knot s.
Tba low pressure system lhat bas
rested over the area for the past few
days ls ex'pected ti> move on tG southern
Nevada and Utah improving the Orange
C.oast weather oatlook.
Building Wages Up
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Bureau er
Labor Slatlsllcs sald today the average
hourly wages oI union construction
workers in larger urban areu ro&1 12.3
percent during tbe 12 months ended Aprll
l.
COMMUNITY LEADER WORKS WITH SCOUTS IN LAGUNA
H1yden Rin ger Receives Out1tanding Service Award
Firm Ho11ors Laguna Man
For Community Service
A Laguna Beach man has been cited by
Ford Motor Co. for outstanding com·
munity service.
Hayden N. Ringer of 36.S Heather Place
Court Orders
Sanity Hearing
A sanity•hearing \\'as ordered today in
Orange County Superior Court for a
Capistrano Beach man ruled to be insane
sit years ago after he allegedly killed his
father wllh a butcher knife.
Judge James F. Judge accepted the
plea of innocent and innocent by reason
of insanity filed by Richard Glenn
Gonna111 III, 28. o( 35036 Camino
Capistrano and ordered the defendant to
return to his courtroom June 23 for s.ani·
ty proceedings.
Gonnan wa s recently returned frcm
Atascade ro State Hosp ital as sane and
ab le to face the murder charges set as ide
by his commitment to the facility in 1965.
Gonnan was accused of the kllllng on
Oct. 8, 1965 o! Richard GleM Gorman
Sr., \\•hose body was found on the kitchen
floor or the family home. •
is program marketing manager ln Philco
Ford Corp. Aeronutronic Div i a I on,
Newport Beach.
He '"'l,l.~ ..• .ainong five Orange Coonty
employes o( lhe firm to be commended
for community service in 1970. The group
will be honored at an ay,•ards banquet
Thursday, JI.lay 13.
Ringer was selected for sef"\'ire to
scouting and his c.ommunlly of Laguna
Beach. a company spokesman sajd.
He is scoutmaster of Troop 35 and has
received the Order of Jl.terit and Silver
Beaver Award -two of the highest
a"·ards to scouting volunteers.
Ringer .ii an elde r in the Community
Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach
and a membtr of the Citizens Town Plan-
ning Association.
He alao is a member of the Sierra Club,
lhe AUdubon Sociel}'. the \Vilderness
Society and the National Parks Associa·
ti on.
Officers of the Orange County Grand
Jury comprised the panel or judges mak-
ing the community aervice award selec-
tions.
' '
Upholstery Sale!
SLllPU SOJA
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STARTING AT
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Our uphol1t•ry 11!1 t onfinu •• fe1turinfJ • largie selec-
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• st•rting pric• of $239. M•ny floor simples in Hercu.
Ion .
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FrldAJ, M,y 7, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J J ,
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'It's Not the Si%e
These 15-inch·wide Goodyear racing tires are ready
"(or use In one of tbe toughest tests for rubber.
Despite their size, these tires weigh less than those
used on the fall\ily auto.
__ ,,Leaving Hospital Early
Urged to Save Costs
BURLINGAME -(BWI -
lf every hospitalized patient
were released one day earlier.
mort than $2 billion in
hospitalisati on costs could be
saved, according to D r .
Roberta F. Fenlon, president
of California Medical Associa-
tion.
The key to getting these pa-
tients out of the hospital
earlier is to make health care
available to them in their
homes during their recupera-
tion -and the key to horn'
h•alth care is Its financing
under health i nsu rance
policies and programs. she
aaid. ~ Her remarks were given at
the annual meeting oI the
California Association of
Home Health Agencies
recently.
"When one considers that
the first home care program
wu instituted In 1796 at the
Boston infirmary, it is as-
toundlng that in 1971 we are
still trying to get the concept
universally accepted.'' Dr.
Fenlon declared.
Home health c11re could
have a dramatic impact on the
costs of Jong term
hospitalization, she pointed
out. She cited a study showing
that 28 percent of the long
term patients at one hospital
could have been discharged a
full month earlier, releasing 10
percent of the beds available.
In addition to reducing
hospital costs and increasing
the availability ot hospital
beds, home care ls easier for
the patient's family a n d
speeds his recovery, sbe said.
Noting that California
Medical Association endorses
home health care, Or. Fenlon
called on health professionals
to take ''united action" to get
borne health care included in
all health insurance pOllcies..
Not in Stars1
Computers Help Astrology
NEW YORK (UPI) -For
centuries in India and China,
no couple dared marry unless
their horoscopes proved them
compatible.
Parents never dar ed pl1n a
future for their c h i l d r e n
without Clin sulting an
•strologer.
Superstition? Maybe, but
Americans in this last third of
the 20th Century are starting
the same practices -with the
help of the electronic
computer.
Time Pattern Research
Institute, a subsidiary of
Cadence Industries. In /: . ,
(Marty Ackerman's o Id
Perfect Film Corp.), has been
gelling horoscopes cast up with
the aid of the computer for
three years. It now has gone
into what it calls the
astrological compatibility
Analysis and the y o u n g
peoples' horoscope.
The first is the age old
method of deciding by the
stars whether lovers or olher
partners are really compatible
enough for a las ting
relationship. The second Is
much likt the horoscope
Indian parents have cast for
their chlldrtr1.
Although astrology Isn't a
big business in America. lt'1 a
growing one , says Bernard
Glttelson, President of the
'time Pattern Research.
Gittleson's finn is one of at
least three in the United
States which use th! computer
to cast horoscopes on a
substantial scale. Two nthers
are Astra-Flash, which luis a
big booth in New York's
Grand Central Station . and
1.odiatronics .
Sales or perhaps $2 million
ire ln thtir Infancy 1Ull,
GiUehon believes.
In addition . every city has a
number of practicing
astrologers and g t n t r a 1
tiorGSCOpes a p p e a r I n i In
newspapers and sold In
drugstorM and variety stores
by the millions. But the
computer~ast horose<>pe is
tailor made for an individual.
It sells for anywhere from $S
to $30, depending cri how many
questions it answers. Gittelaon
thinks an eventual market of
$100 million a year i.s possible.
Gittelson's company
markets through department
stores such as Mac y 's,
G i m be Is', Wanamaker's,
Hudson's, Atraham & Strauss
And the Broadway·Hale Group,
through bookstores such as
Brentano's, Doubleday's and
Walden 's and magalines and
the Diners Club.
"Also we have 10 1d
ind iv i d u a 1 computerized
horoscope a 1 promotional
premiums to nation a 1
advertisen such as Proctor &
Gamble, Best Foods and
Revlon, tnc.," he 11 id.
"Proctor &: Gamble 11\d the
Horo-scopes were among the
most successlul premiums it
ever tried."
A surprising number of
busineas men dabble I n
astrology, Gittelson said. "l
wouldn't dare re veal their
names, but business firms
have engaged our &ervlces to
help them plot their future
course or solve problems."
Some stock market
Investors swear by as-
trological a d v i c e , saying
they do at least as well by
obeying their horoscopes as by
counselors. "I won't make any
such claim. though, "Glttelson
uld firmly.
1'wo univeraltits h a v e
sought the help or Time
Pattern Research -but not to
predict the outcome oI football
games or lhe temper of the
sludent bodies. "Both George
Washington University In the
nation's capital and University
of California It Los Angeles
have researth projects on
astrological forecasts I n
progress as part of their eoclal
and psychological studies and
have asked w: tor hei)p,"
GIUel!IOn said.
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
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J % DAILY PILDT SC
Ruord Poor
Adviso1·s Roasted
h1 Fiscal Book
NEW YORK (AP) -One ol
the most reveehng a n d
re1\.ardlng pastimes lor an 1n-
vrstor 1s 10 go back over the
reoommendat1on.s of seeur111es
advl.strs and rornpare their
forecasls 111th e-0nd1t1ons lhat
actually ensued
Hevealtng 1n the sense lh<ll
the 1n1es1or \\Ill see ho" glib
3nd cheap 1s much 1n1estmcnl
advice Re11 ard1ng Jn that ht
y;JIJ learn Oow cheap advice
can ht costly and therefore to
be ignored 1n the future
In late November and earl)
December of 1968 Yillh the
market ready lo slide 1nlo a
prolonged decllrie that would
be the "orst since 1929 long
term 11e\\s by member f1r n1s
of tht Ne" York Stock Ex
changr Jncluded
-Thrre are 0011 and v.111
bf' n1an\ good hu) op
portun1hcs du11ng this prel)cnt
la:( adjustment period A
largr reservoir or buying
po11er is sill! on !hr sidelines
wa1t1ng to uncover nt\\ and
atlrac11 ve situations
-Right no\.\'. \l'.C have bul
l1sh ac1lon in all lhrtt kry
segmenis or lht market
The lechn1cal background 1s
very SIN>ng and 1here 1s not
enough ad\ erse fundamental
new!I: to make w: doobt our rn
lerpreta11on
-The upside 1mphcallon
plain!} points lo con
s1derably higher levels 1 r
1300 for thr Do11 Junes
Industrial Average over !he
longer term and a po~s1blv
nearer term 1100 to be
reached sa} 1n the first half
of 1969
~1any people ha\e threaten
~ to dig up the damning
records that so often and
curiously remain safely 1n
tered permltllng so many
'aln forecasters to boast As
J lold you last year
John Springer ff1d look al tht
records and no\\ he has writ
ten a book lo be published
soon by Menn Regnerv Co
abou t th<' quahly &f 1n
\estmen1 ad\lce It has the
pro\oca!ive lltlc If The\ re
So Smarl How Come You re
Not Rich '
Re11d 11 and you 11 hkelv
maintain \our own L'Ounsel
hereafter The f o r e c: a s I !I
quoted abovt ~re not isolated
e~arnples Springer c I a 1 m s
that a study or market letter~
at thal time s howtd
LEGAL NOTICE I
~~~--~~~-
NOT<! l O Cll!DtTOttS IV ~!lltOlt (OVllT 0, THI!
ST.I.Tl 0 " C.l.LIFOllHl.I. "011
THE COUHlY O" 01tAHC£
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LEGAL ~O'fJCt
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SUPllllOll COUllT Of TMI
ITATI o • CALll'OllN A FOii
lHl CDUHTY Of 011.1.HGI
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Att. M YI fir , .. 1 .... 0
•uto >htol 0 '"'" Co1 DI MAY 1 I. l. lff
LEGAL NCYfJCE
CEltT I' Ct.TE Of IUS NISS
~ C. T TIOUS NA ME
fl\f unoe • ori-d dQll <t v ~. Is con
a Cl n' • bUI ..... • •.001 Gu I Ind c
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llub •hod 0 t nft Co•ll 01 Y • ol
MIY 7 11 1 II !flt Ool• 1
service at
your fingertips
seventy-ones at
~~~L~
21110 .HAR80R 8LVO I COSTA MESA
111.a) ~•o 1100
' OVER THE COUNTER
.,.,.ftwft'llYt -.......1w _...,._ ........ i-t.ir t A.M. lfHI MAID. ,.l'K.d .,. _. --,....._ .. -rn• ....,....,... " -•
NASD L11tin91 for Thurtd1y, Mty 6, 1971
Complete-New York Stock List -~
lSI~ -• '. -... •• l~-... ' -" -••
lOO UO 1 0 l~O 10S3 1 U '>5.:l'>-'r
JI 011. '° '"'+ 'r 'W.S ' :19\o Oil I I? 1 11 -1• 30 -1&. '91 'J • + • UO I•• ' Al,! IA.<L~()o<IJ'o +li
Jt "'. ll\i 't0 1 ~1•• ~lt 35 351"-•
1l "'I JA il !J+1 n 16 1~, llo'o --
150 st 1 51 st\• +I 1 1i 'I 21 \'J ~l /J .., lA• U ~,•-ff ll JI SJ 'll !S-0.-~
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11" l l ..,, 60>1 -l'a 11 li'li IS'-1 l!>o -,.
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'11 • '''JI .. -~· •JlJl)Jl.I. •! ,, ~,. ,,,_
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Friday~s Closing Prices-Complete. New York Stock Exchange List
NEW YORK (UPI) -The sta<:k market came
under mild pressure Friday reflecting some un
easiness over th& cr1s1s tn the \vorld money market
and a rise tn the nation s unemployment rate last
month
One analyst said he noticed some precautionary
selling by investors \vho had decided to await week
end developments on the monetary .scene \Vest
European central bankers were expecld to n1eet
over the weekend to seek JOtnt action to meet the
C'flSIS
The Dow Jones lndustr111 Average was off
l 05 at 936 34 near the ftnal bell, \Vhile Standard
& Poor s 500 stock index showed a loss ol 0 35 at
10288
Declines outscored advances 941
among the 1 680 issues crossing the tape
to 452,
A turnover of around 16 250 000 shares com
pared with 19 300 000 shares traded Thursday
The Labor Department reported that unem
ployment rose tn April to 6 I percent of the work
force fron1 6 percent a month ear her It "as the
second consecuh\e monthly ri se and was regard
ed as a setback 1n the Adm1n1strat1on s bid tp get
unemployment do"n by the Nove mber 1972 elec
t1on
SC DAILY PILOT J:J
FAIR
F1•t r1 r f1dv1I Thoto
tlir•• worch IU"l liljt f1clort ;,.
op1r1tio11 011 th• DAI LY PILO\
1d tor 1! p191 •v•rv div
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
•
$600 Slirine
To Be Built
A $800 freedom shrine wilt
be lnsl!lled in the Frtd Mokiht
Elementary School 1n Fou~,
taln Valley now ander con
struchon
KIDS
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
.,
I '1
'
.,
• •
I 4 D>ll v PILOT Fridiy, May 7, 1971
92nd Congress Is .Achieving Some Things to' Date
By Fru.lr. Ekai.tt' acling : lhat the lfouse doesn't Most of what ha! been mne'
talk much but !!till likeJ to won't. hurt anybody and ·..,i:ne
WASHINGTON iUPl\ work only three days a week. or it may actually help,•
Whe.n war protC!lten; thrtalen· Okay. And nobody can see Social Stturity benefits to-r
'
Nl 'HS AN~l YllS
ol the military by 1:.7 billion aOO<Jt llilll.
a year in tbe hope that nobody The Senate has approved a
.rnµc.b will have to ~ drafted. $1.7$ b.IWon two-year program
A similar bill is under debale. of federal s ubsidle3 to create
jn the Senate. 150,000 new public service jobs
1W1y11 and Meam h a ·a in .schoois, hospitals, polict
public works projecU. Thal
bW ia in conference now with
the Senate, which approved a
narrower version.
Standby wage and price con-
trols were extended a year
although Prtsidenl Nii:on in--
sists he won't use then1 .
td to close dov.·n the Congress furthermore that }louse and Instance have been raised 10
this 'A'eek: Htp. Edv.'ard I. Senate come December will be percent, retroactive lo J~. 1.
Koch 11)..r\.Y ' predicted oor-rushing as usual to try to get Now the llouse WaYs ·and
rectty they couldn"l do 11 · done with their work. Means Committee has In the
"It's hard to bring to a grin-But the record shows that works another increase for
ding halt a machine that !sn't since Jan. %!, wht>n it got off next year.
in state and local elections (as
tl)ey already can in election of
f~eral bfftcialsJ.
dra}ted a bll~ to reform and fire forces, and other
welfare, catch ,ch~Jers apd overworked and uhderstaffed
put loafers_ to work. while "places. A slmilaf biU is ready
a~suring the needy at leasr !or House action nes:t week.
$200 a montli for a family cl The House has approved
four. Both liberals and con--~ 3nother job-building bill, a $5.5
sen:alives so far see.m pleased billion measure to speed up
Both House and Senate fac-
ed up to the Supersonic
Transport issue again, and
decided finally we can get
along without a plane that will
get u.s from New York to Lon-
don in three hours instead or
the six hours and 40 minutes
now needed,
Naturally, along with . t!I
this the national debt limit
has' been raised once again,
this lime from $395 billion !()
$430 billion. Maybe if the
Congress doesn't work too
hard the rest of the year. we
can make that one stick for
awhile.
mo\•ing ." Koch io:d !he house. to a late start due to the la te A constitutional amendment
Thjs is not to deny all the windup of the 9lsl Congre~. a was passed and sent lo the
olher unkind lh111~s )OU have Jot has been done by, the 92nd. slates to let 18-year-olds vote heacd about Congrt'ss. It Is to1 ___________ _
The House passed a bill to
continue lhe draft, i? n d
automaUc cOllege deferment..,
al)C( raise pay and allo\:ances
~e most of them and to
say that some other wttk's
analysis will be adding more to
the llsl.
But al the risk of standing
acrused of spreading Rood
nt''A'S, 'A'e feel compelled to
report that what Koch said
isn"I lair. Actually lhe 92nd
Congress to date has been
plodding right along 'A'ith its
work.
You may have reud that the
Democrati(" house I ea de r s
aren't the best pals 1n the
Yl"Orld and don"t always tonsulf
iAi th each olh<>r : t.h11l the
Senate still prefers talking to
Rogers' Trip
To Mideast
Important
By PHIL NEWSO M
Secretary •I Slate William
f . ·Rogers' Mideast visit
brough! to a head a policy
debate between Egypt 's hawks
and doves, 'A'ilh the doves, for
!he moment at least. seem-
ingly in the ascendancy.
Although an over-simplifica-
l1-0n. ii is one interpretation
wh ich may ~ drawn from
Cairo's cryptic announcement
of the dismissal of Vice Presi-
dent Ali Sabry. longtime
fnend of the Soviet Union. bil-
ler critic of the United States
and opponent of a compromise
peace settlement in the Middle
East. ·
It further suggests the im-
por1ance attached to the
Rogers visit by the govern-
menl of Egyplian President
AnsiA·ar Al-Sadat and the
praise or blame "'hich will be
heaped •n the American
Reretary ii his mission suc-
ceeds or fails.
It is Rogers' misfortune that
besides the delicacy ef his
mission, he also is the
prisoner • f circumstances
beyond his control, involving
as they do a power struggle
between Sadat and his closest
rival. Sabry, and. in Israel. a
government whose ability to
compromise is limited by a
defiant public opinion opposed
to any Israeli withdrawal from
occupied Arab territory.
That this public opinion is in
part the result ef l he
go\•ernmenl's own manipula-
tion is beside the point in this
discussion.
Allhough not among the
rarly leaders. Sabry is one of
the last of the originals in the
coup that overthrew King
farouk in July. 1952.
\\'1th Pr.esident Gama! Abdel
Nasser's death last October,
he "'as considered among the
leading contenders for !he suc-
cession. Over the years he has
demonstrated great resiliency.
Ht' ha s !lerved as premier
and had served once before in
the vice presidency. bcfnre the
1967 "'ar with Israel. Jn 1965
J\asser nan1eti hiln Secretary
General of lhe Arab Socialis1
L"n1on, Egypt's only legal
political part)'. He fel l into
<'Chpsc in 1969 after a !'1nug-
gling scandal i n v o I v 1 n g
men1bers of his par1y on a
return frorr a visit le the
Soviet Union.
In April. 1970, Nasser nan1cd
him permanent secretary or a
ne'A' Asu Commission fin
Foreign Affairs. 'A'ilh special
attention \fl the Soviet Union.
I le was last known to have
visi ted the Soviet l"nion last
Decemlx!r during a military
mission there. He did not ac·
company Sadat on the la\\er's
sccrel visit there in late
January.
Sabry is kno"'n as a doc··
trinaire Marxisl soci a1i s1
He •pposed Nas~er's agrre-
menl wilh Saudi Arabia 1o encl
!he war in Yem1'n. and he
argued !hat in order lo main-
lain its international influencr,
Egypt n1us1 continue SUIJJ)Qrl
for ··na11onal Ii ber at i o n
movements" abr0<1d.
In his opposition to Sadttt. he
apparently 110Ught le use both
his friendship ~·ilh the Soviet
Union and his influence inside
the Asu.
He opposed his government's
Initiatives toward a negotiated
Mideast Peace and IL~ plan~
to join In a federaton with
Libya and Syria
Presumably hi s oppru;111on tn
the latter "1prang fro1n ""·
treme n1Uont1lism !liner thr
Judef'I of bolh l.iby11 nnd
Syria are almo1l a11 warlike il $
he In their enmlly to1113 rd
1~r1el.
Big
Adotabl• You
DELUXE WAGOH BIR-B-Q
With Slide-Out Fire Draw.er
R.ce111ing door with full vi.,.. glen•
window. warming oYen. qu.iek draw
fir• craw•r for easy charcoal filling
and slarting. adju1labl• fir•box. two
chrome plaled grid•. UL motor. •Pit and
two tines. lcuv• bottom ahelt. wide
track whHl•. 4l"xf9"xl81h. ... (For ooc• I
had th• facta.) 2 987
FOLiliHG. CAMP COT
ARD MATTRESS
All aluminum tram•, ccmTa• top.
co..,•r•d mattress with d••P foam.
lill. o 10111• if there •nr was oa•.
Ligbt to carry, 10 why ccrmp Oil tbei
$J10Uttd un .. 11 you got ci lblDg ·
about roughing U.
917
·BLUE ICE
Funny 1tull. Fe•I• Ilk• o bag filled
with J•lly until you fr-1• ii at
home. thu it 1tay1 Ilk• le• for
hours:, Sen• buying ic. for lb. chttl
and no more wllh the bacon
floating in lb• 'Water.
REG.
91'
-
PIG.
JOHNSON'S
GLORY
SPRAY
FOAM
RUG
CLEANER
The n~m• t•l11 all 10 what mor1
can 11ay. I'll t•ll you a }olle: Did
you h•or about th• guy who was
1ent lo prison for making big
money -obou1 a ha.It inch loo long.
147.
TWO MAH
PUP TENT
Big enough for two Boy Scoa!s.
th.rN 11dzmy lndicm Gulde1. fout
tiny Cuba. 14 PV.PPiff, 28 bam1ters.
115 •hit• mk::• or oD• m9CID srlZllt -·
}i., -
'l<" -• -
SHELL
HO-PEST
STRIP
127
Th•y aay just hong It up indoors or
outdoors and th9 bug1 just fad e ·
ClWCIJ'. CompromiN, hcmg It ju.It
oatsJde tb8 doot and get them GD
th• way In.
CAR
WASH
BRUSH
£v1ry year th• price get11ow.r.
th1y must be making the thin; out
of old c:lgarett• toll. GIM• you lilre
o six-loot arm lo g•t Gil U.. 1pot1
on th• car.
t..,...;e ""° -.-SoBdaf T-oa Galdo am ftriM ,...1um<1. Ah ha. to you all lmow what the •P.
lown hl.lowa Want: to p:i.l a pcrt!o,CONCVP. A Jot of moDllf1 dgbtf Got to gel.a laa;nk 1ocm to. do 1t. W•lL are~ll ill
for cs nzpdM. U yoa nad fm:thw •••
....... ! ." ••.•. . .· ...... " . ·:·• . ~. . . • ALL
ALUMINUM
PATIO KITS
' ·"'r .. ,1,,.., ...
10x20
8x20
I • 8 • • •
8 • I 8 • •
·77
169.95
137.77
,,,,. ,
... : ; • ,;I"'~ .• Did you look cloffat those prices? This 11 the
compl•I• deal to put the all~alumiaum patlo co'nr AdftrtlMcl
•pec:lal• goocl
lhN May 12.
1971. DO IT YOURSELF
ARD SAYE MONEY
on your slab. A guy with half a brain and a little
etfort can put it up and sctY• hundreds of dollars. n
did one and I work Oil o~y on•quarter of a braln.)
This 11 an introductory ,•pecial a1 we Just got our
Dnt load In, 10 save a bundle.
4x8 FOOT
SHEETROCK
First off. I'll tell yoo it I• % 1.nch
thick. Don't those ads frost you that
hide the 1pecification11Jl littl• tyPe
way dowu at lb• bottom. So
compare, 1f1 a buy. 126
6 "· COMBED CEDAR
PALINGS
Nie• textur•, th•••
g•t better looking
with age Qili:• ma:Df'
ho..,••-n) C good wom•a I 2 8
LUSTRA BRICK
TILE
Tw•lve square 1-1 la the box.
Jooks ju11 Ilk• brick but r~• full
1tick II on. No heaTY W8i;)a.l,Do
m•••· no Nlnlorcing.
2 47
IOI
9xl2
DROPCLOTB
Plastic so wh•n you bock
•..,•rytbiug O"fet and your wUe y.U1
crt you. it won't naln. th• rug. Rf she
yells tooloag. wh1 DOI gi"f• her a
little 1hot too.}
7:,..
20 INCH
BREEZE BOX
FAR
Big beo11. reall1 moY•I TOlumes of
air. Sa If ycu 'r. In betw-n air
condiUoning end a d!akf Uttle fem.
thl1 i• th• best solution..
z 15'7 SPEED
VACUUM
VISE
Set It on any smooth 11.1rlace. pu1b
the l8"flf down and It holds Ilk• a
darn lh•ll at Cl Saturdczr Dight
claD1bak•. Swi••l jaws.
297
5/B"xSO n.
NYLON REINFORCED
BOSE
Strength without the w•ight or
atillne1s of the old type. Bta11
coupllngL Som• kind of a
• guarani••· but J can't Nad th• flM
\ print wJtbaut my glasses. •
lmfG O'
LAWN
POWER
;EDGER
NO.
206
337
Th• king of the lown. edgM J*'Pl ..
Years of making th• b.1t 4-cytl•
engine deol1, hlllr adju.1ta.ble .tor
d•pthand angle oi cut.
54aa
YOUR CHOICE
• 100 GARBAGE BAGS
Fii,.• to 11 quart 1!1•.
• 20 TRASH CAN
LINERS
I lg 33 Gclloa Sli•
• 10 LEAF BAGS
MoDll•r S bulh•l 11u.
I
•
"
lU'I T•"•~•M
Gls Face 1976 Deaillltae ~
Frisking
On Drugs
GM Pessimistic
•
WASHINGTON (AP! -The
customs Bureau ••Y• I
On S1n og Cutdown
crackdown on lht flow or ll· WASJUNGTON (lJPl) -
1egal drugs from Indochina Genera! Motors joined Ford
means returning servicemen today in claiming It has found
can expect lo be searched no way t-0 meet exhaust
thoroughly when they enter cleanup 11.andardl. It alto
the States. dlscln1ed a n t I p o 11 u t l on
Commissioner Myles J . research expendlturts that are
Ambrose annolU'Jced the in· \\'tit below itl outlays for
tensified C.'ustoms e f r o r l adverllillng.
Thursday, saying the problem In prepared testimony, Gttt
of illegal drugs f I o w i n g President Edward N. Cole said
through military perBOMel his firm was "hopeful" It
and post cfrices had rtachtd could meet the requlred 90
sericus proportions . percent red u c Ii on in
Henceforth , ht aaid, all mall hydrocarbon and c a r b o n
packages from Southeast A1ia monoxide emlulons for 1975
will be closely examined. models, compared wllb 1970
Cole testifitd that GM spent
$119 mUUnn en el ha u 1 t
cleanup restarch In 1970 and
would spend at least 1124
million lhis yt.ar. The firm 's
1970 ule1 and profit.II, both
reduc@d by a strike, were
re!peclively $18.7 billion and
$609 million.
Advertising Aae, a trade
publication, estimated GM'•
advertising outlays at $171.5
million in 1969. the latut year
for v.'h.ich fi'!'.:~~s were avai-
lable. GM 's 1969 sales 11·ere
124 billion a:-:1 iis profit! were
$1 .7 billion.
Ford 1~id it spent '66
Friday, M~ 7, 1971 DAil Y Pilaf 1J
. ......
million on anti po 11 u t Ion ''Well, 1f it'• :not polluted, ,my do they uem 10
research in 1970 and is spen-uxiOUI to pt cut ?'1
dln& $132 million lhla year. ----------,;;;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;;;;-.
GOVERNMENT WORKER IN BOSTON GETS HELPING HAND PROM POLICEMEN
100 Arrested 1t J.F.K. F"ertl Building Attempting to Disrupt lu1ina1s
He said military base com-models. But ht added:
manders WQU\d cooperate wllh "At lhis point in time we
Customs officers in checking have no way of controlling ox.
servicemen's baggage, their idea of nitrogen to the ex·
personal belongings, and cargo tremely tow levels which could
returning from Soul he a • t be rcqulred by the clean air
Asia. amendment.s of 1970 for 1978
The crackdown mean" all models." mail parcels going through U.S. Steel Cost Boosts Vl\'ITED
STATES
Alcoholism Police Arrest 100
Funds Asked Boston Protesters
military post offices will be The law requires 11 90 per-
subjecl to "100 percent ei· cent nitrogen oxides reduction
amination," Ambrose said. for 1976 cars. Ford testified Matched by 3 Big Fir1ns ! A Customs spokesman said similarly Thursday. American
that means they will be open-Molors and Volbwagen ex·
ed. Up to now, all parcels prtsM:d even more pessimism.
haven't bttn, only 1 h 0 s 9 The hearings bffore the From Wire Servlce1 do not mean wa1e and price
suspected of containing drugs. Environmental Protection PITI'SBURGii _ Ma J 9 r controll were necessary,
Ambrose aaid the stepped up Agency <EPA) are t 0 slttl producers are f1lllng In Other major producera a.id
l\' ATIOI\' AL
BANK
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OPIN
SATURDAYS By Nixon
\\'ASHINGTON (AP ) -The
Nixon administration has ·~
nounced a "major national ef-
fort" to treat alcoholism and
has asked Congress to provjde
$34.6 million for the program.
Th is fig ures out to about
$3.90 a year for each of lhe
counlry's 9 million alcoholics
or problem drinkers.
Tu·o senators contend this is
not enough.
Dr. Morris E. Chavtt.z:,
whose appointment as direct.or
of the government's new N11·
tional Inslltute of Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism was an~
nounced Thursday,
acknowledeed in an interview
the SJ4.6 million lld-
minlstralion request r or
alcoholism program! n e x t
year wUI fall far short o( the
need .
"The country Is ambival'!nt
1bout alcoholism and dO!'Sll't
appear ready throug h
Congress to provide lhe need·
ed funds ," he said.
By The A110Claled Pre11
Police arrested at least 100
persons during an antiwar sit-
in in Boston Thursday during
a day otherwise marked by
waning of demonstrations
against the lndochlna war
around the nation.
The sitdown lasted more
than seven hours outside the
John F. Kennedy federal
building . About 2.000 marchers
came from 11 Boston Common
gathering with the announced
intention of stopping the
building's operation by
preventing lts 4,200 employes
from enltring.
Police at lhe University of -
Illinois sa id they arrested 30
persons for failing to leave a
lobby \\'here they conducted a
sit in protest against
recruiters on campus.
Clapping hands and chanting
"We \\'ant peace now ," about
50 antiwar protesters paraded
in a cir(\le at the entrance lo
the federal building in
downtown Buffalo, N.Y. There
was no attempt to block pei)-
ple from entering or leaving
the building. · ,
At the Waynt State
University cahipu.s ln Detroit.
about 350 persons aathered for
an antiwar rally.
enforctment action is designed determine how the industry ~s line and matching $8 lo 113.50 they were reviewina: their I
to st()p what he called the doing and whether It Is ma . per ton price increa1e1 an-pricln&: policies in light ef the
"Oood of high grade heroin ing • "good fa ith" effort to db US St IC increases. meet the standards. nounce Y · · ee orp. on Wheeling PJ!tsburgh Steel and other hard narcotic drugs EPA Administrator William steel useo to manufacture into the United Slates." automobiles. appliances and Corp., another of the nation's One shipment of illicit D. Ruckelshaus can grant a h ood big producers, said It was
one-year postponement of the 01 er consumer g s. doing some "ntw figuring" on 1 heoin was bagged recently, Thr.... maw 1teel cor-d standards in the event of a .... r-1•· prl-1•-·cture ,.· 1;•hl or the commissioner disc lost · porations, Jones & Lau"hlin, "" ~ w" -.
' .. 1 , ....
MON •• fHUIS. 10.S ~.M.
P•IDATS 10·' P.M.
1714) 540..1211. Let.tect 111:
S.. C•Olt Pia•, Cnhl MeM
AHi. Vic• fl'1'9&..Maft .. W
H. M. STOLTE
A handful of diebatd
demonstrators remained in
(ront of ROTC headquarters at
Kent St.ate Unlver1ity in Kent,
Ohio. The building was open
arter being closed during most
of a four day memorial
observance for the deaths a
year ago of four students in a
confrontation wilh Ohio Na-
tlonal Guardsmen.
•· I t B f •·good faith" effort that fa ils. • the spreading pr1·ce hike Wncn spec a ureau o Republic and Armco Thur1day · d 0 He announced Thursday he movement. ·~~~~~~~~~~~ Narcotics an anger o u s matched hikts announced by But Bethlehem Steel r-rp .. " Drug agents seized 17 pounds v.'ould evaluate efforts partly us st-t Wednesday Thi In ~ by comparing antipollution · · "" · • the No. 2 atttlmaker, seemed of heroin in a piece of military creases averaged 8% percent .
II A JI ,. research srvndlng vdth sales, to •· shying away from the ma pr v. r· The products accounl for L'C k · d 1 profits and advertialng trend. The pac age \\'as seize a one-third of industry shlp·.---------------------Fl. Monmouth, N.J .. and came outlays. menls and equal about one-
The One That Carff
Tho DAILY PILOT-
from Bangkok, Thailand, he hall of Jones & Laughlin'• pro-
said. CWJtoms estimated the ductloh. The increases may
SI G • heroin is worth aOOut $1.75 Air Cras}t enable J&L to reverse the 121 OW ams mllllon If IOid on lhe street. million loss il posted last year.
The seizure was no t In \V ashington. Treasury .
In Economy previously d Is c Io s e d tG CJ aims 12 Secretary John e. Connally
•'preserve the security or the said he "'as very much
Investigations," Custom& said. COOLIDGE, Arii. (UPI) _ disturbed by the round of in-
Reported No arrests have been made. An Apache Airlines plane, creases . He 1aid steel pro-
Th•. heroin, in 20 plastic duc•r • ·'are prlcln1 described as "coughing and bags In a metal box, \ll'as themselves out of the world H~ SPRINGS V (AP) enclostd in slyrofoam and sputtering." cra3hed into a k I" v' • a. -cotton field during an ap-mar e · The economy ii making alow wrapped in multiple layers of parent emergency landing at.-Conna\ly's reaction w a 1
but fa irly satisfactory gaina, brown paper. tempt Thursday, killing all 12 1tron1er lhan the "disap·
Ind ti .d From March 1 to April 24, a per••ns aboard. pointment " ex.pres~ b Y
~ , .. ,. •....C .... -·-.... ,, ... H
$164.88 "';;:...-
-~ 11., ............. ....... ..... , .... . lop uatry execu ves aa1 c to pok.,ma 1 a,. • -Pr Id · J Pr •·· e•··y us ms 1 n u , "They didn 't stand a es ent11 eaa IX\;r i.a1
today, and the government Customs made 248 1uch dru g chance," aald Ramon Flore•:l_:R~on~Z~l•~il~e~r~n~r~li~er~.~~~~=~~~;;;;~::::::::~~~~ should avoid any action that seizures through Army and who saw the two turbo-prop Connally 1ald the Increase•
might rekindle inflation. Air Force post offices alone. De Havilland Dove strike a
Member• of the Buslne.ss concrete Irrigation dltch and
Congress Approval Seen
For Loans to Lockheed
Council, opening their •pring KJDS LOVE It• front porllon dlslnteg"te Jn
'meellrig here. told newsmen flames as it careened 300 feet Jnto lhe fitld .
inflation continues to be lhe UN CLE LEN Flores uid the pilot, Ted
country's foremost problem, Huntington. who took off about
damaging to the confidence of Saturdays in 20 minutes earlier from
consumer• at home and con-Tuc11on, appeared to be trying
CEMENT BOATS FLOAT
W•tch McCi.tchlo M .. 101 lulW o Clftloot
._ ot RocrMtlon Show lflru Moy I.
South Coast 'Plua 1. c •• ,, -.
WASHJNGTON ,_P)
There are indlcation1
Congress will approve loan
guarantees for L o c k h e e d
Aircraft Corp.. and perhaps
other companies as well. Bul
one congressman attacked the
move as an attempt to bail out
the Lockheed chairman and
''his merry band of thieves."
Rep. Y.'illlam S. Moorhead
()).Pa.), lashed out Thur!dsy
at the Nixon Administration,
which asked lhe guar1ntees,
and Lockheed ch8 i rm an
Daniel Haughton.
"One has to admire Daniel
Haugh1on whn by sheer guts
1nd balling wire has kept his
group of Incompetents afloat
by Intimidating the federal
government with threats of
corporate suicide and then
walking out \\'ilh lhe tax·
pa yers' money," Moorhead
1ald .
Hill statemrnt followed a
news conference &t \\'hich
Secretary of Treasury John B.
Connally announced the 1d·
ministration ne:rl v•eek will
send Congress a bill seeking
S2SO million in guarantees to
keep Lockheed from col-
lapsing
Connally sa i d hii;
preliminary soundings indicate
the legislation will be ap-
proved.
Th DAILY PILOT to make an emergency landing fldence Jn lhe dotlar abroad. e a half mile away at Cootld1e
The council's panel of 20 Airport.
private indu1try economists, ltl~::::::::~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i-wa1 learned, has submitt.ed a I
Ul'I T•l••Mlll
LOCKHEED HELPER
Secretary Conn1lly
The consensus of several
congressmen queried is lhat a
stiff fight over the Nixon ad-
mlnistralion plan will be
followtd by approval of aome
type bill embracing other
shaky businesse! who 1 e
failure could have severe ef·
feels on the nati onal economy.
One key Democrat said,
however, that if the bill Is ex-
panded. "The whole thing wtll
si"k. Why not put on the end
of it, 'Capitalism is dead.'"
consen!WI report indicating
national output will total a lit-
tle under 11.050 Lrilllon th Is
year.
Thal would be v.·ell short of
President Nixon·s estimate of
$1.065 trlllion , on whtch the
administration'• fiscal 1972
budget estimate was hued.
Jn February, the council
predicted prlct I n c re a 11 e 1
across the entire economy
would average 4 percent this
year: now its judgment is '·' percent. That represents a
tlowdown from last yellr's S.3
percent rise, but a Jes1 im·
presslve improvement than
had been anlicipattd.
used cars
used
~ut not abused
llYlllly-OnH •l
~1!~L~
tlm HAbOR llVD. / OOlfA Ml&\
(714) 14M100
Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores!
..
••
DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Problems
A year has passed since a new Laguna Beach City
Council, with an apparent built-in 3·2 majority, was
swept tn to office in Laguna Beach on the heels of a
windy election campaign.
All three success!uJ candidates hit lheir winning
streak by zeroing in on the hippie-drug issue, with park·
ing and traffic problems as side issues.
The hippies are still with us, but public resentment,
no longer fired by campaign rhetoric, seems lo have
cooled. The drug problem is worse. So are parking and
traffic \YOQS.
Only the most optimistic voter \vould expect an ad-
ministration to live up to all its campaign promises. But
most Laguna councils have bad some accomplishment
at which to point with pride: the Main Beach purchase:
new fire stations; an excellent sign ordinance; the grad-
ing ordinance.
This one set some kind of record for a rocky. tumul·
tuous first year by anta,gonizing and alarming large sec·
tors of the community and drawing, as a result, the
biggest audiences in local government history.
It started out on a sour note by firing the entire
Planning Commission in a unique midnight session. {As
it developed, three new appointees have since resigned.)
In an attempt to satisfy \vhal son1e of its members
apparently thought \vas popular demand, the council
.f'1C1n created an uproar by coming up with half a dozen
"urgency" ordinances of doubtful legality, all of which
bad to be tabled.
One .of them later was revived to become the no\V·
renowned "dog ordinance" that sparked a public outcry
·and \\las overturned by refe'rendum. •
• A ·house-to-house building inspection program in
'the old \Voodland Drive area set off further protests.
That neighborhood also was the scene of a miniature
riot involving police agencies from outside the commun·
lty\ which led to an official inquiry and lawsuits against
the city. ·
Still Here
Though some criticized the councU for over-reacting
to the Christmas "happening" that brought 20,000
young people and 400 police to the city, the consensus
was that the city fathers were more to be pitied than
censured for this one.
The hullabaloo over high rise has not yet formally
reached the council, but alter stormy Planning Commis·
sion meetings, the council discreeUy deferred its O\vn
hearings.
Possibly gro\\.·ing wiser with age'?
The Boys in the Kitchen
There is b"ardly a male alive who hasn't -at one
point or his life or another -tried to survive on hi3
own without the domestic help of a woman.
The days of eating cold, canned chili beans. ham·
burgers and corn flakes are the quickest to leave a man's
memory after h'e finds his mate.
\Vhat made average bachelorhood even more dis·
rnal \\'ere events like the appearance of pink underwear
after a frustrating day at the laundromat.
Now a teacher -a woman, certainly -at San
Clemente High School has taken all that into account
and developed a new class. ~ler male students on the
Triton campus probably will 5eek sainthood for her a
few years hence.
1'1rs. Ann Ryan heads a popular program teaching
boys everything from preparing a nutritious meal to
handy household hints -all aimed at surviving the
bachelor years. The course is surprisingly popular.
One drawback from the course, however, might not
sho\v up until after the transition from bachelor to
bridegroom.
Our eager student might get stuck in the kitchen it
his cooking's that good. s
I Tf\WOHT THE PEACE
MARCHEi<'!> WENT .HOME !:>Uf'IDAYI
TkEY DID! n!AT'S
THE FBI!
Paper Drives
Can't Absorb
Dear
Gloomy
Gu s:
Be Calls It Sheer Co11iniercialis11i
Refuse Piles
The emotional play upOn legitimate
public concern for Callfornia'a tn·
vironment appears to be leading those
charged with at least one• phase of the
problem into a crtsis .situation.
This Is in lbe field of solld waste
disposal where the term •·recycliJl.4"
t!ittms to have become the magic woi'd
with environmentallspi. Witness the cam-
paigns of container suppliers to buy back
thtir used prod~ts and the proliferation
of volunteer manned "ecology centers"
throughout the state.
As is so often the case with faddist
causes, zeal for rttycUng seems to be
outdistancing the economics a n d
technology of salvage and reuse as a ma-
jor force in solid waste management.
THE NATIONAL l\tAGAZINE for the
f!anitalion Industry, Solid Wastes
J\1anage1nent. reports that at least three
Southern California communities are
halting sepa rate collection of o Id
newsprint and other types of paper. Thil
because waste paper processors are
swamped beyond their capacity and the
price of waste newspapers alone has
dropped from $20 to '4 a ton in six
months.
Commenting editorially the
authoritative ·journal declared: "Add to
all this the reports from the Golden State
from refuse contractors who have their
~'ards piled high with salvaged cor·
rugated papers and cardboards. and the
irritation ot-all those community.minded
folks entrapped in the recycling illusion
can be well understood •.•
"This entire sad and sorry story is
startlingly reminiscent of \\'orld War ll.
Then, great salvage drives wer~ organiz.
ed by patriotic stay.at-home citizens.
Jmpresllive mounds or paper, metals and
cloth "·ere assen1bled. And most of it
How come the supervisors are cool-
ing their heels on the Orange
County Airport study? The Parsons
Report has been done for at least
three monlhs and still v.·e've
heard noLhing.
-L. R. T.
ni. '"'-r-.tllctt rt1crtn' .,,.,.., ""' lll(c9-llr !MM fl IM M.,...-r. 1-111
,_ Ht -ft M Olwlolr Gvt. D1lh' ,.li.t.
.s~yed right there, because the re wss no
demand f~ it."
ntAT RECYCLING as it is now being
undertaken can only seTve as a small tool
in the overall function of solid waste
disposal was made clear in a recent
study in San Francisco.
There collecliOJ1 and di sposal of refuse
is the responsibility of two nationally
recognized l~aders in the field, Sunset
Scavenger· Company and Golden Gate
Dlspc)sal Company. To accurately plan
the role of reclamation, Sunset ran an
analysis or bow much of an average
household's waste "'as a c tu ally
recyclable.
One ton of typ ical refuse was collected
rrom tllftt separate residential areas in
lhe city and hand sorted into 10
categories. The highest yield o I
recoverable products -pr i mar i I y
marketable paper, meta ls and glass -
comprised Jess than a third of the col·
le<:ted refuse.
Bundling this newspaper and sending
back the beer can you emptied while
reading it may well be regarded as a con·
tribution to enhancement of the state'a
ecosystem but support of efforts to im·
prove long-range waste dis po s a I
technology will be an even greater one.
l\llke Abnm.oo
California Ftature Service
Pi zza as GI Fertili zer -WASliI NGTQ'.'{ -Our stories about
mismanagemenl and malfeasance in the
Army·s worldwide. $2.S bil\ion·a·year
commissary systen1 has st im ulated a
Justice Department investigation.
Go\'ernment sleuths, in search of
e\'idence to present
lo a grand jury,
have poked around
mainly In \I/ashing.
ton. We suggest lhey
also 1ook tnto the
garbage pits and
s anitary flllsof
Europe.
They will find lhal
furti ve commissary
officials have tried to cover up their
buying blunders by du mping food Into lhe
garbage. They ha\'e disposed of
truckloads or frozen goodies and pitta.
pies that spolltd In comnlissary freezer&.
AS A R ~I Y DOCO~IE1'il in our
possession. for example. tells about how
lhe Arm y bought enough Round.the CIOt'k
Apple Snack to satl.~y Its <.'Ommissary
('UStomers in Europe for lhree year5 and
enough Round·lhe Clock Berry Snack to
last for fi\·e years. Yet these frozen
delectables have a freezer life of only iix
montbl.
The commissary offlcial5. in the
deel)e$l. of secrtey, truckNi lens of
tholl~anda ol apple mi berry snacks to
(',mnan unltaey fllls, thereby enrichina:
the .on at. 37 cents a Rrving.
A t~ l!'PPlf of pizza pltJ, which
1l110 became Ulnted after 111 monlh3 in
commfuary £rttura, was converted
•im!Wty lllto Gerfuon fel'liliw.
ON A 'O'l'lll!JI buying tprtt '°"'.
niiu1ry offlclals bought 95,000 canll of •
.•.
I
'
.~~ "' Jack Anderaon .. v .... ""'""'?
Del l\1onte while c~am corn. This was
enough to last 30 months, 18 months
longer than the cans should be kept on
the shelves. To get rid of them, the com·
r.1issaries reduced the price from JI to 11
cents per can and sold them off at a I~.
\\'e have been unable to confirm reports
that some cans were simply thrown
away.
We have traced some of these wild
purchases back to Col. Jamea McDowell.
who then headed the purchasing board
for the European con1missary system.
Far from being censured for his 'A'aSte,
however, he has now been gi ven an even
more imporlant commissary job. He is
~w deputy lo l\faJ. ~n. John McLaugh-
lin, >P110 runs the quartermaster center at
Fon L<'r, Va.
~IY ASSOCIATE Les \Vhitten rtached
the extravagant colonel at fort Lee and
a<;ked why he bought so much food that
had to be pl014 cd under. He llllpped,
"No comment." to all questions.
Whillf"n 1\so tried lo question him ~bout report s that he showed unU!Ull'
favoritism for Rockingham Chlcktn.
Aller Certain Rockingham producta: were
declartd unsanitary by aovernment ln-
gpeclora, lhe Pentagon gave Euro-
J>('l n rommlszarlea the optioD of buying
other brands.
M e Dowe 11 accepted 1 Rock·
lr.gham proposal to continue stocking ill
producta in different pack11ge1 which had
not been found uns11nitairy. The end
re1!i11ll , howtvrr, w11s that the goodll weH
unpopular with mltltary housewlV(!s.
'
Critic Speaks Out on 'lrvinese'
To the Editor:
The articles concerning the Irvine
Company's coast.ti deveklpment plans
{DAILY PlLOT, April 28 and 29) con-
tained a number of passages in pure
Irvine.st, y,•hich I define as a corporate
dialect .... ·herein the public statement
completely masks the thought behind it.
For those unfamiliar with this linguistic
variant, I offer my translation of 1 few of
the remarks of Richard A. Reese, Jrvine
vice-president of planJ1ini :
STATE1tENT: "Our economic studies
indicate a critical growing need for a true
coastal resort community." TRANSLA-
TION : "We hired a study group and told
them to come up with that re$U!t, or else.
They delivered."
STATEMENT: "We don't want 1n
u n d esirable automobile-oriented en·
vlronment." TRANSLATION : "We've got
lo make them forget that all those people
will have to get there by car. If that com-
pletely clobbers Coas t Highway in both
directions, it's not <lUr problem."
STATEl\1EN'1': "'Eco'mgy ol tidepools
and undersea gardens is currently un-
protected from irresponsible public
desecration .•. we have learned that the
absence of development alone doesn't in·
sure protection of the e c o I o g y . · '
TRANSLATION: "If they'll S\\'al\ow the:
idea that a few hundred thousand more
people around those tidepools will save
them, y,•e're home free ; they"ll believe
anything."
STATE1itENT: ''We can always do
another Cameo Shores, and this would
satisfy our economic needs, but it is !be
sort of thing people object lo because it
cuts of( the coast." TRANSLATION :
"Cameo Shores was a bummer; we could
have gotten a hundred times the return
f~om !hat land if they 'd have let u.s 10
high-rise. We 've got to keep trying."
OTHER FACETS or the Irvine pro-
posal, while expressed.in somple English,
are no le ss disturbing. The suggestion
that Coast Highway be rel oca ted at the
expense of Orange County taxpayers. to
accommodate the i r profit-oriented
development, is almost unbelievable.
Their magnanimous offer to dedicate two
canyon areas as public parks amounts to
throwing us a fish, since I suspect that
acreage is too precipitous to profitably
develop anyway.
Despite all the self-laudatory
statements about devtlopment of its land
in the public interest, the Irvine Company
cootinu~ to base its planning on sheer
commercialism.
ROBERT D. RIES
Pare ttta& Re apottsll>lllt"
To the Editor:
Referriing to the-letter trom "Cathy
Hoad" (11'.ailbox, ~lay 4):
She asks in her letter, "How can you go
Into a <'rDWd of kids and say •you're clean
and whole.some and you're not'. As a
teenager I know for 1 fact you c1n't."
The answer is simple. Jf a youngster is
tngaging in sexual intercourse (and you
don't get V.D. from toilet seats) at the
age of 15 or 16. she has classified herself.
lf she doesn 't, she doesn't v.11rry about
V.D.
AS ASSEMBLnfAN Robert •I. Burke
puts It. those partnts who care. and raise
tbelr chlldn:n lnformatlvel)' so that they
too care. should not have their children
subjected to the problems trniit are
crtated by parents and children who do
not care.
My statement l! bnJtal If it refen to
Cathy. or anyone like her. But mlf OUli
country reserve to the parenta the rtsh&
to raise their eblldrtn In accordance with
proper sexual !laodard.s that preclude the
unnecewry education by IJUf pubUc
IChools in the art of enjoying e1tr11·
marital lnten:oune without she danger of
.. do!nil _,
~tv CHILDREN •lao can comt"lo me
•
"""'" f..,,. nM1n an .. kMlt. Htn!YH' wril••• tMllN Oft"" ~ -.Mitt Ill * _.,.
-..... Tll9 "'~' .. aMe!IM lllt.•• ,. HI aau 1r t l'ltrllfllll II ... It r""rw<t. All MIM'1 nwll _.. civ. t11Mtur1 •Ml "''m"" ..,,..... lout ••m••
llll Y M wl!MltN 1111 ,__, If Mltltcltaf tM .... IJ
-WlflL P'""'1 Wiil Ml M .............
about sex. They don 't need to go lo the
schools because this is a part of my job
as a parent. Ut those of us who still feel
parents should raise children 4d so, and
don 't classify us all y,·ith the CtUoted
statistics. My children will know wlthoul
school education.
llONALD A. JONES
S11rvfval of Life
To the Edilor :
If one looks behind the ~alled
"obstructionism" of. which the: Sierra
Club is accused in the April 29 Guest
Editorial bY the califomia 'Yater
Resources Association, a concern for the
survival of ).ife itself emerges.
To what end should we dam the Trinity
and Eel Rivers in northern California.
rJooding food-yielding agricultural land
and destroying valuable fishing streams
v;hen recycled water can be obtained at
less cost 1 To what md should we turn a
large share of our ~·ater, as polluted
sewage, ·tnto rivers and oceans to kill the
marine life, eliminaUng · another food
source, and endangering our use or
beache.!1 when it could be recycled and
used righl here?
DAMS IN THE Colorado store most of
Orange County's water until it is so sa lty
and mineraliied, lhaL even when mixed
with our rapidly diminishing underground
supp]y, its qualily is far from satisfac.
tory. Yet that source of water was once
thought to be a perfect iolution to our
?.'aler needs.
Has the Water Resources Associalion
taken all these and many more side ef·
feels into consideration?
HAD THE RECENTLY enacted federal
Environmental Protection Act, requiring
a full study of the environmental impacl
of a development before any action was
authorized, been in effect, m a n y
detrimental constructions and practi~
might have been stopped.
Look behind the curtain. Is the need to
criticize the Sierra t..1ub based on tl1e
desire of a development.minded giant to
justify some <lf its biased interest proj-
ects.
MARY SCOTI
F11el119 111• 10 De al/•
To the Editor:
It is good to see IM DAILY PIWT
report on lhanatology (Comment Page ,
~1ay t ). On lhe othN hand. the rcpo,.t -
and thanatology itself -is really not
complete. There is something vii.al miss·
ln.g from the discussion: a consideration or the nature of death itse lf.
Death is not a passi;,g, transient thing .
Death is permanent. It is not a matter of
1-vlng down and saying, "I'm dead,'" and
then gelling up again and going 1on tu
something else. Death is the lasl "'ord.
Nobody s~ms able to appreciate this.
There can · nothing worse than ~terna l
nonexlste e. If you don't believe me.
you dori'f understand th e na ture of YOUR
death. Death is not an abstract thing !hat
happens to everybody else but not you -
the crushing fact is that it happens to
YOU.
ONCE YOU understand this you vdll
realiu no "divine plan'' can make your
death acceptable -·whether il occurs in
Vietnam or in a nursing home. You will
realize that the object of thanatoloi;;y
should not be tn make us accept death
but tn fiAht it -to the death!
"The 1.iVing ••. (st.ow) their unwlll·
lngness to come to terms with their O\\'n
mort.ality." Is this supposed to be new?
ts conventional per.;uasion going to
change the fundament al fact that man
deep down inside finds death unac·
ceptable? It hasn·t \Vorked in the past -
or the article would not have appeared -
and it can't work now. It is time for man
to grow up ou t of his cosmic inferiority
complex (dust thou art, dust you ui ll be)
and seize death itself by the throat. It 1s
time for death itself to die. . GREG FAHY
Treasurer California Chapter
Student Cyronics Association
'/Vega l ice Feedl>ael<'
To the Editor:
In opposing lhe 1971·72 calendar for
Laguna Beach Schools, r-.1r. Thomas in-
dicated that he had "gotten ;negative
feedback' from the community on the
proposal. 'People feel It Is another !n ii
long series of innov ations up here.' "
As a teacher who has taught in '"'U
school districts, I believe the communitv
should know that any teacher dedicated
lo in1proving education by improving the
program is devoting more lime and effort
lo kids than a teacher in a stagnant
school system. Teacher en thusiasm is
generated and sustained through renewal
of current programs.
The community should know that !ht
"school calendar'' proposal allows for
planning an all-year-a round use of &ehool
facilities. As a teacher. I feel it iJ
"'orthwhile to investigate this possibility.
ART FISHER
Thurston School
Jails i\'ee1I R e fo r mi119
To the Editor :
The purpose o~ this lelter is based on
my recent studies of the conditions of
jail.<i in the United Slates. Humane living
conditions in prisons cannot be reached
unless proper reforms are made.
Jails have be.;n shO\\'n to be a college
for crime. Not onlv is a small-time sneak
thief susceptible tO homosexual ra pe and
drugs, but all!O a prison can be a trade
school for crime. A young inexperienced
crim inal can be turned inlo a young,
highly proficient burglar.
EIGHT-FIVE PERCENT or all crimt!
committed are committed by those who
have been "rehabilitated.'' \Vithout pro-
per separation or criminals. the current
penal sy5lem is surely not a corrective
one.
I am proposint: l\vo propositions. I am
advocating reconstruclion and building o(
more and better jails. This reconslruc·
ling and building of new jails would ha~'e
a two-fold purpose.
FIRST, THE LIVING cond1l1ons would
be improved to human standards. The
jails now arc overcrowded and filthy . The
reconstruction of !he old and the building
or . the new would enlarge footage pe r
prisoner.
A second in1porlan1 resull or the
r~nstructi~v,.ould be lo segregate the
pr1.soners a Ording to criminal offense.
This "·ould ice the possibility of a col·
legc of crime '1cveloping.
I ~ope you will take interest in this ap·
palhng problem and give our prisoners 1
eak.
JIM SUNQUIST
Estate Planning Needs Experts
Some years ago a clerk in a bookstore.,
unpacking a shipment of new books,
found one . On the subject of "estate
planning." Thinking it must be about the
landscaping of large homes, he placed it
Jn the gardening section.
He would hardly make that mistake
today. Estate plaMing has come into it!
oy,·n, used by thoughtful p e o p I e
everywhere to preserve assets during
their lifetime and to pas.s them on wi!ely
-and economically -at death.
Ont reason for the growth of estate
pl1nnlng is Ult growth of estates.
Nowadays tven the ordinary citizen Is
likely lo have an est1te of substance. 1&
may well Include not only a home and a
savings act00nt but also personal life
Wuran«, group insuranct, stocks.
pernikm plan benefits. proHt-&harlng
options, and social security right.a.
ANOTHER REASON b that est.le
planning bu bttome far m o re
50phla:Uc11ted. Its ttcbnlques have gone
well beyond the traditional
"testamentary trust" for a rich old lady
and "spendthrift lru!&" for 1 rich young
m11n.
Unfortunately, there ire p I t f 1 11 s
1plehty for 1he amateur ph1nner. for
tx1mple : many people think avoiding
\
Law iu Ac tion
probate is tht? same as avoiding taxes.
But the federal estate tax Is based on the
entire estate, whether ii passes through
probate or not.
Likewi se, meny people think life
insurance ~·-~l tal:able. But lire
insurancf: prvcttfi.~ are included in
rederal estlte tll purposes unless he has
retained mne of the incidents of
ownmhfp of that policy.
TRUE, IT ~tA V be sensible In certaln
• circumstances lo avoid probate. And it
may be possible in certain clrtumstances
1o avoid taxes on life insureoce. But
clearly thlt ls a fleld in which the layman
need! upert help.
Much tnfonnatlon is ava ilable from
trust departments. a e count a n t s .
lnsur.Ance men, and l n v c Ii t men t
counselors. The ul timate a d v I s e: r ,
however, should usually be iln allorne)'.
since he alone ts fully qualified to give
lhe pel'!IOlllll legal guldnnce a program
should h11vt.
Sonie people shrink f~o1n the Iii• 11oht nf
estate planning. But, like il or not, somt
plan is going to govern the care and
distribution ol )'OUr possession. The plan
C<lUld be yours, if you make one. If you
don't, state and federal laws-oblivious of
your wishes-will do it for you .
An Amcrico11 Bor Asociotion 1111b·
lie service fea ture b~ \ViU Btrnord.
'
-....iW-
Friday. May 7, 1971
T~c editorral page of fhe Dnit11
Pilot seeks ro inform ond st im-
ulate reodtn by pre&tntinp this
1u!W!j)aper's opinion.a and com.
mentory on lopie.s of inte-rest
and sig1d/lca11ce. bu providin g a
jorut1l for tl~e erpre.s1ion of
our rc~deri' opinion&. and b11
prcsfl~tuip ll1e diver&t vit1~
poi11t.t nf in/ormtd ob.,trvtr1
ruut 1pokcs1ne n on topici of ti~
dou.
fl"'hfrl N. \Veed . Publisher
I
In ' " tv.·o
unity
ated
the
ffort
nant
m is
ewal
t th•
for
hool
lt is
ility.
HER
hool
llJ
d on
s of
iving
ched
llege
eak
'"d
trade
need
ung,
imcs
"'ho
pco-
rrent
ctive
I am
ng of
tru e·
have
ould
Tile
. The
!ding
per
the
e the
ense.
coJ.
s ap-
rs I
UIST
some
and
plan
you
us of
puh-
ard.
' • I y
' •
CHECKING •UP•
Reagan Tells of Past Taxes,
Doesn't Comment on Loss es
I
DAILY PJLOI '1
War To y Curb Gairi,s,
SACRAMENTO (AP) - A Tho bill by A ... mblymil
bill to ban the making or sale John Burton (0-San Pru
of war toys in California today Cisco), would bnpose a line 61 up to $500 on pe.non1 coJt. reacbed the · Senate, marking victed or m•tlnc or xlllnl ,.
the ffrst tjme it has won toy resemblln1 a iun. crtnad•
First Dun1hwaiter
passage by either house. or other weapon. ~
SACRAMENTO (UJP) -Confronted by a mounting nounced he had paid 591 ,128 In iiiiiiiii~iiiiii~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
This much is kno\flT: .Gov. conttovers.y lhal threatened state income ta.xl!8 during his ii
Ronald Rtagan paid federal his political .Popularity, R~a. previous years as governor.
il).Come· 14J:es last -year and-. I · --• But •--au•• of "Investment sfate lncome taxes during the gan re11:Jclanl Y summoueu uo;:>,; ......
Used iii Bavaria first four ye8.rs he was newsmen to his cabinet roo~ losses in relation to earnings"
governor. Thursday to read a 350-word last year he owed no state in·
What sUll is not known ..,.. state:nient he wrote himself. come ,taxes. the millionaire Sinokers OQ]y and Reagan says he has.no in-He t18d been under constant governor said.
tention of telling -is what presture for more detaiJS R 1 f h · di f pied." Comes to m Ind SACRAMENTo (UPI) -A kind or "investment losses '' he since disclosure of his st.ate eagan et urrie Y a ter
because a client Inquires, Senate bill that would require suffered to result in his owing tax-exempt stat.us on Teesday. reading the statement and
"Who w a 1 Canoodllng?'' nonsmoklng artas to be set no state income tax for 1970. The Republican governor -refused to answer questions .
By L. M. BOYD
DID YOU KNOW
AQUA PET
IS NOW IN TOWN
Complete Line Of
Tropical Fish • Birds • ltaclents
5901 WARNER
At Sprlngdll•
HUNT. BEACtl
846-3112
OPEN 11 to I
KING LUDWJG of Bavaria
hated waiters. ~uldn't stand
them bustling around. So be
turned that suite directly over
his kitchen Into a dining room,
cut a hole in the floor just a
bit bigger than the tablelOp,
and rigged the table with
ropes' and pulleys to raise and
lower it between floors. Up
went dinner, down wenJ. the
dirty dishe5. King Ludwig Jik·
ed it. A loL World 's fir.st
Nobody, turns out. Had never aside on public framportalion An average Californian sup-still regarded by some as a "That's the final word,"
heard the word. But found it facilities was approved Thurs-porting a lamily-of four on a potential presidenli•l can-Press Secretary Paul Beek
defined in the Random House day by the Assembly Com-$44,100 dlary -such· as dldate -reported paying 1 said later. "It's all the
Dictionary as a slang synonym" meree and Public Utilities Reagan .~ would have paid federal tax last year, but did governor will have lo say oo
for "caressing, fondling. pet·1~Com~~m~1~lt~ee~·-------~12~.~704~ill~'~ta~.te'_.".lnco~m~e'_!'ta~x~es~.-~not~.':sa~y~ho'.':"'.'....m~uch~.~H~e~a~n':_-_it~he:!su~b~jeo~t.~"----:_J~===================~ t.i.ng." Going to have to ask
our Love and War man about
that. Expect he'll say. "Can-
noodling~ Yes, indeed. fine
"Titer. Read everything he
ever wrote!"
dumbwaiter. It's a m21tter or ft.1EN WHO DRINK so much
historical record he used to sit they can 't hold down steady
there all alone during di Mer. work particularly like to take
Intermittently kicking scraps ' quick jobs with moving com-
of gristle, fat, bones and Sut>-panies. Not as truck drivers,
dry garbage through th!: hole certainly. But as packers and
in the (Joor , expectlng It to faU. loaders. Why is clear. It's
on the help below. technically illegal to transport
WHAT'! the-r th 11 liquor acros.s state lines. At ., name 0 a least private stock."So when li-
beatle .. It stands on its ~ad ' quor turns up missjng, nobody
And hke a skunk, squirts 1 . If he can land a
I .1 od ·r 1. .d •comp a1ns. a vo ~11 e, or1 erous 1qw · 1 few hours work unloading Surpn~ l~ds lreeie and household goods from out <1f
hysterical mtct; retreat. Hangs state. an old boy sick with a~nd ~he ~erts of Southern thirst has just about a SQ..50
Cahfo rrua; Anzona. New itex-Chance of getting well 0,,: the
!co. What g the name of that . b And getting paid too. bettle? JO • '
GERf\,Af\S SAY they drink
lo aid digestion. Frenchmen
1>ay they drink to enliven the
conversalion . ltalians say they
drink to enhance romance.
Russi ans say they dr:ink to
forget trouble. Britishers say
they drink to preserve the
pleasantries. Irish say they
drink. to feel the li!t. And
Americans say they drink to
relieve tension.
BELIEVE t aJready men·
tioned the most widely sold
post card ever printed . Car·
ried that famous cartoon
wherein the young man asks
the yoUng lady, "What do you
think of Kipling?" And she
replied. ''I don't know. you
naughty boy, I've never kip-
ARGUMENT CONTINUES
over the whereabouts o( that
12th slreet made famous tn
the elderly ditty known as
"The 12th Street Rag." True,
Euday Bowman, who wrote it,
lived most o( bis Ille In Fort
Worth sometimes credited as
the ~orld 's friendliest city.
But he made it clear before
his death in 1949 the song
referred to Kansas City's 12th
Street.
Your questions and com·
nlents art: welcomed and
will be used in Checking
Up wherever possible.
Please address your letters
to L. !tf. Boyd, P.O. Box
1815. Newport Bea c h,
92660.
Call for Freedom
Article by Angela
On Shootout Bared
SA N RAFAEL IAP) -
Angela Davis has termed last
y ear's ~1arin County
courthouse shootout an "insur·
recti/)n:..'.... that produced only
'No Na111e'
VD Cliriic
Scheduled
SACRA~iEJ\'TO (AP)
He alt h officials in Califomia "s
capital hope the promise of re·
malning just a nu mber will
lure reluctant youth into a
citywide program to combat
venereal di sease.
The unusual "no name"
cHnlc program Saturday is
part of a community effort to
halt the rise in VO, particular-
ly gonorrhea. v.•hich officials
say has reached the epidemic
stage among youth <1f the na·
!Jon's most populous state.
"No nam~ will be taken, no
reeords kept by individual , no
parents or authorities will be
notified," says Roge r Tulloch,
a county health department
coordinator of the "VO Day"
program.
Utilities
Can Add
Imag e Tab
•·meaningless" prison reforms
in an article attributed to her
in a black journal.
four persons died Aug. 7,
1970 in an abortive attempt to
force the release of three
black convicts charged with
murdering a white guard at
Soledad Prison.
The 27-year-<1ld black mili·
tant called for freedom for
"the Soledad Brothers and all
political prisoners" in the
April-fl.lay issue of "Journal
of Blac k Studies and
Research.'' publ ished Thurs·
day in nearby Sausalito.
The article did not say how
her statement was delivered
from the Marin County Jail.
An a v o \Ve d Communist,
Miss Da vis maintains her in·
nocence and describes herself
as a political pris<1ner .
Although not charged with
being present at the shootout.
she is accused of plotting It
and awaits trial on charges of
murder, kidnaping and con-
spi racy.
"The events of Aug. 7 forced
broader sectors of t h e
American public to become
cognizant of the terror which
reigns in this counlry's penal
ins titutions." the f o r m e r
UCLA philosophy instructor
wrote.
"Evidence of its catalytic
impact can be seen in the
abundance of prison exposes ...
appearing in tbe established
press. The reaction or the rul-
ing class to the events of Aug.
7. 1970. was swi f t ,
demonstrating that they were
shaken to the very core.''
Sacramento
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SUNDAY, MAY 9 " '
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.
r
SACRA~1ENTO tAP) -An
Assembly committee has kill·
ed a bill to ha lt public util ities
fron1 adding advertising coslS
to their operating costs lo win
higher rales despUe a plea
that less advertising could aid
California's ec1>klgy.
Assemblyman Kenneth
hi e a d e (D-Oakland ), ques·
tioned Thursday the need for
''image making" by Uve ma-
jor utilities -at a cost of
$50.2 million over the past five
)'tars.
Summit Set_Mag-navox
SACRAMENTO (AP I TOVATT~S 45 Years of
Depeiadable Service
"There ls no need to
establish product identtly,"
h1eade argued, "There's a
pollry que.slion here. \\'ho 's
going lo pay for this ad-
l'erlising -investor~ nr eon·
1>un1ers and taxpayers 111 1
~·hole ?"
Gov. Reaga n accused
OemocraLs In the legislature
Thursda y of getting nothing
done and called a summit con-
ference with them lo discusa
the 1971 session,
The Republican gove rnor '!
lnvila tion, or ch.11\lenge, Y.'a8
accepted promptly by
As:;embly Speaker Bol> Morel·
Ii (0.Van Nuy1), and Se:nate
Ptcsident prC"J t e m J.11me!I
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......
f DAILY "iLOT
Can Nixon
Win Youth
Support?
. By RA YMONU LAHR
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Sen. William E. Brock Ill, (R·
Tenn .) is te!Hria listeners that
President Nixon can win a
majority of new young voters
ln 1972 through empbasl1 on
is'Sues of inte rest to voters In
all age brackell.
'Brock, a pragm1tic con-
Hrvative elected from the
house to !he Senate last yelll"
three \\'etks before his 40th
birthday, bas a special con-
cern for the you th vote.
He organized 11 fellow
Republicans in the House In
1969 lo visit $0 colle5e1 for
t~k sessions to search for the
causes of campus unrest. The
group's report to the President
reco mmen ded lowering the
voting age kl·•,,18 and other
1teps to cod!"' s t u d e n t
discontent.
Frldlf, MQ 7, lt?l ,
''.This generation is pleading
for maximum individual fre&-
dom a n d responsibility,"
Brock told a reporter. "They
l tt enormous growth i n
government as a threat te in·
dividual freedom .
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she'll appreciate forever! low price!
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• 4 wash 1 ..... 11 scour, rinse $139 1'No president in 40 years
has matched the record of this
t rie to make government more • &ig fomilY"'ize capacity WARDS LOW PRICE
responsive." 1 He re!erred speciflcally to
N ix • n Administration pro-
posals for g ov er n m ent
re fo r ms and cabinet
reorganization and for sharing
revenue to strengthen state
and local government.
$45 off! Deluxe xig-zag sewing
machine with carrying easel
99aa
HG.ICC.99
Brock also said U.S. troops
"'ou\d be out of Vietnam
before the 1972 election , fulflll-
tng the presidential com·
mitment to end the war, and
meeting an issue of basic con·
cern to youth. And with all the
t ptimism of Admlnlstratlon
spokesmen. he foresaw "full
e mployment with a vlbri nt
econom y" by then .
• Feotures 1.C. pattern cams, p ush.
b utton reverse, bu ilt.in buttonholer,
b lindhemmer ond more
•Carrying case included
''The President will be able
to run on a pe ace and pros·
perity theme." he said.
He expressed hope that,
.,iiate\•er the N a I i o n a I
Republican Organiiatlon does
le persuade young people to
Yole for the GOP. it will
•·recognl:r.e that most youths
•re neither r adical nor revolu-
tjonary.''
,''They are concerned and
want a chance for meaningful
In volvement." he said. ·'That
means more than stuffing
envelopes.''
Brock acknowledge l h a t
surveys by poll-takers in-
dlcated that more young peo-
ple class themsel ves as
Democ rats er Independents
lban Republicans. but said no
candidate can win \\'ithoul a
1lzable share of the in-
dependent vote .
He said bis o\\·n campaign
last year had been "'youth
oriented'' and that his supper\
from young voters may have
bten decisive in h.is victory
over the veteran Sen. Albert
Gore, And the young \\'ant
"1eme measure o f in-
dependence'' in a political
e11npaign he said.
The 18-to--21 age bracket
represent s about 11 milJlon c
people. Allhoug h. fewer young
people vole than those in the
older bra c kel s. Brock
e1timated thal the 18-to-21
1roup may represent 10 per·
tttit of the 1972 turnout.
CHARGI Ill
VARI -DEPTH LINER
EXPANDS FROM 4 TO
6j-FT. AT ONE END
,
Save 23.95! 9-in. diagonal portable
TV goes where you go! Compact!
$66 • l ight, comped portable
• UHF/VHF a ntennas
• Earphone and cord
• For a ny room in the home IEG.19.95
,
Eledronic oven '."'" incredibly fast and
perfectly portable! Just plug it in!
• Modem cooking begins with electro nic oven I
•Delicious meol1 in just minutes in1tead of hoursl
•No pots a nd pans neededl Cook on paper,
g lau, your finest china
• Only the food cooks -oven, kitchen, cookware
1toycool
• Great on taste, e lectronic oven seals in flmon
•Just plug into standard 115.V outlet
CHARGE ITI
$
WARDS LOW PRICE
Giant family-size 27x15-ft. pool outfit!
SP.end summer in your own .backyard!
REG.$599
~~\.i \ ,• .
.; '"1 Yi! 9 ,,. . ~
/"""""~}':·1 .
•
Spend hot summe r da ys cooling off in your own
backyard ! Easy-to-clean ova l pool outfit includes
thro ugh--wall skimmer that simplifies vacuuming and
ski mmi ng. White metal sidewall is reinforced with
3x3-in . supports . .(.inch ledge provides around·
the-pool seating, 20 gauge vinyl liner i1 winterized.
V:i H.P. FILTER .......................... $151
48-IN. SAF ETY LADDER ................. ,. $36
Complete family -size 20x15-h . oval pool outfit puts
Whatever the turnout. it c;in
be decisive ir the youth \'Olf'
tilta l.lpificantly t o w a r d
either party. Both parties are
developing program! aimed ;it
ttgl!terint and \\'innin& the
votes er th• young.
At GOP beadquarter1 the
preject it ln tbt jurisdiction of
Mr1. Anne Armstrong. na·
Honal ce><:halrman. Aware of
lhe public opinion poll Jn-
dication.t of Re publ ican
we"111knes11 111mong youth, 1he
11ald in a reetnt 1ptech that
the GOP could not win the
young vote If lhe election turn-
ed en party labels. Like Brock,
abe 1ald young voters would
low price on liquid chlorine! Diata1111Ceous earth for filters! summer heat relief as close as your own backyard!
Vinyl la minated •feel wa ll with metolllc $388
g reen frame. Durobl• 16 ga. liner, ~
~'.1" GOP U II turned
Easy.to-handle liqu id
chlorine in no-return
bo'ttl es.
46c
GAL
l'ICIAL I UT
Excellent lili.r a id for
swim ming pool fi lteR. 222 ......
l'ICW.IUT .
steel pool ladder, footbath, over·th•wall
olclmme1 a nd UL ll1ted filter. RIG. $466
SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 'TIL 9:30 PM ... AND, SHOP EVERY SUNDAY: 12 PM 'TIL 5 PMI : ... TORRANCE~
I. UI.... ........... ..... 1•1tlt Mt f11lltl1t11 ~"ill• ......... 1-t; flMtW dty Cl::i£'111 ftftt llf9 MIHfON-~ ....... 111.. -..•w...._ .._.._..... .......... .._._ ...... __. ..... ,...... -.....-11111. ..,111_ __.,.... IN DA AMO )
.... ...,. ... JM.Ma ll lit• --~ .__ ~-tnJllf _, __, .... e.Ml'l--1 llLU'HOfrSMJ..6f71
..
'
SHOP EARLY, SOME
QUANTITIES LIMITED
$1.$2 off girls' straw bags!
• Mony cute straw styles 1 '8
• For summer sundresses
• Special low price now
on bogs for little miss!
2.11 off men's denim flares!
• Navy blue denim llor~s 3 a a
• Machine washable cotton
• Most asked for style
• Men's sizes 29 to 38 RIG. s .99
45' off Wilson K28 golf balls!
• Liquid ce nters
• Cadwell covers
•Conforms to U.S.G.A.
specifications 2 ~~
OF3
llG. 2.99
20-gallon metal trash con!
• Stow oil your trash 1 s 9
away in sturdy metal con
• Holds gia nt 20-gollons
• low price now a t Words
•
"CHAIOI
IJI•
35< off mesh panty hose!
•Sleek hi_p-to-~ fit 64 ( • Proportioned sozes
• fine quality nylon l'I.
• Many fashion colors .... •••
Misses' polyester knit tops
• Pick from navy, red, 2 a a brown, It. blue, white
• Casual, comfy tops
• Misses' S, M, L, XL
59' off boys' /erry socks!
• Solt stretch terry 9 9 • Bright wild colors (
• One size fits 9-11 3
•Tough to beota>mfort l'I.
•••· ncu.
Stock up on screwdrivers!
• Choice of 6 kinds 9 (
• Shockproof dear
fluted handle IA.
• Corban steel blade l'ICIAL
l . ~ t4 \
Special! Girls' nylon jacket!
• Zip-frant nylon jacket 9 9 ( • Handy haad attached
• Drawstring bottom
• Groot colors in 7 -14 IPICIAL
Soe $4! Men's work shoe!
• foll grain glove leather
for ex1nJ a>mfort
• Polyvinyl sole, t-1
• Ofi.,...tan color
711
RIG. 11.99
$5 saving on sun lounger!
• 36-position lounger 14' 8 • Vinyl tubing in bright
colon; easy to clean
• S~rdy steel frame 11._ H.t•
Wards propane fuel tank • ::..,or:: hoveoround S
6
c
• for all your propane
tools and stoves IPICIAL
,
BURrnRIA SP£0AU
Swissburger plate
for tasty luncheon!
• Hamburgerwithswiss cheese
• Fries and cole slow on side
• lettuce, tomato garnish
low price on hair spray!
• Quality Style spray s 8
• Pick regular or super (
• Scented or unscented
• Stock up at this price! SPECIAL
112 off polyester d_ouble knits!
• Luscious polyester kn it
in colorful prints
• Machine washable
• Generous 60" width 3~~
REG. 6.99
1.50 off velveteen pillows!
• Kapok filled body and 19 9 jumbo-It; plush!
• Six exciting colors EA.
• Cotton velveteen llfG. 3.•9
.·.-.
Garden edging, step stones!
• 2' scalloped edge 2 7 ( • 12" square step
• 12" hexagon step EA.
• Great garden addition YOUR CHOICI
DAILY 'ILO't 9~
For The.
Record
Marriage
Licenses
Dissolaations '
Of Marriage
Bi1·tlas ' ·~
tOUTM COAS f C OMMUHIT •t;
MOll"ITAL .... n • ··'•
M• •rod /,\" Cl"rltt. ~. HICP!Olt. .. ••
0PI M•r ill v•, S•n Clt mentt , tll'I, ••• 1 .. ,,,, •..a Mt~ Gr•-" ti C-te, ,,,. ••
0.• CDmt rtlo. No 1-A, l•I' , Cltmtnlt, DO¥ •1,
.... 11 u .•
Ml •I'll' Mr' Mi(ftttl ft Gttt..,, J1'111 '
Av• OtK•noo. S111 Jutn C11•l11t1,_,,.
M• ·,· A1•H H
Mi •nll Mn Jel!t1 M1r!ft1. tt.P1 Vie ..
1 Vol•t rll•. t.• .... n~ NI-I, bDy ~" •ne ""'' """'"•fl E Trt ... 1 .. '''" -e• t ltt nlen. •l<'I
)
I '·I
-.
J 0 OAU."L,lLOT
For The
Record
Dissolutions
Of _Marriage
DISSOlUTICM (I, MAIUll•Gt:
l'"llM M•f )
ltli•lhH, Nor"'I" •-•I 1...i FOl'Cll ...
•e11ln, 0t [ldl M. _...., G10<!fl N
•Ultt>t<•. l ,"1111 4M lflCI M<(l\•f l N l!o
"" I lle•, Vl•9•n•I """ •nO Jiii!" (IYIH' D•vl•. llul!I 1...i I••
-'-i. Mlltf E 1fld Clll"U M J• ~l•v91111n, llOberl (. •o\O Lol'IOU 0
T11 Jr., E,,..., wmi..111 ,..., Jo•t•
M1rlofl
Porr.,, 0tt10<1n ""' '""' J""" !1...,1ev ~1111, P1!tlcll Ann •n<I J1•t!O Donni•
lt.OIO<O. Golole M1rlt t"CI E""'""
ColumbU1
Vl1tf1Colnt, llt•lll•t "'"" t na Pt>IOO
M~Cllnl(lfl, JKll-llM l. l 'ICI JI"'''
'" Ptl!~. ll~n J tnO HPIOt•O D
WoolMf, Ei.oi.te<et t'ld Albero G4'G•q1
Kclppt>, St..,,r<t JIM f llCI JMI\ Mtr..,tn
GINI\. J"""'• llt•MOllCI '"" OotM Lvnn
'°ttllo Ti rtW UICI C.tb<'"
k"<llt\an l, lrm t A11uK1 l flO JOlltnM•
HtllClt11'"'
!w'llelOI . l tt "'""' O tncl J1mn Lt t•1 Hk ktrllOfl, GolO•• M, S. t n<I Ht•mt"
Wlllll
l .... nln•, VIUOt+• 1n<I R•Cl>tftl EOWttO
llo1enbtr1. (1no1t• t llCI M1t.n•el D
l•ller, G•!I t rlCI Jtm••
"ockwell. Slllrlsv Gtlone •nd JOl'ln
Al1~11'16tf'
1-leyl, Dtl!l\f' Ii.. f "11 Gt•'>flf• Lff
Ltv,,1. F•111CSI A Ind JI(• [,
81noor, "'""'" 1nd 111e RKt~. Jlll!lle M1rlt fncl l/.t111t!
,_~
FllH M1• I
Ptllnf'v. KP" I nd E111 A
°"9•, JKk INI Je1"M
Wf'l ls, SullllM M •"" llo~r1 J llOCllwt ll. Jove• L. tncl DGvl• D
Fonlel . """' Mlfll 1nc1 Jar.n Go!1•l•1
Grl!'ll, &on/llt 11. lf'IO ll DM•1
Lillie, Lor"" Eu!H'M tllll Jo•<• Rl1
J 1le•. Ootlllf W, I ncl Dltn
c-. JN nM M. 1na ~1~1, D
llul>P. ,. .... L Incl Ml'le l
ZG<r>f-1. Je•MHP 8 and ErMll II
Sm11!1. Jfl"IW •, I ncl W1lh""' 1(1n1
IJ.o,rr<M. G•K t LH INI Ow19'1! R-rl
Brooks. Jr., 1'hon111 R .,,., Ool<><eo M.
Robtrll(lll., c"""'"' '"" All>frl E. Funk. f Hnl J. ttHI RoDl:rl 8.
Hldr.1. Ool!tlcl 'lo. '"" s~~eri• Jtt n F1ulk.,.,, Fr1nc11 Anntrlt tnd L•l•nd • Rall!. Barb.I•• A 1nr1 Jot>n Mll lo"
IWTf:ll LOCUTOl 'I' Df:C lliliS E11!trff Mt ¥ I
l(.loPltnt!tlrt. LlllGI M1flp 1nd LI'(!
w1lter Underwood, Slill•°" l i nd Wl!htm 0
Htn11n. Sltrld C '"" S••vtn H
Lu>. Betlrltt " '"" Fr1n~ Jolr~h
110111en, Grtc.r 1"" C•rl k•~tl. Vlrt!nlt 5•""'' t nd V"•<f~1
'l.k.11111 Jr
J•u•l•ul, Mfr(O' C •nd B•rllfr
MO .. ~Y. Ol~nt\i' II •n<I w J
Ecti1vt1. 0111 .. ~ !wi •n~t ~nd P.,.,
J .......
Gonl .. 161. F•li>ltU N l"lf ""'611•0 Dooley, Ml!<l•O<I H t n<I WflltY H
V•" Dt Vin!••· k•re11 tnll llf!'ll••
ltttne, llobt•t M *"" 1'o,,,lkO H,
F lo<fl, Vl•';'llnlt C '"" Jf>Jf V Wllter. Ntncv C. •llG Mi(l'!H I O.
Lulkl,., Brn• Loul1• 1nd a ernl•O Joy
Wlc1iw1r, llu!ll E1tln1 •nd Norm1n
St1nlr• Fo1. l(enntlll a. 11111 l 1nd1 Ann
w,11,, OolorH E~1lrom •nd Akherd
l"""'""''" Plldl·P•. M1r111r•I E and £0GY D. c-. Jdln Lr• •"" Lvnn Je•n 1>.1~•,., Clllr!•.s Cllttora •nd J.,i:ri1~
L1l!•f T•u!h. J1,1llllfl ,,.,.,,. •"" RU'l~ll Wt vn.
Ho"· Cllfrle• E •n<I Ctt .... rlnf I~
.. f li. Ch1rle-nt' '"" Jf"Y Eutent' 1(111C"1, t-lfl.., M Ind ACIC!Oft £
l t u•tnl. Jr , Louil A I"" llo1r1vn "
l u•oe, Mt•ll•n J ""' Albl•I M•••Dft ~l,.tk!•nd. lruc• G "'a Emrn• Ll>ll
M(Gaft. Ml rV K1tlllHn •nd J~
Beall• Notices
AlfOEISOW
MJ Del "'""erson -"v• '" ••tkleM ~· M"n!lntton lle1cn. O•!• ol Ot•!n, Ma•
,, 1., G••H•lll ConY8l11c1nl fio•oitfl,
~ .... 1, .. PU>lll ... I f Smithl Mor1ut••
JO WES
'"''eel W Jon•• 1"1·C Ctllt •••-·
L11oun• Hill• O.•t ol a.e..1n, "-•• 6 !.utYl~f'd bv wd~. Chrlshn~, ol 1111 l>Orm';
a11u9htfr, K11!h!Hn D Vouno, '<twP<l•t
l•K ll: !>•O!ft~•. (lvd• R .l""IS, ol LI·
ovn1 H•ll• ,,.,, JO'lt l w•• • rnerntwr ol
Oho Cortinll lDCftf NC :17• I' & /l,M, l'o•·
•Oen., I nd lht "I li'all·~•n T•"'PI•
Str>t•<tl .,10 tw "•Id St•u•a1v. "-1• ,,
' PM, l'•t••1t v • ..,. Chn1>tl w11n rh
r a ... t •d J , .. ., ... 11 UIO !"I' M•IOn•<
C•u D or Lt••u•• wor10, olt1(•flono l~· ...... .,,1: l'U•f·< 11, ... Mernari•I ,.,.~,
F tm•l• IUOOtl•• l>>O't W1•h•n9 IO rn••·t
.,..,.,o•lll <""'"0Uhon1. t1lt1•t tOnlr•O·
u1e 10 lt>t 5~"""" (rloo+K' (ni10,..,·,
"""oot•I o• your I"""'•• <"'"''· P1<d<C 1,1,.., Mor-IUI•._ 011,...1~•\.
