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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-14 - Orange Coast Pilot' .• 1 • I I e e Ill 0 LA LawD1an Loses Bid for Freedom In Bea~h Killing DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * PRlDAY AmRNOON, "4AY ;r4, il97r VOL, M. HO. 11 .. 4 Sl tflONI, "4 l'A•tl .. ~Peanuts~ Pair? I , .. I 1 ~~ I I . i . ' " • " t' { • .. ' I f , I 1 J ~ I .. •• • l I ' ' ' '* ) • • \ ,. • • DAIL'( Pl LOT ,..,.,, ~' ll:ldll l'll K•~ltr JETTIE ANO WINGED PAL, THE GENERAL, GO FOR STROLL Poodle and Pigeon as lnaep1r1 bl1 •• Snoopy •nd Woodstock Friends Indeed Poodle, Pige on Share Same Abode • • By ARTHUR R. V1 NSEL 01 ffl<I 011,., PINI $tiff Gan ii persnickety poodle and , a homeless homing pigeon find happiness in a house trailer? If Snoopy and Woodstock can share a beagle bungalow in the Peanuts comic 5lrip it can happen 11nywhere, with the same warmly human anirttal antics in- volved. . . - . The 'makc-bt\ieve chanlclers created - by cartoonist Charles Schulz have ac- tuallv come to life 11l the Richard HogAns' mobile home, 2518 Newporl B!l'd., Costa Mesa. This is the story of Jettie and General. Just like Snoopy and Woostock, they 're insepar•ble. sha ring and fulfilling some mutual need not to be alone in a world ln- babiled by poor, dumb people. The relationship goes back lo May 2. when Hogan took a group of Seventh Day Adventist Pathfinder Oub youngsters t• Del ~far for 11 day-long even!. Exploring under a railroad trestle. the boys discovered General and • sick sidekick -apparen!!y abandoned by mother homi~g pigeon-huddled on 1 rafter Ind guided Hogan t.o take a look. - "I put tbem in a box and took tbc.m home as a surprise for my wHe. Barb," says !he Fairview St,ate H o s p. i I a, I psychiatric technician. 1 ··The one passed aw1 y, but General 1is thriving." A diet •f cornrtie1l and water fed through a rubber,.. a)'ringe and the at- tentions of a Frenc~;&?verness is kttpina; the young pigeoq,}u~ppy: · · Jettie -who rfosid 'tight into Genera!'& cage and took cha rge from the oulfft - has also perked up and is acting like a dog with a new litter or pupe. "The dog fay1 down jmt like she's · nursing. The bird crawls up and nestles between heri front paws," Hogan ex- pl.aills, Jettie alto licks away untidy bits of cornmeal alter feeding llmt, plu! performing more personal diaper change. type duties. Just like Woodstock in the Peanuts strip, the homing pigeon who has found a home Is trying to Oy, but failed a nut· lerinf 50!0 effort Wt&esday. She compensated by &talking around lS.. PET PAIR, Page ZI • Blonde Held !~Bombing Co11spiracy NEW YORK f UPI ) -A federal war- rant was issued today for the arrest of activist Leslie Bacon on a charge of con- gpiring with six alleged Weathermen to blow up a Madison Avenue bank branch. U.S. Commissioner Qayton D. Holl- inger issued the warrant on a govern· men! complaint which said the 19-year- o!d blonde, arrested last month as a "material witness" Ln the bombing of lhe U.S. Capitol , had "admitted being present at meetings with the other conspirators and di scussed with them a plan to bomb the f irst National Cily Bank Buiding." The other six alleged conspirators, seized by police outside the bank Sept. 14. pleaded guilty last month to reduced stal.8 charges of conspiracy to commit arson. Thret of them were sentenced a week: ago to maximum four-year priSOJt terms, and two to thr!t-year terms. Sentencing of the sixth was de layed whi le he undergoes psychiatric observation at Bellevue Hospital. Officer Accused Of Beach Death Denied Freedom A police. officer's plea tor dismissal of the murder rjlarges filed against him alter officers alleged he shot and killed a fellow patron In a Huntington Beach Bar was rejected Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Howard Cameron di1missed the motion filed by Clifton J. Schusse, 26, of 5672 Rodgers Drive. HuntingWn Beach, and ordered the Los Angeles Poli ce Department patrolman to lace trial June 7. Schusse will be held in Fullerton city jail until the trial date. A further plea lor bail was dented by Judge Cameron. The off-duty ofl icer wa1 arrested last March 1~ shortly aner he allegedly put two bulleU into llfark A. Rodgers. 29, of Buena Park outside the Swinger bar on Beach Boulevard. Arresting officers said the shooting climaxed a quarrel between Schusse and other patrons who objected to the officer feed ina cigarettes to a stray dog . Wit nesses testified in municipal court thet SChusse sent a fr iend out to hl1 car to cet his gun and that he used tbfl weapon te kill Rodgers. • . . Theater Tea~her Quits After Bea~h Cast Party Arrest I I I • I Cast Party Balded Ex-mental Drama Teacher Resigns Patient Held After Arrest in Beach An Edison High School drama teacher hu resigned following his arre1t on a charge of contributing to lhe delinquency or minors. He was arrested Saturday night at his upstairs apa rtment where he was reportedly giving a cast party after the Press Cluhhers To Fet~ County's Top Headliners Tickets are going for the Orange Coun· ty Press Qub's eighth annual Headliners Awards Banquet honoring c oun ty residents who achieved headline status during 1970 on local, national and worldwide scale. The event which draws 400 c o u n l y leadi!rs each year will be Saturday , May 22, at the Santa Ana Elks Lodge, ~gin· ning at 8:30 p.m. with hoste<I cocktails. Dinner, the program featuring 17 honorees ln a dozen categories Including Man of the Year -top award of all - plus big band-style mu sic, dancing until after midnight are included. Science. medicine, com mun2ty service. pro fessiona l and amateur sports, plus several olher areas of accomplishment are covered by •leadliners Awards. Man of the Year title has gone in the past to President Nixon, Judge Robert Gardner, Walt Disney, Dr. Arnold Beckman and other luminaries. TlckeU! are $10 per person and reserva- tions may be made be sending checks to the Orange County Pm.s Club. P .0. Bos 182~, Santa Ana,· 92702. BRAZEN THIEF GRABS THRONE A brazen burglar broke into 111 exclU.sive Collta Mesa rtifdence and stll le the $00 toilet seat. Alvln Sugarman complained to Costa Mess police Thursday. Sugarman, 1pokesman for the Garden Grove building tlrm that owns U>e ho1Js~1 1t 3001 Country Club Drive, lold pOlle< h< would bo unable to ident.lf}' the object If it ii recovered. final performance ot a school play. Police went to the apartment Of John Lee Siler, 26, at 221 Atlanta Ave., at 11:30 p.m. after neighbors had complained of noise. Police reports assert that 17 juvenlles, boys and girls, were taken into protective custody after the officers found quantities of beer, wine, rum and vodka in the apartment.' None of the students was cha rged with an offense. All were released to their parents after giving statements to the police. Slier appeared In West Orange County Judicial Court Thursday and pleaded in- nocent to a charge of furnishing in· toxicants to and Contributing to the delin- quency o( a juvenile . A jury trial was scheduled for 8:30 a.m. July 6. Siler was released after posling bail ot $625. High school District Super intendent Jack Roper said this morning that Siler was suspended Monday morning but on Tuesday lhe teacher resigned. The incident occurred after the final performance of the Greek clasiilc Antigone. Siler had been drama teacher at Edi.son High since September. Under his leadership the student.a had also performed the melodrama Deadwood Dick. Edison Principal Ernie Pascoe said that both productions "Were excellent " and praised Siler's ability ..a.! a dr ama teacher. Santa Ana Teen Dies in Crash A Santa Ana teenager was killed early this morning when the motorcycle on which he was a passenger struck a park- ed car. Frank Ama"l,, )5, of 1&13 McFadden Ave., was dead on arrivi.J at Orange County Medical Center at 12:2.3 a.m., some ~ minute.! after the accident at 1060 W. 17tb SI. Police said Amaro wai a passenger on a motorcycle driven by Roger J. Wentworth, 19. at.so of Santa Ana . Wentworth, wbo was lreattd at the medical ctnter for minor cuts and releas- ed, told po!Jet he had looked doWK at his gas pedal and the next thln1 he knew he wa1 flying over a car parked at lhe aide of the ctrteL In Slaying FROM WIRE SERVICES BELLFLOWER -Blinded by her own blood, a Cal State Long Beach coed escaped from a crazed roomer just evicted by her grandmother Thursday. after being hacked and stabbed with a knife and ax. The former mental patient was disarm- ed by an 00-year-old man, but Kerry Louise Smith, 19, died 2'h hours later during a desperate team effort to save her life. A dozen pints of blood were raced to Bellflower Community Hospital by police helicopter and patrol car, while the .!IUSpect, Donald Kirkpatrick, 33. we.! being questioned by homicide detectives. Once a Camarlllo State Hospital pa· tient, Kirkpatrick was booked by Lakewood Sheriff's deputies on charges of murder following the 4:15 p.m. hackin& spree. "~1iss Smith was more dead than alive when she arrived at the hospital." said one detective, notirig she suffered a 2i,i. inch gash in her skuU plus many other mortal wounds. Her accused killer was jumped by John L. Lindenshov. 80. a tenant of Mrs. Johanna Apple, 76. the apparent quarry of Kirkpatrick. "She was taking out the trash when the attack oceurred," investigators said. Kirkpatrick reportedly burst into her !See AX SLAYING, Page%) Orange 1''eath.er Hazy sunshine is the best the weatherma n can offer this week· end, with litUe temperature change on the Orange Coast where mer· cury will reach 62 on the beacbe.9 and into the lo~·er 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY The city of Huntington Bt'llCh if holdirig nii all day f eseiool l n. Murdy Park this Saturday. You can read all about it ha today't Weekender. \ M<lllltl ll111Mh II Natl!Mltt Ntwt •·I ONnH c-f'I' f lht1avr.t11h J"U *"ho , .. " •t.e• "'-!'11•1• , .. " T'tltvhl911 N ™"'" :N-Jt w .. tMt • W_.t NWI l•tt W"l'il Ntwt 44 W..uMtf ti·• Sadat Foils Political Coup Try CAJRO (UPI) -President Anwar Sadat said tonight he had foiled "what ~11now1t.ed lo a coup" by hLs polltical op. paoeats and that Gen. Mohammed Fa,vzl, the war min!mr, had been placed under house arre:st. Other opponeots were jail· ed. Sadat rpoke ln a nationwide broadcast one day after six cabJnet ministers and ~ top policymakers resigned in Egypt's biggest political upheaval since the 1967 war with Israel. He said several memben of the central committee of the Arab Socialkt Union and two senior police officers were sent to jail. Sadat announced plans for a complete reorganization of the Arab· Socialist Union. Egypt's only political party. (Earlier story, page 4). He said free elections will be held from ''top to bottom" under his own aupervision and "I will be extremely cruel to anybody who attempt to rig the elections." The political crisis was so serious that government leadert or their deputies from Ubya, Syria and the Sudan flew unexpectedly to Cairo earlier today to pledse thelt solidarity wlth Sadat. Sadat aald be asked Vice Premier and Jnterlcr Mlnl.ster Shar1wi Gomaa to resign because Gomaa, as head o( the union's organizational committee, had engineered maneuvers to embarrass the president. He said five of the miAiJter1 who quit Thursday announced their resignationa over Cairo radio without hit knowledge. FawU was one of tho6e who resigned. Sadat said he di.covered only Thursday • tape recorder ln hll own room at the Republican Pa1aee. He aald be discovered the instrument by using an electronic device after being Upped off by JOrne ministenl. He said the recorder was installed by Intelligence operatives working under fonner ministers Gomaa and Sarni Sbaraf. Sadat said the rive ministers who an· nounced their resignatlons on the radio quit to show tolldarlty with Gomaa. ''They thought that Egypt will collapse but today "We fonned a new government including technicians, prolessors and some of the many efficient people "'ith whom our land abounds," Sadat said. Sadat aatd he was leaving his ofiice iJn. mediately after the one hour and 25 minute speech to administer the oath to the new cabinet Pregnant Woman Hurt in. Newport Traf fie Accident A 20-year-old Huntington B e a c h mother-to-be was partia1ly paralyzed ear- ly today when her auto wu rammed from heh.ind by a Costa Mesa man who [ Newport Beach police charged with drunken driving. Police said Kathleen A!bell, 20, 16332 Ross Lane, l~untington Beach, wu south- bowtd on Newport Boulevard at Hospital Road in Newport Beach about midnight when a car driven by Michael Scott, 30, of 1628 Newport Boulevard, plowed into tier from the rear. Mrs. Asbell was rushed to nearby Hoag Mermrial · HOlpital where a spokesman this morning said she was In falr con- dition and under close observabion. Scott, who was arrested on a felony drunken driving charge, received severe facial cutJ but "Was released from the hospital after treabnent. t.fn. Asbell reported the loss of feeling In aDd use of half of her body immedi- ately after the accident, police said . OUN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT H ...... , ...... -·-s. CS1 ; le OMNOI COAIT Pl!ILIJHING COM,AMY l•Mrt H. 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C.llftrfl\9. a.m,11 •• , l>f _,..... ._. -•rt1 " ,,_11 n .tJ ~t "'lllt•'Y a•~. U.2$ ""°""'Ir. IJl"I Ttl""'91• U.S. INFANTRYMAN PUSHES THROUGH A SHAU UNDERBRUSH In Vietnem, Wlt1 In the Air ind Grunts on the Ground U.S. Jets Fight Electric Duel Witl1 Reds in Viet SAIGON (UPI) -Two U.S. Air :f orce F105 Tbunderchief jet fighter-bombers fought electronic duels with Soviet-built SAM2 antiaircraft missile creY.'S inside North Vietnam Thursday. The U.S. Command said today the K105s were flying over Laos when their "Wiley Weasel '' electronic detection sear warned them they bad been "locked T eleplione Firnis Change Met1tO£ls Of Collecting A little known business organization has caused the giant Pacific and General Telephone companles to change their methods of billing commercial customers. L. David Fox of 220 City Boulevard West, Orange, executive director of th e Nat ion a I Businessmen's Association, brought a complaint to the Public Utilities Commission during a hearing Thursday !n Santa Ana. Fox, whose organizaUon should not be confused with the National Association of Businessmen. told the PUC that some of his clients had been threatened with removal of their telephones if they did not pay their directory advertising charges. This. Fo1 asserted., was a violation of the telephone companies' tariff regula· lio1111 as approved by the PUC. Although Fox didn't convince: the Pacific and General Telephone attorneys th at the companies had actually threaten- ed customers with removal ot their telephones for directory ad bills, the companies reported that they are re\.\'ording the bills. Fox and four witnesses took the stand In the PUC hearing in the old county courthouse in Santa Ana before Ex· aminer Robert D. DeWolf. Fox's complaint centered on allegations that when sending notices to customers wilh overdue accounts, the telephone companies lumped the service charges with the directory charges. He did not prove, through testimony, that anyone's phone had ever been removed because directory ads 'A'ere not paid, but he did create enough of a fuss that the companies are revising their bills and late payment notices to show that the telephone 'A'ili only be removed for non-payment of service charges. Fox's \lo'ltnesses admitted they had overdue bills totalling from $300 to $1.1 00. Fox also demanded that the companies bill service charges and directory ad charges se parately. They objected to this <ind General Telephone Service Director Rollo West of Huntington Beach said his firm had made a survey on the subject and 95 percent of their customers wanted just one bill. Frotn Page I AX SLAYING • • room at 4:15 p.m. and began ha cking and 1lashing the young woman. She was struck num erous times in the head, face and body before running blind. ly out of the me in house 10 which are nt· tached smaller rental unit.!. Klrkpatrirk hlmself rclUrned aftl!:r following hfiss Smith out. y.·hcre ll1e l!:lderly tenant wl!o had come to her aid took th e weaJ)Ons away and called au thoriliei. on" to SAM2 radar screens on the other side of the Mu Gia pass inside North Vietnam. The jets turned toward the SAM2 bat- teries and fired their radar-homing Shrike missiles, ·which literally tide down the radar beam or the antiaircraft bat· tery. But Jong before the Shrikes reached target the SAM2 batteries switched their radar off. thus leaving the Shrikes u·ilh no electronic path to folloY.'. "Perha ps the SA~1s' counter-countt!r radar told them the Shrikes were on the way ," a military spokesman said. 11le Fl05 crewmen were unable to determine whether their Shrikes had hit home. But no SA~l2 misslles '"';'ere fired at the planes. The F105s were understood to be escor1i ng 852 stratofortresses on a bomb- ing run over the Ho Chi Minh supply trail complex when they detected two separate SAi\.12 rad ar signals. , One Thunderchief was 18 miles southy.·est of the t<.1u Gia Pass y.·hen it deterled a signal coming from a missile battery 15 miles north of the pass. The second F105 was 27 miles south of the pass y.•hen it picked up the radar beam of a missil e si te five miles north of the pass. SAri.12 missiles have an er fective range of 25 miles or more. Shri kes are effective for a distance of up to 15 miles. The U.S. Command also revealed that In the wee k ending Tuesday not a single American helicopter was shot down over South Vietnam. the first time this has happened an 44 months. Hoy.·ever one helicopter was shot down in Cambodia wi th a loss of three crewmen. Weekly plane losses including accide1t- nl helicopter crashe!I and fixed win g aircraft losses were pu t .at nine, the lowest total in four months. Th is brought to 7.768 the number of U.S. aircraft los t to all causes in U1e IO.year-0ld war. f'rot11 Page 1 PET PAIR ... the floor. pecking at lhe carpet and <"On· versing in squeaky monosyUables "·ilb her French poodle pal. "She t.alks by chirping and flapping her '''ings up and down," says Hogan , y.•hn probably wonders y.·hat Jettie and General are discussing. Chances are it's y.•hat cute house pets l!umans make. Stamps Go Up 2 Cents Sunday Orange County Post Office officials to- dav reminded resident$ that incre ases in mOst posLage rates u'ill go into effect Sunday. The increases. authori zed on ll tem- porary basis untll lhe ne \.\•\y creeled Postal li:ate Commissi on 1nakes it.s recommendation on permanent changes, will raise? firs t-class letter rates from six to eight ce.nl.9 an ounce and alrm:iil let· tcr r;i tes from 10 to 11 cents an ounce . Post cards \\'ill go from five to six t'Cnts and airmail posl cards from eight to nine cenls. The increa se \.Iii! be borne more by busi ness than individuals, o f f i c i a I s pointed out, since aboul 75 percen t of first class and airmail is from com· mrrcial sources. T'he rote increa~ei "'"' part of the Nt w l.inltt'd States Pnstal Service program lo echlrv~ self-sufficiency as required by I . Hallowed Halls Sizzle Fulbright, Rogers Clash Over W,ar Powers WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secr<tary of State William P, Rogers in a brilltling conJrontation with Sen. J. William Jo'ulbright (0-Ark.), today described as unconstitutional and unnecessary pro- posals to restrict a Presldenl's authority lo commit troops abroad. Rogers testified before the Senate Fo~ign Relati ons Committee, beaded by Fulbright, that such action would limit the President's constitutional powen and s.eriously limit his ability to carry out Corelgn policy. During a subsequ ent exchange. both Rogers and Fulbright displayed un- concealed irritation and anger with each other. Fulbright said the adminis:lralion was using ''double talk" to justify con- tinuation of lhe Vietnam War and ex- pected members of Congress to follow ill f'dicts like "good boys." engaged in "usurpation of w.;r powers" of Congress. Rogers adamantly opposed bills to re- quire Congressional aulhorlzatlon ror commitment of troops overseas. He said they were a n unconstitutional in· fringement on the President's powen as commander in chief and would weaken the nation by tying the President's hands in an emergency. •·1 don't remember when I've been more disappointed," F'ulbright to Id Rogers, facing the secrelary who sat across from him behind a felt-eovered table in the Senate caucus room. Fulbright charged that U.S. operations in Cambodia and Laos were undertaken Y.'it00ut consultation with Congress and Will Cmne Ho1ne that contlnuation or the Vietnam \Var had no legal underpinning. Rogers contended that President Nix· on's action! in Southeast Asia were within his rights as commander In chie[ to protect American troop5. "I don't think the Presiden t has any lack of constittional authority to withdraw from the war,'' Rogers snap- ped. · " Fulb . ht ''There comes a time. rig responded, "when this double talk just doesn't appeal to us." . It was possibly the sharpest public ex· change between Rogers and Fulbright - ll'ho have been friends and goU partners since the beglnni.ng ot the Ni.J:on Administraion. At another point, Fulbright rtmarked, "the more I observe this administration, the more it appears that you are folloy.·. ing exactly the same course as your predecessors." "You," he said lo Rogers, ''ha ve ,gone almost 11 far as Mr. Katz· enbach." "Oh, Mr. Chainnan!" Rogers ifl.. terjected angrily. ~~ulbrlght's reference was to testimony by Katzenbach before the committee when he was wtdersec~tary of state that the power of Congress to declare war was no longer a reality in the age of nuclear mlssllery, Fincl1 Will Leave Capital Mter 1972 U.S. Election Rog ers specifically rejected th al charge and that he disagreed \lo'ith Katzenbach's view entirely ... Can I say it an; more clearly?" he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. Fulbright responded that the Nixon Administration like its predecessors was Crucified Baby's Mother Arrested On LSD Sale Rap SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Melanie Alba sat in her jail cell and aummed it up: '"This ha.s been a bad year." A month ago, her 22-month-old Mm Noah was k.ldnaped, bludgeoned to death and left wired to a crude wooden cross in a trash·filled ba!tment by t w o youngsters. A few days later, her husband left town. Today, she \Vas in jail on cha rges of selling LSD. "I really don't ~w what I've been doing,.. the Jong-haired woman uid. ''I've been drunk every night. I've been dazed and confmed. since It happened." Mrs. Alba, !J, and t\\'O other occupant! of a North Beach district apartment were arrested aft er another woman allegedly approached an wtdercover agent and of· fered to sell him 17 capsules or LSD. The sale was completed. at the apartment. Police said Mrs. Alba b e c a m e hyster ical and began screaming about her child, who was taken from a city park by two brothers, aged 7 and 10. They beat him to death and tied him to the cros!. ~1rs. Alba said her husband. Larry, left for the East Coast immediately after the death of their son. ''He dkin't even stick around for the funeral," l!lhe sa id. A daughter, Symania, 3, y.·as sent to Jive "'ith relatives in Gtorgia. Ni.Ion Administration adviser Robert H. Finch announced Thursday in Anaheim that he will waab bis bands oC Washington alt.er the 1m elections, hit.- ting the road home to campaign again in California. "I'll come back as soon as the next election is over. I've already told the President ," said the lonner lieutenant governor who may take ·a shot at the governorship itself. "I've promised my family to come back." Speaking to a plwnbing, heating and cooling contract.ors' convention at the Disneyland Hotel, Finch covered much ground on a local , national and inter- national scale. He said be will devote efforts in months c8-h.ead lo campaigning for ~re.si_del)t~~· on's re-election then may run In 1974 as U.S. senator or governor. The former Secretary of Health Educa- tion and Welfare predicted current Wlemployment ln California will be helped by a new $6 million fiscal year allocation for manpower training. The federal grant will enable a IS-week continuation of present programs, with funds spent on 5,000 of the hard-core unemploytd to develop y.·ork sk.ills and find jobs. A remaining $1 million from a prior allotment will be administered by the Calilornia Department or H u m a n Resourcts Development, while more funds will be forthcoming ne1t faca1 year. "And they 'll be spent in the areas - !iuch as Orange County -whcih have the most difficult unemployment problems," Finch declared. He said America faces a different crisis in the hea lltt care field, with a shortage of more than 100,000 doctors and at least $70 billion required just to start bringing U.S. standards up to a reason- able level. One ol the President's four main. areas of program development in t h e polilically-critical coming year will be in health, Finch added, plus housing, educa- tion and drug control efforts -e1ercised at the United Nation! level, Turning to other Issues, FI n c h predict.eel the Vietnam War situation utilized by Congressman Paul ?i.fcClos.- key's eUort to dump Ni.Ion will no long~ be a poillt of conruct for political advan- tage·. "That issue is the Vietnam War," &aid Finch, contending he found on a recent 14-country tour of Europe it is no longer an issue there due to withdrawal pro- gralll!. "In spite of what you may hear, American prestlge overseas has never been higher," he c\eclared. including the current dollar crisis in his pro- nouncement. Diver, 36, Dies Folll'. Days After Laguna Rescue A scuba diver from Azusa-rescued by Laguna Beach lifeguards Sunday after he was caught in a riptide -died at 8: 15 p.m. Thursday in South Coast Community Ho.spitaJ. A hospital spokesman said Ge<irge Scherf, 36, was kept In a respirator from the time be W85 adrn itted Sunday and never regained consciousness. Scherf WU diving off M o s I street Beach with his 17-year-old son, Keven.. when the two were caught in a riptide and .wept 200 yards out to 11ea. The youth was able to reach the shore safely, but his father had stopped breathing by the time lifeguards Mike England and Art Smart reached him. Mouth-to-mouth resuscitation was ad· ministered by England as the stricken diver was brought ashore on a rescue tube. The guards also tried unsuccessfully IB revive the victim with heart massage and a mechanical resuscitator while awaiting an ambulance. On arrival at the hospital, Scherf was alive but hls condition throughout the week was described as "very critical.'' His body h85 been removed to Azusa where ftmeral services are pending. HA YE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL Bee utifull y 1tyl•d i1 the word for Marchc111 . Th;, hendu:ime double pedtstel teble f11tur•• • clessic p•rqu• top p1u1 J l•1vc1 to m1tch. It 1xt•nd1 to llb" when fully opened, The cheirs mey b• ordered with cine ti 1hown, or with btck pads. Stop in tnd vitw this eJqui1ite dinin9 1et tod1y. TABLE ·--·····-·---·--·----· $519. SIDE CHAIRS -------····-····-ea. $139. ARM CHAIRS --· -"' $159. With l, 22" l••v•s DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE HIWPOlT STOii OPIN FllDAY 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe1ilon1I Interior -Designer• Awell1blt -AID INTERIORS PhoM Tell Pr .. M•1t •f o,_,. C111'Y'-140.12,J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. Phone: 494-6551 "I just murd,.red mv \\•Ire." ht was QU':lt~d ns sa)'l ng. the Postal Reorganlialion AcL 1------------------------------------------- ' I .. .. ····~ ... ·"' . -"· ... - Huntington B~-a~h I ... Fountain Valley Today'11 Final N.Y. Stoek8 VOL M, NO. 115, 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY ·14, ·191 r TEN CENTS Rogers, Fulbright Clash U.S. Brass Battle Over WASHINGTON CUP!) -S.crtlary of State William P. Rogers in a bristling confrontation with Se:n. J. William Fulbright tD-Ark.), today described as unconslitulional and unnece:ssary pro- posals to re:strict a President's authority to commit troops abroad. Rogers testified before the Senate 1'"orelgn Relations Committee, hP.aded by Fulbright. that such action would llmit the President's constitutional powers and Teach er Quits After Arrest At Cast Party An Edison High School drama teacher has resigl"lfd following his arrest on a charge: of rontributing to the de:linquency of minors .. He was arrested Saturday night at hi s upstai rs apartment where he was re:porledl y giving a cast party after the final performance: of a school play. Police went to lhe: apartment nf John Lee Siler. 26, ot'22 1 Atlanta Ave:., al 11:30 p.m. after neighbors had complained or noise. Police reports assert that 17 juveniles. boys and girls. were take:n into protective custody after the: officers found quantities of beer. wine. rum and vodka in the apartment None of the students was charged with 1n offen se:. All were: rele:ased Ul the:ir parents after giving statements to the police. Siler appeared in West Orange County .Judicial Court Thursday and pleaded in- nocent to a charge of lttrni.shing in· tox ican[., In and Contributing lo the de.Jin· quency of a juvenile:. A jury tria l was scheduled fnr 8:30 1.m. July 6. Sile:r was released aft.er posting bail or $625. High school District Superinte:ndent J11ck Roper said thi s morning that Siler v.·as suspe:nded Monday morning but on Tuesday the teacher resigned. The in cid ent occurred after the: fina.1 performance of the: Gree:k cl assic Antigone. 5iler had been drama teache:r at Edison High since Sepl.embe:r. Under his leadership the students had also performed the melodrama De:ad wood Dick. Pregnant Woman Hurt in Newport Traf fie Acc ident A 20-ye<1r-0ld Huntington Be a ch mothe:r·lo-be: "'as partially para\y1.ed ear- ly today whe:n her auto was rammed from be:hinrl by a Costa Mesa man who Newport Reach police charged with drunken driving. Police said Kat hleen Asbell, 2Q. 16332 floss Lane. Hun lington Beach. was south· hound on Newport Boule:v.ard at Hospita l Road in Newport Beach about midnight when 11. car drive:n by Mi chael Scott. 30, ,,r 1626 Ne wport Boulevard. plowed into her h orn the rear. Mrs. Asbe:ll wa s rushed tn nearby Hoag P.1emorial Hospital "'here a spoke:sman th is morning said she was in fair con- dition and unde:r close ohscrvat.ion . Scott . whci was a.rresled on 1 felony drunken drlvin~ ch11.rgc. re:ceived severe 1 fa cial cuts but Wll.5 rcl e:ased from the hospital 11fle:r tre:11.tmrnt. Mrii. Asbell reported I.hr. Jos.'i or fee ling in llnd U.'ie n( ha lf of her body immedi- etely afler the accident. police said. seriously limit ~i.s ability to carry out foreign policy. Ouriog a subsequent exchange, ho.th Rogers and Fulbright displayed un- concealed irritation and anger with each othe:r. Fulbright said the: administration was using ''double talk" to justify con- tinuation of the Vietnam War and ex· peeled members of Congress lo follow its edicts like "good boys." At another poin t. Fulbright remarked, ''the: more I observe this administration, the more it appears that you are follow· ing exact.ly the same coufse as your predecessors." "You,'' he said to Rogers, "have gone al,most as far as Mr. Kall· enbach." "Oh. Mr. Chairman~" Rogers in- terjected angrily. Fulbright's reference was lo testimony by Katzenbach before the committee when he was undersecretary of state that the power of Congress to d-.re war was no longer a reality in the age of nuclear misailery. Rogers apecifically rejected t h a t charge and that he disagreed with Katzenbach's view entirely. •·can I say it any more clearly?'' he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. Fulbright responded that the Nixon Administration like lt.s predecessors was an.gaged in "usurpation of war powers" nf Congress. Rogers adamantly opposed bills to r~ D.llLV .. n .. or Stiff ll'Mle FLIGHT CREW PREPARES FOR TAKEOFF FROM GISLER INTERMEOIATE AIRPORT Huntln,ton Be1ch Sixth Graders Organiw"AlrlirMS ftr Fun .entil •KnoWl~ . . . Kids Initiate Flights Gisl,er Students Run Own Mock Airline Companies By TERRY COVILLE 01 IM Df lh' .. !19t S .. 11 •"This is flight 210. Imperial Airline.~. nnw leaving from Gisler Jntermediale Airport." Pilot Lee Wickersham steppe:d from th e cockpit 11l as..qire his pawngers the flight would be smooth and on time. At 12 years o[ age: he 's the ace pil nl for Imperial and handles the company's big '13'1. four cute hostesses. average age ll, Bad Luck Barred At Mis s Valley Beauty Contest Bad luck is barred from the Miss Foun· taln Valley contest Saturday night. Even though 13 girls are entared, none wilt wear the unlucky number when they parade across the stage of the com· munizy center at 7:30 p.m. Instead, number 14 will trail the lineup Each girl is seeking the crown now held by Linda Anderson. Girls will be judged in formal dresses, awim suits and on • talent presentation. Mayo rs and queens from neighboring cities have been invited to view the ahow. Ed Arnold. 11 local television personality, will emcee the rontest. The: Los Amigos High School Choir and the Fountain VaUey High Baronetle drill te:am will also appear SitturdaY nighl. Harry Dunbar will provide background mu:i;ic on the organ. did the •'coffee , tea or milk'' routine . Passengers giggled. The fligh t was smooth, the landing on time. Mrs. Dana Vaill, • .sixth grade ltacher al Gisler Intermediate School. Huntington Beach, praised the practice effort. Imperial Airlines is a student project. 11 mock-up of the real thing.Tl even has 11 ri val. .JSA 1Jet Stream Airwaysl, operated in similar fashion. ·•t ~Tote to PSA two monlha ago !or their school oriented program on develop- ing an airline compan y and they got us started," Mrs. Vaill explained. F'or the past two month s. 17~ youngsters -half the sixth grade ctasse~ at Gisler -have worked feverishly to build their two airline companies from the ground up. Today is thf! maide:n flight for both Imperial and JSA, as the young ex· tc1.1Uve:s , pilo ts and other workers show ISte FLIERS, Page %1 20 Beach Beauties Vying For Miss Huntington Post Twe:nty girls will seek Jayme Boyd"s Miss Huntington Beach title at 8 p.m .. Saturday in Huntington Beach High School auditorium. Marina High leads the: list nf con· tei'iders with six entrants. Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach high schools itre next with three entrants each, while only two Edison girl& signed up this year. Of the other six girls. two attend Golden We:st College. one is al Orange Coast. two are at universities and one works. Gordon Wheatly wi!I serve AS master of ceremonies for the fourth straight year . Tht Huntington Beach High stage band and Ed ison High"s Madrigal Chorus will provide enlertainment. Tickets for the city·s seventh pageant may be purchased .alt.he door for $1. The conte:st i~ sponsored by the women'1 division of the chamber of commerce. Girls competi ng are: Terri Hull, 17: Connie Wiggins, 17; Patricia Plate, 18; Debara Mackin . 17: Bobbie Thurston, 18; Candi Ca ple:, 18: Cynthia Lillard, 17: Carol Brown, 18; Carol de Keyser, 19: Re:becca Sullard. 17. And Anna Grobe, 17 ; Linda Sweet. 19; JacqueUn Spurlin, 18 ; Robin Bullard, 17: Jo Ellen Diedrich, 18; Mary O'Riley, 17; Ginger Roge:rs, 17; J11.n ~orgerson. 18; Susan Sprauge, 17, and Deborah Clark, 11. Ex-mental Patient Held War quire CongruslonaJ authorlution ror commitment or troop! overseas. He said they were a n unconstitutional in- frln_gement on the President'• powers as c<>mmander in chiel and would weaken the nation by tying the President'• hand.I in an emergency. "l don't remember whe:n I've been more disappointed ," Fulbright to Id Roge rs, facing the secretary who sat across from hlm behind a feJt-covered table in the Senate caucus room. Fulbright charge:d that U.S. operations in Cambodia and Laos were undertaken without consultation with. Congreu Ind that continuation of the Vietnam War had no . legal underpiMing. Rogers Cilntended that Pre:sident Nil· l'.ln's actions in Southeast A!ia were within his rights as commander in chief to protect American troops. "I don't think the President has 111y la ck or constittional authority t o withdraw from the war.'' Rogers snap. ped. "There comes a time ," F'ulbrlght responded, "when this double talk just doesn't appeal to us." It was possibly the sharpest publlc ex· change between Roiers and Fulbright - who have bet:n friends and goll partner• since the beginning of the Ni1on Administraion. OAILY ,ILOT Stf H !"MM RAPS 'FAILURE ARMY' Author Glaaur Public School Failures Told At GW College By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 "'9 O•llY ,lit! Siii! Public schools are turning cut failures like Detroit is turning out bad motor cars. That was the comparative assessment ol public education today by psychologin. author William Glasser who appeared 11 Blonde Charged ~1~1!~'"'" Thursday '' Golden w .. 1 "'l'be public achools are aur bigest In. Bomhm'. g Plot reservoirs for failures ," declared Dr. Glasser, author of tht book ••ScboolJ ·, Without Failure." A • l NY B nk "We take happy little kids and when g ams a . -they're siJ years old we put them into achoo! and sudde:nly they're failures. NEW YOR K (UPI) -A federal war~ Seventy-rive percent of them identify rant was issued today for the arrest of themselves as failures by the first grade activist Leslie Bacon on a charge of con-because the:y've been drafted Into tbe 1plrlng with sii alleged We1thermen to Failure Army." ~low up 1 Madison Avenue bank branch.. Dr. Glasser told Golden West student.a U.S. Commissioner Clayton D. Holl-the most important thing public educa· Inger issued the warrant on a govern· lion can do is to see that no child fails, menl complaint whlch said the 19-year· that ea~h become:s a ~uccess: 1:'he present Id bl ,_ 1 d 1 1 th pass-fail system wont permit 1t. o onui:. arres e BA mon as a , " . .. . "By this I don t mean we lihould have mater1a_J wltnes~. 1n t_he born.bing of the permissive or easy programs. But we U.S. Capitol, h~d adm1tled being ~resent should tell tbe kids, 'If you want to learn at m~e:tlngs w1~ the other con1p1rators and can't do it right away, we 'll wait.'" and d.1scu1sed with :ttiem a pl~ to ~mb The psychologist, whose teaching the First Nation~! City Bank Bu1ding. techniques have been used in &everal The other s11 alleged cona:plrators, school district.s around the nation seized by police out.side the: bank Sept. 14, believes that each person must Jdentiff pleaded guilty last month to reduced himse.U either as 1 succesa: or a failure:. state charges of conspi racy to conuniL The failures, according to Dr. Glasser, arS(}n. Three of them were sentenced a belie:ve they are not worth much and wee:k ago to max.lmum four.year priso11 believe that others don't think much o( terms. and two to three-year terms. them . Se:ntencing or the sixth ~as delayed _w"hile Once they have JdenUfied Lhemselves he: undergoes _psychiatric observation at as failures, they look for ways UJ re-in· Bellevue Hosp1t.a.I. force the picture they have of Miss Bacon, arrested April 27 in a the:mselves ~ashington. O.C., commune, was ques-"This is · why people behave ln such t1oned about the alleged plot to bomb_ the liCrewy ways. Prisoners commit allly !'lew York hank by a federal grand Jury crimes and get locked up over and over 1n Se:attle, where she wa.s taken after her again. They 've identified themselves at arrest. failure:s and they know how to fail. SENATE SETS SS T FOR VOTE WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senala agreed today to vote ne1t Wednesday on the re:vived Supersonic Transport pro- gram with SST oppone11ta emerging from day long negotiation1 in a 1trong tactical position. The vote, acheduled for about S p.m. will be on an amtlldment by Sen. Wlllia m Proxmire (0.Wis.). to reverat 1 clog• House decision earlier thia week that re· directs use Of $6S mlllion in SST funds Jn a $7.2 bi\l ion appropriation measu re. "Once you get used to It. you can really get in the groove and fail," added Dr. Gluse:r. Those persons who lend to identify the:mse:lve:s as successes have learned how to give and receive love:. They also have a feeling of worth About themselves. Dr. Glasser said their path leads to pleasure rather than pain. "It feels good. They're not motivated by pa in but lhty found out that it (success) feels good, .. be said. "U everyone in the world were on thiJ (See GLASSER, Page !J Cout Wea Cher Shipley Returns To Hospital Bed Four girls from U>s Amigos High are ~ntered in the contest. They 11re Nasaria Valle:z. 18: L1nd11 Anderson (not the cur- rent queen). 17: Jan Markland, 17. 11.nd Georgiana Sprow. 17 , Coed, 19, Axed to Death Hazy sunshine is the best the weatherman can offer thls week· end, with little temperature change on the Orange Cl'.la!l where mer-- cury will reach 62 on the beaches and lnt<i the lower 70! inland. Councilman l>lna\d 5hipley was rt.::td· milted In Pacific::i Hospital Huntingto n Beach Thursday for ~·ha! was described RS 11 re:st and checkup Shipley was admitted to the hospitlll M1rch 1$ with a case nf inrectiou. hepatitis. 11 hver disease. He was liter tran:!!ferrf'd to lhe ne:arby Huntington ReRch Convalescent Hospital and then .11!1owed home. He attended the las1 City Council meeting P.1ay 3. A r11cifica Hospital 11pokesmAn SA!d to- d11y that Shipley WRll '"rcsllng nicely" but thP nurse wits unable to say hciw long ht. wnuld rt.mttin 11 patient . Dr. Shipley i5 not exl"'Cted t.n return to his position 111 8 !'llolniey profe MM 1t Cal St,,lt l..ong Re11ch until September. The other nine ;iris, all from Fountain Valle:y High. are Bell y Oliver, 17: Nina Halliwill . 17; Karen Hollennan, 17: Gentv1 Henry, 17 : Laurie Acton, 17: Anita Parki;, 18; Lynn Evans. 17; Mitureen Duffy, 17 and Madeline Orsll\o, 17. P resident Traveling WASiflNGTON (AP I -President Ni1- 0!! is OyinJt to f'lorid1 today for 11 Wf!fkf!nd stay 1t his Key Biscayne villa. Mr11. Nixon Is remitining In Washlnglon. .. Tbt. President Is etpected lo return to tht While House Monday. FROM WIRE SERVICES BELLFLOWER -Blinded by her own blood, a Cal State Long Beach coed t.sca ptd from a crar.ed roomer ju.st evicted by he:r grandmother Thursday. after being hacked and 5tabbed with a knife and ax . The former men tal patient was di~ar~ ed by an ~year-old • m11n, but Ktrry Loui5e Sm.Jlh. 19, died 21h ho\frs 11ttr during a dC.11perate team effort to MJve her llff:. • 1 A do1.en pin!$ of blood were 'raic!fid tn Bellflower Community Hospital by polie! helicopter and patrol car. while the rusped. Donald Kirkpatr ick. 33. waa being questioned by homicide detecUves. Once a Camarillo State Hospital pa- tient, Kirkpatrick was booked by Lakewood Sheriff'& deputies on charge:& or murder following the 4: 15 p.m. hatking •Pree. "Miss Sinith was mace dead than alive •hen •he arrived at the hospital ... Uld ·one detictlve tiot lng she' auflered a -2~ Inch gash In '!\tr skull plus many other ~rtal wounds. Her 1ccuscd klller·was jumped by·J6hh 1~. Lindenshov·. Ml. 1 te.rl1tit of "Mrs. Johanna Applf:, ?6. the 1Jii>arent quarry of Klrkpatrlck. · • j ' "She wu laking out the trash when the attack occurred,'' lnvea:tlgat.on uld. Kirkpatrick reportedly burst Into her room at 4: 15 p.m. ind began hacking tnd slashing the YOW'li woman. She was atrue!lc numerOUit'"Umes tn the head, face .and body b<lor< runillng·bllnd- ly out or the m1\n house to wlil'ch 1n: at· I.ached •m•lltl" Rntal units. Kirkpatrick hlmselr returned after following Miss Smith out, where the elderly · tenant who had come to her aid ·took the weapons a"way a"nd called authorities. "I juit murdere.td my wife,•• he wu 1q'uoted 11 uylni. INSIDE TODAY Tltt city of Huntington Btach is ltolding an all da.11 ftstiool i" Murd11 Po rk ihl.s Soturda11. You co" read. all oboui ii in toda11'1 Weektndtr. l • z DAILY PILOT H Lost Cl1a11ce SST Gets Toehold With Senate Vote WASHINGTON (AP) -The supersonic t.ransporl. has grasped an uneasy f.enale toehold as its opponents ponder delaying • final vote and backers estimate a new start might cost taxpayers an extra $1 bUllon. With lta powerful chairman turning . from previow support of federal ~'T subsicllta, lhe Senate Appropriations Committee voted 13 to 7 Thursday to ap- prove House pA3s!d action granting the project SSS million and giving it one more rWl through the congressional obstacle "°"""' Sen. Alleil J . Ellender (0-La.), the From Page 1 GLASSER ... slde, the W<>rld would be in good shape.'' he added. ''But in the United States it's about fifly.fifty ." ·People who fall are usually associated wi th !onliness pain and depression, ac- cording to Dr. Glasser. Sometimes they resort to pain relievers. "There are many pain relievers In our goc)ety. The classic pain rellever is akohol . People don 't drink it because it tastes good but because it relieves their pain," said Dr. Glasser. Amon the more modern pain relievers of this socitty are a variety of pills and drugs added Dr. Glasser, "And heroin is the greatest pain reliever In the whole world.'' "Pain relievers should be replaced with persons who ca re for you and think you're worthwhile," he said. Telephone Firms Cliange Methods Of Collecting A little known business crganization has caused the giant Pacific and General Telephone companies to cha nge their method! of billing c o m me r c i a I customen. L. David Fox of 220 City Boulevard West, Orange, executive director or the Nat i on a I Businessmen's Association, brought a complaint to the Public Utilities Commission dur ing a hearing Thursday in Santa Ana. Fox, whose organization shoold nol be coo.fused wilh the. National Association of Businessmen, told the PUC that some of his clients had been threatened with removal of their telephones if they did not pay their directory advertising charges. · This, Fox asserted, was a violation of the telephone companies' taritr regula- tions as approved by the PUC. Although Fox didn 't convince the Pacilic and General Telephone attorneys that the companies had actually threaten- ed customers with removal <lf their telephoMs for directory ad bills, the companies reported lhal they are rewording the bills. Fox and four witnesses took lhe stand tn the PUC hearinJ:: in the old county courthouse in Santa Ana before Ex· aminer Robtrt D. OeWolf. Fox 's complaint centered on allegations that when sending notices to customers with overdue accounts. the telephone companies lumped the service charges with the directory charges. He did not prove, through testimony, that anyone's phone had ever been removed becau$e di.rectory ad$ were not paid, but he did create enough of a fuss that the companies are revising their bills Md late payment nolites to show that the telephone will only be removed for non-payment of service charges. OU.Mel COAST DAILY PILOT OUH'IE C:OA.IT PUI LllHING COMl"AHY ••bert H. 'WeeJ ,,.'""' .,.. l"Wlltlllf' chairman said he doubts the Seaate will accept new costs Which he pegged at an extra $.100 million and which the Boeing Co. board chairman said are likely to range from $500 million to $1 billion. ··1 think it's still dead ," Ellender said. "You won't get the votes in the Senate. lt's that simple." A Senate vote confirmi ng two previoU! anti-SST decisions would throw lhe whole matter once again into a conference with the Hou.se with comp letely unprtdictable results. · Federal aid to the SST wii! withdrawn in ~1arcb after Congress debated whether the money could be better spent and whether the plane might damage the en- vironment. Ellender said he wanll to achedule a vote on the is.sue for sometime next week, if Sen. Will iam Proxmire (D·Wls.), leading spokesman against SST, will agree to a time limit on debate. But Proxmire has said he wants the full implicationJ of extra costs to sink In, and that he is willing. to use any of his Senate rights, including the fillbuster, to fight the project. Proxmire assistants said the senator probably will iruiist on hard cost figure• before ·making any moves. But no two estimates ()( those coats are the same. Boeing Chairman William Allen told a news conference that if the SST i1 revived, all rontrat ts and iubcontracts must be renegotiated, and industry must be assured the government will not back away a second tlme. Officer Accused Of Beach Death Denied Freedom A poli ce officer's plea for di!missal of the murder charges filed agalnst him after officers alleged he shot and killed a fellow patron in a Hun tington Beach Bar was rejected Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Howard Cameron dismissed the motion filed by Clifton J. Schusse, 26, of 5672 Rodgers Drive, Huntington &ach, and ordered the Los Angele• Police Department patrolmaa to face trial June 7. Schusse will be held in Fullerton city jail until the trial date. A further plea for bail was denied by Judge Gameron. The off.duty officer was arrested !isl ~1arch 15 shortly after be allegedly pu t two bull et& into Mark A. Rodieni, 2', of Buena Park out.side the Swinger bar on Beach ,Boulevard. Arresting officers said the 1hooUng climued a quarrel betwee n SchUSllle and other patrons who objected to the officer feeding cigaretles to a stray dog. Wll· nesses testified ln mun ic ipal court th1t Schusse sent a friend out tO his car to get his gun and that he used the weapon to kill Rodgers. Lions Club Sets Pancake Feast Afembers of lhe Huntington Beach Lions Club are inviting the public to eat breakfast \11th them this Saturday from 7 a.m. to II a.m. The $1 donation breakfast will consist Qf hotcakes .• .s.a.Ul!ag1::, fruit juice and cof- fee . Each Licket entitles the bearer to eat as much as he wants. This year's breakfast will be held e1t the downtown Lake Park at the corner of 11th Street and Lake Street. Proceeds will be used to purchase eye glasses for needy local youngsters. Since 1933 the Huntington Beach Lions hav e bo ught 612 eye glasses f<>r school children st a total cost of $14,688. Most of the money \vas raised by the Annual Lions Club Breakfast. b AIL'r l"ILOT ll1fl l"M,. MUSIC MAKERS -Ocean Vie \V School District's Mrs. Mary Clow teaches music without mistakes. Among her students ,are (from left) Andy Sacks, Arnez Raj, Lindquist. 1.tike 1t1inadco, Valerie Loya alld Cindy Beautiful Musi~ Ba1iging Out Notes Chil.d's Play Making beautiful mu.Ye can be child's play. It 's being pro\·en every day at Spring View School ln Huntington Beach by first and second graders who know absolutely nothing about m\ISic and cannot read a 5ingle note. The secret lies in the instruments them.selves which were designed by West c:erman composer Carl Orfr. creator of the "Carmina Burana" and a man who has done much work wilh young children. Orff's xylophones, metalophones and glockenspiels can be set up on a panatom.ic scale, making it impossible to strike a sour note, according to teacher Mary Clow. ''The childrtn can have immediate suc· ceu with them because it is impossib le to make a mistake . They allow them to ex· pru:s themselves without w o r r y I n g whether they've hit a quarter note of a half note," she said. Mrs. Clow said the instruments were purchased "'hen she and other teachers pooled their instructional budget. The prire, $630. \\'as high, but , she says, even- tually all of the Spring View pupils v.·ould Cultural Week Activities End After Picnic Fountain Valley Cultural Arts Week ac· Livities wind up Sunday y,ith a pioneer picnic from noon to ti p.m. at Harper Park. Indian, Me~can and Japanese dancers v.·i1\ perform for picnickers along v.·ith a local square dance group. Pie, punch, cake and CQffee will be offered at the park , but residents must bring their o.,.,·n picnic Jull('h. be usin g them. The Orff instruments are being lLSed to help the students distinguish between sounds and rhythm patterns. Often children wil l provide the background rhythm for a student who is "soloi~g·• by pecking out a simple melody with a wooden hammer. "The children can use the instruments as a mean! of communication and im- pression. They have a beautiful musical quality when you coruiider how compact they are," Mrs. Clow said. "ll's an exciting thing for the children. They really go crazy over the in· struments." And although Mrs. Clow often spends an hour with kicb banglng away on the Orff'• creations, she doesn't go crazy. "No matter how you hit the notes. you can't make a mistake. It always sounds beautUul," she said. Pageant Prize Taken From Car Sponsors of Saturday's Miss Fount.a.in Vall ey Pageant hope someone who took a car-stereo tape cassette playe r Thursday will return it to city hall , 10200 Slater Ave. The brand-new un it "'as intended as <lne of the major prizes for the girl v.·ho \Vins the Miss Fountain Valley crown. .. It was ta ken abou t 4 p.m .. Thursday. from the car of Mrs. Diddy Lammers:· reports Mrs. Peggy Funk, organizer of the pageant. ··There v.·ere other gifts left untouched in the car," she said. "If the person who took it would just return it, there .,.,-on't be any questions as ked . lt was one of our top prizes." Fro111 Page l FLIERS .... their parents the making of an airline. ''Each company v;as given a $15 million budget to "'·ork wi!h and certain functions to perform," ~lrs. Vaill said. Students copied the budget of United Airlines to determine the percentage of expenditures for each c<>mmlUee : pilots, stewardesses, finance, public relations and advertising, personnel, passenger service, operations, maintenance. Resourceful Imperial f inance ex· ecutives wrote to a klcal branch or Bank of America for a loan. They got it, $5 million -in spirit. Imperial <lWns one 747 and one Electra , while JSA operates four electras. Before the kids were fully into it, they listened to advice from a stock broker, a pilot, a stewardess, an outdoor ad- vertising executive and other speakers connected with air travel. The advertising committet: designed television spots. magaiine adds, radio an· nouncements and biUboard signs. The Jmperja! slogan Is: "You don't have to be a king tony on Imperial." lt"s rival says "The only way is JSA." Stewardesses designed their 011i'fl cos- tumes. but the first try v.·as voled do.,.,'Tl '"'hen the boys said they wanted shorter ~kirts on the girls. T\\·o crepe paper COS· tumes were actually CQnstrucled. •·This entire project covers our social science st udy," Mrs. Vaill pointed out. By working \Yilh alt parts of an airline co1npany, the students also learn practical applications for math, business, wriling and leadership. "For creative writing. each youngster.~ had to make up an inrtight magazine,'' r-.1rs. Vaill added. "And this project sho\\'· ed us some students beco ming leaders who never had before." Such flight destinations as San Fran· cisco, San Diego, Sac ramento and Salina are on the schedule. But on Monday. both companies will be grounded . their study over. • Sadat Foils Political Coup Try CAffiO (UPI l -President Anwar Sadat said tonight he had foiled "wtiat 11mounted to a roup" by his political OP" ponents and that Gen . ~fohammed Fawzl, the war mini!ter, had been placed undet house arrest. Other opponents were jail· «! . Sadat spoke in a nationwide broadcast one day after six cabiaet ministers and three top po~cymakers resigned in Egypt's bigge!t political upheaval since the 1967 war v.·ith Israel. He said se\'eral members of the central committee of the Arab Socialist Union and two senior police officers were sent to jail, Sadat announced plans for a complete reorganization o( the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only political party. (Earlier story, page 4). He said free elections will be held from ''top to bottom" under his <lWn supervision and ''l will be extremely cruel to anybody who attempt to rig the elections.'' The political crisis was so serious that government leaders or their deputies from Libya, Syria and th e Sudan flew unexpectedly to Cairo earlier today to pledge their solidarity with Sadat. Sadat said he asked Vice Prerniu and Interior Minister Sharawi Comaa to resign because Gomaa, as head or the union's organizational committee, had engineered maneuvers to embarrw the president. He said five of the ministers who quit Thursday announced thelr resignations over Cairo radio without his kno\lo·ledge. Fav.'Zi \ras one of those who re signed. Sadat said he discovered only Thursday a tape recorder in his own room at the Republican Palace. He said he discovered the instrument by using an electronic device after being lipped of f by 50mc- ministers. He said the recorder was installed by Intelligence operatives working under former ministers Gomaa and Sarni Sharaf. Sadat said the five ministers \\'ho an-- noW1ccd their resignat ions on the radio quil to sho.,.,, solidarity with Gomaa . "They lhough t th.at Egypt will collapse but today v.·e formed a new government including technicians. professors and some of the many effi cient people with \\'horn our land abounds ," Sadat said. Sadat said he was leaving his office im· medialely arter the one hour and 25 minute speech to administer the oath to the new cabinet. Ky Esca pes Injury, Copter Forced Down CHA U DOC PROVINCE. Vietnam (UPI 1 -Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam escaped injury Friday .,.,,hen the military helicopter he was aboard was forced to land in a rice paddy due to mechanica l difficulties. The vice preside nt , wtxi was en route to deliver a speech at a religious gatheri ng in a remote area of th1s province near the Cambodian border, boarded an ac- companying Vietnamese air f o r c t helicopter and proceeded to the ceremony "·ithout incident. There v.·ill also be contests, games and other atti.,,itits. Some 2.10 F'o1intai n Valley oldtimers v.-iU be special guests at the picnic. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL Culture week activit.ies Saturday in- clude hobby, flnwer and art shows from JO a.m. lo 5 p.m. al the community center. There v.•i\I also be co ntinuous en- tertainment at the center and a junior thea'ter presentation at 10 a.m. Bus tours of the city wi ll leave eath half hour from tit,\' hall from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. The Miss Founta in Valley contest tops off Saturday ev ents at 7:30 p.m. in the commuJlity center. J •t• l . Cwrl •Y' Vkt l"mio.nt .... C.-11 Mt~ Tliie11111 ICttTif t:4HIW Thell'll l A. Mwr,hi111 /rlll ,..lh'lt E<llJW Ale11 Olr~i11 Well ~ <-~""" Finch to Leave Capitol After 1972 Elections ;,lbt tf 'W. I ''' Ao.-.11!0 EO H111tl11..._ ,._, Offk• 1717.!i 101,h l 1wl1Y1rJ M1ili111 AJdr1111 r.o. l oK ,,0, '2641 0,..,. Offkn L..-a.en: m 1'«•1 A.v- c.11 ,,,..,,.! DI Wft/ l t y II""" "',,.._, 1.-dl: = ,,.,....,.., .... : ..... "' '9n (!-"; J0s. tlortll ii C.mino lt~I bAll'r l"ILOT, 'Wit~ -\do It'°'"""'"~ M-1"/'Dlt. It pUMW. M l!' WIU9I J,....,. 111., ...... ,, .. " 11'1111 ...... "°" lttMlt l.a(tt., tol~ ... d't. Ca,11 Ma&, HWll"""" ~ '"-!•Ill 'li'•llly. '°" ,...._,._, c..i.w-tNll 1 ... 1~1c:a-, ,..,.. ""'" -....._. tlllltt.oi ..... lllcltNI '°""Mil Nnt b 1 llt m '#•I ••1 snet, c.otla MIM. T...,1111 17 141 141-4JJ1 Cit l:Ael A~hl .. '41·1171 °""'"""'• 1tn, 0....,. CM.r ,,_.11111119 ~. ,.. -1torift. """"'' ...... ....... --... ''"""'"--'' ....,...i., _, ..., ~ .wl"-1 ....... ,,,,,_ ,.. ... ti '*""""; ..,..-. he ... ci. .. ,.. .... ~Id ,, "'..,.., ~ ~ Otf9 M-. C..11'-"lt. ~IM lrf C:trl'ltr si.» ~YI ,,., """II P.11 -'111¥1 '"""'"" HttlM ........ .u.lf _...,,. Nixon Administration 1dviser Robert JI. Finch announced Thursday in Anaheim that he will wash his hands of \Vashington after the 1972 elections, hit - ting the road home lo campaign again in Californ ia. ··r11 come back as soon as the nex t election is over. I've already told the President," said the former lieutenant governo r v.·ho may take a shot at the sovernorship ibe1f. '·l've promised my family lo come back:' Speaking to a plumbing, healing and C'OOling rontractors' convention at the 01Sneyland lintel, Finch covered much ground on a local, national and lnler· nal1onal srale. 1 Ht said he will devole efforts in month~ ahead to campaigning for President Nit· on 's re-election then may run Jn 1174 •• U.S. senator or governor. The rormtr Secretary or He.11th Educ:i · tion and Welfare predicted current unemployment in California will be htlpcd b)' I lltW S6 m\11\on flsc-a! year allocation for m:i.npow'r tralnin&. The fMeral grant will en1ble a 13-wetll; continuation nf present programs, with fu nds sptnl on 5,000 of the herd-eore unemployed to develop work skills 1tnd find jobs. A remaining $1 n1illion from A prior allotment V.'ill be 11dministcred by the California Department or Hum a n Resources Development, while more funds will be forthcoming next fiscal year. "And they'JI be spent in the areas - such as Orange Count y -which have the most difficult unem ployment problem3." f'inch declarrd. He said America faces a differen t crisis ln the health care field. with a short.age of more than 100,000 doctors 1nd at least f10 bi!Uon required just lo start bringing U.S. standar~ up to a reason- able le11el. One of the President's four main areas or program development in t h e politically-aiUcal coming year will be In health, Finch added, plus housing, educa· lion and drug control efforts -exercised at th e United Nations: level. Turning to other issues, F I n c h predicted the Vietnam War situation ut.lllzed by Congressman P•ul ~1lC'los- 11ey's effort to dump "Nixon will no longer he: a point of conClict for polltlcal advan· lllftl':. - I Ba•u+ifully 1tyled it the word for Mo1 rche11o1. This ht nd1om1 double pedestal to1ble f.o1 ture1 • c.lo111ic p•rque top plu1 3 l1o1v11 to mo1tch. It •xfend1 to 130'' wh •n full y opened. Thi ch o1 ir1 m•y be orcl1 red wit h c;ane o11 1hown, or with bo1c.k p o1d1. Stop in e nd view thi1 •)(qui1ite dining 11t todo1y. TA BLE ·-·----------·-·-··-·--" .. --... -$51'. SI DE CHAIRS ---·-------------·-·· ..,_ $1l9. ARM CHAIRS .. ------·----·-.... -.. ..,, $159. ,.. Sire: 70 '' x 44" W ith J, 22" leo1 .,es DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wntclllf Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 ~IWPO RT ITORI OPIN FllDAT ,,l , Profeasion•I Interior Desig ners Av•ll•bl t -AID INTERIORS rh-Tell ft" Mnt ef o ,_.. CM1~ l40.1 J6J LAGUNA BEACH 3-45 North Co11t Hwy. Phone: -494-6551 I • ' . ._, • .. -.._ -' Klan Leader Maintain~ Calley Victim of Bias TUSCALOOSA, Ali . (UPI) -'Ille Ku Klux Klan ao- cusad lh1 Anny 1'luriday of letlini Nearoes involved ln the P..ty Lai rQJSSacr• go free whll• m1ki.n1 1 "ac1pe101t'' of Lt. William Calley Jr. The charge came in an editorial by Robe.rl M. Shelt.M, Imperial wtu.rd ot the Klan , printed ln the or11lfllzatlon'1 monthly "Fiery Cross" ma1utne. Shelton nld eight of the J 1 men originally cherged Jn the My Lal Incident were black. "Why have none of them been brought to trial, why only the white lieutenant who obvloualy had no control over th1 ... Nearoe• in thil brleade," he 1ald. ''01 coune, we could not have a Negro up for trial, that would mike America look lib a bigoted country," Shelton wrote. A bl1ci. 10ldler charafd in the tt1y Lai main.ere was acquitted by a court-martt1l earlltr this year. 6Yes, Virginia •• ' • Girl Who Received Santa Letter Dies VALATIE, N.Y. (UPI) - Mr1. Laura Vtrl&lna O'Hanlon I>Guglas, the woman who received the "Yes, Vtrainia, there is a Santa. Claus" letter died Thursday in a nurstna home. She was 81. Virginia O'Hanlon was 8, when she wrote the New York Sun, 11klng : "SOme of my little friends say there ia no Santa Oaw. Papa says lf you see it in the Sun, it'• 50. Please tell me the truth, is there a Santa Claus?" Assistant Editor Francis P. Church penned the famous editorial reply in which he answered Virginia's friends we.re wrong and concluded : "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as cer· tainly as love and generO.!l!ty and devotion txist, and you know that they abound and give to your life it.s highest beauty and joy. Alas , how dreary would be the world if there were •o Santa Claus. It wou ld be as dreary as iJ there were no Virglnias." Mrs. Dougl1s often was reti- cent about her p1rt In the editorial and 1ald it was Church, who died in 1915. who !hould have bttn remem - bered . She said it was Church's repl y lh\t carried the "pbllosophy of ho~ and love." ~' Uf'I T1l1111holt DEAD AT 81 Virginia Dougl11 She Uved most of her Jife In New York City as a teacher and principal and retired about 15 years ago. She Jived in North Chatham, near Albany, v.·ith relatives. 1'1rs. Douglas' health has been fai lng for some time and she 1pent the last tw o Christmases in the hospital. ' . . . ' rrtday, May 14, 1~71 DAILY PILOT G Jurors Act Swiftly Amtrak Leader Blasted 13 Black P'anthers Cleared in NY NEW YORK (AP) -Aller============================ 1n elghl-month trial, 13 Black Panthers acc\L5f!d of bomb conspiracy b1vt bten 1c- qultttd in a verdict reached JO 1wlftJy thlt tht juror1 1urpria.. td even themul'l11. WASfUNGTON (AP) -The two top conareutonal authors of the law to salvage rail passenger aervice have sent Amtr1k'1 bo11 1 bllatering Jet· ter detaUlna their dlsple1sure over how the new corporallon ill beina run. "There ii time to correct the arlevow errors that have occurred," Sen. W1rren G. Magnuson (0.Wuh.), and Rep. Harley o. Sta1ger1, (0. W.Va.), told Amtrak Pruldent and Board Ch1lrman Roaer Lewis, "and w1 herewith urge you to llkl 1pproprl1t1 and swift action. "If the corporation la to get off to a good start," they wrote Lewis Thursday nle;ht, "there are certain immediate changes in policy that are euential." The !louse ls considering a Senate pauet.r e 1 o I u t lo n ••de.signed tall the cor- poration to do what It ahouJd have done anyw1y,'1 1dded the leader1 of the committees that created the 1970 Ra 11 Passenger Service Act. "The point is that Congress ahould no~ have to pry this kind of information loose," they said. "We urge that this ridiculous sltualion be changed without delay." Teamsters Give Hoffa More Time HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (APl - Teamsters Union President James R. Hofla -1tll\ powerful after tour yeara ln prison -has received 1 go ahead from othtt top leaders of the union for a last ditch try to win his freedom and resume control of t h e truckers' union. "Jimmy wanL!I 20 d1y1 until the first week in June before he n1akes up Ns mind on whether to ru11. for re-elec- tion," a high union aource said Thursday of Hoffa'• l1te1t bid for freedom on a claim of new evidence. "They are going to wa it for him. They voted to wait for hlm," said the aource of lht action of tht Teamsters El· ecuUve Board meeting he.re . Militant Rabbi Kahane, Italy Chieftain Unite The panel, which included five bl1clu and a Puerto :Rican, acqul1tad the defen· d1nt1 en au 12 count.I of an in· dlclment 316 hours afttr the c11e had been turned ever to them Thur1d1y. ··we had lunch and began talking and we we.re amazed to find out riJhl away thaL we felt the 11me," said Frederick Hills, an editor. "The miracle wa1 th1t 12 people ef such ex- t r 10rdIn1 r l l y dlvtrse b1ckground1 all felt prelly much the 11me w1y." It took the foreman, J1mes Fo1, a black musician, JO minutes to read the verdict on each of 12 counts for each of the 13 defendants. Spectal&rs cheered, applauded and s'ob- bed as he read the last of the 156 verdicts, all "not cuilty." Afenl Shakur, one of two women defendant~. and the on\~ one of the 13 free in ball, shrieked 11 Fox read "not guilty'' counts against her hus- band Lumumba, 29. He and most of ·~e other defendants had been In jail 1ince arrested in predawn raids April 2, 1969. Jurora, defendants. a ix defense lawyers, relatives and friends crowded into the lobby of the Criminal C o u r t s buildin5, laughing. crying and hugging each other. "I'm da zed -I'm dazed," said Curtis Powell, one ef the defendants. "We all came wlrh bags, prepared to stay a long time, but it wasn't necessary," aald juror Joseph Garry, a postal NEW YORK (U PI ) -Rabbi ment harassment. clerk. Meir Kahane, head of the Stating that "conspiracy Is "There was evidence Rll Jewish Defense League and synonymous with the word right, but it just wasn't Joseph Colombo Sr.. found er frame." Colombo aald his enough." of the Italian-American Civil group might support the JDL Two of those acquitted fled Riahts League pledged the.ir in H1 protest demonstrations t8 Algeria during the trial. mutual support Thur 1 day it Soviet milslorui and other Chief defense lawyer Gerald against what they describerl as facilities. Lefcourt said he would try to "government harassment." C.Olombo, who had led his ~l~~'!:r Ta~ a~~tu~~cha~J The unusual and informal group on picket lines out.side 1tioore. who forfeited bail or exchanges of support came at FBI offices 11id if the JDL a news conferetce following "needs our 1upport and asi.a.,_1_1_~_.ooo_, ______ _ Kahane 's rtlease on ball after for it, we certainly will allow he had been arrested on our iupport." charges of In t e r s l a t e Kahane. offered similar aup- transportaUon of guns and el· port for the Jta.lial\I and aaid plosives. M and Colombo had become The militant Kahane claim-interested In a common cauae ed federal authoriliet were through a mutual interest in trying lo suppre55 the JOT,'11 "brotherhood." protests against treatment of Kahane. who was Indicted Jews In Russia. with 12 other perlMI Wed· wia ca fte• ltlp R,gl1t1r now! You may win a fRE! tr ip to Alaska fo r 2 via P&.0 Brltlat'I Cruise !Inoa ; FREE trip to Africa for 1 vii TWA; FREE trfp to ttl• Yucatan for 2 via Mexlcana A1rllnes; FR.EE 1G-•pe•d blkt . ••• caftd you•teon yout""!Y high-ttylng wfth 1 trlv91- l!ght wardrobe from ~ Grodins tucked into your c:anvaa bag. f\lo-wrink~• easy-caring knits moving with you ; just right for beirig In new pl1eo1. Start Mre. Coita Mesa only - SATURDAY, MAY IS NOON 'TIL l Come in and taUr: to Mr. Allan R. Gray of Ma y Co. World Traval. He'll bt ~lad to an•W•r your traval qutstion1. gtodiftl COSTA MESA Sewth Ce••t 'le11 o,.. W .. JUtflb Colombo, who has been &c· nesday. said his oraanlz.ation cus~ of being an underworld had legally registtted weapons chieftain, said the JDL &nd and had trained "several hun- tbe lt.alian-Amerlcan League dred American Jews" to use WASHINGTON (UPI) -A chairman of the H 0 u 8 e .~w".'.'.:":_l>bo~lh~v~l~ct~lm~s~o~f _!g~ov'.'e~m-~__:!lh<~m~. ________ !_ ___ ====---__!================================ House subcommittee, acting in Administration subcommittee More Capitol Police, K9 Dog Corps Sought the wake cf the March 1 born-on Polict, told UPI he would bing of the Capitol, 11 con-ask his panel f\.1onday te •P- siderlng proposals to increase prove those features. as well the Capitol police force by 214 as proposals to inst.all tlec- men and to create a Kt corps Ironic surveillance equipment with dogs trained lo sniff out in the Capitol and to authorize bombs. overtime pay for police. Rep. Kenneth Gray (0-l\l.), Demands came from both Whittier OKs Nixon Honor, 3-1 the Senate and House to bolster the Capitol police force and to tighten security after the early morning bomb blast en the ground floor of the Senate side of the Capitol. Tht bombing. still unsolved, in· jured no one but caused $200.000 damage. Repair work is under v.·ay. Gray said a comprehensive WHITIIER (UP I) -By a 3-bill, requiring only House 11nd to-1 margin, Whlttler College not Senate approval , would be 1tudenta have exp re a ae d presented to the subcommiltee disapproval of President Nix· to add the 214 men to the 354 on'• honorary degree. officers now assigned to the Nixon, 1 19S4 graduate of House side of the Capitol and the small school, was awar~d to the three Hoose office an honorary deeree of law in buildings. There are 262 of- 1954 while he wu vice pre&i· ficers assigned to the Senate denl side in addition to 4 9 The vole Thursday was 64'-Wash in gt on metropolitan 149 again1l revocation. 'Thert pol ice officers who havt been are 1,900 atudent.s al U. detached to work with the achoo!. Capitol force. The 20-member s t u d e n l ;=="=========;! aenate three weeks ago passed the resolution that asked the. college to revoke the honorary degree All a protest aga inst the U.S. war pollclu in Southeast Asia . stop look seventy-ones •I LOCAL Ne elhtt new1p1p•t ltll• you Mert , evttY dty. tbout wh•l'1 9elnt on i11 the c;.reeter Orintt Cot•t then the DAILY ,llOT. ~~~ 2900 HAFIBOR BLVD./ COSTA MESA (711) ~0.0100 c (Change ·banksJ Checking account service cl1arges are inconvenient, irr~ tating,and often add up to thirty or forty dollars a year.So why pay them? Keep a hundred dollar minimum balance at Southern California First National Bank and you'll never pay another service charge, no matter how, ..... ....- many checks you write. Wor1't that be a relief. F1R8TNATIONAL- ... n"'t-f-.ll.!.C. 58 o(ficn in 0t1'1'1J~. Lot: An1~~' ind S&ll Dit',oroudd • Coat• Me••, 230 East 17th Street, 642·1660 • Hut1t ln9 ton Beach, 8899 Adams Avenue, 962-3377 -17122 Beach Blvd., 847-9681 , ' ' DAILY P ILOT EDITORIAL P A GE 1 Savings Could Res ult The city of tlunlington Beach has hired a project manager f2, oversee construction of the new centra Ii· brary and ~ic center complex. The app<>intment, at first thought, could appear to be an untimely addition to the city payroll in view of the present plight of .n;iunicipal finances. From another viewpoint. however, the hiring of Aubrey Horn of Ne~·· port Beach is a sound decision that may well result in 5avings to the city many times his salary. Horn, a licensed architect and civil engineer, wilt not have the status of a staff member in that he has been signed to a contract at $18,000 a year. The con· tract will terminate automatically \\'hen the $3 million llbrarr in tbe central park and $8.5 million civic center opposite the Huntington Beach High School are com· pleted in about two to two and one hill years. Horn was chosen from more than 70 applicanU and bas worked in construction and enpneering since 1934. The position is one that requires special qualifi· cation5-<1ualificalion.s not often found unong those al· ready on the payroll. ' And the JOb itself, one of insuring the facilities are built t.o specifications and within the cost estimates is one that cannot go unfilled. Rock Festival Concerns Three small rock festivals at Mile Square Regional Park have caused some concern among Fountain Valley residents and city officials. The obvious implication is that rock festivals might grow into a large, regular fea· lure at the park. Several city councilmen were upset that the park issues permits for such activities without any investi· gation of those involved in the activity. And the police department wants to know beforehand when a rock fes· tival is planned. Park officials have now agreed to notify the local police -1>heriffs deputies are responsible ln1ide the park -prior to any large activity scheduled in tbe park. But investigations of persons who want to use a public park seem unnecessary, although rock festlva.ls have presented special traffic policing problems in some communities. There have been no serious incidents dur· ing any of the three p r e v i o u s rock festivals and the large.st crowd reached a peak of only 3,000. Such music events can be -and so far have been -pleasant gath· erings for the youth. It's wise to be alert, but even wiser not to become unduly alarmed. Communi ty Fair Saturday Judging from the tremendous response by Hun- tingt.on Beach civic organizations, this Saturday's second annual Communty Fair promises to be an extravagant:a. " No fewer than 100 attractions, including fun booths, rock bands, Indian dancers, drill teams and even a strol· ling ~rgan ~inder with a monkey will bid for lhe at· tention of visitors at Murdy Park from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Even though 1ast year's fair drew fewer entries, it was heavily supported by the community and should have served as an excellent \Varmup for this year's big· ger and better show. The Huntington Beach Coordinating Council is again sponsoring the Community Fair \vith the goal of drawing together the various elements of l-luntlngton Beach's sprawling co1nmunity. Organizations bringing the attractions to the fair have found it a welcome way to swell their membership ranks by making contacts with new persons. They also &ee it as a means of eanting extra money for their trca· suries. . Continued success of the Community Fair may soon assure it a position comparable to the Fourth or July Parade and the Surfing Champions.hips as one of the city's biggest annual attractions. H IN TER(ON TINENTAL ~AtLISTI ( MISSILES A Cancer Tax Ov erride : One More Chance in .June In America" s -Big Cities tr you live in New York and hail • cab tn midtown, the driver ~·on 't take you to Harlem if it's aft.er sundown. If you live in Chicago and want to take a cab at night to the South or West Side ghettos, the back will refuse, wiU make you pay first, or will demand an extra fare for the trip. Harlem. the Chi· cago ghetl.oli, and dozeru like them throoghout the na- tion, are enclaves: they exist like for- eign communities In a country, controlled (more ·or Jess ) by an occupying police force. TIIEY DON'T LJVE on the same monetary syatem, either. Everything costs more -food, shelter. appliances, and credit most of all . The jobless rate i! twice as high; schooling is half as good ; gamblers and pimps and dope-passer! are the figures of authority h<?re. And the poor who live here are threq times more likely to be robbed. burglarized or mug· ged than the citizens living else~·here. This i! quite literally a cance r in the community, and one that can only spread. It ls past the point v.• he re anyone can assign b I a m e or responsibility ; It makes no difference now how the disease Nrt.ed -it must be got tmder control or every large city in the U.S. will perish. WHAT ARE WE doing about it? Prac· tically nothing. Large sums are •Po Dear Gloom ,-. •' Gm: It's a good thing the Huntington Beach Civic Center project ma n- ager has a real estate broker's license. Judging by the city'• fi· nances, be may have to seU tht site. -D. '.R. T, "'"' fMtvr. !"ff~ ,..._.. "'--- --UJ' fM• t i "" --· llflf JllW "" ,....., • • ._,. ..,.. Dtltr ,tit,, propriated, •gencies and bureans and rnmmissions are appointed, staffed and funded -but !Omehow liW. of the money gets down where it b mO!t neecJ.. ed. Hou.sing starts are negligible, jobs are scarce, training is • joke, and "law en- forctment" is a blend of corruption, negligence and repression. These are facts it only takes 24 hours tit find ouL Condttions are far better in the South than in almost all Northern cities. The South is beginning to turn it.self around. having learned that a system of org111iz· ed bigotry simply doe!n't work in modem 1nduslrial society. The Northern big cities don't practice official bigotry: they simp- ly follow a "scorched earth" policy in reverse, by v.•hich everything the poor minorities need to subsist is denied them. THE SOCIAL BODY i! like a physical organism: il is impos!ible to have an un· treated focus of infection lha~ will not spread throughout the whole systel1'W" Unless a cancer is burned out, or uci!ed in 5ome way, it w i I t metastasize. throughout the whole body. And no part of the "body" of the community will re- main unaffected by this poison. II is too late for sermonizing, moraliz• Ing. philosophizing, or mUing v•lue- judgme111ts on one segment of society or another. We are all in the 1ame cont•- gious ward, and there is no isolation chamber. In a time of plague. only con· cern for the commoa good can sa\'t us. c .an y OU R emember? Can you remember when: You never dreamed our country could ever lose? _ You left the front door open? Prople knew ~·hat the Fourlh of July 1tood for? You took it for granted that women. the elderly and the clergy, were to be resptcled? A girl v.'as a girl and 1 boy was a boy? You didn 't feel embarrassed to say that this was the best darn country in the world? SOCIALIST WAS a dirty v.-ord? Taxes were only a nuisance? , The poor v.·ere loo proud to take charity? You weren"l afraid to go out J1t night? GhetlO! were neighborhood s? You kntw the law meant justice. and you fell • little shiver of awe at the sight of a policeman" Young fellov.'s tried to join the Army or the Navy? Songs had a tune? Crtmln,.ls went to ja11~ You bra.gged about your home 3l.tle and your home town? Politlcian1 p r o c I • I m t d their pii!triotism? , Quotes Walter Smit -"The race of mal\klnd "'>Uld ,,.n.ti did they .,.... .. aid ... h tither. \\'t cannot e:cist without mutu•I hClP.. AO therefore i1\at need aJd Nv• a right to 1sk It from their fel1owmet1: and no one woo hu the power of Qr1ntJng con ttfUSfl 1¥llhaut guilt " I .-. .. ·.~ ~· • ' ;......,_ GuestReport " ' ; ' C-LERKS AND repairmen t r I e d to please you ? A Sunday drive Willi an adventun:, not an ordeal? You COl11d alway1 find someone "illinc and able when you needed t0methlng done? Riots were unthinkable? The clergy talked about religion? You took it for granled that the law v.•ould be enforced, and your safety pro- tected? The flag was a sacred symbol? Our govemmenl •lood up f or Americans anyv.'ht.re in the v.-orld? A ~tAN WllO \vt.nl wrong was blamed, not his mother's nurs lnt habits or h\1 father's income? Things weren't perfect, bul you tl· ptde4 them to be ? Everyo;ne knew the dlfrerence between right and wrong, ~ even college pro- fessors? Collegt \ids awtllowod goldfish, not · •cid?- People elpeded ll"S.ll and valued it when I.bey had more~ People still had the capacity for in- dip1lion! · You ronaldtttd )'OUTJeU ·IUcky to haV• • gOod )Ob, and wben yoo wert proud to have one! America .... the' land tf the free and the homt of the brJ1ve? Arroyo Grande rrt1a·RecMder Student Pleads for a YES Vote To the Editor : One of the big subjec ts locally is one or supreme importance lo our community. It deals with the Proposition B tax over· ride, which was recenUy defeated. I am not speak.Ing for myself. l'IOt for Spring View School. but for all the students v;ho will alt.end the Huntington Beach Union High School District this fall. The fact that proposition 8 wa'i defe•ted will mean that classes and teachers will be cut draslically. School will be on a minimum day basis. All i;tu. dent •ct.ivities will be cut short. The big· aest factor ia, however. th st high school reqWttment& have bet'D eut down ·to 1 hart minimum. Last year to graduate from Huntington Beach High School you needed 220 crtdita (a total of 14 classes). As ii st.ands JIOW, lo fulfill graduation requirement.111 you need onJy 55 credits. This is a total of only six classes whi ch include four classes of physica l education. one class of government and a single class or U. S. histcry. Whatever happened to math . Engll.sh and science? To be admitted tn •ny college you need these classes and more. IF NO GUIDELINE.~ are set. then it i!i cnly common logic that 1here "'ill tw more high school drop-outs and thus more people without good jobs. Careers can be ruined because of lack or educa· ti on. In June, tlll're will be one more chance -a final vole. 1r thaL does not pass. we, the students. will be deprived of a good education. Proposition B must go fhrough. \\'e, the chHdren. are called the leaders of tomorrow, but finl we. the children, n1ust be led. It seems a shame that a fin~ community such as Huntington Beach may Jack adequate edueahon. l am not asking you. but pleading with you to vote yes on Proposition B. \Ve, the students care; how about you? ROBIN RAJ •Ccllhfl Donel Is R l9f11 ' To the Editor : Once again the f\failbox has scooped its: competitor in lhe printing of readers' opi- nions on taboo subject! lhat should have been aired years ago. The story is a lel· ler from a IS-year-old girl named Cathy Moad !~1 ailbox, May 4), and the subsc· quent rebuttal by H grown man named Donald .Jones I Mailbox , May 7). The sub- Ject: VD education. Cathy is right in advocating the ~uca· lion of all kids. Mr. Jones is also right in hii; disposition of his own case, but hl~ \vishful thinking is .somewhat stultified in • I . Mitilhox , ' ' . ....• ~ Letters from reader! are wtlcomt. Normally writer& should convey their messages i"n. 300 worcis or less. The right to condense Letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let-- ters n1ust anchtdt signature and mail· i11g address, but names ma11 be with· held on request ij sufficUnt reason I! apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. !hat a ireal number or kids who need VO J infonnation are 11ot 10 forttlllate as his own kids and Cathy. TJGTrr • CORSETED p r u d e s like Assemblyman Robert Burke w o u Id reserve VD knowledge for tlht: kids he \ things are "bad." Rubbish! But the overall education would nol ! hurt or even embarra5! kids like Cathy \ or Mr. Jones who have havt: been duly in- structed at home. In this area of permissiveness v.·here the happy chappie and his hippie chippy flaunt \ht: don't·give·a-damn attitude in • society that is desperately trying to curb VD, it is lllOl enough to sit on one's big fat onager tlook it up and sue me). One mus! show a little compassion for the massei; who are not so fortunate as Cathy and Mr. Jones. RIGHT HERE I would like to interject a thought thal may shock Mr. Jones. and it may even be a revelation to Cathy. It is : The profes.!iional call girl is safer to deal with than the promiscuous woman. A great step forward in the control of vn would be to release all the call girls from jail and set them up in a government of· fict: to instruct especially the female in lhe deteclion or VD in the males. S. G. UNDIN& lf a aled .Uone11 To the Editor: Haven"t the people of California any recourse against tht: city of Long Beach In its v.·aste of all that money on such " long gone cause as the Queen Mary? What a joke ! People are in need of food and clothing not only in California but all over. and Reagan talks about \VeHare. Whal about the city officials responsible for thi~? Can't they be htld to answer, financi ally or otherv.•ise? GEORGE TATE Dog's Life Can Be Great-or Tough A dog"s life can be opulent indeed. Coo!ider Joie de Vivre. a poodle owned by Mrs. F. Raymond Johnson of New York City. As Judy Klemesrud told it in the New York Times, Joie de Vivre loved to eat caviar from a spoon, dr.ink cham· pagne from a glass and have breakfast in bed with his mislress. Both started lhe day with Special K topped \\'ilh fresh strR\\'berries. 00,er pets are far less fortunalr. Despite the existence of anti·cruclty law~ and humane societies. thousands of animals continue lo suffer from neglect maltreatment or ignorance on the part of their owners. Animal shelter e"mployet' are especially contemptuous af ·person.~ who tum in pet~ to be ''put to sleep'' :1lmply because they have become tired or them. The root of tQe problem i '.' overbreeding, both Inadvertent and deliberate. Most shelter residenl.1 are mongrels that need never have been born If their parenls had been spayed or neutered. But, as Anne Cotrell Free recently p o i n t e d l)Ut in The \Vl.!bingtonian. "A surprising number ot the animals given up by their ov.'ners arc B11 Geor11e ---· Dtar George : My husband cats a huge supptr, then retires at 9 p.m.He 's up at ont> to raid lhe icebox, then back to bed until breakfast. l'\'e tried to tell him there's more to life thRn eating •nd iileeping. Isn't that right, George! MARJE A. Dear Marie: ·vou bet! K liftle stlf-dist1pline . could" open 1 whale new vista for him. With a HUle seJf--control ht • could .•1.a.Y up until 10 or 11 ::tnd haft a copple of betrs v.·hile: w1tc:hlltg the late show. CQ~DENTIAL TO RALPll .NADER: Complain, comp.I a. In , c:Omp11in ! Artn'l )'OU t v e r . aausned? Editorial Research purebreds from poodles I n \\'eimaraners -rrflectin~ the di~posable product paucrn of our afnuent society." A PET CENSUS or the: Cniled Stales prob<lbly 1\0Uld bP 11nposs1ble to un- rlcrtnkc . It is cstirnalcd that American ho1nes harbor 26 million dogs. 21 million l'ats. uncounted legions of birds. lish and e:i.:otic creatures. Statlst1cs 1ndlca1e th a I, 1n rhe ag. J!regate, American pet.!> eat ,.,·en - though not a! well as Joie de Vivre. The Pet Food Institute calculate~ that lhe cost of "maintenance food'' for dogs and cats -defined <'Is suffic ient to provide a complete. balanced diet -has risen nol more than 5 percent in Ille past decade. Nevertheless. th~institute says. sales of dog and cat f zoomed from $600 million lo $1.16"' illion between 1965 and 1970. Much of lhe increase is attributable to the popularity of "gourmet" pet food s." Those who can afford to do so pamper lheir pets in other ways. A clipping-and· bathing session in a dog beauty salon runs about $15. Professional dog walkers in a swank section of l\.fanhattan v.ill air Fido tv.·o hours a day. five days a \veek, for $21 . Our National Disgrace At lasl. thr g1an1 has slu'rerl lo speak . Not jusl for c.enerat ,\l otors. but ror all of the silent cnrpornte bodies who have long endured lhe slings and arrows of outrageous enen1ies. Our n a I ion a I dlsgrnce i~ the tontinuing acceptance of slander of American business and the equating of n1oney with ilnmoralily. And ll'here is the corporate self· a:ssurance that has been equal in the past to all the slr<?SSe~ of peace and war, change and <::atastrophe? h h.1s finally tome forth. in the person of Jame8 l\.llchael Roche. chainnan of General l\.1otors Corporation. to score the 1rrcspon:1:iblc critics v.·ho !IU1ck 1he very structure of !he corpc;irate body and simultaneously poison the lifeblood of the entire system. This confli<::l raging In our lime goes to the roots o( powrr, directed not lm· mtdlatol~ •l the individual Issues, but rAthcr .at the philosophy or man and nature. the deeper founda!lo115 mo."l ''lllnCrablc 'In (he; shock WAVts v.1hlch set Into motion • tidal wave of change. TllE PflOTEtTlVE bsrric1tdc., '1f nur lJ'~lcm have Mi::un to c.:rumblc, and all of Guest Edi tori al l 118 are obligated to take stock of it and to stand with James Roche and his com- pany against the the mounting pre 5sure! fro1n all sides. Thts strug~le has bet:n enlarging itself so that we must now be concerned with factors fasl mo\'ing outlide our control. It has Ml been e~h to bt oppreued by t~ self· destructing rebellion of our own children, <1r l'\'etl exposed to the insults of pow tr. It is now demanded that every corporation submit to the policy of men continually w11rped by their own temper. (.eneral f\lotors l111 now .nawertng tht C'all to defend not only itSt:lf but lo defend a credo lhat offen few fire~·orks but r;:tt~er a 1te11dy promise of improvement for those. of us \\-'ho seek tht ldtal of !'oei1tl responsibility, per$0nal liberty , &nd diM:iplined free enterprise. Elliabf-th ftfACOon•ld ~tennin1 Publilhtr finance A PERSON WHO buys an e1otic pcl ll!IUally is do ing neither himself nor the .animal any favor. Young monkeys seem irresistibly cute until it IS learned that they are almost impossible 1 o housebreak. 'l'hey \viii. however, break up the house. Despite the se uncndearinR trails. more than 100.000 wild monkeys are imported into the United States every year. Inspired, perhaps. by "Born Free." around 10.000 Americans own big ca1s, i,,. eluding lions and leopards. But it take.~ more sk.ill and patience to accommodate an Elsa than most big·cal tancier.i possess. Jn many easc11, lht untrained and untraU1able animal becomes master of its ovmer. ~trs. Si 1'1erri11. v.•ho has 0\1Tied a small South American jungle cat for more lhan ll years. told a Life reporter some of the problems involved: ··You have let decorate tht house v.•ith ma rbl e and vinyl , and then•s nowhere that cal can·t reach. •for all the lack or rrcedom you have by owning them. and tor al! the lack of frt:ef;iom ~hey ha\'t by being ov.·ned by you. you might as "·en make them into fur coats.·• U she had it to do over again. ~lrs. Merrill no doubt v.•ould chootle • coat inslead of a cal. ----- Friday, Ma y H, 1971 T~tt editorial page o/ the Daily P1lo1 seeks to infonn 11nd itim· ulate readers by presenting t/11! ne wspaper's opinions and com- mt1l~ry O"n to~ci of interest and ngnlf1cance, by providlna o forum for ihe expression of O¥r readert' opj'nio111, and bv ptrientino the diverse vieto- pti11ts of informed orMervers awd spokesn1cn on topict of tilt ooy. Robert N. Weed, Publlsher I . --. ,. ••• ., -. . ... ... . . . ' . .. ~. -. .... ·-~-. -• • • • ... / ~ ~~\ City's Fa ·re Presen ted With Fl • air Y·NOT? -PutUng their brand on the day of fu n planned for tomorrow in Nfurdy Park during the second citywide festival are ?lark Batson (left) and David Rud, members of the Yh1CA Y-Wranglers, who have Mrs. Andrew Rud as an appreciative onlooker. The festival offers Hunting- ton Beach residents a chance to become ·acquainted with the services available in the community. ' I . ·': -~ • --· Yoo_ ari d ' .<'}ve ~ .. • \ "' UNUSUAL FARE -Everything from soup to nuts, including earth- worms and ladybUJ::S will be available during the festival tomorrow in Murdy Park. Offering the wormy fare will be the American Associati on of U"iiversity Women, represented by ft'lrs. Vincent Dalsimer (abov,e). A ~1exican mood '"'W be created at the Huntington Beach Library booth which will feature pinatas, a glass blower and Mexican food. Tuning up for the day are (at right,-left to right) Adolio Mayo, Mrs. Ann Hamill 1nd Orlando Mayo. 6men BEA Al>IDERSOH, Editor "" ,.,. ll Pinatas, Mexican food, bands, singing, games, a glass blower1 square dancing, a jail, chuck wagon and lady bug sale -all will fll1 Huntington Beach's Murdy Park from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow. The gala occasion will be the second annual Huntington Beach citywide festival, designed to acquaint residents with all the services available within the community. Sponsoring booths, stage events and competitions will be ap- proximately 100 organizations, including clubs, churches, musical groups, youth groups and community service groups. Sponsoring th& event, which will take place the following Satur- day in case of rain, is the Huntington Beach Coordinating CounciL General chairman of the festival is Bruce Willia.ms. Competitions will include kite flying, a doll buggy parade and athletic events. CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINME NT Continuous entertainment will be offered on the stage of the city's showmobile, including vocal groups, bands, dancing and a fashion 1how. Groups participating to date in clude Artists Association and Gallery (North), art ex hibit; Huntington Beach Library, J\texican·Ameri· can display, pinatas, audio-visual s, glass blower and food, to tie tn with the upcoming summer reading program with a Mexican theme, and the Boys Club of Huntington Beach, demonstrations including blind judo. Also signed up are Boy Scout Troop 134, demonstrations; Ocean View School District, voca l music; Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club, clown ring toss game; Veterans of Foreign Wars, poppy sale; Salvation Army, literature and Christmas ketUe; Las Olas Toastmis· tress Club, literature. gavels and boutique items, and Warner Ave. Baptist Church, drama and singing. More are Senior Citizens and Ocean View LitUe: League, food; Weight Watchers, literature; Huntington Beach Community Ce nter, Spanish food; American Field Service, literature; YMCA Indian Maid· ens, food and boutique; Girl Scouts, dance group and displays; Hunt- ington Beach Environmental Council, literature; Sun View PFO, chuck wagon, jail and s~uare dancing, and American Association of University Women, ecology literature and distribution o{ earthworms and ladybugs.. LIST CONTINUES Still others are Welcome Wagon International, registration of newcomers; Tri·City Challengers 4-H Club, literature and demonstra· tion; Huntington Beach Recreation Activities Association, food; USO Council of Orange County, dance skit; Orange County Adoptive Parents Association, literature, and Las Ayudantes Auxiliary to Family Service Association and Marine View PTO, food. Also participating will be the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Huntington Beach, literature; Visiting Nurses Association of Orange County demonstration;' Ladies Auxiliary of the Boys Clu b, peanut sale; Women's Division, Huntington Beach Cham ber of Commerce, and Golden Key of the Child Guidance Center, food, and YMCA Y~ Wranglers, branding. Musical _groupa will include J.liss Sharon Jeffers, Cold Duck, YGGDRAZIL ('Int of Llfe), Live Wire, Randy and Phil, the Mayo Brothers and General Hysteria. Ro_uadlng out the list of partici pating groups are the Miss Prim l1:odels Cl~ Huntington Beach Exchange Club, Huntington Beach Auxiliary • West Coast Van Association, Lace 'n Leather Square Dance Clu end, the Women's Council, Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Bo ... ti Reall<>rs. Family • Mess, Finds Sister's Hang-up a Dirty Shame nEAR ANN LANDERS : J am a 17- year-old girl v.·hose siste~ (age \~). i.~ driving me nuts . The kid JS the original Mrs. C1ean aod it is more than I can bear. She cannot stand to see a used dish towel on the rack because it Isn't neat looking -so she stuffs it in the drawer, Want a moldy dish towel? Come on over. My mother had to make her stop vacuuming the rugs because she. was wearing them out. She can use a quar t of furniture polish in three days. Our silverware needs to be resllvered because 11he has rubbed the plating off. Everyone in the house has to check with Sis to locate hair brushes, washcloths, even soap. She hides everything. Almost every argument in our house can be traced to my sister's super· ANN LANDERS neatness. \\le are not slobs, Ann. We are a normal family, but my sister is dr iving us Jooney. What do you suggest? -OlllO sos DEAR 0 : Tbere'1 more to tbls than neatness. Your 1lster has •• emotional problem. A perlOn wbo bas • cempul1ion to cbase dlrt and cannot 1tand to 1ee a used towel on a ra ck fs driven by a fear tr a feelin1of1uUI . I 1ugge1t counselJng. DEAR ANN LANDERS ; l have read • several letters in your column from peo- ple wbo despise homoiiexuals. What do they want from us? Would they be satisfied if we were all locked up, isolated from society? Or would they prefer that we simply be shot at sunrise? Why don 't people reali1.e that the only differencl! between homosexu;il~ end heterosexuals is what we do behind clos- ed doors? We don't worry about them. Why should they worry about us? My roommate and t frequently entertain mixed coup~es and we have many in· teresting friends. We are honorable peo- ple . We don't play with girls, pretending to be straight, dragging them around to parties as a cover. We believe this is cheap al'\d dishonest. The notion that gay boys are all limp- wristed and swishy is absurd. Many homosexual males with whom 1 am in- timately acquainted are extreme I y masculine in appearance, dress and man- nerisms. They work at being masculine to avoid detection. I Am acquainted with homosexuals who ere succeSJ fuJ doctors, I aw ye r s , clergymen, politicians. They are in every walk o( life. The closet queens in the pn> fessions and politics must be very circumspect, however; because they are subject to blackmail. Isn't this shameful? A year of psychiatric therapy has helped ml! to accept myseU as I am. I now know that I don't need the friendship of anyone who Views me tu a freak. I hop! and pray that one day all people will be judged on the basis of what they contribute to humanity and how they treat their fellow man. Wouldn't that be wonderful? -WRITrEN IN BEAU- MONT, MAILED IN NEW ORLEANS D!AR FRIEND: Ve11 It would bt woaderftl -ind I prtdlc:t lbat one day It will corue to pass. DEAR ANN: J wa1 touched by th! beautiful letter from the l>year-old boy who was so kind and generous to the old man who lived next door. It was a heart- warming letter and I thank you for it. I'd give 15 years of my life for a aon like that. -SCARSDALE DEAR SCARS: I'll bet Ulat'1 aboat what the boy'• motbtr rave -Ii )'tan of btr life. Thanks for wrUlq. Alcohol is no shortcut to toelal succeu. If you think you have to drink to be •<> cepted by your frJends, aet the fact& Read "Boote and You -for Tetnagtrt Only," by Ann Landers. Send 95 centt 111 coin and a long, stlf·addreased, ttampe4 envelope with Your rtqUtll it c:ara of the DAILY PILOT. .. J 4 DAILY PILOT Pe&tih~ Areund ,_ r ... • ~USS MELODIE A n n : Keller,£:.ter 'al \!r. anQ : ~1rs. ' JC,Uer of Costa ~ ~iesa, a ended the province • conference of Gamma Phl : Beta in Tenwe, Ariz. Miss : Keller tl l ~8n 1t UCLA : and r~ waa. t .elected ; treasurer of her chapter. ; A TEA fqd_ recital will be : given IAU~k Cu~ : HuntingtqnsBeach ~ 3 P-:1!). : Sunday, May 111. The event : will honor Mrs. Eva Granger, : and p'rtici~t)ng will ,be . : music stlderiti qf Qbitlie •Granger Jr. and his sister, ~Miss Edna Granger. : Juni©'r Leag\:rt!'S Convene · Ob9eni~· qi go1den an-piversar rpµghout the ,oontb y, is the Associa· lion of e .l'urUor Leagues cl ,.,.( • Nutmeat Sale Sweetens ~er)Ca. 'Tl 1 : Afore tril'h ~75 delegates Examining the new automatic exposur~ dmer3 system donated by their chap-- gathered for a national con-ter to Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, are Mrs. W. Fred Page, vice ~ention ~.Colorado Springs, president (left) and Mrs. James \V. Hanley, president of Balboa Harbor Alumnae, P,lo~y i U. The Y Gam~a .Phi Bet.a. ~pl~ining µte import ancc of producing precise photomicro· ~°'-~ ~· 1~n\t~ul:;t~r. graphS 1s .Dr. Uoyi! Shverma1.1., pathologist. Funds were r aised through the "" ·--~ ch'apter's linnual holiday nut sale. . , Canada ell:ico. ~~'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~-""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Graduation Upcoming . .The c ft 'V e+.t i 0 n theme forecast~ tOt Future in- f:orporated !ti~ eagues' goals er reshaping the volunteer programs and the importance Of relaiecotogical realities In plann · ~ure trends. : Trave to fjle convention t1as Mrs;?,· ~of\n lt:inerer~presi· dent of JC,._~ewport arbor 'unior ~; She w S ac· (Ompanied by the Mmes. Merill Brywn, Lionel We.st and *1e Ewil\"g. Etiquette Reviewed KATHREENE BRANOT To S.y Vows Graduation announceme11t etiquette ls often perplexing for student and parents. A leading manufacturer of announcements and o t b e r gra:daatiol products of f e r s these suuesrions on how to properly handle t he an· nouncement or an upcoming graduat1on. Announceil}mls StlolHd be mailed 10 days to two weeks be[ore graduation to insure that ever)'one on the mailing list receives his Announcement just prior to the event. Envektpe! ~Id be addressed pe"rsOOally, wilh )'.>en and ink. The gummed outer envelope should be addressed formally with a complete mailing ad· Dinner Party Given To Announce Betrothal Durin g a cocktail buffet din· ner party in the Pasadena home of Mr. and Mrs. Zan John Zak, they announced the engagement of their daughter, Justine Louise Zak to Thomas Patrick Dougan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Patrick Dougan of Corooa de! Mar. • GueslS were f a m i 1 y members of the betrothed cou· pie, who are planning a July l 7 wedding In the Church of St. Bede the Venerable, La Canada . Miss Zak Is a graduate of • Flintridge Sacred H e a r t Academy, Pasadena and at· tended Orange Coast and San Diego State colleges where she majored In home economics. She was presented to society during the Los Angeles Athletic Club's an nu a 1 Sweetheart Ball. Her fiance, who crews for his father on the Columbia which was an America's CUp contender, is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School. A business administration ma· jor. he also attended OCC and SDSC. dress. Avoid abbreviations. Your return address may be added on the flap of the outer envelope. The inner envelope holding the announcement should bear the names of the person or persons to whom the an· nouncement is being sent. This may be, exaressed informi!ly I as:_, Aunt )1ai-y ?n4 U~cle Paul, Edward liar r i J, Grandmother. Children of the addressee may be shown here, using. the firsl name only. If the announcement has a special card holder for the graduate's personal card, lt should be placed in this holder. If there is no holder, the card should be placed in the fold of the announcement so that the graduate's na me faces away from the text. Announcements should be placed in the inner envelope with the folded edge inserted first and the front of the an· nounceme.1t facing the flap. Place the insid e envelope fac· ing towards the back of the outside envelope when if1· serting. The outside envelope should be seaJed securely ind sent by first class mail. July Date Selected July 17 rites in the Church of Christ, Costa Mesa are being planned by Kathreene Louise Brand t and Baron Lee Mahrling, whose betrothal has been announced by h e r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Deene T. Brandt ol Huntington Beach. Wedding Planned Convention Ideas Grow The bride-elect a t t e n d e d Huntington Beach High School and gradualed from Founlain Valley High Schoo.I. Her fiaoce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Mahrling of Fountain Valley, is a graduate of Westminster High Scbool and served in the Army. Xi Xi Pl Views Man ti The Enjoyment of Man will Jl'""ssoll )'hen ,)Ci Xl fi !~tel': Jll!ta ~~ ~hi, meelS al 8 p.m. \\lednesday, 1'1ay 19. in the flunlinglon Beach home of ~trs. Ronald Sarouhan. Mrs. Robert Kremer will present the progrem foflowing a short business ses.!ion con· ducted by r.trs. Norm an Nit'berleln, president. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene P. McGovern of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter. Nancy Lee McGovern to David McCon- nell. A June 19 wedding in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Chapel, Newport Beach is being planned. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and attends Orange Coast College "'here she i.s a member of Epsilon Delta. ~H'er fiahce. soh of .. Mr. and rs. Earl D. 1-fcConnell of ostA Me'5a, is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School . July Plans Announced Federation A Garden of Federation In Bloom will decorate the J~yatt House in Palo Alto Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 20 to 22, when the California Federation of Women 's Clubs, Junior Membership conducts a state convention. Orange District Juniors will Seniors In Tune Harbor Senior Cl ti r:en s ' Choral croup dit;ected bY Mrs. James Sawyer will entertain !he American AS'lociatlon of Retired Persons. N e w p o r t Beach Chapter. tollowliig a noon luncheon and short busine ss mccling the program will begin at I p.m. Thursday, May 20, in the A July wedding tn Our Lady Ne\l.'POrt !·!arbor Lu th f! ran Queen of the Angels Catholic Church. Church is being planned by All ptrson!i 55 or over ~·ho Jane Elizabeth Krosse anrl are inlcrrsled in the organiia· Donovan Evans Dorsey. lion are invited lo attend the P11renl s of the betrothed meetinl{. couple are ~1r. and ?ilrs .I;-~~~~~~ George T. Krosse of Nev.'J)Ort l' Beach and Mr. and ~lrs . .,.,,1111'. C,1arenef Dorsey of Tustin. • Bloom leave en masse on the same flight from Orange County Airport and Mrs. Robert Calderwood will be installed as the disLrict's president. Officers will be introduced during banquets of ac· complishments taking place at fi :30 p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Grover Seguine J r., state coordinator, state chairmen and guests will be honored . Mrs. Vernon Cunningham. CFWC state president. and district presideq~, will be hJrnr>d dutillt Ille lun~w. meetin1 taking place on Fri· dayl wlUt offfers to be in· staled at B p.m. Saturday's luncheon theme Will be Look to This Day And ~·ill honor f\frs. D;:in ~1cKln. non. Junior publjc ,affal r~i:iirmaii, find outgoing Slate officers. Soroptimish Ne'llo'port Har bor Soroptimlst Club meets the first threc l Wednesdays for a n o o n luncheon in the Derby. Costa Mesa. Plana for the Beta Sljfll\a Phi state COh\.~llon taking place Friday. Saturday and &mcf11. May II, t! and 13, will highlight the businen se!Sion . r..1r. 1nd Mrs. Eldon Dverai will reprf:Mmt the chapter. ~llss Krosse Is a ~radu11te of Corona de! ~1ar High School . altended college in Colorado and is a gradut1te of th' HANG TEN Califomla Professional School NB Aux iliary ol Medical Assislant.s. • Htt fiance Is a U C I The Ladles' Au1U l1f1 of gr&du11tt. Newport B each Plre -----------1 Departmenl gathera tht third W•dncsdays •t s p.m. In Kids Like To various Joc1Uons. lnformatinn Sl1e1 6 to 14 AT BAA.ROWS . roiP(dlDi . iocaliM m•y be ASK ANDY obt1uned by calling ~1rs. T. C. -----------!~§§~~~ Dalley, S48·9835. ===--~ Horoscope Leo: Enhance Your Image· SATURDAY MAY 15 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191: Accent on friends, hopes, wishe1. Social activity is highlighted. You can gain plen- ty now through friendly associations, contacts. Sagtt. t.riu individual could play key role. Be seen-and see. TAURUS (April ZG-May 20): by financial disagreement. Pa· tience, diplomacy now can ac- complish wonders. You may be charged with money obliga· lion not rightly your own . LEO ·(July ~Aug. 22): Emphasis is on partnership, marriage, how you relate to public. Be sure to enhance Im· age; see people in realistic light. Lie low. Let others have their share of spotlight . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): • • Draw attention ta talents uwally hidden. Means come out of shell. Express yoursell at party, social affair. One who attempts to belittle you will Jeam a hard lesson. Be confident. Co-<lperate with Gemini in· dividual. Do some digging for additional facts. Don't be " satisfied with superficial In- dications. Find reascns; base . actions on logic, not impulse. GEMINI (May 21..June 20): Accent on moving, obtaining answers ta key questions. Virgo individual now can pro. ve valuable ally. Don't fight change. Make concessions. CANCER : (June 21.July 22): Domestic area may be shaken Bureau Installs Officers Installa tion of officers took place for the Voluntee r Bureau of South Orange Coon· ty with Mrs. Don Adkinsorc ac· cepting presidential duties from Hugh Mynatt. Other officers include th e Mrs. Charles Cottoo, vice president; Mrs. Frank Lynch, secretary, and Ralph Allen, treasurer. New Board members in· elude Kenneth Walker, Mrs. Sadie Reid, Mrs. Thomas Vas- quez, David Crump, James Dods, Mrs. Clarence La Nier, Richard f\larowilz. Ca I v in Stewart and Mrs. J o h n Williamli. 1 Ctrtifleetes of 4,istin~hed servitt were give!\ vo1Urifeers including the Mme!. Fred Amold, Thomas M cC I a in, Eugene Goda, W a I t e r Godshall, Reinhold Swanson and Robert Bock". Mrs. Bock is coordinator for the Well Baby Clinic volunteers . Founding Recalled Alpha Della Pi's founding 120 years ago will be celebrated by Sout hern California alumnae tomorrow during festivities aboard the Princess Louise. Special guest will be f.1rs. Berne Jacobsen of Seattle, a member of the grand council and National Panhellenic con· ference delegate and treasurer. Toastmistress will be Mrs. Robert Hartunian of Hun- tington Beach, president of the Southern Area Council. lo O'J fhe UBRA (Sept . ~Oct . 22): Affections a r e stimulated. Improve relations with children. Welcome change of scenery. Don't hang on to past. Break with one who ob· viously Is using you. Look to future-it is bri~hter. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Strive to present you r in· dividual style. Lead rathe r than follow. Build for future-do so on solid base. Emphasis is on property, real estate, conditions at home. Stick to facts. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Z2· Dec. 21): Stress versatile ap- proach. Display intellectual curiosity. Be willing to laugh at your own foib les. Aquarius individual can provide key answers. Be willing t o ask-then you Team. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Check resources. Review budget. Take nothing £or granted. One born under Leo exerts peculiar c h a r m . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle high: be especially accommodat ing to Sagittarius individual. Take initiative. You get what you want-be sure you know what actually is needed. Don't ii.sit-, for more than you can handle. PISCES (Feb. 19·1\.ii!rch 20): J\fuch occors behili.a the scenes. Vie l\' may be obscured by ~'ishful thinking. Revise order of priorities. Someone may be pulling ~·ool over you r eyes. Be perceptive. Search for truth. , • -,~,! ... ":.- ·f ~~(,;-"'·~ ... if' • • • • N~w slate Tak~s Ov~r Over tfle Rainbow Is the .Q:ieme set~!· by M r s . Willia" Ira \ic f o r ib;. Ptallatfcq cere onle11 which mte win CW}duct Tuesday, ~1hy 18, in Mesi. Verd e Country Cl~;s.,HIJJ~ wil\ be chor Ing ne\lf c#fi~rs ,of the Co Wom~.'s .t'lub ·of 9 orona el Mar h tlleir duties. Hea g the organization for the coming ye<f't wiij be Mr+ Georgft Fox, .aua s.ervlng Cf jter boln! wil\ lie 'Ill!: !~'I' Dale ~agor. Art HOOOeni>yle find M•l-jorie Feddersen, vice preside~; Jens, A~rsen, J.,eslie .. Pqv.t" iQd .... H , r r,f p~rlton, · s.1ere1JtrieS5 t .• H. peiger; treasurer; lialliday , parliamentarian, and George Bryson, .junior past president. . . :J-ajhionj ~ow 1N Corona · ciel Mar 1/2 OFF ENTIRE STOCK SAT. & SUN. ONLY 10 a.m.·6 p.m. 35SS E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR '•"' .... ·- Africa Revitalized Enlightening members of the Trojan League of Orange County on the Dark Continent will be Dr. Tracey E. Strevey, historian from the University of Southern California, whose topic will be A Look at Educational Trends in Africa. Collecting artifacts for the 10 a.m. meeting and luncheon Tuesday, May 18, in the Santa Ana home of Mrs. William Hayward are Mrs. John Af. Billings (left) and Mrs. Fred Bice . Nostalgia Returns Night Owls Singing "Keenage" Guys and Gals in ca;tume will present a pro- gram of nostalgic songs when the Night Owls of the Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler Roost meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 16, in the Bethel Towers, Costa l.fesa. Accompanying them in their varied repertory will be Mrs. l<~l orence MacGinitie. Members of the Harbor Senior Citizen's Choral Group, the 22 singers are directed by Mrs. James Sawyer. A solo performance will be offered by Mrs. Gloria Rush of T Ontario who will be ac--OW n SC ape companied by ner mother, Mrs. Georg-e: Stewert. V • 1 · d Reservations now are being I s u a I z e accepted Coran August visit to , · ' · the·San Diego ~ighJ. Owl Roost Towns cape. Huntington Where a special program is Beach will be the topic when being arranged. Royce Neuschatz. landscape Refreshments and decora-- architect, and Bob Vasquez, lions for Sunday's meeting are assistant city planner speak at being handled by f\.1 i :s 1 the meeting of the Huntington Dorothy Rare, ch a Irma n 1 Beach Br~nch. American c. • -• Erik Hansen. A~ationof Un 1 v er si ty Women. Pianned by Mrs. David Carlbergi chairman of the Human USe of Urban Space Study Group,Jt&'lll'itlite.N • at 7:30 p.m. W'edneSdaf, May 1;~1~9,~i~n~L~•~kc~P~;~,~k~C~lu~b~ho~u~s~e.i;;,;~~~i!:::~::!!l co~tri, t.;~v l! l!irµi1y~~f Musi We Make Oar Reul World Intrude On a Child's "Lollipop Logic"? Bob McGroth, ho•t of TV's "Sesame Street," ex. plains what he calfs ''Loll ipop l'6Qtc." He soys that 11to get a good look at a child's logic, you have 'o slip up on it, ente~ the child's world ever so carefully, talk very little ond listen much.'' e THE 'FIRS.T' FOND).