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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-03-15 - Orange Coast Pilot• • ) \_ I • • •• • • • • _ __ omew· '. . ere · 1n • 2: • • Tlare~ hie~ ~Four Burt . - . -' As Old LA Hotel Burns .. - • .. . • •• • • • ' ' . ••• -.•. ' . . • \ • " ••• ' ' 1 . ' .•• • • • t .. • ' . . ., • • ~Poisons Coat Newi)Qrt Bay Botfo.m··: ' ... . . ' . • • • 'Talwaa Sold Out' Residµes I, . WASHINGTON (UPI) -J!eP. JOiin G. Sdunltz (!\-Calif.), baa 1CClll<d Preai· dent • Nixon of "aurreodettnc" to 11ie Chinese Communisti and of 11aeDiq Out" the N1tionalisl regbne of Chiong Kai- ahek. Clearly unconvinced by the .,. surances of other coD.ervatives auch as Seu. Barry Goldwater JR-Artz.), Sdunltz President Rou.ts r 1 • AU Opponents • In FlorUJa Race .1 . MIAMI (UPI) -President Ni1on blS won a lopsided \'lctoi'y in the ~publican presidential primary, outpolllng the com-. blned totals of liberal Pall! MCC!oftey and conservative John Albbroot b& J>Ul'col" !y •a nlne-~ne mu,tn In Florido". (See Page ' for dellllt oa 'Tue8d11i'• Democratic primary won by A1!,bmna Gov. George Wallaf<:lo. . With 99 percent of the lllale'a preclnclJ ln, Nixon bad 357 ,218 votes or ~ perrint, to l&,978 or four ~rcent for McCloakey. end 35,1171 or nine P.,cent for Ashbrook. • Nixon's margin wu of rout proporllonl in all of Floridl:11 12 cooamsio~ 4.istricl.5. McC!oskey dro~ out of the cam- . paign last week, citing finoncill dil· ficultlea, but his ..... remalnecl .. the Florlda ballot. f ' Narcotic Raids . ~.et 54 Suspects From Coast Area By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M O.lly 1"1191 Sllff • Smashing 11 belvy drug ttafflc ._ ,·11<4 high ~ ond """-· Cooll -police lelllll ~ the · On!nce Cooll .V.rn!ght In I -e roui1dup of sus~ed narcotic. deolon. · II)' down, ii penc1111 were In -.Mir, IO f! them juvenU,. from four ~ !!Ill! ochoola. . , A IOlll of '6 l(rut.es ore cborced In wuranll llllled ~ ...,.. ol illel· ed pu,.,ha.,. In the put tline ,moiidio " wilh mulUple Illes ,or n a r c o._t I c a.,. dangerous drup end morljulllo. One ll the -o! I Newport ~ police detective.· Heroin ond coc~ne turned up iJI allm>- lngly be1vy oupplf durl"I the Cooll lllu ' • (S.. ROUNDUP, .... I) , . " ' ' aaid Tuelday thlt the' "loll u million fi-ee Chiaeae" OD TliwlD had been -acr!Ooed on "the a1tor o! -I." . "Al Peking, on Febnmy • •. th1t 11Crifice WU offered .. to the folio god .ot peace tbrOUCb "8Tender," Schmitz aaid in I newsletter to•ldo. ClllllituenU. "Never -Yllll has the United Slata of Amerlcl • cruelly belrlyed I friencttt Schm\tz. 1 U-yw .. ld lleutenont co~ • Ohel in the Mirlne <Jorpo ond member of t)\e ;folm Birch IDclety, said President -NilOD's joint communique with Premier ~ En-lal WU "IO bad" thlt the President'• def'ltders were· cla1min1 ·he had ~de an actyantac~ "secret·deaJ'' at Peking. "'' Jlul.. Nlton, 'Schmitz noted, 'bad une- qui~ ~ .OD hill return from ~ ~ ,llepuhUc .of QJJn1 that no ---=been lllldt1t Peking. ''Wtlo li the truth, then we have -.-for nothin1. If be II not telllntl 1be tr6, tben blo word cannot be . tnlltld." \ GOidwater, who refrained from ·com· meatina on die Prelldent'1 trip at the time, aaid .. be had been IJ!!l'ed by ::-.v.":t.. 'ti= ~~~ """*"llive AriJIJlll Republlcln lllo' · said the U.S. oommllment to defend Tll1r1a remolned inllct despite I _pledge -to Wtthdr1w Amerloon l'1lnlel from -~ lsllnd 11 -lndellnlte. dote In lhe futuri_ • • SC!imllo• made no -mention of ou~ II--· 111' Goldwater end Other <Vllkl Yllll-"'°.._tlnue to IUPJ>Orl Ntxon,lle aaid, llowever. thlt U.S. policy had ll>lflod 'flrll from the oupport of 1 "free China" t.o a 11two-Olina policy" wu1c<oplable to either 1lcle llld finally to "lit·.tlfect ~ only the ..... ._China."'' • . • , ·Of Metals.··· -.. : ·1~~:. ,,,.} ' d ' i By CANDAClli ,...._ , .................... A variety or -.,, mNll ltl ~ to.i. _.,.,Ill 111 lyj .. ilr the mtllt 11 'the ' llollom of • Newport , oran,e County ' He11th ~ · • llciala oald '!11 .... y. , • The report, (OCIUatod by the ~ . -~""'-•·' .... g,..ts paint portlc!es from bolt ballo, gaoollne In llnel dra!Mp ut car "" haust are liklly oourceo ol tllo molala. · lmmecllale effocll of the pol-. -centrllllona · on ......m, Ille "era not )'el known," ~ Stone, dJl'Jclqr ol ... vlll>nmenlal hilalth for tbO l!lllth'doP"l',I· :rii.:.:~ ~lu\ ...... ,11u1 "said.,. The metal, can ha tolll: to or11D11; even In diluted fom!.~ can -1blJ affecting ."the blnloileilf food= Stone 'warned. "Mltall ea bl even at tevell tblt are Ol'll tiundNdtb " one-thousllldtll. ·of ' tha Conceotr1• .... ' found ~ere... ....... ii The. are1 lll8htat In leod concentrou4n 1 wu ot Iha end of 33rd street wttll !~ . ri'g. parll per rn1Uloo,.allhouP tllo oru of l Ille ,\fthaa brlda:e ,wil doae behind "1\1' •('··:_,.,.,, ,,. I • .,., ~.1" ;U,l~..ft 1!2 parts~ q'llJtlon.' , , • , · • Both of 'lllOH· oraa !live nurby po on· wild wings, theae C1nada g~se are moving western Lake Erie 111d 11Jso In !lie Ottawa National . stal!o\11 •. wbooe oplll111 mllbl ha ·toba ththrough Ohio u they ~~g;_at~ north. Alb p~sent1, _ W_ijcl_l!fe_ Refuse-. , -· . ,;,.. ,. • -by ruoolCJotoojiio.bly, 81one.sald.:_..,._:·i. e geese are concentr1 .... jh tlie mats · area o . · Health ·offlclala llllly:Jed mud .._ --.::....------~---,-------~-...,...------~-----~. at )0 bay slallonl for]nerauy, ll'lliiit, 1 Jead, copper, •· .Uvtr ,,.chromium aid ~ • • 1 • ., I ~ • Cadmium U wetl II fat hro chlorina'ftd Recluse Billionaire Met . 3 D~~' 6 Hurt hy~·1i::i:r·.uv.·t . chromium ""' ~lam,. allhoatll> , U.~; Envoy~in Ni~~~gu~ :: !:w;~::~-1 w_er~=~~-..~ \. ~ ANGELES (AP) -Aller a month . lived 'on Iha sev::.ih q:.0. of ~ lnlercon-, , LOS ANGELES (~) -' T1tree perlDDI 1 in .a hotel hideaway in Nicaragua and 4 tlnental Hotel, 1 aUghe. •met • wtth Presl-were killed and •Ix Injured today wh~n purport«J; 'oiirprlle meeting with the dent Anolllaolo Somoza 11111 U. 5 , fire broke out In on old, al~·story hotel m . NI ~ --"'-' d the U S Ambassador Turoer B Shel•--the downtown Los Angeles, r1re department ~guan ,.,.~ ... UI ' • · • am-"A·---~ Id ' ~ am-official s said. Two firemen 1l10 were in· , biaodor · •then, Howard Hucbeo la -11 reported to have nm to tOa Angeles· · The ~ 'Nld Hughaa ·shoo~" j~red. . -' " • '. , Ari •unli!entillecl IJ)Obsniaii ' !Or the hands wlth bbn ...,,al u-u t bOy , They said onelhemoren peraon w11 .uno,c- Nlcll'l(UID Air F°""' lold-....smen 'that lilted II U.. . alrpprt .• Deocriblng hil , coon led for In ·~ . that erupted . Hughei .] oins e Fire Company 1.'.Jtill*illil flownJo l'prt-.;tone ... ly, handllmw• llrilll. lllleJIQ!IJlllcled: · . al/O"' 7 a.m., In t~e J?I'.,~. of the.H~" · ~y to Loa Angdes, when be baa "I notlcod no dll!lcu!ty In hia, hearing. Barclay. • 1 . uv..t 11..., 1celebdlyltld1 reclwe. uid bil voice ..., llrool.-He was In good The blaze was rai)orlld contiined io ;. . ·~ ~Vo. (A'rl -How- .. ~-'dillft li)llonl!h, •• I 'membe( II ~lfldrlo'•• ,.,_.,.}{~ " ... ,.Ire 'EnP>e Co., ..... w bf " :UWllhln&too 1J l!M.' · ' · -1oed11 dllck -tor '1111 ~II&' ...... ..,.~, D. ilml!IJ. -lleod.' .tMaiti.. • .. Wtudi' sold: "llr. ~ try pt.-.. 1111.,.... • ..,. ....... • tatloft." • ., ID Loa Aqelet, f.t-'l:'-.,.U. 111111 Verlflod tho · ... I ' • I ' • ' I I ... . ...... ~ ... ' A lpolmn.on for the f6.year .. ld humcir 11111 !bl-me for helping make minutes later. ' btlllonllri COllflrmed Tueedoy"nllht thal ' •nil-Ill loo 1111 Viii! bm. He stood ·Filleen guest.I at the hate!, one 1 blillll : """'"' lift -..... 11111 ~ If,., , olfallbl. 1111 llllr """-cUt lhorl like ha ·man. were brought to 11ftty bf firemen ..... l<joled ---..... thf i-;:~~ ... ol 1 salt ond pep-on ladders from the top three noora1of ' · ......,, Rlcblnl Homih, -to ' per • the hotel. About 25 otbor1 °" lhO lower • nonllnll tlllt.lflllbeo -In Loa Alflel4I ' wst 1 t6in beard, which. floora wore led· throu1h thick 1mol!e to • 11JC1 illd that hll wtlerel!boOll ruy .ibo Sllelton ~ 111 Yoo Dyke, "but no safety by rescue·i.nu. ". • , . died I~ fw I Ume. ' ,,, ,. &bki: llMlr•" A spokesman for the hotel Slid la2 . Ailiol1 lboul the , 1-1. from ,the ' '11111, ~ 'lio Ille flrll reported time persO(la were l!Yinc. ln Iha boilldi111. , N~ Air F..,,., Borinoh u!d, '1 llulhellllllwfihpm101»outsldehlsslaff Most guesls ore elderly. The .hOtel·ll hava .., nunn lo bellive be la Iii Loa 1inco Ila,... lalo .. ltislon more than a one of the city' a oldeat, dalln( bock to tbe •· Allpleo." I ' dtclde 'II'· lllllllab refuMd comment on earl y t900a. Its cll<ntele primarily ire (lee Pip ,!,.for dllds of the lltelt ·, the lllpOIL long-time resident.a, 1 hole! ,IPOll11m111 de....,._,. the~~ lntOltlng Cllllmo otllc!ilo In Loo Angel,. aald aald. ·~Ille· ~ ~ ., ... ~~~tt~ • ~~~r!r~ .. t~bii:6 J~ · , llelor9 ~. where Ila ("8 lllGBll, l'llp 1). (See l'lll!, hp ll • 1.._. __ ...:_ _____ .,i . r • , ,.,,, . " • • • • l ~- I ) I DAii. y PILOT ' ' I Plane Cras·h l(ills 112 • Official ' · . an.~l;i Je~ Bea~ri ng V act;i tio ners. Dow'! Li£d, Sa ys . . MANAMA , Bahreln (UPI) -A Dlnioh avelle charter jeUlntr fiyq holld1y home from Ceylon cruhed Tue~ night near Dubel In tho Pe"la Gull, re•tly killing all o( the 106 pa ... n. and 8 crew members, officials Bald ' A ;eport that one man survived the q-1sb in the mountal111 some 40 miles of Dubel· airport was not conftnned. 'i Ste.ding Airways. the Danlsh charter 1lrllne which owned the plone, l{ld the Tjaerebor1 Travel A I e n c y In Copenhagen, which chartered it, 11ld there appear~ to be no survivors. "Al far aa: we have learned from our man in Dubei, there are no survivors," a 1pol<;e§lllan for both companies sald. 'J'he pasatn,ers included 61 Danes, 20 Swedu, U Norweglana, four Finns and 1 • Toples~. Victory Blonde Kicks Sand in Eyes of DA SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The dlltrlct lttomey'1 office h11 dropped charges ol dllturblng tbe peace against a curvlCeOUI blonde who said she sunbathed lop1-lo allbUoh women 's right to bore their upper h1lv., In public. , Diii. Ally. Peter Chang 111d Tll<ldly he had "iJllulflcitnt evidence" lo 4 proo<eute 22-yOll'<lld J!1Jti Chalet. • She waa arrested last fall after she sppeared several times at a public belcll bore mtnui her 1wt1D1U1t,top. · .He allo aid the penal"code section under which she was charged with "openly oulragq public decency" had be<n found uncon11itutlon1l by lb• <:OUN. ' "A lot of people are uptight about their bodies," Miss Chaiet said at the Ume of her arrest: "I never was modest about mine until people around made me ... It really feels nice on a hot day t.o like yoor ahirt off." California May Get Shot .At Firing Space Shuttle • From Wire Service• WASHINGTON -The National Ae~ nautics and Space Administration decid-1 ed today that the boostu •Iii• of the Space Sllutlle wW be powered by aolld-propel1fDI roeket molon rather than by liquid propellanta. · The agency announced alao that the booster stage will be recoverable, and that the chosen d<lign will have engln<I of both the booltu and the orbiter stage firing at !lunch, rather than In tequeoce. C8Ufornil U. Gov. Ed Reinecke .. ys the declllon by NASA hH put C8Ufornla ID the "lead po&tUon" to become the launch and recovery site for the $5.15 billion procraro. "Thus, tbt launch and recovery site is likely lo be along the coast, at Van- der.berg Air Force Base in Southern Calltornia or Cape Kennedy. where it can ' be plucfted fn>m the~-" 1'ut the Aasocl1ted Prell said the decision probably means that the Cape Kennedy launch complex will be chosen over other ~ntenders for space shuttle launchings. The NASA announcement said Kennedy Space Center, Fla., will be responsible for design of Space Shuttle launch and recovery facilltlea. To the comment of Rep. Lou Frey Jr., (R~.) that the deci1lon locked in cape Kennedy as the only logical launch site for the ,abuttle, other observers said V-berr Air Focce Baae ,or BOme ~ to1!1tlon might 'Just at well qualify. Vanderberg, which generally launches ip&Ceeraft into palar orbit as contraated to the equatorial-orbit launches from Jllorida, has been tl)e primary tuting ~nter for the Minuteman solid:propellant rocket. AddlllODllly, the principal 10lld-rocket manulacturlng plant.a are on or near the West Coa1t -Pratt & Wllltney Division o! United Aircraft Corp. at Sunnyvale, Ae.rojet-Gener1l rocket dlvlslon . .at Sacra- mento, the Thlokol Chemical Corp. at Brlnghlm City, Utah. . ' l'rom Page J ; two Germans whlle the 1lx crewmtmbers weie all Danes, ihi llilffie said. ' The pusenger11 were returning from 1 tw1>week holiday In Colombo, Ceylon, flying via Bombay and Dubel to Copenhagen. The jetliner was scheduled to make a refueling stop at Dubel. Airport officials said they lost ra~ contact with the alrlloer only minutes before it was to land. "nle acting airport director Aid "the last radio message we had from the pilot Was : 'I am landln& in four minute!.• Then the plane just disap- peared." He said the plane crashed at f :40 Tues- d1y night,. In ·hilly terrain thrtl or tbur "' miles from the coast. Some 20 pl'anes and helicopters started a search for the wreckage, whJch was , located this morning by a helicopter pilot. He radioed back to Dubei that be could see no signs of survivors at the acene. Airport · officials s&ld the weather wu bad iD the area with storms and rains. · A Sl.erling Airways .pllot'aatd the Dubel airport is we!! equipped and run by the British Royal Air Force (JlAF'·). "The approach is not difficult." he said. The jetliner was due to land at Copenhagen·~ Kastrup airport at 6 this morning. At 7, Tjaereborg general ·manager Knud Kanstrup appeared if! ~he · arrjval lounge and announced to oWld.ing relatives that Sterling Airways Clravelle was reported miiling. "I am~ afraid there ls little hope," he told·uie waiting~tives. . Later Sterlidg issued 1 statement which said, "Sterling A'irw.-/s regreta to inform that the cruh plane ls our super clravelle. There is almost no hopes for survivors. Repart.s that i riiember of the crew had managed to get to 1 little fishing village do not stand up." , A Sterling Airwa,Y• spokesman said the man be)ieved to··· have 'I u r v i v e d presumably was from a r e s c u e helicopter. which had betn forced down durinJ!'. the search because of bad weather. .•. Fr~m Page J , : IJ'iotTI ...... AT LEAST 3 DEAD, 6 HURT IN LOS ANGE LES HOT~L FIRE Firemen Remove Victim of Blaze on Edge of,Skld Row From Page 1 FIRE ... •·ma jor emergency type." Jaye ~· Mor zan Call s Mariju ana Arres t. 'Mi stake' The cause of the blaze was not im· medlately determined, although one guest said he thought he heard a "loud noise" NEW ORI,,EANS (UPI) ...... Singer Jaye. ju'st before the fire erupted. P. Morgan says her arrest on a charge of ·• . Two of those rushed to the County-USC RO UNDUP Medical Center were reported in serious • • • possession of marijuana was "all a condition with burns. One, a man, was . misunderstanding." unidentified . The other person was iden· . p o I I c 'e b e -p· a 'r t1ntent·spe11htadedi "' 'Mlil M'otigan1 40, and he11 drummu, tified as John Hines, 65. crackdo'il'D, aceording to Detective Sgt. Peter Alexander Donald, 27, were ar-liospital spokesmen said the other two John Re~an. . , , rested al New Orleans In ernalionli ' guests, Earl Edlund, 60, and John Miles, He said LSD, mesca.line, mt!-hedr1ne , Airport and booked at a Jefferson Paris,h 67. were being treated for smoke in· amp~etamine .. and barbiturate p11l~i ~~ur~ jail TueSday on a charge of possessing halation and were in fair condition. plentiful martJuana has been bo\Jg lV. ounces of marijuana . Two firemen suffered minor injuries mg the ~tly probe. They were released almost im· wbile battling the blaze, but were treated Breakirig down overall cost of the at the scene. • three-month investigation by d r u I mediately 00.Sl,SOO bond e~c~ and dr.lven Deputy Fire Chief Kenneth Long said h and man houri Sgt Rel.. back to the airport by sheriffs deputies. b 1. , pure ases • · "It II · d t d" That ' t e ire staned o the sixtp floor of the .al.d ,.1 was ,~ .. 1 -~r au~ect. was a a 00 nusun ers an 1ng. s Id ho 1 th I.Ill" ""'"' ,..,-,..,.. 11 I h Id h o te and spread from ere to the at· ,T:unrw y ,. "flY TOM SE PPY WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen. John Tun- ney "(P-l:a!U. ), .. Id lodoy either former •Atty. Geo'. John N. MitcbOll'or C81llornil Lt. \i<>V. Ed " Reinecke llld 1bout - •erulionl they-hid lui yeor allopdly Jbout the Republl~lft ~ailonal' O!t>-vtntion. , "One or the other of them has not told the truth," 11Jd TuMey, after the morn· lag session of the Senate Judiciary Com· mittee . ..:::.-....!.!;heir·--statement.s are in direct con- flict," he added. · The committee ls investigating charges that there was a connection between the Justice Qepartment settlement of three antitrust suits against lnternaUonal Telephone & Telegraph Corp. and the company's purpcrttd $400,000 pledge to support the Republican National Conven· lion ln San Diego next summer. Mitchell , who will head President Nix· on's re-election bid, testified Tuesday and today that he didn't recall discassing the convention with Reinecke d u r I n g meetings he had with him last April and September. , Mitchell said he can only recall , and his records indicate, that Reinecke discussed only the economic development of the state including the bringing of space tbuttle work to Ca1lfornl1. In ask..ing a question, Tunney said Reinecke had told him March 3 that he did discuss the convention with Mitchell in May and an hour later retracted his statement and said it was in September, after the city had been chosen as the con- vention site. Tunney told newsmen ' Reinecke was representing the California Chamber of Commerce and met with Mitchell in an attem pt to get the convention for San Diego. "If he had met with Mitchell in SeJ>- tember, there would be no need to discuss bringing the convention to San Diego," said Tunney. "The decision had already been made. "Their statements can be reconciled." he continued. "The key to Reinecke's recollection is that he was trying to bring the convention to California . In SeJ>- tember it would have been a moot ques- tion . • Appeals Court V phol.ds T exas ' Death Penal ty The city's outlay for the M jailed adds ~ .' ~~nt emen, s ~to newsmen at 1 e tic and then the roof. up to weJJ over '30,000 in total. Jiil. 1 spoke to a JUdge and ~Y lawr.er The Biµ-clax ls locat,ed at .fth and Main AUSTIN, Tex . CAP) -Texas' Court of Relatively small amounts of virtuaily apoke to.• judge. 1 im not 1 crun~il. Streets, near the Stdd Row section j Criminal ~ upheld the con- every contraband drug were confiscated She said she had an ~ngagement m ~an downtown Los A'ngeles. ' .-&titutionality l5t .the-d~ath penalty today. as the three teams of four men each hit Juan and would be flying to Puerto Rtco. A guest on .the top noor , Heiir .1'.1e court's 4-.1 decision upheld the con- more than 40 locations from Costa Mesa She and Donald had stopped over in New Crowder, 41 , said he ' was awakened by v1ction of Ronn~e Earl Te~no, who was to La Habra. Orleans to change planes. smoke curling under the door of his assessed death Jn the electr1c chair in the METALS FOUND .•. No serious incidents were reported In ' room. ......Dec. 8. 1969, slayine: of Odie C. Wright in •the raids, which included a predawn visit -------------"I opened the door and there was a Hou~ton. , . , lo a UC Irvine dornilory. COUNTY BO ARD sheet or flame," said Crowder, who was W1tnesaes 111d Wr1ght was shot m the day. DDE and DDT tracei were relative- ly low and compored to that In CIUfornta river sediment.a. But the level of mercury found on the bottom of the Rhine Chlnnel LI 500 times that of sediment.a used 11 a biae level vaJue for the rtate, Stone Wd. That area in the west end of the bay, aslo the alte for boat maintenance opera- tions, had total heavy metals con- centrations of l,Z21 parts per million, the highest in the bay. But most of the 10 sta· tions showed blgb counts. 'lbe only ~wo stations that compared : farorably wlJh bpe llne1 mercury values . were hi the \1Pper .Bay. : The sedJment figures were compared lo : .1lmllar ~lyses. in Dana . POlttt •Harbor, ' which wu found lo be relaUvely low in : mOst of the metals. • Stone aatd' that the health department : needs more studies to put the figures in : tbeir proper perspective and called this : only a "preliminary look." · Analyses of the Newport Bay water : itself for metah: are now belng done. : Previously, the county Health Depart· • OllAN~ COAST IT DAILY PILOT ment 1nal)'ltd only for bacteria counts. Men comparison da'ta and Information on metaJ effects and distribution1 are lllo needed, Stone 11ld. Boats were ldeiltlfled 11 a PoSSible aource' becaUJe of their high numbers ...:: more than 8,000 veS1tl1 are berthed in Newport Bay -and boat maJntenance activities. The average boat i.! hauled out one and one-third times per year for service and moat of the 1eraplng and sanding residua ends up In the bay. Sto~ said. Boat paints are designed to prevent the sticking of marine organisms. Five of the eight heavy metals a.!lsayed in the bay were foun{ , 1 boat hull paints sold in the Harbot area, Stone said. They are arsenlc, chromium, copj>er, mercury and zinc. More investigation of sources and what to do about them is needed, said Stone. who conflnned Harbor Commi.!I· !loner Frank Robinson's observation that seven to 10 tons of toxic paint is going into the bay each year. Stone said the health department wants to incorporate more metals studies into the overall water quality study of the bay now being devised by city and county of. flcials. ,1 But analyses and ,tudies of metals samples will ctlntinue from now on, he added, and .!lhould be improved with the advent of the health department's own chemical laboratory, Captives were sullen or defiant, non· uninjured. chest b~ a man who robbed the chalant, some even laughln& ind a couple His face and shirt were covtred with automobile supply house where he of gi(ls weeping as they 1treamed into MEET CANCELED soot. worked. Costa Mesa City Jail in handcuffs. He said he slammed the door shut and Tezeno'1 lawyers sought reversa l of his Adults entered via .the rear booki~ Orange County s u p e r v I 8 0 r 5 waited for firemen , who' "really got here ~nviction on grounds the death penalty case ·area; where male suspects jamm canceled today's regular meeting in a hurrry . While I was wa iting, J saw 1.1. crueV and unusual punishment. pro. all cells, while female "arrestees were because three of the five board the flames burn down througb the ceiling hibited by the 8th Amendment to the U.S. shipped on to Orange County Jail. members are out of town. and into my bathroom" Constitution. Juveniles were . fed in through the Crowder was among the 15 who climbed But the Texas court, the highest to "d d nd Su-rvlsors David L. Baker and detective bureau's s1 e oor a pro-,..,... down an aerial ladder to safety. which a criminal case can go in the state, cessed on through to Orange County Ralph M. Clark are aUendlng 8 The blaze erupted just a few .blocks in an opinion by Judge Truman Roberts Juvenile Hall. western regionar conference of the from the scene of another major hotel disagreed. Tbe roundup of known drug.-dealing National Association of Counties in fire that claimed 19 lives and injured 30 "An ex.amination of the Constitution of I ded •5 h ed I t Sacramento and board Chairman lb · Se be 1970 suspects inc u " c arog n cour • o ers in ptem r . the United States reveals through the Issued arre.!lt warrants, while nine Ronald Caspers Is on vacation in That fire de stroyed the Ponet Square amendments to the same that the death persone:~ present When .lawmen ~rrlved Mexico. Hotel, located on Flower Street in the penalty for crime is rec()gnized," Roberts were al.90 booked on var1ou1 charges. i-~~~~~~~~iiiiii~iiiij'p;~ci~ty;'s~Sk~id~Ro~w~s;ec;ti;o•;·mmiliiiiliiiiiiiiw;r;o;t•~· mmmmmiiiiimmm;;,il The ages 1a.nged f,rdm one girl ·1s to •· _ ·----· .. 35·year-:0Jd man' nabbe:d in . Newport Beach Tllesd1y, ... ~ \!Urrtedly pocked preparing to Move to Guadalajara, Mei· lco. Raiders swiftly stepped up their plans th is week when the Orange Coast drug underworfd bee:an to sense something was brewing, especially after an ac- cidental leak Tuesday. Judge Everett W. Dtckey was presiding at the burglary trial of two .!luspected dealers in Harbor Judicial District Court, while several of their friends and fellow suspects sat in the courtroom. Judge Dickey asked it the alleged burglars knew warrants charging sale of narcotics and naming them had just been issued. "The C<>urtroom froze," Sgt. Regan said later. GEM TALK TODAY by HOW WE BUY JEWELS You are, we're sure, well aware of the fact that fine jewels are created from rough stones which ha ve been mined from deep in the earth. .. ' • TN °"'"'" C-t DA il Y l"ILOT, """' wlllctl It tcllrlblrttcl thti Ntw1~r-. .. llUltlllMll •v n.. Olq• CMtt l"lllllllllllnt COm&llnr. 1..-r•"' ed!llont •r• Plllllltlltd, M«'!dt'/ "'""°" Friday, for Cost1 M"'· ".ws-1 l ..cfl, HU!llltllltofl ltlCll/F-ltill Viii.,-, l.l tynt ... d'!, lrvlnWkOdl&ct 8'ICI S.ri Clffntntt1 i.11 J11111 c.imrr-. A t"'9!• ""'-' •llloll It llUblltMcl Slh.lrdt'(I 1nd Sundtrt. Tiit ptll'tclNI lllltl1lt1"" pl1nl h 1t lit WMI llY JlrHt. COlff M .. t , C.Utomi., '26». The budget request for that will go lo the ctlunty Board of Supervlsor.!J at the end of this month. One panicked spectator leaped up and fled , but was quickly caught in the nearby downtown area when running detecUves headed him off. These stones are then pl8ced in the hands of skilled craftsmen who apply years of experience to cut- ting and polishing processes which produce the scintillating jewel you see ih our store. -- - For that spetial someone 's birthda)' ' • . ~ ;: ~ •• :· • • ~ ' ' ~ I. 1 1.1»1rt" N. W1M P'r.l""I Ind Publl.,,... J1ck I. C"rl1y Vk1 Prtllllltnl Md o-rtl M.,...., Tho"''' K11vil ••ltor Tltomtl A. M,r,hi111 MtMllnt Editor Chtrlts H. loo1 Rich1r4 P. Nill Aultttnt Mtnet~ ldJIOn Olfk• C.t. M•: Jn W.W &ty Sh'MI' H...,.,, Inell: int """'°" 81VIM,.. L.,._ IMdl: m 11-t "'""°"' H1111tlnitol 1110!1 1"1S ... cto aoui.w1rf kn C._,,.: »S Nllrfll 11 Cllfllnt ltMI , ........ ,,, .. , '41-4Jl 1 Cl111N!M A'-" .. '4l·M71 ~ .. CM9lat.,..,......, wt.. l llMll 491""4Jt 1 '""' ...,. or.._. CM!lff CNI ...... 141-1111 ~. 1m, °'"'" CMlf MtrM'l"'9 , Mt ,...,. •ltfM. 11r11t•r•11o!11, """"' or •""'"•"""•" 11«1111 ~ ~-wlllMM .,_141, ,., • ...... ef cti1tYrltflt hMr. """" --,.. .... ,. .. ti " ...... lttdl .. Cl&fe "-· Clfllllrlllt. s.c,,... ... .. -..... -·· ...... ''"' .....,t _,., ....... 11 .. &tU lnOMfil~. ' From Page 1 HUGHES IN· LA? many people enter here every day lhat he could easily have been ml~. In Las Vegas, where Hughes lived before flying lo the Bahamas and lhen to Nicaragua, another spokesmen for lhe billionaire, Artlo Sederbe{g, a a I d : ''There'll probably be a lot o! lpeCU!aUon th1t he has returned lo Laa Vegas. But 'We don't know where he 11. 11 If Hugh<I returned to the United States, Hannah sald1 it wa, unlikely that I\ was for 1 Nevada SuprenM! Court hear· Ing tho! opens today on the dlsmilul or Robert Maheu 11 the bllUonalre's chief of N~vada Oj>erilions. Hughes' Conner Nev1d1 qu•rters In tho penthouse at the Daart lnn'are leased lo hotel pa1N>111. The bUllonslr•'• former botel IUlto In N-u reportedly his been lealed lo en.terlllner Frank Slnotra. The h6tel 1pace la Managua ha1 not been •ac1ted. Autborltl., 11ld Hughes ~ bla • • • •laff occupied tho entire floor _Jnd that several members 1tayed behind. Shelton said, Hughe!: "met with the , president and I was there at the muting before he left. Ju.!J:t the president, Mr. Hughes, and, m~lf." Somoza said Hughes told him he was "looking forward wilb "keen anllclpollon lo having the opportunity lo ,eturn to Nicaragua soon.'' • Somoza said he invited Hughes to 11vlalt with me in the near ruturt. 11 • But 'he d•clined , 81 did Shelton, to uy whit hid been d~cu..ed. Other sourc" Slid the three mJ1ht h6ve discussed 1 fl0>$1blt bust~ deal In- volving Hu~bCI' airline, Hughll !JJ?rest, and S::nnoza 'a LanJc1 1lrllne. " HJ1 l1toll moved rftt.d a funlllar Pl~ tern : 1 night from one IOC!uded pll~ to another : a crypf.k conlirnultloll from 1 spokesman. • ,,. • • You'd be surprised at bow much of our time is applied to selection not only of the gems themselves, but also to careful consideration of processors from whom we .buy. Although we, of course, buy jewelry from ·Private and estate · sources, the bulk of our beaulllul . stock o! jewels u purchased from processors who have an u_nque!- tlonabl• reputation for strict con· trols care!ul attention lo detail, ·~nd year1 l)f exacliilg experience. ' Tl'!• 1rue preciousness of 1n Oma;a watch ls th• love lhat goes wllh it. The I Omega you r.CelVe today will become a : proud po11e11lon ... prtclou1 beyond ' compare 1or whit 11 1ymbolizes. With in ' each case bft11 the peerless Omt;a ' rnovtmtnt. M14e with metlculo1J1 cara to give Y••r• of talthlul perlormanct. See O\lr comp1111 celleclion of Omega mtn'• and ladln' wetchts, $65 to over $1000. A-lelf•wlndlno ktfll,.ltr wllll ••lf·dltnol.11! ce!tl'ICl11. 14K teld·lll•d ~·• ............ ,j11 '" lltJftlttl llltl Otlt •.,, ., , , ",,. ,.., , .. t t20 •-• t1t11r10flf1..1•1t wftitt •olld OOl4 ...... a1ts J.C. . .JJ~phl'iej },11w11~riJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENllNT IEkMI IANKAMEAJCARO -MASTER CHAAQE • 14 YIAAS JN SAMI LOCATION •HONE 141·1 40 1 So when 3'0U are looking. for the _ finest In gems, come in and '"" us. )(ou have not only the expert a)tenlion cl the owner .. perllor ; you also have Ute addJUonal auur· '"ce cf knowing that the source of your gem was selec~d w!Ut ~r.· treme personal care, ,,...,...,...,,,.., ~ Mim1a•cica1111cio , •• I I • . ,. • Wtdmdry, Marc 15, Un s DAILY PILtr. ,1 Grammy A-Wards Show '71 Carole King's Year • By MARY ~AMPBELL NEW YORK (AP) -The Grammy Awards, given on Tuesday night to the best records released between Oct. 16, 1970, and Oct. 15, ih1, leave no doubt that 1971 was Carole King's year. Miss King1 was nominated for four Grammies and won them all -including the three which are considered the top of the PoP· Her's was the "record of the year,'' "It's 1'oo Late," a song she wrote and sang; "A;lbum of the year," "Tapestry," "!'1111 lho -and wroi. or a>Wrote, --llil-brolller team, the Clrpnlten, won, nomli>al"4, ¥ suog by otbm • ...Krlslof, Sciences, . in New York, At I ant a, and ••soog of th& year," l'o~You've Got a this year's ''best pop vocal performance fenon had three of the five nominations Nasbvllh!, Olicago and Los Angeles. Fdtnd." whl~ sl)e wrote. by a duo, group or_ cbotuS" category w1th for "but country 99n&" and oge of his The only former Beatie to win a Gram- Sbe also · .... es best lema\e PoP lllelr LP "Carpentera." thro<, ''Help Me Make It Through the my was Paul McCartney who won with vocalist for "Tapestry." J.saac Hayes' recordings received the Night,'' won. his v.·ife Linda for'best arrangement a<..'" James Taylor won as best male pop most nominations _ eight. He won a Sanuni Smith won~ female country companying vocalist!:, for 4.heir· "Unele vocalist, for "You've Got a Friend." composer's award for best score written vocal performance with that Kristo£-Albert/Admiral 1-falsey ... Quincy Jones won for best pop In-for a movie or TV specJal for ''Shaft," a fe.rson song, Jerry Reed won the best llowever, the trustees or the National struroenlal performance for "Smack; moyle. He won an arranger'i award for male country vocal Grammy for "When Association <>f Rec<>rding Arts and water Jack,)' an album with lhe title song best instrumental arrangement for the ~ou're Heit, You're Hot," which he sang Sciepces gave a' special Grammy to the Written by Miss King. single "'Ibeme FromShaft." And "Theme on television during the hour and a half Beatles, t.wo years after the four C&rJy Simon, who writes pop 90ngs and From Shaft" won an award for its in which 12 of the 44 awards were members went their separate ways. e:tays guitar and whose sister Js an opera engineer, Dave Purple. presented. The governors also gave a special singer, was acclaimed best new artist of The res~ were presented at dinners held Grammy to composer Leonard Bernstein. year. Kris Kristofferson was nominated live later in \he evenlng by the National Special awards also were announced Last year's best new artist, the sister times, although songs be wrote were also Academy of Recording Arts and for U>uis Armstrong, who died last .July, ~~~---'~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • and Mahall~ Jac1<!90, who died I!! January. Other awards Included: -Conway Twitty and Loretta Lynn. "After !he Fire ls Gone," best country vocal performance by a duo or group. -Chet Atkins, "Snowblrd," best coun- try instrumental . -Aretha Franklin, j•Brldge Over Troubled Water," best rhythm and blue' female performance. She won in the - category for the fifth straight ytar. Scuba Dive Death -Lou Rawls, "A Natural Man," best rhythm and blues male performance. -Ike and Tina Turner, husband and wife. ''Proud !\.1ary," best rhythm aod blues vocal ~y a duo or group. -Songwriter Bill Withers, ''Ain't 1 No Sunshin(\" best rhythm and blues song. -Duke Ellington, "New 0 r I ea n' Suite," best jazz perfoi-mapce by a big band. \ Mystery · Cleared I!:aguna Beach lifeguards Tuesday at- tempted to clear controversy surrounding th e death Sunday of a San Clemente physician beginni ng a scuba diving Judge Muzzles Barking Suit An Orange County Superlor Court judge has worked out a com- promise in a· lawsuit fi led by an El Toro couple who objected to the persistent barking of t h e i r neighbors' two German Shepherd dogs. Judge Lloyd Blanpied ordered Robert and Ca rol Gilmer, 24876 Jeronimo Lane, to share the costs incurred by their n eig hbor s, Michael and Andrea Aucoin, in the co nstru ction o( a dog · run to be located at the furthest point from the Gilmer property. He ordered the Aucoins to build the run bf March 20 and to ensure that the dogs are kept in the run , in the garage or in the home. They can be released at the rear of the house but only under supervision that will ensure the absence of barking, the jurist ruled. The Gilmers had earlier sued the Aucoins for $36,500 in damages in a lawsuit which claimed that the Au· coins' dogs "bark most or the day and night." Tape recordings were played at the bearing before Judge Blanpied. Judge Issues Pandering Case Mistria l Edict SANTA ROSA (UPI)-Because a pros- ecution witness' vice record was ex· posed, a mistrial was declared f<ir three persons charged with conspiring to pander during a Bohemian Club en- campment. Judge Lincoln Mahan granted the mo-. tion Tuesday in Sonoma County Superior Courl for John Brick, 58, and his wife, Sandra, 35, both or San Francisco, and Robert E. Lee; 41, Guemevllle tavern owner. Because Lee's attorney had not ma,de the motion, the tavern owner cannot be tried again, court officia ls said. Lee had been charged only with con- spiracy. Judge Mahan set March 28 for posting a new trial date for the Bricks. Tbe Bricks had been charged with con-- Spiracy to solicit for prostituUon and at· tempted pandering during the exclusive San Francisco men's club's encampment at a secluded area between Guemevllle and Monte Rio. Judge Mahan acted after It was made public in court that~rs. Maryanna Kitty Sanders, 40, of Sarita Rosa , a prosea.ition witness, had been convicted of pimping and pandering in Santa Clara County in 1941 and had been a licensed prostitute in Nevada in 19.14., "I feel that frankly'lt ls Incredible that four investigative agen-. cies -the sheriff's office, the district at- torney's investigators, the attorney £encral's investigators or the state and 'ihe FBJ -were unable to locate a record el a felony conviction of one of their witnesses," the judge said. session off Cleo Street Beach. Lifeguard Chief Skip Conner said ihltlal statements that the man was a beginning ~ver were incorrect and said Dr. Paul W. Smith, IO, had had previous ex· pe!'ience ~ diving. Conner said he would cl111sify the man as an "ill- termediare.11 The lifeguard's statements came when ques~ about allegations by diving in· structer Car~ Heng er, of 6302 W. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, that the diving conditions were not as severe as previously reported.· Henger said Dr. Smith was part of an advar:iced diving class and that the surf conditions at Cleo Street were not as severe as at other city beaches. Dr. Smith died Sunday morning after being pulled from wa ist deep water off the end of Cleo Street. The county cor· oner's office has completed an autopsy, but the results of toxicological tests won't be known for at least a week. Cause of death is still listed as probable drowning, a coroner's spckesman said. "There is really no way to prove a drowning other than to prove there was no other cause of death," the spokesman noted. He said an autopsy disclosed that Dr. Smith did not have a heart attack and noted that water was found in the victim's lungs, evidence indicative of a drowning. Blood~chioridt tests now being conducted would eliminate other possible causes of death, he added. "I feel he (instructor Henger) was doing the best job be could as an in- structor," CoMer said today. "It seems he took the proper action as an instructor in that situation." Dr. Smith apparenily began having problems prior to going under water and llcDier pullocl him lo lbore. Al,lem»ll lo ·revive the unconscious physician falled , and he was pronounced dead on arrival at Soulh .Coast Communlly Hospital. ln response to Henger's statements about the diving condition, Conner said the surf was not as severe at Cleo Street as at other area s. "1 feel the surf was ruMing fom to five feet that day," Conner said. "At Cleo Street, tbe sutf was not qu1te that high. But according to eye witness accounts, there was surf and there was a set com·· ing in when the victim developed pro- blems." ~.also .sal.d. that Henger, in con- ducting the class at 11 a.m., was In viola· tkm of a city code restricting diving classes to the hours prior to 10 a.m. However, the lifeguard said he had not brought charges against Henger for the violation. Solon Sidetracks Weak VD Bill SACRAME,k,, (AP) -A bill that would have ~uired venereal disease education in all California schools· has been watered' down by its author and put aside for study by an Assembly com- mitteee. Assemblyman John 'Vasconcellos (0. San Jose), deleted a requirement Tues- day Ui.at all schools offer-VD instruction "at appropriate grade levels,'' and re- quire Instead that Ute classes be ollered when at least ~ students peUUon for it. But the Assembly Education Com- mittee gave the bill back to Vasconcellos for stu:dy to clarify Whether the proposed amendm t WQUld take authority away from l officials to decide in which grades 'f education should be taught. Float Takes Shape J lAIL'I' .. ILOT lllff ~ Members of the 7-11 Club at Montanoso Recreation Center in Mission Viejo' cluster about bat-shaped float they ·are building for the Friday St. Patrick's Day Parade. The parade will begin at 3:30 p.m. at . Mission Viejo High School. It wlll move along Chris· anta Drive, finishing at the Mission Viejo Golf Club. A picnic will be held there for spectators and par· ticipants and awards will be presented. School Decision Expected San Joaquin Board to Rule on Y ear-ro und Clas ses A final decision is expected from San Joaquin School District trustees tonight on a proposal to implement an all-year school program at one elementary school in Irvine. Tbe board will bold itll regular meeting beginning at 7:30 p.m· at the IDultipurpose room at .Irvine. Elementary School, 147311 Sane! canyon Ave., In East Irvine. If the proposaJ is approved by trustees, students attending Irvine Elementary School will begin the next school year In July, and will alternate nine week school sessions (45 days) with periods of three- week (15-day) vacations. Two "sc:bools" actually are housed at the Irvine School while a ...iew school is be.!ng bUilt at the nearby California Homes housing site. The new school is yet uMamed. Depending UPon the outcome of a parent poll, one or both of the schools could go on tbe 4$-15 calendar plan. counted, school officials said ~70 per· cent of the parents favored the plan. The all·year school program had been debated extensively and intensively by parents and teachers in the school dilirict and attendance at tchool lioant meetings has been high while the issue was discussed, . If the pl•n is implemented for one or both of the schools, it will culminate Street Change OK'd ~ County supervisors approved without comment this week a request by the Mission Viejo Company for a street name change. , The company wanted to1<lrop the name Via Orgaz and su bstitute Via Manolete for the short street with parallels Jeronimo Road in the Mission Viejo com-munity. more than a year of study by school of· ficials of the advantages and problems of the 45-15 program. other matters facing trustees at the meeliag Jaclude: , -A second attempt by school officials· to get approval of a proposal to $0licit bid! for construction of a school for the • trainable mentally retarded (TMR) students in the district. With only three trustees attending the March 1 board meeting -<>ne man was Ill - a majority of the board meinbers did not approve the pro)lOeal. Board president Gratian Bidart voted against the measure, saying he would not approve the solicllaUon of bids until writ· ten evidence was received from state Of. ficials that the construction project would be financed with state money. -A proposal to distribute a school fact sheet to real estate agents operating within the school district. -··The Bill Evans Album," best jazz per!ornfance by a 90loist, in thi.s case a pianist. -"The Bill Evans Album '' also won in the category of jazz performance by a group for the Bill Evans Trio. -Best recording for children : "Bill Cosby Talks to Kids about Prugs," -Best comedy: ''Th is is a Recording" by Lily Tomlin. -Best score for an original cast album : Composer Stephen Schwartz, for off-Broadway's -''God.spell." -Best gospel: !<Let !\.1e Ll vc," Charley Pride. -Best soul gospel: "Put Your Hand In the Hand of the Man From Galilee," Shirley Caesar. -Best ethnic or traditional recording, including blues: uThey Call Me Muddy Waters" by blues singer Muddy Waters. ' Prostitute Talk To Senior Class Irks Committee CRANSTON, R.I. (UPI) -'Mlreo teachers have been reprimanded by the Schoo l Committee for allowing a pros- titute to address a class of high school seniors. The prostitute, a ~year~ld mother of two, was invited lo West High School Fri· day by the students, who are studying crime as part of their course on economics and· politics in the community. Her talk was about "victimless crime, 1t but her appearance created a furor among certain members of the com- munity, resulting in the School eom- mittee's decision Monday nlgbt to reprl· mand the teachen for "errors of judg. ment." Students wbo attended Mondl,y rllPI'• meellog aald they were not bothered b1 &bt .....__~ ,. ........ lbt they were not allowed to vol~ thelf op\n. ions to the committee, . The teach<ira reprimanded were George O'Neil and James D'&nbra, coordinators of the program, and Walter Campbell, chalnnan of the Soc11l Studies Depart- ment. Mayor James L. Taft Jr .. said he had been beseiged by angry citizens shocked at the disclosure. "What happened at Cranston West on Friday ls hardJy an example of an educ• tional activity that insWls res~or tho Jaw," Taft said. "The maln po · that the pl'O!titute, a person who ls con- tinually II-Outing and breaking the '"" is · not the proper individual to address .1 group of hlgti school students." Trustees have previously indicated that at least 60 percent of the parents with children attending the school would have to approve of a change in the calendar in order for the plan to be approved. The final results of the most recent poll will be released at tonight's meeting. However, with 85 percent of the returns 90wn· & CountrP . . PATIO SHOPS A • Donkey Jockey s Clash at Vie jo Mission Viejo High School students and faculty members -mounted atop donkeys -will batlle it out on the basketball court Friday at a p.m1 at the high school cam pus, 25025 Chrisanta Drive. Proceeds from the annual donkey basketball game will go to the Key Club, said secretary Leo Martin. Adm.ission to the game is $1 .50 f0r adult!:, $1 for students and 75 cents for children. The 20 students who sell the most pre-game tickets will play against faculty volunteers. GO.LD MEDAL Folding DIRECTOR'S CHAIR Festival Makes Changes SWEETHO~~T CHAIR12ss TWIN HEADBOARD 19"9-·'2911 .... 34" New Ground R uks Cover Exhibit~n by A rtists Some new ground rules, covering, among other things, the problem of multi-talented artists and those who Jlie an oetaslonal nip of light refrtahment to while away the long exhibiting hours, were agreed upon by. Festival of Art.! directors th.is week. Director Hal Akins, himstlr ao U· hibltlng artist, noted that an increasing number of artlsts are hedging the ex~ !sting ground rul<s by displaying Items in media other than the one tbey have aub- milted !or jurying. . "It's really not fair to otht:r artlsl5," he said, "when someone who has been juried on pots starts bringing in weaving, even 11 ifs good weaving." • Howev~ be added, '"ntls has ·been gobli On for fJve or Iii years because • ..... lot ol the artist& are doing mulli-medla .-things and a Jot of them are an addition lo the grounds. The jurying rule h" been there, but it hasn1t been enforced.'' The rule, he sald,·ls that an artlsL or crallsmao wishing lo qualUy lo additional media must do so during the annual jury. iog Jn March. Director David Young said he !ell It best to leave entbrcement of the rule to the grounds committee. 11SOmellme1 It's dtfticulli" be Wd. 11For example tl an artist hanp a small Pol ln a Jorge p,1ece of macrame, ls It pots or maCrame? 1 The boanl agreed that the festival should work toward requiring jurying !or. all media, by next year, bul \hat artl!ts should be adviled thal violation ol lhe lule would be noted by the arouncls com- mittee. Directors aloo agned that exhibitOrs should be dia<:ouraged lrom dispensing the cup that ~ lrom lllelr booth!. Under a new rule alcoholic beverages Will be prohibited anywbero on the grounds except when purchased and consumed on the restaurant terrace. Anotller rule wu aimed at curbing the lasl·ml~ute booth buUders wliO habitually "hammer and bang" during the Tbul'S"' day ev~g preview performance of the pngeant, the day belore the olficlal festival opening. From now on, It was agreed, booth work will have lo be com· pletec! by noon on the Thursday preview date. Artistt aJao will be advloed that tltey ore expt<ted to uae the pay phones on the ll10l\l!ds. not the l..Uval olflce or sales booth 'Instruments, u llley wish lo communleate with the oulalde world. WASTI IAS•m Re9. ,,,, •••••••••••• SALi 1.11 HAMl'llS Re9. 2.95 , , , , ••••• , ••• ,,. , , SALi 1.11 HANGING IA.Sans CHAIU I with tr""' R.e9, 19.95 .•••••• , ~ •••• ,,, 'f ,., SALi 27.11 rTAOE•I er NIGHT STAND JO" Hl9h • , , , , • 19.11 DI.It le dock 1trlkt, -lltms lllUSlrtltd """ M ttmPOr•rllr Ollt IM ttoc:k. The Store For Al s- OPEN DAILY 9:30·6 -:;,iFRIDAY 'TIL 9 • SUNDAY, 10·5 RIHJ. $18.00 $1495 e Choose f ro.,,. tchfe variety ol ea11vtU .eolor• e Quality hartl--4 frames '" ••t•rtll, or lllclelc fh.U• • • I f Mll.Y ljl.OT • ' wlala Tea ldae Irvine· Wars Not Over Yet OP!' AND SUING DEPT. -The City ol Santa Anl ,apporenUy b going to co"' llmlt Ila contell In the courts against Ibo City oi liYIJie In an effort to prove that Irvine II really Brigadoon and will ooon dlH-r In the morning mists amid a llUuar of lfsal ~pm. Santi Ana, you will recall, wanta Irvll1e dluolved bfcaue Jrvlne'• cltyhood boun. dams Include a whole Jot of las·heaYY in-~I llllil !hit Santa ADI' had 'Wanted' loralllnatlme; • ' Al,pment count, the score In this legal' ••'a.lands Irvine, ·a, -santa Ana, o. ht ii to 11y, Sartta Ana baa taken Irvine to court eljbl times and come up def, kaput and abort of vlclory each and evtl'J Ume. TBII DOEIN'T dlacoarage Santa Ana, ..,,,...,., ..... that~y. la.-......... In iuch ·mallm. Bui doa' gel the notion that the lolhig or wtlulln( Is totally detmnlned by of· llclaia ol the two munlclpallUes. Every time the Santa Ana city dads gather in their backroom to plot another legal maneuver, it'• eo1Ung aomebody' Dloney. ___. Those somebodJes are the taxpaymi. Lord oqly knows how much lt'a cost the taxpayen of 8anta Ana. For Irvine, in defending ftaell, the cost curve beoomes a little easier to plot. · AS THE DIVINE Cl)y Council met into the wee small hours this rooming, the cl· ty folks approved le1al expendltureo IO far of tzt,GM. Of thaMlgure, '8,137 or 25 per<enl, bad been -I defeDdlng the ci-ty qllnil Santa Anl'1Jepl 1ttacb. "nils doun't even count the number of thouaandl· spent in volunteer cash by dU-.... were defending Irvine In the cOurta before II became a city. , SIX GRAN'D llllY IOW1d like .,.onula In the 1ep1 dndce-But when you figure th<! Wan! City of Irvine had lo•. borrow • f!00,000 jull lo gel the municipality going, It looDll as a more significant ,cblllllt ol cub. Irvine's only real revenue , .0 for ba1 come in 111,000 from cigarette taxee. · So, who knows'!' Santa Ana may lose every legal bltUe and turn out to be the winner In the end alter all. . M1ybe they wW have bled Irvine lax. payer1 dry at the bench of justice. FOOTNOO-ES: N 't m e r o u ~ inqulrie! have come to the paper alnce the story of Ivy Buzton w11 publlsbed. You may recoll he Is the SI. Louis conatruction worker who wu held In jail on a murder charge for 17 montm befon a jury, in one hour'• deliberatk>n, found hhn in- noceqt of the crime. Meanwblle, Buxton lost everything: his Ppartment wu looted. his car repossess-~' hll job loet: and even hla eyeglasses lllolen. Seven! coutal people have of. fered donatlons to aid Buxton. ·We now con report thot l1ICb help moy be sent to: Ivy Buxton, C/O Zaek Conklin 4ll North 70th Street, Eaal st. ·Louis, Ill., 82203 Conklin Is the man wl>o hind-1n a~ tomey who finally freed Ivy Buxton. Jamel F. Wieck, UPI bureau chief in st. Louil, reporta that the Buxt.on case hu created cpna!derable aUr all across the country. And st. Louil authorities are now reviewing their rule• relative to granting Of ball ..... Bike Path Head Quits PORTLAND, or.. (AP) -Sam Oakland, cbalnnan of the PorUand Bycy· cle PaQi Task ,Force, resigned Tuesday because he sald he wanted to spend more time workll1g to get hl&hwa-y funds for mass transit use. T MIAlll, Fla. (AP) -The Democr1Uo presldenUal umpalfn ba1 been ac:r1mtil· ed by 1 Florida prlmory In wblcb Gov. Georae C. Waltlce won by a landollde, . Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey cl•lmed vie-, tory In aecond piece and Sen. Edmund s. Musklt 1Uffered 1 drubbing. W1ltlce, who rnc1e'1o victory 0o bia op- potllion lo school bulln( and his pllilg .. to bear down on crlme and tu 'the -lthy, allo appeared on the lbow and said be fell !be small lbowlng of h11 Dtmocratic rivals in the primary wu 0 1 blow" to all of them. ' Scbcol bulln& "" 'tlie tol> la111e· of the campaign. The Florida voter• 1n 1 1traw ballot which bas no lepl effect, overwhelmingly regiltered ~oppoaltlon to court~rdeted school bwiing to achieve in- tegration. They also voted •ltOn&lY in support of quality educaUon for all. Humphrey .. id today that Wlllace Ls now ''a f2nntda~le opponent .• . . no doubt abo<il that" but J>redlcted !he governor never -> win t b e Qemocrattc prea dentlal nomination. "111 aet Jt/' Hwnphrey aakt ln an m. tervlew on NBC'• 0 Today" show· UPIT• ...... FLORIDA WINNER WAtLACE GITS VICTORY KISS FROM WIPE Tide of A~tlbuslng Vote $-Alaboma Gonrnw to Win -------'---~-'·--· . . . ' .. J>a11aina Ousts U.S .. Agents Af~t(rCol~1hy Anderson PAN IA CITY (UPI) -P1nania's foreign minister TUesday night expelled two U.S. narcotics agents "for in· terventk>n in Panamanian internal af· fairs." The order 1temmed Crom a syndicated column written by Jack Andenon ac· cusing high Panamanian officiab -in. eluding; Foreign Mlniater Juan Antonio Tack -of being lmplle11ed lo heroin · smua:ling. Anderson'• colwnn also im- DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE OtllvtrY of thf Dally Piiot Is guar1ntted MOl'ld•Y·Frlcl•Y: II 't'OU do not lllY• ~ur ptptr by J ;.» p.m., c•ll •M yG!.lt copy wlll bf llroutht to yG!.I. C.111 .,. l•~tft 1111111 7;JO p.m. ' S.turday •!'Id S~I If ,... 00 not r1«I,... 'llHI' copy lly • •.m: Siltvrd•y, or I •·m. Sunday, all •nd 1 copy Wiii bf lin11111tt ta Ttltp~o~ Ind W"lm""ltr ...... ., .• ,; ....... ,. S..n Cl•nltlllt, (lpltlr"• l!IHdl, S.n JIMn Qiplslr•r11t, 0.M Point. plicated Moises Torrijos, brother of Panamanian strongman Gen. Omar Tor· rljos. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the DAILY PILOT.) Narcotics agents Ruben Monzon and Wilbut Plase, both assigned to the U.S. Embusy, were given 24 hours to leave Panama in a brief aMouncement read over Panamanian television. A U.S. embas!y spoke!l'D.an said Monzon and Plue were classified as "at· taches" but were in Panama ·on assign. rrtent from the U.S. Bureau of Narcotics and Rangerous Drug!. He said both men would probably leave the country today. U;S, Ambassador Robert M. 5ayre was · cauedi to the foreign ministry Tuesday to receive the expulsion order. The foreign :minister called Anderson's column a smear campaign to 1break "the capaClty for struggle of the Panamnl1n people." He linked.' Anderson's chara:es againlt hinuleU to his position on negotiations for a new treaty concerning the Panama canal and jurladiction and defense of the canal 7.ooe. Tact saJd, upirst we 1 are accused of being Communista, bu! ii seems that this accusation had no reaults. No, they are looking for dlrUer weapona lo try to brtak the capacity for struggle of the Panamanian people." Two New Storms Appear I St,at;es in Middk West, ,East. Bear Brunt •• M,Ollkey Wrench . . a W1ll1ce deoled today that bia Florlila state's II do!:" to the port¥'• oalklllal succea w11 1 "proteet" qllnst bwli>fl ·oonvantlPP; PlnY woo al>: With his and nld the reaulla lbowed !bat "Iba II percent. . peoplt want me to he .the nomlnM o! the ~n. Henry M.. J1cbo• of Waablngton Democratic party." flnlabed thin! with IS porcent, lhead of Asked about M111kle'1 charges !bat be llualde •llb 1111 r,:;:ant• ~VOWld to wu a ''demagogue of the wont kind,"·· wlntheAprll4W lnpr . . ,.. Wal11oe uld:· "I'm 10try the .... 1or Nel' York Ma)'OI' John V. y won feels that way ••• he' la llYinC 10me 7 percent-btreb' edalnl Sen. Gtorse S. very bad things aboul the great number' McGovern 1111 flllh plice after a heavy of people wl>o lllpport me not onl~ In Investment-hm~Jn lime-~--, Fttirldly but throughout the country." McGovorn ,. took I pen:elll of Iba Wallace's victory of a: percent· of the Democr.Ua Ylttl. Democrollc vote pve him 75 of the In the 'a.pdlllcan prlmazy, President '* * * Equal Schools OK'd * * * Fk>rida ·Vow Suppor~ W al'lace B·using Stance · MIAMI. Fla. !AP) -Florida volors heeded Alablma Gov, George C. Wallace•• call to tell Amt(ica loud and cl01r that they oppoae bwlng ICl>ool children to achleve 'racial balance in cluarooD!I. .. By a 3-1 mar&int the voters in a straw vote referendum Tuesday endoned a pro- . poted conatltulional amendment to encl forced bwln(. Wallace ran an antibusinc campaign in Floclda'a Democratic pre 1 l dent i a I primary and tbol!undl of the volerl '"" dorNd him, too; He won the primary with 42 percent of the vote. In another part of the nonbindlng straw vote which involved 1\epubllcaDI and Democrats, Floridians approved by 1 H morlln a propoul which endor!ed equal education for all children. And they voled by the aome morgln for allowing prayer back into the public schools. With 99 percent of the vote tallied, 1,103,856 voted for a bu!ling amendment while ,386,724 voted aaalnst it, 74 to 26 · percent~ · The . °equal education question, which abo asked voters if they opposed a return to a dual school system, passed by a vote of 1,065,393 to 289,839, or 79 to 21 percent. The call for prayer in public IChool! was approved by 1,133,079 voters with Jtl,818 )'ejecting ii. also '19 lo 11 percent. F1orlda'S DemocraUc governor, Reu-- bin Ask ew, campaigned hard to turn the tide on the busing question and was dlaappoinled that bis constltuenla Jalled to heed his plea. But he said: "I om very happy and pleased that as a majority of FloridiaJll reglnerid OJ>' po.oltlon lo bullng, they also reglatered commJtment to seek other alternativts and not go back to a dual school systeril." After the Florida Lqlalature ~ a blll pl11clng tbe busing straw vote ~ the primary ballot, Askew refused to sign the meaaure until the equal education ques- tion was added in an effort to else some of the busing vote'• sting. The ·prayer question also was added but never was much of an issue. The bu!ling and equal education que!· tions which appeared on the slraw vote ballot -neither of wbicb bas any legal standing -were: . 4Guen wbl I met today?' -0 Do you favor ~rovlding an equal op- portunity for quality education for all chlldrtn regardleea of race, creed, color' or place of rtaidmce and oppose a return to a dual ayltem of public schools?" Black ludtn acrosa the state usailed the lqlalature for pUttlag busing on the bollot Ind Mid the neighborhood scl>oob lllUe wu a smoblcreen for au attempt to resegregate schools which court orders bad integrated· The black Juders threatened massive Negro oppc>liUon at the next election for any leglslator who voted for the an- Ubullng referendum. Bui the threat carried lilUe weight in view of trelneodou1 white oppo.oltion lo busing. 1n•Mt1ml, the 1tale'I lllOlt Ubual , artra, a pre.eltctkm 1traw vote eonducted:. by white parenla produced some 30,000 votu against busing and 200 for it. . State Sena. ' Richard Deeb (R.Sl Petersburg), and Charles Weber (II-Fort Lauderdale), lljlOlllOl'a of the busing straw vote, said they believed it would open the eye1 of Congrus to the need for · nationll action to hall busiJJ&. Pale•fi~ State NI.son swept to victory with fl percent ol the vote and easily won all 40 delq:ates lo the GOP Natlonol Convention· , The Democratic prlJ)lary left !hi party's top contenders with these pros. pacla: -Muskie: The preprlmary frontrunner, be suffered a second successive blow after last week's lackluster victory in New Hampshire. TM primaries In Dhnois ·· nut TuOll<llY and-liter In Wilconsln now k>om as crucial. -Humphrey: Fighllng to overcome a "loser" image, the former vice pruld~t got the booal he oougbl when be bypuaed New Hampshire ta concentrate here. He af>pears to be Muskie's-main rival in Wisconsin. -Wallace: The Alabama governor got the heavy vote he sought and will now enter many other' primaries, both in the South ~ In Northern states such u Wisconsin, Indiana and Maryland. Wallace, winning the victory he said would establish him as a national con- . tender for the ·Democratic prsidentlal captured 11 of 12 congresslooal dJI.. tricts. "I believe I have as good a chance•,as anyone to win the party nomination," he said at his Orlando headquarters. Humphrey won hls six delegates .in a district including heavily Jewish Miami Beach, where half the population is over 65. "Among the proaresslve Democrats," the 1968 nominee said, "I am the leader." Assailing . Wallace, Muskie said, "As long as his kind of politics, his kind of values, threaten the nobillt, of 9ur coun- try, I will fight them with evei'ything I've got." ~ . J The top sil Democrats who ran lti Florida, including Wallace, are entered in the Wisconsin primarx_. Mc06vern is challenging Musk.le for many Ill1nois delegates, while former Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Mlnne90ta opposes the Malrte senator in that state's presidential preference vote. More than 1.6 milllon Floridians, three.. fourths of them Democrat.!, voted in the state1s first presidential preference primary. Preylous contests have been for ~elegates on1y. Radiotelescope To Be Erected WASHINGT01" (AP) -A 3,000<acre detert site in New AIWco has been se- lected as the proposed location'for the world's largest and most bizarre.looking radiotelescope, the National Science Foundation announced today. Designed prim1rily to pick up natural radio signals from the limits ol the uni· verse, the proposed 171-mlllion Instru- ment is also ·rated by lcientlsts as offer· ing the best chance yet of picking up in- telligent signals from any civillzatlOll beyond the solar system. Called I .. ....,. larle llTO)I " tho &lint radiotelescope would consist' OC 'lf' Clish. shaped antennas, deployed in the forin of a huge "Y" over an area' having a di· ameter of 13 miles. Each ann of tbe "Y" would be 13 miles long. Each individual antenna would be 82 feet in diameter, welib 200 tons, and would be movable on railroad tracU de. ployed along the giant anns. _ .. Do you favor an amendment to the U.S. Constitution which would prohlbJt forced busing and guarantee the right cf each student to -attend the appropriate school nearest his home?" · Publishing Firm Fires Handler- Of Hughes Book Hussein Drops Shocker On R~vamping of JQrdan NEW YORK (UPI) -Robert S. ~tewart, who wu,.in charge of the handl· mg of the bogus 0 autobiography" of Howard Hughes, ha5 been dlsmi.saed as editor in chief of McGraw·Hill's general bcok division beca111e he allegedly ac- cepted a loan of ll,700 from two of bis authors, the company said today. The f1c1 that bis dtsmi111I Tuesday came jUlt one day after the book's author, Clifford lrving, his wife, Edith, Md reaearcher..Rlchard Suskind plMded gullly to larceny and conspiracy charges in connectfon with the book, wu 0 a very unfortunate coincidence," 11kl T e d .Weber, a spokeaman for the company. Court aourcu said, meanwhile, that. Irving and his wUe may have a chance of ketplng tbemhlve1 out of jail H tl!eY can pay about •t million lo l\lcGrow-IDll. The company gave .Irving '785,000, of which $100,000. was intended for him and the re- AMMAN, Jordln· (UPI) -King Hussein announced plans today to reorganize bia Hubemlte Kingdom of Jordan into'. federal ital!' mown as the United Ar1b Kingdom. Its most im· . portant point waa establ6bing a aemi- autonomou.s State of Plljesllne on the Israefi-octupled w~ Bank. Political sources In Beirut said his plan depended on the Isr1ells and could pave the way for a peace eettlemfnt. with Israel. Arab aources which aave the first word of the plan on Tuaday have es- prwed fean that Jordan would act separately on some peace agreement at the expen1e1' of !be .Ar~ Clllle ~ ~ Pa!Uthilan guerr!llu. • The Huaseln pl1n hll the Arab world lllte a bombabell although 11 had been ex· pectin& It. Amman newapaP.rs printed special tflernoon• edlllOOJ whl& i<ild out lmmldbtely. Tr1ffte sloWed 'Wbin Am· man radlo broldcut the ~·· speech and groups gathered around r-translstor radios in coffee shops and refugee camps. ~.t.llOH'-l WIA'tlflt •1•¥1Ct IOtt('-51 I• 7J..M lSI S ~ 11~ 7i Cellfol'Kle malnder be was supjloled to paaa oo to Although other Arab nations reacted 1ngrtly the lngrleot reactlaii ·ume from the P~lnlan guetrlllas. Tiwl Morxlit Populor Democratic Front for th~ Liberation of Palestine called I t 11treachery." Dr. Georte Habash, leader of the utremlat Popular Front for the Llbentlon ol Palestlnl, coiled Huaeln I 29. , 19,7,. f \ • \ • Sllfl'ltty 'wermer ~''""' were Hughes. • 1 •-'*'*' *''' lllfellth Tllllnclrt 111 "" However, 1 federal grllld l"-ln-1n1111C1 ..tlon o1 ~ Cllllorfll• -# w1lfl ~deer n _,,,, ww dlctmmt charged 1"1n& kept '700,000 "'f...":"":.:'llMltlt ..:.,,..., iow cltUd and gave SU5klnd $61,000. Sor far, the c~ t1w1111 ,.,. rnom11111, but "-rr book has cost the COE9J>lltl' between -..Hne -•nfldP1'9d l•ttr tn h $900,000 and '95(1,00I Ind "the meter ii (~,,.,.,,.....-,"c;.'' NI" .-11 ...,._ •• predldld stl1l running,'' Weber aa.ld. 0 tar IM L• A,.... .,.., COIT!flerM I th de I-I H .. .._. wlfh , rilld1111 of n T....s.y. ft ano er vt .. ,.. .. en , ..,_, a~ ..,,...... -t11t 111g11 ~,..!vrft T• perently for the flnt time in 15 years, dlY ,,.,. tt1ott ~'" 1oc1er Wlf't: gave ou'·'"*n a look at blm w•·-•· met L.Ofll 8Ndl ""1111. S.Mli Monie• ..,., ~ ucu tllllll •~ ,,_,.. MfUl'lf wi1t111 ,.,., wltb Naraguan Prelident Aoastat}O i::t:".::r-~,:.~1 ..... .!: Somoaa aod U.S. Amblsledor 1\amer B. NllM/1'11 trill """ ""' ...n. . America nation Dff9e, 6M1. --· • .,... ., ..... , SbeJton in ManagUI, then Jeftzal • M•ry ~~"" .... ,fiMH IDi dt1tinlU~ WU not • ecilately wrrillt """' ... ..:::T ... hlWn """"'" .. kncnm, though IOUrcet lndlcated he may '"' ~ t-w ,, t1M1t. 111 ,.,...,... bave cane to the Unlted Stt~ ..., __ t~. """ tlcllY. ,...... ,.Jy '".... • • c...e.e. ~ • .,,,.. ''!!!'!' 'NITI Mi :A ' H B :r:-.r::-.:::r.:::=::.----ctor s ome urns S1t•, ,,,_. Tiii .. --T """' -··••\.• ... •:''""" .. , ...... -·-t ,.,. ...... TllUUDAT !'Int hllh ,., ........... tz».,"" J.1 ''"' -1.:., ........ ):11 ........ ~ ........................ ,!........ .. . -=•·•• "'"' J:Jl;.M. .f.I M 61G """ llfl t:lt "'"" --"" .. "" ... 'I:.'""" STUDIO CITY (UPI) -A llvtnc room llrt Clueed .. esllmlltd $21,500 clan!a«e Tuolday to the homo of actor Mu liaet Jr., ofllclals uld. Firemen reecued lllne docs from Iba blaat, I fh dtportment 1pokesman rrporlod. Bier w11 DOI 11 llome II !be -. 1realer ....,,, than lstatl. • · calro Radio called 11 1 consp&acy lo •Jilli the .Arlbl.' Coiro ..i Beirut -pen aald lllllaeln bad tnllle I t•deat" with la'eel. ·But there WU DO im· medla1e fl')Vemmenl -froO> S)'ri1, Lebanon or Saudi Arabia. The King, In .. addnu lo 500 leading cltluna at the Baamon P1lace, 11ld Leglal1tlon to Clrry out the flrll llfp of lhe reorpnlzollon WOllld be ..... lo ,~II.meat for lmmedlata lldion. B9t In • Iba long run his piano will depend on Israeli approval. • • . One of !be hllcbel to the H1111tln plan waa for atabllllnnent ol "Jeruaalem 11 t1pllal fer Ibo Palullnlan ret1on. wtlh . Anunu ..... 1 ... the -.i mpitaldn • which Hu.In wwld rule 11 -ol stata llded bJ I ceatnJ Council of MlnJstert anol a N11WJ.-"IJ. Ut'I~ 'TO FORM N•W-STATE - .Jorct.n11 Hu1seln 11ratl, which c•ptured Arab J1n111ltm in the 1t67 War, has said the city will re- main the capital of· Israel. Prime Minister Golda Meir .. Id the J91'(11nlan pl1n createe obeladee on the lVld to peace "but that Israel Is wlilln( to enter negotlatk>nl at any time. A 1pokesman for the l.!Jraell Fortlgn Mlnblry repealed Ila statement ·1 ol Wedneldly that there waa no 1greennt "ln any form whataoever" betwttn Iftet al'!l..I°"'*• on the. pltnned federotlon. An1ur Hallb, who wu the Jordanian Governor of Eal Jeruulem untll l1r1e1 captured II, 11kf lhe HUlltln pivpoul on JtrJISalen> "It IU..a:nlblrial tl lndlaa chiefs in Ille Unlteil Statoi ll'IUln« lmOn( tbemsoJVel wl>o la ..... lO Id beck control over New York." ' , I • J - • l ' r • Wha l e Drama Copter w Track Gigi SAN DD:QO (AP) -Scion-.A -II Ille !11!11 lillo ll't planning lo use I U--I D d hell<opler In tractlng a lllvolop"'"' Center blamed California &r•Y whale released the poor r.dlo transmissioN oU the SOulbern Callfomla ;:~If.'• "lazy swimming coalt after 1 year ln c1pttvttf. uThe ·girl'• never dooe They 'abandoned efforts to anythln& ln her life except bob track the whale, named GlJI, up and down ~n a tank, and.it 's by boat Tuesday because &oinl to take, her a while to sigMls from. her radio back 1ct Uke a whale," said t.rrf pack were coming too ~ McKinley of tbe}lavy Ceiter'1 frequen'.ly to ca tch up with marine mammal facility. her, said a sPok.esman for Sea Gld, captured when she wu World, the marine amusement about t weeks old, apparentJy park where the 14,oOO-pound was only sUcking her oose and mammal was kept until Mo~ blow hole out of the water in- day. stead of doing a normal Sinct her release seven forward roU like other gray mile. from San Diego, Gigi whales, McKinley uld. The hu followed a circular swim· back p8ck will not transm.Jt ming pattern and has re-while it iJ submerged. mained in the San Diego area ~Scientists hope to use the acientist.s said. There · wu signals to trace Gigi's path en some diff!rence of opinion as her northern migration, and to• to the significance of her acquire information qn the failure to joln _imn)ed.iately depth of her dives and the other gray whales on their water temperature. The back migration north from ·Scam-pack ia 'designed to become mon's Lagoon, their' breeding disengaged from Gigi In about ground In Baja Calllornia. . ( nine months. set Up Camp . Indians Put Claim On State Missions KING CITY (UPI) -A band of American lndians has pitched camp around Mi ssion San Antonio de Padua. declar· Ing they were civilized. and laid claim to all the 21 historic missions in California. Mission San Anto nio de Padua, lts adobe buildings ln Woman, 75, Jailed; Has 13 Dogs LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An elderly woman who had four times as many dogs as legally allowed hM been ordered to jail for runninit her home like a kennel without ha ving a. license. , . ruins as late as World War n, is in the wooded roothiUs of the Coast Rangi MoUntains 20 miles west of King City. The land it l)CCUpib h1 sur- rounded by the a:ovemment- controlled Hunter ,L i a: g e t t Military Reservation, • once part of the Hearst Ranch, and the mission's restored buildings are used as a training school by, the Roman Catholic Church's Franciscan · Order. Meredith Quinn, a Dakota ·speaking for the Indians, dec.lared the function of the missions founded 200 years ago by Father Junipero Serra "was to convert and civilize the savages." "We feel the missions have served this function," he ad- ded as the Indians demanded the missions and the land on which they stand. The Indians prepared a "menifestn" to be delivered to Bishop Hsrry Clinch of the Monterey Diocese of the church. It asks the church to relln-reductd her pa.ck,of dogs ~'°!" quish all property and records 13.~o ~ -the ~1ty s legal h~1t. l)f the mission, make.al\ "ac- 1 JUSt cant aend my little ' ®Wtting o1 all .moneys and pets to ,t,he ~und to be revenues due Indians," and destroyed, walled M f s . put up "funds ••to provide Froemming, after be Ing anned protection" for the In- The municipal court judge told Mn. Ruth Froemming, 7S, that she would be released from cuslody as soon as she aentenced. dians now in camp. She was fined $750 and Among the demands was sentenced to 30 day11 in jail, one for the eviction of all with three years probation, other occupants from each alter an earlier conviction for mission 's original territory of having too many dogs and let-three square miles. ting them run free without No building was occupied at tags. Mission San Antonio de Padua Neighbors testified that her when the Indian men and pet.s constantly leaped over women set up ·a '"vil!age'1 their fences, barkina: and nip-_ around a minibus and a truck ping al children . In which they had arrived. - ' ~IT•.._... SILENT ON ITT Lt. Gow. Rt lMCkt Reinecke Declines Com·ment Reagan OK~s Adult Bills SA CRAMENTO (APl Gov. Reagan has signed Into law ·two hurry-up measures lf~ic~ backers say correct ~ovenlgbta in the in1b:nt-adult law. ~ , 0De blU would kee p 29,000 youths 18 through 20 years of a"ge on the welfare rolls under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program . The other bill protects state allotments to California's 94 locally run community col· leges. It was feared that the change in the definition of rninon and adults, which went Into effetl March 4, would have deprived the community colleges of $3S million. TRADING iii "THE STAMPS TRAVEL j ~ j THA(REALLY VOUC .. ERS j ...... j SEND YOU" I .......... Travel Vouchers ••• the 11going" kind of stamp ••• takes you anywhere, at any time you choose) Saving Travel Vouchers Is the fastest way to make Your travel dreams come true I Save these mag ic stamps for "fun" vacations! Trad ing Travil Vouchers can P,.SY fqr part or all of your ticket costs! Here's how the program works: L Your participating merchants (see directory) Issue Trad· Ing .:rravel Vouchers with each purchase you make. J. You place "regular" or ''Big Ten" Travel Vouchers in your colorful redemption bo.oks. J. Take your tilled redemption book to your local member Exchange Bank (see directory), and receive a beauilfully engrpved Traveler's Reserve Certificate worth $2.00. 4. When you are ready to travel, take your Traveler's ~eHrve Certificates to, your authorized Travel Agent (IH direc- tory), and apend them like cash! Traveler's Reserve cef· r tlflcates can purchase all or any part of y.our next ticket costs. You choose the time and place, and you 're off on your trip! - :·1······-: . . ... _ ·: : l l Jt:"~ ! :! lpJ~Qet ~: ---:~Withl • • •••••••••• , MERCHANT INOUIAIES INVITED; TM VE LEAS Af:ltfWI, INC. fr1') 111-2aol ' ' I • ,Lettuce Boycott Ordered 'I • Wtdnt!day, Mo1rch 15, 1972 DAILY PILOT :; . Ange la Davis Gives Jw)7 OK, "'_·But Doubts ·Impartial Trial o else na1ne on thi.S \ e,yotidpay -lilOre :fotit I R e Champagne ia more than·adding bubbles, i~s aw<irloof art. We use the best f!'•pes. We we all the skills developed in almost 40 years of winemaking to create a crisp, delicate champagne. • !l's an exceptional champagne. We go all out when we make it, . then we use a little restraint when we price i~ We want you to enjoy it as often as p0ssiblc. How bouuonightJ, ____ _ ~·~ GAI:LO ~~ ~·""r--~;- Dlol\O~~·.,...lll.~ SPAAKL.ING WINE-0.A~O CALIFORNIA CHAMl'AGNE·Ct\AAMAT !IUlK PROC!SS-NATURALL'f FEFIMENTEO..QAL.LO CHAMPAGNE CELLARS, MODESTO, CALIFORNIA ' • • • .. • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE \·Hol m Isn't ' The campaign to recall Laguna Beach city council- man Edw.rd Lorr bas taken the unfortunate. but per- haps predictable, turn of rellectlng on the lntesrtty (and intelligence) of Councilman Roy. Holm , who will be seek· Ing re-election April 11 . Holm and Lorr have had plenty ol diugreements at the council table, so it was a fairly obvious political ploy to try to link Holm with the recall. This being the case, it •would have been patently stupid for Holm to back or even support a recall that could so el6ily backli'"• on him during his own campaign. Holm ts not that naive. A candidate or even iuinimal pclllical acumen would know enough to steer clear of such an entanglement. Holm bas done so, hints and allegations to the contrar1. He bas judlclously avoided any participation whatever in the recall . · It is unfortunate that thli unrelated maneuver should be dragged in as a campaign I11ue, which it is not, at least so far as Holm is concerned, though~! d seem to be developing into a. handy red herrin'g•fo llr 11ppcnents. l (See Mailbox below for letter from Councilman Holm.) Rescue at Dan~ Harbor Hundreds of pleasure boats already rest at their berths at Pana Harbor and by thil summer the facility's entire eut basin will be full of small craft. Jn recent weeks, with capricious fogs sliding In sud· denly along the South Cout, som~ of those boats already have run into trouble. On one such day recently, rescuers from the County Harbor Patrol and San Clemente city lifeguard• That Naive anawered a record number of boatin& distre" calla. Everything went very well, Balli agencies have new, rescue craft on duty, u well u trained crews. Spokesmen for the.rescue agencies .are most appr~ hensive •bout novice yachtsmen getting Into trouble a.long miles of rocky 1hortllne up and down coast of the harbor. And the rate or rescues ·will soar by this' aummer. But even witn the new ma" of boat., both aeencies are confident they can help keep P•na a snug and 11!• harbor tor the boiler. Lanphear's Fine Report Laguna Beach Planning Commissioner Roger Lan· phear iJ a city official who believes in doing hi.I home- work. · Nol content with merely turning up a_t meetings to participate in discuss.ion ol agenda item~. Lanphear put in many extra hours on hi! assignments, with outstand- ing results. His revision ol lbe land use element ol the general plan. based on commission hearin'g.s, cleared the way for additional valuable contributions by fellow commission· ers and resulted in presentation to the city· council of a text that could be adopted with a minimum of argument. More re~enUy, returning from a three-day planning institute sponsored by the League of California Cities. Lanphear turned his hand to 1 detailed repo•t that liter- ally brought the discussions home to Laguna. relating all relevant aspects to local problems. This approach makes it possible for all interested members of the city staff to share the valuable, but too often soon forgbtten information disseminated at such meetings. s I '-.. r Some Don 't Know What To Be For Dear Gloomy Gus f'rom Re.ligious, Moral, S~I, Economic Standpoints ••• SYDNEY J. HARRIS ' " T11oa1hta .i Larae: tn some perionallties, the strength lies only in opppslUqn ; lake away the OP' position and they flounder weakly. ·not knowing what to be for, having ao Ions been qala•~ • • • In a good society. all buallesses wou1d tend to become more like professlons ; in our woelety, aH' proa fessions have tended to become more 1~ businesses. • • When a commun- ity suffer' a stvere rise in crime. the good citizens organ- ize to punish the criminals; but who punlshes the gOod citizens for having per- mitted the criminal spirit to grow and flourish in their midst'? • • • The public feels far more comfortable with a stupid man than with a cle\ter man ; 80 clever men who aspire to public leadership pretend to be more stupid than they are. • • • Most men are poor executives because. they fail to understand that "decision- maklng" does not consist in weighlng all the facts as they come In and then mak- ing the most reasonable judgment. but ra ther moving before all the facts are In and anticipating their consequencts. • • • It is the sys tematic neglect of the natural instinct of competition that will eventually wreck all Marxist societies: and. contrariwise, the systematic negleet or the natural instinct toward cooperation Harwed· resldtnta all over the Orange COast will join in hoping thoat El Toro lolkJ win their case agaln1t the dogs that bark ln- ctSlllltly. Maybe the inconslder1ta owners of lhe "y1pper1" wUJ. sit up and take notice thlt their peta' noise pollution is intolerable. -L. L. flllt fNlwre rfttfcb ,.....,.... "'""-.., ......,..,. ................. .... •r lJllt ..... ti OllMllY 0... 0.llY l'lllt. ls the mosl serious internll threat within competitive aocieUea. • • • You're not truly gl'GWD up until you're leas prone to excuse your own mJltlko and more inclined to ucuse the folliea of others. • • • We don 't genuinely believe in free speech until we recognize that no 1buse of the freedom of speech is as bad 11 1tv4 ing some authority the power to repress It. • • • Pets acquire the parUculAr neuroses of their owners; dogs and their muter. (l'lr mistresses) only seem to look &like, after awhile, when the owners have u1ed their pets for illicit emotional and social needs. • • • Those who live by and for 1en11tlons generally find out much too li te that nothing in the world J1 duller than IUl- tained stimulation. • • • To be a professed "materialist" these da ys is as supersUtioU! and speculative as to be a "spirituallat" -for the more we learn about "matter" the less ·we understand it, and the Jess material it seems. • • • Democracy Is the only 1y1tem that persists in asking the Powers That 'le whether they are the pewer1 that ou&bt to be. Revamping the Military ln "PAWNS: The Plight of the Citiztn. Soldier," young reporter, Peter Barnes, now West Coast editor of The New Repu blic, presents a weU-reasoned, articulate blueprint for revamping, streamli ning and ma1clna more effi cient the U.S. military force. He examines the power that the military exercises over the lives or mll- -..Uons or American citizens (its own courts. for example) to the point where it finds a dangerous per«nt.age of unwilling and in~fficient young people In its 3 mll- Jion man police for ce of the world. It is Barnes' thesis, generally, that the draft can be modified, even eliminated, in favDt! of a competent fighting force. es- 1entially a profession1I defensive mn,y, navy, air for~. This might be based on West Germany 's Bundswehr, in which clvil liberties for 10ldlers were spelled out In the SOldien Law of 1956 and there Is no • longer a dlfftrence between "soldl " and "civilian" in this model force. ... IN ms CHAPTER "Towatd a Democratic Army," Bamu emphu1"1 that If lb• n>Uoo oJ Frederlcli the Grell and OauHwitz could deliberately ae1te on army mpecttul of IOlditn' rllhta and Internally rigged ogainst mllltari•m. It ...w lo&lcal to ' UIUlm that the nallon of MadillUTI ind Jefferson can do the llmt. Thia !1 nol 111 anti·mllitary hara~. The •Uthor bell.... the ml!hary hu oltA\ll -unWriy a>adfJllllOd In -•I ,_. (•part from My Lil •nd olber ob-, • l ( ~E BO~KMAN ) viow: blunders). He baaed his findings and rt110nlnc on lnlervlewa •Ith military pt0ple of all ra.nb (10me hoatlle) alter covering for Newsweek tbe Pruldio stOckade Hmutlny" cue of 1• h\. which 27 confused, frl1blentd youne men faced possible death sent~ tor their 11stures or anti-war diutnl "Pawns" is 1 public aervlce which calls for public 1warenea:s, concern and 1cUon on a major, unhappy and ezpen1Jve American problem. The book should be essential reading for all membera o( Congress, lmOlll others (Knopf; '191). . . BOB TllOMAI, the hatd-worklne Auociated Preu man in lfolliwood for ma ny yem ·and the 1utbor oflhrte ex· cellt nl blogr""""' oJ la to m o v I• m agnates -c''Klq'----i:olin;' ''T1iilber1," "S.lznlck") turns to flctlon in "WeW!ld 133." Tbb wu a ml!take. P'or 1bom.11 11 essentially 1 reporter, and "Weeklnd" · "3.1" is a f!1111ent or his imqlnlllon. It b a toUCh (but not touah enotllbl llory of how, and wily, over a weekend In 193.1. • mt1ed b·ag or movie people are tn- vltd to lhe fabulous costle Eicalibur, another ntme for Hearst's San Simeon of that period. °Cltlaen Kane'' touched on this theme In ' far mort C"Onvinclna man· ner (Doubleday; IU6). WllUam Rosu " Death Sentence Necessary, To the Edllor: C.pltal puniahment 1hould not be don•, away with. It ls necesaaty and proper from at leut the following 1taodpoint.1: Rellgioua, moral, social and ecooomic. Moot people who think that caplW punijhmenl •hould be aboll•htd base their 1rgumVlt on the "Sixth Com· mandment" or the Bible which says, "Thou ahall not ldll." That people take the Popular commandment litr.rally, uying that II God (thmJ&b the Bible I uys we should not kllJ then that applies to every case and condition including war and criminal execution. TO THE POllS!BLB ll!JPl')le ol many, the Bible says the following in Genesis (ch. 9): "And murder is forbidden. Man· killing animals must die, and any man who murders shall be killed; for to kill a man is to kill one made Hke God ." (The Living Bible). How does one go about . killing a murderer other than capital punishment? In fact, most modern trans- lators of the Bible render the "Sixth Commandment" as "Thou shalt not murder." To say murder rather than kill makes the whole difference when debating capital punishment. particularly in light of the Genesi1 passage that both man and beast are to be executed if they kill:"f.e., murder a human. 'I'hus, we have a religious commandme.nt for capital punishment. AND A REUGIOUS -moral view of the value of human life might say that man, having the highest development. lhould have a right to his Ille and that no other man has a right to take it from him. In a sense this is true. But what happens to the guy who cheat!. ihe guy who dolln't obey the rule! and takes another'• Ille'? Do you say "naughty, naucbW" and go about your business? Tht cheater is free to kill anyone he wants then. And the nature of people JUll'&nteea he would kill to obtain his delire1 It there was no punishment. And U be were locked up for life im· prl!onment 'he can still kill other prlaonei'I and guards In prison. For why shouldn't ht! He ls not going anywhere different and nothini more can be done lo him that isn't already done. THIS IS WHY the enforcenlent and correcUon community is working to rdnatate capital punishment. From the premile th1t Ufe ii sacred and of the hl&hest value and therefore should not be taken by man, comes the reality that A prlaon guard's lire ls not worth the dwit be walk.a. on. lince there is no further punishment to murder. The price tltat socjety wlil have to poy to lmprll!On those normally eiecuted, ln te.rw of physical pJant, pay of guards (which would have to incrnat ln numbers and dollars) and losa to thi rest or toelety, is something aocJety can do wltboul Ooe!n't It seem more moral to allow the taking ol one llfe •11 George --- Dur G<or1e: MY wll• has been using a ·rolling pin on her hips. She roils the pin on her hips a half-hour t,.lce a day;- Dot1 this really have 1ny physics! effect! ABNER C. 0.ar Ahnet C.: _ . lndttd II doe1 -It will alve her mljlCUlar ftnler• and, unl... •ho has very 11111( arms. eventual pallll In her 1houlders. llut, as a hobby, It's cMap. (Learn the ben•flbl of stdew&Y' Tbinking. and ttil OtOrp wbll they are.) • ( MAILBOX ) Letten from TecuUrs a.Te welcome. Normallfl writer" Jhould conve11 their messages rn 300 words or les1. The right to condeme letter1 to fit space OT elimi na.tt libel b re1eroed. All let- ters m ust includt sigMtuT1 and mail- ing address, but names may be with.· held on Tequest if 'ufjicient re°"'on b apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lilhed. to prevent the taking al two or 10 or 100? THE COURTS MIGlrr say that c1pilsl punishment is cruel or u ·q u 1 u a I punishment It i.. beyond belief that ii could be considered either. It is not cruel, Jn that there is no suslaintdo pain (In modern execution method!), Nor is it cruel in that it i1 harsh or avert, for that is the very point! Capital puniJh- menl cannot be considered unusual in any wildest stretch of the imagination 1ince it has been practiced from the dawn of civiliution. And it must continue to be practiced for the safety and benefit of society. RICHARD J. ELLIO'IT Balm Not Behind R et!a ll To the Editor: There have been 1 number of statements made recently ln the press and during one city council meeting which have attempted to link me to the recall campaign now in progreu. I am in no way involved in this recall cainpaiin. It is unfortunate that the councillnan in- volved and the New.Post hive made such allegations without a.skt,,g me if J wos indeed "behind" tbe recall. The only campaign to which J am devotin& time and eUort is my own c1mpaip tor re- election on April 11. COUNCILMAN LORR and I have our differencts in philosophy regll'ding the direction and rate of Laguna's growth. The most notable of thete d.lfferences was over the high-rise Issue. I worked 1c- tively with grass roots: organlzalions for lhe adoption of the 34-fool buildin1 height Jimjtation which w.u en1cted into law Aug. 3 by a 3-1 majority of.the voters. Councilman Lorr And the News-Post were on the opposite aide of that iuue but to infer from these difference! that I am a part of the recall movement ls naive to ,.Y the least. To report II as though It were fact is irreaponsiblt. IT IS UNFORTUNATE thlt our council elect.Jons d ' 1 e n e r 1 t e Into such acrimonious, dJvisive a n d tot:aUy unpleasant events -not just for tht can- didates and their famiUes, but for the whole town. Some pt0ple iay llllnp they don 't really mean ind differ~es are ampllDtd entirely out of pni~lon to their real 1Ignlfklll<•. It noed '!Ol be this , .. y. It's my opinion tbal II will backfire on U.... who mlibl perslsl with l1ICh an 1pprooch. . ROY HOLM Se.t -1ditorial a.bovt. • -Edl!<>r Enlf9lateMtl l'OW Sehool To the Editor : "Ho,.. could they want to stop something Uke this?" ,._ ..... -""' thoulhta ...... re.tel the letter• In another fttW1piper *"llten by nln&-and ten·yesr .. ld childrtn. ·memf\tri of th• Ll,,,.,.,e Art. Pn>1ram •I Top of the World ~~~ There are m_\ ulllta In thl! coun111 who art uninformed about a subject. like pollution. M111y holding opinloM .,.. unable, either tttrough i&norance or lick of 1icUl1, t.o communicate them to a newspaper editor. AS PARENTS of one Top or the World student. our main reason for rema1niJli in the area is to see our youngest benefit from the same enlt1htened education as our first has. We ask this question : If student.I are this c1pable at the age of nine' or ten, who can predict what it will be possl.t'>le for them to achieve as adulb'! Our world is coru:tantly changing. Educational .rnet.hodJ must aleo change to conform with present day standard!:. WAU.ACE I< Alli.ENE CANNON Throui·•tD•V Vei.:1 To the Editor: On April 11 , San Cleme.nt.e will have a chance lnol a choice ) t.o choose two peraons out ol I~ candidates to sit on our city council. According to city clerk Max Berg, lhi1 city is prohibited by slate law from hav- ing a runoff election. Hence , a plurallty of Jess than 20 percent of the eJectorale could install a "mlsrepmentative" in our city legislature. For example, one of the incumbent candidatu, Stan Northrup, in his last campaign actually polled only 1,100 votes out of 1,700. Here we havt the grim testlmony that. after having had a taste of him, 1,600-as against 1,100 would have chosen someone elae. PROBABLY SOMEONE with enough Integrity to not 1ecUM the whole dental profession of having mtrcenlf)' motlv~ when they aetk properly fluoridated water for their future pttients as well as for membtrs of their own f11Dllles. Could Jt be possible that one who has no qualms about calling calcium fluoride "r•t Polton" should also condone lht peddling of leeal Joopholee to unauapecUns buyers, calling it in1ur1nct? A giant stride toward dernocraUzinl our voting procea would ~ i ballot that permlta the voter to lnd~ate whom he doea not •lf'lt 11 well 11 whom he doea. FOii INSTANCE, Ir the 6pril 11 ballot had 1 row of boxes Jn front of, and a row bohlnd, the llat ol candldlt.1. and the Io- structiona were to vote for t1'o and agalmt two. then woUta inc!ompet.ent in.- cumbents be anoked out In spite t>f 1 con1Usln1 block o( ~ys • -aome of which a devtoul candldllt \m!ihl have even pl1ctd there hlm•lf. Such 1 plan Is now aJIO verboten by the 1t•te. tr ever there was dirt netd for a tut poll conducted by 1 public-1pirlted newapaper, San Clementt has it now. Of courst, tbe real remedy fOr clearing this palillcal p0llution 11'5 In ch1n&lng the law. But untiJ corrtcted, Sin Cltmente•1 only chance of enjo)llng 1 choiet will be • wnple paU to lde•Uly the "thr<>w-away vot.u" befort election d•y. ~~ WALTl:JI C. KAl\llART, D.D.S.' 'Publle •e 1' Da_..~,,, To the Editor: --y Wt netd Ult help ol tht~newt •• lo inform our eonrruamen thlt we ~very tired ol lhelr poor voting ncordJ. IO Of · tbtlr "moonllpUnc",.wlth 1Ivln& (or lesal lect~a Cor 1'lwn Jl1000 tD ,DOo, skll\\i In Swltwland;'runnlne for l'rul- dent Ind otller olllctl, junhtl a-.1, . e.tc:. etc. , They 1ned r ... Ihe ]Ob. 1ot i~ 'roetin a ntcl lal 1ailry, lots of money-aa•Ina por- qulalleo, l0111 ·vac1liono, etc., yet many of thtm lllve the 1all tt vote Oii n>ll cillf less tllan !O percent of tht liJne -An averqe attendance o( one in five days. Is askln& a !O per&nl attendance too • • much? Once they're eltcled they seem to fetl that they own the job -"the publia bf damned :" Anything that you can do to help Senator Smith put across her motion wid be greatly appreciated b~ the general public. M. L. KEELER One \I a1t Commune To the Editor: After a short trip around the South Coast area , one must conclude developers and local and county eovernmenb are dedicated to altering the land Into one vast com m u n e . Condo-communes:, mobJJe.commune1, townt\ouse communes and apartment communes ill hAve in common lack or space, lack pf privacy and little human dignity or lnd1vldu1lity. In the spring of 1970 a Toledo, Ohio research firm surveyed people who had moved within tht last two years to six different kinds of housing. On the basis of 800 returns, the study showed that as per- cent of families living in other types of homes would prefer to move next into a sina:Je-family house. (Dick Turpin, L.A. Times. Feb. 6. ttn). SCHOOLS ARE deteriorating. thf!I education of fu ture citizens, our most precious treasure. Is jeopardized. Cities are In troub le financially (look at Garden Grove), nood control is inadequate as in Mission Viejo, sewage is being poured in- to the ocean. All this 80 thousands and thous1nds of mostly identical brown mounds may be built for increasingly in. stltutionalized living. Why are we allowing th is to happen in ont of the moit beautiful areas in the world? MRS. ANN RAINEY (} 1e School Bu•e• To the Editor: While we're waiting for the erpert.a a.nd the Orange County Rapid Transit Dl1trict to spend some $1(1(1,000 of our money ti> conduct their exhawiting study or our public transportation needs, why don't we a1k them to get things rolling At once by usinf our school buses as the nucleus of our public transportation system ? ROBERT M. GORDON Quotes -i . Darltne Utter, Lo11g Be1clt - "Even frotn mlf Jlml~ experience aa 1 teach1r. I baVe found that too many sludenta want to•be told what to think - by thelr profanora, their peer eroup or community." -, CIUNO&COAST OAllY PILOT l!Obttt N. W•ed, Pllbll.htr T,,._·Kttoil, Editor • j' Alkrf W. Bo 1 ' Edlfbrial Po011iaitor 'l'h< ~lorial pago or t"' .t>On, Pilot Mt:ka to I nform find .timu4 1'.tt l'eftders by IJl'effnUn1 thll M'llflt>et>t"'I opinlona and CM!· IMA1JrY on topica of lntett1t. and -.ntfk~nce, bY pr0Yldfn1 a forum tor U'lt! e:~lon of our retd~ oDlnlona, •nd by ~ntin1 the dlv.nt! Vkwpolnts or lnronnett ab-&ttWn an« •PGl&lf:&ffttn m t.Gpfea <>IU..daf. Wedn .. day, Marth I&, 1972 • I • I b d I H I b 1 s b ~ f w a a y n f h d ' • L. JI. B!fd Proje~tionists • I • Purloin Pornos ' . -.r • • . Those X-rated llllns,-known co~ ~ dirty pictures, don't stay In circulation lonf, I bear. And th~y get shorter and cleaner as they make the round!. 'I1le movie makers found out why. Some pro)ectionfsts nip out portions of the more electric akin scenes. Understand they piece them together to make fuU- length films or short takes. each a little epitome of pornography. Tsk: tsk. SIMILAR accidents are more ofterr fatal to men than to women. IJkewise, similar surgery. Why! It's ,bafOlng. . TH.du: ARE . ipore! people who under')a.od .Engllsb'<iulal4e the Unil<d- !ltai.1 than inside the llJtllod Stal<s, J>leasfl note. ; ' AT TUB · MOMEr<;f1 can only think of ope word - lalchstring -' cootalnl!Ji ala coll!ecuUve ~Ls. MUI\ b< others t/iou•h. I · ' ' r• • ; r._;, \ \., : ,.\ -• WRITES a curuline cllent; ••Seven years 110, my wife's car was 1ransacked. Of about ,$500 worth ~f Ouistniu presents. Since: 8t ·my dlrectlon, she Jiu ~t a llfe-eized' baby doll, \vrapped In receiving blanket.s, ln ~ crib basket · in the back Seat. Thieves won't monkey aroiJnd In a car with a baby in it. lt works. ~he never even h?thers to lock it anymore." ' . HOG -Vocabulary o! the typical boi ia about 20 words. No, nol ¥'oids exactly. But tones of oink. jstudies at the Universlty of Suuex indicate that. At any rate, the hog is far more converuttoftal than, say, the cow or the horse. Pritnear loquacious, in fact. Q. "What's it mean when a bone is described u lt2 tall. A. That it's a pony. Just 14 hands l\\'O inches. That's four-feet, 10 inches, actually. It it'• 14.3 taU, it's a horse, too big for a pony. That's 14 hands three inche:i. Or four feet 11 inches. CONSIDER 1,200 human births. Of th.,., 1,lllO UTive normally. Now consider the other 40. Of these, one preaenta itself brow first. Four, face flrsl 'l1tirty, J>uttocks flrat. And five, blocked crossways, must be manipulated Into position before delivery. In a comedy column, this type of item is known as clinical relief. SEASONED -You many also call yoursdr a Sel50lled Citizen if you recall when: 1. The biggest evening at the movies was "Bank Night." T. When all the beanes were Packards. 3. An agricultural expert with the government durlng World War II suggested fanners remove the horses' shoes at night to save the metal. OH, AND FOR those who prefer lo buy in ·blllk, might mention that house flies weigh about 100,000 to the pound. Address mail to L. Al. Bo yd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Btach 92660. Swallows Make Home In Rickety Bridge MERID!AN, eam. (AP) - Irs no San Juan Csplatrano, but the swellowa keep coming back to the rickety old Meri- dian bridge anyway. And that's why engineers from the state Division of Highways, who plan to replace the brid~e. are studying the birds' idiosyncracie11. Ever since it was built. in 19U, a colony of b a r n swallows bas returned to the bridge on St. Joseph 's Day. March 19, to build nests of mud and straw ind rear families, say local b i r d watchers. When plans for a new bridge across the Sacramento River at the same location or IOO yards upstream were an- n o u n c e d , conservationists feared the swallows would be driven olf. never to return. But Howard L. Payne. the highway division's assistant district engineer in ~farysville. says the new bridge, wherever it'I built, will be designed 11to provide equal service to tbe birds or people." · He's bHn usured the birds will build their nest.s on the new bridge ·SO miles north of Sacramento, Payne added. "No one is quite IU1"e where the Meridian colony o f swallows lives during the winter," Payne says, display· Ing 'the Mw knowledge of the birds. "During those monthl, the swallows are known to range from Southern California to Brazil, Argentina and even to Chile." To make sure the birds still have a home on a bridge in Sutter County. Payne says he will propose that con!truetlon schedules b< jockeyed "' that the old brldge is left itandlng while the new one ia being built. And the division's design section will even write a special provision in the con· tract to make.... sure the swallows ire protected from demoUUon activity durlng the project, be said. ·• ... dalfCipJ ut t!te Hunte~ Room. Reuben's 4647 MHAtlhur ll•J.,• N1wport l•ach I I ' I ' ' ' DAii. y PILOT 1,i • ' SP.end some · time ·outfitting them for Easter at· Penneys. W'ithout spending very_ much . If you like to save money, save Sunday, too.• Boys' dress shirt of , polyesler/ cotton is Penn~.1rest for no ironing. Has short sleeves and long-point collar. Assorted dobbyprints in popular springtime colo 1s. Sizes8·20. ' ' Girls' bar. look loftOd,... Lilac and wlllte dalty Print or pink and -doll. I ' 79a Boys' texturized dress alacks. Polyes- ter stretch fabric; flare leg styling. Solid fashL~ colors or patterns. 1-20. 298 Boy's Penn Crest' dress shirts in assorted solid c~ors that never. need ironing, Mom. Sizes 6-18. J 899 Boys' leather dress boot with buckle trlm. Pet'}lred• sole ind heel.8~.103, ' , 3so Girls' acryno knit cardigans. ·fine gaug• in white, navy. red or maize. 7·18. .4ee Girls' shiny crinkle vinyl patent 1tr1p pump in black or white. Sizes 8 1/2·3. JCPenney The values are here every day. ' ' *Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: • . SlzH.WX.'4. 7ea loyl' virgin acryllo cart<lgan 1w11t111' In grHI ' faahJon colori. 6lue 1-111, • • NEWPORT BEACH, F1shlo" Island. HUNTING TON BEACH, Huntin9lon Center. '.COSTA MESA, Hert.or Ceittw rc;io.eif 5tN1r) All other atoras open M0nd1y through Saturday. \ • I • • -' I . I DAILY l'tl.01' • • -... 1111<11 !!, 1972 'Lifetime Licenses' Worrying l}~~tors r. ' BJ C. G· McDANIEL who la credited with ojartlng to sample and aupervlle the ,.,. kllMll wrttw ~ ,rederal governm'ent'1 com· quality of medicine. . A doctor who gr•duated munily beollh<onler plan. "Thia 11 nol to Ill' -i doc· from medical x bool in 1930 "We don't leave qualitJ con-tori ate lO!D1. or dan't ~· '' may 11111 pnctlce with the tn1h1(_pllola to ltlloor pilot(... be said. •'liit· we're tUalill( bl._. ot the tuellme llctnt< -with Ille ruponalblllty for be obUlned tl>en, and tbl! Is human ur.. and that requlrea troliblllll 111or.,and more doc-'We're .ie.it,.. public accounlsbillty.• ton and polienls conceroed oeitft ••• 1'•-A number of studier have .•bofl wbolber be k e e p 1 Ute, •N tlNt be<n carried out In the United de11j!oftinc UiJla. Slalel and Canada to attempt dcielor'a ClOlllCience 1, re9alre• ptdtlle to meaJUre the quality of hi& u to whether be tru--ee~ntcltUltv.' perf..-mance In a number of 1y ~treat caocer ~ w~!rly are aummarlud In or. lo . hazardous ... p·11o•-• un100· " be added In the "Medical Care Chart "~ ~ . an interview. Book," compiled by I he Aid the pafelpt looking al Geiger proposes a federal University of Michigan achobt ~~ .1i'":",k.::.:· ~lflca:.1j board ol public m e d I c a I of public health and revised In Ile ph auditors, all of them doctors, 1987. canaot te~ whether I ysl•,;;;.=:;:=::~===:=::==::::;;;:=:::======:::::;I cian bas kept abreast of mecllcaJ --· .. Mis1J ·people interested In medlcine, from m e d i c a I aocletlel to conaumer-orlented critics, ._ tbl! problem Is ~aerlpal. • Gold filled jewelry Tlje llmOrtctn · M e d I c a I ASIOdaUoft,"'(ft a recent edltOrlal in Ill ljlurnal1 iv•J11ed that uniea !!ti profeulon'• . aelf~ -ama are -made more ellecttra, the govemmeqt wquld atep in and Impose lllandardl for medical care, for a special Easter. ~-Alex Gerber, 1 aurgeOD from South .P11adena , estimated in a recent book on healih care that senerat prac- tltlolters perform II mllllon operations a ,_ ~ tlte United Slalel. J11or1borman. be -· ..., lloll ,, ... Ii milli>n year;tt .-aUcm .. done' by, 'ir -tbe SUP'!"lsloll of.t ::;·~~d surgeons or •It • •• or the American Colllla fl SurgeOdi. ' I , • ' SpOkeamen lar m1dfcal • aociellel ay, -....,, \lhll there are ra1ulalofY mechanilml -Ille plo-. !f.:':'°..1!:. to llllDlmize t )le ~ include the lljllem of • -review -docton check· Ing pn olber dpctont, -and rel.~le 4 1 elf-pol l<;inl , "Pftllnulns pro- dldor' edgcatian, modlcl l lOCletlea and Ille -1 of II> comt1e1en14 by -medicll ~..idiu!.;. llllJ .;.., wllile ~ .......... operatlooa, &JI~~ In any repalable bnopilal, whl<Jl woufd bop them ·1rom operating. • .. Dr. H. Jiii* Gelger , chalnnan ol the ctepaitmeot of community medicine at the State University of New York In Stony Brook, L.J., Is one of the physicians who feel the way to 10lve 'the problem is lhrnu!lh a body •! public audlfu who would monitor. doctors' performance. "If we ran airline safety and pilot quality the way we run physician quality control and -supervision, we'd have wreckage and bodies all over the landscape," aeld Geiger, Who Care•? At a special 5.88 Pins, pendanls, earrings and more. All gold filled•, all set with cu ltured pea rl s or semi·precious stones. And so spe cially priced, you can pick Up · some, for gifts and treat.yourself, too. · t/2012K gold filled. JCPenney fine jewelry The values are here every day. No other newapapcr in the world cares about your com- munity like your community dally newspaper does. It'1 the DAILY PILOT. Sltop Sundoy noon to 5 P.M. Qt !he following store~ Aveil•ble •f: NEWPORT IEACH, F•1hion hl•ncl. HUNTINGTON IEACH, Hµntj119ton C.nkr. U1e Penney• ti"'' .ptym•nf pl•n. · SPRING TRIMESTER APRIL 24th THROUGH AUGUST 4th Pepperdine Uni~~ity . ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENT CENTER . . h, •W•t. ., st-. ..... Dt. hnl. ~ Uahrrtrthy, 1031 $. Yennllt .t,q., l•• ........ c.tH. t0044. NOW h ... rilMI te CAll POI APPOINTMINT .. PLAN YOUI S,llN• 5CHIDUll. fer 4' ... ..._ c.ill l*'Jfl I I BUSINESS ADMINISTRAJION l•rwy •f 11111 ..... Pri1telplet ., lce"Mlff C•nnt ke119Mlc Prell .... H1._ leletlH1 ,,,...... ....... M •111rW r.,,,., ... , .. l111n1 .. ......... .. ,. ...•. ,. _,,,lk,,.. ., ...... ..... I -PSYCHOLOGY _.,,_.., ,.,. .. u" A11111•11t S-Ca ... & • 'f II ' I I ... I __ ~_unc_,E_N_c~_L_.,,11 COllECTIONS I ..... I Lee; .. hve""""" PreWllM I,_. line ... .t...nc. ·~·:,_:,.:-:·:_ ___ ~A~j :·:·•:F •:lw:fll '~ ......... I ENGLISH I. ...... aett Sterr' liW. • Ut11•sre -A4u 12• 0111f!1 .... I la ' MfUCATIOMI NOW lllN• ACCIPTIO POI THI U'llM 'lllMllTIR WHIOM -- .,.,L M. Afl'UCATONS POI PINANCIAL AID SHOULD ALIO • IUIM"'9 NOMmY. j • • ----• •• , ' -. . ' I Sale! ·A,11 Ad·onn.a bras arit· 1 -~ I • f~ -. I ~ . . ~ girdl~,. at 20% sav1ng.s. • ..._ R1g. 2.50. ColtOn·bnl hos ylon lace·upper cups: 1djustible atratch llrlllJI. Sizes !J2.36A. 32-408,C. Sale •2 2D. R $3, -2M Reg."- Cr..00- -bra with elastic front lnoert;upper Q"'9 -nylon J1ca.'32"36A, ~~2C. Sale 24° Rig. $3. Kodfl" ....,_podllod . bra with 1djuslable stretch straps; lycr .. spandex back. 32-38A, 32-36!l> Sale 24° . Rog.$7W .... ,. gfr1l9 with ori .... tuminy control lllndl. Nylon/apancllx po~ SiznM,~ Sale 5'° ~ • I -. . \ ' """ 2.75-Cotton/D.C.- polynllr bra with nylon lice _ , cups. Elastic bac k.32-36A. 32-428, 32-4"C. , -Sale 220 32.-420, Re . $3, -2.40 1111. M. GllllllHI ........ ,..,., ..... 1 • nyton/al)llldex · powernet; .ttretch loco front panel, lace cuffs. Sizn S,M,l.,XL White, blue or nude. Sale 320 • . Rig. UD. lellloped l)ylon -In IW .adjustable , atrek:h llrlpo; sp11111tx ~met etaltic.. 1 White, pink, yellow, bjue. 32-36A. 32-388. Sale 2'° """ $1-Gortotlou 1or111.io1 ponty ..,.. II nylon/apl!ldex powomat;llre!ch lace~ Sizn s.M.L.l<L White. yellow, b.lue. Sale 5'° ..... 1.11 .... 11111 In. Nylon lace with Docronl polyeeter/ nylon/cotton body. Silos 28-34. Sale 1121 ' I ' • . ( . JCPenney ' . • ' Reg. it10. cta1111• ...... ""°" -with epoildea 9djuolable _ ..,_ Poly-· liber!ill lllllng. 32-seA,B. s.-1e •2 -13. 8-llalll L,_. ••ndo•~lnlizn S,M,l.,XL White. -Sale 240 ....... caw .. ln.~Plll)1•11 ~cat1111.-.......... IPllldltilor• 1 1 sr Wltlte.~. s ....... - • • • '· .... prlo• effective tllrOugh Sunmy* it the folawlllg atorM: . . - .. • NEWl't>RT IEACH, Feohlon .lilend. RUNTIN&TON BEACH, Huntift9toft-Centa;. •COSTA ME$A. Hori.or C...+.r ('Closed SutiUyJ. .. .Solt priCft ot o• other storos effective through· S.htrday oily. • .I \ • • l r .. ' .. ' ' I • r .. • .. QUE!NIE By Phil lnterlcmdf- "Unless y~ij're U. the bobsled co111petitlon, nplaln yourself!''" '. · . .. I', oww F~e• ,.. ' • J ; l?lnmp Gals Lose ·' . ' J Cash; Not Pounds i ~ MIAMI (AP ) -Hundreds of she said ahe did on 1 y figure-conscious women show-calisthenics with bu fellow eel up at three Miami reducing students -waiting for the salons and found that while massage belt.a and bicyc,les they may not have Jost any that never arrived. Pounds, they were short a few Fifty women who appeared dollars. in leotards at the locked and The owner of the three shuttered &uth Miami studio recently opened Figure Form said they had been told that all Reducing Studios apparently of the )'educing equipment had cleared out over the would ~installed by Monday. weekend, leaving only the red At the third Miami salon, a carpeting and wall mirron, n e i g h b 0 r • Mrs. Frank police said . Irate women flooded police Esworthy, said, "The owner with complaints that they had just loaded up a trailer Satur· paid anywhere from . S38 for day night and hauled the equipment away." short·tenn reducing to $98 fol" "life membershJp,'' Schimek said there was no "My God, have we had the exact · account of bow many phone calls," said Police Sgt. women aigfted up or bow much Edwin Schimek or North money was collected, but Miami Beach. ··And some of estimated that lbe mem,. the women who say they've bersliip fees 11could be.·in tbt been taken are married to thoula, nda .. " ' · .. r I \\lldnHd11. Mirth 15. 1972 • SBle!, 15% off 'Supreme' dr~~ries .and matching bedspread ; A bedroom f~ll of savings~ -' ~ale11~~~-' Reg. •1•. Luxurious 'Supreme' draperies for ao little .money. Beautiful antique satin. rayon/acetate fabric. " 1 cotton Roc-lon' lioing. Fan folded, weighted corners todrapt perfectly. Dcy clet.n..H igh tashlon~olora coordinate with ·bedspread. Wide range of sizes in I stock or special orde r. . 71 1 14". , , Reg. 125, S.111 21~ . -•·. 100 .... ~ ........ 131, .... 121 12f ............. 142. ..... 35.70 Sale -22~~Z8 Rig. ~7. ·supreme' /ulty quilted throw-styl e bedspread matches drape ries. Rayon/acetate with. ~01 yesterfill1 cotton backing. Twin line quilling, cord welted seams, jumbo corded.hem •. Oueen size. reg. S37. Sal• 31.45 Ki ng size.reg. S39, Silt 33.1 5 · • DAILY '1LOT !J · police offict1'3." Dade County officiala aald l Judy Reynolds went to the the ·lludios were licemed in • ' North Miami Beach studio ei:· J~ry .!>Y I man idmtifJ1n& 1 pectini "a J"lnd opening." hiJriself 11 Bill B,i:emer.. , "Some (rand opening," she 1 Bremer could not be located , scoffed. ''We got here and 1 for 1 'cmnment. His• "formt.t' everything~'Waa .. gone, desks,·\ landlady II.id ht moved out telephones,;;,rything." ,'l"itb his wife, YOJUll IOll and For the 1 ·three weeU, idauihter late lasl month. ..,. • -. . . ' Sale.This machine will ' . keep you in stitche$, and save you 41.95. Adjuatable Non·glare · tension. tight. Two speed motor. .sa1es1sa I' • . \ ' ' Rog; 1af.15 /n1~rtabie came zig zag.sewing machine.: L\gfitw~ight, but designed to handle ., a1'moat ,1ny weight fabric. Makes sewing stretoh ma1erlal1 a breeze. Sews· serpentines, bli~d stitch; overlock and . doubl• <fvertock.11 double action an~ 13 single ICtlon camt. Doec twin needle work. • Zig zag sewlng maohine. SeWI foTWard and reverte, ·even m1kea.buttonhol1L Adiustaltle atilch length, zig zag widttl controls, aufomatk: bobbin winder. BOilt·in ligHt. 84.15. : ' JCPenney The values are here every day. ' • ' ' .. .. prtoM ....... lwl llF &andly. ' - ' ' ' I ' . ' .. . ' • t f .... • . .. (1 { . . Polyester double~nits at value . prices . • ·32e· yd. Penn·P'rest polY,ester doubleknits in patte rns-of one color i>f\IS White. 58/60" Tex turized polyeater doubleknits in exciting . multi-color jacquards. 58/60" Decoratdr ·pi I.lows 2 for s5 'Shikl' de corator pillows to' buy by tht pelr and heap In decorator colors for accent and comfort. 16" squares and rounds ••• have some of each. Rayon covered and filled with 100'/• kapok for soft plumpneu. • ' l " / JC Penney The values are her.e~ever~ day. Sale~ prices eff ectlve through Sunday+ at th~ f~owlng stores: .. ' ' I • •COST A MESA, Hory Center (*CloseCI Sunday} ,,,Open Sund1y noon to 6 ""'." • If DAILY l'ILOT ' • 1'.&llrtl'' critcvs Wed'!'d'r, l!_rojt 15, !?7~ -· ' ' . . • ., 811 rce.- ' ' . . on.::-. ct "Ille dcwn ,_,,en It .with )'Oii' hind teetli. • ·- ·Gap in. H~rory · Of -Sea-Sur#aces " HONOLULU (AP) -Iden-: ~ c e a n·o 1 r a p b e.r at the Ulla probinc the ocean floorin Unl•trllty otHaWliij !Jiltltute oeordl al ct-. 'to the poi! al Geopllyatca said IA an In· · ha.. aurfaced a fllCilultln( Iervlew. The sediment cores were m)'ltery: 101M 11 'm.illiM liken between November 1971 yean al biltory appear to be and January 1972 on a cruJae ~· whlcb was part of the Qeep U t~ find out b Sea Drillln( Project aupervil-_, can • " y, ed by.the Scripps lnstitUtlon of t!>ef believe they can belle"' Oceanocraphy !or !be National upllln how Allllralla broke Science Foondalion. off fram. Antarellca 1bout IO Andrewr beUeves the area mlllktn .;.,. qo and 1aJa wu a aballow aea durtna the new DowL&A-oi an irea 11 million "miaing" yeara, _..., 1nd ~n currents ICOUted . wbln mlirar)' potosicll mo-· away the sediment. U hll llam:' ltill CIUle eartbquak!a theory is correct, Andrews and YOlclnlc octlYlty. 18ld drillers should !Ind a ·Drillbtf in the ocean noor &tmilar, ,thoug~ more rece,ntl · -o1 Auatralla. 1ejentllll l•P In llie sedunenta IOUtli of a pp. In the aedlm... A~W 'ta. ··"' of -~.:~ -ol the T-an .e rt -• •~w~u~.­ Coral -bqinnlng Ing ocean ctmdatlon In ad· ·-41 millloo ~ .,. and d it Io~.. to reconatrui:!Inc tftdhls 30 million yean .qo. leolocY, Andrews 18ld. ,,_ ,_ ""• In the A~. Now 1.ealand and •~ m a ... PP New Guinea are -drlltinc aeCimentl for ~ obvioua. or, north· one or tWo lncbel a tmmedlataly obvioul, reuon. year, while the .Pocific Ocean J111111 E. AndreWI, a n floor ta moYl!tl ....i Iowan! New 1.eaJanc[ . "Tltil mUea a ...,.,. where Pot 'Farm' 1ilany -... thinp •••• ,. to be hoppenibt 'bocaute ol the ~·directions,'' Andrews Uncov' ered 18ld. . Sedlmenllry evidence . ...,. • firmed llilt New 1.ealand Mii l'llANCllDO (AJPI) -broh •"'1 , from I ~ • Pollet, actln( "" • • lip, Alllllarctlca • ,Auttialla i1 a n d reporteol .tbey raldod a Oat·m m1aa ll)9l'e than 70 mtJlloii llio Halpt.Ashltury DI.strict, years ago, and · the breek 1fT'elt.ed two men and un-between A. u· st r a I t,1 • Od covered an indoor marljU.na Antarctica wa1 far ·-·•h farm. ' . · along to allow ocean etifr";irts They 11ld they found 400 between the continents by 40 planta, lncluifini 50 seedlings million years ago, Andrews In plutlc cups In the aIUc. 18ld. Other plants were in a closet The northward drift will which wu lined w i l h conUnue until the Australia- alwnlnum foil to reflect beat · New ZeataDd-New G u I n e a from aua lamps. mus collides with Borneo, Thole arreated on charges Andrews Mid. but that even is of paae:ulon Ind cultivation more than just a few years of. marijuana an: Wilfrtd away. Galleps, 21 , fnd Jerry "Say 30 to .0 million yean/' IWklnl, 22. he said. HE.ALTH NEWS: . The Golden Period Of W.hiplash • .,, .. ,., c.twt, e.c. Dr Gary L CoUture, D.C., head and neck ln the oppoglt~ ot lbe Couturl! Chiropractic directio~ with lnJury to ~e Center in Nl!wport Beach. ha1 1urroundmg .and supporttna iuued a atrona 1uagestlon to Uuues."-...... cld t victims makihi them The eonynon causes are auto :WU:Pot the importance of Im-collb;ion. a sudden jerk of one media~ modern chiropractic ~r both arms, a ,,violent blo"':' !nation for whiplash in-1n the head or chin, a reflex exam, jerking of the hell.d due to jur es. 1 . 'dd J In a statement, Dr. Couture rt(hl or su en no se, or any noted that thl!: ttra t three weeks ki nd.. of a fal l tha t causes a.flu a whiplash Injury can b@ forceful, unexpected movement call~ the "iold en period of of the heAd and neck. . tm • .. It also ahould hi': noted that tre& en... . · "Jn the three week pe:rlod the elutic1ty of the. neck struc- 1 II wl ·ccld nt .. states tures decrease11 with advanc-o o DI an a e · . •.1 _,.. D Dr C 'turt "pro~r care and 1na: age, n aene ... , says r. ' U: t f -hlplai h injury Couture, "the older the victim trea !t n ° a w on a Ille the more likelihood of injury can o en aave a pen -. tlm f .... in and discomfort and. disabili ty throuah wh1p-e o _.. I h " "A wtupluh Injury doesn't u · . _, 1·n1· t t•·eJI untn 48 The complications of \l.'hip-.... way1 ma f'I .., . h !nJ · · d houn or more alter a n accl· la• . une~ are ~any ':" dent and d~n't note any vaned.· Str&lrll, .•p~allll, 1rac- the whlplu h effects. Ho~er, t.urea., nerve lnjuri~, muscle &It.et l nl1ht'1 sleep, or even spums. ruptu~ disc, nerv~ lon&ff, he will eventually ex-root compression, nerve or IJlrience a stittneu or aoreMu spjna.l ~~ lnJury that stretches io tht neck. Thi.a Is a positive Into a J~1nt usually thrfi&ttn1 tt~ or a whiplas h injury." health With. an early. ro~~tlon Tk mQlt prevalent' aym p-ot trau~uc .arthntis, 11.)'I '-'----tom•-_. -th@ stltfnea-or Dr_._Cou.lw:t..~--­teden.u ' in the_ ne.ck t..nd Old whipluh injurit1 ·otten bffdachp. There cM also be come back to haunt a penon NUlff, .lilackoula, dlutMu, 11 he -has not recefved proper and vi i--u a-1-distur~ ca.re-:-and:-trea.tmenrloUO~ -"And," he notes, \,moet c:ases the, Injury," says Dr. Couture. tlttre ls low blck pefli." !'RegardleM of whethf!r a whl~ What It bllcklaah and what lash Is new or old It 11 d~fi· \ II It.I cause! nite-ly"--cott!fden:i;!lOl:iiti ma,JOr ''Tec h n lc1lly peUlna-.''lw'aJth '"'hazard. Proper chiro-~ Dr. Cou ture, "a whiplash pr1ctie care and co1Tectlon are atCk' injury la the Involuntary utmost lmportanct." tllru1t of tht httd and neck ' . C.Outure maint.tlN otfictt 111 Ill.)' direction, and the rf'· 11 WettclJ.tf Drive New· laltlne t:lu Uc ~il ol tM 110rt' ch. Phone 645..s3oo, • • • \ I • , Sale. Sjgnificant s~vings on the ·stereas ·you've heard · so much abbut·. ' ~.t+t.t . ' Save 3195 · R111. 1~~. Sale $111. PMn-ie-'""'"'"""" pc. 1tereo component system t~atures AM/FM-FM stereo tuner with FM stereo Indicator light.•llde controls for volume, bass. treble and balance. BSA changerwith 4 speed, 11" turntable. Air suspension spe1kerain walnut cabinets. Comes with '45 RPM adaptor. '~onnecting cords and dust cover , ._ ·SI• month• Save 2195 R11J.11t.!15,Sele$tl. Penncrest9 8 track stereo component system with solid sta te chassis, AM/FM-FM aler~ tuner, easy to use controls. Pushbutton channel ae~orwith lighted channel indicator. Two walnut finisn wood spelkereabinets each wtth 5" speakers. 5.501 mof'lfh.• . , Save 21~5 R09.1tit.!l5, Sile $178 • Penncreste 3 pc. rad io/i:thomt component system with cassette recorder. Features AM/FM-FM stereo tuner, BSA mini changer, air _suspen sion speakers. Recorster has "'cassette pop-up" for easy insertion and removal of tapes. lncl_udes • microphone, blank eassette, 45 RPM adaptor and dust eowtr. $11 month•. Cool savings, too, on freezers and air conditioners. Sale 11696 Aeg..121.H. Penncreste 5,000·BTU air conditioner. Features 2 speed fan and cooling power. Ten position thermostat control maintains desired temperature. Adjustable vertical louvers for cooling where you want it. Permanent, washable Scott foam filter. Easy to install, tool $1 a mOnth• . 6,000 BTU cu·stom air conditioner Reg. 14-i.95, Sale 130.41 8,000 BTU Custom ·•ir conditione<.Reg. 179.9~, -111.11 10,000 BTU Custom air conditioner Aeg. 209·,95, .. 111.11 11 ,500 BTU Custom air conditloner Reg. 229.95 ..... 20UI 15,000 BTU Cusiom 1ir condjtionir.Reg. 2:19.95, --... 18,000 BTU Cuatom air conditioner Rag. 269,95, -241.11 24 ,000 BTU Custom air condilionar R'9. 319.95, -217.11 28,000 BTU Custom air conditionir Alg, 358.95. -m.11 14,000 BTU Imperial ~ir conditioner A'9. 2".95, 1111-.. t ' , ' \. Sale .$198 ' Rog. 219.95, Sova '21.95 Your choice; Penncrest• 15 er 15 cu. ft. vertical or 18 or 20 CU; ft. chest freeier. Vertical freezer features 541 pound capacity, slide~out storage basket. Both have ''power on''. warning lights tumbler type lock, interior light. Vertical ·freezer-in wh ite, avocado. or harvest o.old, chest freezer i" white only. St a month• Perincrest918 or 19 cu:ft. uprlgh1 freezer. Rog. 259.95, Sale U2I •rhta amount tepresenll lht ~ired mtftinttitft moftttlty .,.,..,,_., Plnne,. ThM P1yment Pl.n forth• pure'*' of iel1ted ;tem, No F"JNA~ CHARGE wlll bl Incurred lflM Mlence ofttte ~lfttble rtm billing it peld In full by ttl• eloalng dtta.ofthe rieit billing period. WMlt lneurNd FINANCE CHA"GES witl be dttem'llNd by a,,,IY.fnt ptriedfe '8tn at 1 .2% (ANNUAL l'EflCENT AGE RATE 14.4%) Qn the fitst &500 and 1% (ANNU4L PE~ENTAGE AATI 12'%) °""' pdOfl oWer.POO ettfrlt ptW¥iou1 Mlancewltfi'out dedvdi"8 ptymllnts ortt9dtts. . • , \. · JCPenney, c d;The valuei are here every day. . ' I Shop Su~y noon. to 5 PM at the following 1torea:'' ' . ... ' I u,. ·P9nnty> timt paymtnf pltn. • NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion lslancl .. 'HUNTINGTON iEACH, Ht1r1tl.~ c.nt .... ' . ' \ • I 1 ,. • • ' I \ I l Pat. Nixon: to,-Be 60 World Traveler . Looks Y . '!-ger . WASHINGTON (AP ) -Th• tdmlnl1tratton '1 mo 1 t ac.. claimed a;ood will ambassador, a visitor to 75 countries, celebrates a birthday Thursday. Pat Nixon will he eo. • .. I'm doing what I~ve always done," the First L a d y relpollds when she's praised for her work on t h e President's trip to China or on a recent solo trip to Africa. Mrs. Nlton says her ap- proach has oot changed in 25 years as a world traveler-she just likes to meet the people . What's happened Is that she ls getting more attention, especially on televl!$10n, since President Nixon sent her oo • special missions abroad. The China trip on worldwide television capped the recent round of increased ·public ex- posure. Many are surprised to learn that the slender, blonde, con: aervatively dressed and in· dtfatigabl• rirot Lady will he LIKES j'EQPLE Mn. P~ N[KOli her husband got Jnto public of. !ice i9:-.;.1946. China was the 75th ~trY she had visited . piscusslng the i~re~ publlcily while on her Aitjcan trip, she said only one reporter came along when' shfi and Nixon made the same tre~ during vice presidential days lr1 1957. This time, Mrs. Nixon _.....:...._:..t.._· ___ _ ~ us~. •l•ie •.•• IN!-.;, • .,.. .... ~11.1-•ie.. ii• . •• peeple." noted. there were television crews and a traveling troupe of 40. Such feats as s bak ln& .. . thOusands oL hands and mak· J Ing arduous rounds.of• schools, I~ ' __ .. hospita!s and iristitution'$' have 60 years o d. 'She ·Juuas k .been Mrs. Nixpn'B tradelnar . yqunger. , • 1 J '-Her people-f.o.peopl' · n-Whlt~ · House arcniVe's ate tacts h'ave beep going qn ce fiJJed with l>tctures of a smit· I lng Mrf. Nh:on kissing a.D.d Bedrooms Yet hugging youngsters or patting an old person's hand. ''Sht just laughs whenever the)' say there's 'a new, relax· ed Pat'," Julie .Eisenhower ,aid of her mother. "She's always been warm and very ' Skylab Will BoaA t Comfort, Nice Food Interested in everyone. She always made friends." A reason Mrs. Nixon has fr.iends all over the world. ac- ·cording to Julie, is that "she CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -but with good "taste~ we've neve r. breaka a confidence." The nine astronauts who will tried to make· the Vehic!le occupy tbe Skylab space sta-habitable." • ~ · "For example," Julie said. lion over an eight-month In addi tion l6 individual 1'if• somebody did something period next year will have by s I e e pi n•g ~compartments, · silly. or if som~ world leader Car the best food and ac-Conrad said the Skylab has a· tol~ her somelhmg personal ~r commodations ever provided waste manag e m en t·com~ · private. she never repeats it. to Americans in space. partment "that reSernbles a 'That's why she allNays makes Their quarters still won't real honest to $OSh John."· It : friends •. You )\ave to re~pect match that found in hotels on has a wash basin mirror and her for it. She ·could write a earth, but their food will a~ even a shower 1i'.iesigried to book about all the unbelieva ble proach good restaurant fare work in weightless space. things that h~ve ~ppened." and they at least will ha ve · "We 've got enoUgh water so Mrs. Nixon's good. w i 11 private bedrooms, a well· that each guy can get a crack diplomatic role on her own equipped· ward room and a · at the shower once a week," slarted with a relief mission to bathroom. he said at a recent briefing in Peru in the summer of 1970 The 190,000-pound Skylab, . Houston: . wlien she new 8 300 miles to · set for launch April 30, 1973, is ·. 1'he -ward ·room is eq uip ped ~~It victims of ~ major· An-th~ large.i::t spacecraft ev~r .Wit~ · a dining 1·a b 1 e, cy'an eJ1rthquake. . · bl.ult. It will have the room of 1refngeratoi;s and freezers.and •D S ff · ls allect the trip a three-bedroom house and the heaters .to ,prep.are the food. ; · · 0 icta c es 8 equipment of a g r o u n d · kyla.b crewmen started ~aste . 1 tre~·e"1fus ,J u~ c u· 8 laboratory. esting th~ fO;Od last October. 1p oma 1ca Y a e · · The goal of the project is to A typical dinner men~ will mbassador lo Peru reported caM')' out doz.ens of medical, nclude $hrimp cocktail, lilet 'JI great -;:rm respon&e , lo engineering and scientific ex· . ig_non, sweet. pot a toes , er wannt · periments and see how well ' reamed peas, peach am-Nixbn added ~ n.e w man can live and work in • rosia, orange drink and cof-~·men~lon to his ,tfe',110le ~y apace for long durations. . • For breakfast, ·"'a Q ,pdinf her on ·~al'.' ·offic1a1 Three three-man crews will st r o.n a u,t , riiJght have I issii.. to Africa in January occupy the st~tion for periods_ ape:frult..,1,JUl~e,"' ,scram~led re ;ent the Uni~ Stat&! of four and eight weeks at a eggs, eere~I~ b1scwt and Jarrl I.fa t e inauguration o.f time. and coffee. Lunch might in· Liberia 's new presiden't and to' "If we'ff going to have a elude turkey rice sou p , tell leaders of three African long term space slation up spaghetti and meat, a tuna countries his hopes and alms there. we 're going to have to salad sandwich, strawberries for summit meetings in Pe- Uve sort of like we do down an~ tea. king and Mosco~·. here on the ground ," said "! think we're all in agree-Mrs Nixon who usually Charles Pete Conrad, com-m~~t the food is an order of lifuits · herselt io chit~at and mande.~ ~f the fir~! Skylab inag~itude bett~; ~an we've small talk. said she would h9 crew. Without getting fancy,· had In the past, said Conrad. ha ving some substantive talks SOFT·SELL SAM by Marvin My ers ,-;::::::====; on her Afr ican trip1 But what she said was never disclosed. The trip .brOught her ~w visibility and praise. Time magazine . said Mrs. Nixon ''won lhousan~ • of new friends." It added that she ''once· .11.gain proved that taken . from the penumbra of the . White House she ia an engag: Ste the be1t in men 's w • • r for '721 The best ••· lec:tlon in town for double ltnit slacks and 1port c:oats. Remember, the best is elweys et 14•'1 VII' lhlp · N1wporl l11c.h .. Ing effervescent personality in her own right." Her goal abroad, Mrs. NiXQll said, was .simply "to show that we are good neighbors and good friends." Mountain 'Sold' BRASILfA CAP ) Brazilian police said they were seeking a former convict ac.- cused of selling land he didn't . own m!ar the Venezuelan border, including B r a z i I ' s highest mountain peak. , SAMBO'S DOES IT AGAfN COMPLETE HAM STEAK DINNERS . 2. FOR THE 1 . PRICE OF •. $3 .70 '(ALUE FOR ,1.115 • The FJf" Pf1ce y,,, w1 m111111 it' fwe of our :or Family Foodt d11 b11t1bl1 h•m •t•1k i i'"''" 1r1 your• fo r the price ef c~m'"".os ~:~~ ... ''"''' '''""'' ll~ w rl119, Str¥1d with tometo .1.11r· "'t\A,U1t•NT 11lsh, Fr111c.h frlff 1t•t1ten, ~.! f!::o-'.t:::::ii,. roll, fo111i ttlll'I t.tlti with 1'·:,...J-1'1~1•; Vour c.ho ic.1 of i r•1llr19, f.i~}~";-\Hf: UN9UIT 'ACILnlU ~ 141·441t 3001 S. BRISTOL SANTA 'ANA Offtr a... _,_ lltwwll I I 11 ._,.., NII \flllf 191' . '""'" ..... ' ' ' ' . , . • IAll v 1'11.1'1! JI • l , P~oWer mow8rs .. to ~ ~~ . ... keep your law'rl in trim. • ~Sale s79 I,. \~ • ' ' Jlog. 94.H. Penncroft 11 22" cast n\egnesium wlth·3t 12 HP, 4·cycle engine, cast magnesiu m deck, fold- doWn' h,andle, no-adjust carburetor. end ' easy he ight of cut adjustment. $5 o nionth.' Rear deflector plate Melo no 2 HP front tlirow reel mower. Features 20 " cutting 4 width, controls on ·h•ndle, recoil starter. Metal gra11 catcher included. SI 'month.' Side chute ex~ension deflector ' . -- •• Aog. 49.99 · Hind pu1h reel mower has an 18'' cut. Hedge bar helps protect bushes and shrubbery. Easy single height of cut adjuslment. Tubular chrome T-bar handle. All steel conaftuction . U o nionth. • Rog. 19.09. Penncratt ® 2 t 12 -HP power propelled, 18" cut, sealed ball bearings, 4-section wOod roller, s· blades, 5 spiders, dual height O( CUI fro.m 112" 103". $5 • nionth, • ' . • . 'I ' > • . ' ' ·s· -·1e· 16411 a . . . . . . . 119g, 114.ti , Penncroftll 5 HP . horizont1l 1h1tt tiller. Brfggs and Stratton engine with forward , neutr.al 1Jn~ re verse positions. 26 " cutting width. On handle contrqls. 7.50 o month.• ' . '. • • 99 9 ~ 10' 17' 1t111 ttorogo Dulldlng. Stffl panels are chemically treate<i, electro-galvanizld, polntld and sealed for rust retardafion. Side gable conatructlon. 5.50 1 rrionth. * .. ' • ·Th•• lmDllfll •IP'I""'' ,.,, •e11u•rtd m•nlmum mon1~y J:ll Yl'lltl'll undt• "~"IJ'l 1 1"'1 ~1ym1nt ll!!•n t tllt pi;rtblM ot lflt rt 11tto '''"' No FINANCE CHAFIGE woll ~ tl'IW•lf(I 11 fl'lt bllJ ".l.t• QI th• 1tcoun1'" 11'11 h11t b•l!ln' II Id Ill lun by tl'!.1 c1011ng d1tt of ll'le ne•t tu!l•ng pe11od Wllfl'I •neurrtd FINA~C[ CH.&AGES ,..,11 bt 01111ll'llfltd by 1oolyfn9 oe11oo•c r1lt1 OI I ''• (ANNU4l PEFICENT AGE FIA TE 14 4%1 on th1 ltrll llOO end 1"4 !ANNlJAl ~EM;EtiT"O! AA TE IZ~l on tl'lt OC1 Ion ,.,., 1!00 ot u1y r1¥t0u1 bJ1 l1nc1 ••l\J'>u\dtdutt1119 PIYmtn11 or crtditt , JCPenney • , The values are ~ere . every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following ator.11: • Ytlld •t et Samb'o'1 S.ftt• Awe-h,lra M.fclt JO --couPON . . .. . ... . ~ . Av•il•ble at: NEWPORT BEACH. Feshion bland. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Hunfingt~n Center.' Use Penneys time payment pl 11. . . . • • ' • •• " • . . JI DAILY "LOT w.....uy, Mllth 15, 1'72 B'µsing for Integration Split~ Flo r ida City TllAll»ING l i THE "GOING" TRAVEL ~ Jtl l KIND OF IY JAClt WAUGll ~le-. ........ ..,.. I JACKSONVILLE. FLA. - Bl( 7tU.. ochool bu1 No. llf 1111 out front of Role 'l\lmOf 's boulo In Jsobi>nvill•. VOUCHEllS i . : $TAMPS! among 'em ••. 1 doft1t Ute It lhlt all thiJ anim01ity ~ wash-has betn the architect of bu• like tJllJ bu&lng and they are they Uvtd too far from IChool • • • • • . • "" .,_. ............... 11 caUM we aot to ao all the way ed away." lng for lntegraUon as It bu ,olng to do everything to to . walk,' but none for in-Ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Twice a day, orQ in the mornl,.. once Irr the al· tornoon, Ibo bouncu 1/ltq It, jerlf,I the door handle 1hut, anti' drlvet It into· the teeth of the howling poliUcal gale called bullng. Into her bus, 1t each he1v~ Ing 1top. wriulea: the busing- for -l nttgratlon generation: , crou town and I Jive rl&bt ''Tbt big thlni r thlnk lt betn laid on the city by two throw oblllclu in ill way so t.egratlon . Now 40,000 are bus.- acrou from ICbool at home. wrona iJ crowdtnc on-the court orders. \ t won't work.'' , ed, 11,000 of them for in- We got to get up 1t 1:30 while buH1 -three kids to a seat He sees a different world lo protest during the first te&r•tion. By next fall the my sister who ls In high achoo! when_ It 1ell hot. Jl 'a t.oh much. froffi Rose Turner 's. It's hl1 year of busi11g, Jacksonville 1yltem will be busing 45,000, gets to stay in bed . . . lt'a what caU&tS trouble. lot to cope with the simmering partnts withdrew 2 ·, O O o half of them ror Integration. *'Really, It'• OK lo bu1 u1 Somebody ouaht to-go to rage of-public wiliment. His chlJdren and put them In . Or\l.y 3 of Jacbonvllle'a 137 becaute everybody'• sot to W1ahlnaton and say don't phone console is co nstantly private acbools. Last Sei>. schools woa 't be affected. mix eventually and ,rhy not crowd the lclcb onto the buses" alight with calls that It takes tember at the start of phase It toolr 200 buses before the when we are youna like us? Acroaa: the bridge, Franci1 him and four assistant! nearly one of a two-phase program to court orders. The system con· They are people, too, and 1ot Brown alta back of a desk dair full time to handle. fuJJy integrate, anothtt 4,000 tracled for 49 more the first feeling'a like us, , . r:r ln hia lavender shirt and The complaint! are legion -were pulled out. Next 'fear, year or integration and 108 "J don't like it, all thl1 trou· avender tie, and looking children not picked up, kids the phase two system expects more this yeit. It will add 50 ble just because they want ua cooler than the situation. smoking at the bus stop, a bus to lost another 3,000. • more next September. to mix ... Mr. Waugh (tug· Brown super\lises the Jackson-broken down. Three years ago before the It coats $800,000 a year ging at the slet\le), I'm for \/Ille achoo! system's "A lot of it," he says "is rtrst court order, 3 3 , 911 already. Next year it will be busing. You know why? Rldin& tranaportlUon program and harassment. The peOple don't students were bused because up to $1.S milHon extra a year. the bu.a, it's not too much of a 1----------~-----------------------------'-­ WANT A . LI'ITLE LUV? Try tonnen Chevrolet March 23rd. 2'21 HARBOit BLVD. COSTA MESA .146-1200 . ., kllet>e It'• neeufi r.ecause \ . ft's tJae onllf Wall ..,., are •o••• to understand eaclt other.' price to pay so <1ther klda can get lo go lo the good achooll In our area ••. " At last, tight din-ridden miles later, the boa pullt ur 1t Dou&laa Ander10n and ou of 20 bu1e1 pour black ind whites fusing on the playground. or the schools 1,010 atudtnta, l,llOS are bused In. BuH·d it! Fix it! Store it! white sevenlh-&radera being bused to Doualas ~nderson School to lnte1rate w l t h .seventh-grade blacb from the city's west side acrou ~ bridae. They grin and shout and bob In back, and Role's booming 80prano penetrates all the way to the rear. When thlt'a not tn011gh, her whiltle helps. Do they know they are 1t the center of a natioawide coo- trover1Y! . The reporter -oompldous 1s a queen bee In a hive -aitl hallway back, alfts the babble or Y<!UJlg vole .. for meaning, feellnge, lnsighll, cl~, and heart this: "Heck fire, th& onJy thln1 wrong with bua'n la thlt every other bus bas broken down 1t leut once, but not thll'n. All the other lddl.have oil the fun ..