M(GMEli
c a,.,ooelt "' M(GI>•~ !1tl '"' ~ •••
c or..,,1 11tl M•• O.Ott 01 ae.i., '1-dY 6.
5u•~lwt<I 0¥ nl..,t> MlrD•·~• "la••rn .
....... , ..... , -"1><• ou. """"""'"'; C.•••• 0 ·11• • ...,, w ... 1m1nsi.-: L•u•• lloeto~OI,
Mtn"•""" ll•acn; Vlro•n•t J~'"''' "'"· tOUrll .... .-•• EMl II McGn••· W•!·
m;r><1ton; 1&••< ~ McGn~. (•"'"" JMn
I MC'GllH , "lf•lo'.I I 'lo ( McGhtt I 11
<-•n101. Mt •<>"lt •t•Y•{ti. Mon•M•. ,,., ••
!O, 7 l'M, P•<thC Vitw (h11>tl, ..,,,,,
~tol•rl"' L009t oll1Cl•""g G,.•1 •!lo' •~rvl<t• IO follow ~t l>ft<1 hc Vie .. M•·
m c,.11 l'I•~. w11n 11... Bruct. ICU"'°
(JI![('"""' Wt11t•1•I Ch~WI Yortu•···
6'6·d ll, o ,,tcta••
'1.0 RGA"
Moi• Elluob•'ll .,.o,qln ~~· 11. "' )111 [1>~1fnd. HuM•1>q!Oll lie•(" D•tf of
at•"' Mtv 6 ~.,,., .. ~ br •on, oon••n.
(II Hun!lnD!Oll 81N1CI>. G•u•"'"''· M''V
f 'I.Iller, t1u"tln,g1on 8t1c1>. Mr1 ••tr1•
~""""· St Lcul1, M1nou". """ F.1>«'1 M~""· ....,.,, J,,., \e••I<••· S•tu•~••· lo
-"M• ~rnl11>~ C"•~I tnl••rn•"'' l!o~tlONn
Mvno•l•I PJrll ~"''"'• Mortut •Y· 01·
WILIOOI
lft'11'1 l i+t" W1i10" ·~OI M1nut.I Orlv•
H"nlln•ID" llt~•~ Oi!t ol dttlll, M~v I !.ur~•wtd &r 01re.-11. ""'' P1>vlll1 W•l\Dn ""° Mr R°"l ld W1l%1>. '""" ,,,1e .. , 111"•
Mtrle 1nd v .. e""'· t>lt~ o! '"" """"
Gr1vn •.,.. \prYl(ti ""°"""'· lO lll """· ""~ Ft ... •lr (Dl<>"•ll Fu,.t••I ~ ..
D1•t (IOtl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLJFF ~10RTUARV
U7 E. l i lb St., Costa ~le1a
6464888 • BALTZ f\IURTUAH IES
Corona dcl 1\lar 673·9450
Cosll l\1e.1a li l6-t4U • 8El..l. OROAO\\'AY
MOR1'UARY
110 8rondway, Costa ~lei>•
LI g.1433 • l\lcCORlllICK l.A GUNA
BEACH l\IORTIJARY
1711 Laguna Canyon Rd.
4M-9 .. 1$ • PACm c \'JEW
1\IE~10RlAL PARK
Cemetery 1\tortuary
Cha~I
3$00 Pa~lfic View Drive
Newport Btacb. California
5'4-f7 0I • PEEK rA~m.,.
COWNIAL FU~'ERAL
110~1~
7Mt 6ol1a An-.
Wtttmbtsttr m.:s2s • ~>1mrs MORT'\JAKY
m MaJ• SL -JfntfqWI 8udl
Friday, M.aw 7, 1971
Co11t1ty Areas
Flood Cove1·age
Now Obtainallle
SAN 'f' A AN A -11ome-
o'!''nCrll, apa rt m e n t dwe ll ·
f'rS and ~mall businesse~
1n the uninc,rporaled areas of
Prostitution
Suspects
Face Court
SANTA ANA F'ou r
persons acc used or 1n·
volvement in prostllution nng
have Deen ordered to face trial
J une l in Orange County
Supe rior Cou rt.
Judge Byron K. !\1cMillan
set that date and a f\lay 20
pretrial hearing for Goorge
Lee Van Home. 29, of Long
Beach, Bre nda Joyce Hignite,
24. of Bellflower, Leslie Ruth
Stolher, 25. of Redondo Beach
and Barbara Conlee, 23, of
Cerritos.
All foor are charged w11h
conspiracy to engage in pro-
sti tutton. Van Horne faces ad·
d1t1onal charges ol soliciting.
Distric1 a tt orne y'" in·
vestigators claim the three ac-
cused v.·omen were mem brrs
or a roster of call girls who
v.·ere supplied on demand to
various Orange Coun ty and
Los Angeles County locations.
Van Home was arrested in
Seal Beach. The women were
arrested in Anaheim.
W est1ninster
Latvsuit
Narnes Pair
SANTA AN A A
Bookmaker
Faces Jail
Sentence
SANT A ANA -A Midway
City man accusL'<i on arrest of
conducting a flourishing bet·
ling business lrom his Jackson
Streft apartmen t has pleaded
guilty lo bookmaking charges
in Orange County Superior
Court.
Judge Byron K. f\lcr-.lillan
ordered Eugene Banta, 35, of
14881 Jackson St .. lo rclum to
his courtroom June 17 for
sentencing. He faces a possi-
ble county jail term of 30 days
lo one year.
Bania was arrested last Jan.
22 following a long probe of his
bookie activities by I h el
Wesl!nlnster and f'ullerton l
Police Dcparl!nents and the
Di!'ilrict Allorney'!; ofrict'.
Ile was subs.eq ucnlly. in·I
dieted by the Grand Jury on
charges ot boo kn1oking. ac·j
cepting v.•agers on horse races
and registering bels on hor!'ic l
races.
S . F . I cie1icc air 1
In Ne1v S pot
SANT A AN A -Thi:' Orange I
Count y Science falr. usunlly
conducted · al Santa A n :1
College. Is switching local1ons1
this yeur. lt \\'il l be held f\l ay l
Orange Coun1y are now eligi--
bl~ for low cost flood irr
surancl.'.
The annountenient by the
National f lood I n s u r e r s
ASS01.:1ation. fo\lov;s action by
i.:ounty supervisors \\'ho last
year declared their intent to
meet reqwre1nents of lh e Na·
Llonal Flood Insurance Act.
Damage from flooding and
mud slide! 1s not covered In
standard properly insurance
policies and many persons sul-
fererl heavy losses in the can-
yon areas and in San Juan
Cap lstruno in the .January·
February floods of 1969.
The rlood insurance act. ad·
.1n1nistered by the Department
of Housing and U r b a n
Development (HUD) provides
for the creation of the insurers
association, a pool of private
companies offering insurance
to ho1neo>,1•ners and sn1a ll
businesses al low r a I e s
subsidized by the federal
government.
The assoc1alion may now of.
fer insurance to o.,..·ners of one
lo four family homes and
small business buildings.
The county Flood Control
District has bee n an d is car·
ry1ng out studies leading to
in1plementation of th e JO·
sur ance.
Identified to date as possible
flood areas are the Laguna
Can~·on and San J uan Creek
areas and the Placentia· Yorba
Linda flood plain. O I h e r
studies are under way.
Federal authorities warned
that the National F Io o d
Insurance Act provides tha t
anyone eligible to buy Oood in·
surance who does not chose to
do so niay not be able to get
te~cral disaster relief for an,v
f!OOd Joss that could have been
insured.
Clinics Set
For Rabies
Vaccination
SANTA AN A -Annual lov.·-
tOsl rabies vac<:1nation cl inics
"'ill be conducted in seven
Orange Coast commun1t1es
th is month.
clinics.
a
The clinics are operated as
public service by local
e YOU WOULO f lP ~(f 10 ,AY
$11<;1S FOR lHIS \'A\UE
-~A llSFA(llON GUAt •NTEED
e \0 l O I~ PINISHIO S .. , 7••
P-OOfS f RO/'\ WHIC H l O
(~00~£
e f •M!lV CHllD~lN G~OV'S
Wt\(QMf
IEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE 12.1• in th• Junior Exhibit LAST DAYS-Ends May 11th
Buildin g at the Orange Coun ty "u 1L1c Hot1CR
Fairgrounds in Costa ~le~ll. I DA I l y 12 to 8 -SAT. 10 to 5 -SUN. 11 to 5 !n .(,Or04ln(t will\ (1lllo•n1• CIVIi Codi'
G N f Pl ~Kllon )bl, lllrtt Nt•ltl. 11ro-Hr!¥ 111 eorge ewman o accn-1 cn1rie1 ~1.ur1. 111111 l>f 1111<1 11 Putihc
lia. executive director ol lhl' WHITE FRONT "~(11~n lfl '''1.t'• • 11""'"'~11•1 ll•n •o•
f Id •,.,,..1>tn1~•lon ot llOa•d on or •'lh M•• 11. st:uince ;1.1r. sa the movl' , 1•t1 ,u c_1~1NO •to••• "v'''°~ l"" was ll\ade necessary by' tTl!l· COSlA MESA ••.•• ' •••••••• ' ........ lOl l llllSTOL AY I. M<'•t\ '~bl Mild .... II"• $1'14!tl•nd _,
jor construction proicc~ cur· ANAH£1"4 .•.•... , •..•..•.•••••• HARIOll' WILlllN WAY 1·~ •111•· •MOM ttlOI ..... l'tt lnlOlm~!'°" till ,,. 1fl1.
rentlv under way al Sll nlB Ana LOS AN(1ll[S •••••••••••••••••••• J[ff. ILVD .• , HA USlll Pub!!ll!tft O••~•t C111,1 Dill• I'll~
l~Oll1•g< )•,~=.,,==========================~ M~• I, I, •· IC, 11. I), -tt. It, IJ, 17 IOI! •• IOlj 11
LEGAL NOTIC6 LEGAL NO'l'ICE LEG AL NO'l'ICE
• I
) ,
It's Not the ~i.:e
These 15-inch·wide Goodyear racing tires are ready
for use In one of the toughest tests for rubber.
Despite their size. these tires weigh less than those
used on the family auto.
Leaving Hospital Early J
Urged to Save Costs
tounding that in 1971 we are
still trying lo get the C()ncept
Proctor 4 Slice Toaster
SAT.
ONLY
' -
s10.77
A gift the whole family will en joy! Proctor.Silex
Toaster makes 1 to 4 slices of perfect toast every
time. Select·ronic lets you choose the degree of
toasting you prefer. Even reheats cold slices. ~
Sunbeam 12·Cup Percolator
SAT.
ONLY $8.44
'
Consistently good coffee! Twist.Jock top. Big !am·
ily size, brews 4-12 cups. Keeps coffee serving hot
automatically. BURLINGAME -(BW) -
If every hospitalized patient
were ?"el eased one day earlier.
more than $2 billion in
hospitalization costs could be
saved, according to D r ,
ltoberta F. Fenlon. president
of California Medical A!socia·
lion.
universally accepted." Dr. /li __ .,....,..,..,,_..,...,,_=..,,.,.==.,.iw:aoii
The key to getting these pa-
tients out of the hospital
earlier is to make health care
available to them in their
homes during their recupera-
tion -and the key to home
health care is its financing
under health. insurance
policies and programs, she
&aid.
Her remarks ·were given at
the annual meeting of the
California Association of
Home Health Agencies
recently.
"When one considers that
the first home care program
was jnstituted In 1796 at. the
Boston infirmary, it Is as·
•
Fenlon declared.
Homt: health care could
have a dramatic impact on the
costs of long term
hospitalization, she pointed
out. She cited a study showing
that 28 percent or the long
term patients at one hospital
could have been discharged a
full month earlier, releasing 10
percent of the beds available.
In addition to reducing
hospital costs and incrwing
the availability of hos pital
beds, home care is easier for
the patient's family a n d
lipeeds his recovery. she said.
Noting that California
Medical Association endorses
homt: health care. Dr. Fenlon
called on health professionals
lo take "united action'' to 1et
home health care included in
all health insurance policies.
18" TABLE
TOP GRILL
SAT.
ONLY
Avocado enamtl heavy
puge 1teel. Burnproof
trlan&Je.1hape ltgg.
112" -50' PLA TIC
GARDEN HOSE
SAT.
ONLY $2.58
,-... --......... -...,
DELUXE
I, SAND CHAIR
SAT. 2~5 00 ONLY e
Takl" it to lh~ brRch or
' the back y11rd. Ju~! 1a.v
charg,. it al .K·mllrt.
I r,
DAILY PILOT 11 ..
'
·:
'
70 INCH REDWOOD
PICNIC TABLE, BENCH SET
SAT.
ONLY $19.44
Redwood table Is 8 boards wide, 70x271h table has
flu sh top. redwood stained . Comes with 2 benches.
Model SP-6.
~
~
SEAT TOP 1
SAT.
ONLY
HAMPER
Styren,. \~·ilh J)Olyprnpyll'nt:
tnp 1hllt formR a vanlly 1eat,
Vrntllated. :l2 qt . 1111'.
' r I
ft
I
HANDY SWABS
IN TRAY PACKAGE
84¢
Rtt.1.1.C. 'fOO John-
a on and Johnson
1w1b1 htlp to kttp
baby cltan and We.
I
•
Not ID Stars?
Nylon tire cord reinforced plastic gar·
den hose. Lightweight, Clexlble for easy
coiling. Full !Jow heavy brass couplings.
_;tS 'D"i'"'!""' it.·-"'"""'""'="' ... nn.:. ,, -~
Computers Help Astrology IF'*'--::a::m:zo..,....,,_,__""""' _ _,,,_
NEW YORK (UPI) -For
centuries in India and China,
no couple dared marry unless
their horoscopes proved them
compatible.
by the millions. But the
computer-cast horoscope is
tailor made for an individual.
It sells for anywhere from S5
to $.JO, depending oo how many
questions it an!Wi!rs. GilteJson
thinks an eventual market of
•100 million a year is possible.
~~~~~~~-~~~ f:'I'~ """ ... ,,,"·,,_,..,~_,. -~..--
Parents never dared plan a
future for their c h i I d r e n
without cvnsultlng an
astrologer.
Supersliticm'? Maybe, but
Americans in this last third of
the 20th Century are startin&
the same practices -with the
help of the ele ct ronic
computtr.
·Time Pattern Research
Tnstitute, a subsidiary of
Cadence Industries. Inc . ,
(Marty Ackerman 's ol d
Perfect Film Corp.), has been
11e\llng horoscopes cast up with
the aid of the computer for
three years. It now has gone
Into what it calls the
a 5 tr o logical compatibility
analysis and the you n g
peoples' horoscope
Git telson's company
markets through department
stores such as Macy• s ,
G i m be 1 s' , Wanamaker's,
Hudson's. Abraham & Strauss
and the Broadway·Ha!e Group,
through bookstores such as
Brentano's, Doubleday's and
Walden 's and magazines and
the Diners Club.
"Also we have 5 o Id THE EASY WAY TO COOK OUT
Reg. 29.96
SAT. ONLY s24.88
Wdy L Master Ole( Smobt Wason comes in Wllnul and aoJd ftnin O..atk Draw FR Drawa" for acctsS to fare.
Adjusilh&e fft-boX with toao dwome plated cookin& trid1. , .. .w..c.-......
The first is the age old
method of deciding by the
stars whether lovers ar other
partners are really com patible
enough for a l asting
relationship. The second 111
much like lhe horoscope
Indian parents have cast for
their childre11.
i n d i v id u a I computerized
horoscope a s promotional
1remiums to na ti onal
advertisers such as Proctor &
Gamble, Best Foods and
Revlon, Inc .. " he s ai d.
"Proctor & Gamble said the
Hore-scopes were amoog .lhe
most successful premiums it
""tried." 1•--""'----~-..... -.. ...,.,.....,..,._11
Although astrology isn't a
big business In America, it's a
growing one. 5ays Bernard
Glltelson . President of the
Time Pattern Research.
Gittleson's !inn is one of at
least three in the United
States which use the C(lmputer
to cast horoscopes on •
5ubstanlia1 scale. Two others
are Astr~Flash, which has a
big booth In New York 's
Grand Central Station, and
Zodlatronics.
Sales of ~rhaps S2 mJlllon
are in their infancy still,
Gittelson believes.
Jn addition . every city has a
number of pr a cl i cl n g
astrologers and g en e r a I
horoscopes appearln1 In
newspapers and sold I n
drugstores and variety litores
A surprising number of
business men dabble I n
astrology, Gittelson said. "I
wouldn't dare reveal their
names, but business flnns
have engaged our services to
help lhtm plot their futurt
course or solve problems."
Some 1\ock: m a r k e t
Investors swear by as-.
troloilcal a d v i c e , saying
they do at least as well by
obeying theJr h~oscopes as by
counselors. "I won't make any
such claim , though , "GittellOJI
said firmly.
Two unlversilles h a v e
8-0ught the help t'll Time
Pattern Research -but not to
predict the outcome of football
games or the temper of the
student bodies. ''Both George
Washington University In the
natkln's capital a.nd Univer1ity
t'lf California at Los Anieles
have research projectl «I
astrological forecasts I n
progrtss aa part of their 10Clal
and psychologlcal 1tudies and
hive asked us for help, •1
Olttelson 11.id.
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
__ """'_""'"' ___ "'"""""'"""""""'Ill
BUDDY L MASTER CHEF
Reg. 22.44
SAT. ONLY $18.88
()ne ptt(I flip-top flood with .,full view" uftly jla•
Adjustable fnbox and IWO throme oookinA arid&. l.arJe towel
bit handle. Chrome plattd #pit and tines. Black and h.uvtll.
COSTA MESA
2200 HARBOR BLVD .
rat Wilton)
Lawn Mower Bar9ain!
-_.,. ~Nl'l l(MJOO
SAT.
ONLY $39~00
•
Features 19-inch staggered wheel design. 3 horse~
power motor has recoil·start engine. Seven inch
poly wheels, engine control at handle. Comes in
attractive green color.
21" ROTARY MOWER
SAT.
ONLY
31'1-HP Briggs & Stratton vertical pull start en·
gine with shroud. Engine control on enJine. 8" in·
line poly wheels with dial helght adjusters. U·
_shape handle. Red.
/
SUPER KEM·
TONE LATEX
WALL PAINT
Rog . 6 .94
$5.35 SUPER
SAT. ONLY
Wa sh4lblc latex
wall paint in white 1 and a S(!cction of
Kem·
Tone
I ·i
popular decorator
colors. Buy now at
K mart savings.
·-
Kmart
GRILL
SPECIAL
' FROM THE GRILL
ALL THE SPAGHETTI
YOU CAN EAT
TASTY MEAT SAUCE
"CRISP COLE-SLA IV
ROLL & BUTIER
SAT.
ONLY
HUNTINGTON BEACH ,
19T01 MAG.NOLIA
(•I Gorllold l
• .
• • •
• • • I • • • • •
l ' • '
\
-··
J 2 DAILY PIL01 $
Record Poor
Advi so1·s Roa ste(l
h1 Fiscal Bool{
NEW )ORK IAP) -Ore of
the most revealing a fl d
rt"ard1ng past n1es 1(1r :in 1
'e.slor 1~ lo go back O\ er the
rtcoirimendauons of ~ecuru e.t
edv1:i;ers and ron1p~re their
forcC;'!"I~ 111th cond1t1ons Iha\
ac1ually ensued
Re1cal!ng Jn lhe :,cn<;e that
lhe 1nves1or \\Jll see ho" glib
and cheap 1s n1uch n1t<\ltnent
ad1 ice He\\ard1ng n that h~
v.111 learn hu1 thc;ip advt~
can be costl y and 1h('1clorc to
be ignored n lhP lutuJ<'
In late ~oveniber n I e.arl}
f>rcen1bcr of J9G8 11th thr
market ready lo i;l1de Into a
prolonged <le<'hJ\e that 11-0uld
be tht' "Of<\l since 1929 long
1crm vit '" b1 member t1 n1~
n( the Ne 1 \ nrk Stock Ex
cchangr included
-There art' no" and 11 111
br m;it 1 good bu1 op-
portunrt1e~ du 1ng thi s p1tscn1
tax ad1usr n ent pe11od \
large reser101r of bu v111g
po11er ts still on the s dehnc
\\811ing to unco1er ne11 a id
aural t 1 r s1tual1ons
-Right no11 \\e have bul
Ii h action 1n all thrff kC'y
:r;C'gmcnls of the mar kel
Thr technu:at b<1ckgrour d •~
1cry strong and lherr •~ no1
enough adverse fundamenlal
ne\\S lo make us doubt our n
lerp1 elation
-The upside unphcat1on
plainlv points to <on
s derably higher lei els 1 c
1300 /or the Do" Jones
Industrial I\\ erage over the
longer te rm and a possibly
nearer lerm I JOO to t>r
1rached S3) in the first hall
flf 1969
fi1any people have lhn.•aLen
Pd lo dig up lhr damning
rf'cords thal so oflrn and
c:ur1ousty remain sarel y 1n
lered perm1tl1ng so many
'a1n forecasters lo boast As
l lold }OU last ~ear
John Springer d1d look ar the
rtcords and 0011 he h3~ 11 rt t
ten a book to br pub lished
i;oon b1 Henrv Rcgnr1 v ( o
about lhe qu11hl v of in
VfSln1cnl ad1 Ke 11 h !h•
provocal1ve I Ile H ThC' t
So Smar1 Ho11 Cornr ' ou 1 e
~or Jlrch?
Read 11 and \OU U 1 ktl\
maintain \our 011n <<lU nsel
herrarter Thr fore r as 1 ~
quoted abo\c arr nol isolated
PXamr:ilelll Sp1 n~rr C' 1 ;i 1 rn ~
thal a stud} of n1arkrl lr!1<'r~
Al lhat l1 mr s h Q 11 ,, d
LEGAi r.;QTICE
NOTICE TO (llED TO•S
SUffll 011 COU rtT OF 11'1"'
tT&f!! OF C"L F'Oll NI& ,Oil
lMl COUNTY OT 011 ... NGE
Mt A 0 I<
"'1 • ~ EV(LYN VO~
f ()LC,<" Doe•• d
OT CE I~ HEIPEllY C.!Vf'N
"' "n"""""' " ..., •••• ,, .... l>O .
"'"'.., <ie '''""
_I
MAii.WOOD ~ODEN ANO "OK NSON
'"'" Oflk:1 ••• 1'01
loltw"" I t•<" Ct '°'" o !JW) 'T ot HHI ~ !'I J
AllOl'Mll lo &•m " •I I o
Pub !llfl:I o • ~· t o1 01 • P ~ t<211'7 II
LEGAL N<YT ICE
1,1.11 » l
SUfOEltlOll COUll.l 0' fHf
11 ... TE Of (,t.L FOllN A FOii
lHE COUNlY OF ORAN(;(
Nf A-Ill~
HOTICI OF HE .. RING OF PET TON
FOii! JOROIATE OF W LL ,t.NO FOR
Ll'nlRI ll:SlAMfllllAllY
E• alt <)I CEC LE S ~,t.WYEP ••1
CEC LE S"'R,t.H S,t.WVElt OttfA d
NOT CE I~ l-lElllEBY G VEN "& ~Ybt"1 H Sowve "" I •d "" • " 1 ....
t e11>!0Pobo•o W •nd1> ~'"'°
GI Lt e • Tt.t•men •• o ae on
• • tn<r o "'"IC" n •d• t>r u ~. y C IJ •P'>(! "" ~" m•~t>dO•tt el ,.,.., n, !ht ... ,.,. h• IW-on • o '-"••
XI '1 I ~)O .,.. ~ ~I COU 00"'0
OtPI m•n 'JD l " l•~ '°" • too t;v Ct nlt• O "f we, n NC 1 o
i•fl'I• An• C• to"• Ott'CI M1• l t11
W E ST JOI-IN cou .. ~c~~
ll!ltOWliH Gll!flll & SYlV 1
,, ~-I c1111m1n "" sv •• Ii Ort A•t Cl ltwn • '1-
,... 6U-l1W
" ................ 1141 ....
fOub ... .., 0 '""" c .... ,,,,..~ 1 .. J 1'=7
•
FllWICE'
bull s,ll nc'IS by an 8 lo I rat o
1 h( t'V drncc a~scmbled
111uch of II prev1nusly publ1~h
cd bu1 nol :io skillfully
coordu1<1tcd shov.s
\e?o;tment advi sers 1101
need not be smart but
nred be atn1ost nothing
r1thl'r
\~ long "" yl u have
t'r minal record and have
been eaughl v 1 o t a 1
lnvestnienl
services make
s p '
'" ' . .. ,
service at
your fingertips
seventy-ones at
~~~~
llOfl HARBOR llLVD f COSTA MESA
f714) 640-tl())
'
OVER THE COUNTER
. -·"'""~···
n1 nt
·~ ~ ' "
MUTUAL
FUNDS
-A-
1~ ~.
71i II ' . " . ' .. " . '•"" ~ ID6 JJ~o ' .. ,, " II I 1 ' .. 1• ,,
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Thursday's Closmg · PriceS-:.Complete New York StocIC EXchange List
DAILY PILOT
The lfunUngton B e a e ti
Knlght.s of Columbus ire c<Jn·
ducting. • clothing drive ror.
poor pt0plt In southern states.
Public rtllltlons chairm&11
Ernie Duf1utt announctd that
clothing may be dellvertd at
any ol the city'• five tire sla·
tlon1. 'l'ht drive wUl end an
mid May.
Dufault 11ld that the
clothing wlll be handed over 11,
the prle~t !n th&ra:e -0f
mlulona 1n Ml1sl'8ippl, Ken·
lucky and Ark1nsas •
Edison Hig)i
•
Tours Slatcil
Publlo lou.r1 of the newest
campu1 in I.he Huntln&Jorl
Buch Union Hlah sch o'~ Dittrlct, Edison KJth1 a
beini orrered ~t 10 1 m. uc
Wodntoday mornlOI by PrlnJ
clpal Emr:at P11coe.
Vllltora 1t1 1hown t.bt ad..
mlnlltratlon buildlnl, i:nusJa
and voc1tlon1I arts
cl1aaroorrw, athletk! facllJUtrJ
the art. department a n d
bu1Jnesa and home econom.Jcs
cl111roolftl,
Furihu lnlonnAUon about
the tours Is 1v1llable by call·
1ni; the school at 9Q.tl56 • •
I
•I
/1
-. \
J 4 OAJL Y PILOT Frld~y. May 7, 1971
92nd Congress Is · ·Ac·hieving Some Things to Date
I
Ry Frank E\eaier 1H-1.lng; that the House dOesn't
talk much but still likes to
WASHlNGTON (UPI) .,...0rk only three days a week.
Most of what has been dOne of the military by $217 billion about this.
won't hurt anybOOy and solne a year in. the hope that nobody The Senate has approved a
public works projects. That
bill is ln conference now with
the Senate, which approved a
narrower version.
Standby wage and price con-•1 trols wr.re extended a year
although President Nixon in-
sists he won't use then1. When war protesters thrr.aten· Okay. And nobody can see
ed l.O close down the Congress furthermore that }louse and
this week Rep. Ed.,..·ard L Senate come December wlll be
Koch lD-N. Y · 1 prt'dicted cor-rushing as usual to try to get
of it may actually help,. much will have to be drafted. Sl.75 billion two.year program
Social Security benefits fo.r A similar bill is under debate of federal subsidie:,; to create
instanl-e have been ·raised 10 in the Stnat.e. 150.000 new public service jobs
percent, retroactive to,Jan. 1. Ways and · Means h 11 s in schoois. hospitals. police
rectly they couldn't do ii. done with their "'Ork.
"It 's hard to bring to a grin· But the record shows that
Now the House Ways and In state and local elections (as drafted a .bill to reform and fi re forces, and Qther
Means Commiltee has in th,e they already can in eleciion Of welfare, catch chiselers and overworked and understaffed
works another increase for ·federal officials). put loafers tO work, Wtii!e places. A 'similar tiill is rcadv
next year. The House passed 11 bill, to assu~ing thr needy at least for I-muse action ne:xt week. ·
Both House and Senate fac·
ed up to the Supersonic
Transport issue again, and
decidc.-d Hr.ally we can get
along without a plaM that wiU
get us from New York to Lon·
don in three hours instead of
the six hour!) and_ 40 minutes
now needed.
Naturally, along with all
this. the nati()nal del">t limit
has been raised once aga1n,
this Lime from $395 billion to
$430 billion. Maybt' if 1hd
Congress doesn't work too
hard the rest or the year, we
ca n make thaL one stick for
ding hall a n1achi11e that isn 't since Jan. 21. whefi jt got off
·moving,., Koch lo:d the house. to a late start due-to the lat£'
This is not to deny .all the wrndup of the 9\sl Congress, a
other unkind things you have Jot has been done b"y the 92nd.
heard about Congrt'SS. It is to -----
A constitutional amendment continue lhe draft. c n d $200 a month for a family of The House has approved
v.'as passed and sent to the automatic e<>llege d~ierments, four. Both liberals and con. another job-building.bill, a $5.5
states to let 18-year-olds vote and rai~e pay and allot.ances servatives so far seem pleased billion measure to speed up
ccir•ccde most !lf them and to
say that some other week's
analysis wili be adding more to
the list.
But al the risk of standing
accused of spreading good
news, we feel compelled to
report thal wha1 Koch said
isn't fair. Actually the 92od
<.~ongress to dale has been
ploddifli right along with its
\l'OTk .
You may ha ve read that the
Democratic housE' I ea d er s
aren't the best pals in the
i,1•orld and don 't always consul!
y,•1th each other : that the
Senate still prerers talking to
Rogers' Trip
To Mideast
Important
By PIDL NE"'SOM
Secretary Gf State William
F. Rogers' '-1ideast visit
brought to a head a policy
debate be lween Egypt's hawks
and doves, with the doves, for
lhe moment at least. seem-
ingly in the ascen dancy.
Although an over·simplifica-
tion. it is one interpretation
which may b'? drawn from
Cairo's cryptic announcement
of the di smissal of Vice Presi-
den t Ali Sabry, longtime
fr iend of the Soviet Union. bit-
ter critic of the United States
ahd opponent of a compromise
peace settlement in the Middle
East.
Jt further suggests the im·
portance attached to the
Rogers visit by the govern-
me nt of Egyptian President
AnS\.\-'ar Al-Sadat and the
praise or blame whi ch will be
heaped on the American
secretary if his mission sue·
ceeds or fails.
It is Rogers' 1nisfortune Iha!
besides the delicacy •f his
ifiisston. he alse is the
prisoner • f c!rcumstances
beyond his control, involving
as they do a power struggle
between Sadat and his closest
rival, Sabry, and. in Israel, a
government whose abi lity to
CQmpromise is limited by a
defiant public opinion oppose d
to any Israeli withdra"·a! from
occupied Arab -territory.
That this public op inion is in
part the result or t h e
government's o"•n manipula.
lion is beside the po int in thi s
discussion.
Although no1 among the
early leaders. Sabry is one of
the last of the originals in th e
coup that overthrew King
F'arouk in July. 1952.
With President Gama! Abdel
Nasser's death last October,
he was considered among the
leading contenders for the suc-
cession. Over the years he has
demonst rated great resiliency .
He has served as prernier
and had served once before in
the vice presidency. before the
1967 wa r "'ith Israe l. Jn 1965
Nasser namecl him Sccrrt11ry
Genera! ol the Arab Soci11list
Ln1on. Egypt's only legal
polilical party. He fell into
eclipse in 1969 after 11 !'rnug-
gling scandal i n vol v i n ~
members of his part y on a
return from a \'isit to tht'
Soviet Union.
ln April. 1970, Nasser named
him permanent secretary tJf a
new Asu Commission t1n
foreign Affairs. wi1h special
allenlion le the Sovict l 'nion .
He was ]<1st known In have
visited th!' Soviet { 'nion l11st
December durin g a n1\11lar~·
mls~ion there. Ile did 001 ac-
company Sadat on 1he la11<'r'~
secret visit th('rc 1n l11!t
J anuary.
Sabry is knov•n a~ a dflC'·
trinaire Marxist socialist.
He opposed Nasser's agrc£'"
ment with Saudi Arabia In end
the war in Yc1nen, and hl'
argued that in order to main-
tain its inte rnational influence .
Egypt must continue supf}(>rl
for "national lib eration
moyements'' abroad .
ln his oppositi :-in le Sada t. h('
apparenlly JiOUght le use both
his friendship with the Sov1t't
Union and hls influence inside
the Asu .
• He opposed his govcrnmcnr~
Initiatives toward a negotiated
Mideast Peace and Its plan~
tc join in a fcder11ton with
L1bya itnd Syria.
Presumably his oppositlon to
the · latter 3prang from ex· tremt nationali sm Rlnre 1hr
leaders C)f both tihya. 11nd
SyrJ3 are almest a~ warllkc a~
hf In their enmily ttward
ll'!rael .
a .... ilile. ~~~~~~~~-'---~~~~~~~~'~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
'~·'ll
Big
Adorable You
DELUXE WAGON BAB-B-Q
With Slide-Out Fire Draw.er
Recessing door with full •iew glass
window, warming oven. quick dtaw
fire crawer for easy charcoal filling
and starting. adjustable Jire-box. two
chrome plated grids, UL motor. spit and
two tines. large bottom shel~ wide
track wheels • .(l"x49"xl8~". (For once I
had the lacls.) 2 987
FOLDING. CAMP COT
AND MATTRESS
All aluminum frame, ean•a• top.
covered mattress with d"p foam.
fill. a •ofUe ii there •Yer wris one.
Light lo carry. so why camp on th•
ground unless you got a thing ·
about roughing ii. 887
BLUE ICE
Funny stuff. Feels like a bag filled
with j•lly until you Jreei• it al
home. then ii stay1 liluf'ic• for
hours. Sav• buying ice for the cheat
and no more with the bacon
lloaling in lhe waler.
REC.
98'
·-
JOHNSON'S
GLORY
SPRAY
FOAM
RUG
CLEANER
The name tells all so what mor•
can I say. I'll tell you a joke: Did
you hear about the guy who was sent to pri1on for making b!g
money -about a ha\l lnc:h loo long.
147
TWO MAH
PUP TENT
Big •nough for two Boy Scou!s,
thr•• skinny Indian Guides, lour
tiny Cuba. 14 puppies, 28 ham•t•rs.
115 wblt• mic•. or one mean grluly
bear.
,·-. ~• -
SHELL
HO-PEST
STRIP
127
They tay Just hang It op indoors Df
outdoon and the buga }Utt fade ·
away. Comproml••· hang U ju•t
outside th• door and get them on
the way ln.
CAB
WASH
BRUSH
Every year the prle• gets lower.
they mu1t b. making th• thing oul
of old cigor•lt• foil. Gives you lik•
a 1lx·foot mm to SJ•l all th• 1po11
on lb• ccr.
E•• NCJds tho .. Sander, T.Jerilioa Guld•·cd• red.. your hcauL Ab hu. •o you all know what th• UP· •
town !•llowl waol to put a; paUo cov•r up. A lot ofmcmey.iigbt? Got to get c b:mk lOCUl to d9 lt. W•lL are you ID
for c •u.rprlle..U you. nerd ~•r .....
...... ~ ! .. • ........ .· •• ~ •••• •!·· ~ .. • • •
·'"~ .. , . . .
ALL
ALUMINUM
PATIO KITS
10x20
8x20
e e 9 e I I
• I • e • I
·77
169.95
137.77
J~~ ;,,Ju' ' "' " ' •• :;. ,i.l".t .• Did you look close at those price•? This is the
.Ad••rll•ed
•peclals $Ood
tbru May 12.
1971. DO JT YOURSELF
AHDSAYEMOm
complete deal to put the all-aluminum patio cover
on your slab. A guy with half a brain and a Uttle
effort can put it up and save hundreds of dollars-. (I
d id one and I work on only on•·quart~r of a brain.)
This is an introductory _special aa we }u1t got our
i irst load in. ao save a bundle.
GQT ... ,.
~OOjTjp>(
·~•!!~I>
4x8 FOOT
SHEET ROCK
First ofL I'll tell you it is * lnc:h
thick. Don't tho1e ad& Iroll you that
hide the specifications in littl• type
way down at the bottom. Sa
compar•. It'• a buy.
126
6 FT.
COMBED CEDAB
PALINGS
Nic• 1-xtur•. th•••
get better looking
with ag• (]lk• many
goodwomool 2 ,C have seen)
LUSTBA BBICK
TILE
Twelve 1quare feet in the box.
looks just like brick but you ju1t
slick It on. No heayY w•igbt. DO m•••· no r•inlorcing.
2 47
BOX
9xl2
DBOPCLOTH
Pla1tfc so when you knock
everything over and your wif• yella
al you it won't ruin the rug. (U •h•
yel11 too long, why not give h•tc&
littl• abot too.)
7: •.
20 INCH
BREEZE BOX
FAN
Big b.a1L really moves volumes of
air. So if you're in between air
conditioning and o dinky Uttl• fcln.
thi1 ia th• best solution.
z 1587 SPEED
VACUUM
VISE
S•t 11 on any smooth surface. pu1b
the lever down and II holds lUce o
clam 1h•ll at a Saturday night
clambalr•. Swlvtl jaws,
2'7
5/B"xSO FT.
NYLON REINFORCED
BOSE
Strength without the weight or
1t1Une11 of the old typ•. Bra11
couplings. Some kind of a
guartm!H.·but I can't t•ad th• fin•
print wltho12t my glasses.
KING O'
LAWN
POWER
EDGEB
NO.
206
337
Th• king of the lawn .dger people.
'Y90T1 oJ making the best .fl-cycle
engine deals. fully odfu1tahle Jor
depth and angle ot cut.
548a
YOUR CHOICE
• 100 GARBAGE BAGS
f ll•• to 11 quart •lie.
• 20 TRASH CAN
LINERS
lllg 33 Ga:llon Sl1•
• 10 LEAF BAGS
Monster 5 b\l1b•I afse.
• ear
in-
all
imit
a1n,
n to
the
too
we
for
... ,
'
t • ' • • • ' • , • ' •
..
• l
•
,~ ..
MODEL HOPP ERS -Getting set for a Spring Into Summer fa sh-
ion show on Saturday , May 15, are model s Oeft to right) Mrs. David
\Vhitegon, Kell y Brennan and i\trs. Paul Brennan. Styles for both
t}le young set and young matrons will be modeled in the captain's
Anchorage by Los Lirios Guild of Easter Seal Society \vith funds ·
going to the Orange County Rehabilitation Center.
Pa r for the Course
El Niguel Golf Pros
Drive on to Victory
\Vinners in four flights at El Niguel Country Cl ub Women'~
Golf Association are sporting handsome new medallions -\von
through top scoring during a recent four-day tourney.
Co·chairmen of the event '"ere Mrs. lfarrison Carrick and l\·frs.
c:oJvin Whitin gton. The awards comm ittee was cqrnprised of the Mmes.
Rick Gouin, Phil Cramer and John Francis.
During the tournament, total scores to determine gross and net
in each fli ght \\'ere recorded "'ilh a\vards made during a post tourna-
ment Pu nch Bo\vl Party in th e club patio. Arrangeme nts for the
party \Vere made by !\frs. Richard Parson s, social chairman.
Capturing first place in the Cha mpionship Flight for th e second
year \vas I\Irs. Kenneth Teel followed by runnerup Mrs. \Villiam R.
Egan. Low ne t \Vas l\1rs. Richard f\.t. Hall.
ln A '1ighl. l\.1rs. Bert l\.fenne came in wi th top honors with J\..1rs.
Richard Thompson, runncrup, and l\.1rs. \\1illis Carpenter, low net.
6men
BARBARA DUARTE, 49~~466
frldllJ, MIW J, lt11 . ' "'i \I
Fa shion's in Season
New Spring
To Summer
Los Lirios Guild of the Easter Seal Society will
Spring Into Summer with a fa shionable hop as they
stage an annual lun cheon and fa shio n show on Saturday,
J\1ay 15. •
Crab Louie will highlight the menu in the Captain's
Anchorage in Dana Point. Also on the menu \Vill be clam
cho\vder, hot breads and sherbet.
Door prizes will be a\varded during the event which
begi ns at 11 a.m. \vith proceeds contributed to the
Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center of Orange County.
Modeling fa shions from Rene 's Boutique, Glad.rags
and the Miss J\1uffet Shoppe \viii be guild members the
Mmes. Carol Sturn, David \Vhitegon. James Cowan,
Richard fl.1cG~,nis, Jerry Immel and Paul Brennan.
Kathlee n Im mel and Pam Tandy will show the lat·
est in fa shion for the young set. Miss Tandy is the East·
er Seal child for Orange Co unty this year.
Fashion coordinator and narrator will be Miss Betty
Soldo.
Persons interested in information or reservations
may phone Mrs. James Healy, 494-6686, or I\'trs. Brennan,
499·1439.
l\trs. \Vhitington captu red first slot in B Flight; Ji.1rs. Roger
Conant was runnerup, and Mrs. Richard Ho\vell, low net.
ln C Fli ght. l\.frs. Kenneth Sissell earned the medallion with
l\trs. Ray Henderson, runnerup, and Mrs. Frank Johnson, low net.
WINNIN G TOAST -El Niguel County Club Women'•
Golf Association winners in a recent tournament pro·
pose a championship toast. Taking top honors in the
four-day event are Oeft to right) the Mmes. Kenneth
Teel, club champion for the second year, William R.
Egan, Bert .Menne and Colvin Whitington.
•
Weekend Farmer's Crop Ruined From Seed of Discontent
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a mar·
ried man and a father v.·ho needs help
""ith a prob!en1. f\Iy v.•ifc was spending
money like it grew on trees and \Ve have
many arguments about it. finally I
~-came so desperate that I ran an ad in
the newspaper saying 1 woul d not be
responsible for her debt!.
I live in Indiana and W1lrk in Chicago so
I get home enly on weekends. The Satur·
day alter I ran tl!_e ad in th~ newspaper T
went home and discovered that my wife
had taken all the furniture and left with
our t\vo Children. I'm sure she we(lt to
her molher 's.
I don't care about the furniture but my
children mean the world to me . Please
tell me what to do. -TROUBLED MAN
ANN LANDERS
DEAR MAN: Yoa 1bould have wrlltea
to roe BEFORE )'OU ru that 1d, Bab, bot
"'hat'• done ls done, so let'• go from
here.
Co·ntact your wife and Ilk fler lo tit
down with you eod • counselor or 1
clergyman and settle your differences.
Each or you bas 1 leglUmate beer. It
might be that your wife rpends money
like crazy to get even wllh you for le•v·
ing her alone five days 1 week. The tolu·
tloa ml&flt be for you to work lD Jrictiua
or move yovr f1mdy to Chlca10.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I Am • u;.
year-old high school boy who lives in
Dubuque, Iowa. Dubuque isn 't exacUy
New York City so high school kids here
don't know a lot of sophisticated stuff.
( have never kissed a girl but I am
pl anning on doing it soon. In fact I have
the girl picked out already . Oon1t 1augh,
'
Ann, I really need help.
Please tell me -when a guy kisses a
girl \\1here does his nose belong? I don't
w~nl anything to go wrong. Thanks a lot.
-PLANNING AHEAD
DEAR Hm.D: The nose goes right
along ·with {be re!t' of the face and it
belon11 wherever It land!!. Please let me
know bow you did. I worry about kids like
you.
DEAR ANN. LANDERS: I am 48 years
of age and feel foolish writing to a paper
for help, but I am terribly confused.
My husband died when our son was 4. J
raised the boy myself and he i11 very
close to me. Jerry ~!I now 14. La~t year t
met a widoWer who brought real hap-
piness into my life. Afler JO years of
loneliness it was like a miracle. 1 am
sure we could have been very content
together. financial security was no pro-
blem. We are both comfortable.
\Vhen l told my son I was considering
marrying again he beeame angry at first
and later sull~Jnally he told me I had
to choose between him and the man. So I
stopped seting my friend.
I alt'I very depressed. T feel th at
perhaps I have made the wrong choice.
Yet the mother in me says my first
responsibility Is to my son. Please give
me your views. -SHELBY MRS.
OEAR SHELBY: And how long has thli'I
kid been dictating to you? ft-1y guess is
from the time he /earr.ed ' to lalk. Rua.
don 't walk, to the nearest phone. Get lbt
man back, If you ean. It would be 1
bealtby move for both you and your soa
-unless, of course, the kid plans ..
spend the rest of his life bosslllg you
around loslead of marrying some girl lat
can tyranlze. Jn which case, my CO•
doleoces to you both.
flow wi ll you know when the real thing
comes along? Ask Ann Landers. Send for
her booklet "Love or Sex and Row to Tell
lhe Difference." Send 3S cents in coin and
a long, .self-addressed, stamped envelope
with your request' in care of the DAILY
PlLO'l'.
'•
I
DAILY PILOT
MADRIGALS -Richard Countryman and Vicki
Schwartz, Madrigal Singers at San Clemente High
School, entertain Mrs. \Vales \.Vallace of the Opera
League after getting their cue from director Rich-
Opera League
'
ard C. Da~trup. The choir will entertain during the
annual spring luncheon of the Opera League of
Laguna Beach Tuesday, May 11.
Lends Ea r
LEGAL NMICE LEGAL N011CE
" 411:1 Mlta "ICYITIOUI I UllNt:S• CllTIPlCATI 01' IUllNltl NAMI lTATIMINT
j ,.,.. folltiwlM _,_ I,.. lolllt 'ICT TIOUI Ml.Ml llu•IMH 1t·
The IH!Clwtllr>H ..... CW llP'I !It 11 «NI-THI 1tio•LL Ulll S. CH,, Hwv. lllllCll!'le f a..,,11-1 •I JIM YtlloW'llOllol LllUlll ltKll Orl\lt, CO.If MtM, Cf. nu .. lll'!Otr !tit Jl:ldlfrcl 0 l url (Gtll •1rt.Nrlhlpf ··~· lltU•i....· l!rll'I flfll'lf ., COLOMll ... COii'• 1n flT\tlllO. ,,,, L-111M II•••"· ••enl
11'11 U.LIS a lllllVtCIE tNI ll'ltt Mllll Wf/llbelf (Gitn. 1'1rt,....al'llP> IUI U ~U 1!0 loo"-! for the best ~ah \o make llrl!'I II """_.. ot tn. tol"tWIM ,.,....,a, ltlvl1r1 Orlvt, 5111t• 4IMI ./"' ruu •• Wflo.t 1111nt1 111 lull •1111 llftH el Tnli blltlntn 11 1111111 ((W>llU<ltd br f your contrlbutlon to e community, w y not let r1•111t11t• ,,, •• 1o11ow1: "'''"''1111111
the Volunteer Bureau of South Orange County help o.~ .... ~1"'c~11'-'!::~·c!'.s.iJ.~~°'",:~ ~;;:;~1-;~~.
You !ind just the right volunteer i·ob? ,,,.... "'-....-. 211' Y111""11-~b11~ 0t-•11" ce111 1>111.,. ""'"" OrlYI+ (Hfl Mt'f, Ct "'" 4,_11 XI lf'MI MIV 7 14,. JI 1'11 JOOf.11 Call the bureau any weekday between B:SO 01i.i .... ,u ,., im · ' · S11>11111 '· .. r11iou1.ic LEG" N~'ICE a.m. and l p.m. at &42-0963. M1r11 T1re1• Slfboullk IU.o u •
W'TIR SAfETY ,,,,, ,, c.11+or11l1. Ortllfl Ctuntv; "' 011 AHU tt, Hn , H!or1 '"'· • Ntlll'Y P"41Jn Orange County Association for the Retarded is l'ubnc in •fld 1or ••t• s1111, 11trton11tY c111T1111cAT1 o" 1u5•N11s
I IP!Mtrtd ltlilld II', lll'boll•tk tl'ICI M1•l1 "ICTITlOUI MAME n need of volunteers with water safety instructor T••••• '''"°""i. ,,,_11 ,. '"' 10 11t "" T"-ulld•ril111td "dOt• c1r111., 1h• 11
C.rtlflclt t •· Ill d A "OJ j " Im --• llltloM ,,..'"'" •rt tuli'lcr lbtcl la colllluclln1 t bu1ln111 ti 1'°211 M1rlntl tS 0 U'C' tguar $, n ymp C SW Int wtll'lln !111lrUf'ltnl 11\d 1cktl0Wltd•tcl Orlvt, Hu111lnt1cn 811e11, C11ltornli1i
Jrogram ts sponsored at 11 a.m. each Thursday in tn.Y •~Ku•H "" Nm•. uf\dofr "'' 11c1111ou1 11"" "''"'' of Ei....c• (0,.,ICl4L SEAL ) COMl"ANY 11\d !htr u ld firm It erome Park, Santa Ana. J ....... I!. DIYll com_..:i ol 11\f lo!lowlnl ''"""' whoH
PATH To MATURITY Nol••• 1"11&111c.(1!lfor11I• ,,..,.,, fn full .nd ,,,,,of rtlldtocl !1 II "•l11<INI Offlct Ill lollowa:
Bjg Sisters of Orange County i! '/rogram proa Or•n•• ,countv Ei.1no• M. '''°"· u021 M1r1,.... or.
vldln M'I' COITlll'llHlell l!Xllrtl +illlllll\llOll 8tte11, Ctlll, g adult friends for girls who nee understand· Junt 11. 191~ o1t111 .v.11 1s. 1t11
Ing ta d I h. I !'~bllllltcl Or_. CMl1 OIJIW l'llfl IElet "'I• M. Streif , accep nee an compan ons ip rom someone .....,.., XI •M M.tY 1. '" 21. "" 1•11-n STATE 0, c•L1Fo11.Nl4,
outalde the home. 011:4HGI!' COUNTY :
Fri d ed d b LEGAL NOTICE Oro •prll 1s. 1171. tllfort m1, • No11n en S are ne e W 0 will help girlg: find ,ub!lc In 11'111 for-11!d Slt!e, Pfrkln1!11 ~Ir best path to maturity. U you would like to '""'" El••"" M. t1ra11 known ,, ''" p.1Ut1 lo toe 1~1 "r'°"' wlloie n1m1 II e OD a real Challenge Consider being I big sister. Cl•Tl,tC ATI Of< IUSIHISI wlllulbtd lo fflt wl1tol11 ln1trumtn1 tlld . SU""&R SIGN-UPS • ,ICTtTIOUI NA/1111 tekpowlt01td Ill• UKUltcl ll!t .......
fTVYI TM ll!'>dt••ltf'IMI dtll wrllly h• t1 toll-COtfl<1411 Still Teen'Je vol.uni r al e d I ln •· f 11111e11"' • 111111"'11 11 Wl H1rt111r 11vo.. M•,.., s11tn MOrton ee s are r a Y s gn g -v.p or COit• Mt .. , c1utorn11, .,1141,, in. fie· Prlt1CIP11 Ot11<1 111 summer vo unteer placement, -and more requests for 1111ou1 firm ,.._ 111 JoHN·s 11.•c1NG ortn•• c,,.,n,.,.
th I h I CYCt.es lf'MI 11'111 llld 11111'1 11 cornplllt<I My COll'lmllllon E•Pl•tl er e p art! coming in each day. Do something of ,,.. 1o11n1n• ..,.,..., wl'loo• n•m• 1n .u.u '· u11 different thl5' summer. 11111 •od 1lK• o1 •11101ni:• 11,,1o11"'" Pub111n..i or'"'' Co••' 0111 ... P1101 J.,,11 C1ltcclllo, ):)71 Ftrllhlllrl Ln. 40•11 u. 2J, JO INI MIY '· ltll 111·71 EASTER SEALERS C.M .• C1tll.
A l I D1ltd Aor ll :JI, 1911 new y ormed social·recreational group for Jolln c,ncchlo
adult patients at lbe Easter Seal Rehabilitation Cen· s11•• et c111ftrn11. or1n .. cwnt<t: """2 On ..... ,II 11. un. btfort mt, I Ho!tr'f l'ICTITIOUI IUS1Nl51 ter In Orange, Easter Sealers have actlvlUes rang· l'ub11c 111 1no klr .. id s1111, "''°11111y HAM• sTA'TIMINT
ing from chess to painting to candle-rnakine. ::":~!" ... ~°!'nn !:~~~ch~:,:;o;:n,,:,~~i.:: ,,'?" 1o11o11111n, 11tr.on 11 001111 bulf11u1
Volunteers provide instruction in handicrafts to ~ wllnln ln1trurn1n! lrMI ICknowltd• , KAl"LAN5 II EST AU II AN 'T &
d h t<I llt IXICutMI lht llmf, Ol!LtC/ITl!.SSl!N, llJl 8tl1tol Jlrtet, an obbles which give a new dimension to therapy <011<1"1c1AL sE4L1 co111 M••• gr d h billt tl Marv 11!~ Morton South Cotll 1111t1ur~rit I ~ d pro ams an re l . I OD. Nootrv Pullllc·CllllCll'nlt Dtllcllt$1tn, lllC .. 1 Cthlornl1 cor· TILEPHONBS RINGING "'1"'1"1 Ollie• In PDl'lllon, un 8rl1!ol 511111 Co111 Mf1•
The Orange County Council on Alcoholism. ~:::lr~1~~\!,. Eqlr11 COi'~.~~·"'" ll bflni co..du,lt<I by I
Santa Ana is seeking volunteer telephone aides who l"ub11111tc1 or1n1• ca111 01nv ll'1to1 •br•h•m 1C1111•11
wW handle Incoming calls. Alrll JO •!Id Mty 1• 1'· fl, "71 l006-1l Tht1 ~:.~~'!:, flll'd WI"' !I'll co11r 1J 1-------------1 cltrk al Or1n11 Coun11 on: Ao"I 21, 1911. 8EVEllL Y J, MAO DOX OIPUIV COU1'1'1' Cllfk All.IN AND WllllMAN
LEGAL NOTICE
L!G,U. N011CE
4!1Wftl'f1 ti L•• NOTICI 011' PUILIC NIAllNG t1M Vt111Ct llYof.
Spring Sing Scored Vows Said
In Oregon
HOTICli 11 HEllEIY GIYEM 1!'111 1 Cul\w Clh', C1Hlenlll HUI publlc nNf!M w!ll llf ntld ll'f tlle Cll'r 'T·7tt11 CouMll ol 11'11 City of COiii Mnl Oft INV Pllllllll'ltd Ortnff C&111I Dtl!'I' Pllol 17, 1t71 , 11 ""' """'' "' 7:JO 11.m .. or II Apf'IJ a.a. XI ,,,. M•Y '· 11, 1'11 t U.71
IOGll lt>tr11lltr 11 Inf m•ll11 m1y llel---------~---l'lt1rd, In "" CCIUIKll cn1mller It !ht City LEGAL NOTICE H1n, n F1lr Orlvt, Cnt• Mt11,1_;_===cc=o-c-=""c-=--
CAROL SKILLION
To Join Brides
Pasadena
Setting
For Rite
Carol Rae Sk.illion will
become the bride of Richard
Allen Coffinberry d u r i n g
August rites in the First
Uniled Melhodist Church ,
Pasadena.
Parents of the betrothed
couple are Mr. and Mrs. H. R.
Skillion of Costa Mesa and Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence t-.1,
Coffinberry of Parker, Ariz.
l\.1iss Skllllon ls a graduate
Gf John Muir High School,
Pasadena and Pasadena City
College. Her fiance ia: a
graduate of Pasadena City
College and has served four
years in the U.S. Marines.
Chefs Flip
Flapjacks
In Patio
The patio season will open
on Saturday, May 8, as oC·
ficials of the San Clemente
lnterfaith Se rv l c em en' 1
Center serve a pancake
bre!kfast from 8 to ll a.m.
Honorary host and chalnnan
of the event will be Ken Carr,
city manager. who will share
host duties with Wllilam C.
H o r n , newly·appolnted ex-
ecutive director of the center.
Chefs v.·111 be a corp& or
you-ng fi.iarines known as
Green Badgers who assist in
daily operatio11 or the facility.
Junior hostes!l!!s will serve.
San Clemente area residents
are invited lo enjoy the
breakfast, meet the staff and
tour the facility.
Sale Tags
Attached
The confertnce center of
Hoq Memorial Hoa p l la I,
Prtsbyteriaa ~·HI become 1
blgh-fuhlon shop for a d1y on
'Illuradoy, May Jl.
From noon to S p.m. a
varltty ol new tlothina In·
eluding drts~s. b Io u 1 e s ,
1l1ckJ, pantsuits and tttn
fashions will be sold as a
benefit for the ho11p l t1l
buUdlnr fund .
According lo Mn. Jam's
t.Ftamme, vice presld@nt,
ways and means, the all·
name-brand clothing w a 1
secured at discount prices.
El Adobe restaurant ln San
Juan Capistrano will provide a
colorful background for the
annual spring luncheon or the
Opera League of Laguna
Beach on Tuesday, May IL
Members and guests of the
auxiliary or the Lyrlc Opera
Association of Orange County
Including the Opera 100 of
Leisure World will gather at
11 :30 a.m. for a social hour.
Following lunch, Mrs. Stanley
Eichstaedt. preside nt. w 111
conduct a brief business
session.
Entertainment wilt be pro-
vided by the Madrigal Slnger1
of San Clemente H!gh School
directed by Richard C ,
Dastrup. The group will be In-
troduced by Cyrll M. GalUck,
district music director.
c111ttoml1, on Int 1o11ow1n1 l1tm1: 1· f'll:ONl~EO S"l!Cllll lC PL•N ftr 1llt,.. SU,111 101. COUllT OF Tii i ml!'ll "' V•ntutrllll W•• ooutntrlY •1141 IT.t.TI 011' c•Ltll'OllNl4 POil
S"•an AJICe s~er ~lffie curv!nt In In tt1!1rl1 dlrtcl!Dn lo llM \IP THI: COUNTY 011' OllANGI
-t'~ uq.: with S11'!1 lltbtl. NI. A4JStf the bride of Peter 11\omaa lll!lONE f'ETITION NO. 11·71•1, Coll• E1t11t el PETE R .. ET E II I [ N.
n •• • f N h d Mftt Pltn11lnt Cornml11lon, 11 Fair Oe<tt11<1. neai 0 ewport Beac urlng Or!'ff. COiii Mtll. lflr 11t1m!11l011 la NOTJCE IS HEll.E8Y GIVE N to !I'll cerernonl., ~rfonned b the r11on1 o•oHl'IY ioc111111 ,, 212, Jn, 120, crtdlli!r1 o1 th• tba"9 111m ... otc ... enl ~ Y :au, m , m, 2U. 241, 111111 14' Ovit Strttl. ln11 t!I "''°"" ~1v1,., cltlm1 111rn11 tht Rev. Orville A. Coats In the Cott• M111. trlll'll Cl·S, Sf!IPolnt c ... 11r 111111 dtc..,.tnl •re "qu!r ... to •II• '"trn,
Fl Olttrlcl, lo Cl.Cl', LOC:ll lua!Mll wJll'I lt1t Mc1111rv Ycucl'ltrl. In 11'• oflkt rst Methodist church ' Ol1trl(!.(of\dlUon11 Ptrmll. ot tn1 cl•r~ of'"• •ba•t 1nt1llfd co .... 1. or Albany Ore 111:1.0NI!' PETITION NO 11.·7 1·•· 'o 0<111n1 lntm, wl1h 11'11 nec1•11rv ' • RIUl trO L.IWI• Ot•ll Ltwll j""'°"' IM6 YOVclltrl, to !~t ~nder1l1ntd at lhl olllc1 Th brld d ht f M ' ' al Mr •norMV Jorm Guerin. lllt."
Santa Monica Church
Chosen for Nuptials
The spring affair is under
the direction of the Mmes.
Robert H. Crowell, Wales
Wallace, Thomas Armstrong
and H. Donald Outmans.
Reservations should be made
by Friday, May 7.
During the luncheon, four
tickets to "The Music Man" to
be presented by the Lyric
Opera in September, will be
awarded. Four performances
of the musical are set for the
weekends of Sept. 10 and 17
with tickets now available at
the association ofifce.
e e, 8Ug er 0 r. H1:bor 9Gul1v1rO, COl:f rMtN, :or Oce1n, H~ntlnl!On 8el(I\, C111!ornl1 '1641, and Mrs Merwin H s-r of " ll'll$1fOn t• flfOl'll " -1' II Sol ~lctl ,. tllt plltt cl bu1lnen ol !ht · • ,...~ l t,ntrlll Sir...,, COlll Mt11, lrom Rl. undtr.l1ntct In 111 ,,.lllttl .,.,11lnln1 It Albany, waa attended by Miss T'NO-F•rnlly R91lO•nlltl Dl•trlct, 1° C2-"'' •''" ol Mid Otctdtnl, "'llhln lcu,
C. d Lo Ha 'd f C,, G1ntrtl Com1n1rtl1I Dl1trld.(-mont+ii tfler the 11,11 plllllklllon al lrlll 1n y u ggren as ma1 o 111111-1 f'1rm11 . nohe•. honor. NOTICf IS FUllTHllll GIY< t111t •I Oiled ••rll 11, U71
Inf tlmt 11\d 1l1c1 1111Y1 mtnll!Nltd, tnY Hint M, lt1wrT11n Her husband Is the 90rt or 11\d 111 H'IMI lnltre1ttd ll'llV ·-·· AOmlnl•l••l•I•
Mr 111111 lie n11rd b'I' Ito• Cll• Council GI 1111 of "'' E1t1!1 of "'' . and Mrs. Ted Reed of Cl'1' of Cott• MtN INI ltl• •lorlll'l•l'lllorltlll "bf<>o• "'"' ... t11c1<11n1
Niewport Beach. He asked lt•m•. EILl!EN "'· ll'HINNEY t~t: :.~~~1~"'' """""''
St. Timothy's Cat ho Ii c
Church in Santa Monica was
the setting for afternoon rites
linking Susan Rebecca Gabe ,
daughter oC the Robert Louis
Gabes of Santa Monica, and
Richard Ellard Gouin II, son
of the Richard Gouins of
Laguna Niguel.
The bride's sister, Mi ss
Robin Lynn Gabe was maid
of honor with bridesmaids the
Misses Lauren Rogel!, Debbie
Rolhaus and Priscilla Pril·
chett. Bridget Gouin, the
bridegroom 's sister, w a a
flower girl.
Allan l}rsillo served as best
man while Frank Bitsko,
Robert Peairs and Richard
Fuller seated guests.
The n1w Mrs. Gabe was
graduated from Santa Monica
High School and attended Cal
Western University and San
Diego State College. Her bus--
band is a graduate oi Pomona
High School and Cal Western
C•m• "'"" r 11ei.
LINOA BARTEL
To Marry
News Told
At Service
The engage ment of Linda
Bartel to David M. Cowie has
been announced during a
traditional candlelight service
in the women's residence of
Southern Calllornia College,
Costa Mesa.
MW Bartel, a senior at the
college, Is the daughter of the
Rev. and ~trs. Harry Bartel,
mi!Jiooaries in ~iexico.
lier flance, son of the Rev.
and ~trs. A. P. Cowie of
Lee1ton, Christ Church, New
2.4!aland, is a theology student
at the School of Evangelism,
Languages and CUllure in
LausaMe. Switzerland.
Th<' couple met in Kenytt,
Ea11t Africa last Summ er while
both ~·ere engaged I n
missi onary y,.-ork. No weddin&
d•te has bten set.
and attended San Diego State.
The couple will live In Min·
nesota, where the bridegroom
plays professional baseball lor
the ~1innesota Twins.
LANA VOCK
To Wed
James E. Rieger to be his ~t c1rv Cltrk Hu~t1n11111 911e11, C11Uorn11
nd ush D. k Pubtl1/\td Or111111 C-1 D1H1 Piia!, t»4il man , a en; were 1c Mtv 7, 1t11 10tos.11 ,.,, 1110 su.""
Speer and Tom Corsey. Alltr111y tor 4omlni1trt1rl• l'ubllal'led Or1nve Cct!! D1ll1 Pllc!,
Candlelighters were Miss LEGAL NOTICE AMij u. JCJ •M Mav 1, H , '"' •.a.11
Carol Balskensen and Miss LEGAL NOTICE Laurie Balskensen. IUl"ElllOR COURT 0, TllE STATI 011' C4Llll'OllNI ... ,011 P-llo&U The bride attended the THI COUNTY 01' 011•1t•• ClllTIPICA'Tf 011' IUS1Nlll
St. Andrew's Setting
June Day
Selected U · Q d b (IH NIUlllMr CMUt, ,ICTITIOijl N4M! n1versily of regon, an er SUMMONS (MAllR IAGEJ The ul'IC!erijgnf<t <Iott certify he 11 C'll"o husband graduated from the In re the m•rrltt• "' PetlHontr: Ji11t duct1n1 1 buslnen 11 ion w. 111n 51,. , , Ele1nor Molh1nl tnd ResPondenl: J1mes Co•I• Me••· Cilllornt1, unller fllt.llc;.
Nuptial Vows Read Mr. and t.1rs. Robert E.
Vock or San Clemente have
announced the engagement or
their daua:hter, Lana Rae
Vock to James F. Robinson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Un1vers1ty of Southern 14!tll1a.1 Motl ... nl 1111ous 11rm name ct ftl w•L·M"C Pl!O.
California. He spent five years Ty,,~r..p1~11r:n:'rctenn:~ flll'd . lllllHon Cl>f'O-OUCTS, /2) Sll!IC:TLY GEl!MAN INC, · th N j h t •• f c1rnlng YOUf mt"T•te You mav me • fPlll ltltl Mid lfrm 11 ctm~td ol tllt lot• tn e avy Wt WO wUrs 0 -\llfn •ts11anse w!lhln. thirty oavs of lhe lowlnv penon. whose n•me In lull 1114 duty in Vietnam. dl!e th1I this 1ummori1 Is 1er•ed on yw. Pltce o! reoioon'' I• n tol lowl: II vou /111 lo Ille • wr l!tlt'l reSl>Ol'Se Wllll1m 0. Mllltr, 1071 W. 8111 Rd., wUMn 1ucn time, YOllr Oeltull m1y lie An•l\elm. C• ... tnlt•l'd •nd tnt coun mlV tt'l!tt , ludt· 011td Aprtl n, 1971 St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church. Newport Beach was
the setting for the double ring
ceremony Unkln1 Stephanie
Allen and Frank Polk Bennett.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
Dlerenlleld read the rites for
the daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
John S. Allen of Balboa and
the son of Dr. and Mrs . Robert
Bennett of Huntington Beach.
Given In marriage by her
father, the bride asked Mrs.
Thomas Clrello to be her
matron of honor and Miss Pat-
te Landusky, bridesmaid.
Pete Poitras served as best
man, while ushers were Kyle
Peet and Robbie Bennett. the
bridegroom's brother.
The bride is a graduate of
Newport Harbor Hia:h School
and attended Orange Coast
College. Her husband Is a
graduate of the Army·Navy
Academy. The bridal couple
will reside in Costa Mesa.
R. Robinson of Arcadia.
A June 28 wedding in .the
San Clemente United
Presbyterian Church is being
planned.
The bride-to-be is a graduate
of San Clemente 1-ligh School
ind attended Saddl ~ b ac k
College, whlle her fiance
studied at Arcadia High School
and Pasadena City College. He
eerved ln the Navy.
Ayudantes
Auxiliary
Takes Vote
m1l'FI conl1lnlr111 l11Jun.cllYt or crtntr orC1tr1 Wlllltm 0. Miiie• C011Ctrnln9 dlYlllOll al ••Ol>l!llV, IPOU••I Sllte OI Cllllort'lll. O,tnge CotmlY: s11ocor!, child cu1f0dy, ctl!!d 1u_.i, II· Oo Aorll 1'l. lt11. beto11 m1, • Ne11rv torntYI' IHS, cooi!t, alld MJcll olhtr rtlltl Public In •!'<' for ltlO 51•1•. ""''°""11'1'
11 m•v be 9r111tld bv Tiit cOYrT. ll>l't••..,. Wollltm 0 . Miiier ktWJWn lo n'll
11 Yfil whn 11 1Hk tnt 10vl(1 el 111 11-to II<! tne "''°" wnost ""me 11 1ubicrlll· ternty 111 thll m•lltr, veu "'°"1111 do so eO to rnt within ln•!•umtnt "'"' 1rom,ltT H Ito•! .,..,, writ!.,. r11p0n1t, 11 1cknowl ... vl'd h1 e•tcu!..,. the 11m•. lftY, 11'117 bt llltd ti' 1111'1.. (OFF ICIAi,. SE .. L) Dllld Mirth n, 1'71. M•rv B1lh Merl°" WILLl ... M E. ST .IOH N, Cluk No!lrV Publl<·Caflllll'nll 8'1' Wm. 0. IC•"'11nt, OtDUIY Principal Oflic1 In (SEAL! 0•1n9e C.ountv
Pu~ll!J'>td Or111g1 Cotll DlllY Piiot. My CommlS1lon E•port1 4P•ll XI 11\d MtY '· ]<(, 1!, 1911 lOOl-71 Aorll '· 1'15 '1 Don Cl 'II PublhntO Or1ntt Coesl Dilly ll'llcl " ra. arence w1 Aor11 7J. 30 ""' May 1. u , it11 1i2.,1 serve as p r e s i d e n t of the LEGAL NOTICE
Ayudantes Auxiliary of th e LEGAL NOTICE
Children's Home Society for SUl"ElllO• COUllT OF THE , .. IUU the co ming year. STATE 01' , ... LIFOllNtl l'OR CEllTIFICITE OF llUllNEl t THI COUNTY 011' ORANGE FICTITIOUS NAME The new officer was ln· N•. A""" Tn• ul\dtr111neo doe• c1r111v n, 11 (01'-
Architect or Agent? '•II d Ith h ••• d d I HOTIClf 01' HIAll lNG O' PITITION dueling t b~1lnen ar J10I So Wr lthl Su:o e W er .......,r Ur ng 'Oii 1'11.0l•TI O' WILL •ND 1'011 llre1t, S1nh An1, C:•lllcrnl1. u'n.!tr .,,_ a dinner meeting in the Jolly LITTElll TltT.lMINTAllY llUltlou1 llrm ntmt of OJ ASSEMBLED
0 I . . . , . 1!1l11t of DOMENICA POLLETTO, Ilse OEVICES t2) lllSSON 01 111SSON x nn Jn M1ss1on Viejo. ~-n II DOMENIC.\ POLETTO, tlw "MPLIFIEI! CD. 161 II' s 50 N
Functions Scrutinized
Also taking office were the -nown 11 M•G ... 1110 l"A LE TTO, 11.., 4MPL1F1Eii INC is1 11tssoN SALES kll<P\•n 11 OOMEN ICA. PA LETTA, 1110 CO. Ii) R!SSON SALES INC. (1) !ILU~ Mmes. John Watz, Robert known II DOMENIC ... POLETTO. •!to STEELE tnd lhll ••Id firm 11 ccm11111ldl
Legler and Roger Tapley V·ice known 11 OOMeNtC• POIETTO. Dett••· of ltil follgwlne oer!on. who1e n1m• In • Id, lu!I •nd Plfct ol ftlldonce h 11 follow•: presidents; Edward Mitchell NOTICE ts HERE!!" Gl\IEN Tnat Robert A. f:l ls1I, lSU Stvlllt, PIKtll-
Functions of the nation's
law·makln1 branch of the
government : ls It i he
architect of compromlse or
agent o( change?
This and other quest.ions will
be answered when Orange
Coast League of Women
Voters begin their evaluation
and study of U.S. Congre1s
this month.
Delegates
Traveling
d I I E1tn1r F'tlld•r,cn 1'111 lllfd ll•rtln 1 Pttll· lit, C1lllo•n••.
The first unit meeting wlll dent pro-tern o( the Senate, an Jam·e11 Ru111e • 11ori 1or1>rob11101w111 1n<1 1°'111u1ric:1c1 D1tfdApr1111.1"1 SectetarieJ and 8 i U art Lflltrl Tt1!1mtnt1ry to P1!lll°""'' llcl><!r! ": 11.ll!I take place Tuesday, May 11, who explained the financing of · ' ''''r'""' to w111cn 11 11'1101 1or furtner 5111• 01 c1111o•n·•· or~nt1 countv: Gibson, treasurer. p1rllcu11r1. 11\d t~tt tht 11m1 1nd 011c1 On 1.i>r11 11, 1911, belore me, 1 Nct1rv at 7:30 p.m. In the home of public transportation. Th · 1 f d d . ot llearlnt the 11m1 ~11 bten 111 lo• /!o•Y Public In tnd to• t1ld siaie. P1non1llY , e soc1e y was oun e In 7?, 1t1L ,, t:JO 1.111 .. In th• caur!rDC1.t\ ot t1>1>t1•1<1 Ro0t11 A. Alql k11own kl mt kl Mrs. Edtar Scheck. Other Area delegates attending in-1891 for the purpose of pro-Otautment No. l o1 111d too•t, •' 100 ~t '~' Pf•!IOn wt1011 name 11 1ubscrlbt<!
d 'di f . J , '" Civic Citnttr Drive Wtl!, In 1111 Cll'I' 01 It !ht wl!~ln Instrument anO trtnowled ttd meetings are scheduled for eluded the Mmes. Edwar v1 ng pro ess1ona a"1s ... nce s.n11 Ant, c1111 .... n11. ne ex•cu11<1 lh• ••me.
Wedne sday May 12 at 9:15 Drollin1er. El To ro: Scheck. for natural parents the cblld 011..i M•, 5• 19" ioFFICl"L 5E4Li • W, I! ST JOHN, M11y 8fth Morion
a.m. In the residence of t.irs. Newport Beach: John Feeley, and adoptive parents. coun1J Cl•·-· No11rv Pub11c.c11UCll'nl1
J R Lo I d • M "· ·-M H be t p· kl 4r-1(~, Otl Vt!lt a SJ111lr1 PrillCIPll Olllct In . . ll& ey an ~ir1. '" . ..:vs... e91 : er r tr e There are more than 200 u' """' S•r1n1 itr•t, or1ne1 counh Mood al10 will open her home and David Gilbert, Corona del auxiliaries in the state which Loa •n11111. C•lltern11 ••u My commlnian E•oi•t•
d K h S Tth WIU '214111 Aorll t , 191} at 12:15 p.m. the same d•y. Mar, an Mrs. eil wayne, implement the adoption pro-Att1n11•n fer: l't1111"'1r 'ublllhftt o''"" c~11 01t11 p11e1.
Two meeUn1s have been 1r-Laguna Beach. gram through volunteer work Pullll•llld 0r.n1;!1"::::,11 Dally Pl1o•. A•rll ;J. JO •!Id Mt, 7' H , "71 t45-n
ranged for 9:15 a.m. Thurs-A strong support position for and fund raising. MIY '· 1. n. 1t11 1GC1J.11 LEGAL NOTICE
day, 1'.iay 13, with one in the the school aid tax reform ______ ..:.__.:.::_ _ _.._
home of h1rs. Thom as recently introduced ~·ill be the CLOSEOUTS LEGAL NOTICE cE•T1P1c1T:·~~ 1us1N1~s.
Grasmehr and the other to be league's major legislalive PAINTINGS F1cT1T1ous N•M£ Tnt uod1rsl,..tO do certltv tl'l1Y .,.. conducted by Miss Bea Whit-priority for this session with WHOLISALI NOT!CI 0, SALE 011 coroouc!lnt • 111111 ..... 11 1:m1 simrnoria. tlesey. an evalaut lon or the state's Olt LISll ,l lllSON•L 1'11.0l'lllTY AT Or•nGe. Cl!llo•nlt, under lh• ll(llllOUI firm n1mt ol MC KEE 8110$. (lRADINI)
Who's ln Charge. the coast role in education the main THINK MOTHE•"S DAY '11~~~l~.!~LE ~ERu1cE ano "''' 111d 11rm 11 cOMpOsel!ll
le'gue'S OeW t bl' Study item for the next tWO Ull P1111 A'l't., Ctlll 11\HI 5Ul'flll011 COUll.T 01' 'THI!' 1''1111\t lollowlnt PfflCnl, Wl!Oll ntmtt 111 es area pu !CB-Tun.·S•t .. 16 '·"'· ,. I ...... STATE 0, c•Ll,Otl:NI ... FOii u tna pl1te1 cl resld1nte •••••
ti on providing Information -~y~e~a~r~•·:.._ ________ J~11111t~ii!i!ii~!!i!!!!i!!!!!~IJ TH• couNT'I' oF 01•NG1 roi1ow.~ 0 Co I 'd · J I" l~t Mttllr 01 1~1 Estill of GEOllC.E D1nnl1 0. M'Kff, ~101 Sir .. lvf., range as res1 enls w1l about governmental onora-or1n;e. Kenr>t th w. Mcl{H, 13Cll sim-
b nd. h r • 'J1ji0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;1IN. GllAY, Jll., Otc111td. mons, Orenge e all~ tng t e 68lh annual Hons in Newport Beach. Costa Holl<• 11 he•t.bv oivt " "'"' tne u"· O•ttd A11r11 :n. 1t11
stale canvcnlion of the P.E.O, M sa and L B h FOR MOTHERS' DAY de.,11n1<1 w111 1111 •* 11•1v11te 1111, on or o.nnl1 o. Mcl(r! e aguna eac , was a11e• the 11111 d•r 01 M•v. !ti!, 1t ttoo of· l(e"neth w. Mc'Kee Sisterhood Tuesday through presented to Assemblyman CUSTOM MADE 11,1 ot Eric A•t11r, 1.ot Menlfrt,, Sttt~ er C1Uklrn r1, or11nve ccuntv:
Th -• M I I o · th R be I B dh b d I Herrl'\OSI II each, Coun!y of Lot A.ngftft, On ""'I! n. 1t11, befort mt, 1 No11,,. U1:.uoy, ay ·!.,,in e o r I am y eegates JE s11t101c1111orn1•,101n1n1v1111t•"."'IH!•1 Pub11c 1~ •NI 10, ••ld Sl1te. perMl!\tll• Beverly Hilton Hotel, Beverly attending the 44th biannual WELRY 1110111tr, ,nc1 1ublKt to c....,11rmat.on tov •PHlf ... 0111n11 o. McK•• '""' 1earme1tt
Htu.. i""gue c 0 0 v e 0 t lo 0 1•0 .. 11 SuHrlor court, 111 1111 '''"'· 11111 •na w. McK11 ~nown ta'"' to II<!,.... "''°n' = Choott .,..,, ,..,. ullftlll'I a rnlerttt ot Mid ct«••lftt " 1111 tlrnt cl ""1o1e n1mt1 '" 1\lbictlt>t<I 111 1t11 w11nln
ph I Sacramento. 6t11t1 1111! •II tto• t11nt, 11111 1na 1n11r1Jt ln•trum,nt 11\d 1dl11GWI~ 1111w 1x-A i antropic and educa-1"'"'' -•r 111«1 lrtll'I """' 11111 111. ""'' o1 1110 .<'•«•lf<I n•1 llC· ecuiea 111e ieme. tional oroanizalion founded in During the conclave they lllttn.,, •1•111••· 1111lrf'll bv -••!Ion ct 111w er otllerwlse. !OFF1c1"L sE ... Ll a olllt• 1111n or fn eOdUkln lo lhtl ot u ld M4llY llET).! M011TON 1869 as a aornrtty at Iowa heard Robert ~!ore t I I , I lll'ce11tc1. 11 '"' ume °' 011111, 1n •'Id 10 Not•rv Puo1ic.. c111tor1111 W••Jeyan c 0 I I e g e, the Assembly .....,aker, discuss the it:MOAOEMINT • weoo1No IAH05 111"" cer111n per.on11 ••-rlY 111\1111 '" p,r11e1 .. 1 otuce In "" "I'" . lilt Coun'1' of Orenpe, St1t1 al CtlllOr"ll. Or1npe Cau"IV
secretary for the state and restructuring o( the ta .1 M Let 111 MllllPnllrt "'''ow J.w.•ry ""r11cu1111Y dtKrlbfd '' 1011ow1. town: M• CQf!Vf\1111on E••I•••
Z'tem Se t Al •·rt Rod-~ $ G Jewelry •It. cvf dtlllt. ••• OM 195' S1>11r11n ~ou .. l'r•ll•r, Cl•tt ""'II t, U7S cha piers lntematlonally ind : na or uoe a M., ''" vie. •2T, L1c1nH No. Puio u111fd O••M• c1111 D1!!• P1111t
kl t 0:: ems '*"""' 6 Cfllllll Mp,lltl It 0 ' II'' 21 ,000 California rtl('mbers. a. spea ng on en u re , 'II c 'iu.. t~~~~·~·~·"'~·~·~·;·~· ~"~· ~"~"~~·~·~"' h d ••• I f' 1,.;~ "ft.it-yftf'Mlr"I Ttm'lt Cl! u lP. c1sro In 11wlul rrlOf\tY of
Al•-•• the VOUC ers an •><,;uOO mance ...,.. Ille UnlMd S!llH ori conllrmfllon of NII. ~1n1 conventlon:i...::•:n~d~Se~n~.~J~a;m;•;•;~;li;ll;•~· ;p;res;i;·;:::::'~':':'~·:l:7~n~St:.:":":":':':":':'":·:c:":,.:M:":':':':'~·l~l~O~t~lor Mlcl'I ,, .... v II<! 1cc"19t1ot1 "' 1ht will be ~1n. R. L 0 re n unllltrtl1nlll Ind llltt 5~rlor Cou"· T ...
Lan I m•de, corre,,ponding :~';~."' .......,"' t1o10 kl II<! dt110111td
llCCrltJ.ry for the Slate Md 11111 fllf ollft'I II lie kl wr\llM •NI will
three past slate presidents in-TEACH YOUR INFANT TO SWIM :rll'l;-::;:o,,:'t1tt;:,',':1~;Lo11~.:::~ ~ludlng the Pt1mes. G. B. btlort 1111111 o1 111• Dlled Mey l. lt11
Wal9Qrl, S.C. Stoner and C. M. .1uN1 Gll•V e<LAMTZ .t.dm!11t11r11ri. w11~
McCollough. '1tt. Hear from expert Vlrglnl1 Hunt Newman r111 w111 An11111tc1 o1 , I d 5.tt M 7th
"
Ith C I tl\t Etlt!t of U fd Otctdt~I. Others tr1nellng from the r. in ., 1y , •rouse Court. ar11 111111 ...
Griswold, 0. \\I. BI I ck• 0 ua In Co1t1 "-sa "'""'"' .., A1111111.tn111r1trhi:
NO. I ON
THE COAST
.Your Hometown
Newspaper Is
The DAILY PILOt 11rea "'Ill bf' the Pt!mts. Loya South ~ asf ,. ~:m=ft':~~11• c.n1. tnM
E\tt!rttt Nunan and G, H. __ ...:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~!~~~~~~~~~~""'~~~~--Jw1111 '~' wm An;;::C LanphCl\r. "ullll•"-tl or1n11 CHtt Otl!f i-11o1.J'============! MIV 6, 1, lJ, 1111 1011·11
'
•
Zonfians Honor Senior Coeds
Ear.b month the Zonta Club
of Newport Harbor bonon one
senior lfrl from each of the
Newport·Me1a h.igh IChools as
the ?.on.ta Cirl-of·lhe-month.
The seleclJon i1 based on
leadership, cl t I ze n shl p,
scholarship and service to her
school, At the end of the school
year, the coeds choose
the one they feel most
qual.ined to be named the Zon-
ta Girl-of-the-year for their
school and the recipient ol a
*5()-savings bond.
ESTANCIA
AU-state Honor Band. A three-fifllt grade religion class and nie Farber will pursue at
year member of Tri·Hi-Y, she s.e.rved as secreUlry of her either the University or
has been chaplain a n d church youth groop, and ha.5 California, San Diego or Stan.
secretary of the group. btt1 a Brownie and Junior ford University,
Cd~t HIGH Scout aide. The daughter of fi.1r. and
Aa occupational therapist ls Milis Brown, who rank s MI'S. Joseph Farber 0 f
the career Miss Cindy Bottorf third in her graduating class, Newport Beach is a varsity
will work towards as she received a state scholarship cheerleader, member of CSF,
studies at the University of and the Bank of America AFS, Pep Club; class cooncll,
California, Santa Barbara and Award for achievement in Tars and Spars and perfonned
and the San Francisco Medical English. She plans to attend in the aqua show. "Finian's
Center. Orange Coast College. ma-Rainbow" and a dance pro-
The daughter of Mr. and jorlng In Inhalation therapy duction.
~1rs. Deane E. Bottorf of and then continue at Callrornia Miss Farber is a member of
CoroAa de! Mar Is one of rive State College at Long Beach · Trl·Hi· Y and Girl Scouts:, has
valedictorians and was named as a physical therapy major. received the DAR Good
glrl--0f-the-quarter in 1971. She NH HIGH Citizen Award a111d is •
is class vice president and a Anthropology a1td sociology California State· Scholarship ESTANCIA
Jl)ember of CSF and the are the fields wh.itii Miss Jen-National merit finalist. Jeanl Miller
CdM HIGH
Cindy Bottorf
Friday, May 7, 1971
CM HIGH
Bethany Brown
NH HIGH
Jennie Farber
Miss Jeani Miller. daughter
of Mr. and r.trs. Joe L. Miller or Costa ~1esa, plans lo
become a professional musi-
cian. ~ flutist. she will study
at the University of Southern
California, majorh1g in the
school of performing arts.
American Field Service. Dur----------~=~~,-,-===--=~=--~--~--~---------::====-=-:-::::-:.,,-=-oc-cc=--,---c=-=-c----~~~---c---. HAVE YOU v1•1TE O OUR NEW STORE AT FOUNT.t.1/11 VALLl!Y-11"4 M.,nen• $!,•I TlltlerT C05TA MISA-!lOt Harber llvt. •I WllMll ... ing her junior year she was a ., : FOUNTAIN VALLBY-11141 H1rNr lift. .. lllllllff COSTA MESA-2U E. 11'11 St. ~~~0~~r:et0:ndthcs;~ 5881 Warner at Springdale in Huntington Beach ~i~:!T~1i~~~~!~~=r.~.:·s~·n•n1• ~~:i!:iig: =~~=:;-=:::==:..7"' AFS member. w1:1rM1N1Tl!1t-Ml1 wntrrtlNter ., 0o-.. w ...