-Al 66, Henry Fonda (s still on top in the precarious \YOrld of show busi· ness and son1e \\•eeks he gets his picture in the. pa~er ~lmost as much as his daughter, Jane. He s this week's Profile subject. e THE 'LAST', DIET -Bryon G. Weis, who has been over,ve1ght most of his life, tells about his ups and down s -from liril diet to last _ in "liow I Lost 8,000 Pounds." All Comi.n:t Saturday in the I DAILY PILOT J 7 ' 7 I -. , Newport Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stooks voe M, NO. 115, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY '14, ·1971 . TEN CENTS Newport-Mesa Strike Pos·sibi.lity Downgraded· By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 ttlt 01!ty l"llot St1H The word "strike " is a "bogeyman" a handful of Newport-Mesa Education Associallion members gathered to hear results of a three-day eva luation of their association were told Thursday. "You're not close to calling. a strike \n this district," sa id Mrs. Doroth y Brooksby of the National Education Assooialion (NEAJ staff in Washington, D.C. She was one of a four-member panel ' • -· ~" "~ \ invited by the N-MEA to take a look at the association's efftclivenes.s in 11erving teacher members and dealing with the district and community. r-.lrs. Brooksby's remark was part of a series of recommendalions urged by the . evaluation team tor implementation by the end Of lltis school year. She indicated the associaUon should "define the terms being' bandied about'' such as strike and "negot.iations" another , ' I ' • DA ILY ,.ILOT PM .. bY llldltnl lt'°"!lf' JETTIE AND WINGED PAL, THE GENERAL, GO FOR STROLL Poodle and Pigeon as ln1ep1rabl1 as Snoopy and Woodstock Friends Indeed Poodle, Pigeon Sliare Same Abode By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille OtllY P'll01 Sltlf Can a persnickety poodle and a homeless homing pigeon find happiness in a house tra iler? If Snoopy and Woodstock can share a beagle bungalow in the Peanuts comic strip it can happen anywhere, with the same warmly human animal antics in- volved.• The make-believe characters created by cartoonist Charles Schulz have ac- tually come to life at 1he Richard Hogans' mobile home, 2518 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. This is the story of Jettie and General. Just like Snoopy and Woostock. they 're inseparable. shar ing and fulfilling some mutual need not lo be alone in a world in- habited by poor, dumb people. The relationship goes back to f\.lay 2, when Hogan took a group of Seventh Day Adventist Pathfinder Club youngsters to Del Mar for a da y-long event. Exploring undc't 11 railroad trestle, the boys discovered General and a sick sidekick -apparently abandoned by mother homing pigeo n-huddled on a rafter and guided Hogan to take a look . "I pul them in a box and took them home as 11 surprise for my wife, Barb." says the Fairview State Hosp it a I psychiatric technician. ''The one passed away, but General is thriving." A diet of cornmeal and water fed through a rubber syringe ind the at- tentions of a French goveniess are keep. ing the young pigeon happy. Jettie -who nosed right into General's cage and took charge from lhe outset - has also perked up and is acting like a dog with a new litter of pups. "The dog lays down just like she's nursing. The bird crawls up and nestles between her front paws." Hogan ex- plains. " Jettie al so licks away untidy bits of cornmeal after feeding time, plus performing more personal diaper change- type duties. Just like Woodstock in the Peanul3 strip, the homing pigeon who has found a home is trying to fly, but failed a fltlt· tering solo effort Wednesday. She compensated by stalking around the fl oor. pecking al the carpet and con- versing jn sq ueaky monosyllables with her French poodle pal. ''She talks by chirping and napping her "'ings up and down," says Hogan, who probably wonders "'hat Jettie and General are discussing. Chances are it 's what cute house petJ humans make. Jobs Requested for YES A parenlless Cnsta Mesa yout.h ar- rested earlier this week 11f\er an at- tempted h<iu.se burglary tol d police he unsuccessfully hunted a job for two months. Chanc:es are his plight Cl'Juld have been 1voided through contacting the Harbor Area Youth Employment Service, which today annoUllced a pre-summer stepup ln operating hours. The YES office 1t 5!M. Center St .. will functlon we:ekday11 from 2 to S p.m .. in- creasing an alre11dy-t.remendous need for Jobs to be filled by youngsters seeking work. Merchants, businesses, or homeowners needing a hflnd on a full or part-time b8sls may call 642--0474. according to YES spokesman Bill Band.aruk. "During April YES rilled about 100 jobs b\lt we need more," says Bandarui. word she aaid la not fully understood by teacher members. She said the bogeymen words "just panic people" impb'ing their use wu confusing teachers. "You 6hould make it clear that 'negotiation' is nothin1 more than the art of sitting down and talking,'' she sug- gested. • Bart Hake, ueculive secretary to the 750-me:mber teacher auooiation, II.id alter the meeting that Mn. Brooksby had • the rllbt to "• pel'IOllal opinion on whet.bet or not eond1UonJ 1n the Newport· Mesa district were ripe for calling a atrike. "There may be members ()( the N·MEA who do not 1ubscribe to that view," Hake aald. For the most part, the evaluation. team of NEA and California Te 1cher1 Aasodaton. (CTA) er.pert.a waa com- pllm'"tary cl the N·MEA "'lluizaUoa and rated Its 1t.aff u belni 11~ din&·" Criticlams leWed by evaluators in- cluded: apathy on part of member1bip, wide gap between elementary and secon- dary teachers' vlewa, deClinlng mem- be.rsh.ip, inadequ1ie leadenhlp training programs and poor communicatlorui with the community. Wet}da11 Newman, e1.ecutive dlreetor df the San Bernardino Teachers Organiza.. tion, spoke on th& eva1111tor1' criticisms. He aaJd the association seemed to most teachers interviewed by the team to be promoting through contract demands issues that "reflect .suite and naUocal needs that are not aecessarily relevant to the local altuation. The thought of a atrike is unacceptable to most teachers in the district," he said. The team concluded from its talks with teachers, the press, dist rict officials and community leaders that the "community (See.STRIKE, Page Z) Rogers, Senator Clash Fulbright Lashes Out at Viet War 'Double Talk' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers in a brirtling confrontation with Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.), today described ·as unconstitutional and unnecessary pro- posals to restrict a President's authority to commit troops abroad . Rogers testified before the Senalt Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Fulbright, that .such action would limit the President's constitutional power• and seriously limit his ability to carry out foreign policy. During a subsequent exchange, both Beach Dog Ban Hearing Set Tonight ·. The Newport Beach Police Deputmml. hasn't the staff or the equipment to pro- perly enforct existing leash Jaws on tbt city's beaches. Acting City Manaau Philip F. Bettencourt said today. Bettencourt, in a report to the Newport City Council in advance of Monday night's public hearings on an ordlnanct to ban dogs from the be.aches,. made no -formal rtc0mmendation on the con- trovenial issue, however. Before the council for Monday night's hearing, which is acbeduled aometime after the 7:30 p.m. start of the meeting, are three pro spective ordinances. One would ban dogs and other four-leg- ged animals during the summer months, the other would ban dogs and other pets year-round. The third would be a seasonal ban but only durin1 specific hours. Bettencourt. in his messa1e to t.ht council, also disclosed he had 1urveyed eight olher Soulhern California beach cities comparable in geography to Newport Beach. All of th em, he said, ban animals from the beach year-around Laguna Beach was not included in the survey, he noted, pointing out that community has a part.- time ban from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. from June 15 to Sept. 15. Dogs are totally prohibited from Orange County beaches, he said. Bettencourt said the existing leash law in Newpo;1 Beach presents severe en- forcement problems. especially on the ocean front beaches. "There are 6.l miles of ocean front containing approximately 262 acres of sandy beach," he said, "Because humane officer trucks are not four-wheeJ drive , they cannot be driven on the sand, "There are two four-wheel drivt vehicles in the police department. During fSee OOGS, Pase 2) Merger Denied Roger1 and Fulbright displayed un- concealed inilaUon and anser with each other. Fulbright 1aid the •dminiltraUon waa using "double talk" to juatify con- linu1tfon of the Vietnam War and er.- peeled memben of Consrw to fOllow ill edicts like "'&ood boys." At another poln~ Fulbrl&hl relnll'iood, "the more I observe thl1 1dministraUon, the more it appears that you are follow- ing e1.acUy the same course as your predecessors." "You ," he &aid to Roger•, "have gone almost as far as Mr. Katz- enbach." ''Oh, Pi.tr. Cbairman!" Rogers ln- tuj«ted IJlll'ily. Fulbrl&bt'1 reference was to testimony by Katunbach before . the committee when he was WtderHCretary of state that the power of Consresa to declare war was no longer a re.all1y in the 1ge of nuclear missilery. Rogeni specifically rejected. t h a l charge and that he di!agreed with Kalt:enbach's view entirely. "Can I say it any more ·clearly?" he a&Serted, glaring at Fullbright. Fulbri1ht responded that the Ntion Administration like Its predece.ssors was engaged in "u.surpatlon of war powers" of Congress. Rogers adamantly opposed bills to re- quire Congressional authorization for commitment of troops overseas. He said they were a n unconstitutional in- fringement on the President's powers 11 commander in chief and would weaken the: nation by tying the President's bandJ in an emergency. Will Come Home Senate Sets Finch Will Leave Capital SST Vote Af·ter 1972 U·.S. Election Wednesday Ni.ion Admlnlal.ration a~viaer Robert H. Finch announced Tburaday J n Anaheim that he will wub hb han<la of Wl.!hinlton after lht 1972 elections, hit. Ung the road bOme to campaign again in California. "I'll come back as IOOn 11 the ne1.t election la over. I've already told the President," 11Jd tht fonner lieutenant governor who may take a ahot at the governor1hip itaelf. "I've promllled my family to come back." Speaking to 1 plumbing, heating and cooling contracton' convtntion at the Disneyland Hotel, Finch eovtrtd much srouoo on a local, national and inter- national acaJe. He said he will devo~ efforta in months ahead to campaignlnc for President NlJ- on'1.rHlecUon then may run in 1974 u U.S. senator or governor. The fonner. ~etary of Health Educa- tion and WeUare predicted current Newport Councilmen Plan Study Session Newport Beach city councilmen 1r1 planning two separate eieeuUvt aeulons during their afternoon "study se:Mlon" Monday at City Hall. _ They are tentatively sch~uled to hud- dle with outside counsel IO dilCUSI pen- ding litigation on West Newport oil fieldi early in the metUng and 1t 4:30 p.m. are acheduled to go ba,ck behind closed doors to diJcuss "privileged peraonnel mattera. including progress on city manager reauitment, the vacancy In the city 1t.. torney's office and compenution for in- teTim appoil'!teea." uoemeloyment In Cllilomil wjll be helped by a now 14 mllllon fioeol yelr allocaUon for manpower training. Tht f~al grant will enable a 13-week CODtinuation ol preaent programs, with funds spMt on 5,000 · (If the hartk:ore Unemployed to develop work skills and fj.nd jobs. A remaining $1 million from 1 prior allotment will be 1dminill.ered by the California Department of Hu m a n Resources Development, while more funds will be forthcomln& next filcll year. "And they 'll be spent in the areu - such as Orqe County -which have the most dlrficult unemployment problems," Finch declared. He: said America faces 1 different crisis in the health care field, with a shortage of more than 100,000 doctors and at least S70 billion required just to start bringing U.S. ltandards up to 1 reason- able level. One of the President's four main areas of program development in th e politlcally-criUcal coming year will be ln health, Finch added. plus houlinl, eduq- tion and drug control efforts -exercised at the United Nations level. Turning to other issues, Fl n c h predicted the Vietnam War situation utilized by Congressman Paul McCJos.- key's effort to dump Nixon will no longer be a point of confilct for political advall· tlge. Finch commented on the controversial . SST program, a1ylng it has been revived due to premire on Jtglslaters who voted It down by their constituent& around the nation. "I think we will get an all-volunteer army eventually," he aho laid In regard to the draft issue. WASHINGTON (AP ) -The S..ala agreed today to vote ne~ Wednesday on the revived Supersonic Transport pro- gram with SST opponel'!ts emerlfng from day lone negotiations in a strong tactical position. 'Mle vote, scheduled for a.bout 5 p.m. wlll be on an amew.dment by Sen. William Proxmlre ID-Wl&.), to reverse a cJoge House decision earlier this week that re- directs use of $85 million In SST fund.! in 1 $7.2 billion appropriation measure. The $85 million was origina!Jy intended to pay close out costs of the SST program •fler CoJ!gress voted to abandon the project earlier thia year. The House changed the provision so the moaey could be used for continued federal fund- ing. Agreement on 1 Senate vote had •ot beec expecled so quickly. It was reached after a day ol behind the acenes bar- gaining among Se:Jtate leaders. Assistant Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia told newsmen that ProJ:. mire:, leader of two earlier successful Senate tights against SST, emerged with a strong tactical advantage. Under the agreement, if Proxmire'• amendment is approved, the Senate most likely will paBs the supplemental appro. priaUons bill, sorely needed for gover.- ment sal11ries, welfare and food stamp programs, and send it to a conference with the House. President Takes Off For F lorida Weekend WASHINGTON (AP) -President Jen for Florida Friday to spend the weekend at his villa in Key Blsca)'11e. The presidential plane took off from Andrews Air Force base in suburban Maryland at 2:16 p.m. (EDT); Orange Post Office Rumors False There is no truth to reporta the U.S. Postal Se~ planl to merge the Corona de\ Mar and Newport. Beach post offices, a top U.S. postal official said today. "It's oot so, there's nothins to It, there will be no change whatsoever," Geor1e Saunders, special aaslitant to Western regional director Russell James, said thll momina:. He called printed reports the depart- ~menl was mulling consolidation "un. founded rumor1.'' The reporUi apparently stemmed from a conversation between. R I c h 1 r d LeBaron, county pcntal aetvlct offlet:r, and Carl Kegley, Coroa1 del Mar lawyer 8nd pre ldent of' the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce. Le.Baron could not be reached tor com- ment this morning Ix.It his auptrloni said the meeUng w11 routJne, tometbtna postal service of(lcer1 '!41> constantly." .~ • "LeBaron wu JU1t tryin& to keep in UM.lcb. with leaden nf t.he community to talk about normal things Jike the qualJty ol. the service," Saunders ukt. "Ht WIJ jult tryina to accumulat.1 m. formation." "'nli1 always leads t.o unfounded rumors," be said, "It'• practically a weekly occurrence." Ke&Iey, however, w11n't convinced and thl• morning in1i1ted the postal 1ervlce 11 conaldering the merger. Ha baa appointed 1 chamber committee to lnvelli.gate. "Wby else would they send a man down here to sound out the community on tbe 1Ubject," Kegley aaid. "There'• a move on all over the coun· Lr)' to ton$0lidtte oper.at.lona," he u ld. He called Slwtders' 1t1temcnl 1 1'malar)Gr." .. • "We aay there ii aomeLhlns to it and we'll put all the effort needed into stop. ping It," he 11id. Kesley noted that community uproar halted 1lmilar pla111 15 ye1r1 ago and II.id it would do IO again. He said "Corona dtl Mar buaineumen and residents don't want the con· solidat.lon bec1UH Jt would me1n a loSI of identity for the community. "We would no longer havt the designa- tion 'Corona de! Mar' on postmarks unless letters wtre taken to the post of· flee," he said, ''our stationary and let· tertteads would'n't mean a thins." "Wt 'r1 very proud o( U\e desianation 'Corona del Mar,' "Kegley sald, "and so are thousands of other people ." He said LeBaron wu trytna: to con- vince community leaders there would be no Jou ol ident\ly. · "We know better," Kegely .. id. ,I Hazy !unshine ls the best the weatherman can offer this week· end, with little temperature cbang• on the Orange Coast where mer- cury wUI reach 62 on the beaches and into the lower 70s inland. INSmE TODAY The city of H1tntlngton 8tac1' 'iJ holdhig on all day ftstivol fn Murdy Park thi.s Sat urda11. You can read nU about il in today'.s Wtektndtr. ... 111111 M c111-..1• 1 CllMl!lllf U• II Cl•ffftllll 211~ CMl\lc1 11 C,_.I_,. II DMlfl NMlttt I 1.11""!.fl ,.... • oPllltf!Q lf.U -" A• LlllMn 11 """...... . """""' ... ,, MMIUtl ,..,,.... ,, N1tllntl ..._ N °"lfttt c_,., ' l•1lellrMtl J4.U ,...,,. , .. ,. lfldl ,...,. ... 1 .. n Ttl9WlllM )l TllHlfft "''' WMflltr 4 w__.,,.... l)olt ' WtrM ,._ M ........ , .. , .. t DAILY PILOT Frldq, M11 14, lm $2.3 Million Council Weighs Help Sought By Teacl1ers In qnpasse .. Capital Budget . Leadership of the New po rt ~ Mes a Education Association is seeking legal advice 1-0 find "'ays •·t o prornote the school board 's involven1cnt"' in the im- passe process. A proposl!d capital improvement& budget or more than $2.3 mllllon will be weighed by the Newpor t Beach City Council \\'hen It meets Monday for its afternoon study se.ssioo. Tht council is not expected to take ac- tion on the budget. until il receives the municipal operating budget May 27. Submitted by the public work! depart· ment, the budget calls for $644,600 in gentral fund projects, $648,000 in waler fund e1pendltures, $929.SOD in state gas Lai: road projects and $130,00U lo be spent from the building u cise t.a:z fund. Major projects proposed include: -Replace pUlngs at Newport and Balboa ocean piers ($40,COJ). -Widen Balboa Boulevard from Coast Highway lo 32nd Street ($120,000). --Omstruct University Drive from Jamboree Road to realigned Jl.facArthur Boulevard ($100,000). -Widen Hospital Road from Newport Boulevard to Placentia Avenue ($72,000). -install landscaping in Jamboree me- dians between Pacific Coast Highway and Palisades Road ($30,000). -Prov.Ide matching funds for TOPICS program ($50,000). -Repayment for excess right-of-way obtained for widening 32nd Street tl.15.000). -Relocate storm drain and sewer at end of Shorecliff Road ($55,000 ). -Road resurfacing and reconstruction, citywide ($300,000). -Extend Corona del Aiar beach park- ing lot ($15,000 ). -Contribution to Olympic Pool Fwid ($40,500). . --Oty transpartaUoo study ('60,000). -Replace plumbing In p u b J I c restrooms ($25,000). -Replace parking metera in octa.n front parking lot ($13,500). -General water main replacement (lllW,000). -InlUal construction water ( u n d Corona del Mar Student Heads Mostly Female Women'• bl>eratlon ahould be plea.sed by the results ol the student government elect.ions Thur1day at Corona del Mar High School. Four of the ail student body ollicen elected are girls, Ecology, too, got • vote of confidence u Vlck.i McCarty, 17, defeated thitt male opponents to become student body preldent. The daughter of Mr. and Mra. C. Vance McCarty, 303 Orchid Ave., Corona del Mar. ls an environment.al ac- tivist. She won hands down on tbe first vote in the student eled.ions which are run like a national poUUcal convenUon. One of the two males elected to student government was Merrill Buller Ill, 16, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill BuUer 11, 1718 Gala.a:y Drive, Newport Beach. He'll be vice president for the 1971-72 IChool year. This year's freshman class president got the students' nod for treasurer, the only olber post to which a male was elected. He Is Robert MacDonald. 15, son of Jl.ir. and Mrs. Robert K. MacDonald, 1121 Goldenrod Ave., Newport Beach. The other distaff officers art: Maria Ricca, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Ricca, 4627 Fairfield Drive, Corona del Mar, secretary. Valeire Cadeiro, 16, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. C. Philip Cadeiro. 2336 Bay Fann Place, Santa Ana Heights. com- missioner of campus affairs, and Delib\1 Mellot, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Mellot, 1724 Galaxy Drive, Newoprt Beach, commissioner at l1r1e. OU.Mal COAST DAILY PILOT fUHGI COo\IT PUll.ISHINO COMPAAY . -.lo..-t N. w •• , Pr•llHonJ •"' l"llOI....., Jeclc R. c ... r • .,. \lk:t' ~ w ~· ~ "''"''' Ktt'flr lfllw 1\'"''' A. M1i1r,-lll1111 MMllll ... IUll1"r L ,,,,, krl•f H"""'1 ••di (l1r ftflkor ""'*' .... Offk• llll New,•rt l oule¥1rd llf•ifint Addre11: P.O. lo~ I 17S, •l66l ............. C11t1 Mel•! :uo w .. i ••r s1r ... l. .. vnl leu:l'lt n: , ... : "'~"'""' Hvrl•""J""" IMtll; ,,,,, INtll llovlrv•rl .i.11 (~!1: JOS Hwtrl '' C•mlroll Ae11 • master plan facilities ($138,000). -Repair Big Canyon reservoir lining ($10,0001. -Acquire Santa Ana Heights fire sta- tion site near Jamboree and Palisades (!80,000). -Acquire Buffalo HilJs park site No. 2 ($50.000). Yacht Club's Plea Slated On Expansion A proposal by the Newport Harbor Yacht Club lo extend its bulkhead out an additional 75 feet is expected to draw ob- jections at a meeting of the Newport Beach City Council Monday night. OAILY PILOT $11ff f'llllf Crashes Her Bike Brad Thurman. president of the 7;,o. member teacher association said be and Bart Hake. executive secretary of the N- J\1EA, would begin discussions "'1lh a Buena Park attorney \\'ho is familiar \~·ilh teacher-school board negotiations. The meetings described by Thurman as '·informational" in nature may or may not !ead to rourt arlions by the associa· tion 10 force the Newport-t.1esa school board · 1D name a factftnder in current negotiations. Bill Lawhorn, chairman of the dislricl's cerlilicated employe council has betn designated by tbe teBchers to serve fin the three-member panel. The Winton Act, California's law governing teacbcr-board negotiatons spell~ t1ut the impasse pro- cess. Residents along. the Newport-Balboa Peninsula in the area of the club have hired a lawyer to carry their opposition to the plan to the council. The club is asking for a harbor permit lo extend a llG-foot , section or !ls bulkhead an average or 75 feet bayward, out lo the U.S. bulkhead line. Crossing guard Laurel Storey. comforts a~cident victi1n Kimberly Ann Barnes, 18, of 17902 Gillman St. Irvine. Traffic investigators said h-1iss Barnes flipped head over heels off her bicycle Thursday afternoon \Vhen her purse got caught in the front wheel as she \Vas riding along Tustin Avenue near University Drive in Newport Beach. She was report· ed in satisfactory condition today at Costa h-1esa t.1emorial l-lospital with multiple, head, fa ce and hand injuries. The Newport·fi1esa school board has not appointed an impasse panel member. The district does not recognize the eris· tence of an impasse. Thurman said Thursday the meetings with an attorney are the first step to be taken by association leadership since the teachers' Representative Council voted J..1onday to authorize the N-MEA board members to "act on their behalf:' Club officials said the $22,000 project is designed to give the club more dry storage area. Pedestrian and same residential views would be aUected "quite considerably" if the permit ls approved, George Dawes, Newport Beach harbor and tidelands ad· minlStrator, said this morning. Oa9i'es, 1n his n:port to the council on the application, makes no recom- mendation, however. Dawes polntl'd out the Joint llarbor Committee tabled consideration of the plan at a meeting earller this month pen- ding an opinion from the county counsel on whether prescriptive rights to the beach have been obtained. From Page 1 DOGS ... lhe summer months these two are used for beach patrol and officers on this patrol do take enforcement aclion relative to lbe leash law. "However," Bettencourt said. "the vehicles and men are not equipped to ap- prehend loose dog::; and the time devoted to such work would obviou.sly mean that other law enforcement oblijatloru: Jn the beach area could suffer." Bettencourt. ln his survey, said he checked the clUes of San Clemente, Seal Beach, Huptington Beach, Long Beach, Redobdo Beach, Hermosa B e a e h 1 Manhattan Beach 'and Santa Monica . Stay Cool Neiv port Official Says Trash, Cans Violate Policy Bay Island's trash cans are en- croaching on public property and violate eStab lished city council policy on public righ~f-way, Acting City to.tanager Philip F. Bettencourt said today. Bettencourt said a number of com· plaints about the trash cans. which are stored within a concrete st.rUcture at the Island Avenue street end in Balboa. have been received during the past few \\'eeks. Bettencourt said he \~'iii recommend to the city rouncil ~1onday that he be authorized to negotiate with island homeov.11ers to development alternate methods and-or sites ror refuse col- lection ""'•hich \\'ould not invol\•c a permanent encroachment onto public propertr:· Poinl in~ out there is no \\"r1llen record In the city·s files of i:IU!horization given by the city for t.'Qnslruction of the enc\ousre. he said ''alternath·e methods (or storage) do appear to be available. Bettencourt said it may be possible to store the containers at the island's park· inJZ garage, a block 3\\'ay from the street end. 041lY 'ILOT li.N f'llllf Photographer. as \\/ell as several shopp{!rs. did a dfluhlc take thls \\•eek "·hile pa~slng this window displa,v in a fashionable Nc v.·~ort Beach commerc1al center. \Vas it a display or ne\v summer fa shions? 1.1ore likely, it was merely a half-co1npleled new V.'indow display. Either "'aY, it definitely was an eye.catcher. , As Industrialist of Year Orange Coast civic leader Dr. Arnold 0. Beckman today has a new title added to his lengthy chain. that of California Industrialist of the Year. Tbe first county man to win the honor since its inception 14 years ago, Dr. Beckman shares laurels with a 35-year- old UC Berkeley assistant prefessor nam· ed scientist or the year. Founder of Beckman Instruments Inc., the longtime Corona del Mar resident was cited in a bronze plaque for C1utstan· ding contributions to industry, education and public service. Dr. Peter Duesberg, 35, received in ad- dition to a plaque '5.000 for hi s research lead ing to understanding of v i r a I lransfonnation of normal . cells Is can- cerous cells. Ill The a¥i"ards were bestowed by the Callfornia Jl.luseum of Science and Industry and its educational affiliate, the Call fornia Museum Foundation. Dr. Beckman, 107 Shorecliffs Road, won the award based on long service in developing p rod u c t i v e relationships between educational institutions and business enterprise. The firm that bears his name is one of the world 's leading manufacturers of precision instrument equipment. It wss founded in 1934 with a current $140 million in annual sales and 7 ,000 employes. Among his previous honors. Dr. INDUSTRALIST OF YEAR Coron• del Mar't Beckman Beckman was the Orange County Press Club's Jl.1an of the Year in 1967 and 1966 Purchasing Agent.s Associalion Manager of the Year. The council vote, Thurman said, em- powers the association direct.ors to speak for all teacher members and take whatever steps directors feel are necessary to move negotiaUoru;: fosward. Thurman declined to speculate whether those actions would escalate or ease the Impasse proceeding teachers authorized several week! ago. ''We'll be able to say mort after we've met with counsel," he said. At Issue in the district negotiations is a master contract containing 38 proposals. The board has replied in writing to 11 <lf them and has promised to return responses to the rest at its board meeting Tuesday. Among those responses will be the board's stand on salary and lringe benefit issues. From Pagel STRIKE ... doesn't view the N-MEA as 1 viable organlialion.'' Further, the Image of tea chers as pro- fessionals is "deteriorating'' in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Solutions offered by the team were voiced by George Wichman, of the CTA ataff at Burlingame. He urged establishment of a wide rang- ing public relations program emphasWng the accomplishments of teachers. He called for an end to the ''use of nam- boyant materials and colored words" which he said were "counterproductive'' to teacher goals-when brandished in this communily. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL 4.J),Fp , Beautifully •tyled j, the word for M1rehe111. Th i1 h1nd1om• double ptdt1tal t1ble f11 turt1 1 classic p1rqu1 fop plu1 ) loave1 to mtfch. It extends to 136" when fu lly opened. The c:hair1 mty b• order•d with ttnt •1 1hown, or with bttk ptds. Stop in •nd view thi1 e xqui1ite dining tef todty. TABLE •.... ,, .................. ,,.,, ... ,, ..................... $519. SIDE CHAIRS •.. ,, •. ,,,,,,.,,.,, ... ,,,, ........ ,, ""· $1l9. ARM CHAIRS ,,._ ............... -,, ... ,, ........ $159. Site: 70" x 4'4'' With l, 22'' Le•v•s DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NEWPOllT STOlll OP EN fllUIAY 'TIL' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wes:tcliff Dr.1 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 Profts1lon1I Interior Designers Ava llable-AID INTERIORS rho"' T•ll " .. M•tt •f Of'ff<IO Ce1111ty-.l40-1Z6J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hwy. Phone: 49US51 l l Klan Leader Maintainf Calley Victiin of Bias, ~ TUSCALOOSA. Ala. (UPI) -The Ku Klw: Klan IC· cused the Army Thur1day of letting Negroes involved tn the My Lai massacre go free while maklng a "scapegoat" af Lt. William Calley Jr. The charge came in an editorial by Robert M. Shelton, imperial wizard or the Klan, printed in the organitation's monthly "Fiery Cross" magatlne. Shelton aald eight af the 11 men originally charged in the My Lal incident were black. "Why have none of them been brought lo lria1, why only the white lieutenant who obviously had no control ovrr the ..• Negroes in this brigade,'' he said. "Of course, we could not have a Negro up for trial, that would make America look like a bigoted country," Shelton wrote. A black aoldier charged in the My Lai massacre l\"as acquiUed by a court-marUal earlier this year. 'Yes, Virginia ••• ' Girl Who Received Santa Letter Dies VALATIE, N.Y. (UPI) - Mrs. Laura Vlrlgina O'Hanlo n Douglas, the woman who rectivtd the "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" letter died Thursday in a nursing home. She was 81. Virginia O'Hanlon was 8, \\'hen she v.•role the New York Sun. asking: '"Some of ,my little fr iends say there is no Santa Claus. Papa says i( you see it in the Sun. it's so. Please tell me the truth. is there a Santa Claus?" Assistant Editor Francis P. Church penned the famous 1 editorial reply in which he ansv.·ered Virginia's friends v•ere v.·rorig and concluded : "Yes. Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as cer· t.tlnly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to yoUr life its highest beauty and joy. Alas. how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as drearv as if there were no Virginias ."" ~1rs. Douglas often was reli· cent about her part in the editorial and said it was Church, who died in 1916, who should have been remem· ber!d. She said it was Church'' reply that carried the "philosophy of hope and love." UPI T-1~11t DEAD AT 81 Virginia Dougla• She lived most of her life in New York City as a teacher and principal and retired about IS years ago. She Jived in North Chatham. n e a r Albany, with relatives. Mrs. DQuglas' health has been fa lling for some time and she spent tht last t w o Christmases in the holpital. - FrldaY, M1y 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT G Jurors A~t Swiftly Amtrak Leader Blasted 13 Black Panthers Cleared in NY NEW YORK (AP) -Alter============================ WASHINGTON (AP) -T!Je two top congressional authors er the law to ealvage rail passenger service have sent Amtrak 's boss a blistering Jet- ter detailing their dlspleaaurt ever how the new corporation is being run. "There is time to correct the grievous errors that have occurred," Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (0-Wuh.), and Rep . Harley 0 . Staggers, ((). W.Va.), told Amtrak President and Board Chairman Roger ,. L.ewis. "and we herewith urge you to take appropriate and .swift aclion. ''I! the corporation is to gel off to a good 1lart," they wrote Lewis Thursday niahl, "there are certain immediate changes in policy that are essential." · The House ls considering a Senate passed re solu tion "designed to tell the cor· poratlon to do what It should have done anyway," added the leaders of the committees that created the 1970 Rail Passenger Service Act. "The point is that Congress should not have to pry this kind of information loose," they said. ;,We urge that this ridiculo!.13 situation be changed without delay." Teamsters Give Hoffa More Time HOLLYWOOD. Fla . (AP) - Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa -still pov.·erful after four years in prison -has received a 10 ahead from oth er top leaders of the union for a last ditch try to win his frtedom and resume control of th e truckers' union. "Jimmy wants 20 days until the first week in June before he makes up his mind on whether to run for re-elec· lion," a high union sour~ aald Thursday of Hoffa'• latest bid for freedom on a claim of new evidence. ''They are going to wail for him. They voted to wait for him ," said the llOUrte: of the action of the Teamsters Ex· ecutive Board meeting here. Militant Rabbi Kahane, Italy Chieftain Unite In elahl·month trial, 13 Black Panthers actuaed of bomb conspiracy h111ve been •\:· quitted in a vtrdict reached so swi!tly th.at the jurors aurprt. ed even themselve11. The panel, which included five blacks and a Puerto Rican, acquitted the defen· dants on all 12 C6Unta ot an In· dJctment 3\-l hours alter the case had bee:n turned ever to them Thursday. "We had lunch and began talking and we were amued to find out right away that we felt the same," said Frederick Hills, an editor. "The miracle was that 12 people of such el· traordJnarlly diverse backgrounds all felt pretty much the same way." It took the foreman. James Fox, a black musician, IO minutes to read the verdict en each of 12 counts for each of the 13 defendants. Spectators cheered. applauded and sol> bed as he read the last f)f the 156 verdicts, all "not guilty." Afeni Shakur, one ef two women defendants, and the only ane at the 13 free in bail, shrieked as Fox read •·not guilty " counts against her bus· band Lumumba, 29. He and most of the f)ther defendants had been in jail since arrested in predawn rald.5 April 2, 1969. Jurors, defendants, !l ix defense lawyers, relatives and fr iends crowded Into the lobby er the Criminal Ce u rt s building, laughing, crying and hugging each other. "I'm dazed -I'm dazed," said Curtis Powell, ane e! the defendant!. "We all came with bags , prepared to stay a lang time, but it wasn't ne<::essary ," said juror Joseph Garry, a po!tal NEW YORK (UPl) -Jtabbl ment harassment. clerk. Meir Kahane, head of the Stating that "conspiracy Is "There was evidence all .Jewi11h Defense League and ninonymous with the word right. but it just wasn't ~J enough." ,Joseph Colombo Sr .. founder frame," Colombo said h\11 or !he Jtalian-American Civil group might sppport the JDL Two of those acquitted fled Rights League pledged their in it! protest demonstrations In Al11eria during the trial. mutual support 1' h u rs day at Soviet missions and other Chief defense lawyer Gerald against what they described as facilities . Lefcourt r;aid he would try to "go"ernmenl hara'5ment." C I mbo "'ho had Jed his negotiate the return o f • o 0 • .. Mich11el T11 bor 11nd Richard The unusual and informal group on picket lines outside Moore. who forfeited bail of exchanges of support came at FBI orli~ sald if the JDL a new!! confere flce following "needs our support and asks,,_1_1_50.:.·"'°-·------- Kahane's release on bail after for it. we certainly will allow he had been arrested on our support." charges of i n t e r 1 t a le Kahane. offered similar sup- transportation of guns and ex· port for the Ilalians and said plosives. he and Colombo had becomt The militant Kahane claim4 interested in a common cauiie ed federal autho.,,ties were through a mutual interest In trying to suppress the JDL's "brotherhood." protests against treatment of Kahane, who was indicted Jews in RlWia. with 12 ether persons W!d - • win• ftee lrip Reglattr nowt You mey win a FREE trip to Alaska for 2 via P&O British Crufst llntt: FREE trip to Africa for 1 via TWA; FREE trip to the Yucatan fo r 2 via Maxicana Airlines; FREE 10-speed bike. ••• end you•teon gourwey ...... high-ffyfng wfth a !TWYll- llght wardrobe from• Grodins tucked Into your canvas bag. No-wrinkt• easy~arlng kn its moving with you; Just right for befng In new places. Start hero. Co,ta Mes• only - SATURDAY, MAY JS NOON 'TIL l Come in •nd talk to Mr. Allen R. Grey of Mey Co. World Travel. He'll be 9led to eniwer your trevel que1ti on1. 91odin1 COSTA MESA South Co11f Pl11e I ' Colombo. who has been ac-nesday, said hit orga.nliatlon cused af being an underworld had leaally re1igtered weapons ',-c~h~ie;f~ta~in~,~·~•~id~lh~e~J~D~L~a~n~d~an~d~h~a~d=~:·~lned~~·~·,.:v:e~ra~l~h~un:-~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Italian-American Leaille dred American Jews" to use WASHINGTON (UPI) -A chairman of the House v;ere both victims of govern-them. House subcommittee. acting in Administration subcommittee More Capitol Police, K9 Dog Corps Sought the wakt or the l\1arch I born· on Police, told UPI he would bing of the Capitol, is con- sidering proposals to increase the Capitol police force by 214 men and to create a K9 corps with dogs trained to sniff out bombs. Rep. Kenneth Gray (D-111.), Whittier OKs Nixon Honor, 3-1 ask his panel Monday to ap- prove those features , as well as proposals to install elec· Ironic surveillance equipment in the Capitol and to authorize evertime pay for police. Demands came from both the Senate and }louse to bolster the Capitol police force and to tighten security after tht early morning bomb blast on the ground floor or the Senate side of the Capitol. The bombing. still unsolved , in- jured no one but caused $200,000 damage. Repair work is under way. Gray said a comprehensive WHITIIER (UPI) -By • J. bill. requiring only House and to-I margin, Whittier College nol Senate approval. would be students have t x pressed presented to the subcommittee disapproval of President N\1· to add the 214 men to the 354 on·s honorary degree. officers now assigned to the Nixon, a 1934 graduate or llouse side of the Capltol and the small school. was awarded to the three House office .1n honorary degree af law in buildings. There are 262 of- 1954 while he was vice presi-ficers assigned le the Sen.11te dent. side in addition to 4 9 The vote Thursday was 646-\Vas h i n gt on metropolitan ,. 249 a1.11lrut revocation . There police officers who have been art 1,900 student! al the detached to v.·ork with the achoo l. Capitol for~. The 20-member s tudent r='=========;:;I senate three v.•eeks agn ps55ed the resolution that asked the college to revoke the honorary degree as a protest .11geinst the U.S. war policies in Southeast Asia. stop look •eventy-on11 at LOCAL Ne eth1r 111w1p1p1r tellt yov mere, '"'''Y dey, 1heut wl1tt'1 gei119 en i" the Gr11t1r Ore11g1 Ce11t th111 th1 D~I LY PILOT. and lease ~~~- llDD HAJl!OR 8LVD. I COSTA MESA (T1A) 5404100 Checking account service charges are inconvenient, ir~ tating,ana often add up to thirty or forty dollars a year.Sta why pay them? Keep a hundred dollar minimum balance at Southern California First National Bank and you'll never pay another service charge, no matter how (i"N- many checks you write. Won't that be a relief. FIR8T"""o-. ... lt WMU. fALC. 51 ol't'icw l11 Orutp,,lol All1eles MMl Su t>£ttolCCIUti• • C..ta MNt, 230 Eut 17th Street. 642·1660 • Huntington Beach, 8899 Adam• Avenue, 962-3377 -17122 Beach Blvd., 847·9118t • , a DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE '* A New .Superi.ntende·nt Newport·Mesa Unified School District trustees haye made kno~·n their choice for the district's to~ adminis- trative job. The p0st ranks among .the most important 1chool superintendencies in California. . The consideration of a replacement for Supt. Wil- liam Cunningham \vas thorough a~d complete. The board reviewed suggestions of a recruitment and screen· ing committee they appointed. The assurance from all of those who parti.cipated in the extensive selection process is that Dr. ~oh.n \V, Nicoll brings talent of a high degree to the district. Or. Nicoll comes highly recommended fro'!' t~c Vallejo Unified School District .. His r~cord of ~1str1ct administration represents experience 1n a variety of educational si tuations. The post he will fill is being vacated by a man who leaves a district he served well for the past three years. Though it is not without problems, the Newport-1\iesa district has. during Dr. Cunningham's tenure, f!IO~ed forward in smoothing the unification seas, estabhshmg fiscal stability and developing an outstanding, innova· tive educational program. Welcome. Dr. Nicoll. Eleve n Public Hearings There will be civic activity in quantity in Newport Beach next week. · What otherwise might have bee~ a quiet Mond~y by the bay instead ·starts the week w1~h almost c~rta1n fireworks at city hall along about 7:30 1!1 the evening .. That's when the seven city councilmen take their geats in their chambers and open the first of 11--count them-11 public hearings. Hearing number nine will be the volaWe topic of dogs.on Ne\vport beaches, An ordinanc-0, probably to ban them from June 15 to Sept. 15, will be introduced. Law enforcement and health officials are hoping the summer ban, if enacted. will be a total U-hour ban. Some restriction during summer months seems likely. . . . A hearing on the equally volat1lc subject of tide-- land use fees is next. Whal initially had figured to be another lengthy furor may be abbreviated should the councilmen who have supported the fees to date announce publicly they have changed their minds. . It is kno"'" that at least one of them has, and hts vote would be enough to kill the controversial tax .. Finally the council \vill get around to its hearing on a requeSt by the Lower Newport Bay <;ivic _District study committee to ex.tend the waterfront h1gh-r1se mor- atorium another 90 days to permit public heifings by the planning commission and the co1:1ncil. . . The potential long-range benefit of this cor:icept 1s very \veil worth the additional 90 .days. The public hear· ings should not be clouded <>r~nde~ed. meaningless ~y approving new development while this important public policy is being determined. The week that comes in with such a flurry of events finishes the same way. Former city manage; Harvey L. Hurlburt, (officially disconnected from the. city but serv· ing as a consultant the past six w~eks) will be hon?red with a going-away party ?n t.he Pav1l o~ Queen that "!~ht. Coincidentally, appl1cat1ons for his vacated pos1t1on close the same day. . . Friday is also the deadline imposed b~ the c1_ty_ coun· cil on its committee attempting to negotiate a 101nt re· peal of its agreement with the state on the route of the Paci!ic Coast Freeway through Corona de\ r.t ar .. Everything, including what may very well be a ~er­ ord number of spectators, will simmer through the first eight hearings. on things like zoning appeals and the 1971 weed abatement program. The last three are almost sure·fire barnburners, however. And Friday the top high school scholars \Vlil be hon- ored at a breakfast sponsored by the Chamber of Com· tnerce Commodores Cl ub. (Oh yes, the follow ing \\'CCk the ci ty '·goes Ha\vai· ian"-which sounds like a \velcome change of pace.) N INTER(ON T!NENTAL SALLISTI C MIS SI LES :A Ca.ncer :1 n America's· ~Big Cities If you Jive in New York and hail a cab n midtown, the driver won'l take you to tarlem if it's after sundown. If you live n ctUcagG and want to take a cab at tigbL to the South or West Side ghettos, :he back will reruse, rill make you pay irst, or will demand 1n extra fare for the rip. Harlem. the Chi- .'ago ghett~. 1nd lozens like them hroughout the na- ion, are enclaves: hey exist like for· !lgn communities in a country, controJled ,n1ore or less) by an occupying police Orce. THEY DON'T LIVE on the same nonetary system, either. Everything osts more -food, shelter, appliances, md credit most of all. The jobless rate is \\•ice as high; schooling is half as good; :amblers and pimps and dope-passers ire the figures of authority here. And the IOOr who live here are three times more lkely lo be robbed. burglarized or mug- :ed lhan the citizens Jiving elsewhere. This is quilt: literally a cancer in the ommunity, and one lhal can only pre.ad. It is pa st the point where nyone can assign b I a m e or esponsibility; il n1ake.s no difference iow how the disease started -it must be :ot under control or every large city in he U.S. will perish. WHAT ARE WE doing about it? Prac· lcally not hing. Large sums art ap- Dear Gloomy Gus: Perhaps architect William Perel- ra 's generosity in donating his de- signing headquarters barn to UC Jrvine could be matched by mov- ing his unused ziggurat faclOry lO the campus, too. - G. !. Tiii• ... ..,,. ""1K11 ,.....,.... ¥1fWt. Mt flKUUHIJ' tlleM at I... ...w1r._. , .... ,_,. Ht ...,. ,. Olo9mr ow. Dtltr 1'1111. proprialed, agencies and ~us and commissions are appotnted, staaed and funded -but somehow lltUe of the money gets down where it is most need- ed. Housing starts are neglig ible, jobs are scarce, training is a joke, and "law en- forcement" is a blend of corruplion, neglige~ and repression. These are facts it on.ly takes 24 hours to find out. Conditions are far better in the South than in almost all Norlhern cities. The South is beginning to turn itself around. ha ving learned that a system of organiz· ed bigotry sim ply doesn't work in modern industrial society. The Northern big cities don't practice official bigotry : they simp- ly follow a ··scon:hed earth" policy in re veri;e, by '"'hich everything the poor minorities need to subsist is denied them. THE SOCIAL BODY is like a physica1 organism: it is impossible to have an un- treated focus of infection that. will not spread throughout the whole .system. Unless a cancer is burned out, or excised in some way, it w i 11 metastasize throughout the whole body. And no part of the ''body" of the community will re- ma in unaffected by this poison. It is too late for sermonizing, moralii· ing. philosophizing, or making value· judgments on one segment of society or another. We are all in the same conta. gious ward , and there is no isolation chamber. lo a time of plague, only con· cem for the common good can save U$. Can You Remember? Can ;vou rtmembt!r \11hen: \'ou ne\'tr dreamed our country could vtr Jo~" You left the front door open? People knew v.·hat the fourth of July lood for? ''ou took it for granted that v.·omen, the ·lderly snd the clergy, wert to be espected? A gi rl v.·as a girl and a boy was a boy? You didn "l feel embarrassed to say"lhal hi.s \\'BS 1he best darn country in the rorld? SOCIALIST WAS a dirty word" 1'axes \\'ere only a nuisance".' The.> poor were too pr.cud to take :harity? You "·eren't 1fra1d 10 go out at night7 Ghettos \rere neighborhood~~ You knew lhe la"'' meant ju~tice . and tou felt a lillle shiver of awe at the sight .r 11 polictman? Young fellows tried to join the Army or he Navy? Songs had a tune~ Criminals went to jail~ You bragged about your home state ind your home t~-n? P<llltlclana. p r o c I a I m t d their )l.lrloc.lmi? Quotes 1''111er &.ti -'-rhe r•ce of manldnd wouJd pirilh dld they ~aR to aid each Khtr. We ctnnot exist w1thoot •mututl itlp. AU therefore that n~ •Id hive 1 right to ask it from their fellowmen : 11\d DO one who has lhc power of tranllng can refuse wllhout guilt." • Guest-Re port ' . .., CLERKS AND repairmen t r I e d to tJlease you? A Sunday drive was an ad venture, not an ordeal? You ~uld always find i;omeone willing and able y,·he.n you needed something done? Riots were unthinkable? The clergy talked about rtligion? You took il for granted that the law '"·oulrl be enforced, and your safety pro- lected? The flag was a sacred symbol? Our government a.tood up for Amerlcans any-1''here in the world? A ~TAN \\'HO went "''rtmg was. blamed. not his mother's nul'!ing habl\e or his fa ther's income? Things \reren't perfect. but you ex- pected them to tit? E\'eryone knew the difference between r1ch1 a.nd wrong. -even college pro- fessors? College kids l'A"allowed a:oldfi&h, not acid? People expected less and valued ll when lbcy had more! Ptople ~till hi.It the capacity for Ill· dlgnaUon? You considered yoorstlf Jucky to have • good job, and when you were proud to have one ? America was the land of the free and the home of the brave~ Arro)'o CrJnde Pre1a.·Reeordrr Cri11ie·fighting, Lifesav ing Work of Police Choppers Questions, Answers on Helicopters To the Editor: Jn a recent DAILY PILOT article. t read that the police department considers the helicopter an invaluable aid to crirne prevention. Chief B. James Glavas said that he could enumerate all the benefits our community has thus far deri ved out of this controversial de vice. bul that newspaper space did not permit. I say , 1f there is anything that could be said in defense of the heli~pter. i~ would ha ve to be lllwtrated in just such a list. Let the dti:uns of Newport Beach see the other 1lde of tbe issue (if there it one), a detailed. convincing enumeratK>n of cases1 not just the ambiguous statement, the: helicopter is doing a lot of good. HOW CAN THE police department ex- pect to wi n our cooperation when all we have heard so far is that : I. The helicopter may be equipped with a telescope powerful enough to see into our homes. How else could they hope lo detect what's going on so fa r away? 2. The pilots focus their attention n1ain. ly on pri vate parties and \vomen sunbathing in their backya rds. (Several teenage girls in Ney,•porl Beach claim they were observed for so long that they became self-conscious and had to go into lheir house). 3. THEY HOVER for sometimes an Mailbox Letters froni 1"£ader! are 1velcomc. Nornwlty writers should conuey their message:s in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters mU$t i11clUde signature a7ld mail- i-ng address. but namts mag be with· hetd oii .,equest tf suffu:ie,1t reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. hour over Shorec\i ffs, Cameo Shores or Corona Highlands. Why? Apparenlly · because those re sidents give the most parties. One group having a barbeque in their patio reports that the helicopter hovered so low. it blew their picnic sup- plies o(( the table). 4. Rather than dispatch patrol cars to lhe !rou ble spots, the helicopter merely hovers over them . If these are rumors. then please set us straight. Gla\'as claims that the hclicop1er is nol the only disrupting noise in New port Beach. Even i( this is true. "'hen have any of lhe.se other complaints heen made against motorcycles or sports cars? CARL VAN VLEET Reader Von Vleet's questions prompted t/1e DAILY PILOT to ask Cluef of Police B. Ja nit s Glavas for tl1e 011swers. The re.ply from him and .4.ssistant Chief fl. A. Nel.son follows. Editor 1·0 the t:diUJr : Since full-time helicopte~ patrOI !tarted Feb. I, 1971 in Newport Beach. the helicopter has assisted or been respon- ~ible in 29 anests for bllrglary ; assisted 15 boa~ in trouble outside the harOOr: found and returned within one hour lhree Josi: children; been, instrumental in many n8rcotic arrests, including over 1,000 pounds of marijuana and 1,300 tabs of LSD: assisted hosp itals in emergency blood transfers and added security for ground radio car oflicers. ON APRIL 10, the helicopter was able to follow an attempl·rape suspecl's vehi· cl~ from Corona de! Ma r to Tustin, where the arrest was made. Ground units had been unable to follow the vehicle and the suspect would have made an escape without the hel icopter observations. <See April 12 edition of the DAILY PILOT for complete story). Answering Mr. Van Vlecl's &pecitic questions : t. 1'he Newport Beat11 Police Depart- ment helicopter is not equipped with a telescope of any typt, though equipment is available. There ls no equipment available that can be used to observe into a closed area such as a house. %. 11lE PILOTS and observers focus their attention on possible crime pro- blems and hazard areas. 3. The helicopter docs not hover. It orbits an area. The only ·time it orbits more than five minutes in an area is on a call and it leaves.as soon as possible. The wind generated from the helico pte r rotor blades cannot be detected from the ground unless the helicopter is lower than 100 feet. At that height, trees, wires, and poles would make it nearly impossible to fl y. The helicopter flies over 500 feet ex~ cept in extreme emergencies. and then may fly lower only alter clearance Crom superiors. 4. Helicopters respond lo calls in ad- dition to ground radio cars, and leave when the ground forces do not need air assistance. B. JAMES GLAVAS Chief of Police H. A. NEL.SON Assistant Chief of Polic e Dog's Life Can Be Great-or Tough A dog's life can be opulent indeed. Consider J oie de Vivre, a poodle owned by f\.fr s. F. Raymond Johnson of New York City. As Judy Klemesrud told it in the New York Times, Joie de Vivre loved to eat caviar from a spoon, drink cham· pagne from· a glass and have breakfast in bed with his mistress. Both started the da y with Specia l K lopped \Vilh fresh strawberries. Other pets are far le!iS fortunate. Despite the existence of anti.cruelly laws and humane societies, thousands ~ animals continue to suffer from neglect. maltreatment or ignorance on !he part of their o\\·ners. Animal shelter employes a.rt especi ally rontemptuous of persons \\'ho turn in pets to be "put to sleep·· simply because they have become lired of them. The root of the problem i :<1 overbreeding, both inadvertent anrl deliberate. Most shelter residents are mongrels that need never have been born If their parents had been spayed or neutered. But, as Ann e Cotrell Free recently p o i n t e d out in The \Vashingtonian, "A surprising number of the animals given up by thei r o"·ncrs are •---B y Geo rge --~ Drar George : My husband eats a hui;e supper, then relires at 9 p.m.He 's up at one to raid, the iceOOx, then back to bed untll breakfast. I've tried lo tell him there's more to life than eating and slttping. Isn't that right, (ieorge~ MARIE A. Oear r.1aric : Yoo bet ! A little self.discipline could open ~ whole new vista for him. \\'Jlh a liltle self-control he could slay up until 10 or 11 and h11ve it couple of beers v•bLle l''Jlching the late show. CONKIDEN'l'TA!, TO RALPH ~ADER : Compl11ln, c Q m p I a in, ('00\plain ! Aren't )'OU ever 1atlsfied? Editorial Research purebrerls rron1 poodles to \\leimaraners -reftcct1ng the disposable product pattern of our affluent socie!y." A PET CE1\SUS or the United States probably \\•ould be impassible to un- dertake. It is est1n1ated lhat American hon1es harbor 26 million doi::s. 21 million <'ats , uncounted legions of birds. fish ;ind exotic creatures. Statistics indicate I h at, in 1hc ag· gregate, American pel.s eat well - though not as well as Joie de Vi vre . The Pet Food Institute calculates tha t the cost of "m;i intenance food" for dogs and cats -defined as sufficient lo provide a complete. balanced diet -has risen not more than 5 percent in the past decade. Nevertheles~. the institute says, sales of dog and cat food zoomed from $600 million lo $1.16 billion between 1965 and 1970. Much of the increase is attributable to the popularity of "gourmet'' pet foods. Those Y.·ho can afford to do so pamper their pets Jn other ways. A clipping-and- bathing session in a dog beauty salon runs about SIS. Professional dog walkers 1n a swank sec tion of f\1anhat.tan will air Fido two hours a day, five day.s a week, (or $21. Ou1· Na tional Disgrace At la..~t. the ~ianl ha.s !ltirred to speak. Not just ror General r..totors. but for all or the silenl corporate bodies "'ho have long endured the slings and arro\.\'S of outrageous enc111ics. Our n at i on a I disg race is the continuing acceptance of r;landrr uf American busi ness and the equating of 1noney "'ith immorallty. 1 And y,•here is the corporate self . assurance !hat has been equal in the past lo 1111 the stresses of peace and war, change and ca t;istro~? IT h.:Js finally come forlh, in the per50n of James Michael Roche, chairman or General ~lotors Corporation, lo score l h e irresponsible critics who auack the very stnu:turc of the corporal e hody and slmulu1neously poison lhe lifeblood of the entire system. This conflict r•gin11 in our time goe~ to lht roots oI power, directed not lm- n1erliately at. tht lnd.lv1dual Issues, but rather at t~ philosophy of man and naturt, tt)c detper 'roundation!i nioi;t "utnerable to the shock waves \\1hlch set into motion a tidal wave of change. .• TllE PR01'ECTJVt barricades af our systrn1 ha1·e begun lo crumble. and all of Gue1Jt Editorial us are obligated to lake itock of it and to stand "''ilh James Roche and his com- pany against the the mounting. pre ssures from all sides. Thi~ strug,i:::te has been enlarging itse lf so that we must now bt: concerned with factors last mov ing ou tside our control. It ha s not bttn enough to be oppressed by the self. destructing rebellion of our own children, or even exposed to the insults of power, it is now demanded that every rorporatlon submit to the policy of men conlinually \\'arpcd by their own temper. General f.fotors is now answering the <'all to defend not only Itself but to defend a credo lhat offe.rs few fJreworks but rather a steady promise of lmprgvemtnt for those or us who seek lhe Ideal of social re!!ponslbllity, personal liberty, znd di sciplined free enterprise. Elizabeth ~11eDonald Mannina Pnblir;htr Finance A PERSON WHO buys an exotic pet usually is doing neither him.sell nor the animal any ravor. Young monkcy~S'"~ irresistibly cute until it ls lenrncd lha{ they are almosl impossible t o house break. They \\'ill, however. brea k up the house. Despite these unendearinf: traits. more lhRn 100.000 \\'il d n1onkey~ are imported into the United Stales every year. Inspired. perhaps, by "Born Fre'°.'' around 10.000 Americans own bit cat~. in- cluding lions and leopards. But 1t \akr! more skill and patience to accon1modate an Elsa than most big-cat fan cier.• possess. In man~· cases. the un1rt1illCd and untrainable animal becomes masle r of its o"·ne r . f.frs. Si l\terrill. who has O\.\'ned a small South American jungle cat for more than Jt yea rs. told a Life reporter some ol the problems involved : "\"ou have In decorate lhe house 1vith marble and vinyl. and there'i; nowhere lhaL cat can·t reach. Por all the lack of freedom you have by owning them, and fo r all the laclc of lreedom they have by being owned by you. you might as "'ell m11kt. them inlo fur coau1." tr she had it to dn over again. l\Irs. Merrill no doubt '\.\-'Ould choose 1 coat instead of a cat. -----Friday. May 14, 1971 The edi torial page oJ the Dail11 Pilo& seeks to i11form and a:tnn- ulatc reade rs bu prc:Je t1 to1g tllis newspaper's op£nio11s a11d com- mc11tary on topics of interf1t and sioni/iconce. b11 rrovldina a forum for the e.rrressio11 of our reader1• opinions, and by presl'ntb1g tile diverse view· poftlts af informed ob.~e1 vers and Jpok1s1ntn on topics tJf tht daw. Robert N. Weed. Pu blisher I ( I I ........................... ~ ...... ~. NEXT TO BEING THERE - A visit to a Parisian Fl ea Market is in store fo r me mbers and guests of Irvine Terrace Philh11r1nonic Association. In addition to luncheon at a sidewalk cafe, they may League Juniors • browse through an unusual assortment of gift selections. Di.Splay- ing some of the merchandise are Oeft to rig ht) Mrs. J ohn Miller. Mrs. Ernest Beauchamp and Mrs. Bob Hubert. · ----- -- ~men llEA ANDERSON, Editor ,,.,...., Mer u, "" • .. ... 11 'Paris' Trip Opens Market The next-best thing to being in Paris is being promised to mem- bers and guests of the Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Association. They are invited to relax in a sidewalk cafe for luncheon, stroll through gaily decorated booths sippin~ imported \vines and shop for bargains during the 10th annual Parisian Flea l\1arket which benefits the Orange County Philharmonic Society. This year's fanciful trip will take place bet\veen 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. in the Corona del A1ar home of Mrs. Kalman Spelletich and bar· gain hunters are advised to mark their calendars now for the Wednes· day, May 19, jaunt. In the market place and available tor sale V.'ill be the works of area renowned artists, and many boutique items created ei;pecially by Irvine Terrace members await discriminating shoppers. Included in the sel ection of some of the more unusual gifts will be handcrafted beach bags and tennis equipment. Also offered will be wearing apparel from the slightly used racks, used books and savory homemade bakery goods. Country Cousins Antiques \vill feature a selection of antiques available for purchase and an assortment of prizes will be given away during the day. Tickets at $1 per person may be r,urcbased from any Irvine Ter· race member or at the door the day the l ea market opens. Serving as co-chairmen for the event are 1i1rs. Ron L. Harrod, ?ifrs. Robert Hinrichs and l\irs. Allen lit. Katz. Off to a roaring start from the Briggs Cunningham Automo tive l\Juseu m \Yill be Na tio naJ Charity League Juniors, Ne "'port Chapter wh en they sponso r Oh Really, A Rally car rally tomorrow. At the finish line of the secret cou rse, there \Yil / be di nner and dancing. Proceeds v.•ill ben efit the Tracy Clinic De1nonstra tio n llome and Nu rsery School. Rallyi ng for charity arc ~trs. Jame s T. Cre ber Ocf t) and Mrs. Tom Schock. Deadline Licked in Time for Today's Mail \Vaiting for the mailman with invitations In lland are Oeft to right) Mrs. Robert 0. Basma jian . cha irman dnd Mrs. Lawrence Kittle and Mrs. Jack Light. membe rs of the Las Marineras Au xiliary. The group will host its 14th annual Champa gne Silver Tea between 2 and 4 p.m. Thursday, May 27, in the Jrvine Cove home of Mrs. John Northcott. Donations from the 1pring event will be used for the Las Marineras Auxiliary's Newport Beach office of Family Ser· vice in the Corona ~el Mar Chamber of Commerce bulldina:. Family -__...,....--DEAR ANN LANDERS: t am a I7- year--0ld girl \\'hose sister iage 13! i" driving me nuts. The kid is the original 1'1rs. Clean and ii is more than I can bear. She cannol sland to see a used di!i1h towel on the rack hc<:ause it isn't neat looking -so she sluffs il in lhe drawer. \Vant a moldy dlsh towel? Come on over. My mother had lo make hi!r slop \•acuuming the ru~s because she was ·wearing them out She can use a quart of furniture polish in lhrtt days. (t(lr 1ilver\vart n~ds to be resih:ered because she has rubbed the plating off. Everyone in the house has lo check with Sis to locale hair brushes, washc loth.,, even .~oap. She hides everything. Almost every 11rg11n1e n1 in our hous~ t11n bt tra ced to my sisler·s super- Mess, Finds Sister's Hang-up • a Dirty Shame ANN LANDERS neatness. \\'e are not slobs, Ann . We are a normal family , but my 5ister is driving us looney. What do you suggest? -OfllO sos DEAR 0: There's more to this than neatness. l'our sister ha• an emotional problen1. A perton "'ho has a compul1k>n lo chase dirt. and cannot stand to let a used towel on a rack I~ driven by a fear or a feelin g of aunt. I 1ugge1t coun1ellng. DEAR ANN LA NDERS · T ha \'C read fleveral letters in your colurnn from peo- ple \vho despise homosexuals. Wh at do they want from us? \Vou\d lhey be satis!ied if we were all locked up. isolated from society? Or would they prefer thal we simply be shol at sunrise? \Vhy don't people rea lize that the only difference betwee11 homosexuals and heterosex uals is whal we do behind clO!I· cd doors? \Ve don'l worry about ihem. \Vhy should they worry aboul us? t-.1y roommale and I freq uently entertain mi xed couples and we have many in- teresting friends. \Ye are honorable peo- ple . We don't play with girls, pretending lo be straight, dragging then1 around to parties as a cover. We believe this is cheap and dishonest. The nolion that gay boys~re all limp- wristed and swishy is absurd, Many ho1nosexual males with w,Jlom I am in- timately acquainted are ex t r em e I y masculine in appeS'ranee, dress and man- nerismR. They work at being masculi ne to avoid detection. I am acquainted with homosexuals who 11re 11uccessful doctors, I a w ye r 1 , clergyme n, po\ilicians, They are in every walk of life. The closet queens in the pro- feuions and politics must bt very circumspect, however, because they are mbject to blackmail. Isn 't this shameful? A year of psychiatric therapy has helped me to accept myself as I am. I now know that I don 't need the friendship of anyone who views me as a freak. I hope and pray that one day 111 people wlll be judged on the basis of what they C<>ntribute to humanity and how they treat their fellow man. Wouldn't that be wonderful ? -WRITI'EN IN BEAU· MONT, MAILED IN NEW ORLEANS DEAR FRIEND: Ye•, It would be wonderful -and I predict tb1t one day It will come to pass. "' DEAR ANN : I was touched by lht beautiful teller from the !>year-old lroy who wa s so kind and genel'OUI to the old man who lived ne:a:t door. Jt wu •heart.. warming Jetter and I thank you for it. rd gi ve 15 years Of my life for I IOI'! lfkt that. -SCARSDALE DEAR SCARS' I'll lid lhal'• abool what lhe boy11 molher cave -II 1ear1 ol her life. Thanks for wrllfa&. AIC<>hol Is no shortcut to toeial suc:ceu. lf you think you have to drink to be ac.. cepted by your friends, get the fact& Read "Booze and You -for Teen11tr1 Only,·• by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents In coin and a long, self-addressed, damped envelope \Vith yaur request in care of the DAILY PI LOT. I l.i ,. I ,1 ' :;fif DAILY PILOT . • • • • ' • Peering Around MISS 1\1ELODIE Ann : Keller. daughter of 1\1r. and : Mrs. Glen Keller of Costa : Mesa, attended the province : conference of Gamma PhJ : Beta in Tempe. Ariz. Miss • Ketler is a freshman at UCLA : and recently was elected : treasurer or her chapter. : A TEA aod recilal will be ·given in Lake Park Clubhouse, Huntington Beach al 3 p.m. : Sunday. ?oiay 16. The event : will hooor 1\irs. Eva Granger, : and participating will be : music students of Chai'lie :Granger Jr. and his sister, : Pifiss Edna Granger. j Junior Leagues ~Convene Friday, May 14, 1471 Observing its golden an- :ruversary throughout t h e :month of May Is the Assoc:ia- :tion 01 th• Junior Leagues of Nutmeat Sale Sweetens :America. : ~1ore than 575 delegates Examining the ne\v .automat_ic exposure ca_mera system donated by their ch~p­ :1athered for a national con-ter to Hoag h1emor1al Hospital. Presby ter1an, .arc ~!rs. \V. Fred Page, vice .vention in Colorado Springs, president (left) and l\1rs. James \V. Hanl ey, president of ~alboa H.arbor Alum.nae, Colo. Atay 2-6. The Y Gamma Phi Beta. Explaining the im portance of producing precise photom1cro· Tepresen ted 218 Junior graphs is Dr. Lloyd Sliverman, pat.bolo gist. Funds \vere raised through the Leagues in the United States, chapter's annual holiday nut sale. Canada and Mexico. _:::::!:..::::...:....:::::.::::.c...::.:::c~c...::.::::. _ _:_ __ ~-~----~-------- '. The convention theme Graduation Upcoming , . Horoscope Leo: Enhance Your Image SATURDAY MAY II By SYDNEY OMARR by financia l disagreement. Pa- tience, diplomacy now can ac- compllsh wonders. You may be charged with money obliga. ARIES I March 21-April 19): Lion not rightly your own. Acce.nt on friend!, hopes, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); wishes. Social acllvity is Emphasis Is on partnership, hlgtill&hled . Yoo can gain plen. marriage, how you relate to ty now through fr I end I Y public. Be sure to enhance im· associations, contacts. Sagil· age; see people in realistic tarl u1 Individual could play light. Lie low. Let others have key role. Be seen-and see. their share of spotlight. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Draw attention to talents (O..operate with Gemini in· usually hidden. Means come dlvidual. Do some digging for out of shell . Express yourself additional facts. Don't be at party, social affair. One satisfied with superficial In- who attempts to belittle you dieations. Find reasons: base wlllf"dleamt a hard lesson. Be actions on logic, not imp1.1lse. con I en . LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 22): GEMINI (Ma~ 21-June. 2~) :'\. Affections a re stimulated. Accent on moving, obta1.n1ng Improve relations with answers . t? key questions. children. Welcome change or \'lrao tnd1v1dua l now c~n pro--scenery. Don't hang on to vt valuable ally. Don t fight past. Break with one who ob- change. Make concessions. viously is using you. Look to CANCER: (June 21.July 22l: future-it is brighter. Domestic area may be shaken SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Bureau Installs Officers Strive to present your in- dividual style. Lead rather than follow. Build for future-do so on solid base. Emphasis is on properlY, real estate, conditions al home. Slick to facts . SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Stress venatile ap. proach. Display intellectual curiosity. Be willing to laugh at your own foibles . Aqu1 rlus individual can provide key Installation of officers took answers. Be willing t o place for the V o I u n t e e r ask-then you learn. • • I IJ t l Africa Reviialized • Enlightening members of the Trojan League of Orange County on the Dark Continent will be Dr. Tracey E. Strevey, historian from the University of Southern California, whose topic will be A Look at Educational Trends in Africa. Collecting. artifacts for the 10 a.m. meeting and luncheon Tuesday, May 18, in ·the Santa Ana home of Mrs. William Hayward are Mrs. John M. Billings {left) and Mrs. Fred Bice. Nostalgia Returns Night Owls Singing Costa Mesa. Forecast for the Future in· Corporated the leagues' goals bf reshaping the volunteer J>rograms and the importance :e( relating ecological realities jn planning future trends. Etiquette Reviewed Bureau of South Orange Coun~ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. ty witll Mrs. Don "dkjnson ac-19): Check resources. Review t~pting, p~sidentlal .d u t i. e s budget. Take nothing for ...,...lrom ·W:ugti My(latt., • ~ granted. One ~om under Leo Other officers include the exerts oecuhar ch arm . "Kee.na&e" Guys and Gals in costume will present a pro.- gram of nostalgic songs when the Night Owls of the Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler Roost meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 16, in the Bethel Towers, AOOJmpanying them in their varieit repertory will be Mrs. Florence: MacGinitie. Members of the Harbor Senior Citizen's Choral Group, the 22 singers are dirfl:ted by Mrs. James Sawyer. Traveling to the canvention was Mrs. John Kllle fer, presi~ 1 dent of the New-port Harbor J unj(lr League. She was ac· companied by the Mmes. Merill Brown, Lionel West and Jr;ae Ewing. KATHREENE BRANDT To S1y Vow1 July Date Selected J uly 17 rite& in the Church of Christ, Cost.a Mesa are being pJaMed by Kathreene U:>uJ.ae Brandt and Baron Lee Mahrling, whose betrothal has been announced by h e r ps.rents, Mr. and Mrs. Deene T. Brandt of Huntington Beach . The bride.elect a t l e n d e d Huntington Beach High School afid araduated from Founlain Valley High School. ·Her fianct, son of fl.1r. and 1'1rs. Robert B. Mahrling of Fountain Valley, is a graduate af \VestmiMter High School and served in I.he Army. Xi Xi Pi Views Man The Enjoyment of Man will be discussed \\'hen Xi Xi Pi Chapter, Beta Sl~ma Phi, meets at 8 p.m. Wrdnr.~tlay. li.1ay 19. in !he Hun!1ngtnn Beach homr of P.frs. Honald Sarouhan . 1.·lrs. Robert Kremer ~·111 present the program following a short bu~incss 5ession con- ducted by 1.lrs. Norm a n Nieberlein. president . Plans !or the Beta Sigma Phi st.ete convenllon laking place Friday, Saturday and Sunday, fl.1ay 21. 21 and 23. \\'ill highlight !he business session. Mr. and P.frs. EIOOn Dvorak wilJ reprt-sent the chapter. NB Auxiliary Graduation announcement etiquette is often perplexing for student and parents. A leading manufacturer of announcements and o t h e r graduation products 0 ff er s these suggestions on how to properly handle t he an- nouncemenl of an upcoming graduation. Announcements should be malled JO days to lll'o wec.>ks before graduation lo insure that everyone on the mailing list receives his announct!ment just prior to lh':! event. Envelopes should be addressed personnll y. with pen and ink . The gu1nmed outer envelope should be addressed formally with a complele mailing ad· Dinner Party Given To Announce Betrothal During a cocklail buffet din- ner party in the Pasadena home of Mr. and Mrs. Zan John Zak, they announced the engagement of their daughter, Justine Louise Zak to Thomas Patrick Dougan Jr .. son of P..1r. and Mrs. Thomas Patrick Dougan of Corona del Mar. Guests were family members of the betrothed cou- ple, who are planning a July 17 wedding in the Church of Sl. Bede the Venerable, La Canada. Miss Zak ls a graduate of Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy, Pasadena and at- tended Orange Coast and San Diego State colleges where she majored In home economics. She was presented to society during the Los Angele~ Athletic Club's a n nu a I Sweetheart Ball. Her fiance , who crews for his father on the Cclumbia which was an America's Cup contender. is a graduate of Ccrona del ~far High School . A business administration ma· jor, he also attended OCC and SDSC. ciress. Avoid abbreviatlons. Your return address may be added on the flap of the outer envelope. The inner envelope holding the annourn:ement should bear the names of the person or persons to whom the an· nouncement is being sent. This may be expressed informally, as: Aunt ~1ary and Uncle Paul. Edward Harris, Grandmother. Children of the addressee may be shown here, using the first name only. If the announcement has a special card holder for the graduate's personal card. it should be placed in this holder. If there is no holder. the card should be placed in the fold of the announcement so that the graduat~·s name faces away from the text. Announcements should be placed in the inner envelope v.•ith ille folded edge inserted first and the front of the an· nounceme'lt faci ng the nap. Place the inside envelope fac- ing towards ~ back or the out.side envelope when in· serting. The outside envelope should be sealed securely and sent by first class mail. Wedding Planned Convention Ideas Grow Mr. and Mrs. Eugene "P. McGovern of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter. Nancy Lee McGovern to David McCon· nell. A June 19 wedding in St. Andre\v's Pre s byterian Chapel, Newport Beach is being planned. The bride-to-be Is a graduate (If N e w po r t Harbor Hlth School and attends Orange Ccast College ~"here she is a member of Epsilon Delta. Her fiance. son of l\1r. and t.lrs. Earl D. McConnell of Costa Mesa. is a graduate of Costa r.tesa fl igh School. July Plans Federation A Garden of Federalion in Bloom will decorate the Hyatt House in Palo Alto Thursday, Friday and Saturday, t.1ay 20 to 22. when the California Federation of \\'omen's Clubs, Junior Membership conducls a state convention . Orange District Juniors will Seniors In Tune H~rbor Senior CI t I zen s ' Choral Group directed by Mrs. James Sawyer '"'"ill entertain the American Association of Retired Per~ons. N e w p o r t Beach Chapter. Fo!lou·ing a nonr't luncheon :ind short business mceling the progran1 .i.1·ill bt>gin :it 1 • Bloom rn leave en masse on the same flight from Orange County Airport and ~1rs. Robert Calderwood will be installed as the district's president. Officers will be introduced during ba nq uets of ac- complishments taking place al l 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Grover Seguine Jr.. state coordinator. slate chairmen and guests will be hono~. Mrs . Vernon Cunningham. CFWC slate president. and district prt'sidenls. will be honort'd during the luncheon meeting taking place on Fri- day. \\1ith officers to be in- stalled at 8 p.m. Saturday's luncheon theme will be Look to This Day and will honor ~irs. Dan MrKin· non, Junior public affairs rh:lirman, and outgoing state officers. Announced p.m. Thurschi y. fl·l<iy 20. in 1hr Soro ptimis ts A July \\"Cdding in Our Ladv. Newp1lrt llarb1lr Lu I h c ran Ch"'ch Nev.'port Harbor Soropllmist Queen of lhe Angels Catholic · Club meets the first three Church is being planned by All persons 55 or over v.•ho Jane Eliz:ibcth 1\rosse and are inll'rc5ted in the organiza-\\'cdnesda ys for a noon lion are invited to attend the luncheon in the Derby, Cosio Donovan Evans Dorsey. ~t Parents of the brtrothed meeting.========="='·=====:::::== couple are P.tr . and ~trs. ==._ George T. Kresse of Newport Beach and P..1r. and ~ir.1. ClarenC"t' Dorsey of Tustin. HANG TEN ~tiss Krnsse is a graduate nf Coront'I dtl ~fe r High School . attended ('(!liege In Color11do anti is a gr:idu ate of the Califomle Profession;:il School of ~tf'ctical As~istants. Si1n 6 to 14 AT lier ftance is a UC I T'he Ladies' Au:rdll11ry of graduate. Newpart Beach Flre:-----------1 Departm<nt gathers the third Kid Llk T ~ows Wednesd.!IY! at 8 p.m. 1n S e 0 various locatlon1. Jnformall on regarding location may be ASK ANDY 3404 VIA LIDO. NfWPORf HACH Mr.!. Charles Cotton, vice AQUARIU~ (Jan. 20-~eb. Pres'dent· Mrs Frank Lynch 111): Cycle h1.gh; be espec1a~Jy 1 • • • accommodating to Sagltta nu s ~~creta~~· and Ralph Allen, individual. Take initiative. asur · . You gel what you want-ht: New Board members In· sure you know what actually is elude Kennet h Walker, Mrs. needed. Don'! ask for more Sadie Reid, T-.irs. Thomas Vas-than you can handle. quez, David Crump, James PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Dods, 1.·lrs. Clarence LaNier, A·luch occurs behind the Richard l\1arowitz, Ca Iv i n scenes. \1iew may be obscured Stewart and P.1rs. J oh n by wishful thinking. Revise Williams. order of priorities. Someone may be pulling wool over you r eyes. Be perceptive. Search for trulh. Townscape Visualized Towns cape. Hunlinglon Beach will be the topic when Royce Neuschalz, landscape architect, and Bob Vasquez, assistant city planner speak at the meeting of the Huntington Beach Brarn:h, American Association or Univ er s I ty A solo performance will be offered by Mrs. Gloria Rush of Ontario who wifl be ac- companied by her mother• Jl.1rs. George Stewert. Reservations now are being accepted for an August visit to th e San Diego Night Owl Roost where a special program is being arranged. Refreshments and decor~ lions for Sunday's meeting are being handled by M i s I Dorothy Dare, ch airman , assisted by !lttrs. Erik HanSfn. Ce rtificates of distinguished servit":? y,•ere given voluntetrs including the Mmes. Fred Arnold. Thomas M cc I a in. Eugene Goda, W a I t e r Godshall, Reinhold Swanson and Robert Bock. Mrs. Bock is coordinator for the Well Baby Clinic volunteers. Women. New SI ate Planned by Mrs. David Carlberg. chairman of the Human Use cf Urban Space Takes Over Study Group, it will take place CLOSEOUTS PAINTINGS WHOLESALE OR LESS I Founding Recalled IW ''~ A~., ""' Muo 'li~at~7:~30~p~.m~.~W~edn~e~sd~a~y~, ~Miiaiiy~~·='=u~ .. 51,.:10 ....... ,. 1 '·""· 19, in Lake Park Clubhouse. Over the Rainbow is lhe theme seltcted by M r s . William Halliday for in- Alpha Delta Pi's founding 120 years ago will be celebrated by S o u t h e r n California alumnae lomorrow during festivities aboard the Princw Louise. Special guest will be l\trs. Berne Jacobsen of SeaUle. a member of the grand council and National Panhellenic con- ference delegate and treasurer. Toastmistress will be Mrs. Robert Hart unian of Hun- tington Beach, president of the Southern Area Council. lo O';j fh e stallation ceremonies which she will conduct Tuesday, May 18, in Mesa Verde Country Club. Mrs. Halliday will be charg- ing new officers of the Coast Women's Club of Corona del Mar with their duties. Heading the organization for the coming year will be Mrs. George Fox, and serving on her board will be the Mmes. Dale l\1agor. Art Hoodenpyle and Marjorie Feddersen. vice presidents; Jens Andersen. Leslie Penn and H a r r y Charlton, secretaries: E. H. Geiger. treasurer: Hal liday, parliamentarian, and George Bryson, junior past president. :J-aJhionJ NOW IN Corona del Mar 1/2 OFF ENTIRE STOCK SAT. & SUN. ONLY 10 a.m.·6 p.m. 3535 E. COAS1 HWY. CORONA DEL MAR Comin9 May 15 Must We Make Our Real World Intrude On a Child's 11Lollipop Logic"? Bob McGra th1 host of TV's "Sesame Street1" ex- plains what he calls "Lollfpop Logic." He says that "to get a good look at o child's logic, yo u hove to slip up on it, enter the chi ld 's world ever so carefully, tolk very little ond listen m uch." e THE 'FIRST' FONDA -At 66. Henry Fonda is still on lop in the precarious world of sho\V bu si· ness and son1e \\'eeks he gets hi s picture in the paper almost as much as his daughter. Jane. He's this \v(!ek 's Profile subject. e THE 'LAST' DIET -Bryon G. Weis, who has been over,veight most of his life, tell s about his ups and dou•ns -from first diet to last _ in "I-low I Lost 8.000 Pounds." All Co111 i11!! Saturday in th e I DAILY PILOT J obt.lined by c1Jllns Mrs. T. C. ----------.!~§~~~§ Dalley, 548-9835. """'L~~~~~~~~'-·-~_''-'-~~"-''-'~~~~~~~~.J i._._ ................ ~~--~~~~~~~' • • 17 ! 17 I . ... ... ,. -· --·· ' t;esia Mesa Today's Flnal EDITION N.Y. Stoeks , VO~. 6-4, NO. 11 5, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 14, '197f TEN CENTS • Newport-Mesa Strike Possibility Downgraded By GEORGE LElOAL Of ri. Dlllt' , ... , St1tf 11>e word ''strike" is a "bogeyman" a handlul of Newport-Mesa Education A!sociatton members gathered to hear results of a three-day evaluation of their usociation were told Thursday. "You 're not close to calling a strike in this district," said Mrs. Dorothy Brooksby of the National Education ~SO<iation (NEAl staff in Washington, D.C. She W8.l!I one of a four-member panel ... ~. I • invited .by Lhe N.AIBA to take a look al the association's effectiveness in serving teacher members and dealing with the district and community. Mrs. Brooksby's remark wu part oI a series of recommendatiom urged by the evaluation team 'ror implementation by the end of this school year. She indicated the as.sociation should "define the tenm being bandied about" such as strike and ''negotiationa" another I ' • • JETTIE ANO WINGED PAL, THE GENERAL, GO FOR STROLL Poodle and Pigeon as lnsep1r1ble 11 Snoopy ind Woodstock Friends Indeed Poodle, Pigeon Share Sanie Abode By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of the 0 111'1' ~lltl llfff Can 1 persnickety poodle and a homeless homing pigeon find happiness in a house trailer? IC Snoopy Md Woodstock can share a beagle bungalow in the Peanuts comic strip it can happen anywhere, with the 11ame warmly human animal antics in- volved. The make-believe characters created bv cartoonist Charles Schulz have ac· tUally come to life at Lhe Richard Hogans' mobile home, 1518 Newport Blvd,, Cosla Mesa. . This Is the story of Jettie and General . Just like Snoopy and Woostock, they're inseparable. sharing and fulfilling some mutual need not W be alone in a world in- habited by poor. dumb people. The rela}ionship goes back to May 2, when Hogan took a group of Seventh Day Adventist Pathfinder Club youngsters te Del Mar for a day-long event. Exploring under a railroad trestle, the boys discovered General and a sick t1idekick -apparentl y abandoned by mother homing pigeon-huddled on a rafter and guided Hogan to take a look. "I put lhem in a bo~ and took them homt as a surprisP. for my wife, B11rb," &11y1 lhe Fairvil!w State Hosp i I a I psychiatric techn ician . "The one passed away, but General is thriving." A diet of cornmeal and water led through a rubber syringe and the at- tentions ol a French govenriess are keep- ing the young pigeon happy. Jettie -who nosed right into General'• cage and took charge from the out.set - has al.so perked up and ill acting like a dog with a new Jilter ol pups. "The dog lays down just like she 's nursing . The bird crawls up and nestles between her front paws,'' Hogan ex- plains. Jettie also licks away untidy bits of cornmeal after feeding lime , plus performing more personal diaper change- t}'J>e duties. Just like Woodstock in the Peanut.Ii strip, the homing pigeon who has found a home is trying to fly, but failed a nut· tering solo effort Wednesday. She compensated by stalking around the floor .. pecki.ng at the carpet and con· versing in squeaky monosyllables with her French poodle pal. "She !alks by chirping and flapp ing her wings up and dnwn," sa ys Hogan, wh~ probably wonders what Jettie and General are di$Cussing. Chances art lt'a wh at cute house pets humans make. Jobs Requeswd for YES A parenlless C-Ost.a Mesa youth ar- rtsttd earlier this week after an al· t.e.mpttd house burglary told police he tmsucceu fuUy hunled • job for two months. Ch1nce11 are his plight could have betn avoided through contacting lhe Harbor Arta Youth Employment Service. which 1oday announced a pre-1ummer 1tepup ln optr1tln1 hou rs. ' . The YES office it M4 Center Sl., will funcLion weekdays from 2 to 5 p.m .. in- creasing an already-tremendous nttd for jobs to be filled 'tiy youngsttra seeking work. Merchants. businesses. or homeowne~ needing a hand on 11 full or part-Um ba5is mAy call 642-0474. acco rding to Y 1pokesm11n Bill Band11ruk. ... "Outing April YES filled about 100 job1 but we need more,'' 1ays Bandaruk. word .she &aid is not fully under1tood by teacher members. She said the bogeymen words "just panic people" implyinf their use was confusing teachers. "You ahould make It t:lear that 'negotiation' is nothing more than the art of sitting down and talking," she aug- gestcd. Bart . Hake, executive secrtlary to the 75G-member teacher association. said after the meeting that Mrs. Broobby had the right to "• personal opinion on whether or not conditions in the Newport· Mesa district were ripe for calling a 1trike. "'There may be members of the N-MEA who do not subscribe to that view," Hake said. For the most part, the evaluation team of NEA and California T e a ch e r s A.ssociawn (CfA) expert& was com· plimentary ol the N-MEA orgu.ization and·--rated-lts staff u befnc .. outstan- ding." Criticisms levded by evaluaton in- cluded : apathy on part of membership, wide gap between elementary and secon- dary teachers ' view•. declining mem· be:rship, lnadequate leadership training • programs and poor communications with lhe community. Wendall Newman, executive dlrecwr df the San Bernardino Teachers organiu- tion, spoke on the evaluators' criticiaw. He said the association seemed to mo5l teachers interviewed by the team lo be promoting through contract demand• issues that "renect state and national needs that are not. 1ecessarUy relevant ta the local situation. The thought of a strike is unacceptable to most teacher• in the d.iatrict," he said. The team concluded from its talks wlth teachers. the press, district officlals and community leaders that the "community. (See STRIKE, Pafe I) Rogers, Senator Clash Fulbright Lashes Out at Viet War 'Double Talk' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers in a bristlin& confrontation with Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.), today described as unconstitutional and UMeceuary pro- posals to restrict a President's -authority to commit troops abroad. Rogers testified be.fore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Fulbright, that such action would limit the President's constitutional powers and seriously limit hJs ability W carry nut foreign policy. During a subsequent exchange, both Warrant Out For Blonde In Bomb Plot NEW YORK (UPI ) -A federal war· rant was issued today for the 1rreat of activist Leslie Bacon on 1 charge of con- spiring with six alleged Weathermen ta blow up a Madison Avenue bank branch. U.S. Commissioner Clayton D. Holl· Jnger issued the warrant on a govern- ment complaint which said the 19-year- old blonde, arrested last month as a ;'material witness" in the bombin'g of the U.S. Capitol, had ''admitted beyig present al meetings with the other conspirators and discussed with them a plan to bomb the First National City Bank Buiding." The other six alleged conspl.raWr1, seized by police oul!lide the bank Sept. 14, pleaded guilty last month tt> reduced state charges of conspiracy lo commit arson. Three of them were sentenced a week ago to maximum four-year prison terms, and two to three-year terma, Sentencing of the sixth was delayed while he undergoes psychiatric obaervation at Bellevue Hospital. Miss Bacon, arrested April 27 in a WashingWn, D.C .• commune, was quell· tioned about the alleged plot to bomb the New York bank by a federal grand jury in Seattle, where she was taken after her arrest. BRAZEN THIEF GRABS THRONE A brazen burglar broke into an ezclusive Costa Mesa residence and &Ulle the $50 Wilet seat. Alvin Sugarman complained to Costa Mella police Thursday. Sugarman, spokesman for the Garden Grove building firm that owns the house at 3001 Country Club Drive, told police he would be unable to identify the object if it i.! recovered. Rogers and Fulbright displayed un- concealed Irritation and anger with each olher. Fulbright said the administration was using "double talk" W justify con- tinuation or the Vietnam War and ex· pected members or Congress W follow its edicls like "good boys." At another point, Fulbright remarked, "the more I ob.serve this administration, the more it appears that you are follow· ing exactly the same course as your predecessors." ''You," he said to Rogers, "have gone almoit as far as Mr. Katz· enbach." "Oh, Mr •. Chalrman!" Roger1 ln- ttrjecttd angrily. Fulbright'• reference was W tutimony by Kaltenbach before tht C<lmmittee when he waa undersecretary of state that the power of Congress to declare war was no longer a reality ln the 1ge of nuclear miuilery. Roge rs specifically rejected th at charge and that he dis1greed with Katzenbich's view entirely. "Can I say it any more clearly?" he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. War Minister Held Egypt's President Sudat .Announces Coup Failure CAIRO (UPI} -President Anwar Sadat 1aid tonight he had foiled "what amounted to a coup" by hi!! political op- ponenta and that Gen. Mohammed f'awzl, the war mi nister, had been placed under house arrest. Other opponenl!l were jail· ed. . Sadat spoke in a nationwide bro adcast one day after six cabinet minister11 and three top policymakers resigned in Egypt's biggest politica l upheaval· since the 19117 war wilh Israel . He said several member1 of the central committee of the Arab Socialist Union Mesa Violinist Set to Perform At Carnegie Hall A Cost.a Mesa High School violi11ist re- turns W New York's Carnegie Hali next Wednesday, one ()f 230 outslandin.11'. young musicians across the 11.ation chosen to perform . Linda Lipman, 17, or 1221 McCormack Lane, Is one of si• Southland studenta chosen for the 110-piece American Youth Performs Symphoriy. The concerl will be conducted by Mor- ton Gould, ini.ernationally known com· poser and arraa.ger, and in its siX"th sea- aon, .sponsored by American Airlines. Miss Lipman. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Llpman, has played in Carnegie Hall twice before, as well as with the Louisville, Ky., Symphony Orchestra. A tot.al of J .ooo candidates ror the sym· phony and the 120-voice youth chorull were screened by profes!!onal musicia11s based Oii teacher recommendations and taped audition•. and two senior poUce olfleer1 were sent lo jail . Sadat announced plan1 for a complete reorganization of the Arab Socialist Union, . Egypt'1 only poUijcaJ party. (Earlier story, page 4). He said free elections will be held from "top to bottom" under his own supervision and "I will be eitremely cruel to artybocly who attempt to ri1 the elections." The political crisis was so t1eriow that government leaders or their deputies from Libya, Syrla and the Sudan flew unezpectedly to Cairo earlier today tt> pledge their soUdarlty with Sadat. Sadat said he asked Vice Premier and Interior Ministe r Sha rawl Gom.aa. to re!lign because Gomaa, 11 head of the union 's organlutional committee, had engineered maneuvers to embarrass the president. He said live of lhe mia.isters who quit Thursday announced thelr resignationa over Cairo radio without his knowledge. Fawzl was one of th01e who resigned. Sadat said he discovered only Thursday a tape recorder Jn his own room at the RepubUcan Palace. He said he discovered the instrument by using an electronic device after being Upped oft by some ministers. He said the recorder was installed by Intelligence operaUves working under former ministers Gomaa and Sllml Sharai. Sadat uld the five minlstf:rs who an- nounctd their resignations on the radio quit to show solidarity with Gomaa . "They thought that Egypt will coll!lpse but today we fo rmed a new government including technicians, professors and aome of the mMy efficient people: with whom our land abouncb," Sadat said. Sadat said he was leaving hi! oUlct fm. mediately after the one hour and 25 minute speech to admlnlster the oath to the new cabinet. Finch Quitting • Ill '72 Nixon Adviser May Run for California Position Nixnn Administration ad viser Robert H. Finch announced Thurlday I n Anaheim that he will wa11h his hands of Washington after the 19il elections, hit- ting the road home lo campaign again in California. "I'll come back: as soon 111 the nat election Is over. I've already told the President," aaid the former lieutenant governor wQo ~)' take a shot at the gover'!Ol'sl\!P llafl(. , "r'v• pri>mised my family to come back." Speaking to a plumbing, heating ind cooling contractors' convenUon 1t tht Disneyland Hotel, •·inch covered much ground on ,. local, national and tnter- n111tional scale. He 1111id he will devote efforts in months ( 1he1d to campalgning for Prtaidcnt Nix· on's re-elecUon then may run in 1974 11 U.S. senator or 1ovemor. The former Secretary of Health Educa- tion ind Welfare predicted current unemployment in Cllilomia will be helped by a new M mllllon dlCll )'tar allocation for manpawer training. The federal grant will enable a ts.week continu1tion of prtstnt program.., with funds lptnt on 5,000 or the hard-core unemployed to develop work aldlls and find Jobs. A remaining SI million from a prior ellotment will be administered by the , Californf11 Department of H u m a n Retourca Development, while more fUnd& wlll be forthcomtna nt1.t fl5cal year. J "And they'll be 1pent in the artas - s;uch as Orange County -which have tM- most difficult unemployment problems,•• Finch declared. He ·said America faces a different crlsia ln the health care field. with 11 shortage of more than 100,000 doctol'I and at least $70 billion required just W start bringing U.S. ltlindarda up to a reason- able level. One of the Prtskttnt'1 four main areas or program developmt.nt ln th. potlUcally-ailJcal ,coming year will be tn health, Finch added, plu11 housing, educa- tion and drug control efforts -e:rtrclsed at the UnJted Nations level. Turplng to other luues. FI n e h predicted the Vietnam War situation (S.. FINCH, P•fe .. 11 Fulbright responded lbat the Nhon AdmlniJtration like its predecessors wu engaged in "usurpation of war power1" of Congress. Rogers adamantly opposed bills to re- quire C-Ongressional authorization for commitment of troops oveneas. He u id they were a n unconstitutional ln· fringement on the President'• powen u commander in chief and would, weaken the nation by tying the President'& bandA (See CLASH, Pap I) Senate Sets SST Vote Wednesday WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate agrted today to vote ne:rt Wednesday on the revived Supertoolc Tranaport pro. gram with SST oppone111.S emerl!nl from day Jong...negotlations in 1 atrong tactical position. The vote, scheduled for about 5 p.m. will be on an amndment by Sen. William Pronnlre (~Wis.), to reverse a clOH House decision earlier this week that re- directs use of $&$ million in SST fundJ in a $7.2 billion appropriation measure. The $85 million was originally Intended to pay close out costs of the SST program .after Congreu voted to 1bandon tht projeet earlier this year. The House changed tht provision so the moaey could be used for continued federal fund· ing. Agreement on a Senate vote had JtOt been ezpected so quickly. It was reached after a day of behind the scenes bar· gaining among Snate leaders. Assist.ant Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia told newsmen that Prox· mire, leader of two earlier auccessfu l Senate fights against ssr. emerged with a strong tactical adva•tage, Under the agreement, if Proxmire'• amendment ill approved, the Senate most likely will pass the llUpplemental appro- priations bill, flOf'ely needed for gove,.... ment salaries, welfare and food stamp programs, and send it to a conference with the House. President Takes Off For Florida Weekend WASHINGTON (AP) -President leU for Florida Friday to spend the weekend i t his villa in Key BiscayJ1e. The presidential plane look nff from Andrews Air Force base In suburban Maryland at 2:16 p.m. (EDT). Coat 1''eather Hazy sunshine ls the best t.ht weatherman can offer this week· end, with lltUe temperature change on the Orange Coast where mer- cury will reach 62 on the beaches and into the lower '10s inland. INSIDE TODAY The cit11 of Huntinotox Beac1' is holdhlg an aJJ doy festival in Murd11 Pork thi$ Soturda11-Yow con read aU about ii in toda.11"'1 Weekender. Mu-.i """ M "•""""' ""' w Ot•AM C.U.IY ' ••1t•lll'•h M-u """' , .. ,, llMk .W.rutt 1 .. lf """'''""' . n..i.n ,...,, Wttlfltf c Wtftltfl"I N.wt l•tt' '#trltl Ntw1 W WtMlllNr 11• t DAil Y PILOT Fro .. Pagel FINCH •.. ut.ilized by Conaru.sm•n Paul McClos- Qy'1 ertort to dump Nixon will no longer be • point of conflict ror political ad van· Iago. Friday, M11 l.C, 1971 Salt Creek Area Badham to Seek Finch commtnted on the controvualal SST program, saying Jt has been revived due to pre1sure on leglslaters who voled It down by their constituenu around the nation. Marine Preserve - Help Sought. By Teacl1ers 111 Impasse "I think we will gel an all-volunteer anny eventually," he also said in regard to the draft issue.. "That i51ue b the Vietnam War,'' said Finch, contending he found on a recent If.country tour of Ew-ope It is no longer an issue there due to withdrawal pro- eram.s. l!rom Pagel CLASH ... in an emergency. "I don't rtmember when I've been mart disappointed," Fulbright to I d Rogers, facing the secretary who nt across from him behind a felt<:overed table tn the Senate caucui room. Fulbright eharged that U.S. operations In Cambodia and Laos were undertaken without consullaUon with Congresll and that conUnuaUon of the Vietnam War had no legal underplnnlng. Rogers cooltnded that Prtaideot Nix· on's actions In Southeast Mia were within his rlgbtJ as commander in chief to protect American troop!. "I don't think the President hall any lack of constittional authority t o withdraw from the war," Roger1 snap- p<d. "There comes a time," Fulbright responded, "when this double talk just doesn't appeal to us." lt was poaslbly the aharpest public ti· change between Rogers and Fulbright - who have been friendJ and golf parlntr1 since the beglnnlng of the Nixon Adminl.straion. Stolen Ambulance Hunt Continues The hunt aoes on tllday for the vehicle Involved in one or Costa Mesa's more novel stolen car cases. a 1967 Cadillac ambulanct complete with all emergency equipment Schaefer's Ambulance Senlce perso~ nel awoke Thursday morning to find the '11,000 rig mlsaing from the driveway at l1.8 Cabrlllo St., police uld. Company spokellman Darald L. Stump tald the ambulance, colored white over brown, wu parked about midnight Wednesday. by driver Dile Brown. Nothing was beard dw-ing the night. Driver Injured In Mesa Crasl1 A rur-end colll1Jon at 1 Costa Mesa in- tenecUon Thursday left a Westminster man bolpltallrid today with back in· juries. Marc S. Jaanewskl, 22, of 7081 Golden Nugget Circle, was admitted to Orange Cclunty Medical Center foUo\\·lng Initial treatment 1t Cclsta Mesa Memorial Hoapltal. Police 1aid hl.s car wu stopped north- bound on Newport Boulevard at 23rd St., when hit 1t 4:15 p.m., by a car driven by Raul Escamilla, 25, of Hacleoda Heights. Ky Escapes Injury, CHAU DOC PROVINCE. Vltlnam [UPI) -Viet President Nguyen Cao Ky .r South Vietnam escaped Injury Friday when the military helicopter he was 1board was forced to land in a rice paddy tue to mechanlc1l difficulties. oaANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Oll:AHGI: COA1T PUI Ll lH1HGo C0M'AHY Ro\itrl N. Wtt .J Prftl<l""I 1..S Pl*ll.,.., J•ci: R. Cu,lt y Vl(f '"'id"'' 1..s G-11 M-ttf' Thi"''' k'tt•il 11111 ... lho,..11 A. M""1hi11e M-fl"ll EGl!Of' Ch•rlei H. ltot Rich1r,J P. 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'*"'1-'len .., «"'"" U.U -111111 llY ""ll U.JJ ..-1111 .. 1 11\IU!try lfllllrll!lont, l'•.21 mt!lll'lly. By BARBARA KREIBICH Of lllf D911)1 Plitt ti~ Assemblyman Robert E. Badham, R- Newport Bt.ach, said Thuraday he will in· troduce a bill in Sacramento next week to establish atill another marine preserve off the Orange County shore, this one in the Salt Creek area . '"Qualified biologists have ad vised me the opening of Salt Creek to the public, though providing needed recreational facilities, will create a potential hazard to the natural marine 1ancbJary existing in the area," Badham explained. "I bope next week to prevail upon the Little . Friend Of President Stays Critical Four-year-old Danny Jones, a San aemente child who received the warm wishes of President Nixon last week, re- mains in critical condition today follow- ing risky open heart surgery Monday. Family spokesman aald the youngster Is lltill in the intensive care unit of Children's HO!pital in Lo.s Angeles and there has been no marked change in hi s condition. Doctors bad given tbe boy a 20 percent chance of llurvlvlng the surgery, which repaired three holes in Oanny'll heart and rtlll.ored normaJ blood flow to hi! lungs. The boy, &<>n of Mr. and 1t1r1. Dennis Jones, Js currenUy breatblng with lbe aid flf 1 respirator, the spokesman said. Dan- ny's spirits were buoyed May 3 when San Clemente police Otier Clifford Murray .arranged for the child to meet Prtllident Nixon at the Western Whllt House. Santa Ana 1'een Dies in Crash A Santa Ana teenager was killed early !hill morning when the motorcycle ~ wbich he wall a pal!enger struck a park- ed car. Frank Amaro, 15, of 1513 1.fcFadden Ave., wu dead on arrival al Orange County Medical Center at 12:23 a.m .. aome 20 minutes after the accident 8t 1060 W. 17th St. Police said Amaro was a passenger on a motorcycle driven by Roger J. Wentworth, 19, also of Santa Ana. Wentworth, who wu: treated at the medical ce11ter for minor cuts and releae· ed, told police he had looked doWJI at his gas pedal and the next thing he knew he was flyina over a car parked at the aide of the street. Haircutting Penalty Motivates Game Win BOONVILLE, Ind. (UPI) -A team of long·baired Boonville youtba 1bowed a lot of motivation Thursday night 11 they whipped a sq uad of off-duty pollcemen in a basketball aame, 42-38. The victory meant the poUctmen had to buy a round of lltealc dinnerll. Had the policemen won, the payoff would have been 1 halrcuttina seulon at rn1dcourt for !be kJds. Legislature to add the proper areas at Salt Creek lo the preserves already created by bills 1 introduced in 1968 and 1969.'' These bills resulted in t h e establishment or marine preserves in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Dana Point. Badham said he planned to put an urgency clause in the new measure so it could become effective immediately and provide needed protection this summer. The preserve, he said, v•ou1d run the length of the area: knov.'Il as Salt Creek Cove. The legislator said he had contacted the Orange County Harbor District, Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Avco Corporation, developers of the Laguna Niguel.Salt Creek area, seek· ing support for the proposed marine preserve. Support fro m the concerned Orange County entities seems assured. Richard Weiser, executive vice presi· dent of Avco Communily Developers lnc. and general marlager of the firm 's Laguna Niguel operation sa id Thursday. "As I understand it, the marine preserve "'ould cover only those J'()Cky areas which are exposed at low tide and of course we have no jurisdiction over them. They are state tidelands. However we appreciate t¥1r. Badham's interest in our reaction to the proposal and 1 can say \\'e feel it would most certainly be in the public in- terest. now and in the future ... Tom Fuentell. executive assilltant to Supervisor Crupers, said the supervisor also had been approached by an Orange County College biology p r o f e a s o r regarding the need for a marine preserve at Salt Creek and had has the Harbor Department to repOrt on the feasibility of such a project. ''Mr. Caspers is anxious to move on it and certainly will cooperate."' he said. Establishment of the off -shor e sanctuar ies was sparked some yea rs ago by Lagunan Glenn Vedder, then mayor of the Art Colony, who had become in· creasingly distressed over pillage of the tld epools by collectors and the · •rious. Vedder sought to ha\•e the Laguna Beach City Council establish a marine preserve north of I.he Heilller Park area, but learned that such legislation could not be undertaken by the st.ate. Asemblyman Badham picked up the baU and ln- tnxluced lhe necessary billll to establish lhe series of sanctuaries for Orange County. T ypo Tangles Traffic Test The difference between a11 A and a P i~ 12 hour11. And a typographical error by the print- l'r on a city opinion poll postcard rela- tive to traffic safety, mailed to 4,000 Costa Mesa homes, may make many recipients vote v.·ro1g. City Traffic Engineer Jim Eldridge re- minds J\lesa Verde area residents hours show n in the first item among three lisled should read 6:30 a.m. 10 9 a.m. - not 9 p.m .. as it was incorrectly prhued. The qu~lion 111 proh.ibiling left turns fro1n eastbound Adam~ AveJ1ue onto tvlesa Verde Drive West. to stop short· cuts through the area by commuters headi11g for the San Diego Freeway, If anyonE' voted against the erroneou! 1-1,(, hour left turn ban indicated on the post card, they may c~ll Eldridge's ()ffi ce to correct H in favor of a 2\li hour pro- hibiUo•. CdM's Beckman Honored As Industrialist of Year Orange Coallt civic leader Dr. Arnold 0. Beckman today has 1 new title added In his lengthy chain, that ef California Industrialist o! the Year. The first county man to win the honor since its lncepUon 14 ye1r1 ago, Dr • Beckman shares laurels with 1 35-year· old UC Berkeley assistant professor nam- ed scientisl of the year. Founder of Beckman Instruments Jnc .• the longtime Corona de\ ri.tar resident was cited in a bronze plaque for outstan- ding contributions to industry, education and public service. Dr. Peler Duesberg, 3$, rece ived in ad- dition to a plaque $5,000 for hill research le1din1 to understanding of v I r 1 I transformation of normal alls t• can- cerous cells. The av.·ards were bestowed by the CaUfornia Museum of Science and Industry and itJ educational affiliate, the Callfomia Museum Foundation. Dr. Beekman, 107 Shorecllff1 Road, won the award based en long tervlce in developing p r o d u c t I v e relatlonahlp• between educational lnstllutlons and busines!i enterprlst. The firm that bears his name ls one of the world's leading manufacturtrs o( precision Instrument equipment. It w11 founded In 1934 with 1 current 1140 million in annual sales and 1,000 employe1. Among bis previous bonor1 , Dr. INDU5TRALIST OF YEAR. Coron1 dtl Mar'1 Beckm1n Beckman was the Orange County Press Club's Atan el the Year in 1987 and 1966 Purchaalng Agents Assoclatlon M11n1ger of Lhe Year. •• DAILY PILOT il1ft Piie,. Stay Cool Photographer, as well as several shoppers, did a double take this week while passing this window display in a fashionable Newport Beach commercial center. 'Vas it a display of ne\v summer fashio ns? More likely. it was merely a half-completed ne\v \1•indow display. Either \Vay, it definitely was an eye-catcher. c --------- Beach Tl1eate1~ Teacher Quits After Party Arrest An Edison lligh School drama teacher has resigned following h!J anest on 11 charge or contributing to the de linq uency of minors. He wall arrested Saturday night at his upatalrs apartment where he v.·as reportedly giving a cast part y after th~ fin al performance of a.school play. Police went to the apartment of John tee Slier, 2tl, at 22 1 Atlanta Ave .. at l 1 :30 p.m. after nelghbors had complained of noise. Police reports assert that 17 juveniles. boyll and girls. were taken into protective <'UStody after the officers foun d quantities o[ beer. wine, rum and vodka In the apartment. None of the students was charged 1Yith an offense. All were released lo their pa rents after giving lltatements to the police. Si!er appeared Jn \Vest Orange County .Judicial Court Thursday and pleaded in· nocent to a charge of furnishing in· toxicants lo and contributing to the delin- quency of a juvenile. A jury tria l was scheduled for 8:30 a.m. July 6. Siler v.•as released after poslinC bail of $625. High school District Superintendent Jack Roper said this morning that Slier v.'as suspended Monday morning but on Tu esday the te,•cher re.signed. The incident occurred after lhe final performance of the Greek classic Antigone. Siler had been drama teacher at Edison High since September. Leadership of the New per l-~t es 1 Education Association is seeking legal advice to find Y;ays •·to promote the scbool board 's involvement'' In the im- passe process. Brad Thurman, president ef the 7::.0· member teacher association said he and Bart Hake. executive secretary of the N· MEA, would begin discussions with a Buena Park attorney who is familiar with teacher·school board negoliatlons. The meetings described by Thurman as ''informational" in nature may or may. not lead to court actions by the associa· lion to force the Newporl·Mesa scboo1 board to name a facUinder in current negotiations. Bill Lawhorn, ell.airman of the district's certificated employe council hall been designated by !hi!! teachers to sl!!rve en the three-member panel. The Winton Act, Calilornia's law governing leacher·board negotiatons spells out the Impasse pro- cess. The NeWJ>Ort-Mesa school board hall not appointed an impasse panel member. 'nle db:trict does not recognize the exiJ· tenet of an impuse. Thurman said Thursday the meetings with an attorney are the first step to be taken by association leadership since the teachers' Representative Council voted 1.fonday to authorize the N-1.fEA board members to "act on their behalf." Tbe council vote. Thurman said, em- powers the association directors to speak for all teacher members and take whatever steps directors feel are necessary to move negotiations forward. Thurman declined to speculate whether those acUons would escalate or eallt the impasse proceeding teacherll authorized several weekJ ago. "We'll be able to say more after v.·e·ve met wilb counsel," he said. At issue in the district negotiations is a mallter contract containing 38 proposals. 'I'he board has replied in wr iting to II of them and has promised lo return responses lo the rest at lU board meetin& Tuellday. Among those ~sponses v.·ill be the board'11tand en salary and fringe benefit lsrues. From Pagel STRIKE ... doesn't view the N·MEA all a viable ()rganization. ·• Further, the image of teachers IS pro- fessionals is "deteriorating'' in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Solutions offered by the team were voiced by George Wichman, of the CT A 11laff at Burlingame. He urged establishment of a wide rang· Ing public relations program emphulzlng the accompllshmenl3 of teacherll. He called for an end to the "use of flam· boyant materials and colored words'' which he said v;ere "counterproductive'' to teacher goals when brandished in this community. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL ~!),FR \ l1•utifully styled is-th e word for M•rch111•. This htnd1om1 doubl •. pede1tel teble f1ature1 a cla11ic p•rqu• top plu1 l l11Yet to metch. It 1ictend1 to I lb" when fully opened. The ch•ir1 m•y be ordered with c1n1 •1 shown, or wi th ba ck p1d1. Stop in and view thi1 exquisit1 dining set tod1y. TABLE ........................................................ $519. SIDE CHAIRS ···························-······· '"· $11'. ARM CHAIRS ·····························-. H . $159. Siie: 70" :x 4-t" With 3, 22" L11 v11 DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NIWl'ORT ITORI OPlN Fll.IDA't ill f NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof•11lonal lnt•rlor 011ign1r1 Av1ll1ble -AID INTERIORS ~ORI T•n frw Mast of 01011t• Cee11ty-14f·1 16J . ' LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy, Phoneo 494-6551 I I I "'<I• • ~ ...-I • Klan Leader Maintain~ Calley Victii11 of Bias TUSCALOOSA. Ala. ( UPJ ) -The Ku Klux Klan ac- cmed the Army Thursday of lett.lng Negroes lnvo\\'ed in the My Lal maSJacre go free while making a "scapegoat" of Lt. William Calley Jr. . The charge came in an editorial by Robert ~f. Shelton, imperial wizard of the Klan, printed in the organi!aUon'1 monthly "F'iery Cro!i!" magnine. Shelton said eight of the 11 men originally charged in the My Lal incident were black. "Why have none of them been brought to trial. v.·hy only the white lieutenant who obviously had no control ovtr the ... Negroes In this brigade," be said. "Of course, we could not have a Negro up for trisl, that would make America look like a bigoted country," Shelton wrote. A black M>ldier charged in the 1'-fy Lai massacre was acquitted. by a court-martial earlier this yur. 