• I don1 mind bus'n yet: I kind of like the kids ot achool now. I aot a lot of friondl * * * Aild Rose Tun1er" Is only one of Jacksonville's 361 school bus drivers -95 percent of them women -in a city reputed to be one of the most hea\/Uy buaed in the country for lnlelration purposes. While the children bus, the 1row1H1po filht·obout It. -Turner 1111 back to the ... t of her now ldUl1I bus ond w1tcbel ber younc pauena:ers meld lalo the schoolyard. "At Ont," W 11y11 "l thought busing WU wrona. But I have chanaed my mind. It Wll a bitter Jilli and it took me from September t o Februory lo ,.. It. "But now. I be:lle\le it's needed llecause It's the only way we art going to un- derstand each other. Mind you, I don't push it for the .. ntor-hlgh lddl becou,. the other way Is lmbedded Jn them but with these young ones, that's where It Is. They are going to be the ones to aee * * Texas Next State c To Vote on lssu.e DALLAS (UPI) -Voters In the May • Texas primary will have the opportunity to ex· preu their opinion on whether =n•~~111 ·~ hlbJUn1 busing of children for school lntegratlon. The wording will differ <1n the Repu b llc1n Ind Deniocroilc ballota, but the tuue II aubltanU1lly the .ume. The n!ltllt wlll not he bind· Ing on anyone, but leaden of both partlu meeting aeparate- ly Monday to adopt rules said voters should be allowed. to ex· press an opinion one way or the other. The wording of th e Democratic referendum wtll be "for" or "against" the idea of a constitutional amendment which would say, "No public school student shall, because of hla race, creed or color, be a111igned to or required to at· tend a particular school.'' Rtpublicans can vote for or agaiMt ' ' a constitutional amendment which would pro- hibit the forced busing of * Dela y Set By Court WASHINGTON (APl -Tile Supreme Court has put off un-- tll next term Ill first hearing on claims of racial segregatlon in a public .school aystem outside the South. Court olllclals sold the delay in hearing the school case, from Denver, was caused by the. need for more time for lawyers to prepare and have printed the m1as of documentl and lower court rulings. The heorlng will he held next fall, after the jwtices return from a 3~·month sum· mer vacation. or next winter. 111e current term expires in June. ochool children and the forced COlllOIJclatlon of 1choo l diltricts solely to achieve racial balance." - Republicans passed the bus· llot re1.-with ...... vote, while Democrats &rou1ht it to a rolkall vote and It pallSed Sf.27. I Democrats against t h 1 referendum lncludtd Com- mitteeman Raymond Scott of Port Arthur: who aid the question would not encouraae blacks to vote Democratic. "When Democrats have to di p IO low IS to uae I hate Juue lo 1et -le lo the polls, we have gone pretty far.'' he said. But committeeman Robert Smith pf Dallas uld, "Tile ilsut Is not black and wl)lla. "It is aomethint we in the Democratic party lhou.ld hive I II)' on." Riverside Adds New Curriculum New courses ln b 1 a c k studl11, Sponllh •ml 1enoral phy1lcs wlll hlghll1fll the aum- mer session schtdule at UC Riverside this year. The eight-week UCR sum· Tner session will run from June 19 to Aug. 12. Any stu-- dent with a hia:h · school diploma or who ls 11-years-old may apply for the aession. A $t?O fee will he charged for the clasaes and an ad- ditional $310 for student! wlahing to reside in the cam- pus dorms. The session ls also offering college claues to high school eleventh graders through the hl&h school jurlior program. Further information may be obtained from the UC RJveraide summer session of· flee, 1189 Administration st., UC Riverside 92502. **********~******** MERCURY SAVINGS Ind laln ISSOCil tion Open llon.-llus. 9 Lm.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. IUENA PARK Marcury Sl'linp B~f .. V1!11y View al Lincoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mttcury Savinp Bldf., Edln1er al Beach TUmN MllCllY SIYhlp lldf., 1rvJno 81'111. 1t Howport Awt. **************~** • <j I It's Paint and Hardware Month. And these savings prove it! Special 29 99 Penncraft 10 gill on 1hop vacuum foal!!rn big 10 gallon capacity mo! drum~·po.werful ~HP motor, permanently lubricated ball bNrings 2 exttnsJon tu6M. crevice tool, utUlty nozzle and floor nozzle hoee adapter and 5 filter ba s .Micro tool kit. Includes everything you need for grinding , drill ing, sanding, polishing, and engraving. Powerful motor develops up to 27,000 RPM. Great gift idea for the do·it· yourselfer. Special 599 18" walnut fiOish shelf light. . Handsome unit provides shelf Space along wit h well diffu sed fluorescent light. Includes pull chain, outlet and 4' cord with plug. 795 Phoneshowerwith S9H chrome plated ~xible hose. • Special 1611 Single control kitchen faucet. Special1911 Sing le control kitchen faucet with rinser, Special 1•1 Ready·to·finish shelf kit. Contains six 8" brackets, two36"waU standards, and three 8"x36" shelves. ~~ ' " Sale! Your choice 2499 Save$10 Aeg. 34.99, Sale 24.99. Penncraft8 "" \lariable speed, reversible drill. Features "speed·loc" for pre-setting desired speed. Super burn.aut protected motor. Permanently lubricated ball thrust bearings. Save$10 • Reg. 34.99, Sale 24.99. Penncratte variable speed sabre saw. Thit huvy duty saw Is double Insulated for added protection against shock. Tiit baS8,Spoedsupto~RPM Save•10 R19. 34.99, Solo 24.99. Penncraft• 7%" double insulated • circular saw features powerful 1.9 HP motor that del ivers upto5200RPM. Save •s Reg. 29.99, Sale 24.99. Penncraft~ 5" under-polisher. Powerful 1 /3 HP motor develops 2000 RPM. Features removable side handle, rubber backing pad. Includes 3 sanding discs. pol ishing bonnet. ' Steel storage shelving. Silver colored with pebble grain finish. Fashion-grey posts. Sshelf unJt is rust, scratch and fade resistant. Dimensions: 72"'W x 36"H x 12"0. 12•• Extra deep steel storage shelving. A great space saver. Serves as a room divider, too! Al! steel construction. Silver tone with pebble grain finish. Sshelves. 72"Wx36"H x 18"0 . 1288 9 box storage unit. Rugged steel frame and 9 color coded sturdy containers. Perfect for storing toys, clothing, hats , shoes ... justabout anything! Ta,kes up only3sq.tt.ot floor space. 42"H x 36"Wx12"~ Sile prices effective thru Saturd1y. i JCPenney The values are here everyday. -1 Sho p Sunday noon to 5 P.M: at the following 1tore1 : NEWPORT BEACH, Ftshion lslend. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Centpr1 Use Penneys time ,..yment plen. , ---; ·} I, .. I I • -'\, ' •• . • .. ~ .,!lbJ.rL.:Pl:.LOT:.:.::-A:_DVE::::llTI'..'.:S:_ER:.._~--.:W;:edo::•:=!da~y:..:• -=:..::15,_, 1=972 • 01. GILLETIE JUMBO II AU" • • • . S 01. FAMILY SIZE PREU • \ .. -w .............. 15. 1912 DAil V PILOT JI ' CHIFFoN 2·PACK OF I LI. KERtfS' 41 e1. SIZE SUNSWEET .. Detergent ' Right Guard Concentrate SHAMPOO Strawberry PRESERVES Prune Juice -Toilet Tissue • :· I WI" llEACH, IOWl BRIGHTENERS ANTI- PERSPIRANT Wit~ FREE el Marker Water C1l1r Marker! . .. 26 01. SIZE "Optilets'' RAIN BARRELL . Thra,11ticfan11ul1 .. Fabric Multivitamins · Softener Warks Ric~t Wit- Deterce-1. = --::--=::: ---........ .,,,..1 llJ 111-11151 FIE!! Writing Tablets bl Entl11es •Y STllAAT HALL - .. S~11r Mist'' ••• EntiCing, delicate pastel colors to please a 33c c~rming lady. 56 Sheets. 20 Envelopes. Rei. 41c 11. 5•7 Color Enlargement Perteet Easter gift! Made · 59 · from standard size color C negatives or slides. "Love" GLASSES AICIU Hockiq;-Mo~ Mod colors spel l out "LOVE" on these drama-1 59 tically styled footed • glasses. SET OF 4 • . "Pop Floral" cwsEs bol1rMocki11 -Bold, bnllianUy colored flowers ••• just in time for 1 55 Spring .•• adorn novelty glasses. SET OF 4 o 111. 3111 Di's I $tam & Dry Iron .- 2s.steam ve<rts tor overall distribution. 9 88 Heat resistant OUREVER confset will oot C<JCk,froy or.peel. II(' 12.11 #F-ll • • Electric can ~ener Opens most household cans. Easy-Clean 9 88 rer1•1Vable cutter. Magnet holds lids. Cord storage. White. Ref. 12.11 #EC24 • suN11AM Percolator low silhouetteslyle. Makes 4-12 cupsof · coffee, keeps it hp\ automatically! Pop ap · 9 88 basket. Avocado or H31Yest Gold. 11(. lUI #APSJ • • Halld Mixer Three sp<ed fingertip control tor stirnng, mixing and wlliPiing. Easy cleaning. Push 9 88 button beater e1ector. WMe with black base. IOJ. 12.11 #M·21 • SUNHAM Fry Pal ' Attractive buffet s1ynng. High dome r.over. 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Four color- coded Jet Tips included for family use , Mlractive Golden-Beige ~h. II(. 24.15 1 11 • 19.95 • / .. Corn Remover LIQUID 2 drops softens corns, callouses for easy, painless removal. Jq;. lie 11 It. 59c :..-.... . -i 7 oz. llvtEWiMASTER Al PltClS PlllAlb "'$=.:, .,,,, 1 ltl tin ,llll&l lltl DRUGSTORES 'IPIN 9AMte11 PM 7DAYIAWlll HIWl"Ol f ••ACH -lttf 1"111t. ............. MUMTIHOTOM ••A.CH -= II I I e • HUNTINOTCNI llACH -6 ....., IL 1 .. 0 -Wt R 1-. ·-- ' . " ------ Great kitche n utensil! See-thru me sh screen protects against hot 2 98 splattering grease. Fits pots and pans up to 12" .. • Decorated MUGS Styles tor ke cream sodas or coffee •.. 'white porce/1it1w1r1 z·ggc with hand painling. o YOUR CHOICE I MUG Tree -Decorative and useful accessory for kitchen or 4gc dining area. Holds 6 mugs. Choose from assorted colors. . . 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Sizes 2-4, J.7 IOd 8-14. • ' . .Eton· Suits Just in Ume tor Easter .•• double knit ~~ece - " . outfits tor little fellows. cardigan jackets, round (\l,·1 Mei :sllirts & short pantJ. Choose rom 1 mlety i".-: ·a1 co~r com.bi nations. Sizes 2-4 4 . · .l9 ~ t' .... 4J I I J ' • " • • .. ·• . , ' " • 14 Wtd.....,, Mord! 15, 1912 DAILY PILOT , ~ .... ,.,..._, I De Thl1 If Much Grumbles Called 'tause Celelwe' FAI SE· TEETH Dtep At ~Wrong nm• AtnJd f•I• teelh .in dtot> at the "Wf'Oll time? A df!tl.tU,.. idlMllftl ean · IM!p. FASTEETH• Pow~r sive11 derll\ar8'. a lonipr, 1tlrmer, at.diet 119kl. Wbybeepiblrr.-ci?Formont MCUrlty .... comfort, UH FAS· ,.EETH DentuN Adhadv1 Po..,., DtnlurM that flt are ~nll1J to '9altJL a.. )'OW' dMIU.l ,.,ulatly. JERUSALEM (AP) Lm1el'1 olllclll O\llbUdaman, ' Getshon Avntr, told ne:wsmen his p11bllc complain~ office receives an averaae of 750 anllnbto a monih. He said 70 percent are justllied. ·USIA Battles Image of Davis Case WANTA • LITI'LE LUV? I Try c.11 Chevrolet March 23rd. 2111 HARBOR ILVD. ·coST.f. MESA 546-1200 • KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN ·- WASl{JNGTON (APJ -The United Slates has qui~tly mounted a worldwide cam- Pflgn to portray the' murder- ~spiracy. trial of Angeia Davis aS an ex8.mple 'of de mocracy at work, and lo counter claims she ii being persecuted becall!e ahe is a black and a Comn;iunlst. The U.S. Information Agen- cy has sent packa gfs Of background inlOl'T{lation and detailed instructions, some of them cla111fied, · to ils 106 posts overseas on how the atory ~should be played. 11 As soon as this broke. l knew it would be a ' cause celebre around the world,'' said Ken Towery, USlA policy chief, "That's the way the Commies o~rate." "Our only goal hece Is to see the U.S. gels a fair trial' overseas," said Joseph Glazer, a labor economist who heads a 2Q-membe,r, all-white agency task force to handle the Davis Case. Beeldes its instructions and fiackground information, the . agency last year notified its posts in a classified circular that they could order up to three copies of the Grand Jury • • proceed\qgs that led to Miss Davia' iriCIICtment o,o charges or. murder, kidnapping and coMpiracy. h-liss Davia, an avpwed Communist who was d13miss- ed from the University of California faculty in 19G6. ,js accused of supplylng guns us- ed Jn a 1970 shootout at the ~1arin ·eounty, · Ca Ii f ., courlbouse. Three black con- , victs and a judge were kllle'.d. Now on trial , in San 'Jose, Miu Davis says she ts". In- nocent and claims she is being persecuted because she is black, a woman ani1 a Com- munist. , transcript \Yas available, Cop- Twenty-five USI.\ po 8 ts mann replied, · "Well, you ordered copi~ of ~ Gr.and kno\v, it was a sensitive sub- Jury transcript, w h i c b. ject. ·• , · presents only the-state's side The.-Ageocy -also clauified- of the case. its initial policy guide, sent out Lylt' D. Copmann, chief of Jan. 21, 197.l •• with a 16-page USIA 's Overseas P r e s s analysis of the case by the Service, said malllog of the-legal departme nt , along \Vith transcripts drew a co1nplaint . three pages of answers to from an agency official in wtiat were described u the Brazil that the "rpove was · most commonly asked ques-- unusual and possibly illegal tions. since such proceedings usually A revised policy paper. are kept secret. called an infogulde, was is.sued Copmann 1sald, however, the last month. It is all1]0Jt id en· agency's legal department bad tical to the first one· bl.It it is roled there was nothing wrong not classified. with the action . since the tfanscript alteady had been made public in lhJs country and did not viol~te California ·law. • ' Asked why the agency bad classified its circular that the Bell Loses -· $22 Million, To Frauds LAS VEGAS, (APJ -The Bell Telephone System last year suffered more than $22 million in losses from credit card and other fraud, says a Panel of telephone company oCficials. • ' M a n y non-Communist magazines and papers have joined the 'Free Angela' parade," says the guide. "Articles and interviews in leaQ.ing magazirles'conccntrate 011 Miss f¥$'.. 'statuesqu e beauty,' her '11)YS't i cal qualities/ her''brilliant mind.' Under a heading ''Treat· me nt," USIA officials are told to "explain' to all audiences, esperialli infiuenlial opinion n10\ders, bow the Ant.tlO.. American judicial proctsses differ -sometimes sharply - from the judicial processes in other C1:lUntries." Among other points officials are told to emphasize: ~1iss J;)avis is innocent Until provtu guilty, the trial is open. Ca omia Fede min S The panel appeared this week at the first session of a five-day National District At- torneys Association C(lnvention to ask for help in prosecuting criminals who engage in telephone fraud. "Free Angela Davi! Com- mittees" are operating' freely across the country to raise defense funds: and "loose charges by Angela Davis Com- mittees of genocide against Black l\1llltants are not justi- fied by the facts ." ' ... ' • . ' ,' "'l . ' • , 11!101'1 ·LlBGIST FIDIBAL f j • I . ••• FREE TraYtlers C•ecks With $1,000 min. balance. . . • .FREE Mai ., ., .. l . ' . , . ' . $5,000 Minimu m'Certlflcate Accounts. 2-Year Terms. 5% PassbookAccounta Available Also. '' • ALLTHESE SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE NOW!, . I • 1 FREE FREE FREE FREE ' FREE FREE 11 ... , °""' With ICllllJ Smln Wtth Trut Dul "'t' PllloCOpJ S1nl01 Satl-lr-lbll PHI· ~I npCllMI $1,000mln.~; $1,000min.balanct. Colloctlu ¥/Ith With $11000 min. II! ' . $1,000 mln.balance. bailnce. ' • • » l FRE~·; ' ,. FREE FREE FREE ' FREE FREE c11et aili'on' for' C1•nJtJl1•1 llHIWf lltltJ l'lln PIJrtll' S1tl1U lltlnrilll ..,.... 01·Lil1 Dectrnlo . flif charitable and i11 ... U11flu ' aiftcllecb. Its .. W1111ft ••• 1111111 Smlca ·•tkocationll aroups. ' atao,ofOUJofflca. ' ' • FREE Solttplllllll • • • l(s s11trter than -tosmatClli- .fornl • F1de111. °""' ~ 6" Money-m1k1r ·certHle1t1 · ICCOUrrt" or I 11111- 111 5" curreri.t • • Nathan Wilson, general at- torney for the ·Pl orida Southern Bell Te1!Phone ·and Telegraph Co.. said losses from fraud have risen from $3.5 million in 1968 to an all- time high of '2fl.3 million in 1970. . , The· figure ·dlppedlto $22.2 million during 1971 because or tighter control a n d in- vestigation by the B e 11 System, he ... 1d. Edward Booth, s p e c i a I criminal counsel at Jackson- ville, Fla., said a leadillg cause for the jump in cheating the telephone company is a proliferation of "underground'' publications. Such publications, he said. detail everything from in- stalling one's own phone to divulging the secret codes used in credit card numbering . He said the Bell system has been \vorking toward strppger laws. Two states-Califurnia and North Carolina -have recently placed legislation on :the books which penalize publications \\"hich p r i n t material to aid cheaters~ '• 1--'7'.-:c,--,.,.-,-'~---, Pd. Pol. Altver111tmenl LETTERS I HAVE RECEIVED~ V, DHr Mr. WlllO!l: l'tl Hkt l'I ftl•nk .,.u ptrtOntlly tor ctml111 te tlle D.A.lt. Awtl'dl. I know fttal I ,_Uy ,,,,._ltlMI tilt flCI 11111 MIMtM t i lmPHtt nt H pu wtukl Cillrt --.11 " C9-19 llmtlllfl!I ~ llm• ti thtf. TlltMt tttllll s1nc..-11y, Stllf\ •wrwtf Ith Grtdt P.S. s1n1i. -Somtllttly, Stmtwhtr1 U vat V.ul Pd. for by Comm111H to tf'.tlect Mli)'OI" ltoHrt M. WlllOl'I. Ron Sterive, Tr.Mur'tr, 221 Atnh1i1t1I Rd., C01l1 MIM: ' J .. The paper concludes by urg- ing officials to "gtVe the sub- ject particular pl ay to Soviet audiences." One~fifth Of Town Up in Smoke PODUWK CEii'!'ER, 1.,,. (UPI) -Pod""" Center, the proverbia l hick town o f America, ~1onday night lost the largest of its five buildings to fire . Fire officials in Winterset, a sizeable Madison County town nine miles north of here, said the fire in the combination store-cafe-servi~ station ap. parently began when two men airing a water pump at- tempted to light a propane wa- ter heater. The men -Larry Huff and Robert Ball of rural Winterset -were hospitalized with bums in a \Vinterset HospitaJ. They \vere listed in satisfactory con- dition. · All that remains of the no\v· famous oner.acre town of zero population is a four-unit motel. The »ealled town -it isn 't even shown on the most recent Iowa map -iained national fame three years ago when the Homer Weeks, now of Winterset, put it up for sale. Fatso Clinic EDMONTON, Alta. (AP) - The Royal Alexandra Hospita l is opening the city's first obesity clinic. The only fee for the· clinic's 12-wetk reducing program will be $2 for a diet book . \ I 10nu11 rat e pass· llGOk-.lllOWI ,. .• - c.llfomia Feclorai s..i..,' to. AMcioJfon , .....,.,,.. lnMff up 1o $20,000 'if 011-rof !ht Unllocl.-Qcuai111"", l I ti I . . . : Costa Mlmi~ffice: -Ana~im-Office: . Orange effic --. -~-· 2700 Harbor Bl-id.• 546-2300. 600 N. Euclid.Ave.• 776-ZJ:J.2 4050 Melropolffan Dr. • 639·3033 .. Qaevrolet's oew ufely remind you to f:llten )l'Qlm' belts have three things aolfta: belll via a red lighlClll !of them. · the dash. An ioterrated thr«: fond should ,..., tail 19 ~ -pC)int conMCtion S)'JlellLLf -l'l\!Je ~a little bu=< .. between Jap ind shoulder oc t. buue& 'lil you•.,, made ~A'llttte·Jociringdevk a-oonnection; ---· ---~ that instantly odj .. 11 the oeat Our..,.. ihr ... J)Oilrt ,..t · belt to any Jtrlh: A memory. and ~der belts .•• wilh Even thOug.h you may a built-in~. foratt to buckle up, our new Another MSea from .,.t belll runember. They Chevrolet l'Oll an IW. with.\ a111111et. ~aliettor -.•-.. ulA. I • • ,l .. I ' • • / • Utility Assessed . $117 ,800 Award SAN DIEGO IUPl 1 James Duke, 39, of San Diego, once the ob/'ect of an i.n- vestij:alion o con!lpiracy to burglarize telephone booths, has been awarded $117,800 damages by a Superlar Court jury. The panel found Monday that Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co .. which admitted tapping Duke's telephone in the probe in 1966, invaded hls privacy. Duke was charged with con- spiracy to burglari z e telephone booths and with burglaries of four p a y telephones in 1966. But the charges were dism issed after a telephone company·employe admitted during Duke's trial that be committed perjury wben he said he had not tip- ped Ouke.'1 telephone. The Ju!')', after being In- structed by Judge Daniel Leedy that the utility In (act invaded Duke's privacy in the phone tap, awarded $17,800 general damagea and $100,000 ' punitive damages. Duke mai ntained he lost his job as a salesman for a premix concrete firm because or the tap and subsequent pros· ecution. His invasion or privacy suit was filed In 1967 but it was in 1970 that the state Supreme Court ruled the utility had to answer 97 of the 113 questions posed by one of Duke'a al· torneys, Thomas W. Hauser . iijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . . WANT A LITILE LUV? Try Connell Chevrolet March 23rd. 2821 HARBOR BLVD . COSTA MESA 546-1200 Some Smile ' ' . • ' F o~ ~criticizes­ Prostitution OK • YERINGTON. Nev. (AP \ - A pending decision by l..yon County to legalize houaes of prostitution his left a lonitime opponent of tile brothels bit- terly disappainted . miles from lhe state c1pltal. lf tl\t ordinanct ls approved, II erpttted. Lyon County would be the second Nevada county to formal}1 legaliu prostitution. Storey County, home ol Joe Conforte'1 Mustang Ranch, Is the other. ' "I think the Count y Com· mission might have won the ba ttl e .'' said Yvonne Antognaui, "but it lost the war 1gainst decency and crime and dope ••• the whole bit." The f i v e -m a n gov,ernlnl: commission of this central Nevada county has schedul~ a vate Tue~ay on i n ordinance licensing brothels. It already has bet.n given terr tative approval. Pro.stitution is toler1ted , but not formally leg11lzed, in a number of rural Nevada coun- ties. j~~~~~~~~~ htrs. Antognazzi, a leader of The proposed ordinance, besides charging a monthly fee of $500 or $1 ,000 depending on the size of the establl!h- menl , would place a number of restrictions on operations. Included would bt a ban on the sale of liqlior, and re- quirements that the hou ses be at least three miles from any city or town and 300 yards from public roads, private residences and businesses. There are five houses of . prostitution in Lyon County, four neair the Lyon County- Clrson City line 1bout eJcht the Lyon County Comm ittee for Law and Order. said Mon- day the commission's decision is .. a tragic mistake." She charged bordellos are constantly linked with crime and narcotics ind added, "They don't bring in fl decen t type of pe.non. They're clear- ing houses for gangst er types." The houses also have 1 cor- rupting innuence on young people, she said, "I ~uppose they ha ve this problem In other placr.s, too, but it seems that Lyon C.OUnty has an abnormal number of young girls getting pregnant," she said. "It's because boys who go to these placu go to their girl friends when they don 't have the money." Saw Asked Of Devices SACRAMENTO \ UPll Supermarkets and co 11 e g e bookstores would be permitted to sell prophylactics under a bill introduced by S e n . Anthony Beilenson tD-Beverly Hills I. Cufrently, only 11 c e n s e d phar1nacies are I e g a 11 y permitted to sell such birth control and health protecter devices ovf!r-the-counter. Beilenson said he specifically h11d in mind col· \ege campus stores for sale of prophylactics . How Chevelle . protects you as you travel. A steel cargo guard between the tnmk and passen- gers for added protection. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Steel side guard beams in the doors provide welcome impact protection. A front seat belt reminqer system· with warning light and buzzer helps you remember to buckle up. · Inner fenders protect againat corrosion and kicked- up stones. Big coil springs at every wheel 'protect against bumps. -. The 1972 Chevelle has so 'much good honest value built into it, no wonder it's the most popillar mid-siZe car on the road . Chevelle lits more familiei, more budg- ets, more garages. Chances are it would fit beautifully into your vacation plant. Stop by your Chevrolet dealer's real 900n, No need to call ahead for a reservation. Bulldlnc a' better way to see the U.S...\. Chev rolet l ' I ' I --- ' ·. OAll y 'llOT JI . . Chiita Seeks ZPG B1 JONA TRAN UNGER Ciwtulas klellott MlllW IW¥tel HONG KONG -Chino, wlt!I • quarter of the •orld'I population, lpPtirl to M Jf'akinj headway lo i t I enormous birth-control tfforta, accordl111 to both the evidence in Canton and travelers' rePQrt's from other provinces. Every young married couple Intervie wed In canton city wanted only two "Or three children, and the young rural famllit!'I Jn Kwanitung J"rov• ince seemingly art not much lar1er. In times pa.st. notl!.ing · was of greater importance to a Chinese couple than a aon to c1rry on the ance11tors' name and blood line. Yet, in Can ton, t h i 1 co~reapondent-m e t several young parents who, t1lthou1h they have o n I y daughters. declare they art satisfied with the sl!e of thelt families. More than one couple reported they had turned tG contraceptives after two baby glrls. . ,Many older Chinese 1eems still to hope for trand.Aons, and a IO(>dfy number stlll put 1 premium on a woman•; fertility~ rememberlnc th t da ys when only two children out of el1ht .could be e1pected to survive. But today '• young adults, for whom plafUel and faminft are juat Ule1 told by tht old folks, often asru witft tht government that 1 m 1 I J mana1e1ble tamilltt an ad- visable. T h e . vlce-chalrman of K w a n I tung'a aerlcultural Tung kw an County, an IX• tremely d e n s e I y populated district of 980.000. rel1tea thit 10 years a10 the county'• yearly population lncrhlt w11 1 very hl1h 3 pen:ent. Now, after 1 decade of mall family· plannlns campa~ the increaae ia down to l.S percent. Most pea11nt couplet prefer three children, he uld. Pek•n1 aeemln1ly doea not believe that a sharp population Increase would present ally dan1era to China, 10 th& Chlnete compotlftl llrell thll l1mlly pllnnlnc mww better h111th !or lht wtle 1nd better care for the chtldrel'l.' \ Chln1'1 ,tant W ff min 'I l'liflil: att&uf .... .,... tMt- pl1nned ]llrtnlhood htlJ>I lrM women from tht conffnea of their household: Slnco lllO, the olflcllll women'• orflllillllon ha1 held that women'• equaU. ty c.n ID08t r11dlly be 1chlev· ed when wlvea can earn their own lncomea outlid6 Ole home. Contraceptlv., are rudily 1v1ll1ble In Chino -thourJI not to unmarried• -and are aold below COi~. Abortiou allO ar• provkltd. often fret, utillz. ln1 a 11tf aaf1 procfdure. For couples who dttU-. chlldren, on the olhtr hind, every effort 11 made to make · th!• poalble. China ll puahlng abltinenc• 11 tbe boot Clntracoptivt for youn1 poopll. The FVenunent recommendt !hit youna ldulll delay marrla1e ao u to devote themselvu to Ch in• '1 political and economic development. Men ar~ ad vlaed to remain tingle until thtY' are rt or 21 and womtta till U -tftd th& young people interviewed In Canton are ll1ttnln1. The reau1t it fewer bible.a. Soine young people do mar- ry etirller, but m1rrta1e is prohlbltld by low until mon are 20 and women are 11. The 1t1tufe It a flr cry lrom the trodltlm·bound Chino or thrtt decadea a10. ·•hen chlld brides bort 10n1 11 teon u nature permitted . For today's marr.ltd1, Intra- uterine devices were until recently the MOit common m11n1 of contr1cqtlon. But they proved lit sultld to the ct>t.1ntry1ldt, where women tlo hea vy manual labor. The pill """ 11 Ille -JIOpullll' ~ tianwlde. Plant Put On Auction SllEl\WOOD, Ore. (UPI) - An •uctlan wtD bl hold -21 to 11U equlpm•t ti the Portl1nd °":i::t. 00. loort. a firm founded ID ond .- by M"'ion Pok J-oi Com)>ton, Calif. Gerald Croullrid1 I COlft. pany IPOk"llllll· uld tbl firm decided lo It!! tht fllCiltlltl after bank financtn& wu M ionler IVlillbtt In Decemllir, Ht _pJ!l-1ht lt I Wi employed •bout 3!0 peroons durtOI the hlrv11t llllOll Ind 16 to IO <hroushout the Y•r la pocklna btlns. o • I on 1 • 11utrkraut.1 thll'ri• 1 r.' plum!, ond pt«wlnJ -1tli~ .. and cane ll6rri<t. I, • I '. \ • ' .. ' • , -. " . .. w~. Ma'dl 15, 1972 \ PILOT ·AOV~RTISEJI J ~ • • If DAILY "LOT • • . ' UCI Will Off er Coastal Studies Speakers Pile Up Top Honors The Orange Coast Ccllege ·~ team won jl! fifth atraJght first pla ce 1weep11lakes trophy recentl y It, the Riverside J u n i o r College Invitational against 30 other schools from Arizona and California. The squad also "look a sixth place 1t the Greater Desert Invltatio'nal in Tucson. com· peUng 1galnst upper division schools. OCC was the only junior college in the top 10. At RiveraJde, Steve Stewart of Coata Me111 took a first in male oral interpretation and a first ln perauasive. Georg!!! Martin of Hun· tington Beach took .s;econd in expository and was a finali st in e.xternporaneous. Brad Sherman of Newport Beach ' won MCOnd in e1· temporaneous and was a finall!t in impromptu. DIM& Gerhard! of Newport BeKh tr.on second i n ~asion and wu a finalist Ji Wemporaneous. Olher llnalilll Included Sam WICfa, Westmillller ; VI ct i noot d Colla Meta and Janel --of HWlllJlfllon ~cb. 'Die clellatt teams 0 r -111111 IJld Wida, ud Larry -d Clalta Mw and -.e Se11eJ If Wellmlnsler -quarllr finallill in fzts"' Certlne,te winners -Al' Gi-of Costa llm _. Kall!J Hannahan of Qlll '"9-M Ills•.,._.,.._..., first ~ ..S Diana -a.lnalist In -'!Na. In lhe - ' ' .. ,. ·~ tlVING ~M; 'DINING ROOM, HALLWAY 'ANO. TWO BfDROOM.S· YOU• CHOltll <DU P-ONT NYL131t. '• COllllr.\llCl·AL TWllDS • • HlllCU~~N · ' I , t • COMPLETELY · $. · · INSTALLED · · OVER LUXURIOUS . FGAM ·PADDING . l' . " ' i , COllTIACTOiSI APAITMENT OWNEISI ·~·1 ·o~NEISI ·:sAVf $$$ YOU.R CHOICE: CUT-ANO.CARRY . 1. NYLON CANDY STRIPE · . ' -. T triilfl~ hr 11111 -; .. ,,, lti'ck 2. NYLON SIAI i ltlul fer Ap•• h11,t11t1 alltl IHffll, NOW 3. INDOOl-~I ,~~: ... E11c1ll..t fer All Al'lllS. . 4 •. FO~ BACKED CAIPmNI Ne Pad NHtltd ... -Ll111lt-.f · QHllitlfltJ 9. SAVE $3,00 COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••••• '4.99 CARP_IT.TILES·SAYI $ feels lik e Velvel -Outwears Other DO·IT-YOu1S1lF Corpets -Eo sy To lns10IL 12."112" --100% '''°" '''". , SAYE 29c · !le NOW SAU ,.ICID., ...... •, EA • • l(ODI,. '"'"~OL09' SIAI DIEP Pty .. . "'1t1 ~ •t 1.: Tll-COL• SIAI I 00% Kode~ Po'!Yllter pile rkh ' • · 99 dttp, luxurio11Jly thlc.k pile. 'MonY Jiii ~ 1 new H~style.<ltooralor three color SAU '"'nan• NAMI IN ,...... . ~ 99" • 100% Fortrel polyester. lush'. deep( long :wtOfing and hard to soi . NOW .. J,00% Dqcr011>palyester ,;iie, beou- tiju[ new, deep sh1111. Eos)'tc main-Mii loin, mbny ·"""' decprotor colors ' SM.£.. tc choose fr~ , PIH:U shag to ule<:I from. Resist dirt f.tm ond sOif stoini... . ~ ~ Stays' beautiful 4 with a minimum SAi.( of coro. //""! resif1tnt. Btouifful PllCll docorolOr tftret color •h\19. . , COMPAIAILI llTAIL ..... $1.99 : t -. .. . . , ; -. • • COMPAR~ILrllTAIL ..... $ •. 99 • . c • ...-......, •• ......__.,....,.......,..,. COMPARAILI lllTAIL ..... $&:99 . • · WESTCOV!llA. YEITUIA ~NAllllM PASADINA COSTA MESA'"• HAND OPllllH 252' l . Werli-a,.. ·2M1 L Mahl It. Mt I. IHIW St~ -2660 I. C ...... 49 •1¥11. 1714 I rt llH· WHITTlll ....... !, Ml-5041 US.7674 577-ltoO .•• ,_ • Soo "'"'~'I" r,,..: IO '""" l.bl0<b Wnt •'• , 21>""" '°""" s,,,..., '"" ""°"""IM"' -645 .. ;it ' 1 15911 L Wltlttler llN. S :. bloc: ks ~et10ll GiiM It Wort· "' · •ivi Points Ol'I ~ ,... ;-vv on fuclid Acl"Ol5 from1Coltf. ·Son Gobritl II~ , Newport IMl of I 7rh St. MJ.Ol •l CANOGA PAii 21031 S~onwea W91 347·2U4 Vtl'lturo Fr~ to (MOIO Awe. friotfh to Shtrl!'lll11 Wrt. ~ right. • J HOl,LYWOOD 1115 I . Yonwaot An. ' .... 7455 . , ...... _ .. _ ... ....... ·-• MONTllEllO 7U W. W111fflff 11'4. , ..... , '""" .. Motl""' ...-..... .TORRANCE 42~6 Art11 i1 llff.• . 542-6H6 . l> l loc.t Iott II ....,,._,. 11'4 ... ..,,...,. " - • • LONG BEACH SAN RANCISCO . 3G01 lellfl•or llY4. MIUllAE s.. Dloot ~~ -"' . HI~ C..IH l•I aw.r... ....., ___ --"2·WS • • • .. . · . ' •• ., . ' -. . . _ pu dro .. mo • n ., fl !fbo "ar lid . ..... .... .H ". ,. • • • '• . I , . Why · Di~ Sheraton Hotels . ·. . Give More 'Than Other~s? ' " . ' 87 CUllTll J. SITOMER ... JOHN DILLIN : , C,hrlltian ScitnCe1 Jlontt~t Strtrict Under'lpOUigbModay la tl>e-by wblch American cities compete "against each other with Clllh bldo Jo attrocl .. lionll political conveft\iouL SucctaluJ bids rttuni a city many times tbelr worth In ,.. ... of natlooal j>ubllclty and In busln... generat..i-by · drovu of candlclatta, delegat., and newsmen who deictnd for a week or more, city ol!Jclill ••Y· ·7'!i&-~ of putllng lo(ether and Of· fiita the' llftls"lirii!irll& · piff of the hw· lliP, by the Senate JlldlcJary Committee ~ allegations bf columnllt .Jltk Alilerion that the illl'!lltic 111-lial , 1)1ePbone I< Te!fll:opll ~ · (~). w11 iuJlty of 111Ji1!oPor _liQnd&icl Ill, •COllnecllon with the Rtpublltan· con-. v"1tion Jo beglll Jn !fen Diego Allg..11." , The allagatlon Is ~t rrr pledged ·to. l'lfl'ihlie up to .14do.blio loWard th( .c<in-· Vtqtlon Jo obtain a fa-ible out-Of-" , . anti-trust oettlement: from the JiJStlce • DENJES l~ROPRI ETY o,partment. It Is cbarled that Acllqg Al· • ~ "··~· Gen. Mltcholl. toi'liey General Richard Rlelndl-· .wu , 7 "' . Jrimved in arranging the matter al well . , f · • • . • . . u (lormer Atlomey GeneriJ,.Jobn N. ,Anothoo "hotel industry source says he Ml!Chell. " bis no re-Jo doubl Chat Shera Ion,'· as ' ITT and Kleindienst and Mitchell all the second biggest local chain, would co_tegorlcll,JIY ~.ani Impropriety. • bJve . been approached for a regular A clMct ~..;~.;ftnaa,K'l''I of ¥.II the ... ,,, ... tin this.way. It is not clur, IU!puWcan .... mmocritlc conventions bowever, wi'l'ther the Sheraton payment . tl>e aupnllon. (I.e., ll0,000 each from both hodiea). Tiie other l>ell-pa)'IDOl1la -holh wm brln1 In $100,000· more. So, the boat committee still bJa $!00,000 Jo raise. Its spokesmen sa~ there Is no problem -Uuit the money " being raJs. ed and will be raised through regular channels. Spokesmen ~ to dllcuas potential ....,.... of money. Locel oboervefs apeculate that a number of San Diego's most promlnent businessmen wUi be tapped, though the pro-Nlaon fund-raisers must beware of tapping Joo many fiscal backm of Gov. Ronald Reagan, who though a IU!publlcan, Is a compeUtor of the Presi· dent for 1Upport.and money-Jn Ca!Uornia. II Is also recalled. in San· Diego that many local J>a1slneamen didn't want the IU!j>ublican convention In the flnl place, 'fearing demonllr1tlons and overcrowding In ·th• ·peak ot the lucraUve louiolst Rl.IOn: ! '· ' ~ . ii' ~iarnl, sourcea 8'Y the city pillled)n the Democratic convention with a borid or some $900,00'.t m-money and aentces. . Contributors incltide: ~Jty of Miami Beach: mo;ooo in goods and services, Including police pro- tectk>n, rfree UN of the conventiQn hall, ~i\:., "":.;.ida Hotel and , MOtel 'AJloclaUon: $15,000 to · $100,000 cash. Amount of the final payment wUi depend upon the number of rooms rented bY con- vention delegates. The party will receive $1 per rilom per night. · tills.year (the,Deipocrall mffl In Miami of floD,000 (and the pledge of an utra -Jlilf 10) ~ turDed up• the following inc '100,llOb) Included the regular, ....,... . formatioD!'. ..... ~ · -ilie!jt. ' . ' ... , S O(fi ! -' ~n'j)f ..... ls"""1.lhm1 of tl>e llOO•llOO II " ll'ls believed !J>at a.normal ~s~s111ent tate Cuu proinlsed the Republican-Parly iA csah for Sheralon would have been a fraction .,iW'I of ill .....,..ftll bid of $1,1111,IOO' 1 lea thin tl>e Atlas poymint ·~ IM 000 A k U S p be If .::...lalid" the convenllonha · .d because Atlas bas 1,325 roolllll Jn the ~lly:. S 8 o o TQ '"·""' $600,000 was .to ve been ma e up and Sheraton ~ have I,fJiO when its of·$11•,ooo from the Jocel ConvenUon and ll thlni hotel Is completed soon. SACRAMENTO (AP)· -Foimer U.S. Vllltors Bureau, another $100,000 from . Atty. Gen. John Mitchell's testimony on tJje local -county Board .or Supervisors, ' The question being uUd in aome the International Telephone & Teleai'aph SAN DIEGO -The City Council has voted 5-4 for adop. tlon ol an ordinance to phase O!A 'an estimated J,000 billboards In the city. Pete Wilson, who gave up his Assembly seat after being eJected mayor last November,' led Councilmen Floyd MoM'Ow, Leon Williams, Jim Bate~ and Maureen O'Connor in1 voUng for, the ban TU.esday. ' Value,, more important than money Include a beautiful place to live, Batu &aid before voting. Signs should be for idenUficaUon and direction, he said. The ordinance "prohibils all ootdoor advertising signs not on the Property of the owner. facilltY ·or product advertised by the algn!,: It iljclades a echedule c;ill· ftig for fe moval by April 1, 1973, of signs.. Valued under $500 and allowing-up to rour years for . removal of signs wllh a.market value exceeding $20 ,000: . However; all olitdoor ad- vertising slllJS within 500 feet of a freeway right-of-way would "haVe to be' removed within 90 days of the effective date of the ordinance. Councilman Bob Martinet, voting against the ordinance, said he regarded billboards as ugly, and wished to lee them removed. ·However, he said a lawsuit against the ordinance would keep ii from being e!fecUve 'for years, and many ' m: terested partieS "regarded such a suit as a certainty. Wilson recited for the coun- cil a poem written by Ogden Nash: "I lhink that I shall qever ahd $400 000 from other local .sources. quarters of san Diego ls Why Sheraton case has prorripted a California state of- :AccOrding to· -publi5lied reports, rrr paid and pl~.so much~more than the ficial to call for further inquiry into "A poem as.lovely u a lree. lftmiaed the· city It would -ct as other hotels in the clty. MJtchell's past as a lawyer. •'tDdeed, · u n t es s the ... "~" for ·l«IO,OOD-to. make it easier It is believed that ne.lther the host i:om-William M. Bennett, a member of the billboards faJI, f~ tho money to 1be r81Md. Sheraton . mittee nor the national GOP comllllttee California State Board of Equalization, "I may not see a tree at &tels, an m subalfilary,~ pve · $100,000 in WaahlQgton· wants• to t1.9e the m sent a telegram Tuesday to the senate au .•• , cUb,'and pledged another $100,000 llJt pledge or tl>e Sheraton P8yment-aJ!d· Judiciary Committee concerning a 1969,ii~;,;:r;:;;~iilj;J.~~ll Wis Deeded on a matchJBi buls It Ii pledge· In· ~ of the publicity ,...-antltrUst 1 case Mitchell's old Jaw !Jrmll ..i.i .. · ' · -' rounding the ashington hearings. handled. '.Alf San Diego hotels are Ullderstood to U !lie host committee cannot call on Bennett contended that the Nixon ad: Ill•• made a voluntary contribution· Sheraton'• alnld)'-jlal4 $100,000, then It ministration decided to slop appealing through the Convention . aod Vlllton appears t1\4t all it bas raised, for the GOP the Utah · Public Service Commission's Boreau. The biggest chairi,tn the city. the · tn Washiniton IO far, in' cash, is $100,000. case against El Paso Natural Gas d>. Atlas Company, contributed $24,000 in This figure is made up of halC-payments because NixOn and Mitchell represented this \Vay, accord.i.ng to its spokesmen. paid so far by the visiton' bureau and the firm before taking office. !.~Now' Class .. '· A 1 DiM1 tllAVIL ·-··-·· . •'i Al Sen&c• -4 a.,.1r 111l "•""' ltvf. CMI• Mnt ., fo~fe~d ·· ·-)Jy USC . · Ws ANGELES. (AP) -For U.O.. majorbig J!i. l~ 'Now Generation, tl>e Unlven!ty of S(luthem Calllomia Ilia <:o.me •P wllh • colirie almld at showing you where.It's at, how jt got there and what to do With it. ·" ·· -: · · ···~ -~· _Bushmills. . , - The "Whis~y ~that :span~.: tl)~generations gap .. · jlf!iclally known as the Graduate ~ l~ Popular CUiture,. ~ program l 1 llinited to 20 dildenll and is lielng conducted by D r . ~atrick M or r o w , assistant P!Of.essor of . i;_ngliJh and Ainerican stud.lea. · MQC'tjtw, who· con.sider s Southern Calllornia • 1 po p cUlture's· Valhallat'' •sats 'tbt . cOurse basically asks "what la happening in popr -culture? '\l'llat is the nliture ·of this Culture? How do I r,act to this culture and why!" , . I, ' I .. Jt ranges froni ' Popular music to television com- mercials, but Is far from being a ,snip course, _says Morrow, • ·~ empnaslm thatcatudenla ' ~Ire required to put forth con- ilderable effort In this lludy. ' "Becaus'.e })OINlar cuitUre Is more a loose, baggy moMler qt a· topic than a neat, Wen- dtfilied dlaclpllne; the 1Je111lnar'1 pl ls Jo try to pull Ille llllbjecl matter together !ft. lo,90me shape: by working Its j>hdle1S apecillca toward I01iie 1eneral concept!/' he 11y1. "tt is a 'Course orlenlt!d.toward ~ieotea, ': ~~ uy1. ·• , -Field-1r1pi--aie i\in) li!lflra! port of the curriculum, Wilh '1illl IQ_ theaters, 'nick C»n-~·-uaorted "haPIJl!llblp" ~ lich popdar en- l'lrt,al n m_:.i n :,.ZU~ .~ .. --'"nie elm lllo vJJtll private ...... to pin .an inllghl lnlo llow pop culture Jnftuences the lllHiyl• both of Individuals · * famlllel, Morrow aya. I He lnllsll tl>e _... ilni all llllompl to "gtmrnlck and Jn" an otherwise standard lhlldate aernlnar. . ,. For 300 years, a whi1koy from Bushmills hu be_e,,. with us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, polished and altogether lighthearted fa shion. 15 gene11tions have refined it. 1 S generations have sipped il Theverdic~Nearp.erf ection. Bushmill;, Full of ch•racter. But'not heavy-handed about it. Flavor· lulJBu! nt'ler over-Powering. Bu!hmllls_ It reflects the poll wltha.lllht•nd lively flavar 1h1t iull I.Oday. Compare it to your present whiskey. You needn't purchase a boule. OnC"slp at your favorit e pub will tell you why Bushmills has intrigued so many gen· • eraitions. It is, simply, out of sight. . ••cxrm-.. --· ----·---·-·----.... ·-· · -------· .. ·-···--· BlJSHMJJ ,I S · ~ l'lllMlHI WOIU>'S OlJllST DISTIWn ' • • 1 . •. ' AP..,.. ' . Blacl •a• L14. • , . Pott 0' Call HO HO COME TO THE FAIR ' LIDO SHOPS JOIN · . RICHARD'S MARKETS' 24th BIRTHDAY NOW THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 11 On Via Lide On Nawporl llY<I .. AlltllilllJ custom Shoe Service KING'S UDO ARCO Llk• \HWl-lhfft, i..,., •10,.•t•• 1.,.. 1i4ek, T,J. Sh\~'° ' ' . Y•ut ctr HtVl1M wllll• ., .. .i.., .. u • . -••1119' -!!J-"h••lt, s. .. ••t+lll•1t.. •. . ... PlAlf Ill ,,, catr . ·All•'S • ht. "''' H.rrl1 ~•ei1, S111lllwick. ~ ~ ,,,~., •• hl1h •• 11 •. APROPOS Gt••t cl•th11, llll'lf 1h•11. F•r wi1111•f ·~' .. 8. P. HOWES & SON F1111 ;.w.1.111 hft1•Nl1N1ry 1-.4 1111i'111• f•w1lry; &l"f'lf•I •*' •hh11, BANK OF AMERICA F11ll Mt'ti•• .. tdi111. kit lt.1A1, M•11ty rfllri:\t•T11•Mf'lrl•11t ••rvlc•. BARROWS L1cll•• 1p1rhw,1r, l,tu111•w••r .~ l11f111t 1111!1'111•. BIDWELL D•v~I• •t11t1 •••I' 1 111111 h1,,., If ht ftf th1111 If J1tk't, GENrBURTON LMy'1 1,Whw•pr tlityl1 ~•11, J11k "'"" ~1.,.,.: ''"''· GREG'S FABRIC 'BOUTIQUE 011111111 11111,111, c•vtvrltf ••• ,1 • ., trimt, it11tlo111, it111•l11. On Vii Oporte BERKSlllR£1S l1•utiful •t•w of tho t.1y, f1t lwtcli, 41111101, c•c .. •ilt. BUCKMAN, L m. . . . J•w•l•rt. "Cifh kfr1y th1 f1110 toll• 1f !ho 1i•1r." GI MON E'S T11l•fuU, tlltclH c11w1I to k#Mtf llr111•1, 1cc1111rl•1, t••· B L .. i •.JO Y'''" H'4rle1111 ill i*tt11tl 1"41 ll111i11•11 1 •• ,..1 lhl'I• ••'••· oft Via ~Jdo HllWll'd Lawson Jr., hilt« • R••ltor f9r ••duh•• ,,.,.riltt, w.h•fii- 1 w y•11't• ~11yl11t 1r 11)11 .. 1, DfERW. SAVlllCS •• , •• ,11 .... 1th pl1111 '•" .... ,,.w •• 1111,.1111. UDO FASHIONS . LIDO TRAYll ! 'l•••r••tl•111 111yw•1t• 111 th• w14t w1rl4 •t 111 ••,...I•• •h•rt•· ~Ilia THEATRE AIWl'f1 fll. f11111t Ill •11rr•11t Mt•I• 111• I I f•rfllllPlllnf, 1 PORT O' CALL PWllOIA Artful .,,;y of 1111,•rtU .... 1 11111• r '. 111111, 11tl1tv11,. •ll1l11 ,...,..,. • llCHARD'S LIOO CDITEI • SECURITY PACH IMI C11111,ltf• '\111hiflt 11rri1ot. "Lit tt h yeu1 fl11•11d1I 1'•rffl91," , YIA uao m - 11,,.". •01Mtllt1, ;orfVll'lt, Jtw61ry. · t lfh, ,1.,. ''"''r,tl• ,i,11.,,.,. • ' v .__ ...... Jr-~'""l"':''l\"I!' _ __;~ on . • ' ' 1 ...... • • - • • l { .. , .. • JI DAllV PILOT Sttrpri•e }love Political Scene Youth Confesses Candidates Keep .Joe Busy For the Record I Birth• . '\ :::i ~ •• ::1.r.:1.'.0:::...-'ri... -~~tAL ,N~i~M= ~ '~.i!fl l M By 0. ~·HUSTINGS \ M" -I ., M" '"' ..,. -~ ~w.,,,. Anahe1·m· . urder ' ..... "'" .... .... . _ W11U •· ~MM Sl•t•A1'. A.!i:::.f'::•JI!'!. "''·.,., .. ~"· Hiatt. 172 Mf0of':J:;;~r '"'°" t . rrr~"~r,. SACR.U.fENTO -The =:;,. • ..,.. --. 1• ,.,.., ...,,. "'' • political Season also la: a busy W "--II L ... 1••7 Mr • ~J. L'l tf, H\ll'lltt, 4'tt Mr~ ..... -..,.~ .. kni• ~!l,li'i ... f:~"ri:::t~~~. ~•('~ .... ~,1 tline of year for Joe Barr, "i ..• 1 M..,',.. ~. •.i. 1~·.,..,,.., ....... 1.~ "",· •nd Mr.. otwt M. ,...,, 4 w. SANTA ANA -A young col-Undeboom'1 conviction put chief of the state Divis/on of "' ""~ --•Y · ''" •'· c111" M ... , 111• J •uc1 t changed ••-mind n end •· heavy ·-··1·ly d · r..,, 1 Mr. and Mr1. Jl.khtr~l(~lw, * ege "~ en ,,.. a w .......... Hlgfi"ays' Outdoor A vertts-M~ ~ )· "U:_!''.'!.IM, ~ Mt'i~ 'l.:Ti'i1am ; ~1frtctt. Hoe Tuesday as Jury selection precautklns for what was ex· ing Section. ~jr, lt;:'9.~·~ ~ 1: ~::E!t..t.~,,GW:.,ll:L '21·• ~~~~ ~ Or~de;-oo:.~ ~~9~e': :~w«;::::S~ Joe is the guy who is in ~.::' ~ b::!~ f,trcY, lt::L "· Mr AG'?: "r1.'P J. khw•tf. and admitted the ldlllng or hls the public seeking entry to the charge of making sure can- . Mr. _, Mn. 111::.,f'lt.1.,.._ ~" .. .,.ur2,;';Y.1;,, s.~.;:r-,.. Hunt1ns1on ----~-were ~-•-• for didates ror political office In ~."JI!!>-.~~ !"!.:. .-. "' former girlfriend. ' ~w •~• "~-' ·":'ii'~~ 111CN1t'tt• ~=.~~-~l~·leir.E ~ Lawrence Edward Llnde-. WeaPons following reports that Dm' ner Set California don't clutter up our ,.,_ ""~ •.,.-, -·". """"· _, "'~r~~N.rlt.:~·~. M..!~';rr1~ boom, 22, Cypres,,, asked an attempt .would be made to 8 hi1_'gnsghw. ays with their campaign ~ __ 11oy Mi;:,_~ Mrl. Jwr1 M. 5Ufft. 1•1• w. f · free the def~-nl Mr.-. .., .. J ~:"" IMF.:34:· ""''AM, bllY Judge James Turner or 1rn-gJWll "':!,;,, •· "~ .. •l',,~·,l,l~ "!i,..:.f."l;.~,.li,.~ "'~ medtote sent.nclng on his plea It was leljt!le() that the Jile At Goodwill Thi• year. Joe has been "" ~~ ,.• ~~ 11• of guilty to charges of second of a super¥>r court judfe \!.·as 1Jl8.iling candidate information ~ ' e..a.. •lr1 • degree murder. He drew five threatened In a senes of packets prepared by the "'.:..:=.. ¥!,:; ·,. ... .... • Easter Seal years to me 1n state prison. telephone calls made before In· dustn' es · division of highway• to . office Mr. '"' Mr'i. 1111n w Uluii, 1~101 the trial. · seekers just as soon as they """°"' G-4, GllrlNft Grov•, boY ""·,:1. ~ .._,.,.,,....,.,.ex ktOll S b The Cyprtss Junior ,College file for their nominating .:. ... '{1.i..M~" •. 'i;' "" Push Starts traw erry otudent admltted that be SANTA ANA -Dr. Harold papers. The packet lncludu ,J. "~11~'1. ~· ' 'Ii t , .oz atabbed Janet HeyendahJ, 18, Wilke, a member ol the board an explanation of Calitomla's J.?,::•£,,;r~ :m~l~: •• :,~ F~; Anaheim, as she l~t an of mfectors of G o o d w i 11 Outdoor AdVertising Act plus °' Yt, ,... • ot•• . 'io, J·n County F; nld Day Anaheim Elb Club dance last Industries'.. ot America, wiU 'be an applicat,lon form ror tem- Mr. ,,.,; Mrt; '01:W.1' , SM w. 11c;. Dec. 4. porary sign permits. · w11-. •· c:111t• M"'· "" Im ho""d ed the · keynote speaker ,of· the Th "· I th 6Mr. ..w Mrt. Fr•~""' ''"''" F ? The vict , w JW sever local orga••••t1'on's ann' ual· e perm1..., rom e ,..,,.,_ ""4lr~Z.'i1J:i"'' •1rt ORANGE -"U You Don't orever • her relationship with Llnde-........ division of highways go for SO 'Mr, .Mid M". Lll'rv L uii:tier, '"''" Have A Crippled Child Will boom two weeks berore the feport to the community di,,. cents per sign. w. 1tt11 ¥._,._, eo,,, ~ 11r1 ' I h h ~--' M.~1 ':f. Cf'· T"•~ ~~1'1:', .-. You Help One of Ours'" This SANTA ANA _ What would attack, died a short time ater ner Marc 21 at t e vvvuwill And the c~idates better '"•r ~~ .. .., 'f.,Ct.' 1 he · · give a pomologlst a real In a loc!l-1 hospital. Rehabilitation Center. boQe up on the sign laws. ""~ ~ , h . H.tonck.,, l t me has been adopted by Illegal signs will be removed, "',.· %',., r.·J:J11.,,., om the Otange County Easter charge? How ab o u ti a DI:· Wilke is also a member 1111Pn1r1. Hunt cin ••Kfl, llt'f Sti'awherry field day. of••-board of di'rectors of ..... _ says Barr. Good luck, Joe. Mr. .,.,.. Mn.~ci. e . H•lfl, i1~ Seal Society for 1972 ao-UC F • -~ "'"'"UM, Cltll bor I The -· I St berry ore1gn Mr • .., Mn. • W11111ma. 10J. cording to Eugene F. Tutt, ~1 annua raw National Health Council, and . * President o•lhe u t nit Field Day, slated March 28 at ri--•11 '"'at'--. • co n Y U · the World Commi'8ion on SENATOR MUSKIE'S _ ...,,.. '" """ Tutt str th t by I · UC Irvine's South Coast field r·· esses a usng Ed ti• Social Aspects of I · Lo Ang J tw UC Hc..:aa the Easter Seals on ,all station, will show improved -UC8 OD p em s e es say o "" o. ~"· ,_ Mi r..f.'' '· personal and buiineu maU types of strawberries t o Re}\a6ilitation. He has served Irvine student leaders are sup-'I~ , ,.,.~}l.""t:n.~'t:; countl.ans will be helping ~ growers and nurserymen from as a consultant to government porting their man. Steve • • 1wo~r:r Mr•...:"'J call attentloe to the bnportant all strawberry growing areas Plait Set anct ·other official groups in the Chadima of Downey, one. of ., Mr~'· ti'::~~\:~ work .of the Euter Seal Socie-or the state. U.S. and internationally. UCI 's two . student bod Y ;'M i· •. =~:-=:"':.'II ty in terVing the nteds of the Victor Voth, UCI pomologist Tours or the rehabilitation presidents, and Mark Re.sig of ~ Mor'tvu.... 1:~:,tj1nt . 01,... . community's handicapped. -in l:harge ol s t r ,a w b e r r y Counseling for students who and workshop facilities are Laguna BeaclJ, editorial'direo-ci.•••"~'· . Funds received in the an-research at the experimeotal w<MJld,.like to participate in the scheduled to Start at 6:15 p.m tor or the student newspaper, J:~ ~~h. 'f:!!~°"~· li: .nual ·campaign atay in the unit, say1 150 growers will University of California preCeding the dinner at 7:15 "New University;" are pump-~ ·N'~~r:,c'Ti'·?.=lw".'1~',T. county and go directly to sup-take part in the selection and Education Abroad Program _P;_·_m_. ________ ~ln--=-g_f_or_lh_e_M_•_in_e_Dem __ oc_ra_t ~ j-=-lf/"wM-" ', "",l,',~11,,' port.the work of the 80Clet[.'s cultural displays and take part • ....,,, E of he fi Id 1 during thelr college careers ls I W::"C.""':n:::' ~~·i:·~!'"rn . as.ter .sea I Rehabill1-t on in tours t e stat on. ~Jr.;, ~n~C .:;r, t • · Center for Crippled ChiJdren The unit Is located at 7601 now available at UC Irvine wt- on the local e1mpus. ac-Viejo YMCA d~edor; Richll<I cording to the MfuikJe fol.ks. Preston, a B o y Sc o u t organizer; Herb Slater, an aerospace executive; Mr. and Mn. Dale Barkalow, Caliror· * TAKE ME to your capitol : . nia Real · Estate Association, There seems to be plenty o! and ,.lrs. Eileen Padberg, who candidates willing to take on •tpects to be on hand as a Rep. John Schmitz, who is bld· Nixon delegate a_t ~ GOP ding for a second tenn this N~tlonal Convention 1n San year. Apparently, they . think Diego . Schmitz is vuloerable. because of hJs remarks of late about President Nixon. One of those who will battle Schmitz for the 3 9 th Congre.ssional seat In this year's GOP primary is Earl Carraway, a mortgage banker recently elected to the Tustin Union High School District hoard. Among those attending a re- * FIRST DISTRICT supervioorlal c a n d i d a t e Wallace R. "Wally" Davis has . been appointed to state .Al·' torney General E v e 11 e Younger's Volunteer Advisory Committee. Davis, 9912 Aster Circle. Fountain Valley, practices law in Santa Ana. cent organizauona1 meeting I -,~r;;:J.~i;;:J.~;;a::n for the Carraway campaign were Genevieve Nutto, past presldenl of the Leisure World Republican Club; Vi r g In i a G:arvtr, OraOge .County DAR; Jack ~olley of Newport CET YOUR TRADING TRAVEL VDUCMEllS AT· McD.1tt1ld P.J .. Stor• 1111 H•rllOr llfll, ,,,,. M-.. Beach ; Rex Shaw,• Missi~on~~~~~~~~~~ WANT A . · UTILE LUV? Try Connell Chevrolet March 23rd. . ' 2821 HARBOR Bl VD, CQSTA MESA 546-1200 ..,..ll],., ~11 , oil• MeN. and Adµlta in Orange. Irvine Boulevard in Santa der the' direction of Professor 1. ~~\!'-~ .. The centir.. offers com-Ana. . Jay Martin, EAP coordthlnatoad-r. • ., • w11:, ?:Ir;, 1w\ ,.l"; pre hen 1J v e rehabllitaUon Newly named to e . ,;ren ::,r.n~· IJ,.-~=1.':C:L servicet' to physically ha~ Prof' Gets evsi'°tabryu-r'ed't'an°'E·d~ac~11: 1111 ·111119h, W'l .. M 1 1111.,., dicapped children and adults au "' ,n .":' '11x ':':":"n d ,'{"r. • 1 c~ suffering ·disabilities caused Abroad Program office in ~ ~I '~~~ •;nl"r_::,1r~-:; by accident birth defect and Trailer 409 near the· School of &i 11twmtn1, ,.tcHIC1111w Mt.rn«1.. ' ' F II hi Humanities at VCI. Ms. Helen P•nc.'fl•mll"iJ:J&i,'/::. •lllllnt to diaeaae. Such servicea-lnclude e OWS p dmini tr I FREE i:=Ja"'1:"''" ~:..i c;..'t'M":."li pbfslcal therapy, occupatlonaf . . Stanley i' a ' at ve a.t1on .If/If t'llt Ml«lctl\ c.11<.,. therapy h nd I assistant. Appointment. may • 'Kine ~AU-~M'"'"',.,., Dlrtcto1;•· tbet ' 8~1 8. 1 ~ge· Dr. Richard I. Frank of be made by calling 13U3"1. ~M. YHll'l'!;_ ~" 12 • .., "" apy, 8 ogica es g, Laguna Beach·, associate -Martin said applications are -~· ..,,,, 'it'F:t H111t111. O•t• of ps~soclal services special n--i;, ~rc11 ~ l.',Y~1l:'11 ~ education f 0 r handicapped lessor of cla~lcs and history still being taken on1y for host ~l:t. r~·Mi~"l_f'I~~~ 'i1 childreri, Poot therapy, recrea-at UC Irvine, has been award· EAP universities at Paris, ~anc1_.~!~ t!:mJr~.!ifi:'i!~'Ci tion for_handiclpped children, ed a renowsh lp by the Bordeaux and Mexico for the ~~~=~lrJro!-."':"';;;....Y and more. American Council of Learned 1972--73 academic year. . "AiiiruCKLE • BON . WBBTCUl'F MORTUARY Cl'/ 11. 17111 81., Coll<• M ... . ··-••• BALTZ .BKllGERON .. • 1"UNBllAL DOME corona 611rMlr ' l'IMIM Colla Mai ' 1111411 • 1lll:LL lllOADW AY MOR1VA11f: Ill BrpodwlJ, Colla Meta IJ I-NII " •· HeCORMICK ~GUNA llEACe MQRTUARY 1111 ~'C..)'11111!1. ·-u· • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORW.PAU Cemetery • MorlqrJ CUjiol 1111 Pactne Vlew Drm Newport Bu,cb, c.Jllonlll flt.l'I• • PEl!K FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME 1lll llol11 Aft. "nmwt;· 11131111 llMITllS' MORTlJAllY 11'1Mall81. Dutmltoo Be1dl llllAt Gpal for the Easter Seal Societies for study or the Students I n t e r e s t ed in Campaiglt fn. Orange County modern historiography of the particJpating in the Education bas been set foi' 1135,000. The Romin Empire. Abroad Program during 19'73-- . ··•-~•· Ea•·-•nc1a The 18,000 award will enable 74 either as )llldergraduates or camt-'6'" alWJ •.a-DU Y' bhn to do ftsearch in Europe graduates shOuld contact the April%. · , d I bbatl II . U f II Aiding the Orange C.Ounty ur ng a aa ca eave m EAP o Ice or ·counse ng on Society in its erforl! to raise the tm-7:1 academic _year. He study ·plans as soon as money m the 1972 Easter Seal will ,.analyze the studies of tbe possible. The office also ad- Campaign ls actor Arthur Hill, Roman Empire pw'llled dur· vises ~ fin a n c I a J ar· who la chairman of the Easter Ing the 200 years since the rangem"l:nts, passports and Seal campaign in Orange wr>rk of lath Century English visas, draft clearances and C.ounty. Orange c 0 u n t y • s:l..::~h:ls:to:ri:an:':Ed:w:ard:::G:lh:ho:n:.:::;;:t:ra:n:sporta~=tl:on:.::::::=:;:=i Easter Seal Child is Scott II Elmer,~ of La Habra. I II .~~:r·,i:;~ 1~·~ .. \':; OPALS R·UBIES · Seals or those who would like . . . addJUonal seals should wrlte the· Easter Seal Rehabilitation I 11 ::~. 1: ca~· ~1:1a 1n ~MERALDS DIAMONDS LET'S BE fRINllY If you have new nclghbon or know of anyone moving to o~ area, please tell UI ao that y.•e may extend a friendly welcome and help them to become acquainted in t,helr new surroundinp. Sa. Coast f ISitar 4M-U1' 4'4-9361 Barbar flSitar '46-4174 I SAPPHIRES II PERIDOTS I TOPAZ . II AQAMARINE I AMETHYST II ·GARNETS I • • Penonal!zed • Stylish • Effldent Order p.,. YourMlf or 1 Frltn<t May l,, used Oft envelop•• ,., return eddress le.bels. Also very hendy '' idtntificetlol\ leb.J5 for mMlcin9 personel item' such •1 books, records, photo,, .. c. Lebels ,tick on 9lit1s end m1y be used for merkin9 ~ome cannN foc:d ltem5. All lebtl5 ere printed with 1lyll•h Vo9u1 !yp• o• IJ01 qu1lity whit. gummed ~•per. • r .. ---------------1 PIA 111 flllt cfft.. cll11 •IHI -11 Wiil 11.u tt: · I .,..., """'"" l.•IMI Dh,., P.O .... It" • I .qi.n M--. C•llf. 12'26 I . I l---~~!-~!~J!~~-~-J· • OFF. • • EST A.BUSHED 4JTEifRS HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR IL VO~ COST A MISA 54S.t4H TAX .RETURN . . PR~PARATION DEPOSIT $3,000-., • -.., anng ..... ......,., • l'lcffic s..;.., .,d receive FREE Pl..,.•don of your penonal fldtnl .and Sbtt'tu returns. Some peopN will a.ti $200 to $300 or mort in .:counting fe& (This oh 00..'t 1Pft1: to corporation, pmin.W.ip, butinea or simil• 1'turns.J PROFESSIONAL -..-.. -win ---........... -· .... ,,, .. you ....,.. ..., pollible benefit under th• tax law, E8Ch rn..m will th• be tris>'Hhecked for ICCUnCY by h~--·.,,..whtL All -II .... io tho prrflcy of YoUr l'odfic SM1191 atfico uslog tho troiMCI penonMI of TIX Corpontion of ""-ice, formerty Skw Ta Stmee, Inc. Thil f'irm, started in 1946, is 1hl w:ond la'glllt • compmny in -.e Unitld Stftla. TlMy cumntly employ oiw.-4,500 counstlon 1nd tt... _ ............ 1,oOo,000 .......... ' ' WORK GUARANTEED -by Tm<~ .. of Amlrica. Guaranteed Accuracy. -.. Tri,..._... far --of .,..........,, • reproduction. If .. '°''"'" ..... 11'1 lnOI' .... tint in .,., PINhY ,. in ... t. chwga, they will pay this penalty ot in~ ~ Guaranteed Protection. lf.,.., ..,.,. •..-by,,,. Gowemmen~ ,,,.., will hn11 .. , W detwila It no..,. indudin1 Npl-•tlti• ~ 1n 1Udit conr.r.nc... BRING OR l1AIL-................ dflco••-·s.m.-.,.._, .. odd_.._., .,._. 9CCOUnt IO thlt it CM bit Yllld.ad. At the _,. time, wa wMI ltt up • 11p1Cific appoi ntment for you 10 meet• tlX counlllor at •tin mot,t cionnnilnt 1IO you . ' PLUS -Y~ "' 1 FREE Slfo Dopotit Box, _,,icl ch.., FREE T,........s O.ecks up to $2,500, FREE ~of-. FREE Notary S...icl ood FREE Floondol C..Olll"'9. AND-your dopooit -.111,.. -m lo• -"'ftwo yw 1*6,000·mioi...,,,I c.tifia1o occount -514% S*' lnftMI in 1 one tD flw yWi Cwdfk:d9 ICCOUnt or 5" Pll' annum in 1 NIJll• "•'-ook wount. Ill ..---.....,. REMEMBER-,.. quallly , ... 1111 ti. -'"" -only,.......,"'"' dlpooi•" ,.. ""' ~ •dfkl• .... idlled. tf you hR"I 1n ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, bring us your prnbook ll'ICI w. will trwtw your -.. -far you. mi,. IOod until -but'not blyaod April &, 1972. so .HURRY--yourdopooitTOOAY-......... -byour...:...offlclfar-.iofonnotioo. OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Mond1y.frid1y 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. S.turd1y IO:QO A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA THE MALL OF ORANGE Bristol St. at.Sin Di11911 F,llMly, Costl MISI Tustin Ave. at M11ti Ave, Orange PHONE 54CJ.40&8 PHONE 637-4582 acific .. .._.. . av1 ngs UD LDU ASSOCJATJU ----------------~----- THIS CBCI WICATE GOOD FOR a'1 111D TAX .RETURN PREPARATION ...:=a.cllica::la~nge ..-:-----' Jiii::J' • ..... llMCIAn. -' ' I \ t I t ' r a k e fi t t ' k w tu ca t;\ g th ch er lo d' w I• hr u th SU hi th ca 8 ta co ca de Yo wh w WO La re tor He Iha ha lio cle tha hy the po art ter cir thr whl hul hav cha me stri doc lac pha te you . ref 1 whi F at No don y )'IMI .. er.. - 8 'ILOT.AOVl:RTISER .. If You're . . c ID, Tell Family . By Dr. Peter SttJncrobD "--Dear Dr. Sleincrohii: I am sure my nervous breakdown began with a guilt complex. For months before my husband died I treated him as a lazy so-and·so, unaware he was sick. After hi! death , I was unable to comfort myself with the thought that he had kept his illness from me, as hard as I tried to do so. Don't you think that husbands should let wives kilow when they are gick ? -Mrs. C. COMMENT: What I have been slcying for years bears repeating : A hu sband or wife merely increases the partner's anxiety or gui}t feelings by (·e·~!f.M~1 keeping an illness secret. Before marriage, and after, each should be a health "con- fidant" -should know how the other feels. Otherwise, there is apt to be unneces.ury suffering on the part of btlth ,. patient and marriage partner. 1 recall a man like your tius- band, Mrs. C. He suffered from angina pectoris. Sud· denJy became lazy around the house. Wouldn 't help with keeping the lawn trimmed ; wouldn't even hang up a pie· tUre. Ju.St sat and sat after he came home from his nffice. .Jiis wife and children ac- tOaJ!y called him lazy and "no good" to his face. All the while the poor fellow was suffering thest pains on the slightest ex- ertion. But, stubbornly, he refused to tell his family about his disability. "I don 't want to worry them," he said. In ma int aining this fallacious philosophy, he only brought unnecessary anguish upon himself, and worried them more later when they /suffered guilt comp lexes after his sudd en death. "Why didn't he tell us?" was the sorrowful cry. I advise people not to broad- cast their illnesses t n associates and friends. but to take their own family into full confidence. Only in this way can they expect full un- derstanding and cooperation. You worry your family mnre when you don't tell them than when you do. Dear Dr . Steincrnhn: I wonder if I am mentally ill. Lately I've had trouble remembering names. My. doc· tor says it is only temporary. He charges it 'up to the fact that during the past year J . have had three major opera- fions, lost a son in a motorcy- cle accident and have learned that my wife needs a hysterectomy for cancer of . the uterus. I am only 'J7. ls it possible that I already have arteriosclerosis that ls in· terfering with my b r a i n circulation? -Mr. B. COMMENT : You have gone through enough in a short while to try the courage of a bull. Of course I can't say you haven't some athcroslerotic changes causing failure of memory. But I'm inclined to string along with your own doctor who believes that your lack of memory is a passing phase due to emnlional and tension factors . If he thoug~t you had mental illness he'd . refer you to a psychiatrist - 1 which he hasn~t. has he? • For ~1rs. J : You have made e mistake many make : run- g off in all directions, can- ting this specialist and that. Now you are confused and don't know where to turn ne1t. What 1 su~gest is that (if po!sible) each patient ha~e a ftmily physician as adviser . Then they won 't be running off to see a surgeon when they __ really need to see a p 1ychiatrl1t ; to a d,tnna19logist when !hey need an allergi.31: to a heart 1pe;clallst · when they really ~ to consult one who apeclallzes In treating em· pl\ysema . Your family doctor will tell you If., when, and where to •k specialized diqnosla and treatment. Often. he can take care of your problem ade- qu1toly wllho11t help. 'KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Soturdoy1 in Th• DAILY PILOT -- 1 . . > l. HAVI YOU VISITID OUlt ,HIW STOltl ATt f'OUtnA• VALL rt -'""' ........ St. •1 Tl__,, '°'*'Allll VAll•'f -1•141 IWIW .................. , CO'TA JllllllA -t• H•,., llllt. •I ,, ..... It. (0$TA Jlllll14 -ttl I 1,_ If, ·-31222 caowN YAUEY PAPAY A!ID HUHURST IN WllllA NIGUll I L TOll:O -II T.,. 11 t•ti.111 11: ... •Ulof'Tlllle1"0111 llACM -Jilli IMCll llWI, It Ati..tt IANTA AN.A -1 .. W. lflllttf' _. l rJ1t.1 St. WISTMINSTl•-4111 ~ltuttr 11 Golcltrl Wal MUHTIHOtON llACH -tMI A•1111i •I .,..,.,..,... NUNTINOTOH 111'.-,C-H -... ell tM I•~ MUNT ING(Ofrt llAC"-W•l'Mr .-, S«ir.oui. •• ' • No Liq-· 11 tho . W•lmin-, .vm.,. Conter, ·llMch IJ¥d.· 11 Atl1nt1, AdlMi 11 Brookhurst Storos., THRIFTY SCOOP PURCHASE $19'5 Value!· lairolr s C•rmen I Hair Setter .. ""''•· .,. _,.., $ 66 wiril ,... ,.,... 17 lty ' J=loirel, c~~ • ..., liolr 5 mtyle yo11 6"1re t+i• i1t-· /stanl -yl Co~illl 4• J11to1bo, 9 lort• & , _II ,.11.,., ONLY AT THRIF·T.1 AT THIS LOW PRICE! .,... _ _. -ps $14'' Dacron 3-Lb. Fill Sleeping Bag • 33x75" Flnbhttl Size • Coij Flannel Lining . J~~~j s1 .o•• ~~=~'.:;:~~~~~· ·c • ...,. ..... , .1 .. ,w111 ltot wtth !"-3 llii. Docl'OIO· ,.1.,... ... tlll, ,. • 'clltttl1t flc1111n1I linittg. fully -llutnlrlpp.d with 100% 11~ ,.,. 1 Ht• -r " 1ipp.d , .. 11th1r. lldlHally fallie•I • $)61 A11phon • $J 11 Btrlium Riff • '1" Mlddletin Bind '3" Mastlrcraft Pipes •Mee ..... u.e4 • lHttiwC....-M' ··-· Minkrc,.ff pifMI 111 '-· .... ,_,..1or at1.1 ... How •t • Tlwift)I D~oit Pri<•. Duncan Sinclair Scotch Whisky Fifth GallH HALF GALLON SPECIALS . J: W. Dant: Old Styl• Whiskey -$nil& Half Gallon 7- 0ld 'Mi11•r Dry Gin Half Gallon Bradley's Deluxe llenclecl Whiskey $789 Half Chllon · W1lll1•'1 I Piece -. ,.,, J••••lfl \ --of-~ __ ... _ .. , __ , ...... _$3 8 ....._.. . ., ffwit., ...... _ .::r.:;.. All -9 ......... ---------~ IM% Pely1mr W1•1•'1 Shirts ~·-.. ---...... -.............. 1 ....... $2'' --i.--... ---.. 11. . ' I • Thrifty Further Discounts These ~ 18 TOP SELLING ALBUMS ,_ $5 00 to $1000 Values $5" Mfn. list YOUl CHOICE OF • FM & AM·l11r11 C1rl11 It 11 IHH ·ltlt IHH • Care It . JlffJ luol1 : • la~ I'• A W11t YH • lrul • Ptllf . Peltr hrriw 'I ' CllOkwtrk Or111•. S11lllr10k • Mmlll · Ntll '"'' .-..-..::::~1 If • ht l1l11t1-l1.-11 llptfttt • Kill tr. Al~t Ctt1tr • M111!i1 l1 tit Wiit • Jl1l M11lrl1 • F11r • l1U1,,111 ~.;;,;.;;,~111 • '"' tloFtill • lllOk Oak AlhHH . • Amtrl". Amtrlca • Y111r. llftH l ll10k. Alttu Fr11klil • fraflll • YIS .'lb list ti Mil1lrltSJri111 111rtir • Molo ·Milo ~~'.;:;~~ • Plctir1111'11 Elllllll11 • E•tnH, Lilt l P1h1tr · tJ. ~ --® l(\.tillinl ~4 ~~ Mn1facturer's List Price $5.91 I.Cent Top Hlr • • SterH Albu111s· , •• , f•Mrii. ,.,.rtl1t1 • •·••t•£t If •Inly S1ri '11ltll • ,. llllJlll •Jncals •"-MUl11 • bl llllrt! s197 faWi.,r-a--.111 of..,...· olb111111 .• , .... cVt eltllt IM.1 -;. p,..1,.... Still .. 11 • Ing lot f111I prlc• i11 ...t rw•rd .,.,. Dutstndi11 Selectioa Recent Top Hit 8 Track. Tapes l.,Artl1tel frnli •ff tt.1 t•, .. u.r. 111t1 • W11lll1 F111&1 iO tJtMllNSI •INC. • t1c11s. • Pt1s llltnl s2" Top .. 11.,. 111 P.P,, C•Ynlry lo W•1ltr11, lftlyth111 & ., ......... 11 )'611r f1M1r ilft at o low Thrifty Ditc•Ynt Prk•. 43!... Nestle King Size ..... il .... Jussy Lip Gloss or Eye Shadow Caindy Bars 3 ';";. aac . C•ld Crea111 Face Soap '2 ... $1 00 ..• Choice ef Miiii Ch-I~ Al-Ml «. CrVMJ.. «il!f .MJ!o• 8 ':' 57c Up G1 ... « 11e11..,rel IMlii111 ..i.. 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Big Savings For Youl Ch•i<• •'1 SKurlry !nwlop•1, JJ'1, ltl119 Script En.,.l•l'•a, l00'1o l•h.or11 "ddr111 f11.,.lop•1, 4J'1, -'lril'10H f11.,.l•p••· •0'1, 10~ l•1ol l 11••lop11, AJ't, 123 Sh1•I l"'l•d Tobl•!t atd 12~ 31woot Plai11 Tabl•I\. $J5" & $Jf'5 Yaluts Oor. Enry4or law Prlco $12,M &.$11.1• Deluxe Style Pole LalJlpl Your Choice =:.I~ :~~·~1.::~~ s9t 6 lleh1t111 .. yo11r hcl111e. C..pl•I• & t•ody ta ln1 .. ll. U!. oppr ... d. • $11.11 ·I Anw N1.,f ... Pl ... ,,f, "'111.11 • J Ol•11 IM4t l1rfJ A..,lc111 • $11.11 ·4 SIMl41 c,UMtr ltfl1 • $12.11 •lt1·C1l1r l wUtt 1"4• . Compare Tt Dtbrs Selllnc Ftr Up Tt $1.1. Sale of@!:L'?Multlple Dally Vitamins FULL •lo .. $2.69 l191ler. TIAl.'S • lot. $i.St Wiiii lre1 SUPPLY • Ref, $3.H Cbwe~le ltttiH tf:IU • $ , 88 ''"""'"' ••• ld•llll• coll• 111tle1111I bre11d1 . .,1Un1 ftr 11111ch ,.,,, IA. w •• 1<1ot ... , ,.,. ,,., .. itit. "' chentlllf ...;,,.1~ .. 1t· "· w11111 .... . 'Th•••···· !ltl OlAO( "' 2 ~ $1 l','t\ • ~ I ' • • .] IM•l•·Ui-1 ,., M1il• I• l111_. lt11tl , l•••lll •i...tn1~. I • I j • " • • • ,, " ''I • ,n •I• ... " ' I --·-.. -· " • . ' • ft IAILV PILOT wo1....ia1. M"'"' 1s. 19n Reading Progr.am in V alleri Two Gain Top Honors At Edison " Catches Hold A~ross Nation 2·7 Gain · Sealhearer Laurels Twenty·oeven Marina Hlflh School 1tlidenla have been named as CaliJornla Scholarship Fed er at lo n Sealbearm. The studenll qualified by receiving at least three A's and one B for a minttn'um of four eemesten:, one qf which 1wa1 in their senior year. The sealbearers will wear gold ta11el1 on· their gradu'a- tlon caps and qualify for ldlollll'llllpo ottered by ... ,. ithon IO oollepl lhr"""'"1t lhe United States. The 'l:1 sealbearers are Margaret Armatrong, Darlene B<!Cker, KalllY Billlnp, Jani Blank, Lani ll1oc11ett, Tracy Cooke, Suaan Dahlberg, Craig Daniels, Gayle Devlin, · Judy Doualaaa, EllDbeth Dunn, Christi Dysinger, Tom Hal· . field, Janet Heineman, LucUle Heller, Leslie Maddox, Shawn Milbern, S u~ I e Pflngstel, Caren Siehl, Lucy Tucker, Trish Waters, Ann Well!, Lawrence West, Patric I a Wright, Susie Yabuki, Valerie Young and Chris Zuck. Gestalt Class Set A course In Gestalt therapy 'Is beina: offered in Huntington Beach through Cal State Fullerton. Taught by psychologist Dr. Gerhard Kohn , the class aims 'to help parent:s, teachers, ministers and others who work with people learn therapeutic techniques. Classes meet at 7 p.m. Mon- clay nlihts at the Gerhard Kohn School, corner Beac Boulevard and Ellis Avenue. Registration forms for -tbe 3- unit course are available by calling 962-3313. Medal Won By Officer Air Force Capt. Paul E. Muehring, son of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Muehrin& 708Z Valen- tine Drive, Huntington Beach, bu been awarded the bronze ltar for outstanding perfol:mance of his duties as an information officer at Binb Thay, South Vietnam. He was honored recenUy durial ceremonies at Boston 11111,w11ty where he is stu· d1N for a master's degree . Free Concert Set March 17 4 ""1Dll ·ml light preser> Wlam, fto lllllh Door, and ''"T-Berry wtll be !11r1 GI I fne -at 7:29 ..... IT It ... Anthelm Hlih Moll Al F wbn. Ill No . ......,AWL I . MDAL Pu.MID1' DOOR MIRR.RS ' :,Y4" wide gold tone frame. Sturdy one·piece c,onstructio.n for l9sting beauty • .· 399 14" wide x .4~'"high . Select Pittsburgh sheet glass with brushed bras1 frQme. '.. J99 .14" wide x 54" high. Float g10~1 mirror, shotterproofed for safety, in . genuine luster chrome frame. Overall size - 15"widex 56" 1599 high. I •'xi' • .. 1t*IPINlllllD ltANilLINO HARD!lfOOD BASI Thetreotily iiistolled panels enhance any room. · Choose from Mojave· Oak, Saddle Walnut, Spanish' Oa~· or Antique Avocado. 2 99 IA. .. SllIRWIN·Wlu},IJis . . IXTIRIOR S1~1N ' SN••Wllll•WIWAMS .•.. ~ 111/llil'llll Jiii EXTERIOR STAIN ·:'I---·~ .... '•. Now -.OhanCe and protect the naturg:(beauty o,f wood sidin·gs, 1'1ingles, 1hakes, f8nc;:es~ planters and gbrden_furnifure. Preve.nti wOod roiti~g and control} m~dew_. Easily. applied by brush, roller or sproy. .5!! 'h"x 10-n • • • ELICTRICAL CONDUIT ' I • . ' Thin-II conduit for all ele"ttrjcal jobs. See .our complete line of fittings. ' CULTURED MARBLE BATH VANITY ;._,..-,:=::;~'°l COMPLETELY PllHSHI• ' Pf fl,__., 1Mntot•~·c11T11 SIT WITM POP·lfP ...... 999 .... UJ,. • AllD AS'SIMBLIDI 17"x20" One-piece cultured marble top in white/gold. Complete with knobs and hinges. Faucet extra. Cle•~•ctl Wloilt ... otltl!" 1111 2688 "IWIHLINE" " .. OWER GUN·.1000 • NEW mil Nil YT DUTY ST APLl IUN • Ex"fra heavy duty drive • Loads lightening fast • Built~in staple remover • Chrome finisli over tempered steel • Compact cofrying coSe / 99s .· FllLDIR'I GLOVE • large size boys' glove for little 'ledgue ploy . "U" shaped heel, new style web, «om,pletely leather lined. GA$IOOITER. .. · · . •-oz . ~ •.• New 1hig'1 performance additive '. ,. ' _thpt boo,sts hor,sepower, reduces pollu!~nts. Pep up the old, buggy to zoom the freeways. • • ·- w.....,, llan;h 15. 1m PILOT·ADV£RTISEI g .. ORTHO·&IO ,LAWN AID DICl!OllDRA I 'FOOD . 17 Marina tutlents ORT HO LAWN AND DICHONDRA FOOD High nitrogen plus nutritional foods for blade grass ~or dichondra lawns. ·easy to Opply dust free pellets. •; Odorless and long lasting. One bog covers· 6000 sq. ft. . 3•s ITALIAN CYPRESS l·OALLON This stptely.shrub will enhance any landsccipe .. Excellent along driveways • "and entryways. No trimming needed. •LECTRIC ~BQ LIGHTER For Charcoal lighting ... Just plug in any household socket and remove when fire is started in just a few minutes .. Quick, . easy and clean. No kindling, ____-no fuel. t1 ·SiiF 1 257 TRAllSISTOR RADIO 5 transistors and I diode. Highly .sensitive, long range. Complete with earphone and plastic carrying case: Great for the coming season. 299 · • ( • •• ,. ' " ' J Ii • 0 ,R p p , • .... Sophomore cent.er Bill Walton (upper1eit} ana senior guard Henry Bibby (upper right) of UCLA were the top vote getters in the 1971·72 United Press Inter- national All-American basketball team poll. Dwight Lamar (lower left) of Southwestern Loµisiana; Jim Cbones (center) of Marquette and Ed RaUelf Oower right} of Cal State (Long Beach} round out the top quintet. . · · . '72 Angels Preview Stars ·-Are Gone, .Halos Have U µity t PALM SPRINGS (AP) ~ Rebuilding alter a disai;trous 1971 1eason, the Calilomia Angels count on their Pitching, newcome.rs acquired in the trade mart ·and fellov.·ship to boost their fortunes. • '~e is a better attitude th.is spring ~than I've ever seen," declared pitcher Ahdy ~tessersmith, who woo 20 games 1aSt season. "All the stars are gone and the unity is a lot better." ,. Gone via trade are controversial out- fielder Alex Johnson, and veteran Shortstop Jim Fregosl. A1so missing ts outfielder Tony Conigliaro, who retired in mid-season with a recurrent eye problem. For the newcomers, one must start at the top with Harry Dalton, who quit as director of player personnel for the champion Baltimore club to become g~ral manager and executive vice. president of the Angels. He hir~ Del Rice as field manager. .Rice, vetera~ D)ajor league catcher, piloted the Angels' Salt Lake club to the Pacific Coast League title last year. . Dalton and Rice succeed Dick Walsh and Lefty Phillips and the players aepear happy with the change following their fourth place finish in the American League West. , Dalton's trades have brought shortsJop Le6' Cardenas from Minnesota, outfielder Vada Pinson lrom Cleveland and a four90me from the New York Mets, who acquired Fregosi. The Mets sent pitchers Nolan Ryan and Don Rose , {)Utficlder Leroy Stanton and . , catcher Francisco Estrada to California. Dalton says, "My first job was to create as much balance as possible .. between ·the· offense 'ldd deletise. The pitching' ~~idY,.'JhaPflCI up well. In the trades, we tried to tig~len our delease." The Angels have five proven starters in Messersmith, Tom Murphy, Ryan, Oyde Wright and Rudy May. 'They 8cquired Alan Foster from Cleveland and be could start or relieve. Their bullpen lists ).ioyd Allen; ·Eddie Fisher, Mel Queen and some yOungsters including Archie ReYlliild!, a right-hander --who won 13 games tor'l;alt Lake City last year and' also put in Short1 stints with Calilornia. ' catching presents.''-problem, Jeff Torborg is solid defenstvely but hit only .203 in 55 games last yea?. Joe Azcue, the regular in 1970, quit baseball in 1971 after a salary dispute with 'Walsh, but came back for a trial this sering. . The infield ap~s set with Jim Spencer at first, Sandy Alomar at second, Cardenas at short and Ken McMullen al third. . There is speed on the club with Alomar, cardenas; Stanton, Pinson, Roger Repoz and Mickey Rivers among others. There is enough speed, in fact that 'si:s: of the ouUielders could play center - Rivers , Repot, Stanton, Plmon, Ken Ber· ry and rookie Tom Silverio. "We'vi; got to have hltting," declares Rice. "We have enough pitching to keep us in the ball games and I think the de£ense is okay." The new manager talked to individual players before spring camp opened, delv- ing into the problems so "they could get everything · o~t their OWlds before the start of this campaign." Dodgers Come Up With ; ' Another Young Pitcher VERO BEACH, Fla. - A non-roster ·rookie pitcher was the talk of the Los An,Beles Dodgers' intrasquad game Tues- da,Y as 19-year-old Rick Rhoden pi~ed 'three innings, giving up one rUn. /' 11He's the most advanced .lt-year~ld · :Pitcher· I ever had," manager . Walter Ataton said of Rhoden, a right-hander ,who pitched last year at Daytona Beach and bad a 4-6 record. t The Danny Ozarks defeated the Roy Hartsfields, 7-3, with a four.run eighth m.. Ding. up, he's a cinch to make the club," said an elated manager Del Rice Tuesday after di.irk sparkled with an impressive . three-inning stint of hitless ball. His hurl- ing helped the Halos humble San Frao· cisco 5-4 in an exhibition Jame. • • CHESAPEAKE,. Va •• -The Virginia Squlrea· of the · ""1eflcan Baaketball • AslOclltiOn bave -a local court ln- Laver Takin.g Aim at Titl~; Emerson Wins CHICAGO (AP) -Top seeded Rod Laver laUnched bis bid for a fourth 1972 tournament victoey· Tuesday night by polishing off Australian Tony Roche, M, 6-3 in~ the $50,000 Kemper International Tennis meet. Laver, gunning for · the $10,000 top prize, had littie trouble handling Roche, who is coming back from elbow surgery 'last year. Laver broke Roche's service in the first game of the match at IM Paul . University and. was.in cbara:e the rest of the way.· , In another i'll'St l'OUDd .match, Charles Pasar.ell, defeated AUJtralia'a B i 11 Bowrey, 6-2, 6-1. In concurrent compeUtion at suburban LaGrange, filth-seeded Arthur Ashe Ind No. 6 Bob Lutz also scored first round victories. Ashe whipped Aus~alian Phil Dent, 8-3, 7·5, and Lutz downed Ismail El SJWei, , also by a 6-3, 7·5 seore. '· · A1so advancing to the second' ~ were No. 7 seed Marty Reissen,. ouilastipg Yugoslavian Nickl Pille, 7-1, J. 8, 6-3,' ail)d'No. 10 Roy Emerson, a 6-3; 6-3 victor.~ Australian Fred Stolle. Wtdftfidq, M11<h 15, 19n DAILY PILOT %1 Thoma·s Talks ~ at Last • ---Reveals Bitterness. DAILAS (AP} -"rm going to be my own man," Duane Thomas said ... l'm no& going to b.!g for aomethlng I worked for. l am e.P.limlstic. But if they don~t dig me, well, me ,hell with 'em." The oormally mysterious, tight·llJ>Ped runninJ: star of the champion Dallas Cowboys took a Jong, hard look at his controversial role ht professional foot))all today -aod talkell about It. He talked freely. "I aJmost reached the point of putting an end to my career," be said. 'lbe man who has b e en un- communicative for months and became known as "The Sphinx" unburdened himself of the frustration!,. misun· dentandings and 4J.sillusionP1e-nts that can beset a naive black at.blete coming out of the ghetto into the wheellp.g and dealing wprld ·of big time s~rts. · There's no stlpulatkm th at says tf you pJSJ football you have to talk. I don't get paid for talkina. I get paid to play foot· ball." For this reason, Thomas said he wa.s disturbed by a statement attributed to Dallas coach Tom Landry after the Super Bowl that Thomas would have to change his attitude ii be boped to play with the Cowboys. "If be said that, I think it ls unfair - dishonest," Thomas said. "There is nolhiJll wrong with my attitude. My at.- Utude Is a winning attitude. I have fell $20,000 to be raised only to 122.000 next season, the third year of the agreement. "I dldn'l have any knOwledge of negotiating contracts," Thomas said. . '1Because of the things that were hip. pening in my family, I w111 lost in dolng all sorts of things. "So .I thought l"d get a guy to negotiate for me . I got hold of one of these slick dudes from New York and he was too slick.·· According to friends, Thomas not only was committed to an Inferior contract but "'SS persuaded to sign over power of attorney to the agent, who later was dismissed. Thomas. whose mother and father had died while he was in coJlege t1.nd whose two brothers suffered accidents and costly allme.tits, found himself en· trenched in debt and with a reslricted source of income. It wu ·an exclu,sive i,Aterv1ew with. The Associated . Press ~ 1he ffrst such in· terview since well before th1s-&-1-;12oo , pound J>!lW'j'bo~se from l)allas' .jo~gh South Side Had helpell cant the Cowboys · · ihrOugh a Ctiamptonshlp'Beason aJ\11 to a A1though he blames the agent rither than the D81las front office for this finaP. cial plight. It was undoubtedly \his pressure which provoked Duane's unusal press conference last July In which h~ called Gil Brandt, the Cowboys player personnel director I "liar" and COach Larvlry "a plastic man." 2'-3 victory ,over the Miami Dolpb1ns in · ·the Super Bowl. · • ' , , ·;rootbaU'a ~t· tJ)e . only job in the . · wJ,;!jL.;SJ• added .. "li .I bl\le 'ti> g~ !lack otn · h ·and build over Jgain .and go · to solne 'ng else, okay, then' it has to , "When I signed with the Cowboys, B~andt put his arm around my shoulder and said. 'Don't worry, we 'll take care of you.' " Thomas related. "It was the middle of last season that l found oµt I had a poor contract. I went th Brandt and asked him to renegoUate. I knew they had torn up contracts before. But he had Jost all memory. be that." . "He is a beautiful man -hiai just misunderstood," said interview.~p~tn.ess A1 Tabor, as an aside. ~ ~ "He's had problems and he's been taken advantage of so much, it's no wonder he's susplcioua of1 eveeybody," added Floyd lnglehafl, a !al!, _good-l~k· ing onetime halfback Who spent a year with the Los ~eles Rams. He was Thomas' high schoOl'coach. • . Thomas talked in a lOW, subdued voice. He proved not only articulat~ but even eloquent at timeS. Yet his wOrds ca'rtied the ring of disillusionment. Obviously, be felt he was a man. who had been discriminated agaiiist, lied to and obeated to :the point that be had litUe trust left for anyone. Thomas said his months of silence w,ere sell-Imposed and not traceable . to any outside source, such as former Cleveland great Jim Brown bad beeti~ reported. "It's .oot, that I have anything against reporters," he ei:plained. "I just don~ like people because of their being narrow- minded 00 things. ">•Maybe-cne of your friends might say, •1 don't like Duane Thomas because his shoes are too large.' And you agree. Who gives a damn about what size ~a man wears? The important: tliing 'i:f:· <ls ' be do~ bis job?". . .. l1'be powerlu0y1'bullt fiallbacl, still sp9tfug, in' a low key, said he felt he recel•ed1unlalr criticism ,becallJt of J;Us long sllenee. "You know, It takfs dilferent.people to make ulf the world," he added. "There are some guys on the team who enjoy metUng ~the press, who get JI kkk out of beiot before a iele'vision Carilera: But not me. Bec&use of my backgrowxl,, I don 't pilrti~Jy dig It. . . "''f didJl't feel like talking. So~I didn 't ·talk. U. I read the <;onltitution 1righ~ it , gives i me freedom to do u · l~pJease. U"IT ....... DUANE THOMAS "I went to Schramm (Te:r Schramm, general manager). He said, 'Sorry, boy, · . you're stuck.' I figured they didn't dig that my attitude coincided with ·the goal, · me. I wasn't the atereotype passing b>pe of the team. of ni.ee:er who comes In 1nd says, 'Pleue, "I never go around and complain about Mr. White Man, do th.ls for me.' " him (Landry) not talking.'' Then came the mld-swnmer trade to One of Thomas' problems with the the New England Patriots. Dallas administration has concerned bis "I wish you had' been with me just lo · contract, which Is well below that of see the expression on their face~.:" other super stars in the National Football Thomas said. "It was as If they had been League -and none in the Dallas football pre-conditioned for me. hierarchy denies super star status for "They didn't even send all my records this ball-carrying juggernaut· who ran for up there. The c:olcb (John Mazur) told 95 yards in the last Super Bowl. me to take a three-polnt stance. Thlt wu Coach Landry has been quoted as call-just a little tribute they wanted. Ing him "An:other Jimmy Brown." Others "It didn't make any difference. l was 1 say he could become the best ball-carrier running back. It made no d!Uerence If I in the NFL . · had done the job on my eyebrows. Three Yet, according to a source close to days later they came to me and told me Thomas (he declines to elaborate on to leave. They didn't want to dlacuss It. · money matters), Duane signed a three-They just said, 'Leave, get out.' year oontract with base pay o( only "So l came back borne." ·. Harness Race Inaugural: Big Crowd, Plenty of $$ Harness Raclng's Initial two days in Orana:e County proved highly successful when compared to other similar ven· lures. Saturday night's county Inaugural at U'Js AlamJtos Race Track lured nearly 16,000 fans and they ·put .up 1875,000 In bets. Some of them even won money, It has been learned. Hollywood Park's best-ever attendance · tor harness racing was September 22~ 1970, when 11,560 clicked through tho., ·turnstiles. · When Saratoga opened its season in' 1942 Jess than $35,000 was wagered. You could deduct that amount from what was' bet at Los Alamitos Monday (2nd night of the current season) and you'd have a halt a million dollars left over. * * * More on' tile workl Ice lbtlng ltan wbo'll IPpell' 1t tbe Los Aageles Sporta Area dte 'afternoon of April, t. Tiie . Wlllllt• wllO flalslled l·H ha die Olym(li9 . Gomet 8lld world cbam- ptoaU!po are all to be on hind, laelaclbag. Autrla11 Beltrb: Scbabar CaDlldl'1 Karn M'l:p111ea and Am.erlc1'1 Juel Lynn. . ..> Olympic ud world mea'1 tltllst OndreJ Nepela wm be tllere, a1oa1 wttll Olympie and world rmmerup Str1el CbetverutlllD of Rusi~. However, Uni~ Staiei perform• '"" Mlau Petllevlch ii ao1 olaled lo appear. Tiie pain are allty, toe, dttp!ta die 1bleace of tbe two ~vlet cDaples wllo domhlaled neeal bd<!rutlooal com- pedtloa. llewnty'1 f-JoJo Sml!ltl .... · Ku Sllelley wUI be IH-8lld .,. Joli' ed l>J.Uwo f[qet-... MHoelo G- of Eoll C.rmuy. Ailo oe Ual 1ltll Ire changes In u.e prqram for tbe lbow .e tlllt reference to F.ast Germu1 woaW credit them 11 Ilda( fr<m Ibo DOR - Gennu Democratic RepubUc. West Germu1 like to be referred to •• belag from Ibo Gennu Fed<ral Repall, Uc. ' Politics -yoe can'I seem to ese1_, them. * * * UC Irvine boosters are pu!Ung togethft" a celebrity base~ g~e APtli 33 wtth well·known Orange Cout art • personalltie11 such u O.W. Dl c): Richards, and naUonally known namu kUfil WNITll ...--=--=· WHITE WASH ~---- aucb u Glen CamplJell going against tho UC! V'!"lty. But the varally hasn't got a chance - namely becaute UCI chancellor Dan • Aldrich Is on Ibo aide ol the celeba. ~ong celebritlel due to perform are Mike Connon (Mannix), Bob Reiner (All tn the Family), Greg Morrll (Mission Impossible), ~ Majors ( 0 wen Marshall), Jlllilea Caan (Godfather1), David Hartman (The Bold Ones). · I • '. SAN FRANCISCO -UCLA sophomore center Bill Walton and Oregon State senior .guard Freddie Boyd. head the 1972 Pacific.,'! All Conference basketball team named by coaches today. junctioa ti> pr0iilb41 tbeir defected star, ABA -ICOling Jeader CllarUe Scot~ from playing for any other professional team ' for 60 days. A heart condition proved too much for former Cleveland Browns star Well G<rmuy'• Almat Laymaa and ~ {ord. He died Monday. at a(e 48 in De!l'Oit. ·Henert Wel1lager. Sporls types due for !lie pmt Include Rams linebacker. Marlm • M~er, former NY Ylllkeet Andy Clrty Ind Bob Cherry, Jim Murray (Ramo), Geors• H\Joter (UCLA), l<8fty 11..-(USC and Glanls), Ralpb -(UIC), Jqer Mlller,·Dodgen 8lld - Dick Richirda Is ollerlJlc cne of bis two markels aa a door prise, accordJna to cne oource . Other team members~,all seniors, art Steve Hawes or Washington, AMley !Truitt ol Cal, wbo a Ued with fton Riley of USC lo Ibo ..Una, Ind Cllude Terry of Stanford. Second team members are Joe Mackey, USC; John Gougltran, Cal; Kttth Wilk ... UCLA : Henry Bibby, UCLA ; and Paul Westphal of USC. ' . MESA, Ariz. -Think hard. 'Way back lo 1161. The California Angels had a 1"I"" pttcber with llJ'eat potential who, 11 a ....-ie, won 12 sames. ,His name wu ) Rick Clort. Be'• back. "I WU tickled to death . .lthe keeps thil • '' I • -.;.,...-'--------'---'---~------...----, . Sbthlg officlail ud to make U ... ' r . I • , Royals on Tap Tonight fo~ Lakei:s. c!NCINNATI (AP) _,,,,.Lot Angeles , Lakcrs• current (our-game win streak hardly compares to the team's Incredible 33-game airing eotabllshed earlier In the se~son. Bu~it mfty be more Important. Bill Sharman, coach or the NatloMl Ba$ketball Association's top team, r.a lius the playo!f1 are coming up and be wanls bis team nutf\lni the ... Y tt wu clurii>c the lone otreok. ''ln the Jui four 1ama. we've· been rnovil)g alid running botler because I think the pilyert are trylq to malct I ' , run at Philadelphta'1 record," said Sharman alter · his team sltoolt off a lethargic otretch Tueoday nlght for 1 129- 11! Vicloey over the Dflrolt Plstooa In Ilc!'Plt· Tonlghl, !he Lakers ft<k No. i4 again•! Cincinnati, a team they've bealen three of four times. "This lo thO ~ we've mQved since the ;13-gam~ win st~k." he said. Tbe victory ... bled the Laker1 to plo victory No. II and nttd five vJctodel In tbel• lut seven iam~a to equal PllilHelphla'a ......i-f• moat triumphs. • •' ·' • • • The droPl'llc ol the Pl!t..,., 00,.ever, wu 1'1n No. 2t for the Lakers and that broke 1111 JllBA-mark·for "triumphs on the road. Tbe old mark of 21 ,.., oet, by MUwaukeo lut ·Y-· The Pl~ 1ralled by aa many u 11 polnta fn Ibo thlrifquarter, fought back to wlthbl a budcet early In the fourth period, then saw the Lakers rally for an 11-1 • •Pllfl Ilia! tucked the game •ftly away. Then l'rlday •t. the Lam come llon1e ID*° !lie pn•ful.llacb, a loam they bope to meet ha !lie Weolern Dlvlllon . • • • clwnpl0119blp playoffs -If Los Angeles can dlspooe of Chicago's pesky Bulls ftnt. ' , • * * * • Speaking of boolter elo.. Valvtnlly lllP'• ... Ill pll!Ylll --rnlay algbt 1pbl1t die ldtolil'a .,..... stp• JV start. Aad Ibo adloot ionlly f-tllo varsity lo the'illier llalf of IM ....,...., wlllch l>egloa at I. 'Ille -.. Ve alnady ...... Ual 1thletlc pro.,..., "1 •1..., a Wllllc c1ge and Jolatai otudeat1 to roillq fudl for a weight tuUa1 maclltae. L115t year darla( die bootter booketllall 1bow It had ._ plaue4 to .. vt ..... Jack Par.... felp a Jlnll•a 1t1. Stretellerl wm ~ ud people - la Re4 Crtu -,,... ...... tol "1· It tarted oat tUI PatUm adjlallJ M --·!Wq ..... fraat badllnd. J i I I • " J _, . . . . . .. . .. ~ ....... • I ' ' ' • ' U »AILV l'ILDT . ·Pirate Brummett Named HB Grid Coach • • u hill p . ::fitters .. Silenced lly CRAIG SHEFF .. "" DlllY ...... "'" C<irllot COlie1e'1 Tim Matz. , rated u the FalCOlll' fourth I belt pltchtt, alleoced Ol'IJlll• . ·eout on just tour hitl in IUJdlnl h1I teamm1te1 to a i.o • South -Cout Conference vto- •,Cory at the IOHr 't diamond '!'U<aday. Matz, a freshman right. bander, _.ilowed Jlllt lour atnaJea, alruct out atven ind . waJ.ked none ln going the dlitance. for lhe perennially powerful C<irllot club. Tht win ran the falcons' dn:ult record to 4-0 and kept \hem a Pllll• behind Fullerton ~!--0). Cerritos has a 11-Z ~~~mark .. : occ aptn 1ot &ood pltchlni but opln l''I hurt by !ts ·""!her 111tmic hlttln&. . ·Y Allhoqh Pirate s t a r t e r • Steve Hedrtcf· w11 wtld (four ~ walU In ud-ee tnnlng1) ht .. 'DOnetheleu p Itched ef. !actively. Rellefer MI k e Durbln was very sharp, 1llow· in& jlllt the second Falcon run on three hits In five lnnln11 of work. And Dan Qul,.nberry retired Cerrtloi with litUe trouble In the ninth. But the P~ate atickwork WIS 1nother matter. Two hltl by Ron Martin and ona each by Jobn Palmer and Bob Wlckenh1111 w11 111 coach !Sany ' W1llace11 crew could mu'lttr. OCC Sot two runnen u far 11 aecond, but no one reached third. Cerritos acorid the only run it needad tn·the third on a bunt alqla'by 'llterlln& Smith, a line drlva ~ lo left l>y Mike Pacnotta. a loll( fly lo cenier'- by J.eny Mlddox that ad· vancod both runnen ml a paaed ball. Tho llCOlld t1111 came home In the -OD a walk. a •in&l• by Lee llllUliaml, a IJ'Ollnd out and Don Sneddon'• one-baler up the middle. C"'"9I II) •• ,....,,cf s'"""· u ,.ffl!Ott .. rf -·"' Jotin..,, lb W!ll[lmt. c Che~11. 211 Sfltd9on, .. M1tt, II' lo!lll .. ' • • • 1 • • • • ' ' • • .. . • • ' . " ' .... . ' ' . ' . ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ' 1 ' , . 0r-. c ... , fl) ttl ...... 1lt hlmer. cf lfltml11t. lb WI'-• II WlcktftNftl, rf MclClllll'i, .lit· Z"4tdetf, It · M1rt111, c: .._rlcli:, II L4l!Mt, !NI Dilrtiln, 11 lft 1tw11111, ,.. 0ulM1'1114f'l'Y, 11 •• r II ....,. • • 0 0 • • ' 0 ' 0 0 0 ~ 0 0 • ~ ~ 1 .: l • 0 • , • 1 0 • 0 • • I I 'I I 0 0 0 0 ' 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 l•••• 2' • ' 0 .... w , .... ••• ., 001 OQD.-4 1 1 000 OllG 0004 ' t By ROGER~N Of ........ ,.. ... ., Roy Brullll!ldt hu be<n named head footbalh,01cb at . HunUngtoq Beach High following OUlclal eonrtrmation at the Huntlnglon Buch Dillrlct board meettn1 Tu.,. day night. Brummett succeeds K e n Moala, who 1tepped down after 1 nine-year ltlnl. Brummett becomea the 10th Spikefest Has Top - Sprinte~s i\11 usual, 1prlnt.er1 will abound in the Slit annual Southern C.OunUet: track ind field meet 1t ~untlngtan Beach Hi&h Saturday. There iJ the normal display of nift talent up and down the lilt from the JOO.yard duh and 220 rl&hl up throu&h the 440 and mile relays . Beginning with the century, it'll be a 111111• in both the lar&e and small 1 c b o o I 1 dlviaionJ, The amall achcoll l 0 0 features are• rpeedaters John' Miles and Carlo Tosti of C.Orona del Mar. each of whom hu flown 9.9 at one time or another ln the last two years. Along with the CdM pair, there's another ta ndem in San Dlea:o Lincoln'• Lanard Morris (t.I, 22.6) and David Lamar (10.0. 22.1). Favorite in the 1 m a 11 achooil 100 could be Morn- lnltlde '1 Mike Brooka, 1 9.8 jet. Llaied u pouibiliUea In the larae ICboola version of the 100 art Muir's John Gore (9.1) and Frlfti: Anderson (9.8), Maanolia '• Dave Co o p e r (ID.DJ, Sanla Ana's Dwayne Edwarda (10,0) and t b • Western twosome of Mark Rafter and Gene Brite, both at 9,9, In lhe amall 1ehool.s furlong, Sonora's Bob Blum heads the field at 22.3 while Miles, Tosti, Morril. Lamar. Brooks and El Dorado's Vlnce Kem p ton (23.4) are formidable challengers. The large schools 200 is pac- ed by Edwards' 22.3 clocking. ln addition to Edwards and the o t h e r alorement.loned large schools sprtnt¢rs, also available in the furlong are Eisenhower's Ken Jones (22.5) and Steve Nicholson of Long Beach Wllson (22.7), Golden West, Gauchos Handed Baseball Losses ' ~ .. ' '<:olaen 'w.eJt Coli•&•.'• eight· 1ame Wlmin1·,1treak came to ~· halt Tuesday When host lns An~elea ·City College handl!d the Rustlers a 3-1 defeat at Griffith Park in a Southern C.lliornia Confererq baseball IUt. In another JC a:ame, ln- vadin& Saddleback fell to San Bernardino. 5-4. in Miuion Conference acticn. The Rustlers' Joss ran their Soei.J mark tO 3-1. a g1me hehlod Cypress. The two cluba meet l"l'lday (2:30) at Golden West. The u I u I I I y hard·hlUin( RwiUers were limited to just six hlta hy LACC rlch~hander Bill PanJck. He struck out nine In goln& the distance. Golden Welt's lone run came ln the fifth on a single to center by Bud Bu!Hng. a aacrttlce by Tony C...sci and Dave Klungnseter's on•base biow'to loft. !.,\CC got a pa~ of l'l1M In the third on two 11n&lea. a w1lk and an error. Both tallies "9re Wltlrned. At Sin Bernardino, the 1 ... 11111 Giuchos rallied for ·a ruo ln the eighth on a walk, an er- Night Meet • The f~1t ni&ht track and field dual meet of tho 1971 prep seaton Is schfdul@d Thursday ntrht at Wea(mmmr Hi&h when the LloDI enttrllin Marina in li'lmlol 1. .. guo compelltion. Field evento will atart It 1,311 with the lint tunning fVIDI al 7. ror and a passed b&IJ. But that's all Saddleback could r•t. The Gauchos scored their first run in the fourth on a single by Steve Carpenter. Bob Blacklidge's sacrifice f I y plated the ~nd tall)r in the fourth and Steve Wardlow's double and two passed balls go~ the third run home ln the fifth. Oeldtll Wffl 10 WllMll'!, H Slrn''°"' If C1ldtr, lit "· McClrfM'f, tf I Ulllllf, C Cruel, lb DMlll, 'lb fl(lllf'IO•fflltf'. " M11rlllo, ~ T1!1l1 '' r II rM 4 • ' 0 , 0 1 0 • o e o • o e o 4 I I 0 r o o o J • 1 0 2 0 I I ' 0 0 0 JI I A 1 "9 .,,,..._ cc tt J tb rllrM l!llW1r11,, cl Muc•••· 211 Sl!tltl'I, c W1lhl""'°"• IF MUlhti. 11 1MM111111. a Olltelt, , .. O.uN. u "'"'Ck. rf TOl•li 4 • 1 • J 1 1 0 ' 0 ' 0 ' 0 1 1 ' • 2 0 A I J 0 • . 0 0 0 J 1 t 1,' • • • 133102 ktrt •w 111111'*' ' .. Got,.., .Wttl OllG GID 000-1 ' J Le& A"ftltl cm 1111 00.~ 10 I ........ 141 JKktefl. )I) JW,,nti. lb c1"""'tt<', rt 11-c:llJOtt," Lill;, ct l(ttlf ... " Wantltw, ti AP!cran . l& Holdridtf, c Matt, &II' Tet1l1 '' r II ' ' . . ' . • ' 1 ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' . ' . . ' . ' 27 • ' l•R lltMNl11t Cll •VUt1•. ill Hlt1Je11, rt, If Oau.r, t1 Wttult, cl 01WW111. II ,,,,_r,,_, " Llf'llMUlsl, c Htf!tllh"'tt. • Ald.tc.o, 1 .. IMIUd1ntt. If ~ •• rf lolal1 .. ' . ' ' ' ' . ' . . ' . ' . . ' . . . ' ' ' ' ' . . ' ? : : " tilJmlilH; ;;: TI< ONES · TllAVEL j Jtj1 j .THAT GIVE YOU •••c•as: ,...:, j "TRAVEL"I .......... Alt,.._,_..,,,. i var1lty football coach in Hun- Unglon S..cb Hieb'• II-year hiltory, 1Ueteedlng: K" r r y Walker, Cap Sheue. Leon Minor, Al l\eboln. CI y d e Frlshhoh:.' F...d G<sddard. Vern Vallercamp, Nick Ugle,ich and MoatJ. Ke played quarterback for the Oilers under the coaching of Vtllercamp (Moata was an uailtanl in the fold) In 1951 and '58. Tri tons Lose No. I; Uni Wins San Clemente's four-game unbeaten streak came to a 1udden halt Tuesday when host Santa Anl' H1gh scored six runs in th~ .allth inning on the way to a ,_1 baieball vic· tory over the Tritons. In another tilt. University handed visiting Sc~urr a · 7-2: defeat. San CJemente'a Tritons we're breezing aloni , lo win No. 5 agalnat Santa Ana.· boldln& 1 HI lead goin& 'lnlo the sixth frame . \ But four hits lincluding three triplet:) Ind a pair of walkl helped lo plait the half dozen runs. The big blow wae Dar:ryl Smith's three-run three-bagger. sin Clemente's only run came in the.aecond when Mike Stavro dou bled and .scored an out later oo a throwing error. The Tr1tons' only other hit was a triple by Bill Springm&n with two outs ln the third inl- nlng. , M e. a o while, University's Trojans took advantage of six Schurr errors to e a s i 1 y eutclass 'the Montebello team. A four-run ra llv which featured four Schurr errors did the big damage. Phil Hollett h.it a solo home run for ·the -Trojans In the sixth inning and Rick Peregud went all the way on the mound for Uni. 11trlklng out 10. ltll Cllml111t 10 .. ' ' . ' . ' . ' . J, lll'f'lntf!tl n. 2b Douol11. " I , SPrlnt~ln, 39 ll:IKhell, t Slawro, II M1~1oi, rf Pou;lali. 1& F!t!Wr. cf Grltn~. cl Nl•f1111, ~ Tot1l1 ' 1 ' . ' . 1 • ' . ' ' -~ ' 11n11 .t.111 <•I .. ' • • . ' ' ' ' 1 Crtwford, 11 Frawr, tb SlllU'I~•. ct D1wlt. II ()wt". P·I& Smit~. •1 Moll"•· lb 1!00«. c Hayes, Ut Sltflord, p Tot1l1 ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' 1 u • tcw. .... 111111 .... .... • • • • ' ' • • I O • • • • • • • • ' . ' . .... 1 1 ' . ' . • • ' ' ' ' • • • • • • 1 • 7 I a•• Clll 000 t-1 t 1 OOOOOlx~71 u11rwm1y 111 P:1rtn. no M11>eock, lb I . Jtuckel. '' It. Plrl(lud, ~ P11t1._, II 0 . ll:uttl1, II 1009, rf C1ll. ti N. P1~.c Hollett. I& lot•lt •II r II rt>I 1 i 1 e : ; : : ' • 0 2 J 1 • II I t I 1 1 • • 0 J I 0 I ) 11 1 0 l ' 1 1 21 1 • • lcllun' UI "J'm a believer in fun. dl.tMnt.all." uya Brummett. "it's an auresslve pme, \'ou have to come to play and bit. 1' Brummett toiled as offensive coordinator ror Moats lut seasol) in his first year on the oner campus after coaching tllurs at La Quinta ltwo yeart:I and P1cille1 High I three yeanJ. It was while be auisted at the latler under Art Michal ik U..1 Paclllca copped the Ganttd Greve Leap cbam- plonahlp. At for the nut year's of· fcn1i ye patterns, the 30-yea1"- old Oller mentor lsn't aurt what the Oil City eleven will preaont. "11'1 hard lo ''Y right now. The talent on hand of COW'ff will dettrmlne what we'll go with. I don't think we11 be real blc, "We bod M aenlon lut yw ., I guw that meant ti will be a rebulidln& year. But there la: a good nucleut to work aroun_d. , "l JUii bope I don't run ldlo some of the thin&• that hampered Ken (Moala). When ydu build 1 new school e\·ery three years and cut the heart out of your squad because ol rtdiatrlcUng it'• a pretty aad. dling thin&." aay1 Brummett. Brummott'1 olaY,inl pierlenct after (UVJJ11 tlngloo Beac.h Incl ·yur1 under Steve M u at O.-ana• Cout, thenl another peir of seuona under George Madera• at Chico State. He credits Musseau with 1 major partlon of his present grid phllooophy. Brummett, wift Gay and t~year.Old son Brett reside in Huntington Beach. Battle For ·ucI Westminster 'Outscores Foe; Sea Kings Zip Past MV, 3-2 LEXINGTON. Va. -Minus the big guna that made UC Jrvine a thrff-tlme NCAA col• lege division swimming title holdtr. coach Ed Newland sends hi~ new breed aquad to the posl Thursday a t Washington and Lee Universi· ty ln quest of an upset victory. \Vith Mlke Mart.in and .Rich E4son mie.lng from t h e lineup, Newland '! charges will be hard pressed to gain a fourth straight championship . This duo captured four in· dividual events plus swimming on two winning relay teams a Chargers Trim ' Artists, 8-4 Westminster High School r• bound~ f r o m tournament play with an 11-8 victory over Foothill and Edi1on's Chargers toppled host Laguna. Beach, 8-4. In non -le.ague b&seball actien along the Orange Coast Tuesday af- ternoon. After aplltting a pair of deciJiom with Marina in the recent Huntington B ea c h fl'Mflllll Ill Oii.ti.ii. (f Shew, :ill Dawltt, ~ Che"'Di°'" .. TUYril, C l rld...,,., rf VIMOrtW'ltch, 1& l JHle, p Mtlh!o•"· P Sallltl, 10 1E'wan1, 2b ll:ttl, If Vt~ICl'"'ll'· II Tot1t1 .. ' • • ' . ' . . ' 1 • . ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . 1 ' ~ . .... • • . ' ' ' ' ' ' . . ' ' 1 • • . ' . ' ' ' ~ : • • w"',.,."'"' nn Whllely. " arldt1y, 11 Addl11tlorl, :tb Accomorido, 111 AIMtt, II l!tpl110Z1. cf MIJl'Tlt, "' ll11ltl1Y1 311 Slllc!Wr, lb ,Hedl1fld, 1f si. .... nt. cf•t11 Tfflft'r, rf llttlfloo, c MWlt , c Mlld$P11, lll M1!1, e lotal• ,.. r II rM I I t 1 2 I 1 0 1 • 0 0 2 0 • 0 1 11 o 0 2 1 0 0 I ti I 0 2 1 I 2 2 o e o 2 0 2 , l I I 0 • , J ' 2 I I 1 II I I II l ' ' , I I 0 0 30 11 u • Sart .... 1111'11"15 Foot1!111 Wet1,..,1,.111r • • • 010 3JO 1.4 I 3 ll50 600 •-11 " 2 If"• (I) Wtl11llt•1111'· 2b LOP11, 2b Tac~r,,., Jll Sellwooll. (. ... n: ..... 1~ J,illlHll, If Zlrtoel, If sror. u 0. Allll, rl , Ml.,.., cf '""1'· • M. 1111, ill Tcta11 •II r II 1111 1 1 e a o o a o ' ' 1 0 ' ' ' ' 4 I 1 J 1 o a 1 J ' 0 0 J 1 I II ' 2 , 0 1 e ' , ~ 0 1 , II 0 0 0 211101 LlfUlll llldl 141 a•r 11rto1 1 o a o Corw1"' 'lb Colltft, II C1r1Hn, )b GJ11H011, ,,_.., Fet, 111 MOCl'rn111, u Oltrc:ki. cf Wh1!1,,.. Overholt, ill Cr1wfol'd, c Tolal1 ' 0 0 0 l 1 1 0 ' 0 1 0 l a ' o I I 0 0 I I II I 1 1 0 0 1 0 D 0 2 1 I 3 ,, ' s l ktf't II)' ''""'"'' ' ' . OJ2 120 0-:a 10 2 B-.c~ Ull 000 0-4 J I tournament. Westmlnster re- bounded for Its seventh vic- tory to bring the season record to 1·1. Mike Tessier had three base hits Jn four trips to the plate to pace the Llon attack while Bill Whitely and Jack Hudson each had a double. Hudson was tbe winning pitcher. striking out seven bat- ters In five innings of work. A big five-run uprising in the second put the game out of reach of the visitors from Foothill with sir\ additional markers in the rourth aMurlng the win. Jeff Siemens singled with one away in the second and moved to second on a wild pitch. Tessier singled him home and Mar.i: Houle walked. Hudson then doubled to bring two more runs IUOSI with By RON EV ANS Whitely doublin1 for another ot t11t °'"" ,.1i.1 111H and scoring on a pair of wild C.Orona de! Mar High's Sea pitches. Meanwhile, Edison's Craig Kings blended steady pitching Reni sh made his first mound and the clutch h i t t i n g appearance since his nine-in-performance of Scott Cameron ning no-hitter a week ago and into a winning combination came up with another victory. Tuesday afternoon a! Corona He struck out six in working five iMings and a:av.e up all edged visiting Mission Viejo, four Laguna runs. Mike Alba,~ 3-2, in a non-league baseball Edison's other no-hit pitcher, -conquest. finished up. Cameron deli vered what Laguna's ,Tern Crawford belted a three-run homer in proved to be the winning blow the second to give the Artists in the sixth inning for coach a mementary 4-3 lead but Tom Tom Trager'a Sea Kings when Sellwood followed suit with a he bounced one over third two-run four-bagger in the base and it scored Reed third to put the Chargers in · Johnson with the third run ef front to stay. · the game, giving reliever Dan Grigsby an ettra run to work Oilers Settle for Tie; Newport Blanked, 2-0 with (3-1) and it prov@d · necessary. Coach Harry Hilke's Oiablos bounced back in the top of the 11eventh and touched u p Grigsby for a marker on Britt Hendrickson's single up the middle. Jim Cornett's infield safety and a Sea King error. Huntington Beach H i g h School came from behind to tie host Kennedy High in nine innings, 3-3, Tuesday af- ternoon before festivities were halted by darkness while Newport Harbor dropped a 2.0 decision at El Modena in non- Jeague baseball aclkin. In the Huntington Beach· Kennedy fracas, the Oilers came from behind an 0-2 deficit in the sixth Inning to knot the count on a two-run homer by Steve Deeter. Kyle Vin Amersford had walked ahead of him and the Oiler catcher belted the ball out of the park. Huntington went in front in the top of the seventh when pitcher Steve Brook! singled with two away. He moved to second on a balk and scored on a single by Paul Hornyak. 1n the bottom of the seventh, Jesus Benavides reached third base with a teammate at first An attempted double steal brought Benavides home with a putout made at third on the trailing ruMer who attempted to take two basts on the pit~. Neither team -was nble to score in the two extra fr8mes and the game was called by darkness with eac~ team hav- ing six hits . Larry Halderman started on the mound for Newport and worked a full seven innings, giving up only two runs. Halderman is .an outfielder for coach Andy Smith. HV111l111t111 UI 111 r II rM "~"'· " ! l I 1' van A~••llcrf, ft •,::r.r: """" ·1·! White, lb 4 O 11 J••rv At~ford. II l I I ~uni. If Im AshFord, cl ..:ii"; 0 8 i lraGki. II r 1 1 0 Tot1lt J I I 6 I K111llltly U ) all r II rM ~m:~!'::· If ! I : . ~fl\IWltai, 'lb 0 g i' i~,11 i I ,• Lira,.. ' 0.lf'IMl!I. rf l 0 2 1 lltlvlt'ra,•t 1 0 11 11 Sl'lew,p• o o o ! S.!altr, d ' o o Grigsby got the f i n a I Mission Viejo batter to ground to short. however, and starter Ke vin Merrison was credited with the win. Morrison limited · Mission Viejo to one run on two hits through six frames (both by Brad Harri!, who slammed a triple lo left in the fourth and got on via an infield variety in the sixth ). Harris' second safety pushed mate Dan BreMan around to second and the latter scored en an overthrow at first base. Caineron was also responsi- ble for the Sea Kings' second run in the fourth sta nza. Johnson was stashed at third after walking "nd ad- vancing on John Andrews' single and a wild pitch. Cameron then hit a slow bouncer to second and his hus- tle paid off with a base hit when the defender was a tick late getting the throw eff to first ba·se. year ago. , "1 figure we will be in,,the top ten, perhaps as high as fourth or fifth," Newland said before departure for Virginia on Monday. "But when you lose a swim• mer like Martin, it has to hurt you. All he did was win three evenU each of the last three years in add itioo to swimm.i ng on two winning relay teams each time. ''It will have to be more of a team elfort if we are going to do anything this time," the coach added . Among the fa vorites to cop the team title are San Fernan- do Valley State OJllege, Puget Sound (Wash.!. University of Southern Florida and John Hopkins University. While Newland was cautious in his remarks, he didn't underestimate the ahllity of some of his newest stars.· Tom Boughey, a freshman~ has the difficult role ef filling ·in for Martin and could be the · surprise of the nationals. Boughey is entered in the 1.650 and 500 freestyle events along with the 400 individual medley and possibly two relay races. When Martin w1s a freshman. he had a first (~ free l. a second <1.650 free J and th ird (200 free J. Another freshman, John Sul· ton from Sonora High, will compete in the same three events with Boughey. Mike Carnahan, a junior who gained th ird, roUrth and eighth place finishes a )rear age, is entered in the 200 l~t. 500 free , 200 and 100 butterfly. He can swim in three of th e four events along with two relays under NCAA rules. Jim Fergus was fourth in the·soo a year ago and seventh in the 200 free . He is also entered in the 100 along with the freest yle relays. J.ack Dickmann, another junior, will compete in the sprint races and perhaps three relay races. Brett Bernard, a transfer from the Air Force Academy and former Corona '1el Mar High star, is also in the sprints and relays. Indian Home Runs Too Much for Mesa ~~~~·,he. .1 11 11 ,! Tot1l1 .. Tot1lt: 14 l ' 2 SC.rt .,.,. IR"I"" ' ' . ooo cm 100-1' 1 11t QOI) 100 -I ' I The initial CdM marker came in the third when Brad Baker doubled and .scored en a couple ef fielder 's choicts. Frank Gardner !junior), i! the bai;kstroke specialist and MtulM v111t 0 1 will compete in the 100 back Tolbtrl. cr ·~ ~ : ':' along with the sprints and F1rouM111. 1b 3 o o o relays. ~:;;~~·c" ~ : : : Jim Cooper 1senior1. is Nl'#lltlrt Ha~ <•I, ,. r111 Grll•lwa, rt 1 o o 11 entered in the 100 and 200 •owm111. 1& J o : : ~=~~~7;k~, u ~ : ; : breaststroke and .the medley Cos•· M••• High was held l-c1111 M•w 111 St':~d~ a. ~ : 0 0 Grlll'\91, Pf' o , o o relay. He finished 10th in the wa .,.. "' .. , , 11 rM Burt, r1 ~ o 11 0 J-•· 'lb l o o 11 100 breast a year ago. just four hit.. and ln the proc-sc~ruoo. et J o 1 o w111i., c J 11 ,' ,' c",'.~,",',·,'!, ,' ,• •, 0° T11urHl•Y Golt1111, 2& J o o o Farrtt, er 2 II " " 500 frH -Tom Southtv. Jll'll es suffered an S.1 defeat at c11rlstm111, 111 J 11 o 11 Plck:, c1 1 o o 0 c111111o1m, P ' D o o "•'11111. Jeh" s111to11. M 2 I I 1 FollOl\'I, U J O 2 0 8r..,,.,a11, OI'> 0 1 0 II i90 lllCI. mHllfY -Mike C1rnahan. th. ha.;. Of '"Ugh f'ullert I I'$. c l.lhlf, •b 0 0 ll:udlHll, p 0 0 0 0 .E frt• -S•w! ll•rnard. Carn1ht"-llU3 w .on ll'o.., 11 1 0 l 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 Jtck Dlckrnal'\n. F•a11k G1rdn1r. tau..,., rf l O O O Schll'ld!er, 111 I 0 0 II ll:omrMll, P l-Mtl1r dlwl119 -Ho lftlra ntt. Tuesday in non -1 ea g u e c1a..v,.. 2 o o o H1ld1rm•"· 11 1 o o 1 lot111 '' t ' o «111 mfdlev r111v -G1ro111r ctack!, Cl rk: lll 2 o o o Har"MITT, p I II o o Jim c-r «ibrttJll. Ctrn•~•n or Miki baseball action at the winner's M!rtr~t. " t 0 1 0 l01a11 ,.. o 1 0 COl'Oll1 "' Mir U) 1~;:!'i'.'" 111v1. llM'nt•d or Olckrna11" fieJd Tm1r1 n 1 ' I II MICllN IU •• II rtll FrllllaY I • ,114111'1911 fll ... r 11 rt11 'ttktl"l'"-tl ~ I II I «Ml Ind. Mlldl1y -lo.Johtt. $t;tt!lft, The Winning lndillll scored "tr1IH, U ~II ; ~ ~ =· cftt) J 0 1 0 ::: :s ~ : : : O~ma~e:e Ft7.u1 ll•rntrd, C1rnah1"- W"•• " < O O 0 MfftMH, 111 ~ : : : bfMllt1, 111 1 O I O 100 !ht -lr•ttln11 •. C1rN1han. at will. 1et~ .... two ln the in-"' ... -. -1 , 1 0 100 back -G1rd11tf'. · Ul'6 Mlltchl""", cl J 2 1 l Llltrtler, c J 0 0 II ~ "~' •• !Gii bttHI -COOM•. ltial frame. four in the fourth U111tt1, II J 1 I 0 Slll'llltOf. II J 0 ' 0 Ao!dt'IWS, 111 2 0 ' 0 IOCI l•H relay -" el' ' wm c- .nd gm, gie tallle's '• ,._ third SCha11k, A l e I o ltrr-c:IC,...u o 1 o o C1f!tlt'Ofl, lb J o 1 2 ptt1I 8-'°"Y· 11 .. r,.trd, c 1rntha"" U1 WJIC Vall tolonl, t.. J I I I L-, 11 1 O I O ll1k•r, II 2 1 I 0 Dldlrnal\. Ft••u~. &uttm. and fifth innings. :'~r.ti.F,, : ~ : : ·'t'::;: )b ~ ~ : ~ ~r.~,.;. II ', •, 1 a '11 1,,..'50 lrH -&:::~.-:. SUHQft, L-Tbe Mustangs' Jene run Gurlde,,.,...., ,. , 1 0 0 ll'ollClm. p 0 a 0 0 l(llhltr, ,.. 1 0 0 • F•r•·"r.rc1ntr. lllrnl •d.. Die"'"'""" came in the seventh when Tito lot,ti ._.. bf 1.:.,.. • • • ·~=· 11 ,~ ; ! ~ G~:=· 11 J ; ~ ; g:;:11-_ N'=r1."- Mays socked a borne run. r tt • sc.. by 111111111• •~ llY 1111111• 1 " 1 1....:1:, drw~~H~N~!ri~~~"· Rand H !ch' the Co.II Mffl 000 000 1-1 4 J r II I «IO "'" rtllY-U el ' will cemettt') y u 1nson was ,111tllf1orl 201 "' w.4 1 1 , Htrfo'JW>rf Me.-OOG ooo M J o Mlu l!lft v1110 ooo 11111 1-2 • o aouthl'f, 11r111rc1. ~•r•l'lfl•n. 01c1c.- blg gun for Fullerton, slugginglr:iU:;;:::r\:i;;iU:;;::rUM.-~'".' .C:"~"'~"''.......:"~''....'"~'-·.....,~-·~• _ _:c~-~'.:'~"~"':'.'-~"~'...2101 ·~ 1 t "'•""· F•rou•. co.ir11ne•. a two-run homer in the first -----------~--- and 1 single 11hot ln the third. Sam Perales bqged 1 thr ... run round-tripper for the win· =~u:.::::= . AT Or!KOll, ... Arfrn1, HI ll:ubl"·· 11· c .. ' • • ' . ' . : ": .11.~rs in the fourth . o : The setback ran CGsla leJ4'• .. ,.. lenlM "'~ 11111 lnolltf (Mii M• . ' as '"'\o, 111 lt111t1t, A MOlllO't'f, c, rf Et(!ulva, II s,,11111111. -" s.1c1<1o: ct Nlll1t1. cl L11111. rt T1r1t111t. t a.rec,, If! Tot1l1 ' ' ' . : • Mesa's record to t-4. ' 1 ' . ' . ' . • • • • ' . ' ' " ' • • 1 • ' . 1 • • 1 ' ' . ' ' . • • I I kin by llll'llfttt """" U'llwnl!Y ' ' . 110 011G t-1 I • .eo 021 It-I J I , ----------~- DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ••• DAVE ROSS PONTIAC :MM HAllOl lln. •Mil Dllll COSTA NIM I'll. 546-8017 WIN 1 OA'l'1 A Wiii( ts• A.M.. Te tt1• l'A IY.JfD&Y1 ti AA TO t l'.M. • ) .... -----... --11!;111~ di I from Long Beech to San ·Fr1ncl1CO 4tlm111day. - Or t1k1 us to S1cr1m1nto or San Diego. Over 180 fligh ts •dry bltwten Norlt'lem and Soutnsm C1Ufomfa enabll you ta take PSA often. Wrth pleasure. Alao .)Y!lh lowest 1lr f1rn. Your travel agant knDwl what'I good for you. !'SA I-JOU a lift. " I r • ' • J H c f' ~i t. " "' I " "" ,, LO • ... .. L .. ' ' ' •• • • ,. '" ., •• .. ' ' .. " • a ' •• " " G ' • " • ' c" El ' co VO ' '"' •• • <> ,. •• • .. '" I '" • .. y •• FJ c .. L " M J '" I L .. 0 (.I • w Alamitos ·Harn ess· Entries Racing Results LOS ALAMITOS HAltH•SS ltlSULn THtf•r, Mlrd! 14 C .. 1r & ,.11t ll'lltST aACI -O"f mli.. "ec•. Mtlde" J ve1r old1 ~ under. ,...,, .. Slj(IO. <™ilrv llldl1NI (Mlllff) J.211 t . ., 2.211 luc:tv Hu tTrlntn, Jr J 2.IO 2.IO Actr1u At.ti. ICotirrw) J.611 Tlmt -''°'· AllO rtced -loc11 Motive. H1l'1 Tornmlr, C1!'1 Or1M01, fl J1v l!t, l•d'y 811lw1"· Scrttdled -H•m1 11rry. SICet.10 llACI -0.... milt . "ttt'. (l&l"'lnt. All lflU, l"urH SIMXI. Clt lm· 1,. Pritt S200I. Dl1m111tr Phlt llt llttl •.10 J.oe l.~ Armtwo Cl\tmp fl.C:Mlt) l.lG 2.611 Gent T1lll>' IWlrtterl '''° Tlmt -1.01 W. . Alt.0 reced -Gl't' Vetu, Wh1"11 &:ttl, Dl11W\'l111d, Jordtn Ad!ot, Ltr,.... T11~ No xr1IQ111. It Di iiy Deulllt t -0.rt!ry ltlcl'leril .. 2 -01111'1111'9 1"1111. ''" ''~·· THlll:O lllACI -0... milt, P1c1. M1llf11n 5 v11r old1 tlld ulldtr. Purie 11500. H111k'1 Min I0.11nl1l 2t.lll 1.4(1 3.1111 GDDCI ill:elgn IAck1rm1nl J.:ro t .IO Alldy'1 Doublt fG...,.ltd l .IO Time -2.06 ,.J. A~D r•C9tl -H11ll l'tlt, Admlr1I Time. L.S.O .. Sorlllf Fiver. k t1!chtd -Bl1ck W1y, Or . .1.11n K. 'OURTH ltAC!" -0... !'!Ille 111c1. Cl1lml119. All IOt!S. TDD Cl1lml"1 Prlc1 Ml.Kl. l'Lll'H 11'00. El De Cfll.mftr !Wlrig1r ) '<I.Oii 16.AO I.Oii COlvh'lt W !Dflo<Twr) •.60 l.20 V1ll1nl'• kl"ll fl1rl•1rnl l .IO Time -2,07. Al!IO fKtd -And°'l''I D1ll!11, Tr\1\1 Jullt , TtlWM!ha: Lid. Jtt 01nctr, Pen1lvl knl9"1. No Ktllches. l'l"H JIACI -ON milt , PKt. Cltlrnl!!f. All .,.., l'vrM u:IOO. J!l'ln DM (Btlltv) 1.AO 1611 !,e LldY Trip (1C11rn1ler) •.ID 4.40 kordltt Wt" !Holt) S.to Time -16' "· Also rKfd -TtmHn Jll"lf, Jeff,•son f•Pr1U1. Jot ltld!1rd, Glnnv'• G1n1, lt!ld V. Adlot. Sc:r1tched -Fret Httll'llr. T1m .. n J0\'11 flnllhltl llltrcl, DIM llld 'JllCM ,lh. U lrldtJ-Jel!ll DM& ..... H y ftl1, N iii tn ... SIXTH ltAC• -Ont rnllt lrol. ,_ dlllolllll. P~r" »800. Jtllvtlll'll Duke {Adc1rrn1nl Vic Arden (81'1-) 81lcer Sll'NI (Mot) Time -1.01 U . lJ.'° 7.IO '·'° 4.to J.IO ••• AIJO rtc;td -yt'Or"M D11n, Huck' Finn. HI Em11/r1. Ctr1 H. -Na Kftlc:htl, SIVINTH ltACI -Ont "'lie. fl1et. Condlllantd, -CO.+ tit ltft. ltvnt ..... Sf/'$1 Tot llttotlotlcll) 111,Jt tl.IO 1 ... Lvdt Dulou!' (1(11rn1lff) '·'° J.ot Terry JMll't ltotket (l>tnnltl ..... Time -2.Dol. Alto rl(ed -$perts ArMI, 'rtltttl Mtnlfbl, JltrMIMUl'I', "'""""' NIYKf '""· Na tcrtldla. lleHTH IACI -Ont ITlllt, ltttf, C!tlmllli H1ndlt11, AH ..... fturte -· ltcll llHlll't'I 1.IO s..• UO Llntoln Ltllll lret:* lTltllefl '·" 1 ... lo le ••n-flltl!OUlll) l.tt Tlmt -1.11 M . Al• ltKl!d -Mon••"'• Adlot 'c1n, Dkk OUIM, '°'*' Drlvt, H9 wrtldlf•• NINTH •ACI -0... !1'1111, 1'1c1. (11lm!119, .-,11 fffl, ftvrM lll'Oll. ltotllt! Btr! ll>uotntr) I.OD 4.ill l.M ~ !Holt) J.IO J.IO WM Qft Do ILKGllt) J.11111 l ll'f'lf -f.OI loJ. A!lla r1Cld -<•"''""· knN Lu Ot1n, Dtr11 JunMI. LOf1 ,.lorJdl1n. krlldlld -Ardll~. ~~uct· t -lttnlt '"' •• -""" lltut. • • Area Briefs --.--J~, Prep Net Results Another' Honor • For OCC Star .. Orange Coast College"s Skip Williams has ~ selected to try out for a basketball team that will represent,.... t h e California Junior Co 11 e g e Association in the national AAU tournament in London, Ky., March 24-28. Williams wu invited to the trials along with 14 other junior college standout.s. The trials begin Sunday at Cal Po- ly (Pomona). Fullerton JC guards ' Rick Aberegg and Brad McNamara were also invited to the tr1als. A total of 10 or l l will be picked lo represent the CJCA in the tourney. Sid Phelan of Ci~y College of San ·Francisco and Barney Newlee of Chaffey are co- coaches of the JC team. A U.S. junior cellege squad, under Jerry Tarkanian aod Phelan, played in th Olympic trials, but thi ' year the Olympic committee enied dire<!t representatio from CaJifornia In the trial , Thus the JC players will have to make the seven·man AAU team picked at the 16- team tourney. e Arne Crumley was accorded Gaucho of the Year honors at Tuesday night's awards dinner lauding the Saddleback C.Ollege basketball team. The captain's award went to Steve Ashcraft with Mike Neiswender being selected the most improved player. Dan Kratz was named the most in· splrational. e Costa Mesa High will honor its basketball teams with a sports awards banquet tonight at the Newporter Inn. Festivities get under way at 6 o'clock. e A sports: awards banquet is slated. for tonight at Laguna Beach High School hoooring > the Artists' basketball teams. It begjns at 7 o'clock In the 6Chool (!afetei:la. • San Clemente High's basket· ball and wrestling teams wUI be honored with a spor(s awards banquet tonight. It gets under. way at 1:30 in the school cafeteria. • Fishermen Interested In · making their own a:ear are In- vited to attend a rod building class offered by the Orange County Fly Fisbqs Club at 1400 South BrookhUrst in Fullerton under direction of John Bianco. Instruction will begin on Monday, April 3 with classes lasting from 7: 30 to 9 each evening for six consecutive Monday nights. Bianco lndicates the ·classes will cover the following: rod making afid repair, leaders, fly lines and how to splice to backing, reels, related equip- ment such as waders, vests, nets, special flies and hoW to use them in specific areas. Before each class there will be at least one hour or fly casting instruction. Interested parties are urged to set the date aside and sign up at the first session. • Diana Mies 0£ Pasadena Ci· ty College defeated Traci White of El Camino lo win the singles event of the women 's and girls ' (DGWS J Third An- nual National Intercollegiate Badminton Championship at Cal State I Long Beach J last weekend. 1'he scores of the two-game match were 11-6, 11· I . . Miss Mies and Cindy Young, also from PCC captured the doubles trophy after defeating defending champions Sue An- nis and Linda Whitney of Arizona State Universi ty 15-11, 15-9. For Area ~ JC Basenall Standings Swimming Re sults Semi-rinalists in the si ngles events were Joan Cic rich of Portland Slate University and P~nny Beun of Cal State Long Beach. Julie Churchill and Miss Cicrich of Portland and IOUTKllM CAL tONfl:•e~c• ot )1iss Bezen were defeated in cnrus ' • Goldetl W.st l I " the semi·final round in doubles Eill ,_... 2 2 Mffllle IT!) 1L'f'01rt1t11 Greve .competition. . LOI Af!DellS cc 2 2 Jm ......ci1 .... ltlll'I' -\, M1rln•. TllTlt ; Jllo HondO I 3 ''"·'· Pasadena ·cc, ASU, and Cal ,_... H•rtior • • 1c;1:'°1.F~r:"lfdl-1 ·,;,~~~!~IJ.1.f.-''11" Stale !Long Beach l were first, , •cc ,,T .. ~r'!.~~. ,• 200 l"(f, 11'1' -I, Hl•d'I' (Ml 1. d d th .. d k' ~ ......,.....,, .... ltl>be•hDn 1 1 l. s1or11 CMJ. Tt ..... : secon a n 1r ·ran tng C'(Df'ISs ,, E11t LA e ~=jo1'~·:,~ i'Gi ~. ~l~.:i1"t\i.)~~11ml:' schools of the 20 colleges and 1t10 """';.,.'~ :.•;,:: t n . . uniVersities which participated cvp,111 11 Golden w.st Olvtn. -1. ~-P•ice !Ml I· s. Prk• in the event. LA.CC 11 ltlD Hondo !Ml l . 01vies Ml.•Palnls: 3 .tS. LA HlrbOr 11 E•sl LA ' ' ' ' • 100 Fly -I. 1119 !Ml 1. Scllole1 (Ml i OUTK COAtT CONfl•ltlNCI l. S(Oll fGI. TlrN: !t,J, W • 01 lOD F•N -I. Ctrd..,11 tMI 2. • R111Y1VIHn IGJ 3. luclm1r (Ml. T ""' Fulllrl¥' 6 G ru. W ' ~-'' 'M"°j.•"'W. -I, BDWll'ltn fGJ 1. F1bl1n omen s S1nt1 An1 S I . I_., (M). Tl,,,.; ,:06.0. M•. "' ,,•-•o 2 2 1 ll~k -I , Schol1s !Mj J. """ l ll(ltntf (M) .i. Acibjf1..,., fG). T "'" A hi . Or•• Cal•! 2 ' t :01.1. t etics Sin DllOO I S lllO llrt1sl -I. Htrd'I' IM) J. lartol Sin OlefO Meu 0 6 !G, l . Mont~ (GI. Time; \;Of.6 T-•-• ·-olCIO Fr• Rlll'I' -· \, Mtrl .... Tlmt: -• 1:31.6. Gl•lt" G-,1n111rllc:• C1rrll.,. 1, Ortnslf C111I D •-flwnl1ln Vtll•Y 01.•1 (M.ffl ,_., flull_,,on 1. Ml. Sl'l'I Alltenlo I lrl\11i111 f>fl ft71 Gart,.t11 G"""t ''" El~rcli: - 1 SN!r (Fl /· Siii DllOO 2. S.n Ol9g0 M1" 0 Tl=:~\~. All•~ -I. tdtn Grav1. Frtmaton !Fl . WtdJ~ t,J, "alnl!: 7. #rlMY'fo ei- 100 Fru -1, ECPWl~J IM) 1• WAloOn :;1rn -1. Ollr f l 2. ltk t Fl J. f!Jlltrloni ll Stnll AM IGI J, S. WH19er (M). !Int: :G.I,,, E v':'J1;~l:!~'.ni-.;.fr'f;., 2. Edf'm ISi Ml. Sin An!Ol'lll ti Ctrritos ) .. •• • • • lllO 1nr,. Med~~ -l. "'fGlll ~Gl t. 3. Wlllll1ktr fS). Polnfl: 7.4S. lt.U'f"I ._ j'J."" Ml l. 1rrlson Ml. lrnr: l•r1-1. ~111lr tF J 1, 0"11111 JF) i. Stn DllOO ti Ort• COlll fl 111rnesl '50·'1, .. -1. 1C1sr,:"y11. s.evnder1 Al(t F l. Pa<r,u: .SJ. c.rrt!OI 11 Mt.<l;s.n Antonio ' 0 rt1' lllll'l'Nlf c;.) l. 0 . Wt"!ler Ml. lme: ts.I. c1m"I"'!' Lllf'llt S1nt1 A111 11 11'1rf1'ln 1(111 Fly -I, K1-r ((jo) 1. H1rrii.on MIH!oft VII 1 SI IO Mtrlllt il(lll SIDN CONfl••I NCI '":0o3·F~~'1!1~~=,~=10t.i~'cr0Clk Y~_rV~~.h':11~ ~ lJ::; 10.1s, 1s... •,,' T, •• IGl l. Sootll IMl. Tlmt: 51.6. Se J l jMV\ 11 Cllr\11 .ao Fr« -1. Edvrltrd~ (M) 2. Wlli.on J~I:: I M\f = :0'. SWlllWIJ\tr" l I 0 IGl l. 5, w......,. /ML Time: t:Sl.I. ~homort I CM\/) wan 1... J11!om1r t I 0 lDO !K~ -11 McGiil {G) 2. F1rrtll t"a trnhm1n Ol"!t l s.n llr'l'ltrdlno l 1 o (Ml .1. S!Olc•s GI. Tlmt: 1:10.&. Lil""' Ill !U floettlffl Grimmont 1 I a 100 l r .. st -1. Prl,,.,. !Ml l. Wlletr V1tsll'I' \l won IS.I lU . ~·· O 2 l IMI l a I (G) Tl 1 11.3 J• V1r1 ·~ ILi wan \w. u .... tOO ·Fr:r';tll'I' ·-r:-~1~!111." Tliiw: Stnlor I (F) won ,... rstdt & 2 I 3:S..o. Junior I (,I ""°"' 2.0. Stddl•bltk 0 3 0 ' ' ' •• •• ' CHf SDlillamort I l~-'{ T""81Y'• sc-lii\trl!I• ll11 ll7J G1rlltft Grove Frtll'ol'!l1n I fl if:-, . Sin a1m1rdlno J, Stddltbttk 4 200 Medlt'I' RellY -1. Gtrdf'!I Grovt . l"ltrl<: Ill' MIUI SOVlll-l!trn J, fll..,.rsldl 4 114 l ime: 2:06.4. 1!111nc!1 (11 4J sin Cltmf'lllll 200 F't• -I. Hell ler !Ml 2. l 11J<:k St"lor I !El won f·l. Innings! (Gl 1. Tooey (Gl. Tl"": 2:2&.0. ~lmlor 1 IE\ ....,n 2-11. P11om•r 3, Chlfft-, 2 100 1n11. Medi•! -i. v1." 1G1 2. A~·,--,, I'' _ ••· ,,, __ ,, •-·-• " Armstran1 (Ml , Tabt'I' (GJ. 'time: """ "~ ~-· ,.,. ' ,......, • .,,., I :Oll.l . r1sllm1~ ! ( ) W(lll 2-11. TllllrMl'f'• OllM I ~ ''/: -'• W~/'~ \'il '· Oualb Edi.on !61 111 U"l111ttlty Saddleblc:k 11 Cl!rv• I I • ' ) -~ S,nlor I (EJ WO" 2.·I, < < (•·f-' raa · h ..... : • · JunlM I !fl won l.f. Grou""°" I ,,. ,..,.,. ly -1. Cvlll 11111 (Ml 2. HOf'rNll P•t-r 11 SOUll'l-st1rn f J J. Tobly !G). Tlma: l'I.•. SOllllornart I lUI won 2-1. RI "" •l "' ,., .. ,.,, 100 Fr" -I C11!1 ln1"1 (Ml !· Fre1rirnan I (f l won J.f. "' ,,. Wll!tr IG) J. Htthet !Ml, Time: lll. ·1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~i;;iiii;i;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m. ~ IK-'-1. Vlrto CG\ !. Ovtll1 IMJ • J. Tabt-, fGI. Time: ll.I. ~ 8rff" -1, lll•tt.IMI 2. Jff>klM (G) J. Norcross 1Gl . Tl-: 3'.1. 200 ''" 11t1i.y -I, ,,.,.rlnt, Ttmt: 1:4 .6. Vanguard Nine Falls Southern California College of Costa Mesa is still look ing for It.a first run of the 1972 campaign after four straight shutouts, the latest coming at the hands or p owerful California Lutheran College Tuesday afternoon, 3-0, at TeWinkle Park. Dick Sivertsen showed signs of brillianct. in hlirllrig for the Vanguanb. He wo<;k<d the full nine Innings, striking out eight opposing batters and gameted one of two base hits allowed ScCal hitters. After giving up a pair of runs in the first and one in the second, Silvertsen 1 et t I e d down to shutout the visitors in the nnli seven frames . Only one ol lhe runs was earned. Stefl c ...... "' ~\ 1llrfllr91 lasf\ff, ct J 0 I o Deutl•t. •• • 0 0 • Ad•mt. 111 4 -0 0 0 •~.lb 4 tte• Slvtrttlf\t ' 4 I 1 0 I C\11'111, 1\1 t ,o 0 O ..,.,., ,, 1, •, '• '•I u""""""' ,, HellltO(-. 11 l o o o I JOM&.t JOOO Tot•ll . .ll 0 .t 0 Stlrl lty l11n1t1tt ,, ' II I • Cal Lut1Mr1" 210 IOI -..J ' • SoCtl Coll ... 000 OCO llDO--O I .• .LEASING? LOOK! NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE IORONADO ' 2 DOOR HARDTOP 5159 MONTH 24 MO. OPIN IND INCLUDES: AIR COND., FULL POWER INC. DOOR LOCKS AND SEA TS, AM-FM STEREO, VINYL TOP, TINT. GLASS, TILT WHEEL, BELTED Wf.'N, AN D MORE. We lease aft popular make can and trucb LEASE DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 'Zl 50 HAllOl ILVD. COSTA MISA CALL NORM llRDLOVI, 147-67IO • , ' ' . ' . DAILY PILOT Checkin g Ou t Area t inks Cullen Low SACC -Qualifier- is narrowing the O•ld for the . final run ll tht championship. top honOn, A tie reaulled for 5'COlld pl1ce 1t 63 between Rocco Paterno Ind Dr. Arnold Lee on one 1ide and Howard Jen It I n a with Gordon Rhinehart on the other. dr1w lot parlnon In lbt 1UY1 Ind a•ls miJod f011t10m• event. A tl o'clock lhotl\ID 1tart will 1et the ev,nt undtr way wllh a dinner-dance and prize awards followlJli ' ln the evenlf\8., At the present Ume. there are eigot playm pa ired in the round of 16 with olhen to bt determined thla week. ~f1tchts already att up In- clude Ron Jonts against Joe Ascue: Felix Tomlinson vs. Rocco Paterno; Sam Wallen vs. Bob Henperger ; 11nd Jim Pt1ehring vs , Max Gardens. Gardens is a membtr of bowling's hall of fame and has rolled 32 perfect gamtS" In his 2S-year carter on the lanes. In a partner 's better ball tournament rtetntly, Don Poff and Don Meguiar combined for a low score of 61 to gain Scoreboard Fourth place went to Bob O'Callahan and Larry Smllh wltll !4. lrvh1 e Coa•I Irvine Coast Country Club Is preparing for the annui'I men 's c I u b championship pla)'()ffs lhat get under wa y 1n April. Bill Donovon. former lA>yola. University basketball coach . is the defending champi<tn and will be out to nab his second title in as many years. The .. tourney Is a scratch affair wilh a 36-hole qualirying round and match play for the low /tle.,doeolar le ~1e1f1 club member• at t.te:adow\ark Country Club of Hunti ngton Beactl staged a aweepslakes tournament over the wet.kend. f'irst place went lo Bob Nelson and Dick Huston with a net score of s:J. Second pl.ace' at M 11o·as taken by Jim Glest and Jim Rowland with Nelson Bnd Rowland wiMing third at 57. Fourth place wenl to Don Sn11t h and Da ve Sheppard 1A·llh a sc:nre of 51. eight qua\Ui ers. 1----------- The annuRI St . Patrick 's Day -Shindig is set for Irvine Coast Sunday featurinJt a blind Save 20o/o on our , finest radials our most popular.belts Sale prtcw ellecttve through Blturdey only I Super Cargom11ier XTD amtll iruck tire Sare 22 31 Reg. 27.95 plu1 2.44 led. tu • 670-1 5/6 blackwaJI tube type. ~ Tlre Reg late Fed. 'l Size Price 'rtoe T•1 670.15/6 27.95 22.38 2.44 700.15/6 33.95 27.11 2.114 65().16/8 29.95 23.98 2.81 7()().16/8 34.95 27.98 3.00 75().16/8 40.94 32.78 :1.89 ·Tubele1e 700.14/8 29 .95 23.98 t .114 670.15/8 29.95 23.9~ 2.89 .... 7()().15/8. 37.95 30.:ie 3.22 Pluo Ftcl. tu eocl old Ure. 10o/o off on all auto air condJtioners . No payment Ill June, 1et ) on Penney'• time peymenrjllan. Sale 14395 Rtg.151.ts.Cool anc1 Cleen.18auto air conditioner with t1 ,000 B:T.U. cooling power. Features 2rectangular front louvers and 2 circular side louvers for complete air control. Fiii neatly under dashboard. Sa I e 36 ~!. 4UI plua 2.81 fed. I tax and old Urw:ER TI>-14 , wh ltewall. tubel- Survlvor Radial Wldt Tire. Tire Reg. Sale Fed. Size Pr lee Prlc. Tu ER70·14 45.95 36J6 2.61 FR70.14 47.95 38.36 2.82 GR70·14 49.95 39.96 3.01 HR70·1 4 52.95 42.36 3.31 FA70.15 47.95 38.36 2.95 GR70.1 5 49.95 39 .96 3.01' HR70.15 52.95 42.36 3.38 JA70-15 57.95 "8.36 3.52 LR70.15 59.95 47.98 3 84 PIUI Fed. tu itn.t old Ire. Sale 19 9R~. 24.H plut 1.00·tld. ta x end old ·11ro. C78·1f blackwall, tubeltia. ' El Tlgre 11 Fiber Glass Belted Tire. Tire llz• C78·13 F7S.14 G78·14 G78·15 H78·15 Rtg. Prlct 24 .95 30.95 32.95 33.95 35.95 Sola Price 19.96 24.76 26.36 27.1 6 28.76 Fad. Tax 1.90 2.52 2.&!J 2.78 3.01 WhNew111i onlJ ta mo .. per tire. Without trad9-ln edcl '2 •• par 11 ... Plu1 Fed. tax itnd old Ura. IHOCK AllOftll lt GUAIUNTll or19.1,n Heavy Duty Shock Cloeeou t , II I P1nn1y1 h•••Y dUIY' •hoek 1•11• 11!«' ln1t1U1tlon by a P1nn1ym Aulo C.nt•r. du• to d1l•ct111• 11t•t1tltl• or workm•l'Hlhlp or w.1rout .n111 u.. 011011111 iivrchlMr, own1 th• cir, Ju1t contact •11 .tnd I P9nM)IS 999Cla1Mit •Ill r•pl1ce th1 def1cll•• t11avy duty .nocx a1 no ••· h Cll-ot-JC Pen ney heavy duty a~ock ab1orberw to help your car rlda like-. With llfltlmegum-.ril9e. 1199 lpeel1L th1m1w whHI. Fits Fotdllnd Chtvf0fota.14xl. Cool en d clHn Trlmllne air concllU-{ Reg. 258.95 Ille 233.15 Cool and clMn 30 auto llr conditioner Rog. 229.95 ..... 20l.H Cool and clean Z4 auto air condltionlr Rog.199.95 811 .. 171.91 ~ Cool and clean Ford pick up air condl'-" Reg. 249.95:s11e"224.95 Cool en d claa n Chevy pick up air conditioner Reg.249.95. lale"22MI JC Penney Shop Sund1y noon to 5 P .M. 1t the follow Ing AU!o Centers: NEWPO RT BEACH, Fa>h°ion l1l1nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Canter, u .. Ptnntys time p1tment plan. • , I ' ' I ' • ' • .. Effects of Marine Engines on Ecology ~tudied The Water Qualllt Office of bruk-<io!'fl.._of 'rnartne en1ine project 11 exPected to top In each of the pairs selected monitor both lakes for any frozen..du rlng the winter. just vlronmental control lechnJ- cians of Ann Arbor, ,.Ucb. the -Yederal Env ronmtrital exhausts being discharged into f4DO,OOO. care will be taken to insure changes In condition and make like Jta big brothers all over Protection A I en c Y hat lbe wattt and what effect, U BlA executive director ?t1at t that the lakes are 11 much frequent compari&ens betwttn the northern part of the coun-,.=========== authoriud • crant of nearly any, thtle d.ilchar1es have an J. K1ufman, admln1trator of alike as posaable In water the two. try. In warm water areas the!; $400,000 to help l1unch 1 study aquatic -Jooy. the pro)-t, aaid the t~·o quahty. bonom conditions and "II'• ••••nt1·a1 to study both f t•· 11~· of r!n ........ o ~ o;.--. emisslonJ will .continue lo o 11t: t -~ m1 e The federal arant 11 for the ttams or sclentlw will Uie a plant and animal Ille. cold and warm water lakes \ tnJinet on the environment. first year of the planned two-"mini-lake" approach in the One lake will then be su~ because of the great dif-work lhe year around . THE BEST Readership po 11 s prove "Pea.nuts" ii one of the world'• most popular comic 1triP1. Reiid it daily ln the DAILY PILOT. The lludy, 1ponaored by the yur study and ii renewable sludy, one pair of Jakes In a jected to increasing prwure ferences in aquailc Ii I e The cold -.·ater study will be Boatinl lnduttry Aaocl1tlon'a for the second year. The coon-cold water area. the other in a from marine engines and tbe between them ." K 1 u f m I n carried out by the Universityi MariM E•hlUlt Ra 1 e Ir ch ell will put up S127,000 for the warm water ucllon of the other '\\'ill be retained as a said. "In addi tion, the cold of Mlcblg1n '1 department ofl Council, 11 a I med at _:l~l'r~•:t 2y~ea~r~._!To~ta~l~coa~t~of~th~e:._~cou~n~try;::_. -~c:_ _____ ~c~on~t~ro~l_:l~a~ct~o~r.~Sc~i~en~t~iJ~ls~wi~·1~1 ~w~a~ter::._:w~i~llJa~e~t ~•_i:r~es~t~w~h~e~n~it~iJ~_:w~a~ter~~rt~lou~r~ce~s::_a~n~d~e~n~·~========== determining the chem I c 1 1 .. make-up and quintlty of South Shore Races • Count Toward Series South Short Sailing Chlb his annou11ctd ractli . which will eount toward the High Point Serles for Pacific Handicap ll.lcina: Flett and Small Yacht Jloclng Flett yacht.. Fleet C.pl. Roy Wieaand ·u ld the 1trles 11 an ac· •cumulation of race• already On the 1972 master cal•ndlr. I! P'lrst race of the series will Angelman Series Set By Bahia Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club \fill incorporate its second Angelman Serles Tace with it• •Mual St. Patrick's Day Regatta Saturday and Sunday. The Angelman race for PHRP' rated y1cllta wUJ take the fieet around the Hun· tlniton Beach 20-fathom buoy and around "C'' mark before finishing at the starting point off Balboa Pier. Small boat• scheduled to ulf Inside counes In the St Patrick'• ·Da~ Regatta are Li<lo-14_ A, Udo-14 8, Kite, Flipper, Sabot A, Sabot B, Sabot C, and B?IY other small boat clw with at least four lt&rters. PHRF boats not entered in the Angelman Series will start In the class appropriate to their handicap. PHRF ratings are Class A. up to 156: Class B, 161 to 198, and CIHs C, 204 and up. Buck Award Candidates I Solicited U.S. Power Squadrons District 13 has launched a search for candidates for I.be H. Warner Buck Award, presented each year by the veteran show productr. C.andldates from e a c h aqu11dron are nominated for having made an outstanding ,contribution to the. service be sssc·s Grand Pri• on April I. ' Other races wUI be the Da'ns Point & Relum race jointly tpoMOred by SSSC and Dana Point Yacht Club May 13-14 : ~·1 trtanale Crulae July 21-23: the Pomeroy Trophy Race Oct. 4 and Newport Ocean Salling Aa!IOCistlon's 14· Mile Rank Ract, Nov . 