Miss Miller has been a
member Of the California
Scholarship Federation for two
years, served as vice presi-
dent of the Spanish class, is
secretary of the Ecology Clvb
·and last year was a member
of the Readers' Theater.
The salutatorian of her
graduation class has received
the Bank of America's
outsta111dlng senior a\vard in
music this year. pla yed in the
/' 11-Southern CAJlfornia Hiith
School llonor Band and the
Pttiss Bottorf has served as a
volunteer at Fairview State
Hospital and as a Can-
dystrlper at Hoag 1.1emorial
Hospital , Presbyterian. She is
a member of Tri-Hi-Y.
Cl\1 HIGO
Miss Bethany B r o w n ,
daughter of Mr. and 11rs.
Richard BrowA of Costa Mesa,
is CSF president, gold seal
bearer. GAA secretary and a
member of the educational
development aiuncil .
She has been in Girl
Scouting for t t years. taught
Girls Club Planning
Week-long Events
Tra veling to Sea World
tomorrow \\'ill be members of
the Harbor Area Girls Club as
festivities begin for National
Girls Club \Veek Sunday
through Saturday, May lG-15.
The bus trip begins at 7: ~
a.m. and ends at 5 p.m.
Tickets. at $2.50, include bus
fare, admission and one ride.
Lots of goodies to buy, free
balloons and a real clown will
greet all members w ho
participate in Clown Day,
r..1onday, !\fay 10, at 3:30 p.m.
Those wearing clown costumes
will have their faces painted.
Admission for members only
will be 25 cents.
Fathers will escort their
daughters to a Chocolate Sun·
dae Party at 1 p.m. Thursday,
May 13. Vollyba11, teatherball
and ping pong will be included
at a ticket price of 50 cents.
Any girl in need of a substitute
father should call the Girls
Club staff.
Members of sewing classes
will provide the fashion for a
Mother-daughter affair from 2
to 4 p.m. Saturday, May 15, in
the Rodeway Inn.
Open house at the clubhouse
will take plact from 3 to fi
p.m. Wednesday, May 12. The
staff. board of directors and
volunteer teadm'I will be in
attendance.
Prior to Competition
New Board in Harmony
New offiCf:rs of the Mission
Viejo Chapter of S w e e l
Adelines, Inc., will be inst.ailed
during a dinner meeting In the
Jolly Ox restaurant, Mission
Viejo Wednesday, May 12.
Mrs. Glen Jones . Region II
regent, will offic ially seat
Mrs. ClarenCf: G. Olson as
president. Other ofri cers In-
clude the Mmes. Jerry L.
Stevens, vice president ;
Edward Cassaro, secretary;
James Hooker treasurer;
Horoscope
Stevens, council member, and
James Gordon Jr., junior
council member.
Sweet Adelines will
participate in a regional com·
petition this weekend i n
Phoenix. The chapter will
com pete with 30 o t h e r
chapters for top honors.
Women interested in learn-
ing barbershop harmon y are
invited to regular meeth1gs
every Tuesday night at 7:45 In
Downey Savings and Loan
building.
Gemini: Try to Help
SATURDAY
MAY 8
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21 -April 19):
Accent on money in relation lo
male, partner. There are
going to be some changes in
this area. Permit one close to
you to enjoy self-expression.
',I'AURUS !April 20-May 20):
Play waiUng game. Your
judgment is not as good as It
might be. Pennit others to set
pace. • 1
GEMINI (l\1ay 21.June 20 ):
'l'bere may be pressure from
dependenU. Be willing to aid
those who help themselves.
Don't fall victim to sob
stone&.
Workers
Wrap Up
Campaign
The United Jew ish Welfare
Fund will benefit when Jun-
t:heons are staged In four
Orange County homes al 11 : 30
1.m. r.ionday. 1.tay 1 0 ,
1ponsored by the Women's
Division.
The beneflu will be the firs t
of a series, wrapping up the
19'71 fund-raising drive.
Luncheons will take pla<:e 11'
the homes of the 111mes.
fi.1elville Slnger of Garden
Grove. Herbert t.1odelevsky of
Fullerton. Bernard Mar!lhall
of El Toro and Pttaxwtll
Roston cf Anaheim.
Reservations may bt made
with the United Jew i a h
Welfare offlct.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22):
Good lunar aspect coincides
now with creative endeavors,
roman ce, how to relate to
children.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If
practical, you can secure loose
ends. Means what had been
uncertain will become an
asset.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Put forth original concepts.
Don't be afraid cf self-ex-
pression. Some relatives may
try to make light of your am-
bitions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. 221 :
Emphasis on financial gain as
result of heeding inner feel·
ings. 111eans follow through on
hun ch.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
J,unar cycle high; take In-
itiative. Trust your own judg-
ment: emphasis self-reliance.
Spread influence. Be flexible.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Look behind the
scenes for many answers.
Read between the lines: be
aw~r,. f'f fin" nrjnt .
CAPRICORN IOcc. 22-J an.
191 ; Check tendency to argue
with friends . Instead . ex-
chanj'.!e thoughts. ideas. There
will be some vital changes.
Your emotional life is
reawaktned. Social affair pro-
ves rewarding.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Ptfa\e cont.act with those
in authority. Skip one who
wants to tie you in red lanr.
A~e.rt position In positive
manner. Expres.~ air of con-
ride..,ce.
PISCES (Feb. 19-MBrch 2n):
Improve techniques. Review
lesson!!. Perfect craft. Leam
lo more effectively utill1.e
material at bAnd. Stick to fae·
lual Information, Plan 1head
for \'llcatlon travel.
•
Mother's Da, Gifts Diseo·unt Prieed
•41t Polaroid
108 Colol' Fiim
..... ...
· ldttuollftr$U1•$UI
1 Maior LUel LP.
· Stereo Albums ,57 !...., ......... ........ '•T_ ... ,_. ... -.... _, .... .....
1W hot taC. of foll ....... .,. .. crrTtm tit
-~ of low, ,_. prim. ldeol olft fQr Mtrtrrt ••• «add • ~ °"" c6ictton. .............. a Yradl: Stereo T1pes
H..t. IJpwt; lwt lock-
.... ""a.;,;;: ...... '2" Slnat,., LIM Rowft .-Id --.
Reg. •14• Clairol
Instant Klnuess
air Setter
Im,..... fr'lftl Wyl 9 $1" Glass
Stemware
PHkolC 99~ "P1rt1t1u•
Smort heiiogon II"" liy1e ... I 0 c..
9)blet, 6 m. ct-oompooi-, 6 or. wlnit,
6 or. porfolt, c.odl!oll.
'2" lndfonn
Y11be Cake Pus
lllWs DIJ Specllll
$200 Value! e Summer
Jewelry
Hoffln1a
Orchid lox
Whlfnllll'S
llal Crisps
lCIJen '=' '2"
y..,, 66c ~hoiee
H11f11u'1
All Cnams
Sw•l's il1lk Cllocollll
Assorted lats
'2"
F01trldgl
CllKtllln
... sp• •J,.... .. $J.OO
-Brmt All You1 Mother 1 Dai
f1tm To T~nfty for Expe1t Photo Fin11t.1ng
$1" Knit Shells
or Tank Tops
''" Mother's Day
Gift Boutiques
Yow Cholw """""' ......... $)00 look dolla<J -tho.. th•lr Ng1.ilor prlol. 0-f10m tlgurinn, \'llM$, ew--
1...t bcnia, ~ d!Jha in nenst
... 6' CDlorJ..
heron• Polyester
Yable Cloths
""9s3"
•C,_.•T~•V-Mmd: "•ll• • Sli11kr U-Mlct T .. k T.,.
Your
Choice
'women's
Canll91ns ...... s3•• """ Lonily ~ bib"'
50" Acrrllc.1 115 % n ylon 1:1 .:.:J,,.11 25% toVO" 'tlO'lth
~~trim.
·Yl"YI coated RGllDn Wilt. ..,....
" ord 1w;ini-.. 1rim1. Chllce of
1!ylH6~
lldJ
WI I shire
•
P1ntfl!GM
........ $)19 ........
$5'5 Multicolol'
Area Rugs '""""' $3" ... ·~""" .......
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1
I
I
'
8 DAIL V PILOT
Angels Can't
a.EVELAND (AP) -Tell an athlete
that hll injury Is similar to one that
ladlel who weer blgh l>eela gel and he
ml(ht punch you In the moulh.
A docior at Jollns HOP.kins took )hit
chance Thund.11 ln advl!lng Callfomla
An&el short.stop .Um Fregosi that he may
havi to rest hit Golden Glove for 1 while.
Stems FregOll'a aot pains in his right
foot.
Meanwhile, the Angels have pains in
thelr performances. Alter IO!ing a pair ot
S.t games in a doubleheader to host
Baltimore on Thursday\ California drop-
ped from 1ecood to lhlra in the American
League West, (our games off Oakland's
pace.
Fregosi 1tarted the twin bW ln
8&.lUmore, hll first 1tart ln a Wff:k. but
the foot that 's been bothering him for 10
day• 11arted 1cljnl up 1gllln IDd he hid
Attwel si.te
All ·-• KMl"C (7111 Ma'f 1 -""""' .. CltYtl•""' t ;• ··'"· Ma'I I -.t.npll .t (11,...IMd I01:U t,m,
May t -~1 ti Ci.v.t.... ll:U '·'"-
to come out in favor of Syd O'Brien.
Tbe injury waa diagnoaed u a small
tumor on the nerve ending between the
first and second toes. Seema mlnor but
the pain i.s at times terrific.
Despite a cu.shion in the shoe, the pain.
bu persi.sted on and Off. An opuaUon
' .
Get Rid of
' may be necowy ud H It Ii, Jll!I .....id
be out two weeks.
With or without him Tllurldly, the
An&ell couldn't (onerata 1 D 1 I h In I
•1•inll Baltllld<, • team Ibey led 1-t "'
Jim Spenw'a home nm w-., only
lo have the !tad and the 11me .Oped out
by rein. '!bit forced the douhlelle1der.
Ill the first game, Dave McNlily Fl •
few bre1b and UW!D did the mt htmaell,
scattering four hill and crulalng.
'lbe breab: With the score tied 1·1,
Baltimore's Don Buford wu hit by an
Andy Messersmith pitch. He stole tee0nd,
wtnt to third on the inning'• aecond out
and then scored on Brooks Roblnaon'a:
ain&le. Later Robinson ICOred on a Dave
.
Johmm alngle. Both hlla wtl't of tile
bloop vlrlety, .
'lben, in the eilbtb with Angell at ae-
cood and third and two out, Ale.1. Johnson
e1me to the plate wltb a cb&nte to Ue the
ICM with a bast h!L H1a line drive
-.Id hive been 1 hit hut lhortalop Mark
Belancer'• P,va got in the way for the
third oul
In the 1econd 1ame, only Kvr
McMullen'• third home run of the year
prevented Pat Dobson from urning a
ahutout. In the firlt eame, it wu
McMullen'• double after a two-bagger by
Tony Conlgillro that rot the Angell' only
run.
1D tonlihl's acUon here, Cleveland's
Pains
"
formerly Sudden sam McDowell hopes lo
Improve hQ l..f mark •ial:bst Oyde
Wrigh~ W, of Clilfornla.
CALIPCHINIA •ALTtNtO•I .. , .. ,.. ffrlilrtil • .._,, •''I·~·• I I I• .. ,__, • • • • 11111', d ••••
... ~ " • • • J."9Mll, lit .. 1 , ·• T,C...Sll9/"I, rf "' I I l'.~IMon, rl I 1 1 I
111,.. •• d • 1 • ·~· ••••• "'<Ml.Iii., Jll t I I l,116'1~· I I I I
.S~c l 11 HeNll'lcklt < Ill I ~c 1 110.v1 .... ,a1111
0'8r'4n, .. I I 0 D.J .......... , n •••• Malol'lty, • o O o Dotnon, 11 1 o I 1
l .Alltn, 11 1 I I
E.l'lll'l1r, • I I I Gonullz. Ph I 1 0 Ltlocr... p t I o
Tt11la M f 1 Ttltll 11 ll 6 ll
Ctt!IOmMo oot OOI 111 -1 11111,,..,. tol IOI .,__ >
E -O'lri.ii. DI' -C.l~11a. I, .. ll"'*t 1.
LOI -CtH'9mlti '· ... lll-1 1, ti -J ........ If.
Hit -Mf.Mllll-. IJJ, S -ODbMn. I• -~rkb.
JIM FREGOSI
Alston Hunch on Lef ehvre Pays Off
CHICAGO'S MIKE ANDREWS MAKES BALLET-TYPE LEAP FOR BALL.
White Sox Te•mrn•t• Wilt Wllli1ms Also Missed It in 10.1 Loas to Boston,
. Chicago Wln8' 5.3
Hawks Enjoy 2-0 Lead;
Series Shifts to Montreal
CHICAGO (AP) -Having carved a
commandl11g two-game lead on t h e I r
home ice, the Chicago Black Hawks now
head for Montreal hoping to furUler ad-
vance the drive towards their first
St.anley Cup championship In 10 years.
Aided by two unassisted goal s by utility
man Lou Angotti in the t h i r d period
Thursday ftight, the Black Hav.·ks soared
to a s..3 victory over lhe fl.1ontreal Cana-
dien1 for 1.he second straight triumph in
their best~f·seven playoff for the coveted
cup.
The Canad iens could only take heart in
that returning to home ice they can
ente rtain hope1 of getting back Into the
series.
"They've won two in their building,"
~aid 1'.tontreal coach Al MacNeil. "Now
ifs only fair that we win two in ours.
\Ve've got three of the next four at
home."
The series continues at Montreal Sun·
day afternoon and Tuesday night. Jf a
fifth game is needed it will be In Chicago
Thursd ay. If the series goes the full
seven games, four will be played in
Chicago because the Hawks finished first
In the: \Vestem Division 'vhile fl.1ontrt!al
v.•as third in the powerful Eastern
Divis.ion.
AngotU, who set up Bobby Hull's win-
ning goal In the r;eventh and final game
or the semifinal Strles against the New
York Rangers by winning a face. off from
Walt Tkaczuk, had an even greater game
Thursday.
Twi<:e. his unassi!lted goals gave the
Hawks tv.·o-goal leads in the final period
and, almost as important, he aet up a
screen for Chico Maki's goal which lifted
Chicago into 1 2·2 Ue in the second
period.
r-.tontreal, outplaying the Hawks In the
early going, had taken a 2-1 lead on goals
by Jacques Le:Maire and Pete Atahovllch
arter Bobby Hull had put Chicago ahead
J .().
The Canadiens were still cruising when
suddenly the Hawks scored on a long shot
by Maki to climb into a 2·2 tie. Less than
two minutes later, Jim Pappln scored
and the Canadiens never recovered.
"I wouldn't have had the goal If It
wasn't for Lou," admitted Maki. "He set
up the perfect scretn ror me. I got all of
the puck but even then Kenny Dryden got
a piece of it. He's as quick as a cat. Lou
might be a spot player and a handyman,
but it's sure nice to have him around."
"I was nervous in that fint period,"
said Hawk coach Billy Aeay. "The Cana-
diens played their best hockey in that
period. But our guys got progresslvtly
better and that tying goal really gave us
a lift.
"Lou's biggest forte is being able to sit
on the bench ror a period or even two and
then hop out and give the club a lift,"
said Reay. "He's blessed with the ability
to do it. He's a great relief man. His se..
cood goal was a thing of beauty."
Angotti 5aid he knew he cleared the
puck from J. c . Tremblay wben he
checked the Canadiens' de(enaeman,
"But •·hen I got control or the puck 1
thougbt I wu too close to Dryden. He
came out and when I made a move to the
right, he dJdn 't move so 1 shot. Usually 1
fall on my face on plays like that"
11lere was some question ir a paper cup
which had been thrown on lhe ice might
have had something to do with Angotti'•
clinching goal but Dryden dismissed the
idea.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Brtaltlnc oul
of a k>aing streak is Walter Alston'•
(a.vorite trick. He's done it for so long it'•
become llmool routlno lothe Loo An&eles
Dodgen manager and even he doesn't
know exactly how he does It,
Take ThW"lday night for example. The
Dodgen hid lost four of their last five.
What did Walter do~
"I liked t11e·way Jim Lefebvre was hit.
ting in batting practice and when he WM
pinch hitter," Alalon 1ald. "I jUll thought
he mlghl help ...
The result shows why Alston has been
managing longer than anyone in the ma·
jor 1 .. gueo.
Lefebvrt, slarting for the fint lime in
1 week, responded with a home run and a
World ·Marks
In Jeopardy .
At Spikefest
LOS ANGELES -Billed
l!I the meet ol the century
by many observers, Saturday's battle
of Pacific Eight Conference tract and
fie ld unbeatens between the USC Trojans
and UCLA Bruins at UCLA'• track
stadium is rated by Bruin coach Jlm
Bush as what "coold be the greatest dual
meet of all time."
The former Newport Shores resident
lsn'l kidding when be speaks of the im·
pending spike baUle in superlatives.
For, the Bruin! and their croatown
rivals ~ ranked first and lhird in the
nation by one major track aitd field
publication with only !leCOl1d-rated Tua
1t El Paso preventing the Loa Ana:elel
schools from being 1-2 nationally.
UCLA hasn'I dropped a dual In Ila iul
17 at&rta (nine thlJ season Ind eight in
Jt70) but coach Vern Wolfe's Trojans are
wtlllng to oblige the Brui., by delilng
them a costly sttback.
A world record could come out of the
440, where UCLA's Wayne Collett and
John Smith will be facing Edesel Gar·
rlson of Troy.
The Bruin quartermilers share the
1chool record of 45.7 In the one-lipper
while Garrison has ticked off a G.6 for
sole possession of the USC 1chool stan-
dard.
Texas A &: M'1 Curtis Milla owru the:
current global record in the quarter wlth
1 44. 7 clocking accomplished in 1969.
A 1uprt!me matchup could take pl1et ln
the Jong jump, provided of course that
UCLA's frtshman sensation Jame!
~fcAlister finishe!I this week's 1prtni
football practice unscathed.
fl.1cAllster has leaped to a Wetime best
26-6~ mark this season and he and Tr~
jan Henry Hines (25--2 and 25-S wincf..ald-
ed) will be squaring off in direct com·
petition for the first time ever.
UCLA boasts another 25-foottr in Finn
Ben.dlxtn (25...f~l and 25-6 with the wind
at his back), who could score crucial
points in the long jump.
The 39.5 (USC) and 39.7 (UCLA) clock·
Ing in the 440 relay ahould be lowertd
some on the Bruins' all·weather surf1ct
whlle the mile relay could also be close
with Troy having timed 3:10.2 and the
Brulm 3:10.5.
Both sides art Joaded wil.h neet
sprinters but SC's Willie Deckard (9.3,
20.5) has betn extremely hot of late.
Lance Babb of Troy (13.7) looks like
the l:ZO hlgh hurdles· pick but UCLA's
French import, Jean.Pierre Corval (51.7)
will push the use trio _of Babb (53.0),
Henry J1ckaon (51.3) and Bob Coffman
(52.5) In the 440 intennediat ...
sun another UCLA Frenchman -
Francois TracaneW -will be the pole
vault favorite with a seuonal best of
17..tm and a career high of 174~.
A J>llr of seven-feet high jumpers wlll
be on dlgplay in SC's Larry Hollins (7·1)
and Rick Fletcher (7-4V .. ) of the Bruins.
All in all, Saturday could be a big dly
for both compeUtors and onlookers.
double In the mldal al 1 four-nm IDDinl
&!I the Dodgers defeated Cincinnati ~2 on
a cold. rainy night in Dodger Stadium.
The Dodgers, who took two of the three
Do4fler Slate .... .._ "' .,. , .. )
Ml., , DodMn v1. ,.ltttburll! fiA ... ,,,
Ma., I Dtdttr• vi. ""'burlh 61$5 1.m. Ml., t Oodg.n VI. •1tttbu1'1h ll:SS
games from lhe defending Nailonal
League champion Red!, now tab on the
Pittsburgh Pirates in a Utr~game
weekend series opening tonight. Don SUt-
t.on, o.3, will oppose the Pirates' Bob
Johnson, 1·1, ln the opener.
Clnclnnlti contln~" lte road trip lo SID
Diego where Doll Gullett, 3-0, will open
against lhe Padres Friday night.
U:febvre has been the Dodgers' No. l
pinch hitter driving in four rurut with two ,
pinch singles but has started only six of
Los Angeles' 29 gamea.
"You jwit have to be rudy,11 Lefebvre
said of his role a1 a utility player.
"'lbere'1 no room for g,r~ or ~m·
plaining jus! hecau" you're DOI pla)ing.
EspeclaUy on lhia club."
Lefebvre'& homer and double baeked
Claude Osteen'• nine-bit pitching. Osteen,
who had a string or 18 straight scoreles,,
tnnJng1 against Cincinnati snapped when
Johnny Bench walloped his 10th home nm
or the year in the eighth inning, po!ted
hil f°'lrib victory in six deci.sioJUI.
U•I TtllJMle
WILLIE MAYS SAMPLES PIECE OF SIX-FOOT BIRTHDAY CAKE.
Giants Outflelder Attended Gila Party Honoring Him on 40th Birthday.
Lile Begins for Mays
--a Man for All Seasons
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"I could quit
tomorrow and be satisfied," said Willie
Mays, beginning life at 40.
But he J1lan1 to remain in center field
for lhe San Francisco Giant.II 1 while,
May1 told more than 700 v.·ell wishers
'vn<> attended his 40th Birthday party
Thursday night.
"They say 40 is the turning point. I
don't know. I'll have to play a while and
find out." the b83eball sLar said. He ad-
ded, "This year we'rt doing things that
mmt be done to win 1 pennant."
Mays Is batUng .311 Uus season ind ha1
fivt home nms, giving him a career total
ol m .
Hall of Famer Joe DiMagio, 5"6, who
grew up In San Francisco. v.•as one or the
speakers at the party and said. "I 1cno,,
you're go ing to ''ind up In the Hall
of Fame. But I don't know if I'll be
around to see you get in. 'There's a nile,
you know, that you have to wait unUl five
years 1fter you reli~ to be elected."
Baseball Commissioner Bowie. KOOn,
National League pre,,ldent Charles S.
Feeney, Giants owner Horace Sto11eham,
Manager Charlie Fox, San Francisco
Mayor Joseph Alioto, and entertaintr
cart Reiner were among other speakers
praising ~1ays at tht party held by the
Baseball Writers Association of America.
Trevino Blasts Caddy for Mistakes
Kuhn read 1 telegram lrom President
Nixon telling May1, ''You have provtn
yourself a man ror all !leasons."
Feeney, a former Giants ,.xecuUvt,
said "Those of us who saw him brt!ak in
20 yean ago have all grown older, but he
hasn't."
DALLAS (AP) -Jack Nicklaus
believes Lee Trevino is one or the best
shotmakers i!I golf, but the fiery ~le.xlcan
says It doesn't do any good if your caddy
keeps feeding you the wrong yardage.
Trevino wu particularly miffed at his
raddy Thursday in the opening round of
the Byron Nell!Oll Golt Cl1u\c in which he
fired a rollcr<0aster lW(Hlnder p1.r 68,
placlng the Dallas n•llve two blows
bthlnd le1der Jerry McG<e.
"'My cad<t)', who has been with me two
ind one-half years, haa bffn makm, too
many ml1takts," Ttevino 1ald. "Jt'1 1et-
tint wbtre I have lo walk: &ht y1rdag1
of/,
l•To make up for mistakes, he's toln&
to have to walk the whole course
iooight"
Trfvino said his caddy, Neel Walker,
told him it was t•yards to the pin on hil
second ohol on the 432-yard Pl" four NO.
5.
"It turned out to be only 171 y1rds,"
Trevino said. "There's too much m.
decision out there. lie'• going to hive to
1et him an asslstant or IOl'ntthing."
Trevino, the k>cal favorite who has
never won here, was In a aroup with five
others at Moo the wind-swept , 7,0Sl-yard
Preston Trail Golf CoW'SC -Ted Hayu,
-
Bob Stone, John 5chlte, Ed Sneed IDd
Gay Brewer.
NlcklaUI WIS tied at 19 With Frank
Beard, Maatara king Charita Coody, Bob
O>arlu, Oil Oil~ Hup Royer,
Gene Uttler Ind . omero Blancu. Arnold
Palmer wu croup oJ: 11 others at
even pa:r 70.
Nlcldall3, Trevino'• pl1)'1Ds pllriner,
uid he wa1 convinced 'lnvlno ls •1ont of
the best two or thrtt shotmaters in the
aame. MOit peoplt underutimate bow
v.·ell he hits the ball.''
The 1low-pl1ylng, pal"'latln1 Nicklaus
was uked If It bothered h1m to have to
•
play wllh the f1sl·shobtlng hard·talking
Trevino.
"He doesn 'l sound on much wheri he is
playing wtll ." Nicklaus said. ''I believe
ht usts his joidna for a release f~ tt'l'
pre.uure. He never jokes around when he
play! In my iroup."
McGee i! 1 27·year-o1d five-year tour
vetfran who has never won a touma·
ment. He made '22,000 tut year and hu
pocketed over $291000 this aeuon, playina
wtihout an txempUctl. Hla immediate
aoal 11 lo flnbh In the lop IO In 1111 ... he
-'I hive lo go lluoo(h the quallf)'lni
palnl next year.
And Rtiner, a Los Angele1 Dodgers
ran, said, "Willie ~iaya fs a ball player
you mwt root fori" Mays, M: !laid,
"brings out the child In 111 or ll! that
refuses to die."
Mays respnndtd :
"I don't play for myself. t Jiiiy for tht
fana. U they enjoy my pl1ylng, I enjoy
JllY1<1f." -
Mays abo mede a rpttlal introduction
or "eomt0ne who has gotten mad •t me
someUmea: whee! 1 dJ*1'1 introduce her u
my Ori. J'd like to Introduce Ml.u Mae
Allen.
"Al you all know, I'm not marritd -
ytt," Mays 1dded. Mays, who hu an
adopted son, was divorced 10 years ago.
(IMCINMATI LOS ANOILll
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T!mt -2: 1•. Atlff!dtnce -10,710,
Laver, Emo
Bid for Rome
Tennis Crown
ROME -There ls still fire left In the
aging but crafty tennis aces like Rod
Laver, Roy Emerson and others. ~~
reason is money.
Some year! back they used to dlJplay
their finesse for the fun of it. Now they
play for cash and ketps.
Conna del Mar's Laver, at 33 the
grand·old man of the lefthanded spin and
smash, his earned $714 ,000 since turning
pro in 1962. Last year he made $200,000 in
the tennis circuit that lives off suitcases
and hotels.
Newport Beach's Emerson, now 31,
netted about $100,000 in 1970 .
If giant-killers don 't get to them, both
vtler~ stand a chapce of adding ~
$10,008 lop prize in the Italian Open !hit
yeaf.
Laver spWl his way to the quarter·
rmals . Thursday with an easy 6-4, &-1
triumph over Ezlo de Matteo, Italy's pro-
mising 21-year~ld Davis cupper.
And Emerson erased a U first at
deficit and took the next two 6-4, 6-3 1n
winning over Nikola Pille of Yugoslavia,
Neither are top-seeded.
e Livsey Honored
Orange Coast College basketball coach
Herb Livsey has been named to the: 1072
Olympic Game! selection committee fot
basketball .
Other member! of the commiUee In•
elude chairman John Toomagjan (Fresno
CC) and Sid Phelan (San Francisco CC). ·
The committte's main objective will b~
to see that players in the California JC
system are represented in tht Pan.Am
and Olympic trials in '72.
e Serles at Nlglot
NE\V YORK -The plans of Coin:
missioner Cowie Kuhn to have baseball
play ~ore of its important games a4
night are becoming a reality. .
One of the World Series game! this £all
has been scheduled for under the Jlghts ...
Next year, three midweek games in the
clas1ic will be played at night. ·
Thl!I was announced jointly Thur1d1J:
by Kuhn and tbe National Broadcaltinri
system with the disclosure that NBC's ~xc!usive rights for the World Serles hal'
been extended (our years through th.e
197S season.
e nlaggal'd Na 111ed
BERKELEY -The University oi
Calilornla's Dave Maggard wUI be head
coach of the U.S. track team in a meel
here JuJy 2-3, it was announced by th•
AAU Thursday. ·
Ollan Cassell, track and field atl-'
mlnlstrator . for the AAU , and St.arr
Wr:tght, chairman of the organization's
track and field committee. made the an:>
nouncement at a ne\\'S confe~nce.
e Talk• Conthaue
NEW YORK -The rival American and"
NaUonal Basketball associations huddle
in separate 11es1ions today for the lttOntf'
day ·to· consider the possibility of •
merger. "
The NBA met for seven houn1 and the
ABA, four Thursd•Y at mki·town botela·
in !trlOUS COnaideration of joining forcei ·
Jt'a the latest attempt to end th~
astronomical bidding war ror college
players and inler·league raiding of stars ••
e .Uott:oa F•llOl'e4
MONTE CARLO -Carl-00 ~fOIUOft of ~tina b supremely ct1nfldent o(
qaln beating Nino Benvenull of lllly tn,
the.Ir world mJddle•·etabt title fllht Saturday J\ighL
It will be Monzon's first dtfense or the.
title he toOk rrom Ntno last November .
when he knocked out Benvenuti In the.
tltb round. '
•
•· .. ( "
I . ' All-ti~ 5wimfest • .
••
F·oothill County Champ
i'.ouilll , lllah'o 11'/I •wlm fu&&enJIUI
h• reP1acld Jlancho AlamUoa u the au.
Umo Or1111e ' County choniploo ln the
D~ILY P1~·1 -nd •nliaal
hypolJ>illcal 1wlm m'"l.
BunUuton Beach'• Qay Evans cut a ~ niche In tho l!Jt.
Coach Tom Dt ...... 'i KaJPts, 11Jth,
lul ygr, vaulle<t Into the lop opol with a
5\~.point '{lllllln over runnerup Fulltrt.on
on, the 1b:cnitb ol top marks 1n both
relay• and 1 1rlo of 1econd pl1ce marka by Steve F~. _
1be Otltr lanlor " fourth In tho 21lO in.
dlvlduol mecliey with a J :OU and Ued for
third In tho 100 f\y with tho 52.1 th1t
earned him tho CIF champlonlhlp Satur·
day In thet event.
AD4ime Orup Coualy· l\1tti
200 Mtdley R<l1y -!' Foolhlll 1:41.0 !.
Anaheim 1:41.I 3. Cotta Mesa 1:0 .1 4.
Fullvton 1:41.1 5. Corona de! Mu 1:12.t
Tie between 1.om (Butna Park) and
fi. Rancho AJemlto.s 1:'3.0.
The Knights eased into the 200 medley
relay le1d wlt.h a 1:41.0 and the .oo rree
with a !:JU challled up In Satarday'o
ClF llnato.
1*!t ye1r the only relay strength for th~hto WU a Ii.ti! plo<t Ufne In the
m~1 rtlay. ~ 1" raults were compiled by com-
parin& swim recorcu from 40 Oranae Counfy bJgb :dools with point.I 1ivtn fer the top •Ix pl1ce1. Divine wu excluded.
Polnta were •warded en a T~2-L
batll. Relay points are double the in·
dlvldoal at0te.s.
C»i'ona del Mar maintained ils fifth
-place nnldag, the bJch11t for any oranae
Coast area 1roup.
The Sea Kings garnered 2$V, counter.,
<hielly on tht ezplolto of Kurt Krum·
pholz; who garnered points 1D all four
freestyles.
Cost.a Afesa kept its seventh place
ranking wlth 14 polnts, highllJht.ed by its
tbl!)l ·bell (1 :12.1 ) in the 200 medley re.
Jay '.11
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Knimpbolz (Corona de! Mar) 1:44.7 I .
Stnnk !Fullerton) I :45.I 5. Lashbrook
(Anaheim) 1:16.4 I. catty (Sunny Hill&)
1:47.0.
2GO Ind. Medley -I. Holl (Rancho
Alamitos) 1:113.1 ~· S .. FumiH (Foolhlll)
1;5'.I 3. Cowley (Tusttn) 2:01.0 4. Evins
(Huntlngton Beach) 2:03.1 5. Tie between
Newtoo (Slllllly Hilla) and Reldenbaugfi
(Sonora) 2:11.1:1.
50 Fr.. -l. Carey (Sunny Hiiia) 21.4 J.
Frawley (Servile) 21.1 4. Fanner
(Newport Harbor) 22.3 &. Tie between
Kothm (Anaheim), K. Krum p ho I 1
(Corona de! Mar ), S. FUmlu (Foothill),
Donaldson (Marina) 22.4.
100 Fly -1. Hall (Rancho Alamito!i)
Sl.l 2. Cameron (La Habra) Sl.7 3. Tie
between Evans (Huntington Beach) and
Arth (Anihtlm) 51.3 5. Hldle (SanU110)
53.3 i . Gammon (C.0.ta Mesa) 53.4
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1.om (Buena Park) 47J t. Brown
(Fullerton) 48.7 5. Lalhbrook (Anaheim)
48.1 I. Miller (Foothill) 48.9.
400 Free -1. Hall (Rancho A!Jmltos \
1:39.J I. S. Fumlu (Foothlll) l:to.I I.
Latie (Weatem) 3:46.4 4. St rent
(Fullerton) l :IU 6. La I h brook
(Anaheim) 3:11.0 L K. Knunphola
(Corona de! Mar) 1:48.1.
100 Back -i. Hall (Rand\O Alamitos)
52.5 2. S. Furntss (Foothill) 55.0 I.
R•ldenbaugh (Sonora) SU 4. Mlslolek
(Cool• Men) 55.15. 'fie betw"n Lippoldt
(Marina) and Felnbel'J (Lt Quinta) le-4.
lOo Brust-I. Webb (Fullertoll) 1:01.1
!. Duttle (Volencla) 1:02.4 3. S.' Fumu
(Foothill) l :02.7 4. Tie between J. Nock
(W.,tem) and Ca,.y (SWl!>Y Hiiia) 1:11.1.4
8. Jojlnson (Corona de! Mar) 1:11.1.1.
400 Free ll<lay -I. FoothW 3:11.4 2.
Corona de! Mar 3:17l 3. Anailelm l :IU
4. Fullerton 3:11.1 5. ·sunny Hill( 1:11.t I.
Collt.a Mesa 3:11.1.
Fino! scoring: I. Foothill (43Y,) 2.
Fullerton !31) !. l\ancbo Alamlloo (17) 4.
Anaheim (2711) 5. Corona de! Mar (2511)
6. Sunny Hills (21) 7, Coala Mesa (H) I.
Buena Park (l'ii) I. Tie between Hunt·
ln&ton Beach and we.mm (Ill) 11.
Sonora (5,~) 12, 11e between Li Habra
and Valencia (5) 14. Stnite (Ill) 15.
TusUn (4) JI. Newport Harbor (!) 17.
Santiago (2) ll. Marina (1~4) 19. La
Quinta (t•,~).
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11th Grad~rs
Dominate Area
Spike Teams
Four Meets Tonight
Dope Sheets Tab
By PlllL ROSS .. ... Dllf"' , .... tltft
Tbe lol'aoll<n boclleo of hl&h, tchcol
tnck and lleid many um11 turn out to be the janlon.
Loop Spike Finals
Gtnorolly opeaklq though, tho bulk of
the. comlsU!nUy &eod marks come from
senion who'll araduate wUhln a· matter
or weeka after the conclua.ion or the track
campalcn. .
Then there are the aopbomores and
lreahmen -Qp<ciolly tho -who.turn ln OUlstandinl marb and eara their way
Into tile headlln" because of. thtlr
rtlatJv• )'OUlh in comparllon to their
older oountaputa.
But la lt'll then'1 no way of Ignoring
the dus of '72, or the 11th &raders, who
are uble id' their pruenC6 on tht Oranae ma prep cinder realm.
Ptrhlpe • commut by HunUngton
Beach coach Paul Wood sttma to sum up
tbt wtlole 1ltuaUon.
'"lbil IJ the beat group of juniors we've
ever bad here," says Wood, in a bit of an
underst1tement.
No leas than nine or Wood '• current Oil
City crew have rtsponded to 'the call with
creditable performances.
Standln& ln the forefront at Huntington
Is John M-•· l\'hoae 1:5.!.0 t!8u1 and
f :H.4 (mlle) marks are close to the top ot hla class.
Junior hurdler Steve Pickford has rip-
ped oil 14.$ (120 highs) and 20,f (180
lows) clockings while sprinting classmate
George Fierro (10.2 100 and 13.2 220) is
no aloucb either.
Huntln,ton also claim.I Juniors like
Mike Voeburr (SU 440 and 50.9 anchor
leg in the mile rel1y), pole vaulter Mike
Pr<ndevllle (JU), bJ&h jumper Jim
Worthy (&-0) and sbotputter Tony ctarelli
(50-10),
Just down the road a bit, at Marina,
~ Viking& aren't doing too badly either
in the 11th irade category with hurdlers
Gent Taylor (1 4.9, 19.1) "Paul Sienbo
(IS.I) and two miler Bob Phillips (1:46.2)
in tow.
Weslmlni ter boasts .1 fine junior class
wilb sprinter Chuck Winkles (10.4, 23.7),
quartermiler Dave Stary (51.1), balfmiler
Jeff Young (1:57.4), tw~miler Bob Oietr;
(1:57), hurdler GleM Lantaff (20.7),
vaulter Scott Stettler ( 12-fl) an d
welghtman Jim ~llaad (49-10) .
Hurdler Mau Hogsett (14.5, 19.6),
1prlnter Griff Amles (10.1, 22.7) and
mJler John Holcomb (f:Je.9) combine
with 9-1 shot put artist Terry Albritton
to give Newport Harbor a formid11blc
junior cast.
Second.year Edison is high on its 11th
grade spike group which includes vaulter..
discus thrower Forest \Vrigbt (lUi, IU.
l<PH.), long jumper Ron Collings (22-4~~).
hurdler Dave Powell (15.6, 2 O, 3 ) ,
w~lghtman Sttve Timmerman (5Ho/4)
and distance aces Mike Alvaret (4:31,
t :5t) and John McClure (9:51).
Colla Me11'1 deep dish of junior
cmtance dandies numbers name.! like
defending Irvine League mile champ
Doug Ji.1actean (4 :22 in '70 and 4:26 !his
season) and the Olswang twins -John
(9:33.9) ind Tom (9:17.5).
In addition. tbe Mesans featurt
speedsters Rick Desmet (10.0, 2.lO) and
Bob Bomboy (10.3, 23.4) along with multi-
ple lhre.1t Jon Marchiorllatti (6-4, 20-J).
Corona del Mar 's junior contribution in-
cludes a pair of 9.9 sprinters in Carlo
Tosti and John ?ttiles while Matt Cox is a
51.5 440 man and Howard Royster bas
sailed the discus 159.fi.
Shotputters Craig Dennis (52-1) and
John Dixon (50-9) combine with vaultfr
Craig Hays (12-8), quartermiler Etic
Olson (4t.I) and long jumper John
Grover (21-6) tor Estancia's junior
power.
Other area track aces worth men-
tioning on the seemingly endless Jlth
grade list include Mission Viejo miler Ed
Radermacber (4:22.4), halfmiler Marv
Mann (2:01.9) and i;prlnter Ed lAtro
(23.4), FounWn Valley vaulter Bob
Schenk (13-0) and Latuna Be a ch
1prlnter1 Telford Cottam (2.1.4} and John
I.amber< (10.4, 24.0).
Pnp tnclc and fleld finals In foor
leagues wW take place tonight wlth tome
respt(table marks expected.
The Orange Le&llle was 1lated to hold
Its final meet thll afternoon at El Dorado
High while the Sumet (at Weatem),
Irvine (Weatmin•ter). Creatvlew
(Miulon Viejo) and An&•lua (Sl Poul
lll&h In Santa Fe Sprlllfl•) looPo ware
penclled in for acUon under the ll&hb.
Running event.! tn the Crestview, Irvine
and A•felus meets are scheduled to
begin 1t 1 o'clock while the Sunst:l won't
start its track events until I. Field evenb
on all front.! be1ln a half nour earlier
than the running evenll.
It'll be the same old story 1t the sunset
meet with pere:nnJal champJon Santa Ana
picked to run off and hide again in the
varsity category.
ln •pile of the Saints' team power,
however, there 'll be pienty or Orange
Coast area 1piker1 wbo 1hould ahlne at
Western.
Dual meet Utllal Fountain Velley a~
pears to have a virtual lock on the Irvine
meet crown after the Barons qualt(Ied 10
people In the varsity division In
Tuesday's prellmlnarle1.
Bla:est Baron point-getter could be
Ray Harris.
Harrls is favored in the DAILY PILOT
dope sheet to capture tht hleh jump, Ions
jump and 180 low hurdles.
Crestview antics will be h1ahliahted by
the return of San Clemente v1ulter Tony
Hoffman, Who'1 recov~trom a broken
bone in hts anlt1e which M 1ccrued alter
having cleared lU~l: very early in lbe seuon.
Souuet Dope Sheet
JOO -1. Beyen (LI, 2. ElkW (L), 3.
Edwerds (SA), 4. Rafter (We), 5. Maltby
tM). Prtdlcted time : t.8.
220 -I. Beyers (L), 2. Ventimiglia
!M ), 3. Elkins (L), 4. Lenhardt
(Western ), 5. Edwards (SA). Predicted
lime : 22.0.
14-0 -I. lla1'1'ell (SA), 2. Dicus CS), I.
Dyer (\Vestem), 4. Stacy (Wm), 5. Jura
(M). Predicted Ume : '8.1 .
880 -1. Young (Wm). 2. Dyer
(Western I, 3. Rudy" (NH), f. Campbell
{M), 5. Boehme (We1tern). Predicted
li1ne: 1:58.6.
~!He -I. Brickner (M). 2. Mullins
(HB), :t. Coltman IWm), 4. Holcomb
!NH). S. Martyn (M). Predicted time:
4:2.1.4.
Two mile--I. Genet (SA). 2. Lockm•n
(M), 3. Tello (SA ). 4. Fleming (NH), S.
Carrillo (SA). Predicted time: 9:11.1.
I1JJ HH -1. McQueen (A), 2. Wise
!KB), 3. H-tt (NH), 4. Plcldonl (HB),
5. Handy (L). Predicted Ume: 14.4.
ll!O LH -1. McQueen (A), 2. Lindsay
(SA), 3. Taylor (M), 4. Hopett (NH ), 5.
Wiie (HB), Predicted Ume: 19.1.
440 relay - 1. Santa Ana, 2. ti.1arlna, 3.
Loara, 4. Huntington Beach, 5. Western.
Predicted time : 42.2.
Mile relay -1. Santa Ana, 2. Newport
}!arbor, 3. Huntington Beech, 4. Anaheim,
5. l.Alara. Predicted time: 3:24.2.
HJ -1. !CJ~enber1 (SA), 2. Kar:mtr
!NH), 3. FIOIU (SA), 4. Parks (L), I.
Bayless (A). Predlct>d htlght: .. 2\;.
U -J. Baxter (L), 2. Wise (HB), 3.
\Vhitsltt (SA), 4. Helminiak {M), $,
Sause r (SA). Predicted dJstance : 22-9"1:.
PV -J. Vermllyer (SA J, 2. Riplty (L),
3. Lueras (SA), 4. See:Jert (L), 5. Loper:
(SA). Predlct>d htlght: U-10.
SP -,I. Stevens (NH ), 2. Albritton
(NH), 3. John&Oll (Western), 4. Dreiling
(HB), 5. McLain (L). Predlcttd dJstance:
62-6.
Predicted team scores : Santa Ana (63),
Loara (39 ), Newport Harbor (30), l\1arlna
(2.8), Huntington Beach (22), Western
(17), Anaheim (1$), We1tmlruter (II).
lrt>ltte Dope Sheet
100 -1. Maaa (FV) 2. To1tl (c:dM) 3.
Miles (CdM) 4. Desmet (CM) 5. Batu
Ba.seball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East DlvJsk111
W L Pct. GB
Boalt>n 16 I ,667
Beltimore 16 9 .640 1h
Walhinrton 12 14 .462
Detroit II 13 ,458 5
New York 14 .417 fl
Clevtland 17 .320 l 'h
Oakland
Kan!581 City
Aai•I•
Minnesota
Milwaukee
Chlca10
West Division
19 Jl
14 12
14 14
13 14
11. 13
10 15
!llurNtl"• fllff~llt
1•11111 18, Clllctto I
1J1t1tmtr1 J.J. An•••• l·l
Ml11-11 J, N..,. York l
Olllv ''"'" ltfltdU!id.
TM1r•1 Ol mt'
. 6.13
.538
.500
.481
.458
.400
3
4
411
5
e1;
Olli!INI t ... 111 )·f ) 11 lltlllmo•t l(!ttlltr '~J. nl1hl
....... ,, !Wrlthl t•U 11 Cl1vttllllld IMtOtwtll
'"'· nltttt ICt1111t (lt'f IHNlurHI J~J 11 Df1rtll CLf!!dl •·JJ, nttoll!
Ntw Yorti: t~tr111n 1•tl ti OllU.O !Johll
f..,t). fl!ihl
'""" IC U!I ).IJ I I MUWI..... l~•nln W J • "''"' Wt tllll'!lloft IC•• •n t i MlfHlltttt 111,11n11 ,.,f. """'
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York
Pittaburth
St. U:lul1
Mont.rtaJ
Chicago
Philadelphia
Eut Dl\ll1io1
W L
15 I
IS 11
I! 12
10 I
Jl 15
I 16
Wts& Dlvl1ion
Pet.
.125
GB
.577 I
.571 -• _,,.. !
.42.1 s
.333 7
San Francisco 20 7 .741
Dod1er1 15 14 .517 t
AUant.a JS' 13 .500 tK
Houston 13 14 .411 1
ctnclnn1U JO JS .400 9
San Diego 1 19 .289 UK
T~M,UllV'I lt"'IJI
HO\llten J, Monlr .. r J
DM11n J, c 1neJ11n111 '
CMt-11 N•w Vorlc, rtl!I
SI. Lt ul1 •I l'll!IMtl•~lt, rlln
Olll'y ''"'" ,,~tduJl'll.
TfllllY't 01111 ..
Httl1I011 IWllJOll 1·2) .ti .. /'!llfft .. 111.t llUlll'll .. fol), ftlthl
ClllCMO IMlf'llll S-J) It MMl'rMI 1""'1111 1-'1•
nit hi
SI. Loult !Oli.n ,_,J t i N• Ywlr (ltt\'W
... I). 1111111
Clne!11111t1 (Outlf!I ).f) t i S... cir.. fA11ln
"'" flltlll flllltlttuf'fli fEtltt HI t i ...,_ CJ(tlflll •31.
1111~1
Atltlllt II'-•II 11 ••ft rrw11Cltct lfll,,y $1), 11!111!
DEAN LEWIS ' 1966 HAUOR ILYD., COSTA MISA
S.r'lic1 and Part• fer All lm,...-tttl C1rs
Modern llocly Shop ltr All C•r>
646-9303
Orange County's Larrest •nd MOit Modem Toyoll and Volvo Deller
OWtlSW Hlllllf INClAllm
•
(SAV), Predklad Ume: !D.O. m -L Maas (FV) J. TmU (CdM) I.
Galbrolth (M) " Mn .. (CdM) 5, Dt,met
(CM). Predlct.d time: 22.1.
~ -l. Gilbraith (M) 2. Olaon (Eot)
3. Cox (CdM) 4. Saylta (FV) 5. Kubeska
(CM). Predicle<t Ume: 49.11.
l8tl -I. Rose (CdM) 2. Sayles (FV) 3.
Bell (Est) 4. Gottlieb (SAV) 5. Raymond
(Ed). Predicted time: 1:54.8.
Mile - 1. P.1aclean (CM) 2. Gollnick
(C1'f) 3. Alvarez (Ed) 4. Glennon {CdM} s. lloyl {Eat). Predicted Ume: 1:24.5.
Two mile -I. Dunlevle (LA) 2. Day
(CdM) 3. Leods (FV) I. Contreras (SAV)
~ McClure (Ed). Predicted time: 9:27.9.
120 HH -I. Cooper (M) 2. Gon211les
(SAV) 3. Cole (Est) 4. Knoth (t,;\) 5.
Powell (Ed). Predicted time : 14.I.
180 LH -1. Harris (FV) 2. Lenga (f'V )
3. Gonzales (SAV) 4. Knoth (LA), 5.
Powtll (Ed). Predicted time: 20.l.
440 relay -1. Fountain V~lley 2.
Corona de! Mar 3. Magnolia 4. SA Valley
5. Costa Mesa. P~cted time : 42.8.
Mlle rtlaY -1. Magnolia 2. Corona del
Mar 3. fountain Valley 4. SA Valley 5.
Estancia. Predicted time: 3 :~18.
HJ -t. Harris (FV) 2. Marrh.lorlalti
(CM) 3. Young (CM) 4. Williams (SAV I
$. Casso (FV). Predicted tJme: g..1.
W -l. HarTls (FV) 2. Galbrallh (Ml
3. }.tarchiorlatti (CM) 4. C11sso IF) S.
Mayfield (SAV). Predicted distance: 22·
3\1.
PV - 1. Parkinaon (FV) 2. Alaman
(SAV) 3:-Schenk (FV) 4. Vaughan (CdM)
5. Manlx (CM). Predicted htight: 13-t.
SP -I. Seib! (M) J. Borden (CM) !.
Dennis (Est) 4. Dixon (Ell) 5. Hooletler
(FV). Predicted dlatance: $6-2\;.
Predicted team scores: Fountain
Valley (62). Corona del Pi1ar (44), Costa
Meoa (35), Magnolia (34), SA Volley (23),
Los Alamitos (19). Estancia (18), Edison
(7).
Crestllle"' Dope Shut
100-1. Olurdlward (G) 2. Kushner (K)
!. Keith (Ki 4. Walker CT) 5. McKenzie
(SCI. Predicted time: 10.0.
220-1. Churchward (0) 2. Kushner (K)
3. Kelth.(K) 4. McKenzie (SC)$. Baymen
(SCI. Predicted time: Zl.6 .
44G-l. Donovan (F),.2. Baymen (SC} 3.
, PitcCandless (F) 4. AcO!!ta (T) 5. Minn
(MV). Predicted time : 51.3.
880-1. Rtllly (F) 2. Baker (0 ) 3. Nash
<EM) 4. Mann (P.1V) 5. Vasquez. (0).
Predicted time: 1:59.2.
!\tile-I. Frencls (T) 2. Large (VP) l.
Renard {EM) 4. Given (MY) S. Manw1r-
lnl (T). Predicted time: 4:2U.
Two Mile -1. Spotla (0) 2. Bloc:k !EM)
3. llogers (MV) 4. Swain .(K) !'i. Smith
(SC). Predicted tlm<: 9:20.3.
120 HH-1. Hedlund (VP) 2. Nollac
(EM) 3. Williams (F) I. S1illng (0) J,
Jacks (T), Predicted time : 14.7.
180 LH-1. Hedlund (VP} 2. \Valker (T)
3. NoUac (EM) 4. Wal.9on (0) 5. Williams
(F). Predicted time : 19.6.
441> re.lay-I. Orange 2. VIila Park 3.
Foothill 4. Katella .5. El Modena.
Predicted lime: 43.4.
Mlle relay-I. Katella t. Orange 3.
Foothlll f . VIII• Park 5. San Clemente.
Predicted time: 3:31 .2.
HJ-1. McGllJT)' (SC) 2. Phtlpo (El\I) I.
Hutlon (K) 4. Spencer (VPJ 5. Sulpbln
(0). Predlctod height: 6-3.
LB-I. Hedlund (VP) 2. Wollon (0) I.
Whitney (G) I. Lindahl (EM) 5. McGarry
(SC). Pred1cted diatance: 22-fi.
PV-1. Swanson (0) 2. Sproul (SC) s.
Hollman (SC) 4. Gonnon (T) ~. Keeler
(0). Predicted height: IH.
SP-1. Key!M!r (F) 2. Mowry (EM) S.
Neldhort (K) 4. Labate (VP) 5.
McPherson (0). Predicted di"'"""': 53·
4\;,
DT-1. Pahnka (T) 2. Ltchmar (F) I .
lofowry (EM) 4. Keyttr (F) $. Neldhart
(K). Predicted dlatance : 1116-0.
DEAN LEWIS
MAY SPECIALS
COROLLA l 971
.,ICIAL $1871
VOLVO
1971 OIMO
$3093
144 St4111, R141,,_ H11t.r, 4 ,,, ....
•7J60
VUO CAI SNCW.
$1295
lf'f fOYOTA COlONA
H.T. _R.&H. 4 •II'••'· IYCMOIJI
•
20 OAA.V PILOT Friday, Mq 1, 1971
Vikings' Pemberton
Downs Oilers, 4-2
By HOWARD L HANDY
01 fllot O.lly ~H•t Jtett
Brock Pembtrton outlasted
lhe rains and a detennined
Huntington Beach 0 i I e r
baseball team to po6t 1 4-2
victory for the Marina lligh
Vikings Thursday afternoon on
a :ioggy Vike diamond.
PemberUln breezed through
five inning& without trouble.
giving up three bast hits and a
\\·alk, then ran Into a bit of
t.rooble ln the sixth u 1 steady
driu.le dampened proceedings.
The driule started ia the
fourth and didn't Jet up for the
balance of the game but the
field was playable and tbe
game was completed.
The victory moved Marina
into undi:lputed possession of
third 'Pia~ in the Sunset
League standings with a 6-5-l
record. Anaheim's 1 ea g u e •
leading Colonists were rained
Sunset Baseball
Sailors Win, 2-0;
Lions Beaten ,5-4
Newport Harbor H i g h 's
Steve Hedrick \\'I S a one-man
\\'Ttcking crew T h u r s d a y
afternoon .as he led his Sailor
leammate.s to a 2-V Sunset
League baseball decis'iin over
ho.~t Western.
Jn an .abbreviated slate
because or rain. U1estminste r
fell to Loara . 5--4, on Ule win·
ners' diamond .
Hedrick fashioned a nifly
IVi·o-hitter on his way to blank-
ing the Pioneers and had a no-
hitter going through six in-
nings.
But Western made noise in
the seventh fra me "'ith singles
by Greg LeMendola and Ric k
Emde along with a Vi'alk to
Bob Acosta to load the sacks
wit h no outs.
and scored the insuranct run
on a fielder 's choice.
\Vestern coach Bill t-.!clntire
protested the iSS\.le, claiming,
Newport violated the substitu-
tion rule in the top ef the
se venth.
Dan Schindler pinch hit for
catcher Haig White and singl-
ed. He was replaeed by
pinchrunner Bill Ferree and
later While returned to catch
in the bottom of the inning.
· The protest U based on
Newport substituting twice for
lht: same playt:r according to
~fclntire.
Hedrick struck out seven
and walked three in his stead y
performance.
Westminster's
nullified Gordon
pair rl triples.
s etback
Blakeley's
Blakeley drovt in ooe and
scored 'another while mate
Mike Dodd homered with none
on in the first.
out or a game with Saata Ana
while second place Loara
defeated Westminster, 5-4.
Thursday's game started as
a rematch of an earlier Hun.
tington Beach victory with
Paul Fulham on the mound for
the Oilers and Per;nberton
pitching for the Vikings.
Fulham won a 5--0 verdict in
the first mieting but lasted
only two innings against the-.
host school Thursday. He was
nipped for three runs on three
hits and a like number or
walks.
After getting the first twG
batters 1n the bottom or the
first, Fulham "' a I k e d Pemberton. Bob Witt then
unlo.aded 11 triple lo right
center field to score Pem-
berton and Ron Swanson singJ.
ed lo br ing Witt home.
In the second. D a v e
Campbell drove Kirk Kyler
across on a fielder's choice for
the third Marina tally.
F'inal Marina sCQre came in
a rain-drenched fifth on a bunt
.single by Swanson, a sharp
single lo left by SCQI\ Wheeler
and an infield error. Thi!!
made it 4-0,
The Oller bats ca me alive in
the top of the sixth with Rich
Galle getting a triple with one
away to the same local.ion as
'Yitt"s first inning dr ive.
Bill Shubin then hit a sharp
ground ball to short and beat
the throw to first "'i lh Galle
scoring. Fulham singled lo Nice Bass Catcli
right to move Shubin to second 1''r~d Borders o( West111insler picked up this nice
and Breit White hit a ground stringer of bass from C'anyon Lake last week with
ball toward th ird that "·ent help of fishing partner Bob Banks. The pair used
through the fielders legs for Bushwackers, purple bandits and Smithwick \Vater
an error t1llowing the second Gaters to bag two full limits. run to score. ______ .::_ _ _:_ _ _:_ _ __:_ _________ _
Hunu,..,.~ UI .. • V1n .. m.•1lorl, n ' • C.tlle, cl • ' Sllubln. •1·11 • ' Ful~fm, 11·tl ' • 8 •ooll1. l b ' • W~ltt, 1b ' • A1hford. c , • ~~~!/, l~b ' • ' • Tolflt " ' Mlrin1 "'
• '" ' • ' • ' • ' • • • • • • • ' • • • • '
Baseball's Top Ten
•••ltd 011 .. 11 b1h. HATIONAL LEAGUE ,,1, ... , .. • .. • " Pct .
(;oll!O<"nl1. S; 8anQD, 01kl1nd, f ; If.
JIC~IOn, 08kllnct, ~I w. Horten, 0...
rrolt, S •
,.,,..
N anry on South Grid Team;
:·
Rams Play Cage Charity Tilt
Maler Dei Hlgb's Jim Nanry
has been tabbed to replace
Foootain Valley High's J im
Soi.tis on I.he South All.Star
football team by Rebel coach
Phil Brown (Estancia).
So!Us droWfd from the
&00them contingent because or
a summer tour.
Nanry is the s econd
Monarch to be selected after
an original choice w 1 s
unavailable for the Aug. 19
Orange County setup a t
O!'ange Coast College.
Dav id Combil, the campaign
cha.innan for the Boys Club.
Tar• Honored
Kevin Ashe (swimming) and
Ron W a Iker (gymnastics)
garnered most val uab le
awards Thursday night ;it
Newport Harbor High's sports
awards banquet.
Swlmmlnc
Varsity Captain: Matl
Greer: MV : Kevin Ashe; MGS'
Improved: Sootl Wall.
Beel Captain: J I m
Young: MV: Tim Regan;
Most Improved: Tom Billings.
Cees -Capta in: Rocky
Beek ; MV : Hugo• Schmktt;
Most Improved : John Dickey.
Gymnastics
Varsity -Captain : Jim
Cokas: MY : Ron Waltu;
~fost Improved: Jim Hart.
Area Sports Calendar Center Mario Mele was
selected earlier to replace
O>rona del Atar 's Kar I , .. _11 _ i!::Ui:.1 .t Plu• x 11 6olt -JC ri'51:
Killefer · •.m.I, UC lrv!M ti c.. Slit. l15ft>lll -Co•-de! Mir II flftlll• t;ll s .. V•lley II Cost1 ,...,.., founlillfl
Be •• e,it ~a•••e IF111i.r1 ... J ldOUlllell .. dH" ,, _,,, LA V1l\ey I I EOi-. Loi•• • MlflMI u 8 11111u VI Sclu'I'*" C1Ulornlt Clllt!te s..ng Ana II Nrwl>Ort. W11t.r• • W11>tmlr11Mr, Anlhelm 11 Mun! 1111'°"'
The Los Angeles Rams will 1 11T~~in11~ ":0~11 1 ~:ii' 1t111v1 ., ~1::;, v~~~'°:1 F:!1t1ih~c11~':~:'; be pJauing basketball i n Fri ino. 11 IE\ MOClena, u,,1.,r1~v 11 v1111 1111 I Ttnn•f -C1F .... """ Ct1 ,.,, .. ,,..., II l : 5), UC lrvllll •t I $1111 (Dom· Westminster Saturday in a l!n111. FrW..Sop1' 1<>11rne1 11 Ntwport, 1,.111ul 3,:io, c..1 ruP+ r YS Sollitier• '-~-' i°"'"-'" (1ll!ornl1 JC lroll•ld,,..I ''""'' c1111ort111 Collefll' •I TeWl•l411 1• Cu.1uity game to benefit the 1 San DI"° cc. ."·~., _ E•t•11el• i t c.-.. 1 Westminster Boys Club. L.,c:virn1:~~· "i7 !:~.'1118d1~'::"~:! M••· c"''' M"' 11 SA v111ev1 l!dl-
Th · •• t he 1 Ctlllo•~• c 111 ... o fonslll p1 II 11 Founllln V•llt Y, M1rln1 t looltt, e].J' Opponen..,. a I o Wnlmln•tir CIO:lll o.m.l. Newl*"t 11 Slnlf AIMI, Wttlmln1ltt If
P.m. game m. lhe Westm>'nsler , , West"'"' Hu11t1,...1on &•1ct111 AntlMl!mi ""' -f'I• t r .J /&·' · · " ·• FOOllllll II MltJ.I~ Vll'!e, El Mldlllf I High School auditor>'um will be UCLA. LO•OI• VI UC Irvin• 1t Sin Cltmenlt, L.t9lllll lllctl II I NtWPOrl. ODrldo (Ill 11 3•151. Boys Club directors, city of.1-==----------==:..:.:;:..:;..:;,cc;_ ___ _
ficials and fire and police of-
ficers .
Profits from the game will
be used for the Boys Club
building and equipmeat fund.
Expected to play for the
Rams are Roman Gabriel,
David Ray, Rick Cash, Coy
Bacon, Jack SJtOw, Clancy
\Vi\liams and Tom Ma ck.
The 12 candidates for the
A'.liss \Vestminster Be au t y
Pageant will serve a s
cheerleaders for the game.
Donations for the game are
$2 for adults and $1.50 for
cttildren under 17. Tickets are
available by phoning the Boys
Club office at 892-4156. They
will also be sold a t
Westminster City Hall and the
Chamber of Commerce.
The starting lineup for the
Boys Club team includ es
Mayor De r e k McWhinney,
Police Chief Conner Collacott,
COWlCilman Philip Anthony,
lease
the new look of
leadership {!)
Visa Nabers' "Authofized" Cadnlac lets·
!ng Department for outstanding excellence
1n fleet leasing or ind ividual leasing. A
large selection is now available to cbooM
from. We will purchase your present c::er
1or top price.. Serviee is our DKllSl. ~
11nt poduct.
11Yenty-on• et
~~~
2IDQ HARBOR BLVD. I COSTA MESA (71•) 6404100
Hedrick. however. turned
Vi1CJl'.tern away by gelling one
batter lo strike out, another to
tap into a forct at home and
finished It off by whiffing Mike
Soares.
Loara's Al Leo homered in
the second and then the Sax·
ons put it away with three in
the third on three singles and
a \Vestminster error.
l!rown, ?b
.. • • • ... • ' • 1.ijnta111tt11n Pl anning Com m ission G•rt. ,t,11 " "' " ., ••• Mill8n, .. H " ·~ " • •••
He was also instrumental in
the offensi\'e attack, scorin g
both runs for coach Andy
Smith's nine.
In Uie third inning he led of£
~•ith a walk, stol e second and
eventually 1CGred on an error.
He started it off again ln the
fifth st.anu with a lree pass
Blakeley, Milne and Gary
Rungo eac h reached the ba se
palm twice for coach Frank
~1.unoz':s Westminster Lions.
N-l{fl .. • • •• L.on1rG, fl , • • • ...,..,a ' • • ,
w .... "' ' • ' • A. Wllilt, lb • • • • M<it111 .... cl • • • • E11h•Ung, ,._ ' • • • =~~~t" ' • • • ' • • • :\dllndi.r ..... ' • ' • Hl!drtdt, • • , • • Tot1lt " Wnl1r• (ti
, , , .. • • rlli
ltl(ha•d" ct , • • • Humme!J.. •• ' • • •
C1mpbell, II , • • ' Pemberton. o ' ' • • Witt. c ' ' ' ' s ... 1n1an, lb ' ' ' ' wneeJe•. r1 ' • ' • E+tl•on. lb ' • • • 1t.y1.,, n ' ' • • 1!~~111,, .. ~ • • • • Wlld•,m1n, cf ' • • • TD11l1 'l • ' ,
1c••t '" •~~ ""' • ' • HunHnolon -"" ~· ' ...... ,1 .... '" ... ~ '
Baseball
Standings
•••OIN 0110111 LIAOVI ,,; ... 11
Area Games
Rescheduled LeM-lcl, 11 ' • ' • W LOI ..,costt. •f , • • • Emil•, lb ' • ' • Gr1gn11'11l. It ' • • • DeH1rl, l!! , • • • S.,.,.,, 1D ' • • •
110111 Gr1no1 " ' C.t roen C..o•• " ' P1clllt1 ' ' LI wuTMI • ' S1nt 1110 • '
Intermittent, showers wash-
ed GUt Irvine League baseba11
action ThurMtly afternoon.
WH~I. C Tol1l1
, • " • • • , • Lo;t Aml10, "' 1tw• '' lnnin!l1
R1nt1"' Al1m!1os l 10
They'll try again today and
Monday tG make up th e
scheduled giames, w ea t h e r
permitting.
Today'1 slate includtd Los
Alamitos • Corona del ~1ar
and Costa Mesa at Edison
while Estancia and visiting
Fountain Valley ire due to
collide ~1ond1y.
Only ho&t 1.1agnolia and San·
la Ana Valley f[ot their conttsl
in Vo'ith lbt former prevailing,
>3.
• N~W<>Clrl 001 010 0-1 Wt>!"n "' 000 0-0
W1llml111,., 10 •• • 91tkfltY. ll·ltl ' 0. Mlln•• H ' • ll.Ul\90, ti • • ~=dlt~ fb ' ' , • St. X\1r1 rwl, ' • • kllCML lb ' ' K . Miine, rl ' ' Slfm••11. Jb ' • Lundttn. • ' • T.t1ll 1?,' • L11tt .. • StenclltY. cl • • •••u111k, ,. • ' Wtl1. c ' • w .. 111kt . lb ' ' Hu'1ord. lb • • 1!11•111-. ti ' ' L1...,1n, K ' • L~. It ' ' '""""""· Jb ' • 11.lcn. pn • • 01llon, I • • 0•YI•. 11 ' • Tol1l1 " 'cot1 b• 1nnlf1'11 • • U;~tminll•• '" .. 0-•
• • , ' , '
T~uroc11r• ''"'"' l1 Qulnl1 I. Si n l1vo I G1•d~n G•Olll 1, LOI AmltOI ' P1cUIC•s~Js"~': ~~·.r:iti • "' w " ' ' ..,n1n1!m " ' • , ' LOffl ' • • , • M1f0n1 • • ' ' ' W11!11n • • • ' • S8nlt ,t,n1 • • ' • • "'""""'' • ' • • • • • • • • • • '
W•ttmlt•1!" • ' • Hunll"910n 1 ' • T~urM1r•t St.,..,
Mt rlnt &, H~n•l1191on l!tl<~ 1 NI WPOM HIVDO< 1, WH1!'<"n 0
Ttt11r't 01111t • •• ..,,,.ll•lm II S1~11 ..,"• , • ' • l•VINI LEAOUI w " • • Lot ..,t1milo> ' • • ' ' Fount1ln 11111 ... ' ' ' • • S1n11 ,t,n1 Ville~ ' ' • ' ' • • Mlq,...llt ' ' ' Coron1 dt! M1r • • ' ' ' ' • • • • • • • " •
E1+1n<l1 • ' C01!1 M1t1 • ' • EdltOtl ' ' • T1111nffy•1 1core M11noll1 J. SA 111111, l
TICllY't Ot m1> • • • '
L11t ..,1tmlto1 II Coron1 <!ti M1r
Cotti MMI t i Edl14n
Orange League hostilities
\\'ere also del ayed w it h
Laguna at Sonora and Sad.
dleback ai Bre<i todav and El
Dorado at Valencia Saturday M-IY't Olml L..,tl m ... a-! 10 ' f'oun11ln V1lttr 11 E1l1ntl1
( U O). r-':;jijiiijiiii~~~"·piiiijioi .. ii~~~ In junior college activity
host Saddleback and Chaffey
ha ve rescheduled t h e i r
Afiss ion Conference game for
Saturday at t.
STARS
Sydtl1y Off11tr ;, •n• ef 1~,
wotlol '1 9r11t 11trole91n . H;,
c:olum• It •<>• 1f tt>.1 DAILY
PILOT'S 9r11t f•1tur•1-
ll
Ali;_ ' ~ ~I . :_._,,.....--I
J je ~ 19
Fifth
--....-.. _.,., • ..,.., ~•..,..b'l<~•=~::.,;;;; ... ~v;.,.~:.... ___ _,,
~~@\';
SUNNY
BROOK
"'""'""'" --
..
'" • .., ,., • .. ' '"
••
" ' " ' ,.,
'
M1r1, SF " " " • , . J Pow111, ll•!l•more, 7J: Killft>rew, Chairman Tad Fujita and
ll'<><:k, S!. L " ·~ sr1r1111. P1n " " W. O~y,., L,t, " ·~
" • " " " " '" .J!1
.lit
M I "" Hl>le • 1) ' N ortll r Ull. °"' r olt • 11 ; 1 ·-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-.... "tlfm tk l. 1!01lon, 2t1 l1riclo. Olk·
llfl<I. IP.
C.rote. NY " " " " "' Torr., 51 L • "' " • •• 8"""1, :w " • " " '" S!lub, Mtt " " " " .. "°"'' •uM S!frWll. Pl!!oourvh, ll; H •••on.
All1nll, II: B~, ClllCIMMl, 10;
Col-I, S1n Olt90, I ; C-1, At-
t1nll, 1; 8c>nll•. Sin Fr111eli.co. 7.
"""' ••llttl '" Sllrte11. Pl!hbut1h, JI : H ... ton .
AU.,.,11, 11; (oltter!, S1n O!f'l'O. 11;
C1r0tn1I, St. Loult, 111; S1n11>, (11•<190,
!f; 8.n<;~, (l...,illn1tl. 19; Totrt. \I.
i..ouit. "· Mt YI. S•n Fr1nc .. co. "·
Pitclllnt
t DHlllMJ
ll;y1n. Nt w YQMI, l-0, 1 000; Ill\<.
Pllhbu•9h. J-0, 1.000; Gullett, Cin·
~lt11111i. J.(I, 1,000; Oler1lt•, H"""on, s-cr, 1.000: Mlkkthtn. l.o. An11tln. J.o,
!.000; J, Jolln50n, Sin Fr1ncl1co. J-D.
1 000.
TEAM I ATTtNG
Al II H H• II.II Pct.
Atl1nt1 1'05 91 1•1 26 tl .'61
New York 111 llO :mt 11 l l .JM
Son F r~ncl1co t }6 111 '2.11 u 101 ?&l
SI. Loul• 96) 1u , .. 1S 101 .11•
OO<lte" fft 11J 2'9 U 1" .JSI
Plrhbur<1n ttl 105 227 ?I \0! .llS
(i,,.,lnneti 111 I I 211 '° 71 .2•t
Montreel S9S S. 111 S " .2'1
C1>lc1<00 1.!I 911 10l U It ,1l9
Pl>lll(!ell'till "1"tf 75 11, U 70 .lll
HoutlOtl llOJ t2 JI I 10 ll 7l3
S•n Olqo 111 7J l•l " n .111
AM•l.ICAH Ll!AGUE
Tli.AAI IATTING
Mo""flOll
BOit&n
K1nt1• en~
N!!W York
C~•e110
Ott•oJ•
81l!lmoro
Olklllld
Wt:wolnt!on
AnMh
Cleve!1t1<1
Ml""l ulttt
Al ._ H Hll 11111 Pel.
.,. 111 2JI 15 lOS .111
to! 111 111 2J 111 .110
t U IOI 227 1? ,, .U•
ilOO •• 100 ts to .no
Ill 17 JOI U 1' .Jtt
t ll 1<* 1'00 10 " .J ...
,,. 11J 101 lf '°' .ltl
011 u• m '' 1n .J» U ) H Ill IR t J .211
•1• " 1'111 " .111
IH 75 111 11 10 .1ll
111 60 Ut IJ 51 .lOf
Gals Nab Title
Tht> ~1 ... adowlark "'omen's
club team won il.'i division title
again recently and will defend
1\s Southern California Public
Links team play title in the
coming weeks.
Tn the division with
J\teadow l ark were Los
Ala mitos, El Dorado, Hunt-
ington Seacliff. Founta i n
Valley t-.l ile Square 1 n d
,llYtr Chi' G Al II
OtlYI , Minn lS 101 711 _: ~Jc,•;. Anah eim.
J! fill -GOLF TIPS
Narmruo, O.t JI 91 lt
Murcer, NY 11 tt U
Y111ru m11<.!, I J.11 11 ll ll
$tflNI. KC 16 II U
0. Jolwlwn ••• , 11 " 11
1110111, lt.C 21 101 1S
JO .JJO
11 .n1
l1 .JJI
1l .JH
JO .32]
Lirw 5c•r• lnclUlln 1 GIM SM<'f
GllM -,rlCllct II ltl<I Klltfbrew, Min 111 " 11
F. 11.otiln•on. 1111 11 n 1 NEWPORTER INN
Stoll, 81n 1• tl 10
H"'l'lt llun1 3 PAR GOLF COURSE
01'~1. Monn<no11. I; J. ,._.i1, 1!•11•·
mo"' •; wt11!1, New York, j ; Sllfl'\ce•,
$1.00 wltll thh lt4 w"• c1_,.
TENNIS
SUPPLIES
SHORTS
SHIRTS
DRESSES
RACKETS
SHOES
FRAMES
EXPERT
RE·STHfNGf NG
ACCES .'iOHIES
TENNIS BALLS
PENN. 76 HD
While & Yellow
J '°' $1.89 LIMIT
l CANS
IANKAM ERICARO MASTER CHAllG[
THE ROARING FORK
SKI AND TENNIS SHOP
DGSI, 10 to I -Cler.H S11P.y
DANA POINT
34141 COAST HWY. 49~921
READ THESE $1MPLE RULES!
Once each ho ur K\l;rJz announces a na1ne on tht air
and 1ha1 per.on spins lhe Dream Wheel for a chance
al $1 ,000 cash and hundred s of otlier prizes, Send
a po5 tcard, or the attached coupon (with your name,
address and zip code, incl udin~ phone number) to
KWIZ, Santa Ana, California, 92703.
ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PUASE
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-
. '
l ~ ~
.Channel Dangerous
'
, . Wate rway a Navigator's Nightrnare
. • ~ONDON (UPll -Eternal
¥,l8llance la not only the price
·of liberty. For mariners sill·
'1nl the English Channel lt abo
ts the price of survival.
-The thin stretch of wattr
separating England a n d
France below the white clifJs
of Dover, pinching to a bare 23
miles at its eutem end, ls the
businest waterway In the
world. Between 900 and 1,100
ships thread throua:h it every
24 hours.
It also ls one of the most
dangerous. Ill hatards read
Jike the contenta of 1
· n11vlgator's nightmare.
. t>ne of these hazards Is the
fun who sail it. In one sii·
: We~ period th is year, 51 mep
died when thret I h I p I
sank-almost on top of ope
· ·an,nther -because aomeboPy
. djPn't follow the rules.
• And ~he rules themselves,
; Offlcials say, are Jnadequate to
...cope with the dan1er •.
Consl~er1
-Be1ide1 lhe en orm ou a
traffic through the strait Is the
swarm of traffic on , It and
across it. Cross-channel fer-
rieg and hovercr aft crossing
~ng lanes: at ri11ht angles,
~ of private launches and
chts milling unpredictably,
,. ast guard cuttert, milil.lry
·· ssels on exercise or patrol.
• Pilots say al least one
tential collision narrowly is
erted every two days,
ually at ni&ht. Collis:ioru
emselves are frequent,
ou11:h the number is low iQ
lation to the tonnage on the ·
ove.
-Nature in the channel Is
<~Ind. The bottom varies
, ously: the depth of
can leap from 28 to 4 ~!thin 10 yards. Silt and
g sandbars build ridJles
o ight. Fog is almost a dai-
ly fellow-traveler. Storm s
chum the ,at.er to a frenzy. -~ a re1ult-and .as a new
hazard-ptrh11pa more wrecks
O ld, Young
Pit Skills
Next Stmday
A 46-year age difference
separates the youngest and
the oldest entrants in nut
Sunday's: Powerboat Magazine
J.1afathon of Champions at
Lotlg Beach Marine Stad ium.
They come to the event as
leading contenders among the
filld of 25 entries.
H.T. "Tom" McCU.ne of
Denver, 61, comes to the 225-
mile endi.ro for slngle-eoglned,
outboa rd pomred racers as
winner of the recent in-
vitational 225 at Miami, Fla.
f.i ike Downard, 21. o f
Bucyrus, Ohio, 'A'ili be in the
race as a member of the
lio1ercury factory team and
past winner ol five national
champlonsh!J)!I in m a j o r
categories of outboard racing.
The event will begin at 12:30
with a Le Mans-style start.
The field also include s Out-
board World Championship
1Lake Havasu) record-setting
Bill Sirois of rt. Laderdale,
Fla.
San Diego
Wins Crown
curred had been marked
clearly . Trlnlty H o u 1 e
CorporaUon, the pllotaae and
·buoying authority for the
Ensllah waters of the channel,
put 14 lighted buoys ph.11 two
lightships on the t h r e e
wrecks-the most it has ever
deployed in one 1pot.
And in the next two monUis,
more than 20 vessels were
spotted ignorlna: the marker1.
"Somehow these ships just
didn 't get the word," aald
Ci.pt. David Tibbits, vice
clWrman of the corporation,
in an intervie'A'.
''It never went around . Why
ships don't U1ten to b~-
casts, obtain their noUcea to
Jitter the channel than any mariners and adjutt their
9lher seabed on earth. Wftcks charts I don't know. It's a
from bullion-laden galle!tn~ if mystery to us."
the Spanish armada ta p.Day Tij:Jbits said Utt '1lunaUc
craft which didn't mall' ·it to Pringe" among mariners who
tfl.e Normandy beache1 lie u1e the channel-perhaps 5
ready to rip unwary ships. percent of the total-are
So many sunken Qfrman among the worSt of the
'1bmarles lie there that straisht's uncharted hazards.
1urvey expert! have ~topped ''It was not piloted ships
counting. In one 10-mll, sec· which ran into these wrecks,"
lion off Gravesend, surv~yors he said. ··rt is the mavericks
have charted 100 wrecks-and who cause collisions."
they only chart those that ar' · Any master can be a
dan1erous to shipping,· It-maverick if he likes. There
norlng hundreds more . are no traffic laws in the
All these perlli are covered English Channel. A master
only by a haphazard and un•n· doesn't have to employ a pilot.
forced set of rules. Someone There are no mandatory
would mutter about them highways, either. Ships going
from time to time, but only a east are "advised" lo hug the
real disaster could lead to a French coast and those going
full.scale re view. The disaster west the Brltl1h. but these are
came this year. ' mere recommendations.
The Panamanian tanker Tibbits -and many others
Texaco Caribbean and the -want to change all this with
Peruvian ship Caracas col· ~ rigid system of regulations
lided 5 milu off FolkestOlle. governing channel shipping.
The Texaco Caribbean snap-But as of now, most of the
ped in three and went down. traffic laws on the English
The Guman Fr e I g ht er channel are gent le men's
Brandenburg plowed Ink> the agreements-which tend to
wreck and went down . The work 9nly when everybody in·
Greek freighter Niki smashed volved is a gentleman. Until
Into the same wreckage. and then, or until Iron-clad rules
It, too. sank like a stone. In are adopted and enforced , only
all. 51 men qied. s e c ond·by-second vigilance
Yet each wreck as 1t oc-gets the traffic through.
Ou~r Islands Race
Slated Late in May
Balboa Yacht Club and
Pacific ~1arinen Yacht Club
of Marina del Rey have
scheduled their secOnd annual
Santa Mon.lea to Newport
Outer Islands .Race for the
weekends of Maf 23-29--30.
The Ocean Racing Fleet and
ocellll r a c i n g1
, canlamarans
will sail a iJO-mlle course
starting at Marina del Rey
and leaving Anacapa, San
Nicolas, Santa Barb a r a ,
Catalina and San Clemente
Islands to port and finish at
San Diego
Flee t Wins
San Dieao Fleet II of the
Coronado-1~ Racing Assocla·
tion Sunday v.·on the Interfleet
Team Challense in a three
race series ovtr King Harbor
Fleet I.
The San Dieao sailors took
two oul "-the scheduled thrte
races. Salling for San Diego
were p,ve Schibler, Oemp1ey
Copeland, Jim DeVore, and
Rocky Gallo.
. Representing the K I n g
Harbdl-fleet were Bret Page.
Dick Ohst, Bob Stinger and
John Greiener.
Newport.
The Midgel Ocean Racing
Fleet (MORF) and Pacific
Handicar Racing Fleet yachts
will sai a 135 mile course
from Malina del Rey around
Catalina and San Clemente
Islands before finishing at
Newport.
The Ocean Racing Fleet will
be divided into classes -
those with International Ocean
Racing (JOR) and Cruising
Club of America (CC A )
measurement ratings.
Deadline for receiving en--
tries for the race has bten set
for May 23. There Is an entry
fee of $10 for each yacht.
Entry blank.; ma y be obtained
al ell.her BYC. 1801 Bayside
Drive, Corona det ~1 ar. or l'
PMYC, 1391~ Panay Way,
Marina del Rey.
The race is open lo yachts!
registered with any Southern
California Yachting AS!ocia·
lion affiliated club. Yachts
must be over 20 feet in overall
length to be ellglb\e.
Boating Sales
T ake Upsw ing
GREENWICH, Conn.
Confidenc e is building in the
boating industry as tot.al unit
San Diego State College ~Yilh 2 Re lut·n 1-1 on1e and dollar volume of fa ctory
:skippers Ed Butler and Paul shipments began an upswing
Jlunrltjls won th1 Pacific last February, 1crording to
Coast lntercolle1iatt Sailing On PO\V Trip the National Asaoc\atlon of
Championship• Saturday and Engine and Boal Manufac-
Sunday in a re1at1a sailed at LOS A/IOG ELES (UPI) -tu rers here.
Vail Lske. Two Southern Californians Exceptional 1ains were
The San Diegans scored 48 returned home Tuesday afler shown by th e sailboat. out-
points In the 22--ract re;atta to a three-week. 18,()()0.mile ven-bQard motor and boat trailer
5!1 for second place USC. Third ture with three others to ei:-segments of the Industry, and.
place went to Orange Coast change them s e Ives for for the first six months of the
College with 6& points. American prisoners of war model year which began last
Salling for USC were Argyle held in North Vietnam. September.
Campbell and Jack JakO!~,J.-----------"'"--------1'he 00~ team consl1ted ~
Peter Pit-er and P e t • r
\Vilson. The collegians go to M\81lon
Bay next weekend ftir an
f'liminaUon series for tht na -
tional Intercollegiate ch11m·
pionshipt.
Sabot . Title
To Ullman
Dave Ullman cf Bal~•
t Club won the Newpof'l-1
boa senior fleet chain·
nship of the Sabot Class in l
'll"best out of six races sailed l fot Saturday llJld Sunday
under the spontorship of
Voyagers Yacht Club.
MAY SER·VICE SPECIALS
Rtovolu l •On""~ ~,.., 'I ''•O!• '~ol "'' 1kod• "''"" ('.n,,,1, r 'I univ
No 1 l1n•~ln iol Prf•; •I• ,1, """',If,, li.•~•I '"'h'""'d .. ,,
~•tc nl ll"" "'"'r" .. ,r.1. • '"'""tho q• <I h~ , .• " ,0.,0, .. ,
o"d clh11 "o"'l''''~I, "ri,..o .. c""''' S•·•"• \,v 'Pl'>~'"'
ml'ftl ·o~C'. vo~ f~,t~t ' t•m~ o"d "'0"<"'Y
R"ll· $2.IO
SMOG SYSTEM
SPECIAL
T•1', ti •'" •ftd ,,,_.i,. c:••~k·
c:111 1mi11 io11 1yli11l'I,
$120
YOU SAVE $1.60
R"ll. $14.SO
COOLING SYSTEM
SERVI CE SPECIAL
Fluth & r1pl•c.• c.ool1nl, ~,.,.
IU'I iii!, l~tp•Cf .11 h•1t l '
b1lh. s1000
YOU SAVE $4,50
SANTA ANA
LINCOLN MERCURY
1301 NO. TUSTIN AVf., SANTA ANA 547·084J
"WI A,,l lCIATI YOUR IUSINESS"
Runner-up was Doug Wober
or BYC and third was Denni•
.. Durgan of Bahia Corinthla.n
Yacht Club. There wtre 11 en·I tries in the serie.!I. ._ ___________________ ..!
• •
Faster Tha1a n Speedi1ag B1illet
Tinker' Collinge of Anaheim took the helm of a Ron Jones pickle·
fork hydro lo 6t:t a new record in the kilometer trials at Parker
Dam last week. The Anaheim driver will be b•ck in action Sunday
driving a single·cngine Mercury outboard on a h1olinari hull in the
Pow~rboat 1.-1agazm1 Marathon of Cha1npion.s at Long Beach
Mar1pa.
Yachtii1g 'W ond e1•ful Tl1 erap y' for Cou11ty Doctor
LAKE HA V .\SU CITY, Arb .
(AP) -Df. Arthur G.
Howard, tall, bronzed and
wearing those mod sideburns,
prescriQea sailing as
"wonderfq! health therapy,"
and h~ also loves the com·
petitive side of the sport.
His interest In sailing 1vas
literally bred by fire. llis
borne was consumed by a can-
yon brush fire in California In
1967 and he moved his family
to Newport Beach.
"I saw all the: boat.a and s~ri·
denly decided that J wanted lo
sail," recalls Howard , who
eamed his master's degree in
mwlc before deciding to take
up his father's profession of
medicine. "We sailed rentals
then l bought a boat - a
PacifiC fatamaran."
He didn't give up his other
hobbles of directing the Doc·
tors' Symphony Orchestra cf
Orange County and Long
Beach. playing tennis and
General's
Best Jet Jet~irll
Get all these exclusive Jet-Aire II
features: T\\·in tread
traction design. Long-mileage
Duragen lread rubber.
Curve Control shoulder design.
scuba diving . but he now
ranks sailin g No. 1.
Professionally, he says, "I
don't actually prescribe sail-
ing, hut I'm always b1J8gln.e:
overv.·cight middlea ged males
to get ~ore exercise . . .
enough to keep the coronaries
re1rr,cd out and clC'an."
He adds his personal feeling
that sailing 1-1•i!I do just Iha!
and llov.•ard finds competitl~e
sailing exhaustmg but ex-
hilarating.