'Yes, Virginia ••• ' Girl Who Received Santa Letter Dies VALATIE, N.Y. (UPI) - Mr1. Laura Vlrlgina O'Hanlon Douglas, the woman who received. the "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" letttr dil':d Thursday in a nursing home . She wa s 81. Virginia O'Hanlon was 8, when she wrote the New York Sun, asking : '"Some of my little friends say there is no Sant.a Cla us. Papa says if you 5ee it in the Sun, it's so. Please tell me the truth. is there a Santa Claus?" Assistant Editor Francis P. Church penned the famous edit<Jrial reply in which he answered Virginia's fr iends were wrong and concluded: "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Clau11. He exists as cer· t.alnly a5 love and generosity and devoti<Jn exist, and you know that they abound and give t<J your life it s highest beauty and joy. Alas, how dreary would be the world if there were 110 Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no Virginiaa." Mrs. Douglas often was reti- cent about her part in the editnrlal and said it was Oiurt:h, who died in 1916, who should have bttn remem· be.red. She said it wa5 Oiurcb's reply that carried the "pbilosophy of hope and love." Ul"I T1l1t1ftol9 DEAD AT 81 Virginia Douglas She lived most of her life in New York City as a teacher and principal and retired ab<Jut 15 years ago. She lived in North Chatham. n e ar Albany, with relali\'es. 1'-trs. Douglas' heallh ha. been failing for some time and she spent the last t w o Olristmases in the hospital. More Capitol Police, K9 Dog Corps Sought ---.. -__..,,. ·--~ fr!dliY, MIJ 14, 1cn1 DAILY PILOT t; Jurors Act Swlftly 7 . .q;;: .... Amtrak L'iader Blasted 13 Black Panthers Cleared in NY NEW YO!IJC (AP) -Atter;:::====:::::;======:::::;::::::::;:==~===::::::==:::;;:::;;;; an elght·mont.h trlal, 13 Bltck Panthers accused or bomb conspiracy have be.en IC· quJtted In a verdict reached 10 11wiftly that the jurors surprb-- ed even themselves. WASHINGTON (AP) -The two top congrtsslonal authors of the h1w to salvage rail passenger service ha ve sent Amtrak 's bou a blistering le t- ter detailing thei r displeasure over how the new corporatio n la being run. "There is lime to corrtcl the grievous errors that have occurred,'' Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.), and Rep. Harley 0. Staggers, (O- W.Va.), told Amtrak President and Board Chairman Roger Lewis, "and we herewith urge you to take appropriate and swift acli<>n. "If the corporation is to get off to a good start,'' they wrote Lewis Thursday night. ··there are certain Immediate changes in policy that are es.~enlia I." The House ill considering a Senate passed res<> I u ti on "'designed to tell the cor· poralion to do what It should ha\'e done anyway,'' added lhe leaders of the committees that created the 1970 Ra i I Passenger Servi~ Act. "The point is that Congres.5 should not have to pry this kind of information loose," they said. '"We urge that this ridiculous situation be changed without dellly.'' Teamsters Give Hoffa More Time HOLLYWOOD. Fla . (AP\ - Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa -still pov•erfu l arter four years in prison -has received. a go ahead from other top leaders t1f the union for a last ditch try to "'in his freedom and resu1ne control of t h e t.ruckers' union. "Jimmy wants 20 days until the first week In June before he makes up his mind on whether to .rua for re-elec- ti<>n." a high union source said Thursday o( Hoffa's latest bid for freedom on a claim of new eviden.;e. "They are going to wall for him. They voted to wait for him,'' said the source of the action of the Teamsters Ex· ecutive Board meeting here. Militant Rabbi K~~ Italy Chieftain Umte The panel, which included five blacka and a Puerto Rican, acqultted the defen- d1nll on all 12 counts or an in· dlctment 314 hours aft.tr the c11se had been turned ever to them Thursday. "We bad lunch and began t.alkJng and we were amued to find out rllht 1w1y that we felt the 1ame," said Frederick Hills, an editor. ''The miracle was that 12 people of such es· traordinarll y diverse backgrounds all felt pretty much the same way." lt took the foreman, Jameii; Fox, a blac k musician, 10 minutes to read the verdict on each of 12 counts for each (If the 13 defendants. Spectators cheered , applauded and so~ bed as he read the last of the 156 verdicts, all "not guilty." Afeni Shakur, <>ne of two women defendants, and the t1nly t1ne of the 13 free in bail, shrieked as Fox read "oot guilty" counts again.st her bus. band Lumumba, 29. He and most cf the ether defendants had been In jaU since arrested in predawn raid& April 2, 1969. Jurtlf's. defendants, 1 i s defense lawyers, relaUves and friend.c; crowded into the lobby of the Criminal Co u r 1 s bu ilding, laughing, crying and bugging each other. "I'm dazed -I'm dazed." said Curtis Powell, one ef the defendants. "We all came with bags, prepared \ti 1t.ay a long tlme, but It wasn't necessary," said juror Joseph Garry, a pcstal NEW YO RK (UP I) -Rabbi ment harassment. clerk. Meir Kahane, head of the Slating that "conspi racy is "There was evidence all Jewish Defense J..eague and synonymous with the word right, but it just wasn't enough." .Joseph Colombo Sr., founder frame ," Colombo said his of the JlaHan-American Civil group might support the JDL Two of those acquitted fled Rights League pledged their in its protest demonstratit1ns to Algeria during the trial. mutual support T h u rad a y at Soviet mlssions and other Chief defense l11wyer Gerald against what they described as facilities. Lefcourt iaid he would try to h " h h d 1 d h' negotiate the return o f "government arassmenl. Colombo, w o a e 11 Michael Tabor and Richard The unusual and informal group on picket lints ouUlde Moore. wbo forfeited ball of e1changes of support came at FBI offices 1aid if the JDL a ne ws confere,.ce following "needs oor support and a1k1., __ 1i_50_.ooo_. ______ _ Kahane's release on bail after for it, we certainly will allow he had been arrested <>n our support." charges <Jf ; n t e r 1 t a t e Kahlllle, t1ffered 1imUar 1up- transportation of guns and ex· port for the Itallans and said plosives. he and Colombo had become The militant Kahane claim· interested in a common cause Pd federal authorities were through a mutual interest in trying to suppre~ the JDL's "brotherhood." protests against treatment of Kahane, who was indicted Jews in Russia. Viiith 12 other peraons Wed- Colombo , who has been ac-nesday, aaid his t1rganlzatlon cused of being an underworld had legally registered weapons chieftain, said the JDL and and had trained "uveral bun. the Italian-American League dred American Jews'' to UJe win• ,,.. trip Reg ister now! You may win a FREE trip to Alaska for 2 vi• P&O British Cruise linea; FREE trip to A,frlc& (or 1 via TWA; FREE trl~to 1h• Yucatan tor 2 via Mexlesna Alrl lnea; FREE 10-.peocl blko. •••• nd you•reon youtW!Y hig h-ny1ng with a 1nr1tl- light wardrobe fro m 411( Grodlns tucked Into your canvas bag. N&-wrink~• easy-eerlng kn it~ moving with you; just right for being In new placas. St.art here.. Costa M•1e only - SATURDAY, MAY 15 NOON 'TIL 2 Com• in and talk to Mr. Allan R. Grey of May Co. World Trave l. H1'll b• 9lad to 1n1w•r your trav•I qua1tion1. .gtodinl COSTA MESA So1.1fli Co1tt ''••• O,_ W ... Hllfll1 WASHINGTON (UPJJ - A chairman of the H cu s c,,__:w~':'.'~'~bo~th:_::v~lc~ti'.'.m~s__'o~r_:g!'.o'.'.'.v~ern-".'.:_~th~•=m~.--------.!_-----===----================================= Administration subcommittee House subcommittee, acting in the wake of the March I bom- bing or the Capitol, is con· aide.ring proposals to increase the Capitol poliCi fore! by 214 men and to create a K9 corps with dogs trained to sniff out bombs. Rep. Kenneth Gray lD·lll.), Whittier OKs Nixon Honor, 3-1 WHITTIER IUP!l -B.v a J. to-1 margin, Whittier CollegP students have expres se d disapproval of President Nix· t1n'1 honorary degree. Nixon. a 1934 graduate of the small school. was awarded an honorary degree of law in l9M whlle he was vice presi- dent. The vote Thursday was &46- 249 against revocatlon. There are 1,900 students al the school. on Police, tol d UPI he would ask his panel Monday le ap-- pr<>ve lh<>se features, as v.•ell as proposals lo install elec- tronic surveillance equipment in the Capitol and tn authorize overtime pay for police. Demands came from both the Senate and !louse to bolster the Capito l p<>lice force and to tighten security after the early morning bomb blast fln the ground floor or ihr Senate side of the Capitol. The bombing, still unsolved, in· jured no one but caused $200.000 damage. Repair \\'Ork is under way. Gray said a comprehensive bill. requiring only House 11nd not Senate approval. v.·ould be presented to the subcommittee to add the 214 men to the 354 officers no w assigned to the House side of the Capitol and to the three House t1ffice bu ildings. There are 262 of· ficers assigned to the Senate side in addition to 4 9 Wash ingto n metropolitan palict officers who have been detached to v.·ork with the Capitol force. The 20-membtr s t u d e n t r===========;I senatt three weeks ago passed the reso\uUon that asked the college to revoke the honorary degret 11 .11 protest against lhe U.S. war policies In Southeast Asie. stop look aevenl}'-ones al LOCAL No olh1r 111w1p1p1r t1ll1 you mot e, 1v1ry d1y, 1h0Yt wh1t"1 9oi11g on i11 the 6r11 l1r Or11191 Co11I lh111 lh1 DAILY PILOT. and lease ~1!~L~ leOO HARBOR BLVD. f COSTA MESA (714) !40·1100 '· • c Checking account service charges are inconvenient, irr.i- tating,and often add up to thirty or forty dollars a year.So why pay them? Keep a hundred dollar minimum balance at Southern California First National Bank and you'll never pay another service charge, no matter how 90UTlllllN.__. many checks you write. Won 't that be a relief. ,,,..,N,.TIDNALIWllC 1Jt1.11111..r;J.e. .58off!ffl la Otu,e:, IM A• ..... ud 5611 DltptOeacW • 'Co1t1 Mo11, 230 East 17th Street, 842·1860 e Hunllnglon Buch, 8899 Adoma Avenue, 982-3377 -17122 Beach Blvd., 847·91581 . ' . . ' ' DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE .A New Superintendent Ne,rport·l\fesa Unified School District trustees have made kno\vn their choice for the district's top adminis· trative job. The post ranks among the most important school superintendencies in California. The consideration of a replacement for Supt. Wil· Jiam Cunningham was thorough and complete. The board reviewed suggestions of a·reauitment and screen· ing committee they appointed. The assurance from all of those who participated in the extensive selection process is that Dr. John ,V. Nicoll brings talent of a high degree to the district. Dr. Nicoll comes highly recommended from the Vallejo Unified School District. His .record of district administration represents experience in a variety of educational situations. The post he \\•ill fill is being vacated by a man who leaves a district he served well for the past three years. Though it is not without problems, the Newport-Mesa district has, during Dr. Cunn~ngham's tenure, moved forward in smoothing the unification seas, establishing fiscal stability and developing an outstanding, innova· tive educational program. \Velcome, Dr. Nicoll. For .Greater Efficiency Good news is here for Costa Mesans and their elected local leaders too. if it. works out properly. The city council will soon be able-.to conduct ita business more efficiently and adjourn a bit sooner. A new ordinance amendmeht will allow it to -form· ally convene at 6:30 p.m .• and continue on without in· terruption except for a recess when needed. • which a 6:30 p.m. business meeting-which often runs out of bu!iiness to conduct-followed by a 7:30 legisla· tive session that cannot convene sooner. Not onlY is idle time inflicted on the council and spectators, but many citizens tend to be contused by two difierent starting hours. "Which one should I go to'!" is a frequent question among persons with something to draw th em out to civic center chambers every other Monday. By streamlining the start.and-stop system, council· men can probably conduct a smoother. less-hecti c and thus more efficient meeting overall. And by their own prior admission, various errors and mistakes-some oc· casionaJ.ly easily ia the aftermath-are more common . durinf late-hour deliberations. " kno\V of no one who objects," says Mayor Robert M. Wilson who also likes to go home early. We'll second that motion. Breakfast in the Park Spring is with us, sometimes morning fog and al l, but a litUe mist shouldn't dampen the spirit of the sea· aon. The tempo of the times is up and this time is the one ~hen many organizations stage annual fund-raise rs providing pleasure and also profit, the latter helping to support various community services. One way to help is to support those who do the real work, such as the Kiwanis Club, whose busy chefs will be pr oviding pancakes, sausage and all the trimmings Saturday from 7 a.m. to noon in Costa Mesa Park. ' • ' ' r ' • -... Nobody benefits much from the current way, in Chances ~e you couldn't feed a family of five at home as cheaply, not to mention the fun of an al fresco breakfa!l in the open air-foggy or not. c INTER(ONTINENTAL ~ALLISTIC MISSILES A Cancer In America's Big Cities If you live in New York and hail a cab In midtown, the driver won't take you to Harlem if it'11 after 5Undown. If you live In Qlicago and want to take a cab at night to the South or West Side gbetto5, the bade will re.fuse, ~ill make you pay first, or wiR demand an utra fare for tht trip. Harlem. the OU· caa:o ghe-ttos, and dozens like them throughout the na. tion, are enclaves; they exist like for- eign oommunities In a country, controlled (more or less ) by an octupying police force. 111EY DONi LIVE on the same monetary systcm1 eilher. Everythin g costs more -food. sheller, appliances, and credit most of all . The job!c!S ra te is twice as high ; schooling is half as good; gamblers and pimps and dope-passers are the figures or authority here. And the poor who live here arc three times more likely to be robbed. burglarized or mug· &ed than the ciliteM living elsewhere. This is quite literally a cancer in the aimmunity. and one that can only spread. It is pa&t the point w h e. r e anyone can assign b I a m e or rcsponllibility; it makes no difference now how the disease atarted -it must be J:'.Ot under control or every large city in the U.S. will perish. \\'HAT ARE WE doing about ll? Prac· tically nothing. Large sums are ap- ,Dear Gloomy GOB: How about male welfare recfpienta doing aome school watching t.o pre-- vent our hard-eamed tax dollars from being waated by vandals? -G.D. '"' fMhl,. ""*h ,........ ~ --llY fMM ef ,.. ...._....,. 1M111 ,_ "'·-"' ...... , ... Dtllr '""'" propriated. apncies and burelU:I and commissions are appointed, slatted and funded -but somehow little of the money gets down where it ia most need-o ed. Housing starts are negligible, jobs are scarce, training 11 a joke, and "law en· forcement" is a blend of corrupUon, negligence and repression. These are facts it only takes 24 houri to find out. CondiUong are far better in the South than in almost all Northern cities. The South is beginning to tum itself around. having learned that a system of organlt· ed bigotry simply doesn't work in modem industrial society. The Northern big cities don 't practice official bigotry : they simp- ly follow a "scorched earth" policy in reverse. by which everything the poor minorities need to subsist is denied them. TilE SOCIAL BODY is like a physical organism: it is impossible to have an un· treated focus of infection tha~ will not spread throughout lhe whole 1y1tem. Unless a cancer is burned out, or excised in some way, it w i 11 metastasiu throughout the whole body. And no part of the "body" of the community will re· main unaffected by this poison. Jt is too late: for sermoniz:ing. moraliz:· ing, philosophizing, or making value- judgme11ts on one segment of society or another. We are all in the same conta. gious ward, and there is no isolation chamber. In a time of plague, only con· cern for the common good can save us. Can You Remember? Can you remember wht!n · You never drtamed our country could rver lose'..' You left the front door open? People linew what the Fourth of July stood for ? You took it for granted that "·omen, the elderly and the clergy, were to be respected? A girl WM 1 girl and a boy was a boy? You didn't feel embarrassed to say th1t thi5 was the best darn country in the ~·orld? SOCTAl~IST WAS a dirty "'Ord? Taxci Wf're only a nuisance? The poor were 100 proud to take charity? You wt!rtn't afraid lo go out al night? Chott~ were neighborhoods? You knr"' the l1w me.ant justicr, a11d you fell a UUle 11hi\•er of &\\·e at the 1ighl of a policeman? ''oung fellows tried to Join the Army or lht NIV)'? Songa had a tune? Crlmlmils wenl to jail? You br1ged about your home 1t11t.e and your home town? Politicians pro c I a I mt d their patrlotlJm ! Quotes Walttr &ott -''The nee of mankind • ovld o<r\lh did lh<y ceue lo •Id .. ch nther. We cannot exist without muU:ial h<lp. All 111ei..,ror• 1h11 notd •Id hl\'t • rigbt to ask It from thtfr fellowmd:" 1Dd no one who tias the power or crantlna cen refuse wilhoUt gu.Ut. •· I i Guest Report CLERKS A~'D repairmen t r I e d to please you? A Sunday dri ve wa.s an advenLure, not an ordea1? You coold always find 1omeone willing and able when you needed aomethlng done? Riots were unthinkable? The clergy talked about religion? You took it for irante:d thet the law would be enforced, and your safely pro- tected? The nag was a sacred t1ymbol? Our government stood ' up r 0 r Americans anf"·hert in the world? A l\fAN \VHO "'ent wrong was bl1med, nOl his mother's nuniing habits or hi:i: falht.r"s income? Things wettn·t perfttl, but you ex· pected them to be? Everyorie knew the difference betwee:n ri1ht and wroni. -even cotlege pro- fessors? Cotltgt kld1 swallowed goldfish, not acid? People expected lesa and valued it when they had more~ People. still bad the capacity for in- dipadon? You conJidered yourself lucky to ha ve • good job, and when )'OIJ -..ere proud to b1ye ont? • America was tht land of the frtt and the home or the brave'..' Arroyo Grande 1're11·f\e<:order Edtreation on Venereal Disease 'Cathy Is Right-All ·Kids Need It~ To the Editor : Once again lhe Mailbox has scooped Its competitor in the printing of readers' opl· nions on taboo subject.! that should ha ve been aired years ago. The story is a Jet. ter from a l~year-old girl named Cathy Hoad (Mailbox, A-fay 4), and the subse- quent rebuttal by a grown man named Donald Jones {Mailbox, May 7). The sub- ject; VD education. Cathy is righl jn advocating the educa- tion of all Irids • .Mr. Jooeg is also r.i&bt in h.i's dtspostlion ot' his own case. but bis willlfut thinking is somewhat stultifie:d in ttllt a great nwnber of kids who need VD tnfonnallon are not 50 fortunate aa his own kids and Cathy. TIGJM' • CORSETED p r u d e s like Assemblyman Robert Burk e w o u Id reserve VD knowledge for the kids he things are "bad." Rubbish ! But the overall education would not hurt or even embarrass kids like Cathy or r..tr. Jones who have hive been duly in· .trucled at home. In this area of permissiveness where the happy chappie and his hippie chippy naunt lhe don't-give-a-damn attitude in a aociety that is desperately trying to curb VD, it is not enough to sit on one's big fat onager (look it up and sue me). One must show a little compassion for the masses who ~ not &o fortunate as Cathy and Mr. Jones. KIGHT HERE t would like In interject a thought that may shock Mr. Jones, and .. Mailbox Letter.t from readers ore weLcomt. Normally 1vriter.s sho1i1id convey their messages tn JOO words or less. The right to condense Utters to fit space or eliminate libel is reierved. AIL ltt.- ter.s. mUJt ,include signature and mail- ing 'Clddress, but names may be with- 1'eld on tequtst if sufficient reason is apparent. Pottrv will not be pub· lished. ~ It may even be a revelation to Cathy. It Is : The professional ca.II Jirl is safer to deal with than the promiscuous woman . A great step forward in the control of VD would be lo release all the call girls from jail and set them up in a government of· lice lo jnstruct especially the female in the detection of VD in the males. S. G. UNDINE Enl husiasm In A cl Ion To the Editor: Today. the Costa Mesa High School drama class, under the very able direc· lion of r..1iss Donna Kristiansen , treated our 2fi6 children in grades kindergarten through sixth to their ;iresentalion of "In King Lugdub's Forest." A play produced, staged and acted by some really turned on high schoolers. Seldom do we educators. not directly lnvolved with children or young people at a different age level than our ov.•n situa· tion, gel to see sueh enthusiasm in action. Costa Mt!a High School does have something going there! OUR KINDERGAR'tEN.ERS. w e r t given seats directly in front of the sta&e where they really rrielded into the ~ duction. The.,older children ranged· lo. !he back of the Lyceum. Thole thespians bad the entire spectrum eating out of ti}cir hands -and for nearly an hour of •'>Ud action! I choose. lo believe a demonstration such as we witnessed today i! Ow real "'orld of our youngsters. Hearty congratulations tn the students of Costa Mesa High School. They are a true asset to our district, their parents and to themselves. GARI.AN L. WETZEL Principal Bay View School Punlahl"fJ Parents To the Editor : 1lW: letter comes to you In Lhe hope that .. ·hat I have t.o say will get to the right people. Friday, r..iay 7. there was an article in the DAILY PILO'J' about C.OSla P.1esa in- itiating a law that will punish pare11t! for repeated offenses by their children. JI also stated that chances \\'ere slim that it v.·ould be carried through. Wh at a pity! This world needs desperately the family reforms this \\'Ould bring about. The lack of communlcation and parrn· !al control in our Ame.rlcan families lo· day is appalling. Children need to be made to learn responsibility and wher• else but at home? If Dad had to pay for .funiof's scrapes himself , prison, fine or probatioD, instead of getting it "'fixed" nr just giving up and saying, "What can ynu do with a kid lilie that?" He v.·ould smn see that Junior straightened up. The same goes for Mom and Sis. RESPONSIBD.JTY is the kty word. Dad and r..tom are not responsible parents if they do not teach their children right from wrong and respect for people and the way of life we are able to have in this country. A responsible person will share with a brotht!r who needs and r~place what ~s damaged as he passe l\ through life. If we all did this. wouldn't it be a v.•onderful plact! to live? The ground ru les for such a life are lo be found in God 's Ten Commandments . I pray everyone 1Yho reads lhis letter will alSQ take time out to read over the Ten Commandments and pray for hel11 and guidance. Being a parent .isn't easy, it's just one of lhe most imporlt1nt job.~ nne could find to do -teaching the next generation ho\\' to live . JEAN MAURINE MORTON Dog's Life C_an Be Great-or .. Tough A dog's life can be opulent fndeed . Consider Joie de Vivre , 1 poodle owned by Mrs. F. Raymond Johnson of l\'ew ''ork City. As Judy Kleme:srud told ii in the New York Times. Joie de Vivre lo\'ed to eat caviar from a spoon, dl'1ink cham- pagne from a glass and ha ve breali(ast in bed with his mistress. Both started the day with Specicil K topped with fresh strawberries. Other pets are far !es., fortunate. Despite the existence of anli~ruelty la\rg and humane societies. thousands of animals rontinue to suffer from neglect maltreatment or ignorance on the pan of thelr owners. Animal shelter employe:ii art especially contemptuous of persons who turn in pets t.o be "put to sleep'' simply because they have becQme tired of them. The root of the problem l 11 overbreedlng. both inadverten1 and de\d.berate. ~1ost shelter residents are mongrels that need never have been born If their parenta had been spayed or neutered: But. as Anne Cotrell Free n!'cenUy p o t n I e d out in · TI1e Washingtonian. "A surprising number ol the animals given up by their o'vners !rt purebreds . -from poodles l o \VelmaraM.rs -reflecUng the disposable product ~tem of our arnuent society." A P!T q_NSUS of the United St.ales 1)robably Wt'lllta\ be: impossible to un· dertake. Jt Is e.dimated that AmericAn homu harbor 26 million dogs, 21 million call, uncounted legions of birds, fish and exoUc creatures. Statistics incUcate: 1 h .11. In the a;· grea:ate. American pcls eat ~·ell - though not ._, well as Joir de Vivre. The Pet Food Institute calculates thAt tht C011t o( "maintenance food '' for dogs and cau -defined 15 sufficient tn provide a Ci)mplete. balanced diet -h111s risen not more than l percent in ttw: pa.st decade. Editorial Research Nevertheless. the Institute says. sales of dog and cat food zoomed from $600 million to $1.16 billion between 1965 and 1970. Much of the increase ~s attributable to the popu larity of "gourmet" pet foods. Those who can afford to do ao pamper their pets in other ways. A clipping-and- bathing session in a dog beauty salon run:s about $15. Professional dog walkers In a swank section of r..fanhattan will air Fido two hours a day, five days a week , for $21. A PERSON WHO buys an exotic pcl usually is doing neither himself nor the animal any fa vor. Young monkeys !Item irresistibly cute until it is learned that they are almost impossible to Our National D~grace At last .. the giant has st.irred lo speak. Not just for General hfotors. but for all of lhc silenl corporate bodies who have long endured lhe slings and :arrov.•s of outragcou11 encmie.'I. Our nat i on I 1 disgract i~ the continuing acceptance of slander of American business ind the equating of money with immorality. And where Is Ille corporate sell· assurance lhal ha~ been equal in the past lo all the stresses of peace and war. change and catastrophe? 11 ha.a finally rome forth. in the person of JamM Michael Roche. chairman .of General r..toiors Corpor1tlon , to !COrt th• irreJpon slblc critics who atlaclc the very 11tructure of the corporate body and 11lmullaneously poison tbe ll!tblood of the entire system. This eonnict ragin& in our lime gocs to the roots or powtr, directed no1. im· mcrlinte ly 1t lht lndlvldua! issues, but rather at the philosophy or man and naturt. tht deeper roundalions mosl vulnerable to th& ihock waves which Jet lnlo motion 1 tidal vlav1 or chani;e. TllE PROTECTl\'E barricades of our 1;y~tcm have begun to cru1nblc, and all of '• '·1·· ... ., .. ~··. .·.~, rQl'W f i j • ... .-. us aTe obligated to take stock of it and to stand with James Roche and his com· pany against the the mounting pre~ure.'I from all sides. 1'hi11 strugi:le has bttn enlarging itself so that we must now be concerned with f1ctors fut moving outside our control. It has not betn enough to bt oppressed by tht self· destructing rebellion of our o"·n childrul. or even exposed to the lnsulta of power, It is now demanded that every corporation submit to the policy of men continually v.·arped by their own temper. General Motors b" now answering tilt rail to defend not only IUelf but to defend a credo lh3t offers few )U1'1!works but rather a steady promise o improve!ll(nl for those of us who 11eek the ideal or iiocl:\I respon11ibil!ty, ptrsonal llbtrty, and disciplined free ent.erprlsc. Elliabetb l\lacO.oald !\tannin& Publisher 1'~lnanc1 housebreak. They \\'ill. however. break up the house. Despite these unendearln,I( traits, more than 100.000 wild n1onkey~ are imported into the United States every year. ·Inspired . pe.rhap.~. by ''Born Free." around 10.000 Americans ov.·n big cats. in- cluding lions and leopards. But it lakt"- more skill and patience lo accommodatt! an Elsa than most big-cat fancier"" possess. In n1an y cases. the untrained and untrainable animal becomes master of its 0"11cr . f.1rs. Si Merrill . who has nv.·ncd 1 small South American jungle cat for more than 11 years. told <! Life reporter some of tha problems involved . ··vou have tn decorate the house u·ith marble and vinyl , and there'3 no"•here that cal can ·t reach. For all the lack of fr eedom you ha ve by O\vning them. and for all the lack or freedom they have by being nv.•ned by you. you might &ll •.rell make them in!n fur coats." If she had i! In do over again. l\lr.s. Merrill no doubt v.·ould choose a l'oal instead or a cat. --•''--Fridoy, May l4. 1971 Tht editorial pane of ihe Don11 Pilot setks lo inform and sti m- ulate read ers by prese11rin(1 thl.J ntwspaper's opinions und com· rnentorw on toptcs of int trest and s1gnificancr, bu providina n forurn fo r the .t.rpresslon o/ our readl'TI ' Ol)ininns, 011ct bu p rt !tmth1Q the dil1crse vie~ points of i11formtd nb.(trvrrs 011d spoktsn1.en 011 lop•c.s <If tht day. Robert N. \\Iced, Publisher 7 I I 11 I \ Saddlehaek EDITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoelus • * VO~. 64, NO. 115, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY ·14, ·197r I TEN CENTS Twin Ses ·sions Better Than Portable School? 7 "Portable" education seems unpopular among principals of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. Many stated Wednesday that they would prefer double sessions to packing their campuses with portable classrooms which they labeled. noisy, inconvenient and crowded." • Meeting wilh the distrrict'.1 principals in a special workshop were members of the board of trustees who agreed that ~minating coslly portable classrooms might be worth lookin g into. an Dowta the Mission Trail Young GOPs Host Black Composer SADDLEBACK VALLEY - A cocktail reception for William Grant Still will be hosted by the Saddleback Valley Young Republica nll Saturday. The event, to honor the "dean of Negro \• t:omposers," will take place at 8 p.m. at -... • hliss.ion Viejo Country Club, 26742 Oso l'arltway. The reception will feature Still's con· troversial speech "The S u b v e r s i v e Challenge to American Music.'' The district currently la usina: 58 portable classroorm on campuses spread throughout the district Tht cost of lea1- ing these buildings Is approximately $17S,OOO. Stu Cunningham, principal of Universi- ty Park Elementary School, aaid portable classrooms are not conducive to learning. ';The noise level is very high," he said. ''There are no isolid wallis, no carpeting. no open space, no running water for art or science projects -and wnen the air conditioning is on Jts" lmpossible to hear.'' ' Admission w.i!l be Sl per person. Ne10 ,Judge • A rt Officer• Name d 1i1ISSION VIEJO -Ofricers have been elected by the Mission Viejo Association of Artists and Crartsmen. Doris Swanson has been elected presi- dent. She will be assisted by Beverly \Veber. v.ice president : Dorothy Riggs, corresponding secretary; \Va 11 i e Skrockie , recording secretary and Bobbie Britts. treasurer. e f'f' A llo<I• Eve111 fl,1ISSION VlF.JO -The Future Farmers or America club al ~1ission Vie- jo High School are sponsoring a "field day" Saturday from l to 8 p.m. on the campus. The event \Viii showcase the activities of the agrlcu!tural students at the hlgh school. Livestock. \vhich are being raised for the Orange County Fair, and food crops raised by students will be on display. An open pit barbecue will begin at Ii p.m. Ticketll are being sold by FFA students and will be l!old during the ac- tivity. e f'amll!I Boa t Da!I LAKE FOREST -All residenl5 of take Forest are invited lo compete in the annual Family Boat Day Sunday. The event will take place from noon to .c p.m. and "'ill be under the direction of Admiral Hugh ~1. Figgatt Ill. Events will include paddle boat races, yak·yak competition. and Olympic Class Sabot and Flying Jun ior Sailing. Signupll will be taken irom ll a.m. lo 1 p.m. Contra Cos ta County Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arna. son, 49, was appointed Thurs- day to take over the Angela Davi s murder-conspiracy case -the sixth judge assigned. Other judges have disq ualified themselves on defense chal· lenges. Police Officers Host .Bike Rod eo At High School San Cle mente's police officers and their vdves will sponsor the annual bicycle rodeo for local youngster!! holding bicycle licenses Saturday morning at San Clemente High School. Events for boyll and girls from grades one through six will be offered. Awards in a large number of cycle pro- ficiency events will Include trophies for first place and second and third·place ribbons. The classroom wilh the greatest numbe r of participants will receive a special award . Officers' wives will prepare the refreshmenU;. The events will begin at 9 a.m. at the school parking lot, and the winnert will receive their trophies and ribbon• at about 12:30 p.m., said patrolman Craig Stockier, organizer of the evenL ·Sailor s, 'Girls Indicted On Clemente Drug Raps Seven U.S. Navy corpllmen and two girls arrested wilh them in a San Clemente home were indicted on various (frug chargell Thursr;ay by the Orange County Grand Jury. The panel apru·oved charges o( possession of marijuana for sale, pos.~ssion of LSD, amphetamine and barbituric acid, cultivating marijuana .and mainlanin,11'. a place for the purpose of ~mok inlj'. marijuana. All seven male rlefendants "re iitatloned al Camp Pen dleton. Named in the indlclment were Kcnnt'd!i Lynn Cook. 21, Marvin lloward Schullt, 20. Robert Lull! B~rnett, 2.1, Dwayne Jack Gottschalk, 18. Willi.Im Robert Mueller. 26, Ktnnctb Louil! Johnson, 21 , Rob Brian Roy, 20, Mary Ann Hale, 2fl. and Mary Jane Parker, 19. All were arreMtd March 13 by San Clemente police who raided a home 1l 203 Via Alegra. The two girls gave the -ruidence..aa their home 1ddres.s. Olarges of selling m1rljuana to 1 minor and offering to sell LSD to a minor were added to the indictment on Schull.I Cook. Officers told !he Gr11nd Jury lh11t the Via Alegr1 home hi.d been under surveillance for some time prior to ar· rests and the home wall known to be 1 clearing house for Ole pullhlng of dangerous drugs. Jt was e:xpected lhAl Ill! nine defen• dants would bt arraigned today ill Superior Court. ''ln my are.a the people are juat about sold on the idea of movin1 children out of the portables and into regular clusroom.a ~ven ir it means double seasiozu for the firllt a11d &tcOnd grades." He added that a regular day for first and second grader& is 240 minu~. The double session day is ei:acUy t.be same IO primary children wouldn't lose one minute or instruction. "Perhaps we should consider getting rid of the portable• and 1oing on double sellllions," sald Trustee Jim Nelton. • I Salt Creek Preserve Bill Slated By BARBARA Kl\EIBICR OI , ... o.i1r Pli.t St•tt Wembtyman Robert E. B1dh1m, Jt. Newport Beach, said Thursday he will in- troduce 1 bUJ in Sacramento JtUl week to tlltabliah •till anothtr ·marine _prtMtV• off the Orang• Ooanty .... th& -bl the Salt Q-eek aru. "Qllalified biologists hive ad\'tsed me the opening of Salt Creek to the public, though provtdlng nteded reautlanal facilitie.s, will create a potential huard to the natural marine sanctuary ui.!Uft& In the area,'' Badham explained. "I hope next week to prevail upon the Legislature to add the proper areas at Salt Creek ta the preserve. atrtady created by bills I introduced In 1968 and 1969." These bills resulted In t h e establishment or marine p-eserves in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach. South Laguna and Dana Point. Badham said he planned to put an urgency clause in the new meuure IO It could become effective immedlattly and provide needed protection this summer. The preserve, he uid, would run the length of the area known a.1 Salt <Zetk Cove. The legi!Jator said be had contacted the Orange County Harbor Distrkt. Fi fth District Supervisor Ronald Caspen and Avco Corporation, developers of the Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek area, 1eek- ing support tor the propoeed marine preserve. Support from the concerned Orange County entities !lffmll assured. Richard Weiller, executive vice pres!· dent of Avco Community Developers Inc. and general manager Of lhe firm't Laguna Niguel operaUon l!aid Thursday. "As 1 understand it, the marine pre.serve would cover only thol!e rocky areas whlch are exposed at low tide and of course we have no jurisdiction over them. They .ar~ l!tate tidelands. However we appreciate ~1r. Badham'1 interest in our reaction to the proposal and l can say we feel ii would most certainly be in the public in- terest, now and in the future ." Tom Fuentes. executive assistant to Supervisor Calipers. said the supervisor also bad been approached by an Orange County College biology p r o f e a 1 o r regarding the need for a marine preserve at Salt Creek and had has the Harbor Department to report on the feasibility of such a project. "Mr. Caspers ill anxious to move on tt and certainly will cooperate," he said. Establishment or the 0 f f -I h 0 r t sanctuariell was sparked some years· ago by Lagunan Glenn Vedder. then mayor of the Art Colony, who had become in- creasingly distressed over pillage of the tldepools by collectors and the r"'rious. Vedder sought to have the Laguna Beach City Council establi!h a marine preserve north of the Heisler Park area, bitt learned thi.l4ucll legislation could not be undertaken by the state. Alemb~ Badham picked up the ball and in- troduced the necessary bills to establish the .,-ies al sanctuarie1 for Oranc• County. Fishing, as lictn1ed by the tt.ate Fish and Game Code. is permitted ift the martne preserve-. but no olher plant or 11nlmal life of any description may be disturbed, injured or ttmoved. Tbl! In- cludes auch tldt pool lnblbll&nts u mussels, l!ea urchlnt crabs, 1nemones and the IDte. Rel ocaUon or large rocks and remov1t of peddles 1nd small rocb th•t rmib up lhe habitat of lht,llW'IM cr;Qlltei 1llO b prolllbltod. "Primary children don't lose any lime and tbe otber1 don't lMe too much. rr111re. Me we losing more by putting tht.n in portables than if we shortened their day!" Dr. William Slocks, Alls is tan t SuperinteoClent for Educational Servi<-es, said ii the money used for portable ren- tals were used to hire extra staff tilt student·teacher ratio c o u 1 d be con- 1iderably reduced. "Thia would enhance the learning situa- tion," he said. St.ay Cool "lf we could reduce the raUo , pubaps partnts would be willing to corulder dou- ble sessions," &aid Nelson. Trustee Bob Dameron added that the · term "double sessloru" doesn't carry the stigma it once did and that if education could be Improved by being on double sessions he would favor it. He added that there are a great num- ber or people with untapped (41ent in Leisure World who might consider volun- teering as teacher aides. The rest o( the meeting wall used to gather ideas from principals on how OAn.Y Pl~OT llUI '~"' PhotQgrapher, as well as several shoppers, d id a double tak:e this week while passin& this windaw di splay in a fashionable Newport Beach commercial center. Was it a display of new sum~er fashions? More likely, it was merely a half·completed new window display. Either way, it definitely was an eye-catcher. South Coast United Fund Warms Up for Fall Drive Officiala of the recently Jormed South Coast Area United Fund this week launched lhelf informati on campalgn to prime the pump for next fall 'll two-month donallon campaign. 'nle fund 'Was organized last fall to join diverse charitable coJleclion drives into ooe· large efforl .non c:onrad, tnform11tion chairman ror the local fund , said the fonnation of •the orgailtzatlan wis brought On "to bring otder,out or chaos in the charitable fund-· ra111111t fleld ." .He outlined thete benefits from the United l'nnd' -To the contributor It eliminstell the arinoy1nte of many separate appeals. a11l!ures carerul budgeting of the amount n~ded by each member organiution and assures wise 1pendinJ of Ult 'COntribute4 nio.ne1~ -'tq rhlrit.Ablt 11ind mvict-agencles uie tund ?educes the cost of fUitd.l'llling to leN tb1n ilve percent of the cn&.s p1-o- I 4 • ceeds and allows start members and volunteers to concentrate more on atrvice work. Instead of fund drives. -To the sallcitor it saves time and ef· fort by concentrating on one sJng!e cam- paign. -To the community It meanll the coordination of exil!ting s e r v i c e s , enhances the. understanding of each co~ lect\fl1 agency, elimin•les duplication of services and pares down the co.sts of fund raising: Offcials of the South Coast United Fl.Ind volunteer their services frtt. No dona- tiON will be used for salarles. Conrad ex- pl1lned. Rock Sta r Injured SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) -Singer-- Grace Slick of the .Jerrerson Airplane tuf- rered a concussion Thursday when she 11Tu~$htd ht.r-car Into. 1 concrete wall on an approach to lhe Colden Gate brh11e. children from Irvin< School and La Pu Intermediate School in MlaJon Viejo can spend free time they wlll hive when both those schools go on double tieS1Jona th1I September. Ideas for junior high children included using them to tutor younger children, enlisting their aid in ecology projects, field trips to coort.s, indllllriell, or businesses to augment chtllsroom studies, intramural sports program, and pni-o viding special classes for eJtra help with schoolwork in perhaps churcbel or recreation centers • ant Police Tab San Clemente poliCe are lnvel!tigatinc an_ estimated $3,0IXl damage done by van- dals to (he old sewage treatment plant in which all o( the windows were broken and much of the equipment was di.smanUed. Police believe the malicious mlachiel OCC11rred toward the end of April, although It was not d!scove.ffil Ut1.til Thursday morntns by City Enatneer Phil Peter. Large chunks of blacktop were thrown through the windows in both af the buildings a1 the plant located at the end or Avenida Estacion. Investigators aald in addlUon, major damage was done to the buildings, the generator motor and the electric control panel. Police also said lh1 toilets and sinks In the washroom at the plant were tom from their mountings. The treatment facility, built in 1949, was recently sold by the city to Brlg· ham Young University of Provo, Utah. Use of the antiquated plant was dlJcon. tinued by the city in November of 1971 with the construction of a new facility. The bulldinga and ground•-bavt-blen vacated 1ince that time. Little Friend Of PresUlent Stays Critical Four-year-old Danny Jonet, a Ian Clemente child wbo received the warm willhes of President Nixt'll last week, rfr mains Jn critical condliJDn today follow· Ing risky open heart surgery Monday. Family rpokesman said the youngster is still in the intensive care unit of Children's Hospital in Los Angeles and there has been no marked change in his condition. Ooctor1 had 1Iven the boy a 20 percent chance of surviving the 1urgery, which repaired three holes in Danny's heart and restored normal blood flow te tijs lungs. The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jones, lll currently brealhlng with the aid af a respir1tor, lhe spokeiman 1tid. Dan. ny's llplrits we re buoyed May S wben San Clemente police Chief Clifford Munay arranged for the child to meet President Nixon at the We.stem White House. Oraage Hazy sunshine Is the. best th4! weatherman can offer this week· end, with little temperature change on the Orange Coast wbtre mer- cury will reach S2 Cll the beacbet and into the lower 10s Inland. INSIDE TODAY The cit11 a/ Huntington Btat~ ill h.oldfug on oU day festival i1& Murdy Parle thll Satarda11. Yuu co.n read au about It 'n toda11'1 Weekender. .... hi. ,. Mwhltl '"'"' '' (•llffl'11Le • N1t1 .. 1I N-W ChKltl~t Uf 11 Cl•tt.lllM "·" Or111 .. C-'J t lt11t..,.tfllt H-U C9111lc.I 11 ._,. , .... (1"1111 .... ~ ,. ... , Mllrlt-'t , .. ,, DH111 MtllCfl t Tftt¥1"'"' H eflNrl1I ,..._.. • Tl!Hftrt .... ,, .i111~t• IJ•1J WHIMt I Hfl'ot(.-,, W-'I Nft'I 11•14 AM l 111dfn II Wtrlf Htwt 4-J M1ltlltir t ........... ,, .• Aile\'ltl ff.27 I • . . . . . ...-. . . ... DA.IL Y PILOT SC DAILY PILOT !ttU Pllol9 BEECHWOOD REPLICA OF MICHELANGELO'S "PIETA" Christi•n Abel S•y1 Goodby; Work of Unknown Artist Carving Sold Wood Statue 'Pieta' iii Museiun • • : Carved by an anonymous wood worker to. the 18th century, a full sized replica o! Nichelangelo's "Pieta'' will at last be epshrined in a museum after being purchased ?i.1onday Crom Laguna Beach resident Christian Abel. : The beech"·ood statue, weighing In ex- <iss of 300 pounds, was sold by Abel, hlmself a wood carver, to Santa Barbara r~sident Loisgene Kineva n. Mrs. Kinev an owns a ranch near Santa Barbara (HI ~hich is located the original stage coach 5iop for the community. She plans to con· \'l!rt the stage station, a State Historical 1'1onument, into a museum and wJII display the Piela there. Abel has owned the statue for five years and, arter completely restoring the deteriorated work. he displayed It at the Laguna Federal Gallery for almost two years. He said It was carved somewhere in southern Europe, possibly Italy or Germany, but the art~t bas never been ·determined. Abel said he purchased the work in the United States. The original Pieta, depicting Jesus Christ lying in the arms of his grieving mother, Mary, follow ing the cruciflxtion, was carved by Italian artist Michelangelo in 1494 when he was onl y 19 years old. Mrs. Kinevan said the statue will be enshrined In the altar room of lhe stage station in Sant.a Barbara. She said in the old days, Sunday 1.1ass was said at the station whenever passengers were foreed to wait over the weekend for their corr necting stage coach. 'Ibe Piela will go in- to the room when: the religious services weri conducted. Long Beach Coed Dies In Brutal Ax Slaying FROM WIRE SERVICES BELLFLOWER -Blinded by her own blood, a Cal State long Beach coed escaped from a crazed roomer just evicted by her grandmother Thursday. after being hacked and stabbed with a knife and ai:. The former mental patient was disarm- ed by an 8().year-old man, but Kerry Louise Smith. 19. died 21h hours later during a desperate team effort to save her life . A dozen pints of blood wert. raced t() Bellflo"A·er Community Hospital by police San Clen1enle \Vo111an To Give CSF Recital JoAnn WUllams. a San Clemente resi· dent and graduate music student al Cal State Fullerton, will give a piano recilal lit the campus tonight at 8 o'clock .. Mrs. Williams, who lives at 203 Calle Rica. will perform works of Brahms and Handt.I in music room 127. OIAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT 011.t.NG:.l CO.t.~T P'U9Ll$111"10 COM!".t.N'f flol:ot1t N. w •• d 'rn id.enr •ncl P'uo!loMr J1c1t II.. Curley Vl<I P'rtllllllnl t nd (l....,.11 l ... tlllgtr Tho11111 t<e1Til Ell!., Tlio,..11 A. M w,~11int 1,11,.111,,. l'lllOr helicopter and patrol car, while the suspect, Donald Kirkpatrick, 33, was being questioned by l1omJclde detectives. Once a Camarillo State Hospital pa- tient, Kirkpatrick was booked by Lakewood Sherill's deputies on charges of murder following the 4:15 p.m. hackln& spree. "Miss Smith was more dead than alive when she arrived at the ho,splt.al," sakl one deteeUve, noting she lllffered a 2% inch gash in her skull plus ma ny other mortal wounds. Her qccused klller was jumped by John l~. Undenshov, 80, a tenant of Mrs. Johanna Apple, 76, the apparint quarry of Kirkpatrick. "She was taking out the trash when the attack occurred," investigators said. Kirkpatrick reportedly burst Into her room at 4:15 p.m. and bt!gan hacking and slashing the young woman. She was struck numerous tlmea in lhe head, face and body before running blind- ly out of the main howe to which are at· !ached smaller rental units. Kirkpatrick himself returned after following Mlss Smith out, where the elderly tenant who had come to her aid took the \veapons away and called authorities. .. , jusl murdered my wife," he \\'as quoted as saying. Rock Star Injured SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Singer Grace Slick of the Jerferson· Airplane suf. fered a concussion Thursday when she smashed her car into a concrete wall on an approach to the Golden Gate bridge. Fulbright·, Rogers Wage War Talks WASHINGTON (UPI) -Se<:retary of State William P. Rogers in a bristling confrontation with Sen. J. William Fulbright (0-Ark.J, today described as unconstitutional and unnecessary pro- posals lo restrict a President's au thority to commit troops abroad. Rogers testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committtt. headed by Fulbright, that such action would limit the President's constitutional po"·ers and seriously limit his ability to carry out foreign po~cy. During a subsequent exchange. both Rogers and Fulbright displayed UD· concealed irritation and anger \.\o'ilh each other. Fulbright said the administration was using "'double ,t.alk" to justify con- tinuation or the Vietnam War and ex· pected rnembi!rs of Congress to follow its edicts like "good boys." At another poinl, Fulbright remarked, "tht more I observe this administration, the more Jt 'appears that you are follo\v· ing exactly the same courst as your predecessors." "You," he said to Rogers , •·have gone almost as far as ~1r. Katz· enbach." "Oh. Mr. Chairman!" Rogers in· lerjected angrily. Fulbright's reference was to testimony by Katzenbach before the committee when he v.'as undersecretary of state that the power of Congress lo declare war was no longer a reality in the age of nuclear missilery. · Rogers specifically rejected t h a t charge and that he disagreed with Katzenbach's view entirely. "Can I say it any more clearly'?" he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. Fulbright responded that the Nixon Administration like its predecessors was engaged in "usurpation of war powers'' of Congress. Capistrano Board Rejects State Property Tax Plan Trustees of the Capistrano Unified Sc.hool District have voted to reject the slate property tax plan which is rurrent.ly being considered by the slate legislature. Tht. board voted Wlanlmously Wed- nesday to oppose the statewide properly tax which is designed to make educa· tional opportunities throughout. the slate more equal. If the plan is adopted a state tai: of $3.75 per $100 assessed valuation would be levied in all school districts ln place or a general fund property tu. "Th.is would mean a tai: increase of 2ll cents per $100 assessed valuation in the Diver, 36, Dies Folll'. Days After Laguna Rescue A scuba diver from Azusa-rescued by Laguna Beach Wt.guarda: Sunday after he was caught 1n a riptide -died at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in South Coast Community Hospital. A hospital spokesman said Gtorae Scht.rf, 36, wl.s kept In a respirator from the time he was admitted Sunday and never regained eonsciousnf!!. · Scherf wu diving off M o s s Street Beach with his 17-year-old son, Keven. when the two were caught in a riptide and swept 200 yards out to sea. The youth was able to reach the shore safely, but his father had stopped breathing by the time lifeguards Mike England and Art Smart reached him. Mouth-tirmouth resuscitation was ad- mlubtertd by England as the stricken diver was brought ubore on a rescue tube. The guards also tried unsuccessf\J.Dy to revive the victim with heart massage and a mechanical resu.!Cltator while awaiting an ambulance. Capistrano Unified School DI stric t without any additional state aid;' said Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent !or business services. Chicas added that 90 percent of the schoo l districts throughout the slate would benefit from the state proposal. "But all il would do in our district is raise taxes and allow us to help pay for education in other school districtl," he said. The resolution passed by the board of trustees states that the state should assume its "historical responsibility" of providing 50 percent of the cost of public education without additional ta:tation. ''The state is supposed to pay 30 percent of the cost now but in our district Jt pays only about 20 percent," said Chicas. He said there was a time in the distant past v.•hen the slate in fact supplied 50 percent of the cost easing the burden for local property owners. The state property tax plan was introduced Jn lhe legislature by State Sen. Albert Rodda (().Sacramento). In ad- dition to 1he state tu which would be distributed eqaaOy·mnorig 3Cbool districts in the state the bill would provide an ad- ditional $400 million of state: funds to be U!ed for educatJ:on. . . Teen Dance Set In Lake Forest A dance for teenagers will be staged tonight at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Lake Fort.st residtnls and lht.ir guests must have some identilical.ion that will show they are in either junior or senior high school. The dance will be from 8 p.m. to mid· nlgbl and will ft.ature music by the "Prophets.'' Admlssloo is $.1. DAILY PILOT 11111 P'~tt. ST. CATHERINE STUDENTS PREPARE ECOLOGY DISPLAY Kris Zelarney, Karen Bushman, Kathy Willett~ Jenny Nell E~ology Show Private School Hoasts Open ·House Students of Laguna Beach's St. Catherine School will participate 111 Private Education Day Tuesda y v.·ith an open house for parents, friends and in- terested members or the general public. From 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., students in the sil:th, seventh and eighth grades will join in an ecologically based program in- cluding movies, dramaUc presentations and displays . From 10:30 a.m. until noon visitors will be able to attend lower grade class sessions and watch students and teachers at \1·ork. Urg.ing increased efforts to keep the private school system alive. a St. Catherine spokesman said this 1\•cek, "Rising rosts and static or reduced sup- port have combined in very abrasive forms. And as private or parochial schools are forced to close their doors, the burden of absorbing these youngsters fall s on the already over-crowded, under· staffed public school system. Rationally. the private school system must be allow· ed lo survive.'' Finch to Leave Capitol After 1972 Elections NiJ:on Administration adviser Robert H. Finch announced Thursday Jn Anaheim that he will wash his hands of \Yashington afteT" the 197'2 elecUons. hit- ting the road home to campaign again in California. "I'll come back as soon as the next election is over. I've already told the President,'' said the former lieutenant governor '1·ho may take a shot at the governorship it:;elf. "I've promised my family to tome back:' Speaking to a plumbing, heating and cooling contractors' convention at the Disneyland }lotel, Finch covered much ground on a local, national and inter· national scale. He said he will devote efforts in months ahead to campaigning for President r\'i:t· on's re-election lhen may run in 1974 as U.S. senator or governor. The former Secretary of Health Educa- tion and Welfare predicted currt.nt unemployment In Califomia "''ill be helped by a new $6 million fiscal year allocation for manpower training. The federal grant will enable a 13-week t'Ontinuation of present programs, with funds spent on 5,000 or the hard-core unemployed to develop work skills and find jobs. A remaining $1 million from a prior allotment will be administered by ths California Department of Hurn an Resources Development. while. more f1.1;11ds will be forthcoming next fiscal year. •·And they'll be spent in the areas - such as Orange County -which have the most difficult unemployment problems," Finch declared. On arrival at the hospital , Scherf wu alive but his condition throughout the week was described as "very critical." His body has been removed to Azusa where funeral services are pending. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL Serra VFW Post Sets Ceremony The SeTTa post of the Veterans of Foreign \Vars will hold installation ceremonies of new officers tonight at I p.m. in the gymnasium o! San Juan Capistrano twlisslon. Rudy V. Ramos wiU be installed as post commander, Thomaa Hunn as senior vice commander. Timothy Hart as junior vice commander. Lawrence Ramos a s Chaplain and Harold Rusk a s quartermaster. Refreshments v.·ill be serred and the public ~s invited lo attend. CL Ch1rh1 H. loo1 flich1rcl '· Nill ,,. .. \t11n. Mllll0"'9 El•I~•~ l .. w11• a..clll Office 11? fort1t Av1 n~• Beacl1 Tl1eater Teache1· I ~ii!:ng .dd1•u: P.O. 811 '"'· 9?6S? S1111 c le111n,. Offlc• JOS North El Cuni~• Rtil, tl~72 Otfriot Offkff CO•!I M•• .. Jl? w .. r O•Y $""' JhWllOfl llff<~. llll Nt'"llO'I Bo.. ~.ard l-111f'1l"f!"" 1111c~: 1n11 aeatn I 01.'l1v1'4 Quits Afte1· Party Arrest An Edison High School drama leachtr has resigned following his arrest on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of minor!. He was arrested Saturday night al hi~ upstairs apartment where he was reportedly giving a cast party afte.r the final performance of a school play. Police went to the apartment of John Lee Siler,~. at 221 At!Mta Avt .. at ll:JO pm. after neighbors had complained of noise. Police reporls assert that 17 ju\·enlles. boys and girls, \\'ere lakc.n into proleetive custody after lhe officers found quantities (If beer. wine, rum and \•odka In lhe apartmrnt . f\011l' rif the studenll ·was charged with an olfensi;. All were released lo their parrnts lifter aiving stttlements lo lhe pc llc•. Si!('r nppeared In \Vtst Orange County Judich11l Court Thursday and pleaded In- nocent to a charge of furnl~lng In- toxicants to and contributing to the delin- quency of 1 juvenile. A jury trial was scheduled for 8:30 1.m. July 6. Siler was rtleased after pc13tin& bail of $625. High school District Superintende.nt Jack Roper aaJd this morning that Siler "''as &U.spended Monday morninc but on Tuesdl)' the teacher resigned. The Incident o«:urred after the fina l performance (If lhe Greek cl•sslc Antigone. Siler had bten drama teacher at Ecfuon High sinct September. Under his leedership the students had also performed the melodrama Deadwood Dick. t;di30ll Principal Ernie Paseot -said that both productions "were ucellenl" and praised Slier'• ability as a drama ltacher. ' Be1utifully styled it the word for M1rche111. Thi1 ht'!d1 om1 double pedestal t1ble fe1ture1 • cla11 ic p•rque Jop plus 3 le1v11 to match. It e>1:tend1 to I )6'' whtn fully cpened. Th• ch11ir1 may be orderad with cane 11 1hown, or with bi11ck f)1d1. Stop in and view thi' exqui,it• dining 1•f tod•y. TABLE ..................................................... $Sit. SIDE CHAIRS -................................. ea. $139. ARM CHAIRS ....... -······-·····----oa. $159. Si111: 70" x -14" With ), 22" le•ves DEALERS__P0R: HENREOON -OREXE~ -HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOii OPI~ "TIL t 7111111111/tllletl. " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•1tcllff Or., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe11icn1I Interior D11lgn•rs AvaH1bl1 -AID INTERIORS '"••Toll II,.. Mo1t of OH111t• C11111ry-140·126J • LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hwy. Phona: 494-655 I I ~--. .. .... Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. M , NO. 115, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY '14, ·197f TtN CENTS Marine Preserve· Envisioned for Salt Creek Bf BARBARA KREIBICH 0t Tll• DallY Pli.t S11ff Assemblyman Robert E. Badham, R- Newport Beach, said Thursday he will In- troduce a bill in Sacramento next week to establish still another r:narine preserve CJff Lhe Orange Coonty shore, this one in the Salt Creek area. "Quali£ied biologists have advised me the opening of Salt Creek to the public, though providing needed recreational facilities, will create a potential hazard to Bo11ib Plot the naturaJ marine sanctuary existing in the area." Badham explained. "'I hope next weeK to prevail upon the Legislature to add the proper areas at Salt Creek to the preserve. •!ready created by bills I inlroduei!d in 1968 and 1969." These bills resulted iJ1 t h e establishment of marine preserves in Newport Beach , Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Dana Point Badham said he planned to put an urgency clause In the new measure so it could become effective immediately and provide needed protection this summer. The preserve, he said, would run the length of the area known as Salt Creek Cove. The legislator said he had contacteO the Orange County Harbor District. Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Avco Corp:1ration. developers of the Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek area, seek· a a ing support for the proposed marine preserve. Support from the concerned Orange County entities seems assufed. Richard Weiser, ei:eculive vi~ presi- dent of Avco Community, Developers Inc. and general manager of the firm's Laguna Niguel operation said Thursday. "As I understand it, the marine preserve would cover'only those rocky areas which are exposed at low tide and of course we have no jurisdiction over them. They are state tidelands. However we apprKiate Mr. Badham's interest in our reaction to tha proposal and I can say we feel It would most certainly be: in the public in- terest, now and in the future." Tom Fuentes, executive assistant to Supervisor Caspers, said the supervisor also had been approached by en Orange County College biology p r o f e s s o r regarding the need !or a marine preserve ' Blonde Charged In Conspiracy NE\V YORK IUPll -A federal war- rant v.·as issued today for the arresl of activist Leslie Bacon on a charge of con- 1piring with six alleged Weathermen to blow up a ~1adison Avenue bank branch. Mrs. Hastings Funeral Slated Monday Morning Funeral services for Ch r i 1 l i n e Hastings, wife of former Laguna Beach pla nning commissioner Robert Hastings, will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at ~lcCormick Mortuary Chapel, l 7 9 S Laguna Canyon Road . The Rev. Phillip Heppenslall will or- ficiate at the rites and burial will follow at forest Lawn Memorial Pa r k, Hollywood Hills. Mrs. Haslings. 54. died Wednesday after suffering an apparent stroke. Her husband. wtlo recently underwent open heart surgery in Texas, was ad- mitted to South Coast Community ~lospital for observation immediately following hi s w.ife's death , but permitted bv his doctors to return home toda y. ·Hastings resigned from the planning commission last month prior to the delicate surge ry. which his doctors told him must be follov.•ed by an extended J)f'riod of convalesence. He and his ""ife had returned from Texas to their home, 303 Magno\ia Drive, when Mrs. Hastings wa s stricken. A nati ve of Henryeua. Okla., Mrs. Hastings is survived by two children by a former marriage. Sandy Sue Sobleman and Allan F. Sobleman. both of Los An~eles The Hastings came to Laguna Beach four years ago after his retirement from the Pacific Telephone Company In IAs Angeles. Both have been active in com· munity affairs. President Traveling WASli'INGTON (APJ -Presiden~ Nix· CJn is flying to Florida today for a "·eekend stay at his Key Biscayne villa. Mrs. Nixon is remaining in Washington. Orange Coast Weather Hazy sunshine is the best the weatherman can offer this week- end, with little temperature change on the Orange Coilst where mer- cury will reach 62 on the beaches and into the lower 70s inland. INSIDE TODA. Y The city of 1lu111ington Beach is holdntg an. nLL day ft gtiool in ftf iordy Parlr. thi! Saturday. You can read all about 1t in todo~'' \Vt.e kender. ···""' ,. Cttlle,.11• I C~1tUflt U• 11 c11nllltf :If.ti (11111(, 1t C~uwt•' ll DU!~ Nll!ttt t E•INrlll ..... ' ,1111"'1 IJ.H HM--II """ Llllfll't IJ MlllW~ l Mtwlt• 1 .. 11 MU!llfll ,u .... , ll NlllMlll flt.-. l·I Cr•"" c-ry • •1111111"1~" ... u $..,.. , .. ,. Sr.cit M1"'11t , .. ,, Tti.Yltl<tft U Tlttlll" "'" W11lllt• I w-~,, 'llW\ ,,.,, WMltl 'llW'I W WN•fflftr ll·lt ' U.S. Commissioner Clayton 0. Holl· inger issued the warrant on a govern- ffient complaint which said the 19-year- old blonde, arrested. last month as a •·material witness" ln the bombing o( the U.S. Capitol, had "admitted being present al meetings with the other conspirators and discussed with them • plan to bomb the First National Qty Bank Buiding." 1be other aii: alleged conspiratori, seized by police out.side the bank Sept. 14. pleaded guUty 1.ut month to reduced state charges of conspiracy to commit arson. Three. of them were ae:ntenced a week ago to rnaximwn four-year prison terms, and two to three-year terms. Sentencing of the aixth was delayed while he undergoes psychiatric observation at Bellevue Hospital. Miss Bacon. arrested April 27 in a Washington, D.C .. commune, was ques- tioned about the alleged plot to bomb the New York bank by a federal grand jury in SeatOe, where 1he w1s taken after her arrest. Sierra Official Talks on Irvine Coastline. Plan The proposed Irvine aMexalion end lhe future of coastline development will be discussed by Dr. Richard H. Ball, vi~ prcsidenl of the Sierra Club at a meeting of the Laguna Beach Civic League, Tues- day evening at 8 o'clock in cit~ hall coun- cil chambers. Dr. Ball, a physicisl with the tn- vironmental sciences department at San- ta Monica 's Rand Corporation, i.11 vi~ chairman of the Sierra Club, Angeles Chapter. He also is 1 member of the legislative committee of the Coastal Alliance and a recognized eipert on planning and con- servation matters. A status report on the high rise in· ltiative petition, &eheduled to reach the City Council Wednesday night. also will be presented to League member.11 es they observe the loth anniversary of the organization . Election of a new board of directors and presentation of the L ea g u e '• honorary life member awards also are on the evening agenda. The meeting is open to the public, free of charge. Ali Laguna The art colony Is captured at its picturesque best in this aerial photograph by Charles Everts of Laguna Beach. Upper right the landmark Hotel Laguna, northerly boundary of h1ain Beach, gives perspec- t1ve . About three quarters of an inch left Park Avenue starts due East up past the high scbool and on to Top of the World. At southerly boundary of Main Beach is Rock ?ile. At left is Crescent Bay. Laguna School District Teacher Hiring Procedure .Boosted A new strumlined procedure designed to eliminate many wasted hours pro- cessing job applications and resumes will be put into effect May 24 by the Laguna Beach Unified School District. The Talent Attraction S y a t em , developed for Industry by the University of Mas."Jachusetta, will provide for a pro- apeclive teacher to be: Interviewed by a top 1ehool official before even filling out an application. Dr . William Ullom, su~rinlendcnt of the district, 1aid more thin I ,800 per110n1 phooed or visited the dl1trict office& iR 1970 seeking employment. He 1aid th• new 1ystem will tllmlnate the titnHM• 1uming and expen!lve processing of these applicants by &ereening them in advance. The procedure begin!! with a pro- spective teacher answering an ad- vertisement by calling a phone number at the district office. The applicant will reach a 1ehool official. who will then ask the prospective employe a series of 10 questions. Ullom said these questions are design- ed to determine the teacher'• background, education and teach1ng philosophy very quickly, He said the queslions must be answered within gulde- lineJ pre-established by the developer of the sygtem. If the teacher gives "wrong" answer1 to the quulions, he 11 told he doesn't .. have the qualifications the district Is looking for , However, JJ the app1ica111 passes the first test, he will be told to ap- pear the next day at the district offices for a 1bo1i lnter.11Jew-with~br~Ullom. Once the applicant has given a favorable interview, Ullom says he then fills out an applications and gi11es the district a list of three character and pro- fessional references. Under the old procedurl!!, 111 prospective teacher would be screened by the. school staff first and Ullom would make the final dec1si0n. Under the n~w method, the superintendent will make the first de<:lalon. The district will pay $2,250 tor lhe ~ gram, which will include development and updating of the first 10 questions and management of the program by the Univer~ of MassachusetU;. Sc~! of- ficials feel the new hiring method will save money In the long run becau!le a great deal of paper work will be eliminated. Ullom u ys he thinks the nl!!w pro- cedure will also attract the best talenl available for the job opening. District of· ficials anlicipale hiring about 10 new peo- ple for the 1971.n school ye11r, but the TAlf'nt Attraction system will be uatd for Ullin& all future open!ngs. ' at Salt Creek and had haa the Harbor Department to report on the feasibility of such a project. "Mr. Caspers ii am:ious to move on it and certainly will cooperate," he aakl. Establi!hment of the o f f • 1 ho r e sanctuaries was sparked some yean ago by Lagunan Glenn Vedder, then mayor of the Art Colony, who had become fD. cre:asingly diatressed over pillage of the tidepool! by collectors and the rurtoua. ' War Chief, Followers Arrested CAIRO !UPI) -President Anwer Sadat said tonight he had foiled "what amounted to a coup " by his political op- ponents and that Gen. Mohammed fa\vzi, the war minister, had been placed under house arrest. Other opponents were jail· ed. Sadat spoke in a nationwide broadcast one day after sit cabinet ministers •nd three top policymakers resigned tn Egypt"s biggest political upheaval 1lnca the 1967 war with 1srael. He said several members of the centra1 committ.ee of the Arab Socialist Union and two senior police officers were aenl to jail. Sadat announced plans for a complete reorganiiation or the Arab Socialist Union , Egypt's only poUt.ical party. (Earlier story, page 4). He said free elections will be held from "top to bottom" Wlder his own 1upervision and "I will be ei:trtmely cn.iel to anybody who attempt to rig the elections." ....._ The political crisis was M> seriOUI that government leaders or their deputies from Libya, Syria and the Sudan flew unexpectedly to Cairo earlier today to pledge their solidarity with Sadat. Sadat said he asked Vice Premier end Interior Minister Sharawl Gomaa to resign because Gomaa, as head or the union's organizational committee, had engineered maneuver' to embarrass the president. He said five of the miaisters who quit Thursday announced their resignatlona over Cairo radio without his knowledge. Fawzi was one of ti'°6e who resigned. Sadat said be digcovered only Thursday • tape N!CQrder in his own room at the Republican Palace. He said he discovered the instrument by using Jn electronic ,ck.vice after being tipped off by 110m• i\lnJsters. He said the recorder was Installed by Intelligence operatives working under former minlsters Gomaa and Sa.mi Sharar. Sadat 1aid the five ministera who an- nounced their resignations on the radio quit to show solidarity with Gomaa. "They thought that Egypt will collapse but today we formed a new government including technicians, professors and aome of the many efficient people with whom our land abounds," Sadat said. Sadat said he was leaving his office lm· mediately after the one hour and 25 minute speech to administ.tr the oath to the new cabinel Greenbelt Film Set For Lagtma Showing Lagunanll who have not yet teen the of· ficial Greenbelt fllm are Invited to a gcreening sponsored by the Altru.u Club as part o( their regular meeting Tuesday evening in the Outrlgger Restaurant. The Greenbelt film will be shown at 3:30 o'clock following dinner which will be served from 6:30 at regular restaw-ant prices. BRAZEN THIEF GRABS THRONE A brazen burglar broke blto lft exclusive Costa Mesa realdence and &tole lhe $50 toilet seat, Alvin Sugarman complained to Colta Mesa police Thursday. Sugarman. spokesman for the r.arden Grove tuJllding firm that owns the house at 3001 COUnlry Club Drive, told police he would ba uMble to identify the object 11 lt II recovered. I I ) DAIL V PILOT SC DAILY f'ILDT 11111 ,.IMN BEECHWOOD REPLICA OF MICHELANGELO'S "PIETA" Chri1tl1n Abel S1y1 Goodby; Work of Unknown Arti1t Carving Sold Wood Statue 'Pieta.' in Mus eun1 : Carved by an anonymous "'ood worker ih the 18th century. a full sized replica of Nlichelangelo'1 "Pieta" will at last be E!llshrined in a museum alter being wrchased Monday from Laguna Beach JJsident Christian Abel. : The beechwood statue, weighing in ex* cess of 300 pounds, was sold by Abel, himself a wood carver, to Santa Barbara l'i!sident Loisgene Kinevan . f\.1rs. Kinevan oWns a ranch near Santa Barbara on Which is located the original stage coach dop for the crJmmunity. She plans to con* ~rt lhe stage stalion, a State llislorical Monument. Into a museum and will display the Piela there. Abel has owned the statue for five years and, after s::ompletely restoring the deteriorated v.·ork. he displayed it at the Laguna Federal Gallery for almost tv;o years. He sald ll was carved somewhere in soutbern Europe, possibly Italy or Germany, but the artist has never been determined. Abel sa id be purchased the work in the United States. The (lriglnal Pleta, depicting Jesus Ou'ist lying in the arms or his grleving mother, Mary, following the cruciliJ:tion, was carved by Italian artist Michelangelo in 1494 when be was only 19 years old. Mrs. Klnevan said the statue will be enshrined Jn the altar room of the stage station in Santa Barbara. She said in the <1ld days, Sunday Mas.s was said at the station whenever passengers were forced to wait over the wetkend for their con- necting stage et>ach. The Piela will go in- to the room where the rtllg\ous servicts were coriducted. Long Beach Coed Dies In Brutal Ax Slaying FROM WIRE SERVICES BE;lJ.FLO\VER -Blinded by her own blood, a Cal State Long Beach coed escaped from a crazed roomer jll.!lt evicted by her grandmother Thursday. after being hacked and stabbed with a knUe and a1. The former mental patient was disarm· ed by an 8G-year-0ld man, but Kerry Louise Smith, 19, died 2i,; hours later during a desperate team eifort to gave her life. A dozen pints of blood were raced to Bellilowtr Community Hospital by police San Clemente Wo ma n To Gi ve CSF Recita l JoAnn Williams, a San Clemente resi· dent and grad~ate music student at Cal State Fullertoo. will give a piano recital at the campus tori ight at II o'clock. Mrs. Williams, who lives at 203 Calle Rica, will perform works or Brahms and Handel in music room 127. OIAHG-1 CO,\ST DAILY PILOT ORANG:< COAlT f'UILliHING C.QMPAN't ll•li••+ N. W114 Prn-1 •"" Pl,llll1~t J•<k R. Cu1l1v Viet ,.,.,.ioon1 1PICI (;-•I M•n•~tf Tho"'"' K11•il ltllO!'" 1ho,..11 A. lil urp~!~• M•n1~i~g E.d•ll>r helicopter and patrol car, wlljle tbl suspect, Donald Kirkpatrick, 33, wu being questioned by bomiclde detectives. Once a camarillo State Hospital pa· lient, Kirkpatrick was booked by Lakewood Sherill's deputies on charges or murder folfowing the 4:15 p.m. hacking spree. "Miss Smith was more dead than alive \vhen she arrived at the hospital," aaid one detective, notln1 she suffered 1 l~ inch gash in her skull plus many other mortal wounds. Her accused killer was jumped by John L. Llnderishov, 80, a tenant of Mrs. JohaMa Apple, 76, ~ apparent quarry. or Kirkpatrick. ·•she was taking out the trash when the altack occurred," invesUgaton llid. Kirkpatrick reportedly burst lnto her room at 4:15 p.m. and began backing and slashing the young woman. She was struck numerous times in the head, face and body before running blind- ly out of the maln house to which are at· !ached smaller rental units. Kirkpatrick himself returned alter following Miss Smith out, where the elderly tenant who had come lo her ald took the weapons away and called authoritles. "I just murdered my wife ," he was quoted as saying. Rock Star Injured SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Singer Grace Slick ol lhe Jefferson Airplane suf- f£'red a concussio n Thursday when she smashed her car into a concrete wall on an approach to the Golden Gate bridge. Fulbright, Rogers Wage War Talks WASHING TON (UPI) -Se<tetary of Slate Wllllam P. Rogers ln a brtslllng confrontation with Sen. J. William ' Fulbright (0-Ark.). today described as unconstitutional and UM~ssary pro- posals to restrict a President's authority lo l'Ommit troop.s abroad. Rogers testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, beaded by Fulbright, thal such action "·ould limit the President's consti tutional powers and seriowly limit his ability to carry out foreign policy. During a subsequent exchange, both Rogers and Fulbright displayed un* concealed irritation and anger with each other. Fulbright said the administration was using "double talk" to jusUfy con· tinuatlon of the Vietnam \Var and ex· peeled members of Congres.! to foUow its edicts like "good boys ." At another point, Fulbright remarked, "the more J observe th is administration, the more it appears that you are follov.·· ing exactly the same course as your predecessors." "You," he said to Rogers, "have gone almost as far as Mr. Katz· enbach." "Oh, Mr. Chairman !" Rogers in· terjected angrily. Fulbright's reference ~·as to te.stimony by Katzenbach before the committee when he wa s unde rsecretary of sla te that the power of Congress to declare war was no longer a reality in the age or nuclear missilery. Rogers specifically rejected that charge arid that he disagreed v.·ith Katienbach's view entirely. "Can J say it any more clearly?" he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. FuJbright responded that the Ni.Jon Administration like its predecessors was engaged in "usurpation of "'ar po\ll·ers" cf Congress. Capistrano Board Rejects State Property Tax Plan Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District have voted to re}ect the state property tax plan which is currently being COffiidered by the slate leg islature. The board voted unanimous ly 'Yed· nesday to oppose the statewide property tax which is designed to make educa* tional opportunities lhroughoot the state more equal. If the plan ls adopted a st.ate ta:i of $3. 75 per $100 usessed valuaUon would be levied in all school distrlct.s In place of a general fund property tu. ''Th.ls \\'ould mean a ta:i Jncrease of 21> cents per $100 a§CMed valuation in the Diver, 36, Dies F Olll'. Days After Laguna Rescue A scuba diver from Alu!a-rescued by Lquna Beach Ufegu ardJ Sunday after he wu caught l.n a riptide -died at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in South Coast CommWlity llD3pltal. A hospital spokesman said George Scherf, 36, was kept in a respirator from the time he wu admitt.ed Sunday and never rtgained consciousness. Sctierf was diving off M o s 1 Street Beach with his J7.year-old son , Keven. when the two were caught in 1 rlpUde and swept 200 yards out to sea. 1be youth wu able to reach the shore salely, but his father had slopped br<1thlng by the Lime llleguardJ Mike England and Art Smart reached hlm. Mouth-to-mouth resuscitaUon was ad- minl.stered by England 1s the stricken diver was brought ashore on a rescue tube. The guards also tried unsuccessfully to revive the victim with heart massage and a mechanical resuscitator while awa1Ung an ambulance. On arrival at the hospital, Scherf was alive but his condiUon throughout the week was described as "very criUcal." Capistrano Unified School Di st r i c t without any additional state aid.'' said Sam Chicas. assistant superintendent for business services. Chicas added that 90 percent of the school districts throughout the state would benefit from the state proposal. "But all it would do In our district is ral.se taJ:es and allow us to help pay for educatiori in other school districts," he said. The re!Olutlon passed by the boa rd or trwtee.s states that the state should assume Jts "historical responsibility'' of providing 50 percent of the cost of pub lic education without addiUonal taxation. "The state is supposed to pay 30 percent of the cost now but in our district it pays only about 20 perctnt," said Chicas. lie said there was a time in the distant past when the state in fact &Upplied 50 percent Of the cost easing the burden for Jocal property owners. The state property tax plan was Introduced Jn the legislature by State Sen. Albert Rodda ([).Sacramento}. In ad* dltlon to the state lax which would be distributed equaUJ a.moq school districts ln the state the bil11Vou1d provide an act-. ditlonal $400 million of state funds to be wed for educaUon. Teen Dance Set In Lake Forest A danct for teenagv-s will be staged tonight at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Lake Forest residents and their guesl8 must have some identllication that will show they are in either junior or senior hlgb school. The dance will be from 8 p.m. to mid* nigbl and will feature music by the "Propbels.'1 Admluloll ls II. a ' -' ..., DAILY .. 1LOT S!1tf ,.hi+. ST. CATHERINE STUDENTS PR EPAR E EC OLOGY DISPLAY Kris Zelarney, Karen Bushman, Ka thy Wi ll ett, J enny Nell E~ology Show • Private School Hoa sts Open House Siuden!s o[ Laguna Beach ·s !lt. Catherine School "'ill participate in Private Education Day Tuesday v.·ith an open house for parents, friends and in- terested members of the general pu blic. From 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., students in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades \\'iii join in an ecologically based program in- cluding movies, dramatic presentations and displays. From 10 :30 a.m. until noon visitors v.·ill be able to altend lo"·er grade cl ass sessions and \\'atch students and teachers at \1'ork. Urging increased efforts to keep the prh·ate school system alive, a St. Catherine spokesman said this v.•eek, '·Rising l'OSts and static or reducccl sup-- port ha\·e combined in very abrasiv& forms. And as private or parochial schools are forced to close their doors, the burden of absorbing these youngsters falls on the already over.crowded, under· staffed public school sysl('m. Rationally. the private school system must be allov.·· ed to survive." Finch to Leave Capitol After 1972 Elections Nixon Administration adviser Robert H. Finch announced Thursday in Anaheim that be will wash his hands of Washlngt.oo alter the 1972 elections, hit* ting the road home to campaign again in California. *' "I'll come back as soon as the next election is over. 1 ·ve already told the President," said the former lieutenant governor \vho may lake a shot at the governorshi p itself. "I've promised my family to come back.'' Speaking to a plumbing. healing and cooling contractors' convention at the Disneyland Hote l, Finch covered much ground on a local, nationa l and inter- national scale. ffe said he will dtvote eHorts in months ahead to campaigning for President :"'ix· on·s re.election then may run in 1974 as U.S . .senator or governor. 'rhe former SecreLary of Health Educa- tion and Welfare predicted current urK!mployment in California will be helped by a new $6 million fisca l year allocation for manpower training. The federal grant v.·ill enable a 13--week continuation er present programs, \\ith. funds spent on 5.000 or the hard-core unemployed to develop work skills and find jobs. A remaining $1 million from a prior allotment will be administered by t.he California Department of Human Resources Development. "'hile more funds \\'ill be forthcoming next fiscal year. ··And they'll be spent in the areas - such as Orange County -which. have the most difficult unemployment problems,'' Finch declared. His body has been removed tc Atusa where funeral services are pending. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCH ESA BY DRE XE L Serra VFW Post Sets Ceremony The Serra post of the Veterans or Foreian Wars will hold inatlllaUon ceremonies of new officers tonlgbt at I p.m. in the gymnasium ol San Juan C.plstrano Mls.slon. Rudy V. Ramos will be installed as post commander, 'Ibomas Hunn as senior vice commander, Timothy Hart as junior vice commander. Lawrence R11mo1t as Chaplain and Harold Rusk a s quartermaster. Refreshments ,\·ill be served and the public is invited to allend. l .. 11u a-h Offk• J2? Fo r1(t A•1ft ul Beach Theater Teacher ~~l: M ai!i~g 1ddr1n: P.O. lo• 666, ,l,52 $e1t Cl_.. Ottk• JOS N•rlh lJ C1 Mift1 ~111, 92671 OtHr Ollkn (M1. M .. ,. l)J W11I tlV S1'Ht tltWOO<I •11(~" )ll1 H1wi-t ..... 1n1rl 1-1111111 .. 19'1 lttc.11: 11f.I) .Hell ••vtl•I'' Quits After Party A1·rest An Edison High School drama teacher has resigned follow tng his arrest on a charge of contribuling to the delinquency of minors. He was arrested Saturda}' night at hill upstairs apartment where he waa rrportedly Riving a cas t party after Ult final performance or a school play. Police went to the apartment of John Lee Slier, 26. at 221 Al111 nta Ave .. at Jl :30 p.m. after nelghbon hid eomJ1l1tned of noise. Police reports n~sert tha t 17 juvenilu. boys aDd girls. \\'{'re tekcn Into protective <:u.slody a!ltr the officers round quantltlu or beer, wine. rum and vodk11 In the ap11r1m~nl. Nont of 1he !ludents "'as charged with nn oflrn~t. All "·ere released to thelr p11rents afltr giving statements to the police. S!ler 11ppeared In '\lest Or1nre ~nt1 Judicial Court Thursday and ple11ded in~ nocent lo a charge of furnWting in- toxicants to and eon.tributing to the delifl.. quency of a juvenile. A jury lrial "'as scheduled for 11:30 a.m. July i. Sllt r was released after postlnl ball of 1625. Hlah school District Superintendtnt Jack Roper said this morning that Slier was suspended Monday momin1 but on Tuesday the teacher resigned. The incident octurrtd after the final performance of the Greek cla"lc AnU1ont. Siler had bten drama teacher at Edison liigh since September. Undtr hlJ leaden:hlp the students had also performed th t mclodram• Deadwood Dick. .Ed11M Principal Ernie Pascoe said that both produellons "wue ucellent" and praised Siler's ability as a drama leachtr. Beautilully •tyled i1 t he word for M1rche111. This h1nd1ome double ped••til t1ble fe1ture1 1 cl111ic parqu• top plu1 l le1 v•1 to 'Mi tch . It •xtends to I l6" wh•n fu lly openad. The ch1 ir1 may be ordered wi th cane a1 shown, or with beck pads. Stop in and view thi1 t1Kqui1it1 d ini ng set tod1y. TABLE ·······-··-·····---·····--·-·-··-·-$51 f , SIDE CHAIRS ·····-·-·-·········---... $1lf. ARM CHAIRS ····-·-·········-·-····-·-ea. $159. Sii1 : 70 " >1 44" With ), 22" leaves DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -D REXE~ -HERITAGE • NEWPO~T Bf ACH 1727 WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPE N fRIDAY 'TIL 9 HfWPOIT STOll OPIN PllDAT "TIL 9 Profet:1lonal Interior Desi gners Av1ll1blt-AID INTERIORS "'"'ten f1" ,..., 1t Ofo11t1 C••l!tf-140.126J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hwy, Phone: .C94·6551 1 San l;le1nente Capistrano· . * * * VO L ~. NO. 115, 4 SECTIONS , 44 PAGES EDITION .. Today's Final N.Y. Stoek8 TEN CENTS Twin Ses·sions Better Tha.n Portable . School? ''Portable '' education seems unpopular among principals of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. Many stated Wednesday that they "'ould prefer double sessions to packing their campuses with portable classrooms which they labeled, noisy, inconvenient and crowded." Meeting with the distnicl's principals in 1 special workshop were members of the board of trustees who agreed that ~liminating costly portable classrooms might be worth looking inlO. an Down the Mission Trail Young GOP s Host Black Composer SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A cocktail ·eception for William Grant Still will be 1osted by the Saddld>ack: Valley Young Republica~ Saturday. The event, to honor tbe "dean of Negro :omposers," will take p\ace at 8 p.m. at ;he ~1ission Viejo Country Club, 26742 Oso Parkway. The reception will feature SUJl's con· :roversial speech "The Subversive :hallenge. to Amer ican Music." The district currently is using 58 portable classrooms on campuses spread throughout the district, The cost of leas-- ing these buildings is approximately $175,000. Stu Cunningham , principal of Universi· ty Park Elementary School, said portable classrooms are not conducive to learning. "The noise level is very high," he pid. "There are no solid walls, no carpeting, no open space. no running water for art or science projecls -and when the air conditioning is on its impossible to bear." Admission ",;,11 be 'I per person. 1'1e1v Judge • Art Officers l\'amed ?.tiSSION VIEJO -Officers have been elected by the Mission Viejo Association ,f Artists and Craftsmen. Dori~ Swanson has been elected presi- dent. She v."ill be assisted by Beverly l\'ebcr, vice president; Dorothy Riggs, ~orresponding secretary; W a 11 i • 5krock.ie. recording secretary and Bobbie Britts, treasurer. e f'f' A llosl• E"ent ~1ISSION VlEJO -The Future Farmers of America club at Mission Vie- [o High School are sponsoring a "field clay'' Saturday fr om l to 8 p.m. on the campus. The event "'ill showcase lhe activities ~f the agricultural students al the high school. Livestock . 1vhich are being raised !or the Orange County Fair. and food trllps raised by students will be on displa y. An open pil barbecue will begin al 6 p.m. Tic kets are being sold by FF'A students and will be sold during the ac- t:i1'ity. e f'nmll11 Boal Day LAKE FOREST -All residenls of Lake Forest are in\'iled lO compete in the annual Family Boat Day Sunday. The event will take place from noon to 4 p.m. and ~·ill be under the direction of Admiral Hugh M. F'iggatt Ill. Events will include paddle boat races, yak·yak competition, and ·Olympic Class Sabot and Flying Junior Salting. Signups will be taken Crom 11 a.m. t-0 l p.m. Contra COfita County Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arna· son, 49, was appointed Thurs- day to take over the Angela Davis murder-conspiracy case -the sixth judge assigned. Other judges have disqualified themselves on defense chal- lenges. Police Officers Host Bike Rodeo At High School San Clemente·s police officers and their wives will sponsor the annual bicycle rodeo for local youngsters holding bicycle licenses Saturday morning at San Clemente High School. Events for boys and girls from grades one through six will be offered. Awards in a large number of cycle pro- ficiency events will include troph ies for first pla ce and second and third-place ribbons. The classroom with the greatest number of participants will receive a i;pecial award. Officers' wives will prepare the refreshments. The events will begin at 9 a.m. at lbe school parking Jot, and the winners will receive their tro phies and ribbons at about 12:30 p.m., said patrolman Craig ~tackler, organizer of the evenL • S.ailors, Girls Indicted On Cleme1ite Drug Raps Seven U.S. Navy corpsmen and two girls arrested with them in a San Clemente home ~·ere indicted on various drug charges Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury. The panel approved charges of pa._..session of marijuana fo! sale, possession of LSD. amphetamine and barhlturic acid. cultivatinR marijuana and mainlaning a place for the purpose of 5moking marijuana. All seven male defendants are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Namtd in the indlctmenl were Kenneth Lynn Cook. 21. Mar \1in Howard Schultz, 20, Robert Luis Barnett. 23, Chvayne Jack Gott~halk. 18. \Villi.am Robert Mueller, 26, Kenneth Louis Johnson, 21 , Rob Brisn Roy, 20, Mary Ann Hale , 20, and Mary Jane Parker, 19. All were arrested Mareh 13 by Sin Clemente police who raided 1 home at 203 Via Alegra. The two girls gave the residence as their home address. Oiarges of selling marijuana to • minor and offering to-aeU LSO-&.o a miftot. w!!re added to the indic::tmenl on Schu1b Cook. Orflcers told the Grand Jury that the Via Al!!gra home had been under surveillance for some time prior to M· reru and the home was known to be a clearing houst for the pushing or dangerous drugs. Jt was expttttd that all nine defen· danlJ would be arralrined today in Superior Court. "In my area the peaple are just about sold on the idea of moving children out of the port.ables and into regular classrooms even if it means double sessions for the first and second·grades." He added that 11 regular day for first and second graders is 240 minutes. 11lfl double session day is exactly the same so primary children wouldn't lose one minute of jnslruction. "Perhaps we should consider getting rid of the portables and goiJ'lg on double sessions," said Truatee Jim Nelson. • I Salt Creek Preserve Bill Slated By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 rt>t 01Ur P'llet 11111 Assemblyman Robert E. Badham. R· Newport Beach, said Thursday he will in- trcxiuce a bill in Sacramento Mxt week to establ~h. 1till another marine: preserve off the Orange. County abort:, I.hi.a one: ln the Salt Creek area. "Qualified biologists have adflaed me the opening of Sa1t Creek to the public, though providing needed recreational facilities, wlll create a potential hazard lo the natural marine unct.uary existing ln the area," Bad.ham explained. "I hope next week to prevail upon the Legi1lature lo add the proper areas at Sall Creek to the pmmres alre1dy created by bills I introduced In 1968 and 1969." These bills result.ed'-In t h e establishment ol marine preserves In Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Dana Point. Badham said he planned to put an urgency clause in the new measure so it could become effective immediately and provide needed protection this sum.mer. The preserv( he uld, would run tht length of the area known as Salt Creek Cove. The legislator said he had conlacted the Orange County Harbor District. Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspe rs and Avco Corporation, developers of the Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek area, seek- ing support for the proposed marine: preserve. Support from the concerned Orange County entities seems assured. Richard Weiser. executive via: presl· dent of Avco Community Developers Inc. and general manager of the firm'1 Laguna Niguel operation 5aid Thursday. "As I undersland It. the marine preserve would cover onJy those rocky areas which 11re exposed al low tide and of course we have no jurisdiction over them . They are state tidelands. However we appreciate Mr. Badham 's interest in our reaction to the proposal and J can say we feel It would most certainly be in the public in- terest, now and in the future ." Tom Fuentes, executive assistant lo Supervisor Caspers, said the supervisor also had been approached by an Orange County College biology p r o f e s 1 o r regarding the need for a marine preserve at Salt Creek and had has the Harbor Department to report on the feasibility of such a project. "Mr. Caspers Is anxious to move on ll and certainly will cooperate." ht said . Establishment of the o f f · I ho r e 1anctuaries was 1parked some years ago by Lagunan Glenn Vedder, th!!n mayor of The Art Colony. who had become In- creasingly distressed over pillage of lht tidepools by collectors and the curiou s. Vedder sought to have lhe Laguna Beach City Council establish a marine preserve north of the Heisler Park area, bul learned that sych legislation could not be undertaken by 'the state. Asemblyman Badham picked up the ball and In- troduced the necessary bills to establish the series of sanctuaries for Orange County. Fishing, as liceniied by the slate Fish ADd--G&mL Code. is_ ptrmltted in the marine preserv~. but no other planT or animal life 4'lf 1ny description may be disturbed. injured or removed. This In- cludes 1uc::h tide pool inhabitants at mll3Sels, sea urchins, er1b1, anemonu and the like. Re.location of large rocks 1nd re.mov1l of peddles 1nd 1mall rocka that mike up the habitat or the marine c:natures at.o '" prohibited. "Primary chi ldrtn don't lose any time and the others don't lose too much more. Are we losing more by putting them in portables than if we shortened their day ?" Dr. William Stocks, As s is ta n l Superintendent for Educational Servk:es, said if the money used for portable ren· tals were used to tiire extra i;taff the student-teacher ratio e o u I d be con· siderably reduced. "This would enhance the learning situa· lion," he said. ~-sf Stay Cool "If we could rtduce the raUo, perhaps parents would be wllling to consider dou- ble sessions," said Ne.Ison. Trustee Bob Dameron added that the term "Qduble sessions" doesn 't carry the stigma it once did and that if education <:ould be improved by being on double sessions he would favor it. He added that there are a great num. her or people with untapped talent in Leisure World who might consider' volun· leering as teacher aides. The re.st of the meeting was used to gather ideas from princip&l.J on bow --D"IL'I' PILOT Sl1H P'llel1 Photographer, as well as several shoppers. did a double take this week while passing this \\'indow display in a fashionable Ne\vport Beach commercial center. Was it a display of new summer fashions? More likely, it was merely a half-co mpleted new window display. Either way, it definitely was an eye-catcher. South Coast United Fund Warms Up for Fall Drive Ofricials of the rect?nUy formed South Coast Area United Fund this week launched their information campaign lo prime the pump for nexL fall's two-month donation campaign. The fund was organized last fall to join diverse charitable collection dri ves intn one large effort. Don Conrad, Information chairman for the local fund, said the formation of the organization was brought on "to bring order out of ch~ In the charilable fund· raising fiekl ." uMfm ~~ these benenls from the -To the C4'lntributor It eliminates the annoyanct or many separate appeals, assures careful budgeUng or the amount needed by each member OrKanlt.ation and assures wise spending of the contributed money. -To charitable and service agencier the fund ~uctl the cost of fund raising to 1eu tho five percent·of the gr0111 pn> ceeds and allows st.a.ff members and 11olunteers to concentrate more on service work, Instead of fund drives. -To the solicitor il saves time and ef· fort by roncentraUng on one single cam· paign. -To the community it means the coordination of existing s e r v i c e 1, enhances the understanding of each col· le<::ting agen!!y, eliminates duplication of services and pare.a down the costs of fund raising. Offclals of the South Coast U~ited Fund volunteer their ..services free. No dfj)na· tions will be used for salaries, Conrad ex· plained. Rock Star Injured SAN FRANClSCO (UPI) -Singer Crace Slick or the Jefftrson Airplane. suf· feted 1 concussion Thursday when she smashed her car Into a concrete wall en •n approach to the Goldoo Cate bridge. < children from .Irvine ·School 111d Lo Pu Intermedhite School In Mission Viejo can spend free time they will have when botb those schools 10 on double sessions thl.a September. Jdtas for jwOOr high children included using lllem ID tutor younger children, enlisting their aid in ecology projects. field trips to courts, industries. or busineases to augment classroom studies. intramural sports program, and pro- viding special classes for extra help wttb sChoolwork in perhaps churches or recreation centers. . ' an Police Tab San Clemente. poUce are investigating an estimated $3,000 damage done by van. daJs lo the oJd se"·age treatment plant in wh ich all of the windows were broken and much of the equipment was dismantled. Police believe the malicious mischief occurred toward the end of April, although it was no1 discovered until Thursday morning by City En&Ineer Phil Peter. Large chunks of blacktop were thrown through the windows in both of the buildings at the plant located at the end of Avenida Estacion. Investigators aaid in addition, major damage was done lo the buildings, the generator motor and the electric control panel. Police also said the toilets and sinks In the washroom at the plant Mre tom from their mountings. The treatment facility, built in 1949, was recently sold by the city lo Brig· ham Young University of Provo, Utah. Use of the anliquated plant was discon- tinued by the city in November ot 1970 with the construction of a new facility. The buildings and groundl have bee• \l&cated since that time. Little Friend Of Presi.dent Stays Critic.al Four-year-old Danny Jones, a Saa Clemente child who received the warm wisbes of President Nixon last week, re- mains in critical condition today follow· ing risky open heart surgery Monday. Family spokesman said the youngster is still in the intensive care unit or Chlldren's Hospital in Los Angeles and there has been no marked change in his condition. Doctors had given the boy a 20 percent chance of surviving the surgery, which repaired three holes in Danny's heart and restored normal blood flow tt his lungs. The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jones, is currently breathing with the aid of a respirator, the spokesman said. Dan- ny's spirits were buoyed May 3 when San Clemente police Chief Clifford Murray arranged for Ule chi ld to meet President Nixon at the Western White House. Orange C.ut Weather Hazy sunshine is the best lhe weatherman can offer this week- end. with JitUe temperature change on the Orange Coast where mer· cury will reach 62 on the beaches and into the lower 70s Jnland. INSIDE TODAY The city of Huntington Beocl'l fs .lt.oldi'ng on nll da11 festival i1' ~f11rdy 'Parle this Saturday. You cnn Tead all obout It hl toda11'1 Weekender. Mwl11at ._,...,. '' "''""'' """' ... OflOI" """" • lltsllllflftlt M-IJ '""' 1•1• llttt Mlf11th 1 .. 1, Tt•t•im. M 1llfflln 16-J? Wttrfltr 4 ,._,, MIW\ lt.U . ., .. "-... Wlllt-..r JI·• I .. • OAILY l"ILOT Sltll l'hOlt BEECHWOOO REPLICA OF MICHELANGELO'S "PIETA" Christi1n Abel Says Goodby; Work of Unknown Arti1t Car-ving Sold Wood Statue 'Pieta' in Museum Carved by 1n anonymous v;ood worker In the 18th century, a run sized replica of Michelangelo's "Piela'' will at last be enshrined in a museum after being purchased Monday from Laguna Beach resident Christian Abel, The beechwood statue, v.:etghing in ex- cess or 300 pounds, Y.'as sold by Abel, himself a wood carver, to Santa Barbara r esi dent Loisgene Kinevan. l.-1rs. Kinevan owns a ranch near Sa nta Barbara on which is located the original stage coach stop for the community. She plans to con- vert the slage station, a Sfate Histo rical Monument, into a museum and will display the Piela there. Abel has owned the statue for five years and, after completely restoring the deteriorated work, he displayed lt at the Laguna Federal Gallery for almost two years. He said It was carved somewhere ln so~Europe, possibly Italy or Ge any, but the artlat has never been det · . Abel said he purchased tbt y,·ork in the United States. The original Piela, depicting Jesus Christ lying in the arms of hls grieving mother, Mary, following the cruclflxtlon, was carved by Italian artist Mlchelangelct in 1494 when he was only 19 Years old, 1'.trs. Kinevan 5:1ld the statue will be enshrined in the altar room of the 1tage station in Santa Barbara. She said In the old days. Sunday Mass was said at the station whenever passengers were forced to wait over the weekend for lhelr con- necUng stage coach. The Pleta "Will go in- to the room where the religious services were conducted. Long Beach Coed Dies In Brutal rfx Slaying ' .;· FROM WIRE SERVJCES BELLFLOWER -Blinded by her own blood. a cal Stale Long Beach coed ese1ped from a crazed roomer just evicted by her grandmother Thursday, after being hacked and stabbed with a knife •nd ax. 'Ibe former mental patient was disarm· ed by an 80-year~ld ma n, but Ker ry Louise Smith. 19. died 2Y, hours later during a desperate team effort to save tier life. A dozen pints of blood were raced to Bellflower Community Hospilat by police San Clen1 entc Won1an To Give CSF Hecital JoAM Williams. a Sin Clemente resi- dent and graduate music student al Cal State Fullerton., wOI give a piano recital at the campus tonight at 8 o'clock . Mrs. Wllllams, who lives at 203 Calle Ric•. wlll perform works of Brahms and Handel in music room 127. ORAMGI COAST DAILY PILOT OU.NG:! COAIT P'UILllHI N!l COMPANY Robert N. w •• d P'A'fOll'll ,,,,i P'Ul>lhl>tl' J•tlr "· c~.i.., y"' Prt1l<l1<1I •...i G-•I M1ne;tr 1hor1u1 ke1Yil Edltw 'Th~"''' A. Mur,J.:~1 MtMllnt Ed(11f" helicopter and patrol car, while the suspect, Donald Kirlcp1lrlclc , 33, was being questioned by homicide detectJves. Once a camarlllo State Hospital pa· tient, Kirkpatrick was booked by Lakewood Sheriffs deputles on ch•~ie• of murder following the 4:15 p.m. h•ckln& spree. "MW Smith was more dead than alive \\'hen she arrlved at the hospital," aald one detectlve, noting she .suffered a 21iW inch sash in her akull plus many other mortal wounds . Her accused killer w1s jumped by John L. Llndenshov, 80, a ten.ant of Mrs. Johanna Apple , 78, the apparent quarry of Kirkpatrick. "She was taking out the traati when the attack occurred,'' Investigators said. Kirkpatrick reportedly burst Into her room at 4:15 p.m. and began hacking and slashing tht young woman. She was struck numerous times in the head, face and body before runnlni blind· ly out of the main house to which are at· tached smaller rental units. Kirkpatrick himse lf returned after following MIS! Smith out, where the elderly tenant v.•ho had come to her aid took the ,.,,capons av.•ay and called authorities. "f just murdered my \\'ife ," he \\'as quo ted as saying. Hock Star Injured SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J -SingC?r Gr<ice Slick ol the JeHerson Airpl1ne 1uf. fere d a concussion Thursday when she smashed her car into a concrete \\'all on an approach to the Golden Gate bridge. . . Fulbright, Rogers Wage War Talks WASKINGTON (UPI) -SW.tar}' or State William P, Rogers in a bristling confrontation with Sen. J. William Fulbright CD-Ark.), today described as unconstitutional and unnecessary pro- posalt to restrict a Presidenrs authority to commit troops abroad. Rogers testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Fulbright, that such action \\'ouid limit the President's constitutional po1~1en and seriously limit his ability to carry out foreign policy. During a subsequent exchange, both Rogers and Fulbrigllt displayed un· concealed Irritation and anger with each other. Fulbi'igtit said the administration was using "double lalk" to juJtify con· linuation of the Vietnam \Var and ex· peeled members of Consress to follow its edicts like "good boyL" At another point, Fulbright remarked, "the more [ observe this administration, the more Jt 1ppean that you are follow· ing exactly the same ccurse as your predecessors." "You," he said to Rogers. "have gone almost as far as Mr. Katz. enbach." •·o h, Mr. Chairman!" Rogers in· terjected angrily. Fulbright'• reference was to testimony by Katzenbach before the committee when he was Wldersecretary ol state that the power of Congress to declare war was no longer a reality in the age of nuclear missilery. Rogers specilically rejected t b a t charge and that he disagreed v.ilh Katze nbach's view entirely. "Can I sriy it any more clearly?" he asserted, glaring at Fullbright. Fulbright responded that the Nixon Administration like its predecessors was eRgaged in "wurpation of war powers" o[ Congress. Capistrano Board Rejects State Property Tax Plan Trustees 0£ the Capistrano Unified School District have. voted to reject the state property tax plan which is currently being considered by the state legislature, The board voted unanlmously Wed· nesday lo oppose the statewide property tax \\'hich is dffigned to make educa- Uonal opportunlUe.s throughout the 1tate more equal. If the plan is adopted 1 state ill of '3.75 per •100 wened valuation would be levled 1n all acbool dlstrlctl la place of a general fund property tu:. "This would mean 1 tax increue or 2> centl per •100 auessed valuation In the Diver, 36, Dies Four, Days After Laguna Rescue A acuba diver ftom A.iusa-reacued by Laaun• Beach lifeguards Sund1y after he wu caugtit in a riptide -dJed at 1:15 p.m. Thursday in South Coast Community HOlpllal. A hospital 1poke.sman said George Scherf, 3&. wu kept In 1 respirator from the lime he was 1dmltted Sunday and never rtgalned conlcloumeu. Scflerf wu diving off Ma a s Street Beach with hls 17-year-old acn, Keven, when the two were caught In a riptide and swept 200 yards out to sea. The youth was able to re.1ch the abort 1tfely, but his father htd •topped bre1thlng by the tline lifeguards Mlke Engl111d and Art Smart reached him. Mouth-te>-mouth resu.scit.atlon was ad· mlnlstered by Engl1nd 11 the stricken diver wu brought a.shore on a rescue tube. The guards also tried unsuccessfully to revive the victim with heart m1snge and a mechanical re!Usc itator while 1w1ltlng an ambulance. Capistrano Unified School D I s t r i c t without any additional state aid:' said Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent for business ser\'ices. Chicas added that 90 percent or the school districts throughout the .state v.·ould benefit from the state proposal. "But all It would do in our district ls raise ta xes and allow us to help pay for education In other school district3." he said. The resolution passed by the board or lrwtets states that the state should assume Its "hlstorlcal resporuilbllity" of providing SO percent of the cost of public education without additional taxation. "The state is supposed to pay 30 percent of the cost now but in our district it pays only .about 20 percent," said Chicas. He said there v.·as a lime in lhe distant past ,.,,hen the state in fact supplied 50 percent of the cost easing the burden for local property owners. The 1tate property lax plan was Introduced 1n the legislature by State Sen. Albert Hedda (0..Sacramento). In ad· diUon to the at.ate tu which would be distributed equally among tehool dlatrlcts in the It.Ate the bill Would pro\tjde..., ad· ditional MOO million of alale funds to be wed for education. Teen Dance Set In Lllke. Forest A dance for teenagers will be staged tonigh t at the Lake Forest Beach and TeMI! Club. Lake Forest resldenl.s and their guests must have some identification that will show they are in either junior or senior high school. The dance will be from 8 p.m. to mid· night and will feature music by the ''Prophets." Adml1sion Is $1. OAIL 'f P'ILOT Slllf J'lltlf' ST. CATHERINE STUDENTS PREPARE ECOLOGY DISPLAY Kris Zel1rney, Karen Bushman, Kathy Willett, Jenny Nill E~ology Show Private School Hoa.sts Open House Students of Laguna Beach's SL Catherine School v.·ill participate in Private Education Day Tuesday "'ilh an open house for parents, friends and in- terested members of the general public. From 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., students in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades will join In an ecologlca\ly based program in· eluding movlea, dramatic presentations and displays. Fro m 10:30 a.m. until noon visitors will be able to attend lowe r grade class sessions and watch studen~ and teachers at \\'Ork. Urging increased efforts to keep the private school system alive. a St. Catherine spokesman said this .... ·eek, ''Rising costs and static or reduced &up-- port have combinld in very abrasive forms. And as private or parochial schools are forced to close their doors, the burden of absorbing these youngsters falls on the already over-crowded, under· staffed public school system. Rationally. the private school system must be allo\\·· ed to survive." Finch to Leave Capitol . After 1972 E"lections Nixon Administration adviser Robert H. Finch announced Thursday l n Anaheim that he wW wash his hands of \Vashlngton alter the lm elections, hit- ting the road home to campaign rigain in California . "I'll come back as soon as the next elect.ion ls over. I've already told the Presiden t," said the former lieutenant govemor who may take 1 sho t al the govemorsh\p Itself. ··rve promised my family to come ba ck."' Speaking to a plumbing, hea tlng and cooling contractors ' convention at the Disneyland Hotel, Flnch covered much ground on a local, notional and inter- national scale. He said he will devote efforts in months ahead to campaigning for President Nix· on 's rHlection then may run in 1974 as U.S. senator er governor. The fonner Secretary or Health Educa. lion and Welfare, predicted cunent unemployment Jn California v.·ill ~ helped by a new $6 million fiscal year allocation for manpower training. The federal grant will enable a 13-week continuation or present programs, with runds spent on 5.000 of the hard-core unemployed to develop work skills and find jobs. A remaining SI million from a prior allotment will be administered by the California Department of Huma n Resources Development, while more lunds will be forthcoming next fiscal year. "And they'll be spent in the areas - such as Orange County -which have the most difficult unemployment problems," Finch declared. On arrival at the hcspltal, Scherf was alive but hls cond!Uon throughout the week was described as ''very critical.'' His body has been removed to Aiusa whert funeral services are pendlnJ. HAVE DINNER WITH MARCHESA BY DREXEL Serra VFW Post Sets Ceremony The Serra posl of the Veteraru of Foreign \Vars v.·ill hold installation ceremonies or new ofUcers tonight at 8 p.m. in the gymnaslu m of San Juan C1pistrano Mission. Rud y V. Ramos ,.,,ill be inst.alled as post commander. Thomas Hunn as senior vice 'ommander, Timothy Harl as junior \'ice comm ander, LaY.Tence Ramos a s Chaplaln .and Harold Rusk a s quartermaster. Refreshments ,,·ill be served and the pub lic 4.s invited to attend. C~1rl11 H. loo1 Ille~•'" P. Nill ,t.ul1t•n• M1111gln!I EdiTo•~ Latwt11 JeKll Offk• 112 fo,.11 Aw•nue Beacl1 Theater Teacl1e1· MAiliri9 e.ldr•u : P.O. l o• bb&, •2652 S•• Cl•lllff'-Ofllc• 305 North El C11"i~• R11t, 92672 OtMr Offlct• Co1!1 'A~··· JXI Wet: e • ., S!rt<'! lrfCWJID<I le.c•· 1lJl Ne-.-ro•t !!!OW Ml'd 11111111ngt"" l rt,h: Hi ll lltKl'I lowlr~••• Quits After Party Ar1·est An Edison High School drama teacher has resigned following his arrest on a cha.rge of co ntributing lo the delinquency of minors. He ,.,,as arrestC'd Saturrln y night at his upstairs apartment where he waa reportedly giving a cast party after tblft final per!ormance of a SC'hool play. Police \\'ent to the apartment of John Lee Siler. 26, at 721 Atlanta Ave., at 11 :30 pm. after neighbors had complained of noise, Police reports asser t tha t 17 ju\'enlles. boys and girls. v.·ere taken into protective custody after the offlcC'rs found quantities of bee r. wine. rum and vod ka In the apartn1<'nl . None of the st udents v.·as chareed with an cffcn~. All were rel!a!ed to their pnrcnts after aivina state ments to I.he police. Siler fl (lf)<'arcd in "-'est Orange Couoty J udic\a.1 Court Thursday and ple11.ded In· nocenl to a t!harge of furn ishing In· toxicant.s to and contributing to the delin- quency of 1 juvenile. A jury trial was scheduled for 8:30 a.m. July 6. Siler was released after ~Ung ball of $625. Hl&h school District Superlntendenl Jack Roper aaid this morning that Siltr \\'as suspended Monday momina but on Tuesday the teacher resigned. The lncidenl occurred after the final perforn1ance of the Greek classic AnUgcne. Slier had been drama teacher at Edlscn High s.lnct September. Under his le adorshlp the 1tudenU ha,d also per formed the melodrama Deadv.'OOd Dick. Edlscn JJrlncipal Ernie Pascoe said th1t bolh producUons "were excellent'' nnd pr1.l.sed suer's ability as a drtltll teacht'r. Betutlfully 1tyled is the word for M1rch•s1e. Th i1 harid1ome doubt. pedeital ttbl• f1etur•1 • clt11 ic parqu• top plu1 l le1vei to metch. It •xtend1 to I 36" wh•n fu lly opened. Th• ch1irs may be ordered with cane t i shown, or with ba c~ ptd1. Stop in ind view this eJ1qui sit1 dining 1et tod1y. TAILE .......... -.. -.................................. -.