14. High point scoring will be u1ed with the stiles win golng to the yacht wl h the Jargeat numbfr of points -11 op- posed to the reverse scoring sy11tem. Points will be awarded on the b111i1 of the numbtr of boats beaten in each race. with a quarter point bonus for first place. All boata 1tartln& In a race will be counted for scor· ln1. Final 11coring will be on the best 1ix of eiaht races sailed. Participant.a must be a member of 1 rte0grUied yacht club tnd must have 1 valid PHRF or SYRF measurement certificate. A single entry blank will cover all races e•cept the 14- Mlle Bank race. which will re- quire a separate NOSA entry blank. Perpetual trophies include the Clyde Bet&le Memorial Trophy for PHRF and the Warren Pomeroy Perpetual for SYRF. Race entry blank.s and brochures with c o m p I e t e details are available from SSSC or other yacht clubs. Mercury Eliminates Oil Drain Leading the outboard ln· dustry wi.th a productlon schedule beginning Aprll 27, all outboard engines manufac- tured by Kiekhaefer Mercury will include a feature eliminating overboard o i I drainage. The. system wsa first In- troduced in 1968 on Mercury engines over ~o ttoraepower and now e:rtendS throuah the entire line. Hows: Delly 10 to 10, S... 10 to 7 ·--72 YEARS werl4'1 lte1t ""•wn MrM •f tire 'IY•llty I llRS ~111AITEE .. !~$''"-¥1-8):• 'li: .... . . .. -'''"'""''""' ~ Fi•lc ~uper ~'fi-FligAf 2 For •RAYON BELT/RAYON CORD •Tread fortjfj1q,-,.....;a=a.;;-:13;.;1:;;100~1 +~c¥1!...! With Steel va.14 f7351 F7S.141n51 ~71-14 (8251 071-15 (1251 H7S.14 (81551 H71-15 ln&I .171-14 (8151 ,171-1518851 PLUS FED. EX. TAX EACH TIRE $1.90 2.34 2.52 2.69 2.78 2.93 3.01 3.04 3.12 't ·- ----..._nd/or safety of plea.!lure All major builders of out- boards have announced similar production plans for later this year. This step by the industry removes ootboartt motors from the list of pou1. ble spurtes of warer way con- tathinatlon of oll. 1 boating during the year. , The award will be presented during the Western N11tlon1l Boat and Marine Show at the Anaheim convention Center, Dl1trlct 13 Comman(ie.r Maurie Barr of Long Beach said letters are being sent to each ·southern Ca Ji for n I a squadron a1king for nomina- tions. Nominees must be USPS members who ha ve started 1 program of lasting benefit to all pleasure boaters, Barr said . According to C. F. Aln· ander. vice presi~ent of engineering for Kiekhaefer Mercury. the oil th al normally accumulates In the cra,nkcase of two-cycle outboards Is now forced throu&h a 1)'1ttm thal returns the uctSS lubricant to the combustion c: h a m b e r , There ll Is mixed with the regular fuel charge. Balboa Clqb Announces 66 Series ~ace Lineup The Balboa Yacht Club has r-Point. The fleet will either announced the lineup for it1 spend the night at Dana Point \ 1972 fi6 Sefies of seven-day or return home. races . Original format of the aeries Other races, In the \ series was six races that could be are: completed within 11i• hours. Jn Abalone Point, 20 miles, · recent years a seventh r11ce April 8. was added, the final scoring Huntington 2Q..fathom, 21 •be.Ing ba~ed on the best five mUes, May 21 . races in the series. Huntington Tidelands, 20 1'lf. series will lead off miles, June 10. Saturday with the t&.S.mil• Drllling lsl•nds, II.I mlle1, Dana Point Race. The course July JS. is from the start at BAiboa B&lboa to Long Point. 2S.7 Pier. around "C" mark -11.) mlles. Aug. 12. mil6 off lht Ne"'-port Pier -Long Point to Balboa, 26 thence lo the finish at Dana miles, Aug. 13. } CUTIER CRUISER IS HERE!!! l I • • Jl'-'"91...W. " IS ...,a. • 100 .......... ,.... Pllen PIOM $15,795.00 • " J ' ' .... ,_ ~·-........ •.. ·-,, '" ' • • ' ' _,, ,, .. m 2FOA '" ". ., ... 4 2 fOll "' 2 FOii "' ·~ l1S·14 2 FOii m 2 FOA "' 2.12 .... 2FO" 2 fOfl '" . .. ... .,.,. 2 FO" ,, .. , ... "' ... .... 2 FOii ... .... -·· 3 - toN Hydraulic Jack TURTLE LIQUID WAX ftftHFT.0 I Ton Hydnullc Joctc.,,_ 15;19 llMcfl 111¥4, ot Ltltwelltr 1301 IMchllff. 523.3040 BUENA PARK LJocolo ot Yollty View 5115 Llocoln An, 826-5800 COSTA MESA K-IW.otWllooo 2200~-· 54 .. ZOIZ )· ,.ATUAES: •Pully Autorftltlo •eompectllt•· PIUI N•tly Under' the Dallh SANTA ANA ldl09or St. ot lrlotwl 1400 ldlo9or 546-7132 •EHY ond. Sllde COntfol1 •l•clutfv• FIMI Tunlnt • Unlqu• Stlectof' Button •solld Stlte Circuitry WESTMINSTER 11440 IHch 11.d. ._h 11¥4. at McFcnht.. 892°2088 . - • • • I I • .· ..J ''" """" 1'n ' ' frlOT IC , .. '" E,11 NOT l . Mii hfrt /11 tor IP .... m,.. ""'' a """ ' fht c ,.111 ( Wfll, I ""' AIU(IN ,,~ " CulWr Ttl: Ct Alten1 Publl "'"' t. No "' !d Sc1too1 coilslru to ltt• "''' .. ptO'fl .. ""· Ill •~rll l'Klllll 01\!rlcl (1lllDI' .. NO tlitdfr Miort ti• dH '· T ..... od 11Tuctu• '''ur1t 3. Tht ·~· ,.,. °' (.11:1 tit• pr -•m t ttorll• 1l1!fd h '"' b!Jew \ Wife I c1•1sillc nstect t>!low ··-f1tfll or t.lil ll b 11111111 , iJrCl'l'{lll 1d!1lllon Overt I perform "'°'k ' cr111 '" Holld 111 fh@ lltllll(ft (\@11lfll f"l'l'lo~ Cl•urn ar1c1t11 Clri1<1t l ltclrlc Gl•lltt t.11Mr ,.tlnl1r ..... ...,. PIU!ftbf "'''"" l!oef1r fSltffl ll'IM WO 1111111 Strut'! F111ct l.lllortr ''"""' CPlllA .... .,~ ·-.,,,, Grouo G'oun ·-· Grou11 (jrouo Tl'-MJ 'yd . • • • I · ll ,, . ' ,, . ' ". TrtM Wtlf r '"'' ,,_ lll hou Cl!PI#. '"'"" f~ 1'111 Perftl'"J ,.,,11o, Dtyn\ln tnlUrt dOC\lmt '*! .... 111 I "'' -dtPOlll lt I~ trK!or .... " kf NII M'" Uftlltl NII bl ""'" dl!t .. Ool .... \Vtdn""1, Mor" 15, 1972 • LEGALNarJOE LEGAL NOTICI! Peking Economy . ..... »O OIOINANCI NO. ,,.. TAX COU.ICTOl'S OPPlCI PICTITIOUS IUllNllS Self-sufficiency SUPlllOI COUJIT 011 THI Mt Ol:DINAMCI 011 Ttll CITY (OUM-COUNTY OI' Olt.&N•I NAHi STATIMINT IT&TI OP <ALllOJINIA POJI CIL ~ TNI Ctn' OP COSTA ilotlU. tTATI Of> CM.1,0lt•UA The lell"'11nt ,.....,. «• -'"' THI COUNTY 01' 01.ANOI <•LlllOtUU.t.. CMANOllM TMI lOM: NOTtcl 0" SALi 1'01 TAXIS llutllllu ti: .... A·tttn INO OP • POlTION o,i TMI "''" Ott UNSICU••o ••O•l•TV WfSTCLl,11 SICICltOOM lU,.PLllS NOT1CI OP NfAllNO Otil •ltlTION ICNOWN Al TNI UtYUll tNOUSTa.IAl WHEllf.AS fOWAIO p CltAIG 1/11111 O llld lfNT•LS, 1•1 Wttl(lltf Or .. 1101 Pltot•TI 011 WILL AND •o• C'OlllPLfX, llllOM COUNTY J'UN· CltAJG 1111 f..11M •111111 ..Hi.r.o to .. .,.: M.-ert. C•HI LITTlltl TIST,t,MIHTAIT MIO COMMUNITY OllOUP 11 TO upon *-M. lhtt 111 _.., .. ~ Qrlt'I C. ~ It•,..,,.., Trtll, LI MOl~t:!: OI I L.AS N. MOll•OA. lkl I W CIT'f Cl<'° ANO Ml.CP, IN .t.CCOI· ff1W Ill tf11 MT' .. u.t.>e, ~~ 1\wlMd C1/lld1, C•ll l, · "°'' De<t..O OAltCI WITN llCTI°" "*"• CALI• ,.,-l'llf,..., lt71/ tdl M-.f llOfWI. IUO Ptllrfl Trill, LI MOT!Cl I& 1-0Eltlt Y G!VIN ttlftt .. 0.NIA OOVllfllMlNT COOi WHllllA5 """°'' t!ld bv vlrfllt ol "'' C1'1H11, C1lll, I ~~~ • ~.1: '°'GO'=! OI ~.; .. I llltcl"' Till co~ (11Uf1C11 Ill-Ille Cttv 111' Co.I• JfeYllhll'll ,, • Ste:tt111 '91( ff fllt C•Ulor11l1 Tlll1 11'1u!n.u II 1191"1 tofldvc:ltlll ..... • MINI ... ftt<'M Ofdli11 II follewl· ·--.... TutllOll Codi "" '911twll'll Pl•IMr"'l•. . .. I ' !Of lllVlllC:f DI Ltllflt T11l1mtnt1ry IO ll!CTION 1, AU Ill.et WI .... if tllt Jr-rfY 111if Mtf1 llllttl +;,. ,... JUl'MM Orl111 (, ....... Htll~r, r1Yttll(f to wnktl II 1'11dt tor fellewlfttt ft,WIMd fNI ,....-.rtv It Jf tllt ti Mlle llClloll 1., ""' wfhfM· T~ll 1lllffl*ll 1111111 wllt'I lhl C-IV "''""'· H fli'.cl.tlttt, I/wt lflll !hf 11..,. 11111 '-""' J~H llld 111(!\IOH Ill "'9 Ml.C: .. llolt of 11tl~ ~ ll •ll toH!Nr W!lll (*11 el OrllltlM (11111ty Oii: ,..,,,,,..,., I, Ltl1nd M. cave his been appointed vice. pruldent and m1nager at 8 a a k or Amerle1'1 Costa Meu brine!. ln1titute·of Bankinc. * ':iilliam lftvultr bas been appotnted d ir ecto r of mtf'Kf~1t11I tnd sal~ f o r May Hqrt Trade OIKI OI llMrl"' llM -~MM Ml lOllt, Wlll't ~ t~IOll ff lftt 1911-11'11 -•lllM ltiffto111 tlltl Co.I' of 11M1 lt11. '' Artl!11r I , IOtffr o..tt'f (lllllllV ,.. Mt•tn 2', n n. •I •:lO •. ..,,,.,, 111 lilt SU• A •NI $!t1 I: NOW. TMEl.l!l'Ollf, NOflCI! IS Cft rll. l courtrllllm OI DHlrlf'\1111 No ) ff ltlf TlloM l>Of"llOlll o1 Lott UO, HI l4l ll'd Hl!lllY G!Vt!N 11111 1111 COl.llll'I' 'f'I• l"•IJJK a url. II 'otl (ly~ Ct111tr OrlYt Wttl, lro llJ 1., lllot• t . ,.., "'-oortlOllt ti Ltll Colltcltw el Of•Mt COi.iniy, ~lldtf 1,_ ih' "11illltl'ltd Or11111 Coed DlltY "hot, ffl• City ot ''"'' ""'· Ct ll!111"ftl1. 11.J, l)l tt'ld IU 111 81tt• J, t ll., 11'11111t't vlrh.lt ff ll'lt 1111horl11' telllltfrld b't' II• Mtrdl 1. IS, tt. tt, 1m l»-71 Otltd M1rcl\ I, 1111 klllllhtltltft, 111 lllf (O\lllty tif Ort llH, u-w ld offl(.f r, wlll wll ti '°"~le fll'l:·l---------------1 Wll..LIAM f~6t JOHH. llllt ti Cllifornlt , 11 -""• tuor'H tltft It lt\f hlthftl ~r. tw tt..,,, lewt\11 LEGAL N011CE COVlllY Cit•-In loelt I, ., .... of Ml1cllll"'""'t rnoM'f' fl tllt Unlt..i 511ln, ... ltlt n10C11---------------I COMIN, ITOIOfl I OWIN llk1H'd1, 111 lht otrlt1 f1I tt11 CIUlllV lltY of Mlrcfl, ltn, ti tilt Mur ol 1;Clll l'ICTITIOUI IU11Nll1 ll't': 1.Al.•Y I'. OOL0$1Y) ltKorder ff 11111 Cou111Y, !ll(Jlidlll wltfllll o'Clfrt PJi4 .. ol 11!• d1y, 11 tilt o!llc1 Ml.Ml ITATIMINT 1111 M. lf0t~.Wf¥i S11fi1 HI "°'' IOllOWl11t dttCtlbld ll"tt: ot l ... Ort~ (f\11\IY Tt l Collec:lor, tlO TJW tollowlltt "r10111 1re dol1111 ••""• Aft•· C.i lll. '27tl ... lnnl11t I I "" ln!frlf(tloro Ill Ille M .• , .. ow ..... ltntt ""'· C1lllor'"l1. ffoe blt1lnt1t 11; Tfl1 f7H) '"''"' t•~ltflfnt ., I.Id H[ll AYtlll,of wilt! Ille lollowlnt lltt.trJNd .. _,..,, IW .. mud! I( & H A$SOCIATlfl .... o .... ...,,, Attlr"''' ..,, Pttni-r (flllt •llM ol l•IHt .... ._, •• 11141 rri. """"' II lt'llY " l'lleflNlfY, hi u llt,., 1'905 , .... ,..,.. Clrtl• "0". lrvl119, Cl tl• ft11llllll\fd 0r"1!1• (<NII 01lty .. llol, ltr1Kll011 It "'°"'" Oii INl_fl"I .. of lr1ct .... Ufltllld t1•ft, lottll>tr with ""'tflft kwnll f1'M Mlrch U, 1!. 1(0, ,.,, ..,...11 , ~.,_ !IJ ... .u "' "'•• rttordt<d 111 tl'Oll ftltrflOll 11111 111t cot•t tf t0fldll(tl11t 11td Frtril<. ,, "''fPf· 1ffrl2 Wlllltrw~ or., LEGAL NOTICE ••It •Jt IUPllllOll COURT 0" THI ITATI 0, CALl,ORllllA "011 THI COUNTY 0" OltAHGI N1. A·7nlt HOTICI 01' HIAlllNG OH l'IT!TIOH ,Olt PltOl-TI OF WILL AND POlt LITTlltS 'tlSTAM.ll'ITAltY 1!:1t&t1 el LLOYD LEES AUIEltT, 1!$0 lillOWll 1$ LLOYD l. AUl!IEltT, Oect1Md. NOT ICE IS H!ltfl!IV OtYl!N th1t t>OltOTHY M. AUl!RT ~.u l!llld Mrtlft • P1ll!lo11 !or Prob1te o! Wiii 1111!' fOf hw1nct ol LtltjrJ Tf!ltt m1nl1ry to Ptll· llllflff , re!ere"et to wr.10> It ma.,. lo• t11rlhtr Pil•tkul1r1, aNI .11111 lht lime •NI 1>itt f of llterlnt l!lt 1emt htl bff" 141 1or M1rcll 71, ltn. •I f ::IO 1.m .. 111 Ille courtroom of OtMrlment No. J of w!d COOJflr •I 100 (lvlt Ct ntet Dr!Yt W11t, In I~• Cltv of St "!1 .A.11•, C1llktrnl1. Ot11d Mardi f, itn WILLIAM E St JOHN, Ccuntv Cl~r-l.ClllltT10H, NOW1~1. & O•l.LANC> U4t (11n"'1 f>rlVI M~Wllet! lt8CI!, CtU!. '2U) ltlt•llene: 1110 f .. ·lolOI •1torn•Y1 ftr: ,.ttllle!lff P\lllllslllt O•t"OI Co.11 M1rdl U. IS, XI. !917 LEGAL NOTICE 216, PIM lO ol MIKt ll11\fe!.;1 Mt••· wit. 11t~1tld ti lr.t l\ln\ of $1,141,1Ji I.I Tero. Ctll19T11!1 IKC•dl ot 11111 Cou"IY: tl\rnct. •loll9 Ollt '°'' ,,..j11KC •• ..., tt. c•lllfl '''"" D. Ht~. nn MlltMll "JI" Nlld Ct'lllff'llllf ff ltfd Hiii Awiiut. crulnr llll'!'ltll "lflldu.'' Tiit 1"3 Ltttt TulllrL. CtUfofflll . Ntrlll «I" l1' 0 " E>I!, 3111.47 Fflll tlllli Sant lfllJlllfKtyrtd boll 11•1 twlfl Tl'lll llUi!Mlt b btl~ CV!'ldlt<lttl fh' I lllfl'l(t Sou!~. ,.-!2' IS" f"tlt, J!l.00 PK"_ .... , ,,..i,.., Mii HP 11'31 lfo1lllllld Ptrtllff'1\ll. lfffr ltlenct Notlt\ '3° 'I' '1" l!fll, 11!111'rT11y lit 1tr11 •I lhl lryl"' CO"ll'"' Ci .. D. H1mmonll/ 1111.~ fffll tl!onc:1 Soulll IJ' M' tl" Vllt1 Mtrlfll DoU;1, SH1> No. ,_, In Plrtlltll' f"•ll, 14l0l IMI It lllf 1Mtl11nlnt ot ' Nl!\ll'-1 lrec:ll, C1IU11r1111. Tiii• 1111rmt'lll llltd with !tit Cou111¥ l•1111nt eurvt tllll(t \lf Soutllwttl.,IY On ltlt '"'"""' of lht! orlc• bid tor 111V Cltfk ol °''"" C1t11111Y on M.1rdl "· !t:n, 11\d f\1vln• I tldlUI OI 1100.l)O IHll llfo.tt'IY told !ht (9'fnly Tl • ColllClor ol llY l•Ytrl~ J, MMlllO•, Offlllv CWJ'll'f P 1Ulit 1 "IJ'llll"*I Ortt>Df Co.ti D1J1'1' l"Uet, M1rdl U. b , l't. 111d ,t,1>rll '· 1tn .... 12 ffllnc:• Sovti111111r1'1", ''°"' ltld cu'"'' D••llM (111111¥. or lllt i>erton conlluctlnt Cllftl. ll'lroutll I ctnlrtl 111,11 ti 2~· Q' ~·'. lllf "'' Oii hit bOl\tll, wlll d•I!...., 11!1 •n •re dt•t11w::t ol 1U.tS 11111 ll!lf'et, whf -IV 11 "'' .urct>1w,, IOl'lftlltf 11119f!fll 11 11111 (II...,., SOvtlt 11' '2' )I" with I Clltl el tl!f, rlld Ille ttt!t 111111 E111 . ...,,,, 1"11 """"'<• Scuth ,.. 41' '~"°" "'" 111 ,.r~ ~f<"I\••••· 51 ;• ~!''· 135Cl/02 1~11 I/lei-ct NOl'"tl\ fl' Dlltf: Mtrdl U, ltn. -11 OJ Wtt1. tfO,OJ lftl; llltnc.1 S0\1!11 1.llbtrt L CltrOll LEGAL NOTICE :Jt• ~1' '4" WHI, Jl9J.l5 IMll 11\tftct COu11ty Ti1 COllKICr Ill Solltl! lfOO :JI' JO" Wt1t, 1015,tJ fftll Ort~H COl.l"tv lllCTITIOUI IU11NllS IMiK.t Scw.tth '9" 11'_ l:t" !•ti 211.tt ly H, H11m1l1r•Y. NI.Ml 1T•TIMINT llff/ 11\tn.et So\1111 211' d ' 12" Wtll, Als't TIJ (DlltclOf Tiit lcllcwll!I l>t<IOlll t rt dolnt Uff.'3 Ifft: lr.tnc:• Soutll ti" It' 31" Puttl1'11td Or11191 CDtll D•llr Pl!&t, bllllMlt .. : Et,11, 2.Kl.02 ffftl thrnci Soulh it• a• Mtrch U. tf12 .,,,72 "UTUl.IE SOUNO, «15 Ftlr Or, No. l2' Weil. l\t.n F•U ; '"~(I Soulf\ 40• 101. (0111 M•••· C•!lf(l(n!• lt' 07" Wetr, 511.'5 feel/ ll!tnct NOl"tfl Curry W. lflrll..,trlck. '" 1"1lr Or .. S2' JO' lJ" W111, 171.o.!I '"'1 tl!ell(t LEGAL NOTICE No. '°"' Cttll Miu. C1Ulor"nl1 Nori~ W" !t' 11" W111, 1.,_U fffi; Jolln Morrl1, oiOS F1fr Or .. No , 1'2, 11\Mct Nllfth i.~ U' "" Wut, 111.93 NOTICI OI' O.OVlllNINO (Ollf Mt11. Cflltornlt leel1 thtnce NMth ,.. 11' •1" W1tt. ao••o MIMll• ELICTION Tlll1 bt11l111u 11 bl!"' C&rtdUtllll .... I 2'0," IHI; lhtnct N11rtll l5" 14' O'I" NOTICI! IS HE•EllY GIVEN !flit Cl' f.'lrlMrtil!". Wt1I, "4.1, IHI lo Ill« (IOlffl!"I of TutllltY, A1>rU ll~tJJ, '" tltcllen wilt be Cur,.., W. IC lrlt.Pttrlc-ltld lllld H!fl AYtnue: ll'ltnc:I tllllll II" Mid In ll'll Fouflllln VtlltY kl!ool Tl!lt tll t-1 IUN wflfl tilt Counlv 11ld ''""'UN Nortti 40" ll' :n~ Eu!, Oitlrltt, Ceunry 01 Or'"''· Stitt ol Cit!"• ff Dr111" Count., Oii Mtrcl! 10, nn, m .u lut lo ""btt1nnl"41 ol 1 1-nl Ct Utornli , tor tl!t PllrlMI 01 tltcll"9 -llY ltvtrly J. M1ddoJ., Offuty County (111'¥1 ~•v• Wfllerly Ind h1Ylrtt 1 membfor kt l!H tl!e VICl l\CY Ofl f1!t Cllfll, ••111111 ol ttoO.DO 11111 fllfnc• Norrhtrlv, HY1rnlrtt 111>1rll of 111d school dls!t lct, • lt4Jf .. _ l1t1 Slid c11rv1. l"-l'OUll) • Cllllr•I t•ld mffl'lbef kt lffVI 11ur!111 1111 ,.. Publl~llHf Or1111. COAi! Otlly .. 11111. 1n1lt of u~ 5'' Ol", 1n ire dltl•roct at mitnOtr of tht ''''" In w!llctl 1111 v"i ncv M•rth 15, n . 2t tlld A!lfll 5, 1t12 70,.n NOTICI OP 1ALI. 0,. l•l.!O ft'4: ll!r ric:t , !Intent to 1111 »Id 1111 occvrrtd •1111c1.•l'T ,t,T PU&LIC AUCT•Ofll c11rv1·. North .ic· 11' 31~ Wttt, 109.3$ 11., '"' pu;_"' holdlfl9 itld t lK!IM. LEGAL NOTICE Motlc1 ia htrtbY olven 11111 fl\o! u,.. IHI kl ll!t""91nnlnv ol 1 ''"'""'' c11r11t tllh f!tc!IOll 111111 ci. 11111 It l1 l!ertt:iv j----o=c==,,.-.,,-,,,,~,,.----1 11er1l1ned wilt ttll 1t l'Ubllc tlldlM tl!t toric:1111 Soulhtt•l1r1¥ I nd l!tvlnt 1 ordtrttl COll!Wlllda!ld with tM Cl!y C01.111Clt PICTITIOUS IUSIHISI loll(IWl"a 1lrcr11!· Loc~hrrd Orloll •<. ••dlU'I OI 1200.00 Itel. ltll llld C\lfYt el1Cllor1t tar l'O!Onllln Vtlley 11\d HVll· HAMI STATIMfNT lttQll. No. N 1m1 . .51!d 1111 It 1111rsu1n! btl"11 l1no1n1 11 111 Ntrth111ter1v """°" •••tll. Th~ 1011owl119 H•!Wln 11 dolnt bu1lnt1l Ill Cod~ of Civil l rNtdur1, StcllOnt te•rnl11u1 with lhl ioi..thwe1l1rly pr!)-Otlld 11111 11111 dlY Ill J1nv1ry, 19'2. 11: lfOt.41·.70. end II le lorKIOlt I lltn ol lhl lon11lkln ol !tit! c•rltln COIOtH 11. O. Hlllmtll, OtPlllY IOLO VENTUltlE. INC., 11'0$ $kY Vllflt rtlllned In ti\~ 1mll<Jnl of '31.JH.20, l!~~t!nbtfor1 deKrllltd It "N~,rttl 41)' :11' Or•ll9ll County p1rk (lrclt "Q", lrvl111. Clllf .. nle. -1111 co1t1 ol u lt , lor te111tr1, It-. II.I._ 4!I EtJ!, l111.•1 Itel; lhtnct SuPerl"ltlldt nl o1 khool1 IALLS OF NEWl"08T, INC. A 1111••· i nn m1terl•ll. lllt wit wilt Ilk• Nortllettttrtv, 1t011t l1tl 11111 cur111, Plrbllt.llfd O<•no• co.ii Otlly Pll<!t .. Ct lllMrol• C1>•PO<"tllon, 1ms 51ly Ptrk 1>11<;1 Oil ,A.prll U. lt12. ti T1 llm1nl1 tl\roulll I Ctfllrll 1n1lt of 44' U' 16", Ml•C~ )J, 22. l'tJ 1'11 '2'·12 Clrclt "0", l•VIM, C1lllernl1. Av!1!1c". Or~llf• Cou~!v Alr111)1"!, 58n!• I" lrt dl:lllnc:t ol 940.ll feel to f'tl Tl\11 butlntll Is ~lfll COflCH.IClld lo¥ f An1, Clllfornif, fl 1:30 P.M. Tiit 1!rcr1ll dt1crllled OOlnl cf l1n111ncy1 ll!t nu, LEGAL NOTICE Cellforllll Corooritl1>n. wlh iM' tOlcl "11 \t" '"d !he trrm1 of 1111 1!01111 llld 11rolont1tl on. Narlll 4111' 31' C•rtl 0 . Him!Nlnd Wiii bt riet k.11~. tS" E111, J6t.tl fltf lo Ille riotnl o1 PICTITIOUI IUllNlf.11 Aullltnl Trltl1trt< TAL LM.A.NTl ,lr.VIAl lON, INC9 llttlnnln11. NAMI! SYATIMINY Thi I ff1td I ( 0•1r.ft (0!0111¥ "'1r~rt SECTION J. AU fl'leM -1IOlll ot tilt TM le!lowlnt per-.1 lll'f dollltl butlntSt 1 lllllmltfl "'Ill lllr ounlv Sln!t .A.nt , Ct liio'"ll ktll-!nt dffcrillfod rttl P•OH•l't' k,_n 11: Cltrk ol Ortnte (Ol.llllY M Mlrch U, It)!, .. ublltl'lrd Or11191 Cc11t Otlty Piiot, tt Sitt A 111d Slit 1 irt htrtbY P"!Kld GOLD CO.A.ST LTD .. 3to '°ln11Cr/s1 ~j :rvtrly J, Mldllox, D8itl'f C1111nty Mlrt~ \l, n , n , 14, 15, 1•. 11, 11, 11, to. 1!1d lncl~llrd '" 111~.Cl.CP Zonot : O< .. P.O. 9oJc •t3, L1oun1 111e11, Ct It. er · • lUll \072 •11·'1 SITI A '2Ul l'ulllltJltd Ortntt Co.1! 01llY "llel Thi! -JIM of l lock • of lrvl"f'I Sub-Mrl .... 1rlcl1 L. Whitt . P.O. lex "'· M rd! u n " lld. II s 1'72 ••5-ri LEGAL NOTICE dlY!tlOll 111 !ht Ccunty of Or11111. Siii• of La1un1 Bet(~. C1llf. t1'lJ • • • 1 fl!' • ----------'"'~----IC•lllor"l1, 11 "'' mep tUfd In bodt 1, Mr. J1ct W. Wlollt, S1m1 11 AllP\lt. LEGAL NOTICE tSfl Pllf u "' Ml1~11 • ._., MIFI. In !ht ti· Thl1 tllnl-ll Mini condutttd II~ • Ile• ol Ille C011nly Ate!lf"llt r al 11ld coun--Pt•lrotrlhla. !---------------! SUPl.lllOlt couaT 0" THI! ty, detcrlbtd '' lollowl: . l"l!rl(I,• L. W~ll• TAX COLLICTo•·s Ol'l'IC• Cave. with the bank 1inrt 193~. w11 formerly vice pres ... dtnl wll!Htle blnlt'1 loan 11 • mlnlstr1tion department I 1 Los Attge:lea. He and hil wU live In Fullerton. * Natk.nal Sy1tems Corpor1 doa h11 appolnted Roy A ADderso~ an l!llisltlnt. Th Newport Beach executive has been director of m11rkeling supporl scrv- :ces for the lnterna- lionAI CQr- respon· d'nct School division of In text In s c r • n ton. •No1111ow Pa . He was with CApltal Record Club, Inc., for II years 111 director of fulfillment 11.nd liter as director o f operations planning. Anderson has a degree from Boston University in industrial management. * 141ss1on Viejo r es id en l Daniel F. Monahan has ~een named m anager of First Western Bank's Anaheim of. fi~. He formerly headed the bank's La Habra office. A banker , for 16 years, Monahan joined F irst Western in 1962. He holds a graduate certificate i n commercial banking from the American Irvine Firm McKeon C onstruc. tlon Company' Oran1e ~division. He ~·Ill d irect d Iv J 1 Ion m11rkcllf\I effnr111 throu1hnut the Ortnge County are•. Sylve11t.er was prevl· ousty 11ales represen- l11tlvl" at Mc· Keon's Clise deC1pl11· tr11no In San JuRn Capis· lrano. The firm speclalius in condominium-style apartment home building. * Region&! sales m 1 n B g e r Floyd Bryant of Babrock Electronics Corpor•llon. has been elected pre~ldent of the Nation11I Assnciatlon ol R1!il.!1y Manufacturer!'. Bry ant., who heads lhe firm's control product11 group, h.ss loog been Involved in NARM activities. He joined Babcock's mRrkeling dep11.rt- ment in 1964 and h e 1 d managerial posts in customf!r s ervice, applications enginf!er· ing and sAlfs adi'ninistrRtion prior l.o his prt s ent assignment. He and his wire reside in Fountain Valley. Manuel .J. tmendarli hal'I been named vice president nf finBnce for Arntl Development Company in Tustin. Prior to h is appointment, he was vice pres ident of finance a t Calprop Corporation In Los Angeles. By MILES A. SMITH NEW YORK tAPI .• Present prospl!icts o f American businessmen ck>sing deals C'lver a friendly cup of teA ln Peking 11re slhn. And e ven if the Americans aet to Peking, they m lRhl lind there w11s no' sugar In the tea -or In the bus iness deal. Since President Nixon's trip lo the People's Rep u b I i r . businessmen Rll over t he United SlBlts h111ve betn weighing their c hances of Opening tr&de with the Chinese mainland. THERE ARE no immediate signs of A quick development of that tr1de if previous ex· periences by Amer ic 111n businessmen are 11ny ex- ample. In Lo ,. A n g e l es ', for Instanc e . an e>:port cnnsulh1nt has btt'n wailing eight "''eeks for an answer to his 11p- plic11tinn lo 11ttend a C hinese trade fair. -"' The head of a chemical comp11ny ln Seattle s&y!I, "We've been "''orking on this ir;ince last July. but ll1e Chinese dn not want lo de1\ "''ilh !he United State11." • Such frustrations havt made ' x po r I. ·import spit:i1Jists \Vary. and here are some or the r easons: U.S. Okays RCA-China First 'Deal Plans New Office Unit The Irvine e>:ecutive holds a degree in business ad· m inistration from UCLA and is a member of .thf California. . SOciety of Certified Public Ac- STATI 01' CALll'OlllNIA "OI. l19lnnlng .i till lllllrtKllOll of tl'lt Thlt 1l1t.,l'lent llltd wlltl lh t COll"IY COUNTY OP OllANOI THI" COUNTY OF OlltANOI unltrllnot a1 lltld Niii .A.Ytlllll, ,,. "'' Cltrlt ol Or•llM (011111¥ Oii: Mtrcll f, i•n. STATI! 01' CALll'O•NIA WASHINGTON (UPI ) Nt. A·11J1• "'-C count.ant!. •• TICE 01' NIAi.iNG 01' l'ITIT10M wldt. wilt'\ Ille ct nt•rll nt al llktr l 't' ltWfly J, Mtdllo•, .,...p11ty Ol.lnlY NOTICI O" IALlf llOlt TAXll ""'"e 1rch1•teclutai piann1'n1 The administration h fl S Sltltll Eltl, 90 .._, wide. ti Mid I,._ Clerk, OH UNSICUl.10 ... 0 .. 1.llTY l II llOlt tt•OIATI OF WILL AND FOii ltrHtllon 11 I"""'" on"" mt• of Tr~a lllilH WHEA•••· ,.,. •. ''"''' ... A. • Wood d d formf411y •pproved !he first LITTl!l.5 TlfSTAMENTA•Y N .... .. II I ~ Or c I 0 n Piiot .. firm o( Stewart ar an !•'•t~ 0, J•NE c . Mil LS. 0tc:111td. 0· its..••'"'' '"1P 111td in book 7•1. ""'"' '"'' "' ' Y 1 c1tu11EJ1"''1111.., •llll ""'"1" '' 11•Y. * major business deal between NOflCE IS Hl!ltE!IY GIVEN "''' LOIJll l>IOfl 42 tll•Ollft\ • cl MT1c•lllnr010t Mirth I. lS, n , Jt. nn 414. J llPO'I dtmllld, 1••11 on u1111<11rtd "l'OI>-Assochttes ha s been e<>m· L Milli in~ M•rllvn J, •~v h•v• 111111 M1p1, '"""'or s11d coun1y; LEGAL NOTICE ••l'f In'"' aum of 11)t.01, duly 11u11td Robert G. Vande Vrede ha5 the United St11tes Bnd China "••tl11 1 or1u1°" ror Pre1111r of w1t1 1..c1 Tlw!nce, •lctn• 1"' 111<1 ''"'••lint of for'"'.,,,, 1111 ; m issioned by Associated Real "'-n appointed president of by gr11nting a 12.2 m illion l!lf' luv~nce 01 Ltller• Ttll•"""''"' to 11111 Hit! A.,,_, N-.ie• JI' t!I" E1,1, JlilCTITIOUI IUSINl11 WH!lltE,lr.S, undtr 11111 11'1' vlrt1HP of ltlt "!"'" II f "'' .,11,1""'''· rtlt •ence 10 w1iie11 11 lff.•5 '"' to 111 1n11ri.c11°" w1111 111t NAM.I sTATl!MINT ••ow111.-o1 5«1ioll l'tl1of1t1t c11Utwro11 Est.ate Consultants of Tustin. Ctlesco lndustrtes, a d ivision permanent export cense or a mlM 1., turlfl•r D••tlcular1, '"" tti11 "'' ctntt•llne 01 ""•ul•rl"' A.v•nv•, 10 letl Tll1 1011ew1n1 "'"'" It do!nt bu1lnt11 Atv1111.11 ,,.., T1u11or1 Codt , '"' to!towlnt s11tcl!ite ground st11tlon built ilm• end 011,, of h•••l"o '"'' 11.,.1 ~., wl11t, '' 1111 ••Id 1"1erstc11011 11 111ow" '" pro,..,,., h•• t1rtn 1t1Je<1 111r '"' 1>11•POie to complete pl1ns for a pro-of the Susquehanna CorporA· bet" .,, lcr Ao>rll '· nn. ,, f:JC '·"'" lfl on I~• ...... of Tr1cl No. 101,, •t lier MENMESSY ENTElfllllSES. 1t15 cl 1111 ti Pllblic 111ellon !or 11'14: 1111111(-r . I rr· I I 11·on. H• has ··-n a .,.,, pre•i-by RCA G I 0 b a I Com-'~' c011rtroom 01 n,,..rrment Ne. 3 0 , ;;~~1~fd011 1~-''"•,.,, ''''1,1~_•,lld ',,• "'''°"'st, No. 7, co111 M111• c1111. """ ,, 111d un1111d 11x11, 1o011111r with ess1ona o ice comp ex n ue.: 1 _ _. munication:i. 11ld court, II IOO'f Civic , ...... O•IY• lfl I lpJ, rK!lr • "' II LttrY A!l1n L11lll tn1, 1t1S .... IOlll SI. """''llltt llllrton Ind Cotll Of tilt: Escondldo. dent of the firm s nee 1968 a11u Wtlt. In tt\e (llY ol 5111!1 ""'· C1llforni1. Coun!y: Nt. ,, (Olli Mt••· Ct lll. NOW, THE•EFDllE, NOTICE 15 . The a ction was largely sym - Oltld M•rtto n . 19n Tl!tnc:t, 11"'0 stld centtr!l"' o1 t l!\1 butlllflst tt Mino clll'dllctld b'I' 111 HERIEllY GIVEN 1n11 tht Co1mr., Tix The two slory structure in· WAI general man11er of the bolic since the c 0 m p I , x wiLL11o,1 E. s1. JOHN, Piv1••1no A~1n1HP, SOUth 4'" lt' °'" 1nc11vl4u1t c111111C111r "' Dr•ntt CounfY, undf'f" 11w1 bY systems division of Atlantic Ctt0ini., ,1,,~ IE•il, an.n feat tc Ha lnt1r•Kll011 w1111 Larr., Alli n Lull!1n1 v1r1v1 01 1111 •11111orl1¥ con1e .. 1c1 bY 11w corporates features intended ter minal has been operating in ARKIN ANO WlflSSMAN 111• ''"1•r11"" of Alrw~,. Avtn11t. to feel Th11 1111rmtnt flltd w1111 1111 Ccu111y uPOn 11ld all+ctr. wlll atll ,, C>Ybllc 1uc-Research Corporation sin~ Shanghai since Feb. '3. It was tncl VlfllCI IOUltY•rd Wllll, ~s Ill! ltlll l"lfrlt<;tlo" 11 111-n Cler• ot Or1111t County en: M1rdl ,, lt'2. Uon lo t"t "!t nt1! bllldtr. lor tl $1\. llWlul tO return I Sense Of Warmth Cul¥•r Cll1', c1111""'1' ..,,. on ••Id m•P ot Tr•cl No. 101•: 1¥ 1tver1y J. M•ddo•, 0.-111¥ C01.1n1Y ......... , "' '"' un1rt'd s111t1, °" '"' n1111 _ _. h ff d 1 1967. used to provid ~ press com· T••• nn1 .,..,111 Th'"'•· ·~ "'' .-.Id c111t1r11ne o1 Cll•k. <11, o1 M1rc11. n 11, •' i11e llo•rr "' i :oo a1iy c arm to o ~ce es gn. The Santa Ana resident munications and television AltOt'nl'l'I !fr! l'ttlt'-' ,A.!rwl y AYer!llt Ind Its Soulhwtll!rly l'.lil1J o'tlod; l .M .. OI lalll 111¥. ti Ille llfllct ol V arylng Ceiling heights, tWO l"u)llsllN orta1• c0111 0111-r "net. • P<o1or1t•U011, !.cuth 21" '1' '-'" Wts1, ,.ltbll111H 0r1nr1 co.111 01uv l't101, "" ar.,,., coun1., T1• co11ec:1or, •• N. . earned his de&ree al Newark coverage of President Nixon's Merell 15, ,,, n , ion .,.._7, •1fl ~l tett •o lh• bttlf!fOlrtt 01 • 11""!"' Mircl! 1, l!I, 22, ,., 1•11 tts.n l•l!lfdw•~· S•n•• A"'· c1111orn11, 11,, story lnterlor spaces, and IT-Colle•e of En•ineerlng and v i·,,·; there at th• end of h '• 12• LEGAL NOTICE f\ll"Vl,<CIACIYI Norfl\Wftltrty alld hlY,n• lellowlllf dtKribld "r-rtv, 1W t<t much regular ••(e .• U r f 1 C 0 O W • ••d ui of 1200·00 1111i LEGAL NOTICK thf'f"tol '' m•Y be n«•U••rv, to 11111fy ""' ri r 8 e received his masters I t day China tou~ . Th1..c:o. .51111111w11t1rtv, •Ion• 11111 . 1111 """'Id 1 ..... '""'",., w1111 pen1uie1 planes are em p ha size d · cu:."'· lhr0101h • cil'nlr11 1n11t" 11• .so· l'tCTITIOU< ousiNltt l!MrfOfl •lld "" cotti "' conducf:n, 1,111 throughout the proi·ect All of Rensstlaer Po I y tee h n IC The Com m er ct Ocpart- NOTICI! TO 110011.1 01 · •n •re 111111..c:o of 141.M 1tt1 10 1 ult. Hllm111<1 •t 111e 111m"' '-'It~: • • Institute 1·n New York. ment origi"olly permlfl·' th• I Nctlct i• heftlrf 11vrn ""'Ille SOl•ll riotnt ol t•~•ric:Y with"" Nlf'llllllltrly N•M• ITATIM•NT" °"' toll CF .. ISJ·llR, I J) n. Cltllll fices are orlented to a central cu "' l!!ducttlcn ti'"" Hewcorl·Mtw un111111 11rotonr111on ol thl ctnt1rt111t.a1 Al,...•~ Tht telfflwl111 IMfMll'ls •'• dolni cruJu r n1rnte1 "HldNw•~ 11." Tht 1tt1 h Celesco Industries is located export of the tquipmenl on a School 01,l•lcl will rK•IYt bllh tor l~f A.vpn11t I I lllOWn Ofl tilt Uld "II~ of bi.ltll\llll ti: !"tlrlJner l!lt two ortY "'lrln• 1U ~.. park W j C. h COUnterpoints t e ffi p Or a r y baSiS for c011struction ot 1~1 Adr:111111nt1,.d ll•ml!ldt• Tr1ct No. 6f5'; MOUL Tl.Utt "INISM MAltOW•""· '"'11111 11111111.., •!Id m•v be 1 .. n ,1 "striclly business" wlfh an In· in Costa MesB. ta ••• Mldd'• 'c~ool trorn contr&c!Qrs T~•nct, •'""' 1111 11ld 1ro\Of\91tloll, 26'0 Avon St .. Htwlll(lrl •••ell, "'90. sn1 No m Lido ,.enlntu!• Ytdlt · I ' 'demonstration purposes." .,,., ,,, litt'llld in •cccrd•nc• w1111 "'' .591-11h .ia· JI' 4.!1" wett U.t'J '"' kt 111 JemH T. Mou1trv1. 1115 c111o11, coat• Anc:t1or.O. New-1 Alkh 0"' INt formal outdoor atmosphere. LEGAL NOTICE This was believed to be 1 face· """'!''°"' 01 !fl• c .... 1•1ctar'1 Llttni.t hflt riKllPll wnr. -u ld cenllf'llM of M•••· . Cl'·l..,._lii 1 IJ 11 1-·locl!ed dlf· Con!l"••t• Is h-' !-' lo •. ,,, " •• ,·., '"'111·00 ~m ••••• S1rtt1 !1111 •01 II!, comni, 1JO ''· J1on•• ttl .. , , • · 1 ...... ion sc !;:UU !;:\.! :---====~==c---·I savln• mechan1·sm since lhe !~!i1 ~~· ;-:,,, l"·~:v Off•t' Qf. Sc~ Tl>tl'ICt. •IOllt 1111 tlld (tfll•rllM. N""'"" '''°'· ''""' 11 "· ••m• Yl tlll tncllorlff. start in early May. l'ICTITtOUS IUllNISS & '~11111,,, N-rl·Mti• .unlllld S<l'loal North """:?' lS" we11 1o>0oo '"'to Tll!1 11u1111111 11 11ttn1 conduclff b'I' , 011 1111 P41Y"'1"1 "' "'' 1rlu bid'°' in., NAMI SYATIMINT Peking government up to now -·-.. w lht ""'"' 11ti1n111no. ' · Llmtll<!' P1rtnertlll1>. 111'-•IY Mid, '~• C111111h T1K Colltetor "'!--------------~! Tiit followll'll "''tori r1 ~!flt bll•ln11i h I I t~ · Id d 01,trlct. 11S1 r 1111:rnt11. Cc1l1 Mt1•. SITI I ' J1m•s T Mollltru• Or•n•• County. or !ht 11er1t111 conductl11t LEGAL NOTICE II: as nl s ICU II wou not tra t Ci!Ucrnli , 1111' which 11111' 1111 bids wll! Thil oortlon ol a1oc1i. 1 of lrvlnr•s sub-Thh 111t1m1ni 1111c1 w1111 ...._ "°"""' 1111 1111 ol 1111 bcllllf, wltt 11t1lvt r "'-11ld PHILOU ENTEAl"lllSE5, lOUt L• directly with the United States bf roubllclv rt fd •l...,d. AllY cl•1"' by ' 0 C ,,. -''" .,_,., to IN p.ur0>11tf ~l\fr wtl!I f ·~1 Clrtle, Fcu"l1111 V•lltY. C1. tl7~. 111t1dtr o1 ,,,o, lft his bid must 111 mrd• d11111l°" 1" tht COl.lnh' el O••ntt. "''' o1 Clerk e1 ,,,... °"""" Ot'I: • ... • •11 °' 1 · nd ., ,,,.·,. ,, -1su .... until key political differenc" .. fort bids 1,. O!'t"llf'tl er lllOI cltl"' wUI C!il1for"l1, '' ...-m10 fllld In ..,._ 1, IY lt.,.rlY J, Mllldol! o.t!lllV CllJftlY ,_, '' ',',~,· ! .. ,-,,,,. 1 mtr11110n IU .. 11.1011 COUl.T O, TKI lttllll• A, Lente, 11:153' LI ltott Clrclt, -·•• u -"' ,, • , • , ,,.... ~· ..... .... ,.,., 0 , ,,, ,0 ,0, Fwn111" v1H1¥. c1. n~. were sort·' out b• 11eemtd w1IYfd. .... "' t te IN!OUI •01• fl • c . ........ D•lltl• M1r0> " 1m • ' I lltNIA Tl!lt bu1ln1s1 II Mlf>I Comlll(ttd lh' IA !;;\I ' 1. Tiii ••()\Kl con11111 "' ... r111111 flee cl Ille Cmm!y lilec:ordtr of 11ld Ccuri. • 1'UI Ro11er1 L. (:11,°"' THI COUNTY o, 01.ANll 'l;;::.l;;;ur:;i:ir:;i:p;i:;'l-,;:'1-;I lllrm!lll!le!I A•e•s. verlO<t• tlldltlonel ty, d1lcrlbtd 11 lollcw1: Publ11~1d Or1n11 Coit! 0111'1' Piiot, C t T C It 1 I NO, A•ntM llltl!Yld111I, j ll!'UCh•rei S•tt ~~,tcomtnl Work tlld Btolnnlnl ~t tht mos! E11l~rly cornrr M1rch l, f, 15, ft, 1f12 iJ3.1' O~~ ~nr: IC ot o NOTICI 01' NIAlllNO 01' JtfTITION Phl!lt A. Li nt• t~l'U•ltnlnl 18cltllltl. of Lot S ol Trtcl Ha. 1t11•, 11 Hr m1p I Y H H .,,,,.. 1 1'01. P•OIATlf 01' WILL AND 1'01. Ttllt 1!1!'11\flll llltd wll~ lllf County 3. Tiit i wirdinQ body 1" co...,l>llAnc.e will! fllfod !n beok I~•. D•~• ll •nd 14 OI LEGAL NOTICE Au'l .Ti~ Cal~;... LITTSllS TIST•MINYA•Y Cltrk ff OrlnM C1111n1T °"' ~tll. 21, ltn. fht '"111,...,1ntt ot !~r Lita• Codi . Stlll MIKtll~nfOlll M1111. rtcord1 el 11ld "ubll•llld Orl"9t Co.it Diiiy Pilot , Etltlt of WILLIAM C.E. MOSELEY. ~r. :twrly J. M•clllox Dl'l>Ul'f Cllltll,.., "' Ctl•lcrn!•. ~II 11c•rl1lntd 11\d tdOPll'CI Countv, PICTITIOUS IUS!NISS Mtrih II nn ''''" 1k1 w.c.e . MOSELEY, •k• w. CAJIL IE. f ' , uu• ft>I prevtllln1 nourtv W8fl r1llJ. AU Tlltncf, 1111"1 thr nctrtht11trr!y lint MAMI 1TATIMINT • ' MOSELeY, Pk1 C.A.l.L !. MOSELEY, akl Pub!h.l>ld Or•"•' Co.ti 0.l!y l'ltot, l"llr•mf" em.,lav~ en ••Id wor-•tlll In '"" lit N.,.,.thwttltrlv 1felont11lon el Tiit l1>rl-!llf H rM!ll 11 dcl"I "-'•l"fll LEGAL NOTICE W1LLl,t,M C.A.l.LOS MOSILIY, Dtcllttd IJ, 2', ltr2 127,72 t ctardl n(I with lllt h<Wrl\I WIOf rtltS •• tAld Loi 5, NO<ltl 61° 12' ,, .. W•••· II' . NOTl(lf IS HEJlt!IY GIVEN t~1t,M_"-"'-'-·-·-· ----------·! llllld to~rtl" •M.OC l1fl to ill lnttrstclli!ltl wl"1 tht . ENVl lltOGltAM. sn Ct.,ttr 5trnt. WILL IAM C. MOSELY l!tt fl ied Mr1ln ,,. A"' cliulflc111011 flOI 1t'll~l111•1d encl ct ntrrll M cl Alrw1y Av1nvt, 10 IHI Coal• Met.I. Ctlll. t167J ••• )119 Hllllon ror Prof:ittt of Wiii Int tor LEGAL NOTICE i.-1-tillfd 11'1111 br i>eld 11 tl'lf currrnl wl!f,, '' 11!d tt"ltrlln~ 11 J.hewn Oii Oivllf ltlcl!trd t •-n. 260< 16th "1., SUPllll01t COUllT 011' TNI l11u1nct Ill LUltrs Trtttmellt•ry ta lhej----,cc:c:CCo:'-:C:::C::C.:=---WIH t l!fl tor !ht 1111Jllt1blt !•ldt t nd ll!d "'IP OI lr1cl No. 701,; Cotll Mttlo (i llt, tTATI 011' C.A.Lll'Ol.N IA ,OJI pelltlOlltl rtltrtnct to whldl I• ontet fllr PICTITIOUS IUllNllS c111,111cenon In ,Uftl wit~ lllt 111<ov, T""nc:f, 110111 llh!' ''"ttrllne tlld \11 Tllll butlMll II H int cor>ducttd b't' 1n THI COUNTY 0,. 01.ANQI lurlher .. 1ttlcul1fl. Ind th1t lllf llmt Ind NAMI Siti.TIM•NT llslt'd Tridei c""11clls. II '"v rttn UttN N~rlh~.•1!e•1¥ 11rolMgf!lon, North 11" IP\dlvlllutl. . Mt. A·J!Z11 ~l•tt of t111rlng ltlt 11m1 1111 bH11 ul Thi 1c1Jlcwln1 Hrtont 1rt dol"' below trt nctl currtnt or 1rt r1vl11d by 41 u E11t, 1l0.CIO let!; DIYld lllth•rd l r-n NOTICI 01' HIAl.tlfO ON PITITION lit M1rdl 21, 1tt1, 11 t :Jel 1.m., I" tilt blttlntU 11 : !tl!Or 19rtt rnr"!\ durl no tr.t lllddl"g Tlltnc:f, SO!Oth 61" 11' U" Etll, ""9.CIO Thlt iltttmt"I !!Iii! wllll , the Cwnty POI l'l.OtATI 01' WILL AND Fo• ccurtr"""1 fl OtQlrtmtnl No, l of u l-OAKWOOD TENNIS IMOP SOUTH. time .,.,. c.ont1r11tllM ""'"· wc:ll '"Yt'1ont IHI IO •n lnltr1tc:llon wltll "'" Clt•k ol °''"'' (CU"t'f on: M1•dl f, 1•11. Lt!TTl~S TlfSTAMINTAltY court. ,I 700 Civic Cenltr D•IYt Wetl. In t'lll St11un. NtwJIOf'I lttcll. C1lller11l1. lollt!I bf cClllllotrH! 1 pert 01 tht below Ncrtl!trSlerl'f .. o1orit1tlt!" ff ltlt SY ttWrty J. Mecllli!l:t<, Ot!IUIV ClulllV Etll!t el OME I. V1CTOI 9111A(ltEN, ""(Irv Ol 111111 "'"'· Ct tllornl1, Mlr'ol I . l llloN, UGI t!ldfll Ho. l!I, lllltd r11ts. -'"V h~f\I~. w•lf•rt. VICfl)Clfl, Soutl!tltlt•IY ll11e ol t•ld Lot Si Clfrll •k• OM!'I. v. II.ACKEN, ••• OME• Olltd: ,,..,di '· nn COii• Mfll, C1lllor11I•. l •Oll"!ttlOll or o•htr Mn~lh .111111 be In Tllenct llllnf l11t 11!d 1rol1111t1Uon, . PUHi 1•1'Ctr.t!N, 1k1 0 . V. lltACKEN. WILL IAM E.·'91 JOHN , Ot!I EHloU (w!ll), t4IOO lldtn No. 1l, 1~11111~" tn '~' ""''()Vt'"'''" .,.,,,.,. 1e1le.. Soulh 11' '1' U" Wtll, 130.00 , .. lo tlle "ubllthttl Ortlltt Cutt 1'.11llY li'llctl. Ottt•M!I. Countv (lfrk Coll• Mt11. C•llfor11l1. 0 !I l~IH bf 111ld for work 110l11l ol l>f-glnnln11. M I! I lS t2 l't lf11 61111 NOT ICE 15 ~El.!IY GIVEN 11111 ft.A.ULINI IPSTl!IN Tl!lt butlflttl t1 IDtl"t condiJclMi W 1n ,.,:::;,..::in !•C!St el Ille rttu!1r llav'I SE CTION J. Pur1u1nt lo lfl• ..-t1Yl1lon1 trC ' ' ' ' • I.VIV WUNOElf lllACICEN h•I ll!td :itll Wtllllh AWllUf llldlyldllt l !llu•blnd 1nt wlftl. wcr~ •'Id 11 1111 rift for ov•rtlmt ol !tit fl 5KliOll t2l0.~ of t!lt M""ltl•1I Cld1 et LEGAL NOTICE llt teln I 1>1tltl011 •er Prot>fllt ol Wiii 1..cl LI» Aftttl11, C•ll'-•1111 '"'1 Mtrk I . IUlott cr•fl 1 .. ~clvt!I '"' City of Cftll• M•~·· ""' •PP<l!llfll tt tor lltutnct ol Ltllt•1 Tnl1rntflllrY to Tll: (21)) JU.JIM Tllll 1!1!'111«11! fllttl wltll lfl• (IUlllY HnlldtYI tllfll bl i ll l!Olidt vt re<Df"l1td Ohtrkt Mae•• Mt" of t!lt CllV ol C11tl1 Pl'llllontr, re!trtflet ta wlllch It fl'lldt !01 AltOt'MY fir l'tltlllllltr Cltrk el Ortnfl County f11 Ftllr'Ul'T t2, lft lllt colltetlYt blrtaln!nt 1•retm~~· Mttl '11111 llt C""'tllt!I Ind 11/trt lilr,by ll'ICTITIOUS IUllNl1S !Urtllrr ltrllcUllrJ, llld llltl tllt tlm1 Ind P11b!l1llrd Or11111 (Olll 01!ly l'llOf, lf7t. by lfVtrlY J. Mtlldll•• 0911'\11'1 COUii• TRADING TftAVIL VOUCllllll 111¥111 AT e IOOM ADDITIONS e KITCHIN llMODILING e rATIO IC•llN ROOMI '1 ~ )" :-t "•I • ;...,, ' :.. ··-·. .: "\ ••cllcabl• 10 1111 ntr!lculi r c)1n. 1m1f'ldl!'d bv I~• 11kfltl011 llltrelc •I 1111 NAMI 1TATIMINT Ol•t• nf 1111rlno the ''""' 1111 btl'f' ''' M•rcll •· t . is. 1t11 •n·n ry Cler•. cli n lflca!!Oft er !~Ct 1>! workmt'I Ml ·CP &nd Cl ·CP 1rt1s dttcrl bed In Sec· Tiie followl"t 11r1t1nl 1rt dolnt /or Mtrcl! :ti, ltn, 11 l :JO 1.m , 111 lllej----,..,,,,-.,-.,.7 :=-=---·I F 16021 l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I 1cvld 011 "'' orol rtt lllJ<' 1 ~•rtof, bus!nttl ti: Cl)Urlrllflfft ol Dt•1rtm1nf No. ) cl u ld LEGAL NOTICE ""1111,,.td Ortntf Cotti 01!1Y Pl1ot.j· ~" llllcitlort . Hwrly w..-SECTION 4. Tlllt lllnr d<lntl It mlde Pl.!NCISS MINIS. LTD., 7110 W, COlll'I, 11 1llO Civic Ctnle• Orlv• Wttl. l" Ffbl"lltry U, ll'MI Mt rel! 1, 1, 15, 19n li11 kll.,..r 1.10 ourt111"t JO SICllen 6KS9, Ctll11trn\1 Oc:11" ll'rOftf, N1wPCrt I t • c I! • tl>t Clh' of S1nt1 Aflf, c1l11ornl1. l----,=:"c,o,,=,c0cuc•"'•=u=•=••=•=•=•---·I "''" c Tll Ll'(fr 7 l't Gowtr11rnt"I Codt. t lld ltltlt IN<-ff· C1llloml1. DllHI M1rc11 t, nn C1•,•o:',,'1,, 1 i:!s r~ctlvf 1nd llt t11 fl/II lorcf 11 tti1 1111•11 Jet\11 Wtlch M!llrr, 1110 ·W. Ck.tin WILLl•M E. SI JOHN, NAMI STATIMl!NT tt r I.II!!"" 11111 P•-td ltld Hiii Ann1Me1lon Fr<111t, NtwPOfl lt1tl!, C1lllornla. Coimty Cl .. •k SC~NlMA.llt St!IVICE COMPANY, Oltllt• 1 11 No. I llttomtt t!IKfrjYf, jl\ll prior to lllt M1rllVll J11nnt M!ll1r, 7110 W. OC11" t>•VtO S. TIJPIG~ll. INC., t C1ll+ornt1 Corwt!llJ<', !1 dol11t l-------,...-------j ~·:~• 6 ti t•flir1tlon cf 1111-IU) !11y1 trf!Tt H-FrOllt, H1wt11rl lltttl>. C1llfornl1, Jff NIWHl1 Clllltr Drhll, S~llt Ht llll•~t'H'~ EI O I!! II Mt! O IC A, NOTICI T~llOITO•I ,.• ":: 1A <Oflfl fttdl~ •NI •llDl>lllJ<' ltltrt•of 111111 IM Thi• blltlftt$1 It 1111"• Ulllllucltll w l f'I Ntw-1 INdl, C1MI.,,... l.AIOl.ATOl.Y SlfJl:lllCIS .. .u .. 11.101. COUllT 0, TNI '".,'"ttr IJO llV&ll""11 llll(f I" lflt OJIANGI CO•ST ltfl•ll(Of,....lltd 11MCl1tlon etl!tr 111111 t T.,: (7Ul Ml·SdJ Pl1tm f J.itS O.A.ILY '°ILOT, t llf!'#WPl'OH o1 ttllffll ltl11Mrlhl1>. Altwllt'I' Itri .. flllMtlll' Wltl\ ll>t 1rlnd11 1 PIKt OI tllnll'lfll tel STATI 0 .. CALl,.OllNIA 1'01 ··•-11t1rtr 4.2' cl•Clllll!IJ<', 1rtntld 1,.d .tubl!llltll "" lllt Jel't11 Wtltl! Mllltr Plll)lltlltd Ot~ntt CO.II Ot ll y '°llOI !lrtu It 1!11 Hot•lltl l.oed, N....,.ert THI COUHTY OP OllAlllll ' t •I C\IY o1 Cctll Mt11, '-""-' W'llll Ille MtrllY" J. Mlllt r Mtrch ''· lJ, 10. 1'1' UJ 7.j 811(11. Ct lllo•nlt. NO, A·naa 'Shttl Mtltl · ntmet ot Ille mtmtlerl fl tht City Council Tllll tllllmtnl l!lfC will! lht Ccu"lv . Tlll1 IM!llf'lelt 11 tOlldutt~ 9Y I tot• !1lt lt 111 WILLl•M I", MILLll., l~f'l 1~0111:" Jtt ....,,!nJ lcr •.[Id ••1"" tflt ••MP. Ctt tk o1 ·0,.,,.. C1tt1nty 0" 'el>ru•rY tt. LEGAL N011CE 11eritlor1ic.MNt.M•1t IEltVtCE 0:=6;~~! IS HEl.EIV G1vrt(' 10 Ill• s1',:t':;;.~' 1.113 of'::~:~~ 1:~~ ,lr.CIOPTfD 11111 ""' II•~ ~~l~.•tv•rlY J, Mllkfo•. Offh.lly Coun· COM .. AHY, INC. (tl(Ulotl of IM •llev• nornell "'"'"" Ft"te Ertc!Or 7.lt 1.0IE,11'"( M. WILSOH I' UtM Piii »1 l y SHlltLIY M. SCMNEIOll., ...,,, t ll 11t•10111 lltv'frtt cl1lmt ftllllll ll!t llllor•r J.(lolj MIY .. ot tilt Cllv Pub!ltl!td °''"" COllSI DtllY ,.net. SU .. 11.tOI. cou•T Ol'i TNI M.0. 111d llfcldt11f 1rt ....ulrMI to tll4 ll\tll'I, CtrP1llltr 6.:U of (Otll Mfll l'•lllVtry 23, tnll Mtrcll I, I, 1J, 1 972 9TATI 01' CALIPO•N1A ,01. '°rt11dtfll wltll !hr f'IKfHtrv 't'OU(llefl, ln lllf clllct O .. t!.ATINO IHOINIEl.S ATTEST: ~4S.1t TMI CCUNTY 0 .. 01.ANOI Th!t 1t1t1"'tnl Wft filed wltl\ the (CUii• o1 lt\I clerk ol 1111 1MYt tnllllld <Wrl, or G~ 1 f .U llLll!!N P, l'HINNt!V No. A·l'UU t'f (lt rk of Or1111e Cow"IY 011 Fllll'lllfY lo •r11t11I lt!•m, wllh !ht llK"ltfY Grllll• 2 •.n City Cltrll of ff1t cnv a1 Co.It Mftl LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI 01'" KlfA•INO 0" "ITITtON n. 1t11. ' Vfllldlt•t. to t!lt ur1111r1ltntd If ~ ffflet Grou11 J 7.0\ STATI OF CALlll'OllN1A J '01. Pl.OIATI 0" WILL ANO POii Cl•Tll'tCATlON ti htr tll&rfltYI, llll1111, IAl..A.NGflll, Grfkll> s . CITY 0' COST• Mt!5.I. ) NT WAIVIOI corrtct Clllt'f OI !tit 1i11'1t 11111 Oii fl lll 111 m, ,,_, Ulll W•tlcflll or1 ..... ''"'' >n . -The People's Republic of China clin1s to a lon1 -cherish· t'd poli,ry nf self-sufficiency. tt is reluctant to b fl c o me dependent on anv nuts id1 !)t)"'er and does not w11nt to buy more than il c o11n ull in the world market. ll wants tn ketp an over·all bllance of trade. WHAT MAINLAND China c an offtr American tr11ders 11 not very enticing bec au.!le the rounlry 's economy Is basicaU)' Bgricultural. -China's in1ix>rts Include few consumer g~s. except gr11in, and grain imports have been going down. -America will h11 ve to com-· pete with Japan and the Euro- peen countries, and Japan In particular has some bullt·ln ad v ent&aes s uch u geographical location and !&& labor costs. -Thus fBr Red China hu re/used lo deal directly with the United Statei; for any pro- ducts Bt all. What little they do buy and sell has to ao through a third country, or e ven a fourth . One Ch\na·wAtcher. Wilford Welc h of Arthur O. Little, Inc .. say1 there Is re111on to hope ''lhRt since !he Nixon trip the Chinese will find It ac- ceptable to est11bl!sh direct trade relatlons w ith the United States." Little Inc. ia a management consultant and indus trial research llrrn. John B. Connally , secretary of the Treasury, lold the House Banking and Currency Committtt recenl\y there Wt.U be no ''sudden golden horn of plenty." }le described 11 a f1nt19y any Idea lhit a slpllt.. cant U.S. trade with maW.Dit China would open eoon. SOME ANALYSTS .ha v t estimated that by 1980 "a f.W hundred million d<illln"Ol tr11de may deveJop bet'lfttn the two nallons. Prof. R o ber\ F. Oernberger of the Unlversl· ty of Mlchl&an says his "moet o plimiJtlc" figure would be ~ million. Amerfca's total foreign trade currently la about $80 billion a year. Even II direct trading could be arran&ed, that would be no guarantee of• lar1e Volume 9f buslneaa. Under the Chinese policy of 8'!11-l!Ufflciency,. says Welc111 the Ptktl\I government "h11 malntalnlll a pbalth11!i trade balance. They are unwilllna lo Import more than !hey ... port.'' . Ht uUmalu that In 1171 Peking's forelp Ir ad·• amountad lo $4.4 billion. dlvldo td about equ11iy betwoon U· port and lmporn. DEPARTMENT of Com· merce. 1peciall1ts 1ay good.1 the United Stai.. ml1ht wani to Import from China Include tun11ltn Bnd tun1 oH, both used Jn steel production ; btush brlstluj textiles; lngredJeota for hair products; art worlu; "''' and pottery. Most analysts aay "hi1h technoloay" products are the onts th1t would intere.st P• k i ng . For e1ample, 1<>pltisUcated control tystema for incluatrlal p I a n t a t petroleum off1horo drllllnc equipment a n d electronic ltem1. Gr111111 '. ',~~COUNTY OF 01.ANGI I SS ,,CTITIOUI IUSINISS LITTlfl.1 TllTAMINTAl.Y ltoNO ! 111••11¥ ctrtllY lhtl Ill• i!lf"flol"" 11. MYlllS .. loMtTH, """: Edwlfd H.l1fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~•OU... ~·~,1 '· EILEEN ... PHINNEY. City c i.r11 ..... -·~Ari STATIMI • Cll!ll11 1!11111 .flf CH.I.LES ZEH MAI.TIN Off!tt. l!ftwoort ••tc:l'I. C•lllllr"I' ""°" ... Id! It Oro.t i> 1 1 tlld ti..,llclo Cllt'k. of lht CllY Clllt!ICH el 1 nl '"' OW" ftl HllOnl 1 f t IE AMAN, OIC'P1ICI. (lt!AL) f"ilt ... cf ff llUtll'ltll cl tllt u'11Mrt11"'11 In w uld ' Group I :~: lht (llY ol Cot18 M111. 1!1rtl!Y crrtUy 111!1l~l~tb'1tr BE.A.CH TENMtS CLUll NOTICE !S HEAE!IY GIVEN th•! WILLl•M I . SI JOHN. 111 m1ttllf1 H'llllllllf to !flt ttltll el.w1d 0 you pay an, extra Gr0<.11 t · lfltl "'' l llGVI end !Otffolnt Ordlnt ll(t 'l LILLIAN MA)(INE 1EAM.A.N II•' 111'1:! Cou"ty Cit•-dlCIC!tllt, •lth!n lwr monl'll' tlttr !tit Tl.\M1Tl•t No ,, .. Wll ll!lrllllu<H llld cOlltldtrrd PlllO SHOP, 14oll1 Eest l lutf, N""'""' htrt!11 1 l>l!lltk111 lor P•Dbtl• o1 wit! •nd l y .llWrly J, MloOdax, nrll l>llbllcflffl'I of l!lt notlCI . 5 h f ' 'I'd. Truc:ll J &S HC!lon .... llClllll i i i rttul ... tl'IMll!>I ff ltKI!. Ctlll ... llll '16'0 11tr IUUll'l(f al Ltllfrl Ttllttnl"tl'' IO OflillY D•tttl M1r(l't 6, l•N Q 21 per mont or : . I ylf Trvck I.Ill ,,11 CllY (Ol.lll(li lltto Oii ltlr '2nd dtT of Atttlltlly Mlchltl P•M•n. Ill $1111111 P11111-~ l&olld W1lllf'dl rt!trrn<e 1e p., .. 1T llMA M Mil.LE• tit' • • 12 I'd. Tr11tt sn Faruirv. 1tn, •'Ill thtrteNtr •••tl(.•nd Ho. lfJ, N.,.._, ''""' C1llMml• w111c11 11 ll'ltdt lor f\lrtllor M•llu111rt, •NI P\lblltl!llld Or1f\Ot Coat! 01nv Prrot, Adll'll"lt•;•,rl~ wlltl Ill• F ill N C M • ., 12 •''yd, True:~ •.Ol tllctlfod •• 1 wl!Olt ti 1 rttul1r "'"llflt ttUO. p !I Ill 11111 lllt llrnt 111d 1ttt.:f of llltrlnt tllt ,tbr111rr ,, t lld Mtrch \,I, U, lt7f 411 ·11 wltt .A.nntild 111 tr.t ttlltt { , ew ar amtenance:, 11 • 2J Yll T~U 6,,J ol 11ld (lh' CeulKll hllll Oii 111f flt\ dt'I' °' Jt nlt H¥1llHI '11111"' w 1' t.tmt 1111 bltn NI !or -'llffl ~. lt7' I! ' aD ff IM 1flcwt, Ml'Md dKl'Clll'll, 2J • e v d T t -:·:: ~•rcr., 1,72 llY "" 1o1J.ow1"' ••II c•ll ~~11 1 N~ 107• NtwllOl"t •••ch. • "'·· in th• Cou•l•oom o1 Dtt11flm•"' N4, LEGAL NOTICE 11L1•1. IAllANOlll, ...... ,t'I ,11 lh• extra 11 -t with a Joh-·n • Son -·U 'Tr1Mll Ml• YOlt ' 1 °"' 1 · J ol 111d court, 1t JOI (IYIC Ctnl1r Orly• MYl•I & SMITH I u · ~""' ,..,., • r u W•t•; ~~-!ldltll it" wiitt 11 ~~~ AYfS: c111nc:nm1n: WllSOfl, Jor•111. 1~1~':;·~:,-:11~:.i.~,: !:f'<1" lly 111 Wttt. lft •tv ,ow ff 1t11t1 "'"'· c1111orf'll• su,11111011 cou•T 0 , TH• a,1 1 .... 1111 w. tttM MaJntenance ~ue on any of our b.-.nd ntW 1972 Tiit or-"' u ,1n11t1r, st. c111r. """"''' ,. 011M M1rdl 13. ltl1 tTATI o,. e•Lt1•olll111.t. flOll 1m Wtst<MH Dr., kl11 JU Mercul')'I. Just think of Jt .• , 110 MJ)re annoyin1 repejr 111 \lllOll Journwm•" wor111"• 111~ °' •ltM Noe:s: Cou!lti•111111· Nont T~I• ~.~~~'n1:".:it11 1111 ct1111fy w. E. S• JOH N TM• couNTT o, 01..-.Mot ... ......,,. •••di, C•llfOrftlt t>Ut problem• ••• no more unex-cted e1m11nu1 and beat o f It) f'le<rrs. D I AtS!NT: c._.ll("lllt'lll'I: NOllf Cl ... al O C IV tn l'lbl' •rv tt CoutUI' Cltrk Mt. A·7U2J Tth Ul41 .... u,., '"' .. ,..w COlllfl of Ill• Cenl,•<1 otuminll II• IN WITNl!~5 WHl!ll!Of. I to•YI l!trtlov ··~ rillte OUll u : '""'· WHll•m• I nd ttrfftltll NOTICI OP tllAllllrfO 01' ... TITION AltWM'Yt ltr A""'"hlr1tri1 CT• All ••• a be11ut1tul naw fu ll 1lie Mt.rcury M1rqula or clUdlllt dr,wl"" Ind IPIC!llctlt&M f(I on Nt my lllnd ,...., •Hl•td tht St•• of"" Cl· ltn ..... ltYlf'IY J. MfOdo•, OflUIY Ctllll ..... ..... l'Oll ... OtATI Oil WILL. ANO l'O• .. Vblllllld Of"•~· Ccttl Oll'Y .. 11e1. Monterty to drive In absolutely per{ect cond.itlon at all f!)f !~ "''' , ~:~~ '";~'UC:: lv ol Cot•• Mtt• ""' 1tlt d•1 OI Mlr(h, IT Ckrll. II lltft ... ""'~ Olf¥1 """' L 1-T T •• ' Oil AOMINttTltAYIOlf Mlfdl •• IS, n. 2', "" •U.ti tlm .... Find out for YOUTRll 111 the blN.nt. .m ... ltuurn ,Of'l ....... tmen ' 1•n , .•• , .... ---· D ,, ''"' WI ,.Ill ..... (tlHwlll• •14 w.,. '"' .,,. ••••••• h I ' Prtdoo °'"' l'ol"1. c1111w1111. 1111011 t11t • llLEEN • ,.HINMIY .,.. "''""' ...._., • " • '"' 111s1 ... 111 • • " l is fant1u1tlc east proriram providt1 on all our Uncoln--u ym.r111 ., 1 d-11 o1 1J0.011 per Ml to City Cllr• fnd .,,,....1(1, cttrt ,,~...,. 13. •lld M1rc11 1, .. If, 1tn A~t.., '""'-""' r1111t ot t>O•OTHY ,.ATTll.W>M, LEGAL NOTICE 1t1ercury Producta. '"Mir• !tit '"""'11 l!W!rtO!. II ""'' et !flt CllV Ct11nc:U ., lt!t City "'n f'\ubOJ!ltd OJ'•ntt c .. 11 0111'1' Pitel Dtctlltd, d(lc:11mtnl1 t r• •tlurntd In load tOl'lllltlM of COii• Mt1i LEGAL NOTICE MlfCll 1~. u . 20, "" ""'; NOTl(I II HEl.tlV GtVIN 1111! JO"" PICTITIOUI IU11HISS c.Jl BUD BO\VEN at 5'0.5630 •••.• TODAY! 'irrllt!l11 ''" (101 O'tVI illtr ltlt d•1' ll'I ffill' ft~ltllllled Ortfllf COlll 011IY .. ltof , fi<::•flOll, Jr, htlt 111111 lllrt l"' l>tll. Tl!@ IOI:.~.: 11:;r::,••:,. Mint 'ltfl~~".!..7::::. ~:~~r:::..1u11 •"'Ol.lnt ol lh• Mlrdl lS. ltn ..... ,, ,ICTITIOUS •us1Nlt1 LEGAL NCYI'ICE Allrnlllltl=·.:m~::: ~ ~·~':·: r. llutlntH 11: ' th•ll " l\lllndltort ~ 11'11 (Oii-NAMI ST•T•MIJllT f'ICTITIOV9 tUSINltt l'tft•tMI .. wt!ltfl ,, midi tor ""'"''' GOLD[N WttT CL EANll.S. ,.,. frl'tlor hi wriom "" CllfllfKI I• fWtfdH, The lt11owlft1 Hr-It dolM blltl"'ll NAMI STATIMINT Nrtk11ltt\, Ind tlltl ltlt l)mf 11111 tltc:t Q11ln Orlvt, Mt~ '91Kh, Ctl!I. .,.. llHll '"" tulKonlrlCICr urodor ~Im.. .. If! The 1011-lno HrlOll 11 "'"' bll11nt1\ flt l!tt flflt ,~. ·-htl lltffl Mt tor AIH'll ttWI. ti' Ml lttt 1111" I~• t•!fl 11N!C.ll!fd r•let IAUI LES •NO et-.oS. l'Otl OfllCf tii' , • U, lt1', el t ·JO 1.m .. 111 1111 c_t,_, ot f11w1rd Stu!, 1IO' G1l1•'1 D,I.,., to t ll wotliMtft -•IOYld ff ll!tlll Ill l~I KIDS LOVE IOI! 141, 16.ltl '3nr .\lrtlJ, l1111ttl MAI.LOW t. AllOCl•TES, '10CI Ot111rtmtn1 Ht. ) of 1tld ceurt, t i '100 Ntwoorl lrtd'I. Ctl!I, tMlll t•tcvflllll of !tit Uf'l•f!CI, ltKl't, Ctlllllll'i\11 f01'1 f!..rtlrMl!I '1" N'o .. llA..._ Cttt• Mat. (lYlt Ct11ltr Oflvt Wit!, In llM CltY ltl l.llltmln ltvt. ''°' O•I•.., Ot!\rl, Ho ll!ddff' .............. nlldr ... ~ll ·IH for I •. JtAll ..... 16.m 13ft Strtff, l'Ut'1•'1 JIY ,,.,., .... J100 "'t"'"" Pl .. NI S.ni1 AM, C•M•nl•. NtwfOfl lfl(fl, c1111. "660 ""°" t11 '°'"''""' (•)I 11..,, •llff tM UNCLE LEN llfell, e1111or111t "'o JJA, CMI• -.... O•I" Mtl"dl ,., 1tn. Tl!h llKlllMu '·' Mint ceMuclld '»'" 1 tfttl Ml for !!It OSH'nll'\I of !tilt. Tl\11 tl1it1!f'll• It llflnt eeridi.lctl'll IV fl! Tlllt MIMu it Mlllt concludtllf t1't' 111 W, I , It JOHN '°1rlntrthl11 HUtb•,._ ._ Wiit. Dtltd Mtr<:I! I, ltn lrMllYIWtl. llldl'lldutl. Cou11tv Clt'11 l.otfllll fT, Stul NIWPOltT•M!I• UN1,-1Eo SATURDAYS' IN •o "°"" LM JI¥ M1rl11111 .... ,.. •· •••IM1111 ldW•r• l•u( SCHOOL DltT•ICT Tiii• tl•l-trtt lllld wlffl lttt C111t111Y llolt tltl'ft'Mlll Hltd wlll't tl!t Covnry t.ti«tlfll t1 Ltw Tl\11 't11ltill!'l1nt ltlltl w!ltl 11\f C~flfV ti D•ln .. (OlllllY. Ct . tlfrt ti Of-1nM ("1"'1y 1111: l'tllrull'Y •· (ltrll fl 0..11101 CtlUl'l'l'I •II ,.._ 21, ltn. 11't Ml""' l...C. Cit'"k ~ 0..•111• COi.int\' fll' '°"Vtf'll lt, 1¥ Do/"Oll!Y Hi"'" 'ltrwr THE DAILY PILOT 1111 .• , kYtt'W J, M..,._, ONtlty ly S.-tr J, MMfoll, O..Utr CO&illf'I Cttl• NI..., CMIMnll• l'Nl• 1tn, •• ••~tr!Y J. ,1.tHtJet. °'""" P\ll'Clltlffll .... twflt'I Cl~ Cltrll. f1h cn•1 MMUll C111111,., ,,.,., M1•11ot '1•1J1 ,1'1'4 A"-t' .... h ll......, '•141" tl\!'1!,htcl Orl l'K C"oatl D•lty .. \flt, PlllllltP>ff Or•-Ca.ti D1l~ ,.llot, ,PIMIWll Of"tt>M COi.ili o.nr PllOI. ll~lltl!td Or1Mf Cettl 1)11ly ,.!le!. l>Ultl!tllld Ort"tt CMtl Oellw 111111. M1re11 u •nd M•rell tt. lt72 .... n Mtf'Cf! 1, t, lJ, n . ltn S2i-t2 M1re11 1, t. 1s, 22. 1m IM·n V..r(l't u . ,,, 21, 1tt2 ,,,.,, M1rdl 1. 1, IJ, n . uri "°"" ·- • ' I I I • DAILY l'ILDT S Wfdnad.17, M1tth U, 1•72 • -~-v .s. Profft!tlon• · - Economists · Get 'Cold. Feet' ' .. • , . " ... ,. :;. • • •' • •' ;• ., • • ' Farmers 1 D]:op .SACRAMENTO (UPll Caltfonlia !arm <mployment II 243,400 last month !tll by 4,$00 from January, the stf!te Departmt!l1 or H u m 1 n .RlllOUrces bu reported. M~r~ MOTOR HOMES SALES • RENTALS 11 ~-.. 21 ~. UTI LINIR IALIOA-,ACI ARROW ·~ 0 LOCATID ON THI NIWPOlT ,, PIUWAY, JUST SOUTH 0, THI SANTA ANA •1tllWAY. TAii THI M$JADDIN TURN -OH. TUIN Lin ON YILU•t. " ' • • • • .. .. •• " ;. f. ' • " .. •' 4 ' ,. •' '" • ' •' • " • • ... • • ·' .. • • .. • < ' • • •• I •• • • ~ •• "' • oJ • .~ • • ' • ,, • • • • ~ WAY, 0 N i • • acn1110111 Ii: ...._ I We Pl)'4'l\ % en rogumaavings accourna. 'rho big biinl<a payjuet4%. • \'lhlch makee our rato 1m % Mgher lhan lhelrr. And dopoolt1 In by the 10th Of the month, earn from the 11t. 'That can add up. 6o can our sl4 % time pwbook lntoroat. Contlnele Bani<. Where the percentagee are mol'91n your favor. 121°1° Higher Interest for Your Savings • IJ' Centinela Bank _,..... "'.,.Del,.., .'24 ... Hutwood 1117-WHI M1u1c1tttttr .,..., 8214211 ·' . I " • COMPLETE-NEW YORK ·STOCK UST •• • :f l • . ' • ' • , . • • • ' ' , . • • • • • ' • , . .. • , . " •' ' • ' • ... f'l,"1 • ... . ~. . . • . .. 1971 s ' J • • • <.. :. ....... -:. • t ' I I I I \ H DAILY PILOT Wtdn6d1y, Mirth lS, 19n TV IDGHLIGHTS NBC (4) 1:30 -"West Side Story ." Conclu sion ot. the 1901 musical screen cla,.lc In ill television iw-mlere. Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer star. _ ABC (7)·1:30 -ABC Comed y Hour. The Danny Tllomu Special features guest ap~arances by Bob gope, Sammy Davis Jr., Tolle Fields, Don Knotts and Juliet Prowse. CBS (2) 10: -'Mannix." Dean Slockwe11 and Shelly Fabares. guest in a now-you·see-it, now·you· don't murder case. Mike Connors stars. KTLA (5) 7:30 -NCAA 1971 Championships. Hlghllgllta of the NCAA bask~tball championships of Jut 1U110n which saw UCLA grab its filth · llralght national 11Ue. KHJ f9) 7:30 -"The He!en Morgan Story." Ann Blyth and Paul Newman star in this 1957 blograpblcal movie of the famous torch singer. D CIJCJl E!JAIC ......... "Th• Oallftf Thoml1 Specl1I" Gu~s 1 lob Hope, Slmmy 0"1• Jr., Toti• f!i1ds, Don Knotts and Juliet l"rOWM jiln Dinny In "A f\111117 Thln1 Hip. MAICH 11 pellld on tl!t W1y to I s,et:lal." Tiit: ... (J) .... r.... allow t llO offtrl Ill inlllhl 11110 c.oll• (I) ...... 1111'... ltMpoi'llY co11c:1m1. S11bltcb lndudl consu1111r profktlon, fK)'Cllnr. )el ~ tr1vtl, teltvlslon mtdk:al 1how1 and z..r ciime prnentlon. _ n ... ,,, ... ll4Ct m 11MERY"-Jack Jones, em-* i.nnon Si1ter1, Charo, .......,,. lfl Serclo Mendes Brasil 77 a • m ...,, 'ittr1• ..... . Ill Ill "" -., ....... --IC! (IOI -... -t:OO D ())-• ...... (R) .... c.i. (Mi} '53-«attlryn GrtySOJI. Mlch1fl Dou1J11 plqs I r1!1nMcl Kown Keel, Mn Mllltf. Nuslctl JOU111 m111 who lxtS 1 t1trifyln1 .... ol Sh1knpt1rt'• "Tht l•'m· tut1111 wNn his brotllar blall'llQ m, Inc tf tM Shllw." lt1wln1 him wlttl no on• ta 11111 on. ())-llllll- 9 -(at) .,,. -"' a "" ""'"' ..,1,..... (drt) '56-ltOOllt T1J'I«, Gii) Mltadll 1u1t ""' ~• D CIJ .CJl Ill "' h.-• ,.. Mfflll ... "PowtlrJW!tc.11'' On th1 f11ndl RM· =:Ille ,..,_. tl'I, Brttt ind Dinny lnvatl11t1 n. ~vi. 1111 clrownlnf ol • )'GUJll wom1n. Win•an• D"'" W.W. Jolln Futlmtr ..... ... flt IHI Co*' stow #d1,1•11 • .. C1•lllW Gil LI 1111 ---7:11 ())80- ""' TrlllffC1n11,1111c:tt ...... -·-U.! 1 IM lAl<Y I-ti--ti ... ....... -lltflo: ......... -.. - 11:10 ID Movlt: "W1k1 u, 1llcl lltt- fmys) '66 -Robert Hotlm1n, ll$t G1stonl. •:00r111~= •1111 CIOlbJ •nd i1 :15mFat1w11 F11• II 1111-·IZ "Iha Wld""'Q U:lO D ()) Cll "" -: iCI -C- W1rrior'' Offlctfl Milloy ind Rttcl FlJ Wlttl Mt" (com) '63--0olores pl11 mothtf htn Mt • '°""' II· H•rt. Mu"' O'Brl1n. •f'Ylst (StM frtnW!) but thtlr D 9 m lltlllftf CarwR WillillW worri• wbsldt wl\111 lie lhw1rt1 • SirQJtn JU•sts. ~o:., ~:t. Gery Crosby and 8111 g ...,.: "Tlllll tM L" (COl'!I} a m.p HtcUy LA. Kl '33--W.C. fl1lcls, Baby ltRa,. tile C.lllornlt Goldtfl St•li ": o:: D CD (I) m Diet Cmtt Guut ltA4 1 llosl b Robert Kleln. Sthtduled G rn (Jl m TIMI ~ ti 1uats lrt Robert Vuqhn tnd Rod· !Mt'1 '"'* (R) "A Vtrt Dlff1,.nt lltJ D1n1trfleld. DNl!llMf" ~ NPllllld wtlw bid ID Tt. TtJI tllt Tflllh to(ll olf I rid WMbflCI TOM tftd 12:0!) ti Mow(t: '\Ut Mu "' E1rtti,. EOdlt spend with Honn•"· Owl '64 -111nctnt Pritt, Fnnc.a (I) "'1 ll'lilM Crvllli 81ttOCI. ·~-........ lll lllA Alf1>/-7Z lllL""Ulo l!;)llol 1:30 IJ Mtwle: "1Mt Mlllfft" (dra) ''7 -SUS.11 Hl)'Wtl'd, Roblrt Cummin1s. AIMS Maortllttd. m All-Mlitn Slttw: """"" 1" ltf· P88ID!IBC\AIW11t SiM r1t,• "stltifl WQI" tnd "SNra• ..., c.i. lht ~l·fl!td IOfl'llllCt tf AlllltiS" bl!Wtelt Mtrll Ind lony h tndM J:CI D -........ ~ .. _ .. wllen ctllno •ilb Tony In 1 •ntti · , : ( .. , it -....,111 (wes) filht. frl•l•llt Wood, Rlr.hlld ,.,.. 55 -RIJ MJHand, Mtrt Murphy, 1Mr, Rllss Ttmbl)'n, IHll Moreno R.,mond 811"· and Glkllll Cht-itU sl•r. 4:30 8"""' Thursday hll KIMI• (drt) '4-Jttn Ptrtltr, RUS$111 Klfdtll. 1:00 a "Slime ~ ........... ~r (dr•) '5D- W~ll•rn Koldet1, Gloria SWtnSDll. m "Trtnt'1 tast c." (1111$) 'Sl- ... (C) ..., .. C..'t hi ..., frt• lilidlttl Wilclinf, Mtrflt'lf Lockwood. • It'° (COlll) '56-Juflt ~ JKl 3:00 ()}"Sllltlft Trwit" Plft I (clr1} DAffiME MOVIES Lmmon. • '4!1-G•rt Coofit1, lfttrW h11m1n. l;J9. "'f ....... Wliq" ldta) '42 !Ji "t\t CtNt M111" («I) 157· - .:JJNIM111 ltOldn. Susa11 H.,..,.. .>oM rtfftt, 0t1n llgtr. 11:11•--1"'1 '!0-l:OOfJ 1q "'"'"'"'''"'" (4~) 'SS • Wliaftll. AM ltutMl:fwt .... -Rid!lfd 8urt011, lll)'ll'IOM Maser. Listens to Landers Nearly Everyone • ... I Danzi Quintet Impressive By TOM BARLEY Of flW N I' ..... SI'" lt's been aald of the Danzl Woodwind Quinlet that its members ~ named t ht i r enJemble both to honor the 18th Century c~rman and to draw public att~ntlon to a composer whose name now rarely appears In our chamber music programs. Franz Danzl may ha ve been overshadowed by several of hls illustrious contemporaries but he does not deserve , on the strength of the Lagu na Beach Chamber Musk Socie t y's SAVI YOUll TllAD•Nlii TU.Vil VIUCHftlS FllOM Aft•.u G .... oltd Scl'M• c •. In ' Nt'W,.rl I JWI. C•1l1 Mn.I o,_,. C••ety'• "-""' St. P•nkk'• D.y C•~br.tlo•. friMy, Merell 7 N9'111 .. i..t hi• M11sk •II Ny . P'ld Tilti HIGHLAND IAGPIPIS lat.st cooctrt, lhe obsalrity that haa become his lot. · ThiJ crit\< !oond his ~t.t in D Minor to be a remarkably fresh and inventive wqrk for an era in which those qualities were not always apparent, He was, at the time, condemned for his departures Ir om chamber protocol and thil may ex plain why his chann- ing , wittily scored works may have languished for so long. Let Ull hope tbat the efforts of the ensembfe which has worthily taken his name lead to a revival of the works of a composer who very obviously knew how to weld charm, elegance and technical mastery into a chamber score. The Danzi Quintet wasn't the only work lo be taken from a dusty shelf Thursday night for a well deserved air- ing at the dedicated hands of this fine ensemble. Josef Foerster's Quintet in D Major deljghted the Laguna Beach High School audien« in a reading that displayed to the full the rustic charm woven so cleverly by the Czech com· Poser into a score that reminds us, in so many ways, of the intMcacies and half· tones that Prokofieff was to incorporate in much of his ! chamber work. His work is sure to disap- Poinl many of the purists who tend to deplore the injectio n of a little humor and sprightly interpretation into their cham· ber work. This critic found it to be fresh, utterly free of pretensions and ideal com- panion or honor to the Danzi ~ork that bad gone before it. Said purists were sure to seize eagerly on Paul Hin- demith's ' ' KI e in e Kam- mennusik" bot they would have been sadly disappointed if they looked for the five who tackled Danzi and Foerster so ' · supeibly tO null lhi1 major work. · It fnjoyed ·a 1plendid reading at the hands of tbe Danti group wh!> showed us 1 throughout the evening that the composer who cares to in- ject a little humor intO bis work can count on the Dami · Quintet to convey bis message to the audience. "Though highly dissonant," staled our program : that's as may be but th~ fact remains that his Hindemith work is a clearly stated exercise in artistry that is as traditional in Its setting as the delightfully delivered "Seven Pieces !or A Flute Clock" that preceded it. This ls one of the many works that Haydn wrote for the mechanical clocks of the late eighteenth century and we are fortunate indeed that the . scores have survived the mechanism th at demanded their music. lnconsequenlial, yes, but most charming and an ideal addition to a cleverly rounded chamber concert . , The Danzi Woodwind Quintet : Frans Vester, flute ; Maarten Karres, oboe; Piet Hon ing, clarinet: B r i a n Pollard. bassoon and Adrian viin Woundenberg , horn . Playwright at Work DAIL'( ,.ILOT $Jiff """' ' FREDDIE HART, BAKERSFIELD COUNTRY SINGER F.ive Academy of C&W Music Aw1rds in 1971 It's All Freddie Hart At C&W Music Awards By TOM PALMER ot l'lllt o.i11 ,.lltl Sl1ft Author at SCR for World Premiere "This boy's shot all the duck s off the pond," said actor Chill Wills, as he presented the next to the last award of the evening at t h e 1971 Academy of Country and Western Musk: Awards for 1971 at Buena Park's John Wayne Theater at Knott's Berry Farm. for the last time, Freddie Hart juggled five trophies. 'Flis album, "Easy Lovin'," Wu voted best of the year . He Was voted male vocalist of 1971. His sin)?le song, also c~Ued ''Easy Lovin'," won honors for the best song or the year (award going to composet and publisher J and best single record of the year ' (award going to artist, producer ~nd record company ). • ~ HILD OYll "SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY" & "WHERE'S PDPPA7" lotfl 111 SMw Storts. et 7 P·"'· Co-Hit llOOKHUIST lOGf ,lll'W.•llN. ~ tH--1\22 STADIUM II D.I. .. ,. .... o,..... ,,, ... .. SCR PLAYWRIGHT Richard Ploetz SHOWING NOW! Clint Eostwood & Jessica Wolter "PLAY MISTY FOR ME'c•> VILLA ORANGE 112 ... , ...... , .Orwt• .,....,. sour11 COAST u 61SS.•fl•ww <••fllMIMJ.tf-SlSI ) PAULO DllYf·IN , ........ 54S.ll1l ....,.,,,..,llf .... IA HAllA DllVE Ill I hlhl-.1.r;::• ..... ,.... . .... playwrighting only about three years ago. "My dad wa s very ' active in amateur theatricals and or course I always at- tended his performances." But the urge to write began with keeping a personal daily journal (he still does it) after being inspired by reading Thoreau . "Writing became a way of dealing with reality for me-a filtering. That's where I got th~ habit of writing," Ploetz comments. Now, with the experience of working closely in a repertory situation with actors a n d director, Ploetz would like to do more. And he's serious about the reality of playwriting. "I don 't need much to live On. so I want to continue writing plays that I want to write. I have no designs on slanting my material o r wri ting for the 'commercial theater." ' The production, which is directed by Martin Benson, features Ronald Boussom and John Peters in the tw~man cast. "Oli's Ice Cream Suit" is scheduled for a tw~week, Thursday through Sunday run March 16-25 before it joins the SCR repertory on Wednesday nights in April. "After all this," said Fred- die Hart, carrying three acad- emy trophies on his way a- cross the stage to pick up the award for . best entertainer of the yea r, "w~at's left to say?" But Hart, visibly moved by the compliments heaped on him by the academy, was not through yet. He came out wondering the same question minutea later, as he accepted the final and top award, best single record -his rifth of the evening. So, asrhe glided off the stage Leisure World Seeks Actors Adilltional actors and ac- tresses for an April Leisure World production of Woody Allen's comedy "Don't Drink the Waler" are being sought by director Gwen Yarnell. Needed are performers ln their late 20s or early 30s to complete the cast. Those in- terested should call Miss Yarnell evenings at 675-4687. Hart turned out to be .... ti\\ surprise big winner at Moq. day's seventh annual cow'ttf and western award pres# tations, emceed by Dick Clarft Loretta Lytin received 'Utt award for best female vocali\ of the year . She also received, with Conway Twitty, the · le of top local combo of l97L. ., The academy's Man ot_.t}tll Year Award went to WalW Knott, founder of the bvjy farm , and Dale Evans flC· cepted the Jim Reev_.t.s Memorial award for her 'b!!f" band. Roy Rogers, who 'tfil'.s unable to be present to acaft. Roy Clark presented "t;Qne award, entertained the 1.t'P Persons packing the theilf'.er and received the award for~ best comedy act or the year .. Chosen the best televisi9TJ personality or the year was Glen Campbell, though he .was not present to accept it. ' Other performers during ~ televised presentations were Lynn Anderson, the 1970 tpp female vocalist, who sang Jllr hit "Rose Garden," Roger Miller. and Kenny Rogers 19d the First Edition. ' Among those ma k i Di presentations were T •.X Williams, Charley Pride, ahd Dennis Weaver. · NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEMY AWARDS Including "Best Actor" & "Best Film" !1!:111SCM l'llOOUCTIOlt toMPNfY A NORMAN JEWISON FILM 'FIDDLER ON THE ROOP' ·-~ TO POL ---· NORMAN JEWISON -· JOSEPH STEIN _ ........ __ _ ... _ ........ _ JERRY BOCK h ..... _.., ...... SHELDON HARNICK HA'RolD'PRltiCE .. -----...... --· JEROME ROBBINS .=.-=r.::s-- l'ES."Ei&ll/S "-_,,. ... _. TOMMIOU" -""'mM IH• ' . • '' 1 •" 1 .,, ' I (. 'Ollly Game In Tewa' Honest Characteraation · • • Marks Baena Park Drama By TOM Trrus or tN .,..., Plitt 11.tt SurprisinlJy few playwright. ~sess t~e ability to J"!llly 'flesh ou\'' their ch1ractert, to delve beyond 1 u r fa~ e tlvation and e1pose the an beln& underne~tQ. It is oys ~ e .. SSlQI ex~. fence lo e•nter a ~ar ich · pUoltu Ibis dlf· It ta sk. rank 0. Gilroy's "The Only lme In Town" ls such a pla y. in two of his other works, Subject Was Roses" and 'II Save the Plowboy?'! ilroy structures his 'play with j;;onest characterization while retaining the theatrical virtues. "Only Game" is a 'lW,hter offe(ing than the other two, but th~ truth of the situa. t'n is always visible beneath the forced flippancy by which its charact~rs sidestep reality. The Buena Park PUiyer1, one o{ Orange Coynty'.s. newtr community 'theater groups, have mounted a most Im- p e sive production of th is c dram1 whk:h, like other y plays, is marked by economy or personnel. It Is 1.Jtasically 1 two-eharacter ,a,\udy in communicatinn, with . , , third introduced for one .i;p1cial scene. ' The setting is Las Vegas, "~~P.re fortunes are made and -" ~ ·.r1' " • .. • -·~ .. _ ··-&51·7012 . -...... ·-"'-1'•• .. "T~a OMl Y CM.Ma U' JOWM" A Ny~ l'r1l')il; O. GJl.rrze.;•-W Jerry, 1Welll. ~trvcl ""M_. G-. lon~. I 11,... lt\I" rv '"Ofl'I. mt, .... ~lld tl'll lutfMI ,.,.. ''-""" l'•ldql Ind Sl~i'dl)'\ II I ~' lock ll'lrt119h M&n;l'I •25 It 'he EMii 1ud!terlvf1>1 14'1 !. Htlerlll SI., m, "eH!"Y•lllll'IS lft4l31. THR CAST Fr1n W1U1.,. •...... , ... P11 Mo'l'!'ll'lln ~~··Ml~K~~ ~t i~ holirs, IOmetlmes minutes, ind romance. ii jus~ as transitory, Here ·a .night club piano player fights bis addiction to the crap table with a pjsillusioned chorine ,_,ho has l'Olled snake eyes in the game of Jove too many... times to bet her life's hopes on the chance of a· seven. Pat Moynihan as the cynical and defensive dancer is nothing short of superb In a most diffit'Ult assignment. Re. quired by the swipt· to play her character constantly on edge. with only flashes of the warmt h beneath the barbed facade , Miss Mo Y n i h a n delivers a performance which is stunning in ils believability. She is a most \~:elcome ad· dition to Orange County com- munity theater. John Loughman as her weak-willed lover has an equally arduous task. con- veying his character on two level s -using c andid wisecra cks to cove r a pair of shaky knees. Loughman is quite effective in this mission, especially in his breakdown scene after blowing his bundle, £,do NEWPORT SfllCH-at the entron<e to ttle fobulou' lido l ~lc OR l 83';0 ·•••·••·••·········•··•················ HELD OVER 18th RECORD WEEK 8 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS ;£:.tao'"''" THE FRENCH l CONNEeTION 1 C(l(lA nu ""'I t!Yf" IN THe OltlAT TffADITJON OF '-l>fl!"JflCAN THlllUERS. S.C•lld het11~-"' "THE DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE" ----11. SrAotuM·3 : .. .-:!l..."!!..'lr ·=-----~. SrAotuM 1 · .. .-.:..... '.! •• IL" --- Nl11tln1led Ftr 9111 AcMr G"1'91 C'. ketl "lf05PITAL" CG .. ) • Al .. e "lHE .. AllTY" ••cllltoi'l'I Or1111-9 C11111ly lte .. rvtcl S111 •111111menl Nomlur..i Mr I Aclll1my Aw1rcht "l"IO DLElt ON TNa llOOP:" (11111 E111WMc1 111 ftll ~llt"I 1111 "OlltTY HAllltY" &. "SICIH GI.Mil" f"O> Wltll J111tn Ginter "SOMIETINIES A •llEAT NOTION" (01'1 ,1u1 CH11t h1t'Wtld "PLAY MISlY FOil NII" "Tiie P:rl!ICll CIOllllCllOll" Cll l ... "'¥1111111119 "•l~t" Ill) 0.1'9' lef91 -ll1Mrt lltlllttnll "NCIT llOCK" IGP:I ,1111 N1wm-11 "l wtdl Ct Mhly 9 Tiii S1111i11111C1 IClll" WARREn BEATTY 1 ·and ' GOLDIEHAWn In , ''Cl]'' (Dollert) I SHOWING NOWI •' ,. GERT FRO BE I ROBERT W€BBER I SC01T BRADY ..__ .. m.v. FRRnHOYICH , ......, ., ou1ncv JOr1ES Wtotler'l .-'d 0.rec*! by R IC~RO BROOKS °"''~fld !:rt' COLUMBIA PICT\JAEs ~1R=1~-----=::=u=·---.'. I ~g: "BOB & CAROL & T~D & ALICE".,. I I • . ' OAllV PllOT Mesa Boy Stars In .College Show · NATIONAL . GENERAL . THEATRES A l~year~d high school .Ophomor. from Costa Me.&ai Is ploying a major role In lhe WINNER OF 5 I ACADEMY NOMINATIONS ponovi1ionl!I 1echriicolo1e [!.] from •Orne1 bros., Cit o k't1My l111ure seMC• ALSO -11 C91•r -111 Jennif9 r O'Neil -G•ry Grimes "SUMMER OF '42" ' SATURDAY AND SUNDAY MATINEE ONLY at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. "THE RA EXPEDITIONS" Adults $1.75 Children 7Sc I OPENS· THURSDA y THI WOILD PllMllll Of OLl'S JCI CREAM surT 'if? J'outh C oa>i RerJcrtory RESERVATIONS 646-JMl or ALL AGENCIES ••the old man ol the moun1a1n Plu• Spt1ct1r:ul1r 51-:t ShDf! "Get Hot'' Sun lntefnationat ProdUcllon1 Inc.• • wr.Mtom• FM11Uy f1tf'MtlnlltW Afwlp A FAMILY TREAT! HELD OVIR -H•H•ft•I o ... trll TfttlltrM - SOUTH COAST P'LAZA #1 C•lll Mt11 • (Ill) U•·111t W"4.•1~1 :S:ot:-1, .. -,,~ Sit. & S11"·' 1. .. , J.H, S.ff, 11H A t :H on"11•ttol tor 2 ICIDEMI IWIRDS llST SU,,01111tt ACfOI · l lC llAIO JAICIR llSTSOMf "Ullt&CMhl" ! .Dli I CLINT EASTWOOD WHlcdoyl 6;4J Sal~ Sun. lrlS . . . -H•llMlt a.t-r•I T•11lrt • -POI •ULLl~ON P:ulltrl9" e lfl•OU ~EDWARDS THEATRE.$ INCLUDING, Pllul Newman ~ "••l!Ul "tllill~!... - PHONE-es2-44s3 g "Pooket Money" ~ ~c-;:::-:::::---nONCllli' •• .,., ... ._ l'ICTllMS 1tWM----'1 ltcOnd fNture ''COOL HAND LUK I " i •nu Mlllfll ot Wt Drt110 l•f • ·2H ror ATTUCTION· James Garner 51dnCIBJne GEO RGEC • • f(.077' 2NOMIT P1t11 Sellers 11 '7HE PARTY" aint EastvlDDd Dirty Harry •[jj .......... ••'''I-'"' '11/)lll"•W•<• .. M • - PHONE . 64'·0573 • 214 HIT · JAMIS GARNER "SKIN GAMI" 1 auJt JN tM OllGO J•i. ,HOHi 646-0J7:1 2nd TOP• llAACTIOH NAlAlll 'lt'OOO.IOl~f "BDB l CIRDL l 1!0 & ALICE" GOLDIEHAWO ARREn BEATTY 1"*-",,·DOL1~ ,.~A:lf!CI~ n1.V.FRRnHOYICH ..... ··~f't ...., 'Al!!°'' 1!J RICHARD l!AOOHS • I I • ' l ,, ' ' ' I ' I • / ....--~...,------ • • ' llt DAILY PILOT • Wodnt!day, Matth 15, Im ' ' ,i WE. CANNOifAFFOiRD TO P -ASS UP ANY DE_AL . A LARGE PORTION OF, THE$E CARS 'ARE PRICE FROZEN: ORDERED BEFORE PRICE INCREASE.. . . . . '°"' ~ Cnliw+ • 1n111it. tn: "" POWflr fr41!14i"' liro,tl.,(M rodi•, ... ~1" woll lfts. (2J10Nl04613) $"150 is total dn. pymt. $83.47 is ta I al mo. p'(ll'lt. incl. tox. '72 ti:tnSt & oil finonc• chorvu on oppr, crldit for 48 mos. omrr.d PYml. price $4456.56 incl, oll lirlont• d11~1s. torts. '72 li:tftM or if YtN prtftf to poy cash. full cosh prict it $3415.50 ind IOltJ tDir,, '72 liteme, NHJAl PHIC&«AGE RAT£ 14.34"' $675 is total dn. pymt. $128.31 is totol mo. pyfnl. incl. tax. '72 lic11111 & oll finonct charges on oppr. credit for 48 mos. Deferred pymt. prire $6133.81 ir¥J. all finontt Cho'\lel. 111.ltll. '72 ,· lic1n1eor ii you pref1r 10 poy co1h. full co1h price is$S340.95 ird. soles Ill.It & '72 liclf'ISe. AlrNJAl PERC&ITAGE RATE 14.34% · ALL NEW 1·972 STATION· WAGON PRICIS START AT,,, $ .,,... ................ tu & lie.Mr HMa IOW 400 CID 2v. lu911a11• rack. rodio, tinfld glau. (2A405205942) $455 is total dn. pymt, $91.61 p•mo. ind, tox. '72 li:tnH & all fW!anc:t clllrgts oft Gppr. CJWlit for 48 mos. Oei.r.d pymt. prX:1 $4852.28 inti. oll fllllntt d11w91s. ta••s. '71 li:•w or if you pref« to poy cash. fuH cash pric1 is $3716.SO incl. lll(H IDX. 72 lf:lldt. AfrH.W. P.flCtH- ·TAGE ltATI 14.34% THE FINEST1CAMPEIJIUCI MONEY CAN IUY BRAND NEW 1972 R XLT Camper Special A ABOVER CAMPER Trl·colorN peint, t it cortditioni119, redio, IM • ...., duty), 360 VI, pwr. 1t11rin9 I l 1pd:' cruhom1tic, iinted 429 ([) 4-V, ,;.yr rQOf, cruisnatic pwr. slllr- lng I , frt. lliK brokes. oir cond~ rodio wfwdA tins. {2A3SN19S040) ---=~=~=======~=====~---91•11, 1uper coolin91 2 . 911 ten.k1, PRICES RIFLE 'RID CTI • OF EXCISI TAX hte'l'f Juty front I re•r 1hock1, wide "61 TOllNO •T s·13· VI, Ai.rfo., Air P.B., Rt.H, 1oW mllel. Prlcld to 11111 l\IGA 40) --.S6CIO is lolol dn. pymf. S97 .6 7 is I01ol mo. pymf. ind. tax. '72 licen11 & all fmnc• charges on op pr .credit for 48 mos. Delerrtdpymt price ss21e.16 incl. on tncw:1 chaf\l•s. taxH. 72 lk1n11or ii you prefer topoy cosh, f\111 co sh pric1 is $4151.95 incl. soles m. 72 r~. AIHIAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14.34 % '65 DODGE Dort {IVZfll) :~.~-~~? ............. s777 '"ctory Alt Condltlo.,1119.. • ' l10f ll1tck.. look1lik•11-.. tH(I •24) 'HMUSJANG fo<tory AA, lk. {f20616l) '66 FORD Cu1to111 CRZT 3'5) • $577 r Gettl·ng Income Tax Back? ··5°'"·5 ,;. .... .i ....... h ... , d • ., 1hp bumpt r I F25YRN441661 C•boy1r C1mp1r h11 r1•r 1id1 din1tt1, g1ll1y, WHY WA.Tl• 1l11p1 6, compl1t1ly irut1lt1d witft 1lidin9 r11r window. BUY TODAY -ASK US HOW USED CAR BARGAINS -. , '61 TRIUMPH s 121 lhhr.. 250 load11cll G••ot "aluel ISO• CO• '10TOftTA :s1477 Colw.4dr.~auto. · .......... fOdDfy .... c- dlliooiitlg. fttdlo, ........ • ... Noot-Cl"ASrt '64FALCON .......... <AGM.617) '10 F-100 P.U •. $1877 ~~j •lick 1hift (10.SIJ. SHOW US A GOOD CREDIT STATEMENT-BRAND NEW 1972 PINTO Our Salesmen Have the Finance "Know How." Just tell us the Payment you'd like wE· DELIVER . ON THE SPOT! We or• approved by all Credit Uniol'ls; ,olice, fireman, civil serwice, tel•· phone co .. insvronc.t companies, etc. . BRING US YOUR FLEET DEAL -WE TRADE HIGH! • ! -· • + TAX l UC. ORDER NOW l • • -,,, NO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEMS e will sincerely try to help you finance your car through the best outlets we know. FORD ' • , I . • .. ' I • . ' ., 0 '. I .. matter wbot Ila .....try may be boel stew II a detectable dilb. The lriab have>a way wltb aea.onlnga which tunis Cllllon>la beef Into a beautiful stew for SI. Palrict'a Day. , I · !lluhlla cl. fresh turnip, onion, celery· I tomato and. CllTol m!n&le their flavors • wlll\ Ille almmering 'heel towards the -lll cootlng. To mate the highly nutritious meal more festive garnlSh the -for 'Sl.J>ab-~'• Day 1wltb ~· potatoes. J ' ewe llm STEW " I pounda beef round 111 tahleapoons Dour 1 leAapoon salt 11 teaspoon dry mll!lard !lo teispoon peJ>P"' 2-!ahlespoons cooking.oil 1 (!Ol>.l>uncei CID beef broth 1 teaspoon sugar 1 bay leaf 1 •prig panley Pipch thyme a· carrots, cut ' into cbunb 1 white turnip, cut into chunks 2 onions, quartered 4 ,talks celery, Cl!I into lll·inch lengths I tomatoes, peeled and sliced 2 ,tablespoons ccknstarc'h Duche11 Potaloes CUI bee! Into i-hich cubes. Coat wilh flour miied with salt, mu.lard and pei>- per. Brown quickly In oll. Stir In re- malnlng seasoned flour. Add broth and water to make 2 cups liquid, sugar, bay leaf/ parsley and thyme. Cover and simmer about 1112 hours, un- til beef is tender. Add carrot, turnip and onion, cover and coot 10 minutes. Top with celery and tomato, and cook an ad- ditional 10 minutes. Remove bay leaf and. panley. Mix cornstarch with Z tab! .. apoons cold water. Stir into stew, and cook a few minutes longer, stirring gently now and then. Serve with Duchess Po- tatoes. Makes 6 servinp. DUCHESS POTATOES Combine 2 cups mashed potatoes, 2 egg yolkl, 2 tablespoons milk and 2 tables- poons melted butter. Beat until smooth. Turn Into pastry bag fitted with star tube. Pres.!! out into 6 ~ttes-onto butter- ed bating sheet. Brush tops with melted butter. Broll IDllli heated through arid llgblly brown. Makes 6 servings. U uslnilnstanl maal)ed potatoes, follow packs~ dlrectlons !er 4 servings (Z cups) mashed potatoes. ' . PLANNING AHEAD Sumptuou·s/Meals ., ' ' S,erved Any Ti ·me ' Meaf.and·potatoes monotony can be banished from every· da,y meals with litUe effort on the part of the cook. . . f'Tbe Menu Cookbook," another in the Better Homes and Gardens series, offers a practical guide to good nutrition wrapped A In 115 complete menus filled with tested recipes. Sections are devoted to everyday meals and to those special ·touches required for entertaining. Alten>ate menus are suggested to provide addition variety. ' · ' Main dishes are matched to accompaniments, salads, breads and desserl!i In tempting combinations. Ovm·meals, make-ahead dishes and delicacies to prepare on outdoor' grills are offered for the busy mother or working wife. Time'saving tips on making food attractive, simplifying prepara- tion ana dreS!ing llP dull dishes are Interspersed with menu plans. LEFTOVER SOLUTION · Even the most efficient shopper has occasional leftover beef, pork, ham, lamb and turkey. "Meat Encores" suggests hearty main dishes 1for those second-day portions. · Leftover rice and vegetables are whipped Into thrifty main dishes in.a '1meal stretchers" section. Even the staunchest vegetable-hater will ask for seconds' of the vegetable dishes seasoned and served bright, intoreSting ways. HEARTY HODGEPODGE 6 slices bacon 1 medium onion, thinly sliced 1 pound beef shank :y, pound ham hock 6 cups water 2 teaspoons salt 2 15-ounce cans gubanto beans 3 cups diced peeled potatoes 1 clove garlic minced 1 4-ounce link Polish sausage: thinly sliced In Dutch oven cook bacon till crisp; drain, res~rving 2 table- spoons drippings. Crumble bacon and set aside. .Cook onions In , reserved drippings till tender but not brown. Add beef shank, ham hock, water and. sail Cov.er and simmer 11> hours. Remove meat from slianjc and h~J!l hock; dise. Skim tat from broth. Return diced l\'eat to B<Jdp; add undrained beans, po' tatoes and garlic. Simmer, covered, 30 minutes more. Add sausage and bacon. Simmer covered 15 minutes longer. Serves 8 to 10. FRE NCH ONION CA$SEROLE 4 medium onions, sliced S tablespoons butter or margarine• , 2 tablespoons all-purpose fiour 'Duh pepper· • , ~ cup beef bouillon • 14 cup dry sherry 11> cup.s pl&ill crootons 2 tabl••P<M>ll• butter or margarine, m•lted 2 ounces process Swiss cheese, sllreddecl S tablespoons grated Parmesan ch- cdo); onions la the S tabletp00114, batter just till tender. Blend In nour and peppel\ Add bouillon lnd lberry; ooolt and sltr witll thickened and bubbly. Turn Into a l:(iuait ca ... role. • , Toa croutons wl\b 2 tablespoons melted btitter; spoon atop onion mixture. Sprinkle with Swills and Parmesan cheeees. Place under broiler just till cheeses met~ about l minute. Semi Im· mediately. Mates 4 to e servings. • • YOU NEEDN'T STEW OVE R ST. PATRICK'S DAY ENTREE GREENERY TRIMMED FOR SALAD PLATE Emerald Isle · Molded· On this day, you can eat the green as well u wear the green. St. Patrick's Day salads are dellghUui gelatin molds form- ed Into gala Iriab bats. Soflenecl cream cheeSe forms the hilt- hands, ball a pecan forms the bUckle. Youngsters enjoy any oovelty holiday food •• , and the salads are as nutritious as they are delectable. rr. PATRICK'S • DAY SALAD 3 or I grapefruit (4 cups sectior Grape/rljlt juice 3 tnvelopes unfiavored gelatin• !lcupwpr ll>tu_.,'salt 111 cupa cold water s ta....._ white vinegar I table.poons lime juice Gmn lood coloring I cup Wedded cabbage • 1 cup chopped celery and lime juice, Add a few c1ropa creeu I> cup chopped mila food coloring. Pour I cupa o! thil mixture I package (I ounces) cream cheese Into I~ x 10 x !·Inch Jellyroll pan. CblU 12 pecan halves unW firm. To -grape!rul~ cul slice from Place remalnlng gelatine mixture Jn top, then cut off peel In strips from top to roMgerator and chlU unW conalttency of botlom, C1lltlng deep enough lo rtmove unbeaten egg white. Fold In grspe!rull white memlrane, then cut slice from bot· sections, cabbage, celery and chopped tom. Or Clll off peel round and round nula. 1plral luhlon. Pour Into IZ muff.bl tlnl, 2 lnchea deep. Oo over !rall again, itmoVbli any t.. Cbill until firm. Remove pan o! gelatbli! malnlng white meml!rane. CUt along side from refrigerator. cut Into :1-lncb clrclts. or each dividing membrane• from outside Remove with IPllula and place on In- to middle of core. Removnectlon by aec--dlvidusl salad plataa lo form -ol11at. tloll cmr bowl lo retain Julee from lruil Remove gelattno from mulllll tlnl; nnlh aectlons; add a d d 111 o n a I place on top o! circle to fonn top bat. grapefruit jutce • to mate 2¥• cups ; Decorate base with aoltened cream re,.rve. Mix 1elatlne, sugar and salt In cheese to mate band of hat (u.e pa.llry saucepan; lllr tn cold water. Place over (uhe j; use pecan baU !or buckle. Gal'!llsh low heat and stir UDtli·ielatine II dillolv· with additional mpelrult aecUons il ed. • · desired. Serve with ma)'<)Mliae • Add I~ CQlll ..-.pe1ru11 juice, vinegar YIELD: ll lndlvldual talads. , IEA AND!RSON, Editor PIM JI .. Home News Es tro gen Subjec t Of Stew By DORO'fHY WENCK _ ....,ot1"" c...,, ~ ,Uvl•r Ha~e you ev~r heard o( dJethylstlbtstrol-DES.for short? Tbls is .. a ~ 'growth honnone (estrogen} t!iht has' been u.sed ln cattle .feed since 1954 to cause the animals t1> grow faster on leu feed. Concern over the possibility o! DES residue in meat developed after the fin- ding by one researcher that women who took DES during prognancy to prevent miscarriage had .daughters who bad 1 higher than normal Incidence or vaginal cancer. Unlll recently, a 48-hour withdrawal pedoll het-leedjng; DES and anlmaJ alqbter bed boen 'vp!uptarily followed .' bf,liveatocf prod-.-ll WU thought thaf• Iller tllls lime· Interval no DES r<\tllilue'"'""'""' In. tie meal However 1 USDA 1urvey, conducted Jast summer, showed that in a few c~ DES residue wu found in the liven of the animals. Al a result, the Food and Drug Admlnlatratlon and U S DA established new regulations concmdng the U!e o! DES which went Into effe<" Jan. 8. · MANDATORY In . place of the voluntary 41-ho1" withdrawal Jll'OCl'lm, a m an d 1 to r ! certlflcalloa' _,am oow requlreo tha the anlmala he certlfled u m1 bavJn1 been led ,DES, or 'u' having l!eot withdrawn •from ·DBS al leut 1 day: before sl•llllJler:. , U neither ol ...,.. requlrementa ba: been met, cattle met abeep wlD he hel< alive !or 7 days before slaqhter b; Fedl!ral meat lnapector1. -Or, if the anlmala arw llaughtered. llDlplea wlll be -lo a USDA lpjlr'OV6' • -alal7: .... _I ......... 111:1 -· JfO'D these animala oould ml b< m.,teted until the taala Jll'O" It la frt,. · o! 'DES realdue. ~ 'Since the new cerlificaUon prog:rar · went Into effect, USDA baa reported !In<. Ing DES In two anlfual liver aamples - a steir and a lamb. No DES WU found I·' • lllllplea• nl IDUlcle tissue from elthl aillmal. INVESTIGATION In both ca1e1, the producers ht · cerllfJed that the anlmala -. lakeo o fl>ed conlalnlng DES 7 di1' hef<R . alaugbter. However, l\)veolliatloo baa ahown II>·' the aheep feed coatalned DES during U , time thet the grower certlfled It ' l\llhnal• were helng withdrawn from It · llonnone. The ateer Incident la Billi und< Investigation. Each lncldeol haa been ._tect to 11 . Food and Drug Admlnlatratlon for .pcifi •. ble· criminal pn>oecullon, ' • • M a conaeQueid of these tlndinp ~ , two prod.-1, !or future llveato< ' sblprnenla, must either bave the anlmi . held at the llauahter plant for 7 di; prior to 1llughter or have the anlmf slaughtered and retained pending the JS<, come of tea.ting !or DES. This «quence of action ls an • i lusttatjoia ,cl. lii>W"consunier concern r protection baa blollght about lmproV! re8ulatlonl and testing for a posslt harinfuI lllbllance In food. Criminal t llon aPinst offenders might poaiJ> aerve u an uampLe to other producert. • Biµ.i 'INT!ioDUCED Mfanwhlle, bUla bave been ~I In the U.S. Senste and lloule lo' co1~ pletely outlaw the use of DES. A iia '• now looma between the cattle product • lobby and the antlDES group. '11 cattle growers are anxious to reta1n:11 1 o! DES. They claim that -used J!t ' perly lt II a lllfe chemical. ·• • The crowm• chief arlUDlflll In fayfr o! DES la· baled on a USDA atudy wti1! , .. ,. consumert -pay l3llO milllod . f4«I million a year more .for beel;'r, mucb u U cenla I pound Gira, 11 DI II outlawed. The llucly uys D~ bna1 feedlot lain rataa for Rw1 11 pen:t' • and lor belfen If~ Your Jeclslaton ..., .... to ban·" decide, with JOUr belp, whother or' S: .~ this growth bormooe -conttnae ' he used. ' QUESTIONS WE ARE Alllt"ll Q. I made a big baldl cl. chDI 1111.• tome canned cbW aa1ta. Allenrarda • noticed that the llntng cl. the -ol t ' chlU salsa can had chipped off In plao . Some of thll mutt bavo ·IOllen· lnto 1 . · chill. Would this be harmlul! • A. Tbe FCJ!ld AddlUVtt Amendment the Federal J!'ood, Dn1C and ~ Act pnihiblla the uae ol lood COlilaln< , which would lrar.fer I po1-' : harmful aubllaace to the food In the er •. Therefore ,.. need not wwry oboUI few chll"I ·rrom the can llninl bannl you. Occallonally, ,.. !Ind ..-.~ on the lnalde ol cans or cm the food. 'II II not harmful either. ' . . --- Dog's ·Tale Motel · Wor:ker ' Waggin~ .. - Lea 'ves ,. , -. • ; DEA.R ANN J.,\NDERS : I Live 1l)d a ~ad ringer for mf:. SevuaJ months {•If>._· whi__n_ L:lirst 11• 1 s:!iclW'e of her , 1 wa1 cerfaln t0meone his 1upe Piifct my head on 1nother woman't body, (The dimtT11MMls were definitely not .mine.} your readers think they recoanlze ia porno queen 1n the sdpermartet « 1.t a ff' A llifflfhf. r.u lh<m not to Jump to ioo- chlllON -NOT GUILTY IN BUFFALO busband ~s I'm a chronic comPiallfet. He do<an'l und!'jtan<I. Whal CIO I ~­ JllEAllY·EYED _ • · -k In 1 mo\fl. I'd like to 1tr1lahten out \ IMI jtric-.iron• Kentu<i<rwho uid ,.. --- \t -...Muldn't admit p«>plt •llh peta. We'•e i'hld I kll lt11 trooble with aniQ'lalt than ti• ,t4#Ur4 ~~ •• I DEAR BUFF: Now llow 11 tbe wortd woulll Ibo (toe ,..,ie no rad my eot- ama KNOW wlaat a peru qitea lotkl like~ l'•t ltere'• )'octr letta ud my lb-,., wrttlq. DEAR BLEARY• Your fuk ""' lotllly lrnlloo1I, but tbl1 ~·~ ·-the)' aren't very real lo yo11. I 1111iM& • cot or ' roll·aw,y bf&.. 01 ·IM uoGld Door. It's eatler tba 1ellln1 yoir itlat. • . . ) ' • \ people. .. ' Since I've been here I know or only two tn1t1nce1 where • pet darriaged hotel pro-ture1 ofl the wall, 1bower cu'rtai,ns, te1tlmoalal for maa'1 · belt trtffd. TOO pt'rty. In both Cl8el a little ihampoo on anythlna that w11rl't riveted to ~he noor . bid they ca•'l retd. the rus ,remedied the )>robtem. People · No one h11 ever been tnJu.red in our DEAR ANN LANDERS: I ftlt 10rry for are another 1tory. They've fell 'l.15 "''ilh place by a pet, but we've hid el1ht cunt. tht happily married woman who wrote to ' broken chllr1 , mirrors, burnt mattresses hurt In fam ily tights. 1lnce July, -say she .had done aome nude modeling In Ind food on the wallpaptr. One drunk ac-includins one woman who shot her bus-her younger land more fooliah ) day& and tually put his list through a TV screen. band . w1s, haunted b)flhe fear th1t she might With Ute ei:cepUon or a beach slipper al I re•d recently about a mo el in be recognized. l am .in 1 almilJ.r predica- the pool , nothlna haJ ever betn SlOlen Manhattan for pets only. No people allow-ment so I can underatand her anxiety. from ua b)'a pet. Our two-legged guests. ed. l envy them ' their cllentele. -Only I wa s innocent. . on tht other hand .• have helped MIDWEST READER A certain girl who 1pecialius in tMmaelves to lamps, linen. pillows, pie-DEAR MIDWEST: What 1 alct pornographic modeling 1nd slag films 11 A few day1 later a man who works with my· huaband lold him be had seen some 11.ag movies at the home of a friend and 1 •as the st.ar. My husband uked U he could arr1nge to aee the film Ind bis W'lsb wu granted. He came home in a state of ahock and said tbe a:itl w11 9\Y at.o\ute double, except for the body. He asked me to please cut my blonde hair and dye i{ dark brown, which i did at once. J 1till 1et uncomfortable ia tome- 'one 1tare1 1t me or 11y1, "Haven't we met before?" but I'm no longer panicted. Pleaae print my Jetter in case JOme of DEAR ANN LANDERS : We bought an old house three year• 110. All the bedrocma are upstalr1 . I have not had one.1ood ni1ht'11leep since we moved in. Jt'1 like sltepin& on top of~ toadstool. I feel as ii I'm on a shtlf and if I tum over l'lf ran Out into the yard. I want to stU Utll house and 1et one with at least one bedroom \On the ground floor. My. ' Can druas be a friend' In time of~tresa! 11 l't!ti keep your head tngether "" they be"Ot help? Ann Landers' new biookl~ "Strai'ght Dope' on Drugs" separates the fact from the fictK>n . Gel it toda,y. For each booklet ordered send a doll1t bill. plus a long. self-addressed, 1tam~ 'envelope, with 16 cents worth of stampl to Ann Landen, Boz 3346, Chieqo; DI. 60654. ;;;;:.;~~:-:;:~~---:~.~--=--:;l Horoscope: Li brans , Finish Proiects \ MARCH 16 THURSDAY By SYDNEY OMARR , ARIES (March 21-~prtJ 111: Overcome obstacles by~ being versatile. If you !mist on only one way, you invite problems. Einphasize per 10 n a I I ty , ·1 original methods. ~ ready to :f break with some 1ccepted pro-\ cedures. Room is being made at top echelon. TAURUS I April 2G-May 201: Tread lightly. Heavy-handed methods now cannot succetd. Check fine print. Perce.ive hkl- den meanings, detect subtle nuances. Aquaria• lndividu1l You get into difficulty by ac- ting on lmpulat. Unorthodo1 approach Is okay, but be IUre you are aware of potential - and consequences. You will be completing a project. This Is time to finish, not initiate. 8 C 0 RP I 0 (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Work, health areas are empha1ized , Pact i1 1tlmul1t1n1. Be 1ure it isn't reckl ... ty quick. Study Leo measa1e. You gain now through new contacts. Adhere lo ln<ijvidu1l11tyle. 1Pore one who forever complaln1. SAGmwus <Nov. 11- Dec. 21 ): Frlend1 act in way which causes some lo ralae eyebrows. Maintain le~ of humor. What 1ppears lo1t la merely ml1pl1ced. In ac- tuality, gain if shown. Finan- cial picture will be bri&hter. CAPRICORN illec. 2%·J1n. 19 ): Be aware of tendency lo &ot lo extremes. Recall diet, health resolutions. Home tn- vironment may chance -sud· denly. You come out of 1ny rut. emotional or otherwise. Social life accelerates. Have _tun, but ta~e care. N~l&hbor.1, rel1tives make ac-. cuaatJ011s. Key ii to pay at. tentlon to facts. Let rumors go 1---------- by wayside. Another Aquarian figurea prominently. PISCES (Feb. 19-fo..1arch 20 1: Be re1dy for change, travel , variety ore 1·pe r ie nc es . Protect valuables. Friend miy be sincere but misinformed. Realiu this and be cautious where money is concerned. Gemini and Vlr10 persons are in picture. "•• c1mt1111t11 r: ifi~y:;· .Ji;~~:~~::: • ti!,.. "" e..,.. U1 •· 171ft ti .. Mlt\tl"M k . ._.J·MM (Mia lilts. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 11): Confu1ion may 1ppe1r to!;=;==================; be par for the cour1e . "cf:q provide answer1. You ald ['":!=="!!===:-VliftGJrNJAlJSi!!====~ y~f by being thoroueh. 11 ~ l' IKGJNIA'S }:;'~!-, GEMiln c(May 21.June 20): SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE Sflecial relationships are ln-1114 E1st Coa1t Hwy. • Corona clel Mir .Preparations Done • In Jig Time A 11lute to, St. Patrick in the form of a luncheon and card party is planned by the Women'• Dliiblon, Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce. The event will t1ke pl see 1t noon, Friday, Morch I 7, in the Murdy Park Clubhouse. Planning In "Jle time" ue Mrs. Robert Wall Qefl) ind Mri. Doug Loughmiller. tensilied. Friend& tend to be Phon• 6)].1050 argumentative. Avoid becom- ing Involved in ramHy dispute. Be perceptive, analytical. Some hopes, 'wis hes are sub- . ject to revision. Be ready. CANCER (June 21-July 2%1: You get help from source that may previously have been in· different. Home en vironment can be improved. Key Is to be diplomatic. Don't force issues. Review ambitions. Talk of property, residence is featured. LEO (July 23-Aug. 2%): ,_1aintain steady pace. Going here and there could be waste of time. Sift through rumors, report.!. Stick to fact, not fan· HER·E COMES SPRING H11rry 111 a11.I l•ok •t. our J,,aoutiful 11•w tprl111 f1hric1, th1 color1 •r1 f,..at, t+i, f•hric1 1a1y to wor .. wiH.I Gla,.,1rou1 or c•1ual p•ffot1u 111 full 1h• r•111••; Si111plicity, l u+t1ric .. •Ml McC•ll1! E•tl•r w11l.: 1wim a11d 11111 w•1r 1he11I~ h• 1+•rt•J 11ow, s •••• ..,ckr1. '•11im1, t i ~9ha ... 1 •nd chic .... ,, ••• for ,1 • ., de+h1, lent tlr•n•t ••• "•rv ckic! e IANIAMll lCAll S1• Yeu s •• 11! VIR.&INIA e MASTll CHAlal • • • • • : ba11lt•rn•ric•tcl e 11'1a1f•r ch•rt• 7 farhiol\ id•11d, nawpart c•11t1r 644.5070 cy. Some, who want to appearl!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;::;::;::;::;::::::;;:::::;:::;:::;:::;=;~ Important, try to sell rumor1. Don't fall for sob story. Bengci/is Re1ect SObies · VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 2%): . ' Birth ,Pangs Bitter - Pleasant surprise due. Affects financial status. Avoid jum· ping to conclusions. Wait for offer .You may be worth more than imagined. Self-esteem Btcause of shame, 10me non- pternant girls also hive left home. A women'• home 1 s sponsored 11 a pllot project by the B1ngl1de1h governm ent and lnternation1I r e 11 e f organizations. rises. You obtain needed back- ing. Actept e1:tra duty, assign- ment. LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 2%1: GOODWILL INDUSTRIES ' • THURS•f'Rl·SAT, MARCH 16-17·18 ON NEW CLOTHING For the Entire f a.mily • • • and Just in Time for Easter! Please Use These Booths In Your Ne~hborhood · ' TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR STORE FULL OF WONDERFUL VALUES I I PLEASE JOIN US FOR FREE COFFEE & DONUTS DUlllNG OUlt llRTHDAY C:ILllRATION I ' •• /(irk .. rr~ewelers ""SA VE THE GREEN" TllURS~FRl..t SAT.ONLY Genuine Opals Genu in a Opel• -gems of good fort une -with 111 the r1dient color• of the r•inbow c.1ptur1d in • 1ilv•ry cloud. In 14 kt. white or ytllow ttld. FREFJSCROlL en lhe otory •f the Op1I r• h Y""' purch.,.,! LARGE SELECTION · Loose or Mounted MA NY STYLES TO CHOOSE.FROM Regularly Priced From $15 To $450 ·NOW 25% OFF Ee1y creel it tt rm1 e· •tuclant accounts •"'•Jl1i,1. • up to 12 month• to P•Y • l1nltAmtric1rcl • Mister Ch•rt• CHARGE IT! I HUNTINGTON C:INTll 811ch l lvd. i ncl Ecl in get Huntint+on 81ech H2·H01 . HARIOR CINTIR 2300 Herbor llv~. Co1t1 M111 145.9415 MON., THUU., 'RI. ilL t P.M. ' ' • ' ' ~ Wtd,,.sdlf, M"'~ 15, lm ~All.Y tlLOT d Club~ Rolling c Out the Green · Carpet· They're Selling Like Hotcakes ' . . Oraage Coest club actlviUes • 'during the w,.keod will hall•' • alhletic and lri&h them..,, .tinltOn-. Beach, r 0 u n t • t n Valley and S.~I Beach wUI obstr;'.e their .organization's ll2nd birthd<Y by staging an .:___ -;-BCYC · ~;i"logy walk Satuz;<!ay, Mardi A dinner dance Frida ' ; ·'The Long Beach . National y, . Guan! Unit Headquarters and Mardi 1.7, wi)I stlrt on a tWo-Edison High School'• Earlb . day St. Patrick'• Day Regatta Club will assist with the for Bahia Corinthian ... Yacht beautification project that , Club mem6ers and guests. finishes with a b I r t h d a y The Irish buffet, hosted by celebraUon program In Murdy -p Ca t . nd Park. Mn. Donald E . ort p am a Mn. James Tho 1 F tain V U Ernoli and Mr. aDd' Mrs. Lorin mpson ° oun 8 ey . • . . . may be contacted to arrange Weiss, will ·begin w1lh a sOclal f tr sh llectio hour at 1:30. or a co g.., Beta Sigma Ph i Qelta Delta Kappa chapter members of Beta Sigma Phi will gather in the Tustin home of Mrs. Randall Ivey for a Las Vegas Night party at B p.m. on Sat~day, March 18. l BYC Burton Morse, utrologer, will tell women of Balboa Yacht Cl~ what luck is in their future when they meet for luncheon at 11:30 a.m.' Fri- day, March 17. 4 p.m. Saturday, Mardi 11, In · the Jerrcld R. COie resldenc. • Newport Beach. wW benefit tb;e' Junior Ebell Cl\lb's con- valescent home crafts pro- gram. The Mmes. A. L. Ha!tings and Richard Flggt...chalrmen, report thlt merchandise ~ ' elu~ a Spanish sofa, Martha Wuhington ,sewing cabinet, ski equipment and large map wall hanging. The club~s Amerlcanl.am commlUee teaches . handiwork twiet a month at Park Lido and Glenhaven convalescent homes. Preschool - Dirk Benediz and Terry Hugar Oeft lo right) know practice makes perfect. The boys are tuning up their tastebuds for the Linda Vista PTO pancake breakfast slated for Saturday, March 18, from 8 to 11 a.m. · • Ecology Walk NB . Ju niors Funds • for Niguel Parent Participation Preschool will be raised by a boutique and bake sale from 10 a.m. to 6 p. m. Saturday. March 18, at the Alpha Beta market, Laguna Niguel. Easter baskeb, handmade wall plaques, crocheted hatJ, ll:O••l LllfOlltll Grand Opening SPE.CIAL sz OFF ';":."' Noah's Dog 6rD0111il)g Phone 642-9123 · ' 21U NEWl"OltT ILVD., COSTA MISA Offer E1tplrt1 M1rch 2~- .......... T~ADING ~;~ "THE STAMPS TRAVEL : : THAT REALLY 'voucHERS )~[ SEND YOU"! • • • • • • • ••• • • • Aek your mtrchml ...... 1$ . KING SIZE SHEETS PLAT = $4!"~-""!! Q.t7 ''· •'1.111,N ,, .... "'"' '---------' STOCI UP N,OWJ WAMSUTTA BURLINGTON Bed /j Beth rashlo'!,.~!,19ps 1'"1 MAIN ST., llf S...,. CMttr -HUNTINGTON llEACM IMU.~ M.11!1r °"'"" DAGE ·; 2t Falhlon laland, Newport Beach -'Phone 644-2525 . . An Old Favorite Is Back With A New Look THREE IN ONE ..• Groduoted puckers -smoll, medium, large oll in one !.bric ' mokes • deligh!ful long dress. or • little girls' Eostor frqck. S..o our collection of pollerns ond choose your version of an 1 old-foshioned look. Trim in loco for odded ' femininity. W oshoble ond Open Body no-iron. Natural and sunshine colors. ~5 " wide. 3.29 yd. PUKKA SHEER , •. Lightweight see;sucker with • leno strip. Cool, eosy-core polyester/ cotton blend. White, nature!, grope, tropicel turquoise ond Celilomie orongo, ~5" wide. 2.6S'ycl. • • ... '· Camp Fire Git ls from Hun-A gara&'t sale from 8 a.m. lo ' . •BABIES • 1· • •CHILDREN •ADULTS , Big 8110 COLOR PoRTRAIT e No Age Limit SEARS LOW PRICE! • Limited lo ona Portraa 9 9 ¢ per subject M1xii:num two portr•it1 per family on Speciel offer • Group rates evellable e S1ti1f•ction 6u1r1nt141d PLUS 5h FIIM CHARGE -II-.~ 11 A.M. to 7 P.M.,.........., 10 A.M, to S P.M.,........., 12 NOON to 41:!0 P.M. • M~ Thr...,.. luft*r, -1 a· 1 t c. ...... llJllrlltol !I. , ' T~r..ca IMal,M>UUCCAJriDCO. 2t1M .......... t t..I. i ...... ~ 45tl ... llO<~lltt s..toi.s,r.., 1.wt L T1hu1• ... ......... ,. 2sot c ................. ... ponchoe and baked sO!>da Ire being ,.adled for 1be ,vent, headed by Mn. D a v I d Xariker. Ni9htin9ele1 • Mn. Doniel Sllepanlooo, newly elteled president ot tllt Nl&bllngale Cbapler ot Haq. Kiwi Club Memorial Hoaplla1 1 Pmbytertan. wlll. be IMall .. , 'I1>e Newport Beach Chapttt at 1be group'• anN!al mottinC ' · of 1be Kiwi Club will meet for April 4 in the W~ White 1n Irish Corfee at 11 a.m. House. Salurday, }larch 18, in the Olber of!lcers on .l>er board Leonard $plelman rest~ence, Include the ~1mes. Kerm Orange, and for a busloess Rima , Thomas Boler and meeting 1t I p.m. 11iursday. James VI n st on. v Ice March 23. in the Santa Ana cha.irmen : Corbett Wi190n and home of Mrs. George Slmor. George H o e d I n a: h a u 1 • ' Fonner .American Airlines secretaries: James S. ea y • stewardesses are invited to tnasurer and sterllng Wolle, join. · parllamentartan. ' -I Junior ·Posters . · Ben efit • Works ol more than 50. artists and fashions from local specialty shops will b ~ displayed In Balboa Pavilion during the Artist! and Models benefit on Sunday.~arch 19. spansored by the C i t r u s Chapter, National Psoriasis FoundaUon. The $2.50 ad- mission price Is a donation for researeh about the hereditary skin disease. Brian Buckler. B r I a ft Anderson and Mark Ste~ have been named final win- ners in the S.monlh safet1 poster contest spo11.39red by the Huntlna:ton Beach Junior Woman's Club. Their posters are on display at Huntington Center Mall. Night Owls Mrs. William Kersavage will tell a mother's viewpoint of treatment at City of Hope medical center when Newport Beach Night OWlf meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 19. in~ Bethel ·Towers social hall, , Costa Mesa . K llDTIQUE lcl1f l : . A 11101t, 1111iqu • •tot• with • WOii• 4•rf11I 1•l•c.tlo11 of • f1111 cloth11 •Ml 1c.C.••••rl1t 1t mM•1t prlc.••· LI'ITLE LUV? Try Connell Chevrolet March 23rd. 2821 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ~1200 Enjoy nutritious food Netu"llv it'sgoOd. • "Fantastic Fooda-The Natural Way'" Atourpresentation you'll get a new out- look on good nutrition. Alld you'll tum on to our helpful tips ind meal plan- ning ideas.How about dishee like Three Cheese Dip, Whole Wlleat Coolrile Bread, Almond Nut Butter ••• naturally delicious!. Come. Visit with ua and get / your free copy of our new "Fantutio Fooda" recipe booklet. . '""'-111 ¥911ey c ...... ..,. c.t.- 1 OJOf I..,_ A ... , ,..,, ... v-., M....,, M..U 20. 1t7J -7111 P·•· 1...-,, M.,..J1, lt7J-111Jle ... w_. ...... City C..CI C•111•1r1 IZOO W..a l11tsc A .... W• ll•tw w .. ,,, • .,., .._.. JJ, 1'71-1111 ,_ .. n...p, M.U 21, 1'11 -111JI •·•· leef .._. 6rMt w ....... t.Yllltt C1••••ttv .... 2ttt Willl:al111eo A• .. ._..._. /' M....,, Merdi J7, 1t72 -;1.tH P••• TMMley, M9d JI, 1t7J -fl1JI •·•• w ........ ,. ... Jt. 1t7J-7:11p .•• 1'11f14'9y. M .. • JI, 1f7J-10111 e.•. ' .................... ...-,Ne.,.... ..... M..-,, A,,n J, 1t7J-7:JI ,.-. ,....,, .... 4, 1 t72 -1 l 1Jt .... M...,, Apttl 11.1f7J:-71M:·•· ,_...,April 11, 1t72 -11:J •.-. .. ,.,. .............. Offka 22'41 C..... (.t M..._.1, II f.,. ,......,, .... ,,. 4, 1t72 -71JI p.a. w .......... s. 1t12-1•111 e ••• I E - • ! " J I I . , ... , , • ' Novel Approach • • • • Model Cookbook a Mysfery · · . NEW YORK (UPll -U crackel'I, and the a!oremen-rl0o wilh 1pioa,"-· DJU, toad-Jn-lbHlolt (aa Enlllsh "1ae aJ)d I labl""-of London models stay allm on tioned Porill(.,. obocolste wine and 1~. and a -dilb of'"-baked In po-Grand -1boul • • the favorite recipu $0 of thtm deaert, which 1ttrta with ol lemon .outfle. · cake batter), runny e 11 mlnutes, until mixture ii Conlribulocl ti> a,,...~. heavy cream,' and .ends with whites, ... us, orpn meals oynlpy. Add peel allll coOk un- they c:ould mike 1 lorlune tell-dark' ... eet chocolate. OTHER CHOICES ' a.cl alictd wrapped bread. ' W'lt la tr ............... )IOI' !•i lhe world ho" they In the IJM>ducttori, MilS ' A photograph of each molltl Or-wllh cai:amel and syrup over all "'ui"'F" manace It. Few of tbtir Millington w r It ea that 1ccompaniu eaf,ll 1tt of nqta is described q model chill iteVertl ~ rtdpe1 are low-or · e v en ". . .many p e op I e "J 11 recipes, u do ·chart.a of the Diana Gort'• favorite deuert. · ~ 1 cup plua 2 mlddle-calOrle. remember wonderful meala models' preferences In other' Peel 4 oranges, remoVin& labletpoons otqar kl• bavy •• The paperback boo.k wts tr1111porled In her (Styfil1'1) areu--lnc:ludln&reatauranta. both the ~lored zeat -pan 1nd pour U,,.boi cartmt~ compited to {Bite money for mini-v111, especially the man m111&1.ne1, shops, 1uthon, and the whtte pith beneath Jt. on a larae. plece et oded w·ue<I· the Save the Qi.Udrtn Fund, a who ran into It when she .-as aDirnals, hairdreuert: and pet, Cut away all pith from akin"'. paper int lnetal,.P&ft to make . half-century old inde~ncknt deU vUing a tureen .of hates f.JnOng foods. two of the oran1e1, slice the a thin layer. ·voluntary orga n ii a fi o n gaspacho." · Their food phoblaa are as zest the aiu o! matchlticks Whan caramel hu bardtoed dedicated to helping children, M i s s Glas.!·Hooper con-varied u those of the general ind blanch the strips in bOillng and eoolect.' crack i\ .into chips regardless Of race and religion tributed her, gasPacho soup population. A few voted water. Drain and reserve with 1 rolling pin and'Sprinkle Jn almost 50 countries reciPf". along With one for . against all meat but mOlt al>-them . the caramel and abredded, All authors' royalties for ''Not Latin American duck.' which is j~ to such thinp as sutt BoU t cup of sugar with 1 toasted almonds on the Just a Pretty Face" (Corgi a 1plcy main dish of duclt and pudding, pigs' trotters ·(feet), cup plus 2 tablespoons of white oranges at servina time. Books) will be donated to Ulie"p;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. ;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;~;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!i;;;;;;;;;;i;' ;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;mj fu~ . ]j ' ~ The reCi...... are as in-• ~\ ternatlonal ";; the chijdren . ·.'l ... ~·:. who will benefit. They include ~ "_J Spanish roaSt duck, Italian . \ • bollito misto (stew ), French "·r·-· coqullles St. J a c t(u es r · .r (scallops ). Algerian couscous f (stew ), creme au chocolate . ".C _ ... P or tug a I se, Mexican f' "' -..: ~··';:.--guacamole, Japaneae mi.so •. · -. . ~ .... -.. -. '08 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALIOA REFRIGERATED DELIVERY S!RVICE: PHONE 673-1310 soup, Indian Curry, Irish stew, MK1a1e Eastern t a b o J I e b (salad ) and American ham- burger. INCIALI THUUDAT,· FllD~T. SA.TUIDAY, MAICH 16, 17, 11 ----------------------------------\ SUM MENU · It's hard to see how Han- nerle Dehn, a wide-eyed blonde, stays slender on the foodJ she chose as favorites - LETTUCE JOE'S PURE loQRK FRANKFURTERS, NOODLES, COMliNID grapefruit and prawn cocktail with a mayonnaise-base sauce, baked ham with orange, lemon and cranberry uuce, mornay potatoes (baked with onion in a creamy cl>Mse sauce) and orange snow, like cheesecake RED ,LEAF OR' SOSTON ITALIAN SQUASH Hot 'Dish Hearty Bl ... ' .. '4ched iCf noodJN and bit.a of.plu.mp frankfurter with a llJib-proleln oheele •uce, 1dd 'a dash of ore1ano and ~ hive a stick·tb-~e­ ribo, ~le. Ill hearty ltallOn Oam lt~lni.,.nt of the IUCC!Ulent;"W h o I e 1 o m e famUy rooc1a or Boloena, reOownecl r.r.nutrilloul pasta, rohlm oh<etes and aubtly 1plced 11usaie1. 1 A mtdley "of onions, green pepper and tomato accent the cheeM llMI<:< 'that's made "'Ith convenient condensed -cream of celery aoup;. nutritious .whole milk and 'rriellow· Checf. d1r. BO~EiE NOODLES 1 pack.age~ ,(I o u n c e s ) medium · rioodlet 3 llblespoona butter. 1(3 cup "chopped onion. 113 cup chop!>ed ~ peJ> per 1 can (101A ounces) con- densed cream of celery aoup 1 can (8 ounces) tomato .. ~ .. 1n ciip milk · Ill oupa (8 ounces) shred· ded Cheddar cheese '12 teasJJ90n leaf oregano ~ frinkfurters, thinly sliced Cook noodles according to Bolo,,_ .lfOJ>41fl .!P!• golden brown ln the oven and a final sprinkling of Cheddar r ight before auving adds a golden crown and ertra flavor and nutrition. · Carry out the llallan theme by aev)nl 'buttered Italian green bona,. hard rolls and butter. packqe direcUons ; drain. Jn . · a Iar1e sauctpan melt butter: saute onion and green pepper until tender. Stir in soup, tomato sauce, milk, 1 cup cheese and oregano. Remove (rom heat. Add noodles and frankfurters : turn into I-quart casserole. Bake In preheated Reade.r Reveals S.ecret . Recipe The Evansville re a de r pecans. Po.ur into unbaked whose. daughter·iD-Jaw refused · s~~ll. Bake :U-SO minutes at to part with , H~tll recipe , 375 or until 8 knife jnserted in for pie crust should riae up the center comes out clean. trlumpbant today. Serve with whipped cream. DEAR NAN: .Here ts tlaat For one of my fa vorite fill· lngs J cook 1 package recipe. I& is on tbe back of a chocolate Pudding and Pie powdered 1ugar bo,, •nd It 11 Filling, uslng 1n. cup less milk very good; I ate. Yu81a tee than package instructs . Cook, cream IUllag. Mel& t ·iqaares cool and fold ih 1 cup whipped IZ oance1) ••I" e et e. •ed. cream, J,2 cup chopped pecans cbocolale with % &abletpoom and ~ cup naked C()(.'(lnut. butter. Poor Into baited sbeU. Chill , Take from beat, add I tablt-serve with whipped cream . ·-· ilol mllk, l/l"Cup 1lrted MRS. AL PATRIAS, Hui· powdered 1apr and 1113 caps ~hlnson, Minn. cocoaa&:, flakes. ~s firmly ' Sun Uotber frtl'rl K. Cun- Oft bottom of 1idet .... wrasect .. Inch pie pan. C ~,111 1 llour before filling wllil l..:e cream, a cblffoa or cre1m tm. Ing. Serves eJcbt. NRS. GEORGE E. VAUPEL,"'Carml, ID. J. DEAR NAN : I enjoy ohirlng reclpe1 with others. \ F o r . Chocolate Coconut Pecan Pie make a regu lar pie cniat but add 2 ounces gr11ted '1Weet chocolate. Roll and press Into the pan. C.Over the crust with c:hopped pecans and ooconul. Prell In !innly. Filling : Melt 1 0 u n c e I unswtttened. chocolate with J , tablelpoont butt.tr over hot w1&er. CotJibine "' cup sugar, I cup u,111 <Gm 1yrop in a Dlqbam, Lanc .. tJr, Pa. Mocha Chilton Pecan Pie. ~en t tables~n wwflavored .gelatin la'% cap cold water. In 1111cepaa combJne J table- 1poon1 cocoa, % cup 1ugar, % cup Witer and 1 teaspoons in- stant coffee, 1tirrlng: t o dissolve. Bring to a boU, cook cently for 5 minutes, 1tln1ng COMtantly. Slowly stir over 3 sligbUy be1te:a egj yolks. Return lo pin, 11tr over heal aatll UdckeDed. T1ke from beat, add dl1solv· ed 'iel•tln plus 1 teaspoon vanilla and '{4 teaspoon rum extract SUr well. Cbfll WI mlx&ure mounds wbe1 droppt;d from a spoon. Beat I •II nllet with \\ tea· 1pooa 11lt bul in 'A cup 1011r, a tea1pooa at a tftne, utU whites 1ta114 la atlf! puka. Add ~ eup finely chopped pecans. FtWI llto c~ate. pl1U1 tnixtare. Ctver dlkkly with wWppod cnom. Ganlsb 1rlth pecl:I UJve1. ' 350 llegree oven, 2S-30 minutes or linUI hcit and bubbly. Sprinkle with II cup Cheddar cheese; Jet stand until cheese melta. Servee 8 to 8. • • I • ' without cruat. Deborah Romano c b o s e equally rich recipes avocado and crabmeat with sauce containing both heavy cream and mayonnaise, fillet of veal stuffed with -among other things -ham, pate de tole ·gras, frankfurters and ... ' \ ,,. SAUSAGE 59c ,. c • F 0 LBS. R •. WI llllln TNI lleNT TO UIUT 9UANTITllS '. In plhln English that's 15¢. )Vhich is the tidy little sum you can now save .on Weber's Original San Francisco English Muffins. And ohhh, what muffins. Tenderly baked the simple old fashioned way. With all of the fine ingredientslhat make them deliciously different: Pre-sliced too. So they pop easily in and out of the toaster,. a nice rich golden brown, And wouldn't you know it. Only Weber's has them. So look for our Original . San Francisco English Muffins. • Iii. the blue gingham wrap. And save a good old American nickel ·ancf dime. ' · • •'. Onlyfrom~ ' ·····························••4 •• • • . IS~ i I I • I ' I · .'UJeben ~~{ ••• '. s , . . l~ol.W"*'• · Orlaful S.. Fnmcllco ~....... I "' Q m Mr. Grocer: Wl'ltn alt "'"" er ltli1 offer h..,. bltl'I ~Jo 't f1t1M tty tllf C'1t=ln•MI by you, 11'11trtt111 t ,.11d1 I Contotti~ wilt lh11 COi/poii for 15' JllUt a, I tll!ldll11t 011 the P\lrtlle•.t of OMI i-<iklO• of W1bl1't • I • ; Otltlr.el kl\ f'l'l~!tco l1111filh Mullin•. Arrf oth ... u1.t 'I fOill'llllttt tf'luif. 11N91c• ,,....;di119 _plll'Ch••• of •vi· • S t~ ~el ~"°'!final S1n frll>C ilCO (1'191J1h I : 'MUl!lil1 to ccwtf ~ua::pr1l'1n11d tor 1td1mptlo11 1 1'1111t ill lftO'llln """" . I. tct\111M1f f'f\1111 ~I I I llltl ,.._ CIM \lt!l.ll 1 of 1 •• Only Orll COVf!M Hf 1 : ~11tt0!!!1r. 011" llltliltl llO!tf!l&iiir 36, 1172., tnlttttll• I • , arenn c.w,., ll!rO ... 1112, Clinton, IOWI 11m. Wft • --=i.. boil. ooolr 1W11 Add lhc c~ Then pour alowl7 -• -'"'· ·······························' ! ,... R •11t1'11!ill:aMDI IDfatillll • • Keop ..... llllil all lhe 1, • ' • I • ' ·' tyrUp II IMd;·ldll .1 teaspoon '8111111 aad I cup c:hopped A few of the reciJia.N.1n _ Wiley Includes in her boolt1et "18 Most Asked For Recipes" 1re CAndied Dill SUces, Lit T1ylor'1 favorite Chill and Oatmeal Pie. For your oepy send 25 cents and a long self. addressed stami>ed ..Velope with your request for ft to tier In care al the DAILY PILOT,J-----------------:_-------,------------,;_-__ ,;_ _________ _.:. ___ _ ' l I I 1 T • , • PILOT-ADVERTISER N • • . Cre9m O' the Crop -"ir.onch·fmh" FlavOr. . VET'S DOG FOOD' - PROTEIN RICHI 1 SV.-oz. Can 1oc FRESHABYE fl FACELLE Baby Diapers 12-Packs 79c KLEENEX TISSUE ' . • FACIAL 2-Ply Tissues Packof200 37c GOOD BUY FEATURES! Ground Cinnamon i::': '\';:'39' : Table Syrup ,!":::~;'.';,. '~~' 69' Spaghetti O::,':'... "t ,"-55' Krispy Crackers -~ i! 36' Cli11nk Tuna 't!' 39' USDA Grade "A" Whole Body 2 to 2/h lbs. Ideal To Barbecue .. lb Plump & Te nder • . " SWIFT'S BUTIERB.ALL ' Turkeys-All Under 14-l b. Weight Range lb.sac Wilson Franks <;;:;~,;;.;::-i:: 59' All Beef Franks 'tx.'":/ · :i:: 73' Pork S ""''~·-·· 79 ' au sage ,,, . ..,,,,, "'"" .. I con AGE CHEESE . LtJCerne Quoijl.y-High In Protein. DAIRY DELI BUYS! COLDBROOK MARGARINE Ideal For A 21 C Spread or Cooking Use 1-lb. Ctn. ' Lucerne Com Tortillas ... .lB' Lueeme Biscuits . ~~ '<:: 8' Shady Lane Butter '""'"M" ~:~81' SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! 'Prices Effective In l icensed Safeway Discounts. I. BOURBON OldColhoon s399 Ktnt ucky Slrajght · · ll-Pr11f FHt• Mac Nair's Scotch ~~ ""'$529 st: Elmo's Rum '~::!"'· USDA Choice Graded lamb Short Shonk Flavorful And Ten· der. Safeway lb Guaranteed. ' ""' $369 . · 1 BEEF CHUCK ROAST ' USDA Choice Grode 69C Flovorful Blode Cut lb. F Th' h FrtshCustom}f(rnd 63' ·ryer 19 s c~. "-''" .. "" 1l ,resh Pork Roast ,';':~';:,'7. 1l59' Sirloin Tip Steak u~.:.. ._$)49 . FRIED CHICKEN r.~~~Ne · 2 ;i~_$J 59 · • s· 1R· L I. IN s1 AK IONILESS •EE~ $ . T P · For Broiling or Barbe-J 89 • · cuing. USDA Choice 1-. 1F-ESH PORK ST~AKS c~:.~:i:~~ , .. 79c P. ORK .CHOPS c!A,~:!~;~~~!!'!~ a9c _ , (Ctnltr Rib' Pork Chopi lb. $1.09) I,, . . . PORK ROAST IONEUSS EASTER" PORK 89C . , I ~~'P:,;~::if,'i'~ II. CANNED HAM ! HORMELEXTRALEAH 8onelrss -Fully Cooked From Ecntem Mm 3.11.$319 C11 • ' ·Fish Clkes ~a:l0E~i~i1 1it-:;39c S!IOW's -frtil\ $27' c 111 flo'l'l)f 1•. _ PllCES flnl '""" "'"°''" . " If ff CTI VI Sliced.Bacan Beef Roast IN ' Sof1way Brand Rolled & Tied Chuck LOS ANG ELIS LONGHORN CHEESE Chtddar Voriety-Sofewoy Random Weights A Bel-air Peas • Premium 11·•• 15C Quolity Pk1.' A Cheese Pina W Bel-air -Real H-u . 5 9c Ita lian Style P•r. 9 French Toast ,:.~,:. II Grape Juice ,~;<;, FISH DINNERS "''49' ... ~::20· • cait•i• Cl1l<1 ll·IL 51 c Choice of Sole or Pk( Perch-to Pon -Fry • CLAM CHOWDER .. s11w'sN1wE111111_1s.. 32c Dericious As A Soup Or c11 1• . • Souct. Robust Toste! USDA Choice Graded Beef Full Cut Bone-In Ideal To Pon-Fry lb. BEEF RIB STEAK USDA Choice Grade . Large Meoty Cut lb. 5109 Beef Patties Veal Steaks Sliced Bacon Chuck Wogon Cook«! -tltot & Eat Monor lfouw -Ten- der M.oty Ml Vto1 lloth's -Rt11ulor or Thitk SlioeJi .. 89' •. 98 ' 1-11.73• .... !:~~.~'~"Steak~ 159 USDA Choice Graded Beef • Latnb Rib Chops '~":" .:$13' P.olish Sausage ""~~, .. ._$1°' Sliced Bologna t':k"i:i '1:75' Comed Beef Brisket ~'":;." .. $1,. USDA 99 · & Thick" 69C Cilolcc C OlANGI COUNTY. R"'~'"· II. (EXCEPT CATALINA) Pritts Elfec1ivo Mor. 16-18, I 972 Al Sofe,..1 Di1<0unL • r • I I • I I ' ' -ORANGE TISSUE ~JUICE SAVE MORE AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT! 1 -' • . • • • : ·: .. . ~· . . . ITID~ DE -TERGENT . • .. · SALTINES BUSY BAKER 4:;~'.· sac ; Crisp To The Ve ry lost Crocker! 1-11. , I c In ~ 8 PICKLES ~~~~~1r!~~~~~~l~1;~: • TRASH CAN K~.~~~~~ft 22.u. '9C Ju ~ 3U11. '9~ 11'1 ~ • I COFFEE PRE-GROUND SofeWGy's Own -Con- venien t Easy To Openl ,.". 5ec ,,, ~ llVORY LIQUID :::Kr 22-oz. sac Ill. ':/ffe :~;"<:~. ,•, '•'•' ~$ .::t ::::: ~; ::~ SAFEWAY BAKERY BUYS ! ARA c ~~~ . ~ fil ORA,_NG.ES FANCY ~ . CALIFORNIA l:': . NAVELS I ARTICHOKES LARGE SIZE ·~! ' , .• *' .{:. l Brown MushroolllS •. 88' T I '""'""" 3·•.39• ange OS lcrw In cmor11s ... Italian Squash ~':' o.19• Leaf lettuce "'' 19• . POTTED GARDEN . Sulphate Of REDWOOD MUMS HOSE AMMONIA · TUBS _ lovely (0!0<1 ' $199 ;,,,., $'649 ~· 89' '~'· $2'' Foil l ·il, fkl!l111t Otorl'ltter Wrori Pit 50~.11,.~Dia. £och . ' ' ' ... • • I • • 'f I • •• ' . ,. • ' ,. ,. Waffles ,,J ' • REP LE NISH SKI .ENERGY Warm Skiers 1 Ont favorite putime thai is the family has spent tog et.her. . ; IQjoytd by American !amilieJ, Concord Waffles are topped '1 plttall 'llld cbildreo alike, ta with sweetened w h I p P • d ~ lldJDI. cream and a grape sauce I · There); tomething about the made with convenient grape , 4 .un& of. the cold, cri.!p air and preserves . and canned and !;. tlJo .freedom ol gliding dol'n lroun fruit. ~ t11ooe powdered sugar slopes . . CONCORD WAFFLES ;, .. lllll lllrocta people of al);agea 2 tablespooM cornstarch Z cupa pancal<e mix 2 eggs 2 cups milk (~ cup grape. juice may be substituted for par\ of the milk) 6 tablespoons melted or li- stirring until mixture I s thickened and 11111ooth. Add fruits. Qilll. Combine pancake mix, eggs, milk and liquid •horlening In a bowl. Beat with a rotary beater until batter is fairly smooth. Bake in preheated waffle iron until steaming stops. quid shortening . .: to lllla lllVlcorating 8">rt;· ' . tcan'(ll ounca) mandarin ~ A otrenUOWI day)if slalon! ' orange sqmenta 2 cups heavy 3 " 1 tablespooos aug •· ud downhill rllCjp( ciJta lor a I package (IO OWICO!llrowi ;-; !Marty, Wll'm\llCO\allJlper. f. mind !nliti thawed Drain fruits, r e 1 v i n g syrup. In saucepan. combine 1yrupa. Jll'•pe preserves, and cornatarch. Bring to a boll. Whip cream with sugar. Force through pagtry tube on- to waffles. Serve with fruited sauce. Makes 'alt servblis. :1 waffle oupptl( II ·Ifie perfect 1 jar r10 ounca) grape '; J ny to and tlltt i.perfect day preserves · •• t •• , ' ' . . .. .. Boo.n for Small Farms? .. i;·p· "e· ~-oa· · . . " ,.J l t' • ., • ' Ra'ised · 'O·rganically' : \ '.' NEW YliflK ·r!!,fn ~ demaild! !or O'lanic fooda may help IC• compltab wbat fmn orpniza· tlool bave been trying ui do fer yurt -·they 1114Y k_eep more Jmall farmers l n busJn:pl, TbJ 'vii ol lht hottest !UI>-• ·ai&l't~,wa,.a. ~ \!O!lmal. a monll!Iy • ...,. • ,. ~ 0 •• dl1trlbulloai lil >Ilri\lted to. 111111 .. • ...i rUICbm • who' pn>daCe rnajor crops o r- llvellock. The view la shared by Jack Miller, a Boyentown. Pa .. merchant who offers farmers tn bi• area 11 much at 2G per· ctDt above market prices for organic produce, and John Mac:Mahon, on organic farmer In Bortholomew Coonly. Ind., who holds a decree I n chemlitry. UT AIL AHEAD Tho tulb to orsanlc food• .WI la greater at the retail level than on the farm, although two rice farmen - one tri Arkansas and the other 1n California -re<enUy con· verted a total of 3,300 .acres to the organic method. , Neither antlcipate~ financial problel!ll despite hig)ler costs . and yields cul· by 1bout 50 percent. · Carl Garricb. the Ar~l\ll· told the magulne that prices offered b Y distributors were so good that . he wrote bis own contract. ' The two farmers switched in reponae to two health Iood digtrlbutora who offered hlg)l prices to meet inte!Ue bla-clty demand on the Eas.t ond Wu! .cout. 4or organic riot which Is .li\Jllnli.d supply. ' , !l'f!IER ijoos . "The tread is not limited to unusual foods such as brown rice and soybeana," wrcte farm JUe editor C.ne Logsdon. He said a division of a ma· jor food manufacturtr ls ln"' troducing oganic tomato juice and whole tomatoes, a midwestern cheese company is paying an 8 cent premium for organic milk and some farmers are completing plans to market organic meat. Log!don said the NaUonal NutrlUonal Foods A 1 s n ', reports about 250 manufac- turers and distributors cur· rently are handlil'll oraanics, and about 2,000 retlil stores sell such roods exclusively. While enthusiasm grows for th• old.fashioned methods that use no chemical fertilliera or serays, only a few nUdwestem farmers are trying organica, \ht magazine said. Lewis Heaton. in Indiana corn and ,.,,,... grower, said he'd have to give up farming if he had to give up chemicals. Curtis Ovei:dabl, a Min· nuota soil acientist, reiterated the widely-held view that food grown with inorganic com- mertial fertilizers does not differ from that grown with organic manures. He said the organic concept ii a myth becauie organic m a n u r e s break down 1nf.o inorganic ~ ; forms in the ·t0H before the plants can use them. l'be big mccess of org1nic food marke\Jng last year led ' to one problem ,that ls not yet solved : organic p hon I es . Roher\ Rodale. editor of Organic Gardening and Farm- ing magazioe, told Farm Journal that you can detect spray residues but It's hard to " ten if chemical fertiliiers have been u.ed. ' At least one -organics · retailer has hired 1 laboratory 1 r to make leaf analyses and take soil samples Jn early spring and three weeks after planting to make sure that its contr.acting farmers are Jiving up to their end of the bargain. ,• ~ Filling for Rolls· Is 'A 1· I .. pee 1ng • '".. You 'can count on heads ! tunlillc 11M1 ,.... anifllng < ilmllrl1Y'lt tho harance i5'U· lol !rom tooll!lom• . Walnut Onapftoj)f. ., Crunchy w1lluta peak from llPllY Ill owned, tender dou&h ( lolda, ..... I doliciou fmh- • ---=ttheto~ ~ =:rp . *1aled ~ ~ti hn 1Cr1tch with l'9; • ... lallllldio111, lhele .-" ron. 111 .... loped tor success -I ,. baveo1 veolUred """ 1111 11111tic1 of yeast • .,.. ,. ptioo before. n lk1111'na coffee, Oran11• Walnut Rolla make breakfast I speclaJ JDeaJ. WALNUT ORANGE RO~ i cake or package yeast 1/J cup warm water l.-1 cup milk \ 2 toblespoons lborterung 2 tablespoCl!ll granulated sugar I LY•poon salt 1 egg, beaten Z\I cups 1ilted all·purpose · flour Oranie sugar· \I cup chppped California walnuts Orange Glau Saften ,Yeast in warm water. ' I - Hut milk to ocalclinc. Add place close together In '""IJ- aborteninl, SUltr llMI 'i'lt, greased 9-Jnch round pon. Let tod cool to lubnrm. Com-rise until doubled 10 s.ile, blne with diuolved ye11t .and about 30 to IS minutes. Bake egg. Gradually b\eod in f1ouf at 375 degrees F. aboUt :IS to to make a rather soft Aou~. 30 minutes, until n I c e I y 'rum ciit onto flound bolr<l, browned. COOi slightly, theo and U,111 Itchily, Juli llitii driule with Orqe Glut. doulh roailda up. Makel 12 rolla. Return to lJoll'I, cover Ind --..._, cmim 1 let rill untll dooibltd In ...nn -...-._ place, about I hour. Turn out, tablapoona IOlt butter with VJ and roll to a redancJt about t cup .,...uilted qar and I • IZ lncllos. Spnad with lwpoOnl ITlted oronp peel. Oronp &icar and sprlnlde Or-GI-: n\IJ ll cup with wahM&. Roll up 11 for sifted powdered llJl&r with 1 jelly roll, to mal<e a U.inch tablespqon orange juice and Vs roll. I tu•poori finely grated or1n1• cut Jn l·lncb aucea, and peel. . I WITH SALLIE SPIN THE WHEEL YOU MIGHT WIN A 17c DECO RA TED COOKIE Harbor Vie w and Lido ... How cOmy can a batch or Riehard'a County hicks git when they're. in t here pitchin' for a, ~utiful silver trophy. Play hbrse race ... poSt time 5 p.m. you might win 3 pounds of asparagus . . · All of the git up and go County Fair 24th birthday fixins are the brain chllds of our own smiley people round the old corral ... Each department · in both stores h~ve done' their own Lhing. BecauSe Richard's is two markets thi! birthday month of 24 candles. seemed only fittin' we stir up a bucket. o f see-wbl>-c..,,.. outdo-who bubbles and offer • a prize. May tbe best market win and the other jump o.,.,. the '!it to orret congratulati~~· '.l't>t judges, of course, will ·be u.r;ibl.ased. · cold , uncalculated , ob- jective, u n attached in- dividuals mfking th e i r unheralded judging· rounds· . inconspicuously UMoticed by everyone. MOMMY BUY ME ONE PF THOSE Wanna see what an oil well does under ground? One with a fluid packed pump? See a true mi.nlature that a real oil pump selling company shows to their prospective buyers. Wanna milk a cow ... You can look right into the eyes of a full sire model Jer$ty, and do the kids· have fun. Buy a pineapple plant with a genuine fruited pineapple growing on it.,See an eight pound loaL c( braid- 1 ed ,French. bread deCorated ' with 20 tiny American Flags .. What a starter for a par- ty .... Scarecrow Joe. .. Com's.ii) the crib ... Ever ·aee an old time com sheller or Sausage stuffer or Dy chaser or suds saver . . . square butter chum ... a 60 year old cashier's money · tray? PACKING CRATES AND GUNNEY SACKS A double (aced Titus Moody ... An Iron Food contest . . . "Guess t h e number of raisins we'll stll this. weekend." Red Eye XX .... Bale.s of hay ... Bi& auction in the ·-meat department. . . .You bid. You get the whole prime rib, ham or turkey. What you pay goea to charity. Something new. . . .Heat and serve lobster rolls all done up with· bamboo shoots and celery .... Lo'le the old coffee grinder .... with the sign that sez "electric .arinder o~ counter 20 .... with the col· fee beans all around. . . Hacienda Le Verbena Costa Rican coffee. . . .Adams Extra Mocha, Expreaso. Mexican and Sumatra Arabica . . . a I s o Hill Brothers. . . .Big swing' to grind your own. 01 d Fashioned Hot Dogs 15c ... Old Barrels marked XXX •.. Platte Valley StralK)lt Corn Whiskey, aged In the hllla . . . An honest to real bi& copper •till that really wotlis .•• See It. ... Stacks o( .Westerner Cream Sand,wic!h cookies in an aid wheelbarrow: , ·: .. Sign up : win $10 )iotih . of meat. Provolone c~ hanging and Usinger /Alt Beef Sum- mer Sausage. :,; .. ijarrels of cheese and 'cr.ackers. •· . everywhei'e. ',; 1':'.A,.sneaky ' q_r1nge1 and ItJntm' display that goes under~¢ ... .Win a cast.• o( .i&ackin' Cakes . . . .!Mty crocker's newest. .. -~ minutes fro!" package to overr. Dlunp m 11 in pan. Dump In 1 cup water and 1 ta~I~ vinegar. Stir till' .t\IP.rjrthlnl1S wet. Bike. ~ • I · .R\cbanl'•, the P • o p I e 1 St.Ores, · b a 1 everything, I !tom flat toothpicks to overnight IOaking tapioca pearls. . . .&t most of all ' we'Ve got /Jot of wonderful people .... total 261 ••• who care for you , Lido ...i Harbor Vi.,., l • "" . . ~ • ' ., _.~ .. '.'."J ( . ' . :"I-.. I :~ ' , . rt1·A_tR· E'-tEN· .. ts· . . ·~!'I>.. . ,.-~v:;. . . • • , , •' • II 11 !i,11 >. ,<> '. J HARBOR VIEW STbRE MARCH. 17, II 9 to 5 P.M. . , ,, •.. ARJS AND. CRAFTS SHOW irte1udin9 .potion, jowolors tnd ,Oiotm., ~~ • it doneJ,Pre1en+•d by+he Costa M•s• Art L••9u•. "j.., PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSA Ys-Excifi n9 works by J•h• 6ru~b WOOD CARVINGS, whittling by C. E. McNiol of Nowpert. COM~UNITY CONCERT ASSOCIATION EXHIBIT CHAMIER OF COMMERCE, Womon'• Div. Cc;>DI' IOOK SALE MARCH \I I 1.4 P.t.4. SEASHEL~ EXHIBIT by Concholo9i1! David Snyder; 11 yrs. '/ . . ''" ' . . UDO STORE .; ':-. MARCH 17, II 10.4 P.M. ~· ~- RUMMAGE SALE by ~ho l\!•wport Harbor Emblom Club. P....-41 . Mardal\ School , Junior Blind, Hear Foundati•n. IT'S J.. &OOD CA SEI FERN AND PLANT ' SHOW:-:flowor Shop WHITE ELEPHANT SALE. ~,i,RCl;i t•· ' BAKE SALE by th• ·wom••·!',~illll if fti':"i•'!'./I0""9'· I• • MACRAMAE EXHIBIT Girl~·~.ht:tloiop•n-.• .... , . ..,. • • SEE BABY QUAIL HATCf'!INGI An •.xcit,in9~14u .. ti0..•I oxporionct '°' kids. lncubtlor is adjacont to th• fl!'illor Shep LIDO •STO~t ONLYI ·l ·• . ' . SPEC.IAL EVENT~f~:: ·Mar. 17, '.4 p.m. •:.-4 I • .:.' lL1o¢,.,STORE ONLY !. ' ·• ~ ·I couNTY FAil· MEAT. Aua1 , j; . ,. . .. ALL · PROCEEd~iiO TO CHARITY • '·'WHOA NELLIE~! .. ))ICK LANE ·~t " f • ... ~ • ' I ' ' AUCTIO~E!l ,. '.:. • · e·id on your favo.ritfi;Whol ~ 't.rt~• rib, Whole Pork Loin, Whole Lido Hem, '•t·M Tavern Ham, Fre1h Hen Turkey, Club Hem, Slab Bacon plu1 _Ba.r-M Whole Smo1<ed Pork ~oi n. . .. ~~~~ I JOIN T~E FUN with DICK LANt ... % '~ . • • .-?: ' BEST! Bii) TAKES HOME THE t.4EA Tl ' .. t·.,~1~ ·, .., .. L •• RICHARD'S FAMOUS, SUCCULENT . BARBEC~~P. .·RIBS LI. 1,.~, · ·BAR-M ALL BEEF S~LA~·I' , 11 oz. ·11.* WISCONSIN A6ED "' . . S~arp CHEDDAR~.~HE~SE ~L ~ Knudsen Farmer Style or Low Fat Cothig' 'Chttst "· J4 Lts Hierbas· Exotic Herlt F.reilCh Dressing · 'oz. -~ < • ii ·r -~~ DANISH CHEESE SALE •nd DEMO ' . Duke Creamed Havarti or Esrom Ch•••• SLICfD OANISH 6 01. po~T ·SA~UT or TILSITER ' • • OI. LIDO CENTER 34)3 Via Lido, Newport· Beach OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 I . , • 673-0360 KERN' ST , ' BircCI Rich J . \ ).0 PRICES EFFECTIVE. MA!lCA 14-19 .... . .. . . . . . ' . . • • PUT· ON YOUR BEST BLUE JEANS AND SUNDAY ~ON.t,tETS, ·~ND' COME ON DOWN T9 RICHARD 'S COUNTY . fAIR-WE'RE CELEBRATING OUR 2'4 YEARS IN NEWPORT. ' . WIN! FREE PRIZES DAILY! ' ' I ' .-. ' · .11 the bel l rings wh ilo you oro .-chec:l<ing _out you oro on ·insto~t winner! . _ . FREE HELIUM BALL-OQNS FOii THE Klos SA TU RDA Y , -. . { . ,:-. ' ' 'f~·:,~~-\ . " • !i• ' • ' ' • ' . . . . . ~· .· .. ... • t f .. 4• . < I ' ~ '\ ~ f ~~~3M/ LI DO STORE ON LY . SPlllN& FRESH . LAVENDER LILACS REG. 3.SO 2. 98 IRISH SODA· BREAD POTATO ROLLS Fruit Filled Variety Buns SINGLE LAYE R BUNCH • Jti 6 for 31i 6 for 41• St. Patrick's CAKL 89¢ SPARERIBS ~EAN AND MEATY 79¢,B. FOL GERS COFFEE ; THE SALAD MA KER, LEAFY BOSTON BUTTER LETTUCE 2 FOR 19¢ GRiAT WITH CORNED BEEF FIRM, LOCAL CABBAGE 5¢ LI. !-!: ' . ~;lit~~"' KERN'S SLICED STRAWBERRIES ''oz. Bird'I Eye Oran9e Plus •or. Richard 's Ice Cream,.,."' ,..t v. .... 4forSt PORK LOIN ROAST Proporodloroosyurvlng le39LB. CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS 1e29LB. THICK LOIN CHOPSBeke them with wue rkraut 1 e39 LB. COUNTRY STYLE SPARERIBS 89¢ LB. Fresh legs of PORK Whole o_r Holl . 79¢ LB. FRESH SIDE PORK To fry" you would bocon 69¢ LB. A ST . PATRICK'S DAY SPECIAL !ll KOSHER STYLE BR ISKETS . CORNED BEEF Theleftovers1regr11t,too .. · 1.29 LI. ZACKY· FARMS CALIFORNIA GROWN Fresh HEN TURKEYS Easy 10 wrbecue 59¢ ~a. f oC~OJ'~IU f ft'esh Rainbow Trout ~~;. 89¢ ••. Alaskan Bay Shrimp ,.2.98 ... Northern HALIBUT STE'AK c-.... c.. · 1.29 LI. ~. t c}{~t STUFFED CHICKEN · BREASTS o ........ u ....... Ht .. STUFFED PORK CHOPS STUFFED PORK TENDERLOIN wi ......... .,,,., ...... ,,. . . CHICKEN A LA KIEV ,_ ...... ··-... Chh ... AND A MARVELOUS SELECTION OF ll.S.D.A. PRIME BEEF ROASTS AND STEAKS 98c LI. 1.29 LL 1,69 LI. ,.1.39 ... I LB. l7t FOLGERS COFFEE I LI. 1.53 FOL GERS CO.FF EE I LI. 2.Zt Knudsen First Quality Butter 1 LI. a5i Sunshine Oatmeal Cookies 11 or. 49• PILLSBU RY HUNG RY JACK PANCAKE MIX JZ 01. 45¢ Olde Farm SYRUP Z4 OZ. 49¢ TROPICANA ORANGE JUICE v. ••u.oN 79¢ JELL-0 Gelatin ALL R.uou , or. 5for$1 11 or. 5forS1 11 or. 4 for $1 . ''or. 5 for $1 ''oz. 'Sfor$1 Countyfa~r Spetia1s OLD FASHIONED APPLESAUCE Yellow Clin9 PEACHES HALns w l<ICID Cream Style or Whole Kernel CORN Stewed or Whole Peeled TOMATOES SLICED BEETS RE'D KIDNEY BEANS MIXED BEAN SALAD OVEN BAKED BEANS u or. 4 for $1 11•1. oz. 6 for $1 FROM STOUFF~S • . ' t 11 YI 0%, ',59¢ 11'/o oz. 59¢ . 10 oz. 59¢ 61/J oz. 59¢ IOZ. 4for$1 11oz. 4for$1 .... 5for$1 tetc. l for s 1 70f. 3fw$1 .. ~v· ~AiJ~..,.' ~ marKers . ' CUT GREEN BEANS .. PETIT POIS PEAS ' MINCED OR CHOPPED CLAMS :!B~L~~!MS I MEDIUM DEVEINED SHRIMP f'ITTED JUMBO RIPE OLIVES t • BR<DWN BREAQ COLOMBIAN COFFEE • . • 1 oz . 3 for $1 ll oz. 3for$1 ''oz. 4ferSt 11 or. lforSt I Or. lfor$1 11 oz. l9c 711< or. ,,. 4'11 oz. 79• ... or. 3for$1 "ciz. 3for$1 1 LI. ,,_ ~~ l:iA RBOR VI EW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beach. 673-2155 OPEN DAILY 9 - 8, SUN. 9·_ 6 • , f ". -' ' ' ·if DAJlV '1LOT Wldnttd•Y. M""' 15, 197: . I l • • ' • Films, Festi Vais ;! .Fash ions F.ilf Out ca·le·nd·ar '. I ' (Editor's, Note : A coiwho fallnd clubbou1t. )nvlled ~oted to Nf~port . 88Jcl'l,1 were P.•t prftidtnls and ~ Mesa,· L11un1 Bue~ ~ honOrary aerYict . reclpltnlt am~ Mlssk>n Viejo par'enf-' t lncluctinf',Dr. John Nlcoll, teacher organlutions wijl ·Or. NOrrn1n Lolls and Leon appear In the DAtLY PILOT _Meeks ol the NtWpbrt·Mtsa uch week . Information Unffied School ~l 1 tr I ct . muat be received by the ( Adminl1tr1tlve counseling worne,n 's department or and offl~e 1ta . membrrs ~ri. Gared smith. l.148 alao were preSri\. Officers CtnteJJ1 Place, New p o'r t electect •to serve for 1'72·73 Beach by 5 p.m. Thursday are the Mmes. Theo Tare, for publication Wednesda y./ president; Robert Kemble, Bay View PTA Mn. R. C. Suticu~ President COMING UP : Jiii" Brend• taaley, coordtnator from Lion Country 81farl will speak on animal behavior and conservation progr1m1 1t 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March II, In the mulllpurpose room. Gout.I will alt0 have the. opportunity to view a Uon cUb. California PTA Mn . Boyd McCulloall' President COMING UP: Officer Tom Laur of the Com Meu Police Departmtnt w 111 .Donal4. Sloper and F. M. Bniue&U, Wee p-isJdents; RoctntY Jooe:1, rtcording ,. 1ecretary ; Conrad Schweitur, treasurer, and Alfred Wooley, historian, along' with Thurl Raven1 Cro lt aa cor· reaponding aecret.ary. MrJ. Sloper presenttd M r 1 . Wooley the honorary service award. Mr1. Guy Riley was Jn cbarce of the. luncheon. ~ Eestbluff PFO Col H. B. Ellker Presidenl COMING UP : G t ,n er a I mfftlng at 7: 30 lonleht In the. multipurpo1t room. RE PORTS: Citizens-of-the- month for February Were. honored and presented certificates. Stlected were Kevin Smith, S u 1 a n n e Samuelian, Scott Partick, Jody Btcher, Robert Holmen, Llsa Stolltnberg, Susie Crone, H ow a rd England, Stacy French, Kirk Mosher, Jennie McGowan and Francis Murphy. Estancia PTSA .. ' • for the Monarcbette:s. Miss Cindy BethllM, n a t i o n a I champion twirler wlll 1!10 perform. Ticket.a at '2 for adults and $1 for students will be sold at the door ... Student art shOw 4nd sale during the Tuesday, March 21, guild meeting in the om. Officers for 1972-73 will be elected. Monte Vista PT A Mrs. Tbom11 Heradol President COMING UP: Hobby fair and Ice cream social at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. New po rt Ele. PT A Mrt. Roger ' Early President COMING UP: Award-winning science projects ,will be displayed at the association meeting from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 22. in the cafeteria. · Ne wpo rt Hts. PT A rt1rs . Ralph E. St.evens President Pre sidio PTA Jlln. Bq~ n.m,..1 President COMING U P : AaaoclaUon m e e t 1 n I at 7:30 p.m. Wednesclay, March U. Program will Inc I u d 1 presentation o! tht honorary service award and a guest speaker. Mrs. A. M. Chrysler, wbo will dlacuss a school In Guatamat.a. Refreshments will be Pro: vlded by parents of second and third grade atudenll under the dlrectloo oI J\IJ'L Joo McKlbbon. , • ·Prince of Pee ce PTF >' Mn.,....,. ••• kh P1?'