SAVE fromt23.BO 1Dt32.80 ON 4 TIRES
OEPfNOING ON SIZE
21·*36 2 f• $40 2 flP $46
TUIEllll 11..ACICWAU. T\Jlf:LESS lllACKWAU. T\JSELESS elACKWALL
• --l"ttoo•n• I l-IM• 2~0 ' 2 ''15 2 -..oa tlr W~•!o•oll ltt 50 --111
Ifft • to-1 ~. l ..... u li''"' 7 I~·••. 1 1:.-1~ ~.,., 1.1).11. t 1~-U ''" "'"" .,.~' '"'°' .... r .... . ..... u..-.... , ....... , ...... . Da~a, ''"''''"'·""-'""I•.'"''''"" ••• ,, f,,,,,,,._,, .. ..,
,, .... _.,,. ... 1 ..
-FRONT ND ~ALIGN ENT
~ pot!Tl'l&GAWlllll
lH3
ft<IO~TlWeAN•fllt
UM -~-
Crooked wheels rob your car of
maximum pertorm1nc,1.ride, steer-
ing and tire wear. we correct
c11ter, c1mber, toe-In toe-out lo
your car manufacturer'• specillca-
tlon11, and aafety check end adJuat
your atetrlng.
:~:";:-~·. ~-:·. ~~· • o::::,•.:. ·r.~ .
I •« '' ~· ir"'-•' I ~I'"' • •• l • 1 .. ,, •: '•"G l lJ• ~··
''" <loOO••"''I 0' "''
P.S. INOY
MAG
WHEELS
s9900 Set of
4
1"0111 D-CHI V-fllL 'l'MOUTM-D"' TIU,.-TO'l'OT A
l•d. Ojl,TSUH 14CI
S-HO LE MAGS AVAILABLE for
o/4 ton Campers and Pick~ups·
1llghtly higher.
''Just cruslng ts also very competition.
restful." ~e a1aerts. So far the budding entrants
Jlov.·ard says he sails three into society have been rather
wcekenqs or each monlh. ad-cooperative.
ding, "My wife swears 1 go ''Only on three or four l'IC·
out every weekend." casions has anolher doctor
lie practices medicine at the been called on to deliver one
Yorb a Park Medical Center of my ~at!ent"s babies " he
'A'ilh seven ot her physicia~s. says. '
He"s in the oHice 3'111 days a -----------
week plus making hospital CHECK THE DAILY PILOT
calls and tlellvering babies, iVERY DAY FOR
and must carefully schedule ALL CURRENT
his time to permit sailing MARKn INFORMATION
VW·,.OISCl-ll HILLMA,.·MG
T~bfltH· WhlllWfll
TI RES
12"
PORSCHE l
VOLKSWACHN 35ss
I'll. 11.lf
The proven rodiol for
"''' 011d dry ""•other.
Up to: twite the miltoge;
lwice !ht lro thOl'I,
lwict !ht comfort.
0
T•k• Your Pick
USED
TIRES
5 95
••ch
11lu1 tot
Loh ol llOll·l~!d
1rffd l•!I.
\ COMPLETE
. t J BRAKE
al! RELINE
'49!.~c.~ Wlftte11t DIH.1
We do all this: • Reline all 4
1
wh11fl e Rebuild
1111 bri kJ eyll ndtr& • Turn i nd True 4 brake
drums f Repack front wheel bearings e Ad Ju1t
brtk~t· r11to rt fluld • Ro.ad t11t yoUr cir!
only $8~~ ..
St•nd•td •nd comp•el American,.,.,
EXPERT WHEEL BALANCE
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'
I
U..,~ ""-.::CDAl=LY:..:.P:..:.IL:::O:..;T ______ ••• f•Jd.u.·11.v 7, 1971
• ANIMAltgic .,.....,.. I ~ " .t .
• , .. 4 ' . .. .... l,.. -.(-
"
•
~
~
Uruguay
Cop Faces
Big Task
M 0 NTEVIDEO. Uruguay
(AP) -A waUet s ize
photograph clipped to his desk
calendar reminds Po 11 c e
Jnspector Julio Cesar Rigaud
el tbe job be bas to do.
' .
THE ' ~ 'l BOLD PRICE SLASHING Off .MOST WANTED mMS'TH~ ·EViRYONE NEmS'. •• DON'T MISS OUT!
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' .
...
. ' :-":· =-~ • . . ) .
•I ••
The photograph shows ~
smiling Geoffref Jackson, the
British ambassador, before he
was kidnaped by Uruguay's
Tupamaro guerrillas 15 weeks
ago.
Rigaud's immediate Lask is
to find Jackson, 55. His long
run job is to wipe out the
Tupamaros. Neither is easy.
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DAYTIME PAMPBIS
DISPOSABLE DIAPBIS
Jn three ears, the guerrillas
have staged 10 successful kid·
napings and carried out hun--
dreds of bombings, robberies
and assaults on businesses and
government officials. By ene
estimate, they have taken the
equivalent of $4 million.
Four persons have been kid-
naped just this year. Beside!
Jackson, the Tupamaros hold
a wealthy U rugu ayan
businessman and the director
of the state owned telephone
company, v.·ho had been ab-
ducted twice.
One foreigner here says the
guerrillas have aroused a sort
of perverse pride among
Uruguayans.
"While they don ·t l i k e
them," he said, "they still
th.ink they are the best damn
guerrilla organization ill the
hemisphere, possibly t b '
world."
Nearly veryone has h i s
favorite Tupamaro story. such
as the time they carried off a
two ton safe containing
$375,000 in gold coins and
aterUng. The guerrillas releas-
ed a Jist oC the sale's contents,
and the government fined the
owner for income tax evasion
because he hadn't reported the
gold on his tax returns.
The police, with 14 oCricers
killed and dozens wounded in
Tupamaro attacks. are not
amused.
"Tbey may b e revolu·
tionaries," said an official,
"but as far as we're con-
cerned, we are dealing with
common criminals who rob
bank!. murder, kidnap and
1teal."
The Tupamaros executed
one of their kidnap victims,
U.S. police adviser Dan
Mitrlone on Aug. 9. Many con-
tider this was a tactical error
that cost them the "Robin
Hood image" they bad en-
joyed.
The kidnap victim held the
longest was soils e x p e r t
Claude L. Fly. of Fort Collins.
Colo.. released on ~larch 2
after 208 days in captivity.
About 170 Tupa mar o
suspects are imprisoned at
Punta Carreteras jail here. in..
eluding the founder. old line
Socialist Raul Sendic, arrested
a few days arter Fly "'BS kid·
naped. Police say the jailed
leaders contim.Je to direct the
movement passing o r d e r s
through visitors.
Sendic and other dissident
Socialists f o u n d e d the
organization in 1962 as the
Tupamaro National Liberation
Front, using the name of .a
Peruvian Indian chief, Tupac
Amaru, who fought l h e
Spanish. A band of Uruguayan
rebels used the n a m e
'J'upamaros d u r i n g the
Uruguayan revolution against
Spain.
Estimates of Tupa ma ro
1trenglh range from aboot 300
to 1,000 hard core militants,
with 50,000 active supporters.
They are believed to be
mainly young intellectuals of
both sexes of middle and up--
per middle class origin .
They don't seem to have
much support among v.•orkers
.-rural labo~rs.
''They are mainly fru strated
people attracted to the ad-
ftnture of seeking to provoke
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Cabloet of Prtsldenl Jorge
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Bu1 the Tupaml1'0f. ha••11-------------------------------------------...... been clw on w_hal !hey -
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'
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Friday, May 7, 1971
• "
DE .R
•
DAILY PILOT
' ~
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23
A Comple ·te Guile . ••• Wllere to go ••• .f.o-• ••
Psychic Kick
'Now' Thing
For Movie Set
By VERNON SCO'JT
U,I HeltrWMll Cent"911111111
HOLL YVi'OOD -Movie folk are on
a . ;·:'-'c kick right now.
Fortune tellers, astrologers and tea
Jeaf readers are out. Those who com·
: ·:.::·:: .!e with the spirits are very in.
Most in demand o( all is "ne Kenny
KingstOn, a blond man with penetrating
eyes, a sense. of humor and thorough
dedication to his gift for Cilntacting those
'· , have passed from this vale.
Some of Hollywood's most famous
movie and television stars, directors and
Ji,·oducers hire him for private readings,
group seances and to entertain at parties,
''Most stars want to know if they
shc:·'d accept a television project or
if they can ask for more money or
jf they will be forgotten if they leave
the country for any length or time,"
King,ston said during lunch at thf°Brown
Derby.
He interrupted himself to point to
a table at which Broderick Crawford
was sitting. . .
"Look at that," Kingston said. ''Glenn
Miller is standing right next to Crawford
tJiing to bother him."' ·
Kenny was reminded the great band
Jea,d.: died during World War II.
"l know," he said. "But Glenn is
standing right there. Look, see, he's
.ar.no;·ing Brod."
Cn:wford began scratching his neck
furicuS!y and glanced around the
rt "ltauranl.
"l wonder why Glenn is doing thal,"
Kingston said . "Oh, ,J see."
The last remark w a s addressed to
absolutely no one. Asked to w~m he
,. :; talking, Kenry nodded to his right.
"Clifton Webbt" he said. "His spirit
Is with me all tbe time. So is that
of Runnlng Bull, my lndlan, and Henry
c. Clark -that's the grandfather who
died before J was . bom. When l was
only JO years.old Henry C. helped me
pass a test in school. 'l'ha.t's when l
k-:ev• I v. as psychic.
"l have 86 percent accuracy on predic·
lions," he added. '
Kingston said he is a doctor of divinity
in the Universal Church~ of the Master
with headquarters in San Jose.
Kenny was formerly 1 drama coach
and feels psychics have become respec·
table and are no longer considered in
the same category with fortune tellers.
He'i>ridicted the tie vote in the Oscar
batloting between Barbra Streisand and
Kate Hepburn. "l have some predictions for 1971 ,"-·
he sa id.
"In the coming year Bob Hope, Frank
Sinatra, Glenn Ford and President ~izon
wiJl t:::come grandfathers. J)ckie Onassis
"'iii make her film debut and Marlo
Thomas could marry ~ man she hasn't
yet met."
Kingston said the spirit world is very
much a part of the Jiving world. 'then
he laughed. By wa'f of explanation he
11id that1 Clifton Webb had just told
him it was Ume to go.
They 1'!fi. Presumably together.
' .
' .. . '
rOBIN WAGNER KINOERGA~TENER. FEEDS FERN TO DINOSAUR , ' . .
lntennission
Dou.hie
By TOM TfTUS
01 tll• O..ltr l'lltot Sl11f
To many an amateur thespian , com·
munity theater has a sort of narcotic ef·
fed -the more you get, the more you
·want. And if you're not careful, it can
take over your life.
1 Miriam Kaiser is a pnime example of
suCh a theater addict, but you won 't hear
her complain. Even though she's spent
the past five weeks, virtually bag and
baggage, a~ the LAJng Beach Community
Playhouse rehearsing one play while
preforming in another.
The vivacious Orange County actress, a
familiar flgure--on the Huntington Beach
Playhouse st.age as well , closes out her
stint as hypersensitive secretary In
"Patterns" tomorrow night. But she'll be
back under the same lights next weekend
as a brasay New 'York gun moll in "Three
Men on a Hone."
Life for
This Involves performing lour nights a
week and rehearsing
Ul.ree more night!: and
t w o weekend after·
noons, but ?.11riam Js
showing no sign of
strain. Her only con·
ces:don thus far to the
hecUc schedule h a 1
been foregoing h e r
usual mile-Jong mom·
ing jog. ' MUUAM ll:AISl:ll
"J NEED MY SLEEP ncrw," declsres
the attractive mother o( five boys who
explains that "after rehearsals and
performances J usually get the household
chores out of the way, and t~en fall into
bed about 3 a.m. Since all the ki~ g~t
their own breakfast, l can slay there all
morning."
It's a hectic schedule, but Miria1n is
DAILY l'ILDT l .. ff PHILLIP DOYLE AND MIKE SCHllBER PUT FINISHING TOUCHES ON ALLIGATOR
Young Artists Displaying
Works at Fashion Is,and· .·
. '
.
.By GEORGE LEIDAL
ef ,,._ DfilJ l"llel "9ff
Fashion ·island in Newport Beach will
be the setting for a display of 1rtwork by
children in Newport-Mesa Unified Districl
acbools from Tuesday to Saturday.
More than 50 large papier mache ren·
dition.s of atorybook characters will ht
entered in tbe first dislrictwide art com·
pefilion for all grade levels.
Student entries will be judged duri nR
!he sho\\'ing in Fashion Island and 27
plaques. 27 trophies and a grand prize.
perpetual trophy will be awarded.
As the deadline for completing entries
neared, teachers in district schools were
heard muttering vows like "I'll never
touch papier mache again" as the wheat
paste, iitarcb, newspaper, wood and
chicken wire creations approached their
final form.
School yards and classrooms all over
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa were lit·
tered with the p~pier-macbe debris: as
1tudent.s worked on their individual and
group entries. Some works iiuch as one
elementary schOOl'I. six-foot rendition of
Paul Bunyan tow~red over the junior
artists.
Materials for tht papier-mache were
donated ~y the Fashion Island Merchants
Association which is' 1ponsoring the proi·
ect and ahow with the Newport-~Jesa
district.
Stray objects found and brought in b~
children will be included in their
storybook sculpturt as will "recycled"
paper hand towels rescued from the
schools' lavatory trash cans.
The atage court in the Fashion J11land
mall will be covered with an orange and., •
white canopy to llhelter th e display.
Unlike last year'a Animal Co untry •
display, visitors will ht able to walk
through the maze of art object.5. Along
with the papier mache will be more than
500 artworks created by district students.
"All schools have been invited I ~
participate and most schools wiU have
displays of both papier·mache and art,''
Jenean Rombe rg said. Sbe is • member
ef a 10.teacher committee directing the
showing.
Among the types of artwork$ to be
shown , representing classroom work, are .
paintings in tempera, f i n g er pain t,
V.'atercolor and oil; dra\1•ings in pa stcl11,
chalk, ink. pencil and charcoal, and col·
lages, mosaics, stitchery, weaving ,
mobiles, murals, s cu Ip tu re s , con·
struclions, mixed media, jewelry and
ceramics.
All will be returned to tile schools at
the closc of the Fashion Island showing
"'here · it may be decided to donate the
papler·mache &lorybook figures te
children's wards of area hospitals, Miss
Romberg said.
Teachers who hav& developed the art
and papier·mache ahow and will judge
the competition are; Tom LaMar of
McNally' Continuation High School. Jim
Stoia of Co11ta Mesa High, Joan Robert.
JOn and Dick McNabb of Corona del
l\far High, Barbara Beckett of Monte
Vista Elementary, ·Marilyn Ellis and
Don Tre.dway of Estancia: High, Betty
Handy of Lincoln ?I.fiddle School and
Joan Hyltnd of TeWinkle. Middle· School.
Miss Romberg is the dis trict elementary
art specialist.
Planning for the papier-mache contest
GAYLE SPAY ANO FRIEND
Ger1ldine Gir1 ffe Gets Attention
included providing worksh op Instruction
for teachers who are not art majors.
All arl entrants will receive a
,ccrlificlite of participation and there will
be no pri zes awarde d for the art entries
other than the papier-mache works.
The Fashion Island combined com-
petition and art show replaces the forme r
Junior Ebell Club 1poosored elementary
school art show. It ii the first all level,
all district showing.
Active ·Actress· WEEKENDER
INSIDE FEATURES
accustomed to It after playhla: h\ three
shows at Buntinltoi!. ·Beach, one at the
Laguna Playhoust, four in Garden. Grove
and four in Long N ath llrice arrlVlnJ in
Orange County in 1968.
Performing h8a l>een Miriam's 1jthing"
since the age of 10, .beglootng o a travel·
ing gospel singer with her two listers in
Colorado. She ha.s done church plays in
that state, Illinois and San, Diego, m.
eluding 1a social drama called "Two in a
Trap11 which played 26 performances in
a.s many diHertnt churches hf1961.
Huntington Beach Playhouse audience~
have seen her in 1'The Best Man,"
"lnvitat.ioo to a Murder" and "The
Impossible Yurs," which &he later
repeated at Long \:seach. She traveled to
Laguna for a cameo role in ''Look
Homeward, Angel" earller th I 1
year.
STRENUOUS? INbEED, but that' 1
the way the lUc.l.s it "'Jbe theatet i.s run-
ning through my veins now," the 11ys. "I
don't. think I'd ever want to qiilt!'
Jn °Patterns'' ?.1Jriam has reaCbed -
In the opinion of her director and thia col ..
umnJat (who art one and tht same) -an
important plateau in acting quality. The
Rod Serling-dram1 Is a 0 man'1 show"
dominated by the COlllllcls of lhr<e high.
level executlvea, but Miriam's portrayal
of embittered loyi.Ity command.! her
brief Jeenes and bu generated lofty
pra.lst of both the printed ind verbal
variety.
Next week she pulls a switcheroo.
adopting a Bronx accent and several .
J)OiJnda of padding ("after working all
these years to keep allm") for "Three
Men on a Horse." The transition from
~{arge to Mabel should bt interesting ln.
deed.
How is all th.is affeeUng'her home life? /
"I've cot thl! wct'ld'1 most understandinr
husband," 1he grlna. "However, my
.. i'IJdest boy will h•ve to traduate tro"!n/
high school without me nett month."
Friday, May 7, 1171
The · advanced dance cll.M at
HunUnfilon Beach High School is,
presentlhg a dance coocert and you
art an: invited. See story and pic-
-rures-oo Page 24 today.
Tra,vel Page !4
Statt;1rt Ballet Set Page Zt
Newport Harbor Mastum· Pate !4
"Fret Prince" on TV Page %4
KcET AacUon Page 24
Laguna Chamber Music Page !4
tee Capedt# Page !f
Oat..!N' About Pages 15-tT
Gulde to Fun Page %7
Television Lo.c Pa(e ti
Gulde to Movies Page !I
Why Piek on Rich Page n :-
Student Fiim Conte~t Pagett
Live nr.11ter Page tt
T91dora Duncan Page zt
Lagvu Art Gallt.ry P1ge zwt
Llberaet at Ahmanson P1ge tt
"I '
i
,
•
Friday, May 7, 1911
•••
World Claatnpion
•
M~ppets Do : • •
•
TV Program
I
A cruUve bit of ,_.,, wJU
1 be IND Wednesda,y, May 12 a\
7:30 p.m .• when Channel t
ptt5enta "The Frog Prince,"
featuring those now famous
Muppets wbo ha ve made
numerous televi s ion ap-
pearances. Jim Henson, who
created the Muppets, produced
and directed the show and has
Tim \Vood makes his first professional debut this year with the Jee caPades
after winning U. S. and World Championships. The ice show opens Tuesday
'at the Long Beach Arena for a six-day run.
created 1everal new
characte:r1 for this e1cltlng
a pedal.
It Is I Winn and witty
version of the ctnturln old
Prine,. and the Froc atory.
But the MuPPots do ·11 In a
mod, humorous way set to
mwlc. The nk:e but nutty n~·
rator of the show ls a frog
named Kermi\, who comes to
the aid of a fellow frog that
can 't even IWitn, Sir Robin the
Br1ve. M you might expect,
when Sir Robin the Brave
finally succeeds in kissing UM!
beauUful flaxen ah1lred
Princesa, played by Trudy
Youn1. he becomea 1
bandoome Prince, played by
Gordon 'lbompaon. These are
the only human characters 1n
the show. rhe olhert ire col·
orful Muppet& wUh distinct 'Travel
~r90nalltlea. ·
Bahamas Poised for Tourist Influx In 1970, Jlm Henlbn directed
"Hey Cinderella," the flr!l In
the "Talet From Muppetland"
aerle1, which was an outata~
ding aucceu with television
viewers. And now in ''The
Ff'OI Prioce," Henson con.
Unua to prove th1t television
can effecUvely p r o v 1 d e
creative, wholesome en-
ttrtalnment for the \ entlrt
family.
DAILY PILOT 1 .. lt •11eto1
DEBI FDNG, A PICTURE OF GRACE AND FEMINITY IN SOLO
Eich Dance Portr1y1 an Emotion Showing That Each of Us N11ds People
By STAN DELAPLANE
•' ABOARD TS HAMBURG -When these big
uruise ships hit port, it's payday for the tu·free
·stores. but a local can't get a seat in a restaurant.
Toi drivers mine the ship's gangway for the spend·
ers who want to cross the bridge to Paradise Is·
land. Minimum dice table bet in the casino is SS.
I didn 't know that. Gave the dealer $10 -fig·
uring to get ten chips as in Las Vegas. He handed
..pie two. I put down one. Something new here: You
have to add a house quarter to Uie bet. I went to
;uie cashier for change. By the time I got back, the
'ridlng $5 chip had grown to $85. I gave him the
Jt'u.artu, Took the seven chips and cashed in.
* The Bahamas expect a milllon and a half visit-
ors this year. And 400,000 will come on cruise ships
11le this new TS Hamburg. A bunch will come over
·from Miami -round trip fare is now only $34 . U.S.
customs checks you out at Nassau airport before
you go back to Miami. (Your tax dollars at work
for you .)
~·· * I French perfume, Swiss watches, Japanese
cameras are good buys at free port prices. Clothing
is NOT a g~ buy here. Prices jacked up for the
Big Time Spender trade. The straw market -big·
~ gest in the warm water islands -is. in Rawson
i square as y9u get off the ship: purses, 'hats, trays, i miniature straw animals. A good short trip from the
East coast. But you won1t make it on this ship. The
TS Hamburg goes into 30 and 60·day cruises from
the West Coast next winter under Holland Ameri·
ca Cruises.
* "We Intend to tr1vel by tr1in this summer In
Eurepe. Wiii we h1v1 tr1ubl1 with the l1ngu•1•
buying tickets? lo1rdln9 the train?"
For heaven's sake, DON'T buy tickel!! at the
station. This is like somebody speaking only
German trying to get by at a Greyhound bus depot
during commute hour. Your hotel desk porter
speaks English. Have him send a bellboy lo buy the
tickets. Have him get a taxi and tell the driver
when to go and to explain to the railroad porter.
give the desk porter S2. The driver $1 . The railroad
Starting in .July
porter $1. This hand·holda you rl&hl to your seat.
* "We llk1 to go to Mexico Heh y11r. Now we
would prefer ktaylng In one town ·fn a hou11 ••. "
Short time rentals are expen!ive. M.ay take you
a day or two to locate. A lot of people are buying
condominium bowing -a new thing in Mexico.
About $25,000 buys you two bedrooms, two baths
·and garden . Daily maid, gardener and upkeep, 1150
a year. The idea b you use it for a month, rent It
out the rest of the year. It should pay It.ell off In
ten years.
* "C1n my two 1lrf1 u11 a h1lr drpr In Europe?''
They need ·adaptor plugs AND a tranaformtr.
Adaptor plugs are only a way of getting your Amer·
lean plug fitted to a plug that goes into European
outlets. It doesn't fix the hair dryer so that it works
on European currents -different in m•ny ·couna
tries. Free catalogue on plug adaptors: TraVelers
Checklist, Box 105 Gracie Sta. New York City. Cal•·
Jogue for transformers: Paci!ic·King, 1215 West 6th
Street, Los Angeles, Ca .
* Easy to buy electric razors that can be switch·
ed from one current to another. Same with travel
irons. There's a German Braum hand dryer that
goes for all currents. Rechargeable flashlights and
portable coffee makers same.
* "Our fffn·ae• boys want to camp through
Europe. We wonder how safe it Is ... "
Safe enough. Europeans are great campers -
there are thousands of camping grounds. There are
also group camping tours that might appeal to you.
Air fare, camping, tent.a, the workJ. are included
tn the price. One I saw recently is run by Sabena,
the Belgian airline. Ask them for the folder .
* Camping in Europe ls not our rugged idea.
Camp grounds are manicured. It's a sort of lawn
party sleeping in a tent. I saw some elegant c1mps
on the Normandy coast of France. Also along Lake
Como in Italy. I mean everybody had sports cloth·
Ing to match the surroundings. The best camps are
pr ivately owned. You pay a small fee to put up the
tent.
\Vhile attending the
Unlvenlty of Maryland In
19M, Jim joined the ICbool'a
puppet club. When a local
televis.lon ahow wu casting
for puppttttn, he auditioned
-and the Muppeu were born,
He had never studied puppetry
aZ)d was there/ore never bound
by coovenUon1 . A.a a result,
his creativity h1a capUvated
the country and c1ptured
aeveral televllion and film
featlval awards.
The book and lyrics were
created by Jerry Juhl, a
writer and puppeteer; Joe
Raposo ls the composer.
Channel 28
To Auction
Rodin Work
A bronte head of George
Bernard Shlw, aculpttd by
Augu1te Rodin, has been
donated lo KCET's 1 9 7 1
televl!lon aucuon by B. Gerald
Cantor, Beverly Hilla in-
vestment banker and noled art
collector.
The art trealUJ'e wlll be up
for bid on Channel 28 May lf,
openln1 night of the auction.
and wlll be exhlblted at the art
preview on May I and 9' ln
KCET's auction warehouae -
4378 Sunset Drive in Los
Dancers
Ready
Program
The advanced modem dance
clau nr Huntington Beach
Hllh School, will be dancing
up an emotional storm on
March 14 in the achool's gym,
1903 Main St., Huntington
Beach, and they've named·.
their show "Windows of Your
Mind." Mrs . Connie Crenshaw
11 the in1tructor.
The 7:30 p.m. program wlll
have a theme which deals with
emotions and each dance
pre~nted will portray a dif·
ferent one.
The dancers hope lo ma ke
the audience aware of the fact
thati emoUona exist - every.
thing from apathy to happl-
nes1 ot be1on1tn1 and those
feellnp of the lonely ones
as well 'a1 the over popular
types, will be portrayed In
dance.
Tickets, SI for adults: 75
cents for students (children
under 12 free ). may be
purchased at the door.
The invitation could read,
"Come and open up wit h us
the "Windows of Your Mind."
Seventeen dances wlll be
porfonned.
FRIGHT IS THE EMOTION OF THIS GROUP
Cindy Lu, Andree lecoq and Debbie McCurdy
Russ Concert on Tap
Angeles. With a concert by the become available may be Prokofiev's Quartet ln F ma.
According lo art hl1torians, Borodin Qua r let from made by calling 499·3106. jor, Op. 92 ; the eighth string
Shaw generally refused to alt Moscow, ~ Liguna Beach The 8:30 p.m. concert in the quartet of Shostakovich and for hil portrait, but he agreed Chamber Mualc Soclety wlll
to do ao for Rodin because ht: c!Ole ill! currtnt aeason May Laguna Beach high schoo1 Beethoven's B·flat majo r
Stuttgart Ballet Scheduled for LA
had auch great 1dm1raUon for lJ, but prQ1ram1 for the 1971·110';;";;d;;ito;;rl;;umiii0iii0w;;Jl;;Jiii0i•"•c•l•u;;d;;eiiiO;;q;;uaiiiriiiteiiit.iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;; the sculptor. Shaw wu quoted 72 tellOn already have been11
a1 s1ylng, "Rodin hit given lined up. THE VILLAGE WEST me I m m or t • 111 Y • and Like the othe r three con-
blographlcal dictionaries in 1 ctr'tl In the l9?0-?I series, the FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER •••
S. Hurok has announced the
repertory for the celebrated
Stuttgart Ballet which will be
appearing in lts second season
Jn the ).(is Angeles Shrine
. Audilorlu~ for six evenings
and t tv o matinees, July I
throu gh 8.
Four rull·length ballell pl''>
du ced by C<lmpan y director
John Cran ko. including one
Los Angeles premiere, vo'ill be
given two perform1ncet each.
•·Romeo and Juliet" wi ll
npen the season Thursday
e'·enlng . July 1, repe1tlng the
' 'Public Art'
rollo\1.'ing night. This work was
labeled "best of ' all '' by New
York Times criti c CJ I ve
Barnes. and Is described as
"utterly beautiful " by the
Saturday Review's W a I I e r
Terry. It drew rave.a from the
Los Angeles reviewers in its
1969 American tour. Music Is
by Serge Prokofiev. with
8Cenery by Jurgen Rose.
''The Taming of the Shrew,"
with music by Kurt-Heinz
Stolu after Domenico Scal'lat·
ti, sce~ry and costumes by
Elisabeth Dalton. will be
performed at both the matinte
and evening performances of
Saturday, July 3. This is the
work which has been descrll>-
ed as "a lusty. bawdy, brawl·
ing. electrifying ballet :" and
as "a delight from beginning
to end.''
An opulent favorite by the
company, Cranko's "Eugene
Onegin." with music b y
Tchaikovsky as arranged and
orcheatrated by Stolze, wllh
acel'lety and costumes by
Rose., will be performed Sun-
day matinee, July 4. and at
the evening performance of
Tuesday, July 6.
U>s An1etes Fine Arts Squad did this submarine as a piece of public art to
float In Bay by Balboa Pavili on and pu blici:r:e the current showing of "New P~lntinrs In !.<ls Angeles" at the Ne wport Harbor Art Museum. The eihiblt will continue through June 20 .
one thousand year1 from now , •Borodin presentaUon II sold ... is f'Xpandin~ .•. more studins
will all contain the note 'Shaw, out to member•. but reserva· & F"csti\!&.I space &.\"ai!ablC' The Los Angeles premiere
will be lhe new Cranko ballet.
"Carmen," performed on the
evenings or July 7 and 8. The
ballet just has betn hailed at
its American premiere in New
York , and follows closely the
original Merimee novella . The
score, fashioned by Wolfga ng
Fortner In collaboration wllh
Wllfried Steinbrenner. Is
described as a ''collage of
Bizet." The browns a11d 1r1ys
of Goya ire reflected Jn Jacqu.
es Duponl's scenery and C08·
tumes.
George Bernard, subject of a t1ona for tickets tha t may', 79J L.,•n• C•nron Road, Lagijna -F'" Porldn9 -494·fl90
bust by Rodin.• " l ~ii'i;ii;;iii;,~~ia~i;;,i~ioiiiiii;i~iii~ii:.'ii""~~~iS~=~ii~~:::~~ Cantor Is well known in lhe !I 'AJi • .a...1Ji.V.,·a•t.'.-f\ol ... -~.' art world for his interest In f<
Mall orders now are being
accepted only at The Mut1lc
Ctnter (135 N. Grand Ave ..
Los Angeles 90012). n o w
Shrine Auditorium wher e
Hurok will present the engage--
ment by arrangement wilh
Music Center Presen t.ations.
Matinees are at 2:30 and
evenlng performances ate at
8:30.
the worka of Rodin . His
11sembled Rodin worka are
conaldered to be the molt et·
tenalve private collection In
the world, and many pieces
are on loan to museums
throu1hout the United States.
Twenty-five piece• are cur-
ren tly on a nationwide tollr
under the sponeorshlp of the
American Federation of Art.II,
and In 1968 a much larger
selection toured under the
auspices of the Los Angeles
County Museo.m of Art.
In accepting the donation ,
James L. Lbper, executive I
vice president and general .
manager of KCET. remarked, ·
"\Ve are very grateful to Mr. I Cantor for hls generous con·
tributi on. It Is one of the mo8l
valuable works or art ever
given to our annual auction."
HUNTER'S BOO .KS
THI WIST~ FINIST IOOKSTORIS
POR IJO YIAU--SINCI 1111
Loc1tod Al
FASHION SQUARE
IN SANTA ANA
Phone 1714) 543.9343
U ,IOO hob & ,.,......,
JJ,000 Uo._, GrHtlOf C:.W
IARGAINS G•LORll
OPEN EVENINGS 'TlL 9 P.llf.
Just In Time For MOTHER'S DAY
OPIN ALL DAY SUNDAY, MAY 9 O~IN ALL DAY
Our Flower Shop h11 ord•r•d 100,000 flowers for this event! We'll have ro1•1,
'c1rnation1, chine mum1, tulip1 , d•i1it1, btby breath and ma ny ma ny more -
pottecf planft that ere tho fr•1he1t in town ! W e "pick ours out" at the market.
W• don't ju1t ord•r them! IThet'1 the differ ence), ci nd at prices you won't be-
lieve. Prof•1sion•lly wr1pp•d to s•y "H•ppy Moth•r's D•y."
How •bout wiring some back e•i.t to mother. Just phone~· :L9ci=~~i
675-62,1, "we do the rest."
SAVE WITH THESE COUPONS
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• CRISP CIELERY • CHECK THESE I • Flr1t Of The Good On• •
• 011 • ICllEllG • SMALL, TASTY •
: CELLO CARROTS : LEnucE : CANTALOUPE :
• • 9¢EA • • • IOCEA. : 8FoR$1.00:
• Llmlt-6 • Llmlt-6 • Limit-I • • With Thl1 Coupon • With This Coupon ••••••••••••••••••• • With Thi• Coupon • •••••••••••
COUPONS IXPIRE MAY 1J
Teke her out to dinner Mother's Dey, you'll love the food et fh•1• rest•ur•nfs .• •
Berkshire 's "On The Bay"; Vill•ge Inn, Ba lbo• Island: The Arche1, Newport;
Stu#t Shirt, N1wport; Vill• Nave , Newport, and ov•r 200 others. How 1bout you
c1lllng us?
"Orange Countu'.t t aatest Growing Produce and f lower OrgnnUo tion ·•
e NEWPORT PRODUCE ~ Opt11 7 0.,. • Weell 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
2616 Ntwport loulavard on the Ptnlnsulo
P'hone
17.J..1715
173·1711
111·6291
.. 35 Yeo:rt of Produce
Know How"
'1Vhere quolit~ ·u ih e
Order of the floust"
J
I
,
I
)
l
,., . .. , .. • ,; J ' ••
(
DAIL V >!LOT 25
•
OUT ' N , AB OUT .,,
NOR1'J STANLEY
ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
Mom's Big Day
Sunday will be ·here before there's much more
time to think about it. So late planners have only
what's left of today and a few hours tomorrow to get
organized for the May 9 observance.
At this point no one should have to be reminded
of Sunday's big event -!.father's Day -whereby we
salute the bead of domestic relations in every Ameri·
can home. But there are those forgetful souls among
us who might be spared considerable embarrassment
by this last-minute prod. • ,
If necessary, such things as candy, flowers and
gifts can still be obtain~d in a quick flurry of shop-
ping. The matter of selecting a restaurant for mom's
major treat. however, can't ride until the last poss-
ible moment.
Mother's Day finds the year's record crowds
packing most dining establishments. All because fet-
ing the guest of honor to a deluxe ~eal .h~~ .become
the inescapable wrap-up for the days activities.
Time's a-wasting for those families who haven't
made arrangements to uphold the tradition. Better
get on the phone now for reservations, or set an
early hour for departure if you're going to a pla~e
where service is on a first-come, first-served basis.
Many of the area's restaurants have been gear·
ing for weeks to meet the special demands of this
one day. Ranging from elaborate brunch spreads to
expressly designed dinner menu, an unlimited range
of possibilities will be offered to patrons.
• .
It's best, o( course, to check with the restaurant
of your choice to obtain precise details. In a random
and therefore incomplete, survey, Out 'N' About
secured some information of spots primed to give
mot.her the royal treatment.
~ 11700 MACARTHUR ILVD.
NEWPORT llACH
.,., •• it.
c,Airporterqnn Ora119a County Air,ort
CJ!otel IJJ.J770
Wht-rt1'ho-INN P.ook Pt1ttl
Mother's Day Brunch
II •00 A.M. to l•OO P.M.
IN THE MEDITERRANEAN ROOM
Dinner From -4 :00 P.M.
BREAKFAST. LUNCH & DINNER
AT THE CAPTAIN'S TAILE
Entartain'"•nt and Oancint In Th.
CAIARET COCKTAIL LOUNGE
We Promise You Good
cli j 1eJlau1·anl oon
Happy m AM•••CAN cu1s1N•
Mother's Day
To All Our
Friends and Customers
lf,1 ADAMI AYf. Cet M11t1Nli•1
HUNTINGTON IU.CH 968-5050
FAMILY
RESTAURANTS
WITH THE
PROMISE
OF GOOD
Chinese
AND
AMERICAN FOOD
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY
To All Of Our
Friends And Customen
1505 MISA YllDI Dl.
I l lKk h . "' AUIN COSTA MISA
140-6flt
116'01 IU.CH ILYD.
1 lll<ti Ha . .t SH DI-,.,,
WISTMINSTll
ltJ-2111
"Rel•x and enjoy th• c•sual intim•c:y
of lelboa l1lends' Village Inn.
MOTHER'S DAY
SUNDAY, MAY 9th
FAMILT STTLE DINNERS
F1eturin9 A Special
Mother'• D•y Menu
ADDED TREAT: IOln OF A
CORSAGE FOR mar MOTHIR
Re11rvation1 Su99e1ted
Superb Cuisin~Exctllent Coc~tails
IALIOA ISLAND '7J.o45JO
Corn., of Peril oMI M•fa•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Jn HupLUtgton Beach, two &horeline establish·
ments will fittingly feature seafood dishes-among
other prospects -for mom's consideration. They
are the Fisherman, 317 Pacific Coast High\vay, and
Sam's Seafood, 16278 Pacific Coast Highway.
By way or something totally different, German
and Chinese cuisine will be spotlighted. respective-
ly, at the Berliner resturant, 18582 Beach Blvd ..
To"'" & Country Center: and Li's resturant, 8961
Adams at Magnolia.
NEWPORT BEACH
The guarantee of a red carpet welcome is
promised for the guest of honor at a number of
first-rate places in Newport Beach. These include
Bob Burns, 37 Fashion Island, Ne\vport Center;
Pacific Dining Car, 501 30th St.: Stull Shirt. 2241
W. Coast Highway; Nelvporter Inn, 1107 Jamboree
Road .
BALBOA
In other areas of Newport still more restau ·
rants are planning a distinctive bill of fare for the
occasion. Among them are the Tale of the 'Vhale,
Balboa Pavilion. 400 ?i1ain St., and the Village Inn,
129 Marine, Balboa Island.
CORONA DEL MAR
Yet another section of Newport Beach-Corona
del ?itar -also boasts several spots where the ram·
ily can be certain its favorite lady will receive all
due attention. They are the Five Crowns, 3801 E.
Coast Highway, and Roberta Linn and Freddie
Bell's Inn Place, 2121 E. Coast Highway.
COSTA MESA
Special care has gone into the planning for
~1other's big day at some of Costa lilsea's-select din-
ing establishments. On the list are the Volcano
House at the Rodeway tnn, 1400 Palisades Road;
the Derby restaurant. 1262 Palisades Road; ?itr.
Steak, 2267 Fairvie\v, at Wilson .
Fine Italian Cuubae Cocktails
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673-1267 ·--o,... o.lly -I p.111. t. 2 e.1W.
CLOSID MONDAY
JOIN IN ON AN "INN" THING
THE SUNDAY SWING
SAN CLEMENTE INN
\\1ill Featurl"
JOHNNT SMITH
And Thi"
ALPHAllTICALS
MAT f
5 to 10 P.M.
:r.1ake This Date A r.tui;t
Limited Engagemtnt
125 AVENIDA ESPl.ANDIAN
SAN CLEMENTE 4'2·610J
Open
.12 Noon
1'1other's
Day
DON JOSE'
NOW APPEARING
ELLA MAE MORSE
Recording Artist
Wllh The
HAYDEN CAUSEY TRIO
Enchll•d• and T1co •...••.....•.... , $1 .35
Chill Relleno. Enchil1d1 ............. $1.50
Set"4 wM lfu, .._., Tn1e4lfl4 -4 WM
flNUT MDICAN FOOD AT llilONAIU PllCU
e COCKTAILS e
9093 E. Ad•m• l•I Mognoli•) Hunt. Beoch 962·7911
AIRPORT AREA
There's a fine spot in the vicinity 0£ Orange
County Airport where mom can be treated to a
special brunch or dinner bill of rare. It's the Med i·
terranean Room of the Airporter Inn, 18700 Ma c·
Arthur Blvd.
MID-COUNTY
1itid·Orange County provides several strong
candidates to capture mother's dining out fancy on
Sunday, Afay 9. These include the Japanese fare al
Miyako restaurant, 33 Town and Country, Orange.
and the seafood and steak entrees at the Prince or
Whales, 15975 Harbor Blvd .. Fountain Valley.
~lenus especially designed to appeal to the
whole family \Viii be served in the Blue Bayou,
Plaza lnn and French ~1arket restaurants, Disney-
land, Anaheim.
Cork 'N Cleaver
It's as rare as a romp in Santa Ana sno'v when
we manage to hit a new restaurant the first day of
business. But the natural order of things got out of
"'hack on a recent evening and ~·e joined the ranks
o( first-nighters at a Costa Mesa debut.
Swinging open its large wooden doors to the
local dining populace 'vas the wittily-named Cork
'N Cleaver. And the cleaverness carries righ t into
the establishment's short and to the point motto
-"Beef and Booze." .
f d ~
ALL NEW
Taking up in the quarters most recently occu-
pied by the Prime Rib Inn on E. 17th St., the Cor k
brings a wholly different picture to the location .
An extensi ve interior and outside remodeling ha:..
changed even the architectural details of the former
premises.
The handsome brick and stucco building is
finished with touches of \Vrought iron, leather and
bottle glass in the design. Beamed wood ceilings.
511 JtTH ST.
NIWPOIT IU.CH
lUllYATIONI
,,.~ ..
WI WILL OPEN
MOTHER'S DAY
AT J:OO P.M.
A Thrtt Gtneration Family Tradition -Est 1921
FINEST
SEAFOOD
AND
OYSTER BAR
IN THE
SOUTHLAND
630 LIDO PARK DRIVE
NEWPORT 'BEACH 675-0100
GIVE MOTHER AN UNFORGETTABLE .
TREAT ON HER DAY
Special Mother'• Dey Menu
IR UNCH 10 •·'"·to I P·'"·
DINNER I to J 0 P·"'·
GLORIA ALTMANN
AT THI PIA NO IA.It
IYllT SUNDA.1'
J17 PACl,IC COAST HWY.
HUNTINGTON IUCH
lta1arvation1 Aetaptatl
,-..., Jl1rtln ef I ar ....,.,
1)6-2111
T•• Dry Dock
PRESENTS THE
MARK
DAVIDSON TRIO
t 10 t Nlfhtty -S1111 •t I
SUNDAY JAM SISSION
Witt! 0 ... 1 Arthta I ,. I P·•·
SUNDAY ONLY
JACK COSTANZO & GERRIE WOO
HOUSE SPECIALTY
ARMENIAN LAMB·KABOB
TRV OUR "DAILY DOUBLE" 5 P.M.. 7 P.M.
Twe DlllMn fw Tiie hie• 9f 0-fWetliMytl
SAT. & SUN. BRUNCH
Ci.k t tf
I .......... ,..,_, $175 J. s ... ' ,,,.
J. ., .. leM4kt
A•11Ma Jlltll .,. ta..Ul1• ew.
2i01 W. C••t Hlth•il'f
Newpitrt lffc•-141·1 Iii
rougb·hewn paneling and rustic chandeliers (which
shed a very dim, romantic illumination) are other
attractive features througboul
Much about the atmosphere suggests a rather
Spanish or Mexican theme. Overall. though, the ef·
feet is one of combining the hearty warmth of a
Colorado ski lodge 'vith a southwestern adobe inn.
HUGE FIREPLACE
To round out that feeling there's even a Pueblo
Ind ia n touch . A huge Hopi fireplace spans most ot
one \val! in the largest dining area.
The restaurant is divided into seven dinin1
.u·eas, a bar and a cocktail lounge. The bar is hick·
ed by two unusual bottle collages.
The bartop1 made by the Cork 'N Cleaver crew. h~s. variou.s liquor labels inset in an epoxy resin
g1v1ng an interesting "glassed" effect. Bottled win-
do\vs, a1so produced by the same craftsmen, were
made by sand casting colored bottles in cement.
BUTCHER BLOCKS
The ne\v furnishings include tables handmade
of pegged flooring resembling butcher blocks. Com-
f~rtable. seating around these novel tables is pro--
v1ded by captains chairs.
If you fail to observe the butcher block motif
\\1hen you sit do"'"· recognition wUI come quickly
v.'hen you are handed the menus. They're lettered
on actual meat cleavers. This unusual bit of real· i ~n.1·. \Ve couldn't help but joshingly note, calls for
v1s1t1ng the restaurant in strictly good-humored
company.
LIMITED MENU
,i\s for th~ bill of fare iUlelf. lhe Cork offen
what surely must be one of the shortest in the
area. Four selections in top of the grade choice,
corn-fed aged beef are aU that go on the ch~grill.
Continued on Page 26
Real
C1nlonese food
eat her9 .,
take heme.
lTAG
CHDISE CASIHO
111 2 ht pl.. Newport leoch ORlolo i.9560
o,_ r .. h •llll Deify 1Z·12 -M. n4 s.t. "ti I •• -.
• •• a-tni~wers
• • •
MOTHER'S
DAY
o~arloo.in9 tha l lwo
1'1cific 011 +ha ''h floor = SPECIAL HOLIDAY MENU
ATOP TOWERS WING or
SURF and SAND HOTEL ........
12 N-te II p.M. ._.... ... 1555 S. COAST HWY.
LAGUNA BEACH 494-6574
Intimate and Oeli9htful
FRENCH RESTAURANT
Don't For9et Mom
On Her Big Cay
MOTHER'S DAT
Sunday, Moy f
Dinner S•rv•d From 2 p.m.
c., .... ef ...... ,,. ..... , .....
C.tt• M... 141·1,41
8
ffilYflKO
J.Wldleoo JM..r ODekt•Pe
"-'""' 339 So. Los llobJet, Puad-• 7911-7'11
33 Tawna: C011ntry, Oranse • 5«2"'3:113
1ra1tCois'
CONTINENTAL CUISINE
Famout For
FLAMING DUCK
Open I I :00 A.M. -Closed Monday
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA
11151 BEACH BLVD. 14J.lflf
THE CELLAR
LUNCHEON e DINNER e COCKTAILS
MOTHER 'S DAY
Setvin9 Dinner From I · p.m.
220 FOREST A VE.
LAGUNA BEACH -~94-0600
I
I
.. '
DAILY ~llOT Frld11, M1y 1, 1971
FINE FOOD • ENTERTAINMENT
DANCING; • ·.COCKTAILS
MOM RATES THE BEST
WITH OUI SPICIAL
HOLIDAY MENU
SUNDAY, MAY t
lr11Kll 11 M l -DI..., ,.,.. 4
Cort•I•• fo• AU Molh1fl-Rt11r.,1tlo111 S111J111t1tl
Comint_ Ath111'lio•1 -M1k1 ll.111tv1tlo111 E1rly
STAN KENTON -MAY 25th
COUNT BASIE -JUNE 9th
2121 East Coost Hl9hwoy
C0tOM del Mor 675·0505
PURE LEMON
·MERINGUE PIE
l .. ular S1.t5
NOW-$1.35 With Thia M
Mede With Real Lemon5. J. iJ No P•u•~•t;.,., No lm;i.t;oo F1,..,;,g Ji
·" THRU MAY 10, 1971 ~ '~ ill. .. i You M•y Reserve Your Pie By C1llinq ~ ! 557. 6694 jj
• 1510 w. IAKU IAT HAllORJ I . i COSTA MESA I.
~~~';i9~~~.,
..
•
,WEEKENDER
Continu.d from P19e 2,S
These entrees are beef kabob, $3.95: top ~ir
Join , $4.95; teriyaki sirloin, $5.25; Ne \v York cut,
$5.95. d \Vhile meat orders are being prepare , patrons
step to the center room and partake of a "do -it-
yoursell" salad bar. In this operation crisp, chill-dry
greenJ and cherry tomatoes can be loaded onto. a
plate and topped with any of a variety of dressings.
HOT BREAD
Once you 're returned to your table, whole
Joaves of bot rye and sourdough bread are brought
on a dandy cutting board. Both salad and bread arc
included in the asking prices.
In our first sampling of the wares. we chose the
teriyaki sirloin and New York cut. Both yielded ex·
cellent cuts of beef and "'ere cooked to medium
rare perfection as ordered.
NOW APPEARING
,, • .., .. ,. , ... r4.,
THE
ISR'.AFEL DUO
SUNDAYS
GREGG TOPPER
Pi•ni,t -Si11g1r
Guil•rill
• LAGUNA
FLEUR DE LIS
COCKTAILS
HOIS D'OIUYllJ S.7 P.M.
OPIN llVIH DAl'I
1460 S. COAST BLVD.
LAGUNA BEACH
Fiii PAIK ING IN IUI
' .
Jordon
ISRAFEL DUO
John
•
TAKE MOTHER TO HAWAII!! In tbt finrst traJition
of tht true innktptr's •rt.
Dinner At
MOTHER'S DAY
From 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
CORONA DEL MAR
3901 E. Coa1t Highway
675-0900
2 STEAK
DINNERS FOR
• Frenc.h Fries
• French Fried Onlml ~in 91
• Toned Seled • Ro ll end Butter
Iring • friend! Take advante9• of thi5 d1liciou• d.in-
ner for 2, •t • just right price. 1/1 lb. t ender cho1c•
steak, cut to Bradford Hou•• 1pecific1tion1. 11 911od
to • friend, or m•ybe the family? Th is m••I, It a
favorite with •ll ... you'll b• • winner! .. o,.n O.lly
M.n. thru let.
t 1H a.M. te t ,,l'ft.
Sunt11y ~KNOWN FOR VALUES
11 a ..... te '.-P!"'· GRANT PLAZA,-BROOKHURST & ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH
.-..-....--. .-....--..
fl cozy DINING llOOM -
.1801 EA ST COAST H1CJl\VAV"
(UllO.'iA DU. 11Al, (ALU.Olll'IA
P11o~·r.: (714) 675-137.t
PRlttCE
lijJWes
RESTAURANT
11arooo ... sna•s Tu.~ w• .. Tllur. o"" 4 pm l'rf., S11., S1111. o,... 11 1m
ICleMll MoM1y1I
SANTA AN.I.: lS9J5 H1rlllr l!'ld. IJ9·t11C n blodl rt, el [«lnrtr)
00BK1 l\l
OLEt\VER
BEEF k BOOZE
NOW OPEN
428 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
645·5410
FOOD TO GO
2698 NEWPORT Bl.VD. (~T MESA DRIVEJll"
COSTA MESA At,.u "•111 0 "• Ce•11'' fal,..,e•••
SCOUT-0-RAMA
THIS WEEKEND
At Orange County Fairground•
O·UT 'N ABOUT .
of! with a sirloin burger, $1.50. Other selections are cp~eseburg~· .(wiilr Swiss, "'1~d~ar or American),
1nushroom burger, bacon burger, skinny. burger,
all $1.75 each. and a steak sandwich, $2.60.
Perhaps one of the most striking features about
the restaurant is the ae'cent on youth. And the zesty
enthusiasm ,of the college-age waiters and wait·
resses i.& quite contagiou~:
$
CLEVER ATTIRE
The staff personnel turmer give a summer-like
brightness to the surroundipgs by their attire. The
girls are dressed in madras mini·skirts, while the
feUov.•s sport matching madras bermuda shorts.
FIRST IN OUR STATE
The Jocal Cork 'N Cleaver is the first Cali·
fornia establishment in a chain of like-named rest·
aurants presently operating in five other states.
Since the initial Cork opened in Scottsdale Arizona
in November, 1964, others have followed bi Tucson
and Phoenix , Colorado Springs, Denver, Boulder
and Lakewood, Colorado; Omaha, Nebraska; Fargo
North Dakota; ·and Dayton, Ohio.
The newest Cork 'N Cleaver ls located at 425
E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. The restaurant is open
seven days a \\'eek, with dinner service nightly from
6 to 11 , Sunday through Thursday, and untlJ 12
midnight on Friday and Saturday evenings.
Continued on Paga 27 llr==-----~~~~------~
ALLEY
llllT
PRESENTS
The Sensational
TONY FLORES
Guitarist/Vocalist
Folk, Classlc1I; Spanish
TUE. THRU SAT.
GINO LANZI
Monday Nl9ht1
nATUllNG DINN!RS
In th1 St11 Fr1nci1co M1nn1r
ftMEftA
IU:&TAUli.NT
Continental Cuisine
Cockt11ls
Strving
Luncheon and Dinner
Mondau through Saturdat1.
-· MICKEY MOUSE WHIPS UP TREATS FOR MOM
Di1neyland Hai Special Menus end Music Ph1nntd
TEMPLE GARDENS
O,-Ht-IS:S:SRe1taura11t
LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY
Visi t Our
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
IUFFET LUNCH 11 :30·1:30
Monday thru Friday
OPEN
ll:lt •.m .. II ,.m. Sun. mr. nun.
ll:lt 1.m. • 2 •.m. ,.rl, •Ill ht,
Closed Sundays
U.Cl OF LAMI }'eaturtng Exotic
1500 At'AMS (et Heritor)
COSTA MESA
S40·1tl7 540·192J
[
STEAKS e SU.FOOD Tro1iical Drinks
s TO 11 NIGHTLY We ara locat•d next to II\,,==,,;,,,==============;';'
IUSINESSMAN'S LUNCH ~ .. ~;,~ .. co. ;, South g &1Xl),;,~~~~~~l'J);'.'.:fi;,·~
11 :00 TO 5 JJJJ s. lrllt•I -\$\ I ~
SATURDAY-11 to S .,_ w-"""" fc(, AVOLCANO HOUSE ~
LUNCH OR BRUNCH ~ fj:
su:~:~:,R~:.cH '""" ~~~.~~ ... 01 "' ~ ~ MOTH:~=.~~! .. ~,[~~ t
ON TMa OCEAN ADJACENT wor ld'1 o;ir11I 11trolot1n. Hi1 ~ f(,.
TO t!IWl'OllT •U.CH Plll!ll c:ol11fll11 11 0111 of tll1 DA ILY ~
2106 w. OCEAN FRONT PlLOrs ,,111 f11ti.rr••· i ••EAST OF CAPON fUGtNIE .••... • • • · • • • · • · 54.ZS ~ , 8rMll o1 et~ flll&Clltcl !ft whll1 W1M 'i\ltl f:ll ~~N~EW~PO~R~T~l~EA~C~H~~~~~~~~~I 1£ FILfT OF SOLf IONNf FEMME ...••..... · • · · SJ.95 a:-?"
7 Flitt of lr111'1 ,ale po1chfd In wl<M, llC.0 wltl'I m111llroem1, 1auc.1 ~,,.;
' Mother's Day .
Sunday, May 9
Dinner Served From ., P.M.
Early Re!e.rvations Sugiest~
37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CDmR
isnw.. lufrum1 & 1ro1dw1
""""" P111tl111 ' "-•ti-. •144-2uo•
The Boon Docks Ptoudly Presents
CARMEN
Mc R,A E
MAY 11·12·13
TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY 9 and 12
Make R11erv1tion1 For 9 p.m. Dinner Show Now
WE TllREE-Appearing Nighll y
JIMMY VANN IAND
Now Ancl Then on Mondays
LUNCH e DINNE R
COCKTAILS
EXQUISITE HORS D'OEUVRES
llll W. COAST HWY.
lJooN ·
UOCKS
NIWPOU HACH
6 4 2. 4 2 9.8
On The by
At Th. Arlh ..
~.<,~: ~:Jl:( RIIS OF IEEf ........................ SS.,S ~. ~ Slow rDoHll'd prim• bftf. 1ccomp.inl1d b~ l'loru,.a.11'1, of co11r1e V': l~i1~ NEW YO•K STU.IC • " .•••.•.••• ' ............ ss.•s
Cl'lolct J<ow York 1Trlp 1lrlcln 1!tak 1>ralle<1 •ncl crowntd wolh ...t ~<lf:C'z' crisp onion strl"'1, oroWfl bUIT•r ~~.~·, \\{ .-.1•·· lllnnt" 11rvecl wllh cllO!c1 of cre1m o! mu•nroe1m ~oup 1r ,-ml~ed ore1n Hl•cl, t>ek..:I pa1110 11\d t>roccoll na111nc1al•1.
lreollf•lt Hl'ff4 all day h1 Coffff Shep
5t-1400 PALISADES ROAD· COSTA MESA
~ I Ne1r ro rhe lodewoy Inn) 557·14~6
~ f)"~""'Xj);~;.~~~e'~ ii':
MOTHER DESERVES THE FINEST
Choice of Cre1tm of Mu1hroom Soup or Tossed Gree,,
S•lod, ROAST LEG OF LAMB AU JUS, M;of J•lly.
Fresh A1para9us Hol la ndaise, Ro•st New Potatoes,
Persleyed Carrots, Broiled Tomato end Choice of
Strawberry Shortcake or Chocolate Rum Parfait, end
Bevere9e.
ADULTS $5.SO CHILDREN $3.50
Regular Menu Also Served
Open from Noon to I 0 p.m. ••. 1"f .,_.,.... ;
a sTuf.T.~~!Rf Ntwport Beach
2241 W•lt Coast Highway·• (714) 646-5057
BALBDI\
P/\VllllDll
Special
Mother's Day
Menu
ROAST LAMB
and
ROAST PRIME RIB
PLENTY OF PARKING
IN.NEW MUNICIPAL
LOT NEARBY
TAtE tkWHAtE
400 MAIN , BALBOA PE INSUL.A • 1714117J.4m
•
•
\:
~ Mort's B AL-~C?ff T Lounge
'
ENTE RTAl~M ENT
FRI. AND' SAT.-9 P.M. to 2 A.M.
FOOD AND SPIRITS
• COUNTRY STYLE
BREAKFAST Stlutdo y
• LUN CH SPECIALS Dtily
• f AMIL Y STYLE DINNER
Ce1111,im fteJJI SI.II -. $4.l t
,......, ttirw-s.tw*J
• POT LUCK E,.,y Tut 1doy
• SUNDAY BRUN CH
t A.M. t. 4 P.M.
4507 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT HACH '75-4JOO
~~T[AI( SAYS
MOTHER'S DAY
TRY A
LITTLE TENDERNESS
MENU SELECTIONS INCLUDE
ON
~~.~:E ~r L~.·~~EsRfR IP . . ........................ $3.99
S OZ. "LI T O• SIRLOIN ........................... $2.19
CHICKEll-SIAFOOD
All Steekt Are U.S.D.A. Cftolce
PtrflCfty·AtM Corn~Fed leef
SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU
ALSO: A pewee pl•te for the
Little Tots -2tc
FOR our OF
1'lllS WORW
Pil.IVERY
~iJl.'llCi·
In N..,,art Retell
& Coatt Mut ...
64&-7111
In Hunt!nrton Bt1ch 147·1~14
• •
OPEN DAI LY
11 A.M •• 9 P.M.
2267 FAIRYIEW
lAT WILSONI
COSTA MISA
548°0361
. FAMILY PIZZA PARLORS
PIPI NG HOT PIUAS (WITH PIZZAZI) OEllVEREO TO 'llJUR
DOOR IN MlNUfES, IN ME·N·£DS SPACE AOE M0911.E OVENS.
,
OUT 'N' ABOUT
(Coatlollld Inoa Pqe HI
Quiet Cannon
A groundbreaking ceremony next Monday, May
10, klcka off construction of a new restaurant
which bolds promise of becoming a major South
CoHI attraction. Getting under way with the ltr1l
turn of earth will be the Quiet Cannon in Dana
Point.
Located on a bluff overlooking the new ma·
rlna, the restaurant bas been planned to capllallle
on the settlDg'a natural beauty througli unusual
, interior and exterior designs. These features, quite
interestingly, will display the creative handiwork
of a prolesslonal rarity -a lady architect. In this
case she's Lynne Paxton, the American and Euro-
pean educated head of Paxton A6sociates in Los
Angeles.
* • TWO LEVELS
Constructed on two levels, the Cannon's lower
section will sport a cocktail lounge with seating for
100 persons. The upper dining roodl will accommo-
date 150 patroOf and, like the lounge, provide an
unobstructed view or the marina and coastline to
San Clemente.
Thertt will be two three·sided fireplaces in the
cocktail fl'e• and two double-sided fireplaces In the
dining room, along with a fireplace in the entry
hall. The interior ambience will be further hJgh·
ligbted by large rough limbers, barn board on the
walls, and wood beam ceiling• throughout.
i .
AND THE CANNON
A focal point on the outside deck wlll be a
permanenUy mounted, old muzzle loading iron
cannon. It was salvaged from the Spanish galleon
"Santa Morgarita," which was sunk In 1595 off
Biscayne Bay, Florida.
Featurin& The Finest In
Authentic Mexican Food
RestauROr:Zt
Z431J
DEL PRADO
DANA POINT
4'6°6175
MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL
OPlN AT 3:00 P.M.
H•m S+••k ·-······--···-····-·--·-----·············· $2.ts
Prime Rib ············-··-·-·-·----···-········ $3.tS
Nt w York Ste•k ······-··-······--··-·············· $4.50
Price Incl udes One Margarita For l\1'other
Appe•rln9 Ni9htly
KENNY LAURSEN
Armed With 61.!itar And
, Contidered Extremely Entertainin9
Orange Count11's
Mo1t Beautiful
Restaurant
PROUDLY INTRODUCES
Newl11 E~nded And Ezeltl.,.
Dinner And Luneh Menus
IA'OIY NIW INTUU IMCLUDI: Gh"" keMpl a.,.nH
fr• s,.t. -,,... I.Ht ..._. 011ms _. Clliffrys,...
c1 ... •• ttie """911911 -...... 11., Ct• '"' -•••In-.... M...Ul•M _.... tlalty -1.-'"'" llN
el I•,.,. ...,, • fa -PleMIJlll tlhMt IMlwtil"" ldl.t• ......... ~,, ........
DINNER-DANCING EVERY NIGHT
TWO llANDS
31 106 COAST HWY •• SOUTH LAGUNA I R ... rv~tlon1 l99.z663
SUNDAY, MAY 9
Enjoy
MOTHER'S DAY
At
THE BERLINER
German Family Restaurant
Famous For
SAUERBRATEN with POTATO DUMPLINGIS
OPEN AT I :00 P.M.
'
COMING ATIRACTION
Sl,INDAY, MAY 16
... innl"I At 4:00 P.M.
IOCK IEER FESTIVAL
With The
TRIO AUSTRIA IMrMt ,,... Vi9Mll
CNILDllWI MINU
U.NfUIT PACH.ma
You Have To Ste 1t1d Hear Them
Only One Apptartncf
Fer RUWYatltn1 caJI N ..
11112 llACH aVD.
T""' & CIUiifff C.....,
HUNTIN•TON llACH
Hl·AOO
'
,.
a~ ....
... ,, , . ~ .. --. ... ........ .. ' ...
Ftldq, 111.,. 7, 1'171
Your Guide to Fun
. ....... ""
: , .
DAILY PILOT J1
T&G Concert Saturday
MAY7
BENEFIT DINNER -'!be Golden Wut CoUege lntemaUoa.
al Club will IJ>()IUOr a benefit dinner for Tina Kyaella.
(Founlaln VaUey U.yoar-old girl who bas been UI), tonlibt
In the tollege center, 1$714 Golden West St., Hwitmgton
Beach. '!be Orient.I menu will be oerved from I to 10 p.m.
and llcl<eta ano $%.75 lo' adulla: 12.!IO for bis!> tchool and
college 1tudent!:, and $1.75 for elementary students. AU fUndl
railed will be lran&ferrecl to the Tina KyseUa Fund at lhe
Fountain Valley B ol A.
MAY I
TOWN AND GOWN CONCERT -'!be UCT Town and G0\111
will -a sprin( benefit concert by lhe faculty and llu· dents ol the University on Sat., May 8 at 8:30 p.m. In lhe
Con«:rt Hall of Fine Arts Village on Campus. Performing
will be Alan Moore, H. Colin Slim. University Woodwind
Quintel. Peter Odegard, Lawrence Gordon, Carole Boelter,
Kathy Monahan, Kate Whitney, 1vfA11rice Allard, Kerry Grant
and Amold Juda. Tlckela, 12.!IO, may be reserved by calling
Mrs. Smith, S73-2445. Funds w!ll be used for music scholar·
ships .
MAY I
SCOtrr-0-RAMA -A1ore than 3SO exhibits will be on dls-
pl1y at the Scout..().Rama to be held May 8 ln the Oranie
County Fairgrounds, 2701 Fairview Drtve, Co!ta Mesa from
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. The O!ildrtn's Cloir of Long Beach will
perfonn and the.re will be visits by Mkkey MOU3e and his
fellow Disneyland characters along with karate elhlblUons
by Japanese Village, plus rock music and marching band1.
For more Information phone 546-4990 ..
MAY I
TEEN DANCE -The Westminster Teen Club will hold a
dance for teerui (mo!t Sat. nights) 15 through 18 years who
live 1n Westminlter or attend Balsa Grande, FoW1taln Val-
ley, La Quinta or Westminster Rlgb SChools. Admiulon for
members $1; non members, $1.50. May 8, "Shoppe'' will
play for dancing.
MAY I
FOLK CONCERT -The Aasociated Students of UCI are
presenting a folk concert with John Stewart and Jennifer in
Crawford Hall at 1:30 on May I. Tickets, $2.50, may be pw-o
chased al the Auociated Stude.1i.a Office. Phone 13UM9.
MAY I
moH SCHOOL CARNIVAL -' A Renai.slance Faire with an
up-to-d1te campu.s carnival will take place at the Fountain
Valley football field , 17816 Bushard Sl, Fotmtaln Valley,
this Sat. from 10 a.m. to dusk. Everyoot> is Invited. Admjg..
sion Is 25 cents, but those in Renaissance attire will be Id·
milted free. A dance for high school studenta will follow at
I p.m. in the gym with music by Sweet and Sour Blues Band.
MAY M
RAMONA -Early Calif. history with gay flettu and old
world romance will be ucaptured with the fflh season of the
famed Ramona outdoor play in the Ramona Bowl, Hemet,
this Sal and Sun. at 2:30 p.m. Phone (711) 858-3111.
MAYt
J AZZ SF.SSION -Jazz Incorporated will hold a Jw: n s-
slon at 2 p.m. &mday, May 9, in the Huntlngton Buch
Moose Hall, 7409 Lorge Circle (Gothard and Edinger), at
2 p.m. _Special gueat artist will be Bob McCracken. Member•
and mU31clans ftte: guests, $2.
MAY t • 11
UCI CONCERTS -The htusic Department of tfCJ will pre-
sent free concerts In the Village Concert Hall on campus
on May 9 -10 at 8:30 p.m.; A-1ay 14 at 1 and l :JO p.m.; May
15 • 17 at 8:30 p.m.
MAY II· 11
FOUNTAIN VAU.EY ARTS WEEK -Fountain Valley win
be celebrating Cultural Arts Week May 10 • 16 with apedal
displays, special fooda, bridge toumament.s ,a modem dance
concert, ballet reel.tat, talent showa, art sbow1, hobby show1,
Jr. Theater pl'Oduc:Uon, bus toun of city and a flower lhow.
It will take place all ovtr the city with headquarttn 1t the
civic t enw-,· 10200 Slater, Fowttain Valley. Phone -.2013
for further lnfonnation.
MAY II
FOREIGN FILM SElllES -The South Coast Cinema So-
ciety is showing a series of classic fJJnu, In the Forum on
guna Beach. An all Charlie Chaplin proa:ram will be 1hown
on May 12.
MAYtl·ll
Cllll.01\EN'S PLAY -"'!be Thtrteen Ciocka," I play based
on Thurber, for children will be presented at UCJ 1n the
Fine Artl \1illage Studio Theater at 8:30 p.m. May 12-15.
Admission 11.
MAY ti
CHANCELLOR 'S TRIP -UC! Chancellor Aldrich will &Ive
a lecture on his recentl y completed world study tour on May
Bank
Int"'"' .-r •--a:rWd Cl•llr •llCI ptld Mrlffly °" rt011lllr ,., ..
boClll •cc-1,, Ofoollt .,., lfll
IOt~lnltr•I peld lretll rM lit.
°" •ll'lflt or n111111,i. IMtVl°lt'f Time
0.,..J" Of UOO or lftOl'e.
111"'"' Plld ctll9'"'''·
In 1ddlllon, C.n11nela Bank off era other B«nk Tlm1
Deposit! with varying rates and maturities. All acoountl
art Insured to $20,000 by the Fod1ral Oepoa~
· Insurance Corporation.
Pleue can or stop In for d1t111s on any or ·all of these
1avlng1 plans. You'll get our full lntereatl
nn C:.•iula llanklWwpcll't 11 adi
., Sp9ciddlinMw••••Jcql1rvt.
:ml\\WC... ~(d Noopo.tlo.ioon)
Nooporl lood\Colf..no9l660 -{M6.Taf
ti •I I p.m. In the Fino Arts VW.n TlielW'. He will .... bis
color alide.s to Illustrate. Tickets are free and may be ob-
talned tl Fine Arts box of[lce. The pubUc la Invited.
MAY JJ.n
STORY HOUR· -A story hour for pre-scliool dlUdren wlll
be held in the Mutner'• Ubrary, 2005 Dover Drive, Ntw·
port Beach, each 'lbursday at JO a.m. The Corona dd lllor
Library, 420 Marftlold Ave., Corona dd llfar· will bold a
story hour [or prwcbooJers every secoad and fGur1ll 'l'lllr>-
day of tbe month at 10 a.m. ,
MAYH
ROD SERLING LECl'llllE -Rod Strllng, moUon plcturo
and l<lovlslon writer, will speak tl Golden Wt1t Collop,
15744 Golden Wet! Sl, l!untmgton Beach, at I p.m. May It.
"View from the Middle" will be lhe UUo ol the final arifaf,
lecture Protrtm ol the current lchool year. Open to Ille public, admls&ioo Is $1.
MAY If
CONCERT -1be Community Chorale and the Golden Weit
Slngen will give a free concert at 8 p.m. in Forum n en
Campus, 15744 Golden West Ave., HunUntron ·Beach, May 14.
MAY If
STRAWB!llftY FES'nVAL -The Garden Grove Stnw·
berry Festival will be held in Garden Grove Par~ {Map-
Ila and Westmlnlter Ave.), May 27 • 31. Opening day boan
2 p.m. • 11 p.m.; Fri. • Sat. and Mon. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.;
Sun., noon• to 11 p.m. 'lbere WW be live entertalnment, tbe
world's largest strawberry 1bortcake, camlvaJ ridfll, a
rodeo, a celebrity breakfast and a parade whlcb Is ttt for
Sat., AdmWlon to feltlvaJ grounds ii free. Phone a 7'JIO for
other information.
MAY If
DICK GREGORY -The Associated Studen ta: will pn11nt
"An Evening With Dick Gregory," In Crawford Hall en
c1mpu1 at 8 p.m. May 14. Ticket.s , $3. available at Aao--
ciated Students Office on campwi.
MAY 14
SURFER JR.. DANCES -The WestmlMttr Surfer Jr. Ttm
Club will hold • danee on the second and fourth Friday "
the month for '1th aid Ith graders. The 7:30 lo 1:30 dance
will be in the Community Center, 8200 Westmln.!ter Aft.
Admi~ion 50 centa.
MAY II
TRAVEL FILM -Marlon and Bob Auburn will show an
aviation-travel film, "Flying America," at 1:30 p.m." Ml)'
16 in the Orange Coaat. College auditorium, 271>1 ll'alnietr
Road, Costa Mesa. The to-minute color motion pkture wu
shol over a period of five months and will h1ablilht thl
beauties of our country. No admission charge.
"'""'" -"°'' ~ PICKWICI .
BOOKSHOPS
lMI CrTY a..... • f11'l m .mo
SOUTH SW
lROPICAL RSH
IOUTM COAST •t.AU. o,.. c. ... "-••. 111 4) uo.11•1 ...........
Who C.res7
Largest Selection of
Tropical Flab a.
tiupplles In the aru.
Ne 1tfi1r 11 .... ,1111•• h1 the
wetltil c•r•• 1ll111t ,.ur co111m11•
ftlty Ii•• V•lll' •M11111o111lty 4eily
ft• ... p•p•r 111•11. It's th. DAILY PILOT.
NewJLM~ 111 W. WIUOM. COIT ,lqlA
f9"F•ln>h llll., 161'11
tmA9*1~ ................
NHIU
l•e SMw I._.. l P.M.
~ ....
•llff'OIT lbCM • Ol.J.13Sb SHHy "91t1 2 P.M.
THE IMMORTAL STORY OF LOVE
ALL NEW
ALSO' "RST RUN
THIS SUSPENSE FILM
INTlllHATIONAL AWAllD WINNll POil 911T •11.M
MW... 0.••••1 ...._ c.r.i• C..lfrlr
''THIS MAN MUST DIE" ..
lft. SN w Stwffl 1 P.M.
CHllDllN'I MATINll
SATURDAY -2 P.M.
"Cl"DlllLLA"
"SNOW WHITI I IOSI •n,.
Mf:TllO.QClOWYMMA'tUI P'nMntl
A IUltT 9t£NH!D'i' PROOUCTION
r• MAGl!::.0 .. ... nan lllflTll, .. ·1 •••m•ur AheTW&led:FollC..C... .,
"CELEBRATION AT BIG SUR'"
SATURDAY AmRNOON ND PRIZIS
TO THI LUCKY TIC
f :t!fl:t•t!I °" z;..=-
NOW-D.ClUSIYI AUA fHOWUte -TMIU MAT"lt" . . .
"Rl<:H ANr;> lllWARDINGI
ENTHRAWNGI"
·ludlllt Ctlrt,"'8 Ycttt Mftalne
COLUMBIA PICFURES
.~ •.
11\YINO AU.EM
PRODUCTION
RICHARD
HARRIS
ALEC
GUINN.ES$
Al.SO -JACK \IM MON
CATHlllMI DI NIUYI
"APRIL FOOLS"
•
. . . . . •
ft DAILY PILOT Frkf.iy, May 7. 1971
Y 011r Guide to Movies
'Poppa' Star Loves Mom to Death
Friday Saturday
Ed f lo r .,,. Nott: Thil
movie guid. is prepared
by the fil1'l$ committee of
Harbor Council PTA . Mrs-. mning Morni•ng Nigel Balley i.t prtsident and Mn. Bruce Nordland
MAY 7 MAY I i& committee chairman. It
........... .,,,~. l:OO ([J JYlaa..... Ls intended as a reftrenct
(l)UC:,._~,Smlttl. 1:3GIJt])S.rt" S...... in dttennin;ng suitable
D INllC •"""'6ct Tom Snydtr, 7:0D 1J Ntw Wonlt. Jhw w.,. f ii m 1 for certain age
eneu.tlhw D !IDl mr.....,.s• groups-and will appta1'
D "SEVEN THIEVES"! C11 rY I a---wetklt1. Your view1 ore
* ROD STEIGER-COLOR m rvtik Atftlra solicited. Mail them to Me>--...... '"" 11~•2!0. . G .,. f I h fJltrO'Oectilllwlt:(to)"'SMll wr """' vit UltK", car e o t
""""'(ll!Jlt*'YJ 'IO-RM Sltlatr, 7:JO fJ DlutJ'• T,...,. DAILY PILOT.
£fin,_. S. Rribl111011. .ID•~ Collin.t, 0@?;) Kai. l Jecitl
::::~'==-~~~= ~~ A!TS f!lillloi! 4oll1r robbel)' '"""' ttlt !ijlhtdt Im flt1111d Mo..e. C.ito .-..... c.NlllO, m TlM!detbl1• Where's Poppa'! ( R ) :
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t]) C1S ..... Wttltt Ctollkltt. m c .. 117 this love-drama.
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FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
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II WOlfDllUllD" 111
(GP): Story ol ha1ttd between
father and son. Both dislike
feeling lhL! way. Melvyn
Douglas and Gene Hackman
porlray the father and son In
this film of the older genera-
tion gap.
··Joe" iRl: Jot, a crude
factory worker and h i s
wealthy advertising executive
friend Bill. share hatred of
''Blacks, liberals, we If are
bums." Violence ttUpls when
BUIA daughter b e c o m e s
enmlshed ln Village hippie en-
vironment of sex and drugs.
T>e Lut Valley (GPk
Priest and mayor connive to
turn womenfolk over t o
mercenaries occupying last
village untouched by "30
Years War." Cap ta in's
mistress burned at stake only
after professor sli!s her throat
to prevent burning alive.
The Magic Cbrlsttaa (GP):
Rich man Involves police,
artists, sport heroes and ln-
dUJlrialists in game to prove
his belief that "all me.n can be
corrupted by money."
M•A•s•u (R): Irreverent
comedy about lhe Mobile
Army Surgical Hospital during
the Korean War. Spoof on
nurse-doctor relationships and
the "Last Supper.''
The Statue ll: Story of a
male's preoccupatioa with the.
site of his r e p r o d u c ~ I v e
organs.
Tbtre'1 A Girl lD My Soup
IRJ : Goldie !lawn and Peter
Sellers star in c o m e d y .
Escapades or a fticbt1y
American girl and a stuffy
English gourmet.
Vani11blng Point (RJ: Story
Kowoskl-Korean War vet, ex-
cop, ex-race driver. Speeds
from Denver to San Francisco
with pallet in pursuit, en-
couraged by Black radio disc
jockey against background of
hard rock music.
Ry1.111'1 Daupter ( G P ) :
Robert Mitchum and Sarah
Miles star in a love story 1et
in scenic lreland of 1116.
RestleS! and beautiful wife of
middle-aged school teacher
has affair with English major.
Tragedy for all result.I.
W ealthyTake Lumps
Womt1 In Love (R): Screen
adaption of. D. H. Lawrence
novel set in England of 1917.
Diskin rejects love of an
a r i s t o c r alic intellectUal,
choosing instead an earthy
school mistress. He also
becomes involved In a sensual
relationship with his best
Sunflower (GP): Melodrama
of World War JI. Italian wife
searches vast USSR to find
husband missing in action.
Finds him Jiving with lovely
Russian who nursed him back
to health. They meet again in
Italy but discover past cannot
be relieved.
This Afan MllSt me (GP):
French trhllle.r. Father vows
revenge when son is struck
and killed by auto in village
square. By chance he meets
driver's beautiful companion
and methodically WO(>Ji her un-to Ille leads him to the killer.
Rich Raked Over Coals . on TV friend, Gerald '
By Terrence O'Flaberty
The rich are having a ter-
rible time of television these
days. Never a week goes by
without a dozen or more
scriptwriters ranging the
wealthy just for h a v i n g
money. After a while you're
apt to get the idea there's
something wrong about being
rich.
To use a favorite expression
of the non·rich, that's not tell-
ing it like it is, baby!
There's oo one on my block
who doesn 't like rich people.
Take me. for example. Some
of the happiest moments of
my poor life have been spent
observing the wealthy, and,
while I cannot say I have
never met a rich man J didn't
like. J am willing to go on
record saying that the rich are
a damn sight more interesting
DOCTORS ICNOW IYllYONl'S
INTIMATE SlClns
UCEPT THOSI OF
THiil WIYIS I
r'
•
• •• ' "t • . \"~' .~ .... ;' . ' .. ' ' 1· .
A t:AANKDVIClf llAXJlCOON !
IXICll:llW·
UV.. IBl
._ Qjumtia Picttns tru:ll •
ALSO-HIT NO. J
• --PITll
SELLERS
!;(lll!
HAWN
"THE ANDIOMIDA
Slit.I.IN"
Ne lftef'tfll Ifft•
~Ht •I 7:JO I. IO
Mlllfl-l•I. I. SUI'!.
11-:11:11 .. s
WlllMf" :I MM. Aw1,_,1
"RYAN'S OAU•HTER"
... otrltt o"" U N-• t l".M. DlllY ...~-M ... ttlnt TillITT. ·I P.M.
l'rl. · S.1. ·I:• P.M.
~llNH Sat.· S... · t l'.M. .... ,.,... S.11'J
• lo(.Mleft!Y ........
"PAnON"
"M.A.J.H,"
Ofl'iN I P.M.-JNOW ,,.
lo be around than the poor.
And the one.s I didn't like, I
TRIED t.o like. Who wastes
that kind of effort on the. poor?
Heck, I wouldn't even mind
being rich myseU. Their cars
are more comfortable. they
get around more, and they
sleep better on the night of
April 14. That's no bad crowd
to hang out with.
YET NO ONE seems: to hate
the rich on such a regular
basis as the tv scriptwriten
even though some of them are
rich therilselves. Maybe they
just don't like the RICHER
rich. Whatever the reason,
they've given the word a bad
cormotation as if to imply that
the rich are Jess trustworthy
than the poor. I may be
foolhardy but I'd rather trust
a rich man with my pocket-
15 Choirs
To Perfornt
At Campus
book any day or the week. Not
if be's charging me interest, of
course.
The other night a character
on one of those mod lawyer
series snarled: "The rich only
make life worse for the poor •
"
I MATURE TEENS
AND ADULTS
Cold Turkey (GP): $25
million Is offered to small
Jowa town if residents stop
smoking. Story of bow greed
affects the town minister, doc-
tor, right.wing fanatics and
Well, sonny boy, I have the enforcing police. Local
never heard of a poor man bars and massage parlor do
endowing a university or giv-thriving business d u r i n g
ing a great collection of art to "smokers withdrawals."
a museum where the poor can The Great White Hope
see it. It isn't the non-rich who (GP): Fictionalized account of
chip-in to cover the cultural life of Jack John~first
deficit. Black heavyweight champion
THE RICH don 't need me to of 19lll. Tragedy resul ts as
defend them, God knows, but prejudic.ed boring establish-
maybe they could u.se 8 few ment reacts to his victory and
pointers on how to improve his publicized affair with a
their television image. I know white woman.
they 'd be the last group ()fl Jenny (GP): Marlo Thomas
earth to storm the barricades portrays Jenny, a pregnant
in their own behaU or form a girl from New England. who
rich-man's lib, but what's goes to New York where she
wrong with an NAARP -Na-marries. for convenience, a
tional Association for the young man who wishes to
Advancement ()f Rich Pevple? avoid the draft.
Even animals bave an SPCA. Love Story (GP): A 1 i
Why not have an SPCR? MacC raw and Ryan O'Neal
To the best ()f m Y star in romantic, bitter-sweet
knowledge, the villains in Iv fable of today's college youth
dramas are never openly af-and the generation gap. Told
filiated with the AFL or CIO. in their language.
Wlnoln1 fGP): New mar·
riage or race champion almost
breaks-up under pressure of
the lndiandpolis 500. Ignored
wife is discovered in secret
relationsbip with rival driver.
Side plot shows poignant story
of strong stepfather-step.son
relationship.
Wutbering: Heights t G ) :
Emily Bronte's classic tale of
the melancholy-tragic love af-
fair of Heathcliff a n d
Catherine. Wild moors of
Northern England a a.ntury
ago are the setting.
FAAtJLY
Cromwel: fG ): Epic story ()r
England's Oliver Cromwell
"The Citizen King," and his
struggle lo overthrow King
Charles 1. Stars Alec Guin-
ness.
Fantasia tGt: Re-issue oC
D.isney film combining car-
toons and serious music (If
Leopold Stokowski conducUng
the Philadelphia Symphony
Orchestra.
On A Clear Day (GI: Movie
version of the Lerner-Lane
musical of re-incarnation star~
ring Barbra Streisand and
Yves Montand . Maybe an American Feder-A New Leaf (GP): Walter
Fifteen choirs from com-ation of Wealth woukf provide Matthau is a luxu ry hungry
munity colleges throughout similar immunitv from in-bachelor down to his last nunendo. The riCh DO have Southern California will gather quarter-million. Elaine May
Tora, Tora, Tora (G): Re-
creation of events preceding
Japanese surprise altack on
Pearl Harbor. Dual view of
the event treated more as pic-o
torial history than establishing
causes.
at Orange Coast College today their organizations, ho~'ever. plays the-rich love interest in
for a festival ol Chamber Perhaps even the scripwriters this slapstick comedy.
Choirs. ha ve heard of The MUJeum of Patton: Salute To A Rebel Modern Art, the Ford Foun-(GP · of th The afternoon session will I: Film portrait e * dalion, the Carnegie Fund . · w Id w II I k start at 2:30 p.m. and the or ar genera nown
evening session at ?:30 p.rn. .the list is long and honorable. as '"Old Blood and Guts"' Tht letter immediatelu
The public is invited to attend FIRST OF ALL, the rich showing him capable of in-ofter the titll indicates the
at 00 charge. need to get their own Scott tense profanity and as a rating given the picturt bt1
Fitzgerald to coin a phrase brilliant war st rate gist. the Mo tion Picture. Code. Each group will perform for such as "the poor are not like George C. Scott portrays Pat-The Code And Rating pro-
approximately 12 minutes. The us ... " But wouldn't they like ton . Karl 1i-1alden is General gram may be found on ont
combined choirs will join at to be! Omar Bradley. ()f tht motion picturt pages, the end of the festival in thret',--------------------------------mass pieces. These will be
conducted by Dr. Charles Hirt
or the· University or Southern:
California.
Dr. Hirt ls the adjudicator.
conductor for the festival, and
Dr. Burton Karson of
California Slate College al
Fullerton is the critical com-
mentator.
MOVIE MT1NOS
RJR PARENTS AND
\'DUNG PBlPlE
1"'9~., ... ,.,.,,,.,.~ _...,,.,._,,.. _ _,,., __ ,.,.....,.,,,,,_~
AU .UIS AOWITllD
,_..I A\od1tlll:H
""" fl=iii1 All ASll ADMITTfD ~ '-·t ~· Svnatttl
--------------------
···························· -·•-!Ill .. --............... .. _.,. ____ ..._.,_
NOW!
ONE WEEK ONLY!
THEATRE Plos
W11/1 Dis11ey's Fe11tMrtllt
"Dad , Cao I Borror The Carr'
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOW!!
The9by
~·d---ClillulltlNtakl,...··f'ilb7f'.,... .... _ "FASCINATING!
_m PDlm SCIENCE FICtlDN THllUEI
Tl COME TD THE SCREEN IN YWS !"
...... *°""1h )'OW"~
-Jvd,l,, C#ltt. ~.,... 'rwl: ~.,..
A mf Ml l'llOOOCTION
=AIDROM:DA S1RAIN
--q...,,,,, ..... --....
-
~... --
•
•
.. ,
•
Lynda Day
· She's the newest addition to the "Mission Impossl·
ble" adventur&drama when it Starts 1n the fall sea·
son. Her role will be that o( an urbane, &ophiaticat-
ed woman whose mastery o( disguise 11 fantastic.
Live
Theater
"Spider's \\'eb"
An Agatha Christie come,a,-
murder is on str"e at .the La-
guna Moulton PlayhOUH, 808
Laiuna Canyon Road, Lapna
Beach, at 8:30 p.m. Tutt, -
Sat., through May 8. 'l\a.,
etvations -494-0743.