$Sit. SIDE CHA IRS .................................... H . $llt. ARM CHAIRS ................... -............ "· $159. Size : 70" x ~4" With l , 22'' l eave s DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NIW'°lT STOll OrlN fllDA'r "TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•stcllff Or., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof•s1lon1I Interior Oe1t9ntrs .Av1ll1blt -AID INTERIORS Pho111 Tell,,_ Molt•' ON'flfl C••lltr-140·1 26 1 LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co1st Hwy. Phon e: 494-6SSI . .. ... . . . .. Battle Waged on Jobless Co unty Grou p Aids Troubled Aerospace I ndustry By JACK BROBACK OI llM Dtollr l'O•I St•lt If you have a man-siled pro- blem you must develop a man sized solution for that prG- bJem. That is the philosophy or the Orange County ~fanagement Council \\'hi ch has launched its Pro ressional Opportunities Program lo defeat current unemployment in the aerospace industry. The problem is el'ident enough-21 ,400 jobs have been Jost in the past J8 1nonths an "' lhret' out of everv five manufacturi ng jobs in ·orange County .are in defen s e aerospace. so that y.·e can tap the well of talent in the unemployed aerospace proressiona\. (The ocr..tc got $100,00 as a starter from the U.S. Department of Labor). versatility .and coordinate ii to the existing jobs. -Job Development. Define the new goals and directions of our country and identify y.·hat work need be done to ac· compllsh them. -Retraining. Retrain and reorient existing t a I e n t tO\\•ards accomplishing the new goa ls and aspirations. -Support. Efforts at self help must be supported and promoted. OC~IC AND its Professional Opportunilies Program is trying to become the catalyst to enable !he desired in- teraction to take place. The in- gredienls to the solution of the unemployment problem exist : OCP.fC hopes lo trigger lhe blend. CARA WA V l:l\.IPHASIZ~ that for the program to IUC· ceed there must be an op. timistic business attitude and that new id eas must be ex- plored. He concludes, · • C 1 o s e coordination and open com· munication p r o v i d e d by OCMC. will promote effective utilizalion of all resources and y,·ill direct all activities to the ultimate goal or l o t a l employment." It is the first program of it.s kind in the nation. Bank Post To Fisher Local Product Displayed A new drill pump manufactured by l1T Jabsco of Costa 1r1esa is explained to a stockholder by Harold S. Ganeen, chairman and president o( International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. during IIT's an- Robert G. Fisher of Newport nual meeting now being held in San Diego. The Beach has been named assis· device. which pumps fluids while being driven by tant manager of Crocker· a home electric drill is one of the products on dis· rrlday1 M11 14, l~n DAILY PILOT J 5 THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN FOR EACH sc ient ist- engineer out or a job !here .are 7.7 other su pporting jobs lost. The cost to !he taxpayers in unemployment pay has jumped from . $3 .9 million to $8 .J milli on a month . a jump of 225 percent in 15 "months. The county \vclfare costs are esca lnting. loo. OCMC li!:ls the ctghl mo~t urgent needs and a proposed solution to the1n : -Overvie\\'. Consider the beneficial effect of rtemploy- 1nenl of these professionals on the general economy as well as on the individual . Jose ph Caraway. y,•ho heads up the OCMC operation says "Some alliludes can and will be changed. lnduslry ~"ds to be aware of the versatility or the aerospace professional. The professional needs to know that I.here are com- mercial opporlun ilies open to him." Citizens National Ba n k • s play at the meeting. Euclid·Ball of!ice in Anaheim, -'--'------''---------------II it was announced by Harold C. And the man who knows ;uat how to turn the phrase to oet tht mos& out of the barb is DAILY PllOT column- ist Sydne11 Horris. He has been cCllled the modern -day ff e n r 11 Mtncken. If you're nad11 for his use of tht acid 4djective and thought -provokinp prose to give you the needle .. , i/ you want to find something to think about in what you read _ .. if you have o sense of humor, you b e l o n g with readers who delight in telling othera what "Syd said" tn onir of the nation's most -quoted columns. -T\.fe thod . fnr!ividual a n d sporadic group efforts mus! be c o ordinated -a kind of guidance system lo direct our n1is~iles to their targets. -Funds. Financial i:uopor\ from governments and in- dust rv n1ust be solicited and budgett'd to "prime !he P.Ump" EDISON MANAGER Robert W. Beck Robert Beck Heads SCE Robert B. Beck of Hunting- ton Beach has been appointed Soulhern Californ ia Edison C om p a n y 's southea stern di vision n1anager \\•Hh head· quarters io Santa An:i. He succeeds .Jack ll Kime 1\'ho has been transfe rred to the cotnpany"s n ort h e r n di\'ision. -Job location. Identify ex· isling jobs lylng dorn1anl. I Most non-aerospace firms have never applied for an outside contract, government or other\\•ise. They don't have the expertise to do the job but there are hundreds of unemployed space "'orkers who dol. Kipp, senior vice president and regional manager. Fisher, who has been witb the bank for 23 years, former- ly was assistant manager at the bank's Wiimington office. CAB Cites Continental -Talent identificati on. tden - tify exisling lalent .and its The program's goal is total emoloyn1ent bu th'! leaders realize that it will lake time to achieve. A more realistic total or 500 new scientist..engineer jobs by the end of this year is spotlighted. With the support Y•orkers this means 4,000 new jobs. COMMUNITY EVENTS 26th ANNUAL FISH FRY, PARADE & CARN IVAL ARTIST Since joining C r o c k e r - Citizens as a teller in 1947, Fisher has served Croc ker- Citizens in various capacities. Fisher is married and has !y,·o daughters. LOS ANGELES {BWJ-Con- !inental Airlines had the best on-time performance in the airline Industry during 1970, with 79.3 percent of its flighls arriving on time or within 15 minutes of schedule, according to a Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) report. Costa Mesa Newpo rt Harbor Lions June 4, 5 & 6 FORD PINTO YANIAHA 125 GRAND PRI ZES • P1rade Televi1ed 4 PM S•t., Channel 5 OF THE MONTH Displayi ng in our Lobby, May 15 thr u June 14 DORIS SCQTI NELSON (<>1t• Mu~ Ar!ISI IP<'<iO!illr>O ;~ c~pt1Jrin9 l~• wifmlf'I •ncl inTultl~ffltU of C~Hdren, PtQPI• °' •nlm111 . 5~• ll•s p.oln1~ to .,. •• ,. 1~ oil• •f>(J •crylic1. $1!.ICIVJng •I Cllori111rd ,t.rt !nstltutt ln LM A(>Oe lH , •M more •~ c..,!ly, w•t~ J~me• Cluner, NtwpOr! lle•ch, Ind F rtn~ Tanflt !lo of l•gun• BNth. Among Mrs. Nelwn'• COll~IO" ••e AdCllQl\o l <>(IU M•leo, ·~·O•H~tnl o! M"'k o (MW 01c1~ledl1 Jol'ln FallnUoc~. owner of $!Ox RHlllll" ...... •nd I CIOI", Vltlt'"I Edward• EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! The CAB al so noted that Continental ranked first in on· time performance in January 1971, with 80.4 percent. (On· time performance recorded by the CAB is ror nonstop flighls betwttn major traffic points 200 miles or more apart.) .... CAUFOANIA FEDERAL SAVINGS --·---•••• Beck. 42 . pr<.'\'iously \\'as mao;1ger of the southern di\"is ion in Long Beach. He has •• been associated wit h the in· vcstor-011 ned electric utilit y s1oce 1943 y,•hen he began his career in the distribution con- ~truclion di\•ision He \\'as ap- po:nted district supe rintendent at Covina in 1961. Later he 5e r\"cd s u cc e ~ s i v e I y as northern and sou the rn division suocrintendent of distri111tion He was named general superintendent or custon1c r S<'f\'Jce in 1965. eastern division mann.11.cr in 1967, cen- lral division manager in 1968 and southen1 di\'lsion manager in 1!170. E d i s on 's sou theas tern division is one of six major ser\·ice divisions in the com- pany 's system. ll covPrs Orange County and the southeas!?rn tip of Los Angeles Counl y. Al the close or 19i0. the di \"ision aC«1unte<l for 23 per- cent of the electric service meters on the Edison s}stem. GOLFER 'S BARGAIN ~ Only 25 Min. .,~ away at San Juan Hlll1 Sin J111n C.1pl11r1,,. Monday thru Friday • G•M~ f•M EIK!rk Cl•I !I l>t!llP'I lo• ' 837·0361 493·1167 ··~····~·······~···· FOR c A•r 111DERS A fl'\V l"'rn1t1nl'of Tf'f' timl'1: arc .l\"tulable on Sat. &. S11n. ...... *·············· 111~'f"nl 1111 ~ 1111 for A fi'Rll h11rkrl or ball~ on the drlv· r11 n1;r. ., 5. 753~;.~··· Certificate Accounts• 5.92% Annual Yield if all savings and interest remain a year. - $1,000 min imum deposit 1-year minimum term. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit 5.253 :~~ual 53 current annual rat• 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Yield if all savings and interest remain a year. No minimum deposit Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposil. Passbook Accounts s: 13% Annual Yleld Ir all sa\lings and interest remain a year. No minimum deposit Cally compounding. Interest day--ln to day-out · w11tidrawals before maturity permit1ed but subjecl lo some los~ ol ln te1e-.ot. Cal!f.~m!~ ... f.~.4.~!!!!.hlr§.~!!ngs • NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL ' COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Convtnl11nl Offices throughqut Loa. Ange let, Orange and Venlur11 Collntlas -'tCOVf'llt •r• it111md up to $l'D.OOO ulld1r si•owlalomi Of &l'l'I flid•r•I Sl'YlllQt & loin l111ur1n~ ~a"'"'"'*" •Oll!ey et tM Unltld 8tet. QO'lll'ftft'ltlll- Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown By Sydney Harris: ''One of the highest p•ld jobs In Americ• conslstt of standing up in front of a mic. rophon•, Mp1rating the good records from the b•d ones -and playing the bMI ones." "Jt'a sad but true that while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar- tument for a little drink now and then." "Most of th• so-called 'incompatibil ity' In marriage tprlngs from the fact th•t to most men, sex i1 an act; while to •II women, It Is en emotion. And this diff er· enc• in attitude c1n be bridged only by love." "The sole difference between a 'dedica. ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con- sists in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives." "The most explosive combin•tion in the world consists of sincerity 1tdded to Ignorance." "\Vhenever I am the recipient of an ex· cessively hearty handshake, J suspect A-fr. Muscles is trying to sell something, hide somethlng, or prove something." Check The Editorial Page For This Signature It'll Help You Find The Latest Quotables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col- umn, A Regular Feature of the DAILY PILOT Your Hometown D•llv Newspaper • ' • • • • • • • . • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • ' N1b KO U0 Nil(O Cll llO N1rco :kl '° N11hu1C11 4 Nt1Afrln 100 NII Avll f'9 Nil Ctn '5 Nat<:a~ll: 11 Ntl Clltm JO NatClt'tl 90 No~l"lll2 NoNG11 1.0 No NG Pl~f" Nos aP' 70 NS Pw •rJ 60 Nolh~ t ~ Norl~tOll 1 Northll pfl IS Nwu Air ,5 Nwtll1nt l <IQ No•-.! Ind NW Ind ctA.S NW11rCI !>IC.I Nw11 n pu?@ f.IWI ~rw l 10 Norlon l so ""' 1 Smon Nofl S 01 .4oO NVF Ca SC DAil v '11.DT I :I< Friday·s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List l•ltt Hit ,-------------1 Uiih.I Mlf' I." CllM Cflt Stoek Leaden .... .. ..................... "" ............ .., ............... ,-~--:::::-:::::-:::::::::;-~~, .... .. ,.._. M)lll '--oa. ~I DOW JONIS AYllllAOIJ OIM.I 1111111 t.. 0.. Qf. Market Lower h1 Active T1·ade NEW YORK (UPI) -Normal pre weekend evenmg up pressures and concern over the world monetary sll uat1on sent the stock mrrkel IO\Ver 11 fairly .active trading Friday loj .. 'Y.,.k\AP)Flflel Dow.J-"'''' nocu u11~ , ... c.i J? l!Wlo I* 1~ -~ W1t11 f! ,.., ~" H)r ~, .. ~~ H.t un G•• .111 .Sf 1•"' , 1~ -... =::i: lii* u. "u.17.1 m~ '\Yt\! il·t\ m\~\}l~~ \~"~ 1 1it 1n Si: W•lftW, l.M 'II( 14 S\2 il :ic1,l; SIO->' -OM ~!Wiii~\ ~ i ~l• ... \Ii ff\o t :: :z:~~oh~ ~~·tt~on,1n 1todu 11Md In tvtt-t tln ~~ 11 fh4 ~'"' f~~ = :::11GJ;1\ ... ~;ri: i u~u~; o;~ ~ ~~ ~~ 1\.. !1!~': r•I r.I lm ~ I'> Ji'° + 411 =:lLMll~ n ~'" liltt ~~~1· u I = tt ... =~~'I-a. llltlJ Mitll i..-C.... Clll ~ llWMI I 1ii -Iii W:if1 11' Trine <;ct '° •,G tl~ 41'--14 H ~ctr:.1 \ 1$ : ;1i ~/r,.'i! ~t! lr'"' u ~ 3 .o~ a~ '? .. -"u .. r n 1L ~ :luM.1r 1-:itl Yr~~lfr -4' :o~ ~~~ lt" i~~ _Ill. ~1~':n..so 1 ij;;:' -"w11 a...c; 1.>1 Tr:~~·~ ~~ tSu l..'111~=!1 11/,'*flf.!1 ~ 1J; ff~ +~:~u~'r.1 !' {illWFln -'QJ l• U i)... I~ + l,IMI 1:.0 141 i = ~ :!t~llM~~ .. ~'!~~ '10 f:i ,.. 1 ~l -t. Un I UH ""' ml! ~'·' :"··!~-· ti ~ Wll Ull IPU.M lrtWHilol 1 1 ~ 11 : .. !'Ioli~:~: ;,•jl ..... Iii -¥w.u11 r'"' A sense or uneasiness over the 1ntemat1onal Tr•vLodt " •• ''(" ''1 ''~ + ~ ~')"°11" .o -. -"Wnlil E 1• U !",'•'~,-'•/,) ", ,.. !"',. "",~ = "' n, ~ COft'l' •• ' h =t t ~.•,,L""!.. '•';j.• monetary picture may be a restra1n lng factor at 1is c " " .. "' ...... -iw !I ···· ' I d "~""",.~. .~ '11".' ·~':1' ',. ~ •,• "u'tt'••'"'• ... ... m· " j w"'" .... point ' one ana yst remarked •but basically tra ers Ti ''' .. "" ... 17\\ -' .so Ill """ ·~ U ~ .0 .0 _ • Tl Ill( It l t .ttU. +la U Ill If lit 1~ 1th -~ Wlletll'J'I liJ ,, ,1~ 11u. 11.,. w are doing a Jot of 'sideline s1ttmg' as the market T w p" !Cl 2 I' •"' •"' -u 11t210 3'~ ~ + v. wt1111P1n ' 31 ll\j, ltl.o " =°'• COntlnUeS to COnSO}idate pas! gains !_R~":'~~8"~in ~' ,J..., 1J'" rJ:Z:t .... Ult Oii .0. "11..: Il'° m:+:=i:11t~.J. 't ~ l;~ ;i~ .!_ ~ ~tM 1n uJ 1~ lil>li U -~ ~l·~,PL~ In P,9 U"-II\.. Wiit C tfC.) lU JJ"-7, ... I•'• -I\ Tvltf • ll ~ )OI.• ltllo -"v~C'w. • •" ,.2'~ •'"• '"' -~ Wll llCrw M , ,." i'"" ~"' + v, Also resulting 1n some hesitancy among rnvest u v v.....-1M u ... ~ -1" hll• ~ 7 ,\lo , t\'t+~ -,. -VtMoCCI .0 lJ 1J 10• ''"'-"Whli.lktr 1,, 31 ~ ,, " ,; ors was an announcement by Egypt11n President uAL int 'tl :it ~"1 ~ -t1o vr, c.,,. 110 " "" ,.. ~ "'" -i• w~"''' 1 ~t: :J1o ~~ ;::: = f! Anwar Sadat that he had foiled what amounted H~i.c~ ~lo 11 ~ ,... 31~ =-'~ ~~-~!i ~ ~~ l:!: J;"' =,~ :Z11 11.$!. 2 : 'no ,,, 11•1-a _, to a coup• by hlS political opponents ~G CP 1 7t " I'" '!!" ni.. -"'vaeomw ..u ' ,,.,,. 1111. 21~ + o.to w,.., co "'' 1 ,,..., 11 1' -1 MC 1111 n Jt 1.., 2 • 21'\lo I Ii V•!IPw 117 to. JOV. tti.. ~ w111n ox 1 "' "11. llN l ~ 11'4 -'4 llllf(O .tG 11 'tt ''"" I~ ~ V1 1• pf7 !J '10 101 .. 100\'J 1011• +1\11 W nnMO 11111 ,u ,~ 1~~ m!\:,;.t..i ShorUy before the final gong the Dow Jones tlu~li~!JI ;~l. r i'w. ~ft~ ~: ; :l~fi ,ng ~ ti"" ti"-2 :Zl!(~Pw~:: .' "" ,,~ t•-"· I d H. al A (( 0 98 t 935 36 SI d d n C-I .. lt Jt'4 lf\lt -VorllCldlo 1' 1N 2•1~ rm -"Wlac ,.S 11• 1 )O.I~ io.i ... '" .. =1"' n U;,1.1 1 verage was o a an ar 11 ,'r."'"• 1 <GI $11\11 4''111.-6011 + ~ Vllkln 11111 ' 11 1s11> " 1s Witco c11 n ,.. ,.,,. JN u"' + ~ & Poor s 500 stock 1nde• showed a loss of o 47 at !111 " 11 11.1, 1"" ,, 1"" vw11un1 1i 1 '~ 1~. •A+ :i. wucoe "" tJ 101 "!Vt ~ 4)\':I -loio " u~ ~I :1: = f~ 99~ " "'' w x y Z-Wulv WW JO » """ ""' "'-102 22 Declines led advances, 820 to 543 among un e 01 • 1 ao ~ t: ~ -w~ .u JIJl '° ltYI ,,~ -~ th 1 654 th U110llC1I 1 60 n .. m. 31U ,, -.... Wll> It •14 JO r1tlO .$111. M • ,, .. -., w~~I: 1] n":: nS:~ 1~1; + ~ e issues crossing e tape ~;><;.~~ 'C'! 11 11 "l • sN sl\t. -~ w•~f 1 '° ~ t.J11 Ai' ,,,,. -"' w~kl All'W'o' ': r.~ r:~ '=~ -t',, .... ,. ....... ,,,., ..... ,. ............ ,,,.,,,. .. =,.,••"'l~~*r.r:~11 .l ~l }lit }:!: M"; ~ 5:~~:r: !:: 1i ~U: n:! ~}~: !i ~ur11r:,,,. '° n Ji SJ\lo Sl\\--.:Oj UnlONofl'llr 111 llto :JOlo ,,. t V.W1lll u•F "° 11 1t 20 .. "°"'-1~XetoxC1 to 1'1 '-1~'1 '°"' ~ UftltO'lll '° 116 2' ' \o n +. Iii Wt l M...., Ml ',j '°~ 10 1 7111'1 -\lo )hr• II'( I M 11 ~ lR -\lo Thrill Dr 1CI 1• '' ti>o !f,1, 1,TllllR!f!~ o1011 ", 11t~ ,...,, llr + ~ Un "''Ill pt t 1J.IO 10. lOS 101 Wtlll l.flll ft., 4t\o ..... -l fi '1'1'11$ SC> l )t l'I JO'.li » 30 Ti Corp 110 2 li~• 3~ ~ obl!>P.,. 60 71 11 l4lil 1" -t~ Ut1l!.hoo1 40 13 o 4 ' '1 -V• Wtrd FOO!ll t 11\io 12 1 12"" -\lo U tt C-.C u 11 .. 11\lo 11.o.J, -,.. Tflltw1IM !Cl 11 i' 4 ,. ' ,, .... -1 Todd Sh t 10 l .. )jY., lo U11·! Aft I IO •.11 •.! ., .. 4J + .. W1meco "° u " '•'h If + "'r:v•t c:--' "''-' ''Ill ""'° -\.lo T mt Inc I 'O I} 41.. SJ 1 S. +'"' lolffoE 1 IO J.', ~.," 21\to \' -\\ Unll<encl• .)0 U2 ' 11 11 Wlf!\tCO I~ ! .. "5 -1\lt .nlltl II! I• ti t,._ 2• '°'""" + ""TlmtiMlr SO I "~ •t' "i + II> llOIRetll m ,v ,...,. JN 11~ -"U I"' 111110 14 17h 11•• 17'• -i., WtfU'" t 10 lt 1W. '™' n•i -1\o\ Ul'll lf'ld 'l'f d .M ~ j61'. -4\lo Tfmlt" I ID CM l'll> lliio :II~ -'Ii 00! llol At1 11 I -\lo Urt IC• 21• 40 ,._ f\o\ t\'t -Vo W•rl\Sw• I I ll'lo »h 31\t + ¥11 COPY1'1thltll " Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List Ray Wilson Firms Sold Unit Tabs A chain o{ contemporarJ; men a clothing stores hu an- nounced acqul!1Uon cf three Ray Wilson shops t,wo o{ tbem m Orange County The , South Coast Ptua. O:lsta Mesa The City Center. Orange and the lh1rd of l he nay W1lM>n shops In 'R.lvtttlde wall become part of tbt Lofd... Rebtl lndustrles chain No amount was dl!tlosed for U\e transaction but Prmdtnt Maurice Balson predicted ac· quillUon Wiii bring ao ad· dlllonal n mlUlon per year to the company The pure.base makes ll 1tore! In his chain oper1ltng as The Rebel Shops HOtl$t cf Lords and H1p Pocket. Killing 4 Kids Tra in Hits Car SAN JOSE ( UPll -Four children wtre kllled Thursday nigh! whtn rretcht train slammtd into tbtlr family" station wagon al a r"Hroad ~<>1slng Kllltd were David \Veyer Jr 3 his brother Stephen. five months Suzetle 5, and Tami a 'Mitre wtrt U. chlldren of Mr and Mrs. Dafld Weyer cf Sin JOH. Th<k molhor Joan II, IJlo driver a n d se'fto-yeu.old 1uter JonUyn 1urrtftd !Nt their condition 1'11 not Ir> mediate!)' known. • • •• j ; : .. J8 DAJLV PILDT F"rida.y, May 1'1. 1971 It Only Hurts When YouLaugh--Hogan AII-starTilt Proteste{l HOUSTON \API -It ~nly hurts ~t\tn yw laugh, Ben Hogan said today ln coo- templatlng the nightmarish nine he took on the par three fourth hole in tht first round of the Houston Champions Interna- tional Golf Tournament. "ll's not lilt worst hole I've ever played -I had an 11 once on a par thr« hole in Jacksonville. Fla .,'' the 53-year- old golfing legend recalled good-naturedly arter being forced lo withdraw from hill first competition of the season. Stricken with a recurring injury to his lefl knee, dating back lo his near fatal automobile accident in 1949, I h e methodical little Texan stopped at the 12th hole after soaring 11 strokt.5 over Halos' Murphy Seeks to Halt Losing Streak Tom ti.1urphy. who hasn't won a game ln more than a month, takes the mound tonight for the California Angels as they open a home stand with vlision.s of doing better than the last time they came ho mt. After Cali fornia'.s first road tiwing of A11gel Slale All Gt"'H •R lllMl'C UllJ "''' u -AMelt v•. Mllwtulia ~·., u -Anotll VI. Mllwtulc•• N.1¥ 1• -.i."9•1• VI, MllWlul!tt Mor 11 -A"'l•ll v1. Mlnne!.ol• I iS o >n. 1 SS •.m. l ,jS 1.m. l :~j "·"'· the season. thev returned home with a season mark of 3.4 and hopes high. h1urph,v started that first game back iind dropped a 4-0 decision lo Oakland. California lost the next three games. too. and y,'ound up closing that home stand "'ilh a 6-7 record. Murphy begins another homestand opener tonight. taking his 1-4 record against Milwa ukee's Bill Parsons. 3-3. l\.1urphy was the first Angel kl record a \~clory this stason when, on the second day of the season. he y,·hipped Kansas Ci· ty 7.3 by scattering 10 hits. llowever. since tben he has lost lour of the six games in y,•hich he started and has an inflated earned run ave rage of ·i.07 in :;& innings. He's walked 18 and struck out only 14 and v.·as kayoed 4-1 by Cleveland last time out. Golden Glove shortstop Jim Frcg~ of thP Angels is out of klnight's game with the samr problem that lorctd him lo miss tv.·o games already -a ncuroml or llf'rvc tumor in his right foot. He's been fitted v:ith a special shoe brace and the Angels arr hoping surgery \von 't be. necessary. However. In J.im·s place has come Syd O'Brien. He's started at short and in his last seven games has hit safely. In that span. IK! has eight hits in 26 tnips up and six rUN batted in. Anotb.Jot batter on a Lear i.s Californi a'• ne\v starting catcher John Stephenson. The much·l rave\ed veteran has fashion· ed a seven-game hil streak good for 12 hits in 2~ at bats including three doubles, three runs scored and three driven in. Right now. however. all eyes arr; on Mur phy. Racing Surface Could Be Slow For Preakness BALT!h10RE !AP) -·rhe weather and !he re~ulllng condilion of the Pimlico rac· Ing 11urface ls of morP concern In !he lral.ncrs of Salurday·:i; Preakness entries than the post positions. Af!er the bumping. crO\\•ding and block· Ing in the 20-horse cavalry charge kno v:n a:i; the Kenlucky Derby. the dra\~ Thurs· dav lo determine the starting f!ate line-up for' lhe Preakness \Va s strictly ho-hum. Jn the Oer'by. \\'On by long~hot C:inonero JI, it was jockey C.O"·hoy Jim- mv ~ichols aboard Lisl '''ho obser\'ed: '·l\·e seen lhe 'Chargr of thr Light HrH!t1dr' on television. b11t I ne,·cr thought J'd be in i\.0 ' Bui lhe I 3 6 mile Preakness will hare only 11 starters. ~ no traffic jams are rxoccted. ln!itead. \Vith Pimlico being pellc<I by rain se,·eral da rs during the past \1·eek - including a do,,·npour Thursday -the tii!k turned lo the condition of the racing llrip. ··1 preft'r 1nut1:· said l;erald Lord. trainer of Gustavr Ring·s Sound Off. v.·ho ""on the Preakness Prep last y,·r~k o\1('r farored E~ecutloner on an off \rack. ''I hoor it rains a~ain Friday ·· The weather forecast. ho"·ever . called fnr clear <>k ies tod:1y and Saturday. prior 10 the 96th running of the Preakness at 2:40 p.m , PDT. CBS "'ill \elevi~e from 2 to 3 p.m .. and broadcast on radio from 2:25 W 2:45 p.m Sound OH also drev.· the No. I post posi- tion. pulting him in the best spot to go kl 1hc front v.;th tht early .spet<I v.·~ich is likelv to come from Calumel Farm·~ Easiem Fleet and EJecutioner of the October House Fann. ··11 really doesn't ma kt: any d1f· ference." t.Ord said. "T want my horse. to Jay 9ff the pace a litUc bit anyy,·a.1·. but ht has tm speed lo go to the front on lht- tirst turn. l think I'm going lo v.'in it .'' Sottnd Off 11nd W. P. RQ&SO's tmpctuo~i· ty. tJowevcr, are rated l~l In the pre>- bable odds, with the favorite 's role going to Jim French, the Derby runner·up own· ed by Frank J. Caldv.•ell, at S-2. • .. I hate to play and quit ," he said. "II buf1l.'ll me up. But I just couldn't keep up with the other fe\loy,·s t partners Charles Coody and Dick Lotz). It was no use trying to take that misc11•:' liogan said he int ended to treat the k~ with diatlwrmy and he hoped he might be able to play next week in the Colonial Invitation ir1 THs hon1e city of Fort \Vorllt ··rm oot diseouragcd," he said. "I've been hitting the ball well. It seem( I can do everything but play goH." Hogan lhen recalled an experience more drtadful than that of Thu rsday "'hen he hit three shots into a deep ravine fronting the 228·yard fourth hole, taking t~ penally shots. and v.'ound up with a nule. ··1•11 never forget a hole I playe<I in Jacksonville:' he said ... I think lhc year was around 1946. It was a simple par Lhree-seven-iron shot. But the green v.·as divided by a big hump and we had been playing it with the nag on the left side. "On this particular day, th~ nag was on the right side . I hit what I thought was a good shot. ··My caddie said, 'I think you went in the lake. ~1r. Hogan.' I 11aid, 'There's no lake over there.' ·ve!' there is boss.' 'No, there's not -hoy,' long ha~·e you been caddying here, son~' 'Fifteen years, ~Ir. Hoj!an,' he replied. "I v.•ent down there and. sure enough there was 1 lake there. I had never seen it because it always had been obscured by the crowd. ··The ball was visi):lle in some soft sand so I tried to play ii. The ball came out, but I got a glimpse of something white. The ball had rolled back in. This time I decided to watch ii. I bit It and it trickled back again. 0'This time I co ul dn't find it. So I drop- ped the ball in a cup of sand and hit il with a wedge as hard as I could. It new across the ridge where I didn't want to be in the first place. "Now I'm lying nine. so I tw<rputl for an It. .. A1eanv.·hilc, Larry Hin.son and Kermit Zarley moved into a share of the lead with 67s, four under pa r on the tough, 7,166 yard Champions Golf Club C.Ourse. They ...,'ere one stroke in front of rookie Hubert Green. who has threatened twice -finishing second and third -in the last three weeks. Another stroke back, at 69, were Dave Hill and Bob Murphy. while the big group at 70 included defending champion Gibby Gilbert. Chi Chi Rodriquez, amateur Ben Crenshaw. Homero Blancas and several others. Amold Palmer had a 71. t.1aslef!I champ Charles Coody took a 72 and Lee Trevino was v.·ell back at 76. u.-1 Ttlt•~ By Owi1e1·s NE\V YORK -\Valter Kennedy, rom· missioner of the Nalional Basketball Association. says the 17 owners of the league's teams ha\'e protested to him the all-star game planned by the NBA Players Association \1·ith a te~m from the American Basketball Association. In a letter Thuisday 10 Larry Fleischer. altorney for the NBA players organization. Kennedy said the game scheduled for Houston l\1ay 28 is a viola- tion of all the pla yers' contracts 1vhich specify the team owner m~~l gi~e permission for a player to participate 1n a game outside league sanction. The game was announced by Osca r Robertson. president of the NBAPA. after Kennedy announced the NBA and ABA y,'ould seek congressional approval for a merger. The players presently ha\'e an • injunction against the 1ncrcer of Ille former rival leagues. e Polo To11r1u!lf Sel ' Ten teams are entered in Saturday and Sunday's SPAAU water polo cham· pionship at Golden \Vest College 1vith the Phillips 66 A team seeded No. I. The tourney gets under way Saturday morning at 8 1vi!h t"'O championship round tills being played al 5 and 6 p.m. that day. Sunday's round of games y,•ill be climaxed \Vith the title tilts at 3 and ( Three CINA !Corona-I r v 1 n e · Ney,'port Association) teams are entered in the tournev under the direction of UC Irvine coach · Ed Newland. CINA ·s No. I team 1s seeded second. Phillips 6& also has two other squadJ entered with Golden \Vest players making up one of them. Other entrants include C.Orona de! t.1ar. [)oy,•ney. Riverside and Cal Poly (Pomona). There is no admission charge Saturday with $1 being assessed Sunday. e Taylor 10 Re111r11 KANSAS CITY -Outfielder Car 1 Taylor, who burned his s11·eatshirt in disgust before leav ing the Kanszs Cil,V Royals, v.·ilJ be back next week. a club spokesman says. ~HICAGO'S DENNIS HULL SCORE S FIRST GOAL FOR HAWKS OVER MONTREAL GOALIE KEN ORYOEN. HAWK S WON, 2.0, TO LEAD SERIES. Cedric Tallis. Royals general manager, said he got a telephone call Thursday from Taylor "'ho was at his off-season home in Sarasot;i. Fl;i Taylor said ht. v.·anted to take care of some personal mallers and relurn to Kansas Cltv in a fe''' days. · Dodgers Open Crucial Seri es SAN F RANC ISCO fAPI -Ste\'C Stont. and Al Downing, unexpected standouts on their respective pitching staffs. y,•i ll be !he start ers lonighl when the San Fran- cisco Giants and Los Angele.'! Dodgers meet for the first lime this season. Stone. the Giants' 2~ year-old rookir Ot1 T V Tot1lgl11 Cl1a1111 e l 11 al 7:55 right-hander, takes a 3-1 record into Ille opener of the important thrcc·game weekend series at Candlestick Park. He·s in only' his th ird year of organized baseball and was not on the Gianls' 40- man spring roster. Downing. a left.hander y,•ho appeared washed up afler 10 seasons in the Amcifcan League, came to the Dodgers in aJwinter trade y,•ilh the ~1ilwaukec Brey,·ers. He "'on a starting job with the Dodgers and stands 3·2. The Giants arc con11ng off a three· 11:ame sv.•eep of the defending National League champion Cinci nnati Red s and lead the second place Dodgers by eight games in the \Vestern Division. The fir st Dodger-Giant series or thr year is expected to draw about 90,000 fans lo Candlestick Park _I Played Way I Should --Black Ha ·wks ' Jarrett ClllCAGO (AP) -Doug Jarett didn't score a goal Thursday night. In fact he didn't_ even make an assist. But the big defenseman is one of the reasons the Chicago Black Hawks have taken the up- per hand over the Montreal Canadiens in their Stanley Cup Playoff. The Hawks, getting picture goals fron1 Dennis Hull and Cliff Koroll, defeated the Canadiens 2-0 behind goalie Tony Esposito to take a :l-2 edge in their best- of-7 series which no\\' advances lo f\1on· treal Sunday afternoon in a nationally televised rontest. Jarrell. y,•ho has been virtually helpless throughout the series. turned it around Thursday to help lead !he Ha...,·ks lo vie· tory. He played so Y.'ell that Coach Billy Reay never even came close lo using his reser\'e defensernen as he had in the two pre\'ious losses in Montreal. "\Ve \\'ere moving for a change.'' sanl .Jarrett in relating his play and 1hat of <!cfense mate Keith Magnuson. "At lea st J thought I \vas for a change. "I \\'as so disgusted and disappointed wit h the 1\·ay I "'as playing, I didn 't know "'hat lo do. I guess I went out and played lht game the way 1 should and the wa y l'n1 capable. "I think it all bega n in the last game of the New Yorl..'series," continued Jarrett. ··1 started thinking loo much. I don 't know 11·hy. I guess it 1vas just a slump, "The harder 1 y,•orke<I. the worse it got." continued Jarrett. "In five games J don't think I hit anybody.'' Jarrett hit and hit hard Thursday night and his jarring checks not only helped preser1•c Esposito's shutout but opened the doors for the offense. Dennis Hull scored his sixth goal of th<; series on a perfect pass from Koroll at 10:57 of the first period and the ty,·osome collaborated for the second goal at 11 :26 of the second period y,•hen Koro11 slapped in Dennis' shot after if had hit a skate in front of goalie Ken Dryden. Coach Reay gave everyone cred it "from the goalkeeper on out and l "'as pleased "'ith our penalty killing. Befor e 1he series s!Drted I said it would go six or seven games." "How many now ." son1eonc interrupted. "Right now I'd say six," responded Rea y. MARLENE HAGGE SINKS PUTT FOR 69 AN O LEAD IN LAS VEGAS SEALY·LPGA CLASSI C, Drivers Bid For· Indy Pole INDIANAPOLJS {AP) -A crowd usually guessed as the second·largest in Ainerican sports will S\\'arm into the 539- acre Indianapolis t.1otor Speedway Satur- day. almost guaranteed a dozen record- sn1ashing runs for the pole position in the 55th 500-mile race Ma y 29. Indiana State Pollce generally estimate the crowd for the firsl day of time trials upv;ards of 250,000 and the race day S\\'Srm at about 100,000 more. t\.1ark Donohue of Media, Pa., who rinished second to Al Unser of Albu· querque, N.t.I .. In last year's n1Blicm- dollar lndy race. will be a prohibitive favorite to win the No. 1 starting position in the 33-car field . Donohue wa~ clocked in officially at 180.977 n1iles per hour Thursday, com- pared "'it h the three-year-0\d offici al record of 171.5S9 for !he 11}.mile qualifica- tions, set by Joe Leonard of San Jose in an STP turbine car. Donohue has a radical new f.lark 16 1\lcLaren owned by fonner racer Roger Penske of Philadelphia and po"·ered by a special shorl-s1roke Offenhauser engine . Peter Revson of New York. fifth in the 1969 Indy classic. and former world champion Denis Hulme of New Zealand have the only other t.tark 16s that have been built. Tallis said l! serious illne~s 111 Taylor"s family had added kl the outfielder's wor- ries and it apparently became too much for him . Taylor has started eight games for the Royals and has gotten only seven hits in 37 times at bat for a \1·eak .189 average . After failing llv1ce at the plate in Baltimore Wednesday he look himself nut of the game and \Yent to the dressing room . There he set fire Ill his sweatshirt in front or his locker. e McQ11ny 111/<S l'Hct TAt.1PA, Fla. -The University of Tampa's record breaking junior ru itning back Leon P..1cQuay has signed a one-year contract 1\'ilh the Toronto Argonaut s or the Canadian football leaguo, the Tampa Tribune reported in today's editions. Although the signing was confirmed bv official sources. Spartan Coach BiiJ Fulcher expressed doubt that t.1cQuay had signed. e Americn11s f'nll BUFFALO. N.Y. -The Soviet linion·s national basketba ll team trounced an American squad ~7 Thursday night in the second game of a cross-country l:nited States tour. The Russians won 83-f,2 against the same group of an1ateur and college players Tuesday night. The Soviet tcatn "'as Jen by Aljan Zharmukhamfdov who scored 23 points and snared 17 rebou nds. The visitors led 3.1·28 at the half but pulled a\.\1ay in the secood half Randy Smith and Julius Erving led thl' United States with IS poin1 s each. F1111 Behi11d UCI Ni11 e; Puget Soun{l Ne xt Fo e By HOWARD L. HANDY (If Ille Di iiy .-1111 Slt H I The California Angels have a Funday ;chcduled in c onjunction y,•ith a Disneyland promotion June 13. UC lrv,ine's base ball teftm slftged 11 f'unday Thursday in conjw1ction V.'ilh a Big I B..Xlslcr club sponsored fashion sho\v thal few of the players were aware of and the extra curricular activity took place prior lo the ga1ne. The l!CI Funday \1•as al the rxpense of the Southern California Co 11 c g e Vanguards and at conclu5ion of the se\•en innings. coach Gary Adams' crew had posted a 22·4 vicklry to run the season record to 31·15-1. The fun is behind ncnv. hoy,·e\'er. as Adam.s attempts to bring his charge! back to earth and a second straight ap- pearance in the NCAA \Veslern Regional baseball playoffs at S11n Fernando Valley State College beginning Friday agains' Pugel Sound. No Ume schedule has been released by the host school to dale although all fou r teams "·111 play at least one game on opcnin~ day . Three ga1nes "'ill be played Saturday and one or l\\'O, es necessary. on Sunday, Adam.~ s~arted an all-srnior lineup Thu~~day y,·1!~ many of the players at un- familiar pos1t1ons lo start or bl'fore lhe action had ended. T\1·0 big double figure inning s set a nc...- lJCI. stan~ard y,•if.h !he An!eater.~ scoring JO tunes 111 the first Rnd 1 J in rhe sixth UCI belted 15 hits including an insidC: l_he-p~rk. homer by fllikr Sheline in the first 1nn1ng. SeC1t I•! .. ' ' ' ' . llO,~•·· It DollOl••· JI> Mi<i911't r1·0-<I 1 0 Q Ml'""" tl•P 1 I ) Slvor•MI", p·ltl l O 7 7 "'""~™"'• n J O O O <11ru11C1, t l 0 O o l nom1<. \II-ti.cl Tr~"1on, 2D ~~C•• Celt111<r VC I••"'~ l 0 0 0 I I 0 0 0000 .n IQ I 0 0 0 11 • • • • 0 • l i ·-~1\l ~ l Fr!dAy, May 14, }q71 DAILY PILOT 3 •Miss. Webb~ Yon~re Supposed to Be Dead~ Ry KATE \VERB u~1,.,. ,.,~ •~-'""'' 111 tl1r,. previous dupatclies Kate \Vf'bb, UPI bureau nianager in Pll11ont ~ehn, told of her copt11rt <n1d htr hf,. as a C(lptive of tht Viet Cuiig i1~ t.:ornbodia . 111 tht followiiig rlispatcli. I.he last of four, site I.ells of litr rt· lta.1e. Li ving guerrilla st~·le was weakening us. espec ially rne. daily. Our captors seemed unalfei;ted hy the tough reg~men. Our release was hinted at but never pro- mised. I began to be racked by fevers . Then suddenl y, we cross from one world to .another, a world of shadow in the night to !ht> unaccustomed glare of light, speed and noise. Symbolically, it was at dawn v. hen we made the crossing to freedom . 21 lonely. hesifant and frightened group W8\'ing a "'hite flag on Highway 4. I remembered "•hat I had written al the time of a prisoner of """ar release in South Vietnam In !963 : Their eyes look like those of sleepwalkers, but their feel teU you it ""'as real. * An entry In my scrap paper journnl : ~1onday. April 26. Ache all aver, mid v1ith fever. Still no cigarettes. fever cold as rold. \Vrapped in mine and Su.mos- quito nets. UPI over Funk Radio says PP rocketed. Helos ove r again. Spend 30 mins trencher. Gap 'footh says release. in three days, bul secret. I figure that a deliberate leak to get something out of us. Eyes burning with fever. That evening we sal in a circle in the dark listening lo Radio Hanoi ne\VS. Several of the officers came do\\ln lo ask how I felt, shi rting their flashlighL'\ at me. The doctor had given me a Tilfom y. cin table t after Toshiichi Suzuki had called him. THE 11'1.'TERPRE. -l TER I called ~1r. ~ Liberation squat!ed ~ \ beside me in the dark. You must do yo ur best to keep yo ur health. he sa.id. I nodded. thinking cf the malaria case I had seen passing on one of the marches: delirious screams coming from a poncho lit!rr. It .\\'as becomin~ more difficult to force my mind into reality . A column of ~ix men maved int,, the camp. full packs on their backs. sil<'ntly casting curious stares at us over their shoulders. They \\·enl in lhe direction of thr. kitchen. hidden in a nearby cluster of trees and a place "''e had never seen . 1 \l'alched lhem. wondcrini.: "·hy lhe gu11r- ritla lroops a[\\·ays moved s1lcntly. sePm· ingly \\'ilhout orders in drab ant-like <..,,1. umns. Tea Kim Heang, the rreelance photographer \l.'hom we called ~loonface. moved beside me, guessing my state of depression. Bai Tangai. he y.•hispered !Cambodian for th ree days. I He put his finger to his lips and jerked his head at the guard \Ve called Gap Tooth. He fingered a bracelet I had woven out or vines and threads from a peasant scarf the y had ~iven me and pulled more vines from the trees around us lo make me a necklace. SUDOENL, .. SO:\l EBO DY cried ~-na k~. \Ve all jun1ped. Gap Tooth shone his flashlight. lau~hing at our fear. The Ca1n· hodians beat lhe ground ""'ilh the chunks of 1\·ood 11•e had been sitting on, but none nf us sat do""" again . \\'e lay in our harri· moc ks pt"Jndering Gap Tooth's secret that ...,.e \1·ould be freed in three days. It rain· ed. The monsoon season was beginning. * The foll c111'1nG d11y. April '!1. Dad. the man assigned to answe r mine and Su· 1.uki '!i-questions, !!aid we Y.'OUld be r('le<1s· ed. \Ve had been tal king of Sihanouk all morning. hunched over the bamboo tahle in ou r sheller. Bunker and Ky. 1"·0 or the camp dog-s. dazed under our ha1nm ocks P.1v fever was dOY.'n. But I was still wrai:r pe.d in mosquito nets and Suzuki"s shirt y.•hich he had discarded because tf the ht>al. You will he released al Trape;ing Krailanr, on Mighway ~. Dad told us. 1'he t.iberation front y.•ill assure your safe!)' Y<1u \\•ill ha\·e h\·o sets of clothing. ;tnd :'100 Reils 1bel\\·ecn $5 and $6) r.ach ror transpor1 Jr Iha! is nol enough, you must not be afraid lo lell us. Your perwnal posses.~ions will be returned. but ac- rording 10 the rules, your cameras y.•ill be lt1ken. SUZUK I A.ND I were silc.nl. Dad did not scein puzzled or surpr.ised. Our relea:o.e had been hinted at earlier. but ool mentioned again. Are yo u satislied~ llave you anything to say! He asked. \\'e simply nodded. Camwn, we said. Vietnamese for thank you. I "·ondered if the 1•ameras \\'ere bein,i: ~iven to the Khm er Rouge as a ransom for our st1frty. I thought it probable. but said noth1n11 . * Anothrr .lourney entry: \\1t>d. 2111h. \Vrapped up with burning head and shivers all day. Cambodian.~ say bath means release. Doctor gives n1e four pil!s and head rub. Scolds me lor \Dking bath. Try to force food. ~tusl eat. (;ettin!!, trio "'eak. can't even v.•alk lo John without f\~l inJ.!: hrad. Long !>:low day. Dad J:!l)CS thr11 \isl of po!!sessions. but says no morl'. ~ur.uk1 1s bell ing on ~lay I Wt discuss nortlwrners and snuthemer~ The bath made U!' excited tM-cause "'e trtrP nat scheduled for ilnolhrr. hy out r('('konin g. until lhe rollowini:: Monday. Bui two }!Uards I CRl1ed The Twins began carrying kerosene cnns of water. cootie style. lo th<' crock in the bath house early tn 'the morning. f.toonface !at beside my hammock. drinking our tea btc.1u!ie theirs "·as flnished , Tochl)'• he said \l.'hile I inspec.led the stitches on his old shoulder wounds for "hat seemed the hundredth lime and 10111 him they were ok<1y. Lay off our lea. I added BATHJNG HAD beron1e a ma1or event. lndi vldual\y, "-'e would lake our io;carves and half coconut shell the cambodlans U!- ed for drinking (Suzuki and I had glasses) into the bathhouse and slop lhe water from an e11rthenwarc crock over our ~weal-soaked bodies. Het NUOC'. (the Wflter!li finishedl. a guard would cflll nut and then more y.·ater \\IOU!d com('. \\'r would wash out our clolhr.s (whiC'h dried in minutes) and hang them on bamboo po les under tJ1e trees where lhe helil'Opters couldn't see them. then carefully wrap wh<1t was Ir.It (If the soap in a !ear to use for our rice bowls and daily wasl1ers. A day seemed like weeks before. now ,,t seems like years. Sarath said. He was right. But atlhou~h \\/('"-"Pre to walk two more days, our official release came the next (Thursday) morning . 'the guards \\'oke U.'i before S o'c.lock, earlier than usual. ~1r . Lib arrived and said. put on your n('w clothes. The officer or tht> high co1nmRnd is up here . . I Ei\tERGED FR0~1 the bath house ~n a new green uniform they h'lld given me and Sarath said. pack. miss. everything. F.ach of us was given a small green cloth bag and 1 pacJ.:ed everything -the tom shirt and jeans I had ~n captured in. the necklace 11-1oonface hRd made for me. my black pajamas, toothbrush and toothpaste. Hammock and mosquito net, loo. Mr. Lib ordered. \Ve stared at each other. Was it release or just another long march? * At 9 fl'clock Y.'e "'ere photographed . in· div.idually and in a group, by a man f.1r. Lib confided was a very high ranking of- ficer . Mr. Lib was flustered and nervou!I, although it is not Communist habit to salute or show deference to or- ficers. We discussed the value of 11 camera lens with th~ offj<:f'r as he squatted beside us. Mr. Lib y.•as mistr<1nslating in his nervousness. \Ve then \\'ere: taken to \hr tree-hidden shelter \\'here we had been inle1Togated. \\1oodcn benches wrre arranged in a semi-circle before a table covered "''ith the tradiLional green and \\'hite checkered cloth. The squ;il old mililar.11 mt1n who had been in lhe background during our tn· terrogalion presided. Before him lay a sheaf of documents -the ofricial orders from !he southwest command for lhe release nf four journalists and two driver· · interpreters. according to the humane princi ptes nf the liberation armed force s. \\'e fell awkwa rd in our ne\\I ('lOlhC!'. The hiJ!h co m ma n cl rrpreSt'n1al ivP cleared his throat. put on his spectacle.!! and looked up I le seemed \11eary and re;id tht order slo"·ly. TRANSLATION \VERE read to u~ and y.•hen the sections about the humane policies \\'ere read "'e were signaled to applau~. \Ve did. More group phnlographs rollowed before ...,·e returntd for our personal possessions. I was handrd back my purse. watch. a Chinese charm I \\'ear around my neck. my rinit. aspirin. ""'allel and I. D. cards. Nothing 11'as missinJl. r !'igned for !hem. and for lh e 300 Rei!s thev gave each of ui; for transportaLion. You now have the opportunity lo say thank you. J\1r. Libera lion informed us. producin~ his IRpe recorder. Suzuki took the rnicrophone and thank· -eel tl'iem in Enl\lish. f\.1oonf:ice followed. in Cambodian. then me and Charoon. \Yl!I shook hands all around. the officers in- cluded. and plates of b;inanas and candy and l<'a \\'ere placed nn the table Wr &lso \\·ere given a full package of cigarettes each. The officer mnl inned me nff the bench onto a chair. 'i'ou are 1·rrv 11•rak. hr !'aid \\'hen you relurn In your home. ~·ou must c:heck ~·our health very cart'fully. He pushed a ~Jass of tea lo11ard me and tit mv cii;:arette. as he had done during lhe int errogation. Your ct1meras are tools flf \ht im· perialisfll and their lackey!'. he \Cl ld U.'1. They win be used for 1he good purposes of th!! Libera1ion Front. WHEN YOU LEAVt: you Y.'l ll not tell people "·hrre this place is. It <'OU!d mean difficully. He looked al me :ind Suzuki. \Vhcn you go hac k lo your homes, he !'aid. {I'll the truth about us. Tell the lrulh. You mav ha\'e to be verv brave, but tell thr trUth . · t remembered th11I during lht> in- lcrro~alion ht' had said he did nnl believe I 'Pl would publish anything 1 wrote Jbou! them. * \\'e 11:-ked about other joumal isls. There are 17 missirn:t in Cambodia . The <'ommand repre!lcntolive loo ked almost embarrassed. I though!. TI1c lihrra1ion forces could oot bt' hrld rC'sflllnsihle for journalist~ who followed 1hc Lon Nol troops, he said. It Mundrd like a \\'aming. Suzukl and I pre.~sed the question. He repeated th11t ii was the rolicy of the Libpration Front. nt>ver to kill prisoners. hut !'lllid that in the southwest region he had no knowledge of other captive Jaurnalists. I fr!t a sense of fallure. * II "';i!i "' ~:4n pm. thal r vcni ng under R !iickle moon th11t '"'e tnO\'ed oul of the rirst leR nl tht l:i~I lari to rrPedom. The Pnl.tre camp lurned out In ~hR ke hands Rnd say goodbve. \Ve: werr pholo~raphed logelher with the offit'ers. lhen moved off into the du sk. turnini;: to v.•avP. f'·rom 20 ya rds away, the camp looked like jwit another clump of treci;. \Ve were not tied. The men carried ric.t in !'carves !ilUng nround their necks. and also their releai;e bags. Thert were. as usual, !!ix guards -011d. Dave. old Toolh, Mr. Lib, The Teachtr and onr. or the member!! or the new party that had 11rrived an rnmp. Tht Ca mhod lans were told lhat if v.r \\'.11ked fast 1t "-'OUld \Jlke IJ PI R e porte r Kate We uo '.fells Ber Experience about 300 yards away near the end of the march. with flares and the crash Of mortars. We &kirted vWages and the guards held long consullatlons at each at.op. Dad kept dropplng out of line. He had the stomach upset known to American Gls ln Vietnam as Ho Ch.I Mlnh's Revenge. stepped oul onto tht highway, the otberl shuffling behind. There was lhe f1mlllar nap -0f lihowtr shoes in m, unfamlUar nalted light or day. Troops appeared on the crtst or a hill ahead of us. We stopped and Moonface'a face fell, u dld t'.1e flag he waa carrying. We ctuick\y shoved It up again, mappin' at him nervously. As Priso11e r of Co1ntnutaists We stopped at a place. lit by the nlOOn and naree, where straw had been stacked under a spreading tree. We were told to g\e-ep but I didn't. 'J'he guards went off in groups and 5eemed to be argulng over their plans. Govcrn1nent or Khmer Rouge ? TM drag column moved slowly down the hill toward us. Lon Nol, Sarath and Moonlace i;aid sirnultan6-0ullly. The approaching troops stopped, staring. We continued walking, slowly. (P1rt 41 ont> night instead of two lo reach l lighway 4. OUR COLUMN of bobbing gray !1-h11- d0\l.'S movrd on , through villages, O\'tr paddy fields. along paddy dikes and wind- ing tra!Lc;. On a dtrt road y.·e twice stopped for jeeps to roU by . Four men sat in e11ch \•chicle. the headlights shaded and each Jeep decked out like a carnival flont with three branches for camounage. Villagers appeared to take no notice, Twice "-'e see.med lo lose our way and three times we back tracked . the guards :thining their Oashlights an trail forks looking for a familiar sign. OnCt' a village woman carrying a flashlight called to lhe guards. shouting something in cam- bodian, and we retraced our steps. I was told I was walking very well and that 1 must keep doing my best. My hezd \Vas S\l.'imming, my hair and new suit drenched witJ1 sweat. At the next rest stop \\'e simply leaned against one anolhers backs. too tired to sit. A BLISTER BROKt: on my foot. 11 will br numb in an hour. I thought. ll wa~. Then a jab like a hot needle in my toe. Snake. I yeUed. Dad was there with his flashlight before the echo of my \'Oice had died. I grabbed Vom, Suzuki's driver/. \\'ho was in front of me in the column. Tell them they have to cut my foot. it's a snake, I jabbered. Gold Tooth came grinning with a ~ven. inch SC(lrpian. Don'l worry. 110 danger, Mr. Lib said. If snake, very dangerous. We crouched in a circle of light from the flashlight as Dad bound my swelling toe and the raw blister. Mr. Lib asked me ~·hat a scorpion was called in English * \\le sa\\I what looked like a town, ""ilh scores of bright lights, but il was villagers fishing for crahs and frogs in the flooded but shallow paddy fields by the lighl of oil flares. Gold Tooth and Dad joked with them and bought four live frogs, which croaked behind me the rest nf the march. They ate them for breakfast the next morning , roasted over a fire on a bamboo skewer. I fell at le.st three tir.tes '1;:.spite Dad's flashlight. Finally, he stopped and gave me his Ho Chi Minh sandals, put them on my feet. and took my shower shoes. The Ho sandals had curved rubber sticking out in front to protect the toes and were much more comfortable. ;side from pro- tecting one from thorns, scorpions and bamboo spikes. Greater love hath no man I thought. ,1 DAD SEE~1EO to have difficulty, too, y.·a\king in the shov;er shoes. They slither , mud sucks them arr, and brambte:ri tear them askew. He decided to carry them and walked barefoot. II was pa st midnight and we were exhausted \vhen he handed Suzuki and me lumps or fudge -like sugar. A thick patch of jungle was our camp. The Teacher had strung my hammock and J fell into it. * It rained that day and we amateurishly ~I rung ponchos over our hammocks. Moonface caught an inch.long thorn in h.is heel and went straight to Dad with a con- fidence that amused me. Dad dug it out for him. We lazed in hammocks listening to the transistor radio. I picked up a children's program on the BBC: They didn't ask me to turn it ofr. Gold Tooth and the new guard had gone off an day and I won- dered if they ever slept. Dad repeatedly went aver a hand :sketched map cf the release point with 11s. He had a rever and asked for some or the aspirin they had returned to me. t jt.ave him the aspirin -and lhe pocket book. He ha d admired the soft black leather. * WE WERE SCARED. Even the guards seemed nervous. There was fighting Gold Tooth appeared out or nowhere. bringing news, and by the light of the flares over the battle on the road 1 could see him drawing maps ln the dust for the other~. It is time to move, Mr. Lib said. We scrambled up and In minutes wert mov· ing off again. It lit my Mitt to lasl cig. aret.. It was sometime after 3 a.m. we did not use flashlights. We stopped suddenly on what 1 thought was a nrw trail. The Teacher was whispering in Cambodian, we were i;hak· Ing hands, wishing godti luck to each other. - Then the six of us were alone in the dark. \Vhere are we ? 1 asked Sarath. Highway 4, but not at 1'rapeang Krailang. Quick, we must move from this place. The soldiers say we must move. STILL WE STOOD. The Teacher ai; pearcd from somewhere beh.lnd us. Move, he wispered, then disappeared. We moved about 500 yards, our shower shoes making a loud napping sound on the road. l walked in front because you have a white face, as agreed beforehand. We argued about moving to A nearby abandonl'd house with old foxholes around it. The guards had said lo wait until after lhe government armored roado clearing patrol had passed. We had said we wouh! lake civilian transportation back to Phnom Penh . But we knew we were not in a toy.•n, bot territory con· trolled by the Khmer RouAe. ~1oonface won oul. He took a piece 0£ "'hile parachute silk I had and tied ii to a ~tick. We ~tripped off our gift cloth.inA and dressed in the dark in what we had left of our civilian clothes. The pink gray dawn came slowly. illuminating an empty slrelch or highway littered with spent shell castings. SHAKILY, I picked up my little bag, lvloonface, clad only in his tom trousers -now too large for him -raised the white parachute i;itk nag . The two of us I could see their uniforml now and for the first time in 24 days my nerves re.Ill· ed. J had to blink to hold back the tear1. A first lieutenant was standing ln the middle of the road. Journalists. we said lamely, still wav· ing our flag blgh. The officer pointed at me. "Miss Webb." he _said. "You're aup- posed to be dead." K arate Expert· 7 Years Old HIGHLAND, Ind. (API -Kim Pisut is capable of breaking a one inch pine board with the palm of her hand. But her mother ha s warned 7. year -old Klm against breaking tebles, despite the urgin1s of her classmates. Under the guidance cf her fathe r. Tom Plsut. a third degree black belt holder, Kim has developed into a karate veteran. She won the An1erican Karate Association Open litle in her class last March and placed third in the United Slates Martial Arts Champioruhips last November in ~!emptlis, Tenn. Kim performs in "kata" com- petition. where participanb are judged an their ability to execute M karate moves. The contestants compile points by displaying moves against imaginary apponents. Kim's father says she used ht watch as he taught at his private karate school. then im itated hi m in fronl of a mirror. She's competed against kids up lo 16 years old but has yet to meet another girl in competition. KIWANIS 2 Is t ANNUAL PANCAKE BREAKFAST 111 111 646-5033 540-5710 BENEFIT FOR HARBOR AREA YOUTH of NEWPORT BEACH and COSTA MESA SATURDAY MAY 15th 7 a.m. 'til 12 Noon · • COSTA MESA CITY PARK ADULTS s1.oo * PANCAKES·SAUSAGE·JUICE·COFFEE·MILK PREPARED WITH T.L.C. BY KIWA NIS MEMBERS * FREE PRIZES GIVEN AWAY CHILDREN 75c l rl n9 the family ! * FREE MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT PROCEE DS RAISED TD ASSI ST HA RBOR AREA YOUTH ORGANIZATI ON S THIS SPACE DONATED BY Don Swedlund Since 1959 4 DAIL\' PILOT \ \ •' I ~ps Pow, Smack- Break, Bust By THOMAS MURPlllNE Of llM Oallr ~1191 l llH B0~1E SWEET HOME: Every family should have some activity in which an the members join and do together. Th& experts tell you this is good for a helilthy envlronmer:it around the old homestead. Our famil y is no exception to this rule. We have an activity we all do toaether. We break things. We do it in unisorf. in pairs ar sometime s with several 50\0 performances all going on at the same time, ·* * * In ror kitchen we have one of tho.se fancy last-a·llfelime auto m •tic transistorized 77·butlon blenders. It is our second ane. The first one had a short lifetime. ending its exislence in a great spray of sparks. smoke and the smell of burning insulation. \\'HEN OUR YOUNG daughter dropped the glass measuring cup, ii broke. naturally. But since she's a member of our family, 11he did ii with a flair for the spectacular. It hit the kitchen counter, Ii mashed. fell to the floor . On the way down, the pieces gashed ber leg, re- quiring 11 or so stitches. \Vhen ou r family doctor sees us com· ing, he doesn't worry about pills or miracle cures. He just reaches for nee- dle. thread, bandages or casts. We've broken more bones than the LA Rams in three seasons. ~ Our doctors secretly wfsh we 'd get out of the house over the weekends. Sunday seems to be our best breaking day. We also do well on Thank s givings , Christmases or Fourths of July. THE ~IOTHER of our house a time back burned her leg badly. She had a dif- fi cult time explainin"g to our good family n1edlc that it was caused by a hot motorcycle exhaust pipe when the machine fell over on her. * * * Our youngest $on specializes in break· Ing the \o\'hetls on skateboards. Those wheels come apart and spray little, tiny bal!bearings all over the house. Our place is so covered with ballbearings that the family cats can't get their footing . If he doesn't break the skateboard wheels, he breaks the board itself. We have a lot of o!d skateboards. They make cheery fires on cold nights. FOR GROUP THERAPY, we specialize in breaking cars. We have four ; all old. all tired and all in various stages of being broken. I 'II bet when you see your neighbor come oul and look under his auto. you figure he 's searching for the evening paper. When our neighbors see us crawl under one of the family motor cars. thty know "-'e"re 1oing to crawl back out carrying some busted part. We don 't break off extefior piece! because that doesn"t show much im· agination. We bust cars internally, thu~ requ iring spectacular overhauls tbat entertain the entire neighbo rhood. ONE or OUR cars run! quite well right now. Nobody will drive it. The engine sound s so good that it is suspect. None of us trust it. * * * Of caurse, in arder In keep a famil y like ours going. we must have an ex· tensive toot collection. We even have two eleet ric drills. one for each hand. The y don't do much good right now, however, Both of them are broken. rrlday, M•t 14, 1'171 Hospital Checkup Sen . Edward Kennedy (L) and Sen. Peter Domini ck (R·Colo.) tour hospital in Denver prior to Senate HeaJth subcommittee hearings Eye surgery equipment is being demqnstrated . Red Decision on POW s Scrutinized by Envoys PARIS (AP) -Diplomats carefully studied today Hanoi's hedged agreement to accept 570 sick and wounded North Vietnamese prisoners of war with the hope it might si gnal a change in North Vietnam's rigid pol icy on prisoners it holds. No firm predictions in this sense were being made, however. North Vietnam 's delegation to the Paris peace talks had no elaboration on the announcement by Hanoi radio !hat it \\'OUld accept the 570 North Vietnamese "patriots" held in South Vietnam. But there was expectation, diplomats said, Three Policemen Shot Probing Chicago Quarrel CI-IICAG O /UPI) -Three policemen v.·cre wounded and four .suspects have been charged with attempted murder in connection with a domestic quarrel lhal erupted into an exchange of gunfire between police and gunmen in a south side apartment building. PoliC1! said the shooting occu rred Thursday when the three offi cers arrived at the apartment followi ng a complaint by Mrs. Virginette Williams, 19. lhat her estranged husband Irvin g. 19, was going In kidnap her &-month-old daughte r, Nye.tta. Neighbors said the apa rtment builcling was regarded as a Black Panther Party hangout. A police investigator said a df)(lr an the second floor ca rried a gign reading, "Black Panther Lileraturr Headquarters." A cache or arms \\•as confiscated at the 11partmenL However, police said the four susprcls were not known Panther party men1bers. The Panthers also denied kn o"·ing t he &uspects. thal the Norlh Vietnamese would soon contact the South Vietnamese here lo work out arrangements for the prisoner return. South Vietnamese officials here say 23& ::a iling North Vietnamese prisoners have been returned North in recent years, in groups or several score each. The signifirance of the latest offer and ac. ceptance is that it involves a far greater number of prisoners. and il comes in the midst of intense U.S. efforts to get the North Vietnamese to release American prisone rs or have lhem and others in· terned in a neutral country. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce told Thursday's meeting <>f lhe peacl! conference the United States would be: willing to fly out or send by boat to an agretd neutral country North Vietnamese prisoners held in the South. There are I, 167 U.S. military men miss ing in Soulheast Asia, and at least 462 believed lo be held prisoner. mainly by North Vietnam. Yippie Official Hoffman Accused \\'ASHJNGTON !UPI ! -A feder al grand jury invesljgaling this month's peace demonstrations in \\'ashlngton has rC'turned its firs! indictment -agairut Yipp1c leade r Abbie Hoffman. Protest planners announced anothe r antiwar of· fens1\'e in the Capital later this month. lloffman was charged with crossing sta le lines to organize and take part in a riot. and with obstructing a policeman . Both incidenl~ allegedly happened in the f\·lay Day week drive tn shul down thl! govcrnn1cnl <luring \1·hich 12.000 persons were arrested. TI1e grand jury. silllng in \Vashing({ln, reportedl y may indict as many as a half· dozen other protest leaders. Twister Rips Off Steeple 5 North Carolina Trailer Horne s Also Wreck ed Callror11ia Tet11pernt.ures ............ . -.. Arabs Rally to Sadat 6 Top Ministers Quit in Cabinet Crisis CAIRO (UPI) -Government leaders or their deputies from, Ubya, Syria and the Sudan flew unupectedly to Cairo to- day lo pledge their solidarity with Presi· dent Anwar Sadat in Egypt's current cabinet crisis. Sadat himself, speak.inc to a delegation or judges who had come to pleda:e their support, promjsed today, "I would never hesitate to cru:sh" any attempt lo stage a coup d'etat. Sadat Thuraday accepted the migna· lions Of six cabinet minsters and three high policymakers in the b i g gt 1 t governmental 1hakeup since the death of President Gama! Abdel Nuser last Stpt. 28. The c;risis was foruhadowed by Sadat'• dismissal two wttka ago of Vice Prest. dent Aly Sabry. Though Sabry was coruidered tbe most pro-Soviet figure in the Egyptian hierarchy, the immediate cauae for his dismissal was his opposition to the sign· ing April 17, of a loose feder ation linking Egypt with Syria and Libya and , even- tually, the Sudan. The Middle East News Agency said that In telephone conversations with Sadat Thursday night , Syrian President Lt. Gen. Hafez Al Assad and Libyan Premier Col. Moam.mar Al Kha<!afy pledged •·complete support." Today, l.Jbya's Deputy Premier Maj. Abdel Salam Jalloud and Syria's Vice President Mahmow:I El Ayyo, as well as the Sudan 's national leader, Premier Maj. Gen. Jaafar Numeir)', new to Ciiro to reaffirm this pledge. Just bow effective this support would be over the lone run remained to be aeen. Though the oraanization <>f the "federa· lion of Arab Republics" lasl month trig- gered the current crisis, its deeper causes were believed to be strictly Eeyp- tian. The government~trolled Egyptian press today applauded Sadat's ac· ceptance of the resignation!!. The Daily Al Akhbar aaid in an open statement to S1dat, .. all the people are fully bdt1nd you in telling you, 'yes, yes, yea.'" Sadat was to p> on nationwide television today, presumably to explain the resignatl<>ns. Involved in Thursday 's shakeup we!'fl Gen. Mohammed Fawzi, minister of war, and lnttrlor minister and Vice Premier Sharawi Gomaa , both of whom were con- sidered powerful men in the cabinet Tht others who relligned iocluded: Stingirig Rebuke . Mohammed Fayek, mlnlstl!r tor in- formation ; Sami Sharif, minJstl!r of presidential affairs; Hilmi EI· Sa Id • minister for election power, Saad Zayed, mini1ter for housing, and three members of Egypt's only legal political party, the Arab Socialist Union. There were Abdel Moshtn Abdul Nour, secretary general of the ASU, Habib Shukier, speaker <>f th• as.embly, and Oia Edelen Dawood. • member of the ASU executive cammilttt. Heath's Party Devastated In London City Elections LONDON (UPI) -Prime Minister Edward Heath's governing Conservative Party suffered stina:ing lmses in local government elections today in what was widely interpreted as a protest vote against soaring unemployment and in· flation. In their first major popularity test sinct winning power in June, the conservatives were ousted from control of 17 of Lon- don's 32 metropolitan borouahs, ac- carding to incomplete returns. They also were swept from power in local governments in Manchester. Hull , Doncaster. Warrington and many other big industrial cities. The voting was for city coW'ICib in Loll-- don and 350 other cities and towns in England and Wales. Voting was held in Scotland last week. With all but 3 of 374 contests dec ided, the Labor Party scared net gains of 2.029 council seats and the conservativ~s 1uf· fered 1.843 net losses. The Labor Party's gain• more than wiped out the 1.500 cnuncil seats ll losl in a conservative landslide In 1968. Tilt election wu fought largely on M· tional issues and political experts gene rally interpreted the big Labor Party gains as a protest vole &gainsl high prices and unemployment that recenUy topped the 800,000 mark. Roy Jenknns, deputy leader or the Labor Party, cammented "the results ex· ceed our expectations, which were high. They are a massiVI! vote of no cantidence in the government's perfonna~." Conservative Party chairman Peter Thomas said "naturally. 1 am diu~ poinled. but. of course, we knew Labor would be bound to regain many se1ts this year." The near landslide for Labor had no Immediate effect on the position of the Conservative Party government It has a camfortable majority of about 30 seats in Parliament and is not obligated to hold new parliamentary general electioru for "'at least another three-and..a·half yearll. MAVCO You are what you eat ••• nutrit ion experts have told us. Natural foo ds and vitam ins, sugar·free treats .•. these are the value- foods that head the list of most health- watchers today. And now in May Co you can come and rea p the ben efits of natural vitam ins, minerals and proteins ... foods without preservat ives. And more. Alt to th e good ••. of your good hea lth. introducing ''Nature's Foods'' , reg. 89c Tap'n Org.inic awle juice reg. 1.65 Tiger milk powder r~. 4.1 O Am. Diet Aid Alpha TocOl'herol reg. 2/6.65 Arn. Diet Aid Acerol.t Plus reg. 69c Old fashioned Herb Dtf:SS;ing reg. 75c La ~sen Cr.anola Cereal rtg. 6Jc K&l large S~nta Clara f'run!s i3c. 1.39 J .49 2/S.65 59c •Jc 49c health c.et1ter I 08 -down tcwn I.e., leurel plaza, 'outh be y, ercedia, 1en diego only our new Health and Nutrition Center ---·-- t r U1tUM l"ttU l1tltr111llH1I I• UNIT~O Plf$1 tNTl"INAT10"4"AL Tr'"P''"'"''' ~~O o•eciol!t ••on for I l~f 2•-"""' Ptrf&d • .,,,,,,. 1! i I "' A ltlr ... tltl'lll IPH••tll 111 tl'lt .+!11t• 11 mottl• \u1111v tkles 1r-l1111fl1 f'V•• Sol<'"''" Ct lllo•nlt tod1v. •II" 1emr n\111>! t r><! mftrn•nt lo"' (!OYCh Ind ll!D 1lent '"' co-111 n.. Loi .1.11oe111 •••• i.10 huv ountltlM l"t' !ht low CIOIKI! '"" '°" <l ttrtd. 1mi>er1+u•et remtl1ted •t>ou! '"' Mm• w<11t tl\r. P•f'lll(t<!il C:lv+C Ct nt., 111011 Jl. tomoa""' wl+l'I llturtOt•'• 16 1h• low IO!'ll"'I will ~ • Oeru.t '°" 11t.u•...tt v t lOIMI O"!t • .. l••r•neHll>'•I ..... _, I NI N~ ... 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Nt"" 'l'erli. Ptl"' s ... 1 ... 1 P~il1dtlp.ltl1 Pl'>Ot,,IJ" ,.,,,.O..ltlt tt10~ C:IJ)o lrno 5t Leu1i St ll 1.•kt C:/l'I ltfl 01,.., St 1t F•tlt(IHO ltt !llt IM•.t "t W111'1l11t1.,,, • Ml91'1 Lew l"r••· 111 n ,. " •• •• '·' .. " " " 7). 0 " . " " " " " • ~ " .. " .. .. " " .. .. .. " " .. .. ~ " " • " " .. " .. • " .. " • " " .. • ., .. " ,, " •• • .. " " " " • .. " .. •• " " • " " .. .. " ~ " • • "' " " .. " " "I I ,,. ' I .u " ·" may co Muth c111t 19l1a1, aa n ditto fwy. 1t briatol, cott1 mtaa; 546--9321 thop mo nd1y thr u 11turd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m. Klan Leader Maintain~ Calley Victim of Bias TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI ) -The Ku Klux Klan IC· cuud the Army Thursday of letting Negroes inW>l\'ed in the hfy Lai massacre go free while making a "scapegoat" of LI. William Calley Jr. The charge came in an editorial by Robert M. Shelton, Imperial wizard of the Klan, printed in the organiution·s monthly "Fiery Cross" ntagazlne. Shelton said eight of the 11 men originally charged in the r.ty Lal incident weri black. "Why have none of them been brought to trial. why onl y the white lleutenant who obviously had no control over the ... Negroes in this brigade," he said. "Of course, we could not have a Negro up for trial. that would make America look like a bigoted country.'' Shelton wrote. A black soldier charged in the 1'1y Lai massacre ~·as acquitted by a court-martial earlie r this year. 'Yes, Virginia ••• ' Girl · Who Received Santa Letter Dies VALATIE. N.Y. (UPI) -I Mrs. Laura Virigina O'Han lon Douglas, the woman who received the "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" letter died Thursday in a nursing home. She 'A'as 81. • Virginia O'Hanlon \\'as 8. Y.•hen she 'ATOle the New York Sun, asking : "Some of my !i ltle friends say there is no Santa Claus. Papa says If you see it in the Sun. it's so. Please tell me the tru th, is there a Santa Cl<ius?" Assistant Editor Francis P. Church penned the famous editorial reply in v.'hich he answered Virginia's friends v.·ere ~·rong and concluded: "Yes. Virginia, there is a Sant a Claus. He exists as cer- tainly as love and generosity and de vot ion exist. and you know that thC'y abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas, how dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no Virg!nias." Mrs. Douglas often was reti- ce nt about her part in the editorial and said it v.·as Church, who died In 1916. \Vho should ha ve been remem· bered. She said it was Church's reply that carried the "phllo.sophy of hope and love." UP1 TtltpbO!t DEAD AT 81 Virgini1 Douglas She lived mosl of her life In New York City as a teacher and principal and reti red aboul JS years ago. She lived in Norlh Chatham . near Albany, v.•i!h relatives. fiilrs. Douglas' health has been fa iling for some time and she spent the last t w o Christmases in the hospilal. More Capitol Police, K9 Dog Corp s Sought rrld.1r, M1y 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT 6 Jurors Act Swiftly Amtrak Leader Blasted 13 Black Panthers Cleared in NY NEW. YORK (AP ) -Alter============================ an eight·month trial, 13 Black WASHINGTON (AP) -The two top congresalonal authors of the law to salvage rail passenger service have sent Amlrak 's boss a blisteri ng let- ter detailing their displeasure O',!er how the new corporation is being run . "There is time to correct the grievous errors that have occurred." Sen. Warren G. /ifagnuson (0-Wash.), and Rep. Harley 0. Staggers, ( 0. W.Va .), told Amtrak President and Board Chairman Roger Lewis, "'and we herev.•lth urge you to take appropriate and S\\'ift action. "If the corporation is to get ofr lo a good start," the y v.•rotc Levds Thursday night, "there are certa in immediate changes in policy that are essential." The House is considering a Senate passed res o 1 u t ion 1 ''designed to tell the cor· poration to do what it should have done anyv.•ay," added the leaders of the committees that created the 1970 Ra i I Passenger Service Act. "The point is that Congress should not ha ve to pry this kind of informat ion loose," they said. "\\'e urge that this ridiculous situatio n be changed without delay." T eamsters Give Hoffa More Time HOLLY\VOOD, Fla. (APl - Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa -still pov.·erfu l after four years in pr ison -has received a go s.head fro1n other top leaders of the union for a last ditch try to \\'in his freedom and resume control of t h e truckers' union. ''Jimmy wants 2{I days until the first week in June before he makes up his mind on whether to ru11 for re-elec· tion." a high union source said Thursda y of Hoffa's latest bid for freedom on a claim of new evidence. "They are going to wait for him . They voted to wa it for him.'' said the source of the action of the Teamsters Ex· ecutive Board meeting here. Militant Rabbi l{ahane, Ital y Chieftain Unite Panlher1 accused o( bomb coruipiracy hive befn ac- quitted in 1 verdict reach ed 10 swiftly that tht 1urars surpris- ed even lhemse ves. The panel, which included five blacks and a Puerto Rican, acquitted the defen- dants on all U counts of an in· dlclment a.,; hours after the case had been turned •ver to them Thursday. "We had lunch and began talking and we were amazed to find out right away thal we relt the same." said Frederick Hills, an editor. "The miracle was that 12 people of such es:- t rao rd in ar i ly diverse backgrounds all felt pretty much the same way." I~ took the foreman, Jam"s F'ox. a black musician, 10 minutes to read the verdict en each of 12 counts for each af the 13 defendants. Spectators cheered. applauded and sob- bed as he n~ad the last of the 156 verdicts. all "not guilty.'' Afeni Shakur, one of two women defendants, and the only one of the 13 Iree in bail, shrieked as Fox read "not iuilty" count.s against her hus- band Lumumba, 29. He and most of the other defendants had been in jail since arrested in predawn rald.!i April 2, 1969. Jurors. defendan ts, s l x defense lawyers, rt:latives and friends crowded into the lobby of the Criminal Courts building, laughing, crying and hugging each other. "I'm dazed -l'm dazed," said Curtis Powell, one er the defe ndants. •·we all came ~·ith bags, prepared to stay 1 long time. but it wasn't necw1ry," said juror Joseph Garry, a po.stal NE\V YORK (UPl l -Rabbi ment harassment. clerk. ~ieir Kahane, head of the Staling that •·conspiracy is "There was evidence all .Jewish Defense League and synonymou~ with the word right, but it just wasn't Joseph Co!on1bo Sr., founder frame ." Colombo said his enough.'' of the Jtalian·American Civil group might suppon the JDL Two of those acqu itted ned Rights League pledged their in its protest demonstrations 10 Algeria during the trial. mutual support Thu rs d a Y at Soviet mlaslons and other Chier defense lawyer Gera ld against what they described as facilities. Lefcourt said he would try to " d h negotiate the · return o f •·government harassment. Colombo, who had 1e is Michael Tabor and Richard The unusual and infonna l group on picket lines outside Moore, who forfeited ball of exchanges of support came at FBI offices said ii the JDL a news conference followin g "needs our support and asks,_l_i_so_.ooo_. ______ _ Kahane's relea se on bail after for ii, we certainly will allow lie had bcoen arrested on our support.'' charges of int e r s ta t e Kahane. offered similar sup.. transportation of guns and ex· port for the Italians and said plosivcs. he and Colombo had become The militant Kahane claim· interested in a Common cau~ ed federal authorities v.·ere through a mutual interest in trying to suppress the JDL's "broiherhood." protesls against tre11tment or Kahane, who was indicted Jews in RUS!ia. with 12 olher persons Wed· Colombo, who has been ac,.. nesday, said hla organlution cused of being an underworld had legally registered weapons chieftain. said the JDL and and had trained "several hun- wift o ftee trip Register now! You mav win a FREE trt p 10 >.laska for 2 vla P&O British Cruise lines; FREE tr ip to Afrfea for 1 via TWA; FREE trip to 11'1• Yucatan for 2 via Mexleana AJrlinea; FREE 1G-apeed bike. ••• oftd you•teoft yourw~y hlgh-nyfng wltPt a trsvtt• light wardrobe from tit Grod tns tucked into your canvas bag, No.wr!nk.~I• · eaSY7C•ting kn lls moving with you; just right for being In new plaeet. Start l\ere. Co1t1 Me1e only-I SATUR DAY, MAY 15 NOON 'TIL 2 Come In end t1lk to Mr. All i n R. Gr•y of M1y Co. W or ld Tr1 v1I. He'll be qlad +o 1n1wer your tr1ve l qu•1tions. g1odin1 COSTA MESA S•uth C••lf Pl1ui 0,., W• Nltfltl j•~h~e~l~ta~l~la~n~-A~mte~r~ic~•~n~Le~a~gu~•~jd~r~<d~Am~•=ri~'c:•n~J~ew~s·~·~IO~ll.l:•~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~b WASHI NGTON (U PI ) -A chairman of Lhe Hou s e,. ~·ere both viclims of govern-them. House subcommi ttee, acting in , the w1ke of the J1,1arch 1 bom- bing of the Capitol. is con· sidering proposals to increase the Capitol po lice force by 214 men and to create a K9 corps ll.'ilh dogs trained to sniff out bombs. Rep. Kenneth Gray lD-Ill.), Whittier · OKs Nix.on Honor , 3-1 • Administration subcommittee on Police, told UPI he would ask his panel r.tonday to ap· prove those features. as "''ell as proposals lo install elec- tronic survelllance equipment in the Cap ito l and to ;iuthorize overtime pay for police. Den1ands came from both the Senate and House Ill bolster the Capitol pohce force and to lighten security after the early morning bomb blast on the ground fl oor of !he Sena te side or the Capito!. The bombing. slill unsolved, in- jured no one but caused li200.000 damage. Repair v.·ork is under ~·ny. Gray said a comprehensi ve \\'HITTIER fUPJ \ -By a 3-bill, rcquirini:: only House and to-1 margin. \Vh iUier College not Sen:.te approv al. v.·ould be .studenls have ex pr esse d present ed to lhc subcom111ittee disapproval of President Ni:t· to add the 214 men to the 354 on·s honorary degree. officers now assigned to the Nixon. a 1934 graduate of lfouse side of the Capitol and the small school. was awarded to lhe three House office an honorary degree of law in buildings. There are 262 of- 19~4 v.·hile he was vice presi-ricers assignC'd to the Senate dent. side in addition 1o 4 9 The vote Thursday y,·as 646-\Vas h Ing ton metropolitan 249 against rt:vocation . There police officers v.·ho have been are 1,900 students at the detached lo work with the school. Capilol force. The 2(1.member s t u d e n t ;============.! senate lhree weeks ago passed tht resolutJon that asked the college to revoke the honorary degree 1s a protest agains t the U.S. war policies in Southeast Asia. LOCAL No elll•r n•w1p•per t11f1 you 111or1, •v1ry d•y .• bo11I w1'.1 t'1 9oin9 on in t~e Gr11l1r Or•n91 Co11! th•n tllt DAILY PILOT. stop look ··~ and lease 1evenly·on111 11 t ~~~ 2ll:lO HAMOR l!:LVD. I COSTA MESA (71<1) 64i:Mf00 • • (Change ·ban Checking account service charges are inconvenient, irr~ toting, and often add up to thirty or forty dollars a year.So w hy pay them? Keep a hundred dollar minimum balance at Southern California First National Bank and you 'll never pay another se rvice charge, no matt er how •otm1• .... - many ch ecks you write. Won 't that b e a rel ief ..... ..,NATIOllALIWIK MMi:l f.D.J.G. -,. effite i• Orup, tot A•t•'-u4 S.. XX.to~ • C01ta MHa, 230 East 17lh Street, 842·1660 e Hun!lngl•n Beach, 8899 Adams Avonue, 9112·3377 -17122 Bea<h Blvd., 847-9681 I I Di\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Aid to Home Buyers ' In a community of odd-shaped lots, steep hills, wind· ing roads and elderly dwellings, it is not always easy Lo make buiJdings and improvements conform to the letter of th e la\v. . In Laguna Beach. over lhe yea.rs, a multitude or p!'operty O\vners have bent the dwelling regulations :-t1ghtly in order to flt the house they want into the site they \Vant -either with or without official variances. As a result. the real estate picture in the Art Colony Is rife \rith so·callcd "nonconforming" situations and city authorities witness a steady parade of frustrated O\vners who have ju st discovered they cannot legally n1ake what seems an eminently reasonable improve· n1 enl. fe\v buyers take the trouble to look into the his· tory of a property to learn what iUi limitations, if any, may be. A' proposed ordinance would require the seller or residential property to provide the buyer with a city report or zoning status. past variances and permi~ and existen ce of any noncpnforming condition. 1\ home is the largest investment.-many families ever 1nake . Certainly any prospective Laguna home· buyer would \Velcome the additional assu rance that some such ordinance could provide. Two Ne,v Hospitals 1'he l\\'O proposed new hospitals in Saddleback Val· Icy have been capturing plenty of headlines lately wlth rounty offirials embroiled in controversy over the i5'- a;uance of necessary permits. No\v that the dust has settled, it appears that con· ~tru ction of both facilities will proceed as planned, which is just as ,,·ell . The population explosion in the burgeoning valley n1akcs increased loca.J medical care an immediate musL A Cance r 1 11 America's Big Cities tr you lh·e in New York and hail a cab In midt o1vn, the dr iver won 't lake you lo ll arlem if il"s a1 tcr sundo1\'n. If you live n Chicago and v.·anl to take a cab al r11ght to the South or \Vest Side ghettos, lil t" hack will refuse, 11ill make you pay lirsl, or will demand an extra lare for the trip. Harlcrn. the Chi· eago shc·Hos, and dozens l1kr them lhroug houl the na- 11011, arc enclaves: Hwy c:<i~l like for· c1i;n communities in a counlry. controlled r nlurc or less) by an occupying police force. TllEY DO N·T Ll\'E on the same i1onclary s~·.stem . either. Everything ;osts n1ore ·-food. sheller. appliances. ;ind crcdi! most of ::ill. The j obless rate is l\1 ice as J11gh: schooling is half as good ; ~amblers and pimp~ and dope·passers arc the f1.1::111·cs of authority here. And the l)(Jtlr 11·ho 11\'C hPrr arc three limes more h~cly lo be robbed. burglarized or mug· gcd !han the ci111.cns h ~1ing elsewhere. Th1i; r~ quitr literally a cancer in !he tommunuy, an d orw 1hat can only ~pread. IL is past lhe point where a111 one can assign b I a me or re~~JXlnSibili ty; it makes no difference 110\\' how the disease started -it must be l!<ll un<ler control or every large city in Lhe U.S. \~:ii\ perish. '''HAT ARE ''i't: rio1ng ahout it? Prac· tir.:l\lly nothing. Large stuns are ap- Dear Gloom y Gus: How about male welfare rttipien1-' doing some school watching to pre-- vent our bard-earned tax dollars from being waited by vandals? -G.D. T~lt ... IUrt rtt'"1'1 rtMln' 1'19..... Rel --n~ ,,,." .. ,,.. ""-'"'"· ,..., r-"" -" " ''-'' ew .. DtllJ' ,,,.., propri11ted. agencies and bure1111 and commissions are appointed, ataf:ftd i nd funded -but !<>meOOw little or the money gets down whe~ it is-mO!t need· ed. Housing starts are negligible, jobl are scarce. training 1s a joke, and "law en· forcement" is a blend or corruption, negligence and repression. These are facts it only takea 24 hours to find out. Conditions are far better in lhe South than in almost all Northern citle.!J. The South js beginning to turn lt.Rlf around. having learned that a system of organi:t· ed bigotry simply doesn't work in modern industrial society. The Northern big cities don 't practice official bigotry : they 1imp- ly follow a "scorched earth" policy in reverse, by which everything the poor minorities need to subsist is denied them . THE SOCIAL BODY ia like a physical organism: it is impossible to have an un· treated focus of inftction tha~ will not spread throughout the whole system. Unless a can~r is burned out, or excised in some way, it w i I I rneta.stasize throughout the whole body. And no part of the "body" of the community will re- main unaffeeted by this poison. It is too late for sermonlzinr, moralir:· Ing. philosophir:ing. or making value· judgme11ts on one segment of society or another. We are all in the same conla· gious ward, and there is no i!olatlon chamber. In a time of plague, only con· cern for the commo111 good can save us. Can Y ou Remember? ran vou reml·n,bcr ,1•hcn· Yuu ·nc1 e:-r drc:imcd our country could t ier lo~r" \'ou left lhc Iron! door npen" Pl'nplc kntw \I lla\ the f o\rth or July ~lOl)(J !or ·• \'011 look ii fnr ~r:intcd th!ll '\'Omen, !he r l1il'rly ;uni the clergy, \\'rre to be 1 c~pcctrd~ /\ ~1rl 1\·as :i girl ~nil a 00~ 11·as a boy:' You rl1dn"1 frel c111bRrras~rcl lo say !hat Ons \1·a~ the besl darn C'Ollnlry in the '1l·r!d"' ~OC:IALl~T \\'A~ a dirtv 11·ord? Tai\{'S ll('!'C only n n11is;iiice·.• Th(' poor 11crc loo proud to lake r hnril.v '.' \'011 11'<'r<'n'1 afl'<i!d to ~o out at night? f:hrt1 o.~ 1-1rr£' nl'ighborhoods? '"<lu kne\.\' thC' law rncant justice, and ~nu frl1 11 litllc shiver or a1-1•c at the sight ()f a pol 1cem:in "! 'oun;: lcllo11'1i tnt?d lo join the. Army or the Navy:' Song" had :i t1Jnc" Crim 1n.1l ~ 11cnt to Ja1r~ You bragged aboul your home state 11 nd your home: 1own:' Politicians p 1 o c 1 a 1 m c d thei.r patrlol.lim ? Quotes \\'allcr ScoU -"The r11ce. of mankind "'.,uJd perish did they cease to aid each nr hc:r. We Caf\not exist wllbou1 mutual belp. Al1 therefore that need aid have 11 right to ai;k it from I.heir fellowmen ; a!"141 no one u·ho hn" !he power of grtnting l'811 relu~e 11·i1hout guilt." ( Guest Report CLERKS A1''0 repairmen l r i e d lo please you? A Sunday drive wa:s an adventure, not an ordeal? You could always find someone willin& and able when you needed something done? Riots were unthinkable? The clergy talked about rellgion? You took it for granted that the Jaw \\'OUld be enforced, and your 1afety pro- tected? The !Jag \\'as a sacred symbol~ Our government stood up r 0 r An1ericans any'A·here in the worl d? A flfAN \\'HO \Vent \\TOng was blamed. not his mother's nursing habits or his fa ther's income? Things "·erenl perfect , but you e1· peeled them to be? Everyone knew t.he difference bttween right and wrong, -even college p~ fessors1 Collcae kids swallowed 1oldrish, not acid? , People u:pec.ted less and valued it "'hen they had mort? People stiTI Md the capacity for ln- dlgnaUon? You considet""ed yourael! lucky to ha\'e a good job. and when you were proud to have one? America was the land er tht free and the home of the bral'e? Arroyo Grande Pres1.flecorder Valley r .. idents should nol be obliged to make the long treks now necesS&rY to reach the nearest coastal or Inland hospitals. The Saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hills will pro- vide an initial · 160 beds, with plans for growth to 500 beds. The Mission Conununity facility in Mission Viejo plans 126 beds, increasing to 250. At the rate the valley is growing, there "''ill be a real need for all the hospital beds both facilities can provide. It's time to stop the fussing and get on \vith the building, without worrying about "competition" prob- lems which very likely won't exist. Lame Brains at Work Aft.er many tumultuous meetings, Laguna's city fathers finally managed to adopt a ne\V animal control ordJnance that appeared to satisfy most of their con· 1tituents and end a period of turmoil. -But for the harassed officers of the Humane Society, lt wu ju1t a beginning. In attempting to enforce the new la\v they have been subjected to physical threats, chased \vilh a car in one instance, had their cita~ion books ripped out of their hands and even been subjected to in sults while trying to rescue an ailing sea! from the beach. At the canyon animal shelter, cats have been 1pirited away by "visitors,'' dog s let out of their cages and rocks and garbage hurled at the buildin gs. ·it i.s unfortunate that the Humane Society and its representatives should be subjected to this twisted be· havior. Dedicated to the care and protection of animals, they deserve a great deal more adm iration than th e Jame brains whose idea of kindness to animals is to let them run Joos~ in traffic or release them from the she!· ter to a doubtful fate. s INTER(ONTJNE NTAL ~ALLI STI C MISSILES Ed1reati on Ott Ve1ae 1•e ul Disease 'Cathy Is Right-All Kids Need It' To the Editor : On~ again the Mailbox has .scooped its competitor in the printing of readers' opi· nlOllll on taboo subjects that should hava *n aired yean: ago. The :!tlory is a let· ter from a 15-year.qld girl named Cathy Hoad (Mailbox, May 4), and the subse· quent rtbuttal by a. grown man named Donald Jones (Ma.ilbo>0:, Ma y 7). The sub- ject; VD education. Cathy ii right in advocating the educa· Uoa of all kids. Mr. Jones is also right in hil di.tpolitioa of his own use, but his w!lllM thinking Is .....,.hat ... IU!ied In that a ueat number or kids who need VD Information. are 1IOl ao fortunate as hla ..... kids Ind Cathy. TIGHT • CORSETED pr u des like Assemblyman Robert Burke w o u Id reserve VD JmowJeds:e for the kids he things are "bad." Rubbish! But the ovtrall education would not hurt or even embarra!! kids like Cathy or Mr. Jones who have have been duly in- :structed at home. Jn this area of permissiveness where the happy chappie and his hippie chippy na.unt the don't·give-a-darnit attitude in a society that is desperately trying to curb VD, k is JIOt enous:h to sit on one's big rat onager (look it up and sue me ). One must sbolt"· a JitUe compasaion ror the masses •ho arr not so fortunate as Cathy and Mt. )ones. JllGRT HERE I would like to interject a thought that may shock Mr. Jones, and . Mail l:>c}x Letters-from readers are welcornc. Normally 1vriters should convey their rnessages iii 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit spa ce or eliminate libeL is reserved . All let· ters must inctua.e signaiure a11d mail· ing address, but 1i.ames may be with· htLd .on. reqiust if sufficient reason is OP,paTent. Pott'l/ 1DfU t1ot be pub· JiJIJed. .. it may e"en be a revel at'ion to Cathy. It is : The professional call girl is safrr to deal with than the promiscuous woman. A great step forward in lhe control of VD would be to release all the call girls front jail and set them up in a government of- fice to instruct especially !he frmale in the detection of VD in the males. S. G. UNDINE De11.r11ctivc P1·iso11s To the Editor : This' is just lo say amen to the recent letter about California prisons. As a group they are probably the best in the United States. but doing time in them is destructive rather than rehab ilitative for most of the prisoners. 1 have visited every prison in Calilornia, several of them many times, and talked to a greal niany starf members and inmates . Although the peo. pie are not faultless, of course, it is the system itself 1vhich no grou p of people, no matter how able and dedicated, could possibly make effective. 1 DOUBT ff ANY kind of locking·Ufl system can ever be good for very many peopl e. but one lhing "'e can do easily. Send re\\·er people to prison and keep them there for shorter sentences. Cahfomia's average senten~ for a g1\'en crime is well above for the 50 states, and the United States as whole uses prison ~ great deal more tbl.n Eµro- pean countries. I "" "As a matter of fac l we are Jlready moving in this direction, with proteCtion being given to persons who five.years ago would have been given time. This \\'orks al least as well as prison, judging by later behavior. Jncidentally, it is of course lren1endously cheaper. BERNARD C. KIRBY AJr .. K1rb!J Is a member of ~ltc soc· inlnri !J facull!/ ai San Dieflp Stale College, !:ditor P 1111 lsl1 l119 f'nre nts To the Editor. This letter comes to you in the hope that \Vhal I have to say \\'ill 'el lo the right people. friday. May 7. there was 3n article in th e DAILY PILOT about Costa 1'.Iesa in· iliating a Jaw that will punish pare11ts for repeated offenses by their children . It also stated lhal chances were slim that it "·ould be carried through. \llhat a pity! 'T'his world needs desperatel y the family reforms this would bring about. The lack or commun1ca1 ion and paren- tal control in our American famil ies lo· da y is appalling. Chi ldren need In be made lo learn responsibility and '\'hers else but at hoipe? If Dad had lo pay for Junior's scrapes h1msrlf. prison. fine or probation. insread of gelling 1t '·fixed" or just gi\'ing ·UP and saying. •·\Vhat can you do wi th a kid like that ?·· He 1~ould soon see that Junior straigh tened up. The same goes for r-.1om and Sis. RESPONSIRlLITY is the kcv '1"nrd. Dad and Mom arc not reSpons1bta parents if !hey do not leach their children right from \vrong and respect for people and the \vay of life \\·e are abll' t.o havr. in this country. A responsible pe rson \viii :;hare with a brother \l'ho needs and replace \\·hat is damaged as he passe3 through life. H \V C all did this. \1·ouldn"! it be a wonderful place to live? The ground rules for such a life are ,to be found in Goers Ten Commandments. I pray everyone 'l'ho reads this letter "'ill also take time out to read o\·er 1he Ten Commandrr cnls and pray for hclri and guidance. Being a parent asn'I easy. ifs just on e of the most importa nt JOb'.'i one could find lo do -teaching the nex t generation ho\\' to 111•e. JEAN 1'.IAURINE 1-IORTON Dog's Life Can Be Great-or Tough A dog's life can be opulent indeed. Consider Joie de Vivre, a poodle owned by Mrs. F. Raymond Johnson of New York City. As Judy Klemesrud told it in the New York Times, Joie de Vivre loved to eat caviar from a spoon, drink cham· pagne from a glass and have brtakfast in bed with his mistress. Both started the day v.·ith Special K topped with fresh strawberries. Other pets an far leis lortunRtr. Despite the Wstentt of anh--c:ruelty law~ and humane societies. thousands of animals continue to suffer from neglect. maltreatment or ignorance on the part of their owntn:. Animal shelter employes are especially contemptuous of persons \\'ho turo in pets to be "put to sleep" simply because they ha ve become tired of them. The root of tpe problem l ! overbreedlng. both inadvertent and deliberate. Most shelter residents are mongrels that need never have been born if their parents had been spayed or ntuterfd. But, as Anne Cotrell Free rettntly p o I n t e d out in The \\'uhlngtonlan, "A surprising numbrr ol the animals given up by their owners are pureb~s from poodles I o Welmara.ners -reflecting the disposable product ptttem ol our affluent sociely," A PET CENSUS of the Unittd States probably 'lt'OUld be imposslble lo un- dertake. It b tslimated that America n homes harbor 2& Mill ion dogs, 21 million cats, uncounted legions or birds, fish and tiottc c:naturts .. Statistics iodk:ata th a I. In lhe ai· grqale, Amerlran pets est well - thou&b not aa well 11 Joie de Vivrt. The Pet l1'ood Institute c11culates th1t the ClSt of"rti.ainteMnCe food'' for dogs 1nd cat.. -defined IS sufficient lo provide a complete, balanced diet -h11 risen not more than 5 percent iJI the past decade. Editorial Research Neverthelrss. the institute says. sale~ of dog and cat food zoomed from $600 million to $1.Jfi billion between 1965 and l970. ?i1uch of the increase is attributable to the popularity of "gourmet " pct foods. Tho~r "'ho can afford lo do so pamricr lheir pets in othP.r ways. A clipping·and- bathing session 1n ii dog beauty salon runs about $If!. Professional dog walkers in a S\.\'ank section of Manhattan-1v11I air "Fido two hours a da y. five days a week, for $21. A PERSON \\'HO buys an exot ic pct 11sually is doing neither himself nor the an imal any favor. Young monkeys seem 1rresislibly cute until it is learned th<Jl they are almost impossible to Our Nationa l Dis g ra ce At 1Ast, the g1an1 has sHrl'ed to speak. Not just for General f.lotors. hut for all of !he silent corporate. bodies who have long endured !he slings and arrows or outrageous enem ies. Our nation a 1 disgrace is the continuing acceptance of slsnder or American business and lhe equaUng of money with immorality. • And where is the corporate sctr. assurance that has been equal in the past to all the !Stresses of peace and w11r, change and catastrophe?' It h.is finally come forth, in lhe person ol James f.1ichael Roe.he. chairman of General P.1otors Corporation. to score I h e irre~ponsible c-rilics who 111l1c he very structure of the corporate y and almult1neously poison the lif ood of the entire system. This conflict raging ln the roots o( powtr, ted not im· medlately 111 the individual issues. but rathfr at the ph ilosophy of man :1nd nature. the daeper foundations most vulnerable to the ahock waves which 6et into motion a Lidal wave of change. TllE PROTECTIVE barricades of our 1ys tr.m have begun to crumblt. 11,nd all of Guest iditoria l ' ·- us arc obligated to take stock or it and to st.and with James Roche 11nd his com· pany ega,inst lhe the mounting press ures from all sides. Thii; S1rugi.:Jc has been enlarging itse lf !lo lhat we must n°'' be concerned with factors fast moving ()utsidc our control. It ha~ not been enough lo be oppressed by thl' self. destructing rebellton of our own children, or even exposed lo the insults of power. it is now dcmnnded lhat every COl'J)Orlll1on ~ubn1it lo lhe policy of men conUnually \\'8rped by their own temper. Cent ral f\lotors is no1v ans\\·ering lhc call to dtftnd not on!y Itself but to deff'nd a credo that offer!i few fireworks but ralhrr a slf'ady promise of lmprovemrn1 for 1hose of 115 11i·ho s~k the ldtol ,of soc ial rtsi:onsibillt y, personal liberty, atld disciplined free enterprise. Elltnbelb f\taeDonald fl1annln1,. PublliMr Finance housebreak. They '11ill. hO\\'Cver, hreak up lhe house. Despite these unendearing traits. n1ore than J00 .000 \\"ild monkcvs ::rre i1nporled into !he United Sl<rtcs eve.i-y year. Inspired. perhapi;, by ''Barn Frer.'' around 10.000 An1ericans 01\·n big cats. 1n- cludiJ1!: lions and leopa rds. But 1\ lake~ more skill and patie nce to accon1modale an Elsa tha n most big-cat fancier~ pcissess. In n1any ca.sl's. lhe untrained and untrainable anunal becomes master of its owner. f.lrs. Si /l.1erril1. \1·ho has O\l'fled a small Soulh American jungle cat for more th;-in 11 years. told a Life reporter some of the problems involved : '"You ha ve to d<'"corate !he house \Vilh marble 11nt1 \'inyl. and there's no\\-here that cat can't reach. for all !he lack of freed on1 you have by O\~·ning them. and for al! the lack of freedom they h~ve by being 011ned bv ~·ou , you might as v.·en niake U1cn1 intC. fur coats.''. If she had il to do over aga in, 1'1rs. Merrill no doubl would choose 11 coal instead of a cat. ----iill- f'r1day. ~tay 14 , 1971 The cdi!on"al page of the Daily Pilot src/;s lo i11fortn and sbm.- 11/olc readers by prcs cttling th11 newspaper 's op1n1011s and cmn- n1en1nry on topic: Of intercs£ a1zd sioni ficancc. by providing a for1~1n tor thl t %prcs$ion of our reoqen' opinion.J. and by presr11ting tlrt diut rst trlew- poinU of informe r! ob.(c rvt r1 ond spokcsmrn 011 topics <If tht day. Rober t N. Weed, Pu bli•hor Couples File Lawsuit Four Named in 'Financial BonanzaCase Two couples who claim they v.·ere pressured into parting with $80.000 in a stocJI: market venture have filed suit for that an1ount in Orange County Superior Court. \Valier and Avis Elliott of Santa Ana and Russ and Natalie Boore y, 2501 Har· bor View Drire, Corona del Mar, claim they paid the money -$50,000 by the Elliolls, $.10,000 by the Booreys -on April 29, 1969, to Richard Ruiz, Kenneth and Ii e e Bratcher and Johnnie I.Lee fi1cFadden. They allege they V.'er# lold by Bratcher thal be •as a former presi'denl and board chairman or Satellite Naviga- tion Corporation and that he had learned or a share-split- ting situation in tht company which would P.rove to be a .. financial bonanu." JACK BIDWELL KNOWS THE ' DIFFERENCE They claim they were told that an immediat1 c a s h purchase. of the only available 400 pre-split shares in the organl:r.atlon \.\'ould be the only way in which they could benefit from lhe imminent reorganization. Ruiz. the lawsuit alleges, represented him.self lo be a licensed securities broker able to handle the sale of sbau.s in the Satellite Corp. Subsequent investigation proved a 11 statement! made at the time by the de.fendants to be un- true, the complaint alleges. That same investigation. the suit charges, showed the stock value of Satellite to be nil. Il allegedly was diSC<lvered that the defendants owned no stock in Satellite and Ruiz asserted- ly pocketed one third of the $80.000 contributed by the plaintiffs. Supervisors Oust Seve11 Committees Fast Worke rs OAILV '11Ar 0 t • • ' County Po ison Center A ids Victims >: " • • . .. ORANGE -In Orange emetic Is desirable Jn so m e iron tablets, boric acid. ,.·1 of themselves and rour more ur- CoW"lty, a four.year old drank cases, if a child who has wintergreen, camphor· 1 oil ed common poisons, d(.i.ll:J leak preventative intended for swaJIO\\'ed caustics throws up, and ammonialed mere\.:)· cleaner, arsenic. strychnlni; a car's gasoline line . the caustic severely damages According to Orange County and cyanide. One of every l.iJ From the emergency \\'Ard, body passages on its 11ccond coroner's report, 59 persons Orange Cowity suicide& Js a her physician ,.. phoned the trip through the gullet, said died in the county last yea r of juvenile. Orange County Poison center. Dr. Letcher. The locldlcr accidental )Xlisoning, one dur· ;::=======:::;;;.;-;-;;.:· He gave the brand name on survived. ing fumigation of a house, the container. "If you can't reach you r Drugs and poisons ;··· a S\vlftly searChing the poison O\Vn doctor, call Orange COWi· temptation to suicidal p• No Smoking Signs Posted Final Stocks In All Homo Editions center's files at Orange Coun· ty Medical Center emergency Last year. 77 Orange 1 v t y M e di ca J Center . ·ward-don't waste precious resident! used drugs t i:HI pharmacists found ·no listing time," advised Or. \Villian1 K.ii";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;-;;;;;iiii;;;iiii for "brand X." Fr.iend. Santa Ana pediotri.11 "But within an hour ," said cian. Dr. Friend served as Dr. Kenneth Letcher, chief of chairman of the Prange Coun- the CO!Ully poison ~nler ," \\"e ty ti1edical Association Com. ORANGE -"No Smoking" had the headquarters of the mittee on poisons, which, with signs bave been posted in manufaclurer on the line in the Orange County Pediatl"ic Orange County's big~ fire Texas, had learned that th l' Society. t.l'orked to get the hazard areas by the California leak preventative contained county poison center establish-?~~~:~ b~s ~c:e;~:ie ~~~ talc, \vhiCh is damaging to the ed. brush lands went into effect digestive tract, and from a During A single year of Texas poison consultant, ob· operation from October I, May f. ta'ined instructions for 'he 1969. to September 30, 1970, Elmer Oster1nan. slat~ preferred medical treatment." the center received l.23S calls for1:St ranger and county firt The child recovered. Todav, from physicians asking for chief, said the posted area::; both Orange County PoisOn identification of the poisonous are roughly east of Irvine Center and the national center ingredient of substances in· Park, El Toro and San Juan have on record ingredients ot gested, and pre fer red Capistrano. brand x. treatment. The doctor, while In posted areas, it is against Another Orange c 0 u n t y awaiting an ambulance, may I I See by Today's Want Ads • Giiantic back yard est.ate 1 sale .•. $10-4100! fol.dint chair~. breakfast chai1'S, ! har stools, patio flU"Tliture, and mi.scellanous. • Here"s a Clusic~ Beauti- ful classic rultar \vilh hardshell case, never used, only $65. 0\Vhen all about hiln are losing their heads, Jack has kept his in· tact. lle's refused to compromise his lmpec· cable taste to canforn1 '\.\1ith the \\'him s of cur· rent fads. lie kno\vs the difference bet\veen an influence in a style and a fad that \\'ill be gone in three months. A true haberdasher! prints to offer you the greatest selection 1n Ne .. vport B ea ch . :\II Jack's, shirts are from the gr e a t e st shirt· makers in the business , . G~nt. Enro, and Ex4 cello; among others. 1'hat \\!BY you kno'v you·r(' getting quality along 1vith the Bid111ell service. :\nd if you really \Vant to tie yolll" look together. Jack also has a vast assortment of neCk\vear from Tai· bott •. another r eason to come see good old •• the law to smoke, even in a child , a boy, 2~J years old. ask the parent lo take some vehicle, except al places of tailed to g e t treatment as immediate action such as habitation, improved camp pn:unptly allhough it \\'as diluting I.he poison by having grounds, or places "·here known he had swaUowed soli::t the child drink 111ilk or waler. smok.ing is specifically per1nit-drain cleaner \.\'hich contained Often the poison Is a SANTA ANA -Seven coun· ted by sign, Osterman said. lye. The l.oddler "-'SS not household cleaner. a comtnon l ty committees and study Violation of this section of hospitalized W"llil 4 hours after yard plant or such medicine~ groups which have outlived the coonty Code can result ii a swallowing the caustic. commonly found in lhe home • Trcasu1·e~ to Trinket&.·.·· .irla11s~'a1·C", sportinc goods, 11n1iques, rurnirurt, lineru, 1i!\·er, and other 11oodies. For example, Jack's got all his new spring dress shirts and body shirts in no\v. There are solids, s tr i p e s and their original purpost! "·ere maximum fine of $500 and six Fortunately, he had ool bee11 as aspirin. thyroid tablets, I voted out of existence Tuesday" _.'.'.m::•:::nt'.'.h'.'..'.'.in~ja'.'.il'.:.. -----~g~iv'.'.'"."'....'."'.'..'."~'m'.'.:'.el'.'.ic'.;._:.Whi:::·1:'_:'"::.__:b'.'.'.ir~th'....'.:co~n~1r<>'.'.'.'..l _IP'.'.il".:I''.:.· ~h'.':o~rm~on~•:'·:!;I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-~ by the Orange County Boardl of Supervisors. JACK BIDWELL · 3467 VIA LIDO in NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 ..... Dissolved by the board were t he executive coordinating committee on coastal plan- ning, recreational be a ch es planning committee and the negotiating committee on beaches between Monarch Ba\' and Dana Point. · Duties of all these groups have been takei1 over by tile new Ocean and Shoreline Planning Steering Commil t("!e. Others eliminated include the human relations :studv team . the Orange CountY Airport architectural planning advisory group and the county safety committee. READ THIH SIMPLE RUUSI Once eaoh hour KWIZ annonnces •name on the air. and that person spins the Dream Wheel for a ch&nce at $1,000 cash and hundreds of other prizes. Send a. postcard, or the attached coupon ( ""·itli yo ur name, address and zip code, includin;; phone number) lo i.;WJ z, San la Ana, California, 92703. ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PlEAS --------------------------~ KWIZ DRE.AM WHEEL NAME------------ ADDRESS•------------ CITYr------~-+....--- ZIP·-------------PHONt_ __________ _ . I L--------~-----------~---., Listen for Your Name On The Air! IZ1480 ON THE AM RADIO DIAL 1 DODGE CAR PRICES Ja • START Art~ COLT HOT NEW SUB-COMPACT WITH A 100-HP PUNCH I IT PROVES "SMALL PRICf' DOESN'T MEAN "SMALL CAR'.' GET A FREE AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WHEN YOU BUY ! • Man1facturer's Suggested Retail Price for Dodge Colt 2-door ·coupe, with elf standard equipment, as shown. Price includes deslinofion charges, but does not include srate or local taxes, t1rle or license fees, or other Deoler·esloblished charges, if any, for Deoler-insfalled equipment or services. DESTINATION CH ARGES AllE INCLUDED. Come in and see lhe cor with more of everything I Fo ur Colt models : Coupe JshownJ, Hordrop.1 4·Door Sedan,S!at1on Wagon, otodditionol charge. Order yours today I ' AMER ICA'S NO. 1 COM,ACT VALUEI The Dodge Price Fighters' new Demon is sized with the compacts-priced • with the minis! Room for li\le adults. Huge trunk. Choice of economy engines, Sixes or V8s. Wide choice of op11ans, too I Check Demon before you buy onv small corf llEllEAT Of A SElLOUTI lost year,' lhis hardtop broke oil soles rec ords I We sold out! This year/ our Swinger hardtop is on e\len • better deal. When vou buy· this specially equipped hordtop,j you gef the oulomolic Irons· mission FREE. Check out the' "success sellout" now I Dodge ~!i: AUTHORIZED DEALERS , • ' -· • ' .. : ·. : : ' . . • j ':I. ~· ... ., .-. I •i • I DAILY PILOT Frld1y, M11 14, 1971 Travlin' Sa111 Atayor Sam Yorty or Los Angeles arrived from su n- ny California in Bos ton Thur!day en route to Ne\v J-lampshire to further test his politic.al ~tre.ngth a_s a Presidential can didate for the nations first pr1· mary. Angela's New Judge Has No Great Fears MARTINEZ, Cal~. (AP) - The JOrt spo1';en jurist assign- ed to hear the murder kidnap trial of black militant Angela Davis u ys he has "no great fears or worries ; il's just another case." Judie Richard E. Arnason. appoin~d to the case Thurs- day, hi• a reputation as an extremely calm. courteous Jurist. Arnason, who is ~·bile, Pilot Lost In WWII Found Dead SAN BERNARDINO t UPI I -Failh Sheehan, 75, Thurs· day lost the "llttle hope" she nurtured for the past 27 years. has presided over a wide range or criminal and civil ca&es in this San Francisco suburb. He conducted the murder trial which last Feb. 10 resulted in death :sentences for two gunmen convicted of tying up and shooting in the back of the head a woman and two men durin1 • rural tavern robbery. r.tiss Davis and a codefen- dant , Ruchell Ma&ee, are ac- cused of murder, kidnaping and conspiracy in connecUon with a Marin Co u nty courtroom escape try last Aug. 7 in which a judge and three other men were killed. Miu Davis, 'l1 , is a former philosophy instructor at UCLA and a self professed Com· munisl Magee. 32. is a Hfe term convict at San Quentin prison. By Senate Panel $400 Million Put Back in Welfare SACRAMENTO (API Senate Democrats h a v e pumped 1nore than $ 4 0 0 million into Gov . Reagan ·s welfare budget -restori11g welfare spending lo the cur- rent le vel which Reagan says will bankrupt the state. The action came on a 7.4 party line vote by the Senate Finance C<immittee I a t e Thursday, All four no votes came froni Republicans. One said it would mean "a monumental tax in- crea:ie'' to pass the budget that way . Sen. Stephen P. Teale (0-\Vcst Point ) as he proposed that the committee ignore Reagan's v.·clfare reform program ln preparing to send its budget to the full Senate, probably by the middle of next week. It also sets the stage for crilical negoliations bel\.\'een Reagan and the Oemocra L" \\'ho control both houses of the legisla ture over we I fa re reform and new laxes. In budgeting $573 .6 million for welfare aid in February. Reagan figured on enough savings to balance the budget this year without resorting lo a tax hike. Democrats claim it y,·on't: aren 't likely to pass it all; and QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl "And then it occurred to me, ·~y c~'t a. business· man have a muse· • • • Gover.nor Readies Ow~· Tax Program SACRAMENTO (UPI) "It's questionable," said Gov. Ronald Reagan was Se:n. Fred Marler Jr. IR·Red· repoMed ready to change his ding ). "It's unknown nolf mind today and send the whether \.\'e c1n do it. We 've legislature his own 111 pro-reached agreement on many, gram U a. bipartisan Senate ef-many issues but now ~·e're fort at tax reform falls getting down to two or three through. hard issues." Dlsclosure that the governor A1arltr said the ad hoc com· has a 1>lan ready to introduce mittee was spilt over such came amid strong indications basic issues of whether a pro- that "hard" iSllues separate gram should merely shift tax· Republicans and Democrats es with no net gain in revenu11 trying lo wrile a tar program er whether it should also in· acceptable to both sides. crease taxes to f i n a n c 11 Those in on the negotlation1 hardpressed areas such as voiced IHUe optimism that education. agreement was near. Reagan sponsored but lost It boosts the Republican governor's original S 6. 7 4 billion economy budget to almost $7.5 billion and ii would need almost SI billion in ne~ taxes to be balanced. contend the state needs a tax -----------------------increase anyway to pay for State finance 0 ire ct o r hi.1 property tax relief pro· Verne Orr said the ad-gram last year in the Senate ministration has been writing and campaigned for re-elec· ,its O\.\'n property tar relief lion on a platform that in- package and \\aS "almost fin eluded assurances that he the verge" of intrOOucing it would sponsor another pro- this week but decided to give gram this session. "This protects the life sup- porl items of the people," said State Teen VD Lev els Skyrocket SACRAMENTO llJPI) Nearly 10 percent of California's teen-agers have venerea l disea~ and the in· cidence cou ld rise to one out of two by 1980 unless there is a "major breakthrough," the state board of education was other programs -like new public school aid -that v.·eren't in Reagan's budget By leaving welfare under present budgeting procedure.~. spending for the year startu1g July I ~·ould run $816.6 billion, according to Reagan budget figures. The Finance Com· mittee also added S I 4 6 m i 11 ion in the ~· e I fare- related ~ledi-Cal program or health care for the poor. Hot Botto111 Threat Told \old Thund•y. SAN FRANCISCO (UPll - "If this were measles or A safely expert has warned chicken pox the community girls in miniskirts '1.o stay would be in an uproar," said a"·ay from the steam vent of a Or. Geoffrey Simmons, Tl. controversial new rountain if who treats 250 VD cases a lhev want to av o i d week . "bcirbecued'' bottoms. He said California had Iver Larson. executive vice 100,000 ca11es last year. one _out president of the local chapter of every six in the United of lhe National Safety Council, States. He said nearly IO said Thursday the louvered percent of teenage students in conc rete vent of t h e the 1tal11 have VD. Embarcadero Plaza l''oun tain, '''J'he public health servitt is a $600,000 jumble of hollow predicting it will be one out of blocks. was dangerous. Organisin Fatal to Girl; Infested Creel{ Closed the bipartisan ad hoc Senate!~~~~~~~~~~~~ committee more time to agree.. ··\Ve're quite willing to hold ba ck as long as there is any hope on both parties' part that they can do so," Orr said, ad· ding the legislation would be introductd "if we 're not able LOS ANG ELES (AP) ...'.. A unlikely that the identity of It• gel bipartisan help in the stretch of Deep Creek in the the organism causing her senate." Apple Valley. He spe ria area death \\'OUld have been Sen. Walter Stiern ([).. KID S LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT has been closed on suspicion it Bakersfield), one of I.he sena.te established. harbors the type of organism ,1jla~•~w~c~;1i"~'~·i'~e~po~rl;;•d~.~"~I~w~a~s~~~~~~~~~~~~ that caused the death of a San Be:nardino C 0 u n 1 Y hopeful 'll'e could make it. Bui L-Ong Bea ch girl. heallh officials say technicia11s we may be breaking up." Susan llatliH. 16, died f.1ay 2 from the State Health Oepart- in a Torrance hosp1la! or . an ment are making tellts to infeclion of the brain caused detennine if the organism ex· by Amoeba naglaeri, ac· ists in the Warm Springs area cording to Dr. lrving Li~wack, of Deep Creek. a Long Beach health officer. The U.S.f oresl Service has The orgpnl11m , until recently placed the area off Jimil.ll and tMught _harmless to man, plans 10 chlorinate it. .Jivea In warm pools of stag·_ ------ nan! wall'r. 0. Litwack said.' Miss Jtatlifr had been swim· niing in the creek five days! before she died. UNITED .STATES N ATIONAL B>\NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH A medicul text says in-1 rection of the brair~y amoeba is ahno.st always fatal within ' five days after swimming in staiflant water. It adds there have been only ~• cases of in-I HOW Ol'E H feetion of !he brain by' Amoebn rccord:-d in the ~·orld i since 1965. Dr. Litwack said if ~tiss Rallirf's death had not oc- curred In Harbor General j llOIJlil.11, a teaching -~it~! auociated with UCLA, It 1s SATURDAYS 9 to 1 r.M. MO N.-THUllS. 10.s r .M. FRIDAYS 10·6 r .M. 171 41 S40-S l 11. loceted h1: So. Co11tf rlat•, C11tta Men your repair handled with care seventy-ones at two by 1980. barring any ma. Larson s u g g es I e d a jor breakthrough," he said. smokestack be erecled for "I f this epidemic continues venting a steam boiler. rather unchecked, It will become than the current "hot box" a aature'1 way ol controllln& few feel above the ground . overpopu\aUon.11 Gonorrhea ••can you lm1gln1 what can ceuse sterilization, he would happen if a miniskirted sa;d. grrl sat on ii?" The sarety ,.. The DAILY PILOT-He called for VD instruction pert asked. "Or someone AHi, Vk t l"r ... -M • ..., ... H. M. STOLTE ~~~ :MOO HARBOR BLVD./COITA MESA (714) 640-9100 In the schools and was sup-touched it? They'd be Tops in Loca l Sports ported by Board Member Dr. ib~a~cbe~cu~c~d~."