!.dtnt COMING llP : Ga a tr a I • meet1n4 at 7:• p.m. Tue .. day. March" 11, In the 'multlpurpnet room at Mesa' Verde School. "Wlnnle thl Pooh" will be preM!nted by 1tudenls from Walter Meyer Lutheran High S c h o tt_ I , Inglewood. Mrs. Ruth Rols<- ington 11 program chairman. l. St. Joh n Au x. Mrs. Anthony Becker President rrnmt 1 film at 9:30 a.m, omorrow ln the multipurpose room on Child Molesting. Discussion 11nd quesUon1 wlll be welcomed. . . • As90eiation meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 21, will re1ture Art Martinez:, chl.irman of the Orance County C:Ommiuion on Human RelaUona, 1peakinf on Mental Pollution. Slnfj' ... Iona and serving o f refrtshments will precede the mettin1. Mr1. Wiiliam Nowak Preti dent Gymnasts Take a Practice Tumble COMING UP : Gener a I meeting at 3:30 p.m. Tues- day, ~{arch · 21. in the resource center room will feature Miss Lyn n McNeil! . reading specialist who will demonslrall: Hoff m an Reader machines and Mrs. ~1ary G. Farrell. guidance soecialist speak:ng o n Motivational Jab. Election of off icers also will take place.' Parents of students in third and fourth grades will host. COMING UP: Ill o I h tr• daughter fashion show, Mill American Pie will take place at 8 p.m. Fridav, March 24, in the IOCiRl hilt. Dessert.. will be urved ill the convent at 7 p.m. Tickets, at S3 for adults anll $2 for students may be ob- tained from Mrs. John Seidel. 549-2747. REPORTS : Past and current presidents 1erved the dinner hosted by Father Anthon1 ~McGowan , for Archbishoi.t Timothy Manning rolloll(ing a recent con (i rm a ti o n ceremony at St. John's. College Pk. PT A Jlln. R.lberl Marold Prealdent COMING UP: llllmm•e• ale from I a.m. to 4 p.m: and p1per drive until noor. Satur- day, March JS. Papers lllould be lllUed or lied with. twine. CdM ~igh PTA Mr1. Joh1 Durkee Prt1ldent REPORTS: Foundett Doy aalld luncheon took place 1111 week In 1111 IJndt COMING U P : Amciallon meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuts- qay, ;March 21. in the forum will ·fe11.ture a film and com- mentary by the Orange County Health Department entitled Everything v. o u Alway:I Walited To Know About VD But Were Afraid To Ask. Students from the music department w I I I perfonn and the honorary 1ervlct award• will bt. preoenled. Harbor View PFO Mn. William LJcblcap President COMING UP: Mn. WJIJlam Corona deJ Mar students Andrea Baltzer, Jill Wood and Becky Othmer (left to right) demonstrate • prac- tice !lip from tbe1 gymnastic and tumbling program Wright and committee members will meet at 10 a.m. Monday, March 20, in the home · of Mrs . Richard Harano to finalize plans for an April 26 art festival. April will be designated art month . '· Hop e Hav en PTG Mrs. Perne l G. Bar1ttt President · . " COMING UP : Fund-raising wty will take place at 9:SO a.in. tomorrow in the con· ference room of Oakwood Garden Apartments North. Mrs. Pernel G. Barnett and Mrs. Harry Sampson will host. REPORTS : Proceeds from the Valentine luncheon were $100. Mrs. Kenneth Cagason was chairman .. , Dr. Dong Back Kim spoke last week to a large group of mem· hers. Reservations for sum- mer school are being taken by Mrs. Roberl Jacobs, tupervisor-teacher at 642- 4719. lo be}ealured rriday, March J7yal -3:30 p.m. al lhe Mother-Daughter Spring Garden Party at the school. ' Kil lyb rooke PTA Mrs. Ronald Arnold President COMING UP: Ge n er a I meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the multipurpose room will feature crafts and hob- by displa ys by Donn a Freibertshauser, director of the 11rts and crafts division of the Orange County Fair. Donna Mithoff a I s o will display scrap c r a f t s . Individuals and youth groups will participate. Linda Vista PTO Rlcbard Nleder~a11Hr President REPORTS: Serving on the nominating co mmittee are ~lhe Mmes. Max Harthcock, chai rman; Sam Palmer, Wes Jacobi. Harry Mellor and David Chavis and John Clarke. principal . . . At- tendance iward for the February general meeting wa s won by Robert Kelly's fourth grade class ... Proceeds from the daffy ap- ple sale we.re ™· Paula rino PTA Nick Hanson • President ~ TeWinkl e PTA Mrs. Lawrence Encldll1 President REPORTS: Honorary 1erviee award w11.s presented to Mrs. Donald Utter. Turtle Rock PTA Orin Potter President Elections Primary Bu siness of Units COMING UP: Pa n c a k e breakfast from 8 to 11 a.m. Saturday. March 18, will feature juice. coffee, milk , sausage and pa n c a k e s. Representatives from each classroom wlU. enter a pan- cakH:ating contest at 9 a.m. .. , Ecology dri ve con- tinues. Newspapers. glass and aluminum may be brought to school ~fonday, March 20. Trees are being purchased with the pro- ceeds. Ma ter Doi PG Dr. Edwllrd T. Hammer President CO~i!NG UP: Everything's Beaut iful is the theme or the mother-daughter fa shion show and buffet luncheon to take place at 11 :45 a.m. Saturday, March 18, in the multipurpose room . Home sewn creations including knits and crocheted fashions wilt be modeled . Tickets Are $1.50 for adults and 75 cents for children . .. U n i t meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuu- day. March 21, in the m u It i purpose room. Nominating committee will present the slate of officers and election will follow . Program will include a talent show, Parenti of third grade students will host. REPORTS: Official 1ehool sweatshirta and pennant& in the school colors of blue and green went on &ale Jut week. Victoria PT A )fr1. Dou1El11 Bowler President Gay Nineties Returning Ill a Gay NineJle• mood for lhe Perry PTO• carnival, ICheduled from 2-8 p.m. Saturdoy, Moreb 18, at lhe school are O eft to rifhl) Eric Lo(ston, Joseph .R. Ptl'I')' and llorHD Stupak. J I • (Editor'• Note: A column devoted to Fountain V11.lley. Huntington Beach. Ocean View and Seal Be111ch School D j st r j ct par ent-teacher organizations will appear in the DAILY PILOT each week . Information muit be received by Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull. 54i71 Mangrum Drive, Huntington Beach by 5 p.m. Thur1day for publica- tion Wednesday.) Gisle r Inter. PTA Mrs. Wii iiam Davl1 President COMJ'NG UP: Wearing or the Green is the theme of the mother and dauahter fa shion show scheduled tomorrow night at 7. Fashions from Huntington Center will be coordinated by the Mis1 Prim Academy, and music will be provide<: by the Edison High S c h o o 1 Madrigals. Tickets are pric- ed al $1 for molher1 and 50 cent! for students. Door prizes will bt. awarded. REPORTS : Unit baa donated $17S to be used for prtsiden- tial phyalcal Illness awards. Harper PTA Mr1. Xennetar. Killer Pteaident COMING UP : Unit will assist with an eighth grade ciASS trip to Sacramento schedu\. ed Monday, Marth 2tl. Parents aervinc as chaperones are Thom as Whaling, Jerry Feltman, Al Hollinden, Donald Maddox and Mrs. Ken Braman. Also chaperoning will be Edward ' .PoweJI, principal, and Jim Dutton, George Sheridan and Mrs. Harold Burnett, eighth grade teachel'1. Dut- ton has 11rr11nged lht1 fl ight ~ and lhe. ruu day of o~rva­ ~ lloo in lht -c::1pltol tt 11.1.p- plement lh• eighth rr•d• civics Protr•~· Hope View PFO J\lr1. David Crandall President COMING UP: Officers wlll be elected at eener,aJ m .. u., ) . 1 Tuesday, March 21. at 7:30 p.m. Den 2 of Cub Scout Pack 418 will conduct the nag ceremoniu . and the select choir of fourth, fiflh and si1th graders w i 11 perform under the direction of Mrs . Charles Koepke . REPORTS : Members at- tended the first in a series or math classes tor parents presented by Miss Jane Sunde and William Gerhardt. Oka PTO Mrs. Larry Lepley President COMING UP: Reading Sup- port System will be the pro- gram topic at genera I meeting tonight at 7:30 in 'ht musia room. Speakers will be Principal Ted Towry and Miss Charlotte Schroeder, Miu C i n d a Scandling and Mrs. R. T. Harney, learning co ordinators. Nominating committee will be selected, and a vote will be taken on improvements to the school. Meeting wlll be hosted by Mrs. Robert Randall, hospitality chAirman ... Unit will join Bushard PTO In co·h<>.!ling Meet the Can. dldates Night Mo n d a y, March 20, at 7:30 p.m. Speaking will be Lorin Lam· mers. David Israelsky and Dr. Ed Borowiee, school board candidates. • REPORTS : Sweatshirt sale is in progress •nd will continue throughout M a r c h , ·~ cording to Mrt. RonaJd Stephanson. chalrm•n. Par,k View PTO Mn. Robert OSian President COMING .UP: Ed Williams or the Huntington Beach Police ~partment will be guest .Jpeaker at 1eneral meeting tonight al 7:30 In the humanities room. Fourth, fifth and sixth grade chorus will pt:r(orm under the direction or ~frs. Michael Pamson. Mrs. G i I be rt U.rpes II p r o 1 ra m cbalrmln. COMING UP : Promenade Into Spring is the theme of the musical variety show to be presented by the music department under the direc· tion of Theodore Clark at 8 tonight. Miss Lynn Davis, director of the drill team is i n charge of the choreography dance routine Fairyfales Frac tu re d COMING UP: Dr. John Nicoll will apeak on Middle School Philosophy at 7 loniebt. Fifth and siith £ r I d I students will pre!l!nt 1 musical progr1m. Vlctorla't Salute to America , honorlnr famoo1 Americans past and present. Offlcer1 for the 1972-73 yeor wt II be electad. Annual variety show, sponsored by Westmlnsler PTA. will be presented Friday and Saturday, March 17-18, at 8 p.m. In Westminster High Sc bool. Ill a skit, lea· luring ''The Three Little Pigs" are Oeft to right) Mrs. Joseph Fodor, Don Al> bolt and Mra. Wllllllll Suter. • • ( J J . \ I j ' • 8 ,ILOT-AOVERTISER S WfdnHday, Marek 15, 1972 , Good -F.ood ' . . -.. ' ' .. •. .. Best Medicine ( . . • • I By JOHNA B~ . • nllecllon Is. vo.· .. tl)e only "'"ect to you by rtlcUag to M ripe toes, peeled, IO!na-. peraley, b re Id NEW YORK ~ ,/ eaj like I per>0n who con minor to me you." chopped crumbs. ult and peppor to live," '"id Ille 'hiJ!lllf original whaL I'm doing. And onl y • MAJWUS' PLAK1 2 tablecpoons m Io cod tas!e. add more liquid (wine ~ {; thro\lgh !hit reO~ can l 1Poaclle4 Fl*, Qnol< Style) parsley . or walor ) If needed. Cover: let Geor&e Mabaria. '.{.operate on ~e the CJnvu, IO to 3 yellow onions; peeled, 2 tablespaons bread crumbs simmer 15 mins. (or unUI flsb eiglll cylincfers;r live out' of ipeall.,-• chopped to wte begln.s to Dake). · \ evefY~Jl!>re,•I've always got "lf you aee a pelnter, he l 'ii tablespoom salad oil ( Saut~ooions in salad oU u~ Serve at once with Greek them, IOiQ& and I ain't gonna ~int.I 10mething and steps About t/J cup dry white wine ljl golden; add wine (or clam sal1d (made with lettuce, ·change that for one second. I back to )ook at it. Jf be doesn't (or clam JUict) juice ). water. }feat to bolling tomato, onion, green pepper, devour Hre ! llkctWhat he sees, he changes About 112 cup water point; tower heat. Add filet to cucumber. feta cheese and 0 AJ I ·~ my urestyle, my it. You can't stand back and 2 pounds freth Ci.ah filets: skillet with wine-onion mlx~ vinegar-oil dressing, garnish body is my vehicle in life and look at yourselr, but you can red snapper, aole o r ture. with anchovy filets or he.r· my brain I've always felt iJ-see through other people. They flounder Top each filet with chopped ring.) Serves I to I. something ihat will go on 1n-l---...::..--'-'--.C...------------'-----~--=.:_ _ __::..:._ ________ _,l'= definitely. Now, how can I keep the body running? You do It with food in one way, with exercise In another. DAILY "LOT ... -, To operate Oft 'eight cyllndert' you heve to feed your body. , ' "I've slowed down some. l used to eat so fast that I wu on dessert berore anybody else bad finished salad. I'm an e;arth person really. I'm never suave; it doesn't fit me. There a.re no aspirin in my medicine cabinet. I squeeze my own juice. There's no ice cream in the freezer and no coffee and no cigarettes. Somehow, the way he said it, Maharis makes you feel like you'd be glad to throw away a cigarette in his presence. He is gracious. e1· uberant, enthusiastic about life -and most articulate. Check our prices and quality for yourself. Take a look at our prices. Ralphs has about 15,000 items and !hey're all marked at Ralphs famous low everyday prices-even the hard-to-find delicacies. We honestly beli""" )'Oil can't do better at any other supennarket. LOW PRICES The actor's com:'em for hi.s body and good food is a carry- over from a bout of hepatitis that caused him to bow out of the highly successful TV series Roule 66. He's always enjoyed good food and likes to create Greek, or what he calls "goofy" dishes. Hi.s father was a pro- fessional cook. "My parents are both good cookl. My mother uaed to do a lot of Greek as well as American dishes. My favorites were calamary ( s q u i d ) , pastlUso ( cbopped m e a t , noodles and eggs b a k e d together), chicken · pll°ar. She had wonderful Greek: cookie recipes, especially kourabies ·(almond confections, coaled in powdered sugar -traditional for Euler and Chri.!tmas ). "Personally, I eat for strength. T bum up energy in incredible amounts . And I eat enormous amounts of food , but iLI'm doing something that requires less energy, then I put less fuel in the tank. For example, I never eat belore I go to bed. But I don't requirt huge amoUnts of sleep either. "That's probably becauae someone told me when I was a kid, you sleep on~thifd of your life. I don 't want to do that! Life's not long to begin with. I figure after I'm dead I'm asleep for eternity!" he .. id grinning. George loves to entertain. He liv~ in the Santa MonJca hills and treasures }\ i s privacy. "I like to do off-beat things, rather than the uaual botUe of gin. I like to entertain people with new tastes. If, for example, I find people who have never had Filipino food or heallh foods, I prepare that. "I make a salad with all the raw vegetables you CJD think of, but which people seldorn eat raw, I.e. potatoes, string beans, cauliflower. Then I throw In almonds , raisin,,, ap- ples, cottage chtese, Swiss cheese, all kinds or goofy things. ''They say I'm a vegetarian, but I'm not really. I cook simply because I can't stand the chore of washing dishes, aJi that. Maharls ~Y best express himself at the euel. "I'm an expressionist. My oils can be described as Gauguin, Paul K1ee, El Greco, late Goya wlth periods of . Picasso a n d Monet." One of hia earliest works, a mural, was executed fOr~ Lunt-Fontaine theatu in"'New York.) He baa UtU!!: regard for Im- ages. "l don't want to be an imace. I want to be what 1 am! In ftcl, I don't see myself at all. You tell what my Zucchini Zippy Dish Then check our quality. And bea tough judge. Ralphs guamnteesevery single item you buy, whether it's.meat, produce, deli, dairy, bakery or anything else, You must be camplet.ely satisfied with what you buy at Ralphs or we will cheerfully refund yoorpun:baae price. UlllA GRADIA YING · Whole FR 2102v.111t. 29 CHICKENS lb .• USDA QllADE A CALIFORNIA GROWN ROASTING-RISH 59 CHICKENS ::.i~ 4 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES MEAT MASTER BEEF Betfloln BRAISING STRIPS Quick Fry BEEF CUBE STEAK Bnf Slrto1n Tip BREAKFAST STEAK Sllced-1 Pound'Pkg. RATH BACON flegul1r or Hot-1 pound Pkg. Jimmy Dean Sausage lb •• ea lb. 1.29 .... 1.59 .73 .87 Swift-Brown 'n&erve SAUSAGE LINKS -.pkJ •• 88 Top Most-10'h-oz.pkg. 55 CORN DOGS , High ProWln-LowCttalelttrol 79 GROUND 1\IRKEY 1b. • UNTEN SEAFOOD 1SPfCIAIJ FiSA'sTicks lb •• 59 lb, 1.89 No. 1-Mtdlum Slza FROZEN SHRIMP TIM'°llAllY R£0UCED PRICE Pl.UStBUY ---.ou-.. .. ___ .. ,o.- HEALTH .& BEAUTY AIDS O.odorent RIGHT GUARD Regular or Menthol l 1"-oi. 88 Edge Shave Cream ••• • Strl-Dex ,. , 'MEDICATED PADS J11ot~z ~74 Pepsodent-Adltt-Mtd. a Hard TOOTH l;IRUSf1 Atgul1r or Mint Crest Tooth Paste Dtodor1nt by Gillette FOOT GUARD Sup1rtube _ Head & Shoulders Super A Rtgular Alberto Balsam ... 44 size • 5-oz. aa tube •"'!' ~~.99 ;.1; 1.88 .:,-;; 1.18 Prices 1nect1v1 from March 1e t!t"' 22-1172. .. mFIHOl!llDP 7·BONE r STEAK :79 RALPtll sr. PA11llClll DAY IPICIAL CORN BEEF ROUND lb.1.09 EVERYDAY J..QW"PRICES CAUFORMA ,GROWN DlfYli Fresher-USDA Grlde A FRYERS Wh<>lo 3 lbo. a U,P .... 36 • LIQUOR DEPARTMENT Sandre Laktthlre ·• VODKA or GIN S1v120c Fifth 2.88 Dfttllltd In &cotl.UMI 11 Proof Royal Regiment SCOTCH Old Glenwood-I YHr Oki Straight Bourbon Q.jibi;{a Rose ''SL Patrk:k'e D• Special" Montclalr-Sawti 30c GREEN PIENTliE DAIRY Vita Palct ORANGE UICE Fifth 4.78. ; • Fifth 3;78 Gallon l,89 Fifth 2.88 ~.1 .• 83 on-1912 1 c.ri {kl.) ......., ,.,.,....., CMck ~ Dilml'""' 14-c ... (1111 cups) ........... eondt!IMd "'* f , pedc'04 c-11 AllftOfld ,...... _ )II cup f'..U, M•ferine, mel'9d P111heat D'llfl 10400".\Jrwll ~dough: pl8ee glaln ungr'Hlld 15a 10.\nch le111 roii '*" o.itty ~ ctough to.CCMf bottom cf P9'X milk ll'IWlly -dough. lprinkti With trotting mix. 12to15 lnl!Mll undl goldlfl bfOWft.CooLCut Into Plllllhu.y CRESCENT ROLLS i<ING SIZEWIENERS :: .• jAC'K:0cH" ~.68 Aath I-oz. Bordon American PEPPERONI STICKS pq. .73 SLICED CH lmento-lwl.. 73 12.oOZ.plfl •• llord.n Sllced 1-fb. .46 American Qlleae Flelschm1nn MARGARINE I-lb. 2 88 -~ . Parkay SOFT MARGARINE 1-lb. .38 10-gaf. Ralphs lld Faslfonad .. ,, .. ICE CREAM ~69 FROZEN FOOD R1lph1Go1dtn Premium ICE CREAM Pint :£1 Blrd ... ye COOL WHIP ....,,.._ .66 Mar-Ke1-Btef orChfftt ENCHILADAS 13\H&,.._ .68 Wefch'e GRAPE JUICE -. .... 23 J11nett11-Snappy DtlUll kg PIZZAS ':.ti 1.48 Wokoftold Kl!!!! • , 1 44 CRABMt:AT -....... , Chec:kerbotrd Foodt-Whffe Meat 2 7I Turkey Roasts 21-or.pkf. , 1000 !f!l!!J.• Dronad l OB TRUUI 10....pk1. • , lonlonPo~-.!IL~-1-oL 38 GRATED EESE ~·u• , . 211Ht .49 2': .43 12~C1n Roylll Cl'ltJvn .. ,... .78 Ocean lpNf hcff •r ltr1111td Sauce 11-or.nn .28 1 ... L 48 Pkt•• ...... 28 -· I-Pk. .66 COFFEE 1°i! 1.36 49 EVERYDAY WW P. PRICES PRODUCE Slllkllt NAVB. 15 ORANGES porlb.• • I WlltlN LETiucE· .. eh .19 Rti'ssEl-' POTATOES _h .31 Vint Rlpt-Full Ba1ktt 28 CHERRY TOMATOES nch • Top• Removed FRESH CARROTS pu1t>..13 Prtmlum Qu1lltv-Biking Size 10 RUSSET POTATOES per1t>.. FRESH cur. FLORIST QUALITY FLOWERS Be1utlful Mlxtd BOUQUETS CAANATIONS ...:....., .• -·· BAKERYD'EPA1f'T'MENT RALPHS Whlto ··d-aa BREAD Whe1t or 1·1b. I-or. loaf lpUt Top • "••Ph• HOT CROSS BUNS ':.1f"a'l.• ~Pie -~· Apple or Cherry '•k.1. 0 . 4I RALPHS STRUDEL ~ Homo frlll;C~n11(1 Cu\i PreMh Pritt: Tri Tattra Fr8Zlll Potatm SIMPLOT 1 .......... .26 ·HOUSEHOLD NEEDS ' . • LiQulooe~1·t:fiC$00 = Aa Fentetllk ' • 66 , , Bathroom Cleaner '17....... '· Ptodor1nt 1 th 14 JERGENS BAR SOAP. ,r ... Mlrecl• Whit• · 1 -Laundry Additive ll-fl•L ,&,g V11elhM lnltntlv• C•r• -8& BATH BEADS 11-or.pk1., Pertorm-Wlth lpreytf 22•0,_ 40 WINDOW CLEANER -. ... , ~!!!(! 01~~·. KITCHEN ,TOOLS Vin JI PHOTO ALBUMS . ..,. .• -1.• HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT HOUSEHOl.D NEEDS PANTR il.l.EJIS PANTRY FILLERS EASTER BASKETSURl'/llSES ......... -" SUPPOSITORIES -COLD CREAM ,...,."t'!' __ ,...., COUGH SYRUP CORICIOIN TAlliTII ·-· ARTHRITll TAILETS --BONDED RAZOR :&f.33 -; ... :.::.n ::.aa ::..u • I ·Oft.:MaE PLUS -:.11. --.... FISH FIUETS ,.,: f .41 -ftOltot-Wlllol---.. SLICED GREEN BEANS ...,":;.3'7 .,_....,. ___ .,... ___ ._, WHtTE CORN ..._,... .39 ..... , ...... FISH STICKS ........ ._., CHEESE PIZZAS ......... • ·-SOAP PADS ......... ..... BOWLCWNER _,. .. 1 ¥cmet Bowt Cle1ner ::: .... ,..,_ FACIAL TISSUE ""'"'"'.28 .... PAPER NAPKINS ......... ·:a-T ll.ITTilllUE .... .. 1 .. ... ";.aa .. ":.10 M•M Ae lpl'll ...,,,.,. ......__ fW llAKID llAlll EVAPORATR lllLK f1at1r. l l'lop "riy •hll•.........,. •• __ .... -:.11 .. 1':.11 complt lL ChOOM fro• E•w eancllJ. IUDMIYllAM EVAPOMTID MILK E11t1r-nlledballttlfr0111t11~~ ---";.11 Cil'LATIN DElllRTI •-· OI -oga,1nd Ill klndt Of Ellttf .......... MUSTARD .... l ---~2..43 DIET Pll'll CO ...... FOLDERS come ~.12 .... •;; 1.09 fOLOERI COFl'IE ··-JELLYHANI ...... ... ,_.., -·-CAllPNLLS IOU' -:.12 ':Ii-.... t'fi'.-c ocou 1001 ";It .. " ) ' I I ' ' , Speedjy Spanish oup • ' ·~.~~~,~~ :~ ·~!~~~!S rr~~ r (borroloed' !rom In) thll IJ! '.,-1cJ>• 111vo been uuteed "lo · cl lo . k 1 ollloe oil. pe.rfe r 1 qui hot mea A bit of saffron, cboppecf r. · aft,r a day ou · 1 • , '•lcY. 'cooked. rice and ~ ,· Sklert especial/ li ke quick-.. hard.-cooked ' ea· ·complete . ' to-prepare dirt s • : ,, 1thf•me1J. Fot a•.ftnaJ .toUch .. •• bec1uae the cook usually h¥ .'brl!ld eubes aau~i Jn olive been akiing 111 d too! rWl1at oij, .~too. · . '" can ho more wel~me tban a .· Jll>J,'A CU~R)'fl DE HO~. • hearty, nutritlou IOOP' t/la l : I paclian (l"ourict11 'frOzen can be put toR ther Jn 15 . c}lklten 1iven, thlwed and minuia? . · chopped · • : CaMed eoups -condensed i,; PQOnd r a w shrimp, onion IOUP and con~ • · shelled. develned, and biJque ol. tomato-prnvldii the chopped , \ flavor base and the con-·1 "medium clove aarllc, venlence. To theM are ... added minced · '9 teaspoon saffrqn % cup olive oil . 1 can (Joi,; oonee.sJ deruied onion soup ·Repast ·Rom~n Why don 't you ~eate your own 11-llan festiv party on your next occasi to en- l~rtain _guests? , t can (11 ounce11 condensed bisque of tna.to aou p · 2 soup CIDI' triter · \ , I hord•cooliod egg, chopPed \'I cup ~kecj rice I tablespoon c·h opp• d parsley 4 1lices bJ:ead, cut in cubes Jn large saucepan, s'aute liv~s, shrimp; .. gfrlic .ihd.1&.if-·, fron-in V4 ,cup oliv~ oil until done: Add soup, water, w . rice, and parsley. Heat: S~r now and then. ;. - Meariwhile, in skillet, heat remaiTiing·oJJve oil : add bre:Bp' . cubes. Saute gently until - crisp; drain . Garnish soup with croutons. Maies 4 to 6 servings. All it takes to giv you that Rome.or Naples fla are red checkered tableclot s, bottles 'holding1candles with wax drip- ping dOwn-the 1lde!!I, rhaps a few Italian travel posters, I,tali•n r~rds, and a , reaUy delicious. Italian . enu of Antipasto ~nd . Spina h-Cheese ~a~lco~t~I. , ., S8uCt:' Brown me 'in but· M • ·i d ter with·gar11c: add r maming 0 r Ina .e ingredients to pan an beat to boiling: cover and over .. M' ' I '"l '·medium !ieat • ut 20 ,· ap ey minutes. · ·~~~it· set aside . Lighl , cook . , r~ 11; '' ,onJon~ . in butter. Slit in · Mapley mBfinade dresses up j!ii' a ·11p1nach,J co~tage c se and everyday chicken. Nt • Parmesan cheese. d eggs , . ..... ;i;;,~;G and seasonings: mix "· MAPLEY BAKED CHICKEN • t' Fixiryg F~ndue Easy A,s·1 • Slicin.g. Cheese · Cheese fondue ls ·a -very unusual dish because Jtdoesn't hive to e~ served at a special time of day. It can bt a quick lunch, a,. fun dinner and it. even p'rovlde& entertainment for iuest.s J4·te In the evening. ff you have been dl~rag_. ed by \ong~and lnvolvt!d fondue recipes, lake _heart. T~is inake ·al· table' -in .. minutes version has beCii developed . And It's not expensivt. fither. The Wlrie. Fondue is shown with ctisp French bread, but • iny kind of bread will do. You can eat. cfet.sert at th"e atlme time by dipping thin apple sllctit in· the cheese mixture. Expc!rtence has 11hown that It W<lllld ho • good Idea lo have extra ingredients oft tiand, ready to make more . Of ... COW'le, serve with a cfullt<I wblte wine. A good rule at; thumb to follow is simply to ~rve the same wine you've 11.!ed in I.he fondue. WINE CHEESE FONDUE' I cup Rhine wine 1 pa~kage '(3 ounces.t old English process Cheddar cheese slices, cut up 1 tablespoon flour mixed with 2 tablespoons water iHard crust bread or rolls, cut in bite-size pieces or fruit ,, cut in pieces. Pour wine Into fondue pot. Add pieces ·of cheese. Place over medium-high heat until cheese is melted and miftUre is smooth. Add flour mb:ture .aod. c90k 1~nd stir , un,til thickened. Reduce heat so mixture continues lo bubble gently. -Spear ~bread or fruit piec:es on fondoe fork and dip Into hot mlxtur-e. Note : Recipe may be ;dou· bled or tripled depending upon size of fondue pot and number of people being.served. Sets Hearts 'Aflame . Bourbon B~st If yoti &ie a ~achelor who does the trick best. , U11irig a. small s n. fill 1 cup maple·blended syrup shetl.!1 with spinach iiture. y4 cup lemon juice · Pour half of tom to-meat sauce into. a· -13\lt · b oval 1/4 cup soy sauce baker. I clove garlic. minced Arrange filled she s in a 'h cup chopped onion roW ; pour' ·remalnit 11auce Mt cup chopped green peper over. Bake in a 3Sl degree I te.aSpoop salt . oven atiout.30 ininutC Makes l/z teasi>oon pepper 4. to. 8 servings. Thvo 2\oi:-Jh..fcying .chickens, ·s PlNACH ·C u' E'SE 'c•.~·in.pi<!ces . MANI,CO'M'J Combine the marinade in· WITH MEAT SA CE gredients and pour over s8uCe: 1 chicken pieces in shallow bak· Y.t pound ground ing pan. ~ve.r; refrigerate at 1 or 2 table spoons bUtter or 'least 3 hOurs, turnini chicken margarine ·• several times. Drain chicken, 1 small clove garliq maahed. reseryii;ig~ f!Jatinade. . I 1 !·pound can tomj,oaa . . Arr:an.&e ~bic_ken pieces. skin I 1 8-oonce Cfl:n t.omaJo sauct side dowR,-in 1hallow baking 1h. teaspoon salt , I Pepper 11 • , I , Fiiiing: l ~ 1/4 cup chopped onidt.i pan or dish . Baste with 1/3 or m,rinade. -a.ke ·in :,Preheated · · moderate 'oven (35()1 degrees) 30 minutes. , , - · 2 tablespoons blt\er . or margarine L 1 l(k)unce packa.1 frozen c.}lopped spinac 1cooked · tnd well drained 2 ~ups cottage drained cheese, 1h · cup grated Parme!Bn cheese II teaopoon aalt I · , Pepper · .· 2 sJJgh~Jy beaten e~ ; I Manicot\I sntlls cooked acco~g to 'p• kac·e directions . Baste wtth 11i3 of mariP.ade: bake 20 minutes. Turn chicken pieces; bute with remaining 11:'1 or marinade. Bake an ad· diUonal 20 minutes. Baste with pan juices. Serves 8. Gadget Wiring Tbe Lremeq<ious ,growth in · the use of small appliances during the last 10 years also has ' increased ufe demand on the home wiring sy1tem. dabbles in cooking. and you Thie IOl ·proof bourOOn keeps want to lnipre.!ls 1 lady friend , those blue names nickering for quite a while and can . who not lry the. fireworks bit7, virtually hypnoti1.e your guest . 1t's a Sh~me the spectacular -if th~t·s what you had In · process :or flaming a dish mind . And the flavor of 1,... doesn 't' occur to more host.s' -bourbon rriates well with a i.~ or hostessu -particularly if long roster of food , plai. or · the gue5t is shunning rich fancy . . . · 'I\-i : ....... 11uces and anf_!hing else that . Bourbon is used to name a 1pel11; e~s calories. wide variety or dishes from The nambe method Is an seafood to strawberry and ' easy way to convi nce your lov-banana dessert.II. Here Is one td one that you re.ally must thats qu'ite simple to prepare cherish her -or him -to go and will not keep you confined. to all that trouble. to the kitchen v.:hen l'ou are 1 Years ago, many h o s t a trying to look you r best. ~uailed al the lhoo(hl or put-WILD ORIENTAL SHRIMP tmg any quanUty of Uquor into the food they were preparing. It conjured up visions of bemused guests sliding under the table. or worse. Now everybody kl'IOWs that. Ir you cook or flame food drenched in liquor, the alcohol tiums· away leaving behind anly navor thJt permeates the Elalty you are cooking and _ s it that ex~tc quality you .. : ne names are just the fun Pf!rl.' to pl .. se lht eye and Pee tM evening a fertive air. U 1ont 11 the cu.rtaln1 don't c:Mdl .llre. •I• years brandy w1s rzl'W'I ss the only true ~ agent, but lod•Y'• alfD aJ'f: turning more llnd ..... It p.d, rull·bodied Ken. ...., llourbon. . fti 1rjot b lo ... • high ,,..i I.., and worm 11 In a lldl. over • name before ia· llthw IL l rind a Kentucky ··-IUI ,,... IOI prnor ·) v. cup tO l·proor , Kentucky · bourbon · ·2 tablespoons soy sauce I clove crushed ,R:arlic 4 tablespoons oil I tabl~Poon minc.ed candied ·ginger (or t~ tablespoon "" each 'p0wdered ginger ahd sugar I 1 pound raw shrimp de- veine<I and sjlelled Combine I tablespoo n • bourboo (&Ive. -for flam· Ing), aoy oauco, '2 ta.blespoi>\it oil. garlic' and ,finger. Pour over shrimp. •• 1 Hear rem1tnln1 oll l n sk!Uet or charing dtah. ·Add •hrlmp. Cook. stirring occlsion•llY for about live minutes, or anti! shrimp turns pink . Warm ren1olndrr of bourbon. ignite and pour ~ shrimp In pan •ond stir slo"'ly until namts die. Serve with rice. Servts two . Good with a cold ""' wino. \ • - • I • . : \ · llAF~O·D SPECIALS . FJLLU OF TURBOT ... -..... ............... . .... 6t FllLET oF.BUnERFISH : ..... :_ ............. 9t , ·AsM1t1ETa:·1.s'' H~~qt; .. :, ......... : ..... 1 ... ~ ............ !! •'AN IEADT _:. .. ..:.. ........ --·-·-, .... , ............. lb. U"I"" ~ .... • •·1:,1c · · · 9t 1 llV~ ~ lJ-OZ. P'ICG. ~,,.., .. ___ ,, __ ., ......... ..:. .... " ............... tA .. · COO KEO: SltR,f MP 1.0• .. G ......... , .......... 9t $ ~ FRANKS OL' VllGINIA'. 12 OZ.' ' ' ~'tF5 ·9· ~ EACH , .' !LJ~'!.~2.'.!~~ .. S!~~~~ ····-··~-·""'' IOL 55' '!!'&.,~~~! !!~~~-·!~ ............... ; OL TUN 6t 49< C11Sa1r IOlLS ~'"'"" ..... __ ............... OL ru .. Jtc IOl'S lSsllltD'slLAi lllSSllKS ........... o.ot 1•. Jtc "IOl'S IOOllFOIT SALAI lllSSlllG _ .... o.ot "'5'c IOl'S IUU CllUSE DllSSllG ...... c .. : ............ o.ot "'·tit. . . -. NEW FROM MINUTE MAIO: ' . B:RIG .HI &.EA ·RlY ~ ,.OZll COICllTIAR· · UllJ A TIOI Ol~lKil JUICE . ·. . ... ~.~s JI:~ ~:T I HALF GALLON SALE · ROYALOCCASION CHARCOAL FIL TEIED . ' (HUCK,. ROASl · IC>NELES.S .1 ............. : ................................... '."'"'"'"'" ..... .. ,·PORIERHOUSE WELL TRIMMEO $TEA~S ......................................... ...__ .......... . ·cHU(K STEAK~· · I . I ~· BONELESS ........ : ............. : ...................... .-..... -............. .,. ... , -·-·· · . ~ ' ~ FA•11L.Y STEAltS . ~ · BONELES~.~~ ......... -.... " ............................... -....... ---. ••• ., ...... i;.v- , ·SHOULDER CLOE1 .. · BONELESS ROASTS ................................................................. -....... . • l.S.l.A. la"CTll ··=-~-=-.. LAMB ·LEGS · LAMIRACKS 7·ftt . WHOLE OR :SUC!O ." ..... __ ........ lb.. 7. . . . . . . I , , ~ vo-5 i•ot c' s 1 aa ffAIR·SPRlt Y.~ ' llf'G.. SV'f'I, HARD TO HOLD • • •. j ' .... , W ;PJJJt7~~-~~~84' . s 80 PROOF -·ae "HALF GALLON !Mls .... COFFEE 1·1>.CAlll · SUl78~ I I . . $J ·l9 .... lb. • • BRIAICFAIT IPICIALI . . 7·9' ...... lb.. • . ....... FISH .STICKS · a or."" ....... -...... _,,•9c 1 'A •. Silt ... _ .. ___ t.W. u or. Siii ...................... 19c ' wtlr•~•w ~ · VaQ ~!c~mp's . 1'1111rs,-Sn ., Mir. ~11 Raisin 43c Brel4 ............. 11or......., Miil~ ' S139 . Cab ..... -.: .. •1.,.... l•.1u1 . ' S1111111'0ck 49c ._45' c.-..~ .... , ........ "" ... __ Jt)c ' ............ . - • • • •• ' • ' · ·. CAF'iiniiPiii's~, · <01119 BEEF s1·1e .. . .·I :. I. ROUNDS .• WllOll LKS · WlnPILVIC ' ~ ••uss IOUll ~UAllS _____ ,, lb.$1.zt --·-....-..-~., · . , •· .,a&WllOASn ............. _, __ , ..... lb.$1.zt BREASTS :I~~ .. ~:.:.: ..... 7t ·IOlwss snWlllG 111F _____ , •. s1.1• • : . . IOUID.10ASn eo•mss10POR10no• 11.$1.•' . ' : ' .:_: DAIRY PRODUCTS ·ARDEN YOGURt .-: . . . '.'All FLAVORS 1/2 PINTS . "SOLID · t,tEAD )• GARDIN .. FRESH " • AO IRTISID '111CU EfFICTIVI 7 FUU DAYS THURSDAY, MAI. 16 thniWID .. MAR.11 . . . , ' 175 E. 17th St~· COSTA MESA ' I • • .. $ FOR • • . . "' . •. . ' DAILV !ILOT ~I \ . . I \ t ' TRIP.LE .;, •1 !1TAMP& . ' f wtlM MNMUM iJ.00 "'HtcMAM : C.U-tn Goocl Mor. 16.M•r.22 ' BLEACH PUREX GALLON SIZE ' UMITONICOUl'ON 3 I $ I'll ADULT CUSTOMll ' MAI. 16·MAl. ll , - ALL DETERGENT FOR AUTOMATIC WASHERS 9 llt.0 l l oa. uMITONlcoiiPON stBB I'll ADULTCUSTOMll MAI. 16.MAl.11 IVORY LI UID 21,os~ SIZI Difllmiri..::.- • UMIT ONI COUl'ON 3 I ~ I'll ADULT CUSTOMll MAI. 16·MAl.11 SYRUP MRS. IUTTJIWOITH 24 OL , UMITONICOUl'ON • I ~ I'll ADULT CUSTOMll MAI. 16-MAl.11 BISQUICK LARGE SIZE 60-0Z. PKG • . 'UMIT ONI COUl'ON 5 . ~ I'll ADULT CUSTOMll · MAI. 1'·MAl.11 . 100 BONUS STAMPS . . • - • • - ' - \ • • • ,. DAIL y I'll.OT Alpha Beta's Man ·in Blue · ~says: _ 801 6ROSULAK STOR r MANAGER ·2200 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ' ) '· *II AIJ'MA KTA MICMIOIHOOO IVIQID (fMl awl IN Tiil llD Aft<*) PIOUDLY Offllll BtJTCHElt'S PllDE MEATS -~-·! WHOLllODY •LOW PIUCE ' FRESH FRYERS 12.ouJICfl'llCll!I[ WA0UR STAR MIU=<URE IACON c MIJ.11 YOV'U. H PlOUD TO SllV• QIJALITY AND SATISFACTION GUW!ITEED • 'CrSCOOlll PRICED \ CRANDALL'S • USDA 'GUDE A' YOUNG TURKEY HINDQUARTERS c LB. ® ............ PENNYWISE • 1-LB. PKG. SLICED BACON T-BONE STEAK FRESH ECONO PAK GROUND BEEF oi ~~R ST. PATRICK'S DAY FEATURE! STANDING . RIB-ROAST WGE END. J QANCY'S CORNED BEEF BRISKET 97~ IOHUll 7,~ I '' IHUCIC '"'' 69' CHUU ftCAIT lL ftOAIT CllT • • UNTIN 'IJ.TUllS CDTWIUll•f«INCIPM*Mf 771 IDLI 11 IUTTlftlAUH fROZIN FOOD I 1,f•C ', JI(, ,.,, I 1,1, '1' fVfflY DA Y .@WER'" ISPIRll 146' BO'mZOPIO fBllYER 'jiiiii' I:~:n.RELUR 69' UDu LO'!IOR CO IJQtllD SHllPOQ 83 1 PACXAGE OF Z TillZT'I ALIA· SELTZER 601 ------~~~~·- 3-0UNCE CRtME IRECI OIE DAIDRUFF " SRllPOO &-OUNCE LOT10!f iiliuAr LIQUID DOUCHE 791 Lii 98' J27 SHORT ~!VI • Al&OKl'ED lllEI • LIDlt.S • ,_, ..... ,..... . •. FILl,IT or ODD • ........... 71' IHIJl!IDIOA • I--661 . lllF PATTlll : Tlllll .... uRcnw 1111. t n. .,...,..., ; ~ FILUT IF OOUI PlftOH • f A.~l AST IC O!SCOU i.'T'; EVERY {J.,Y ~GAU.ON • FAMILY Pll Rl1'1tR IETR ICE CWll @ GREEN GIANT • to.oz. • PROztN U SUEUR PEAS @ t-OZ. • XITCH£M SUCED •FROZEN llltllM SIAllT BEANS ~ IO.OZ. BOX • F!\OZEll ~ TASTl.fRIES ~ 10-0? BOX • FROZEN ~ TASTl·STRIPES ~ 12-0'Z. CAN • F!IOZEN ~ HAWAIIAN PUNCH ALPMA IETA .OllCOUfllT "'" FA NTASTIC OISCOU NT ') ! 'r'l RY fl Ar 8&-t:c\ 12-0Z CAMS (I PJ.Cr:I DtET ~~AaM'1..cou W..::: 3&' 26' 2&- 39' ~~:BOX. ·wa TBAW" ~. liw"m STUWIERAIES 331 '-OUNCE PACO.GE DANOLA IMPORTEll NAii AlJ'HA l n A UISCotllfT l'll lCE t::C'\ 12-0Z. BAG• FROZEN 21 • ~ lllf·IDA CNDPPED DNIDNS ' @ 19-0Z. BOX • PEPPERONI OR ~PXG. • COii.NED BE'EF • CIUCDlf uo'S m ilu'Tf"'1 .-SAUSAGE • FRO'lEN G~ ARAIVEDERCI PIZZA -" t::C'\ »oz. CAR • lIU.OW•WHJnl 37• ~ JOUYTlllE POPCORN ~ SUNSHINE • II-OZ. llOZ: ~ Hl·HD CRACKERS &-OZ. BOX • WHITE • WHEA.T • JrfZ REG. OR UN6A1.T£D OLD LONDON MELIA TOAST ~ 13-0Z CAN • W/PtA.NUTI ~ PLANltRS MIXED NUTS @ 16-0'Z. LOAP Rll'1tR 1!111 RAISIN HW PXG.OF 8 • POWDIR •PU.IN• SUGAR QR CRUMB 41' 11.1,NR BETA CAR DINUTS llnl lftl PACXAGE OF I • tlOT CIDSS 111111 lt'1111UI • "'"!iliiaa li~~~ ML"~· \--31' I-LB. PACICJ.GE • AU. MEAT OSCAJl MAYU WIEllEIS 12-0UllCL"ftaCXAGE llSW YARIEIY PAK I-OUNCE PACXAG& OstAll MAYEI Ll'lf.I ClllESl 1-0UJfCE PACV.GE OSCAR MAYO SANDWICH SPIUD @ SMOu;..r:MFT • 2> COUNT IEEF Dill @ 16-0'Z. PA.CU.QI $0FT-$PllfAD llll'DIAL lllARUm D 1" • 471 1" lllT TOPS 2" SLl?EVEU:Sl r:NIT TOl'll 1.a MIJIWll. 10 A.II. TO I PJl (8 " c:oUNT •"". lltalll.A• I 10 I.IT. a u 11JJL 10 1 r Jl 'jrOiii' OOIFIDETS • PASSOVER FOODS , "WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE ,Of KbSHER PASSOVER FOOOS AVAILABLE AT SELECTED STORES.• STRAWBERRIES ASPARAGUS LI. AESH lllED llll'E ' ' MUSHROOMS 88~ WARRMILON CHIRRY TOMATOIS 29~ .... JUICI ORANGIS 10~ 29!. 2i29' fllESM l.All'E SOLID CAllAGI 9c,., ARTICHOKIS GllHN llANI 29~ !'u . "'" "" r-------.--""'1: CARROT$ nnH cur MARGUIRm 4nc DAISllS 7au. _....,, ofUlLY "''""''° $P'HUCH • MUSTARO • COi.WO 1 0' BUNCH YIGITAIUS a ~11.'I:' IYLOI '°~".i."'" 6'7 f;...-"" ........ _...,°'..,"' .. '"' ...... """"'-'--~ lilRDEI HOSE · TifU[ PIOOIJC( N ICO unCTIVt IUiL tNI ~ Fiil D<CORATOll: "-AllTtlll THIMIOAY ntlU lftllfll(IOAY ~ WITH M CKUE Of HOil! @ ~,~-Uui;m;R @~m~AI 33' @EEll<111• <§m"™ 41i' 17' 1&.0UlfCE PACXAGE 2:.-llPHR IETR Sl'ABllEITI 3Z-OUMCZ PAcv.aE ... ®~™,-23' '@™1i'iAlic~ilff" 11' 1.25-0UNCE Bont.E SOHILUl&'S 381 IARUO POWDER CANP!IEU.'S • If.CL CAM YUETAILI IElf SGCIP t::C'\ Tf.OL CAif • ltAIONED ~ IOlI UUll llAllS "=t "'" ~ 12S COUNT BOX 2a. ~ IOYALE FACIAi. TlllUl 11' ~ O>Cf. PAC<AGE • ASSOll!ZD 11' ~SCOTT fAMILY 1W1!1111 Ol COUNT PACUGE • IPICE TOlll 12' m llUl(INS ~ .. OUNCECAN ~ CRISCO SNOl!TDlllMI ~ 24..0UNCE BOTTLE ·'=1 IWOLA CORN OIL I "-OUNCE llOT'lU! @ca";r~k ~rt~. :2.l-ari:.. PXG. PEACH I.It 171 ... @rurJcfi'~'nurs , 381' @ 12-0UNCE JAR• SWlSS c:9 >ATURAL 11·· OVAl.Tlllt , !ETTY CRocr:EI\ • 21-0L BOX © APPLE ClNNAMON • PEACH •CHERRY ... ,, UPSIDE DOWN CAKf 1111' ~ lO'ii·!'Z· PM.• I VARIETIEll U• ~TOAST.V'S POP UPS -· ·@c~~oli'ifilt6S'"" u- ~ ....... &llMMflll M TO MO•&T 1 .... 110 • Ullt TAt~ml •ALL TUAal n1M1 • • COSTA MIJA -:t•O •• tl'ltl tt. DOUlll DllCOllNn MIAN DOUIU IAVlNOI AT ALPHA llTA ' 0.Ublt 0'-41ntt •r1 •XfN W+'I• 111 "''"'"' M Mf -v "'fllltir lew dbwvnt prim . Th•)' .,,. _.._ ,..i~i. lty .. ,..,,.,,. PllHh. .. •lltWOMtt f,. .. fM MllvfllCfV,.,. Wf1' ftilt •lltr9 M.tllf po-4 .... YffJ • ' . r COITA UM --,.....,. tK MUflllflfllleTON 1.-,cM -,.. .,._ HUWYUteTOfll ••Abe -lNl1 flll, ._. .tt, NUffTA,_ YAUAY -... W.,_. U.U•A NIU.I -... Oii • • ...._ • ntvfNI -... CllfNr, VllfNtll'j ,.. IOUT" L.AeUflllA -am L c.Nt Hi-.-r . ' ' -1 t ' t i f t I sl Q bo In ~ tU lb I{! Un v. th. In '• ' '· ' I • ) c. , . Staff of •' life ' Wtdntl<11Y, ~•re~ 15, 1~72 O.tiLY PILOT fi Y , to . ·Many ··occasions Rises . ) • , Ll 'Mqll peolm plMN>w that brUd 11uce . . 'of loaf and pull out crumbs Add U..wed bea"" to the bot IUaonecf tomato oauc.. MaktS cloves (1 cup shr<dded ) do&r,. oven !QI' 2'I mbttrtes; : an portlnt member cf 1 tableapool) Worcestenhire f om ' center of loaf and from mlalurt, then add cheele. Fill ' 6 11ervtngs. I pow:id ground bttt ... In a large sauce pan. com-drain off fat. Add breed cubes one ol lhe bllic four fGod aauce ' ) end ~slice, leaving about ~ loaf with the meat mixtu re MEATOT.MB_AUTO PUANDDDINGSPlcY y, cu' milk bine tomatoes, brown sugar, and pour tomato mlxtureovtt · afoupe -the brud and l tablespoon vtneaar inch of crust. Set loaf aside. pressing genUy to pack ; " 1 egr. be1ten onion, salt, pepper and cloves, top. «ruts lf'Ollp. . 1 tablupoon oil combine all the c r u m b s replace end slice ' and wrap in 2 cans ( 1 pound each) n tetspoon salt 1 I m m e r 3 O "' I n u t e 1 , Bake at S50 deg..-for 30 · ,Bu} few people give much 1 p.sckage (9 OW'ICfl) froun (about 4 cups) with all other alurJ,linum foil. .. tomatoes !~ tftllpoon pe.wer . Meanwhile, comblne beef , minutes. Sprinkle w t th Uiouibt to "9Vel ways of en--Italian green bean 1 , lrlgredients except the. oil, 'Bake in a preheated 415 ~ cup brown sugar ~ sl~ "''hite bread, cubed n\llk, egg, salt and pep per ; crumb$, green pepper and jeyins· bread and the good th awed bean( and cheese. deiree oven about 20 minutes. ~ cup chopped onion 1 cup' bread crumbs form Into 13 balls and pla ce In cheese : bake until cheese has D\ltritlon lt carrlu . ~ cup Parmeun cheee.e Brown the meat mixture in To serve, slice with serrated 14 tMspoon pepper 1 cup'dlced green pe pper .a grtased 2 quart casserole. melted. about 10 minut9. Have you ever though l. for Cut one thick slice from end bot oil. stirring until crumbly: knlle. ll desired serve with a 'ia to V. teupoon ground 4 ounces mozza rella cheese Bake In a prc~eated 350 ~1akes 4' to 6 servings. q:ample, that bread can be a-------~-----_:----'---'---------------------------------~------------ qldck and easy way to dump. Le t Id * t v :~~:~:~t;r;~~:~~t~;~ ree n en Menu eas a ons ~·· ~;~;; During Our Annual Cheese Festival pudding? :The old say:in& thal ''vwiety ii the spice or life" is espe.Cfally true when it comes to seein~ that your famil y en- joys and asks ror steonds or tbe nutrlti owi meals you work hJrd to prepare for them . •The beauty or these novel ,ays of handlln~ breed is that tfey all include substantial amounts or the three other bi~lie food groups. ' !#l'EWED ' CHICKEN WITH qu1cK BREAD DUMPLINGS ;1-4 pound stewing chicken !1 teaspoons &all • IO l>fppercorns : 1 bay leaf :i stalk celery with leaves "3 medium onions, peeled and . : ;. quartered or 1 pound pearl , onions . :4 carrots, scraped and cut in : chunks ~ v, cup nour ! v, cup water :1 package (I ounces ) frozen i Pf!IS, thawed :Place chicken .in hea vy pot; a;(1d add water Just to C-Over. Sprinkle with salt; add pep- P.tfcornl, bay leaf, and celery. Cfovtr and 1immer vt:ry gently about 1 hours. Add onions and ciirrots and continue cooking uhtll meat begins to loosen ffom bone and vegetables are \tonder. ~Remove bay !ear and celery l•aves. Push chicken to one side in pot and stir in mixture <t nour and water to chicken bfnlh . Add pe&s: rearrange cflicken pieces in bottom of ptit and place dumplings on ~of the stew. 1When gravy begins to bub- ble, cover and simmer gently 1i minutes. Remove dump- 1~ from stew; arrange ai-ound edge of healed platter Md pla ct chicken pieces ·in center. Remove peppercorns from gravy if desired. Taste gravy and 11djust seasoning if necessary: pour over stew and dumplings. Makes 8 servings. QUICK BREAD DUMPLINGS 8 slices bi'ead, diced 3 eggs. lightly beaten ~ teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon pepper ~ tea1pooon poultry season- ing ;t tablespoon poppy seed ~ 2 tablespoons minced onion Place bread cubes in Jar1e tiowl. O>mbine remainin1 in- lfedi~nts and pour over breRd, tossing lightly lo m i x thoroughly. Form into 8 balls, u!ing about 1/3 cup of the mix- tUre at a time. pressing gently to mold shape. Refrigerate un- 1{1 read y to use . Variation: For bread dump- llnp with beef stew. aubsUtute 14 teaspoon marjoram or thyme for the poultry seaso n- ing. ITALIAN WAF SUPPER · 1 loaf ( 1 pound ) unsliced , Italian bread 1.: 1 ~ pounds ground heel •• 't2 cup chopped onion t 1 can (8 ounces) tomato :· uuce " cup milk or water • 1 tea~n chili powder : 1>i teaspoon Rlrlic powder 1 leaaptJOD 1111 1 te a 1 po on horse rad ish . · i:Be a ·Lamb With Menu I . Barley pilaf, .,.... beans and ul•d can accompany iavory roaal lamb. ' .. SAVORY llOABT LAMB '• 'Ill pounds (1bool) butt haU • ~ of leg ol lamb ~ 2 cloves garlic 111 tablespoons aour ~ teaspoon salt • 14 teaspoon.pepper 1 te1spoon paprika Olt surface fat away from ersidt of lamb. With a 1mat1 lharp . knife make I jmall deep •llLI throogll top ~a~; peel 1arltc, ·cut Into jll•ert and lnaerl In altta. . Mix torethtr the flour, oall, ;epper ind paprika : rub over entire surface ot lamb. Rolst on a rock In p lhallow 111n1 pan In ~ :*-4esree ntll roaat m • a t ter reglsttrt 171 CHEER Allt:n'Ui'n'" I ••ANT &Sc 1;;,l. ~ IWl ,,., ..... e-I fx(IW Cn, Extn O•llltr, lxtrwilnary L11t11 Gm• MIMIS n v,,,., Very Voas Tiit 11'1 MtCoy ORNED BEEF CENRR CUT CHUCK OR 7·BONE USDA CHOICE POUCH PACK BRISKET POINT CUT OR CRY·O·YAC ROUND I Boneless Chuck USDA CHOICE •1• IUf llOAIT Ill. c~:~;. s12~ Should•r Clod s1z1 IOWD •nm IONlLaS IO.uT Ill. CABBAGE,· Chuck Steaks USDA CHOICI lllP 69• MADI CUTI FANCY. GAADEN· c Ill FLAT CUT Center Cut Chuck a;::: 79r._ .Family Steaks '°:'.~~~CY, 11 ~~ POUCH PACK •• , •• , . FRESH ..... , I l•:mml I !l\Jlllf.l'Jif!ljlillJll l'litl! Sliced Bacon 'M.~w:~:.-69~ Pork Loin Roast 09\'.:=.=-59! Fresh Pork Chops::v-:.-:.~ ... 79! RM$1ing Chickens ~~ 59! Sunsweet Prune Juice "°:: 59' Jerseymaid Buffer ';:7;-81' Manischewitz Borschtf ;39c Schilling Black Pepper ~ 45' cooce, llit.C'rTO MT ,,, WlieltLollsttn ---lluten Wlilll111 •1" .. ,::. :::= 59~ FRESH COD FILLETS 98 "u' ASPAUGUS --39! rJ/.!Ji:Jfl LIQUORS flATURES 1ft lllUTUL IPllllTS .19 - STWGHT QHTUCXY • llo.J'ltOOP . ff Miiibrook Bourbon":.. "''3 fT~ SWISS COlON'I' • 1 " RhlMsktlltr Wint ~ BURGIE DRAFT BEER •.•• ,... Save 1 s· 99' FANCY,IED DWCIOUS Fresh ~ltl'f 0 ..::;:o. 19~ F•cy 111 Plant ~ 19~ lrewa Onlou -::..:::-10~ llrlll Posits ""':::"" 39~ Jl...,..,.l Lllll'l SAUSAGE 89 ' • NJO/fi/§)11£11111:1:)1,jliti.fl,5 PRELL concentrate lllAMPOO, ....._ ... ..:'."... I '!?.' I ,,.,.... .,, TWICIM PAIT 14 ...... lvfferlaT•lets »IOOTH,IOPI', VB.VITTlllN Jergens Lotion WHITE SHELF PAPER ~ 3 88' VOHS,HfATANOML/111111.l!UilMOOOOI t Bobka Coff11 Cakt 'l:' 55 " L:.,.' ' EGGS 41 · • Vons Cream ChltSI =: 38' lieclerkranz ~~':' 65' Maybud Edams · ::..-:: 75' Bleu Cheese -~~.. W . Cresida Roquefort '$" 89' GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Enrlchod-511. All-Purpose IAO CHUNKTU·NA • ~ "'(<; --• Dt1D1onu ,_ _, -· 'l'UNA • DELMONTE UghlMeal. fl....t•/ .•• DELMONTE PEAS SwMl.T•""-17.0L Early Gortlwi ,, •1 • CAI lf•rY••t APPLE VIVA VON', COFFEE " f'" " 69' "' . ' . . ' • • . . '· • I l ' ' • ' . • . • • i • • lor m~ium done) -· mlmrltl per pound ; II 1 0111 I~ lamb a little pink, I:...,..~ time. 34081 ldaltS Ave.1 at Brookhurs~ Huntington Beach llabiny Park Drive, Capistrano Beacll 5922 Edinger Avl, at S~ftldlle. Huntington Beach Laguna ·Hills PJm, £1 Toro 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington lead 17950 Magnolia, Fountaln . Ya'8f ' • • l I ,f ' • • I . ..... ., I'll.OT Calorie Counts Down . • . ),. IWUIARA GlllBONS !Aw-<llorie corned beef! You diln , need a leprechaun lo oplrjl away all U..., extra -t.d -In lielud'• 111tiooal dish. Not if you're • -allopper ••• .and • Slim Gourmet coot.! -corned beef la pickled bm briaket. one of th• fatlieat ]lia:tl GI Ille mul (Brisket 1flilbl .hi ·1t 1380 calorie& or more per pound whllt loan • ·DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS II WITH TrllS COU'°N ' • VOID AmR SUNDAY, MAR •. ,, • NO MINIMUM PUlCH~Sf-NO MAXIMU M P~RCiofASE ONE OROEl 6Nl Y ANY AMOUNf YOUNG "N" TENDEl LOCAL .. I WHh tlti1couppll.,110 11'1i11im11111 pur cht 50 /l qulro'll. l imit JO I ,.~ co11po11 -Ofto i:.011po11 jMlr t:1ntomor, Void oftor Su!Mil oy, I' Mmh II. • 6001 ONLY AT ii1eAIN USllT . --. ·, '' ' "'•NJ '-------- CHEER DETERGENT GIANT , . SIZI ' 69'· Wit~ thla co11,to11, 110 ml11lm11m pv~h•1• roquiroll. Limit I "••; por c:.011po11 -0 110 co11 po11 po r c1u tom or. Vo ld •ft•r S1111doy,• M1rch It. -· mmd ii lea than 6SO -jull about ball!) Jut comed beef doesn't 111.. lo be br!Jbt! Many i ' THE SLIM GOURMET CELERY~~~~ ji ' LENTON 9 VOLT I ·~~~~!~STOR 2~2 5' I RADIOS R ! -With !Iii• coupo11, 110 mi11it11ull'I purch•i• rt quirtd. l ill'l it 4 ! 10~,I BIRDSEYE PEAS MIX OR MATCH 11 Ot. , , BIRDSEYE _./,ar1tet1 and butcher CUT CORN ~~ ""°"' now carry corned beef nwid. thinks_ lo tbe ..,.,. Pwlai lllllllbor of calorie ud c h.o I e 1 t er o I· con acloua WEIGHT WATCHERS LUNCHES as-i. • HADDOCK • SOLE Carned bet! round tuta ,.. 59~A. Icily lib corned beef brisket • PERCH 8 OZ. -:nceptthltit'amuch,much ~~ Jeinert Corned . beef rOund " . ;, ·+·a IJeUer cold sanchrich I .i ii fj : I :J j l •) • J 1!31 --. -..u•1no1......,y. I :. ~.r-~-·tbave ASPARAGUS ... canil!I · -mmd, he . CID . jlrollobl1 pt ti for you. 2 9" ' Or. • • JI you're f.,lln& EXTRA FANCY JI •.·-. w"1 not com OC L LI )'OllrOWD(AD it takto b a few L A • • ! weeb. space Jn y o u r rell!ceoior and a druptore lhlt -,ultpeter. llere'1 1111 butc: rule !CJr • 1lllldna a Plc;kJtng brine. , • .Mlz ioptbor· I cup come ; all, 2 quorta. water, II tea· ~ -ultpoter; J tabl .. pOons :· ....... 2 ~ mh:ed : . piekliai, I bly Juvea: Heat to i' bolJlnc Jn I Ductpan .. Cool and i" add·-.,,.rirfje., • Place a mmd of beef In a ~ cenmlc croc.: or iiaU bowl ;:· anil pqiir Dll the mlrtn~t. Be ~ IUte meat ii completel y :. .. -led· " Cover t l chl ly and ~ refrt&eflte two to three ~ weeb, b!rDing occulonally. :·. Oiot befnie aorvtng, : :-· To corn beef, Nova Scotia ;":; stcyle, ,blft'I a method from .•; Marie .Ntshtinlale. author of :•: Ille cbarmlq .cookbook,\ "Out ::-of .Oki Nova. Scotia Kitchens ! " :.· M!lch milder than th• corned i.· beef we're accustomed to, this :, pickled beef baa the advant.age ,..._ ol speed. i Plcl?lnc brine: I c u p 1 : wattt, I cup aalt, 3 table----!-· .__, l baylea!,6po!>' ~;-pt1airnl. .1 clove. garlic, Z •, teupoona pickling apicea. Mix ; lofethtr ud co"'r a bee! . round. Marinate for two to i;. four daya before cookinc. '' SUNNYStPATRICK'SDAV ). CORNED BEEF lo CABBAGE '· TOMATOES 19~. BROCCOLI 19~ .. APPLES • PIPPIN 4 LB. 39¢ r CELLO • llAG BAG- WATERMELON FIRST OF THE SEASON WHOLE 9¢ OR . HALF LB. BAR M HICKORY SMOKED l WHOLE OR I HALF ' 19 . I LI. ; Sew Clever J I •• " 11 pt r co11po11 -P11• co11po11 p•r custo""''· Void t fl t r Surid•y, I M•rch 19. M)OD ONLY AT IA••AINiA.SllT ' • ,, ZEE TOILET 3 F $1. TISSUE · ~ HEALTH ~ BEAUTY AIDS CONT AC COLD CAl'SULIS PACK OF TIN 89' COMP.A.II AT tit AIROSOL SHAVING-ClllAM e lllJUU.l e LIMI e MINTHOL -11 OZ. CAN SCOPE t MOUTHWASH~ .. OL oz. IOTTLI -II•. $2.01 AT OTHll STO•IS CEP ACOL ,. .... oz. MOUTHWASH IOnLI 1115. Sl .Jt AT OTHll STOllS NABISCO VANILLA WAFERS •••. 49¢-24 oz ...... AMERICAN llEAUTY RONI-MAC .... 4ft-24 oz. ••• 3~ 8~ TIDE $119 DETERGfHT --MAZOLA OIL • 24 OZ. IOTTLI • KING SIZE REG. $1 .45 WILSHIRE PICKLES IAR M ALL IEEF KNACKWURST c lb I ' .. OSCAR MAYER FRESH RtOZEN · SMAU SIZE e IOSHll SPIAIS 01 e POLISH ·Sl'IAlS -26 OZ. JA• 1 LB. CAN MJB INSTANT COFFEE 10 OZ. JAR LOG CABIN SYRUP (24 Fl. OZ.) WITH FREE 1 LB. llOX HUNGRY JACK PANCAKE MIX HUNTS CHOCOLATE PUDDING Jumbo 1 Lb. 13 Or. Can ' lUSDA GRADE "A" • ' • • • l'·l.EGGED . • PAN Rl~D.Y .. FRYING ~ . ' L C' •& CHICKEN IAR M IULK SLICED . BOLOGNA IAR M IULK NORTHERN RLLET OF TURBOT I. • ' t ' llrlce1 lffectlver Thursday thru Sunday ' Mar. 16, 17, 11,· 19 l'rfc• llllljftf .. -.. i.N. I WI 5U.DL Y ACCl!PT t • I rJL'OT -~DVrRTinR s \ ' .I ··~· t. .. \· ', 1llueA'S OliALITY f' ~ .. • ; SLICED BACON ., .... ~·· .. f . STATER BROS. SLICE D ·WV • • COTIOULAMI .. i2oz 6f S11tar l~, ·~~T ot B EEF &fte ' Slitllil OGNA .. 12 o~ ;,- ·PANM-lfCED 4it7 iPOD'KED ~AM .......... •oz. 5gc iiHORMEl ALL MEAT ' · i:WIENERS -- . . -·LB. w !:JIMMY dEA.N REG.' OR HOT 8.,., -RK SAUSAGE ....... '" r : MO'fllf1El.\,'6°PRIDE , 11111schwei1er ·····----· Le. 6f ' ~ ... · .. OCEAll ·p PERCH . ;· ~flUHFIOZJNFl.WT · c ' 'Sf ATER BIOi. MONEV° BACK MEAT GUARANTEE . . 'l'OU'•t ...ssuno Of. THE JINIST (.t.11MG OUAUTY '· WJIH •ll STATC• MOS. Ml!All. (Vffl' l'lfC( f" lo\li.t.T TOUMJ'f 1U St.1.tt• ~.~ l.INCONOll~ A.IL"!' GV~ ....... TUO TO NJ.SI! YOU ..• Ol YOUt NoONlT Will M. (lol(f..,UUY MfUNOfD. PRE-caofED HEAT AND eAT 69c BREADED PERCH · • '"' BREADED • PRE-COOKED • HEAT&. EA.T &gc TURBOT FILLET -·-·----,L• ' .. l, fAYM ~ ,.._. ,,. • r DAILY 1rLOT 4G • ." " STA111-.CllTlle-7 SC ' ROUND BONE ltOAIT ........ LI. . • IOllF"'--· ... 03 " ROLLED ROAST ......... , ..... LI. ~ . . i&irsiliK ....... La.•· i 07 . n•111110&;a....... . 95c-. RUMP ROASlao••·•• ..... LI. · · _..,._.OU...,.. ,.. . 9·9c ' 'RIB STEAKS ..... : .......................... LI. ·LIAN•-·Y--QflSflAKS . s I Q9 'STEAKS:.•:.~=·· ................ LI. LB. LEAN a uNo EA • NO' AILS S 149 T .BONI S.qAK< . · BLADE PORTERHOUSE STEAK ........ LB. WILL s I 4 5 CUT ' ITATE• BROS. CERTlflEO BEEF s179 :::~:.~ POQND TOP SIRLOIN STEAK .-.. . LB GUAIANTHD 1 -· .. ·· • ··1B 6-TH ··:-. ·1<7-TH . . to«~LOIN . ·RIBS GROUND BEEF · 'At.It . . WTB.N CllAIN FID •• SMAU.UANMIAT,Y , ' ' ·mu . W£1£1J££M ' FOOOITlMn lTALLITOID .. ' PRUH • LIAN• DIUCIOUS !i!ICN'ID IN OUI STOHS ' ·. . ' ' ' . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . PRICES EFFEC. THURS. -lhru WED •• MARCH 1~ 11H W• ., .... ,,. A1 ' 'I 1t ••--.-.-1t71Wltf ....... C...M• ,.,71 ..... __ UJll ___ .' 1·~ ' ' • • ' ' ~ DAil Y PILOT • • . ... .. .. Wt<MsdlJ, Mltti l.5, l9n .. . . .. .. / . • • ........ MlrdlU.1971 \ l'lt.OT-AIMllTISll • \ El Rancho's freezers are 1 filkd with bargains th·is week-erid! Switch ·'em from ~ur freezers to yours ••• and .know your saving/ Choose your family's favorites, for qui~k. easy-to.enjoy dinners ••• and save! ~ou.U love the eonvenien.:., and the pric.1 Birdseye Peas .. ~0.~:.~~· •.• 6 i $1 · Enchiladas ..... Y~~.~.~ ..... 3 i $1 Picked fnlh in•the fields and rushed to the freezer, to preaerve flavor I Americana style preserv"" the authentic flavor in mild manner! Bee!, ch-, cblcl<en. 7Yros. pJr:r. Birdseye Corn.:!~.0~~~: •• 6· :·$1 Layer Cakes ... ~.!~ .. '. 69~ AD the l'Olden fOO\lneaa. of field fresh corn, waiting for your enjoymentt • Three layers high • , • light and moist, with crwny icing! Choose your favorit& Frozen I. Stuffed , Meat :Pies.~. 4·9, . . .. ·' . . . . . 6. F $·1 Dole. ·S Juices............... • I •• . FROZEM ••• 60L · .. 0 . 'l'he)".l.intw! ••• tender·crasts stuffed with beef, turkey or chicken! DeliCjoqal lOYs-oz .. pkg. iufJfo Solipl ................... 3 ~ '1 ScaHOped Potatoes ·>: ........... ~911 · Yonr choice ot reruJar.S~ Virietieal Frozen. Stouffer's ••• }\eat and aerve! 12, oz. . Ore ldl Pota~ .............. 4 lot '1 fscallOped Apples .......... ; ... 49' Cboole.C~.Cuts o'r ,French Fri,.11 lb. Stouffer'•."• • welcome surprise! •• , 12 oz. · . . Spln'acb· SOuffle ................. 39' Stoutt• makes It JO enjoyable 112 oz. A touch of Hawaii for the freezer! Pineapple, Pineapple-Grapefruit, Pineappl9-0range • • Sara lee Coffee Rings ~ ....... 69' Serve w~rm for breakfast!,., 9-oz. pkg, Macaroni and Cheese ...... 3 I>: '1 M~in course from Va.ii de Kamp's ! .... 11 oz. . . Orange Plus ....... _ ... : ........... 49'' Orange juice taste ••• Birdseye, 9 .oz. Pepperidge fanns Turnovers~ Flaky ctWlt, flavored filling! 1,2-oz. pJir, Apple Pie ....................... '1.29 Butter Recommends ••• big 9" aize. Frozen Aunt Jemima Waffles.: ....... 39' Euy to tierve at J>reakfast! •· .. 9 oz. Strawbenies .................. ·3 .. '1 Birdseye ••• Quick u;.,. pxoceu ! l<kll:. pJr:r. • ' Special Grocery Values! · . l!nttJI' ..... ~~ !~ ....... 111 ..... -.. '" ' . . . Sweet, tender white meat., •. cut !tom king size Calltornla chickens! r ·· Super Meflt Specials! ,, IPBI ...... ~ ........ II Gives you cleaning power in cold water for today's fabrics!,,. and uves money! ""'11.lhJ1• ....... -~-....... 51! Rich jwcy dllrk meat from chunky,JDelltier King size California birds! . . . . ·Chlffan Baauo .... 2. ~.~A~ ••.• 4,,,q Bay a palr.an.d a spare or two for ihe bathroom, at El Rancho's apecial price! ltanan Dressing ................. 59~ · ·Potato Buds : : ..... 1~.~ ~i:-:-......• 59' Bf&' value on :Wllhbone 16 oz. size. · Mashed potatoes in minutes,., Betty'Croclrer . . Gold Medil flour ............... 53' MJ.B. Coffee ..................... 79t. I fresh fryer Wings .................. 3 .. '1 Biwr chickens have meatier winp l Plana for bakinrT S&v.I' on 5 lb. bag. Your choice of Kri!>ds l 8-lb. C&ll 2.23. ' fresh Chicken Uvers ................. ''-·Super Fresh Produce · • · • Freahn ... maka in ihe difference I . Asparagu~ . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . 29·~ Bir size stalks to afford: flailor'ilnd tenderness tip to tip! ' Cucumbers ....... '2 lot 19' Romaine ................ 15'· Firm, to give you crisp slices! . Criap ·1.eaves for better salads l Havel Oranges ............. 8 lk '1 Radishes, Green Onions 2. 15,. ,, . . The lJ.11118 "Sunklst" assurea the quality! Add color and bright taste to Aladlll Bunch • .. B f R t . . $169 llOllElDS • , • Hf.Ill Of Sll101!1 • ee oas ...... , ................... . A boneless roast, so tender, so delicioas • , • U.S.D.A Choice beef! -..·~-Chuck . Steak ....... ~ ~C!'! ••••••• 69l Compare the value, and see that there is a difference in Center Cuti De?icareasen Specials! \ L ' ;L Cho SMALL $169 LAICll $139 . a1Qu . ps .... ~~·.tt. • .... ~~·!4. . . • · Froin U.S.D.A. Choice dom..,tic lamb , • , and alwaya f!'"lh at El Rendlol Swiss Cheese .. ~. ~~:s .. 98~ Saratoga Lamb Chops ..... ~ .... s.1.69 .. Boneleaa,' to offer more value no mattsr how they'n enjoyed l Our fin..,t.,, sweet nutty flavor roes great in sandwiches or for snaclal franks ..... srRlllCF!flD ..... 55' Kraft's American .... 79• All meat or all beef! • , , 12-o:t. Pklr· Individual wrapped aliceal 12 oz.- J aCO Shells .. ~1aiLON!AL .. 39¢ Shredded Cheddar ... 39' Ground Beef.muWI! 9r.. Always freah·rround and tend"erl ' Sliced Bacon .n UllCHO. 69~ Thicker Ranch style Jlicell Beef Patties ...... : .. 99fr. Oar OWll Extra 1-srlndl Ground lamb .. SIUll .. 69t. So lelll, and 1'1111)' treoh I Jlead.Y to Ul8 ! . , . pkg, Of 12. Mi.sa Wi!ponain , • , for tacos l 4 os. Liquor Values Grant's Scotch ...... ~~ .. ~:~~ ......... rJ.99 Pour Grant's ..... with the assurance you are the ~tinr ha1tl Qt. bU. ,Halibut Steak~.~ .. •1~ Wolfschmidt Vodka ,_99 Hungarian Wine · .... 'lOO .. 60e on the halt-pllon We. Weibel' a Green , , • Jigh~ drt l 6th. Mild flavor, •• light flaky meat •• , delicioao broiled I Niii II 11111111 •••. • .. Alaskan King Crab Meat ..... : . : ......... : ... ~ .. llfsll· .Whiskey .' ...... '6.29 Ballantfne's Beer ... '1.14· · Jluplv ••••for St. Pat'• Day! 6th. A brand you know! SiJ: 12-oz. uni, , :Mild llavor •.• flaJcy meat ••• tor a coclctal1 or a ClllOMI t ' • • f r I I • • • • • I r ' • • 270 I . JO l'!LOT·AMRTJSER N , . Wfdnt!d11. M1rc11 "· tm'· r ' ' J toiAll~O FIG MlWTONS ~. •7c g•• .. 10.0Z, GREEN GIANT-fROZEN VEGETABLE! GENERAL MILLS-CER,EAL BUC-WHEAT •·OZ. 39c PURE VEGETdlE-POlYUNSATURATED WESSON Oil 31.oz. 93c · IOTTLE 12.oz. 5·9c PKG. . . . OSCAl lrMYll (THICK 01110 . 12.or. 7tc) 55c ALL MEAT BOLOGNA ..... ';~'; 05C.+.lt .IJ.AYll-THICIC 01 lfGULAI ll-01.Ji7c) 79c ALL llEP BOLOGNA ••••• :•;~'; ' ' .oGUll'OrT, lllU (THOUU.ND ISU.MD ~) 48C BOB'S DIESSINIS •••••••• :;0 .'; 1.t.iSO•TED VAlllTllS 29c I tc••·· SOUPS •••••••••••• i.::; ' , . FAMILY11PAK HAM.·,~~!·73c •· KMUDSIM , SIC . YOIUIT PUSH-UPS .• ~;'; ' ' LIQUOR DEPT. YOUI CHOICE iACH FIFTH VODKA s 98 SUNDERLAND DRY GIN flfTH ,. j .-.. --~---"':"-~---"."""~--------, i GRAND •EGAL i 1 r11x SELECT 1 ' i TalPLI SEC i11a ' i i 'l?J ·~\99e ! ~------------------------· ~ D,ON CARLOS-HALf GALLO]" .,,. TEQUILA ...... . • """"... • 12 ''"" ••• MA••A•ITA MIX ••••••••••••••• 1111.&Jllll,f Plfttrt "' •LOODY MARY MIX •••••••• , We don't want , : you to 10 -· · somepliee . 91ie ••• liOuuM DOt. j MOUUM, Pit. 1 1u1111.J1ur i -1urr11 Nur. I ' ....,.. aJtD11soN 1 JANI aN01asoN liowl '1 Stm ENGLISH l HAMBURGER l HOT DOG 1 SOOD WHITt l SLICED WHEAT IOUS . l MU"11ls l IUNS I PK.. 11 IUNS I P( . l lllAO 16 OZ. l lllAD 16 OZ, ~:-=-35c ! ~;:i_ 33c J ;::~ 33c 1 ~=~: 33c ! ~.:;. 25c ·1 ~~ 25 c 'IOMI ITIU.OIAHI 411 j SOM1 lftU C•Afft41c I IOMI Still CllAlll •11 I SOMt lnUCllAlll Q1 / JDMI ITJU. Cllilll ttc I JOM1 Sf1U CM.Ult He lllru 1 II""" Mu 'h I 1$t!IMI lbu..C 1'1111 Jl1 I -..111Ktt1t Ptlct411 I lltlul l;lsu11t l'r!u Ill I lltlul tt.c ... 1 Mt1 1lc I lllfMtl liNtut Mn 111 'nlll lftMI Ml ALL IAUI IJCCUdlYILT,. ftllPTUIAaT AMt AH MAIAlm9 Ti MllT.~ ... nA•AIM W .ALITT BARBECUE TIMEI ,----YOUR CHolc!:fil5r®'AL'irr ____ l i ~.!:~!!!.!ACON ;~!· 69 c i • IUll°I QU.t.LITY • . • .1 • AlMOIJIJ "MIU CUii" • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • IA. I I ,.....,. -· ,.,. ' , 1111. ..II I w.,..··-.. '-", I. I I , ... -....... ,17c '""' ,._ ""''"59c I io------------------------·1 :--FRESHLY MADE I SMALL SIZES UNDER 3-LBS. ' c EEF:.:aOAST c .LB. i GROUND BEIF ! cf;~r· ...... ··~~: .................• If! I & PKG.0'6'3C I • II •' k ' .... I 3·LBS. . I .... y ... I -..i.1-• • • • • • • • • Ill. I ' ' OR LB I IONELESS ' L ___ -:::....:: ___ ~~·! ________ _: __ t Top llrloln lteak1 .'.:u ••••• •1~~ U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" BECTSVII:LE-TYPE SMALL. 5-8 LBS. '.!'ft:., .., 1'.RESB :~:~." 8 c URKEYS ·.· ~ d \ ·.~ •• .. , ., ·~ OVEN READY EXCEllENT TO B.Q. ---LENTEN SEAFOOD nLLITS ... •un1aP11H· .... , • 79~ ;.~LLIN ef·T•UCOD •••••••••;• ~·~ .... -'I" PILLITI ef DOYIR IOLI.,•••• ,., • p,.o11 I Siu 79• 8AIN•OW ROUT •••••• , •• '!'e,. ... •••• • •• WISTl•N OYSllR• ••••• ~0:~~~.. --..1 ......... _.._(I' • ..-...... .,..-.> •1•• •RllN SHRIMP ••••••••••••••• ii.. ·-COii ltOIS ....•..•.•••• ;:!"=11• 79&. ' "TENDER-AGED STEER BEEF" ·CHUCK STEAK c BEEF SHOIT lllS ••• !~. ~~1H •••• ll1i. COINED BEEF IOUNDS ~ ••• "ft'~ 97,i. 1 :I U :-. I' I· I. \ \ C I B I· I I. F H C I \I \\ \:-.II I \ L I C I\ :-. I \.I I. "GOLDEN or. RED DELICIOUS Your Cltoiee ' AND PIPPIN L&. BAG ' ' •• I , , ' ' • ' Wedntsday, Martfl 151 19n •U.MCO AM!llCAM Spaghetti "18c oz. ... IMITATION CllAMll COFFEE·MATE 6~.79c All PUIK>SE llSQ~CK MIX JUHYMAID-All ,LAVOlS' ICED 'MILK ~~~ 49c SIMPLI! Sl~ON. DE!P DISH . 21.oz . . FRUIT PIES APPLE, PEACH, 49 C STRAW,/RHUIARI (CHURY 69<) CAMPHLl'S SOUP CHICKEN & RICE ~~ 15.c · M.D. ASST. COLORS-IATHROOM . TISSUE . ' 4 ::t.~y3J.•. l'ACIC ' ' All GRINDS-VAC PACK I MJICOf •• l 3 ·ll . $219 TIN THE IXTRA STRENGTH PAIN QlllVIR iXCEDiilN :· . IOTTLE Of 100 ···1M uo. ' $1 .69 ANTIHl'TIC'MOUTHWASH LISTERINE f~ILY 0 20:0Z, ·• 1· ,28 REG. $1.59 ' . He S1111rt ShtH 81JC1rlu l R111w1ter ... !'!o:'.41c $1.09 81111111 Rlt-1 Buar~ D'aodorant SpraJ .~~!:13c $1.50 FD·l FDS Feml1l11 Huien1 .......... 3.~~·.$1.19 ' ' ' " ' ' . '., ~ • 2701 HAltlOR ILYD., COSTA MESA e 13922 IROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVI e llOI W. EDINGER, ·SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL , TORO, EL TORO ' . I I ' • . ' , ' ' l ' ' I II \ II ' • • • '~-------. - • YOU SAVE AllJRE. '' HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ~'!,;,~.,;; .!',:13' .,..VIVA NAPKINS .... ~30' M.J.I. COFFEE • ~2.43 LADY scon FACIAL .. J':':29· .Mj,i.coml.:::1.2s .,.+DOW CLEANER ••• ~=77' .,.+APP(ESAUCE •••• ,,:J:35' TOP JOI CLEANE!,;,;..:73' tf'°'RUn TIEAT •'"31' WOOLOVE ' ' • ' ' ' ' '""'""'"' .in AIN SflA....,. •.••••• JM :..A-Cf'-AllWIEI-•• -. ;. .~~=63' • DAIRY PRODUCTS IMO DIBSING ••••• .W::37• IUmlMILI ....... .,:42• OUNGEJUICI · .... =as• ICE CIEAM •••• ~=79• ... OTHER ITEMS CANADA DIY .• ~.•1=11• IEEI •.••• -.•• ::ft!.:1.49 GOLD SEAL GIN ••• :=1 .11 C9111JJAVW ..,,_ __ ll9'S) tl'°AITICHOKES ••• ~':33' .... LIQUIDGOLD ".;~1.45 tl'°IAIED BEANS ...... u..:n• .,.+n.n.IOL ••..• "mz0:::l69' nilll .... ~'!~~.";" .. ~SI• .,.+GOODWINS llNSE • .:'.:l69'' IHf STEW ••••••• ~= ... .,.+LIME LIQUID ~':J:l49' ,,,. ... WELCIAIE 11111 . !_'!!_~!" ' . • • '". ~~-=21• .·~~DGllCl'"I 3.~A lllRE llCE PEllSOllAL IYOIY ._..,."=31• -F ._.IOI 7· y· ~· llfflUE'is ........ 0:.:13' PACKACED GOODS .. ··uD -... -·-31 .. •-• • • ·' MOllW 1 PET FOODS llEAD •••••• ~~0:,::37• Ill UN DOG FOoD ~~27· .... CHILI SAUCE ..... -..... f'.lllllUM WCIERS 11":.-:::66• LITTLE FllSIUES ••• '!"'i'J.'::.56•· .,. '''' ,,...,_. -ACOOllES ...,...._,.,,_ GUYITUIN -:115· 'DELMOITECATSUP ••• "::34'.,. ··~"'"::! . ~·· "" • ~'!'ll..111111 ....... .:ff'. ~~::~·~:*.~-1: ·• ~~n de Kamps • tf'°CLAM CHOWDEI • u:ir.132' ti'° MUmN MIX......,"W.'=49• u ·OUTSTANDING VARlm .,.+SNACK OLIVES ••• ,.':.'ffll.21• .tf'°CHOCOLATE • ~.'T.~'::239• Of FRISK IAIERY GOODS PEANUT, Oil ....... =72' c & H SUGAI •••••••• 'l.."ll 9• ., .......... -""N .... VM ......... . alSCO -·· ----·-. •••••••••• -•ozm.,. C&HSUGAI·· •• ,, ... ,, FARM FRESH PRODUCE .,.+PUDDINGS •••• "!'ll:31• • ''' ' •• ,.-. OIXXll.Uf. OIOCXIU.• fUDll, T.vtae.l OI. llCI : FROZEN FOODS PllOmN 21 CDIDITIDIER 'ij For lino, thin,$1 "9 · • limp, dry or V . c1am:.god0 hair, .. 0% ·'=:-::r .. 1 Col_gate MF• BANANA - QllOUITA RAND GOLDINRIPI 9UNCHIS ·11~ U.J.10.1 8RIDE 'RUSSET . POTATOES -;. --..... ,...~ ... , .... i ,. ........ ... ~ • 'IPS ... I .... """ M1•••r1 __ .., caDu ··-.,. ..... .,. .... -··-·::s: ____ ..._ ' =-··--&1•1181••1 ........ •ft'll • 1• II. Ctillnl.a..., I llK'• Pm. 111 W •. .._. ' ......... IUCll • "" """"' -.-......... ...,, ...... .. -;··-""""'""' UllWON •WI .......... 0.. u-.ua-14'11s... ..... ..., ~.-....... .. l.,... . ""' ....... ..... Liii ................. . Ll•---·MmL~ =-~ ~·;.! .:.:s- --. 1lllt ....... -·-·-· ... ........ L,..._. Ill I 7 PFF•I ••ts ..... a ..... -.... · .. --.. , ,, ... -... .. ==n.~...=::t 101201IUCI•1111 ... .e.. RH'"• ...... CllllS .... =·-•s• .. ..._ ·----·---....... :m::ia;::.rr .. = .... -,. .... ·IUllL ... ... WlllJ1•,1m .. .... ... -........... .... • . ~ D . DAll.Y PILOT • . ' '•, " 'ROUi-D. STEii . CHUCK ROAST ...... ~~r.1 1:Y ,. 7 c FRESH fRYERs · l'Ol.Y M*D•D ....UAUTY U . AMDl'l.AVOll , 'Bigger t no uperm et an a - Variety 1toral On-the-opot •hopping for a pan or a ponttuit I •• A rug or a rake I •• A blanketorabike!And muCh. much more •• ot money saving low discount P.fkes I ' IUlllTOll • PLUIH El STER ISSDR'FIEIT · s-1.19 .~s497 " . ,·~~::.. 1~~ ·s2s1 . tct 17. A un\iue Mledlon of Men's . short al-. shim In on -....... of p<lntt·cinif;colon; 65% l"'~tor/35% «~Hon • b ..., ~ron1 care,'1Qng ~· "°'·~~ 'T IMTA M1itCA ·' ' j . ...... :r.. Faihloned of ..... -......,,, and all .............. EOster •. ·~ .,.,!tltght big. .,. llttJe .......... , , DiiHiWiRE ~ .. : ,~~ Informal and pretty enoy9h ' SHOVEL ••PAIL IOI' partiOI, durable e= s9n for daily family UM. rnilfanl, dishwathor aafe. ' . ' . 11.-.. ..... SILLY PUm J .9c taffy, bounces Ilk• a rubber. boll pleb up plctuNO from. -1trlp1 In full color, •-be lllOldejl Into all -cf "'1apoo • · .. R 02: Pl.Ame SERY.-11 PITCHER r~=to~.,c lid-color bollom; .._ .... •IJle. IWl-'!Of' WISTE .11s1n . Attracllve new 1lln>llne otyhng and handy, ...,. s26' -owing top; a. groat "cialloclor" In n!Ce colon. .. .... .... IMllY ........ llili' ,, .... .,. " PIP-IP 0111111 TllEIFarTuriloy,leel,Lmnb ... 66• ..: .... · . t • I ' • " . . . ' • I , I ' . ' •• ::. • • ,• • ~ ., ., .. k 1: -• ' I; ~· ' • •• • • • ; • . . • " · J§ Pll.OT·AD'IUTIS£l ' . . THE _Sl<Y IS ' F.~WNG' ,. J"allln& rietit into the kitchen. -rlcht throuRh tht-SJCX .. lJGHT-of this charming Custom. Built Home! It's also faij .. Jn& htto ~he SPARKUNG HEATED A FILTERED POOL. arid (!in the p&tlo and through another SKYUGH'l' in the garqe! But It's ~rteetly safe In any of the tou_r. bedrooms, ·the famllY, room, the, !lining room, and the Jiving room, under tbe 'NATURAL WOOD, BEAMED 'CATIIEDRAL CEII.JNpS! A. irff.t Nf!wport Buch addreu at only· $53,000 with 10" . .iow,. . .c.n,646-7.171. ~ •-I ; • .. • f>· • :''SPANISH HACIENDA" I • If k,•...,a bit.of old.Spain that you've bttn looking for, then ;::~ look 1 no further. Beautiful Inside. and out, hu .ii oioce .' .1 , ~ features a home can otter. It'••• mU1t• to see at •• ~ '. •' '. sai-Coll -.. ••• 842.2!135. • · .. TATERS. THE TANGERINE KnCHEN Will ablolutely delight you! ~ profnslonall.Y decorated four bedroom hornie with a ett•t family room. There's new Iha& carpet.a to tlck1e your toea and two .fittplaefll to wvm them. A betutltul profeuionally landscaped Yard. complete with the BBQ Pit and a Boat and Trailer attt.. &nit room · for a pool! A pratlge Newport Beach 1.ddreu.. Only $39,500. can 646· 1111. "DEUGHTFUL" . · Thia home lncorporates every item required by the metlcu· lous owner for gracious living.· Located in a prime reslden· tlal area of Huntingt9n Beaci\. Close to aebOola and •bop-· pin&• can UI\ today to lff , • • 842•2535. ! YOU ' WILi PURR-R·R JJ you anuale ;in one of my four bedrooms, cuddle beatde my craokllna: fireplace and my yard won't brfflc.your back! My banker wpt loan you up to 90% of my purchase price ot •only $25,800. For )'Olli' p@rsonal showing. pleue call 646-717L "DON'T IE A RENT SLAVE" Invest, don't spend:. Saye tor thi:t rainy day by buying your own home. $3350.9() aild low ~nthly p&Ytmnts. will buy you a , eood died piece of this irut ''America." Priced at $2:1,700, better hurry ••• Ml-2!135. w......i.r, Mll'dt 15, 1972 Olli. y Pll.01' • NO ONE OFFERS MOIE!. No.1 ··-----......... .. ...... N'r,..,1,11 ... I elflc9 te ..... .... I• Mwert~ c-....ate Ce• .... ....,.,...,. I• ..._ 1,. tM M....,.Aree ,...., ·•••'tlua _ T1lla II _. ..... -a..• "SOMETHING UNUSUAL" Here ls a 4 bedroom custom built beauty wlli bring joyOUI Uvtne to your entire family. Huge corner lot can• accomm• date· the lareest of families. For all tb~ details. call 842-~ "THIS WEEK'S . LEADBt" Join the smart set and move Into a Jltetlme ot m· llvln&. truly an' adorable family home. Con'ttnlently ted to the schools and the-new Huntinrton .Beach:CentraV k. Only.$29,500, , • SQ.2$35. . . , "UtT1MATE IN 9U'ALITY ''WALX TO IEACH" IRING YOUR GOLF CLUIS "LITTLE DOUGH- LOTS O' HOUSE" • •.· · . AND TASTE" LoCated in'JJtinu1'tt.on &iach. Sbarpest'bome on Rumbolt "·~· 'Larae bonus room 4 Bl>~. BuUt·•ln wet 1t,.r; heated and ~>IJIOOt. COr· · ·ner lot for•boat or camPer. rJ'hti" home ii plush .tJiro .. ~·Prloe $64,000. CALL M7-8010. ' . . . · NO WxURY LEFT OUT! WeJcome · G.1:'1 or e&ay. mon.y down, you' can ptµ"Chase a 2 )'tar old '4; bedroom •home at the udtl~ .Jillll".,' ... fl' ... 1titd ........ lngton Beach .dole to all 1chooll and 1hopQlng, Don't let this· one a:et away. Ca11 now, 847..eol.O. 1 CARMEL WITH A VIEW · ' ' Thia dramatic uilusuAl 4 bedroom, 4 1tory Home, Looking tor a l:arae yard In Harbor View? !furry I ' \ '!bll unique home la located """' .-~ . '(; ·~~IMJr q , •• 'r .,,,I ... tates. Comer Lot.3 bedroom, A: den. 2 nnpl."" ' fomier model home. $41,500! Call 847-6010.. f · HAPPINESS IN HARIOR VIEW I Thia cbalming 4 bedroom home lbcated in Hunt· with 180 cderree view of the Qcun; private ac-to 1ee t!'ll 3 .~i;n. 2 .t.aµi.h6me, which OYp• looks the mountlitl'll by 'daY and the llghta'."a t cess to ~fl: c:oro~. del Mar Beach. Over 4'.000 !nlcht. Cul .. .pc location 11 sreat for ch~n. ~qu';l'e feet or,livlnl apace. Mupt see to aPpi"e· . 1Seven fruit tfets, water 10ftener, 1elf-cle911i91 elate. Call for appolntinent at:•673-8550 •. Price · oven, atrium outside of muter bathroom, mtr- •IDUCID ·-"4,IOI Join tlie care~free 'lite with community.park. pools, and courts. Come home to .:i& pOjtoftno already landscaped, and flnllhe4 with mey extra goodies. Park your.boat or trailer ~xi.to the house. Ektra clQaeta A bookshelve1 10lve atorage prol;lle1n1. 3 large bedrooms, 3'ii blthl, 2600 aq. ft. o( luxurlau1 Jlvtnr make thk ·u executive dream. DONT Ml~S IT! Call 546-2313. · . · "PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP" . tnaton .Beach, 11 youn to ,enjoy .for a very small initJal tnvestm~nt and you don't even have to qualify for the Jomi. Ci.11 ui for the tacll about ihis,propert,. Only "'6,wl. Call 842.2!135. $298,500. : rored• wardfobe dooni, lob of cement and br:fc:k ·• wcrk are just a •few of the extras. Don't mlu ' . . .. ' • ELEGANT 51R.~31A. MlSA VERDE • ' . -. lllJa UJUllual booul)r. 'Call 54g.231J. •• , "AUTHENnCM.L Y SPANISH" • I ' r SAGACnY SAVl,S 11111 Sponllh chotmer will ha,. ,... -Uing with pride. 8doooo, immaculate both lnalde and outllde, plua addftlmil • amenJtln IUCh u; the goU count!, a paft around the corner; Wllldn& distances to aChooll and lbopping centers. Don't • Beautiful. Republlc--buUt b(llM 1ltualat on comer lot on quiet 1lttet in choice Mesa Verde neighborhood. Features. very 1barp condition throulhout th1I 2700 IQu&re foot home with Jari• 11<p.down family "'°"' with fireplace and wet bar; huge muter 1uJte and formal dlninc room. Price, 1$.900. For additional lnfcnnat1on and appointment, please phone ~2313. , ' The red tUe root aDlt the J.cioied courtyatd m&kn the malfllflcent Spqlah architecture truly a majestic splendor, Call about ~ i year DO propen,, tax plan. &42·25.15. Two duplitxea $30,000 each. All prlmt unftl on ~ftW. Excellent return. Good rent schedule, -low maJ•~ - low down payment -good 1tart.r. M\alf be told toptblr. Don't min this one. Cell 5'6-2311 • belitate, 842.2535, • • • R ·BA.L . ' TAT-ERS. • • . 0,. 'Tl ' • • NEWPORT BEACH '. COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH CORONA DEL MAR INVESTMENTS 1700 Newp ort Blvd, 2790 Htrbor Blvcl. 646-717 1 546-2313 1793 1 leach Blvd. 6014 Wamer Ave. 84 2-2535 84 7 -60·10 . 332 Marguerite 27 90 Harbo r Blvd. Suitt. 2011 673-8550 Coste Mesa 546-1600 • • • ~ ' I { • ' • ' . • • ' • • ' _j • ~ DAll.Y l'ILOT DICI TIACY . TUMIUWIEDS Mun AND JEFF ' wt'Re R~ TO MAK~ OUR S!:TTLl!MeNT, MFI. PLENTY • ...._. WILL '\IOU AMO • MRS. PLENTY SIGN T)lESE-P WHY ~·T YOU JU$T CALL IT WHAT If IS1 · •wR1Tel\'S CRAMP"? \ / \ ... ~·17=.: 1:.'-'5--··':'" .. --..:.------.:..\ '!"" :{ . ' ' • WEl,.L., . COMIEoN· WHO? ly Al Smith GORDO ' t . . " NANCY TkAT tu'r& eov HAS tlEllN FOL.L.OWING M&. FOR Bl.OCKS ~I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. ,OW!R I AC-OSS 38 Unit of Ofmtr· Yeslffday's Puzzle Solvrd: ship In I ... 1 !=Ul\I ,, ~:::~,O- s Tht 11f1t pid cattd: 2 won:ls the 0Ch1t ' 42 Thoughts ' EllJlllUf't to 43 C1r1vanswy ftt rllk of 44 llll11ht way ltts of llft: 14 Taiwtcl pltct t.onlur:lanls111 ustd 111 45 Ex lgtney ' filltr IMlwttn 46 Alimentary 1 dtst Md canal nr,:1r,.1 1Jt·11 ]!] LHUJ,ol '11 Jl·J ,Ii I llf•l• J,J '1 ~·1l;J1 I fl·l i1 -1r1;Jn ;~r1n :J•i11u n.i •I~ ·l>4 AIU"Jo l>lllll~I J :.1 .. '111·.trt 11•1n 111tn •"l •l l·l ill11J!J flf·hl r•lCIJ fJI J•JLl·I 1'1'111'.l!•J '1"l·l f1 11'J,j111 J : ,, 1'1•1 n . r1.1n i•Jr1111.~r 1 1;1~111 ;,t+1-1 r1t1nr1 t 1t1t+ 1.1;1'1 1~'11 ! r.J fli-lf1f1 1111111,1111.11·111 1~1·1111~r1n r:Jn:lr:'l uu1,1 JLi r·111t1~•11 !J{·Jl11J r.1f•l t1 U~IJU~ L-ltil•JIJ lJO~Li [J(]i]("J(] tht troor 47 Fruit 3/lS/72 '15 lrtl•M 4' Unable to 111ovt 5 Warning sound JS Lost frtshntss 16 Having wings 51 lmporltlts 6 Lubr1c1ttd 37 Esstnl11I 17 Drive down by ~ Grttk goddess 7 Perta in ing lo polnt ,. 1 suectsslon ol wisdom a brarw:h of 38 Drew back ~ of light blows 58 An11H 1111thrmatlcs from caut ion 111 lt1v.s oot &o Establ lshtd 8 Short cGUih 40 -Jonis: '·20 ft lvtr of h1b lt of 9 Glass In win· Grt1I Yalt G«llllftY Nhavlor dow divisions football coach )21 Fulklng 61 S!lfints: 10 Grttk rtslsl· 41 Kind of sOiltd • dtvlctT 2 WOf'dS aoct 9'0UP 46 Snarl 22 RI.Kl away lrOl'll 63 Black: Poet. 11 ExlJ'MS rtf700f 48 Stlzt and smlct 114 Pilhy1 12 Roman road hold lt;ally 23 Orchtstr1 65 Shadt 13 So as lo IJ't· .t• AlllOnlJ ; i· tlil: SKlicn 66 Sltdgt \ltflt !ht PGS• SQ Lock of I ZS.1.ovts to 67 Goost ~nus slbllity that trt111111's hair txctss 618 Apart from I• "What's lilt 52 Pl1.911ikt 27 Shotl lh1t bl_g .7!". fruits 2' Nat'I Educatii:n "' Hard y novt i 24 ~il'tlght 53 Comirds lo 90 AssOl;latlon : htro lnt /closures S4 -Nltlstn of Abbr, 26 Gtn1r1I Stflst lht silent 30 Sk fn 1111rk DOWN 28 Tmtl by air movies follow ing lht JO That g!rl 55 In that cast htallng ol an l Gt nus of 31 Autolst's pri»-. 56 ·-dt CO!tlbat: lnJiry i llowtrs l1m: 2 words Out ol Klton 34 Marlntt's 2 Flssl lt rock 32 Flt!d of study 57 Irish G1tllc cflrKtlon ] Bultdfng Jl Change tht 5.,9 ltallan royal I 3' '1We comts matetlal SOlltt: dtcor namt ~I In llkt - 2 WOl'ds 34 A1 neat as -62 Big SttYt Jn -": 2 word1 4 Bloc k -·: 2 words ltflnls Oto!, THATS E>SI! JUDC)E PARKER MiLLO, POCTOlt! THIS 15 S-'M PilVilt ! HOW'S ~MAllEV? MISS l'EACH ~ I PERKINS ... ~. r 1. f 1 ff--ri I " (_",,I; .... ON A•M • DIT MOON MULLINS ( by Emi• lushmlller STOP FOL.L.OWING ME ···EITHER CATCH UP OR GO AWAY LOOK, POC.tOlt .CAN YOU CHECK WlTM YOUR S'NITCH90ACP Ol'EC-'TOr? ASK WHETM&r SHE'S CECE IVEP ANY CALLS ASICING ABOUT CMA.RLEV QUINN'S CONPITION •• ANP WHETHER THE C-'LLER IS ,._ WOMAN! W><V ><AVIN'T ~ llltUN, AATMUll t . T><~N Utl A PIFFllU!NT WO"I>, ' " ' By Harold Le Dom I 'M I~ A. PUl5l1C:. PHONE &OOTM ! Will YOU Oll.. ME ti GMT 18.\C:.K ! ~ETTER YET, H.l.VE: THE OPER"'TOJl Wilt. PO! WHAT~ TME NUM8Elf CALL ME!· / • • . " ly Mel .'IOU DON'T UNPlll!'STAND. J: CAN'T S~f~L A Wolle> •• ANY WO"P- ly John Miia ·-MQIT l l ~ g • ' • ly Dlelr M11re1 Ain 't no wa4 'IOU qoin' t' qit Beckll over th' ~eat ....,,.,, t' th"front o' th' ca.rt! • Ir Ferd Johnson 'ICXJ'~ ~I :r ~r OllD!li:&1"AIJC> , l(IH(I ~ve~r~1/Jii; 111 so Bl.ASTE!> UftllSIUE MSf DI'/£! THE GIRLS "We had • marvelou VICIUon-tbe weai&hr WU • •wfll we ""' prldkallJ Cooped up la IH ...,,.., Ut1L" !JJ '. ' ' .1 1 ·~ ~ 14 PU.OT ·ADVERTISER , 4'5 . YEARS . OF · SERVICt ~'Sl11c• 1h "foiincliftg In 1926, tho F.M. Torb•ll Co., 111<. ll1t trown lo Decomo ono of Amorlc1'_1 lart••f rool 11t1t1 or9111i11tlo111 with 1 111twor~ of 44 offic.11 1.nil ovtr 600 1mplov111. O"'' I 'It biUio11 cloll1rt In r11I " ~ 11t1t1 ha1 boon •old by ti, T trbtll Co. This grewtlt hot Mon Hit rttwlt of th1 !11clic1t1cl efforts ~f 1 group of 1111r1,1tic r11I 11t1t1 prof11l10111ls 911idH by tho concept of gh•lng ttrYitt to tho p11blic, \ lllST IUY .IN AREAi $31,500-NO DOWN IO.I .. Mtsa dtl Mir -prntl111 tnd 11111 Uvl11111 -utmblt eonvtn1111Ce. 4 t.M- rooms, 2 btlhs, f11mlly r110m, 11Ylng room 9n!Yrte«I by twmdlOmt fl,... pl•~ Gourmel buill-ln kllchet1, d111'1w111ler. Hugf patio fof ou~ Ctll- fornll llvlng" en1tr11lnln;. Ho down G.I. -low down FHA ltm"I$.. u:l-1720. 2 IONUS ROOMS! $36,fSOI .. · 230C1 llCI. tt. of tNI femlty llwlng • ..,1ort11n111111J l 1Mi1ltr 1lied bedrooms. 1 beth1, family room with lnsplrl11111 llreplac• PLUS 2 huge bonus rooms! One fw lhe .chlldrtn -ttlt other •dull•I GINrnlng bulllln kitchen, dllh· Wl1J.h1r. Del]9hlfvl petlo. Rich wood pantll119. M1ny utr11. Pools afllld grtllltld1 -room tor boet or lrlllfr. A blaullfUl home In l1bulous Fountlln Val1•Y· l.Q..%561 ENCLOSED SWIM POOL! $30,HCl.-NO •DOWN G.1. ttrm..:. ·&»Ps dcrwn 111.olttirs, Lov.lv 'tiomt1tn -., COIM Mts1'1 finest 1reas, J IP'<iolll blldrootftl, 1 bllht, bli!IH1t Wl('t ~-kUchth. Piiio. L.Oldl of decking, hMled .. flllll'td pool Wiiii Ill 911Vlpmtm, N"r ' MW dwp' ;.oded Urpt!lrig, cuslOm dr1pn. Pillo. Elegant flrtPlaCI In 11!rldlw f1mUy room. .Walk '° 1Ylr'ffhlng. ~1'20 • CIRCULAR DRIVi-llEDUCED $30001 Prlcld to Hll·lt,131,5001 lleliullfl.ll • ·blldroom, 2 t11Th,1fall'lllY i;oom home with 1Xfi1i ;;,io;1r. J colorld TV O\Jlltlt. Most dtiilribl1 lloof: 'plm wnll larg1 flmlly NlW!I, lnvUlng f1r1pl1C1, delUxe bulllln klk:l!"1, dl!lhwbl!lr, bulll..!n (llhw1 closet. Custom 1hut11r1. Welk to elel'M!'ltary Kl'IOOI. IHuge grounds,' l~capectto pt for "°'I. MMICM • • I ONLY $27,SO~WNll HELPS WITH TERMS your p11ymt'nts wlll be les. thin rtnt, S l1""1'0VI sl111d bldrvoms, 2 betl\t, •«ludlld rto1r llvl!'lll room overloolts 1 p!ctr.rrl$Clut landKlpild Y11rd. Room tor poor. Prlmt location n1ar Gdkltn .WHI co11• l Hr.rnnnirtOn C.nltr. No doWn G,I, ltrtn5 -ktW dOWn 111 othtn lool la..UI ' ' Since 1·926 .. . \ ' • DRAMATIC FEATURES! $41,5001 . . Sunk111 llvinO room wllh high c1ttllldr11 c1Ul11Qs, larQll flmlly room with Mncbome w.1 btr ' oorumus flrepl1ee, 4 btdroon1$, 3· bl!M IMdl ot Gtcoretor titt'"h, w1llplpw a. dr1pn. AJI 1lectrlc push but/or; bUnnn kllchtn, dlShWlllltt. Quit! c:ul-d•de tlr"t. "AttrtcHvt IM'ldc p.iotlo, Sprll'lk· lttS tront &. rear. lmlrilcul1!1 -·rnovt rlgllf In condllk111. Na·ll1l TODAYS IEST IUYI $26,000-NO DOWN IO.I. 10%. clown 1111 alh1r1. '2000 In tl!ClllM _111tr11. Welk to bNcll from'lhlt 4 bedroom, 2 1ep.ior11t1 bath hamit. WlfH dt!lk. klkhen, bulltln rlngt, ovtll & dl•hwe1htr. 125 fl. dHp grounds, nNtly llndsc.eptd. I'll yn. MW. Sl\lrptal llome In •rM •I this low prkt. IM2-6691 REDUC!D $2oo0 TO $32,tool . Submit tll ttrme. 'NO down .to Vilt -1°"' cklwn l!M-Yttt:. 't INCfoUs 'btdroorm, l biol.,_, 20th ctntury· mlr,clt bulllln kll~en. Plush ctrPttl~ thruouf. Cvslom drapes. J.nvltlna llltry :h1U. F1mlfy · ~. Wllll tllllenf llreplac1. NHtly m.nlcvred, llSlltfutly l1ndK1plld. ........ , . . . ~ o-r rff(fy '!3;.~5~~~1! .. !n~~.~;,,i;,~·o~~~~ 't Yn. 11tW beauty. Kl119 sl11d bldroom1, 2'blll!IS, d~ux1 br.rlllln klldlfn1 dbt)Wi&Mr. Hugt tamlly room tor 111 tht 1eHon wllh i,1ndJOme i¥tl baf ' 1n, lnvltlrWil llrR!)llct. Lailds of ptr1 abln1li. Extrts gelof11 'PIC1ur1 book i..lld1e1p- lng tool 142.Ufl MIS.A WOOO '240 FT~2,SOOI L•rr;rn 'homt In 1re1, only' IV. Yri. 111¥11 ( m1ultr 1t1td bldroonw,· ) tMllN. F1noilly l'Ollm '#llh ~lr111ona1 llr1p1Kt;. ·~•" dthlllt 11111111n applfancft, dl111W11illtf. 'Formal cl'lnlnu room, OV1nlnd' .. r11Df. Pool •11111 grounds -11ndidip911 te ptrftttlon. s.D;171' 1 . ' Tarbell Re·aches 81°/o Of The Home Buyen * 10 FU!-L PAGE ADS EACH WEEK. * TARBELL'S EXCLUSIVE MULTIP\.E LISTING BqoK I ' * GUARANTEED SALES. * COMPLETE FINANCING * TELETYPE SERVl~E ' / ''LIST·1YO~R HOME . WITH NUMBER 1'' l ' "M.l . 115" $34,950-NO DOWN IO.J. Low dawn 111' ollltl'I. O..lgn tor Mppy family, nvlno. Prettl91, eonvtnl1nt FCMtnllin \11l1ty, ntir llne•I scllools a. .nGpplng, L.trvt bOnui room wllll prlv•I• .,_Ill, King 1lzlld blclrooins. 21'1 tMllhs, l1mlly room wllh lnvll!ng flr.pl1e1. Pillo IOI' outdoor tun&. 1n1ert1l11lng. "2·"66 TALK AIOUT· LUXURY ,FEATURES! $42.DOO y~ .. aer11-..., protn•lon1!1y dll(orlllld 'Wtlh IXPIOllllt flOCll:ed 11r111 paptr, mlrrti'lld tn1'11r bedroom ckH111t, Mw lh11 c1rpetlng. rlcll wood pontltd d9", •llO. uP 111111111 niom wllh dr1mallc c1lfleclr11 c~llnll•· llr.rllt by ftmous bulld1r -t~b m11n1 QUtllly canslruc11on lhruoull Walk It bffch! No down G.I, t1rm•, IO'llo 'tll Olt'llrl FHA. 1*460~ ' . IXECUTI~ ~QL PALACE! $1t,SOQI : J1DD 1q, ti, "Stiow Plllct.H s apedoUI blldrooms, i btf1'11, format dlplng r;oom, l•m!ly room Wiii! tftgant tlrtpllcl. Gl11mlng Hrhct blilllln klkhtn, dlshw1lher, $ptrkllng pool, tie1tld &. Ill 1r~, lofft• Of dlC:klng, IUlll llnd- tci plng, Club holltl tnler!aln 1111 Iii own tiia:ck y1 rdl a.t;2·25&1 , • ' SOUTH COAST OFFICES * Costa Meia • S40~ 1720 2tH tt.rht-•-4. * HuntilKjton leach 16111 '""""'· *'·Huntington leach f017 A4-, * Huntill9f011 .leach l lJ4 ,f-* Fountain Vallev · , 11114 ......... * FoulJtGln VaUey 17t41 M .. ,.. ... * Mission Viejo . IJll l • T_. a.-* Laguna Hllh 842·6691 962-5566 846-0604 962~1373 842-2561 830-6060 830-6030 . __ ,._2417•-- '*: Sall JHn Capistrano 493-1341 ! ~ ... llllt , • • .t _...,, Mirth 15, 1972 < DAILY PILOT fJ • • • We Sell a H.ome Every 27 Minutes! SIMPLY GORGEOUS ! $41,5001 D1cor1tal"1 drHm wllh dr1matlc 1unk.n !lvlng room, c1llllldr1t arniw. famtly room wllll wet bar, lllndJOmt l!r1Pl11c1, .. P1111lv1 w•ll1NOP1r. Co,. cr1t1 &. brick !Miia. Flnffl bu1Uln gl11mlng kllchln. D"hWG•h1r. lYI yr •• ntw. 811ttr llllln mootl condlllon. Qultt cul-cl.we •lrffl. "2·11h IOLAMOROUS POOL HOMl-$43,tot 2600 sq. II. IXICUIJllt Wllh' tu•ury f'31iitt OlloNI ,4 btdroom•. '"" Mtlll, f1n1t1Uc den wllh ITMISJlve tlre11lac1, 111111ct kllchtn, fl1111t blillttln 1PPllo 1ncn lllihwaslltr, tarm1~ lllnl"8 room. COl'lfolK PllOI. O.llQhlf\ll Pfflo. Lu•ll 1111nllng1 1.-1llr11ri.. 2 11orr, p11v110vst. G!tttnlng lltt'd'#OOd lloort, E•P'Ml111 c1r11ellng, Thi& lt t 'Mr.rS! IM" lo ,,.,,-1(!111 rtll I XICt.tl/ve 11m1ty u111no. ffl·S566 SOLD Since 1926 I ' •• ' ' ii • I I .. • DAlfY Pll.OT Ev1ryo119 Hai Something T~at Someone Else Wanta ' b t '•· Martt. lS, 1972 DAILY · Pllal ·CLASSIFIED ADS ·111e Bigaest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Di~I 64€_5678 for Fast Results _ ..... _ ..... _ ..... General PILOT ·ADVERTISU Jf You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade ;It With a Went Ad .. -! *'*, * * * * * * * iiiiG~or~•~ro~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil=G~•~.,.;r~a~l;:;:;::;:;:;:::;;;;:O....:::;:;;=r~;:;:;::;:;:;:::::;;I O.~-na~ra_I~-..,,,.-~,.. Newport English . • • • • A nENTION BUILDERS •••• HOMISlns .. Tudor Eshite · 4·fafnlly·DlnilNJ I TAYLOR .(O. Corner Gleneagle & llamilton, Costa Mesa. · ............................... $12,500. -I/ llG CAl(YON COUNTRY CLUB North Laguna Hillside • View, good terms. ............................... $35,000. ONCE JN A LIFE'tWE! From curved drive to irtain a:lasa entry -.1uperb! Giant living room with tudot beam• everywhere! Mu.Ive' brick fireplace. Fot'JJW dint. Crown_ eourmet Jdtcben. Family "°I"· 4 h ... rooma. SECLUDED )'U'd. CLOSE TO BAY OR' BEACH! Lowest price, See'" to compare! e..n. now MS-alOO. . i I ' rompleielj in this presU&iou area right I ' ~ to see our flne H1ectlon of l~·~me• I the he8rl of Newport Beach. G anted en- ttance into thll area where you ~ enjoy a <;<>untry club atmosphere. CUltolhized 4 It 5 lidrm homes pi'!'. $87,900 a. $168,000 : · ''Our 27th Y •r'' ;. ',W15UY N. TAYLOi CO., RMlton 2111 San J..,..,111 Hills Raat. Nl~RT CINTIR · . .......II Daily Pilot Classified Ads • ,.._... 0-rol ' " ' lllT OP BAYSHORl!S• · Let ~ 1bow YoU our fine exclwlves -S'& f lldhnl., from $511,500. WaierfronlJ from '148,IOO. • Enjoy thll . lo\ialy, prlv. beach .... , Muy·llatvey . ' ' ·. 2 LARGI UNITH19;500 ·Corona de! Mar -bOth 2-aty. 4 BR., s ba. "!'· Studio type. One hu cozy ,frplc., .Clll'Jl., drapes, blW. 2 Cir gar p1uii carport. 3800 sq. ft. Al Fini . CJ.MIO SHORES New listing -built by Ferdi just 4 years ago. 4 Bdrmll., large fainily rqom w /fire- place & aep. blJUard room. Pool. $140,000. Carol Tatum · ·DISIGNl!D POR HAPPY LIVING . Ym1'11 !Ind charm in this 4 bedrm., con- veniently located home. The price is woilh ~_time to lnve1Ugate. $72,500. Baycrest. Mar1 Lob Marlon 1.IDO ISLI SPECIALISTS We ·bave jlllt sold four of our excluaive JJ.sting1. -However, we have 1iz more from '8,000 • '285,000. Eugene Vreeland ' . ·, ·' IAJTILUPP ' Osarmlnr J.BR. 11ome, teeallftiliy c1eeorat: ed Ii landscaped. Pootme yanl .. Night view.' -Walk to lchooll & tennll. Harriet Davies. "5,500 D•lou PINtf1QUSl-WATIRPRONT .....,, in the h'eart of the fun in Newport Beach • .1 BR., 2 baths, 2 tenacH. Privacy with security. 10% Down. Call for app't. '57,000. LaVera BUJ'lll . " ~ . · HARIOR VllW HILLS < New llllinf. The popular Lust "Sandpiper." l BR., family rm. w/frpl. le wet tiar. Pro- feailo"'1}y landscaped. '69,500. Cathryn Tennille · ZONID l'OR HORSIS 5 Acres in Newport Beach.-'Beautlful area for growing family. 4 Bdnn1., Igo. fam. dining rm. & lanai for lltformal entertain- · irig, off spaciOUJ pool area. $22e,OOO. Kathryn Raulston · HARBOR ISLAND-$325,000 ' Eatly American charm & erace. Exquisite decor. Ample grounds w /poo~ tall Ibid• tree's, BBQ area. Pier & boat dock. Call M. C. Bute . . SHORICLll'l's-APPROX. ~ ACltl Builcjing site overlooiln1 jetty, with direct" access to awlmqllng beach. Plans & render- ing avallabl~. Will consider trade for unlit. $150,000. Edie Ollon ' 133.0700 •2uo --Coldwll. .... ~ 550 NIWPORT CINTIR DR., N.I . recilt.11 Cl.IAN l SAYI CUTE BEACH COTTAGE "ON BALBOA ISLAND" Get ready to spend the summer here! 2 bed· room, 1 hath, FIREPLACE, front patio, one block to South Bay. Only .......... $32,500. "ONE, TWO, THREE" CORONA DEL MAR TRll'LEX Built in range and oven, di!hwuher and dJs. . poaal, carpets and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit bu 2 bedrooms, 1 'h bath w/f.ireplace. F.lcb unit bu 2 car- ports, maintenance free yard and pool prlvi· leges, and from UPSTAIRS · BALCONIES .. A VIEW. .. ...... , ............... $75,000. NICE, AND READY. TO GO I · "OWNER ANXIOUS" All wrapped up in thll""nlce TWO. STOllY 4 bedroom, 3 bath, HUG!/ RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool table, buillln kilcll~, large yard will aceommodate your 30' foot boa~ and a spacious feeling prevails lhru· out. It's only · ................... $39,000. ''WALK TO THE BEACH" CORONA DIL MAR 2 Bedroom, 2 baths, fireplace, cute modern kitchen, picture windows with enclosed aide patio, GUEST QUARTERS over 'the garaae. ONLY ONE BLOCK TO THE BEACH. ............................... $49,000. CHARM, COMFORT, VALUE "IN THIS ·ONI" IN HUNTINGTON. BEACH. 4 Bedrooms, FAMILY ROOM, used brick finlpl1ce, 2 balli!, bulllln ldtchon; o:1-tO lhopping, schools, Jr College & freeway. Only '31;500. • VACATION SITES Lake Arrowhead--Hook Road, forest & stream, view. . ........................... $3,500. Arrowhead Woods-Agusta Street. .. $12,500. Big Bear Lake-Will trade,-Coata Mesa or Newport. . ...................... $30,000. Laite Gregory-North Shore. • ••••... $5,000. Apple Valley ...................... $3,750. Vall Lake Aqeage-126-acres, hills & . view owner will divide ............. $575. per Ac. Kona Hawaii·Beauilful·l acre bomesite, nr. Hilton Hotel. ..................... $5,500. RESIDENTIAL INCOME Two R-4-good for units, Costa Mesa. ...................... $10,000 & $20,000 Three 2 BR units. rm to add more units, C.M. . ........................... $52,500. INDUSTRIAL . , M· 1 83' x 109' good Costa Mesa Joe. $26,0(>0. May trade for R·2 or residential lo~ Costa Mesa or Newport. Office Opaft Saturdays I. Sundays PETE BARRETI REALTY 1605 W-llff Dr., N.I. 642-5200 C. F. Colesworthy & Co. Realtors WATIRFIONT On private Island community. 6 be!koom home that is just right for the water orient· ed family that loves "to entertain. With a little altering the dock, will take a 50' boat. Call for an appointment to inspect this one- of·a·kind home & best of all, you own the land. $295,000. BAYRlQNT WITH a private sandy ·beach. Spacious 5 bedroom 3 bath home with powder room, for· SINGLE LEVEL 5 BEDROOM Large fam. rm.· in this lovely home, close to SI. Johns, schools & shoppil\g. Many ex- tras plus a lge. 6% loan. $37,500 CALL 675-3000 ANYTIME -- oflnJa .JJ/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Linda 1111 Drive Beautiful new 5 BR., 4'h BA. home. Water· front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak r,anelled fam. rpi., frplc., wet bar. Large mas er suite has frplc. & cozy lounge areal view of Bay & the mountains ...... '179,500. For Complall lnformalion On All Hom11 lo Lois, Ploa11 Call: llLL GRUNDY, REALTOl :Mi Bayslda Dr., Sulll I, N.B. '7~161 Ou & Bay View General RUSTIC LOl'T The !-o! COMFORT aboundl in this two bdrm. older borne on one or thole quiet 'side street& I n EASTSIDE COSTA MESA. Eltterlor it used bride and wood. -fireplaoe " .,.. ed brick and ao ii the back ,..,,, l!al'B-Q and .. tlo. Double car garqe: and pe.v· IOHl\I I Ol~O \ . . . 9UAINT COTTAGE Eutside 2 Bdrm, hardwood home on hu,e' ,c:orner 'Jot.• OOuble det&Cbed caf a ce w/room to expand. ·vacant • Ready to show anyttini!t $19;250. Nowport' , at Fairview 646-tlll (onytlmo) leach Estm 5 Bedrooms $24,900!! . \VO\V! \VHAT A VALUE! Birch panel in giant ll room. Real uted. brick fir&- placo, Knotty pb)e ~l>il room and bi,&, tool Formal dine. 5 hUie beclroolM. JOI' to beach. Don't wait -call now -64$-0303. IOHl\l I 111\0 \ ' EARLY AMERICAN -3 bd· rm. 2 bath, uaed brick fire- place, electric kl' ~n. F .A. heat, excellent condition thru.-out, attractively land- scaped, room to store rec- reational vehicles-PRICED at only $49;500 -Owner will consider 2nd T.D. eel alley. Yes, there ii a loft --,===--l n·ow used •• '.. $25 soo• "C" THOMAS Realtor bodroom. . $23,900. • • No Down -Mow In No down to Veta • J,.ow ma! dining room. family room ~!us Jarfe 2 lz:::~Z:CZl:!:l:!:l:!:-:i:i·:, bedroom apartment over garage. Asking all others. 3 Bed:roosu, baths, aeclUded rear 11 .:m ;;.rloola .. the. ...,,.tlng.=::. ~ •ASSoCWU REALTORS 644-7270 . ' $150,000. lutblllff ()fflce • 640·0020 ' Bayside Office • 675-4930 FANTASTIC , ·VALUE. Gonlral EYenlnp Call &46-SDI Hommer & l'alnt E11uall SAVEi to lhops, part llD4 " -~1710. 29611-.0....-·. $22, 900·$24,0001 Your choice o! THREE! VA Al'l'RAISES · We're Joaded with 'em! 2-3 AT $42 500 btdroom ftxtr uppen PLUS I • thiJ ALL TILE (the real Seller leaW>g "'I' Idaho llD4 stuff) m nvmc room and mUJt ~ this 9Uldlnr .f kitchen What a combo' bedroom 2 story Meaa Giant 0cracklln& flreplacei Verde home! Separate din. Adobe block + opett beam ing, 2% bath! 6: den. ceiling! Call now to save Oversized lot with room for -646.0003. pool-and ? For detaill, call 54G-ll51 (Open eves.) IOIH \I I 01\11\ l~l $30,500 SPANISH l!LIGAHCI" Owner anxiool.' s·p an 1 •'' design. heautlf1d' lhrit<al. ,.;, conditioned, """ bvi !arr< Wirll1 rm .+ llrepla<t!, dlnllw ·.....,, s bathl, n. t •. r ... , wood ca1J1net1. brlr. 'ar. so o, sa-aL TARBELL • M...,.Ua •t Talberl, Follntaln Valley Gener ii WALKER & LEE REALTORS -~ HOISU Thi.l's right -with a malllnl addreu ot Newport Beach! HU1e W:nlly home with 5 bedrooms, &eparate den, 11'eparate iamu,y room, separate dinini room, AND .1ep&rate corral wltb 3 horses standing I'M~. Tb1s opportunity doesn't pre-- 1ent Jttelt very often. If you can afford $67.900, better 1lve ua a call. Sb.own by appointment only. SAVI $UOO $2.000 under market value. 4 bedrooms. 2 bllhl. '206 mo. $26,000 all terms. Very ahup IWlmmloc pool home C16x32 pool). Lovely carpe" • drapes, covered patio. GI no -.. FHA low down. or take over .low interest Joan with SlTI -II. Only '28.990. Unbellevable. • ADDID FAMILY IOOM ll72 mo. 3-muter bedroom!, 2 baths. tiWJt·Ins. UM new-$29,750. ' 961.U71 °""" ........ • IA YCIUt· SAClll'ICI s1111 und ... 3.000 sq. tt o1 CUSTOM c111t1nct1 ...... wtlh hleh open beam cellinp. rich --u.c. 3, ho.tho, 3 ..r P· rare, 2 tirepJaces, Invltlna 1undeek aDd ml,JHUc balconies. Owner palcl •~.ooo 6 Y'°"' •to. but l"'vln& countcy and wU1 .mnce at 189,!SOO! Newpmt IMcll Otftce -'46o7711 lt4I Wiii .. Dr • .t...... 0,.. • I 11 WALKll & Lii .. VU NIW CADILLAC & CllDIT CAID TO TOP IALllMAN Cll' COMPANY. Second consecutive )'.ear. Another flnit tor John and Walker A Let. Twtnty·nine Other top saie.people jOln new Wlnnera Orde Club llD4 reeelwd bonus checkl totlllnJ °"' 11~000 at lnDUll A--t. 'Ibo Costa M-Olllco bad 8" mnbtra ID tbt dab. ConcretulaUORI to I.II! C111a M•• OMce mt H ...... lhll., 0,.. •-lltti : 541-9491 14M461 1 \ . P.6,000 PUU PllCI IN HUNTINGTON llACH .L ' ' 4 bedroom. .2 ht.lhl wtlh carpeu "' drip,. 2-garage with • partia]Jy completed room tn prqe. All this plua you can take over a 6% VA lod. 2.sTOIY HOMI • wmt """IH fbed----.... n. ............. ll01F lleotod pooL lloot Bulltlaalm --I H•1tl ..... l•ll!dl Oflw -iG t•I 1• •• ,.If 0,.. •• k11 ..... • t I ' ' • \ • II 'PILOT-AOVUTISER OAILY 'tLOf ---I~ L -·-l~ I -·-]~[ _ .... • • "' • 'll •••• °""'"' Macnab-I rvin e Eut Bluff $33,750 THE 'MOST C Bdrm + I' omily Rm for, tho 1...,, In lhl1 tine OwnU '1tllinc. FJmily room area. 3 B<trrna., 2 bl., tam./ with u&ed n at u r a I brick kit., l -1l;y. O>rnpletel,y re- EXCLUSIVE QUI ET fir"!'place, den-cozy .l warm. de<.'Or. New carp., dra.l>Cf•, 1 .._int, ~tile pl11• "mani-SHORECLIFFSI l <bedrmL,oven!zedmu"r ~ - Step to the beach from Ibis bedroom, p.11.tio rl.rden with cured . ," on a h•PPY 2 BR ehanntt w/beautiful pa.u.thru to kitchtn, bc:k. wtrttt & •Cf'O¥ from priv. carden. You own the land. $3.1,750. park\ Nole: low leasehOld ,& taxes -a very tine value $105,000. 11.t $44,1'0. BA ¥F;RONT , 6'4-llll Broktt Anytlm• Float for large boal -SAn. or power. 33• LR, FR. 4 Fovnteln V•ll•y BR's, 3 baths, PR, Sparkling Adllms at Mqnolia, H ti. m ee h "VA REPO" ·blue pool, Immaculate. Im-un n •• on ~"'=~ med\al e occupancy possible. $23,000 FULL PRl'CE $28,450 ~with $840 down. S BIG VIEW IN RARELY can you find 11. blf:'drooms, ~baths. We hAVf' 810 CANYON home at this price Umt'1 OTHERS. WALKER & LEE' Intriguing floor plan overlook· available at ALL TERMS. REALTORS 968-3.171. ln&: fairway. 5 BR's -4 Call now for appointment. BY Owner: 4 .Br Condo. WALK TO OCEAN 20CIO SQ, FT, JUST l!STID ~ Cloee tn, 1·bdrm. bunaalo-,, •· on R,J lot Ask\nc fl9,950. . l'er an N In Woman'• Werhl Coll Mtry lletfl '41-5611, tl!t UI C +DIN. RM, +FAM. RM. $26,500. * $2800 * ~ ' ~.!' C11ble Coat Set T• sa. 501 Prlllted Panen 0Wl'N"r leavln.r area • '-fu.st aieU! Wall·le>waU carpet., builtin r/o. used br~ trbl. 2 battu1. Xlht Jnd9Cpg~ sub-......_ .... mit. Call MT-1221. --------- SEYMOUR REALTY, Jilil Lido Isla S.,ach Blvd,, Hun~ Bch, _,BA__,Y_,P_R_ON_T_V_ll_W..._ * DOWNTOWN Pri<'f: has Just befon drail.le- Eicquisite 2 bedroom w/de-•11,y ~oottl to $99,:.00 on lllched mountaineers cabin 1hi1 spacious 2 BR., dt!n for ~...0-Q/den/rnlertaining. home w/dining rm. A wet Man\curtod ldscpg v.•ilh bear-bar; entry courtyard w/ Ina avocado trtt on an R·3 fountain, lge. patio on 60 k>t, $31,800. call 842-4466. fl . Joi: 3 car prap .i Udo Nord bay view. c ade rship howaRO lo<i>eoa J ... baU..,-FR -"'""'•1•'6, Wa Ike' r & Lee 129,500, Wolk lo &chis, Milo Excitlng open desi.sm. Sq. Park, GolJ c. fishing. 2 t ----'------ GLAMOROUS VILLA Club<• pools, Ab0>lul<ly"' SHARP 4 BR REAL ESTATE Ma1C0- 3416 Via Udo u~·1vur=: ti6Mr=:s an'•2 levelil. Beautiful ri>o. I -~!L.T0450RS main!. 17649 I --J--'in•s • ....u.... LoUO ILl-u CORNER ho , •-'f I 3 BR .. 31Ai ba, den A privacy -3 BR's -2 baths L.,;==~""""=-,-w. (11 4) 557 ei::""'. me in vo;aut1 u 1 '° -· SUBURB! p P 11.yroom ·' • • • •• ·•• $89.SOO THE &EST HOMES ...... _ $89,500. INTERVIEWING R.E. sales-B A ARK. ~ume S BR 3 ba trad LAGUNA VIEW LOTS men w/or without exp. y Owner, 4 BR, 1"'-BA.. existing 6% GI loan or pay · · 1 a corner. ... IN THE &EST AREAS Th' Unobstructed lrontage. 2 CdM loc. HJR 675-1225.lr Fam rm. + big kilchto'n, LOW down lo NEW con-Pool • ··" ·• · • ..... tl25,000 $32.000. 17926 Ash St., F.V. venilo--' 1,·nanci'ng LIDO REALTY INC . Blocks from ocean front. Balboa Peninsula 213/379-6721, ...... · 3317 Via Udo. N.I!. $:.!,IOl, For immodial• "'" 1--------• LARWIN • 673-7300 :}. '"' "·>: MESA VE ROE A truly unique Mesa Verde pool home. 4 Bedrooms and a , hug~ lot near the Country Club . Beam ceil· Gladys Russell 642·8235. BALBOA Penlnsuht home-. Huntington Beach "*"'4405 ANYTIME · Quiet. near bay, nice area. ;;;;;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;I 1MMAC. 3 BR, 114. BA .. C.ll """169, 545-3543, UKE PRIVACY? BUILOERS LOOK-Sooth palio, Own<r onx iou" lngs, amber skylight, deep pile shag and oodles of used brick. This house is different, Macnab-Irvine College Park Flexlh.le zoning, approx 4i Priced lo sell~ 8 k r , This sharp 3 BR Ranchero acrt', lf.B., hu ild to your ...:.•7_:_3-67..::..:56=,'------ . :.~ • designed for those who love life and love a goOa buy: Just listed, Rf'alty Compal'JY '42-1235· , i , , , 644-4200 BY Owner. Best In College Pk. 4 BR, 3 BA. Top cond. ls the ultimate in quiet liv-deslrt'. Priced right. 3 Bfl, 2 BA home on Lido lng. Lots of shag crptg and * 846-2RIH • wanted from owne.r. Call PRESENTED AT $C8,950. e PHONE 546-5Ho Sell at appraisal. Sf0...&76. a glowing firepl makes this RED CARPET Realtor 613-2332 Eves. A MUST on ycur list of BY OWNER _ 5-BR. f.,.m 7408 MESA VERDE SPECIAL Coron• dal Mar homes to let'. $27,950 .. F .P., 1 ..., .. l BR, 2 Ba. 1unny patio. 2 VA no money down. $1400 rm, ge fencf!d yd, garage. Jots from bchlbay. Comp! total cash needed for non S800 rin. SJ6..4168 eves. or furn. Owner, &42-5424. wknds. ~--'--"-'-'-'---l.tt A<k 'B..1"4 ~E~PORT BEACH Just listtd Clean as a whistle 4 bedroom in top location on a 80':x140' fee lot. Formal dining room, all electric kitchen and classic antique parquet entry, See this one today, better yet call us tomorrow it'.s awfully late. PRESENTEO AT $59,500. e PHONE 645-4500 This heavy SHAKE ROOF beauty ha's just been listed. You'll 'delight at lhe large bedroomi> with lovely dee· IL.d1'i! orator wallpapr-n and birch paneling 10 complement t.he interior. Special rear access Ideal for BOAT OR TRAlL- ,ER! If you don't call, you'U vets. I' 962-4471 C :;:) SCMIOJ $2B,900 Irvine VACANTI READY TO MOVE INI Fabulous, ''Marquette'' model In University Park, S Bdrms., 2% ba's., 111.mlly Mesa Varda F1-om school to Saturdays 1D 1J,ecial trip11. ti's fun to go pla.~s in this outfit. A cabled roat and hat In a bright color i1 just whal 1hr. \.\'ants! Knil coal. ln one pie<-f', neck down, of knhtini lNIOOI: CfHCH CORONA DELMAR· 675-6000 have' missed this. S.12,900. BACHELOR'S HIDEAWAY Cozy 2 Bdrm. charmer - frplc. -low mainlrnance yard. A real BUY -$.12,500 4 BDRM+ DEN Owner muat sell. Entry hall to central floor plan. • 2 patios, 28 foot rear living rm., 4 bedroom, fireplace, brk., built-im, $ 2 8, 9 o o. 1141Hl604, DUPLEX. l BR1 2 Ba, 2 BR-11,1 Biii. B lt-in 11, di.shwa.sher, shag cp~. drps, frplc. 3 car gar. l car space. Waslle'r hookup, Priv fenced yards, patio. Nr shopping Ii bank. XJnt Joe. ~2787 rm. w/wet bar Ii tz;PI. 32 fl. before 9AM or aft 9PM, mstr. suite w 1~1 r pl c; Principe.ls only. Freshly painted inside « wonted. Pat. "1408: aiu1 4-10 Look your beat em brllht 1~-_.nvz ,__ sprlnc days in • lki~ .. ..,.. 1. • ...._, .... topped by a COl'ltrut ICli1 for °"e•ch pe.ttttn -add 25 and crisp t•b de:t•U. Send! 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar out! Offered at $40,~ Newoort Be•ch ' cenls for each pattem for Printed Pattern 9041: Hl:W' MESA VERDE•546-5990 675-3000 2850 Mas a. Verde Drive, Costa Masa NEWPORT1i£Acff • 645-8500 BAY& BEACW TARBELL !!!!!!!!!!!, '~"";;w;••:lc:ll;ff~,O~d~v•~·~N;•w;po:rt~B~•:"~h~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!ll/==;;;~~~;;~z Edinger at Springdale, ' FHA-VA TERMS AVAIL. SOONl Huntlngton Beoch GeMral 3 Bed.rm + family rm, large Spacious Lusk built 4 BR &: LIKE NEW REALTY ---------double-car gar. $25,000, family rm., In Harbor Vlt'w 4 BR. + 3 BATHS SOL VISTA Hms, Upgradod <>•rl"t• ~ $32,500 :ieneral ORIENTAL Skandia model with 18.,c35' $27,500. drapes: sprinklers front &: NEW paint in &: out. NEW LUXURY heat~ pool. 4 BR. Oveniz· 3 Bedroom home, 1~ bath, rear: shake roof, poolsize wall-to-wall !!hag carpet, Ov 1 ed Hving·Camily rm. Llghl, hard""'OOd Doors, double gar-lot. Priced to sell! FORMAL DINING area, er ooking the Bly chttry and sharp. Priced age. Northeast Costa Meaa. MORGAN REAL TY cheery~bright kitch. wtbltin by day & l\l>i.nkling r 6.~st lighls by night right al $39,900. 673-6642 67r-rlo + dilhwshr! Xlnt area In e'ICclu~lve Irvine Terrace 6 UNITS DELIGHTFULLY decorated • Walk to schools! It's Sr-eluded &: restful BIGGEST on 1Ai acre: lot. $69,500. 3 BR, r~am & Din rm., VACANT and waiting ju't atmosphere with £.OWCASE -. Carmel Model, Close to FOR YOU! Call 847-1221. 4 Bedrooms &: 4 baths I UNITS park. Fee simplr. e y SEYMOUR REALTY, Formal dining room Larg bedroom In charm· Comer location. $\00.000. owner, 1951 Port Chelsea. 1TI41 Beach Blvd., J;lunt. Bch. Perched on the hill ing of We.stminsl'11'. De-Roy McCardle Realtor Appt please. 644-1295.-NEAR AL-BEACH with breathtaking view Jigh interior deconti.ng 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. SWEE G OCE N me Drama.tic sunken living rooin coordinated with outdoor 541-772f p IN A Beautih.iJ. heated aod ti.lttted Spack>us swimming pool living. Low lnteresl assum· ~ & HARBOR VIEW Pool, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ln Lovely Oriental &arden · abl~ k>an · • * BUJlD• ONE * Lusk • Bdnn, 2% Ba, fam new palnt inside. and out. $187,400 · -t_, ,.. ..i : ......:....... • ~ Let tis sell you this aprx. 1-rm. $12,800. 644-5386, 3429 Vacant! v.vrnA. or aa---SUiURBIA' PARK acre,;,. which can be oplit S<abree" Ln, •um• Sit~ loan,· Quick pof' lm'ma~~Jai, 4 b.:Qroom horor-Build on one. keep the other ANXIOUS . Several 4 hr session. $35,900. Call 8.f2..4.teS -REALTOR,s SINCE 1944 on comer k>t. Ptlci! reduced fur horscj. When honit'!I are homes. lmmed. occup. to 60 10 $4l.~. ilnd owner's new no longt"r" WA!"ed, sell the days, Agent 67>7225 HIR. Ieadership .AJ REA L E:51ATE hom·e i1 allno1t ready. 10% extr~ site and ~alize a BEAUTIFUL location 2 profit. -~=--~~~~ Down """'"""n" • .,, VA All f s~~ story, 5 hr, • ·~' 3 lrplc, SWIM POOL JoaQ. Terrific Mbrhood, one yoors or ,,.,,UUl.I Agent 675-7225 H1R Or ask a.bout our other 5 BDRMS. c-l l11li -1 'i ·llii ---l\"11ll11 r ''SINCE 1946'' l st Westem Bank Bldg Upiversiry Park, Irvine O•ys 133-GIOl Nights HOSPITALITY HOUSE A warm welcome awaits you here. Large family room, panelled living room with dining area, shag carpeting, nev.• paint, 2 fireplaces and park location are just a few of the featu~s of this unique 4 bdrm, 2~ be.. townhouse. Yours tor only S.19,500'. ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Qnter, Irvine Call Anytime, 83J...082I FOR ale by owner, Beaut • BR bomf'", Fam rm & Formal din. rm, on &'l'ttn· M-11. 833-100. mile from ocean. Pitrc..ls from $L1,500 SUPER 2 Br., 2 Ba., paol, -' FITZPATRICK'S great Harbor View. Agent. 673-4400 Owner move. 5 Bedrooms. Laguna. &each swim pool, xtra pullman -"--"""'-'-'------ C BDRM,. 2 BATH $12,795 Built On Your L•nd -1343 sq, ~ Living 41'tl -All lath & plaster -tlardwood cabinets -Breakfast ba~ -Pullman ba.lhs -SpaCk>u.s wm:lrobes JUST $9.53 SQ, FT. Pl&.nning·Design-Financing I Also Duplexes and Triplexes CALL 537-0380 1Cfi66 Westminster Ave, G.G. OPEN 7 DAYS tii~u!!N~"Q HERE IS OPPORTUNITY $3.000. down and 11ssume ex- lsting 7Y,% loan. Use a.II your cash 10 buy. No loan .fffl tn' this lov~ly 3 bed- room plus finished bonus room. C11.ll now for lurther information. $33,500. ~'?:rs WALLACE REALTOl(S · . ....;_5"!'41CI- (Open Evenin9ol - xc:eptldnal H- in C°'*Je PClllc VIEW Capistrano Valley Realty 675-12'25 HlR A view h9me with a REALI.. Y 31501 C..mlno Capistrano Cost• Men baths, huge !A>nlly room, HANDYMAN out1tandine view-!, A mar-San Juan Capistrano volnv• woman dOl(gned kltch C9J.1124 3 BR, 2 BA• thick •hog carpe•""· ... -SPECIAL pensive decorations. N c that a.II 'NOmen would love. Realtor Since 1965 Freshly remodeled, painted, 3. Bedrooms with a master YEDY PRIVATE decorated. &: new carpeting. down terms, brk'. $31,000. Sprawling ruiific ranch style 842-6691. home, · localed in finer, bednn suite. Call for a nigh! ~ . La.rge living & dining nns., TARBELL appointment and really fall Rear yard wilh 2 patios, 4 hUge master BR w i th in love. HURRY\ The first large bedrooms, 3 baths, ri~place. Alley ll cc e 11. • one who St'et!I this will buy larfe Uvlna: and formal din· Quiet eaatside 1 t re e 1, l61ll Be•~c__h Blvd., it. $38,500. on FtiA/VA with ingroom. Wa.l,k to schools, Huntincton Beach a much lower price on con· lit grade thru Jr. College. S32.500. --=G"O"V°"E="'R~N"M~E=N~To- ventionaJ terms. Beautiful landscaping, Slate CALL (i) '''·l•t4 OWNED e LARWIN e '""" ,.paralolaU11dryroom A ... -' .. ~ FHA t. VA r<po•se•sed 968-4405 ANYTIME ~~ m~,!! ~.,!!re. Please call 7;~.... Townhouses & homes. Low • ay . .p.N,-... Nt•r Ne•,•rl P••I orrlce down. No points or Escrow Starter Home! 111".:t.. . t«L Gov'I .. ,,. c1.,;ng N 8 h ~~ BY OWNER-cost.s. All price 11lilges. call ear eac: es --·~ 5 BR (convert to <+huge 968C4R44E1ST REALTY $19 ,000!,~ maSl<r} 2 BA, !am/dining, A LOT FOR A UTTLE! Per· Xtra lge lot, cul-de-sac. All feel starter home with hlg BLUFFS '•PLAZA'I cu11tom feature111ncl new air ~~~ F~LY~~~ ~~ ~undg~ &p~~I:', 'P:7 ~::.r: ,,., • Lowest leasehold IN KNO'M'Y P.INE! Cabin • Very ~ al $3:t,500. kitchen. Cul de iac lot. Jog A Maintenance Dues Drive brJt~ Kerry Lllne to beach. Walk to shops. ENO UNIT .. 3 Bdrms.. 2 e 54S-8000 CAii now 645-0303 baths. Low down It monthly -' paymtr::. Xlnt value at ME~ Verde 4 Br. Owner $3.1-,500, Move-in cond., im-trasf. Reduced to $31,500. No med. Oct:Upancy. dn. VA. 1616 Elm Ave., HEL£N B. DOWD 1=:~""1,6!~51:::-' .....,,.,,,,__,~ BY Owner: 3 Br .. 1% ba., I OHi \I I 01 \0\ ,,. t " ' < ! RE·AL TOR 644-0134 w/w crpts, bltns, xtras. Im· '• "'25 500 mac, 127'950' ""'996. · ~ • .. uNns BY 0wner. x1n I.rt. Br. , Eastslcle cliarmef. Spolleu 2 Prfme Co~ Xlht Costa Mesa ba., corn. lot. Rnl tar· boat. bf?droom home, Plenty of 1_. 1 -·-~ ~1~ Be • $24 ooo. 642-6459. room for camper A: boat. """· nvaiwn ~ • l.I~-'-' ~~----~ Guest area, wOrk shop. t~r · lhan IO% .re _ : J\JA't D•n• Point Low, low down. Hurry, al hsted ~ $98,SOO. Wont last --=-· ------- this price it will sell fast. long! 3 BR. -BY OWNElt Ca.ti 545-8424 (Open Eves.) It 1!1 ·~uy walking to Dal'\ll SEPARATE MAID/ GUEST QUARTERS 2300 sq n sina:le 11ory, room to span! Move in this Sutn· mer arid live: lOonge Or-juM enjoy the beach. Call MZ-4466 •eade rship ..m._J REAL ESTATE VERY ANXIOUS! Beaut. pool hme. Heavy sl\a~e roof. 3 BR, 3 Ba, 3 car gar, 2JXI +. &q. lt. Housewtre·• pride A: jOy, Xlnt nbrhd. Sac. Sale. * Ctinlilry 21 * REAL ESTitTE IC2-112 ! WALK TO BEACH "VILLAGE OF LAGUNA" aection. Pet.ailed exterior of ROUGH WOOD PLANK, BRICK, WEATHERED CEDAR SHINGLE ROOFLINES. 1 Well deiigned, 3 BDRM. Ii FAM, DEN FLOOR PLAN, hu dbl door entry hall w/floon or poll1hed agate • SPACIOUS REAR L: IV . RM, HAS CENll'ER FIREPLACE, IN EARLY c'ALIF. DESIGN, &liding glass doors open to patio It yard BADLY 1N NEED OF LANDSCAPING &:: WEEDING. W IW 3 h ll g carpeting &. custom drapes t.hru-01.11. COZY FAM. DEN HAS RE.SAWN WOOD fAf>IE!, ED WALL.S & T J.>L E F'LOORS. Open11 to com- pletely modern kitchen with BILT-IN RANGE It OVEN, OISJ.IWSHR., DISPOSAL. elc. & deep tiAined hclwd. cabinets. Thi• better quality home is an OUTSTANDING BUY FOR SOMEONE WITII A GRFXN THUMB , Offered for $36,950 FULL PRICE Lower On. Pymt. O.K. or will ~II lo ELIGIBLE VETERAN ON V.A. TERMS. 4 nice ~ma. .14' baths. Dining room, large living . Lachenmyer l R" 1 II ,>t I room wttb brlc:k IitePJ.IM;e. '646-3928 Eves: 548-9416 Point Marina f,rom this modem 3 BR, 14 ha borne. S.·per-1lzed 2-<:ar gar A many xtras •~ offered for $33.900. 639--388.1 or 'drtw from this sharp 4 bedroom dishwshr and prof lnd&cpd yan:I. Full price 123,950. All t:rrrns. Vacant lor quick oc- cup, Call 54G-8555. S\!ERWeeD REAL TY •18964 Brookhunl, F .V. MISSION REALTY 985 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Phone 171 4) "94-0731 Full """"' plumbing an.r -~w=H~Y~R~E~N~T~?­ , brand new palnt. V•ry nle< yard for ycur 1arden. Priced ' at onlY lll,(Q). with a. 7'4 90 ~ 30 yell\ loan aviuable. 1 Please call today. PRICI! REDUCED by; :.Sl'6 Monunlla, 3 BR., familY rm,, iu baths. E1st Bluff ~ I-'"°'""'"""--''---Decked pa 11 o, custom COMFORT ABLE 4. BR. home. Iii• I C~ CUTIE Vflth nice pool a:. room 'for Income unit. To be redec- araled , A told at $44, ~. J»uy now A: aavel • When :yqu can own thl• ! Blt·in kitch.; trplc. Secluded TWIN "f-llllS'' _ dn.-•: cloM to beach A bedroom home &:; bath wllh p.tlio. Good Ea1takte Colla IM · .l.~.:1 PR.)'menls less than l"t!nt. Meu 'location. $33,7&0.. _.,_.,, Frplc., w/w csr'fl, ~---bm' 11 blMI. Gresl neighbor s vw•ft:r anxious 10 11u •t • Call: 673-3663 54.WTIS l~. bluffs site beavtlts $33 950 oUen. Full price 123,000. GI Brand apanklng new 3 bd· 96i,..i058 Owner/Agent no down tmna. Ca JI rmL, ~ bl's,; yj_tw prop.. . --=-==='"'"'-- 540-3$M. ·' .rtl .. , LaviJhly decoratod $ QUICK $ ,$HERWe eD ,RE~L TY • priced to .,m ExdU!lve WI IUY HOMES 1l96C Brookhunt, . !.:!: with -Mlt. KAS.ABIAN "41·9604 SUPER PLAYPEN STIPS TO BIACH ,lf..... KASABIAN BAYSHORES. 2 BR l den, (N'"'POrt-129 500> f;. I~"' Decorator's pad. Must .ell. 3 BR., family nn.,' 2 baths, tw.~ ~ REAL ESTATE:' Submit all offers, bltns. Pooll, lenni• rec. :S( ;i :~ IL --GEM area, CAU. NOWll I. BY Owner, lol<e o v u 1510 w. Cout Hwy,, N,B. CAYWOOD REALTY ' ti•\ rca ly !'!."'n'!,_.,'.',~ •• '!1'1!! 6T"~ REALTORS 6'2·4523 * Jea.12'1 * ,._, ~n, ~.-.-.-. •-2414 Vista Dr:1 Oto $42,500. Nttd $8800 Oovo'n, A l'iod want ltd ii a load ~ Pilot Want Adi btvt Newport 'Btacn No credit chec.kr. U>-6920 '""-bvplnt pion, IH-IU! ANmME uk r.r Jack, ' . COTIAGE Walk to beach A-lhoppinr from this elate-In v•fuc. Great weekender, witb good 11"0Wth potenlh1.I. Best buy In town for $27,500. l .. ' \ ' I * * • .. • NEWPORT * Alr Mail and Spttial Hand!-Women's Size• 34, 36, 38, «), Ing; otherw\R third-clua 42, 4'i, 46, @, 50. Size 36 de.livery will take thrff {bust 401 talu~1 1-718 yda. 1 wee~ or mol'I". Se:nd to 61)..inch: scarf 14 yd, J9.lftd'I, RIVJERA Condominium living In the Back Bay area overlooking beautiful Newporl Beach. Hf'"re's an opportunity 10 own a home lor lt'M than N'nl. 4 mastr-r size bedroom11 w I huge walk-in closets, 3 bath11. Floor-to-celling fireplace in graciowi: living room, w/w crptg & cu11tm drps fhruout. AM /FM Intercom. Bltlnii in- clude dlshw1!.hr. ALTf'S of green gives a park-like at· mosphere to lh~ magnifi· Cl"Ill homes priced from $26,250. 10% down -total paymts as low u $26. per mo, lnCludes an. Models open 1rom 10 tu 8 daJly, rTor: low Irvine lo Santa Iubt>ll. Directional signs to the moqe111 or call 54().5147. VILLAGE REAL ESTATE. * * * * • • $28,• Seeing is Believing Alitt Brooks, the DAILY U:VENTY·P'IVll CZ1ft'I PILOT, IO!I, Needlecratt for e.ach pattern ... add '5 Dept .. Box 163, Old Chetsea ce.nt1 for each pattern tor Station. New York. N.Y, Air Mall and Speclal Ha.ndl· 10011 . Print N•nMI, Addre11, 1na:: otherwise thl~-dtll Zip, rattern Nu1nber. delivuy will take tlfte NEE O LEC RAF'T "12! w~lul or mott. Send_, Crochet, knlt, ~le. F~e Marian Martin, the-DAILY d irections. 50 ce nts. PILOT ••• p ""-' TU, llt\em .,..to'., NEW! ln1tan1 Macrame. 232 Weit 18th st., New B11.sic, fancy knots, pat-York, N.Y. lOOll. terrl!I. $1. Prln1 NAME, ADDl&lll F.111y Art nr Hairpin er,,. with ~IP, 8IZI: and nn,a: ch,.t -over 26 designs lo k $1 NUMBER, ma e. · SEE MORE • I 1n11tant flN'lchet Bonk -· 13 Pr •I Fashionl and choole «* le.am by picture.1! Patterns. pattwn. he trotn. MW $!::o.np~te tn1t.aa& Gift llDolri SOriJw·Sµmmet C.talos. All ... more t_han 100 ·~· ... tt. aizff1 Only !iO cents. sf'"' I 'j ~ #" :w;.: ~=;.:11 It Jiffy Ru.1 1loott ... 50 $1. cents JN~TANT FAS~ Quilt boot 1-11 patte.rnt. 50 BOOK -Hundredl et cenm. 'l ~f!uhfon~,!!~f~octs.~~$1~,~~~[I MalllWnt QlllH Book :t -50 1 cents. · Q9Ht11 lot Tnday'• Llvlar -I _ ~~.,.._ J rAJ 15 beautiful p1.tterns. 50 . --· 1:!!1 · cents.• -----~---· •.. a.nd what you 1et: 11 Moltlla Homes Newport S.ach Bick Bly! I r , I~ i-"-•-•_•_•_l• ____ 12f_ Just oll Tustin in beaut. ...... twlllt U 11:!.J Newport Riviera. '-------:~ CONTEM~ Now showing 4 bed.room, 3 I GRIEN RIVlllt baths, terraza entryway, Newport Belch . Great Fam.Uy Par;tt: ~ beaut. w/w crptg It MONTHLY SPACE RENTAJ- decora.tor drape1, • to n e I .;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;i;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;; I FROM $&19,50! firepl., AM/FM -Intercom, EAST BLUl'F lAJak 5 BR. 3 A arut fam1Jy comml.U#r dishwshr &: bltns. ALL pla~ BA •. fa.m rm. 2 trplcs, 2600 wltb comfort Is luxury W ned colllmmunity with •cre1 ICI'· tt. $61,000:, 644-1102. ev.,.one. Located 10 JDla. of ro ng green. Swimming eut of Anaheim. an .. pool, putting green, loads of RiYenide Fwy, Take Gr.I. animitle1, Total payment of San Clement. River off.ramp adjacent tt $263 per mo. includes all. ~ mvel" Gou Coone. 3 Bedroom, two-story-from SHOF(ECLIFFS 4'UJ. Greea River Dr. $26.250. Follow Irvine No By Owner, 4 er., 2 Ba., Corml. ** 71fl737·13'M lo Santa Isabel Avl!!'., follow frplc, dri-. nu crpt A: 35 ft. Moblla Home signa lo mbdet or ca.II wallpaper, 1u bbq, ocean BEST OFFER. 646-3180 aft I 540-5147, Vlu.AGE REAL 'C"-vw. Pvt. bch. Maw xtra. PM .i;.rol.ate exclusive sales agent. Immed. OccupanQ. Appl ~~·o=~~--~­ only s.2.Qoo. Sff-.813I or lOd'.t' MobUI!!' home, encloled --NO POINTS '93--01111 .,,.., 833-1611, Ext cabana. Furn,. In A'!'!I' Park, downtown C , a , L 2838 dya. sa.arut. No otn Commitltt 'S.n JUM Caplotr.,. .BUDGER ~-~. uiii)I, When you buy this cu.st.om ~;...;;,;,:;,;,.,;;,;;;:;;.:.:.;.;;.;;.~ -~~~ duplex on Newport. Island. l:HvEsrta:NT • xln't cond. Must be moved. Complelt" with pier • float. OPPORTUNITY $8500. Owner will carry 1st T .D. Jn SanrClemente. A him bld-1 ~=,-,,(~21~3~) _69~1-31~75~~~ $82,000 room, 1 bath home on M NICE lOxlS w/r&Wed added Co RI ... kll. Weil localed tor ~ rm. Xtru. toveJy Pk. o:in. • · 111• ping ar beach. 1d'Ml for b@. loc. $3100, M&--St •I' ginning Estate builder. EaAY I~·~·~!~·~·~· ~-,,,-,,,,..,,.---. J MARTIN Te~i.t..PRJOE S27,700 19AChampionMobuiHom., FITZP'TRICK'S lli!ll, 5 9lar Parlt, 1-:'"' REAL TORS 644-7'62 " c M ... _,, -• pnl. Cai>l•tnno Volley ReJ'lly ' ' ~~. u• 4 BR, 21/2 BA 11so1 eami..., eapl11nno 143-Z'i!, On llighland Dr. Uke new. 4 San JMan Ca1>ietrano NEW Moon '69, itx4.l w/ spacious btlnns. &:: family 493-1124 extnt•lncJdc'bto Gaw~I rm., 2\, bllthr;, stlding sla.u ,.:..R;•::•:..lt:.or:...:S:..l_::.;_1;,:ffS=-porotl, 2 BR.' 2 BA In 5 Stat }l -~l' ' Park, 638-5022, 531'"'"'4-WA. o'\ooks 1t 11.-. .. mg Tustin pool. Many extras. A t'a.ml· ly home to be proud of. $43,IOl, CALL G> 646·l4J4 lftA'--Ta EAL TY Nt ar Ne•ptrl P••• Offle• -- I EAST 17th ITRllT COSTA MISA 445 Ft -i.., 1 !lh SL IJU.lltll --.. -.Blot,'~ ci,M Hl1hw., '""' .... • C.1 I land " bldp, • Ac<nl. 61>-12'l5 H,l.R. FOR ACTION •• CAU '42°Hn ' i . .. -· • I ' --IWl.r I'll.OT 'I I I 1. 1- 1 , , I ' .I • • • " 1 • ,. I J . ' , I' • ·' " •• . ·' (I~ ·-., I Z· " • ' •• a I ; " ... '· .. • . • ' ( . ' . . , ' . . • iROfl's ••• well, he's iust AROllE • ·Some of America's Greatest Comic Characters . ' . SUNDAYS in COLOR in the DAILY PILOT Htrt'• h1r1'a . here'• CHARLIE BROWN •• , Md LUCY •• , and LINUS •.• and GORDO DICK TRACY ' ·1 , . .. • • , TUMBLEWEEDS • I • 1111 but not -hi"'' htl'l'I ICl!ROEDEll .. , and INOOPV FAMILY CIRCUS MOON MULLINS • • HILDIGARDE SOPPY Now ••• The New Sunday "Edition of the DAILY PILOT Delivers Plenty of _Laughs Every Su~~ay _ Morning • ! -- . 1 ) • ' i . .. • ' I • • . . • . . . . . • • . . , . , I , . ' • • • • . . • • . • • • • • • . . • • • • • • . ~ . • . ' • : . . . ' • I • • • • • • • . • • • • I • • • ,• • ' • • • • . • . . • • • • • • • • • • ' • • ' '· ' . • ( • ! I • • • •• : •• ' ' I • I . ' ' ' ' . ' ' • • ' ' ' . I ~ ' . : 1 ' . • • •• •• •• ' . •• q i I I I 11 R Buy . a ,· Border ' to Border Bargai Every classilioCI want ad in tho DAILY PILOT appears in every edition every day. That means your 1d win be seen in papers delivered to homes and sold from newsracks from border to border an along the Orange Coas1 ... an the woy from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All •• e . Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeb Laguna Beaeh Irvine Saddlebaek San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daffy newsrack edition) ' For One Price With A Classified Ad • Phone 642-5678 YOU CAii CHARGE IT, TOO • DAILY I'll.OT ff llt] ·305 ""''· , ...... 'Units Eostbluff ~L-ldo_l_si.,.....----·lc~.-,..,.,._..,.MeM,.....----1·N-•_w_Po<t ____ ch ___ lolbN Penll11ulo 16' ~ Furnished 300 HouAs Unfurn. MO Apll, l'um. Coste-. , .. Income Propertv --~::'::"':'::~"::''"'.'""".: 1100 -1110\IE JN AlJonnc.o l BR., 2 Ba., Wind'°' 2Bn .. 2bathunlts.2,... OESIRABLE HARBOR View lloou-l e ll$WKltUP-OnOc<an e ShldyEtmJ.1. .. m-Pool Square, $221600, old. Fu11y carp. A dra.ped. RENT /or 3 m08 beclnnlfli' llO?itE ~. family room. din-Lo\'dy Bacb.l Br-Rooma: Oiildrtn't Stction l BR:, 2 B&., l 1tory Tiburon, Covered parldnc. Best· loca· April l. May It J une. 2 Br 2 ba ptd .....,., fOl'Cf<I lna room. Av•Uahle April Mtld 1trvict-Pool-UUI' pd ~-. • VDl\Jm 1 a. 1 Br. $29.500. · tkm. $150,CO>. ~1a.lUl't! couple only, no ~l.1. . · • C • u .... ~. • 1-15 s.MXI per month ~ue. e Call 67~<11> e """" • • • BR. 2" Ba Y'"· Pac' .. -110 chlldren. RA!uonable! ltr heat, Garb-dlsp, blt·IJlS, An 't· "'1270 '==-,,,.-::-;:::--.,.,= 1'Jroo:i nwmo. Up $219fD n " .... .we, >;, '7S..,050 0 615-1892. frplt', pal}(), tara~. '"°aler ,..en . vn-. 110.\tE like 2 Br duplex, lT. E. 22nd St. e , M~ 'l BR. 2~~ &&., Villa Pacific, __ .~---.=----ch_,.----furn. Adults only. no ~s. 4 BR. 3 BA. fam. rm., pool. qUlet residential area near HOLIDAY PLAZA W Ml'' [•MT Cl.,& Newport -RATE REASONABLE Back bay, Kids OK . ·~ach. UIS winter. 6'f3..31'SJ. DELUXE S,pacloua 1 BR. 3127BR,500.2 Ba H l Co t '--".;' ~====--EASTER W£EK: 3 Bedroom Across from Country Club $350/mo. 1-4 days, $40-Slll "-"n""" .. ~-duplex. 3 br, 2 tum apt "" H led ~ ' ·• un · 0 "' H"""S S 275 M D * Pl 54U706 M H nna ··~• -• •-.. ~· $21,900. 7 ""¥ E boulf. Family $150. Call esa r. l, ='·,,.,.•-=.,,·==-.c=::. b.i, all :c:tru. $400 lse. Am~e parldnc. Adults -no 3 BR., 2~S &., Tiburon, 5 _ 2 Bdrm. &. 2 _ 1 Bdrm., 673:8793. e Students! 1 BR nr OfC· CANAL \\'Btuf'ront duplex 3 .213/191)..n73 Slflt&. 1965 Pomona Aw. CM $30,500 fixer uppers on 2 R·2 Iota. Hou1t1 Unfum, 305 pet Ok, AU util Inc $85. BR, 2 ba., patio, yriy Ille. Cost• MeM LGE 1 br apt, part. turn 1 2 BR., 2 Ba., llunt. htarina, $875. nlontWy income. --...,.------ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900 S325 ~to. AgL 6f6-2.414. .;..;.;.;.;; ... .;......;.....____ Sl25. turn $135. Adlllb . lfil,500. $79,500. I ·G_._ .. _ .. _i ______ • RURAL Livlnt< -2 Br w/ Soni• An• Heights Cena del Oro l.'1dry, .... Qul<t. NT We h•ve more CENTURY 21 ~2-1771 frpf, klda/pet $lT5. 2 BR. Febe'td yard. $l7S ALL 1!I'IlJTIES PAID mrkt1. 19Xl \Vall.cf' No. B C•ll UI •nytime. SO. OF HWY AlA Rent•la e 645:3900 1not1th. First and Ii.1st. Avail Compare> before you rent • 54$.Ml!. farwin realty inc Corona del t.1ar DUPLE..'{. 2 El Toro no"" 642-t239 aft 6. CUstom designed, featuring: 1 BR. l\u'n. Eutskk, trr • t61 4405 ~5411 BR Ir 1 BR. Close in to C d 1 1 • Spacious kHchen with in. fenced patio, crptd, drpt, beach. Many amenities. CaU FOR l'fnt Dr lease, 3 Br .• 2 on om n uma direct llehtlne l'!tc. Alt utll inc. $140, per Duplexes/Units 673-4308 Agent. Ba., spacioua yard \\•lth.1 __ u_n_f_u_rn_. ____ 3_2_0 e Separate din's area mo. &U4'00. ,...'"_'-_ _,-.,... ...... _16_2 Lota for Sale 170 covered patio. $265 mo. General • Home-like s!Orap $115 Attractive studM>. New Il.B .• Beautiful extra 1 ...... 3 1P'.!ho~ne~ll30-,j87~~-~J~.::-----loiiiiIDiC'C.:;&:'.'""s;;;;;;;: • Private patios Fl & tree '6" Bu11den Attention ;: " BDR.'1. Condo., Sauna. •Closed garqe ,v/storage crvt. ow"r1 •· Br., 2 Ba I:. 2 Br., 1 Ba., Fountain V•ll•V Jac"~'l:l S\\'itn. tennis. S2'1S • 1-UIJ length marble pull-Do\\'ntO\\'tl, ~A Broac:hvay, kwely lge. grounds, g;u·age Just North Of The ---,--,--.,,...,,-1 -· C.f\1 • + huge park'g, On cul-de-Western Who'to House 262!) Harbor Blvd. LG . 4 BdrnJ., 3 ba., li'w'\ni:" 1110 .. 968-2705 afler 6 P.l\I. nian Bd 2 •"500 Ow 8" "76 t.:AL' OL'L'Po rn1 ., la ...... kit. and dln1 .... Coile ••-so • King-si rms EXTRA Iarae 1 Br, Ba. sac ,,_, • ner '"""" · Panonunlc ocean front vie"' .....,...._.,., ·a~ "'b n.. e Pool 0 ·~·--..,.. pool til -·" Adults -~ Serving Newport-Costa ~1e!>Ct area. Fenced-in back yd. • ...,..... ~"= -• u .-u· .... r Dt.x-Dana Point duplex lot, can build 22 unit!$, l'On· urea. Qvet• 500 rentals J\otullt leave state, 963-l0fl7. 3 BR. 2 Ba, cpts, drps, rounded n·lth phuh land· 35. $145. MS-4636. rv!b9:.1B3:2 ~-Lantern ~6~~·Po~~1C:to~-~~~~~ available now. Our fee is Huntington B••ch blt-lns, dllh"·hr. 2 pools, clb. ~~~~11ffv1.ng at us best 'D'"o_n_o_Po=-1:-nt-:-----i &: Catalina. 259'c dO\vn. Total $15.00. \Ve gUarantee 5etvlcc hoose, $235. 54-ENTIO. Large 1 BR $17!.i • UNITS wanted. I-Jave buyers price $ll2,000. S46-t600. or your 1noney back. Fair? Baeh. Pad. $85. Util. Pd. 3 BR. 2 BA, priv balcony trrn.mES FREE l\:n~~ r!~~~ -~~tiM Jor duple."<es up lo lge urrlls. INVESTMENT DIVISION Call OO\Y. !furry . overlooks pools & rec aren. 36:i \V. \VUson &42-1911 ...,.:;;"~le\V unit.II. Adlt cpl., Agent 67~7225 lfIR.~ EKi;: Crate s1ro Util Pd. Sl9S mo. l\tlkl' 548-3869 e\'es. .--.c=°"=="°".---· UNITS "'anted. Have buyers 1 Bdrn1. on lhl' ·\\later. Cozy Collage, rear $120 LOW WEE Kl Y no pets, lite dutJes. 613-0507 . tor duple..'tes up to lge units. Furnished \\•ith u t 11 i t i e s Flowering 'l"ree Sl li. Pri. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 RATES Huntington Beach Agent 67~1225 Hffi. paid. $200 Year round. You AU Come 2 Br. ~l.40 S J C 1 20IO Newport Blvd . w/uW. Don't get .,..·onied· an U•n •P atrano Costa Mesa EXECUTIVE SUITIS Income Property 1'6 CHOICE Jot, JOO'xla5', R-2 2 Bdrm. Rent reduced lo get mad • HELP·U Rentals NE\V 2 BR, patio kitchen 642-2•11 MOTEL APTS. WATERFRONT Tµ paved alley 348 E . St7o. Has retrig. &-bltns. will get You a Pad. \\'/bllns shag w/.:V &. cu:iit STUDIOS & 1 BR•s. 727 Yorktown llvd. SHELTER. Dock your boat, Rochester St.~ C.bf. Short Fenced yard for pet. 1-lalleluja 2 ~· $150. utl pd dl'Jls, double gurage, $18,j AVAILABLE l94n BEACH BLVD, iellle 3 new units, NB. Call walk to 17th SI. shpng. cntr. crpt/pal, ku:ls/J)f't. • ilUlT)' mo Adults. Evf!!I 962-8197. e Full kitchen AT YORKTO\VN 1 d ils Pvt 714 $21,T':iO. 673-9509. 3 Bdrm. House. New decor. Ju111p'n Jacks 3 Br. $155 · • 1-leated pool 5364411 6~~~~. • • owner. : Children & pets \ve lcon1e, or Cook ie Crumble $90 ru· \Vtr Duplexes Unfurn. 350 • Laundry facilities Low Weekly Ra .. a ~~~""',_.,,,-,--I Mountain, Oestrt, \\'ill consider singles $225. Lill'! t-.1iracles 4 Br. $200 C Me e Fl't'e utlliUes STUDIOS a I IR'S. 21 Unit-Nr. Shop'g. Res.art 174 cpl, drps, pal. ocean vu oat• •• • Free linens • FUll kitchen 2 &. 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8231 Ellis tt BIG BEAR LAKE LANDLORDS! Your next HELP-U •• 530:6311 1 BR Duplf.'X, part!)' turn .. e T.V, I: maid senr. avail. e H .. ted _, Ave HB. $420 M 847-3957 tenant may be on our ,._ __, t _.. Need a tax deduction? Try 'ti r t Call f free •NEAR Beach -I Br, cpl/ \Valer "" gcuuener urn. e Phone service e J.Almdry facWties •'NEW'' this cabin-in-lhe w 0 0 d s, 1'~t~ ng 18 : us or drps, ch.ild/pel ok, $115. Adults only; oo pet 1 . * •-WK. & UP * e Free utllltia 2"UNITS "mg"'""''" ALA R I I e 645-3900 "°'9"'. -r• ~-"-· "' Com pl. finished only $8,950. en a I ..,...~ ..,... e Studio •· 1 BR Apts • '= ~··• ADULT APART'IENTS $90 1 BR hrne, kids OK I:-=~.,,-=--""='-• V It --u .u ., OR start \\'/a secluded lot 2 BR 11; BA gar Sharp e Roorb $15 WK A Up. • T. • u ... u lef'V, a vau. 114 E. 20TH ST. for only $950. and WE'Ll. $110. sngls/cpls C.l\f. e HARD to Beat! 2 Br, fncd nice·~~ .. rerrlg sir.o/mo ' • TV &: Maid Servi...._ Ava.ii e ear.B-Que COSTA MESA BUILD a cabin on that lot $135 alone on Joi, kids/pets yrd, encl ear. kids/pels. ...._?"-'.:.... L' .... •2951 • _. e Phone 1trvlce l•-a, Br.-n ., • ., • ......, $77.50 2 BR pvt hmc. vac. $155. , '""'""" ,,..,.. • Phone Servlcfo. Utll Pd ,,-.c.o n.n. VU"'t;JIJil for you! Call Ross cn4) e All major credit cuds URGE bach. near S.pta. PRIME 4-Plex 3 Br .. 2 Ba., SJ&-1738 or ';ite: Spe=r ;i:·; :: :i~~~tskig~~~t.!I ALA ReCntaNls eH0645'M'E3tOOS Dan• Point 23'1G Newport Blvd. 5'8-97l!S Sirw1e adult owr 35, M. Inc. i700/mo. No dn VA. Real Estate, .o. Box , SlSO 2 BR util pd c.~1. 10 VA A. T * EXCEPTIONAL * Thls Ad \VOt'th $5 on Rent m-«>89 . $62,500. N. Costa l\fesa. Big Bear Lake, California. $l70 2 BR pvt unit N.B. Rent While You Buy Slna:Je, I. 2, J, Br. Co~va al ChJJdren le Pet Section Newpert a.ech _s.;_-7~.filfil-_. -~-~--, Re•I Estate S160 ? BR !pl bltin kit l & -" BR homes, some Linda. Open. -49Z-422;i. Unbellev•bly le•utlfvl 2 Tri-Plexes, 2 br .. 1 ba. ea. Exchange 182 $165 kids OK C.M. \\'(pools, 1st mo. SlOO dep. Huntington &.•ch VAL D' lSERE Garden Apt•. BEAUT. '69 Bachtior Trallfr, • Newport Bch., nr. Nwp!. ---·-"-'"'.'" ... "".:'-$175 3 BR kids/pets, gar ll.B. l\-10VE IN NOW! Adults -no pets. Flowers ln n~ N.B. Park. No Harbor High. XJnt tax Investors On The 3 BR 2 BA sngls OK C.1\-1. From $195 to $22> per mo. IA1MAC. ex. lrg. 3 BR, 2 BA, cverywltefoe. Stream A children or pell. $90 mo • 1helter. <h\•ncr, 548-9695. Move U I $255 3 BR on bch. N.B. Roberts & Ca. 962~5511 cpts, drps, bltns, lrg. lovely \Vaterfall, 45• pool Rec. Rm, 6U-4933 • I UNIT • Walk io Bch! .P• . 3 BR horse ranch, hams, •WE have a large selection pri~. Y1"!· Gar + huge Sauna, Sell 1·2 Bdrm, J\rm. 2 BR apt uroa mim hay Exchange 10 uni!, prime cottals l 3 and 4 bedroom homes prk g. $195. Resp. married Unfurn. from $138. SEE IT: bch 3n9 thru e/19 .iy. 1 ~ ~::!;.~ =1.:1l.! dn. Eastslde ~·Mn~y maker. s. 2· Rent:A:House 979-8410 ~hat can be mo\•ed into couple. {Adults). 3-42-3276 2Cm Parsons, 64U670. '150. month.~- Bdr'lls. "'tth fireplaces, also \''e Specialize In Newport almost immediately on our Newport &tech L BR. Furn. 2 lri closets, BACHELOR apt, mid- TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 CLASSIFIED HOURS 8 :00 a.m. 1o 5 p.m. Monday lh.rU Friday 9 to noon Saturday Adwrtisers mar, pla~ their ads by te ephone COSTA MESA omCE 330 w. Bay 642-5678 NEWPORT BEAOI 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 l!UNTINGTON BEACH 17815 Beach Rlvd: 541).1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest A~. . 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N, El Camino Real 492-4420 . NORTH COUNTY dial trtt 540.1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Detdllne for copy & Jcills is 5:30 p.m. the day bc- f°"' ~blication, except tor Monday Edi lion when deadline I& S&tur~ day, 12 noon, CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advt'rll!lil't'S should check !heir ads dally ._ reporl errors lmmcdiat_e_!)'.___ THE DAILY .PILOT assumes Uabllity for ~ flnst In- correct lnlert.Ion only, CANCELLATIONS : When kllllng an ad be su~ to ma){e a record ot ih< KILL NUMBER 11ven yau by your ad taker as receipt o( your cancellation. 'I'tl ls ltlll number must ~ pre. i~nted by the-Adverti~r in ca..q;e ot • dispute, CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECl'JON OF NEW AD BEl'ORE RUNNING: EV!ry effort fa m1deo to kill or porTttt a n~ ad thflt h*s beren ordered. but Wf' cannot Rui'ran- l«-to do so onlll lhe ad ha1 IPPf:art'd In UM!' i;.-... , .. 5 • bach. quartt.'rs. Incon1e LANDLORDS' Re t Opt ion plan queensizebed,prlv dreuina .. 1 .. ,._ trall I o\'er Sl2,fi00 per ye a r. • HnR\~000 REALTY 'NEWPORT llElGllTS rm,xtralr&:rooms,enclgar =S;i~. 671!..y $89,,j(I(). Beach e Corona del l\-far e s E setss5 ' delux~ ne11o• 3 bdrm:· 2 b~th, "'/storage. Adults only, no Laguiia e & Dana Point. lge. hv nn., electric bit-ins, ls Sl.50/ 3 BR. one block from beach,' Exchange C.Orona del l\Iar Our Rental Service is FR.EE PICK OF THE CROP · SUn· dishwasher, u'/\v &. drapes. pc2o35 Full:~ton, C.M. a.vall April lit. $3Z mo.I duplex, 2 -1 Bdrm. adjacent 10 You! ny sparkling clean, walk to $295 mo. "C'' THOMAS. o"tj;fB:a.;;;eio.:ai;f.c:a;po;:i j ,1J5.'J1~~01~dy~,~m.6!11~~~ ... ~·:,.,, lo complete shopping NU-VIEW RENTAlS beach. 3 BR, lrg patio. encl REALTOR a.ts-5527. TURN Bachelor apt. Carpnrt l BR turn. apt. UW pd. Near center. Income $330 month, 6l3-403o or 494-3248 dbl g8.t". Many xtras. $240 Sant• AM Htlghta le lndry. Nr •hOP'I A ICbll. bq 6 UClo Ult. C.U. l·U4: $<12,500. Also have SU.000 VERY CLEAN 4. BR home mo. 838-795'1. $129.00 + dep. 991 gJ .. Jim. • equity in estate sized R--1 lot with bltins & lrg fencd yd BEAlfl'. 3 BR home. trpl, 2 BR. erpt'd. drp'd, No pet!. Camino, No. !; CM.,~~~~~~~;~ in Kailua-Kona. Ha\\'aii. for·$265 per mo. FAMILIES Jove1y patio, bJock lo achOOI. '1501':"°. lat It latlt + ••j ~·~·~Ofo!!~-!!;·=~~.:i...,,-;:;: INVESTMENT DIVISION ONLY. Call a&ent 540-4141• 536-Jm/536-UfiS. cleanmg dep. SU-1362. BACHELORS Qnb: 1 BR, CLmAN tor 2 Bit adltl. noJ 546-1600 0 RN 3 B tiall apt. Fum. Utllltes Pd. ptla. 14". kJt. $135:$150 Jal, 1-t:)/THEREAL l.")l ESTA'.fERS TRADE 4 Bedroom Harbor View home, fee land. $16,000 equity for UNITS i n Newport or Cosla Mesa. Call ~7722 or 644~. Re•I Estate W•nted 184 NEED ·' Sharp Duplex, Cd?.t &./or Clean 4 Br llrn·Nicc area Cash Buyer SAND CASTLE REAL ESTATE 1786 So. Coast I lwy Laguna Beach. 494-8025 NEED 3 or 4 bdrm house, Corona del Mar M 'DE r. par y It] ti4&-79T2 or 301 Afeq, Dr., E. 11th st, N.B. t• 1JG1. I ,,-,===-:=-,..--.1 furn,. blfrl.!I. Xlnt 1.9 c_, , • -I • CA' HARBOR View Hills, view. 40 ~L::-ind"'.a""y°'L_n-:~=123S:z-.c;968-8971.c=::-;;;rl'-... _tn __ '_-_-_.J ·~ ijli. Ullfurn. iii BR $550 Month. IT BR -'-· ..... SHARP 1 Br. ~-Nr • AGENT '" •848 DLx. 2 , crpt1, u.o.)'<', ., .. , .hn... ti! ~ No -ts. lo k lo V't't""'t bltlns. Kids OK Rede<:. ......,... u . .,.., ,,_ I Y c=-0.~,-.~Mc:-eso------1R·-·A·Houie 979,9430 ••ta, Furn, J60 Adults. \SM M onrovi a. -----------~· ..,, 518--0336 XI.NT -tlon, 2 BR. 2 BA. Irvine •FOR RENT• IMMACULATE 3 BED · UNIVERSITY PARK ROOM, 2 b a t h home, 2 BR. 2 bath, den ••••.• $300 J.ireplace, dbl. gar., pat.lo, 3 BR. 2 Bath, atrium •• $335 Bold New Co11cept redecorated. New s hag 3 BR. .2~ ba., fam. rm. $325 crpls & drps. Avail. March 4 BR.. 2\1 ba., lam. rm. $350 FURNITURE RENTAL ls!. $250 per mo. 301 Ea.at TURTLE ROCX Broadway, C.M. . 4 SR. 2 ~. lam. rm .•• $360 Lachenmyer R(·.ilt()r 1860 Nev.'flOrt Blvd., C.M. can 646-39'28 Eves:. 673-4577 4 BR. 2~,ba, fa m. nn. $390 * lttontb to Month We have short term * 100% Purchase Option tum. rentals avail. • Wide Selection. Style-Coton * 24 Hour Dellvery 1 BR $125 lc $ISO. Pool, tel'-V\tw, l'rplc, S undte'lc:, Taef', ide'al fOT bachelor, no Heated_ pooJ. $DJ mo.: c1>1ld/pets 1993 a.urc11 ·s· -=5-•..,•,..14,_ ... --::,...-...--- 5111-91133. c1,lltr•no ...... * WiNTER RATES * * NEW • $165 * Attn.c furn Studios $115, 1 Kear Dana Pomt Marti& 1DO BR'1 tl25. Adulta; m peta. 1q. tt. l 81'. apt., Ip. AJ, ms Eld<n, M!l'· Aot. 6. ~. •Ito ,..... A snJNNING 1 br, lum'd ll60. refrta., lhqtutlc ept. -· 2 br unlUm 1185. SM dollOn -avail. Ip. 1111v. w/ad 645-5530 p&tlo. Mil', 311322 ~ l'um. B1cholor & I l'r'1 C..lttrano, ApL lD • oapoclolly nice. 2110 1425 -bll' )'"1 -tal Newport Blvd., CM. :;'° .. ~~~ ~....::: Mesa Verde pr e f erred· I '" ... ~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!'!""!!!!!~I Buyer re~ now! Doyle C.O. • COZY 1 Br -Front A Eves, 838·63l'I. rear porch, cat ok. Utll inc 1 BR $128. 2 BR. $138. ty lum'd Adults, llO pots. Furnlahee·utll paid. 2450 •-; NeWpOrt Blvd., C.M. . WATO:I tbt IUl"IHt ln ttlll "SINCE 11116" 517 IV. 19th, CM 54W4ll FURNISHED 2 BR, Apt. ......UV. 3 bc1ms. Ocou IW . lat We1tmo Bank Bldg 27""6 N. Main, SA 517-0314 Utll. pakl. $l'IO/mo. 2277·B B1V1f. dupllx. A""1i. oo!J. Unlvetwity Park, Irvine }da e Ave. 5'8-5913. S«JO Mo. .Asut 6f5...at, e t:ASTSIDE Lov•ly -2 Br, Days 83"41101 Nlght1 B1lbN hl1nd BEA • p RN. 2 IR MIJ.!)OIO. ALA Rentola e 645-3'00 [ ][i] ~ yrd, encl gar, $150_. £_. ~----WATE"~ONT 1 BR .. Htd Pool Adults (W/teenolt) ~u"'m°'Q~UE;.,,,ha=te-a_u_o_n""n= •• ~"'"·-ALA Rental• e 645-~n • , --... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""'""l3 BR. 2"ba. tam. rm .•• $340 il"OUnd tlopr, priv patio, No pet1. S1'5 up, 6C2-95a). Dr. 2 bdrm. I: den • dlnins 8usines' 200 e 2 BEDROOl\J with single 3 BR. 2 ba. N'pt. •• $375/400 parkina:, 1nq 400 S. Baytront AVAIL Now 1 I: :I Br tum, room. Adults oniy, S3'15 Mo. 0--0ppo-"'"'rt,.....un.,,1,.tv_...,,._"". garago for llSll. , ( BR. 2 ba. N'pl. •••.•• 1425 Apt. 5. poo~ ..., nn, pl loc. No _, '1M930, -· I BARBER Shop. Newport e 2 BEDROOM hnrdwood 2 BR. 2 ba. ••••• ••• $275/300 1 BR. Furn. ApL Yearly chldrn, no petJ. 6f6.6124. * GUA'l' VIEW 2 Bit. * Bch. Ex. loc. 2 chairs. Tues. Doors crpts, ~s. firepl, 4 BR. 21h bathi • •• • $325~ Call SaUsbury Rll;y * FURNISHED GARA.OE J'rplc., bltnai, tundtckl, pooL ' thru Sat. 9-.5. 548-1346. dbl g;_,, large yanl. s:m. 3 BR. 7 ba. home······ •• 673-6900 ** >.Yr. $140/Mo. PlOup. '""3H, ~ I R M C di R It 3 BR. tit AUK..Cw-n ... · 1"10 " 275 Broadw•v C M lnvtstment oy c ar • ea or 2 oR, ba.y vlew, a-araie apt. _,, • • CLOSE lo Beach, Jrs. 2 Br .• Opportunity '220 110 Newport Blvd., C.M. (i eel h•11 $225. U mo, lease. 673>:6900 * 1 WEEK FREE * 2 Ba., open bum.I, trp&c. _..,.,o.;..==....,--_,.. 541-7729 r I day.. Bach. nu cite, no ldl. m " bllN, 331).A M_ .... EXCHANGES, lnvatmentl Put a little "JOOt' in your Br, 1165. Adltl. M24ltt:' l7}-0937 or 673-57211. / l.. tax sbeltel'I. H~~..!' LEASE 3 Br, 2 ba. Custom RE"TY Levti • sell tl>OM baubles The rutest dra# In tht -.,Penthoute, ~-2 Investment ReaJty. 61-1.1.~. Blt·in elec kitchen. Dshwshr, lU.o for "buclca". Clll "••lifted Wttt •• .a ,..1 DI.fly p 11 o t bib to beh. 2 Br, 1 IL Sty ~y to LNn . 240 <TPls le drps. Frplc, Private UnClallv. i:~1:,en1~ ~lne 6t2-567I. ClulJfted AA. MMS7t. A nt. 173-tm . Patio, Top cond.. Close to'i,,~~ov~·:-"~'·~~;;:w:..,,1;;~;;;===;:;;:;:;:::;:;::~;;;=;:;;;:;;:;;;::::;;;;..;=;:;;;:;;:;:;::;:::=;;;;;;;;; 1 t TD L schools. $265/mo. cau &Uc [ 1 $ 08 ns 673-8550. Loguno Bffch 6* % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans !~ int. based on equity. Al80 NE\V 95~ i ol aale-prlce k>4nl Settler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-0611 -H'u1>or .,.. 21 yn. [ ]~ ADULTS only, N•w 2 BR, 2 NORTH END BA house. crpt, Drt>a. Bltns, Ir pvt fncd·ln patio & Larae 2 ~· 4-plcx In garage. Call aJt 5 or "11rknd1, garden 11ethng. Classed 1n $175 64()....8fi65. dining room. Roomy kit· ' chcn. Quiet, lltc & airy. 3 BR, 2 BA, Unftn'n condo, il In Bit! Pool Cl.ubhR. ht &: 1185. Ut cl. Perl. mature nl, ' rouple. tut + ISO ,.,urlt~. NU-VIEW RENTALS Children OK. Good ftf I, n"I At1'11\ •n• ....... , $185 mo. 557-5630. u1.-.-..-. or .. .,......wt0 MESA Ve'de 4 BR 2 BA LAGUNA NIGUEL 4 bdrm, 2 bllns &: dlh~1-r, wi'w erpt~ b11, liv. nn It. dining. ai:ea, It drps. Avail Apr "bl. family rn1, frpl , built-mi. 847-008.1. cary»elll. drapt1, frnced & ' ·- 1pnnklen, 2-<:at icaraa~ • 4 BR. $200 Years leue. lmmac. $310 mo, lit, last ~~ ~tricttv HouMt Fumtahed 300 West-side A!au. r.w1. 683 and depc>1t1. 4§..47M. Cllh '" o4vance by malt G~~",;j ·"" .. · • "" Senate St.495--0tlil. L0gUN Nlguol , ~...,Pr-io:-wro ..,.." ...,I ii . I' I I I _ orll at 1Nlt1 ~our af, MESA del Mar tem.ponry , • • • • .• . • . .t, C<L 10 ~-~ ordet>. 1100 1 BR, kldl/pet. HB ronl>l 4 BR hit. Avail thru SPACIOUS -4 BDRM 1310 2 THE DAILY PlLOT tt--$150 Pvt b.me, mals. Cd~t Juoo XI. $280 mo. 5''6 ~-Baths. fan\ rm. w/w crptc, servrs tht" right tn claJ. $135 2 BR, util pd C.1\t, 3 BR. 2 s.., renC'Cd yard le drpt, bllnt. fenced yard, slty, edll, ttn90I"" or ~ $150 2 .Bit N.B. Kids/pct• double garage. $230lmo. view. SJ0..73.10. fl.lie any 14\itrlilMtent, Octan fmt $17G. Kids. N.S. Call M9-Cl&t6. . ••-11 Verde and to ~ tts rattS Pvt hme, C'plg/&na:111 Cd~t ,... :aw.~~ wllhO\JI R°"t·A·N-t79.a4JO ** 3 BR. 3 BA, T-... SllARP 4 BR, 2 BA homo. Dbl ..,..... Pool prl\lll. Gmt loc, <:Is to set.I~ A CLASSIPIED Lido lilo 11!.l. ~. b&n<aln at 127; mo. Wa"'r MAILING ADORES$ 4 Bdm ... 4 bath home. di,,. Ut11111., paid 1150. 2 BR, Incl. Jivall alt Apr. 15. I'. o. Bolr 1!!80, den, livtnr noom. 1650/mo. Ttft\a, l<lda/ptts OK. ,;~..::.;";",..· =-,.-;-.,,--= L-.°"'~to=v=-~-JJi!!v~..,.~1'~1·~ ... ~·~m.~2!08~.§ Rllll·A·H-t1t-NJO A"'°""""' a4 11 a &ood sca.auurs ANSWllS IN CLASSIPICATION IOO ll2GI Wblto Elepb&nt Dlme-A·Llnoi~Call~~!!:~!_;l~&i!: .. :!!_l _ _j~"'~,..~-~m!°!"~"!.'-----'-~~-~~-'.!:!~~~~=.:::_!~'._!~_::~::==!:=:..:::=.:::._:=7--1 ' • I I ,, I • • ' -, .. w ........ -15, 1'72 PILOT ·ADVUTISOI r~~lttJ~•, 1-.. ~ 1~ , ..... -... ..:i~ r~-;;;.1~i 1-·-lltl .__I _-___,1~ ;.l ---~1~~""i';. "'_ .... _f-~iai~. !'-=---1~1 UnfunL :115 .... .,,,,_ MS I.JI. ~ "5 I.JI. Unfum. Ml Ap11.. R-411 lullnui Renlal +u Found (frw ad•l 5541 Cabl'!°tma• ... ~!;;·~~·ii;-;---..,.. ===~=~~:!~~~~~~~·~ Fum.orUnfum. 370 CUSTOM Cablaet NUi>W A olol Mar ~C;;Oll;;;;o;;-;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;o Hunt""'""" -Newport llNch COiia -LAGUNA 8-h. Priva .. "111E FACTORY" In C... FND. Bladt w/tu I< wllit•, -t Wad<. PatloL - • ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; room, canyon view, l)ffv1te ntry Wlap a new concept half rrown doe· l'art Basset Add.It. Free Est. W-52lt. ~ *'NEW * ON BEACH'. OCEANFRON·T yrly • entrance. $95 mo.~ In ,.tall artisan shops. See !,!7":'.!:;· Meoa Ven!•, C.14. Car_. Sorvlco apaciout 1 br apt, btst part LOVELY ........ ',._ BA. c-,. to appreciate. tmtrno UP • ..,_.;NO. ,..... ------1 VW NINOS of beach. Adultl only, avail 1 9• "ND NEW N1'l • .,,,..... ~ MALE ..i-most.I blk ._ u~•-· F11RH I< UNJV11N 64S-<l668. """ clooets, prl •otrance, end 425 :Kith St NB. 673-~ -· Y JOllN'S Carpet • ~--, 2 Bi From P65 • 4iil. $215. From $145. DillnJubtr, Iba& Ph&'e, S85 ~1821. BEAUT &tore space E. 17th w/tan I: ~wht. Looks like, C 1 e • n er a, Ex tr a • 2 BR, 2 BA APTS Suj>or-Olmlortabk>qul<t Neu Newport Back Bay. Gu a: Water Pa.Id. Mo. to 11o. nom ms. ADULTS ONLY Yrly Dix 2 Br-Beach earpotlng, walk·u .-1a.1-======"--~ ' 625 ' tt for but bluer than a Beagle. Drl-Shampoo 1"'e Scotch- • Furniture AvaJlabJt • Ba., bltnl., d l 1 DI,, Forced~ heat, extra large (;UHt Hom. 415 ~~~ ~2.-1:;1: Mi.99'J6 Meaa Verde area. 557-6610. guard (Soil ~). Oii Tai .&CllD l 6 2 Bit. ~ • Unflln. 11npi... I ...... PMl<!L -. T<nota' a.o1on a&t. CarpetN?al*-dflhwuhtr dlbwahr., lndrY hookup, roomt.Btaudtulpmeroom, *PRIVATE· ROOM* aaktorMra.Baker. SMALL white tern. dog, vie Dej'reaten: I: 10 all ;:' btattd pool.unna•ttnnla pr. 213: 387-2257. heated P60l. BBQ'a. encJoa. for ambulatory pttlOl1. Good STORE tor rent or lease $350 of Ilamilton Ii:: .Pornoiw., brlg:btenen -~••-m ,.to ' ttc room.ocean ilws ir-... _ ed PJ'&PI, quJet tun"OUDd· lood, -.i-.... __,_., -·~·-..r c M 96i-o9ll3. bleach for wnwi:: earpe . IOll Sea Lane. ODf -<~ nr Co<at .11"71 Chlldron Wolcomo. 2324 Elden Aw e 664012 . v -nt1 """• 1.ngs 4 close to aboppln&:. ,.......,., ~u1.1 .... ~........... mo. 1000 aq ft, approx. llU · · Save )'OU? money by avfuc pattc..emple parkilw 1;.;;;;;.F;..A.:.;:.M;.;...l_l_l_E_S_ Adult !Mng, no pell. in&a. * Call 548-4753 * Newport Blvd' C.M. Lost S55 me exlni. trips. Will clan. HS<ouriUNTl1yN. GGuardLTON EL CORDOVA APTS. 540-3493. KEYS 01 _ 1 should .., Uvi"" rm., dinlll1 rm. " ~ Charle St 642-4470 PVT A'partmenll lot senior UNUSUAL Live in mod. apt. Ford on gold chain at-hall $15. Any rm. $7.50; ' CHARMING 2 Br., CJl'll, NEW~~A~~f~~tTEO PACIFIC • WELCOME! Near Harbor & Hamilton SL =:: & n;•~·u·ff"; ~ ~ ~ ~your business. 675-7225 llc.e.i to 1.,.., ttd ftutty ooucb llD. Cl)air $5. 15 )Tl.; dlps, nnp A r f: t r la • TU OCEAN A VE., H.B. 642--9278 Agent powder-putt type ball. Lo.<lt exp is what counts, mt I.Ocat..i on ocean aide ot GROUNDS ffi4J 536-1487 SINGLE STORY '"!'!l!'~!!!!!!"'!l!!"!l!!!!l!!~!!! I . lndu1trial Rental 450 In Coot& M.,.. Pl,... oall method. I do ~ ,.,...u. Uy Uo H tcd -10 Minutes to Ocean Of.Copen IO am-0 pm Daily South Sea Atmosphere BOARD I Care I Laundry. 645-2142 after 6 p.m. Good rel. 531~01. :zr,;,ming. ix: & c~. Gu Heat A Stove. Water WD.J..LUf ·WALTERS co. i BDRM·J BATH PALM MESA APTS. Good mea1s-:-sem1 $200. Prf 2500 Sq. ~t. $250 Mo. $lOO REWARD STEAM Carpet Clea~. All util fnclu<ted at $250 per Gar. Rec. Rm, Laundry Rm Sl.59 le. $164 mo. MINUTES TO' NPT. ,BQL $250. Men-Women, 531-5414. Modem bldg., Edinger St German Shepherd, C.M. area. prof. Satisfaction auarn. at mo. 64i-84oo. 1 BR. $l40 * FRESH AIR ,..,_ts and Drapes FURN. OR UNFURN. . V11c1tion Rent11l1 425 Nr. Frwy., So. Santa Ana ~ayed temaJe. Blk, tan lowest priceL Free .t. 2 BR. $160, $165, $175 ~...... nd 'tlo--... UnbeUevabJy ~ apts., Walaworth Real Estate ~..... Rab. 1 !J62.<l672 2 BORMS., bltns Walk to Hacl4"Kf• de Mffe W&llc: 3 Blkl ·to Beach! Air Co l •iai ~,pool, Jacuzzi elect bJt. LAKE Arrowhead, 3 Br. 2 CALL: 639--4210 mcu-.,, gs. """~es. 'I· .::::::..:.:=· ------1 beach. $190. Orange Coast 100 w. Wl.IMOn, Apt t. CM Ice 2 BR, apt, newly decor. Private P~L ins, •ha&' crpts, ~ aauna Ba, tum except Unena. m. NEW del M 1 units S b. .--=.::~::.::=~o-..,...-, C11rpenter !teal Estate. Call: ~. BRAND NEW 1 & 2 IR Wl w criit•. drps, bltns, ex· ~~ Sto..,..,.. etc. Adu'Jt.s, no pets. wknd. $150 per wk. 545-8519. power. ux.~133-M~1.. LOST: Blk le bm Da.schsund LARGE OR SMALL Costa Meu ct{lt retrtr. $150. No sngls, ~...... ·--SINGLE.S ••••• From S135 Rent1l1 to Share 430 543·3145; 836-9798 eves. puppy, Vic: Huntington St le liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l FROM $130 no pet&. 536-1111 Nr. Schools l 'BEDRM .••••• From $140 ---------1 Frankfort .Reward All Types Work: CUt doora, 11 Near shops, enc Io 1 e d 2 BR !lo . •---._ Nt. So. Coast Pl"-28 2 BEDRM. , , •• From $160 GIRL will ·•·-2 BR apt Rentllls Wint.ct 460 64• ~·g, 536-4066. pane I, ttmodfl. tinlah, bull' t I Ad I ..• P:,,.· 'cwl~ • ••1-• · HIDDEN VILLAGE ~ ~·~ ~-··•-J c -1161. &'llJ'ai'tl, • nr, enc • ...,_. You're right, they're under-w/2 cirls or couple. Access 4.nuue, re_.,.D, "'' • _. .NEW NEW NEW VILLA RIVIERA patio., attractive lndscpg. ¥--u1• n.<. "'7-093Se an n I' 2500 South Salta priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. !rom Goldenwe•I "-" Lo CAREER woman w/rental LOST 2 dogs • 1 beaglb•lklri&· CUSTOM Woodwork PaJlel.. Adult. only, m p!tL 1970 i..,., ';;>. .ri.aa, 01 • (tnler 2 blks W. of BrUtoJ.. (5 blka frmri N...........,. Blvd.) '-'<Ill. property elsewhere wants color & 1 cockapoo, .... - Wallace St., 5 4 I -O IO 4 , NEW 1, 2, 3 bedrooms. $135, oH Warner oi:a Linda W8¥, 546-9800"'• ~ 1 ="~n~t.~89443=..=::29~·----quaint muse & ya rd , tan. Males. Mesa del Mar, ing. Formica. Gen'l Re.-.. JUST FINISHED $160, $18.5. Walk to JOU th to W, Central) SHARE My W a t e r f r o n t Laguna Beach area. Prefer C.M. 546-6198. Aft 51 Ph: Duke DaDurb. 646-B:::N· 0 NEW 2 BR Broadway It. Penney's, 1ar. Santa Ana e 5f6..1525 HACIENDA Home w/dock. man 30-60 2 b/r &: garage, New in YOUNG female cat "Miss ~6:::75-;:78'.:13:;:... ~~--,.,-~I FamlllH Wolcomel (IO 2 BR, 2 FULL BA} • Special cabinet space •Lodi.......,. wllg - """ 527-3144. South L•-• HARBOR yrs. $150/mo. St r a I&' b t. area. w/steady newspaper Boot." mixed dark&. white' EXP. Remodelfn&. cablneta, 8ron7.e Medallion, encl car, WALK TO BEACH ":"'r •-;;· • ~l AVOCADO STREET 675-4331. job. Will lease right place, fur wiwhite boots. Mcaa repa!n:, maint Forni. crplt, cfrPI, blt-irui, garb. Brand new 1·2-3 BR Cpt., * BEACH LIVING AT ITS Adults 'only • No Peli WANTED: Good earthY soul prefer trees, birds, garden, Del Mar Tract. 546--0150. refinishlni:. has. 64&-024.. =~ s:=i!~ 'i: !:; drps, bltns, frplc. 125 16th le BEST .•• ·~ :I BR, 2 nei!~1~s2 A;:.1·Pool to ihare funky ol.d, house. fireplace and sea vie~. BLUEPOINT Siamese cat. Cement, Concrete • Bm, cell e Lndey A. Patios • D/W·Di!posal e Drape1 e Deep 2 color lhaa cpts e Special aounclptootlnc -~ oA1-3951. BA, elev. to beich. Adults, Cl--•-be h H B Call Ready references. Wnte pd. Chi~ ok, no pets .-_ '" Garage. Dlshwshr. Paid util. v.....-..., ac · · • cl-·"•·• Ad No. 298 (cr"OM eyed) Mesa Verde FREE idea•, advice and .,. ~• • 2 B A~Cloaed . ~,. no pell. From $350. 31155 Shetly &: Charlie 53fr21.fl. ..-.u""' ~. r. . gar ....... tt ' Coul Hwy., South Laauna FROM Sl!iO. 646-1204 DAILY PILOT, P. 0, Box area. estimates. AU t char&• frxo e Nr. San Diego Frw. Hat· bor Blvd i-: school& • BRAND NEW • drps, ch.it amall pet O.K. ** 499-2835. Coldwell, Banker&: Co. GIRL wanted to .eek &: 1560, Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626 * 979-1592 * is a beautiful job at • reu. l.ar&"e 1 BR apt Bronz.e me-Slt>/mo. 847.2940, 1i{anaglng Agent share 2 Br apt w/same. 1 LOST: Blue parakeet price. 64>-5073. GAS Heat,.Gas Cooking 1 atx1 WATER-AU pa.Id. dalUon. Crpts, drps, prb. Irvine Apts., ,.,,, DRIVE BY child ok. Call 638-7767. RESP. Gentleman 16 yr !!On, REWARD b ~ I;.:.;;;;;;_ ______ ,_!F~u~r~n:.. ~o~r~U~nfu~~m~·:._!17~0 ~ Rm in pri. Home, . kitchen * * 645--0408 * * CEMENT WORK, no jo wu disposal. Single car gar, 147 Flower St., C.M. 1 BR. SHARE 2 BR. 2 BA furn'd priv. SlOO. Own linen & small, reuonable. F re·e ! ' Month to Month $1IO 622 Hamilton, CM See Mgr-Mr. ol Mn. Hoban 541-2062 Gas .I: wtr pd. $150/mo. PARK WEST Coif• Mesa Furn. Best location In C.M. apt. w/bachelor, at the beds. 642-9130 nay 5 • 5 Pound temafe honey color Estim. H. Sbdl!ck. 548 ms 6f2..«i63. APARTMENTS 646-0920 or 646-38l5. beach. $S2.50. 642-3271. CM/NB. dog, wiry wavy ha 1 r · WlNTER Rates! C.Oncrete l100 bl drp 1 Bdrm. From $160 A.DUL T LIVING Huntington 8e1ch WOMAN w/2 children <I & TWO professional females 546-7308. 897-5480. ___ , f1oon, patios, d r l v e1, Lovely •nil· apt., tna, 1 ' 2 Bel 2 B NEW Garden Apartments lO ) wants to share a hse. or seek 2 Bdnn. furn house or SE'ITER/Lab Mix. Solid sidewa.lkl. Don. 66-8514. erpt, retria. Fned yard. rm., 1• With H t-• ~-• nd • OCEAN VIEW-From $135. Apt in bch areas 5.SZ-9288. bl k /NB r v· Working adlt only, 100.f El From $195 ea cu rvua a 1 Bi-furn or Unfurn. CASA apt, CdM or north. Approx. ac w ·~use. tc. * CONCRETE WORK * Camino. Call aft 12 noon : 3883 Parkvlew Lane Barbecue area PLAYA, 14th &: Walnut, GIRL to share beach apt. $225 mo. 832-0015. 19th St., C.M. 642-0218. IJCENSED ~ BONDED ON WENESDAY 546--S'TGt ~. (Jwt ott Priva:-ae paundtlosry ~":conies H.B. Call 536-8367. N67~?,:;. Beach Area. Call CdM, Laguna Bch areas. 2 ~ DICK OR W y ~ SanDJeaoFwyatCufverRd) • .,..._,,i. B• u tu hse St I I there'• a plaet for every· ** BEAUTU11L 1 A 2 BR. Individual garages and Newport Beach ' n rn. · oft. · fl.OOR Work a,. patina, thing when you Jjve 1t the C.Ontem.porary Garden Aptl. carpo~ 1 &: 2 Bedrooms Gariges for Rent 43.5 refrlg. FE!nced yd . 644-7015 . s.mc.. Md Replin driveways&: side w a I~·, Vendome • , , 1500 tq, ft. Pa t I o 1, fr p I c , p o·o I. Lagvn• Beach From $155 per month STORAGE only. S20 per mo. eves.• l.Jc'd & bonded. 645-0826. 'Nifh excellent Atorq:e. lt $l!i0-$165. Call M&-5163. Gas&: water included RESORT UYINC$' Costa Mesa or Npt Beach. Misc. Rentals 465 you're movtna riom a lhger 2 BR Jn excellent location, ** ALMOST LIKE YOUR Drive By 548-8251 or 54&-1405. · C.M. Accounting ,home, i.11 you're giving up . OWN HOME. Nr. new 2 2311 Elden Ave. or call LOT, fenced, storage. " the c··-of hom• own-Mela Ve~. cpt, draperies, BR., 2 Ba., beamed ceillngs, .,A.,s~ FROM $135 SI'ORAGE on1y. Glll'l.&'e, nr. Boats, campers etc. 50c per SBA-Accounting •e r v Ic es 1 ~ --bulll-ln1, ·g1r1g•, ~ ·~ A' rt "' · · • ~1 and -M·'~· Sta-" ocean vw. $250 rm. Adults, l1'po • ,.._., mo. ft. $8.50 minimum. 642-S560. specializing 1n computerized "'~IMI p ......... W\11:1\o .... , cul-de-1ac Street. $150/mO, """f\oA ·~~~~~~~~~~' livinc -2 bedrooms, 2 96• -· , ..::"'::c::P'.:.il-=...494-4288==::·___ ==*-*.c"c.:_~..:...':.....*_*__ acctg. tor small businesses, bathi, 'plu1 den. 1--~----· ----~-t· It's Oakwood Garden EXTRA Jrg 5tora.ge garage 2 [ for rates call 631)..1920. THE VENDO"E · MO.OEQ 1 Bdrm. apt. Cpts. L•guna Nlg\MI Apartmenta ••• and It's 1tall, EZ access. SJO. mo. .....-,..1, ]ltil Acctng, Bkkpng, Taxes, M d-, d•hwW, b It· In I, -.....;,.~-'---"" ••-~• •-•J-A ·~ LAGu· NA NIGUEL tun, tine ne1.· bbors and -~--~-··------~;;;;mmiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~L.:..r•:·na~nc~ta~1 ~s1m;"~·~"':":.· _ J.8C5 "'9fio:uu venue garagt'. ·1 child ok. All util · Call 642-2824. Mn. Phillips pd. $150/ino. 301' Avocado, Apartmenh' prestige living In one luxur. Office Rental .c4CJ * 540-5426 * Apt 9, C.M. 645--0984. ' can About Our New I! Mo. lous packa~. There's $1 WHO NEEDS AN OFFICE?? Personals 530 Applit nce Rep1lr ' . ~~8111. UNCrpFURN ...!._BR Studsiow!A~t. ~':, 1 ~~ 2 ~~~: ~~o~.~ln ~1atiobnllli:_:._· ~~l cataffn ~veu· be,,. 1 tita ot* ---0-RA-N-0-----1 _&_P_a_rt_• ____ _ ---~--ta, ........ ear. m I ewuWlllllg, '"''I.I'!, ~. u y I cu 0 'c:' w 0 i::ost -OPENING * Discount Appliance Repair Contractor ROOM AddiUons, Eltlme.tn, plans le layoul 1ingle or 2 1tory, L. T. Construction. 847-15ll. AddiUora * RemodeliJIC Gerwiek " Son, Uc. 6J3-6041 * 54!1-2171) J AC K T au I a ne-Repa.b', remod., addit. 20 yrs exp. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547-0036. Electrical ~21..,. pool. No cbil•-n, ,., -ta. $1.87. 2 BR, 2 Ba, $196 per health cl ... _ • o t rent /eqmp/·"·-••• = ~ th Uwi, aaunu. pro-»a-'41" • S2 Off With This Ad Washer, Dryer, Di.sbwuher, APARTMENTS Quiet net&' h b or hood mon • shop, In-golf driving Space also avail. b y l Full D...f... u,........... Disposal Etc. Free Est. ELECTRICAL WORK. All 3 BR, 2 BA ••••••••• _, $235. 642--80(2. · -· 20041 Aloma. Avt. 495-4272 ** NEW ** cl day/wk/mo.· Mon· Fr l. £ Priv:i':~~,. GUARANTEED * 546-6694 kinds. Bl1 at small l.Jc'd Ir 2 BR 1" BA ••M LOVE · 2 L'tdo 1110 ~e. ubhouse, ttc. 673-5450 lns. Fret est. 546-0211. , -i. •••••••· -· LY 2 BR, BA .;;;;;;;;'.;_;..:.., ___ .....;_I . 3. Attrac Female Tedi Babysitting (A!Sl AVAIL. FURN.) Twnhle, patio,· dbl gu.. * CHARMING * LA COSTA APJS Cu•tom d<roral<d c!ng!.,, DESK opace available ISO 4. ioo• Rock Sauna Gardening New adult garden Aitt~. J>OOi1. $2lS mo. 673-.7776 3 BR.. beamed ceU'i., frplc. • 1 I: 2 BR. Furnished le Un. mo. Will provide turnlture 5. Free C.Old DrinkB CHILD care experienced &: ·,-,pan<a<---G.:._--.----.-1. 1-1 21at · r•t'-"'' eves A wknda. ·carp,, •drapes, etc. Adulbl, 1 & 2 Bedroom furnlsbed •. No Jeue requ.ittd. at $5 mo. Answering Rl'Ylce * Executive Hiealth·Spa * dependable weekdays. In. DEroft $PAE. f A 3 J;Jr. lpt. ili;I up onJy. $300 Month, yearly. 9 Bullt-inl • Sha&" carpets Modeit Open Daily 10 to 7, available, 17875 Beach Blvd. 2192 Dupont No. 113 Irvine !ant to 5 yn:. Lunches & ~90 ~;:tt ~ ~ • APARTMENTS Pool, <pt/ilrp .. bltns, Kida ok Call' 673-3663 963-2505 Eyes. e Drapes e Walk In cloaeta Hwrt!ntrtoo ll<ach. 60--4321 (:100 ynlo behi')d Ah-porter) snacks. Fenc<d yml. OU 1-..:.,,c,:;;_c.;.:.c.=.~cc..:.cc=--.I ·~ Co d Frp! • • Swl 1996 Maple No ;I. 642-3813 NEWPORT BEAOI on 9 AM to 1 AM. M.-Sat. San Diego Fwy. nr So. EXPER Japanese Gardt!b!r1 = n • " • • ,.. . ' e Swimming Pool • OAKWOOD GA, ROEN COAsr HWY 825 * 13'2100 * Coa t Pl 54&-7487 Comple,. -~ aervi .... Neat mJng Poola • Health Spa • 2206 College No, 5 6«2-7035 • Bar-b-Ques • 911. feet. ~ s aza. . ,y Tennis Crta • Game .I: Bil· LARGE 2 Br Moblle Home~ e Enc}osed GIU'ap' APARTMENTS lots of parking •• suitable for M/Charge B of A Check BABYSITrING in my home. & Rella. Frtt est. 6.f2--4311. liard Room. ·adults only. $135 mo. Al 'Utilities Paid architect or drafting. s.1IXl DISCOVER DISCOVERY Dependable and permanent. The "Yellow Plllff" · Mo. "C". THOMAS, l BEDROOM phu utilities. 546-6998 Find YOURSELF in Someone ;jcjj.Mjj.i 'jj""ijj'jjP;jjhojjnejji64ij>-0384ijjii' liii'jj''ijssjilllediiji;';i';i' ;i-jjiiijiillll FROM $U5 (P.e&:ort lJvlng for REALTOR 548-5.577. Call now -No obligation MEDITERRANEAN ~~ :: ~pta, """' bl"" Mow Vordo t Adulls, ,., peta Adulls only.) DESK '"""' availabl• ISO ffi41 8,1S.Q85 (213) 387-= * 64:1-2623 alt 6 pm Walking cllltance to Nl':WPDRT BEACH mo. Will pmvide furn!-NATIONAU.Y * * * * * VILLAGE NEW i bdrm rondo, ohal obooPlnc center. 1Stb at lzvine atlSmo........,..,..aervtco ==~RECOG~~N~IZE~D~-1 ,---------------,( )400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. lCrpBRls Carpod rtall. 1:!v· ~tio. bepl•~: dratlopes, diahwupoolher, 354 Avocado St., C.M. u: ~ .,..., ,...,0 ~~~e. 222 Fonst Ave, PROBLEM Pregnancy c.o~ (714) 557. -• rps, or:iec. •o:!p. u .. , pa ' aaraae. . 6C2-970I ~ Qt V'U-0! "-6 ...... Beach. 49f....&466 • -w dulls nl N hlld i:.u._~A1.: fident, s y mp at h e tic RENTAL OFF!r..:o 1 o y. o c ren or Sl90. ~ DELUXE 360 sq. f' 2 rm. "'""' t $125/ '54g..u22 ,7=:::.='°"=-....,..---1 .. pregnancy counseling. Abor-l , OPEN lO ~ TO 6 PM ""'=·.,.:.:=.:mo=',.:...c.::::.:·c.· --I Newport· S..ch VISTA DEL MESA suite, $175/mo. Corona de! tion &: Adoption ref. AP· I BA'I' MEADOW APTS. 2 BR,.2 BA Studio PARK NEWPORT * * * * Apartmant1 Mu nr. post o-. Snack CARE, 642-«16. I :i Br, beam ceiliDp. prtv pa· Crpt.s, drpl, patio. POOL. · El · Pwrto Mes• Apt1 l Ii:: 2 BR. Furn. It Unf. Dish-Shop. Priv. pkg. Atr-oond. ...:.._FU~LL=Y~Ll:.:CEN=~SE~D~- 1 tlo. rec. facll., cloa<d IU· 1 child ok. 64&--0496 APARTMENTS * * * * wuber • Stove I< R<frfg • R<alono.Uo, Bkr. ~700 Reoo....., Hindu Spir!tualbt 1 age. Gas hYt cookine le e WILSON GARDENS e Oft the ~ 1 Bedroom Apts, Sbq crpt'g-1..«e Rec center. DESK Space Avail. $75 Per SplrltuaJ Reading given dal· 'water all pd, All adults, no 2 BR, 11,i BA, crpt'drpl, encl . . RENT starts $155 Mo. Ideal for R. Estate, Ins, Jy. 10 AM·lO PM. Advice on pets. From $165. patio, $141>. 642-6811 Luxury. aPartment U OV· $130 It up tnct utilltiet, Also Irvine & Mes• Drive etc, Xlnt loc. 1938 Harbor aJI matters. I can help you, 387 W. :Q8.Y St., C.M. 1 BR, Stove, Retrlg,, .erlooldng the water. Enjoy furn. Pool It Recreation * 5454155 * Bl, Costa Mesa. Call 312N. EICaminoReal, San Call 646-0073 Dishwuber, Crpb, Drps. $750,CkXI health spa, 7 swim-area. Quiet Environment. Saunderson 642-0212. Clemente. 49i-9136 or o:-. .,...,.. -•-......,.,_ 7 11-'-ted t OCEANFRONT: 4 Br, 3 Ba. Trader's Paradise , * * $170 * * 717 Jame1, $135. '"'1""0..I.». .. .... ........-. ~u en-Ott street~· No CUI· 01I d OFFICE Space, Lquna Ni· 492-903.f. 3 Br, 1" Ba, newly palnt<d. Dana Point nil courts. ·plus rnlle. of dm:I, ,no pets. New._ toNm ecor. FYarlm. guel Professional Center. 600ALC 7@o~H~O~U~c~s[°JAlX>lOOn~-~u~si..1 \.... ________________ .)! n ---------bicycle trails, putting, abut.' Also Garqes.For Rent prefe ; o pets. y. 1,280 r:-:ft I ~ "'A" ,, ...... ' Bftns, cpt/drp, 61cl patio. fieboard .. ......,•et Junior l 's $600 mo. 673-8561. or sq. · . ocean v ew. Phone .,_.7217 or write P .O. ; Nr achl& Ir. sbop'g. Clildren NEW trl-plx (2) 2 bn, 2 ba, • -..... y • 1959-1961 Maple Avie. Call Mabel between 2 .l 4 Box 1223, Costa Mesa. CLEAR Improved lot, Des- lines times dollars ' OK, no -ts. 880 Center st., , w/bl~. crpt, drps, water from $l70 monthly; also 1 Costa Mesa pm. 499-2241 or 496-576.1. ~~~~~~~~~~lert KnoUs, Apple Valley. ~ pd vi 1714) ~..., ...,.,... and 2-bedroom planl and:t'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~ CM. 642-8340 or 543-2682. ., ew. ~. ..,., __ 1• l ~ CORONA DEL MAR. FUm. . Trade for S93-SSSI :Ht°"'. town b<r•ses. -· * 2 BEDROOM * Ron11• ![SJ MOTOR HOME t l'..RG. 2 Br. 1* Ba. sha11-'=-=:c· ~~~~~~ tiic Jd~ns, private patios 1~ Ba Townhouse oo:icepl ._ _____ _, AIC. sec'y service. S15 mo. Lost_, fcu111 .f99..2S95 • l crpl, bit-ins, frple, priv. LARGE 2 BR. 2 Ba, b:l.tnS, or baloon1es, carpeting, dra· Beam ceWnp. extr4 lrg ••••••••• Agent 675-7225 H.t.R. l~;;;;jj;jliljiii;::· -~1 patio, encl. gar. 1 blk ne1179w crp~~&:7 ~·0~7 ~l'lllny. peries. Subll!l'l'anean park· bedrms encl J '.tiO recrea· R-i _._ ARCHJTF.Cr, Engineer, etc. 1 ·"' Exhouchange two free&: clear acha. 837-9842 d 1y 1 , mo. o.:i -.,,.;r ... , cw -• Ing with elevators. Optkmal ••--rm' aauna •• ·,._ .,... _,,, -Officel. See to appreciate. · se1 for income property d I .Iwo f -' --· -Found (froo ads} 550 LoVell Johns, RHllo• 645-6345 eves. E11t Bluff maJ . serv ce. t north 0 Adults.. Our Sunday after. WANTED: Middle a I' e d Exter. entrance, S8S mo. ,1100,000 2nd TD, llD,000 income. Solid aecurlt;y. WANT' Large AP!', ahop'J center, office or !??t * B~ 547-6469 * Quttt adult 2 BR 1% BA -----_,.,.....,,,_,..-Fashion Island at Jambor-nooll IJ..ll·Q's ti Free Art woman to share 2 BR 548-5300, OPEN. 444 Old BROWN &: black German 8J0..0382 ; ·apt. % blk to 8hop, 2 car NEWPORT BEACH &a~nd San Joaquin Hillil Lessons startiog mn. Duplex, CdM, W a I k Ing Newport Blvd. Shepherd, approx. 1 yr old. SACRIFICE-Sl!l,000 Texas , · gBJ, under bldg 240 E. 16th Vill11 Granada Apt1. TelePhone (7l4) 644-!900 HARBOR G~EENS distance to shop'g, Free Bay View Offices 4 beige paws, leather collar, Lake View Estate FREE &: Clear· Goll Coune lot, Canyon Lake, $85(X). WANT: Fixer UpPtl', Home or Apts. * Bkr. 547-6469 * ' Pl. Ph: 642-1073 eves. FoUr bedroomc With baloon-• 546-5025 room &: board in ·exchange Del air-conditioned no lap, vie. Seashore, N.B. FOR: Equity + 1? In fine Jes above It below. Graclolll tor rental intonnation for care ot elderly lady COi). uxe, 642-9656. mobile home, tnotor home , EASTER Special! 3 Bdrm., 2 Bath. Mow: now • P1¥ments start ht. $165/mo. Call ' 962--0670. SPARKLING 3 Bdrm home~ most exclusive S.A. •lreet• 1126 Sharon Road. WANT: . LRG 2 BR w/patJo. Quiet. , ,Crpts, drps, 1tove, ref'rig, gar, adults, no pf! I s . : &46-2768. • REDUCED rent for Apt I Manager tor 10 unit apt. 2 Br. Adul!s only. No pets. 645-3515. • 1 BR Bachelor w/1klve I retri,g.. crpts, drp1 $150. elec & water 1pd. 2515 D ! Elden Ave. 545-1657. 1 J BR, 2 BA. ui1£ Apt. llSO. Adults, no peta, 820 Center j st. 642-5848. I 2 BR CONDOMINIUM, 1\1 I BA ctu'porl. 1143. • 637.-. , $135. 2 BR. lmmac. New e SPACIOUS e Udo area • 50c -z. ft. living .I: quiet tutroUndl.n&' WATER VieW-2 BR, 2 BA, Weil-Designed Apt& vaJestng. No lifting. Lite Realonornics, Bkr. 675-6700 FOUND together Schnaw:er or car. Prl party 962-0564. for famib' with cblldren. approx. 800 sq. ft. D/W, 1 .I: 2 BR. w/ TeJTaoes, meal preparation .l lite A: Poodle le.males, vk:. 1 .... QUAIL Valley house, week· Near O:>rona del Mar High SIC oven, crpt'd, drp'd, Ftom $140 • $2'TS/mo housekeeplnr. No smoking. • OFFICE~ • dlanapolls & Beach Blvd., end retreat, nice! $18,500. ScbooL ""'Firepla~. Wet~ .I: gar Deck Skle tie avail Ref's. req'd. Write resume 300 &: 600 . IQ'. f t. COSTA Cl Co bull'·lo kitchen .~ •• -. · ly 1 · ..., .... u~ Shag cpts, drps. saunas, t n--~· Co d 1 MESA Call .~2130 H.B. 536-8751. ear. Exchange ~ta .,....., ......... Year ease. TI.f:61~ pool, jacuul, encl gar. o: DOM. ''"• rona e · U'iV'-• Mesa hou 'nte Doyl Co 835 AMIGOS WAY 6'4-2991 M C 92i25 FND. German S h e p h er d se. . e • appt. Quiet Adult living ar, a · 350 Sq. ft. office for lease, (female) vie. SlaUtt a: 548-1168. Chris Col~~~ Co. BRAND NEWI MERRIMAC WOODS Sell Idle Hems now! Call downtown Costa Me 1 a. Ward, F.V. Ask for Jofce. YES. we have bananu. And 2 IR. 2 BATHS -ADULTS ONLY-PET OK tti MUrimac W~, CM 64l-567B Now! 642-4230/673-4626. 962-4481. net spendable! $172,000 trvJt Fully carpeted 4, dniped DELUXE 2 BR-$185 MALE Aired&Il' ovenhOt planta~lon &: s?1aU cattle 2 €overed parking stalls Dshwshr., frrilc., '2 Ba., IWim jaw, vie. comer 'of Maraue-ranch 1n Austraha FOR Cal. Gar A water pd. $250 Mo. pool. 557·2125. :aJ342 Santa ST' "" "m> GA:,.E-.:a"1e ¥. rite A Cit Hwy, CdM. No prnp. Ag!. 615-72'25 !UR Ydy. 816 Amla<>o Way, NB Ana Av.. ~ .~ -. .... tap, n •• oollar. 67S69l1. * * * • 0 NEW Spacious Apts. £x,. .-"" ..t.lta }< ~ ~~ ~~1!:: ){ utu. SMALL yng lite Brwn dog" • LAKE Isabella view lot M '7Ml•I dusive location, nr shop'g. -:A)IM. J • y fWlr _,,,... .. .,,, y sm • .u l"f'1. Found March Sth Vic close In Wofford Heights. Frplc., atr/cond., pool, etc. »A.'' ·,-; ~i;,"1111• '• t~• $!fh• d od: v«}l4} 0ranp "-A.:. Cec~ Pl:, zzil $2,000 equity tor travel trail· WP'df JLa 1 BR, $185/mo. 2'BR. 2 Ba. ~ .... ri.;q .··~M!fds mllf9d~to!·~ t"":;;zjji1i:'.:! ~-A•• C.M er or down on home H.B. BRAND NEW 1245/mo. f'IS.49ll Bkr. """'' ot.,....z.,:::;:::~. '.-·-·• ~· ~·-•· .... . om. 1414417. . e 2BR, 2u twnhle, t«lD-. SEACLIFF Manor 2 Br, 11,i "10i:n't llT"""*tq 'ta.. FND: Small wht 1q Wt.VJ' OWNER· Grana<laHilll J.. 111 .., .2Shott · 32To '2S,..llll haired do&" w/tan apoll A • · ft., cpts, drps., b'ltln1 . Ba Studk:I. Pool. Cpts, drpa, l ,0,.,0.lnf Jlo.lor cllbllr ean. U::ioks like Cocker~ Vletv hme, 2P? Ml· ft. w a 11 pap e r , pool rec bltna. $160. Ask about ou ' A-Oorl't -:u Der .. To c ....... lel 54.5-4S22 ownn COit $64.~. f Br. facilities. Im. 804 Amiaos dlscount.1525 Place n t I a , ft,. ~~ :f~ ..._., ' · 3 Ba. tun. rm. Fer DupG Way, 6'1>1380. Ave.~ 1 7Pvl' 37Wld •7o..Ntlf GREAT Dane Puppy • 3-4 or bme. CdM or NB, Income property or ttt~ * Bkr. 547-6469 * PANORAMIC Bay View Apt for luxury living. ConaldU San Fernando Valley W!w" lot for portion of $37.-5M eq. Agt 613-llm, 673-1144. (9) J\.l. Lots. Vista, C&L Clear. $25,000. Trade all oi part, tor house or lncmnie. The Doyle Co, 548-ll81. Ouis 3 Duplexes + 3-0n·a lot; C.M. !!OM total eqty. Ex· change all or pt for 1"0'1, clear mtr hme, cam.pr, IUlo """'BRIDDe.All- N'Pr Dooch dltpla. 3 811. 2 ba. eL unit. ~ Val .Tak• 23 to 27 ft. -I tilr. .. part,down. 0..-!a*· • ... &15-M- PRIVATE 2 Br 2 Ba · '"*' 3't ~ • ...,._.. moe old. VW:. 23rd I: 6f4.45n, ~ Fountain Y•ftey ** ., ., ,~. •3tM4 *'v-n....-CM -&daMe cpt/drp&, bltns, encl car., lOYiM "'°To ?OT,.... ........ ,... · · · ~ 15,000 R..1lotin11.lntrldge/ patio Infant ok $1 7 S -~~~ l,"..,~ ~i~ ~C.. Pl. 548-2733. Pasadena: area· plu., for I .,,,.... • drps. ideal kw I --------ZENITH COLOR TV.' II''. TRADE FOR ANT!Qlml OR ANYTHING or VAWJ: • senior edit.I. Kea Verde ; atta. 546-.. ' I •2 BR. 1 BA. "'-v-. ' -· cri>11/drpe/bltns. 1.y clot<ta. nso. Adult.. ' NO PETS. 5'7....,_ ' 2Br . ....Slo .... ' UI B Ca-St, C:M. ' -SllW -cblldmt ... 3 Br, Jll be. 1..,, cptldrp1, ~. no ,.., 56-311~ J)lr, 2 .. -.... apt'd " ........... 114 • No. ,._ VACANT TIBURON "BALBOA" model·! Br, 2% BA, kids ok. Immediate .....-12115. per montll. ' larwln realty Inc. 698""'400 Anytime 82M065 lfuntl"""' loach · 2 BR w/pr. er,i.. t1rpo, blll'On)I, blWn stow. No smtll chlktnn. R e t • 1. Mlmo. !16i-2SU. I • 5'8-31os. '.,, · ' lJAcfMtfft "'3Wllt 711., ~ ili'MiE ·Labrador,pnppy, all beach bou9e ot •~art. l•Efkw:t ",_. 7•Wlth bl k I Vk: H-~ • ·--• * OCEANFRONT Deluxe t50r •5Wtll 1 75r-'te ac · ma e. ou;uuo. • 709 N. M .... 5 """',la Ave., AT APPROX. 1125. ** 64$-062) ** 'I BR, 2 • • "'-•·, end .. -., 16 y_, "'TM 761"lot Victoria.. 833-U:IO. Mbambn., Calif. 91801. ~ u.i--•-'t7F«tort a~ 77~ % Ac comm'l lot Ong . YH:J'b'. Adults, no pets. 11Mot. AIC...-71~ FAT black male c ~ t , ** DuplQ DIM Pt.~. la G pss. 1'1J..J.990t 213:m..un. 1t0f ..,g;-" :~ clawlet1, vie Lacuna Cyn. tqUJty SlJ,!iO'J. WUl tride for ~' 1151:e O:,~r: Jud. ** WATERFRONT super ~':tl'fJ • -:22,,.., 1:::7 ~~ :i~1c • Rd. CH-~L lot, T.0 .11, <II' ': up to Utah. T.nde lor R.F... ii deluxe 3 Br, tleft. 3 Be. a "" AW FOUND: Female B • • 1 et SlO,CXX>. A&ent. artt. or f &M-14 TwnhR. NJO. Pitt A tloat • An i~=-~t,.._ :!.w Hou ad, younc, well * 562-7«l? * avail.TM:m-Ga.t.-' 7·1>l l'2SW. 55~ IST• lf'O()mtd.•2308. 2 GORGEOUS oceutronl 31:kries-5.4,A.28Rm ....... 7S3T 12',.., ,.,_ .......... * YEAIU.Y-HEAJ\ OC!EAN. i,,.. 27GitiM 51tf ITC-... wmn:: Min. Jtmale Poodie k>ll Jn stwlter Cove, Cal. " SCT'f!, IJ'Clll ••• 1111 j lJlG 2 ot 3 BIL~ m.$250. ......._n ·~~ ·~:-' =~: ...... "': tt h_.. vie. MdO:ll.cb\ Or., t.aiu.111 V•I. $31.000. Trade hr SS5,CXX>. Eqaitr,l&GllO. -.r Appt. 61J-1llll9. .,,r. ,,.,_. •-,..._. ""'·•~ Bucb. -a._ °""'IY lncom•. rtntal• Wll) ..... ......, ' t-17 . • .O.~-• IOI,~ ..._ •• ~, ~·~ ' ' . lUVlERA Rally 499-2!00 .,,. T -n llMUI llou• flllnllnCT Wl!cb dlel ___ J~~~~\$11~-=='&'~-=="~-==:!~~~--. e o.Jly ~ 01-* * * * * OP!N ROUSE -1-Ad. f0.4111 :;::._ __ :.:_ •. _....:.;....:.;_....:.; __ ...::....:.;_~ I • -1 l ' • ' . ' • ' . - w-.,, lllfdl lS, 1m: r .....:..--1~ 1---1~ IJ I '"cfll'Jr•:t l[Il] l Help w ... i:.._ Ma F 710 Help W•-· Ma,. 711 JNCO¥E Tax Tl<tuml By PobUc Attt. RH.I. Home er omc.. -z. ) " • DA&Y PILOT. [: ,..," .... • .- • I I . ' -.,, Miid! 15, 1972 ........... l[i] I -... -I~ I __ .. 111 Muolcol IHll•-n In C... 152 llom, Sllpo/&JI! tll Cycles, llbt. GIBSON S.G. Ll)lo ""' • 5-erl l§l I ........... 1§1 !.. .......... I~ ~·' ~;~~t;=~t70~ A-. 1....,i..1 . "° 0.-el f!I Trucb ,.. , ~ n.s ..,.,-,,.---,,...~-r------ALFA ROMEO FIAT 7 PC. VILVIT & w/-$21111. 2 Quf11« !NG...,.11Dloolemal<.'5D· DOCK!k111>. ...... lllmln.1---------SPANISH OAK cahll>ets""w/Sbomih h<o4 A11o % _, l!o .,.._bop-Sall J>ftL Wtzlde<. 303 E. J!'l2 2:i! CC HUSKY, .,...r I1LN'ESS 1D ram11 fOrtts 1 t s 1 , c b e v y P • u • ,.tt., '.f1_...Jeep tru.c.t, w/a.lurntnum eamc>er shell. partially · comJ)l<ted, wd Good cood. $GI. ~ alt ** $14" ** '72 128 FIAT LIVING ltM. GllOUP $In, 615-4186. , por ldlS $11. HHl:IS E<fa<wattt Bal. 1-.971.-2166. n-OOd. l ccwllllotr of I' v.lvd oola, OLD "'1lJ< Fmltt Shoman °"'9 154 Boats, 5poed & Ski ti I * Call 5.16-l99G • rlow 6 tires, 4 cyt. Wll.l'ftD. 3 pm. 'fl Alfa Romeo . Spi~er ~= BR.AND new 1972 FlAT 128 ceptlonal. Lo mL Ori& 2 DR SEDAN Motor trendl Dy 5C7..s83t or eve 846-2'39 .. ~ c.; of the Yf81'·" con!ruttn& v~tvtt accent lmJ) wltb ~JS" JJJ.L'a. All Motor Homes MO chall', 2 Spanilh oU end new parts in top, .135 watts SCHNAUZER )11n. . Pl1PI • 14' Claupar Manthoo, ~hp hube:. fdnmninccond.·~··~-~~~--~ Ford 2 dr wag, nu eng. Auto L111lne '64 brk5, frnl end It air cond. AUDI Winn•I' of 1 automotive tablet, Spanjth Olk coffee R.A1.S. '300, Stg..2193. .AKC • tbotl, I wks old. Mercury, SkJ le tillh. Bail tahlft • 2 Spanlah lamps. · SchMtm!r A ti.,, toy poodle ·--• ~u .. -·~ ~ .. ALL FOR $1ft Sl!Al'FER UprJrbt Pla11> • ·-· "• '"N· -· · I __ , -A-~1o I ~ .. : ... ~-=~-6:'1>-::'135~7~call~:af~lel'~I:~~~~~~~~ I TERM5-ALSO' xnt ~~ ~-·-· "I-'· LAY-AWAY PLAN ~w -1150 OBEDIENCE ciu. to...,.. , T--, Jinhl TRADEllS In the Newport ll<ach.. -~ FURNITURE 2 YR. Old •ti ol Sll-l&nd 1tvlne-. Wed, Much 22, 2t2 N. Breadway, S.A. Vlbnl-L $lOll .. otter. 7,30 -Open to all dogs 135-1305 Open 7 day> m.<354. "".,. s mca. -. Campen, S.le/ Rom t20 BUJFFS 2100 VIAi& llol'ado Offl .. ·l'umfluN/ • SHERRY'S POODLES * Sofa 29' aec, aoft "'"" $500 Equip. 124 EASTER PUPPY SALE! '72 GMC Fl'ir/-, auto Ice PJO, OFFICE <hail' metal with $50. .. Up. ALL COLO Truck Ca' mpe 2 match.in& Oriental teat • . 54&-2M&. • r chain Pl) ea. 2 b1k eotftt ~.at I; back. like BRAND new 1972 GMC % ton tbb $2S ea.,~ botHH $90 new $25. 545-2529. AKC Oiamp, kennel bred P.U. FuUy factory equip~. for 16, HavKand dllbn: m. Pl•nos/Organs 126 ~~ ~ k :Ci inctudin& v.a engine plw; Kin& bed: llntna, elect beautiful 8' cabover camper blanll., ''"""'· complt $l00. * PUBLIC NOTICE I 10 an>. that 11 .. ,.. six. Serial No. Mile. chest, pic'a., aUw:r, Before )'OU buy your piano POODLE pupa, 5 males, 2 TCE142850681.9, etc. Good boy's Ii: men'• or orran. be auu Ii see w: blck, 3 party rolorEtl, Very WAS $5063.21 -· mini bike, tl'aln, for &.st S.loction ...... nabi.. Call alt 5,30. SAYE $1164.21 dunebull&er, ican. etc. tor ~ best service in 64&-8188. FROM STTCKER WALNUT·RCA color combo. Souttifm Callfomla 1 w .. k old Ch!hualNa pup-NOW $3899.00 ·TV radio atereo Walnut 5' At Lowa1t pies. $10 each. 2 Te1rtpoo1 I: Tax, Lie. & Doc. Fee .,:.tormk.. S ~Hl&tk Discount Prlc11 $10 t!'8ch. 64J..t81.8, 534-3885 or LEASE for only Sill.50 mo. leather backHwivel. Sec-COAS.T MUSIC after 6. open end 36 mo. lease tional-14' Clll'Wd llonl-<xc. SERVICE DARIJNG POODLE PUPPY BILL BARRY cond • .Mile 1~ • dnpei, 1839 Newport Bl at Harbor 9 WEEKS OLD i 3 5 • l JV.II rottee I: end tablet Cotrta Mesa 642-2851 642-481! 5i-388S after 6. .... lhelvea. m.q;tt ' Open SWx!ay• 12 to Spm 2 Black ~C Toy Poodleo, 2 GMC-FIAT-PONTIAC 13631 Harbor, Garden Grove l Blk. So. or G.G. Frwy, 636-2333 Motor Homes Soles• Re• 558-3222 '66 BSA Victor dirt bike, 4.ll -~ t.'C, •pare ena Ir: oUier parts. + I.EASING '71 . Audi, Super 90, Sta See aft 6 pm. 2CJ1 10th St., v.·qon. 4 spd. A.i'1/FM ~A~p,,.1._10-'-. _H.,,.B"'. -.,---= Try our Jeue experts tor radio super car. Must aell, Antiqve1/Cl•11lc1 953 Savina:s • SatilfactiOD • Ser-1_892-883 __ 1_,a1,,,1,,6.=,..--- l940 FORD ,;i,"'i.EAsE ALL POPULAR BMW Exce~·~~'::'u.;: l!50 ~~AT COlllPETI-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 836-5672 Call MaJcolm Reid for Dune Bunies further details. 'THEODORE MEYERS Manx. Veey Clean. ROBINS l'ORD Mille-Havem nr. new. Baja 2JOO HarlJor Blvd. raclna enc. 1900 cc All o.ta Mesa 6CUOIO equip. S2'lllO 67>-7133. AUt01 Wanted 9'I VOLKSWAGEN Dune Bugy. Street legal. Top, towbar in- cluded. $695. GUr.2657. WE rAY TOP ON 1972 Bavaria's .M '<) ~.:.. • lC.U s. VIII.age \Vay, S.A. Trucks 9'l RECREATIONAL V@hicles --------·CASH '°' n...t irom. 1'75 to 1190 • 64 International per week, plus 7c per mlle. TRAVELALL that runs llke a Sleeps 4. to 8. Oller ~plres top plus beautiful 18' house J~ 1. 1972. 546--0291. 2995 traiter that is completely Bristol, C.M. self con t a i n e d , THIS IMMACULATE 23' Ute· WEEK'S SPECIAL. $1995 .+ tax, lie. & doc. fee #OLR434-CK5271 for Uled can A trudca, lull can 111 rw tree Httmata. GROTH CHEVROLET SEE US ABOUT Ov1rs1a1 Delivery CREVIER MOTORS 2ffi \V. 1st St .. ~ta Ana 135-3171 AutomoilV& Excellence Alli for Sal" Man..,. & llZll Beach Blvd. Huntlnoton lleacb 111.aJn . Kl 9-3331 awards throughout E\ll'Ope. Standard equipment in· udes: 4 speed trana. radial Urea, fL disc. brakes + many extras. Serial No. 128AOTll008. $1976.80 + tax, Uc. I: doc. lee or LEASE for only $60."1 mo. open end 36 mo. lease BILL BARRY FIAT-GMC-PONTIAC (1.st St. at S.A. Fwy.) 3XX1 E. 1st St, Santa Ana 558-1000 . JAGUAR ALWAYS A Fine Selection OF NEW & USID JAGUARS "Specializll1g In Quality" BAUER Buick.()pol-J•1uar 234 E. 17th SL EBONY '2'' --table w/2 * HAMMOND mo'• old. 1 mate, 1 female. <ht st. at s.A. Fwy.l -~-2000 E. 1st St. Santa Ana ..... ' clin: f!S : °"""'1 ORGANS S31-'l411. 558-1000 , truitwood m&J\'I chest, 5 * * * IRISH Setter Pedi&l'ff -f!S; Con>cle llofl. J..arseo!All ,..!:.1,des!N-~U!'.~t PllPll • AKC. 549--1612 °' . flberglaH '!nib B/W TV. 25" plchzrre .. ~ M:\,I "'"" -G T Liner, llleeps 7, every ac- ces1101')', 1910 stUl under wananly. Sll,800. Call 6T.,...al67. after 6 pm. RENT our 'TI El Dorado motor home. Sleeps 6, fully self-eontained. Reserve now. 5-4~9513. '50: m-2425. ll<f ... ,.,. """-aiv• 111 a try. ~.,. em· op o~"!I" !!!", 112 PENNY ~~S!f! co. 8~!'°~·.:c1: .:,",'.; Camper Shell *.i:~ s':':::U~n !~~~~ ~ Gli.DRE.'' ll3S2 Beach Bl, s. of Karella also trkclor. 965-3626. Fits •a•n El Camino wk&: Sc mi. 642-5158. BILL BARRY GMC FIAT- PONTIAC (ht SI. at S.A. F\vy.) 2:lOO E. 1st St. Santa Ana 558-1000 WE """ all makes of clean ROY CARVER I used sporta cars, paid for ' nc. or not Please drive in for 2925 Harbor Blvd tree appraisal. Costa Mesa 546-4444 NEWPORT IMPORTS DATSUN '69 1600 Roadster Cost'a Mes,a 54&-TJ65 '69 JAG XKE 2+2, Xlnt c:ond. 19,000 q. mi's. dinn wire ~ills., air cond., auto trans., am/Im Aefto radio. All Jthr inter. $3950. 645-4330, 673--1621. N"'J)Ol't Harbor Emblem Daily 10-9, Sat 11).6, Sun 12-6 TINY Toy Poodle 8 wks old $225 Oub No, 381. Rwnma&e MAJOR llRAND ORGANS gilver l50. ~ 534-3885 Call 137.5003 Trailers, Travel 945 ~.7=2~l/4,.....,,T~o-n-G~M~C 3100 W. Coast Hwy., 1968 JAGUAR, tan, XKE 4 spd.. dlr. All chrome whee~, Coupe. Xlnt cond. hardtop & soft top, Exotic Call G4f-{i661 .AM ONLY Sole. Mal'cll 17-U l9'l2-From $393 Inc. A1lel. Cl>M. alt.,. 6. '70 ANGELUS "11-cont ll' • ARISTOCRATS Hour 1 lOAM-oo.Ricbards Hammond • W\zrlttzer, etc. NOR\VEGIAN Elkhoudds 6 cab aver camper, Sleeps 6, e NEWPORTS ;l'i 14.mt in. the pat l o, Alto Harp 1 t e ho rd 1 &: wk& 2 ma1es. Xlnt for .how blu lnttt, refrig, shower, . • AUTO-MATES Newport Be~. Pianos. or pet. AKC re&-548-Qn_ toilet, Hot & C.old water, 2 Also, several used $395 A: up 1972 G.M.C. camper truck w Newport Beach PS, PB, radio, 3 .speed auto. 642-'405 trans., gauges, T. glass plus -,;======,,,_.. long wide box, WiU haul WE PAY TOP DOUAR ftd exterior, black ·bucket r ,.,,:;;=::""=;.:..;~;;-':=~ ...... Sacrifice! Take small KARMANN GHIA down. Call 546-8736. GOULD MUSIC CO. wy likes. Will sacrifice \VORSHAM: TRAJLER'sALES 1 ANTIQUES: 6~ •ta!Md slau 2145 No, Main S.A. GERM SHEP, 6 wk1, AKC 97M841, 646--0155. 2709 W. 17th Street 10~' camper. Serial No. FOR TOP USED CARS TCE2428503857. U YoUr car ls extra clan, '72 DATSUN 510 Big Sedan. 4 speed dlr. Vinyl 1975 X!.NT CONDmON 548-5982 =k,pBe~A1:; 54'7..a&sl ** Since 1911 Free obtd t e711c':,!'i: ,70 Ford %. ton camper SantaAna (714)531-25!'.fi otbol' collecal Ii.nu. Call PIAN05**0RGANS ';!::::""" 642-003 ' Special b'Uck, will' 8 TEARDROP U fl. d I x ~1'150. KawaJ, Steinway, lmvrey, L b sleeper camper. 646-3608. ~l. SC,119lps 6, ~ttlne O\vner $3395,0Q -":..!'Uin l!UICK Plus tax, lie. It doc. fee 2M E. 17th St. or LEASE for only $99 mo. Costa Mesa 548-116S Root. Under <t,000 miles. •69 Kannann Ghla, Ai.'6./FM, R & H + wsw, Full price auto, 20,txXJ ori&: mL l $2136. Can finance all. .,495 ·~ •~• nsKING tackle, appllanon, Allen, Baldwin, etc. From 11• •20 • • pups ... ~.1550 Cycles, Bik9s, t reg. 8-70. Li e um:I. hDmtbold .ltem1, mu eh $296. RENTALS. DaQy 10-9 U"lf • ~ Scooters 925 $1800. 646-8115. 227 \Va1nut, open end 36 mo. lease BILL BARRY ~~ ~= (#234128) ca.Il 494-68ll aft1=°'~""'~"-'"--,' ,,.-,_-·- 10 am 546-8736. ·59 Karmann Ghia, new eng. _.., 22!D Jlutprs DI', s...-, 1~ Sllnday 12-S Tiny Toy Poodles _c_.M~·-~~~~--LEASE a 1972 Dat.sun Pick Ne\v brakes, Needs paint, S300 or best otter. 531-9739. C.M. 'lbura, Fri to Sal. 9 FIELD'S PIANO CO. 5 wi<t. old. 6!MIC. Jm 650 Bonneville Triumph. Cox Tent Trailor GMr FIAT-PONTIAC I' am. 1833 Newport Blvd. Hones 15' Xlnt CODd, 4,CKKI mi. $1395. Sleeps six, water tank, link, -i FREEZER, -. ft!'fril. old Cotta Mesa 714/863250 1971 Honda Mini bike, brand ice bclx-. $799. 541-3825 (l!t St. at S.A. Fwy.) _,. 1Jnk, mud> mllc. WOULD YOU TWO P.O.A. type ponleg. new, ..U. 1"' $189.95 uklng Auto S.rvlca, Parts 949 2000 E. ~ixxJSant& Ana Call ~mo. BELIEVE Jlal ..,../b.,.,.lanket s;·6· .. " $15(). 67>-1280 or 646-lllT. GOOD-AR P I I ---'------ •--'•ry • 115 FREE ORGAN U:SOONS -" • · HONDA YAMAHA •L 0 Y • a SS • .,........ u Jone u you Jlkel No re&-493-9173. SPRING SALE Blems, C60x15 $'.29.95. All IH. ''LAD""'"IES~°"11k,,--"1W-:--,~o':"'.:l d l!tn;don. No obllptkm, Jwst SUSAN Smith stables: Board-1972 YAM CI'2 l'ias Bizn, low prices. lll Jaclceni 1.on1tnn: ..'lilt wateb w/'lJ Ome J&andaYt 7:30 pm. 1ni tra.i.nfnl A lessons. Costa REG. $619. SALE $599. ~:,c::·M!:~ s~~ Bu~ lntf'rn&tional Harvest~r dWnondt. never woJ'n . COAST MUSIC Mesa 549-1953. HUSKY 250 5 Speed In Stock sell trade open SUnday, 1950 RECREATION CENTER Sacrlflce ""10. ·PY!-otJ. W-2151 AGGIE HONDA. sc. 492-6741 N•wport , CM . .,,5-35.14. Tire ROY CARVER, Inc. TOP$ l!UYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 -ch Blvd. H. Beach. P.t.. 847455?5 up. $69.95/lno. or buy. POCAL LEASING I< IN- VES'Illi!ENT CO. 54S-ll55. '71 DATSUN 510 \Vagon. WilL Buy your car paid for R/H. Fae. air. Top Tack. or not. Call Ralph Gordon 12,500 mi. Perl cond. $2100 • 613-0900 -54~3031. 1970 644-6248. liarbor mvd., Costa P.1esa. RE=o~D-atsun--• .,~,--~-. N-.. -, * * \ViU trade: 'iO Honda 350 tires r/b automatic. Good + Cash: l-~or Van or Volvo. cond. $650. 546-4478. Call 61&-4706. '69 Datsun P/U. R/H, air. Ahlo camper .shell \Vliet box. Call 645-1380. MAZQA M5-0053. TOP PRICES PAID FOR I JI., ]If) '10 Honda 459 Yetman road City. • 2925 Harbor Blvd. Autos, Imported 970 , DWIONDS • a., Jllftct Steln""I" " H&MmO~ -"t 'I"" int 1'. ractng frame, belol' lo<ks, ENGINE 1'67 GMC v .. 305 Costa M.,. 546-4444 ALFA ROMEO i * WHOtnALE PRICES * PENNY OWSLEY CO'' · • 3~» gal t.ank $300 Finn E. c o·m p jet e ex~pt '59 CHEV Apache 36 utility i#,~Dml~~Dla~~-~t-~53090~1 192-3314 -454-1861. alternator, good cond. body, 6 eyl. 3 spd, $795.1 ---A-l-f•_R_o_m_ao __ ~ • . ,,. S,1rffn1.Gwfa· .. Gener.. 900 ·n KAWASAKI 100 ~n. All 56-8095. 536--3912. • " ·~ ~~;,~ sta. wag. ;600. ""M""'E=1=c"'E"'D"'ES=-""'B"'ENZ== I ! lllUNDESlGN -amP POOL Tl~ie ·~ Ci:.m: .;rs~;~ bii'"t11e bl11e ·~ ~~~ng. Fast. S250. Call 4 Custom mag wheels, 15" '68 FORD 250, auto, 3fiO V-8, COMPONENT sYSTEM, p1onlhlp 8' idn'1 cond. Paid and do 90me fiahlng. El MEN alwhinum 8" wide. Fit Ford. below Blue Book, clean u a T pcl lncludlnc: '400, Mlchj $225. MM362, Pescador II ""'line !or you. 'S 10 SPD BIKE or Chrysler'!' adapt to VW. pin. 543-0961 alts AM/FM/FM/MPx t un er TV R dlo HIPI 16' ftberilul boat 'WI.th 60 Beat Offer * 546-8346 4 for $30. 67S-1345 eves. FORD '00, 8xl0 Flatbed wll track cartrld&e p~. st.:. I I I» bp Mm:. $851(' A real beau· 5 Speed Stingr•y \VE BER CARBURETORS. stake,. Ne"w rubber. ~1 3 WQ' baa reflex apeaken, • ty. 540-22'19 aft 5 or anr.,thne $40. * 613-0194 48-IDA, S70 each. 646-7582. ** 548--4ro4 ** Gllnrd', Pr D f e 111 o n 8 l 1972 ZENITH It: -RCA Glior 'f>'ftk~11. FOR Sale: 'TI Mini Ellduro. '59 VW bwi trans axle $00 or '58 Ford Pick Up Truck NO\V ON' DISPLAY turntable, complete w/baa:, aets at dearancoe pricet.16" 11' BOSTON WHALER Xlnt cond. $250. . best oiler AlJ.eJ'......P pm: cond, must seie to ap-Sales Service d11lt cover • diamond from ms 18" from $288 - • 64""4042. FERRARI l 'ERRARI GTB 275. Nu red paint, strong enr;. nu brakt!s & clutch. $7900. 675-1860, Gl&-5119. '70 300SEL 1 stylus, ewrythin& rully 19'' trom"$339., ll" ~ ** 54S-G>4 ** , ~~ 6f2....6587. preciate. ~1282. Parts Body Shop cuar. Omtplete .,...m aold $389., 21" !rom 1459., 23" Boots/Marine '71 Honda ql·450 K3 7,!;00 2 Sears Oil state 4 ply, 2 ply '59 Ford l!ancbero, Runs COAST IMPORTS : !or $397.88, pay ott anWl bal ll'Om $441., 25" lrom 1475, Equip. tM ml-X1nt Cl>nd, l'ISQ firm. ~. 2 lbrgls belts + 2 xlnt, 1250. lll00-1200 W. Cout Hwy. or $1M.71 or an.all monthly All w/3 yr picture tube, 1 8t6-~454. ply nylon Sal each. 675-6658. ** 646.-1413 ** Newport Beacb FOR ACTION. , • CAU 642°5678 6.3 w/sunroof, Landau Top, Fully Equl!)ped. 1 .... avail- able, paymnta of $7.50. U.S.A. yr partJc I< "1'Vice. Calle 90 BAl1' Tanks $24.95 boating Autos, Imported 970 ~utac~ lmpertad m Autos, Imported 970 Auto&, Imported SteftO F.qulp WarebouR, or terms avail. .!BC Color accen. (fish. tackle) dw-ii"'"i'i'i" i" i=iiiiiiiii'iiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Authorized Da•ler 523-7250 I 179 E. 17th st., Coata Meu., TV, oon >ttll.nta at count! 666180,' 557-8077. 16-2"1 Maanoli&. Ha n ti n rt on BNts, Power 906 1! STEREO Unclaimed 19'72 Beach 968-3329 . • ......... A • .. ............. .. ; G..-i HI. Auto tumtable, COLOR TV ;lO: 0,., -. 14' Gl!ssllar. Boat air~ 1peaker1 Motorola·Zenith. Al9o ~with 45 J:(p, Mercury en- 1w/cros1-over l)'Stem, TV's_ $100 up. Teo:s TV, gtne, and trailer., The per- . AMIFMIMPX radio & 1811 Ntwport Bl., C.M. !<!ct ski "' flahlns boat. A ,. tape deck. Still brand new ii: 541J..3.493. once in a lifetime buy. First ; auaranteed. S:ild for aver come first aene. #CW9272. $300 pay ott balance ot $120 SANSUI 200DA Receiver. $595 or 'take ovu small Xlnt Cl>nd. $l00. 646-7049 bet Pl)'J'Dt!nta, Credit Dept., ~:00 p.m. :+ tax, lie. • doc. tee , 'n4--. BILL BARRY ·~ * ~!~<!' * I 'f,..1ey.. Ill' PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT & Appl......, Ost St. at S.A. Fwy.) < Auctions Fl'lday, 1:3(),p.m. 3 Lf~,2Tl ...... $2.00 2000.E. ~St. Sant& Ana · Windy'• Auction Barn lOtlO ~ Newport. CM -FREE to aood borne w/loi. 28' 1966 Chris Craft Expreq Bebtnd T-·"• m"-Mlt1 of room! Female 6 mo old Cruiser. Many xtru, lo hra. v•v "" German Sbtpberd, 1 i g h t Pvt owner, days f2U) SHAG CarJ>etin&" for sale 12 belp color with black 5 91 -J 8 8 O , eves (nf) square yardl or brand new muk. c.n 837...wll. 545-6715. ,~,.bite nylon lhl&" carpetln& HONEY colored, F. lhaggy 1965 24' Owens Cruiser 225 at a tttmendoul aavinp. .. I HP ,,_ Price is om, $l.9S pel' yard. coca -a -po <Ii\ mo's, . '""""· Private party call 837-4239 tra.lned/ahots, To ed hm. 675-BM> El Toro. 968-00l2. u~· 1'1b&ll, lleepg 2, &h or , . FREE puppies, ma I e, ski, 9J HP Evinntde & trlr. ANTIQUE \\TOUght ll'On fen-put~e J months. $1595. 968-7437. : cing 3'x8' ~. S30 tL Gty W aned ,,;, C'•-" Pl CMl===c'7===o--,,-Noll Hawn. Srfbrd. 7'xii. e • ~ ~ • 1 BRANO NEW 14' Flbc~aq 833-l420. · ew1. boat, cust built incl canopy. % Lab Retriever, .rots. Ma.hog int. SU.00. 546-6306. Mltlt find &ood hJtrH!' for\VANTED: 12-14 rt . her. For info call 847--4846, fibtrglass boat &. traUer, •' 10x48 ANGELUS traller & cabana. New <=ablnet aewin& " machlne. I am 1tck I: have to atU at onoe. 646-8261· OLD •tun. must sell, iron & braa bedr, camlval Clua. paintitwJ, etc. St3-1886. SHAKLEE PrOOuct. (t>r a hfeltbier, cleuer, wealthier aft 6. 7~--10 hp motor. 646-2132. • )'OU, 19&-2564 or 892-3163. Bl.ilCK Cockapoo, !•male 2 Boats S.11 '°' yrg old. Xlnt w/cblldttn.1---.'------ 675-Sl70 n"eS. $4000 Equity in Oaasle 26' * PUPS: pt Qill1e (blk Danish. motor 18iler. Sell or whl., " bro) Adorable! G consider tr.de fat amaUcr wits Wd. 847-3126 * trallttable boat I: cub orTT FREE to gd. home: OJck-a-Slip avail. Milani, •' WHEELCHAlR ·Everat..Jennlna.Startiner, Call 673-1362. QUALITY women'• dottdna, ·me ti.14. Xlnt buys! m E. Utll st. Apt. Q CM. ! __ , 8 cld TI.f/644-6735 or 675-8&XJ. JlO() o;:u1a1.f!, UlOS. ·l~~.,-_,--=--.,--96l-l3'19. 14' Entuprise, Ous sloop, W .. ~. H I bl ck trailer. $650. WW fina~. ~,,Lu. ome w a 833-8852 female part poodle puppy,1~-~·,,,..._,.,=-7""""-=: !11endly. 00-1295. Boots, Sllpa/Doc,kl 910 * s Piece tet o1 I~. GD. H<MM wanttd for d&rl-. OIOICE aUp for 50' m ,65' Jlnnd -I $25. !no mix Dachshund puppy. boat Slip 11 21' wide. (7Hl ,-** f75..fl5I ** Good W/c:bildren. ~ 6'13-ai06, • BAlt .. ·-· Dlnl<to, Dbl G=.r ~~~~ ::i QUICK CASH ~~· Drye!', _& --5 wks. 6T>-4186evea. ' \ 5'"14" Hhelv .. plalo .i-TAKE ME. 2 yr old ruco THROUGH A . ~.=r-~~~~:DAILY PILOT ~ =•••• 121 Labrador. Male , WANT AD -·-aflS. ) WAN'll:D to._ lltlJ 110 9 W. mix PoPf>i<&, lllal bt &1!•dh•Ke11Uao4,1 -lor4/1.l007W.11aJboa 14• U70 '"'117 .......... 11.a.-..i,10.._~ ....... ·-~-~---~' I 'rhe Detsun 510 Wegon. Five big doors. (More doors per cer then e lot of ot er imports.) Gets loeds in end out in e hurry. Other interesting specs: Overhead cem en9ine. Up to 25 miles;per gellon. Sefety front disc brek•s. All. vinyl upholstered interior. Full synchro 4-speed shi~ 1 eutometic optionelL It'~ more little wegon then you've eve; expected. Drive ' a Datsun •• , then decide. , / ~~~~~~~ 1200 Coupo laocl Sedln 510 2-0r Sedln 510 4-Dr Std•n 510 w..on Pldwl> 200-z See Our Complete Line of '72 Dat1uns e STATION W~GONS e PICKUPS 2 & 4 DR. SEDANS e FASTBACKS e 240Z (LIMlnD QUANTITY> 6000 SHOWI Dim A DA nuN ••• THIN DICIDI. _,2845 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA M•SA 540 6410 1 f I I l I (, I 1 • • • ~!LOT ·~DVERTIS!R Wldlllid.ly, MW 15, 1972 • Wtdntidty, M11<~ 15, 1972 Auteo, Imported MIRCIDl!S l~NZ MG ---I§] I -·-l§l 1 .. ,..~.. l§J I ---~;;m~~,~---.:~ Auloo, UM4 ftO Au,.., UMd ftO Au ... , u..d '90 Autoo, 1Me · ... ' . . .. _. ....... --':.....-----1-~...;,.;;;.; __ ...;.;. Pl!Ufil!OT _VOLVO , IUICK CHEVROLET MAVERICK PONTIAC • • VOLqWACiEN im MG Mldce~ 6,000 muu. * 'f1£1!GEOT * '61 VW IU'i CilT OUR V"u VO ALWAYS '70 ._..Sta. W•on ""' Ma .. rick •. ia.t cond. --,7-2 _P_•_ll-1c-exceUent cos:id. Mutt sell. ~ n•...-•. "6 New ti.rtl, 22,()Jl, ml. Alk1nc ' Mm:edt1 &em HOUSE OF 12,IOO.• Witt .,,,..,, In-Aa,lowu 12.299. (No. 5'01 'c::· ~ .. i::,,badcoadtio.:: DEAL llFORE A Fin•" "-l~tlon Factory m, PS, Buull!W ~1;::.14;;;,50;· .:.61;.7."2.'!90:::0, • .,.--,-~ Fll'llllrcl cl-. _l99--1753 a!tor 3 pm. FRJT:: w.uUU:!l'S -Tab ....u ""'"' YOll BUY! .... -Irwin -· wit!> uddl• in-' '70 Mawrick 3 .... Brand -un Flrlblrd..PS. IMPORTS '6& MG Mld&e~ • • ...-. ''" Sport Cor Center ..ui -Pvt. Pty. can SAVE ON EIJROP!:AN OF tenor <251BS'll 12695. ..,,,.,,uaJ. ·""'' cond. 1915. PB, ..ruo, beattt, wsw celleot oonditlon. ~•ORANG! COUNT Y'S !W&mscrfH!Sll D!L!V!RY NEW&USED J-Avnt ChlW 61'-5!0.l. O...~elec.clod<Amony, 1--R--'cl "'f D!Jt. LAAGEST '70 CAMPER pop-top. Xlnt IUICKS ~""'I 1'"" v•i MUSTANG maoy -... ""'°' traa, Mercedft0 h111" PORSCHE Avail. Pvt. •'>· fU-1531 un BAUER t.oauna Sch '66 Must1nq GT 2a7D:fs'8"$4ot1.'2 1 ne -•nee'"' MGA no E. lit SL, S.A. M1-0~ cond. 11,000 mi. J'U<ao. ~ I •-•· "SpeclaiiJll>S in Qu.UJy" 946 S. Coast H.,.., ceoter ft, ......i., Serial No. . Now Offerl•1 ''8 MGA, oeed1 body • ln-1 --------l'~p,._m-=·=~~=-.,... DLYD 8uick-Opol.Ja9uar "'4-1744JM6.996'1 Dir auto. PS PB at. "'""· SAVE $700 00 The I.arrest Selection ot tenor work. 1160. OVER 25 '64 BUS. ·o; nblt -· 234 E. l1tb SI. '70 El Camino strong heart 1195 ITEY 5101 • PreY\oualy Owned *.641-Cl.56 * 11e.mkamper. Ntw pa.int. l.9115 Harbor, CM. 646-930! Colta M 5'8-....-wiU finance. Pvt. pty. Call FROP.t STlCKER. SL Modtl1 , ____ M_G_I ___ , Cl1i1n, Recond~lonecl, MW titts. Very clean. •utot UMd 990 eu. ,.,,,.. Radio. Heater. Auto Trans, 546-8136 aft 9 am. 494·6811. NOW $Sn1.62 10 to chl:qe trom & Gutrantffd. 6"-1'88. .._ , '61 BUICK Le S&brt Jl.00· u v..g, (973EfU), $2395. '65 MUSI' ANG hrdtp, 6 cyl, + Tax, lie. &. doc fee 1'G-2t0 SL Model• '64MGBCon'"""·Xlnt.,,nd, PORSCHE$ '11>Bel&<VWBua. 1!1,00l mi. 10 ta, * 5111·7063 * Tommy Ayres Chevy •landard """'· blu w/nu orl.£4SEnd!ora:olyl99i!.mo. (7141 $2).7250 ·12 Uc .. 1100 or bat otter. 91 l'a. 912'•. 914•1 1 owner, afr. Amor. racln( Transportation peln<. tape d.ck " FM openBl,LL BAmoRR. y HOllll of 704 Marruerlte, c d M', 1'S7 to 1971 beadtn. Xlnt mech. ..... s-1a1s CADILLAC 946 s. Cout """· "'""v•r. Daughters "'· Imports I 6"""12· lll'\O. 91'-l313 alt s. sm°"AND u LARGIST ~wJ::.~ MUJt ..U! 919 • 8841 ' Auth. S.lt1'.s.~~~.. Ol'l!L '70 Pop Top Camper, New 100% FlnlJlcior A~.Uable. SELECTION OF ~LIS. PONTIAC-GMC·l'IAT tl1t SI. at S.A. Fwy.) 2000 E. ltt St Santa Ana SS&-1000 LHM 1----·--~1 n,naatu T"'" Xlnt """'· Ai" 18to108 CADILLACS IN CONTINENTAL '66 MUSTANG !ully equip., ALWAYS ,Mull ..U this week. 12175. aood cond. $815. 68'2 Manchester. Buena Pk. 642-1838. ORANGE COUNTY '71 Continental MK 111 613--3009 Alongaldt the 3100 w. Coast Hwy. .63 vw, new .66 t"line, runs SALES..LEASING 16,000 ori&inaJ mlle1, luxur-"'68"M"'USW1tr=c,,:..-=289:::;...,eo""nvm-.,-.• Santa Ana A Fine Selection N•wpart Beach fl'ftf, muit sell. S&crillee AtrmORlZED iousb' equip~. with &lJ the Auto, R/H. lo mi's. Pvt. '72 Pontloc Vonturo II BrW new '12 Ventura ll 2· dr. Fully factory eq11ipped lnciudlnc 6-cyl engine. SU. No. 242703Ll05037 . F raew11y OF , -~=,;,"'_,2_,"940.,..;;5~-'=-I S450. Inquire al no A • SERVICE.. extra1 includin& Speed Con· l'I;)'· $1300. 645-00il. at "'"" Blvd. lurnott NEW & USID ,. E · Orchid CdM Nabers CadlUac trol, Morced" Trad• in. OLDSMOBILE . IN JIUENA PARK OPELS W ·WANT .12 .,',.BU~. !or W. or mi HARBOR BL., Authorlnd '71 280 SE ''Specialiiina in Qu&llty" leue. Leaae payninUlOO~ COSI'A laSA M.B. Dealer 1966 OLDS DeJta 88 4 Dr. 3.5 Coupe, Fully Equipped, 2 BAUER PORSCHES deductible,""''""" pymoL AMERICAN 5'0·9100 Open Sunda1 ___ .,,._1250-'-----edn. Very cloan local, WAS $2951.94 SAVE $500 to choo&e from, · c.an n4: '494--04112 eve1. '61 Sedan De Ville '62 Continental, &ll. power, mi£in,a.I car. Air, etc. $895. Authorized Dealer 8ulck·Opel.J19uar HIGHF.tt on-m ·n vw ~. B ·-•~ Go"''°"'· fully ,,,YI,..., -.. 1.._ UDO or best offer. ~aving Firm ~2083. FRO~f STICKER NOW S2451. 94 523.1250 114 E. 11tl> St. AVAILABLE --·~.~per ug, , __ , American Motors ~. Including---~.~-for the lliand.s oext we<k: "·--M "~" .....,., .,,., '11' ~ AMF r m. M&-3632 '69 Cullasa Supreme full pwr. + Tax, Lie & Doc Fee or LEASE for only $74 mo. '70 280 SE fully equip. Xtra. ...ue1.a e!IA. ~''°"' DON BURNS , ___ *_6_73--0_136_* __ """Oremllnl" Jo'Hornett stereo. Factory Air, ol -'-'-~"-· ~-~~-&: air cond. $2"41. clean. Orig owner. Prl~ Don't give up the 1hlp! 'M vw Dellvtry Van )oll'Mat1dor1 ..,,,,J.v1lin• -"''6i"'r: .. c' a$~2895Vil. j642-09ffiil3i:E-11--~C:::O~U~G~A~R~-892·!>9~. Jor immed saJe. Owner "Lbt" lt in cla,;tilied. Ship ASK ro ... _Good ·~ ,,,_.,Amba11ador1 '69 CONVERTIBLE l.;,,60,..-0"'1"••"'.::::~:::;:_t~l-r-,-,. Open end 36 mo. leue BILL BARRY tranl. ~. 640-UOT. to Sbott Results! 6U-5678 R GLEN now• . _,.,, Huae ..,. __ ,_ of 'n'1 A: 'T.J's •""" 636-2333 + M&-0858 * •WUI. Meticuloualy maiJ\lained. all '61 Cousar .............. S995 PIS..P/B, P \V. Rum ~at AutM, Imported 970 Aulol, Imported 970 ,71 914 .68 vw, Au to, AM/FM, Good llg•llCJ 5aYln91 Service rec., w.,,.anJy, Lux-Loaded, vinyl top, lmmac. $300 or otter. 5117-9305. 4, 6.000 mn ... AM/FM radio. mech, needs body work. Harbor American ury options. Pvt Pty, 13135 Orig. own<r • 491-.1356 l'LYMOUTH PONTIAC·GMC·FIAT !1st St. at S.A. Fwy.) 2000 E. 1st St. Santa Ana SSS-1000 UtAN LtWI~ ORA NGE COUNTY HlAOIJUARTERS TOYOTA--VOLVO GIANT SPRING CLEA" UP • 1972 • CEUCAS PICK UPS LAND CRUISERS IMMIDIATE ~ELIVERY SAVE SAVE ' ~...,,.. BRAND NEW 1972 CLEARANCE TOYOTA s99 . ~·. ' "' DOWN 552 Per Month FO!t JUST -41 MONTHS Cempl•f• c:e1h prlc:e it S2 I 75.J'4, i11cl11d•t ,11 f•••1, 1•11 lie: .. fr1 i9ht, d11!ar pr•p e!IO cl1li"•'V on 1ppro.,,cl c,.4it. Daf1rred p1vm•11t pric1 it $2721.67. l11clud11 111 fl11111ce cti•rt••· t1x•1, 1972 lie,, fr1i9lit l dlr, prep. Nethi119 mer• to buy, • · A1111u•I P•rt•nt•t• R•t• 12.64 % ' BRAND NEW 1972 CLEARANCE VOLVO 142 597 DOWN 597 Per Month $97 IS th • fof•I clow11 pymt. S97 II th• tot•! mo11thlv p'f'!'lt. intlutli119 I•• I: '72 lie. ancl fi11•nc• ch•rt•• 011 .,,, .... .ct critelit for 60 mo1. o.f.rr•cl pymt. price i• $5,917 lnclucl i119 •II fin•nte ch•rg•s, f•:.:•• & "72 lie,. or If vo11 Pr•f•r to p•y t •1h, f1111 c•1h prie• ii $4, I ll.45 int.I. t•1 I '72 lie, Ann11•I p•rc:.•ntag• r1t• 11 15.42%, ( 1426144-259532). OVER 40 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM • 164's • 145's • 144's 1800 ES STATION WAGON· ORDER YOURS NOWI TRADE INS DOMESTIC & IMPORT USED ''' 'IA.T SJtl Appre-.:. -40 mpg. fXTJOO ll 71 TOYOTA SPIT. S1J91 'U YOLYO 1JH Stff fSUXTlll ''I YOLYO Stltl IZAD4271 '4J YW lltl '61 OLDS C'TL'SS SIJ9S (WQ0664 ) "JO CHIY. Sllfl Air, Aute., !OZIAOAJ'. ''I MUSTAN• SHI IJKSIJ 1 l 1972 VOLVO 1 IOOES Station W llCJOn THI T~UE SPORTS CAR FliEL FUEL IHJICTION, DISC BRAKIS, DEFOGGER , .. 11.1.~~! -~L~~~.~. '!ft~~~ .... ,,,, h1t.ri•r, 4 ... h••I dl1c br1~11. 164 4 DOOR S DAN ' cyl, f11•I lnJt tf•'• •II ,,,1 1••th•r lnf1r. Pow1r 1l••r· 1111, D•fttt•r, 4 wh•1I d!1e llr1••1, Mich1U11 railal tl,.1. DEA N LtWIS OR~Mf.l C~IJNTY ii[ M1ilUARH R' TOY OT A·-VOL VO 646-9303 h/.', H~RP.Ofl BLVD COSTA MESA Still under WaJT&nty 'til S60D or. 644-5999. 61S-T497 675-1972 '70 Coupr, loaded. $2500. ~ •• 000 Horne of Convenient '60 ~-d. C-1 own, ·'-.!ulJ a< 1"' n-•uv<"lle Pi CM --:.==-----. . . milu, immaculate '69 vw camper -·"'· to on P •--•· .... ......-au-· 'IU,J ....., ., • ' -'70 p~ th __ ,., .,......., •--..~ ... •uo ....,.. 60M ' •~/ ! ! {behind DeMy'r;), , mou ·~~tum. $2195 lHt Horbor Blvd. ,_.. -m<. -0 'r. Authoriiod Phone ~· DLR. c .. 1. M... ""4261 _64:.: .. :...::2319.:.::_· .::64&-::..:UJ=J.___ DODGE M-~:,., ~l•r ·o; vw BUG . IUICK ·n coupe devm .. Gold. ru• -------Superblrd .-..._..,. Must Sell ! top. S6499. Call Her 1 h '65 DODGE Coronet 2 dr. '70 Por1ch1 911T 66-5752 &ltu -4 PM &45-41MO. Rdan V-8, automatic, clean. Zi,tm actual milY, under Stereo, M•••· Private Party. ,60 vw nu .,int " lnb• '68 Buick CHEVELLE S55f\. Call 96S-1441. w.,,.anty, V-3, Auto Trant .. Days 839-9560, aH 5 -mai wheel!!. S350 firm. Sport Waqon '67 Dart. Good cond. 1 owner. Power Steering, M • 1 833 3'°' '"0 ~n:-t '~ WAGON 15 000 ml r /h au•A .,., Wheels, only 500 of the11 • .w.J. 673-4746 alt 5:30 pm. a ....... Heater, Power Bra.k6, -............. ~ ' · ' .... .,.,. n<LWUo Full $2DI Aikin& $700 67s...5116. made each year. d Jr. ~ Pbrache 911T 7'.500 '70 VW Sqbclc. Ork &reed Power Steerln&, Tiit Wheel, pwr. . Sacrilice at $2395. WW con. miles, A.M/FM rad 1 0 • w/blk vnl int. Xlnf cond. Luaaae Rack, Factory Air -~-~~°'-,-511c.1_-4240~--1 FORD sider trade. chrome rlJJls, many other thruout 9(i8,..M35. Cand. (XNB868). $2095. CHEVROLET --------6'6-3242 days 557.45-40 aft 5 extras, cocoa brnwn with T A Ch 'M F rd Gal 500 V-8 t tan tnteriqr 54J-;407D after 4 '64 VW, new paint, low Olllmy yres 8YJ -.66--Ch-ev--Im-pela--sta-tion-I &it', oftill pwr .. ·545-9.~u :; '10 Roadrunner Plymouth p.m. milts, xlnt mndition. wqon. Radio, h ea t e r ' 979-C?lD best euh otler or auto tnnl., mq whla. •U roe~~ 9"' $57S. * 675-3355 946 s. Cout Hwy. trade for??? (clean), $2100. 64W'n3 . uu ~ u : new t!l'll. , Lacuna Beach automatic trana, pow e r Xlnt cond. $'800/be1t oiler. 611 VW Bus. air cond., 494-17W546-9967 •toertnc. ili condlti>nlno. LEASE a 1912 Ford Pinto. PONTIAC MUil &ell? 673-6613. AM/FM, $1250, Pvt. ply. --------Pbont 540--64.14 DLR. ~"o""I ,,,., POCAL''O'-------~ -~ '69 !'--225 1~'-'--"::..:==:.::..-~·""mo. or .ny. .-'67 912, fact air, 5 apd. ._..Tru 1971 EL CAMINO 350, turbo LO.'S I: INVESTMENT Convm:., '69 Custom V-8, w~t .U,000 m.i. Xlnt condition. '65u B~11Mkt.. ~~b, limited, Factory Air Cond, ~dro. air cond. power CO. ~ll . wT/wht top. Air, P/S, P/B, $39fJO. C&ll 642-TI82 o· UllAe:r", tllttr. _.....-, or Fully Equipped, CYQA1l6l disc1, brand new Michelin '67 Ford XL: Autom tic, air. ape deck. Lo ml'a. Sell tor RENAULT ·~~:~=·ad enc• T:m, Ayres Chevy ~U.O ~CX:~i1:i7. $349S, ::;,;r~~;.,~cul te . Beat "1:=''Po=- 1 boo=n=t:=~-=:-;:..:,:_,.::":::·:...,.2~nr-., BY Owner: '69 R.-16 Sta Wan. tranam. eurtam. .l bed, WllL Buy your car paid for •n BRONCO 4x4. Xlnt cond. Hard top. $400. or beat otter. 1970 BONNMLE Cpe. V-1, automatic, 1adory air conditlonine, full powu, power windows, powe,r aeata, radio. bt a ter, whitewall tirft, -top. Factory warr1nty <8119.AQZ) Kelly Blue ~ pri<o 13165. ' $2899 Prloe valid thrU 3/l3/T2 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Uio Harbor Blvd. Coat&Meu 5'M011 '61 Pontiac Catalina ' Dr . Auto, p/b, p/1, alz. X1nt eond. WUI trade. 17W121'.: RAMBLER air. RAdio. Clean. Bargain. $1.50. 536-M55. 946 S. Cout Hwy. or not Call Ralph Gordon 8000 mUe1. $3460. 6J8..S570 U59 ft.ambler DthQDt $1100. 557-2125. '68 Bua. Nttd& lite body Laiuna Beach 673--0900 -S&.3031, 1970 ~. * * '68 Fire bird 350. Xlnt Good condition. Low miln TOYOTA ""rk}~"" ~ '!! "'4-17W546-9961 Harbor Blvd., Coata Me... --L~l~N"C.:..::O.:.:L'"N---~:'i:~· new rod I a I•. --=,)11SO~-c,,:&:4il!:;lll22~~- ' '60 Elettra, "'1 oonv. Good. '70 Impala anfd wlblk vinyl -------STUDU™ GET OUR 'Tl VW · &lndla1 Camper. 1225 or ofter. Owner. tp P-S, at., $2200. '68 Cootioenta!. Silver w/bil< 1961 Flrobird $1400 -- retrls., toilet, flberllau top, 833-8852. 968-3608. la.ndau top. Full power Call 5".aM alt 6. TOYOTA DIAL $3900 531 -I ---------::::-::':::-:""':;:.:,:.,;;:;,,:;_,,..,-'63 QT Hawk,, ftW' ....... · --·· '61 Buick Sport. Wao. 3 """ '61 Chevy lmpela, 4 -· 3911 w/alr. Like new. Muat 11& .. eometb!nc YoU WIDt 10 Pwr ltlf, pd 111'11, J111t BEFORE YOU IUYI 'M VW VAN lull pwr .. AIC, under 311,000 oeri~ oew ""'· OU.Up, Mcrillce, best off• r. sell! Claulllod Ids do u .....,.,. '* .. •·<lllll SSXl!bltofr. 64U294 mi. $1500. 675-3104. n.mo ..... 19!1. so-..mi. ..u-e.nNOlr• s• -... l9t!6 Harbor, C.M. 846-930:! llll!l ll•ftlis um.ms Tq)"Dta I: Jquar Dea1tt Authorlled Sales 6 Service 900 s. Cout li!ihway Loauna &ach 540-3100 '69 CORONA $1595 Automatic, air 739AQC Santa Ana Toyote Smrlce dept. open 7:30 am 'til 9 pm Monday thru Fri- day. PHONE S4U12 411 W. Wamer, Santa Ana TRIUMPH *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SPITFIRES AS row AS S2399 OT-4 SAVE $500 FRrrz w ARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST no E. 11t, s.A. 5'17--0764 ·n TR6 Burg. new paint. O/drive. AM/FM R>d. 54<>-2319. '70 TR 6. Immaculate. New We. X tires . fop mechanical. $2395. 495-007-4. 'M J;rlumph TR-4. $7s0 '* Call 66-1027 * '66 Triumph Herald Run1 OK. ••. sro. ·-· '57 TR·3 Alter 5 pm , $200. -VOLKSWAGEN '68 VW • Lea than &O miles on reblt 1600 q. Excl. COf<d, !850. -· 196.1 VW Bug, l96S eq. Good cond. $5.5b, Call 613-1252. '58 Bui. Re-bit ena-.. b"l.N. Good tn. New pa int . C1t1t<lm inter. $9!!IO. fl'5..5405. '85 VW, JJQt:. Radio, ht&ter, -ohape .. 5'04410DLR. '65 .VW: XLNT COND .. low mlln, AM/FM U 15 . fl?J....480& attu 6 PM. ''3 vw. -body, 2 yr. old reblt ""'" rlh. S 3 SO. ~ 'Ill vw Sedan. Xlnt ..... Mo"f ......... 1518 alttr 1 pm. 213: OX t..31091 I to 4. v-.... tn6nojll Rent )WI' houJt, apt.. irtore bldg., etc. thru a ll&1J.y Pilot Qaulfl.«! Ad. • • ' • ' "° AulOI, New 9IO Aulol, Now 910'"A-i-u'-:ilo-'M"','<No:--w--...., ... I • • 1970MARKID IMMACULATE , Beautiful medium green mist metallic with <lark ivy leather with Landau rool, Fully Luxury ~ulpped, full power, climate control air conditioning, individual 6 way power seats, radtQ with 8 track tape and mucti·more. (128 AKU ) , ' • • • SALE! PREVIOUSLY OWNED MARK ID's ·· and-CONTINENTALS! an outstanding 1970 CADILLAC Cov,. DrtVlll• Beautiful 1llver mbt fini1h with black °'upholstery t.nd l1ndau roof. Luxury eftuipp@d, full power, climate control w . (ZZX1391 $4475 1969 OLDS 98 COUPI Polar w!Ut.t with contrutins vi.11¥1 roof &l'ld !Qt.trier, luxury equipped. full pow· er, factory t1r conditionlnt. power 8 way seat.a. ttJL wheel. <253941) $2575 ' ,_ selection of exceptional 1969 j:ontinental Cpe. Ovhta!Wlln1ly Cleln Cardinal red. w/burgundy leather a: black landau roof. Luxury equipped with . full power, factory a.Ir. etr. (136ACA) " $2995 1965 BUICK RIVIHA Be11utiful aold metalllc finllh with matchlnt bucket 1eat1, full power, fac- tory tir con&tionin1. tilt •tffrln& wheel, (RTZ046) " •$1275 cars ••• HURRY! 1971 Marquis H.T. LIKI .. IW-10,IOO MIL.II Btautitu.I Aeaean Gold Mllt with black Interior. Auto. trans.. powtr 1tterJnr. power brakes."azn.fm 1tert0 radio, tac· tory alr cona; and much mort. Mu.at Re A drive to appreciate. (303CII) SALE PRICE 1971 Coi{tinental 4 DOOi llDAN Medium creen meta1Hc: wlth dark Ivy lAndau root and leathtr tnterlor. lT,000 mUo. Full power, factory alt, .all U-lu.xury featurn, power 8 way ant, t!lt. wheel, il1·FM st,reo, etl". (811Ctll $5975 "Ormlg• Countv'1 tomap of ti.. Cars• 2829 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • JS40.&830 • • " • ' • J \ • • PllOT-ADVERTISE~ ··If e I Wtdntldfl, MM<h 15, 1972 9 'llAILVPllOT WtdMSdly, Morch 15, 1972 \ • '72 DODGE B-100 ··VAN . ' F11lly fec:tory •c:iuipped incl. front cU1c brele•, 4 1 emp. •It., I p•clr:•9•, Gu•I mirror1, 6ooJy11r G71x 15 fir11, 10x21 H.O. r11r br1ke1, etc. fll IAl2V. 606959) IM~EPIATE DELIVERY •1 saa ::.~. $199 DOWN '77 15 MO. 36 M.. •. ti# It tottl dn. pymt. sn.1s b ieffl mo. pymt. lnc:I. I•• l 11-l •II c:1rrvl11Q Wr11t1 an lppt. trldlt for • mos. Oll«rld pym!. pr!c1 $3902.20 fric:I. llx a. lk""''l .&HHUAL ' P'tltCtNT~GE R.&TE'tol.•"' -. ' TAKE YOUR CHOICE IMMEDIATE d /·.DELI.VERY FULL PRICE $1·99 DOWN · $36AMO·NTH 36 MONTHS Sift 15 1o111 dn. pymt, "' l• to111 mo. -ft mt. lnel. t1x • lh:lllll • 111 c.rryll!Q c.hlr11t1 on lppt. c:rtdlt tor 36 mo1. Dtferrtd pyml. Pl"lt1 1160) Incl. 1111: • llcen11. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11.7$ . . 1970 PLYMOUTH Vtl, Aulomltlc:, Rldlo, H"'-'· Power SIMrlno, F1c:fory .Air Corid. (!SJ CVR) . 1970 CHEVROLET Vt, AufOl'n1t lc, Redla, H1111ter, Pow.r 5!Hrln;, Whit• W1ll1, Wheel Cl)Vlrl. (f«I AUNJ 1'70 FORD VI, Avtorn.llc;, Rldlo, Heiler, Pow1r StMrlng. (lU llSQ) • SpMd lront. .. 'ti(. qN. dil' llraktl, hu11r, llutk.ii.crt.Yinyl irue<ior, ~hmiKh _..! OO>ERY~TOOAV. ll;f OHLV IMl'OIT WllH OYER 'llOO AMEllCAH SllVICf IAlltTIS ntlnJOUT U.S. , FACTOIY COLOl Of YOUI CHOICI • $)99·DOWN PIKlllTUTAILOWAS :~~:~M~~~~g~~.~1 .799·- ·AHNUM;!'llCIMlJi&IUn 11,Jt"il. ' ·.. . 1~111 JllW ' ' FA~Y COLOI Of YOUt CHOICI '72 DART ,11·· l .. ~...,.... ... ..;. ltfl, llifll kck IMh, hut ... , '"""'-' ................. . "5•1• lii-IH. ..i..it.-., ..... ......... "'"" i11111.c1 ,.;.,,, ' ,_h !!Nth-.. Olf)(t YOURS TODAY, ; • • SI" is 11111 *' """'· U. is ..... ,_""" ircl .... 1t .... ...., .. ,....,... ,....,.. ....... "..iii lw 3' "'°'· Dlfwfelf""".,,,C' S251S ifti:I. ... & ~-. AMlllAl 'fllC91TAGt U tt t .fl% $199DOWN $66AMONTH FOR 31 llOlfTNS . . ~ 0 ~ . .v. ... ~, l! .. COl ~.·Tl .IT SEE AND DRIVE' .. .JHE f~US "COPl!IN''.VAN BRAND NEW '72 DODGE TRUCK loodld wilh vinyl berch MOtl. htoNr, E71x\4 tirt&, windshitld wmh«ti. dirlction signal&. Ml vinyl inl .. muth muth more. OnWYours T~. .FACTOIY COLOI OF tOUI CHOICI VEGA . f . . . '71 FORD 509 .'71MUITANG $199 .DOWN . $73 A. MONTH $199 pOWN $43 A MONTif ~g~T~s $l99 ' DOWN $46 A MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS $2288 • ~;",.~,~~.";,~,mo.,!~ ..... "'"'"· """'" $1288 ... i., vlnvl Interior, much. much more. FULL !IJl llUL ) ' PllCI "" Is tol11I dn. pyml. W Is kltal mo. pymt Incl. t1x, !le- '"'' & all carrying ch11r1111 an •PPr credll !<Ir l6 mos. Otftrred pymt. prlc:I S17~7 Incl. 11111: t. lk9"H. 'AHHUAL PERCENTAGE 11.6.nl. '65 Plymouth '66 Pontiac IARRACUDA GTO v~s. auto, trons, pow•r st••rirtg , rodlo, heottr, V-8, rodio, heoter, whiMwoN ?irtt, fuH my! inttriol', '.69Sl:MZ ~ buckelYOIS,rtar.eotspeakw,XSP230 \II, .Avtom11tlc, Aldla, Hltltr, l"K!Of'y A ir. (nl CIEi $1" 15 10111 dn. pvm1. 14' Is $1488 loltl rno. pymt. Incl. t1x t. UtlllM t. 111 c1rryf1111 cl'llr11n on appr. credll tor l6 rnos, Olf1rred pymt. prlc;1 51155 . fUL1 •~I TH • '"~H. •NN"AC ••Kt PERCENTAGE RATE lllPnlo li.f-.i!llW.•ifMir.V.l,lllllO. tra~I., foci. olr co~d, powtr JltfllQ, rodia, ,_,_., WSW't. •x. w11ee1 CO'l•t.·W!yl Mkm & nuch ""!"-W COM , '68 ROADRUNNER '68 CHEV. C(.maro • 2 o•. H.1. Y·L ..... ..,,, fo<1oy o<. $688 poww stffrft;i, rodio. *-· virfl roof. rm YXT163 'llct ' ................... -... $688 -· vinyl inferior, bucklt SllltS. V\JZ 460 • rlKi 1111:, lie, Ii •II cirrvll'lll • c~~ \Ol'lr lpPr, c:rtdll · for 36 mot. Otffrred Pf· fill mt. prk• S2117 lnc:t. 1111 PIKI" lie. ANNUAL PElll· CENTAGE RATE 10.75. ~ 69 FORD Galaxie lOOHT.Y·l.w•.-•fo<l.o<< .... $988 . powtr slflfng, powtr brokH. rodio, Mater. ZR1673' , ' fVll 'llC:I '6'9'00DGE VAN 5288 ::~1 5388 ::~1 '.67 FORD St~.~gn. . . . ·'69 CHEV. NOVA • • '69 ·coRTINA '66 PLYMOUTH t-::~:-=-: .. t;:::--=--·:..:.":""""::.:.~·;.._=~·s~a~a.-+::--Q,~..;.._,·~ .. __ $_88_8.....:.....;;•-+-~~ :_;;;~__...~:..·.....--:~. ""'""_....._'. ~"~_. $8.:....;.....;;. 8_8_.:: '71 Ford. Station Wagoa t · '68 PONT. Firebinl . .'6t CHEV: PicklQI 5588 FUU ,! PIKI • • V·I , 01110. Irons., power st•trirtg, rodlo, htari(, PN41E6221944;2 538·8"'" PIKI ' '1688 i:: r.a:, ... -:$aaa~ • ' • • I 'I ., ' • • ' • I( PlLOT ·AO'lt:RTISER Wo!11tl4'1, Muth 15, l97t -0~( Y PJLOT jj I 'I ' . 1972 COUPE DE VIIJE Very Low Mileage ,Exec. Car Factory air oondltlonlng', vinyl roof, full ltt.ther,e){terior, AM-FM •tereo rad.to, power 6-'way fron t aeat adj111tor, power door locka,, ~ •.6808 FOR THIS ANNIVERSARY SALE • WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF NEW CARS > LEASE ·A BRAND NEW . '72 SEDAN DE VILLE · ' tllt-telescoptc steering wheel; waw ,' tires, lamp 'mobitot'I:' 6 many other deluxe cadlllac extru 6 ~m fresh. (SER 188224) • ., IN OUR HISTORY Fully equlpped with vblyl roof, AM-J'M •ttteo radio. soft ray glass, full powered 6 way seat, door edge guards, automatic cli- rnate control a1r conditioning, tilt l: ~ele •teerlnc wbetL (~9) 5 175~ 2( l\IONTH OPEN END , BUY OR LEASE TODAY . 70 Fleetwood . ANNIYDSAIT $5666 '8roulhlm-Leather interior, ".inYl top, dual individual power comfort -full -· foc\ary air condl· tk:mlnl, AM·nl ttereo, power door lodal, Im than :16,000 mlJa. (682ADKI SAUi PllCI ' ' -. '69 Coupe· De Vile ANNIYDSAIY 53555 Tapestry I: leather interior, f ull power ~ factorJ air co.1 • ..lltlonlng, tilt-t&escOpic steering whttl. AM-FM stereo radio, power door locka:, twlll&bt amtlneL CYSL- 3461 SAU PllCE . - ·' e· 70 Coupe De Ville ANNtYE•SA•Y ~ &1!" co.ndl~~~' vl!\l'.!.~.op,,lJ!ll_),~)11~ iJ!ter·,. ~4333 Jor, all powei: 11'9, ~locks, !lit A ~ 1teerlng, 1tetto, most llli dlx. extru. !TIUSII SALE PllCE ' • I • '69 Continental Mark Ill ANNIYllSAIT 1, ·s4444 -, Vinyl top, leather interior, full power, factory alr condltlonlng, tilt wheel, AM-J'M 1tereo radio. poWer 1 door locks, pOwer trunk ,opeber, etc, (Mil>LI) SALE PllCE " ! . • I ' ~ · 70 Sedan De Ville ANNIYllSAIT 54222 . Vinyl top, leather interior, AM-FM radio, power door locks, full power, factory a.ir conditioning, twilight sentinel, loc.al 1 owner c.ar. (097AGA) SALE PllCE ' ' '69 Sedan De Viii• ANNIYIRSAIY Factory alr condlttonloe. full ·power, vinyl top, tapes-53444 try '=: leather interior, atereo1 Wt A: telescopic steer- ing, door locks. light sentinel. Local low mileage & .,.tia cleen. (Y2:L897i' SALE PllCE --" . . '68 Jaguar XKE ANNIVEISAIY 53111 Beautiful 2+2 coupe. Exquillte sand beige w/plwh English Saddle leatller inter. Factory air conditioning, auto. trans., .AM-PM. radio, chrome wire wheels, low mileage. (\.VAI.695) SALi PRICE . . '68 El Dorado ANNIYllSAIY • 53222 Factory air conditioning, full leather lnterlor, padded top, full power. tllt 6 telescopic wheel, stereo. ddOr locks. radlal t!res, etc. All deluxe xtras and shows the ultimate In care. (VQH044), SALE PllCE ' LARGEST SELECTION OF LATE .. MODEL CADil,J,ACS IN Orange County • CHOICEST INVENTORY IN SOUTHERN . CALIFORNIA ' ' ~e Prices Effective Thru M:Ucb 31, 1972 '71 -EI Dorado Jade &reen f.lremlst/green padded lop/matching tapu;- try t: ]eat.her interior, full power, factory air, tilt wheel, AM-FM, power door locks I: trunk opener, Uaht sen):., etc. (423837) ~ ~~~:~ •• ~e'!~n~uonmr. ....,.. at.eerlng, brakM, windows, tilt A: telescopic 1teer1nc. · 1lgnal seekina radio, tapestry lnl@rlor, power antenna. Many dlx. xtru. (356ASH) '68 Sedan De VIie ~ 1!nmlot llnllJI, """°'7. aJr eondl~, IUD power, vinyl top. "111 lel.tber Interior, tUt 6 telescopic •tftrinc. ._ door loclm, etc. <WID0041 '67 CacRtac · Convertible. Red exterior wttb whlte top and matchJna: white leather interior. l'Ull power, factory atr condi· .. 1 .ttonln&, tilt-Ule wheel, 1tereo AM·J'M rad.lo, power door.locks, etc. (UTB739) · :11 Sedan De · VIie Factoey •air Coodttlcnlar. fllll power, vtll11 top. Luxur· . lowi cloth .l leather lnterlcr, Ult .., ~ 11ffrtng, otereo AM/nl, door loe]Q, twlllrtit tent!ML -... ly low local mileage. (867CXW) · '66 COupe De YUie . Full pc)wer, factory air condltionln&. till·tele wheel, AM·Flll ra~o. w,Y1 top. clcltli .l t..thi!r lntmqr, CSBHOOOI • '68 Cadillac De VIie , Convt. Leather Interior, tun power, taetoey air con4i· tlonlna:. UJV..i..coote. 1.-0c whee~ AM·nl ndio, etc. (YCI'209) • '67 Sedan De Ville · Vinyl top. leather interior, full power, factory air coadftkmlna, AM-FM ndlo, tilt telescopic 1teenna" wheel, etc. (UOUIJl) ANNITlisAIT '?444 s'Al.I flllCI ANNWlaAn 52666 SALE PllCI SAi.i PllCI ' , ANNIVRS.UT 51999 SALE PllCE ANNIVllSAIY 56222 SALE PllCI ANNIVIUAIT 51444 SALE PllCI ANNIVllSAIT 52555 · SALi PllCI SAUi PllCI'' Your Authorized Cacllllqc Dealer Serving the Orange Coast Harbot,. Area • I . , -------.NABERS . . ''\ . 2600 Harbor Blvd., -. Costa Mesa . - 540~9100 SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN· '• ' NABERS LE~ING LEASE DIRECT lmmecll•I• Dell .. ry • l xcollent l1l1dloil ' ' ,,.. P'lclrup ..... Del...., FrM Loan Ctr1 Whllo Loo• Cer ~ Four ond one-hall acrot of hltol lllt:±J ' Cadlllac focllltln .......,. to Mtlor .. .,. Mrvlco , CMlllM ouel1110bll.._ IO (wlc atelhl· and 45 fecttry. tnlnool tochnlclOftt. '' . . 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thro FrL e 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM ,Sai and Sun • • • • r , J 1 • I .. l r \ . ' ·- ' ' • BRAND . NEW 1972 NEW YORKER BROUGHAM, 4 DR. HARDTOP SEl. • Vl29121l20475 I I' ' • ... PILOT-AOVERnsER •• ft ' . . I 'QUALITY USED CAR;TRADE-INS . • ' '65 . 'CHRYSLER . NIW YOIKll V-1, llft.. tr.flJ.o ,....., M•ter, P.S., P.l.,•Power Whw•owa. Pow• .... ~A··~~59S - - '69 VOLKSWAGEN· IU!i . Rodlo . .i hH•s99·5·"· lXIZllJI '69 DODGE DART, liT 2 DI. H.T. VI, 111tom1tle\ AM-FM r)lcllo, hoofor, ,._, 1t11rlitg & br1k11, ,hit1 w1U1, oir conditlonlftf, vinyl top. l·YQCllfl ' 51595 '70 PLYMOUTH FUIY Ill VI, 111tomotlc, rocllo, h11t1r, powor 1t11rln9, white w1ll1, vinyl .. ,, ,;, .. .iii':i9 5 ·, ' ' '. '69 CHEVROLET CAl'ilCI 2 DOol Vt, om .. oir eond., powot 1t .. ri~ & ltrok11: rfflo, h11t..-, ' whltow~!f.,;s'oiit•S' '68 ~HRYSLER ·3"~UPI -. VI, ·1uhHt11tlc:, oit co.,cfitionlflt. f!O"'' 1fMri11t-l,r1li: ... .,.iMows l nob, "'s1·49·5· lWrPH·21·, '64 FORD SEDAN 6 cyliticlor, olr conditionin.9, r~dio, h11tor, whit1w1ll tires. llWAl561 ' ' . 5595 '68 IMPERIAL SEDAN VI, 111tom1tic, olr conclftlonin;, power 1fMri.11t, po;t,1r W1l:15, r1dio, 'h11t1r1 whit.well tir11, v.inyl roof, IXOK5461 ' '51695 '70 TOYOTA WAfM>lt ' 4 cyllnci1r AM ·FM r•dle, h11t.r, whlt .. 111 Hre1, tlrlve it 111d '"'" ""' 51~i9 5 . . : ' ' • ·, : .. ~AMPER SALE!. · NEW '72 'F253 PICllJ.UP AND NEW 11 n. CAMPER Pickup is Cust. Styleside with 360-VI, •ir c ond., auto. tr1ns., radio, 8100 Gvw pkg., spt. cus t. cab, boot, l imit Jlip 1xl1, T-Gl11s, 7:50xl6, Aux 25 911. fu•I t,ank and more. Stk •574. El Dorado Shaw· I n•• Camper has 91s/elec r1fri9, monometic toil1t, cheteeu range, color cord drapes, mettresses1\efc. Stk •859, Truly dlx. pkg . throughout! . . ..... ......,,. Wedllfldly. M~ 15. 1972 DAii. Y PILOT 1:J - .. - , Come ·ln and ·Test Drive The Two Newest • • Better Ideas From Ford! COURIER PICKUP . ORD" , ROBINS EVERY-DAY VOLUME DISCOUNTS SAVE YOU MON\'f! . NEW '72 GALAXIES NOW DISCOUNTED UP TO ~01 ''°" WINDOW ITICltll 5,,, • 12Jll H1440<411 110151 • PINTO STATION WAGON The New Economy l111port The S...art Looking, S...ooth Rlcling Way To Be Thrifty! ... N•EW-•'72-M•U•ST•A•N•G•s •· NOW DISCOUNT!D UP TO 5500 PIOM WINDOW \ITIClft Str. # 12F02HI I 17l•l (25CI) ' ' $]T ~1 o ... l::):__:D:ISC=O=U=N~T The Newest "LiHle Car" Has 60 Cu. Pt. of ~oSpace! ' ( 57770•60 15 "CAMPERS NEW '72 TOllNOS NOW DISCOUNTID UP TO , AT SUPER DISCOUNTS! PRICE T M: • • 5788 ~= · Set. • 11All Nl l l14tJ" ( 10«1 Y.OU1LL LIKE · THEM! ...--L-E_A_S_l.~N--G-~---sA_n_o_N_L_ow--M~ILIA~G~E~-------, e PU DllVEN MODILS! IUiiJ 400 1111. WT. J>W'. ""'-A d~<~ 24 MO. $1 02'~o. ~ air cond., radio, tlnt glau. OPEN ENO '72 GUN TOllNO HD Tr ,-AM 302 ~ AJT, pwr. steer. and discs, 24 1.itO { Mo. air omd., rad.lo. tint glus,, OPEN END , ~ , ~:~:.,~~'2!Tbrr· . • OP2E4NMEQND. .. ... 73 ~ .. w, "• aq:ent ~p; . . ;' .1. ·' ' 11 l'U·DIMN MODILS AT SAVINGS Liii. THl!J. ·• " • :W. LiAsl ALL L'OPllLAI MAICIS·AT co~ ........ ' ' . L.T .D. -Galaxie -T-Bird -Ford ·Wagon 1Sale! M""f to cMoM "°"'· ''5 tin 71 Mod .... s,_, roofs, ,.,_ ... 2 door l 4 door hardtops t.•1d•~f!oll '°""'•· ,,, coodltlool ... w-•• cmilW.le. ·, ' ~ IXl\MPLE: · '711 FORD 10 PASS. Cnlr'(, Squire, Fu.II pwr., •ir roof r•ck, I ?ISCFN). OUR PRICE $3696 . 70 FOID CUSTOM $1496 '69 V.W. CAMPEI f 4 door. VS. automatic, Sundial. 4 s~ radio, power steerini, good mUe11. heater, recond._~n_glne. (357VW). Two tone. Good miles. (YEW848) 52296 HARD TO FIND CITY OF COSTA MESA LEASE RETURN · '71 ·R,•D c usToM'soo 4 DOOi MAKE' ·oFF. ER VB. radio. heater, automatic, power steerlnit. 2 to choose from. Good miles. \Veil serviced. ... ·v.w . IUG 5996 Loaded. Good mUes. (XSR931l . ' ... ·71 CAMAIO R.S. MAKE Vinyl roof, 350 V8, auto., air, OFFER P.S,, RAH. 8,000 miles, (936- •BSY) . ' '67 FllElllD VS, RA:H, auto,, P.S., low miles, vinyl roof. (UOG260) ''5 LTD 2 DI. H.T. V8, auto .. R&H, P.S., a.ir cond., good miles. (WIG~> 51396 5896 · l-RUCK SA·L·E! .. , Many to • ....0.. freoli, 112 too~ If• , .... '64,.... 'n models. ' EXAMPLE: '64 .. FORD 1h ·TON PICKUP VI, futom•fic, 1.:rYic•"\My, good mll•0 1. 110121) • OUR PRICE $796 WASH· ·0 -UT!· . ' ' ;ALL .1971 DEMO. AND EXEC. C.AiS . MUSl' GO AT SUPIR DISCQUNJSf''. BEAUTlfUL, SHOWROOM FRESH, MODELS THAT STILL CAltRY·IAL· ANCE OF NIW 'CAR WARRANTY. HURRY POR EXTRA SAVINGS ON THESE! • T ·BIRDS • GALAXIES • STATION WAGONS • TORINOS • M,U~TANGS • LTD's . ' · HAID TO FIND '70 MACH I. 428 COBRA 'JET Automatic. AM·FM radio, red w/r~ Interior, wide ova.ls, louvered rear window, &900 miles, immaculate thru--0ut. (852AGH) '70 MAVlllCll .. 51 ·496 ''71 PINTO , 796 R.l:H. au(o., vinYI rdof,1 RAH, auto., '6nyl roof, 2 tone, wsw, aoocf inflll. 1 :iooo engine, &ood miles. 1161948> ~ 1 (975CEU) .. MAKE OfflR '66 CHEY. MALliu S.S. 'V'8, .(speed, radio, hl"ater, good' nilles. (XWY940) 7 1 MllC. CAPlll '. 51 ·99·6 'H DOOM 500 H.T. !1496 trim, good miles. ( RAH, P.S ., vinyl root, aood $896 4 speed, Ri:H, chrome Coronet 2 dr. VB, auto .. • (~NP> · miws.. many extru. l"tXB871) 1.-----::~~~~~~~!"-i'-----------------· ~,N-COM~-E -,~A=x~a=E=F~UN±!D~o=uE=? HARD To FIND us1D. Low MILEAGE Au...,,..t1c1, r•cl10, lte•t•r, with or WHY WAIT? '72 ~·~~!~.uf~~~!~ .. ,_.... : • MAKE OFFER BUY NOW ~-PAY LATER .. 1 ·.-"-,o-,-;,-:~;-~~:~;;;.-f·51--09---6-:-."-~-Y-M-ou~m.;;.;;;;~~•,~•~11~;;;.;~1 ,66 FAIRLANE SOOXL $896 2 Dr. lfudt<>p. Radio,.,.,. 2 lir. H.T.RAlt,.auto.,'P.S., • I ·-"·_"_Spd_._. •_"_'°_lid._, -.iood _____ • -ai. cond. Good mu ... V8, auto., RMI, P .S., air cond., miles. CYDD720) ~ (PI'T484) ne:w pa.int, good miles. ' · __ _,cc!.!TB"'M°"825"'l--="·-----~~ 'H CADILLAC H.T. 51496 'H MUSTAN •• ff.T. ,696 '65 MUSTANG HAIDTOP $896' DeVIJle. FWl power, tact. ~uto., RAH, P.S., Autom&.tic, radio, heater, .. • air, Gold w/vtnyl roof. , rood mUee. · good miles. {RFD614) (SHB004) (~) · "MUST~NG-.SAJ..E!,,. ,'.· .{ .· ---:~·-.V---.· , · HARD TO FIND USED '71 V.W. 7 PASS. WAGON Radio. beater, 2 to~ paint. Llke new, under 6,000 miles. (l549D.!\'J MAKE OfflR . ~ t. cho-...... 'H lln, '71 •••• ,C.._ ........ -ertlllle·...i. 2+?,........ -· -· ..... -·-"°"' .. ---.. -· · ,EXAMPLE: •·. 't7 MUSTANG HARDTQP 11:•~1•, ht•fer, •u+ometic, •ir co11d., t ood mll••· IUGS097) -ou,R PRICE $996 . I .... 2060 Hari>or SALES DE". HOURS I AM TO t Piii MOIM!ll I Alll TQ 6 Piii SAT ,. 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN ' PARTS-SERVICE HOURS · . . 7 AM To 9 PM MON • 1 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-Fill PARTS DEPT .. ONLY I AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS 1 I • i!An.Y PILOT •· • , 4 Speed trans. 1600 (~ "'9·' bucktt seats. emis£ion _:_,. , I ~~· . ' fully synci..l.zeif 1fom, 170 , • 2DOOR CIO economy q;ne; 1r11;>Sioti . . NEW $19 . controj, self adjusfiig brakes. • . . , The~;mple mochme. . LOW LOW , lw;~:fri DELIVERY PRICE . . 8 BRAND. NEW 1972 ·TORINO ........... ' '- HARDTOP ,_ ' - . . ' ' ,. . '66 CHEV. impala .Wgn. . . . $9 88 • Y-1. Mt. ._. ,_ tt"'I ... •ACTOIT Alt. (llL-· ' 121). ' '68 RAMBLER Wagon . . . $98. 8 '.,, . llli. ....... ,. ..... ~rHle,..llMttr,ell~IU.' ' • I -.Wfll• . -' '6; q· ·CHEV. WAGON $1788 ,_.._ s...I• YI, a. 1tMriltf, • -" ... ...,. .... ,,....,,._..,,(1t;m;=,,. . . ... '6' ·9 ·!~~~~~~~~ ......... .., ... $1-788-t, Ce•llllllll••ill• flWlr llttrhi1. ltrl1I NI. , tD71Yl...,_2 , .i • • ~ '68 ~~l~·=•~n~otk $'],.] 8 '69 FORD .PICKUP . $1.ss·a·.: •1•~W...Db:.' ........ U..... ... 77'Ut . SA VE . -' . ' '68· !e~~.!.!~~.~~ ........ "'"'· •,. (7J11UI • I .,, $f588 . '70 . ' ;, FORD' PICKUP · · ·· ,, .. ..,.,•hl.•LM1 .Jcw1~ '70PLYM.WAGON $23•88 · :'69DODGECampirVan •,' $248 8' . C.........,._N......_,._. .......... flct. .tHT• ..... "':;'Ji.~ ... , ..,.,_,...-. : .W,(lt114M) .......... u.-t ' • • 17 ·1 FORD LTD Wagon $398·s ~·· i/69'rFORi> & C · $26·· aa· · · . •••••L 11 , ...... _., ...... ,_,, "''· , ••• , . . . am per. . . . .._....,,..... AiC .,... ......,.., .... ..n.. -· v.a. ..... ....._ ,_..., .w ~1111ka .... . ._._,_,...,_,...ua ... nMaQ ·'-.J -r .... rn.. .... C..-.J11M1 . . . . . _) . .. '68 DATSUN 51~ · • · ~6ss· , ·~;-i:o. ·Ml~ERfcl( · -: . -~ t·3&'0 ' _____ .. ...; .... _ ... _____ ..,.,_. ___ ~ t '11 .......... .....,.(IUllllf ....... ~ croisomotic1r;,",,•ollnew .~EW ' $2588 . '68 •· , . $ 88 ' '69 . . .-. . $138'8' Torino d.Sogn,_front d;sc ~ke· LOW LftW . ' • . ' vW !.'!!' . ,. .· MU, STANG. HAitDt'°'P :: . ' dnct oir van#ilotlOn,,anlSSIOn , ~ r.,... I , · ,,. -caatnll. "B2'5fla757 PllCf . . . . .......... • .•• i.,..u_.. . .,.,.., ---IMM..__ .............. Ut-:-.. ta•. ' 'IRANDNEW '1972 ' '6 CORTINA WAGON 8 '71 PINTO . ' ' .. .; ~1488 HUNDERBIRD DI' ... --... ~··-·" ·-·"'I'-"'"'----- .......... 2DOOR ~69DA~SUNRdstr. . 598 '7.1.~.&!.!>!.~.: s1·9s s . .1 .. "'fil!l~M111 . . ' ' SAHAYRIDTOP .... ,IJ..,_T._0!..0T-·.·c •. !.~.!..n~Scl· ~.· $ 2· .. 8 . f10!!P~**' ".;·.;.:-·,..: $21 -88· U "_._...;,,, 1 , , • ·=J=:.~•~lll1ssii4t,~ . .'._ !' ' '. TRUCK & CAMPER-...... KING 0' 'llil ROAD CABOVIR Eqpt. with stove, sink, icollox, etc. . . ' ON A llllW '72 FOaD PICKUP CUSTOM STYLESIDE COMPLITI CAMPIRPACKAGI . ' ' . ' ·110 " -. s1 3as· ''tfO ....... ·. ·$21·a··a··· TOYOTA Sta. Wgn. I ~ ... ~1~Y,; !.~~!~.t: ,,,, ,,..., ,..,, . . c...11 .. ,.n11 .. -.11<.,,..._,,.._. m.., _ _, ' ' . . ' ' . , 166-' JAGUAR MKX 4'.2 $19 ...... L""41.cl.t..: ...... . ........... .,....,,.~ ..... ,..~:· .. , , . Lk-"'-S'IUtJ , . · ·a· ''70 FORD LTD HDTP~ $24' ·as: t· . L"'-4 l•cL '""" •f:.:z::..:..;:.:: · ' ~--. ~ PILL~ , ,,. ··1 FORD*\\** : . 526 .. 88., t.MAm•9MP.Y.a,_......_,... ....... , . i I ''°"' ____ ........... " 'i' , ..,.,, . ·to • • JIUft!ISI , ,... , ,.• . , , ~1u1~Jl2lll~1u11111vi~111111111111111111111u1111111u1~ ;: •ORDLTDat•WPllCES · -~ =:' = S116.95PEIMOllTH · -=:.::J Ei ' = '72 PINTO 2 DOOi . WEEliND aENTAL SPEC. =· = $St.SI PU MOITM Im A l t7i l'OID P,llTO Si ' . 5 ._ . 24 M °'9t Bl) lWE • From 2 p .M.'·fridcry'" 10 AM. = = . MondayClll!flmWHkend ' ·= = •pa_~ Only$1S.t5+~"'· I ~i11111~MTAMnM111111111111~;,',~:;ii~ii1rinl • ·! . ~ .... • •' l . ' ·-• 1 • • r . - • • " r • r • • I ... ·" . '{ • • -.-. ..,-• • ' San (;Jeme~ie . ' Teday'a Final fapistrano EDITIO N • N.Y. Steeb VOL. 65, NO. 75, 6 ~ECTIONS, I 04 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNE5D~Y, M_ARCH 15, 19n JEN CENTS • Harbor Un~t ·urgeS Holdillg Tanks o·n Boat·s Orange county harbor commissioners Tuesday unanimously recommended to the Board of Super"visors an ordinance that would require all boats with toilets to ha've holding tanks or other disctlarge dev\ce's by Jan. l, 1974. The ordinance woqld apply to all boats trav~ling within county h!rbors, including visitors. A second portion of the ordinance wiH require that all commercial marinas pro- vide holding tank pump-put facilities or equivalent services in a 24-hour on-call unit, also by Jani l, 1974. H1U'bor District officials began drafting the onlinante more than; three months ago when they received notice from the · San Diogo Jleglooal Weter Quality Con- trol ~rd that the current county law was inadequate. A variation of the county's older 1899 Refuse Act, it says simply that no one can dump anything into county harbors. The San Dlea:o board gave county of- ficials 120 days to draft a new ordinance or·said it woWd do it for I.hem. That tline bas -nm out, but Harbor officiall were granted an ertentlon into May. '.I'he San Diego boanf only has jurisdic- tion over Dana, Point Harbor but wor~ has begun with ... the &'nta Ana Jteiional Water Quality Control Board to make any county laws conlorm to Sunset and Newport Harbors alsO. . Commissk>ner1'Tuesday afternoon adopted aomo chanps !hat _, Ill(· gealed by !ho Joint Harbor Commit~ that morning. • The Joint Harbor Committee b mad• up·of t,,. Newport •Jludl City counctlmen end two harbor· OOlllJBiulonon. As It ouggoaled, ..,. iectlon of the ordJnanco WU cbanged le rud !hat "'M one shall own or operate a boat" thlt bn • head (marine toilet) wlthoot 1 holding tank. Il·had said "occupy," but some of· ficials were ,f.fraid that phrue could put the burden on innocent vlaltor1 on boal!. ~ -. ' . . Also at tbe committee'• suggestion, a reference to requiring pwpp-out 1tatlon:1 only at marinas with more than SD boats wu entirely removed. •' • , .. f : •• 0Vfe1d have a 1.ot of 4'-boat marinas In town," Commluion Ohllrman Martin UAb 111C1. 1 ~lljlng tankl '1~ l\O\ tho ooly sanitary device etloweil, allltough thoy aro the alliiplest ano-t lnuponoiv•. Boat 9"ll'i:s cOuld ~.climso io Install eqUlpment to provide ai direct connection with .u.,; local sewer system or to create a ~a~e trutq:\ent. system on the boat capable of producing fl11id comparable tq ~ndary treated ·water. accepted by the health ofltco<. 1 • · Sewage treatment systems are ex:· peutve and !1fe not yet ·a~ailable ror smaller boal5. Commlealonus . ompba!iud, despite boating "propaganda" lo the c:Ontrary, that the addition or a baalc but sufficient holding tank was not expensive. "Despite what you may have heard otherwise," Commissioner F r a n k Robinson told the small audience, "Installation of a system that meets these requirement.! only run,, in the $100 range." Usab, who owns a 21-foot boat, sakt he has a carry-out tank that cost around $80 "and it. meets the code." "We've just sort of resurrected a more deluxe cham~r pot," Robln'son added. More sophisticated systems run , into higher costs and may require Installation fees. . ' Commissioners adopted'-the ordinance applying to all boats over an a)ternatlve referring to only lhose vessels "not used for transportation purposes." Councilma n Carl Kymla said tht &ee· ond alternative wouJd be m or t ''discriminatory." Enforcement of the ordinance would probably nvolve boarding vessels and might be difficult, admitted Harbor of- ficials, who added that the law would also apply to~moorlng owners. As the owner of the moorings, the county will have to provide or contract fpr a floating pump.out service, llfficiaJs said. ;.t ' a1 ers .._ ... cour -..-.oas ·Coastline Bill Filed Carpenter Text Assures Local Contr('>l By L PETER KRIEG ment to keep control of the shoreline, This measure, a . refinement of a Of Ille D•nv Pllll Steff State Senator DeMis Carpenter (R- Newport Beach) today filed the text 0£ bis' proposed coastline management bill that is de.signed to allow local govern- subject to a review ,process throuch a similar bill introduced by Sle,roty ~ ne..,-state agency. year, Is supported by . moat eon- A11 incorporaled citle1 . are ei:cluded aervationiSts .. from control and tbere . would be. oo moratorluin on construction while a state A 1pokesman for Cari>enttr declined to coastal .plan is developed.. take 'a.gue$a u to W,hlc~-il any, will ever Chambe r~ Boosts Members ' Dues Carpenter's measure is 1~· fourth ma-i..~m·· la . ' ui=o.v e w,. lQr coastal ID&nllOmepl proposal MW , Carpeolor is """"\illC •.;..whit be ~ , ,before tho Lqlala~ ~""" 1111>-• , • ,., 1,. , mttt..i by i1111e Sea. J-Q, we.i-tii ' ··~ lbo:"nlll' I' ll:r"•""" ID \df ·(!Hnglowood), Is '-"" le be 'tilled . ™.'""'If g'!,~ , f· • Monday by 'the ~I' Oemilteo".... •. ~ tlllef_ • 1111·i.t111 . , • Nalural Resources and Wll<Q11•• -.\BOWi individual Coistal ..W.U.. lo ' In San Clement,e The strongest of f.be· fOUf_ IDUIUl'll, a . --· -- bill ·submitted jo-.iy~ by Sli16 se .. tor d~ tbeJr ow.i.~ ...,, ~b_ere Leaders of the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce Tuesday took two steps to return the organization to a stable finan- cial keel -raising the annual ·mem- bership dues: by 20 percent and. placing budget matters on a fiscal -year basis. Donald C. Gruniki (R·Wataootvllte) and between i,iltll Y~ aild ~ mllU U.. Assemblyman Alm Sloroty ( D • L o • land. Angol,.), will be beard by tho·p&nel Mon--Ji,quir.e local (county) iovnment clay but no action Is anticipated, to 1Ubmil llllcl ueo end couta1 .p1am to 1 And in the next few months. the same officials as well as general members of the chamber, plan a retreat to Palm Springs to further discuss the chamber's financial situation. Funeral S.ervice Slated Thursday For Dr. Smith "Ii's not a real crisis," said chamber manager Bob Evans later, "but . we are strapped for funds at present. He said that further Ievenue measure~ Funeral services wJJl. be conducted might include raising the advertising T1lursday morning at San Clemente ra'tes for the chirliber's big annual · United Presbyterian Cburcb for Dr. Paul moneymaker -the South C o a a t McCJay Smith, a local physician who died telephone directory. ·in a diving mishap last wtiekend in SOutb 't!i!;,_dues increase, chamber directo~s Laguna He was 50 . learne<l Tuesday, would reap about $2,000 , '. • ' a year more in revenue The rites will begin at 10 a.m. at the E ·d thal lh. lo'-thurch where the general practitioner vans sai o er measures was 8 member raise income would be included · in a · . • chamber budget in time for the start of Dr. SmiUi, who live4 at 2400 S. Ola (See CHAMBER, Pase·!) Vista, received his educaUon in medicine Would-be Solon Candidate Seeks et lbe Univoralty ol Minnesota, being ~uated late in 1M3, and immediately entered the service. Alter serving in the Anny Medical Curps 1n England for the next three years, the pbyaielan returned to private life and sej uf> his ftnt dvllien practice Jn Lak• Crystal, Minn. F'Jin A l In 1965 Dr. Smllh came lo San I g pprova ctem.ente to ostabiilh his office~, ollorlng services as a general practlboner and . . ' treating weight aod net'VOUI disorders . . A wo_uld-be congressional candidate T Dr. sn\ith leavea his widow, Patricia; who claims he was muscled out of the four sons Dtvld stationed with the Navy Regl.strar of ".oters' offlce by deputy • aboard the alrcr~ft carrier USS Hancock, sheriffs last Friday despite the fact that Paul ' Jr., -of Minneapolis, Minn., and be. got to t~e d~r one minute before \he Mark and John ·of San Clemente; a flling .deadline w~ll ask In Orange County daughter, Debbte, of San Cle~ente; a Superior Co~rt JUd~e March 24 to ap--brother, Dr. Harry Smith \of Lake prove his reJeded l!llng. Crystal end 1 lilter Mn. Mery Aftboe• Fullerton build er William Brashears, a of eareY I N.C. I candidate for the 34th District seat held Afttr Thunday'1 servkes interment by Rep. Richard T. Hanna (0.Anaheim), will be in Like Crystal. Sheffer Mortuary, has submitted affidavits signed by she San Clemente, is in charge of. arranc~ 1 alleged witnesses to the incident to J'udge rnenl!. Lester Van Tatenhove. Brashears claims in his lawsuit that • !~member atate agency by Mlr<b of 11174. -Calls for complotlon of the oiate coaaJal pion six months later. -Allows development to continue dur- ing the Interim, . provided It m"\" preljminary Cff!erla ':'tabllshed by !lie atroady...iatlng Clllforola A d v I 1 o r y Cooimlssion oo· Marthe and Coait'!f Raourcea. Officials Eye Flower, Trash 'Co1J.troversies' San Juen Capistrano city councilmen · are hoping two new proposals won't blossom into controversies. One is lot' an. official city flower and the oU..r Is !or en olf!dal city truh can. "This may become u con'trovenlal u paming the . street outaldo dty hall,'' qu ipped Ma)'or Tony For1ter. The San J uen Boautllul Committee esked the council Monday to adopt tho wild red goranium u the official dty flower. . ' • -·,1. lhe' .. UdJoiicel..,...ted Jn. diao . Paintbrush. A · was _.sted Olriverbed cane. n • • Tho San Juan Boautuul Commltteo.abo augg .. ted that I dlallnctfvO JrOOden recoptacl• be edopted u tho clty's ol· ficlaJ trash ~D. The l\lllestiOll WU directed to staff. "Pd Ilk• to-..,·~ fl01'or·lhln( illn- dled aboul for awhjle,'' lllcl Councllmap Ed Chermak. ; A dedllcn ·will bo ma~ after the· com· munity hie had time , to make ·other . nominations. · . ' ··., , • .·~ •· -· '' ,.··uP1'T....;.. AT LEAsT 3 ,li~AD, 6 HURT; IN. LOS.ANGELES HOTEL.PIRE f.lr•"*' 'R-• Victim ·of 81111. on Elite of Skid Row • - Downto-WU LA Hotel Blaze . . ' ' . Kills 3 ·~~1:'sol).s;· '6 Hurt · '· .. ·• .. . ·' •i:;os··~ELES (AP) -'lllm penon.s wero klflad .llld six Injured focla'y, wbd !Ire broilli out In en old, lii..torY hotel Jn . downtown Loe Apgol'8, fire ' dopartmonl officlala1 Aki. Two firemen Ibo were fn..· jured, . Tbif iald• ohe more pel'IOn• .was unac- counted fw1Jn ~1 Dames. that eruoted · abliilt 7. a.in. in'the ,top Door of tho lioiel Batcla)'.. ,,.. ' ' I · The 'bla.,· wis reported· contained 311 int,....· tater. ' ' • ' Fifteen cuata It the bole); OllO I blind n\an, were brouiht to llfe\y by firomen 'oo tadder1 !rom the top three flodrs of 1be hotel. About 25 others p tho lower .flOors were led thtoueb th!& smoie to sarety by. rescue teams. ' 1 · A sPoteSman for · the hotel liid 132 'per'SQDs ~ere.living tn. ~ building. · Most guests are elderly. ~e .botel ls Qne of the cityjs oldest, dating back to the 'oar(y ItltlOi. II! cllonl•I• primarily are 'loni-Unte reald•nta, 1 hotel spokesman aid. ' · Twenty-seven fire companies and 100 firemen fought t , described as a "tnajOr emerg cy t 11 • -.. ~i:Jlllties hailed him et the door of tho ch k u N A• · t /y .said 4:59 p.m. He ~pparently ~luded iantaAnaofficealthoughtheciol!kclear. , , erma· , , , ·rges • '·ew 1rpor the officers, entered the butldlng and .. joined tho long line al lbe Tiling window. , ~ But the persistent deputies then ad· ' ~ ~ ' · vised lhe wailing Brashears thal they Should the Ceplstreno AJ.,..t move 'Avloo v t lend on the wut Ilda of beard anything aboul It. contlnlled,.growth end dovolopment In the would like him to leave the premises. The el_.here? the Sari Juan Crt;M Plood Control ai.. ~·we fetl "we are a vital tegment of Ul\e· vicinity of~the airport, HI We as an air 1'eiuctant Republican complied wiib "tbeir Councilman Ed a..rmek -.to nel betw ... LI NOYl lllcl Ille Sao Dlqo <OfM'llllll,, .. Aid Wilcox. ''There -~ laclllty jl lin?ltecl They lddod that Ill• request. · think eo. •. ••1'1 m&I\)' airporta of our l)lllO In O[aop • l~nd la zoned Ind~ end will probebly Registrar or Voters David Hltd>COCk "The il bu boon -not ,Fnln,. : ' I '. County," lit , become loo valuable to remeln en alrporl 111d Ile will tell lhe court that Breshears I king ::the !Utan., llkl Che~ II , .......,, ol Illa -.. lo nloclllo,n, -of l<!j1COnt -ll• homo lnChetlie ..!°"'ak 81Uldtui,: ,_ not know u· d'ood was three mlnute.s la!'I. Brashears cla~s 00 ,1 'iDee ' ai.m.k bu lovlled • Jedenl Avlalloo • partl" hno In tho post complllned about , .... ~ ~ In his action that 11ltcHc0ck'1 aides cl ·: ~"':Y 1 Cit ~~ tho Sao Juao • A4f.llCY (FAA) ~W ~ ·~\ • · nolee liOm the airport. Wiicox 11kl an p)akl land could be ueed for en lirP>rl, the doon l>oforo 5 p.m. · ' .~ r~ Y ' , 1 opOdol •mootJnc ~to ,.,.. -ONnct Olunly Airport · Conunlqlop ' ilul'bi lntmoted In finding oul, , J''ln'tny event " 1lrMbtars llid '"'• .I Jlilnfi JllO~ aJrpori "l'rlla • of ~;;~, ;1 • • . ' .....,tly made teala and IQW>d lllot Ibo ':The council ahould uplore 11! dfdates.:wm ruhig their papers ll~s '1~tt• ~ ~t dell ·(If • Uoo." . .' If ), ( • : ~ ", "'l&lly owned airPort 'does not exceed f,,serlllY •t :, avt"nuea," he said. Hf don't. expett much • 1i :30 p.m. 1 lmow beceueo l..,.atched them · -C!tmnak, lcfo1 •lo ·lo .,... fW al(p>rl • • . -·Jay nolle levtls. · ·•,. "·~' :e";:':"t at lint. M<*I pootiJ< welcome !tom outside the office right up to that from lls current locllloo In tho Wlkm. • ~ • --"Wo artn't noisy;• uld l\'lltos. • Y.I in lbelr nelahborhooda lib Ibey Umo." Capl.streno lndultrial compla at Doi le ooaunont Aid bo hlm1 City ofllclalo·bave llttfllllt -..uliw. welcome cancor." • , .. ' ' • J \ .. • • .. ' .. :.-. r -. 54 Arrested In Schools Crackdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of IM Dllltr f'Ult Steff Smashing at heavy drug trafHc amon1 area. high schQoll and colleges, Costa Mesa police (teams crillcroued the Orengo Cout ov~ In 1 maalvo roundup of suspected narcoticl dealtn. By dawn, M pmone "'" in -..IJ1 20 of them ju...U.. from four -~ ~of a·'~ an trl:: la warronia ...... lie I I'~ ed purcha ... In the ... -,_. willi multiple sales of •a r co t I c 1 , dangerous drup 11111 marllu-,. · Op• IJ the oon of a'"NiWpolt lloach' police detective. . Heroin ind cocaine turned up la alarmoo ln&IY heavy supply during tho c..ta M-'I> o 11 c e De p art m ent-spearbuded creckdown, acconlin& to Dotecllve SCI. John Regan. Ho ·aald LSD, muclllno, mothodrlno, amphetamine and barbiturate pills, plus plontlful !"arljuene has been bought cfur. btg1 the coatly probe. Break.Ing down overall cost of the throe-month Jnvmlgetion by d r u g purchuoa and man hours. set. Regen aaid it was about feOO per supsect. Tho dty'1 ouU.y for the M jelled adcfa up to woll over '30,000 Jn total. Relatlvol~ 111111U lll!OUDti of virtually every contraband dru& were confilcated as the three\teanu: of four men each hit more tha n to locations from Coeta Mesa to L:J Habrr. No. serloui incidents were reported In the raids, which Included a .predawn visit lo a UC l~ino ctomltory. · CapUvea were aullen or defiant, non. chalant, &Orne even laughing and 1 couple of gkla w"plng a.s they strwned into Costa M"' City Jail In handcuffs. Mull.I •n!erod vta the roar booklna case area, where male suspects jammeil all cells, while ; female arr!ateea were •hipped on to Orange County Jail. Juveniles were fed Jn· through the detective bureau's 1lde door apd pro- cessed on through to Orange County Juvenile Hall. Tho roUndup of known cfrug-cloalinf euspocta Included f5 charged In court- laaued arreet werranta, while nine persons present when lawmen arrived were jllo bOoked on varioul cbargea. • l • ' . • • • . ' 1.._ '· I I z CAILV I .~~T w,.,.,..,, -~ 15, 19;'2 .. ,. Ill Billionaire LA? I Mideast ··Plane Crash ' . Recluse Hughes. Departs Nit;ar.ag.'!:'1.1ff ?~):'. . .: .. reMOn tb'be~ i-.11 ln ·t.os • .. l{ills '112 LOS ANGELES (AP) -After a month tn a hotel hideaway in Nicaragua and a purported 1Urprlse meeting with the Nlcarapan pre1ldenl ar.d the U.S. am· blssador there, Howard Hughes is ttported to have flown to Los Angeles. Another report said he was ill Vancouver, B.C. An unidcntlOed ipokeaman for the Nicaraguan Air Force t41d newsmen that -Hughes had flown ln a private plane early Tuesday to Los Angeles, where he has lived u both a ctlobrHy al!d a reclUle. A aplUsJnlft for . the 66-yW<>id billionaire confirmed Tuesday night that Hughes left Nicararua and arrived at an undlsClosed destination. However, the 1pokesman, Ricbard HaMah, refused to confinn that Hughe& was in Los AngeJea and said that his whereabouts may not be dtscloeed for a Ume. Asked about the n!Pl>rt from the Nicaraguan A1r -"orce, Hannah Uid, "1 Anetta."~ ' '{! ' I (Ste Yage 4 for det1i1s ol the lateSt developmenf in the bizarre case Involving Clilford lrvlnt! and the purported HUj!hea autobk>graphy.' Before leaving Managua , wbere he ' Jived on the seventh Ooor of the lntercon. tlnental Hotel, Hughe! met with Prest. dent Anastasio Somoza and 11 . S • Ambassador Turner B. Shelton, the Am· bas.sador said. MANAMA, Bahrein (UPI) - A Danish Caravelle charter jetliner flying ho1\daf goers home from Ceylon crashed Tues- day night near Dubel in the Persian Gulf, appartntly killing all of · the l~ passe~· gen a'nd I crew members, off1clals said loday. , . ed th A report that one man surv1v . e California May Get Shot At Firing Space Shuttle The ambassador said Hughes shook hands with him several times as they talked at the airport. Describing ru. • handJhake as strong , Shelton ldded: "I noticed no difficulty in his hearing, and hla voice was strone. He was in good humor and thanked me for helping make anangements for his visit here. He stood straight, hi! hair was c:ut short like he used to wear it ... sort of 1 salt and pep. per appearance." . Pay Board members Chairman George Boldt Oe!t) and Arnold w.eber put their penci11 to JOOd use as they and other board me~bers listen to shi pping companies and West Coast dock worker~ \Inion lea~ers plead for their strike·ending pay increases at.a Washington hearing. crash in the mountains some 40 miles east of Dubel airport was not confirmed. Sterling Airways, the Danish charter airline which owned the plane, and t~e Tjaereborg Travel Age n ~ Y in Copenhagen, which chartered 1t, a1Jd there appeared to be no survivors. . "As far as we ha ve learned f.rom ~ur man in Dubei there are no survivors, a spokes man fo~ both companies said. The passengers included 68 ~anes, 20 Swedes, 12 Norwegians, four FIMS and two Germans while the six crewmembers • From Win Services WASHINGTON -The National Aero- nautics and Space Admlnlltratlon decid- ed today thai the booster stage of the Space Shutlle will be powered by aolld- propellant rocket moton rather than by liquid propellants. The agency announced also that the booster ·stage will be recoverable, and that the chosen design wlll have engines of both the booster and the orbit.er stage firing at launch, rather than in 1equen;ce. California LI. Gov. Ed Reinecke uys the decillon by NASA hu put California in the "lead position" to become the launch and recovery alte for the $5.15 bllllon program. "Thus, the launch and reco very site Is likely to be along the coast, at Van- der.berg Air Force Base in Southern caJ.ifornia or Cape Kennedy, where It can be plucked from the ocean." nut the Associated Press said the decision probably means that the Cape Kennedy launch complex will be chosen over other contenderti for space 1huttle Ja•inchirlgs. The NASA announcement saJd KeMecly SpaCe Center, Fla., will be responsible for design of Space Shuttle launch and recovery facilities. To tbe comment of Rep. Lou Frey Jr., !R-~1a .) that the declalon ioclled In Cape KeMedy as the only logical launch site for the shuttle, other observers aald Vandenberg Air Force Bue or BOme olher location might Just as well quallfy. Vanderber1, which generally laUJ1Chel spacecraft Into polar orbit at contrasted to the e.quatorlal-orblt launches from Florida, has been the primary telling center for the Minuteman solld·propellant rockat. Capo Trustees Eye Objectives Two new statements -one regarding the environment and· the other rea;ardlng the Individual -have been added to the C1plstrano Unified School '-'District's educational alms and objectives. Suggested by the Cltiz.en's Committee on Dana Hills High School, the two statements are as follows : -To develop in each student an un- derstan ding of the responsibilities 1nd duties of citizens In our society in reg1rd to maintaining or improving of our en· VirQ.!lment. -111 develop in each student the ability for self-dlrec:tlon, decision making ind the efficient use of time. Thorpe on Citizens' Growth Iripact Unit Jim Thorpe has been 'appointed the San Juan Capistrano City Council rtpn!sent-. · ative to the citizens' commJttee studying the impact or growth and development on the Capistrano Unified School District. The committee will be composed or representatives of cities, county govern- ment and developers to study the district's 11rowine: lack or classroo ms. OlANGI COAST DAILY PILOT 'nit~· COl1t DAILY PILOT, wfth Mlktl I• combined lh• Nt"'1·Pren, b Dl.lblbMll W tile Or11111• COii! PIJblll'hlne (Ompefly, ..... rite cdlller\1 ••• 11Ubll1hed, Mo:ic1tv thl'VUlfl f'rlfty, f'O( COit• Mui, NfWS>Ort IMdl, Hlln"fl8'°" llMC~/Fnur.!tln V•llWI', llfUM !Heh, lrvl!MfS.ddl.-Wtk 'Md Sin Clemente/ l•n J1,1.tn Ctpl1tr1l'IO. A. slnglp rtglll!lll tdl11on 11 ,UOll1fltll $1!1,1rdt~• Wod Sllt'ldlYL Tiie prln(lptl l'Ulllllhlflt ,i1nl II t i UI WM! l1y Jfntt1 CMlt MllM, C..llltrnl1, tH». hlttrt N. Wttd Pmlcltfll 1t'llf l'11bll'~"" J11lc R. Curlty V"* PMNllllll Ind 0.-11 MIM9tl' n."''' 1< ..... n ..... Thom•• A. Murplll~• MtlMltM E1t11or C)i1tl'1s H. l••• ki<ll1r4 P. Ntll .... l&ttnl MIMI .. E•llolt S. Cl111r• Offlcre IOI NDrttt ti C1W1IH '••I, 't•11 o,.._ <:Mis M•11 a W.W NY Sh'• Htw*1•1#Cf!: . .a» N~ hult\lt,.. Hlilllllllo1911 lhKfil: 1"1S ~ 11o11.11-e Id;-8H'11: 2lf "Oft!' A\19\W Tot-ln41 HMlll · Cl~ MMthlll I Ml-A1• S.. Ci..nt. Al "'°2•a•1 Ttl1J•111 .. fl..44Jt • Hughes Wore a thin beard, which Shelton described as a Van Dyke, "but no Additionally, lhe principal solid.rocket manufacturing pianta are on or near the Weat Coast -Pratt & Whitney Division <if United Aircraft Corp. at Sunnyva'.le, AeroJet-General rocket division at Sacra· mento, the Thiokol Chemical Corp. at Brlnlham City, Utah. thlck sldeburns." , This would be the fint reported time Hughes met with persons outside his staff sinCe he went Into seclusion more than a decade ago . Hannah refused 'comment on the report. Toxic Sediment,s Found were all Danes, the airline said . . , The passe ngers were returning ff"lnft a two-week holiday in Colombo, Ceylon, flying via Bombay and Dubel to Copenhagen. 'l'he jetliner Was scheduled to make a refueling stop at Dubel. NASA said It will Issue Invitations to In- . duatry this week to submit proposals for design and development of the space shuttle. customs officials ln Los Angeles said they hadn't noticed Hughes enter the United Slates. But they added that so mnny people enter tiere every day that he could easily have been missed . In Newport Bay Bottom . Airport officials said they lost .radio contact with the airliner onl.Y m~nutes before it was to land. The acting airport director said "the last radio message we had from the pilot was : 'I am .landi~g in four minutes.' Then the plane Just disap-NASA previously decided on the deiign· for the upper stage Of the Space~ ~huttle, called the orbiter, and awarded a con· tract for the engines. . • However, a company Passed over on the engine decision cha llenged NASA 's choice and the govemment's General Ac· counting Office is Investigating. , Reinecke also said ·be learned that three California aerospace companies have an opportunity to bid on a '380 rnllllon to f400 million conlracl for rocket motor production for the shuttle. Reinecke, who has led California's ef· forts to bring shuttle contracts and site locaUOns to the state, eaUlnated the rocket development and production con· tracts would mean 7 ,000 ne'( jobs over a IO.year period. Hi sald 700 of the jobs would be created ne1t year;.· He uld the California f\fms are Aero- jet-General of Sacramento: u n It e d Technology Center 'in Sunn)"181e and Lockheed-Solid Propellant Dlvi11on In Recllanda. I He said the only non-California firm permllled ·to bid will be Thiokol In Brigham Qily, Utah. Even' If the prime conlracll abould go to the Utah company, Reinecke aild California will get "a good porUon" of the 1hutlle Jobs. • E'rom Pqe J CJIAMBE~ .•. tlle new fllcal year. ni. group hu been grappling with financial headaches ever 1ince a local printing flnn In San Clemente folded and valua ble perforated tapes of all ttlrectory lllllngs disappeared U well. What waa expected to k a banner year for the directory wa1 more of a break- even matter, EVana e1plained, simply because the profits were used to pa y printers to duplicate the computerized printing tapes. "That was a Iona, costly operation, and it had to be done U the popular directory were to survive," Evans said. Thu! far the actual proflt.s from the current directory have not been publicly dlscuased In chamber clrcle1. . In Las Vegas, where Hughes lived · before flying to the Bahim:as and then to Nicar1gua, another spokesman for the billionaire. Arelo Sederberg, s a i d : "There'll probably be a Jot of speculation that he has returned to Las Vegas. But we don't know where be Is.'' By -CANDACE PEARSON °' "'' o~u., 1'11e1 s11H A variety of heavy metals In highly toxic concentrations are lying fn the sedi· ment at the bottom of Newport Bay1 Orange Gounty Health Department of. licials said "'uesday . The report, requested by the county San Juan Capistrano Near I Decision on Police Unit · By PAMELA RAILAN McKeown ,said the response was not 01 1111 o.nr 1'1111 lt•ff overwhelming, but "disappointing." After two years or study, the clty of The public safety director said in , San Juan C~pistrano ls nearing a decision speaking to residents and businessmen he on Its own municipal police department. ·found a favorat>le response to a In a rtport submltted to the City Olun· municipal police operatl<1n as long ~s ell Monday, Joe Mc Keown, director of there was no substantial increase in public safety, recommended that the city taxes. r take steps to Implement Its own poli e Businessmen were 100 percent in favo service In the interest of economy-and e of ;ncreased services, residents had flc lency. "'l!!t..ei-reaction and some lacked in· The city Ls ,"current.ly served by. the f<1rmatlon, cofnmunlty and homeowners Orange Collnty Sherl!f's Office whlch gtoups were very posit ive in their sup- provides one car to serve ~ Juan, port of expanded pollct services, and all C,J>!strano Beach\ , Pana POint, the were gratified that the city was in· Ort " .Hl .h' •J..:1 ~th ~ t Iii tereste~ J.fl the~r opiniqna.. • • . e.a,. I 1'a{ ar"", e eoup Y ne, "II appears that thil city has rea~hed a and area rlorttl to Avery Parkway. At point . In Its gro)'th . when loCal ~Uce night parts of Soutb Laguna are Included. services are a must m order to continue For this •erv.ice the city paid $140,489 any orderly development of services," &aid McKeown . He cited the city's growth for 19'/1·72 baied on the number of rate, the number of tourists that visit resPonles'~·made during the year ending each year, traffic generated throughout June 30, 19'71. the city, and the Condition of the Ortega McKeO\vn '1ald the sheriff's office pro-Highway as factors tnOuenclnf this state- vide, good .~asic service, \tlit' Mt at the men t. \ level the city needs. Major c:rltlclsms in· Other factors Influencing his recom· elude : very little time for prev~ntlve meridation include the city's population patrol ; the city has no control over costs profile -36 percent of the citizens are or style of service ; there is little police-under 21 -an d the fact that so percent comrhunity identity. or the residents leave the city to go to "On Feb. a· a meeting was held with work each day which is significant from Sheriff James Musick regarding hll abili· ·the burglary prevention viewpoint. ty to provide services and the C06ls in· "The lack of city-s ponsored yquth pro- volved. At the outset the SherJff staid he grams, narcotics programs and gener:al cculd not provide 'ervlce as in-crime prevenUon programs is apparent. expensively as the city could p1<1vide The need for«hese programs ~ their own pol lee ruvicee," said Me-more evident each day as the city Harbor Commission six months ago. sug- gests paint particles from boat hulls, gasoline in street drainage and car ex- haust are likely sources of the metals. Itnmecliate effects of the poisonous con- centrations on marine life "are not yet known," Robert Stone, director of e~ vironmental health for the health depart· ment, told commissioners, but he said the outlook is not good. The metals can be toxic to organisms even in JIM.vted form and can possibly be affectinf"""'the biological food chain,•• Stone warned. "Metals can be poisonous even at levels that are one hundredth or one.thousandth of the concentrationi found here. '1 The area highest in lead concentration was at the end of 33rd Street with 1 n parts per million, although the .•rea .of the Arches bridge wo close beb1nJ with 142 parts per million. Both of those areas have nearby gas stations, whose spillage might be taken by runoff into the bay, stone said. Hea1lh officials analyzed mud samplea at 10 bay stations for mercury, arsen ic, lead, copper , zinc, silver, chromium and cadmium as well as for two chlorinated hydrocarbons, DDE and DDT. ' Chamber Frowns On Trash Cans I As Ad Media Directors of the San C I e m e n t e Chamber of Commerce took issue with the group's environmental c:ommittee Wednesday and scotched plans to con· tract with a firm to furnis h trash cans for city sidewalks -with advertising on the fixtures . Chamber director Dan Philippba~ said he couJd not reconcile the idea that a busines s would want to equate itself with trash through an ad on a public rubbish container. Other directors also q u e s t i o n e d whether, Indeed, such cans -a dozen proposed by the committee -wouJd ac- tually improve the environment. The recomme11.datk>n for approval to set up the containers was tabled in- definitely by unanimous vote of the direc- peared." · He said the plane crashed at 8:40 Tues- day night In hilly terr'ain three or four miles from the coast. Some 20 plan~s and helicopters started a search for' the wreckage , whi ch ~as located this morning by a helicopter pilot. He radioed back to Dubei that he could see no signs of survivors at the scene. Airport officials said the weal~ was bad in the area with storms and rains. A Sterling Airways pilot said the Dubel airport is wet: equipped and run by the British Royal Air Force lRA!l: ,, "The approach is not d1ff1cult, he said. The jetliner was due to land ~t Copenhagen's Kastrup airport at 6 this morning. At 7, Tjaereborg general manager Knud Kanstrup appeared i~ ~he arrival lounge and announced to wa1t1ng relatives that Sterling Airways Caravelle was reported missing. "I am afraid there ls liftle hope," he told the waiting relatives. Later, Sterling issued a statement. which said "Sterling Al:hvqs regrets to tnform that' the crash wane is our super Caravelle. There )s almost M hopes for survivors. Reporili that a member o{ the crew had managed ,to get to a llttle fishing village do not stand up.•• Countian Lost In New Zealand AUCKLAND (AP) -Searcher• comb- ing the rough country of New Zealand's South Island have found no trace of an Anaheim woman hiker missing for nine days. , , Police at the town of Nelson said Miss' Rosel yn Rae Tilbury, 2.3, of 812 Avocado St had planned to meet a friend March 6 on.1the Island's Heaphy trail, but did not appear. At first there was little concern because there were other hikers an.d shelters In· the vicinity and the trail 11 well marked. The increase in membership dues brings the cb1mber'1 individual mem· berahlf fee up to 417 from the orl1lnal 115. Businw and professional dues follow a sliding scale, and fees are based on the number of employes a member has. Keown. 1 / grows ,'' sald McKeown , McKeown said extensive.Jrivestlgations l~~;;;;~;;i;ii~~iiiiii~~F~~;iiiiif;ijiijiiiiiijiiiijm; also were ,nade into contracting police I services from San Clemente. Based on a formula provided by the • ne ighboring police department, the service would cost the city $329,620 a year -far more than if the city organized Its own. tors. However, heavy rain started, and it was Jeamed that the woman was not dressed for wet weather. A plane joined the search Tuesday, but Miss Tilbury was not found. The minimum dues under that sliding scale will rise from $35 a year to $42. Evans stressed that the increase is the first in the past six years and was overdue. The retreat in Palm Springs, it is hoped, will yield new ideas on raising even more revenue . But planning for that function has had its share of problems as well. Chamber President Roy Garbarine said lhst last weekend he received a haU~ dozen calls or complaint that the chamber was paying the $40-per·person tab for the April ~21 retreat to the El Mlrador Hotel. But Garbarine emphasized that each delegate attending will pay the fee from hia own pocket and the chamber ia not spending any !unds for the project. Reservatiom for the funcUon -'open to all chamber members -should be made before Friday with a l20 deposit, chamber aides eaid today. McKeown, after intensive study, sa id a police department . with 12 awom person· nel and five civilians providing two ca rs 24 hours a day, seven days a week would cost $289,508 the first year. This includes ekpensive start.up costs, all f.rl nge benefits, overtime, maintenance and operation, and salaries but does not in· clude an office facility, Services which would be provided by the sheriff's office at no charge would be crime lab facilities and operation, county jail services, civil process service!, mutual aid assistance, county narcotics Slllilrl_d and some training. ,Jltl{eown said he has been talking to organl:r.ations, b u s I n e 1 1 m e n , and residents since he was hired ln January in an effort to find out whit kinds of police eervicea are needetl ' desired. Hoping to speak before ev club, Topless ·vi~tory • Bwnde Kicks Sand in Eyes of DA • SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The ~!strict altomey'1 office hssldropped charges of disturbing th• peace against a •curvaceciuJ blonde who H d ohe iunbathed topless lo establish womnn'I rlChl to bare their upper hal.,s In publlo.. .. Dist. AUy. Peter Chang aald Tuesday he had "lnsutflclcnl evldenCe to prosetule 22-year .. ld Rtkl Chalet. ' . She wa1 arrested last fall aftei-1h1 appeared sever1l times at a 'publJc · beach here mlnu> her 1wlmJult top. GEM TALK TODAY by HOW WE BUY JEWELS You are, we're sure, well aware o( the fact that fine 1 jewels· are created from rough stones which have been mined lrom deep 1n the earth. These stones are then placed In the band• of skilled craltsmen who apply years of experience I~ cul· ting and polishing processes which produce the scintillating jewel yo,u see in our store. You'd be surprised at how m~ch of our time is applied to selection not only of the gems themselves, but also to carefUI consideration: of proceuors ,from whom we buy. Although vie, of course, buy Jewelry from · private and estate sources, tho bulk of our beautilul atock of jewels 11 purchated from processors who 'have an unques- tionable reputation for strict con· trois, careful attention to detail, and years of exacting experience. • Fcir tha~ 1 spec1a, • som~ones bi~day ' Tha tru e pr1clou1ne11 of 1n Omt;a · watch is the lov1 that goea with it. The omega you reOaJva today win become a prou d po1se11lon ••• pr1clou1 beyond cfl'npm '°' whll It symbGl11t1. Within • ••Ch Clse b••t• 1h• pearl••• Omega r movement. Mada wllh metlculou• care 111 a1 ..... y11rt cl faithful perlorm•nce. 811• our complete collecllon of Omtga men'• and ltdles' w-lc:he•, $.65 to ovtr •1000. A-ltll•'fi1Rdl~• '91111•1t1r will' ••lr·tl'llft/"I c•l1nd1r, 141( •old·IHIH NI• ............. ,. I~ llllftlttl llHI llfl • ", •· •., ... , ".,.,.11)0 8 -4 111l11nolld1. 141( Wl'lllt Hild flld ·~·~ .. llU J. ~ JJ-u.mphri~ J11w11 • .. ' • • ~'· 1m. Or•... CO..t ~­""""'""· Ht """' 1'9rln, lll;Mw...., 11111 IW!tf ""'*' llf' ttMn...,_.. ..... "'" .. ~ 1111( ... t ......... .......... °"""""' ....... . -·~ .. -... ···-=-.,.. Col • Mt ... ~ Clllflll'nll, -vM• .., u m.r u.Jr """1111y1-w. ""' •ti "'°"ll'lfy1 "'llf'9ry RlfMtlMl U.U "°*""Ir. He aloo eald the penal code aeclion under which the waa charged with "openly oulrqln1 public decency" ha4 been found unconstitutional 'lY the eourta;, A lot of people are uptight .~ their bod its," Miss Chai el uld. at the UIDI of her arrest "I never wu modest about mine until people 1round madl' me ••• II really i..is nk1 on a hot daf to take your oblrt off." So when you are looking for the !!nest In gem&, com• in. and see us . You baV-e not only the upert atlentlon ol the owner-opentor; you also have the additional 111ur- ance of knowing that th• source of your gem was aelected with ex· treme personal care. {A•'+'lfflMIMllO 1823 NEWPORT-BL-VD. COStA-M\W,_---!1-- 1 :1 CONVEN,tENT TEAMS · 24 YtA~$ IN SAME lOCATION ,, IANKAM&AICAAD -MASJElt CHAll&l 'HONE 141 ·J401 !i....~~~~~~~~ • • • I • • • ' ' . { ·, • • OAJL Y "LOT if LEGAL NOl'ICE LEG.IL NOTICE Ll!GAL NOTICE· LEGAL NOTICE Peking Eco~om11 lit.a »IJ OaDINA•CI llO. n.. TAX COUI CfCHt'J °''1(1 ,ICTITIOUI IUSINISS IU,•••o• COUllT o• THI .,. Ol.Ol~AMCI o~ ,.... CITY COU• COUNTY o• OltAN•• ......... IT.&T•MtNT ITAT• OP' CALIP'OllMIA P'Ol CIL Of' TH• CITY Of' COSTA M•SA. ITATI Of' CAl.lllOINtA 1"-fle11owl"' H IHll• t •• CIOllll THa COUNTY 011 Oiv.Hll CALl,.OINJ"' CMAMelJM THI ION> NOTtCa OP' Ul.I 110.. TAX.II M IMM II. .... A·?lln IN• Oii " llOITl'OM Of' THI AIU °" u11s1c11••0 ,.o,••TY WllT(Lll'"I'" SlClll'.,OOM IVll'll'LllS llllOTICI 0' .......... °"' l'ITITION !Qlo.WM .unit llt\f'INI 11101.ttTllAI.. .WH••us. •DWAID f , CIAIO ..... o. • .... •INTAl S. 1•1 W"ltUff Or., 1'01 P'IOJATI Ofl WILL AND HHI COlllP'LIJC, 'ltOM COUNTY !"I.AN· CllAIO IWI• Iii• 1NI M91ecll0 .. N Y, N"-1. C.•111. L•TTtll TllTAMINTAIY NIO COMMUNITY e•OUP' 11 TO 1>11011 ...... 1111. tllll• M llftMCutticl ,,.. Orli n(, 10f90'!, lf.O P'M!rft Tr11I. L1 !•1111 ot IL.a.IN. MOUGA. 1k.1 11..Ai CITY Cl-CP' ANO Ml -CL \II ACCOI· .,..,., 111 tlll -tt Uolt .•• IM'f ••-MCI C1Mdl. C1llt. "MOlllAG•. DK.tMd. DAJf(I WITN l lCTIOlll -· CALI· ... 1111 , .... lf11r . hN Mli• "°""' ll.o ,.,, .. Trill, L• Lt:ltnd M. Cl\'11 has been Jrulitute of Bank Ina . . HOTICl ti HrllllY OIYIN lfltl '°'"I" ~llNMINT CODI. WHlllllAl. vntlr I NI lw ~l•tw (If ~ e.twod1, c1n1. t nd MA.IV LOVISI OOOINIZ "'' tllM TIW c11, (8llflCff ot .... Cit. ., C•I• ,......1.io.... fll &tclllll "'' ot 1M C1UtW'lll1 Tiii• Wtll'IHI It btlf'lll ~'"" ..., • appointed vi~e preslden a * hlttlfl • "li!IM for Jlrol:lf .. « Wm '"' Mtw dloa Mr• .e11" K flollow1: IM-Ml T1•11loll (OClt, 1t>t .......... ,. il't l1"11'"'1t. manager It 8 I I k O( ",";';lJiam &JIVttler has been I fol' 1'iWlllCI ol Ltttt'l Tf•t1mto'.ll"' le SltCT IOH I, AM thjol -11on of tM ''°"'""° fl.II ~ .. lltct IOI" ttw tu•-Orle" C. •ottn Mllt!Mfr, rtt••tfl<• te 'M'llU! •• .,.,. tor '9tl0wlnt ,.wtMll .,..,1 ,,~ 11 ,, w11 .1 1U011c -•Ion 1., ~ Ntlttu· '"'l• '"'""""' tllH wJlll tti. CWfllY A.mtrlc1'1 Costa Mesa brancl.. 1ppo1n1e11 d Ire c t or of fli•ltlt• Nrt~tert. •nll "'•' ffl• llrM '"' h~rtev 1tl(td •rid Int..,... 111 1'llt Mt-CP' 11.., fll w i. 1111Nlll 11 • ..,, '°''""' w11t1 <:19rlri o1 Or•ne•~°"'""' Oii• ""'"'"' •· ,. ... ,, wllh the •·nk 11·nc• m.,,,,,,,· tnd solo· s f o r Self -s~fficiency May ·Hurt Trade llllKt of llttriflti !Ill .. ,.... 1111 ..... WI Zont. Wlt'll "" l •t"'IOI! Of 1'llt fDlloWl f'lll MMnllt ...... _ ll'd (0111 ol $1/11 lt'1. I Y Artl'lllr I . 11;, .... °""'" (IU"ty \Al Ul!I ,... M••c~ 21• 1'"· •l '''° t .m .. 1" tN su~ A •nf 1111 •: NOW. TMflEl'Ott:t. ..ot1c1 11 CJ•re.. t93t, was formerly \'ice pres • Mc Keo n Const r u C· By A11LES A. SMITH nu•l•OOl'll Of 0.1r1m.,.1 N1. J of Mic! Tl!Ott pOrtl-ol l,.crl1 lfO. ltl, I•! •llCI M1•a1v OtVll!N 11\tt in. C-'1' Tl• 11•11'" h I I C • 0 «!JM,'' 1to Ctvlc cent1r 0•1 .... w1u. 111 11J i.1 81ock •·,,,.-.a .. -''°"*., Loi• ce11f(10I' tt 0 ,,_ CD11n1Y. llfl4•• 1nc1 tiY "11blbhld Dr•nt• '°''' D111.,. l'1io1. dent with t e bank's oan a <· I on om Pan Y s ran1e NEW YORK !AP) "'' c11, Of s."" Alll, c1 111orn11. 113. ,,. •NI'" 111 ••ock 1, 111"' 1 ... 111t'• ... 1,1~ 01 "" 1111t11r11Y t011ferrM ~' ._,.,,. ~r~ '· u. ii, "' 1'n :w-n m inistration department i t d i\'lsion. 01ttG M1•ch •· i•n. S11b41 ... 1110,i. 111 1111 COi.int' ot Or•ne•, ~ Mhl oHlor. wm Mil 11 INl!lk 111e. Present pr n & p e c t S of w11.L1AM 1 . s1 JOHI".. > ,,.,, 01 c11Hor-11r1. ••·-m•• r1c:11r11., 119ri '• ""• hl•hu1 ~r. tor c1Mi. 11wh.l1 LEGAL NOTICE Los Angeles. He and his wll He will direct d Iv i s Io n Amt rlclln bu.slntssmen closing c1111n1Y Cl••~ In ...,_ 1. •••• • Of Ml•c•H•-• ,,......., !If 1111 vn11tt1 s111as. 1111 t111 t1N1---------------1 II I ~·11 t m a r ketlnn effnrt.s throughoul COHiii. STOKN• I OWIM •t(ord•. 111 1119 Offlw ... "'' COUl'lf'f di¥ ., Mtrd\, ,,,,_ ., ""' lllur ., 2!00 PtCTITIOVS •UIUllSI ve n '"u tr on. "' dtals over a friendly cup of llY1 u11v '· G01.os1v1 •ll<ordf• ot »Id count.,.,' lnc~ w11t1111 o•cttct P'.M .. of Mid 111y, •• 1111 01nc1 titAMI STATIMaMT * the Oranae t · p k' II 1111 N. ,,...,...., •• 111111 iu 1t1t tonow1"' dlttrlbttl llnn: 01 1111 or'"" c...,,,1., T•• Ctlltti.r. '311> TM 1oi1o""'1"' ""oni •r• 11o1n, e• 1n t 1ng ares m , s1111• A111, c1111. n111 IMIMI"' 11 tht Int••*"°" Of 111, .... ••Olflw•.,., ''"" """· c1111er1111. t11t tiu11 ... 11 11: N1tlonal System1 Corpor1 County 11rt11. And even if the ArnerlC'H-ns Ttl: tru) w :uu • c..,1.,.11,.. ot 11t111 Hiii AY1n11t with 1M 1o11ow•n• 1111u1llltl ,.._,,Y, or 111 l9\lidl K 1o H •~SOCI A.TIS. '· o. IOJ1 aJT, tion has appointed Roy A S I l Alltr11tt• iwt l"etllltNr t •"'••llM et '''''' A~enu •• •• Mid in. 1111rto1 11 ••11' " nec:eu1 .... 11 11llt"-11905 Sky P1rt circ•• ''O"'. 1,....1.w. c111• • Y v ell er get lo Prkiflg, they m ight find il'ubll•llld Or•"'Ot Co.•t 0111-, il'llof, ter•t!on 11 1110w" Oii 1111 m•, 11 trK• the 11,..1i. 11xn , '°"'"" wlt'll Nn1lt1t1 1orn11 ""' Ander50n 11n a ssistant. Th ,.,..1 5 pr•VI· th s gar In tht te M••t fl 1•, "· 111. lt1i 6M-n Hif. J1H, 11 ... ,..., recorded In IOlk "'*"-•NI Ml• -•• 11 tlllllll<ll11t u.lcl Fr•nlt ~. O{lt9f. J.19Cll Wl"i.,wlOd or., .. f' ere WllS no u . a f tt. o"' io ., Mt)C•ll•rotcM M1,1• wie. ,.,1m11M 11 Ill• ..,m o1 11.10.n : Et Toro. c1n1orn11 Newport BeM!h executive has ously sales - or in the business deal. LEGAL NOTICE ..... SUP'lllD• COU•T o• TM• STATI 0, CAl..IPOllOA '01 THI COUNTY 01' OIAllOI' ' . 111. A·mtt NOT ICI Of' NIAJllNO 0111 JllTITIDN POI P'IOIATI 0, WILL ANO ,01 ltnllS TISTAMl!NTAIY a11111 ol l LOVO LEES AU81!.I T, 1IM 11-n 11 LLOYD L. AUllE llT, Dtcltlld. ·~· ol t1ld'C111nl¥I ltllfl(t , •lellt 0119 IOll CP-.Si!O-CC, • u "· c•lll" Ct•ol o. ~.rnmcw1. 11'2 Mllthlll 0'51'" been director Sinct-P resident Nixon 's trin wld ct111 ... u111 ., •Id Nin 1ow1111e, c111IM• ntm1oi1 "k•lftt." T"-1"3 l."k t utti"' Ct1itot1111. r e p r t sen· "' NoNfl. r 11• t.1". e111, ,,,._.1 m 11 111<111 s.n, '""""'''tu~ ""' illb twin T1111 1Mir.l11t" 11 Ml111 t'Ol'ld11<ttd 1n • .l of marketing talive at Mc· lo the People's Rep u b I i c , llleflc• '°""' .,.. w U" E•••· u .111 '•umtk• 11111,,., tt0 H" ••<fl 1"•11111>1:1 P1rtr11rllll1. • businessmen all over the 1-.ti · 111.tnt• Motil\ a• w »" 1111, .,... '"'1"11t11 11 tM 1rv lne Ctmo111.,. c1rol o. M•ll'mOlldl · SUJlPort serv· Keon's Case MO.to 1M11·"'-"c1 54ovtll u • ,,.. n " \1111• M1rln1 oon •. su,. ,.., .,. i.. il'1rt111r · de c 1 p IS· United States hAve been EtJI, 14.0J flt! IO lt>e bHln"I"' ol • N.......,, ••tell, C1lltornl1. T~lt , .. ,.,,....,, IUtd will\ lM Covrotv :cts for the I h' th ,. h f ,,_, ,..,,.,. ~~• touni.,....1.,.., °" "'• ....... n1 of..,. o•1c1 bk:l tor '"' c1 .. 1111 °''"" Cololtitt" "'M1rCl\ u, u11. I n t er n a-lr11no In San w' g ing er c ances o •1'1111 111v11111 • ,,. • ..,. ., 1110.• '"'' -" ..., ttit c°"'"'' Tb con.ill'lr °'ti~ l l!Ye(ly J, Mid~. OtPVIY C01111ty SY·•••••• Ju•n C•pi's· o pening trade with the Chinese 11\tnc:• '°'1lllff1t1•h" •lone 111c1 cur.,., Or11111 cou11tt". or ....._ HrlOll <Ollduc:11"4 c1ert. tional Cor· .. · 1 nd 111roue11 • ceritr11 •n•'• ot ,,. °" "'" 1M t1l1 °" 1111 ~"'· w111 dtllv« th• ,. ,.,.. r e s n 0 n· trllno. Tbe firffi 1....,.1 .. 'lieiio In main a · •n i re 11t1l•1Kt Ill 11>.•.s 1 ... 11 1tttnc1, u ld •r-"' HI "" ...,.dl•Nr. '°"""' l'ut1ll1ned ~·• C11111 D•ll'f l'llot, .,, ,.....~ Ill THERt: ARE no immedia te '•-nt lo 1tltl cu ..... SOI.lit. 11• tt' .MM will! • blH of 1111. •lld 1111 ""' 111111 ~rch U, :tt. 2'. Ind o\•rll 4. 1t '1 .... ,, denc:e School C'Ondomlniun1-slyle apartment • • NOTIC! IS Hl!llEIY GIY l!N 11111 001t0THY M. AIJlfltT 1\11 llltd l!lrtl" I otllUen tor l'roll1lt Of Wiii 111d t« IUUllKI °' Ltll•r• Tn l1m111l•r'I' lo P'•ll· tl01111•, •tl1re"c1 to whl<ll 11 m1d1 for fyrtl!•r Ntllcultrt. •NI 11111 lh• time •1"1111 •IKt If ~tlrlllf 1111 u mt ~ •• been ut tor Merell lt, 1tn. 11 t:JO 1.m., In Ill• tDilrlrDOm cl D1P1•tment NO. 3 llf M id <OIJl1, 11 100 civic C•nte• Orlv• w111. 111 !lit CllY M S1~11 ""'· Ct ll10r11I•. 1!1tt, '3.Sl Ifft; Jttltlc1 ko.ml Jr l1' ~ vtll Ill .. I~ OU''"'"" di'Vt'Si.OO Of home bUildln•. Signs Of 8 QUiCk developmenl 11" W111, llS0.02 fffl ; ~• Nortll &1• DllN; Mtrch IJ. Im. LEGAL NOTICE • f h i l d 'f · 1r ot· we.i. 150.«1 '"11 tt1-..c1 Soi.1111 1to111r1 1.. c11nin I n t ex I i n * 0 l 11 ra e 1 previous ex· 'rhe People'• Republ' of h' ''' .w" w111. "'1U "''' thlllc• count' T11 couecror e1 periences by A m e r I c 11 n -Sou111 .,. JI' 50" we11. 1ou.•i '"'1 D••-c111.1n1Y '1CTITious 11us1N1s1 S c r a n ton. Region.al ule! m .an a i e r b · China cllngs tn a long-ch~rlsh· 1~ SOllll'I ...... ,,. 1i" 1!111 212.ft •• M. Mumlll\re'f'. NAMI STATIMSHT iND••toN Pll. Fl d 8 t f 8 ·-k us1nessmen are any ex· 1 .. 11 llltllc• SIM.Ith ,.. ,,. ti" Wt1t. ••1'1 T•• Co1'9ctor TM 1011-1111 Ol•SO"I •rt de\,,, oy ry•n 0 ....... -0(' ample ' ed policy o r .!ieH-suHicif'ncy. It Uff.-=i ,..,, ""-South •1• n• J1 " ll'ubn1fltd O••l'ltl (:1111 01111 ll'not. b11t1""1 ,1•: He w11! with <i:apital Record Elet'tronir1 Corpor1tlon. has E"11t. tto.n 191'1; "'•F1C• so..111 111· n· M•l'Ch 11, 1,,, ,,,.,, ,uTUiltE 50UND. «11 F111 D•. No. In L o ~ J nae I es . for 1s reluctant to he com e 37" wtt1. ait .ti '"'1 111M<1 sovt11 411• 101. en••• M•••· c1H1or1111 Club, Inc ., for II years as been elected prt'l!ldent nf the instanc e, an export consultanl 011111 Mtf(h t, 1t12 WILllAM E. SI JOH N, C111nh Clt"k ,.. °'" we11, S61.•s ff:lti 111tnc"1 North Cv••Y w. Kl•kn11~1ct. 123 F11r or.. dlrertnr of fulfillm ent .and 1 1 dependent on any oulsidt n• XI' 3S" We.JI, 121.os IH1 1 th1ntt LtGA.L NOTICE No. 10-J, Cos!• M1r.1. c1Uto•"'' Nal!onAI Association n Re ay has been waiting elghl weeks Hort11 Sol" ff' 1•" w11r. 1t:1.1, m 11 Jlh" Mor•11. ios F11r Dr~ No, 101. later as direc tor of operations MRnufacturers. for ;:in 11.nswer to hi~ ap-power and docs not want lo lfllllTSON, HOWSIJI & 0"11.ANO '4MO C1m1tU1 Orlv1 thltl!C'I Norr11 1'0 A4' "" W•11• 111.113 , NoT1c1 011 oove11111NG · · '111" M1111· cin1or"11 planning. Andersori has a h buy more than it c11n sell ill 1M1t 1111F1Ct Norr11 3,. ,,, ,, .. w111, IOAJID MIM•IJI •L•CTION Th!t 1Mitln11, 11 1111n, tonduu1e1 b~ • Br y ant.. who e11ds the plicatinn to attend a Chinese the world market. It wants to '911.f! '"'1 lfl•11~ Nor111 3J' 14' 01 " .Notice: 1s Ht:1eav GIVEN '"•' Oii P•r•111•1n111· degree from Boston .Univer sity ft'rm's control producis group, tri:ide fa ir N9WDl•I llll(h, C1lll, t26'J ,.......,.., (710 JIO-JIOI A1tor111y1 fer: P'lllll111tr ll'vells~ Or1ng1 Cotti M1rch u . 15, :io. nn Wttt, '"·'' Ifft to 111e ''"tern"" a1 T .., . A 11 ,, '''' , 11,,. . curry w. 1t1r1c11tr1c1c · keep an over all "·l•nce of ,,111 led Hiii Av•-: 11111\(1 •llm• 1111 11,~e 1'" 1~· ," · •n "1ec1 °" • : Tlil1-ot11.,..e111 111111 w1111 lh• C01J11t' In lndustrlll management. h I bee · 1 ed i The head of a chemic al · lHI 11111 <onttrll-,._.... ... o .,,., ..... ' • d II "• ou1111ln v111e' &cllool Cl1r1. of O••~•• Counl¥ on M•rch 10 1\IJ * as ong n 1nvo \' n 1rode. ... '""' "" ,. ~· 111• 011111c1, COi.int.,. 01 o •• ,,. •. s11t1 er , 1 ' · NAR" t' 'ti ~ · ,. d company in Sealtlt sa'"· "3 . .W 1"1 lo lllt bhlnnlllf 11 1 t111te"t Ct llfornli , 111r lhl PoUrpoH of ttecltllf -~ f~trlY J. M1ddllll, C.1111ty Coun!v . d I 1~1 I C IVI es. rn:: JO ne , .. ,.,., <1M1111 we11,r1y ind ~•vine 1 mttnbl' 11. 1111 t11e vi ci ncy O#I tti" Cltrll. Mission Viejo re! i en Babcock's market ln~ depart· "We"vP' been wnrking on !hi! \VHAT MAJi'\ILANO China r1c1ht• llf 1200.00 lfftl ""M• "fort111r1.,., •ov•rnl"• 11o1r11 a1 11111 1c11001 d111r1e1 ' l6QI 011tlel F. Monah1n has be!n · d h 1 d s ince !As t Jul.v, but the can offer American tr1ders i, LEGAL NOTICE l lOlll 1111 ltld CllrYt, ltlrouW. 1 ce1t1r1I t1lll mM1btr to ttrvt d1trlfl9 1'llt ,~ P11bll1llld Or~nff Co11t Otll' 11101. menl in 1964 an e '"'11 01 .w• "' 01", 111 ••c '"•'•"'• 01 m•llldir llf 1111 1.,m 111 w11ict1 1111 ""''!ICY M1rch u , n ,.,. 1rw1 Ap•U 3, 1t11 10..12 named m•nager o f Flrst m•nageri'ol post• 1·n cu•t•m•r Chinest do nnt w11nt to dtal not very entic ing because tile NOTICI OP' IAL• a,· ,,\,10 '"" lhtll(e, ""-1 lo 1111 11111 hll otc11rrM . h h .•• s .. t ' . b . II .&11c11APT "T P'U•Lrc AUCTION c11rv•, Nor111 •· 1r 31" Wtst, 10t,:u ,.,.., tht' 1111;_ ot 11o11111111 1,1d •IKllM, LEGAL NOTICE Western Bank.'1 Anaheim of-service. applications en11:lneer· wit t e Unllcu • tates. coun ry s economy is as1ca 'I Netlct I• nertbv •1v•,, ""'' 1111 1,1n· '"' 1o "" ""'1""11111 ot • 1•no1"' t11rv1 11115 •ltc1!on M111 bl 1M1 11 11 hl•tti.,.1---------------1 fice. He· formerly headed the Such frustratinns have made agricultur1l. • d1•1lt"fd "'Ill HI! 11 1111bllc 10dl011 lhl COllC•Yt SotJ!llt11lerlY 111d h111l1111 1 orotrldfon~lllAllCI wltl'I Jl'll Cl,., COll"'ll ,ICTITIOUS •UllNlll inl{ ll'jd !&leS administraflnn tollowl1'1 •1•<•1"' Lock~~ Orjpn t<. •..:11111 llf 1700.oa '"1, 1111 llld C!.l""t t lKllon.• Jor Founitln Vt l!tY •Ml Hun. NAMa STATIMaNT bank's La Habra office. prlor t0 hi! p f"e Sent e X p 0 r I ·import SpeCi !ll\~IS -China's imports Include Rtt11. No N inn. s11d ui l• 11 pu,_,,, 1111111 11n9!"1 11 111 Nort11e11l••l't' tlnst011 1liCJ'I. TN! 1o11ow1ne 1111,_ 11 c1olnt1 w i1M11 A b nk f 6 v.·ar,v. and here a re some of lew co g··• pl !fl· ce.1, 01 c :vH P•O.:r<111••· &Kllo!\I ,.,m1111.11 ""''"' ~ Souttiwe11,,'1' n•• oittct .1111127""11,.,. ot J,11111...,, 1tl1. ••: · a er or I y ears, a ssignment. He and h is v.•ife nsumer u11uS, exct 12&1.•1-.10. •"° 11 1e 1or1e1DM • 11t11 e1 "'' 1o1111111on e1 1i..1 <••11111 COii•.. 1t. o. Hlllm•n. 011111"' 1104.o V!HTU1t t:, 1,..c .• l1'&S s•, · Monihan joined First Western Id 1 F . V 11 ~" reasons: grain, and grain Import.a have 11n111r1lenrd 1" 111, .,11oun1 ~ ut.J,..10, ~"biter• dHc•IOld 11 "N!'""fl •• 11· Or•not ceunty p1111 Cl•tl• .. 0 ... 1...,1"'· ceu1ern1i . res e n ounta1n II ey. be 1 d 01111 (11111 ot 1•1•, tor ·•~lri. llllo,, ., ... "' E1$1, 3111 .. 1 1 .. 11 !ht-lie• Superl"t1ndt11t ·llf Scll<»I• IALl.S OF N!Wil'OllT, IHC. ... in 1982. He holds II graduate * i tn 80 ng own . • 11 ... 1rw1 mtt1r1111. Tht ..i1 win 111.1 Nor1M111~1~. 11-1111 111d cu,..,, ,11ti1lr.llld °''""' c11111 D•ll' ,1111. ,.11~n1. cor_.111011. l1'0l Sky P•rll certificate i n commercial h J... .A. -Americ1 will hive to com-Pllt'I on. A11•U u , 1tn. 11 Tttlm•llft ffl•ou911 • c111tr1t 1n111 o1 "' "' lt". Mtorch u . n . ,., it n ,29•11 Cl•~lt "Q", 1,...1,.., ci utornl•. M1nucl J. Armendariz a~ w W petr with J a plln and lhe Eur~ A.,.1111111. Or•nt• couMv A!rPOtt, S•"t• '" ••c 11111111(1 o1 t40.u Ifft 1o 11" TMt Wtlritu 11 11elne cOl'!Cli.oclld 1n , banking from the AmeMcan been named vice president of Ant, c1111Q1<"11. •t t:30 P.M. T111 11•<••" dett"rlbld oo1n1 ot 11ng.ncy: 1111nu. LEGAL NOTICE c1111.,"11 cor-•rlorl. peAn countries, and J1pin ln w11t bt 111111 .. ,, 11·· '"d '"' 11rm1 o1 .. 1, •lofll u ld -1on .. 11on, Norltl e• 31· C••o• D. HttNr>orWI finance for Arnel Oevelq,pment v s Ok I I h I Wiii be nit Ct$1\. ~$" E111, 2'6.'3 t .. t lo IJ11 Jl'llnl o1 ,ICTITIOUS IVSINlll AUll!lnl Trttw rl r ays pa r! CU &r BS some bu! l•in TAl..LMANTt AVI AT10_N, INC. l)ffJ""Jne. NAMI sTAT.!M•NT .,..,,1, 111,tl'Mrl, 111'° wlll'I lht county J F Comp1ny Jn Tustin. ·Prior to , • 1 d v an t a g e g such al O••"'" county Al•PD•t s!cT•oN 2. AH llloN -11an1 of ~ Thi io11ow1"' Pl•IOlll ••• dol11t1 tiusl<MH c1 .. k ttt °''"" cou""' on M•rch u "" rvi'ne ~ ~ his appointment, he w111 vice geographical 1-1tlon •od '°" S•~ll A"•· C1Ufor~l1 loll_,,.. llucrllled rt1I o•-••Y ll l'IOW" 11: I ' ' .&.i. ll.J. u... P'1111tltllld O••"I• Cotti 0111, Pnot. •• s11. A 1n11 1111 1 •r• ~flbY •••c«1 001.0 COAST 1.To .• 1t0 ,.111oer111 ~ .. r: ..... r• J fMHo .. , 0..11"' count' president of financ e 1 t RCA-Chi'na la bor costt. Mlrch n . n. u. i•. is. "· 11, it. lt, :io. •r>d l11Ctudld I" 11'1• c1.c" zoM : er .• 11'.o . &<Ill "], l.•111,,1 &••ct1. c1n1. . . ,. 1ut.i C1lprop Corporation In Lo.! . -Thus far 11·• .Chino h11 1tn t12·12 SITI " ~ 1 1 ,. 0 ll'u&ll"'" O••"" totJt 0111, il'!lel. Pl N ~ Th•t portlo" of S!otk ' of l•Ylllt'I lllb· ••, "11• cl• L. wn ••. . .... ff], M1rt11 u n 11' 11'111 A-11 ' ltn ff5... ans ew Angeles. refused to deal d!rectlv wltb LEGAL NOTICE d!Yl1l111 In 1111 County ol Or1ne1, St1t1 ol Lt•Ufll le1et1, Ctllf. 92'51 ' • ,., • ... ,_ c•nfor"11 •• , ,.., m1p 111e11 in 11oo11. ,, Mr. J1c• w. wn111. s,,.,, •1 •btlv1. LEGAL NOTICE The Irvine executive holds a Fi'rst Deal the United States for any pro- JJtl IUP'lllOll COVllT 0' THI ITATI 0' (ALl,OJIHIA ,0. THI COUNTY OP' OIAMOI .,.,, •• e1 M11c•ll•'-11 M1111. 1" 1111 0,. T1111 111111 .... 11 •• 1111111 co..oue1M b' • degree in bu~ 1ne 111 lld· ducts it all. What little they flee llf Ille Cou"'"" Rtcordtr ef uild Coun· il't•ln1r111!11. 1---------------I Off' U 't ..... "''111& ll'. dttc•lbtd II l0How1: P1trlcl1 l . Whll• TAI( COl.L•CTOl'S O,PICI ice m . m ini.!ltratlon from UCLA 11.nd d o bu~ and sell h•s lo ao lltvln"ll'OO I I lfle l"!ernctlen of Ille Thll 1t1t1mtn1 tltlld ... 1111 th1 Cou111Y COUNTY 0, OllAHGa th !hi d \ ' c1111trnn1 o1 1t111 HIU -•v1"11•. 100 1n1 Clt•k llf °''"'' C111nll' en: M1rc11t.1tn. tTATI 011 CAL•,OJlNIA is a mem ber qt the Clllfornla WASHINGTON (UPI ) rou1 a r coun ry, or NDTICI 0' HIA•INO 0' JllTITIOll 1"'011 P'ltOIATI 01"' WILi. AND ,01 LlTTalll TISTAMIMTAIY wioe. w1111 "'• ce .. terune a1 11t1r I v 11vtrr~ J. Mt.io•. O•""'"" cou"" NOT1<1 o' SAL• ,o• TAXIS Th hi I 1 1 Society o f Certified Public AC· The adm lnislrlltion ha s even I fourth. SlrHI E111. IO 1 .. 1. ""'ldt, II .. 111 I"· Cl••k. ON UNSICUlllO P'JIOP'l!llTY e arc tect.ura p ann ng 0 Chi t h w111-~ Ellll1 of JANI! C. MILLS, Dtc1111d, HOTICI IS Hl!llE I V OIVIN ll\1t LOUii t~•1ecU011 11 tt-.ow11'" !1\1 m10 llf Trtcl f'lW l WHEllEAS, JOHN I!". Gll Ul l!lll 1nd A. fi f d d ~OUntantS. formi:tl\y approved the first nt nl•WI C er, llfU No. •t5'. •• "r m10 111111 1" "9ok u1 , ll'11b!llht11 0••"9• '°''' Dall' Piiot. 011:u1E11 h11 11111c1 •Ml nt1IK1lll ,, 1111, rm 0 · Stewart Woodar an * ma}O· r business deRI between Welch o( Arthur 0. Llttl11 l . Mll11 11'111 Mt rllY" J. """' MYI ntld ll1•tln ~ ,.il!IOll lot itrobtll OI wlll...11(!!11 lor 11.i11F1Ct of l.l!lt•• TtttAmenl••Y l'6 the otlltlontr1, rflettll(t lo Wltldl fl mid• tnr lurln« p1rll(11l1r1. 111d 11\tl 1111 tlmt Ind 1ll (t of he1rl"" lllf Ul'"I t\11 """ HI fot April •· 1tn, 11 t :lll 1.m., Ill 1111 courtrPQtn llf D101rlm111! No. l ol u ld tourf, It 7DCI Clvk C.,,ter Crl"' Wt1l, I~ fflt Cit' ol 51"11 A/II, C1lltorn!1. .,.,.. '2 ll'lrout h "' " Mltc•ll•neou1 M•r<h 1• u . n. "· 1912 '1"72 ·11pon d•m•lld.' t•••• °" 1H111Cu•t11 oro. Aasoclates has been com-I th I •• M101. •e<or1h o1 1111:1 count.,.r r LEGAL NOTICE •rty 1n 1111 •11m of itn.cn, 11111, 11,.1..., Robert G. V•nde Vrede has the United States and China nc., aays ere s rea~n w TIWll(I!, •b'lt '"' 1"11 cen1••Urit o' lflr "'' ~··• .,,11: , miRsloned by Auociated Real by granting a '2.2 mltllon hnpe "th11l since the Nlxo1 ... Hiii A...-, Norltl «I" ,,. 4J" E1tl, f'l(TITIOUS IUSINISI WHEREAS, 111'11111' Ind bY vlrlue °' "'' been appointed president of tr1'p the Chin••• will find It ·- .... u '"' 1e 111 lnttnectton w1111 111t NAMI sTAT•MINT ••ov1t!on1 o1 section ttu llf •ne c1111or1111 Estate Consultants of Tustin, Celesco tndastrtei, 1 division permanent export license for a · ... ~1111•t1M o1 P'•v11r1,.. Av..,u•. • ~., Th• 1o11ow1n1 H<1001 11 11o1n1 w11n111 1t1vt111.1• '"11 t1111io.. c oe1e, 1ht 1ou-1nt1 ~atellite ground stallon huilt ceptable to establish direct w~. 11 11.1 111c1 1111n1t.c11.,., •• .nown 11. "'""f'"" 1111 ~" HlrH 1of •11t 011r1111• to complete . plaM for a pro-of the Susquehann11 Corpora· t d I Ii Ith h u 1 ~ on 111• mi p ... TrtCI No. 1117&. It Mr . HENNESSY ENTl!llPltl$ES. UIS ol 1111 •I Pllbllc IUCUon lor !hi 1111111<· by RCA GI 0 b a I Com· ra ere A On!'I w I e n l~ m•• 111.., in 11oo1o: ,.,, ••9'1 11 •net u ''"°"' 11. No. 1, ce11• Meui. C•llf. 11°" 01 11ld ur>P1ld t••"· 10911111r ""'"' fessional o ffice complex in tion. He has been 11 vice presi-munications. States." Little Inc. 11 1 e1 Mlte•11•-• Mtsi•. •Kordi ot .w11 L••,., "n•n 1.u111lfl>, 1t1i ,.,,_ st. n1<11111,, TMrfl111 .,... '°'"of 11111 E•-ndi'do. dent of the flrm .g\nce 1968 and m•nogement -n!ultant •od Olllll M1rt~ ll. lfl'7 WILLIAM E. St. J OHN, C-h Cl t•k COthilv : . . Nt. '·Cot•• ""-'•· Ct lll. . HOW. THEltEFOltE, NOTICI! IS ........ The act ion was largely sym· .. ., n.1nc1, •kw>t s1°11 «nlerllnt Of Thi• 11ut1rit111 11 "1,.. conct1Kltd 1w 1n HE11E11v 01vt:N 1n11 tnt county '•• The two slory structure Jn. was gene.ra.1 maoq:er of the bolic since the c 0 mp i ex industrial research firm. ll'11111r1110 Av1.-, South ,,. 11' "'" llldlv1dv11. CollKtor GI Or1119e C111ntv. Ul'lder Ind bf st d i . I r 'All t" J h 8 Co E•11,. '"·"' t"1 10 111 1n1.,ttt11on ... 11h L•rry •t11n 1.u1111n1 v1rtv1 cl lllt 111111 .... 11, conttrrlll b• 11w corpor8tes features intended s y em s vis on ° an IC terminal has been operating In· O n · nn1lly, secretary IJ\f '""'"11"" .. A.Inv•~ A .... l\llt •• ll'fl Tlll1 1l•tem1rt1 lltH ... 1111 "'' CO!Jnty u-. 11ld Olll(tr, wHI Hil II IHJflllc Ill[· Re~earch Corpor1tion &Ince Sh h F b I of the Treasury, told the AIKIN AMO waHSMAN •* ¥1nlct 1ou1..,.1111 CM ...... Cl!'t'. CllHOl'llll tft.M Tth 121JI 111 .. 111 Altel'lll'I fer: P'l'lltl-1 'ublftllttl Or1,,lf .Cotti Dell't' Mirth 1s, u . n. un wldt. 11 1111 u 111 1n1trtKtl111 11 "'°""'n ,11111 llf °''""' c-n-,.,: M•rcfl •· 1,,i. 11'" 10 ,11, hl•"••t blc!Mr, 1.,, u lfl. 1.,,"111 to retut n a sense of warmth ang a i !'lince e . 11. I Y.'il S H "' itld "'1P " Tr•ct No. 1111'; • .,. ,,.,..n..,. J , Ml6d0 ... C.tt111Y counh' ,.,_.,. ~ 111e un11e11 s1a1.1, Oil 111, ttfll 1967. ' used to prov id.: prtss com· ouse Banking 11nd CUrren:jli '"-nc•, •'-1111 ••ld <•nt••l!nt ., cim . 111, 01 ""•''"· itn. ,, ,,.. tiou• 01 i:oo and cha"rm to -Office design. The Santa Ana ruident Comm ilte.t recently there w Alrw., Av•-•1111 11• $;OU"'::""'"'' '""J o«locll 1".M .• 01 ui1" d•'· 11 the 0111ct e1 Virylng ceiling· heights, two m unications and television be "°...,'111°"' Scull\ "" •1 .w w111• t"u1111111u °'"''' <ot•r D-11'1' P11111, 1h1 O••ne• co''"'Y r •• catlkto• •JO N earned his delfee at Newark covera"e 'of Presld~nt•'Nlxon't no "sudden rolden horn ff LEGAL NOTICE P'llot. .,..,. •'°-'' letl to IM tie~1""1nt1 ot • l1nt1~n1 M•rch 1, 1s. n . 211, 1tn stJ.71 i rotdw1y, s'"'' """'· c1111or~1 •• 1~ · 1tory Interior spaces, and ir· College of Engl-ri"" and ' f.ltnty. '' He described 10 a Cll ..... te!'IUYt Norll'lw111tr1, Ind ... ~.n• 1o11-1 ... h scr!Dfd P•OPl•tt" or .. m11<fl I xt I f •• ~.. •• visit there al lhe end of h is 12· • •ldl11t 11 uee.oo 1"'11 1LEGA.L NOTICE "''f"' •1 m•, r,. nece1~•;..,., 10 111111, regu ar e er or s u r 8 c e rece ived hla masters at d Ay China tour. •nt111 Uy !de11tha6 • •ltn!f. TMl'C•, 1ou111w1111rl\', 1lon1 11ld 1111 vno1kl ,~~•• toe1ttotr ... 11h ""111111 planes are em p ha s i z. e d ca t US t d Ith I I ..o cur~t. lh•llllOll. c•n1r1t 1"91• of 11' JO' llllrtOll IN !ht 'cc1t1 OI col'ld ctln• ••Id h f Rensselaer p 0 I y tech n I c 'The-c 0 m m er c e IXlpart· n ' • r1 e w m1 n .'f" NOT1c1 TO 11Do1111 01", •n arc dl1t111et o• '"·'' 1 .. 1 to • f'1cT1T1ou1 1us11111s ·111,, ,,umet.e 11 th• 111,,, 111 ,~6•.St: t roughout the project. AU o • .• .1 Chip1 would open toon. Nolle• 11 tltl'ebv 01v111 '"'' 1111 lot•d po1"1 01 ''"''"'' w1111 t"' North11t1u1, llAMa sT•T•MlfllT OM 1.,.1 Cfl'·IU3'ett 1 :u 11 <•bin fices are oriented to 8 central Institute In New York. ment originally perm1tt~ the .. .. , o1 Edi.oc111on cl tt11 N1""'port·M• .. u111111d l'•a1o11t1t1011 o1 "'• ctn!1r11 ... 01 "*'"""'' Tiie 1o11o""'1n1 A rlOl!i •f• dol"' c•u1 ... 11im1c1 ··H1c111,..fy 11 •• th. 1ffl Cele sco Industries I! located export of the equipme nt on a li"ME ANAL\'-h 1 v 1· khool 011t•ltl will rPC•lv~ b1111 flt!' lflt •~tr.u• •• 111-n on 1111 ••kl m1, 01 bu1lne11 ••: F•l•llMr hsa two ,,., ,,.,,,ir1t 721 Hit park Wh ic h counterpoints , b I f QY "'" unilr11Ctlen 01 ""' •dd111on1 •nd 111mec1fl Tr1<1 No. ff.W 1 Mout.111 u P F•NtJH HA111>wA1tt:, 111,111,1 1"11111111 •11c1 ,.,1, flt ..," ,, "stric lly business" with In in· In Costa Mesa. e m Po r a r Y a!I s or eatlmated thit by IMO "I ftw to ltt l Mlddl• StllOOI from Conlrtc!Ott ' Tl'lt nct, I I-1111 ll ld oro1ont1llo", :a6.o AY'" 51., Nt-rl lltlCJ\, '2"°. 5110 No 1H Lido il'e<>lnl fl YKhl 1----c::-cc-:-".".""°c:".:'.::"---·, 'demonstr&!iOn purpol!CS.tt hundred m filfOn d ollars" Of 11111 ••• tlt11'!1d I" KCOl'dlt'lt:I wlill ""' Souffl 'II. Jr t.!" W11t as.at '"' to lfi J1m11 f . Mou1tr11p, t7'S CiNll, C!llll :Ancho ... p H'•wport l11cll, UOM I 1 rorm11I outdoor atmoephere;. LEGAL NOTICE Th' I ed t be , '"""1~10,,, 01 1ht '°"'r•cto•'• Llttr>M 1"1triec11ton with ~ 111d ctnt1r11,.. e1 M•••· ''·''5t·I~. , u 11 ,1_ l«.lltd :i. Co t r 1 heel led to JS was be iev o a ace· trade may develop between Ad. 11d1 wrn M rec111v1c1 u"n1 1:00 •·""· •••tr sir"' 11111 •o• 1 . co11111t, no st. J1mtt P'L, tir1n1 11111, ••m• ,.~M 111e11or1,1. ns rue ion s ac u ;---===.,,.-===,.---! saving · mecha nism· since the the two nitlons. Prof. Ro~ Atrfl '· !911. In !tie 01/l(t ol School Tlllnct. •IOlll ll JI il ld Ctllltrllnt. NMDOrt Ir.ch. On tht •• ,m'"' of,~. ffl(f tild IOr l lW start in early May. ,ICTITIOUS IUllHass p k' t t ~· Ftc!lllltf, NfW110rl·Ml!I Unlllld SclleOI Norlfl "° 21' IS" W111 , JOJO.OD fffl le Thl1 butlntu 11 blln1 a!lld\Kltd bY I P•ootrtY Joki !hi Counlf Tt C II 1 1 llAMI ITATIMINT e Ing governmen Up 0 now f , Dfrnberjer o( the Unlveral~ 1>111r1c1. n i1 il'11t..,111. co,11 M•••· th• PO!nt of bHl""lllf. l.lmlltd P'1r1,,..r11111. Or1n1e cou"iY. or"'' Ptr.:11 :O:: ~i:.,1----L-E_G_A_L_N_OTI __ CE _____ , Th• 19Jlowl"• H•Mln 11 dOlnt builriett h.as insisted it would not lr3de ty of M1'chl(1n 11y1 h is "moot Ctll~"ll 1lllr wlllcfl time Int bldt Wiii l1TI I J1m11 T. MOUUrve //'It! lll I hi llo/'I II Ill n tM II: ._ oubllci, ~•d 11111111. A"Y t111m bf • Th11 oort!11t1 01 11oc-1 o1 1rvl11t'1 su11-Thi• 111 .. ....n• lllld with tN cou11tv J1•ooer:.. 010 ,~ ·~ ~ 11-• v-:.. 1u,,1d PH11.ou ENTE1ti1'111&E5. uu:it l • directly with !ht United States optlmtstlc" fliura ould ~ blddtr ol ,.,0, I" hli blll m111t " mldt dl•ltlon I" l!lt Counl¥ of Ort n11, 11111 Of Cl•rll II Or1n11 C1111nty on: Feb. 11, ltn. ~In el 1111 :J11;., ~111'· ..,11 •:!' w 1 '-"" lt!KI Clrclt, '111.1"t1I" v1111,, C1 . .,,y, t'I k lltl l dlff W ~ N lor• bfd1 ••• -ntd or MICll Cll l"' wHI C1lllor"l1 ••• "' m11 llltd In lloolr. I, .... ltYtrl'I' J. Mttldo .. l>ep11'Y Colol"IY Yfl1 ln 111d :...rm1:.r. • .,,.,IUJOll SUl'l•IOI COUIT 0, TNI Phi!!•"· Ltt•••· 10»t L• ilt Olf Clrctt. un I ey po Cl erencea MSG mlllk>n. Amerl~a !s total "111t.......i w•l'ftll. ott1 •• c1 Mli.c1l1•1110U1 ""•••· 111 r111 ef. c1en:. 0,1'°. Mirt11 11 ,,n STATl o, CALll'OIHIA ,01 Fou11111" "•111'• C•. n71ll. were sorted out. (orelgn lride currently 11 1. Tht ~o!t<• (Otlllll1 llf Vl•llM 1$(1 llf Ill• Coun,.,. IKOrllt• llf tlld COllri-'" 1.i11 -..... , L (11 . THl.COUllTV Oil' o• .. NOI Tllll bu1l11114 II "I"' tOlllluclH lly •n11,;Jo;::io;::ir;;~;o;i;;r\;ril l ""ot•tld Ar1i1, v1rlou1 ldlllllontl "" itt)Crl!lld •• 1&1lowi 1 P'ullllthld Or1ntt coa1t Diiiy Piiot, c_,.,. T~. cr'fi'K1 llf • NO. •·ttt» llldlYldu•I. I 1bout MO billion I ye1r. ,.ructu•ei sne ci.vt llH>"'tl'I! wort 1nd •••l"nlnt 11 t'lll mo11 E11t1rty t Mtrdl 1, I. 15, 22. n n W.11 O••llfe Cou"i: or NOT1ca op HIAllHO o' P'aTITIOM Pnlllt A, l •"•• Even I! d irect trading cou" tHUrl1n1nt 11clM!lts. Of I.DI 5 al Trtc:I No. '°''· 11 Mr 1.,. M Hun\lol'I POI P•OIATI 0' WILL ANO f'l>I T~l1 11ttfll'lll"ll 111111 Wiii\ 1111 Co..in!Y TRADING RI i. Tiii 1wtrllh~ blW'l I" compU111C• wlll\ fl~ i.. flooll. 16•. lllfe:I ll Incl 1• LEGAL NOTICE A11'• 't 11 Co!~~ I.ITT••• TISTAMINTAIY Clerk DI °''"" Cou"l1 o": l'ftl, :tt. \'7J, be arranged, that woold be DO 1111 r•ulri11·1t"" c111111 L111or co111. 11111 M•ac•t111110U• M•PI. rKwdt llf 11111 ,.1111115/'lt!d O••r.t• '°''' 01111 ,1101 1111i. Of WILLIAM c.E. MOSEll!!V, ~r.,:1ver1, ~. M1ddo .. Dtouty C°"""' TRAVIL VOUCKIRI ~arintet oI a ltrft volume of c1 c11.torn11. h11 •K t•11111fd •lld idePtil'd cou111¥: P'tC TITtous 1u11111s1 Merell u 1tn ,._ ,,,.,; lk• w.c.e . MOSELEY,••• w. c••L E. • , '"• GIVllll AT slneu. fll.t pr1.,.1lll11f lloutlY w11t •tiff. Alt Tll1nc1, 11°"9 ltie nor"lllt•tlt•IY llM NAMI ITATIMaNT ' MOSl!L.fY. 1lc1 CAiltl !. MOS!l.EY, 1k• -'m'" .... DloYld ll'I 11ld werll Ptld In •"II 111 Norlllwf1!1rlY ••elon•1H9" of n.. toll-Int "''°" Ii dolllt !M.111nttl LEGAL NOTICE WILllAM CAll LOS MOS!LEY, 01)(11Jtll .. \lbtllhld Or1ne1 COiii Dall' P'llo!. r.rii1 .. o,...., Under the Chin••• policy of Htordll'l(I wlll\ "'• hou•IY Wiit rl lff •• Nild l.llf J, "'°'"' •1° u · 1•" Wiii. I i' NOT ICE IS H!ll•Y GIV!N lh•I Mlfel'I I .•• u . 12. nn S21·12 211$ •• Cllfl MlthW•'f 111ttt1 hP•tln lfO.oo tttt 10 111 1"11rHCtton wtth '"' "111vi•oGllAM. s11 c1ntt• s1r.11, WILLIAM c. MOSl!LY h11 n1r<1 ht••I" • LEGAL NOTICE <•P'flll dtl M•r 1elf.1ufricleocy, 11yJ Weld!. An¥ cl1Hlllc1tlo" riot 111tklHlil'd ind t1nt1rt1111 o1 Alrw1Y AYlfllll, U fie! COlll Mt••· Ce!!!. n•21 •Al Jl4t oe!llfon tor Proti11t cl Wlh 11111 tor the p kl I "h ii.1""" 1111M •h•ll be 111ld '' 1111 curr•nl "'Id•, 11 111d c1ntttl!Mll' 111ow11 en O•vlll l lch•rct ••-"· MO-< '"" l"'I.. suf'1110• cou11T OI' THI 111u1roct of ltn"' Te11-m'"""" 10 ll'l•I-----------~--e nng 1overnmen U wt" rt!ll for 1111 lpPllc1ll1 lrlo:ll llld t lld "''' ol lrlCI No. 101 : Coil• M111, C1llt. ITATa 0, CAl.t,OllNll. ,01 Hll!I011t r rti1<tnc1 lo which 11 midi for P't(TITIOUI IUllfllllS maintained I potltlve tradl <l1,tlllc1tie" In '"''' wlll! '"~ 1flovt Tht ll(I, llOllf Niel c•11t1rll11t •Ml Ill T~ll 11111!""' 11 to11111 condu<11d by •n THI COUNTY 0, OIANGI lllfltllr ••Mlc11\1r1, •Ml "'" 1111 llm1 ..... NAMI ITATIMIHT • •OOM "DDITIONI bal1nce. Thay ·-WJ~111; ... . Ut!td tr1llt1 Co11ncrt1. It '"" rlltt 1111ed Nor!llMll.,ty P•OIO(IJll!lt l!. Norlll Jt• llldlv!du•I N•. A·12117 •l•c• ot flt1rlnt1 !flt 11me 11•1 bit" Mt Tiit fetlowl"' Hr11t11 i re dtlhl ... •• ,. .... w bllnw 1rt l'IOt c11 rrt "t or 1r1 r1,1Ne1 b'I" ''' 44" !it!, nG.00 tttt1 oiivi~ 111cnird t ro""'n NOTlca O, HIAltNG ON P'ITITIOll lor M1rch 11, 1t1:ti 11 t·>O 1 m., In t11t Mt11"111• • KITCHIN.•IMOOILINO impor~ m6re thin they el• l1bor . •OrNrntm1 dll•lr.t '"' blddl~ TlttMt, Soutlt •1• l!' ,, .. 1!111, oltll.00 Thl1 lll!tme<ll fl1td wlltl . 1111 Ceunly '011t P'IOIATI OF Wll,.I,. A'40 P'OI courlroom ot DtPl~t111tni No.' 3 of ••Id OAkwoOo TEHN" IHOP' IOUTM, • ,ATIO IClllN •OOMI port." !lm1 or cen1truc!lon tlmt, 111<~ r1vl1!0111 IHI lo I" l"lfrltcilOll with !flt C!i r-OI Ori llt• County e1': Mlrclt t , 1t12. LITTallS TllTAMaNrAJIY ' teurt, It ,700 Civic Ctnltr Drlvt Wt1t, In fill 5'IOYll, Ne""'-1 811Cll. C1lltornf1, , ll'lt ll bt CD1'11dtrtd 1 111rt ol 1'llt tll!e""' NorlhllSltrl' ltl"Ol-1119" cl 1111 ll v a1v1r!Y J. Mt ltdo•, DtPlll' CoYnty Ellllt al OMl!ll: V!CTOI lltACICt:N, l!lf Cl" CH S1nt1 An1, C1llfOr"I.. M1rk I , llllett, '* t:ld111 N1. SJ, ffe tltimatea tblt Jri 1971 !!tlt(I r1tt1. ""V htfl!I!, well lr•. v1c~llon, S&11lh~~1te.rly l111t et 11ld Lot J1 Cltrk. l~I OMl!ll: V, lltACKEN, l kl OM!Jl 011111 Mt t(;h t, lt~. , Coil• M•lt .. C1lllor11!1. p kl , •1-ofTlollcn or elh•r be1'1flt1 th llt bl !!I Tllt1>cl0 lt~n· .. 1111 1tld prclont1tlon. P1'Ht IJlACIC!N, 1k1 0. V. l iltACl(EN, WI LLIAM I! Sf JOHN, Gtll Eltlolt fwllt !. !-00 El&t" Nt. 21, I n1 I fOrtiln l r Id I 1ddl!1011 lO tht btlow ll11Pd WIM )CllU , Seuth 71 41 .W Weir, 130,00 IHI lo tflt Publllllttl Ort"lf (Otlt 1>111)' •lt0t, OtCflt•d. COlllllY Citric Co1l1 ('ot11. Gl lller"ll . I lfnGUnted lo $4,4 bllJIOn, diVld• Overllmt thlll tie e1ld '°' WOf-POI"' Of tlltl1tnlnt. M••ch I 1' n ,. lf12 &12·12 NOTICE IS MEiltf.llV GIVl!N ltltt '"UllN• ll'ITllN Thl1"1!111ln111 II Mint CDnducttd IY •n ed bo perter"'~ i~ •~ct~t ol lht '"ull r dl Y'I SICTION 3. Pur1o1,1111t le I~• 1~1t10111 ' ' ' ' lt\JSY WUNDE.I llACKE N hll lllfd »ti W1b11~ 1.vfft\11 IMlvl•YI! (l\\l~bllld •NI wlftl I Ut fQUll!y bftWetR 11~ ~rll •Ml 11 tht r•I• '"' ev1r11m1 M 1111 ot S•cti111 "'°·'el 1111 M11nlt l111I Ced• el LEGAL NOTICE llf rel" • 11e11t1e11 lor Proti1•• ol w111 1rtd 1.tt l.ftlttt1, C11lftl'11!1 "Ml Mt r\f 1. 1111011 · 111,.. IHllMnt port ind Jmportl. crtll l"llO(WCI. , lht City ol Cotti M1$1, !I'll llOO'"ltl•11t1 lor !JIYl~t of Ltll!•1 T&1l.,m,,,!1ry te Tth (llJI W•11U Thlt i!tttmtllt ltlld wl!~ [ftl County HtMlt C-11'1iltl¥1 P'rka Mo!kl•Y• 111111 tM 111 hollll1'1 r1<"11l11d Olllrlct Mtt or MIPI o11111 City o1 Co111 tttl!len••· rtlertnet ID whkll 11 m1dt for """"'' fer '•lltloN!tr Clirk of Ort "'' Ct11nly on ""'lll l"f' n , 'l!llltc"'f ._,tllNtl Ill' Ill• callKllv• btr••lnlr>t lftftf'nlnf Mt$1 1h11i bl< temalltd •Ml 11/~r• fltr~b, P'ICTITlous·au SIHllS lurlhtr Pl rtlt ul•••· •I'd lh•I !tit !Im• •Ml P'ul ll1hlll Ort ntt Gollt D•lh' il'llot, lfTI. by ••vt•IY J, M1ddo•. Dttllh (l\ln· ,.._ 111 .. 111 DEPARTMENT of COm-·~o11c•~" to ""' 111r11cu11r cr111. 1m1n11111 b~ 1111 1ddftle11 llll•llo 01 1111 MAMa tTl.TaMINT ~l•c• 01 l'lt•rlne ""' ""'' 1111 bffn Ml M1rcll 1. t, 1J. '"1 ,21•12 ..., Ct•rk. · -mtrce sna11Jillsts IAy a··•· cllJtlllctllOll or t'nle Of workmfll Ml.(11' •net C1.Cil' 1rt11 dtKtlbfd In Sic· T'll4I lollowlnt Pl•tOll• •r• dcllnl lor M~rch lt, 1t7i, It t :30 1.m .. 111 lhe fl' 16071 1~~~~~~~~~~~ ~· ,..,. l(llOICYld on Ill• •role<!. 110"' htrtol. 1Mi1l11t11 ••: courtroom II Otl>l•lmt"t No, 1 el 1111 LEGAL N011CE il'11tiH11!td O•l"ff c .. 11 D•lh' P'llOI.!' the Unltld Stitt• m ight w1nt tl•Hlllcillon Mwrty Wlf• Tll>N '· TM1 1orit (h111111 11 mtdt "llNCIS5 M1Ht:S. LTD .• n 10 w. caun, 11 1'00 Civic Ctntt• O•lvt w111. In Fteruery n, i lld Mirth 1, I, u . 1t11 to Import from China include •5\lll.,., t to ~'1111nl lo IKlton ~. C1lll111"nl1 OCHn l'rOlll, N"111rt It I C fl • tl!t C11¥ ol S1"11 ~111, C1lller11l1. l'IC T'ITIOVt llU$IHISS • ..S-72 t ,.., 1 TH• "''•' 1.ri Go111rnm1111 Collt, •lld 111111 bKorne II· c1111ern11. D11111 M1rc11 t, 1tn tun&altn and tuna oil, bolh 1 trlcl•ll I.SJ l~lvt tnd bC 1" lull lorct 11 1111 uimt Jell" W•lch Mllltr, 11111 w. 0Ct1n WILLIAM E. 11 JOHN, HAMI ITITIMIMT LEGAL NOTICE uaed lri tleol producllon; brush •lirltr l.H Um1 tt11t ,.,.,........ ltld Niii AN11x1llen ,.-ront. NtwPorl lt1t11. c1111e1,,11. C:ounry C l••~ I N~~~~t:~.~~111!E~!~.u,,;,o~':::;,, ______ _,::::,--------I brt I Liltttr 1 16 No. 1 btcomn "'l!C'I""'• ....i ll"lor HI 111t .v..r11¥11 Jt•l'lftf Mlt11r, 1110 w, 0et111 o"v10 '· TtMlll• 1 ,,... st ti; textllea; Jngredltntl ''lfttir i t1 ••~fr111111 of nn-11$1 ~I'll from ... f ront, Ntw"rt !•tell, C1llter~l1. JM 11"'"'1 Ctfllv Dr!Yt, 1111111 f'tl WllMH •• .. ~ h I rod .... ,...""'" 1 '3 tOlld •••dint I MI 16tt11o11 lllettal 11'1•11 IM Tlllt bu1lnt11 ,, "Int tOnd!Xltd ..., '" ....... r1 IN(~, C1NI. tUa ,,','o•"•"•o'•vl o,,•,,•,,,•, E D t c A L ,,•,•,•,"10'• ',•.,c,•,••, .. , •• ,... or I r p uct.s; art worU j PlUl"W 1:111 DU!llf~ etlCI 111 lhl 011.HGa co ST 11NIKl'POl"llld lttoel1tl011 tther 1hll'I • Tiii 1114! ... .JU) ruf:, •nd polttry. f'I I , 1_.tJ DAILY P'llOT, ' -•OIPlf" of lfMl"ll ••rlntrtllle. Atttnlr/' flt: P'ttllltoer wllfl 11\t ••IF1Clp1 1 Pll<• ol buJlMU Id· STATI OP' CALl,011111,\ POI ·=:,.i. ,.tt clrClllttlon, prlnlftll •ncl ~1111111 I" 1M 1f"n W1lcll M1t1tr 11'11111/'llld Or•not (Mii Otll'f P'llol. drtt1 11 l!l He11ir11 ilto-d, N1wwt TMI COUNTY 01' OIAMll Oft anaf,Ylts 11)' "h llh 111111 M•t•t , 12 c1" ot cut• MUI. 1oe11111r w11t1 t11t 1!'11....., J. Mm1r ,.,,.,,di "• is. JG, nn .u-11 ••,•,"',,' ~-~.•11~•"•"1·, ,_,,_,., ,, , , w••1,. ,•1·,"•'x '· MILL••· technololY" producla are tie · n1mtt ot 1119 lntn'I"'' of !I'll City Cllllldl .,..,,,, 11tttm1"1 llltd wit!! ll'lt County "" .... -· -cor• tlllP ot IN11 wmer• t tt ... 11111111 tor 1rw1 1111111 ttit 11"'•· c11rk a1 0r1nH ceu111Y (Ill F•1tr111"' n . LEGAL NOTICE 11Pr1tl011 Oec•••ld· onea that would lntereat P .. • •• ~1.~~r 1'03 ,ASSl!CI ANO ADOfl"t!D 11'111 '"'· 111'1' l(h. "' ....... ., J. M•IHIOll. l>llWI\' Coull· TCMNEMAI Sl"VICE MOTICE IS Ml!l!IY GIVIN to tl'I• k In g . F 0 r • I Imp It , ~"" '" llf M1rdl, ,.,,. ty c1 .. 11. COM,ANV. INC, 1rtodllor1 llf lh• ... v. "'m•ll """''"' l'IFICI l!reCte• . "OIEllT M, WILSON , Utlt "" SU •• IHI.I.IV M. IC!oflla tOll. lh•t Ill """"' h1v!"' tl•lml 1•11"11 ""' aoph lstlcated control 1y1tem1 ~:"""'~•r 5&°'J Mt vor et !hi! Cit. il'ubllthld O••nt• Co111 011'1' P'Hol, I Ull'•1101 COUlt'f OJI Tiii M.0. 11111 itt(edltlt •r• '"utrtd to 1111 "'""· f lnd t I I I 0:, .. ,",,1,0 " of Co1!1 MIN '•ll•Ulr' fl, 11111 Merell 1, f, H, 1'11 t TATI O• CALtl'OIMIA 1110• •r11ldent Wllll 111, "l'C'fll'' vOll(/llfl. In !ht oll!CI Or UI r I p a n t ft r lllOINlllS I" ATTIST; .. J.11 TMI COVNTY 0' DIAMGI Tllft llllttnt'tl w11 lllld Wl!h !tit Clll"· el !ht (lflk ot lht tbeYt ll'ltlllld Ct11rt, 11 pttf'OJeUM Q(f1hore drilii"• OrOUtl I -llLEl!N P'. ftMIHHfY Nt, A·TUU 1¥ Cl••-ol Or1n11 C01Jnt' Oii Ftllr111f' to ••flt"I lh•ll'I, ""'Uh tllt ntc•11ar~ I d ~ '• ~"".' t _ t·:r City Clt rll ol tllt cu, OI C"ll ,,.,... LEGAL NOTICE NOT1C• 0, HIAltNG 0, •aTITtON H. lt1J. YOUdl•n. to lf\t 11nd1r1l11'1d •I !hf otllt• fqU pment an 1lectrvnlc vrotJ r · STAT! OF CAl.1,0INIA J '01 '108ATa 0, WILl AND ,Olli ClllTl,ICATION t! hi • 11!or"tv1, ltLt:IU, IAIANOll, Items. Grou& t 7.lf COUHTY OF OiltANOI l SI LITTlll TISTAMlllTAltY tlOMO I lltfl bY ,c1rtl"-11\11 Ill• lortte!n1 II I MYfllS I. $MITH , Attn• l dw•rd H. iiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Orout S 1,31 CITY OF C03TA MISA J jll(TITlOUI IUSllllSS W.&1¥10) torrf(I cOl'f el !ht 1rltlnll 011 lilt Ill my 11-. U01 We1 tcllll Drl.,., lulll iu, Group' f.Al I Ell.E EN , .. MINNEY City Cltrk NI.Ml STATIM•NT E1ll!t of CHAlt l.IS l.lH MAiltllN Oflltf, N1W110rl 8t1ch. C1llfc111!1 ""'°" '!¥11!cn I• ' Ol'el.I~ 1 7,1\ end t x.ifl'lo tlf.r!I Of lh• Cl'tv CllullCll llf Tiii lfllf-111• HflOlll lfl dOl'!,t SEMIAN, Otcttted. CllAl.I tht t1Kf Of 1t111ln11• 01 th• undl•tltnld In w uld gl"Ol.I•: ~1: tilt C!I' ti CPlll Mn1. htrttlY «rtlfy IMJl!~l.;,~:llT IEACH TIMMIS Cl..Ull NOTICE IS HEIEllV GIVEN tnti Wll.LIAM e. It JOHN, 111 mtllln Mrt1l"lnf to !ht 11!1!1 ol ttld O you pay an extra fOllP ll'llt 1t1t 1bovt 1r.d terlfOI"' OrdlrllllCI • OI I " 1.11.1.lAN MAJClHE SEl.MAN lltl llltd Coun1y Ci.rk di<~"'· wU~1" iour mo..T~t llltr 1~1 TIAMSn •• No. l'W Wll l"trOdut ed Ind t(lllllo:ll•ld , 0 IM • HOI f l t! lll,I f, IW-1 hf'r•I~ • 11t11tlt" for protl•I• o• ""'ltl •Ml I Y ...... rly J. Ml ddO•, 11r11 ounllCl llOl'I Of ~1, ntn,.. th f 4 '!fl , Trvtk J.IJ lltll&n bY HCtlOll II • r .. lllt r 1r11tllll9 al ••tt~. Ct lUOl'llTI tt'60. for IHu1nc1 llf Lt lltrt lHl1mtt'lll tY II 0111\!IY Oitrd M1te11 6, lt12 05 21 per mon or A· I ,11 Truck JU l ld CU' (&\lllCU l'ltlCI on lflf ~""di' llf Nlll\tt'I' Ml<lttll ,,Odi n, Iii S11tuU 11'11111-r !I OllO W1lvtfl rfft rt1'<t to fl'.1 .. 11 llllMA NI. Ml l.L,E.11. ti' • _ , • 12 ,d. True.ii J.n ~"111,,.,, 1111, 111111111,,111,.. ...,111111 ,,,. "'· 101. New•rt ee1e11. c~111er"t• tnte11 11 ""* tor 1vr111•r .. ,11c111•••· •nd ,~t111111td O••r.t• c11111 0111• P'1to1, Aom1n111r11r1• "'''n "'' Full New Car Mam' tenance·", U • '' ,d, TTr1tck '·~ t~ll!d 1t 1 wftOlt 11 1 rnul1r mHtlrit ""'°· 19 11 115 11111 fl'lf ltm• •fld elt<• II llt1r1"' lllt '•Mu1rr n •11d Mt rcll 1, I, U, 1t 72 411·12 wUI AMt•tll 11 tl'lt lllt lt . r ,, • 2! .,..,, ruck ' el llld Cltll Cou!Ktl hlkl Oii ltl•'""' ,., of J•nfi HYl•llll roct•n. w •• tlml {YI bllll .. , !or AOf'll •• n11 II ... of lht IMV• llt/TIH dt<ldtnl, 1J · '°ff, Tr1,1ck 'ff 1111rct>, 1t12 n ~ lollowlnt r•" t•ll ''"Y11 He, 181• Newtort IMch, 1.m .. 111 !ht (OU•t,._,, et 0..,011111111'11 ,.... LEGAL NOTICE 111.llltl, •AIAMe111, • TrtMll Mbr t,lt Wilt! C1lllor11l1 t1Ht. J Of 5tld court, 11 !'00 CIYlt Cl n1tr Or!vt MYt•S I IMITH Wtllt Truell J,tl AYfS: ('l'Nft(Hmt11: Wlllotl, JOtdlll. Tllh tiull"IH It btl"4 c~ttd It)' t n Wn t, I" Ill.! Cll' of Sl"'I A/Id, C1U!11t11l1. 9UP'lt1Dfl COUIT Of' THI I YI lfW1rd H. Sr.i.1 Tltt fotHOlll• Kfltdul•Of WIHI Ii iNil• Plnlilty, $1. (lllr, N1m .... 1 lnllf'l'klllll lhuiail'lll INI ""'''9). Olltd M1r<lt 11.1911 ITArl 01' CALIPOlllllA P'Olt 1Ml•WttltHN Or., lllllH 111 • ~ Jti;rf\t't'l'llh workln• "''"' '""' NOlS: c-cllm9": NOlll A"ltltll'I NI. ''1111111 w. E. " JOHN THI COUNTY 0' OillAN•• Mtw•rt l••t~. Cltlftt~lt ,, ... (I I llollri. AIS!HT· (li.Jfl(ll!Mll• ,,_ Tith ,111-1 111111 wllh 1111 Ceuntv COlll'ty Cltrt Mt. A·1Jn1 Tth (1!4! '4j.IJ• (•111 ol "'' Cl!llllr•ct OOtUf'ltltit lri-IN WllNtSs WMlll:!o.O. I ....... llertlly Clt1'11 " D<'•l'ltl COl/nl'I' OPI '""'''lo.,"· 1wr11 .. Wll1!1m1 '"" lfflft... llOTICI 0' lllAllllO 0 , P'ITITION """'"'"I ,., Adm'.!11h trtlrfl CT" Cllldhlf dr•wfnel ll'lll iPKffk•llMlett~" °'1 Ml my llll'ld Incl •lll•loll 1111 IHI of IN Cl· ,,~ 11'1' ....... ly J. Mtd(IOO;, °"'""' fl. llH!e ,.... llDlt P'iltOll.TI Of' Wll.l AlllO ,o. P'lllllllhld or ..... Cotti Ot!ly ,u.1. flit lln!I 1111' !11.,pHllrH I I tl!I t i If ,.,. el C•ll ,,,,. .. 1111• ,Ill ,., ., MlrCll. tr lt•k. " ttttt ... S"111 ou .... Strnt L. TT. I. 0, l.DMINllTlATIOM Mlrd'I I, ll. n. "· It'! &:D-12 P'orltr..Jtn1t11 .. P•r!Ml'I. ,..,, Dll nn. , ,.,.. Aflfflel. C•Ulwlll1 •14 WITH-TMl·Wll.L ANllllXID ,, •• Dllll P'e!nt. ci ntorf'll•, Ul'Oll 11141 EILEEN P ... HINNIY '""'1111111 Or•"'• CO.ii r. 0111' 1111' "t•h UlU tlJoflll ltll lt DI DOltOTHY ,. ... r t e1SON, LEGAL NOTICE H ymtr!I ol I dtPMU ol UO.to ,_ itl It Cltr C*k tnd l•-ofllclti tltr-f'tllrllll'y U. t lld Mirth , t, U, 1tn "'"'111YI • P'llllltflff fl\Wrt !/'It! return llllrlJOf. 11 t'fltd tf1t (lh' C "I 11 111t Cl" ""°11 P'Vllll.,,_ Ottl'IOI C11tll 011l'f ll'Utl DKt•Mlt. !----,.-,,,,-.,---~.,..---=~~ t~1 h'::~~·\:t.,~:1: : COit• Mttlllilllt• LEGAL NOTICE M1rcll u . IS, ,., 1'72 ... n c."~:i:~~..:i~ ~.~·h~~~n::"~~.1~·~ -:::~ '":fl~T~0.~ .. ::~~111 .. 1:• tht fflllll'lf of blcl•. !ht NU tmwlll ol 1111 "W.lltllld Or1tlf1 Co11I Dilly P'Utl, LEGAL NOTICE lfM i.t lt"Obllt ~ wlll •nd to' Liii••• ol Tll• lollowlnt °'""'' ~r• dOln1 dfMjlt will be rtl\IP"l'IH. Mtr!ob 11. lt11 "5•11 ll'ICl!TIOUS IUSlllll5 Adll'llnlltrl llon "1ffl.lfl,.w!U 1 n" t •I~, blitl ... it tt: tt 111111 bl m1M111.,...,. "'"" tM ~ •AMI tTATIMINT f'ICTITIOUI IUJINill rlttf.nct lo wllt(J'I It m1&1 IOI" lllrllltf GOl.OIN Wllf Cl..I AHlfl5, UN trtetor te llll'llltn '"" efW!lrlCt II IWfli!M!ll, lllt 1111 .. 1111 Mrtlll It dtfllf Wlllltlt NAM.I STl.TIMINT •••tkWI•••· Incl lhtl 111, 111'1'\e •lld l'IK• G1l1•r l>tlv•. H•""'lllrt 111<1!, (1111. and u!IOll 1ny t11bcOl'ltrt ct61" lll!Cllr Jtll'l'I, H tt: Thi foll•l1t1 .. ,llOll 11 .. t"" billlllttt I" llf•tlnt "'' ••111• h•1 bffn Mt tor All"ll nt.o. '" 11111 .... 111111 1114 ••Jd •111<1tl .. ,.,.. l.t.UILIS _.,..o ll!ADI, 'ott Offlc• ••t u . 1'11, II f:)O ··'"·· !fl "" (Ill"''""' ot t:dW1rd.. Stul. 19°' G1l1J1' OrlY1. ti ... workmltl tlll•llWtd., ~ 111"" KIDS LOVE IOI' r•1. 16m Urd llrM\, IV/!111 MA"LOW .. A5iDC IA'l'll. 21oe °'"'''"•nl Nt, ' •• 1tld tour!, •I 100 ... ,.llO•I ···"'· Ct lll. ftttO •~ttuti ... ti !ht Cllltr•cl. ltld'I. C1!!fonll1 fll74t ... !Ir_ P'L, No. U,t,, C•I• M1t1. CIYlt Ctl'ltfl Orlyt WP1I, I" '"' City of IKtlTl•l"'I' 11111. ltllt G•I••' Otlvt, JIL"lll!lifr "''' "'llfldr1w lllt bid for I •• Je.An LH, l•UJ t~f Ill JI~ MtrlOW, ,,. ,.titrlOll Ill., No. S1rt11 AM, C•lllOrllll. H-111tl l11ch, C1lll. '*'° Hrloil OJ -lorfv.flvt 10 ) dt ¥t '"" !ht l•NCLE LEN lllcll, tlllf0fll11 Witt 11•, CMll Mtu, Otltd M~rdl 11, ltl'f. Thll tl\lt!ntJI It bf/111 cWllCltd ,.,. • "'""'.., lht 1111•nlilt Ill bkti. \l . Tiii• lllltlntM " Mint tllltlucld ll't ii 1'111• -..i1111U1 I• Mint C0114111Uld ti~ lh w. E. SI JOHii P'lrllltt1ll!t 1 Hu•b•nd .. Wiit. l>li.t Mlr'h I, ltJl 111411'1'16111!• l¥ldu1I. Coun" Cl•rk lit~tfl'l'll'l 11111 NIW~flT·Ml$A UHlf'llO SATURDAYS IN •• JoAl'I l.H Je¥ M.trlevr 1 ... rt "" lttlllltrt ld••rl 1ul SCMOOI. OISTll:ICT I "Tlllt ''"""1111 lllld w!tti Ill• Cou"'' Tltl1 tllltf'l\M'I l'ltttl Wlllt "'' Co...ntv •t!ltl'llt¥ 11 L•• Tll!1 tftll!l'ltnl n1ed wllll lftt (l\lf"ll' of Or1~1t C11111tty, Cti Clt<"k of Ortl'IN Cwllly 0011 '""''"" M, Cifl'\ OI Ottl\ff Cou,.ry Oft : ')' lt11, INI MlrW llWI. Cltrll cl O••rtt Ceunl' 11111 '111ru1rp ft, '' Dorttl'I' Ml ,.,..., fl'IW r THE D "ILY PILOT lttt '' ,.........., J. M.Mlle•, °""'"' '' lt\lfrh' J, Mffftlc, Dhll Ctu""" c"'' Nt.w, C•llflnllt tt•H 1tn. 1v 11vtr1, J. M•ddel. ~ul'I' l"llrtf\t llnt Affl'I , I!'\ CDlll'lh' Cltrl!. Cieri.. ft~ 1n11 ,....,_ CIU"h' CIH'lt. 4'.!·HOG 1'1'111 l'lt144 A fMf M ,.1iltloflll" ' l'•lt ltt '1.ll!IMM Or'"" Cotti 01Jt' 1"111'1. P'Ultlllflee Ott ntl Cot•!. Dtll'r itlltt, ,l'\ltillll!tf Drlfltl 1:Ntl DI P'!ltf, 11bllilltl'.I Ort"tt Co.•t 01fly ~II... P'utl hll'ltd Ori "" CMfl Cit!' P'HOI, ref\ 15 11111 Mll"dl tt. Ttl1 Mt.11 1Nr1111 1, •· tJ, a. 1m 12'-n Mtrtl'I 1, •· 11, tt. 1tn u..n "i1rel'I u. u. tt, 1•11 701·11 Mtrdl 1. 1. •s. n . It'! »0-7J ' ' nu1.t'a •JI tht e xtra It cott wit!\ a JMNon a Son tull Malnttnanct LtAst o n 1ny of our brand new 1972 1\tercurya. Juat think ct It .•• no mort •nncylnr rtpalr problems ... no mort unexptetfd ~xpen1n l.nd Mat of 1111 ••• " beautiful new full 1lu MttCUr,y Marqu ll or 1-fnnte~r. lo drlvf' In abtolut•b' ptrl~L-condition at all tlme1. F nd OtJt for )'ttUrstlf all the bMeftt& Ind ple&IUrft thl1 rantutle ltut proanm prcvidn oa all our Llneoln-- l\1trcury Prod:U(tl. Call :a uo 10\VEi"l It 540-!5&30 ••.• TODAY !' 2921 HAftlOfl ILVO .. COSTA MllA • -- • • . .... . .-.,4A.-.... , J .... ~ .. V .s. Pro eetlon• ' Farmers Drop SACRAMENTO (UPI /. - califo[!!i1 farm employment 11 213,400 IHI month fell by C1500 from January, the atate Department of H u m a n RelOUr<ea hu nported. M~r~ MOTOR HOMES SALES • RENTALS 11 fl, to 21 fl. UTI LINER IALIOA-PACI ARROW LOC.ATID ON THI NIWPOlf ADWA1', JUST IOUTN Of THI MNTA ANA flllWAY • • TAii THI M'fADDIN TUIN OISP. TUIN UPf ON YILLAltL WAY. 0 N IDINGllll i i < • i We pl)' 4»'ll> en re;un....avlnga "'°""""' ,,,. big banks pay )usl 4%, • ""11ch makes our rate 12~ % hlgMrthan thelrt. And deposlll In bylhe 10lh of Iha monlh, earn trom the 11t. 'rho! can add up. 160 can our 5"" time pulbocl< Interest. Cenllnela Bank. Whore th• percontageaaromore In your favor. 121°1° Higher Interest for Your Savings. " --. . ' ' • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST • • • • ~r.; ........ . .. . ' C, • ' .. , . • ~ ,. ,. _, . • •• • • • t: t • • " Wema~y's· QOSing Pri~mplete New ·· Yark Stock Market Ooses · Slightly Higher NEW YORK (UPI)·-'!'be dock market closed llJPUy biChar Wednlllday although profit taldn8 ana Milin& to0k a'l'•Y . oome of lta urllar 111n1. Tnding W.. fllrly acji•e. · . Sbo.Hly befon the cloae,' the Dow Jonu ln- dualrili 1ven1e of IC) 1tlede1fblue:chl:f llll>cka .w1s aht1d around 3 polnU 1t 987.01. Ith• been lheod mon thin 8 at one point. Standard i Poor'• SOO oto<k index 111ned 0.21 to 107.82. -. : Advances held a abort IHd over declinu 1mong the more than 1,7•0 issue• croaina lb• tape. • SC Dlll.Y PILOT tr Exchange List , Complete Closing Prices American Stock Exchange List , ·~ I . • ' • • Glfl c-•~• NEW YORK -Babcock. and Wilcox, Co. ~ "°" ~~J million contraet tram Electric Corp, for nuclear power productlon-_..... . -. e '-" Olc••etl WASHINGTON -JJ'be E>o port-lmporl Bank Mond11 ar proved a-$1S.SI rallilon .... Ill Scandinavian airlines s,- lo help flillnoe· ...-of two OC.10 alrllntrt fl'wa Mcl>onnall·Dou1l11 Co r J. Total cost of lM craft 1' 1bou& 151 million. • ) ''" II DAILY PILOT < • ' . ' TV IDGHLIGHTS NBC (4) 1:30 -""West Side Story." Conclusion of the 1961 musical screen classic in Its television premiere. Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer star. ABC (7) 1:30 -ABC Comedy Hour. The Danny Thomas Special features guest ap~arances by Bob Hope, Sammy Davis Jr., Totie Fields, Don Knotts and Jullet Prowse. CBS (2) 10:00 -"Mannix." Dean Stockwell and Shelly Fabar .. guest in a now-you-see-it, now-you· don't murder case. Mike Connors stars. KTLA (5)" 7:30 -NCAA 1971 Championships. Highlights of the NCAA basketball championships of lut season which saw UCLA grab its fifth alraigbt national tlUe. . KHJ (9) 7:30 -"The Helen Morgan St-Ory." Ann Blyth and Paul Newman star in this 1957 biographical movie of the famous torch singer. Wednesday _Evening • u w rn m... """' ""' ''Tll• Dinny Thom11 Special" Gu1Jt1 Bob Hopt, S.mmy Divis Jr., Tolle fl1l6s, Don Kndts 1nd Julill. PfllWSI ~in Dinny In "A Funnr Thln1 HIP· MAlllCH 15 pefltd oa thl W11to1 Special." Thi sl'loW 1lso o«eri 111 inslaht Into eon· l:Ot ()) • 8 lll""" t1mporuy COllClms. Subjtcl'l lncludt Cl) WIW WM ,,... consumer protection, r.qdini. Jet TM 'A 9 .! 111 trml, ttkrvision mtdic•I showl ind , .,_fl Jemie crime pmtntiol'J. ,_, •••••• l.Mll tD "MERV''-Jack Jones, Ill ID -. * Lennon Sl1ter1, Charo, 111...,..., R Sercio Mendes Brasil 77 If D ... It..., Crfff11 sa.. -~.,... .... •:»• ....... a.ct -\1111 8 ... : (C) (II) "1111 Mt '*" 1:00 8 {)) MM!cll c.ttr (RJ 'u•st Coed. (mus) ·~ Gt.,_, Mlcf'IMI Dou1ln pll)'S 1 rlf1rdtd Mowtrd KM!, Ml Miiier. Mllllcal JOUnl m111 who llCf:I 1 t1rrif)'tn1 ..,... Ill Sllllltl,1111'1 "Thi T1111-future w4l9ll hi1 brother bemma 111, l"I of tM ShllW." llrtina him with no on• to tetn 011. w-mim-· 9 111111: tar) j.,.. ,..., ... a Tll• ¥Prc1W11 Ill,,.... (•11) ,'~obett,Ttylol, I!) Nltldlt "" ""· ,,,. u w rn m 111o """"" 1 •-::-.:-,...._ 0'Pow1rswitdi" On tM Frtnch Rlwl· I = U. trt, Britt 111d Dinny lnmll11t1 TM~ vi. th• drownin1 of 1 )'OUnr woman. W.1i1d.t 8 Niii Wttdl John Fullmer --.... _ .... '!Id ,ln•leC._I... ·~1111 ... ... ... 10:00 8 (IJ ..... (R) 0.111 S*kwtH 7·1 ~··-E;c ,,, .. WWsltJU.1 II.MU., l ...... .,.._11 -~ ... ....... ,.., .... llF119: "T• , ......... - tnd SMiiy F1•111 pl1y mtjor roltt lfl I llOW·)'Ol.l·Mt·it·llOW·JLCIU·dcwl't m111d« ctSt tut puzzles M M111-,,._ D a m NiPI Wery "Sincm Aunt Ad1 came to stl)"' 11.111 Je1n· ntt11 Kol•n; "With Apolo&i11 to Mr. Hydt" slari Ad1m Wes1; "The Flip, Sidi of S.lan" stirs Art• .lohnlOll • D•'7•--Glm•.., 1111""' 7:119-• .. -(R) '"'" fBM-"°""(I!) ''UIU· Do You Wint To 941 • Dodor'1" Ml•• beth ir 111ff1t _1111 ftllow studtnta and t11ch· Cl> MntMlllt • II fraMtu m for th• fltl! time. 10:1s g Kl• Wnp.U, II DI ..... -,...,. Guest host John IJMr clocb In 1t tht llCfOI)' 10:30 (J) Tiit hldclU"' ·for • look II woRI~ Arntrkl, 11 ...... Geor1t Pljln1m l}'ntr II IR tmploymenl 1pnt Mtk· ell DfclR ill t11t ltonl lnr nrlous jobs for )obltll Dontld D TMt Is TM LK• S!Jrprlaed iuest Duck aM IOot)'. Is Pit loont. e NW 1171 a...,i....,. Hl1h· = ~~ N~b of till NCAA Buketb1H cheim· ft Fiii: (C) "Tiit Vultlln" =ti" which ll'lt tht hOllorl to 0) 4z Jlta Cl)Tolol"'T"'" ll:G08Q(l)d§l!)l!l- (J)I-~... CIJ -.... a-I -(!II~ "'Tllo U (I)E!l-...._ ...... ltM;' (blo) '57-Mn a MIN: (t) "1119 Storr .. M• llytlt, 1'.1ul Mtwme11, c1111 Ewtns. u.r (dr•) '57 -Ron11d Colm1n, Rlchlnl ClrflOll. Tiit rl• tnd !all Htclr Lamm, tht M111 Brotl!ers. of tht 19ft'IOUS torch lln1tt, Mr un· M1nkilld lltt Just lmnttd tN UJPtr h ... ~1 H·bomb. l'klw 1 ctl1sti1I Hlalt Tri· •PPr .,,. r, bout .ntll •lcotlol bun11 must decide m1n'1 f1t..:.. 1ncl mntual rbl lo atarclom. tD _._ """' preserw11ion Df destNCtlon1 -• CD TM!I M' C.MqUHClf •Cl) ln&NI d) f..W.U 111 Snlnr Lucll11 Rlwtrs 9 LWY: "9ffhll A llltllctll Coa-Oil Th C.C.n. if Our TI• .. ..,. '., ID TIMI Frtlldt CW 11:10 CD MM: "WN u, tnd 1111" • C tt 11 Wfftt111 (m)'l) '66 -Robert Hoffm1n, Us• G1stonl. l:GO ~u~H't.,~ 111111 Cr1111by tnd 11:15 ll'I ftsllnl fll•lct DID ~1( "Tht Wldnlsd1y ll:Jll D (jJ CIS Litt Movie: IC) '°Cl111t Wtrrior" Offioffs MalJOf' end Reff Fly Wltll Mt" {com) '63-0olorn pl11 rnollltr hen owr • ~n1 rt· Hirt, Hurh O'llri1n. Mrwist (SIM F11nken) but their Q lfl m lohnll)' C.110n Wllliu11 woni• .ubsldl wtltn he tl'lw1rh • S.rorin iuuls. ;:e,rob:;:t G11J Crosby and BUI g MM: "TIUJ• _. CllS" (com) n .. - , . '33-W.C. Fields, ll1by LeRoy. P ....,., JUnp vs. !ht C.lifomll Goldtll SMls It 01k· 0 ell Cl) ED Did: . Ctwtt Guilt llllcl. host Is Robert ICl11n. Sthedul@d D (J) Cl} EB a. CMrb?li, •I 1uuts trt Robert Y1u11'1n ind Rod· EMit' FftMJ (R) 'A V Dlff M'J' D1n1trfi1ld. Drum~ A nrpt~ ''!.11r •: m T• T .. Utt Tfltll tops off • wild wtlktn4! Tom tnd lZ:Clt GI "-'e: "lAlt MN 11 brtll" Eddlt apenll wtth Norm1n. (llor) ·54 -Vincent Prict. fr111ta (I) lillJ Cl'IM• Cru... Btttota. mA"i•-- mn. ~"'""" 11!1 llll A hlllkAffolr/Dodloo '7% .,_""' e""' 1:30 8 MnM: "lMt MMl!rt" (dra) '47 -Suwn H1yward, Robert Cummln1s. Acnes Moorelt11d. m M·Nl&M Siw: "'-rtnlt 111 T 1r- al089t f! amJm Wt 1 t sw. ror," "statiM Wttt" ind "She11• -Conti. Thi lll·f1ted rom1nca If Alttftlb" ~n M1ri1 1nd Tony b •ncMd J·oo-..... (C) "A M Alo .. I ) when Cfllrio kllls TOI!)' ln • kftllt • ~ • . "' M wa fllf". H1t1lll Wood, Richard BtJ· , R5S ,;.:-.ru:1ll.nd, Mii)' Murphy, ..,, Russ T1mb1yn. Ritt Moreno 11 • 11141 Gtor11 Cht~lris stir, 4:JO 11 fhn Thursday IMYTillE MOVIES hW ..... ~ (dtl) '43-.letR hrlltr, RUS$111 H11dln. t:GI" "Smet ........ ~ (drt) '5G- WilliM ·Holden, Glori• SW1nson. m "l'rllll:'• List Caw" (11115) 'S3- ..... .,. ol't a. Aw., fl1• .MkttHl Wildlnt M1r11rd Lockwcod. Ir"' flM) ~ AllJ'Ofl, Jad: J:GD (I) "'SarNp TNll_.-P1rt I (dr1) .._, '4~ary Coolltt. ln111d 8'11111111. .................. (dll) 'ot2 Qi "'n. CFlll M111~ (dl'I) '57 - ••• """' SIUll Htyw1rd. Jost ftmr, De•n Jigtr. -....... , .... (., '5G-4:00fl(C)"Pri1Cttfl'laytn"(d11)'5S -111 -...... -t11c11m au..,, '"""'d """'· • I Lis~ns t~. Landers Nearly Everyone • l rtl' ' • • . ' • ' I • ' • • ' ' • . Danzl~uin~et lmp.ressive By TOM BARLEY Of t11t e.11 ... Pii.t s,.tt It's been said o( the Danzl Woodwind Qulntet that its members named t he i r ensemble both to honor the 18th Century German and to draw public attention to a composer whose name now rarely appears in our chamber music programs. Franz Danzi may have been overshadciwed by several of his illustrious contemporaries but he does not deserve, on the strength or the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Soc le ty 's SAVI YOUll TRADING TllAVIL VOUCMEllS FllOM ·~ .... -k,... c.. 1116 New,_r1 •Ml. Cetll M.SI Or .... C"1tty'1 L_,.., Sf. P.trlclt't hy C.tebr9ti ... frid.y, M-• 1 latest concert, the obscurity that h.as become his lot. Tids critic found his Quintet in D Minor tp be a remarkably fresh and inventive work for an era in which those qualities were not always apparent. He was, at the time, condellllled for his departures f r o m chamber PljDlocol and this may explain why his charm- ing, wittjly scored works may have \anguished for so long. Let us hope that the eUorts of the ensemble which has worthily taken his name lead to a revival of the works of a composer who very obviously knew how to weld charm. elegance and techni c a l mastery Into a chamber score. The Danzi Quintet wasn,'t the only work to be ta ken from a dusty shelf Thursday night for a well deserved air· ing at the dedicated hands of this fine ensemble. Josef Feerster's Quintet in D Major delighted the Laguna Beach High School audience in a reading that displayed to the full the rustic charm woven so cleverly by the Czech com· poser into a score that reminds us, in so many ways, of the Intricacies and half· tones that Prokofieff was to incorporate in much ot his • chamber work. His work is sure to disap- point many of the puri sts who tend to deplore the injection of a little humor and sprighUy interpretation into their cham- ber work. This critic found it to be fres h, uttefly free ot pretensions and ideal com· panion of honor to the Danzi work that had gone before it. Said purists were sure to seize eagerly on Paul Hin- demith 's ' ' K 1 e i n e Kam. mermusik" but they would have been sadly disappointed if they looked for the five who tackled Danzi and Foerster so • •uperbly lo Duff thla major work. It 'enjoyed 'I 'splendid reading at the hands of the · Dan;i group who ahQwed us throughout th~ ~vening that the..ct>mposer who cares to ln- ~ject a little humor into his work can count on the Danzl . Quintet to convey his message to the audience. "Though highly dissonant.~' stated our program; that's as may be but the fact remains that bis Hindemith work is a clearly stated exercise in artistry that is as traditional in its setting as the delightfully delivered "Seven Pieces for A Flute Clock" that preceded it. This is one of the many works tha t Haydn wrote for the mechanical clocks of the late eighteenth century and we are fortunate indeed that the scores have survived the mechanism that demanded their music. Inconsequential. yes, but most charming and an ideal aitdition to a cleverly rounded cha.mber concert. The Danzi Woodwind Quintet: Frans Vester, flute ; Maarten K&rres, oboe; Piet Honing , clarinet: B r I 11 n Pollard, bassoon and Adrian van Woundenberg, horn . • ·1 DAIL'( ,ILOT Si.II ,hetir FREDDIE HART, BAKERSFIELD COUNTRY SINGER Five Ac1demy of C&W Music Aw1rds in 1971 It's All Freddie Hart N ... llt IMt hhll !Hiie 4111 .,.. rtn Tiii HIGHLAND U&P1m Playwright at Work At1C&W Music Awards By TOM PALMER Ol t1M Clel" ,1191 Sl1H "This boy's shot all the ducks off the pond," said actor Chill Wills, as he presented the next to the last award of the evening at the 1971 Academy of Country and Western Music Awards for 1971 at Buena Park's John Wayne Theater at Knott's Berry Farm. for the last time. 'Freddie Ha[rt juggled fi ve trophies. Ais album, "Easy Lovin'." wlis voted best of the year. He was voted male vocalist of 1971. ~·"'""'f W-~.!r. . .,. Author at SCR for World Premiere His single song, also called "Easy Lovin'," won honors for the best song of the year (award going to composer l!,P.d publisher ) and best slqi11 record of the year {aW~ going to artist, producer aq~ record compa ny). : i ~ CCHtOllA el~ Mil HILD 0¥11 "SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY" & "WHERE'S POPPA?'! .... Ill lltew lt.m et 7 P·•· COMIN• Nm WlllC "DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER" wltti S-. C.ltMfJ Ii Jiff St. htl9 A remote cabin near rural Duxbury, Vermont is the permanent "hideaway' for Richard Ploetz, whose new play "0\i's Ice Cream Sui(" receives its world premiere Thursday at South Coast Repertory . "CAT D' NINE TAILS" For the last month, however, Pjoetz has been in the relatively a I i e n en- virorunent of Ca Ii for n I a , participating ln rehearsals for the play at SCR's Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa . The production, and Ploetz, visit, are underwritten by the Office for Advanced Drama Research which, through fund· ing from · the Rockefeller Foundation, puts y o u n g playwrights into contact with American repertory com- panies in t h e hope that something exciting will ha~ pen. As far as Ploetz Is con· cerned, it's happening. "5 EASY PIECES" -.... - ''THI •OYI IN THI •AND'' * hth Col« -Ill HOOKHUlST LOGE 2ntw ... 11 •c1. tM-1122 STADIUM II D.I. ........ o,..,. m..,,,. "The whole experience has been most beneficial," he · says. "Seeing a blueprint turn- ing into an actual three- dimensional project Is very exciting." According to Ploetz, taking back the practical techniques of application to his work as a playwright will be invaluable. "Oli's Ice Cream Suit" SCR PLAYWRIGHT Richard Ploett began when Ploetz was a playwriting graduate student in the Yale Drama School last year. After working on the play in scene workshops , . he rewrote it making many changes in the structure and then sent it off to the Office for Ad v anced Drama Research. SCR read the play and agreed to do it. Ploetz came to SHOWING NOW! ' -.. .. -.... -.. -IOIJCJO.-.... ,\'OI•-·---·-----__ ..,,..,_ e '==" .. *-'! ~-=--(PG)' .. _ .. _ ---~·---·--·-___ ,. __ _ -----.-~ Clint Eastwood & Jessica Wolttr "PLAY MISTY FOR ME'\a) • VIUAOUNGI 171 •.ll••••U ...... ,,...,. . SOUtH COAST II "' S.11ft..,.., t.•MntiMf.WI PAULO D .. VE-IN CesttiMt••i4J.331S ll•..,ort r.,. ot a.ktr LA HAllA DljYEIN I I•"°""'"" 162 J lffctl 11.C. & Morht llM. • playwrighting only about three years ago. "My dad was very active in amateur theatricals ' and of course I always al· tended his performances." But the urge to write began with keeping a person.al daily journal (be still does it) after being inspired by reading Thoreau. "Writing became a way of dealing with reality for me-a filtering. That's where I got the habit of writing," Ploetz comments. Now, wit h the experience of working c\osely in a repertory situation ~1th actors a n d director, Ploetz would like to do more. And he 's serious abOut the reality of playwriting. 0 1 don't need much to live On, so I want to continue wTiting plays that I want to · write. 1 have no designs on slanting my material or writing ror the commercial theater." Tht production, which is directed by Martin Beilson. features Ronald Boussom and John Peters in the two-man cast. "Oli's Ice Cream Suit" is scheduled for a two-week, Thursday through Sunday run March 16-25 before it joins the SCR repertory on Wednesday nights in April . 41 After all this," said Fred· die Hart , carrying three acad· .emy trophies on his way a· ·cross the stage to pick up the award for best entertainer of the year, "what's left to say?" But Hart, visibly moved by the complimenls heaped on him by the academy:, was not through yet. He came out wondering the same question minutes later, as he accepted the final and top award, best single rteord -his fifth of the evening. So, as he glided off the stage Leisure World Seeks Actors • Additional actors and ac. tresses for an April Leisure World production of WoOdy Allen's comedy "Don't Drink the Water'' are being sought by director Gwen Yarnell. Needed are performers In theic 'late 20s or early 30s to complete the cast. Those in· terested should calf' Miss Yarnell evenings at 67~687. Hart turned out to be tU surprise big winner at Mohl day's sevecth annual counttJ: and western award pre~ tations?tmc~ by Dick C\4rk. Loretta Lynn received :t.tie award for best female vodi~ of the yea'r. She also receiv with Conway Twitty, the ti of top local combo of 1971. ' The academy's Man of tlai Year Award went lo Waller Knott, founder or the bfi~ farm, and Dale Evans cepted the Jim Ree VA Memorial award for her b""'bs- band. Roy Rogers, who ·; unable to be.present to acce Roy Clark presented . · award, entertained the 2, persons packing the theat and received the award for the best comedy act of the yell;. Chosen the best televill~ personality of the year "(is Glen Campbell, though he viaa ·not present to accept it. tf Other performers during 8Je televised presentations W"ere Lynn Andersen, the 1970 ~p female vocalist, who sapg0 NJ hit "Rose Garden." Roger Miller, and Kenny Rogers ~ the First Edition. ~ Among those m a k I j:I presentations .l'ere T e x Williams, Charley Pride, apd Dennis Weaver. ~ NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEMY AWARDS lnduding "lest Actor" & "Best lW[ lllllllSOl '9IODt.IC1DI OOWNft' -A NORMAN JEWISON Fll.M "FIDDL!R ON THE ROOF" -TO POL -.... Dlf.-_. NORMAN JEWISON -· JOSEPH ST!IN .._.._ ... ....,., -...... ...., ........ JERRY BOCK ~ ................... . "HELDON HARNICK ..._.. .... --....... HAROLD PRINCE t.M ... ----· JEROME ROBBINS -----~ ....... r.to.."EM.7. =-~------· ' --.... l "'fiddler~nthe Roof· onthescreen NOW I Gl-:.=.Oj.1~ .... "":'l:'.:i:.:-~-;;~"'="•..:.1 SHOWING In ~ o,_ Deny 1JtOI N ... -•ttt P.M. M....., . ,, ,, •• , 1:Jt fSl.tol -t :OO PM f$2 .lt1 ,....., •••• , •• , 1 :JI ISJ.001 -l:OI PM Ill.Ill Wed...-, , •• ,, • 1 ill fSJ.111 ..._ ltto PM Ill.IOI lhncley , ,,,, ,, , 1:11 Ill.Ml -l!ff PM ISJ.111 __ _,r.t4oy .,,,,,.,,. 1:JO !SJ.Oil -l :JI PM CS4.00I s.t.i.., ........ 1:00 llJ.111 -4:41 PM 114.001 1 ·-llll , .. IM.001 ......, , , , ,, ,, , , , 1 :ff fSJ .111 -4141 PM ISJ.11) -l :H PM ISJ.lt) .... v to' Be did de da tu ty A ony Ne his Iba s 'S sur Sen. said free .. sac of aaid .. Sta lri Sc onel the Nix L c Al two mer cons ic A ., com up 'Eve No pre dent The Bet! y R .di poat the t ·~~ )be . ' • '••. .. r .. ' • ( , . V04,65, NO. ~. 6 SECTIONS, 104 PAGES ' .. I ·ell .~ , 'EDITION • " ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORt~IA· • ' .. . Teday's Fl•al ' ' WEDNESbAY, MARCH 16, 1'72« JEN CENTS ' . Village AtmOsphere" Underlined by · Hopefuls ' BJ' PATl\ICK BOYLE ' Of .... ~lly , ... t ltfft ' Generalized statements . about 01ain- t1lni.,g jl" "village atmosphere" iln Laguna , Beach a.nd a de.sire voicedr bf one can· dldate. to "liberate .the p o I i c e department" n)arked the opening Tues-- day qight or what could become a tunnJltuous battle for two seats on the ci· ty council. A standing-room-only crowd of art cql· ony reside!!ts packf!d City Hall for the tu fir>t of six scheduled candidate i\irums, thl.!1 one sponsored by Village. Laguna. After initial statements by each of the six council hopefuls on preserving the village flavor -of the city, pointed questions from the audience led to other subjects1 in.. eluding police practices and past city council actions. Attorney Richard Carr perhlif>' sparked the most murmuring from the au- dience when he called for 1 liftini of restrictions on police to eliminate the < narcotics problem from the oorrununity. "The police have v~ry. constM1ctive Ideas which they have not been allowed to impletnent," Carr said in response to a question without giving examples. He said the "drug peddlers" ln town should be cracked down on by law enforcement o'fficials and ''run out of town." "The police ought to' be a:Jven a h;eer . hand in accomplishing this fact (of eliminating drug pushers)" he said. "I would let the police implement their plan • a1 · ers Coastline Bill 'Filed Carpen·ter Text Assures Lflcal Control . By L. PETER KRIEG or t11t DellJ 1"1 .. 1 Staff State Senator DeMis Carpenter (R· NewpQll Beach) ~Y filed the teit of his proposed coastline management• bill that is designed to allow . local gOvern· Sr:hmitz Charges NiXon in'China 'Surr(#~~ing' . W ASillNGTON (UPI) -Rep. John G. .Schmitz CR-Calif.), .. bas °'accused Presi· dent Nixon of "s:urreQdering" to thf! Chineee Communisti11nd of ''selling oUt" the Nationailst regime of Chiang Kai· shek. • Cleai:lY. unConvinced .. by the P. surances of other con~aUves such. as Sen. Barry Goldwater <(J\.fu'\z.), Schmitz said Tu.esdaY tJJat ttie 1'last 15 million free (::hinese" on Taiwan had been sacrificed on "the altar of appeasement.'' "At Peking, 'on February 21, that sacrifice was offered up 'to the false god af peace through surrender," Schmitz 1aid in a 'newsletter to his constituents. "Never since Yalta has the United States of' America so cruelly betrayed a frlenr ~:.. • >; ~ ~ 'I• Sch~ a ~1-year"'!)ld lieuten~" col· anel in 'the Marine Corps and mem.ber of the John Birch Society, said ·President Nixon's joi,nt commwjique with Premier (See SCHMI'l'Z, Pa1e !) Lagtina Democrat Clubs to Merge . After a lengthy separatioa, Laguna's two Democratic clubs have decided to merge into a Single neW ClUb With a DeW I constitution. After membership of the liberal South Coast Democratic Peace Club voted in favor of the merger, Middle-of-the-road Laguna Beach · Democratic C I u b members followed suit and election of new officers for ·the, joint endeavot' is 1clleduled on Saturday .. A slate of officers waS proposed by a combined ,.nominat~-committee made up of Peggy Morreale, Gwen Mathew, 'Evelyn Munro and Tommie Gunn. Nominees include JOseph Tomehak, president; Fran Engelha~dt, vice presi· dent; Phyllis Sweeney, t i'·e as u re r: Thelma Music, recording secretary; and · Betty Larssen, correspohdlne secretary. Youth M usiCtJl ment to keep control ot' the shoreline, subj~t to a review process through a new state agency. AU incorporated cities are excluded from control and there would be no moratorium on construction while a state coastal plan is developed. CarPenter's measure is the fourth ma· jor ~tal management proposal now before the Legislature:•althouih' -sul> mitteii by state s.ii. J;nies Q. Wedwortb· (0.lngfewood), is .I~ to be i'illed /llond!;y by, the • sOna~· Olifunlitee on Naf!di lWooufces ..il'.'.W'ildllle. ;;; The strongellt of the four· measures, a bill aubmitted JoigUy . by Slate Senator . Donald L> Grunakf (J\.W1-ville) and ~yman Alan Sleroty ( D. L o 1 I ' Angeles), will be bioard by the paJiel Mon- day,but 'no action ia aDticipited. Would-be Solon Candidate S~eks Filing Appr~va~ 4 would·be 1l9ngreSsioDal caildid~te ,.-ho claims he was MUscied out of the ~gistrar of Voters,._office by deputy sheriffs last Friday despite the fact that he got to the door one minute before the filing deadline will uk in Orange County Superior Court judge March 24 to ap- prove his rejected filing. Fullerton build~r William Brashears, a candidate for the 34th District seat held by Rep. Richard T. ,Hanna ([).Anaheim), ha1 submitted affidavits signed .. by six alleged witnesses to the incident to Judge 'Leiter Van T.itenhove. Brashears claims In his lawsuit that deputies halted him at the door af the Santa Ana offict although the clock clear- ly said 4:59 p.m. He apparently eluded the officers, entered tbe building · and joined the long line· at the fil ing window. But the persistent deputies then ad- vised the waiting · Brashears that they would like him to leave the premises . The reluctant Republican complied with their request. Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock said .be will tell the court that Brashears was three minutes late. Brashears claims in his actk>n that Httcbcock's aides closed the doon before 5 'p.m. • . "In any event," Brashears said, "can- didates were filing their papers as late as S:30 p.m. I know because I watd!ed them from outside the ofnce right up to that time~" · Thia meuure, a refinement of. a •imilar b!U Introduced by Sleroty Jut year, is supported by moat con- servationists. ' A spok.esman for <;Jrpenter decliped to take a guess 1s to wbiCh, U any, will ever become law. Carpenter is counting on whit , he has terme<t 't11e "reasorlabl~" provisiOns in h,)J measure to get it passed .. Among otlier things, bis .bill: · -Allow1 iiidividilal cOastali cOunties to define~ own~, ~ · 1 ao~JIW bei.e,;n 1,1111 y~ . .0 ~)I.. land. . I • t -Requires local 1eoi.iiiy> go,ierlimpt. to "'bmit land U1e and COllW ~ to I ' IS.member · ~te a1eQcy bf Marci& · af 1974. •• -Calls for completion of the state coa¥ plan ail months·Jater. -~.Hows development to continue dur· lng , the interim, ptovlded It meets preliminary criteria ~P,blt•hed by the already..mtlng caJUqrnia A d v I • o r y Commission on Marine and Coastal Resourees. Laguna Trustees To Study-Budget Deficit Tonight l Ways or dealing with a projected deficit · of 1135,000 in the 19n-73 budget will be examined by Laguna Beach Vnlfied School District trustees at a special study session Thursday night. The 7:30 o'clock meeting will be held in the high school cafeteria at as Park Ave.,;..,said Supt. Willllrn Ullom. The change from the district board room was made because it can only hold 72 persons under fire department stand- ards. Recent school board meetings have been drawing crowds of more than 100 persons. Trustees have been asked by Dr. Ullom to Submit/riority iten;ts for next year's budget .an to comment on the following recommendations made b)' the district staff: ' -Reduction ·O~ a trustee.mandated reserve account bf •100,000 lo $25,000. -Notification to all district employes that no money will be available for, pay raises before July I, 1'73. . -Restaration of non~catlonal pro- gram cuts lf any income beyood what is projected ts found. for acComplishlng tbJs." Ind,unberit Councilman Charlton Boyd, ste\ing hi! second term on ~ council, took· exception to Carr's remakrs. "I would be opposed to any such slmpllstlc answer to such 1 fiendishly complex pM>~lem, •J Boyd said. The coun- cilmllll explained that Jaw enforcement was only 1one means of apl>roaching the pfobJem, saytnc it should also be given "the ' health approach" through such ~ -· ;' f :services as the county's Drua:•Abuse pro- gram. Councilman Roy Holm, also seeking 1 second term, agreed with bOth Carr and &yd abo4t lhe ser•ousness of the pro~ !em, but saJd he di4 nof feel a change In police tactics would' be ._ solution. "Wha,t a policem'n C!\ln al)d can't do Is rather well defined," Holm noted , refer· ring to the constltutk>nal rights of persons being 1rrested. "I am iiot talking at>out violatlon of civil , UPl<t_...,.. •. AT LEAST 3 DEAD, 6 HURT.IN LOS ANGELES HOTEL PIRE:. Firomen Romovo Victim of Blaze on Edto of Skid Row .. . . . . . ' . . Oowntown :LA Hotel Blilze . . . . Kills 3 Perso1is;· 6 Hurt ,. . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three persons were kilfed ·and six injured t~ay• when fire broke out in an old, slx"'8tory hotel in downtown Los Angeles, rll'e dtp15tment offici81s said. Two firemen also were in- jured. They said one more perSon was unac- cqunted for In the names that erupted about 7 a.m. iJ1 the top floor of the Hotel B!Jrclay. The blaze · wa1' reported contained 30 minutes later. . Fllleeo guests at.the hotel, one a blind man, were brought to 1afety by firemen on ladders from the top three floors ol the hotel. About 25 other1 oo the lower floors were led through thick smoke ·to 11fety f,y· re!Cue teama. ' A !pokesmsn for the hotel · said 132 persons 'wire living in lhe building. Most gueata ore· elderly: The i>Qtet ts one of the city's oldest, dating baclt to' the early 1900s: Its ~lientele prlm~y . m Jon~·Ume residents, .a ~tel spoke,sman said. Twenty~seven fire companies and 100 firemen fought the blaze, described 11 a 11major emergency" type ." · ' · The cause of tJie blaze wu not Im· mediately determined ; although one guest Hid be thOuilbt he hUrd I "loud 'noile" Jusl before tlie fi re enipted." Returns Tonight ' Ttie popular musical,". ''Where Is the Mayor?" will return to the 1boards at Laguna's Thurston tlntermedlate 'ScbOol l}oat Holding Tanks RecoJllmended tonight !or a four.<Jay run. Orange County harbor commlMtonen San Diego Regional Water "'·•I''-~- More than a third of the school's stu· • Tuesday unanimously recommended to trol Board that the current~y j.'; dent body is involved in the annual pro-the Board of Supervisors an ordinance wu inadequate. , duction, which always draws capacity au• that would ~ulre all boats with tolletl A variaUon of the county'• '3t°der 1899 0dlences. · to hlive holding tanks or other dllchlirge lltfuse Ad, tt •Y• simply that no one Curtain ti.me will be I p.r.. today devices by Jan. 1, 1974. can dump anything into county harbors. postpone the 1Urgery until.after Laguna's The ordlnlbct woilld apply to all boat. The San Dlqo board pve CO\IDtY of· the acboot, are !I .25 for adults and 15 travellQg wtlbin coUnty harbors, Including fJclala 1JO days to draft 1 new ordlnMce , centa for lltUdenU. visitor>. · • or llld tt would do tt for them. That time , Peter Bernard i.1, student lltreciO<' ~·, ~Jo second portion of dot ordl-~ .. i.s, run GUI, but Harbor olftct1Jo .were . 1be cast Includes steve Haucht. Chrll iequ\re'fhft alt -rcll~ mariiliJJiiQI • nteor an extentlOn Into May. , Randall, Amy Montgomery, Grelcben vl<le holding tank pump-®! I~ or '"11e San Diec• board ooly 1111 Jurladlc- Rodecker, Robert' Jlrunlwick, M I 1 equivalent la'Vices in 1 24-bour Ol>Clll tton OV<r Dana' Point Harbor but -k Jnierlandl, Sharin Rsnall, Val Anlman, unlt, al!O by Jan. I, lf1l. bu begun wl1h 'the Santa Ana ftosloa.al Hedi 'Heuclrlcklon1 8"bert Cllnnlnf; John Harbor Dillri<I officials bqan dranlng Water Quo I tty Control Botnl to IDIU any 'LllJStrom, Robert Green ind Susan the onflnance• more than three months county bin conforlll lo ..... t and Wolcott. ago when they received noUce from the Newport Harbon 1110. • .) • • • COmmisalonen Tue!day a f t e r A ~ o n adopted tome changea that were IUI· guied by tlie Joint Harbor Committee that momlng. ·The Joint Horbor Commlltee ii mode ·up of two Newpcirl Beech dty, c0uncilmen and two harbor commllllo-., , · A! It IUQeltad, ope .ae<llon of -Ole , ordinarH?t was c""'8ecl to reed ~ 11no one ohall "I'" or'cpr1te 1 ~~IUI bu I jJud (mal'IJle toilotl -'I baldint! tank: It had ~ "~")lit ...,.. or. lldats were lltald !tit ,.._. could put tlie bunfetlll}I •-~ on boats, Also II .. commllalfl """"""' I • rdertnce•to requlrln& ~t station. 'Ohly at marinas with more than 50 boats ..,.., entirely removed. • "We'd hive 1 lot-of *'bo•t mortnoa In town," Commlulon Chairman. Marttn Uub sold. • Holdln& tanks are not the only, 1anltary .<Jevtc. allowed, allhouch they ' or• the .simpleat and moo\ lpupenslve. ' 1, Boat ownen.coWd also.-to lnatall equipment to provide 1 cfliect conneCtton with the locot -l1llern or to male I ltWlll lrutmeal syllem on tllo boot Clpable of producing Quid OODIJlll'll>le to oecondary treated water acoeptacl by the healtli officer. • . ·i rights," Carr said in rebuttal. "I am talk· ing about enforcing the law." Other audience questions Included two that were directed at all of the can- didates. Only attorney Frances Hauer said she would not favor a return to a re- qui rement that only a 4-T vote of th• council could override a Planning Com- mission decision. The council recent11 changed the law. requiring only a 3·2 vote IS.. CANDIDATES, Pa(e Zl 54 ·Arrested In Schools Crackdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tllt DellJ ,. .... ,.., Smashing at heavy drug traffic among; area high schools and colleges, Costa Mesa police teams crisscrossed the Orange Coast overnight in a massive ro~ndup or suspected narcotics dealers. By dawn , 54 persons were in custodf, 20 of them juveniles from four aru hlgb schools. A total ol l! a~ 1rt charged la w9rnnta !Slued fJ>llowlnc scores.91~ eel pun:hlioes Jn . lhe ,put - wtlll lllllltlple Illes ol • 1 r e o 11 o 1 , .......... mv,a and ....uu-. Onetetheaoool1~­ p;oUce detective. Heroin and cocaine turned up 1n alann-- tnily heavy supply durl111 lho Colla llloa Poltce Departmoat--ltlldoot crackdown, ·~ lo ~ BcL John Regan. He said LSD, mMCallne, melhedrlne. amphetamine and blrbltur1te pills, plus plentiful marijuana baa been bought dur- ing the CO!tly probe. Breaking down ...... n cost of tho three -month invesUgatlon by d r u I purchases and man hours, Sgt. Reean aald It was about MOO per supsect. ' The ctly'• ouUay for the 51 jailed addJ up to well over·~,000 In total. Relatively small amounta of virtually every contraband drue were conflscated as the three teams of four men each hit m(.)re than 40 loc;atlons from C.Osta Meta to L1 Habra. · No serious lncidenta were reported In the raids, which included a predawn visit to a UC Irvine dormitory. Captives were sullen or defiant, DO& chalant, some even laughing and a couple of girls weeping 1s they streamed into Costa Me!l City Jail Jn handcuffs . AduJta entered via the rear booking case. area, where male suspects jammed all cells, while female 'arrestees were 1hlpped on to Orange County Jail . Juveniles were fed in through the detective bureau's side door and pro- ce!sed on through to Orange County Juvenile Hall. , The roundup of known drug-dealin1 •uspects Included 45 charged In court· issued arrest warrants, while nine pe:r90ns prmnt when la'f'IDen arrived were also boo.keel on varklul charges. The agOI ringed from one gtrl 11 to 1 35-year-old man nabbed ln Newport Beach Tut1d1y, u be hurriedly packed preparing to mo~e to Guadalajara, ~··· tco .. We•lller The sun might ~reak throuib thote low ctoud1 'I'hunday for 1 briet 1tay -but will be over- powered again in the early eveninC • houri. Hight at the beach 60J rlsln1 to the Mgh 10'• lnland. Low• -. INSmE TODAY The pracllce of lffe.time ,,..dJ. cal lictnae1 ha.i come under oi- UJck lncre01fnglv. from both doctors and patina.ti. See 1to1111 PoQ• 8. l ~ . l -.. " --.. --. ...... QIM'r ll ... . -... Or ......... " ---·-. ---. --.. -........... --. / ' I ' ' • I I DAILY PILOT LB 61 • ( Billionaire ID LA? ·Recluse Hughes Departs Nicaragua ffqlll ·. ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Afier a month autord Imnc ud the purported Huehn CUeloml omctam In Loo AliloltO Aid In a hotel bldffway In Nlcarqua and a autobiography.) they hadn1 nolk:ed· Hugbol -the purported surpriae meeUng with the Before tuvinJ: Managua. where be United States. But they added that so Nicaraguan president ar:d the U.S. am· lived on the seventh floor of the lntercon. many J>eO.pte enter here e~ery day lh~t he• baaador there. Howard , Hughe.a ii Unental ,ffotel, Hughes met with Preal· could easily have been missed. . reported to hive flown to Led Angele11. dent Anastasio Somoza and · u . s. In Las Vegas, where Hughes hved Another report aald he was In Vancouver, Ambusador Turner B. Shelton, the am· ~lo!e flying to the Bahamas and then to B.C. buudor said. N1c~ra~a, anotber spokesman for the An unidtntUJed spoke.man for the The ambassador said Hughes shook bllhoria1re, Arelo Sederber1. • • I d : Ntcaracuan Air Force told newsmen that haodl with him several Umes as they "There'll probably be a lot of speculation H\lghes bad flown ln a private plane early talked at the airport. Describing hiJ that he, has returned to ~.~ Vegas. Put Tuesday to Los Angele!, where he haa handshake a! strong, Shelton added: wt-don t koow where he'-1.!. . lived aa both a celebrity and a recluse. "I notie«t no difficulty In his bearing If Hughes returned to the United A spokesman for the ~year~ld and his vo~ was strona. He was in good states, Hannah said, it wa.~ unlikely that b11Uooalre confirmed TUHday night that humor and thanked me for helping make 11 was for a Nevada 5:tJpr~me Court hear· Hughes left Nicarasua and arrived at an arrangements for his visit here. He stood ing today on the _d1sm~~ of ~bert undisclosed destination. However, the strai&bt, his ba1.r was cut short Uke he: Maheu as the bilUonai.rf s chief of . 1pokettnan, Richard Hannah, refuled to used to weir it ... sort or a Salt and pep. Nevada operations. confiml that Huahes was in Los Anleles per apPearance." Hughes' fom:ier Nevada quarters in the and said that his whereabouts may not be Hugbea wore 1 thin beard, which penthouse at the Desert 1nn ~e. leased to diaclosed. for a time. Shelton deacribed u a Van Dyke, "but no hotel p~tr~ns. The bllUonaire s former Alked about the rtPort from the thick akltbutnl... hotel suite 1n Nassau reportedly has been , Nicaraguan Air Force, Hannah aald, "l 'l1ila wouid be the first reported time: leased to ec~rtalner Frl;Dk Sinatra. The have no rtaaon to believe be 11 ln Loi Hugbet met with persons oul!lde his staff hotel space m, Managua ,bu not been Angeles." aince he went Into seclusion more than a vacated. Authorities said lfugbes and his (See Page 4. for data.Us: or the:. latest decade 1go. Hannah refused comment on staff occupied the. entire noor and that development in the bizarre cue involving the rtport. several members stayed be~lnd. Laguna Councilmen Face Lengthy Agenda at Meet ... Llcuna Beacli councllmto tonllbt will acbedute a epeclal meetin& date to rM•· am1De: the entire new municipal waste management program, a.sped.a of which have become controversial. The action will be part of !ht lengthy 32-item apnda, moot of wblch "'ms routine:. CArl Kymla, general manager of the Moulton Nlgqel W'\er Dlatrict will &J>' pear at the beginning of the meeting to disCUll a propoul that the city join the Aliao Agency aa a regional planning group for sanitation. . -An-<>rdtnan<e-eatablilhlnc four·year term.1 for pll.nnlng commilalonen wDl be Introduced, &Jone with an amendment to the bulldJnc conatructlon las ordinance reprdlnf upeodltlQ'e of revenue col· lected and a epeclal ordinance racuJatli>g fire• and outdoor cooklnc In Hebler Park. Up for IOCOncf rtacflnc and adoption· Is an ordinance prezonlng a JrOf>Oled Laguna Canyon anner1tlon a another reaulatlna parades. '!be COllDCll will be uied to authOrlz< · -alaal ol !ht eucalyptua srove In Lacana canyon with a view to .... lllderinl lta purcbaae and to conaider Im- mediate development of a "mlnJ-maJI" on lower P1ti Avenue between Cout ' ' r 'I CofC Mermaids Focus Attention On Trash Bags Spring wUI be a little late lhla year In Lagun1 Beach as the Chamber of Com- merce Mermaids (women's division) postponed the~ annual citywide aprlng clean·up campaign In order to fOCIJ.9 the~ attention on lhe .Top of the World trash. lllgbway and !ht oaw library. A1lo on the agend1 is a resolution prepared by Ille Cltil.ens' Town Planning A-iaUon regarding ·transportation and frOtway POlicle1. Fro• Page 1 SCHMITZ ... Chou En-Ill was "ao hid'' that the Prealdent'1 de!enders were cl1imlng he h1d made an advantaa:eous 11secret deal" at Peking. But Ntzon, Schmitz noted, had une- quivocally decland on hill return from !ht P~lel Rtpubllc of China that no semt deal bad been made at Peking. '4U be ii telllng the truth, then we have aacriftced Taiwan for nolhin(. U he II not telling the truth, then hla word cannot be trulted. '' Goldw1ter, who refrained from com- menUna on the President's trip at the time, sald later he hod been auured by Nixon and other White House officials !hat notblnl ha~ been SjlCrllicod. '!be conservaUve Ari.ton• Republican allo sald !ht U.S. commllment to defend Taiwan remalntd Intact despite a pledge to withdraw Amerlc1n Corces from the ia!Mjl at IOln• Indefinite dala In the latuni. ... • lclunttl made no direct mention of IUcl1 1tatemenll by Goldw1ter and oilier coaaervatlvet who continue to support Ntzon. He uld, bowevar, thot U.S. policy had shifted first from the support of a "free China" to a "two-China polJcy" unacceptable to either side and finally to "In effect recocnlzfnl only Ille slave Cbln1." . 34 Students Eye Laguna Festival Scholarships Shelton said, Hughes "met with the president and I was there al the meeting before he left. Just the president, Mr. Hughes, and myself." I SOmoza said Hughes told .him he was ''looking forward with keen anticipation to having the opportunity tO' return to Nicaragua soon.'' Somoza said he invited Hughes to "visit with me in the near future ." But he declined, as did Shelton, to say what had been diJc-· ..sed. Other souroea laid I.he: three might have discuSRd. a possible busint.u deal in· volving Hughes ' airline, Hughes Alrwest, and Somoza's Lanlca airline. Hill latest moved fitted a familiar pat·· tern : a flight from one secluded place to another ; a cryptic confirmation from a 1pokesman. Texas Speaker, 2 Aides Facing Prison Bribe ' ABILENE, Tes. (AP) -A jury con. vtcted Texas House Speaker G u s Mutscher and .two aldes tod1y of con.. spiracy to accept a bribe in the Texas stockbank loan scandals. Convicted with Mutscher were his two ~hief lieutenants, state Rep. Tommy Shannon of Fort Worth and ad- ministrative aide Rush McGinty. Mu?cher's head swayed slightly as the verdict waa read . Ooe lawyer, Richard 1'Raeeborse" Haynes , dropped his head on his hands and grimaced as if he wanted to cry. 1 rlie eight-woman, !our·man j u r y deliberate<! two boi.1 111<1 ,IO qi!liutes 1fter a 13-day trial fn which t~ detense put on no witnesses but ulf4 almost all Its allotment of four houri Jn jury argwnents in an effort to convince the jury that the state failed to meet its burden of proof. The son of a farmer1 Mut.scher, 1t 39, ~d risen to the third highest office In the atate'1 government. He is manied to a former Miss America. President Routs All Opponents In Florida Race • • '\ •• U~ITtllMlll Pencil Pushers .Mi CI east ·:Plane Crash 1 .. ., . I• 'Kills li2 • MANAMA, Bahreln iUPll -A Danish Caravelle charter jetUner flying holiday goers home from Ceylon crashed Tues- day night near Dubel in the Persian Gulf, apparently killing all of the 106 passen- gers and 6 crew .members, officials. 1aid today. A report that one man survived .the crash in the mountains some 40 miles east of Dubei airport was not confirmed. Sterling Airways, the Danish charter airline which owned the plane, and the TJaereborg Travel A I ency i n Copenhagen, which chirtered It, said there apj)eared to be no survivors. Pay Board members Chairman George Boldt Oeft) and Arnold W.eber put their pencils to JOOd Use as they and other board me~bers listen to shipping companies -.nd West Coast dock workers union lea~ers . plead for their strike-ending pay increases at a Washington hearing. "As far as we have learned from our man in Dubei, there are no survivors," a d spoke!lman .for both companies said . 'r The pa~ngers included li)I Danes, 20d From Page 1 CANDIDATES NIGHT • • • for such an override. rise structure~ in the: city. Each of the ci ndidates also said be or In response to a question, she said she she would favor keeping the position of would not as a council'woman let her opin· city clerk ~ part Qf the government ion! be swayed by small groups of organtza tiop. residents attending council meetings. 111 Following are a few of the remarks by each of the candidates _ listed in response to another question, Mrs. Haller alphabetical order -made during said she was not and had never been a Ttlesday's forum . member of the conservative John Birch Boyd, 52, incumbent councilman and Society. travel aeent, proposed as one of his goals Holm, ts, incumbent councilman and a e1pandlrlg the council to seven members businesa executive, cautioned against elected from.specific councllinaajc areas electing a city council that wouJd be in ot the city. sympathy with the desires of coastal Boyd said "neighborhood represen-landowners wanting to build high rise talion" by each couni::il membei "Will go slructures. on toward enhancing the dream of the Holm said that lf the new high rise village atmosphere." The councilman ordinance is struck down by the Supreme also said he favored adopting a low ·densi· Court in a lawsuit, the council would ty population goal ; restricting -but not again be 1(1 control of height limitations. wiping out -the tourist industry ("We The councilman, during a rebutla1 mus~ pay for what we wan t.'' he said ); period following candidates' rernarks, said preserving the Sycamore Hills area as a he agreed with most of the ''generalities greenbelt and getUng more women to fill about village atmosphere that had been city posts. made. Boyd called on each of the candidates to "take a strong stand " on each of these "We are all for planting trees and Issues. In response to a question, he said everything," he said, "bul there is more hto. was not involved in ilie present effort to running a city than that." to recall councilman Ed Lorr. In repsonse to a question, Holm said he Carr, 40, an attorney, said he had was not connected with the Lorr recall traveled and lived in many areas of the movement. He said he felt the movement world but came to Laguna Beach to live was "muddying up the April 11 election." because of it_, village flavor. He said he Harry Lawrence, 57, a businessman, W('Uld preserve this flavor by following recounted his past effort! to beautify the the general plan to keep out freeways and community through the chamber of com· hlgh rise, build malls and control density. merce beautification committee. He ~aid the planning commission should "The bu!ineSs peopJt were the tobghest have: a freer hand and should not be sub--to convince that a beautiful clty was good ject to council or other pressures. business," Lawrence said.· Carr qualllied his stand on keeping out ·Questioned about his stand on q_igh rise. high rise by sayin& he would favor -Lawrence presented 11 evidenCe of his with Comm unity approval -.building a anti-high rise sentiments a J~tter to the Swedes, 12 Norwegians, four Finns an two Germans while the six crewmembers were all Danes, the airline said. The passengers were returning from a two-week holiday in Colombo, Ceylon, flying via Bombay and bubei to Copenhagen. The jetliner was scheduled to make a refueling stop at Dubei. Airport offlcials said they lost radio contact ' with the airliner only minutes before it was to land. The acting airport director said "the last radio me5sage we had from the pilot was: 'I am landing in four minutes.' Then the plane just disap- peared.'' He said the plane crashed at 8:40 Tues- day night in hilly terrain three or four miles from the-coast. Some 20 planes and helicopters started a seareh for the: wreckaae, which was located this morning by a helicopter pilot. He radioed back to Dubei that he could see no signs of survivors at the scene. Airport officials said the weather was bad in the area with storms and rains. A Sterling Airways pilot said the Dubel airport is we!: equipped and. run by the British Royal Air Force (RAF ). "The approach is not difficult," he said. The jetliner was due to land at COpenhagen's Kastrup airport at 8 this morning. At 7, Tjaereborg generll manager Knud Kanstrup. appeared in ~he arrival lounge and announced to waiting relatives that Sterling Airways Caravelle was reported missing. "I am afraid there Is litUe hope," be told the waiting relatives. Playliowie Now Free of Debt, Veruwr Reports tall structure in one of U1e canyons to Planning CommlssJon be wrote In 19&7 on provide low cost housing for students and expansion of the Surf and Sand Hotel. In After a 'year-long . "team f(fort" the the elderly. ' the letter, Lawrence protested the high Laguna Moulton Playhouse now ls com- " I feel Laguna Beach has a definite rise construction and said extreme height pletely free Of debt, playhouse President need for low cost housing," he said, "would encourage high rise all along the Glenn Vedder reported thl' week. noting he would favor using "un· boulevard ." The drive to wipe out a debt of approx· conditional federal assistance" to build However, he said he felt property lmately l50,IXXI that exis ted when the such a structure. owners' rights should not be abridged. new playhouse board took office in Feb. Frances Haller, 41, an attorney,· l!laid Beth Leed!, 30, 8 social worker. said ruary of 1971, brou1ht support from the she was strongly opposed to any federal 1 , 1 city, the Festival or Arts, which prC>o profams lo build Jaw cost housing. the answer to the commun ty s prob ems vided $14,00 to pay off two-thirds Of a " don't support federal funds ror was a unified citizenry and stressed a bank loan and many donors and staff building, planning or constructing lower need lo promote better police-community members, Vedder said. income homes in Laguna Beach," she relation!. ''GQod plays, well performed, al.so said. "It Is hard to keep us (the average She said Laguna Beach residents were broulhf; 1ood box office ttsulls," Jle citizens ) motivated and paying tues polarized by fear and said a unlried city added. when we look around and see students council could help eliminate dissension At the: time the: board took over, Vedder getting food stamps. Now they want among the residents. said , (he playhouse was burdened with a subsidized rent." "The city council should really be the S22,000 bank Joan, two personal ·loans or At 1 meeting of the Chamber's unlflca· tion commlttee thla week, the Menn1ids volunteered to contribute their energies operating In the city's plaMed uperl· ment wJth the use of paper trash con· talnen ln !ht hU!top dbtrlct. Flrai atep will be an lnformallonal News that 34 Laguna Beach hlgh school Mrs. Haller said she supported the people," Mrs. Leed! said. "The people: 16,000 each an dabout $15,000 in unpaid .,. general plan and would be in favor of should not have to tight City Hall." bills. MIAMI (UPI) -President Nixon1 has undergroundlng all utillties in the city. She said she would work tofrlng peo-All now have been paid off, he conclud. meetina fOr resideitt.8 at Top Of the World students have applied for Festival of Arts Sct\OoJ qert Thursday at 7:30 p.m. , scholarships in live areas Of study ·City Mapqer Lawrence Rose will e~ brought smiles lo the laces of Festival plain !ht plan to distribute 30-gallon '-..of Arts directors Monday night. • recycled pa~~-trl!h bags to re~lact ''That's just great." commented direc- metal and rigid ~l1stlc trash containers tor David Young "I remember th da ys throughout the neighborhood In a 80-day ; e experiment beglnninf In April. when we wouldn t 1et more than two or Tbe Mermaids wll uslst In preparing three inferested students." flyers aDd signing up residents In an at-Director GleM Vedder said 10 students tempt to secure 100 pucent participation have applied for art scholarships, seven in the experiment. for writing, 11 for music, six for drama OIANel COAST · DAILY PILOT TM °'9flll C.... O.llV "llOT, W1tt1 "'41kl'I 11 ~ -"-........ b pueilltlHI w 1t>e Or•• C..tf f"vtlllsltlnl COl'llllln)'. $tptr. nite ~I,_. ere ••MC. MW!Hy t1t!W11t f'rJihy, fW OMTI Meu, NIWPWI S..U.. , ... ,.......... •Mdlll"ounl•ln V•llty, latVN •tld\, ~ltbtcl!. er1C1 l•n Cltnltl'ltV Sell JllM Ctfllh'•Nt. A tl1'19'9 "'lllo!lll •u• " JWll"* s.1.,,d•Y1 " So.nd•Y'I· TM ,,,trle.1 ... 1 ..,.rtlWlfnl pi."! h II )JO Wftl .. ., SINet, CO&• M .. , 011""'1•, t2'2'. l•"•rt N. 'We14 l't9i.tnl ,,,. ........ J ... ~ "'· Curley Viet "'-lllMt •M 0..11 M.1Mtt1' TltCNftlt "•••ii ..... Tiie""'' A. Mw,li1e ~'"'Ml"" a.rt .. H. l•" a1 .. ~ .... r. Nan M WW ~ 1:1,.... ...._ __ 221 kt.it """'"· IUfh .. A.44te.J1: P.O. h• •ta. tJUJ --c.'9 Mew: "'..., .., s .... • ......... e.ktl! »» ... ..,..,. ........ HwlT"""" h ldl' HS7J Midi ._.,.,,.. 1M QlflP ••e.:i as~ JI Cl ....... Nq' ITI41 '4MIJ1 a a t ...... Tltl 1MW7I a...-.... Al •;i•••ll'lll ,.,.,.. ...... 466 '-•.._ ,.a, °"'"" c_, """'"'.,. =er·..::.-...... -~·""· _, • .• s•r:r~~ ..... ,,, ................. ._.,ti-...-.~ et 11>1...,.,. ....,,. .. c:.llt .... ~i.. 11.*N:l'l.i• ., canW .., ~· .,. Mt'I u.u _..,. ,..._., .. ,.,.....,. Q,(S """1ftl\'. and five for dance. Nine of the student!:, ht added. applied in two categories and ' one student has applied in three different fields of study. , Students must submit all their scholar. ship material by April 14 and relllts will be announced Mar a. Vedder sa id. Last ytlr the testlva awarded $10,619 IQ scholarships to new and continuing stu· dents. Postal Worker Admits Murder Postal worker Philip Bert Alleman changed his mind today moments before jW'J teiedlon WU to &et under WI)' in bl! Oru&e County superior Court murder trial and pleaded gullly to the kllllng of Westminster postmaster Paul Burtner. Jucf(t Willilm C. Spe~s accepted the M-)'Oll'Okf Santa Anan's plea and Im· IMdlttelJ IMtenced him to five years to lift In state prison on the second degr" mmler admlulon. He allo eentenctd Alleman to one to 14 ,..,. ln llata prlaon for the wounding of maJb 1Uperintendent Ernest Gaulden and m8de tbe 19\teneet concurrent. I It -tbt third such action In three days by deftlldanll In Superior court ........ triall. · Lawnnce Edward Llndeboom, 22, llllted jury 1tlectlon :ru...ray and pleased pllty lo _,,., dejrte mui'dtr. Tilt ~ Colle!!• }ludenl eot nv, ~" 14 lift from Jude• JamtJ 'l\Jmer for the tilli,. of his 18-ycaMld f • r m.e< g!rlfrfend . (Set story. P81• II ). • won a lopsided victory in the Republican She also voiced opp<>Sition to any high pie together. ed, and the playhou.se is out of the red. presiaentiat primal"}', outpolling the C!lll\· 1-pamaaiil;;;i =(!l;j;~j·iiiiii·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiii:mmiiiiiiiiiiam;;iiii;;;;;n bined totals of liberal Paul PrfcCl01key / I and conservative John Ashbrook by near- ly a nine-to-one margin In Florida . (See Page 4 for details on Tuesday's Democratic primary won by Alabama Gov. George \\'allace.) With 99 percent of the state's preclncta In , Nixon had 3&7.230 votes or t:T percent, ·to 16,978 or four percent for. McCloskey and 35,974 or nine percent for A!hbrook. Nixon 's margin was of rout proportions In all of Florida '1 12 con1ressional districts. ' .. McCloskey dropped out of the cam- paign last week, citing tinancial dif- ficulties, but his name remained on the Florida baUot. Laguna Greeter To Have Surgery Laguna Beach Greeter Eiler Larsen, who returned tO the I.Ong Be'ach Veterans Hospital last week for a checkup and routine cobalt treatment, has advlsid Laguna friends he will be remaining at the hospital to undergo minor SUJ'let)'. Larsen, who said he t1 "teelina: fine , .. explained he had received permission from doctors at the VA facility to postpone th~ surgerh until after Laruna '1 Winter Festival so he could participate In the annual celebration. He expect> to remain In tbe hoopltal for a week or 10 days. Channel Plan Okayed The Orange COunty Flood COntrol Dlslrlct 1ot approval Tuolday by the Board of Supervlaors of an asreameot to cooperate with the city of Lquna Beach for ~natruellon 0of the Boat · Can10n 1torm .drain channtl. Tbe dlatrtct wm contrl11uta 1111.000 lo .~ proj<ct. Tha clty •WlU cootributa 113,IOO .. " " f • GEM TALK TODAY by HOW WE IUY JEWELS You are, we're sure, well aware of the fact that fine jewels are created from rough stones which have been mined from deep in the earth. These stones are then placed In the hands of skilled craftsmen whn apply years of experience to cut· ting and polishin~ proceS5tS which product the scintillating jewel you see in our store. You'd be surprised at how much of our time is applied to selection not only of the gems themselvea, but also to car8ful consideration of processors !rom whom we buy, Although we. 'of courst, buy jewelry from private and estate sources the bulk of our beautiful stock ol jewels Is purchased from processors who have an unques· tlonable reputation for strict con· trols, careful attention to detall, and years of exacting experience. So when ynu are looking for the lln61t In gems, cnme tn i and 1ee u1. You have nnt only tb\ expert attention of the owner-opefatnr; you also have the edditional es&ur· ance of knowing that the source of your gem was 1elected wlth ex- treme personal care. (All..,....,_,, '\ • Fortha~ 1 spec1a someone 's i birthday The true pr1clou1n1ss of In Omega witch I• th• love that aoe• with ft. Th• Omega ycu rttel'fl today Will blcom• a proud po111salon ••• pr1c lou1 beyond coml)ar• 101 whet It symbollzea. Whh ln 11th caaa beata the pe1rl1Q Omta• 1 movement. Mede wllh metlculout eatt to C1 lvt.y11ra ol fefthfvl perlorm1nc1. Ste our complete collecllon ot Om191 m1n'1 ·and l1dlet' w1tch11, $6$ lo ovtr 11000. A-t11f.wll1d1110· a.11111111r w1111 t tlr·ell•nf"I c1t111d1r, 1~1C tol.,IJllcl IUI •••••••·••••• 11 111 111111111111MI CIM ••·•····•••••••·••••118 •-4 c111mOlld•. 1•ic w11r 1011111 IOI' ••••••• , .. _ J.C. fiu:nphrie6 Jewp/er~ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA . • CONV£NllNT TlkMS 24 YEAkS IN S,1.Mf LOCATION .ANKAMl•fc.AlD -MAS1l• CHAkWE •t-W>NE a•t-J401 I ' ! • .. d d e tr vi r vi tr w R c Ii or w co N a f u • w to u de •• eq wl ' r Saddlehaek • ' . EDITION • voi:. ~s. NO. 75, • SECTIONS, 104 PAGES • Reaidents of Uru,verslty P a r t ' s He suuested Ull Irvine Company greenbelt area agreed Tuesday night thaC ~ should share in the solution of the..current the solution o1 the problem reslll with the youth greenbelt abuse problem by pro- Jrvine City Council,1 although one man vi~lng an alternate meetlngi;plact. suggested the Irvine Company might help University . Community A.s9oeiation the area ·live up to ,its advertising prom· president, Michael B. Macx:arone, 17932 ise. Gillman Street~ University Park, told the "The company's ads tell us It Is so e-0uncil solutions were being worked out quiet he~e you can hear grass growing," wltli "a group of 20 to 25 bf the involved o~e Ba~m'Sb;.eet resident told the c_oun-youths" and the Irvine CoJ?pan.Y. to pro- ctl, addmg, "Maybe we don't want 1t so vide an acceptable meeting place for quiet we C8' bear grass grow." teens away from · homes, but near the ' .ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH ·15, 1972 Qilver al Mlchelloo l)rjve locallan. The exact, k>cation ls yet to be determined."' The &eMral location is desirable for two reasons, Maccarone said. , "The kids trail lite ants to and from the Shopping center tn search of food," be said. . . Secondly, the area has ·for five years become a meetin& ground lhat has become more popular with the opening of University High School. Maecaro~ noted· students at Urtl High make new fr~nds and invite them to 'the troubled greenbelt before and alter school and in the evening hours. Residents Of .the green b ~It reiterated their cnatge that young people drag race. through. the short residential• streets, Jitter) ~Its and continue to th reaten resldent.1$'with pby,Sical violence. Mayor · WUllam Fischbach Tuesday night indicated be did not believe the city council could ta'ke action on the problem and commended the community auocla- tion for-working on U. , Then, JS more residents spote1 council opinions shilled toward taking some ac- tion. ''We're ·golng to have an unfortunate In- cident here soon ... with somebody llr- lng a shotgun at some kid breaking into his ,house •. : . and you'll be sorry for not havjng acted," one resident opined. Councilmen E. Ray Qulgley1 Jr. and John Bw-ton agreed the problem was the • --- • TEN CENTS rts)Xlnslbllity of the city as wtll u the community assoclfitlon and that use ol "police power" was a partial solution. &lh, however, contended the long range problem centers on parental responslbllJty . Burton went further to say that '1th.is city has a Ie!)Xlnslbillty tG develop programs for youths and places for them to go.'' He said the routlnl "teen center" approach Is unsatisfactory (See GREENl!l!;LT, P ... I) • a1 ers cour _oas Council Debates Move " . Building Permit Freeze Extension Eyed. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tM Dllily 1'11111 Sttff Irvine City Councilmen Tuesday night decided to let the building permit freeze clock nearly run out on March 28 before deciding~hether or not the freeze will be ert~ed and If it should be extended for 120 or 180 days .. Councilmen debated at length a recom- mendaUon by Planning Commission Chairman Wayne A. Clark that lhe city extend the freeze . Clark said the city should: -Get its planning bearings. -Set up a development preview com· mission to · review esthettca of con- struction projects. Clark noted that the regular work of the plaMing commiSsion such as ap- proving ~ning and tract map mat~ers would continue deapite the freeze . discussii>n of what Burton described as the "general planning concepts we as councilman have for what we'd like to see Irvine become." Action on the freeze Itself, by council vote, will not occur until the March 2* meeting. 54Arrested hi Schools Crackdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of t11e O.tly l'MM ltlft Smashing at heavy dru1 !riffle llDOlll area high schools and colleges, Coat& Mesa police teama crlsscrosaed thl , Oranae Coast overni.&ht in a maulvt roundup of suspected narcotlca dealers. By dawn, 54 penona were iD Cl.lltady. 211 of them juvenlloa lrmn four .,. blP acboob. . . ' Holding Tanks Given Harbor But, be argued in !av.or of the con-- tinued holdup of development until the Cl· ty at ,least nails dowD tWo ceneraJ. plan elements ·-parks ahd ~rutlon and ·• 3 Dead , 6 Hurt As H ot,el -Burns . .·. ' ! '"'l<tlll ot•···-... ~JI ' '·~illue\l~llCOl'Uol'all!J• ,ed ~ "'1111,.. .... ~ wllll maltlf!l!.L~ ol .a 1 r t ot I c 1, dangeroua .....,.. and marijuana. . . Boar~ ~~eking . Orange County harbor con\mts.lonen TueJdaf WWlimOllsly recommended to the Boan! of SuJ?ervi>ors an ordinance that would require all boats with toilets to. have holding tanks or .otber discharge devices by Jan. 1, 1174. The ordinance would apply tO all boats traveling within county harbors, Including visitors. A second )Xlrtion of the ordinance .will require that all commercial marinas pro- vide holding tank pum~ut facilities or equivalent services in a 24-hour on-call unit,' also by Jan. 1, 1974. Harbor District official.! began drafting the ordinance more than three months ago when they ~ived notk.le from the San Diego Regional Water Quality Con- trol Board that the current county Jaw was ioidequate. . . ~ A variation ol the county's older 1899 Refuse Act, It says .simply that no one can dump anything into county harbors. The San Diego board gave count)'; of· ficlals 120 days to draft a new ordinance q; said it would do it for them. That time bas nm out, but Harbor ~cials were granted an elrtention into May. The San Diego board only hlll jurisdic- tion over Dana Point Harbor but work · Has begun with the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board to make any county Jaws c:onfonn to &Inset and Newport Harbors also. Commissioners Tueaday a f t e r n o o n adopted some changea that were aug .. gested by the Joint Harbor ~ that morning. The Joint Harbor Ci>m\)llttee up of two Newport Beach city counct n and two harbor · commlss1oners. As it suggested"' one section of the ordlnance WIS cbanjed lo .. rtid that "DO one shall own or operate a boat" that has a head (marine toilet) without a holding tank. It had said "occupy," but some of· ficlals were afraid that phrue could put the burden on innocent vWtors on boats. Also at the committee'• 1UggestJon, a ,.. refere'nce to ~ pmnp.out staUons only at 1narinas '<ti.th more than 50 boats ,was ent'irely removed. • "We'd have a lot of e.boat marinas in town," COmmisslon Chairman MarUn Usab oald. Holding tanks are not the onl1 sanitary device all owed, although they are lhe 1Jmplest and most inexpensive. Boat ownen could also choose to Install equipment to provide a direct connection with the local sewer system or to create a 1ew1ge treatment syatem On the boat capable of producing fluid comparable to aecondary tr .. ted waler accepted by the boalth officer. Small Quake Strikes . ( . BEiapiLEY (Ai') -A ama1l artb-= .... Jeported llhorlly Iller -1 1111....., Wa-•tlle ml San .luin Blutilll, • the Urtlvenlty o f (:a!Uomla Mkf. ~It 111d the umblor, at 12:!4 p.m., mwur<d 1\0 oo a.I Rldltor ...... • ' • master plari of drainage. . . ' ,, . . ' ,, t In LOs Angeles These two e1ementa do not provide for rttroactive rqulttion· and in r..t cannot LOS ~GELl!S[AP) -ThrH persons be enfarced on a tract unW IO diya after ,.,...,.. they haY~ beeo drawn by I1!a ~-allll noted, and """ty ·c111 a~ J ..... Erickson agraed, .'Gllillr -al ,.. elements are not 10 ~ ~ lleDry Q\llileJ, -~. Jed the move lo delay action on the freea extention at Tuesday's meeting. He, reiterated hls view that councilmen need~ ed a better Idea of ~ what .had lo be acompllshed during the freeze to mate- the moratorium practical. Councilmen Jotµt Burton anci E. Ray. Quigley also .indicated they'd like to see some general planning concepts nailed' down prior to determinini how lone thei freeze should be. Ray Quigley also suggested the city- sbould invite developers to discuSsions' relative to the extending 'of the freeze or what the city might hope lo accompl~li with. it. · A spokesman for one developer, ·s 6: S Construction Company, which Jatef in the meeting got approval of a final ' tract map, agreed that developers would' want to meet with city offici;,I . · · · The councll set next esdlY rtight at 7:30 p.m. in city hall I • lludi session meeting. It will be the lint of a series of council study aesalona reatrlcted lo Sen. Carpenter Files Coastline Management Bill By L PETER KRIEG Of flte D9lty Pltlt ltlff $ale Senator llennil CMpenter (R· Newport Beach) loda~ Died the text of his prof>l*d coastline manqemeot -but that is dellinell to allow local govern- ment to keep control of the shoreline, rubje<:t lo a review 1!'0Ces8 through a new state agency. All incorporated cities are e1c1uded from control and there would be no moratorium on construction while a state coastal plan ls .developed. Carpenter's measure. Is the fourth ma- jor coastal management proposal now before the Lqlalature, althougb one, sub- mitted by Stale Sen. James Q. Wedworlh (().Inglewood), ts expected to be killed Monday by the Senate Committee on Natural Retourc<s and WUd!Ue .. The lllrOnflal of the four measures, a bill Sllbmilled joinlly by Slate Senator Donald L Grunaky · (R·Waltonville) aod Auem6lyman Alan Sleroty ( D ·Lo 1 Angelea), will be haard by.the panel Mon- day bot no ICllon ls uitlcfpoted. nu. measure, .a refinement or 1 similar bW hltn>duced by Sieroty Jail year, ii llljlported by moot - lel'Vltionlltl. •. A spokesman for Carpllller declined to ltke a -U lo wlddJ, If lllY, wW ever' bficomel1w. • Carpen!« ls ...... hll .. whit he haa termed the .. _ble" ~In bll .,....,,. lo pt. ...... .. ·~ Jured: ... .... , ' ' COW!lid 1or i:" i:-i::.i.r~ about 7 a.m. in the f<iP lloir;o( ~iQi;i. Barclay. . • · . , . " ; ~ ~aze WU ~,,.MllteirH • minutes Jeter. . .1 .. DA"--f "IUT leiff "-' ... ·I': • , ~ • Filtem l'ielti·I$ the.11ote1, ..... blind man. -· &routlil,fo'-y by firemen on ladders fl1im ilif fdp three .floors. ol Ille. hol•L ~.=:o111tr1 .. the !Ower !loon· ~.'lot ,lhroagli tblCI: smoke lo POLICE OFFICER 'ouJpES DRUG SUSPECTS Tf.il:i: ·· ·Th9 C~a M..a DOIO<tlvn'Wpre NOf•Pfl ln iC :r. ' lllely by '""""' tuma. I·A i.,,..._an for· the hotel ' uid m 1 ~ ·-•·liVlnc in 1tbe· butlding. .Most pail are ·elderly. The bi>ttl ts lrv.ine C~IJ~c~ ·to~,Re~~~ I '1 • • ooe of the dty's oldelt,,dating back lo the early 1900s. Its cllentele primarily are· Joog~time ·residents, a hotel spokesman said. Twenty.seven fire companies and 100 firemen fought the blaze, described a.s a "major emergency type." • . ~I,: Trash Pi~kup : Franchls~~ .. The cauae of• the bll.ze was not lm· mediately determined, although one gueat said be thought he heard a "loud noise" A trash collection franchise in North' Irvine ls destined for Irvine City Council review on March 38- Miles E. 0 Pete1' PeterSon, president of Irvine -Council Action Here .are the. major acUons taken Tuesday nliht by~ the Irvine City Councilmen : - • • • CITY CLEl\K: Accepted with regret the reai&nation of, Mrs. Norrlaa Brandt who has served as acting city c:lerk 1lnce incorpoiaUon. c,ty Manlier William Woollett J!· ,waa appointed to sue~ her. - • BUILDING l'.llEEZE: ·Tabled exteaalon recommeodation o( the plan- ning commlslioo until the Marcb ll council meelln&. 'lbat'a the day the preaenl itl4ay lrteu explrea. • PLANNING CONSULTANT: Directed city manaaer to hire an interim plaMlng adviaer. lo. oerve lheo·clty plannlnf eommlaaton• while the aearch for a permaoent planning dJrec:tor continues. e FREEZE EXCEPTIONS: Set up a heartna CO!ll/llitlee made up ol Councilmen Ray Qulcley and Gabrielle Pryor and Woolett lo handle exC<p- tions to tbe clty11 bulldinl freeze . ' . • GREENBELT SAFETY: Launched the hearlna pro<ell nqulrtll lo close porilon! of Mondo Street Jn Unlveralty Park lo eue traffic problem r .. lated lo yoolha' alleged abuse of the privately owned greenboll Raolution aettlng hearing 4ate oa atreet CIOIUre will be considered by the council ntxt Tuesday.. · • TllUll COLLECTION: Set Marcb ll for bearjng on whether or not the -, l'lllted frmchtse for trash 1<rvic< in the Raciluet Qub lllouJd be coo .... PRANClmiE.'1: Set March ll for public haarlna on ex- -odl between the ctty and Southern Cllioli'nla Edfaon Gu Company., • , 'I • ,. • , ~~: • city,attomq ~ c1?ft joint~~ . '::! Coolrol Oiatricl fllat may ar 'Dll'j nllf ,..ma. ~e. • .; .. , .. ,· j • •. ilablilboc! lo otfictelDoUciaya.' indacuoc 816ir-, . ' • • the North IrVlne HomeoWnera Aaocla· !ton, ..rote the Cily Council ~that the finh pr,..ntly oervinf the Racquet Club charges ~ a month for once weekly pickup. He cillms that compare. .to rates of tlkents to •t.50 a month in other areH of the clly served by IJlO!her tinn .. Residents of the Racquet <Jub CQnteod they are limlted to amountl and kind of tiuh they cin, put QUI anll the0 truh col· Jecting firm ... r .... to •bane• the day or• type of ·service. j The firm hlll told bomeowuen they have a pem\anent frlnChlM ar~ by Oranie Coynty1 accor'dlnf to the com· plaint'. .,. ~ Deputy Clt)i Attorney James· Erickson Tuetclay nlgl)t told tfloo council, "I can find no one in county goveriiment who knows when 'IUCh · a francblae was llsUed.:· ' ~ He advlaed the cdunciJ 1 they could' ni)1tll the franchlie 6n twi> ....,oc1a, netther of whlch fmolved Im r.e residents are payiJll. ' The couiM:tl, he said, could deUrmlne· the quality of service doea not meel city· criteria , or does not match level of aervlce offered tn otber arw of the clly. Republicans -Set • St. Pat's Party All Republlca.. In the • Saddleback Valley are invited lo a k Palrick'1 Day ~ J'rlda)', Mini n, • · · ' ' 'nit mfll 11111 tab',.,. II t p.m. al -~ llloaloa,Viojo, ........., Dr pia 1111tlia1ck-\'alley Yoq ""8W..UO.-...,. nrll I/I\ no cbars• far the~ -. ...,,_ at• ~ lo -..i • llllal lilt ·own food mlba-. G.tioo ,... .piNlo .no !Ir llilcuue4 ' •durliia tho .......... ildonlUltlon l:all ~.flldlw, •• or Daa •Lewellen, , . , ' One b the -of-• llewpcfl'I -police detective. Herfin and cocaine turned up hi aJarm. i"llr .~'l' IUptllJ .... tbl=MIA Pil,l co Dot.rift.~ l11 t -... 1<12.... .... Jollii Jlocan. · . 'He said LSD, =:ne, metbeclrlne, amphetamlni IGd bltante pflll> pl111 plentUul marljllllil bis been boulht clur-fnll lhe coatJy• probe. Bruklng ~ overall coat of the three , month 'Invat111Uon .by d r u I purchaaea aod man llOura, Sjt. Rocan 1ald it wao about 11tJtJ per sujloect. 'I'll• cur·· outlay for the 5( jailed addl up to wel over PJ,000 In total . RelaUvely mall llTIOU!!ts of virtually every contraband dnic were conllacated u the three teama of four men each hit more than 40 locations from eosta Meaa to· L1 Habra. No iarloua lncldenb were reported la the raldt, which included a predawn vlatt to a UC Irvine dormitory. • Clpllvto ...... -... deflanl, -chalant, .Ome Pea.laughing ind a couple of lllrl• weepiJll al' they streamed into C..ta M,.. City Jail in handculfa. Adulll antered via the rear bootinl cue ll'OI, wile"' ma!< IUl)l<Cts jammeil all ceU., while female arrestee. were llblpped on to Orqe County Jail . · · Juvenilea were fed In through the detective bureau'• aide door and pro- ceued on lhrougb lo Orange county Ju...U. Hall. , The roundup of known drug-dulllll suapecta Included 45 chat1ed in cour\o iaaued arrest warrants, while-ttlne perl!)ns present when la•men arrived were allo boOked on vark>ul cbargea. The ag., ....... from -atrl II lo I :.year .. Jd man lllbbed In Newport Beach Tueadat, 11 lie hurriedly packed preparinf lo move to Guadalajara, Mel• tco. \. Oru•e Weatller The sun might break throu&h those lqw d<ioHfa · Thunday for a brief •lay -bUi will be OYlr' powered again Jn the early eventns hours. llicha at the beach II, rlsblti lo the high 'm'• ln!lllcf. Lows 50-M. I' iNsm 11 n•-'Y The prt1eti<o. tf U/ethnf medi- cal lice"'" 1141 """" •""" •~ tack incrtod!IQI~. from . boUo doctors ond potinu. $11 11orr. Page 3. L, M. ...,,, 1 -.. ~-,.-·:.a.~ =:t" . ,. -.. --.. --. IAl&1 I I ... -.... ,., ......... " lf9I II Fl • ... .._ . -. -... ~~· ... -. ... ... ------w ~ ='='.,'"'L.....11 --, ' , • I ' ' ' Jr OA!LV PllOl • IS ' . ' ' 'Trash Ti our' Slated ,Mideast ( ' ' Harbor, Hea.lth Units Hunt for Polluters ~ . , . Plane Crash • ~ Orange County Harbor Dist,rlct and Health Department offlclall will t•ke an early morning tour of Newport Harbor IOOD to try to catch polluters throwing 11rbage In the bay. lialll wtU Ill llauod U they can catch , .. ,... la tlM Id .... .ldded. , nearby awlmmlnl boacM1, aht addJ\l. • . The caila · are. oflon wi-out will! chlorinated substances. 1aid Miss Ficker. who commented that she had made another near.<fawn excursion Tuesday morning. lffils 112 Harbor [){strict Director Kenneth Sampson Tuesday told Newport Beach resident Sue Ficker that ataff members or both the harbor and h e a I t h departmenla would boat with her to th< hllh .. 1arbage ' potnta" of the bay. Clta· Mils Ficker, who _said lhe could never ''get anyone to aet up at a a.m. before," clw&ed before Harbor Commiasloner1 that .some of the more posh restaurants that rlng the b•y wuh the ir garbage cans out In early mornin&S directly Into the bay. Much of the debril -aome of It half· eaten food -then wuhea up around Topless Vi~tory Blonde Kicks Sand in Eyes of DA SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Tho dlllrlct attome1'1 office has dropped chargea of dlaturbing the peace aaalnll 1 curvaceous blonde who said &he sunbathed toplw to eatabllah women's right to bare their upper halves In publtc. Dlat. Atty. Peter Chang aald Tuesdly he had uinlllfflclent evidence" to prosecute 22--year--0ld Riki Chalet. She was arrested last fall after she appeared several times at a public beach here minus her swimsuit top. He also said the penal code section under which she waa charged with "openly outragln&: public decency" had been· found unconatitutlonal by the courts. "A lot of people are uptiabt 1bout the1r bodlea," Miss Chalet said at the tlm.e of her arrest. "I never w11 modest about mine until people around made me • . It really feela nice oo a bot day to take your shirt oU." Council ·Seeks New Law On Regulating ,Peddlers A mucb<iebated peddler resuiat1n1 ,law was g0r1pp0d Tu..aty nlfllt 11 the Irillle Clly Council ordered a 1ew law drafted Iha! would reflll11e afl 10llclton either by muns of a city Jasued permit or per· . mlt eicepllon cerUflcate. City Mana1er William Woollett Jr. told the COtJDCil any tolicltation ordinance "doesn't work worth a darn unl• the Exchange Clubs Mark Birthday Tbe llat annlvertal')I of the foundln( of the E1chaofe Clubl will bo celebrated by the Saddleback Vafley chapter 11· a speCtal meeting March 23 at noon 1t the Jolly 0. In Mlsalon Viejo. The first club was founded March 27, 1111 ~Y, f i!OUP of Detf<ll !tt"":"en for the purpoae of a~ Alic! de<jlcatma lbemMlva _ I<! __ , m~!illy service, accon!lna to Bill Kohler, pro. gram chairman. The national organlzatlon was founded In 1917 and the Saddleback fl'OUP w11 chartered In November of 1188. Bob Turner, chairman of the Callfornla diatrlct educational program, will present hi&hlllhta of educational pro- highilghla of educations! Jll'Oi'ams beaun by exchan&e clubs durlng the meeting. Three new mel?!bers will be indUcted. Countian Held On Heroin 8:ap BANGKOK (.UPI! -Narcotics 1genta from Baqkol, ·!l'halland, have impltcated a 19-yeaNlld Orange girl Ill a plol to t1111UUle a Nltcaae containing $500,000 worth of hero.In Into the United States. ·Tbt agents1sald Chriatlne! Tierney and Utree otlier American &iris were arrested Tuesday after pOllce entered three ad· joining rooms at the Llberty Hott! and allegedly confiscated a small quantity of opium and an opium pipe. Police said the girls were implicated with Steven Roy Buck, 26, an American arrested last week at the railroad station while alleRedly carrvinit the heroin. OUNel COAIT " DAILY PILOT I 'Tiit ar.11111 c.tll DAILY PILOT, with •Id! , 11 comltlMCI ll'lt Mr#l·Pr .. , 11 PUl!llll\fll by tllt Or•llS:• Co111 Pllbll•Mno Ce1n.,.n1. Stpt- ,.,. edit'°"' Ir• 1>uOU1hM, Mon0•1 tlll'Ollllh FrldeJ, for GD1t1 M111, Newport lie.tell, Mll!lt""'9rl 'ltK,h/Foun1•1n \1'1llty) Llt1111• IMCll, lrvlM/S~ltbltk ltld S.n Otmenl1/ S." JUI" . Clflif;~•llO. A 111181• r19l-I tdlllln It siublllMcl' S.lvrdlVt .,.j Slllld1'(t. TM IH'lnc:lptJ ,..lllftlnt ,i.nt II •f DO WHI .. ., llf"t, C.te M ... , C.Qf'Omlt, '1112', Relttrt N. WeM Pr•""-•11111 l'VOlltlltf J1ck It. Cwl•y Vici Prlllcllnt 1M o.wn1 lo\anaelf Tilel'll•I Ketvft Efltw Tti111n11 A, Mur,1'i11• · MINllN !di""' Cha1l•1 H. lot• Ricll1r4 I'. Nill Aa.1!1tani Mtnlllnl u .... - pencn who an1wer1 the door knows the city dou 11aul1Ie pOddlers and ask to see ldenUflcatloo or a pennit." CouncIJman Ray Quigley araued in favor of a stronger ordJnance citing "public safety illue111 related to 10Jlcl. tors uslnf the auJae of a charitable aoll· citaUon to "ca1e a home." He auaeattd, "When they find no one at home, that home becomes 1 prime hJt IDr a. burtlary/' Ray Qull~Y arsued. Councilnwl John Burton uraed fellow counellmen to lake IOl1lt PO<lllon Oii the ordlnance. "Either this will be a wide open city or it won't," he said , aupport- in, "draftiu of a tlthter ordinanct. M.,... lfilliam Fllchbach oh<erved dur-lna dllCUlllon of an amended ordinance !hit the pillq of euepllona on eicep- ffont>ln 1lle lllJl1lql of tM l1w made It dllflcult to know for certain which aroups or ~ were exempted and whiah were not. 1 The councll ~animouaJy approvbd FJlclillacb'~ .iaa ,to aee a new ·Ia., ~I. ,np~ all aollclto11. Borne '!OtJld ~ bf charl!d a fee la pl 1 ~ petmJI while othera would moraly y for an ISCePllon certificate to carry Wjlh lbtm whlle aeekln1 conlrl· bulfona or aelllnf la Irvine, T~o Utilities Seek Irvine OK On Franchise The city of Irvine 1tand1 to collect as much as $51,000 a year income from two publlc utility firms If it approves an ex· elusive franchise conlract at a public hearing March 21. Both the Southern California Edraon Company and the Southern California Gas Company asked th~ council to a~ prove standard franchi se agreements. Terms Of the contract would mean the Edison Olmpany wou1d pay the city from $33,000 to $35,000 a year based on gross incomes. The gas company would pay from S151000 to $18,000 a year to the city. The franchises, councilmen were told, wouJd not prevent the city from laun- ching Its own utlllty services, or keep a competitor from buying either company's capital Improvements in the new city. Mayor William Fishbach was assured by Edison officials that, although the electric company contract provided for lines "over. under and in'' city streets . adoption of that language would not weaken other ordinances re qui r i n g undergrounding of utilities In Irvine. Gas company spokesman J. W. Decker, who followed the lengthy discussion of · the electric company's franchise, noted "You can rest as,,ured we will un- derground our Unes." Setting the· hearing for the franchise contract is the flrst step toward the agreement allowinJI: the firms, exclusive rights to aerie Irvfne homes. Henderson GetS Death Sentenee She also claimed she has seen boatyard ope rators throw bottles and trash in the water and then allow the area to atagnate. Harbor commissioners, led by member Frank Robinson, voted unanimously to cooperate with a Health Department In- vestigation and to help present evidence to the "appropriate agenciea." That agency might be the California Deputy Attorney General's offlcu ln San Diego, which has a apecial environmental prOtectkl n committee. The Health Department has more ••m\15Cle" to actually analyze and testify to what the debr is and its effects might be, Sampson explained. . "This 1s only a starting ,POint, but small problema make up the ·bfgger problem of a healthy .bay,". Robinson said. adding that such morning policing tounr could have an effecct. "It will teU those poUuters, 'Fell as. the C<IZY game is over,' ''. he said, 1 Miss Ficker had come to the corn· mi1sion with petitioru iJgned by 2,500 Harbor area residents as~ing for a moratorium on conatruction upland of the bay until an alternate drainii}g point for the run-off is found . The petitions asked that improper drainage into the bay be further prevented and that runoff eo someplace other than the bay. C.Ommi1sioners set that request aside for further study while considering the garbage charges. Mi11 Ficker said s~ and . other member• of the Central Newport Beach Community Aaaociatlon hid preaented the' debris and dralnage issues to the city last November but said her group got only "Jlp .service" from councilmen. Presi.deht Roiits All Opponents In Florida Race MIAMI (UPI} -President Nixon has won a lopsided victory in the RepubUcan presidentlaJ primary, outpolllng the com· blned tota!J of liberal Paul McCloskey and canaervatlve John Ashbrook by near· Jy a nipe-to-one mifgln in Florida, (See "FailA ·~for detail~ orl Tueada}"i De~ocratic primary won by Alabama 9'>V· George Wallace.) , , ., With.It, l"'rcent o(.1\1<, ta!~i • preci~cla •m, N~ ll'f! 357,230~9te1or17 percent, to 11.11' or fpur per<~nl for McCloskey and S61t74. ·or nine pe~ent for Aahbrook. · ~lxon's margin was of rout proportions in all of Florida's U con1r~sslonal dlolricfa. McCioakey dropped out of the cam· palP. last week, cltlnf financial dlf· flculties , but his name remained on the Florida ballot. * -{:(-* Schmitz Charges ' Nixon in China 'Surrendering' WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Rep. John G. Schmitz (R:Calif.), has accused Presi- dent Nixon ·of "surrenderif\g" to the Chinese Communists and of "selling out" the Nationalist reglme of Chiang Kai· ahek. Clearly unconvinced by the as.- surances of other conservatives such as Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.), Schmitz said Tuesday that the "last 15 million free Ch..inese" on Taiwan had been sacrificed on "the altar of appeuement." "At Peking, on February 28, that sacrifice was offered up to the false god of peace through surrender," Schmitz said in a newsletter to his const1tuenls . "Never since Yalta has the United States of America so cruelly betrayed 1 fr iend." Schmitz, a 41-year-old lieutenant col· onel in the Marine Corps and member of the John Birch Society, saJd President Nixon's joint communique with Premier Chou En-lai was "so bad" that the President's defenders were clalmlng he had made an advantaeeous 41se<:rtt deal" at Peking. But Nixon, Schmitz no\ed, hid ..,._ quivocally declared on his return from the Peoples Republic of China that no aecret deal had been made at PeklJ1&. "U he is telling the ttulh, theri we have aacrifictd TaiWan for nothing. If he ls no~ telling the truth , then hla wont cannot be trusted." Goldwater. who refrait'led from com- menting on the Pre1ident'1 trip at the time, said later he hid been usured by Clilfl Ma1: >:» W• ll'f Strwt N..,.,. Inc~:»» fMwlllWt -.,IWI~ ~ teec~: m !"--.t A¥MW Hdnt .... ••e111 11111 .... ~,. •a...: as,..,. 11 a,,..-. SA N DIEGO CUPll -Wlllie c. Nlxori and other White House officia!J u.,. ••• rn41 '42:-t111 Cl ,,.. A .... tf1f1 I '4a.1671 ~-· ... Al ........... .. ,,, , •••• 4fJ""4Jt °""'""" .,. oni,... C011t ""*''•"" CIMUMt. .. .... •torlM. """'""""'· .....-..... ., edlf""t~lt fltnlll ~-••• , $ .... !llwt ..... , ,.... -~·--· ' ' •• utt!1~~'7::c= J!!!!!M'l'f' IW """ Q.lJ olllt..,... u.u """"'l"f.', • Henderson, convicted of killing a that nothing had been sacrificed. The potlceman, has been sentenced to death conservative Ari2ona Repobllcan alao even thougb sucb a sentence has been 11td the U.S. commitment to defend held uncoiia!Jtutlonal by !be California Taiwan remained Intact rleaplte • pledge supreme Court. ' to withdraw American fotcea from the ' Hend<raon, 26, waa convicted of kllllng laland 1t aome lndellnlt. dole In the Sgt. Freddie Edwan!s, a IS.year veteran ' future. of the force wlth two children, OcL 7 Schmitz made no dlroot menUon of afltr 1 holdup. 1uch 1tate1nent& by Goldw1ter and other He wu aenlenced to death Feb. 11, · ~aervatlves who conUnue to 1upport before the 1tale'1 highest court atruc!L Nlxpn. He. 11jd, however, that U.S. policy down Iha death penalty. Judjje Wllllam bid ablfted first from the aupport Ill 1 Low formally tmpaoed the aentence Tua:. "fr .. China" to 1 "lwo-Ollna pOllcy" dly, bat pva ffandel'IOll a atay of 11· unacceptable to either 1lde and finally to eculloo pendlna appeola of the Slqnma "In effect recofJlbinl -1• the alive Court rullna. China.,, . - . ~., . f ' I Pencil Pushers • MANAMA, Bahreln (UPI) -A Danish Caravelle charter jetliner flying holiday 1oers home from Ceylon crashed Tues- day night near Dubei in the Ptrsian Gulf, apparf'ntly killing 111 of the 106 paw n· gers and 6 crew members, officials said today. A repo1t that one man survived the crash in the mountains some 40 miles east of Dubei airpor t was not confirmed. Pay Board members Cbairman Geor11e Boldt Oeft) and Arnold Weber put their pencils to $'.OOd use as they and other board members listen to shipping companies and West Coast dock workers union leaders plead for their strike-ending pay increases at a Washington hearing. Sterling Airways: the Danlah charter ille.Arhich owned the plane, and the aerebo rg Travef A g en c y Jn penhagen, which chartered it, aald there appeared to be no surv ivors. "As far as we have learned from our man In Dubei, there are no survivors," a spokesman for both tompanles sald. The Passengers Included 68 Dl.ne1, 20 Swedes, 12 Norwegians, four Finns and two Germans while the six crewmembert were all Dar:ies, the airline said. Recluse Billionaire Met The passengers were returning from a two-wefk holiday in Colombo, Ceylon. nying vi a Bombay and Dubei to Copenhagen. The jetliner was scheduled to make a refueling stop at Dubei . U.S. Envoy in Nicaragua Airport officials said they lost radio contact with the airliner only minutes before it waa to land. The acting airport director said "the last radio message we had from the pilot was : 'I am landing in four minutes.' Then lhe plane just disa~ peared." ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Afltr a month in a 'hotel hitieaway in Nicaragua and a purported surprise meeting with the Nicaraguan preaident and the U.S. am· bassador there, Howard Hughes is reported to have flown to Los Angeles. Another 'ewrt said he was iJI Vancouver, B.C. An un identified spokesman for the Nicaraguan Air Force told ne9'S'J'nen that Hughes had flown in a private plane early Tuesday to Los Angeles, where he has lived as both a celebrity and a recluse. A spokesman for the ~year--0ld billionaire confirmed Tuesday rllght that Hughes left Nicaragua and arrived at an undisclosed destination. However, the Frotn Page 1 GREENBELT • •• In his view. CoWlCilman Henry Quigley noted the community association might enforce trespass laws, but discussion revealed that prosecutions are difficult since guests of Unlveraity Park residents may use the green~lts. Burto• and Ray Quigley . pointed out that one aspect of the parental resP.Onsibility problem iS that parents don't always know where their children are. The council lmited ils action Tue.day to the traffic problem. , Co;uncllmen said they will a,.ait,furtber word from Maccarone on · progress of negotiations with the Irvine Company lor an alternate site for teen gatherings away from homes. The council Indicated it .wou1d con!ider a resolution next Tuesday night that would set a IO-day hearing process on the closure of Mondo Street. That solution was sought by many of the original 22 residents of homes abut· ting the greenbelt. 1 City Manager William Woollett Jr. told th e council safety lighUng in the greenbelt would be provided by the com· munity association, as well. A report from the city's traffic engineer -the county road department -will be heard next Tuesday on the feasibility of closing Mon· do Street. Residents contend that would put an end to the use of the four -street block as a drag strip. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRlll HOW WE BUY JEWELS You are, we 're sure, Well aware of the fact that fine jewels are created from roUgh stones Which have bun mined from deep in the earth. These stones are then placed in the hands of skilled craftsmen who apply years of experience lo cut· ting and polisbing processes which prnduce the scintillating jewel you see in our store. You'd be surprised at how much of our time is applied to selection not only of the gems themselves, bu t also to careful consideration of processors from whom we buy. Although we, of course, buy jewelry from private and estate sources, the . bulk of our beautiful stock .of jewels lJ purchased from processors who have an unques· tlonable reputation for strict con· trols, 'careful attention to detail, and years of dactlng experience. . ' So when you are looking for the finest In gems, come in and see us. You have not only !he expert attention of the owner-operalori you alao have the add!Uonal 111ur- ance of knowing that the source of your gem was select..i 'with ex· treme ---•I Cart. W\A llZEr*l r.".V-.. • • spokesman, Richard Hannah, refused t.o confirm that Hughes was in Los Angeles and said that his whereabouts ma y not be disclosed for a time. Asked about the report from the Nicaraguan Air Force. Hannah said, "1 have no reason to believe he is in Los Angelea." (See Page 4 for details of the latest development In the bizarre case involving Clifford Irving and the purported Hughes autobiography.) Would-be Solon Candidate Seeks Filing Approval A would-be congressional candidate who cla ims he was muscled out of the Registrar of Voters' office by deputy sheriffs last Friday despite the fact that he got to the door one minute before the filing deadline will ask in Orange County Superior O>urt judge March 24 to ap- prove his ~jected (iling. Fullerton builder William Brashears, a candidate for the 34th District seat held by Rep. Richard T; Hanna (D-Ana~eim ), haa submitted 'affidavits· algned by six alleged witnesses to the incident to J udge Lester Van Tatenhove. Br!shears claims in his lawsuit that deputies halted him at the door of the Santa Ana office although the clock clear- ly said 4:59 p.m. He apparently eluded the officers, entered the building and jotned the long line at the filing window. But the persistent deputi es then ad· vised the waiting Brashears that they would like him to leave the premises. The reluctant Republican complied with their request. Registrar of Vote rs David Hitchcock said he will tell the caurt that Brashear s was three minutes late. Brashears claims in his action that Hitchcock's aides closed the doors before 5 p.m. ••tn anx eve nt," Brashear s said, "can- didates were filing their papers as late as 5:30 p.m. 1 know because: I watched them from outside the office right up to that time." - He said the plane crashed at 8:40 Tueg.. day night in hilly terrain three or four1 miles from the coast. Some 20 planes and helicopters started a search for the wreckage, which was located this morning by a helicopter pilot. He radioed back to Dubei that he could see no signs of survivors at the scene. Airport officials said the weather was bad in the area with storms and rains. A Sterling Airways pilot aald the Dubel airport is wel! equipped and run by the British Royal Air Force (RAF). "The approach is not difficult ," he said. The jetliner . was due to land at Copenhagen 's Kastrup airport at 6 this morning . At 7, Tjaereborg general manager Knud Kanstrup appeared in the arriva l lounge and announced to waiting relatives that Sterll ng Airways Caravelle wa s reported missing. "I am afraid there is little hope," he told the waiting relatives . Later Sterling issued a statement which said, "Sterling Airways regrets to inform that the crash plane is our super Caravelle. There is . .,1most no hopes for survivors. Reports that a member' of the crew had managed to get to a little fishing village do not stand up.'' A Sterling Airways spokesman said the man bell"ved to have s u r v I v e d presumabf1' was from a re Sc u e helicopter. whi ch had been forced down during the .search because of bad weather. 1 Dead, 17 Hurt As Car Hits Bus FRESNO (UPI) -A car driven by ~ 70-year--0ld Fresno man ran through a stop sign and collided with a bus carrying 61 elementary school children . The car's driver, Enos Mares , wa1 killed Tuesday and 16 students and the school bus driver were injured, one child seri ously. · The California Highway Patrol said most of the injuries were minor and eight of the children were taken to a hospital for treatment For that special someone's · 4 birthday The tru1 pr1clou1ne1s of '" Omega w11ch 1• the love thet goes wilh it. Th• Omega you r1cei\'1 today will become a proud po1s111lon .•• preclou1 b1yond comp1r1 for what It 1ymbollz11. Within 1ach case b11t1 the pee rless Omega movement. Made wlth met1culou1 cara lo 01v1.y11r1 ol l1llhful perlormance. See our complete colltctlon of Om•ga meri'a 1nd l1dJt1' watches, $85 to over $1000. A-t•lt•ll'llldlnf ll•m•t.r •111'1 "tl•UllJlllnf c;1t1ndlr. 14X tol!M111f1 c••• ......... ., .. &14S !n 1111111 ... llffl Clff •••·· i , •• , ,. ••• ., , •• t 1SO 1-4 flllnMft.14K Wflltl IOlld O&id ...... &Its J.C. fiumphri ed Jeweler~ • 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANICAMlltlCAltD-MAST£1t CMAltQE. t4 YU.RS IN SAMl LOCATION PHONE l~l,J401 \ • I , ' I ! ' Wh~Ie Dr ama I . I Cnprer to . Track Gigi SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sclen- tiJll Ire planning lo use I helicopter in tracking a California gray whale released off • the Southern California toast after a year In captivity. They abandoned efforts lo track the .whale, named Gigi, by boat Tuesday because signals from her radio back pack were coming too in- frequen•Jy to calch up with her, saJd a spokesman for Sea World, the marine am~ment park where the 14,000-P®nd mammal was kept until Mon- day. A scientist 1t the N1vll Uodtrse.I lleMlr<h Ind Development Center blamed the poor radio transmissions on Gigi's "lazy swiinJlllng habits." '"I'be girl's never doDe anythlng in her life except bob up and down in a tank-; and It'• going to take her a while to act like a whale," said Larry McKinley of the Navy Center's marine mammal facility. Gigi, captured when she was about I weeks old, apparently was only sticking her nose and blaw hole out of the water in· stead of doing a normal forward roll like olher gray whales, McKinley said. The back pack will not transmit while it is submerged. • •• u,.., ....... SILENT ON ITT Lt. Gov. Rei fteck1 Reinecke Declines Comment ' Lettuce Boycott Ordered By Ulllted l'r<11 lllenotloul A nationwide lettuce boycott and strike agalnst centrJIJ Califotni'a growers w 111 resume Friday after a year's moratorium, Cesar Cbavei ' .. said Tuesday. No Changes Chavez, head ol the United ' Farm workers Organizing Solon Asks Committee (UFWOC), said negotiations have failed with SACRAMENTO (UPI) The author of th·e about 198 major I el tu c e Legislature's heavily amended growers in the natkln's "salad roll call vote reform says he bowl" of Salinas Valley. wUI ask the Senate to reject The union has been trying to Assembly chanies to his pro- get the growers to drop a posals. "sweetheart contract" they If the Senate agrees lo the signed with the Teamsten request by Sen. •Pe ter Behr Union just before the 1970 (R-Tiburon), a two-house con- UFWOC six-month strike 11.nd ference commlttee·will be ap- pointed to Iron out the , dif· boycott began. ferences Ind de~elop a com- ' Wtdnt,.'f, f<lmh IS, 1972 ..._ bAJL V PILOT fi I I ' • Angela Davis Give s jm~y OK, But Doubt~ ·Imp~~ial Tri~ SAN JOSE (UPI) -Angela Davis says she Is convinced she cannot get a rafr trial~tn middle-class Santa C I a r,. County. but believes the afl. white jury sworn In to hear her case "will do Its best." Eight women and four men, Including one ~1 e x I c a n · American , were aceepted by bo\l> sides Tuesday at the murder. k..idnaplng ind con- spiracy trial of Miss Davis, U. a black woman and an avowed Communist. Seleclto{I or four alternates was expected to be completed today ,or Thursday and testimony could bea:in as early as Monda,y. The trial. now in ·its thlrd week. had been expected to bog down over jury selection for months. between the prosecution and defense during a 4S-mlnute conference wilh J u d g e Richard E. Arnason. • The ~former UCLA philosophy Instructor, who is charged with supplying the guns In the Marin County Courthouse shootings of 19i0, addressed the berKti in clear. matter.of-fact tones : "\Ve have long contended it would be impossible for me to get 1 fair trial in Santa Clara County, We have made a num· ber of motions challenging the jury system here. "There Is no useful purnoae in further' delay of the lrial. We are confident 'in these men and women and are happy to accept the jury as It Is now." Prosecutor Albert W. Harris Jr., an assistant state attorney gener111. concurred in her declslon, saying, "The people will aJso accept the jury." Panelists included a Mex- ican-American man employed by IBM. a woman whose son was a conscientious objector, a 45-year-old bachelor, a Jewish divorcee. a young matron ~who works in a department store, and tv;o young women in their 20s. -The panel 's average age w2s about 40, although this was not a matter of court record. Since her release seven miles from San Diego, Gigi has foUowed a circular swim· rn1bg pattern and has re-. malned in the San Diego area, ecientists said, There was some difference of opinion as to the significance of her failure to join immediately other gray whales on their migration north from Scam- mon'• Lagoon, their breeding g~ in Baja California. Scientists hope to use the signals to trace Gigi's path on her northern migration, and to acquire information on the depth of· her dives and the waler temperature. The back pack Is designed to become disengaged from Gigi in about nine months. "Jt was jU&t a stalling tactic promise. SACRAMENTO (AP ) _Lt. on their part," Chavez said of Behr tol~ newsmel) he pl.ans Gov. Ed Reinecke has refu sed the recent talks to get the to seek Senate rejections or Miss Davis stood up In court to formallY accept 'the jury Tuesday . after a : surprise agreemen,t was worked out "As I look at these men and women I see that this jury does reflect the composition or the county -there are no bJack people. Though I can't say It's a jury of my peers, after much discussion we art convinced they will put forth their be~t effort to give me a fair trial. ~ Before ending Tuesday's session, six alternate jurors were seated and questioned, but they were all dismissed. Set Up Camp growers to switch contracts to Assembly amendments this TAKE A PICTURE WITH to answer questions from UFWOC jurisdiction. afternoon. newsmen regarding his W. He said lettuce boycott ac-In rapid fashion, the THE EASTER BUNNY volvement in the International tivities would begin Friday Assembly Rules Committee Telephone I.: Telegraph offer across the nation, and in Tuesday rewrote Behr 's Now _ Carousel Court Indians Put Claim On S tat.e Missions to help underwrite the Canada and Northern Europe. Senate-passed change in the Some strike centers already way the legislators vote ln ~ _......_ ~ ast IDf __ _ Republican Nati 0 n a 1 Con-are established because of the committee and sent It to the OUlllD \0 J' ~ venlion in San Diego. ,.J"~n~io~n~·s~bo~yoo~tt~o~f~n~i n~•:_~n;oo~r~w~h~er~e~lt~w~a~s~sw~i~lt~lyl __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:._-The Republican official's Northern California wine!. adopted without debate 68-0. KING CITY (UP!) -A band of American Indians has pitched camp around Mission San Antonio de Padu •. declar- ing they were civilized. and laid claim to all the 21 historic missions in California . Mission San Antonio · de Padua, its adobe buildings Jn Woman, 75, Jailed; Has 13 Do gs LOS ANGELES (UP!I -An elderly woman who had four times as many dogs as legally allowed has been ordered to jail for runnin~ her home like a kennel without having a license. The municipal court judge told Mrs. Ruth Froemming, 75, that she would be released from custody as soon as she i'educed her pack of dogs from 13 to 3 -the city's legal limit. "I just can't send my little pets to the pound to be destroyed," wailed M r s . Froemming, after be i n g sentenced. She Was fined $750 and sentenced to 30 days in jail, with three years probation, after an earlier conviction for having too many dogs and let· ting them run free without tags. Neighbors testified that her pels constantly leaped over their fences, barking and nip- ping at children. ruins as late as World War II, is in the wooded foothills of the Coast Range Mountains ~ miles west of King City. The land . it occupies is sur- rounded by the government· controlled Hunter L i g g e t t Military Reservation, once part of the Hearst Ranch, and the mission's restored buildings are used as a training school by the Roman Catholic Church's Francisca n Order. Meredith Quinn, a Dakota speaking for the Indians, declared the function or the missions founded 200 years ago by Father Junipero Serra "was to convert and civilize the savages." "We feel the missions have served this fwiction," he ad- ded as the Indians demanded the missions and the land on which they stand. The Indians prepared a "manifesto" to be delivered to Bishop Harry. Clinch of the Monterey Diocese of the church. , . , 1 It asks the church to rehn· quish all property 'and records of the mission, make an "ac- counting or all moneys and revenues due Indians," and put up "funds to provide . armed protection" for the In· dians now in camp. Among the demands wa.s one for the eviction or all other occupant! from each miSsion's original lerritOry of three square mile!. No building was occupied at Mission Sap Antonio de Padua when the Indian men and women set up a uvillage" around a minibus and a truck In which they had arrived. refusal came at a news CQn- f erence in the hallway outside his office where he reported on California's efforts to ob-1 taln contract! for the space 1 shuttle program. Asked by a newsman if he planned to testify on the ITT case before the S e n a t e Judiciary Committee, Reinecke responded, "I have not been invited and I hope am not invited." (See story, Page 17). Meanwhile a Justice Depart· ment letter is being used by local fund raisers to assure businessmen that their con· tributions for the forthcoming Republican n a l i o n a 1 con· vention are legal and tax deductible. the Los Angeles Times said today. Rea gan OK's Adult Bills SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Reagan has signed into laW two hurry-up measures which backen say correct oversights In the instant-adult law. One bill Would keep 29,000 youths 18 through 20 years of age on the welfare rolls. under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program. The other bill protects state allotments to Calilornia's 94 locally r.un community col· leges. It was feared that the change In the definition of l'ninors and adults, which went into effect March 4, would have depri~ the community colleges ol $36 million. if 'fouVe seeq tllis- ' TRADING 1~1 "THE STAMPS . TRAVEL i ~i THAT REALLY VOUCHERS l ~~Jl SEND YOU"! .......... tp'll vlaQt to read tbisl · Travel Vouchers ••• the "going" kind of stamp .•• takes you anywhere, at any time you choose! Saving Travel Vouchers Is the fastest way to make your travel dreams come true! Save t hese magic s~arri.Ps for "fun" vacation~! Trading Travel Vouchers can pay¥for part or all of your ticket costs! Here's how the program works: L Your partiCipatlng merchants {see director9' Issue Trad- ing Travel Vouchers with each purchase you make. " You place "regular" or "Big Ten" Travel Vouchers In your ••colorful redemption books. S. Take your fllled redemption book to your local member Exchange Bank (see directory), and receivi a beautifully en!taved Traveler's Reserve Certificate worth $2.00. C. When you are ready to travel, take your Traveler's Reserve Certificates to your authorized Travel Agent (SH direc- tory), and spend them like cash! Traveler's Reserve car· tfficates can purchase all or any part of your next ticket costs. You.choose the time and place, and you're off on your. trip! MERCHANT INOUIRIES lNVIT!D~ TRAVELERS A£SEAVI, INC. (714) 17t-2200 • • • If else put· .na1ne on • charnpagn,.e, you'd pay -.alot,hd '·more -' • . ' forit. • -- EeChampagneia more ' thaii adding bubbles, it's a work of art. We use the best grapes. We use all the skills developed in almost 40 years of winemaking to create a crisp, delicate champagne. It's an exceptional champagne. We go all out when we make if, then we use, a little restraint when we price it. We want you to enjoy it as often as possible. How about tonight? IPANC~lNQ WINE.QAU.0 CALIFORNIA CHAMPAGNE-CHARM AT 8ULK PROCESS-NATURM.LY ,EAMENTlO-OALLO CMAMPAGN! CELLAAS, MODlSTO, CALIFORNIA • • •· I • -. --... ~ -. . ·--. . ---. i ' . • I f •1 DAILY ~ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Hol m Isn't The campaign to recall Laguna Beach city council· man Edward . Uirr has taken tbe un!ortunate, but per- haps predictable, turn o! re!lecting on the integrity (and intelligence) o! Councilman Roy Holm, who will be seek· ing re-election April 11. Holm and Uirr have had plenty or disagreement& at the council table, so it was a fairly obviotis political ploy I<> try to llnk Holm with the recall. This being the case, it would have been patenUy stupid for Holm to back or even support a recall that couJd so easily backfire on him during his own campaign. Holm is not that naive. __. A candidate of even minimal political acumen would know enough to steer clear of such an entanglement. Holm has done so, hints and allegations to the contrary. He has judiciously avoided any participation whatever in the recall. It is unfortunate that this unrelated maneuver should be dragged in as a campaign issue, which it is not. at least so far as Holm is concerned, though it does seem I<> be developiJ\g int<> a handy red herring !or bis opponents. (See Mailbox below for letter from Councilman Holm.) Rescue at Dana Har bor Hundre<is of pleasure boats already rest at their berths at Dana: Harbor· and by this aummer the facility's entire east basin will be full of small craft. In recent weeks, with capricious fogs sliding in sud· . denly along the South Coast, some.of those boats already have run into trouble. _ On one such day recently, rescuers from the County Harbor Patrol and San Clemente city lifeguards • That Naive answered a record number of Doatlng distress calls. Everything went very well. Both agencies have new, rescue craft on duty, as well as trained crews. Spokesmen for the rescue agencies are mo$t .appre- henislve about novice yachtsmen getting into trouble along miles of rocky shoreline up and down coast of the harbor. And the rate of rescues will soar by this summer. But even with the new mae of boat,,, both agencies are confident they can help keep Dana a snug and safe harbor for the boater. Lanp hear,s· Fi.ne Report Laguna Beach Planning Commissioner Roger Lan· phear is a city official who believes in doing his home- work. Not content with merely turning up at meetings to participate in discussion of agenda items, Lanphear put 1n many extra hours on his assignments, with outstand· ing results. tlis revision of the land use element of the general plan, based on commission hearings, cleared the way for .,.additional valuable contributions by fellow commission· ers and resulted in presentation to the city council of a text that could be adopted with a minimum of argument. 'f.1ore recently, returning from a three-day planning institute sponsored by the League of California Ci ties, Lanphear turned his hand to a detailed report that liter• ally brought the discussions home to Laguna, relating all relevant aspects to local problems. This af preach makes it possible for all interested members o the city staff to share the valuable, but too often soon forgotten information disseminated at such meetings. .s Some Don 't Know What Dear Gloomy Gus f'rom Religious, Moral, Social, Economic Standpoints. • • ' To Be For • • SYDNEY J. H°A:~ •' ' Thoughts -et tar11e: In some peZ.sonalities, the strength lies only in opposition; take away lhl o~ position and ~ fl!"l"der w .. kly, not knowing what to 6i lw. having Sb long been 1galn1L • • • In a good society, all businesns tend to become 111or! JlkeilX'offs our society, a11 pro-• fesslons have tended to become more like businesses. • • \\'hen a commun- l!y suffers a severe rise in crime. the good citizens organ. ize to punish the criminals;. but who punishes the good citizens for having per· milted the crim inal spirit to grow and flourish in their midst? I • • • The, public feels far more comfortable with a stupid man than with a clever man; so clever men who aspire to public leade rship pretend to be more stupid than they are. • • • Most men are poor executives because. they fail to understand that "decision· making " does not consist in weighing all the facts as they come in and then mak· ing the most reasonable judgment. but rather moving before all the facts are jn and anticipating their consequences. ' • • • It is the systematic neglect of the natural instinct of competition that will eventually wreck all Marxist societies ; and, contrariwise. the systematic neglect of the i;iatural instinct toward cooperation B.araased residents all over the Orange Coast will join In hoping lhose El Toro folks win their case against the dogs that~ bark in- cessantly. Maybe the lnconsfderate owners of the "yappers" will alt up and take notice that their pets' nolae pollution is intolerable. -L. L. is the most serioUI internal threat 'Within competitive societies. • • • • ' You're D\'.t: truly grown up unW you're leas pro&e to e1cuae your own ml1takes ind more inclined to u cuse the follies of others. • • • We don't genuinely believe in free speech until we recognize that no abuse of the freedom of speech is as bad 11 glv· ing some authority the power to repress it. • • • Pets acquire the particular neuroses of their owners; dogs and their masters (or mistresses ) 'onl y seem to look alike, after awhile, when !he owners have used their pets for illicit emotional and social needs. • • • Those who live by and for senaalions generally find out much too late that nothing in the world is duller than sua- tained stimulation . • • • To be a professed "materialist" these days is as superstitious and speculative as to be a "spiritualist'' -for the more we learn about "matter" the less we understand it, and the Jess material it see,ms. • • • Democracy Is the only system that persists in asking the Powers That Be whethu they are the powers that ought to be. Revamping the Military In "PAWNS: The Plight of the Citizen- Soldier," young reporter, Peter Barnes. now Wtst Coast editor of The New Republic, presents a. w'll·reasoned, articulate blueprint for revamping, 6lreamlining and making more efficient the U.S. military force. He examines the power that the military exercises over the Jives of mil- lions of American citizens (its own courts', for example) to the point where it finds a dangerous percentage of unwilling and inefficient young people in its 3 mll- Jlon niiln police force of the world. It is Barnes' thesis, generally, that the draft can be moclified, even elim inated. In favor of a t·ompfte.nt fighting force, es- &entlally a professional defensive 11rmy, navy, 4ir force. This might be based on Wtst Germany's Bundswehr, in which civil lif;ierties for soldlers were spelled out In Ute Soldiers Law of 1956 and·lhere Is no longer a difference betwe'n "sold' 11 and "civilian" In thi.s model rorce. I IN IDS CHAPTER "Toward 1 Democratic Army," Barnes emphasiz's that 1r the nation of Frederick the Great and CJausewitz could de11be.rate1y create an army respectful of toldiers' righ ts and lnl<mally rlued ogalmt milltar~m. It S<"tms Joela! to assume thai the nallon of disoo and Jt!t'enon can do the . iJ not an anll-mlUllry hara11g11<. The auehor' bell.,,.. tbe mlJJJary hos ofl<ll beoll lllllalrl)I c;oodemntd in recent yean (apart from My Lal and other ob- ) ' (THE BOOKMAN ) vious blunders). He bued his findings and reasoning on interviews with military people of all ranks (some hosWe) after covering for Newsweek the Presidio stockade "muUny" case of 1968 in wblcb 27 con fused, frl1htened young men faced possible death senlencts !or tbelr gestures of anti·w* dissent. i'Pawns" Is a public Sfll'Vlce which calls fOr public awareness, concern and action on a major, unhappy and expensive American problem. Tile book should be essential reading for all members of Conaress, omona otbm (Knop(: $795). BOB moMAS, tbe hard-irorklftl As!OCiated Pr ... man In Hollywood !or many years and the author of three ex- cellent hto1nphle1 or late m o v I e magnates (''King Cohn," "Tbalbtr11 11 "Selznick") turn1 to fiction In "Weekend '33. '' This w11 a mistake. For Thomas Lt essentially 1 reporter, 411d "Wetktnd" "33'' is a flgmen\ of hl1 tmagin1Uon. It Is 1 tough (but not tough IOOUlhl• story o! how, and why, over a watkend In 1133. a mJxed hag of movie people are 111- vlted to the fabulous castle ErcaUbur, another name for Heant't San Slmeon of that period. "Citizen Kane" ~uched on this theme In • fat more convindna man-ner (Doubleday; N .115). WU!l1m Ho1u Death Sentence Necessary, Proper To tbe Editor: Capital punishment should not be done away with. It is necessary and proper from at least the following 1tandpoints: Religioua, moral, social and economic. Most people who think that capital punbhment should be abolished base their argument on the "Sixth Com- mandment" of tht Bible which says, "Thou lhalt not kill." These people take the Popular comma~t litt.ralty, saying tbat il God (throlilh tbe Biblel aays we should not kill lhen that applies t.o every case and condition including war and criminal execuUon. ' TO THE POSSmU: wrprlse of many, MAILBOX Letteri from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages Tn 300 word.! or less. The righ t to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseTved. All ltt· ters mu.st include sign.atu1't and mail· ing address, but namts may be with.· held on request if lufji,cient rea.3'on is apporent. Poetrll wiU not be pub· lished. ' ' the Bible says the folloWihg in Genesis to prevent the taking or two or 10 or 100? (ch. 9): "And mu~r js forbidden . Man- killing animals must•~ and any man THE COURTS MIGHT siy that~ capital who murders shail ~ killed; for to kill a punishment is cruel or u nu au a I man is to kill one made like God." (The punishment. It Is beyond belief •that it Living Bible ). How does one go about could be considered either. It Is not cruel, killing a murderer other than capital in that there is no sustai ned .pain (In punishment? In fact, most modem trans. "modern execution methods). Nor is It lators of the Bible render the "Sixlh cruel in that it is harsh or severe, for Commandment" as "Thou shalt not .,;. that is the very point! ·capital punls h- mur der." ment cannot be considered unusual in any To say murder rather than kill makes wildest stretch of the imagination since lt the whole ·dilference when debating has been practiced from the dawn of capital punishment, particularly in light civilization . A~~ it must continue t.o be of the Genesis passage that both 1nan and practiced fo~e safety and benefit of beast are to be executed if they kill, i.e., society. murder a human. Thus, we ha ve a RICHARD J . ELLIO'IT religious commandment for capital punishment. AND A RELIGIOUS -mwal view of the value of human life mi~t say that man, having the highest development, ihould have a right to his life and that no other man has a right to take it from him. In a sense this is true. But what happens to. the guy who cheats. the guy who doesn't obey the rules and takes another's life? Do you say "naughty, nau&}lty" and go about your business? The cheater is free to kill anyone he wants then. And the nature of people guarantees he would kill to obtain his desires if there was no punishment. And U he were locked up for life im- prbonment he can still kill other prisoners and guards in prison. For u•hy ahouldn't he? He is not going anywhere different and oothing more can be done t.o him that isn't already done. THIS JS WHY the enforcement and correction community is working to reinstate capital punishment. From the premise that life ls sacred and of the highest value and therefore should not be taken by man, comes the reality that a pri110n guard's tile ls not worth the dust he walks on, since there is no further punishment to murder. The price that toelety will have to pay t.o Imprison those normally executed, in terrrui of physical plant, pay of guard.a: (which would have to increase in numbers ind dollars} and lou-to the rm or aoclety. Is something society can do without. Doesn't It seem more moral to allow the taking of one lile a., Geerre --~ Dear Geor1e: My wile has been usln1 • niUln1 ' pin on IMr hips . She niUs tbe pin on her hlp1 a hal!-bour twice a day. Doea thJt really have any physical effect! ABNER C. Dear Abner C.: Indeed It does -it wUI give her mt11CUlar ftnaera and, unlen ahe hu very long 1rms, eventual palns in her sbouldera. But, 11 a hobby, lt'a cheap. (Lum the benelits o( Sideway• Thlnkln1. and Jell Gtor1e what they m .) .. Holm Not Be hind R eca ll To the Editor : There have been a number of statements made recently in the press and durin g one city council meeting which have attempted to link me to the re call campaign now in progress. J am in no way involved in this recall campai'1· It is unfortunale that the councilman m.. volved and the News-Post have made such allegations with?.UtJsking me if I was indeed "behind" urec311. Jhe, only campaign to which I am devoting Ume and effort is my own campaign for r&- election on April 11 . COUNCILMAN LORR and 1 have our differences in philosophy regarding the direction and ra te of Laguna 's growth. The most notable of these differences was over the high·rise issue. I worked ac- tively with grass roots organ~tions for the adoption of the 36-foot building height limitation which was enacted into Jaw Aug. 3 by a 3·1 majority of the voters. Councilman Lorr and the News·Post were on the opposite side of that issue b~t to infer from these differences that J am a part of the recall movement is naive to say the least. To report it as l.hoµgh it were fact is irrespQnslble. IT IS UNFORTUNATE that our council elections d e g e n e r a t e tnto euch acrimonious, divisive 1 n d totally unpleasant events -not just for the can~ d.idates and their ramllies. but for the whole town. Some people sayithings they don't really mean and difrerehces are ·amplified entirely out of propcrtlon to their real aieniflcance. lt need not ht this '\V&y: It's my opinion that it will backfire on those who mJght persist with such an approach. ROY HOLM See editoriaL abovt. -!:dilor . Enlf9llletted T OW School To the Editor: 1'Jtow could IJ\ey want to atop aomelhlng like this?" Tbtae ...,, our tboughll as we read tbe letters In another oewspaper written by nine-and ten-year-old children. members of tbe Langu1ge Arts Program at Top of the World School. There are many aduU1 In th is ~lry • who are uninfonned about a subject like pollution . Many holding opinions are unable, either through ignor1nce or lack of skills, to communicate them to a new_spaper editor. AS PARENTS of one Top of the World student, our main reaS-On for remainina in the area is to see our youngest benefit rrom the same enlightened education as our first has. We ask this question : If students are this capable at the age of nine or ttn , who can predict what it will be possible for them to achieve as adults? Our world is constantly changing. Educationat:rriethoda mu11t al!IO chanae to conform with present day standards. WALLA CE & ARLENE CANNON Throm·amay V o tes To the Editor : On April 11. San Clemente will have a chance (not a choice) to choose two persons out of 14 candidates to sit on our city council. According to city cle rk Max Berg, this city is prohibited by state law from hav. ing a runoff election. Hence, a plurality of less than 20 percent of the eleetor1te could install a "misrepresentative" in our city legislature. For example, one of the incumbent candidates, Stan Northrup, in his last campaign actually polled only J.100 votes out of 2,700. Here we have the grim testimony that, after having h!d a taste of him, 1,600 as against 1,100 would ha ve chosen someone else. PROBABLY SOMEONE with enou1h Integrity to not accuse the whole dental professi on of having mercenary motives when they seek properly Duoridated water for· their future patient. as well as for members of their own families. Could it be possible that one who has no qualms about calling calciu m nuoride "rat poison" should also condone the peddling of legal loopholes to unsu.specttn1 buyers, calling it insurance? · A giant stride toward democratizing our voting process woUld be a ballot that permits the voter to indicate whom he does not want as well 11 whom be does. FOR INSTANCE, I! the April It ballot had 1 row of boxes in front of, and a row hehind, the list o! candldales, and the in- structlon.s were to vote for two ind against two, the.n would incompelflnt in· cumbents be .smoked out In !Jplt.e or. 1 confusing block of decoys -some of which a devious candidate mlaht have even placed there hllnself. Such a plan is now also verboten by the state. . If ev'r there . was dire need for a test poll conducted by • ~uhllc-1plrittd new.spaper, San Clemente has it oow:-'()f course, the real remedy for clearing lbi.5 political pollution lies in changing the law. But until corrected, Sin Cltmtnle's only chance of enjoying a choice win be • wnple poll to Identify the "tbniw·•*•.l' votes" before election day. ~ WALTER C. HARBART, .D.S. 'P 11f>ll c lie Dem!M!tl • To tbe Editor: ' We need tbe help ol the ne"' media to Inform 9lJr coniresrmen that we an very tired of their poor voting records. Also of their "moonllghtina". wtth alvlng sso (or le!}) lectures for from fl,000 to fS,000, • skOng In Switzerland. running !or Pr"l- dent and other offices, Junkets abroad, etc .. etc. -, They asked !or the job, got It, rteeive a ' • nice fat salary, loll of money·savlng ptr· qul1iles. loni vacatloal, etc., yet many ol tllem have the pll to vole °" niU calls leH tban !ti ptrC</lt o! the time -an average attendance of one in five d1¥•· Is asking a IO perooit attent!Mct too· much? Once they're elected they seem to feel that they own the job -"Lhe public be damned ~·· • Anything that you can do to help Sen1tor Smith put across her motion will be greaUy appreciated by the general public. M. L. KEELER One Va t Commune To the Editor : After • short trip around the South Coast arei:, one must conclude developers and local· and county governments are dedicated to altering the land into one vast c o m m u n e . Condo-communes, moblle-eommunes, townhouse communes and apartment communes all hive in common lack of sp8.ce, lack of privacy and litUe human dignity or individuality. In the spring of 1970 a Toledo, Ohio re.search firm surveyed people who had moved within the last two years to six cjifferent kinds of housing. On the b1sis of bl returns, the study showed that 85 per. cent of familles living in other types ot homes would prefer to move neit into a single-family house. (Dick Turpin, L.A. Times, Feb. 6, 1972). " SCROOU ARE deteriorating, the education of fu ture citizens, our most precious treasure, is jeopardized. Cities are In trouble financially (look at Garden Grove ), flood control is inadequate as in Mission Viejo, sewage is being poured in· to the ocean. All this so thousands and · thousands or mostly identical brown mounds may be built for increasingly in- stltutionallied living. Why are we allowing this to happen in one of the most beautiful !reas Ui th · world? MRS. ANN RAINEY • Vie School Buaes To lhe Editor: While we 're waiting for the eiperta and the Orange County Rapid Transit District to spend some '600,000 of our money tB conduct their exhausting study of our public transportation need.s, why don't we a.sk them to get thlngs rolling at once by uaing our school buses as the nucleus of our public transportation system? "ROBERT M. GORDON ' Quotes I!!. Dari... U11er, Long .Bta9 - 11Even from my Umittd experience Is a teacher, I have found that too many students wont to be told what to thlnl: - by their professors, their peer grou.p or community." • ORAN•• ~AST '. DAILY PILOT l!oberl N, We.cl, Publilhtr Thomu ii.11il, Editor· Alben w. Bot" Editorial Pagt Uitor 'nie tdlh>rial pag~ of the [)alb' Ptlet attkl to infonn and 1Urnu· lttt readl!l'I by prcscntln.c this newtpapieT't oplntons ~ com· 1Nntary ori topics of lnttr~t and •trntncance, by _providing a forum tor tl'te' e:rpN'Sllon or our readera• oolnlona, •nd by pre&entJng the dJvnMr ,Vl~tJ Of Into~ ol>-mwn and •pokes.men on toptcs of the diu-. Wedn .. day, March J5, 1972 - • • ' I ._un1ing1Qn Beaeh Ft.tnntain Valley' .. VOL 65, NO. 75; 6 SECTIONS, 104 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • ) ' . W~NESDAY, MARCH 15, 1972 TEN CENTS Carpenter Files Text on Measure 87 !. PETER KRIEG Of tM Dllty Piii! St•ff Slate ~nator Denni s Carpenter (R~ NewPort Beach) today filed the led of hi!/ proposed coastline management bill that l! designed to allow local govern- ment to keep control or the shorellne, aubjecl to a review process through .a new slate agency, · All incorporated cities are excluded froni control and there would be no rnOratorium on construction whlle a state coutal plan is developed. DAA.T ""-OT Jli!M. ....... LIA,VES ScHOOL BOAID H'"'lllotton BHch'• Liftott School Trustee ' µggett Resigns After P rotest By JORN ZALLER Of .. Dflltr l"tlM 11.tf Trustee Ivan Lig,ett of the Huntington Beacti ·city (elemenlfrY) SChool District 1'9811!!ed Tue!day night ~ ~ thit ~acllen have "created lt.,!!11" ~k atowld here." ' Teachers last month aought criminal charges against Llpett and thn:O other tru,.t.es for alleged violation of the Brown Act, Calilomla'a anlf.• 3f1:1 In government law. ' "!refuse IA> be sublected to tilla llfnd ol harrassment," IJgaeU laid l.n qutttinc. Ligget> is the --.of the school board, bavIDc IUVld llnce l~. His current term rum until JIMe Jlft. He Aid his reslgnatiao la elfedlve today. ' "! would Uke to thlnlt tbose people (tbe t4fchers) because ham, ,_ • Xoart In public Ille wtlhout a criminal """"1, I iii>• blve one," IJclttl said. The coonty District Attorney's office liinounced lut week that It will not prtss crfmlnaJ cbar1ea u requeoled, by ~. T_.. bid cla1med that the only lepJ -,.,.. -to them' was IA> 11tk erlmJnaJ cbarf11. -, Liuett read Ian ~ nlgbt which he aaid PIO' vkled teachers with an avenue of civil redml. "I 11181•st that It was malfeasap~ Jn. feasance, « misfeasance, or something, but I think they were very inaccurate In contending that they bid to l>rOceed !,he way they did," Liggett aaid. "[' would suggest that we trust.'eel ahoo1d have been aUorded a small por· (See b!GGETI', Page!) ' Hughes Joins · " Fire Com pany ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -How· , an! HUCl!es, the elualve bflllollaiie,, , bas beeoma a Ufe member of·Alu> · · ~ andrla'I historic Friendship Veter-,&ns Fiio Ensille Co., founded by Geor1e Washln&ton In 17'14. · · '!'be group ft<Oived a check /lit 1100 and a letter illllled by "!I. D. Henley, Held, E1eculive Staff, 11 wbich "Id: "lolr. llllglles i.. very pleated with 1our very tlnd Inv). tatlon." , , In Los An1ele1, a Hughes spot• man verified the 1-. I t Clrpenler's _,. II the laoirlli 1111- jor coastal management prv-1 now before the Legisla~, aJtbougb -IU!> milted by state Sell. Jama Q. W""'°rth (~Inglewood), Is expected to be lillled "londay. by the Senate Commltiee DD Natural llesouroes and Wlldllle. The llroll(eol ol the four .,....,,.., a bill submJtled jointly by . state senator Donald L. Gnl!ISky (R-Wattonv)lle) and AasemblYD!ID Alan Sieroty ( D ·Lo 1 Angeles), will be heard by the panel Mon- day but no action Is antlclpa_ted. Tbla IMUW't, a refinement of a similar bill lntroducod by Sterol7 last )'elr, la oupported by --aervationiab. ,.. A SPokeamlll fdr CUpenlu ,declined to take a guess u to which, U: afty 1 will ever become law. carpenter la c:ounllng an what he bas termed the "reuonable" prqvilions in bla m....,... to gel It posaed. Among other things, bis blll: ~Altows fndlvldual coastal counttes to dtrme their own 'coutal :rone, 10mewbere • between 1,000 fll'<ll and throe mllea In- land. u -R<qulres local (county)' government IA> submJl.land uoe and coutal plans IA> a t~member state agency by M1rch of 11'14. • -Calls for oompletion of the state coastal plait liI monlhs later. -Allon development to continue dur· Ing the Interim, ' pmvlded It meets prellmlnary ·criteria establlsbed by the already...mlnc C.llfornla A d v I a o r y Commission on Marine and Coastal Resources. Carpenler'a measure does prohibit any reduction of public beaches or other public recreation areas as well as 11 reduction or restriction of et.lstlrig public acceM to beache3 before the coastal plan Is developed. It. also stipulates that any planning unit that falls to sut>mlt a plan will be cut off from further state funds or federal fund s admlnlstered by the state for any p«>Ject within the coutal r.ooe until the plan la completed. The agency to be created to oversee the state coastal plan would Include one · mem ber from each of the nine coastal counties and six members from the public at large. All should have some experience with marine conservation, engineering ot biological or ecologJcal sciences. cirpenter proposes a first-year budget for the commission of '250,000. a1 ers . ' ._'CO Ur _.oas Cause Sought ,. " 'Capt. Jac~'s' Surf~iHe Home Gutted by Fire A rasi.ng lire virtuall y destroyed the Surfside home of a well-known Orange County restaurant operator today and firemen were, still tryin1 rto contain it at . ' noon. The blaze . gutted the beachfront residence of Capt. Jack Haley, A·lU Surfside Ave., in the private commuriity within Seal Beach city limitsJ . No immediate damage estimate or ••l!IO ol ~ wttlroeft at 11: .. a'.IJI. could be determined since flmnen from lhroo deJ>lfllnenll were still ~ ft. • • No other reports of llr\ICIUnl ~e to bomes crowded within Ibo lltll< colonj ~ !:!U:~~,i~ U.:S:: o'::· by Haley, operator of Captain Jack's restaurant in Sunset BNcb and builder of a second one In Hllftt1nclon Btach. Truck> from tbe Seal Beach, Hun- tington Beach and Westminster fire departments responded to the alarm. Narrow streets within the old seaside development make fire truck access dif· ficult In times ol emergency. Haley is a former Seal Beach lifeguard captain and was once well known in Southland surfing compeijtion. 2 Thieves Steal ' F otomat Money Margaret Schlusser, %1, Anaheim, was depositing the day's Fotomat receipts in a bank's night depository Tuesday when two arme;d men grabbed the money bag containing about $280. Miss Scbluuer la employed at tbe Fotomat 1tanct' at 1010 N. State College Blvd., :Anaheim. 11te robber'y took plac, at State C.ODece and. Lincoln Avenue, abcNI 1a lllnea aouth. _. She ·delctlbecl her ..,,.i.1S11ilani.. as being ~t )'WI old, one U " and the other six feet tall, bolb Weighing about • UIS pounds. Beach Car Wash Set ~ junior and sophomort classes at Huntington Beach Hiib.Schooi wlll bold a car wash from 10 a.ni. IO -t p.m. Saturday In the school parking lot:.' The $1 charge will be. med to finance the junior prom and the sopbomore Sadie Hawklnll day dance. ' A similar major fire In illrfslde aeveral yeara ago claimed the ur. ol aa -and destroyed the adjaceal lane ol anotber surfing star' Corky Camll. The colany Is ~ ol new.,. mulU-story bomeo aloos Illa --iuCh u llalay'a -_. ....., collqll datinl back ... -• -- ·Pre1ideni-loreta AU 'JpPJnenti In Florida Race MIAMI (UPI) -Preslilaat in-baa W<ln a loplfded victory ID the Republbn presideollal ,pr1mary, outpoflflls the -. blned total.o of liberal Pllll McClcllkq and comervative Jolm. Alhbroot by D\NI'• ly • nfne.IHne margin In Florida. (See Page 4 !or detal1J oo Tlltad11's Democratic primary """ by Alabama Gov. George Wallace.) Wfth 91 percent ol the atate's precincts in, Ni.Ion had 3S7,2IO votet or rT pert:tnt, to 16,1111 or four pereent for McCloskey and 35,l'ltor Dine pen:ent for Aahbrook. Nixon's mafgin. waa .of rout proportions In all of Florida's U consressi~l districts. . 1 , , McCl<>skey dropped oul of the C.m- paign l1St week, cillnl flnanctal dil· ficulties, but bls name remaioed on the Florida .ballot. Priest Cleared On Drug Cha~ges LOS ANGELES (AP) -Marijuana possession clial'gea qalnst u llcllv~t Roman Catholic priest IDd a companion have been dl'OflPOCL Superior Cocut Jodee William E. Calde<Ott granted a --Tues-day IA> drop-the cbarles'qilnst the' Rev. Louis D. Jaramlllo, 411, and Richard V. Sa'irlelle, 21, botb of AlbuquerC(IM!, N.M., for lack of evljlence. They "e.te arrested Jan. 5 by police wbo Aid U9y focmd a box tllat appeared to contain marijtl1na after atopplng a car driven by Sawtelle. He bid been driving erratically, officers llkl. ' , .. , ' . . ,. ' ... . . ..~ . ... , .... '~ .... ,,\ Alleman ."'.,Pleads :G~ty1 •• ,;.; • ' .l •• . To P-0stmasie:r's· Murder . " . ' ' '. ' -, . ~sited jury selection Tue¢a7•a!"f pl~aed iuiltY to second degree m!lfder. TJi• Cypress 1College stu~nt got five YUM!. Jo life from Judge James 'tuioer for UJe · ldlllng of his ·1e.yeaN114 ·,for·mtr Poslal worker Philip Bert Alleman chansed his mind today momen~ befo're jury llele<tloa was lo get under way In bis Or~nge County ~ Superior ,c.ourt · murder trial and pleaded guilty 'to the 'kming .of ' . . Westminster Postmaster Paul 'Bw'tner. Judge W!Diam C. 'gptirs accepted the Z4-year-otd Santa Ahari'1 ·pte. and Im· mediately aentencecl him IA> five yem to lUe in state prison on the aecond ctevee murder admiuion. · 1Irllrleod. (See, story, pqe 11). , • , Floyd Larry Strong, 20, p! Santa Ana, closed his trial before it really started . Monday by, I u~lng Judge, l!yroo. K. He alao sentenced ADODllD to ooe IA> 14 yW'I In state p\-laon for ;llie wouocf\ng of . malls 1Uperlntendeot Ernest Claulden 1od made the 9e0tf:nces concurrent. It waa the third BUch action In three · daya by defeodanta In Superfcir Court murder trials. , · ' Li~ Edward Llndeboom, 22, McMillan to (fttennine bi1 guilf· on the strength of the Iranacr\pt i.fd Iietort the jurist. • -1 : Judie McMillan aentenced the leader of the trio accused of killing a Tua(in mart.t.cl.,.k to IUe ln•slfle prlaon lo( first degree 111urder. · Alleman, who.wu found aane Tuesday S·eesawe·rs Clailn Record by Judie Spelr1, shot and k.lled Burtner, 11, and wounded Gaulden, 41, la.It Nov. 4 obortly after he bid been reprimanded in. a diJciPl.inlrY aeasl9n at)the :Westmlnster post office. · . He went home f~r bis gun after the reprimand and relumed to abool Burtner In the head and· chest .u t1ie po11Inaster tried to eoctpe and wounded Gaulden In the stomach u tlie 1uperlntendent 1erambled for cover. ' . ' Yalle y Youth~ Tottering On-Toward Six-day Mark Two Fountain Valley ,..tha claim to slgnlf'ICllltly beloii the fS,000 mark they weird.r McQueen~s Wife have brolron the -1c1·1 record for <ll.. bid aet for themlolvei. 'A gu sta~ attendant, CryoeJ had u..-\eeleMolterlng today alls bof>. "We mIPt even 10 over the all< dap rbeumlUc fvever u 1 chfld that -ken-G ed Di bln(•ap allil clown for _.. than 114 bee-ftl ha~ ncelvad plqes for ad bla Iej1. 'ti thoqht I would bave IO : rarit VOrCe ho11t1 In a Maroll of Dlma fund nlslnf ·every bour we p Ovtl' the record. The qult durln& the aecond nigh(," be aid. "I , stunt. f-we can bold out, the mott money had a real bod lee problem aricf .U Tbadn't SA'NTA MONICA (AP) -Actor Steve R1cbarc1 Cryael, IO, and La..,. Down-the March ol Dims wUl 1a1," llfcf been doins It for the llarch o1 rn,. I ~ bu i..n divorced by hll wile big, 17, aaythey-. tllt-1112:11 Crysel. , prohabljl woolcl have •toppocl." of nearly II yeara.lormer cluclr. Nelle a.m. today. 'l'blJ are cont In U In I, The pair becan Ila record attempt Int llownfnl, • •I>i. works at ' a , Adams Mc:Queen. however, IA> aal a new mark ol 144 houra 1bund.q ntllll '"' a '*1llal pork -·· 111permarbet, .... he and bis partner She was granted an tnlerlocutory orals doya llraJcbl by 1:111 p.m. "f""1llflad" wtlb a iolevllloo aet, a ric!Jo wlll hive ccmp~ about 11,00I ~· • dlvOrce Tuaday oo gro111!dl ol Jr. Speaking over a Ie1epbono attached to ,,lid sleeJl!DC facflW... ' • · down cyClea b7 the 'Ume they flnJsll tha reconcilable dlfferenceo. The Superior the -• at Santa A.al'• Santa Anita CryMI said tlit CIOf1 bruU wert four m<lay ttretcl>. , Court decree becoma final In itl days. Park, Cryael •ld tilla motntng, "an even mtnutea and JI aecondo per pel'IOll each . Both of the rteo<d breU«l 'rec:eIVed Mn. Mc:Queen. -lfantod c:uatocly ol 54 Arrested In ·Schools CrackdoWn By ARTBUI\ II. VINSEL Ot .. DMly , •• ,,.,, Smashln1 at heavy dl'llll traffic .,..;,, area high sc~ Ud coUe&es, Costa Mesa Police toama · crlucrooaod tho Orange !lout. mrnJclil Jn a ..-iv. l'O\Jnclup of su111¥_0d naic:Ollcl dUlm. By dawn, 54 ~ WU."~·~CUltodY. ZO Of them juvO!)llQ from fdur ara blP """""'· ' . . ~UI· ' ' ..:._....-·-~ A Jotal of ,~ ~ art charlod In nmall lllUtd lciUowlll ..W .,.. .... ................ ' ... ii a+reill••· ~ aiid marljuao. Clio Ii Illa ..., of a Nawport ludl Po=::~;.,...~~~ Inily i...vy auPl1l1 durilll tilt Coata -Poll.cit Departmen~~ crackdown, M.'COl'dtna to Detect!Ye SIL John Reaan. He uid LSD,· me!CAUne, metbedrine. amphetamine and barbiturate pills,, plua plenUful marljUalll. bu been boU&hl dw- tng the COIUy probe. · BrealtlnC down overall cost of tilt three -month inve1Upt.ion by d r u I purchaei and man boon, Sgt. Rosan aald It was about MOO per 1upeeet. The city's outlay for lhe 54 jalled addo up to well ovs $111,lllO In total. ~Uvely omall amounto ol virtually every contraband drug "'re confiacated u the three teams of four men each hit more than 40 Jocatlona from Costa Meu · to ,L> Habra. No, aerloua lncldento were reported In · the raids, whlcb'lnclucltd a predlwn vlllt IA> a UC Irvine dopnltory, captives were lullen or defiant , non- chalant, some eve.n laughing and a couple of g(ris weeping 11 Ibey streamed Into Co.ta M ... City Jail In handcuffs. · Adults entered via the rear booking Case area, where male suspects jammed all c~U~. while , female arrestees wert1 ahippid on to Orange County Joli. Juvenflea were fed In through Ibo deteCtlve bureau'• side door 1od pro- c:esaed on throogh to Orange County Juvenile Hin. Tbe roundup of known drul-deallnl IUapecll Incfncled 46 charsed In court- IMUed arreat warrant.a, while nlM penons ~t when lawmen arrlvecl were alao booked on varloua cbar&ea. The q• r&ll(ed from -atrl 14 to a :J5.year-oid man nabbed In Newport Beach Tuaclly, u he hlirrfedly peclrod (8eo ROONDIJP, Pip Sl . Weat•e• ' The 111111 might b,..k throulh ~ low cJouda 1bunclay for "' brief st.ay -but will be o·ver:- PoW•red again lq the early evenfn( hours. llilha at the beach IO, rlsln& w, the hl1h 'IG))nlanct, ~ IOl64. INSmE TOD..\ 'l' Th• pnicllcc of Uf1ti1114 ~~ col Ucenr11 hu COftl.• u'ndcr at.: tack l..,.a.ringlu, from !JOU. doctors and ptl&UntJ.,. See •tort, Pao• s. . . · "· M...... ' ...... .. -I (.,.., c.-,, ·---. ·-. ~....._JI -... --. --. :::-J Dr.··=-" 111 daya appeara to be • pntty sure thlnl 4a7 -jun enoqh time to •-er' Un\O olf rro.a -Joi,. to -.e In the their two clllldnn, Tarry L•ll•, u, ""' now." patun'• call ot. nearb7 portable toilet. stunt. cme1 'ltv~"" La'1:olonl~ St. ~Ii -..11. . . . Both upect a 'crood of 1,000 to cbeer "i.wson could pt time without any and Downlnc ot . Glila ~dlln St. • The M~. Who ma! whllt he wu 1-.rtM ,... • ..... IM::seM ... -...., ............. " 1as: I • =--:1 -. --. ---!hem '"1 through the llnaJ ataaea and to -bit "'7 lep -. botherl• me,· TM jlld 124-bour -... held b7 1 student II 11-Acton 8llldlo Ill New back their Interest with pledgea. So far,· ao I bid to mm or ta. -to·~ stem Cooper .al a., TOQIO, M of Yori: CftY,-. marrlod In San ClelD01llo the pair baa collectad ool7 f4IJt -lnllet," uJllolae\f Ceylll. "It ...U1 ftft ~Vallq. ' ' • • In 1*, and .aparaled lnlJ,.. lfll. =-......... , --. ,, • ' • .. ' ' rj I I u,,, ....... New Comm•nder Vice Adm. Noel A. M. Gayler, 57 was nominated Tuesday by Pr~sident· Nixon to become commander • in • chief of the Pacific command, the largest independent military command . --.in the world. He succeeds Adm. John s. McCain Jr., who is re- tiring. Plane Carrying 112 Crashes; No Survivors MANAMA Bahrein (UPI) -A Danish Caravoll• ~ jetliner flying holiday. goer• home from Ceylon crashed Tues- day night near Dube.I in the Persian Gulf, appar•ntly killing all of the '106 pauen• gers ind 9 crew•members. officials said toda'y. A report tha~ one man survived the cra1h in the mountains IODle 40 miles eut o! Dubel airport wu not confirmed. Sterling Atnraya, the Danlab charter airline 'Which owned the plane, and the Tjaerebort Travel Ag en c y In CopOnhagen, which chaOlered it, uid there ~ to be IM) l\ll'VIVorl. "M f.ar u we have learned from our inu in Dubel, there are no survivor•," a tp0kelman for both compantet said. 'nlo -er• Included II Danes, 20 Swedel, II Nonr..ian.. lour ll'innl and two Germani whlle-the" lix crewmembtrs ...,. all Danea, the alrline aa14. ,, Debate Planned " On Top of Pier Initiative Bid A move to place the Top of ·the Pier in- ltlati1e on the April II ballot in Hun- tington Beach will be debated March 28 before an Orange County Superior Court judge. Judge Lester Van Tatenhove will rule on that date on the-lawsuit filed by City Council candidate Richard Belyea . The Huntington Beach m•n claims In his ac-- tlon that the petition represents the wishes of 4,494 city res1dents. The Initiative would 'prevent the city 1 111~ bond1. for ~the co~uction of a 'doiml<>Wft 'plarklnt lot, envisaged by the . <Jty pm wt,ol lbe i>'(etall Top of the Pier <redevelopment plan. , Belyea .clajm• that tha City Council Is unlawfully I111ling'1t~e l>ond1 through a • Jeueback arrana:ement and thus avoiding dlrect voter. 1pproval for the long term debt. · Approval of tht initiative would prevent algning _ a lease with the Huntington Baach Parting Authority unless cily voter• later declde to endorse the action. City councilmen sit as directors of the parklnit authclitv. ... OIAN•I COAST HI DAILY PILOT TM Orange COit! DAILY ll'ILOT, wllh ~lch ft mmbl'*' IM HtWl·P'~, b PllbUtl'lul bY 1tte Or•r>O• Cottt ,Wlltlllnl com"""'Y· Stp.I• '-'-dltlor!t ,,. PVbll•lltd, Mtfld•J' rP1!'9Vlf'I Fl"kl1y, tor C09t1 Mn•, Ntwporl 9etdi, H11ntlnglon 81Kl!/Fountern' V•lltY, Lltunt llMcll, ll'Vfnt/S1ddltlbtck Ind Sin Cltmtntt/ 111'1 J111n C1pb lrtrio. A slllfO!lt regl-1 eclllltrt 15 pt,1bllsllld S1tvnl1YJ Ind Slllld1ys. "" ,...11'\CIO•I "1bi!511!'nsl Pl•"' ,, It .D:I ·west .•• , ltrttt, C.I• M .. , C:•Hlornl1, m:M" RoDert N. Weed ,rnldent llld ll'llbllsl'IW Jeck It. Curley j Vice l'nsldwit tnill Gmtr1I MIMttr T~o11111 keevil (di tor Thom•• A. MurphiM MtMll,_ llflflf Cherle1 H. L..t1 R.lch1rd '· Nell At.111111\1 ~1,...,lnt Ecllton Terrr c.,,a1. Wflt Or•ne• Ceuruy Efllof' · .. """""'" .... OMt. 17171 leeck l.11leverd Ma1hlf AJdftSI) ,,0, ••• 7f01 fl641 Ottltr Offkae. 0 UfllM llMdl: 1n '"-1 A'Nl'IW C..• M-: :lJll WHI l1y SlfMt ........... d'I: >m HNllOf'f IMtYll'd • a.-.:. at Hwtl'I E.t C.1'1l11t ••I . 1'11•'••• fl14, '42o41.it er a n.t A4'1rtW .. 64J.t6n ,-,_ ........ Ctlllfy ~-140-1121 ----·-~ • ..... •lrlf... lt~lf'ltttMl ......, .................... twtl11 _, .... ·== ~ .... ,.,.. . - ... , ...... ....., .... ~. 1111•• ::=..-..~~! • Solid Fttel • • \ • State in Race For Space Jo.h? From Wlre Service• Additionally, the prlncJpal solid-rocket WASHINGTON _ The National Aero-manufacturing plant.s are on or near the naullcs and Spai:e Admini.stration decid-West Coast·-Pratt&: Whitney Division of United Aircraft Corp. at Sunnyval•, ed today that the booster stage of the Space ShutUe will be powered by aolid· I rojet-General rocket division at Sacra-mento, the Thiokol €hemical Corp. at propellant rocket motors rather than by Dr Ingham City, Utah. liquid propellants. NASA said it will issue invitations to in- The agency announced also that the dustry this week to submit proposals for booster stage will be recoverable, and design and development ol the apace that the chosen design will have engines shuttle. of both the booster and the orbiter stage NASA previously decided on the design firing° at launch, rather than 1n'sequence. for the upper stage of the Space GhutUe, California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke 1ays called the orbiter, and awarded a con- lhe declaion by NASA baa put California tract for the engine.!. In the ''lead position" to become the However, a e-0mpany passed over on launch and recovery site for the '5.15 the engine decision challenged NASA's billion program. choice and the government's General Ac-"ThUI, the launch and recovery site is counting Office .i.s investigating. likely ,to be along the coast, at Van· Reinecke also said he learned that der..berg Air Force Base ln Southern callfornla or cape Kennedy. where It ccoe,,.n-'three ·califomia aerospace companies be plucked from the ocean.'' have an opportunity to bid on a $380 Hut tne A!sociated Press said the million to $400 million coqtract 'for rocket declaion probably mearui that the Cape motor production for the shuttle. Kennedy launch complex will be chosen Reinecke, who has led California's ef· over other contenders for space shuttle forts to bring shuttle contracts and site launchings. · . locations to the state, estimated the The NASA announcement said Kennedy rocket development and production con· Space Center, Fla., will be resJ>onslble tracts would mean 7,000 new jobs over a for design of Space Shuttle latmeh and lG-year period. He &aid 700 of the jobs recovery facilities. would be Created next year. To the comment of Rep. Loo Frey Jr., He said the California firms are Aero- (R·1',la.) that the decision locked in Cape jet-General of Sacramento, u n It e d Kennedy as the only logical launch site Technology Center in Sunnyvale and for the shuttle, other observers said Lockheed-Solid Propellant Division in Vandenberg Air Force Bue or some Redlands., other location might just as well qualify. He said the only non-California finn Vanderberg, which generally launche! permitted to bid w!U be Thiokol in ipacecraft into polar orbit as contrasted Brigham City, Utah. Even If the prime to the eq111torial-orblt launches from Florida, baa been the primary testing contracts should go to the Utah company, center for the Minuteman solld·propellant Reinecke said C&llfornia will get 0 • a:ood roc_ket. portion'' of the shuttle jobs. 1 Vancouver Radio Station· Reports Hughes Is There VANCOUVER (AP) -Radio station CKWX aald today billionaire Industrialist Howard Hughes II occupying the top floor of the Bayabore IM Hotel In Vancouver. The top two Doors were sealed off from jhe public. ' ..._ The ·ltatlon aatd Hughe9 arr.ived r Jn Vancouver Tuesday by chartered aircraft with a party of about a dozen personi. He WU reported earlier to hav Down to Lol1Anielet after spendln& ~month in 1 boW hkteaway in Ntcaraiua.: r 1 , An wddentUleO spokeaman fm the Niclrquan Air Force told newsmen that Hqba had flown ln a r,rlvate plane early Tueaday to Loi Ange es, where he baa lived u both 1 celebrity and a recluse. A , spot.man """for lhe · etr.year-old blUlollalre conllrmed Tueaday night that Hnghes left Nlcarqua and arrived at an undtlcloled destination. However, the apokuman, Richard Hannah. refused to conftnn that Hughes was ln Loi Angele. Mitchell or Reinecke Lied, > Tunney Believes By TOM SEPPY WASHINGTON (AP).,. Sen. John Tun· ney (0-Calif.), said today either former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell or California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke lied about con· versatlons they had last year allegedly about the Republican National Con- vention. "One or the other of them has not told the truth," said TuMey, after the morn· ing .... session of the Senate Judiciary Com· mil tee. "Their statemen1' are In direct con- flict," be added. The committee ls.Investigating charges that there was a connection between the JuaUce Department settlement of three antitrust suits against International . Telephone & Telegraph Corp. and the company's purported $400,000 pledge to support the Republican National Conven· tion in San Diego next summer. Mitchell, who will head President Nlx· on's re-election bid, testified Tuesday and today that he didn't recall discussing the convention with Reinecke d u r I n g meetings tie had wibi him last April and September. Mitchell said he can only recall, and his records Indicate, that Reinecke dlscuued only the economic development of the state including the bringing of space shuttle "'Ork to Callfornia. In asking a question, Tunney said Reinecke had told him March 3 that he did discuss the convention with Mitchell in May and an hour later retracted his statement aod said It wa1 in september, after the city had been chosen •• the con- . vention site. Tunney told newsmen Reinecke WAS representing the Clllfornl• Chamber of Commerce .nd met with Mitchell Jn an attempt to 1et the convention. for San Die&o. "If ha had met with Mitchell ln Sep- tember, !here would be .., notd to dbcuA brlnglna tha con•-to San Dlago," aaid Tunney. "'nlo doclllan had alrea4y-Jllldo. "~ir 11a1e.-t1 -Ill - ciled," ba -· '"lllt ay lo lllein-ecn · 1 l'ICOIItcticll 11 lbal lie •• llJlnl lo ~Ille """"8llkln to Calllnla. IA SeiMmbor II w.ld U.. llooa I lllOOI quetllon. and said that his whereabouts may not be di.scloaed for a time. Asked about the repQrl from the Nicaraguan Air Force, Hannah said, "I have no reason to believe be ls in Los Aneeles:" (See Page 4 for detail! of the latest · development in the bizarre case involving Cfifford Irvlng and the purported Hughes autobiography.) , Jle4lr• leaving ·~,,.gua, JVher~ he lived on the seventh floor of the Intercon- tinentll Hotel, Hugties met with P,resi· dent Atiutas!o SOmoza .nd U . S . AmbasSador Turner B. Shelton, the am· bassador said. The ambassador said Hugbes shook hands with •him several times u f.bey • talked at the airport. De!Cl'll>)ng hill handshake as strong, Shelton added: "I noticed no dllficulty in his hearing .. and his voice was strona:. He wu ln good humor and thanked me for helping make arrangements for his visit here. He stood straight, hi!: hair was cut short like he used to wear it ... sort of 1 salt and pep- per appearance." Hughes wore a thin beard, which Shelton described as a Van Dyke, "but no thick sideburns." This w9uld~ be the first reported time Hughes met with persons outside his staff since he went into seclusion more than. a decade ago. HaMah refused comment on the report. 1 Customs officials in Los Angeles aaid they hadn't noticed Hughes enter ihe l,Tnited States. But they added that so m;:;ny people enter here every day that he could easily have been missed. In Las Vegas, where Hughes lived before fl yinJ to the Bahamas and then to Nicaragua, another spokesman for the billionaire, Arelo Sederberg, 1 1 t d : "There'll probably be a lot of speculation that he has returned to Las Vegu. But we don't know where he Ls.'' From Page J LIGGETT ... tion of the courtesy that teachers say we have afforded them." County Superintendent of Schools Robert Peterson must now call an elec· tion to fill Liggett 's seat. School officials said that !uch an election probably will be hed toward the end of June .. Prior to announcing his resignation, which school officials said was a com· plete surprise, 'Liggett recounted prin· clpal points of the teachers' complaint. Looking over a list of people who had agreed to serve as wltrietses if the teachers' charge ever came to trial , Lig· gett commented, "We have no disclaimer from any of these people, so I 1ssuine they are ready to go on with the light against crime ln our schools." After being told that one of the wit- nesses was a teacher recently eranted tenure by the school board, J,lwtt 11id, "ll's nice that she's a teachal, beca19" If she were 'In any otbet profession, 1he- wouldn 't have a job now." Top scboOl ofllclala and other trusteet t1pressed reiret at Ltuett'~ departufe. "This man made'\ causUc comments from time 1(1 time," Uld Cllarlea Palmer, deputy auperlntend<n~ , "but 'lhet\ It came don io the ecttlal YO\I, hO never OttCI voted qainat the beat ltlteral of children or of teacJlera. "Sometimes he would ablk~ hit head • tno,1 but then he'd 'fOte 'lJI,' 11 P~er Id . . ' .. . , DAIL'!' PILOT ll1ff P'lltlt ' • Fre• r.,e 1 ROUNDUP ••• -4 preparing fo move to Guadalajara, Mex· lco . . Raldtrt· awifUy atepped up lhalt Rlans thll waelt when the Orange Coast drug ul'tderworld be11n to sense something was brewing, especially after an ac-- cidental leak Tuesday. Judge,Everett W. Dickey wa s presiding •t the burglary trial of two suspected dealel's in Harbor Judicial District Court. while several of their frlenas and fello" 1uspect.s ~t Jn the courtroom . 'Judge Dickey asked If the alleged burglars knew warrants char1ing sale of narcotics and namin& them had just been bsued. 1_'The courtroom froze ," Sgt. Regan sa id later. One panlcked spectator leaped up and fled, but was quickly c1ught in the nearby downtown area wtlen running de tectives headed him off. Mass arraignments are expected for the alleged drug dealers scooped up in . )-he overnight raid, most of whom are held in jail in lieu of $12,500 bail each. Many of them have prior records and a few were alread y in jail. O:ganiz~rs of the sweep authorized by Police Chief Roger E. Neth after putting together a beefed-up narcotics squad earlier this year hope they have wiped out major suppliers . CMPD'S REGAN BRIEFS HIS MEN PRIOR TO ROUNDUP For Dru1 De1l1r1 and Copt, 1 Lon•, ~Hple11 Night Students -juveniles and adults - rep:esent Orange Coast College, UC Irvine, McNally Continuation. Costa Mesa, and Estancia high schools plus Fountain Valley High School... ' Cities hit as fast as raid teams could work included Huntin&ton Beach, Foun- tain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove, Newport Beach, La Habra and the unin- corporated area of Santa Ana Heights. 'Neth's Narks' Briefed Transportation teams driving a paddy wagon, station wagons and squad cars trailed raiders to various addresses the Before Co.ast Roundup bulk of them in Costa Mesa. ' Investigators encountered a f e w weapons and other traceable items being checked today as possibly stolen pro-perty. Mobilizing for a major roundup of suspected drug dealers hu parallels to preparing !or a military campaign, from Initial strategy to J as t ·minute in· structions. Detective Sgt. John Regan, supervisor · of the tealn called Neth's' Narks, checked his watch in the brightly lighted room and began giving orders. ';['he time was 7:30 p.m., an· ironic twist of the calendar and clock. He had been sch'eduled for weeks as featured speaker In a C.Osta Mesa High School Drug Abuse Clinic, beginning at the same moment three blocks away. The supervising narcotics detective sent a substitute speaker. Regan and his men were zeroing in on the roots of the campus drug problem. Th<,.!!1•• !>t."'~t -.11\{P~ acrQ!lOgy, long' ~aired and le Ira Oil -s.11 arouod a U-shaped table, Dashlights and holsters protruding from poctieU, or poking out of windbreaker jac;)tetS~ '' 'Four bf theiri 'catlnot be' pHotographed. TheY are meh who!e recent ii-hour shifts were spent in furtive, itleet corner meetings, dingy apartments I and brigh t p1rking 'lots where the action-seeking young hang out. somebody called upstairs to the jaU for another carton of handcuffs. "This ls 1 highly 1pecilliied team.'' Sgt. Regan declared, emphi1Wng city administration support in their un· dereover drug-buytitg spree. Thousands of dollars hid to be spent. "I sugest ·y0u wait un~il late to hit UCJ , when those people are asleep. We don't want tr.ouble out there/' he added. "On these juvenUes, the partnts ire going to be 'coming off the wall',11 hei continued . "Explain a little to them." Newsmen sitting in, before going into the field with raid teams listened as at- tentively as the men they would ac- company. "I do not want any mistakes tonight," warned Sgt. Regan. GEM TALK 1 TODAY by HOW WE BUY JEWELS You are, we're·sure, well aware of the fdct !hat fine jewels are created from rough stones which have been mined from deep in the earth. These stones are then placed in the hands of skilled craftsmen who apply years J9.f e'xperience to cut- tll!g> and po!llliin1 processei \llhlch produce the scintillating jewel you see in our store. You'.d be surpristd at how much or our time is applied -to selection not only of the, gems themselves, but also to careful consideration of processors Imm whom we buy. Allhough we, of .cour~ buy jewelry from private an estate 1ources, lhe bulk of our b utiful stock of jewels 11 purchased from processors who have an unques- tlonable reputation for itrlct con-trol•, careful atteniion to' detail, and years of exacting experience. & when you are lookin1Ffor lhe finest In gems, come in and tee u1. You have not only th• expert atteoUon of the ,owneN>perator: you also have lhe addltlonal assur- ance of knowinc !bat !be source of your gem w11 1alected wllh ex- treme personal can. ~--u ' ' ~ I • ''Whoever has to arrest is joing to have-a free-for-an ·on Hia hands." "One dangerous Jndlvldual on this list is because if he's high. there could be trouble." "It's going to be a Iona ni2ht . You're going to get tired, be careful" Stak!Outs and on-foot :surveillance of raid targets are tricky operations, and sometimes well-meanin&" citliens can create problems. Briefing the 21).plus men, Sgt. Regan s.12id to notify headqua rt e.rs com· munlcations If they picked up any 92.;s (suspicious person) radio dispalches originating in their areas. "Don 't just giggle and drive off," he said, drawing a laugh. He outlined the comple1ities of col· lecting S4 persons and any evidence present, reminding all to quickly attend to details. "Don't 1tand around with your finger fn your ear," he added in a final gruff joke. "Let'~ 10• ."]'.." ' ~ Ii -ir ' .. ..~ •); ' ' '* * '* Drug Stakeout Tension Eased Tenaion durittg an eleht-man stakeout on a Costa Mesa residence: where poSsible armed retlstance was rumored broke with muffled. Jauahter during Tuesday night's drug roundup. Costa Mesa detectives in,1·~o unmarked sedans and a black-and-white patrol car staged a rendezvous just out of sight of their target on the city's west side. Suddenly, a boy about 13 on a bicycle rode a.round· a comer into their midst - clutching 1 pllfered red-and-white Stop algn -glanced around in disbelief and pedaled off at high apeed. He wu only small fry, so they Jet him go. A few of the juveniles -generally agreed to be accJdentally present When SU!pect-hoats were captured -have been released to their parents pending further investigation. T.h~ far-flung rai~ was t~e largest suCh lnd1vidual operation in Costa Mesa history, although two netted similar num- bers of suspects in the past. Operation Harvest and Operation Daybreak, however. included partlclpa· Uon of the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement and many other county pollet 1genci•s. Santa Ana Sets Outer Of fices For City Hall 1 Santa a will open thr"' branch cit1 hall! in l income areas within 30 days, according to Robert Portillo, community relatlonJ coordinator for the city. Councilmen approved the move thi9 week. City Manager Carl Thornton told them : "If the three pilot centers work we will be back to ask for more later." He said he woulrf l11ce to see as many a1 seven spatted abou1 lhr> city. Cost of the mini city halls Is estimated at $3S,700 a year each. The purpose i& to open communications between city hall and residents especially In answering C<'mplaints, Thornton said. Activities at the branch city halls will include help in neighborhood planning and rehabilitation projec1', Portillo said. He said addJtional services would in- clude family counseling, vocational training, literacy and citizenship cluses. daycare centers, legal advice and medical and dental screening clinics. As such, he added, they will be both ci. ty halls and human relations centers. For that special someone's birthday Th• trve preclou1ne11 of an Omtga Wttch ts u,. loYI th11 goe1 wlth It. The Omega you recelue today will bec:om• a p1oud l)Clllttslon ••• precious beyond ~()lflplr• tor whit It symbolizes. Within a1ch c111 b1111 the peerless Omega movement. Mad• with metleulous care to J 51Jve .y11rt of f1llhful performance. St• our comp11t1 co11tcllon of Orntga m1n11 and ladles' w1tchtt, $65 to over $1000. A-1•11.w1f\d1"' .. '"'"''' wt111 .. 1,·~·"f'" c1l1111~1. 1•K told..itl!td n•• , •"''""", UI I~ Ill ~!111 llMl ettt ,,,.,,,.., •• ,.,.,.,, 1)0 1 -4 cl!lfllOf\dt. 1~1( wllllt 10Ud ;old ,,., .. 111& J.C. fiump4rie6 Jew~fer6 1823 NEWPORT Bl VO., COST A MESA CONVINllNT TERMS 24 YEAllS IN SAME LOCATION IANICAMlllCAlO -MAITU CHAlQl " rMON! 141·140! 0 l • I l -• Wtdntsday, March 15, 1972 H DAILY Pll.« 01 Grammf . Awards .Show '71 Carole King's Year ... • • ' • • ' ' BJ MARY CAMPBELL • NEW YOHK (AP) -The Grammy Awards. given on Tuesday night to the best recorda released betw<ei Oct. 18, 1970, and Oct. 15, 1971, leave no doubt that 1971 waa Clrole Kin&'• year. Miss King was nominated for four · Grammies and won them all -lncludlng the three whlch are considered the top· of th• pop. Her's was the' "record of thi year;• "It's Too Late," a song she wrote and sang; "AlbWn of the year," "Tapestry," ...,,. Ibo -ud '-"' co-l'f"le, and "IOlll o1 the .,.., ... HYou've Got a Friend," which abe wrote. Siio aJao .... u best -P'P vocalist ror 1"Tape4try." !JllMI Taylor wtn aa bell male ,pop vocall!t, fur 11You~ Got 1 Pr5end." Quincy Jones woo !or best pop m. strumental perfonuncie for i'Sinack· water'Jaclt," an atbmn with the Utle - written by Mm KJng. Carly. Simon, wbo writes pop song> aJlll plays guitar and "boae sister Is an op<ra , singer. was acclahned best new artist of • year. Last year's best\ new artist, the sister ... --. tbe Olrpmllrs, ... WI yur•1 "bllt,pop vocal perlorinance ... by a duo, -0< cborlll" catem with their LP "c.r,entlra. II -t.uc: a.,..• HCO<dlllp .-tvld the -· nilmtnotlont -otcbt. He -• com_.'I award !or beat -. .mtten for a !Dovie or TV special for .. Sbatt," a movie. He won an. ~"I award for best lmlrumintal -·-!or the •ln&l.e '"lberne From Sbft, .. And '"lbeme From Shaft.. wori ·ID award for its encJntoer, Daye Purple. • Kris KriltoUenon was noml.nited five tlmu, altholl8il aonp Ile wrote were also Nixon Betrayal Charged Schmitz Accuses President of Red China 'Surrender' WAS!UNGTON (UPI) -Rep. Jobn G. Sclimlti, a 41·year-old lieutenant col~ time, said later be bad been usured by Schmitz (R-Calif.), has accused Presi· dent Nixon of Hsurrenderlng" to the Chinese Communlsts and of ''selling out" the NaUonaltst reglme of Chiang Kai- Bhek. CiearIY unconvlnc«l by the as- surances of other conservativ~ such as Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-At!J;), Scbmlls said Tuesday that the "last 15 million free Olinese'' on Taiwan bad been sacrificed on "the altar of appeasement." one I In the Marine Corps and memiler of Nlzm and ' other White House officials the Jobn Birch Society,. said President that nothing had been aacrillced. The Nixon's joint communiq11e with Prem~r c:Onle"atlve Arimna Republican also Chou En-Jal was "90 bad" that the said the U.S. commitment to defend President's defenders were claimini be Taiwan remained intact· despite a pledge had inade an advantaa:eoua «aecret deal'.' to withdraw American forces from the at Peking. island at '°""' Indefinite date In tile But Nixon, Schmitz noted, had ..,.. futur.. quivocally declared on bis return from Schmitz made no direct mention of the Peoples Republic of China th¥. DO such statements by Goldwater and other "Al Peking, on February 28, that sacrifiet was offered up to the false god or peace through surrender," Schmitz said in a newsletter to his constituents. secret deal had been made at Pekinj. conservatives who continue to support· "If be Is telling the truth, then we have Ntxoo. He aald, however, that U.S. policy sacri!lced Tllwan for nothing. If lie is· Ml' had ablited flrst from tbe support of a telling the 'truth, then hi! word cannot-t>e-••tree China" to a "two-China policy" "Never since Yalta has the United States of America so cruelly betrayed a friend." trusted." unacceptable to either side and finally to Goldwater, who r~ralned from com· "in effect recognizing only the slave mentlng on the President's trip al the China.'' I Topless Vietory Blonde Kicks Sand in Eyes of DA SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The district attorney's office bas dropped charges of disturbing the peace against a curvaceous blonde who said she Btmbathed topless to establish women's right to bare their upper halves in. public. Dist. Atty. Peter Chug said Tuesday he bad, ''insufficient evidence" to prosecute 22-year~Jd Riki Chalet. She was arrested last fall after she appeared several times at a public beach here minus her swimsuit top. He alao said the penal code aectioo under willch she was charged with "openly outraging public decency" had been found unconstitutional by the courts. "A lot of people are uptight about their bodies," Miss Chaiet said at the time of her arrest. "l never wu modest about mine until people around made me . , • II really feels nice .., a bot day to take """ ablrt off." County Poultry ·Disease .TermetJ, U.S. Emergency From Wire Mvkel . . . . Outbreaks of Newcastle's disease 111t1ong poultry fiockll In Orange County and other Southland areas have been tenned a "national emergency" by federal authorities. Tbe declaration was made Tuesday by Agriculture Secretary Earl S. Butz. It Is a formality required for the release of additional federal funds to combat the dlsease in Orange, Santa Barbara, Ven- tura, San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Riverside and Imperial c.ounties. UnOer Butz' proclamation th e Agriculture Department and California authorities will eradicate the virus by : -Destroying Ill Infected and exposed poultry Docks and paying indemntli., to owners. -Launching a lllllndalOfl' •-illltjon program In tbe elght.<>ounty quarantltled area. The federal pllt>fllinent wlII pro- vide free vacclne1. NewcasUe's disease Is not COlllldered dangerous to huinans, bill II It peo unchecked, it could came loSRS reacbing $500 million, ac<Ordlng to a federal spokesman. State 'agrlcultural· o!lkiall beve stressed that all poultry put on alle for comumptlon bad palled Inspection and i!. -free .• Monday, officials announced expall!ion of the quarantine irea from parta of San Bernardino and Bivenlde -.tlea to all - , of Soutliem cantornia. The quarantiJle controls the movement of uninapected birds and other !!ems that mlgbt spread the Asiatic virus. Newcaslle's disease, a foreign strain of an ailment long present In U.S. poultry, entered the country in imported ~ birds and bas alnce spread to chickens and turkeys. The worst outbreak eru~ i n California late last year. About 313,000 blr:ds were destroyed at an indemnity -of $500,000. Officials estimate the · total number of infected or exposed flocks at 1.5 million chickens and turkeys, 1 Dead, 17 Hurt ; As 'C ar Hits Bus FRESNO (UPI) -A car driven by • '70-year..0'1 nuuo man ran through • stop '111gn \nd collided With a bus carry!Jig 11 elementar'Y 9Cb9ol' .en. 1be car's driver, !Dos Mares, was tilled Tueaday anc!tll lliudenls and tile i!Cbool bus driver were iaju.rod, one clrlld aeriOllSiy. The California llisilway Patrol said most of the injuries were minor and eight of the chitdren were taken to a hospital for treatment· ' l..aguna Gtlardl Kep!i:t 1. , ' 3 Die, 6 Hurt As Fire Guts Old LA Hotel 106 ANGELES (AP) -Thr.,. per""" were killed and six iAjured todly when fino brokf out In an old, a!I·story botel In downtown Loa Angeles, fire department officials said. Two firemen alJo were in- jured, They said one more person was unac- counted for In the flames that erupted about 1 a.m. in the top floor of the Hotel Barcl11y. ' The blaze wu reported contali1ed :JO minutes' later. Ftfteea guests.at the ilotel, one a blind man, were brought to safety by firemen on Lodders. -,the top three Doors of the bbtel. About 25 others oii the lower floora were led throup Wet smqk< to aafety by reacue ,teams. A spokesman for the llOtel aaid 132 persona were living In the bolldlng, Most guests are elderly. The ilolel Is one of the city's oldest, dating back to the early lllOOO. !Is cllentele prlmarlly are long-~ midenls, • botel JpoWmaD said. Twenty-seven firt companiea and 100 firemen fought tlie blau, described as a ••major emerleocy type." ,The cause of tht blue was not Jm.. liledlately determined, although one guest aald he thought Ile beard a "loud noise" Two of t!lOae ruabed to the County-USC Medical Center wert reported in serious condition with burns. One, a man, wu uni.dentUled. The otber person was iden- tified as· John Bines, 65. Hospital spokesmen said the other two guests, Earl Edlund, IO, and John Miles, 17, were being trei:i.ted. for smoke in- halation and were ln fair condition. ' Two firemen suffered minor Injuries wblle battling the blaze, but were treated atthe~ , Depilty · F'fre Chie! 'K.metb Long said the fire started on the 1Wh floor of the old ilotel and spread from then to'the a~ Uc and then the roof. ' The Barclay is located at 4ljl and Main Streeta, near ~d Row aectlon of downtown Los es. A guest on Up Door, Henry Crowder, 41, said he1 WIS awakened by smote curlloi under the door: of his room. "I opened tht door Ind there WU a sheet Of: flame," said Crowder, who was -jured. His faoe and shirt were covered with soal. -· -'•· Mystery .Dive Death Clear ,. Laguna Beach lifeguards Tuesday at· • tempted to clear controversy allTOUnding the death Sunday of a San Clemente physician beginning a scuba diving aeaslon oll Cleo Sine! Beach. being pulled from waist deep water off the ead of Cleo Streel The county .cor- oner'1 office hu completed an autopsy, but the result.I of toxicological tests won't be known for at least a week. cause of death Is still llated u probable drowning, a coroqer'I Jpoltesman aald. problems prior to going under water and Henger pulled 1*11 to ailore, Attempts to revive the UJ'ICODICloUI physician falltd and be waa .....,.._ dead on arrlvll at South Cout Commm1lty llolpilal. Lifeguard Chief Skip Conner said Initial statementa that the man waa a beginning diver were lncomcl and aald Dr. Faul f . W. Smith, SO, bad bad preVlous 11· , perlenoe acuba dlvloi. Coaoer slid he would classify the man as an "i& ; tennediate." ·. ; The lifeguard's statements came when ; questioned about allegations by dlvlni 'In- •( llFronructer Carl Henger: .. °' .~ W. Ocean t, Newport Bea~, w~t the dlVlng : conditlona wer;t . ~ u leVere u : previously reJJ9'1ed. Denger uld Dr. ~ Smith was part of an advanced dlvinff • <la11 and Iba! the surf c<llldltiona at Cleo ( Streel were not aa aevere 11 at other city ~ hucbe•. Dr. SmHh died Stmda7 momln( after " "'!'her• ii really no way to prove 1 drowning olber than, to prove !bare W\I no other caue. of death," the ipotesman noted. He aald an wtopay dlacloaed that Dr. Smith did not have a heart attack and noted that water was loond In the victim'• Jungs, evkienct lndtcativt of a ~nlng. Blood chloride teal• now being concloctcd woold eliminate other J>O•lble causes of death, be added. "I feel he (lnatructor Henger) wu dolnt 'the · best· job be could as an i... atructor.'' Conner Aki todaiy. ''It Mm\I be toot the proper action aa an lnalruclor In that litualloa.. Dr. Smith opparent11 began hlvinc . In respinae to 8'iigr.r'a statements ~bout the dlvlni coodltlon, Conner aald the surf -not u aev<irw 11 Cleo Street u at other 1tea1. "J feel the JW'f WU running fOID' to five feet !bat dtJ," OooM' aald. "At Cleo Street, !ht surf WU not quite !bet hlch. But accorclinff to eye witness accounll, thtre w11 IUl'f and there 'WU a aet com~ Ing In wben Ille victim developed pro- blems." Cooner 1lso said that Hen1or, In cqn. ducting the ciasa a~ 11 a.m., wu In viola- tion of a city ~ restrk:tlni divine cla1tt1 to the boon prior to 10 a.m. However, the lifeguard said be had not ~bt cbaraea qllnat Hqer !or Ille -lloa. nomlnat.d u lllllC by others. Kristo!· fenon bacl'thrte. of Ille five nominations for ••best country IOft8" and ooe or bis thre<, "Help Me Mlle II 'lbrolJgb the Night," woo. Samml Smfth won best female country, vocal performance with that Kristof. fenon oong, Jerry Reed won the be:lt male couqtry well Granvny !or "Wh<n You'rt Hot, You're lJot," wblcll )le sang on television dw-lng the hour and a· half in which ·JI ol the ff awards were presented. Tbt 'rest were preseated at dlnners held Wu In the evenll)g by the National Academy of Recording Arts a n d l ......... SClencea, tn New York, At 1anl1, NashvWe, Chicago and Los Angclea. · 'Ibe onty rormer Beatie to win 'a Gram- my was Paul ~1cCartney who won with his wlfe Linda for best arrangement tiic- companying vocil.ists, ·for their ·"Uncle Albert/Admira l Halsey." However, the trustees of the NaUonal Association of Recording Arts and Sciences gave a special Grammy to the Beatles, two years after the row- members went their separate ways. The governors also gave a special Grammy to composer Leonard Bernstein. Special awards also were announced for Louis Armstrong, who died last July, Hitting the BfH)ks Sally Parker, a junior at UC -Irvine, ls up to her ears in studies th is week u~she, along with many other students, cram for final exams. Finals began Monday and run through Saturday at UC!, closing out the _win ter quarter. ' Mass Transit System Eyed In Move by, County Board -. ' Plans for :a mass tramilt system were The new transit ta1 11llocatiocl are pushed closer to reality Tuesday when rect.tved through the Southern California tile Orange County Board of Supervisori! Associ>Uon of Governmenll (SCAG). ratified a new state sales tax agreement They may only go to auch 011aniiatlons mol:lng the countf eligible for 19 million as the Orange Cotmty Transtt District in study and development funds . and 'city transit systems such as those By formallf ,tndorsing the new state belni operated In Laeuna Beach and San. Jaw, supervisors ensured that Orange ta Ana. County will receive ~'14 ce s from each RaUfic.ation by the Board o f $1 raised through state es taxes. The .supervisors was required to make certain increase represents ,-cent more than that the addiUonal allocaUon to the couir under the old agreement. ties was used exclusively for mass In addition, the new pact will provide transit. Orange County and Its 28 ctttea and ad· If the supervisors bad not agreed to the ditlonal $2.5 million from a new state sales tax on ga&0llne. This money will be new plan, Jt would have meant that set aside for greenbelt and recreation Orange Olunty would have continued area use by f.he"SUpervlson, provided the with the old agreement of.a one-cent tax _c_it_ie_s_atao_r_:a_tH..:y_th...:e:....:::agr~ee=m:.:en:::t:... ___ .:.ldc=::k.::back=.::'°':.Ucb state aales tax dollilr. lhd Mahalla Jackaon, w!IO •dleol ta Janu~. Other-awards lnclllded : -Cooway Twitty and Lofflta Lynn, ••After the Fire js Gone,'• best·couatry weal performance by a dllO or llOOP· -Otet AtklM, "Snowbird," best COUft- tey Instrumental. -Aretha Frank.Un, ''Bridge OVer Trouliled Water," best rhy\lun and blu.s female performance. She won In thf: category for lhe fifth straight yur. -Lou Rawls, "A Natural Min," best rhythm and blues male performance . -Ike and Tina Turner. husband and wife, "Proud ~lary," best rhythm and blues vocal by a duo or group. -Songwriter Bill Withers, "Atn't No SUnshine," best rhythm and blues song. -Duke Ellington, "New O r 1 e a n s Suite," best jau performance by a big band. -"The BIU Evans Albwn," best jazz performant'f' by a soloist, in this case a pianist. ..., • -''The Bill Evans Album" also won in the category of jau. performance by a group for the Bill Evans Trio. -Best recording for children: "Bi?I Cosby Talks to Kids about rrugs." -Best comedy : "This is a Recording" by Uly Tomlin. -Best score for an original cast album : Composer Stephen Schwartz, for off.Broadway's "Godspelt" -Best gospel: "Let Me Live," Charley Pride. -Best soul 'gos pel: 0 Put Your Hand in the Hand of the Man From GaWee," Shirley Caesar. -Best ethnic or traditional recording, lncluding blues : 0 Thty Call Me Muddy: Waters" by blues sinetr Muddy Waters. ' Hopeful Says He Was 'lfept From Filing A would.be conaresalonal candidate who claims he waa muscled out of the Registrar of Voters' office by deputy sherifls last Friday despite the fact that he got to the door one minute before the filing deadline will aat 11 Orange County Superior Court jlldge March 21 to ap- prove ills rejected flllng. Fullerton builder Wllllam Bra1hem, 1 candidate for the 14th District ... 1 ileld by Rep . Richard T. Hanna (!).Anaheim), has IUbmltted affidavits alt!ned by six allegl'! witn~1,.1 to the in<ldollt lo Jac1&t 1.eater Van Tatetilioft. Brashears ctalms ID bis lrnull tbal· deputlto flaJted him at Ille door el tho Santa Ana office llthou&b tbt clock claar- ly said 4:59 P·'!'· lie apparent!Jr eJlidad the bl!lcers, ei10rid the bulldlnf and joined the long line al the IUlq window , But tbe persistent deputlea then ad- vised the wafting Brubeara that they would like him to lea•• the premlae1. Tho reluctant Republican complied with their request. Reglstrer of Voters David Httcbc:ocli said he will tell the court that Brashears waa three minutea late. Br11beart claims in his action that Hltchcod:'s aid.et clc.ed the doora before 5 p.m. "In any event," Br11bean sald, '1can- dldatea were filing their papers aa late as 6:30 p.m. I know becauae I watched them from outalde the olfice right up to that time." qDwn :t-·CountrP · PATIO SHOPS A • • GO.LD MEDAL Folding -.-IRECTOR'S _)_.~ • SWEETHO~RT CHAIR12ss TWIN HEADBOARD ... 111. 19" -29" .... 34" Nymph Chair •••• $13" WAITI IAt •m ll•t· ,_,, ••••..••..•• SALi 1.n HA Mf'IU It ... 2.91 ••.• , • , ••• ,,,,,, .• SALi 1.11 MANelMe W llT'S CHAllS lwltfi ''"'"' ll11: )9.9S , •••• , , •••• , •••••.• , •. SAU 27.11 ITA .... "' •HT STAND JO" Hi9h •• ,, , • 1 t.11 Ow te dOtl ,.,_,, ....,.. "*"" lll111tr11.t ,,..., lie ""1ttf•rlfv wt tf •lodr. . . . 111e *' For .u s-~ Ol'EN DAILY 9:30°6 FRIDAY 'TIL 9 • SUNDAY, 10·5 CHAIR RetJ. $18.00 $1495 • c .... e front tol4e -"etv et e-ci• eelera e Q ... lt11 IJaNlll'••• f,...es fn ".,.,..,, •r W.Ck f'-&s• I I • I' I .. ' • • • • • : . . .. ' DAil y 1111."0T Wodntsdly, ..... U. 1972 I( Irvine Wars Not Over Yet OFF AND SUING DEPT. -The Clly of Sanla Ana apperenUy II soloi to con- tinue lts con~est in the courts igalnat the City of Irvine In en effnrl to prove that Irvine Is really Brigadoon aod will eoon disappear In the morning mill& amid a Oulter of legal papers. Santa Ana, you will recall, wants Irvine dlllolved because Irvine'• cityhood bourr darlee Include a whole lot of lu·heavy Irr dUllrlal land thet San~ Ana had wllllled for a long time; · ·~ · · ' · At preaent count the, llCOl't! In thje ltjll war ltandl Irvine, I, Sihta Ana', 01 Thal Is to eay, 8anla Ana bu liken • Irvine lo court eight tl!pee. and CO"'!' up • drJ, kaput aod short of victory each and every time. TRIS DOESN'T dlacoura1e Sula Ana, ho......-, ·-that cllJ 11 -to lootllC 1n such matJen. But don't get tiie ncitli>n that lhl 10ltng or wtimlng 11 tolally determined by of· ficials of the two munlcfpellties. "' Every time the Santa Ana clty 'dads gather in their backroom to p1ot another legal maneuver, lt'1 COll!ng eomebody money. Those somebodies are the taxpayers. Lord only (?>ow• how mlich it's cost the taapayero of l!w>ta Ana. For Irvine, in defe)JdlJ!g Itself, the cost curve. becomee a llltle easier lo plot. AS THE mVJNE City Council met Into the 'wee llllall hours lhl& morning, the ci- ty folks approved legal upendltures eo far of 124,0K. OI that figur<, $41,137 or 15 percent, had been 1pent defendini Iba ci- ty egalnll Santa Ana's legal attaCb. Thia doesn 't even count the ,nwnber of thousands 1pent in volunteer cub by cltlzens who were defending Irvine In the coum before it became a city. SIX GRAND may IOlllld like peanuta ln the lelal dodge. But -,.., llpre tho lnf•nl City of ~ bid lo: ·borrow •100,000 just lo gd Iba lllUlllcipaUty· going, it looms as a more 1lplftclnt cbWlk of cash. Irvine's only rtal revenue ao far bu come in $18,000 from cig.rette tax '• ' ea. I So, who knows? Sanla Ana may lCJ.111 every legal battle aod turn ool to be the winner In t!>e end efter all. ' Maybe they wW have bled Irvine tax· payers dry at Iba bench of jUIUce. * FOOTNOTD: N u m er o u s lnquirjes have come to the paper since the slory·of Ivy Buxton was published. You may recall be I& the St. Louis collllrucllon worker who was held in jail on a murder charge for 17 months before a jury, in one hour's deliberation. found him in- nocent of the crime. · Meanwhile, Buxton loal everything: his apartment was looted, his car repossess. ed, his job lost and even b1s eyegluses etolen. Several coastal people have of- fered donations to aid Buxton. We now can report that such help may be sent to: Ivy Buxton, C/O Zack Conklin tll North 7oth Str<et, East St. Louis, Ill., m03 Conklin is the man who 1lired an at· torney who f111aUy freed Ivy Buxton. Jemeo I'. Wieck, UPI bureau chi~! in St. Louis, reporta lhlt Iba Buxton case bu created considerable 1Ur all across the country. And St. Louis authwities are now r<Vt..ing lbaJr rules rtilaUve lo granting of ball. Bike P ath Head Quits PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Sam Oakland, chairman of the PorUend Bycy· cle Path Task Force, resigned Tuesday because be said be wanted to spend more time working to get highway funds for mass tran!it use. w ·allace Throw,s In a Monkey ~rench .·MIAMI, Jl'la. (AP) -Tba lllrnocratlc presldenUal campalcn baa -ocrambl- ed by ' Florida primary ID ·wblch Oov. George C. Wallace ....., b)' a llDdlllde, Sen. Hubert H. HUJJtphrey claimed vie·. lory In second plecle and Ilea. Edmund s. Mullle eulfored a drubblnc. Humphrey uld today the! Wallace I& now "a formidable ._...,i . . . no doubt about that" but pndlcted Iba governor would never win t h e Democratic prealdentlal nomtnation. "111 ret It," Humphrey uld In u In- terview on NBC'• "Today" lhow· . : . ' Wallace, who rode lo vlc1orl' oo his op-W. denied today1 thet bla J1orldl J)OlltJon lo IChool bulfn,.and bla pleclf.. -Wta a "prolell". ecalJ>ll boslni lo bear doWll on crime aod tq Iba . and uld Iba reeulll ahowed the! "the wealthy allo appeared on the abow and people want me lo ba Iba nopilnee ol.lhe uld ht fell the amall oloowlng of· bla llemoCnUc party."• ' _ ·• ne-raUc rival& In the primary was "a ·Alled about MUJkla'a char(ea thet he blow" tct.all ot them. WU I "demagogue 'o/ tbe w0nt klad/' School busllll wu the lo~ l&aue of Iba Wallace aaid :-"I'm "'"1 the MDllot cam(lll8n. Tba Flilrlcllol\>olen·ln ·a'llraw feall thet way •.. be 11 aaylnfl -ballot which lw no · legal effect, . very bad thinp !bout the lll'Ut 111111\ber overirhibnlngly reglltered ppp0slUon lo of people ·who 9"ppiri me not. only ill courl-ordored acbool busing lo achieve In-Florlday but throughout li)e eauntry." te:gratlon. Tbty also voted rtronaJy in Wallace '• victory of a 'percent of the oupport of quallty education for all. Democratic vote pve him 11 · of· the • lhile'• 11 deloilalla lo the puty•a oalloaal oonvantlpn; llilmpbny won al& ·•illi bla ~~ M. ~-c1. wuldnit.n liallhed third with LI pem!ll, alltOll cl ~ with bla • per<elll, and vo...i to win the April t W~ prjmary. New York lla)'<ll' Jolin V. Ltndaay won 7 .percent -barely eclflnfl Sen. Georaa s. McGqvem for llftb place after a beaVY investm11Jt bere in Ume and money. McGovern. look, f percent of the Democratic vo&ea. • In the lltpubllcan primary, Preaident • ·* * * Equal Schools OK'd * Ul'I T1..,.,.tt FLORIDA WINNER WALLAC! GETS VICTORY KISS FROM WIFE .Tf~ of Antlbu1l111 Vo,. s-ps Alabom1 Gov.,nor lo Win · fap~a Ou~ts U.S. A~~pts AfterColumn.hy Anderson '\ ' ... L I I . ;;..» , , AN,...,; CITY .(UPI) -P,uama•1 loreJgn riilnlal#r .'J'Uetday nJlhl eepejled two U.S. narcotics agents 11lor 'in- terverition in Panamanian internal. af. lairs." ' · -The order stemmed from a syndicated column written by Jack Andenon ac- CtlSing high Panama.nlan officiall L m. eluding Foreign Mlnl!ter Juan Ahtonio Tack -of being implicated in heroin emuggling. Anderson's column alao llJl.. pucatid Moises Torrijos, brother of Panamanian 1tnmgman Gtn. Omar Tor· rijos. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial pare of the DAILY PILOT.) . Narcotics agents Rub!on Moru!q!J__and Wllbut Piase, both assig!ied lo the U.S. Embaey, were given 2f hour~ to leave Panama in a brief announcement read ·over Panamanian te1evislon. r Florida Vote Support,s W alUice Busing St.ance MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Florida voters heeded Alabama Gov. Georre c. Wallact~s call to tell America loud and clear that they oppose -busing school' children to achleve racial balance in clwroo1n1. By a S-1 margin, the voters in a straw vote referendum Tuesdly endorsed a pro- poaed conalitoUonal amendment to end forced busJni. ·Wallace ran an antibll.!lng campaign in Florida's Democratic pres t dent I a 1 primary and thcuJandl of the voten en- dorsed him, too. He won the primary with U percent cl the vote. , In another part of the nonbinding straw vote which involved Republicans. and Democrats, Floridians approved by a f.l margin a proposal which endor~ equaJ education for all children. And they voted by the same margin for allowing prayer back into the public schools. With 119 percent of ~ vote lallied, 1,103,856 voted for ·a busing amendment while 386,'lM voted aeainst it, 7f to 26 percent. The ~ edw:ation question, which also asked voters U they opposed a return to a dual school system, pas_,ed by a vote of l,oe5;393 lo 289,839, or 71 lo 21 percent. '!be call for prayer in public schools was approved by 1,133,079 voben with 291,MI rejeclloi it, al&o 71 to 21 percent. · Flllida's Democratic governor, Reu· bin Askew, campaigned hard to turn the tide on the busing question and was dllappoillted. lhlt hll constltuenll failed lo heed bll plea. Bui he said: "I am very happy and pleased thet 11 a majority of Floridians rerl&tered op- poslUon lo busing, they al&o fltijalered commitment to seek other alternaUves aod not go baclt lo a dui1 school syalem." After the Florida Legisja\ur"-Pl!sed a bill placill( the bulillJ ali'aw vote 0. the primary ballot, Altew refuaed lo sign the measure until the equal education ques- tion wa.s added iD an effort to eue some of tbe bulloi vote's sting. 'Ille prarer question also was added but never was much of pn issue. The busing and equal education ques-- tions which appeared on the straw vote ballot -neither of which has any ieJal standing -were: Wiele• • 'Glleil wbo I met ttday?' -"Do you favor providing an equal op- portunity for quality educeUon for ,all childreJi reg.,utw of race, creed, color or place of residence and oppase a return lo a dual syalern of publlc achool&!" Black leaders across the state assailed the legislature for putting bus!Qe on the . ballot and aaid the neitfhborhood schools issue was a smokescreen for an attempt lo (<Stlffegate schools which courl orders had illtegrated· 1 The black leaders threatened mal!ive /Negro O~li9n at the next election for any IeaWator who voted for the an- tibusing, referendum. But the threat carried little weight in view of tre~us white opposition to busill(. In Miaml, the ilate's moat liberal area, a ~ection straw vote conducted by whit.e parents produced' some ,,,000 votes against bu!lag and 200 for it. State Sens. Richard Deeb (!\.St. Petersburs), and Cbarlee Weber (R·F'ort Lauderdale), ._, of the bulins straw vote, Wd they believed it would open the eyes of Congress to the need for national acUon lo bait bullng. Palestine State Nlaon 1Wept lo vlclory with fl percent ol . the vote and e~y won all tO delegates lo the GOP National convention· The DemocraUc primary le{t the party'1 lop cootendera wltli these p,... pecta: . -Muskie: The preprlmary frontrunner. he IUffered a second aucceaslve blow after Jut week's .lacklul\er victory in New Hampahlre. The primaries ill llllnols next Tueadey and later in Wlsoonsill now loom u crucial. -Hwnphrey: Fighting to overcome a ''l0ter" image, the former vice president got the booot be eought when he bypwed New Hampshire to concentrate here'. He appears to be Muskie 's main rival 'in Wisconsin. --Wallace: The Alabama governor got the heavy vote he aought and will now enter many other primaries, both in the South and in Nortllern llatel such as Wisconsin, Iniliana aod Maryland. Wallace, winning the victory he said would establish htm as a national con- tender for the Democratic prsidentlal captirred ~J of 12 congressional dis- tricts. · "1 believe I have as good a cb4n.~ as anyone to win the party nomination," he said at hls Orlando headquarters. Humphrey won his six delegates in a district lncludlng heavily Jewish Mlaml Beach, :wbere l'half the population is over 15. ''Among the ProttreMive Democrats,'' the 1968 nominee said, "lam the leader.'' AAalling Wallace, Muak!e said, uM Jong as hia kind of polltlcS, his kind of values, threaten the noblllty of our coun- try, I will fight them with everything I've got." .The top six Democrats who ran, ln Florida, lncludlng Wallace, are entered in the Wisconsin primary. McGovern is challenging Muskie for many Illinois de.legates, while former Sen. Eugene J. MCCarthy of Minnesota opposes the Maine senator in that state's presidential preference vote. More than 1.1 million Floridians, three· foortba of them DemoCreta, voted In the state's ftnt prtsidential preference primary. Previous contesls have been for delegates only. ' Radiotelescope To B.e Erected WASHINGT01' (AP) -A 3,00!).acra desert site in New Mexico bu been, se.. Jected u the P"Oposed location for Iha world'• largest and moot bilarr .. looklng radioteiescope, the National Scierice Foundation annou1eed today. Deslgned primarily lo pick .up natural radio signals from the Umlls of the uJli. vene, the propooed flf.mlllioo instru- ment is alto rated by scientists as offer.. ina:. the best chance yet of pickini up in- telligent signals from any civllizlUoa beyond ~ aol8}' system. , Called a ''very._Iarge may,'' the giant radlotelesccpe would consial of %1 dlsh- shaped antennas, deployed ill the ftrQI cl a huge "Y" over an area having .a d~ ameter ol 23 miles. Each arm of tbe ,"¥" would be 13 miles long. Each Individual antenna would )lf 82 fl!et in diameter, weigh 200. tons, al!d would be movable on rai1road tracks d~ ployed along the Jient arms. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllvery of the Doi~ Piiot ISVU#~ MC1nO•V·Frld1y: Ir YO\I C10 !IOI tit,.., yo1o1r ,.pr Oy .1:a ,_m., call •nd ~ capr wlll DI brO\llll'lt to 'lllV· CtllJ .,.. f1111M unt!f ·1:• p.11'1, A U.S. embassy spokesman said Momon and Plue were classified as "at· tacbes" but were in Panama on assign· m'1lt from the U.S. Bureau or Narcotics and Rangerous Drugs. He said both men would probably leave the country today. U.S. Ambusador Robert M. Sayre was ·called to Iba foreijpl ministry Tuesday lo recdve the eapullion order. 'Ibe 'foreign minister called Anderaon1s column a smear campaign to break "the -"Do you favor an amendment to the U.S. ConalituUon which would prohibit forced busing and JUarlUltee the .right of each student to attend the appropriate school nearest b1' home?" Publishing Firm Fires Handle r . Of Hu g hes Book Hussein Drops Shocker "On Revampin.g of Jordan ' S.turdey Ind S\ll"dly: It 'f'l" • llOI r-.111'1 your copy by ' •.m: 5'""11•'1· or l •.m. Sunde'(, clll end 1 <."OPY Will Pie brolllllll ti rou. C•ll• •r• llk"1 unljl If 1.m. T tleplltnts ' . . ,,,., 0111111• CG;iniy Ara. · ........ ~ • NOl'lftwhl Hunt•1en htdl r •nd Wflt~llllllr . ..,,, ... ,.,. ...... ,..,.,. Sin Cltmlftll, OlplatAM iucfl. · capacity for atrug&le of the Panamnlall people." He linked Anderson's charaes against himself to his position on negotiations fdr a new treaty concerning the Panama ~ and jurladicUoo end defense of the Cina! Zone. . Tack said, 'iFirat we m a<:i:U3ed of being Communlala, but it oeeina that !hie ·accusation had no results. ·No, they are looking for dirtier weap0ns lo try lo 'break the capectty for 1trugle of lhe Panamanian people." AMMAN, Jordan (UPI) King HllSSttn annoonced plans today to m;:w YORK (UPI) -Robert s. reorganiu bla Hashemlle Kingdom of Stewart, who wu in charge of the bandJ. Jordan into a federal state known as the illg .of the bogus "aulohlography" of Uniled Arab Kingdom. II& moat , tm· Howard Hughes, baa been clilmlued as porlaol point wai ealahilshlng a lltmi· edilo · chief of McG HUI' aulonomoos State of Palestine on the r m raw-s geoeraJ tsraell-occupled West Bank. book division becauee he allegedly ao-· cepted a loan of 'I 'IOO from two of bis PoUUcal '°""* In Belrul llld bis plan authors the oompan'y aaid todaf \depended on the Iaraells and could pave The iact lhlt bla dlsmfaal Tuesday ~.J."La~' ..:.=:.;-:::. :1 came JUI! one day after the hoot's word of the plan 00 Tu' y biH .,._ author, Clillord Irving, his wile, Edith, presaed leara 'that Jorden would act and researcher Richard &lakind pleaded separately on eome ·peace •lgreemant at guilty to larceny and conspiracy charges the expenees of the Arba cause and the in connection with the book, was "1,very Palestmian guerrillas. unfortunate coincidence," aaid ·Ted 'rhe HiIISeln ,plan hit ,lbO Ar h woricl ' Weber, a spokesmen for the company. lllc:e a licimbSbell.~ilbougb It had' been .s. Court sources said, meanwhile, that pecUng it. Amman newspaper1 printed Irving and his wlfe may have a chance of special afternoon editions whiCh aold out Two New 1Storms Appear keeping themselv~ out of jall 11 they can Immediately. Traffic aJowed when Am- pay about $1 million to McGraw-Hill. 'Ille man radlo broadcast Iba ~~ speecll company gave lrving f/65,000, of which aod gi'oope gathered around tra- $100,000 wu Intended for him and the re-radiol In coHee sbope and refulee campe. States in Middle Wes t, .East Bear Brunt ' C•llfM'iala mainder he WU aup_.i lo -Cll lo AJtlloogh other Arab naUom. ~ snglltlv w."'*' ,.,,._.,. ....,. Hap..· · U'llriJ1 u. anpielt react.km eame from =:'*' _::: ':,~~K~ However, 1 federal. grand jury in--the p.iuuruan guerrUlu. The Mln:ist i ;;:: ·::"~::!!. ':::',:: - -dtctmenl charsed Irving kept l'I00,000 Popular Democratic Front for the eo.1~~ "" • ..., clWd and gave Suskind '86,000. Sor f~, the Liberation of Palestine called J t '""" IM'I,. ,,. "*"""" Wt i.i:r book has cost the com~-tilhveen "treachery." Dr. George Habash, leader :;"',. •n .nt1ci,.red MM!" 1r1 "" '900,000 and '9501000 aild "tbit! meter is of the estrem1Jt Popular Front for the .-.,. ., '.:..::t:': ---•WI running," Weber said. !Jberatlon of Paleetlne, calleCI Hlllllln a :"ni 'r:-r!:1111 o1 11 ~:;::;;..~ In another develollnent, lfllgba, Ip. greater enemy than llntl. ' .,,,, ........ TO FORM NEW STAT E Jordan'• Huueln Amont ..... 111g11 lltnplt"1tur1t ,._. parenUy for the first time tn 11 y11n, Cllro Radio called H a con.plracy to fa:',, 'a!w. ~-= : :; gave outakttn a look at him when ht met 1pttt the Arabi. Cairo mt Beirut Iarael, wtdch captured Arab Jeruaalem ._.. 7>n, -W11.., -with Nlcarll\l&li Pnlldanl Aoalllllo ......,.pera aaid llU•ln had made a In lM 1117 War, baa llld Iba city will r .. :::.::" .::::" .::. ~1."".: Son-.. and U.S. Ambe11.U Teamer B. 11dell" with lnel ... tbtrl ... ~ ... tDPrlmelln' the ~-dGoldallraet .... A . id ·~ -....,, .... -· ., ... .,. Sbellon In Muapa, the 1111 the Contra! medlala ,...nmen1 -lnm Syria, -~ir 11 •~ -~ "" --..,. American nation. ' ~ er -Arabia. • Jordanian plan creates obltacles on tho C....a Hit C1e111oa11on -1101 lnlnedlataI, Tbo Kini, In ... -lo .. ~ rood lo -but that llrae1 II wlllinl .,:::."•"""'= ~ .. i::= !mown, thoulb -...C.tad 111 llllY cl-al the llMman 'Pai-, ..ia lo -~at Ill,)' lime. • '" ~.• .";;-.:::. ~ --· bava -lo tho l1tlllod lllates. ' J.etllllalloa lo carry oul lbt tint lllol of A opobanan for the IJraell Foreign • •••1rc1 ~ow todly ·~ """""""'· HIP t.dliy, _.. • the NCll'Plllation would bt tenl to Mlnlltry res-ted Its atatement of m':'J......... ... .... .~ c':,,,";; .......... -... .. Actor's Home B1ll118 ~ for ,,,,_ ... -1111! In Wed"llllay that there .... no agreement ~., . .., .• ~ iow •o"' ,.._. "'*''..,,.. r..,.,,.,. the Jq nm hit pllnl will dl)llDd on "ia:11DJ bm whlteoever'' between hra.el ~------'• .. M '1 ---I& laraefl aPll'Ov&I. and JGrdao Cll the planned federation, ~ S•ll, "!.::Ci.?"W. STUDIO CITY (UPI) -A Uvinl room Ono ·of· the hlldlea lo tho -plan Anwar llallb, who -the Jordanian ,..":, O:::.,.-.::r.,-.::, '1..:::,; -""" .......... ::II:: .:;: lire caused u eetl{nltocl '21,IOll damace waa for eotabli,_ of Jlnllllam u . Goliwnoe Iii Eta! Jerllllkm unW Ind _ ..... ..,., .... IN ,. .... hlMICI, N SICllflf "" ·'TMua~Y ""' Tueldl1 to tbe ~ ol lldor Mu Bier capllll for the Pl1MtbMn ftlbt, wttb capbnd tt, ll1d tbe Hu.in propoeaJ oa - -• -_., ,,,. """ .: ............ ,,. .... <i Jr., olflclll1 uld. Firemen rescued three Amman nmaln(Dfl Iba lednl capital In Je-"la Jllre a 1alherlnl ol Indian =:-;.::.:.·::..· ..... .,.. llll'lt ......... , ....... 1tsr&& '1 dop from the blae, a fire dlplrtment 1'bkhHmeinwaWdrule11blldofl&IY cblell ta tbl United States arsu1nl •----= '::' ;;;;::::;:;: ::;:: :;, opok-reported. Bur wu aot at aided by a -I Cotmell fl. Mlnf,.... -.lhernael"' who Is _.,,. to pt =*.,.. ... ,.,:::::~ .. • ._ • ::., =:;::: === bome at tbe time. IDd 1 Nltioul A--blJ. t.cftoatroJ O'ff/l New York.'' • : . _, ' ' • I • , ( ' I Whale·Drama Copt.er to Trac k Gigi ~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sciel>-A ocienlilt .t Ule Navll tisU are plannlnc to .,. a Underw -h a n d heljcopltr In track"'4 a Developmeat Ctnlor blamed CaJUornia"lr•y whale released the poor radio transmiaaiona off the Southern California :bi~'• .. lazy swimm~ cout after· a year in captivity. "The girl's never done They abandoned efforts to anything in her life except bob tract the whale, named Gigi, up and down in a lank.~ by boat Tuesday becau.e goth« to take heM while to signals from. her rad.lo bade .__ act Uke a whale," said Larry pack were coming too in-· McKinley of lhe Navy Center.'s frequenjy to catch up wilh marine mammal facility. her, said 1 spokesman for Sea Gigi, captured when she was World, the marlne amU1emenl about C weeks old, apparently park where the 14,000-pound was only sticking her nose and mammal wu kept until Mon-blow bole out of the water in- day. stead of doing a normal · Slnce her release seven forward roll like other gray milts· from San Diego, Gigi whales, McKinley said. The has followed a circular swim-back pack will not trarmnlt ming pattern and has re-while it is submerged. U,I T•i.M .. SILENT ON ITT Lt, Gov. Reinecke Reinecke ·Declines Comment Lettuce Boycott Ordered · By Uolled Prus lnterDltloaal A nationwide lettur.i! boycott and st rike agahut centrttl California growers vt 111 resume Friday after a year.'s moratorium, Cesar Chavez ' • • .. id Tuesday. No Changes, Chavez. head ~ the United Farm Workers Organizing Solon Asks Committee (UFWOC ), uid negotiations have failed with SACRAMENTO (UPI) about 108 major lettuce The author of the .J..eaisl1turt's heavily amended growers in the nation's "11!11d rr'I call vote reform· says he bowl" of Salinas Vallq.. w111 ask the Senate tc reject The union ha!!! been trying to Assembly chan1es to hjs pro- get the growers to drop 1 pouls. "sweetheart contract" they lf the Senate agrees to the signed with the Teamsters request by Sen. Peter Behr Union just before the 1970 CR-Tiburon), a tw~use· con- UFWOC siX-month strike '\Rd ference committee will be AP. boycott began. pointed to iron out the dif- ferences and develop a com- • • I Wid11tlda)', M"'h 15, 1972 DAILV PILOT [; Angela Davis Gives Jm~ 01{, But Doubts Im partial Trial ' l -·• • SAN JOS&..CUPI) -Angela _ between the prosecution and Davi! aays &he is convinced defense during a 45-mlnute she cannot get a fair trial in conference with J u d g e middle-clau Santa C 1 1 r a Richard E. Arnason. County, but believes the all-T.h e Io rm er U,C LA white jury sworn in' to bear phllosophy Instructor, wh9 Is· her case "will do IL! best.'' charged with supplying the Eight women and four men, guns in the Marin County including one . Mex l can . r.ourlhouse -shootings of 1970, American, were accepted by addressed the bench In clear. both skies Tuesday at the matter-of-fact tone!!!: murder, kidnllping and con-"'We have long contended It spiracy trial of Miss Davis, 28, would be impossible for me to 1 black woman and an avowed get a fair triaJ in Santa Clara C.Ommunlst. Selectio'l of four C.Ounty, We bave msde a num- alterr.Jtes was expected to be her ol motions challeniing the completed today or Thursday jury system here. and testimony could begin e.s "As t look at these men and early, as ~fonday. women I see that this jury · The trial, now ln Its th ird does renect the composition of week, had been expected to the county -there are no bog down over jury selection black people. Though 1 can't for months. say it's a jury of my peers, "There ls no useful pun>QH in fUrther delay of the trial. We are conlldent In these nitn and women and are happy to accept the Jury as it Is now." Prosecutor Albert W, Harris Jr., an assistant state attorney gtneral, concurred in bet deClslon, saying, "The people will also accept the jury." Panelists Included a Mex- ican-American man employed by IBM , a woman whose son was a conscientious objector, a 45-y~aN>ld bachelor, 1 Jewish 'divorcee, a yo ung matron who works in a department store, and t~·o young women In their 20s. The panel 's avera ge age 1"l!S Rbout 40, although this was not a matter of court record. mained. ln the San Diego area, Scientists hope to use the acientists said. ,There was signals to trace Gigi 's Mlh on aome difference of opinion as her northern lnigration, and to to the significance of ·hy acquire information OJl the failure to join immediately dej>th Of her dives and the other gray whales on their water · temperature. The back migration north from Scam-pack is designed to become mon's Lagoon, their breeding disengaged from Gigi In about a:round in Baja C8lifornia. , nine months. "lt was just a stalling tactic promise. . · SACRAMENTO (AP) _ Lt. on their part," Chavez said of Behr told J1eW$men lie p1a:ns Gov. Ed Reinecke has refused the recent talks to get the to seek Senate rejections of Miss Da vis stood up In court after much discu.uion we are to formafi y accept the jury convinced they will put ·forth Tuesda y after a surprise t~eir ~st effort to give me a agreement was worked out lair trial. Befort ending Tuesday's session, six alternate jurors were seated and questioned, but they were all dismissed. Set Up Camp to answer questions from growerstoswitchcontracl.sto Assembl y amendments this TAKE A PIC"TURE WIT UFWOC jurisdiction. aft H newsmen regarding his in-He said lettuce boycott ac-I~r~~Pid ' fa shion, 1 1th e · volvement in the International tivities wollld begin Friday Assembly Rules Committee THE EASTER BUNNY , Te1ephone ill: Telegraph offer across the nation, and in Tuesday rewrote Behr ' s Indians Put Claim On State Missions to help under,write th e Canada and Northern Europe. Senate-passed change in the Now -C•rou1el Court Republican N a t i 0 n 8 1 Con-. Some strike centers already way the 1egislatars vote In loath (i sf 'Plaza are established because of the committee and sent It to the 01 venfa>n jn San Diego. union's boycott of n I n e floor where it was swiftly · · , The Republican official's JN§o~r~th~er~n~c§a~li~fo~r~ni~a~w~in~es~. :_:__;a;do~p~tedfw~i~thou~t~d~e~ba~te~G&-0~-J __ .:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- KING CITY (UPI) -A band of American Indians has pitched camp around Mission San Antonio de Padua. declar- ln~ they were civilized, and latd claim to all the 21•historic missions in California. Mission San Antonio de Padua, Its adobe buildings in Woman, 75, Jailed; Has 13 Dogs RJins as late as World War ll, is in the wooded foothills of the Coast Range Mountains 20 miles west of King City. , The land it occupies I!!! sur- rounded by the government- controlled Hunter L I i'g et t Military Reservation, once part of the Hearst Ranch, and the mission's restored buildings are used as a training school by the Roman Catholic Church 's Franciscan Order. / Meredith Quinn, a Dakota speaking for lhe J11dians, declared the function of the missions founded 200 yea rs ago by Father Junipero Serra "was to convert and civilize LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An the savages." eJderly woman who had four "We feel the missions have times as many dogs as legally served this function," he ' ad- allowed h11s been ordered to ded as the Indians demanded jail for ruMln~ her home like the missions and the land on a kennel without having a which they stand. license. The Indians prepared a "manifesto" to be delivered :to _1Thed Mmunlcipal courl Ju_dge Bishop Harry Clinch of !he to rs. Ruth Froemming, Monterey Diocese of the • 71. that 1he would be rele':* church . ... llfr . from custody 81 IOOn as •he 1'• ·tt asks the church to r r . reduced her pack of dogs from . h 11 e m lS'toJ .-the clty's legal 'limit. . qu1s a .Pr~perty and rec?.rds "I j t , tend . 1 of the m1ss1on~ OMlke an ac-us CIR t my htt e counting ol all moneys and peb: to ,t,be pound lo be revenues due Indians," and destroyed, walled Mrs · put up "funds to provide Froemml~1, after b e l n g armed protection" for the lri· aentenced. dians now in camp. She was fined f750 and Among the demands was senttneed to 30 days in jail, one for the eviction of all with three years probation, other occupants from ea ch after an earlier conviction for mission's original territory of having too many dogs and let-three square miles. ting them run free without No building was occupied at tags. Mission San Antonio de Padua Neighbors testified that her when the Indian men and pets constantly leaped over women set up a "village'' their fences, barking and nip-around a minibus and a 'truck ping at children. · iD which they had arrived. refusal came at a news con-]· ference in the hallway outside his office where he reported on California'!!! efforts to ob- tain contracts for the space shuttle program. Asked by a newsman If he plal)Oed to testify on the l1T case before the S e n a t e Judi ciary Committee, Reinecke "responded , "I have not been invited and I hope am not invited." (See story, Page 17). Meanwhile a Justice Depart· ment Jetter is being used by . local fund raisers ta assure businessmen that their 'COO- tributions for the forthcoming Republican n a t i o n a 1 con- vention are legal and tax deductible. the Los Angeles Times said today. Rea gan OK's Adult Bills SACIV.;MENTO (AP) · - 'Gov, Re~R:an has signed into Jaw two hurry-up measures which backers say correct ovefsights in the instant-adult law. One bill would keep 29,000 youths 18 through 20 years of age on the welfare rolls under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program . The other bill protects state allotments to California's 94 locally run community col- leges. It was feared that the change In the definition of minors and adults, which went Into effect March 4, would have deprived the community college~ or $38 million. if~ seeq tbis- TRADING j~j "THE STAMPS TRAVEL 1 ~! THAT REALLY VOUCHERS l ~~Jl SEND YOU"! . ········· IJOU'll waqt to read tbis! Travel Vouchers ••• the "going" kind of sta"mp • , . takes you anywhere, at any time you choose! Saving Travel Vouchers ls the fastest way to make you r travel dreams come true! Save these magic stamp~ for ''fyn'' vacatio~,1 Trading Travel Vouchers can pay for part or all of your ticket costs! Here's how the program works: L Your participating merchants (see directory) issue Trad- l{lg Travel Vouchers wilh each pur~hase you make. 2. You place "regular" or :'Big Ten" Trav~ Vouchers in your colorful redemption books. S. Take your filled redemption book to your local member E?tchange Bank (see directory), and receive a beautifully engraved Traveler's Reserve Certificate worth $2.00. 4. When you are ready to travel, ta~e your Traveler1s Reserve Certificates to your authorized Travel Agent (see dlrec· tory), and spend them like cash! Traveler's Reserve cer· tillcates ca.n purchase all or any part Qf your next ticket coats. You choose the time and place, and you're off on your trip! . • • MERCHANT INOUIAIE$ lHVIT.fO: TAAVELli.S RESll'IVE, INC. (11•) 171·2200 • • • .. ' If l -.0 else . put . • na1ne on cha1npag11~you'dpay alOt " more .. I . -:for it \" • E e Ow:npagne la mare ' • than adding bu bbl .. , !es a·wmlc of art. We use the best grapes. We we all the skills developed in almost I 40 years of winemaking to create a crisp, delicate champagne. Jes an exceptional champagnC. We go all out when we make it, then we use a little restraint when we price it. We want you to enjoy it as often as possible. How about tonightl ~·~ GALLO CALl,O,.IA SPAAKLINQ WINE.QAU.0 CALIFORNIA CHAMPAGNE-CHAAMAT BU\.K PROCESS.-NATURAU.Y FEAMiNTEO-OfilO CHAMPAGNE CELLARS, ~COUTO, CALIFORNIA • j • • • ' • " DAD.V PILOT EDITORIAL P A GE ' Answerable Questions I Huntington Beach Councllmen will tackle a crucial question. April 3 on whether 36.5 acres of industrial land should be rezoned for apartments. The land, at the north welt corner of Edinger A venue and Graham Street, Ii within an Industrial plot of about 300 acres owned by developer John Lusk. In 1969, the council told Lusk it would allow him to build apartments on aome o( the industrial acreage as be developed ln- • dwtry In the total area. Lusk clalms he needs low.eost apartments to house the workers attracted by industry. The item bas now passed between the council and the planning commission several times, with planners saying they don't want apartments on industrial land. It's time to stop the tennis match and answer a few Important questions. Does Huntington Beach have more indwtrW land than It can reasonably expect to develop! Are there already enough apartments for low-income workers? Will the apartments mix well with the in· dusbj? . These are answerable questions, given a litUe fact. finding. When those questions are answered. it should be easy for the city to make a clear and final decl!lon. Youth C.Ommi ssion's Goals High school students in Fount.aln Valley are asking the city council for a piece of the action. At the last council meeting, eight students from Fountain Valley High School asked that they be allowed to foim a "youth commlu:lon" to advite city leaders on relaUons between young people and their community. Jell Paul, the leader of the students, proposed that· a. youth commission would be valuable in surveying the feelings of teenagers, working with police to diminish juvenile dellquency·and acting as a butter zone between young radicals and the establishment. These goals appear to be a solld step toward creat· in& a feellng of mutual understanding and trust between young people and their senior&. Fountain Valley citizens should be pleased that their youth desire to play a role in. seeking solutions to the generation gap, and that their council ls responsive to that desire. Bringing Forest to Pupils The Ocean View School District has decided that since it can 't transport all of its children to the forest to study nature, it will instead bring the forest to the kids. With this in mind, a 2.3 acre tract of land at Golden View School has been fenced off and turned into a huge environmental study lab. There are trees, shrubs, grasses, and animals -everything typical of a real forest. And that's not all. Besides hardwood and pine forest areas, the study lab has areas devoted to desert regions, marshland, and chaparral, to name some ol the others. ln each area, care is taken to blend together the different Ille form to duplicate nature as exactly as pos· sible. Children will be able to use the lab to study the re- lation between climate and the budding of flowers. Or they will learn to control their rabbit population by vary- ing the food supply. Amazingly, the whole study center has been /ut together out of donations which have been estimate at $250,000 so far. It goes to show that volunteer contribu· tions still do have an important effect on education. ' • H Some Don't ,Knaw · Wkat Dear Gloomy Gus From R~lf.gious, Moral, Social, Economic Standpoints. • • To Be For · · ~ '111oqbt1 a~•: In some per Ues, the strenatb liH only in oppotltlon ,· take away lH,i~~ position and t.be7 fiQWlder wt.aklJt DOl knowing whal ID ~le1, baving .O•Jlq been qalut. . ... • • • In a iood IOciety, all bulioesaes~d tend to'"become lnon1'lllle ~ea•iJ.';, In our society, all pro-' I fessiona have tended to become more Uke l:IUlinesses. • • When a commun- ity suffers a severe rise in crime. the good citizens organ- ize to punish the criminals: but who punishes the good citizens for having per• mitted the criminal spirit to grow and flourish tn their midst? • • • • The public feels far more comfortable with a stupid man than with a clever man ; so clever men who aspire to public leadership pretend to be more stupid than they are .. • • • Most men are poor executives ~ause they fail to understand that ''decislon- maklng" does not coruii!t in weighing all the facts as they come in and then. mak- ing the most reasonable judgment, but rather moving before all the facts are in and anUcipating their consequences. • • • lt is the systematic neglect of the natural' instinct of competition that will eventuiJly wreck 1U Marxist societies; and, contrariwise, the systematic neglect of the natural inst.Jnct joward cooper1Uon Haraued reaidenlt all over the Orange Coast will join in hoping those El Toro folks win their case qainlt the doga that bark in- eeuanlly. Maybe the inconalderat. ownm of the 11y1ppers" will 1lt up and t.ke MLlce that their pets' noise pollution is Intolerable. -L. L. ""• ... ,.,. r9flildt. ,.....,... ....... .... .....,,., .... If ............ ... ._, ... ,_, II ~ .... o.llY Plitt. la the most aetloua internal threat wllhtn oocnpe:Utive AOCieUes. • • • You're mt truly fl!'OWl1 up untu you're leu pron• to exCule your own m..llllkes · antt· more Inclined to ei:cuse the fellle1 of others, • • • We don't genuinely believe In free 1Speech until we recognize that no abuse of the freedom of speech Is 11 bad 1s giv- ing some authority the power to repress It. • • • Pets acquire the particular neuroses of their owner.a ; dogs and their masters (or mistresses) only seem to look alike, after awhile, when the owners have used their pets for illicit emotional and aoclal needs. • • • Those who live by and for 1enAUons gefterally find out much too late that nothing in the world is duller than. au. tained stimulation. • • • To be a professed "materialist" these days is as auperstlUous and speculative as to be a "spiritualist" -for the more we learn about "m.1tter'' the less we understand it, and the leas material It seems. • • • Democracy ls tbe only system that persists in asking the Powers That Be whether the? are the powen that OU1ht to be. Revamping the Military In "PAWNS: The Plight ol the Citlt.en. Soldier," young reporter, Peter Barnu, now West Ola.st editor of Th' New Republic, presenb ·• weJJ.rtu0ned, articulate blueprint for revamping, streamlining and making more efficient the U.S. military force. He examines the power that the military exercises over the lives of mil· lions oJ American cJUuns (its own , courts. for example) to the point where It finds a dan1erou1 percentage of unwilling and inefficient young people in it.s 3 mil· !Jon man police force of the world, It is Barnes' thesi~.·generally, that the draft can be Diod!Oed. even elimlnated, in favor of a competent fighting force, es- ttnUally 1 professional defensive army, navy, air force. 'l'tlls ml1ht be based on West Otnnany's Bundswehr. in which clvll UberUea tor soldiers were spelled out Jn the Soldfers Law ol llll6 ind there ll no · loocer a difference between "aoldi'!j" aod "ctvillan" in thiJ model force. 1 · ·· IN RIB CHAPTER "T.,,ard a Democrltlc Army." Barnes empbasil" that ii the nation ot Frederick the Grext aod Cl..,.wltz could deliberately create an army recpectful of soldien' rights and lnteniall1 rtged qainst militarism, it _,,, lolieal to -that the notion or ,.....,. 111111 JeJleraoo can do the .. Ame: Thll ia 11111 111 antl-mUitsry haransue. The ....., believu the military has --mtflJrly ....itmned in ttttnt ,_. (aport from M1 Lal aod other ob- \ I, • (THE BOOKMAN) viou.. blunder1). He based ·his findings and reaaoning on intervlew1 wtt.h military people of all ranks (some holtile) after covering for Newsweek the Presidio stockade ''mutiny" cue of l9S8 in which 27 confused, frl1htened young men faced possible ~eath sentences for their gestures of anU.war dlwnt. "Pawns" ls a public 1ervlce which calls for public awareoeu, concern and action on a. m1ijor 1 unhappy and expe.t\slve American problem. Tlie book 1hould be Uiential reading for all members of Congr ..... ....., olhvt (Knopf; 47151. BOB TffOMA8. the hard-working Associated !'.-'¥" In ff9Jlyftod for many years and thi author of three ex- cellent blOfraphlee of late m o v I• magnata ("KinJ Cohn," ''nlllbera.·• "Selznick"\ turns to ftctlon in "Weekend '33." This was a mJ11ake. For Thomas is f'utntlally a reporter' and 11Weebnd'' "33" 11 a flfll!lent of h11 lmaglntlion. it is I tough (but not toufh enough) story or bow, and why, over 1 wetltend" In 1933. a mind bag ol movie peopl• .,. Jn. viltd to the fabulous cutle. Eicallbur, another name for HearsV1 Sin Simeon of that period. "Citizen Kaoe '' touched on tb.ia theme fn 1 far more convincin& min· ner !Doubleday; ie.11). WltUam 80111 Death Sentence Necessary, Proper To the Editor: Capital punishment should not be done away with. It Is necessary and proper -from 1t least the following atandpoints: Religious , moral, BOClal and economic. Most people who think that capital punishment should be abolished base their argument 00 the "Sixth Com- mandment" or th• Bible which says, 11Thou ahalt not kUl.11 '111ese people take the popular commandment literally, saying that ii God (thro111h th< Bible\ 11ys we sbouJd not Jell! then that applies to every case and condiUon facluding war and criminal execution. TO THE POSSlBLlf surprise of many, the Bible says the iOJlowing In Genesis (ch. 9): "And murder is roi-bidden . Man· killing animals must die, and any man who murders shall be killed ; for to kill a man is to kill one midi! like God." (The Living Bible ). How does one go about killing a murderer other than capital punishment? In fact, most modern tran,s.. latoni: of the Bible render the "Sixth Commandment" as ''Thou shalt not murder." To say murder rather than kill makes the whole difference when debating capital punishment, particularly in light of the Genesis passage that both man and beast are to be executed if they kill, i.e., murder a human. Thus, we have a religious com mandment for capital punishment. AND A RELIGIOUS -moral view of the value of human life might say that man, having the highest development, ahould have a right to his life and that no other man has a right to take it from him. In a Sense this is true. But what happerui to the guy who cheats, the guy who doesn't obey the rules and takes another's llfe? Do you say "naughty, naughty" and go about your business? TM cheater is free to kill anyone he wanta: then. And the nature of people guarantees -tre would kill to obtain his desires U there was no punisiment. And if he were locked up fdr life im- prisonment he can still kill other prisoners and guards in prison. For \\·hy ahouldn't he? He Is not going anywhere different and nothing more can be done to hlm that isn't already done. THIS IS WHY the enforcenlent and correction community is working to reinstate capital punishment. From the preml!e that life la sacred and of the highest value and therefore should not be taken by man, comes the reality that a prison guard's life Is not worth the dust he walks on, since there is no further punlsbment to murder. The price that society wilfhave to pay to imprison those normally executed, in terms of physical plant, pay of guards (w hich would have to increase in numbers and dollars ) and Joss to the rut of aociety, is something IOClety can do without. Doesn't it seem more moral to allow the taking of one life B11 George --~ Desr George: My wife has been using a rolling pin on her hips . She rolls the pin on her hlp1 a ball-hour twice a day. Does thla really have any physical elfect? ABNER C. Dur Abner C.: Indeed ii does -it will give her muocular flnltt• and. unt... she hu very long 1.nns, eventual palns 1n her shoulders. But, u a hobby, It'• 'cheap. [Le1m the bentrlu ol Slde••YI Thinking. and tell Geor1e what they art.J , • ( MAILBOX ~) Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should conveu their messages fn 300 words or less. The right to condense letters .to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. AIL let- ters must include signature,and mail- ing address, bue names may be with- held on request if .IU/ficirnt rta1on is apparent. Poetry will not .be pub- lished. - to prevent the taking of two or 10 or 100? THE COURTS MIGHT say that capital punishment is cruel or u n u IS u a I punishment. It -"is beyond belief that it could be considered either. It i& not cruel, in that there is no sustained pain (in modern execution methQ!:!s). Nor is It cruel in that il is harsh or &evere, for that is the very point! Capital punish· ment cannot be considered unusual in any wildest stretch of the imagination since it has been practiced from the dawn of civilization. And it must continue to be practiced for the safety and benefit of society. RICHARD J . ELLIOTT 'P u bllt! B e Damned /' To the Editor: We need the hel p of the news media to inform our congressmen that we are very tired of their poor voting records. Also of their "moonlighting", with giving $50 (or Jess) lectures for from $1 ,000 to $5,000, skiing in Switzerland. ·running far Presi· dent and other offices, junkets abroad, etc .. etc. ' They asked for the job, got it, rece ive a nice fat salary, lots of money-saving per- qUisites, long vacations, etc., yet many of them have the gall to vote on roll calls less than 60 percent of the time -an . aver8ge attendance of one in five days. Is asking a 60 percent attendance too much? Once they're P-lected they seem. lo feel that they own the job -'1the public be damned!" Anything that you can do to help Senator Smith put across her fnotion will be greatly appreciated by the general public. M. L. KEELER Share t he Ai4 To the Editor: With recent neWJ releuts (rom Indi1, stating that they plan to withdraw the 1 .. t ol their 40JIOO lrooPI in 81ngl1desh (formerly East Pakistan) within tht next two months. we nt.• havt ample proof of who plfhned ind executed thil invasion. India all!> admltJ lo the endor1e:ment of thlt1 invasion by Soviet Russia , which also provided most of lhe mllltary hardware for lhls conquest. In this needl 1 war (If the U:.N. had been alert and taktn the proper action) mllllons of people have experlenc~ the ravages of war, with the loss of many live•. prop<rty destroyed snd thelr only me1n1 of ma.king a living. etc. To counter these di sastrous conditions, we are now being asked for financial aid. with 1 re- quest for 175 mjlllon (requesl>d by one congressman) as 1 starter. THERE IS NO " doubt lhsl th ... In- nocent vlcUms are in need of help - Btrr. how about a "share plan" for such aul1t&nce on the following basis! <I) Thal the U.N. 11l all tht member nations to make payment to a sped1J fund for such relier. 12) That, in so doing. the U.S. "111 match the amount given by India and/or Soviet Russia who, as the aggressors,· should pay the major share. As regards the contribution by India, this could come out of the billions of our blocked U.S. loan funds in India. It seems that such transfer action is possible. with a joint agreement between India and the U.S. for such a special purpose. ln any event. Jet's assume this is a re~nable, equitable basis whereby the members or the U.N., the U.S., India and Soviet Russia might help to equitably share in the i-ehabilitation of Bangladesh. AL N. SEARES lronlt! Situation To the Editor: l was prompted to write this letter because I think that a counter balance to the opposition to Bill Mauldln 's pot car- toon is necessary. The cartoon simply "said" that alcohol can kill but is legal while marijuana. that doesn 't, is illegal. Marijuana in itself has been proven to be relatively safe. It is not a matter of whether we as a society need another intoxicant. The fact is that both are here to stay. But the really dangerous one ls legal, the safer one isn't. As the cartoon and cartoonist indicated, ironic Isn't it. RON HAYDEN • Loglt!«I' R e1111ons To the Editor: " After reading your recap of the recent Huntington Beach City Council meetin1. I have decided that the following must be the "logical" reasons for our .city fathers and city attorney to conduct a hearing that deserved an "X" rating. I. To keep Councilman Coen awake past 11 p.m. (It was interesttn1 to note that this was the first of several meetings that had no mention of time limit, at least in your paper ). . " 2. To help Councilman Matney fight juvenile deUnquency by keeping 1n1ut in dty hall and off the streeta. 3. To help Councllm~pley prepare , a .lecture on the biolog11J11? aspecta of a massage. 4. Mayor McCracken lost his gavel or be<!ame so engroased in the testimony that he became lost in the outer limits of good last•. , . I. COUNCllMAN Bartlett's cu,tlomers needed some new stories to exchanp\ S. Councilman G re e n was bul1 wrlUng a report on ••ear pollution." 7. Councihf'Oti'&n Gibbs needed mort Information for her lat~at b o o k • "Everywoman's Guide to M 11s1 I~ Parlors In HunUngton Beach." Even wilh all of thoN LOGICAL real'!Ons, r can't help but wonder why ttM testlmOl'!Y could not have been made bf depo1itlon, (I'm sure Mr. Bonfa lmow1· the meaning of the word) and the councll ten to spend the valuable hearin1.tlm1 on • more pretSlna nuitten. · I , 'l' Possibly ll they would inv"t IJl l .C9Pl' . of "The Senauou1 Couple" or ~· N1> • Doz, whichever 11 needed In .. ch • particular cage, the coundl could htUnt to the bu•ineu. ol running our rmm1·cJ.. ty in a "G" rated manntt .. ROBERTA WATERMAN V•e Se .... 1 Buu To the Editor: While we're walling £or the erpe.rll and the Orange COUnty Rapid Transit District to spend oo!M llO<J,000 of -our monty to conduct th•lr exhauatlng lludy ol our Pl(bllc lralllportatlon needa, why don'I we ail< them to 1et things roll!.n& at onct by . ~ using our school buses as the nucleus ol our public transportation system? ROBERT M. GORDON Dl~ne11land Awards To the Editor: 1 have been a three-year subscriber to the DAILY PILOT to keep aware of local news. I was astounded that the recent Disneyland Awards were poorly and i.ft.. correctly reported. ·1n your March 9 edition of the Hun· Ungton Beach-Fountain Valley DAil.Y PILOT, page!, you showed a photograph stating ln the caption, "The three win· ners ... recei ving $1,000 each ... " There were 30 winners receiving $1 ,000 each and one grand prize winner received $7,500. IT IS A BIG, exciting and important Orange County event and many Fountain Valley organizations entered the contest and were present at the beautiful award luncheon totally hosted by Disneyland. Some of the 31 wiMing groups had participant! from Fountain Valley. For example, "Sing Out Young Generation,'' a winning youth group entry, has three young people from Fountain Valley-my two children (Donna and David Brook) and a friend o[ theirs (Sandy Broderick). SO PLEASE, dear editor, either don't print the events at all or if you do, please report it accurately. Such coveted and well-won awards deserve more than just a picture with an Inaccurate capUon. Perhaps if you had included an article, the mi!take would have been avoided . JOAN BROOK LISTER The photo caption March 9 referred to "three Orange Coost organizations" and dealt only with the three winning groups within the DAILY PILOT cir· culo.tion area. A follow·UP itory March 10 gave further detail.!. including the top award of $7,500 to the Mother'• A.uriliaTtl to the Tuatin Boys' Club. -Editor Made The Happy To the Editor: On behall of Westminster High School Mecha Club, we would like to thank your reporter, Michael Goodrich, for the e1- ·cellent article on the meeting held by the Mexican-American Committee for Bitter Educatlon this past week. Objective and accurate reporting like thi.IJ makes u1 very happy. Thank you 11ain. JACKIE VARELA President DAVID CANCHOLA Vice President LINDA ALVAREZ Secretary CINDY LOZANO Treasurer OIANei C.OAI T DAILY PILOT Robrrt N. Wrad, .l'Ml>!JJhcr • • • Thomci Jrtrolf, UJ"* Alberl'W. B~tnl Edftona! Pdgc i41lar I 1ilt td.ilorial Pf;lC or the t>tlly Pilot att.k1 to Inform and aUmu-late readtrs by PrtscnUn"f lhll ne.'lpepw-r'1 opinions and com-ment&.ry on topics ot lnterat and tlJn10canCI', by provktin( " forum tor the eX!'ll""Ylol\ or our readers' opiniont, and by Jn'ettnlln&;' the diveJ"M v1ewpoln(s or lnformtd qb-•~rt and •PGkeamen on toptca ol !Mclay. Wednesday, March 15, 1972 ' -• '• ( 11 11 • II .1 I I • 6"' • • • • ' Orange CAast ~ . EDIT-JON N.Y. Steeb VOL ~s. NO. 75, ~SECTIONS, 104 PA&ES ORAN6E COUNTY,' CALIFORNIA WEDNESD'AY, M,f.RC!1 ·15, 1972 N TEN CENTS €arpenter Eiles Text on Coa·stline. Measure By L. PETER KBIEG Of Ille ~ '41tt Stiff state Senator IleMI! Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) today filed 'tbe text of bis proposed coastline 1111Ngement bill that is designed to allow local govern- ment lo kee~ con)rol of tbe shoreline, aubject to a r~vlew proce311 through a DeW ·State agency. All . lnccrporated cities are excluded from control and there would be . no montorium on construction while a atate coutal plan IJ .developed. Clrpenter's meuure lo lbe fourth ma· jor couta1 ""-"' ~ -before the Lqlslatlft, althouP one, "'"' miu.d by state Sen. Jam11 Q. Wedwortb (().Inglewood), lo <IJJOCll!I to be killed Monday by lhe Senate Commlltee on Natural """""-and Wlldllfe. The 11ron1est 'of tbe four m-. a bill submitted jolDlly by State Senatoi: Donald L. G""'"1 (1\-Wllionvlllt) and Aasemblyman Alan Sleroly ( D • L o 1 Angeles), will be beard by tbe puel Mo!>' day but no aclion Is anticipated. ' ,. Thll muaun, a -of a llmllarbUlilllroducedbym..tylall yur, Is supported by t-i ...,. eervationists. 1 A spobsman for Carpeotet declined to take a gueu as to which. if IDJ, wW ever ~me ·tew. . • CarJ)eo(er II C<1UJ!tlng on w!Yt be, bu termed u.·••reucmabJe .. ·proV111ou in hia ........., to get If plDecf. Amolli oilier thlnp, bls•blll: ' -Allon lndWldual eoulll ~ to define lheir own eoutel -· 10111ewbert ' ' •· between 1,000 yarcla and three miles In- land. -Requires local (coUnlyl government !f;submil t~ ure and coastal plans to a °'~member atai, llOll9Y • by Marth oi 1971.· ·~U.. for completion · of the state eoutal plan 111 menths ~ter. -Alk>WI .'deve~t 'to continue dur· ing the 1in&er\m1 provided : it meets preliminary crtterla ·eslabltabed ·by the , already-ntst!N CalilornJa, A.d v I a or y ~ •, ' ' Commission on Marine and Coastal Resources. Carpenter's mwure does prohibit any reductk>n of pubUc beaches or other public recrealk>n areas c as well as " reduction or restriction of existing pub!Jc access to beaches before the coaslal ;Ian I! ~ovetoped. It also stlpuJates that any planning unit that falls to submit a plan wu_i be cut off from further ,state funds or .fedeJ;"al, funds administered by the state for any project within lhe ccmtal zone until the plan b completed. The agency to be created to oversee the state coastal plan would include on1 member from each of the nine coastal counties and six members from the pubJic at large. All should have some experience with marine oonservatkln, engineering ot biological or ecological sciences. Carpent~r proposes a fJnt·year budget for the commlasion of t;i50,000. ' a1 cour ~oas 'Pojsons' in Ba.y Repo~ted . Health Department Finds Heavy -M e'tals -On -Bo.ttom • By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1Mi Qilll'f ,Ult II.ti 1A variety of heavy metals ln highly toxic concentrations are lying in the sedi- ment at the bottom of Newport Bay, Orange County Health Department of- ficials said "'uesday. The report, requeated by the county Harbor Cornmi!sion aix months ago, aug· gesls paint pirllcle! from boat hul~. * * ~ * * Officials ~o Lay Trap • # . gasoline in street drainage and car ex· hauat are lik~ly sources of the metals. Immediate ef(ects of the poisonous con. centratlons on marine life "are not yet known," .Robert Stone, director of en- vironmental health for 'the health depart· ment, told commissioners, but be aaid'the outlook is not good. ' · ., \ \ .. " I • 54 Arrested In Schools Crackdown By ARTHUll R. VINSEL Of .. D9tl¥ , .... ,, ... Smashln1 at heavy dru1 ttaffic llllOlll area high acbool1 and colle111, Coltl !d•sa police teama crlucrooaecl !be Orange Coast oveml&bt in i mualve roundup of su•pected narcotlco dealen. By dawn, 54 pmona w.n In cua1od7, 20 of tbem juvenilll from lour aru htaJ> achools. . For Newport Pollut~rrs · The metals can be toxic to organisms even·ln diluted form and can.poalbly be l . affecting "tbe biological food cbaln, • stone. warned. "Metals can bt poisonoul' even at levels that' are one ilundredth or one-tboulandth of ' tbe ccinCentratioal fciund ~-.. ' : • • ... ' A total or * arnateea an cbar1111 bl Orange Coonly Harbor !lillrlct and Health Department off~ wm·take an earll', morning lour of Ne1'p0rl Harbor IOOll to tfy to catch polluters throwing garbage In' the bay. · Hlrbor District Dlrtdor Kenneth Sampoon Tuesday told Neeport Beach resident Sue Ficker that 1taff members of both the harbor and h e a I t h departmentl wouJd boat with her to the high "garbage points" of the bay. Cita· ttona will be issued If they can catch anyone In the act, he added. Miss Ficker, who said she could never "get anyone to get up.at I a.m. before," c~ed before Harbor Commissioners that some Or the more posh restaurants that ring tbe bay wash their garbage cans 'out in early mornings direcUy into the bay. Much of t.be debris -IOllle of it hall· eaten food -then washes up around neFbY swim.min& ,beaches, she added. Tbe cans are· often washed out with chlorinated substances, said Mias Ficker, who commented that she had made another near-dawn excursion Tuesday ~ming. ' She also claimed she bas seen boatyard operators throw bottlea and trash in the water and then allow the area to atagnate. · Harbor commissioners, lecl by member Frank Robinson, voted unanimously to cooperate with a Health Deporlmenl ln- vesUgatton and to help preaent evidence lo. the "appropriate ageodel." Tbat agency might be the Calllom!J Deputy Attorney General'• offices In San Diego, which bas a 1peclal enviroomental protectlon committee. The Health Department has more '*mU1Cle" to actually analyze and test.lfy to what the debris and ill effects might be, Sampeon erplalnlJil. "This Is only a •tarting point, but small problema make up the bigger problem of ' . Pr esident Routs AU Opponents l it Florida Race MIAMI (UPI) -President Nixon ~u -a lopl[ded victory Jn tbe Republican pldenUal primary, autpolllnC tbe com· blned totala of liberal Paul McCloa~•,1 llJld ........ auve Jobn Aahbroolt by near-, ly a nJne.-margin In Florida .. (See Pago ( for detal!J on Tuesday's Democratic primary won by Alabama Gov. George Wallace.I With Ill percent of the state•i preclnc!J 'In, Nbciin had 157,:UO vote1 or rr per<:1nt, to 11,m or four percent for McCloskey and :15,971 or nine percont !or AshbroOlt. Nl1on'1 margin was of rout proportions In aU of Florida'• u conare,.iOllll dlslrlcts. • McClo!l<ey dropped out or the cam- paign IHI week, cltln1 flnanc!JI di!· llculttea, 11111 hi• name rtmalned on the Florida bollot. • ! . ·- .~ttby blJ," PM'..,. ...,, ....... !bat aucll morning poJli:Jnt tours couia have an effecct. "It will tell those polluters, 'Fellas, the CW/ game is over,'" he 1,.Jd. "Miss Ficker had -to the com-mission with peUtlona signed by 2,!00 Harbor area residents askinr for a moratorhun on construction upland of the • bay until an alternate draining point for the run-off is found. The petitions asked tbat improper drainage Into the bay be further prevented and that runoff eo someplace other than the bay. Commissioners set that request aside for further study whUe con1idering the garbage chargea. Absentee B~ts Now Av ailable Newport Beach voters who will be out of the city for the April 11 city council election may obtain ablentee ballots now, City Clerk Law:a L>glos 11ld today. Except in WIJIUal c;lrcumatances, they mlist be obtalnecl by April (, Mrs. Laglos sawl: "H a condition arilel alter April ( that wou\d ~ A voter" from the poU.., a · spedal a~tlon may be filed at the Cl!'fk's office during tbe week prior to ,election, II she said, • All aboontee ballota mual be returned by S p.m. A~il 10~ ~ • "H a phyrlcal d!Jabllily lriaes election day/~ ¥rs. Lagloa aaid, 11a voter may "rece!ve0an ysentee ballol by reodlng a wti.tten 1tatement to the city clerk from the doctor or .hOspital verifying con- finement." ' The am big~ Jn IOioi d>neenlfetlaol ... al tila tad Of llnl --171 ' porls per mm.., aJ1boaP 1lle -iJf the ~-~ ..... ~ llobblJ W\111 I a partl per llllJllon'. •. Both of -lreas 'hive neatby '" stations, whcioe 1111lllqe migltt be taktn by ninoff litw !hi _boy, stone uld: , · Health ofllclals anal)'Rd mud aampteo at 10 bay stations ,for ·mercury, arsenic, lead, copPer, zinc, silver, chrorrilum and cadmium as well as fOl"I t'wO cblortnated hydrocatt>Ons, DOE and DDT. The· ojudy showed tbat I ll V e r , chromium .and· cadmium, altbougb bigh, were balically tbe ume tbrougbout tbe day. DOE and DDT traces were relaUve-- ly tow and Compared to. that In Calilbmte river sedimenta. But the level of meri;ury found on Uie'. bottom of the 'Rhine Owmel I! 500 ttma that of sedimenti used · as a hue level \'alue for the state, Stone,aaid . · Tbal area In ·the west and of the bay, aslci' the aite·for boat• maintenance opera· tions, bad' 1otal heayy metals con- centrations of11,221 par18 per million, the highest In the bay. But most of thi 10 sta- tions showed high counts. The only two stations that compared favorably with base line mercury valuea were in the Upper Bay. The sediment figures were compared to similar lhalyaes in Dana "Point Harbor, which was found to be relatively· low in most of the metals. Stone said that the health department needa more studies to put tbe flpres In their proper penpectlve and called Ibis ·ooly a "p~ look.". Analy,.. of the Newport Bay water ltaeli for metals are now being clone, Previously, tbe cqunty; Health Depart- ment analfled oely r.. liact.'rta coun!J . Mort cornplriaon data llld lnformatloo on metalt effectr and dJatrtbuUou are a!Jo .neoded,,Stone 14id. : , • Boa!J 'I'•"'' tdentifled 'u . a Poulble IOW'ct beCao.ae of their hi&h numben' -more than"' 6,0oo vessels 'are berthed In ' (See METAi.ii, P11e I) . . .. , , • .. • •' . f 1 DAIO:'PI ....... ...,......,., '..Olic,1,qFFrcu i.~i.nDis riauo suifllcTS'.Ta·..i41~ *1 ' .. , · 'fho Cella .-. ,Delecih(f WoN Not lei plain Cl.~, . : • , 1 ~1 . • I 4. I 'C t , , •• 11 ; o. t ' " ' • ' I : I I J' Vaneouver .R~dio ·Station~~ • • , ,.., • ,..., I"'• ' "t; , .'• 1 I ' ., (' ' "" 11 Reports ,ff~gh~s ·Is There ' VANCOUVER (AP) -Rad!<,. station CKWX aald today billionaire lndualrlsillt Howard HIJihes ts occupying the-lop floor of the Baysbore ltlfl Hotel in ,Vancouver~ ~ ,top two floors were sealed off frorq the public. '!'be station S.kl Hughes . artived In Vancoover Tuesday bl( cb4r1ered alrtraft witJ> i porly of about a dazea penons. , He wu feported earlier to. bi'•• .nown to Loa Angeles alter spending a month In a hotel ·hideaway .In Nicarqua._ • An ontdentlfled opol<esman for the Ntcanguan Air Forte tof<l '-1!11"'1 that Hughes had nown In a prlva~ plane wly Tuesday to Los Angeles, where he bu lived as botb a celebrity and a reclUJe. A spokesman for the . 16-year-old billionaire conlirmed Tuescll1 nilhl tbat Hughes tell Nlcaraaua and arrived"al ·an" µnilisclo;..i 'de8t1natlo'n. However, the 'spokesman, Richard Hannah, retused to confirm that Hughes was li1 Loa Angeles ·and aald qiat hla whereaboutl may not be diad09eli for a Ume. Asked about tbe •reoort · from .!be .Nicaraguan Air Force~ Hannah laid, 0 1 have no reuon to believe be Is In Loa Aage.lel. It (See Page I for detalls of tbe Jateit development In tbe bilarre·cue Involving Clll!orcf !rVlng and1be pllrp6IUif Huclfel autobiography.) Before leaving Manqlia, wbert he lived on the seventh floor ol the In~ tlnental Hotel, Hughes met wHh Pres~ dent Anastasio Somoza and U . S .. Ambassador Turner B. Shelton, the am- bassador .. Id. Seesawers Claim Record' ,The amba51ador said Hu1bea 1hoo~ bando with him oeveral tlm" u ther talked at the airport. ~lblnJ hto baodshakt 11 llrong, Shelton added: ' "I noUced no dli!icultr In bll !tearing, and h!J voice wa1 stronc. 8' -In Jood humor and tbanked ·me ·• helping make arrangements for bla vtatl bere. Ho llood straight, bll hair -, clll abart ilkt he Uled to wear tt ... -all aan and pep- per appearance." Valley Youths Tottering On T(>ward Six-day Mark Two Fountain Valley youlha claim to ba\re broken the workl'11-eolrd for con- tlnuaua teeter.fotlering today after bob- bing up ai>d don\ fOr mri 1han JU bG1lrl In a March or Dimes fund railing stunt. Richard O'Yaol, Ill, and LaWIOO Down- ing, 17, 11y'1ey broke the recotd at 12:3$ a.m •. today. Tber are continuing , however, to set a new mark of 144 houri or six dayr slralgbt by 1:111 p.m. . Speaking over a telephone attached to the see-saw at 'Santi Ana'• Santa Anita Park, Crysel 111d this morning, "an even six days appean to bs I pretty sure thing now." t Both expect a crwed of 1,0tlO to cMeer lbem on UV.Ugh the rtnal lllqOI and to back their Interest with plldlfea. &I far, lbe pair bu colltcted onl1 MtlO • slgntficanlly'below lb< 16,lltlO mart they bad oet for tbemoe!+.s. • . "We mtP.t .... JO over lbe atJC dl1S becaUJe ... ba .. , recetYed pledl• "" every bour we go otel: !be' .-.!. The longer we Clll bald out, tbe more money the Mlrcl! of Dimes wtl1 pt," lald Cryod. '!'be' pair began llJ record attempt IHI Thunday niaht oa 1 normal park aeesaw, "furnished" with a televllk>n set, a radio aod ateeptng facllltla. Cryoel ~ IM oaly brew were four mlnutea _,. II oeconda per 'pancin each day -Just enoqh llmo to anawtt · nalun'1 call at a nearby portabtl toilet. · ' "La-...,.. 1ot lhert1.,ithout any troubla but my Jep illM llothertnr me, oo l bad to -. or Im wobble to tho tollll,'' uplalned Cr711f. "II really felt ' • ' wtlrd." ., A Pl otatlon alltodanl, cr,ael bad rheumatic lvevor u a child Iba! ..- ed bta lep. "I tbOUlbl I _,.. Uva to • quit ""fl1I tbe second nllht." bo olld. "I had I reo1bodiqproblemandW1-1 been doing a r.. Ibo March or Dll* r probably woald have ~. • , Downing, who wart 1 • at a rupermarkket, said be and bis porlnOr will have completed abaut 11,aot a"""'4- dcwn cycta by'tbe time tbl!' flnilb Ole sll'day llreldl. ;, Beth of tbe record llreiliera rectlved · time off from their Jobs to enpce tn the 1tunt. Crysel llvt1 at 9"I La Colooia St. and Downing at !Im Glaas Mountain St. Tbe old JU.hour r_.t .;u held by Sten Cooper illd Qar'y Toupan, liolil' or C..lro Valley. • • Hughes -'e a tbin belrd, which Shelton deocrlbod U a VIII Dyke, "but no thick sidebuml." ~ Thia ..... kl be tbe ~ ~ Hughes met with -bis staff llince he went Into eac!uolon more then ~ deelde qo. Hannall refuled comment on tbe rai>ort. Cualoml o!Oclala In Loa Ania* said they hadn't noticed ii...... _, 'tbe United stalel. But tlJey added the! IO · many -I• enter bm. every day that ho could eaally have been mlsaed. In Lu Vagu, wbert HIJlbea lived, before fiyJnt to !be labanau and then to Nicaragua, another apoMaman for tfle billionaire, Areio Sederberf, 1 a I ~ : "Thtto'll probably be 1lq\of11ieculation that be bu -to I:.. \/agu. But we do!l't llnaw where be la.• .. • J • warranti luued IDUawtac -al" allar· ed purcl!ues bl lbe put tbnt --witb mWtl,&I 11111 GI. n 1tco tIe1 ; ..... ...... """ illllft]lilii. ' Claa II Ibo 100 et a Newporl -pollal~ Hnljlandcaaalneturnad .$ bao'I')' 111PlllJ.durlnt the llcilo ~ht D1 p1rlm•• cracMown, according to De!Octtvt SCI. John llqan. He 11kl LSD, mescaline, melhedrlna, amphetamine llld barbiturate pllta, ptu plenttlul marijuana bu been bought ilui- lng tbe coatly probe. ~ down overall coat or Ibo three· month lnveallaatlon by , dW,4:• purcl!ues aod man liours, Sgt. Aid It WU about l800 per IUpatcl. '< The city's outlay for the 54 Jalllfl idM up to well over '30,000 In total. RelatlYely anall amounla of virtUflly every conlraban!f drui wen coollacalod u the three teama of four men each hll more than 40 k>catiorui from Coat.I w.._ to L1 Habra. No 1etioul Incident.I were reported in the ratda, wblch Included a predan vtall to a UC Irvine· dormltory. Captives were sullen or defiant, .non-~hatant, 1<>me evan lauahlng and a coup!• of glrla weeping as they streamed into C.0.ta Me11 CJty Jail in handcuffa, Adulta entered via the rear booldna cue area, where male 1u1pectt: JIDlIDICI aJJ celJ1, while female arreateet 1'ft •hipped on to Orange County Jall. Juveniles were led In tbrouih lbe detective b""'!U'I side door and Pl'"' ' ceaed on tbrOup. to Orange CoualJ Juvenile Hall. · · The rouodup of known drq-deoJtnc IUlf)ects Included (6 cbarled In .-to tsaued arrest warrants, wb.IJe nta penons p,,_,i when fa-arrivtd were a!Jo bookld 111 -diarpo. The Bi• rupd --llrf II te a :JS.year-old ,_ ..-la Newport Beach Tuesclly' u be burrledly poclrod (See ROIJNDUP, Pap i i Wea'tller The .... mllhl break tbroqh U-low cJoud1 Thunday f« I I brief Illy -but Wiii be ...... I powered again In tbe early -tas houn . llllba al tbe beacb IO, rialnl to the bigh 70'1 lnlaod. LoW1 - INSIDE TODAY. · The pnrclko ol U/o-med> cal lk<nli• ""' "°"" """" ·~ · tack 1..,. • .moo1~,, tr""' bo1~ doctors and pa«nu. Ste 1torJJ, Pag1 I. L.M.~ 1 -.. c .. ,..... • c.,. <.-,. Cllttl.... fM4 ,_ .. -. .,..... Mttk\lt '' ••:twtM ,.. • • &,.,,........ ..,, ,._ .. ,, ,. ... "" .... ,. ........ . ---. -. t -..... --'I ----" ... . .,.,.. .... ..... .....,..... tt ............. ,, -.. -.. -. --. __ ... --. \ \ ' r •· - 2 DAJL Y PILOT II Holding TaQ)(s Asked : • Board Urges Law Over. Boat Discharge · • • . •r t.. . Orange county harbor commlsslonen vl4o holdlDI link JlWlll><lUt facllltla or CM ~111Y11Wil Into ccllnty barlion. Tueada unanlmOU$ly r«0mmended to "'1dvaleift oervtcaa In ·a Z'-lloilr 00...U ~Ila llloao 'boord llfll -111 ol· • the ~ of Supervlaors an ordinance unit, 1lao by Jan. I, 1174. flc!als lid dl)'l to draft a new ordinance . that woold niqulre alt boats with tollets Harbor District o!ficlals began drafting 0< aatd It would do It for them, That ttm. to have holding tankl or other dlscbarge the ordinance more than three months has run out, but Harbor officials we.re d vlet.s by Jan t 1974 ago when they received notice from the granted an extentlbn tnto May .... 'The ordinan~ Would 'apply to all boats San Diego Regional Water Quality Con· The San Diego board only has jurisdlo- traveling within county harbors, includin& trot &ard that the current county law tion over Dana Point Harbor but work visitors was inadequate. has begun with the Santa Ana Regional A seCond Ion of the ordinance will A variation of the county's older 1899 Water Quality Control Board to make any uire JI commercial marlnu pro-Refuse Act, it uys 1lmply that no one county l.!!lwl conform to sunset aod ,_;;:="'-'-Newport Harbors also. Court Reforna Vrged Commissioners Tuesday a f t e r n o o n adopted some changes that were sug- gested by the ·Joint Harbor Committee that morning. TrafficCases Waste Time The Joint Harbor Committee b made up of two Newport Beach city councilmen and two harbor eornmla8ioner1. Of Juages, Dungan Says As It suggested, one section or' the ordinance was changed to rtad that "no one shall own or operate 1 boat" that hu a head (marine toilet) without a holding tank. It had -said "occupy," but some of· ficlals were afraid that phrue ·could put the burdeli or\ innocent Visitors on boata. Municipal CGW'I tud&t1 now 1pe!"f 7D perctnt of their time as "policemen or the police" and 30 percent of their time listening to minor traffic stories, Judge Donald Dungan of the Harbor Judicial l.i1atrlct court, aaid Tuesday. That 100 percent total, Dungan told the Newport Harbor Optlmllls Club, could be reduced by ao ii commiaalonera -not judae1 -were hired to heat mild~ meanor traffic vlolallons. Their salaries would probably be one. third that of a Judge's, aaJd Dungan, add· tng, "you don't aeed a n:ia.n ~~ hJgh}y paid aa a judge to hear storits. . Judget spend much Ume determln~t If pi>Uce arrest. are leral and hearing motJom concernlng defendanU' rithts, he aald. ,1 "I'm not auggestlng that these aren Important constitutional rtghll, but they do hurt eUlclency and Clllle delays," aald Dungan, who aupested "usin• the tools wt already have ' tD create judicial reform. Jud1es have been °reluctant or un. wre" to uae UieJr power, Dun1an uJd, using the example that attorney~ late for court cases can be put Jn Jail and then traiwported to court on time the followln1 day. Orarui:e County courla began an experi- ment thrtt years ago In using pretrial conferences' hi crlmfnal cuea:, he 41id, whJch have 11e:llmlnated the necealty ol wilnelltl eY<f comln1 to court In 91 per- cent of the cues." Jud1eo m\llt real!Je that whtle they might be tlfocttve on lbt bench, they mlchl not be 1ood admlnlatraton, ~· •dded. ' ' •· I Countian Lost ~ll Ne~ ~aland AUCK!.AND (AP)'-.... ~ COJllb. Ing the I-it countrY of New 1Alland'• South J1l1nd have found no trace 'of an Anaheim woman hiker miuina for nine days. d Ml Police at the town of Nelson aal u Roselyn Rae Tilbury, 23, of 812 Avocado St., bad planned to meet a friend March I on the tatand's Heaphy trall, but did not appear. At flrst there was little conctrn becauae 'there· were other hlkera and abeltera In tbe vicinity and the trall ta well marked. Howe.vei:, heavy raln started, and It wu learned that the woman waa not dreued for wet weather. A plane joined the ,.arch Tueaday, but Miia Tilbury was not found . One bill before the state legislator suuesta adtflng non-judic ial administra- tors to district courts. "We rtalize ·We can 't go on wilh the old inefficient system," Dungan sa id, pointlna to the lengthy backlog o! cases awalt.lrif· trials as a re1ult. He reluctantly supp<rted the practice of baraained or negotiated pleas between defenae attorneys and district attorney• because they save time even though they coukl talte away some of the judge's power. Citizens should look at the courts as their• ind not 11 belonging to judf es and attorneys, Dun1111 urged, and let h~, Ieg- ialator1 "know yoa are concerned. Solid Propellant Fuel Selected For Space Shuttle ·From Wire Services WASHJNGroN -The National Aero- nautics and Space Administration dee!~ ed today that the booster allge of the Space ShutUe wlll be powered by solid· propellant rocket motors rather than by liquid proptllants. The ll'llCJI announced al!O that ti, • booster ata1e will be recoverable, and that the cboaen design will have engines o! Jioll!. the boostor and .~torblter sll~e ftlil llllati,~r lll&J ll ""'"~ California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke says the declaion by NASA has put California in the "lead pc1:1ltlon" to become the , J!i. and recove':lj site for lh,e ,f .t5 ~'J:unch and recovery 'Illa II l~y be along the coul, al Van- der.berf Air Force Baae In Southern California or cape Kennedy, where It can be plucked from the ocean." llUI Ille Allodlted Prw aid the Also at the committee's suggestion, a reference to requiring pump-out stations only at 1narlnas with more than 50 boats was entirely removed., • "We'd have a lot of 4.~boat marinas in town," Commis.sion Cha~an Martin Usab 1aid. "' Holding tanks are nqt the only sanitary 'device allowed, 'allhoUgh the)' are the simplest and m08t in6pensiye, Boat owners could al!O choose to Install equipment to prQvide a direct connection with the local sewer system or to create a sewage treatment system on the boat capable of producing fluid cOmparable to aecondary treated water acctpted by the health officer. Sewage treatment systems are ex- pensive and are not yet available for arnaller boats. Commissioners emphasized, ~plte boating ','propaganda" to the Contrary, that the atldltlon of a basic but aufflclenl holding tank was not expensive. , "Despite what you may have heard otherwise," Commissioner F r a n k Robinson told the small audience, "installation of a System that meets these requirements only runs in the SlOO range." . ' Usab, who owns a 21-foot boat, said he has a carry-out tank that coat around AO "and it meets the code." "We've just sort of resurrected a more deluxe chamber pot,'? Robimon added. Mofe aophistlcated systems run Into higher costs and Diay require inatallation fees . Commissioners adopted the ordinanct applying to all boat.. over an alternative referrtn& l,o ·only those v~b "DOI Uled '!or ~rtatjn p~'i ~ t Coundlman Carl Kymla aald the se<· ond alt'Unative would be m o r e "dJscrimlna.tory." ~"' j, 'f I 'I ') Up.per ' Bd:y ' I I I• Back In Rivers ·Bill declalon probably means that the Cape Upper Newport Bly b back In the Wlld · Kennedy launch complez will he chooen Rivers blll again. over other contend.era for sp.1ce ahuttle State ~Senator Peter H. Behr (R-8an Ja11nchlngs. Rafael) this week put the estuary back in The NASA 1Mouncernent said Kennedy his waterway preservation measure after Space Center, Fla., will be responsible taking it out three weeks aeo after put· for design of 1Space Shuttle launch and ting It In early in February. · recovery facilities. The bill, aimed primarily at prtserving To the comment of Rep. Lou Frey Jr., the natural status of Northern California (R·1'"""1a.) that the decision locked in Cape rivers, would prohibit any dredaing in the Kennedy as the only logical launch site ~ck Bay. ror the shuttle, other observers said / \tandenberg Air Force Base or tome other location might Just as well qualify. li:~n. Carpenter Sets Vanderberg, which generally launches ye; spacecraft into polar orbit as contrasted . • to the equatorial-orbit launches from Talk to CofC Unit DAILY ,ILOT Sllff f'Mlll ,CMPO'S REGAN BRIEFS HIS MEN PRIOR TO ROUNDUP For Dl"ut Dealers ind Cops, • Long, Sleeplt11 Night 'Neth's Narks' Briefed Before Coast Roundup Mobilizing for a major roundup o! suspected drug dealers has parallels to preparing for a military campaign, from initial strategy to I a s t -m i n u ~ e in- structions. Detective Sgt. John Regan, supervisor of the team called Neth's Narka, checked his watch in the brighUy lighted room and began giving orders. The time was 7:30 p.m., an ironic twist ol the calendar and clock. He had been scheduled for weeks as featured speaker in a. Costa Mesa High School Drug Abuse Clinic, beginning at the same moment three blocks· away. 'The supervising narcotics detective sent a substitute speaker. protruding from pockets, or poking out of windbreaker jackets. Four of them cannot be photographed. They are men whose recent 18-hour shUts were spent in furtive street corner meetings, ~gy apartments and bright parking. lots where the action-seeking young hang out. Somebody called upstairs to the jail for another Carton of handcuffs. "This Is a highly specialized team.'' Sgt. Regan declared, emphasizing city administration support in their un· dercoVer drug-buying spree. Thousands of dollars had to be spent. "I suggest you wait until late to hit UCI, when those people are asleep. We don't want trouble out there," he added. Fro• P .. e J ·ROUNDUJ>. • • ' . ... preparing to move to Guadalajar1, Mu:· kio. . ' . · l(aJdln nrtflly atapped up their plau this week whe~ the Orange Coast drul underworld bea:an to sense something was brewins:, especially after an ac- cidental leak Tuesday. Judge Everett W. Dickey was presiding at the burglary trial of two suspected dealers in Harbor Judicial District Court, while several Of their friends and fello• euspects sat in the courtroom. Judge Dickey asked ii the alleged burglars knew warrants charging sale of narl'Otics and nam1ng them had just been issued. "The courtroom froze," Sgt. Regan 1aid later. One panicked spectator leaped up and fled , but wu quickly caught in the nearby downtown area when running detectives headed him off. Mass arraigrunents are expected for the alleged drug dealers scooped up in the overnight raid, most of whom are held in jail in lieu of Jl2,500 ball each. Many of them have prior records and a few were already in jail . Organizers of U1e sweep authorized by Police Chief Roger E. Neth after putting together a beefed-up narcotics squad earlier this year hope they have wiped out major 'suppliers. Students -juveniles and adults - represent Orange Co.ast College, UC Irvine, McNally Continuation, Costa Mesa, and Eslancia high schools, plus Fountain Valley High School. .. Cities hit as fast as raid teams l'OUld work included Huntington Beach, Foun- tain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove, Newport Beach, La Habra and the unirr corporated arta of Santa Ana Heights. Transportation teams driving a paddy wagon, station wagons and squad cars trailed raiders to various addresses, the bulk of them In Colla Mesa . InvestJgators encountued I l e w weapons and other traceable items being ' checked today as possibly stolen pro- perly. I I A few of the jlivennes -generally agreed to be accidentally present when suspect-hosts were captured -have been released to their Parents pending further investigation. The far-flung raid was the largest such lndiv.idual operation in Costa Mesa history, although tWo netted similar num-- bers of suspects in the past. Operation Harvest and Operation Daybreak, howe ver. Included participa-- tion of the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement and many other county police agencies. · Regan and 'his men were zeroing in on the roots of the 'campus drug problem. The men present -some 1CtOtJD1Y, long haired and ·bearded -aat around a U·shaped table, flashlights and holsters "On these juveniles. the parent• are Newpor~ Dn'vers going to be 'coming off the wall'," he . continued. "Ex12!.!!irt•a little &o them." • .. : ' . ~ •. Newsmen sitting in, belore going into F ' D dJi the field with raid teams listened as al· acmg ea ne tentively u the men they would ac· oompan~i*; -d w if·: t~ \ qp ·~ar)<lng Tags Newport Bay -and boat mihite.nance actl\'iUes. The average boat is h8uled out one and one-third times per year for aetvice and Drug Stakeout Tension Eased most of the scraping 11\d sanding residue Tension during 'I.I eiaht-man 1takeout end! up In the bay, Stone said. on a Costa Mesa rtaidence where possible d · d to t the anned reslatance wu nuncred broke &at paints are esigne preven with muffled laughter during Tuesday sticking of marine organisms. · night's drug roundup. Five of the eight heavy metals assayed O>sta Mesa detectives in two unmarked in the bay were found in boat ·hull paints sedans and a black-and-white patrol car sold ln the HarDor area, Stone said. staged a rendezvous just out of sight of They are arsenic, chromiUm, copper, their target on the city's west side. mercury and zinc~ Suddenly, a boy about 13 on a bicycle MOre investigation of aourcea and rode around a corner into their midst - what to do about them Is needed, said clutching a pilfered red-and-white Stop Stone who confirmed Harbor Commi1-sign -glanced around in disbelief...,and ilone; Frank Robinson's observation that pedaled off at high speed. seven to 10 tons of toxic paint is going He was only small fry, so they let him Annual parking stickers for Newport Be.!!lch parking lots are now available at city ball1 3300 Newport Boulevard, and must be obtained by Frlday, city offlcialJ said today. 1 Philip Bettencourt, assistant city man- ager, said the Police Department will be- gin tagging cars parked in metered areas without the new sticker• 11 of Saturday. Likewise, 1971 stickers will not be honored at the Balboa and Corona del Mar lob beginning Saturday. Price of the stickm has been doubled this year, to $20 for regular permits and to $30 for "transferrable dashboard per .. mits. Senator to Address Corona del Mar CofC Stale Senator Clair W. Burgener (R· ilMCbO Santa Fe), a candidate for the new 42nd Congressional District which repr6en11 Corona del Mar, will speak at the Corona del Mar Chamber of Com- merce luncheon Thursday. Florida, has been the primary testing center for the Minuteman solid-propellant rocket. Additionally, the principal solid-rocket manufacturing plants are on or near the West Coast -Pratt & Whitney Division of United Aircraft Corp. at Sunnyvale, Aerojet·General rocket divls:lon at Sacra- mento, the Thiokol Chemical Corp. at Br!niham City, Utah. into the bay each year. BJ>. State Senator Dennis Carpenter (ft. Jii;;;;;;;;;;;;ii,iiiiiiiiiij'!P~--;-iji-j-jijjjj-iliiiliiiliiiliili Newport Beach) will speak Friday at 7:30 a.m. at a. breakfast meeting of the Marine Division of the Newpurt Harbor Chamber of Commerce .at the Balboa Bay Club. The stickers are good at all beach-area parking metera with blue poles, beside.a the parking lots. • ' .. • •• ! ' • • • • • • • ' • The lunch 'II at the Vllla Sweden al noon. Bur1ener's toplca will be "Coastal and Environmental Problems and Current State t.eglslatlon." ., -ICOAIT • DAILY PILOT 1"e en,.. c.et DAILY PILOT, wlll wtlldl ... corMIMf ftle ,._....,._ " '"'"'*' w 1M er.,.. C.lt Mllllllllt ~ • ..,._ .... •ltlont .,.. publllMd, MOM!•., ~ P'rkl1.,, flW eoft1 Miii, N"""" llMfl, H1111t1""9n lffc:hll'ount11n v11i.y, lWUM 1.-dl, ll"WIMISNd-.Ck W S.n Cltlnente/ S.11 J11111 C...i11...._ A 111111• N1JMll ldltl•fl " --~ .. M'lft)'.t " ~ • .,... The \llrlllc:IJllll •llMlll •11t h •t UI W.t It., StrMI, C.... Mat, C.tlllmll, .... ~.~,rt N. W1M ,, .......... ,.., ...... J•1k I. C.rl1y va ,,.._,, w OtMrtl .,.... n ••• , 1(,,,., ·-'"''"''' A. Mw,t.1110 MIMt ... lfUW L Pehr Krlet H...,.n IMClt CllY Mnw .. .,.,, ...... .,.,... lJJJ N..,..+ '"'"'" M1Rl111 Alllil,..111 P.O. he i•7&. t1W2 --°"'' M .. : D Wiii" t.y • ....., l..ttwll' ltiKt11 m ....-..1 .-.~ MIM~i.t-awd\1 1111J a.-dl ... ..,....i M CltrNWo1 »S """' El QtriN _, , ... ,.. f714J 641,-4121 Q111NW .......... '4W71 =r;. lf7l. °""" cwt ""W• . "' ..... . ....... , ............ ......-.i -11.. f/lt ........ ...._.. ,..., "*' .. ........ """"" ..-111 .... ...... " °"""""' ....... . ___ ...... __ ._, C:.lfWlllt. IA11••1 .... """"'"' .., !NII' .. ,, ..,.,..,. ............ ""' ...,,. ' • NASA said It will Issue invitations to In- dustry this week to submit proposals for design and development "bf the space shuttle. COASTWISE His topic will. be "Projected Coastal, Tidelands and Boating Legislation" and will include details of the coasUine bill he introduced Wednesday. Reservations are necessary and can ~ made by calling the chamber offices be· fore noon Thunday. B" Pftll lnterlalull "Oh, ly lht Way, Thlt ht of Sl9n1 0.,0 With l~ry Ho-Wt Sell Within 1-llock1 of tho lloaCh." , ...... I • GEM TALK TODAY l!Y · HOW WE BUY JEWILS You' are, we're sure: well aware of the fact that line Jel'els are created from rough stones whJCh have been mined from deep In the earth. These stones are then plaCed in the hands of skilled craftsmen who apply years of experience to cut- ting and polishing processes which produce the scintillating jewel you see in our store. You'd be surprised at how m~ch of our time is appl\ed to selection not only of the gems tbemselves1 but also to careful consldaratJon of processors from whom wa buy. Although we, of course, buy jewelry f1'>m private and eattte sources, the bull< of our beautl111l stock of jewels is purchased from processors who have an unqi.,ie .. llonable reputation for strict con- trols · careful attention to detail, and years of exa~ting experi121ce. So when you are looking for the finest In gems, come In and iee us. You have not only the expert attention of the owner.,perator; you also have the additlont! a11ur- ance of knowing that the 1oun:e of your gem was selected with u· lfeme "PefSODal (:1t'9. ~Wrti I U D ' • ' • For that specia~ someanes birthday Th• trut J)reclousness of 1n 01n1ga watch 11 the love lhat goes With It. The Omega you recerve 1oday will become a ' proud po1111slon ••• precloua b1yond comptrt for what It symbOlil•a.. Within / ••ell CIM b9~ta 1h• peetltla Omega mowm•nt Mid• with melleulout c1111 lo 9!\<9.yti1rt of f11t~ful perfonntnct. SI• our eompltte collecUon of ()IMga men'• and l1dlea' Watches, MS to' over $1000. ' A-lelf•Wll'ldlftl ltlll'lltlet With Mlf•d\111111111 t1l111d1r.1•K ooli!MlUM t11• .,,,,.,,. ••• ,(tU 111 llllnlllt Mltl lhl ••••••••., ,. ...... ,.11'° I ... o4 clltt10!WM. 1•K ""'"' lollcl told , ..... t1U 182~ NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CO/IVINllNT TERMS 24 YIAll IN IAMI LOCATION IANICAMIRICARD-MASnl CHARSe ,HONl Hl-1401 - ·"'" ,I • I' .. • -, .. Whale Drama Copt,er t.o , Tr ack Gigi · fu DIEGO (AP) -Sc:Jen. tloa are plaonlng 1 to UM • helicopter In trlckill( a California gny wbo1e roleaoed off the SOuthern Clli!omla cout alter 1year111 eapliylty. They abandoned llforl.I Ip tract the whale, named Gigi, by boat ri-Jay btc:ause signals from her \.!!!lo J>ock pact were c6miJ11 too in- frequen•Jy to ca(ch up with her, 11akl a spokesman for Sea World, the marine amusement park wher< the 14,000.pound mammal was kept until Mon- day. A lldonllot et the N'vlll UnderMI -••• Development Center blamed the poor rlMllo transm- .., Gilt'• "lay swimming habits." ''11M! girl 11 never done anything in her life except bob up and down in a tank, and it'• going to take her a while to act lil<e.1 wb,ale," said Larry McKinley of the Navy Center's marine mammal facility. Gigi, captured when she Willi about I w~s old, apparently was only sUcklng her ~ and blow hole out of the water in- stead. of doing a normal forward roll like other gray whales, McKinley said. The back pack will not tranmnll while It la submerged. U,.I Tt ..... I• SIL ENT ON ITT Lt. Gov. 'lttinecW• Reinecke Declines Comment Lettuce Boycott . Ordered -----·-\ • \ DAILY PILOT 5 Angela Davis' Gives Jui~y 'OK,: But Doubts Impartial Trial SAN JOSE !UPI) -Angela between the prosecullon and "There Is no useful pur..,.. By Uolled Preu ~tloalll Davis says she Is convinced defenae • during a ~minute In lurlher deial of the trial • A nationwide lettuce boycott she cannot get a falr trial in conference with J u d g e W nil middle-class Santa C I a r a Rlrhard E. Arnason. e are co dent iri t.hep men and strike ·against centrAI County. but believes the all· The fo r mer Uc LA and women and are happy to California growers ' w I 11 white jury sworn in to hear philosophy-instructor, who is accept the jury aa It la now." resume Friday after a year's her case "will do Its best." charged with supplying the Prosecutor Albert W. Harris moratorium, Cesar Chavei Eight women and four men, gW'IS in the Marin County Jr., an assbtant state attorney ·d Tu N Ch Including one ~1 ex I can -Courthouse shootings of t9'i'U, gencrAI. concurred in her sai esday. 0 anges, American. were accepted by addressed the bench in clear. decision, saying, ".The J)'Ople . Chavez, bead of the United both sides TJJesday at the matter-of-fact tones : will also aceept the jury." Farm Workers Organizing Solon Asks murder. kid naping and con-"We have long contended ii Panelists included a Mex- Committee (UFWOC ), said splracy trial of Miss Davis, 28, \\'Ould be impossible for me to lean-American man emplo).ed negotiations have failed with SACRAMENTO (UPI} a black woman and an avowed get a fair trial in Santa Clara by IBM, a woman whose son Tb e author o { the Communist. Selection of four County. We have made a num-was a conscientious objector, about 198 major lettuce Legislature's heavily amended alternates was expected to be ber or motions challenging the a 45-yeaN>ld bachelor, a growets in the nation's "salarl roll call vote reform says he completed today or Thursday jury system here. Jewish divorcee, a young bowl" or Salinas Valley. will ask the Senate to reject and testimony could begin as "As J look at these men and matron who works in a The union has been trying to Assembly chana:es to his pro-early as Monday. women I see that this jury department store, and two get the growers to drop a posals. The trJal, now In Its th,ird does reflect the composition of young women in their 20s. "sweetheart contract" they 'lf the Senate agrees to the week, had been expected to the county -there are no The panel 's average age \\'as signed with the Teamsters request. by Sen. Peter Behr bog down over jury selection black people. Thoogh I can't about 40, although this was oot t Union just before the 1970 (R-Tiburon), a two-house con-for months. .. say It's a jury of my peers, a matter of court record . UFWOC: six-month strike 1tnd ference committee will be ap-Mi~ Davis stood up in court after much discussion we are Before ending Tue~ay's boycott began. pointed to iron out the dif· to formally accept the jury convinced they will put forth session, six alterna te jurors "It was just 8 stalling tactic· fere~ and develop 1 com-Tuesday after' a surprise their best effort to 1ive me a were sealed and questioned, Since her release seven mUet from San Diego, Gigi has followed a circular swlm· 1l'ling pattern and baa re- mained in the San Diego area, .clentlst.a f&ld. There wu aome difference of opinion as to the sigfilflcance of her !allure to join immediately other gray whales on their migration north from Scam· mon '1 Lagoon, their breeding ground In Baja Calllomia. r Scientists hope to U1e the algnola· to trace Gigi's path on ber northttn mlgratlon, and to acquire Information on the cleplh of ber div.. and the water temperature .. The back pack la dealgned to become clls<ngaged from Gigi In about nine months. . h I .. Ch d f promise. agreement was worked out fa ir trial. . but th all d' 1 ....i SACRAMENTO (AP) -Lt. on t er part, avez sai o Behr told newsmen he plans i -----~~~--~!ii~~~i!~iiij!~~~~~~~·y~w~e~re~~1-sm~ss-'.:_'' Gov. Ed Reinecke ha s refused the recent talks to get the to seek· Senate rejections of to answer questions from growers to switch contracts to Assembly am~dments this TAKE A PICTURE WITH Set Up Camp UFWOC jurisdiction. ft ~, newsmen regardi ng his in-a ernoon. He said lettuce. boycott ac-1 r ·d f hi t h Volv.ment l·n the lnternat1·onai . n ap1 as on, e THE EASTER BUNNY Indians Put Claim On Stat,e Missions '. tivities would begin Friday Assembly Rules Committee Telephone It Telegraph offer ac ross the nation, and in Tue&day rewrote B e hr ' s to help underwrite the Canada and' Northern Europe. Senate-passed ehange in the Now -C11rou1el Court Republican N 8 t i 0 n a 1 Con-Some strike centers already way the legislators vote in Math ~Oasf ?lua are established because of the committee and sent It to the ... vention in San Diego. ,.i"~n~io~n·~s~bo~yco~tt~o~f~n~i n:e Jfl~oo;r~·~w~h~er~e~lt~w~a~s~sw!i~!t~ly1_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~ The Republican official's Northern California wines. adopted without debate &a.ti. KING CITY (UPI) - A band of American Ind ians has pitched camp around Mission San Antonio de Padua, declar- tn~ they were civilized, and laid claim to all the 21 historic missions in California. Mission San Antonio dt! Padua, lt.s adobe b'ulldings In Woman, Jailed; Has 13 Dog s . ' ruins as late as Worlfi...War n, 1s in the wooded 'foothills of the Coast Range Mountains 20 iniles west of King Citfi. The land It oecupi~"ls sur' rounded by the toverrunent- coptrolled Hunter L '1~ 11 e t t Military ' Reservation, once part of the Hearst Ranch, and the mission's restored buildings are used as a training achoo! by the Roman Catholic Church's Franciscan Order. i Meredith Quinn, a Dakota speaking for the Indians, declared the function of the . missions founded 200 years ago by Father Junipero Serra "was to convert and civilize .LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -An the savages." elderly woman who had four "We feel the miu ions ha ve times as many dogs as legally served this function," he ad- allowed has been ordered to ded as the Ind ians demanded jail for runni~ her home like the missions and the land on a kennel without hfving a which they stand. li The Indians prepared a cense. .. f The municipal court judge ·mani esto" to be delivered to refusal came at a news con- ference in the hallway outside his office where he reported on Califor11.ia'1 efforts to ob- tain contracts for the space shutUe progtam. Asked by a newsman If he planned to testify on ~e rrr case before the · S e n a t e Judiciary Committee, Reinecke responded, "I have not been invited and· I hope am not invited." (See story, Pag~·l7). Mea'nwhile a Justice Depart- ment letter is being used by local fund raisers to assure businessmen that their con· tributions for the forthcoming Republican n a t i o n a I con- vention are legal and tax deductible, the Los Angeles Times said today. Rea gan OK's Adult Bills tOld Mrs. Ruth Frotmming, Bishop Harry Clinch of the 75. that &he would be released Monterey Diocese ol the fro -·~~ -sbe 'ch!ltch. " SACRAMENTO (AP) m "'~wuy as ·soon u , Jt asks the church to relin-' Gov. ~agan has signed lrito reduced her pack of dogs from qui$h all property ·and records 1aw two hurry-up measures 13 to 3 -the city's legal limit. or the mission, make an "ac-which backers say correct "I just can't send my Jittle . counting of all moneys and oversights in the instant-adult ped tatro toed ,t,he J>e:>undled Mto be revenues due Indians..'.' and Jaw. es Y . • wai . r 1 · put ·up "fu¢s to provide ·. One bill would keep 29,000 Froemming, after-b ~ 1 n g armed protection" for the In-youths 18 through 20 years of sentenced. • dians now ln camp age on the welfare rolls under She was Cined. $750 ~d Among the de~ands ·'fas the Aid to Families with sentenced to 30 days in jail, one for the eviction of' ·an Dependent Children program. with three rears ~ro~tion, other occupants from each The Other .bill protects stat.e afte~ an earlier conviction for mission's original territory of allotments to California 's 94 ~av1ng too many dogs a~ let-three square miles. locally run community col- ting µiem run free without No building was occupied at lege!. It was reared that the tags.. . . Mission San Antonio de Padua t change in the definition of Neighbors testified that her when the Indian men and minm and adults which went pe~ con~tly l.eaped ov.er women set. ~p a "village" into erfect March •, would ~e1r fe~, barking_ apd nip-around a .ffllntbl,ls and a truck have deprived the community pmg at children. in which l[ley had arrived. colleges of $36 million. I ljott\fe seeq tbis-. . . Travel Vouchers ••• the "going" kind Ot stamp ••• takes. yo~ an~here, at any time you choose! Saving Travel Vouchers ls the fastest way to make your travel dreams come true! Save these mag!c stamps for "fun" \1$Catlonsl Trading Travel Voucher.scan pay for part or all ol,your ticket costs! Here's how the program works: ' ·L Your participating mercha'nts (see directory) issue Trad· \ ing Travel Vouchers with each purchase you m&ke. 2. You place .,r~gular" or "Big Ten" Travel Vouchers in your colorful redemption books. J. Take your filled redemption book to your local member ExcHange Bank (see directory), and receive a beautifully engraved Traveler's Reserve Certificate worth $2.00. '9 When you are ready to travel, take your Traveler's Reserve Certif!c8tes to your authorized Travel Agent (see direc- tory), and spend them like cash! Traveler's Reaerve cer- tificates can purchase all or any part or your next ticket costs. You· choose the tlme and place, and you're off on - your trip! \ .......... MEPICHAHt INOUIRltl IMVITtDi TRAVELERS RESEAVl, INC. (114) 111-uot (' ' If -else put na1neon cha•npagne, you'd pay :.atot ~ 'lnore ., . .r • ' ., .. . . for .it. • R e Champagne ii more than adding bubbles, lea a wii:k of art. We use the best grapes. We use all the skills developed in almost 49 years of winemaking to ere.ate a crisp, delicatC'.'Champagne. It's an exceptional 0champagne, V(e go all out when we make it, then we use a little restraint when we price it. We want you to enjoy it as often as possible. How about tonight? ~-·~ GALLO .. ~,«., u,._ .... oi-... ,.,,,,..-,uia BPAAKUNO WINE..OM.1..0 CAUFOftNIA CHAMPAQNE~HARMAT BUU< PROOES5-NATURALL.Y FERMENlEO.OAllO CHAMPAGNE cnLARS. MODESTO. OAl.IFOl'INIA • I • • Ii , • ( I • \ ' DAD~Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Intriguing Election The upcomlnc Newport Beach City Council ere .. lions offer some lntriguirig anrles ln interest the voteu that have not been preBent in recent elections. • Tc be sure, the actions and utterances of the six candidates themselves so far have contributed little that would inspire much more than a yawn Crom ~e electorate. But that haa been a pattern before. Things will warm up. For one thing, we have a previously unzeated two- term cowicilman seeking a return to office from a new district in the person of P. D. "Dee" Cook. • We have Mayor Ed Hirth, who four years ago un· 1eated a strong incumbent (Cook), himself facing a strong challenge. We have two candidates with litUe previous involve- ment in city and civic affairs seeking office in the per- 1ons of John Slnre contesting with Cook for the seat Lindsley Parsons ls vacating, and Paul Rycko!!, cballeng· Inc Mayor Hirth. A second challenger to Hirth ls perennial civic critic Harvey Pease. Councilman Donald Mcinnis, unop- posed, rounds out the ballot. However, the most inlriJuing aspect in thi! electlon Is wbetlfer or not there is a ' slate" on the ballot, for the first time in many years -in more than a hall dozen electione. Store and Rr.ckoff both declare they are not running as a slate, while acknowledging many key backers in common and some common stands. Store particularly notea that aome of hi• backers support Ryckofrs oppon· ent, Hirth . · Whether or not the candidates consider them· aelves a· slate they may indeed be supported as a slate. They both have tbe actjve backing of the leadership core of the Freeway Fighters group as members of their canipaign, coDUnittees. These include Vincent Jorgensen, Walter Koch, Margot Skilling, Carroll Beek and Marshall Duffield, among others. Admittedly common ln both candidates'· campaigns are the fund raising efforts of Duffield. In the aftermath 0£ last year's anti-freeway election, aome leaders of the Freeway Fighters and their official body, the Citizens Coordinating Committee, talked en· thUJlastically of keeping their organization Intact to be- come a lor<flk-hopefully to be THE force -in city politic•. 1lartii11 with thb election. , So we have two new lac~ In city politics whose inter· est in city affairs sprang from their involvement in the !reeway election, challenging two veterans of city service. Sharp differences of position on ma jor city problems may turn up, but they haven 't been spelled out so far. As of now the campaigoing seems to have produced little more than the usual conflicting but general cl&ims of who will most diligently and selflessly serve his con· 1tituents. But the undercurrents are there. ' Court Relief, at Last Orange County Supervisors ' have formally moved to build new llarbor Judicial Di!trict Courts on the Col· !Ins Radio Company properly. Equally important, they have also moved to lease some temporary space in the Collins building to relieve the dreadful overcrowding in present facilities. Thank goodness. The temporary quarters are scheduled to be ready about May 1. The permanent new courts building is about two years away. Orange County judges have been for ce d to adm in· ister the laws ol the people out of impossible fa cilities far , far too long. While Supervisors can be blamed for part o( the de- la y. simply because they dragged thei r feet on the proj· ect, the responsibUity for the protracted inaction does not all rest with them. Newport Beach councilmell' likewise. took their fine time in admitting the death of their civii:: center project at Newport Center following voter rejection ol bonds for the city hall-police station portion of the project. But there is no need to beat a dead horse. For all concerned, including the speculative land developers around the new court site, everything has turned out fo r the better. 1 • • • • N Some Don't Know What Dear Gloomy Gus From Religious, Moral, Social, E.conomic Standp0,lnts. • • • To Be For (srnNEY J. HARRI~) Tlloqllll • i.orce: ' Jn some per!Olllllties. the strength Uu only in opPG11illon; take awi~ • .e op-poslllon llld ~ Bounder ,...,..., lot knowing what to be fer, having so loll( been ;.;atat. • • • • Whe'\ a commun- ity st'iffers a severe rise ln crime, the good ci\izens organ- ize lo punish the criminals ; but who punishes the good citizens for having per- mitted the criminal spirit to grow and flourish in their midst? • • • Th~ public feels far more comfortable with a stupid m~ than with a clever man ; so clever men who aspire to public leadership pretend to be more stupid than lbey a.re. • • • Most men are poor executives because tht:y fail to understand that "decision· making" does not consist in weighing aJl the facts as they come in and then mak- ing the most reasonable judgment, but rather moving before all the facts are in and anticipating their consequences. • • • It ts the systematic neglect of the natural instinct of competition that will eventually wreck all Marxist societies ; and, Contrarlwise, the systematic neglect of the natural instinct toward cooperation ' ·~ Talk abotll double llalldorda! The people along the beach in West Newport object lo bicycle trails on public property, yet many of them aelfllhly tocroach on public pro~ ·erty with their own walla and pallot! -M. W. T. "'" ... ,.,,. ,...... ,.....,.... ...... .., -rtlJ ,,... ., .. .....,._. .. ... .,., "' ...... ......,. .... Deity .. u ••. , II the moot serious Internal threat within ..,..p1tiuve .o<teu.s, • • • You1re not truly grown up untll you're ltss prone to excuae your own mistakes and more inclined to excuse the follies of others. • • • We don 't genuinely believe in free speech untU we recognize that no abuse of the freedom of speech is as bad as glv· ing some authority the powe.r to repress II. • • • Pets acquire the particular neuroses of their owners; dogs and thelr masters (or mistresses ) only seem to look alike, after awhile, when the owneri have used the ir pets for illicit emotional' and social n~ds. • • • Those who live by and for m\sations generall y find out much too late that nothing in the world iA duller than sUJo tained stimulation. . . ' . To be a professed 0 materialist" these days ls, as superstiUoua and speculative as to be a "spiritualist" -for the more we learn about "matter" the less we understand it, and the less material it seems. • • • Democracy Is the only syslem that persists in~ asking the Powers That Be whether they are the powers that ought lo be. Revamping the · Military In "PAWNS : The Plight of lhe Citizen. SoJd.ier," young reporter, Peter Barnes, now West Coast editor of Tl» New Repubik:, presents a well-rAsoned, articulate blueprint for revamping, sl:'eamfuting and malting more efficient the U.S. military force. He examines the power that ~he military ei:erclses over the Jives of mil- Uons of American citltens (Ila own courts, for e1ample) to the point where it f111ds a dangerous percentage of unwilling and inefficient young people in tta S mil· lion man police force. cf the wor1d. It is Barnes' thella, tl'nerally, that the draft can be inodifled, even ellmii11ted1 in favor of a competent fighting force, • aenUally a profeatonal defensive army, navy, air force. '11111 might ht based...on West Germany's Bundawebr, In which clvU )lberlie• lor 10lcller1 were spelled out la the Soldien Law ol 1956 and lllere II mt longer a dlffertnef; between ~r" and "civillall" in this model tN · 'BIS CHAPTER. "Toward •a Demoaa!IC Anny," Barnes einpbaslzes that If Ille -o! """"'lck the Great mid a-lb ~ dellberalely creale 111 -~or aoldlera' rights and ...,..a, qalnol militarism., it _. to .. , ... that the nation of 111 Ir• and JefttnDa can do the -. 1Jdl II ml 'II antHDDltary harangue . '1111 ..._ belimi the mllltary haa ... --b'-lnrec.nt ,... <.-t i-My Lii and other of>. l (THE BOOKMAN) vious blunders). He based hl1 findings and reuoninc on Interviews with military people o! au cank,s (some hostile) after covering for Newsweek the Presidio 1tockade "muUny" case of 1961 in which 27 confused, frl&hlened YOWli men raced possible death sentences for their gestures of anti-wa,r dissent. "Pawns" Is a public service whJcb calls for publlc awareDe!s, concern and action on a major, unhippy and e-rpenalve American problem. The book 1bould be OJsenU.I readlllg !or all members of eon,ra., ...... Olbars (Knop!; $715). BOB TIIOM.U, the hard-working Auocialod Prtsa mail in Hoflyweod !or many years and the author of three ex- cellent blotf'apblu or lale m 0 v h magnates ("Ki1l1 Cobo." "'lllllber1." 1'Stllftick") turns to fiction in "WeUend '33." Th1I ••• a mistake. For Thomas ii essentially 1 reporter, and "Weekend" •13311 11 a fJcmtn.t of hi1 Imagination. It It a toual> (bui not tough eooulb ) · story of how, and why, over a weeitnd lD 193.1, a miied bag of moV!e people are In- vited to the fabulous castle Exc11Ubur1 ano(her name for Hear1t'1 San Simeon of that period. "CiUzen K°"'" toucbed on thiJ theme in a far more convinclng man. ner (Doubleday; Ill.~). William Bo1u Death Sentence Necessary, Proper : To the Edllor: capital punillhment ahould not ht done away with. It is necessary and proper from at least the following atandpolnts: Rell£1ous, moral, .soclal and economic. Most people who tblnk that capital punishment should be abolished base their argument on "the "Sixth Com- mandment" of the Bible which says, j<Thou ahalt not kill." Theee people take the popular commandlDeQt literally, saying that U God (throli&h the Bible! says we should not JdlJ thea. that applies to every case and condition Including war and criminal execuijon. t..~ TO THE POSSIBLE surprl,. of many, the Bible says the following in Genesis (ch, 9.): "And murder JI forbidden . Man· killing animals must die, and any man who murders shall be killed ; for lo kill a man Is to kill one made like God ." (The Living Bible). How does one go abou t killing a murderer other than capital punishment? ln fact, most modem trans.. Jators of the Bible render the "Sixth Commandment" as "Thou shalt not murder." To say murder rather than kill mall:es the whole difference when debating capital punishment. particularly in light of the Genesis passage that both man and beast are to 'be exeg!ted U they kill , i.e., murd er a human. Thus, we have a religioUs commandment for capital punishment. AND A RELIGIOUS -moral view of the vaJue of human life might say that man, having the highest develo pment, should have a right to his life and that no other 1 man has a right to lake it from him. In a sense this is true. 'But what happens to the guy who cheats, ihe guy who doesn't obey the rules and takes another's life? Do you say "naughty, nauahty" and go about your business? The cheater is free to kill anyone he want.I ~o. And the nature of people guarantees he would kill to obta in his dealres if there was no punishment. And if he were locked up for life im- prisonment be can still kill othe r prisoners and guards in prison. For \\'hY 1houldn't he? He is not going anywhere different and nothlng more can be done to him that Jsn't already done. THJS IS WHY the enforcen1ent and correction community is working to rtinstate capital punishment. From the premise that life i.! sacred and of the highest value and therefore should not be taken by man, comes the realit y that a prison guard's life ls not worth the du.st be walks on, since there is no further punishment to murder. The price that society will have to pay to Imprison those normally executed, in terms of physical plant, pay of guards (wttich would have to increase In numbers and dollars) and lou to the rest of society, is something society can do without. Doesn't It seem more moral to allow the taking of one IUe B11 George --~ Dear Georae: My wile has been using 1 rolling pin on her hips. She n>U• the pin on her hips a hall·hour twice a day. Does thiJ really have any physical effect! Dear Abott c:: ABNER C. Indeed It does -It will give her muacular flnger1 and, unleu sM bu very long arms,· eventual pains ln her shouldep . But, a1 a hobby, lt'1 cheap. Cl.earn the benoflll of Sldewaya. Thinkinf, and tell Geor1• what thty,m.J ' MAILBOX LetttT& from reader! art welcomt . ·Normally writers should conve11 their me!sages tn 300 words or less. Tht right to conden.se letters to fit space or etiminate libel is reserved. All lct-- ters must include signatufe and mail-- ina address, but name& mag be with-- held on request if iufficiht rea&on is apparent. Poet'J 'lqitl no be pub· li.lhed. /.' . ' to prevent the taking of two or JO or 100? THE COUBTS MIGHT say thal capital punishment is cruel or u n u & u a I punishment. It is beyond belief tl\_at it could be considered either. It is not cruel, in that there is no sustained pain (in modern execution methods). Nor is it cruel in that it is harsh or severe, for that Is the very ,.nt! Capital punish- ment cannot be co'!iaered UlJ.Usual ln any wildest stretch of the imagination since it has been practiced from the dawn of civilization. And it must continue to be practiced for the safety and benefit of society. RICHARD J. ELLIO'l'I' No Oppoaitlo11 To the Editor: There see ms to be growing concern ci.over the increasing traffic problem in Newport Beach. The majority of people in Newport opposed the propos&d Pacific 1; Coast freeway as a solution to the traf- fic problem and yet we sit back and watch the new housing and high-r ise developments (a great addition to the traffic problem) without voicing any op- position whatsoever. ' · The beautiful lands of ~ewpcrt are being rapidly co nsum ed and destroyed by construction. The view of Balboa Bay will soon be obliterated and parts of Bayside Drive will cease to exist. MANY WILDLIFE creatw:es are being forced from their homes in order to make way for construction. The hills of lr:vine are being blanketed with uncontrollable housing developments . In time, the land betwee n Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach will be covered with "destination resorts'' and the scenic drive will be destroyed. Yet, thr,oughout, all this we remain .silent and voice no o~ position. Once done, there is no undoing. And how will the great traffic problems be cont rolled once these developments are completed? A Corona del Mar freeway might well fit the role of hero In saving us from Oftr congestion of vehicles. r WE TRAVEL MILES and 011Je1 each year to view the great ne:tural beauty of California and yet we Jet the beauty of our own city deteriorate beneath the hands o! the almighty dollor. f n>gress -yields many unpleasant results that are not viewed until they have taken hold, and ln many instances it Is too lite to act. We never seem to realize Ult value of wbat we have until It's aone. MARK MAGIERA Jronle Sltuatl•11 To the Editor: I wa1 prompted to wrlle this letter because I think that a counter balance to the oppoaltlon lo Bill Mauldin'• pol car- toon ls necessary. The cartoon simply "••Id" thal alcohol can kill but Is lefal while marijuana, !bat doesn'~ Is Ill•&•. Marijuana in ltseU1111 I I been proven to be relatively safe. It is not a matter of whether we as a aociety need another intoxicant. The f1ct is that both are here to stay. But the 1 really dangerous One is legal, the safer one isn't. As the cartoon and cartoonist indicated, ironic isn't lt. RON HAYDEN Defend• Ted Kenned11 ' To the Edl\ir: , Last week l wrote a rebuttar to your "angry" ed!toria1 on "KeMedy's Cheap PoUtica." Y u asked me to..condense it to nonnal leng'th. Not too long ago Sydney Harris wrote a columri that should convey my messare. / I lhink he was bugged about people who show a real concern for their own, rather than feeJing a genUine compassion for all oppressed human beings. In other words, any man can have his favorlte cause or group, without necessaril y being an honorable man . The true test of a m'n's character lies in whether or not he ls capable of extending himself and his con- cern for just anyone at all who happens to need his attention. AND SO IT IS wit h the Kennedys. May we never be without one. It was the Ken· nedy compassion that brought attention to the poor Bengalis who w e r e !llaughtered In the streets of Bangladesh; the Irish in Ulster who are afforded the sime justice as our American blacks; in- justices to our farm workers ; the plight of the Jews ; the poOr In Mississippi, and the Indians. All of their crles were heard by men who put conscience before politics -U!e Kennedys. Long live the KeMtdys!, · BERNICE WEl.5H Share the Aid To the Editor: With recent news releases from India, stating that they plan to withdraw the last of their 40,000 troops in Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan) wlthln the neit two months, we now have ample proof of who plaMed and executed this invuion. Jndia also admits to the endorsement of this invasion by Soviet Russia, which also provided most of the military hardware for lhiJ conquest. ' ravages of war. with the loss of manyi. lives . property destroyed and their only, means of making a living. etc. To counter' these disastrous conditions, we are now being asktd for financial aid, with a re- quest for f75 million (requested by one congressman) as a sta rter. THERE IS NO doubt that these in-, noceitt victims are in need of help - Btrr, bow about a "share plan'' for such assistance on the following basis? CJ) That the U.N. ask all the member- nstions tp make payment to a special fund for such relier. ' (2) That, in so doing , the U.S. wiU match the amount 1iven by India and/or Soviet Russia who, as the aggressors, should pay the major share. . As regards the contribution by India, this could come out of the billio ns of our blocked U.S. loan funds in India. It seems that such transfer action is gosslllJe, with a joint agreement between India and the U.S. for such a special purpose. In any event, Jet's assume this Is a reasonable, equitable bas is whereby the members of the U.N., the U.S., Ind ia and Soviet Russia might hel p to equitably share in the rehabilitaUon of Ban1ladesh. AL N. SEARES 'Public Be Damnelll' To the Editor' . We need the htlp oJ the news medla to Inform our congressmen that we are very tired of their poor voting records. Also of their "moonlighting", with giving $50 (or les s) lettures for from •1 .000 to SS,000, skllng in Swltmland, running for Presi- dent and other office!:, jwikets abroad, etc., etc. · They asked for the job, got It, receive a nice fa\ ulary, JO ts of money-saving per- quisites, Iona: vacatio1s, etc., yet many of them have the gall to vote on roll calls less than flO percent of the tilne -an average attendance of one in five days. Is asking a 80 percent attendance too much? Orice they 're elected they seem to feel that they own the job -"the public be damned ! " Anything that you can do lo help Senator Smith put acms her motion will be creaUy appreciated by the generaJ public. I M. L. KEELER V•e School Buae• To Ifie Editor: • In this needle ss w• (if the U.N. had been alert and take n ·the pro~r action) millions o! people have expetlenced the Long on Theory · (PRESS co~~) While we~re waiting for the experb: .and the Ora111~ County Rapid Transit Dis\tlct to ~nd IOmt $800,000 of ou r money. to conduct their eiheusting study of our public transportation needs, why don't<We uk: them to get things roning at once·by 1uafng our school buseS as the nucleus of ·our public tranaportatlon system? r Mo'Vllle, Iowa, Recotdt "ProbliblY · Jt one ol the blUul ln>llblel with IO mocb rederal regulaUon -days ·la Ula! many of the people dlrectinf till federal program• are Jong on theory alld tbort oo 'I bulln.,1 experlenc:e. Tlter• are j>ltnty o! •1, men who can alt bad< and tell you 1'o1!~ things should be · run . . . b u t buslneaswtae. these theoriel aren'~ worth'. a linkera dorn. rt look lo 111 like we need>' more succf!ssful buslDessm!n in goVern- ment olrlceJ lo help direct the programs successfully." Warr Acre1, Okla., l'llllall\ CI!f. Northwe1t Nen: "In the last ti yean, our total groS& national outpul In the U.S. has Jumped II peri:ent, a lolal or fjOO billion . .'. /Penonal lncomea Increased f!l)O bUJJon Ind Ille number ol employed cllmbed a whopt: ten million ..• Looks like the enlerprlae ay1t""1 does work , .• " .... • ROBERT M. GO!IDON. DAILY PILOT l!obcrt /11 Wftd, "1/~r 'l'llom., 1e .. b1, td1/' °,\Lb<r't <Wj hoffl Editorial Pa//e..Edilu ' . The edl ri11.I pagt' or thit Dt.lly Pllot tttkt to Inform •!'Id stlmu· l•te reader1 by presenllnr thl1 ntwlpt,ptr'.a oelnions 8nd ~Ol'Tt• mt.ntary on topic. of lnltrnt 1nd fllSnlOcanct, by providina: a forum • for lhe tXPf't'MIOn of our re1dm' opinions, and by prttenlln1 the dlvme,vie\Ypoin\I of lnrormtd ob-aen•ers and. spok«!amtn on topb ol ~clay, · Wednesday, Marth 15, 197%· • • •• • • • N.Y. Steeks .VOL 65, NO. 75, 6 SECTIONS, 104 PA6ES .9 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ., WEDNESDAY, t.4ARCH 15, 1972 ' c TEN CENTS • ' I... ' ' , Carpenter Files T~xt on ·Measure By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. ~ ,. ... St_,, , State ~nator ·Denn~ Carpentfr (R· Newport Belch) today fUed . the ten of h~ proposOd coutllne managemeot bill thft ls d~~ to allow local govern- ment to 'keep control of the shoreline, subject to a revl"' proces,, through a new ·ai.te qency. ~ , lnoorporatetJ cities are excluded ffl\m control and there would be no moratorium on constrqction while a state coutal plan b developed. 1. Carpenter's .......,.. II the fourth ma· jor coutal management propooal now before tbe Legislature, although one, 1111>- mltled by Slate Sen. James Q. Wedworth (l).lnglewood), ll, upocled to be killed Monday by the Senate Committee on Natural Resourcel and Wildlife. The strong eat ot the four meas,res, a bill submltted jointly by Slate Senator Donald L. Grunsky (R·Wataonvllle) and Assemblymati Alan SiUoty ( D • L o a Angeles), will be heard by the panel Mon- day but no action is antlclpated. 'Mils measure, a -11./me.nt ol. a aimUar bill lntrodu~·~ last year, b 111ppoit!d by moil" con- aervationists. A apokeamao for Clrpenter declined to take a·guess I! to which, U any, will e\'el' become law. Carpenter Is CllWlling on whet be has · termed the .. reasonable" provlaiooa in bis meuure In get It passed. Among other things, bb bill: -Allows Individual coulal countlta to define their own coastal zone, 10111tWbert • a1· ers ~Poisons' in Bay Reported ·Health Department Find s Heavy Metals on Bottom By CANDACE PEARSON IN "' DilllY' il'lltl Slttf A variety of Iieavy metals In highly toxic concentratiOOa are lying In the sedi-- ment at the bottom of Newport Bay. Orange County Health ·Department of. ficials said "'uesday. The report, requested by the county Harbor Commission six months ago, sug· gests paint particles from boat hulls, gaSouM: in street drainage· and .car ex- haust are likely sources of the metalls. Immediate effects of the~lsonous COO-· centratlons on marine 'life "are not •yet known," Robert Stone, director of en- vironmental health for •the health depart. , ment, told commissioners, but be said the 16 ... ,000 Volt,s ln1·ure 2 ou~km~t~~~~toxictooreanimls . even in diluted fonn and can possibly be affecting HtJie biolog!Cal food chain,'' stone warned. "Metala can be .Poisonous between 1,000 ylrda and three miles ln- 1and.. I . , -Requires toC.I (.....ty) government to submit land !"' ml 'coaatel plans to 1 !!I-member stole eiency by Marcll of 1974. t ..:.cans. lor · completion of the state coastal plan 'si1 months later. · -.tillows devtlQpment to conttnue dur- ing the l.Otertm, . provided It meets prelimlnary criterll established by the already.<Wtlng Californla A ¢ v I s o r y . ' Comm!Jsion on Merine end Coast1l Re90UJ'Ctfl, ,,,, Carpenter's m·euure ·c1oes prohibit any reduction of pitjUc bCacbes or other public recreation areu as well as A reduciion or restrlcUoo of ~xlstlng public aeceaa to beaches before tlie coa,stal plan Is developed. ' ..._ Ii also·stipulates that any planning unit that falls to submit a plan will be cut off from f'urther sfate funds or federal ftmds ac:piinlltered by the state for 1ny P!<>lecl cour within lhe coastal zone W)tll ,the plan is completed. The agency to be created to oversee lht state coastal plan would include one member from each of the nine coastal cwnties and alx members from the public at large. All should have some experience with marine conservation, engineering or biological or ecological scienct3. Carpenter proposes a flnt~year budget for the commission of SZS0,000. 54 Ar~ested In Schools Crackdown By ARTHUR IL VINSEL Of .... .,._ .. ,.,. ,..., • Smashing at belvy drUi tr11fic •moac erel' bigb schools and collqee, Coste Mese police ~ crl.sacn>ued Ibo Orange Coast overnl&bt in a maulvt roundup of auspected narcotlct dealers. B) diwn, II pe,_ ~ere In ClllledJ, Ill of them juventlee lr'om lour -hlcb ICboolL. ' • • • Men Atop Utility Pole, ~s~~:'fbe000=:~ • 'the .,.. !Jlghest In )e44' ooncontr"""1 A total of 41 ~ 1rJ1 chi .... la · . wmanta l11Ued fo1JOwtni -of llkl- 1 •a.:~---.... Two llulltlnrtoo· Beach lll"n were r.. chest .~In ~bly 1tti!butebl~, lo efiher ~ •t the ..;i.: ~"t "!. 113 ~ ---c..te -Memorial H ... , "!!rpfue .. • tanocwuy jolt of tie<> ··-r..!!:. .....,_ 'c1 --·~. ~~ .• alter -fte they lrlcal current 1 u~ "'~ ~ .... "" .,. ~-w•w pill! lhortly noon Y • r Wttn-at the ~ w'd neither 142 parll per.million. . ... iv .... ·~ 11.•V))lt jolt •too -· --...... ...i Coota'.M.11 bacqard man was thrown U.,., the pole.top perch Boal of -arm 'bave, nearby gas . • """'' .,...e m 1 · where they were worktng ,cm the power -statloill, -iplllaife might be taken an =ei:=~· 11, 1Dcl Cleit -· line that rima tbr<lllib _,..! backylrda -hf·rniioft Intl the bay, Slone Slid. Jl,'botli employes of Southern Calllornil OR the south side ol Orange ·Averiiie be-Health ofllclals analyied mud aimpies Edlsoo Company escaped serious Injury tween Bey and 22nd atree1. · 11 II bay llatloos for mercurj, arsenic, in the electrical accident that happened · lead, cop~, zinc, sliver, chromium and sJ!Ort1y before nOon tod•r, cadmium as well as for two chlorinated The accident caused a power outage Cong_,..,., Okays bydrocarbOra, DDE and l)DT. j,. the are• Including 19"'• traffic signals. • .•""""' . The study showed that a 11 v e r , Mrs. Al Ogden of 108I Orange Ave., chromium and cadmium, ,_Jt.hough high, tw bu t f D bt ff"k B l were basica1ly the same throughout the CostA Mesa said she SIW 0 rs s 0 e . I e, u day. DOE and DDT traoo(were relaUV.. 11larp yellaw light" from a window In Jy low lUKI compared to.that in Calijor'illa ber',hoine tbat'faces away from the acene. ' river sediments. · Liter C..IA Mesa firemen and electric urges Reforms But ibe level of mercury found on the eompany crews cleared -several back· bottom of the Rhine Channel is 508 tlriies ~ ., "l ··;···~ ;._ft, • . ' '.Olrd5 as the f1llen power line continued WASHINGTON (UPI) -Congress ap-that of aedimentA used as a bUe level io .pan" for 11everal minutes alter the value for the u-•-, N---said. ured I bed t the hospital proved In the nick of time today a $20 11.a..c: ~11: inj pl r were rus 0 • That area' In the west end of, the bay, billion Increase in the limit on the na· . Hospital officials aaid one man re· tional debt. aslo the site for boat maintenance oper ... ·Vancouver . Radio Stittiott,.. ' ' ctlved an e)ectrlCll burn on the side of But Democrats warned President Nix· tions, had total heavy metab con-bb la<e and ·the other complained of a centrations of I ~1 " .... pe' r million, the President Ro uts . ' AU OppoJWnh In Florida Race MuMt (UPI) -President Nixon bu won a topaided victory In the Republican pmldentlal prlmuy' nut polling the com- bined tollls of liberal P1ul MCCioskey and coneervative Jofm ASb!>rool< by near- ly 1 nlne-l<>ooe margin In lllorida. (See Page I for .delllla on Tuelday'a Democratic primary won by Alabama Gov. George Wallace.) on be can't count on any more deficit .-t--- spending authority unless he Supports tax highest in the bay. But most of the 10 &ta. reform. lions showed high counts .. The House approved on a 237.105 vote a The only two stations that compared new $450 billion celling on the national favorably with base line mercury values debt and Jent the compromise bill to the were in the Upper Bay. Senate, where tt wu passed 5f>33. The sediment 'ficures were oompared to It. ,bickers said, Congress had no similar anafyses In Dana 'Point Harbor, altemltlte IJ9caU1e the Treasury already which was found to' be relatively low in . ls 'wlthbf S24 million of exceedini the most of the metals. limit u ,of·todey. Stone said thlt the health department Nixon lllked that the llmtt be raised by needs more stildies to put the flcures In , flj) billion, to 1 14111 billion level be said tbeit proper perspective and called thll would be-..i,to "'"' deflctt ependlng only a "preliminary look." throoCb next February. Analyses of' the Ne"P!>rl Illy w1ter Today'• bi!I cut the ne\r llmlt to l450 Itself for metals ere now. being clooe. billion, and W&.9 supposed to cover Previously, the county Healt.b1 Depart· government borrowing through June 30. ment analyied ool1 for bactert1 counts. Before then, House Democrats declared More compar;.m dall and lnforrnaUon at a party caucus, Nimn hid better at on metal effects and dlstrfbutions are least 'get on record fbr closing some of also needed,' Slone .. id. the tax "loopholes" they claimed are cost-Boata were klentined as a possible ting the government billions of dollars. oource because of their high numbers - Nixon is expected to aign the measure more than 1,000 vessels ll't! berthed in tonight. ~-(See METAUI, P ... t) ' . ' ' • ' ' • f Repoks--Hughes-I~ Th~~e. Fnm l 1'1r't11ervlca VANCOUVER. B,C,_. Howard 'Hughes wu reported today to have. arrived in thil Canadian West Coast · city after a secretive plane 1flitht from Minagua, Nicaragua. ~ , who ~ied utwo 41Y•· before." Hughes arrived by plant•between· I Lm. and s a.rq. i\ieaday. ~ · " · Ander"I" 111d the ,llolfl atalf wu eked oot to be present during Hllgbel' 1ctual arrival 0 90 no one ICtUaD1 11w them ar- rive." • Anderoon lald h&had been not111ec11~t "be wu eoo11derinf CD1111n( hm or Warren Anderson, the ·manager of the pluah Bayshore Inn, said the eccentric billionaire and an en~age of•14 pir19.DS &l'flVed bere late Tudday ... ming ucl ' rented the two top noon of the Inn. Andenon said penons In Huehea' parii .,rneplace 1l' autern ~·" said they espected lo otay· 'from sts The _,,er Alrporj. conlrol .. 1c1 • nfonlhs to. a yeari ~ .._ ~ ' private jet frri,ved httt ~ ·frOm Hughes left Manegu• .after a faoe-1'> · ':toe Angela; dlocbarged It. ~· lice !!>eetlng with the · president of and returned to Lal ~elee. Nic1r1gua and an American diplomat. Anderson aid the perly' booked II Andenon Aid 'the roo'mi "'"' boOl<eil roonil Of , the nejr to-siddltIOn of the ln °1dvanc:e by aidee ol·the -ialist ' lnn,ownedby.thell'eaternhnlelcbaln. ' • ''The -lnp "!':'··~the With 19 Percent o( the state's preclncts ln; Nixon bad 357 ,230 votes or 17 percent, tO ,l&,971 or four percent for McCloskey lnd·li,974 or nine percent for Ashbrook. Nixon's margin wu of rout proportions In 'all of Florld1'1 12 COOll'Ullonal ~alrlcll. I McCloskey dropped nut of tbe cam- paign "last week, citing fmancial dif· flcUltlea, but his name remained on the Florid• ballot. Seesawers Claim Record .. neme lloW1rd HUCllll," ho .,.Id. 'Ille first noUflclt!Gii, ho aaid, .... moide "Ovet die weekend. If I Andmon relued lo-the'eootol Ibo rooms rented by l!Ugheo, ..Ylll thot lnl'ortnltlon WU conQdlntlal. • • ' Valle y Youths Tottering Ori To oord Six-da y Mark "Let'• just A)' wt're dellsbted le blve them hert." An unlde'nt1fled ......... .... the algnlflcanUy below the .$$,ODO 1111rk they weird," , NICaraguon Air r.... told MWlllltB thot had set for themeelvea, , • A gu 11At\on 1\tendant, CI')'lel bad Hughes )lad flown In • priv1la pllM eorl1 llleil ii ••rc•tlc•, ...... and ..... ' ' 'ClDI ~.:."' ., • lln'ltlrt ..... ~,IJ1d-...... ~ ~ ....... .. ~lep D1p1r tm crldldawu, •CCCll'dtnrs te1 sp. John JletU, " \ He Mid LSD.1 11111Callne1 methedrine. •"lpbetemliie Iii<! blrblturate plIIa plus pleatllul mar()IW>l..1111 -bOaiJif ..,_ • ' Ing the coetly pi'obe. Breljdng down overall COii Of lhl three • month ln""1Jg1Uon by d r u 1 pure-· and ,... bollrl, 1111. <RogU aald It Wll 1bollt llOO per IUpeeclC' The city's outlay !...-the II Jalled. ldda up to well,over 1311.000 In total. Ral1Uvely llllall llllOWlll of vltlually every contraband dnli· were c:onfllcated u the three teoml--al four m111 -hll more than 40 locatlona from Colle Mt.a to L1 Habr1 . No .maw. inddag were reported i. the ralda, which h)('Jnded 1 predawn viltt to 1 UC · Irvine dormitory. Captives were IUllen or defiant, -. chllant, some ev.O laughlnJ and 1 ooupl1 of girls weeping u they atrumed Into Costa Mesa' City Jail In handculb. Adults eolertd via the reer booldlW case area , where male tu1pecta Jammea all cella, while female 1msteei were ahlpped on to Orange County Jall . Juventlee "'"' fed In throuah lhl detectt~e bureau's. aide door aDll pro. cessed on lbnucb to Orenge eoum, Juvenile Hall. The roundup of known druf-delllna IUlpeCll Included 41 dilrlld in 4'0IJlt. issUed emst ...,,.-. while nlne -p--11-errtnd were •lao booAd .......... -.... • 'Ille 1gea napd -cme llr! II lo I !!l-ye1r-old man nebbad Iii Newport Beech 1'lladOy, u be buniellly poelrod (See llOllliDVP ...... , ,Ona•• 1"eadler Tho llWI mlchl breU UvouP thole low cloacla Tbundly for • brief stay -but will be -powered egaln In the earty ....,lnl ' houra. Highs 11 tho 'beach IO, rising lo: the high 70'1 lnl1nd. LoWI -3 Found Dead • In Eastbluf f Two Foun!Aln Valley youtha claim to have broken the world'• record for con- tinuous teeter-loitering today 1fter bob- bing up and down for more than 121 bc.urs In 1 Marcll of Dimes fund raising stunt. "We might even go over the sis d1ys rh4!umatlc rvtver Ii 1 ctlod that _k..,. Tuesday lo toe Anpla, whln be bu hec1uee we hive received pledges for ed Ille lep, "f thoUiht I ...Id blVe to UV'lf u bollf • c:elebrltJ 11111 • -~ ' every hour we go over the ..-11. 'Ille quit durJnc the -•• • 11o aaJd. "I A spokmnan i. !bl .. ~ INSIBE T08A l' The procU.. of J;/ctimc mcdl- • Richard Crysel, 20, and .LlwllOll Down-~ Newport pollce reported the di!covery f!!g, 11, aay they broke the record at 12:35 ef three bodies in a home at 328 Vista a.m. today . They are cont l nu Ing, tu.rte In the Eastblulf tectloo of New. however, to aet a new merk of 144 houra ~ Beadi .this alteraoon . or= str·•·•t b I 30 •. Two ~. 1~•imately I and ' I YI ...,, Y : p.m. ~·-. · over 1 telephone •tllched to ,..... old, Wert In en uJIO\ain bathroom the -w at s.1111 Ana's Slnll Anlll tub, 1pp.srt11Uy drowned. Par• ,,__. id •••-rnl " '. A woman nid to be the chlldren'1 .., .... ,._A ~mo ng, •n e~en -· w1s' found in I second bathroom. :.d~ys 1ppell'l lo be I pretty IUre thing en:z,:1 ber doth aleo waa under 1n.... &th eipoCt • crwod of 1,000 to cheer ~ detafb, Including the ·names. al them on throuP the final llagea •nd to the vlctlml, were not Immediately 1v1ll· ~ back lbelr lnllr9'I !11th pledcea. So fer, 1ble. the pelt ~ collected only MOO - f• ,. ' I • ·I I • . ·' longer we C111 bold out, the more mooey hod a reel bad leg problem ud MI lllcln~ ~~':::rt~ 11u:! the March ol Dlmet ,.Ul pt," aaid been dolnc tt fa< the Marth of, Dlmu I undlseloled dell-. How-. Ibo Crysel. IJl'ol>ll!ly Wj>Uld hlvo llOpped." nfllled to The pelt IJoi•n Ila record lltempt lut l>owiiiac. who w o r k' 1 ,11 a ~ ~ =i..·•....._ 'Illunday niibt on • normel perk -·· lllPOl!lmttet, llld be 111!1 1111 pertnor ---~ -"fumlsbed" wltb • televlllon set, • rldlo wilJ Ill" -plelod -11,• ..,.i. .,.i 111tl'tbat blo •lw• IOll m1J IOI bl end sleeping fecllltlea. clo!m ~-by tho am. Ibey flnllll tho dllcl111d 6!r • UmL Crysel laid the ooly iw,.ks ftre lour 1ls-day otntdl. Allied-lboul 1111. 1-' lrbm' ·the minutes •DCI II aeconcls per person eech Both ol tho rocorcl -bro ncol"4 l'lcaraplft Air rarce,,llla!Jill uld, "I d1y -Jut •noucl> um. lo • ......,. time ctl frvlll tllllr Jobi le ..-ce Ill Ibo hi•~ 1'io nuon Ill lllHim ho II In LOe neture'1 call ~ Mll'bJ. porleble tollot. otunt. Cl'ylel 11"1 at NII LI ~ !It. Aqselol." "Llnoo could pt thii. ~ 101 andDownlnc1tMmGllllllGaiealoSt. (SM l'lge 1 for ·dltalla'of lho'leteal trouble bu\ 1l't lip ,,... ~-'Ille old ~ -llold by E""t In the bbam cuo ln"1f•DIC , oo I bid lo mor..or Im .,,.., Sieve~ al"! ~~ , aod the~ HllcJloo tone~" uplained Ceywel. " -~ V£Iey. , , • ~ · pit!.) , , ., .(I ... , . . .t ._.1..-r, .. \ .... ~ ~ ~ ... . t 1 ' I I cof ,.,.,.," ""' -•'*' ·~ tack llicr•'1'i1191U, from bot~ doctcm and patinU. Sci •torv, Pof/f I. L. M..... ' -... a:c.w J -.. Ccza"' • -....... " =-~,...: ·-... ""' ......... II ...... ' . ._ L-.n • -. t --............. --. --" ... . _,. a• .... 11111 ... " ----. ---. =-~= .. ...: --. I •. • • ' ' .. • It DAILY PILOT c I W.....,, -15, 1'72 ·.\ Frottt Pqe 1 Mideast -• Plane Crash •• Kills 112 I MANAMA. Bahreln (UPI) -A Dlllbh caravene charter Jetliner flying holldoy goers home from cey1oi' crashed Tues- d•y night near Dubel In t~ Persian Gulf, •!Prtnlly tUlfnc all of the IOI pa .... gen and e crew memben, cdnciala Aid today. A rep()rt tha~ one man survived the crash in tbe mountains aome 40 miles east of Dubei 1lrport was not conftrmed . Sterling Airways, the Danish charter airline which owned the vtane, and the Tjtettbore Travel A 1 en e y in Copenhagen, which chartered II, utd there aootared to be M survivors. "Al far aa we have learned from our maa In Dubel, there are no survivors,'' a spokesman for both companies aald. The pasaenger1 Included 11 Dina, 20 Swedes, 12 Norwegians, four Flnna and two Germans while the six crewmembers were all Danes, the airline 18id. The passengers were returning from a tw......i: holiday In Colombo, C.ylon, flying vii Boa>boy and Dubel to Copenhleen. The jell1-"" ICheduled to mab a re!uellng llop al Dubel. Airport olficla!J utd they loot radio contact with the airliner only mlnutea before it wu to land. The octing airport ' director said "the Jut radio messqe we had from Ille pilot wu: 'I -lllldiq In four minutes.' Then the plane just disap- peared." He Aid the plane cruhed at l:Ml Tuu- day night In hUly Urrlln three or four miles from the coast. Some ZO planes and helicopters started a search for the wreckap, which wu located Ulla morning by a helicopter pilot. He radlood bock , lo Dubel that he could aee no l1gns of IUl'Vivon at the teeM. Airport officlolt uld the weather wu bod In the area with atorma and raln1. A SterlinC AJnnys pilot utd the Dubel airport II wet: equipped and run by the Brltllll Jloy1l Air Fon:e (RAF). "'lbe --It not dllllcul~'" he Aid. J~ck K. Bowring I:..ast. Rites Held • • Funetal aervlcea were collducted TLI•• day for Jock K. Bowring wbo died Slt- urday at the IP ol 23. , Mr. Bowring 1ttended the Orientation Institute 1 for the Blind ot A,1""'7, ~r and W.. alYadlnl PronP Coul C011e1e. He I01vu hit pa ... nta, Mr. and Mn. Jack R. Bowring of m Tul1rie Road, Colla Meu; two btothera, Kirk of Temple CliJ, 11111 Kercy of c.o.to Mell; 1 alster, CellO ol c.o.to MOii; and paternal l!J'andmother, Mn. Grace Bowring of KanNa City, Mluourl. Services were held 1t , Pacific View Memorial Part . Harold A. Schrupp. friend and counaelor ot OriUJ1e Coast eou.,., opote 1t the oervlces. School Protest Slated ip Mesa Pamila protestbia tbe transfer or 11 Woddliind E11111entary School 1 l x t h ~ In C9o!I Meu lo a 1nlcldle school wlll meet with ichool' dlstrlct ofllclals tonight to d!Jcuaa their ll'levances. The meeting bu been scheduled for 7:30 p.m. In tlie Woodlond multl·purpoa• room. The parents are protesting the transfer on the lfOllndl that Woodland School Is already uncleMnrolled and that 1blfllnl the students to another campus Is• un- neces.o;ary. OU.lf•I COAST DAILY PILOT nit o..,.. Ceint OAI\. Y I'll.OT, ... wllldl ll ~ tM H_,,,.... fl MlllflM 1Jr lie Or•• C•ft Mlllflllll etmpel!Y, ..,._ m. .. It._ ... .-i"'*I, MMUy ~ Pfl4ty, lbf C:O.lt M•1, H.wport •Mell. ........ •.-clll l'-ltln v.11 • .,, """"' ·""'· INIM/JMdr•u. Mii SINI c"'"'""" Sin Jl,llR Ct~ A 1t119le r19lon4f edlllln b Ml...._. S.lllrd1p end Sund1.,., The prfnc.IMI Mtrlfl"'9 plt~I h t i Slll W"I llY Sir.t, C.tl M .. , Ctlltwnll, t»». Ro9.tt H. WeM PrHldlllt lll'llf P\lfllw.t J••lr: a. C11rl•v Vb ..,_llltnt W CO--tl MIMttf n,,..,, Kee•ll ·-n ...... A.. M•,lll1te Melllllll•Htw Clierf• H. leN a1chetJ P. Nall ................ ""'""" ---lJt w ... .., ""'•' M•fllitf AMNm P.O .... lhO. t2iJt --......... a.,dlr -......., ._..,.,.. ~ ..... J ..... , ....... "'"'""'* ~! 1,.,, .. di .....,_.,., IMC._...., ....... CeMMa ... "' ,a 11 C714t ..._.nt er • .., .&Jest' a .,...n ~t. ..,., 'GMllle °"' , ...... ~ ... _ ..... MaasllJL --·--·-~ --.... J......, ...... ,....,..,...,__ ... i!~Jr1E~'i • • Discharge • • • Boa • Measure Backed Qrange county harbor commleloners Tuesday unanimously recommended to the Board of Supervisors an ordinance thlt would require all boats· with toilets to bave holding tanks or oU)er discharge devices by Jon. I, 1171. · The ordinance would apply to all boats traveling within county harbors, Including viaitora. A &econd portion of the ordinance will r~uire t~t all commercial marinai pro- vide holding tank pump-out facilities or equivalent aervices In a 1.f..hour on-c•ll unit, also by Jan. 1, 1974. Harbor District ofUciala began dr1fUn11 the ordinance more thin thrte months ago when they received notice from the San Diego Regional Water Quality con- trol Board that the current county Jaw Wll inadequate. A variation of the county's older 1899 Refuae Act, It aay, simply that no one can dump anythlng Jnto county harbors. The San· Diego boa.rd gave county of· ficiall 120 daya lo ctraft a new ordinance « said it, would dd It for them. That time hu nm out, but Harbor officials were aranted an eitention into May, Water Quality Control &ant to make any county laws conform to Sunset and Newport Harbors also. Comm.iMioners Tuesday a f t e r n o o n adopted some changes that were sug- gested by the Joint Harbor Committee that morning . The Joint Harbor Committee ia made up or two Newport Beach city councilmen and two harbor CQmmissioners. A3 it suggested, one secUon or the ordinance was changed to read that "no one shall own or operate 1 bOat" that has a head (marine toilet) without a holding ti.nk. rt had said "occupy," but some of· fielal& were afraid that phrut could put UY burden on innocent visitors on boat.s. Frem Page 1 METALS ... Newport Bay -and boat maintenance activities. DAil. Y "ilDT Sl1H ,.~ole ROUNDUP • • • preparing to move to Gui.dalajar , Met· ..... . llaldera owlflli 11tpped up their ptana thls w'etk when the Orange Co1st drug underworld be11n to sense something was bre'fing, e!peclally efter an ac- cidental leak Tuesday. Juda:e Everett W. Dickey was presiding at the burglary trial of two sUspected dealers in Harbor Judicial District Court. whUe several of their friends and fello• 1usii:ect1 ut In the courtroom. Judge Dickey asked ii the alleged burglars knew warrants charging sale of narcotics and nam1na; them had just been Issued. "The courtroom froze," Sgt. Regan said later. One panicked spectator leaped up and !led, but was quickly Caught In tha nearby downtown area when runnin1 detectives headed him oU. Mass arraignments are expected for the alleged drug dealers scooped up in the overnight raid, most of whom are held in jail in lieu of $12,500 bail each. Many of them have prior records and a few were already in jail. The San Diego board only baS jurisdic- tion ovv Dana Point Harbor but work has becun with the Santa Ana Re1ion1l The average boat is hauled out ooe and one·third times per year for service and most of the scraping and sanding residue ends up In the bay, Stone said. CMPD'S REGAN BRIEFS HIS MEN PRIOR TO ROUNDUP For Drug O..l1r1 and Cops, a Long, Sleepless Night Organizers of the sweep authorized by Police Chief Roger E. Neth after putting together a beefed-up narcotics squad earlier this year hope they have wiped out major suppliers. Students -juveniles and adults - rep~esenl Or1nge Coast College, UC 11'.vine, McNally Continuation, Costa Mesa, .and Estancia high schools, plus Fountain Valley High School. .. Solid Propellant Fuel Selected Boat paints are designed to prevent the sticking of marine organisms. Five of the eight heavy melab assayed In the bay were found in boat hull paints sold in the Harbor area, Stone said. 'Neth's Nar.ks' Briefed Cities hit as fast as raid teams could w~rk included Hulitington Beach, Foun- tain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove. Newport Beach, La Habra and the unin· corporated area of Santa Ana Heights. For Space Shuttle They are arsenic, chromium, copper, mercury and zinc. More investigation of tources and what to do about them is needed, said Stone, who confirmed Harbor Commls- tloner Frank Robinson'1 observaUon that seven to 10 tons of toxic paint ls 1oing into the bay each year. Before Coast Roundup Transportation teams driving a paddy wagon, station wagons and squad cars trailed raiders to various addresses the From Wire Servtcea WASHINGTON -The National Aero- nauticl and Space Admlni.atratlon decid- ed today that the booster stage of the Space Shuttle wlll be powered by solld- propellant rocket motors rather than by liquid propellants. • The qency llllllOUllCed also thal the boolter •ta&• will be recoverable,' and that the c1-n desJcn wlll have englnea of both the -and the orbiter stage firing 11 llunch, ralber than in aequence. Fire-damaged Salvation Army Store to Open Callfornta Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke 11ys the ,declalon by NASA bu put California in fhe "lead poaltlon" lo become the Gutted by a !20,000 fire aet to cov- launcb and racovery site for the $5. 15 er a blftglary six wee~ a10, Costa billion prGp'am. Mesa'~ Salvation Army Red Shield Tlfrift 0 Tht11, the launch and recovery site Is Store IS about to reopen for business. like1y to be •Ions the coast, at Van-'Ceremonies at 2126 H1rbor ~lvd., Fri· dt:l'!beq Air Force Bue in Southerq ~ ... day at.' 9 a.m. will mark successful C&llfonila or Clpe Kennedy, where. it can renovation.of the shop, accord.in& to Bria:. be pluclted from the ocean." · John . Allen. · l!Ut tile Auoclated Preu 11ld the The ~ Shield Slore was wrecked d~ ~bly means that the cape when someone doused piled clothing and Kennedy launch complex will be chosen other merchandise with flammable liquid over other contenden for space shuttle .and ignited it. .. launchlnga.r Nor SUS~ were ever caught and Tiii lllAIA ~··•--enl uld K1nqedy JIO!ice I~ Ille flre ,'f'll'll!luaJl1 set lo s 1 l!IC'I c.m.r, Fla .. wUI be responilble divert itt.O!lon from •the burslar's real or delJ&n of ,Spece Shuttle launch and Urget, a car agency · down the 1treet ........,. facillttel, looted }he same night. .. TO the comment of Rep. Lou Frey Jr., Merchandise 10ld ls aecond hand and CR·Fla.) that the decision locked In Cape prov Idea repair an<l' delivery Jobs for 110· f ~ ~,!he only loclcal launch site down-and-out members In· rebobUltatlon • Mobilizing for a major roundup of suspected drug dealers has parallels to preparing for a military campaign, from initial strategy to I as t -m I nut e in· structlons. . Detective Sgt. John Regan, supervisor Lighting Nearly Short · Circuited By City's 'Error An administrative oversight has nearly short-circuited the smooth operation of the Costa Mesa City Street Llghtina: and Maintenance District. City officials discovered iD March that 1hey had forgotten to file renewal papers for ~he district wh.ich energiies abd keeps up most of the city's streetlights. The deadline "fas Jan. 1. · " ••'Jt was a goof on our part~•"admUied City Manager Fred Sofsabi.1 'Who ,~Rs · asked Assemblyman Robert Burke (R· Huntington Beach) to introduce .. forgiveness legislation" to cover the faux pas. Sorsabal however explained that it is of the team c11led Neth's Narks cheeked his watch in the brightly Hghied room and began giving order's. The time was 7:30 p.m., an ironic twist Of the calendar and clock. He had been scheduled for weeks as featured speaker in a Costa Mesa High School Drug Abuse Clinic, beginning at the same moment three blocks away. The supervising narcotics detective sent a substitute speaker. Regan and his men were zeroing in on the roots of the campus drug problem. The men present -some scroungy long haired and bearded -sat around ~ U-shaped table. nashtight.s and holsters protruding from pockets, or poking out of windbreaker jackets. Four of them cannot be photographed. They are men whose recent 18-00ur shifts bulk of them in Costa Mesa. ' Investigators encountered a r e w weapons and other traceable items be.ing checked today as possibly stolen pro-· perty. A few of the juveniles -generally agreed to be. accidentally present when suspect-hosts were captured -have been released to their parents pending further investigation. The far-flung raid was the largest such individual operation in COsta Mesa history, although two netted similar num- ben of suspects in the past. Operation Harvest and Opera.lion I?aybreak, however, included participa. t1on of the State Bureau of Narcotic• Enforcement and many other county police .agencies. were spent in tw1ive street comer K , meeUngs, dingy apartm ents and bright a1ser to Host parking lots where the action-seeking young hang out. Somebody f.l!lled upstairs to the jail /or \ Can Ai date Forum another carto. of ¥nd~uffs. J l * * * Drug Stakeout ' T e1ision Ecised C'Aata Mesa'• Kaiser School will host a forum for the city's 21 council candidates at 7:30 p.m. March 21. The venture is 1ponsored jointly by ·the Costa Tomorrow and the East Sida Property Owners groups. · £ .... '=...!'.!"'tie• other olioerven llld at the Salvation Army Men's Social • ... ~ 1 Air Force Bue or aome Service Center in Santi Ana other l<loatlon might just u well qualify. · not uncommon for some cities to overlook Tension during an eiiht·man stakeout filing of renewal papers for such assess· on a Costa Mesa residence where J)(&ible Each Cllndidate for the April 11 elecUon has been invited and will be allowed time to speak, occording to J. C. Humphreys, orgllliz.er of the evehl Vanderberg, which generally launche!'I spacecraft into polar orbit as contrasted to the equatorlal-orbit launches from Florida, has been the prlmory testing center for the Minuteman solid-propellant rocket. Senator . to Address Corona del ·Mar CofC State Senator Clair W. Bur1ener (R- Rancho Santa Fe), a candidate for the new 42nd Congressional District which represents {'.()rona del Mar. will speak at the C.Orona del Mar Chamber of Com· merce luncheon Thursday. The lunch is at the Villa Sweden at noon. Burgener's topica will be 1·coastal and Envirorimental Problems and Current State Legislation." ment districts. "There are at least 50 armed resistance was rum<ftd broke other districts in other areas which are with muffled laughter durinl Tuucfay experiencing similar problems," he said. night's drug roundup. "1'hi11 is no big problem, we ju.st didn't Costa Mesa detectives in two unmarked meet the deadline," the city manager ad-sedans aod a black-and·white petrol car ded. staged a rendezvous just out of sight ol Poster Contest Winners Feted The district's '350,000 annual 'budget is their target on the city's west aide. Awards ranging from trophies to small raised from a tax rate of 15 cents per Suddenly, a boy about 13 on a bicycle IU!v.inga accounts: will be presented to the $100 of assessed valuation. In the event rode around a corner into their mlds:t - WIMers of the Students for Crime the forglveness legislation were turned c~utching a pilfered red-and-white Stop Prevention poster contest March 22 at down. Sorsabal said the city· would be sign -glanced around in disbelief and Newport Harbor High School. empowered to form a new emergency pedaled off at-'high speed. Master of ceremonie!'I for the 7:30 p.m'. district which would keep the Ua:hts burn-He was only small fry, so they let him ceremony will be Dave deSoto, chief o.f li'in~giiiriiioiijr ;;;'";;;e;iyiieiiiaiiir.miiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijlJpgiiio.iiiiiii the Orange County news bureau for radio station KMPC. The winners will be ~rawn from a field of 135 semi.finalists representing 15 C.Osta Mesa schools. Nearly 9,000 Costa M"esa students participated in the poster contest which coined the theme of ''shoplifting." GEM TALK .. TODAY Ex-mayor Will Speak Mrs. Doreen Marshall, former Newport Beach councilwoman, mayor a n d foreman of the 1971 Ortnge county Grand Jury, will be the guest speaker Thursday during the breakfast meetina: of CHART : COsta Mesa. She will speak on the topic. "What Makes a Good Council" at 7:30 a.m. at the Mesa Verde Country Club. Officials to Lay Trap For Newport Polluters by J, C. HUMPHllEI HOW WE BUY JEWELS You are, we 're sure, well aware ol the !act thal line jewels are created from rough sto nes which have been mined from deep in the • Orange County Harbor District and Health Department offlclal1 will take an early morn~g tour of Newport Harbor soon to try lo catch polluters thro'l'lng garbage In the bay. Harbor · District Director Kenneth Sampson Tuesday told Newport Beach resident Sue Ficker that staff members of both the harbor and he a I th departments would boat with her lo the high "garboge points" of the bay. Cita- tions will be issued Ir they can catch anyone in the ac~ be added. Miss Ficker, who said she could never "get IDYOM to get up at a a.m. before.'' charged before Harbor Commla:sloners that some of the more posh restaurants that ring the boy wuh their gorbage cans out In oarly mornlng1 directly Into the bay. Muell of the debris -aome or It hall· eaten food ,..... then washes up ·around nearby 1wlmmlll.i beaches, she 1dded. The cana are often washed out with chlorinated aubltances, said Ml11 Ficker, who commented thal she had made anothtr neaNtlwn excursion · Tuaday .. morning. She 1lao cl1lmed ihe bu ,... boatyard opnton throw bottlu 111d lnlh In tbe Wiier and then allow Ille aru to ll•l!llte. earth. · Harbor commissioners, led by member Frank Robinson, voted'" unanimously to COOiJ:f!ra~e with a Health Department in· vest1gation and to help present evidence These stones are then placed in to the "lpPropriate agencies." the hands of skilled craftsmen who That agency might be the California apply years of experience to cu~ Deputy Attorney General's offices In San ting and polishing processes which Diego, which has a spttial environmental · produce the scintillating jewel yoU protection committee. see in our store. The Health Dt!parbnent has more "muscle" to actually analyze and testify You'd be surprised at how much to what the debris and its effects. might of our time is applied to sele~tlon be, Sampson explained. • not only of th_e gems themselves, "This is only a starting point, but small but also to careful C ... o.nsideration problem• lnake up the blgger 'problem or of processots Crom whom we buy. a healthy bay," Robinson 1aid, adding that such morning policing tours could Although we,_ of course, buy have an effecct. jewelry from private and estate· "11 wlll tell those polluters, 'Feilaa, the sources. the bulk, of our beautiful cozy game Is over,'" ht aaid. stock of jewels Is purchased from Miss Ficker had cOme to the com-processors who have an unques- mission with petitions signed by 2,500 llonable reputation for strict con- Harbor ~ea residents asking for a trots, careful attention to detail, moralorlum on conatructlon upland or the and years of exacting experience. bay until an alternate drolriln( wlnt for tho run-ol\ is Jound. So when you are looking for the The pe itlons l!ked that lmprqper finest In gems, come In and see dralna8e Into the baf be f\irlber us,. You have not only the expert prevented 1"'1 tbat runol 10 oomep!lce attention o! tbe owner-operator; o~ than Ille bay. • • • · you also have the additional assur- Comml11loners set thar "'quell ~Id• ance of knowing that the source of for farth!r stiJdy wblle collll4erlal Ute your gem WIS selected with ex- 1arbage charges. · treme personal care'. '"'""'",..'" I The true prtclouaness of an Omega walc:h I• the love that gou with it. The Omega you recelVfl tod••wHI become a prot.ld po11eask>n .,. precious beyond compare for what It 1ymboliz:es, Wilhln eactl caat beala the peerless Omega movement. Mede wlltl meUculous care 10 g1Vt.Ye1rf ol f1llhlul performance, See our comptalt collectlon of Omega men'• ind lad les' watches, $65 to over $1000. A-llll·wllltllno '41•f!'••!•r wllh ••ll·cblftfllllt f:':t"f•r 1'~ to1d-IHIM tttl ...... .,,., .. ll45 I !'I"'• Ht P"' .......... ,.,,.,. •• ,tUO 1-4 fll"'OflCll, l•IC ""'II• IOllCI told ... , •• t tllS J.C. JJ.~mphriej Jeweferj 1823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA CONVfNllNT TllM$ JANICAMfl lCAlD-MASnl CHAl&f 24 YU.•s IN 5AMl LOCATION ,HONE Ml0)40 I • , • ( ( ) Whale. D rama Co1tt.er ~ Trqck Gigi SAN DIEGO (~) -Seier> A ~ 1l the N1vll ' Lettuce • Boycott I \_ Wtdnt!doJ. Morth 15; 1'112 DAILY PILOT $ ~Angela Davis Gives Jury OK, . . Bu~ D9ubts ·Imparti~ Trial · -tilts are planning ta UH a ,_Undt!r1e1 Beleltth a a d 'Delloopter in trackil>I a ~~~.....::! Callfornli '"'' wtWe relealed Oil f:;•, "luy swlmmln( off the JSOuthem CalHomli blblli" Ordered SAN JOSE (UPI) -Anf<l1 beLWMn tbe prooecutlon ond • Dlvi.s says she ls con,·1 ~ dtrense during a U.minute By V•Hed Pren ............ ahe cannot get a !air trial in conference wilb J u d I e "There b no UIOM ,...._ in l\lrther del1Y ol tbe trlll. We •re confident in tbele mea and women and ore happy 1o lctepl the jUl)' .. It ls ..... " coast after a year in e1ptlvUy. ~~ 11rl'1 never done They abandoned efforts to 1nyt111nc in her lilt ucept bob track the whale; named Gl1l1 up and down ln a tank, and It'• by boot Tue!dly because going to take her a while to signals Crom her radio •k act like a whale," said Larry pack were Coming too ~ McKinlef of the Navy Center's frequen~ly to catch up with marine mammal ftclllty. her, said a spokesman tor Sea Gigi, captured when she was World. the marine amusement about C weeks old, apparently park where the 14,000-pound was only sticking her nose and mammal was kept untll Mo~ blow hole out of the water In- day. _ stead of doing a normal . ~Sine.! her release seven forward roll like other gray miles from San Diego, Gigi w,hales, McKinley uld. The 'bu followed a circular swim-back pack wlll not transmit ming pattetn and has re-while it is submerged. mained in the San Diego area, Scientbta hope to use. the • tcientists said. There was slgoals to trace Gigi's path on 10tne dilference of opirilon a.s 1'er northern miV~tion, and to rto the significance of her .acquire infonmt.jon on the failure to join immedlately depth of her cUves and the other gray · whale1 ~on 'their water temperature. The back migration north from Scam· pack i. deJlgned .to ~me mon'a Lagoon, their breeding dbengaged from G1g1 in about ground in Baja Ca!Uornli. nine monl)ia. Set Up Camp Indians Put Claim On S iate' Missions Ul'lt:..._... SILENT ON ITT LI. Gov. lttlMCkt Reinecke ·Declines Comment A n1Uonwide lettuce boycotl ' mkldle-class Sat'lta CI 1 r a ,Rlct\ard E. Arnasoft. and strike qaln.st cenlrA1 CoUnty. but believes tht all-T h e f,J. r m e r U C L A California growers w 111 white jury swom ln to ' hear philosoph)"\IMtn.ictor, who ia resume Friday after a year's her case ''will do Its best." chafled.. with supplying the Eight women and (our men, guns In the Marln County nlOl'atorium, Cesar Chavei Including one · M ex i c a n . Courthousi shootings of lt70, aaid Tuesday. No Changes American, were accepted by . addressfed the bench in clear, Chavez, head of the United ' both sides TuesdllY ot the ·malteN>f·f•ct tones: Farm Workers Organizing S } A k murder, kldnaplng and con-"We have long contended it Committee (UFWOC), said 0 On ~ S spiracy trial of Mt,.; Davis, !8. would be Impossible for me to • SACRAMENTO (UPI ) a black woman and an avowed get 1 fair trial ln Santa Clara negotiations have failed with T.h e author of l he Communist. Selection of ·tour County. We have made a num- about 198 m1jor I et tu c e Legislature's heavily ameoded alfernates was expected to be ber or motions challenging the growers in the n•Uon'.!I "salad roll cait volt reform says he . completed today or Thursday jury system here. bowl" of Salinas V1ll~y. will ast the Senile to reject and testimony could begin as "As I look at these men and The union has bten trying 10 Assembly chanies to his pro-early" as Monday. "amen I see that this jury get the 'growers {o drop 1 posals. · • The trial, now In Jls third dots reflect the composition of "sweeUieart contract" they If tJ\e Senate agrees to the week, had been ei:pected to the county -there are no T l request by Sen. Peter Behr bog down over jury selection black people. Though t can't signed with the eams ers I • · r (R-Tiburon ), a two.house con-(or months. say ts a Jury o my peers, Unio n just before the 1970 ferehce committee will be an.. Miss Davis stood up in court after much discussion we an! UFWOC six-month strike !\nd " boycott began. pointed to iron out jlbe dif· to 'formally accept the jury convinced they will put forth ferenci!s and developL a com· Tuesday after a surprise thclr best effort to a:ive me a Proaecutor Atbert W. Harris Jr .. an uslstant state attorney J•netal. concurred in her declslon, 11ytng, ''The people will tl.9o ae<ept !he Jury." Panelists included a Mex· lean-American man employed _ by IBM, a woman whose soo was a conscientkMla objector. " 1 45-yea~ld bachelor, a Jewish divorcee, a young matron who worU in a department store, and two young women In their 20s. The panel's average age was • about «I, although this was not 1 a matter of court record. Before ending Tuesday•s sesaion, six alterna te jurors were seated and questioned, • but ~Y were all d.i.!lmlssed. "It was just a stalling tactic promise. . agretment was worked aut f11lr trial. SACRAMENTO -(AP ) -Lt. on their part," Chavez said of Behr told newsmen he plans\-_;:_-::.-iii!i!i ;;~ijii~il!~~~iiiii!liij~~~~·=--Gov. Ed Reinedte }µls refused the recent talks to get the to seek Senate iejections of I ~ to answer qu estions from growers lo switch contracts to Assembly amendment.!! this TAKE A Pie· TORE· .WITH UFWOC jurisdiction. afternoon. , newsmen regarding_ his in-He said lettuce boyt'Otl ac--1n rapid fa shion, the THE EASTER BUNNY volvement in the In~ernational Uvitie1 would begin Frklay Assembly Rules Committee Telephone '-Telegraph offer aeros.s the nation, and in Tue!day rewrote B e hr ' a Now _ Carousel Court to help underwrite t b e Canada and Northern Europe. Senate--passed change In the I Co Some strik~ centers already way the legislators vote in C: .-...a.i ~Olsf •---Republican N 1 tIon 1 n-are established because of the committee and Rnl It to the ....... \"--r ~ vention In San Diego. ,.Ju~n~iofn'~•~bo~y~co~l~l~o~f~n~l~n~e'.._~floo;r~w~he~r~e~il~w;a•~•!w~il~tt~yL _ _:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~--Tbe Republican official's Northern California wines. adopted without debate 6&-0. reruSal came at a news con-.... ~ ---ference Jn the hallway, ool!ide kJNG CrfY (UPI) -A ruins as late as World ~Ir Il, his of!lce where he reported . ~nd of American Iodian.s ~ Js in the wooded foothills of on California'• elforl.!J to ob- p1tched camp around Mus1on th~ c.oast Rang~ Mou_n~m contracts foi-the space . San Antonio de P~d.u~, declar-miles west of King ?1ty. shuttle program. lnJ they were c1v1hzed .. a~ The land it occup1e.!I ls sur~ Asked by a newsman if he 1 la!d ~la~ to all. the ?1 hl.!ltoru: . rounded by the govenunent· planned to testify on the rrr m1s~1o~s 1n Cahforn1a. ~trollt4 Hunter ~ I 11 e t l case before the\ s e n 1 t e Mission San An!D~lo de Military I Reservation, once J u d I c I 8 r y c 0 m mlttee·, " Padua, Its adobe build1na:s In part of ~he. H~arst Ranch, and Reinecke responded , "I have th~ . m1s~uon s r e s l o r e d not been invited and I hope buildings are used a.!J· a am not invi~.'' (See story, Woman, 75, Jailed; Has 13 Dogs LOS ANGELES (t:iPI) -An elderly woman who had ·four times as many dogs as legally allowed )l11s been ordered to jail for runninR her home like a .kennel without having a licenee. The municipal court judge told Mrs .. Ruth Froemming, 75', that she would hie released · from custody as soon as she reduced her pack of dOgs from 13 to 3 -the city '• legal limit. -.: "l just can't send my )iltle pets to the 'Pound to be' d.Stroyed," wailed M h ·. Froemming, after be I n g senjenced. She was fined f750 and sentenced to :M> day.!I in jail, with three ·years probation, after an earlier conviction for having too many dogs and let- ting them run free without tags. Neighbors festlfied that her pet! constantly leaped over their fences, barking and nip- ping at children. · training school by the Roman Page l7 ) · Catholic Church:s Franciscan Meanwhile a Justice \epart· Order· . . ment letter is being used by Mer_e<11th Quinn, a Dakota local fund raisers to assure speak1ng ror the Indians, businessmen that their coo-d~l~red the function of .. the tributlons for Uie forthcoming mw1ons founded . 200 years ReQtJblican n a t I 0 n a J con· ~go by Fat;ber Jurupero .~i:a ventlon ar"e iega1 and tax was to convert and c1v1lize deductible the Los Angeles the savages." . . · "We feel the missions have Tunes said today. served this function," he ad· ded as the Indians demanded the missions and the land on which they stand. The Indians prepared a "manifesto" to be delivered to Bishop Harry Clinch of the Monterey Dioetse of the church. , l,t 41sks the church to relin:- qulsh alt property and records of the mission, make an 11ac-Counting~all mo11ey1 and reveQues ue Indians," and put up " ncls to provide anned protection" for the In- dians now in camp. Among the demands was one for the eviction of 111 other occupants from each mis.sion's original territory of three sqllare mil~s. No building was occupied at Mission San Antonio de Padua' when the Indian men and women set up a "village" around.a minibus and a lzJ.Jck I" whicli they had a'rrived. Reagan OK's Adult Bills SACRAMENTO (AP) G'ov. Reagan has signed into :~cbtw~:::;-u:_ym:~~ oversights In the instant-adult law.· · One bill would keep 29,000 youths 18 through 20 years of age on the welfare rolls under . the Aid to families with Dependent Children 'program. · The other bill protects slate allotments to Californi1's 94 locally run community col- leges. It was feared that the change in the definition of minors and adults, which went into effect March 4, would have deprived the community colleges of $36 million . TRADING i~l "THE STAMPS .. TRAVEL 1~1 THAT REALLY VOUCHERS l ~l SEND YOU'! ····~····· <a'll! Vouchors ••• the "going" kind ot stamp , •• takes you anywhere, at any time you choose! Sa'(ing Travel Vouchers Is the fastest way to make your1ravel drea,ms come true! Save these magic •~amps for "fun" vacations! Trading Travel Vouche(i can-pay for part or all of your ticket costs! Here's how the program works: L Your. partlcip erchants (see directory)' issue Trad· ing Travel V uchers with each purchase you make. •' You place'' egular" or "Big Ten'' ,Travel Vouchers In your ._colorful redemption books. . J. Take your filled redemption book to your local member ,. Exchange Bank (see directory), and receive a beautifully engraved Traveler's Reserve Certlllcate worth $2.00. 4. When you are ready 10 travel, take your Traveler' a Reserve Certificates to your authorized Travel Agent (see dir.ec· tory), and spend them like ca1hl Traveler'• Reserve car· tiflcates can purchase all or any part of your next ticket costs. You choose the time and place, and you'ra of! on your trip! M~RCHANT INQUIRIES INVITED; lRAV[LtAI JllEIERVE, INC. (114) 171-nol • • • 0 .. I> .• else •, ' ' .Ee Champape ii mare than adding biibb!.,, !~1 a 1'1irlt of art. We use the best grapes. We we all the skills developed in llllDOlt 40 years of wincm•klng to create a crisp, delicate champagne. It'• an exceptional c:lwnpque. We SQ.ill out whCl\ we II!lkc it, then we, use a little restraint when we price It. We want -you to enjoy It as .often•• possible. How about tonightl -~·~ GALLO ~ ,,,,,,,,,, .~ 4'· ... -klf_ tilol,l.0---...-.""*'M.UIUll SPAAKLINO WINE-GALLO CALIFORNIA CHAMPAONE:.cHAFIMAT ~ULK PROCESs-HATV~LY FEAMENTEO.OAU.0 CHAMPAGNE CELLARS. MOOESfO, OAUFOANlA \ • • • I r , . • • ' • • • DAD ,Y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE Park Community interest In the proposed F1irview Park appears to be at an all·tlme blah even though the biggest qu.,.tion -llnancin1 -Is far from settled. Undaunted by the $6 l!lillion price tag attached to the 260 acres behind Fairview State Hospital , new con· cepts are being aenerated almost daily by various groups. As a result, there have been the inevitable conflict· Ing views of bow the site is to be developed once Costa Mesa (1 nd /or some other public agency) bu acquired It -or ii it should be developed at all. Some groups envision the park as 1 well·man1cured and landscaped haven In which to relax and engage in recreation. Sports·minded Estancia High School students believe it's the perfect place for a 7,000.seat city stadium. Those with a scientific bent would have jt include botani· cal gardens and an archeological dig for Indian artifact.. Yet another group, the Estancia· Hiih School Ecol· ogy Club, has taken !11e con~ervationi1l1 approa<:Jt ~nd would like to see a maJor portion of the land remain Just as It Is. Estancia's "Wilderness Park" proposal has much to recommend it for part of the large site. Not only would it !'.reserve for future generations some of Orange Coun· ty s virgin territory, but it might be the only develop- ment the city could afford at the start. The other ideas which have already been proposed are not to be discooqted . The vast expanse of 1and en· sur .. th•~ there would be plenty of room for the other projects -when the city -hopefully with the help of the community and it.ate and private agencies -can work out the financing. At least for now, the overwhelming problem for city officials centers around acquiring the land. The property, declared surplus in 1959, has already fired the imapna· ' • lion of Costa Mesa residents about its potential uses. Since the General Services Admint.tratlon ls w&ltlng for specific proposals from the county and clty for dis- position of the Fairview land, lt"Wollld appear prudent for ·elected officials to h1cil the people's enthusiasm with a plan to finance the project. · Court Relief, at Last Orange County Supervisors have formally moved to build new Harbor Judici'1 District Courts on the Col· Uns Radio Co mpany property. Equally important, they have also moved to lease some temporary space in the Collins building to relieve the dreadful overcrowding in present facilities. Thank goodness. The temporary quarters are scheduled to· be ready about May 1. The permanent new courts building is about two years away. Orange County judges have been forced to admin· isler the laws of the people out ol impossible facilities far, far too long. While Supervisors can be blamed for part of the de- lay. simply because they dragged their feet on the proj· ect, the responsibility for the protracted inaction does not all rest with them. Newport Beach councilmen likewise took their line time in admitting the death ol their civic center project at Newport Center following voter r'ejection ol bonds for the city hall·police station portion of the project. But there is no need to beat a dead horse. For all concerned, including the speculative land developers around the.new court site, everything has turned out for the better. . I • c Some Don 't Know What To Be For Dear Gloomy Gus From Religious, Moral, Social, Economic Standpoint• ••• Death. Sentence Necessary,. :Proper (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) . no.gilts II Llt1e: lo aome personaJmes, the strength lies cnly ln opposition; take away tbe op- positlon and · they flouader weakly, not knowlng wb1t to be for, having to lone been • qalusL • • • In a good socle!f. all businesses would t.nd to becomMOOre lllle prola~: In our IC>ciety, ill pro- f...tons have teoded to become more like· bualn ...... • • Wben a commun· fty 1Ufftr1 I HVtre Kie in crime, the good citizens qan-- lze to puoish th• criminals: but who punishes the good citizen! for having per· mltted the crlmlnal spirit to grow and fiouri.sh in their midst? • • • The public feels far more comfortable with a stupid man than with a clever man; 50 clever men who aspire to public leadership pretend to be more stupid than they are . • • • ' Most men are poor executives because lilnaaed realdent. all over the Orange COast will join in hoping thoae El Toro folks win their case against the dogs that bark in- Cf.lllDUy. Maybe the inconsiderate owner1 of the ••yappera" wiU sit Up and take not1ct that their pet.a' noi11e pollution la int.olerablf. -L. L. fl the most seriOIJI inltrnlf tilreat wlthln competitive IOCieUte. • • • You're QDt truly srown up until you're l~s1 prone to acute your own mist.Dea and more 1nc1lned lo excuse the follies of others. • • • We don't genuinely believe in free speech until we recognize thlt no abuse of the freedom of speech l1 a1 bad as giv· ing some authority the power to represa It. • • " Pets acquire the particular neuroses of their owners ; dogs and their masters (or mistresses) only seem to look alike, a/tu awhile, when the owner• have used their pet• for illicit emotional a.nd social needs. • • • Those who live by and for sensations generally find out much too late that nothing In the world ia duller than 1us· tained stimulation. To the Editor: Capital punishment should not be done away with. It is necessary and proper from at least the following standpoints: Religlow. moral. aocial and economic. 'M08t people who think that capital punishment shollld be abolished base their argument on the "Sixth Com· mandment" of the Bible whirh says, "Thoi(ahalt not klll." These people t>k; the popular commar>dmtnt litr.rally, saying that ii God Cthroucb the Bible1 uys we should not kill then that applies to every case and condition including war and criminal execuli.on. TO THE POSSrBLE surprise of many, the Bible says the followmg in Genesis (ch. 0): "And murder is forbidden . Man. killing animals must die, and any man who murders shall be kiUed; for to kill a man is to kill one made like God." (The Living Bible). How does one go about killing a murderer other than capital punishment'! In fact, most modern trans· lators of the Bible render the "Sixth Commandment'' as "Thou shalt not murder." To say murder rather th an kill makes lhP whole difference when debating capital punishment. pa rticularly in light of the Geneals passage that both man and beast are to be executed if they kill . i.e., murder a human. Thus, we have a religious commandment for capital punishment. they fail to understand that "decision-• • • maklnJ" does not consist in weighing all To be a professed "materialist" these AND A RELIGIOUS -moral view of the value of human life might say that man. having the highest development, shouJd have a right to his life and that no other man has a right to take it from him. In a sense this is true. But what happens to the guy who cheats. the guy who doesn 't obey the rules and takes another's life? Do you say •·naughty, nau1hty" and go about your business? 1be cheater is free. lo kill anyone he want. then. And the nature or people guarantees he would kill to obtain his desires if lhtre was no punishment. And if he were locked up for life im· prlsonment he can still kill other prisoners and guards Jn prison. For it·hy shouldn't he? He is not going :inywhere different and nothing more can be done Lo him that Isn't already done. the facts aJ they come in and then mak· days i1 as 1upentltlous and speculative ing the mosl reasonable judgment. but as to be a "spiritual.lit" -lot the more rather moving before all the facts are in we learn about "matter" the less we and anticipating their consequences. understand It, and the less materiaJ It • • • • see.ms. naturaJ instinct of competition that will Democracy 11 the only system that Jt is the systematic neglect of t~e • • • eventually wreck all Marxist socieli persists in askln,a: the Pewers That Be and, contrariwise, the systematic neglect whether they are the powers that ought of the natural instinct toward cooperation to be. Revamping the Military In "PAWNS: The Plight or the Citiaen. Sol di tr," young reporter, Peter Barnes, now West Coast editor of The New Republi~, presents a well-reasoned, articulate blueprint for revamping, streamlining and making more efficient the U.S. military force . He exarninel the ~wer that the military exercises over !he lives of mil - lions ' of Amerlcan citizens (its own cour(I, for example) to the point where ii finds .a dangmioa pereentage of unwilllng and ibef!icJertt youna ~ple in Its 3 mil· lion man poli"'! lorce ol the world. It ia Barnet' thesis, gtntrally, that t~ draft can be modified, even ellminated. in favor of e competent fighting force, es-- aentiaJJy a pro!usional defensive army, navy, air force . Thi1 might be based on West 1 Germany's Bundrwehr. in which civil liberties for 110ld1en were spelled out ill. th• Soldiera Law ol 1956 and tjler• JI nd longer a difference between "soldjer" and "civilian" in thia model force. . ..._. IN~ IUS CHAPTER .iToward a Democratic Army," B1rnes empbHlzes tl\lt II the naUon of Frederick the Great and aa ... wlt• could dellbortJely create u 111111.f mJ)eClf\JI of soldlen' rights and -..iiy tfqed against milita·riJtn, It _,, loslc•l to l!IWllt that the nation fl .,...... and JeffO(IOn can do the -· 'Ilda la aol on anU·military haranl"•· '1111 IUlllor llelieves the military ha• """" bin unfairly COlld<mned In recenl :run (•port from My Lal and other ob- • ! (THE BOOKMAN) vlous blunders). He baaed )iJs findings and reasoning on interviews with mUJtary.• people ar aJI r&nks (some ho!tUel after covering fur Newsweek the Presidio stockade .. mutiny" case of lMl in which 27 c:on!U&ed. frightened young men raced possible death aentence:s' for their gesturea ol·antl-war dlastnt. "Pawns'' Is• public service which calls for public awareneu, concern and action on a major. unhappy and expensive Amerle.sn problem. The book should b< essential reading for all ft)embora of ~ amq others (KlloP/: l'/'5). TRIS JS WRY the enforcen'lerlt and correction community is working to reinstate capital punishment. Fr1Jm the premise that life is sacred and of the highest value and therefore should not be taken ~man. comes the reality that a prison ard 's life is not worth the dust he walk on . since there is no further pti~hment lo murder . The price that society will have to pay to imprison those normally executed. in terms or physical pl~ht, pay of guards t which would have to increase In numbers and dollars ) and Joas to the rest of society, ls something aoclety can do without. Doesn't it seem more moral to allow !he taking of one life . - B11 George --~ 808 'l'ROMU, the hard-worklnt-. Dear George· Assodlled Pms man In Hollywood !or I'-=-'. . · many years and the author of three et· My •i.fe h~s been usin1 a rolling cellent blogr1phie1 ol late m 0 v J • pin on her hips. Sh• rolls the pin oo magnates ("King Cohn,'' HTheJberJ," her hipa a h1lf·hour· twice 1 ~ay. "Selmlclt") turns to fiction Jn "Weel<end Doe• thla really have any phy11cal '33." Thia wu Ul'J!lake. For ~ Is elloct! lisenUally 1 repotf<r, and "WeUond'" ABNER C. '"3.1'" 11.• fllment or his lmqtnaUon. Dear Abner C.: It fl a touch (but no1 touah .enoup) lndetd It does -It "Ill civo her glory or ho•. and wh)', over a weebnd In muscular flnlers and, unfe" she 103.1, • mlxi!d beg or movie people ire in-ha! very Ion.-arms, eventual pains vited to the · fabulous castle Excalibur, In her sbouldera. But, as a bobby, anothtt name for Hearst'• San Shneon of It's cheap. th1t J::;lod. "Cttiun Kane" touched on (Learn the benorlls or Sld•waya this eme in 1 fat more convtnclng man· Thinking, and tell Georse what ner (Doubleday; IUIJ. Ibey ore.J Wiiliam ·Boaaa •• I ' ' [ MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. Norm.ally writ"rs should cont.•ey their messages tn ·300 words or ltss. Tht Tight to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. AU ltt- ters must include signatuTe and mail· ing address, but namts mau bt with· held on requtst if su//iei,;nt rta.1on i.s apparent. Poetry will not be pub· lish.ed. to prevent the taking of two or 10 or 100? THE COURTS MIGHT say that e.spital punlshment Is cruel or U·D u'a u a I punishment. It is beyond belief that it could be considered either. It ls not cruel, in that there is no sustained pain (In modern execution methods). Nor is It cruel in that it is harsh or severe , for that is the very point ! Capital punish· ment cannot be considered unusual in any wildest stretch of lhe imagina_tion since It has been practiced from the dawn of civilization. And it must continue lo be practiced for the safety and btneflt of society . RICHARD J. ELLIOTT Sha re the Aid To the Editor: With recent news releases from India, stating that they plan to withdraw the last of their 40,000 troops in Bangladesh (formerly East Paklstan) within the nexl two mon ths. we now have a~ple proof of who planned and executed lhis invuion. India also admits to the endorsement of this invasion by Soviet Russia, which also provided most of the military hardware for this conquest. rn this needless war (if the U.N. had been alert and taken Jhe proper action) millions of people have experienced the ra vages of war, with the loss· of many lives, property de'stroyed and their only means of mak ing a living, etc. To counter these disastrous conditions, we are no"' bting asked for financial aJd, wit h a re- quest for $75 million (requested by one congressman) as a starter, THERE IS NO doubt that these in· nocent victims are in need o[ help - BUT. how about a "share plan'' for such assistance on the f.:>llowing basis'! (I 1 That the U.N. 11sk all the member nations to make payment to a 1pecial fund for such relief. \2) That, in so doing, the U.S. will match the amount given by lncUa and/or Sov iet Russia who, as the aggressors, $hould pay the major sharei • . As regards the conttibutinn by India, this could come out of the bJll\ons of our blocked U.S. loan funds In India . It seems that such transfer action Is ponible, wltt1 l joint agreement <between India and the U.S. for such a special purpo1e. In 1ny event, let's assume this Is a reasonable, equitable basis whereby the memb<rs or the U.N., the U.S., India and Sovld Ruggia might help to equitably share In the rehabilitation of Bangladesh. AL If. SEARES l ronle Slt11adon To the Edi tor: I M"as prompted to write this letter btcausc I think that a counter balance to the opposition to Bill Mauldin'• pot CAr"- tOOI! ls necessary. The cartoon simply "said" thal alcobc>l can kill but Is legal while marijuana, that dotsn't. is Ulegal. M1r[Jll1n1 in lts•tt hu been proven to b< relatively hie. It la not ) ' • • a m1tter or whether we &II a society need another intoxicant. Tbe fact it that both are here to stay. But the really dangerou11 one is legal, the safer one isn't. As the cartoon and cartoonist indicated, ir<lnic is n't it. RON HAYDEN Do These Make Senser To the Editor : I am the mother of children at Woodland School and, frankly , J am con· fused by the matters of the last few days. It is m1 understanding lhat Middle Schools were conceived In the past to alleviate overcrowding and split se.sslona in our elementary schools . Today, now that Woodland is desperately in need of a higher enroliment to keep teachers ind special programs. the superintendent proposes to Jransfer our 6th graders to Kaiser, which· will force us info split sessions again. Does that make sense? DISTK ICT taxpayers will be forced to bear the economic burden., of nine schools whose enrollment! are under 400 students because their 8th graders were · taken to a Middle School which has to 1pend more taxpayers' money to build clas'srooms to accommodate these new student!. Does that make sense? The existence of two elementary schools are in danger because theii; &th grades are going to K·aiser while two blocks away another school district has to keep Its 6th graders at elementary school because its junior:. high is too crowded with 7th and Mh graders. This same dist rict is bus!ig its children to school when ~hey could walk to Woodland. Does .that make sense? THE SCHOOL BOARD says that we parents should "welcome the greater educational oppcrtunitiu the middle schools offer." I wonder if the board has ever ordered a study to see how effective this concept has been. Has the board ac- tuaHy questioned the teachers and parents of 6th graders at, aay, Davis Middle School? I am worried about Woodland. I like ·our tittle school. I'd rather send my · chlldren here than have them commute vast distances to a giant education !ac· tory." Can't the board be a little more flexible with the times? ERIN FINDLAY Pension Dispute To the Editor: Regarding your article, "Penalon Di•pute". published In the Feb. 2A edition of the DAILY PILOT, I. as a student, cannot help but say, "No wonder there Is " such a Jack of trust betwffn the youth 11nd the establishment." Jt Isn 't a lack of under1ta1'¥iing. ,bul rather a better understanding in cases such as this U.l are helping to widen the gap between today's youth and the establlshment. Don't the yoUth of our city, and all Costa Mesans for that mil- ter, have A right to ex:pecl mori-than this type of cronytsm and alliances from our public qlflclsl•? As a concorned cll!Un, I certainly hope so! BARRY JOllNSON ' De l e na Ted Kenni!!dll To the Editor: Last week l wrote a reliuttal to your "angry" editorial on "Kennedy's Chup Polltlca.'' You asked me to cond1nse It to normol length. Nol too long1alJO Sydney ll1rrls wrote • column that anould con vey my me»&1e. I think he was b<Jiged •bout people who show a real concern for tilelr own, rather tllan reeJin( 1 1enulne compaaalon for 111 • • oppressed human beings. 1n other words, any man can nave his favorite cause or group, without necessarily being an honorable man. The true test of a man1a character lies in whether or not he Is capable of ext.ending himself and his coil· cern for just anyone at all who happens to need his attention .. ANO SO IT IS with the Kenned ys. May we never be without one. It was the Ken- nedy compassion that brought attention to the poor Bengalis who w ere slaughtered in lhe streel1 of Bangladesh; the Irish in Ulster who are afforded the same justice as our AmeriCAn blacks: in- justicea to our farm worker s; the plight of the Jews ; the poor in Mississippi, and the Indians . All ()f their cries we·re heard by men who put conscience before politics -the Kennedys. Long live the KeMedfs! BERNICE WELSH Sele rtlve Enloreement To the Edit.or: Joel Tate's letter (Msilbox . Marcil!) Is right. The Costa Mesa police enf<>r<:e onJy the laws they want to. JOHN BROOKS 'Puhlle Be Damned/' To the Editor : We need the help of the news medja to biform our congressmen that we are very tired of their poor voting records. Also of their "moonlighting'', with giving $M (or less) lecture$ for from Sl.000 to $5.000, skiing in Swl{z.er\11nd. running for Pres!· dent and other offices, junkets abroad, etc .. etc. They asked for the job, got it, receive a ni()e fat 11lary, lots of money-saving per· quisltes, long vacations, etc., yet many of them have the gall to vote on roll calla le!is than 80 percent of the time -Ill average attendance o( One in five days. Is asking a 60 percent attendance too much? Once they're elected they seem to feel that they own the job -"the public bt damned!" Anything that you can do lo help Senator Smith put acros1 her motion will be greatly apprtciated by the general public. . M. L. KEELER Vse Sehaol Buses To the Editor: W~lle we're waiting for the experls and the-Oran1e County Rtpid Transit District to •pend some M00,090 of our money to cOnduct lheir exhausting study of our public transportation needs, why don't we uk them to 1et things rolling at once by u!lng our 11cboo1 bu._es as the nucleus of our public transpcrt8tion system? ROBERT M. GORDON OIAH9i COAST DAILY PILOT Robert-N. 1\1 tecf, Pl'bliah<r ' . . Tho .... , l;et•il, tditor .4Cbt1·1 W. !late• .l."dilorio! Page Editor The edltorh1J pa~ ot th~ DIJlf Pilot aeeks lo lntonn and atimup la.tt rcad«!rs by presenlln1 this ntw1PftJ')l!t'a orinlons and comp lfttftl&ry on tl')plca of Inter-Ht and "lanlfican , by provfdin.i A forum fnr the exprt>ulon of 'our rttdttw' (!pinions. and by 1'tt!Scntlni;: the •UvtJrse vlt:"'ooint.. of Informed cb- fftW!ra &n6 a-pokttmtn on toptca (!( tht d-.y. Wednesday, March 15 1972 • • '