"Abie'• lrilb Nose'•
••nie Nlgbt Before Xmas"
Two one act plays on stage
at the NUty Theater, 307 Main
St., Huntington Beach, at 8:30
p.m. Frl.-Sat .. through liiay 1,. Reaervations 536-91511.
"Patterns"
Rod Serllng's d r a m a on
lltage at Long Bf!ach Com-
munity Playhouse, 5021 E.
Anaheim Ave., L<ing Beach,
at 8:30 p.m. Frl.-Sat. through
May 8. Reservations -(213)
l.13'o536.
"Ra1bomon"
Japaneee-style drama on
stage at the Huntington Beach
Playhouse, 2110 Main St.,
liuntlngton Beach, Fri.-Sat. at
8:30 p.m. through May 15. Res-
ervatlons-53ft..8861 .
1'Tbe Man1•1e Go Round"
'nle marital comedy bl on
1tage at the San Clemente
Community Th e a l e r , 202
Avenlda Cabrlllo, San Cle-
mente, 'l1lurs .• Sit. at 8:30
p.m. through May 22. Reser-
vaUons -.(92..(M65.
"Luv"
Isadora
Duncan
. Profiled
uadora Duncan (11'18-1127),
the .•namboyant daocer and
ptr10nallt7 who -made
tieadllnes 8Cl'Oll the United
Slatee and E.,..,pe, wW ' be
pc)rtrayed on:NET Play~'s
.. lladora Duncan -The Big·
gest Dance r in the World" this
Saturday at 8:30 p.m. on
KCET, Channel 28.
Vlvian Pickles, who will be
seen in the forthcoming fUms
''Nlc.bolat and Ale.undra" and
"Harold and 1'faude.'' play• •
the American dancer' who •
abandoned the classical forms
of dance and became a major
influe nce on tbe development
of modern dance in Europe
and America.
Isadora, who attained as
much or more fame in her day
for her tragic and scandal-rld-
den personal life as for her
art was In a literal sense a
big' woman, and even In this
respe c t she was un·
conventional as a dancer.
Borg; in San Francisco, she
attained her major success
abroad -London. Par is, Vien-
na. Budapest and Germany.
After openlng a dance school
for children in Bf!rlln, 1he was
invited to Rwsla to ttart a
similar school. Wblle she was
there, she married 1 RusatB.11,
but was aubsequently baniahed
from bis homeland for her
outaPoken anti radical ideas.
Later, tragic accidents
claimed the lives of her two
children and her huaband, and
Isadora her1eU was strangled
in another accident while
riding in an open·alr car when
the long scarf she wore
became caught under a rear
wheel.
"Isadora Duncan" is a
• "The Big Knife'' presentation of NET Division,
.; A ·Hollywood drama Is on E d u c atlonal BroadcasUng
. itage at the Wtstmilllter Com-Corporation, produced by the
•rnunl ty T ht a t e r • Finley BBC. Dirtcted and produced
School. Edward• at 1'rask by Ken RUIBell ("Women In
i\ve., Westminster at 8:30 p.m. Love ," ''The 1'fusic Lovers'').
Fri. • Sat. through May 15 _,........,a min.
Wlth an added performance on ~· • May , 22. Reservations -
-197-8315. . j--1
A romantic 1at1re Is on
1tage at South Coast Re per·
tory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Cos·
la Mesa. Fri. . Sun. at 8:30 p.m. through May 15. Reser-
vations -646-1363.
Caan Cast
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
James Caan "In play the role
of Ute elder ion. Sonny, in
Paramount'• movie venion of
Marlo Puw's besl·seller "The
Godfather."
AM9 C•llitl'M1n1Mll
'" "WUTHllUNe HEIGHTS" I•) ...
"SUNPLOWll• (•I
wtTll '-"' .. lMtll
OPENS FRIDAY
the hit
TONITI AT 6110 AND 9:10
'"Where's
Poppa?"
II l\JILIR .,.,,, '' I ,..r,.11lo 1, !
A"D AT 1111 ONLY
111 .... +-
COMTINUOUI IATUlDAY
AND SUNDAY P•OM 1141
LUV
comedy lty Murr•J Schlttal
,~out/1 ( ullsl /tr J< 1t1J11 ,..
• -o-: . '.,...-• -• • ..... .. . . . . ... . ' .
Tyro Film Maker
Event Scheduled
The film fuUvaJ for YOWllf
film makera, which started
John Lan«enecket'• ' ' T h e
Ressurrectlon of Bronco Billy''
on 115 way to an Academy
Award for best aubject, will be
prtaented agaln this year by
1tJ spoMOrs, the Broadway
Department Stores.
rnay have been entered In
previous conte!ls but cannot
have won an award. They can
be personal, ob jective,
1 u b Ii minal, documentary,
farcical , funn y , animated,
vocal or a hundred other
definitives but must reflect
creativity. Film can be
black • white or color a n d
Clnemedla 11, optn ei:~
cluJlvely to high &Chool and
college students, offers win-
ner• of the compeUtion ln\-
pressive cash prJus, scrten-inl recognition, and just
poulbly, an Academy Award.
· 8mm, super 8 or 16mm.
Entrt'es mUlt be non-pr~
fessiooal, not UNprofesstonal;
'Canteen'
At Ivar
The hlt mutlcal. "Victory
Canteen," based on tbe frantic
forties and starring Patty
Andrews or the f a m o u s
Andrews Slaters, is now in the
fourth month at lhe Ivar
Theatre ln Hollywood.
One of the very few orlglnal
musicals to emanate I n
Hollywood, plan11 are now
underway to take the show to
New York and Lu Vegas, •c-
cording to writer-producers
Mill Lanen, Bob Lauber and
Dick and Bob Sherman.
The show Is performed
nightly at 8:30 p.m. (except
l\fondaya), with two
performances given on Sun·
days al 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.
.... .
Plus • Ba<bro Slni•md In
"oNAQEARDAYm~
. ' • t IJW/\Rf>S
CINEMA VIEJO
'•'< "l(<.<1 IWY • 1A ••1 ""~ '"
~ \[\ ~·· 11
F1nt prize in Cinemedl1 Il
is $1000; second, $500; third.
$2:50. Five honorable mentlona
offer $50 each. In lhe special
awards category, best !Crlpt
will be awarded $250; belt
mU!ical score or aound tract.
'250; and best class project,
~-Winning films will be shown
to hJ&h school and college au.
dleJlCes ln California , Nevada
ond Arizona during the Fall
•Film Festlval In August.
Judging of the films will be
on the basla Of creative lrn·
agination, o v e r • a 11 presen-
lallon, general technical pro-TEN-YEAR.OLD jug· flc\ency and camera work.
Winners v.·ill be notllled by gling sensation, Albert
telegram on or before August Lucas, joins Liberace
IO, 1971 ; non·wlnnlng films and Fay !l-1cKay, sing.
will be returned after Augwt ing-comedienne, to-
15Entries in Clnemedla JI night at the l.J:ls An·
muat be accompanied by a11 geles Ahmanson Thea·
official entry form which I.I ter in a lO·day run of
available at all Broadway a glittering Llberace
atores In the executlve offices &hO\V.
and received either at one of r==========.I the Broad~·ays or ibe firm'•
headquar ter s -The
Broadway, Youth Office, 3380
North Mission Ro1d, Loi
Angeles, Califomla 90031, on
or before June 28, 1911.
THE BEST
R11d1nhlp poll1 prov• "P1•·
llllh" i1 on• of +h• world's molt
popul•r c:omic: 1lrip1. R•ed it
"•ily in the DAILY PILOT.
DI KVAH DYKE
PiPPA SCOTT
BOB NEWHART
~
HIT SCHINPLAY
flllott Gould
Ooncild Suth•rfond
ill-i\S·ll/
,..... ''lll.IU PitDla
Ali Mac&raw
RyanO'Neal
... And Forgii'I
7l!tm Th<H-
1Te._,;.
DDLIDRS'
WIVES • -DYAN CANNON
' RI ARD CRENNA COLOR· from Columbia "'1urtl
Meet Henry & Henrietta ...
the laugh riot of the year.
W~lTll MATTHAU & !LAINE MAY
·"A itii"i.i"ar
MOVIELAB
"\\llli~ .\ll.\111\1:
Till .. \11\'I '.'"'
• TICIDOCOLOa CW: 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
Frldl1, Mu 7, 1971 DAILY PILOT Jl9 '
Art . ' 1sts.
Exhibit
Opening
VeraatWty and variety will
be featund In tho "Eight
Artists Expo,.d .. nhlblt open·
Ing May a at Laguna Beach
Art Auoclatlon Gallery, 307
Oiff Drive, Laguna Beac h.
Co<baJrmen and exhibitor1
Robert 'fborn and Jay Willia
have rounded up Southland
aritsts Jury AndeI'IOll, John
deHeru, Jay Maddox, Earl
Roddy, Williaa;i Wegman and
William 1t1ahan to Joln them in
the 6how dedicated to new
talent.
Five of the eight youn1
arti!Jts are fllle arts faculty
members al college level; all
have been featured in I~
po~t sbowa at such diver~
instltutlom. u the Whitney,
deYounj, Frye, Newport
Harbor and Phoenix museW111.
"We anticipate a very ex·
citing ahow!" txelalma Direc-
tor Enman. He 1ays the
Gallery visitor may look
forward to seeing and hearing
the exhibit, inasmuch aa a
wide range of contemporary
materials wlll be utlllzed, In-
cluding video tapea, flexible
re1W, polyesters and en-
vironmental Ugbt mediu as
wt~ u modern metal!,
NATIONAL GENERAL THIATRIS
ACAOIMY AWAMJ SHOW
Winner 8 Academy
of-Awards
INCLUDIM•
BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR
GEORGE C. SCOTT PATTON
IM'°RTANT MA.JOI STUIMO
PllYllW TONlaKT.AT l:lf P.M,
"MASH'" will Mt M ....... "'" """' ... .. PATTON" wlll M ..._.
et S:H a 11100 P.M.
SATUIDAT I IUNDAT
1:00 P.M.
SPICIAL CHILDUN'I
M.ATINll
r
l uy IL Stll It.• Try i.tfll fasttst rtsponse In the Wtst agalftd yu
. OWR ~ T.St orm ... ,·hne Ads, where the act/on Is, /11 Satll>dlr(1
DAILY PILOT.
NATIONA~ GENERAL THEATRIS
Important
major studio preview.
tonight at·lsJO P.M.·
'l •• • •
SOUTH COAST PLAZA .THEATRE I
3410 BRISTOL, CQST-!l·MESA
"MASH" WILL NOT II lflOWlt ·THIS EYENINCO
"PATTON" WILL II SHOWN AT 1:20 AND 11 P.M.
A Blake Edwards lilm
starring
C\VilllamGHolden
O~eal
61CarlMalde11
. inastory
ol the Old West
'
' .
•
•
'!
,,
3fJ DAil Y PILOT frldQ, M11 7, 1971
' .~TL~ . . .
CHR¥SLER.l ·PL¥MOVTH!IMPERIAL:
' . . ·I ' .
BQHD:,.~EW· :'71 CRl,C :ET
•
_r;---ATLAS
· SllYICE
DVAltTMENT
'~, ~ ..
welcerMS .. f.n~ ·honors all
C!irpler Cerpqrotion Yehicles
,...irlnt Ml'Jice and warranty
...tr, "9•nlles1 of where cor
wa purchased. ·we h o 11 o r
Moster Chor9e,, lonkA111eri·
cclrd, Corte 'llonche, ·
American Express
Lt SAIRt 4 DR. H.T
VI, aulom1f;,, radio,
~a1lar, power ,111rin9
l br1~11, ,;, condi·
tioninljl. llMAbl7!
s495
and Diner'•
Club.
AMERICAN SEDAN
•6 cyli11d1r, 1ulom1tic,
r1dio, l111l1r, low, low
rnil11. tox: 115 )
USED
CAR
'68 Y.W. '67 PLYMOUTH '68 ·TOYOTA· '67 OLDSMOBllE '68 CHRYSLER
IUO
4 1p11d lr1111rni11ion,
11clio, h11!1r. !YQA-
17tl
'1295
. ,,
Vt, 1ulom1tic, power
1l11r1119 • br1k11 ·win·
dow1 • 1111<, 1ir COii•
ditio11in9 vinyl roof.
!Y1J401 I
.
COllONA SIDAN
l1111lif11I 11cl cir wi!h
1ul0tn1lic lr11111"i11io11,
IWJMll41 [
,4.95 ..
\
CUTLASS SUPlllMI
Z dr. 1port coup•, 'II,
.fulom 1tic, r1dlo, h1•l-
1r, pow1r tf~1ri119 I
.,..... r hlf1 w1lh.
"lnyl top, •i~ cortditioa·
i119. IUOW07.I
JOO 2 DOOR H.T.
VI, 1ulom1lic, 11dio,
. i111t1r, pow1r 1t11ri119
& br1k11, 1ir, vinyl
top. IXOA752)
51595 ., ~1995
'68 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT
'II, 111tom1lic, r1dio,
h11f1r, · pow1r 1!111•
i119, 1ir conditionin9,
vinyl top. l WGPl26 )
THI GllAT NIW 1971 <HaTSLllS
A-Ill YMOUTHS Altl SITTIN4 ALL·T.,.
SAL .. s liCORDI AT AT~At.. PINI' SILlCTION
AND OUI ALWAYS· LOW, 1.,0W PRICIS
· /,\IAN VOLUMI SAVlftGS ON
ALL-MODILS.
• 'SER •. f:-YL2911E"l20577
. .. ·. ~,~;,."
f ABULOUS~Ji~1:$ALl,:.
d "th all . is over·loade w1
Our inventory • • ns of the fabu·
models and color comb1natkl st be moved.
They mu lous 1971 Furys. f the right itinCJ or If you've been wa Now is the
w Fury • • · deal on a ne • You're the boss!
time. Come on in • • •
NEWl'ORT SEDAN
VI , 1ulom1lic, t1dio,
~1al1r, power 1i1or:n9,
i bra •••. 1ir condi·
tionin9 . !NOYIO l )
'69 Chevrolet
' CA.MARO SUPll sn.
'II, 1ulom1tic, r1dio,
h11t1r,' power 1l11r-
i119, buc•et 111h, con -
1011, vi11yl. top. IXSK-
"$2295
MUSTANG-
6 c$if"~'· .,U;o,tt-. ...
er, immacufjr.. 1171·
OBW l
'995
'69 CHEVROLET
MALllU 2 DR. H.T •
YI, 1ulom1tic, r..dio,
h11 .. r, power 1l11ri1111
I br1•11, 1ir condi·
tio11i119, vinyl top.
IYONJ40l
. . . .
..
• . ' .
•
.
' <.
~ , . • ~
~
' '
•
•
.·
I
•
r
•
•
•
.. NEW1971
$
...
FULL
PRICE
IM-~n·flU1ar ATBSOl FOD
••• OR IF YOU ·PREF~ OUR'~SY TERMS:
FULL
PRICE
~lf9141997o3)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT WILSON fORD
•• :oR IF YOU PREFER OUR EASY TERMS
™" ......... ~-.,,..,_,.-............. ...-.~ """"""' .. ..
'71 i;. .... -.. -............. ---'"""" , .. :i. --· o.i ... ... _... .......... u,, ............. --· ....... ~ -... '11 lk-• .. ~ -·-I••'<> poy cool\, lhe "'M e<u h prN:o io ortly Jlll7.90 Nw.ludi~o ..,1., IO.,
?I !icoftoo.' AfllfllUAl Pll(INTACE IATE 11 .25% .
NEW'71 T·BIRD LA II DAU
With Brougham
Interior
., .......
~68 f:s~-~~~,~~~,~~~<lo, . .,,,.,(IS~ $J 88
frld.iy, May 7, 1~71 DAILY ,ILl!T l}J
BRAND NEW 1971
ELDORADO 8' CABOVER CAMPER
omplcte camper pack?ge equipt. with scove, Jink, icebox, dinette
queen size bed & much more. No. 111087.
& LONG BED FORD PICKUP
'68 Ford F-100, V-8, 4 speed, r adio, heater, step rear bumper. I
p IOYRD300S3 Cat;r. 728%A,
$
COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE
FULL
PRICE
S88 i• the 1010! dn, pyml 'ond S88 it !ht to!ol mo. pyml, Incl. 1011, '11
Ileen•• and oil lino~t• <ho19e1 011 oppro~ed credit for 36 moo.
Deferred p~m1. p<i<e ;, $32!.6 ind. oll foflon<e thorytl. loxe1, '71
lic:•fl•• or of 'f'O« prele1 to pay to1h, full t o1h price ii S272S.•O Incl
1o!t• lo• I. '71 hr eo•t.
ANNUAL ,llCENT.lGE IATE 12.25% , '6 7 ~:~•~.~~~ .... ;,;,,,,,.;., ... ,. .. luJC.$988 EW'JI "-1MfT ANGH~=
'6 7 ~~.~.~~~~ .. ~,~~.~.T.?.~ ... 1nx. $9 as· ·~~ ~" . ,·ss FULL '
6. ,.FORD GALAXIE 500 $1288 oro1Lo110002> . . . -'It. ,1, PRICE I .••. TP. Vl,fo<to.-, '''"'''"'"1 ........ . IMMEDIATfJIEl\VIRT A , . .-~ :. • ... . la9,rdio,healtrll'S6Y16S921 1-------------=~_._...._ _____ _
1 NEW '71 .. GAi.AXii
M • • ~ .• O 1, '67 !~~~~ .. ~~~~.~~ ........... $1388
h1x 111tn11. 111161 .
SAYE
$1600
'68 !~~~.~!!!~, OofO. fA ... fo<lo'Y $1388 •ir 'cHlllltl•l•1, ,. .. r 1tNrl.,, '''""
wlAll•••··'· lrHf.lk .. M24,ACf fully equ.,,,ed with foctory oir, ... ....;;;...;;:;....======----------------/6. 9 ~.~E.~~A~~!~~.~~ ..... , $1488
52788 IJ54HI 12413 crul1e-o-malic Tron•., power
1tHring/broko1/wi11dow1 & 6-
woy 11ott, AM /FM 1!ttto with
power onltnno, whi11wo1l1 &.
""ut h mo1e. (Striol
#JJ8AN 106J32)
FROM FACTORY LIST Jmmedjate Delirert
WllKIN~ RINTAL lltlCIALll
1971 MUSTANG • "AIR CONDITION E:.:D'-'..,"T<:"r."--,
From 4 P.M. Fridoy
to 10 A.M. Monday
First 100 Miles Free .•1900
SPICIAL WEEKi. T & MOllT
VWBUG
A•t., 411,.t11,1t .. t1r. Uc1111 lDT ·Jtl.
I ·.o, , ,. ' ..... 'I
· TRIUMP.ft'·G;T.~pe •
Htr4 tt fi!HI hit l11t,.rt. (VfS.tlt)
llMter, lit"'' Yll-4&5
• Foto GaLax'ie 500 $t 6.89.
V·Si ••••;tr1111., P'9wtr •t•trh11, r14i1, · ' ~. ' ll~ttr. Uctn•I 612-S. • : '" . . ' ' ·9·· PONf.tAC!lJ: .0. $1·•79· 8 VI, l14i1, Huter, ''"'' 1t1erlllf, l1cll1t 11111. lllit 1ew. (1SH·04S )
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FULLPRICI
NEW 1971 ECONOLINE YAN
$2688
ORDEI! rolilis NOW
67 £f!!f!,~ .!9~ .. ~T~~ """
thr.11°111t. IYJl 1521
' ' . :-,. "'" ,. '· ,,: 9; DODGE VA ~ ;~ .
v.1, • ,,,,,,, h•r• t• fi1I
llHS41)
FULL PRICE
,,,. IROt,!CO i:t:lu $2188 ' •J tptff, 1lr cllHllltlHl11, 4 whul 4rl••• '
' ••clitt 11111, 11111 t•·I••• trl11t . l lce111 •••·260
:ti D41l V PILOT
DICK TIACY
TUMILEWll!DS
~ ...
Mun AND JEFF
YOU SAID >l:lU w.>1no
'TO MARRY ANYGIRLvllST
SO YOU COULD ~VE A
flOMEUFE
~~~R
l<NOWA
GAL-~
/ \
JUDGE PARKER
HERE, nL SIGN
A BL>.NK CHECK
AMP VOi FILL IN
TME NECESSl.RY
Mla!NT, JOMNNY!
PLAIN JANE
\l{ISHlll<O,
IVEl.L
frld.v, M1t 7, 1971
J EFF, I'D LIKE
YoUTO MEET MISS KLl ~K&
MISS !(LINK, . ' ·
J EFFJ
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R .•. POWER !
ACROSS
l Bug It t •ll
5 Took ''llOlt
J D LrYfnf ind
Ltvrnson
14 Aid and ·-
15 l 1wfr
16 Operilic
hi9h1!9hl
17 ErKI
18 "Hold --·!"
20 lmpro,.ptu :
2 •0tds
ZZ lfllt rttl:
Abbr .
2J Eltcltonic
device 24 Cosmetic 2& Means of
trans·
portlltO"
27 Tak lrtt •ttJ
111111 drinks
:30 Stttltd
14 Narro•
channtla
ol •altr
)5 l ak t llvtly
191ln 16 SM1ll: Sutfl1
17 Y1nlsht d
31 Body ol
Slit •lltr
40 Ytr'I 11101t
pencil
41 "••tauttnl
Cht ck
42 Hit
4) ti . A111•ICI"
cownlr'I 45 Add tugtr to
47 Ont •ho
wor t s •Ith ,,.,
•
•
41 Spanish
wile It
4• Ctay :
lnl0<111al
SD Rtmovt
wool llOflll
l http ~l Evll:
Prtlii
54 ltgal t vffll
58 Alrican
animll
•l ft un oul
of 9tar
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&4 -· btnt :
Not wr it
65 Capt
66 Wlnd1.
Slang
., P'1tllt d
OOIN
1 Tht O'Hara
ho mt
2 R11ting
) Cltil lon
4 811t
5 P1onou"
Ii Allt clionatt
7 Oc.currt nc r
I S1uc'I
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collrgt -"
10 V11 t arid
a~a of
norlht rn
A1T lt1
11 81"~ ll Somtthing
s hOrttl
thin otltflfs
ol its c 11ss
IJ Powdt1y
starch
obta!ntd
frO M I p.llm
19 Trail
21 Fi1htrm1n'1
ntct ssl IJ
25 Part s of
shot s
Z6 Kin d ol
pi pr
27 Passes
through 1
scrttn
28 On t of 1hr
wllt's loll s zi; us N1v~1
.A.cadt111y
lttshman
JO Gr;assJand
31 A99r191 lt
32 Avoid by
cunning
33 E~c h1dt
]5 Hi9h
spirits·
lnlor1111I
~ ls ablt
5 7 71
40 ShOWlnlJ
~COlll
42 Kind of lo~
4~ lrl l"t
tnlranc r
411 l'.11 111!> tht
s pirits of
47 Small 11rt f'l1
pl~n\1
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50 Avo id
51 Tortoist 'i.
oppontnl
52 Units of
t nffll)'
51 F lll·lopptd
hill
55 Objt cl of
worship
Sr. C•madian
j)fOYilW:t
Abbr .
57 Show lht .. ,
59 ContainPr
bO Make an
1\ltmpt
ly Tom K. Ryan
' .. J4 .
ly Al Smith
IF YOU ,.HINKIM
CIOING'lbMA~RV
A PERF'liCT
S,.RANGER
YOOR <:RKZ'//
ly Harold Le Dou
1Nq PENTM.LY, l TM INK VOii SMOULP TMJ..T
SlE PEAN RILl.Y! Ma. AN OLP Wct!LCJ BE ~1ENP OF TME ·FA.1A1Lv ~ rLL GREAT •• I
MAl(I A PMONE c>.LL. TO ~I .IA
RIGMT NOW ANP TEU. MIM I
YOU'RE OM 'IOUI W,..Y
OtlT THERE !
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
;
J
!
Furu~
Su1<&EONS oF
AME.RICA
STEVE ROPER
WILL ! I WASlri/'T Sl/U
YOU'D 6HOW THIS
,vcai.Jlh'(i., PEGGV.'"'
ACCO\J"1 Of' ··Y-IOI
·•LAST M16H1/
t CAW'T THINK Cl ~
l1'>1G TIW IWPIMED
LAST NIGMT WMICM
'M:M.t> MAI(£ ME S~Y AVtAV. MIKE .'
.. -;,-
U'L AINll
n!LLOW ~. ni' r.tCTS
O' TI-4' LIFE O' MAl-JL'i 5TMILE'I
15 t..o+I ~N' A.EVEAL.U> TO
OUR CH IU.UN !!
,_,
SAU Y IANANAS
-
GORDO
.,
~~1 '/oor= ANOt\16~ 61',t.~ ,.ONI ~1'5
J'!toM1'/ w= CJNCO Dtr.
·~ll'tl'. 1&"6!
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
-· ... -' -,.~
MAVD
e,t.IJ.i'
By John Miles
By ~II
-I THINK
,.HEY'lrE F'OR w><eN we
H•MO THE
PATll!MT
T><I! ISll.L.-
~"'i .• t -1 '"'1\"911,.,,, ••
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ly Charin M. Schllll
n 1;
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ly Al Capp .
ly Chaitn lanotti
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ly Ferd Johnson
11"'n""17"~-in-rrT .JUST IN 11M~ !
~ ll '·
MR.MUM
,_.
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P!I:!* . S.1
~llYl!Ot>Y ICllOWS Y/I
SHOLILt> t>i'Y.C~s.AiJ
A MOUSE·
If '!toger lolen
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,,,du, •11 '· 1971 DAIL V l'!LOT J3
Everyone Has
Som eth ing Th at
Someo ne El•e Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Fi n cl It, T racl e It
Wit h a Want Acl The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
General
l~I I _,,,.. l~[1 ~! __ ... _ .... ..:;, l~;;;;,e I ~[ __ ... _-~!~~,el I~! I ~ I _ .... "°'*' lorSll• I~ I _,... ... I~ I
I Gener1I
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NO DOWN TO VETS
Gtn•r1I Gener•I
0
G_•_n_•_••_• ______ 1 G9i1•ral l G•n•r•I G..,eral
iijjiiiijjiiiijjiiiijjiiiijjiijjiiiijjiiiijjii_.iijjiijjjji * MESA VERDE * I GI $200. GI Pool Home
P ele Barrell f<eaft'I
10~:, Down to 0U1crs, large 3
bcdr1n \Oo'/hnh·••d firs, bltns,
2ilx20 rumpw; r rn, blck wall
f'ncl re&r yard. VA appra.LS·
cd a! , .
MACNAB IRVINE Lo\leQo_. imniac. bonle. l.st I Thal's rhe total cosl to move l Bedroom, 2 811, hrdwd
• ~~ermg.. Beaut grounds. Into this: clean, vacant 4 BR, noon;, carl)('ts, dti>S· In:;.
• patio. 3 BR, I< family 2 BA ho~. Like new cond, kilch. huge liep. family rm.
Salisbury
i;:l·~lly
$24,600 Fl NER HOMES rG,·· 7 bat!Wufi5'900 \\'/w crpts. d11>i1. e1c. Pric-p\ua pool. N.E. Coftta ?-1c11a. prejl'nfj
5 BR & FAMILY
Sp11cious Conten1porary i\fe~a PIER & SLIP
OUR EXCLUSIVES
BALBOA ISLAND eorge •mson ed 10 sell, SZ7.500. 129~. &11 or tcr~.
1613-43.iO REALi:i.~ Eves. -~.~~~LINS & WATTS .,..... ..,._, Eves. 9G2-tilll!9 PROMISE HER EVERYTHING
AND GIVE HER THI S It AR B 0 R HIGH·
L.'\NDS HOME! 2024 Ber.,'l'J Lane has 3 bed·
rooms. l o/4 baths, is in inimaculate conditio n
\•:ith new carpeting and lovely landscaping.
$34,500. Open Sat. & Sun .. 1·5.
PENINSULA BAYFRONT
CHAR~UNG OLD ENGLISH 3 BF.DROOM
HOME -\Vith magnificent 52 fl. vie1v front·
age, separate Summer house, trees and love·
Jy garden, pier and floa t. $179.500.
CUSTOM WATERFRONT
BEAUTIFUL VIEW - 3 bedroom. den. wel
bar, for 1nal dining room. gou rn1et kitchen
v.•ith breakfast area. Pi er and slip. including
boat. $119,500.
TERRIFIC RECREATION · LAND
BUTTERFIELD AREA-Spectacular vie'v of
Vail Lake -Your own mountain top. Gentle
terrain, highway front age. Acreage from 20
to 240 acres. $650 to $850 per acre. Contact
Bill Bents or Ric k Rickard.
BUILDING SITES:
R-'2 lot -wi th nice 3 bedroom h ou.~e. In·
eludes plans for more units. $28,500.
2 -lots -Bonaire. Ne'''port Beach custom
area. $19.250 & $20,000 .
Hillside -Ba y and ocean vie\Y. ~18,500.
Lot -Corner Gleneaglc & I·lamillon. $1 3.·
500.
72 Foot Peninsul• Bayfront. S293.800.
Office Open Saturdays & Sundays
PETE BARRETI REAL TY
1605 Westcliff Or., N.B.
642-5200
G•n•ral General
-BAY & BEACH REALTY , Inc.
'22 Ye1rs of Service
In The H1rbor Are•
WATERFRONT WITH SLIP
Enjoy the life on the bayshore \vith a sandy
beach & your O\Yn boat sli p. 3 Lge. bdrms.
&. 3 ba ths plu s 3 car gar age. S69.500 \Vith 10~0
dO\V O.
BEST OCEAN VIEW PLUS POOL
Rela x in the hid. pool. then enjoy the mag·
ni!icent 180 degree vie1v from this 4 bdrm ..
immac. home. Only $52.500.
CAMEO SHORES PLUS VIEW
A truly splendid 4 bdrm. home. priced to sell
fast. The view is exceptional & the pool re-
freshing. S74,500.
IRVINE TERRACE •2
Some bay & ocean vie,v. on Bayadere. one
of the a r ea's finest. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths \Yilh
2 bdrms. each wing. ~9.950.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-S
974 Sandcastle, Harbor View Hills
4 Spacious bd rn1s .. beaut. kitch. w /a vie\v
brkfst nook. Dbl. frplc .. !or the lge. living
r m. & fam ily rm. 3 Baths & 3 car garage.
$69,500
675-3000
I
BLACK LIMPID
POOL PAD
! G1n•ral
A PRODUCING
195 ACRE
ORANGE GROVE
Vf'rdl? hon1e on large ror-Dover Shores. Brick and ~·ood in vite you to
nc,r 101. D1vurcr Sa.le. Sul>-enter this charming custom built bayfront
mit offen. VA appraised home. The owner chose this lot over all
at · · · · $42 150 othfrs. Every room has a spectacular VIEW,
3 DELUXE even the gourmet kitchen. 4000 sq. ft. _ lg.
4-PLEXES Fam. room -5 BR --A tremendous home
2 Bn and 2 BR l\P15. Ney,·. for Y?U an d your friends to enjoy.
port BcaC'h. s12.ooo dn DE CORA TORS HOME
$72,500 Newport Island -Pier & Float. 2 BR & den.
Fabulous kitchen. Shown by app'tonly. Please -i • call Mrs. Fay. 642·8235 or 548-6966. • -1-• I ~ BALBOA PENINSULA
R AL €lose lo Bay Launching RAf\fP. Tennis Club
642-1771 Anytim• and Ocean. 5 BR home opposite Park. Top
1 -quality construction. Reduc ed to $95,000.
LAST ONE IN!!?? A VERY LOVELY HOME
You·u hrar !hill olten wl!h
lhis fantastic, custon1. heal·
rd, filtered ~1mn1ing pool
complel~ with J acuui and
surrounded by df'cking and
covered patio. Oh, there's
also a b1g 4 bedroom and
on a secluded tree lined street -as you
step from your car - your heart will be cap-
tured by this English brick home cro,vned w/
heavy shakes. Immaculate "'ithin -carpeted
& draped regardless of cost. 3 BR -LR -
DR -FR. $71,000. Open Sunday 1-5. 1615
Lincol n Ln .. Newport Beach.
fan1 1ly room horn" 100. OWNERS SAY SELL NOW I
You'll hf> surprist'd_ al 1~hat l.g. FR, F'ormaJ DR. Convertible Den . 3 BR's.
)'Ott can it!I for S35.900. Panoramic VIE\V. 2·story LR. Inspect and
brin~ an orfer. Asking $79.500.
COATS THE BEST & BEAUTY TOO WAL~ACE High ?1.1 the Hill overlooking Ne\Yport Bay _
REALTORS li1agn~f1cent VIE\V. 3 ~R. 3 Ba. -fine wood
m..tl.CT paneling. Owner leaving area. Op~n Sat. &
--.-Sun. 1-5 p.m. 801 Kings Road, Ne \V port
(Open Eveningl) Beach. Shown by app't during \Yeek. $69,500
LOCATION PLUS
\Valk lo "'ESTCL!Ft' shop-
pini;: center, f\1ARJNERS
~hool. puhlic library, 1\1/\R·
INERS PARK and renn1 s
courti;. Near Harbor High·
land Thf'e<.' Bdrm. t 1vith 2tr
x 22· addilion to Miitr. Bd·
rn1. ·1 T"·o R111h home "'ilh
Jar~r n!ar hving room ovrr-
-pro perty clear -o\vner may carry 1st
T.D.
MACNAB -IRVINE
642-8235 675-3210
1010 Bayside Drlv• 901 Dover Drive
Newport Beach
took1ng gleammg heated and General
fillert"d pool. All lh1s for 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
only $36.950 . llURR\'.
t:vrnlng~ Call 5-18-326J
$183. PER MONTH
PAYS IT ALL-
Principal, in1i"res1. t;i.xrs, in-
surance, on 3 BR. 2 B;i. Vfl
reposSt>ssion. Priced lx'lo\v
markrt a! $22,000. AnYont'
can buy . 1~·11h this low do"'"
paymr. To M"r call 540-JJ j l
10pcn eves. 1
MISS iON
IMPOSSIBLE I
To rind a buyrr \l'ho belirvci:
h" can slill grt a sharp. 1
year young, 3 bedroom bar.
gain ll'ith thick shag car-
pets, patio. built-Ins, dish·
11·ashcr. and jog 10 lht-
efinJa J,,/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
12 Lindi Isl• Oriv•
Elegant ne\v 5 BR. 41n ba. home w/formal
din. rm .. fam. rm., \ve t bar. Impressive en-
try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500.
26 Linda Isl• Drive
Decorator furnished. 5 Br. 5 ba th home fac-
ing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready
for immed. occupancy. W /dock $200,000
52 Linda Isle Oriv•
Cust. 6 BR .. study, 5 bath home \Y/4 Crpl cs.,
circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Shown by appl. ........ $215,000
107 Linda Isl• Drive
5 BR. 3 baths: fam. rm., form . din. rm. 2
F plcs .. Rm. fo r pool. Dock. By appl. $145,000
Waterfront Lots
No. 44: .108 Ft. on \rater ...... .
No. 76: 3 car garage. Reduced to ..
$125,000
$ 77,000
For Compl•t• inform1tion on 111 homea &
lots, ple11• c1ll:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642--4620
bcach. \V0\V-S23.500!. Should General
yoi: accrp1 this n11ss1on? 1 General
Walker & Lee s1000 LESS THAN ;;;R;;;;ea:;;;d;;;;y;;;;in=Au:;;;g;;;;us;;:;t 1
RC'11Jtor.~
1682 r.•"''" APPRAISAL , 111'> R"'·415.i o' :-t4(1..5l10 1·errific J BP. 2 Ba homr l L.ARGE ROO~l!i. <4 bedroom ~ ~ '• 1 Mth phi., po\\·clcr room on quirt cul-Or-sac. Heavy d , b 11 ft ,.1 "-~ . 11n :r a 1 o 1 c • ...,n. 'NW
i>hakr roor. a.Ii elect bltins, sq n ol luxury l1v1nc 1\llh
O\VNER H0.\1E 11•1lh near
nf'w, nirl! 2 bdrm. apl. On
' Opal, close to South Bay.
$6:),000
'· I ON SAPPJ-llRE. nr. Ntlrlh
Bay; 4 Bdrm. home pills 2
bd rm. ap1, S76,j()Q
Salisbury
Rea If.}'
I Jl.i MARJNE AVE. 673-6900
BALBOA !Sl.AND
COLLEGE PARK
-BEAUTIE>-
(l •. 2366 Colgate -~ BR +
(am1J,v rn1., shag carptt;,
"aterlalJ in ~ear yard,
$30,500
(Z.) 3J8 \\'es1brook. "I BR w/
pool, largr-corner lot.
$32,500
1::.) Zl.I Tulane • f SR 1·11s·
l()mized homt'. 2200 11q. ft.
or luxury Jiving. See !he
\'l!!"y heiil.
Newport
••
F•irview j
646-1111
(anytim•) I
""""""'"""'='"""'""" I PAY TAXES??
RENTING??
N0\\,.5 the ti1nr to uivl'i;I In
a home 10 l!aVe on t""es
next yrar. Appl'OX. S30,00
per mo. :.av1ngs on thi! :t
bl'droom beauty. C.J.":i; no
monry nretled \\'1th 101111
p;iyml'nt ol approx. $161.00
prr month inc ludts all.
Home ha~ all that you nl'('fl
11 nd 1norr. fo'U LL P RICE is
$22.!NO. You 1•an't afford lo
rent any lon~er. C.Al ,I...
Walker & Lee
Rf'altor~ I :.ti!Kl llnrbor Blvd. 111 Adams
54:i-!1491 Opo:-n 'II.I ~ P,\f
NEWPORT BEACH
10-J. DOWN
Steps to beach, lmmacuJarc
home". 2 Story, 3 BR, targl'
mastf'r bedrm. \\'ith f1repl,
2\~ Ba . oversized Jiv1n:;
room 1v/lirepl, bl11n~. /'\e10.·ly
<lecoratP<I \Vlth new sha;i:
crpts !hruoul. db!. e;ar.
$48.000.
W. E . L1ch•nmyer
l86o Ne1vpor1 Blvd .. C.1\1,
Call 646-3928 Eve11: 673-1.)7.i
V.A. RESALE
:: qooPn-si7.Pd bt>droom~.
(;rra1 f'Xlra J11f!::c ctil-d('·l(llC
lot. Anyonr (·an lakr over
:.ubjr-ct lo VA IQ<l n 1vi1h 11
httle dah of 1:a~b and pay·
1nf'nl,11; of Slli4 per n1onth ·
1nrlude~ all. (;0 i\l/\N GO'
Walker & Lee HIDDEN
TWO STORY
Charm1nJ1: ~ bedroom home in
upper l\1csa Verde. La rge
family room, "·et bar. f\\"0
lireplaces. ()y:ncr leaving
area. A:i;king '48,JOO. Call
;..&G-2313.
lrg. ram. rm & oversiZe lo!. 100 fttr on ll\c vieo.v in Dov·
O.wner \\'ant11 OUl. will sac· 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams ~i~~c;,.i:i.s~d~c~~~a~r v~ ;1:.esp~~,~~:':.~~ :i.: :: ~,.i;,.[M9\ 0JH"n 'til 9 r~I
1-o·THEREAL
\'."\.. ESTATERS ' .,. '
dn VA term:i;7" Call 5'J&.j88() a.rate din_ing room. ~nusuaJ LIDO WATERFRONT
0 PoOI design. Come 1n and , PTS 32 LIO l pen eve.i.l walk rhru Jv11.n \Veils cu~· A ·• 0 0 NORD
tom home now under con-$140,000 Prlc«t with 1% h i
trucUon 11· not too la le / T.D. 6 Beaut. furn. unil•: ~o select· you; own colon ~ Ii car a:arage~ k util. room.
rJnorini;:. Excellent financing 80. Ft. on_ swimming beach.
iveilabJ,.. \V11l consider tra~e tor boat
Just h~ttd and in time for
11ummcr en1crlalnmcnr or
family tun. OVER • SIZE
bedrooms, California fin'-
pla~. gardr.n kitchen and
11·Attrlall. B11.rg11in priCC'd
S21.500! Fan!a11tlc term~ 10
Iii any one.
Walker & Lee
S.:. . .JOO acr('. ~uhmit lt'rm~ .. "I
honH's. Si0.000 in equipmen!.
Sl00.000 p!us in yrly pm.
tluctlon. t"'r(>rwa,v approach·
lng w11h1n t2 mi!f'. Vl'ntura [ • C~unty. 4 nulc:i; .'<> L a kc "HONEYMOON·
P1ru. Taxe"' SJ.i,000. .)r. 1 Call Kermit Rigg:;, aSl>OCialt> FOR TWO" . ,, _ I
PRICED UNDER-...
MARKET VALUE
4 BI R tri-leveJ in v:clui;Jve
flrca. f'orn1aJ dining, separ-
1\tr family room. ..:arpels
thruout, shakl' roof, Vacant
-ready to move itl, AU
terms including grtill a~-
11umable flfA Loan
Ivan Wells & Sons
Roy J, W•rd Co .
EXCLUSIVE AGENT;.;
103.1 Marine~ Drive 646-1500
or maximum $85,000 lge, f
BR. house.
Biii Grundy, Rltr.
8ll Dover Dr., N.B. 64.z..t620 _______ az '
EMERALD BAY
Fantastic white waler view
fron1 thl.11 lmm11c, 4 bdnn.
It. fam ily rm. home. Com·
munity pool.$, tennl11 cts.,
pri~·. beach; prlv. patml~
11trttl1 lor your M!cUrily. Sho"'"' by app't. only. $9.1,000
D•L•ncy R•el Est•t• 2S2fl l:, CGa.'11 Hwy., CdM
Realtors
7682 Edinger
<11~1 812-445.:i or 5-IQ.jJ40
MESA VERDE
A top ;oil courv-location
11•hh a ~8lhlak1n~ virw. :i
bfflrooms C>r' • MMroom~ I.·
den. :: W,lh•, !ormal din1r.i;
and breakfast 1"1)t)nl, Ir 111
al.o th!' m01.1 1nexpcn~l\'l'
JtOll course home In Me511
Vrrdt by far at Si8,5'Xl. Call
&tl).7171.
O THE REAL
''."\.. CSTATERS
' * SACRIFICE * l J'Ar.1. rm., 2 bl! .• 2 c.11r i:ar.
Aal\lmt VA loan of S26.2Jel:
Sl:'\80 toh1l do11·n
')llcsn\?~c'.Rcattr
546-5990 -Cj-FO UR PLEX
Sh<irp. Sharp 2 bt-droom, 2
hath ~p.B:CIOU~ Aflllrtmenr~.
t.:JCtrsi 111.r;t 11tcp riol\'n riv-
ing roomit wllh tirepla~.
Bu1lr-Jnoi nf cou~ No va-
c11ncy f.ac:tor. Clo~· to 11hop.
pin~ •nd fn-eway1. Priced
right at $6.l.!JOO. For an ap...
polntn1enr 10 iMpect ca I J
675--1930. •
•C<US'MlRTl<Yacnl REAi.TORS
.... , ... "'" ttl•OM
Bicycle to the hrach. Sharp
2 BR green shai crpl, curt.
drps' elec blflnii:, IR. cov'd.
patki, Ne1v FH A. Open Sat
It Sun.
MARINER REAL TY
8-12-~1 24 hri; An~ serv
~ --
Walker & ·Lee
20tJ Wr.~t(.iitf Drive
616-nll Open 'Ill 9 P~1
BALBOA ISLAND * BAYSHORES * 5 BEDROOMS Rf'modclM and ex:P1Lnded 3
(apt' Ox! filylt. 3 e .. ths Brd1'00n1 -J bath -10
Lo\PI• leafit $66 j()() 11'.lep~ !O 11<1ndy beach. Ash
Home Show· Rt~ltors pant'led -ntw kt1chen and
.. ,\rmchair llouwhuntlng.. baths -and storage spact
3SJj E C 1 llwy CdM gaklre -2 car g11ra.ge.
' 67~;225 " I $82,~ -CalJ 67J.8500.
-~W~A~TERFRONT
DOVER SHORES
60xl00 lot, pl"r I< ~lifl for 40
\-o THEREAL
'."\.. ESTATERS '" . . ..
Duplex • Ju1t Listed
Block 10 ocrinr 2 BR.. tum.
on.llll, lo"'er w/uMd brick
1rplc, Xln1 fflllAI area!
$'19,500
Call: 673-360J 642-22$3 EVl!S,
associated
DROK ERs-s;r EAL TORS
l01S W Bolboo 67J.J66)
DOVER SHORES
6.14-1270
CAREFREE LIVING
Spaciowi 2 alory Condo. 2
en, l \~ BA. F'in:ph.1c;t, All
Blt ·ln!I, \Vl\V cpli~. rlrps.
Pr1Vlte patio. Huge pool,
recreation room. l.aundry
facllllits. OWNER A-1UST
SELL! 549.()614
View hOme. 11f8 Santlt.a'o Dr. SACRIFICE LA KEFRONT,
Best bu1 • apac. 5 BR. 4 bl!. 1 .... ke Forest. Leavina: arl!a:
CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE
OF CURRENT LISTINGS
OFFICE OPEN SAT. I. SUN.
EASTBLUFF-OPEN HOUSE
2800 CAROB, Open Sun. 1·5. Doll house on
quiet street. Lovel y. large fen ced back yard,
perfect for small children. Some vie\v. 3 BR ..
2 baths and neat as a pin . $43.950. George
Grupe.
CAMEO SHORES
4507 ROXBURY. Open Sun. 1·5. Charming
.P.1ex1can styhng & decor, w/beautiful vie\v.
Large patio & room for pool. 4 Bedrooms 3
baths. dining & famil y room . $85,000. Ca~ol
Tatum.
REAL PANORAMIC VIEW
Transferring executive says "sell " this ele-
gant contemporary home \Vith walJs of glass.
4 BR .. formal dining, fam. rm ., custom poo l.
Beautifully landsc aped & a forever vie\v. Im-
ntediate possession . $74 ,900. Belle Partch.
CHOICE LOCATION
Beacon Bay -3 bedroom home --f· apt. -
$69,000. Beamed ceiling, lovely large South
patio. Few doors from sandy beach. Boa t &
tennis available. Charming l ·bedroom apt.
Mary Lou fl.1 arion .
BA YSHORES BY THE BAY
Priva te beaches are a joy when summe r rolls
along; s h o r t walk to this charminJ?: 3 BR.
home & gsl. house; hi beam ceilings. Act now
-$42.000. G. Vreel and.
CHOICE CORNER LOT
On. S?mersel ~~e in \Vestclirf. Protec ted by
bu1ld1ng restr1ct1ons. O\vner transferred , will
sacrifice. Only S25,950. Harry Frederick.
WATERFIONT DUPLEX
Lo w do\vn payment will finance it. One 3·BR~
unit & one 2·BR. unit w/dock for two boat~.
Excellent income. 0 \V n er will carry 2nd.
$89,500. M. C. Buie.
CLEAN-CLEAN-CLEAN
You mu st see this 2 yr. old cupcake! Do yo u
like open beamed ceilings? Family room wi th
\vet bar? Expensive carpets & drapes? Form·
al dining? Professional landscaping? Offered
in mint co ndition at $45,000. Bill Comstock.
EASTBLUFF-5 BEDROOMS
Great fa miJy home on large lot. Family roo m
has fi replace. 3 car garage. O\vner anxious
to sell. $64 .950. Cathryn Tennill e.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Lovely "Portofi no" model \\'/added room -
steps to pool. Perfect for teenagers! \Vhere
else can you find 4 BR .. 31h ba., on fee land~
$55.000 . Harriett Davies.
EASY ELEGANT CONDO .
3 BR. + famjl y rm. 2 Patios. Great vie\v. Cozy
fireplace. Built·in kit. Elec. garage opener.
All Spanish decor. \Ve need a fast sale. Sub-
mit offer. $47.900. Lavera Burns.
UNIVERSITY PARK
3 BR. fo'am. Room To\\'nhouse .... .
4 BR. Fam. Room To\vnhou se .... .
3 BR. Fam. Room To\vnhouse .... .
3 BR. fo~am . Rm. home -pool
3 BR. Fam. Rm ., prime loc. F'ee ...
Chuck Lewis.
FIRST SHOWING -
IRVINE TERRACE
S29,500
$31.950
832,950
$43.950
$48,950
Compare! See for yourself. this 4 bdrm. &
!am. rm. \vith wet bar home is the best buy
in the area! ~teated pool with out.~ide dressing
room & b a t h. in sunny landscaped patio.
$55,500. Kathryn Raulston.
ENJOY CORONA DEL MAR
Charming small home \V/very large patio &
carefree garden. Rea r rental unit helps pay
your 'vay. Never a vacancy factor. $45,000.
Mary Harvey.
POOL WITH A VIEW
Jn Dover Shores: t h re e baths &. four bed·
room!!. family, laundry and dining ROOMS.
Two fireplaces. Three car garage. "Sec this
one". $86,800. Al Fink. .
A MUST SEE
ls th lii choice 3 BR. -2 Bath home -l'.:asl·
blufr -large kit. \vit h bltn. oven & ran j!;e.
Sep. for1nal dining roo m -lovely poolsizc
yard - sprinklers. Reduced price al $43.950.
Art Gordon.
133-0700
644-2430 Coldwell, Banker
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11.
Roy Mccardle Realtor
1810 Ne"·port Blvd:, C.M.
548-nH
•FOR MOM•
I BPdroon1, 2 tutr h. corner
lo! hon1r. with a good G.I.
loan or $19.000. Pay only
.'il~. nio. inc1uding !axe~.
!'iubmit your do1vn payment.
$24 ,750
Newport
••
f•irvi•w
646·1811
(anytime)
PENDING
FORECLOSURE
Ovn1f"r unabJ,. to meJnh1in
pnymenl!. Mu='t sell Im·
n11!dlatPly, X!nt ttsidential
area. l BR, 2 BA, large lot.
Trarlic tree cul·dC·!JllC, F'HA
or VA terms. $25,000,
Call ~j-842·1 ~Open eve1)
e·!!!hwe·tiit•
BUILDERS
CLOSE-OUT
\\',. havl' 8 tripll';i.;rs for
1">8.500 rich. Owoc.rs uni1
lvlll ~ tx-droom.~. 1. h:1IM,
fireplace. lnC1Jmc i11 $.i50.00
Pl'f month. All T<'rmll a\•a.il·
11.blf' including No Down
C..l.'J or 1".11.A. C11U .
Walker & Lee
2700 f[arh~.)r Blvd. al Ade ms
!"14~0.16.l Oprn 'Iii 9 P!\l
$24,950
4 BO. +FAMILY RM .
Spa1'ious hotnr . L11 rge
room.~ lhroughout. Hugr
rarnily rm., natural brick
firrplucr. ·I llO.'cn St7.l'rl bed·
roon1~. [inr quality bulJr.
in11, rnlry hall. "Paradise"
111 landscaping, Brk. Open
!Iii 9 PM . 540-172}.
TARBELL 2955 Ho•bor
EASTBLUFF DREAM
Ncalt'~t. f'le1ne1! 3 Br, 2 ba.
Lusk hll. cha.rmf'r wl a
spac., /ully rncd. yd. A
'"m1L,I ~rr ". al S45.500.
Home Show Re•ltors
''Armchair Houlil"hunt1ng''
~ I::, Coas1 Hwy .• CdM
675-7225
Gener al
HlRE~T E 01.SOV
'" NEAi. TON '>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BACHELOR
"BEACH"
BARGAIN
It 11andy bra"chf'!I and
lhr rOAr or the surr
lurn you on. this ls 1t.
Sun1n1l'r·fun cot la I{~.
Spa('ious living roorn,
bright shiny kitchen.
lari.;r bedrooms. IN-
CLUDES living roorn
lurnitur,. and J'f'(ri1tl!r8·
tor. Ownpr llquida tlncc
for fasl ~all'. Don'! pA~
ur thet brisk-morning
run on !hr sand. Hun·y
-won' 1. ltu11. Dial
645·0303
HOLD ONTO
YOUR HAT!
No 9uollfyln9
At 6J/4•/•
Your chane(l to ta k,. ad-
vantagl'. Owntr Juiit up
and moved a1\'Ry. Gor-
p:eous SPANISlt STYl..f.
home. N('1\·er. Bright
cheery living room.
CRACKLING A D 0 B E
AACl-IED >TREPLACE.
Thick lu~h carpel .... F'11m-
JJy room. 50 fl. flf kilch·
Pn counlt'r. 1-~xtra IRrge
back yard -llll fl'nct'd .
Taki: over 6~ Annual ~~
ni.te loan. no quallfyinr.
U.fl\ft'DIATE POSSES·
$ION. DiRl
645-0303
l ORI.\ I E Ol.S01\ ·'· RF.Al .. ORS
Cnll· P~t '\00<\ :ll;..~."M
"··~111r f'1.,..11.-·,·lir·"' r. .. ·;:r
Wesfciiff-3 81d room
'.\lu •• ""II fJ1•nrr r.1::.2fll:'l
It. boat. Ch1'rmlni: l Br. 21',"1E'"s'°•=v=,=n1=,=,=,=..,=nc=,=-, 1
811 hon1r. xlnt v\1'111'. $117.9311 bdrm. 21= b~!hs. Wn. ;m.
Xlnl rlnr. 111v~il. 011·~r. ~fovill'lt' out flf stA!f:. S42.000.
Tr;lde Ar1·11ptablf'. 518-1!136 '-15-1781 or 6 4 2 .::: 7 6 O
flT ti ll·lfi~I 11·rrk-1\ay•
Adi!lptlble floor ! Jan for Luxury 2 br/2 ba. Boe.ting,
couple or Ire. famUy. Newly fishing Jn your lrnt yrd. j
tl~r•ted. By aPf''t. $91,000 CJubh~"· ~1. tennis. Under I
Biii Grvndy, Retiltor market pr1rt-.
!33 Dover Dr .. N.B. &-12-4620 _ _r:o~"'.'."':!E:!·"'..''~''!!:;o..:~:m~_,.'.!'<'!!!!!11!!!11!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!1111!!!!111111!!!!!11!!!11!!!!!'1-'~""";;;;,;;ll;•;•bo;;'·~C~"';"';,;';',..;,~
•
I 1
''<I ... r . . .
~ DAILY '!LOT _ ..... J~I _,. ... I~ I _, ..... I~ I--· I~
IA YSHORES IA YFRONT
?t1agniJictnt home on the East fro n t with
spacious "I.· Plan", s~rrounding bay side
swimming pool & beautiful Rose garden; Cozy
paneled don \\'Ith fireplace. Corryfotlable,
formal dining room; 4 bedrooms. in,cludlng
servant'5 quarters, paneled 6fflce \\'It~ ~u[·
side entr1rire. An exceptional home in 1m·
macul1te condition.
$293,750
LINDA ISLE
Prime Bayfront lot with a '1mlle ·or water" in
front bulkhead already in.
' $75,000 INCLUDES PLANS
JUNIOR SHOPPING CENTER 1ooc,. Occ upied. Profitabl y man11ed by our
1nanagement division. Prime Orange County
loc ation. clo5e to free,vay.
$185,000 FULL PRICE
HARBOR
COMP.' ANY
REALTORS
''SINCE 1944"
673-4400
General
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
1.., ttih li•4f 41'9Ctory witt. r•• ttil1 •-'ie11.lll ..
r•• t• ho110·h•11tl ... .All n. Motion llttH ltol-
oro dncrilMll 111 tr..tw ••a !Jr 9111Yertblflt ., ...
wfllfo 111 tlll-r'• DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. PotTen
P.w/119 .,._,. ho11'" fer ••It ., to Nllt Ol'O 1fl)etl to
lltt titeli lllf•f-tl" 111 tlllt col11-Hell FrWoy.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom)
721 Marguerite, Cotona de! l.far
675-5726 !Sat & Sun J-5)
19582 Westwinds Ln., Huntington Beach
842-5541 !Sat & Sun.)
2205 Cliff Dr. (Newport Heights) NB
675·3210 (Sunday)
(3 Bedroom)
2024 Beryl Ln (Harbor Hghldsl CdM
842·5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*17392 Los Am igos, Fountain Valley
842-5541 (Sat 1·5)
2800 Carob (Eastbluf!) NB
833-0700: 844-2430 (Sun 1·5)
216 Poppy, Corona del Mar
644-4910. $87,500 (Sun 1-5 :30)
511 Santa Ana, Costa Mesa
846-7171 (Sun 1·5)
252 Sierks, Costa Mesa
675-3210 $27,350 (Sunday)
801 King~ Rd., Newport Beach ·
675-3210 (Sal & Sun)
1198 Boi se Way, Costa '11esa
546·5411 $29,950 !Sat 1·51
(3 Bedroom & Family or Oen)
923 Goldenrod, Corona de! Mar
675·5726 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
9672 Albacore. Huntington Beach
962·0624 Sl9,250 IS.t & Sun 1-51
12502 Bubbling Well. Tustin
832·8063 !Sun 9·6)
*3216 Id aho Place. Costa Mesa
545·6424 1Sat & Sun 1-5)
9700 Raven , tluntington Beach
846-71 71 !Sun 1-5)
2924 Carob SL, Newport Beach
846·7171 rsat & Sun 1-5)
1717 Terrapin, Nev.1po rt Beach
646-7l7l !Sun 1-51
1218 Cambridge , Ne,vport Beach
646-7171 (Sun 1·51
323 Lugonia, Ne,vporl Beach
846·7171 (Sat & Su n 1·5)
2420 Cliff Drive, New port Beach
646·7171 !Sun 2·61
161!l 1:1ncotn l,n. f\\1estcli ffl NB
642-8235 $71 ,000 !Sunday)
(4 Bedroom)
221 2 Margaret. f\'e\\·port 11ei~hts
540·6761 !Sat & Sun 10-4)
(4 Bedroom & femlly or Den)
1657 Oahu Plice. Costa }!1esa
546·9702 rsat & Su n 10·6)
1124 SanUago. (Dov er Shores) NB
642-5200 !Sit 1·5)
2812 Cli ff Drive, Newport Beach
846·7171 (Sun 1·51
218 West Nobel , Santa Ana
846·7171 !Sat 2·5)
2056 Port Weybridge, Newport Beach
646-7171 (Sat 1·5)
2612 Lighthouse (Broadmoor) NB
644-4910 S61,500 !Sat 1·5:30)
4507 Roxbury <C ameo Shores) CdM
833-0700: 644·2430 !Sun 1·51
**505 Morning Star (Dover Shores! NB
642-8235 IS•l & Sun)
2057 Commodore I Baycrest) NB
642·8235 $74,500 (Sunday)
2300 La Linda Pl .. Costa Mila
842·8235 S4 l ,A50 (Saturday)
(S 8edroom)
*10:13 Mariners Dr .. (Dover Shores) NB
646-1550 · !Open Daily)
(5 ledroom & Femlly er Oen)_
**2l0 Evenln& Sta r (Dover Shores\ NB
842-8235 (Sund•yJ ..... * • w.,.,f,.., ..... ,... .... w ........
DROP OUT
Unlcrtunately this l&.le
dropped OU! of t'SCroW " l!'1 a 1ood buy. Good for.
tunl" fl>r you, 5 Bedroom1,
qu iet Me11 Vtn1e Joe •• nr
l!ChooJ and aolf oourae,
.>hrk assumable JOl.n. 'fry
v.•hh anly 1011. do1''n, !or
low monlhly paymenls.
PricM by l\ttsa Verde 1
Realty It $34,500.
BbAT A~D fRAILllf
HOME
On largt cornet lot in HAR·
BOR EST ATES. The heme
conal1ts· of Thret Bdrms ..
Two Batru, 1!ep .. vin&
kitchen alld larce Family
Room. Two pa t!o.!i . double
g11.rage. Wil l sell f'HA Or
VA at $29.500.
Eveninas Cali 548-3265
f 220 E.17t~ &48•0555
PRICED BELOW
APPRAISAL
I
****** * TAYLOR CO. *
PROMISE HIR ANYTHING
Then surprise her with this luxurlous1y ap-
pointed Dover Shores ItaJian Villa reaturlng
4 bedrooms. den, formal dining room .t 3\.0
baths. VIEW of city lights. I S99,llllO
EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE
A truly b<autlful 5 BR & family rm. home
with formal DR. Abundant marble ,rich wool
carpeting &~xpenslve drapes. Air-condition-
ing, pier/slip & 3 car gar. s~.ooo
DOVER SHORES -$105,000
Brand new home! Dramatic 2 stry living rm.
4 BR, study, garden rm w/wet b1r & formal
DR. Island kitchen. 3 car garage.
BROADMOOR HOME
Solid value in this Harbor View 4 BR home.
Paneled F .R., formaJ D.R., comm. pool.
2612 LIGHTHOUSE 'Open Sat. 1-5:30
MEDITERRANEAN SPLENDOR
Dover Shores waterfrt home. AJI new Cront,
·encl. patio & entry way. Dock your boat at
your doorstep. Take a dip in the pool. Enjoy
s upreme comfort in this 5 BRs + maid's
room, formal DR, bit-in wet bar. $175,000
NEAR LITTLE CORONA BEACH
Custom built spacious modern 3 BR w/gour·
met kitchen. Wide angle vu of hill s & some
ocean vu. Beautiful wood paneling & fabu-
lous mstr ste. Priced to sell! $87,500
·216 POPPY Open Sat. 1-5:30
THE BEST OF MEREDITH GARDENS
Dramatic entrance w/gallerla for your fav-
orite paintings. Decorator colors, marble
Prole11lonally appraised at fireplace & wood-paneling make this 4 BR +
$35,500, and l)OW ottered at formal D.R. a fine value! .......... -'45,500
$34.~. Huge s BR ' Spt!.C• ious lam. rm. Bcau1. big, BAY ISLAND -$160,000
1unny kircb. on lrg cul-de-An older 5 BR home with loads o! charm on
sac 1o1. See~thls before you this lo vel y tropical island right here in New-
buy Any la~ home in Har-port Beach. Pier & slip. Call for appt.
bor arta. No dn lo Vl'll ar
low dn t~HA. Phone !>40.11~1 CAPE COD ON WRONG OCEAN I
for detalli. (Open eves.) Authentic in detail. White water view in
North Laguna. Custom bulll 5 BR & 4 bathi .
I ~ ~1~~~1. Private steps down to beach ........ $175,000
• ~ . CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS
DOVER SHORES & BAYCREST
* s ~R • VACANT * 90' Front, level, lee $ 27,500
Beaut Jf11.rbor View Homes 85' Front, level, corner, fee $ 28,500
res. ' w/wet bar, lovely 80' View site, level, lease S 29,500
c.1rp.: aelf-cleaninr ove:r11, 94' Vu si te on Galaxy, lease $ 38,500
incl. qulck po1tse11 . Owner 75 ' x 180' VU on Galaxy, le11e $ 39,500
Anxious. $59,500 including 57' Front. pier & slip. lease f 53,500
the ''""· BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE
Pountoln VoHoY
········~··········· NEW BABY • * * * FHA·221 .PROGRAM
* Sl,®. LEASE/OPMON.
S2&5 ptr tnO. l yr ckl 3 BR r
Spenlsh rern. Prof land.
commt.anity pool I rec.
Custom drps & c r p t1 . forces 1111 of our 11vely Ayrtos "L.. Cu1st1"
homa. We must hive more r • o m, • we
bought o lorpr Ay,.. ho-. Dur .......,rful
new IMiby gtv .. you a 9rHt oppottl.lnlty to
have our pr111nt 2 BR., 2 ~··· lt9. rumpus rm. hortM. only 9/10 of• mll• from Hunting-
ton St•t• buc:'h~ Qrapet, block-wall, frant
lndscpg., llrepl., fly. crrtd., J.tc, Must .bo -n
to bo 1pprKt1lod. Col 962-1371 -lkr.
As11.1mt: 7\t'N VA bn. $750 DOWN MARINE• RE ALTY
$209 mo. indude1 all. .f BR. 84~ or 546-1322
2 BA, tully cp14. It. corntr ,;H;.cu-n~tl-nt""t~on-,li""o"o"'c"h--1 lot paUo tenced rta.r yard.
RoOm ror bOtt or camper. ------S"P"'A"N"l"'S"H __ , BY OWNER. 900 Wut :ioth, ULTRA•
co.ta·Meaa M&onU. Uf,,000 * * * CUSTOM BUILT
I I • • • • • • •'I • • • ! • • I I 1 1 1 u,:;:u;;;;;;;r;;c:;;:r;;-;v;;: fi<>m double arched eqtr)'. to O.n.r1I Coton. dtl Mar HIGHLY UPGRADED COL-ADOBE RED TILED J\OOF.
LEGE PARK Home. 4 br/2 R DI ...... COUNTRY SIZE OPliN SAT/SUN 1-5 Ito,'°" or uMd brick,"""" 3 Hua• 8 '• ep ~-
LOT 721 .MARGUERITI a: shutters. UnbellevAble carpetina:. Custom Mapes.
and coum:f\Y SIZE KIT9l·
EN. a.tautiful 4 BR, 2 1tory
c1.1stom ·home wtlh all the
good~• Incl. 3 car pr. Own-
er transferred to Fr&nce,
muat \eavt by June, Prlced
!or lmmtdiate 1ale a1 an
unbelievabl!: $45.000. can
M5-84:M (Open eveal
~;W!aij•ntil
* POOL* MESA VERDE
f antutlc 4 BR, 2 5tory 'home
w11h arehed veranda sun.
deck overlool(ing sparkl ing
fne-lorm pool. Formal din-
in1, 1ep kitchenttte, hide-a.
wa1 den & plush, qt.aiet lo-
cation. Owner will consider
au term. • ~7 ,950. C a 11
545-842.4, SOUTH COAST
REALTORS,
3 BEDROOM,
2 BATH
-Hurry on thili one. BeCl.u.11e
lor SZl,500 .you get a bullt·in
su 1 2 b4rm Extra .~ 0, 113 ''· wlenotTnou. Built·in book shelves Md per nt'i · 1•" end tablel. Sparklin1 lge, Uv. rm, w/fpl , 8&1h ha& pool, patio & tret.1. Ex· "brick" decor kitche n. tub & 11lower · F' A .... ,, qui1ite wall""'"rs It xtru. ' ' · · '"' · .... Breakfast bar. WaJI of 1molt-Prlv. encl. yard w/dbl aar· Mt.1st be seen to be •P.
qe 4 room tor addl1. unit preciatMI. $37,CKXI or make ed 1Jau over rich "''OC'm
on R-2 Jot. Look • ' eom· otr. 54G-1326 wood panellln1. Spani•b
Pare this price -$M,500. BY OWNER.. Low, low down. alW'nptlOne bu.rnins fire.
Eut aide, cuatom built. place, Too much to AY here
923 GOLDINROD Llndbtrr Sehl. 3 br, l'Ai ba, -A mu1t to aee.10..idoy 111
"'-·-,_,, ,. -3 bd -k, -u. drp•. service yrs. old and wry ow wn, V\.._.n v-. ~e. rm.. ...., ... ., $32 ~ H all <n.fJ family rm ... 2 ba. Encl. pool. nn, dbl garage , VA, raA · , urry .l c
sllllld yard, 2 Car 1ar. Xl nt ='-.",·""'=·,,.5l"'H37'""""'6~== 9'2"5!0 foe. liurcy on thb • Only BY OWN!:R. 3 br, 2 ba, fam
$50,000. rm. Nr So Coast Plau l IOHl\I I. Ol\O\ CALL 61.5-5728 schools. tmmac cond. Xlnt
landsc. 17x11 workshop. Lge ,, ' • I ' (• p ~ cov'd patio. • yn, $32,900.
;OJ s::J:--Assume. ~791 19131 Brookhur1t Ave. -~:;:;S;':;:'":;:'';;;':;;"~"::"::"~ QUIET, seduded two BR., Hunllnrton Beach 1~ bath. Adult con---c===:-.;:;;15=0-I BEAUTIFUL doml,lum. By Own<r, opp't CHECK TH E
LARGE DUPLEX o .. "!':..~ Prlnclpfl .. , ,, GI .. ""' total dowo. a Ba _..,......., w/bltlna, only $25,900.
A RARE ITEM IN TOWN. EAST' SIDE OR
Each unit a 4 Bedroom 21' 4 BR. 2 BA, cvd patio . .f JlR. 2 Ba, bltlns, covered
bath witb appl"O'Xlmately Carpeting, drapes, built ins patio, GI'a only $100 SOW
2,000 IQ. fl. Onijr 2 yean old. dishwuhtr. S29,9SO. 51,( 1ii dn.
Enjoy top Income. excelJ loan. 6t&-54U, UR
lent location, a n d luxury :",i;'-""'T':::O: •. :=-_o.;::;-;: Immac. 3 BR. 2 Ba, bruk· livino. ~.SllO with .,,.1., ,ntt_ 3 Bl\, 2 BA, un11UT1. i~e A ··• "'" ......, ....,,., tttrt1. are included. Nr fut bu. xtn. Irr lot, GI,
down. CALL 61, ~=-shopping & school. $225 FHA term&. Alkinf $23,900.
............. month. 54;...5239 alt 5PM OR
'-O Till.: REAL
\""'\.. ESTATl:Rs
' • ' r
3 Br + den. l~i ba C.Ondo. Clean, dean • BR, only
N P I N' . ,,..,.. $17,500. Submit your otttr. ear new, oo . ............ OR By ownu. 546-4760 days; ~535 evea. Rent. lease option this .f. BR,
2 8& borne, only ~ per kitchen, forced air heat, -==7""==:,"°~""'=7-
breakfast bar. double 1ar· Don't Call Me A "H"AL'°EC=RE=ST=-. ""s.."',::n"'""'"""•Y
age, and ail only 4~ yeara Duplex ! ! owner, 3 bdrm, 2 bi, mo.
old. call now. 54&;86:40 , $25,500. Asaurne CI Loan. 147-1531
2629 Harbor, C.M.
WANTED
3 TO 4 Bdnn .. 2 bath plus
famUy rm.: 2;000 + 11q. JI ..
wtpolll or are a, Approx. 5
yrs. or yowl,ger. $60-$70,000.
I'm a nifty 2 bedroom HOME 54;...7973
witb ~dl1h tiraplace, pa-..:...:..-;RE""PO=ss"ES""sr"'o°'N"s-tlG "and ltul)' yard with a
sharp 2 bedroom money
m8.klna: 1ara,e ape.rtrnent
out In back, All on the IOUth
side of the hlahway.
Only $49, r..o
Cail 673-85.iQ
\ O Tl!C RC/II,
'"\. l .S'I'A'fCR:;
Gov't & others. Anyone can
buy, low down. S22M to
$40M. Will& Rlty 546-7805
MESA ~I ltiar S BR, 3 BA.
Many extraa. By Ow~r.
M&-1701
e OCEAN VIEW e
Immac. 3 Br, By Owner.
$34,900. M2°9Sl6
The Re•I E1t1t1 M•rt
WALK ONE
BLOCK
CORBIN 56' Waterfront. Lease S 69,500
• 45' Waterfront. Le8'e S 73 ,000 CAMEO SHORES D•na Point
That will take you to the
C...tholie Cburch lo: aclir>ol.
Gr to the bralld new Lucky
mkL Move right into a
ii-eat 4 BR Seabury home
en your own terms, tnclud·
lng nothlng down la Cl buy.
er. New listing Sl),500.
MARTIN 45' Waterfront. Lease. Plans incl S 75.000 Beaullf'Ul Ocean View
108' \V aterfront. Lease $125,000 Just listl!d! 4 BR.• lam. rm.
2 CORONA DEL MAR CORONA DEL ~U.R _View! w/4 ba . .l po<>!. 4639 Gorl\am I REALTORS '44-76' VU O'looking China Cove -f~ $ 65,000 ~ttn. settillr "ith big trees. Dr. $%,OOO, By app't.
$23 1950 Custom Pnlvlncial home. Bill Grundy, Realtor "BROKERS & SALESMEN Prlva cy , ieclua ion. 833 Dover Dr.,..NB 6q-4620
We have an opening in our Re sidential Divi-Redwood, uSf!d briclc, Make VOGIL VALUE
l Bdrm. + Den sion for an experienced man or woman pos· roof. ltiasslve trplc., BBQ. N~ly painted' amall home
No down terrna available. sessing enthusiasm and integrity. If you are peffed Oak firs., J BR. Plll.5 garaie ap&rtment. At·
J Enrry hall, 1paclou~ livina interested in a beautiful ollice in the finest hmtr. iA 24'). 2 Baths PLUS tractive private patio. C101e
rooni , naruraJ wood kilch-location, working with congenial associates, sep. itudio. Room for pool in location $45,500. Vo1e1 CO. I
en cllbl~ts. FJnr quality we are interested in meeting you. You own the land. Fint. 2667 East C:OUt Hwy, CdM. buiJt.ln.11, l'XlrA e1ll in1t Atta, fall). vjew home. '$67;S()O. ff7l-2Q2{1,
du1h1va.~hcr, e.-.:tr11. bath~. pier. "Our 26th Yoor" 673 -·
'""'•"' '"" ,..,.""' WESLEY N TAYLOR CO R Ito • ·:~ * ; • · • .. c_._·,,_._M_•_•_• ___ _
* SHANGRJ LA *
Bt.ay this for a larae lam.Uy
In time for thto May 15th
openin1 of Dana Point Ma·
rina. (. br, lam rm, 3 ba.
2500 sq ft. For the unheard
ol Price of ~.500. Balcony
view, profeu!Onally land··
1C1.ped room for pool, w1.1IC·
lng dlstan~ ta marina.
Owner anxiol.ll, due to trans-
fer . Cal!-
BLAIR REALTY
1100 S, El Camino Real
SAN CI...EMENTE 492.'811 I TARBELL 2955 Harbor I • ., ea 11 , ·
0 TIM I
2111 Son Joaquin Hiiis Rood Perfect Setting UNUSUAL "°"" • lot. E·Z Dover ShorH PO L E NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Glorioui big trees shelter ma!nt. • BR, lrg 1lld ln1 1 --=~=~~::::::--
GI '"'" m., mo" i"'o Oh io I * * * * * * th" good 3 Bedroom, N•w· gtuo lorn rm,
1
"' d'". •hoP. DOVER SHORES • BR, 2 Ba home w/15'x36' port Beach home, Conven-or combG, l/v rm, dbl 1ar. 2
hrd . & ntrd pool for only ient 10 Mariner'1 Scbool & BA. Cdnveni1nt quiet Joe. nr VIEW HOME I ------------------1 f ,_ t all achls. Out of 1me1, 10 SIOO. total cost. Gd. area. Westclif Shopping .....,n q . mln from beach-2 min to San
I Newly painted. Crpts It bit-I Gener ii General Only $33,000. DI N r '" dll Jn~. Appraised prl~ $30.500. Arnold & Freud ego or iwpt "'>'· ,,,,, .
COLLINS & WATTS ~;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;~~;;;:;;~;;o_;;;;;;;;~~~?=;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;,1 terent types or azaJea.s in a
9fi2-;»2.1 Ei·e~.642.0427 • EXCELLENT LOCATION 383 E. I71h St., Costa M~ui ai,rd~n ex1reme ly easy ·to
POOL
$22,000
REALTORS 6'16-7755 maintain. No lawn to mow. Newly painted 4 BR 2 BA home , walk to -AN EXCLUSIVE-Outdoor outlets, outdoor
Mariners School & Westcliff Shops. Reduced PICTURESQUE N.B. lirhts. Chti•tmaa ll&bts hlf.
for quick sale. $38,500. ,., c.·1ru -, m.,-1 Backbay 3 Bdrm. home. · • u-.: •, ,..., 111, Jacaranda and Norldolk Great for family, Large P0i-DOVER SHORES -VIEW
For S1l1 By Owner
Dover Shores view. { bed-
room. 3 bath home + fam-
ily room with sunken wer
bir. 2 firepla~A. formal
dinini; r oom, separale
breakfast room. Valentine
built, 2 yeal'I old. 3JXI .sq.
fl. 3 car 1uaie. $89,500,
543--1455
J&.. co:Ts
~WALLACI
RlALTOltS
Open Evenings
• 962-44.14 •
DECORATOR'S
DREAM JUST $24,500
Close to city pk. & ~an -
3 BR, 2 Ba, lre1hly painted
in .l out, like new crpts 4i
custom drps, 11repl, bltin
rante Ir. oven. GI or FHA
1erm1. Call 847-1221.
SEYMOUR REAL TY
1n41 Beach Blvd., Htgn lk:h
Open 'tll 9 PM
NEAR THE BEACH
Dandy 3 bedroom. 2 bi.th.
New Joni fl'ffn shag car-
pe t1, pa rt block waJJ fent'ed ,
Outstanding valu• In Hunt·
lng1on Be a c h. $13,950.
842-~
?ark l!kr yard 32 foot swim
pool, Beautiful home. En try
hall, lAtgt living rm .. lirf!.
pl11:e", oo down term& avail·
Able brk. 540-11'20
TARBELL 2955 Horbor
Wan t a spacious 3 BR. 21h BA home with
formal dining room. family rm w/2nd !pl.
that expands to a 5 BR + xtra BA by just
opening a door? Not an add·on , but a unique
d esi~n by Ivan Wells. Call today to see this
outstanding value at $92,500.
t1o bltin B·B-Q, Jdscpd. to pine. Sprinkler system fron t
perlect1on. A·. must . set~ A: ttar. New Ml.fer htr, n!:w
S34.950. disw,•hr
1
, ne.~· .. dlspo
1
n
1
1. 2,093 l -=F~ou-n""t-1~1n-V'7"ol"'l•_Y ___ , ~ci=
JEAN SMITH RL.TR . IQ. t Pua._.. 8q. t n &tr·
* CANAL FRONT *
3 RR. l~ b11.. A·F'rRme 2
11)'. S11.ndy bcarh. bo;itin1
k fi~hing at your door!
S.17,500.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
Ql6 W. Co.st H1'')'., NB
548-1290
-~R~E=POSSE~SS"'IAO"'N_.S -1
BAYCREST
~ttractively decorated, spoUess 3 BR. 2112
BA & fam rm quality home on quif!t street.
Formal dining room. Charming cov'd patio.
$62,500.
ROY J. WARD CO., RHltors Sparkling cltan home1, somt 1033 Mariners Drive, N.I . 646-1550 rl('wly painled & t"arpeted_ 2
400 E. 17th St., C.M. 646·~ agt. Sl'l.650 For sale by ;-;;-;;;;;;:-;:;;-;;;:;-:::;;:;;;-;;;:-;I ''"Eiii::!M:-E>~;;L!;;o,;:i ~'~w~"'~'·;.~~·-~3660~.,.,.-<fiE-D~.iiifH !3 BR, 2 BA. Ex . cond. Stove, 9 l MA E AV" I °"-===.,-,===--I
"'''· "''"'''"· Hoodli<h". I 4 PL ~. $2500 down CUSTOM CONDO, Jndscpd ga.rd!:n. Many Cu11t. bi t. 3 BR., 1%. ba.
Xtra1. Tu1ti n-S.A. limits, Bltru., Center ialand, oodles •
fnt. dl'cor. $26.500. 543-690I of srorare. Muslve 1rp1C:-Auun{e 6"9' G.f. Joan, S260 PQOL-$17,900
Balbol Island & bclltlh. Nat. v.·ood cRb-per mo tnclUde1 prin Int
DUPLEX
Larre. ll&ht & ·cheery 2 bd·
rm. upper apt. w/lrplc., en-
cloaed sunroom otl !iv. rm .
inets. Conc~te drive. COv. taxes,;· IM. Seller wili ca~~
patio. A beauty for S26,500. TY back U:ll)O 2nd,. at 1%,
CALL US .TO SEE! 3 )T due datt $.10 ptr mo.
MORGAN RIAL TY '
Dover Shortt Office l ,4 & 5 bdrm&. Son1r w11 h Coty l bdrm, lo1vtr apt.
pool1. ~·HA-VA ronv. lcrms, Roo m to butld. See this
PLUS
67u.42 675-4459
OPEN HOUSE SAT. 1..S
1 lfl 8olH Woy
HAFF DAL REAL TY
142-440J
Wow? Just lilted I it's rrtal.
Relax • enjoy IUe. No up.
keep worrte1. 2 IJ. br 1ulle1.
Gourmet. all elec, kitchen
incl dryer, refrlg. prlvAtt
20' patio. 2 car 1arap,
C.Ommunity clubhouse ttn·
nfs courts, pools. V1r). IOw
down with PA)'ments much
cheaper 1han ttnt. HlllTY-
\\'On't lut! CA 11 (714)
962-'511S. .
fro~~'~-: 'i:i:,\~~.. Read Daily Pilot Classified ~;·~"" j"" """"" '°
I 81-43 AdAm11 Ave. 962-5;;23 I Setnlc Properties ~726
fN. of !laker-E. Gt Flltvl4!w)
Vacant 3 BR, 2 Ba l famU,y
rm. Bein& rtdtt<lrAted. CW·
de-Ac lol nr OCC 4i •'->P·
pina:. Askillr P!l.9&>. Su bmU
Evet: 5fl..2445
~ 4 BR plus Dan
Vocont-$U.JOO ' .
your offtr.
BY OWN!:R ~ Cuatom 3 L1nriln . R11lty, Inc.
bdrm, ~ bath, tri-level. J46.S41 I anytime Ot1Pfrate owner muit aell
l.llrte OOnus ·rm with ooe&n 21582 Brookhurst. Hunt. Sch. thi• week a1 any 1<>11. CI
vie1v, ntar harbor. Owner 194$ MAPLE AVE. appr 'al. at thla price. SUB· will help finance. ,57.000; MJT on -price ' LOW, LOW 9 Sl2,000 dn. 4 9 6 -3 4 I 5 Cu1t. bit. 3 BR., l 'l ba. CASH !>OWN 1 131 Brrokhunt Ave.
Capistrano Beach. Bltns., Cenrcr Island. ocwtles · Ht111tln&ton Beach
Collo•o Po.rk &t ttora1e. Massive lrpl c. HAFFDAL R!ALTY 4 Bdrm: Ii ba. er-pt. bit-Ins. • A: hearth. N•t v.·OOd cab· Jrg fenetd yd. Taki" ove r
COU.EGE PARK 3 BR. 2 ln~ts. Cor'K:nte drive. Cov. Evt!4r!.~ Ut6 ~'1'. % GI. ApprGx SU.000 to
ea. Many e:t.lri.1. Owner, patio. A be•l'll.y for 128,500. ~ -----e.......... loan, Prlct $21,000. For alt
282 Prlneeton Or. $29,9SO. CALL US TO UEt =-~ ~ llll 1 WHk Otlly, Principle& ~~A';,,~~~~"3:llO. o .. n 6=~AN Rl~~rr.ll "\i\!mF cO~d!.: ,,.,.,.... &
CotlM 411 Mir f\1fSA V!'rde by trelWerrtd 3 Bit. 2 8A. l •tory G.RZEN malnl 'd. L.ce llv'1 aru, 2 br ..,..,...,,.,.--•'::•~··:--:--I Marini. lmm•c. 4 Bft, 2 8A YAlJ.EY TownhOUle A: den, 2 ba. Nr beaeh. 111t Tlm1 ,0fferMf w-trplconcu l -dt.-•a c. $26,100 Poola, 1enn11. S2t,IOO,
For Sale 2-c11r 1ar. "'·lworkshop. cvd OPEN HOUSE Sun. 2-6 t&U11l.
In C•rneb Hl9hl1nd1 pelio, easy~an lndscpna. 178~ l..tROia. 1.tne9 ""Y'"'O"w'"N"E"R;--"'3""0r".-:-:1~'""""b& Bf!tl.Ut Jandttaptd l"Xt<:Ul!Vf!· Playhae, boat/rrlr 1tort.1t Fo1.1nta.ln Valley • 9684163 fObtch Haven Home} bllnl,
type home on corner lot w/ area + many otber xtru. crpts, d"3. Very c.ltan.
180• view of oct1n. 3 hr, S32.~ !W&-*702. RT.AL Tot Ta~p1r l t 1 yr? :;:.soo. 846--.. 4602 &lite
denf,,.'tt be"r t. din'g rtn. * NEW LISTING * Pool, dbl frplc, custom ·
ASKING $60,000 Aatt.am8.blt '"" V.>.. loan: drpa, rtfrtc, wa1htr 6. 0B"Y'OWN;;;;;;;;E:;;Rc;i"b<°'ii'"'11o°'.""hd=wl•I
CaU owner, 673·0431 Sl69 Mo. tl\CI, aU: .3 BR. + drytr, dlspo&al all lllni ntw firs. ctptldrpt, lndtCJd,
Bii6AOMOOR. VIEW home. dtn, 2 ba. 6:1 X tlo• Jot. at $11$/mo. ror S23.500. You WUt to ocean, prk. 1Chf•1.
4 BR, 2~ ba, Comm1.111\l)' $24,:.00, titffl'l t Hie! b61trr ctn mw, John H. SJl ,500. 111)..00M
IOHl\I I. Ol\O\
' ~ ' !) ~· I
S@\l~}A-'£t.~s·
Tito Punle willt tlte 6uilt-ln Cltucl/e e Roorrt1llQ9 *ttto11 cf 1he
'
C1pi1tr1no Beach.
pool. 2101 J11l11ind vtew Dr, CaJI: P11 WGOd 54~nxl Jrv.·i~ l AMJJc. at ~TO Pflor ln&rpd, cul-de-!'Ae lot,
S74.900. 144·2fi21 Scenle Propertlt1 ITW roi SALE by oWMr: ~ br. :i br/2 bl. l•m rm, all tltc.
D&Jl.Y Pilot Want Adi baYe O&Uy PUOt an• raml'1 rm. lrt Cl'.lfner lot. PrlnclJ>.tl• Only. 133.too,
bartalns plort. bqatn1 salon. 1'. Vly ma. 54l).603I 968-~sn SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 ------
•
[ _,.,,..
Huntington Bead! L1gun1 luch
TAX REFUND EMERALD IAY
COMING?? A llllut'°'1s hOme detailed ill
Invest wisely in anotM.t exquiaite wte. Elepnt Uv-
home as a l!iP&tt. \Ve hAve ing nn .. spac. f4mily • din·
a v'ry lovely hon1e on Eut-in&: rm .. tge. paneled den,
side of Cos1i1. ~re1a that 3 bdtms.. 4 baths; 3 flre-
·wo11ld be ideal. Cl lotll\ of plttces. S\1•imming po o J,
S23,00) w·iui 71/,'lli annual Lovely garde.tli, ocean view
percentage rate v.•J1h total • $115,000.
payn1ent of $210.00 less tax Turner A1toei•t•s
aa11 lng1 cf . approx. $60.00 1105 N. Coasl Hwy., J..aa:una
~r mo. Thu;; home shows i 494--1177 Anytime Walk1~;"&c.Lee ti~M~F~~GB~: ... ~
1790 llarbor Blvd. at Adams
5"~ Open 'fil 9 P!i.f
$34,llQO
4 BR & FAM RM
+POOL
Exec, home w/"kf!y shaped "
pool + beaut reltig'd wet
bar , enlgd fam rm vt/hl-
beam cell, firepl, w/w crpts
& custom drps formal din
area, Cul-de-s.ie: sl. VA/
F1fA terms,
SEYMOUR REALTY
1TI4il Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch
Open 'til 9 Plot
country provincial -ocean
view • pool. Big 2 BR I den
_ recreaUon room. Easily
expandable to 4.-5 BR.