~-=:..::-~1~:;::;,,;~;;;:=~:,,,:,""'"==========~===================== John Ford, a San Diego physi-14 cian . who said, "a child !'hould not be allowed to fini sh junior high school \\'ilhnut some evidence· He has had such in· struction." A military telegram in- formed her that the remains of her son, missing in action during World War JI in t~e Pacific, had been found 1n New Guinea. ''There was alwa ys a liltlt hope le ft even after all lhese year.!! that he could be alive," Mrs. Sheehan said. Nixon Chances i11 State Shown by Electio11 Poll C1and Opening-Month DISCOUNTS! Even i( you missed our fabulous Grand. Opening festivities, you can still tnJ..e a dvantage of the outstanding, spccin l grand opening discounts during the montl1 of 11ay, The Arborotunt loc. is the most amazing garden center you've ever seen and \vc're still celebrating! \'v'e'vc combined ;i nursery, patio cent er, garden l1outiquc, flo\\'Cr shop, 11lant and )andscapc service and a \vholc bunch of experts under one big, beautiful roof Save $4.00 NGbody makes beltfr redwood pl111ters than Patio Wood Products. Md, llObody can sell them 15 low Conversation piece! HAHNS IVY Ll~t Ult unusual? In the t;ad1t!on of topiary. wt asked Select growtl"l to The telegram said her son, Ll. Oliver A. Sheehan Jr., died with nine other men ~·hen his B24 bomber was shot down during a bombing run Dec . I, 1943. The telegrafti reported that Australian offic ials were in New Guinea to investigate a report of a do~·ned World War II aircraft and heard about three other planes that had also been shot dn\\'n. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - \Vilh John Gardner in the field as a fourth candidate, Presi- dent Nixon ~·ouJd carry California in next year's presidential election. the California Poll reported today. But in a three-man race in· eluding George Wallace of Alabama, Nixon would lose to eilhtr Sen. Edmund ~1uskic of t-.1e .. or Sen . Edward Kennedy of Mass .. according to the poll F1·ogs Gathet• Ju111p Fest Stllrts Toda y ANGE\,.'\ CA.\1P tUPll -T11·0 thousand croaking con- testants limbered up l.od11y for the lntemalional J umping Frog Jubilee -\.\•hile their sponsors told stories that \.\'Ould makr ,\lark T\\·a1n proud. The froi.is gathered -11·herc else? -at "Froglo\vn.'' as the Cal:n eras County Fairgrounds is kno~11 during the annual 1umping contest, to praclice their \.\'eekend leaps for glorv. The.contest co1nmcmorates T~·ain's famous short story or gold ru11h da~·s in thill old mining camp: "The celebrtiled jumpin5? frog Calaveras C<iunty." . . ~lontana·s govemor and a San Francisco frog trainer tried to outdo Twain in the tall tale department ! :ov. Forres t H. Anderson of ~1 ontana bo\.\'ed out of the contest. saving he couldn't gel his entry chipped out of frozen mud and unllmbered In time. lie turned down the offer of a local leaper on ground!i ~1ontana shouldn't be represented bv a merccnan•. \\.'illiam c· .Steed. a San Franciscan "'ho jockeyed his Arkans:is frog to victory in the governor's jump last year, said his entry !his time was "Hoppy Longie." an 11p1ly named leaper found in a Chine~ meat market. • Slctd. :i ping pong enthusiast. said Hoppy Longie fell asleep on U1e pad in his cage \\'hile "'atching a I.able tennis :;came. hypnotized by the bouncing ball. So. the trainer said. 1ie 1dipped a speaker bt"!nealh the frog's pillow and played "poaiUve suggestions" on jumping lo him. '· "It's workin& wondcn." uld Slttct "Now he really &i'ortnes out tn pr•ctice Jumpa.'' ~ Gov. Milton J, Sh.tpp of Pennsylv11ni11 also reported ,.;..,bl .. In provJdlni an entry. lib "f'ro1. Snake and TurUe r. .. :::: .. rtported a rt•I Jumper w11 nol 1v1Uablr, Shapp d. "8t the 1ov1mor 1wo~ a secretly tralntd entry ~med 11SnowfJake" would be available for the. contest. ~-The tntrJet in Sunday'• crand finals include reprt- ~t.tJves of 10 fortian countrf11, 19 governors and 36 ~ .... operated by Mervin f'1eld. Anolher Democratic senator. Hubert Humphrey, would lose in California to Nixon in either a three or four man race, the poll reported. Gardner. a Republican and Secretarv of Health , Educa- tion arid \Vclfare in the Johnson adniinistration. i s founder and head of a citizens lobby group known as "Com- mon Cause" and clai rning in excess of J.10,000 nic1nlx·rs The poll. l<1kcn April 26-,\fay 3. sampled J.050 persons in a cross-section weighted f o r variables such as party af- filiation. urbanization. and socio-economic status. I t covered 547 Democrats. 363 Republicans and 140 other. Half of the 1,050 intervie~·ed voted on a lhree -m an presidential race and half on a four-man one. ~·ith Gardnrr lncluded. Gardner \\'Ould ~et more votes than \Vall<ice, the poll shO\l'Cd. but al !he e.~· pensc of !he Democratic can· didate, be he Muskie, Kennedy or Humphrey. c:ardner polled a consistent ~ percent no mallcr v•hn was the Democra tic candidate. \\lith Gardner making it a four-ma n race. Nixon out- pollrd Muskie U.36, Kennedy 44.34 a.nd •lumphrey 43-32. Phospha te Ban ~l ov in g A lung SACRE ~1EXTO (AP 1 -A 1)111 lo b<1n all phn<ipha1C' del{'rg1•nt s •n falifon11a by 1974 goes lo !he Assembly \Vay~ and ~trans Committee today after ~'Inning approval In the Assembly's Env ironmt:ntal Qui'l\itv Com- millet. The tnvlronmtnl commlllee unanlmously approved the bill by Assrmblyman Ernest La <Mite tO·Modlato). o v tr strong objections from the na- tlon&I Soap and Oetergcnl to help you 'vilh all your gardening nnd outdoor 11ecds. And, \Ve save you a lot of money, to bool! Don'l Iorgcl lo ask for your f rec "Think Green" bumper ~ticker. It's good for the ecology! <•t.ut love ly Hahns Ivy into ctnt -shaptd pyram ids. Wilt until you fr.ut your ciardrn-grttri tyts on thlt ltaut iful i;rttrl er varitgated ralio plant! Over 3 fttl tall . Rti;. Sl2.'?8 Truckload Sale! WhyW~I? REDWOOD ROUNDS IN STANT LAWN w~ stll slude cheap! lh1 best tree sele~tion ff'flm Y1Jl1y Crtst Tree Co. In Orange County! B11u\ilul specimens r•1dy to pl1nl. 9'.\0' lli~lt. In lS-1al!on containe rs. 81azilian Pepper, C11list1mon, £vergreen Elm, [vergreen Pea1s, 1tc. (We'll deli~er a~d pl1nt at nominal cost!. Regular SJS trets $29" No need to wait for 1rttn anymou! Just roll out !he grten c11ptl -ins11nt 1r1s~ l1fm C1l-Tu rf. for new J1wns 01 to rtp1ir your p1tstnt _,. one. We have txptrh to f/A.\--;j -'~ idvise you. 7Y2 sq._ It. nills. ~1(\lK"' ~ -J.:) Blue Gr1ss Mii $ ltt ~ -. . D;dtondri 1}41 5 PIECE PATI O/POOL SET W e ho"nor Bank.Americard & MasterCharge Homs: 8-6PM DaUy Including Sunday ~dd an tltt~I lll<l~ ta your patio or poolside 'llt!h th rs be1u\1tul 5 pc. palio ICE.PLANT wrmn ttl t~at won't put you in hoc~! Uniweld constructio", ilnc-plaled ins ide and out, icrylic tn1mel lin1sh, l ir1in plasllc. hand·!itd bands. 42~ round 11lrly• tempered obs.cu1e glass table! How c1n you 10 'II/on&! 1"nd lJ37 " -::.~~ Gallon Sale! Now! An e1sitr my to get rid of weeds il'I ice pt1nt. Speci1I liquid spr1y formula kills wetds, won't tiarm Ice plant. S11 111110 weeds! l g1llo11 truts up to 1 OC'A1 squ1r1 frrt. Sotcld 13 u 11!, A~sociat lon 11.nd Procter 1..:1 _________________________________________________________ _ Gamble Co 1- '• For The Record Marriage Li c e nse s IN O•AN•I COUNTY MIY HI! LASOltOA·IUTTS -Fr1ncl1. JO ol 6JQJ L11dlow. G1rd111 Grewe i nd Jvne M .. 11 ol '"' Unlv1r11 Av1 .. Wntn1ln1t1r It AU 5CHENIACH·llltEDEHOFT -F•e<11rlc• M., 51 o! lCJ C1rn1llon Ave .. Corona dtl M~ Ind JO'ICI P., ~• ol Coron• dtl Mt•. l!VANS.AKHOFF -S11nte~ Iii ., ?l ol 75}1 Voltl Orlvt , Huntlnl!Ofl Bt~tn l l'ICI K 11hlHn L., JI ol Hllfllln9tOll 811ch HOLLAND·HOYT -Gr"°"' R ~ ,, of 1'151 Nt"'-1, Tu1!1n t nd Grttl C., 25 ol 201 On~•. lltlbo1 lllttld I HEFFIELD-GltANT --.111n W .. 11 o! J.05 Anni Drive. Anthtll'I t nd Ptlrltlt R ' n or 515 Vl"Ol'\a, Co.ti Me11 f !NLEY JE.t!KINS -Rl!ocle5 A~ 51 ol U05 Wei.I Mtrtellt L1,.., Stnll Ant tnd Els!• B .• lt ot •M Ce<>ltr Slrttt. C0$11 Mtu SMITH·OWEN -Mlchttl E .• 11 ol '°'1 M!l!M Clrcl,, Mt.lnllnllon ltttn tnd Cltrt S, 11 ol 1011 Walrlul #wt .. Tv1!111 l lNNS·Hll ... AO -Cl••~ II ,. 1' ol 1760C PomoN ,t,ve, C01!1 Mtll •"" c11rl1llrw o., n Of IS6j Orui1re1, 51,.. , .... n. $UTTON·BA0WN -Byron W .• l't or ftj Cummll\Sll Pl1ce. l1tun1 r!t&cll 11'\d JOl'CI I' .• :n of l1•un1 811cl• DAWSON·WE.l.VfA -Otnn\1 .I.., 7j ill !O'U7 M1cOufr, S11"t"" 1"'1 Elltibttll A .. II ol 1Q7•1 M1cOufl. S!lnle111 (;llEEN·AAO!Stt -Hi!rOld N,. 38 ol ''312 Vii L•••· Mlulon Vlelo •nd P1trlcl1 A .• JS of l&JG.1111'1 Sl••1t, N1wJ)Ol"t 8e1ch f)AV!050N·r!UATZO -F•lnl< D .. 1j cl •olfl 51n1t1, Co1!il Mtll Ind Mtdt A . l1 or CONtil Mt•• WHITTLE·r!AU8Al(EA -No•m1n V,. 71 of 133~1 ,1r,m1rlllo D rlYt. We1tmln11 .. r Ind 81rb1•1 A., It ol 151 Soulh w .. 1d111!1r. Anal\1Jm. Ml¥ •Ill S!MENT,lr,L.SPAUIGER: -Mil""ll '1. cl ~ How1rd Strffl. LO& Al1m ilH 1.,.; Ol1n1 l., 2~ ol LOI .1.ltmllot. IEXTON·A!ILE -J1m11 E .• ?• ol l loO Gltn~yre, L11u"' 811cll 1"" L1ur1 D. It, ol L1gun1 8t1ch. f l !ILE·BASS -lYlt C., ?• Of 11"0 TtmPle tl!ll1 Orlvt. Lttu,,. 8t1ch 1nd Ol1n1 L., 13. ol IDl H1v1nllur11 Polnl, LI Jo\11. SEll!IO.McklnllY -JOH"" G .• " ol llllll .t..dllnd Slrttl, Gtrdtn G•Cvl 10\d (ht•¥1 J , II ol 9l60 Mlcll1<1n AYt., Wtllmln1trr. WE8ER:-LIEN -D1n!1I F .• 11 ol 105~ Ktn,,_1 L1n1. Stinton "'" Chrlll• I .• 16 Of l).jl Glenn H.>llY Or .• ,1.,.,.. tlt'lm, Dissol11tions Of Jtf a1•riage !n1trt41 Mtv 1 Hucktb1, J•cautlln• T. I ncl Tl>,,...11 A. Tl'lcm11M>n, N1illnt "· incl John W. 81itl>l1lclt, Ccltne Oorll 1nd 11\emts Arthur l.f9tt1. L&lt Ev~!yn incl Hoth M•!hl~ McAflf9. M1rv "· 1!'lcl Mlltt.tw W. :Ji n..,., llettv J Ind IC~nnell! I!!. !tlcldo, Lturc It. 1nd Elnt J. CMenl!••cl, M1rv Cl1lr~ &nd Jfftltl L_._1rcl l luner. Cl\rl1t!1'11 Mtrle ind Terrv Gene Cave~. Jtme• A. i ncl M~lllt .., Gtmmtll. R:ulll G Ind Gi lt M Wtt~I. Ct rmen M tnd Arl!'llJr Jtoy Wesr, J1nl• G1vlt t!'lcl Donnv Htlt M1rt, Joon Cl1ltt 1nd R~rt Eu•tnt Olds. P1lrkl1 E. Ind LloYd Evt•tll Ptn!c. Mt!b• J~~n 1...t OtlD Garcl1, M1rl1 Eleni ind Aooaelie Ltt, Mlelolfl Stelltlon tnd K.trtn E. Mcoc.k. rleTTY J. l nCI J. c. Orlota. Silty fftCI Ct rla1 G. Muctdo. $111r!t\ Ind Aobtrl Scat! Srtw1rl. J1caut ne O •nd ,t..ndrew .I.. $1,,,,11, P1mel1 1nd Vldlut Conley. Mori• J. c . and Jtat...rt L. Lt Aole, Cl!artts llleft1rcl Ind ICl!hleen Marv Cnrnl1-1v. C1rolt Ann Ind Acbtr1 Em· melt l 1!1klet, Chrl1 G 1...t Atn& L, Vllhtuer, Ncrm1n .I,, tnd K1ren Su11,.. Ml~~llell, Vlr1lnl1 C-er tnd Jat>n Wl!lltm Swill. Rt~CCI Ann 1...t Mlcllltl 0. G11ry, Sut1n J. ind TllOITlli H. Tlntltv. Ktlh••n L. 1nd Ch1r1e1 E. .l.tllo, Mlrlf\1 M. tod F•1nk .., Jr. WM!f. Evt Plu1rcl tnd H~wtrd Curll! De at h No tices CAil.i.HO DIYICI E Car1'10. l1• Buc~ ... 11 Ro1d, Coate Mt ... 0 1!1 or dt'l!h. M1V 1'. 5~•­ ..... ~ bv wilt , M1rY E C•r1no. ot !llt l>omt; 1<1n, OtYlcl M . Of HIWfli; OI•• tnfl , Mr. Incl Mrl Mlc,,ttl 5. C1r1'10 I r., Ga«llln Gro"t; 1>rollltr. Mlc"-tl S. (•r1'10 Jr , Glfck'I G•DVt ; tltltrl, Mir· 1art! FOlll'ltl, G1rc11n Gr11Yl 1 ,lr,nne O-trlo, Glenclllc Gr1v1tl!11 lefYlct1. l1turd1.,, M1v IS. P•tlllc vr1w ~emc•l•I ....... P1tll•t View Mot1uarY, Dorec:IO•I C"'llLTON Guv E. C1r11on. ~?0-P .l.vtnldl St Y1ll1. L1gun1 Hill1. 0111 ol !Mlf!ll. M1• U. 11rvlc t• ot ndl111 11 McCormick L11u~• l\Htl! MclrTUlfY. HASTll'tOS Cnr\u;~, M "41111ng1 JOl M1t'10!11 D•' L••u~• 8••<11. Dllt ol c1e1111, MIV \l. Slrv•cts ...,...,;~g 11 McCorft'llt~ l 11un1 l!ttch Mcr1u1•• NVWENING ""'" Ro•• "hwenl"g US9! Lo• S•"1no1, L•tu,.. Nltutl. D•!O of d11t11, M1¥ 11. l ur,.lvfcl ~" 10~. 11:011 l l ·•Ut . Coro"~ •ti Ml•; lwa dtuDMtrs. Ml¥ Elltn f!dgg,. Ltgun~ Nlgut l; 811!• R 11:11, Coron• atl M~r; II gr1ndchlld•tn1 elg~I 1 ,111 . gr~ncf(.llildrt" Prlv1 1t Hrvlce1 "'eft' htlcl Fria8v et P~cl!lc View M~· morlil P1rk 1'1mllv 1ugge1!1 '"011 wlil\lng 10 make memor\11 cor1lrlt1ullon1. oteiie <on!tltlult 10 l~elr 11~0•1!1 chi•· UV Ptclllc view Mo•tu1•¥· Olr1c!o•1. . SIM$ 1'l¥m<>ncl E Simi 01 Htrbor l!IYd · So l:r>. s1"11 "'""· Se•v1ce1 .,.nolne 11 !!ti! tlrotdwlr Mor!u1rr. W,lr,LL 11,,"''' A. Wall. lOIOl S. Cc11! Hl1~w1v. louth L19Ufll. O•!f ol Cl,,.lf\. Ml¥ u. St•Ylctl plfl(llno 11 McCormick L19un1 8e1t" Mcr11i1rv. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 6'&-4888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES C:Orona del !\far 673-9450 Costa P.1esa 6.f.6-%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Me1a LI 8-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'795 Laguna Canyon Rd. IM-9'11 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Ch1pd J500 Paclffc 'view Drive Newport Beaclo, CtlHOl'llla flU!OI • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '7801 Bolu A"e. Westminster P3-3W • s•mn·s MORTUARY 1%'1 l\1aln SI. 5""'539 Huntington 6eacb • Private Schools ' Set Hours SANTA ANA -Private schools througbout Oran.11 County will observe Privat~ Education Day Sunday. Msgr. John J. Reilly, prln· cipal or Mater Del High School in Santa Ana, said the purpose of Private Education Day is to "focus attention on tne con- tributions to education being made by non-public schools." The Private Education Day activities scheduled Sunday are open to the public. The rollowing is a partial listing of the activities planned by area Catholic schools: -St. Jolla t b e Bap- tist School, IO'll Baker St., Costa Mesa. open house from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. -St. Joachim School, 1964 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, an· nual art festival from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Parish Hali. Classroom facilities wilt be open from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. -St. Francis of Assisi Catholic S c b o o J 1 20400 Magnolia St .. Hunt l n gt on Beach. offers displays of teaching techniques a n d classroom equipment from 1:30'p.m. to 4 p.m. -ft.later Oei High School, 1202 W. Edinger Ave .. Santa Ana, open house from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. -St. Barbara's Cat ho I le School, 5306 W. McFadden Ave., open house from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. -Service High School. 1952 W. La Palma Ave., Anaheim. open house from . noon to 3 p.m. -Our Lady Queen of Angeli School, 2M6 Mar V I s t a , Newport Beach , demonstra- tion classes from 1:30 p.m, to 2:30 p.m. -Marywood School, 2811 Villa Real Road, Oran1e. open house from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. 1 Press Club Headliner Feast Slated SANT A ANA -Television personality JohMy_Grant and actor Dean Jones, }?ead up the celebrity list for the Orange Cour'lty Press C I u b ' s an- nual Headliners Banquet May 22. The dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. at the Santa Ana Elk.s Club . Orange County newsmen stage the event to honor men and women who have made headlines during the year for outstanding achievement Honors are exteoded in a variety of fields, incluJing public service, government and communily affairs, medicine, heroism and spor'J. Headliners or the year have included such figures as Presi- dent Nixon. Walt Disney and Judge Robert G a rd n er . Tickets for the hosted cocktail hour and banquet are $10. They are available by writing the Orange County Press Club, P. 0 . Box 1827, Santa Ana. No Activity Sch eduled At El Toro EL TORO -The Marine Corps Air Station here plans no special activities i n observance of Armed Forces Day Saturday. Air station officials noted the April 15 open house wh!ch featured the ''Blue Angels"' was held to recognize Armed Forces Day -a month early. Scheduling connlcts for the precision f I y i n g team necessitated their early IP· pearance. according to Marine Corps spokesmen. Anyone interested may view Marine Corps activities and equipment at Camp Pendleton's Armed Forces Day open house. Saturday. Automobiles will be ad. mltled to Pendleton through the main gate at Oceanside. The gate will be open lrom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Stans to T alk At Coast Mee t U.S. Sttretary of Commen:e Maurice H. Stans will addru,s lhe World Affairs council of Orange County al 7:30 p.m. May 20 at the Newport.er Inn in Newport Beach. ''International Dimension1 of World Trade" will be the subject of Ills talk . • shorty pants ... al I dressed up! softly flowing crepe spl its high, showing off shorty pants Sweet little miss dresses. Young. Lacy. Almost shy. But \VOW! Look what's peeking out. Today's best. Shorty pants. !Bet you thought they couldn 't look this pretty.) How perfect for young ladies who want to feel extra special, extra comfortable. Ju st think how carefree you'll dance the night awpy! Shorty pants plus dress in rayon crepe, sizes 5-13. 34.00 a. lacy bodice dress and shorty pants, chal k white over pink b. mandarin collar dress, braid and posey trim, aquamarine blue c. sheer sleeve dress with cellophane trim, buttercup yellow tTitlY co evening ~hop 97 ' .. •• I r ( I u Friday, MIJ lC, )qJl may co IOUth cOMt plua, "" diego fwy at bristol, cllttl meea; 5~9321 siinp.mond.y thru wturday 10 am to 9:30 pm, sullday llOOll 'tll S p.m • • I DAil Y "LOT 9 • ,. ., ' ' I ' MAVCO ! -· • I • J 0 DAIL V PILOT DICK TRACY SM!! ORAN IC ~R MARTINl5. PLUS ONE rrid~1• May 14, 19?1 M AR:TIN15,EIJ ? wELL ~ SI-IE NEEO$ "SOME O F TI-IE \.lAl R 01= ~E DOG T\.IAT 61T MER." SHE SPILLED ON ME . , t:(Y TUMBLEWEEDS I MAV E MASf'rJNIS, &UT NO OLIVES. By Chester Gould l'vE GOT HER OLIVES. RIGHT HEREWMERE /" · SHE TOSSED -1 'EM. 'iJ ~ By Tom K. Ryan I'l l ~n LOlS OF Pl'OPLf: WOULJ/ LIK£1V HAVE-THIS HORSIE-! A SOAP MllNUFAC1URfR, A COUPLE l'l'.J6 FOOP COMPANIES AN' A fERflllZER PLANT, A GWE-FACTO~Y .... Mun AND JEFF MUSIC, M U51C, Ti..\A,-(;j ALL )Ol.l THINK ABoUTI JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE YES, MISS SPENC.ER:' I ~I NK I HEA.~ THE J::~ONT DOOIZBELL'. JO~NNV .' Wl-IERE D1D YOU 6 ET TMl.T OUTJ::tT ? ...... , ....... ......... ..,_ I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER I ACROSS l l.larble /, Unaltrr Pd 10 Mosl~"1 \, ·11c 14 Colhdt w1t'l i•ld r,.Do1111d 15 R 1v ~r ol Engla11rl IO Limor proph~: 17 Tran;,tory 'l'l Vol111t 20 Ont ~ctin,1 J~ ~ gov,r111)f 11 Caovmc:e ane" 23 'A d1!<1ry co,nmam:I 2) Couvry A lal ~p 1rn.t9r 71. Pr •mary co!Oi 27 Fir" l•pon 2? Oral "n•c oortrv 31 S1t11P01l111~ pail )} U11d1v1rlf'd ·~ r rtnc!1 A111 •11,1 ]!. USA-lan~d~ d•l·u~• q1oun Ahh1 •O Fl•rnJr~ Iii~! H'\Ult~ I{ 51 .... monro ' ~ISCI! llv na.,.. 44 Po\~ flJI 111rrp· i 1~ alor'" 11,. 9'0"''~ IS N11l"h-r nt ll'~r~hl ll'> 47 Called ' ' ) • " " '" " " • ) .,, " •> lO ' " " " " " ,, ,. , .. 50 E-isled SZ Locat ion Yrstr1day's Puzzlr Solvtd: SJ Low oHsllor r island 54 Opposn r of anti S7 Holdprs or r •rta+rr coll .. qr Mf';i•-e AbM. ~~ For 11.1rd·. bl HJ11or~ b4 Nol o.i~ily ~~c: 1ltd bl Notm t fld1r; t.B Ttnd111~ lo Alld ,19~•0 70 M.111'~ n~·11t ll 5tylr 72 A 1:loq1ollil~ ,. 501111~.h d•l1Sl -~ Srdndin~1.ao I 1.'.1111• y"111·~ ' D1'1Al•d j 01 ~ /tll''- 4 Or~1n1• 111gir••1! ~ C'llr '' I·~ e N A<rt!<"~·• OrlStQl!t!li t 10 Q111c k Pllll( Ir~< 11 LoYe ~t!~" 12 Tt10c11as ···-- lrisl1 po-1 I' l11v.~rn u; 111(•t~~~ Z 11or1h 7} Ob<,.1v•d ?4 Styl• of !yp• '1 Outdoor garn' ?8 Sin:,:~ JO L0;19 narra1 •vt ~ 32 !ht Rtp1•ol1· (~I\~ A.bbl. n,.f,.., • fll'rt"{1111g Q•ll111• o\bo• • 1• !1n.11~ • D"cl.1•• l11!or'll~I 110,,1,,.1,. "-1 o\v~l~nt•1~ ~ N ''"I~ loy :o ~1rkn•>~ > • . ' ~ ,, " " l2 " l> " JO " " J5 ,,. .. •l •• ,, •• " " ,,. " " " .. .. " " n ,, ' 5 1 ~ 7 l ;q Boil! •l Sl1~Pt w1i11 ~<\ ~t 4J Ablior ~b Dom"'h~~!r• 48 Prolrs\1011~1 rn a11 51 Drcl~r"d hal, 54 Bc~r doYm ~~ Fttnr'l ~11" ltlCOtnt 5b Goldt·1 ~tJtuett• S& CA1vtd ~to:.• pdl.u ~o o .. , ;1ho 101t b2 Clos~ It l>l Brodo" "'':•' b) (,r,1'.1'1 !}.,~ • o' ~·,, •' ~,' d~~·· <')to bq l.~·· fl \ I· " " " " "' " " l1 " JI ,. .. .. ' >J - " ~ ---," By Al Smith I P o N'T GET ~·; /1 T~E BEAT BUT M AN ,DIG~AT CRA7YDRUM! By Harold Le Doux By Frank Baginski W'MY:l.Jt,.' H AVE To S.AY RED So Louo?! PERKINS MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER PEANUTS /.JH WE'LL l-1•\Vt AR&u,1,~ENT--:·­ B1T f Ef'. /\R.&Ui\lfNT~-· F~J,\l Tl/11E 1V Tit\1E", eur \·VE'LL '\\LIDDLE Tl-4.i:;;:cu.::·H . f • ~~,,;:,:;:_; .-,. -~ ~-·---...,... ........ -; .; -:=;-.. Ll'L ABNER MANL'/ STANL.f.'f f>IN K·K·KID- NAPPEO!.' . I ~s :- ''---' .... _._._,_ ........ -" !iALL Y BANANAS By Al Capp nr MOST·UNCCNTROLLA!>L'/ l\OMANTIC FEENDS IN ALL ~'l-ll L..L.5 .'.'-IF THE"f 1QRTIJRES HIS METHOD"OJT.A. H IM,NO • •. GAL IN°00GPATCH 16 SAFE !.' ' . NO GAL INTH' ..o~'WO~R~L)D~~!(~~~~ rd1\""' By Charles Barsotti : L .'.::::'.._ _ _...,;;.,,,;;:,._.::oJ,,.,, ...... . ··---~~--~ GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS SOME S<:IE~TIST5 . SA<./ Tt-IA'T, !Al ABO!JT" THIRTll 4EARf;, Ttie EARTH'S POPVL.ATIO~ 11!1~1-DOOBLE ! WE 'LL l=IGHT,. TERr;::t8L"f', ~N ~EPEATEr> ...JC.:4$!.JN~, eirr \\µEN ALL 1;· ..., ·'NC' OQNE:., !... 5T11..').. -E:THEi:::. l'EfP Yo<JI! EYt; ON 1'M' CASH REGISTE~ EVE~ MINUTE, \'.1LLIO -· AFTER ALL, ::;.,,_,,,., WE1Vf·HAPA <iOOP PAY. 0000, IOflH Tt-!llJ<'S /,$. O::OWDED AS 'THEIJ ARI! TODA</ •• WHAT 1411µ. rr 8f. Ul<E 'fMliAJ ? By John Miles .... ··~ 1.-.:.:. ~-~.: •.. j fl').hn By Mell COULDN'f WE SPLIT UP JL/5 1 T f.115 ONCE ~ . '~ lo' .. i~ " ,, MR. MUM By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Ballen .:JHAT1S WHAT :r LIKE -A~ llJ-DEPTH • MlAL</SIS OF A S111JATIOIJ. . ' ' ' ., l ·- ,., .. By Saunders and Overgard WE Rf HfilE. GIQLS ' ··IL " l>:i Olli M'D 8U'!' I OUil TlCICC'TS .' ' v ti,E G ... iE ·~.t, .... WlL!. OPE" 1"HE BACll\ TO COUNT US. OF COURSE ! ... 50 STAilT 1-4101""6 OU~··•UH··· BATTLE Si.JPP1.1E5 UNDER XXI~ CLOTH!~/ By Charles M. Schub EVER'< NOW AND MN r eECOME l'lA611ED &< 5EU'·CW8T,; •• 90Vl!~1 f ~; --' ) '·e ' I "" 'il ~ "'" ~ ~~- DENNIS THE MENACE 'I WAS f/WJ.Y ~ f.r ARST. I lll:lU6llT .W.Y~ 1HJ(f ~ WASIT 1 • I I I • ' Ftld.11, May 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT 11 CHECKING •UP• Ann and Abby Not Onl y Noted Twin s By L. ri.t BOYD LOT OF PEOPLE have been bitten by sharks. And Jnost say they felt no pain at the instant . none whatsoever . . . CZAR PJ:o..IER the Great of Jlussia liked to Loss parties. ti.1ost evrry time he picked out some guest at random and forced same to ch1galug an ('normous goblet or vodka. That was not . noble. . .A K~Dt Y CLIENT says your vnlted . celery \\'ill crisp up pronto if you cover it and slic· ed raw potato v.iiUi water in the refri.l!eraLor. Corps?" A. One lo 10 .•. Q.l•.,••m•-••••••111 ''How many teenagers around here work to earn money?" A. Little better than hair ... Q. "The whereabouts cf the old Hatfield-McCoy feud, please." A. \Vest Virginia . I ' "mAT SCHOLAR "'ho t! claimed Ann Landers and ·, Abigail Van Buren are the en-~ ly ramous twins in history was ' :Jtad wrong. sir." writes a Seattle subscr)ber. ' 'W ha t 'j· about Chang and Eng. the origina1 Siamese tw ins of • yesteryear? Romulus and '• Remus, the founders of old Rome? The Van Arsdale \ ! brothers of basketball?" Quite 1 ~· right, quite right. I . researchers found more an /j high school studenthts . 1\ f / tJ 100 COUNT PAPER PLATES Sat." s ... 48' Only IF YOU WANT to know how to put away every day. young lady. multiply your weight by 12. Say you weigh 125 pounds. And you WAnt to stay there. All right. figure 12 times 125 equals l .500. And that's bow many calories you can allow yourself. ri.1ore, you'!! ~et heavier. Fewer. you'll trim doi.•:n. Or so says a medical speri~li~t JN A sroov of Michigan ~ I 1 half sprang forth or a morn-·r HOT 'N COLD CUPS J ;, ing. vittlesless. That needs no , ;l teh:e~n~~:ngir~~~nu~~er:J II Sa~n~y Sun. 3 For 99C [ r~ 100 ct. pack, 9" 'vhlte pa per plal<'!I t. the boys five to one. Ca~ou : f4 ~~ &re idC'al to use for sel'\'in& parly ARGU.\1ENT CONTINUES over v•here a ~entleman shoul d take his pasilion when ;imbling along the thoroughfare with tv.·n larlies. Hetwoen them? To lheir tert? To their ri'lht'.' "Between lhem." said l That's wronj;J'. Either to the left nr lo the right. Always in such a POSi· lion that he can t:i!k to both. if possible, or at least lo one, without turninR away from the other. The etiquette experts insist. exoleln the why of that'.' . . . j Package of 50, 7 oz. insulated CU))ll, ~ WffiCll or the states he~ the ll arf' Ideal for picnics and partiE'S. :• most poetic name? I nominate h:F Colorado. first. Second. Mon- tana. Thitd, Pennsvlvania. \Vere it not for tlle North or South attached t h e r e t o , Carolina certainly would be the most poetic. And the State nf Rhode Island and Providen('e Plantations Is not 1 bad either, if you like free ~ verse. 'l .. !. I , I 50' x 1/2" GARDEN HOSE I J SO'x 1fi'' Plastic hose L~ flexible llght\reight. t:asy 1 to carry. Save ol lh1 ~ .super JO\\ price. 1-~ -. I CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. ''How many shots in a quart of whiskev?" A. Just 21 plus ..• Q. "\Vhal"s the ratio of of- ficers to men In the ?.farine Your questions and com-i 1nents are welcomed ond j will be used in Checking t-1 Up wherever poss i bl t . ,1 Please addres1 your letter3 • n . ·~ to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Be a ch, 92660. ~ 20W & JOW PENNZOIL 36" WIDE 100°/o JUTE BURLAP .. Nuclear Deterrent Arsenals Still Grow 35 " Sat. & Sun. 44¢ Sat. & Sun. I' Only . . . . . . . . . . YD . 1 Only · · · • · · · · QT. t Ideal for curtains and decorating 36" \\1ide. Asst. -' The tough film motor oil with Z7 -20\V and 30\V. l t colors. I I II I , ., By \\'(LJ.JA!\1 L. R\' AN A" 5Pll'Cltl Cotrt-1141H11 \Vhal \Vinsto n Churchill described as the "balance of terror'' seems to ha ve V.'Orked for a quarter of a century to prevent the two superpowers rrom making nuclear war. \Viii it continue to work? A research scientist or the Rand Corporation 5uggests !hat there ;ire grave reasons to doubt that it will. Perhaps. he hints, the whole policy of mutual deterrence is based upon dangerous illusions. The Soviet Union and the United States for years have been caught up in a grim self escalating arms race. 'Ille Russians profess lo seek only parity "'ith the Americans. bu t. every time they draw near. the United States feels im~lled to protect its "deter· rent'' capabilily by adding lo it yet a~ain. "At first blush, thi!I ex4 elusive reliance on the Great Deterrent. , , .has impressive arguments in its ravor," says Fred Cha rles lkle in a lllim book caller. "Every \\f ar ~lust End." published recently by Columbia University Press. One of the most important arguments for deterrents is that, since \Vorld War II. nuclear weapons have been unused, though arsenals have grown enormously. ~ r, a v.•ar in which nuclear·l"'""""""'""'"""" .. mc;;:;m:::ma:m .. m >w:n:1'!l"ll:" .1:-: .;.__...._·~"! "' weapons are lo be used into .. ~7-T :::;;l"' '.~q the closest possible rela- tionship with the war's out· come. But this attempt is en- dangered by many or the reverse processes that have so often prevented governments from either f u 11 y un· derstanding c r efrectlvely planning the termin ation of wars." There are frightentn g arguments, he says, agalnst relying en the deterrence strategy: The United States might have "retaliatory" capacity to respond to a first strike, but the national leaders ·would have to think about the fate of a devastated country and perhaps "realize that what re· mains er the nation's future would largely depend on how the war. which had just btgun, would come lo an end." It might, he suggests. seem v.·iser to forego the revenge TOMATOES & COLEUS IN QUARTS Sat. & Sun. strike . Onty ............ . -Deterrence can be ef· leclive only against a Bu y several at this low Kmart price and deliberately planned attack. Thus. the aggressor wculd Summer Planting. save on Pre- have given much thought to 6 4 1 74 his chances of profiting fromlP--------------------. C l it. Jn this event, the aggressor could easily misread the abili· Use Your I • ty and the will cf the attacked 8-12-16 balanred plant ' ~ to respond. Kmart Charge I I I -Accidental nuclear war I food, soil fl('nrtrant. I~ circumstances which would make the idea of deterrence BankAmerlcard gf'r )'lelds at flrmrr fuJl.fla-~PCL<;, controls \\'{'eds. meaningless. An unauthorized vored lrui1. 5 lb!!. 18" TABLE TOP GRILL Sot. & Sun. Only ....... . Avacado xreen steel table burn-proof leg triangle, .. 1.74 top grill. Sturdy ne\v Polyester Double Knits Re9. 4.44 Sat. & Sun. Only No iron fini&h. 511"/GO'' po1)'1'Sler doublr knits in jacquard v.·eaves, minl \1•afflrs. creprs, tv.·ills. ?ohichinr \\l'-h 11nd "Ho"'evcr." lkle w r i I e f, "!he exclusive relianct. on nuclear deterrPnce appears Jess comforting -indeed. deepl y troubling -H i!s many limitations are taken into con· sideralion. Deterrence must be viev.'ed In a strategy that seeks to bring the initiation of co u Id er UP t Under Or :S lb, box tomato food. For big-ff't'ds roses, kill!! In· ~ or accidental launch cou1d 1 ._ ___________________ _. ll<::=:.-;;;-~----...,,.,,.-p .• --. ,. -,.--··· • 1,... I ~.In== re s u J t in unprecedented destruction and lead to run nuclear war. No threat of deterrence ls Insurance against accident. tumbll" dry. ,J-'"! -"t.- • ~ easy-cart 1ctivt·Wt1r CJ" ~•l'l\•1r11ric 1r• e 1P1 t1f1r ch•rt• ) f•1hi•11 hl•nol, fltwport 11 11t1r 644·10'0 ·.J· 20 GALLON TRASH CAN Sat. & Sun. 2 $3 00 Only FOR e Jleavy duty, 20 gal. galvanized (arba11e can "·ilh tight filling lld. Limit 2 per coupon. • .. ~. I I I I I I I • I --~ COSTA MESA 2200 HARBOR ILVD. (11t W il1on) ORCHID TOWELS Sat & Sun. 18¢ Only 1\1 n ply to\\'t>l! \\'Ork and fef'l Jlk,. cloth. Asst. colors. Llmll 4 prr roupon. ,~·I"; dlfl w KODACHROME X FILM Sot. & Sun. $1 27 Only • h'X 126-20 rxposurr cartrldJ:f' 11101 101· In!la-malic color ~lidc~. Sa\••• at this 1011· l\mar•t Jll'll'E', Umll 4 per ('(l11po11. I HUNTINGTON BEACH 19101 MA-GNOLIA (11tGerfleldl I I I Propert~· Tax Ct1l~ Disr11ss t•rl H~ I.ill IS l'AS."1''1~' \\' \Slll'.'\\;1\l:'\ (1'1'! I \\ h1·1~·r \ 1"U r1·n1 ,,r "1111 ',1ur 1 h1\11H' Nh"ul :•~ l'('t'•'t'lll 11f ~ 1' 1• h>titil f\J't'lllhtur<' h•I h"u<1n,,: T"rJ"1'.'~rn1~ '"" C\l.q 11f h1i.•;tl 1"''1"'111 l~\r Ttioi·~<' 1.t \1'• h:t1 ,. lwn tl•111;; ~lttph'. In 1<1•111t \\•11111u111111r• '""' If' t:•'llW° Uj' ,IS n1u.·h /0(, 61\fl pt11 r n! "' rr tht \\,t~I :\1 Th.11 11\1'.ll\( A 111:41\ \\Ill• t\i\l\ji;ht A th'11•1' Ul l!l..~l \< 111111 h.111n,i: h' I''·' 11p t.1 f11" 1nn1·~ Al' llllk'h Ill Al\1\11.1! \\l\lj'<lt'~I IA \t'~ -'~ hr r!J,:UM1 1\ll l'h.11 kutd 1\{ thi~ 11n'\'L( f<'tl\1\~ bud.i.:"1~ TA\.jl,\l'l"C' l'ol'\\tC'.•I~ A.ti'.Aln~t JX'\i't"·~ ltl l<'l' .. N' j:t'l!ll\):: ~'l.tdo.•r hy lhf' ~"·'r. ~111 Iii llhi;ll.lf ~'llHf' ~~ .... IYl\\1'111$ I" I I ~ 11ih.\ko J'f\'f'i:'l1 1 l.1l • i1l'lt'i\\. t lw-1 'no 11\"ll hltl1 11•1 d._, "\l"·n .,,-d_ I l '1!1 -'ftd (',\U ni~ i:.11vrnn1t'nll' .,,. h r a 1· 1 I ~ I ~k-n1 .~ t\l'\'i~~ 111,r~_ 11 l'\11."'h tlruis 1n ~t'>.'4.1! ~ t'll"r· -,\( 1\i.-\:-"'-'Alh r;ll"'f'I~ l"'l"\V'm"' \t .a llnW' v.hr-n tht-1 j AN' ,k.:.11oc.·~llilt"~~ ~t'<'l.!I\( :\,l ;\ 1: t••n .-! f~in,i ~, 1,•: .l' ~·\ N"T\11\l't\\:'> \IOUl.i <''\"f\:<;..t1 ~I UT\lh;nl.Al\-.\' ;\M\ •~'l"f'A~ I~ \hNr h~A\ 1,,1..r ft'\'fll P.."'-"'f"'r:~ I IA'l:.t'~ ~I ttwrr-.s:f \ \l\l v. a1-< \r. •ha. (lll'f""'r\I. ll.\'C~ ('l.X\\l.i t'\t' ~ k-~ b...!'\..m~,,w-'"" ·~ "'"""'-t'f tam.' "'.{l\r.'\.11 "~ .,..,,,. ... 'tl'l"C'I li\ ~ht 1'?'\.'-~ N'\t"~,if t ~alr •\I 'h,,~a: t:'''t"t'T":-'W'fl:( 'f'i~ tN iY'~' :i1. ''-''1:J tv maJt' tn.'«Y ~ .:rlA~'t' Stur.i1t$-tl1 :ht-~' ~.p tn..c;n:-.J!t-"t'> ANf ,~}!« I N~i.AI r r ~ r .a·,· \'l):•r.a:a:,.w 1~1 tht"'Jt tl" 1:0.Ai $-U ~ S ! .I I\: I J; 1 L • : ( .' ~ r :"JI 1' ,• 1 t S I t.t\ .. ~~:_( "' f<"".'"'•ot fl;'\" f'l"M' A"'t' ,-,1.mm.-n ;·\J.•r 1 ~~-....: t!w ''-c·;~ 1'.Y ntf'\[ ,..,. l!'Jt.'~\t~r>::l S~"("! ma,1 IS.\ A ~Ji\ :\"'t\! 13\t\A\~ CJtr ~ :~"'n At\ '-'"'\11:wi-.. \;m\ ".t~ :,• fl.ti !,,.-JI. ~, J'Y'M' ~ \'."1\;U-.l~~ \.I .it -n.r,-. ro.-"'~~v .. ~' th.s ~"'4>\• ~ I< "'"'t'\! f,' •""-.,:!'N<' I s_,.J,'r.".'. ' .. : :-.t" ~":'t\~ -- .1.~1 ,,v.--n .... :. ... ~ l~~ ··~1:~ il'C --.,.~ "'~ .. :.• ~ s-... ..: ,,- 7"1f' :'\'~ •J,J ... 7'1\'.la.."i' !'\"\ ... ..._..-,, .,i\ • J;.f ..... :"'\ .... : .,,,.,,__,.,.~ ~., .. ;T•'t'f'O.~ -~ ·.- "~ .'V -.r~..-, '"'"""'-I. "tr :., ~--r ....... ~ ..... _._ f"\'f'" • .. 'li--.."'r'." (-,, ... ;, .... .. 1,.1.\ (\'"-: .. \•;"'lo.:-. ".--.. . ' < ~ \! ' ......... -.-...... ' ~.t . • ... ':' .~.1;• .... :-...-.. -~·-· • " ""''"'f'Jo t"-J"( -'Ir i.. ,,-:.... .... ("$-• , •• ~~.:;.-;. '-tt ~:tt -.. ~ ·y t'\,~ • 'V ~ •"" .),; ;\J • \?°" ,t ·"-: ... ( \"l""":' .. • ;\-..... ~-, ·~ ~.'\."'!'.,' ' "' \ -.. .. ....... ''"" <(" ..... --... \, .--s ~ ..... -"-"'f .._ ~ ~"\\ .. . "" . ·.~ ,;.., --,..."'I • '(' ' "( -· ' .... --.,. -. -....... I. I .., ;><>--· ,-~ . .. . ..-· . ...... .c-• . . ' ,. "'' ....,, ~ < , " .""',-• . '" "' ;'4.; .. .._....... ........ '.""<." '"""'""" 'O., $.• -, .. , .......... 9\.,: .. ~~ .. ,-..,:~.._ •:\" . , ... :.. ..-~ '(·~ .... .. • .... • ~ .... l .. , .. , J.\ --r.L ''<'rJI'•.: J"\.'. :...."'\,'.~ -. ~ -..... "t<; _.,, ' ~'r.:-... ~ .. .. .... - WI "-...._~ t">6 ~ • s •"'-°'C' [ . i I I ' ' '~ 4A«1h- ' .... '"' p JUST SAT ''CHAIOl ITI'' ' 61< OFF PANTYHOSE • H i~to-toe snlooth fit • foshionoble nude heel •Your choice of colors • One size stretch fit ~ .~ ....... ·rr-. ~ ~-= \f' ZJ 88~. llG. 1A9 AUTO COFFEE KIT! ·Plug in to lighter outlet 988 • Sectional cose • Attachmen t bracket 0 2 -'·s · SPlCIAlVALUl ,.-JnU91,, spoons SPECIAL! FLIGHT BAG • ' n....""')·..,:-~Sl.!. ·ec-- • '' ·Ooe'<'~, ')..""'I 7as SPEC IAL SUY BEDDING PLANT PACKS • &, 33~ • ~l pt"-~ • Adci bog'-· cxac: cob: LADIES' BIKINI PANTIES • 100% soft cotton so~ • Eloslici1ed leg, wo i•I • Solid or prinls •Sizes 5, 6 and 7 Sil'ICIAL l.YY GOURMET COOK SET 244 • Non·saotch spoons • Frencl>-style wisk • Firm-gri p tongs • Handy wol l rack llG. 3.99 ' \ 28" BOUDOIR LAMP 7sa • Turned-~ UIM • Spun-metcl base • Yirryl shade ·.n trim • Mustor<I, red or r.,,,.. SHQAl 'IAl.UI GARAGE CREEPER • Ha:JwoOO f.ume • Poddo.l """"' 151 ·a..oli!y ~ 544 SllOf -nn w. u t--311 l!O..Y S\l\Sll 1 l l\' 5 PW LAOENEGA TO I ANa .... t'~ ~ ..... ->. "'-' :..""""" ~:-.:: - \I,~ C'" i-<. 'bNil"W ..... -:":: DIAMOND RING SET • 14K gold setting 59sa • Florentine finish • Rose petal design • Matching band SPICIAL 'I.I.LUI I • HOT WHEEL SllnERs 1~ • Famous Mattel• COT$ • Most popular models • Race '~S'W'Cp 'em • look like the reol can 110..1.96 s2 OFF SLIPCOVER •Colonial print or .alicl 13ss • Moch">e ~ble • Sniaoth. stretch fi t SOFA COVER •• 27.88 u&. ,.._" _, -~ ~ s4 OFF SCR&N DOOR 7as • Sh..-cly oluminJm frame • 2'6-' :rs-, 0-..;dths • Mne mesh SO'U!llilg • Emy t<> insmll -11.u SPEOALi~~ ~· ' Barbecued beef on fresh toasted bun! 99c ' '· SPECIAL • Juicy beef slices ' • Delicious sauce • Crisp french fries • Creamy cole slaw ' SHOP EARLY, SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED 51c OFF PAPERBACKS 99: • CUrTent popular tit les • Novels, non-fiction • ''Best Sellers'' • Greet for all ages RIG.1.50 1/2 OFF VINYL TILE 17.~ • Easy.stick 12"x 12" • Oear, durable colors • Use on wood, concre te • M<irry decorator colors R.IG • .14c ANTENNA SPECIAL! • UHF-VHF, color, 8 W • Corro~on resista nt 19.99 ANTENNA . l 5.88 29.99 ANTE NNA. 23.88 9as 1.51 OFF TOILET SEAT • Solid •-ood con.lru ... • So eel enamel nish ·~slant • "ht and pas~! '344 ......... .5 .... _,. !:' ..... --.:· :wo-.:-"!''-.:' --· .. , ... .., ,.._ . .: = ~ ·~ ... , ..... ...__ .... ~ ..... ~ .._ ........ -:--... ...... ~.x ......... • • SOUTHERN CHARM -Dr. and li1rs. Anthony OrlandeJla are as charming as their surroundings as they reflect on this evening's Bayou Ball in the Balboa Bay Club. \Veeping willo\vs, \vrought DAtLY ,ILOT Pl>•I• _, ll lcb1rd ll(ffbltt iron lanterns ·and Southern decor will transforn he club into a New Orleans setting for Ebel! Club me and their husbands and invited guests for the annual fun aising dinner dance. The Laguna Line Londoners Schedule A West Coast First By BARBARA DUARTE Of l~t Ollil' l"ilOI Slllf LOTS OF ENGLISH GOSSIP v.•ill be exchanged for a 'reek as British banker Nigel Valette and his mother ?\lrs. Leonard Valette ar- rive in the Art Colony via Nev.' York. The Valettes will enjoy some Southland sightseeing since they ha ve never been to the \Vest Coast-a surprising fact since they know C\"ery square inch of Europe and the East Coast. .A.ftcr they take a first-eye look at the United States '"ith the aid of USABUS (an unlimited bus pass similar to Eurail travel), they \\'ill arrive here for a vi sit \l'ith Doug and Sally Ree ve. l\laking the visit more memorable i.~ the fa ct Doug \1·as best man at the Valettes' 1~·edding at Swayfield , Lincol nshire. GALA BIRTHDAY PLANS are in the offing for the first anni· \•ersary of the hostess co1nmiJ.tee of the Laguna Beach Art Associalion. The group, \Vhich se rves during art openings and includes some artists and collectors, 'vill meet in the gallery at 1 :30 p.n1. on Tuesday, l\fay 18. Mrs. Fred Briggs. founding member, \Viii handle arrange1nents. Among celebrants are the ?\1mes. James Crowsha\\', Armen Gasparian, Ken Knutsen. l\1ichael ~1 cKec. Gale Pike, Jack Rowe, Harold Smith, Dzintris Vallis, Edn1und Van Deusen, Patricia Challis and Jane Ayres. ' ~men BARBARA DUARTE, 494·9466 .,!fer, Mtr , .. 1'11 S ""' U Fun in the Bayou ' ·Ball Beams .. On Orleans Tonight's the big night as Ebell Club members, husbands and their guests arrive at the Balboa Bay Club and enter the festive splendor of Ne\V Orleans. The patron list for the Laguna Beach affair ha.o; gro\vn. insuring the Bayou Ball will fullfil the charm of the Old South and delight partygoers who '''iii arrive at 7:30 p.m. for a cocktail hour follo,ved by dinner and dancing. Patrons of the annual fund-raising event include Assemblyman Robert Badham, Ors. Joseph E. Jensen Jr .. Herbert Burridge. Kevin Carroll and Vincent P. Car· roll and their Y.'ives, Takashi Kawaratani, Bill ~1arriner, Del Upchurch, Ronald F. Hoover and Frank \Val ler. Other supporters are the Afessrs. and ?\tmes. Paul D. Chisman. Thomas S\vanson. John B. Lawson. Charles Dean, Roy Holm, C. Edward Miller. Cecil B. de Wolf, Jack Stewart, Bertrand S. Kampert, David Phoenix, Harold Odmark, Horace S. Mazel and Raymond Gill. Also signing are the ?\-1essrs. and A1mes. Robert ?\1. Le\vis, Keith A. Kinner, Alan Ferguson, Earl Steer, \Vil- liam l-J. Beck and \Varren Cleary. 1'-tiss l.orna 1'-1ills and the Mmes. Edmund Fairchild, Virginia Savage, Adrian Ackerman, G. W. Luck and John \V. Solomon. Also invited are the Atmes. Linda Smith. Edward Nell, James Kindel Jr., E. Gene Crain, .Tames Schmitz, Kenneth \Vood, Joseph O'Sullivan. l\1ary Jaco bs, Joseph Tomehak, Frank 1nterlandi and Carmel Manto. Deadline Licked in Time for Toda~s Mail ( Family OEAR ANN LANOl-:RS. T am 1t 17- )'ear-old girl y,·hose sister tage 131 i~ driving me nut s. The kid is the original >.Irs. Clean 11nd il is more than I can bear. She citnnot sland lo see a used dish lowel on the ra ck because ii isn·1 neal looking -so she stuffs it in the drawer. \Vant 1 moldy dish toy,·eJ? Come on over. ~fy n1other had to make her stop \•acuuming the rugs because she \\'as .. .-earing them out. She can use a quart or furniture polish in three days. Our silvery,·are needs to be resilvered hecause she has rubbed the plating off. ~veryone in the house has to check with Kis to locale hair brushes, washcloths, even soap. She hide., everything . Almost rvery arg11mcnt in our house can ht tr:iccd ro n1y sister 's super- Waiting for the mail1nan \Vilh invitations in hand are nett to right) Mrs. Bobe.rt O. Basmajian, chairman and l\frs. Lawrence Kittle and l\1rs. Jack Li ght, members of the Las Marineras Auxiliary. The group will host its 14th annual Chan1pagne Silver Tea between 2 and 4 p.m. Thursday, r..1ay 27, in the Irvine Cove home of Mrs. John Northcott. Donations from the spring event will be used for lhe Las fl.1arineras Auxiliary's Newport Beach office of Family Ser· vice in the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce buildin&. • Mess, Finds Sister's Hang-up a Dirtyshame ANN LANDERS neatnes~. \Ve are not slobs, AM. We are a normal ramily, but my sister is driving us looney. What do you suggest? -OHIO sos DEAR 0 : There's more to this than neatnesll. Your sl5ter ha1 an emolional problem. A person "·bo baa a compul1ioa to chase dirt and cannot stand to 1ee 1 used towel on a rack 1!1 driven by 1 fea r or a fetlln( of 1111Jt. 1 111ggesl counseling. PJ·:1\ll ANN LA NDERS: T ha ve read several letters in you r column from peo- ple who despise homosexuals. What dG they want from us ? Would they be satisfied if we were all locked up, isolated from society? Or would they prefer that we 5imply be. shot at sunrise? Why don't people realize that the only difference belwee11 homosexuals and heterosexuals is what we do behind clos· ed doors? We don·t worry about lhcn1. \\'hy should they v.·orry about us? ?\1y roommate .11nd J frequenUy entertain mixed couples and we have many in- teresting friends. \Ve are honorable peo- ple. We don·t play with girls, pretending to be straight, dragging them around to parties as a cover. \Ve believe this is cheap and dishonest. The nolion that gay boy5 are all limp- wristed and swishy is absurd. Many hcmosexual males wi1h whom I am ln- lim::itely acquainted are extreme I y masculine in appearance. dress and man- nerisms. They work at being masculine to avoid detection. I am acquainted with homosexuals who arc successful doctors, I aw ye r •, clergymen, politicians. They are in every walk of life. The closet r{IJeens in lhe pro· fcssions and politics must be very circumspect, howe\'er, because they are subject to blackmail. Isn't this shameful? A year of psychiatric therapy has helped me to accept myself as l am . I now know that I don 't need the friendship cf anycne who views me as a freak . I hope and pray that ooe day 111 people wlll be judged on the basis of what they contribute to humanity and how they treat their fellow man. Wouldn't that be wonderful? -WRITTEN IN BEAU· MONT, MAILED JN NEW ORLEANS DEAR FRIEND1 Ye1, tl would be wonderful -and I prtdlct that one day ll 1''111 t11me lo pa111. DEAR ANN : I ~·a9 touched by the ·- beautiful letter from the t~year~ld boy who was so kind and generou1 lo the old man who lived next door. It was a heart. ~·arming letter and I thank you for it. I'd give 15 years of my lire for a aon like that. -SCARSDALE DEAR SCARS: I'll btt that's about what tbe boy's mother rave -15 yun of her life. Thank1 for wrl1ln1. Alcohol ls no shortcut lo social suectM. If yoq thin k you have to drink to be ao- cepted by your friends, gel the t;ct. Read "Booze and You -for Tr.A-ger1 Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents In C(lin and a long, self·addressed, stamped envelope wl!h your request In care or the DAILY PILOT. /. ,f DAIL V PllOT Peering Around tt11SS !UELODIE .A n n :Keller. daughter of !\1r. and ~rs. Glen Keller of Costa :Mesa, attended the province ·conference of Gamma Phi .Beta in Tempe, Ariz. Miss Keller is a freshman at UCLA and recently was elected ,treasurer of her chapter. A TEA and recital will be i:iven ln Lake Park Clubhou~. Huntington Beach at 3 p.m. Sunday, May 16. The e\•ent Will honor Mrs. Eva Granger, and participating will be music students of Chai"!ie Granger Jr. and his sister, 1ttiss Edna Granger. Junior Leagues Convene \ Observing its golden an· niversary throughaut t he month of May is the AssoCia- tion of the Junior Leagues of America. J=rlday, May 14, 1971 Nutmeat Sale Sweetens ~-lore than 575 delegates Examining the new automatic exposu re camera system donated by their chap- glithered for a ·national con-ter to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Presbyterian. are ftirs. W, Fred Page, vice vention in Colorddo Springs. president (left) and !\1rs. James \V. }lanley, president of Balboa Harbor Alumnae, Colo. tltay 2·6. The Y Gamma .Phi Beta. Explaining the import: a nee of producing precise photomicro· represented 218 Jun i 0 r graphs 1s Dr. Lloyd Sliverman, pathologist. Funds "'ere raised through the Leagues in the United States, cbapter's annual holiday nut sa!e. Canada and Mexico. --'\-'--------''----------------------The convention theme Graduation Upcoming ' Forecast for the Future in· corporated the leagues' goals of reshaping the volunteer programs and the importance of relating ecological realities in planning future trends. Traveling to the convention was l\lrs. John K.iJl.efer. presi- dent of the Ne1vport Harbar Junior League. She was ac- companied by the Mmes. Merill Brown, Lionel \Vest and Kae Ewing. Etiquette Reviewed KATHREENE BRANOT To Say Vowt Graduation announcement etiquette is often perplexing for student and parents. A leading manufacturer of announcements and o th e·r graduation products 0 fr er s these suggestions on how to properly handle t h e an- nouncement of an upcoming graduation. Announcements should be mailed 10 days to l\vo weeks before graduation to insure that everyone on the mailing list receives his announc~mcnt just prior to t~ event. Envelopes should be addressed personally. with pen and ink. The gummed outer envelope should be addressed formally "'ilh a complete mailing ad- Dinner Party Given To Announce Betrothal During a cocktail buffet din- ner party in the Pasadena home ot Mr. and Mrs. Zan John Zak , they announced th~ engagement of th~ir daughter, Justine Louise Zak to Thomas Patrick Dougan Jr., son of Mr. Md Mrs. Thomas Patrick Dougan of Corona del Mar. Guests "'ere f a m i 1 y members of the betrothed cou- ple, who are planning a July 17 wedding in the Church of St. Bede the Venerable, La Canada. Miss Zak is a graduate of Flintridge Sacred H e a r t Academy, Pasadena and at- tended Orange Coast and San Diego State colleges where she majored in home economics. She was prese nted to society during the Los Angele! Alhletlc Club's an nu a I Sweetheart Ball. Her fiance, "'ho crews for his father on the Columbia which was an America's Cup contender, is a graduate of COrona de! !\far High School. A business administration ma- jor, he also attended OCC and SDSC. dress. A void abbreviallons. Your return address may be add~ on the flap of the outer envelope. The inner envelope holding the announcement should bear the names of the person or persons to whom the an- nouncement is being sent. Th is may be expressed informall y, <is : Aunt Mary and Uncle Pau!, Ed\\·ard H arr is , Grandmother. Children of the addressee may be shown here, using the first name only. lf the announcement has a special card, holder for Lhe graduate's personal card. it should be placed in this holder. Jf there is no holder, the card shauld be placed in the fold of the aMouncement so that the graduat~'s name faces away from the te1t. Announcements should be placed in tlfe inner envelope with the folded edge inserted first and the front of the an· nouncemcnt_faclng the flap. Place the inside envelope fac· ing to"'ards the back of the outside envelope when in· serting. The outside envelope should be sealed securely and sent by first class mail. July Date Selected July 17 riles in the Church of Christ. C-Ost.a Mesa are being planned by Kalhreene Louise Brandt and Baron Lee f\iahrling, u•hose betrothal has been alJnounced by h e r parents, tfr. and ~trs. Deene T. Brandt of lfuntington Beach . Wedding Planned Convention Ideas Grow The bride-elect a t t e n d e d Huntington Beach High School and graduated from Founlain Valley High School. Her fiance, son of Mr. and ~trs. Robert B. Mahrling of Fountain Valley, is a graduate of Westminster High School and served in the Army. Xi Xi Pi Views Man The Enjoyment of ~1an \\'ill be discussed when Xi Xi Pi Chapter. Beta Sigmii Phi, meets al 8 p.m. \\'ednesday, !\fay 19. in the Hun!ingtnn Beach home of ~1rs. Ronald Sarouhan. ~!rs. Robert Kremer will present 1he program fnllo"•ing a short business session C(ln- ducted by ~frs. r\ or n1 a n Nieberlein, president. Mr. and ~1rs. Eugene ?. McGo\·ern of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter. Nancy Lee McGovern to David f\1cCon- neH. A June 19 wedding in St. Andrew's Presbyter i an Chapel. Newport Beach is being planned. The bride-to-be is a graduate nf Newpo rt Harbor High School and attends Orange Coast College where she is a member of Epsilon Delta. Her fiance. son of ~Ir. and ?\1rs. Earl n. 1'.1cConnell of Costa Mesa, ls a graduate of Cos ta /\1esa High School. July Plans Announced Federation A Garden of Federation in Bloom will decorate the Hyatt House in Palo Alto Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 20 to 22, when the California Federation of 'Vomen's Clubs, Junior t1embership conducts a state convPntion. Orange District Juniors will Seniors In Tune ll<irbor Senior Citizens' Choral Group directed by 1'.1rs. James Sa"·yer \\'ill tntertain the American Association of Retired Persons. New p o r I Beach Chapter. Fo!lo"·ing a noon luncheon and short business mcetint; the prograrn '¥1'ill begin at I p.m. Thursday , !\lay 20. in the A July wedding in Our Larly l\p1,1·pnrt Harbor Lu l he r a n Qurcn of the Angels Calholic Church. Church is being planned by All persons 55 or over \\'ho J;:ine Elizabeth Krosse and iirc interested in the organiza- Donovan Evans Dorsey. lion are invited to attend the. Parents of lhe betrothed meeting. couple are ritr. and Mrs .l'-~gg~ George T. Krosse of Ne11'oor1 I" Beach and Mr. 11nd f.1rs. Clarence Dorsry of Tu.~tin. 1n Bloom leave en masse on the same I flight from Orange County 1 Airport and l\1rs. Robert I Calderwood wi\\ be installed as the district's president. I Officers will be introduced 1 during banquets of ac-1 comp!ishments taking place at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Mrs.) Grover Seguine Jr.. slate, coordinator, state chairmen 1 and guests will be honored . Mrs. Vernon Cunningham, CF\VC sta te president. and districl presidents. will be honored during the luncheon meeting lakin~ place on Fri- day. wHh officers to be in- st:illed at 8 p.m. S11turday's luncheon theme \\'ill he Look to This D11v and u•ill honor ?ttrs. D11n McKin· non. Junior public affairs rhairm11n. and ourgoing slate officers. Soropt imists Ne\.\tport Harbor Soroptimlst ' Club meets the first three \\'ednesdav!' for a noon lnncheon ·in the DE'rby, C-Osiri f.fesa. Plans far the Beta Sigma Phi state con\•ention laking place Friday, Satu rday and Sunday, May 21. 22 and 23. v:ilJ highlight lhf' business session. f\fr . and ~1r::.. Eldon Dvorak will represent the chapter. l\liss Krosse is a grad11atC' nf Corona clel r.tar High School. attended college in Colorado and is a graduale or the California Professional School of T\tf'dical Assistants. HANG TEN NB Au xiliary Her flance is a U C l the Ladies' Auxiliary of graduate. Newport Bea-ch F'lre -----------, Departmenl gathers the third Kid Llk T Wednesdays at 8 p.m. in S e 0 various locations. Information Situ 6 to 14 AT regarding location may be ASK ANOV 3404 VIA LIDO NEWPORT IEACH Horoscope Leo: Enh.ance Your Image SATURDAY MAY IS By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on friends, hopes, wishes. Social activity is highlighted. You can gain plen. ty now through friend l y associations, contacts. Saglt- tariu1 individual could play key role. Be seen-and see. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Dr.aw attention to talents usually hidden. Means CQme oot of shell. Express yourselr at party, social affair. One who attempts to belittle you will learn a hard lesson. Be confident. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): by financial disagreement. Pa- tience, diplomacy now can ac. compllsh wonders. You may be charged with money obliga- tion not rightly your own. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis is on partnership, marriage, how you relate to public. Be sure to enhance im- age; see people in realistic light. Lie low. Let others have their share of spotlight. VIRGO (Aug. 23,Sepi. 22): Co-Qpera~e witb Gemini in· dividual. Do some digging for additional facts. Don't be satisfied with superficial in· dications. Find reasons: base actions on logic. not impulse. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): I • I . I .. .. . . -.. •• ,, • • K • ~ ' • ,, ' . ~· • • • • • ,, Accent on moving, obtaining answers lo key questions. Vlr10 individual now can pro- ve valuable ally. Don't fight change. Make concessions. Affections a r e stimulated. Impcove relations wilh Africa Revitalized children. Welcome change of scenery. Don't hang on to Enlightening members of the Trojan League of past. Bre11k with one who ob-Orange County on the Dark Continent \Viii be Dr. CANCER: <June 21.JuJy 22): viously is using you. Look to Tracey E. Strevey, historian from the University of future-it is brighter. Southern California, \vhose topic \Viii be A Look at Damestic area may be shaken SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Educational Trends in Africa. Collecting artifacts Strive to present your in-for ~he 10 a.m. meeting and luncheon Tuesday, May Bureau Installs Officers dividua l style. Lead rather 18, 1n the Santa Ana home of Mrs. William Hayward than f o 11 ow . B u i Id for are Mrs. John A1. Billings (left) and Mrs. Fred Bice. future-do so on solid base. ______ _:__:_:..::_~:::_:::::~::::...::::.:::_:_:..:::..:::..::.:_ Installation of officers took place for the Volunteer Bureau of South Orange Coun- ty with Mrs. Don Adkinson ac· cepting presidential d u t i e s from Hugh Mynatt. Other officers include the Mrs. Charles Cotton, vice president ; Mrs. Frank Lynch, secretary, and Ralph Allen , treasurer. New Board members in- clude Kenneth 'Yalker, Mrs. Sadie Reid, Mrs. Thomas Vas- quez, David Crump, James Dods. Mrs. Clarence LaNier. Richard Marowitz. Ca Iv in Stewart and ~1rs. Joh n William s. Certificates of distinguished servi~ were given volunteers includiJlE the Mmes. Fred Arnold , Thomas M cC I a in, Eugene Goda. W a It er Godshall. Reinhold Swanson and Robert Bock. l\1rs. Bock is coordinator for the Well Baby Clinic volunteers. Emphasis is on property, real estate. conditions at home. Stick to facts. SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Stress versatile ap- proach. Displa y intellectual curiosity. Be willing to laugh at your own foibles. Aquarius individual can provide key answers. Be willing to ask-then you learn. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Check' resources. Review budget. Take nothing for granted. One born under Leo exerls oeculiar ch a rm . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle high; be especially accommodating to Sagittari us individual. Take initiative. You get what you want-be sure you know what actually is needed. Don't ask for more than you can handle. PJSCES (Feb. 19·1\1arch 20): f\1uch occurs behind t he scenes. View may be obscured by \l.'ishful think ing. Revise order of priorities. Someone m;iy be pulling \VOOI over you r eyes. Be perceptive. Search for truth. New Slate · Takes Over Nostalgia Returns Night Owls Singing "Keenage" Guys and Gals in costume will present a pro- gram of nostalgic songs when the Night Owls of the Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler Roost meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, 1'.lay 16, in the Bethel Towers, Townscape Visualized Town s cape. Huntington Beach will he the topic when Royce Neuschatz. landscape architect, and Bob Vasquez, assistant city planner speak at the meeting of the Huntington Beach Branch, A m e r i c a n Association of University \Vomen. Planned by riitrs. David Carlberg. chairman of the Human Use of Urban Space Study Group, it will take pl11ce at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, ~1ay Costa /\1esa. Accompanying them in trn!ir varied repertory will be Mrs. Florence MacGinitie, Members of the Harbor Senior Citizen's Choral Group, the 22. singers are directed by Mrs. James Sawyer. A so!o performance will be offered by Mrs. Gloria Rush o( Ontario who will be ac· companied by her mother, Mrs. George Stewert. Reservations now are being accepted for an August visit to the San Diego Night Owl Roos t where a special program is being arranged. Refreshments and decora- tions for Sunday's meeting are being handled by ~1 is 1 Dorothy Dare. chairman , assisted by Mrs. Erik Hansen. CLOSEOUTS PAINTINGS WHOLESALE OR LESS! llfl Pan Avt., Costa M111 Tuei .. Sil.·10 a.m. lo J '·'"· Founding Recalled 19, in Lake Park Clubhouse. Over the Rainba\\' is the"iiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iii0iiiOiiiii theme selected bv l\f rs ·Ill \Vi!liam Halliday · f o r in- Alpha Delta Pi's founding 1211 years ago will b e celebrated · by SouLhe r n California 2lumnae tomorrow during festivities aboard the Princess Louise. Special gLtest will be Mrs. Berne Jacobsen of Seattle, 11 member of the grand council and National Panhel\enic con- ference delegate and trea!urer. Toastmistress will be Mrs. Robert Hartunian of Hun- tington Beach, president of the Southern Area Council. lo O'J th e stall ation ceremonies which she will conduct Tuesday, May 18. in Mesa Verde Country Club. f\1rs. Halliday "'iii be charg- ing new officers of the Coast• \\romen's Club o( Corona del l Mar 1vith their duties. Heading the organi;i;ation for I !he coming yea r will be Mrs. George Fox. and serving on 1 her board "'ill be. the Mmes. Dale l\-tagor. Art Hoodcnpyle and r.1arjorie Feddersen. vice i pre~idents; Jens Andersen. Leslie Penn and Harryl Charlton, secretaries: E. H.I Geiger . treasurer: H11lliday. parliamentarian. ;ind George l Bryson. junior past president. ---- or/J 5-aohiono NOW IN Corona del Mar 1/2 OFF ENTIRE STOCK SAT. & SUN. ONLY 10 a.m. • 6 p.m. lSlS E. COASl HWY. COR ONA DEL MAR Coming May 15 Most We Moke Oar Reul World Intrude On o Child's 11Lollipop Logic"? Bob McGrath, host of TV's "SE·some Street,'' ex. plains wha t he coifs ''lollipop logic." He says that uto get a good look at a child's logic, you have to slip up on it, enler the child's world ever so ca refully, talk very little and listen much." e T~E 'FI RS.T' FONDA -1\t 66, l-l enry Fonda is still on top in the precarious \\·orld of sho\v busi- ness and soine \~·eeks he gets his picture in the pa~er <:ihnost as much as his daughter. Jane. He s this 'reek's Profile subject. e THE 'LAST'.0 1ET -Bryon G. \Vets. \Vho has been O\'er,,·e1g ht most of his life. tells about his ups and do\rns -fro111 first diet to last -in ''l·fov• I Lost 8,000 Pounds." AH Co1nin1? Sa turd ay • 111 the I DAILY PILOT ) obialned by "lling Mr.,. T. C. _________ .. _ J~~~E~~~ ' Dailey, 548-9835. =---.=-:-___ _ ''-~---~-~-·-·-~_;,_._~_ •• _._. _______ __! ... ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' ' . Battle Waged on Jobless Count y Group Aids Troubled Aerospace Industry By JACK BROBACK Ot Ille Dtlty ~llt! 11111 If you have a man-sized pro- blem you must develop a n1an sized solution for that pro. bJe1n . That is the philosophy of the Orange County f\1anagement Council vd1i ch has launched its P r o fessional Opportunities Program lo defeat current un e mplo yment in the aerospace indu stry. The problern is evident enough-21 ,400 jobs ha\'e been lost in !he past 18 months an.i three out of everv five manufacturing jobs in 'orange County are in defense aerospace. FOR EACH sci entist- engineer oul of a job thert' are 7.7 olher supporting jobs lost. The cost to the taxpayers in unemployment pay h a s jumped from $3.9 million to $8.1 million a month, a jump of 225 percent in 15 months. The county ~·e!fare costs are escalating. too. ocr-.tc li~ts th" eight most urgent needs and a proposed solution to then1 : _,..fethod. lndi1·idual a n d sporadi(' group efforts must be coordinated -a kind of guidance s.vstem to direct our mis.sites to their targets. -Funds. Finan"iaJ suoport from go\"ernmenls and in- dustry must be solicited and budgeted to "prime the pump" EDISON MANAGER Robert W. Beck Robert .Beck Heads SCE Robert B. Beck of Hunting. ton Beach has been appointed Southern Califomla Edison C o m p a n y ' !I southeastern divisio n manager with head· qua11ers in Santa Ana. He succeeds Jack H. Kime ~·ho has been transferred to the cotnpany's nor I her n di vision. so that we can tap the well or talent in the unemployed aerospace professional. (The OC!\fC got $100.00 as a starter from the U.S. Department o( Labor). -Orcrvicw. Consider the beneficia l effect of reemploy- ment of these professionals on the general economy as \veil as on the individual. -Job location. Identify ex· isling jobs lying dormant. 1 r-.1ost non·aerospace firms have never applied for an outside contract. government or otherwise. They don't have the expertise to do the job but there are hundred s 0 r unemployed space workers who do). -Talent identification. Iden· tify existing talent and its versatility aOd coordinate it to the existing jobs. -Job Development. Define the new goals and direction! of our count ry and identify what work need be done to ac- complish them . -Retraining. Retrain and reorient existing ta I e n t towards accomplishing the new goals and aspirations. -Support E£forts at self help must be supported and promoted . OC!\otC AND its Pro(es.sional Opportunities Program is trying to become the catalyst to enable the desired in- teraction to take place. The in- gredients to the solution or the unemployment problem exist: OC1'fC hopes to trigger the blend. Joseph Caraway, who heads up the OCMC operation says "'Some attltudes can and will be changed. Industry ~ds to be aware of the versaHLity of the aerospace professional. The professional needs to know that there are com- mercial opportunities open to him." The program's goal is total emoloyn1ent bu th~ leaders realize that it \\'ill take time to achieve. A more realistic rota! or 500 ne1v scientist-engineer jobs by the end of this year is spotlighted. \Vilh the support workers this means 4,000 new jobs. COMMUNITY EVENTS 26th ANNUAL FISH FRY, PARADE & CARNIVAL ARTIST CARAWAY EMPHASIZES that for the program to suc- ceed there must be an ~ timistic business attitude and that new ideas must be f:X· plored. He concludes, ' ' C I o s e coordination and open com· municatlon p r o v i d e d by OCMC. will promote effective utilization of all resources and \\1ill dl.rtct all activities to the ultimate goal of t o t a I employment." It is the first program Of ii.a kind in the nation. Bank Post To Fisher Local Product Displayed ' A new drill pump manufactured by I'IT Jabsco of Costa l\lesa is explained to a stockholder by Harold S. Ganeen, chairman and president of International Telepjione and Telegraph Corp. during I'M''s an· Robert G. Fisher of Ne.,.,.-port nua!' 'meeting now being held in San Die~o. The Beach has been named assis· device, "'hich pumps fluids while being dr1v.en by !ant manager of Crocker-a home electric drill is one of the products on dis· Citizens National 8 an k' 1 pl2y at the meeting. Euclid·Ball office in Anaheim, -'-'------''--------------II it was announced by Harold C. Kipp. senior vi« president and regional manager. Fisher, who has been wilh the bank for 23 yea rs, former- IY v.·as assistant manager at the bank's \Vilmington office. Since joining C r o c k e r - Citizens as a teller in 1947, Fisher has served Crocker· Citizens in various capacities. Fisher is married and bu l\\'O daughters. CAB Cites Continental LOS ANGELES (B\\.')-Con· line ntal Airllnes had the best on-time perfonnance in lhe airline industry during 1970. with 79.3 percent ol its flights arriving on time or within 15 minutes ol schedule, a~nling to a Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB ) rtport. The CAB also noted that Continental ranked first in on- Ume perfonnanct in January 1971, with 80.4 perct.nt. (On- Ume performance reec>rded by the CAB i.! for noMtop filght.s betwten major traffic points 200 miles er more apart.) .,. CAUFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS _._ __ Costa Mesa Newport Ha rbor Lions June 4, 5 & 6 FORD PINTO YAMAHA 125 GRAND PRIZES • P1 rade Televised 4 PM Sat., Channel 5 OF THE MONTH Displaying in our Lobby, May 15 thru June 14 DORIS scon NELSON C~!I Mtw Artist 1PtCi•l11lng l" t•CT\lri"" I~• w1rm~ •nd l"!lllll•tnH• cf cl!l'Grtn. PtOPlt "' •nlmtl•. S~f ~I• pelnl.,;t JO Y•••s In oil• Ind tcryllu , •tvdrlnel tr Ct>orin.rd Art ln"l!1111 In Lo• Antila , 1r>d mott , ... •••"Illy, ... oh J•m .. Cl\lli.r, NtWpotl INth. 1r>d Fr•nk Tenrlello of l.•gun.o INch. Among M'1 N•!"""'' collectan •re Adcllll'la Loe>u MlllO, •~·PfHillMI of Mnlco !now d•ctt.ed ll JO'ln Fehnsroc~. ow.,e; of SIM lt•1l•u••.,'1, ,...,. 1ctor, Vi1Kl!'l11 Edw1r41. EARN ·HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! Beck . 42. pre\'iously was manager or the southern d il·i~ion in Loni:: Beach. He has II!!!!!' been associated \vith the in- ,·es tor--o~·uM electric utility since 1948 \\'hen he began his career in the distr ibution con· struction division. He was ai; poin ted dislricl superintendent at Covina in 1981. Later he served succes~ive l y as northern and southern division suncrintendent of distribution. He was named general superintendent of customer service in 1965, ea s le r n di\·ision manager in 1967. Cl'n· lral division manager in 1968 and l'-Ou thcm division manager in l!liO. Edison's southeastern division is one of si x major service di visions in the com- panv's system. u· cO\'l'r<; Orange County and the southeast~m tip of Los Angeles County. At the close of 1970. the di\·ision acrounted for 23 per· cent of the electric ser.1ice meters on the Edison system . GOLFER'S BARGAIN ' -Q'i Only 25 Min. 'I ~ 1way et San Juen Hill• S•• Jff• CtphlrlM thru f'ridey e G'"~ Ftft (IH!rlr Cu1 11 Holn '°" 7 837·0361 493-1167 ........................ FOR CART RIDDS A f~ l"'1·mawnl Tre ttmt'S are ava lablt> on $111. & Sun. •••••••••••••••••••• PrPJrn~ thl~ 111t f('lr 11 ,REI hu('kf'l nt balls on th(' drh·· .,.. rani::r. 5. 7 5 3 ~~.~··· Certificate Accounts* 5.92% Annual Yield if all savings and interest remain a year. Sf ,000 minimum deposit. 1-year minimum tenn. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 5.253~;1~ual 53 current •nnu1I r•t• 90 Day Certificate Accounts• 5.399/. Annual Yield Passbook Accounts 5.13% Annu1I Ylold If all savings and interest remai n a year. No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. If all savings and Interest remain• year. No minimum deposit Ca lly compounding. Earn from date of deposit. Interest day·in to day.out. ·vJ1thdrawaLs before ma.torily permitted but subjocl to some IO$t. of lntere:ot. Cal!f.9m~~~,!.~.~~!!!!.hlr§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Conveitlen, Olfices lhtoughout Loa Ange In, Orange tnd Ventura CoUntles .-.:.c.ou"tt •'• ll'ltllr.d up to $:?tl,OOO unMr prov1'1°"' of tlM rK.,-11 kYln9s & lc•n ln•11r1nc.• Cofpor•Uott. • Derfl'l-nt -aeney et,,_ United a~ Govwnment. Frld.1y, M..,. lC, 19n DAfl v PILOT I IS THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And the man who lqtowi ju.se hoio to tuni the phra.se to get the most out of tht barb i.J DAILY PILOT column· Ut Sl/(lne11 Harris. He ha.s bttn called the modern -day H e n r v M.a ncken. If you're readt1 for his use of the add adjecti v e and th o u 17 h &-• provoking pro.ft to give 11ou the needle .•. if you want to /ind .something to think about in what 11ou read ... i/ 11ou havt o: sense of humor, you b e J o n g with readers who delight in telling otheri wha t "S11d said" t11 on. of the n.ation'.s m.oa:t • quottd columns-. Some Sample Barbs ' Retently Thrown By Sydney Harris: ''One of the highest paid jobs In Amerlc• consists of tt1ndlng up In front of 1 mic- rophone, 11p1ratlng the good records from th. bed ones -and playing the ltecl ones. H ''lt'1 1ad but true that while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar- cument for a little drink now and then ... "'Most of the so-called 'incompatibility' In fl'l•rrlage 1prln9s from the fact that to most men, HX is 1n act; while to all wemen, It 11 •n emotion. And this differ- 1nc1 In 1ttllud1 c1n be bridged only by love." "TI1e .sole difference between a 'dedica. ted cru1ader' and a 'nosy reformer' coo- i;:ists in our agreement or di sagreement with his objectives." 0 The most explosive combin•tlon in the world consists of 1inc1rity 1dded to Ignorance." "\Vhenever I am the recipient ot an ex- cessively hearty handshake, J .suspect fl.1r. Afuscles i.s trying to sen something, hide something, or prove someUtlng.11 Check The Editorial Page For This Signature It'll Help You Find The Latest Quotables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col- umn, A Regular Feature of the DAILY PILOT You,. Hometown Deily New1p1par JI b.llLY 'ILOT s .Meaning Given Those Dull Money Te1·ms lmpo11ant . ' . ~ -... • OVER TH"£ COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List ...... """' ..... t : ....... " ... r ·~ • A.k ...... MAID. rfjl !) ... 1 ,, .tN 41~ •11.i. -\~ L'rk• ........ ,...... flt ..... ---.,. c-i"""*'-At11 PSO 1.• .. 21~ ~ , "" + ... NASO Llatlnp for Thunday, Mly 13, 1971 ~~= ruJbv ~ ,m 11... 1~ + t l ....... Cl:ll• .. •••tmam••a•••·•·"-' .............. , ... Olr!C.05111 11\t ~ Nlol.-\ti Armc ... t 11 Ila ;tv, ~ +~ -1i. A ... IW ,.,.., Armtl Ck IO 10) YI Jfl'I -~ A.mll Pl' .. 7J ,._ J\li a l" t11'1 -YI •N A~ .. IN "'mCk irf'J 7S 110 60 to + h "'"' •11 '"'° 'I ~ ~ ••• Co<"ll ,. 1 ""' ,,._ n-. -... MEW VOll:K c•"\ l'aden NOWllll" ln'll '° Wedi! "" 1\1• 1'1ncol l't ' ......... 1 .. Ind 1 II i.:n. ~ »'lo -" -T,._ followir. Ill. rlr\U H YV.OVtlron 'j\llU\llH1r,.,. It 1ll'O l.-.P1•10l1 0 Mir.• Ai.hldO!t 1,19 )117 !514 t•"' 2•\li-j 11 I Nl-.cfM 1rk1 k l Rlill 1~ El P11nf " ' HMlthl t i\11 P1rk DI' 12\'t 1J A1hl0 pl7..... 'l '°"' M M - N -· 0 f Nl!lontl J,a,wrllla rwns N 111, 1 f11ll\ Sii ..... •lit ... " ,, q ,.,, •. H ... 1Yo ,..., ~·· • 1°"9 ""' 111\ -ti. c." Y RK (AP) -Three Many bomtowners, or t.l· Otlltrt A-., -1n11 ,., ~ 1111 e11tr"' ... 22 22v. wt• J• u-1111 11i P1r1iw a.. '"' 1t11oAud 1.10 ,. ~"' ''"' ,,..,~ t" 1119 "°""'... hnk. ~" M \1• 11 Econ \Ab ~"'"' itrll Cl' "' P111Lw H ,,.. Vh AMI SP .20b 11 ... mi ).!'~ ·~ llnanclal terms ti.ave been ap-ample, are paying less thaa 1'*"111Ct • 11111 ... 111ic:k•Y<11 11r. 1N1 eouct ~v ,. <:2"" .,, u .-. '~ P11 F1a11 11.-u ..u~ Tt•ntP 1 1~1 2 11t1 1~ -0-- -H-1- 1r111 atotio'-1unn.1" Jl4 ~ e1P11 11 m S'9 Hldoc: In 1-. n6 P111ltv f' t im A.IPI..,. I'S :Joi 1"' 1i. !J::"" -11 -ar1n• r •• u I • r I ,. 1'n >Orne or the ···t corporation• ••nk ... T""' lurll 5lm _ ... -... •r.• ~ Holoom ''" "" P•V<lll• '"' ,,., "I :y_EI 'I ""' ,, -"' In Ill-)I l!tt "-.• . Hill Pr 1 '°" .... .. 0 ~ 111 II~ '"' s 11WSv r~ tn. Elcltt' • '°"' HNVlr 5~ ~2¥1 P1vL Or uw. ''""A! Cl "'j! • Ji-Jf'4 -\,. c. 1.25 II s.w. :u -Vo Hillll>utl I OS .. -pa~rs. all haYlng '" el· ~ ...... they locked the lender 111 lk sl '* Jm 1mw N ~ m E§ Nlild m 2 Hor1r lh• u,, 1..-Pwt ""' uu. 1i\1 ~1,1c.,",l , ,' 110 l'I H~, S6'" + 1~ f1 11111 ..-• ~"" .., .. + "" H1mu w11 w ;a r~ UC\. .....,. l1IE""' ~ 21\li C..1111 Miii 1~ lot E trm $) 17\.'ll How•ll 01 t\lo 101'1 PHrln T :l2 J<1 " ll '!... Of 1 I.lo IE-li •r. lnO "* 2 11 li! ta •714 'H.mm PIP 1 I H I HC n:i. M\lo C. I 11» 101 • '"" 5f'J 2A \'o u p-Pie 2 Jill Al llcll ,.,J 7J ~ SJ\lo ~ II -\o I P""*'• 171 ti \1 "1-\\o Htm171...::I ,«I ed 011 }OUr fortune11, e ither into ~ long term arTangement M~ 811, ~ 4 11, C•= P 11 11v.e tCtl' ~ _. 2'\lo 11e1t Mt• ! s•~ P• a.a.w 2iw. N\lo 11 Riu. °'/i , 12' 1 J ' -"" ·~· l.14 ~ ~ i f, · H•nc1 1 '"" ·" ~ 11>1 ,y st.lit Cll' MIM !~ :Moh IE~ OJI 1,W. 17~ .,_, f'IO J \lo )I~ l'Hll IY# I •llo A!J~<"c~~· W Ult 5"1o ;i:-"-!\. .t.4 -1' H111d Hlr ,11 tt'mOtt or lmmed1att-The many years ago. u VI lk• ~ U\11 CIP 1w1t "" ... IEllll"l'Y c-19". ,, .... Hvul p l\.'I ' l'tllolll J.j """ a:• c';" '11 'ft' 3 ;"' '' Iv ;p 1111 ,.. nl'I \~ + .;, H:-ti!. it 1: odds are. howev'r. lb.I Ibey S b rp and pro!onned in-VIN BM 2t\.12t\1'C&11ln Air !"' tVfE'*'I' R a 7 Hy1n C~ 17:W.Ul.4Plltlboll 14\io U'°" TO'lnc ' .. lot u'C 11\11 IV.-V. r'~J.fi' ~ Sll4 S1V.-\oo!j1rtourl l a • e I-C•o TIC \lo M l!oitw Ill I r.Y•ll ltll U"-11\lo PllU ii/II 211'ot72 A\ltOtl PIW n 1014 10 10 ' ' L 1:4 11• " " + .... 'H1rrl1 lnl I creases In the prime rate Fkl Un LI a :u :iim •r• c11 ,. ~, e....:o 111 1 me" sr •~c1"' 1'1111!• GI l •lll "°"' "'om 0.11 11 51'4 sm mi. , I. '·" IAD tt " " +1 ttlrteo Ct 1 shed no more light than a 1 .... 1r111• c1r11 111 2>4 E'IYIY ow "'10\11 HM ll Ct "' J\lo l'M!on ·~ '\\ A.11tomt11 ,,..,, l:rt 1olio 10111 101~ -''I ,. , I II g •SYI o&Wo -,. i41r1SMn1 IO would, however' .. ianal an JO• M l co ' ..... C1rl Gr• 21\1 U VI rlt TIC "" <f\a INI HllCll' 13\.'Jo 3' Plldml A l \'Ji ·~~ vm c-IS I~ 1$\lo ''"" -\jo ... .IJ l " 1N. 114' i'l••~AI l.M borntcf lluJb I In _.. A.FA Prl 17 1~ CIK HG I~ 11\lo l'A C. :it '2 \"lor lt1t 1~ 1'14 Jilft~•ln 7t 1t Avco Cit wt ~1 514 S s ~· I nit 1110 .. 14 ~ fl~ + lllo H1•IH El 1.4'1 ' CrC35e a SO the rates for AIO Inc 10Yi 11 C1v111ll C 11\11 lJ I Ctce U\lo J~ nto O!w> '"° ·~ Pt111Un 111.'<I 1•11t Ava pol:t ._ 1i G 414' o ..-\il Ill Air .N 160 ~ 4.P'lo .... -IYi a•vn Alen I Tb<y lf'e .,,._ • I ho rt J AITJ Inc 1 rl.4 C911tn 2Pll 2S*'o 1brl Cir UV. 17\il ln1<1 hwl Jl'o ~ Por! HIC 21\lio ttV. AwtY PO ,JO 3• U .U fl tK 111! 7• ~ ' ~\ + .. 11tl1lne : 111e pnme ra e. new me mo gage oan.s AVM c1 1o" 10" c111vt Pl ''"' 1tv1 111 1• 11\'i 11 1111rmk 111 2lli '~' P011J1 M 11111 1M1o .-. ...... , inc 110 "'" i'I • -Ir. ~ Mfl • 1)1 !'\'! ~ i1"' + " c.-. 1nc1 the •-1-ol paym-l• and EURODOLLARS Tiles Atlitri Ind 2 m Cenv l.11' 11-.wU\io ,,.,, I! N. "'~ 1""'"' G 1~ 151\ f'roc l't 1tv, n ,.,,."" Pl2 so 1 61\lr. 1.1111 u>A .. 111 ..r I I s 1J 2s +1 ~Kl1M .sot IHI ~· -e Act.lilWI p 2:111o D\o c111nc.1 ,_ ~ ~ ,,,frill ,.,. 1,._ 1,,1, w,n tYO .-. Pro Golf ~ ,.,.,. ..,..,,, P~ l.lll uo ~ " "'I +'U vii•\ M 101 "' -.-. ~ • H''ru HJ 1 ~-~-11 So are Amen"can d 011. r' lt./JMlr 2~ ""Clllrt OM ' """ \""'' .... ~ •,, ... ,".", Ml• ..• c,r. ,~ 2014 PJ'Ud Min )\It Jl< A.I1tc0U 1.»r lfJ 211\ 1'0~ to\to -h ttol'r Ill I :V!f ~ .. .. :t-t •I-Curt £.ooWVUU art. phoneUcally "6cl\vl w lS ... HV.Clllm Llfl Ulll lS '"' 0... • ... 2t\'.I J1~1'ull5 NM 2(1>:02114 l"jlnc,~ ~·ii~ tn1 ri~::zt::r:.,1n1,o~' dull. •• ,~ •• ~ are they, ••·t circulating abroad not just in AdY 1t111 .,, •• , c111s1 1.. n. ,,. ~1°"'""1 n 1to »~ '"' ~v11rn s. s1 Pubs NC 11~ 11'" -B--E .,. n UlO 114.,.. 1fl'" n• .... HelmP .a. """ ""'o\41'-~ loltot Eur •·• ' r All*>' Sill 11'• U Cllllol UI 17 11 '-' Bott 2.-;; 27\lo lntMI¥ 1.-. U\I PUbllllr A""' I I! 9f1 tt dO tf\~ n \lli "I\ • , ~imrl\1' 1f tt Is t ope uul m a score o other ..,., 1nc1 :HI :Jf\ 111 Brl<ll 101v.1tJ "" Gtnll '•'• '"" onla Int 1i:i.. u 11o P11rtpj 1014 100. l!bdtW ""° «? »w. l, ll -1111 1 E:o pU 50 , 1t•o 19 nro • Html.,,, c ... f:IS\' 0 understand why tr lso ~.n the AIOll l'lo • 4 (llH!on ,~ 15Ji ""'" Mtl ''"" 70\11 •Sou UI ""' ~ p 1911.wt 211/J ~ lltOlll 1t " ... Jll~ .... -~~'·' 14 122 2111, ~ ,~ .. + ""Hffll l...C: I~ the f . 1 COlln le! a Pl 1ow1y, Y A!tlf•ll 1•'• l"•Cllr!1~ I,. l'U FtPMI u11 U\lt 1• JICOCI FL 4\'o .... P\110 C1p JV. S\'I 81!1 GE 1.G 75 JtMlll 21¥1 JOlll. •• 111"l111o11 .~ 2t 11\\ 111'1 111'1 , Ht"\llt• ..50JI Y a1 to generate any are dollar deposi•a made in A1cet1c H• • , c11r1» p1 1~ n• ~tPM wt 11111 ~ ,_," c tVi 10\.'ll Qui t CM 1N ,,,,., 1:11 cr1 14"4 i10 '"" ~' .. " 1mi~11 , • "' 41 •4~ 4~ _ v. HerJ11' 1 10 .par l-~ Alcon I.II JM< fiQ\11 ltrn Mlt Ult U\11 F'sfWnl' 7 7\.'l llrn ~ti Jl'f •I~ ltT S¥•1 S S\IJ -1'111'1'1 G l,_\ IJ,,_ ll\lo -rn llllm 1 '19 2Jlll ~ t) t ''• loill\lf>leln .lS aa. forei"" rather than United Aldltl Et 2•• ~. 11r11v1 A it\lo n.. ,,..,., ' lt\lo l1\lo a,,.n Pr 11v. ii BlllOP 01 2 1 2"t 2•" ''"" -"011 511~ 2 • ,. ~ ~ \,Hew Pt<k .10 They d o han sianifica 6 " Allee \.lid 1n . 1.-. c11wu1 11 11111 ,,.. l•m•b• • •111 •1111tt cc "", att ote11 1 M • lll 2'1'> • + \\ 011S 01.20 • 1m u'' 11~ Hlo11 VG"r o·· ace, Slates Banks. Alt TIKI! 1 :sit c11r1t Ml 2'l• 2J~ 1111• ""' l\li J\lo .,,..... I! " 1'\lo g1n11 of HY 1 1s ~. """ '*'\'! -"'g~ ~ '"' !I oi.. . , tt111on Hot 1 howevtr. The prime rate, for The dolla _; .. }. All• 8-v •1• .-. CllUIM A. 11111 llKIY" M ''"" 22\/o A1)'(11 (II 117 H• "'"fr 2... ,, -"" ,. .st'" -1\lo I ..... )-U '""' 71 -1::.. Hober! I 20 nstanct, will probably never or never rome home lns•··d . ','.,"" ,','•' '"', ... 1,1,,.. ~.'' uw 1•"' cMs 11>d u l 7V:i 11ec111 IE• n1., n\lo 11ro c1t .2s1 21 .st" s• Jt\\ + '' u. Eo11111 ' ·~ 11 n + .,. ttoti £1ec1 ... l se rs ,....,,t seldom Ano Eou1 ,"' 12:i.. cun111 o~ no ~ <G1 CP 21'1 2"-111vmn0 1•~ 16\'o B•tb«Oll 11 • ~ 50 50 -v. ~ ~· M ''f ""' u'llo 1;\11 -~ H.wo-nw11 .tO he fr red •-~ .,, ,... ~ " MUTUAL <•I" Stl 1'\11 ~ RH(:t »Vo ll:W. a1:11c Int IO • 1111 ll'Ai 11"4 -•11 •l1111nm .AO 10 u 1M 1~ + II) HOild•lnn j > 0 e w ~ but lt does th I • t t b d b Alollnm ,.. • ollln '4 ,, 21.... (1t1lll "' If lt'lr. RtlP En'I '"' 6"" ••• " Mio u 1Mi 16'9 1~ + ~· 1\11111!" 1 1 Jl lJ l l -\lo HotldYA. .IS fo-ast the It In the ralts e)' are en OU a roa Y Alpln Gte 1•1o •1" com c1• l7Wi 31'.4 <11v•• 11\(o ., 1tldctr Pu 21\11 71,,. 11.11" Ml pl 1 10 11'111 '' " t " 111n11 t>1 B 1 1 ni.:. :zi" :a:i1' -~ HOlll<'Suo * ·-l o b ks d re A BlliP ,, 2'1\lt Cami lh lt\11 10"'1 ( ......... A n nv, ltud E~ '60.:. .,,,., B1!11lnd 10 lJS '2t"" 21"" ""' \, L 1o .. Co .'4 I 2514 lil<I 2S 1 .lo Home'.tlle "° Y ouwillpay \ reign an. an a ac-A'Ett..ll i:w.JYocomOi• n n (•tt o .. l\\~llolllnMC 711.,..22 11t11 01ud 1s11111 ., nv.+Yi 1111v .:io n11tt• .. 1»1.o.•21,1 +H'l 1-ion•wtt1 1~ cepted for various commercial Am Ex11 1101.1to'4 c..mw P1 2n't 11in <•vum ~ J:ir. 1t-1on 1o l!M n11t1cnLD • tn 111 1• 111 -s .,....11111.; sJ U\11 11~ i211o -\~ HoovrB1 1 » THE PRIME RA.TE -ln I Del Arn Finl :n JJ\'t com Pt• 1J 17\lo FUNDS I( .. ~ T• 1•"" 1111\ llouM 411Jo 41>,(o 81llt L•b ll 1" U '2\11 '2\lo -"lo OlvMM I 111 11-. 1H• 27111 -'' HOIPllCP Am rans.ctions Pit. 'Is Pr~ c ''" ''' , c 1 a1Yk Cll so J 101to 10'4 111\j, , OrPtD!>tr • JO :tO\\ 'l"'I 30 + ~. HP$! lnll :16 thiww-v thl i! th ...... b-' v-",1 .. 1 LS ''Iii ''" CmD1 "' •• I -p l\lo n" ltow•n In ,,,. 2~ 10 51'4 Sl 51 _;,,.. OomtMnl IO .. 70 •r ... """ +31~ i4oud1IU1 60 :-~· J' s e • .uwest o blems, the dollar still ls in-!~ •'~~. • ~, .. ',l, ',~•,, ,~~~ fl': t Kt11111 ,,. J~ R111 stov 37'flo 31 :::;~"!.' ,1 ,. 120 40\11 40\i; 40v, -14 OomFrwl lSV 40 m J\• t \'I -Vt i40UC11 Pl 1.2s t a1nable lending r ate at any ... ~ • ~:1°" A )i4' .!.~ s,",,,11...... ,',.""'~,,. 11111 F"J. p,, s 1°"" 106 10611 ! v, 0ot111111..., -" 61 MV. 1~ '1"14 -"HO<lll Mitt 'o Lim •• Offered •· holde-ol th• t ernat1onally a ccepted •,.Ml',',',~ '•'•· ,'",.",~'•"•• 1'• •'' 1t•W.CC"'"'°"=.::""""'"''' iwo -.-. o.. • •Beckman $ m ,.. .,. 'S'" 1•~ Oorlc CP :n 1 »I• W :IO'll + \, Hou'en' 1 :io ... •• ' T TO u•• ,',',",~~SAS K•Ur lYC 10\~ l!\lo Sc1n!n Et ~ v.r. fl 0 k )0 156 -~ ,. .... lil,ij 11 Oorr 011••• • ,,,,... \.\ 12111 -'-1, H1mF ~u .. ~.. Some t 1 m es E\lrodollars Am w.io 10,, 1 11~ COii 1toc:k _.. ICftltt E11 11111 Uito Schort 1.. 6>.it 1v. 8~i 10 1, 1111 21~ 11v, _ 111 Oo1sey 10 12 2l\ll 2 • 2J'1• -1to ttoutF au so ~t Cl'f:dlt r atings, Which , An•~lll1 114 1\loCOlllr1n tt. 1\0 NEW YO•IC tAP!tCA llO<l 1S,)IK1veFlb 1':0.:.Jt ... Scl•CPlr 11>\ 21'o8eltoPtf •sott 10t 2()>,;, 70 l(r,;i-1\~rCp 1$ SI 4111 4\~ 4'1\-i>Houol"i>l2 l1 u s ually mea-the -........ ~ circulate to the d.is.ad vanlage An11t111 a 491'1 50 ccrl!l(u "'" is•,, -T1>t 1o11ow1nto ..,.. 1nv G11111 • ..s t 65 K•Y Cu1F l"' 1"~ Scr!PP• H 22\lo »I'> g•ldtn 1,60 1 2' 29 7t ! 111 wc11m 2.10 lit """' nu 91"" -1-1• Hout LP 1 :n "" -·~• or national CCOllOffileS. ',"",,,°',}!] 1, .. ,, '1 1 • ,'~,,. •,,, ·~ •l'o ltlionl 1UHllld b IHTGN un1w1ll Ken PC. 11~• ll\I> SctlplG 4 ''~ eldo"lllH '°" M 11\'I 21'.I. 71 I\~ l voCll 1 «I 14 l7\\ J7 .. )JV. + ~ HOUs!NGi to ra er 'om.I UI" F I th int t ,.,d Ml~ 11'• 11'• Cr&w Co 11\o lt\.'Jo tUon of SK\ltlllel 111 ..... IOl'i G•-M;lnt11 El J'Ao '" Sffrl• •I ,~ .... 23l\ 81!'mll Co «I d 10"1 19 lt!'O -.,. reu"' 110 s ,,.,, ~--"~ -V· How Jolln ,, C:'x.r&tiollJ th (!..-1~ "" 1~11 "'11>1 N1!1ontl .i..oot. ln•tt BPI l1 .. UOllllnt1 Int 2\41 ''lo Sfflld l'O 21To 2'1'1118ell H-61) 11 •1 ..i.'4 .161/t Vo rftll,.., 1«1 SI l!'A l5Vo l!i'll+l~HouG ~1151.1 di uala. rat:;p:~~PY ~ Sw1banks e~~ .... ;~~l' l~:: lf• ~~~,"~~ ':~ ':~ :::.:rlt• :kw':t~ ll>ws11 NII 1~: i: ~ ~:=p '.;'" :.!~ .:'" ~:'F l~l't 1~ 1:=~ !.~ 2&f ~"' ~t.~ ~,.. t ~ ~r11~:'le 21 ~ i1t? '1v. tttt-v. ~~::~ 3, U this ls so, you may ex-• Arnt• In • •1~c1111r ,ed • t \'l <ou111 111ve ....., """ ,10 s11L1nc1 tn l7\lo~1\41Sln•lrn 1\li 1~atllt'ltC11160 ll1>1 ,",~ f!~ H.,_=,1~ :P,..w70.0 i,~,n,,•,•,,•,•10•-+}~~-~.B'!'l',,"',- ong fallen below those ofl<lrow H n :n24cv11 com '" tl•1010 cblol orbGVtlll S!Ort 20.21210lland 1t1 '"" •in svvc Gr• 1 aener1 '"10 ""' .... ,. .. ,.. -... """ -peel, generally speaking. that A• .. ld• 11 11•~ o.na11b •"• 6\• 11111.01 lh,,..IOY Selle! t.» 10.00 L•,,. wd t \fnf'o S.•en u lffi .. ~. B111fl !vi 2 » iro nv. 22\la ""' ""'I P'6. 7 i 2 '' M H -~ H11n1 Chm 12 J r I I German banks, m oney seeking A111111 sv J'ili •I• o.ntv M Hilt 11 •~ A•' v,, ,, , •• u ........ ,,. , , .. s-1tne 1.w. 1,i, B1~1 151 • t t.'o ,,,. -\\ " r•d ' :io 20 51'4 51\~ SI'" 1aanoPw 1 60 oan~ o esser qua 1ty Wiii " ,.. -• ,_, , 2 ~ 1\0 .,,,. • 'Pll" ni 111 ~ ,... ~ -1111 1aea1 B•• H th h h t t ti AtCC l ol o13'o.f)l10111 CP ,,. >0 AOIE ,.,., 5" $60\Jltl tt7421lo1Lffdv c .. lt\lolJl\Stnl111 In ··~ ,.. " ,, ,, ,,. .. ,,\j;_,.,~ l.2~ ,. 1• Id 1"6 _, lllt1lpl •n ca~ hi•ber in'·res t rates e ig es re u m recen y ... 11011 Lr 1s1~ u ... 0.1. °"' ~ ,.. Atierdn 2,. 2..s 1vr 1 u 1 64 Lth co.i '" n, Sn•P Tl• 12 ..,,,, aerk•r P11e1 .. Lt 1.u ., , •• ~ '"• -u• .. + "" 1H c " "~ e i.e • pouredintothe lattercountry ""',,,•,,k,11 ·.~~ •,"o.0,•,•, .... ,,, ",':-~?"AGm1r111y FuNll J H•ncll 1x1t1L•l1Gr11 11t.11~sc11w•t 1s11K16 :f;"'~'..1 ~ ~ Jru J?Y• if"'+"' a •uan.111 1110 n~ 21'11 1M-1 r c':r.'p1, 4 so And you might expect that .. -~\ OtWth ,,, 10::tJotwwt" n.nn.2sL.tw11 &'" 11 .... 12...,SeNE Toi ,.,._•~•a1tck °"ti 11, 71\(o 10 ,., -3~ ._101t12 a5 r10 7t ,. '2t • 1 l'ov• 110 •~en the pnme rate mO''""' This increased the m oney su~ 1111 l'ntC 7"1 •~ 01·110 P 7'\ ,.. \ncom • •1 •Ill l(~t-l"lllCK • Lin Bce11 1m l•W. sw G1 • 1s>.roc1•1\ B1tlrJo11n .., ,1 u1~ 11~, ,,,., _ u. 1 ~DI' J rt:io " 11.\0o 21 + !} 1mlr1 Cp 1vn 11 ,.,., I' B•l'l'I H¥ ITl~lt O.vl1 FO •~• J ,,,.,,.. t9'10f4 -'"'lo l1.1'1J2 JJl.lcidn1c t\lo 7\\SwEI Sv 11 11\\l lft,t Ll\/91 3l 231" 21" 1114 q lJJ.ol1.J1 1t0 2' 26 26 -\•!N C1 l«I Y our rate will move sooner or ply In Germany and added to 1um 11:11 JM> 26'" 01v1n l•n 21 n vius s11 1 c111 Im 11M 1Jn Loo11w 1v. n o So>lrn c, 1•\\ 1•"' 81et;11; HA. .. , 11 '3\1 '2\0 .:.:'" •mo r..o 21 u ui:. 1,l'J -1.< income Ctl'lt I ble f I I•""" It t!.. •~ Oti..11• c •1'\ "'" 1111 F 10" n '*' ~\II It 1J 1' ti.II Loft c nn ll' l"i S-e•v 1" J\oo 11ue Bell 1 JO t7 71\la ~ l'Mll -2\lo "''" AM m 1J'll U lJ\111 -\lo 1ncCC11 U11 Jater IS pro m 0 infahOn, and B1Ut1I I" 51 S1~\0ffor In 11•lo12'~A.lflll .. d J71 l.11 wl 8• til ,,,..U.. Eltn lD')ll Slendyn 25\.'Jo71'.t.8obbi. Btk$ tl 1~ 11 16\li -I.. 1""1•nHO IO It l"' 't that the prime rate the Ge-didn't "'· -1 1 11~m .. 1 51'~ SI o.1r111 •• "'" s.•• "'"1"'' " 10" 10.11 111 1(1 1 tt 1 ,, Lomch c JSf.o u\-s1<1 11.,1, '°"" 11(~ 1ot1n1 ca '° 7'7 2s•:. ''"' 2~ -i. -E·F-ll'ldn•Gl 1 n ,,,.Sn& UAC I a 11¥11 Mk 21'" tt Oe!nl OH 12 12\lo llAl'n J'of Ill ti 111 Kl 'tS 1 711 Madlin G 1.,_ IS Stfn HPd :n 3'\11 Bolo( Ii 1S11 212 O\oo •tl'o 4Jllo lnO~ltPl I ~ 11 b di all. ' 1,"""",., •• , •,,•,, ""••'• °'••'• ',,•,•,•, 11~ 11°" llH•ll 11.11 1 c111 s1 19.1111 n I Poot Mio "4 Sterle str 1-Al 1514 &on111 1114 i n"" un 1.\4o +\lo 1111tl'1c ·" )0 27'4 2J 21\11t~1nc1 PL ~·ts res)' a s much of a rect ·-n 21 111111 12 1snt1 cu1 s1 1ot111t1 1111v , '"' So••we ct .av.,,..~ &ookM"' j•U t ''" 25 uui +" •ttoCp " 211 23 """ ri \"°'''N" t0 k b ' Ith lo BALANCE OF PAYMENTS ltnl ~Id 1t\~ l'll Oewt• El l~I''• •1'1<•P 1..!I 711 Cu1 $l I.SS t »iM•ll~rl t 1V. n 5"ll>C Tlv '"" '1't Bora..<! JO JC1 271/J 1\olo 2No -Iii A.Ir Lin W ,,.,.. :l:Uo 2J\la -rtaer lt•rwl 2 ins 1p w cons umer an~ Bert H•t s1 SJ 0 1 ..... C•• 27\\17...,,m Bui 1lt l tJ cuss.. 51J s,., PID' c • 1,..s""'d•I, 1~11u.a.orew1r 11s sa JO.., JOYO~-·• ••IG• I.CW• 11,121 ~h •l '• .u\o+~to ntltd on.» But aS an incllca!Or 0 r -Thl.S is to some extent a ltt! Ull •7"6 .ol¥o 019'~1 AP 1' o I ... f,m Dlvft 11.1' 11 3• Poi1r '11 • tl M1rM Ml 2W. "' • SUPft El 1l 13\0 Borman ,10. 51 \OV; 10'llo 111 -'4' til Ultl I «I 10'1• :IO\~ 20~ • lnllnd SH 1 mlso albb Ml 9'•10 Olt ll,..o<1 51i 5'~t,m E&ll1 }.56 6.otKnlc~D J61 ICJ M 8rowr 3' 3o1y,TIMt! DC l•ot,2(ll(oBD1IEOl111' 11 Jl\11 '9'.\ Jll4--::~~~~· ~l !Jh l l\1' ~i\\l~t fcarP eoononuc c o n d j t 1 0 n s , it om er, beta use seldom are Bhlu"" w 1• 1111, OlK '"' l'• •• , ........ Expreu· K"k" GI 10 s1 11 51 M1u1 LP u 11o 1' T1mpax u1in1., &e> Ed otl u ''''l 1~ '"" •-·, t .. 11on ott 1• • "°" ~ "'°" 1\ 1n1llc PIA.1 :is Pa •· • baJa Tb lllrd!.on .... u,0 11nCr11 171,,J C1P!t tl?101t~ ,d 711 J11McC11t 61 66 T1Ullt U li\11 ,,~ "".;... ,--, cnllnMI 61 65 •S •S l \ In ICOI 1 forecasts What IJeS &helld f Meni.:t ID nee. C Blrl<hr 11\ 7t\I Ooc:vlel t•t 10 l'l(m• t 5110•7 Lem Grlll ID" 11 U McOutv 1• 2•:0. Taylor I lto 21't loutn• Inc I ll 1 "' \~ c\rll Jk .219 t d'o :l •S•o + ~ tn1!.~°': M The pnme rate no-· 1 , ten· Unftecl Stat.ell hasn't had Bkk Hiii• is M 0ona1 LJ ''" n·~ tn~r" 0111001 Lex A$~ 11 10 111t Medic H ,,,, ,., !''" wt 1oa 1ot tr;~~, ... ~~~ 't~ lly, !~~ !~~ -:.\• dlrd NC Al 1 U'~· ,~,* 36'• , 1nrr11c1nc • 1 '° .. BOlllll El ,,, ?"lo O(!W J~~· •!'. 4" SP.Cl '" llbrl~ Fd '" J ,, Mtdlt M ,.,. 1S\'o 'K~ Pub S\• ' Br111 MY 110 15' ''"' M'll Ill'• -\lo dl1o0118r01 l ,J .. 37\. -"" IBM J.10 dmg to nse a aft f II equthbr1um m this regard for l oor ,t.H TS'' uv, oa.i. o~ 71'. 1••, ~1oct '~ 1~ 311111 s1~ too 1 u Mf<llrn JI''> 11 Tecwm I' 190 H~ l rl•!Mr at 2 • •SI'• u11i ,i\o'J G.&.G 10 ~ 21 1 0 " • int c11,., Hier gain er a Ing I' I d de 1011 C10 1f\' 10'-Ounkln 0 II~ 1''~ Am Gtlh 1 00 165 Liie In~ 1 11 I t4 Mtrld '" 21'~ 11'/t TtlKDm •V. S atllPtl :Kio 111 \J'li l J\lf 1)'1< -14o Itel Auoc ff •'>" II~ 9 + '1' lnlFl1,~ t0D sharplv, since late last year near y wo eca s Better .,,., lnY so 111 1.1nc Hit 11•1211Mt1cr En ~io•,TV corn '"' •l'terPt1 tn30ll 100 lJ 1J n \9tln 0111 ,n• .. '"" t1v.-,,1n1He(v 1 to llltth -'rnMullt tUIOULlnl S15 Mdls-W 19"'10\,Ttn"tnl 23V•C7l:W.81;rwvHlltl 01 4 .,., ,~ 1J•~+llo'J ~em Ma, J4S 11\l U>, i61f•~loiol n!HGkl .Jl9 Currently 5.25 to 550 percent ca epaymenlssttuauon. S!/lltliol... 'mN Glh l6l J,J1,.oom1s 1VAHLES Mloid c . 9"• ,,,,,, .-.m0 1v.' IMIWYH•I p1 1 14 51 •Vt ~1 _ •"",F' '4 u~. "'• 1s11 +>i1o1n11nouu I be T b ts • •l ,. AMchor Gr°'""' Ctnfll l l 51 31 ,, Mld11~ 2h 3 Therm A 7\0 31.\ 8rkWYGl1 10 32 341~ 11,,, ' + t'J N H 6'• 1~• •'• • JnllfldA. Pl S Ing asked. Some b anks e paymen SltU8wOn IS Caolt t ff t ltt C1pll 12 01 ll 01 Mldw GI '3 ?• Tllnr Co 11 1~ BklvnUG 1 12 14 1S\o 2S~ 2~'• -~ 11,',~,•G, .l l~I 10 '• 10 1• JI)>, -V. nt Mlnu1I tJ j ed th the felatlon between what JS S•re~ 11g~•t1 1•1 11no111t111 G.-w111 "" n Miii u fl l(.fl Mllllll<' 11 SI llltnv 1n ' ,.,, Brown co 1s t!oo t\lo '"' l "v ff 26t? n 21'• + 111 1n1 Mno recen Y ra s etr rate by 1 lnc1'1• 1 :it •it 1.oro A tit 10 n Miii Mu• u~ 11~ T1t1n G"• •~ s Bwn~nro .20 1 11~. 11:i. 1 n, -~' ~r lri\ 1~ m ,t:_. ~"' 7~;! ~\lo \~,N~~ i :ft O 25 ""'rcent, indicating that spent itbroad by a natio n in Unlen oitierw •• no11<1, ·~'~' 01 01.1 Fd 1nv t s7 10 ff L11tn Bro n '1 lJ u MINI" tn 1' n~ Toti£ Le Hlo .sv. ewnsi.o. 1.50 s JTVJ 37\~ 31..,. _,,. .,.,.,...,..., tF 1 14 70,,. 191-. ito1o _1"" Int 11~'"''' ~ d~ 1 I~ .... I v ... 1 ... 05 51.1,7 Ma1n1 '" • " '7"t ,,.,... 01 3!'4 3''• T,.,..:or c 11'> l'll. Brll"'""" 11 371 :>J:i. 31"" ,,,~ + \.'Jo ""'e" ' ~ 1• ••• ll'' _, + •• I T& I • demand was catching U" w>th both publlc and p r I v a I e ... ~i ~ 1 '"'"° "" 1•b1t •rt innu•1 As Iron s or 5.M Mantlln s •1 s t1 Ml11 A:T 1~ 131, Trncn1 G 1n1 11-" Bwcv 1' I 20 '' 30\ii 1911 3~ + .,.. mP ''' "' •• .,. • w nl 1 '' transac'•IODS and what roreion ollb""-'"'• b•sKI on tht 1111 ou••t .. 1• A.Jt HoueMon M•t c111 J 2' 1 :u Miu v1 o B•o ltl• 7ran.a o :n 2N 1udd o 3' 'l"' 11 11 , •• mp,, G•' ~ 79 1>.l. " lntTl.T PIO 4 ~ -or itml4nr111•I 11.c11r111on !ptcl•I or Fl>d a 1u 1.1.s Frtld ltl JMMollwk A: 2t''o 1Jitlrko PO lll'•:lt 81t11Qtl llld l 91• t ''~ 11111M •ll 7111~f"2~t?2ff\<+~l'":~lf1:.iJ ~ '"pply Ffld A S ti 6 '1 Mltuell\ISll Co Mo AKll 1._ 1h 7t1Moll H S'~ S~\ 8udll o el S tlO ' ,,., " 61 -) lftlllllMln •0 2 S'flo U'.'o )JV. + "i ln!TI. T p!H 4 But these rate11 are for new nations spend in that nation. •~"• d,.ldt..o, or .,.ymtn•• nllf de119 s1oc:~ • 11 ,,,. 1nc1... '" 7 '3 Monl cot 1~ G\\ l r1<111r J~• •Y. e11t1F.,o 1 10 11 ~-. '°~ '°"" + •• "n\•B,!" otp so "'" 101. 1cw. -11o intTl.T t'" I Old I II Tb U lted S t •• b ~!en 5 OJ J 47 MIH 11A2 12.7l ~ Pc , ... , 10" lrlln 00 .... s 8Ul9¥1W tO 21 nu. 22>o0 nt,. OU I 0 1 2 20 • 3'~ ....... 3•"-·~ ' TT Oal\!, 03llll gener a Y !: n ai.c:S as 3 ntrt<! •t rHUltr 1rt loe<>hfl•d In ll'le Blb!4<1 t 11 9 n Mltl tne IS :1:J 16 H Mowt I 1i' l•i:'; Tvson F lJi:; IJ &unkr A.1mo 2"3 l~o 15111 IS t -\' 1111111.11 .«II lll ""'° if 29 •• + \4 I~& f~ ~ n aren't affected. It means, for defu:it because the inflow 1P11ow1~• 1001PW1!..s Bar•k Fd 1 11 t5.iM•n Glfl i11J u,..Mor .. 1n K 14•. u,unnK 4(~ •4'Bun1c1t,.r1• 11 "':-\' 4~>,., ''""=~ aul'YFd 10. i1 1 •l\.'11 '°"' 400•-l>to\n•ll.T f"" B•v•t G,. t 11 .....,. " lr 1• • 1• '' Ml9e lrl. 2~•to 1~''> un c H1>1 2to l~. B0~~lN~ ~= "r,: ~.'.: ~ t; _ .. E,s .. 1nc l 20 llS 211 211.~ 27\'t -,._ nr urn olO example, that while the na. from e xports Of good!I and 1-A1•0 e•••• ar 1•1••• b-Anow•I rere lleecn H•I ,,_,, 11,ltM•ltt • 12 4 n M11Tr wt ''• Ji,. un n1um 2'\~ ~~ 1~,1N,.. Dl.u 31 J'• 7.,, 1" _ \'o ,•ow rt JO 1 u .. 1m U'-\ -""t"' u111 A I Pill• track dlwld"'" c-lloula1rl11t d•YI B18c" In 1•12 1412 11J1W1 l•lll•llMl>lcPI M 6'• 1• .. u" McGll 1~ ""l"rnclv 10 31 i •\>o 1,,. 2101 utxlnl 1 10 lit«~•• "4\-)-:\lttnlt•I>'("~ 1 I on's soundest corporations service s and investments IS dliftd d-Oecl•rKI "' 11tld 1n 1t11 p1u1 Berg Ken u ..... n Miii AM '" 115 Mel Club 2•'• 7S us lf'l(tll "' ~ urr.11~• .o 11 11•~ ,,,., lll'• -1-"-E11trlln .lit 111 11'\to 17\.'Jo 1• + '-1n11Br1nd to might •·· the best cred>t r isks, not -•fficient to cover the 11ec\ do .. ldtond. t-P•ld 11•• ve•• ,_ &If\ G1PI • •1 1 "° ,,,_v 1J 11 ll JI Mut11tr 11•. 11•~ us En••• 1"4 1•"" 111111 uni.. , '" 11..., ll'. • , e1hv1 c11 .,. 1s. 1.si.:. 2"• JS'~ -• '"'•r•l'w 1.21 Lit' _,,. 1' l I I I Bond•tt ''' 7Sl,,.._Yt U .. t •12t•Mwrph P J't J•~US Tr•L" S~S.\~ IE lllYI 1''1.40 • 1''~ J'i'• ll"•• ln!Hll Sl•i ldbe J ts t •dn 1oc\aur n1l,7lest1m1IK!C•t"Bo•lnSI• ''lf1' 1FFll tntMM,,.rl.E ll'•lSliU~l•Alr J't P• 1Ev1"1P ,tOll •146 45 •Sl•-1 l-1 lttl )'OU cou paymg ess In• amoun spro on imports v-11u1 on u<1l•h11N1 or 1i-11<111iou1;on &o•t ,dn nt1no1,....1F G1h 1t1 '"NCC .,111 , .. 6,.upPt11 ~ n••D'• -C--exct nO 125 .,J n~. 21 11 ••-1•,.1ow1EI t:ICI terest _ if you have an old travel mihlnry, foreign aid 0111 11-0tc1a•t<1 o• P•ln .., 11r 1hi. Bot1 """° • 11 • 11 us Gv 10"' 10 67 N•••• c• IA, lJ\\ u111 Ind ,,,,. 1s>~ ,,.,. ,, 70 16 "'° d l• .,~. _ ..., F111tr" .a .. 1 n 1P"o 111" -'" •,owauc.i 1 :11 Yllr t.-Otc:l1rtd Of Plld •II•• ''"'-8.-w" FO ) ,, 4 3' o ..... G • GS '51 N1IC1• It 10lt lilt V•ll¥ ,DI" •'• flt c 11111 lt .,.,, 16. .... F•cla<A .tO " Jll't :l7~· JJ,,. -'" -·~ 1 JO Joan. and investments. Olvldtnd ... •Diii UP ~-0.Cl••f<I or NICI Bullo.:• C1l•ln M Omlhl It" 11 '' N•I GIO I ri, " Y1lleY G• l(Ro. 101.o c::"1f~nl tO r" l l.. .... -\• F•lrch C1m !l!lt .. ,..,,. 'M• + Ii ,•ow•P-• I ~ .-------------------------------! &u!lck U•Ut1Mvl $1\rt vnav•ll N H..,11 •''o ,,.,v11u11 t.D 1 t\lo c1111,.,, ,,..,,, 31 n ·1 n1 n 11 -i-"'F1lrll'ld 15' "1 1~. IG11 l~a-1 1fi 0 Joi "'1• Yt••· ·~ •C<vmwlatlvt h 5Uf wolll (•Nin 1t SI 11,,, M\11 lrll 1 00 2 00 Ntl l ib •JI'> ••'II Y&nO Air t>\ 10•,;i CampA.Ut IS JI ll'o Jll~ ~. +1 '•lrmonl 1 Solt 17\\ U\~ 16'h -.. E Imp .tO dtvtd...Ot 1" •""'" n Ntw luu11. o--Ol~id JU •.H HIEA. Miii 10 t7 11 1t N p 11,,.1 1J I• V•nct • 71\., 2HO Clm.i> So I ID JOI JHt 31~ Jlh Ft"llll 1• 1~1 1"o 1'~ + Ito Utk C11tP lease the new look of leadership {!) Viall Nabers' "Aulhorlied" Cadlllac Leas-ing Department f o r out.standing excellence In fle et lea.sing or Individual leasin g. A large select ion Is now available to choose fro m . We will purchase your present car for to p price, Service l:s our most Import• ent product. 1ev1nly-on11 at ~~~~ 2000 iiAADOR 9LVD I COSTA MESA (71~) ~H1DO SIL VER Are you interested in knowing more -about trading in Silver? ~rhc l l 5·year old firm of H. Hentz & Co., Jnc. will hold a seminar on the Silver Futures Market on M•Y 20th, 1971 "7:30 PJ.L at our Orange Office and onMay2~ih.1971 tt7:30P.M. ttour S.-ly Hills Oflice J f you arc jntere$ttd ia an in-Oeptli discussion of the various aspects of che silver market, in· clud1.t1g che world supply, demand, the ttehnical factors involved and the possible advantagts of uading in S1lver Fu NI cs.. all for a rcscrva.tion. Orang<, 777 So. Main, Mi" Bakcc (714) 8}).}100 B<:vrrly Hols, 166 No. C.nnon Or,Mi!> Weber (213) CR)-)492 E.iablishtd 18)6 H. Hentz & Co. -Inc.- Mcmbcno£the NcwYorkStock Exchan&t, lnc. and Leading Commod i<y bchang<s M1in Office: New York City D f C...NNOT ATTEND, ,llA.Sl SEND Mt A SUM.MA~Y f'1lll "''' v"" dlw-.O am1n.cr. ofe-N11w 5. 10 n 11 t1 Nit IN! 11 60 ll 60 N SKllli.11 11'1 1111 V1l•ro 1m '"'con Br-'.o 1 1 1~. 1:0... -\lo '•mllr Fl .40 1' 1'"-1111 lS'll -Vo t.rrecl or "'° 1c11a<1 l•~•n al '•" O•vlcStnd HY VIII 11 l1 1t0l Nat s.e.:11r Se• NI! snow 1'• 1,,.. ve~1•on ,~ 11•~ con Pi e J JO 11 11v. 121. 71t. -~ F1nt1eool Inc ;w 12\t, 11 It -·~ ...... 11,.1 r-Otcl••KI a• plld In 1910 lll1tl ~ur .... Fd 11 3' 11 Bil.In ll 21 It JS $11 Sl!vr 3 !I"° Wld\ Pll 14 7•"'1 (dn p till JO l ~ 1-Slio U'N , Fir Wtil Fin 22 l(~t IJI~ l'l't + "'° 1•Met .10 I II p I I ll111M1t 111••1 B-5GJ550NE ... GE 17 1n.w11111<1 111-o11\•cu11111 110 Jlt 1• ",, '•t1llM!1 ... IIIS\i•S'•4P•. •J•nl•e~ -I «It 0 w Mn<llo I-l id " itoct dllr ml G Fl/NI l G CJ ll ?1 01"14 l 11 • ll NJ Nit G :IO'-\ 21 W lltldl 1'>113 Clill C. ..Jere 111 4' '4\11 ~\ + Iii FAS lnll 20.J. .4~ '°"' , ... , _. ,~ J....,Fd 1 '11 1910 "tlm••t<! tl>l'I w•lvt In eJ1.0l~IOend C1P1m l:Jt J.ot Grwlll t 1l 10 6J Nlchltn F 17' •C11 Wlh NO 1~ it>lo CirDrwn IJO •7 61~ .,.,, 'RI + ~ 'tadetl .JO 3' 11;; 6'\.o 31 , + ~ J1pF !~l.61t or1~s!;:~•1:i:1~~! a1te ~::ll ri;n :·., ;-11 r,w,,111 ~ll ::: ~:::::: :c !:~! ;::_; ~:;:-~= 1~:4 l~~:;~:ori611!1 Jt ~t~ l~~ !~ = ~ ~=~ \-:i 11 ,,._ ~""-m: + "1::r~~r 1'' c ..... y Sh ll u 16.11 $t0f!IC • •1 t 1t NoC1r GI u•i. , ... Wtlgh!W ll ll'flo Ca,.o f'll 1... 61 11 ... 1•1 .. 141.o FldNMI• "' J6J •Ito '°'' '1""" -"'Jim W1U ~ Cl~•lltd ll-IE10lvld~ ~-E•dlvl-(hannl"I Fl>l\dl, NII Grlh f9'101'NIEll• 011 l''• J'oWt ldtrn l•o •'•Cirplt<; 1711 5' 21 ~1 21 '• 21 \11+ i.:.F'ldP1cEI 11 11\o'J 11°"' 1714 .. JlrnWPI ltO llllld •11<1 1o1ln In full 11.0lt~E• dltl"· 81t1n It.OD I' 11 Ntul C" IM 1.50 NW Ni!G t~ 10'\ Wtltni M lS 35"' c1r,.tl'Cll tO 31 JI'," 36.W 11 -~ FldPI Plld I 2 21\lo !!,, 2t -\Ii JOflnM.ln l 10 l)utlon, ••-E• rlo11!1 l'W-Wltl'IOYI w•r-Com lt I IU ,.00 HtllW Fii 11U11.tJ NW Pu5v 'l1'• 'l"I'• WtlllF M 1''~ 1•~ CirrO 1 )2g l 36 JJ\1 36 + \lo F1<1Slln$ 60 1• 11 4"'" 11 ' , JOflnJOfl Aa r•llll ww-Wll~ wtr<•nll Wd-Wh'" Il l• Grwtt> s" 6.51 H-Wld 1S u 1• 71 NDlll l C• •n~ 6l.,, Well G1• I•'\ 17~ C1•1Wtl IUt lS u•) 1''~ 11•i. -"" ,tdtr1•1 Inc 10 10"-lo.ii 11\0 ' Jalln1 !•C IO lllC'On'I JM l !tN-lon IJ7$1771NllCI ll 10 101~W11ci1 ,. .... ·~•c11lltCk 60b )1 12'"' 2IV, """'. 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Atfl,Y • ~· t,. ver in •c $ 11 1.ss AMF Inc t9 lM ll"" """' Slloo +-'• Ollfror O•J• "' ~ ~ 6t\6 -t"• Gr1naun .to 11•} Jt~ "'' 11! • -'11 f.\l(•t co :io samt "-'rlod la!il year Grou ...... ,.. F<'I 11 ,. 11 ... Vlk1"9 t 15 J l• .. mlK .. r: I Spt "'" -l• nO•I oft 0 1iOO .0 to olll -" Gl•nlrCN "' ti 11 ll"" IS'I -+ '. Mt<y AH 1 ~ '" ' t'&l""Lttl•••HHWtU511 tt'lt13AMPtnc6' • Iii 1 '1i-"'Con""'IOdl 'llO SR-~ m•n•IYllt l li''l•'''•21',-'·M.o FdH• revenue!! Jn the 1971 period1o1...i~ .,., ••t ,,1 w1v-M 11 1t 1,41 Am~P•h 111 • t1\ 1t",. -''<:"°'u~11 '° 114 .. ll ll _, r1111w 1JC1 .. ,, •l'• 1S'o -'~M111~ G•• t'~• 11 .,1,n w,111...i11 Gro\111 Amllt"I CllU' •1 ~ 1 .. ,,_.... .. C-•ln 1'11 tt ~''!Eli Sii\-"' r•';b;" l'5 150 SI ll'•,. +1 MltlcCll 60 totalrd $3,882,00U compared tn ..,.1.... , ""~•" fnir ,, •1tJ 14 ~I'' !r.i. ~ '.-\1 1:: 1:? -\9 c -· ~.i" u !""' • -'? ·:~ ..... ~ 11 _: r ?::" ~ ~,. ,r,• -~~ Mltnvoll 1 711 '35760001he vca rbefore =:~,:~" 1;:;1!;.; ~""''~ l"i!:l',:!Am:,: 160 it J1t. )J\• ,,...._,·~=}'t11w1 ,J Ji.-l'4' l~~;-:•g'L-O• t.XI, ~ ~ .... 3\ l!•!+·:~\:f• 1 111 • -• l""M 111 , or A"'"' 11 11 ~ r.~ 11'1 -•1 c-t ""n ts ) " .. f1M 11111o _ 1' ING(1ron te S 10>. '0'• ,°""' -'' vat "' Share holders f!lerled a new ,',, " n! ... JS l .. JI. '"'1• ,. AnlCOl'IClt 1 ~ i Tl" "n\\ + 141 C-1•"" 1 '° a Ir.! '° to'• -\l !Nl)Ntlc 1 .0 11 )) ~' } S) --+-\ MMlflM'ld s.,•, , • ,.._. • Tru!' l,Of ""'h Hoe:~ 1 ) Vi ,11<. \"'\ c-•tt J.)11 """ !"" +1' i NN •IB •IO 2 1'') \1'• '° • -\1 ·~-, !iiltl!(' of d ir cC'IOrS (.: Arn h olt l"<rw't~ • '1 " W•!ll 1,._,u ...... llCOrO *' • ''\ lf\oo t\1 -•·c-1r1 stl, ' 'lo lS\A ' _,, INN PIA•O ll\I l't, 11~ Ml nHln JU Smith, P A Toft. Clifford, M ~-;.'";'\~ ,:,,'! ,; ~ :~;' 1i10°lrif ~; ==~~l. ':ll J tl"' ti... f~, =~~:Ir~: U: 1H 1ttn ,tt.. ,~~ 7,:~ 1,:;~~1~1~ ~ !t~ ~; ~~:: ~ ~ ... utg•~'°wi P V llod I Dudl F 'f rll""" 1 ' W••t l""' t 1173Silollto0 1,:tl 6'll 1l'o 1f"-IJ C!rWlttCom 'l"li''o~O"i -"'•WU~•ll N 1 71 j1'4,1»-••MlflC O!!U • ;in r rtcl\. ey , l,....P l""•o lll,.\\.,Wlnf" ~d StS i~·~oCo II ~I 'l 1711 U•t • '~c.,.-11or11 lll S ''• [' '1'1 + \oo i'w~,~!~ )0 t •. , I , t •) • •,Mlft!~ llltl '1lllcr R J S"tlorandC s 1'"'"<"·"' ,.,., ... w1n1lttd •7' 1'AP co111 1s 21•~ j11\-"CPC tM1 1'#i '!! ll''i 111 ~"-'' rn !•M,.. 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Ull I I f E•Ct llO UCI '1 JG !'11Mll W•I '° • , , \tk!OI' Com Un 5 12 !II<~ Ot-c~ UP .$ II ~Dl/Ollt CP Up l U mtl"I Co 1111 11 IS )(1!• Ind u11 J'l'f 1 car11 er ~: J: 11 .... ::.o:·tf!C U: • • 1• ~u!l«I I"' UD :i\lt fl~~~Oh~ 00 'l JI ud~llY (I l.'-•2lltplll. ~~I+ ii., U1 L,u1 Mfl Pel C:.i11_,. Gii !0 • -' O!I I. 1•10or Inc '!'--1=t ou j • 11corn• $ .. -•'t ~ J •IHl! Ctrt U't ..-J ••• 111•r1t.m I 1$10 -11'1 ., 1-' tm<~fM ll n· .. = ,~ ,, 'I ·~/\lb ,~ -'"' ~· '1 <t<t,.,... ol'o 11 1~ -1'• dn Homnld 1'--,_. S.t d11HYdr1 21 l'D'\ _,, Sf 4111"'' !kl ,, -J\l " I ..,,,.... ••• 1'• -"• 0 dn MtrtOf!l 1'1 -•o O!f •I dn g~...,.011 '•'· -... ~, ., ....... , , .. ~.~ ='·· ~ !1 :~:ii·~ .. 1.$'' -I o 'I l;•r"" •c-d O"• -•t u !i''"'' ll'IC ,, -1, , .. f:'"""' ~1-'0 111.t -lo OI re •IM ,to 11\t -.. .., ltr0'1. "' f JJ -I t o,5 1rou"'1 Fiii Complete Closing Prices -Ameritan Stotk Exchange List • City of Hope Day Set June 6 Actor Fred MacMWTay will be honorary general chairman of the 1971 Hope Sunday fund dnve for the City of Hope N&hooal Medical Center at Duarte Hope Sunday 1s Jurw 6 The services of the free, non-sectanan hospital a r t available en referral basis by private phys1c1ans City of l!ope depends en contribul.lons to meet its an- nual budget of $16 mlihon. An 111 mllbon expansion fund drive 1s also underway to pro- vlde new buildlnp on the bospital'a 92 acre 1lte. Pledge Killed In Berkeley LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Peter J 1.upton, 27, a former police officer, wa s placed on two years probaµon Tuesday after ht pleaded guilty to violating the c1vU rights of • ~ omnn by forcing her le disrobe during a se1trch. In entering his plea, LuplCl'I admitted be had no probablt coiuse ta force l'iiay Ling Lu. 20. to disrobe in hla: patrol car May 1, 1970 $25 0 Winner Deborah H D" l gh t-. dtiuj!hter or v L. Dwight, 2M1 Pemba Drive. Costa M~ has been awarded a #50 scholarship by the .RetaD Clerks Union Local 33&1 Butu Perk. l • I • • . . . . " . . · 1 ... 8 OAJL Y PILOT r,ldar. May 14. 1971 It Only Hurts When You Laugh--Hogan All-star Tilt lhrce penally shoJs. and wound up with~ lh"' was. lake there. I had never seen Zarley moved Into • share of the lead Protested HOUSTON (AP) -It only hurts when you laugh, Ben Hogan said today in COO· templatlng the nigbtmari11h nine he took on the par lhrte fourth hole in the first round of the llouston Champions lnlern<1· Uonal Golf Tournament. 111t's not tht worst hole J've ever played -I had an 11 once on a par three hole in Jacksonville, Fla.," the SJ.year. old golfing legend recalled good-naturedly 11 fter being forced to withdraw from his first co1npelition of the season. Stricken wltb a recurring injury to his left knee, dating back to his near fatal automobile accid~nt in 1949, the methodical little Texan stopped al the 11th hole!: after soaririg II stroke5 over P"'· Halos' Murphy Seeks to Halt Losing Streak Tom Pi.lurphy, who hasn't won 1 game ln more than a month, t.akes the mound tonight for the California Angels as they open a home stand Y.'ith visions of doing better lhan the ·last time they came home. After California's first road swing of A11gel Slate All G1m11 •• tlMl'C 1n11 'MY U -A .... 11 VL Ml!WlultH N1y U -...... 11 v1. l.lllWl ... ff MIV II -........ VI. MllW ...... H MIY 11 -Anlell VI. Ml...- ':~S •·"'· J ·JS •.m. l:lS •. m. P:J.S •.tn. the season. they returned home 'lli'itb a 11eason mark of 8-4 and hopes high. l\furphy started that first game back and dropped a 4-0 d~ision to QakJand. California lost the next three game1. too, Md \\'OUnd up closing that home stand V.'ith a ~7 record. ~turphy begins another homestand opener tonight. taking his 1·4 record against Milwaukee's Bill Parsons. 3-3. ~turphy 11.'as the first Angel to record a \•ictory this season "''hen, on the second d.av of the season. he "1lipped Kansas Ci- ty 7-3 by scattering 10 hits. J-1011.'ever, since then he has lost four of the six games in "'hich he st.arkd and has an inflated earned run average of ~.07 in 56 iMings. He's 11.'alked lll""ind struck out only 14 and v.•as kayoed 4-1 by Cleveland la!l time out. Colden Glo,·e shortstop Jim Fregosi of the Angels is out of tonight's game "'ith the same problem that forctd him to miss two games already -a neuroma or Aerve tumor in his right fool. He's been filled ~'ith a special shot brace and the Angels are hoping surgery won't be necessary. However. in J!m's place has (.'()me Syd O'Brien. He 's started at short and in his last seven games has hit safely. In that _J pan, •~ has eight hi ts in 26 trips up and six nta1 batted in. Anol,,,.r batter on a tear is California's new starting catcher John Stephen!lon. The much-traveled veteran has fashion- ed • seven-game hit streak good for 12 hits in 24 al bats including three doubles, three runs scored and three driven in. Right no"'. however, all eyes sre on ).iurphy. Racing Sm·face Could Be Slow For Preakness BALTIJ\10RE (AP\ -The \\'eather and the resulting condition of I.he Pimlico rar- ing ~urface i!I of more concern lo lhe trainers of Saturday·s Preakness entries than Uie post pos;uons. After the bumping. cro"·ding and block- Ing in the ZO..horse cavalry charge knO\\'rt as the Kentucky Derb.v. lht draw Thurs-- dav to determine I~ slartin.e: gate line.up for. !he Preakness \\'as strictly ho-hum. 1 n the Derb~·. "·on h,\' long shot Canonero II. ii \1•a.s jockey Co\\·boy Jim· mv Nichols aboard List \\'ho observed: "J',·e seen lht 'Charge of the Light RriP.ade· on le\e\'i.;;ion. but I ne\'cr thought I'd be in 11:· But the I Jf6 mile Preakness \1•111 ha1·e only 11 starters. so no traffic jams art expected. Instead. v.·ith Pimlico tx-ing pelted by rain se1·eral da \'s during the past v•eek - including a d11•npour Thursday -the t~\k turned to the condition of \ht racing &trip. "I prefer mud:· said Gerald Lord, trainer ol Guslal'c Ring 's Sound OH. who 11·on the Preakness Prep last "·erk ovrr favored Executioner on an off track. "I hot)(' it rains again Friday.'' The \l.'eather forecast. hov.·ever. called for cl('ar skies today anri Saturday, prior to the 96th running of lht' Preakness at 2:40 p.m . POT. CRS \\Ill televi~e from 2 to J p.m .. and broadcasl on radio from 2:25 to 2:45 p.m. Sound Off also drew the No. I post posi· tion, putting him in the best spot to go to Ow front with the early speed v1hkh i.s likely to come from Ca lumel rarm·s Eastern Fleet and t:xecutioner of the October House Fann. "It really doesn't m a k e any dif- ference.·· Lord said. "I v.•ant my hor~ to Jay off the pace a little bit any"'a)'. but he has the speed to go to the front on the fir.st turn. I think I'm going to win it." Sound Off and W. P. Rosso·s lmpetuosi· ly. however, are rated 10.1 tn the pr&- ba)?lt odd!, wilh the favorite's role going l.o Jim French, tht Derby runnez--up own . eel by F'rank J . Caldwell , at 5-1. "J hale to play and quit," he said. "II burns me ~P. But I just l'OUldn'1 ket>p up with the other fello"'s t partners Charles Coody and Dick LolzJ. II v.·as oo use trying to take that misery '' Hogan said he intended to treat the knee with diatheriny and he hoped he might be able lo play next week in the Colonial Invitation in n1s home <·ity of Fort \Vorlh. "J'm ool discouraged." he said. ''I've been hilling the ball well It see1ns I can do e\'erything but play golf." Hogan then recalled an experience n1ore dreadful than that of Thursday when he hit three shots into a deep ravine fronting the 223-yard fourth hole, taking n111e. It because it always had been obscured with 67s, four under par on the tough, "I'll never fornet a hole I played in by the cro d · " w · 7,166 yard Champion.s Golt Club Course. Jat°ksonville," he said. "I lhink the year d ' .. Ii It . 1 "The ball was visible in some :ioft sand They .,.,·ere one stroke in front of rookie 11.•as aroun · was a sunp e par so I tried to play it. The ball came out, l•·e•-se,en-i ron shot. But the groen was Hubert Green "'ho has threatened Jw1"ce •u " but I got a glimpse of something white. • " divided by a big hump and we had been The ball had rolled back in. This time t -finishing second and third -in the last playing it with the flag on the left side. decided to watch it. I hlt it and it trickled three weeks. ·•on this particular day. the nag was 011 back again. the right side. I hit "'hat I thought was a good shot. "This time I couldn't find it. So I drop. "~·ly caddie said. ·t think you \Vent in ped the ball in a cup of sand and hit it IJ~ Jake, ~fr. Hogan.' I said, 'There's 110 with a \\'edge as hard as I could. It flew lake over there.' 'Yes the.rt is bo!.!I.' 'No, across the ridge where,l didn 't "'ant to be there's not -how Jong have you been in the first plact. caddying here, son~· 'Fifteen years, Mr. ''Now I'm lying nine, ~o I two-pull for Hogan,' he replied. an 11." "I went down there and. sure enough Mean~·hil~, Larry Hinson and Kermit Another stroke back, at 69, were Dave Hill and Bob Murphy, while the big group at 70 included defending champion Gibby Gilbert, Chi Chi Rodriquez, amateur Ben Crenshaw, Homero Blancas and several others. Arnold Palmer had a 71. Masters champ Charles Coody took a 72 and Lee Trevino was well back at 76. Ul'I Telwllele CHICAGO'S DENNIS HULL SCORES FIRST GOAL FOR HAWKS OVER MONTREAL GOALIE KEN DRYDEN. HAWKS WON, 2-0, TO LEAD SERIES. Dodgers Open Crucial Series SAN F'RANCISCO (AP) -Steve Stone 111nd Al Downing, unexpected standouts on their respecti ve pitching staffs. will be the starters tonight when the San Fran- cisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers meet for the first time this season. Stone. the Giants' 23-year-old rookie 011 TV To11igl11 Cl1a1mel l l at 7 :55 right-hander. takes a 3-1 record into the opener of the important three-game ~·eekcnd series at Candlestick Park. He's in only his third year or organized h<lseball and was nol on the Gi ants' 4D- n1an spring roster. Do\\·ning. a left-handt.'r v.·ho appeared \\'ashed up after 10 seasons in the American League. carne to lhe Dodgers in a v.•inter trade 11·1th the J\filwaukee Brewers. He \\'On a starllng job ~·ith the Dodgers and stands 3-2. The Giants are con1111g off a thrcc- gan1e sweep of the defending National League champion Ci ncinna1i Reds and lead the second placr Dodge rs by eight gan1es in the \Vcstern Di 11ision. The first DO<.lger-Giunl series of the year is expecterl to draw about 90.000 lans to Candlestick Park I Played Way I Should --Black· Hawks' Jarrett CHICAGO (AP) -Doug Jarett didn't score a goal Thursday night. In fact he didn't even make an assist. But the big defenseman is one of the reasons the Chicago Black Hawks have taken the up- per hand over the-Montreal Canadiens in their Stanley Cup Playoff. The Hawks, getting picture goals from Dennis Hull and Cliff Koroll . defeated the Canadiens 2--0 behind goalie Tony Esposito to take a J.-2 edge in their be~t­ of·7 series \1•hich no\v advances to ~1on­ treal Sunday afternoon in a nationally tdfevised contest. Jarrett, \\'ho has been virtually helpless throughout the series. tumed ii around Thursday to help lead the Ha\\·ks to vie· Lory. He played so well that Coach Billy Reay never even came close lo using his reserve defensemen as he had in the two previous losses in r-.1ontreal. "\Ve "'ere moving for a change."' sa1<f .Jarrett in relating his play and lhat of defense mate Keith ~tagnuson. ''At least I thought I "'as for a change. "\ 1vas so disgusted and disappointed \l'ith the 11·ay J was playing, I didn't know 1vhal to do. I guess J "·ent out and played the game the v.•ay I should and the \vay J'm capable. "[think it all began in the last game of !he New York series," continued Jarrett. "I started thinking too much. I don'l know \\'hy. 1 guess 11 v.·as just a slump, "The harder I worked, the worst ii got." continued Jarrett. ''In five games J don't think I hit anybody .'' J arretl hit and hit hard Thursday night and his jarring checks not only helped preser\·e Esposito's shutout but opened the doors for the offense. Dennis Hull scored his sixth goat or the series on a perfect pass fro1n Koroll at 10:57 of the first period and lhe tv.·osomc collaborated for the second goal at 11:26 of the second period \1-hen Korol! slapped in Dennis' shot after if had hit a skate in fronl of goalie Ken Dryden. Coach Reay ga \'e everyone credit "from the goalkeeper on ou! and 1 \\'as pleased "'ilh our penalty killing. Before lhe series started I said it \vould go six or seven games." "How many now," someone inlt:!rrupted. "Right now I'd say six," responded Reay. Drivers Bid For Indy Pole l~'DIANAPOLIS IAP) -A l'rowd usually guessed as the second·largest in American sports ·will swarm into the 539- acre Indianapolis Motor Speedway Satur· day. almost guaranteed a dozen record· smashing runs for the pole position in the 55th SO(l.mile race ~1ay 29. Ind iana State Police generally estimate the crowd for the first day of time trials Up\\'ards of 250,000 and the race day swarm at about 100.000 more. Mark Donohue of l\1edia. Pa.. who rinished second to Al Unser of Albu· querque. N.M .. in last year's million. dollar Indy race. \\'ill be a prohibitive fav orite lo win the No. I starting position in the 33-car fi eld. Donohue \\'as clOCk i!d in offi cially at 180.977 miles per hour Thursday. com- pared with the lhree-year-0ld official tecord of 171 .559 for the IQ.mile qualifica. lions. sel by Joe Leonard of San Jose in an STP turbine car. Donohue has a rad ical new J\1ark 16 !'\lcLaren O\vned by former racer Roger Penske or Philadelphia and powered by 11 ::pccial ~horl·stroke Offenhauser engine. Peter Rcvson of New York, fifth in the 1969 Indy classic. and former \\'Orld cha1npion Denis Hulme of Ne.w Zealand 'have the only other ~1ark 16s that have ~n built. By Owi1ers NE\V YO RK -Walter Kennedy, com· missioner of the Na tional Basketball Association, says the 17 owners of the league's teams ha11e protested to him the al l-star g a ni e planned by the NBA Players Association v.'ith a team from the American Basketball Association. In a Jetter Thursday to Larry Fleischer, attorney for the ~'BA players organization, Kennedy said the game scheduled for Houston Pi.1ay 28 is a viola- tion of all the players· contracts which specify the team owner must give permission for a player to participate in a game outside league sanction. The game was announw:l by Oscar Robertson. president of the ~'BAPA, after Kennedy aMounccd the NBA and ABA v.·ould seek congressional approval for 1 mergtr. The players presently have an injunction against lhe merger of the former rival leagues. e Polo To11r11ey Set Ten teams art entered in Saturday and Sunday's SPAAU water polo cham· pionship al Golden West College with the Phillips 66 A team seeded No. I. The tourney gets under way Saturday morning at 8 \\'Ith tv.·o championship round tills being played al 5 and 6 p.m. that day. Sunday's round of games will be clima:xed with the title lilts at J and 4. Three CINA (D:lrona-T r v i n e • Nev.'port Association) teams are entered in the tourney under the direction or UC Irvine coach Ed Newland. CINA 's No. I team is seeded second. Phillips 66 also has two other squad! entered with Golden West players making up one of them. Other entrants include Corona de! f\lar. Downey, Riverside and Cal Poly (Pomona). There is no admission charge Saturday with $1 being assessed Sunday. e Taylor to Re111r11 KANSAS CITY -Oulfielder C 11 'I Ta}'lor, who bu1·ned his sweatshirt in disgust before leaving the Kansas City Royals, \\'iU be back next week. a club spokesman says. Cedric Tallis, Royals general manager, said he got a telephone call Thursday from Taylor who was at his off-season home in Sarasota. F'la. Tavlor sa id he "·anted to take care of sclme personal" matters and return to Kansas City in a few days. Tallis said a srrious illness in Taylor's family had added lo the outfielder's wor· ries and ii apparently became too much for him. Taylor has started eight games for ..the Royals and has gotten only seven hits in 37 limes at bat ror a \l'eak .189 average. After failing tv.·ice al !he plate in Baltimore \Vednesday he took himself out of the game and ~'ent to the dressing room. There he scl fire to his S\\'eatshirt in front of his locker. e ~leq1111y l11l<s Paet TAf\1PA, Fla. -The University or Tampa's record breaking junior running back Leon f\fcQuay has signed a one-year contract ~·ith the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian football leagnt. the Tampa Tribune reported in today's editions. Although the signing was confirmed by official sources. Spartan Coach Bill Fulcher expressed doubt that McQuay had signed. e A111eric1111s f'11ll BUFFALO, N.Y. -The So\·iet Union 's national baskelball learn trounced an American squad ~7 Thurs.day night in the second game of a cross-country United States tour. _ The Russians won 83-82 against the same group of amateur and college players Tuesday night. The Soviet learn \\'as led by Aljan Zharmukhamrdov \1•ho scored 23 points and snared 17 rebounds. The \•isitors led 33-28 at lh c half but pulled away in the second half. Randy Smith and Julius Er\'ing led the United States with 15 points each. F1111 Bel1ind UCI Ni11e; ""' r1i..11er. MARLENE HAGGE SINKS PUTT FOR 69 AND LEAD IN LAS VEGAS SEALY·LPGA CLASSIC. • Puget Sou11d Next Foe By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 IM 0•111 1'1191 Sl•tf The Cali fornia Angels have a Funday ~eduled in conj u n ct ion v;ith a Disneyland promotion June 13. UC Trvine's baseball learn staged a Funday Thursday in conjunction ~'ith a Big I Booster club sponsored fashion show that fe1v of lhc players \1·ere aware of and the extra curricular activity took place prior to the game. The UC I Funday 11·as at lhe expense of the Southern California C o 11 e g e Vanguards and at conclusion of the seven Innings. coach Gary Adams' crew had ~led 11 22-4 ,·ictory to run the season record to 31-15-1. The fun is behind "°"'" hov.'e,·er. as Adan1s attempts to bring his charges back to earth and a second straight ap- pearance in the NCAA \\'estern Regional bascball playoffs at San Fernando Valley State College ~ginnlf\E: Friday again.c;' Pugct SQund. No time schedule has been released by the host school to date although all lour teams will play Rl least one game on opening day. Three games v.·111 ~played Saturday and one or two, as nc<"essary, on Sunday. Adams s~arted an all-senior lineup Thursday Wllh many of the pll'lyers al un- famUiar position~ to start or before !he action had ended. T~·o big double figure innings sel a new UC! standard ~·ith the An1ea1ers scoring 10 !imes in the ti~st ~nd JI in the sixth. UC! belted 15 hits 1ncludinJi an inside-l_he-p~rk. homer hy ~1ikc Sheline in fhf! first 1nn1ng. S.C•! /I) ... , ' ' 0 l!O"ll!, II Oouvl••· JI! Hl11~ln-, UC 1,.,111• U!I h •~· •••ftrtl 0 0 SP•nt•, lb.c 1 1 ! 1 0 0 L>o~• 7b 7 1 1 1 Si'l<'lln• r-tn t t 1 1 M~••"OI!. •t ) t I t o·co~""'· rf.p.cl • I Q C H1r .... r, Cl·D l I I 1 Slv•rrlon. D•ID 1 0 ' 1 .. ,,.,..,_,asJ G OO Oslu"4. c l 0 o O Tt>omat, 11>-•f·CI lrenlon, 2b l 0 0 0 I I O O lb u.a 1 ~t"""· ll I I•"~'. U·P ) Done!. D 0 "'~'''""'" IB 0 11-cl·ID-D I tl·tl>e>l•Oll, (C•...,MJo, "" I R"ilon<!o. • o S••ort. ' 0 • , ' • ' ' , 0 0 • ' 0 ' ' . • , ' ' • • • Jb i't> c ~··'A. , ' ' fO!l l\ ${('! (Cll"9• n L.IC lr•IM Ii ~ ~ • c 0 0 0 0 11 • • • . ' ' 11 ,~ t DAILY '!LOT J 8 WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS! Westminster Hosts MAY SERVICE SPECIALS By JIM NIEMIEC The yellowtall have anived-lhla: is the good word from the party boats O!lhing out ol San Diego. CIF Spike Prelims llc•olvl!on•"' new "J'' <>lonol '''""<!' "" '~ 0''"'1 C.u~~•, No 1 L1ncol• 11'<-•C•l'f <1, • .,1 .. , nc.,. ofl· ·1 1,.c101y u.111.,,., .. ., "• vt(C' ~t P••<<'• 'omporoblc •o rr"'" .~~·q••d tlf ><•••C<" ,,.,, ,,, ond cthr• non-1p<'t 1<ll1:~d .. pol• '~'·,~••(•by >Pf'"~' n•c-nl •Oor. ,~ .. f,.,,h,, ••m•· ·•~ "•n , The llrst yellow of the aeason was picked up Sund1y by Bob Michalski of San Diego fishing aboard the bo1U Fiesta. '}.1lchalski used a green and white TADY jig to n1ark the start of the yellowtail season by landing the 19¥~ pound gameste r. The San Diego Yello"·lail Derby is now in full swing and the sponsoring groups of U1e derby held their press trip last Tue sd11.y. It ju.st happened to be the day the yellowtail broke loose and 30 outdoor writers landed more than 40 yellowtail and 11ack full s of barracuda. The dock count was in excesg of 150 yellows and the out· look is good for a continued good run of game fish. Coast Area By PHIL ROSS Of lh Dtlh' l'lltl ll•ff Some 400 athletf:s from 63 schools and nine differen t leag ues will converge on Westminster High Saturd ay for one portkln ol the Cl~· Sou thern Section track and field preliminaries. and 19.0 (ISO lows) while Milrina low stick act Gene T.11ylor has been dropped to the Bee level for CIF com· petition . Four 23-0-plus long jumpers will compete including Hun· tington Beach's Garth Wise 123-1) and Foun tain Valley'' Ray Harris t23-0). Newport Harbor strongboys Mark Stevens t63-5~) and junklr Terry Albritton are fP:vored to advance as the lt>p shot put qualifie rs while San Clemente pole vaulter Tony fioffn1an ( 14·61;:) i~ rapidly regaining hls old form after re<.'O\•ering fro rn an ear!y- season broken ankl e. Reg. ~fi.ao SMOG SYSTEM SPECIAL Tt1I, el•tn 1ftil •••vi,, Cltft~· t••• t m lu io" •v•l•m, $120 YOU SAVE $1.60 Reg. $14.50 COOLI NG SYSTEM SERVICE SPECIAL Flirt~ I •1~l1e1 coo!•"t, P•••• 1u11 i11t, in1p1ct •ll ~01 11 I bt lh . $1000 YOU SAVE $4.50 Fi¥ting aboard Steve Glffin 's boat Holiday. the group of writers\(,ound very good action on surface fish all day, with the yellows making !heir best showing around 9:30 a.m. The ~llowtail are mixed fish ringing in weighls from 7 lo 30 pou nds and are hitting live squid better than iron at this lime. There are a lot of fish in the water and the bait conditions are excellent. Net Res ults For Preps, Prel im meets will al.~ be held al Inglewood, Lakewood and Chaffey with I o p qualifiers from the four sites advancing to next Fridey night's CIF stmifinals at Cer· ritos College. Fountain Vall ey SANTA ANA LINCOLN MIRCURY 1301 NO. TUSTI N AVE., SANTA ANA 5'47·0143 "Wf APPRfCIATI! YOUR I USINESS" The water is clearing up and the warmer water current.s appea r lo be moving in. lltVIJrU! TOUllHAM•HT tit '"114111 The Westminster versioli of the prelims begins with the pole vault at 11 a.m., with the remainder of the rield events slarting at 11 :30 and the first running event slated lo get out Aw aits CIF Bid . For more information on the fi shing in San Diego phone f'.lther Point Loma SporUishing (714) 223-1627 or Fisherman's Landing at (714) 222.0391. Closer to the ha rbor area. fishing has improved \l.'ilh the better weather. A few barracuda are starting to show and bass fishing has already picked up. All the local landings are current· Iv switching over to their summer schedules in preparation for the annual good runs of yellowtail , barracuda, bass and bonito. Bay fishing continues to be good for boal anglers trolling Hie deeper channels around the islands. Last week George L<r baugh of Newport Beach and Dave Brownell picked up a num· brr of bay and spotted bass on deep running plugs y,·hile trol· ling during the slack tide. Skiff fil;h ermen report fair numbers of bass and small hali- but in the bay and near the jetty and list live bait as the best en ticer. Rc1S• Top Fre•h Water A n 91i119 Every where in the Southland. from San Diego lo Santa Bar· bnra to Lake Havasu, marlaa operators report a movement of big fish to shallow waters for their annual or semi-annual spawn. Vail Lake gave up a 81'f: pound northern largemouth to Jim Dorsey of Elsinore lo bigbll~ht the weeks fishing, and mo\•es Dorsey into lbe lead of the Vail Lake fishini: bonanza. In addition to the good catches of bass at Vail Lake. crap- pie and hlueg ll are also listed as excellent with catfish starting lo show up on Che stringers. Lake Havasu largemouth bass are moving up from deep "'aler, and· curren tly are hitting worms, deep running plugs and Purple Bandits in 5 to 20 feel of water. The bucketmouths shou ld provide excellent surface actton for the ne:rt three lo rive \lo'eeks as the fish move up even lighter to the now nearly full lake. There ha\.·e also been a few large striped bass taken at Havasu recently, ~1hlch means that not all the fish move up lhe river lo Davis Dam al this time of the year. Dick Morris of Canoga Park picked up a . strlpe.r using a ~poon rigged 1i\'lth Uncle Josh pork rind, but the pin-strippers are not conslstant in lbei r feeding habits •. reports Morris. The City Lakes Recreation Department for San Diego liste d 11 number of large Florida strain bass in their weekly bullelln. Olay Lake seems to be the best ror big bass to 15 pounds, ·while El Capitan and Sutherland are producing some nice catches of bas~ running In excess of 10 pounds. Lake Uen sha\lo' and Wohlford are also rated as very good for bass, crappie, bluegll and ca tfi sh and wilh warmer weather should btcume even better. Tbe trout at Wohlford are holding their own with the other fish fo1111d in the lake due to !be heavy weekly trout plants. lligh S i e rra Fishing Cro.,.,·ley La ke is living up lo ils reputation as being one of the more consistent 1>roducing lakes in the high country. s1n,1n Fll'JI •MIMI. Mfllt r !CdM) del. Fr!Ult t !E,f.afl) ' 0, •.•. 5Chlldh1119• IF\11 lltl. W 11 ' on lEdliOnl •·•. 17 a . llutwll ICM\ won b• de!1111! \laM'n1ue11 ll-V att Wil~ 1E111 ''°' •·J. Enal1t¥ !CM) dd Sml!h ILAI 6-0, .. •• Lewl1 (CaM) clef II, llllHtll CE1!) 6-1, •·1. (L~) ~~;~·,".f~ &-\~alMOn) atf L11rn:l<1u11r M5Wn 1E1r) Ol!f Zt •embt ($AV) 6-1. i -0. Gu!llc~ !CaMJ d~I. Hollle-11 IE>!) ,. 0, 6·0, ,_fli~1. IEdllonl dt l VtntrRotl (SAVI ,.,~1mt~r (EdltOnl aer D1vl1 (LA) •·l. T~nd•I !Fv/ ae1 G••Y !LAI 1-1. •·3. Dvo• /CtlM Cit! Come (FV) 6-1, 1-11. S1>1Jr ((I,\) aM Sltventon (Edi.on) 7• j '·t.· l•l~ n'.?°" tF\I) dtf P. PtlerlD<! !~AVJ M1llet1 1E11\ <It! Ovitt (FV) i·I, 11. ''''"' 1tw1111 N lllt• ICdMI dtl $.chlldht uer ll'VI 1-1, i •O. fl ~uuell (CMl dt l Vtltn1~lt fFV! ._., 1·' El'ldSln' (CMJ Ml LtW I• !CdM, 1-S, •-> Mll1"0'I fE1ll dtt S. P!lu""" CEdit.enl ,.,, 6-1. llltt IEdlllll'lf atl Gulllcit !CdMI f.1, •• rana11 !FV) dei io!Ufl!"' CEdlWll!) .. J. 6·1. $pelr ICM) c!tf. D1tr ((dMJ HM , J", ••• Ml lWlll IElill dtt End1le1 (CM) M, 6-1. Ouarl1rlJ11tl1 Mlller ICc!M) dtf B. lluntll !CdM) •· I. 6-1. Mtu~ !ES!l de! EdntM'V ICM) .... , .•. Ttl'1dt l !FV) dtl lllcf" !Edllolll 6-l. &· • Miiiott !£11l aet ~<>tlr !CM) 6-!1, 6-1. Dtulllu Fl111 llo-und Ntlu tr·Vtrmuna tCdMI at! PerTtr, H.t nn !M•al 6-0, 6·0. Gavno•·WDdt (E!tl dt !. C.ttflC~· ~lldlltm ICM) 1•6, 6·1, 6-1. T110-Fry• (LA) <It! P•lct-McKln111v 1Eal•onl 6·1, u. 6·0. MUlt r-l l)ll_ptn fl'V) dtl Ntltll• M<\r~nn !Eol l 6°1. 6·D. I( llelt•·H1rrl• ICaMI dtl Clltrnow· M~rin 1"ooe>1n I FVl 6·J. 6· I. Ft rn1nd11-l-l1nu ISAVl dtf lolellv• Hon!!'!'borne llf\••) 6·1, l-6. 6-0 A.,.,..r1tn· k t mllt<in (Ed1S01'l dtl ~·.~:;;~~~;~~ '7:~) '~rt3;..~~lb1ld· Grt• (LA) 'i11~~trlln1l1 ~, Ntl1M'r·V1r..,und (CdM! det Gt•no•· Wtdt !Ell) 6-1, 1-0 Mlllf•·Too""'n (l'V! df"f T1tc-F•~f" !LAI 6·J. 7·'· 6-1. 1(1U1ter-H,.rrl1 IC11MI dd F.,nt ndu• lol~n" !SAV I l·I, 1·1 l(•t WCJ¥k·Sl\ew (FV} dtl ol.ndtrHn-HemlllO<I CEdliOl'll '-J. '-"· Vt ,,111' lHllM ••.c~ tU\~) 01\lil ,_, u,...1n ll1rryh!ll Ill won 6-h kl\! 3-4: _., 6-l . i.-1. ~~~t'i \tl-;: ti; =:. ~. 5t.'i, 1i!11 .. llrolfltrton Ill io.r 1·6. '"· G-6, 1.6 0-ln Steer t tld Pt 1ttol (L, 101! j../, '°'' 101(1 '·6, 6·) McCl rlf"r 1tld Jtcabien (L) los! 1·6, 1"; WOii 6-1, 6·1 v1 ... 1iv of the blocks at 12:30 p.m. By ROGER CARLSON Spi kers from all seven 01 1~• O•llv l'lltl s11ff Orange County prep leagues Fountain Valley H i g h's !Crestview . Freeway, Garden baseball team is in somewhat Grove. Irvine, Orange, Sunset of a stale of limbo today and Angelus) will compete at rollowing the conclusion of the Weslmi11ster along w I th Irvine Le!lgue season Thurs· representatives from th e San-day afternoon. ta Fe and Suburban loops. Coach John Cole 's Barons The 440 will feature five ---- competitors with marks of 49.2 u1:v1rF,n!i~a.ou1 or faster and they include San-Liii -'l•mlro• ,w 1L l •• ta Ana's Bob Harrell (48.2), Foun11rn v111,, 1 J 1 •;, Mt~llOll~ I S l , .. Garden Grove's defendiog CIF s1n11 Ant v1111v 1 ' • T K · k E•11nd1 ''ll champ ony r z ytos1 a coron1d1l M&• J 1 1 1 f48.l ). Magnolia's John i:i:!. Mew ! 1; : ; Galbraith (49.0J. Mike Grasha t .s .i.r,,,.1,':~·z~~s:w• (49.1) of Savanna and Neff's -,c-c-~-,-~----c-c-­ Brad Williams (49.2). finished in tie for second place Garden Grove junior Mark with Magnolia following Les Schilling (4:13.9) heads a Alamtios' succe55ful bid to the formidable cast of miler.s with title with a clutch 4--0 victory trea aces Bob B r j c k n e r over host Corona del Mar in a (4:23), of Marina. Doug makeup game that was rained MacLean (4 :23.1) of Costa out last week. Mesa and Westmin.!lers Ke vin Chances are good that the Coleman (4:26 ) among the Barons will enter CIF AAA other contenders for further compe tition Tuesday, but they qualifying spots. must await the CIF 's decision Anaheim 's Bob McQueen (Wday or Saturday) as to will be in the [orefroot of the whether three te11ms will be hurdle races al Westminster awarded bids to the ellmina. ofJ his bests of 14.2 (120 hi&hs) tlons from the Irvine circul L Two Eagles, Sea Kings Na1n ed to All-loop Team Corona del Mar and Estan· cia each picked up a pair of first team selections on the All-Irvine League baseball team as picked by the DAILY PILOT. Sampson and ~like Allen) along with EdiSOll's Ron Ruff and Estancia's C h a r Its Coakley to wrap up honors for Orange Coast area alhletes. Player of the year hooors went to Lo~ Alamitos' classy catcher. Terry Stupy, tf Magnolia and F o u n t a n Valley are both invited a coin flip "will decide which learn will trek to San Antonio L.eague co-champi on Upla nd Tuesday. Teams still without an op- ponenl are Balsa Grande, Bishop Montgomery, Fullerton, Tustin and Azusa. Coach Dave Hernandez's Irvine League champion Grif- fins will play host lo Pacifica, the third plact fin isher in the Garden Grove League. The CIF office confirmed this morning that three teams 'A'ould be accepted from the Irvine League in the playc>ffs. Los Alamitos didn 't waste any time in its bid to clinch the tille against Corona de! Mar, scoring twice in the in- itial frame behind [our solid base hits and a couple of Corona de! ~1ar miscues. The Griffi n~ salted it awav with another pair In the sixth behind ace pitcher Jim F'ox. Fox limited cnach Tom Tracer's Sea Kings to four hits .ind struck out eight lM Alt1'1!11 ft) .. ' • "' Ct mt•Ofl. d • • ' ' ~IA-n, If • • • • ~luP•. C l ' • • ol.I"'~' " ' ' ' He'"l!lon. 11 ' • ' ' M•rlln. Pr • ' • • l ""''· 70 , • ' ' C.t te>f'nl•• rl ' • 0 • HfOI"'· lO ' • ' ' Fo•. a , 0 0 • !{Int. P~ ' • • • Tc1e11 " . ' ' Cwon• dtl Mt • !II "' .. ' • Ptrt•r. II ' • • • ~•mYtl1. lb ' • ' • J, Palmrr. tip ' • ' • 9. Ptlmt " Jb.rl ' • • • ~-JonnS011. ttc·I ' • ' • •••• :lb ' • • • Erlclu Ofl, ( ' • • • D"'"''· lb·rl ' • • 0 J. Jonnson. u l • • • Vlla1, p • • • Htill"n lb ' I • • T011ll •• • ' Sctrt ~' lftftlnt1 ' • • <m -'l1m1ro1 "' "' ~· , • '(T Ill lllf SWIN' TODAY. Sttl 1tr y11r SOlf !DUI 1111111•110!1 Jl4 $IHI t•lty111 ••• 11or M••'111lil l lttlin l••1li1tt!y 11 l1c1IJ!. Miii JtrllCIJltill 'llUI\ t!lll C•!! Tt1r flltM· hu ... er .. ti CIMPUlrUNTAIY Clf(ll ff(S •lll titt•Jttltl tr 111 tlltr JIJJlf 111111 t'I 1111111 111. ''''' 1111111ti1u S•Utlltl. AU fl1r 11•l1tl II 10111.i111, ti t11 tlic ... 11•tr H•il1tit11 1t•1c• IUJ le illJUI' •Y r.r l••hlt11I Cl lllU 114 11•1· JOIN GOLF TOUR Inc. FOR THI GU ATllT GOLF I AIGAIN IVIR OFFIRID 1111• 11 UI c11r11 ••••· Mu i Niii •11thh 111.t 11 1 l•I !er 111 •uii. Ot•er OYll II r1 rtic lfJ1111 C111111 11 C1hlt11l1, Dftttl, W10l11fN. lln141, Hhllk Ulll'lt •ueJil1 '1'tWlh 1Jt• C1JI •istttl!I ltt JlUll•lt ti 1'1 1-11 ••Mic. SOM( SlllTIUNO COlllS(S ll C1111DA 0111.wt L&CIHIA IUCll Ci1110N 111110111l tAlfLI SPl111CS FillllOOK AlU!A llEEMS IOllll ttlH IWIY IOllllt IXTW UlflS CDllOtU 11llflAU IN • 11111 1 111 .-IOI 11!t1 SlllTA NllU llATllllAl IUAll Wl • •rt!tlt1Ull Ct!t Lt11&1J ,ALM DESEIT lECOlOU SPlllllllffl • tr'"-'C lfll'I 11111 $All JUAN C1~1DN ,Ult • '"'-1 fi1.11ti HlllS 11.Ullf ll lllGIUMI • l1Mct41 C.H tt.1 l11ei &lllflll CA!tlttl CllllOill • llfltl k ct•lll1U1 ( 11 CAllU • fHl 1 .. , ..... 11 I !ti ,_ rGMON I CllSli ¥£ID SI YIUI~ C.•11-t11'f Jl11!0111l OESEIT Ill l& MilltHI It~ 1M "" t~1 Weil lt ~IMCHO tuHSEt llRLS cu11 l 111w1~1 1.. YllDE SWiii' PlU. lllUl 11·c11CI( ONL y L-1&11c110 t1u11A rul -11(114 U'fWIEMCt »' KflHI 'llllKS $ 6 50 CIEfMtll( COLOUf lllllOIN Yilllf Siii LUIS •ff SAii CtiMDITl ~ ••llCHO MUNI A••11t 1£111A•DO 11!Dl£Cllffl M1•tttUI' AllD GIHEIS '" v 11111£1 llflltll 1111 M1111l1nl1J 1111• u:,,~111, Ptu• . Ori ltnt ll. 11!1 ur1v~1 .1 ~ SP[C/~t MAtl '"" M1M91lsM1" -.. ~,ucAt10N Jott1111 too aT LAS VE'AS L.._ II •I -.111 ......... , .. ' PACICA"E _______ ,. .. .....,.111 w""" • -I ~ -Gill lt<0r. hu. t4 ~ .. •lol•l·1 t111 '°' I '· o. ••• 515 Mt""',.,., .. , ••m• 1 I S•n ''•""••••· <•lif. •1•1z I• .. r> •I 1•-.r.. ~ ll1l.bllf~ I I l1<1titf \--- -!1r -•••H<iM,s \Sl.H •K•J tr11111r U1111 I 1 ,. ''¥ ltll'.•IN' C~lllt t l , I I .,.,,., I I .~u. I I city st•l•___....Jip I I •ltrtthrrt 1 I ~-----------------------~Olf 1111as. IK. '·'· .. , 545, ,,. CltllUtt, C11iltrtY t111l Limits of I to I ~z pound rainbows are common every day at the lrike Y1ith a sprinkling of large browns to 9 pounds being taken. Anglers using TNT floating bait, cheese and sa lmon eggs are finding the rainbows eager to bite, while anglers trolling F'ishbacks. Needlcri sh and Dave Davis' ri gged with nightcrawl· ers are picking up the larger browns. I. Cl"""''' CU Y,1 u i1J Minltn Vit i• Slnt111 Corona de! Mar's brolher combo of John and Bob Palmer were acCQrded first teem honors al lhe utility and third base spots while E:ilan· cia's tandem of Jim Watson (shortstop) and Jeff Zelsdorf (outfield ) made the team. Magnolia 's Jim Patterson was named cuach of the year 11fl er guiding the Sentinels to a 1 -~~~~---­coront att M•f -~ ~· • ' Bridgeport Lake remains slow for some unknown reason, but predictions are that the big browns y,·ill start showing up i;oon . Tom Li nze of Costa ~!esa and his family flihed the fasl \vaters of the East Walker River and pic ked up browns y,·eighing to five pou nds. June, Gull. Silve r and Grant Lake in the JiJM-Lake loop are listed as fair for medium sized trout \•:ith a few to trophy slze being picked up by shore ang lers casting medium running plugs and spoons from shore during the early morning and late even· Ing hours. Ru sh Creek Is good for plants. Deotfl itte Near for R e r1e1l'al Anyone who plans on doing any bunting in Californ ia nexl season. and "'ho does nol currently possess a valid hunting li- cense, proof of havi ng held a license or has not gone through a hunlrrs safely course ha d better get a li ctnse before .June I. 19il If ::in app!icanl can not provt or show his license or et:rtifi· catc or ins truction. he must attend a hunters safety course ad - ministered by DFG. Llm1>er• (S) <!t i. Nlbe<:ktr (Ml 6•3, d•I. 0, Hebtll {Ml 1-!. dtl, (; Hto.tl (Ml 6-1. dtf. Rvkst•ll1 (M) i·l King !SJ Gt!, H!t>tcktr (M) ~-·· d~r. D. HtDlll !Ml 6·1. dtl. G. Hf:bt ll !M) 6-1 , <!ti, Ruk1t1ll1 (Ml 6-3. 11.i11 !Sl def. ~lbeck1r {M) 1.s, def, D Htt>th IM) 6-4, d•I. Ci lolt beh (Ml 6-1, dt!. Ruli.1tt1l1 (M) 6·1. l(lnc•ld (S) de!. NIDec ke• (Ml ~l. lou to D Hebe!I !Ml J-1. dtf. Ci..Hll>- 111 (Ml 6-0, cit!. llu-il•ll1 (M) 6-4. Ooubltl M1d~k l i nd Oowllnt !SI def. Brown 1nd Ct ll IMf 6·!, 6·T; Ctl. W1lkt r t nd M<Dowtll IM) •-1, 11-1 (OPt 1n!I S11tlf IS) !Ph! w!lh Brow" •na CtU !M! Ml. •·i l dtt. Wtlku •nd MC00wt ll 4M) 4-}, 6-). J1111lw Vt"I" \J I Cl""tllll (l \<t) Uhl Mini.., V!t1t Slntlt l B..,,.,n CSJ df!. E'l11kl11wl1 CM } t-4. IO•I to Brown !Ml t .. Mi nning !Sl cit/ !1111<le1wl1 !Ml "'· loll IO Brown ("'1) !-4 Mtlllt ur (51 Iott IO McC1rt~v !Ml J.t, <let. Nt ultld (M t i ·O Mlllt l1!1dt ISi lctl lo M<C.~r!hv IM) '·O, dt ( Ntu/tlO !Ml I I Ooubtt1 K•llv 1nO Lunt IS~ dtl N1ur•r 1nd l(nlt1 !Ml 6·•1 ad Hent• '"° Wi lton IM! 6·D 1(11lbtr 1nd LtH•Ck& ISi d•! N1u•1• •nd l<nnr !M l 6·1; lo1t to Htntv and W11!0<1 IMl 1-6. Founlain Valley's M i k e Shimaji was the best second baseman in the circuit and made the team along with se- cond team choicr11 Steve Fox and Dave Lynch for the Barons. A pair of Cmita Mcsans made the second team (Tom MD Banquet Mater Dei High School wlll honor its basketball, baseball and track teams with its an- nual spring sports a'A·ards banquet Monday night. Festivi ties get under way al fi : 30 at the Garden Grove Elks Club. CIF playoff berth. Magnolia figured sinh in the league in pre.season picks. All·lfwl"' l t t1ut 1'1'11 Ttt m "''· l'llJtr lth9411 Cl•n lltctrcr C-T.,ry 51111>•, Liii Al1mi1o• Sr. "1 19--Ch1rilt Gl1>1on. St n!t Ant Vt~ lty Sr .. 1'• 1•-M1t.1 Shlm11I, Fo-unl1ln Vl llt Y I r, .lll 39-flol> P1lmt r. (orcnt tltl Mt • Seoh. ··~ 55-Jlm WIT ..... E•lt 'l<lt Sr .. 7JO OF -l(t llh l<lriil.lt n, Mtonoll1 Sr .. :Ill OF-01•t Sl•wwn. LDI illltml!ot Sr .JJI 01'-Jttl Ze1'6orl. Elltndt Sr .t11 V1U-JoJI" Pt lmtr. C"'Dlll df'J Mtr Sr. ·"' 1'-9111 l1lclt<>. i1n11 ol.nt Vt llt v Ir. .., P-J!m Fu, LOI Alt mll<>1 Sr. l •7 ltc..W Tttllt C-Mlkt II"*'· M.tonollt S• .. 3'1 18-T..., 5tmo10!'I, Cotti M11• 1·· .in 28-Ron Rutt, EdlMlft • . .110 l9-JM. Glt1plt, S1nt1 Ant V1lllY Jr. .110 ~5-Jlm lol1mll!0<1, l CIS Altl'll!lllJr .. UO OF-G1ry Ttmpltlon. ~•ntt ol.nt Vf ll11 Frtlh. ,)64 OF-hl•I•• Ce.It.It•. E111ncl• 1·· .m z~~1::. '\'.1:~h7e1~n';':,~·v.11.~-)~l .ll~-Mli<'t Pll!•t1Gf'. M•gn~lll ~t. 7-1 P-S!tYt Fo~. Fwnttln Vtllt V St. '-' .i.+:~ri~'I ol 1111 Ye1r -S!ygy. Loi (1111ch o! tht f 11r -Jim l'IT!trten, MIQllOlll All-stars Nip LACC, 6-4 Ba,se ba ll Standings DIAN LEWIS Hio Hondo Cotlege"s Rick 1"hompson slammed an eighth inning 1nsidc.the-park home run to dee p center field to break a 4-4 tie and give the Southern Ca I i l o rn i a Con- ference AU-Sta rs a 6-4 basebBll victory over circuit champ Los Angeles CC Thursday at Gol den West. Golden West's J im Hogan \\'as the only player on the all· slar roster gett ing more than one hit. Hogan ripped a solo hon1e run over the right field frnce in the third inning and also singled. He sco red three runs. 1. .. A.n11111 Ul .. ' • "' Eaw1rd~. n ' 0 • • Smlll•v. i • ' ' ' • l<"111u11. rt • • ' i B1Te1, t1 ' • • Cron, c I ! • • M1r!lrw11. e ! 0 JO~•!, Jb ' ' D11Bo.1. lb • • ' • W11~ln<111>n, lb ! • ! • M~ct.ey " 0 • PQ<'(O, • • • • • M1':ri,~ ~ • • • ' ' All-$11" Ii i .. ' • "' Jo'" Hll'Gt n. (I ' ' ' ' P«~il>f. 20 ' • ' • Gtl>l'llrl " ' • • ! ~1•m•. II l 0 • T~cmo-" ' ' '~"'"· rt ' • ' I ~:1'1~i1{1" l ' ' • ' • Kit!••• u • • • ~r•1~ C ' • • • "fP1"r. C l ! ' ' LO"C•f"lll. ltl • I 6;r~•l1, ]0 ' • ' ( ,.,.,..", 10 I I • I /'l.f.,Ytl, 0 I 1(1~ ... "~'" • ~~:!1,.p" • • • • • i i ! To1111 Sc-•1 IM'711t1 ' • l ACC '" m !Oil-• ' ' lltf·Sttr1 '" ...... ' ' A~IERJCAN LEAGUE Boston Baltimore New York Detroit \Vashington Cleveland Oakland Angels ~!innesot.a Kansas City r..1ilwaukee Chicago l=:asl Oh•islon W L 19 JO 13 12 15 14 15 15 13 18 10 '° '4't1l Division Z1 17 16 16 12 12 12 17 " 17 17 18 Thu'1dl ''I R11u!I' r e1. .65.\ .600 .517 .500 .419 .333 .6.'i7 GB I '> ' 4'1 7 9'\ .500 511 .500 51., .485 6 .4 1 ~ R .400 811 N1w Y~rl •. Milw•u~~e J, 10 (n"•n11 O..~l1nd t. 1<1n><1• CHy 3 On!Y 9&me1 1Ch.UVl!'d. To01,·1 Gtm11 Oet.oh l Z""" 0.11 tt Wa1n1nv!on (Mellin l !l. n11n' teltlme<"I IP•lmt r s.n 11 floS!Ofl fS•1btl• s.01 . ni,~! C11wl1"11 fL•mb O.Ol ti N1w fer~ !Kllnf" I 1\, nlt~t O••l•ncl tflluo 1·1! 11 Kt 'll•l (Ir. fW •l9h! ~11. nlQ~I C~lc"o IWotel 1·11 ti Nln11tto'1 11<111 J.l!, no1M Ml .... 1ul11 (l'l'tot\J )•ll t i Atltlt IM11rol'I¥ 1'6), nleht NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division New York Pittsburgh St. Loui-" l\1ont real Chicago Philadelph ia W L IA 10 19 12 18 14 12 J 1 15 17 9 '° West Division San Francisco Dodgers Allanta llouslon C1ncinnn1i San Diego 25 17 15 IS II JO 9 17 17 17 211 21 l hMrllilY'I llH~lll ~e ttmts t<:hedultd. f0Ct1'• •• "'" Pel. .65.\ .613 .5"1 .522 .469 .3IO .735 GB I "" • rn JO .500 R .469 9 .469 9 .355 121~ .323 13\\ ~t!I Dino !•11111 1-•) ~t (!l!ur,.. (l'to~•' ).I) N!"W Yor~ !K1101m1n J-ll 1! l'l!!tbY•th tJtfl~. :uJI\ 1 tl, ~l•ht Pholltl•lnt.lt 4L~•Kh l-1/ •t All•nl• (lleld I ,,, ~l9M Menl,ttl IS!enM'nl!I 1·1) 11 (1fttln~tll !Nolt n 11\ nl9h! Sr LOUol ICtMiOll l ll t i HoutlO<'I r111111"9h1m 111. "l9ht gu,,,., teo-irw J.1 1t Sin F,t t1tl1tt !Stot>t ).1). ~I.ft! DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Service and Pert• for All Imported C1r1 Modern Body Shop for All Cir& Orange County's I..argest and Most ~1odern Toyota and Volvo Dealer OV!lSEAS OELIVEll'f SrECIALISTS !TIQJY!§!Tft'! MAY SPE CI ALS COROLLA 1971 0.mo SPICIAL $1777 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2999 142 114•ft, t1dio, ho1f1r, 1wt1111•tic trtl'lt, USID CAI SPICI A.L $3195 1 t't Yol•o 164 Wow lt••lt. ~ •• ,.,, •trtlfl'llllc, ..... , tltttlltt. ''~'-'' 1lr ettlllllltn, f'l'Wtt U l l SANDY ALOMAR Hunt ing ton Booch W. T. GRAN ONE DAY BASEBAL SPECIAL SATURDAY MAY 15th 1-3 p.m. JIM SPENCER Full erton OUR PHOTO DEPARTMENT WILL TAKE A PICTURE OF I ANY CHILD, ACCOMPANIED BY AN ADULT, WITH ONE OF THE 3 PLAYERS PICTURED ABOVE, PLUS AN AUTO · GRAPHED PICTURE OF PLAYER. (WHILE THEY LAST) . ALL FOR THE L W PRI E OF 1.00 PER PICTURE. LOCATED IN QUR SPORTING GOODS OEPARTMEN1'fl'.H..fl.Am!S"ARE THESE SPECIAL BUYS - 1. ASST. GLOVES Reg. $7.44 2. BASEBALL BAT~.g. $2.49 Sale $5 96 Sale $1 67 Sale 86c 3. BASEBALLS Reg. $1.00 GRAN T PLAZA 962-3387 Huntington B11ch • 8rookhur1t & Ad1m1; l • { ' I i • • • . ·1 ~D CAIL'r PILOT Waste Standar.ds Hurltor Yacht Club FRll POOL PARTlt ' PLAN. TO A TIEllD S\INSfT 'l'OOl.f ' . ~ , ~ ANNUAL SPLASH • l~SH I 0 a.m. to 7 p:m. thil 'S1turtl1y 1nclL.Sund1y ~ Olympic R~gatla dn;·Debut ~s~ly t() Boats ~ewport Harbor Yacht Club 11 ill conduct lbe rirst of what WASHlJiGTOl'f LUPI) ':"" board treattnenr, not holding is expected to become an an· \ Tbt iovemment hu proposed tanks." Schwartz said. "Tank.5 nual Olympic Classes Regatta marine wute treatment stan. are impractical." :>aturday and Sunday. danla that would oost pleasore boat owners an estimated $200 Schwartz said boat owners The regatta v."ill be sailed on U> S300 each. wert hoping industry could Olympic type courses west of The standards. published in deve.lop an on·board treatment the Newport Pier with two Thursday's Federal Register device whi ch would sell for no races scheduled on Saturday by the Envi1'0llmental Protec-more than $.100. The EPA said aod two on Sunday. tion Agency (EPA), would re-il would help finance rcscar The six Olympic classes are quire tha t human wastes 1 _o_n_t_h_e.:p_ro_:;_..,_1. ______ \.------------the Dragon. Star. Flying discharged from boats me2t the sa me secondary treatment standards prescribed r o r municipal wastes. The EPA said lhe proposed standards woukl keep the water cleat'I enough for swim· ming, ev~ at crowded marinas. 'New boats would ha ve ta meet the standards in two years, and older boats three years later. Th~ EPA sakl it would con- sider any public com1ne:nts submitted during the nex t 4i days before issuing final rul- ing on the standards. The standards, r e q u i r '-d under the 19711 Water Quality Improvement Act, already have s p a r k e d controversy 11mong pleasure boat owners and marina operators. The EPA suggested two ways to meet the r u I e ~ boat holding tanks coupled \\'ilh pump-out device1 at marinas, or on-board treat- ment devices. Buh the agency acknowledg- ed that no practical on-board devit'e has yet been developed for pleasure craft, and that few marinas are equipped fJl pump out holding ta nks. Even those th.at l'OUld would h.ave difficu lty disposing of the ac- cun1ulated wastes, an EPA spokesman said. Richard Schwartz, executive director of the boalo\vners as- sociation or the Unil ed States said boat owners already were caught between lhe prospect cf meeting future federa l stan· dards and t.he reality of ex· isting rul es imposed b y several states. "\Ve boat cwners are for on· Mesa11 Set For Border Dasli Event Phil CarJcoff of Costa tilesa ~ill pit bis powerful onshore powerboat racer 1 n v a d e r against l\lo'O other lo p Southland contenders in Saturday's Border Dash, a 112· mile race from Long Beach to :r.1ission Bay. Also in the Oflsh-Ore Class will be Bob Nordskog'ii Sally Viking from Van Nuys, and Louis !\feyer Jr.. Woodland Hills, in Out·A-Site. The only local en!ry in the s.,Ort Class \lo'ill be Ernest Ka nz ler's Shoemaker from Costa ?o.tesa, driven by Qiuck Daigh of Long Beach. Ben Garrett ol Ne\\•port Beach is the top entry in the Cruiser Class \l'ith his Chi- quita. Nordskog comes into Saturday's race less than a "'eek after spectacular flip in lasl. Sunday's Ou l boa r d tit arathon of Champions at Long Beach ti1arine Stadium. The veteran driver sustained multiple lacerations of his right leg. He \\'ill be at the helm of his 27·1oot Magnum hull powered by l\\'in SSO.p Nordskog Chev engines. The race starts al II a.m. Belmont Shore Pier with a 11tarting flee( of some 15 en· tries expected. ~NII ' 409 CLEANER --;~ 409 I --·~ Everybody screams when we are oul of this stull. What does it do that's so g reat? Are you drinking this slufl? ·-·. -~ METAL LEAF RAKE Gel a couple and when the .kids say. "Gee. Dad. I'd help but lhere·s only one rake."' .And then you surprise lhem. -·---------TURTLE BLACK TOP VINYL WAX So you have a nice landau top. but it doesn't look like it u sed lo. A little of this w ill bring back !he shine. 118 BLACK SHAG CARPET For home or auto, deep pile. Beals the carpet store p rice and the pric'"° at the auto part s place will make you gasp! (gasp, gasp) SIX FOOT W!OTH 2 99 YD. -~-----,.;;;;;....;.... __ l>Jtchman. Finn. Soling and part of the training program • • Free R•frt1hm 1r\(1 Tempest. Bolh the Soling and for the Olympiad. s u N s Er p' o' 0 Ls the 1'e1npesl will bEj new Trophies for the NHYC classes in lhe 1972 sailing event will be presentt:d Sun·) 1217 s •• e..:0.kfft.lirtt. A~h•I,.;:_ ph: 712-42'' Olympic <1t Kiel. Germany.iird~a~y~a~t~a~bo~u~t~6~,.,~p~.m~. ~;~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~i~~i The Soling replaced the ~.5. ~::i";",'rT~:;~s.?~r;pn~~! KIRK JEWELERS .TIME.X .REPAIR-•ddllion. ' COSTA MESA • • Se"ral other Y"'ht clubs "'"'°' c;,,,._,.,_,.,. throughou t Southern CaHfcr-HUNTINGTON BEACH nia and 1he nation t'Onduct ! Authorized Orange Coun ty SALES AND SERVICE Hwntl119to• Center-lf2·5501 Olyn1pic classes regattas as a ~-... --... lllii~~!ii~~~~~ CHARBROIL GAS BAR-B-Q A real production wilh stainless steel burner, rugged base and stand. Puts out 35.000 BTUs for real broiling, no mess. long wail. or coals to buy, 7787 10 LBS. BAR-B-Q BRIQUETS II you're already with a nice charcoal barbecu• then you'll want good briquets for a low price. We got 'em, Harold. 42" PATIO TABLE Rugged metal deal, enameled finish. sturdy base. Unless they·ve tricked me again. tbit lable is a winner. 1187 7 FOOT PATIO UMBRELLA A real looker with th• melal post that bends to the angle you want. Wipes clean w ith damp cloth. floral top with fringe, Keeps the sun (or rain) ofl your chow. 1587 KIDDIE TABLE AND ClfAIRS 997 Here is a awell set, jus1 their size. How would you like to play house and not be able to reach the tea pot. humm? OSCILLATING WAVE SPRINKLER ~ 2s7 This is lhe one that covers right and left with no dry spots. One selling usually catches the biggest yard. µnless you got one al those crazy ones. WORK BENCH KIT All pr•cut. Splined tog•ther so no big drilling and nailing. 997 PLASTIC LAMINATED KITCHEN COUNTER TOPS s· 29.88 10' 37.88 12· 44.88 . · ... One piece deal with formed backsplash and '---" rolled front so the eggs don't roll ell on the Jloor. (And who put the eggs on the counter anyhow?) 1,400 Lost In Boating Accidents DOUBLE FACED TAPE REGISTER FOR FREE CLASSES PEAT MOSS WASHINGTON -Over 1,400 penons lost their lives in boating accidents during 1970 according to the annual report "Boating Stalistics" i~sued by the U. S. Cos11t Guard. Commenting on the report. Admiral C. R. Bender. Com· mandant of the Coast Gunrd said, "ft1any of these lives coul d have been saved had the people Involved been more a\•:are or basic boating safety practices." In addllion to the cro\\·ing number of deaths reporled lo the Coast Gu11rd. lhe amount or property damage also in- fTeased by almost two million dollars. Injuries. how ever . decre11~e to 780, from I .(l(M in 196!t. The reported number of accidents al90 decreased from 4.067 in 1009 to 3,1163 GOLFERS Wffll l..w·Ml!Wllt .... fl'r"ffkt Al TM NEWPORTER INN PAR i GOLF COURSE S1.00. With tftlt alf WMk tll)'f I oin'I writing nothing nice a bout any old lwo Jaced tape. lt comes i n different w id ths. but it's atill two laced. REG. 1.99 GLIDDEN SPRED SATIN The besl interio r masonry palnl made. Scrubbable. satislaclion guaranleed. 1housands al colors. Etc, Yalr.. ya'\. yak! 5 97 GAL. WEDNESDAY EVENINGS 7,30. the curtain goes up in La Mirada at the Conimun"ity Room. f un arid frolic. good times. and lots ol learning from the e xperts. Reg ister in any store., May 19 -.. Low \'ollage Lighting .. by Mr. Walla Ohm ol lnlermatic May 26 -"How to Panel a Wall" by Mike Nail of Georgia Pacific June 2-"La wn and Garden Care .. by Harry Grasseed o! Sandini. NAIROBI FLOOR TILE A lot ol mood you can create with th i5 line vi nyl· a s bestos tile. Biq J2xl2 piece~ you can lay with no special skill. 45 sq. fl. in !he carton. 7 77 CARTON • ·~ I ......_. • .._ c. ~·I . . . --~ \ ··-·--·-TO "11M1<.f; 1T\ ... 1C.• "'-""" 'I ""' .·.-57 70 LB . BALE I knew a fellow named Pete Moss once, used to hold 1wic• his weighl in whisky. But he didn't lighten the soil or keep down weeds like this sluU. {So. rm crazy with th• copy, J got the flu). f'rldU, M~ 14, 1971 DAILY PlLOT , . • . EE E DE A Complete Guitle • • • Where • •• to go What to tlo ' .· ~- • •• • • DARIN HEIM, 4, THINKS ABOUT THE FESTIVAL FRISBEE CONTEST ••• THEN HE PRACT ICES HIS TECHNIQUE •• , AWAY IT GOES,,, ANO BACK IT SAILS RIGHT INTO HIS HANO Huntington Fun ·Sl.ated , lllultitude of Events Pla111i cd for Beach Festivol This Saturday Is going to be a big day In fluntington Beach \\'here the city's se- cond annual festival Y.'l\I be taking place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Site of the happy happening is the 17-acre Murdy Park located on Golden West St. just north of \\'arner A\·e. Four acres of the park. and adjacent Park Vie1v School grounds v:ill be used. The event. v.·hich is sponsored by the Hunr:nglon Beach Coordinating Council, v.·ill provide about 80 organizations an op- portunity to sho\v the commWlity (and each other), what they are doing .irid l\ilat services they offer the community. \Vhlle providing information is one of the main ·reasons for the festi\'a\, everyone attending \Viii have an opportunity for plf'nty of fun . Gaines, food booths, contesls. display booths g a Io re , demonstrations, en· tert.alnment and exhibits \\"ill all be part or Uie program. 1'here even y,·111 be a Frisbee contest ror kids. "This is a people event, put on by peo- ple. for people of the community," says Bruce L. \Viltiams of Golden \\lesl College, festival chairman. "All facets of the community and all ages of residents T.ill be represented.·· Jn the booth area, which v.•ill be con - ctnttated on the baskelball courts. visitors "•ill find an array of gaily decorated slands dispensing everything from chili dogs and lee cream to brochures, lady bugs and earth worms. The City Library \\'ill have a festive J\texican-American di splay y,·hich will tie in y,•ith their children's summer reading program. Book-rilled pinatas. an audio· visual program and a glass blo\ver \Viii be part of it and food booths on either side of the exhibit will have i'.1exiican food. The Girl Scouts and the Boy ScouL'I of Orange County \Viii display equipment and have demonstrations and the Hun- tington Beach Boys' Club will perrorm blind judo, judo, wreslling and tram- poline activities. Y Indian l\faidens from the \Vhite Buffalo Nation y,•ill have a large area or teepees and \\'ill hold demonstrations. The llunlinglon Beach Exchange Club will provide a strollin~ exhibit of an organ grinder y,•ith a monkey, to add fun to the event. On the "Showmobi le Stage.'' north or the basketball courts. continuous en· tcrt.ainmenl \\•ill be provided throughout the day. Opening at 10 a.m. \Vith the 180 piece Ocean View All District School Band and concluding with a pageant of drama-singing by the \Varner Ave .. Bap· tist Church members, the audience \Viii have an opportunity to watch all the shO\\'S in between from bleachers in front of the stage. Some of lhe performer.; l.o be seen in· elude ~1exican dancers. H Girl Scout drill team, Uie D. G. Brass Choir, the Lace 'N Hollywood Backstage Leather Square Dance Club, 11 dance group and skit frol'l.1 the USO, a c]iildrcn's model show by Miss Prim's Model Club and a Melody. Chorus from Huntington Center. · At the park entrance. ricld evcnls for young children will be held under 1he supervision of Kni ghts of Columbus. There also wllJ be skateboards. unicycle..;, a pet show a doll buggy parade and kite flying. For the teen and adult audiencf' therr \\ill be eight rock bands and folk singers are slated for the outdoor stage at Purk View School. 'I'bey include Generation Hysteria : \Vhipple Tree; Phil and Randy: Cold Duck ; Dan and Ann : Yzzdrazil: folk llinger Sharon Jerfers. and Li\'e Wire. The Huntington Beach Arl League and the Artists Association and (iallery of \luntington Beach North \\'ill have art by their members on clisplay in the gra11s area on the South side of Circular Drive. Contestants in the Miss Hunl.ington Beach Pageant. 11 contest sponsored b.v the Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce. ha ve been invited to make personal appearances at the sho1vn1obile during the day. The conte11l will be judg· cd Saturday night at the Huntington Be::ich High School. The festival will provide a full menu or entertainment , fun, information and con· vivialty and residents of cilif':s arl' in· vited to come and have fun and lea rn about the Huntington &:ach community. Producer Turma11 Tur11s Directo1~ By. VERNON SCOTT "'' lttrtr 'll'Mllll Cetr.t"""°'t HOLLYWOOD -The difference between a motion picture producer and a fi '"1 director is roughly that of the president Qf General f\1otors and the thief design engineer. The president has the final word, but It is the designer y,·ho determines Y.'hat next y!ar's models will be. Larry Turman is a producer \\'ho ha!'i turned director. an uncommon step in the movie business. Producers rf':ap pro- fil3 .,.<ttiJe the director suffers the slings af criticism and sometimes hall-hearted praise. As a pr:oduce.r Tunnan's record is superb: "the Flim-Flam 1'1an." "The Graduate.'' "Pretty Poison" and "Tb• GreBit \\'hite Hope." Geor&e C. Scott ran away with the J)ral.se for "Flim-Flam Man," Mike Nichols \\'as canonized for ' • T h e Graduate." "Pretty Poison" \\'al'. the first film on ecology. "The Great While Hope'' Is cne of Hollywood's best interpretalionl ol a Bl'Olld•cay musical. One 'J'l'lnP to the conclusion that Turman is dotty to switch from his succes.!i as a producer to the perilous profession of directing. Turman is handsome. l:ilcndcr, a tennis player and the kind of man you mighl expect to see in, say, a shaving cream commercial. 1-le has turned producer-director with "The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker," starring Dick Benjamin. Jo a n n a Shimkus. Elizabeth Ashley and Adam West. a stery of contemporary mores. Other hY{lhenates such as Alfred Hitchcock, Slanley Kramer and George Sle\'cns (kl name a few) were directors first. Then seeing that it ""as tile pro- ducer who skimmed off the cream they became producer-directors. Tunnan -and Alan Pakula of "The Sterile CUckoo" -are the only top men in recent • memory to tackle the job in reverse. "Directing is hard wock." Turman said. "It's stimulaling but no fun. The pressures, compromises and frustration are terrific. Bef()fe we started. 1 didn 't have any idea, for instance, where to place the camera. ''I had some misgivings until we ac- tually began shooting beeause 1 had newer staged a scene \Vith actors. "But once we \vere on the set lhe action seemed to fl ow because I retid and stud ied the script so thoroughly. Choosing good actors ~begin \Vilh helped considerably, "So much of wha t happens on the stage is dictated by the script and story lhat the director's preparation in advance sin1plifies his work. "Directing is the art or telling a story through movement. I was guirted by what I felt was right and tasteful." Turman regards most pictures of 1 ~ past two or three years with disdti in. Not i;o much for 1he films tbemselve~ as the lack of taste and style with which they were made. ... "l think the public is fed up ¥.'ith poor taste." he said. ''Thi! year 'Love Story' and 'Airport' are the most popular pictures. Both "''ere done tastefully. "And, incidentally, pul me do\vn n!'I one person who really enjoyed 'Airport' I thoughl it was it fine piclurc and beautifully directed." Golden West College Hosts Rod Serli11g • .. A\vard-winning lelevision "'rilcr Rod Scrling will speak at Golden West College tonight at B p.m .. on "Vie\v from the Mid· dlr.."' Scrling. whose unt·on1pron1tsing 1tra1nas ha ve earned hin1 the unofficial ti· lie of lclevision·s only angry young n11n, \1•ill spcuk in tl•e Colle ge Cent=r in the fina l artist-lecture progran1 of the eur- l'Cnl school year . The public is in1·1tcd . Admission is $1. With such intense dramas as '"Pat- terns.'' "Requ iem for a Heavyweight." the first 90-minute play written expressly for tele\•ision, anrt "The Co1nedian, '' Scrting has earned three Emmv a11•ard~ fro1n the ·Nation.ii Academy of Televi- sion Arts and Sci· enccs and t1o1·0 Syl- vania best drama awards. Serling b e g a n 110D 11111.1Nc; writing screen plays for United Artist!'! and f.1ctro-Goldwyn t.faycr in 1953, displaying an insatiahle need lo \1•ritc creative. provocative scripts. A yea r later he started explorlng lhc quirks of man's irnaginalion in hi~ series "The T\\•ilight t.one. '' and quickly rose to the heights Jn Lelevision drama. Author of mort than 100 televi.~ion plays, he has contributed to the United States Steel Hour, Playhouse 00, Kraft Theater, and Lux Playhouse 90. He is one of the first video dramatists to have one of his works produce:! vn a network a sce- ond lime by papular demand, and one of the few \\'ho have had their dramas published in book ronn and made into motion plcturts- Joh11 Strong Set For Controversy 011 N e\v Progran1 A ne\v topical talk show will hit lhe lelcvislon screens, ,_lay 15 at 10:30 p.n1. \\'ith .John Strong ai; slar of what is ap- propriately titled, '"The John Stroni Sho11'." Billed as dynamic, attract ive . articulate and sometimes abrasive. his advance publicity says he is sure to bring wrath from the far right as well as the far lefl :-. no subjec\ is sacred to him. \\lord has it that "john is one of the most penetrating tele vision personalities since the heyday of Joe Pyne." Hal Parets, who \vas producer of the ''Joe Pyne Show," \\'ill be guiding t.hls every· Saturday night production where some of the biggest names in palitica and show business .will debate issues. l11te1·11aissio11 1'healers Get Stronger As Se ason Nears End By TO~! TITUS Of !flt Dl llY ,hf! lr1U II 111ay have come in like an un· dernoun1!lhCd lamb. but the 1970-71 com- munity theater season along 1he Orange Coast and ils environs is m1:1king its exit like a hair, and hearty lion. ficldo1n in recent momory has a season Lcgun quite so badly as did the current nine months starting last September. t.lateriial and productions, in most cases, "·ere at an extremely low ebb. as if hur- riedly losscd together after an extended vacalion Rut con11nun11y theater in !he area has been redeeming 1tselt repea tedly over the past several \\'eeks. not only by oficring shows or higher quality bul by f:Oing out on • llmb with more dif f~cul t a~ignments. 'J'hcatcri!' re<iuire lhis s6rt of challenge, and mosl of thcrn are meeting it impressively. An excellent example 1s the \\'cslminstcr ·con1munily Theater's pro- duction of '"The ~ig Knife," which openlXl last weekend. CliHord Odct~· sc ript is a tough row lor any amateur group to tioc. yet director Alex Koba and his casl came lhrough wit h one or the mosl impressive stagings of the year. EQUALLY DIFFICULT for the com~ munity playhouses is Arthur Miller 's "A View From the Bridge" -particularly when. like Weslmlnslcr, the ca!!. never sees the stage until almosl opening nighl., But Richard Dow's mounting Of lhi.!1 drama for the Irvine Community Theater was probably the single most outstanding effort of the season. Heavy drama is generally avoided not because or its .artistic challenge. but because it can be box office poison. ~fary Eastman found this out when she st.aged ''Who'll Save the Plowboy~" far the San Clemente Community Theater, yet the Actress Wins Purt in 'Picture' Rosasharyn Knox showed up an hour late to get 1 role in "Skin Game," a Cherokee production for \Varner Bros., playing one of a group of lissome dance- hall gi rls. Producer llarry Keller, noting the young beauty's great disappointment, sent her ovtr to the still lab for pictures. She'll appear in four different scenes hanging in blushlng color over the bar in the Biller End saloon. She'll show her lines Instead ot deliver- ing them. " .. -.. show was one of the season's most;~ lrlguing. - Three theaters. three exceplitiill shows. Yet these same pie~ ~tarted off lhcir 11easons "''iith lhrtt oJ"th blandest and most unimpres.sive ~ !:'dies of the year -there "''as no~ lion lo go, artistically, bul uµ. :: Nol all ambitious undertakings resutt:fu stunning success -a~ at least...,Dll& theater leamed lo its chagrin last t;ilf_. But \\'hen cast and direclor accept ~ assignment as a personal challeng~);9 their capabilities. the end product caq·Jtc a memorable production. ~ TlflS JS NOT to imply that con:i~ per se. is inferior. Some or the seaaOti brightest moments ha ve also been;".if, most hilarious -such as the Lida JSle Players' "You Know t Can'L Ht.ar 'Ynd \Vhen the \Valer'• Running ," the Cb!ll\ l\:lesa Civic Playhouse's "Here Mis :leremy ·rroy" and the recent "The Mtft \Vho Came lo Dinner,'' and ·iaft Clemenle's "Charley's Aunt.·• • ~ It iii, initially, up lo · the vacU>iii thea ters lo selet t their shows witbii- a.nd for~sight, lo in1'ure they hav .. rl!!hl d1reclor for the particular . being presented and. once t.:b'* groundwork is laid, to attack each * production as though it were the ~ important yet mounted on !heir stagi<;& \\Then all these variables are in worii1le crder. community theaters will be .o5( fering 5e330ns mort resembling t~ Jafi. !er months of lhis one -and ICM tik~ beginning. ;,.:! -. . ·. \\'EEKENDER . •. INSIDE FEATURES ;• Friday, ~lay If, 1'71 Stan Delaplane mu.ses abGut JaJ malc3', lhe Caribbean and ariswer11 • some ttacjers' question• In tii!t ._ coJUmn today. You can find Jt on' Page 22. Travel Galdt to Fun Art ln lbt: Park D1vld Hartman IndJat11 Celebrate New!maa In China Out 'N' Aboat Te~vl1kt1t Lo1 GuJde to i\fovtes la tbe Gallelie! P11e H:~ Pace UJ Pace U Page U Pact n Page U Pages ZC • ti Page JI Page ZS · Pace 27 Pa1e 2'1 Pate :1 KCET Auction Sllftday Nuele1r Pt ·er, KN BC .. . . • • • ' O~lY PILOT Y...W ~\fie to Futa Estancia Swim Show Set 114 ~·,II l&b School syncroniz.ed swim· . · Dµal 1wim show, "N.ew York : -15 at I p.m. in the high school jft Metf.. Tickets, $1 for adults; wl~· ll t:1rd, and children SO cent!. MAY II CONCERT -The Community Chorale and the Golden West Singers will give a free concert al 8 p.m. in Forum 11 on Campus, 1~744 Golden West Ave., Hnutingtcn Beach, May 14. fr1AV 14 ROD SERLING LEC'flTRto: -Rod Strling, motion pirture ·and television writer, will speak at Golden We!lt Colle1e. J5744 Golden West St.. Hunlington Beach, at a p.m. May 14. .. View from the Middle" will be the title of the final artist- Jecture proa:ram or the current school year. Open to the >:public, admlsaloo ls 11. Travel • • Jamaica B1·uised ~ By Economic Dip . By STAN DILAPLANE MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica -Christ~pher , Columbus knew a good U1ing wbe 1 n he s.aw it. He called this green-and-gold iJland 'the fairest ~and ~ that eye has beheld." Prices have gone up smce Christopher did lhe beads-for-gold exch.ange. t.· The whole Caribbean has been bruised by fall· • Ing American economy. Or maybe every~dy sud· ·denly took a look at the ~rices ~d said: "Her. · M'hat's going on here?" Tour!Bt business was off this winter all over the sugar islands, We stayed at three hotels: All elegant, excel· , lent and hiA:h·priced: Half Moon ru~s more l~an $100 a night; the Trident gels $70; Cari)l Ocho• Rios, $60. This is the way it runs all throua~ ~e Carib- bean. Add your air fare, a rent car, lippm&, and you have an expensive package. * . The high season is over no~. Summer !ates will ' bring prices down a third. Friend of min~ came down here, took a taxi by the hour and ~ou~d a ~ .. guest house for $12. But these places aren t listed with travel agents. Canadians come down here fast and cheap on Air Canada and they seem to find reasonable bot!ls. So they're here. How to find them?, Jamaica Tourist Board bas an attractive free ~ folder rating seventy hotels for value ~n roo.111s, • service and food . Star system. Don't give price!! ; though. Only "luxury priced," "middle pr:1ced." ' "modestly priced." So you have to ask for their rate ~ &heel. too. . * ~ "We can only take our v~cation lrt 1ummer. : Will It be tNI hot in the C1 ribbe1n? Hurricanes? : Rain?'' . : I don't think il's too hot. fThough 1l makes me t hot that most or these islands insist on a tie and t jacket for dinner.) Hurricane season: July through I• September. Always sends a fringe of rain all over. , Refreshing though. f "Friends t•ll us Lon!n is crowd•d. Hard to get ~Into restaurants. We are discourag!d .• _· :." ! True, London, Paris, Rome, Atliens become : tourist ghettos in the crowded summer. Unless 'you're a half hour early. you. can't g~t NEAR the :1. Changing of the Guard. You line up with your to~r group to get UP to the Acropolis. Reserve a day 1n • ADVAN CE to get into the big Paris restaurants. l * . l t \Vhat to do'! \Veil, I've taken a service su1 e- l which includes kitchen -in apartment hotels. For· gel the big sightseeing centers: Rent a car an~ go out to country towns and pubs. European capitals have simply reached a tourist saturation point. "We are flying in th! 747 for the first time •. " Just like other airplanes only bigger. The air· Jines are still experimenting. Tryi~g to n:ia~e them feel like not so many people. American Airlines P.ut in a spacious bar and lounge in back. Delta ~ut 1L'i first-class upstairs lounge in half. One half 1s the "private penthouse" for a party of s~x: You~ own l bar and stewardess. United puts the kitchens in the be!Jy and elevates the food trays. * There's been BIG improvement in getting you and your baggage on and off. But it's still a LOT of people. And pretty much or a mob scene at board· ing time. * "C1n w• t1k• a camper Into Mexico?" · l ..ots of campers going dov.'n. Not a" many camper park.'i as we ha\lt. If you get stuck, many motels will let you park in their grounds for a small fee. Friend of mine V.Til~s me after 180 days in a camper in A1cx ico: "Cos~ for two for EVERY· THING have run SB.57 a day." 111AY If SVRFER JR. DANCES -The Westminster Surfer Jr. Teen Club will hold a dance on lhe second and fourlh t"riday of !ht month for 7th and 8th graders. The 7:30 to 9:30 dance will be ii'! Lhe Community Center, 8200 Westminster Ave. Admission 50 cents. MAVI C·l7 UCI CONCERTS -The Mu!!lc Department or UCI will pre.- sent free concerts in the Village Concert Hall on carnpus on May 9 · 10 at 8:30 p.m.; ~1ay 14 at land 8:30 p.m.; li-1ay IS. 17 at &:30 p.m. ~IAY14 ·ll f'OUNTAIN VALLEY ARTS WEEK -Fountain Valley 'A-'ill be celebrating Cultural Arts \\1eek May 10 • 16 with specia l displays, special foods, bridge tournaments ,a modern dance concert, ballet recital, talent shows. art shows, hobby shows, Jr, Theater production, bus tours of city and a Dower show. ll will take place all Over the city wtlh headquarters at the civic center. 10200 Slater, Fountain Valley. Phone 968-2013 for further lnformaLion. MAYl,·IS CIDLDREN'S PLA V -"The Thirteen Cloe ks," a play based an Thurber, for children will be presented at UC? in the Fine Art.s Village Studio Theater at 8:30 p.m. May 14-15. Admission $1. MAY IS TEEN 01'.NCE -The Wt:Btminster Teen Club will hold a dance for teens (most Sat. nights) JS through 18 years who live in Westminster or attend Bolsa Grande, Fountain Val· ley, La Quin ta or Westminster High Schools, Admission for members $1 ; non members, $1.50. MAY IS HR FESTIVAL -The Coordinating Council of Huntington Beach Is holding a Festival from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Murdy Park, on Golden \Ve st St., north of Warner Ave. Booths. games contest, exhibits and Scouts, art exhibits and musi· cal entertainment will be part of lhe fun. MAY 15 YOUNG SOUL CONCERT -The Interested Citizens of Santa Ana are prellenling an e.rplosion of music and drama with the "'Young Soul'' in ooncert at Smedley Jr. High School, Santa Ana, at 8 p.m. May 15. The group or 40 singers, ac- companied by the "Jaz7. Jets'' will perform the music and dance! or Africa and the Caribbean. Tickets, $2 for adults and $1 for &tudent.s, at the door. Funds raised go toward scholar1hlps. MAY IS· 16 SCIENCE FA.m -The Orange County Science Fair will take place in the Junior Exhibits Bldg., at the Orange Coun· ty Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, fl1ay 15 -16 frOm 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days. Students in grades seven through 12 will compele for cash prizes and awards. Win· ners will be eligible for competition in state and national fairs later this month. MAY ll TRAVEL FILM -Marion and Bob Auburn will show an aviation-travel film . "Flying America," at 8:30 p.m. May 16 in the Orange Coast College auditorium. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The 90-minute color motion picture was shot over a period of rive months and will highligbt the beauties of our country. No admission charge. lr1AY 19 ·JUNE 11 TRIP TO NORTH POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Ana College, 1530 \V. 171h St., Santa Ana, is having a series of public shows eacn \Ved. at 7: 15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.m. The fili:_n, "Shadow!! In Space." \\'iii be shown May 19 . June 11. The performances are free but restn1ations are request- ed. Phone f>47·9561. ~IAV 20 • %1 STORY HOUR - A story hour for pre-school children will be held in the fl1ariner·s Library, 2005 Dover Drive, New- port Beach, each Thursday at 10 a.m. The Corona dcl A1ar Library, 420 Marigold Ave., Corona de! Mar will hold a story hour for pre-schoolers every second and fourth Thurs:- day or the month at 10 a.m. l\1AY 21. !2 UCI CONCERT -The University Orchestra under the baton. of. Peter Ode.gard will pttsent a concert at 8:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village Theater on the UC! Campus. Admission fret. J\1AY 22 DANCE CONCERT -The Dan ce Theater of Orange County is pre~enting a dance concert, f\1ay 22, one performance only 8 p.m. Jn the Santa Ana High School Auditorium, 520 W. Wal· nut SL. San!a Ana. Tickets. $' for adull3. $2 for students. Phone 528-1640. ~1A \' Z! IRVTNE J\IASTER CHORALE -fl1aurice Allard will direct the Spring concert of the Irvine l\1aster Chorale joined with the Oranee Coast College Chorale in R. Vaughan Williams' •·Fantasia" on P.1ay 22 at II p.m. in the Chapman College Auditorium, 333 N. Gh1ssell. Orange. The Master Chorale also will sing Carl Orff 's "Ca rmina Burana." Tickets S3 for adults. $1.50 for students, al the door or in advance from Coast Music Store. J\1AY 24 OC PlllLHARl\10:\'lC -The Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the 1.os Angeles Philharmonic Orcheslra under the baton of Dan iel Barenboim, l\1Ry 24. in Crawford ~fall on the UC! campus. at 8:30 p.m. Jacqueline du Pre. cellillt, will be soloist. For licke! information phone 646-6411. !\IA\' 27 STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL -The Garden Grove Straw- berty Festival will be held in Garden Grove Park /Magno- lia and Westminster Ave.). May '!I -31. Opening day hour11 2 p.m. • IJ p.m.: Fri.· Sat. and 1'-fon. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.: Sun .. noon to 11 p.m. There will be live entertainment, the "'orld's largest strawberry s~lcake. camival rides. a rodeo. a celebrity breakfast and a parade which ls set for Sat.. Admission lo festival grounds is free. Phone 6311-7950 for other information. TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ ' . . . ' . . . ·. ; . .. . . . . 1 Art Fair i. Slated DAVID HARTMAN Traveled 30,000 Miles TV Star Travels Country During the hiatus period before the Channel 4 series, '"The Bold Ones," began pro- duction for the c o m i n g television season, David Hartman traveled some 30,000 airmiles -all in the United States-and talked to several hundred thousand peopli!. The tall act.or who &tars a!I Dr. Paul Hunter in the series. was master ot ceremonies al f.1arch of Dimes telethons in Virginia and Tennessee during his vacation. He spoke at a congress on social problems in Texas and at a nurses con-- ventioo in Northern California. He rode . horseback in a parade at a winter carnival in Montana and on a float at a spring festival in North Carolina. He was a special guest at a Broadcasters Association meeting in Ohio and at a b~nefit dinner for a hospital in Los Angeles. He was a guest auctioneer at a fund raising event for a school for retarded children on Long !!land, New York, and he worked out for a coople weeks with the San Francisco Giants ball club In Arlwna . And there were other things. loo. like appearing on the David FrGSl Show in New York and on the Virginia Graham Shaw in U!s Angeles. In Mesa ... A two-day Arts and Crafts Fait wUI be held in Costa Mesa City Park, corner of Center St. and Park Ave., on May 22 and 23 froin 10 a.n1. to 5 p.m. Over 75 Artists a n d craftsmen will be displaying and selling their works or art Including ceramics, painting, leather, candles. sculpture, weaving, mosaics, graphics, and tie and dye fabrics. Many ·craftsmen will be present giving demonstrations of their skill.11 and talents. Good old fashioned home made pastries, food a !1 d refreshments al.so will be sold for those more interested In the arts of grandma's kitchen . For information on entering art in the Fair, phone fair coordinator, Megan Wright, at 642-11308. JIM L1 LIBERTE WORKS ON SCULPTURE M1ny Free L~nce Artists Entering ''Art in the P•rlc• He Scooped World Newsman Tells of Return to China By Ttrnnce O'Flaberly There have been more Americans on the moon than in China for the past 22 years. Until last month, that is, when Oiou En-lei discovered the diplomatic value of Ping Pong. Even more important thari the wann reception given to th e American players was the welcome received by the first three American journalists to be allowed in China for regular news coverage since the 1950s. I spent a fascinating half hour with one of them this week -NBC's John Rich. For a man who haa just scooped every other U.S. reporter in the world, save two, he was remarkably nonplussed. "I think it's safe to conclude that the great door of China has swung open -slightly,'' he told me with shy skep- ticism. '"For me il was certainly a spectacular return to China after a hasty exil from Shanghai when it fell lo the Communists in 1949," said Ri ch. "We flew into Peking on a moonlight night. The airport was dark but a red carpet was laid out for us. It's impossible not to be overwhelmed by the scale of Peking, the wide, wide streets and the great Gate of Heavenly Peace." RICH WAS HIGHLY complimentary to C ho u personally : ··He speaks e)(· cellent French and I know he understands English because he correc"e his intecpreter. He is v much an in· tcrnationa an who is in con- trol of the day-tCH:tay workings of the government e v e n though he may be getting his orders from Mao or Defense f\.1inisler Lin Piao." Why the sudden change? ''Chou doesn't want the Chinese lo be isolated from the \\Orld any longer -even !hough they're one quarter of it." . , , What part did an avowed anti.Communist like President Nixon play? "}Us role was a big one. Although he built his early political career on a hard-line attitude, he came to the Whlte HOU!e with the hope of reopening th• mainland. Last fall he first referred to what had been called "Red China" by i ts right narne -The People's Republic ot China. It was a sign. But I think everyone In- cluding Nixon was surprised at the Ping Pong invitation." Were you ever uneasy? At Mt1seu1n Grounds "Frankly, until the great reception given us at the match in Peking in a stadium of 18,000 people, the thought occurred to us that we could have been called there to be humiliated. But actually, the crowd showed great favoritism to the 1 American players. When one of the girls missed several shots In a row they 'A-'ere silent but when she v.·on the next point there wa!I a spontaneous ovation.'' Indians Plan Holiday Fiesta WHERE DO WE go from here? "ll may not go as rapid· ly from here on. Remember the toasts were a I w a y 1 between the "people" of China t1alkl Jndiao Museum will the Memorial Day event wilt tions are welcomed, and will and the "people" of America stage its sixth colorful be Indians from sever a I be applied lo the museum's -not the governments. But Memorial Day fiesta and reservations -Moron go, !>Cholarship and building pro-the \liolent phase of the barbecue on Sunday, May 30. Sob ob a, Torres-Martinez. grams. revolution appears to be over. on museum grounds at Colorado River -under the To reach the fiesta, take The troublesome Red Guard f\.1orongo Reservation in Ban· general chairmanship of Interstate 10 to the Fields has been farmed out - ning . lwfariano Saubel of Morongo. • Road turnoff between Banning literally -into the rural areas The day's events will include Ted Torro of Torres· and Cabazon (about 211 miles and told to stay there." games and contests for Martinez is president of the east of Palm Springs). Head Rich is no freshman In the dlildren, Indian singing and Malki Association w h i c h north on Fields Road for a Orient. He C1lvered the Far dan cing, booth displays and spoosors the yearly event. m i I e ·and· a-half. Fiesta East starting in 1946 as a nighttime Indian bird songs. Clifford Mathe\\'S of 1.forongo. grounds are visible from the reporter for In ternational Activities will begin at 11 a well·known Indian chieJ, is road. Ne\\'S Service and joined NBC a.m. with nag-raising services again in charge of the A reminder: Although the news during !he Korean war. honoring Indian veterans. barbecue. legal holiday this year will fall He bas been the network Barbecue service will follow Indians and non-Indians will on ~1onday, May 31, Malki's bureau chief in Berlin, Paril immediately. Singing and dan· be welcomed visitors. No ad-fiesta will be held on the tradi· and most recently in Tokyo cing by the campfire will con· mission fee is charged for ad· tional holiday date of 1'-fay 30, where he has been "Clllna linue through the night. mission or for parking. Oona· a Sunday. watching" since 1962. Malk i Mu!leum was the first•j&iiiliii..:iiiiin;;;.,.ili;Oiiii<i;;;;;Qiiiiiiii0;;;£;'-"-;;;:;:_,.,,,~n,;;oJii=iliiaaiiiiii-iiii:Paml,iiiiOiOiiiiiiiiiiiiij museum to be established on a IJ~ Southern California Indian Reservation when it opened its doors in 1965. ' When it staged Its first riesta in 1966, Malkl played a large part In reestablishing California Indians. Since that first year. the fiesta has al·. lracled thousands of visitors, sometimes as many as 10,000 to the museum. Heading :irrangements for Thank You! Thank You! Thank You! OUR FLOWER SHOP SOLD 100,000 FLOWERS LAST WEEK! Our biggest week in history. We were mobbed, and we loved it! We eve" f.i•d lo get more flowers Sunday morning! So, to lhow our customers our appr•· c ie+ion we ere going to give every coupon custom1r any flower ot l/1 Prlcel So, clip this coupon & Sove 50°/o. Just imagine our famous ''fresh flowers" at •;, Price/! Note: Th is ;, 1/1 of our regular, sensible prices •• , not ridiculous prices you see in mo1t flow•r shops! Come see, come sa ve. ~ ..... . ~ ..... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "How would you 1pend YOUR summer •• , 1" T v.•ouldn't fight that European scene with a family. Unless I simply rented a house or a boat and worked out from that base. My own summer: Three \\'eek in French Canada -in a HOUSE! Three weeks in Jamaica -in a HOUSE! Four weeks in Mexico -in a HOUSE! We Dere You ..• Every Seturdey ORIGINAL OIL • Pl15T DI' THI YIAll • fLOWlll SHOP' a IY ,O,Ul.All DIMAND • a COACHELLA a a SALINAS NOW a • "Local Sweat Corn". ALL FLOWERS • ,c .... G • • a Y111r t hole• a LEnUCE a SAN FRANCISCO aug .,...... -MCllf'C THE BEST ~1t.ltt\hlp p11U1 ~''"'' "'•.t• 1111f1" it ont of th. world01 '"01f p1~11l1r t1lflic ,tt!pt. ~ ••• 1t .t.u, 111 tho DAIL y ,llOT. HUNTER'S BOOKS THI WHT'~ FINEST IOOKSTORES FOR lZO YEA~S-SINCE 1151 Located At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (7141 S4J.9343 H ,100 kob & Pop«bocb lZ,000 u .. ...i Grtttlog Cordt IAlGAINS G•LOHI OPEN E1'ENll\'GS 'TIL 9 P.111. on PAINTINGS (From Europe) 24x36 Canvas •10!~ HUGE Selection of ALL Sizes WHOLISALE PRICES I !look for the Little Yellow Cott•ge ) 369 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 11 to 5 Ph. 645-5 360 • 5 • y; • ,,.,, • • ¢ EAR • 2 PRICE • V'" EA. • a lhnlt-1 Dor, a llrnlt-t l1111clt a Lim!,.._.. a • With Thl1 Cou,111 a With Tllh C1upo11 a With Thb C11,111 a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE MAY 19 Thesa resteur•nt1 demend the finest for their cu1tomer1. lhet's why they f••· ture Newport Prod11cel Pefronite them! YIUa Sw.den, Corona del Mer; DtltH1ey't Sea S1'anty, Newport! Artc:lertt Mariner, Newport & Tustin; The Vikh191, Cost• Me1e; HuntlnttOft Lan", Huntington 8e•ch, •nd 0Y1r 200 others. How al.out your celling u17 "Orcrnot Count11'.t ft11tt.t! Growi11g Produce and Flower Organization" . .... 67U71J 61U711 •7t-6Jtl ~ N~!~~~!.k ~~.~~~~E 2616 Newport loulC!vcrrd on the Ptnlnsula '----' "'35 Years of Produc1 Know How" "Where: quality f.t the Order of tlu1 llowt" • t • • ' ' ,. ' .. ··-. ' . --' DAILY PILOT 23 SANTA CRUZ: A Vacation Paradise Where in the world can you camp and picnic in a magnifi- cent Redwood forest and still spend the day at the beach. or take your fa1nily to a Slate Beach Park on the Pacific Ocean and visit primittve forest areas the same day? One area that ca n oner campers both mountain and seashore facilities is Santa Cruz County. Located on the Californ ia Coast on A1onterey Bay, 70 nlites south of San F'rancisco, Santa Cruz. County offers families a \\'ide range of facilities 111 Redwood Sta!e Parks and State Beach Parks. All State Park campsites are classified Type A by the Stale of California. and ordinarily have flush loilets, piped drinking water, hot lihowers, laundry trays, surfaced roads, and campsites with a table, stove and cupboard. r.1osl parks provide \1-'ood either al 11loves or fireplaces as no "'ood ma y be collected in any State Park. fAi\llL'r' FUN There"s ra mily fun all year long in Santa Cruz County. Swi1n all year long al 7 Slate Beach Parks with Northern California·s i;afesl ocean swin1n1ing. For ex- citement you can visiL the famed Santa Cruz Boardwalk, see San- ta Claus at his year round home, Santa's Village, ride California's last regularly scheduled steam train at Roaring Camp. enjoy unusual wax museums and the unique Lost \Vorld, or see the la"·S of gravity defied at the 11--\ystcry Spot. And. you "'ill en j o y Jo.'isherman's Wharf with its fine seafood restaurants, golfing at three championship courses. sailing and boating from the Small Craft Harbor, the history ot titission Santa Cruz. and fishing in mountain streams or the Pacific Ocean. Santa Cruz County is known as California's "Horn of Plenty", and is one of the rnost important agricultural and horticultural centers in the nation. You'll see where much of the fruits and vegetables are grown for the world"s n1arkets al \Vatsonvitle. And you can visit the gardens of the comrnercial Begonia gro\vers near Capitola, Begonia Capitol of the \Vorld BEACH PAHKS tilany families enjoy the beau- ty and fun of the seashore. and Santa Cruz County has excellent facilities in Slate Beach Parks along Monterey Bay and the Pacific t>ce<1n. Here are JUSl threr. Ne"· Brighton State Beach. 90 Type A campsites and 22 picnic units are contained in this 85 acre park located 4 miles below Santa Cr uz near Capitola off 1-iighway I. It is the first cam· ping park on the coast south of San Francisco. The five thou~ sand fool Jong sandy beach i~ popular for family s"'11nming be- cause of its "'arn1 "'ater and gen1le surf with no riptides or undertow. Surf fishing and clam- 1ning are excellent. and a nlag- nificent view of ti1onterey Bay r.an be seen from the ca1npsltcs. The park is open all year. and there is an entrance fee and a 7 day camping limit fr om June I through September 30. Seacliff State Beach. One of the most popular state beach parks on ti-1onlerey Bay. this two mile long beach has 26 trailer units with electrical and water hook-ups, llS picnic unit s. and is a Type A campground. The beach offers excellent swimming in gentle surf with no underlO\\', and is called by park officials the safest ocean swimming in the slate. A unique feature is the SANTA CRUZ DREAM INN ON THE BEACH fishing pier -the old 435 fool cen1enl ship Palo Alto which of- fers excellent fishing for perch. 50Je. flounder, halibut, and other sea gamr. Located 9 miles below Santa Crut off High"'ay I. the park has a 7 day lin1it. Food and supplies may be purchased from conces~ion at the park. Sunut Slate Bf'aeb. Located 4 miles \vest of Watsonville off High"·ay I, th is park offers 90 Type A camp units and S5 picnic units arrtid groves of l\1onterey Pine and Cypress and exc-tllent picnicking facilities. Popular \1•ith rishermen and clammers as well as s"·i1nmers. the sandy beach is 312 miles long and backed by a high bluff coverrd "'ith \\·ildflo\vers during lt.1arch 11nd April. The park is open all ~• has an entrance fee, and a c ping lin1il of 1 days from J e I through September 30. l\tOUri..'TAIN PARKS If you're looking for excellent mounlain parks. here a re facililies available 11t three areas in Santa Cruz County . Big Basin Redwoods Slate Park. One of the finest camping areas in the Stale, Big Basin Park is located 6 miles belo1v Skyline High"•ay off Highway 9 north of Boulder Creek. There are 362 Type A camping un its. and 127 picnic sites. Streams at Big Basin are shallo"· and offer good \\'ading but no real swim- ming. There are public swim- ming pools in nearby communi- ties. Fishing is another attrac- tion of the Park. An unusual na- lure program has been developed featuring lectures, movies, an -cf~Hfint nature museum. and guided nature "'alks. Inside the Park are 35 1niles of• hiking trails winding through majestic Redwood groves. The Park of- fer s campers a store and restaurant. and is open all year. There is 11 small entrance ret>. and a camping limit of 15 days (rom June 1 through Sept. 30 Henry Co\l·ell Redwood s Stair Park. Localed off Highway 9 near Felton, this park is famed for its grove of ginnl R<'dwood trees. Among the m a n y Red1voods located along a mark- t.'<i loop trail is 'The Giant, largest in the park at 285 feel Lall and ;,1 fe<'! in circum- NATURAL BRIDGES STATE BEACH. l..ocaled just north o( Santa Cruz. thi!i l~nusual beach _offers exce~lenl S\Vin1mi ng, ~idepool exploring and picnicking. 1 he Natural Bridges of \Vh1ch two are s tanding and one is building are wave· l'aused arches in the hard sandstone that juts fron1 the rugged cliffs overlook- ing the Pacific Ocean. They are found in only 6 other areas in ('alifornia. Be hind the cove in lhe trees are 25 picnic sites. Ea ch year in Septen1ber and Oclo· ber, thousands of 1nonarch butterflies n1igrate to this State Park. ference. Recently added lo the park·s facilities are 100 Ty!)(' A camp sites orf lOrahan1 Hill Hoad. Near the ent rance to the Hedwood grove is a picnic area of 220 unil."i. a sma ll restaurant and snack bar. and a gift shop. r into Lake. Localed just il r('\I' minutes drive from \Vatsonville oH Green Valley Road in the Pa- jaro \'alley. this recrea11ona\ area is Popular for IVAler skiing. "'1shing, swirn1ning and boating. Bccrntly added to 1l1e area ·~ fa- e1li1ies are 1Jm1ted trailer units. an extended boat launching rarnp, a fl oa!ing dock. vollyebnll and ~hu ffleboard courts, picnic facilities. a play ground. basebal l dinmond and barhecue area.. Open all ye ar "'ith no entranct f"". You'd bet!er plan a Jong visit to Santa Cruz County becaul!fl 1here's so much to see a11d do all year long . F'o r comp lete in· formation write, Santa Crui County Advertising Committee, Dept. 'r. 701 Ocean Slreel, Sanll Cruz. California 9:>060. • RESTAURANT • IAR • DINING & • DANCING e OCEAN VIEW ~ TAKE TIME TO VISIT SANTA CRUZ ON YOUR NEXT TRIP NORTH ~t?wzK~ BOARDWALK Rent a fabulous Golf-Holiday Villa 175 W. CLIFF DRIVE l40I) 426-4330 ~~~ IAllA IRll lllllY llf/ JlllfJ/11 ii Mill/111 IAf t · DiSC:OWJ your own pnv.ite be.ich ••• or vlsil orw-of our i ,1.11e BNth Parki along Mon1erf'y B.1y. SI.In, ~w•m. suri, h:lh .1t NortMrn t:Ji1ilornia's wfci.t arld ch!;a~1 be.1ch~. Or w.ilk 1hrou11h Gi1nt Redwt>Od Utt~ •I Cowr!I •~ B•g ~WI Slate ParJr;;~ .. , only minul~ from our y,ndy be;a(hf!\. lher!'s fun .1nd e:u-demenl, 100-lhf' f;amou~ flo.1rdw.1lk , l<>arin& Camp Steam Tnin, ~nT~ls \'i0,1ge, fi~ dinJng, ;ant•qur )hopping and mo~. ~vrA ui · visatour ... fk """"'''''"' ... . ,.-~w . visa .tour 3 (lOP~YI • 2t>fJ111111 lllY Sf II PER PERSON Double Occupancy llcl'HS •E1ecel1tnt "'"olftOIOliflrn • 2 01y1 of Golf ~2 l•t•kl••h •Go1nm1\ Plnnltf' •R.,.,..1Jen11 •or1111 C1•0 GetAw1.y ... to Santa Cruz County \YJl;ITE VlSATOUR TODAY, FOR INFORMATION ANO RESERVATION!; ~ ....................................................................... ~ . "' VISATOUI r .O. I OX 921 •SANTA CIUZ.CAllfOINIA' 9S060 , ~ -,,.., llU Ylt.tlOotr t111om\fl!Or'. : Nlflll' •.•.•.••. ,, ....................... ,,, ................ ,, ..................... ,, ..... . i ~!r;:~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·s;;;,;·:::::::::::::::::·z~·:::::::::::: . ' ~1} silnt,1 cruz cout1ty " ; -.... ' ....... ' ..... " .......... ".' .................................. " . 610 CLUBHOUSE DRIVE ,; GE ITO SAMU. Cir "· Ull vv i nery One of the few small Calijornia wi- neries still operated by the original fomi~. The Borgetto fomi~ still use old world wine-making methods to produce prize winning wines. ,..,, whit BARGmo•s WINE TASTING ROOM l5J5 Mtrllt Melo St~ S911t11I SANTA CRUZ FAMILY FUR ~ llDI IH A GIANT SHOWIALL ! AND MANY MO•a aXCITING RIDll, ATTIACTtOtill AND SURPllllSI NEW santlS Village tilGHWAY 17, SCOTT'S VALLIY Discover California's finest Seashore Playland ( ,..;<Jnl a rrui Sri+~1rl*' Cnn11J3nv) 1------------ • among the Redwoods at laulder Creek Golf and Country Clulo N•w ••• picfu r•squ•. singl• and t wo story \l'illa s ea ch including a fiJly appoint•d kitch•"• fireplac• and decks, o-rlookin9 • creektide s•ttin9 and I I of t he most b•autiful holas of Golf in Cali- forn ia! C lu bhous•-Dini ng-T enni1 Heatod Pools. Come to the cool Redwood C ountry! Writ• loul- fler Cr•ek Golf and Country Club, Bould•t Craek, California, for brochure or T elephon• '40t. -lll -2111 er '415-573-1500 • . ' Thom1t J. C11llS,1" Jr. Do,olopm111t When you tee off at Pasatiempo ror the first lime you 're in for a remarkable round or golf ... In for that leisurely feeling of freedom that comes from. playing agninst a magnificent background of pines, oaks. and a wide. sweeping carpet of green ... Where. "'hether you·re a pro or an amateur, 3fOU hnd thal every hole is one to remember. l11ter11rrlionall11 /amous Pasnhl'rt1po was ell'· ti111nr rl by Dr. Alr.tllnr &facl(en:rt. the ereotor of mn1111 ot/1.tr fa1nu11s courses, 111cludi11g St. A11dre1vs Col/ Cluh 111 Scotland and th ~ /.1 1111 Tiit ~nd you otir b rocJi11rr~ _________________ .... _ -- •, ·: • -., ' . ' .,_. • • :tf DAILY PILOT frld.117 , May 14, 1911 OUT WEEKENDER ' N , I ABOUT . ., NORM STAJ\IUY ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE ' Hungry Tiger ' The anxiously awaited opening of the Hun&ry · Tiger on the Coast llighway in Newport Beach is finally an accomplished fact and we wish to say : "\Velcome." Located on the ocean side of the highway a lew yard.a east of the intersection at Bayside Dr., Newport'• Tiger occupies the site of the tonner 'Bayside h:Jn. Those, like us, who have been drlvlnJ by daily ifuring recent months and observing the re- . modelin g already know that very litUe of the origi· nal structure is evident in the new restaurant. POPULAR CHAIN Out 'n' abouttrs who occasionally venture out· side of Orange County further know the Hungry Tiger won't arrive on the local scene as a •i!irst and only." A popular chain of such spots have been in operation for some time in Southern California. Five Tigers are currenUy open to the 4ining public in Sherman Oaks, Hollywood, \Vestchester, Palos Verdes and Palm Springs. And reservations are recommended at all of them to as.sure prompt seating without a wait. The principal house o!ferings at all Tigers are a number 0£ seafood specialties. But each also serves a complete selection of fine steaks. TRY THE SCHROO It was during a visit to the Palos Verdes Ti ger se\'eral months ago that we made the acquaintance of schrod, pronourl.ced "skrod." Uninitiated up to that moment. we quickly joined the ranks of its dedicated fans. This tasty entree is actually fresh baby had -· dock, schrod being an old English word meaning "baby." A favorite New England item, it dates back as far as the American Revolution, we were told. A fe\v years back Hungry Tiger scout!: discov- ered this unusu al dish being served on the Boston \vaterfront. A firm, meaty fish, it possesses an ex- • • Real Cantonese Food Ht here or t1k1 home. STAG CHlllSE CASINO 111 2ht pl., Newport llHch Olllole 3·95to o,.. , ........ .., 12-12 -Fri. -........ J .... MORT'S BAL-PORT LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FRI. AND SAT.-9 P.M. lo 2 A.M. FOOD AND SPIRITS GRAND OPENING PAITY TUESDAY, JUNE 15 lit S.. U, 111 Tate M ... t1- hc1u• lt't H1p,.1 ... A1'9ffy FAMILY STYLI DINNllll -TUIS. THIU SAT. 1Z OL USDA CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Compl1t1 Dinner •............... $1.15 SUNDAY BRUNCH-9 A.M . TO 4 P.M. 4507 W. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT RACH '71-4100 Th• Dry Dock rllESENTS THE MARK DAVIDSON TRIO S1M.., Ti.ti '114rr t P.M. t1 J A.M. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL 5 to 7 P.M. OAILY DINE AT ONE HALF PRICE CWltti htt.htt Of 011t A.t ll .. 11• '!,l•e) SAT. & SUN. BRUNCH Olliff 9f 1. M ... M ·--$195 1. ..... 1 .... l .......... . ........ , ....... CMloli.. ·- 1601 W. c .. t Mltlt..., .... ,Mt lffclt-141-1166 ceplion1l consistency while retaining 1 flavor all ils own. VARIETY OF WAYS Considerably tutier that mature haddock, sch.rod is prepared at the Tigt:rs in a variety of ways. These include baked, broiled, a la amandine or mueniere. The most popular melbod yields a lu1e (11 oz.) portion sauteed in butter with broiled tomato and vegetable. Originally offered as an occasional special item, schrod was so well received by regular pa. trons that it soon made its way onto the daily menu. ANOTHER OUE SOON Word has it that still another Hungry Tiger is coming to Orange County in mid-December, wh en a Santa Ana location is tentatively ICheduled to open. Sam Bass Jn these otherwise boisterous times, there's a soft and pleasing voice issuing from a quiet corner of the Treasyre Chest Lounge at the Mesa Lanes in Costa Mesa. It comes from a gentle, chummy enter· tainer with the unlikely name of Sam Bass. Actually Sam-as we learned during a bel\\'een sets chat-was born Duane Bass, but so many folks insisted on calling him Sam for so long he finally gave in and accepted it as his new moniker. He's no kin, of course, to the like-named outlaw, and his mild manner indicates there isn't even any tern· peramental relationship. .. «(§ FROM COUNTRY TO POP Sam, by background and experience, fits into a special category of performers enjoying wide popularity today. This group-with Glenn Camp- bell its best known personality-consist!: of those \Vho have moved from many years in country S\Ving music to the pop field. TEMPLE GARDENS ct"WGSSRestaurant LUNCHEON & DINNER OAIL Y Visit Our IUCKSHA COCKTAIL IUffET LUNCH 11:H-1:JI Menllay thru Prllfey 01'11111 111:11 1 ...... 11 ""'· 11111. t1'1n1 T~V"­ IHJI '·'"--J 1.fft. ,.,l, •IMI S1f, IJH At"AMS (•t Herlter) COSTA MllA 540· 1'l7 540· 1 tlJ •••tic: S...lfl ·-·· crol' •114 et m••Ph•,• ~.{."" ,, .. ,,,. ---,,. .... ~~ l6271 PaclllcCorotHwy, Hu11Unt tOl'I 811th R"tllll81iot1t f21J) 592-1321 Enjoy Our ft•vloll Jtalfan Sl.yle DON JOSE' /\'OW APPEARll\'G ELLA MAE MORSE Recordlnt Artist With Tho HAYDEN CAUSEY TRIO Enchi11d1 end T1co .. , ...•... _ .•. _ .. $1 .3.S Chill Rollono • Enchiledo ......... , ... $1.50 ~ wltll l lu , a.-. T.-.41 ... utl klM PINUT MUie.AM POOD AT aU.SONAlll PalCIS e COCKTAILS e fOtJ E. Ad1m1 ltt Motn•lit) H•nl. llooch 962·7911 -. The vocal chords, as in Sam's case, intone wholly contemporary renditions of current songs lilr.e "It's Impossible." "Love Me Tonight" and "Spinning \Vheel." But beneath the sound there is the unmistakable and distinctive quality that be- speaks seasoning on the Grand Old Opry circuit. Sam can stake special claim to development on that particular route. He once logged several years touring wJth Opry packaee shows of Nash- ville. Born and raised in Oklahoma City, Sam has been making a living as a guitarist·vocalist since he wu 17 years old. At the Treasure Chest he sticks with the electric guitar, but he's equally at home on the Ha\vaiian steel guitar and also plays bass. TOURS ANO RADIO Oklahoma City gave way to 13 years of resi· dence in Tulsa and mid·west tours with various groups. Much of the time in Tulsa was devoted to long·term appearances on local radio and TV shows aired on CBS affiliate stations. Best known of the country swing aggregations Sam has been featured with the Leon Mc Aullif and the Cimarron Boys. As a songwriter, Mc Aullif com· posed the hit tune "Steel Guitar Rag.'' , ~t~ Sam came to California in 1936 and worked \Vith a number of groups before striking off on his own as a single a year and a half ago. Engagements prior to the Treasure Ch"est at Mesa Lanes include the Red Vest and Wonderbowl in Anaheim, and Riverside's Holiday Inn. ld VARIETY Some of the songs we especially enjoyed when "'hen \\'e caught Sam's act the other evening were ''I Never Promised You A Rose Garden." "Rain- drops Keep Falling On ?.fy llead," "Satin Doll" and "\Vichita Lineman." He presently lives in Ana.helm ® ffil~flKO l.t.9C-. Dlwr c.pt.lle Open '1 daJ• :138 So.Lot R.obltt, Pt•.daa • 19S-7'005 ZI Town a, Co\lntry, Orange• 541·3303 SU.FOOD CONVllSATION Everyone i1 t•lking •hout out delicious 1teemed clems end 9i•nt I 16·20 oi:.I Austri•n Lobster T1il1. SUNDAY IRUNCH S..Vt<I -lD A.M. -J P.M. E111e,l1i11ro1111t & D1 ncin9 HA.,,Y MOUi Mea. • Prl. I tto 7 ,.111. wllll Hen .i· .. ,,,.. IAN9UIT PACILITIES J17 PACIPIC COAST HWY. HUNTIN•TON llA.CH Ol'•M 1 OATI Re11,.,.1tio111 Acc•J1t•cl l'lf l'•ttl• If J 1r nll•• ll'-2111 S01 JM 51. ~ISllYATIONI NIWrOIT liACH f71·1lll We Serlle V.S. Prime Easlern Corn-fed Beef Exclusively, Personall11 Selected Ami Aged In Our °"'" Cooler A Thrtt Gtntrot£on Famil11 Tradition -Est. 1921 FINEST SEAFOOD ., AND OYSTER IAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 UDO l'ARK DRIVE N&Wl'ORT IEACH 675·0100 JIM BO'S FAMILY COFFEE SHOI' 2 DINNERS FOR 1 THE PRICE OF WITH TH!S COUPON -4 TO' r.M. Goo.I Tlire Set1r41y, M1, 22 3050 E. COAST HIGHWAY with his wife, Betty Jean. and their three chiJdren, Deborah Ann, Du.ane and Deanna . .-. Sam Basa is appearing in the Treuure Chest Lounge of ~1esa Lanes, 1703 Superior, near 17th St. and Newport Ave., Costa, Mesa Tuesday throu&h Saturday, from 8:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Late Night Omelettes Surveying the human condition has been one or our long-standing avocations. Through this fas· cinating diversion we've come to the realization that a great many folks aspire to be night people. Only the lucky fe w, though, can follow such a life style whenever they choose. The vast majority --. those without coupons to cli p or a rich uncle Harry -has to forego the notion during work· \\'eek and settle for the playboy's orbit on week- ends. WHERE TO EAT AFTER MIDNIGHT? Even th.en this short-lived period of equality with non-workers poses certain problems. Foremost of these, it seems, • is finding an eating spot where late hours attend a bill of fare which presents a departure from dinner house and coffee shop menus. , Be advised that an ideal place exists in these parts to solve the dilemma -as we discovered following the midnight hour last Saturday. It's the wondrous Egg & Ale in Newport Beach, where omelettes reign supreme to provide the late diner \\'ith a main course both suitable and diflerent. NOW THE CHOICE Once seated, one further quan dary may arjse but that's the restaurant's fault. The tempting array of omelette choices befuddles the decision-makine process. . \Ve ultimately got around to making our eelec- tions from 30 world·wide varieties. These range in price and content from the regular "plain" ome- Continutd on Page 15 Fine Italia,. Cnulne Cocktali. 2J25 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 . ...,..,,.,.. o,_ hltr -I ''"'' t. 2 e.wi. FINE FOOD • ENTERTAINMENT CLOS ID MONDAY DANCING • COCKTAILS BUFFET LUNCH DAILY $1.95 CELEBRATE HA WAii WEEK MAY 2 .. JI -NJtltttr ,,..,. Sh-'-t1ti .. HGAL TAHITIANS AM f,fll.li1 •'"' ll1bert1, .f coMrt• SUNDAY, MAY JO AUTHENTIC HAWAIIAN LUAU M•k• l111 rv1tfo111 Now C 1roiin1_ Att,ectio111 -Mike Re11,v1fio111 E1rly ST AN KENTON -MAY 25th COUNT BASIE -JUNE 9th LIONEL HAMPTON -JUNE 22 Jl21 IE<nt C:oast Hlthway c...,.. dtl M• '75·0505 • - Contlnu~ from P1ge 24 lette, $1.35, to the exotic red caviar (with sour cream~ $3. Hopefully the four members of our party at least cut a little cosmopolitan air when we ordered an international assortment. INTERNATIONAL The first two orders \Vent to the Marat (con· taining bits of sausage, crisp bacon, croutons and herbs), $1.75, and the Mexican (with chili and beans, onions on request), $1.90. The other selections were mushroom and scallion, $1.90, and the apple and cinnamon (with lemon and brandy llambee), $2.25. _\f!l Each omelette is prepared to order in an indi- vidual chafing dish in a special cooking area open to view at the far end of the dining room. As the main dish comes up so does a basket of very warm and fresh bread-both light and dark. RELISH TRAY Also included in the price, and arriving at your table before the bread or entree, iS a tray with a substantial assortment of cold hors d'oeuv res. Our savory selection yielded nice appetizers like pickled ....... .. ltct ... "' ......... ,_ ... " Tiit M .. 11i.• M•- lUNCH e DINNER LATE DINNERS COFFEE SHOP MOKl'S FAMOUS IURGUS I. SHAKES Bret1kft1st TIKI LOUNGE L,nch Songs Of Cavin Dinn er 1400 PALISADES ROAD -COSTA MESA li (Ntlrt M th Rod•w•r I•) 511·1466 ~ .~~=:-:-----i­A TREAT FOR Rll LOVERS ! ,,ldaf, Mu 14, ltn D.lllV '1l0f Q OUT 'N ABO -UT THE BERLINER German Family Rutauranl • peppers, green and black olives, cheese crackers, fresh carrots and celery, and slices of bard-boiled egg. To name only a few of the additional omelettes there's Swiss cheese and black olive, $1 .80; ltalian salami, $1.75; chicken livers with sauteed onions, $1.95; Alaskan crabmeat and chives, $2.50; Bene- dict with ham, black olives and hollandaise sauce, $2.15; shrimp with seafood sauce, $2; avocado, with tomato, lemon, onion, garlic (sour cream on re- quest), $1.95. YOU NAME IT For the really adventurous there's the No. 30 "you name it" omelette-"if we have it, you are welcome to it." Price, if the house can produce it, will be determined by the ingredients. Ale imbibers are offered local bre\v for M cents and several imported varieties for 65 and 70 cents. A champagne cocktail is 85 cents and house wines 90 cents for a half·litre, 40 cents per glass. The Egg & Ale doesn't restrict service of its ftMtftA ftE&TAUMNT Contlnent•I Cuisine Cockt•ll1 S-no Luncheon and Dtnntr Mondav through Sat'MrdGJI. Closed Sundays .llllY BIT PRESENTS TONY FLORES Gult•rist/Voc•li1t Folk, Cl•1slc•I, Spanish TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Mondtiy Nl9htt1 NATURING DINNERS delectable fare to weekend night owll, of cour ... But for those living the high life Friday and Satur- day evenings, and for whom omelettes wW furnlalf a welcome change of sustenance, dinner hours run from 5 p.rn. right on to 2 a.m. · I The same offerings are available Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., and again from 5 to 9. Tuesday through Thursday, lunch runs from 11 to 2 and dlll· ner from 5 to 10. The Egg & Ale is opented as an adjunct to the Flying Buller restaurant but maintains a separate identity and quarters. Located in the back or side dining room (depending on the dlrecUon you take~ you can enter through the Butler or by the direct outside door from the parkirlg lot. . Decor is along lines of an old Engllah Inn. A sense of intimacy is estabW:hed b:y: ib size and 1eat. ing capacity -approximately 40 penoris. The Egg & Ale is located at 3101 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. A1onday nights the house is dark. F•mou1 For SAUERIRATEN w;th POTATO DUMPLINIOS lnl•Y A Wundorbor Time A.I Our BOCK BEER FESTIVAL SUNDAY, MAY 16th le9lnnln9 At •:OO P.M. Mu1ic end Di1n~i!1j With The TRIO AIBTRIA Oi,..ct From Yl•nne For Re1erYt1fl on1 C1ll Now • Open D•lly For Dinner CHILDllM'S Min CL~s:'D ~~~AY IAN911n PACH.Ill• Ah• Vhlt OI• l&•LINEll DELICATESSEN FiM 1.,,., .... F••d• 1111,•rtM l1•r• & Wl1111 11112 llACH ILYD. ,..,. & Cevntry CMter HUNTINGTON IEACH Hl-1100 ~ FOR WEEKEND NIGHTOWLS 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. lFIIW~ 3801 E.t.rr Co.ln HICJnl'AT 0.0XA ml. ll.u. Cu.mil:ll'U. Paowa: (714) 615-1374 EGG AND ALE !'RESENTS m WONDl!RFUL WORLD OF · OMELETTES With Service to 2 A.M. Friday and Saturday Nltes FEATURING 30 WORLO.WIDE VARIETIES OF OMELITTES SUNDAY TUH.-THURS. FRl.-SAT, ,, to 2-5 lot II lo 2-5 to 10 II to Z-5 to 2 Tor Tht Brit Omelrttr1 ln Th r Writ TllE VOLCANO HOUSE EXTENDS A SPECIAL I OFFER ON ITS FAMOUS HAWAilAN RIBS . " SUNDAY and MONDAY NITES COMPLETE HAWAIIAN RIB DINNER FOR ONLY $3.7S W• •re loc•ted n•xt to the M•y Co. In South Co11t Plt111. 1111 s. ...... c.... ..... 140-1140 111 th1 S111 Fr111c:i110 M111111r U.CI O• LAMI STIAlS e SIAPOOD Ii TO I I NIGHTLY IUSINISSMAN'S LUNCH 11 :00 TO 5 SATURDAY-II to 5 LUNCH OR BRUNCH 3101 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 673--0977 NOTHING ON OUR MENU IS OVER $3. 99 • STEAK & L.OBSTER e CHOICI T·Bone STEAK e NIW YOll STRll' ........ . Nothing higher on the menu. N•tur1lly-1ged U.S.D.A. Choice beef only. No tenderizers. St•1k dinners 1l•rt •t $1 .65 •nd include 11lad, to11t & pot1toe1. Biked pot1toe1 from 11 A.M. 'til 9 P .M. ! "Well • done" st••ks cooked with t9nd1r loving care, too I SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MENU ALSO: A pewee plat• for the Little Tots -Z9c OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. -9 P.M. ZZ67 FAIRVIEW CAT WILSONI COSTA MESA 548-0368 The Boon Docks Proudly Presents WE THREE APPEARING NIGHTLY COMING ATTRACTION SKILES And HENDERSON MAY 25-26-27 JIMMY VANN IAND Mon. & Tues. Nit11 LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS EXQUISITE HORS D'OEUVRES For Advertising tn Out 'N' About Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 FOR our OF THIS WORLP Pil.IVERY .SE!t~IC~ ~ In Nftport Betdl & Cost.I Mw C.11 Ma-713' In Huntjnrton Buell 847·1~14 • SUNOAY-BRUNCH OPIN IYllY DAY OM TM• OC•AM ADJAC•lfT TO MIWl"O•r eU.CN I'll• ZI06 W. OCIAN JlllONT NEWPORT IEACH • FAMILY PIZZA PARLORS PIPING HOT PIZZAS (WtTH Plw.l!) DELIVERED TO YOUR OOOR IN MINUTES, IN ME·N·EDS SPACE AGE MOBILEOVlNS. NOW Ol'EN 428 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 645-5410 PRlttCE lbltales RESTAURANT u1r11a ... nua T"., Wfll., 1'11•. O"" ~ trn •rt ....... ._ °"" 11 .,.,. 1c-... M9Ml1ys1 SAllTA Nik 1"75 MIMI" W . UM170 (I ~lllil It. .. Ulnf«) DAILY DINNER SPECIALS $3.95 BREAKFAST AND LUNCH DAILY T!tE/tkWlI!tB WITH ,. sw••,.ING V ISW Of' Nh,.O'ltT HAll:901t ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ! AT LAST! TheUllGAITE!... i • A rath•r smaQ n4 NfMWflot oMcUN Ml"" In Orcanp County, Callftrnla • : lth•crodle•f , ....... otilrnl ••• ~token..,, plun1•• w.·,.. brlngfn1 bode : i GOOD MUSIC! ! : Coll JI wtMd you will, lt't INOt JAZZ Wfrft a h!t band 1ovndl : • • i T~:~=~~= 'THE SWINGING YEARS' ! : ••• wMch, of ceuttt, mNnl abMJutefy MthJnt vnt.n yeo lcntw~o'1Jn.tht1roup •, • : : JIM GREEN ''°mbon• • ED DRAGON drum• : : ANGELO SAITIA frumpof. JOHN ROGERS bou : • • r. KEITH MORROW piano • PLUS: : 3131 W. COAST HWY. "' e e I(: ~irp~:.1:.1:.. ';!.~~.1CJlotel ' . '> NOW PRESENTS EVERY SUNDAY FROM 11 A.M. TO l P.M. THE MEDrmtRANEAN ROOM BRUNCHEON A NUtT CA•IOUSILI A11 l11tlr•l1 Ntw C•11ltjllt f•1h1tll'lf • M1111.., •f Ai>- ••rt1d Chlll•d, S1l•tt Ftulh '11 Thh11a. C•11terit4 witk " Mo1111d •f Cott1te· Ch1111, 011• Wlll •• S1rvt4 P1r T•· •11. IDAHO RAINIOW TIOUT ••••.... 1.71 ,,_.. W1lw Trwt, lflMol, Siu._ to t T-.. l •(Ol'fM wllfl l'rwtl'I ltt1, krl l'll911f 1N 1 ~-Mour.d of Llrtfl!lllM "-111M1 OMILlnl CHANTICLlll , , •••••••• 2.•I A o.!"'llfflll Mhrhlf• of Cllldllll llh 1fld Mu1h· ,..,.,,,. In H•vy Cr•rn, Ml/l' IPkld 1rt11 l'Oldfll lntt I P'lvf'fy 0.111911 0-i.t» THI AllPOIQI •• , •••• , •• , , ••••• , 4.11 A l'......,..I (r•llon. A Delkt 11 Cul fll J ii.t MlfMll, .. .,._. ,. VM Dllcrll'lllrllllllll T11t. 1114 Acc.,,.,..,111 .-, • l'oN<"4id l!n Atop • Mllfl'ln 1111111 Grllnd wlrtl cir Glllltr1 HOlllN11l11 fllTATA MIDrTlllANIA • ••• , , , •• , 2.•I Tru!)' I T11t1 Tr11ll Ltlll Gr1UM1 t !rltlll wl"' ''""' Oo!loM, o..-~ '"lrwocll, 11111 1 I C!Oldl"" Otrlk, All T111• Llflltly t nf 1'0t,.,.. lnH. I '"""' O!Nllftt 1r1 1 l llct l'f Ctvlfl' ......... IOAIT PllMI Ill, •• .I• •.• , • ,. , I .II A L11tfl', Cllllct Cut, C1rv• ,,.,,. OW &rt1t S!1Nll"11 A" llt11t., for ft\1 Htlrt)' Mlll-41r lltll LIVtr A IOUNTIOUI IAlln el l l1111Nrrv Muffl111, MIR• l1f11•• D111i1li 1.11, 1114 f/1 ~ Crol11111h. C•lf•• T11 S111ka M ilk l••s llNIDICT ••• , , , •••••••. , • , • 1.H Tri. tr.rn11 ,,.,.,,.., Thi• cr .. ,rc 01111 w111 11 Stn"ld WI"' ll'M<Mll ,, .. h ll:111t11 111 ........ •~ l!!l'ClllJll MllPll11 W'ltll C1"1Hll11 llf.11'1 1111111' lluct Holl1rt111ll•. Colli .. ''"" •11111 1 C1ml-tur1 of r-i... Wm Enhlnc1 Tllll l'lt1'1 IOYAL SPANISH OMILlnl . , , , •• , • 2.•I A lnN Ornti.tll L.ll'tr'I o.llfll!I A S~y ..... llOU<'•I l'f T-111, Gl"Mll 0!111111, M111l11•tw• ChO•lnt tlld Cl'lfflt, Alt Dlllfl\lfUll)I '"""' •Ml $1rvecl l'luffy Mii • CllPIS YllONl9UI ... ,, •.. , ••. , • I.II l'rtrldl PtllClllH, Crt1rntd Cl'lldltll 1111111 Wllllt Mwcll Grlptt, Wlltl 1 ll:lcll Mt>mtv Sl- 0 11rtd to l'trlK!lon, Win (Ol"llPrll1 Til1' Dltll. A ll'trwn1t P'1_,t., Thlt Ditti WUI Diii¢!! tM MOii! Ol1crlmln1Ung A •1..t.ss OP CHAMPA•NI snno WITH YOUI IRUNCH - ANY COCITAIL OP TOUR CHOICl-SI 19700 MACARTHUR ILYD. Oppo1lt• Or•l'lt• C•vnty Alrpert NIWPORT llACH Far ll ... rvatlon1 Cell W -2711 I EVERY SATURDAY I 2 STEAK DINNIRS FOR • French Fries • French Fried Onion Rings • Tossed Seled • Roll end Butter Brinl e friend! Teke •dvt1ntt19• of thi1 cfeliciou1 din- n•r or 2, et e ju1t right price. '11 lb. tend•r choice sft•k, cut to !rtidford Heu•• •p•cific tfions. I• 9ood to • friend, or maybe the femily7 This m•til, i1 • ft1v1rite wit h ell • , , you'll be e winn•rl • $ •) ~KNOWN FOR VALUES (_~ 1 Jot• of 1ur• wlto /u1r drop by to do rltelr fhlnf •••• olf tit• rlmol : NIWPOlT llA~ : Tm: !ED ~AltTErL : M~h:4~ ... IJ oo N 6 4 2 • 4 2 9. 8 : ISl221M"' 1•L1otO.IM~M,._,"'1,<oll1on.i• : t •H -:.:-..:::,,.,.. UO CKS 0 • •h• a., : SPECIAL JAM SESSION EVERY suNDA Y•J P.M. : GRANT PLAZA-e~ooKHuasT a. ADAMS-HUNT1~'o~°TiN":ri.CH !...~~~~~~~~~~-A-t_T_h•~"'-'-h'-'~_,1 ••···········································,,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_. • • ' • • , I . ~ DAil Y Plldf' Frld•r, May 14, 1971 Friday Saturday Evening Morning MAY 14 MAY 15 5~ fJ lfcN.., Jtrry Ounptry. 1:00 l])TV I Cla..,._ (]) PlfWI Rtuonet, Smilh, 1:30 0 Cl) Sunrl• S.NltlJ 0 MIC Ntn1Me1 Tom S1116e1. 7:00 I) ftew Wonls. Nn Wt)'S e The ... 11.11 s"°" o ®) m ttnlf'°*J 111owi 0 COLOR · JAMES GARNER IIJ !V I~''""" * IN "UP PERISCOPE"! m Ltt's Rip 0 Sh: O'aoct MM: IC) (90) -Up fD SUllM Stnlt #261-?M. rerbc•P,•" (dfll!I•) '59 -Jamu 7:30 fJ D111fJ't TrMllont 61/'Mt, Edmond O'B1ien, Andr1 Mar· 0 a;) Htd:le I Jldllt ti n, Alaft Hile, Carleton Clrpenter. 000 ::=:.!_trimct fr1n' Gifford, Sein Gttrlson. ._ CJ Did Vt-Dpkt IJj} Untlt Rill m 1111 FR!lbttnu m Th11Acl1Jbircls l!Jlt1tl rtk l :OOIJltlf1 1111,/RMd h1u111 K:1t1 f11l A TIMI for Joll1/Clllrlle's f'ff 0 IE Woody Wooctptc:ter @) flsh• F11111Jr 0 Cil (])Lancelot Unt CD Notld111 34 CIJ a.ea u.. _.. @mDmhY1lleJDIJS 0 Movh: "f1nltt1 tor 1 Dlltt. Im LI Hera f1lflHitl'E011 toftltlllo Sc.f" (m)'Slrry) '63 -Rlc:titn! aJ NNI Jim HIWtllornt. E11n, Al Hirt, Tin1 loulw. 6:30 (])Nm SiM HOddJ., m l•I• of Wtlls flt&O' (j) Trvtta °' Consaq11111CD 1:15 9 Campus l'Totllt (f) CBS 1k-1r1 Writer Ctnnklte. 1:30 B ®:i m nit luploos O C.Hld Cam1r1 GI Cba Kid @)NBC "'ews D1vid B1intl11. l :U OQ) ~~In's Mutuil m Th i flyln1 J .. un ',.,., ED Koc!Jtpldp ltdft t:oo U ()) Slbrlu & .. .,...,.... ·-@:)Slllded Fiims O ®l mer. Dollttle m Dntrt R'l*t o Motlt: ... ., ... ntt , .... a!) TBA 0 {}) (j) Jtrry Lewis Sttow 7:flt If) CIS News WaltH Cl'tH'ltite. m A.M. MO¥ltl: "C.J In till Nlpt 0 ID Nit NIW'l Dnid Brinkltr. (drama) '57-Cdmond O'Brien, Natt· 00 Te Ttll tilt Troth 0 Whit'• MJ Urtt? lie Wood, Brisn Oolllriy. "'Y .. n1 @)Dick Yin Dyle •nd D1nfel'OU(' (dr1m1) '57-M•tl m I L.m L11ey Dimon, Connie StewML m C[J Dr11net ID Tr• Ho1111 ED Thirty Mlnutn With . • • Em C..d• J Cllltarns fil) Christ tile Lhln1 Word a!> P1not11111 LllM g) Anftlitol Ntlf"OI 9:30 0 @} g;, 1111 Pl1t l'HtMr EID SI NG fueraa hi 0 rn (j) ..... Doublldtdin (f) Movit C1m1 0 Movie: (C) "Tiit Ml1 lellind OM 7:JO 1J The lntrm1 (R) RGn o·Ne11 Cun" (western) '52 -Aandolpl 1uests 15 • veteran boxe1. Saitt, Patricia W,ITIOl'1, Phlllp C•rtJ. @ Movie: (CJ "Th• u .. 1, St!" (fO· = ::i~:et ~ lllltt b Ltut" ma~ce) '64-Jlmt5 Darren, P•mel1 '"°" O III 1 l ~ ~·-~ T1fhn · Ill I•,._,-... 0 ~ m Hi1ll Cllaperrll (R} D @I m H.R. Putldlll 9 Vir&lni1 Cr1ll1m Sllow @ R11I Elllte Rtm.lk 0 00 fl) '111 lrldy lunch (R) 0 (})Hot _Wllnl• @ Movie: "'Gorco" (sci·fiJ '61-a> Luella Libr1 Bill Jnl'ers. Wllliim Sylvester. 10:30 0 (I) H1rle111 I~ 0 Milllon $ Mowit: (Zllr) "'JM 0 @) er;, .. Htr• C.• tlil lnrMp G1ztbo~ (oomedy) '60-Glenn ford, 0 Mftlt: lfl,nt ii If• Orinftl" Debbie Rey®lds, c.ul lieine'r. 0 CIJ 5'J H~s m BASEBALL'S GREATEST ll:OO 0 (f)Ardilt ~ funhont o ®J m M•ior Lt1ru• lnlW * RIVALRY! DODGERS @ Movie: "Slllcidt lltlllion,'" VERSUS GIANTS! O (D Mo'°' •-Gt l>Gdftr Dup llt/W1nn·UP O Movlt: "Tht Lion I U. ...,.... (E) Perry Mason m Movie: "Juni'\t flitrterr'" fI) Rlppln1 Up tht WMk GI:) FlHb M1dun1 EI!')Clntlfll 30 11:30 O (])Th Hardy hyt al Estrellas Mutlula &I M11tt I MIN Rtnelltft 7:55 m Dodftf B•ubt11 The LosAllgeln A"' .. Dod1ers vs. SJ. Gi1nts. rr~noon lli) Cuedloi dt Seiandos 1:00 0 @ m "'""' ' tfl• ~ •• , 12::00 a ~bf-Dot, Wllt11 .lr1 YIU? t]) The Uvin1 Book ~ Mm1: "Loin Dirk" (m~tt~ EI) Sytyi11 En1iq111 52-. G1or1e Rift. Ooruthy Mtrt. . 0 00 m Aintrican ~ ' 1:05 CS Luella Libre 00 Bat1111n 1:301J o\ady C1lffith Sllow (R) fD ttitll School ""*"- O ®J m N1m1 •I Ott Clftlt (R) @l}Tntrlfanb:ltlct e NYPO m Drt• • ,. ,..,. .. 0 00 a> Tiii hrtrid1t f111ilJ (R) 12:15 ID '""d ID DODGERS AND GIANTS ID ""11 • * BATILE IT OUT! iii) Pttletll fill Urlna "" Dodflf D11govt/W11•·l!fl t :OO 1J ()) CSS frid•J Mowie: (C) 12:30 £l (]J The Monklh . (211r) "T1rz1n'1 Th1u Clltll1n1es• 00 Moblle tfollll Show (advenlure) '63 -.lotk Ma holle)'. O flovle: "'The Explolht .. ,,.,. 0 Tiit f 11&itiv1 lien" (dr1m1) '61-0 @00 aJ I JJIC1AL I Undtfllt 12:55 m DcH11w lltlbtn WGrld of Jtcquts CollflNu Nla&:ocm 1:00 O D1stairdlJ & Mlltttey of LGst Ships." (R) Sunker :lhipl, [])Cl.,•• rrotlit unseen and untouched bJ min !Gr CIJ Mwle: "'Ifs Ahl," Tommy Xlrt 1 qu1rter of • cen!ut')', 111 nplored 0 Movli: "Mu .,. 1 nPtr.,... In this ent0ra Cou~tuu presentttlGn. @ TY I I.ORI tt 1Mrnl111 (E) felonJ Squad l!J Wttk•nd N11f1 @ID 30 Ml nlltt:I aJ Lo l'rohibld9 @m Lt Cri1dil lt:n CNdt ffi Hot Wheel~ m El Pet.do cit Soli1 1:30 a (JJ Th• lebonl t :3D D Candid C1111tr1 (])Voice of A(ricultur1 (DI J,ICIAL IM 1 le .. o I Rocle o Q Zant Cr.,Tbe1tro Champions lGp money-winners com· (fJ McH1lt'1 Nl'tf pelt in tll eYtf'lt3. 1!J Movie: "G1111fi11 II Indian lip• fD Sin Fr1nci5tG Mh (D StJ H1wb @I!) Maslule/f'lltor's DtM Z:OD til LI Cr111 cit M1riu Cniw EJ THE PREAKNESS msptnish Featu11 Film * SECOND CLASSIC IN 10:00 O @l m Stnin11 Report (R) THE TRIPLE CROWN ~ • I I ' ' • > ' ' . .. ' Vou,. Guide to Movie• AllC.J,.. b<lllliN D~;,.,1. """'""'' u.., 11....., .. w;o1. ,..,.,.. *TUT MllWT 11tlAITt'11, ri ... c.""' """'-• "ti.ry ••• Miff ..... twfft"' f-> °""'""" ,..,.,, "'"""i-,,-.~·-" .t.\lCOLO• "llD SIT AT MOllllllG" t•P) ,_,, • 1._1 ~-o • G-~· it..o .. df "Dlln DIQ•S MAlfl"l5P) --··"' ,_ --t 31-l'l3'S AJJ c.I~ bl••;,~ Oriu.1. $i.,, ... ;"I! ti.•'""""""'"".,..,.. ci. ...... ..., "Unu 115 MA.11" IG'j f'luo•~w...,,,. "'llOlOIO"t'Pl Scott Editor 's Note: This movie guidt is prepared bt1 the films committte of I/arbor Council PTA. ~frs. Nigel Bailey is presi~ent a11d Mrs. Bruce Nordland is committee chairman. l t is intended as a reference In determining suitable f i l ms for certain age group! on d will appear weekly. Y o "r views art solicited. Mail them to Mo- vit Cuidt, ca re of t h t DAILY PILOT. * ADULTS Five Eairy Pieces ~R): Son of wealthy musical family leaves home to b e c o m e itinerant worker. Lives con· tentedly with waitress-<lrinks and brawls with new hillbilly friends. Get Carter (R): Michael Caine is small-time London thug in story of revenge in British underworld. I Never Sang For My Father (GP): Story of hatred betw een a father and son. Melvyn Douglas and Gene Hackman star in this story of the older generation gap. Inves tigation of a Citlze-n Above Suspicion (R ): Italian suspense thriller. Head of ci t y's homicide bureau -":.-''... murders his lover-a pro- ~';';;,~'7'' stitute with a passion for T .... Grr..uS<'-.. •F•"""'u...-.1 murder stories. Film asks the "uco.oe ancient question "Who polices • Ill 'Giants'· The Lalli• Valley (GP): Priest and mayor connive lo turn womenfolk over t o mer~naries occupying last village untouched by The Thirty-Years-War. Captain's mistress burned at stake after professor slits her throat to prevent bunting alive. te~e profanity and as a brilliant war strategist . George C. Scott portrays Pat- ton, Karl Malden is Gent-rat Omar Bradley, Ryan's Daughter · ( GP ) : Robert f\.lilchum and Sarah Miles star in a love story sel in scenic Ireland of 1916. Restless and beautiful wife of middl-e-aged school teacher has affair with English major. Tragedy for all results. Sunflower (G): Melodrama of World War II. Italian v.•ife JR. MATINEE SATURDAY-2 P.M. "ALAKAZAM THE COREAT" & "LOST WORLD OF SINIAD" FREE PRIZES ALL SEATS 75c SAT. I SUN . J\f>l<A"S*ll IR): Irreverent comedy about the Mobile Anny Surgical Hospital during lhe Korean War. Spoof en nurse-doctor relationships and the "Last Supper." Pretty l\f aids All ln A Row IRI: Rock Hudson stars with Telly Sa\•alas, Angie Dickinson and Roddy :f.1c0o-wall in story about the "new" American high school girl. searches va st USSR to find~~llllllliil~~~~ .. ,~,~"!"~'~'~,,..~·~··~·~.,;·~~~ husband missing in act ion. ""1 .. •1" 4:is.& 1:ts Locates him living w it h beautiful Russian who nursed him back to health. They meet again in Italy but discover past cannot be re1;ve<1. Xf!ID-DI 11! 1"· Sh•• ••••h 7 The Statue (R): Story of a male's preoccupation with the size of his re p r o d u ctiv e organs . They Might Be Gia nts (G ):I 0 Conli11uow1 Sllow Po.ignant comedy-fantasy star· _,_ - , •EWPOIT l t lCM • 01.1.fJJO l\fATURE TEENS AND ADULTS ring George Scott as an amnesia victim following the death of his wife. The famous jurist imagines he is Sherlock Andromeda S tra i n tG ): Holmes. Joanne \\'oodwaNf is Suspenseful story of race the psychologist to whom he is against time. ·where scientists assigned. Her drab ap- in unde rground Jab in desert pearance and outlook on life try tG isolate rare disease are both ohanged when love transported to earth from and beauty touch her. an other planet. Stars David THX 1138 (GP): Citizen Wayne. rnx and THY rediscover sex TWIN COMEDY Hrr FIRST RUN THE STORY OF A VERY SUCCESSFUL TRANSPLANT Elke Sommer Britt Ekland Denholm Elliott (R) ,, ''PERCY'' "'Tll111Jl"15P) -•S..-C°""I-•• (5 l-IJi~~·;po::::l::ic::•=''='====:::~-, 'Wlllll DIMOSAUIS IUllD JHf fAITH• I The Cheyenne Social Club in a computerized "1984" type (GP): After the CivjJ War, a warld where all heads are Texas cowboy inherits a shaved. Men and women are bordello in Cheyenne. James sedated and me dicated Stewart, Henry Fonda and through a depersonalized Shirley Jones star in this prison.city of tomorrow. situation comedy. When DinMaurs Ruled The Cold Turkey (GP): $25 Earth (G): Tale of the million is offered to · small dinosaur era when the Rock I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ............. I ....... ,_ S.Jl·U7l T••Atli-P«~FMI•.-.•! ~~ -nit 11AIO lrDl" (fP) ~. "I 1.'"10 fOI Pinn IOT"' If Pl _ ......... . .. " .. --,, ...... ~M-6211 AU c.J,,,. E.wi.,;,,, 0r;, ... 1 .. s""-i.,: ~, ... M<G.••n "'Tiil lllVllS" l'PJ "··· ... ~ .... d -.~ "'A MA.II uuro·110111" ''" ... -.... -·-· ... _ ...... I JJ.\IM1 T-t;-1S.Ww•Fi<1J-D-,/ ••cor.., "nlll"11Jl"lfPI ..... w....rco1o•1....... ''I "WllRI DllOSAUIS lUln> TM IAITH" l ............. w .. •oi •-• 'Jl·J1!~ -·-·---M l-IOU All C.I~ ,,.,,.;_ E,,,,,q,.••tf U"do• 1 T ,.,., k W"" ,.,..,, ""lfln MAIDS AU llill A IOr' 11) ""••Mii-C"'"' "1:0CAITll"11) -·-·-M!l-111! ,. .. , ,_. s.,,, Cott "lt&IATOA.lllTOr JAYA"lf) "THf ANDROMEDA STU.IN" N• Rewrt"ff Seats DlllV II 1::Jer & 11 M1llll"1 $11. lo $~n. Wlnn1r 2 AcM . Aw•rd1 "RYAN'S DAUGHTlt• I•• Ofllc• o"" If NO.n • , PM. Diii' Showlf.,,.._ 11\llfl, lllrv Tllurt. -I f'M. ""···Sat, • 1::11 P.M. M1!1,..._1 Sii. • SVll. · t P.M. 11.tttrvM s .. 11 lowa town if residents ston People try to appease the gods smok'ing. Story or how greed by sacrificing the b I on d affe<:ts Uie town minister, doc· virgins of the village. 'I.or, right-wing fanatics and FAMILY the enforcing police. Local On A Clear Day (G): Movie bars and massage parlor do version of the Lerner-Lane thriving business dur ing musical of reincarnation star· smokers' withdrawals. ring Barbra Streisand and The Horne t' 5 N e s t Yves Atontand. (GP): World war II adventure Fantasia tGJ: Re-iss ue of set behind enemy lines in the Disney classic combining Northern Italy. Rock Hudso n cartoons and music of portrays an American army lhe Philadelphia Symphony captain who parachutes into a Orchestra conducted b y village wlth a demolition team Leopold Stokowski. lo blow up a dam. * Jenny (Gl : A1arlo Thomas The letter imniediately plays Jenny, a pregnant girl after the title indicates the from New England who goes 1'ati11 g given the picture by to Ne\V York . For convenience the Motion Picture Code. she marries a young man who Tlie Code A·nc!' Rating pro· wishes to avoid the draft. gram may be found on one Little Bir rtf an (GP): Dustin af the motion picture pages. Hoffman stars as a 121-year·l-=~-==-~=::::::::=====:;:;ll '\ DUSTIN .HOlftt<\N .lnn.f 816~- f'lc,vrn Rot.d (Gf') Call 67).6260 For Show Tlmea ALSO ,LAYING -"AD..t.M AT 4 A.M.'" wltti Mic:ll•el Do11tlo-l.M Purcell ~:il~~~~~~.!n s~~~ ·~~t:~~ PiCKWi~CK ~~-~1.· (' Arnelican West. culmmating BOOKSHOPS C.1 1n Custer's Last Stand. . 1:~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::;;;1 Gp Al . THf (ITT · Love St.ory ( ): 1 °'""". f71'1 4n.1100 MacGraw and Ryan O'Nea] SOUTH COAST 'lAIA 0-Iv•. Sllow Startt' P.M. star in romantic, bitter-sweet c.,,,., M••• • <71~J jf0.21f1 t ..... ,. fable of today·s college youth Conthtu11ut Slt•w Satwr••"t and the generation gap. Told from s: Sunn., fro111 2 ;n lhe;r language. MO\/IE RATINOS A New Leaf lGP): \Va[ter FOR PARENTS ANO l..t.RGAIN MATINEE Matthau portrays .a luxury YOUNO PEDPl£ 1¥ERY WID. -1 f'.M. hungry bachelor 'Who is down to his last quarter-million. Elaine May plar.i the rich love interest in this slapstick style comedy. Patton : Salute To A Rebel (GPI : Film portrait of the World War II general known as "Old Blood and Guts" showing him capable of in- 1 .... .,,, ....... "' ""-'"""" •• " .. _ ,,.,.. •"""'' ,,.. W<lfllilol)o " ~ ~-,., .,_,,,,..,,,.... Clll-. George C. Scott Academy Winner Best Actor in ''PATTON'• ONtw1 S1nders/Morrls. O (!)Tripll Crown Hone Rtdnt Aciu111 1.1s Jra, t,1j c~nd. ,1s 0 @CJ) CD le.1, Ameriu n Style @ Auou Utt ftntt FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER °""''" 1-1011"'8" THE VILLAGE WEST ®MO G,11( UMO(I 11 ADVIO(O ,,,.. '"'"' ""' .. .., in e1'11r~ .,,.,I ~ B • W d N ° 0 ' "LITTl.a a lG MAN" ($~1 .:. •• ,er 11 ews O Double f11tur1 Mwl11: '"[di• d. Plui ~ M " ... M I ••• is expanding •.. 111ore stu 1oa ... a .. -..., ......... ... ............................ ~ 1n.,1p of f11r" (suspense) -1y &. festival spacf' available "HOll.NET'I HE ST" 10~·1 \l" EDAmeriun Fil111 lfrstltut. TlMrtrt Ht1lh1rl1, Virgilio T1lx1ir1. -rllfl wit~ Rock HudSOl'I .__.,."",.:.,,":,.~,::.::.,..._ tD:lOIJ Movir. (C) (1111 4511) "Whi.lper· Doublt Apllts"(d11m1)'63-Mtrlnt 1~~7~t~l~L~•·~·~·~·~Co~•~Y•~·~·~·~·~·~· L~"'~'"~·~~·~~~~Po~·~"~·~·~~·~"~·~U~t~O~~~~·~~·~'·~·~,~·~·~·~·~>.~-~'°~'~'~'~··~·~'..:=======:::::::::::-::!. in1 Smith" (western) '48 -Altn Vlady, Rnbert '!ossein. 1: l1dd. Rober1 Pr11ton. 0 I SJIC1i L I UCU footblt1 Sporb· m Biii Jolllls Nnrs usttr Tom Ha rmon t1k11 vlewtl'I ED R11lities behind the steMS IOI' 1 pr1·11tson I!) ttdt:n1 de Allpsti11 look at th1 UC".A Bruin fool ball 11:00f)([)G!Nnri te1m. D !tltt!Nn• 06)11Jl(i4,I ladles f'CA Coll @ 0..111 Y1lle1 o.,. Tourn1111tnt Kathy Whllwnrtti tnd 0 CJ)@ Nrw1 Carol Minn 111 1mon1 lhe rom· CJ Nor11: (C) ''Stpltmbtr $11111'11" petitors of this $50.000 tnum•· (drtm1) '60 -Joa:in1 Dru, Malt ment, 1irin1 live from th1 Oe"rt Stevel'I$, Robtrt Sl11us1. Inn CGun\ty Club ifl l 11 Ve11s, m Sco1tbolrd Nev, m 1111 the Clcd: If§) llntw '"' l lbl• 11 I ID m The Amtriun Wnt :1 NIWI Put111m/rist1m1n. m Y1ri td1dtt Minlula al Cinema 34 2;30 @ lilew1tt~ 11:30 O W Men Criffin (I) rontm lolln1 0 IJj') .i;, JGhnny C.n n @)Sports Chtlllnp o rn oo m Diet enrtt m oo111rt , Slft11 CIJ Movit: "Tht List nm1 I Sn l :OO EJ DEBUT Ow Amtrtc.n Mulllttl Ardll1" (tomedy) '61 -Robtrt Hrrit111 Mitchum, .lfek Wpbb. llJ Skttdlbool ID MO¥it: (t) "TM leut of Hollow Q Mowie: "lmll#tion C111t11l' M1111nttln" (ilC•·l i) 'S6 -Guy Midi· ((l ln1t1n1tlor!1I Kour IOll. Patriti1 Medina. O Movie: (C: "'D1U1a" (w..ttm) ~ CGftwrllllon1 With • hJthl•· ®) Ml)lll1: (C) .. oi •• MOll1ttr, Dit" Cf) Mwie: ""f11111 Di'!l .. tl• Mq• lZ:lS 0 Mo.it: (C) "Norlhwut l r1lr @ID M11Mult/01w1 1 Coliath (wutern) '46 -JIM~ lltel. Bob (I) Rwid.t Muslult Stettt. m Tiit Bl& f'l ctul'I ID Morie; "The t~Yitlb11 ltJ" (x.I· al) l11tr1 dtl S•bldl lh 'J~Bori1 ll1rlotl. (D Motor Mout1 1:00 f) Mtwlf: "'M1ri11e ltldtrr'" (dra. l :JO tJ O[I UT Tiit C1t11 lol!M ~- m1) '4t-f:obtrt ~In Pl\ O'Brien. (I) M0¥1e: "Tht Nlatit Wiiker• (}) 0 0 (I) ®J """ CIJ Movie: "Wiiy Mtrtl I DI ... o '°"' "•1117'• w.rt1 m aindf'lll'• '"4111 H011 Q) All·~labt s-.: "n11rter Atltd," ffl Luch1 tfl '"I'* "Cilri ln tti1 Woods"' tnd "Nrok1 11111 m TM Mwnt.11 the Lost Secn1s of Hlppw11tn." a> H1tllJ .. This Week Treat the Family to Dinner In One of Orange County's Fine Restaurants, ..... ·:x~ . A ROBT• ~~~no:· ' l~aiitar. J 1!tfANDROMiDA SIRAIN tlCLltt•I •••A•••••T PLAYING Mlftll· MWAYi-: E IUIN ·KAJEREKI~~ BORiSttvtN"NElSoN'ffiDDING . MICHAELCRiCHTON . ROBERTWJSE·GILMELLE 1......::::--.... --1 FASCIN- ATING @=.i"' A UNIYERSAL ~ TtCIOOOO'.OR0 IUA\'ISJlll 0 "Breat~ Taking!!" ·---·- ALSO G SOPHIA LOREN "SUNFLOWER" FREE PRIZES TO THE HOLDERS OF LUCKY NUMBERS SATURDAY AFTERNOON • BALBOA 673-4048 OPIN 6:45 709 !. l•lboa l•lbM Ponln1ul• NOW-IXCLUSIYI SHOWING ACADEMY AWARD WINNER -lllT PORllGN flLM- r-_._ .... ,,_ .. u, ..., : ~ll!-•OOOl_..,._,eCOC1to.• .. - JNml'IGATJON OF A CITIZEN abov.e. ..) susp1aon llil '·'The _Tlirn-g!r,ol Lrte ·1s perfectionJ!A suspenseful;human drama! Don't;miss it!' . ~-°"' . .. --.. . . . . .. . . frld11y, M1y 14, 1971 UAILY PllOf 21 In the Galleries GW Students' Art Exhibit Nuclear Plants Discussed GOLDEN WEST GALLERY -15714 Goldeo Well SL, Hun• lngton Beach. On uhiblt in the Ubtary, during regular hours, a juried student art show through June 11. NB CMC Cl<NTER GALLERY -WI Newport Blvd., Ne# port Beach. Currently on exhibit In city hall during regular busineas houn, paintings from juried Art Festival, through May. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coa3t High- way, Corona del Mar. (Fonnerly Cotree Garden Gallery.) Houri: 11 a.m. to 3:$0 p.m. Mon.-Sat. The Junior League of Newport Harbor exhibit will feature vertical 1crolls, black int paJntlng1 and wood blocka prints by Sueo Serb:awa, and Oonl art by Rlho Tanaka, through June 3. TV Auction to Include Year's Rent in Newport Bargains galore are prGo mised during KCE'l''s third AMUal TV auction, which gets under way this Sunday night on Channel 28. Among many special items that will go on the block dur- ing the eight-day .aellatbon are a one-year lease on a one- bedroom, unfurnished apart- ment wlth a private club membenhlp at Park Newport In Newport Beach; a 40-day European cruile for two; two race horses -an Arabian and a thoroughbred; a l~foot speedboet with 50 horsepower AQUA PET TllOl"f.f.1. I" llH•• ••os e•oo•HTS -SPECIALS -e Ti9er 01c1r _ • • • • • SZ.tf • N •a11 • •••••••••• 1/$1 .00 e Bli ck T•tr• •••• ,, 1/$1 .00 e H. F11i1hn ••••• , J;t1.00 e Silv•rfip •• , , , , , , 1/$1.00 e Shaw Guppi•t ••• , SJ.tt 5901 W•tMt", H111ttl119to11 ••II CW111r Sl'flflttlfll 111d Wlllll!" HUNTINGTON IU.CH 146-JllZ engine, trailer and complete accessorie.s, and a 1971 Da~un sedan. Paintings, sculpture. draw- ings and other graphics as well as anliques will be auc- tioned off Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m. Then all sorts of new merchandise will be offered to the highest bidders Monday through Friday from 6 p.m. to midnight, Saturday from S p.m. W"ltil I a.m., and next Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m. TV sets, radios, t a p e recorders, home appliances, musical instruments, furniture, jewelry, bicycles, m o torcycles, refrigerators, sporting goods, luggage, gift certificates, vacation trips, theater tickets and numersous other Items, many personaJtt. td by celtbriUes, will be up 'for bid . Here is an opportunity to anag some bargalrul, have fun and h e I p non-commercial KCET stay on the air all at the same time. Last year the auction raised more than $200,000 for the community- supported station. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ACADEMY . AWARD SHOW Winner 8 Academy of . Awards INCLUDIN• BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR GEORGE C. SCOTT PA1TON ALSO -Im SClllNrLAY M-A:S·H lel" Offlc• OpeM 6:45 p.m. "PATTON" 7:15 p.111. "MASH" 10111 p.m. ... "'""' Visit the fufllre where love 2nd 111 FNtvrt is the ultimate crime "THE ILLUSTRATED MAN'' "THX 1138" Rod Steiger Weekdays 6.45 (GP) Sat. & Sun. J2,JO RESIRYID SIAT IN(jAlilMINT TORA TORA TORA - .DI--UK HIR.lliSO"N u I • ".l 1-t" I • I I - S.Wtjhlnl. ~-.. .,..,,..,........ ~iiiiii•@4.t8' BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main SL, Santi Ana. Hou": 1 10 a.m. to •:30 p.m. Tuel • ..Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed and '111ura. No cl\Arge. On exhibit Torana Pal.ronl Show and winners of 1'7l regional children's works. l!JrouSh May. . • OCC GAIJ.ERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours: 9 a.m. to f p.m. Mon.-Fri.; 6 to 9 p.m. Wed. No admission charge. On exhibit through A1ay. ~·ork of Bruce Piner, OCC associate prof. of art, In library. Student art in Gal- lery through May 28. MARINERS SAVINGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit regu~ business hours photography by Rick Malmin through May. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On uh.lblt during regular business hoUr11 through June, watercolors by Elsie Lee Rltter. ~A VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Pi.fess. CurenUy on exhibit through May, arts and crafts by Donna Frlebertshauser. AVCO SAVING -3310 Bristol, Costa Mesa. On elhlblt dW"- lng regular business hours, watercolors, oil paintings and ink washes by Margaret Neal, through Pi.1ay. LAGUNA ART ASSOCIATION-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours : noon to 5 p.m. daily. Docenl tours, 2 p.m. Sun. On exhibit through May, "Eight Artists Exposed," work or Jerry Anderson, John qe Heras, Jay 1'1&ddox, Earle Roddy, William Wegman and William J.tahan, Ad- mission, non-membe rs, $1, sludents 50 cents. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Co6ta Pi.lesa. On exhibit during regular business hours through May, oil paintings by Joanne Bone. The pros and cons or the prollferaUon of" nuclear power plants in the United States are e~amlned in "Powera That Be," a hard-hitting KNBC documentary which airs Tue$· day, May 18 at 8 p.m. on Channel 4. Actor Jack Lemmon offers the narration during the hour· long special. Evidence In support of the "nukes," as they are known in the trade, is voiced in an in- terview with Congressman Chet Holifield (D-Calif.), chairman of the Joint Com- mittee on Atomic Energy. Op- posing th.is view are Dr. John Gofman and Or. Arthur Tamplin, staff members of the. U.S. Atomic Energy Com· mission's Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Livermore, Calif. These two severe critics of n u c I ea r proliferation discuss their findings . Pretty Maids all in a raN "'°"' ..-ll!:XX >ut£:N · HG Cl'.J:NO'J fEUY SAVAl.AS • 'RIETTY w.iol All N A c;..,..... iCWf ~·l<EENAN W'NN · S-0. b, GENE iOXt:NBERl!Y e..d ~ ;. -' b, fiAN'.li ICUJNI · """""' b, GENE ra:uNBeAA"I · th.<"'1 b, l<'CJm VA!lM ®;*;REMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT*! '" HAltlOJI SHOPPING CENTEJI 2nd Feature at Both ·f?.. PDWA"DS ~ Ml<hool c. ... HARBOR c1":':'..1 '"" II.I,.. 111 !RI "Get Carter" SECURITY PAClFIC BANK -l96 E. 17th St., C.Osta Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil paintings by Shirley Leyrer ,through May. While backers of nuclear pov•er insist the program Is safe, clean and dependable, critics maintain it is none ofl----------------------------,.----- these, and Is in fact so dangerous, a moratorium on nuclear p I a n t construction should be declared, The basic criticism voiced by opponents surround problems lhat are in· berent in the program, i.e., radiation, long-lived waste, and the possibility of a major reactor accident. CORONA DEL MAR UBRARY--420 Marigold Ave., Corona de! Mar. CUrrenUy on exhibit during llbrary hours, exhibit of Corona de! Mar High School students, through May. DOWNEY SAVINGS -360 E. 17th SL, Costa Mesa. On ex- hJbit during regular business hours. oll paintings by Bernice Houser and Pat Ingram , through May. TRANS AMERICAN TITLE -170 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours , oil paintings by Betty Brook!, through May. UCI GALLERY -The Fine Arts Village Gallery on UCI campus is open 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Thurs., Fri., Sun.; 9 a.m.· 4:30 p.m. Tues., Wedi Closed Mondays and Saturdays. On exhibit through May 20, Graduate Student Art Show. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUrtl-WO Main St., Balboa. Hours: 1-5 p.m.-Sun.; 6-9 p.m. Mon. Closed Mon., and Tue!. in daytime hours . Admission free. CUrrenlly on exhibit, "New Painting in Los Angeles," an avant guarde expression of art. Work of James Bradley, James Ganzer, Thomas Seidel, Allan J..1cCullom, Thomas \\'udl. Jim Frazin, Vic Hender110n, Leona rd Korin and T!!rry Schoonhoven may be seen through June 20. COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit. during regular library hours, charcoal sketches and oil painlings by Tony Marsh, through May. JIB LIBRARY -525 S. Mai n St., llnutington Beach. On ex- hibit during regular library hours, oil paintings by Carl Pierce, through May. CHAUIS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours: 11 a.m. -5 p.m .daily, Currently on e1hibit, a twirman show of oils and bronzes by Roger Kuntz and watercOlors by Rex Brand t, through May. Oo the other hand, experts are predicUng a severe power shortage in the com.Ing decade unless more power plants are built. The Atomic Energy Commission believes nuclear power Is the best answer. SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Largest Selectton al Tropical Fisll & Supplies in the area. New z LM:lltl•M 111 '#. WILIOH, COITA M•U. foff F•irvllw Allll.. So1•1"1 fllZll All111l-H1111tl111fN IMCll o<M>U nus-w.1t Disney'• Ffff11mt• "DAD -CAN I BORROW THE CAR" IS A FILM OF RARE Ret1tkrs D igest •·Red Slty •IM orni1'g" ;, " 1111 ,,. ning momtnl of JN'ttn rom11nl ;. cism. It will s11rtly In 011t of Jbt 1t10Jt i mport•nl/i/111J of J 97 1. E"traordin•ry lmfJ•ct!" • Winfrrtl Blt11ins, L.A. /lf'r11/d- E"11mintr • HAL WAI I'& PAOOUC!TOOI< REDBKYAT MDRNINB "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" '"' !' NOW AT BOTH THEATRES • • IJf MAllO!t '"°"""° Cl#Ttll • • ll!"DWAltD8 HARBOR,..:'1.2 MAltlOfl I LVD. AT WIUOM IT. OSTA 1111.f. 14l·OS7l 2NDTOPHIT Mkho1! Coln1 and l5•in Ekland 1,, "GET CARTER" (R) . ·I __,,_,.._.,... ,....,,.,_,.,_ .. -,-···-•••• .,.1!" ..... - "'Ir .. ···--·----- THXll38 W-l!ltol pr._,i.1HX11• Aobrtl DI.MID and Donald ~ T~T~ "A RARE DILIGNJ. THI llVll Of SUCCUSIUL I .. VEHTIOH IS MARVILOUSLY HIOH. 'A J11w l11f' •cliln•• tH """' •-' IM'rt .. W• ,,..,_ el tli1h11111nl•c•111l4l111I ,., ,.,,I' AWALTER MAnHAcU&'IU'i'Ni'M:AY "A ilewuCia1 flll Colo< by MOVIELAS . A UIOV[IPIAl l'!CTUIP[ f fCHNICOlOll.f (Ratitd OP) ROCK HUDSON .ANGlE DICKlNSON TELLYSAVALAS DUSTIN HOffMAN "LITTl.f BIG MAN" ~TecMicolor· ~-. DUSTIN HOFFMAN e CHIE F DAN GEORGE SAT. APR.24 CHiLDREN'S MATiNEES ALL SEATS 75c BOX OFFICE OP~NS 11 :45 A.M.-SHOW RUNS FROM 12 NOON TILL 3130 E DWAR DS CINEMA VIEJ '~~ DlfC.0 f"YIV Af \II PAI TIJ~Nillf 810 6'190 - THL 8LSSIA!IS I.RE (O\!lll[, THE 8USSIA!IS ARE CO)JJll~ • ' ' . ' •. \ -r ·~:.:; 1, • .,; t 11v.iy, May J4, 1911 -- We Are Ov•r' Stocked By Somt $200,000 And The Inventory Must Be B1l1nced. P r I c • Sl11hing Is Tht Order Of Tho Doy At ATLAS CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH. Check Tht Outst1nding Value• 0 ff• r • d And Come In Tod1y. Sptci1I S1vin91 On All New And Used Cars. NEW 1971 CRICKET '6? BUICK Ll SAIRI! 4 DR. H.T. VI, •11tom•fi,, rtdio, h11t1r, pow•r 1lttrin9 I brtkt1, ,;, cond i- t io11in9. tl MA617) '68 Y.W. ··~ 4 1p11d l r1n1mi11ion, radio, h11l1r, !YQA- 17'1 1 SER. NO. '4141 -Jlll·Ofl66Z '64 RAMBLER AMERICAN SEDAN 6 cvlind.,, 1utom1li,, rtdio, l-11t1r, low, low mil11. !OX=: 185) '67 PLYMOUTH y" \II, 111lom11ic, power 1l11rong • br1k11 •win- dow1 -Jttl:, •ir con· ditioning vinyl roof. (\l lJ401 I '68 TOYOTA CORONA SEOAN IWJM l l~I '67 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 dr. sport coupt, \II, 111!om1lic, rt~i o. hetl· er, power d11rin9 & brtk11, whi•e w1 il1, vinyl top,,;, condition· i119. f UOW070) s1495 "' ... ~ .. Atl•• 9er•J£e D•· ••rt•••t W'el• ee•e• ••4 H.e••r• a11 ·c•rytler C•r· p•ratl•• v .. 11~1•• R•~•lrl•lt &ervfee · aail Warra•IY w.rk. "•••rtll•aa Of1''ltt!re Car "'•• P•re•••etl. 1"• H•••r M••ler c•artre. •••k· A•eriear•. Carte Bia••••• A•erl• ea• Expr••• Aatl Dhle Cl•~···· USED CAR '68 CHRYSLER JOO :Z DOOlt H.T. va . 111 lom1lic, rtdio. ll11lt•, powtr 1l11rin9 I brtkei, t ir, vinyl top. t XOA7S1 I s1995 '68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT \II, 111tom1lic, r1d io, ll11l1r, power 1!11•· i119, t ir condilio11i119, .. inyl top. IW6Pl26l .. NEW 1971 DUSTER '69 PLYMOUTH FUltY Ill H.T. COUPI \18, 1ulom1tic, rtdio, llttltt, pow1r li11r· in9, vinyl top, t i• co11· ditioning. IXRV6'141 SER . NO. VL2911E123920 '69 FORD 2 dr. H.T., VI . '"to- m1lic, rtdio, h11ltr, po""'' 1l11ri111J, whil1 w1U1, vinyl top, 1ir condilio11in9. !XYG - 6111 '68 PLYMOUTH '69 OPEL l•llRACUDA J(AOEnf 6 cyl. •ulom~lic, pow• •• 1l1orin9. eir cond., ltul!y f•cloty ·~ui p- vinyl top, r"iio, ilt•I· p1d. IZLK70)) "'• whil1w•ll lirt1. !VWVJ 44 ) $1295 ~295 '69 Chevrolet CA.MARO SUPER SPT. \II, 111tom1ti,, r1di1, h11!1r, power 1!11" in9, bucl..11 ltth, co11- 1ol1, vi11yl lo p. IXSK- 76 1 l $2195 '69 CHEVROLET MALllU 2 DR. H.T. \II. 111lom1lic. •tdio, h1tltr. power 1le1rir111 I b11'.•1, t ir condi- tio11in9. winyl top, IYONl •Ol • ,,:,. '• • . {· ·!· • • ' • Frida)', May 14, 1971 • DAILY PILOT H THE TIME TO BUY THAT 171 CAR IS NOW!! ANN.UAL DEMONSTRATOR 1971 0 PINTO 2000CC engine, outo, radio, disc brokes, cloc k, tin ted gfo!I, vinyl rO<l l. fo!d down reor seot. delu)(e decor group, con\o- lette, (IR IOXl 38540) FACTORY LIST PRICE $2760 SPECIAL $21 SALE PRICE 2 DOOR HARDTOP 598 FULL· PRICE Factory oir, A 29 V-8, cruiltomotic l•oris, power l'lee rorig, broket, w•n· dow,, U~Oh, till l!etririg wheel, 1!ereo lope with radio, t1n1ed glo11, linger 1ip '(leed control, 1Yh1tewoll1 w11h di~ wkeel tO Yert, londou top. (1J8AN 11 1253) FACTORY LIST PRICE $7237.09 SPECIAL SALE PRICE 1971 GALAXIE 5004 DR. HT Factory a i1 . .tOO cu. in V -8, c ru· iieomatic. p/slee.,ng/broke., . AIA/FM lt"•eo, vinyl roof, tin!ed gloss. wlii- Tewolls, dlx wheel covers. (1J565 1l7565). FACTORY LIST PRICE $5002.75 1971 ' MAVERICK · 4DOOR ·· fnctory oir, cruiseomotic Irons, power sieering, rodie>, accent group, tinted gloss, wh!tewolls. (l li::921 107411) FACTORY LIST PRICE $3291.71 SPECIAL $2 SALE PRICE .1971 LTD BROUGHAM 2 DOOR HARDTOP 532 FULL PRICE 429 cu. in V-8, factory oir, c1uiseomotic, power steering, brake1, windowi., 5tereo lope w11h 1odio, l1nted gloi.5, dl11 steering wheel, whitewalls w11h dl 11 covers. (IJ68K111969) FACTORY LIST PRICE $5528.IB SPECIAL $5 SALE PRICE . 1009 FULL . PRICE SPECIAL SALE PRICE $J768~~LL PRICE SPECIAL . SALE PRICE $41 Bl~~Ll . PRICE BRAND 1971 TRUCK NEW &CAMPER F-250 3/4 TON PICKUP & ELDORADO CAMPER Complete ca mper packa ge equip!, wilh ttove, t ink, icebox, etc. No. 105467 Ser. Nl . F25ARK20 169. $ ~:~:ENT t.,0, NEW 1971 ECONOLINE VAN ... ,-.... ORDER YOURS TODAY $2688FULL • PRICE '62 FORD FIOO Le 111 81 .. , v.1, l •11•1 .. , r•• .. Y to ••rk. (31709() I RANCHERO 65 Y-l,Aelo,Ptw1rStttri119. (PfXllt) $250 TOTAl $11658 $250 i1 , •• ,., ••••• '""'· '" ,,,,,,. i• , •• ,., ...... ''"''· iRcl, '6 7 ~"~~~.~.~~~.,~;, 8 $9 8 8 ,.., '71 lic1Ru '"• 111 fi"111c t cha1'11tl •• ''''''" cr••it l1r J• rod io, htiltr. (V3266l) .. 11.hftrrHI ''"''· ••ic1 i1$444•.ll i11cl.1ll fi11111C1 cli1r9u,la•n '71 lic11111 or ii'" •••hr to''' c11li, hll cttli ••ict i1 $l761.40 l1t1:I. 11111 11•, '71 li<tt it, All NU Al rEl(lllJA$1IAll12% _.,;;llM.;;;.RM-.AIND;.;;IDA.;;;.T-1 D""IL-.1v.-1R_Y-------t '6 7 ~?~~! J,?.,! On$12 8 8 NEW ELDORADO CAMPER JVUS4J) 10 1/2' MOHAWK CAB OVER Self contoin&d un;1 with 1toinle51 1!etl 1lnk, rong•, ov•n, hood, g o1f,lec. refrig, tiot &. cold water. shower, oquomol· le toilet, wolnul porielirig rhruout, plllnly of electric ou1l11s, t omplt te home owoy from home. # 9055.46 SPECIAL $) 434 SALE PRICE CHEV. $1. 388 '6 7 l /4 TON ST~llE Hu•y Duty l1111pt. Xtr• (11111 Thruevt, tVl1152 ' '69 DODGEVanWgn. 988 V-1 •. a p1,1ler !tor.. $1 II f1ed fllOiltl, . 112fS4E) t--~~~----..,....~~~---1 '69 ~~'~e.~!~~ All $2688 lit1•y il1ty, VI, e'te, \ llr. 1Mf, (XDZ6Sf) $488 FORDWGN. $488 / (o,11try St .. 111, v.1, ''''• 64 ,owtr slttri119, r.di1, ltt1!1r, (096-CTR). '6' o· Y.!'.~~~-milu, · (IG,IS6) '65 MUSTANG2+2 $488 '68~ ... ~ ........... ,,· ... $788 V·I, r1d10, h11t1r. (NGXf24). ~';;;;111, r1dl1, h11111r. !Sll- '62 ~~.~_l.~~.~~.;"m'"' $48. 8 '67••A•~.~~? .. , .. ,.;,,, $9·88 elhtr xtr11. (JRS606) Red10, HHter. IUJC·S07) I MU TANG V-8 788 '68f P~P. ~.~R VI, $13 88 HARDTOP with elr co114., auto. tran1., fectory air 66 out•. tra1u., pow1r sl11ri111. .,, P{S, P/W•i11rl roof, Li· (SZJ76G) CtlUI 243 A(F ,67 MUSTANG HT$ J 288 ,69 DODGE SuperB$i VS, 011t11., powtr , V·I, 1ute. tr111t., ,ow1r . steerl119, rodlo, heoter. 1t11ring, ro4io, hteltr. 48 8 ITYX541J l ic e11s1Yaf-4IS ' '68 VWBUG $988 ,70 FORDFairlane~, Au te, dl x rad io, ht•ltr. Li· HARDTOP, r~d10, h.••ltr. s 8 8 ctn11 lD T·Jtl. Vtry low 1111ltt, l1t e111e 753BSR 8 DODGE R.T. ~ FORDGal.SOO I VI, A11to, Pow tr Sit tr· I v.1, ''''· tr1111 .. ,.wtr 6 ;., .... ; .......... "'' 1088 69 ,,.,.;,,, , .. ; ......... $1688 ti Stoll. (VWX102) lict11tt 612.AJIS, '68 f.~,~~.~.~!~~" $1288 '70 f;~vR•. ,.,!,°·!!';~. l"2188 out~, 1to•1r 1t11ri119, ·· p1 ,,pow1 r (il i1c}il10r1ke1,~ . r1 il111. h11ttr. rei1a, h1et1r. Strtal Ne. (IJ156Y16$920) 150St4 · '67 I.~'.~~!.~.~:!'$1288 '69 ~P.~.~.~:.rx .. ~ .. nd-2188 1111,ort. (VFS919) . :11g, Rodto, li1.1ter, 111· ~ 1e11 reek. 006-IHL 167 T -BIRD Landau 1388 ,69 T-BIRD Landau 2 f,U powtr, f1ct1ry eir, t loadt d ind. V-1, e'to. $ 688 & 111011r othtr 4tl,lt .p tre111., '''' ''"· ,,.,,, t1tr.1.SX1161. ,,,, r&li, Lic111t ' . ·-· !JO DAil Y PILOT '''"'· .. ,~, 14, 1971 Everyone Hos Something Thot Someone El•e Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS· You Can Sell It, Find If, Trade It With o Want Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5618 for Fast Results l~I [-·· ... I~ CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCH URE OF CURRE NT LISTI NGS OF FICE OPEN SAT. & SUN. VIEW THE BLUE PACIFIC From this 3 bdrm. & den home in EXCLU· SIV E (~AlifEO SllORF.S. A home you really can afford. Corner lot ins ures privacy, al so access to 3 private bear·hes. One of our best buy~. ('all to see. $67,500. Bud Austin. CAMEO SHORES OPEi\ SC.~. 1·5. 4507 HOXBL.HY DK Ocean \'iew from charming hacienda -c u s t o 111 woo~ shut~ers, French & Spanish '~'a!Jpaper. Afexican tlle. 4 Bedrooms. 3 baths. family room 1,1,•/brick fireplace, formal dining room. $85,000. Carol 1'atum, HARBOR VIEW HILlS OPEN SAT. 1·5. 923 GOLDENROD. Beautiful vie\\' r r o m 3 bedroom. 2 bath. fam. room home "'/new shag carpetin g in living room. Large lot "·Jmany trees & s pace to expand home & put in pool. $49.500. liarry Frederick TWO PRESTIGE WATERF«ONTS EACH WITH PIER & SUP LI.DO ISLA ND -5 Bdrms .. 4'h baths. Brick terrace. Professionally decorated. S210.000. HARBOR ISl..ANlJ -6 Bdrms .. 5 baths. Deep front terrace \\'ith 0\11n b e a <: h. $250.000. Kathryn Raulston. BEACON BAY Private community· this rho 1 t e area ne ar beach, has several verr attractive homes v.·1t h sma!J i n <: o m e apirttnents. ~la ny added features .. f or fur t t1 C" r information . tall: A-fary Lou ~1ar1on A DREAM COME TRUE '11ove into a newly decorated. freshly painted 3 BR. home in Eastbluff. Lovely yard to en· joy carefree living. O"·ner transferred. S46.· 500. Ji arriett Davies. LEASE OR SALE O\vner leaving thi~ beautiful custom to'''n· bouse. :I Oversize bdrms .. 2 ba .. lovely panel· ed liv. rm. w/frpl(". \Viii sell $44,500 or lease $375. G. Vreeland. ANXIOUS -PRICE REDUCTION St-1Jers want to cash out no'v on lh1s 2 yr. old dream home. It's clean. It's expensively dec- orated & completely landscaped. It's a bar· gain at $42,500! It has 3 bedrooms. formal dining room plus familv room \\'ith '"'el bar. Call noll.·~ Bill Con1sto{·k. IN WESTCUFF A cozy 3 bdrin. home - spacious din. room, lovely yard with trees. Short walk to ~lari n· e rs School, Park & Library. ~46.500. Cathryn Tennill e. GREAT VIEW AND POOL Dramatic Dover Shores. 4 Bit.. 3 bath home. Huge den w/library 'l\vo <·ozy fireplaces, lge. fam . kitch. \v/gas BBQ. Sep. sewing roo1n . Three car gar. $86.800. J\! Fink. GRACIOUS TWO • STORY Family borne close to schools. 4 BR .. 2 1~ ba's .. den. fo rm. OR .. breakfast nook. Beautiful landscaping v.·ith <'ozy ~Hie r1a\1 0. Priced to .sell! $41 .900. ~1 I '. Htl!t'. THIS HOME SPARKLES Ideal famil y home -4 l.g. BR 's .. 2 1f.? baths. New w/w cpts. -fa mily rn1. '"'ilh frplc .. bi t· in kit.ch. 40 Ft. heated pool -111ell landseapcd. Sprinklers. Choi ce Baycrcst loc . Only $79,· 950. Art Gordon. REALLY MOTIVATED Owners 1noved to lla\~a1i. 3 Bil .. fain rn1 .• private pool & jacuz~.i. Keen lJniversl ty r•a rk "'Tulane" ho1ne. come see -c>PE,\J SUNDAY J.S. REDUCED TO SELL: Nm1 onl y $43.950. 18021 Aspen Tret-LanC'. "f 'h u('\\'' Le\vis. THE BLUFFS BEST BUYS ltilMED. Possession. 3 BR .• 3 bath s. paneled den. 220 sq. ft. 2 patios. $41 .900. AND 3 BR., 3 Ba. Franciscan Model. \.'acant. \Vilt lease/option -Submit.. $41,500. LaVera Burns. BAYSHORES 3.000 Sq. l-'t. hon1c '"'lrg. patios & yard. J,rg. tiv. rm .. fan1 . r n1. \V 1"•et bar, din rn1 . & :l oversized bdrm!i. -1 can be d ivi ded. Near private bc3ches. $58,500. ?\1ary f·l arv~y. IRVINE COVE VIEWS ! Custom Eller broch d es ign; 4 roo1ns \\'ilh white "·ater view . .;, Si e p s l.o your private beach. Formal dining room; 5 bedroom~. 3th baths. Perfec·t for the \~·hole family. $210.000. George Grupe. 833-0700 6"44-2430 Coldwell, Banker SSO NEWPORT CE NTER OR., N.I . CHARM & BEAUTY Th.~~~ l!:i~on a I l/t1l•·t 1•til-dt'·t;0C il/l''('!, Jiu 11.,111 t-.... ·ron1e-&va1JabJ.·. A ', ry 1argt· ~ Bftlroom hoffil' 1 i,.' IW'iotfl; .. J o".mf:lng I . n" pl.1n1i11i:s. ;. d·~.: y <tr d , J-:;>.f")l:l !Ol' . .: /•DUL, a sep· llr<i!r• pool hoUS4', and .in unb.-l1e\a6!" are .. for rte• r,,.ation and f'n}tlYmf'nl. Jt all PXIS!JI !or your insptC'IK'ln and approval in Colltge 'Park's bt'~I ~ction wirhin 1 \\;.Jlonl{ d111tan,.,. !t1 1tl1 Thr~ I y •f,.,uJ.!. afll'I Ur!\on;::e Coa!t CfiiJ P>:t'. Pnt'f"{J no"· ar 1 ~.;6.!r'.Q, !~COATS I c & . W WALLACE REALTORS -~141- (0pen Ev•ni"ts) l cOMFORT~HARM- C••tY • t"Omfor1ahle tli.rrr bd- rl'lU. IWO bath httmf' on JIAHO\\'OOD .FLOOlt'i "'llh largi> d1n/rn1, BIN kl!. and bl'l'<1lrfas1 a1't'a. Covered pa. 110. Dbl. garage . -.·ell land· iiCapPl'I . a11soned fruit trtts. I.ocattd ''" T\\'O f''ULL SIZ.. r:o J.OTS • EASTSIDE ('QSTA l\T!'.."'SA. Priced to ~Pll al urtly $37.:'.00 • 0\\'fW>!' \\"Ill 1 •"illT)' lolln HJ quri./Jfrf'd huy· l-:1••n1ng'I Call G-12-7438 Beaut ifU1:1m maculate 4 ~droom. '.l li1ory v"JTh 3 ba!h,., /1!u.~ gorgN'HJ~ POOL for 1ha 1 CaJ1forniit llv1n g. l..ol~ o! dN:king, aho buil1 - 1n BBQ All 1un1trd on Eas!- ~111.., ('Q,!.i .\l1•$a·.~ rh.ar1n· u11: ;ir .. ll. Sub)Pl'\ 10 $31.800 \',\ ).(l;t(l ill l_i', \l tlh /lll)'•' rul.'n1~ t•11sy to liandll", Call t-0011: Walker & Lee Z790 llarl>or Blvd. a t Adan1s 545-0465 Open 't11 9 P~I THE NICEST PEOPLE Lilr In N1·11·1,.1rl llf'1;:h!~. I ;-.: .. 11.1 :.! lx·d1·001 n & ronver-I 11hl" dt>n or :i J:>f,.iMtlTTl hnm" \\ 11lk1 11~ d1:.ta1\l'C' 111 :ti! 1whr..-.!K. R•)(}m fnr \)l'l&! <Jr tr~.11/er. s:U.900. C11ll £46..7171. 1-Q THE REAL '-'.'.. I;STATERS >! r " . r ~· Young Executive's Prim• Bch. Ar•a Hom• J Bit 2 Ba. Jiu;:" family rnl. Din. rn1 2 hr(' pl'~. Lrg. en· <-1. patio. Lrg kilch • all •·h·1·1 IJ!l11K, :i 1•11r gar 1111d I 11H•r1), rnru1y '1ras, jnrl. <'l•>Ct . .!;'ill' door UP'f.'tll'r, l'Of· 111•r !01 11 /bo:11 J{lllt. ·""!" ****** * TAYLOR CO. * THE BLUFFS -$Sl,SOO Just listed ~ "E'' plan condominium on green belt 3 BR . fam rm & 2 patios .. ~!any extras include brick fireplace w/mantle upgraded cptng & drapes. Immaculate! CORONA OEL MAR -$61,SOO Lovely "Broadmoor" home at top of Harbor View hill s. Spacious 4 & FR w/formal DR. 26 12 LIGHTHOUSE Open Sat-Sun 1-5 030 TR I-L EVEL ELEGANCE Dramatic & spacious home \\'/4 BR, FR & formal DR . Located on a quiet corner site in i\lered lLh Gardens, Hunt. Beach. $45,500 2025 1 CRAJMER Open Sun 1-5 030 LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Glamor & perfection in this superb 5 bdrm home w/fam nn, formal DR & 5 baths. Ele-- gant decor thruout. Pier/slip. Air-cond. CAMEO SHORES -$17S,000 Ocean viey,• ! Custom built 4 BR &. den home \I' 1formal DR. Finest interior design. Beauti- ful patio & lanai with great pool. 4500 ORRINGTON Open Sun. 1·5 o30 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -$54,SOO Delightful 4 BR front unit w/fireplace. Rear 2 BR. 2 ba. Easy maintenance. 51:;.5151;, POll\SEITlA Open Sat. 1-5 030 OOVER SHORES -$99,SOO . ..\ real classic! Italian influence in this gor- geous 4 BR home wi den formal DR. 3112 baths and view of city lights. 1606 ANTIGUA Open Sun. l-5o30 CORONA DEL MAR Spacious custom built 3 BR modern near I~ittle ('°erona beach. Some ocean vu . Beaut- iful "·ood paneling & mstr suite. $87 ,500. 216 POPPY Open Sat-Sun 1-50 30 WHITE WATER VIEWI $175,000 North Laguna ocean !rt. 5 BR. 4 ha. Nev.' England farm house. Custom quality & top condition. Your private steps to the beach. BAY ISLAND'"-St6G,OOO Charming 5 BR home w/pier & slip. Pictur· esque island. w/private park & tennis court. OOVER SHORES BEAUTY Prestige address ! Brand new 2·story modern with 4 Bdrms, study, garden room & formal dining room. Sunny & gay. $105,000 410 MORNING STAR Open Sat-Sun 1-5:30 WATERFRONT HOME -$117,SOO In viting entrance to 3 BR & den home \V/ sweeping view o! bay. \Vann decorator col- ors. Jluge deck. Pier/slip. Call !or appt. CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS DOVER SHORES & BAYCREST 90' Front, level, fee S 27,500 s.s· Front. level. corner, fee S 28.500 80' Vie\~· s ite. le ve l, lease $ 29,500 94 ' Vu site on Galaxy, lease S 38,500 75' x 180' VU on Galaxy, lease $ 39,500 57' Front, pier & slip, lease $ 49,500 BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE 56' \\·aterfront. Lease $ 69.500 45' \.\.'aterfront. Lease S 73,000 108' \\laterfront. Lease $125,000 CORONA DEL MAR VU or China Cove, bay, ocean BROKERS & SALESMEN $ 65,000 \Ve have an opening in our Residential Di vi- sion for an experienced 1nan or woman pos- sessing enthusiasm and integrity. lf you are interested in a beautiful off ice in the finest location, \\'Ork ing \\'ith congenial associates, \\'e are in terested in meeting you. 1 '0 ur 26th Y••r" 1111.s .,ut11t:ind1ng honlt• 11ric· rd al $~1.500. 162·5.iZl COLLINS & WATTS CONDO WESLEY N, TAYLOR CO,, Realtors 2l1 l San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 4 BEDROOM IYAN WELLS -PRESENTS - Ywr opponunny to ha1eo I! neY.", \•je"'· horn!! home In l>ol'eor Shores -CU:>'lom built t•\ yu0r pai·t1cular nP(<is. \I i• ha\" t ~ largest St>lec- tl<in ol King siu, ctJOJl·e , homesites \\'Ith ouu:tanding \'le"lli"s 1ll Ke\.\'l)On Beach, and I.bey ca.n naw !:it-ac- quired 1n i ·tt a& \\"l'U as Leu.hold. At tbf' present ume v•e haVf' J new horn" under constru<.·uon v«hlch 11111 be ready for occupancy in J une ln case )'OU 11iih 10 TnO\'e soon, Come" to 1033 Mariners Dr. for a pre\ie-.· ot our exc1 ling M\lol .f l< 5 bedroom home'5 complete .,,:ith sparkling pools. Ivan Wells & Sons cusro :i.r BUILDEru S!NCE 19'2'1 JO'.r. :\larirwrs Dri1·e 646-1,j;j() -~-TRIPLEX ,'\ewport Jle1gh1s. Located on a tree-lined 111tte-t in a quiet ! MACNAB -IRVINE FINER HOMES FIT FOR A ROMAN EMPEROR ~1agnificent Bayfront. Imagine entertaining friends ''Ioside'' your home w /a sunken piano ba r & "out.side" in a pool w/waterfaJI + sauna batb, jacuzzi, massage parlor -plus a complete kitchen & BBQ. "In.side'' 5 BR's -formal DR & den. 120' of waterfront lux· ury. Please call Amy Gaston 642-8235 . DOVER SHORES BAYFRONT REGENCY :\ lruly e legant home \\'/pier and slip. 5 lg. BR's stud y, library, beautiful DR -a few of the ti'lA.t"lY features that make this one of Dover Shores' greatest homes. Please call 675-3210 for appt. $179,500 on leasehold. or $224,875 fee. Open Sunday 1-5, 210 Evening Star, D.S. DOVER SHORES VI LLA This beautiful completely enclosed villa is the perfect setting for your fine furnishings and fine art treasures. All rooms have ten· foot ceilings and open to fountains -formal swimming pool and gardens. Truly magnifi· cent. 5 BR. formal DR, lg. formal entry in marble -$169,500. Shown by appt. only. DOVER SHORES UNIQUE BAYFRONT Pier and Slip. Charming & spacious 2 BR home w I an old world atmosphere in a new "'orld setting. Elevated ceilings -parquet walnut floors -brick courtyard &. brick terrace. Beautiful separate -2 room & bath -guest apt. across the courtyard. aN"a close tu beachn, Ooat-1 LARGEST POOL IN BAYCREST '"~· school & shopping. 2 ' And one of largest lots -\11/fru it trees & 11\o berlroom unit.," f'nt"IO!<· room to relax. This beautiful Jvan \Vells f'd gara,1t:l'S on a le" sirnpit> home has 5 BR's -FR -formal DR and large Joi. :'\E\V COPPER p L u ~I B 1 NG. Rttf>nrly everything for marvelous family Jiving. First painted in&. out. Geoerou~Jy , time offered. $87,500, priced ai only S:il.950. &i. WANT A LONG ESCROW? ter be r1tuck, r.a.ll NO\\' for appointnient 10 insptoct • Available Sept. 10. Beautiful luxury home 67:,....i9::!1. for real Calif. living. Gorgeous big pool, What Do You Want? ~hadr treoes '.' Quiet 111rert '.' Colle-ge Park? 2 l'On111.nlic fireplaett? F ormal dining roon17 '\l'rlL """ halt' tt all in one place. Beautitul 11·eU- ktp1 home for your plea.sure, 3 ma.ter bedrooms. Lovely kllchen \.\'ith a 11 modem built-ins. Gr terms with no money do\\'n! Minimum ikl11·n on FHA . Call for qu&.l. ific11t1ons. Let's trade hous. ci. CALL Walker & Lee P..eallors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ~ Open 'ti! 9: 00 PM EASTS I DE CHARMER Just li!ted, exceptional 3 BR. 2 Ba . on rorner k'i1. Lrg rlli! g11r. bltins. sep. util area. ne\\' p&.Int in~ide Ir out. Pricl' only S28.500. A!- sumableo a'.4 •;~ loan w/pay. mti only $148 per mo. incl tax~ & ins. Call ~5880 • * * * * * fountains & walls !or warm sunshiny balh.ing & tanning year round. 2 levels, 3 BR's - could add big view room above & rumpus room below. By appt. only. $79,500. SPARKLING SPANISH -BAYCREST Authentic old Spanish charm. Dbl. door Spanish tiled entry. Sunken LR, splendid for· mal DR, richly paneled FR, Spanish style bricked courtyard. Only 4 yrs. old. Open Sunday 1-S p.m. 2057 Commodore, Newport Beach. $74,500. DELIGHTFUL BAYCREST A beautiful family & entertainment oriented 4 BR home on Candlestick Lane. Recently r.edecorated. freshly painted. Opens to a park· like yard '"'/huge trees & children's play area. Please call for appt. MEREDITH GARDENS BEAUTY A very lovely 3 BR, 21/2 BA hon1e . Lg. FR, elegant formal DR, pool sized rear yard, & 500 sq. ft. of covered patio. Professional landscaping & decorating. On cul-de-sac. Please call 675-3210 for appt. DO YOU NEEO A TAX SHELTER? 2 nice rental homes on 1 big lot 'v/room for a third. 2 BR's each, 3 garages, sep. fenced yards. Clean. Good income. Near school. $39.500, MACNAB· IRVINE 675-3210 642-8235 1080 B•ysid• Drive 901 Dover Driv• N1wport Baich ............... ~ G•Mr1I G•neral Ve·ry ln-ter·IKt·ing \ ,;;;======--====,;;; V•·r.v nxuny 1n bt>11u1ilul ron· 1lit1on. Owru•r ;1n1dou!' 111\d 11~k1n1: S:!i.:IO'l: :».ut.llfWO. Prl~ 110me new shag Cat· eft J. J l petlng, Call your painll'r. . t'n . a ,, ii * * * * * * East&ide locale. Preti}' cul-~ ...,,--,,-------:---.,.-----I ~'.;~,:'.b~;~';~;,1 ';;,~~·.:,: PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES :.-1~·, !l:ubor, r \1, SO, SO HOMEY! Best Buy/$22 ,900 CT • l'lO dn~ F11A rrrms! ~ BR! Lo1~ llf p11"'°1l lng~ Lrg )J 11ith fruit ln.'1•N: HAFFDAL REAL TY >02-410~. f:Vt'll, ;.4).24411 -* BAYFRONT * Balooa Cn1·e11 3 Ddrn1 . + lumll} nn. J.i,:c. 11'QrkNh<lp, 2'~ Bu 'J<. ~l'. petlO, tJ4.'ach, pi1·r & :dt11. Si':i,000. • G•n•r al G•n.ral lx>au!lful, \·acanL \\.'f'ary l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ___ ;;;;;;;;;;:;i;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ 0\1'ncr. 2086 ~la1·1on \\'a}. oil 21 $1 St. l>f'11'·n Orang1> b Sar11a Ana. OPEN daily 1·5. CAMEO SHORES Spectacular ocean &. j e tty vie1\1S from this lovely, traditional home. 4 bedrooms. formal dining room. •·cozy" paneled den with fire· place. Swimming pool enclosed with plastic see·thru fence. $89,500. COUNTRY CLUB Luxurious F'oiru•ay home on fabulous La Cos- ta Co untry Club. ""ith 3 spacious bedrooms & baths. formal dining roo1n, family room '"'ith professional bar. $163,820. Completely rurn· ished. 16 LUXURY UNITS Some with vic\v, \Veil located, close to schools & shopping. Excellent rental record. $375,000. HARBOR Arnold & Freud :188 E. 17th St., C.~I. 646-7Thj days 646-5538 e\·t!. MESA VERDE A lop golr court.e Joc11fion \\.'ilh a brt'athtaking v1e1\.'. 5 ))('droom! or 4 bedroom~ a. tten, 3 ba!hs, !ormaJ dining and hreakfasl room. It i11 &!S(l thfo most 1nex~n.11ive golf course homp in J\!esa \'t'rde by far al S48,SOO. Call 6-16-7171. \-0. T HE REAL ··'"'\.. ESTATERS . ' 26 Linda Isl• Driv• Decorator furnished. 5 Br. 5 bath home fac- ing 1-Iarbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready for imn1ed. occupancy. \V /dock $200,000 53 Linda Isl• Driv• Home on lagoon, 5 BR., 41,li ba .. u1/4 frplcs., jacuui tub, hdwd. firs .. sep. !iv. rm., din. rm., fam. rm. & brkfst. rm ....... $175,000 92 Linda Isl• Drlv• Beaut. 5 BR., 4 ba. home w/fo rmal din. rm. &. family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outs ide stairwav. Built-in gun cabinet & bookshel ves. $145.00o 107 Linda Iii• Drive 5 BR. 3 baths: lam. rm., form. din . rm. 2 Fplcs., Rm. for pool. Dock. By Appl. $145,000 Wat•rfront Lots No. 44 0 108 Ft. on wat~r ............ $125,000 No. 76: 3 Car garage. Reduced to ... $77,000 For complel• lnform•t1on on 111 hom•• & lots, ple•M <•II: Bl LL GRUNDY, REAL TOR &33 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.U:~ 642"'620 • SALE, RENT OR LEASE OPTION 3 Btdrm & ·fam ily, AJkinc $2:1,950. or rent $250, pu mo. CAI! MO-USt Open Ev~inp ' l G•n•ral UNIVUI'. t1()AtfS f1Hl(fl.U.,8~ VIEW CAMEO I HIGHLANOS ... J'Qu want OC't'an \1f'\v! Poplar~ anr! brick wall ! privaey! Slatuary line I form1i.l gardrn! PO\Oo'df"f' I room at t'ntry! Dou We:· 1 fireplace? 3 BR. family • room, office or ~ ioom! Call 6T.HOOO to 6tt the Ciscel ho~. ONLY $49,500 B/B 2'J YEARS OY REAL ESTATE SER\7JCE, 1!11 TI-iE HARBOR AREA OPEN SAT/SUN. l..S 2018 BARRANCA 4 The Bluffs). SACRITTCE - "Fore\'er after" ""ill be yvur impression of thiJ love- ly :\ Bdrm. 2 Ba, mode-rn condominium. Balcony v.•/ Xlnt lfieYO', $30.900. 606 NARCISSUS (Corona dt'I ~lar1. HO;>."£Y. i\IOO:i CCJITAGE. cha.rm. ing -2 bdrm. home, open beain ceil., trplc .• secluded back yard&, patio. R-2 Lot . buy no-.', build in('0!1le unit latl!r. SJS.!J!ij 675-3000 cmllAl & IH!.lfil llE.ll:l'Y l:\t:. ,f ST ~~19 ____!2'~~000 ! WALK TO CHURCHES AND SHOPS Bright 3 BR, 2 Ba, hard\\'OOd tlonr home -Believe it Cir no! you Cll.n as5ume a 4~~S~ loan on this one ;\ice add· ed lanai, · $27,000 N•wport •t Fai rview 646-8811 (anytime) J BR, 2 BA. E.'I:. cond. Stove, frplc, \\'a!erfn.11, floodlights. Jndscpd garden. i\f an y Xtras. Tustin-S.A. limits. Int . decor. $26.500. S43-600! G•n•ral I ORfSI [ OlSO\ '" f.>J"Al TOP S OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK Would You lf'fl eye LESS THAN $75.00 A Month Investor's J<Pt'Cial. Tak" over 3 '.-., tu1nu11 I % rHlf' FHA loan. !\"(>at aud cle11n ~ bedroon1 homP. •• Can be yours f or IC'sJ :.,' thl\11 $75 a monlh, Rare find nrstlf'd on huge ~; 11·el1 kept lot. F or the particular homt• b\IVf'r or the discerning lnVPs· tor, l>Cln't f11!1 t11 inves· tigatt' lhis unu~ua1 011- pcirlunity. \Von't las t liO hurry. call 645-DJDJ BACHELOR "BEACH" BARGAIN U 1and,y beachPS and the roar ol the surf turn you on, this ls it. Summer-fun cottage, Specious Hvtn, room brlghl shiny kitchen'. 111.rg,. bedroon1s. JN. Cl.UDES livinit room furniture and refrigt>r.11· tor. CW.<ner liquidatlng for fast sate. Don'! ~!' up that brlsk·mnrning run on th" sand. lfUJTy -"·on't la.~t Dial 645-0JDJ I 0111 \I J 111 '0\ Pf A . ~ORJ, . ;i , . .. 2299 Harbor, Costa '.Mesa - ' G•neral * S'/, INTEREST * BEACHES & BOATS $j,(O) Do\1'n S· hllL ot loon al .'\"'n 1nlf'rf'st • no loan l'O~I.~! Milrp 3 BP. & fon1lly rn1. , hotnr On fJllll't, t'Or"ne1· lot llnts of pnvacy, !\tO\'C, l'I'· ;lrir; .. washer &: dl'\lt'f' incl. at $29,%0. ~ thi~ 0 1•'<.lft,\''. ;MORGAN REAL TY Att unly ii-tr ps a1\tty ll'Otll 1h1~ 4 BR. 2 ba. Bayshore Dr bE'auty. Call today to 1-1~· tiv1ni: cu 11, bi•sr. JSi,;,cx) Hom• Show R•altor' 3.)l) £. Coast H\\'Y, Cd~! 675-7225 673-6642 675-6459 1 •·;\rn1ch<11r l-lousl'hunl in~·· Gen•r•I Open Houses THIS WEEKEND 1:.., tflk lta11d, directory witll yo• tllit wfflelld 01 yo• t• llou10-llu11th"i · All tllo locotlo111 llttff bolew eto d.-.crlbod 111 9roatet" dot<1ll by ed'forti1l119 elw- whoro I• tedo''' DAILY PILOT VIA.HT ADS. PatrolK 1llowl11• OJl'Ofl hou501 fo r tale or ro rollt are 11r9od te l~t 11o1cll !11forrnolio11 h1 thb coh111111 f'OCI! Friday. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom') 721 l'rlarguerite, Corona del Mar 670-5726 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 332 Prospect, Nc\rporl Beach 646-7171 !Sal 1·5) {3 Bedroom) **121 Harbor island Rd., Na 673-7300 ! ~at & Sun l·5) 16701 Ne"'•land SI ., Huntington Beach 714 1847-0540 1Sat & Sun 10-5) 1979 Orange .i\ \ e .. Cost.a l\'lesa 546-5972. $24 .5-00 ll'ri. eve & Sal. 9-5\ 2303 Fairhill Dr., Ne\vport Beach 646-3255 I Sat & Sun l-5) 4607 \Vayne 11.d. (Ca1neo Hglds) Cdti.I 673-2222 (Sun 1-5\ 156 Cosla ~lesa St .. Costa i\1e!'ia 548-7729. S28.500 1Sat & Sun 1-5) 216 Popp_v, Corona del :\1ar "44-49!0. S87.SOO !Sat & Sun 1·5 :30) 250 \Va lnut, Nev.iporl Beach 646-7171 (Sat 2-5) 511 Santa Ana . Ne1,·port Beach 646-7171 rsu n 1-5) 801 Kings Road. Ne1vport Beach ti75-3 2JO (Sat & Su n) (3 BR & Family or Oen) 3209 l\lonlana .<\ve .• (~lcsa Verdel ('J\1 546-1242 I Sat & Sun l-5) *1106 Goldenrod (l·la r. Vie\I.' Hills) CdM 673-2222 (Sun 1·5) 2221 Arbutus (EastbluffJ NB 644-2024 r Sa! & Sun 12-61 *18021 Aspen Tree Ln. Universlty Park 644-24:10, S41.950 1Sun 1-.5) 92~ Gnldenrod 1 lirtrbor \'1c11· 1-lill::;\ C:d:-01 8.13-0iOO : 644-2430 fSal. l-5) 9700 Ra,·en, l·lunt ington Beach 646-7171 ISun 1·5) 1717 Terrapin. NeY.•porl Beach 646-7171 !Sat 2-5) 472 East 16th St .. Costa J\lesa 646-7171 !Sun 1-5) *1130 Pembroke Ln . (\Vcslclif!) NU 675-2t01 tSun 1·5) 1615 Lincoln Ln . f\Ve s tcliff) NB 642-~235. ~i l ,000 !Sunday) (4 Bedroom) 3242 J\1ontana I J\•lesa Verde) ('~·t 540-7560. 534.750 !Sat & Sun) 15892 Redlands. \Vesln1inster 897-3357. ~J!l.950 1Sat & Sun 12-5) 6107 'Lancaster, Ne\\·port Beach 673-65t0 (Sunday 1-5 1 4507 Roxburv <Cameo Shores\ CdM E.13-0700; 644-2430 !Sun 1-5 :30) 1410 N. La IJonita St .. Santa Ana 537-3278. $26.900 (Sat & Sun) f4 BR & Fam ily or Oen) 975 .Tunipero Drive, Costa J\1esa ~46-3660 f~at & Sun 1·5) 1901 Beryl Ln . Nc~·porl Beach 646-2063, ~39.950 !Sat & Sun 1-5 <~0) 1657 Oahu Place, ('osta J\·icsa 546-9702 /Sat & Sun 10-6) 2612 l .. ighthouse IBroadmoor) NB 644-4910. $61.500 /Sat & Sun 1-5 :301 4500 Orrington 1\an1eo Shores) CdM 644-49t0. $175.000 !Sun 1-5 :301 20251. (~raimer lfVleredith Gardens) JI B 644-4910. 545.500 iSun l-5 :301 1606 Antigua I Dover Shores) J\1B 644-49t0, 599.500 ISun 1-5:30) 410 J\1orning Slar /Dover .Shores) NB 644-4910. S105 .000 tSat & Sun 1-:J:301 **505 ~1orning Star I Dover Shores) NB 642-82:l.'i I Sat & Sun) 20!l7 Commodore (Ba ye; rest) NB 642-8235 I Sunday) IS Bedroom) *1033 :\IR1·1ners Dr. {Dover Shores) KB 646-1550 .. I Open Oaily) 2i56 Lorenzo St. ().le sa dcl !\lar1 ('!\! 546-1 701 (Sat & Sun 1·6) (S BR & Family or Oen) 2230 Aralia St.. Ne\\ port Beach 644-1102 . $00.000 !Sal & Sun J-5) 1941 Commodore Rd . 1Bayc rest) NB . 646-8926 fSat & Sun 1·5) 25825 i\\'enida J\laripos;:i , San .lunn Capis· trano. 493·3292. $38.000 1Sat & Sun 10·5) 2652 Bass\1•ood 1 J~astnlu!f~ NB 548-77211. 148.95-0 1Sa1 & Sun 1-51 **210 Eveninc Star fUover Shores) NB 642-8~15 1 Sunday) 2921 Catalpa. l·:astblu(f 545-9451. S52.9S-O !Sunday 11-4) DUPLEXES FOR SALE 12 BR & l B~ I fi(IO . .\cac1a , (orona deJ i\lar 67:Vi222 (4BR&lBR I 515-5151 i Po1nset11a. f'orona del ri.1ar 644-4910, 154,500 1Sa1 1-5 30\ HOME + INCOME 12 BR Home + 1 BR ) 427 Jasmine Ave .. Co rona det fvtar 675-1540 ; 675-4561 (Sal & Sun 1-;) *'"' • • w ... tfreflt .. tt * Peol ... , WeterlJe11t • 9UIET REST • G<lrgt"OOs Deannr Homt near 1he oc:ea11 on l>eautlfully well kepi corner lot, 11hllke roof, adlllt ll\'t'd-111, one O\\'l'ICr home. ::I BR. :! Ba, $25,500 BRING YOUP. CHECK 800!\ NtWPort •I Fo1lrview Bar1·efl R eaft'I pt'e:J~nl:J EXCITINGLY DIFFERENT FROM YOUR DECK JN THE TREE TOPS. View the activities in the ba.v -or take a dip in your heated pool. This informal all red,vood 5 bedroom hon1e invites relaxed Jiving. Offered at $75,000 (includes la nd). 446-Hll SHORECUFF OCEAN AND JETT'' VlE\V -Top condi- tion. 3 Bedroom, convertible den .and 3 OPEN HOUSE-baths. Dining room •ith fireplace. break· fast/family room "tilh \Yet bar. Garden 1 TO 5 DAILY selling. $115,ooo. ;m·, \'UKON, COSTA MESA. BA YCREST I No1v "aca111. Jn1med. po.;. BEST PRICED HO~lE IN T~IE AREA ~cssion. Lri:: 4 BR homr. $56,000 ! 4 Bedrooms. dining room. kil· I !'ly. crpLd , arwt all 1two n:iod· chen with breakfast area, 2¥1 }laths. Great rrn ('Onvenienct'&. Cov'd. p11-potential ! I tK> arid fanta:;;t1c B·B·Q. Prore.<. ""pd· U>w '"""SPECTACULAR WATERFRONT r~t~loan avail.· $32·9j()· SPACIOUS ROOMS. HIGH CEILINGS -~l::r. 424 tOpl'n t'\IC'J PIER & SLIP -Beautifully decorated and ~ ~ ready fo r instant occupancy. $189,500 -MilQl1k_1filil may lease/option. V ''"'"'' GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY ON UDO • • • BEAUTIFUL HOME 2 BR f'llSL~Jde C.l'll . \Valk Jo Calholic church. linmacu· la1.~ 1n i>vcry 11ay. Nrw f'l'PIS, drp~. 2 Pf.Ito:!, aUry acccs..~. $23,000. • • • FOUR UNITS plus 3 BR home &· pool. Uni· 1·r rsity Dr. Pa.stsidp C.i\1. Lachenmyer Rea ltor TAKE A TAX DEDUCTION ->nd have a good life. 3 Units on the Island near shop!! and activities. rt1 ove into one or rent all. $110,000. Office Open So1turdo1ys & Sund•ys PETE BARREIT REAL TY 1605 Westcliff Dr., H.B. 642-5200 Gener•I 6-16-3928 :>15-3483 -% LA BONNE VIE T11·0 Bdrn1. T\1'0 8:11h. p:1. lio, pool and l'f'Cl'P~!ion toom, ON LY .,21 .. iOO. Can BAY & BEACH REALTY, Inc. 22 Ye•rs of S.rvice In Tht Harbor Art• BAYFRONT & SANDY BEACH Loaf in luxury on the wide, sandy beac h, v.•ilh good swimming at your pleasure. Vie\V the entire harbor entrance act ivity from the cov. patio, of this cust. bit. beauty. \Voul d you believe-only $97,500 -with xlnl terms? WATE RFRONT WITH PRIVATE SLIP Cust. bit. 3 BR. '"ith 2 lge. patios. 3 car garage & sandy beach. -slip for 35 to 40 ft. ooat. Q\\'ner will finance . S7i,500 Only S7:JO jota! movr-ln !or thL~ CJUl'f'n ~LZCrl 4 hrdroom. :l hR.th ri;1atf' \l't1h fireplace, n1oriern hu1lt-in kirchrn, car· Beauty, rleg1111cp and rharm f'('I!', ant1 lors ol goodic11. raditlle throughoul this love· $2-1.000, NO UPS, NO LX-ly l"'O-story homp stluated TRAS on large lot in outstandin.;: ' i\tESA VERDE location \\'ilh Walker & Lee 7s,q2 Edingt>r 171•0 8.l2·445J or ~-jl \(] EASTBLUFF POOL HOME On a hui;:r irrrgul<ir cul-dr· ~at Jot 1n Eastbluff. An ou1- s1and1ng :1 Bedroom hom,. pnvac.-y and quif>L f('alur. "!!-4 brdroom~. 2~2 baths, ,·cry lal'g'e mai.1cr suJtr, ~unny lntchcn • family area ;i1td .1 1·ar gaJMd!i(f' Prir'I' S."12,j()), Phonr .ilG.2~1~ and 11eoe to appreC1a1r. \-0' THE REAL ·~ESTATERS ' .. ,.,.,, '' • \\IHh 1 r:om plctely lMlated ...... iO-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' anrl .~afety fenced pool. Only $52,000. Phol'lf' 6n-8.'hl0. DELUXE 4-PLEX J BR and 2 BR apis. New. f)Or1 Brach. $11:1 month in- come. 80'; loan-1',{~ii int, $72,500 1st TIME LISTED PERR0:"-1 REALTY C0,\1- 1 4 Door! 10 ocran • .11lcpi; 10 PANY. 642-1711 AnylimP. /'.'.H.,'.C. Conlf'r loe. Spol-* MESA VERDE .- lN<s homr on ovcr:;11Pd lot 1011,.d f(lr anothrr unit \\'/ Lovt'ly 1mmac. homr. &oau1. viC'"'. Only ~l.:00, App't. ground~. Cov. patio. ~ BR. I &-fam. rm. 2 8;"J!h11_ $::.",,$00 on y. G w·11· Call: tii:\.::s&.1 613-8086 Evr~. eorg• 1 1am1on associated BROKERS-REALTORS J02S W 8olboa 67l·l66J RLALTOR 673-4130 liard"'OOd r I o o r '· hl'<'pl. CJJ>l.S, drp.~. cov'd paoo, dbl car gar. Lrg bark yd. fo.lany beau1 fru11 tree! &-shruh:.. $28,:-,00. Trrm~ i'1iA or VA, Open Housa Sat. & Sun. 1-S; 156 Cost• Mes• St. Cost• Mes• Roy McCo1rdle R1o1ltor 181tl Ne1''po11 Blvd., C ,\[. 548-7729 EASTBLUF-F-DREAM • Nt>alr.~t. clcal1t'~! ;'I Br. :l ba. Lu~k h!t. charn1e1· \vi a i.pac·., fully lncd. yd. A "n1u.~1 1PP ", al $4:1.:xxt Hom~ Show Realtors ''_A~ hair /lou~hu11ting·· ~ , C0&;1 Hwy .. Cd.\-t 675-7225 $500. DOWN :I Bf'tlroom, 2 bi1th, douhlC' i::-ar<igr. Comer 101 C1.\l. Call kll Luyme5. 540-11;-Jl, HE:R- ITAGE REALTORS. FtldlJ, M11 14, l!J71 "MAJESTIC MANSION" •••••••••••••••••••• 4-BORS. 2-STORY FANTASTIC ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! -$28,500 Tha1 ·i; righ1 and only :11 ~ }P11rs oJ<l. for the lolkis \\'ho likfo lhe ul!iina!<" in ntodrrn decor. Lui;h 1•i11'J)et\ng, 8!Cp down living rootu. Citandcl- h•1·1'(! forni:1I d1111ng roon1 . ~l11j~1ve ft.1n1ily 1110111, ~ gi· an1 brdr!t 2' i ba1h~. fir<-· plaer, gardrti klltht•n 1hal sparklf'~. Lush gtound.~. !\l1n. to hr;1.ch. Shop around llM"n look at lhL!I tor $28 • .:;oo • lt'i; hx'Omparablc. Call \714) 962-5:18.'> IOR I. \l E Ol.SO\ '" R£A l rQR { J9t3t 'BrookhuNt Ave. tluntu1g1on Beac.'h So UNUSUAL we're havin9 an UNUSUAL OPEN HOUSE Come See 4 bdr1ns. all Opening onto POOL. Over 4000' of living area ! Separate fan1ily room and formal dining ! Near Golf Co urse, Tennis and Clubhouse ! EXECUTIVE-TYPE, ENTERTAINING HOME! $79,950 3007 JAVA ROAD, COSTA MESA Fr;day , May 14th, 7 PM to 9:30 PM South Coast Real Estate 1 SOO Ado1ma, Costa Meao1 545-8424 * 5 BEDROOMS * •••••••••••••••••••• Genero1I Gener•I VACANT HARBOR VIEW HOMES ~aur1ru1 t'l's1£k>rlC, '"irh ""f h;ir, lovl'l.Y c·arpPtin1:::, >1rlf- l'lce1n1ng ovi:n.,. Qu1ek pos. M'!sior1. O"·ner an>r:ious! $,;9,51)) JNCLUOING 11-ll: l.AI-10 CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 LUXURY AT A PRICE FIRST TIME OFFERED Choice Ba ycrest location. 4 Bedroom. 3 Baths. famil y room, 3 car garage. 50' .i;park- Hng pool. Call for appoint1nent lo see this nev,o listing. $87,500. CUSTOM BUILT Dover S hore s View. 4 Bedrooms. 3 baths. panelled family room. formal dining room plus breakfast area off bright. colorful kit- chen. Secluded courtyard pool. $112,000. HARBOR HIGHLANDS 4 Bedroom, 2 Baths, lovely large yard. Re- duced for quick sale. $38,500. ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors 1033 Mariners Drive, N.B. 646-TSSO Dover Shore• Office 1 \\'llh th1~ f1nr family homf' Gen.ro1I General i!• ~1r~a Vr1•dr. 4 hii::: bcd-1--------- •~m' '"" ' doo. 0"'"''Y 2 Bdrm. Townhouse · .~hag rug!I 1hroughou1. At. '"'"v• '~""''''"· 1.o" 01 31'2 Baths Detached rxtra.c;. En,t0y n1any "nice l~ · <layi." in a nicr hou~c in 11 nice nrighborhood. Priced right a1 $39.9j(I, J~6-2313, '·-0 THE REAL ".°"-ESTATERS Maids Quarters COLLEGE PARK -BEAUTIES- 111 . 2366 Colga!f' • 4 BR + fam ily rm., 1.hag earplE:. waterfall in "'Par yard. $30,500 t:Z.J 338 Westbrook . 'BR w/ pool, \11r11,. l"ornrr 101. OAILY PILOT Ill S23,• POOL 3 bedroom + den pa1·k like yard, beautiful iround.1 · plcnir •rt•. 9hllrp homr, rntty ha.II bullt-ln range + oven + d111hwa11h- f'r, xt1i1 r11.Ung arr~ in •P'•f'• ious kitchrn. rirf'plaf'I", f'l'I• Uo bkr, oprn 111 t pn1. :)40-1720. TAR BELL 2955 H .. rbor Bo1lbo.-lsl•nd Lllllr l~land Charmf'r 8) 0 1111rr. All l'ltttric. l11·11e .:arden li pa1io, Beam k t:a1hf'dral 1..-illngs. ~·ood pallt"Jing. 1\lrx1ca11 tilf' rloor 1n fan1ily roon1, 1f'M'l1./JI nool'!I In ~!h & l.:J1Chrn. marblr bath~ Sta inl"85. 1·ulturrd n1arl:Jlr, wt.lnul 1•1tb1nl'lil In k l lrh r n Karas•an earpPung. l mporl· f'd Ji('lllS!I-"'indo\\'!I. l\J11ny , other <·uslGm rralurrs. Cail ' ~ •pp'1 li73-i060. ___ I t1JLL Loi C-1 7.011 lni!_, ~larinl' Avr. Ralph V Hinge1-, Island P.ralty, -4!'l8 I Pa1•1i Aw ., Balbo11 J:!!l I li1?.-1WO COLLEGE PARK l Bedroo1n & Pool. OwN"r. :O::p.11nish Drcor. Big lo1! r;n. .:inc1ng arr•nged locall~. 10',a do1\·n. 1.2 inlef'l'S1 CCK>- VC'ntion11I. S3.'t900. No traf- fic. :ri!l-0.i::O for app'1. Corona del Mar OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5 721 MARGUERITE Pt"Obably die las! chancr to buy a nicfo. single r11.mily homr for under S35.CJOO. 2 Bdrm .. extra lg,., livi~ rm. 1v/frJ>l1·. bath has tu!J J 3hoWf'1'. ~·.A. hrat. R-l [nl, - t•m. for garage apL Th1ii 01\f' h1s f'\lf'rythirl( f>X•'ept 1endrr. loving C'llt# • You bring lh11l. Look & compur al $34.j()Q. SCENIC PROPER·TIES 675-5726 BEAUTIFUL LARGE DUPLEX "' .. ' .. ' Live 1hf' rasy 'll'ay ol Hlr. No upkt>rp 1''0ITll'll. Oub- hollw and pool, 'l 1uxuriou.~ bdnn~. ::~. lavi.~h hatllA. nu1h 1n k1t1•l\l'n "'11h dinloi: 111-ea . Lush 1·arl)f'I and drap- 1'1', Ot'l:u·h1•d gu1•111 laciliti1•~ \\'i!h ba1h. Alnun1 lypr 20' paUo. Only l .)r, old. Vrry small down And h1k1• 0\'rr• ri.1s1L11g lo1tn Yo\1 ('1111'1 11f- lord 10 •'<'nt! Beach~ llun-y. $32,500 ,, RARE ITE:\1 1:-1 \)\\'N. (7141 962-5.),11;) I ORISf [ Of.SO\ ... P F Al 1 0 N ~ 4 bdr + family rm. t3 I 22.~ Tulaue • 4 BR cu~-1 Each uni1 1 • Bf'd1-001n 21,11 lom1~.rd homr :?'200 ~q . II. hath 1\'llh 11ppro\1n111r,..Jy ol lu,ur.v 111·1nt. N>e rht' '!.000 llQ'. ft. Only 2 ;1-ears old. vrry he~t. 1-:n10y lnp inron1••, ""'~Pl· 1!•111 IO<'cahnn. 1 n d lui.ury N•wport hv1~. $19.~ \\'ilh ooly 10';:0 dow~. •• J!air'liew 646-111 I (anytime) GOVERNMENT .. RErOSSESSION H you're lookini:: ror 1 bar· rain, hrre ii 1.'I -PrimP Co~!a i\Jesa loi:auon nr shop· ping. 3 Lrg. BR. 2 Ba. fam- ily rm, lovl'ly crpt.~ k drps, l'lf'ct. bl1tns & many xtras. Full pricf' $26.500. Anyonr can buy ii v"ith Sl:SOO dn. paymr. Hurry and lief: thi! lilllini;:. t:•ll ~I0· 11'.il f0j)"n t\'t.'1.'1 WATERFRONT DOVER SHORES CALL 613-t ·..:,o 1-R THE RCAL. \ E3TATERS • •P 1 --"*=o~P~EN su"N. 1.s iC 4607 WAYNE RD. Spic f.: span home; .1 BR .. 2 'Ba. Sunporch. Ca111ro HiKh - l11n1l.~. 1106 GOLDENROD J!nrh<11· v1rw Jllll~. VLf'IV! Pool' l BR., IHmi]y rm. Be;i u1 . :i;ardPn.~. DON V. FRANKLIN Reo1ltor • 673-2222 • BY Q\\'NER -$51, 750 l blk.!1 lo brarh, ~:o.:t In shop'g 1:nlr. :Z COMPLE'Tfo:. LY furn. homf'.!I; 1 rrnttd: for NE\V O\\'NER 1t :Z Br horn ... eXN'llrntly rurn. h' r;olfan, Polynt•.•1an decor, drps, mtrTors, 11,. w w/.,., c·rptli, nl'\\1y 1·rdec.'Or., priv. porch amirl.~l lu~h tropicAI jjt'lfJng. Xtr lg dbl 1otara1 .. + xtr prk'r area. ti7:>.1540 or 67~i-45ti 1, :.'!i~'!l Jla1 hnr, (',,\!. pd df' (1f 01vtl{'rshlp hon1r, 60x!OO lo(. Pirr &. ~!111 for 40 r1. boo!. Charn1ing .l BR, J BA hon1r, den, 11 r1 :0.r. "teem room. Xln1 \I<'\\', Slll.9.'iO. Xlnl hnc 11 vail. *An E1to1-,-.~B~u~i~ld~.-r.~ 40 ~~I. R-:l 101 w/rharming 1"011al!f'. Priced undrr I.hr. markrr a1 $39,fJOO. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ju"l:ur1ou11 xtr• fealurts own- MESA VERDE .i Brdroom~. hrieh1 rhf'Prful homf'. la.rg• country k1tch- rn. $2!1,9:'JO, ')n1,il\i~1'.J\caft~ 546·5990 rr lrl'lni;lt>rf'd l'C£1111~ pri •·e ()\\lnr r". T1·11de 11 <·r·cpLable. to •he figurr ol S2l.~. No :>48-1936 or 644--168'1 . dO""ll terms 11va.1l1hlr. 4 lx-th"OOm~. hu,i:r fan11Jy ro0m. hlult-in rttnll.I' 11nd O\'Ml, p;u'k likr ya1•d and pa· --------"'· •. ,. ,,, .. ,,,. $27,700 TARBELL 2955 Ho1rbor OLE'-SPANISH--1 J bcfr. +den + J b•tho HACIENDAll poal + tennis Archrd rntl)' l<"ads pas! 1.3 ,. 1 bf'autU\ll llomP pnf'ed f;\J" bf'· Boyd Realty ;'\629 E. Coa.~1 Hwy., CdM 675-5930 -=c"°"AMccEO SHO"~R'°'E'°'S~ Beaullf'uJ <X·Pan Vir.,., Just Jii;:terl ' 4 BR. X· fam. ""· 1•/4 n;'l.. ,'.: pooL 46l9 (iorh&m Dr. S!fi,000. By app'L $24,950 $©\\.~lA-l&"BtfS" <:11di111: watrrfAll into drr. low m&rk,.t v&lue hy de~pr.r· orator',( '1rPam. 1'1odrrn l.'1 111r owner. l batM 3 ~d· romorrnw kitchen .. l .~pa1·­ t0u.~ bedroom.!!, 11nd I r 11 r rarly C1lilorni1 1111111,. Tradf' your.i! room~ + '1rn l'ntry ~ll. hu~!' .. bonu'" f11n1ily roon1. uew 11·all lo 1~·all 1·aff)E'l.'I hkr. no rinwn ti' rm~ 11vail- 11htP. Opt'n ut !I pm. ;,10-1110. Bill Grundy, Realtor &:t1 Dover Dr., NB fi42~ HARBOR Vir1v llill.'1' • Ll.u1k home. 4 Br, 2~:, ba. J ear i:Ht. 0Cf'8J1 Vif'W. $6!),5(ll), Pv1 pry, 9Al\f-:lPi\1, ~7U9, 5 Pl\l·!I P.\'1, 644-lMO. DE_L_uxe-2-BR~&~D~E~N-4 BO.+ FAMILY RM. Sp.<1c1ous home . Larar rooni~ lhroughout. Mugc family rm., na1ural brick llrrplRce, ~ r.1n l'.i7.ed ~­ ri'X)rnll, rln" quillity built- 1ns. en1ry hall. "P11r11.rlil1e" in land11caping. Brk. Open 11il 9 P:'--1. 540-l?M. TARBELL 2955 Horbor BEST BUY IN COSTA MESA J tw-droom 'l Mth. ~C'f'Ut>n1 No C¢<1a Mc.u IOl:'shon. Sl.1.:JOO. \'A-fll1\. $41i.86i(l, :/629 1111.rhor. c.~1. OPEN 1-5 SAT/SUN. 121 Harbor lsl1nd Rd. Newport Beach Elr;anr lln.)'fron\ home With rnrr 11nd llllp Lido Rt•lly Inc. 31'n \111' LiOO 67~1.lOO The Pun/« with the Built-In Chuckle e ~~1~rs~~~~~£~ltlEIS r r r r I' I' 11 I 6 ~~F:~~~ LETTUSI I . , I • I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 PJ.US 't>P I l:Jr J'f'ntaJ. iO' 1·orlll'r 101. pvl patio, ad re1•ms. Aili Prier•, Bia' Walker & Lee TARBELL 115s H•rbo• -CAREFREE-LIVrNG-----------2t:l/,)g,'l-0.U9. Rr:ill°"' 1682 Edin11,rr r;1.t1 8~Z-44.i:, or :140.~11'10 * 644 DARRELC .- lmmac.. adult OC('Up1rd ~ BR. It flllrn1!y rm. or lnrmal din. rn1. 8Paur. 1•arp. I.: <ll"lJpe,; trplc. O'i l.lf'd 1•r· 11if'. Lui-h Olr honctr.:i h11~1n f,, lnd:-ICPf. Qu ick P'l.!l'('tl, Drl\f' hy & !'All In WP. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 '75-645' DOVER SHORES- Vif'w home, 1148 Santiago Dr. BC'll buy • ipllC. $ BR. 4 ba. Ad11pt~blf' Ooor plan for l"OUple or !gr. ramil,v. Nt"wly !lecora1t'd. By app't. S91.000 Bill Grundy,, Rea11or A.l.1 i)(>vrr nr., N.B. f;.12-'*frnl S1>acioos 2 story Condo. Jo:al'I· llidf' c.~J. :z 0 BR, 1'i BA. ~·ireplaCI'.'. All bl1-in.'I, \\'/\V cpl!, dl'J)ll. Pr1va1t< patio. Hgt pool rerreation roon1, Laundry 'tacililie.'I OWN~R ~l lJST SELL! 5-19-0674 ----STEPS TO OCEAN Nrwly U,.cor. • r·1rpttMf, ,1 RR .. )tt,;, 1>;1, Bltn.l. 2 1·11· OPEN Hou.w l-6P~1 Sal • Sun. 400 Hl'Jiolropt. Cozy 2 br, lrjt R-2 101. i\1usl .ell. $39.fliiO. BROAD:\100R VTJo:W hnm~. 4 BR. 21,, ha, 1-ommunity µOOI. 1701 l1t.111nd V1,.w Or $7t900 ti44-:mJ Cost• Mes• l:IJ'"J.AC'. sn.soo. NO DOWN GI CAYWOOD REAL TV 1.1 ~t"ie B<"droon1.-. Larr. tiJ06 \\I. Coa.<1t ""·y., 1'1.B. y•rd. cov,..~ p11tio, tTin- ~&.1290 crelf' dn\'l'.'Way. S22,500, Call __ R_E_P_O_S_S-ESSIONS-LP! Luyme~. 3411-ll.il. !f.£R.. IT AGE RB.AL TORS, Sparkling clesn hornet. IJ()mr llf';'ll'ly paln!ed Ir carpe1td. 2 3,4 It 5 bdrm.!I. Somt "1th poola. FHA-VA conv. terms, tron1 S20.000 to $40,00D. Collins &-WatL• Tnr. 88-C.\ Adam.!! A\·r, 962-~l COLLEGE PARK AREA Sharp S lg Br. home 2 &. It ram rm . th11i&: e•ri>e'· S33.000. $~780: ;}16.5197. 2-ilj Vas~r Pl. I DAILY PILQT rrtdty, Mily 14, 19]1 Huntington B.ach Newport S..tch Newport Be.tch "4al £1t.11 .. ...... I~ 1._;;;"""''~"'l ~;;;I H""tlngton 11 .. ch Doran• Meley TOP SALES FOR MARCH AND APRIL Wlfh lolal sales of $460,000 Member or 11 u ntington Beach -1'~o unlain Valley Board or Realtors. \l/e're sold out of hstin~s o f all types. l\'eed income property, 3 & 4 bdrms. all areas. BRASHEAR REALTY I rvine FINER LIVING IN UNIVERSITY PARK I. TURTLE ROCK U ve in a planned community, where we have a cres and acres or green pa rk areas, swimming pools, miles of winding trails, an 18 hole golf course, shopp'ing center & FINE SCJ-1001.S . A t the present time, we have a good sl!:lection or 2 to 5 bedroom h omes avail· able -per haps the RIGHT ONE FOR YOU! \Ve are here to solve your housi.OI? needs in an efficient & professional manner. ("I l11li'l 'i·lld, ASSOCIATES Lorraine Nevens THE BLUFFS "ZAPATA" PLAN 4 Bedroo1ns, 31h bath!: family huge rumpus room. YOU OWN THE LAND room p lus Decorator's d ream. Every quality appoint· ment. Ba rely used , I year young. Job trans· fer for ces immed iate sale below replacement cost on this "Turn K ey" home. Desirable t e rms ava ilable at $59.500 WES'TCUJo"•" 3 br, 2 b.. 1eparate dlnlna:. f"tt•hly palllted. Great yard. $44.!Q'.I. ..,_,.., HARBOR HIGH.lA."lDS 4 br, 3 b4. 5\4. niA $.19,950 Owner 646-2!E3 Newport Heights 3 BR. + D Cus1om bonie only 6 yrs old. ~ear CliN Dr. 3 BR. + dtn, 2 lull baihs. Kitch. bltnJ. Dbl. garage on alle)'. A good buy at $34.500. 4 Bit, 2 BA. ;>;ew l!Jting. Ne1o1.•pon Helrhts area of C.Osta l!eu.. 4 bd- rms. 2 baths, Jarge·R·2 !or John Peckham "' / alley. Asking S2!1.000. Eloise McQuown 2414 V i•ta Del Oro 01o1.,ner "'ants to ro. make t23 years expcrienC"el "SINCE 1946" Toni Escobar NEWPORT BEACH oNtr. 17931 Be•ch Blvd ., Suite D ]st \Vrslrrn Bank Blds;. C..\LL ~ ''''l'I" ---''1 li·uliur lnduttrlal Property 168 HAYE NEW Ofbce Bwldl.lli W/$100 K equity, UTK Net lncorne WANT FREE & CLEAR lnduatrlaJ Bld'g or Lot {l ac) \V.R. DuBois: 5"4.>7166 Lots for S•I• 170 FORECLOSURE 2'Wi acre borae ranch repos· atsaed from former •e~ ,pace employee now avail- a ble at developers coat. SAVE $3000 Business Opportunity 200 WANTED!! l\1an to re1tock and m1ike collecuons Imm commer- cl.a\ and indu.strull 1nack a.nd con!tctton accountt In your atta. f\ut ume now. fUJJ Um~ later. S hrs, wefk. Jy erfort required. day& or eves. No 51!1\ing, Excellent y,·eeldy income potenllal. $1250 rolaJ ca~h required to 111.af't, For detail.-, 'ATl!e to: Pn:ldU('ts Div. #2, P.O. Bax :'ill», Anahf'1m, CaHf. 92.804. Include phont. number, TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES '""n'ie Broker with Empath)'" 1n6 Orange Ave., C.J\1. 645-4170; 540.0608 anytime We need sales peoplt 847-8507 Evei : 96843n or 968·1178 Univer1ily Park Katie Lon gfellow 644-llJl ~~ ~ 1 :~~~~::::::~~~~~::::::::·1;D~a~y~1~8~33~-ll;1~0~1~N~;g~h~t1~~~E~d~P~e~le~rs~o~n ...... 1 ~ Cost• Me•a 1 East Bluff ;EA L TY on these fabulous, oak stud. ded, ranch size spreads. Loca. led ln the boo.:nlllg South Coast area near San Juan Capistrano. H I g h a bove the amog, private road and Iocked gate gual'-antee the-natural beauty of I•_.,.., _____ _ this formu Spanilh Gr&nt NEEDED: Huntington Be•ch Lagun.t Beach Near N1.,..po r 1 Po 11 o rrlc t UNUSUAL """" < lo!. f~Z M t s 11 Newport Shores m11lnt. ~ br. In:: 1hd1ni:: 11:la5-" us e . LARGE FAMILY HOZ..1E• Laguna Hills Newport Beach I aurrnunded by beautiJul "10 RKING PARTNER OR Cleveland National Forest. PVT INVESI'OR. SUb1tAnt· fam rm. I\'£ rm. rlhl gar, 21 · WALK JO BEACH Jn Oceanrronr Mifhborhood. CHAR).1JNG 4. BR. 2 1tory, AU utilities a~ble. ial refllrn on money inve1l• ba. Cnn\·rnu•nl, qull'1 ]I)(' Ila~ a bdrmi .. 3 b3 '1 .. huge LEISURE World bara:ain, Baycrest 4 BR pools, tennis. _oc ean. $33,500. P RICED FROM tC!.950 ed, 5ecured w/collater&l. near a!1 11c•hl<. 2 min ln S. 81~ 5 ~droom or 4. and dPn. 521 900 living r m. w/frplc, Formal ~~adrid 2 BR. N_t>w crpts. Owner going easl. must sell 0\\·ner 4M-9351 LOW DOWN.EASY TERMS For more info wr11e P.O. O. or NY.fl! h~·y At11lt11~ in I 2* b111h.~. fnrm11.! d ining 1 dlntna: rm Lgf'., \\'rll Pquip-air cood, $10,9j() down. Baycrt'sl art'a 4 bdrms. j San Clemente gdn '"'¥)' p;.: to n111.1nr111n. room, vie\\' or Back Bay. \\le Ju.st llstf!d this 1400 5t1. /~I kuch. k re<'l'f'alion R.'li-0064 1 ·i d · , I .. . am1 y rm, 1n1ng rm. • RE OCE Oulrloor ourll'I~ f., IJ:-n!Jl, I O"'nl'r has mo\'M 11nd 11 f!, !(1\\11 ho1nl', only '• mi. room. Ovrr 3.000 sq. f!. on Lido Isle balm, 2 frplcs, Ille entry, • D Ai':1 AN VIE.W e Christma' l1:,:h1s h I 1·1 n , despPralr 10 M:U. GREAT tn the surr. 3 BR. 2 Rii, hugP f)nf' lrvrl. surroundf'd hy large dhl garage. l...ot 80. al Shorechff!.' walJdng dis. to \'BrJOu!I trre~. Sprinkling OPPOP.TU:"ITI'. '"'"'top 11 ~· rm, fpl , din. J..ra: !nfrml nice gardf'n,11 1,,, palJO areas. Prime Lido Nord d Ask' S39900 S!Ort's & priv. bch. 4 br, 2 1 iY!, frn1 k bk, :>.r"· "111"r Joan av11ilable. $j2,!r.)(). f'l::if1ng at<"a tn kirch 14·/all A vrry func110nal. wll pl-\.n. 5 BR. 6 ba. w/elev111or. 52 wi e. ing ' · ba, bll!ns, w/w carpet 1 htr. rlshy,·~hr, riispn!iial. 2,09!! Brokl'r ~~-9451 !alt'St dlx blttn,\. Pv!, patio, I nrd horn ... Agking $87.500. ft !of: Pltr &. !loat i275,000. C..\LL (!) · ••1 ·2 •1• (brand new ), !rplc & drps. 2 Circumstance~ lorce the Im· mediate dispos1ilon oI these 1ew choice parcels whose former owners LOSS ls your GAlN~ ! Call or write 1or complete detaib and color on.site photos. Buy direct from the developer: 'q fl -460 sq ft in car. • 2 rar <'l05"d gar. \\'nn'1 las! B'· Tip of Lido Isle 9!'.i:!.~,. car ear. \\'/bltin shelves & I''·'"' By ov.nf'r 'i-16-36&1 East Bluff -Vtew 'P A-A-..-..... ~ I b. n' "'. L " I II "' ·"' ar Thi.~ pril.'I". HURR'i! ': .. ': t.l\:C~ Beaut. 4 BR., 5 Ba. home 2 _., " · us,,, u Y $46-5-00 II Larct.' l~Ullk l BR, 2'1 Ba TER:\iS! I ~· ~~ frplcs. 56 ft , w11trr lron!age. ! N :-; R t:~Ll\' I ~prinklered yarrl. Loe. at 2172 DuPont Drive, :ftm 8 1 m l Arhu!us. 644-202<1 -go COA5T"".-¥. Roo r J bo J t •r ' t•porl oi l Off t t 2725 Via Vistosa. Low dn Newport Beach. Cal. 92G&t By o"•ner • Meke offt>r • COATS 1 .ourw l..i.r..uu.. c.ot.i. · m !'r ara;e at sips. MOT HE R-1 N·LAW? pymt. By o\\•ner, 4g2-4187 The "ml)§!" popular modi>! OPEN So•/Sun 1~" & A-•---..c-Pnc~ $500,00D. This 1111racfi\'Plv Jnrlscpd. 83J.322J'&: RANCHO CAPISTRANO ~ WALLACE * 499-2800 • Bill Grundy,. Rltr. c1,·11"· .. •n 3 bdc'm, ·' b-1.. 2 BDR:>.f S23.7::,0 ONE PLUS A , \Vest of lh1~ ~ BP. family hOm" 833 Do 0 /liS 642~ , .... ~.. "" Excr!lent location, n r 11 r \\1th formal fl1n1na, hllK"e Fountain Valley REALTORS SUPER SHARP ver r., home "·1th <l<'n & d1n1ng rt>nttr f)f tO\\'n, close 10 llunlington Beach, backs up tam rm "' f1rt'pl. 3 spark· Open Evenings ~reing is helieveing! This L rm., has detached mother-f>\·l'rything. to privale airport. Could be ling BA'1 11od f11n1.uticall) CHATEAU BLANC e 96l..44S4 e 1 beaut custom . built home QWS00 1n.law qcrs., complete wi1h I BUTLER REAL ESTATE R-3 or 7?7 Possible second /dscpd. Pnl'l\f' :\ir~a \ll'nlt !'"!!!~~~ .... !!!~!!!~ v.·/a lanlasuc view ol ocr.an, Contemporary 5 bdrm.. 3 kHch: & ba. \\'orkshop plus 430 De La t~strella 1 contiguoU& acre avulable. Joe. Call 5-1:>-S..21 !Oprn 2 & 3 Br Delu~e Townhouses. ASSUME 51,4 O/o ,.....,11,rllne &r canyon has 3 br, llaths + l.R;t'. upstain lam· pa1·k1ng Jor boat or trlr.. San Clemente Subordination. evl'11.• SOLTll COAST • Carpel,.; & r1ra~ lncl. /• dintng rm, 3 ba & a beaut dy rttrta!ion rm. In xln! $38.500. 492-3034 or 492-5610 Larwin Realty, Inc. _R_f_:A_L_TO_Rs. ! •. ~tn kitchen • P\·1 patio•s f'Xlra lge i;::ame rm w/b1tn cond. 45. Loi . $90,000 Rich Irwin Realtor Santa Ana 7156l Brookhurs!. H.B. • ,-.1ESA \'er<lf' h) lrllnllf'r· 1~ ~q fl rumpu~ room LOA~. nn lhig 'Al'll·k!'pl 4 "'ethar. Prorl'f;s1on11.lly <IN'· * 675-6060 * ..,,,..,,--,------546-5411 anytime N'd :i.1arirw lmmar 4 Bn. 1 En<'I 2 rar g11.rAt'P!li • S14·1m. RR. l 11ory h<:tmt. Stin"~ nra!Pl'i &r landacaped + bOWORb lo u >s on Ja. • ONE e 4 BDR.'1. 2 ba, 1 yr ., old 1 ~=="',.,..°""""'-...-""" RA v.·-frplc nn rul..rJr ... ar m1n1:: pools & t!'l)nls couru. like a model w/f<lrmal fl1n-manv otllf'r special fpaiur-ACQl(OA O" A Kl"D "U lfO\IE S26,!Xl0. By owner. 1410 N. CHOICE lot. 100 x 135 R-2 2-car gar w/10onrk"hnf'I, c\·ll Ing. 3 RA '11 11 nrl nnly 11 ~hor! ,.5 100 nllmerou~ t<l meniinn. 3.fl6 Via Lido 67;...J.)62 5000',0 11 0o1' ..• ,· Sho•;, La Bonna SL 537-32'7S. paved alley. 348 E · <74 3'0 t $28 SOO lk "-s " ·1 ·~ " Rochester St. C'.'.1 close to pahf'I, ra11}-i"llrf' lnri.~rrini:: " , ~ O , v.·11. to the .,,,arh. · Uumt You own fhe land & priced e DELIGHTFUL :'l br, l•m S J C · II Conttmp. Spanish <le,.ign an uan ap1strano 17th st. shopping area Pla}h.<"r, hoalflrlr sTnri:ti;:C' on rln. p11ymt. 0Y.'flf'r w1 r ight for fag t sale at $69,9;;(). rm. s1udy, spacious patifig & 4 BR + maid's, 4 ~1 ba $2:?,000 4i73-9509 111 rr11 + rrt~nv c.1hrr :i.1ra~.) 968-7111··--hrlp finance. Askin.11; $38,0(JO, o,..n hou~a 1hl.~ Sun 1 10 5. sundrck. Choicr ~I 10 ,, \ot. BY TNSfD owner 1•;, yr old !=-=--~-~-= ,.,. Fpatiolls i.:ourmet k1tcll!'n BoK 1819, Santa Ana. Newapaper Dealership For L.A. Hera!rl Examiner in Santa Ana. Be in bllsine11 for yourstlf. Cash depogil req'd. \\'rite Box RP, ~ Lincoln. Anahtim. CO:'lfBINATION beer bar & rafr & 2 BR. apt. Xlnt loc. S62.~Jl10 Incl. 11!1 PLACE REALTY 4M.9704 BEACH stand-food to go. Beer. plus renLal~. Fut i rnonth nJ>l'ration. tir:>--26::() BEAUTY Salon. 3 1italio111. 1"ewly decorated-low rent. $.lOO. '>'"ill handle 523-1612 VENDING Rf. Candy snacks local moving S120J. or trade for car ~2-2307 Money to Loin 240 1st TD Loan 6f.. '7o INTEREST 2nd TD Loan S:::~ .. -ffi 51~9702 So. Bay Realty Exi!linlt' loan $27,W>. • $226 140:l Skyl1n,., 494-4194. By o\\ncr. 6i3-7677 A ,. j bdrm. 3 ba. !am rm. y,·/w R2 LOT zoned for 7 to 10 _ __ ~~.,...,..,..,..,,,....,.. . 1. C 11 nt111ue door~ • oun1a1n 1 d 1 " unit•, ~.305 .. f\·r oouo-· \\'F:STC'L!rF" AR EA :=: Pf'r mo. inr ~ IAXl'll, 11 INCOME TOO!! FOR sale or ~nr 3 hdrm. a trium. 4·car gar .. Tern1s. cps. rps. ""'!r 5 nr. wsur, """ "'" Terms hi.!sed on ~tty. S2i,:l()O. Harbnr Hu.~h rl io;t YOUR Sfo1u;ons H nml', ;11;}-11424 10pen evt>s.f conV<"rtibledf'n,lrpl,bll-in!, SIS9,j(X) *• ;,;ia.7249 dryr, tefr1d . Lr~ club. C.J\1. Realtor, (213) 642-2171 54>0611 V.'alk !o all M:hls f.t \Vt>stchlf '1Pfl1trrr11nP11n T storr. 4 SOUTH COAST RLALTORS l Charmtng older 2 bf'droom $64,51Xl nr ,450 mo. ~ar 1 ___ c_,_~=~--landscaped, f n c d yrd 374-1418 collect Sf>rving Harbor al'f!a 21 yl'I, 11hopp1n.:. SHARP. \\'/2 lf'li:, hdrl'I), 2 h;i ,, ~omAn ~a· NEAR THE BEACH Lagun11. homf:, on valu11blt )1'11.sr. 675-856.i. A GEM \v/pa!io & rm for boat. 'S~A~C~R~IF~l~C~Eo'-..i~,-.-v-,-"-,-,~,-,,c. I Sattler Mortgage Co, BR, plllil ron\'rr1. rlt>n. fJtn. 11unkrn h •, i·m., '-''Ith ma~~J\'f' R·2 rorner lot wi1h ~1udio • . k w l ho 3 Oversized 2 car gar. 1 mi ro \Viii takt ll units, 300· trom 336 E 17 s J I I I 'd d Jcpl fnrn1al din nn o ·" 3 "·d 2 h •h . . · 90 Frontagt on y,•1dr ,1f'f'et 3 Spar hng t'J'IC 111 me. , I marina & beach. Nr schocll iiii.iiiii.i~ .... ~thi.i~""'iiii''-iil l rm, P , rli:' t>nr C) · .; k , . · h -· BIH1y ,,.. room. a · 11.partmenL \V11lk1nii:'d1.~1ance bdrm horn!' on gll'f'C'I 10 Bdrms. & lamtly rm, ". ,\sklnl! S3B,900. 4.93-3292. beach in San Clemente, l!'f'rJ, la.st poSsr!li.. all car.,rn !\. "/Y.Pt 11r. ;\f'w lnnl! ~rrrn 1h111t rar· 10 1own & beach Ocean hrd. & fill. pool. Low malnt. .--.,..~-------$32,000 .. terms. 496.JM!. 0....nr/Bkr now .. "11!Wl5.17 pr(lf l11>nrlo;c~ping Assume pt't:ii, p11.r1 hlock wall fenei!d. 1 ~ 11 · ...,. · slr!'rl lo1. By ownf'r, prln. ]'"'"pg. 0 .. ,..,..~ ... ,.1, AC· Tustin -·, " >'HA I $~2 000 b , v f'W. ...xCf' ent co ition. c1pal.~ nnlv. 1173-8177 '"""'-....... , ft " e ~ • Acre. vie\v lot e *Reduc:ed$1~000 * ·' 1 ' ni1n. · ) Outslandtni;: value 1n lfun1. F irrplace, forCl"d air hear, · . TION • ju~r $47,7jl). ----------Corona de! lolar l''HA. \',\, (f)n\·f'nl . nr yriu ~',"~~198942 Canary F.V., in,::ton Be a ch. S!8,!al. double ro:11rag r, $43.7:.0. Call· D_P!';,N <Hbou"'2 L~unp 2:3? '1' SEMPLE I BY O"·ner. ~a~ I Option •673-2010• ""--1• · 842-2).\j ;i;,..,, r. n.... r1nr1pa ~ 3 BP.. 2 full BA. Frplc. in ~-~~~~~-~-nan1e 1t' 3 RR. + fsm. rm. ..AO · d • 1 ·" "D p · d I I 2 Ba. s~700 r.EAL Tor Tapprr 11.1 6 }T~ Ola,·~ _:inly. $6.'•.CXXl_2~7 Via Eboli Real Estate 675.2101 rn. ,rPC~. Pncni yd. ana 01nt up •x ots: Call : Pai \\'nod ~.·.-.2..'lOll Pool. dhl frplr. ruslom /,4 1~ Me•• del Mar 2515 E. Coast !lwy .. Cd~! 'Yorba s, fairhavt'n $29.900 $7.97Zi to $12,950 Scfon1c Pl'flllf'rl 1,.s f'i:r:ii~ rlrp~. rrfric. "'a~h!'r fl.: REAL ESTATE SPECTACULAR VIEW or n'nl S2.10. 646-~ , I IJ3-ao90 (Bkr) dr~·1·r. 1h~pclll:1l 1111 like """"' Outstanding Location \'ACANT 3-RR .-2-:1A,-;1i al $18j/mo lor $2l.'100. Ynu JJ90CtenneyrtSt. 4 br. l ba, lll:e kitr.hen/din'ii:: 2 Redrms and a l'.iAN'S den.1 Mes• Verde Fairway bl tin~. crp!~ Thnt11ut, CtJv'd ht>l!Pr l'all M'I, John JI 5750.00 •94-9"!73 5'19--0.116 arra, lrplc, hnck pa11n, Cus1om appo1nt1ncn1.5 thru. Real Est<1te, [..8) lot. Onr. 531-7307. &12-4.J).l J>llllll, A.!<~1tm" FHA. nn ~" ••10 nut. Terraced. rlPva!<'d. cor-Gt:nt1'1I !r.iin & A<~. a t 6..., ..... · * TOTAL CASH • I ~ lrt'E'l!, corner houM w111d" R•nches, Farms, q"•i•lyi·• 'l ~ dn S":i 9'XI -~ -TOP f "· \\' "" I !I d• 2 nP~ 101 ror thar "Kin" of u " ' "'"''"' • ··' BV CN.·nrr: 4 hr. fa m rn1, 121 ,9~. Condo. J BR, Y.Shr, 0 1"" o .. u c 1 si · yarrl for boa! ~r trail<'r ' "' Groves full pncf'. John Jrw1n It 1,..., One of tht" bf.st ocean vit>ws . 1 1 Jo ho . !hr lhll" f!'rl1ns:~ ! S39.~ on 180 Cash Fast! 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds FREE APPRAISALS Costa Mesa Investment 548-771 I anytime Mortgages, Trust Deeds 26G PRIVATE PARTY, WA.'i'TS TO BUY 2nd. TD's. Call: AMOC. 636--1470 rorn••r Jot Assume . nA dryr, relr11t drp11, crpl~. m1nu es n m11. r II pi:: FHA or GI 1erfl1s, ln11n. ~·10-60.1.8 Ney,• n.mint. O:ir. lol, vacant. in Lai.::una. 2JOO l!q ll + 2'a rtnler, freeway1, 1chools, * S750 Total ON * ,~ r11r ''"'" J400 sq fr or = k 131 500 Larwin Realty, Inc. u 1· t B h 847-8.:.07, 968-4377, 968-1178 · ·"' acM Par · , . F"\JA 221-02 Program 4 nun 1ng on eac rlerk~. 2 BR + rlf'n or 3 546•3086. 546-5411 anytime Acreage for sale 150 LIQUIDATION . ro.40. 80 ac parcels at Lucerne Vallt>y & Helenrlal!'. Pi:iced to clear at Sl 117 pl'r .ar . Divide or holrl. Brokrr, 644-4670 * 962-3543 * J'.l ACRE producing orange ~iiiJiiiiJiiij]j~~~~iiiJi~I grove in Riverside. at Van ~ Bllren & Cleveland. Good I ]~ Bdrm, 2 Bath. ne'A' 11hei,: ... BR l..a.rl'::e Jivin,. mom itnd 21562 Brookhur~1. Jfllnl. BC'h. GLEN MAR . • • ' BEDRMS -129.950 • -. --l'i1rpPI, fli;hwhr & d1~po~al. family mom. !orm11J Oining FHA. VA & ronv terms. LET 'EM WALK 121,000. By 0 11 nrr · GlG-3600 Ju.~t Ji.~ll'd, lhi~ sotHh Gll'n f'f)()111, 2i-, BA. Prorr.s~ionaJ. Conipl redecora!1>'1, nrw Tn rverythlni;: frc.rn this grac- COLLEC;f::-rArlK -3 -AR~ \l1o1r 4 bedroom. 2 ba!h 1.v rirrora!<'rl and land!cap. rrnt &: 1, f('nced yard. ioll~. lgl'. 3 BR. 21 1 ha. 0 d •-" d f k I .,. GOVT LAf\'D $j/ac. \\'rllf' Ba. :\111ny f'l\IJ'A~. "'nrr. h<lmr. ha~ rv-1\'f'r ~hall' rar· AIRLINE PILOT TRANS-r · niuce or quic sat O.....•ntr, Roll Li!.Y.'. 557-2001 home. Bt~ family rm. \\'/ 282 Pr1ncrton Dr. $29,g:io I ]Je1,, \\'OQrl kllrhPn rahinP!~. 0·10·nRc•o R• 11 1 ,1 , w tn SKi 000 ~94-170/l d ~·· •~on 1 1 1 f I ... . Lanrl Package, Llgj Ar· .r. r .. ,au t, n -~ ays: . .,.,_,,,""',.vr~. rpc, pllS orma .. 1n1ng. rowhPad Ave, San ~"'.t 11~""11· ~':4:.-.J:l&J. Oprn I 2 rar Kllrag!', buil1-1n~ !Int'! .l,000, sq. 11 . lr1 lt\'el, 4 ./ $R4,SOO. Arllst'i lllXury 4 Br, 2 ba. ma ny custom (iourme1 kit('h. A·l ~cor· Bernardino. Ca. -P00-1. "·•••". '""""'· , "l•l·", 1 r:ra", rlrA".' Pnor -.~. d k 1 I 18 · 30 · l1nme. prnf dPrort11 Pd. 4 ,, ·-~ .... ~ .. "" , ... '"' ,-"~" , ,,, " " •~·-Ml i;:aren 11:1tn. J>. AP. .. l'i BA. Sp11cioul! 5, ~A. PMn. llnly, Hope Gerrie Realty S400 pt"r arrr. 7i&-1900 or site for trailer pk or sub-_ Houses lorRent 11! division near new Arlington 1 ;;mmmmmm;~;;;1 H.S. si1e on main h"'Y to Marrh Fiehf. w·rite Cha~. Houses Furnished 300 r.fartin, 870 N. ~fain St., 1-:--------_;.;.:; River&ide, 92501 General 0R~e-a~l ~E~1~t.-t~e-~---I Exchange 112 _.,:1111M;IN•l:I · t · · un · ·'----~ 11 1·rar patio llrf'a. ClrAn, hdrm~. 3 ha1h~. 1f1nin1 rm. lea!u~• 131 500. Assllme 1111ng tht1H'llt1 .Ask1ni: SJ(l.000 I CALI" •·-••"· 1~ •<-•. blrM, dsh11,·sllr. air t'flnd 3 C111! f:.12-253;:, for 11ppo1nt• bnnu~ rn1, 3 r11r i:~r~i::r. 54S-!i0£I i;.r 4400 fir 1~20 fir•·. Ir" ,\n1hony -1. nn1f mrnt. '"'" rv>n1 ~11_,.n fl'nfrri \•11ullf'd hr1m CPJI. !iv, Lae I ;1-•1• • af! 6 pm, ;:..is-JR:i.2. 1 U . _ 1 1 r "' "'"' " ,..... M V d nits. •OP ocation. Pno . landsi·pd,,nr111klrr.c.S2n.1;.o. 1 )'lrrl lu•h i;ha' 1'11.....,.1 ,1 frpl ructom !!hut!er~. esa er• PANORAMIC VIEW Comme cc•'al ,. . • ,. Roo ! I Large private unir. S.l!J.000 PALM SPRINGS RENTAL FINDERS Fr•• To Landlords 645.0111 Call fi.IS..'112.l or ;,1~34~.ll. ru.•lnm itra""~. A 11 ~um.. ~·nrm~I din rm. m or ol Jelly & marn channel. 3 Property 158 ,.. l p OPEN HOUSE 1 equ11y. Trad!:' up or do11i·n LOVEI.Y l hr hnmr-:-filni I'm I lari;:r VA ln11n. Sl9.950. poo · re,.IJJi::I' art'a. I BR ., 4 ba. hon1e w/formal ---=-------for inconie roasr area. 4Jt W. 1,tfl, Coal• M .. e Ov.nrr. R!l7-1ti7 1 1 ./ S14.l.500 Ore.11 n Iron!. Sat, Sun l to 5 . 1 din. rm .. i;tudy: 2 f .... lcs, CENTRAL LOCATION pAl10.i:ar,frprc/1lrp~, L ... h "" •Jb +f 1.t.. .,. CulverN1chols e vAC\TIQ••yR •23 ISO 1"·11 u1. urar · ..... armin,i;:-., r . am rm. " ua, f'U•· wtt bar. Ne1\·ly r!'dccor. C-'l. 9Crx2)4' Jor y,·ith :::.000 ' ;~ ROUND! nll'Tl('r 1\tll ""II fnr FltA 11p. EXCELLENT , I I d '· bl I o {71413252182 or o tb "" pr11iAAI ~18-3097 ('\'f'~ Oprn I ""d 2' ' ' f I I k I RR, 31~ RIA, db!'n, Jove Y r-sar,.:s1r,•, f' oc. Y.n· On Mindy beach. $169,;,QO. sq h ht'ated and air-eond. . 11~~ e ucacb. K1ds/ptll. CONDOMINIUM w· • •A, P ··I' rr t . 1 Jrl'lurlrd o d rt<"k Ntv.' Pr ...... ,~ • ontana A\!', 2001 Bayside Dr. By 11.pp·t. blllldi ng, $K(l,()(X) (71 •11 325-8152 ~ ,o:;un 1.:i rrp1~. drp~. Qy,•n. 11n.~t0lll!. 01'1e~n~ palfn. P~li:' Allen, S~-1242 B'll G d R I Real Estate Wanted 184 ALA Rf'n!all! e &15-300'.l ~-· · r~ ·'sin... " ' oan. ric. <o!Cp un r m '· ., ·"" • _ t111~ -:i BY 0\VJ'.iER 4 br. 2 ha, blrn~. 81~ Do\'l!r Dr., N.B. &12-4620 642•5200 e RARE Il':OEED! Spar. 1 "AST SID" f' , 1 "fll' 6" 1 p ~ d k s•1s~1 It 1 494 7-7, · 1 run y , ea tor 1· Pete Barrett Realty 4 Bit 2 Rll, r\rl pa tin f'lt In\\' Il l S21.7:ll. 3 br 2 9fill·\J7,~. 968-4377, FARUl..OU~ V!F.\\' H0.\1f; pa1io )ard + boa! nr tr!r * CASH BUYER * Br, child. smJ ~I ok. Sll.l. Catfll'lin.i:-, fir11 rr~. hull! In• h:ith~. n"" t·llA $1 ,•lM d11 n ro~t -ln1 rnl'it $10,000. P11.tlo. yard '-''ltn1ranrt'. Clos .. lo BALBOA COVES Condominiums ALA Ren1als e &15-3~ dl!h"a~h,.r. $29.9j(l. ~'JI .'. fl.l'tlll~ i1.0.~ fll"r nln inl'iurlrs Comparr w/prt>sf'n! hldg. C11lil. &hool. Open hnll&f' WATERFRONT I for s ale 160 ' Don't list your homt, SlJ:Vl!'-1ER £.. yrly. rentals; -''-'-' _'4_6-_._·~1:_. __ ~~~ 11.IJ. J. •'•tr';: 11 .. <1'r\'tr'1' porrh. rol'i1 -lo! ros1 $10.000. P11110. y,·krnd! SJ4,7j(I, 541)..i:i&l Tr1nsferred • ~1ust iell! ---"7'"""'"""'"___ sell it to us. finer homes in beach arl'a. EAST s1dr, .1 l><1rn1, 2 br1. 2 111111 r o. 1l1:ch11, r111~. rlrp~. rlr(·k, frnrr. Jnr!srrJ! $2AAO. M ' , v· . Prlme•Joc. 3 BR, 2 ba. single VACANT Save time, save money. Bill Grundy R!tr. 642-462() pahn.•. rlf'!. J;:llr nn 11.llry ,.,,.,,llrnr lnt:11l1<:m, 11. m11s1 27:,0 ~q ri homr & gar ft1r •ssion ie1o story, Ntwly dPCOr. Fenced 2 BR. 2 Ba with ch11nn1ng .lil,1h for ho11t & •'ll111rrr· rki:; 111 ~re -l'if'Hn, l'lrA11. ('lf'IUL " "' S.1.l.200 or $1 2.10 per sq 11 -At:GEAN Hilll'i, 133,:iOO. J Br. yrl. 30 H. boat &lip. ;iJ,500 mezzanine n1s1r. hedr m, . ...,. us JC 1111.rm, 1 r. (·u::TQ\. I IN'T" .. RIOR I immed. l1rm offer. Broker 1129 ~ R 1· C" B Home Buyer !)(> '] k $'2~ .. iOfl hy nwrlf'r '.'oolll--1!171 1, 4 hr, 2 ba, dtn1nro: k llln1 rn1~. lnclu.d.Pl'i 4 bdrms. 21i balhs 2 Ba, Yam. Rm. I.Ast l\'t'ek Bill Grundy, Realtor blt1.n bunk beds In 3rd down· am cr.i, tot o. Avl 6/t ----~ 11<12-7577 & ~l40·5336 Bl B * 64'011 HALECRF:ST .. .;a,•r1111·P hy ri\!iJlS:: !i11.r. lmmar 111 f.: llt!! l\f'Z4 mi;tr bf'cl • dt!li rm. hy o\vnr Bar1111in pricP~ 1111 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4!i20 stai~ bedrm. Clean. Beau· . Ue eacon er 1 n 3 h J 2 h 1:11' Sr brach & ~chl~ (;ood I J)(l'll lablr l'iiztd rri·r. rm. 2 A!l~ume 6,..,,, Joan SJ0.3021 O llful C'TP1s & drps Jhruout \VANTED to Lease: 3 Bdrm Corona del Mar ow rr, · 'rm, 11 • ·• 962..4471 (:;::I 546-1103 1rrm~. bv n11nrr !11\il-lfilli frpl~. ui1l1ty-~1or. r m, llr &11-73." .. 1. · F R THE MAN T~ $1500 down on· Special bouse \\'/pool. No children . ._,._..::~;:;.,.;;_;;:;.,. __ _ Parlll'll SI. ('. \l. $2.i,;m, GI ,._, ... ,.. ...... _. ..... ,_! Wh W t E th' 'J e 4i7. 7 ~ Lot1n ~11J-79'i~. • :\ruSr SELi. l\lrriilerr11nf'11.n hu1h1nl, r11rpt"•ing. rir1'pr~. New rt Beach 0 a n s very •ng finAnc1ng." .>-165. COZY 2 Br cottage.. nr ---POOL SIDE PARADISE 2.000 •q fl. 2 hlkll In 111itrr l Tnlal S4ll.OOO. 4rl.4-9600 early po Unrlrr SI0,000, swunmtn;:, beach, beam ceiling, f .... lc, OPEN-hnu~,. Sun, 4 RR , ~-1 b J '" 3 Bedroom + 2 Bath front, onlv Slfl.700 Call John am nr 111! l nr y,·krnd. ·~"' ing, tenn1~. tac l!'S, SUPER SHARP )~ pr1v patio. S2SO. 67.~!M3. r ... m. Tfll, 2 hA hn1nr Xln1 $28 750 II Jr11,·1 ~ & As~ 11 1 0 fr A ISLAND PARADISE l.lkt Ol'W 4 bdrni, k ill'n I" ' • c M l1n11n .. s.11.:llO Hkrlollr 2710 • f,J6-.44i0 I cean ont pt. 4 BR+ 8 I G f.tm. Rm. j 6HH Lanc11~trr Oprn S11n 1-j I V1J111 Pacl.l!r 2 BR, l 2 B11, f inancial -osta esa _n_r~kl':_('~I .)46.\'i!lll Arllut :!O '20' t'f1\''rl & rni·I. Dram11r1r J.llrf f.t ,;horcl1rie $.l600) Univert ity Re a lty f~~ mtrroit'CIBehvinbg rm wall, ~;mmmmmiiiiiii~;; NC\\I 3 BR, 2 BA. l..i;e. No e OROPPF.D prirr !o SH;o(l Jl~trn " lpl f.t Aar·B·Q 20·~ Ir vine \'ll!WO Imm •n ele,ooJ .l brf. • 3001 E C.•t, Hl\',Y liiJ-6.ilO Sud.Ji:: crrits. ~t uy In area crnts, drp,, Dbl. '''· • •• ~~ ponl Hucr, pro! ld~<'ptf Truly 11 shny,•plarf' lli',21' <ti $z.l.!l~ and terms too. B "' ~ hr!o" li11r m~rkrl \';ilur 1n rm. uni1. Llir&e living rm. f8 m rm hi hrllm crlhni:: novt·R SHORES AREA uslness only. Refs. ft'q. Nn pers. S'.Jfl.'.WI t·1r,.rla•r. 3 hr. l'ul-dr .... 11r Int. Crpt~. drps, ASSUME G.I. /f J "h . d k . . . . . Sf'!' Jt fast. 1hi~ won'! last~! Opportunity 2CO S200 mn &12-6781. ""~ Q•-. 5"i-ii6i ~lrrr 4 hll!n• .. \~ i~. All trrm11. w rp l' .. ,. II s., w11c. ec . Pllll~ Verdt> 111n™' lirt>pl. You o"n thP Jann Larwin Realty Inc DO.J .... ·---fili-l:?2I Almns1 nf'Y.1 3 BR. 2 hA. hnmf' 2 Garaae 1pacea. Sv.·1mm1ng Cool \l'~trrfall tn l1v. rm. l.Ji,·rly S. rlrg~n1 .1 BR J 546-S4ll t: ' ,";="~· ~C~\1:..,..-~-~-- \fF:SA Vrnir h~· n"·nrr; l in nl'w rlf'velopmPnl. in lht ' pool • $87,500, p!u3 f1N'pl. fish pond & wa. hom(' 2,6.j(l ~q It. r 1n rm. . any ime WorkinCJ Capital Huntington Beach brirm, fml,v rm, 2 hn. r11t1n SEYMOUR REALTY l't"n1rr or lh'f nry,· Cily nl Turner A1sociatt• !Prf11U 1n alr111m. Lu!h lnrl· fn m 'rm hrt11kfA~I art11 21362 Brookhursl, llun1. Bch. Optn fl~ll~. S 2 !I, 9:; 0 . 1i1~l Rf'11rh Rl\'d .. lllJi::n Bch trvlnr. Small riown Pl'Ymr. llOj N. Cnt11'! Hwy., LAguna scpg. Blit Nlrnt'r lol . All &11ut yarrl Srr 111 !\~ COUNTRY Clllh Villas • by Loan R@quired 4 BR. fam rm, 3 ~. tri.Jevel, :l<f7>-WT.1 Oprn 'Ill 9 Pl\f & 1mn1rri. occup11nry. Prl!'· 494-1177 Anytime trrm~. 817·1221 pn'rinll'. $72.~. Owm>r OY.'n!'r. BE'alll Spanish 3 br, Nr beach. July Jst·Jan 15th, ,-,E-.S-A_V_f:-RD_f._lf_"_hl-,-,,,.-,,-3 cl1 111 $33,9:,0, EMERALD BAY LDT SEYMOUR REALTY &t2-5.ilt1 I 2'i ba, frplc. P\'I patio. Ad· $100,000 $325. 962·74_01_.-c----- BR. 2 BA, lhmll~ n'l'lrn nn IT'S A MESS (i d h II 17141 Stach Blvd ., Mlgn Bch !) BEDR00'.'.1S. Choi cl' zacrn! 1.0 pool Arta, \\'alk '" 1091. INT. PAYABLE Leguna Be•ch rul.<Jr.<;ar s:i1.:r00. ~~i7..f>.i2'1 Cle an Up And Save .. I] ... : re ,· Oppn ·ru 9 P~I Baycres1 lor 2 B;i's .. 31 :.~~,~~,.\n!'{srl,!' Coun1ry Club. SEMI . ANNUALLY I·-''---....:;.,.. __ _ 2 RR '.;, 1·rp1 t:-•lrp~~ i;lo\·r~ $18,SOO • J"1nr~1 It l<1r£r~I v1rw lot pa!ios. \Vood panrl!'d fam. -=-' -.,.·-~~--·-----E~tERALD Bay home avail rrlri,i::. J-·rn1'f'll ~11nt. 2110 .l Bit. 2 /!a, i•rpi~. drps, hit· Rl•:td.TY 1127 E111f'r11.Jd 611,y NEEDS TEENAGERS 1.~ dtn rm: 2 frplc~. ln1mcd . I Costa M esa Recorded collat!"r&J secur· :i:P~~~:a~1:.1w~111l~n~idb!'11; Or11 nc,. \11', C'\1 :,1;).16.~7 R • o Q 1 d I B 'll G d Rlt Commllnlty pool. clllbllollit & JlO.~~f'J>~. S.V:.000 ----------lly po!illon. Prefer Actlvf', ~n "' · Utet fU· l'•Sl!f, l'n11'. Park CrntPr, lrv1ne 1 run Y• r. 1~1 Coinnl'Odorri Rrl 3 Br. 212 ba, lrplr. ~w1m· ~fatuile Exer.u!lvt, Exp. in sumn1er rental . By --BY~OWNER flOOI ~11r ~11r1t, Bnn.11: ~omr C 8 '"3 Do I) "' B " puttinx g~tn \1•i1h thii irn· I o •!14 0737 34 '1111 Any11n1t' R.\1-0 2'l """ vcr r, . .._pi eacu mAr. adlll! occupied 3 BR., By Q11·nrr f1.J~8!!26 mtng flOO. rvt palro , Coun· Admlnl.~tration, Financl', wner. · , ext . 4 Bdrrn k s1u1ty 5-lli.fiiAA p11 1nr, )(11~ o! 1>lbn11 f::r!'al!f' _ 642_.620 family rm. h"Z. Lgt. Optn 1·5 ~111, s,. Slln I 1ry Club Vtlla, nr golf !\1anufacturing & !\!arket-Newport Beach 'IE<. A ~., \1,:-; -OR-. 3 !\,\·., nnrl fin? ll jnY.~I hPrt, UNIVERSITY Park, 4 brirn1 rour~I' Sl1 !XlO f or 11ppt ina:. Business integclly ' --.;,..,.-,...-----·I " "" ' ~ I '~ · b ' · )M OC".AN v<'"', 3 BR, 3 BA . hdrms. & hu,e clo.<.rd pa. CHOICE BLUFt"S CONDO 1 . ' . ' . •1 E ...... I .... M ~u n111 1,.1 i/10! tY.nll~t', 2.~00 '<! 11. 21.1 r. · ~ rall Ml/.2i03 mu1t J\1odc~t ,11.111.ry to ad· WATERFRONT "t1nv rx1r11~. ,y \."'nrr. SE 0 T hill"•.'''",,., ill• -1. 2. t1'0 m•k•• I"••' -•1 ho·•• Jrvt l. 3 BR, ,~oioeul•• ------·---,--= I I 5-16-ljfll YM UR REAL Y hath~. tl\'t'r~izr.d fam rni, 2 " " " ~ "'" " •·~ " '" 'I· m n ~tcr l1n1111C'l!s '1 advise l7lil 11,..,ch Rl\'d. lllJl'l'I Jkh ~tor)' hi;: rm, brick frrt r~r i.;;1ni1::, $49,j()(). ~asy ror 11 famlly wlt.h tetnaiets, view of bay. Or11:: lo11 Income P r operty 166 o n prorr.durf'I for gro,~·lh 2 BR + BR on lov.·er level. CUSfu:\1 hull•, F'-51<lr, 2 Rr. 2 OA, 1·rp1', bl!n,, frpk, rul~f'--111·. dht 11<1rAl!t. R:o C\\"!W'r :i<!S.~~. -----Dan• Point Ofl"n '•!t 9 P~I i·u~1om lnd!CllPf', ,. \' r r 11 !!'rm~. 0\1•nrr-191·2":39. S:.9.500. least'hold a.r!'a Call lor .1 Units at $49.RfiG..tax Ahcjj;; of imall, privAtely owntd Beaut. bay "le11.•. P\•t. park = ::::ii!:!::!:::l:::::::I I $40 740 D e L•ncy Re•I E1t1te lflfll. pr1nc1pab on 1 Y. co. Leverage pot.ential, w/llo\\·ers k trees. AvaiJ. 111nl1. (;ood oc11tion · · 4 rut. 2 RA. fnrm11l rlinin11 114164'2..., b 1noomc Or1vr by 2266 · II 8"t'77 I ' 2818 f:. "··•] lfwy., Cd'! ~ I~ \ · able thru Augus1 lfi!h. VACANT BEAUTY .!-:A ,,.':."' ~ · pnt _ nn, l~ml!y rm, 20C,() ~Q ft , """"' • l1r.rr St, C ~!. Ov.·ner h•11 Pr1nc1plei Only~ TURTI.E RM-k • 2 1101')', of 1 ll'nrrrl ~ 11 r fl. sprinklrors, fil.f.7270 CORO~ADO tw'lmf', ~ BR. frrm GI \n11n comm!tmf'nt Wesley N. Taylor Co. $24,800 1,1., 3 hll , initn} P>i:tr11.~ rnc1~i·Jl!I. S.1!l,.i00 4!1i-.t.8M ramily rm. PJu_th .. hac , ~t $49.200. Good in\tt'Jlmtnt \Vrlt,. rlassifi~ acl •<16. REALTORS :--h11rp 3 Bl~. lre~hly p!!lnlt'd \'ie" $·l7.::.00. Ownf'r -La nuna-H'll• PRIVATE ROAD carpet rhro11.1:hou1 t..i1s nf npJl!)rtUnit~ w/vt!ry llrtl( D11llv Pllnt. P.O. &x 1560, 2111 San Joaqllin Hilb RO!ld A l.oT Rl'Y 111.•1dr. nr11 rlr11<, br1rk l1rr. fi.t}-2()',j I • 1 lmmac. 3 BR. den, din. rm tl!hf'r f'~lr11, J mm t> d ""~h. Prln<"!pllls 0 n I y , CMlll t.lesa. Calif 92626 NEWPORT CENTER 4i14-4910 Dan11 Point 1111, 0K lnr pl, h!11n R & n. In: ("f)\"d --VJ""'•·•. l.•, 1, ", H'ill• 3 bllrh hl'Jm" on l.R:t. t•nttd pns:iit•s1no, $32,j()() 113;.9:,oo 64~11 or .f!Ja-jljfj ENCO * WE NEED * duplPX ,,r hnn1r, S!l010 R • L u •· h r:." " n ••n """m JUll">. ()(Im lot Mat a g na ._ac ·r ri·lf'1 •tl 4 Rf'rlronms, 3 tull lor L1eh1 airy room,, m11nl-r ,..,..,,..~ 18 UNITS hy owner/lg!. has a Servit'e Staoon 11i·1t11 11 SUMMER BUTLErt nt:AI. ~.~'TATE II',, Q I k d I •• !!ARBOR v1•·" 430 Ofl LA t:~ll'l"llll 12 1; ;;;;, \ll111:,,,,"",',''.,:1\_~,"1 · * EMERALD BAY * h11th~ plu~ l1m1ly room 11 11h rure 1v.•n5 ft u>1:au1. g•r· C:\v JIO:'llE:, 5 TO\\'NHOUSES 2 br. 1'1 ba, irood IOC'alion 1vallable in RENTAL Nt.nClrmen1t' u.f'I b;ir ~nil PXlt nded droru : dbl. ll:•l"f,lff I.· ghnp. Br. 3 ha, 3-car .11;11r. f'a, S119.:i00, $18,000 down. Huntington Be11ch, LISTINGS •92-.\0."A nr 4'12-.'iSIO S E YMOUR REALTY rlRST Of'rt:f{t;'I;(; Cu~rom ht11r1h r"ln~ VPrdf's mck A~.or P"IOl &; pu1t1n11: .cr•tn. Spac10~ tam rm. \I;,., hor, Eli~t eo~1a Mt!a, 126-l·IO PA10 TRAINING ~ -171~1 l1'•arh Rh·d. lll(n Sch (")Un!r) Ml'fl ltt'1Tll r!f'a n • flrl'plAIY Custom panellnc Besi buy tn Atta. $&4,!iOO. 2 rrplt'll, YormaJ rlin'c rm, ~IC'lod.,v Lane. Annual in· PROr. COUNSELING BURR WHITE .. Wf.'F.:O It " f'l'llp", ,tlean Oprn '11J 9 f>.\I bf'itm t'l"ll1 ni,:~. ll('t'll.n \'If'" 11.nfl 111111pll fl'"T. rr(I f ' cau 6-12-46~ lor •pp"I, SSl.900 • * 641-2127 COmf'. $15,420 j1t)5S, Owner, STRONG Re•ltor 675-4430 OUI !ht' ln'it-"Ul'1'11 & lr811h • ".7:--~~~~~~~1 I " 2 RR " " -.. • pno nil>! " nl'n • l11nrl~raprd lront and hack. 8111 G rundy, Rteltor EASTBLUf'r Lu$k hnn1P, '.i .... ~176,S. ADV£RTISEMENTS & ...,,.,1 Newport B!\•d., N.R. turn inlo .-11.~h lhn1 II D111lv B\' '"O"r•J l1r, 1\ ht, l•o" -r -011· -E I ., J n-11 "I I ""· •--" 3 I ""===~====~ P"OMOTION p p 1 '"' ' ., '' ,,-''" .. n •·r·nt . 1 ~1 > '· . ,,. • .t:nl ll nr1Jtn•..,ruu•,., hr. b&, C11m rm. 2600 1q fl. • • \V HITE ELE'PlfANTS" •~ · • AL SU PORT Sell the old !iituff 1 ot Cl.u1tlf!f'ri 11.(! &42-."167~ ~p '' /"••"Y ·•11·,, 0P"O "•""o"l • 4 \ "R 1'1 ~ I ' •· I LOVEJ V 3 BR 2 b J I I FIN NCING ••• .. " " .. , '' "" "" 1" • n · · •n• I nrar ~r~ ~ 11nn ••""PP nJ. • • . a hnrne. rp C'J, $60.llOO Op"n Sllr fWtminnlna: )'Ollr houM!! A ~I STANCF. Buy tJw. new 1tuH HOUSf. lf11nlln1 ? "1atrh th<' I h1111fr ~~r Ii Sun. $27,lOO. fh1r'!f'r 8lllfd~r 497·1.\17, All for 111 ./'Jl'IO 8Y OwMr. :ocTrt11Kt yard, 1i blk to bay. " Slln l·!i. 2230 Ar111ia 51. "C1111h·' .. !iir,!l th11m thnJ C111l A. Oom.,. Dy1 836.flOOt O,lly Pilot Want Adi h1vtt OPEN HOl.1si column ~ 714/fifl-!I. n ·l:'l'l-~7,t, ~1i2 )At &Isi s, 8.Y>-3373 Lido IJI'" fiT3-'t185 644-1102 Daily Pilot Cl•••!Ued .Ews A week•nt1:1. 962-8069 barr1dl'IJ &alof'I. --~-----·-------- • ' ' F'rld"r. ,_,,, 14, 11J71 DAILY PILOT 33 HouH• Furnished 300 HouMa Unfurn. CondomlniumJ 305 Unfurn. 320 Aptt. furn. 36CI Apt. Unfvm. 3'S Apt. Unfvm. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfum. 3'S Apt. Unlum. -B•lbo. Penlnaula Coste Meaa Newport Beech i 'c~.-,-,-.-M-e-,-.-----·G-e~ne°",~.~1""----= Costa Met• FOR sale 01· Jrase; 1nplly 2 BH hou.'>f'. Av•il, May 18th 2 STORY . ~ hirgf' BR. 1~. HOL.IDAY PLAZA 2 Bd1·m. lrpl.. talcoey. lti E. JUNG BROS. Announets /um; ·I br/3 ba . lan1 rn1., Pl'I\', YaJ'U, $185/mo. Call s.. All bll·ins. Cp1•, drps. OELUXB Spaciou! 1 BR Bay. \Vinter r•tea, $17j Apls. Now Avail.ab!~ ll'ICI : "Everyihin; I ro n1 bl'fore 6 al 612--0210. aft 6 Jo'rple. Prl.,.11.I<' patJO l...ii.rge furn •Pt Sl~ Heoited pool, .\lonthl) Y'rarly, $22.;. Jn. MEDITERRANEAN "In<' ;::lali!i<'ll to Roman flrn, 548-7963. S\vimniing pool. l't"\'l'<'l&lion Arnplc parking. -"du1L-., •110 QUIN' al apl C, 673--1321 or VILLAGE rub." $700. ~8-599:1. 4 BP.. den, 2 baths. \''•lk to rm, laundry ru1, enc·losed pets. 1965 Potnona. C)t. :i-tS-nn ______ _ <.01ta MeN * Spanish Elegance San Cltmtntt au i.chools. Avail June 21. i"•r~. t:as1s1<.lr. C .. \I . -5P-E-~CIAL _ u.i Rall'• fropi Df.:LUXJo; Ouplrx. \'rarly 2400 Jlarbo1· Blvd. S27J, :HG-2~6~ :i49--0674 $2j wk, k'.lt avail, in ald le1ur. All a PP J i a n c,. R . Costa ,\1'.esa Quiet Ad(.lt Living :l BR, utll. p11.1<.1, "lllk lo 1 Br. Duple>, 1110\·• & -1,1•, L H'll TV !c a. SP La k \Vkd1t~·~ all 6 pm, !c \\knds, (71-f.) 557·80'20 Shai 1.""I e d ..... , e bltns "'hool "-•"h •10,c llllO •~ "' a9unl 1 S .~eJ'\', , p . ll 10 • 0~0 •9•9. SPACIOUS _,., J & 2 BR . •• •• .... • '"" ~ • .. !!I, • all u!ll pct S13.'.i/n10. Jj,)6 _...,_,,--,---=-1\to1et, 2301 Npl Blvd . C1\L "'.,,....." .~.. BeautlJul Pool. e All Utll. Pd, ISt', 14-J \V, J\lal'rprisa. 1'.knds. Orange A\•r. ~ NE\V dlx. 11ngl 'ty 3 BP., 2 616-74-l:J ' Sl7j \'EARLY -'! bl'., ln1· !ux ap111. 11•/pool, DI\\', l BR. SlJO • 2 BR, 1170 House5 Unfurn. 305 -E-.-,t-B-lu-ff BA,. l.'rpts, c~rp~, ~Jlni;, pool. FURN BACH!::LOR OR 1 BR mal!, nr bay, atorPs, oce•n. encl J:lU'. beau1., rec rm '-Adults only-no pet~. Children 01\. 'l C rnc g1tr. • · 4UI!~ 1':. Bay, atllls. 67:>-4172 laundl'y l•cd. Nr OC l'Ollege .2-41 Avocado SL fi.tG..097!1 General EA:iT SLUrr i:rd & 1rash pkup inc S~16:1. Nu:r-ly de<'Orttted Sll01-$\40. aft 6 & 1\eek!'nds It trwys •• ,dlllt!i, no pets. Bkr. 837_~. Pool Adults. &12·218J 642-4-170 EAST BLUFF Uq:.:e u11n1ncula1e ho .ts" G 8 Corona dtl Mar \11\h br au1iru1 g111'dC'n.~ -Duple·•• Unfurn. 350 • LR redeC" 1 r. ~ntrally ATTRACTIVE 2 Br duplex, LB1"•"" i1n1nacula!l' h nus t' "' 1-Pool <a1·por1 Adl1 -lull) rnelo.st'd and pr1vi.tr. ..-. • • s. '"' frpl<'. c1·p1s, drps, bf'am with beau!i!ul garden~ -C M _,, 11"5 "" \\' Hamill"" fron1 and back. f' our 0511 e5a ,~ · "'· .JUV • "'" ceilings, patio, adults, oni>' full y encloserl anti prlvatr. 1 ·---------1 &16-4160 or ;1-15--0700 .., • !ront find bai·k r 0 u r bNrooins or 3 and drn. :Z ~.., no pets. ~1·1. $169.50. 23.>I. b<lth.'\, lorn1al d1nin" room. 2 BR. 1 BA. tOrlipJ. rf'df't', QUJE."r a111·ac studios Slt:J. 1111!> Santa A.11a Avr. 673-0395. bedroon1s 01· ~ 1111!1 den. ;! .. c pt 11 ·p reb'I" •ov.-• fan1ily roon1 opc>n to kitchen r ~. 1 ·"· .,, ~ · 1 Br $125. AdHs. no pPts e '!""• VEIWE ·-• _ ORLEANS APTS. ADULTS ONLY 2 & 3 BR, Avail. Private pa· tic., pool. indlv. l•undcy lac. Newport Beech Newport Beach NOW ~OU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH Enjoy $750,000 health clu b & spa: 7 pools, 1 tennis courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also 2- story townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elec. kitch- ens, private balcony or patio. From $175. Subterranean parking, elev, maid Bervice. Full-line food markel, dry cleaner, beauty salon within complex . 7 beaut. model apts. Y am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. Jam~ree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. ol Fashion Island. 714 : 64~1900 for leasing info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS ba1hs, formal d111ing room. F side nr CaUi.ol1c l'hurrh "L.3n .. '" and <'nC'h:rl'it<i paio. $\00 a ·-· :11:..; Eldrn ~1gr Apt 6 C'I family roorn open to kitchen Oldei· l'pl. no pets. Slj(). · • · · ON TEN ACRES d eluxe 2 I: 3 Br, 2 Ba.A -~p_t_. ~U_n_f~u_m_. ___ .,.:.365;:. Newport Beach and l'nc)osed patio, S-100 a nionlh illCludrn~ ga!'denrr. Agl , 642-0:.i96 2 BR, '.? ba, sunken liv rm. 1 It 2 BR. Fure 4' Unlurn. l"ncl rar. S14j & up. Rental :-1 month inl'ludini; gal"deTlf'r. A\'ailable m101cdialely. Call , J'rplc, ball'Oll~. SIJ!O lmo JTaJ Fil•eplaces / Ptlv. patios. Ofc; 3095 t.iac:e Ave , ll&l Tustµl , Colt& 1'.Iesa Huntin9ton &leach WESTCLJJ.'1'~ Drivr -2 BR . (Nr.e>ranaeCo.AlrpoM;Tus-l ~~~~!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!l!J!!!!!!!!!!!J!l!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! tin at 17th St; nr. WtstclttU. ... ,,·1abl• 1mm-'1af('ly. Call rvcn1ngs, ,,. eek.ends . NE\V I Br. brick S:d.'\ frpl, Bakr1· St., C:\1 . .J;;0-2570 Poo'-Tenn>'• Cootnt'l Bkfst. 54&-1034. ?..1JT. Mrs. Tbomp.wn 642."611 N l d Bl ... ~ ...,,. 673-6;)68 or 5-f.).!}.l.JI. bc1tn1s, patio, 11/"'· bltns, I ~ S A eiv Y eror. tn a~· e v"' n in g S. \\ f' e kc n ti adult ro JK'ls, Yrly. $136. SillALL bachelor apt 1\•/ util. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 6f4..26ll OVERBURDENED I eGSCGpe pts _Plianu.~. Pool. e 642-6214 l-''="=-""=-,=-='="="-"='-l_:'ii __ ~-! Fountain Valley Oven' Housr. 1R7 £. 21sl St $.11.l nio. $2.J sf'('uri!y, ~yr (MacArthur nr Coast H wy) Call rtM> pmble1n .solvrn. * $130 UP * . LOVELY l'K"W J-2-3 BR. 1 j I YEARLY 3 Br. 2 aa. ~ LARGE 3 bNlroo111. jus1 SVAl'\ISM beauty: 3 br/'l ba, 642-&l:ll'.l <>Id or 01•'rr. &~ THE PROPERTY AIA N· GIANT l .l 2 BEDROO~f! blk from (l('('an. Crp's. drps, rr·~ll', $265/nio. R#!'a rr.' paintrd. tarprts & dra(K"s. ll'Cllled garden, C&D bllins, • PRJVATt: pallO • l'nl·I l & 2 BR . Util pd. SGL. sty. 2 Br .. l\e\\'I)' cptd, AGEi\IENT Di\' of Sou1h Gorgeous, park-like Rttinc. patK>, dsh\vhr, iUodeck, trpl. quired. Call £.16-:i'!OO. gar, TI'C lac. S260. 968-2&11 gar. :t Br cplldt·p!'. $160 & * No pet~. * 1 't Q 1 _ t 1 BR, 1~~ BA, 1·rp11, d1-p~. ff'Ticed yard, hlm1ly room. I drpd & painted. Stovt> k rel. Coast R.E. 5'15-842l Closed garages for mL'I'.· .20:; 15th St. 847-3957 1'hild1'i!n S,. pl'15 OK, 210 ,-Pl til~ "''V\ 2450 Nrw""r! 81\'d., ~1. incl. l·Blk. ro beach No 2 B", cptldrp, bl-,, "I"•_... mutn s~n y. u et 1"'"e · ,-~-1ti,d11~•ithr. Adil ,-•pt• o•li p/rn. \\'alker g, 1. re , Garden Grove $1 .>/rTio. 1· .-.......... )"' 1 Sllll l'ol Jse "' "' ._" = Adults, no pel1. :t O 2 o * PRIVACY * ·""" " I $120-1 br. utililies incl. No pe ~. ' ?·· . . gar + prkg. Adu I 1 s · Fullerton Ave (llarbor to R f ! 2 BR / Sls:,. 642-4387 ~\~~'~:~<; '71'11 S42-4 4j,J or 3 BR. :Z BA. d1sl\\l'llSh('r, rlbl ~ /)('I S, 1662 Newport Bh·d, 'DeLanc}' R.t-. 64~ Sll."i/m<i. 2210 Rutgen Dr. Bay, then So. until 2 blks t~:. ~u;ec .. c·~. 1~~;:~ Newport Heightl di d D l garag 2 r. crpt~. (frps. Yrly Ap•rtmenu fotRent C.)I 6·12..a19'1. * COROLIDOAPTS lf 646-691, So. ol N!wport Blvd.) etr. Small rhild OK. l·-0 -'---...;::.... __ _ Lan or S· wners se. $ 10 nio. 673-51;]4 I 1 Br. furn. gas & \\Qtl"r P<l. 2 B~. studios .tc 11reel levels, NE\V 1 Br. Jrplc, beams, 642-8690 Ca'IJ Owner 540-3S6:! L...,E deluxr 2 BR, frpl<·. \Ve 1vil\ refer tenan1s to you Huntington Beach No ehildrt'n 110 pe, ~ $1&1 & up, Dsh"•hr. rrpl, dbl patio, w/1v, bltns. l adult. I ------~=~-crprs, drps. Adul1s. SJ7r. k'REE of charge ... i\lany 360 Sl20/nio. :w.>-°.>!¥.ll. 646-70.1S · l'IU'J>Ol'L LARGE Pool . )'eal'ly. $136. Avl ~lay l. * BRAND NEW * ./ CHEZ ORO APT::; 2100 Haven Pl. l>42-37R1. desirable tenants on oW' C0/\'00-Dec. 2 Br + dE"n, Apts. Furn. 67'.!-3371': &12-8520 823~ Atlanta. 1-2·3 Bdrn1J. S•nt• Ana waiting !is!. I 1" B11, l'PIS, drps, .bl tns, General I Br, spacious. pool. ad Its. LA COSTA APTS, 1 k 2 BR. Pool. Private i: a rag r. h /d ' . idt>al for b11chelors, $12.i $220 l BR ovel'looking Back •Deluxe 1·2-3 BR. NE\V d I ALA Rentals e &1.).3900 11 s r ryrr, ~ ca'!' gar. . Bltns, 111vimming pool & gar-\\lshr/d1•)'tl'. 5 3 6-0 3 l 6. • l' uxe 4 pJex apt -2 Quiet. l..eaSl' $2lO. !J6S..j732 1993 Chul'eh. ~18-963.'\ Bay. Frplc. 2 pvt patlOs, All bltn!. Crpts, drps. Gar. Al · pd 11• 11•0 ::i:;&-2727 br, t•rpts, drp•, b 111'1,. i'""J)ll\IACULATE~ 2 Br. Rent Beautdul Furniture \'It'"' from Irv rn1 & br rn1 . Nr. s. Coa.sl Plaza. age. l Uhl · j(l to i i;!o\'P, 1·rfr1g, c PI d r. f'\"f'S &· i1knd~ lor as h1l!e as 2 BR. I~ ba. L.rg. closf'ts. Use of pool. Call &1;,...1200 :>l:>-232:1. mo. Aduhs, no pel!. Nr Huntington H1rbour dshwshr. "oc' gflr. Childrru Kids? $140. fA~'TASTIC ran1iJy rni . ONE MONTH pool, nr shops. Adlts. U!i! Jj4 Avocatlo, Cl\!. 642-910& & pe1s \\'elcom". 417 Nobiol) H -BR pd. 1884 l\lonrovia. :H&-0336. SHA. RP !.-Br.,, cpts, cl.rps. DELUX<' I BR. !IOO ... ft.. Tr•plex · lJUlf~I att>a . Lrg • llff SUnllow,r. ;,j1-1045 t'U'· ALA Rt>ntalJt e bl.>3900 uge ;i house. S~ Pt>r "' B 11 1 BR "" k nio. • • XTRA large smglf'. P'l'lV. patio. Urnd. ~11~· ~ bltns, crpl5, drps, relrig. 2 BR. 1''RO:\I 5155 r • 40, · -1-.r. Peta .)4;...2321or 1nquiJ•r al Apt A , 3 BDR.\t .• Family rm., par · 8'.l:rll13; R214il:.IO t'l!.;1 complete with SI C1/mo. 9S8 l\11ssion Dr1\'t' Scrn1t• Prop. 67;,.S•26 gar, bale, like n e \\'. COMPLETELY REDE C . ok. 171~1 84&-007l. Sin Clemente like yard. Costa ~tesa. Kid s 100" 0 ,. pt1. b'4&-RI39 I 3 BR. 21,• BA Deluxe apt. So. 962-'llM. CLEAN & COZY t'Ai'l.ILY SPACIOUS ne"' I bdnn. in I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;; OK brk .. S200 a month. NO 2 STY 3 hr/:Z ha + den. your 1• I' rrf:. &ID-l720. 1 flyrd. 1,. Btk to pool. icn· Purcha5e Option I Br 11.81~111~ disran.:·e to of H"'Y· See Mgr. 322-~ * BEAUTIFUL l !: 2 BR UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. quirt 4 pltx. C 11 r p,. I s . • COzy Co''. ••.' 1 81 n1s; ': ini tu lx:h J36-J6J7 Ind llf'ru sclt>ct.ion. shllpp1ng. no 1•h1ldrrn or l\fargurrite or ph, 673-7127. Con1em""..,.""' Garden Apt~: VILL1 MESA APTS drapP11, hit·ln~. patio, lndry. • 0 I yu•-3 719 W. \\'ilsru1 &46-12.~l furc"" air, s1;1.l, 893-2631 chikh'Cn & prtfi. $121'.l. ,\\'I 13 BR. 2 Bu. lrg ff' need bat }.: 24 Hour e Y· (H'ts. 512~ incl uht fi.l.">-IS4R 2 Br. 1 Ba wtrrplr '1. saJ"agt', Patios, tr p I c s , pool. no\i . y .. 111, lTpts. 11rps, nri\ly l CUSTOM Dana Point No pell. $17.l/mo. Sl:iG-$16.l. Call ~5163 SPAC 2 Br apts Irom WALK TO BEACH ALA r.· .. ntal~ e 6[>-3900 pa1ntf'd. 962-38::7 Furniture Rental 673-9111::1 2 BR d,1,,, Tow"'--.. ~ ... Pvt Sl40. Hti! pool. Play yd. Nr11• 1 br t.: l br. 2 ba, crpl.~ l ~~~-~-~-c--cc-c-= I 5lr\GLE TV l t k "'"'u...-Crpl,, drps. bltn~, patio. 1 ~· I I · 'l7 \r 19th C \1 5\S·l-181 • · · poo • pe 5 0 • Co•I• Mes• "" ; ti t &: 1 l'Jl!I.. ,,,,,,.4.)4-1 3 BUR)!. + 1an11ly rm., tu I rv1ne " · • .. · $25 & kl o pa.,._., rnc :ar. sma l>I' Ne"·ly decorated. Klci1 ok. ·:cc__..,-~ • NEW • NOW RENTING DELUXE-LARGE h k Anahein1 77-1·2800 · up\\ y. ana i\larma iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' ok. $16.l. A\lll'll approx 6/1. :Z BEOROO~i~ nr.a1· ~hop'g dining: 1·m., buill-iru;., r · TURTLE G>l-J!08 lnn, J4111 Coa~t H11y. 1998 MapJ, No. l 6,12-6344 $391'1 • month. NO FEE, Rock. 4 bd11n, fa n1 t.aMabra NEW JOO!! O'.inlidge ~l40-72.i7. :?214 Colle&e No. 2 646-0627 Newly dl'l.'Oraled. $1 30/Mo Z Bedroom, 2 Bath!'.. Fully: Ne\vporl, 5-i0-l720. 1'n1, 1 ba , atriun1. $3i:1 nlf) CHATEAU LAPOINTE Huntington Beach NEW N£W -----Realonornil'.o Corp. 67~700 l'al'J>Pted & draped, DL-ti·I Li-a.>;('. 833-141 1 "~·r~. & 2 BR unt apt, grnd ill', all HARBOR GREENS 2 BR -Wa!illrr &. stove. Radian1 e SPACIOUS! 2 Br. l'Pl. wf'rkrnds LOVELY 2 BR apl ... Fu1'll & u!il pd, 11tv inrl. Pool. Gal'. • crpt~. drps, blt ini. 2 drps, Lncd yd, <;<Ir, t:hlld. l:nJurn. ShaJ; crp1 '=;. hld La Quinta Hermosa VILLA CORDOVA Adlts, 11() l)('IS. $165. i\1gl' GARDEN &:: STUDIO AP'l'S <'hilrlrl'n OK .. $135 per mo. heat, 2 C•r enclO!fed &iLraa:- SIG:J Laguna Beach pool. Carports. Aduhs, no 1 No. 9. 311:: \V. \Vilson. Ci\1. Bnch.1, 2. 3 BR'3• from $110. Tr11dt\\'ind!I. Rlly. 847-&511. l's. Overlooking golf couraej _ I w/ ocean view. . ALA Renl<1l~ e 64:i-J900 • VIE\\' HOi\lE * pets. 1"r'Om Sl~(} Spanish Country Estate Li\'· QU IET..sAFF: NE\VLY Ol"coratcd 2 BR 27oo Petenon W•y, C.~f. Lagune Beach 114 E. San Gabrir-1 ! e REALLY NICE! 2 Br, all LAGUNA BE1\CH 19-ll Poniona Avr. C.\T. ing &. Spacious Ap1s. Ter· 110 Unit Adult W/l'llrport, $120. Water pd.1 .=546-0: __ 1_70:.__ _______ ,1* LOVELY GARDEN AM'S bltns, cpt, k1ds/pels. $160 ·f Bdrn1 . ,to lam. rn1., rxrc. Beacon Bay raced poo!: sunken 1t<1.s BBQ Apartment Complex 219-1 B Placentia Ave. * REGENCY * ALA Rentals • &1.l-3900 4 Bdr111 . & fain. !'In ., t•:.;r1'. . Untwlieva ble Lt\'ini; . Onlv e I & 2 BORMS. 636-4120 2 Br, 1 Ba, crptg/drps, ieU QUIET 2 BR, 2 BA and 1 San ClPmentl' • 492-2455 • OC't'R!I rr l''i 1 / SINGLE 1 br fur11 apl_: A\'atl 1 Br uni $J.S().fu'rn 117-5 BR , OC'f'an view. 1 h!ock to Sljl}-Ne\\·ly d1•cor. 2 Br, ~ha:; 1 I\. rrpace, 11 w I I $1 L:A~ &·\\'ATER PAID ~Br,"• bit studio_ Nrwli• cleangasoven,enclc:ar,pa. bral.'h & lo11·n. Yl'ar lrase,,..,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. crpl!, ,;111·. ;~as lsldl". r•arp., bl.l-ln krrct~ lnc!. ~11~ooos~.r 6~~1~~ (J JllO. 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 Mo. to Mo. From $140 d~'Ol'atrd . tgP patio. i:ar tio11. ~-360:1. 311 \\'. Wil110n w1ntl'r rate~ ~·c11r-1'0Und. Westcliff Blue Beacon * 6~.S-0111 1 re(ri\gl!S1S'ia'N· 1'r.aE>0\IL3.illr~· "10· B lb p . 1 ALL UTIL ISCLUOED :.13:1:1 l:::lden Avr. Ci\J Sl6j mo. Adult~. 1383 Bllkrr. D•n• Poo-nt i\latu1·t' adults. 494-40'.Z!l day, I • HARD TO BEAT• 1 6 ,,..~ donus: .,uv tNt>&.r Bai•k Sa~ 1 :l4M17:1 t1r &1.6-8303 4!14.;\llJ9 P\'t' & \\'ktnd . .r rw • . . ' . ~' ._ I a oa en1nsu a s-1,, • , ...... ,,. QUIET SP ACIOU"N 2 r, I * 49-1..{1731 • J t d 'I rt DELUXE 1'1 It el du lt> --- ---br. 2 ha gal'dcn apt. Plush I \\lllktobch,k1dsokUl!ptl. ~ . 'lBR.ful'n.ap!.lblockfi'oni n.ie .1·annr snucr J.o:' Sl'r:\!;::1 .Ted\Voodhead LG'B ,, B td , ,spi-1' P )lo.. 'l RR. llf'Rr bearh. A1tul1s Sl:'.() I 'l LGE BR ~. 11 /11. rirp~. beach i\~·ail t1' June 2.irh. ~ours 11 you bring this 11.d 646-0032: :. r. ~ ,.. i u io apl. ~ BR, 1 ~ BA. P\'I fr nerd I P rt f i r r t' d . S 1 ;, .l m 0 . gold crpls, drp,., b!tnK, p11' ALA Rrn1;ils • 61:'>-J!)()(l rc!J'I;.!. ~IO\f'. $250 i~c._ulil. $30 i1 kl) 01· $11.;, Lhil pa1<.1. i1hen ~ou visit our models. "!!!l!!!l!!ji!i!!iijjiii!l•••I No J>('ts, fam1hl'Jonly. Priv. pat1>;1, l'pls, drps. blt1ns. Av11dablt Jun 1 ~~·n39 pa lro, chandelier In masltr, 26..'.: Grandv1l•11. 4!»-:tSIJ 6_~ ··:t;,q 4 bl ks s of Sau Diego Frwy I!!!! patio. 12J6 Joann Sr. Sl40 nl'wly painled. S'.?10 nio. ,. · ' -·· hath. Lots of on.site park'~ $\IO-Cozy CoH;ige, l\Cll'port I L N . I •...-.l. · on &a~h j blk \V Holt FAIRWAY • LGE 2 BR. upstalr~. ).Jru. 11938 Alc11Z11r. 496-:lJl!I Mes• Verde + l'Oli'd gar. All ~gl •ton 1 Hghts. n1Ct' yd. ,\1a1urr adlt, aguna igue R.a1es by \\'l'l'k on Ocran 10 16211 ' Park~id~ on Lane. \lerdr. locked gar .. SlSO No \\'alk lo Coco'~ I< West('litl Blue Beacon * 645-0111 NE\\' 4 Br, 2 Ba. dm area + Lovely Bachelors. J : BR 17141 8 ,7.,tt~l VILLA APTS. 2 Br 10"'er..Crpl~. l1rps. • 1 BR. new crpts. drps, Pla:ai. Adulls. S 1 S $ I 1 1 \l d p 1 lit 1 Pf"\11. :'i.'1i-R.WO. ~-~ slO\'P, gar. LM> S12:i. 24762 cl<ist'd gar, nr , h 0 P · g ~ IH2-0239. • \\'ALI\ tn Beach~ Laguna am rio1. frpl , rpts, drps. -a1 llE'IV~~:'·871go . l. I DLX uppel' l-Br. 2 Ba, nu LaPaz Avr . 2ll/.l97-:\i61 Aduh.~. no pell. S1'15/mo. ~==~===~=- '.! Br, rncl gar, avl yrly. ~pri~kl~1'.~. fr~C'~;J )aJ-d. ln1-• e ti1.1-' e -2 BH, 1'lraz1 & a!\L'a<;l .. ct'Pt~. ' shg crpt, drps, bltn5, SW9 E•at Bluff ~lll.l. QUIET. PRESTIGE APT. 816\ rnac. $::10_ 49:>-4 • .¥1. CLJ::AN barlwlor 11111 :S. !'ilrps drp~, bHn~. arr t'Olld, nJ l & .3 BR 1 I ~,---~~-~---2 BR, c111111, drps. b!tin.,. ALA nrntal• • s~:>-3!!00 1 1 BR. 2 BA. rrpl.\, drps. pa\-10 beach. SlOO & up 31:1 I:: .. ~<·hoots, ..;hop'::: k pa1·h J\1u, Private patio. pool · lndiv. >-"="~·-N_r_OCC.cc_·_:_,;_7-'_'5_I_. --1 Newport Beech \\'a!k to \Vt'slcl!fr Plaza. ---B t'-" Bl d GR~ 99-1· k N "0-1-" !;iundry fal' S170 -2 Br .. 2 B« Studio. a,. Sl6.}.Dh: 2 Bi· 1 Ba al! bl Ins I rd sto rage sparf' lor trailer a """ 1• . ,,,.., · ·1 o . n P"1,.., "" ;;a l" · NEWPORT BEACH EASTBLUFF Adi!.~. No J>PI~. SI....,, new cpl!!. chiJd/~1 ok. . 1 01 boat. 3 yr~ old. Xlnt 2 BR. .. incl. uul; furn. Yrilrly 1-BP... s\1•unn1u1:;: pool. :t Nu'c"t OA'd'"1'' Col. Airport '= crpt~. ~~rps, !patio, sar. 28.i Villi Gr•ned• Apts. mon1hly. 6"6-8372 &r 111 cond S2SO 1<fH21l l8<'. $22.l month Rlks In bra1 •h. Adults, No · u !s oii .v. Oglr-. ·"::::8-8.:::::30:::.· ----Fc>Ur ~rooms with baJcon. l·Bdrm. unf., UPl!ta!I'~ wilh 646-lj,10. Blue Beacon * 645-~ _ N B • Ag('n! ft7:'>-l!i42 * f"'I~, Sl3:, f){'r nionlh, :20122 Santa ~na Ave... E-SlDE 1 Bdrn1 quiet apt. le, above&: 1'ielow. Gracloui frple .. t:lll'Pl'led &· draped. I A~~-------- • NEEDS f'"A)f!LY! :z Br, I ewport each 360 Tr·ru!l'wind.~ Rrlllri· iur-R:,11 l\l.i;r. Mrs. !o.ach1_n1. Apr .:.·A P111't fu1·n. near Wrslcliff J bllns. & refl'lg, sis;;. pts., Unfurn. 370 L g a B h ·-lol' family with ebildi·l'n, . _ !ncd }rd. rn~·I i:.: a r' EX EC UT r V E h ti in,. Apt5. Furn. . .>16·621.> 11dult $120. l1&..)()J~. 642-8419, Jivlnr k qulet ..uo11ndinr - -'75-6050 '' Furn. or kid~/pe!~. $130. . ., I n\'l'rlookin).'.: coun1rv ('luh . .'1 Coste Mesa a un eec 1 Parlt-Like Surrounding NE\V-2-001411-Bllns. p81i(;°, Nrar Qlrona del r-.tar Jliah Cost• Me5• ALA Ren1als_~r~900 bdnn, 3'~ ba1h~ \\' i 1 h * SUNNY * Q Ur t: T J;: a ,. d r n a I' 1 QUJEt • IJELUXE p;•rage. Adulls, no pt"ts. School. Flreplace we! bar I ..... MllAllMUT ct .. llC. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $22a-Nicr l Br. lrg yard, tor Spanish entry. /\"ear !>l'hoob clo11n101vn. t BR. dro.'Or11101· :.2 & .l BR APTS 100-G t~. ~ls1 SI. ~S-2127. built.in kitcMn aPplianoes. * * * it kids & pctr.. & S!lflpping. 13.1:1 per 1110. *ACRES * h1rn1shf'd, ncean vir11, 1 blk Also rurn. Bachelor 3-BDRl\-I, 2 bath, nr shoppiog n; A~fIGOS WAY ~.2991 SEACLIFF l\fanor Apts. 2 I o,y, j •Io-g 1 so, eves, I * Motel Apt• * "-h . 8 d 1 E Puerto Meta Apta Bl e Beacon * 645-0111 • , '" <K·ar , nr"" 1'1)1,,, <l!'ps, Piv patios * Htd Pool!'. center & schools. Lrg ff'nced Cold\\'ell, Banker&: Co. r, cpts, rp1, b tn!, pool, * * * '* u 5·19-0161 . Ideal ho111r. J S!u,110 & I Bedrflluns !'a.111. .\[alurt! adlt~ Yl'ar Nr shop'& *Adult., only •='~'~"~·~IZ="'=c":=-'=m=o=.0":='-:..:.!7=<l::..., riranagln& Agenl 541-52!1 priv pa.lio, studio 1ype, 1 1 ~ NE\VPORT \VcsL Clean _3 BEAUT!t·ui. 4 bd rm i·usloni I L.O\V RATI:: . ..; li•a~r. S200 1110. ·1!H-40:t9 day. ,. Ba. Infant ok. 54S-:?682 152:; I Bedroom Apts. Br. Bltns 2 t·ar ~ar. Slj() I home Acluli~. reff'r 5300 mo 1 S:!j \Vri!.k·SlltO ,\l•i. 1'11-~l9 evl's &-11krnd.o. Martinique Apt5. 3 BR, 2 BA. s1 70 • NEW DELUXE • Placenlia. All'k about our .'\1o. on Y"lll'l). lea:.r rn{·. i:an1ener. ~t40-6761 01 lJaily ltatrl'< ,\~.1.I. r,00,-,-.,.-h:·I'-, -,1 /pi·1-,-11. 1i77 Sanra Ana Ave., C~I P~~~1;s; f:;}.1 ~~;r 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for le•se. Incl dlscoonl. $1~ I'. up Incl. UtiliUr1 At.so Caywood Rt>a!ty :~ 71·1 7.l.1-0393. 1..'0llPtl. \V 1U bt> e Color ·rv. A11·C(lnr l 11-;1111.,., CtoSf' 10 hr;i<"h, hus '.lh:r. Apt U.~ 646-:i."1'12 _ 1pac. master 1uhe, din rm I ~L~O~v=E~L~Y~B~A=Y~F~R=D~N~T~ 1 fUl'J" Pool & Recttation e IT'S A )!ESS::; 81·, ll'ICd l ~1101\n 11-4 sun. :l2IZ I e Pool. Pool T:i!•I( .~ ~hop'g. :-,;11rth r-nd.l \Vll.SON GARDt:N APTS. '! SHARP 2 BR $140 '1. dbl garage. auto door I l Br. From $3'S. ~l!a. Quiet ~nvironml!nl. ~d. frpl, kills & p!'IS. $110 .'\laJ)!aret Dr. e Sounrl~ t''1-jfl7!l BR linfurn. Ne\\')) di>c. lltd Pool. Adult'. no pe ts. O?(!ner avail, POOi k Rec. U street par ·nr. No Olil-1 I'll.AL Rrn1als • 6~:>-3900 "'ATERfRO:-:T:; Br 1 Ba ;r.:76 :>.:r111)1)n Ghd. N t B h I NP\\' l'ptsldrps Sp i1 i' 1-191:. Bay St. orfi41.9320 •rea. Furn/Unf. dren. no pets. • -*-3-BR-:-S-110 * I hnn1r, nc111y 1'Nlr1·. on sari· [ :.1R-!li:M ewpo~~----~1"011nd,, Adlls. · lll'.I ~t.~ -SP_A_C_IOus Bachelor. ulll pd • $26.i • NEWPORT TOWERS Al!l<l Garagf's For Rrnl I Fixer Up[l('t', k'.id~ J>"I~ ok. 1 d.\ ";11t·h. Sl.000 1110 ~EIV O\\'N!·.n.11111lr r CC EAN VIEW. Sl40/n10 ml f nu" 1 a i n Refrig t..· ~1ovr. $1 2:! nio. 865 Ainigos \Vay, 1"B • 642-1202 • 1959-1961 1'faple Ave. I Blur &aeon • &l:l-Oll! B1ll~'Undy Rltr ~2-1620 ~E\\! \~::_,\(j !~l~:':r_ FURN. YRL Y. \\'ny E (Harbor, lurn \\1, on Adu!!. !19.l Valenci•. No. J. J\lanag!d by COZY 2 bdrm unfurn, range, C.OSta i\lesa 1="7,::._'-:;"-~.-c,c---j \\'ESTCL!ff" area 4 IJI'. 2 • $130 UP .,. .. "'1' 't'l "~ t ""'-\Vd~----**STUNNING-Ji°r-:? br \\'n.LlA).1 \VALTERS CO. I blk lo beach, 1190 inc, ,...,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. :B~a_l_bo_a=P~e:on~i~n~•-u~la"':'""'.O'C"". 1 ba, 11/1\ l'pt, d~p,, blt1L~. GlANT I&: 2 Bl:::OROO\I' 1·'"'" -' '""'' y,,, •ot lll)· HOLIDAY PLAZA g•rden apt. 2 \\'etks frc•. -.-TOWNHOUSE-utililil!t, yt>arly. Av•il im· I , . . .. ~1;111·~. Lr·.: rrc r111. pal10 mediatl"l)'. ti73-1106 QUIET 1 hr. pvt patro,I OCEANFRONT-just built 3 ri,·o,!r, IJ~N1, _ ~r ~hop·.i;. Gtl1 i;eous, pa1k-hke M?ltin.,. fl '':00 -~1 ~,~1 DELUXE Spacious l bdrm Slii ** 64:>-5530 Deluxe 2 Br, :t~a Ba. bltns, -~=~==~=--•·amrd ••'>og•.-. bl lo•. I 1 110 6~&-211 Closed ''"'''s !or max· _i.:~ r ;:· ...'.1111 ~--1 20 --•-1 Q *TOWNHOUSE * = " st)·fantast1c bay • ocean I ·•-·' r . •.1. un urn. apt. SI . :stove, re-BACH. Ap1. partly furn., ... .,c. patio, enc car. u1el. w/v.•, soil 11·ater. Unfurn ' •irw. 3 Br, 2 B•. lam rn1, ~ BR &· fa111 , 2'·-· ha, """I. imun1 security, Quiet ~tl'ert . BACllELOr;. ;i pl, all rlr1·. frig. Mtd pool, Ampl!" park-,·"''· •lo•. -lr1·g. • •loop 675-5033 1 BR 2 B • C 21 1 1 1 1 I 0 1 ,~~, Adull~ no pe1s. 2020 s\11111 pool , "flt ! :::ar. I Olk 1 N 1 Id N t vr '' ~:::;=;...---~=~= · · a . .,. arpor1 .. S ;, $150. F'urn $160. All util 's, rmuo. sundeck, 1 s 'w l I'· , unc. M ·'r 111cl grrlnr, Fl Ucrion Ave IHa•·bor 10 ni·<'iHi . Sl·IO •110 ('l'd'•I n~~ 'o c 11 tl"n. o pc~. !Klfa . ::(}I 16th Pl11cr. I We'll help you sell! &12-5678 REALTOR ~-6966 incl .114 OglP St, 6f15-4120 bl1n~. dr·ps, ~·rpi~ .. \dH!f':.:. r>ool upkf'rp. l\l1', :HR..{IJ;,;J B~Y. then So. un1il. 2 hlk~, :ii.~-11.:1 . ~ ' . 1 l~.i Pomon~, CNI . Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn, 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 'A~p-,-.-U~n7fu_r_n-.---~3'S= sml fX'!, $jQ(l ·n1Q. Jsr Newport Heights So. of Newport Bl\'ri. 6<\:!. /;•1>--. P ~-2 STORY -'l Jar~E" BR. 1·\ ;.,--..,-.,,.-':""--..-.-.:,.,----:-..,----·o'----::--.,.----~-'---"'°'-.,...--- 6i:i·.'i031 81i!l0 ~,' .. 11 0 11 .flP 1',. 0''.'1. ·1'.11 ~a . All ~Jt.1n!I.. Cpl~. 1h·ps. Nawport S.•ch Newport Beach Newport 8t1ch Newport Beech 1BEAUT. n111d. 101\nhou.,r. 3 1h1ldrr11 01 f".:l.•. <!!OJ ,~ tr·pJ(• Pnva1r patio. Uli·i:r ---'---------'-"'~'-"''--'O.:.;..:;;'--'--____________ ;.... ______ _ ~~~~I Mar ! BR. ~,,,BA. Jrpl<. palm Unbelievably Beautiful Hi!11 .S• ,'l;.R fi1&.41i61 i;1v1n1111rn1: pool, rPCteatlon 2 BDft'IS, 11! ti11.1h• frpl,I Pool 2 Car i::u 1\U blln~. V.\J.O' I S!::Rl:.G111 dt>~ApL~ \\'t:ST<Ui··~· Urr1·r. 2Ri·1 rn1, laundry n11 , rnrlos•d carpr l,, di·.,IJ('~ p 11 t 1n, ('ilrp, rlrdf)f'" L'" s2i:·, \Jn /\dull 5 -no pC'T~ ~lowrr~ ~r11)y fi•'cor. Bill\ ap-c111·:11:r Ea~l~nle. C.!\I, ~arat::,.. \i• lh 10~ ,\1 •t'lil' '11 ·,z'.l-lil{) 01 b4;>-i>J l2 rvery\1hrrr . ;-tr<'~1 n1 /..· pllani·r•o;, root I 612-627·1 I '.149--0Ciil. Sauua. Sgls 1·2 Bdrrn. furn-· : , • · .' .... ; ~i:.i-s:;Ht, Anil !7'1--0.iG'i P\f'" r 1rs/11kf'ld• I \Vaterfa~I . Lo pool J·.rr:. ,F'.n1, -.-\\'!1\TFR l'~~T \' ,. • ---* $llQ * ,I 1'DR:'>(~::-ba !l1~1111k University Park Unfurn. froin SJ:l.l. S!::E JT: R;i.11 X~\\ ll'l~ :SCpt _ l Rr. 111 Ba. patio. bJ\nJ, S:;8j/111n. Ciill !I an1 In llOO!I, -------~ 1 2000 Par.;ons &12-8670 ABBE\ P,f~ALT) 6-l'l·.'l(JO 1·1·p1s, t11'PJt, A11k aboU! our 67.)...IJ.""1": a!1 Ii pn:. ti !l-&·1::~ \\'(' Jrrvr t::-:ruR~ISHED ~ -* SUS 'CASIT AS 2 BR rurn. apls. Pool. Ko ~1scou111 plan. 880 Ctnter ~BDJ!~~Z b111h .... .! rt,;r.x 1.··11 En l'<'ntal1' 1n 1h1lrlre11 or fll'1~. 2.13;i1._ Jtith S1., Co\1. 642-8310 frple~ .. l)flOI \"rl,\ l<'a•r Un1 1<'r 11~ P:1rk ,I.,; TurLle LI';, nicely furn Bachelor I;; SI, NB. 646-4664 SHARP bachrl<ir unit , clO!LI! ABBEY Rt:1\LTY 61l-::li-~l Rock .t· 11 uuld co1t~1df.'1' 11 a 1 Br. furn1sh£1d mode. \pt. Unfurr.. 365 10 OCC & UCI, $130 mo. RUSTIC___ pr1\·ilrl!c to help ,1 ou sOl\'e oprn dail). :\r11• 1'E"nlal ralcs 1nrl's refng Avail i\tay J your hou~n1;: need~. 2110 Nr11f10M Bl1·d. C,\I Gener•I :..i~Hl7111, 97:1 Villencia, Ap!. ~ BDP..'\T, '1. l,H ll'f'I, S:~tl tl!n 6»-2062 nr 2 1.~ i9li-li19 Cost• Mes• BA YCLIFF MOTEL VEN DOME No. 2. Jr no answer ~4427. 2 BR, 1': BA. ~harp, Cri>lll. drps, 1200 ~· ft. Ava il•blr 1Jn b'l'1rllil, ,;._,_ --'1~Pnhor 1.;11li:l'P 1 \' '· m.1id ~rr11c:r. l\l\I CUL TE :t BR. 2'~ R.\. l.11,111")' ('on· . ' A A APTS~ llol\. S16.l mo. ~1l:>-OTI8 97:\ lt•'N.lf'tl J••· llon11niun1 AU tilt tn~. CJ>t~. ADUl.T llnd V;:i.lrnf'111, Apr No, 2. ii no 11rps. Pa 110. ~ 1 .. i r i;il!'~gr _ _ hl' '.'ii"t __ }',\;>.ULY &>cuon an~"'rr, 11.1.1-4427 s iovr ,t· rrlr1;;. j !l(...19:)3 nr "SINCE J9~G'' • . F~'.-~ 1Nrl. lJ ~ 11 -Close to shopping, P•rk I Sll.'>-lmm11cu!11tl' 1 Br. c·pt, :)'!:r6411 l~I \\',.:>tr n1 Bnnk Bldg Dl·.LU~.~· ti.~i·hr\or ~: ·, hrl• Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba rh·J>ll, hl1ni1 incl rPfrii:. Qulr t "E\V 2 -,,. Bl Unh·er~il\' Park ,\pl, ~ ... 1 i1rrkl.v I.· 11p .Jo. S . I ti <-plP~ N1· •. ,_., No_,, " BR. ~ 1.•. ln.~. . I T A 'l !!'JS El • w1m poo pu ~reen " · r "3 • .. -• pa110, J::An1gr. ,\(!ult'. nl} Days 8:?3-0101 Nig hts ratr s. ''!'ni~ . vai · · * Fr111 Jndi~/lndry fac'l$ :\!gr. ~ La Salle Apt 1, prts. 160-G i::. 21~1 s t. Cani~•Hi-0.1,:oJ._____ 1845. Anaheim Ave. CM. :J.t9-3:;24 or ~m. 548-2121. I '1 BR '>! h .1 ~~-0 $25 per w eek & up COSTA t.IESA 642-2824 UNfURN 2 BR, 118:J, Dra- Bf.AUTlfUL ,,,.~II Vt'n:le I 4 BR: ~l~h :~1~~1,··;.;;,~, .... ] R.\Cll !·:LUH ~· I an maoc 2·~ty. l~. rm. w/trpl .. b ho ~" lo<m'l I ·rv .~ nillid ~rt\ :l\oill. B k B O·-rtook1'og 1roplc·' 1·•-pd '·. mr: '""" 'furtJe Hor': ••••• , ... ~·7·, ac ay ·~· ...., ,. ....... d I I I .00 1.~l \'whllUI, l' 11 ' ----'------' • !" 1n i:t' rn1, [M'.JO · • 3 OR, 2 balli,, .......... ~~i.,, -Mw1mm1nr pool patio, ·..., - 962-r ... 26 11 3 BR. 2 bath~. '"''''"·"'' T\r11~:11 i1u~~l'' -iilo • 2 1 ~R:. rpt~. drp~. b!tns, E. 18rh St, 494..{1209 u " '\ 1 (' f'O(I 'Hi. 1/ nlfl LRG 2 Rf: hou~r 111 i•ourt, I a\'a1l Aut J,1 ........ $IOO I'"' · ·• r"" ~.n rp.ri f'I ,...? ~ •. ,., AEAUTifUL 2 Rr t•· BR ' • t t :\! r • l ....... ,,.. • I . . ptll.1 10. iz~1·. mn1ri pr11·a1·~ "'"t••" • ' " ' ''1 --·--. Sru{IKI, Ntw crp!., I: Paint ~!40/nlO tH'.?-3-19:-i nr :Ui-$X i · · .. red h"1 I I ... '..:,,·,. ~·.;-,, "' Balboa Pen1nsul1 0111~ .. hltn~. c11rport. S\60 ,~'--~~~--,,-,---,.-•·,•fl' 1 1 !'''· OCLA~f'R.~-Spar 2 Hr. :0 1110 ;o;o pet1-l ch!ld ok. 998 • • l BR. ,.p!/drp<:, ~Al , 1 111 p~. All II. 11· t rl"l,11• hr . FIR, 'r!rr kitrh. siinrlrck. _!2_ Camino .').li)..-0\,i l nrcr-yd. Sls:i/nll'I No prig. R!::ALT\' I Rrll c onl~, no rirt~ 6~i-IOl ·I r,.w rll.rp!'~ t:ncl aarair I LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA. bltn1, :)4l\.J'I0:1. &U;.6ib'2 Alli; pin 'r(l.rl)'-S2i:1 nit1. Adult~. oo l i·rpl•. nr 'rhools . Un1\I P11..rk Cen!<'r lr'-'lnt ----,.1 6., 1,,., 2Br.Tu1<:nhoU11C,l '~ba .111• CallAnyhme 83:.\~~ I Bl1.lurn11 p!,aU11111 ~ fX't ~ 1 • .-. or 2ll . \\'a 1 hrrJrlryrr •v•il. tach gar. erpt & rl111s.Sl60 Purl) l;~r11~r /\rlultc, no :~y: .. 11;1 6t.).\<i96 -.fl :1. mo. Avail 6/1 540-£14 ·I Bdr, 2 Bath Culvf'rtl~i.i•. 1><'1' SI'(} )l11:r Nn. 9, :-,.~UP.AND llt'W DELUXE l Br, I 2 Bd1111 duple~. encl pauo, 3 BDR'.\1, 2 b11!h, nr shopptni;: Pool prlvi!Cgt'S, $27j /111u. _I\ Wl'"111· C \I 2 RA apts. 1600 block E.1 {llruge, adulfa only, $150. cen!er & scOool!. Lr;:: fcnf'td • • Call &1:'>-N:'li 1 I \\',\ 11 no111 -1 & 2 Bit 111.11 Ealbofl Bh'd: close to OCl'An I 216~A Chl\rl! Dr. 5411-8335 yurd. S2.i0 ptr mo. ::M>-7161 I'. \V !I IT E ELEP!li\!\TS'' I Ptiril. i·rr rrn. l[d 1"":.r.·n~ ur h.1;1 I yr lra~c. l11C:l 1 ~"~'~"'~l7',-'-'-' -"----~i 3 BR., 2 811., f"Anl. Rm. av<"rn1nn1n~ }•1\lr nou~" "'"_:!ld~n nr prll'. r,u, ''· 1, 0 /.1\'. rlrp-.. 11!"1 &_? M"fl!. :: Rn, hltn~. pal1fl. ~undeck, Con1111 PO(ll, t•h\l!h't'n 0."·[ "Cash" .!!ieli U.~m Utt~ Sill irlle ·Ut•11s rw.;1•.t Call i fi,1~11111 dll~$, 6i:)..02;,., e1C$ 1 'I~·, \·o P"IJ:. ~:J Pluml'r ~r\\', R1\., $29:'J. 612-0.100. D:dly Pilot Oa.ulfied I lil:Z..5C78 No1\! lnr HJlpt SI r )l. <21:~· 5..it-00:52 . 1' -mamer square apa1 bnents ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS FOR ADULTS DESIRING TO LIVE AMIDST BEAUTY BY THE SEA IN THE PRESTIGIOUS WESTct.IF"F AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH •••••••• FROM $230 For lnform1llon telephone Mr. Robert M. Buckley, Manager al (714) 845-0252 or write to Th• Office Of The M1n1ger, M1rlner Square Ap1rtmen11, 1244 Irvin• Awenue, Newport S.ech, C111fornl1 12664 __ f ' ;j.f DAILY PILOT Frldl 7, M•y 14, lfi1 i I )liiil l·-~-~-~-,1 ~~~1 ~~='1~~= J l!J,~--·-_ ..... _ ... ~ ........... ,.i ••• ,,. ~1 1 ·~"'' I ~ ~' _.,,_ ... ___,)~ [ -l~ Apts., Apt1., Furn. or Unfum. 37D Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Newport S.•ch Newport Beach FROM $135* Olympic i ii a pool-8illi•rch-S•un a ,-T t l'lnil pro ,.,,op-Color TV loung•-H••lth Club~­ ll'ldoor golf driYin9 r•l'l91-P•rty Room-Full tim • Act i ... iti•' Oir 1clor. BE:\ll'fJJ-'l1L :\P:\J{T\fl::~"J'S. Single.;., 1 & :;! Bcd roon1 s. furnished or unfurnished . RI::.\SON.'\BLJ-~ RE:'\T " · S1ne:l e~ fron1 t:l.i. l Bedroorn~ fron1 Sl-15. :2 Bedrooins froin S:WO. LO\\" 1110\'e Ul charges. No lrase re4 'd. Models Open Daily 10 i1m to I pm SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Apar1:11rn1s 1J..i>1 lcu ~ln~lt 1.ro1,le 1 JJ\11\P k il11fl 71 4: 645-0SSO .\pR1tn1rnls • L "'orr li\"1nr: fnr "'":Ir St marri~d 1dult•I )lllh lit11n fn1n" k Do\Cr 714 : 642-81 70 Apts., I Rooms 400 Office Rental 440 Announcements $00 Furn. or Unfurn. 310 _,..=.,...=-----1 ---------1 ________ .;.:.: When You Want it done right .•. ----------I i::,\IPLO\'ED gtnt Pl'f'f'd Pvt I DELUXE PROr SUfTE}i ldtal Beauty Shop 64.6-3621 r nrr11nc-.. &: ba1h, no ~n1ok-17617 Btarh Blvd. H 8 ~n 6 day• a ~·~k ---·----· .__.......... rr~. :l.1~7197, tii?t--0310 Pltnt1 lul pkns. AIC, Jan., t:venincs by ApPQintmenl BAY MEADOW APTS. Guest Hom• 415 n1us1c, nf'1\·carpel" pa.1nV drpB :25 ro 900 1Q. t1. Suite :oiJo:~ll·PRIVATE morn 1u 8 Ph. ~7-1511 .. .,,..i[ Pwtonalt !!') 1i~:r11~Ni gue.;i;1 hom;o lor DESK spaCT available ..,., . . 1•1drrl) 11mbula1or.\ l"'d}. 1no. \\'Ill provide furnlturel ~;;;;;;;;::~~I .. t.00..1 rood. l"01111:rn1al al· 111 $.i n10. An~avering Rrvlce l1 r11n~phrrr. lgr rarrl k p11rM1 ava'.!ablc. 1Z2 Forl!!st Ave P•r&onal& .530 B1'.u•1 ,-,·1!111i;:~. P••l\('hns::. 11n1 fHl llP'. !VlTf'lilllll\ l"l'lilllC~ -\II aduh~. 1'1(1 11t.·!~. ..-f;.u·hr!llr 11p1 ll'on1 S1IO Call one of the experts listed below!! • :! RI~ front t lb.·, * • I Bcdru()rn • • 1 Hi den. ""' bar. :! B.1 :.~7 \I Ba} :'1 ltlt11n H.l rbn•· f..· \r11por1 Bhd, '• rnl. ·' iJ! !!tlh ~It . C.\IJ. lilli-OtJ'i', ~~~'.l:i!l::111"1•a , S :! :i 0 I n1 o, Lairuna Brach 4!»-9466 ' -;-;;J°LLY LICE:-ISEO * - -D~'F'ICE SUITES R<'no1vned Hindu Splrituah~t * PRIVATE-ROOM 2·i0-.-oo", h1rn, \ln1 lol', on Ad\•icr on aU matter:1. '/~!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!~~'!'!!'! ~~~~~~~~~~! ·~~~~~~~~~~~! fnr f'ld1'1I> lad) Bl'igh1 • COii.bi li"''Y nr Oo1·r r Love .• \larriaft, Bu1ines.s )~1 1: •--•••n<•-· )~/;[ )~ 1·ht'.'rr> i:ar<!rn ~urrounduu:.'. i;.i:.-2182 Rrad ingK gi\'en 7 da)'s a Swvk-. and Repaira -·--.---Str¥ic91 •nd l\lilllirl • :\"u!nllOUS m "II J $, Call I EXEC ores Furn. fully "'"ek. 10 a.m. IO JO p.rn. . RP. 111~11 I. rrl. 11du lr n11. ·.. " s.a Cl •••••••••••II .\1.~-~7-,3 I -oiii for ~ub-!e-asr l"On 312 N. El Camino Real, I 1 11 \IOOfino '\lin I Ar lur11• THE (.;.,Jl!'11101·,. t:ur,.1 llunlf' thly .'ic( y ~rr1 If'"' 11va1l 11, enlenlf'. l•bytltting I G d I I ha~ 11 01 1 1111 avl 101 ,1, •. Call \I! Da\id, lii:;......!~ll ___ 492·91~. -492.0016 __ , •r •n ng 1 Plaster, Patch, Repair 111• IJl'I~ $110/rno, 971-R II ' ---COS I i;rh ,..:· ·.i~-fi9:).! huhllnf.\ ~u,.si, :>-lO-:!:J02.I O..:t.lJXE""""Ottie;-111--coro~ SINGLE? WIDOWED? TA MESA AL'S Landscapin;. Trel' • PATCH PLAS'TERJNG e :-.\rTHACTl\'E ~h:rh~J Gl~-'l.-:i:i Ucl \Jar 11ear Po~1 olllet". *Divorc ed Over 21* PRE-SCHOOL removal Yard rrmodr.hng. All typt-1. Fl'l"t ~sflmate1 PRJ\'--1·n;--, St!:1/;1~··;:-mp-1·. Snack Shop, Priv. parkin,. Oldt~t l: 111.tgcsL l'or a K'lt Sprcior.l Summer Pl'O,fram Truh haulini . 101 cleanup. Call 50-W."I l'i•fl', h;l, "•P l/drro~. ...... l8h l: :\! bliui~. Sl:l.I unJui·n . filt-.i."•i u1d111dut;I ~·.•1r ,..:p~···qUif'I· $100 mo. Bkr 67."HiOO e"planiil.oty mt!~sagr 24 hrl 1 · onrovla. 1 ~ day + Repair ~pr1nldr.r11. 673-1166 I Pl bing Huntington Baac~ 1·•1111lor'ablr ~ n1('al~ a day XE\V office. gnid fir ..... 11 • _., day . .H1.m1 ~~ia~ '::81•~n.~ ..;11~Md 1 EXPl-.R. Japanc~e-Amet1c.in __ •_m ________ _ plan :'\urst> on rall 89J-4 197 1..-ond ., only J60. 16.)2.A r\e11'-TRIO w.1lh aingtr a vailablf' ''-'i hrs, 6 30 ~~I~· ~~1 :ardener, complc~ garden-LE\V Taka.! k Son's Plum- ' v ;-cition Ranta ls 425 po11 Blvd, 0 1 &ll-2811. e\ '$ for dancrs. parlltS, tf'Ccp-Su· wk.CO:\fi.Aru:' ~2-40-' 1ng ~Cf"\.'1« " cleanup I bing Repa ir R: e .PI p " ON BEACH I Ml-.J106. tions. Pop, jau, li1hl 1vc:k . or S3S-S'1"7 I JO j 893---01,")() RPmndt.I )"'ree 1-.;JtU'ftltea • • I BEAt;TJFt;L 4 BP. hou....-nr J NEWPORT BEAC-H &l&-2290___ -, ..., . I LA\~ care k 11rdt>n ll'Ork I fi.16-8340 L111Je Corona. .!U!) k or $!"'< 10 Sls.·, ALCOHOLICS .o\non)·mou.~. \ ACATTON ~lothr.r -11 1J) Ltgh! hii uling. Exp · d . LL\Y Takas I.· Son's Plu.mb- A ' A ;\[\\' 2 BP.. APTS .\u' Sl~JOO. n10. •7·· n·,.·•.-1 u; taJ.:e r11.1T of h ld I P s., pt1., t-·mni S:.!.'.XI __ .....,__ • 67. 1601 * Phone :>42-7217 or "THI' ~cur c 1 rt'n in Rta~nblf'. Call ~>-1::-!lil:i 1n~ Repa11. Rt'pli>f', Remo. Fur n. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I F\i•iiilW"• Ai·arl•bl• Rentals to Share 430 ----~ -·-----P.O. Bo.