$91,500. Owner I Builder
497-15.37, 499-2974.
CHOICE Wood's Cow loca-
tion. 4 BR, 21,S BA. Only 2
bllcs to beach. Beam celling,
fireplace, separate dinifli
room Private e D c l o1ed
courtyard + brick barbq
atta.. $59.500
Lingo R. E ,
L1gun• Hill•
VIE\V! Laguna Hills '"""""""'""""""!!!!!""'""'I Tri-level 4 Bedrooms, 3 tull 5 BEDROOMS baths plus family room with
wet bar and ex.tended Assume existing $28.200. GI hearth Palos Verdes rock
loan. 5 Br. 2 J IOl'y, priced fireplace. Custom paneling
under market. Blti n range and wallpaper. prof .
&. ove n, dishv•asher. lrg landscaped tront and back.
kitch, lorm'J liv rm, lirepl, Delighl1ul neighbo rhood
crpts, drp~. fenc'd, land-near achOols and shopping.
scpd, oversized dbl gar. All for $41.000. By 0\1.'fler.
251 72 Los Bolsas. &30-3373 1llage Re al Estate I' HZ-4471 ( :::;J 546-1103 3f~~ 311:;~,st~~· i:,:~
Assumable GI loan. lmmac.
By onr, Save RE Comm l-'S.16=·"'°=·..:"=G-3.oll:::.< ___ _ 3 BR, 2 ba, hardwood floors.
tully crpld, Indoor -ou tdoor ~L~id~o;:_l_s_le _____ _
comm'l crpt dln'g rm, kitch-Prime Lido Nord
en both . bathrooms. f (A 5 BR. 6 ba. w/elevator. 52
heal, sprinklers, 6 blks to
1
lt. lot. Pier Ir. float. $215,000.
~ach. Cl~e to schools, Tip of Lido Isle
Ne""POrt \\·est tract. Jli1usl ,,,_ t 4i BR -Ba born 2 · A ot:8U .. ,:>. e ~ to appreciate. ssume frplcs. 56 ft. water frontage, ~ '.' VA loan, anyone qual-Room for large boat slips.
1fie11. 9-132 Mok1hana Dr, p · $.500 000 ~8· 952-2175. Bus-MS-9990. nBin G;undy, Rltr.
VILLA PACIFIC 833 Dover Dr., NB M2-4620
'f()\VNHOUSE -FHA appr.
$11,000.1$1500 dn. 3 BR, elec
kitch, upgr'd crpts. Adi! occ.
Pool. e1c. No outside main!.
S.S7-8507/Eves. 968-1178 &.
968-43TI,
3 BR. fam. rm .. 45X88 $93,500
5 BR. 5 Ba. Bayfront $149,000
\Yatertront lol Cl·H Sl99.500
LIDO REAL TY INC.
3377 Via Lido 611-7300
FOR sale or rent 3 bdrm,
convertible den. f.rpl. blt-irui,
$64,500 or $450 mo. year
lease . 6T:>-8565.
DI RT BOMB GRACIOUS 3 br, 3 ha.
$17,500. 3 BR + tam . rm., Master br w/lrplc. By
close to ocean. Fix up and 1 .:owne.:::~'~·..:67~>-:_:21~4~1·:_ __ _
save $$$. 2 Ba, w/w crpts M•sa d•I M•r
& drps, bit.ins -what a buy. s ubmit. cau 847-l?ll 4 Br, 2 ba, many custom
SEYMOUR REAL TY teatUtts. $31.500. Assume
1 Bl b 5\~ rnA. Prin. only, I 141 Beach vd ., tltgn Be ~5027 Open 'til 9 Pi\t 1 ~~-~~-----f!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J Mesa Verde
$19,250. 10% Down v.·/pmnts BY Owner. Mesa. Verde.
of $1!1() buys my 3 br , 2 ba JBR, 1'4 BA. Cul-de-sac
horn.-. Sepr din rm. 60x100' SJl,500. Open Sun 1-S. 3209
101 , Jrg lndscpd rear yd. Montana 546-1242.
22'x22' flagstoni> pa I Io
"'/brick bbq. Crpts/drps, BY OWNER, 4 bdrm, 3 ba,
dshwhr, v.•ashr, dr y e r , air com!. w/filter. Cusl-Om
pull man sink.5. 962--0624. decor throughout, ~I a r g e
'
BR , .,, , Fonn·' lvgrn1 , tam rm. Must !lff to , ....._ ga ., w. dining. ut ility & family rm appreciate. $48,SOO. 541).!662'7
wl lrplc, 2~~ ba, 2300 ft . EARLY AMERICAN
sprinklers, Owner. 842-2167 Channing 3 BR 2 BA, f11m.
Huntington Harbour nn. $31,900. Own. 546-1.803.
1 --w-.-T~ER--FR_O_N_T--,-B-.--, 1 Mission Viejo . -' BA, v.·eL bu , '10' dock. CORONADO home, 3 BR,
$83,0CQ. Owner 846-1454 Family rm, Plush shag
Irvine carpet throughOUt. Lots ol
other extras. I m me d
NEW LISTING
A lovely 2-sty, 5 bdrm, &
family rm. Chancellor home.
Conveniently !OCR.led near
shopping cen ter &. rec. fa-
ilitles. ~1eliculously main-
't&ined! Id.-al for lge. fam-
ily. Low price of $.'.l4,950!
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Cente-r, lrvirt(' I
can Anylime 833--0lm
TURTLE Roc k. ~ BR, many
extras, view. Upper $40's.
O\\'llt'r 8l'\.-20a7
Laguna Beach
SPANISH
MODERN
Ocean vil'W horn!'; wrought
iron & v.·ood thruout_ Curv.
~ archl's; double en try
doors: nigh bramed cl'il-
ings; fi replace: shaded pa-
timl. Spacious. brigb! bu ill·
jn kitchen with corner win-
dow ovrr si nk, looking out
to hlu.-P11ci!ic. 3 Bedrooms,
:t baths. $46.X!O. Cail •
possrssion, $32,500. BJ?-9.500
or 830-2808
AEGEA.L~ Hills, $33.900. 3 br,
2 ba. Owner. Sale or tradl!.
For CdM or Laguna , .,._.,,,
Newport S.•ch
EASTBLUFF
Prime view lot. 2j()() sq. ft,
house. 3 Bdrms .. 3 baths,.
form al dihing rm., brkfst.
rm. Huge rumpus rm. Can
buy on leasehold or you ov.·n
t~ land. $5:),000, leasehold
-Shown by app't. with ••
2-04 Vist.a Dtl Oro
Nev.']>On Beach 644-1133
4 BR. Baycrest
Fresh listing. Owner eoing
east, rnust sell Baycreast
area 4 bdrms, family rm,
dining rm; 2 baths. 2 Irplc1,
tile entry, larger dbl garage.
Lot 80' wide. Asking $39.900.
Newport lleoch
PRIVATE ROAD
lrrun1c. 3 BR, de, dill, rm.
3 b.tth hom9 on lae. feno@d
101. Llibt alry l'OOmi, manJ.
cured lawna I beaut. pr-
dens: dbl. 1ara1e &: s~p.
Auoc. pool I p\jUlfli gre('n.
Best buy In atta. $64,SOO.
Call &12-4620 tor apP't
Bill GNndy, RHhor
* OCEANFRONT *
*DUPLEX*
2 Up • 2 down. Ownu anx-
X>us • muat sell today. Tr>'
;65,000.
IURR WHITE
REALTOR
2901 N!!wport Blvd., N.B.
67">4630 6~ Ews.
PANORAMIC VIEW
ot jetty I. mam 'channel. l
BR., 4 ba. ~ w/fonnal
din. rm., study; 3 frplca,
wl!t bar. Newly redecot'-
On aandy beach. $169,:.00.
alO'l B~lde Dr. By app'L
BUI Grundy, Realtor
833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642.f620
FDR'fHE MAN
who w•nt1 ev•rything
Under $40,000, 1wimmln1.
boating, tenni11, beaches.
Tllis 4 bdnn, + den borne
has IT! Firat 0Uerin1, .o
call toda.y.
Univer1ity Re•lty
3001 E, Csl. H"''Y· 673-6510
BALBOA COVES
WATERFRONT
Transferttd • Must sell!
Prime Joe. 3 BR. :t ba. sin&:le
story. Newly decor. Fenced
yd. 30 tt. boa! "''· 175.500
Bill Grundy, Re•ltor
833 Dover Dr .. N.B. 6ti.4S20
DOVER SHORES AREA
You own lhe land
Lovely &: el!!gant 3 BR home,
2,650 sq fl. Din rm. tam rm.
bnaldast area. Beaut. yard.
See to appreciate. $72,500.
Owner 642-5.583
NEW tIOME • 3 Br, 2 Ba.
built for Indoor/outdoor liv-
ing. Landscaped. C'lo.e to
schls & stores. Reduced to
$37,000. Owner • 646-408o
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
~ br, 3 ba, 5"" FHA
$39.~ Owner MG-2063
LUXURY BAYFRDNT
l BR-apt. $39,500. Slill. Lease
or part trade. Owner:
67J..881X). Lido ~ Hotel.
WESTCLIFF 3 br, 2 ba.,
separate din'g, fresh I y
painted. Great yard .
642-3149
S BR, 4 BA. H/f ~·
Fam. nn. By Owner. $82,000
16j)O Sanliaa;o Dr., NB
Newport Height•
4 IR $29,900
Just listed. Newpon Hei(htB
area ol Costa 1.f.-aa, 4
bdnnll, 2 baths on qui.-t
street, large R·2 lot w/alley.
Great home for lmprow-
ment l value. Anxious, hlll'-
ry with ofter.
CALL e ,4,·2414 9~.~f!'L N••r Ne•p•rl P•1t Office
By Owner·Fln•I wkend
Offered For S•I•
Newport Hgt:s dlarmer-Own-
er must sell his beautitul
CUS!Om 4 br home. AU ~
Ju."(e features. CI o s e to
schools I i;hop'g. Appra.ised
at $42,000, See to appreciate
I: make offer. 27121.fargaret
Dr. Optn house Sa t &: Sun,
10-4 or call 5'0-676l.
FIXER-UPPER
Architect hun't had time to
tinish his ttmod!!ling job, , •
here's a chance: to 1ave
money .•. do it youtsel.t! l
BR. hom.-; drive by 515
Redland, • ,only $26,950.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 67S-645'
CUSTO?.f House. g yt1 old, 3
bdrms &. den, 2 full baths.
Sep dbl garage. Nr Cliff Dr.
$34,500 or oUer. Owner.
646-2793.
Tustin
-·~-----~--OWNER, m'lall ~ o \In If y
estate, 1/3 acre 3 bdrm, 2
ba, fmly nn, $33.500. FHA
appraised. lal2 Bubblinc
Well, Tustin, 832-M63
Unlver1lty P•r1c
BY OWNER. Irvine: 4 BR It
den, $31 ,500. 10% dn. Swim
pl1, tennis.
833--06921644-4564
.__·~..:."-..:.!~..:. .. _··_.Jll•I
" ,. . . , ... . -' .
F"r1011, May 7, 1'71
I~!.___·-~~·-· 1~1~1 ;;;;m~l~~l=~'~~l:.I ;;;-;;·-~l~~l ~l---·~-.;l;;;iel
Ac,..... fer u&e 150 Lota for S..I• 170 Bu1ines-1 lnvNtment Hou ... Unfurn.. 305 Hevse1 UnfYrn.
1 ·co=VT='"""""'-,-.. ~-.. ~. ~w"",,..u. FORECLOSURE Opportunity J!, zoo. Opportunity 221 c ....... del Mor
Land Packalt', Im Ar-2~ acre bane ranch repos. Newport Heigfth
ro wbt•d Ave, San Hued from former aero-ILLNESS FORCES SALE 3 Br, 2 ba, 1 blk AOl'tb ot BEAUT. mod. townhoule.
a.mu.lino, Ca. '""'° •mpl.,.. ,,,. '""" ' OF LITE MANUFACTURING BUSINESS Cotut Hwy. 2 cblldnn ok. BR., 2% BA, trplc., patio.
Ap.rtments for nl• 152 able at devtlopera cost Ideal opportunity IOr aggressive man or wo-$250/mo. 673-«Kl Pool. 2 C.a.r 1ar. All bllllll,
SAVE $30'.MJ man to take over wholesale arts & crafts Cost• Me1a carp, drapes_ Lae S2SS MV. 22 UNIT~. Low, Low down. on these tebuJoua, oak ;,ud. accessory business. All original design mdse (l) 523-47to or ~ sales pru:e $220,000 with on-ded, ranch size spreads. 1 . 48, 1% BA, dbl sara&• evesJwknds.
ly 10% down. Xlnt cond. In Loc1tted In !he boomil:ll -some ovely unported things that sell in COM'L USE Ok l BEDROOM bl)u11e with oloe
good m\tal area. Xlnt true South Coast area near San the best stores. Facility located Nwprt Bcb. $195 J.e w/optlon 10 buy yard. $:100 per month,
sheller. 544-0760. Juan Olplltruno. H 11 h All set up with complete inventory, equip., Fine st\lcco-pl•tlttf'd home, • 548-4lS6 •
Arthur A. Turner A.uoe:. above the smog, n"lvale beautiiul offices & showroom s. age 13. 68' lot 1¥ worth ... Great mall order business potential. Present Sl-1.950 ret hol.i ... fne. $7800 S•n J1o1•n C•pl1tr1no
Commercial road and locked 11te iuar-· ill l h b · & $184 PITI Go Harbor tum Property )JI antee the natur~ beauty of owner m bea t ut will assist in teachlo' Wat 00 Lytll! ruru No. SM 4 BR • family rm. Brand ,.,,.,,,-.,-;,,_-..,-,,-,-,_I th1a fonner Spanhh Grant the bu siness. 10 see 'J new Troy home. ml:irw, d6h-
ACRE for Comm'I Stables surrounded by beautUul Total investment $14,500. Part cash, balance 54• !M.9' o:A• ""•" wshr, cpll, patio. 1prinklen, 18H back w/1% net net O t t 'bl I E n-,,,_.'"'"" F I ~ t 673-226: 673--5?2! C1eveland National Fore.st. n erms o respons1 e peop e. verytbing • MESA VERDE • or on y ....... per mo. cau. ~"';=·-;.;;:_;;70:0':...::::..:=--1 All utilities a\11lilable. available to work with . Must sell now. Please "93·1936 or 493-3041.
Condomlnlum1 PRICED FROM $9,950 write for appt: MANUFACTURING, P.O. Very clean &Dd sbarp. New Univeriity P•rk
for ••I• 160 WW DOWN·EASY TERMS ! Box 1996, Newport Beach, Calif. 92663. carpets and drapes. 3 BR,
----------IC1rcumsW!ces :lotte the: Im-l Ba. family rm. Quiet
BUDGET SAVER mediate di.!posltlon or these Buslneis a~walk to markets. $2EO
Monllcello 10WnhoUM, 2 or 3 few choice parcela whole per month. 5ID-ll51 Jlitr.
bedrooms, buutifUlly dee--former ownen LOSS a your Opportunity JG&'l h!yhtt, HERJT AGE REAl.,...
orated" Quiet iocation. Own-GAIN !! Call or write lor HouMt frif'lllnt~ TORS, (open eves.)
er &JWOUS -~ ~. complete details and colol' NEEDED : 2 BR. Opt'd, prap, water
on-site photos. Buy direct \VORKJ.NG PARTNER OR & trash pd. Ref Req'd.
TIBURON from the developer: PVT INVESTOR. Subst.ant· Hous.s Furnished 300 $150/rno + $50 dep. No
TOWNHOUSES ia.l return on moDey invest· pea. 2274 Placentia "No, A.
Larwin built 2-J &: 4 BR re-RANCHO CAPISTRANO ed, secW'ed w/coUaleiaJ. Cost• Mesa 646--6637.
sales now on mkt. Buy 2112 DuPont Drive, Rm 3 For more info write P .O. fMMAC. l •br, 2 ba. bltns.
FHA, GI or take over ex-Newport Beach, Cal. 92664 Box 1819. Santa Ana: SUl\t~1ER Rental turn. 3 Crpls/drps, Fncd back yd,
lstin&: loans. We have 50me 833-3223 I New s paper Dealership BR, dt n, patio, avall June CO\', patio, dbl gar. $275 mo.
real gt.amorous o.nes. Call R2 LOT z.o~. for 7 to 10 For L.A. Herald Examiner Jn 20th 10 Sept Sth. Utll pd. 715 Costa Me1a St 0\1.•ner • --" --·• d vi Ion t -$200/mo. 345 Costa ~1eu St. 64 4--034;; · '
"""-wins ~~e 1 1 or units, ti0x305 . Nr country Sanra Ana &-ln businei;s [;c~o~•~t·~·~1'~"'~·_;;.~1~&--0~500~--l3"!fi'1<M-h0";;;<-w;iih information. club, C.~1. RcaJlOr, (213) for yourseif. Cash depo.sit . 3 BDRM hom~ w Ith
L•rwln Realty, Inc. 374-1418 collect rcq'd. Wr lte Box RP, 2662 Huntington B•1ch f l r e pla c~. $190. 2030
546-5411 •nytlme 50x125' residential lo t in Linroln, Anaheim. 4 BR, fam rni, 3 ba, trl-level, Monrovia Ave., Costa Mesa
2156'l Brookhunt. Hunl. Bch. Palisades, 6 b.locks fro nt the.-LAUNDRAr-.1AT Nr bea<'h. July Isl.Jan 15th, e 3 BR., 2 ba. S225. Avail
CAREFREE LIVING ocean at Capi~~nino Bf'ach. BY OWNER S.125. 962·7404. June 15th. 3057 Royce Ln.
Spacious i. story Condo. 2 ::0 do~~ & tyS t~~";W Total ' \\'l'sf Ne11.'POr1 . Ne\I.' y.·ash-2 BR, furnished house, adulr.i;1,.:C~a~ll~!>l:,::_>-~520:-=-l-----
BR, 1"' BA. Fireplace, All · P · · ~ ers. E~tbl . trade. $.29,9::.0. j only. Sl7J/mn 231? England Sl.:JO 2 BR, drps, crpt.
811-ins, W/\V cpts, drps. • ~ + Acre, view lot • 837-G~l? or 642-3863 11B. ~J.50!!. ' 1arage.
We have UNFURNISHED A:
FURNISHED ttntab In
Unlvenlly Park • Turtle
Rock I: would oon.ictcr H a
prlvilere to help )'Ot.I IOive
YoUr ·bouslna: needs.
,.I !111· I 11·lltl
---I l111ltiw
"SINCE !"6"
ht Western Bank Bids
Unlvenlly Park
Days 133-0101 Nights
4 BR. with family room.
Turtle Rock .......... $375
J BR. 2 baUur ••• •• • •••• $325
3 BR, 2 baths: turnt.shed
avail. Aur. hi •• -.•••• $400
Private patio. Huge pool, Corona del ~far * 673-5134 *
...,.ation room. "'"""" • ., .. .,,.. I Money to Loen 240 Lido Isle i ' red h·111 tacil'tie OWNER ?ttusr 3 BR, clean, Freedom Home
SEC:. •. ~9-0674 MoRuentsoertin, Desert,
174
1st TD Loan ''BEAUTIFULLY tumlshed, tract. c .M. Nice yard, Re.rs extra lg. 2 BR., 2 bath, 2 nq'd, $150. Call ~7275
Duplexe1/Unit1 I • H. INTE patio home, Mod. elt'c, kit., :t BR DUPLEX • F need REAL~Y i•I• 162 CABIN on 2~~ acres only 6a "' REST OW, washer & dryer, Dbl e ,,
$4995 w/gocxl renns. A 2nd TD Loan gar. $400 ~to yr lense" yard, crp_!s. drps. $140 mo. Univ, Park Center lrvim:
FOR sale -T\VO 2-story perlect wk nd h Id I! a \v a y . ~tacnab-lrvine Ava.U Sn:>. 540--017'8 caJJ Anytime ~ duplexe~, 24' ·"" 5.)' to be Writr Roberts, P. O. Box T.-rm9 based on tqUll)' Realty Company fiTS.3210 S}.1ALL 3 BR houe. Near "'!~"'!"~"'!"~ ... ..,..,~,
movl!d. 1mmeduate!y. 716 & 431, Yucca Valley, Ca . 92884 1 642•2171 S4s.o6l I Newport B••Ch Country Club. Families only. 4 BR, 2 BA Culverdale, $275.
ns \V . Balboa Bl\'d. Make or call local 557..Jl69 • '-"--.: H ho $150. 837-1789 3 Br, 2 Ba, bonu11 rm, S300
otter 673-7730 ~~·ng ar r area 21 yrs. WATERFRONT Pool Prlvll. 64~2991i · 20 ACRES nr Interstate 10. 1 S•ttler Mortg•g• Co. 2 BDRr--f, priv. yan:I. Good
Income Property 166 Orange Coun ty. $300. per a<·· 336 E 17th Street 2 BR + BR on lo11.·.-r Jrvtl. condition. Avail May 18th. HouMS Furn. or
........ S3XI. dow n, S60 mo. To · I &au1. bay view. Pvl. park Sl90 per mo. Call bt'fo~ 6 Unfurn. 310
$655 PER MO. INCOME reliable party. Owner (213) j c h F I w/!lowers Ir. lrel'11, Avail· pm. 645--0710 ---------Huge~.· 2 baths each. 245-3050 as ast iable lhru Augwit 15th. Huntington Be•ch Cost• Mes•
Magn1f1cent fireplace and R 1 E t t W tad 114 [ • We1ley N. T•ylor Co.c __ AP_E_C_od_l_B-,,-.,-.m-.. -.-il·-I
built-in kitchen grace this •• 1 • e an 11t & 2nd Trust Dffd1 I REALTORS CLEAN 3 br I :t ha, w I w ingi, brick trplc, c I D,
luxurious "4i PLEX" near CASH BUYER FREE APPRAISALS 2lll San Joaquin Hill3 Rot.d shag, drps, bltns. Great klc. Xlra lge yard, lnllt trees.
So. Coast ~aza. ~U vacan-1 Costa Mei• lnvistmenf NEWPORTCENTERS#-4910 L!!e $225. Rl!nt $235. 17342 F'urn or unfurn, child OK.
cy, Jmpl'f'ssive u!'1ta worthy "'-·'t 1· t c....... [ 548-7711 •nytime Hou1e1 Unfurn. 305 OiapparaJ. Ln, 968-3454. aft 646-3226. otyotirexcellentinvestment. u uu Ui your '""""'• •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 6 pm or bet. 10 am.
Submit your terms ov.'Tler aell 11 to u1. I Lido Isl• flexible ro _ · Save time, savr nK>ney, Mortg•ges, Gener•I CONDO-Dec. 2 BR + den,
W lk' & L immed t1rm oHer. Tru1t D•eds 260 I d l ~ BA. crp\i;, drps, bllns,
er ee
. L•nd or 1·0wner1 \\'ashr + dryer. 2 car gar. a Home-Buyer 54().:>J:'Jj I $1000 DISCOUNT \Vt will refer tenants kl )'OU Quiel. l.t'ase sno. 968-5712
Reall'ors $4500 DOWN Solid S6000 li;r T.D, on $10,000 FREE of charge, •• Many eves It l'l•knd~.
71'00 Harbor Blvd. •t Adams "'ant 3 Br or 2 on lo! Cd i\t lot \n Yorba Linda. 10~ in-des.ii:able. tenanl11 on our REDEC. Dutch Hawn 3 BR ,
5U-Of65 "---Lil !:OO PM Will pay $200 mo, 1% lntt'r.] te!'eSI. 8 1no due datc. Sell \l.'a111ng bsl. 2 M. y -1 Fncd 0 :.;:.,;cc;_~v'-""~:;.,..:=,:=.;:.;;;_I N··• · J l t 71 /<~~ ALA 0 • ta! e ••··39!10 • 'i"'c• )ar ' _ ccu pos~1s1on unc ~ T.D. ror $.jOOI), 4 .u .. -vuL• ncn ' ....,, Bit~. New c:rpt. $2ll.
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE:
72S Via Lido Non:!. Lido
J:lle. Call Wtbster 4--0920 or
Brighton G-4::.47
Condominium•
Unfurn. 220
5 UNIT mi .. ·,·· oea . .,""so'2 1281, Al· I 1sr TD's $12,0CQ (4-$3000) 7',; FREE Rt'ntal Book Drop In 893-8768. L•gun• Hills
MONEYMAKER m ra, · Interest. Sa le-or trade. and Browse We nave a bookl-7~"":-:;,,..-=~--o 4 BR 2 BA bl.tin OVl!n .\ NEW dlx. angl •l;y 3 BR., 2 _ 500 •• 10 000 DOWN WANT to buy ~!onarch Bay 4 1'1yen;, 673-6736 lull. ' ' d BA •• •-bl~--_.., " ' or 5 Bdrm home. (2Ul WALKER I: LEE, Reallon range, CJ'Plir, rps. Clean. • crp ... , "'1'1• u .. ,
Probably one of our best of'!-283-SZlO (2U} 68:1-8857 ~ Harbor Blvd. at Adllmll Fenced yd. $l'li. mo. Childnn OK. 2 C enc pr,
for more uniU 6.1 x 300 • RESP. party desire11 lease/ ..... forRent e e RANCH SIZE Yd! 2 Br, -Bkr. 837-5506. erings of the ye-ar. Room ' I~ 142 2708 grd • In.sh plrup inc $266.
1.fl _ Lot. Low 'ttnt income option 2..J BR., amall down. blln.'1, encl gar, kids I: pets. 3 BR. 2 ba, crpts/drps, I :-.,---U~71---=,I
t5.lli0. Excellent yield and 496-tBOS ews. $170, gard.-ner, fncd yd, .$250 mo. Dupl•x•• n urn. 350 :·
tax shelter, Phone 646-nn ALA Ran•ahi • 64~3900 M2-3960 Cost• Mesa Hou1e1 Furnished 300 BALBOA lSLAND houSt' Huntington H•rbour
'O THE REAL ., ESTATf:RS
2 bdrm1, den, hr. ltasc. NEW 1 Br. brick gas frpl,
213 325-3781 $199/MO. Clean 3 Br, 2 Ba. beam!I', patio, w/w, bltns. l
2-car garage, crpl'>, drps, adlf. Yrly. S136. &42.8520
bltn11, tncd yard. 2 kids ok.
3 Un.its at $49,~tu 1beller Builntrll
Sl90·l Br fam hom• bltns,
CID, gar, yd. Kldsti>e1.11.
Blue Be•con * 645-0111
Y o r k 1 o w n. M a 1 no 1 ia _H_u_n_•_l•_v_t_•_•_B_e_e_•_h __ ,.._.,.., '-'-.income. Drive by 2266 Opportunity 200 RENTAL FINDERS
Mirier St, C.M. Owner has,1,,-,-,,00'.-o--,..----Free To Landlords e IMMACULATE! 2 Br, 2 L•guna Be•ch
DUPLEX, unfum, SW +
Utilities. 2 BR + garage.
Adl!s, no pets, Re I' a. .....,., firm GI loan commitment RAPIDLY growi ng M5.0111 Bn, crpts, drps, kid1 It pet1.l;;c;;.-:c;c..;;...;;...;;_;, ___ _
at $49,200. Good inwstmen1 &: Fishing tnvel Agency. $1,j(), + VIEW HOi\-tES *
opportunity W)\'l!f)' little Xlnt protected area of SA to 4JJ W.1! ... c .... MeM ALA Rental!! e &4~3900 LAGUNA BEAOI Newport Shores " cash. Principals on I y . NB to Lag. Sch. 11ave 12 1170_2 Br honie Bit 4 Bdrm .. Ir: ~· nn., exc. 646-8517 or 495-5156 pl't'pd . wks. of TV adv. on SISO-YEARLY, 1 Br, furn. · · ni, nu ocean view, fireplace, w/w ----------· 3 BDRM, 2 ba, w) \IH of , FOR sail!: 2-2 BR houses, .i J im Thomas 0 u t do o r h5e at beach. Yrd. SmJ pet Cpts, d~, yd, Sng1s ok. carp bit-in kitch incl
2-2 BR Duplexes. All on 1~ Shaw. Forc1!d sale causerl ok. Blu• Be1con * '45-0111 retrt(. l yr. leue $350 mo ..
acre lot in Costa Jlife&a. All b}' 011.'TW!n' i;hort no!Lce ol Blue Be•con * 645-0111 •ENJOY! J Br, 2 Ba , cpl!., 3 Bdrm. 2 bt.th home, exc.
unia have lrplc, drps, crpt, mililary overseas dates. e STEPS TO OCEAN ! d rp~. 2 car gar, kid11. ~. ocean vie-w. W/w carp. il
indiv. guages & fncd yard&. 67>13&5 Roomy 1 Br, kids & pets ok. AL.A Rl!ntal.11 • 64>3900 drapes thruout. Neat as &
Total price $81,()()0. Call Xl.NT opp o r t u n 11 y -SllJ. 3 BDRJ.t., Family rm., park pin $300 mo.
tennis ct, 1wim pool • ;
clbhse. Patio, crpl, dl'PI I. :• = ;;:.· ;n: s~~~\~ :.
aft 6. • :
337--0289 P h o I o g r 1 p h y Studio.
1
ALA Rentals e &IS.-3000 like yard. Col;ta Mesa. Kids Dix. 3 BR. 2 ba.., N?rth end
INDUSTRIAL INCOME ~stablfshrd. 8 yrs, Coa11 $80-Util pd, Bach at heach. OK, brk., $200 a munth. NO loc., X!nt ocean view, All
100% rented 5 shop industrial H11.'Y locat1on, Laguna Bch. Ava ij oow, Ideal student. t-FE_E_.c.....54tl-_1_1>l_. _____ 1 bltn . kit., lrpl., open beam A Id be cell's. $315 mo blda:. Rtturns over 12% on rea w e open. Stro ' Blue B•acon * 64S:011 I $140-2 Br, blrns, cpltr, drps, MISSION REALTY 49«1?31
[ .. _,,,_
equity . Located in beach llgh\'g equip + furnishings: garage. Children ok
area. $69,500. darkroom fac!I wfpartlal • R~RE-Bel•pdch ~ad! Clc,an Blue Beacon* 64.S-0111 L•gun• Nlguel Apt1. Fum.
Sbelter Industries, Inc. N(1.1ip. Owner leaving state. &: quirt, ut · rly Sll · (n4) 64~2820 714/494-2024 ALA Rentals e MS.3900 e HEAR TIIIS! 2 Br, Jncd NEW ~ BR, 2 BA, din arta Generll
SAN CLE1'fENTE -11 UNIT TO BUY OR
JEWEL $10,959 return on $25,000 down. Full price SELL A BUSINESS
11>1.000. Tue "'~ Eol>i"' HOLLAND BUS, SALES
Investment Division i\1r. ''The Broker with Empathy"
Bell TI4 346-2316 or 714 lTI6 Orange A\'t ., C.?1-1.
540-228.l 645-4170; 54().0608 anytime
lnduttrl•I Property 161 \IJe need sales people
HAYE
NEW Ottict Suildin1
W/$100 K equity,
S27K Net Income
WANT
FREE• CLEAR
lndu.stria.J. Bld'g
or Lot (1 ac)
W.R. DuBob: MS-n66
Let1 for Sele 170
GRAI ME!
USED car lot -oUlce-lights.
Ta' x 160' near Harbor I.
Bay St. See 2036 Harbor.
C:\t
e BAOIELOR PA D! l-landy yd, encl gar, kid1/petw. $130 +-farn rm, {rpl, cpti, drpg, ----------1
LA I ~ kl f d ·-~ l Rent BeauUlul Furnltuiw to bench. Ulil pd. •o~. A Renta !I • 64>3900 1p •• n ers, ence ,. ... u. m--•!10 4= •••4 for as little as ALA Rrntal!I e 64~3900 3 BURM. + lamil)' nn., full mac. " ' J.r-o"' SU~l1'1ER & yrly. ren1als; dining rm., built-Ins., bric. 3 BR, 2 BA. crpta, drps, pav-ONE MONTH ;;
finer homes In beach 11rea $390 a month. NO FEE, M storage spa~ for
Bill Gn1 ndy Rltr. 642-4620 'iNl•cwport'r5i'!;;,.,_Afj~l1>l:<'.~;-;;r;;;:[,~"~·~U~•,...~boa~t~, ~'~"'~'~'-'d~·~Xln~t complet• with
DAILY PILOT for action!
)~
e COZY ' PAO! C'Pll ! d'P•. cond. $280. 495-424i4 your 100-/•
!l!v/refri1. child ok. $95. LSE or lse/opt 3 Br, 2 B.a , Purch•s• Option
ALA Rentals • Mr>-3900 $285. Fireplaoe, yard, 1ar. Ind . item selection.
l Br, 2 Ba, lrplc. bltn.1, CID, bltna, 4!M-4746, 499-l331. 24 Hour 0.ly.
gar, sngls ok. $200 2 ,LCE BR.I, w/1v, drpi, refr, CUSTOM
Blue Be•con * 64$.0111 stove. $200 Inc. util. 263 Furniture Rent•I
• NEAR BEACJ-1! I Br, Grandview. 494-281.5 317 w. 19th, C.M. 548-34n
stove, re-frig, kids I: pets. Lido Ille Anaheim 774-:tl!OO $125 I,-'::':,_.-,..,._,.,.,,...___ Wlabra 694-3708
ALA .Rental!! e 645-!900 3 BR, crpt'd, bltins, pato & CHATEAU LAPOINTE 1 .c~00--"-'.--'-=-=:.:1 frplc. Lease. Adlts. $300.
$175-Blk to beach. lmmac. 673-4063 or (213) B-28M LOVELY 2 BR •Pit. Furn •
2 Br. Singles ok. M d I M Unturn, Shar crpt'g, htd
Blue Be•con * '4S.0111 •s• • •r pool, Carportg. Adult1, no
e RARE INDEED! 3 Br, 4 BR, 2 BA 4 den. Walk to peta. From $140.
fncd yd kids & pets S1 55 all •cboolt. $275, 1 'if'. lease. 1941 Pomona. Avr, CM.
ALA ~~tali e 6.fs-39oo Avail June 20. 546-2464 HOLIDAY PLAZA
B•lbo• Penlnsul• Newport Budl DELUXE Spaclou11 l Bit I IOCE ;:;:::A:;:NF;_:R,.:O:;NT:;:_:::J,:.:.,:::,::...~:..,,-,-·,l~,-,;Br,...-pa-rtlal.,,-,,-ly--f-u_r_o. I f!Jrn apt $13S. Ht.:aJed pool.
A-Olan CALL e ,4,·2414 ---------1/1~.~f!"
I'm a very unu11Ual home site
on a quitt eul-de-aac street
In delllrable Mesa Verde,
From my level guildina pad,
high on a hilt, J can see the
1'(11! cou.ne and tt>e llahtl
of the ctty, Come attnd on
me and aee tor youraeU.
$21.950. Call 546-2313.
"" bou U Ample parkif)6, No ch.lldrert 1
sty-fantaatlc bay • ocean !If'. pstlirt, SlTO mo. • no peta, 1965 Pomona. vi~. 3 Br, 2 Ba, tam nn, Water paid. Couple only. CM
REAL ESTATE M••r Ptc..,•rt h•I Otflcit
THE BLUFF 1190 Gle.nne.vre St
494-9473 549°0316
* HARD TO f"INO • Truly better th&o n!!\lf and
2-Story: !I bdrms., 2\1 ba th.1, hardly 11\'i'd in. Choice cor
lge. k1tchi:n w/brkts1. area. ner location, sheltered pa.
FormAI dln1 ~ MJI,; lge. liV· !lo, nice ,.;e.w and exptrtl)'
Ing rm. 11o·/lrplc. Nice lam-dtocorated. 1800 sq ft or lfv
Oy hon1!' on quiet cul di! Ing ittta tn thl.it choice 3 Bl\
u c strttt in pi nei~hbor-hom.-. Ow°'r "''Ill 11ell im·
hood, S39.Si00. med tor s«.650. or consider
m~ trade. Cilll 54~W4. SOUTH
Ill$-~.~, ~~ "CO:,:.,A,:ST,;,_,R_EAL_TO:..:_R;;;S:_. -~
90.lll<~c;.Li PRICED for quick &all!! Like __ .._c..... nt w, 2600 sq It, ~·br. • ba,
+ 499-2800 * ft.m rm plus tep same rm.
erJ.ll /drpt, lnscpn;t. com•
SEi:LL'lG Your bOal? "Lisi" n1unity pxil. plus m•ny
wUh us .. 5"11 it 111.sr . 0 5.lly x1ru . Nertr f u hlon l•land.
Pllo' ClA'-!!l rtffi. &4~i8 Ry "'\~r•S.iA.~'10. 544-6653
Acr••t• for ••I• 150
HAWAII -2 ACRES
S<.900
Trtt1-P'erna-Orch!d1. B l 1
J11land 16 mi to Hilo. CAJI or
Write Ol\11t1r !oday. Wr1te
Clual.fled arl No, 155, Dally
Plk>t. P.O. Box 1560, toll& J --'7"ii';T"~i'<i'i ..... "1'~J
M•"· 9'676 " * BY OWNER * 2U 4J2.-33.49 Didi. site. Perm. view, End
40-A cre land inw.lment In of DunnLn1 Dr., La.runa
forest area eut of s. J. Bch, All utll. Sewer latual
Capistnno. Utllltita. $1ffl in, CASll OUT Jll,000. Box
per acre. Xlnt ta.x .netter. '6f.. Palm Sprinp.. n4:
Terma. R. S. Brown, Real· ,,;.3*'233"-'.;::;~· ~~~-~~~1
tor. 493-4774. CHOICE lot. 100 x llS M
10 ACRES Riverside County paved alley. 343 E ,
nr Interstate 10 trwy $2950. Rochester St. Ot closf to
f/p. Lew down, e11.sy tmn• 17th St. shOppil'l&
to rella.ble party. C>wnitr .,;S22""',000"""'"'~'--'-9l09"-----I 1 21~1 i\!"...3o30 Sell id.I• items nowt
Call &ll-&J'"TI Now! Call &12-li671 Now!
patio, aundeck, d sh YI hr' Call alter -4:30, 673-2383 :::--::-' --:::--:--7"--·I
bltnll, drp1, erptl.. Adullll, no WESTCLIFF area, 4 br, 2 B•lboa Peninsula
pell!, S50Q/mo. lte. ITS-0034 ba, w/w cpl, drps, bltns, -,$35,,,-.,W°"'K--OCEA""'"'"-N'"F_RONT __ ,,
C•pl1tr<1no &.•ch trplc, f/yrd, nr shop'&· IAYely Be.chelon, 1-Bit .
S325/mo. 646--7745. Ma.ld service. Pool. U1~
1 Br house, WATERFRONT 3 BR. 4 Bt., e61S-17t0e
ocean view, privacy, SUS home, llfl"'ly f'td('C .• on san-Coite Mei•
mo. or l yr l1e SUS mo. dy beach. $1.000 h1o.
49£....4167 Bill Grundy Rltr. &12-4620 ATTRACTIVE 2 br
Corona del M•,. Newport Heights stud~I ~-ba, crpts .\ dtp.1. encl garagt. $170. 6'2-S291 * co zy COITAGE -, blks NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1 BR. 1135. C,..!/dml.
from beach, frplc bcl11m N11w decor EARL V A1'1l.fU. SWlm'c pool. cme In. 14;;
ttllln,,., new cr-Pt1. No CAN ANTIQUE charm l
chlldru. Avail July lit or Btdtooms 2 baths c11nhtl _E,, . .,"_lh_S_t~, .c.._",,· ,,.•94="""=~-I
before. $250. 675--49-13 nook, ctoubie deta~ pr. e H•ppy I BR $140 e
2 BR houae, frp)o, l1e fenced •le pha 1tora1tt. Famllles Poot. AduJt1. 642-.%181
yard, spaa to park boat or p~ftmd, No Ptll. $2:50 I BDRM turn apt, $140 mo.
trlr, 3 blks ta beach. monthJy Includes utilities No pets, 820 Ctnler Slrfft,
$250/mo, 673-9019 8nd prdener. t\f. M, La-01. 642-5848
TIU'n unused llems lnto quick Borde ltl!altor, 646--055S.
call 612-MTS We'll help you MU! 6Q..5611
HouM! Hunttng!' \Y1tcb
OP!:N HOUSE column.
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•
I
I
I ' '
;18 DAILY PILOT rrldlJ, Ml1 7, 1971
I ................ Jl!J I ................ ,~I [ ............... J~ , ..... -....... I~ I-·-......... l~I
Aph. Furn. MO IA,_,p;..t_•.,.· _F_,u_m_·.,,...-,--360-Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 lpt. Unfum. :US Apt. Unfum.
~c-.-,t-.-~""'"-,.~~~~~ N•wport 8e•ch
365 Apt. Unfum. :US Apt. Unfum.
iiiiiNiaiwiipoiirtiilleiiaicihiiiiiiii' San Clement• Coit• Maia Huntington Beach I B•lboa Ponln1ulo
I BRAND new DF.LU'}Q: 3 Sr.
CASA de ORO La Quinta Hermosa ' .. •P"'· '""' ·-E CASUAL C&llf, Llvini In .t ( BIJboa 81\'tl; close to ocean
\\'ann 1.lediterranean almoa-' Spanish Country E1tAte Liv-or bay. 1 yr Leue. lllcl
pbere, Spacious color co-! ins il SpacK>us Arla, Ter-D/\V. drp$, frpl & crpt.
ordinated apts -oe.sij:ned l I raced pool: sunken gall BBQ fi4.4..4161 day1, 6'73-mJ.1 eve.
lu1'flished for s1yle & com-l)nbelievablf' Living • Only _1_0_'-'-"-'-· -----~
to.rt • Hea led pool • Kitch-I Br unf $150.furn $175 Sl7j YEARLY • 2 br., \m-
en w/ Indirect li&hllng • 2 Br unf $175 furn $210
1
, mac, nr bay, stores, ocean.
Deluxe RI O. AduJIJI. No pe1.1. I ALL UTIL L\'CLUDED 419~ E. Bly, adlt11. 67;-Hl72
1 BR.-Sl73 turn. 1 Special 3onus: a silver· aft 6 & ll'l'ekends
Bachelor -$1.fj pl1ttd cltnd!e ~nuHer is 12 BR., incl. ulil ., :m i\1o.
• 2 BR -~195 yours if you brina; this 11id . ye:arly, Newpol'! Beach
t:TILITIES INCLUDED "·hen you vi.sit our models. I Realty 6Ta-lti42 ~ \V. Wlbon 642.-1972 14 blkJ1 s. of San Ole.co Fn'l'Y Coron• d•I M•r * SUNNY * on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holl ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * ACRES * to 1621 1 Park!!lde Lane. * Mot•l·Apts. * 17141 8'1·a441 ~·
NOW YOU CAN AFFORD
NEWPORT BEACH
R£AL value, Crpt•. Drp1,
Dshwu, Pool. 2 BR. Only
$130. Mature adlt1 only, No
pets. Quiet. 2295 Pacitlc Av(!,
548-6878. 642-4429 * 5170 * Enjoy $750,000 health club & spa; 7 pools, 7
3 Br, 1~~ Ba, patio, bltni, tennis courts. BacheJor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also 2-
crpr!I, drpt. Ask abou t our story townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. E lec. kitch-
dl11COunt plan. 880 Centtr ens, private balcony or patio. From $175.
sr., Ci\1. 642..1134(1 Subterranean parking, elev, maid service.
2 Bdrm dupl~x. e1Jcl pa tio, Full-line food market, dry cleaner, beauty
garagt, 11dults only. Sl50. salon within complex. 7 beaut. model apts.
2169-A Charlt or. 548-88.li V am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt.
\\'kd1ys aft 6. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. of
* REGENCY * Fashion Island. 714: 644-1900 !or leasing info.
',~:,, ~!'~.:~~~':'.;..'~' PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS
• , NEW •
NOW RENTING
DB LUXE-LARGE
2 Bedroom, 2 Bal.hi. Fully
carpeted & draped. Dish·
10.'asher £. stove. Ra.du1nl
heat. 2 car enclosPd garag-
~. Overlooking &:Olf course
w/ ocea n \•iew.
ll4 E. San G1bt1el
San Clemente
• 492-2455 •
' '
Apts.,
Fum. or Unfurn.
Aptt.,
370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Newport Buch Newport BNch
FROM $135*
Olympic sit• pool-Billiards-S•un•s-Tennis
r.ro shop-Color TV loun9.-Ha•lth Clubs-
ndoor 9olf drivin 9 r•n9.-Party Room-Full
time Activities Oir•ctor.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Singl<', l & 2
Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished.
REASONABLE RENT': Singles from $135.
1 Bedrooms froim $145. 2 Bedrooms from
$200. Low move in charges. No lease req'd.
Studio & l Bedtoonl!
LO\V RATES
$L \Vttk·SlOO ~lo.
Daily Rate!! Avail.
~;:._ ~t~;o,~·~548-T;"°';';'-~3~77~W~. ~W?"'°~"'l~~!!!!J!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!'!!!!!'l!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!\!!!l~~~'.'Fi~~~j"j~2 Models Open Daily 10 1m to I pm ~ LG 1 & 2 BR Patio Yd. BRAND NEW lux. 2 Br, 2 1 SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN
PanellUq:, &as &_ 1vtr pd, In-Apt. Unfurn, 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 83, lll> .sq. It. Quiet A tm t Apl.rtn1ents
• Color 1V, Air-Corid
QUIET garden 1p1
do"·ntown . I BR, decorator
(urnished, ocean view, 1 blk
lo beach, new t:pts, drps,
p11 !nr. Mature adlU. Year
ieliJ!f'. s:m mo. 494-4029 day,
4!M-:l839 eve~ '1 wkends
ON TEN ACRES
l & 2 BR. Furn. & Unturn.
Fireplaces I priv. pab.
Pooia TennlS Contnt't Bids!.
900 Sea Lane, CdM fi.U.26ll
(hia.cArtbur nr Cout HWy)
I J OK 12192 Edi ----------cu.1-d~c. Panoramic view par en 5 (resort Uvin.,. for an · na;er -nr ·---------ot ocean. Adul!s only. S180. (just fDr •Ingle people) sin<>le &: married adults)
Harbor C_••-·~·,,.,.M~·~·~•,--..,,--· I East Bluff 49,_~,9 Irvine A 16th ..
• Pool, Pool Table e Sounds
.. ~-16th btwn Irvine It Dovu
HARBOR GREENS ORLEANS APTS. e NEW DELUXE e Santa An• 714: 645-0550 714: 642-1170
2376 Newport Blvd.
548-91.U
GARDEN l: SI'UDIO APTS 3 BR. 2 BA Apt for lease. Incl!;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:::;;; •Rent subject to loeation
Bnch.1, 2, 3 BR's. from SllO. ADULTS ONLY spac. master suite, din rm CAN'T BE BEAT
NE'\V OW~'ER-under
NEW !'.tANAGE~tE.N'T
2'100 7Peterl0n Way, C.M. 2 A 3 BR. Avail, Pnva1e pa. " dbl 1ara1e. auto door Sl8:1. 2 BR modern. ocean 5"6-03 0 u Poo
CROUND Floo I Id !iv, PoOI . indiv. laundrv tac, opener ava . I &i Rec. vif'"" 11·alk lo beach. bhint. r. ne1'' Y cp . .
• ~~ UP * SHARP ba chelor unit. close (Nr. Ora.nge Co . .11 ........ r1; Tua. area. .,...., Adul1ii. No pets. 494.-6189 draped &i painted; ~tove k ._..,... GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM! refr ig. incl. 1-Blk. lo ~ach. 10 OCC " UCT. S130 mo. ti11 a111th St; nr. \Vestcli!f). • S265 •
Gorgeous. park-like ~tting. Newport Beach No pets. Sl80 Mo. on yearly incr5 re:lr!g. Avail May 1 Clo1~ 1ara1e~ lor max-PARK NE"rPORT, Jam· lf'asr. 5-15--0118, 91l Valencia. Apl. 11~1 Tusti n, Costa P.fesa
lmum security. Quiet atnet. bortt Rd. Chance to lry ex-DeLancy R.E 644-12'10 No. 'l. If no aru;\li·er llli-442'1 Mir. Mrt. Tbomp!IO!l 642-400
Adults, no pets. 2020 elusive adull communily * COROLIDO APTS * 2 BR, 111.. BA, sharp, Crpll,
Fullerton Ave (Harbor to living on shor!-tenn buis. I 2 Rr, s1udios & street levels. drp,;, 1200 !IQ. fl. Availablel---~.-l~l.10=~u~P~•---
8ay. then So. until 2 bib br at rost. furn or unfurn . I sis;;&. up. Dshwhr. lrpl, dhl now. 1.165 mo. 545-0TI~ 973 GIA~"'T l &. 2 BEDROOt.f!
So. or Ne"·port Blvd . 642-Agt Dot. 646-2290 or carport . LA R G E Pool. Valt'ncia, ~pt. No. 2• if 00 Gorgeous, park-like setting.
8690 646-:m8. 673_3318 ans"·er, 835-44Z7 Closed garages for max-
unb.11.v.bly B •• ut'.ful Al'All J J 1.. ., BR ,.c.,::.c_c:.,_~~~-~--.,.. QUIET 2 BR, I~~ BA, crpl'd, imum securi1y. Quiel stree!. • unr · u -'· • 2 Br I Ba 1rpl sha& cpl , forced air, buiJt.ini;, priv Adults. no pets. 2 O 2 O VA'tul~' ~SE!E,.Gt~~~o~~~ &:arden apt. l\r \Ves!cU drp~, bit~. h'urry $210, patio. 26-19 On.nfe Ave. Apt Fulle.tlo n Ave fHal'bor to
865 Amigos Way, NB
htanared by
WILLIAM WALTERS CO.
luxury Ea1tbluff
2 Br, l~ Ba, frplc, patio,
rool. Adulta. $72!> mo.
644-1162 or 834-3405 work.
Huntington Ueech
Children Welcom•I
SINGLE STORY
South Sea A tmoe:phere
2 BR. . 2 BATH
Carpets & drpa
Alr Condi tloned,
Private Patios
HEATED POOL
Plenty ot lawn
Carport & Storage
HIDDEN VILLAGE
GARDEN APTS.
2500 South Salta
Santa Ana t.i S.16-1525
Shopping Cntr. f100 mo. Btwr: 10.5, 630-2062; aft s, E. 548-9a92 Bay, then ..: ... until 2 blks Move in now. 2 BR·s, all ex-
every"'hel'f'. SITeam k. Refs. Adults, no p e I & • 213: S96-l719 ""' fras. Pool, pvt paliO.<J. Pets [!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""~""' \Vaterlall, 45' pool ~. Rm, 6"6-8641 ~'=-'=-~~~---c,,-QUIET 4-plex-lrg dlx 2 br, So. of Ne1,•port Blvd.) ok. f'rom $139. Nr achools NEW delux 4-pltic ap1, 2 BR,
Sauna. Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, Furn---.-125-,-V-E_E_K_&_U_P_•--13 BR, 2~~ BA Deluxe apL So. !/a ht, pr. rent reduced to 6-'2-3690 & shopping. Jlt3l ··B" or crp1s, drps, bltns, dshw1r.
Unfurn. from $135. SEE IT: MESA •JOT"'' ot Hwy. See Atrr. 322-~ 1na1ure reti p. cpl . lo manqe RTNG BROS. Announces ,;D" Keelson l.n. 968-75lO, encl aar. Childl'f'n & ptts -P "" •0-. • " . "'.. . 1\fa1·••11erite " ph_ 673.7127. bl"-54009= I 417 N "·I II """"' arsom, -•u K1tc~n. TV 11, maid serv1ce.1 .c..,=•c..:."c;;,..c-'---~-I .,.. ,,...., <J(I Apts No111 Available 847-4&:"16 or 842-1170. '"e come. Ou.:· <>
• -~". INCL U Ii J . H d J ""9681 SHARP 1 Br cplll d,..,.,s "* B~•UT!fUL 1 & 2 BR. . SunflO\.\'er. 557-1045, ~~2321 r u n.i~ eate poo . ~ -., · .,. • .cJ\ MEDITERRANEAN LOVELY 2 BR. Qtuet, I-s ty or inquire at apt A.
DELUXE bachelor & : br :! BR furn apt~. Poo l No priv. patio. Crnd. f1r. Contemporary Carden Apl.5. VILLAGE duplex. Newly dl'C. Yd., ,,,--,0,,"'°-~----Apt;c. $3.'i \\'eekly & up. !\fo. Scenic Prop. liW-5726 Patios, fr p I r:: s , pool. · 1 We1tcllff rhildl'f'n or P"t~. 2-405-,; 2400 "''"°' Blvd. patJO. c osed gar. Cpl . rates. Terms Avail. 998 El Sl50-SI65. Call 546-5163 1-----------C11.n1ino. ~6-0451. l61h St. N.B. 64G-4fJ6.f Costa Mesa Col!ta ,\fesa \\'/small child OK. No pets. QUIET. PRESTIGE APT .
. -~--OCEANFRO~'T J Br, 2 Ba, f ;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;: 1 2 BR, cpl!, drp1, bltns, 11l1 l ;)57-8020 $160 l\lo. Refs, req. Owner 2 BR, crpld, dl"J)ll, bltins.
$1S per w•ek & up S250 mo. Iii 6115. Adult! on· I rtlrig, up!rrs. infanl ok, 540-3862 \Valk to Weslcll!f P\111.11. ,.~A~~;,~~.~.'!~;, '" """''' 673•8088 * Spanish Elegance [ ;:..,r,,"· 11
'" "''·""· * BRAND NEW * Seascape Apts Adi~. No P"" •180·
\VESTCL!FF D · l B LOVo•y l 1 , BR 1 monthly. ti-16-8.372 or 4ii0 V1ctoril. C.1\l. rive · r. DELUXE I BR, 900 iq. ft ., LA COSTA APTS, 1 & 2 BR. "'... new • ··• . 64&-liJO. 1-*~~S~U=S~C~A~S=IT~A"""S~ I Ne\11Jy decor. Bltn •P-~t~ The i\1ood •·or bltna, crpt•. drps, refrlg. BJiru, swimming pool & gar-blk from ocean. crpts. drps, i~--------
pJ!ances. Pool. • 642-6274 gar. bale, li ke new . age. AJI utiJ pd. S150 to Sl70 patio, dshwhr, sundeck. trpl. Apts.,
U. nicely furn Bachelor Ir • \\'INTER RENTALS • Quiet Adult Living 962--4180. nio. Adult~. no pet!. 20j 15th St. 8~1-39:i1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
1 Br. f'umished mode •. ; ~nt NOW for Sept.! Shag <'Pt e drpg e bhns e MESA VERDE are~ • 3:>4 Avocado. C:\1. 642-9708 BEACHBLUFF Apts Costa Me~se
OPf'n daily. Ne\\' rental rates , ABBEY REALTY 642-3350 BeautHul POOi deluxe 2 '1 3 Br, 2 Ba, . 1 New 2 Bdrm, dshwhr, pool, J ;;:::;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:::;;;;;
2110 Ne .... •port Blvd, Ci\I j l'ofAY·JUnt! at the beach1 Lre 2 Br, $170 incl all util encl ra.r, Sl45 & up. Rental LUXURY Condom inium. patio 8231 Ellis 1•
SPECIAL • ltl Rates from \ 3 br. 2 ba duplex avail now. Adult~ only-no pe!s. o ,_, M A Handy to frwy. 3 BR, 21 l S.i2..8477 or 8.t7-39\i7 ""919 f('; ""~ i ce v e . BA. •ml P''' 1--· ,-~ 0, S25 11·k, Kit a va.11, maid S24:>/mo. :JoJ9-0M4 2~1 Avocado St. 64"""" ~6-1034 •1<.-u .,., 1 ~-~-~-~~~--1 La k · · large p111io. Xtra lrg encl Nr Huntington H•rbour ten •. TV & ph. Sea r 1 RED .. block to ocean, pool, Quiet Adult Living gar. Pool . Lovely around~. Triplex • quie1 area. Lrg • ~fotel. 2301 Npt Blvd .• CM. llingll' adul ts $135. 833-35.15 FAIRWAY
* * * * El Pu•rfo Mela Apt1
* * • * l B•droom Apts. 646-744;1 or 64{-0637 f'~es. Newly dN"Or1ted 2 BR. Gar. Xtra cleen. $23.\ mo. Call Br -Sl40, l BR • S240. Pets
a1te & Pool. Carpets, dra?-CO!ll'CI 1213• 547-0900 or ok. (114 ) 846-0071. Sl " · 11· Al LRC reder I Br. centrally LARGE ,,,,,;, apl. 1100 ;,... VILLA APTS. ,,1• 54" ~so JO ... up 111c1. ul •ties_ so I f'll. No pe11. 642-8042 ·'1 """"' 2 BR, clean.\ attract., rrnts. lurr Pool •-Rec,ea""n ioc. Pool. l'arport. Ad!t1. no . Util Patio I blk from bch. .... ..-""
'
11~-~ 11' Hami'ltoo · ' NICE & SPAcioull I Br . ...,...ti<, SPACIOUS ne"'' I It 2 BR drp!'I, Blln!, Air rond. Nr area. Quiet Environment. pt ll. .;;J, ·""" • • 61:.-IAAO bc-!orr noon. ~.,. 646-4160 or 54~1fi0 2 &. J BR's drp!'I, bltru; + refrig. Adlt!'I. lux. apts \I/pool, O/\V. school1", !ihop'g & park, l\ids Off stree1 parking. No Chi.I·
B CJ{EWR 1 l OCEANFRNT ~•ummer Private palio, pool . indiv. no p!"IJ<, $120. Jnq. 2868 La-l'ncl gar, ~au1. rec rm & OK, no pets. ~1548 dren, no pet!'I.
A · c 0~ n · speci&I S22'i mo til Ju~ 1:1 Jau«A-· lat. Sa.lie Apt I, C:-Of. 549-la24. la undry far1l. Nr OC colle&c 2 BEDROOM, near !lhOp '"•· Also Garages f'or Rrnt Garaa:e. No pel l<. lnqui~ 642-8001 642-$000 , ...... , • & fnvys. Adul11<, no ~ti;. N 1 d ·" 1 ~.1961 M 1 A upita lr R, l~fi Lj, f~ · Near Orange Co. Alrponk 1 2B~deluxeTownhoui<t.Pvt 642-1470. eW'i ecoratoru. $130/P.fo ·7""° ape ve.
Rochester. 0 1. Apt. Unfurn. 365 UCL Adulls only. I palW>, encl i::;ar, small prt . . Realonomics Corp. 67a..6700 Costa Mesa
I BR. Jurn apt, all util pd
1
G I 20122 Sanla Ana A11e. 1 ok. SJ6i Avail approx 6/1. '1 BR . FROM S\5.i , 2iliBR:R..;;,;;;0,~,~mO..~,;,;w~ly'0o~.~.,,.;;i1~,dj!~~~~~~~!!!!"!'~•
Pool. Ca.rare. Adult!'. ~ enera Mrr '-frs. Joachim Apt l·A 3009 Cbolidge 540-7241. COMPLF:l'ELY RED l: C, .r, draped. Call a.!I 6 pm , BAY MEADOW APTS.
'
· ;,.i&-6215 • I • BR 1 1 ~ n 11 CLF.AN & cozy F"AMIL v 53&-20S8
pf'!!. Slj(). l\tg-r. No. . l8.1 un · IP • '"""' r. 1 UNITS. CONV LOCATION '""'°"''""',..-""°~.,----IS J · r~"="=--W-"c"'c"-·-c~·~"-·-~~-VEN DOME Pi1rlt·Li1'• Surrounding ulil pd, s1v h1".I. P~I. Gar. VILL-. ,VJESA .APTS . LRG 2 Br. kids ok. garagr, earn ceJ ings, pane~int El'IV
I BR trailer, SSO + util. L1•g QUIET -lJELUXE Arlll!'I, no J>'I.~. 116a. l\1gr 119 w \V J!'On &16-12·1 crpt/drps. $130 a mo. Call pal!<>il, n'.!crca!lon ac 1 es.
1 B I di 11"" 1!'.ThfACULATE APTS! l-.2 & l BR APTS No. 9, 3113 \\'. \\'ilson, 0.1. · 1
' :i 842--8368 aft 6P1'l. All adul1s, no pets. r tr r + nan-a, ..,, + ADULT and , SPAC 2 Br a p I 1 !rom ' * Bachelor apl fron1 Sl lO *
Ut11. 64&-1809 alt 6 pm. FAt\IILY Sf'ctlon Also ~urn. Bachelor UPPER J BR, 2 BA, pool. $140 Ht' l Pl '<I 2 BR. $1'40. 842-8365 * 2 BR from $165 ..
• BACllELOR APT. • Close to shopping, Park Prv patios * Htd Pools No ~ts'. 2 -~ h i Id re n , Crpt~. d~s:°b1tns, aypato: * 1 Bedroo1n *
UtilitiPs Paid. Sl 20. "* Spacious l eR·a, 2 ba Nr sbop'a "* Adults only 9!H t..hsswn. :>4:>-l8S2 l"ewly decorated. Kkis ok. Legun• Be•ch * t Br. den, wet bar. 2 Ba
l==~c_,_11_64_~_358~'-=c 1 "* Swim pool, pul/rreen Martinique Apts. 2 BR, 1~ BA, _FA ht._ \\'/\v 1998 Maple No. 1 642-634-4 "* LOVELY GARDEN APTS 387 \V. Bay St (btwn Harbor
QUIET anrac !!ludioll Sll'J. * Frpl, Ind.iv/lndry fac'l1 1777 Santa Ana Ave .. CM ~~ts,~~·22bllins. Sl45 mo. 221_4_C·~'~"·~·~·~"c''~·c'=---"~6--0621~~ [QUIET 2 BR, 2 BA and J "-Ne1vport Blvd. 1" ml. N.
I Br. S12:>. Adlt~. '19 pel1. 1145 An•heim Ave. ~1gr. Apt 113 646-5042 . . BEAUTIFUL 2 Br, I t~ Ba BR. ocean view, l block 10 of 19th SI). 2l~j Elden, fllgr Apt fi, C~1. COSTA t..fESA 642-2824 I :.-=,_.,.:c:.,~==~=~ E·SIDE 2 BR, blhn!, CID, Studlo. New crpts Ir p1inL beach & t0\1.-ti. Year leaSf', CALL 6-16-0073
2 BR, 2 ba. sunken !iv rm, "'"'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O! J\VILSON GARDEN APTS. 2 gar, lauOO . lac. No peU. Drps, bltns, carport. S160 \~·inter ralr~ year·round. 1 or 2 l3R, furn or unf.
2045 TUSTIN A\'e, "PP'r 2 ~R Unfum. Newly fire. Child ok . SI55. 646-4104. mo. No pet.s-1 child ok. 998 !lolaturP .1.dulti;. 4!M-4029 day, Cpl/d-. poo'J, "''"°P•. utl frplc, balconJ. SIAA/mo 1255 Nt"' rpt!'l/drp!I. Sp t r 1, . ,...1 C•m'"" "-•"-n.,.1 '!J.I 3839 k d ·• Baker st .. C!\1. :J40-2;i70. BR duplr.x w/lrg 11undr.ck, ground.~. Adlt1< 110 pct!'. LG 2 Br, 1 .~ Ba. studio apt. r.. ""· .... U'"""V"t ., • evf' '-"'' en pd. 1884 fltonrovia. a48-0.tl6
Dene Paint t·loJ<P gar. &: lndry hookups, Sl .\O/mo. ng3 ~· 0 u 11 1 9 1 11 No pets, families only. Priv. ATTRACTIVE, 2 BR duplf'x, 2'BR. aparlmr.nt. Quit'!. CloSI" Huntington Be•ch I
Sl7:i 6•16-1.'\80 \V11.y i-:. O!Arbor. 11.11·11 \\',on patio. 726 Joann St. Sl40 fJ'Plr, crpt". drps, bPan1 in. Aduhs. Lf>a5f' SIG:>. 215 .
SING LE, TV. pool. pet!'I ok.
S'l:> A up \\'kly. Dana P.tarina
Inn, 34111 Coa~t Hwy.
Huntington Be•ch
l ROR/\1, :l hath. nr shopping \V il:;onl 51 70 -2 Br., 2 Ba Studio. rr i.ini;:~. p111io, adult~ only, Cypress Dr. 49-1-0io!I 2 &: l BR. S150 up. Patio.
1·rn1rr s., school11. Lrg ff'ncPd HOLIDAY-PLAZA--1 <'tp1~. drpll, patio, gar. 2S5 ':'° prls REf's. S 1~9.50. ?la4 Pool Children. MORA KAI
Y''"· '""' ,., n-io. 56-1761 n..1 "1• ·~1 Santa Ana Avr fij 3--0J9:i Mes• Verd• Apl;, 18&81 :.Otora Kai Ln. 1.,_• " DELUXE Spacmus I bdrm v,. e. ·1 ~ • ·• •
2 BR /d bl I • " BR 1 d blk E. Of Beach at Garfield. Belboi1 Pen1nsula unfurn. a.p t. SUO. Stove, l°f'· LRG. J BR, 2 BA, new tiha& . r pt rp_. !n~. cosed ~ · nei• crp s. rps. 114: 962-8994
I fri". Hid pool. Ample park-crp18, $169 mo, !JC\\'ly dee. itar. + prk i· Adu 11 K , closed gar, nr l! ho p · g ··-~~~~-~~~-I-BR.. 1wimmin1 pool. '.! OCEA.i~f'RONT-Spor. 2 Br. 2 " Sl"/ 22 0 R ~ Ad I 114'/ ,-QUICK CASH ;01 No children No P'IS Nr OCC. CarpoM 5.;7-6151 ""mo. I u11ers "''· u t~. no pe1s. .>mo. Blkt to beach. Adult.a . No Ba , elec kitch., 1undl"c k, : C · • ~919 64j...3jt5.
pets. Sl:U per mo. nPw carp1'g. Enrl garafe. 1~ Pomona, l'ot. 3 BDR~l. 2 balh, nr shopping THROUGH A
Trade"·ind1 Real ty 841-Sjtl \'early-.$775 mo. Adult!, no * 2 BR unfurn apl. $1UI mo. Ci!nter & school1. Lrg fenced NE\V l Br. lrplc, beanu, Newport Beech
The flllite~t draw In the \Vtai pets. 673-1990 or 2.13 ; lnlant ok, l"o pets. Joann yard, S250 per mo. 54:J.-1761 patio, w/v.·, bJtns. 1 adult. SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2 DAILY PILOT
.. •Dally Pilot Oa.ultled Jj3..ll7l SI, Cl\I. ~9-3437 e H•ppy1 Br. $130 e ~~ SIJ.6. Av! !'.tay l. Br. cpts. drps, bltn!I, pool. WANT AD
Ad. &t2-:JG78 \Ve'll help you sell! 643-5678 Seoll the old srun Pool. Ad1tll!'I, 642-2181 priv pa!lo, stud io type, 11Tr ~---------
Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn,
Newport Beech
Apt1.,
370 Furn. or Unfurn.
N•wport Beech
Brand Spanking New
In Beautiful
BACK BAY
I and 2 Btdraom1
Furnished end Unfurnished
Adult Living * Dishwasher * Stove and Refrigerat9r * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting colors) * Sound Proofed * Billiard Tables
*Pool * Large Recreation Center
RENT STARTS $155
370
•
Vista Del Mesa
' Apartments
Tustin & Mesa Drive @
545.4955
Apt1.1 Apt1.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn.
Huntington Be•ch
Are you
ready
fora
if so, 1umirm wi ll be here
soon, why not Uve at the beach, and enjoy row
putting green, gym, voH~
ball court, two swimming
poola, aaumi belhs. bl!.
llvd roomandtlubhov-.
For a relaxing retreat.
you ~ YoUf choice of
one or iwo bedrooms, fUr·
nlshed and unfumlahed.
each with Its own priYate
patio, flreplaco In lwo
~droom, elevalora, dis~
washera, carpets •nd
dr•pe•. •rid all utllO• are pakt e~cepl lights.
FantuUe -ell "°'" jult: $145.
"'' lo< Commander Relting.
Manager
(714) 962-6653
21861 Brookhurst Slreet
HunUrigton Beach, C.fff,
Huntington Beach
370
~-~~----~-I SPACIOUS B1chPl01 u t i I Ra. lnfanl ok. a.18-2682 lj2j Apts., Apts., Apt1., A~t. Un.furn. W Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 paid. ReffR & i;to\'e, Sl2?1 Placentia. Ask about our Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1-.,N-.-w-po"'""rt-.:B~a-e-c~h----N-a_w_po_'_t_Ba_a_c_h ____ N-C-e-w_po_r_t_B~.-.-.~h----,,N~e-w_po_rt--:llec-a-c~h----;no· Adult. M..l Valencia. No dtsc<>un!. 1-c-.-,-,-.-M-.-,-.-------,C~o-,-,-.~M-.-,.---------------1
"'
Jner
square apai btlEllts
ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF
TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS FOR
ADULTS 01;.SIRING TO LIVE AMIDST BEAUTY
BY THE SEA IN THE PRESTIGIOUS WESTCLll'F
AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH • , •••••• FROM $230
For Information l•l•pho1111 Mr. RolMrt M. Buckley,
Managar at (714) &4!M>252 or writ• to Th•
Olflc. Of 1'119 M111899r, Moriner Square
Aputm•nlt, 1244 Irvin• Av•nue,
Newport a.ach, Calilornl•
92664
I YEARLY beach plush :i bdr. Costa Mesa
.... D~lu:<P 1·2-3 BR. 2 h11 . lireplaC{'l"flt'W drape~, l======-----------------------"'---
All bhn~. Crpti<. drp1. Gar l·&rpet.~. lots of paneling
Nr. S. ~:~ !;_!!,u . SZ7j, lS09 "'· Balboa Bh'd .
.J"IJ--•.>.... 61l-2223
DELUXE New 3 B~. S2TJ., LOVEL y BAYFRONT 2 All Pxtras! 392 Woodland Plac, 6'16-S.1i6 I Br, from $365. Furn & . . Unf. NEWPORT row.
LCE 2 Br, upstain. Crpt,s. ERS, 642.l20l.
rirp~. rangt>, r11.rporl. No -------
pt!~. Sl ?.O. 673-1118 1 * TOWNHOUSES *
SHARP 1 BR S~ :: BR. 2 Ba. J-CarporL s:ns
Htd Pool. Adul ts, no ptls. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Carporl . $22l
Eutalde • 642-9j2Q REALTOR .'48-b'966
• "* S'ltJNNJNG lge 2
gardrn apl.
SJ~ ...... 640....i.:j,.W
br BEACH yr[y plu_.h 4 bdr. l
b11. fu'f'pl ace ne w carpels,
drape•. S..'50. IR09 W. BAiboa
673-2'l23 * 2 BR. pvt patio l 1anrr. I ~=~,.,.-~-.,---Adults, no pets. Sl4D/mo. COZY 2 bdrm unfurn, range ,
Gl:!.-1411 J blk to beach. Sl!J(l 1nr.
util!tit>5, yearly. Avail im·
Dan• Paint medlalely. fi1J.-\J06
2 BR, 14' BA I: Pvr. pa!lo. 2 BR nr O<'ean, cpt1. drps
81tn1, crpt1, df'PI. S2l0 mo. Sl&:i yrty. lst & last + dtp
49&-2319 33938 Alcaur JU 36th SI. 213: 248-1921
E•tt Bluff
NEWPORT BEACH
VIII• Gr•nada Apta.
rour bedrooms with btlcon-
te~ above 4 '-flow. Graclou•
livtna • qule:t llU1'01•ndin(
VISTA DEL Lido. on lhf'
Ba.yfronl. L,ce. l·BR. SJ50
Leue. Realtor 6no-435Q
WESTCLJFF Ortvr -2 BR.
Newly df'COr. Blln 111p.
plilntf'!t. Pool, e 642-Q74
Newport Height&
fol· 11.tnU)I "'llh Jftlldn>n. , NICF. ~ BR. Pool, GAr . Cpt~·
NeAr Ceron• del ~tar Hlah Drp~. Adll!!, no pelJ<, SLiO.
School. Flreplaee. Wt!t b&r Ii &1~1. ~l-8006
bu1Jt.tn kitchen appllaneet, LGE delux 2 BR, frplc,
133 MUGOS WAY 644.lm Col!!.-@11 Banker 6: Co. Cpts. Orp,, Adul!i SITO. 2100
fttanq!n.1 Arent 54J.sl21 ='='·="'="-"-1"~64-'""~1c3-1
--TIRED of that old f\im.lture! e TOWNHOUSE 1t•e· ,..u, m1 U..t hml
Ortluxt 2 Br, J\tt Sa, bltm. to rrple.ct. Just watch the
frpl e. ~lio. enc 1ar. Quiet. tw·nJIUT1 4 mlseell1M1Y.u
li73-ml columns ln lhe Cla..qlfied
~II Idle l!ema now!
(111\ ~2-JGi~ Na1,·!
Section.
,;e'\J help you stU! 642-6S11
--------. -----------
Amazing Adult Living
UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS
Featured in
PROFESSIONAL BUILDER'S MAGAZINE
"SHANGRI LA"
as
Liveable luxury with all the conveniences:
Clubhouse -Social Life -Indoor & Outdoor
Sports-Walk to stores, banks , movie and college.
1 & 2 BEDROOM Apartments
with T 1rraces
FROM $140 to $295
j
MODELS OPEN DAILY
Merrimac Woods
425 Merrimac Way, Costa MISCI
(BefwHn H1rbar and F1lrvl1wJ
-.r:-L:..'-'-.:. ---------------
NOW!
NEW!
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED ~DS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
3 LINES
l TIMES
52.00
ANY ITEM
$ OR
LESS
e EACH ITE~ MUST BE PRICED e
• No lttm O..r $50 • Ne Commord•I PlnM •
• Ne Copy C""'-e No AW....latlona e
•
CALL
642-5678
ASK FOR YOUR •
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR
AND YOU MAY, .CHARGE IT! v
>
Apts.,
furn. or UnfuM. n o
Huntington leech
ON BEACH!
NEW 1 BR. APTS
F'rom S23o
P'Urnlhu'e AVlilabt.
Ca.rptt1·drapts-dlahwuher
heated pool.aaunu-tennit
J"eC' !'OOnl«ea.n vi•ws
p11tki1-ample parkin1
Security auatda.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AW., H.B. en•> 538-1487
Ofc 0Pe" 10 am-6 pm Da.Jl.)-
W!WAM WALTERS CO.
Laguna l••ch
Pl'fttlae Office
"ON TH!: BAY"
At 1Jdo Yacht AncbOl'&&9
3 Room suite
Ground 11ouM88 sq rt
Air (.'Ol\d, Cpta, Dtpi1
E.Z Paridnr, Utt! p&!d
$4.10 per monlh
Ava.ilablt Ma,y bt
717 UDO PARK DRIVE
Newport Beach 673-1060
Jdtal 8fful;)' Shop ~ LOST: Male Ptnlan cat,
Open f da)'l a .,,..k Wht w/n.11t 1trlpt1. Meta
};veninp by Appointment Verde atta.. ~
Aut. tr•nsport•tlon s2s I ·LO~!>"r,:.c..noe.:;;,okla:;"'_;:,;;w_:/l::.d::!a_mmid __ '
RIDE lo New York City! * $lDO reward *
about Ma,y 10. Need rood ~712
pMple Jor comp 1 :i y , FEMALE be&Jle, I yn.
675-1385 Broadmoor Development -----------
CAltl"INTltY Ganltntr. Yard <"'--
MINOR IW'AIR.S. No Job l'W>U.,. --Too Small. Cabinet .. ..... l!lorp'd • ..._
a.it• • o I h • r ~ta. CUI 6 Up Lawn
56.1175 u no aMlfet Jeaw M&intananct, 1.ic'd, nw ... dj we. at •2311 H. 0. ~ a.ft ,_
Andenon. J ANES!: G a 1' d t n i n
flNE CARP.ENTAY S.Mct. Neat work. Ot&lll.I
Exptritnctd Cr a t t 1 ma n • )'d. m&l.nt. SU..230S
..........
vie., CdM. Reward! m.-OZIT
LOSf: Silll'l!r..,rey mlnlatw't
poodlt:, Vic: 21th .l
N'wport. 673-MlS
~r.. M. Weintraub. JOHNSON'S GAJU)J:Nill!:G
ll•l Mr.-5300. Yord ""· de....,..., pl . unr, aprlllldm. 90-~ Cement, Concret• ~ * GOLDEN KEY * LAWN'"'· d&anuo, .....,..,
OFFICES 5•• -....,. ..... ....,...,.-..,..-beds. truh baullna. H.B
PerNnalt ~ I I~ * SAVE TIME A MONEY! F .V. Uta. M7~ I N~w ottlce blda: at Oranre INlrucUM Im H
County Alrpon, Your own * !'UU.YUCENSED * 1 :~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~I"'"~ ave It pumped •LA.WN ean 6 rud•n wcrk. furn office from Sloo a mo, Renowned Hindi.I Splritu&llat a n Y w .her 1 ' • n·y t 1 m e • l.Ja:ht haullnc. Ex., • d • ~ ~cretarlaJ A othu se:rvJce1 Ac!vtc. on all matters. Schools & ~~~Concrtlt Pumpina: ReuonahJ•. Call 5".f1l5. j
avail. Gumbiner Bld1, 2712 ~~~· r':S': lnatructlen1 575 QUAUTY ctment work, J't eJAPANtsl: G.\RDENER.e
Dupont Dr, Itvine. UJ.9303 ...:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;; Goo-do 1, "c'• "·nt1-•. Malntmance, dffnup 1 wttk, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. • •• ~ .. .... ..., DV 'C\I HB lV CM MM442 DESK •pa.ce aVl.lla.ble S5(I Sl2 N. El Camino Real. AIRLINE 6U-l.695. area. *
mo. Will provkte tumiturf San Oemente SCHOOLS PATIOS, w-•t.-J-lv,~ ,_COMPLETE lan 4 NEW luxurious oceatltnlnt at $5 mo. Anl\\'erlnr service ...._., v..-. ' u~ _ ......... 1.. fVke I
apta, 'l bdrm I: 2 tathl, available. 17875 Beach Bl\-d, 4S2-SJ.36, '92-0016 PACf,IC •ta.11 new lawn1, aaw bnak a .. ..,. ..... ae ·
elevator, fittplacez. FULL HuntJnrton Beach. 6U-4321 SINGLE? WIOOWlD? Da.>-• NiJht cawis remove. MS-8668 Jor ~•t. ' J'lm 5'J..OtXt
SECURITY. VILLA DESK vallabl $S0 *Dlvorcecl0v•r21* 5'3.6596 CEM.ENTWORK,no;tob*LAWN Maint. Haullna, ,.....
RA.UNA, 530 OiU Dr.. w~ce ~ ~!tu Oldeat "large.it. For a telf 61D E. 17th SI., Santa. Ana •mall, re:uonable. Fr•• lawnt, clean-up, ~·
La.run• Beach mo. pro re ,,-•-··tory m....,e :M !'::;. Esttm. H. Studlck, 541-all.S. FlT1 tit. Call MS-mt at $5 mo. Anlwtrlnl Ml'V\ce .,....,.
available. 305 No. El ad~. 5'1·9991 PIANO LISSONS CTSTOM CONCRETE Gtntrel StrvlMt I BR, 2 bllui to Main Beach .
S165 furn, S155 unturn. * LOS PADRES REALTY • 'ffi4·8833, 497-166.i
Santa An•
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRAND NEW
SPACIOUS
l & 2 Bdrm. Apts.
Adult Living
F u rn. &. Unfurn.
Dishwasbtt • color coordinat-
ed a:ipUances • plu&b aha.I
carpet • choice o1 2 color
tcheme1 -2 baths • atall
ahowm • m1rtored ward-
robe donra -lndlrect U1ht.
Ina In kitchen • breakta1t
bar • huge pr!vat. fenced
patkl • plush landscapins •
brick Bar-B·Q's • larp' heat.
ed. pool1 It lana1.
3101 So. Brl1tol St.
(~i ML N. ot So. Cout Plata)
Santa Ana
PHONE: 557-1200
Camino Real, SanALCQ ,=,;u"'o~w~c"s=--Ano=-nymou<==.·l your home. Certified te•ch-PATl(}.DRJVES.ETC. APARTMENT IE Homei
Clem,nt, . .f92-4420 Phone. SU-7217 or write e.n. Mutlc Syit,ms. Mr Frtt etil 531-~ 67&-Mll .Malntenance--paintinJ, 11 x'
DELUXE PROF. SUITES P.O. Box 1223 CO•ta ~tesa. Hathcock, 644-0144• Contrachlr 1,aky fa.u«itl, repair ftnctl,
J7612 Beach Blvd., H.B. ONE no11-1mok!na: neat 1Cl'fle111, waah w Ind ow a ,
Plentilul plmc, A/C, jan.,roo ·=mc-m~•'~'-",.'_"_"_t_•_•_",,"'" ii ._, __ --· l~ WATERPRF vi~! d t ck wall1, wax floon . R.ef'1. Cal music, new carpet1 I pa.int/ "'.:Laguna ho\111. 49'-2!1Ul ---coa.tinp, all type1. Lft John 648-9tl0
drpJ:, 325 10 900 ,q, ft. Suit' Social Cluba 5S~ Roofin& Co., CM. 1C-722ll'TH=tN~K~-,,-bou-,-t """1t'"1 """w~-.-:--I
8. Ph. 841-2521 I••••••••-free t•l. $9.$5 lnclud's cu wuh.
BEAUTIFUL l room oUi~ THE Intimate Group of Accounting ROOM Additions, L . T. Hand wax, tires dft1Md,
auite w/kitchen'rt'. Id'al Contemporary Co u PI es· CoNtruction. Sincl• 111lry or dlro™' poll.abed, M&-llOJ
lor architect. i n 1 u ran c e Partie• Fri &: Sat. Non REUABLE accta " bk.kpa 2. Elttm., plana • l&yout. for app't. Ai'"'· ~allor, ,1c. On members welcom,, 537-635.:I aerv lce thru P/L " bal MT-1511 l-,,8,.-,,-,band=c."8;:..,,=:-,-::C&l=l °"M"o.°"1»1~
hionrovia St. In N . B . ~·~r~5'>-~~-~~~~~~: I KhHt, all taxei, my h<lm• Addltiort1 • Remodellna 54~ arter S.Rcpe.lr $3501$300 per mo. 645--0770 ynur olc, pick up 6 de!. Gerwlclc: 6 Son, Uc. Bulld-Se.tv MOii Tbinp
NEW Waterfront OUict:a l[Q.) 644--0Jll 673"-60tl * 549-n70 *LABOR UNLIM.n'EDT
$175 To J.135 Month Lost and Found . Baby1lttl"1 Uc'd Contr. Remodellna: HANDYMAN
Above The Islander COSTA MESA Additlom, Plana, ~t Weldin&-Carpe.ntry '73-1112
Ml Bayaide Dr, N'pt. Beach Ka.rt E. Kandall M&-.1.531 H•ull
Bill Grundy R!tr. 642-46JJ Found (frM ads, $.SO PRE-SCHOOL Z..fY Way, quality homa ~ .
DESK ipace available $50 Special SUmm'r Prosram l'f!palr. Wallt, ct!llnr, &ors YA1U>, sar&re, cleanups.
mo. Wlll provide tumtture BROWN, while It. IP'ff" rac-lllth • Mo11rovia, % d~ + etc. No :lob too •mall. Remove tree1, dlrt, and
at $5 mo. Answering service 1111" piaeon. Tq No. Auiust tuU day •••kin1, Planned 5"4?-4JJ6 24 hr aru ierv •klpk>adtr, back II••·
a.va!labl,. 222 Forest Ave, 19&l, SD '754-B\76. Foullfl program, hot lunche•. ,\£es ' ' ' 96l-874S
, ....... na Beach. 494-9466 4/29 5th &. M&rill'rite, 7-6, hf'I 6:30 A~f-6 Pllf. Furniture TRASH • G d ..._.. Con'lna del Ma.r. 673-1530 $13 wk-COMPARE! 642-4050 arqt ean-t1p, OFFICE SUITES Fumlrur. Strippifll' 7 da.v1. $10 a load. J'fff tit.
750-500•, !um, xlnt loc ., on BEAUTl}l.IL Se • I Po! ~ t I ,_•=r.,,838=·523='°'· .,.---,,---~ I Special kitchen cab. doon Anytlrne. SQ..S031
CMJ'!I Hwy nr o over . Siamese, i1 now wry Pl'fll· l BABYSIT al rny hou1e day itripPed $& aa. Avr chain UGHT Haullns. Anythlna:I
&IS-2l82 nant I. trlendly. VI r : • nit' 7 day1 a wk. 6 mo'• S5 ea. Glulnr. &42-lUS. Anywhere! Ya.rd dean-up.
C Ores Fu •. 11 t.aruna Hlllll. Answer or to 5 YJ'I, Lou of love, food, Low rat'• 19 EXE • · rn, "' Y will r ive away. 830-6417 I • J VI · G•rd•nlnt <q"ip. for ~ub-l,ase mon· P aymatei oyi. elona MOVING, G
BLACK • Jr!~ c t It. H11.rbor area CM. 64.S-1413 thly. Sl'c'y 1~rvlcl's avail. ittY s >""" a * LANDSCAP.ING * 6 Ille haul . Reuorlablt.
Call ?t1r. David, 6'J3-44ll . w I wht feet wearln.i n,a TEENAGER wl1heJ1 to N'w lawns, tnoe removal, Fttt e1tlmat11, 66-1902. C'<lll1r found 'vie. Tu1tln 6 baby1!t on weekend• in · kl DELUXE olflce in Corona 800 St. ,,,,, .,_., 111r1n fl:rs, drain1, a.rbora, HtUIKINnlnt
11 '----ft .. _ .... __..I,~
del l\lar near POiit oUic,, • .., V'OV"'O•J• Coll'ft! Park area ONLY. patios fencea Uc'd contr.
.,_R,_oom __ •.,,._,...,_.,.......,..-400-·I Snack Shop, Prlv. parkina. FOUND Brown A white ma.le 546-'78lT, fl:VtininJ•. u., tiiuter C11arae. 13 yr1 1-°"M"°•aa-"ct'"•.,,......,-,,.,-;:...,~r--·-1
•1FOR relined lady in my SlOO mo. Bier. 675-€100. puppy w-lv·bro,!~ e51yt NA Bl Babylittin.r Weekdays k>c. •xp, M&-1~. Carplta, Wlndowa, l'loon.t tc.
" A' blue eye. 1c. '"""' ., · · Reuonable Rate1 PRO--JONAL, -·-•-·, Resld. l Commc'I. ~ quiet, aurac. home In Costa NEW ottic,, arM ur. If· 645-~16 .r.c...,., ............ ~lesa. No smokin1. Kit cond., only $60. 1652-A New· 6TS--&850 trf.1 work, aprlnkltn, aera-By DQ".
privU. ~f's. S65. 540-1195. pol't Blvd, CM 642-2!21, eve1 FOUND -rold ch• rm LIC'D CHILD CARE tlon, pe.111, di.Matt. •Hd Own Tran.q>ortatlcn
.. l •106 braceJ,1 on Begonia, CdM. Harbor• Baker, CM. $ .,,... control. Cle1n up '°"· -~· ~\ALE student -room with «> • •·· J·-.........,_. -"'~'======c--·1 P,,'e!!,e.,"'.:.· ... ·.'CdM"' Mienti..,. exp, Refs. 5'S.2!K3 Term1. Goorg,, M6-M93 DEDICATED ~····me kitc~n priv. t15. wk. NEWPORT BEACH .N<J ... v ... ~. e M.2-3310 $108 to t185 Bulld•rt AL'S GARDENING W• do evtrythlnz. 1'1w FOUND: Black Poodle, vie. for prdenJns I: •mat I eltimale. Call l'TS-4072 LAGUNA Bch. Priva1e room, * 6i~J60l * Victoria i. National, Colla NO Job Too "-·"t Br!•' I nd •-~ -"
hi P ... •A~ ""'....i ~ ~ ... ~.U:...-i~,~~ Hou-~••"JNG team kit priv, ~·as dr, e ... ..,. 1360 S IT -OUioe or 1ttu't. ?tte1a. Call & identify. block, concrete, carpentry, ~ ~ ....... ,,~ .. -.. ~14JU•
1tudent. 494~ Nina, R•uonable. Cotta ?-1esa. ~1909 after 3;30 add a rm, hoUM leveling, CdM, ~ta MtJI.. Doftr Thoroush. By the job. can
LRG bedroom, priva~ '"' Mr. Popa ~281J LFO~U~N~o~-= .. -.~bu-ry,,--.,t"r"'a-c"'t"'. rar. door ttpaln. Fret 1st. 1 ;,Sho~"!!'~· .:,W:;•~.t~c:!l!tt~-=-ll-Ji .... B;;C::i'm-8';"";;;-';.;•J>.ml,..,;;;i_
trance. Ne•r South Cout l61o SANTA ANA AVE, CM ynunr eute Beagle, wht l Woody,~. IQNE stop Jtpane• prden-Bay I: Beach Janltori&l
nfE Gallemore Guts! Hnmt:
Phu.a. 540-56Ui From 300 aq/ft. 35c 1q tt. blk, red collar. Con!Jlct Bob C•rpet Service lf!I' I: minor landtca.pfnr. CrPtt, window•: floora •tc.
e 2 NICE rooms, SlS per * 6T~2.f&t er 54.1-5031 or Su1!1 :,.l&-U« Fret eit. llS-3917. Harbor Rei. &: Comm I. 6'1-l401
wl't.k 'ach. Lovtly home in INOJVIOUAL OFFICES I 'G"'O"'L"'D""'ln:,ll:;:lal",-od:7'.,'i'.1nr:::".1;:00:::"1,.,a~I DEEP St,am Carptt Cl,.,,. View, II: 1'u1:11 Rocle lrenlng
H.B. Ca.II 536-2091. New lrv!n' Indu~I. C<lmplex. Marinr.r'a Park. Call to ~~~e~llaR.::b· 'b";~ !!':AL -~.~S-'-,IAnd-~,-ca-p-ln-r-. ~T~,-,-,·llR·-0-N-IN"G-lllc--.. -.-1-.-,-.. -,·1 I
FURNISHED Room tor rent, Top Joe. 833-3443 anytime identity. 642-4286 Servicei, 5.'ll-34«> removal. Yard remodtllnr. load.) P/U dellv. 50c ti
SlS wk &t up. No students. 3700 Newport Blvd, NB BLACK Lab Re tr I ever . Tra1h hau1ln1, lot cleanup. way, u wanted. Rt f .
993 El Camino. MG--0451 On th' Bay young, lnjurtd. Vic: 2JOO Diamond Carpet Cleanlr\J fti!palr 1prinklen. 613-1166. ~~ l A 642-3529 Av1 1iza room $8 Guest Home 415 67~2464 er 541·5032 blk, Irv ne v,, Rfl:palrin& I: llUta.UaUona EXPER. JapaneM-.AJ'Mrkan lronlna done In my home.
* PRIVATE ROOM STORE, Office or Desk Sf\1ALI. bretd dog, beacle, Free Etl. ~1317 rardener, Ct'lmpl'le pnlen-Sl.50 doi.
space; 1842 N'wport Blvd., vie Cl\1 golf courM?. Ill&' 1ervtce ' d lanup. e MS-570 e
for elderly lady. Brltht C.M. ~ 538-3818 Carpenter 119.1-0lSO J•nltorlll
cheery aarden surround· J N tritioll$ mW. Call 500 sq ft cupeted oUICi!a or MALE Slamtte cat Vic AU. types rtp&itl, any 11 CLEAN Up Sptc:iallat, haul·~ Y&i1 :~753~ · j ~ .. II?!!.,,, tor rent. 195/mo. lrvlne-, partWly 1havtd tail job. Add remodel. Quality lnr odd jobl, new fence 4 b)ria.l. WJn..
.,. ~ l3J...-0'18ll '4"oric, Jtta1. 962.-JlllJ rep&ir. Rtu. $U-6955 dow1, tloon, crpta Ir conatr
PRlV. room ln llc'd l'l'st DESK SPACE, 1ina-le office BLK f,malt puppy Vic M'1a du.nup. Carpet ihampoolna.
home, bo&rd It nunlnr or 1ulle. S50 &. up. Ea1t d'l Mar. * * * * * * A eamplett cornm'l lltl'Y. ~~· ~~tory ma n · Cosla Mes11. 543-6773 546-7308 For 1'1tt tit. ea.I.I, 98UnJ.
Rao" • "A ror 1 S1'.tALL office •lorqt room, S.\t 1haUY black do( vie. r-----------------.1Paintlng &
... ,..,me care !Oxll + toilet &-10014·~r. N .. uonal I. Oak, C M. P1perh•ntl"1 g1!ntl,man, S35ll mn. 2-tO ' 540-1943
Ambent Rd, C.M. 54>-236.l E&AI C.l\t. S~1llmo. ""~""""""'""-~~---....,.
8u1lnes1 R•nt•I 44.5 FO UND m11le cit, py &: I Trader's Paradise N'o WuU. + WALLPAPllt *
ha1 a pvt rm avail. for 11m· 9.l.i \VEST Jfi!h ~I. Newpnrl
bulatory iuelit, !>40.-2:l!i2. Brai·h. 2-1 RR 11pt~. I.· 1-2
white 1trlpt1 I a n I h a I r
W/eolla.r. S49--0Lt1
Lo1t SSS lines
times
dollars
• \Vba.a you call "M.ac" 5C&-.l..... M&-1T1l
CUSTOM HOUSE PAINTING
We pa.Int )'(!Ur home; nol a
houae your 1lte. Matolan •
fi.latoian 5'4-$nM
642-9862 RH ht)UM' on I ~. Vll'W 11c·rr11,
VACANCY in board &. Cllrt 11 v11 il with fix up lnr r•nm-J PP.ARL Ir: d!tmond clip
hontt tor ambulatory lali\es. b1nlitinn bu!'Jntg,; k living f!arrln&. Vic of Chi>s Cary j
Reasonable rAles. 543-1Z27 quarters or owner will hu lld Reil., Oranre or We1tclltf 1
Summer Rent•lt 420 to 1ull te-nant. Tri.Co Reali~ Shoppinr area, N.B. &in-'
645-Qi:ll tlmental value, Reward.;
ANY exterior $123 i.bcr, )'OU
supply the paint • 1 CM.I.
Call MS--™6. VIEW-2 bdrm-1Jej11p1 ~=----.,--.,,--64"1" it ~-"l•d -ANTl~QUE """""'rn booth • ........, .,.. or wr • ....... ssu 4-adults only. Beaut\JUIJy ,.,,.,..v Ad N "7 o II Pilot furnished. Available May 1~ Perfect operating cond. $100 p 0 :~ ..... ,~ ,.~ .. ' M · INT 11 Exter. Pairitin&.
ptr day income at 1ood · · DVX · ..-., ....,. eia, Llc'd Int. P'ree e1t 30 )Tl
thnl Sept. AJI or part. Call locat ion. Trade !or car, boat Cal!f. 92626 Cl•an, Jo ml 1966 rord •ta· IS' Bolton Whaltr type ~ Chuck ~
now 67~930 AGT. or wlll lease 64Z.0010 or MALE white Se a I po Jlit tion waaon + ! for y0ur 'TO 00.t, new, Ir trailer. Trade , '
SPACIOUS beachlront rurn. 4g.i.4977 Siameee, Joni hair, blue or '71 GM or Ford 1tatlon for motorcycle. 123 Town• PROFESSIONAL palnttrc •
2 BR, 2 BA In Laruna, nr. ====-c:=-;--,.,1;;,1:: eyei, ailw~ ml.kinii:i. Left waron. St. c .Af. lnter/exter. Hone1t work.
11hop1. 494-4658, 494-3493 SHOWROOM, mfr. I: of ce Thun. nlle. 19 5 3 Con· After 7 pm, M4-27U ' Call ~1257 Lie. l Ins. SU.tm, MS--53!0. 11 ~~=~,..c.=----..: apace. Parkln1. Clon-ln Rentaf1 to Share 430 Larurui. ~ M 0 • ~nental. 1 548.-3504.. M ll ch Oceanfront duplex. Owner Trade $11,~ equity, beaut *PAPIRHANGlllt*
BACHELOR 10 1hart! l
bdnn; oompl. furn "'' rolor
TV, frpl. On aand. Call John
'fullerton 558-1000 ~r
67.s-8387
LOOKING rw roomm•''· Z-l5 v.tio will s.hl.re her 1pt.
vdth femal' by 6 f l ~.
67;)-0091
FE:\1ALE roommat' to 1hare
.1 Mnn. home I: ,xp., chUd
494-4&3. ~e~~ IO e com Pan I 0 n · tired of manaaement, wiU 31' cabin crulHr, FIB: for Superior Crattaman, Rtu.
_:;,~,:o;.==~~-.,,-1 ~~"=w'"~~,.....---,--:;-eXChanae Jor T.D. '•. equity Jn octan view 2 or 3 Ratti, C. Rt-blco, &M-'"9 •
• f'OR LEAS&-9JO Ml . ft. .::IRVINE St. .,.. ..... -... who ca11· PJCH IRWIN BR I ho d -~1-1 Bldr. Jor machine sl'llp, """"' + am rm me or U• PAINTING, prot111k>nt(. All
ho! ho ed Tue1 rt Siamese cat, Realtor/Exchanior 67.>6060 "'"· 64., "°""', !-46-1492, w or le 1 u a r n . Co Io r It.raze or up 1tery 1 p. ......,...., * CalJ :>48-3797 * pleaae call back M&-3504 KA VE: lit Tru1f dttd1 -HAV~ 2 story blcf.r, 2600 aq, s p e c J a l I I I • 9 g 2 -3143,
lnduatrl•I Rental 451 MALE poodle, mlnia. blk. $Jj,OOQ • (4-$3000) 7% in· ti .. C.~t. • choice comer.1~"~'-~'~"~'~· ~~~---•
"Beau," 9 )'1'1, rie,tl• tere1t. WANT; House, du· $48,000 eq, For holllt, du· PAINT I NG : Hone1t ,
500 SO. FT. BLDG. medication. Lake Fore51, El plex, cu or !!'!' plex. The rox Co. Jle:aJ. ruarantHd work. l.Je'd.
East 17th St., Costa Men Toro art•. Reward! * M~ni 673...fi'r.16 * toni, 673-9195. ~aJ rt.f'1. Call ff:>.5T40 aft
220 Elttlrical Power ===· ev::.L 200 da.vi. HAVE: MOUNTAIN HOME 19Sl OIEV. JMPAl..A., ll3 5·
1110 ~fonth 575--6700 Broker 1 .,:::;,.;=_;;,,..;.;..,~--,~-er1 Bear. J BR. fum, equity ~nr-Auto·Po~r·R&.H. Fair PAPERHANGER, flock, toil,
7500 IQ. I!.. all powPr, heat, CAT, moitly wh.lte w\th rrey $8400. WANT: Houu, du. rubber-New bat., /or P/U vinyl, ruar., t1Uma~•. The
968-2640 l\ghlB, partllions k noot'I & black •trlpta ' •pots. plvc, car or ! !? truck, p Ink lt1r pink. JI an Im a 11 • 5'7~
11"==---,-,--c-:-;::-:: I finished. ISM ?wlonrovla, Short haired, alt. male. • M 673-6756 * 6«5-71'2 aft g ors". ,\Sun. Schwartz
okay.
CHIO\. wanted 10 shar' Clear pla1tic «1llar. Vic. yera
house wfume. $62.50. N.B. Call 645-C770 Sftn htateo Pt., S.C. -4~9492 47 Full Improv'd R·l Iola Have '·Pltx. pool lz. ttc PAINTING/paperl!'ll. 11
Call 642-9161 lNDUsrRlAL U11lt or office BLK •triptd male-tabby, @ $4,500 CS211,500) Clear. room, Prldt of Owntrahl.P Yr1. in Ha.r~r area. Lie 4
l l"W°'O"MA=N.;:=t:.o..:a:i'hatt'::::'"'>;N;;B-a;:p:;t,· I ar atudlo? $50. W. 16th St., "St1tnley," vie Npt R!ir'.tra Wlll Olvld•. Watit Motor-In Tuatln. Want Free 4 bonded. Rt.I I furn.~.
N.B. 646-1724 or 50-'1691 Chi Al I ••• ,,,, c•· "-PAINTING/pa~--1• -35th St. f13...2'752 alt 7 PM or 1 -:-~-c~-,.--,---,,~ I about 1 wk. Reward , ya • rp ane, ~ .,.ar nou11e. r""" ... ,.. ~ o1• ..
wHkend. Rtnt1ls Wanted 460 642-4158 home or Inc. 1'114) '59.llll! Call e73-3101 Alt In Hut>Gr &lea,. Lie A
EW home en beach. N'pt. YEAR round in LQ;una =rE=MAL==E-do(,_.--,Sb"'"'p°'1C<>=u,~·e I Market Buildln1 land, 60x4~ Want '63 or later' dr ht,., or bonded. Rera tum. SdJ3SC
\t'nT!mrw/1hare wffPma/P. mix. 65 tbt. Blk wlbrn Trade vaJue Sl!i,000 for ?. Have 40 a.crt1 flO mort PA.INTINC/paptrtnc. ll Jft
• •.,.. c~... Beach. Clo~ in. :t br. Aue. . So ~111 ·-N C tn Harbor uu. Ue "" SlOO ?-io. 5-lf...361 : 1........,.,... or Stpt. 4 In raml!y. Up ta chtsl. Vic. Oran1e '1 22nd, acl'Mle tn • '"" · -avall; . Al lk a.tta, U500 bondad. Rar tum. MJ...2IK.
ISJfARE hly wate.rtront bome $2S>. hl-1905. CM Mll!td badly 6-42--1&3.i f rankloti.!:; Trade Ut> or ~. '&ie~~ ~~~~.:1'P"1'"u"'to"""r,"""'P~:~lcll,..,...~lt:c.,.-~,-,'I
w/ dock. Man. 30-60 year!. WANTED TO LEASE :: Br, LO~ Upper Bay . Airport 1 .:.0o:.wn..c:,..:'""'~-~-~
1150/mo. 67S-4331 BAY or OCEANJ.RONT. area, Sm blaek 1>iorth1Jttd '&3 VW BUG In ,OOd oondl· Tradt-lu,e UO,t:QJ lot,~ Pi.ASTEfC~arcti:Rm' AdJ;,
G .. R--435 * g..a.7•"• * dQc w/whlle <:Mat i. paw1. lion. Will tnde tor ~·rrrd. l cltar, In Weatdltf on s. A1coua. c.ilinp, 1tucco eragts r .. ,. ,.,.. ....,... Name .................. MT-9112 .......... n. -"'-'-t V••, •-'·-~'Want -~It &lrafe vn:u ...,..,..,,. "' uwa .,,, "'°nt .... v Dr for equity iJI rtfin, Ffte I I 1 l malt S ,
•• Sl'OR.AGE Gar• I e • LO--s1a~ male pit 1: c. Mon, Wed, 1'rl or Nit11 Ntwport Stach homt. ~1591. 54.>-4!iU aJt S. "" th to rtn\ tor 11orqio. .., ' ~ .,_per mon 642--1000 or 5f6..WS K!llybrook/Paularino atta 673-13)1 64$.1565 * PATCH Pl...ASTEIUNG
642-&91 until 6 pm. "'·t ar•-rnoon. Chlldren1 I~---,--;;;:-;-;-:--,,,-till ~-All ru ~-1•--1 Misc. Rtnta1s 465 ~ "" !law ele11.n C2 lnts 11n HI· * 11' Chrt.u · 'ty muu.:I , ...,pt.a. ~~ti .. ,,. n CARJ.GE 19:xl9, ston.re. on· pet. Call I.ft 6 pm, ~7-m9 way 101 ln Lquna 6 San i>'lllll m•hofan)', Chf'Y)' 313 Call ~
ly. '35/mo. Nr Oranre Ave. LOT 63x95' nr Pllt't.ritlt. Ave. LOST U)·lpd bleydt, 1Uver Oement1. Va.lufd al ~.IXXI ma.rtne, mint e&nd .. W/tnll· Plumblnt
It f'lowtr St. C.M. 5U-527T Slllrttt: boats, trltl, can. w Io ran 11 tape t'I n l 120,000. Trad• tor Nwprt ttr. T'r for auto 11r 'm's ol'I_,,..,,...,.,.""°_,.,,.._..,.._
DOUBLE GARAGE ~tc. AU or part. MT-.2361'1 handkbArr, Meaa Vtrde Bc:h property. l!fl...n. tqual value. {%UI 9S3-Qr21. I I M Htt Water S.rv. * 673-6263 • * TRAILER •pace tor nnl; area. 545--4375 Tank A l&bOr lnlt&lltd
t>All-Y PILOT 1cr &dlon! up to 31' trallt" For tll&l lttm untkr llO, * * * * * * 30 Ill ltO e 90 r&I l!J!I. ''--------------------------~·.::c.u=..::66-Sf=..::.:11.:..::•;,;s.="":.'--. Call 542.128.l try tht P•ney Plnchlr w••••••••••••••••''~ .. !..!·~"~"~""' ~·~p·~'...!s.1!:!'!:·!!11S1e1
. .
M DAILY l'ILOT Frjdq, M17 7, 1971 '
---1~! ... ,.,,..... l[ll] ! ..,.,_ J[ll] I ·-.. •• ILUJ ! ____ -_ ... __,J[l}l ! -.. ...: l iJ ~! ;;;"· ... ,~·-;;;;l[ll];;;IJ
l'lumbl"' • Help Wanted, M I P 710 Help Wanted, MI F 7ll Halp W1nted, M ~ F 711 Help Wonted, Ma F 711 Help W•nted, M & F. 11:l~1lp Wont ed. M & F 711
j~;;;;;~:;::~;-;::::::-;::::::-·1----------DENTAL rectptionUll , ex·
LEW T..._ • Son'a Plumb. ACTIVITY GIRL P'rl'""' """'""'" 4 day INSURAHC.E SALES PSYCIUATIUC Tech, >t, R. * WAITRESS.EXP'O lni R..pair, R.eplp., Rt~ PART ntitE \\ttk, lluntln&ton Harbor. Become ~ tacll., In C~nda.le. Xlnt Not u~ 21. NO PHONE dd...n.. ~st. 646.3340 1 10 4 prn .o.uy S4&--0fil7. ·~ to le 'i:'nl, u.lary l ltiflae benefits. ~ , CAJ.J..S, App!r lri ~
$1 HOUR PARKHURS'TD ~=EN-T=AL-=Ro«--p-tlo-,-.-,-Sec-'y-, =~ ... ;:, u: 213/247~ I Surt•Sif1otn.$930WJC.0..St
Plumltlna1eltttrica1 n!palr ru:J'IREMENT HOME t'xper. Pediatric dentl.ttry. tvts & wttkendt. Full lime flUben 6 llWy,, N..S. li"'~-ms;".i-;;;;;:;"'.-;:;;;,;..._:.:;;;;;'<0!;::1~-~~L>~Al~am~""~·:,..';,':;·v::,·= 5-16-5615 9Al\l.5Pi\t. tor apdt "'hen qualHled w/W\Jimlted Costa Mesa WANTED J women for craft
l..E\V Talw: il Son's Plum-ADVERTISING AR TI ST DETAIL GIRLS CALL US opportunlty. JIJ J ' type UHmbJy. Must enjoy
blnr Repair Re Pi Pe Production Manager for hot HELP CLEAN M 0 BILE Fermer'1 ln1urance f<ettben .d NO\v lntervi.wtnr worldns w/banda. W 111
Remodel f'rM Estimates Newport Beach agency , UNITS Group train. 8T5C W. lMh SI, NB.
646-UiO Must have rood board .fULL TJ~1 E PER..'1ANENT 540-u41• M0-1834, ~!r. Lani Costa Mesa FULL TIME WANTED FIT babytttter PLUMBING REPAIR skUlii. Know printing, pro-Immediate Openings for ne'!Nborn. Start June 7th
No Job too small duction&ndschedullng. Xlnt Good Pay Call Now ~ No1v lnterviel'·ini DAY-BUSBOYS 8:30-5:30, No wk end•.
• 6'U-3l28 e o pp o ,· t u n i t y . DU REL '9AM·9Pl\.f, Sat 9AM-6PM 673--.3241
R m--' I & R I ADVERTISINC, 2172 Du-Oran&:e Coa~t · PART TIME EVES. S D-sa. Mon, U¥'U Fri. WANTED -Middle aged
' -• epe ' pont Dr., N.B. 833-1'70 1 E1np!oyrnent Agency J;:_ * Apply • man tor steady pt-time bldg
Cu1tom Wood Interior' ASST HELPER l2f_Broadwa!' C.Osta_ i\Iesa ~ • -HOSTESS 3 10 5 pm' for intv. cuatodlan. 847-9696, S46-2S2Q
The ultlmare in individual, Lrg expanding co. needs gal &l:..JW 64~ll2 '4.>lll3 • Over 2l -U.» W. Adana $100.00 Wttkly pouible-ad-
elhnic & period desi&m & for tull 4: p/lime help. S3.85 * DRIVERS * _ c.o&ta Mesa dresslna: mail for firms.
Installation tor iJJ or pan hr. Call ?.fr. Bob, 54&-9862 rf * ApPly * ~~~ ... "!'!!!!!!!~!!!~[ Details send 1tam~ ae:U
ol )'OU1' home. See bow dig-ADULTS -3 men to Y.'ork No Expe ence Before 11 AM or 3-5 P:OI SCHOOL teachers who play addressed envelope to
tinc:llve your home can be bttr concesmn Fri nights., Necessary• IRVINE PER.50\JNEL 1555 W. Adama piano to tea.ch p/time. Call Dreisbach, Drawer s D,
\.\'Ith appropriate arches only, at cycle ~ce1. $3. per Pif ha 1 ,._11; dr' SER.VJCES•AG£Ney [~~~C~o!!s!!!la!!!!!!!M.,.11,,•..,..,,!! [ ~M:"':-:"~Sy:'~"~""~·~M!--0~:'":: li~An~lhony~~·~"'~"~'~1'~'""'~· ~· ll021~ doors 'ndo •-' hr Excel pt time job Jor [ ust \•e c ean ...... • rv-SECRETARY • Wl Wll, pane ... , ·. . ;,.,, --nl Not .... ., ~ !88 E 17th (•t '-"--) CM RETIRED bull' I poli-m"" or f 1 rem an ........ ,.... ......,,. ...,. · ._. vulll!' • • man or woman to New om-1 0 .,_ '-. • n1 -executed in .... .... · YELLOW. CAB CO ''2 1470 --~· -[ I~ Fttneh. Ena:liah, tifexlcan 642-9006 • -• manage small Ice cream Good opportunity for alert &.,.
?.1edlt. -CratUine Construe'. *Adv, Procl'n $550/600 186 E. 16th St., C.M. store in Balboa. S50 wk, hn aecretaty, to work in fut MlidM I t• V
'Ion Co ,.,_, ELECTRONIC JAPANESE lady ~ed tor ll-5, Wed-Sun+ Fri & Sat nacedN.B.advert ialng ~------~ • .,.....,,.,..4 or 6'16-2().12 * f'ee pd by co. 1.ocaI firm / d k ~-•---CdM '"ht 6'•9006 ~ Ass"MBL""S ay wor · V>O'tl ........ p. n06 1 " ,,,.. a-ncy_ All ·"illl incl"""'•'••••••••-eve. requires thoroughly exper. .""' "'-'' . 644-1339 .. ~ ..,. uu---ot •
Roof• ~--''n clk .. -ferably in Immediate Operungs area. REAL ESTATE Salesman, SH l'Tq'd, ~1670. Antiques IOO 1"1 ""...... ' .-~ G-• p ' Call N • LADIES, free clothing xtra' unique OP""rtunlty In 1ub· DUREL ADVERTISING ":;::-:-:::::::=::---::--c-
LEE Roofine C.O. Roofing ol Fee jobs also, 9A:\1-9P!lt, Sat 9AM-4iPM money. Fuhlon W a & on, division sale&, se.llin& higher 2172 Dupont Or/Suite t LJ.ECTOR'S, Decoraton pubJ ic&tlons. Expert typlat. I """' ay. ow. .... •co
all lypes. Reoover, repairs, J . R. Piere• • Ora"ie Coast MinneBOla Woolen Co. Eves, priced homes in an outatan-NeWpOrt Beach, Cali! photofraphs datinr 1880'.>
tber-mo roof coatinp, white Associates Agency, In< i•• E
8
mpldoyment ~}.ency 645--0420 or (213) 39;'>-8758. din& area. A proven sue-SECT. Boo~eeper ttct Real ~c~~e;' •. ~!::1 !u~i:~
A color. Lie/bonded since. 188• N rt 01 642-6720 ...., roa way ....,.,ta Mesa LADY who can sew well; to eessrut history of sales in Estate olf1ee. exp, Prefer-$5-$!5 &42-l1S8
'{1 642-7227 J eivpo · ' 615-3111 &t5-3ll2 645.3113 1ew cocktail dre&&es tor rei lde ntiaJ property red. D!ckBera:962-242l ·
· . BABYSJTI'ING & Ii I e " private party. Reasonable. necesgary, Per 11ua1 ive MANY a.ntiques; alassware,
T. Guy Rooflrw. Deal ~irect. housekeeping, live in pref. I---======--~T-8650. appear~. Successful ap. Sec'y to $500 China, etc. lncludina: 1832 ! do !"Y own •'Ork. 64~2780. l'v1ust be ulia., have local EXPERIENCED , pllcant will have op. Escrow dept. exper, req'd. \Vild . Rose . tea set. ~so
548-9500 rt'fs It: love ch 11 d r r n. \VAITRESSES over 21. Lendscepe Gardener portunity to earn high In· Type 4S, M;on. ,. Tues ol1. TW'klsh curios; rues. pipe,
Sewing/Alteretlon' !W0-1634. 1 Contact Rent', &a~ Penn, PO!!lit Xln't worldng come. Plellie send brlel 37~ Hr week, e1.e. $75 le up. 646-4236
BABYSmER 1 u e EXPER p I eater Jor cone\, l\fust have neat ap-resume to Ad No. 45, Daily NEWPORT HUTCH CUPBOARD EUROPEAN DIT1&mak!n1. . • ma 1 e ' Gilman. No piece Work, pear, l\lust have rel'11. Sal-Pilot, PO Box 1560, Costa '.\fed' · Sho . Expertly Custom Fitted reliable woman to l''&lch .i '* a.;g..3244 * ary open. For intervw Call l\fesa., Calif. Personnel Agency . 1c1ne w Antiques
Accur. Reu 67.l-18'19 ' bo)'! in evrs. 4~700, btwn l o==o-,-~~~-~ Cdl\f, 673_1261 Mon-Fri B l;;--,;-o.,,-.,'°'tt.'."".'.:-::-;::..,,,-133 Dover Or., N.B. 7864 Westmlns.ter (nr Beach · 10 & f EXPER cleanine lady, Own R.E. SALES: We spec, in in. 642•3170 Blvd) 11·5 daily. 893-1213. ~Iterations '42·5145 BABYSITTER needed Thurs, transportation, Ref'1, 2.liM ,.•,,M~-~lO•AM=~·~nl_y=, ==-=== 1 come prop. Sml, auttsilve ~\':'!!!!!!~!"'~~'"."!!!!!!!ISCHOOU.fASTER C\ocia;, 3 Ne&t, accun.te, 20 yean exp. Fri l Sat, approx 7 hr!. E. Oceanlrnt, Balboa LEGAL SEC'Y, super sharp co., needs lop. man to join SERVICE Station Ulbe man sizes, $30 to $50. 790 T•llorln11 PITf, Own transp, 557-8346 FIBERGLASS Id A w/110me Sh. stenorette, our aale1 team. Lrg. ad Af l t L • mo ers. p-m•i • b"~ .... _,_ Rolorr•I• • -Fully exp'd. Must have a nzan a, a1una . r 1· ~1 t·•-" exec. .... .,ng exper. uuu .. ~ 494-&119 DRESS~lAKING BAKERY Thrift Store girl P tea tons now ..,.. fl&' &11.en. Newport Center 0 f c , speeialized tralnina. ?if r \\'Orked rt'cently u lubrica-·
O:>ati, suits 6 IOWM wanted. Apply in pet!iOn at CIR,.11~~r,. l\~~ta CA~?· 1731 S. 644-MCJO. Ewing, FOUR ST AR ~n 11m1 anRl. -~Id PA>J9th •.1ANT==rQ~U~E~S""by~l~V-... ~.-H~,.~_
Alterations 645-2533 a:l'24 Placentia. Costa t.fet:a. '"'"" ' ""'" ·-· REALTY, 835-4422 ..... ne Ii. uw.e • man 8'181 Bolu., lt!idway
Tr.I S.-lco a«B-9002 E.O.E. GARDENER \vanted-Irvine LIVE-in b&kpr I: ck, rm & ;;-;,...=;-;-;,--,,=;-~,,.-Ne1vport, C.~t. City 192-3622. Spec. in dep •• Coa>t Cou ,_Cl b A I bd -S2DO . Cong, SAL.ESl\1AN, Service Sta. I Banking n.,;. u · PPY k 540 2-62 Part time, Neat in ap-SERVICE Station rraveyard gus.
TREES, J.ledges, Top, Trim,* TELLER in person a .m. :t~~ er. -:> ' pea.ranee. Apply 2590 man. 6 days a wk (prefer-''•"""N~T""'I=Q~U~E"'°-A,-r-m-o-,~.,-,
cut, removed, hauled. Ins. * NCR OPERATOR GENERAL OFFICE \VORK Ne\.\'Oprt Blvd., C.l\f. man goi;g to collea:el . \.\'/origt11:11l beveled mirror
I
'
ti MAID Wanted; Tahiti Inn Ri h!i id 19th le N t doo ~ 64MOOO Bi&: John Exp'd. Apply In ""rSOn n t're& ng posilion with SALES LADY, Ex-r. c e , eWpOr , n Approx. 1!80. E:iccel.
GENERAL "'" Lairuna brokera•c firm. t.fotel, 450 Victoria, Cl\1. r-C.l\I. cond. Asking $400. 675-4i70J tree serv., yard Newport Netionel Call 548-2129 For Dress Shop cleanup. AU around han-Benk Teletype exper. de.e:lrable Please Call, 548--4433 SERVICE St. Sa I es man Appll•nces I02
d R w '"'S but not necessary. f.fu11t be J\!anufacturing f/tlme-Jite mechanics, 2 ~,--,,,.,,.,.,-,--..,---yman. eas . .........,.,., Su-rlor & Placentia, N.B. DIRECTOR OR , •• , .,,__ .il.Ccurate lypls1 &. good , at * S•les E xec min. exper. Ntat in appear. Frigidaire washer
Upholitery BARl\WDS & Dancers general office \.\'Ork. Phone V.P . MFG •.. TO $-tOM Apply 2500 Newport Blvd, '40. Good Condition.
VINYL Weldlni:t~uts burns wanted. Apply in person, l\liss Burt 494-9181 for in-l\fust b;1vc strong backaround CAREER CM. 548-2017
!ears. Custom dyeing (alj Firehouge, 177 E 17th St., tervirw. in all phas« of mfg. relat-OPPORTUNITY _ SERVICE Sta. Attend . Must KENMORE GAS DRYER,
colors\ 649-2237 fmobile) C.1'1. GENERAL HELPER ed to hvy duty mobile equip. be good salesman. Salary ..,. All heat11 $40.
8311-39-12 e BLUE DOLPHIN e Full or pltlme for itlereo I J . R. Pierce SALES REP Comm. Apply in person, 673-0198 or 548-2408
GERMAN Crafl&"man wants Waitresses, exper. over ?j, firm. $3.85 hr. Call ~fr. Associates Agency, Jnc. 3190 Harbor Blvd, C.1.f. OVEN, G.E., buUt-ln, aqua.
\\urk. Your fabric or mine. Apply 33.» Via Lido, NB. Cole, ~9862 lS85 Newpol't. C~1 642~720 $35•000 • $J5,000 SERVICE Sta. titan. il1ust be Ve ry good cond. $60. Call
REASONABLE :l36-8367 BOAT CARPEMTER GEi~ERAL Ofc. SH I.:. typ.. AlARR IED! Too many bills:' ff' YOU 'RE LOOKING good all around. Salary + ~7559
or cabinet maker. Penn. )Ob. ini;:, p/timc perm .. approx. Permanent par t-1 1 me .f'OR A JOB ntAT WJLL comm. Apply in person, 30481'12""'· ~A~d~m~iral,.-,~R~o~lri~'-a;""'ln-.-ood-·--[fi] F'ringe bcnefi~. Lake Ar· 25 hrs 11·k. 675-j.'.W employment. Sec '91anager, PROVIDE TRE~tENOOUS Brl1tol Ave. O!. cond $45. I i I n>\\'head Marina, (71t) GIRL FRIDAY Mon lhru Thur aft 7 pm. no EA'RNING POTENTIAL, SERVICE St at ion At-* 642-3087 * . f 337-2j()I, Jor Dental Office, musl type, tilone calls please. Paulo SECURITY &o PRESTIGE tendant-All l>hi.fUI open. Ap-KEJ\'),10RE 1lo"e wJhiP
BOAT BUILD'G Gl\t SAIL ~ile I'. mret lhe public, TJ Drive-Jn Theater. 305 1 TIIENYOU'RETHETYPE ply4678Campus,N.B. ovenrange,Sear'~best,$75.
10 40. Call 548-2291 Ne"'J)Ott Blvd, C.flt. OF' ~!AN \VE '"E LOOK-SEWING Mach•'-o-rator 646-:itiT.> Job W•nted Femile 702 Top pay for Top man with ., .n.n. '"' ..-
' exec. ability. 213: 876-8186 HARDWARE 1tore 1tockman 1.IATURE \.\·oman for 11·7 ING .l"OR. uph. type i.tem1. Exp.I r••------~,
MA1'JRE lady. \.\1th oYln * BUSINESS MAN * H. \V. \Vri&:ht Co, l2l6 am shift. Sa"'')'rr Home, 675-7952 / tumlhll't' " rute Job will . . Rochester, Co11a l\tesa ti4&-6TI6, 2'619 Orafi11! A\'e, YOUR NEW PROFES-ISH<UiEO'EO':-r"'>t"ET""'AL""w"'ORKE;;;;;;;;RS;;;l l CLASSIFIED ii\'~ TLC lo elderly or Vaned e~perie~, p~lmar~y CLASS CUTl'ER·SE'ITER C.i\I. SIONAL CAREER \VI L L NON-AERO SPACE JOBS
children tor pr rm an r n t automotive. ecen y llO d PRODUCT FABRICATION ti!ECHANIC w/clu.s A START \VITH A TRAINING FULL IDIE PERMANENT HOURS
Place 10 put furnlturt'. Good Imported Car agency, noiv FU p ROG RA •1 THAT IS ~ · I I · N LL TL\1E PERi\tAi~E.NT liCt>nse, luUy oxp'd. \Preler " Immediate ..... y.:n1ngs 8·00 am to • ftm <00k, haJ own ""'· '· lu•t "-"'ant ore-ocate in ewport H"'DED BY DAVE LOOK G Call . . . v.., • ..... ""' Immediate Openings agrncy manl. Exll'emely ~ • ood Pay! Now! ).tonday thru Fr.Jd&1 free v.·erkends. &i&a-2466 be-arc:, prefe~bly in auto-Good Pay Call Now good pay. No olhen need L~GLAND, INVESTMENT 9AM·9Pi\f, Sat !AM~P<\I 9 to noon Saturday
fore 3 pm mo ile or anied field such 9A:\f 9P'I •·1 9A't "P'I 1 Id ANALYST R E BROKER Ora Coast Advertisers m:r, p!ac& ' as boats or ? !!!?, Desire · -1 • -"..., • app y. Richfie , 19th & , . . . nge
AIDES f"or convalescence position ot some prominence Orange Coasl Ne\\·port, C.l\f. Employment Agency their ads by te epbcme
elderly care or l~mlly .c:are:'. with factory, diatribulor or Employment Agency l\IOTEL l\fakls, rxp'd. Apply YOU 'LL ALSO START 124 Broadway Costa Mesa COSTA MESA OFncE
Homemakert, !ri7.fi681. u Gen'! i\lgr: Jn dealership. 124 Broad\\·ay Cosla i\1<"9a in pet'son, Costa ~tesa Inn. f~11\IEDIATELY \vmt A 645-3111 645-3112 645-llll 330 w. B~
Help Wanted, M & F 710 \Vlll consider investment in 64~3Ul &l~W 645-3113 C.~l. CliANCE FOR A NEW 1971 SHIPPING & REC. CK. 642-M78
right deal. Phone 672-4202 HAIRDRESSER needed CADILLAC PAID FOR BY Exp. electronic firm. call NE\VPORT BEACH
.ACCOUNTANT anytime. J/timr. Attract. bu1y shop. WIA.lt)' US. · Atrs. Schmidt, \VestcliU Per. 3333 Newport Blvd
Retired executive requirt'sl'B~U~SIN'==E~SS~--rtu~~, -~,,-r Xln'I 1\·orking conds. Above sonnel Agency, 2()13 West-642-5678
, 11 0 a rou~ Y man or Yo'Oman w/van or Ba G'G" H · .-, Co """ ~ service f tho hl oppo n ty av1 earnlnis. Ask for Betty 'Ji\°" e St.art Jmmedialely cliff Or., N.B. 64.>2770 BU~GTON B"'CB
exp d acc_I. for part Ume "'agon. Pickup & deli~·ery. ~:X, I 11 air Styles, • mpany Car Plan SPRAY PAINT MGR 17875 Beach Blvd.
l''Ol'k, lt}.1:> hrs mo. tifust be N•••· bus·,.,., "'"S""" • Incentive Proeran1 . M0-1220
able to type, CdM location. llR · """" '"" HAJR St)•list, f emale, e Plush Offices Run your own N~a.lion.
!:tao-4866. C EER OPPORTUNITY w/clientele for excepllonal ~ Non-automotive. o tnUt on .LAGUNA BEACH
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Stel'l'O co. nttds full or Salon on Lido. Great linan· HW"" TH I S OPPORTUNITY ~;:.o~~a!.:7te sh::x,~I prof-.222 :~~Ave,
Adm Sele' p/llme, dependable. $3.85 cial opportunity for right \VILL BE FILLED l:\UifEO. Call Sally Hart 540~
hr. Call ltoUman, :i46-9862 girl. Call Norm Zapien ar EXECUTIVE TATELY. SO f'OR YOUR COASTAL AGENCY SAN CLEMENTE
CAPABLE young in en the SUbmarine. 673-j9J I or p I A OlANCE TO AN EXCITING 305 N. ~2<::~201no Real TRAIN TO
BE A FINANCIAL
CONSULTANT
"·anted for faciory '1vrk. 673-5930 er1onne 111ncy NE\V CAREER A NE\V 2790 Harbor Bl at Adami
I I I 410 IV Coast 1-l wy NB 971 C DtLLAC' .,. 000 ~EAJ'I C t Cl NORTH COUN ~ App Y n penion at Cout HAIR STYLIST 11 anted Suite H · i;.i;,.2716 I A & ,,.,.., "' ~· " arpe eaner or • T<.
Cata1naran, 33012 C .a 11 r \\'/some follol\'lng in Che TH ROUG H COMMISSIONS he lper, clean cul, exper dial tree 540.1220
Pe r fecto , San Juan art'a. Call 548-.i!I79, Ask for OFFICE GIRL &. SERV ICE f'EES • CALL pref, \.\'iii train. Apply 1740
WOMEN Capistrano. Jntrrview daily Char. NOW. Superior Ave, C.l\1.
at 2;00 P:\f, arrive 1Ai hour D:\IV ,. CONTRACTS TRAU-IEES
MEN
e NO DEGREE OR EXPER. early HIGH SCHOOL !ilulit ha\·e experience. 547-6771 Nation wide company needs NECESSARY. ==~~--~~ STUDENTS SUNSET FORD CARPET salesman, plenty of $air& Yo'Ork, eve, 4-8, $1.67 1 ~IO Garden Grove Blvd.. 4 sharp men to fill manai~
'MIE \VORLD or FI:\!-leads, niust be exptor. \Vork iuar, + comm. \Vcstminster, Calif. A'k for Mr. Levritt hma',",' ,"',~~-e ~Slb·,00,·,.0".:,tt~sltl ANCE & INVESTING IS ou_t_ of hom~, best oo~m. 0 644 =· 0 0 ' .. ...... " '-" 40· · Part time full tim• """"'J 1 636-40I "Ir. Ak•· .,, Bt'wn 9&3, 213/ VERY EXCITING & ?IIOST 4 ,c. . ' ' *HOUSEKEEPER* ON SALES Mgi·. for C.?..t. >..1nt " " RE\VARD'NG FILLED. 96-6361, Phtl 'E busboy {daytin1el, <.'Of· 72-1-8)8() for appt. '"' FULL TIJ\1E-LJNDA ISLE fee shop \V&itresses, din ing oppty for hi eamina:s. F'uller I ~~==~---.,-.-CLA l.\IS CLERK: Xlnl oppty· Bru•h '"""7!" o TRUCK d · •-... -LIVE-JN or '>DAYS room \\'Aitresses. Apply 1100 · .nv-.1 a. river, \VlU't!!nu..-.-YOU CAN START A in_ our H._B. _O_fflce for a1n · .. SA bl '" mu'! b d Gd fuU time ""I, Clo•• ''"' Pali.sades Rd, Costa ~1ei<a, RAH Coventry needs ti. or m11.n auem ym · 1'-ABULOUSCAREERntAT it1.ous ind_ l\'l ual . '''/xlnt "" "" " k LA • Or C
' kil,_ D too ,ml cl"drn) '''""'' ,-m-ask for i\larion Kendall pt l.imc help. No in-no1v · · anie o. CAJN • "'0 YOU TO\VAR'n ypi_ng ' .""· ut_1es 11re, " -· ·" I D-•·--n I • ., """"" ...., -" "~n"'"•ble hskpr ,, I high b<t_\\·een 2 &. ~ pm i\fon lhru vestment. \Viii train, min at-ea. D<Udl"'e o. nc. ""'1 FINANCIAL lNDEPEN-\'11.fh:u -& inte~sting 37 ~ ,... ,,,.... ..,.. ~•n ""'-< IV 6 S NB
DENCE SEC UR J Ty & Hr.':; ~~I-benefits. Phone; s!andards. 644-4711 (Npt j "'~"'=· '°"',,.--,-,.---..,.--!<":;;-';:~;;:-' .. ~=:-:' ~·=----· l th t, · ·
PRE:::.l]CE 8 ~ 2 -1 • ~ l : P et s o n· 1 Behl 10o'kdays 9-5 or 830-8999 PART Time Se c re I a r y . Sell idle items now~ Daily Pilot -Want Ads have
· n e I/Un 1 guard Group wkrnds, tor penonat inter-1 perm. Req: SH, typing (55-I Callu:~"•'.,·""="~N~o,w,!,,.~=•· bargains ralore.
nt!S AREA or INVEST. Insural:K'r t view. 6j \\'Pml, dictaphone & HS Help W1nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
ING IS CONSTANTLY IN· CLERK TYPIST HOUSEKEEPER-3 days per fn:'"e~i::x' at;;~·~~:
CREASING & ?if o R E 70 u A So St ,1·rek, 2 hours each day. I ~trs. Gonzalei PEOPLE ARE NEEDED p ccur. me at typ-O\.\•n tramportation & 3 ==~~,-~~--
TO HELP JN TiilS FIELD i~g. X!n't. salary, gd bene-refert'nces required. $70 per ! PART time-Alterations girl
' · r11.1. f'a.sh1on !!land. mo. Cdl\1. Call Mn. Devis.
1
wanted for Exclusive Bou-
lf' YOU'RE READY TO MISS EXEC AGENCY 9 to j 11·eekdays, 642-16M tique. 67>TI40
BE TRA INED t''OR 'nllii -4lO \V, Coast Hii)'., NB I HSf\-PRS Emplyr pays fee. I Part time !\!aids
TYPE OF CAREER AS AN 646-l939 George Allen Byland A.gen· Seal.ark ~lotel
INCENTIVE TO JOIN US . . ~· 100.B E. 16th, S.A. ~144j
\\'E'LL l\IAKJ:o.: IT POS-** .COOK_ tor Italian deh 547--0395 PRESS OPERATORS
SIBLEF'OAYOUTO HA VE Expd. l&.ll4 Beach Blvd , HOME MANAGER \\'omen \.\'Ork for pla11lc
J. 1971 CADILLAC & \\'E'LL H4:; lkh. . PA y f'OR JT. COLLEGE gil'I lo •pend i\talure l.>4J, competent ll'O· i molding plat1t, 546-3370
1ummrr at N.B. as babysit· m11n 10 live-in I manage. PRODUCTION controller &
ler. ?.lust !wlm & drivt. Orangr Counry home for 21 platlllE'r. Starting Salary • Start lmlTll'd1atrly
0 Company Car Pla11
• Plush OUice•
Ple11.se call 6n.tll05 aduJta. $50().$600. To arrange Wio 540-9945
CO' I interview • .appolntment Call 1PRO, FESSIONAL pho"' . IP ANION -ight l'loU:iC· 1213! 861 jJ(it 5 30 PM keeptor for elder!)' lady, live • aft : · 1 solicitor -Dana Point, San
DAVI:: LOOKTNGLAND ln. Laguna, Refs. 494·708a ll01\1EWORKERS lo stuff j Clemente, Capistrano atta.
n~ANCIAL JNVEST!lrENT COOK~mbo. Dinner I.: envelopes flt Jlt'r 1000 min. Work In your own home.
ANAL'lST, R. E. BROKER breakfast See Harold , Send !elf:-addre11ed 1 Be~I dral in atta, Phone
\VILL SHO\V YOU HOW ALLEY \\'EST, 2l06 Oce•n· stamped envlo~. Donna 835-1~ bel'l\'ffll 9;00 a.m.
ALL TillS CA.~ BE A fronl, N.B., across: from \\'rst, P. 0. ftt11>. 564, \Vhil-l and noon.
START TO A ?\'EW RE. pier. lier, Caht. 90601 'R~E~C~E~PT=1=o~N~1sr=...,,.-,-~.u-.-,. I
\\'ARDING Llf'E. COOK companion \\'llnled to * .. llOUSEREEPER beAuty Mlon in Newport .
, , • share <:harrninr liltle house Ii: LAUNDRESS \\'ell ~-altracti\'C,.
POSITION:s TO BE "''-!-· nr bay 11.·/rklerly l;idy. Sm Call &l&.7i64 under 30. Pn-vious txp.
ED L\f,\IEDIAT£LY • SO ~alary, pri room£.. ba. J\1u t HOSTESS . EXP'O. not flf«uary. &12-DJ.9.t
CAU.. NOW. drive. 549-tz.tt. 21·40. Good fJiy. The Don RECEPTIONIST
DENTAL Exee. &c'y Ok. Jase Re11auran1 0093 E. for Retlrttnenl Home..
lifrr. Dfven;lfied dut i es . Adams, H.B. ' 99Zi La Alameda Ave, Jo',V.
Sec'y skills, bkkpn1. JANITORS, exper, only l RELIABLE
A1k fer Mr. Brooka imturt. Good f>PNanAlity & p/timr. nlaht '''Orie ln c.~t. MEN OR WOMEN
547.f771
A Large International. Financial
Headquarters I..ocated In Newport Beach
Has The Follo,ving Job Openings:
SECRETARY
Typing & Shorth1nd ..•.•. $500 •
STENO ••••• $450
Excellent Working Conditions & Employee
Benefits. For An Interview Concerning The
Positions Above, Please Phone 644--5800 &
Ask For Mrs. Smllh In The Ptrsonnel De·
partment.
PROGRAM ANALYS:F-. ._
TIVo Years Experlenco In ANS. COBOL Ad·
ministration Experience Assembly Language,
DOF Optrating Sys t t m s. OS Operating
Systems Experience Preferred.
Pli•M Send Re 1 um e To P. 0 . Box 2210,
Newpor t BHch, C1llf. 92660, Attention:
CLASSIFIED
DEADL'INES
Dt11.dllne for copy I: kil111
Is 5:30 p.m. the day be-
fore publication, except tor Monday FAltk>n
when deadline: la Satu,..
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Advcrtisctll
should check their ad&
daily &: report errors
lmmediatcly. THE
DAILY PILOT htumes liability for the first t""
correct lmertlon only,
CANO':LLATIONS:
When killing an 114 b@ sure to m11.ke a !'eCOrd
of tlie kil.L NUMBER
given you by your ad
taker as f'tt'eipt ot )'out
cancellation. This \dll
number must ~ p~
sented by the advBtlser
In CUl" of a dispute.
CANCELLATlON' 0 R
CORRECTION or NEW
AD BEFORE RUNNING:
Evt?ry effort is madt!' to
kill or correct • new ad
that has been orde'l'C!d,
but \Ve cannot gu11.ran· te~ to do so untlJ tM ad
has appea~ in the p&· per.
DIME-A-UN& ADS : Th~ ade art 1trlctf1,1
e&ah In adVlnt't' by m•h or at any one of our of·
fices. NO phone-order-.
THE DAU.Y 'PlLOT ~
scrvn the-rl.Rht to clu.
slfy, f'dlt, censor or re-.
Cuse. any advertlsemc:nt...
And to ch•nte Ila rates
le ~irulaUons without Pfior noUce.
CLASSIFIED
MAILING ADDRESS
P. O. Box 1S60,
Colla Mesa
026:!6
Mrs. Smith.
l~""'"'""""••••!!!!!I judirm~nt req'd. To 45. Top .1 bt11ch cilirs. 630-1601 1401 Opporrunlly, S130. 10 $200. a
frS Beacn houM time. Bil· nlat)'. 5"16-3000 .li:raemtr, An11hrlm 11·crk to sr111·t Car hfllpluJ.
1e-af tdtcdon ~I See the Trader'• Paradise column i!! IT'S A breete .. HeU your S11111dy Job, 'ad\"Kneemen!. I
DAILY PILOr Oualfll!d for YD\11 S LI.nu, S Daya for ltem.e: \\1th ease, uMJ Dally Call lltr. Hlu, 5l2-f749, be· Equat Opportunity Employer
IM:ctioft bOWI Sl. Call today ••. GU-5678. f>llot Claulfl~. &42'-M7S f\\·f't~ I It 2 p,\J, only, ·-----------------
"WEED U II. ttap" .. clean
out•lhc tttasutt1 A trash -
tum i'nto e11sh thrn a Da1ly
PUot Clautfled 1d. $42..oo'TB
·Buy a
Border
.to
Border
Bargai
Every cf.,sifie~ w•nl .~ in tho DAILY
PILOT •ppe•rs in every edition every
dey. That 'IM1ns your 1d will be seen
in p1pe'1 doovorod l o homos ind sold
from n1wsr•ck/ from border to border
111 •long the Orange Co11t •••• n tho
way from
"
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All • • •
Huntington Beach
Valley FounU.ln
CostJI Mesa
Newport Beach
Laguna Beach
Saddlehack
San Clemente
Capistrano
(Plus the daily
newsrack edition)
For One Price
With A
• 4 I ' • '
Classified Ad
Phone 642-5678
•
r dd.iy, M'l' i, 1971 DAILY, l'lLOT 39 ~~~~~~l ~-~~,~~~--11~~~~~·~~~ .. ~~~~-~· ~~. ~~ I ~ I~[ -]~I --. I~ I -,;JI~!' f<HtoYou Ii[ ,,..,,y,. ltil hbw-l[E [ ....::~, I~ I 1'-'";., Iii]
Antique.s
' _.._ .... ,:...--~~1;;;~~~l~iiii;i;i~~ f ,;;iiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimii;.;;f
IOOAntiqu11 ... IOO Mlace)l•MouS Ill MIKell•nMU1 BEAUT. lona·halt'td wh.l~e i.ov!'.B& 'remale cat Dot• 154 8Nt1, R_ent/Ch•rt'r 90I C•mptn, S.fe/Rentf2G "iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I W•nted 120 female caL Strietly a house c~. ahota, l'it yrs. ((n!f -
A-KOREA 'S• ANJlliuES · JOHN'S 'BIKES 1 "t. Sho'• i>«n 1payod. 0111y tabllyl. N•.., good home. • DALMATIAN PUPS.AKC, 32' '!WI"'"'• Cbrla, IU!Iy ' ______ ,;......;.-to good, ~lni; home. ~1817 511 abow quality. Pvt ply, tquip'd. l''lahil)g or Crul!i·
-NEW-\VANTED: Boy'1 . Schwinn &16-4&65 aft. 4 & wk.nds ~/8 t ~ klttl'fW very lovable 675-2109 1111. Xlnt cond. M&-iu-4 JUST · RECEIVED NEW SHIPMENT! Jc spetd Mons m.1<1.m :!~.t~';,J:' ,~ l BEIGE colored longtu.1""' ... ,...1, & playful 2 "'"""'''Y"'o'"~=,,.RE='°'T"•"m"'•-, -,.-,-,. Boats, Sall 909
BEAUTfFUL AUSTRIAN , ENGLISH & Ladles 5 ~ U1 spd ~$85 leave phone re. ,_t ~ tom kitty. 8 "'ks old. WIU shell, I blk & gra,y •trlped AKC Champ Sired. ,M~F
FRENCH PIECES. GREAT SELECTION. "''"' & Ladl" 3-spd l'O·SOO alt 5 pm "'11""' C.M." nearby, Aloo S4S-<ll27 ill TERMSI! * * SJI..$72' L 14 #2611
ALSO CLEARING OUT ODDS & ENDS TO Sti~a· "11·".1"N1=·E°'o'-,-tdl~~p~,-,-,~;,-nl 6 cans o! clean cooldru; AKC fem blk LA.b, products lRISH Scner puppie1, AKC MINT CONDITION ~lAKE ROOM FQR ANOTHER EUROPEAN -USED-Orient~ tva. also smaller greaS4!'. &IZ..9846 51!1 beaut pups. Ge.ntle trained rq. Champion 5ired. Show
SHlPMENT ON THE \VAY, BEST PRICES 10 Speed $45-$..~ sizes, ln iood cond, TO qua.lilied home • needsdaytlmt"att111ntlon 6pPt,Mall'!onty e 968-6921 S>'JI..S~TRAILER-COVER
TO DEALERS! , 3 Speed $2$.-$40 -!fl~.9332, :t9'f-S382. Adorable roll!e p uJ p y. 962-5737 pm 5/7 3 COCK-A-POOS 1 apricot ~3-1l3U da,ya 613-13-44 Sal &
.Sting ft&.)'1 $18-iJj "JG'"· ~.,-'-""°io·· -.,s."u"°.,,,.,-.,-..,,,.-,.,..-,d I Love1 rhUdren. Nefd lenc. FREE to qualUled home, $10; 2 blacks. ss' ea. ' Sun.
ANDRl;A'S .AN lQUES -REPAIRS--Trailer. 1.ate model tn ex. ~ard. ~ ;,g ~rman Shcpberd • Lab •642-9161 GIVING Up The Slip: '70 1·1 J
2380 N•wport Blvd., C.M. '45-487Q rnnd. Very re aao nab I c · l~=~~------I mL'IOO puppy, Love Ii HorHs SS4 1"1. Hobie Cat, on trlr. 0,,.n D•ily JO •.m. to 5 p.nl. * SUn. N00n tH 5 2340 NEWPORT 8LVD. 962--7689 FREE kittens htlly ,,·caned yard. 5'a8.{1813, 836--1493 sn \V/Q..ila ,r,; life jacket1. !\tint
I ~!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!i!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'! I COSTA MESA 1_ & housebrokeo. lo.loving, LOVABLE Co'(nplinion ! 0 CORRAL 1pact:, ne"•ly roni· cond. Stored Inside. $8.50. IA.ppll•nces I02 Furniture 110 OPEN •to WKDAYS. NEED 1111'3t packinz trunk.I must find nomh. ~9&1801, adultl. sm. breed b 1 k pleted, 16X24', 8X16' Is Call: &U--4910 Mk Ior ;\fr,
SAT. & SUN. M or crll~. 545-3459 * Dana Poinl. ' 5/10 Chihuahua dQxie under 10 COY~. Tack roam, feed, Collil'r
HUGE We 1 ting house H_E_LP_r_w-,-.... --.-.-,..-.,,-mo-: 64.S-4720 2 Lo lll .• blk k !~. 546-9682 S/1 exerelse. Hunlle1 planned. l ·w"'oo"'-1~,""N~.,-. """'""'2=.-o2~.,-, .. -
!rldge/botto1n free' I ., Mutlc•l Instruments 822 va e m ... e · L'OC l'r · Back Bay area S?S-239 :;:er mi • 1\\'o large beige antique -WiU 1ake Trade-Ins-mix 6 .me. I Jong and 1 short G E R M A N .'iheP gold . · blue. BlC Racing sails. Tilt
die ineat-veg drwr. 25 cu fl, velvet chair• w(matching l·'M""ARL=~iN""'~,1i','-'mod,:.:~,~I ~.,"-~12ds ;~IG~N~"1':::::~,~ .. ~,~,~.i~,71-.~,~,-,-,~t h a 1 r. Out d 0 a r dogs retriever Jge dog, t yr old, 10 YR Bay geld1ng, genHe. trlr. Boat cover. Mint cond.
<.'Opper, 8 yrs. $50. 491-9351. ottoman. Our ~owner. 010'-ed gaoge It M·l caitine, 3 Slli Espana gultar model 539-6994 • • 5JJ.0 has sbota _need• blJ )'l"d & Tack lncluded.$300. S.18-9971 ! =1~109=;·=""""'~-c=-~-~-
• REBLT 'A'shrs-i:;as dryrs in10 a smail. awtment and clips, brass. iO Sf-a.rs U" SL-11 $100. Both w/case. ND gd l.oines far 2 lovablc kids. 646-8301. 5/10 or ~ ELECTRA 23' FlbefKlas."1, ·~ G .. ·--·1v "•tr Chg ran"! tako us. We are "'" A~~.. ,, ' I Llk -" ..,,, ..... -....., · .,..., ·I ... blk & white port, 'TV, ha~ly ~ mal4i tlk cocker mix. 6 mo. BLACK pregnant cal & J ps ... mo Or· e new 0011u. May I a g "pa i, man . almosl brand Mil'. Please __ .. IPTn A'·rth 1 1 • 1 T'· p-'"" _,,,,~ ..... 12 700 u,..,.. ••v· ""' exhaust or .PIANO, pecan wood, console, oni <>< 11hor1 halr, out· stripOO ki!ten to good homes. I II• Ji } 'II' ', .. ~ ""'" .. ......, '" • •
CAMPER 8' cabov1r
w/j&cb:, $750. * 642--tm .,,
Nl1'!ROD '
1'ent Camper. ·n Lbnse
$200. * 54&3681.
Cycles, 8lke1l
Scooter•
THllll
HONDA
Ill
"FRIEDUlllBr
, .. M.tom ,...,., .,
,,,,_ • fm.'1561l
n-1:531-8637. ~~~799~~ home tor $600. Fiat 850, $35. r.luntz 418 S550, 3 yrs new. Also guitars l~"°'~'[d~ofg~'·~"~...,..~~"';!~S/~7·i~C~•~ll~a=l:lr:S:. ~642'~·204~,~~~S~/7~1~.;-~""~<~':.;rt;P.~""';';';;:;"-~ 1 :y2,13_l-;:S!IS-"°'>~"~'~· ~w.,,.._io~30-· _ _, \VEDGEWOOD Gas ~ge track borne tape deck & ampllfier. 968-2!)18 EX'l'R..El\tELY attractive kit· 'IVllN kittens black, PAl'I . 2-• VENTURE: ~eeps 4
Older but ,·ery clean; $35. PVT party "'ants to sell \v/spea.kers, S70. Antlq. ~r1 I Sl=R~' ~C~..,~1,-,-,,..,-m-,.-1,-6-.,-.· I tens, ~ v.·ecks old. Clean, Persian, 00 kind adult home trailer, mtilor, he1d ALL 1970 TRIUlilPH" Dayton !00.
496-1123 <Capo Beacbl.! OOJnplete houSe of beautitul 1920 + vintage, w/43 + var-ltl yrs. old Cost S~-Make :'lealthy, box. Ir a in l'! d , 536-4037 5/7 General 900 SET FOR RACJNG! ' Jo~antutlc! No ru1t, no
TOP S$ Paid for refl'ig., iieai' r._w Medi!, furn, in-ious sz cut glasses, Must !lee offer (2131 592-2!HI. H,8 l\lale-l<~en1a.!c, 642--7081 YOUNG adult ki!tlei; ··we 531-0831. 557_233,1 dings, all paint &: chrome
stO \'es. W8$her & diYtn; ·::::~f.' !~e~a~edsoJ:is:. to apprec. &st ofr. &12-6428. Offic• fW"niture/ LOVABLE yg adult very need good homes, too." CAPTAIN SPRITE 11' fiberglass family l!ke new. Mcctuuiically
645-4930, Eves 536-4041 Bunk beads, Beaut Thomas-CUSTOM sofa, loose down Equip. 1'41 lriendly femalr-long hair 5-18-08l3 or S36-449J 517 Ul\llmlted license. any~ sailboat. Dacron .sails. Like perfect. Gar8'ed 4 covered.
LARGE REFRIGERATORS ville kingsi bdrm .sel It cushions, casters, anUque blk. cat wllh yellow eyes. , tons. 30 Years expenence new, $500. 54Q..6587 2447 ml. $995. 673-3838
135, 16. $55 gold & blue. srotchguard, 5 USED ~sks, l'A1vel chain. 893-2867 !>/lO'CUDDLY lo\: able kittens 10 sail & power, Professional I 'L~roo""'~,.;-~,.~ll°'bo~,~,-w-/7.l~rl-r. 19TI TRIUMPH T R6 R, ntore. 213/925-3622 l'k 1 •= 1 1. '""====7'~-'oc-1 good homes, 5,18-0813 or 1 II hln "'id "1 · 1· _.. , .. _ •-Id Guaranteed * 646--~8:!1 I e new, C05.,........ sel or Paymef\I: tax deduc!Jih'e toiEXCEPTlONALLY cule kit· 336-4493 517 .11por s gi:u. e, .. exic~n l\1any extras All in xlnt tcenscu, uu..-c wee ... Cl .
NORGE' frost ~ refri.a. l ONLY !-5 pc SP a n is h Sl23, Lovely blk Perslf.11 locaJ S~arity. New \l!rtical lens, tome pl. Siamese, . &. Central. America & Pacll-cond. $185. ~7834 financial hardshrp, !6 01
Li.k 175 \Sed\'OOm sei, l.ike new, S99. Jamb .cape stole s;.o. Seve1'1ll ga.s bmller. Use inlbors or hi blk & . FREE kittens lo those whO le Coast waters _ InstnJ.c. l ·SCH=7.oc~K~S""~-'-'-~-1 miles, QeVer dropped. Paid e new . • ONLY' •• ool & lov• ••al · 1-pure w , mixtures.. ..,_ ·i 1 & •-&1 h . ' Racing Sabot, u1 .. _ 1n1: • ,_,,, a -.. antique Bisque dolls &: bot· outdoors. 642--0116 5-18-461.l 518 care, cc:auti 11 • ,,.. t y, tlon In boat handling, sea-$1,49:, se ..... 06 Jor SLMJ.;J. * 540-~ • sets, ~!.9/set. l tJes. 54S.747J ESK th' ta.bl Call 968-8900 S/T rnansh!p DR & celestial xlnl cond, S3!5.: Hobie bel· <IM-5808, Laguna Beach.
GAS stoves ru 1.: S.12:>; Elec ONLY!-Blonoe boo·kca 1e 1 -*-.,,.-,A~U~C=Tl=O~N~-*~ ~hair'. ~ks1::1ves, e, ~~;:. FREE female 1; Lab-Germ FREE Very fr 1e nd 1 Y na.vlgati~n. PICK UP &: ly boa1'Cl. !H'', S2S, 492-1813 .71 Norton T50cc. N • w.
dryer. 1 year old S7j. Xlnt headboard & night stand h:lr . 6444197. 2306 Arbutus St, Shep. 2 yrs old. Lo_ves waler beautiful Siamese, preg· DELIVERY AN'i\VHERE: 69 Sa.le ol the Sabots \Vlnner! former dealer will aell tor.
cond. 536-1835. double bed, S15. UFF, 188.3 Fine Furniture Ea!tblufl, N\.\"'I Bch great w I c h 1 l d re n . nant ~11 5/7 captain & wHe available for Full racing gear! ~lake ol· $1250 cash. Call 6T3-Til14 or
RECONOITIONE Harbor Blvd, Cl\t. 548-9457 & Appliance " 673-9361 S/10 ' (er: 675-0757 1 ' D \Vasher REMINGTON elec IP'wriler, , ~ THREE k i t t e n 5 . part extended cruising. Exten-see b kc al 231 Agate Ave,
$25. 838 East First St. Santa FRENCH Provincial dining Auc!ions Friday, 1:00 p.m. elec .c&.lculator, Paymaster NFJED gd home lor l.>vab~e Siamese 6 "''eek.!i old. Call sive administrative experi-e COL. Challengei· 2~· Balboa. l!Wmd aft 4 pm.
Ana. Open 9-9, 7 days room set: table 6 chairs, Windy's Auction Barn checli protector. $300 For Yi adult tan n1ale 1hort htur 8flZ-l'1Sl ' 517 cncc. 646-2977 fbrgls. Fast & pretly. Xlnt 1 1-V~AN-T~E-0-,-Bo~y-.,-~Soh-wl~,-.-11 ,,,~,-,~,-;ff~,-,..-',"~ ... -',=.~ .. ~,~"'~.-. I ~~:: ~::i.:u:h M ~~~i~~ a:l'l;Af Newporl, CUI 646-8686 Ali, ~7562 aft 6 ~1~94letTicr. shots, hsb~~T ='-";;.~~E"'E""K=1rr=E~N~s""~'l•s~ca;R.,.-A-M'""""L"'E-.T-.S. cond. 0/B. S3000. 644-1836. vanity blkt. Good cond.
Kenmore \\'asher, avocado, S'75. Ladies oak desk!: chair &hind Tony's Bldg, !itat'l STA'{DARD OFFICE DESK tiil-284 1 • COLUM.BIA 28, 1969 -Load-Reasonabtt-, Pleaae call &
. i;.G. * 645-7820 $40 Wb•· • g -· .,0 UNION MEMBERS & CHAIR ti:"-DARLING fluffy \\'hi . SIT ed. $9800. Days: 713/ leave phone No. at 540-&'ll8 . e 5e'>''•n ,, ... cw e, · ~ COC'k-a·poo puppie female. ANSWERS 636.{7757; Eve1: 714/646-5724 aft 5 pm Hotpoint Dishwasher J\faple cabinet $30. 645-4437 JOIN l,INION BUYING SER-* 644-7127 * 6~2-7174· 673-9687 5n BEA\JT!f'UL b I u e -eyed 1~~+-""'==-=-~I
Coppertone. Runsflne.Areal Gara·Ae Sat• 112 VICE. MEMBER SAVINGS 826 .' black kitll!ns, 6 wks. old, LIDO 14, Hull 2280, l\forgan 1969 KAWASAKI (Bush
bargain at s.xi. ;)ol9-o$74 v· ON NATIONAL BRANDS Pianos/Organs FREE klltl'na a.II colors Jong box traifll!d. 838-3073 511 Purism -Limbo_ Demon racing sails, 3 yrs old, Good Whacker) 115c:c, street or
Camer•s & J.Family Garage Sa I e : OF APPLIANCES, FURNI-factory Authorized t~ hair, box tral~~Q YG adull Jo,•able "·ire hair -~IY, -ME hi1 BILL shape, Sl395, 673--6223 trail. Perfect. 1200 mi. $3&a.!I
Equipment 808 Typi?Ylriler, Couch, Scrttn TURE, BEDDING & STER· Distributor for terrier mix n1ed u. gd . Patient _s ':°m~~alnt ~bout LIDO 14 No. 423, x!nt rond, Also Sears All1tate Mo~.
door, dish"·sr, lite fixtures, EO. PHONE: 962--0101 Yamaha * Kimball SHAGGY part Sheep dog, 1vatch dog. 540-6777 517 his P!Ychiatrist: He satd he w/trailer, 2 covrrs, xtra 60cc, s75. 968-1865 • 'I
HASSELBLAD 500 c with ·so
mm. Planar, handgr l p,
stovepipe finder, beaulilul,
$475.: Vintage 1..eica Model
0, Black \vith 3.5 Elmar
and case, mint condition
$95: Leica 3C two collector's
lenses, $75.: spotm1tcr ae·
cessory !or Gossen Luna
Pro "·ith leather ca.sf' $10.
496-4123, eves (Capl~trano
Beach)
chaJrg, blkes, cotinter-top MOVI G Conn * Thomas male to good home "'Ith • . didn't believe in 1hock thcr-sails. SI@. 494--17:11 '10 DUCATI 350cc. Xlnt N out of itate • children. 830-5119 517 a Lo\'ely kittens 7 'vks old. apy •"·'ho hand·" >IE"• cone!. H&rdship -Must'I bar refrig $36, Gn1ndig h.._fi miscellaneous Hems for 111Je Kohler & Campbell 5-IS-S26l l9'J6 An ah e Im , :;-"" •u LIDO 14 &: trlr North sails
xlnt rond $50, Scort ·5 HP _ dishes, pictures, lamps. Fabulou.. selection of new & 2 baby kittens, 1; Per!ian, C.i\i , 517 BILL. sooo. ' ' saK <tkuil!LceH. 8F~ ,,s:a;J.>6 '8 • 10032
outbrd S3J, King mosaic beds, hide-a-bed couch _ tW'· used grands, 1plnets, con. both female. -4 wks old. . WANTED: Diesel fishing * S.16-9!HS * u • · • ""_, 1 · ~
headbrd SlO, i'tfany,. many quoiSe, tables, and ac-ISOles & <lrgans only at 646-5674 5/10 ~!~ST llnd honie !or kittens, boat w/flying brldge.-good Boats, Sllpi/Oocki 910 • 1966 Norton, all cuslom,
misc. Reasonable. 3134 Ker· ··'-COAST •'USIC 11'1ll be put to s I e e fl _ _, 3.5 ~ ~ w·u all bit "~-• ---cumwo.ted bric-a-brae. Call IV\ ADORABLE "'hite puppy th ·1e. Ca.II S.JG-28ro S/lO 1'Quu, .UV11 to 40,uuu. 1 re e.'6 ... ~ u ..., ....
l'Y Ln, CM. to see any fjme. 646-4003 NE\\'PORT & HARBOR frce w hood h 0 m c . 0 erwJ ' trade vacant land I n MOORING, Balboa Island. Semi-chopped, MUil ·HD..
GARAGE Sale Sat & Sun, 208 ANTIQUE popcorn booth _ Costa lr1esa * &U-2851 Sl2-G?69 5/8 HI chair aM hotpolnt built in business area ar Huntington Rent or buy. South Bay 675-t06t after 6 pm.
Geneva St. H.B. 536-4125 or Perfect operating c:ond. SlOO • 300 Pianos &. Organs HONDA car body. 403 N. ra_ngc and oven. \Vorkll good ~ach of equal v a I u e. preferably near Topaz. 213 1 --J~OO!l~Bu~l-ta-co~M-,-,a-do~r-·I
536-7274. Antique bed & per day inrome at good NE\V-USED. Going out for NeYlport Blvd .. Jusl ta.Ice 11 5~~3481 11!1 5 517 \\rHc: Bo~ 648 Kula, Maul, 473-0911 2.'iOcc Street or Dirt
dres1er. din"'r tables, chairs, lbcatlon, Trade for car. boat business. Rentals $lO a rpp. al\·ay. 5110 2 BEAUTlf"UL kilteru; blk & Hawaii 96153 26' SLIP, S&a/mo. Privale Good condition $475
clothing, stefeo phono, baby or will lease 642-0010 or Steinway, Baldwin & Kaw'ai REAU.Y eu!e killrn. 1 "'hl. \.\'l'aned & h1brk. "IERCUR\' props, r;leering ba1h. No. 7 Balboa C.over;, 1,,,,....,=-·=54,,.S-"530_·_,-•.,---.,-j YASHICA Super' 'ITL. bll-in
meter. 4 lenses + addi!.lollal
equipment. Sl50 or ofier.
64J-3573.
thing 8 ' 1amP 1 · t i ne 494-4977 Chickering, Yamaha, etc. like a Httlr racoon, :~= s.1S-1630 518 cables, singl! lewr controls, N.B. Call 6Th-4331 '69 V\V, 24?.I, perfect cond. ~P1;'6~ds~m~:;Y :::: DELTA PooJ "9,ble, ~. nELD·s PIANO CO. halr 546-52~2 :,11 5 BEAUTIFUL longhaired lnstrument&, ""._lndsh.ields, DCX:K tor power boat tC1 24 All extras & se rvice
sla!e. Never u~ed. ~tall Costa Mesa Garden Grove ==-------~I kiHen~. 6 wks old. 613..2202 Cle. Phone, 5-19--ffi.10 ft. F'rce ell!c & water. rerords. Dr. Scolt 5-14--5262
w/alr co. price $900, &ell fo r 14;;o, Ale~ (TI4.) 645-3250 (114) 638--27'10 FREE kittens 2 a.dorabll' aft 5 !>/8 NEIV 7' <-I · k d' h l";J/f lt B ,,..-2 or 495-<4343.
Furniture 110 GARAGE Sal A I I.,. ""' nutty whl. fem .a I e If.. "t"'r )a ing y, . t. . . uo;>-21 4 ===~=~---~I
e: r supp 1 ' deep Lreeu, ~ rond, Sl5. HAMMOND, S 11 In way , 6"il-E653 5110 f'Ul,.F'Y caHCQ mother cat. oars, a.nchor, JI~ hp Johnwn 25-35" SLIP, choice localion, "69 KAWASAKI 250 Strietly 1,-0-N_L_Y_'-.--S-tu-d-,n-1-d-,-,-,-,-.1 pool table, hosp. bed, dia. 2592 Baysborc Dr, N.B. Yamaha. New & used free box trainM klllens call motor. S229. Sec 11.t 11759 ample park lni::: dirt, \Viii C01l..!lider· best o1·
good . cond, S25 each. 2 rm ll'I, liv, rm furn. -'='2-4062=,,;.,·.,.--~-=--1 pianos of most makes. Best AUSTRALIAN She Ph c rd 642-1897. 5110 Edinger, Ftn Vly, 531-5063. * 645-l •IM * !er. $7--1804
?.1aytag ·washr, refrig & lots H"O ... 1 So C&ld 1 "·h 'd puppy, 1nale, good n1ark· SKI f ' h "· 22• 1 =~=~=~=---ONLY!-Bookases, dark mo...,,3138 ShafunLn,Costa SPITAL bed $75; 4 uuyll n • .a .... mi t . 54.~3 517 2 PLA'iJolJL fl ugey kittens. or 1s . ....:nlury n-*WANT TO RENT dock I969KAWASAKJ,2SOcc,dlrt
I I l'k Siil _._ ~-Cushioned N lonial h Mui;lc Co ~.......,. N •r .. i.. ings. .r,,... b~ n ... Cnt1' ~· HP 3.5 wa nu , 1 e new, ca....... ~.resa coue • ·, ~· · ,; ......... , 1 :o""==~.,.-~~~7. -12 Pl.A YFUL flufly kllle.ns. ru ..,., er. ~.., • Rpace for 20' sailboat, Hlg equlpped. Like nel\' w/800
Chests of drav:et!l, S22 STa; fijghl ,ta.bit, solid che.r· Santa Ana. PUP P IE~~i Dalrnat111.n. female. 646-8630 5110 ?alPH , Full canvas, Xlnt Harbour &!I'•· S4.8--38l3 mi''· 642-7S3S
each/UP. UFF, l 88 5 l\10VING sale -Fri all day I:. ry, $29; StveraJ elec !ans, "•""°P~IA~N~O""'J"",..-~·""'-o~· I Avail. in one week . cond $3500. 5!0-2-458 Sat art 6:30, 2224 Placentia, Misc boaseho.ld i le m 8 • nstrucUons. New 64&-1547 511 4 ASSORTED kittens, 8 wks · Boats, Speed & Skf 911 '70 YAMAHA R S. 350 twtn, Har~r Blvd, C~1. 548-9457 Apt B, C.M. ~me It see 846-ST92 England Con serva tory 1 ~~~---.-----I oJrl. 548-8004 5/10 FIBERGLASS Dinghy & 3 hp -------.,--:dnt c.'Oncl., 200o in!., $595.
BEAUT 10' custom sofa, van·, .. , ho .. ••bold & m•·"", .:=,-,·=-,,==---·I 1'1usic training, your home . 2 Early Amencan soias -1 . . Evinrude outbrd. SI 7 5, •1ovING • m"•I --" ·o•, >17 -d -·~ muted 10\di;, 1\'00d trim , " ....... ""1 e 5x7 ,f:t:. Camino camper 53S-l51 l needs re u p ho I s t e r i n g DARUNG pl. Pe.r.iian kit· 673-9686 or 615-0406 " .... llCll · ""~"" ays, ""'"._" evei.
cost $1!XX>, sell $475. 2 1 c~'~~~;~;~~~E-:.~1,-,~;~f~a-m~il~y. thelJ lJDll. 7'13xl.3 chrome ALLEN ORGM'S exclusively 962--2622 5/10 ~ens 6 "''kl!. 842-9892 . 5/8 14' GLASS OYer .... ~. 45 HP ~~~-e~~~~~. n~r:::: Sl!"'ond• 50 Like ~~!..,!
unique black naug chairs wheels. si:; 10r pair. Pen. Also CONN & \VURLITZER ADORABLE kitlens, 7 "'ks FREE kit.ten 7 wks Sian1e.se !\Jere. Traill'r &: cover. Sk i ignitlon, vinyl lop, many e;ic. ;,ii '"".,,.,.,
S400 pr. Pertee! cond. ~:~n~hop~~~:.~~~~n~ppl.~ ~:~• $~~~~cle, near Gould !\fusic Co, since 1911 o Id . A I so, g u fl fl l cs. ar1d i;, Siamese 963-9307 5/7 or fish, 545--1595 Ira~. Ready Jar rtsh or ikl. '69 HARLEY -Full dresa.
5-16-5027. Etc. 507 Acacia, Cdi\1, ' • :i 1 ~N.J\fainSA,547-06.11 962-&167 5/82fE;\1ALEkittens-6wk1.80ats/Marlne \~orig.cost,aelltor$l495. Sl 900 firm . Cal l 1'2~0~N~'L~Y~,--~,-,.-.~.,-n,-,-.. -,.-~-, 1 675-8109. Sat & Sun, S-6. *WEDDING.\GOWN* * * L-13J Hammond Organ, T wk . old kit1.ens long haircd, old. 816-9686 Sn Equip. 904 J c.;54~S--,,77<~7J===c-'"".,,-,-I ·-71_41_96~'oc-5059c-;="'.,'c:'"--::l,... __ 1 S2.) ea. 1 ONLY !~ pc PATIO table w/6 chairs, GorgeQUs, perfec oond. Cost French Provincial. $9l]. mutf'd cal1ro & g r c )' BABY rabbit \V/cagc & ac-l:OO'.:""°"",...-----19' CALIFORJ\.'IAN -160 hp '69 JJO.'llDA 00
Spanish pedestal gan1ing trumpet, mens, womens & St50 • Sell tor f150 or bst 675-3468 545-7308 5/10 cessories. 673-8687 5/7 ~fERCURY. props, cables, 1/0, h.d. trlr, Radio, bait $275. 1500 ml.
table & ~hairs. S85. UFF, childrerui clothes, ml s e. ='~l~'·,.-,"="~·-"-4-56...,.56 ____ l j~~· Grand piano, J\tust sell, 8 mo old femllle Chihuahua controls, Instr um en Is, tank, many other access. • ~-0175 •
1885 Harbor Blvd, Clll. Spanish pictures, claw foot TIVO 100~~ \\'OOI carpcts, good rond, Any reasonable hsbrk. gd 1vlth children 1 "'1odihleids, etc. 5'1~530 S2395. &IZ-1636 1 M=o~NT=1ss=.-.~.,~~La-~Cnw--.
Ci\I. 548-9457 chair. 540-1169 · 12xlt &., 9xi1 w IP Ads . offer considered. 847--WJ7 8!17..c638 5/8 , ~11 and~ 11~ J Boats, Pow~r 906 Aircraft 915 Cmpl. reblL New rubber,
ASSORTED sofas, your GARAGE Sal Furn of all Drapes, &""Id. 4 panels, Sn.vting Goods 830 Kt'ITENS 6 "'ks ~ never raced. 545-7918
choiCI' S29 each. Assorted kind~. sterli~a: 11 i 1 v er, lined. Brass t i rep I 11 ce r~· 1 536--0!4."\ ~~1T, .. •o,~~~ 16h'.',1130 .. 1.11pg,la',',". PILOT'S ZEP portable ox· 1970 YAMAHA 360 MX. xtnt lfving room chairs S9 each fereen & andirons. 962-5825 GOLF Clubs 1970 l'&B u· • ....,., " .. ygcn \\'/case -22 cu ft, 4 _ _, 2 I & • · clothing. Much more mi1e. ~ 5/8 Pets, General 850 Xlnt cond, S400. ,,.,~ .,,,.3 co11u. 11'ta o gean Directors chairs, S9 each. 3"" 1 :. • A NB "·t i\IOVING: l\fulit sell !11m., 0 -••• e r b " 1 11 ma!ched ~ o11Uet v.•/masks, $125. 11 CU "-Imel m< "'° ~· ""' .....,gonia w, · -" i\IOVJNG, can'! li1ke h!.i;, days: 496-4145 aft 6 &: f 2 tJ uc • ...,..., ....,.,.....,,.. UFF, 1885 Harbor Blvd., thru Tues. lOAl\t on. po'A·er lawn mower & ei', I registered set. 2-9 irson. 1, 3 1 1 h _ 00 I, ou el, S75. 4 to 6, 1967 B !ta 250!: Sharp & c:-.1. 518-9457. WMher It dryer, cnn. nn & 4 woo d s. Oversized O\'Jng. on~1 air, grey. tom· BABY bunny 1.1 checkered "'k s. 61~745; aft 6, 642-4872 u co c.
SECTIONAL SOFA, tables, COPPERTONE c 0 u n 1 er ~t. Many other items. Aft I leather grips, stiff shart, cat. 49-J-93Z'I S/IO giant, ~ii copJ"J(!r satin, S2. il-fUST SELL 26' Steell'craft -very fall. $400.
chairs, hide-a-bed, girl's ~mfct freezer, maple bar ~PM . 642-7136. D-4. $135. 545-4552 af! 4 pm BOXER/I-found, male, 6 mo Baby guinea pig SO c . New S/S radio, rebll eng, ( il • 96S-6l86 ·~. lampa, "•-• ,.frig. s oo 5• WATER bed k' " G bo 1 h o 1 <l , n e c d 1 ho ni c , 546--9965 hull redone 3 nlo ago. Sllp ,_r_"_"~-"-'_1,._~l .h ·n Suzuki 400 MX. 2 hrs on <nU n· ·• 646-2277 s, ne"'·· in; or u auge s tgUn t aca 54:>--04·1 ~ 51g ll 800 s.16--Sl90 ml bike. Fln;t $950 !Akea: tt! All near new, Very Reas: ===-=7.'-""'"'"""" I queen 1ize with :; yr ve.nt, rib, pump, duck bar· J • Cats 852 ava · $l · · • 66-l44ft •
540-9.356 l\tOVING North. Sat-Sun ruarantee, $1!. re..1, &: carrying holsier. $90. BEAUT. yg adult.long haired ·sn 29' ~1n1crew Owens,
DUNCAN Phy!• din\"" table, t.t ay s...9. lU E. 2ind , f;l., * 646-6634 * c8Ji afl' 5, 673-6689 I<: re Y fem a 1 f! cat PUREBRED Seal P ()I n t Take over pay1nentl!, C~1 Birds, c11ges. BB gun. 546--7.'.IOS 5110 s· k' 8 • 54•24•• • seat1 12 SSS 2 dcckl'r Misc. !t-18-5907 ** COMPLETE lapidary 7-'2" SURFBOARD iamcsc iucns. Sl J, """ ,,..
kidney-shaped coffee table, equip. Trumpet. st er c 0 • ~1861 atter 6 pm FROLJCSOl\fE I.ah mix pup-"'eeks. 962-4934 '67 32' Twinscrew Chril!
glass top Sl5 Nevermar ANTIQUES, furn. •or\a:. pain-Misc Water ki 1 pies-flt'l'd good homes fncd 2 Pure Sealpoint .kiltl'ns, 9 Corinlhlan. low down, Xlnt 'v/8' cabover camper. New
table $5. 644-0a81 tjngs, clothes, elc. P'n. &: ard ,· 1 •• ,, 6'7.e: ~'.!'3r · rtt~ NEAR new standard pool yard 5-18-0813, 836-4493 518 "''eeks Sl2 each. cond, S\2,500. 5-18-243-i load Jc,·elers. Imn1ac & ex· ~t. 703 N. Ba)IJronr Bal ...., • ~00 tab.le, beige. All equipmc1Jt h '' ooo J ~ BEAUTlFUL yr old Heritage Isle. .1 FOR Sale 260 rolls BulJ.alo Included. 67>3802 FREE lo qualified home 1 yr • 673-3166 * 1958 26' CHRIS Connie, twin Ira 5 arp."" · m · Lxtras.
dining room set -4 nickel• & 130 rolli Mercury BARBELLli • Th-100 lb old St. Be1·nard, fncd yard. Dogs 8~ screw, Xlnt cond, $32SO. ! "S~2S00"".~'~·7~~~17~°'~·.,--.,---
caneback chairs, s mall BEIGE davenport $ti0 Full di IV"I p 0 Bo ·~' 548--0813, 830--4493 5/8 Dys: 5-17·5-166: Eves6TJ.7257 NE\V 8' Fll.H!rgls cab-over, bod -mp Sl3 G1U& di-mes. '' e · · x 364, sels, S20 each. Pi""" P''• TINY I Ch 'h h 12· 6 table expands 10 seat 12. . , ...... . . Claremont. Callt. tabll' S20. 646-.22ro. .... 1 S:'11. tan i;payed dog About k Id oy rt ~ ua I ua. J_. 40' CLASSIC dil'sel cruiSl'r . expandable camper. Ideal
Campers, Sale/Rent 920
'ti7 CHEVY 292 stick it. ton
'68 HONDA 175, needs valve
job. Sl 75. Also baby car
~eat. 540--6859
Desert Ready GrHv•a
$475 firm. 646-4631 aft 6
1970 Pl'nlon 125, XLNT
COND. $450 Firm. * 675-TQ&) ...
Mobile Homes 935 Asking S475. 6/~7£G nette tbl & 4 swive1 OOrS S98. S\\'l \IM 1 -. gd w/ch!Jd~n 646-2.'\60 whc" AP'Kc I "pood' P"1 ppies, Many extr11~. '"-~. Call ror ~~ ton P. U. Faetocy 673-J942 · • ING LESSONS (I) 3-0 p I '12 d (JI " o op oy o p"~ ~ di 1 SU04 "'" °'"" E HJOJ:;..A-BED $65. Recliner ' \VII cnn ree · ·an aft 6:30 5110 ·• .. ... 54G-1401 rec· · 1r1U""""U'f0i.I. ves NE'W Moblle Honie 20x~2. 2
7 GARAGE Sale-Appliances, 1 ttt;u:h in your home 12-0 Penn reel l37. ==o.--e7.,-,,--~~•"' PY $6.l. &12-481B d a Y s .1,,,~====-0~~-5-10--0295 R $32.::.0. Velvet rocker S3 .50. chilth'\:n fi mo. & up, n.JZZY -Alfectionnte-Kit· 53-1-38&3 eves, 15' OUTBOARD fiberglass 8 · 2 ™1· SU.:;QO. Set up k Early Amcr. couch S67.50. Iixtures, etc. M•ny odds & r. 673·,9.l?& ten h 1 ood ho OOh El . 1 1 1 & '71 PACE Arrow ~fntor lndscpd !n Costa Me~·s
Lovc .~a1 SJ;). Velvet chair ends. Com~ ll'e 162 E. 22nd ,ea.soll8blc rates &t0-9llO I =st~-~R~~tc'---...,-t --1 -·ee 0 g ':1e., BASSI'..! Hound puppies · 9 fl gin, e ec s ar Home, Sips 6, self L'Onl., GREENLEAF PARK. liaO
$25. All like new 642-8171. St, C.i\t. Sat. &-SUn. ,'.,.'=' ~·~p=m~·.,.--...,.----1 ;::; es Miran ' 132 fi..IZ2J s. IO wks, AJ\C, shots. 'fr j gcnl'Mllor. SSOO. 5.'IG-2498· hen-Air, summer d at I! s Whittler Ave.
?1-IOTHER'S Dey Garage Sale CARPET la.Yer has quall1)', .,.-.,.=------,--FREE Cats -1\1o111 er s fem1des, Red males. S75 up. 38' Cl-IRIS Const. T.C. Load· avail. 832--7840. 5~8-1698 * fi4b.2510 BROWN-S8Hman dining shags & Hi-Lo at discount 1 · 646-5967 5/10 494-7TI2 ~-S2.J.500. Days: 213/ table. 6 chair1, gla&& doored -708 Reltolft$e, CdM. Sun, GROCERY 5t<lre equipment. 636..f11!i7 E 1141646-512~ 1970 EL Camino -350 Au!o. BEACH HOMES
hutch. Fine cond. SJ.25. May 9!h, 9 to S ~!~~~~?it~) aJt: tt19834li0nahle.! 847-&J77 or 5.16-S1IX a~:P1~~ ~1;!e~62• mo1;1
1
y8 t!UNGARIAN Vizaia pupr; -21 · : ves :
/
· w. Camper. 11,000 ml. Ex· Udo. Bayihore. HunHngton
962--7653 e GARAGE Sale--1215 Pem· ong , .. 1TII-.....,...g, a AKC. X·rayed, Great ' Fishing boat "' ll"l'Y ma-tras. lmmac. 548-1470 Call TED -645--3140
BEAUTIFUL sofa, never US· broke', N1{l Sal 10:30 to 5. PLANTS: Cho I<: e llMOI"!-TV, R•dio, HiFf, ALL grey b11hy killl'TIS, 5 "'ks \.\'a!chcJogs. &: w/chUdren r!ne el'!gine. $300; Jeep lraU-l ;rn;u;E;-cF~as°"to=o~t -dn:;=:~w,-.,in::-..,= I e•:"'o-.,R"O~Y~A~L-~Lan<e-.,--r-.,2Ml""ol
ed. i15.l. J\.1atching Joveseat FurnituN Ii mi11e. rnenl. Sun or shade. Very ' Stereo 136 old, 838-1634 5/8 2131457-207R· er $250, 548-8014 West., ,a t>ally Pilot Adult park, em pet ok.
$95. VelVet cha.Jr $ 9 5, MlscellerMOUt 818 reasonable. 291 E. 2lrd St., 6 mn hlk female cockapoo, • BEAUTif1JL Lhasa Call &l2-6678 Now! CaesifJed Ad. 60-5678 Owner. 6'1&-5849 s:»-19,jS. :.::.°" 21" WESTINGHOUSE-color love:g childrrn. 968-3549 SIP Apao puppier;. All Jlamllton,1 ~---.=;;;;::;;;;;;;:;;;;:::;=:;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;:~·=:...:.;;;;:;;;;::;:;:;::;;;;;:::;:;;;:;;;:;;;:=-j ROYAL tl«:tric typrewri1er. rO,R late: 1e>Ja It chair, pool con~le. Beautiful Maple AKC h t Re bl I•
• • GOLD quilted cooch A Nice maehtne In good shape table, T&Lina accordion. Call cabinet, ex. contl . C.Olor 6 mo old Collie shP.p & ? sm. • s 0 s · ll$0na e
lo\'e1eat. 6 mos old, $225. $50. 6n-4262 aJt s, 557-$245 Mas1P.r nntenna.. !'lfoving, dog 846-S358 5/8 6.19-58.17 art 7 pm.
Phone 646-9166 must Bell! $150. 6'16-4184 llJ' 3 mo. old female puppie blk MIN, Schn11u:Ler. fem1, 8
2 T\VI!'! bed sets. l new%, 1'::,i;:~~~tebe:i, n:i~ J~~=:·!k~:;:r~~ ~!).;t 383 \V, Bay, CM . Apl ~w_i-.lh_Wh,..,-1_54&-~_7308.,.,,,_--'~"'I ;!..:Ve!~11Cp:an~l~h~
off $55.. l U'.I. exc. cond. 86&-f.'02 S92-2!M.l HB 9 wk old m11le kitten nl'<'di; 833-Zl.59
Bayshores ~S-7529 '1-rn=-.·PO=~=T:--.BCH=,-TEN=~. ~N""ts U.S. pivtrs Miil.iit ~fins Go ~~~::xiA!m w,,ar~iL c~~~~ gd home. 645-2841 5/81·.-o~A~LM~~A~T~IA~N~,-'"~d~.,-,.-1-,.-,1
FORCED TO SELL? Near CL''B membenhlp tor ul.e. tor S50 or beat oHtr. BLUE k t I new Avocado ifttn 5018 &: u 1 ....,7 ....,.,, speakers, Empire 3 9 8 par:i. ee w Cabe. to approvOO bltche~. Turf
loveseal. Call now! 673--6926 Jlt'UCIC\lib C! °" .,,.,,.,.. 673-l498. turntable, Sony 3-head tape, &15-0151 5/8 Dalmatians, 642-1937
BDR.\f fum. full slie bed. * SURrBOARD • l.AD[ES di.amond ring, 24 F'i.111'1er tuner .. Cost $2200. \VI-UTE altered male eat. AKC Skye Terrier: Malt, 8
$35. Picnic tbl &: benches $8. • AfINI BIKE • dlamOndt, 6 rubies, worth Best ofter over $1000. 4 to 6 Hu shots. 546-7308 5/10 mo'e old. Need.!! lovlrig
Lawnmower SS. 968-9'ral Call 644-5775 $600. Qking $350. 673·5"1M pm, 67>4745: aft 6, 6'1""4872 GREY klttem1 for f.tolhe.n horn~. Cttll: 833-266-«
COUCH $40. Antique blue HYDROMATIC ele<:trie bed N.O. 21 '' color TV, Sl:IS, 19" Dfty 847..{i)S(l; 962-299.1 5110 BLACK Labrador R'.trlever,
bedroom furniture $50. l2U -adjust• ta many dlJfercnt STERLING SI.LVc:R • Cha.no portable, UI. FR.EE rabbit, grey & 'White. t ma. old. AKC Ker.
BeUast. 5-45-192:1 posltkms. $200. ~19 ttlly. l.2 pl3C!" &ettl\lP. aery._ • 548-6529 * &11-5698 5/10 Female. 830-4370
SOFA g· iong grttncrulhed HEARING AID, Electont, In& P~"-' off. 673-Sfl' SO~Y 12" Delux port. rolor HORSE tert11iz.er, 20381 PUG Pup!!, AKC, t.awn, vtl~t. hr11..nd new, &acrlttcc 1()0..A C.Ost $3.15, Sacrllice CEMENT mixer. 200 w11."tt TV 0051 $350. 6 mo old. Sac. Cypress Santa Ana I-Its S/7 Champion stock, $65 It up.
l no ....... ~.s .'°'I«>°"', '""~._~2302""~~~~-portable ge~rator. 4 hp $2So. 64.2-6118 eve. ' · Stud Servlet. !li.5-7!74 °""' :::: rototiller. llkt> tl('w. ~11:\ FEMAf-E ~ pupp ies I a bl=="'°~""'"""="°'--1 -.+ I' COOOi. ,b4.1;6~• SIGNS: .Stottfrqnts 4-win-1.,,,,----,,,------dobennan tplx. ~T PRF..i'lY blonde PeklngffC,
.at i... ®w' bo.ts trudtl 1'or Mlscefl•MOU• I II I ,.-,..,-,2-:~-,..,=--~1 femalt>. To good ~. only MClde.m. &"°" l'On•ul_., · ' ' . l"D 3 L I TT L E kittcri!, l"M'ed SJJ 545-2191 536-4S62 estimate call: 962-3&37. W•ntad " _ fl'llt la Yev . home:s, tree. 1192.3201 S/1 =,,· =·==-=c=,-.,,.,--)
2 QUILTED ...... ,_ .f1i acb. NEWPORT &11.ch Tennl1 LO-heat &lalnJeu itetlware, I ~------;;;; I ==="--'-C,-~~o--~-1 SCJfNAUZER PUPS, Mi'lc '""'"""" Club family membenhlp tor II l''REE wood 1644 SUperior al 1lud. Groom.
Sof8-bed $65; ~ ebd Ublc sale. S350. Call S37..J7?4 made by VOl.tn:tb C». Pwn CUT£ Kl/lens to rood home. "&16-32.11 sn M&--0839
$7.SO. 644-4579 Or complele Rt. 54S-11lll .... ·~"' S/8 PUPPIES &-T kl Id
srEEL Sl-:CRT.TARIAL ladles Rolex W•tch f.!ayrtArd ~" w n • part SHERRY 'S PoOO.lr.s Mother's
DESK S-40 , SI~. 6i.>-4SOJ aft 6. t ... & 4 I WK old k1Ue.n1 2-ytllow-2-Poodle. Call S48-l225 518 DA.y present11, $.iO & \Ip , All ~fACA'V perch, 11 l.•IU ea.Ilea., 54~7. !!i/1'0 19 Wk Old kl!ten. Hou.wbrok-colo1'5, 5''6-2848 * 6·1&-6150 4 mCYCLES, uttd. A.II typtS removable caae. Must be
e 36" stack vrro6t;ht Iron [ J..J-10 1p, 26" &: Stl11SITT-ys. 1turdy -re a 10 nab I e . ,CUTE adorable kitten1 6 ·wk& en &. •-eaned. MS-1449 S/7
class top table & t ch11 ln.
1
Good Cond. 642.1272 M8-!H53 old. 9fi8..3014 S/IO
SGS. Call 67>30tS. A good w11nt ad ii a tood For Iha! item vnder $fll, FREE. cutf' hlk puppies S
Call MU16'71 N~ _1n_v._11_m_,_01 ______ , try the'rertrtJ Pinc_.,_,__ ms. old 543-1363 S/10
•
j
•
'
Mobll• Homes '15 MoOilo-
• Germany's Finest Product
BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS
ALL MODELS
NOW ON DISPLAY
Complete Parts & Service
Ask about European Delivery Plan.
ROY CARVER, INC.
AUTHORIZED B.M.W. DEALER
2925 Harbor Bl vd .
Costa l\1esa
546-4444
S~l•I Prka
011 N1w MCi't I•
Cehbratl11 Of Our
Gr•11id 0,.11111.
We ""'INN .. T1 Dhci,1"i11t
Ye1 011 Tr .... 1111 Of
"'r' Owtr~lrit ''''"-·
MG's STARTING FROM
970
$2824
'69 MGBS '66 MGB
SEVEJ.AL TO CHOOSE FltOM
IMMACUl.Alt CARS EXC5llENT C-'R SHOWS REAL CAAE
Wire whe1l1. M•~v oth 1r 1rir1-.
l!.'IXSb91 •o cl1y u11co~clitio~•I 9111r1r.le•
~ZRM9 1 1 l
$1995 $1495
1971 DAYTONA FERRARI "365" GTB /4
FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
7,000 MILES-ST ILL SMELLS NEW
$21,900.00
JO DAY Dlll¥lJtl" -IUND NIW FIOM 'ACTOJIY -S2J,500
1970 FERRARI "365" 2 + 2
19,000 •rit in1I mil11. Sold l 11r.,ic1 .. iri Hol!ywoocl. Air conclotionint , 1l1thic win•
il•w1, '""''' wh11l1.,
$13 ,900.00
1967 FERRARI "365"
C.llf•r"I• Co1tffftli.l1
Only IS •f th111 '"'''' m1ol1. o•i9in1l coil w11 '"'' $20,000. It 11 •'luipptcl with full power, 1ir, wlr1 wh11 l1, •rc1ll 1nt condilio11.
. $11 ,900.00
HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY SPORT CARS ON SALE
169 911 S Targa
fr•sh loc.•1 Cer
$6995
'69 911 '
EXTRA SHARP
SHOWS REAL CARE
$4995
AUTHO•IZID SALU • SUVICI FOR
1'IG··Lot11s••.Je1aseia
Ferrari
3100 WEST COAST HIGHWAY
NlWPORT RACH 64Z-t405
. . ' . . .
$4'9 ON. $98.31 mo.
$199 is the totJ.I down P•Y·
men!. $98.31 is the tot.al
monthly payment including
tu, lictn5e and finance
cbul:et on approved cre-
dit for 48 months. The cash
price including tax & lie.
erue ll $471-4.35. Dt'ltn-ed
price ii: $5217.88 including
\
Alk for Sale1 ?-.fanaiu
182ll Beach Blvd,
Huntl.n&ton Beach
1147-6087 KI ~3331
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP $ BUYER
BILL ?-.IAA"EY TOY OT A
18881 Beach Blvd.
It &ach. Ph. 147-8555
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
U your car ls extra de~
see us fir.it.
BAUER BUICK
234 E. 17th SL
Costa f.te1a 548-7165
Autos, Imported 970
ALFA ROMEO
'67 Dumo
Jmmacul11tt! 5 •pd. dlr. 1
owner, factory h11.rd top.
IZ>..'U9&8) Full priee $199j.
Small down. Will !ins.nee pvt
pty. CR.JI a l! 10 11.m 540-3100
or '494-7506.
1967 Al!~ Romeo DUETI'O
Conv. $1 295. * Ph. 673--6945 *
"""· """" • ""'"" AUSTIN AMERICA chll.Til". Annual percentaie
rate llAoir...
Ov~ l3j New &: Used Cars
BANK REPO
1969 Au5TJn Amenca 2-.dr, 4
\}I. ;\Jake olfer. Ste D. l>l&r·
tin. Assisl&nt Cashier, Uni.
TM !;1ates N&iional BAnk,
13t5 :\t 11·port Blvd .. C.M.
To Choose Froin
OPEN 'Tit. 10 P~I
2000 E. Ut St .. Santi. Ana
(l!I St. at S.A. Fwy.)
5$..1000
.,. GMc s. 14. 4 '""· Goorl AUSTIN HEALEY
~~' ~ ~~~that A '61 BUG EYE SPRITE
' '60 CHEVY "1J ton P.U .. V-8.
R&H, new trans, clutch. Fu!! price S.l!l9. lJTA 243).
~lech. xlnt. $TOO. Ma--4-!03. B11r.11ck Imports, 998 So.
'51 Ford f'6 2 ron fl&t~d
xint cond. $600. 642-9464
54S.-U35 aft S
'59 FORD RANCHERO • Air
rond. r&h. !\tust set! to ap·
precialt!. $450. 6~~34
'63 Chtvy ~I ton P.U. 3-spd.
Custom cab, R/H, SlBSO. ........ ,
970
Co11M li11.'Y .• Larnna Beach.
~6-IQjJ or 4(1.1.~771.
'6' HEALEY 3000. Looks,
runs iood. Recent en(lllt'
11'0rk. I 11•1nt ne11·cr car.
\\'111 sell th11 for $800.
546·?050
'59 Bug Eye Sprite
$1j(I + 642-8802
Autos, Imported 9i0
Lookl Look! Look!
MIRACLE
''ROTARY''
MAZDA
Coming May 14th At
J1rtuporl
31inports
970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported
FIAT
13631 Harbor Blvd., G.G.
1Jus1 S. of G.G. Frwy.)
CLOSED SUNDAYS 6J6...23J3
llBl1JB n1u s..
"FRIEDLANDER"
I l7SO llACH ILYD.
!Hwy. l 9l
893-7:.66 • 537-6824
'lO FIAT Sports Coupe. Gold.
11,000 Careful miles Sl.~.
Cat!: 548-9480
•
FIAT
1969 flAT 850 Spyder-Milll
cond. J),000 mi. SlJOO or
trade tor 1tation wan.
5-t&-01'\ 4 or 50-4414
'69 FIAT ~ Spyder
Ul~· m1leaa:e. Ex . ccnd.
l\IUll Sell! 54&--0919
JAGUAR
'68 XKE 242
A used Volkswagen makes a
first-rate second car.
'63 GHIA
CONYt:RTllLE
(ll Jl Ol I full price $$00.
NO MONEY DOWN
!OAC)
S2Q4l MO~o,~;T.
For l• monl~i. C•ih p•ic•
iric ludin9 t1x l lie. SS42.00 o.1.,..c1 p1vm•nl price
$716.92. A.P.11.. 21.25 1..
'68 v.w.
SEDAN f0VA564l
Full price $900
NO MONIY DOWN
!OACI
$3588 TOTA~ MO. l'MHT.
for 36 mo,thi. C 11I. pr1c•
iftclud;nt t1• l lie. $910.00,
01f1rr1d p1ym1nt ''ic•
$1291.61. A.P.Jt. 21.21%,
'68 DUNE BUGGY ,.,. ••• s999
'62 PORSCHE C.lil110Ll!T
!1Jl ILO)
BILL YATES
s1099
NE~
1971 Mercu1·y Montego
2 DR. HARDTOP
INCLUDES ALL THIS EQUIPMENT
llOT A
COMPACT I
But • Full
t ired intermediet•
with • 117" wheel
base. Luxury plu1.
Radio, heater, bench seats, white side well tires , concealed
windshield wipers, reversible key & locking system, flow.
thru ventilation •. #.I I TOIL 53 I 404
Ml~~~~DA I JOHNSON & SON
COSTA MISA, CALIFORNIA
645 -5700
Lookl Look! Lookl
1 Mlle South of San Diego F rffw•y
Lincoln Continental• M a1·k III• Mercury •Cougar
2626 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA 540·5630 642·0911
•
Auto•, lmpart1a
1960 GHIA
Lots or mlle1 o! traruporla·
uon left. Specially priced
Automatic. air oond., wsw, for quick sale. QD1'~325
TG . Pwr. St. dlr. !'>lust sell. LOOK • $499.00
Under factory \\'arranty. 0
T.i,, old" "''' """ fm. CHICK IVERS N
ill\Ce pvt. ply. Call ;i-10.:::100 VW
#lSl-0621. 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. a.l!J-l03 1 Ext. 6G 01. 67
Xf(F. Ja2 1968 (flt' Xln1 ==N~'o~wec"°~'l7B<~ao=h=~ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '°"' '1'· ""° KARMANN GHIA COSTA MESA f'M /AMISW. "'" opkn to' l-:::--:::'.'"CO--::---:c----~~=~--
1...,.c":..""c..· ~"~'17~'-'...:·00llO=. ---1 fLASH '69 Karmann Ghia. LOTUS
Draw Fast v.hcn you rila~ Xln1 cond. S1850. Call LOTUS
an ad in the DAILY PILOT 67:>-561.2 alt Ii pm. AtmlORIZED
Autos, lmported--970 l -A~u-t-'.,-'.-'"im'-'-po.:.rc_t•.:.4='-9=7=0 SALES & SERVICE
A Sports Car
You Can Afford While You're Still
Young Enough to En joy It
r~t fio1a~o·so1d!111 r~e llo5 disc bmkes in front ond ill·
I0-$1 prictd !rue ~Or11 car an deperodent su~tn1ioo all round.
the "10rkt1 And, for mony people, 1!'$
Tl>e •I'd lmt on •1$ engine •I !tie bnl-looklng ~I cor u,,.
all Ille woy up ot 6,SOO rpm. It dtr $10,000.
LIST FOR LESS THAN $2400
J1rtuµort
3\Jnµorts
3100 \V. Coast Hwy.
Ne10o·port Beach
'* '66 LOTIJS [!an Cl)P
Yrllo1t.•-hlack. Xlnl cone!.
$1930. 675-8169.
MERCEDES BENZ
MERCEDES 600
SERIES
6 door \inousine with divi~ion.
Evt>rv ('1'Hlttlvablc r . ..:tra on
1h1s ·Rolls-Royce tradf'·ln,
lj,OIJO miles. (VAK 436!
s1:1,9:il.
ROY CARVER , INC.
ALWAYS
ON
SUNDAY
TO GET MORE "BUGS" OUT OF OUR
DEALERSHIP WE ARE NOW OP EN ON
SUNDAY. NOW 7 DAYS A WEEK OU R CUS-
TOMERS GET "BUGGED" BECAUSE VIV
IS AMERICA'S NO. I SELLING IMPORT .
CH ICK IVERSON WILL BE OPEN ON SUN-
DAYS BECAUSE NOW WE HAVE A FULL
LINE OF NEW CARS FOR IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY.
cti,(/11.J ,,t .....
PORSCHE / AUDI
Authorized Sales & Service
445 E. COAST HIGHWAY
At Bayside Drive
NEWPORT BEACH
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
549-3031
Ext. 66 or 67
MORRIS
'5T Morris J\.tinor. Re-bit ef'\1".
Heater. New top. Xlnt cond.
~5
OPEL
Brand New & Oemo'1
'70 OPELS
1 10 choose from. l"Ully fac-
tory equipped, Must be sold
this \1--eekend at
Huge S•vingt I
Mike McCarthy
BUICK
lS.15 Beach Blvd, at S.0 . Fwy
89-1-3.1-41 I 531.2450
'68 OPEL WAGON
Air conditJOning, lugiage
rack. v.·hite &ide wall tires.
(VHl\158)
$1145
DON BURNS
PRESTIGE
PORSCHE, AUDI
13631 Harl:ot Blvd., G.G.
(Just S. of G.G, Frwy.)
CLOSED SUNDAYS 636-2333
'65 OPEL DELUXE
292'.5 llarbor Blvd.
Cos1a r.lesa ,;,.;~-~44~'4~ I ~!!!!!!"'"'!"'"'"""!!!!!!!~!!!"'"!""'"'"!"'"""'"!!!!!!!!!!!!~l 2 Door Sedan. Radio & heat· ;;;;; er. IUPCl191
~os, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 $498
FIAT
The biggest selling cat in Europe
Visit our complete automotive service
facility · 16 stolls ·expert staff of high-
ly trained mec:hanic:s. Complete body &
c:u~tom paint shop tool
Bill Jones'
B.J. Sportscar Center, Inc.
• BRA~9~1NEW OLDSMOBILE
INCLUDES : Heater, defroster, backup liq hts. emer.
q1ncy flashers, dual speed wipers, padded d ash,
peddll!ld visor5, 1eat and shoulder belts, head rests
and all the new safety equi pmeni. Ord,i,r now in
your c hoic.e af colars ... an d add your choice of
•c:cessories.
•
MERCEDES BENZ
'62 i\IERCEOES Ben1 190,
Good cond. S82i
• S-11-S1 ~3 *
CUTE 1960 i'olrrcedrs Benz.
Ne1v IU°f'<;, good cond. i'olusl
sell. 61:r3613
MG
MG
MG
A'lfl'HORIZED
SALES Ir: SERVICE
J1rtuµort
jl111port ~1
3100 W. Coast I-fwy.
Newport Beach
BUSINESS
IS
FANTASTIC
AT
UNIVERSITY
OLDS!
WHY?
BECAUSE OUR SELECTION OF
NEW 1971 OLDSMOBILES IS
GREAT.
BECAUSE WE OFFER
OUTSTANDING DISCOUNTS.
BECAUSE WE ALLOW MORE
FOR YOUR CAR IN TRADE.
e BECAUSE OUR MANY, MANY
EASY AND LONG TERM
FINANCING PROGRAMS
MAKE IT SO EASY FOR
EVERYONE TO PURCHASE
THE
•
"ALWAYS A STEP AHEAD"
OLDSMOBILE
Mike McCarthy
BUICK
15.'i.5 Beach Blvd. al S.D. FW)'
S!J4..3341 I 531·24~
PORSCHE
DON BURNS
Used Porsches
PRESTIGE
PORSCHE, AUDI
13631 Harbor Blvd ., G.G.
(Ju.st S. of G.G. F'rwy.)
CLOSED SUNDAYS 636-2lll
'70 914-6
Canary yellow with pin strip.
ping, AM/fl-1, 9US whttlt,
Under factory warranty,
6900 mi. 1161CfG)
$4895
DON BURNS
PRESTIGE
PORSCHE, AUDI
13631 Harbor IDvd., G.G,
(Jus1 S. ol G.G. Frwy.1
CLOSED SUNDAYS 6.16-23.\1
'69 PORSCHE 911T
5 SpeM. AM-~~i'ol. Co-co mats,
excellent cond. Nel't' car
tradf'-ln, fYZT-416) $-1995.
ROY CARVER, INC.
2!12.J Harbor Bl\'d.
Costa i\.lcsa M&-4444
'65 PORSCHE C
\Vhi!e with ttd rnterior. Ex·
ccllcnt condition. CTZP 808)
t"ull price $2495 or take
tr11.de. CaJI ·i~-774•1.
BLACK "&I SC, fu>rPnl
engine t.. 1ran~. i\.fa~~. r;o.1,
tolust scr. 642-434.l dy~.
&l&-911j al! 6, A.~k fur
Lancf".
'53 SPEEDSTER, 1-ebuilt
engine, good cond. 673-3180
or 675-4719 eve11.
'59 Por. Cpe, Reblt eng &
tritn5 .. R.ad1a11, A~t I Ft.I,
Chromr whls, I a c q u e r . .,...,m I
l4l69 • 912 Orlaina:I own~.
$4900. 8J3-Jj3,5 or 64~7 ·
eves.
'69 PORSCHf': 9\IE. immac.
Extras, Incl lea!her. $5900.
Pr!. party 962-lj6J
'62 PORSCHE, mint oon-
dlllon. S2.000 firm.
• 962-58.'15
SUNBEAM
1963 SUNBEAM Alpine~ New
<."\utch Ir brakes. $550 or best
of!er. 546--0636
TOYOTA 1-------1·' TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
$69.01 MONTH*
36 n1os. Ott. pay price.
$2484.36 or cub p r I c e
$2003.55, incl. Tu & Lie
Remember, "WE All NEYER A.P.R. lt54%. Serial No. NEW CARS ™"' SATISFIED UNTIL YOU AltE" •o~ approved c:ttdit
2850 540·9640 Biii Maxey Toyota
188!1 BEAOI BL. 847-8555
USl:D CARS HUNTINGTON BEACH
HARB OR BLVD., 540-8881 DAILY PILOT DIME -A
•---------------tiiCitiOiiiSiiiTmAi.iiMiiiEiiiSliA;..,_. ___________ IJNEs ""I,..,..."'"' n!e9 • dAy.
frld1y, M1y 7, 1971
BUY YOUR NEW .
OR USED CAR AT
BELOW,
**PAR** PRICES! DRIVE
STRAIGHT TO
BEACH CITY DODGE
TODAY AND SCORE
UNBELIEVABLE
SAVINGS!
All NEW DODGE COLT
No other im port offers oll th111 fealure1 os standard equipment: Adju1tobl1
steering column, flow thru ve ntilation, front d isc brakes, 100 h.p. engine,
reclining bucket seots, hidd en a ntenna plus up to 30 m.p.g.
$
ORDER
YOURS
NOW
FORDS • CHEVYS • IMPORTS
YOU NAME IT WE HAVE IT!
'70 FORD
C:UITOM 500
Y-t, .... ,.,,,., .,._ t-l"t.
-,,._._,, ._,,.,, .0.1• CON·
Dl110Mlfi(;, •N •• ••4 .........
$1988
'69 FALCON
TH1 -,,_.., 11• of. lo M w•l•
'-11' -1"'9'11 wit~ '"'"' ••4 --•I•••*"""'-!"'°" , .• l l<. lJll J1 , . , •Noi<-4 1•00
W l•t ••' l lG i"'lf.
'61 CAM.ARO
...,i., ..... , ... '9fl•ct ....
YD.UJ•, .. ON\T
'55 CHIV.
1;, TON f'IC:lt U'
' ..,.. . i ,...,i "°"'·• f041o. 1G•Jtl1f
'66 vw
CAM,11
J),.01 "'""'· (THl1\ll
Visit
Our Complete
MOTOR HOME
SERVICE
DEPT.
'6 7 Mustan9
VI. •~tom11k, POWff' tlff•i~.
l1cte•v 11• .,,..., , Wllltew•ll
llrti, r1d•e, """'· (IUT5UJ
$1088
'61 COUGAR
IH lt 11•d ~lo•, •lr <'l•f••io•l•t ••4 .,.,1 t••· l•I• ..,., k ,..,1
'"'ty, YNllll •• , OMlV
$1588
'65 Ford Van
ECO NOLI Ni
111r;1i: 1hlft econemy ' '-Tl
...,1.,. J!1~10. ~M!et Thi\
c~,·~ 111 ga<ICI co""lll°" (NF"Z·
l•ll
'65 GMC
CAllYALL
' cvl • ,_,. .~111, ••d ... 3 -"· 111133'1
'71 Pace·Arrow
11' MOTOR HOMI
Onlv 1200 m•I" F.,ll v ,,11
co<1tJlntd. ,.;, ce<>d. (911C:5N)
$6988
1-1• h '"-_,. 20 '"'"'· II lo • $ .... .,i ... 1, .. 11 ...... 1 • .., ~.... ••
..... h. kt•"l"ll' ••••h•<!•• wh~
............ -...... 1 ...... -. l>ool .. , , .. ,i..._, -O•llteM. 1IM1>l•1 ., .. ,.,...,i.., '-• •· "' -.iu.11, .,,..i.•od ~, ..... ~ ..... _ J·h••t< '" •-· , .. , ...... "'!',,.,,,.••II
-· .. 1 ... """-"' ••4 .... ,
·-1 •••• 1 .. .
o•ota How •o•
YOUR VACAllON
'70DODGI
' ...... V-1, -'-'"'· holly ... ,..,,, _1...... 1.t1 .... l•1 •It
< .. d. lie. Wll 1CO
'67CAMARO
l~lt ;, • • .,,, ... , •MJY 1 -·
h•1d "''· ... , •I•~• •ltt> .., ... ,.,+10 "'"'" _., ,,_,,.. oM "''"f Olho• !u•uri.. t•I.,... ''"rwl •••• '•'., '""'~ o• l lJOO •••
ll•JfO
$988
'69 TOYOTA
coaou..t.
4 ''""'· •Mi•, ~1t., Y·I. jX1iJ4J!
166 FORD
r2'0 TlUCK
-4 '•I K-, lfl ... ._..... Y-8,
Q ••••....... i. .... 11 ... llk• ......
(11Ul21
OPEN RO.AD
•000 ............... ~ •• 1 .i ..
1,!jO "'''"'· ... , •• "' '°·000 .. 11.
., S _. "'•rt•Mr (.0.IXCI
I
. . '. . -..
frfdaf, Ma)' 7, 1971
.!§JI .,......... !§JI .,. ...... ,. l§JI .......... l§J ......... ,. l§J I ~ .... -I~ I ....... -I~ I ......... 1§1 1 '--_.,. .. ,_ .... ,.;m;;l§l~~
l~iiiiiii!!iiiiiiiii.:.:~~ N 980 A t Now 9811Aulos, Now 980 ,______ -• it~A~ulel,~N~-~==~980=.;;;A•;lo~•·~•W===;;;;;;;;";;;;os:i;;;, =========il~Au~tas~,:;;tm~po;md~~9~70 Autos, Imported' 970 Autot,. Imported' 970 Autos, Imported 970 Aut?'• Imported 97~
i BAUER BIDCIL IN COSTA MESA '67 T~~:T~:ADR. . TOYOTA VOLKSWA~EN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '
:\.. . Automailo. radio. while •l<I• ~ ~~ Large Selection • VW '69 '70 KARMANN
wall ""'· (UZN443). SELECTWN OF Of YW Campers, GHIA
''SPECIA. LIZINCi $1015 \ Jims1!~~"fmporls Vans, Kombis, SQUAREBACK I Air<0od .. m,.wheo1,.1000 DON BURNS l~:Oi.w;~:•r Juses, New & Used '"'1 '"'"ed "'1,000 mil" & ~:;~k m1';;;;s·~;m:~;~,;";~
\ O E & S Immediate D•llvery just like new. 4 Bpeed ra-
1
tactory 11·111Tan1y
PRESTIGE pen 54~j·2S un. CHICK IVERSON dlo, "'"'"· "'w "'w iire•. $2195
IN UAL ITV ,, ,!~~~~E~l~dU.D! G. '71 MARK II SEDAN ~~·.r~ • NABERS c'Aoll~c l ~
BRAND NEW
ll19l744SSl'
READY
F.OR
DELIVERY
TODAY!
LARGEST SELECTION':
ALL MODELS -COLORS -OPTIONS
AVAILA,BLE
FINALLY WE HAVE NEW '71
ESTATE WAGONS!
6 and 9 PASSENGER -ALL ARE
FULLY EQUIPPED AND ALL ARE
AIR CONDITIONED.
YOUR CHOICE
OF COLORS!
UICK.
II\ COSTA MESA
BVlCK·OPEL·JA6VAR
234 E. 17th St.,
Costa .Mesa
548-7765
(Just S. ol C .G. 1'~J"\vy) 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. Ra· COSTA ME.SA 2600 HARBOR BL, ft~ 61
CLOSED SUNDAYS 636-Zl.13 dio, heater. Loaded.<• 197-,66 V\Y S d COSfA MESA .. s0"
TOYOTA 2371 Take older car in trade bOO f b~ : nSJOOexc Call 540-9100 Open Sunday ~ '
or small down. Under 7,000 y-"!ze~ oc · or '68 VW 'ft. ' DEMO SALE mile \V'll finance pvt PIY offer 61:>-6593 aft 6 . ~~ .J
$1777 Call ~-~IOO ..,_1506· ' '60 VW, '64ename ta,..... xlnt StJck sllilt, wh.He \l.'Hh black ff or · • .,. ' ,...., Ulterior radio \V\VJ733 cond~ • · · 1971 TOYOTA '69 :royola Corona Dlx .2 dr · * 64&...67Sl * $1215 5~9-3031 Exl. 66 or 67
Demo #93>6. Lo1v miles, vmyl top-3 car family ,. • , 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
full factory equipped. J,000 mi. $1550 59 VW Bug, $550. 63 reblt CQSfA l\IESA
8 O'llfER DEi\IOS ON SALE Like ne\I.'! 646-8301 eng, '64 trans, tape deck, DON BURNS
TRIUMPH
, xlnt oond. Eves 646-!W73 1967 V\V Bug, excellent oond.
w/new engine . e '68 VW. Good CoJld. PRESTIGE e 612-TJ36 e .1.J£4ll le00 W TOYOTA '71 SPITFIRES . ean1
:'5'05 • PORSCHE, AUDI ,'67 VOLKSWAGEN ""'
NOW ON DISPLAY ·53 ·GHIA. Good cond . Very good condition
1966 Harbor. C.i\-1. 6-16-9303 Come tn for a test drive! throughout, S350 or trade tor 136l1 Harbor Blvd., G.G. l\lu.st Sfill :llS-4000
TOYOTA '69 FRITZ WARREN'S convertible. 846-3442 (Just S. of G.G. Frwy.l '62 GHIA, good cond. Runs ,
Corona model. Radio, heater, SPORT CAR CENTER 1971 SUPER Bug, auto slick, CLOSED SUNDAYS 63&.2333 great. l\lust sell. $295. Call ·
e!c. $1495, Also '70 model, no E. 1st St., S.A. 547--07&4 Radio. Clementine. Like VW '70 Bug, R&H. private ~6'~2-=297__,9 ~~--,-----,
auton111tic. $1695. Opendai)y9.9; closed SUnday new. $1895. 962-2667 party. $17!'. '69 V\V, 24).1 , 11e1·fecl cond;
Mtc Howard Leasing l963 Triumph TR4 New top, '60 TRIUMPH TR-3. Purple •546-9959 • ~JI ~lras &:_sc1vice recordi;.
(Corner Isl & tlarbor) new brake's. Good conditio n. $350 6-1 V\V $475 a44-J262, 495-4343
839-9600 531.(16()7 Santa Ana Original. Might consider 645-2698 Excellent running cond. ./ '68 VW CAMPER, SUN;
NO matter what rt LS. you trade $793. 5f9.-0530 • 548--0!12 e DIAL INT. VERY CLEAN
can sell II with a ·DAILY Daily Pilot Want Ads have '68 VW Squareback 6+1-8·107 nf1 6
PILOT WANT AD! &12--5618 bargain.'I galore. • 833-2793 • For best results! 642-5618
~~-~A--~~-•
JOHN CONNELL
"No Girnrnj ~k1, ,
No GiveeW•y1,,.
J ust 21 Yr1. Hone1t St llin9
WE'RE LOADED
WITH
THE ALL NEW 1971
CHEVR'OLET WAGONS! • The r•ar window 9oes up and disappears
into the roof.
The tail 9ate 901ts down and disoppears
into the floor.
ALL MODELS • EQU'IPMENT
AND COLORS -;;AVAILABLE!
OVESI 50 VEGAS TO
~CH·OOSE FROM
NEW 1971
Named Cor of the Y eor 1971
' MOTOR Tit.END
Best Handling Car in America Regardless of Price
IOAD & TRACK
Finest Out Of Comparison T esls of the Six Smoll Co rs
CAR & DRIVER
VEGA · 2 DOOR SEDAN $2197. ,r~;iJ.
CHOICE
OF
10
CO LOU
HUGE
DISCOUNTS
• WE'RE LOADED
WITH BRAND NEW
1971 VANS!
CAMPER VANS-SPORT VANS
TRUCKS-TRUCKS-TRUCKS '
LOTS OF 4 WHEEL DRIVES
Pickup1~s-Carryalls-Blazers.
BRAND NEW
1971CHEVY1/2 TON
•
8' BOX
PICKUP
163 96781
Immediate Delivery .
$2569
CONNE-LL CHEVROL-ET
2828 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 546-1200
•
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO STATION WAGONS IUICK IUICK
'68 YW
CAMPER
'66 VW, M ,'tt' rel)lt •fll·
AM/TM, htr, 11.lnl"OOf, l
owner. Xlnt IXlnd. ~Tront tire mount. Fully 6'fl...Q81
equipped. "'1!166=vw=1300==-.-,n"'"•-,,,...,---.,.
S2695 olean. '*"'· cuh. Call
962-2503 &1trr 6 p,m.
VOLVO
c VOLVO '68.Td. Air ...... P$, PB--..,,...,..,....,,"°""='-
DEMO SALE . .::~Witry Squl ... r ... r. • Buick '69 Electra
• ltt.Automatle • Alr a.ir, rack. 10 pua,, etc. -
• lU Autcmatic $3195.
• 1-14 4 Speed '69 Klllfl'WOCMf 3 Mat. Po111er,
• 164 Automatic al t t $2795 We s-·'·"•· In r. au o .. t c. -. ~ '6& Country Sedan 10 pu1.
Ovtntu Dellv~ry f"act«y air, power rack,
fA&A 141ll0 M•c HO'fli'lr Le•t nt
"225"
Lwnll1oul 4-dr. hard«:ip w/
"llmUed" trim. Fact, air
cond., fU1l power vlrt)1 top,
all optlon1: -tx·Ybo43l e NABERS CADILLAC
'70 RIVIERAS
Dtmo · •· 2 10 choo.ae from.
Low miles. B&I, 50,0IXI milt
W&JTIJ!ty available. NI
power includlnc alr cond..
Mtast be IOld Ulla. weekend.
HUGE SAVINGS!
Min McCarthy fl ••• L••.:• 22,000 ml., elcd. -1"'51.
'llllHI VOLVO fC,omer 1st A: Harbor)
'VOi.Vo' 839-9600 531-0001 Santa Ana -HARBO B
-""' H.-. C.M. 616-9303 IUICK roSTA M~A L., 15.15 S.ach Bl ... at s.!>. Fwy
BUICK
1---:""=,-.--________ CALL 540-910o Open Sunday 194-llfl I 531.:u.50
"FRIEDLANDER" S3295 '70 ll!VIERA, Load«!, All '66 RIVIERA 1-="'="'~=~,...... VI t 1 '6' BUICK RIVIERA 549-3031 Ext. M or 67 ,.,. ttACtt urW"t. •1 1969 Volvo l&t Sed. R., H.~ power acceu, ny roo ,
1970 HAft.80R. BLVD. m.1S64 e UT.mt Automatic, Factory Air 1ttreo AM /rM, 10,000 mi'1, Tull powtr, faetOry air, lan--.u-~~-MESA '61 VOLVO SEDAN Coi><ID~L~ ~6516-TT70, Evu o ':,.,'::";,1~«:"[s~~i%nd. !'.;'.. ~ ~;...28t::
..-.. .. r~ ..-.,.,..top, 'U, Xlnl lMPO cl Sl 298 · new, Set at ccnd, AM/fM, Tape, '71 2 Ooo 4 .....-,.,_ '"-I RTS '12 BUICK Wildcat, un, Mac Howard Laa1f-
motor, Ntw liris, S2495 or r, •~. n ....... ,..,a -646-9303 mech. rood. Make otter. Mike McCarthy "•
take over pymnll ,63 BUG er. CLXZ731) $499. full price. 19'6 Harbor rtvd., * 548-6215 u c &19~~~~ ~-=lna
sunroof, Llke ~w, Siu~ Barwick Importa:, 998 So, Cortai Mesa '89 BUICK Riviera, all B I K
w/blk lnttr., $1195. 546-4033 Coast Hwy., Lquna Buch. '6.l p.iiOO Xldt cond Ntw power, Stuflo, Mq; wheels, '67 filvtua. Mint~-White
aft 5. • ' 546-405l or 494-mt. brkl, Tiit1, clutch.' etc. Beautiful, $3400. .. IOI? ISM Btaeh Blvd. at S.D. Fwy w/black leathtt lntericc',
·n VW In.It AM/1'M CraJc e VOLVO P1100 e O'dr:lw, s.c. 714: 846-9518 • '65 BUICK SPORT S!M-3341 / 531·klo bu"c:ktt Hall, eonaole shift, • • Very cl•--·-R/ll Air, tinted rlul, full power, stereo many xtru $2500 ....,, ""• • '67 Votw 122S 2-dr. Im· WAGON. Sharp. P/1, auto. BUICK '66 RMera. white 5 new titti, 1 OWl'ltr car,
new: I ~. 7,000 I mil••· Ovtrdrive. A37.+t98 mat"Ulate th 1' u 0 u l . Sliro sm. £213) 592-2353. Beaut)', loaded. Pvt. ply. $2295. Mtrv: gn...1uo, aft
&3l-6'2S Tba futnt draw 1n Ute West cash. g.u.7222 or 67S--Oi80 For be9f; re1uJts! ~ $1575. MS..1410 fipm: 541-6158
~~-m~~ •~-m~-m
UNIVERSITY OLDS
WILL SAVE VDU M RE
LOOK AT OUR
SELECTION!!!
'85 CADILLAC
Brcutham .f Dr. H.T. Full power, factory air, fil,000
mtlea. (POE477)
$1699
'69 CHEVROLET
Impala 4 Dr. H.T. Radio,
heater, autom.atic, power
atetrlnr. vieyl roof. cnw-
135> $2499
'68 CHEVROLET
NovL Radio, heate:r, auto-
matic, pow-er 1teerlnr, vinYl root. (WV'J'M9J
$1599
'68 CHEVROLET
Impala 9 pau. 'Wagon. Ra·
d.lo. hea.ter, automatic. pow·
er stffrina. factOl"J air.
CYEW020l
$~299
'67 CHEVROLET
Ime&la wacon. 6 p1.11enger.
Raalo, heater, automatic,
power sttertna, factory air.
CTPK990l
$1599
'69 OLDS DELTA
88 sport coupe. Radio, heat-
er, automatic, power 1teer-
ln1. factory air, yU,yI roor.
CXYK194)
$3299
'
'69 OLDS 98
Luxury sedan. Full pou·er,
factory a i r conditioning,
vinyl roof. <XNW495 )
$3799
'68 OLDS DELTA
88 4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater,
automatic, pOwer steerlns.
factory air, vinyl rOot.
(VRY.IOO)
$2199
'68 OLDS CUTLASS
4 Dr. H.T. Radio. heater, au-
tomatic. power steering, factory 8.U', vinyl roof.
(VHE287)
$1899
'68 OLDS DELTA
88 Sport Cou pe, Radio,
heater, a utomatic, power
5ltering, factory air, vinyl
roof, <WBJ745)
$2099
'67 OLDS CUTlASS
Coupe. Radio, heater, auto-
matic, power steerln1, fac-
tory air. (USK317J
$1699
'65 OLDS 88
Sport coupe. Good trampor.
tatlon. Radio, heater, auto-
matic, pow tr •t.eerins. (PBB845)
$899
'69 PONTIAC GTO
Radio. heater, autom1.Uc.
power steertna. factory air, vinyl rtiof. <YRV890)
$2699
'69 GRAND PRIX .
Full pewer, tactoey air,
vinyl f$&f, CZDT212)
$3499
'68 BONNEVILLE
4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater,
automatic, power ltefrinl,
factory alr.
$2099
(2) '70 CUTLASS s2999• Ceup11. lt •ili•, h11t1r, aut•·
l!'ll tic pow1• t111ri11f, f1 c.ler.,
1ir. Tw1 t• ch•••• fro,,.. 1707·
1lr. 17,900 1ch11I mi!11, IC IO·
70 O~DS CUTLASS s3199 Coup•. 11000 1clu1I rn il11.
lt1il io, h11!1r 111to1111tic, pow•
•r 1t11ri"9· f1 ctory air c.1"4i-
fio"i119. 1972AGDJ
'70 OLDS DILTA II s3399 4 Dr. H.T. ll.1411 h1al1r, oufe·
m1tlc., p1w1r tl11rl119, f1ct1ry
air. 17900 1c.tu1l mll11. ICIO·
I Ill J
EXTRA SAYINGS ON THESE EXTRA NICI CARS
f 68 CHIVlOLl'I $1199 I 66 MUS'IAN• CONY'!. s999 I 66 OLDS CU'ILASS $1299 Impala Sport Cpe. Radio, Radio and he:ater, J'tadlo, heat@r, automatic,
heater, automatic, power automatic transmfulcm. poWer 1teert'21, vinyl
ateerln1. (VGJ582) (Uf\V63..1) roof. ISLW9 l
f 66 DODGE CORONET $1199 f 66 OLDS CUTLASS 51199 I 66 OLDS DILTA II s799 Spt. Cpe. R&dk>., hH.ttt 4 Dr. Sed. Radio, heater, Sport Coupe. Full wer,
automa'tlc, po.we stetit automatic tr&nlmiulon. fact~ air cond1if:1n1.
ln1. vinyl roat. (~Kin) fTWF178) i RU 761
f 6 7 POlD CUSTOM $899 I' 66 OLDS CUTLASS 51399 I' 6 7 ~~o~l!~ .. ~~~~Uc, 51399 500 4 Dr. Sedan. Radio, Coupe. Radio, heater, he.ater, automatic. flO'Wtr automatic, factory alr. power=t&lr 1tffrl~ factory air. (TEY317) cond. ( ) (651B )
TRUCK SPECIALS ALL READY FOR VACATIONS
'70 FORD Yi TON '69 GMC Yi TON '68 CHEVROLET Yi TON '68 GMC Yi TON '84 FORD 1 TON
f'lcli:v,. l1119 wh11t li•11, Yt, ,itlrwp. l1r1t wh1•I k1k, V6 •II· Pi1•vp. Vt, •ute1111tlc, p•••r '1eii:WJI. lt1ill•, h1•t1r 111tom11Jc, C1li I Cll1HI., VI •rttl111, 4 r1ill1, h11t1r, 111t•1111tie, l'l•1r tJill•, r1lll•, 'h11lar, 1utom1tic., 1t11ri rtg r1dio 1114 h11t1r. !ltJ. pow1r tf•ari119 f1,lory air. 1t1ar~. I 0,000 •clv1I 1111111. fl•••r lt.•rlnf. f 16Jl 7fl 27AI IQ•ttS•I '''" tf111.1tril•~·"· f t11•111: 1711 Fl
1899 s1999 $2199 $2299 ~199
,. Sale prices effective thru Thur., M.&)' 8, 1971 0:00 p.m.
2850 HARBOR ·aLVD. COSTA MESA
540-8881
I
CALLUINOWll c .. ....., ....... .., ... ,.,.,.,twe,..•
. 1 ~11 .. ~'UJ:!P.!!T •.I"" tn-" CollfGntio 1.·I l'U tn-0tt-lo'
2. M""' --0tt -4. H you bov1 llttt1 or oo .... .....
UTMlmtom••maar•iwrw-• TUT YOU M&T Drtlt.._T...,a. ..... ,_ ......
BRAND NEW
1971 DODGE VAN
I 100
FULLY FACTORY Elj)UIPl'ED
$2689
01,Dll YOUll TODAY
71CHARGER
DAI\ V PILOT
~;~
fUll IMMIDIATI
PRICE DIUVHJ
~~u• MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE
OJt ALL UllD CARI IN STOCK
1970 CUDA
T1111 IDw mn,.... "Cud•" Ila. 1111 .. ,.,..
..... ........ -· ti .... lll.ldltl -"' rM4 wllet~ Uft.oie, ll&H. I013AUK >
FULL PllCI
$200 .... $55
$999
'HDODel ------· ZXl"64
• ~-.-...., .... a· .,pc!W9' -..... -.Wt•
•1555
'69aUICK ---_____ ..._
...,, ......... 1tl41t
'1666
'69 FORD
ITATION WAGQH
VI, evt.l'l'tetie, r1dio, h11t1r, ,oow1r
1turl11t, 111111h 111or1. 1Yfl]14l
$1233
OUR 01.lRTEOUS PR FESSIONAL SALESMEN AND
·CREDI'! COUNSELORS ARE ALL BONDED BY Al·
STATE INS. AND STATE LICENSED. YOU'LL LOVE
'IH
•
\
I
.j . I
I
IUICK CADILLAC CADILLAC : e Buick '70 GS 455 , • •
CAD. '69 SEO. DE VILLE 1 CAD. 1969 EL DORADO
I Coupe
LllXUnOU5 Spon Hdtp. finish+
ed tn 'rmint "'1uft w/black
vinyl lop I: vin.)1 Inter,
Fact. a ir cond. P'steer.,
au10. trans., JL1i. Tilt whttl,
chrome sport "''heels. Local
lo. nii. f843AFSl e NABERS CADILLAC
~HARBOR BL .•
COSTA 1'1ESA
CALL ~9100 Open Sunday
CADILLAC
CADILLAC 1..,,. .. S.loctlan
OF LUXURIOUS
CADILLACS
CADILLAC
• CAD. '68 SEO. DE VILLE
CADILLAC
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC-OMC-f'IAT
'69 CADILLAC
(~
'62 ""'"'" Reblt bnk" & '68 CHARGER DELUXE eniine. Good running cond.
BEST OFFER. 548-5613 2 Door. White with contrut-
Afte:J" 5:30 &: v.·,ekends
'10 NOV A SS 350. 4 •pd, tape
deck, map, custom paint.
$2500. or best otter. 1832 So.
Cout Hwy., San Clemente.
1966 G.rPALA, ve:r)' good
cond., l o"''N'r. Call eves
only It \li'kndS. '493-:J.J37,
ina: interior. V8 automatic,
pown 1teerirw1 radio, heat·
er, CVIK842)
$1398
Mike McCarthy
BUICK
493-3900 155.i Beach Blvd. at S.D. Fwy
e '63 Chevy Impala 894-3341 I 531-2450
Fae air, P/b, PIS, VI A'LNT cond '64 DODGE
VERY CLEAN * ~ DART • 270 hp, 4-dr. $31.S. * 646-l&!IO * Call eves. 893-1547
'69 CAPRICE 2-dr hrdtp,
Full pov.·er, Air. Tape, FORD
Clean. 36,00D mi'&. $2:>75;1---------1 F.P. 644-4670 or MS-2182 1970 FORD LTD
1967 Che~lle r-.talibu •ta 4 OR. SEO.
wzn-New brak~ luiJ rack REFLECI'S
p\\.T rear wn<fw. $1200'. EXCELLENT CARE
846-6369 Beautiful one ownE'r trade in.
I '°'"°"="""'-c--,-,.--=--, I Dark Jvy ri.tetallic Jini.sh '66 ll.IPALA, loaded. 1'fu.st · h unload . Our m isfortune is "1t matching landau root
your iain. Pvt p t y: l\I)' gold interior. Auto.
5.TI.~195. trans., Radio. heater, pow·
l "'~iiii=-,,,.,-::c:---:::c-1 er steering. pcm·er brakes.
·62 CHEVY NO v a con-Factory a ir, etc. See and ~rtibJe, low mileage . .$375 or d rive to appreciate. 375CQS.
be-st otter. ca.I I 846-5348. $3150. Johnson & Son, 26'6 * OiEVEl..LE 068 SS 396. Harbor Blvd. Costa Meu.,
Loaded. Beautitul c a r. 540·5630 '
s:~~~;!;'~~" '~,6~7-F~A...,IR_LA_N_E_X_L_,
327 eng-xtra clean
$!XXI 646-8301 Sport Coupe. Black on black.
'66 L\1PALA \Vgn, Auto. Air, ys. auton:iatic, power stHr-
All P"'T, Nu titt!I. 60,000. 111~, radlO. heater, 47,txll
Sll.50 er best otr. 833-2238 miles. (TZR.202!
$1298
Mike McCarthy
BUICK
Harbor American
• !~h 01~1
l9~y t1A~~OI> (O~IA "°(~L
'61 JEEP CJ-5. V6, convl
top, •·am hubs, radio. Good
: cond. $2050. 67S-39TI
1969 Toyota LC hubs roll bar,
fltt eX1. extru. 61~:
e73-11J1 .
LINCOLN
'68 Llneu!n. 4 door. All xtra1.
Perle-ct condition,
6T:>-359()
·es CONTINENTAL 4 dr. eX·
ctl cond. FUii pwr, l O\l:ner,
Sl57S. 644-2859 aft. 1 p.m.
MAVERICK
'10 Mavt'rick Li,000 mi's. ijv.•
Hl"Hi. xln't rond. SlfaO.
6'73-4092
MERCURY
'70 MERCURY
MONTEREY
4 1". JlT. 390 V$. R&H
. automatic. po1\tr"-.'l~J. ~
' brk&, rac1ory air. W,800
, miles. 1a1.JCDD1 'i\19$•· ·
.. ROY CARVER, Jl'!C . ,
.. 2925 Harbor BMr
• Coata Mesa ~
;:i·· •""' ... =c~O~L~O"'N"Y"P"A"RK"'°w-.-.-,-,
:. -F'ull pov.·t'r, f11c!ory air,
flt'W til'e!'I. $2200. Days:
·· !Ha...-0310: E1·p~: 499--11?.6
e 19i0 :'.IONTEGO 1~·a~n.
Taki' O\'er paymenr.o.. Ca!I
aft 5, !'157°3440
MUSTANG-
e MUSTANG '67
$1777
Factory air. p'slttr., 1uto.
tran.. Ra.dio., btr., v.11w.
Vinyl top, Vinyl buckrt
11eat1. Lov.·. low miles .~ 11
"REAL CREA~'f PUF'F'. ·•
{Tl'W407·\ e NABl:RS CADILLAC
2600 HARBOR 8 1..,
COSTA ?ofESA
CALL 540-9100 0f)t'n Sunday
. '66. VS, .79,000 mi's, Blue
.,·/vinyl tbp, Nt'w lire&.
Very clean. SMO. Ml-6791
MUSTANG '61 CON VT :
Aulo, V-8, PS, Riff, Pvt
P ly: $1050. 714/962-111'1
1970 White Mustang
Dlsc brakes, air cond radto,
: black vinyl interior. 1:.V1 ply.
642-6166
'65 ~luslang 2-dr. R/lt Au!o
tnns. 4 new rPtreads &
brakf' job. 675--0R57
OLDSMOBILE
1966 TORONADO
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE
Be11u11ful Chestnut metallic
finish \\'lfh custom inrerlor.
auto tran5 .. radio, hentpr,
pow, it!el'r, JlO"''· brakt-~.
pow. u·indows. Fat·rory aJr.
RVK<116. $117.'i. John.son &
Son. 2626 Harbor 81\·d ..
Cotta l\fl'U. 540-::41()
'64 Oldt F&; · i tat.ioo wgn.
Good . "°"# $.150'; 5.J&-s88,j
Call Sli t..ol'lly ' J
'64 OLDS Jetstar. 4.odr. Goori
buy at $375. 83a-5405 It
66-450a af). 5;Jl.
'S!I OL£S ,CO A.,Vfr l ible .
Surfer s'11Prcill. $100 or be~!
. olff!r. M2-t758
• '69 OLDS CutJ115• "S" •
factory 3-spd trans. 10.000
acl. ml: $11'75, ·714/ 89'1-1!40
PONTIAC
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC-0~1C-rtAT
NEW '71
VENTURA II
Fully Faclory l"qUipped
\\1226-1{)."i
' SALE $2288 '
: $2" ON. $63.10 MO.
· 1299 it lhe total dov.•n p&.V•
mt'nl. $63.80 is 1he lolal
n1011thly payment. including
tlXi ltt't'Ollf' a.nd Cllllnct
chtttte1 on approvrd credit
tor 26 months. The cir.sh
prit'f' including 1ax & license
Is S2447.40, dtler~ price ia
S%>95.80 1ncludlnc t1x, lie•
f'nse l: finAnct ch11rge. An-
uaJ pf'l'('fl/1tagt ra1t' 9,31%.
·'
OVER llj
NE\V & USED CARS
to ChooM> t"rom
OPEN 'TJL IO P,\I
, · »XI E. lsl SL, Santa Ana
tis! -St. a1 S.A. fT\\'),J ,,..,000
Call IOdq -St.U tonaorrowl
Fut ftmifl wlth a DaUy
Pilot OUallled Ad .. Dl&I
dittet MMS11 • NOW!
•
Frld'1, t.1'1 7, H7) OAl\Y PILOT
l§J 1! Autoi. ror~• I §J I~ _A_"_"_'°'_"_'_' ~)I ~.I ! [ A""'°'"'' J§][ ~ A_ut"r.._w.__,)~
990 •A•v•to•,•. •u• ... •••-990• I Au tos, Used 990 Auto•, UHd 990 Autos, Ustd 990 Autos, UMd " PONTIAC I PONTIAC PONTIAC '5' T·BIRD
Ponholl! top, au1omatic, Con-
tinental v.·hcels, l .owner
ca:., radio, while aide wall
tires. (1"XV333J
MUST BE SEEN
DON BURNS
PRESTIGE
PDRSCH~ AUDI
T-llRD
'60 HARl:Yl'OP, all powr..eir
$395. or trade for small tcO.
car, xlnt cond. 492-7911, ....
or 492-31'll tJt S.
'.)5 T-BJRD-All orla·
Clean -SIDI or Best Ofr. . ......,,.
TEMl'EST
'65 TEMPEST CUil. 2-<Sr. Rt.
V~. 1uto .. RMI, fact. air;
Clean. $-Wl. 96&-1M7 '
DAILY P ILOT ftlr actloat'
call M~I I:. Save!
~(i DEALERS HAVE BIG , srocKs . BETlf R snECTIQN
GREATER BARGAINS
30 DAY
100% DEALER WARRANTY
PARTS & LABOR
"No Exclusions"
.'70.JMPALA . "' \,' :J Dr. H.'t. Auto., radio, P.S .. air,
'llt Ow~ wf.rrant.f front factory.
\C6'A._SVl l!'rt Ch('ar.
$2799
'70 CAMARO
Ne1\· car rondltlon. Radio, auto., r.s., P.B., air cond. Dt'luxe lntrr·
ior. Beautiful. t31iAZVJ
2 Dr. JtT. C'tflrf:l'0111 1hln1t hftA
vlnyl roof. re.d1•1, 11 utn., !'.~ .. P.B ..
ttir r o11d. F'Rct"r.v \1A rrAn!.1. nt'\I'
rubbf.r, dead sharp. t l·lliAl_;l\J
$3599
'70 NOYA
4 Dr. Seel 6 cylindrr. aulo .. ra·
dio. P.S.. fact. \l'lllTanly. Nie<'.
t!MASQJ
$2399
'69 IMPALA
4 Dr. Sedan. Auto., P.:-; .• re.din,
air cond. S ul'C value h(lre. trOS·
5421
4 Or. ScJ11n. Had10, P.S .. aufn , 6
cy!., factory t1:arranty. 1849CPCJ
$2099
'69 IMPALA
Cu~tom Cpe. Vinyl roor, r11dlo,
P.S.. au!o., 1ti1· cund. 1 011·nl'r.
tXXE0601
$2199
'69 MALIBU ._
C1)11'. 2 Dr. lf.T. Vinyl l'OOf, 1"Jdl11,
l'.:-:0 .. a111on1ulic. Laf'('ful 01\'ner.
1YD:0.105Zi1
C'p1•. nurk••! !1'111~. COr\!Olt', P.S ..
a11t••. riu\10. 11'\!1)1 roof, dt'lld
shJ.q1. !'ill'•._ IVCC<l:\61
$2199
'68 NOVA
4 Di·. S,..dan. Auto., P.S. radln.
(;r1 ,·0111· monrys \1·orth here.
(VSR5ti6J
$1299
'68 CAMARO
CJ'lf'. ti 1·~ I.. l'.S., radio, 1Utk,
sharp. Thr only (Jiii'.
4 Dr. S!'d. One OY.'Ot'r, 48,000
miles. P.S .• aulo., radio. ?.larve· lou~ cond. Jlurry. (0SX496J
'70 MUSTANG
'67 CONTINENTAL
4 Dr. Sf-d. Nt1v .. \'jl'li}'I\ root, nf'"'' rolor. Auto., P.8., P:!J •air, natty
nice beautiful t'al'; (TrZ669)
WAlONS -WAGONS -WAGONS
'70 CONCOURS '68 IMPALA 6 PASS. '70 FORD LTD WAGON '71 FORD LTD WAGON '67 FORD 10 PASS. '66 BUICK 6 PASS.
2 D1·. 1-f.T. 12.000 miles.
P.S.. radio, nice. Oleap
{449.13BJ )
$1999
'69 YW IUG
13,CXX> miles. Stick, radio.
CCKJ {Wholesale)
$1500
'66 IUICK
Electra 225 cw;tom 4 Dr. Sed. 1'dil
ha& to be one of the nlceat can
"''t' h&vt'. Air, elec. n erylhins.
P.S., 1•inyl root, new ru bber, tlll9
car, (RPR616J
$1999
'67 OLDS VISTA
9 pasi<. ChC\'f'll~ ~·al!nn. Llke
nP\\·, auto., P.S .. radio. Ra·
2or sharp. (\60ACG1
\Vagon. Autu.. P.S, r11d1".
c lt'an rHI ~trong car. Bea ..
gain. (\VXF..3·1.11
Country Squir•·. 12,0('l(l
1n1ll'1. Suprr n1et>. Aat.f?.I
strn:'fi. alr, auto .. P.S.
10 1J11sli. t ar\ory frrsh. R11-
d1u. P.S., auto.. au· 1·ond.,
X.000 nu l~. Carl'fU I 0\1"n<'r.
!'\ice, niC'C', nicr. 186SCP~I)
Falrl&nl' Country St'da.n.
Auto.. r&.dio, P.S., cheap.
tP23431
Sk)'ltJ ~oagbn.'. Auto., r.s ..
radio, Air conil FUghl price.
t292CQT)
CruiSt'r. 9 pay. Radio, P.S.,
nulo., air, remarkabl@ Cll'i.
tP2365'
$3099
.
'69 IMPALA 6 PASS.
\Vagon. P.adio, P.S., 11uto,.
air cond. Lllll' !piles. !P:.!36Jl
"
$1999
'66 CHM II 6 fAS.S.
\\'11.gon. 6 rylindcr. air, aut1l.,
r adio. f..;ier. fSBC74•1 •
SPECIAL TRUCKS
'69 FORD F-600 '64 FORD F600
EL CAMINOS·· RANCHEROS
'70 EL CAMINO '69 EL CAMINO
VI , 11,000 ,.,;111. A11!0., r1dio, P.S .. 'o'8, <j old ~'"VI •01f, <jold c.olor,
1ir. llke n1w. Hu991t ot11191.
1
1 P.S .. t ufo., r1dlo, t it tond. (42~·
(J J,02G l ~7E J
$3499 $2799 ------------~--'66 EL CAMINO '69 EL CAMINO
VI , bl11t . ll:1di1, P.51, • ..,. ... 1lr V8. while '''· R1dio, P.S .• 1uto.,
c1nd. E•trt 11i,1. IP2)641 olr co11d. l ow, l1w P"''· !Tl 4-
_$2799_ )"" $1499
'61 EL CAMINO ' '64 EL CAMINO
VI, rtdio, 4 1p11J , .••P'' 1P'"1v1, tw1 11mtli,, P.S., r1Jlt , l l JJ.
1qwlpm111t. 011d 1~1~p, lt 41 1SCI •IPI
$1999 $79.9
'6' EL CAMINO
VI, ~i11yl reef, ort lltl ll tw color.
Yo u \hould 111, P.5., t ufo. IOSI·
5001
'68 RANCHERO
V!, dtuy, you b.t. P.S., 1~d :o,
1ulo., t ir tend. D11d ,h,rp. !127·
IOC I
$3899 $4599 $1499 $1499 $2199
' '70 FO.RD 10 PASS. '68 FORD 6 PASS. '68 RAMBLER 9 PASS. '68 'P\YiouTH 6 PASS . '70 PLYMOUTH
-"< ~ -··
Counlrv !:il"d11 n \Vni::on. R11-
dlr'J. P.'S .. 1111lo., eh;, Nllsly
-111t•e. 1134AGCJ
-f11irlH11•• Count!'.\' Srd11n.
Aulro., r.s .. 11tr, radlu. HlRht
1nd1-.. 18ll!l::.A 1
An1bas!.Bdor VR \lla.t:on. All·
ttl., P.S., radio. alr cond.
Sfl('cial Jlrict'. (\VEE332l
Satellite "'agon. Radio, t1.u·
to., P.S., 1·adlo, air. Special
!)fie<!. ( VSA31 I)
Suburlian \V.tiron. U ke new,
P.S., auto., air, radio, fact,
"'Brranty. Clau here. (37l<o
ADAI
VANS ·• CAMPERS ·· VANS
S'EC IAll l TO CHOOSE FROM. NEW SU N DIA L
CAMPER CONVERSIONS.
'69 CHEVY Yz TON I '66 CHEVY. SPT. VAN
Vin, DI•. '"''"· 110•1, le• bo•. Dtlu11 6 pin. Auto., 6 t~I.
w1ter, 1leep1 4. Pen, tll ton•en. mi!ei, rttl l~ltp. !SIYl52)
i1nce. Sur• pr1tly, Auto., r1d:11.
"""' $3699 $1699
TRUCKS· TRUCKS ~,·.
'69 DODGE VAN 1 '67 CHEVY 'I• T:>N
t I'&" ~part ~an. !.u10, r•ulo. tllt•11 PU \/'l, r1a.o, stltk, l'I D. "1.t/o!litnl.
'YP5 J!iJ C•m~r Clmptr
$2699 $2199
--·10 cHIVY 112 TON '6 7 CH EV~Y-l,-/2-T"'O~N~-
P U VI, cusl, (II>, P 5, .. 110 , f!dlo. p U, VI, rld•O, \li<k Nice. (VPill(IJ•
"" ... , $3199 $1899 __
'69 CHEVY-•/,TON-'66 CH EVY ¥• TON
P IJ. 6, 1!1", ,.a..._ O". 1"°' 9.,.,,.,. P tJ .. u'v • •lll•O, II• Hll"'r'• "'""'' !H<I C1mp.1n. <lml)<'" !116MDJ C8f'li>f:' CM"l>I' t US•llll) ' ~
$2499 $1799
-~.~69~C~H.EVY-'12-TON-
P U VI, PS . l •t, ••d>O, d<fl cl\1111 !Or
I l!ICI I~. (P'f1111
$2699
-·"•"t 'c"H'"EYY-¥• TON--
~ u \II, llltk, 111•• '"' rloM DMt , C1mp. tr, Cami:>t•. Clm!M•. OM:Mf' I
'61 CHEVY 'h TON
l'.U. llh<t'o, P'.S. IU'D' t lr, NtW or11111t tGlor. (l"flfl)
'66 FORD 1/a TON
P IJ 6 (YI, • lllffd, fldlo, ci.itt.
f•t tll. ~ IUX1'1)
$1699
'64 FORD ¥• TON
,. U v•. • 1Hlld, cam1>1r·t•m1>1r. ICU,,. m
$1299
'17 INTllNATIONAL
WANT-tO BUY, A ~ ' " I ~· ..... -: ;"'
'66 IMPALA SS
$1399
'66 IMPALA , °'· ~-~· ~u$l1fJ11! ,•l" f
'65 CHM 4 DOOR
Std. ,t,1111 .• P'.S, ~Ir, (JCiY Hfl
$79f •
'6J CORYAIR 2 DR. ,.uto., •Nie, nice. 1 _._ IUOJ ltll
$599
'62 CORYAll -2 bl. '
!lltk, radio. 4Q,t,l 11tl
$499
'61 MUSTANIO en.
,.1,, tu1o .. rtdlo, •~••P. ')l(bz 4f.fl ~
$149" .
' '
'67 MUSTANG CPE.
lllHlll, 1\119,, 1rr. "-'· CTI!!(. WI
$1299
'65 MUSTANG CPE.
111~. ' cyu~. fJllW ''°' $799
BARGAIN? •
''6 MUSTANG CPE.
,t,ulo., ,,S., r111ie, nl<•. lltlH ~I
$1199
'66 MUSTANG CPE.
Vinyl rool, aulo., rat!lo. P.S. {TSM 'lfl)
·' $1299
'66 FORD IOALAXIE
C111. llUll, •uto., P.5. lllMS 'IOI
$799
'61 PONTIAC GTO
J ,Pffll, rtdlo, Ya. nu l!.LI
$899
'65 PONTIAC CPE.
lladkl. P'.S .•• ,11<~. (J2d 11!.I(./
$699
'68 OPEL
Kltltrl•. Altllo, I SHtd, -"'•rt . IXSlllJNJ
$899
'68 OLDS 442
Ci>e. • ~PHCI. P.S .. rl1!16, 10 mll•. CUI.I
$1199
'6J CADILLAC Cpt DtYllt
V .. 1lr, ~.&., rtclil, 11«, lffls. t J>ttUA)
$699
2828 HARBO·R BLVD.
COSTA MESA
! ...
•
. . . ..
I
' .
! . . . , ..........
Busitaen . fs· Good'. •.
At Theodore. Rol;i~i . ' : " Ford!'
. ' ' '
...
. The Reason I~ $i,.aple
' .
ifvIE' •
.. ' ••
PRE~.SUSON
El ' ...
' ' '
THIS WEEKEND
-'ONLY.-CA~P.ER .SALE
THEODORE
ROllNS SR.
~'THIODORI.
· ' ROBINS JR. ..
181 ·;111.in''.ill~iTitiiY'h
.
'
BRAND NEW
1971 MUSTANGS
HARDTOl'S-l'ASTIACl(S-CONVllTllLU
EVERY NEW 19'70 ... $: 1. 5.
CAMPER IN .
STOCK . , 7
SLASHED TO ' , . .
OVER
FAC1'.0RY·
INVOICE •
. . 40 IN
STOCK $75 OVER llG llLlc:tlON -'NO ADDID DU.Lil CHAIG-U . . '
tests for reliability, perforl"(l1~c91 : ·$ 95 ' Give• your -<•r owr llg rit,( , ; .9. ·' , . 1 .TP ,CHQ(>SE
. FROM
FACTORY
· · . INVOICE
W• ilr• the Or•ftl~ COunty Shew ,C&Hibfflen ,.,. II OV1t~ '•mPlf•_I
ind safety, in just ,30''mln~te~ , · pllH ••• ' li«~•f RENT A . CAMPER ' : .
Full written report ~ Is inchJ~ed · , . rtlCI
I I . l . ..... . ~ . NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD ONS-NO ORDERS '..... , '\
RESERYI TODA\' FOR ASSURED D;lo TU.
or 011 y, • 1 , ... t ! · ~ i , . , , fULL
· ~:r' TOR~it~:. ·. ,
New 4 ·Or. Seclci~ ~,. \J\.'fAVE ,NEW LTI>. ri • rciugh.
351 V-8. AT., blt Ures, P.S .. P.discs. • H.T. 429 V8, vinyl roor. cruiso., ~SW, SAVE
$1100 · air, rad, T-glass, whl CVTli, tidy,,m~d-'$· ·os• vis. grp., P.S .. d.lx., str. whl., P atrs.,
Ing. ~tc. (1030.52) •39 . ;;~ f\ . . P-dr. Jocks. air, auto temp. control,
W·Stlir. 54001.25 011r l'rke s~401i • · . · Al\t-Fl\i, P.\Vi--~. ~W08 l. •455 ________ _,,~~.w+----w.s1kr. $6041lqVt l'il4o$4941
New 2 Dr. Hdtp. Brciugh. C./4yr:. NEW LTb A s"$t1lE . SA. ·VE
351 v8 A·T. bit ures. '""&·~;P-S· • " • " • ~ , 6 pass. wason. 429 VS, Cruiso., WS\V,
P -0· . air rad. whl ·"""-·;lo. '~l24)..l:i581ti.ill'. ' <' vi" grp .. P.S .. dlx. raok. •ir oond.. $110100 iscs, · ~ . VI AM-Fl\t, H.D. susp., dlx. whl. covers.
356), •236 . {14234 ). •862
W·5tlir. M4ZJ.25 O•r Pti« 53741.73 ' • ·W·stkr. $5785 Our Price $4684 '
New 4 Dr. Sedan . savE
vs. cruiso .. \VS\V, vis. group, P.S., ._,.
P.B .. elr, rear window1.ff~··l~f~!\'jf'' • · •
tint. glass, \l:hl. coverS" <l3f9J~ '~\: · 1 "...
W-5tlir. 54031.15 Otr hic.e $J4J1 .21S . . ,
New 2 .Dr. Hardtcip .. SAVE
VS. crulso \VSW;P'.S .. P.B .. alrr·ra~ $ Ii.•
dlo, tinted' glass, wheel covers. {161· 601-
598\. •498 ' .-
w .sttr. 5~11' Our Prlc. 53514.42 .,~ r .
NEW RANCHERO
Emls!lon control system, E7X~4 tires, $,. a3• .A?.1 radio. {119131\.
W.-stkr $3196.82 Our Price $2712.94 . · .
N!~vs.R!~:~~~~ !O: PS. Bil
J)O\l.'er djsc brakes. radio, tint a lass._ $aaea H.D. 1usp. (115648 ). .
W-stv $4284.06 Our Price $3395.4~ ·
NEW LTD 4 DR. HDTP.
NEW GALAXIE 500 SAVE
2 Dr. Hd. Tp. 400 V-8 , Vinyl rt .. Air.
Pwr. Str. and brakes. air, radio. \!.•hi. $92300 cvrs., tint &Jass, t lec. dcfoga;cr.
100015). #661 . '
W-stkr. $4922 Our P;lce $l"t •
N.~~ BRONCO
N!~P'B~,~~.o~~~oG2d~-')~uE tor'. aux. fuel tank. Stk. #0764 '$'
(70012 )
W-stkr. $4522.44 Our Price $3851.21 6
NEW BllONCO WAGON SAVE .
VB bucket 1ts,... traction lock R-axle, Oi . -::
Ltd. slip-front axle. SpL 'pkg., aux. $7 · 611 fuel tank, radl6, frtt running hubs. .
Stk. •T200C8014l
w·stkr. $4680.22 Our l'flce $]973.46
-. ' . 1" •.
NEW 2 Doo1l' L).NDAU SAVE
Power sun root, lro14&~. P.W .. P.
Se1tt, auto., air, 1tir!)d t.Ue, tilt whl., $15' 2· 5" , P-diso., vinyl CtQP. p-a;ntennll, etc. •652 (100015) '
W-Stkr. S7'3f 'O.,,r1,PrJce $6114
NEW 2 DOOR' .+iARDTOP SAVE
Air, Full power, tilt whl. A/T. Brou&:-
Mm Int., W/W, radio, .429-V& •181. $1·20· 1" .
1106435) .. "' t ' .
W-Stkr. $6351~50 OW Pilce $5157
. NEW 2 'DR. HDTP. BR. SAVE
•FuU pwr., ·yinyl roof, air, AIT, tilt
~iii., pwr. wfnd., steer. 11.nd brakes, $1301" · radio, 429-VS. •399-1111587) . ·
( ;~j5tkr. $W1J.lf Our' ,rice $5312.75 ;-,l.. · . ,
NEW 2 DOOR LANDAU
429-VS. Full P'tVf'.. A/T, AJ\.f-FM.
Brougham int. T-glass. tilt whl.,
Auto. Temp., Alr. #651 {1000141
· W-Stkr. 173~1 Our ,rice $5M7
SAVE
s1s11··
~fi' Fl 00 PICKUP
N~ ,~;.10!, ~~L~~~E"d'•· ~~V~T ..
tint. glass, H.D. Rear Sp., iBU&es. cig. $543· 9 lighter. Stk. •T63 (26381. ,
W-Stkr. $3ll.t7 Our Prlc• $2,fS.OO
N~!1!· ~~~.~~~!~~ ... xii. 5Jl YE
amp A oil gaug ... tool box, aw,.,. "9· .53• matic, opt. vacuum , booster. AM-FM ?I
stereo, P.S., G78xl5 tires, etc. (0651). .
W-stkr $4850.20 0ur· l'flce $l896.J1
.. \ \ •.'
a 1 • I
: : f, NIW 1971
I. • ~.: t
' •' 'I/ ' t • d 1 '£ 5
' · I -4-•
''-ll ·f ''«
:. '."1 •1 -~1· .. 9.: . \~ ,_,
.1 , .... .To.
•11lly 911vlppff ...,.IHI ''" C.C. -.1 .. , hlly 1y11ellre1d-4
4 .-etl ff?lllllllUIOfl, ...... l tMfretter, llJ.leftf "diNCta
•Ir" Y•11tjl•tf•• 1y1te11t, wi.d1llleld wasl!Ms, ~1~11 •et.tJ
bvcltet lffts. .... r ._ltt. • • • fr..t & reor, pedde4 \'f .. r
&-den.II, loclllflt •tHr. c•l•"''• bedit, l19lm. O"'-r Todtrf
.A LiTILE BiGGER • • •
• . • FOR A LITTLE MORE
MAVERICK
1 DR5,.;_,4 DRS.-GRAllERS-Y-8S . .
~~~ F250 PICKUP
N!!r'~!~.,F?oo~~ !~m50cab. :$~~E
Cruise-o-matic transmission, power ~as• t' s l.eerlni;.:-, power disc brakes. "360" . •1'
VB, radio. extra gu tank. •16, motor
•2158. R1t1ll ~3.01-S.le, $3147.70
NEW P.250 RANGER XLT 'SAVE
C.mp<r SP"C. JOO VB. o~ul<0 .. ''~(f • , ..... AM-PM stf'rf'O. P.S., P-d1scs, extr 2 R gas tank, rlc. • 125 (03067\
W~stkr. $5597.tl Our p'rlce $4576.09 . .
.. .. , '·
. MUST ~$'3t~AlE
10 to choose from. '65 thru '70 mo;dt11. Coupes, hardtops, convertlbl•
end 2 + 2 Fastbl.cks. Some wi'h 4 \peeds, al10 air conditioninsi and
automatic modll1 with poWer steering. · ·
ALL 'OPIF,JRS CONSIDIRED
f\TAAQES ~CEP¥D tla\0 'fOR '"OR 'NOTI :
.9-;LTD-GALAXl£-TOllNO-WAGONSALE
Ma11y ' . from. '65 thru '70 Models. Sport roofs, fonnccls, 2 .._
&-4' oor ct:rtopl &-stda". Full po-¥et, air condltlonfnt. Warrutles
ovoflable.
EXAMPLE:_ 1965 ~:,,\('.(~ HARDTOP
R•d io, l.i1te•.-t 'l'fhl'M: l0JU74l l
oua· '" 'J•t• ·
------------------..... ,-6-SFO~~~--s-99-6 · Auto., Jtl li, P.S .. air co nd., rood ~iltos. <NOG876)
EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD SEDAN
Vf, t ufo., ~I H, ppw•r 1l•••int I di,c lwt~11, 2 tti.11•. ck'rorn1 lri""' tood milu . ( IO~lZ;tl
I .. OUR P9'1C-$'1;69• . ,, . .. . . i •. . , . ~
•• ' .
'70 MUSTANG H.T. '2694.: I..oedcd. vs. auto .. P.s .
R&H, fact. 11.lr. "'-arr. avail-
able. Lo\\' miles. 1621AVPl , .. , 1
'61 Y.Vf. SUNROOF
f{a_dio and heater.
f;X!f307J -
. ):,j,.
'63 MfRC. CO.MET 2 DR. H.T. '1096 . i~sW:5i R&H.pow•"'"''"'· 'H FALCON FU'IURA
Sed. Auto .. R&H,
power steerin1.
{XMP294l • (
,..,. . . " .• '
· 9 FOtD· -COlltA
Spt. roof. auto.,
R&H, P.S .
!ZD\17071 ·~796
'67 MUSTANG H.T.
'69 v.w:[11i.G : :
Fully oqulp""-
good miles.
IX\\'Z861 l
.
..
~1096 I . '
• ·SALES DEP.f ~
HOURS.
'70 COUGAR s279·6' Ehmif'\lllOr. Auln., P.S .. P-
di scs., R&H. Landau ted, · .
fact. \~·11.rr. 11.v11.ll. t843BILI
,'(9. FORD LTD
2;dr.' Fl.T. vs; auto .. R&H.
P..S .. P.B .. facl. air, \'lnyl
ro~, (XSR897l . .
.
•l ,14¥ TO t PM MON-FRI
I. AM TO i PM SAT
10 AM TO i PM SUN I
'65 OLDS 'FIS< 'f'A,GON Auto .. ~ ra'C!lo, heater,
(\VIJlJ51 '67 PLYMOUTH Sl'ORT FURY 2 Dr: H.T. VB, 11utn .. R&:H.
P.S .. vinyl roof, lil'ood miles.
f\VCR890 : '64. -FALCON 2 DR. 6 cylinder, radio and h~ter.
{0SV613)
P ART~$ER¥1CE
HOURS
'64 CHEY. WAGON
&t Air. VS. auto .. R&H.
P.S., air, good miles.
!llN1551
'66 MERCURY
Colony Park wagon. VS,
llUIO., P.s .. RilH, a.ir con-
ditioning. IRLl..491)
.
1 AM Too 6 PM TUNlll ·I 1 AM To 9 PM MON
m96 '70 MAVERICK
2 door. 1 oWner. Radin, ~fl:Fnoyiy, f~~s.
.'6' CHEYT MALllU HT$2196 .. VS. auto., RlH,
P..S., air ~nc:I. (807BSJ) • . '
PARTS DEPT. ONLY
8 AM tci 1 PM SATURDAYS"
..
' '