\ 1223 0>s1a :\ltsa. l.our homt 11 hllf' }OU vac11-JAPA:\ESt: Garden 1 n & drl. frf'I' e!I. 646-8310 1------------------------, l.';60 ~ }l -OflJCt' or store ----tlon. Rl'hablt, 1':1.c l'llrn t • . -----1 Newport Beach Newport Beach CarpetJ·drapes-dt5h1111shcr OLDJo:R 11ork1n;: n111 n 11111 r!cason;iblc. Coslw ~lcp: Social Clubs S3~ ref.•. 0\111 t·ar. ,}l&-3989. ~rvrct: i\"cai "ork. Cleaoup COLE PLUMBING Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY •nd '2 Bedr ooms Furnished and Unfurnished Adult Living * Dish \vasher * St o\'e and Rcfrigl'rato r * Shag Carpet1n1: 14 exciting rnlor5) * Sound Proofed * Billiard Tables * Pool * Large Re crea tio n ('enter RENT STARTS S 155 • Vista Del Mesa ~ ' Apartments "' Tustin & Mes• Oriv e ® 545-4855 .Apts., Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn . or Unfurn. 370 Huntington Beach Are you ready fora 11 -t change?•· --- hca1eQ pool.saunu·11'nn1s •har" ll('aut1ful :; Rn homr. J\1r Popt-6~· 2820 :J45--!!187 Aller ti P\I ~d. ma rnl 968-230·1 J '.!! tlr Sr.r\'ict rrc i"OOm-ocean \•itws I . .i--TH E: Intimate Groop of ---. --CL.1-.:AN l! SpeclaT""lh-J ., 61" 1161 • I 1:ar111:r. 81 "'lra~ ! n -1:'\'DIVIDUAl, Or~I CJ::S Con1em po1·111·y Co u p r f s . TEEKAGER dr.s1rr! babyKi1· ~d .Pb, 1~' iU&I '~ patios.ample park:inc :'\"r11 pon Rc i:.t·h 11 11h s11n1r :'\rw lr\·lnr Indus!. l'Ompi<'X . Parrlr.<1 J<·r·r, Sa!. N 0 n ti ng in Collt.2:<' Park arf;a ,' ~g ~o :· ~~g:;e_nce SB HOUR Srcurity guards. Pn1;11r GIH'r!rn. 1'1'.1101• T\", Top lo!·. S33-:l.J-1:l anylllllf' nirmbrrll Of.\. ~ ~ i-6 • :l ~ \,\.'~kerw1.<1 onl y , Call iepair. ea.. J I Plumblni:/electrical repalr HUNTINGTON ~1<tde11cr. Sll:i. 11u1. Call -~2500 ., ., "· 7>1&-7817 J im's La1vn Cut11ns; and 64:!-27;;J 642-1403 .)lS-827:? :i;oo NM1lx>M.Blvd:-:\:s-F · Call PACIFIC On the Ra .v $65 n10. Ch1Jd (·a~·r 1n my f' ~di;ing . p for ~r~~9 -ptt::-i:SI:'\'G REPAIR ill OCE.\:'\" AVE .. !LB. 171 4) l16-1487 Ole oprn 10 am-6 pm Da il) \rlLLJ.4.:\1 \\'.'i LTERS CO. B.\C1tEu.ir{-IO-~hlln>-O , •• '''' · 11 ·"" largf' tlea.n homt C .\I ~mart. llone 64 -l6 3 No ,.. b Jon •mall ht!nn. ··on1ril furn 11/ <'0101 OfFIC~;-::,p;,'.";-ror rtn! Til Loil artd Found 646-5i'l7 Cut I< Edge Lawn • 642-3128 e 1;1-~ or J-•. ..,:::2 I[ ][SJ T\". lrpl On ~anrt Call John Build :\laintenanrr., Lic'd, lntured R f I ~·uurrlnn ~:, 8 _ 1 000 or \\'. l!lth :-;1, C.\I Oprn IKnJ~e l •ti :>'S-4808 aft~. 00 1ng .. ~-~1~~ ~I ,, Sun 10 A:\1-4 P:\1 ' ~O Job Too Small! Bnck, e JAP.4.:\ESE GARDE:'\"ER e LF.E Roofln:: Co. Rooflnr of 9-Rf:ACll ;ip1 Poo~~a una., Business Rental 44; Found lfrM ads ) 550 block. con.crl!te. carpentry, :\lain1cn<1ntt, t·leanup 11!1 t)·pe~. Rrcol'fr, r!pair1. 1"11 "1~ l:U-11 rt~ ~ ;r;,,tl ~'u· STORE or offii·r ror lPa:-iP. r.EDDrSJI bro\i·n P u P P ) add • rn1, ho.u~ lt l'elin;, I HB t-V C:\I a.rea * J.t2-S442 !her-mo r;of ooat1n1s. wh itt r1rnr "'1 ~har l' 2 RR 11 / l.''.::'O sq f1 Harbor Rl1·r1 Rllode-s1an rt dhound 11·ilh i;i:~r. door repa~n. Free e~I. JOH1\'SON'S--CARDENING ~-. '~,,l~r·,~_L,ic/bond~ I.Iner n•:1lr n· lf'malr. 11.·.a. l";,11 \\oodl' 962~!HJ I ., ~ ••· "hri•rr. j:'.f...i9.M fron1agr Aor t'(lnri. 1Tptrl. nea collar \·ir, Cd:\1 Dr · · · Yard 1·art. c·ltall-Up!, plan-. ---· !'al! 6·11.llOtiCJ cla.~~: LI Srockton 613-1060 Carpet Service 1inJ:, ~pri nklr.r.1. 962-~. T Guy P.oohn;:, Deal 01l'ect rtF:.;PO.' .. 1ou11i gal~i~ti"~ ~'.b;!l!l r1·r~ ------------I r do my 011·n Y.'Ork. 6-ll--2780 !'6::-~ '" shart , harm111i;: 9,,11'1,J,. -----lfo"Ol:i\"D btk & 1\hl, appro.....: :i CARPET ~hampoo1n::. rtry .lipa~5,. Garclrnrr ::1'1S-9j90 ' 1 Rioo'•lo. rrniu REACH ' 1,1 honie 111 • 1 m,. i\PT + lri;: lot ? 1<tri:f 1110 old rrn1 kitlrn V1 r: off roam. R.r.!id. comm'I 11111. E.\p'd. Yard \\ork . S . /A-l"t---c .. ~---1 hui'111r-• arPil .\lij/n1n or :l'Jril s1 L:p""'r Back aa,. d.,,., , 11001., 1. · _r i ..... n-ur. Plant1n:: &!6-061' I awing ara11ons Ar. f11rnfunl•tr•• fro111 ti;'; • .!JR,". I ·i ·11 , Bl " C\I • "' "' · rer fsl <1 2 t.. ;; BDR.\I..; SliO L"P Pano. f""<OI t•11 :1 nrr r \IORA K \I .\PT• ·,~,1 \\ora K~i Ln ·~ h,.; ••I Rfo~rh 11\ (;;u11t l<I :t I ..... , .. ,,.. -·"-·""port ""· · ·( "4&-71ill 962--0iiit CO:\IPLETE: lawn l: EUROPEAN Sl::.:,111 ·" Pi1 ~,,.. ., \I \Tl"P.E 111>m;in-;-11! ~tlarf t ~•18--0lll! . -----1 ..J ~ D1'91Sma.lnnr . ----' , -------110 Sprrd blkf rounrl • · • I J:il•uenini; ser'\"i('r. I Ex~rtly Cu~tom Fitted, Laguna Be•ch ~ F>r/2 Ba lul l_> rum Park SHOI\ ROO~l . mf;. " offrl_',.. PonJOn a ln C.:\I. Own:~ ~EEP Stran1 C11rpet Clean· Jim 543--040.., Ai;cur. Fl.ta!. 673-1849 ::'\c111J')l·1 J\pll' Rrf~ 1·e-l'p1t1c·f' Pai·kill::: Clo~f'·ln . -~ 111i . Reha . !'st.ab. hmi. 8'a! I . 1 -.'7"-c.~--~,.;..=~ ,\F:I\' lu\11nou~ °'""1r>frnn1 '1U:rPd 6\1-~12. Laguna. ~s:,..s::~:i .~•lo . 1dcnt1f.)'. 6.J&.8:.l.}I prier~. Recor C a rp e l Lo\\Y,.,. .\!a1nt . Haulini_. ~w l ~ltarations-'42-5&45 apl •. 2 bt1n11 l '.! I .11•)\• 1-IJf 2-Rooni~iia. ,.< 11,.,.r1,..d JIJ 494-40:;::. FOUND: Pid,eon, ...,.rtn Z. ~:vicl'~. :l.~1 ~4~0 1~11'!1.~. tl!lln-~1p, ~ pruruni:. Neat. arcurate, 20 fe\l'.J'iext'. ·r1r1arnr /1·rn!at<'• Fl'Ll. ,., tree ,.st Call a46-379 SEC l ' f\ 1 T f. \'!LI. ·\ •i1;:rri La11:un.t Bra,·h hou.~"· c0 RO:'\'A dr1-:\i~C'ruut pu1·pJ1! nfrk. hro11·n body, Diamond C~rpr.t Cll':aninr · ' Tile P'i 11\4-~.~1!1 1111 1 • 1:ioo •q fl , 111ai! ~,11011 "'.1"~ Plta.:lr call&.· A\·g size 1'00m SS General Servic•• """"'--o--------1 P.Al.':\"\ -~o Cl.f l Di ~ -., II ·---406' P. . • . II . CE RAi\llC Ille l'!t " Ir l.1<11'iHla Rr;i rh l O\!Pl. furn 2 RR, 2 RA ' no" Ai:r.n1 ti73-6.lJO 1 rnt Y .l.H J .1:pa1nn1 ln1ta anon~ llu~b;wd Busy": Ca.II )Joos• I R h -------Fr L' 1 ''' 131-remodel. ri·•t ... ~!. Sm.all .-:!~Rr. rlupl~\·01 rA ~11U llr•·k. 'h'2 • pi~ ,101 ii" .(· rr r $11 !! 216 F~lr'\ ,,. I ~-01 l'i l I: 1. BP. At,• ~1;·._\JHI Orr-Rn 1 '"". 100 Iliff Or11<' ,.\p1~ Ph 4111. "iO.".' ---- Si1nt• An• VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 11 P1• .;1i:11n.i r1<1· . Stl rno. lndustrial-Rtnt;f--,5-0 t-·ouND 11h1 poodlt ,1 .. : e~ r.! · · · · ' :;-1:.-0820 af1~r 6·P.epa1r \'e ~ '0 .,1 , ·o~ .. .joh~ "''tlt.'Omf'. ,:..16.-20&. ........ ~. _,..,,,,. 1\or!f'. nr San1;, lsabt'JL C•rpenter Su1ld·.:k'rv ;\Jo~! Thint~ - :O:l!.\P.E \ly 11a1rrlroni 110111 ... i .)()() ~~11 • ii.II pci11tr, hC'at. Call ir!Pnt1 ly 6%--0487 -----------Tree Servrca t h ' · & CARPENTRY * LABOR t:NU~fITED * II I rlo1 k \J11n 10-60 ~<'ai < rg 1~· parll!~~n~ floor.~ BRN &. 1\h( pup. vie; 16th Pl J·!ANOY:'\fAN TRE:ES, Hrd1es, Top. Trim, ~1 ·.011110 _67.1--4:!.~J __ ~n~~h~1!11 ~-~710 ~lonrovia, t,, Serna Ano Al'~. 1626 S..1r :\IINOR REPAlP.5 No .Job \\'Pldin,c: _ Carponll')' Si.J..l~:':! I r;ut, remo,·ed. hauled. l ns. Garages for Rent 435 ' --~ --la Ana Air Too Small. Cabinet in rar· °HWling I 6-12-4030 Bi.t John 630 SQ. FT. BLOG. )o'QU;-o;D ,1111 1;--;:ai:-gr;y--k qe5 k o 1 h r r c~blnt~. LIARAG F: l~'l!I, ,.1or11~r nn. E.,,, 17111 s1.. Co.~1 .. \lr~a ii·hi!r ~tlil>f'! I 011 11 ti 1 i r 5(5...!1173 If 110 1ns"·er h~ave YARD Jll'aJe, Pleanu GEXERAL tree strv .• yard fl <Jrane: .. Al'P !.· ~·1011·rr :'L ,~ El-. ll'l"•l Po••i· m•&· ,, ""2312. 11 o. R · ps. rlcanup. All around han-. ..., ...... :. • 11 /L"-Oilar. :;.t~)::J ...... emove rrtt~. d1r1. hJ•, dyman. Re•s ,,.,,. ::••i ( \T ~:~-) 1no 'i.!S-·,:z:r. $110 \lo111h fi1 .J..6100 Brokrr PARA KE~--;--., h • .~nderson. I •k1ploi der, bilck h 0 e . -.""'-~. ___ ._-c.:cc-.:.;;:..... __ f _,, _ ___ r.• llC'. ar ---96'1-874· 1T t l.;iri:t '.!;' '< 11' i:ar>l::e l:'\DLSTRIAL Unit 01· ofhr·r \·ork1o11n, H.8 962-78!1& A~ iz )Ob. R.f'sid., Comm'I, j -.J u oring "'Or<tl!" flnll \';!;, 1110 1,•1 .-1u.rhu4 _ i ·.() '.\. ~'i.'h St., 1 Al~hans /ound-iflVir. C~I~ lndtL•., Apt5. Rt as. F'rpr e~t. , TRASll t.· Garage i·ltan-up, I :S:P'•"~OIOSH,-.~L-• .,.--,,.-.-G-,..,,-.-.·,1 "· '"'P1 .(· ~·a 11"1·1r11 Ml./19ti · H 11t&-l1'2 I or .•12-,t;~\ l)l~-:i06J _962·1~ 7 dil).'I. $10_ • r_oarl. i'·iee es~.I Pnv&tl'. Very 101•• ratei. It '2 Bdrm . .Apt1. Off R I A Adult Living i ce R ent i1T 440 entals Wanted 460 Lt SSS Cement, Concr ete ~yumf .)43-5031 Con1ac1 Julio &.1."r--41!!'!1 F & U I r -,, T''"f. -os ., II :'\lOVUl"G, Gir;ii;e cle an-up , Upholstery urn. n urn. "t·"·•ll~ ... Rldz~!J'a "· A "". 11nn11111 ur1:~n1h 1., "E'\\ARD 1 11 • :sAVE Tl:\IE l· '10:\"E\'' &, lite h I .. bl I D I h I -" -, 1.,. I <l!'~iir 1 B 1 . 1 · 1 ·"' '" ~ or i>rna · · au !11£. r'.ea~ona e. ,,-----------1 is 1"a~ tr· C'OOr C'OOui :,.Jll'. '· -'1 -~1 'l<'I. !'! r ap nr 'tur 101 hlari.. k&· 11h11 ~ hall) ft inalf' Ha\'f' II pum ptd -1n)1~tifrf. frtt rit1n1ii\C! 84~1602 VI1\"YL 1~·tldtnt:-Cuts bums erl 1pphanffJ, plu th sha;: • ·<:; :· -Sib() ITlfJ. qJn1pJ. ~· r11rC'ly ru111 fol' rlOlj. Has lilg•. tii::-i!l!lt or/ an)timf'. Calvtrt's Concrttr l H I . · I rea111. Cu!!Om d)'l!L~I fa.Ii ca~t . C'hoil'I' ol 2 ro.<>t ~ r ...... rp•.:. <!rp~. plPnl\ .lunr \\ 1~h 10 !'C'I01.;ait l.; tii&-9 __ 4 :-.,· • Pumping .. ~>48·8426 I OUllC e1n1n9 f'Olor~• 6.f9-Z237 1 bile llrllemti. 2 bat~. 1ia1! ~··~r:: '\.Jr11 l<X·wl!•ir: hu.v hf'l1nt "/ 1·t 111111 \\"ntt ( -~~ •. '0 QUfJ ll On i , 838 ~942 mo 1 iholl'er, . miri·nred iiard· ..• ~ ·:•It .:1 r· \l Pt-:T t: \l P,P1t., iO'J ~:•t·aloii;i, IMk~rl . Q~ALm l:tmr_n'. 11·ork. lr t Say k .Brach J11.niro!'i1l : -,, ·coc-;;,-,.,--, robe dOl'lrs . lnchrrrt ll.c.hT-R.\P.P.f.Tr n Jo: i\ LT y . f'a pilol~. C.<\ g;;o10. Ph. OJSAPPEAP.1'.:D fr1 1non1. ?~or~'. do 1!. Lied. Bonded. 1 C1·pr~. 111ndo" s. floors e1c. 1 LJC. furn. Uph. Rt ed k -.~:-::·.,. 110~1 10.-.-;011 Lido J~lf'. Jgr 9 ~r old !!till·. 64.,..169.i _ _Re~. k Co1nn1'L 64&-J.Wl cant 11ork. Anthony'.<1 Uph. Ing In kilC'hcn . br~akf1~r Se ~ B 4 bar • hur.ie pri,.111e frnred B~:.,l T1~·t ·1:-:1 rr.rini--nffi~<" ;:-nr-4-BR -ho;;;-h-;--.17;;,,. po1n1 Si11111~!1".11J rrrr.d malr. CE:\:If:'\"T \\'ORK. no Joh roo ~Icsa dtanln;:: Servi~ .~· • · · 6 2-~27 pn tto • plush landsrapint •t11·r •1/kiti•hPnrtrr. lrlr:1J 1·,1 11. I .11· lriisl", s:h:1 p-rr , ti7.1-2~81, r.,-...·ard I sm11 L .l'f.i.:«>n~blr ._. t· r_," I C.U-P!'1s. \\'lndo1,·s .. 1'1_oor1 e1c. DIAL direct 642-5618. CharJe brick Bar-e.Q·,. lar,e ht'al-lnr St r,·!111 "1·1. 111~11 r a 11 ,. ~ 1110 f'rrfr r i-:n~ir.:n .11· 111 LOST. b1·011·11 ii 11h1te •mall E:~tim . 11· :stutlick. :i48-!!61~. -~ Commc I. :i48-41Il I Your ad, lhtn •It N.ek and 1110. summtr w1!1 bfl h•1e soon. wl'ly not live 11 tl'le btach, and enjoy ,our putting green. gym, voltty ball court. lwo 1wimmlng pools. aeuna betl'ls. bll - ll•rd roomandclubhouH, For 1 relailng retreal. you have your choic1 or one 01 lwo b•drooms, lur• nished i nd un!urnl~lled, •1cn wlrn Its own pfi.,.a1e patio, llrepl1ce 1n two bedroom , elevato1~. dl1h- wa1nars. carpet• •nd d1Bpe$, Ind l tl 11tlltlt'I •r• p11 ld eice p! llgllts. f11nta1Uc -111 tn:im fu•t J145. cd pools !· J11na i. ~.c:r111. H'ii !lor, rl(· On ill1"~ .. Call l"-OJICrl, 21::: I dog_ 11·/ rrd !!ta t'O!lar. An.•.j PATIOS, "'alkll, drive . in· DEOJCAT[D CLEAKING lbrtn t~ tht pho/'lt nnc! 3l01 So. Bristol St. '1011101 1,. ,..;1 in :>: R .dl-L.!'ll 10 sta~her. 1fl6.l·A ,\1tyl'r Pt. 1 stall ne11· 11""""· s1-...-. b1·t11J.:, I \\'r do l'l'er,.1hinc. ftte i Traders Paradise column ii 1 1 f!i ~II. N. or So. r nast Plaza! s~:..01 \~.00 f""r mo f.l.'..-OilO. e LEAV!!"G--rO,-:'\Um~ r '.I Rf11 a1'd rrmol't . ~l't&-8668 for e.\I fStilna re. Call Si.l-<1072 for you: :; Linea. !I Days ~r S•ntil A na ·' ~:\\'-\\'f;"1f rfron1 -OlhC'r,- 1 Rr11pon . 11ni:lr learht r "111 1CL:P.i~Y~l-;rl-G old , n • • CO~CRETE._ Floor~. I Paint int &. .S:,. Call today. · .i-12.-$71. PHONE: 557-1'200 ST.> to J~:t.> \lonth "a1·r rr,r l'tnll~f k prl' I RPfT •tl'fr, 11c. Lai: BC'h patio•. rln1·f •. 1dt11·alk~. 1 Paperhanging Al•'•~ Thr l•land;or :~0-.~11:.!J! h1ah ,er.on!. P. ~"' •r d . ~labs P."a.~. Don 642·8:>14 1 11 ~11 Ha.1 •1dr Dr, 1'\ p; &-a•·h J RP. -u~~.;--01.-apl 4!M--.\~:a Cl'.STO!ll CON'CRfu-BAP.:'\ElT pi1n1ing; 1pec!al kilt i;nirn!~ lt!r r i:i12-l6JO 11a1111'rl 1n Sr11por! llarhnr Rf:\\'ARD. Tur~,;-par~· P.'iTTO-DRJVES.EiC'. otrer. •lucct1 eai·r~ la bor DESK-.<p;ii•• ava1l:1b!, -,.-1() !hi:h :'l·h! <h.~1ru:! SJ.ii) n10.1 kl'CI . \'Jc Jl rgh Dr. Laguna.] _ _'"l"l!e es1. ~1-i!N. ,i,l.,\il& mil reri11l. sin.rl' s1l:1. 11\~ 1 "ent1l1 111n \\'ill rirn\'\dr furnirurr l.nral rrl• ti16--l,Jf; , ~~l-1'16.1. 494-:121_:!,_u~~'!..a_IC~ild Care ~:~1}.· 1~~~~~ou,.~·~~~,'"' A1k lor Comn'l~nde r Aatti~g. Mtnager (714)962~3 1'1 s·, 1111'1. ""~ll't"rin.i; ~rrvirP \1/lJDI ,. "" 1 I POO ............... Ol' , . ~~ :: r 11 r n1 11 n1 * \\'HITE TOY OLE !lbl;-.~:1::6 ~\.lllllhlr li~i.i SC'<trh Bh·rl. 11~n1~ 1(lll111 01 hat'hf'lor 1pl ln~l \\'itsorr ll!f'<1, C .\I. CHILD Car·• 1n homt nl ---'---·------~nltn;:~n Rrnt·h. 6~2-1321 in("d\1 Plrd•'"•d!ltii:t-281.l. rt<""ll rd 6l2-228_. rorm~r ~tu·~f'ry ~r l'Lonl PRO~~. pa1nt1n;. t:).\t ~ 1 t-·r:r..:-,;!hlll::D 1!00111 r1,r rrnt, OF.SI' ~pacr ~111tl11hlt$.~ .1Br-2-Ba-unlurn HarhOr UJsr:-:i,tl~black!~l'I \\"/!'td ~a9c~~~· :>4~4-49 b!'lll\ 3A.111 JtOr}. 1011 ii.• S22j 11·/1d I $1~ 111-. /.: up ;\n ~rudrnl~. f n10 \\"ill prov1rle furniturr hi;.:h .•i·h. •rri1. )r!y. !ta~' r'l'l lll r All~ 10 ··ctiombo".. · · paint . Av1 i·m $18. Alrlts.•, I Room1 ~1&61 Brooktiur1t Srreet tiunt1ng1on Betch. Call!. ~s 1::1 1'11n11n..1 :116-01'11 81 s·, ITI(l Al1.!111 !'!'1Mg .!\('fl II'.'(' ti71-l6i!i R"""t rtl. 67>3311!'. Contractor ipr.iy1ni:; acf"OU!. C1'1hn&:5, :.? ' liihr-hil-h;i 1::;-,!o~r!g j;11 "''a.rl11hlf' .10.i No. F:l -------coats .i l.i. Roy. s.ti-115'. Apts., Furn. or .A.pis., rnl p1<!:: blk~ 10 hth h:.ii <"a niino Rral, 5 ,·11 ,Mi1c:. Rentals 4651Y0Rh:SHIRE TrtTtPr 4 th;. Lic'd Contr, Rt modelini CUSTO:\IHOU.5EPAf.\'Tf:'\'G 1 ~7:1 .. 102:: n!I 10 A\I til 11 p,\I t'lrn1r11 tr 41:12-4~2<1 • B 'IP.'\ 1 .. 1 .,.,, <ll11if, f!t~ rolla r M. Btat h Addition!, Pl.ans, f...a)'OUl \Vt paint .>'O"" -mo. _1 , --------.----. • " 11 • "· •• J nio. " •·Pnp1"' 9'1i2....;t17 Rf\\'llrd! '" '"' ·~· A ,c:ood 111111! 1d 1~ a lt"ood l\r11po1I Bll'd, Co~T I ~lt~ll. -.--~ -----K;iJI f.. l~fnd11.Jl 543-1337 hoUii! your 11%f . r>latolan k or Unfurn. 370 Ap;~;n. or Unfurn. 370 invP.~!rnr 111 ;1,11.0.~11 LO:-.i .1/ll/11. fluffy bl;irk Addition~ * Rt'modfllnr \lalo111n .14·1-:ii94 Unfurn. 370 Furn. Costa Mes• Costa Mesa -------------------- Amazing Adult Living UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS Featured in PROFESSIONAL BUILDER 'S MAGAZINE "SHANGRI LA " as liveable luxury wi th o il the co nven ience.: Clubhouse-Soci o I Life -Indoor & O utdoo r Sports-W o lk t o stores, bonks . mo vi e and coll eg e. 1 & 2 FROM BEDROOM Apartments with Terraces $140 •• $295 MODELS OPEN DAILY Mer rimac Woods 425 Merrimac Way, Costa M esa (Betw een H.tr bo r .tnd F.tirview) ------------- * * * * * I puppy \\/wh11 r fn.'n~ ~1111 ~. Crn1itJ.: k Son. Lie. I i\IA:'\' ! 11 ;ft--,.,---- 1 I<'. S A llr1~h1~ .. >4.>-ti44.ll 67~] ~ ·._\" "170 I ~t'lillf'I! * -_ _ _ · · ;.-.. I r ~J 1 ur a nr , ot!lrt< 1 IL.OST nr CCI. Sian1rsr ,.,-;, m-\ra). qu1li1y 110111, r~!1ri,ncr.<1. flooi: !Pri·it:e' 1 ,...---------------------... rl11 1·k h1"11n 11/!lr~ •'01lar 1. !'!'pair. \\'alls . ..:erlint:. noori Xlnt ref• •:>s-:..1:.2 Abr11m.<1 . .1t:;:~2.1t. ~.LR4'0MJ f t(·. l\o joh roo ~n1all. PA1 Nr1;-.;c·--:-1 -,-· -.--. _____ • ., ? • . •. p1oess1ona All BLI' •l r1ptd TaDb), malr. _:>47--00.~..:.24hr 11 n~ rfrv 1v or k .i;u 1 r n Colo r ll '1-01111.r. nr t1r hool . Ltg, Electrici1I ~ fl r r i • I 11 1 . 9 ti i ~14J ;>.1gu,I. Plra!lf'. 49.-, •. 1906 . :~fi-1441. 'I I LOST-~!il1, bro"n poodlr LJ C D ~ect11c1an, ma1n1 No \\'atnnt rt n11lr. 4 mo~ cild. V1r 4.uh ~'"''\'. Ah!o, rP11d. indu,.tri1I * WALL,.APER * SI., i".B 6i.l-7:i7~ 11Cttr 6 642-4.ii~ ~rnen >°'' C&ll "lit&c" • LAD, .. ~ rolrl \\atr.h-lo~t ~·r1 Furnitur• .'.io4S.14"4 M&.lTil t I mes I f'l"r ·•11 "'. .sci ._ Coa•I Pl •za. F11m1turr SD"lpplllf ~IA~. ll'lft k IOI\ \\"ould Irk~ I r:'"ward 6~.._1.i4.lt Special ki1c~n r 11 b. rlotirs mainttr.an<'t 11ork. Officr. Trader's Paradise lines dollars •!Tipped $1 t a A\"I: chau~ I rr.•tauranl ... re.•1drn1~. f'!C [ I ~ i; ,,. filu1n1t liol 2-14-li Exp Rtif~ l:i7-6J!M '----------------J ln1truc:t~n P'S' O•rdaning II *PA PE.-HANGER*-1 SUperwr Crt t11m1n Rftai . 'l'rr1 S'.!t.l!Xl c't1111r l mor11 PRO~'E.<:SJO:\",,L :\I A I KT r Ra lf'' C Rrbko 646-2449 : pJ 11~ . fnr l•tr 111,,drt \iln 1·;,111111 · rl', \l,11:111f1r,..111 1\r1th1~11 ~"''i'•I~ I l'll (-;\ ]qi)) l'.1J11"d '•r' \.:,lfl, \l 1it ll'•U!r t,1r 1r11rl1~. ~II• 11111u,..,, cun• nr .•uhn111. . n:;:.n.~fl/ 'II.II •"" !\h)li r11.: 14,I •lf'f"! II ii, ''" '" '"' [ ,1,:1 #>CJ.Ill', \'~1 ~I I•! ·1,.1 lu1 I•,. lf\\·1 ••· .. ,1 hid:.:. )'Of••"!. t• , I' \I • 1 ll<ll· r 1 11 111•1 , S!•lllll rq ~'" h"11•r du· pl<'\ I h·· r," 1 ·... f!,• J· riw-. 11; ,.•il.1 "~~\\ s1 J" 1~ t ""'1 1, h.l,111: '1"011 fJ1'!1•h Jl ,11(' Hf'" 111'1• t!!'!'Tl",1111 h1..i-· 11.11<111.lt". r1111!r lu1 fl···!.. up. !,1/ "r ~ i~G \I . :.'Olh ~1 i.1~-lli!t'I. rnr r!1111. Pa.1. l'ln ~ h h~, I Schools & n·,~ 1'01 k. pr 0 n 1 11 i: · PROFE.'i:HON'AL. pa1ntina nr bl·h prop. riif 'rl. Pay.~ instruction1 575 tpr•>ini;. l'll!t~~t " ii·rpd 111:~1 ,,1,..r. llonesr \\<'Irk. i:ri0 nio. I.· 1972 JOO() ,.110 eonn"-Ol Sp1·11klPr 1·rpa1r Lu-t.· in,<. ;)48_27:>.9. 64.i-.illO. ~·vii) illlllr. pi 1. Pf>. TO-Clean up job~. Ceorgr. !'fi~1.: ,.1.... AIRL INE &4~9.i l ~:T k l::\ler. Pa.inting. . -5CHOOLS e LANDSCAP-ING-e 1 1.ir 'tf, '"."-· ~·r.,e .e!t. 30 )Tl 'rrar!t l1u·g;-$:.<l,OOO IOI, ,;:;;. Cl k ...... """"' PACIFIC 1'.0TOTJLLl:\'C. 21 .... SQ 1·r ~\Pf'"=~"~"_;_· ~~c..:.:::'--1 1 lz rlrar, 1n \l"c.•lc!ifr on S. "" ~-= Day k r<:1-i:h r Cla1se1 SPRJ:'\'KL.ER.s, SEED ~· PAl.'\Tli\"G/papennr:. 18 )TS .-:an1111s;:o 01 for tQUl1)' 1n I 1 1.._,.1, n fi;oiich honi r .)43.6.>95 SOD LI\\'NS. LlC'D CO~Tr. n H1.1·bor a.ta. L!c &: 1 po nlG-~)6.1 . n10 E 17Th St., Santa Ana ltl.1-16.>I I bonded. Rer . furn. &U-23.36 I --------_ES&£ E ---AL 'S GAR.ODiING PAL'\;TL'-;G/papen111 11 )'T's , l. .. :r 111tidrl Chrys!r1, !'on-BRIDGE !r~i;on~. Sl.z·, ?l'I" for ardenln •. I In Harbor al'!a .. Lie 1.: '' r·1hlr l1l;r nt11 "'nndl1ln11. Df't·•nn. \lorn Ii f1 f 11f'••1on~ lanQ:ca in 1 , ".· 1 m 1 11 bonded. Ref's furn. MZ-2356. j ~1.!~..0 1nllt •. i1ul onrifr kr21n111n11 \la\ lll!h 1.,. ~'61h 5J,(}..-I; ~ Ii l"ll<'f''· call ---_____ cc._c;;.;; 11111r11n11 . tr11dr lnr olrlr,1 Thr .'l"f>h"rrl.ol '"'" 1111!' · ;) · n.·rnt Ne111X1M . PAl ,,TJ/\'.G lion f'Sf.1 , ilt or ~ t 1. .. 1.~·1·1 I {'lu1n·h. l."an11 11 ,\1a1ir1 C.1111 Cd:\!, O>~l il :\l'"•il.. Doi-er ~uar1n!r<'d •1ork l.1r'rl -11 r1 ~ .ll'lhn !'.:II ol'. 492..go:ri _soorr_:. ~"~1r11 rr. l«1l 1tf , t:•ll 11.-.. :1;40 1f1 1\.uu 1r11;.1J unu. '""P'lrt ---*LANDSCAP ING-..-' fll C'ol•l • \lr.11 ·11.Uif' f"l,111 l PIANO LESSONS . -----~ootf 111.,.,.,,.,I), Arri diio ,( \our honif {.;f llr(ird te;1rh-.l.'\r11· IM"ll•. lrl'P •1'1"11"11 al. PAP};r.UAXGER, !lock, foil. 1: p11,,.,1,.1111 ~ quiiy b'2~I ,.,., ~ln~u· .<:yvr"tlls ,\fr •pr1nkl~1 1, lfraln., arbor~. I ,-1nyl, tu•r . e1umat~•· Thto 1 .\t:\ .. l~·!'.!11 1:,1 ,;:;n, l!:irl'i<oclo.. t;.l l-Ol ~-l ' ri:u1~. fr11r,., L1r'd l'Ontt. 1.1an I m 1 n, 5-11~.J.3 ----------i----Li•• \IASIPr Ch'f1'' IJ yl'll ,·;;"='='='='c":..._ _____ _ \\"h11 1 do you h1\·e 10 tnrdt-DON'T (l\"t It away. ftl 1~ r -.:p l36-122j . P la1t11r, Pitch, Ae•elr 1 1 · rrinrk ca.th for II wilh a 1="· ~..:..-'"--""'-----• L1~t h ~"' -in Oranat DAILY PILOT OutifledlONE: 110P Japaneu l•rdf'~ PLASTER-Patch-Rm Addi. 1 Ctiunt;} 1 l 11 t;toit r!lld trad Call 641-567A Ii ch111·~, ft 1~i: 4r mlnnr landac11p1nr Accous. <'f'ili nr,, 1 tu r t" . !'l '<"I ~ ,.,, ~~t, SJ!..:'Sl7. Harbor >tli" 1·-1 , 1 J 1 I"&: pmt 1 •,) • 1C!t.IJ today -Sell tor.1omiw· ,.1,,,, A-Tllrtlt Rork '" ,.-" m a f • · '· . " I I <. . . • t . '/" . •·. ./ ' :z;1 ~ A.e•d Cl•111fic•tion1 For Expert Assistance 6500-6900 In Iii• DAILV PILOT fo1~1 l"l'\Ults "'1111 a O;uh S."3-~1. MS--f;)M .ot rt:; ........ _ .. .,' * * * * * * ·1 Ptlot Cla•,1l1ed \ii .otAJ . -·--------· --. - -................... lllJ!!!!!iii.!!!!!!!!!!!!iL•~·"'~'~'~llit:!~ilt -NO\\'!_ I .· rr!d.ly, May 14, 1971 OAJL V PILOT $& [ l[fl]I ~ _ ..... ,_ .... ~l[Il] IL.----_-__,J[fl] I .......... l[fl] l.___ ....... _ .•.. __,j[fl] f J[fl] I ..d ... ll§l I ....... Job W•nted, Male 100 Help WantM, Ma F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•ntitd, M & F 710 I02 Furniture 110 Gor ... S.la 112 I need • Job! C 0 MP AN I 0 N ~ l It r GENERAL OFFICE WORK KEYPUNCH SECRETARY CL 0 SING out 1 a Ir , DANISH dlnlJic table .t CIGAHTIC &ck yard atatr I've hffn • protrulonal houteketpina, Uw-.i..n, Good tnlt't'e1tioc poa;iHon with SUPERVISOR Rfocept/Jr, Soc'y New oHlcta • Airport Loe. dl.thwaaben. 1•• &: flee chain, 12' Bdrm cablntl talf., ,lClc llO 11111:1. bute.nder tor over 20 yn. hOmt, small salary, ~49 Lquna brokerqe l1nn. LONG 8EA0t AREA Sec'y, SH " Sp&nUh Good opportunlly tor alert 1tove..., l bltn ovens, 2 com-wilt drawtn, me I• l Foldlnc dlaln, 11 ea, to Now havln1 raim:I • rood aft 6. Telec;ype exper. desirable AUnimum 2 )'ti. aupervaory Ouk 1YP1-la. Pwt:haiin& !iecretary, to \\'Ork :,, fut pact ldtchet11, waler llOf-kitchen cablnet1, headboard, brld1t chn, 50c to 12, 3 bar U . f&m.ily, of nettnlt)', I've COUNTER &irl, pt !lme, but nol nettuary, ~hlll be t:o+:p on 18}.1 029 '-~. R.eeept/PBIC p&ced N.8. adv t rt I 1 In r 1ener1. Al's A p P 11 an c e chain, etc, $ • S·2 $11 , 1lool1, 110 !:I, pal'° lurn, Sb bt'come handy •1 many rnornlnss, Mon-f'ri. CIO\\'n accurate typi111 & iood 11 Shoi.ud be familiar with Mary Baughm ln qency. All skills lncludinf Service. J~ Ort.nae:, C.M. 546-366:i to flO, alto IUKCl&e. dl:111'1et, thine•. I'm not afraid ot Cleaners, .1056 Bayside Dr. pneral oHice v.·ork. Phone work .chfldulinl: 6 work Ex•cutive SH req 'd, 833-1670. ~215. 642--6515.K '~IN~c=sz=brd~-w-lb~-~-.~bd~brd,...,., .1pon1na JJ(!Ods, an 4' bt'UI ""rk. \\!'hat can I do tor NB Mi11 Burt .t!M-9181 for in· mf'a.suremtnL ;Excellent Peraonn•I AQ•ncy DUREL. ADVERTJSING G.E. 2 dr. bottom (rf4!nr, $!%>. Oft wllltt, 17' curved objfcll, 4 m!Jc. 2 ~00 you'!' 673-2606 .;.c;:__~iifriii1;---j~"~rvl~•~w~. ==~--.,..-~ benetl!JI 4 •a.Ill')' 10 v.·ork .•10 W. Cout HW)I, NB 2172 Dupont Dr/Suite 4. late model. Will take tradP.-3 RCrion aot11., harp.in 1100. Newport BI v d • C.M, PR6 Euro-Trained gourmtt CREDIT l-lAIRDRESSER n eeded In a &TOwin&: computer cor· Suite H 6'1$.r.16 Newport Beach, CA.llf. in $175. 30" au range, clean Dlnln& aet. 8 chalni, table A Frl-Sun, 10.~ S48--6103. chef seeks domestic employ CHECKER f/tlmt. Attnet. busy shop. fJOJ'ation. Call Mr. Voyer *SECRETARY * $50. 24" apt. r1nge, clean bullet, bleached. ml.hog, GARAGE &<Ile: Ga11 1tove nfs. 633-5i29 Xln'I workin&" <.'Ond1. Above 2lJ, m.1tl37 t.lr r-.trs. Elli-RECEPTIONIST • &ood •P· Exper, aeneral office, llte $35. Rerular au range, bElritain 1125. 6'4.-2001 .$15 Crib mannu 14 Baby Jolt Wanted, Fem•I• 702 A Bank Exper, Desirable avs earnings. Ask for Berty M>n. 213. 687·5759. UNION-pearance & ability 10 mret typing. Salary open. Store. clean $65. 2114 Continental, car bl'd $4 Wo mt n '! Sartori, G!Gi's Halr Sty!e1, Ai\1ERJCA Computer c:or. the public nee. Light typing Matakovlch & \\'olf~ra. C.M. ALI. lam?! Reduaod · Good elolh1n1t, siir l2. ~1en's nt\\' C0lt1PANION I Nu r 'e. PLEASE APPLY 846-5000 &r cltrlcal work required. Contultlng Enalnetl'!I, Cd?.1.lN~O=R=G=E~a-,,~10-w-,-,7 ... -,-~16'"°. cond, $4 each/UP. 6 trotlff-rs. Booki and other C.pablf', intell!pnt. "Jill of poration, Equal Opportunily $36()...$400, mn, depending on 615-7131 Ktnmore elec dryer 150 only-So!u, tair oondition, hoo:Rhold i I e rn I. 283 ... ~ d .. Cook ._1,,, BANK OF GIRL FRIDAY, OC. Airport Employer. A 1 1 p 1 $25 each. 2 only-5 pc dinette y1...,,_;D Pia<•. bOl·-n a.u ,.a es · UJ. • liii..OiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiii.... exp. PP}' n er&0n a SERVICE St, Sa Its man Both idnt cond, l\l&f 4' $25/ UIT '"""' .,. .. ,... ~~ .. . w· .. , ,·,, areL i Just ht' exper bkkpr, C 1 "· 3 I 0 l l M!ls, ut. , ......., ...,__, & ~ ,-·•·, •-your car or mine. v • ~ _ _, -.1 f l I 5 , 111:1.N11 ou .... tamaran, f/llmf'-llte mechanics, 2 Yn. dellv. M&-8672, Mi7-81J5 H bo CM .. , ... 1 ....,.., _,..., u'"" .... ..,.,, I Xl I ~ ... .,,..... l)'Pe ...., ""'pm. Ur11.1ena .... o c egl ec y _.. Cal ar r, . .,.._""" ,, .. PM 100 · nt rt 1 ' ...,......,....,..., AMERICA procedures. SH or atenorettt 2 Yn: exper. ren1 liw. Good le Perfecto, SJC. min. exper. Neat in appear. REFRIGERATORs BEAUTIFUL Id H rl ~ 83i-ll3l. Pxprr prPf'd. Pllime now. typlsl, lite SH, lite bk.kpng, R. E. SALESMEN WANTED Apply ~ Nt>wport Blvd, \\'HY BUYf RENT! di I yr o e tag: GARAGE salt>. White French CHILD Catt $1.25 1nc:ludt5 Rt1umt. Wrtt Cla1~lfiM ad C'\.a-&r Attra ... 'tlve, E1tablished R.E. 11 rm CM. 3 mo1 minimum. 548-0203 n ng room tel Pnwinclal double Md, box ·•••. Llt• nu-;.,,,. ca-itl· 1'8 D il P ll p o .,._,., · r · in 1· · • --• canebaek cllaln, s m 11. I I spn'ors 6. 1na11n11. like ~-''--.... '" no. • Y 01, · · NEWPORT speci.a tung iating ..... e SEWERS, if you have ex·• REBLT V.'81\n-1u dryrs tab!t-!'xpand1 10 !!eat U . 18.i I..( dtrlyl $15 day, Beat .. ~rsh. N3444 Vl1•BLidoh !!!!:!.-1560, Colla Mesa. Ca. P•r sonnel Agency or und1,eve~~dao,..1 aie tor periertt ln ""'"t 1uil $50 Cuar-Delv, Mitr Chg. Mking $41~. 67HiO~, :7iioer daac:n. • 1 ·18. s~!: Refined, maturto. oo:ac •wpor ••c. ;J.MUO N B re • en!.... e\•e opment, manutacrunni. this b: your 1'1ayta1 rep a I r m 1 n. areu &. Blurts. 557.mg Equal Cppor. Employor HELP w•"t·•·. Mo.~~. Ill Dover Dr., • • nuds oonscientious, honeat, chance 10 i""--,. '""' 714 53, .. .,.. BEAUTIFUL Spanish oak phono., sot1, pa in 11n r1 , ::c==~~--~"".,,-1 .,, "" ..-r '' 642·3170 fulltime salesmen. R. E . • ..... "'.. : ..._,, table11, avocado vel\'tt sofa clothing, el<'. Sal & Sun, 1~ r..IOTHER'S aide. one day a CUTTER, exper. or artisti<' 8am-lpm. To care !or 8 mo J '!"'!'!!!'~":'!~~~!!'!!~J license l'f'q''d. Commiulon ~·ares,tr~·~~ing condi~ns .. 1 1~,-,.-~fl~.-,..~fl'!~,-,-,-.,-0-,~1,,.~ .. ., love seat, custom tufted. s, 3015 Carob St, (Ea.st V>'k. J\latute, exp. lo'.'ilh int., ""'/l!wing exper. for small old baby & k""'P bou.se clean. e LEGAL SECRETARY bui.s. n a ie Y atmosp re. Kenmore wash!:r, avocado, All near new! 613--e26 Bluff) 644-2868. toddlen &nd. exceptional aportsv.·tarmlar.Applyl.589 ~1ust prov ide 011.·n Be E 'd Comt> 10 the Surfer Hou~. 150 * &a&-1SXI ehildren. 593.137-1 Alonrovla, NB. transportation. 117j / mo. Newport ach. "p DIKE • CO., INC, 18259 ltlt Baldy Circlt>, F.V. ' FRENCH Prov. table (2) 16" * * GLORIFIED Garqe UC! •horthand, IBM diet, book-714/646-9&31 SHARP T •·i-•··• t'ton••t KENMORE wube:r, $3.5, n · leave&, 1 arm, ~ 1ide cllalrs, S&lt. Bendit Florence Crit· ~IATURE woman sttks in-COUPLE-Malnttna.nce man UH, 833.~ Meep!ng 1 attorney office tn \Vetkdays tor appolntmehl yp .. '""''" P "' cellt>nl: Also wuhtr It Thom11villt, cherry ·wood. ttnlon Strvices. May J.tth ttrestlnr job Jnvolvi~ boats &. maid tor ho1el on Mach. HSKPRS Emplyr paya fee. Newport· Center. Sa I a r Y REAL ES1'ATE SALESMAN !,°~_J!.'hhat ~-""''"'u~' ho•lfllp"ruiu_D="'~'-"~I_. "°'~-10950"--,..,., $695 cuh. 96l-7!'-18 from 9 to 4. 19U St.aririf\ or travel. Good driver. Li\'t--in + salary. 675--8740 George Allen Byland Agen-O""n Mr Seymour 673-3288 °"" " '"' -, o Cd'! E 1 I ·1 I ,... ' ' ' \\'ANTED. SMALL ACTJVE but not esitnt!al. Muit be e t7 cu It frostle11 uprtaht FORMlCA tbl, sofll, bk!, r, 1• • 9 It 1 em1, v"' 642-1758 DENTAL Ass't tront desk cy l06-B E. 16th, S.A. ,'~'='T>-~729!l=~·=-~-""°7 1 SUCCESSFUL OF'C TIIAT accurate & able 10 coni{IOl>e freett'r, I mo old. Call bike, lamps, bf'd, odds & tage clothing, b1r1aln A ORGANIST • many years &ec'y, Exper 0 only. Ptople'l-"'-'~--0395-~=====,..-LEGAL SEC'Y w/IOme: SH, MAKES MONEY. DICK letterA from ldeas. Send 968-7848 f'ndt, 751 Olyrnplc Avt, "g~•-lo~"~'-------·I ex ..... rience a 11 protestant oriented preventive prae· * * HOUSEKEEPER stenorette, IBM exec. & BERC, 962-2421. 1 0 Id L I~=~---~--~ c M "" ~•s ~ I-'--'-"''--'-"-''-"-----I re1ume o: av · AUTO v.•uher $90 & elec · · .,..u-~O't ehurchts, desires substitute lice, H.B. 962-2436 I.: LAUNDRESS Cbkokpno•"!o'r',"'. ,,_~·~ ~A!, w port RE~AURANT. !\talt 18 or Fruf'r, PO Box 2268, N.B., riryee 175, llkt new. $115 tor BEDR00!\1 tel, 5 i>ea, like A HAPPENING ""'Ork. MS..3002. DELIVERY •-·k of TV & CaJ! 64&.716-1 • ~ A I II 2 PM N 9~' bo Come one, oomt all, 3 fam. '" O\•er. pp y a • . n ~-th. 644-4835 aft .t:30 ne .... ·. Matching che1t, extra. N .. __ "· ·o -Cook Appli·-,.._~ ttf' ... .___ h II T I 2966 iHes 5 •&: diming things trom ~mparu n ~·~--~. '"""""" s • ._-M·AN to learn pictutt u .. n-P one ca ~ as ee, S H Ip p ING clerk fl.:>r WEDGEWOOD Gaa Ran<>e Coffe!' table. M&--6746 aft 4 Llve-in or out quired. The Davis-Brown J & &al A pl 190 s B · tol C ~1 . ..,, P't gar~ & Grandma's attic, ng es. P Y · ns • ·· · Chrl!tmas Card Co. Duties Older, but very clean, SZ"> " 1620 Kent Ln, N.B. Sat '-• 646-1822 • 0Co=·~""~·-34_37 ______ 1 Ol&ll Hlo'.')'. Laguna ~ach include warehou1ing nf 496-4123 (Capo Beach) PROVINCIAL couch '-chair AIDES For c:onv&le•cence, 00."I'AL Exec. Sec'y Ofc. MAIDS RENTAL AGENT m~rchandi.s~. Permanrnt. COLDSPOT Frnstleai, 14 cu $50; round lsble' end table Sun. !'lderly care or family care, Mfl'. Divtrslfied du t I e 1 , Apply, V11gabond Motor Apply 33046 Ca.II~ AvtAdor ft retrir ...,.110P freezer, cop-S25; Fr1fidaire wuher 150, YOU Name it-\\'e nave It , Homemaker~. 547-6681, Sec'y skills, bk k p n r , ~ Hotel. 3151 Hartx>r, Ci'-1 Prominent Wl'lt Loi; J.natlet San Juan Capistrano pertone $125. 644-2901 -"= .. ="'~'·=,.-,-.,,--,,--,I :.n:~it Jil!~ac:l!'Club'. Help Wanted, M & F 710 mature. Good personalil)' II J\.1GR. Tnint't', intervw at hAeed development ti rm MUST SelH 2 Pc atttional 347 Bayside Dr, NB. Sa! judgment req'd. To 45. Top Kentucky Fried Oiicken. needs t u 11 time Rental STENO .......... $450 Cameri1 & avocado grn, Great for that M•v 15 •. 9 10 5. 1'.iarlrw. APT. man•<>er w anted , salary. 546-3000 2929 E. Coast Hwy, Cd..'d .\rt'nt. No sales promotion E I t IOI -I·-~ ~ -Excellent \\"Orking c:onds & qu pm•n ..-.. a room or new"....... Items, de1ipr c I o t h e a , manage 16 unit& in e DENTAL RECEP· tD\A~ DCDC:r'V..INEL MATIJRE resident manager, involved, Salary SSOO plus Good 11.lJ..-2136 bmks, etc. Westm inster for I r t !' TIONISf w a n t e d -Se n d ~v II 'It; '" l.J\.J\JI 'I for pre stir~ 30 unit adlt. conimi.Slion. Excellent lu· e~ploytt bene!its. ELECTRIC dryer, F'rigklaire, apt. Call bel\\'?I Zpm & .tprn resume ro Classified Ad f';o. SER.YICES•AGENCY apt. c.~f. Reply stating exp, ture a.ssured. Call 557-8020. ;:1:n ~~;r:::nC:~~ runs on 110 volt, $35. !148-2635 Hl1ANDSOM 1 E pair 1 hob i&e,__~n-MOVING! Mu1t SEll! Good onlr. 842-1333 161, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box G t'rl F•lday are, family status, present l ~""""'""""""""""'""""''I anytime. que vevet cu cuolf'S furniture, patio c ht l r s . ST 151Kl, Costa ~1eM 92626 situation etc. \V.r it!': RE\\'ARD!f\G Te I e phone this position, pl!'&se phone 1-~--------w/ml'llchir\J' o 11 o man•· Polaroid, compl ete, Non!lco ADVERTJ!ING ART 1 Attractive briaht girl \\'/rood Classified ad No. l49 The .,.'Ork tron\ home. Must have 644·5800 &. ask tor Mn. Furnltur• &10 ~T-7998. ftcorder. Ironrite. BBQ's, Production ~tanaaer for hot ' •---------1 SH & typ'"< for "·-N.B. . 1 · IV · Smo'th •-1"· P•-"""' ~,1 I ' u• ,..,,.,.,, D•>'ly P o'lot P . 0, •-, 1=, pr ival t 1n e , rite "' ,,.,. ............ ......, ·•----------Lumber. Many other item,, Nelo'.-port Beach a i::enc y. DAY DISHWASHER ol<. ~ ~ Eq 1 n............ •. E 1 SOFAS, ctia1N, c arpe t, 'I h ~ "--rd Costa Mtu., Ca.JU. 92626 CJa1silit>d ad No. 58, Daily IUl '-'Yt"'''"'nlly mp WKE NEW 8' Spanish &0!11. .Ir 0....,....,ries, pi"t'"'· m\&c. Come Su! 62() Jumine, "U!t ave 5........, ~ 488 E. 11th (al Irv:iM) C.M. Plol P 0 Bo l~ Colt l ~~""""""""""~!!!~l 1 "°' Id 1199 .,.,._ ... dcill1. Know prinrinr. pro-~IECHANIC w/clus A I, · • x ' a .1 S•""""rvi!IO-needed tor ovt ieat, fO • · <~quality. Private-party, CdM. Frl·Sal. lG-5 P:\1 . . duction and schedulini:;. X\n1 Apply In Person 642·1470 licenR. Pref. agency man.1-'-''-"-· _c._1_11_. _m_"'-~~~ I ..-Calif;-nia Ii~. Will train, Like new S pc. Spanish 67:.-1!194 GARAGE Sale, household opp or tun i t Y. DUREL Extumely gd pay for ri1ht RN 'S p/timt 7Ar-.f.3P)f b •97_1379 , .. pm. Bdnn ael, anti~ avocado, 9• Hl'rc:ulon aofa, button items, misc. furn, wom~n & ADVERTISING , 2172 Du· Ancient Mariner INTELLIGENT, lovinr lady man. All others nttd not ap-3P}.f-11Pi'.1 shift, L V N .. $1J9. Like new :i pc. Speni11;h luf!rd, never U!l("d SlSO. girl• clothing fnew cocktail pant Dr., N.B. 833--1670 Restaurant 10 help w/2 babies i: ply. Richlield, 19th & f/tlme " p/11me. Tele. Appt. Sec'y gaming table, pedeslal 'YP". Matching loveaeat t l 0 o. dressesl Ii brick·a-brack. ASSEt-.IBLERS house1Vt1Tk. 642-2637. Nt1''J>Orl Blvd, C.M. Huntington Bearh to investment broker. P / $85. UF'f', lB85 Harbor, C~I. ~~195.1 1400 Ses c resl !Lusk Co.,,Jf!s ..... nt Ho•p. · 1.~"~g.~"-'~'~--~~--H l CdM Frl & Sal on lmm •• 1,1, ~,,,·ng• '-" time, perm. 8 1 ....... omes , , , · ~ v~ 0 W H 18811 FJ 'd ; B I 5 b d ' So a, quilled !.1ueK'l!nt r~ p , Call •·,.,.,,, 2607 . Co•st wy JN"B•g. Sal•-to -plus e e MEN .. 'l e e on a Ave 4 PM~I PM eau. pc., ran new ly, 1~5. uuuu ay. n • ~ '" ~ H B 347.~015 d' II 1 1•• lo b'Olrl, Good condition $&!. l,C'..'='c.,:'-~-~--~r 9Ao'd·9P'.\.f, Sat 9A~l-6P;>if Newport Bea ch benefits. Unique position 10 atalf our Factory BranC'h · · ..., Our Ollice CdM. Please do ine e I! s, as50r ""' ro ri1, S42-47i'l GAR.AGE aale: Chlld'!I line Oran1e Coas! w/tremt>ndous futuM for k service our equipment. not apply upl!'ss you are an 1;,g each aet. Uke new dou-maple drtlisf'r, 9x12 bralrl Employment Arency * DRIVERS * experienced fire & ca11 girl. Steady job. No lay offs. Pro-SALESMAN extro\'t'M "ho likes to Argue bl!' bo)C springs .Ir ma1tre5s HIDE-a-Beil Sft<I: 1' couch rug, men'1 goll club1, Toy11, 1869 Ne1''fl0rl Blvd, C'.\I • Must have min. of 3 yr1. motion. Car helpful. Income Good potential. call Mni. atrana't>l'I into }i>Ur ...,.ay o( Mii, sterilized, 1l5 stt, ~ pc. $69.~; kweseat 155; rocker t-.1Uic ltem1. 1961 port 64,5..3111 &IS-3112 &IJ..llJJ No Experience general agency fire .Ir cas opportunity 1150. a week to Schmidt, \\'ntcliff Penon-thinking, 833 • .:J656. H ome walnut finish bdnn ~~t. S32.SO. liltf! new. 642-1171 Ramsgate, H1rbor Vil'1" Necessary! experience. Cail 77l-ll41. iitart. ean 496-2383, 10 am-net A~ncy. l:MJ \Vestcliff 6T~I089. ~:.s~S-~~· l88,j Harbor, s1~1ri10NS ·II i d e. a-Bed . Homes, NB. Tri & Sal. 10-s. 11 D<., N.'B. 6'1>1r70 wh ite nilugahyde, top rond. TRE'~'RES I 1 'nk t ASSISTANT lo'.'1n1~ for Ken l\fust ha\'!' clean Callf, driv. U.1MED. open 1 n g for .::~·~m~·""',..-==-,.,.,,..,., * * TOP PAY * * PVT party i,1•ar1t!I 10 lii'1l ~u o n e 11• Templl'ton 's Hair 11tyhsl1i. · d N nd ""' St'amslrt'sa-traintf' or ex· e PART TIME exp' d SALESMAN, Sel'\'it'f' Siil. Paid _vacation, P'id holiday_• ,-mpl•I• hou" 01 ... ,.1,1,,1 ,";,:;:;5-~"'ii"~"'~'~":_=,,.--::= gl19sware, sporting goods, d ing recor · 0t u tr ..., ....... tlme. Ne&! In a"--" "" QUALIT\' t ade "' I 1 · • ;\fust bel lce nse ('OS-YELLOW CAB CO per.Apply900 \\'.17thS1., mature :ales1ady for ...... ,. medic&liru.plan.Apply in near new Med.It furn in. , cuaom m anuque&,· urn. 1nen. melologist. M~j7 186 E~ 16th St., C.~1. • C~1. 646-3909 maternity Mop. No. 28 ~e~~ Blvd~.Pt~~1. 2) 90 pel"IOn, only. Jnc:a Pla111cs dudes 8' blk na'ug !IOi:i & ~ee~t:o;;:~r.N~~erlnr. ~"~':~~.m~~ ne6;:;lr;~· ~r11 BABYSITTER my home .1 1 .EA-RN~'...!:F~O~R~~A:.O:S~U:::M::::M_E_R.l-;JA.-.;N_;:ITOi'iiiRS>o_.-,~.~,.:;;;:-,,-o;;-;;,T;I Y Fashion lsland. No phone SALES go'r\, p·~ ,,·m,, Inc. 32972 Calle Perfecto, lovel!f'at never used S15CJ I -==~~====.,..-' I boys, 8:30 'Iii 5:30 C&ll a.It 2 I hl k I C ~f calls plt>ase. ""'• SJC. Bunk be~di, Beaut Thon1a1~ ~'TEEL SECRETARIAL l~. Slit, lG-6. VACATION, A CAR, CAMP p lime, nia:. \iior n ·' . I =""-="'-""'-'-~--~-I bak•~. Afternoorui, Sat I.. DESK 1•• GARAGE SALE M ' P~t ~3518. OR COLLEGE FOR YOUR &r beach cities. ~1601 1401 PART time trainees, mile. ·~ * WAITRESS.EXP'O ville ldngsi bdnn aet 11 ..., -oving, BEELINE F&shions. Earn Sl CHILDREN. Be an AVON Kraemer, Anaheim HS or Coll. No exp nee. 'The Su7 ,:!·~ a;!,""1 · 96i--4096, alter Not under :ti. NO Pl~ONE more. 213/925--3672 l""';:;:--;;i*,7,6'&-ll~:.:::'~'°:.,c*:_,..,,,.,,, must sell. Hou 1 eh o Id be llful ttdM Zoo RtstauMLnt, Coast Hwy ~~~::C:.='---~~~ 3 PC 12' Nue &ectional aota furnilnre, baby furniture,' to $8 per hr plus au Representative & earn extra JAPANESE lady n for & M••Arth,,r. " Xl CALLS. Apply in penon, PVT party sacrlrlce beaut bicyclts & mi5('. 192 4 clolhts. \\'t train. Car monf'y. \\'in prizes. Mee! day W'Ork. Own transp. CdM ,_ SALES ~fir. for C.M. nt Surf &r Sirloin, 5630 w. Coast MMlt qullte-d s· 110fa & and matchina chair, $50. Tahuna Ttrr, Cd~f. Sat 4 Ml'.'l!!!11ry. Call 633-9574 or p~plr. HavP. fun. It's euy area. 644-1339 PARTY co u n 1!'Ior1 Ir. oppty for hJ tarnina-s. Fuller ll"'Y" N.B. love11est, ~Ull lamp11, l -"'~~~~840=1~. -------I Sun. ~5435. 1o i;f'I slart('d, J ust c:all: house\\'lws needed. $50 for 3 \ _B_ru_•_h.o., _54&-_S_t_'5_. ----.. pecan tables. arH!. plant.o;, 1 -----~--~ 546-5341. 540--1<Hl eves ""'eekly + bonu1. Ph: SARAH Coventry IM'ed11 n. or WAITER, male. Muit bee~-oi l palnt!ng11, art objec111;, Garage Sel• 112 DON'T MISS THISI Bi-Linguel S•c'y ELECTRONIC assemblers • J. W . ROBINSON'S 545-4445, 8-10 am or 4--7 pm pt Um• help. No in-pertenced. Continental c.01• king matlrt'11 set. See arrrr Boy &out Troop 106 I Be able to take dictation In E•p'd ,.,, u•• 01 mo·,. ...... ,...,.,. e NE\VPORT BEACH e & wknds ve1tment. \Vil! train, m ln !line. Only neat appearing S wkdy1 or all dAy wknds, GARAGE SALE Moving 2nd Annual Rumn111.ge Salt I Spa.ni•h. For inttrnat1onal "'" .................. -20 540--061.t need apply, 1464 S. Coast J307l Red Hill Tustin, Eail! 1 Ltalht'r ehra, Eai•ly !\fay 1Sl6 9-4, 7!)()j Red ! to string core m~mory PBX Oper., an 1 we r in g age · ' Hwy Laguna ~ach • American dtllk, matching Hill, -•"'• 01 P•li.••d•• mktng mgr. ExporL frames & stacks. 1674 llas immediate 1trvic:e exp!!r, prt!'d. H.B. SECRETARY ' · J ONLY-Hlsh back black bookshelf, z library chrs, "v "'' ''" '" MISS EXEC AGENCY )fcGs\Y Avt, Santa Ana openinr fur area. 536-8881 N!'WJ)OM Bch CPA finn aeek· WAITRESS. Clean, neat tt vinyl chalr1, xlnt cond, Sl!l baby buglY, antique bed, SUN. 10-4, tool1, \\'l'lrk ben· tlO W, Coa1t Hwy., NB M0-9945 PERSONNEL Girl . job re· inr penon for 1 girl office. attractive. Over 21· Apply ellch 39NLY-2rlra\vPrlllU· jump seat, antique roll top che11, tiloragt cabinets , 646-3939 ESCROW ASST/ SALES quire1 initial intPrvitwinr of t-.1ust be good typ!11 w/ex-Egg &r Ale, 673--0!ln, J\tr. dent' deslu, SJ9 e11rh. 3 de11k, antique coUee tbl, m11ny mi11c. house ho 1 d l!!.,.!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!,.,.,..,.!!!!,IREAL ESTATE prospecti\'e employe~. light perience in otlice-Proet'· Zimmer. only-Executive le Srry "'Omen'11 &r chldm'1 clothe1 1lem11, 2399 Redlands Dr. BOAT BUILDER TRAINEE LOAN PROCESSOR e FULL TIME typing, ketping Pmplo~ dures, ahorthand c!esirablt. WORKING RN nf'ed.1; maturf' dtsks, $79 each. UFF, 1885 &. toys. 644--1185 Sat&. SUnl,CN=-~·=· ~==---~-Asaem bl~n le C1rpenlen for rtcords & 110me phone \\'Ork. Prefer 1 detail-mlndM, ron· wom1n to sil alternoon~. 1-~ Harbor, Ci\!, MS..!M57 only. DECORATORS trsverrine bldr of race "inners. Co. UNITED CALIFORNIA Exper. pref'd, Outgoin& personalily &. al· lcientious 'fltn'ker who can hn. 3 days a wk'-8 l'<rs 2 CUST0:-.19' aof1, belgt, food "R~>:F""R~IG=ERA=~T~O~R~.-d~n~g-. ~,::-Pl, round tbl. 1e11.ls R, erystal \\o\J} train. Start $2.0o trr. tractil'e appearance nee. adapl to a \\'Ide variety o! days a wk 12:30 pm-12:00 oond. $50. I heds & mite:. 9091 J\.1ahalo, cha.ndeJier, ;mpo'"'• •~ "~"""~~ BANK but not nec:euary. W Id Call Helen Haye:s, .,.,~ ---e !'.t~ns Fumlihings S380.-$420. mo, derending on apeciaJ projec111• !\lust be pml ou prrfer ~mf!One * ~36-4562 * H.B. 962-7693 cl'gs. 846-2995 COASfAL AGENCY 2il2 \V. Coast Hwy experience. Apply in person responsiblt, 'fl·eu rroomed, from Cd!\1 or UniveNl'!)' A . 800 -A-c1,..-------1~00"' 1 ·A--.-'------800-2790 Harbor Bl At Adam.~ Ne""·port Beach, Calif. Exceptional Co. Benetiti; ·~ Coast Catamaran, l'.!OU artiru.late, attractive. Xlnl Park area. 811·18&1 nt1que1 nt qu•• ntaqu•• 646-2431 Calle Perlttlo, SJC. ~wking ronditlons, con,.,. BOOKKEEPER F /C $500.$600 Per J\lo. E 0 l Apply In person 10·5 p.m. qua! ppor. emp oyer p RO FE S SJONAL phone lal atmosphere. V.'rne Clas-• 2 Fuh.lon Isl., N.B. EXECUTIVE .iecretary Equal opportunity empleyer aollcitor -Da.na Point, San sifie-d Ad •lt9, Daily PUot, I Fashion Island of I i c e . Clemente, Capistrano ana, P.O. Box UGO, C.M. 92626 ACCOUNTING CLERK SecretariaJ & gen olfK·e Work In your own home. S375·S450 Per ~lo. duties. Top skill & ex-Be~t deal in area. Phone Permanent Po!lition. ~liss1on perience req'd. SE-nd resume 835-1"65 betwttn 9:00 a.m. Sac'y $l1l To V.P. ?-.lktng. Attractiv~. xln't skill~. Work as ri.l&it Viejo area. tNO FEEl t: sal1ry requ irements to J , W . ROBINSON'S and nron. Classititd Ad ~o. 160, Daily e NE\\/PORT BEACH e PRO ·TEMP Pilo!. P .O. Box 1560, C.M, PROGRAM ANALYST Arm o( dynamic boss. Great 92626. oppor. l6al W. Broidway 1-iu: immediate 2 Yra txper, in ANS. COBOL NEWPORT 77,0890 openlnr for Adm exper A~sembly Lang-P•r ionn•I Agan•y An•heim "" EXPER. SECRETARY uage, oor Operating !'yi:- 1 Typing 50 w.p.m. SJ-! 8~ LUNCH tems,OS()ploratingSy&tems Ill Oov•r Or., N.B. $650 w P m exper. pref'd, Please aeiw:I 642-3170 Bkkpar to UNITED CALIFORNIA WAITRESSES ..... m. to P. 0. ""'mo. Pttfer medical exprr. rully BANK """"'" SEC compultri1ed systems, A/P, -. -Newport Beach, Calif . ..,._,, • ca.sh disburae.nents I rt-Jll t\venida Del !'.·Iar Apply in person 10-5 p.m, Attn: lttrs. Smith. Excellent skilU, yoonr co. eeipl.'!. vouchel'!I, cheekl!. San Clem!'nte a 2 Fuhion 111 .• N.B. EqusJ Oppnrtunity Emp beAch a.rea. ct.II l.llr1i!'lf', Firure aptitude. Lile typing. 1n~1 192-5123 Equal opportuniey employer J ~~~~""""~":!':!!!"!':!!!' J \Ve-stdiN Pf'raonnel ~ncy, No TB. ren'l ledier or EquAl Opportunity Em;ilo~r We'll help )'OU sell? 6-tl-5671 '.IMJ \\'etldift Dr.. N.8. ;!'(:~~~~~:"'i:::":~;;.i;Ji~~~!!!""""~~~~ For best results! 642-5678 64;,.mo strnt.s.NEWPORT EXP TV ~ce Man f~r Help Want•d M & F 710 H•lp Want•d, M & F 710 H•lp W•ntff, M & F 710 outside service. Good RPt 1 iiiii,iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. Pertonn•I Agency rtquired. The Davia-Brown Ill Dover Or., N.B. Co. 5-18-3437 '42·3870 EXPER. Sel'\'i~ Station al· ltnd. Hrly v.11ge + mmm. CAPABLE young mt n ~ E. Coast Hwy, NB v.·anted tor l1cton-'\i>rk. I ------~--­ Apply in pe:r&0n at Coast EXP. Pre--School teacher or Catamaran, J.3012 C 11 I I e aomt college. 9:30-1:30, full Pt r ft e Io , San Ju11n ~"~·m,:c:.•~l·~~~'~·-"=""'~'~'-'~-­ C&p1strano. Tnttr•.'le\'' dally EXP Bu5 boys : Newport 11t 2:00 P~t. arrive 1.111 hour Beach Tennis Club . e.srly. Call RRne: 644-0050 CAR hops or V.'l itre1se1. At· ira ctlv e 11·/bu bbllng ptnonaliey. p/timr. The Zoo Re11 . {Coast J.J1\'Y at !'.1cAtthur ). OIJLD earr & lire houst· kH"plnt. Live in or out, t-.fuat love children, aae 6,4 l 3 mo·1, Dana Pt. 493·38&2 anytlme S.t &. Sun, ""'kdY• art•r 5 pm. CLERK TYPIST Type ~!ID. s.1ary sm for an intf'rvle\\' t"Onternln.c 1h11 rosl!lon. plea!t call '44·5IOO &r ask lor ti1n. Smith In ll'lfl Pel'llOMfl DepL f.crual Oppi:ir. Emplo)'er CO~IPA..~ION -hou'eke-eper, ~flnimum n\11'!\ln1 t:tptr. Lh·a.Jn ...,·/1ctl\•fl tJderly lady. )iu&t drtw . Enall•h ''Pf•klna: only. !JlJ day~. SY.O me. Rtf't ftq'UtatTd . MS.7Ui 9 1m.S ~m. F' AST food Opf!taUon, MID)! tralnPr. Bau s al ary. percPntdge liter. Wt l t e qualification~ 10 ad ~. 5!1, Dally Piloi, P. o. Box 1560, Costa ~IPsa, Ca 92626. FIBERGLASS 1T10lders. Ap- pllca!ions now btlllJ" 1&ker1. Clipper 1'.larine Corp, 1731 S. Ritchey. S&nla Ana. F /time male help 11.'ll'lled. P/timt femalr. Carrtra Conctuions O>rp. ~111115, wkdys bt'fort 6. except Thurt. Ask lor ~tr. Rtddinr. PP. Y cook, fU11 or part time. Apply in pe:raon. House ot plf',, 3110 Ne""ilOrt Blvd, Newport Bt1ch FRY Cook "'<llnttd-Exp'd, VIiia~ Inn, 127 Marlnt, Balbo:\ Island. 673-t~ The futest draw 1n the Wet! • • a Daily Pilot Oa1111itd Ad. M2-Sl71 Re1taurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exciting Coco '.s AND Plankhouae Accepting Appllc1tlon1 For , , • Coco '.s e WAITRESSES e COOKS e HOSTISS!S e IUSIOYS & DISHWASHERS Plankhouae e LUNCH WAITRISSES e COCKTAIL WAITRESSES e BUSBOYS e DINNER WAITERS e IARTINDIRS e DISHWASH!U APPLY IN PERSON 9 A.M. "Ill 4 P .M. 12342 BROOKHURST ST., GARDEN GROVI Owned by Far \Ve!t Services. Inc. Optrators or Snack Shop s, Co co's, Reuben'•. Reuben !. Let . The Whaltr, Isi dore's ••. 1100.00 Y.'etkly possible·ad· dressing m11il for tums. ~tails send st11mped srlf addre15t'd f'nvelope I o Drel1bach, DJ-a.,.,-er BD, Anthony, New Me)CiCO, ~1 YOUNG man now .,.,·orktng a~ a11t. chef -"~nderful opportunity lor the righ1 man 1'Ti1e to Chu YeageT 3295 Newport Bl. Newport 92647 YOUNG man factory work, l\.1u~t ha\'C clean dr:v!n~ record. Nt11.• 4 day 4() hr week. 12.50 10 11lart. 1603 \\I', Alton, S.A. 545-7101 Antiques AUTHENTIQUES AntlqUe Row 2-123 Newport Blvd, C~I Peniona.!Iy selecled shipment ot fine eoun!Tjr furniture &. unu1u1l primltlv!'I jU!t ar- r ived from mldwesL. Tu~­ Sat * J(}.5, OCCAS, chain jn aets of .t, 6 ,.. 8. l1iahboys, Dre•11er1, Table1, Bookcase11, Dtsks .Ir Wicker. 185 Pa~aden11 Ave, Tustin, <>If Jal SI. ANT I QUE Armo ire w/or\.(ln11J beveled mirror doors Approx. 1880. Exctl cohd, 675-6705 HUTCH CUPBOARD Med icine Show Antique• 78M Wt1tmlnster Cnr Beach Blvd) ll-5 dally. ~1213. ANT'JQUES by \Vanda Huff· man 8181 Bolaa, Midway City m-3622. Spec. iii dtp ...... COLDSPOT Retrirt, Ken· mo~ 1tovt1, di1hwuhf'n. rtduC'td up 10 $100. Sllcht trtlght dama&f & floor mndels. FUily guarant~ed. Saara Roebuck &r Co. !'()59 Adami. H.B. Pho n I': !162-1711. Tut rt•ultt are ju11 a phont e1ll away. su..5S'll AUCTION! ''9CIAl CONllONMINfl -l ·OVllllAI CONTAINll lO.liDJ An1lrea,11 Antiques 2380 New11ort Boulevard, Costa. ~fe1a Sal., May 15th . 11 a.m. & Sun., May 16th. I p.m. Approx. SI 25,000.00 Valuation - A Fine Collection 2 llG SAU DAYS Antiques A,'ITJQUE FURNITURE -ACCESSORI ES CLOCKS -VICTORIAN UPHOLSTERY FRAf,t r.S-ORIENTAL Pt:RSIAN RUt.::S FINF. BRASS -IMPORT.EXPORT COLI.Em ON 2 llG SAU DAYS Fre:nch -Engli1l1 -Auslrian -Spani.ah-Amtrican -Iran PARTIAL LISTI NC: Cal"ltd Waln11t Dinin1 Room Tabk1 I: Chairt. hf:a1111ful bi1 Sid,\ioard~ "With rn1rble 1op. I: H111cA, ~ E1t1ut, 1rr•t olrl odd China C1hinfl1, Curkt C.blllet, IJc,..,keuu with 1l1w doort. odd t1U1rbli: ,,., Nlah1 St11nd1, ..tao pain of S1tad1, s-ir of Loa.ii XV (tntd ho"' end ficch. 1>~h 11f /11111ri111 Twin Bede. many, m11y Cn".11 Annolrt~ marble toe W11h Standr.. Beruwood 0.1ir1, Iota nf odd Dinin' Ch1in, Vle1orla11 Sfuee, C\11iJI', l'Arlor .,.t, Wklrr pitee,_ RMklu, fine 0r,._.,, Vic1or1111 01•tl1, CanJOOlc 1'1blt1, Hl ft. Hall Mirror with llllfhle lop Cb&11 D1u.. Good ,,1ec1lon of old 0 1k ,1eee1 ••• Cl.OCKS--Grarulfathrr Cl.OCKS, Schonl CLOCKS, fNlh of 16111 rrn!IU'f Cloioonna Knr•1n 17K V1M!1, Cif ta•l74S 16 l!Jht hud t t,..td C11111try f'renth Ch1nddi•r•, 'l«trlfled. Old 3 ptntl tined teatwood Scl'iltn, Potttl1in S10 .. c1, En~li1h 1idrbo1rd1. Qo1b~1 !?UN. 11.orttd lkne1, fhi: COMPLETE FRENCH Ii AUSTRIAN BEOROOM SU ITts whh Twin Bed1, nl1h1 1t1nJ•, Ort1Jff & Twi n Arntalr8, Pbonop 1ph1, ttc., etc. Atte-111rin. hu11dr1d1 of ilcrns 100 nwnuou1 to Jill. (A Speel~I Con 11i,101 men1 from the lmporkf'l !) HANDMADE ORIENTAL PERSI.4JV RUG S Bi1 colltctlOl'I hM:hul•• Ytty rare and ''lntblf. ruJ11nd1 u : Jml!'-ri•I Crnwn Kinn1111, K1ah1n1., Qu1111, Prinre.• Bokhan, Ror•I l•f•h•n. Shiru. lndiu. Roy1I Suouk -Roorn 111,, Thro-' Ruancn., Pr•rer. tt.e. I e1e .. iMa• t01ne old f111., pirce .. TEllll!r Ariprvll:. 2S i:. ,.,,h upon •ward or hid. Balaoet: .. pkkup. (In conju11ci. wilh C041t Auction) Col. Limbo Burleson 2380 Newport Blvd., Cmtn M<1n AUCTIONEER 'tn•peetJon Invited Dall7 to time ol 9'.le. (lloo" Open JO A.M.) , :SI DAllY PILOT LECAL NOTICE , ll:Q PICTITIOUI I UtlNl11 fot.-.MI ST.ITIJi!IENT TIM lollO'<l'IM ptt.OIU l 't '41otol T·JMN NOTICE TO t•EDITOl.S SUPallOI COUIT 011 TMS STATE 011 ca1.1llOIMl• 110• THI! COUNTY 01' O•ANGI ..,,1,...n 1 1· lMIE !HO .. L!t. 1601 5 Ll ..... I ltKll (GISI 14wr ' JM. A.u&i lt~•O o. '~" l~n '•"~niPl lll El'Mrt lt 11v, Ltl~,... 101<.11. l•~nt W.,,lllt<t !Gffl PtrlN<Jl"PI 114<1 .. lvle•t Orl•t, 5t nlt """ 11111 kllMH I• bl1n1 COl'ICl .. c•ta ~· I "•rlf'ltr"'I" lront WIMl>ftt 11!0\tt~ D. lufl "~llllsl>t<I Or.lntt Co••' 011ly l»lol """"'JO •nd MIY l , 1', ll. 1'11 IQOt•)I LEGAL NOTICE l"UI LIC NOTICE tn 1<t0tdtn<t ,.Ir~ Ctll~rn11 Clvll Code tKt~ )OSI. tlltH llorH" PIOMMY ol C:IMn'ld •O•lltY, "'Ill bl Hid ti P"ltll( ""ction 10 11tl1tr 1 llvenimtn'1 lltn tor ra.mte<tlllioft vi -·o "" "' t !lff MIY 11, 1t71, 41 CMINO liOl"St 4ud ltn, 1111' ~OrJn to lit Kiii tl"f. -!.l\ltltl>d "'°"'• -flUY. tnd -IJl!ldlnt. for lnlOl'mt llOn ftll u•11n. P11&1lfst.ef Ort -C:Ot~I OtolY P ilot, AltY t. 7, I. 10, II, If, IJ, t .. U, 11. 1,11 •OIS.11 Ell11t 01 PAUL R. C\.AllK. Otee1sH. NOTICE IS 1"EREllY GIVEN 10 llHr cr~oh~1 o4 rnt 11;10•t .,.m..i OK..,tn1 1n1r 111 Pt'""'' 111¥ine cl1lm1 •••ln1t ll>t 111\1 dKllOrnl 1r1 rnu,.td to flit !ti.am, .. 1111 ~ ntetu••r v.....c11tn, I~ rnt olllct ol 11141 c11•~ o! ·~ 1bGYt 1n· h!!HI <O<Jr1, or 10 ort~I ll'>tfl'I, wltn 1t11 n1cei"'" voucn1r1. to rnt 1111C1en1t"9d 1! 1n1 oltlct ol n1r 1rto•n1v, Al<E t.EY P. OU!lll(,, .ii !oc>11tn Flower Slrttl, S11l!1 ICM, LO\ ... 1111111., C:o\ll<>rn1& toOIJ wnkn !1 1111 p11c1 ot 1>111ln1n at "'' 11ndu 1lon10 in 11! m1111ri ~tlAinlne '° tile 111111 ot 1jd !ltctdKH, within tour moi1!h1 tl!•r l iflot PllbllC•tlOtl of l/\!1 fl<llkt. D1!1d A1Hll 7,.,, ..... ·;· ~"'", HELEN D (lAlltl( E•e<11trl• 01 1nr Will 01 1n1 t l>o•t n1rneci dtCtcknl, AKELl!Y I", OUlll( '1t J.lulh l'i.w.r SI., Slllle M4 Lt• .A~ttl•1, Ctlll.,.i. ... 11 ltl: nui MAlllMR •• ..., A"trMY ffr IE•Klltf"I• Pl>bli11>t<1 Ot•n9'! COii' 0•11'1 P1H:.I. A.Pl11 l0 Ind MIY I, 14. 11. !tll !Ot .. 11 ~~~~~ DON'T PINCH YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming ) But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES • ' • with a PILOT ' • PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES $2.00 Any Item Priced $50. or Less (If mor• than one item, the combined total cannot ••t••d $SO.} 642-5678 • \ LEGAL NOTICE • • !)lily fil!OI, 1'71 1111·'1 LEGAL NOTICE 38 DAIL V PILOT Boan, S.11 909 BoAtt, Sllps/Dockt 910 Cycles .. Blk11, Mobll1 Hom11 935 Auto S1rvlc:1. P•ri• Mt Antlque1/Cl111lc1 953 Trucks '" s""'°"'' CKdpl•l now DEMONSTRATOR tO' SLIP .. Sania Barban. Scool•rs '25 111RN, hJ4 "'""· nlco INTERNATIONAL s •• ,, l·,-6-0_C_H_EVY __ C_A_R_R_YA-u"" S.O.ts, Power 16' lArtOn Olnwrtlble. like new. 121 Men:. sttrndr1ve. Xtra prop. Skt harne~s. NumUOUI xtru. $ 2 4 O 0 . 1n41 '33-U)5 •fi1 GULFSTREArtt : 17· 1936 PLYMOU'm 4-dr. Orlc. booki!I£' banfoot cruise.s to SALE Want lo nchange 1 o_r '69 \/'IV, 24M, pttfect cond. park. Space! & utilities engine, 3-apd trans C uphOl s., headlinin&, matts. C..tal1na. Depart Fri ~e . Ccronado 11, 30 a. 3S Newport, approx 1 mo. thlli All extras & s et vice undtt $&>, mo. Stt to ap-traMfer cue. Make offer. pedals, grill, enrtrw, brakes. return Sun eve. S50 per Yankee 30 summer. 213 981..0161. recor;is. Or. Scott ~262 preciate $2450. 54&--1667 646-464<1 New til"'Ps. .fi2,IXXJ miles. person. Calif. Cr u I s e 5 S•v• Up To $21000 SLIPS for sailboats, 24' to 34' '"'or"<"95--4°'""_34_3·~=--=..,-~ Trailers, Tr1v1I 945 VW BUS &eats for '68 or Mint oond. Purrs like a kit- J Spd, J Sei ls. Ntw P&int, Nice. tGWE8991 $995 ~191 Up To 10 Yrs fin&nelllf n ar row beam. Be st ~IN I bike, 311 HP, Br1u1.t: 16, Tra1Il Trail~r·.· El•c. later. Best otter. ten! 497-1694 . E S 1 A 8 L1SHE0 yacht Trades. Lease Back, Charter facilities. Free pr kn &:. Straiton eng, good oond, $*> * * 968-1210 * * D libeTl1•1&, 6S hp Mere, vinyl ch&rtu .11.pncy needs sharp YACHTS ROYALE, Phonr 67J..BTU 'tit 10 PM. or be~t o!r. Call for in-brake1. utane stove & /---°"vw"""E,..n.,~.-.. ---une Bu9gi•1 956 -Ml-- top, bait t&.nk, pump trlr. boats, po\\"er & uil, to lOO'. INC . PRIVATE sldt! tie . .., max· formation 557-1763 all J pm. oven. Ex. oond. Sleeps 6 & -·--:::-,"'.'"'.o----· I ~ .... Xtry! $149.>. ~ Ori&: price ...., .70 y 125 hu lots of room and storage 1600 CC, '70 MyC'rs Tow'd, VW power, ,,074n. Ernie MIMey 548-4191 %112 \V. Coast Hwy, NB !mum. $100 mo. A..\1Al!A : Dirt xtra.s ··--A . * Call 530-6940 * I..l~nsed. Good cond. S97j. -'"0810 675-646! slill atrttt leral. $450. spac:e. ~ to pprec:iate! ~~~~~~~~~~I 32 Twi C f II ,..=~~-,..~----~ l;;;:-Sr:JP.Si551,;;;-p;:;:;:;;lli'~~IC'.~·~";''~~~=~=-$800 with 14 x 14 enclosed 54l>-5990 dys, 5*-9251 evei . MUST .eU, 25· Ov.•ens Ex· , nscrew hris, u y ~ .r.i_,, b 1~ . I h I prrss cruiser. l'Ood cond, equip'd. Fishing or C'ru.is· FLYING Dutchman + trlr, 26' SLIP, SSS/mo. Private 2:JOcc X-6 SUZUKl Ch ca 1.rni. '"" w i ou · §] Sports, Ract, Rods 959 Bal'J'l.in pr ice, Eves ,_'"-·-"'-•-'-'°-"'-· _54_8-_,.._,.__ all. \\kC' new .. 2 tuU sets o! bath. No. ~Balboa Coves, cone! S350. CaU · 64~~~ 1 ;;,962.-,--;;76;;:-89~==-,,,.-,= --""'--"'-"'" _ _,, .. &12-3062 uils + 'p1nnaktt aellr. N.B. Call 61H331 afte · 6 '66 23' KerWdll trailer, . '33 CHEVY PICKUP l---·------1 Boats, Sail 909 SJ2j() or oiler. (:lllJ ~~·SLIP VI B·'"--1 1 r pni. seU~talnecl, air cond. * 23' TOU.YCRAFT Cabin ---------886-7m. .>J • • c: _..,.,.,... 5 e, Mobile Hom•s 935 67J.-7997 ist SIS head p.llty MALIBU OUTIUGGER 1,,-c-====--,=::---ol Bayside Dr. Avail June, Ju------------Antiques/Classics 953 Cadillac engine, hydro. ?-1ust ~. ~t t~. S3xio RtadY • PLUS TRAILER • 1 . ·1VENTUIRE; h •l,oep•All.4 ly l: Aug. 675-53a."I INSTANT HOUSING Trall•r1, Utlllty 947 be seen. to £0! (7141 82S-7504 ~A"7173 trSETa1 erf.ORmoRAorC.ING'~. • Boats, 5 ........ AA1 & Ski 911 1940 FORD P.U. V-3 tlathead ~ ~ $700 ~ i--4'x7'x24" 8 OX TRAILER recentJ.Y overhauled. N@eds 2100 Har001· Blvd. '68 Chevy ~I Ion P.U. l-llpd. Custom cab, R/li, SlA50. ......,., '61 RED ford 6 Pickup g· Bed S39J. Runs JO(>d! 546-8409 early am or evell 67 TR 0 JAN l6' fly -14~. ~50~.~.,-1~SH~.~1-,..,..-1au--. Ex~-. 1 53l--083l, 557-2~ 14 FT., 7:; HP Evinrudt. WHY WAIT? LlKE NEW1 $150 &J7-3370, pa.int -body 'WOrk $450. brid&t/dual ccntrols. All KITE Xlnt cond 2 sail• 2 "'-t k. •'='= · trlr 830-2&21 or best ofter. '36-5672 txtras 11p1 6. Ntw en.1:. a:Uent condition. • • • • IX"au · s 1. .....,.,, inc. · The all new Vlllaa:e House 646-9DOO '493.329'1 bonus. tTlr. nnbl. &16-{120J 847-6578 or &46-5742 by I evllt l\fobile Systems Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 2100 Harbor Bh·d. Save your car • :t'a not far! J1JSt ttach ~ ~ phone le all Dl.ily i.t1o1 Classified &U-5171 Omzt &tM66 yoor ad • todl)'! ~---~---~· dys, 673-BID eves. with sloping shake roof can 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Import~ 970 Trucks 962 Truckt 962 :·················--• : See Our Truck • : Specials ts : e For Your Truck • • • e Or e : Recreational Needs : : * leyHrp * DooU-: • • ~ Snlltlll * 1111 C11111l11thern • • • l11et Jord• • • • 12' Aquacat; Good cond. nf!W 1 l[i) be yours OO\\'! J\fodels on dttk, car camer1 Tr1111POrtitlon .fl!.. dlaplay at $495. ,.,,_.,,, .. BAY HAR BOR LIDO 14-Xlnt cone!. Trailer, MOBILE HOMES covtr. Call 544-1060 days; Campers, Sale/Rent 920 or 675-8465 eves. 1425 Baker St., Costa J\.feu. + LIDO 14 No. 266 3 10' ALASKAN camper unit, Just S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor wltrailer. $1095. Lesi trlr RU cont, v.·/gas & elec. 7141540-9470 $MS. EVes : 644-2fi01 refrl&. Range &. ovtn. 12v l: Exc:lu1ive Re1id•ntial 2 lIOv elec .. sink wlv,.ater Park Newport Beach S.~0\\i"BIRD fiberglass: system, a"•n1ngs &: lots of ' aaUs \v/dolly or trlr. $300. storqe. 6'4"' top Lv.TS for 8x"ll. trailer. 12x25 cabana * * 646-4370 * * sarer h\lo'Y travel. Sl,025. custont blt. 12x30 patio, COLUMBIA 28, 1969 • Load· 67.>-lll3. Fenced. Bricked. Boat sl ips. ed. S9800. Days: 213/ Priv. beach. R~. hall, 636.C757· Eves: 714/646-5724 CHEV. pa.nl'I ca.mper . billiard rm Rent $95 mo. • Storaa:e 10 yrs. Like new. ..,,,.,,,, 11<· ;...,_1~• SAlLBOAT & accessorits Take small trade-in. 34111 .-ivu. • •0 ' """· 3HP Gull. Good cond. $L50. Cout Hwy, Apt 11, Dana Call 54&-1153 · Pt. VENTURE 21, fully equip-'51 f'brd school bus con- ped. $2400. \'t ried. FOR SALE OR ! DUNTON FORD ! • SJ YUU SllYIN• OUNGI COUNTT • * 962-6351 * TRADE. 548-5613 after 4, FLIPPER: Sails &: haul in ask for Jim. * Kaw .. saki * IHJl •Ai-;A "A(.l{;<i.~4H!1'UN S:i.lt·~. St·1, J';ir1,, ln' Champion Motorcycles :.'II" Harho1 B!vd C ,\1 • li4'l·!Jl1 • xlnt rond. Ll'ss !han 2 yrs I '·"n,--"P-.A'°CE~-A:-m>-w--.,:-10-:-10c, I old. $325. 673-868J Homt, Sips 6, self <..'Ont.,l'LA~N~CER=~ • .,~~,--~~ 12' wooden sin.1:le 1ail, frTe ien-alJ', summer date s bdrm 2 oa' bit-ins w/d slip. sm or best oHer. avail. 832-784-0. v.·tr ~f!ene;, N'O 7 x S George 4M-33S4 TRADE '67 Deluxe 4 dr. .storage sheds, country club RHODES 19 ~oop, fuU cov., Cortina, xln't cond plus ? atmosphere. AdWts mobile mtr., 2 sets sails, x..lnt cond. for late model van camptr. park. 645-0783 after 6. Hot car from Bavaria. e 201 WEST WARNER : The amazingly successful new BMW Bavaria is here. 6 cylinders. 2.8 liters.130 mph. Wundercar! : SANTA ANA 546-7074 e •.....•••...••••.. ~ Autos, Imported 970 Sl.595. 548-1067. Call 67>5258 1971 34· Doublt t i p-out Autos, Imported 970 CHEVY Bu 11 IC amp e r . Fireball. Only 4 mo old, NEWPORT IMPORTS NOW ON DISPLAY The Summit '----$13,500.00--· 1971 DAYTONA FERRARI "365" GTB /4 FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 7,000 MILES-STILL SMELLS NEW $21,900.00 JO D4Y Dlll'illl:Y -IUND NIW FROM FACTORY -SJJ,&00 • • • 1970 FERRARI "365" 2 + 2 lt,000 o•igi11tl mil•1. SolJ I ••rvic:1d in Hollywood. Air c:ondifion in9, •lt c:hi' win· cl ow1, wi•t wh111t., $13 ,900.00 • • • 1967 FERRARI "365" Collfor11lo Con•ffl/blt Ortly IS of ih t 11 w1r1 m1d1, erigintl c:01t w t i o~tr S20,000. II i1 1quipp1tl with f11ll '>1w11, t lr, wi11 w~11l1, 11c:ell111t cortd ition. $11,900.00 • • • 'O ••Y 1111c:o11dltlonol worl'ttllty 011 ef111ino & drlwt trt1ln. e HUGE SELECTION OF QUALITY SPORT CARS ON SALE e '67 Jaguar XKE Cp1. 1•,000 ori9i111I mtl11 . IAPW6001 •'Just beaut.if1tl as t1e1v'' '71 Super Bug '69 VW Bus 1,900 erig. 111i111. M19 wl.111. & wide 0>'1h. # 7llCPV, D1lu •1, Fully eqwipptd. $2295 $2595 ' '69MG A11l•ffl •fic, M6C. ci. ......... ~ •• " 11110. llltlic h 111.._ Nter ~ew t ond1!1on. '67 912 Porsche $2595 $3595 AUTHORIZEO SALIS & SUV/CE FOR MG··Lotus--Jense1i FeM'ari 3100 WEST COAST HIGHWAY Nl:Wl'OlT IEACH 642·9405 I Butane stove & refrig, full slepl in only 1 week, in size. 4 bunk beds, dinette beaut \Va!er1ront Prk; days tbl, etc. S97S. 64&-7934. 213 / 7 4 6-2 3 9 4, Eves; '69 FORD Super Van-Elec 213/931-4244 refrlg, head, oven. stove,.1'N°''E'°'\°"V"'M"o"b°"ilc-•~H7o_m_•_7tlx"°'. 5°'2,...,, 7 filp top, air oond. 545-3215. BR, 2 ha. 112.500. Set up k Cycl•s Bikes lndscpd in Costa !\1esa's S I' r ' 925 GREENLEAF PARK. 1750 coo• 1 Whittier Ave. THINK HONDA .. "FRI EDU ND ER~ , .. MAOI fMWT, •1 5.17-6824 • 893-7566 548-1698 * 645-2510 BEAUT '71 Go J den west Aquarius, shag crpts, Full drps, 2 full baths. 2 BR l: den, !\l1rrored \\'a.II in liv. rm.j~:! e 24x33 LANCER-2 br, 2 ba, 11., yrs old. New a.dull park, C.i-.1. 64&-1823 '67 Bultaco l25ce with 25011-.i:C:=;-;;;:::::-;;=:--I I enzine. Rl&:ht crank 1,~ chip-!"ie"''JX>_r1 \Vattr Front peel. $1SO. '67 Honda, 3(15 30 mobile home/caban& enrtne. bond to 350cr, com· Good cond. Sl800 646-9000 BMW --- ROY CARVER, INC. AUTHO RIZE D B.M.W. DEALER SALES & SERVICE 2925 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 5464444 p!e!t including pipes, $75. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980Autos, N•w 980Autos, N•w 980 Auto1, New 64&-3814 all 6. '66 Norton 750cc bored out to SOOcc. Semi chopped, rebl! en& & trans. Good looking, must sell. S850 or best offer. Call btwn 6-9 ,,,.kdys, v.·knds anytime 675-4062 650cc TRIUMPH: 1960 Triumph TR6 mag., bike cslm &: chromed, ?.lolly paint job, $800 or bst otr. 642-7119 09 BSA 650cc LIGHTNING T 0 U RI N G modtl-A65L, single owntr, lo mi. A1n! con<!. Ph: s.t&-SJn 305 Honda Chopper, $450 or btsl oUer. See to ap- preciate. C&.11 646-9i03, ask for Gary e HUSf...'Y 2j(). See to btlievt. S750. Call Tom. days 67 3 -20 50; eves 67>-0662. 1948 Triumph Tigtr 100. Orig cond, 500cc, 13.000 orig m1, :rilust ~ee to apprec. $87j. 675-4507 KA WA SAKI 90. Ne11,· e:>:· pansion chamber. Great dir t. Street legal . Ac- Cl'~!orie~ S295. 54:>-J.l84. e U5cc YA.i\1AHA-Knobbit5, chamber, fork brace. Xl nt cond. sm or offtr, ~0-5846 11ltl'r S pm. ·59 HONDA 90 S27j, 1500 mi. • 54:)4775 . HONDA ~tln1 Trail. 1 ~Told, A tw1uty, Sacrifice Sl2S, 833-3220. SUZUKI, 56, :.i!llcc, Uaving, mU5t M"il. ~ or best of. ftr. 67>16'16, S.10-4~3 1967 Bultaco 250cc. Sharp & , .. ery Jast. S-400. • ~1S6 19Tl SUZUKI 250, dirt bikt, 74 mi's, 10 mo's left on \\'ltr. S725. ~522. * 1970 PEt-.'TON 125 * Xlnt oond. S<IJO firm. * Call 67>7085 * ·70 SUZUl\l 00, likr nu, under v.•arr.11.nty, 7j/J mlles. $325. 673-2191. '70 Y A..""1AHA 125 ENDURO, S375, will deal. Xlnt cond. >t8-4090 "68 BultaC'O 100 Fis! Oirt r.1dy. :'o11ny xtras. :\1n't. $300. &12-8338 '49 KA\\' A SAKI 500. ~la. Coot! cond. Com p l <'I t!)' C'htcktd by mech. 5.16--3.~96 HONDA·Not Running $n • • * M9·l6.q') '68 BULTACO PURSA.~G wtt!I •~saorie1. Firm $400. 495-)649, Af ter 6:00 P:'ol. "W!:ED It & reap" .. clea.n out the tl"!alun'I It tT.t$h - rum lnto cash thru • Dady Pilot Clatslficd al'.f. ~2-.'i67• PRE VACATION SPECIAL 1971 COLONY PARK STATION WAGON Crou co111try rlclo potk .. o Powe• 1icl1 window 1, Colony P1rk Sit • tio11 Wtgon, 42t-4V VI . Twin corn. fart 10111191 1•t h, Non 1 1h1 111I 1mi1- "011 1y1t1,.,, Corn11in9 l1mp1. WSW H.71115 ll1 lt1d Tir11, Tilt 1t111i119 wh8tl. A11tom1tic ''"'d conl1ol, 6- "'•Y PWll 1e•I dri>'er 1ide, lle tli"i119 p1uen9 t r lttl, Ct "lt r f1 cin9 rtar 11th, Ti"led 91111 • complt l•, l u9· 9191 c11ti•r • w11ir dell., Ctrpeltd lo•d ltoor. St11ion w19on Ptdded/ loc~1b l1 1ii/1 itor19e com111rlmen+, Powt r door !11ck1, Aulomtfic ltrnpt•I• l urt conlrol, AM rtdio w/1t1r10 ltp• 1y1., lnlerv1I wind1lll1ld wip1r1, OLX 111! & FllT. 1ltc1<•lder btlh, .-.,,,,,_ •net protection 9rouJ1, lttmole CTL t ltfl ht"d mi,,or, • 511111 DISCOUNT $1077 '-'°JOHNSON & SON ' 1 Mile South of Sen Diego FrHway 'Lincoln Continental e Mark III e Mercury e Cougar 2626 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA M!SA 540-5630 642.0981 980 -. ..... l§J ! -..... 1§1 I ..... ..... 1§1 ~' ..... _ ... _ .... _,1§11 -. ..... l§l I Trucks 962 Trucks 1--------''2 Autos. Imported 970 Autos, I mporre6 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Import.cl BILL BARRY 1 1i6 DODGE CREW CAB AUSTIN HEALEY pO~TIAC-G~1C-flAT NEW '71 GMC V2 T. P ickup & I Ft. Camp.r 6 Pa~n.t;er. &•~It btil. ldtal lor camper. V8, auton1a11c, Pov.er 111eer1ng, a !r 11ncl.. radio. heattr. Priced rthl! IUJ60S31 rully equipped Zll?lil. Tint-~ ~-J __ . ed 1!111. Heavy duty J-'&!R 1~ sprlnf !, brake booeter J.7 2100 Ha.rbor Blvd . 66.M66 rear axlt., l 11peed 111tomatic Auto Laa1lrtg 964 1ran1 k push bu!lon radio. ---'---- Plumbing ttlroughoui. }"1ve J,,I LEASE .;:allon butan, tank romplece :?~ mo's w/purcMse option 1nsulauon Torque "'indov.•s. '7o ~tavf'rlck, S.l9 mo. '6' J-IEALEY 3000. Loolui, runs ~-Recent en1ine work. J want newer car. \\'ill llfU this for $800. ~2050 BMW Tll'tlv~ volt Jlght1n;,: ~Y~-'69 Cad El Dorad ... Sl79 mo. Jl'n1. FOur1een i:tallon plastic ·~ Cad r...... <lev·,11' 1129 mo I • , _ <-I I ~''"' '· -· L..ar.&:est ""' ection o 11aw· lank. f1f1y pound in-"70 Frd C.alaxy 500. $89 mn. J Neiv &. Used BM'IVs sulal~ ice bo'I'., 1110 pla_1e '67 Cad El Dorado. llti mo. • Southland·s 1'-lost 1\!od- burner. s 1or11i;l', hand tail-AND OTHERS ~ P'" ·r · oi't'd draperu~ii. Sleep.i six w-1 All cars II t AlR but ~laverick ! • Cern rv1cs' 'k" ,111es I I. ·• bl ' ompJete toe o opttona •r.e ta e queen SOUTH COAST ~1 V p ~izc ~d arrangement. Par· B. \ uts 111:1ollNI dra11ers. i\lany oth-CAR LEASING 1 • O..·er_!eas Delivery er fea tures. 300 \\0 • Csr !1111· NB 6..1~:?'182 S?f"rl!lii1ts LEASE a new 0 "71 Pinto S30 Buy Or Lease SALE $3987 $499 ON. · $91.31 mo. S-199 15 lhe !n1ill doo.1n Pll)· men!. 3!lS.ll is !he-total monthly payinent 1nc:lud1ng r;,x. licensf' and finance char~es on appl"oved Cf!'· rill for '1S monthis. The cash price includi111: ta:\: It lic- ,11.se 1.; ~~27~.3.'i. Delt>rred P!"ICI' 1:s S.'l21i.88 1ndudln~ t..Xt~. hC'tn~ &..· finance char&:f'. Annual percentaa:e rate llAO'•. I Over Jl) N1w & U11td Cars 1'o Choote From OPE'.\' "TIL 10 P.\I :2(00 E 1st SI., Sant.a An• 11st Sr. ill S.A. f'ol)'. I 558-1000 • HI. r.tcr.tATION CEXT!:R mo. (36 n10.I open end. At RENT ' "'w '7! p;,to $-1 C BOB AUTREY clay and Ac mile. Put a • l.LtUe kick iri your hfe. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1860 Long Beach Blvd., Lona: Reach Phone 1213) 591-8721 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Cl~ Sunday COSTA ~1ESA 642-0010 I -~A-u'"tom-o~U~,-,~E~x-o"el'c-1,"n-,_oo,- Autos Wanted 9&8 we PAY TOP CASH for used cars & truck!, just cal! us ror tree estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales 1\{ana.11:u 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntlniton Beach 847 -6087 KI 9-3331 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS & ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cn11ta f\1 esa ~-44« DATSUN '71 DATSUN * 510 * STATION WAGON DATSUN DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 11835 Beac.b Blvd. Hun~on Beaeh IG-tm. or ;Y.().(W.42 FERRARI FERRARI AtmiORlZEO SALES & SERVICE J1rtupo1 r 3l1npor1 ,-, 3100 \V. Coa.st H"''Y· Newport Beach FIAT BILL BARRY PONTIAC-G~tC-J-'IAT NEW '71 FIAT ISO SEDAN 2198233 SALE $1679 $299 DN. S49.59 MO. ~AT --------1 CIDBD • Lar1f'1t Seltt!lon or Nf!w &, Used f'iata e Southland'! Most ~1od­ eorn ~'"rvict-facilit1a:.. • Complf"te Stock of fiat P11.rt11 • Overi;pas Delil'try Sptt1al i&ts Buy Or Lea1e At C. BOB AUTREY 1860 Lonr Beach Blvd., Long Stach Phone (213) 591-8721 Cioaed Sunday HILLMAN ·~ Hillman Station \Yaion. '61 H\llm&n Converfi~. Both need enfH'lf' ~'Ork S7:l. 548-2318 JAGUAR '71 JAGUAR ¥12 KARMANN GHIA '65 KARMANN GHIA I RRB l'taf $1099 Harbour V.W. 18111 REACH BL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH \\"O\Y! '69 Ka1·n1ann Ch111-Super c!ll'an. On I y Sl!.'JO. 67"-:1611 af! 6" pm "6..1 Kannann Ghia 1500-S EXCELLENT • + sm •• s.1a-102S •• LOTUS LOTUS AUTHORIZED .S..\LES "-SERVICE J1rtlljJOll 31111jJ0 llS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Stach Automatic, air cor'ld .• waw, TG. Pwr. SL dlr. Must sell. Undr1· fllctory w1rT1nt)'. S299 Ls !~ iotal do~·n P<l.Y· Take older tr1dt. "rlll Un· n1ent. $49.5.q ls tht total anl'f! pvr. pty. Call 5.10-3100 monthly p1ymtnt includil"lg #IS7-IJ6Z7. t.ax, license and fin1Mce 1---------- chargr1 on approved credit tor 36 months. The cash pncf! tnclllding tax k lic- enae it S179'l.9.'i. Of!ltrnd price i! $208t24 includ tni:; ta.x. lietnsc l< finan~ chari;:e. Annual pt>rct'nta1e rlllP lJ.!kJ,.~. Over 13;, Nt.1v &. Ugpd Cars To Choo!<t From OPEN 'TJL 10 P.\I 2000 E. l at ~t .. Santa Ana. '68 XKE 242 1\terttdes 2.'iO SE, like Autometic, fa<'I. air, dlr. I'll""''· low mileagt. $4.950. Loaded. _ ewner. Ta.kt older Air k lrarm>r , new Michelin trade or 1ma1J down. \Vill tirf'5. 493-3429. finance pvt. pty. C a 11 e 1962 1\fercedes t90C-Good 540-3100 aft 10 am. runn1ni:: cond. l\lust 5ell . JAG ·:. _ XK 150 Coupe. Disc $&.)Otoffrr. Mi-8143. brks. Elec. O"dr. Ex~llent 'M '190 SL hanllop. !l0'1. S1500. Ml~ reslor,.d. Tape deck. $1500 firm. 67.l-1066 aft 6 pm . ROY CARVER, Inc. I 292j 1·11'1.rbor Blvd. Cotta i\1t>sa 546-4444 MtltiT ioel/ '67 G'.\1C '4 If your car is extra clean, F'actory air conditionin:. /lst St. at S.A. f W)'.l aee us ru-sr. rAdio. h111;~a1:~ rAck. 4.700 :l.18-ICXXI JENSEN MG T.f .U. enf . V--6. 30:>-E, compltte except alternator. V!ry a:d cond. 26.(XXI mi's. .>4>309;). Co11ta i\1tsa mil~,o.. factory "·arranty. --------- BAUER BUICK ll92CTDf /IJDll& 234 E. 17th SL $2395 • Co1ta fl1esa 548-7165 L'd'FORTS \\'ANTED I B ill Jones' TlllU ._ ';~~·; ~~y"i!~ I B. I. Sportscar Cent. "FRIEDLANDER" JENSEN AtmiORJZED SALES ,•_ SERVJCE J1rtupnr! Jl111pol'I ~; 3100 \V. Coast HW)'. MG At.m{QRIZED SALES & SERVICE J]rtupor1 3\inport ~, "Si G~IC Van, lll!reo, panelt d. noor, curt a in 1, Cragers K· ntw tlrei. 6 cyl. auto $1600. j..)7~20 BILL fl JAXEY TOYOTA ~833 1-rarbor At Adams, I 1J7SO llACH ILYD. lml Beoach Blvd. I f Hwy. J9 I H. Beach. Ph. 341-3555 540-4'91 89J.7.'i66 e 537-6824 N1t'ol'por1 Beach 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. 910 Autos, New Autos, New 910 .Autos, New 980 Auto1, New 980 Autos, New 980 Newport &act. 1--------1 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim • BUSINESS IS FANTASTIC AT UNIVERSITY OLDS! WHY? BECAUSE OUR SELECTION OF NEW 1971 OLDSMOBILES IS GREAT. ~ THINl ... ~ .. "FRIEDLANDER" 1J7M e•.&CM OfWY. HI 893-7566 • 537.Q24 MGB e l\.fGB '64-Like ne1v in & ou!. \\'1re 'ol·hrels, R&li. i v.io . Call 64;)...476..1 OPEL '71 OPE L Rallye Sporr 4 spd .. R4H. Showroom fre•h. 8-aJCPE $1895 Harbor American 646·0261 1969 HARIOR, COSTA M[SA e '69 Opel 2-dr sport coupe w/vinyl lllp. Xtra. cleitn. 102 eng. slick shift. oversited 'M'fW. R&H £. tAP"' Mck. SI20Cl. 4!l&-1425 ·70 OPEL GT. ~lu1t ~Jl th11 immar car. See to app?'f'c . 675-6197 SRA~~INEW OLDSMOBILE INCLUDES : H1ater, d efroster. beckup lights, emtr• 9e"cy fle1her1, duel speed wipers, padd1d dash, iaad.led "'iso rs, seat and shoulder belts, heed r11ts anti all the l'lew safety equipment. Order now in yeur choice of colors ... and a dd your choice cf accessori es. e BECAUSE WE OFFER OUTSTANDING DISCOUNTS. PORSCHE '65 PORSCHE C • • 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 Romomb•, "WI ARI N!VU SATISPllD UNTIL YOU AU" 2850 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA NEW CARS 540·9640 USED CARS 540·8881 White 'M'ilh n!:d intPrior. Ex- ceUtnt condition. (TZP 808) Full price S2·1'.l5 or take trade. CaJJ 4f}.t-n44. BLACK '6~ SC. Recen1 ena:lne I. tran~. !\lal?s, F"~l. Mu~t sec 642-4343 dys. 646--!Jllj aft 6, A~k ~or La nCf". 196!}-9J2. Chrome 111h!~. Am· I Fm radio. $4800. Orig. ow11<'r. SlJ-mj, &14--0637 ~es. '68 PorM:he 912, A;\f-F)!., h1qs, Muat 1eU. ... 548-3309 + '56 PORSCllE Speed111er Ou:111<'. Restnrerl. ready to paint. $2000. 67~!MO. RENAULT '69 Renaul! lt-16 S119?.i Sedan Wllitln, f:'<. cond. Dk. gm. 23 mpg. 642-lll4 ROLLS ROYCE '68 R OLLS Ftoyce. &Md Ii able, fur rug11, fully equip., min! cond. 84fr299J SPRITE 'M Sprite, M.W top. 4 llf!W t1re1. lS.000 miles. &ood oond. S725. 347-9934 eves & "M"f"eke nd11 TOYOTA lf&I TOYOTA CORONA 4 DR . SEO. MUST SELL BeauuJuJ ~ tini~h 'oli!h 2 lone 1nl,.nor. Auto trarui., Radio Heatf'r, e tr .. Priett ~uc'ed. V'TL200 $975. John· &: Son, 2628 Harbor Blvd., C:OSla ~lest, 540-56..~. "MAKE Rrom For Oa.d- d y' ', .cl t11n out tht prap. ,your tn1h la CASH with 1. Daily Pilot OusUlel ••• DAIL y ~ILOT S• l~I AulOI for Sale l~I 1§1 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, N•w 9IO JACKPOT BUY Al BEACH CITY DODGE TODAY! --, ~ Immediate Delivary ~ BRAND NEW 1971 DART SWINGER ~ n.h 11 Ille full 1!10 •<•"•'"Y 11101 1Mor11 .. r ... to lhe e.,;,. lo.,.lly. h ou!ilullv 4elallff wllll lh••• ••ho clo1uro le•lur•• Ibo! Mak• !he Ch.-,1ler ,.-oducl ar1 eut1tandl111 ltuy. leac• City O.de• ha1 o ·~•tlol prlte or1 lh• ""'o!ionol "'ode!illl ll2llll1lll'3 IM.'olfOIATl DltlVEIYI HOW ONlY $ NEW CAR TRAD!·INS All SALE PRICED! '70 FORD '69 TOYOTA MAVIRICK COROLLA Wo lo,,10 )o" .. ,.,, '""' "'I• 4 -M. •H••• """°'· """ .... •••• !I " '"'' .. .i ..... ~ ell '"" •••••••••«• ••oi -h• 4•1"1 .. • 00<• thlo lo,. .,;.,, •tJl46. •'""'····· 11),t~. . '68 COUGAR '68 CHARGER •u;. & •••'"'· .1. •••4 • ..., ... ,i v 1 ....... """' , ... "' , ... .r.1 .... To;, ••• It rN I _ .. ,. VI<•· ""11 •oe. lo•• d""' '"" •-Y· !ti ... CJ<!f JJ1Ul4.,. ••l<H •• .,11 ot '68 CAMARO '69 FALCON h o ,.,.t.ct -o• • M•telo .,1 ... f)I, '"' tileer. •1' <\'I, h looo•!ll•llY N •I•-wl!~ •ffio. ~ool•I ••~ ~•· TDAJJ4 , . Oi'llY I~" Jo<'. oon•. XJll'~ ..• ••· '"'" 1400 d•1I•• ••• l lG IA.LE '68 DODGE MONACO • -· ~"'~'''• V·l, ••IO , .. ,..., • ....... ,.,..... .... •l• ... , ' •lo~ 100, , ... ,.,., '"''" WPD· "' '66VW CAMPllt l.li'oot • ~1.~1 l b '<1"'' " ' 11,.11 1 ... 1111711 '67 CAMARO !h;o M • ••••, •o•y '""'" ) -• .., ••••• Voo r do!I"'' •f•• O•lfl ,, ... ' .. -•• , .1 .... "'' .... , ..... ...... ., ,.1,..i •• .., •••••• loo •• •• ,~ .. 11100. ll•jfO '69 Pace Arrow 1 I ft. Motor Horne .0 1• ... ,,iliO•i•f , ln C)O':I O!lf"OI "''"· P,,,10•<0 ol l0,000 "'''' -j "'· ·•"•"'•· •11•11 MOTORHOME SALES & SERVICE We're tht f1ctory repr11ent1- ti¥e for Pace Arrow.(hinook and E11plorer Motor Home1. We repair &!I sy$1ems and install Gener&tors, Air Con· BRAND NEW '68 vw BUG R.•dio, 11••••" i !l!Md ltll AE ll ) ditioners, Awnings, S1ereo Systems & Underco.!ling. 1971 DODGE VAN CONVERSION U11i! (Oll'l~ltto with full 1;11 lttd tho• 111akt1 i~lo cll•ot19, watt• •~ji>ply wit~ pwMp, lctbo., par11li11g ' l•1ul•llo". •l•yl l!oo" cur•a i•t, 1to11111 c•lti1111i, 12J cw. r •• 1/t lan •11li d111>t j•. wo1I c .. 11 ... 1 .. .,,. S.•1411 "IA1Ull1001. Ol'IN DAILY 'Ill I 0 ,M INCWDJNO SUND.A.YI $ All t•r1 subjKI ID l'lflOr stle. Pfltf:S good '111 Mond•y. M•Y 17, 1971. I I 't ' 40 DAILY PILOT Friday, May 14, 1971 I .......... l~l I ·~...... l§J I ........... l§J I ......... l§J I ............ l§J I .......... l§J I ·~ .... -l§J I ~....... I~ ~........ ][~ j •A~-;-===;;;"°;;;A;;;•;;:'°';;;;• ;;N•;;;;•==="";;A;;:u;;tos;;;,;;i:N;;;;ew~=;;i9;;;;80;;;;A;;;ulo;;••;;;;N;;;;•w==;;;;"°=~I Autos, Import.a 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported t70 i.; TOYOTA TOYOTA TRIUMPH ALWAYS BAUER BUICI{ IN COSTA MESA ''SPECIALIZING IN UALITY'' Buick's Excitnig New l1nport OPEL 1900 SPORT CPE~ *57f46722J 2 DOOR SPORT COUPE <4 i peed, reclining bucket 1eet1. All Federall y Required Safety Equipment. White wall tires, tinted windshield, power disc brakes, 90 horsepower engine with hydr aulic lifter1 . DELIVERY TODAY! LARGEST SELECTION AtL MODELS -COLORS -OPTIONS AVAILABLE FINALLY WE HAVE NEW '71 ESTATE WAGONS! 6 and 9 PASSENGER -ALL ARE FULLY EQUIPPED AND ALL ARE AIR CONDITIONED. YOUR CHOICE OF COLO.RS! UICK. IN COSTA MESA B U ICK ·OP EL·JAGUA R 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-7765 • 1U1 IUKI JJ~ f. ,,, CO.lf.l HlU. TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT 1970 Toyota Corolla CANARY Yellow 62 Triumph 1200 Cpe. TR-4. Rrc. reblt. Gd. uphol. ures. paint. Super Oun! SPOR1Y ECONOMY $69J. ~&-2885 or 548-6591 ""•h•"" nni.h ,,, .. bloek VOLKSWAGEN ON SUNDAY $69.01 MONTH• 36 1nos. Del. pay pr!~. $2~84.36 or cub p r I c e $2003.55 incl. Tax &: Lie A.P.R. 'tt5J%. SerlaJ No. ].J,1347. *On approved credit Bill Maxey Toyota 18881 BEAOI BL. 8•17·8555 HUNTINGTON BEACH bucket seats, 4 speed trans., "'"",.......-.,.,--- Radio. Hefltcr, etc., Priced '69 V\\', auto stick l\Jn roof for quick salr. 621AKS. $1<175 AM /Fi\1, beaut. ' con d.: Johnson & Son, 2626 Har. Sl .450 64-1-rol7. bor Blvd., Costa J\1esa, ,68 V\V d 1 540 .;G30 se an, 1unroo , • · At\1/FM radio, $1,17fl BESI' BARGAINS 548-03lll COME SEE OUR SELECTION OF TOYOTAS Jim Slemons Imports 140 W. Warner Senta Ana '71 VW Camper. 12,000 mi. Radio. P/B. Heady! $3150. 546-8409 early A.'f or ew. V\V '69 Bug. Light bluf". Stick. 31.000 mi . Excellent condition 642-1304 TO GET MORE "BUGS" OUT OF OUR DEALERSHIP WE ARE NOW OPEN ON SUNDAY. NOW 7 DAYS A WEEK OUR CUS- TOMERS GET "BUGGED" BECAUSE VW JS AMERICA'S NO. I SELLING IMPORT. CHICK IVERSON WILL BE OPEN ON SUN· DAYS BECAUSE NOW WE HAVE A FULL LI NE OF' NEW CARS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. Open E v11. & Sun. TOYOTA DEMO SALE $1777 54MllS '70 VW Advf'nturer csm~r- 1 --==~~-I Lo mi. Llke nev.•. Under TRIUMPH ........ ,1y. =· '"-'"" 1971 TOYOTA PORSCHE/ AUDI Authoriz~d Sales & Service "6Z, To)'Otll Land Crui.!.('r i"°759TR:l. CLASSIC COND. 1969 VW: Pvt Pty, dark P.U .. , 4 v.·hl drive. $lfi00. S.l80. Call 673--9966 ask for green, radio & W/¥.'. 445 E. COAST HIGHWAY At Bayside Drive NEWPORT BEACH 1970 HARBOR BLVD. \\'/camper $1900. 549--0:i(JJ John * * 644-2901 "'* '70 Corolla 2-dr, Like ne\v, '64 TR-4 . .Gret"n v.•/black 1n1. '64 VW Bus. x.ln't cond. !JOO 3000 mi's, $1 795. Good cond. $800. 673-9966 engine, $1075. * ;,.1G-876J * ask for Angelo 646--0430 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New JOHN CONNILL "No G irnrnick1, No Gi ~••w•y1, J u1t 21 Yr1. Hone1t S1U in9 WE'RE LOADED WITH THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • The rear window CJDeS up and disapjMars into the roof. The tail CJate CJOes down and disappears into the floor. ALL MODELS • EQUIPMENT • AND COLORS AVAILABLE! COSTA MESA 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 980Autos, New OVER 50 .VEGAS TO ~ CHOOSE FROM Named Car of the Year 1971 MOTOR T•EHD Best Handling Car in America Regardless of Price ROAD & TU.CK 980 Ene•I Out Of Compari•on T ••ts of the Six Small Cars CAR & DltlYIR NEW 1971 VEGA 2 DOOR SEDAN $2197 ,r:;:J. CHOICI o• 10 COLORS ~HUGE DISCOUNTS • WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW 1971 VANS! CAMPER VANS-SPORT VANS TRUCKS-TRUCKS-TRUCKS LOTS OF 4 WHEEL DRIVES Pickups-Carryalls-Blazers. lmmecliate Delivery i971DCHEVv 1 /2 TON ,:~{~~:! $ 2 5 6 9 CONNELL CHEVROLET • 2828 HARJlnst BLVD. COSTA MESA· 546-1200 f ........... I~ I .,. .. ,,,.. l§J I ·-..... l§J I .......... l§J 1 .......... l§J I ......... - A-, Imported · 970 Autos, Im'°""" 970 Autot, lmpwtM 970 Autot, Imported 970 Autos, lmPorted 970 Autot, lmpc:ted VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '70 VW SEDAN '68 VW CAMPER (1(16 APJ) IWXP 754l $1799 $2899 Har bour V.W. Har bour V .W. 1&711 .!EACH BL. s.t2-4435 187ll BEACH Bt.. 842-«35 HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEAOt" '59 VW, xln't running cond. 1'68 VW Squ1reb1ck .a HP enc. '37~ Call I SA'LE PRICED 54~2730. , . BELOW WHOLESALE 'fJ!l VW Bus • 62 rebuilt enc: One owne trade 30 000 ml ~x~t. cond. n.tns &ood $650 ~ ...,. r dio, • ' ... 1 ' or offe 673-4643 · ... 11"" trail.!. ra , • ..,a er. r ~. XEV667. ··$1175. Johnson VOLKSWAGEN e VW's e HUGE SELECTION New C•r Dt eler Lowest Prices HlgheJt Trades Bill Jones' VOLKSWAGEN '64 VW SEDAN (JKN ~) $899 Harbour V.W. 18111 BEACH BL. 84:1-4435 HUNTING10N BEACH '6:1 Kannann Ghia VW, black w I ~1tite convertib!e top, nbuilt engine. Xlnt mech. condition. $425 br best oiler. E\/ts 49+-1380 VOLKSWAGEN e '69 BUG R/H * Air Best oiler • * 96.J.-7231 VOLVO VOLVO DEMO SALE • 144 Automatic & Alt • 142 Automatic e l « 4 Speed • 16" Automatle We Specialize In Overseu Delivery ..DEM Lew W VOLVO VOLVO $1295 1969 Volw lM S!d. R., H., Autmnatlc, Factory A I r Cond. Sharp, YWR343 DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS 646-9303 1946 Harbor tlvd., Col'ta Men. ~ THINI. ~ 'YO!!O' "FRIEDLANDER" tS1M •IACll UCW'I". •• 893-"1'566 • 531-68M "64 VW Conv. Low mllea,ge. & SOn, ~ Harbor Blvd., Ex. cond. Must Sell! fl.lake Costa MtR. 540-5630, offer. 962-1782 '70 VW Bug, blue, stereo tape, wood whl, duh o\ knobs. 14,COI mi. Xlnt oond. Pvt pty. $1795, 646-2635 btwn 4-7 pm. B. J. Sportscar Cent 2&l3 Harbor at Adams, 54M-491 '63 VW, New reblt ena;, trans, etc. Immaculate cond, Priced for quick salt. clays: 548-1333, eves: 1900 Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 Autos, Ultd 1963 VW. 6 passenger pick· up . Excellent condition. $700 492-3873. '64 VW Camper, New tn.ns, 673-45'2. I ;,;;67;-;;V"'o1"'vo-;122S="°'2-<1r=.-.1='m. 1970 VW camper, 9IXIO mi. maculate th r u out. S1250 $3100 finn. cash. 644-7222 or 67:;....o880 '51 Ford ac:hool bus, con- verted. FOR SALE OR TRADE. 548-5613 alter 4, uk for Jim. • 1969 VW-Xlnt cond. $U30. Sunday altemoon only, ~3129 * '69 VW. xlnt eond, low mi. stick shift. $1400. 536-7192 '63 Volvo P-1800, xln't cend. --------'70 V\V Conv. Yellow & mk. Sacr. below whlse. $900. Low miles, warr. $1995 <Jr can 846-9518 Rtblt eng. Tape deck, E:k-~~•-•_4_>1_-<="'5~•-·~~ haust, Xlnt cond, $1400. 645-1082 BUICK • '68 vw. Good Cond. 11050 _ai_'-'~•-m_. =~~~-'°1969=--"'vw=.v"•"'Y-llOOd=-cond=. 1965 VW~Xlnt Concl. Blue. $1450, trade tor VW 642-8'.l86 ==--;=-:-,---...,,= --------'68 Vo!YO 122 51 autom .. 34000 • '65 BUICK SP 0 R-T 1967 VW Squareback mi. Very good oond. Alikin.i WAGON. ShlJ'?. P/1, auto. Call MG-5405 f775 * * * 536-6&53 Cali 842-71$ $1195 *** 644-4285 $1400. 494-3193 $775. (213) 592--2353. 980 UNIVERSITY OLDS WILL -SAVE l VDU ~MCRE LOOK AT OUR SELECTION!!! Impala 4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater. automatic, po'A-·er 1tterinc, vinyl roaf. (YIW· 135) $2499 '68 CHEVROLET Nova. Radio, hl!:alt'!r, auto· matic, pov.·er steerinr, vinyl roof. (WVT549) $1699 '69 OLDS 98 Hardtop coupe. Full power, factory air c:ond. •111421 $'3799 '70 OLDS DELTA 88 Automatic, power steerint;, fact. air. radio. he8.ttr. 15,· 000 miles. {752ASHI $3695 '69 OLDS DELTA 88 1port coupe. Ra.dio, heat- er. automatic, power steer- ing, factory air, vinyl roof. (XYK194) $3299 '69 OLDS 98 Luxury 5cdan. Full power, fa ctory 11. Jr conditioning, vinyl roof. {XNW495) $3799 '68 OLDS DELTA 88 4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater, automatic, power st~ring, factory air, vinyl roof. {VRY200J $2199 '68 OLDS CUTLASS 4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater. au- tomatic, power steering, factory a.ir, vinyl roof. {VHE287l $1899 '68 OLDS DELTA 88 Sport Coupe. Radio, heater, aulom11.tic. pov.•er steerini:. factory air, vinyl roof. CWBJ745) $2099 '67 OLDS CUTLASS Coupe. Radi<J, heah'r, auto- matic, power steerinr, tac· t.ory air. {USK377J $1699 '70 OLDS CUTLASS Coupe. 13,000 actual milt!. Radio, heater. auto,. P.S., air cond. C972AGDl $3199 '71 OLDS CUTLASS DEMO SALE Auto., fact. a.ir, vinyl roof, P.S. ~ low as 6,000 mllPs. Save!! '69 PONTIAC GTO Radio, heater, automatic, power 1teerin1. factory air, "'lnyl roof. CYRV890) $2699 '69 GRAND PRIX Full power, factory air, vinyl r oof. (ZDT282) $3199 '68 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater, automatic, power 1teerin1, factory air. CVTL260i $2099 ~ EXTRA SAYINGS ON TH ESE EXTRA NICE CARS Impala Sport Cpe. Radio, '68 CHEVROLET heater, automatic, power ,;teering. (VGJ582) 51199 '66 MUSTANG CONYT, Radio and heater. automatic transmission. <UKV633 J 5899 '66 OLDS CUTLASS Radio, hcat.~r. au~omatic, power 1teer1ni::. vinyl roof. fSLW929) s1299 '66 DODGE CORONET s1199 '67 OLDS CUTLAS5 s1199 Spl Cpe. Radio, heater, . 4 Dr. Se~. Radio, ~ea..ter, automatic, powe.r stetr· · automatic tralllm111s1on. Int;, vinyl roof. <XK!9081 (TWF178l '67 PONTIAC GTO $1399 Radio, ht!ater, automatic, f'IO"'er ~t.ef'rtng, air cond. I 788CKX I '66 llAMILfl CLASSIC 5995 I '67 CHEVROLET 51599 j '65 OLDS 98 4-40 Sport Coupe. Automatic. Impala \Vairon. 6 passen-Sport Cou~. Good transpor--------w~ ~----(RZL.375 1 ' ' mAtlC. power st.eerint:, rac• -mat1c. power iletrlJlg. tnry air. fTPK990J (P8B845) TRUCK SPECIALS ALL READY FOR VACATIONS '67 GMC Yi TON '69 GMC Yi TON '68 CHEVROLET Yi TON '68 GMC Yi TON '64 FORD 1 TON Long wheel but, air cond., Pickup. lon9 wll11I ~.,,, V6 111-Pi,kup. Vt, 1ulom1tic, powtr Pickup, R•dio, h1•I•• 1utom1tic, C1b I Ch111i1, VI •n9ln1, 4 i int , rftdio, h11+•r, 1ulom1tic, 1t11rin9 rtdio 111d h•tltr. 1191· pow•r 1t•1rin9 ltclory eir. 4 spttd, radio. CQ989!-4) pow1r 1t11rin9, I 163t7fl 27At (Q918541 1p11d lr1~1minio11, ltS7111l, 51595 51999 52199 $2299 51199 Salt prices eUtttiv• thru Thur., May 16, 1971 9:00 p.m. All •dv. car• 1ubjPCt to prior sale 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-8881 ,. CALL UI NOWll r _, h4te•lll ..., .. _ .. ,1 .. ,.."'" INSTANT CREDIT YOU •HD AllO Snui SAVI YOU -IY l.w you in,_~ Colifmlia 3. tt you en-on your Job 2. M yrall IWI .,..yon your 4. If you havt little or no COi' credit UTMI m1111U111m Clllfr &m1'8MS TOI-to TIATTOUllAY Drfrltit ..... ,., iii .. """ ,.ctiobll 0~~~0 1971 COLTS 1~~.·: MO~I Jll~llNl~I CA~ ro• TOOR llM!Rl(AN DOllA;r ~•«••A l ~"'" Jo~"'' Tov• 8...:1~~· r '' 71 CHARGER NfW FULL PRICE IMMIDIATI DILIYllY BRAND NEW 1971 DODGE VAN FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED B 100 ' OIDll YOUll TODAY '70 CHALLENGER 2 Or. H.T, VI, l uck•t S..1ts, ft& H. Mudt mor1, !'74DDw'I $1498 PULL PftlCI S200 DOWN s45 MO. J6 MO. IXlll II tt.I tot1I dn. 11Vmt, 1nll W I• let•! mo, ~11. "'cl. to, 71 lk..,.e •rid •It 11- ftlncl charge~ on •P!'lrovtd crtdll fw » ""°'· °"'''"'" pym1. 1H"lc1 h S1t20.00 ln<I •II finance chl•llH, llJH, '11 llc.,11 or If you prt!er to ~y Uth, lo!il prkt 11 SU7J.l'O iN:.t. H in ''"· '11 llCWIH. Anno.NI Ptrctnt-••1• '·-· 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WARRANTY WHY PAY MORE? .~~uRMONEY BACK GUARANTEE On All Used Cars Listed Below '70 IMPALA '70 FORD F1clot'( 1it, 11dio I ll11!1r, t ic. M1v1rick. #OK'11Tlllt70 CU STOM 'f Dr, H.T. v.a, 1uto. tr•n1., pow1r 1l11rin9, •it co11d., r1dio, lo.11t1r, whit1w1ll iire1, tinttd 1j1l111, dll. wh11! cov1r1, l1nd•u, (ZACl4 I) H1rG~p Vt, 1uto., .. ore, 1764BDA l $1888 '70 CUDA ll1 VI, wid, ov•h, buck1t 111h, ro•d wh•1l11 r1dio, ll11t1r, 10/]. AUKJ 1598 '67 CAMARO H1rdlop. VI, •ufo., b11ck1t 111h, con1ol1, rtdio, ll11t1r, wllilt will tir11, IV EX871 I' $788 '69 Dodge Charger V-t, 1vfo. lt1n1., f•ctory 1ir con<:l i. tionin9, pow1r 1t11rin9, r1dio, 11111· er. IZIZ4 '1J I $1555 '66 CHEV. '69 FORD STATION WAGON Aut• • .,,,.,., pow1, 1t11rln9, r1dio, ll11t1r, wh it1w1ll tlr••· IRQH9Stl $488 STATION WAGON VI, •ufom1t1c, r1d!o, 1111!1•, power •l•1rl~9. mwcll 1nor1. IYFll14 1 1233 I ii ' " :1 :1 11 " " " 1 ' ' ' • ,, { !! I I ,, I I ' ,, '.i ,I ,1 ·1 :1 :1 ·I I . .I! DAILY PllOT Friday, MJY 14, 1971 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Uttd l--'--.-U-IC_K__ BUICK '67 SKYLARK * CUSTOM * Blue \l.•lth v.hite interior, 2 Dr .. J-IArd Top. a utomatic, radio. ht'ater, air co11dl- 1ion1ng, all po"·er, like nev.'. {\'C1'01'1 I $1695 Bill Jones' B. J. Sportscar Cent 283.J }larbor at Adams, '69 BUICK RIVIERA f'ull power, factory •ir, Jan- deu top, AM/Ff\.f, 28,000 miles look!! Ii drives hke l'lf'W. See at Mac Howaird Leasint \Corner 111 & Harbor! 839-9600 53.1-0607 Sa.n r a Ana SACRIFICE 1970 Buick Super Electra Cu~tom 22;, HT. F11cl air, rJrh, P"·r seats Ir. 1•.'indo\.\·s. many mott extras. Beaut bronze v.1/burni1h saddlf' vinyl top &. uplx>l_ A steal at S4Z49. 644-4101 540-4491 1..E SABRE * '67 4dr Hdlp, 'i{l Rh•lera, Joadf'd! All p/b, pis, radio, new I~!. pov.·er. Au·. S!ereo. Am-F'm.1 ~"'-'""'~·-"1..,s~~-=~-, Rt'd IM>auty! S 4 , 4 0 0. '63 Bu ick Riv1rra-Xlnt cond. 044--0110. Po1\·er throout. l\lu!t see. =am=CK~"·62"'"'"10-,.-"71,-,-s1a"'". "w" .. '".1 $450. Eve! OR-3--4021 9 pus. air. lo mi·~. clean. CADILLAC $-Kl() or makt ofler. Call 8.12-878·1. '69 BUICK Rivit-r11. 11.ll JlO"•er, Stereo. tilag wheels, Beaut iful. $3150. 646-1087 For best results! 642-5678 '71 Cad Coupe De\11JJe FUily factory equipt. pvt. pcy. 67>-= '69 EL DORADO 1 OWNER Ltss Than lS,000 M ilt s Still In Warranty Firt'n1ist color. full lealhrr 1nter ior:AM/1'~, ... , Sl€'rco, PS, PB, PW. P. :seal!, air <.'Ond., llll ""'heel, landau lop. au1o- mallc trunk & door lock&. 1•9'35! Priced to ~u . ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. 64~4166 '69 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE Full power. factory air, door Jock.:-:, CIC! $439S M•c Howard Lta1i119 (Coroer ht & Harbor) ~9600 Santa Ana '65 CAD. Coupe de Villf', 58,000 ml. Yellow v.1/ black vinyl lop, blk leathrr int, fac. air, Loaded. Excel rood. * ~2449 .. CADILLAC • L•rgest Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS Autos, Used CHEVROLET CHEVRc;>LET "° CHEVROLET Autos, Used DODGE =-------·-1 -~5Ca~!!ct:c:v~e= 1:ne~~~ s:ile!~peAi; '70 MONTE (ARLO '69 CHEVROLET ':9nc1~~~GJ~:;~~8~~.~ x~~t cond. Extras! XJnt! $16W. 3j(l turbo hydromatic, factory CAPRICE 642-3024· Ph. 644-5422. air, power equipped. Lan-Hard1op Coupe. factory ail-, Bal. Blvd, NB. 61:l-8920. CAMARO dau, etc. "3.)()", turbo hydromatic. 'W DART 273 -1 speed i ood ' 0 C t 1969 MALIBU Chevelle, 2 dr, '70 NOVA "307 VI" PCJ'A'er eql.lfpt .. landau top. cond. :\lust sell $6.'lO 1n r•ng• oun 'f landau top, auto O'arul, a ir, f 6 1963 thru 1970'1 1969 CAMARO CPE. P'A'r steering, vinyl ilil!ats, Automatic tra111., power $2395 * ~a. t * SUPER VALUE •2 ~ .,, "l08 steering, factory air. la11-M•c Howard Leasing '61 \Valk-in Van. prner1 ibe~ Fln..~hy Con1petition orange • ,-.J • ........., • dau iop, et<:. (Corner Ut & HarborJ ~hap!:!, $87;j, AfD finish v.·i1h Black Landau '63 Chevy Impala, SS, 327 cu '70 IMPALA CUSTOM 839-9600 Santa Ana • 541i-76&t * CAOILlAC rool &· buck('! seats. vs, in, 4 isp, 8 track tape deck. COUPE SALE OR TRADE 1----f -O_R_D __ _ MmtOillZED DEAl..U Auto Trarus, Radio, Htr. Musi !eU roday, S4 : 5 F t • land 2600 HARBOR BL., 968-7281 ac ~ry air, au, powrr 1961 Oiev. " dr. Impala 283 COSTA MESA Pov.·rr Stttring. Yactory "°u-=..-o-==-""°= ~1pmen1, turbo hydroma· eng .• Aulo _ Power _ R&H _I --------- Air, etc. YEH070. $2475, '69 VAN V-8, auto. Stereo, he. elc. 1''air rubb _New bait. S:?OO. STATION WAGONS 540-9Ul0 Open Sunday Joh"'~"'~ • So", 2626 Ji•"boo• panelled, louvl'rt'd \Vindow1. M H d L · • '68 Ford. Air aulo., PS. PB-,._,,."' " .... •c owar easing or trade for P/U truck, pink '6.'I Cadillac Coll"" <ie Ville, Blvd ., Costa Mesa. ;)4()..j63Q. ?!lint cond. $2095. 642~1 ICo 1 H '"·) S19'JJ. ..-rner st & ar ...... · !or pink. 6.fi...2142 aft 6 P~'f. 2-1.000 mi's, Pvt O\Vlll'r. Full .69 CAl\IARO, like nu, pv.T S '68 CHEVY Impala 2-dr, 839-9600 531-0601 Santa Ana 01 Sat & Sun. '69 Country Squ1rr. ~·er, pov.•er & air + A.\1/F,\1 & B. a ir & FM, vinyl top, auto, R&H . 34,000 mi. $1.37;j 'ii·&99~6.e;;;;-r.;:;:-;;;;;;;:-;:;:I:::;-~:.=.:=:::-----;;:-air, rack, 10 pais.s,, •le. -stereo, vinyl roof. leather or ofler. 836-6392. v C 0 n course '62 Chevy iilation ""'agon. Rr-$319j. •"I•• 1,.11 w''"' power hYd. tran.~. new steel radial wagon-RltH, . auto trans, bit brak-. • enoine. Good "'" ., ,,.,.,,, 1u·c·.s, spoiif'rs. One ownef, '67 El Can1ino 3Z7 VS p/s, P /s fact ai VS / "·~ . .,, '69 Kingswootl 3 st'a!. Po'ver. door kx.:ka, Perteet oond . ' r, ' \\' w runni11g cond BEST Ol''"F-a ir. auto .. e1r. -$279;1.. &t;...2lS2 ~acrific" $3.200. 673-2191 pfb, auto, Rir, gd tires. tire~. Clean. $2393. Af1 6, ER. 3'!8-z.6U ·After 5;30 & •68 Country Sedan 10 pa~~. 1910 CA;\1ARO, 8,::.00 m!les, Xlnt cont! Sl 600. 6T:.>-4507 ;j4Q.-S254 k "•" 1970 Coo--v,·11, Lo mi'li -;;~;;;;-;:;;::;-~;:::--;;:;;-;·I ~·:c·'::'::';·~:;;·==~~-facto"'' air, po.,.,·er. rack . ... -'-"' ' air. consolr, $3,100. \VUI 1955 CHEVY " ., all elecl, a ir. Ai\.1/f~I. 1968 CHEvY VAi~: R/11, CHRYSLER 22.000 mi., f'tc. -$229:l. SlOOO. & a~ui~ paynit!. take V\V bus m t..rade. Best oller * 817-3871 ne1,11 6 ply!'!. no v.1ndov.·,;. Mac Howard Leasin" . 547-1141. p rl ~ 1-o:-c--=-:--:= • Call Ginny !>45-8471 Days --~=-==~=--i '64 CHEVY Stn \Vgn: rK"IV e eel. $16""· 4 9 7-l 0 8 4 .. 67 Ch ~ C ... -ti. tCorner J~t k llarborJ I CHE ELLE 64&-6972 ry5 CNOJ onv , .... " 1. 5W-Z286 eves. V f'll!;, 111-es, brake!, paint :::c:-cc-------I Gold w/blk, ex. concl. A/C 8]l.9600 '::131-0607 $anta A n~ i968cad Sedan dt'Vi!IC'. All ·-1 ~6.J~;...J~"'~·-'~'""~'-"-~~-1 1964 Chevy •· ~'acto r y Ne1\ ~fich<'liru; 642-33l4 -1970FORO LTD 1,e,ather, pov.·rr. New :~~-·~ El ea.mlnoA l27, .f Xln•pd1. 196XJ5tChe_~ a6i~cayneR < 8 Dr. camPt'r" Van. R/H, au10.l---~C~O=M'""ET=--4 DR. SEO. . · nl cone!. Pvt pty. -""· • e\V f'ngme, ..-mags. • n . COnu, S 15. 0 EST Pverything, like new SllOO. RE1'~LECTS , Autos, New 980 We'll help you sell! 6'2-5678 Autos, Ntw 980 Autos, New 64~2475 cone!. 673-ro86 alt 5. OFTER. 531-13.25 497-1084, 646--6912 l-"'.,64".C-:--:c:-.-m-.",-c:::-.1";.-n"'.t-.-1:'...XCELLENT CARI:: I 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, Ntw 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 1 owlK'r * ti-l;)-1028 Beauntul one owner trade tn I Dark Jvy 1'Ie1aU.ic finii;h t Wllh maichin.i: landau rool. · lvy ;:;olrl 1111ertor. Aulo.', trans .. Radio. hratr-r, J)O""'·: rr strrr1n;:;, powf'r brakes. · F<ictory air, r1r. Sf.I" 11nd, 1tril·e to arprrc:iatr . :ir;,e:QS : • CONTINENTAL CONTINENTAL MKlll 17.oOO ONE O\VNER !\JILES Striking pastel blue hnish \vith polar v.·h1tf' leathrr in· terior & landau rool. Lux- ury equipped throughou1. t,Ull pov.·rr, air cond .. po\\'Cr door iocks. lllr stff'nni; \\•heel, radio. v.·1th stereo 1ape system etc. ~faintained like new. Balance of factory watTS.nty available. See & drive today. !J6.IAGD. Jolm- son & Son, 2076 Harbor BJ\·d., Costa ?<.1esa. 5'!0-5630 1970 MARK Ill ~.000 mi. 5 yr "·arranry Elrganr blur. v.·h1tr Bl'Ollg- ham lop blue [Pathrr inter- ior. Evi-ry deluxe extra, incl s1f'rro radio & rape deck, i\lichelin ~tt'.'el-bel!f'{( tirrs. For sale by ou·ner. 6-12-8119 '10 Cont'!. 2 dr. rully equipt. Balance ol iw1~· \Varranty transferable. $5095. 6-lj-JJ91 CORVAIR '63 2--DR i\>1onza; Xln! cond. Red '''/11 hilr lop. Lo ml. S·l25. 642-7I:i78. '63 CORVAIR ~1onia 4 ~peed, $350 54S-6710 aftrr 6. CORVETIE '58 CORVETTE Hardtop. 4 Spd, RM wt Elk Stripes. 327 \tS, overhauled by ~faTCIJ! ~lotor~. !IUZ5i0) $1045 ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. ·57 CoJ'VP\lr 327 F I lfrads Four Speed Po;:i BP!! Offer 842~ '67 CORVETTE FASTBCK SUPER SHARP ~ * Call : 842-7302 * '63 Corvair Spyder • good condition, 4 gpd, 1'1ust aeli! EvPS. 642-6832 COUGAR Sl lJO. Johnson &-Son. 2S26 : Harbor Blvd .. Costa Meaa. 1 :.l0-5630 l '66 Bronco. 4 \\hi dr, hdtp .1 overdrive, locking hubs, 1w. ing-a1vay ipare, ~.000 mi, brand ne111 strttl ti~ & v.·hls, p!us 5 xtra. oll the Rd. tires k v.·hls. S2450. Also 1 a\>ail matching 4' x 7' x 24"l box trlr. 8.17-3370; Alt 5 pm ; 830-2621 '69 FORD SUPER VAN , E-JoO 12:1 ..... l"K'el baslo. vs.I auromati<' tran!., radio, heater etc. ' $249S Mac Howard Leasing tCorner 1st & tlarborl 1 S:i!l-9Ei00 5.11-0607 Santa Ana ~ '69 TORINO Squ 1rr \Vagon,I Pt'rlect eond, 16,000 mi's, R/H, PIS. P/B k d~c brks. Air cond, $2450 . :>tJ.-3666. 1967 FORD Country Squll't air corn!. PS PR. Good , polyglas.« 11 1"1"~. Only 52,000 1 ni1!es. \\'PI I main!ained, t·lPan. Sl600 J.i7-Jlll 196.l FORD station v.·agon. Country Squ1N' -Alr cond. nrw tln'!I & pa1n1. ~ or make offer. Pvt p I)'. 962-jII6 1968 F'ord wagon. v.·a.rranty i\1iche lin tin>~. ne\Y brake!, iiuto trans, Z90 t>ng. $1,fiOO. =-~6--!m!J ·57 FORD Gali1Xy, green. 2 flr. blk v1n.vl lop & urihol~trry. Call before ll or af!er S. 6•12-6\6j '70 Country Sedan Station \Vagon. p ~ p/b, autom, lu11:gage rark, xlnt cond, low n1ileagP. "94-576j 'ITT GALAXIE :ioo-Aulo, r&h, ;u.r. Good rond $62a * 494--5752 FALCO~ '&I, good conditlon S?.00. 536-7012 after 6 p.m. 8042 Sail Cirtlr 9 'j1 .Ford Fa.irlane, P/a, auro. rlh. xlnl cc n d . :>4~1 or J46..-.307!1 '62 FORD wagon, powrr sterrint:, fl\rlory 11ir, good tires. Best oiler. 962-3971 '69 F'ord \Vagon LTD 300 f'rlg, a ir. P/B, P/S, P/r e a r 11·1ndo\.\. Sn7j 962-0~7 '6.1 ford Galaxy '1(X) ~, A,\1/F1'.1, 1-'Rc air . • :i.i7-7311 .. Turn unused items into quick ca.sh, call &ll-567& Autos, lmporttd--970 A Sports Car You Can Afford While You're Still Young Enough to Enjoy It nw Fial ISO Spide-r l;j; tht ""'drit. ~;,, frOl'I Ml' lit- '°"~' pnted rut 'flOl1S '°' o. dlplnlM!ll Wsp.tlS'°" Gii r-.d, h miri:tl Aftd, tor -n~ p111plt, it'i The 1td liM 1111 its tfllJ"' ii ,._ bftf.llJoli;ifv lpOrtS ts •· .. flt....,., 14111'1 6,500 fll"I. # '*'$10.000. LIST FOR LESS THAN S2400 aasa LOWEST PRICES, HIGHEST TRADES. Visit oer complttt ••l9tnetiwc ••"''• focility -16 stotls • txptrt stoff of hig~ ly trohttd mtchonics. Complttt ~ody & cwstom peint shop tool BILL JONES B. J. Sportscar Center 2133 Hub or Slid. 11 ld1ms. Costa leu . 540·4491 ..., . . . I Friday, Mu l~. 1971 DAILY PILOT 43 I .,,....... l§J I .,........ l§l I .......... .]§] I Autos, UMCI FORD PONTIAC 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC 990 Autos, UMd RAMBLER 990 Autos, UMd T·BIRD 990 Autos, Used T·BIRD --------1---------·--------------------------- 990 MUSf ell good transporta· 1969 PONTIAC GTO '65 PONTIAC GTO tlon ""•. '66 GTO, 4 spd, new brnkrs. '65 PONTIAC GTO; rlean; 1969 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX * RETIRED TEACHER l9M T·Blrd: Ori&' 6J,00l ml, wants 10 sell her classic "5fi Perlttt cond. 3 !J>d, $1185· T-Bird she has enjoyed the 962-3?2S. pasf ll years. CU095l. Pb. ·-PRICED AT WHOLESALE Automatic, radio and heater • "8-9881 • E-, body excel. Be11 ofl' P"T. aterr. .tr b r a k e 1 , • ~ ... B 'f LI f 11· vlnyt top, au-condltlonin<>, l"'====--..,===-.1 over $1,IXXI take11. 64&-5355 Autom11.tic. caut1 Ul n1e rost meta ic . .., '51 Ford v.-agon. RPblr T·Hirdl--~------$575. Call: 67;,...2723 finish 1,1·ith hannoniz.ing Lan· YVX143 eng, 3 new tires. Xlnl <..'Ond. '61 Ponliac l...f'~1ana-R&H , d1u & interior. Auto lrll.IU., $2488 ;,.J11-3898 '.\!UST SELL $.150. 54>-6722 Pl•, .. ,,,,.1,1 --•. $'95. '66 Bonneville 4-dr hrdtp, d' •-t .. v •JU has everything, $1025. ra 10• ..... ai .. po\\'. seer.. DAV E ROSS '67 FORD Ranch \\ngoO, 673-4132 5t8-45SJ pow. brakes, air cond., etc, 62 RA~1BLER Sta. Wai. $300 Factory Air. P /S -P/B. To1vi ng hitch. 64UIS82, 'SS T-BlRD-All ori&. Oean ~ $Ul0 or Best otr. * &16-8301 • '65 T-Bird. 2 dr, landau, tuU pwr, factory air, $750. Aho 4 Chev ma.gs, S60. C&ll ;;.tS.Otl2 or 673-9950 original O\\'tlf'r. $1,250 orl:1::968::-;P;--::. -c0::T0::--:3::1::000::--.c 1-~~~------Excellent condition through· PONTIAC be1t ortfr. 493-3292. onhac . · ' mi. 1958 POI\'TJAC Ch I e ft an . o ut. See & drivt• today. XTG· '56 T·Bird. 51.000 mi. 1 01,1•ner. All f'lltras. Xlnt oond. $1800. 644-MlS 1----------1 New lll't'!, vinyl ll)p. $1500. auto. PIS. S150. C 11 I l 923. $:ll75. Johnson & Son, Clean. ~1ust sl'e! 646-8455. "'"' .,..,,... ""~ ""~! :?ISO Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. Costa '.\lcsa S4&-8017 T·BIRD VALIANT G.M.C. ~'•u• or ...,.,.....,... 2626 Jlarbor Blvd., Costa '69 GTO Judgt>, 4 speed, vrry 1971 PONT Grand Prix. ~lust ~lesa. 5'!0·!i630 l·.67..,,--:G.,.M°'C:-,.,-,-,,-,:-,,-.,-, -,-.,-ru ~ood cofld!tlon. J2:m or best sell. }~ully equipped $4200. -----''---------The ''Yellow Pa~" of length llC\I' paint l'f't•ent offer. 548-0918 'oi<l~-"'-"~·~-c---~= \Ve'll help you sell! 64J..!J678 elasslfled, . , 642-5678 OVf'~U!. $1::00. 49.i.1 768 A 7-u7to-,-.~U7Md~,---~990=J i Autos, Used Autos, Used 990 JEEPS 'JS P.U, 4 \V.D.: V-8. (h•erdrive. \\'irll' wht'f'I~. N.nd tirt>s. radio. ,S!}5(). 549-1780 l\laynard 1969 Toyota LC hubs roll bar. till ext. extras. 67J....840:l; 613-8131 '68 JEEP CJ·J. V6. coovl top, \\'arn hubs, radio. Good cf)lld. $0050. 67~397l. LINCOLN I9J6 LinCQJn Cont'! '.\lark JI, body & mechanical :dn't. Needs some uphot. Y.'Crk. $2500 or besl olr. 34S-8994. MUSTANG * MUSTANG * '69 Hard Top. automalic, radio, heater, ai1· condition· ing, Po"'Pr i;tl't"ring, po"•er brakes, Landau top, low miles. (ZBROJ9 1 $1995 Bill Jones' B. I. Sportscar Cent 28JJ H arbor at Adami;, 540-4491 ·67 l\fUSfA..'l'G f'B·Pls, fa c. tory tape. 4·spd lrans, jU5! tuned. Immac cond. J...o ml. P..Iusl i;ee owner. Gf'tting new company car. l\tust sell. $1350. 968.-018-1. MUST sell '67 r-.tuslang, lllll powr/alr/tape deck. niag 'A'heels, blk vinyl top. \'ery clean. Make otrer, 492.5(119. '66 MUSTANG Convert, V8, Auto trans. 1'.tust sell thlll week 557-7008. 1969 Mustang Festblc: Sll9:5. • • 831).2'l~3 '65 Mustang V-8 Hardtop. 3 1pd. MI!\'T S77j. ,.,,_,... '65 Mustang fastl>a.ck..S cyl, 3 speed. $695 **-* 6T.>-10·[i '65 convertible-Lo mi. Ex· c-epUonally clean. $ 9 5 0 . <n-2065 '66 l'llUSTANG VS, Auto, P/s. Immaculate. 546-4071 . '66 l\Iustang, Al\'l I f':'il, 4-spd, etc., $895. 3.)19 :E. Coast Hwy. S.,j y,·pekdays. '69 t-.la ch I, ·128 Cobra je1, Mags. PIS. Di.~c brakf's. $1900 or bes! oflcr. 8-17-51~0 OLDSMOBILE '67 OLDS SEDAN NC (l!}I CXV; $899 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL. 842-44.lJ HUNTINGTON BEACH '67 DELTA '88' Full po\.\'er. Air Conditioning. dlr. TRF087. !\lust sell. \Viii take trade or finance. Call 494.7744, '70 Old1 98: J.1ust Sac Now! Full pov.·er, all xtru. $4600 or bst ofr. ~764 ** 1967 OLDS 442. Blue conv\, Auto. $1395. CaU 66-4530 '70 Old~ 442. 455 w/air in· duction, A.."\f I Fl\l 11erro. Sharp. S.~085. s-16..t:>iR PLYMOUTH '70 ROAD RUNNER 440 w/thfte 2-barttl1, 4-spd, po1! rear end. $299j. Call alter 6 pm. 642.-4130. PONTIAC BILL BARRY PONTIAC-G'.\tC-t'lAT NEW '71 VENTURA II Fully Factory t'Quipped \~ SALE $2288 $2t9 ON. $63.IO MO. $299 is the tolAI down PAY· mtnl. $63.80 is the total monthly payment, lncludlna: taX. li~nsc and financ. charges on appro\'td c~ll for 36 month~. The c11h priOe including 1ax & llcenM" b1 $244i.40, delertro pric~ i1 $2595.80 including I.AX, lie· enae &: r:nance cha.rgt . An.. \Ill percentage rate 9.31 ~~o. OVER 135 NEW • USED CARS to O'I005e From OPEN 'TU .. 10 P'.\I 2CMXI E. 111 St., Santa Arw. 1111 St. al S.A. Frwy.1 558-1000 BICi DEALERS HAVE BICi STOCKS BETTER SELECTION • GREATER BARGAINS 30 DAY 100% DEALER WARRANTY PARTS & LABOR "HO EXCLUSIONS" 1969 CAPRICE 4 Dr. Hardtop. Elcc. v.•indov.•i;, \'inyl roof. air, R. auto., P/B, PIS, \\·arranty. (YULC69! 2 Door Sport Cpe. Hardtop, Auto., ft P/S. Alr Cond., factory \Yar- ranty Ren1ain ing, tCX>3ASV J. Dul· standing Value. $2799 1969 MALIBU 2 Dr. J-la.rdtup Cpe. VS. P/S, auto., vinyl roof, gor11:t'ous car. tYC'.\-1· 0661. Cht'ap. 2 Dr. Hardtop Sc>dan. Lo\v milt'!, R. PS, auto., air C'Ond. NICt'. l377· Br.t\VJ $3099 1970 MALIBU COUPE 2 Dr. Hardtop. 10.000 miles, VS, R, PIS, aufo., remaining \\·arranty. tSTK974J 2 Dr. Sedan, 6 cyl.. Economy Car in ShO\\'roon1 Condition, Automa· tic Trans., Rftdlo. Has factory war- ranty, l350ASQ. tWOWJ (BUYJ $2399 V8 C~ .. Vinyl Roof, R, P/S, Auto., Air Cond. Terrlfic C&r, Factory \Varranty. (146AGK) $3599 "Custom." Rli:i;ht one. Auto., P /S, air, R, needs a careful buyer. tXWE222) $2499 1970 CAMARO 1969 IMPALA 1969 NOVA 2 Dr. Hardtnp, VS, P IS. Auto., Alr, 4 Dr. Sfflan. VS, Auto., P IS, Radio, 4 Dr. SN&n. (Eronomy Carl 6 cyl., frl'Sh condi1 lon, (317AZV). (Re· Air Cnnd. Sure this wetk'1 Special Radio, P fS. Auto. Remaining Fae· n1alning \1•arrantyJ Buy. {YOS542) tory war:ranty. --""$~2~6~991'!'1!'J!"-t---•$-18_9_9 __ ---t--.'!l'l'P$-...2799 $3099 $2199 $2099 1969 CA ARO 1968 MALIBU 1968 C '!!!!o'!"!~~T"""-•1•9•68-C8A•M•A•R•0-.. 19•6•7•M•A•LI•B•U-C•O•U•PE .. -•1•966-N•O•V•A--· 2 Dr. Hardtop Z28. 4 speed, radio. 4 Dr. Sedan. VS. one> careful own. gorge-ous, f resh sho"hToom <'onddl-4P/SDr.a~!~rdt8j~ ~.~~dan.ni~o8, ,'yadTPio, f'rood. au1o., P /S. air cond. Need a 2 Dr. }IT. n, auto., PIS, 6 c.yL 2 Dr. l-IT. VS, PI S, auto., vinyl Super Sport15epe. Console bucket tlon. Not onl' of 1 cse aroun . • ., c ., ... • • g car at a good price~ (\VVR· seats, VS, P , auto., R. Looking Careful use. (Y\VY7561 435) l!OOJ economy. Real iha.rp. (Wl£352J roof, terrific car. <WPB844) for just tha t one? <RUJ 091) $2599 1968 NOVA 4 door sed. V-8, Auto., r.s .. radio. lVSR5661 $1399 $1899 1965 FORD LTD 4 Door ltardtop. Top condition. Air, P.S., auto., radio. 45,000 miles. <REX562J $1199 $1599 1971 CAMARO V8, auto .. R, A/C. P/S, P/B. new car cond ition. {75:.!BSYJ. This ha.s to be a buy. $3399 $1899 196 LINC LN Continrntn! 4 Dr l-lt1rdlop Stdan. Air, PIS. P IB, ell'C'. \V, elec. se11ts, vinyl roor. S har1.1 sharp sharp auto. You should IN'. (TRB:l28J $1499 $1599 1967 L NCOLN Continental 2 Door Ha.rd Top. Tre· mendous color, vinyl root. .shov.· room fl"filh, air, elee. everythln&:, P I S, P/B, radio, abarp. (P2380) $2499 $1499 1969 RAMBLER J a velin. 2 Dr. l t.T. PIS, Ra d Io, Auto .. VS-12,000 miles -Buy? Buy! Buy ! (449B8Jt $1999 STATION WAGONS WE HAVE 'EM STATION WAGONS 1970 Chevrolet 1970 Chev. Malibu 1970 Chevrolet 1969 Chevrolet 1968 Chev. Impala 1966 Chevy II 1970 Ford LTD 1970 CHEVY · Townsman Kings Wood Bel Air W19011 Country Sq uirt , AM/ Kin91wood, 6 p•nenqer .,,9• f P1 11 St1tion W1.gon, A:•, f p•n Concoune W1.gon. 6 Pin W~.go 1t _ Ridio, t. p•u Wi lJon _ R, l'/S, 6 p111. W19011, Auto., P/S, 6 p1u W19on -Economy fM St1roo, Auto., P/S, Elec. on, 1ir, P.S .. redio, P.!I., l u9· PI S. R, l u.g919e Rick, P/I , R1d io. Auto., P/S. -Sh1 rp. . G d A A' C d N G R1d io -Tod1 y·, led l uy • ·cyt., Auto., R1dio, 1ir W!l\Clow1 11,000 Mi, LTD 9191 ri ck 14 000 mi N1 w C t VI tl.OACGI PI S, Pl !I. A.wto., A.1r on · uto., " on " •w or· IWXEl<ll d N t SBC lnltrior Trim -Trt mt ndou1 d ', 'H ,-11!4 Auto., 150 u. n., , _ NOce. !Pllf ll ••oui ,old color. !Pllt.)) con" ic• 744 1 ct r c:on il1on. uHy. • P2lf6. Oe1d s .... p. Cir, lflfAVBI BGFI $3799 $3099 $3699 $2899 $1899 $1399 $3999 $3699 .1.97•0-Fo•nl•W•ag.on-+1•96.;.8.Fo.rd•F•air.lan•e+i-19.67•F•or•d•Wa.go•n..-~1~96~8 ~Ra.mb.,.le•r ..,.1.97•0•Da•ts•un·w·ag.on...,.19•66•B•uic•k•Sky•l•ark..-~19~68~P!'"'~·mo·ut•h-,.. Amba11ador S1tellft1 JO f'1n., II;, PI S, Auto .. Air cond. -l etuliful lllu1 Ci r. ! ll4AGCI Countrv S1dt11. Auto .. P/S, A.Ir, R1 dio, Sp1ci•I P1ic 1d. (11795A) 9 Pin . -R1dio, Auto., P/ S, S11. 5)15, Sp1cit l Pric1d Al 9 p W A. 1 P/S 12,000 ml. Auto Tr1n1., R1. 6 P111. W19on, Auto .. P/S, S I W R A 1 P/S '11• •9on, u o.. • Air, R., Rec k I 292C"TJ. por e90"· ' u o., ' R, Air Cond. lle1t buy to· dio. 011d Sh1rp. (125ASll "" A.Jr IVSAJl l ) Sptcii t 6 P111 . W•~o", Auto., R1dio, Air Cond .. -l ow, Low Mn11. Low, l ow pric1. !l 71 ADH J d1y. IWEEll 2l Specli l. ·Pric1 .. At SPECIAL TRUCKS '69 FORD F-600 2 "'" 1•uck. 191" -1t1o111 won 1r ~•'•I' 1lum. v1n body, Side "°""• .olld r .. r <loort, r.'(<lr111I>< IJOO lb. luck 1w•v 1111 111i.. fH·:IO 10 olY ru-. EIK.? IPlld r"r ..... Truck In g.,.rtnlffd cONll!lon, Low ml+M, DHd 1n•r1> 11>~1r1ro<t throuu~u1. 21,QOO hub mP1er m!111. '•Pftd !"n~. CJ11 •CJ $4599 '64 FORO F600 t lofl d111I rur Wf'l"llruck. 1 IP<tod rNr IXle, V .. , I ,pnd, r.11 U'•l .. I' 1lumlnum 11111 body wi!n hydr1ulic 1111 9l !t, n ,OOO mlln, In IOI> cvn<lltlon l)O!h m«r.tnlcol •nd ftPPff'r!"<t. Gu1r•Mft<I condr!lon. <S~nl l $2499 TRUCKS -TRUCKS '69 CHEV. ¥• cyl., 1tic\, $2499 '69 CHEV. V1 TON 1!1p1id1 pick up. R1dio, P.S., !P2171 I $2799 '68 CHEV. V-8 'h TON "c~up. R1dio , P.S., 1uto ., 1ir, n1w col1r. IP'2 16 11 $2299 '67 CHEV. ¥• TON Picku p, v.1, ,tick, r1dio. !'1947101 $1899· '66 FORD ¥< TON Pic \up. • c:yl .. 4 1pe1d, H.0. 1quip. R1dio, cu1tom c1b. IU11797 ) $1699 $1199 '64 FORD '/4 TON V-1, 4 1pe1d , H.O. c1mp1r equip. $1399 '57 INTERNATIONAL 'Ii ton pic:kup. Unu1u1I cond ition. !Jl1556) $699 '67 CHEV. >,\ TON P'ic\up. VI , R1dio, 1lick, H.D. C1mp1• Equip, tU51250l $2099 $1899 SPECIAL VANS '68 CHEVROLET .... --. -.. -...... $3399 '•Ion. Stick 1hltf, v .. , rldlo. H11 M>O l un 0111 Clmt>tr co•wtnlon, P1n cir tonutnlfllct. Sl-.pe In •Ing 1l1t btd, SIOYI, ICI b0.1<. NICI, U1J00Aj '69 CHEVROLET _ .............. _ . $3799 \'J Ion. v.1, 111hlm1!1c. rtdlo, low "'Jin . l rtnd ntw '""' Oltl 111lu•• c1onper convtr· llon. ~!Ilk><> wagon convtnltnc:t. llftP -H1 -WC,. -plMll/rt, Economlc•I I/IC .. lion, CP2ll51 '69 CHEVROLET .. __ .. _ .......... $3699 '4 m . v 1. •uhl , redlo. V•n his b<1nd new Sun 0111 c1mw conwolOn. ltmlly cir 1nd work ci r. Vou'll ll~e II. 11'.JHEI VANS -VANS ''I CHfYROLU 111 TON Vi n. 6 cyl .. 1tick-, r1dio. fP2J911 • ,, CHEY•OLn l/J TON 'l1t1, A.ulo,. 6 cyl .. r1dio. R11l 11i&1. l2SK6 l6 1 .,, DODGE sro•T $1599 $1199 $2499 Vi n. l •01lt r, •ulo .. r1dio. IYPSJ76 l EL CAMINOS ·· RANCHEROS '69 EL CAMINO '1-1. P.S .. 1uto., 1ir. Rio;h t "';1,,, &old ¥inyl roof, t old cir. !111u· liful relly wh1e l1. (42•47E ) $2799 '69 EL CAMINO Y·I , 1uto., P.S., r1dio, bl1c\ v:ny1 roof. Hu99er Or•~-;•. &or91ou1. (6515001 '68 EL CAMINO Supt r 1port, 4 ipc1d. r1djo, ri9ht "'ile1 -,;9lit cir. lf4115C) $1999 --.~69~E~L~CAM=~1N~O~­ v.1, r1dio, pow1r 1te1tin9, a uto., 1ir. Nice blu e c11. !P1 J64 J $2699 -~.68~RA~NCH E~R~O~­ v.1, 1uio., P.S., redio, 1ir. N11ty. "ict 9r••" cer. ! 211t OCJ $1999 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA " $3399 BARGAIN HUNTING '67 MALIBU '65 BUICK WILDCAT Coupe. Red io, P.S., Auto. 11••· l door h11dtop. R1dio, 1ir, P.S. & I QDJ P.B. N:c,. IOXllt16l $1199 $999 '66 IMPALA COUPE Aulo., R1dio, P.S., Nic:1. ITX54)4) '63 CADILLAC DEVILLE $1199 Coupt. Air, P.S . • P.11., redio, IP221 5 I '63 CORVAIR $599 ' d oor coupe. • ipeed, redlo. '64 BUICK HARDTOP IUOJ7911 $499 • door. R1 dio, 1ulo., eir, P.S • ! RBP474) '65 MUSTANG $499 R1d io, 6 c:yl., dick. IJKW2t 01 $799 '66 BUICK LA SABRE 4 door 1ed1n. Aul .. P.S .. r1dio, t it. Sh1tp. ! SBR776l '65 RAMBLER WAGON $1299 Auto., r1dio. !NFV479) $399 '65 CHEVROLET . '68 OLDS 442 COUPE 4 door 11de"· Ft 1dio, P.S., auto., 4 1p11d, rtdl11. !956CUCI t ir, Good c:o"d. !JOY261 l $1199 $799 • I • , ' • NOT JUST A FEW PRICE LEADERS BUT BONAFIDE DISCOUNTS ON EVERY NEW 1971 CAR AND TRUCK IN OUR BIG VOLUME INVENTORY! TIME ~ THIS WEEKEND SAYE DURING OUR BIG CAMPER SALE -ONLY- THEODORE ROllNS SR. Time M•pzlM Q\lallty DMl•r AwMI fof 1t71 THEODORE ROllNS JR. ENJOY CAltlFlll SUMMllt DllYIN::i l BRAND NEW 1971 MUSTANGS . / HARDTOP5-fASTIACKS-CONVERTll;.IS EVERY NEW 1970 CAMPER IN STOCK SLASHED TO $75 OVER FACTORY INVOICE DUR $100,000 DIAGNOSTIC CENTER 40 ST~CK TO CHOOSE FROM $75 OVER FACTORY INVOICE llG SILICTION -NO ADDID DIALEI CHAltGU Gives your car · over ~130 vlt1I tests for reliability, perform1nce and safety, in just 30 minutes. Full written report 11 in~luded for only We are ttt. Or1n1• County Show C... Deal•r• '•r II 0.rMlo C1m,.r1J plu1 ••-I li<1ni1 RENT A CAMPER NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD·ONS-NO OR'DERS IESERVI TODAY FOi ASSURED DA ns. ~;~ TORINO New 4 Dr. Sedan · SAVE 351 V.S. AT., bit tires, P.S., P-discs, air, rad, T-glass, whl cvrs, bdy mould· $60529 Ing, etc. (1030521 #39 W-Stllr. 14001.25 01r f'tke SJ4DJ.t' New 2 Dr. Hdtp. Brough. 351 VS, A-T. bit tires, vis ifp. p.s, P-discs, air, rad, whl cvn, etc. (124"· 356). •236 W·St\r. S44JJ,J5 01r Price $1741 .7J SAVE $681 52 SAVE VS , cn1iso .. WSW, vis. group, P.~ .• $60000 P.B., air, rear \vindow defog, radio, . tint. glass, whl. coverS. (136942) •315 W·Stltr. S40J1 .J5 01r Price SJ4Jl.JS New 2 Dr. Hardtop VB, crul!io., WSW, P.S., P.B .. air. ra- dio. tinted glass, wheel covers. (161· 598). .#498 W·lfltt. S4116 011r Prk• SJ514.4J SAVE $601 58 ~;~ RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO SAVE Emts1lon control system, E7Xl.C t.ins. $68388 AM radio. (119131). W-stkr $3396.82 Our Price $2712.94 NEW RANCHERO 500 SAVE 351 V8, crulsomaUc, \•is. group, P.S., 63 power disc brakes. radio, tint. i lass, $888 H.0. I UIP, (115648). w .. 111r $4284.06 Our Prlct $3Jt5.4J MUST AN ~i~ FORD NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brough. J~.T. 429 VS, vinyl roof, cruiso., \VSW, vt~. grp .. P .S., dbc,, ~tr. whl., P·stn: .. P·dr. locks, air, autb temp. control, A~1-FM, P.W. elc. (128708). •455 W·Stk•. $6041 011r Price $4941 SAVE $1100 N!~. ~'~~.~~~~~C~L<o. WSW. SAVE '''· ''"·· P.S .. dlx. '"k· oic cond .. $110100 A~t-Ft.1, H.D. susp., dlx. whl. covers. (14234). •862 W-stkr. $5785 Our Price $4684 N~~ R~TET.~w~~~"~?.J!-.nd S4 VE I \1•indows, air, clrc. &frost, AM-F~t. $97200 Vis. grp. \VIW. Tint. glass, whl. cvrs. (100017). •660 W-1tkr. $5267 Our Price $4295 NEW GALAXIE 500 SAVE 2 Dr. Hd. Tp. 400 V-8, Vinyl rf., A/T, Pwr. Str. 11.nd brakes, alr, radio, whl. $92300 cvrs.. tint. glass, e\ec. dclogger. tU0015). •661 W-stkr. $4922 Our Pr • $3999 "-~';" BF.tONCO NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VB. SpC Pkg .• '°"'· .,-p .• H.D. Rod"· $67 23 tor, aux. fuel tank. Stk. •0764 1 (70012) W•lllor. $4522.44 Our Price $3851 .21 NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE V8 bucket 1tt., traction lock R-axle, $ 676 Ltd. 1llp-fronl axil'!. Spt. . pkg., aux. 70 fuel t•nk, radio, free runnrng hubs. Stk. a T200(80l4l •·•lkr. $4610.22 Our P•let $3973.46 ~~r' T·BIRD NEW 2 DOOR LANDAU SAVE Pov,.er sun rroor, Brougham, P.W .. P. SC'at, auto., air, stereo tarw. tilt whl., $152500 P-discs., vinyl top, p-antenna, etc. #652 (100015) W-Stkr. S7-'l9 Our Prlcl $6111 N;~,1~ f"~~~I~ w~~D!~! SAVE ham Int., \V/W, radio, 429-VS. #181. Sl 20100 ( 106435) W-Stkr. $6151.50 Our Prlc1 $5157 r~~~r .. 2 vie~~o~~~~ ~1~_R ;ilt SA YE "•hi., pwr. "·ind .. steer. end brakes, sl 30100 radio, 429-VS. #399 (111587) W•ltkr. $6613.75 Our Prlc• $5312.75 ~2~-~ ~"'~~~R AL:,N_e,AF~1. SA VE BrQugham int. T-J;lass, Ult whl., $151100 Auto. Temp., Air. #651 {100014) W·Stkr. $7371 Our Prlc• $5167 ~rr' F 1 00 PICKUP NEW " F· 100 STYLESID~ . -SA VE P.U. -'10-6 cyl. eng., 3-spd., radio; $ 97 l int. t18M;, ILD. Rear Sp., gauges, cig. 643 lighler. Stk. •T6J (2638J. W-Stkr. $331.t7 Our Prlc• $2695.00 N:i~si!.· ~~~n:~~~~~g, xlt, SA YE Art)p & oil gau:;;::es, tool box, cruiso-$95389 matic, opt. vacuum booster, Al-1-FM stt'reo, P.S., G78x15 tirt's, etc. (0651). W-1tkr $4850.20 Our l'rice $3896.31 BRAND NEW 1971 MAVERICKS $75 OVER FACTORY INVOICE 2-DOORS • 4-DOORS 6 CYL's • V-8's GRABBERS AUTOMATICS • STICKS NO li11'1.111CKS .,-o _,,, _ 01,·s _,.O ORDERS ~~~ F250 PICKUP NEW 1971 FORD F-250 SAYE Camper spttlal. Sport custom cab, a ·uii;e-o-matic transmission, power $96531 s trerinJ!;:. power disc brakes, '"360" V8, radio. extra gas tank. •16, motor •2158. R•t11ll $4133.0l-5•1• $3167.70 NEW F-250 RANGER XLT SAVE C•"'P"' S,,..-. 390 VB. ''"'""·· olc..tl 021 aa A~1-f't.-1 stereo. P.S., P-disc&, t!xtra.Ji gas lank. eto. •125 (030671 ' W-stkr. $5597.tl Our Price $4576.0f 10 to chqose from. '65 thru '70 models. Coupes, he~dtops,_c,onvertlble ind 2 + 2 F11tbick1. Some with 4 _1peed1, 1lso ••r cond1honln9 •nd automatic models with power 1t11r1n9. ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT! -----y~~ Mooy to. choo>e from. '65 thru '70 Models. Sport rooh, 1o,...1,, 2 door & 4 door hardtops Ir 1Han. Full po"*er• olr cOftditlonlnt. Warralftles avallabla. EXAMPLE: 1965 MUSTANG l:IARDTOP R1clio, k11!1r, 1titl d1iH, :10TU74l l OUR PRICE $696 '70 MU5TANCO H.T. $2696 Loaded. VS, auto .. P.S. H&H. fa<!. oi•. n"-,,_;,_ able. Low miles. ~621AVPJ '69 V.W. IUCO Fully equipped, good miles. lXWZ861J "68 VW IUG $1 096 Radio & h""'· 4 •J>ttd. 1WIK390J '70 FIAT 850 SPYDER Radk1. heatrr, rrd with black top. Low miles. t503BER 1 ------------1 Hardlnp, automatic. P ~. '69 PONTIAC LE MANS rad in, hPl\(PT. i VPS354J '70 COUGAR $2796 ~~~~~~R1&~i.A~t~d&~·~~d:· '67 P2LDY·M. Ho.Tu_TVHR .• ~PtOo .. RRT•HFU_ RY fact. \\·arr. av&ll. (843BlL) • .. - ___________ ,I P.S .. vinyl roof, :;;::nod milt'~- (\VCR890l '69 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T. V8. 11ufo .. R&ll, P.S .. P.B .. far!. air, vinyl roof.,(XSR89J J '64 FALCON 2 DR. 6 cylinder, radio 11.nd heater. COSV613) $ '69 FALCON FUTURA $1596 Seel. Auto., R&H, po~\·rr steering. ( Xi'11P2941 "64 CHEV. WAGON $796 B<'I Air. vii. l!Ulo., R&H. r .s .. air. good mll,.s: lllN155' '70 PONTIAC G.T.O. $2696 H"rdtop. AUl l')matic, P.S., P.B. 1321AGGI '69 FORD COIRA $1696 Spt. roof. auto., R&H. P.S. (ZDV707) '70 MAVERICK $1596 2 door, l O"'nPr. Radio, heeler, t'conomy plus. IYRE7161 "69 CHEVY MALllU HT $2196 VS, auto .. R&H. P.S., air cond. <807BSI) 2060 Harbor SALES DEPT. HOURS I AM TO t PM MON·FRI I AM TO 4 PM SAT 10 AM TO 4 PM SUN 1 . I PARTS-SERVICE HO~ , . 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 P.M TUE·FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS •