Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-28 - Orange Coast Pilot\ 7 : DAILY PILOT Nadie Gals * * * 10'" * * * TH URSDAY. Al'l'ERNOON, JANUARY 21, :1t1J 'lel, M. fltO. .,_ • Mtftoffl. N PH•• · • • • • • • • •• • • • • - Program for Minorities Under • r' Buntitlfltela Man . •, Fir J • Stock Scandal Arrest Revealed By TOM BARLEY Of tllt .CMllY P'19'1 ll•H Joseph D. Dulaney's successor to the bankrupt Laguna Hills enterprise left high and dry when the Newport Beach stockbroker left for Germany has been booked on charges cf i ran d theft, forgery and conspiracy. JamJ!S E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach, was arrested Jan. 22 by FBI agents who picked him up in Los Angeles. He spent fi\lt days In Orange County jail before beioC released on $250,000 bail. But the arrest of the man who moved from the vice president's chiir to Dulaney 's prelklentia.I office ari.r the organiler of World Trendl Financiil IDc. left lor Munich, Germany, in June·11tet, was far from ·pleasing today 1' the man who is beading the 1e1rdl for Dulaney. "'l'tdl is just whit I didn't ·want," aaid Deputy Diltrict Attorney Joe Dic~noa of U..f.offt<ie'1 fraud divislpn. ''Thim <.are mare thin Dulaney met Shii!ley lnvolvoi'I in lhil meu and file · ar~. Of Shipley ooly dt:awa tbetr .ti.. tenUod to our ..aearch." , BUt fBI ....,1 Philip Sheridan adl the 'IJTelt. of Shipley ..,., carried out at 1 tbe requesl of Orange CountJi .,,_ and th< Huntington 9oldi . . ...... C.ed > I e1ecutlVe wa1, picked up ·OD 1111 unlawful flight warrant. "Thaf1 all we khoW about it,'' he said. "The Orana:e Coonty people can take it from there and we only did what we "1ere uked to do." Dickerson is back in Orange County from a trip \o Flora, Ill .• Dulaney's birt.hplaOt and the place where he wu seen, according to DickerJOn, within the last two weeb. at I . . rv1ne . . .. . , .. ' > • ' ' . Woman Losea To Con ~.-~ A 73-J'M-old woman.lo the Ial..t vk:llm ol the IO-<OUM pldpon drop bunke 1•me. Santa Ana police saJd Mn. Semayda Ramos lost M.000 tb.11 11be had withdrawn from her bank account. She tol~ polict two women ap- proached her'· at 1 ahoppini cent«. Tuey told 1oer ,.. could hive • share of Q,000 ,which had been found by a friend of thein if she put up her money u a tood (a.ith ge.st:ure. After giving the '6,000 to thl: women, ahe wa giv~n an addrea where she Would receive her mooey and $3.000 more aa her ahare of the find . The addres.!I proved to be flc· titious . ' .. ~ ~·~ ..l• i . -;jS...,..i ~ ·J •• DiMtt · ..... . ,. , . or . ' l:lits9iarige In Policy • ID Chapped Li_ps --- .. t .. ' I • l .1 ;;.~y. ·J.nu.ary za. 1971 BROKER SOUGHT Jooo"" Dvl•My f'rom P .. e 1 DULANEY •.• include a $500,000 lo.an made to Dulaney by the Atlantic Co. of New York and ,. ~.000 Joan obtained by the lfidbroker from St Be.rn&ntine Ho!!pital ill ·Sen Bemirdloo. . -J nvestigatcn said euctly $10,000 bu btea repaid on the: San Bernardino loan. •• WQl'ld Financial Trends records in· dfcote tllol.Sbtplo,y earDlld 111,000 • ye&< tz vice. president. Dulaney paid himself ,t'.XXI and his wile Marlene earned ,000 as secretary of seve ral of his ~ations. j.ssets realized by rece:ivors include. 000 from . the .sale of Dulaney'~ ,OQO ban)e at .~ M"""'1>c Star Lelle !JI: the Dover Shores oedioo of Newport ~ .. ~ BD!I • furtllO< 115,0GO from the D1e of no:taney's $35,000 cabln at L.te ~ow be.ad. ·' " . :Grounded -Tanker ~pills Oil Into Atlantic Ocean "'" -"NEW-YORJ( CAP) -A -er lolded Mill Ull,tltlO g.U-of oil ran aground and -• -today off llocbway ~ach cir\ the AUantfc Ocean, the Cout Oilard ieported. .'Jt Could not be determined immediately how much of the ol1 leaked into the J!a . ne Cout Guard aaid It WU a mil.JI leak, and thiit It had been "stopped or aeverely reduced" about two tours '""' the 1htp ·~ the SS-Verdon -fll!tnt airound 1bout I a.m. 'I'lle lhtp, ·owned )>y the Spentoobuah m Co. of New York. WU qround Eu! llocbny llllet, be\Ween y ll<ach and Atlantic ll<ach, l>eborderbetwMn-andN .... u !lfllnly on Long !Jlancf. •l'lbe Coast Guard Mid a barge ha d fQiled oiongaide the Verdon to take on ~ of Its oil. A 1pOkesman said a aig Pf'lblbly -1d try to pull the 1hlp oil the sandbor Ill blgb tide arowid t:p.m. .'~lice in Queens said there was 1p- ently no dlJl&U' of tbe tanker break· up .• ...... Coast Guard uJd there were two -of<ll ln the lhfp -a lilht beating ~rr med in homes and a beavler type -in lndustttal furnaces. "I'be Ship WU first spatted by a Coast Guan! belicopler. A llleboat· bod to -1>act becaUle of roueb MU. but a tu& and the barge later re.aebed It. No injuries were reported to the 1tven- man aew. Nudies Get Convicted LOS ANGEi.ES (l!PI) -Sl>1een dancers and four maDIC'fl ot nlghtclubl which featured nude entertainment were convicted Wednesday of stacln& lewd performances. The. munidpat eourt set aentencing for Fe~. 18 for the empk>ye1 ci Dee'• flf7 CJ.¢ and the T.ebr'I Room. DAllV PllOY ~ ...... ,,. ... , ...... ...... leecl ....... ,..., C:... Mn• S-Cl •1 OltAHGE COAST ..U.LIMONG COM,.., Ro~ert N. W.H P'r•ldll'll .,.,. ,.. ..... J.ck l . ;:~~ ~ P'1'91ill«ltW ...... Tlto111•• K.rril ...... lho11111 A. M11,p51:,.. M ... !nlhllW fUcJ.1r4 P. H1I """' or.r.. (-"I' ..... -O.S. AMNI D W.1..., .... .....,.., auc111 nn w.t .... ...,._.. ~-.ca;m•-'•­...,,h••• ...,., 111!'1 lttoOI' ........... wc:~•...,.aCMmllMl N.ft.Y PILOT, tll'llfil Wlllldl Ill_...... ... flt! I ,, ... • s::i;: ~ ..;: =-.:..-::::. . ClllMI .... :i ........ --e.o ............. V11ej, ..... wflll ,_ - -=--Pl .... = c............. .. .. " ............................ a.r..-.c..~ .. / I I ' #m•t ....... •• a m • ...,. ••. e '411fW S. -::• M lsf&I s ;:::.:.11 ...... _,,...,. ""'~·--~ -... _...... ~1 ....,..._....,,....,_ea I .., .. ·-7 • ...... .• ,.,...:" ...... " ..,,,... ...... ~ ..... ~~ .. w•~­.., c.te ~. tet"'"'" w I -'"""' a .. """"'•r1 M'.... __.,, · ft!lllil>tY -..Nt-....... ...... . \. t Mynepu11a B,_.t 1 Fire Razes Tw·o Mesa Apartments . Sporadic explosions of magnflllum 11'llrked a spectacular blaze t 111.l destroyed two Costa Mesa apa.rtmeatl and a prage Wednesday ni&ht, itliurinl one among 17 firemen battling ll for nearly a hall-hour. One occupant managed to save hls clothing and personal effeetl!I, but they were ·1tolen immediately by looters. &.ttalioo Chiel Ron Coleman. who directed operations on the scene. said damage Ulllld reach $12,000, including content.a of the structutes. The alarm came in at 7:01 p.m .. sending fitt trucks racing to tbe 2.100 block of Elden Avenue. Flames had engulfed the 11tructures at 1J2f and 2326 Elden Ave., by the time they arrived . "Every time we pul water on the fire it kept blowing up,'' said Chief Coleman . He said I.he blaze was caused \11hen glfOline fumes ignited in the g~rage while Larry, Graham, of 2326 Elden Ave., waa cleaning a fore ign car's dismantled trans miss.Ion. ",.\ctually, there ..,,.as very litlle guoline med," qud poleman remarked. Drifting across tHe floor. however, the volatile fur:nes reached a water helter pilot name apd in a flash the structure was on fire. Chief Coleman said the magnesi um parta hampered effort.a to control the fae, llnoe lilt light metal -Uled in mWtary iPcendiary wu)>ool -la hlcJ>Jy flammable. ' ''Evtrytime wt bit It with the 1\-S l('dl 1ios.. u looked llU the Fourth of Jul)'," he wd, describing the fir• whlclt drew croWda of the curloui. FirMlan~~itc:k-Schuitt received medical treatmCnl afli!r~ ne stepped on a nail which was driven through his boot and into lhe sole of his foot. During the belght of !be blue. Willi.Im T. Perry. 21, of 2324 Elden AYe., manag· ed to salvage his clothing and pile it nearby. , "Tb.is is really pathetic," Chief Coleman M.id, · noUng that juveniles who gathered to watch the excitement stole the clothing. Perry, a student. told police be saw seven boys about 13 lo 17 years old laking the items and chased them down Orange Avenue. He valuad t.be wardrobe and other posaezsiom auch as identifieaUon cards at $150, aecordlng to Officer Gene Norden. Perry's apartment was spared, while anoijier uni~ at . that &ddreas, occupied by Jerry Edge, was destroyed. Firefighters finally extinguished the blaze af ter 2Q minutes, but were on the scene nearly three hours, mopping up and dousina hot apots . Black Musician Claims He -Was Shot by Manson LOS ANGELES (AP) -The penalty trial of Charles ManllOl'l and three women followers convicted in the Sharon Tate murders starts today with a black musi· clan reportedly ready to testify that Manson shett him with a gun similar lo one med .ln the killings. Bernard Crowe. 28, of Hollywood has JI.id be hu a. bullet lodged ln his back Fog Worsening In Tehachapis Where .6 Died .•. BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Highway Patrol cars with fla shing lights today escorted motorists and trucks in convoys throu&b thick fog where a mass pileup wrecked dozens of vehicles and killed alx persons. Thi fog blanket smothering the major north-tooth highway belt through the Tehachapi Mountains Wll.!! "worse than · yesterday," the Highway Patrol said . Patrol can, with amber lights flashing , led convoya of irucka and cars carefully throa&b the fol at slow speeds. Tht patrol's "Operation Fog:bound" was organized to prevent a repetition of the tragedy Wednesday morning which ettated "a four milt Jong junkyanf' on U.S. 99. The Weather Bureau pred icted dense nl&ht and morning fog in the San Joaquin Valley and coutal valleys in California tt> continue through the weekend. Many a1rpairta were closed for hours by the clOuda of mist. Hi&bWay patrolman David Carr was one of the first officers on the scene of the pileup Wednesday morning. Whit be aaw Jn the fog wa.s a twisted jmnble of auto parts. tires, hulks of trucks and trailers, and people dead and lnjuttd. The chain-reaction of deadly crasbea involV'lng cars and trucks ;ilong fog-blinded U.S. 99 early Wednesda y kill- ed llx peraOns and in jurtd at leasl ·a. For sis ~· the eetllisions occurred tn OM: of Jhe be&v.Jest fog s in memory in Califumta's central valley. One old timer ca.11.ld tt "worse than I've ever .teen." l"be to1· stretched more than I rom the alleged shooting incident at his apartment on Aus . l . 11&9, eight days before the Tat.e killings. A witnes s at the11Tate tri&J uid he went to the Croft apartment with Manson and saw him enter carrying a long barreled revolver. Crowe was the first l!icheduled witness of 10 the prosecution said il would call in trying to persuade the jury to senten.ce the four defend ants to death in the gas chamber. They were convicted Monday of murder-conspiracy in the l!llayings of Miss Tate and six olhers. Chief defense attorney Paul Fitzgerald Is to presenl a motion alltging that the death penalty and I.he penalty trial requi red by california law ,re un· consUtuliona.l. He will ask Ul.al the defen- dants automatically be sentenced to life imprisonment. As the hearing opened todsy. Fitz.. gerald asked to enter a pita of not guilty by resM>n of insanity for hls client. Patri· cia Krenwinke l. The judge did not immediately ru!e on the molion bu t summoned all attorneys into chambers to diSCUS.!i the su rprise twist. wh ich came just befon! the penalty phase of the trial was aboul. to open. 1\-tiss Krenwinkel, 2.3, was convicted of mu rder-conspiracy last Monday along with Charles Manson and two other v•omen members of his hippie style clan , Fitzgerald told the court he realized it u·as "'·ery unusual" to mike a chanl!e of plea at this point but added "I made a 1actical decision in advance of trial and perhaps it ·was an erroneous decision." He said he previousl y felt such a plea \1·ould amount lo Miss Krenwinkel admit· ling the charges. "Now. however , the !:-ituat ion has changed remarkably." he sa id . noling that the defendant now faces the life-o r-dea th decision of the jury. Fitzgerald said Wedntsday UW!: penalty tri al rules offered the jury no guidelines upon which to base their crucial decision between life and death. Apollo Counting Sailing AloP,g Without HitCh ~ mn.· from 'loo&b of Bakersfield in ' CAPE '"""B~ov (UPI) -Tbe Kern Crlallty to Mll')'IVUle In Yuba Coun-JU11•1•c. ty. A:notber colJiDon 148 miles away countdown sa\led without a hitch past in LMIUNt""' also . blanketed by fog, the midw~y point today an'd wutherri'ltn ~lled.~t}i1;~ added to the • 1'8Vt of optimism by Visibility_ was., cut ·to as ·little as 15 forecasting Satisfactory eetndltlons for fee~ alone IOlite ~il'MI .ot ~ '9. the Sunday afternoon's launch of Apollo 14 main north-1CM.1tb artery tn the state. to the moon . 1be fLrlf. aod Jaigm collision oc:Curred Partly cloudy skies and cool tetn· I to lJ mUet nanti of Batersfleld: .where peratures were predicted for the 3:23 50 ctn piliedl"\Jp tn a ..Rrit:s of ·crashes p.m. EST blastoff wllh t2 milHn·hour in the tetUtlabou*1 lane beglm.lna at about winds sweeping in ort the ocean. Ac· I a.m. , , · • , ceptable eetndllions also were· forecast FaUr ~pla difid When elfht tnkka for ocea n recovery areas . and fl"" o)J\oi~lnlci 0..an6ther. Alan B. Shepard, Stuort A. Roosa and J;>Jck GtrVllllJ:~ aiil>toh\ oonlnlir i~ ' Edgar D. Mitchell tnopected the mon- Km1 eo.tJ IPI ·h cara1 lftd': ~ stious 28-inch camera and other' ltlr' that WeN ...-~.fn ••One .oll4., u(QI':.. wilJ° be st.owed in !heir C(lll\mand 1bip of-btonliis'afeot'1Dlolhe.alr." "cabto·~ u..n· ,.tumec1'1a'°1paceen1lt - . · 1nlMn' lo poil!h the~ lunar O!lljtai Oylnf 11kllls. • J County Girl, 15, Killed. by Auto · A Los AJamJtoi !Prl, 15, WU kUJed Wtdnelday nlaht when she w11 11truck by a car tl Ball Road and Kaylor Avtnoe. ·· ~ Apollo , 14's backuri astrohauUJ - E~ue A. Geman, fton1ld E. Evans and Joe Henry Engle -maintained lhe tri!nlna pace set by I.he prlmt pllota and. for t.be. fint time, could step ln at the eleventh hour and ·replace the prime pilots if tiecesaary to meel the launch dale. "Ii'• been theoretical i n tt>o pal and It's a reality now," s1ld4 . .p.ac. qeney ciffldal. . .... ·.r. ,. . Dpnild K. Slaytoft._. · 'tNtf o( the astronaut Corps. explained t.bat Ctrnan. Biker• Lo•t Northeast U.S. Buried by Snow Child of War \Var can make men -and children -old before their time. In thls photo taken by Toshio Sakai near Da Nang .. South \'ietnam . a Vietnamese boy clings to an older brother who ap pears to be wise beyond h is years. f'rom Pqe J FIREHOUSE • • • more recentl y follow ing roll call and lhey ag reed to have their cases con· solidated like their sister defendants. Judie Dungan then dismissed charges against one, Miss Le9na Gray. for laclc" of prosecution at the request of the city attoraey's office. The case against her evide~ wasn't st rong enough. "Now as to the rest of you , I v.ent you to Hslen carefully," Judge Dugan said , explaining how and when the re. mainlng bottomless dancers would be handled. Defense and prosecu tion agreed to call no witnesses. but lo simply argue point<; of law before Judge Dungan after he has read and re.viewed all 25 cases remaining. ' By Ualted Preas laterulletnal An intenle storm raked the Northea.st lod.a)'. stactin& snow in heavy delfts, closlnl! roads and bnngln& biting cold ·temperatures. Fol1f hikers f r o m Lht Rutgers Unlvenity Outdoor Club were ~t on mile-hl1h Mt. Washintton , N.H .. wher ttle wind-chill factor wu lOU below ,.ro, A search team waited at lhe base of the mountain for a break in the weather to resume the search called off by the bitter midwinter storm. The four young men, a: from New Jertty, were not found by three March parties Wednesda y, on e of which reached the 5.600 foot level of the 6,288-foot mountain, highest in the northeast. The temperature was ~ degrees below zero on the mountain, and the w in d 1 40 miles per hour. Mt. Waahinlton Is the windiellt 1pot In the United States. with average win<hl over S5 mil11 per hour and gales as high as 231. The atorm showed mercy to no one, from Ontarlo·s premier to a shell fisherman fror:n New Jersey. . Premier John Roberts was rescued Wednesday after spending the night wi th 400 other stranded motorilll.5 at a highway service center near Ingersoll, Ont. A Point Pleas;int, N.J .. fistierman. Richard Knapp , spenl a horrowing night in an open boat amidst howling winda and frigid·· temperatllte.! berore he was rescued Wednesday. The men were only two of thousands who suffered as bliz.zards closed half the roads in New York State and Im- mobilized much of southern Ontario. Upstate New York today continued to shiver under biting winds and near zero temperature.!!. and a 2511-mile stretch of sno"'·-covered highway from Buffalo lo thC' Pennsy lvania state line remained closed for the second da y. Blizzard warnings we re issued for the northern Finger Lakes and counties easl of Lake Ontario ;is windl! up to 40 miles per hour swept into the It.a te froPn cent ral Quebec. Albany loday reoorded an earty morn- ing "''ind chill factor of 54 degrees below zero. In Rochester, tl'lore than 150 schools and businesses were closed Wednesday by the cold weather and impassable roads. At least tllree highway fatalities in the stale were blamed on the weather. The arctic blast Wednesday al50 struck the eastern midwe st. High winds slacked IS.foot drifts across the highways al Cheboygan, Mich., and fi ve-foot drifts n e ar Traverse City, Mich, Florida ~~~ r· ............. ~; - 1 @ ~[M]OOOOO $~ l 'j ~ Choose !rom hundreds of fabrics and ove r 20 wood i or paint finishes. There are combtnations of beau- 1- ti fuJ fabrics and decorative v.·ood tones to blend v.1ith any decorator color plans. b'J~~ ---- Your favorite de sign.tr vilU be Mm to auilt Votl cit.rus growr rs and truck ranner1 In I.he deef soulh fired amud1e pota to ward of \ow trmperaturt1 early today. In s b a r p contrast, Santa Ana wlnda Wednesday gave Loa: Anp.les a record temper1 lure of 116 degrees. The National Weather Service P ld early today flurries and squalls were expected to drop up to five lnchet Of new snow near Lake Ontario, Travelers warnings were posted in northeast Ohio, western New York and oorthern Vermont and New Hampshirt. El1ewhert, strong winds kept ple w1ming1 in effect today for the Grut Lakes and alOOI! the Allalltic Col~t mm, Maine Let North Caroli na. Snow flurTiel we~ reported from the southern portions of the midwetl to cei:itral Tr.nneqee. Wuther over the remainder of the ceua- try 1enerally was fair. Early morning temper1turts rana:td from 20 below zero at Far10. N.D .• to ii at Brownivlllt and McAllen, TeL f 'rotta Pnge 1 MINORITY ... minorily groups.·• Hoy said . Garcia, formerly a counselor at Hun- tington Beach High School, wil l repert lo the actinl! dean of students an d be 'responsible for coordinating academ1c adv ising, counseling and academic rup- port for minorlly sludenl.5, Three other presen l minorily sta ff 1d· ministrators will be reassigned. Two of these will report to Knowlrs. They are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Milner will assist Gareia. Willie Ann Adams a11d Fernando Cor dero were appointed to lhe UCI Counseling Center to serve under Ill newly appointed director. Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arrangement pr.; vides three centers wbere minorities may come tor-irupport." Knowles S8ii the key to the entire project we~ the apJ¥)intmenl of the associate dean of ndmissions and he cha rged that "tha t appointment is not being considered under UCl's affirmative action program'' to insure appointment of a minority person for the job. After Hoy :i11id "we're looki ng fnr the besl qua1ifitd person to handle that complex assignment and would he del ighted if we were lo find 1 bl1ck capable of handling the du ties'' Knowlea said, "I 'm ln!!ulted." Your choice ,,,. -·· office 11td Susan Stanll>arJ, of A l To11nd S~~ died 1t Los Al•mltol ti.nerlll Hotpital .,.. houn oftor the l :IO p.m. ltddent. · - Sbe Wlll hit by 1 car drlYen by Marian Britt, 46, of Cypress. The drlvtr wa.s nol held. F.von• and Engle are "Ill> to Ute 18t!le PROFESS IONAL Opott M"!'-, 1'llclrl. I l'rl. r.... U" HARIOR ILVD . rr.11diness" as Shepard. Roosa And COSTA MESA , CALIF . Mii<:heil and could 5Ubelilute ••on entir< INTERIOR DESIGNERS TIT OUI llVOLVIN• CHAI.. 64 l-Ol7S 646,0176 cr~w II they h.11d to. '-------------------------...:.;~:::.:_ __ .::::::::.::.... ____ _ 11 ,1 I -... ._ ..... • ·Huntington Beaeh voe. '64, NO. 24, l SECTIONS, 14 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . ' eac an ets ~toe Not Much Spill ""-"" --Lt• ' •• • • . ' ' . Grounded Ship ' ' > • --·-··-.,... -~··---·-... Springs Oil Leak NEW YORK (AP) -A tanker loaded with 420,000 gallons ol oil ran aground and sprang a leak today off Rockawa y Beach on the Atlantic Ocean, the Coast Guard reported. It could not be determined immediately DA Concludes County Trial; Urges Death Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat- terton today concluded his case against accused killer Robert Eugene Williams of Huntington Beach, with a renewed demand that the death penalty be im- posed. Chatterton put on eight witnesses in Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman's courtroom to sup- port his argument that Williams, 18, of 1504 Pecan SL, shot Robert Leroy Hennann in the back and head last Nov. 7. Hennann, 19, of '16 15th St., died three hour• later fi'bm those wound!. His parents found Utt body of their 10n sprawled across hls bed when they returned home that night. Chatterton has argued tha t Williams, who had been booked on drug charges a few days earlier with Hermann and Martha Riggs, 19, of 1824 Park St., Huntington Beach, shot HermaM in the belief that the youth was an informe r. Williams was wrong, Chatterton told the jury. But, he argued, that fact shouJd not influence the panel. when it retires to consider its verdict. Defense attorney Ron Steelman will o~n the defense of Williams later toda y and it is expected that the defendant himself will be one of tbe first witneMeS. Miss Riggs, 11ccused by Chatterton of supplying the gun that Will iams used to kill Hermann, goes on trial Feb. 10 on charges of murder and conspiracy to comlJli.t murder. Senate Confirms Morton as New Interior Chief WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate today confirmed President N i 1. o n • 1 nomin1tlon of former GOP Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton lo be the new secretary of the interiar. Mt>rton, until today a Republican con· gressman from MarylaDd, pledged in hearing earlier this week he will Uk the poll to help try to change the nati on'• priorities, placing the protection of the environment on a scale with the. economy and national deferme. Conftrmation was by unanimoua con- sent; no dissenting voice Wlll heard. " Morton, the first Easterner named to the poli in many decades, was oppoRd for U>eo pGlitlon by a number of coo- 11ervaUon 8"00~ including the S l tr r a Oub wtridl said his conservation record was dltmal at worst and lackluster It best. I Senjte Republican Leader Hugh leott of Pemw)'lv:aftla Slid·•lmmediately after Mortoa'• ,.,minaUon w,.. conflfl1-9 that he la turti Morion'• CJPROnentl will dlance the ir minds.· "! ... ~la all ol those .... -~ J-.i ·-" .:-in llnd they m JTit\. i!l\f! ~lete ~ end ...,,,.,....; -.. Id, '. Scott uld be IS ol the opllllon Morton will tile the wM path on many vital lsstJts M that taken by former Secretary W1U.. J. Hlciiel. HJd:iil wu fiNd from the CablDtt by P1 .weal Niian 1ate last year after the Prahknl 11Jd Ule two men nG loncer 11hlrtd • ltnte of mutual un-- dtnt.ondlna. Hlclr:el'• n6mtnlttorl at the bellnnlnr cf the NIJ:Dn ~nlstraUon ftl ~viOlently opPo90d by moot coniervllloo -· Most of these fl"OU}>!' l•ter cbanpd their mind and protested Hlclr:el'a dbimtssal. - h9w much of the oil leaked into the sea. The Coast Guard said it was a small leak. and that it had bffn ''stopped or severely reduced" about two lours after the ship -the SS Verdon - went aground about 9 a.m. The ship, owned by the Spenlonbush Transport Co. of New York, was aground in the East Rockaway Inlet, between Rockaway Beach and Atlantic Beach, the border between Queel'l!I and Nassau County on Long Island. OAILV PILOT ll•ft '1ltM The Coast Guard said a barge h a d pulled alongside the Verdon to take on some of its oil. A spokesman said a tug probably would try to pull the ship off the sandbar at high tide around 8 p.m. Oil TRUCK MOVES OFF AFTER DUMPING WASTES IN CONTROVERSIAL DUMP HolTt90wner1 Have Become lncen..ct About the Smell at H1mllton StrMt ind Magnolia Avenut Police in Queens said there was ap- parently no danger of the: tanker break· ing up. Solution Sought The Coast Guard said there were two types of ell in the ship -a li ght heating oil used in homes and a heavier type used in industrial furnaces. The ship 'QI firat &potted by. a Coast Goard helicopter. A lifeboat bad to turn back because of rough aeas, bu t a tug and the barp later fUCbed ll No injurie.s were rtported to the seven- man crew. VC Irvine Coed Found i.'.'. Qceani Death Probed By BARBARA KRE!B!CB ot IN 0.-Piie! ll•lf Laguna Beach detectives are in- vestigating the dea th of an attractive UC Irvine student whose body was recovered from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach shortly before noon Wed- nesday. .~Operatofi.o£Mud Dump:· Hold Mreting'With16ty Fleeing Theft Suspect Shot By GG Officer A fleeing auto theft. suspect was shot by a Garden Grove police officer early this morning. Officer Richard Ybarra fired two shots at William Bert James, 23, of Be.II. James was later captured ln a backyard by officer Terry Dzvonlck. He had been shot in the foot and scratched on the arms and face by rose bushes. Police said Ybarra spotted a boat and trailer reported stolen. When he au.empted to stop the vehicle the driver drove away at high speed. James lost control of the car and when it overturned he fled the scene with officer Ybarra in pursuit. Ybarra was hit in the leg by something during the chase and thouaht he had been shot 10 he fired two rounds from his service revolver at the f 1 e e In g suspect. James wa s treated at the Orange Coun· ty Mf14ical Center and then lodged in Orang" County )Ill on smpicion o! auto theft. The victim was identified as Carolyn M. Jones, 21, of 1287 Cliff Drive. UC! officials said she is registered this quarter as a senior. majoring In history. An official of the Orange County Coroner's office said that on the basis of preliminary examinat.ion the cause of death is listed as "apparent drown- ing," pending completion of an autopsy. However. lacerations were found on both wrists, according to detectiV"el and lifeguards who recovered the body. The incisions reportedly were unusual, run- ning lengthwise from the hand rather than across the wrist. Other bruises and abrasions on the body probably were cawed by sharp rocks in the area, detectives surmised. Neighbors said the young woman. whose parents Jive in Glendale, had Jived in a11 apartment at the Cliff Drive address for one year and four months. Her body was recovered fl oating In the water about 25 yards cffshore, In the vicinity of Seal Rock, by lifegu •• J Lt Eugene dePaulis. It WR! clad in underwear and a yellcw T-shirt. A long blue coat and a single shoe. apparenll~· belonging to the victim , were found in lhe water nearby. By ALAN DIRKIN Of lilt 0.llY ~IMI •t.tt Opera tors of the 40-acre rotary mud dump that is being blamed fdr offensive odors by homeowners in south.east Hun - tington Beach met with city officials today to discuss solutions to the problem. The meeting, set up by Oil Field Superintendent Herb Day, came u pro- lest.s ove r noxious fumes which alleged!f emanate tram the dump behind the Soulhern CaWornia Edi800 p I a.n t mounted. Residents are. ca\Jina city ha_ll to de- mand action and twice In the last two da ys Mrs. Peggy Sword, 9092 Bobbie Cir· cle, has complained to the police about gaseous smells in the area . ''I don't know what is being dumped there. but last night we almost got ga sed out of our homes," she said today. ''The dum p must go -it simply must be removed." Pet itions are being circulated among residents in the southeast sector urging the council to act against the dump. located at Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street and used for the depos it of rotary tnud from oil drilling oper•· tions. Homeowners are planning to turn out in force at Monday evening's meeting cf the city council when the staff ii Rerouting Effort Snagged Huntingwn Freeway Move Loses Support Groups expected to present a report ea tlie problem. City Administrator Doyle Millet who has ordered police b.UCOpter pUots to check dtunplng optr1tloll8· 1t tM alte and earth aamples of lolds 't0t11 for analysis uid today that.. be bu not yet. formuJated • recommendatJoo for the council. The city attorney's offfce alao bu been asked to ctinduct reeearcb to tee If the owners of the dump. Joeeph 1Dd Carl Steverson. are vio1atln,g any public nuJsanct laWI. Miner said that one anlle ~at It being explored is 1he posslbllity ol the city buyi ng the property. "The pro- blem then is , what do you do with it?" he commented. "We muat figure out a way to make that property com- p1tib!~ With the surroundinf reaidential ..... The city has already purchased about (See DUMP, Pa1e 1) ·scenic Route From New Park To River Eyed Fountain VaUey P. I l ·D DID I C.OJD- miasloner1 are th'i•klbt· ·~ creaUn& ' ' 1 ZS.foot wide ace.nlc carr1dal"-to link Mile Square ·Part" wttll Ult IDla, A.DI River. · Wednesdly nJcllt tl)oy .Mt Ftb. 10 U ' . the dote tor • pub!Jc bUrfnl .. tba pr_.1. The plan would cblnp. zoning laWI a, TIRRY COVILl..E bomeo*nen" meeUnf which drew 1bo\Jt change Monday. to requlr~ a ~root wl~. atrtP . of Of ,,.. _. ,_ ,.... Ml people. "Most o us boacbt bomes Mn. Botzbach said !ht iJ ur&in1 all landacapfril alons. lbe ~ side ot A campaign lo .cban&e the route of here after tbt original freeway route Golden West );omeowners to attend the Warner Avenue from MUe ··Square to the propoaed Huntington.Buch Freeway was adopted." couocll meeting to oppoae a route change. the riv•. It wOuld allo forct all tialldplp suffered two aetbacb tbll week. The proposed route chance would brln1 The en.Ure freeway di.scuuion was io be set at Jeaat IO reet·1 b9ct ·from Trustees of the Huatlncton Beach the"freeway IOUth·llq Gotlaard.'Street rt.Opened a few· months ago b y 'tbeW1mer!Avenae•lb1llt'•llM.~ •. Union Hilh 8cbciol lllllrli:t. refuled to lnllud ol Newland StreeL ll.Wll(ild owing -· In the path ol the """""' 'CU,,.;,i ta':;r.iiellli' Pl"ido' !er· 1 · ~ the l'j)Uie chop effort and west from Newlapd to Gotbard . to a route who IUlleated chanctng . IL , to 1 ~11.._, · . .....,:"'.nlf~a~*tOot 1gr:oot>olH..u.,tonlladtbomeowner1 point near Hell A..,,.. .. In .r-.tn Gotho;d Street where the lalld ,11..lllU •tba~lrljlll1he.~'' .T.": 1 '' decided to -1111 cbaiit. Villey. • undevilopod. · ""' l'lllei' 111¥e 1*n~~thl Higb acbool .,,,_ lOllf. their 1tal141 Monday nl&hl,i,llM. m· '. Beoch 1ect: ·"" not ·dllml~.::;: .typt 1"1 1-.i>bc tO ...... . ; 11i1 ' becauoe Ibo dlltild .,,,_ lnur clli!l't Qty Council "!¥'>~ . ..--· "Iv ---l til< ~ illiitJ' "'-taeo"91J ... ol •hlcb. Wiltmlnllo{,_._ lllf "" the lreewa~1.-n.,el(y p it oilill ltUi .W1•ell;.111111/!• ' ' · ~"""' i>ltillllllio'~ !'l . ·cliUll• c1r ·dela1111.lbt f~11. . ., 1,_,,~·~10<llll·!'l'!ll'l!~.t11~• ~· · 11111 111.u. 1t r .. .._. •• , .... · 'lllo -ic ""i1Wir"l!li· .iii 11nt . ' . ._ a., ·~·.1181P1 IHI~ ......... ~~ •. tllo ' -• Jo.""*"' 1fow, 11· · ...,...,.;a,.·l!*li "'!'I-'~ end M.W.... iViy,itit itNio<t·iho1 .. 11 ·c1tY.''llli·~~~;11 .$.lw:'t .. .,..,.,._p1111t': ~~·-1t~r~I ' WQ • cJly blttle ind the llChool dlltrlct already on ~,f1vorllf • -f"Ounloln Vllloy 8"1 · 'Ibo'. ~ -• ---~~ ~ &bouJd llla7 oat ·af It • cbln(•. ' ' Be.ch flllla0dll0 clooe ~!" UN .. -' w·-R-• MWIWblle, ....,.II bnmeowners 1long "Huntl ..... Boacb'1.doclllotl· wtll bl "ll we pt 1ny --from GoldeJI WOil --Wednosdly nlll>t 1ignlflclo~" ..,.1111oe BrWlc, 111perlnten-.Hiint!nctOn Beach, we'll lleeo flC!itlnl. to ~-ate tklr ppposWon to tbe ct.nt of, tbe FounWn Vllley School We're llio ,..Idol 111pport l:roni locll pr~ !'Oii .. ~ 1'fdcll would brtog DUtrtct'. cblm1Mn ol -J.,_ ·ml lhO· he~.,,,. to them. His dlatrlct b .n lw a new thO '<hnl!• County Bo.1rd ol ~brlq Ibo~~""""=-~:...~~ .~ b~f;"'~y bqpe .that Iller lhno mud! cloler tO Ibo ""'Ira! port." Mn. would cut Uuwch Uio , . . lot ol -. ol _, IOIDeooe rea1bof. 1!Mt R-Batzbocb, 1192 Dofllnco Or., tha.dlltrlct'• educltlon . It wW be like. Hunt.,.... -II Hlmti1laton Beach, said this mombl1. A F''cuntatn Valley spokffman WUJ ur&t a 1lgnWcint factor in "bat ~." Mrt. Botzblcb uld ohe organlud the Huntlngton BO.di IO oupport 1 roull Brick cobt!udell. Spa~a Ontla:wed BALTiMoa!: ("°"" ~...._ .,._,.;;.. .. !'-~~, r. ·~~-.,-.,.--·bo4nl ,,.,,,. " ·a11111-.o1o Illa tOrp!lrll ...,,. -.. ... . eipta!R ' ' . ,c,1 ;~ID ., tbe llile'• •pulilt. , l'!lllriPil• .... 'In uielr 1lllence v lplll, llld· - 1Uowed to 1pw unnily llullo!M· . .. : .... \ • TEN 'CENTS Dulaney Successor Charged By TOM BARLEY Ot .. Detty ~ lt•ff Joseph D. Dulaoey's ,...-lo the blnkrupt LaBUJll Hilla bblerprlll loll bigll and dry when the Newport Buch stocibroker left for GermuJ bai - booked en ctiar1a of Ir• n d· theft, forgeiy and complracy. James E •. Slilpley, a , ol 11161 Lowd Circle, Hunllngton Belch, wu ~ Jan. 2l by Fill q.ms wbo ~ blr!i up In Loi Angela. lie spent five dayi In. Orqe Cloullly jlll before tielll& .. teaaed .. '250.000 boll. But the arrest of tbe· man who moved from the vice pre.sldent's ~hair to Dulaney's presidential office after th• organizer of World Trends Financial Inc. lelt for Munich, Germany, In June, 1989, was far from pleasing today to the man who is heading the search for Dulaney. "This is jut what 1 didn't want, .. said Deputy District Attorney Joe Dtckenon of that office's fraud divlalon. ••1bere are more than Dulaney and Shipley involved In this mess and the arrest ol Shipley only draws their at,.. tent.ion to our teareb." Bui FBI ...... : Philip llberld"! aald ~ "'1''" ., lldploy · -· -oul It the request of Orange Cocmly authnrltlel and the HunllaatGn Beacb ueartive wu piclled up on 111 unlawful Qjjit, 1'arrant. •'That·· all ... -~ ti," ho amd. "Tbe Or111ge Coanty people can tale· It from there ,.00 we Ollly did what we were asked to do." Dickerson IJ back in Orange County from a trip to Flor1, DI ., Dulaney•a bb1hplace and the place where he was aeen, aceording to Dicte.rJOn, within the last two weeks. Dickerson's trip was fruit.lees but the fraud investigator apParently remains cominced that DullJleY, 37, fonner Newport Bea.ch f'Hiden t. ls now back in th1s country after an 18-montb aojourn In Europe, most of th.at ilmfl being spent in Gennany. I:>qlaney tpok hla attractivt wile i.iirlene and two cbildren with him !hortly before the burst of the financial bubble that had been supervised by him frotn plush office bulldin1s in Laguna Hilla and Seal Beach. Shfpley ia lccuaed of one count of conspiracy to commit grand theft and fo rgery; four counts of grand theft and tbrtt counts of fOJl:ery . IdenUcal w1rr11nts were signed ror the arrest of Dullt'llY and his wlfe. Invqtlgators today believe that the !See DULANEY, P•ae II Westminster Father Files for Election EdJJlund C. P. 8betban, a Westminster porODt. bas beco11>e Uie ' nnt cendldate IQ file papers for Uie ' April 20 tru>tee ejeclloo In Bun~ e .. cb Union Hlg~ sttioel Oillrlc.f. . ~. 31 .. an Alcoholk: Beverage OlilJIJOI· olllcer. filed hil papen Wedo nesdly. lie 1lvea II IOOI Elvira Sl, Weolmlnster. Orul• -.Watller I j ~ 'D&;n. Y PILOT H Thund11. January 28, 1971 Old-time~ Recall Start_ of Mud Dump Fig}f.t . . . Lona4lmtl resideoll · OI lfllnlington Bead1 belle9t the p-.l .dmltov.my .,... .tlie-~fVlrlO(!. brother> ~ mud d-1*llY boilln "lO ·yeoro-qo wliocl ·-_.. lint approved for tile ana. OldUrners rttall that a ligniflcant bat· fl'tle toot place between city planners ,a.od developers over whether tbe area .JOulb .ft AUaota Avenue to the CQast •• silauld be 10nod lndustrtol e< raldooUaJ . al Hanilhoii-1...,. and MJll10Ua Street. ''no city anllcipaltd the '""1111111 1be nci-t ..., .-aly ~ by tllll -1d dlHlop and lri<d _to:obep !hon pl• ... dlreclor Cllliird ~ who . -out Ila! ... ·1oo1:· a11llllal plan-iqardod• Ill• .... .. • pollotJal Jo. nJni dlrJ<tor Diet Hirlow oald. . •. dlliUlll -. . . . ·· 1be cooOlcl llo1an when tho W1l11al!i lit lolll t11U11tua Pld the ......,t. 4oo Dovalop-1 Company ol 11_.t collod 11-1 Wool. wu lpproved by BtJcb filed • tent.aUve tr.ct map to the eounctl Dec. lt. 19llO. and homes build 295 homes near tht mud dump were conatrueted two yeara later. "The Ntwporl We decilloo "" Ille by lb openlnr up tllo .,.. lb m ldeoUal "v-~e9Joliod • . URI, lM.11'1"'..,. Tiie L1'JO appllcallon wu denied by UM plll1llllW -........ · but lh•t body -.ovtrTUlod by 11>1 toencll. TtlPJ) pttpared'-a ~point report ouUln!ni hla opposltlon to residential development In I.be aoutheut sector of the ci ty. ~ .... 'iiol"'"' ~ .. ' . . had already -allblfobed. Ho pointed out that the development would be near the Soulherh Callroinia Edi~ plant, the county stump dump, the rotary mud dump, the sanitation district'• treatment plant, oil wells and fuel atorage lank!. belt to rtaidenU.al, except lbo5e Iota wi~ u:iltlnc lq<lustrlAJ J~il1ti11 on them. • t'Tho dty ·414 noi71hini , JI Clllld to atop lbe builders," Harlow 1ald. "We even had 1011 bor!np made Of the land tn the hopt of comtn1 up with aome fi~ditig.s that would dissuade t b • developer rrom building." :ucI Minority Study Change Lashed "In 1960 the city had initiated a zone change procedure to rezone the area to indulltrial," Harlow sa id. "Part of that th inking wa1 al so based on the pos.sibility that the Qiast Freeway would run about a mile Inland giving good access to th is industrial belt." The mud dump , ror the deposit nr oil drilli ng wastes, has been used .1lnce the mid 1930's. One o( the owners, Joseph Stevert0n, recalled that they put up •ISM uytng "Thia 11 a Permanent Mud Dump'' around the facil ity to let potential home buyers know what was there. • MAKING CHANGES Yic;e Chancellor Hoy From Page 1 ··DULANEY I •• ~ l' losses of investors in the financial groups controlled by Dulaney will amount to By GEORGE LEIDAL Of "It Dt>ll'f' ~-t II•" A precedent setting attemp! by UC Irvine to shift its Educational Op- portun ities Program for m i n Cl r I t y . students in to th@ "'mainstream of university administration" was crJ!lclzed today by the black who heads the present program. Timothy Knowles, EOP director since 1989, saJd the new UCI plan "never addresaed Itself to the needs of minority students.'' "Ptople hired by the university to run the tOP pro1ram were never con- sulted on the new plan. We were told either t.o accept it or leave," Knowles ciw'ged during a monthly bre1kfut meeting between UCI administi1tors and newsmen. Although Knowles' leadership of the minority progreln at UCI haa bten at- tacked by other minority groups on cam- pWI,° the new plan pllces the 26-year-old former atbletf: as an associate dean repQrting to the dean or student affairs on a level equal to associate deana of financial aida, admi.sslons and the r~. John C. Hoy, vice chancellor for stu. dent affairs, characterized the EOP reorganization "aa pa.rt of a general .1dminist{ative consolidation in the stu- d@nt attain area designed to increase e!fect.lveneaa. We believe it will require the general student affalra admlnlatrator to include minority problems and op- portunities in hill thinking." Hoy said the controversy aurroundlng the separate EOP program had dJmin!ah- ed Knowles' effectiveness. "We've tended to find staff energies focused on an identity crisis in that 'EOP' was not a posit ive tag. but rather a label'' in- dicating minorities had received apeclal treatment. "Mora le was low and tht!re was real co nflict between black and brown elements," Hoy said. UCt IJ the first of the nine date unlvers.Jty campuses to move ad- ministration of lts minority proerams Into the "mainstream." Hoy maintains that other universities in the nalion ''without separate programs, have work- ed more rapidly to meet the need! O( minority Students. >I Knowles said he objected to being hired to "do one job and then being told to do another or leave." Under the reorp.nlzation he loaes power tit control EOP policy. A Chicano appointee, Julio Garci•, whD be&an work today u associate dean . of 1tudenb "will relieve Tim cf some of the pressures on him from ether minority groups," Hoy said. Garcia, formerly a counselor at Hun- Uniton Beach High School, will re.Port to the acting dean of students and be responsible for coordinaUna academic advising, counseling and ac1demlc 1up- port for minority students. Three other present minority 1Uiff ad- ministritors will be reassigned. Two of thl!Je will report to Knowles . They are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Milner will assist Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and Fernando Cordero were appointed to UH! UCI CounJdin& Center to serve under jts newly appointed director, Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arrangement pro- vides three centers where minor!Ues may come for support." Knowles said the key to the entire project was the appointment of the associate dean of admiS&iona and he charged that "that appointment la not being considered under UCI's affirmative action program" to insure appointment or a minority person for the job. After Hoy said "we 're looking for the best qualified person to handle that complex assignment and would be deligh ted if we were to find a black capable of handling the duties" Knowles said, "I'm insul ted." i at least '3 million. All his varied en- terprises. are in bankruptcy court in ~Santa Ana awe.itlng proceedings that may· I depend on · the trach:; of Dulaney for • final accounting. Most of the investments handled hy 4 Dulaney capie from residents of Laguna ~ retiremen! communtues and a long 111\ ' of their names la today beld in lhe bankr\tpt.cy court's bulky files. Shipley rt!Cently a p p e a r e d 1n bankruptcy court .as a witness: and he ~ tesUlled at that time that the only con· ~ tact he bad with Dulaney after his ~boss left the Laguna Hills "Taj Mahal'" W for the last Ume was a telephone call t he received from Munich. Sign ups for Little League Starting for West County ~ Shipley did not reveal the aubstance 'oI that conversation froro the witness t bar and he refused OUl..!rJde the hearing : room to anawer any questions concerning ; hill year l<ing aS.sociatlon wlth the mJaalng J0u1aney. t Dullhey's Seal Beach Professional 'Buildi ng at 13820 Bay Blvd.. has now t_.been. forecloaed. llis Laguna Hills f'rofessional Building at 2.\\21 Pueo de V1Jencl1 has been claimed by a crtdJtor and is on the market at $l.3 million. Tbrtt Little Leaaue organizatloM strv· ing Huntington Be1ch and Fountain Valley will stan signlng boys for summer baseball over the next two weeks. Sig.cups are scheduled in the Fountain Valley, Hu.aUngt on Valley and Sea View leagues. Boys who will be eiiht-yea rs-old by Aug. l up to those who are 12-years-o!d may play Little League baseball. Uncleared loans listed by recelvf,rl tnclude a '500.000 lo an mad! to Duliney by the Atlantic Co. of New York and ~ $500,000 loan ob~ by t he . stockbro ker from St. BtmardJne HO!]>Jtal . in San Bernardino. The Fountain Valley Little Lea(Ue. serving boys who live within the city boundary. wilt reg!st~r players from t a.m. to S p.m. this Saturday or Feb. 6. and from noon to 5 p.m. this Sunday or Feb. 7 at the league field on Ward Street. one block south of Talbert .Avenue . . A t:eneral meeting for pll.rtn ts of old an4 new players in the Fountain Va lley LMgut wil l be held at 7·30 p.m , f'r!d1y, in tbt! comm unity center. 10200 Slater Ave. For inform ation phone R-0her1 Welch, l@ague presid(!nt. 847.()890. Investigators said eucUy $10,000 bu · been repaid on th e San Bernardino loan . World Flnancial Trtnds records m. dic ate that Shipley earned ff8,000 • yeltf as vice presid ent. Il!Jl1ney paid him self $36.000 and his wife Marlene earned $12,000 as secretary of se'l£eral ol his corooratlons. DAILY PILOT OlltA.HGl ~O,MT L'UILllHI" f;t/IUIJlf't Re\l•rt H, WMll ~.,.,.. ........... Jatl: R. Cttl~ ... Vici ...... ,ld..,I •1'111 ~ """""" Tho11111 Ktt..,il ' EGllM" Tht111 •1 A. M1r,.!111 M -01n1 Ef1:.r Al111 D1rki11 Wtt,! Ottft!lt c;.,,..,1r l!llttr J>lb.rt W. ltht Auocl1I• Edit•• H11ttl1tt,.• IMc~ a.... 11Tu l111h lewl•~•r4 M1 Ui"I Adir11u r.o. h .. 7f0, •tMI °'""-LI""" a-111 !tt ,.,..., Avtl!U. CoUI M .. I NO Wtll ley ll'MI 114.......,.1 111K~= n11 w,.1 ., ... ~It'll~ .. .., ci.,,_,.: as Hwtll Ill e.i.tlf-. .... 4 The Huntington V11!1ey Le ague serve,.; 'boys living in Huntington Beach north of Adams Avenue and west or Beach Boulevard. It w\11 hold signup~ from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., S11turday. Sund11y and Feb. 8, 7 . .,nd 13 at Bushard School, Physical Fitness · P~gra~ Swrted Ai B6ys Club A lhrOH!tp pllyslcal flwu pro1ram hH betn devolaped by Pal Downey. director of the HWlllntton Beach Boy 's Club, to lllapo·up !ht local youth 1aee • to ti; "Event. Include. pual>.lpa, pullupo. bar &po. ?Oill cijmJ>, •IUP.. woll jump; ttan-dlnJ brotd.J~111p, CJ1jltltr mlle and mlk nu\," Dpwm!J;..ll;V&. - . Certmcati\ii 1!riJ1 .1\1.awardod · for com-·· , platllll·thl?-t,...:i...io, wblle a lropl17 • II the Pl•!l*•bt!'I~ "'"" <'!" match the thlrd '_lM'&. .... \ . • "Wt. ~'llioi( ~ ..<Ii ,atop · a lllllt ill*" ....... '-Iba Jul• wtll ..... • ·-p boy'• fll•111 and at Ille oame time produce a ,..1 le< him to ohoot r..-," Downey aplalntd. 111t .a-_ ... i. tail<Nd to IU ucb ... Jowl, wltll the ~II for winnlnc a Cll'tlflt:atl dlfertna f o r each year. For example: an el1ht-ye1r-old musl do eJPt p!lllMl!li In !ht lint level. 18 In the ttee0nd level and '17 In the third. An Jt-yeer-old would have to do o IUO<IUl<m ol 2l, U aild 14 i!llO!>upl. Any ' boy I*,.... !Ito agu of • and II <1111 Ji.Ill· the l!cy't Club tor 11.10 • ,.. ~-liltormauon }Jhon& 1&11u1 or diop bY ·llio club at !19 YorlitoW11 An. 19699 Education Lane. For further in· formation phone Chuck Fuller, league president, 968-4933. Sea View League is for boys who live 11outh of Adams Avenue and west of Beach Boulevard . Sea View signups 9.'0n't start until Feb. 6, 7, 13 and 14, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. In the club house of LeBard School, 20451 Cralmer Lane , Huntinaton Beach. For lnfo.rmallon phone Le n Bose, 958-1887, or Dave Bergdahl, 9&2-5&47. All new boys who plan to play baseball should have their birth cerlificates with them to re1Lster and money for fees. The price mey vary with ea ch league. Holiday Lottery Prize $1 Million NEW YORK (AP ) -The New York State milllon-dollar special holiday lot- tery wits won today by Charles Klotz, 61. Detroit. Mich. Second prize of $100,000 was won by pi zza.maker Albert F.icalora, 28, and h1a v•ife, Winifred, 20, Brooklyn, N.Y. Norman L. Cooke, a blchelor -and Consolidated Edison Qi, draft.sman, or Manhattan, won third prize of $50,000. ~1aj. William J. Dieal, Jr .. 30. hla wife . Mary, 211, and tbtlr tffO cbtidren1 won fourth pr\R: of mooo. Ten otbtt grand tier Uciet holders won $10,000 each. Apart1nent Zone Action Delayed A reque1t for 10n1na to alJow 48 apart· ment units in rountaln Valley wu delayed Wednesd1y by the plannlnc eom- mlsrlon unUl planners can lnvuU11te cornmercl•I uses for the pttiperty. Charles Ishii had arked for R"' (hilb wanted commerciel zoninc on· l.7t IC'l"ll ati·the •toUthwert corner ·ot Brookhurtt StNll· and La 1Jamod1 Blrffl. Ht allo wan led commerclaJ sontna on 1, 7t ICtll next to tbe 1partrnenU:. Commtsalonen auqelted 1 total com- mtn!lal pacbp mlllrt bo a -1111, and beld up approvaJ for further study. Nudie8 Get Convicted LOS ANGELES fUPll -llmtn d1nctrt end four managirl of ntplclube: which fu\ur!d nude. entu~lament wm ronvlcted Wednooday 61 •loilnl, ~wd ptrformances, The mWllclpal court otl sentencrni: for reb . 18 for Utt emplOJt• of Dee'a 007 Club and the Zebr1 Room. Old council aoo planning commi&Slon minutes ahow that the development com- pany was successful because Its attorney, Dale Heinly, argued that the land was actually zoned RI -ror singl e fam ily home s -and the city could nol deny the tract map . "Thal argument was based on a technicality reall y because the property had just been annexed by the city and all annexed property is 11utomatically given Rt zoning, the lllO!t restrictive use," former planning commissioner Dr. Henry K11uf'rria·n recalled. ''It was 11 loophole, but, even though we were In the process ,of rezoning, our attorney advised us nOt to go to court " After the ~ewport West tract was approved . several others were okayed unUI In 1965 the Urban Land Institute panel advised the city to rezone the ·•When you are buying In. you 1hould know what you are buying next lo," he said. "You should know your ne ighbors. t wouldn't want to do anything to hurt my ne ighbor who waa there before me ." William Dodge , public relations ofllcer for the William Lyon Development Com- pany, said that Newport West wa1 one of his company's most successful developmen ts . ''I know that &,JJb-diviaioo.dld extremely well ," he aaid. "We art atlll continuing to build In that area beCause we feel it represents a good v1lue. "The homeowner also has had a tremendous appr~l.at!on in the value of his property. That i!i usually the c1111e wben homes are built within walking distance of the ocean." From l'tlfle 1 DAILY L'ILOT ll•fl 'Mi. UNHAPPY ABOUT CHANGES IOP Admlnl1trator Knowl•• DUMP .•. SO acres of a former county dump nert to the mud dump snd plans lo build a community park on it. Day said that the Steversona have off@red to sell the land to the city st about SIS,ooo an acre. , "But engineers estimate that to clean It up would cost about another $20.000 an acr@," he added. "They are being very COQ'PeraUve. but \l's still quite a problt.m to us. something has to be done with the oil wastes Car Hits Beach Cyclist A 16-year old Edison High School stu· dent is in the hospital today recovering from Inj uries she rtceived Wednesd ay morning when her bicycle collld@d with a car. Medi ca I authorities at HWllini\on Jntercommunity Hospital said Theresa J. Thomas, 10071 Sprit Circle, Huntington Beach, is 1n 11t11~•CtOT)' Cqrri!lti~n1 Officers said she was pedalling h@r bicycle in a crosswa lk leading across Brookhursl Street near AUanta Avenue around 1 a.m. Wednesday when the ac- cident occurred. James G. Thompson, 25, a resident of 2Q901 Belgard Ciccle and driver of lhe car, told officers he was trying to maie a r~~t turg, onto Srookhurst Stretf and ,CPl*i~r "J~ tb• btu. · Choose lrom hundreds of fabrics and over 20 wood or pa.int fini1hes. There are combtnation.s of beau. ti1ul fabrics and decorative wood tones to blend with any dec orator color plans. , •• ' I: : •' • • In this city -the further you haul the more lt costs." The county's Air Poll ution Control District (APCD) has served the operators with a notice of violation of the publle health and safety code. alleging that on Jan. 12 pollutants from the sile con· sUtuted a public nuisance. ·'This was not an order, not an in· junction, but more of a w11rning to the Steversons to correct the problem ." Edward Camarena, APCD engineer, ex- plained. Th@ dump is licensed for lhe depo1it of dirt. gravtl, rock, glass. plaster and asphalt by the county's Water Pollutloo Control District. Camarena said that the APCD believes t.Aat the source of lhe foul smells Jan. 12 was waste mater ials from an oil refinery. The APCD set up a meeting with homeowners in Edison l:figh School J an. 19 and asked about 150 pe.raon! present to fill out complaint forms, giving the times and descrlplion of the Q.bjectio.na.bl• odors. "So far we have received only 10 forms b&ck," Camareea added . 1, < • Your choice H.J.G~RRFff fU~NrpJRE ~ ,ROFISSIONAL · o,_ M ... n.... l ,,I. ·-111& HARIOR ILVD. INTER OR ~N COSTA MESA, ·c.<.LIF. __ 1 __ 01_s_1 .. _1_Rs ___ ,_•_r_o_u_•_•_1Y_o_Lv_1N_•_c_H_A1_11 ___ 6:;.;~..:.6 • ..:.01:.;.:75 646-0276 • r .. r • I g I • • ' I t • .. it d • . il • • 0 •• -+--• • " -.. Relations Unit Eyed Public Heari·ng Announced for Februar)'· Establishment of an Orange C4unty Human RelaUorui Commissioo moved one 1lep nearer reallzation Wednesday with the setting of a public hearlng "for Feb. 24 on the long-studied proposal. As proposed by a 1g..membe.r task force named by the supervisors la:rt August the commissioii would be established begin ning March 1 and would have these functkma : I. lnv~tigate, study and initiate action to resolve prob!tmS relating to prejudice. discrimination and disorder in any field or human relations. 2. Recommend legislation or all levels of government to prevent and allevi1te social problems in employm_ent. housing and other areas. 3. Consult and cooperale with public and private agencies, in developing pr:C>- grams and techniques for achieving harmonious inle rgroup relations and communicatioru: within Orange County. 4. Provide a resource for the individual V.'hose problem in the social e:ystem has been caught up or bypassed in the bureaucratic stru~ture of the com- munity. To achie\'e the listed functions the commissjon would have the duty and power to: Receive And hear specific complaints and probleme: ri dllcrlmimlUon; to discuss uch mailer with the approp-ilte public or private aaency for thf:ir ~ tlons; to lnvesUgate when appropriate, make f.indinls and report ~ findlnp. Emphaabs ia to be placed upon. needs ln the areas of education, h.aUliD.I, PQllce- communlty relations and em pklyme.nt. The proposed commWion will ha'(e 20 members of whom at least ~t shall be from the Mui.can-Amedcan and Black communities. or the 20 members, five w.W be named by lhe Board of Supervisors. f.lve by the League of Otif.!I and lhe mn.atning IO · by the. initial 10 members f r om a list of eligibles propoeed by concerned individuals and groups within Orani;e County. A lhree-m,mbet11 1taff ii pr9poaed con- sisting of an executive director, an assis- tant and a typQ:t clerk. Colt or operating the commission for the fiscal year 1971·72 is estimated at $53,000 with $31,500 for saJaries and t t2,000 for commiaskln member fees at f25 a meetln&, limited to two a month. Cost for the last quarter of the current fiscal year is e1timated at '17,IOO. A problem which may confront the commission -the 1ubpoena power was atud.ied and a pos,,lble eolution auggeated. The County Counstl ruled that the Black Musician Claims He Was Slwt by Manson LOS ANGELES (AP) .-The penalty trial of Charles Manson and three women follower• convicted in the ,Sharon Tate murders starts today with a black mmi· cian reportedly ready to testify that Manson 1hot him with a gun similar to one used in the killings. Bernard Crowe, 28, of Hollywood has said he has a bullet lodged in his back from the alleged shooting incident at his apartment on Aug. 1, 1969, eight days before the Tate killings. A witne1s at the Tat.e trial said he went to the Crowe apartment with M<inson and saw him enter carrying a long barreled revolver. Crowe was ll1f': first scheduled witness of 10 the pro.5eeution said · it would call in lrying to persuade the jury to sentera the four defendants to death in the eas chamber. They wert convicted Monday of murder-conspiracy in the slayings of Mias Tate and slx.otbtr1. Chief defense attomty Paul Fitzgerald ls to present a motion alleging that the death penalty and lhe penalty triaJ req11ired , by California law are un- constitutional. He will ut that the defen· dants automatically be sentenced to life imprisonment. As the hearing opened today, Fitz. gerald asttd to enter a plea of not guilty by reuon of insanlty for his client, Patri· ci a Krenwinkel. The judge did not immediately rule on the motion but summoned all attorneys into chambers to discuss the surprise twist. which came just befo~ the penalty phase of the trial was about to open. Miss Krenwinkel, 23, was convicted of murder-tonspiracy last Monday along with Charles fl.,amon 3nd two other l i • I ) , women members of his hippie sty le clan. Fitzgerald told the court be realized it was "very unusual" to make a change of plea at this. point but added "J made a tactical decision in advance of trial and perhaps it was an erroneous decision." He said he previously felt 1uch a plea would amount to Miss Krenwinkel admit- ting the charges. "Now, however, the !i:ituation has changed remarkably," he said , noting that the defendant now faces the life-or-death decision of the jury. Fitzgerald said Wednesday the penalty trial rules offered the jury no guidelines upon which to hase their crucial decision between life and death. "The decision is left to the absolutt discretion of the jury." he sa..id. "In all other situa tions than the penalty trial. a jury deliberata under the court's instructions and reachts its verdicts within the area delineated by the judge. "But in the most Important decision of all, whether I hum.an tftlng 1hould live or die. the . turY bu no lllidellnea, no standards. no criteria." He said that once the penalty verdict was in. the motives which moved the jury to choose life or death would re.main "obscure, diaorder,Jd and lrration1l •. :• Banks Lower Rates SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Both th• Bank of America and the Crocker· Citizens National Banks a n n e u n c e d Wednesday they were cutting interest rates on all calegories of consumer INRs by a half percent. The decreaae becomu effective Feb. I and 11 lhe secend since November. cowity bu m power IO de.leg1tt eu~ poena power lo a comrnbUoa or com- mittee. Howtftt, tbe ~pervbon may appoint a oounty Hoartna Officer. Such as officer could conduct hearlngs on , behalf of tht commlssion and would . have the p>W« to issue subpoenas com.. pelting atteoc:lanl'e at the ht:ill..L ing. A Human Relationl Commission ~a , ~ met wl1h . unanimous approval. Two weeks. ago the League of CltM!a voted 1u:agaimt formation of such a body. League repreaentatives were con .. :erned with the indiactiminate use of the sub- poen11 .power and with the lack of eleded officiala on the proposed commission. 'The OnDI!• Coonty Pollce Chiefs Association abo upr•ed coneeroed in~ terest. Huntington Beach Chief Earl Rob~• asked for further l:llormation for the chiefs' IP'OUP· The task force study was made at the request of the .lt69 cowrty Grand Jury, the Human RelaUom c.ouncu of Orangt County, and the £eague of Woman Voters of Orange County. Selection guidelines for commission membership include that each appointee should "bt 3e115iUve to and have an · understanding af human relations, as demonstrated. by previous active in- volvement in solving problema of human concern in the community or interest group from which be is selected." n.e t~member ta s k force whicn created the outline of the proposed com· mission represented the Human RtlaUOM Council: the League of Cities; execuUve assistanU to the aupervilors; county .11.d-- ministrative office, planning, probation and welfare departments. County Administrative Officer Robert E: 'Ibomu served as cl'lalrman of lhe task force: <Xange Coast residents serv· ing included Jack Turk, Hunlington Beach; Doyle Miller. city administrator of Huntington Beach, and Mrs. Ebie Kroeache, Colt.a Meaa. Apollo Counting Sailing Along Without Hitch CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The countdOwn sailed without a hitch past the midway point today and weathermen added to the wave of optimism by forecasting satisfactory conditions for Sunday afternoon 's launch of Apollo 14 to the moon. Partly cloudy skies and cool tern· peratures were predicted for the 3;2.1 p.m. EST blalloft wUh 12 mile-an-hour winds sweeping in off the ocean . Ac· ceptable conditions also were forecast for ocean rec1Jvery areas. Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell lnopected the mon· slrous 21-inch camera and olher gear that will be stowed in their comm1nd ship cabin and then returned to spacecraft trainen to polish their lunar orbital flying skills. Apollo lf's backup astronaut!! - 1 Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. ~ans and Joe Henry Engle -maintained the training pece set by the prime pilots and. for the first time, could step in at the eleventh hour and replace the prtme pilots 1f ne«uary tt meet the launch date. ,. --·- Child of War War can make men -and children -old before their time. In this photo taken by Toshio Sakai near Da Nang, South \'ietnam, a Vietnamese boy clings to an older brother who appears to be wise beyond his years. Fog Worsening In Tehachapis Wliere 6 Died BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Highway Patrol cars with flashing lights today escorted motorists and trucks in convoys through thi ck fog where a mass pileup wrecked dozens of vehicles and k.illed six persons. The fog blanket smothering the major north-south highway belt through the Tehachapi Mountains was "worse than yesterday," .Ute· ffighw•y Patrol said. Patrol carS, with amber lights flashing. led convoys of trucks and cars care.full • throlJ&b-th~ fog al slow spttds. -_ The patrol's "Operation Fogbound" was organized to prevent a repetition of the tragedy Wednesday morning which created "a four mile long junkyard" on U.S. 99. The Weather Bureau predicted dense night and morning fog In the San Joaquin Valley and coastal valleys in Callforni• to contlnJJe through the weekend. Many airports were closed for hours by the clo ud!! of misl. Higllway patrolman David Carr was one of the first officers on the scene of the pileup Wednesday morning. What he saw in lhe fog was a twisted jumble of auto parts, tires. hulks of truck• and trailers, and people dead ind injured. H Russ Have Best Maine Air Photo WASHINGTON (AP) -When • _..... ._late at the Maine state Museum decided he needed a aatelllte pbo&ograph of the oartheutern United States for a new exhibit, it seemed a simple. enough tut tQ find one. Cutalbli, thought ~ Kit)', wit~ NASA, ibe A1r F°"" and the N1tlaoal Weather Service all bavtng picture-taking aateWtes whlwlni: around tbe globe, one of them mu1t have caucht a snapshot of New England. Rilbl? Wrona. Noot or the qencin bad ever been much interuted In a space picture of Maine except the Weather Service -but that WU on a cloudy day. With a chuckle Kley reallied the only people Interested in peeping in on Maine on a clear day probably were the Russians. The Russian!! And ao, "just for the heck· of it," Kley said, he wrota the Soviet Embassy here. A prompt reply referred him to the Soviet Academy of Sciences in M05cow. Kley wrote Moscow. Could t h e academy help? Certainly, the Russiana replied . In fact, SCAG Report they said, they had the bot tnon satellite picture of the nOrtheut.m United Slates in existence. They'd be glad to send a copy. For f!OO. It took a while for the amall m111eum to find the mooey, but Kley finally received his picture last week, endlne a search that began in December lt99. "It's of excellent technical quality," Kley said in a telephone interview from Augusta. "We can even pick out small offshore islands. The ooly problem ii that it'1 not a lingle pholograpb. Jt'a a mosaic Of several pbot.ographl. "In fa ct, It's a pasle-up job that looks like it was done with a dull pair of scissors during a 1hort lunch break." Like any disgruntled coo.swner, JCley ha! written the Soviet Academy com· plaining that. he didn't get his money'• worth. And while waiting for a reply be '• hoping th.11.t maybe Apollo 14, NASA's manned lunar fligJ.t scheduled for takeoff thia weekend, might come up with something better. But if Kle7 ever decides to arrange an exhibit on M05COw, he says he knows where to go f« hla satellite pictul'K. Orange County Growth Fastest in Southland Orange County faces the moet rapid growth of all areas In the six counties whlch compriM: the Southern California Association <.'. Governments, SCAG of. ficials told supervlsora Wednesday. Ray Remy. e1ecutive director of the six-county organit.atlon, In a "Regional Development Guide" report said the county would grow to a point where 17 percent of the population of the region is located here compared with five per· cent now. He said population den1lty would jum-p from the present IOI per aquart mile to 3,119 in 1980. Orange Coimty'1 open sp1ce wdl '1'op from 377,IOO acres or 75 percent today to 250,000 or 48 percent by 1ltO, Rem.J: warned. An alarmed supervisor Ronald Copen wondered how the county could •low. such promised growth in population - family planning or zoning? Remy said neither method offered a solution, that the supervisors' belt. tool for regulating growth wu provision of public facilities such aa roads, drainqe, etc . Horse Trading • • ; Mare a s ~iion, Say s Buyer ; Chauncey, the lrupper chestnut who's defied two attempt• to dilute his • undoubted mascullnlty ia today munching his oats and awaiting the outcome or an Orange County Superior Court hearing. • Owner James Barr of Santa Ana wants to seod the happy horse back to . Burbank ind the 1table or Joe Nemeth, Chauncey's former owner. He says in a complaint demanding $9,000 in damages that Nemeth knew Chauncey wa1 : very much a male when he e:old him for $2,500 last June 20. Soon after Chauncey arrived in Orange C.Ounty he began to display "eel'"" ' tain slalllon characteristics" Barr said. Barr says he continues to di!play them and he alleges that Nemeth has ignored his letlers demanding cancellation ot • the deal and Chauncey's return to Burbank. ~ Barr says Chauncey is not a suitable equine companion for two childttn · ages 7 and 9, adding that two attempt1 by veterinarians to castrate Cbaunoey have failed. Barr'a complaint lJ awaiting the setting of 1 Superior Court bearing. The Big M J~ big enough (over $434,000~000) to pay the nation's hjghest interest on insured savings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very perso al service. Highest interest at utual ~§yj." gs COroM .. Mer oftlOe: •r rnt Coelt Htghwif / l1f..I010 Other ofllcft In Covina, WM1 Arcadia, Puadena Ind Glendlle •' ' I I DAI ~PILOT • 'What are yoa BOi"I to ff unemployed at when ;YOa graduate?' Here's One For Book 11J DICK WEST ' • ' w ASHING TON -<me ol tbe l1IDlt ~lscui:aed boob this seum is •"Jbe Greening of America," which tell.11 how' the rounra" 1eneraUon is avlng the eoontry Iron! whatever It II the old!r generaUon has done to It. FIREMEN B"TILE BLAZES IN CONSHOHOCKEN, PA, WHERE 48 WERE INJURED 40-mph Wind Gu1t1, Rapidly Fo;mlnt Ice Hampered Flr1fl9hter1 . Among other things the older genera- tion baa done, according to the book, Blasts Rip Row of Homes Philmlelphia Suburb Devastated After Gas Leak II pennlt ·tedllolotlY to nm nmpant. If It becomes tedmlcaJly polllble to do sometblng; the book says, the older generaUon will do it sitnpty because It Is teclmlcilly polllble. Uttle dr "'" tl1oulltt ·Is fllveo to whether llM! project II. rulfy needed or what Its ultimate impact on aociety and the tnvtrOnmtnt Will be, the book aays. Belftl· ovet 29 m}'Belf, I resent thi.s olleg-. Ind ,. doel Dr. Dmtrnoff Deepllllnlt DI tbe Deepthlnk Jnatltule ol Applied Relearch and Stonn Door Do. PHILADELPHIA (UPI} -A' series or explosions ripped through a row of houses in the suburb of w e 1 t COQshobncken Wednesday night, leaving one flremau dead and two per110r13 miss. ing.' At least 48 other persons were injured, one criUcally. Firemen ·searched tbe rubble or lhe homes today for lhe bodies of the two missing occupants. 1be explosions and the fire that follow- ed, apparenlly triggered by leaking gas, destroyed at least five homes and damaged Iii: others. Jt raged out of ('(X'.ltrol for m o r e than three hours. Utility poles burned like candlu. Fourteen persom, including-aeven fireme,n, were hospitalized. Four persons were admitted to the intensive care unit at Sacred Heart Hospital in Nor- ristown with burns and injuries. Joseph Powers, a>, the dead fireman, was working a hose line wilh hil t w i n brother, James, when he· wn struck by flying rubble. Debris tripped at least nin e other firemen briefly when a wall collapsed. Winds with gusts up to 40 mil es an hour hampered firefighters' efforts . 1ei! formed rapidly on firemen 's coat!, apparatus, telephone ' poles, t re es , WERN I RAN Jnto Dr. Deepthinll at the TraasportaUon Department Otis week, he diaclosed of an airplane that Oiu upskie down. 'Vietnam Deaths Rise '"Thanb k.-ment ~ In ·-qlne<rJnc, it ii -teduUea.lJy poaible to build a plane that fliel better upside down than it does rlght side up," he explained. "The a tr o d·y n 1 m i c · principle ln•olved bent probably ls too ccapllcated tor t;he layman to UDde;'stand. but bllieatly the blood rmtUDa to the paaeogen' heads u they Oy up1lde down fllv,. the plme addltlonal tbrust." Reds Trap Cambodians 18 Miles South of Capital Dr. Deepthlnl< opened bll brlefcaae tnd pulled out a small drawing board to which was attached a aet of blueprints. 1'These are the pl.am for the Amtrkan version of the upgide down transport, !Ommonly known as tbe VDT" he aaJd.. •·All you can .see, it win be capable ti carrying more than 2,000 passengers In an inverted position." ''IT'S BEAtn'IFL," 1 said, "but have you co~klered what effect flying upside down will have on the passengers?" "We oonducted ett.ensive tests with onlmals flyllg with their 1 .. t over their heads and no harmful dfecta were noted." "That's rt?as.!lurlng," I uid. "What 1nimals did you 111e in the uperiment!" "Three-toed Aloth!." ''You seem. to have toodMd all tht tealogical bases." J sakl, "but are you certain there is a genuine nefll for the United States to bWld I plane of th is type?'' "Absolutely," he replied. "We have to do il to keep Britain, France and the Soviet Union from doing it." I doubt that even the younger genera· lion would quarrel with that. -UPI SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces cut off a battalion of Cambodian troops today IS miles south of the capital of Phnom Penh. No attempt was ex- pected to take the Cambodian capital itseU. In South Vietnam, the U.S. Command reported that American combat deaths rose sharply to 50 last wetk -its GREEN BERETS TO QUIT WAR SIJGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command lodAf' announced th!!: cloSC<lut or all Special Force: operations in South Viet- nam and said the Green Beret . symbol Of the elite troopers, will disappear from tbe battJellelds of Indochina . The last major Green Beret insla\lation In Vietnam, the 5th special forces head- quarters at Nha Trang, ceased opera lion~ Jan. IS after nearly a decade. The command did not specif y when all the troopsi would be oot of the counlry. highest point in more than two monttis -because of an increase in helicopters downed. The 24-hour lunar new year cease-fire in Vietnam Wednesday, however, saw fewer violations than any truce period in the last five years. U.S. spokesmen reported that Communis t troop1 caused a total of 78 incidents during the period. One U.S. soldier was killed and three wounded. In neighboring Cambodia, the battalion of government troo1>3 was cut off at the town of Saang. A battle at dawn t"'O miles from the town left two Cam- bodians killed and 10 wounded , according to field officers on the scene. They said 10 Communists bodies were found and "another 40 Co mmunist wounded \~ere carried away." UPI reports from the scene said that the government troops in Saang were cut off there from the capital when an esti ma ted 150 Communists entrenched themselves around a broken bridge over the Bassac River. In the capital, the curfew was relaxed for the second day today . lt was imposed after a Communist attack on the Phnom Penh airport last week and subsequent terrorU!t attacks inside the citf itself. Record Lows Numb East Travel Waming1 ~Into Effect in New York C•Hfenda ~ tunnt', w•rm cl•• ••MIH llvtMrll C..11~1111 ~y clR,~lfl ft'\t collll atld _.,.,y .... 1111oor '"°"" 111 fftlldl 111 tti. Nllorl. TM LOI ...._, .. ••M wt11 modlY 1Uf1M wtt11 """ M"' deull:9 11111 ton· ~ .....,.,.. ""'"'"1tvr1. TllllW'1 ..,_. JiJlh .. OYlc Clfttw -• te. VII l9IW' ...,_ Iran W~I"• , .. "*"· ,.,.. ... ~ ...... Jt11 ..... " ........ • 111 )tM. To.itlflt't ._ wlll ...... A ~ ,.-. .r T!Wft'lll .... w•m•""'Mlllll•-- Tile'IAJr ....... ~ Di.Md~ ...,.., ..... llliill t "Jll' .. u. ..,,..... ....... ~-............ ...,1 ... -.... , ... ,:~ ,...'"',,... ................ ...... ....... .tai Mt• ...... -..... ~ .,.. ............. ~ ... , .,,. ........ . ........... ,,,.., ...... ..... """ °"""' _, .................. ltlto ~ .,..... v.... c-ttt llOtfll-_... ....... --~ lfl"",.. ...... ....... ~ ................ ; ... ~ NeM ,..., "°""* ~ ...-.. ........................ Ml. .._.""" IP•l•4•1• ... ......... JNL ...... ~--........... .... ... °"" """· ==-:::..JM .......... )- ('~ ..... u ......... , ... ~ .. Liit ,.._. Flll.1 ,_.,.. ,.. ,, TM__. '""' ... ~ C.... ""' ~ ........... .,....... ,_,,_ ...... 'T..,.......,, • ....., .... ""' _, wffl ,...... "-• " ,. wllllt lllW."" 1111 ........ will .. ,,_ " It a. Waft;r ._,.,.l\H'9 i. ... s-. ·-!'Wee ' TIMtHIA'f' ...... .... •.....••...• '=•Jl.M. ·t.t .................... ,lt:Nl"'I\, .... _.., .. ., ~ ....................... •:M•·"'· 1,1 ,,...,. I!,. ........ .. .. ff; .. '·""' •.• ................. • .... l lNl.lft. ~·· .__,frlHlfl ............ ll;M,.m. t.t I I TeMIN!l'U•rec Albin• I AlbuQ!Jffll\lf At11nt1 Al'ldlof"l91 '°''M flUllllO C~l ... 19 C!t1eln,..11 C1.-nl1rlllt Dall•• """'" °"' Mol-"""'' '''""'*• ,,_ --· ·--JMil...,....llt X-(lty L .. V-1 L• Mfel .. Loub¥1UI ,_. Mlilrlll. ·~-.. ..... M-o Mtwo.te.111 -· .. Olt.,._..CTl'r -,.,,,., ..... ,,,.. ""'11Me11Jhl• f'f'IOlfll• ,.llllllllr.il "ortllllf, Ott. lt•lt (llY ·-s.c:r.-lt St.~~ Sitt L..itt Cll'r --&111Frll'ld-....... .•. ,.,. w""- \ M .... ~'"" 11 •IS AP .... " " ~ . ., ,, °' .... °' ts .e1 11 a .M '' lJ .o4 11 " .II .. " " " It M ·" IJ 17 .. .., . .. .... ... .. .JI 11 ...... " " " " " .. .. " n '' .113 " " " .. .., ~7 .. , .. .,, .t1 " .. " .. .... '' 10 ... 14 11 " " II .. .a a " .... " .. .. ., .. " " " ,., .. " .. .. .. " " . " sidewalks and the street. Walls of fire, with flames leaping 60 to 7~ feet into the sky, spread along the 100 block of Front. Sb'eet. Workers from the Philadelphia Electric Co., which services the area with gas, shut. off power nt 12:40 a.m. 'lbe blaze then was rapidly brought under control. Adolph Viv ian, 59. a resident of the next block, heard the blast as he was preparing to go to work. "I was silting on the steps putting my shoes on, ready to go to work and all at ooce. . .I look out and I see a ball of fire come up at me, to wards my place," he said. The nen time he looked out "we had another explosion" he said. There were about "three or four ex- plosions," he said. Vivian's home is on a hUI overlooking the block. Impact of the explosions knocked out the window of his kltcbeo door. Drugstore _p~ops Shoplifting Rap Agairist Udall FAIRFAX, Va. (UPI) -A charge or "concealment of merchandise" against former Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall was dropped today after the lawyer tor a drug store admitted the arrest was "an error." Udall, 50, was arre:!lted Jan. 16 when he walked out of a drug !lort in Fairfax County near his McLean, Va.. home with a 90-cent pack of cigars. Udall said at the time the incident was •·a horrible mistake" and Wd in a statement he handed to newsmen at the courthouse toda y that it wa:s "an absent-minded oversight.·• The lawyer for the drugstore said ''great study '' convinced the drug firm the charge was .. an error" and asked it be droppe<I . County Prosecutor Robert Horan agreed, saying it was "tradi t.ional in misdemeanor cases" to go along with the business firm. In his typewritten statement. Udall said . "other than ordinary traffic tickets I have never been charged with violating the criminal lav.·s of the United States.'' He said he did not have the slightest intention of steali ng the cigars and was innocent. Judge J. Mason Grove ordered the charge dropped. Uda ll. now in private Jaw practice In Washington, D.C., was &rrt!ted by a policeman who was in the store at the Ume. Talk Under Way Over Oil Gripes TEHRAN (UP I) -Negotiation1 opened ~1 blhnen representatives of major _... oil ,companies and tht Pwltan pit ltfttl limed at averUng a ttisis ln·~"'1 lndulln'· Jntl'1 MWR o( Finance Jamshid Anw1'llF' Aid &be talks prognssed ... -.u, dllr1DC. tbe lint tow-hour -bmllvfn( -· from Iran, ltOQiodSladlAnhlL· He .... •' oa company rl~.,..•m•tollfti ...-to r-ct !be ~· ... .,._llulf .,.., 'Bad Risk' Hits 103· ( ' Still Going Strong LONDON (UPI) -~ J-~ who was refuted a Ille Insurance polk:y 70 years ago on grounds she bad a heart condlUon, celebrated her 103rd birthday today. '"ll>ey certainty made, a bl1 mltllk• with mt," Mia J...etl Aid at the: llome fer r.ur.d Qlun:I!· ~lsten. · About 100 guello attiinded a party for Mr this momlrig and more stopped 1n for tea thJa 1fternoon. _, ..... - 3 More. Seiud Ecuador Charges Coercion 'by U .S~ .. WASHlNGTON (UPI) -Ecuador has !eized three more American twia boats off its coast for a total of 17 since Jan. II, the State Department 3aid today. 'Ibese seizures occurred at about the time the councll of the Organization of American States approved a n Ecuadorian request to hold a foreign ministers meeting Saturday on the tuna boat controversy. The three vessels reportedly seized some 55 miles off the coast of Ecuador were identified as the Jeanette C, the Coimera and the Western King. All three boats were taken to the Ecuadorian port of Salinas where they probably will be released after paying heavy fines. The OAS foreign ministers meet Satur- day to hear F.cuadorian charges of U.S. "coercion ..• and economic aggression." The OAS voted 22--0 Wednesday night for the foreign ministers' session, ig- noring a U.S. State Department proposal for arbitration of the dillpute. The United States abstained from the vote. 'The meeUng was scheduled Saturday. In the past two weeks, Ecuador bas gone on a ship seizing spree. Ecuador claims e.rclusive fishing righb up to 200 miles from its coasts. The United States contends the rights extent" only 12 miles from the coasts. It was the first time the fi shing dispute had betn brought before the OAS. Ecuador asked the hearing, arguing the United States had used "coercive" measures by imposing a one-year emb&rgo on arms sales to Ecuador. The American arbitration proposal, ad- vanced earlier Wednesday, proposed talks in volving Ecuador, Peru , Chile and Senators Call Rogers to Meet Over Cambodia WASHINGTON (UPI) -. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee called Secretary of State William P. Rogers to a closed meeting today to find out what is going on in Cambodia, and whether U.S. military action there violates Congressional restrictions vot!d last year. "The purpose or this meeting is to !ind out what's going on out there,'' a committee spokesman said. "We know there have been ,\mericans on the ground in Cambodia. We saw the pictures in the paper." Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird WedJ.esday ~ave his version of U.S. in- volvement in Cambodia at a closed meeting with the Senate Armed Services Committee. An amendment by Sens. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky.), and Frank Church (D- Idaho), prohibits the use of ground CQm- bat forces or milltary advisers in Cam· bodia . Laird testified there had been no violation of either the language or the intent or the amendment . Foreign RelaUons Committee members wanted specific Information from Rogers about eyewitness reports that American servicemen were on the ground in Cam- bodia, citing pictures or soldiers dressed in civilian clothes to back up thelr qutlll- tion. Capital Tour , ' the Unlted States on the fWilng limit · and submitting tbe queatlon .t.o the ~ ternational court of jwtict for a bin~ determlnatioo. The foreign ministers already are g{ttbered in WaslW:lrgton for a dJaculllaa of how to combat polltic&l terrorism. Laird Points To Military Budget ·Boosi SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Deft .... Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Wday next year's military budget will. be· iQ- creased, mainly '-: achieve an 'alJ.- volunteer Army ~· le maintain u·.s. Technologica1 JeadfJ(lhip. Without giving frlOres for the fiscal 1972 budget to be ·aubmltfed to Congreu Friday, Laird said "'11le defense buda:et will sbow an increase In funds requested but still continue to follow a downward trend as a percentage of total federal spending." ' • In remarks prepared for the Com· monwealth Club of California, he added: "This increase will be related primarily to our efforts to achieve zero draft calls by July 1, 1973, and will also under· score the need for the U.S. to maintain technological leadership in lig\lt or the momentum of weapons development by the Soviet Union." At the same time, Laird said, American lnvolvement in the Indochina war "by any measure -casualties, operations, manpower levtls, budget - is down signllicantly." Laird said the Nixon Admin istratlon Inherited "a one-track policy for terminaUng the war," b a s e d entirely on Paris negotiations. He said as the prospect for resolving the conflict by diplomacy alone appeared "more and more remote." it was necessary to adopt a policy of "Viet- namization," turri ing the war over to the South Vietnamese. But he said "We continue to press for a negotiated settlement because that would be the quickest way to end the v.·ar." A similar policy, be said, is being carried out in Cambodia where andtr terms of the Ni.ron Doctrine the cam- bodians are supplying Uie manpower and the United States ti fur\Usbing assktance in the fonn of arms, ~uipment and air power. Pro Penny Pincher Levels Phone Suit NEW YORK (UPI) -Robert Warrtin. a song v.-riter. arranger and publi.!her, says be has kept track of all the time he has spent waiting for telephone dial tones, or wailing to set an operator or a business representative. Warrt.n says he has !pent 3,675 minutes waiting hi eight months. Since he values his time at $5 an hour, be is su.Jng the New York: Telephone Company for $.108.2.1. UPl'r ......... Patricia Nixon escort& Prln~ SoPllla of SpaJn Oil a tour of lhe new Jolin F. Kennedy center for Ute l'erforml!Ur Arb. In front row IL to R) are Mrs. Emil Mosbacher, wife of the Wer of protocol, Princess Sophia; Tricia, and William Blair, director at the center . , . . . , . , • • . ·-, :..!. ' -I Follni Yulley N.Y.S~ EDIT•ION ' VOL 64, NO. 24, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 'THURSDAY,-JANUi'.ltY. 28, '19Tr TEN CENTS . --. :.~ eac an a. Not Mau!h Spill Grounded Ship Springs Oil Leak NEW YORK (AP) -A tanker loaded with 420,000 gallons of -Oil ran aground and sprang a leak today off Rockaway Beach on the Atlantic Ocean, the Coast Guard reported. It could not be determined immediately DA Concludes County Trial; Urges Death Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat- terton today concluded his case against accused killer Robert Eugene William! of Huntington Beach. with a re.newed demand that the death penalty be im- posed . Chatterton put on eight witnesses in Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman's courtroom lo iiup- port his argument that Williams, 18, of 1504 Pecan St., shot Robert Leray Hermann in the back and head last Nov, 7. --- Hermann,. 19, of 411 15th St.. died three hours later from those wounds. His parent3 found the body of theµ-_ fO!!. sprawled &cr'll$S his bed when they returned home that nlght. Chattertcn bu argued that Williams, who had been booked on drug charges a few days earlier wllh Hermann and Martha Riggs, 19, of 1821 Pafk St .• Huntington Beach , shot Henum\ ln tbe belief that the youth was an informer. Williams was wrong. Chatterton told the jury. But. he argued, that fact should not influence the panel when it retirc:i to con!Jider its verdict. Defense attorney Ron Steelman will fl~en the defense. flf Williams later today and it is expected that the defendant himself will be one of the first witnesses. Miss Riggs, accused by Chatterton of ~upplying the gun that Wllliai:is used to kill Hermann. goes on trial Feb. to on charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder. Senate Confirms Morton as New Interior Chief WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Senate toda y confirmed President N i x o n ' s nomination flf former GOP Chairman Rogen C. B. Mor'Uln to be the: new secretary of Ole interior. how much of the oil leaked into the sea. . The Coast Guard said it was a small leak, and that It had been "stopped or severely reduced" about two tours after the ship -the SS Verdon - went aground about 9 a.m. The ship, owned by the Spentonbush Transport Co. of New York, was aground in the East Rockaway Inlet, between Rockaway Beach and Atlantic Beach, the border between Queens and Nassau County on Long Island. The Coast. Guard said a barge h a d pulled alongside the Verdon to take on some of it!il oil. A spokesman said a tug probably would try to puU the ship off the sandbar 1t high tide a.round 8 p.m. Police In Queens said thert: was ap- parently no danger of the tanker break· ing up. The Coast Guard said there were two types of cil in the ship - a light heating oil used in homes and a heavier type used in industrial furnaces. The ship was first spotted by a Coast Guard heUcopter, A lifeOOat bad to turn back becalJll'. .ol rouclt 1eu. but a tu,g and lhe barge later reKhed it. · No injuries were reported to the seven· ma crew. Fleeing Theft Suspect Shot By GG Officer A fleeing auto theft suspect was shot by a Garden Grove police officer early this morntng. Officer Richard Ybarra fired two shots at William Bert James, 23, of Bell. James was later captured in a backyard by officer Terr y Dzvonick. He had been shot in the foot and scratched on the arms and face by rose bushes. Polict!: said Ybarra spotted a boat and trailer reported stolen. When he attempted tD stop the vehicle the driver drove away at hi gh speed. James lost co ntrol of the car and 9.'hen it overtur ned he fled the scene with officer Ybarra in pursuit. Ybarra was hit in the leg by someth ing during the chase and thought he had been shot so he fired two rounds from hit aervice revolver at I.he f 1 e e i n g suspect. James was treated at the Orange Coun- ty Medical Center and then lodged in Orana:e County jaij on suspicion of auto theft. ' • . . .. • • ·~ ... . .. ' ' . .. . . CAILY l"ILOl lllff l"hit9 Dulaney Successor Ch ----d arge By TOM BARLEY Of .. °"" l"llltt s .... Joseph D. Dulaney'!J succeaor to the btnlcru l La Hills ........... _ left p flUllA --· ... -· high and dry when the Newport Beach atockbroker lef\ for Germany bas been boOked on charges of g r a n d theft, forgery and conspiracy. James E. Shipley, 38, of 111951 Lowell Clrele, HunUngton Beach, wu unsted Jan: 22 by FBI agents who pie~ him up m Loa Ang~Jes. He spent five days in Orange County jail belm 1>elng releued on $250,000 ball. OIL TRUCK MOVES OFF AFTER DUMPING WASTES IN CONTROVERSIAL DUMP Homeowners H•v• Become lncenMd About the Smell •t H•milton StrMt and Metftolla Avenu. But the arrest of the man who moved from the vice prtsident's chair to Dulaney'• pre!i.dentlal office after the organizer of World Trend!J Financial Inc. left for Munich, Gennany, in June, 1969. was fer from pleaaing today to the man who is heading the search for Dulaney. '"Ill.is is just what I didn't want,'' said Deputy District Attorney Joe Dickerson of that office's fraud divl&i.on. "There are more than Dulaney and VC Irvine Coed Found in Ocean; Dea.th Pfi,.ed ....... , .. By BARBUA KREUllCB °' "" DltlY l'\llt Ad Laguna Beaeh detectives are .tn- ve.stigatin& tbe death of an 1ttract1ve UC Irvine student whose body was recovered from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach shortly before noon Wed- nesday. The victim was identified as Carolyn 1.1. Jones, 21 , of 12Jl7 Cliff Drive. UCI officials said she is registered this quarter as a 9enior, majoring in history. An official of the Orange County Coroner's office said that on the basis of preliminary examination the cause of death is listed as "apparent drown- ing.'' pending completion of an aUtoP3Y· However, lacerations were found on both wrists, according to detectives and lifeguards who reC(lvcred the body. The incisions reportedly were unusual. run- ning. lengthwise from the hand rather then across the wriSt. Other bruises and abrasions on the body probab ly were caused by sharp rocks in the area. detectiv es surmised. Neighbors said th e young woman , whose parents live in Glendale , had lived in an apartment at the Cliff Drive address for one year and four months. Her body was recovered floaling In the water about "25 yards offshore, in the vicinity flf Seal Rock, by lifeguard LL Eugene dePaulis. It was clad in u.nderwear and a yellow T-shirt. A long blue coat and A single shoe, apparently belonging to the victim, were found in the water nearby. S I t i Saun ht Shipley involved in this mess and the 0 u on ===v airest of' Shipley only draws their at· tention to our search." 0 · £ -M • d D . Bui FBI agent Philip Sheridan said -perato:rs 0 . u. ' "' ;~~p . rrs:~~:~ If~~!~~ . , 1 """r' ' '"'Ir.'-r....;r · ·• ~ ,..,·. • _:, i. '"' ·P'i ...,, t i e1ecuttve wu pJcked up on an unlawful ~H91d -Meeting. Witli~ity ~ '.!~~:t::,. ~~ho~~·.:: By Al.AJ'I DIRXJN Of "'9 o.11'1' l"Olf lt1ff Operat.o 0 rs of the 40-acre rotary mud dump that ·is being blamed1for offellillive odors· by homeowneNI in· aoulbelat Hun: tlncton Beach met with· c¥x .oUlclal.s today to discuss solutions tll;Ule problem . The meeting, set up by. Oil FJtld Superintendent Herb Diy. cami as pro. tests over ooxious fumes which allegedly emanate from the dump behind the Southern Califoraia Ediaon p I a n t mounted." Residents are ea\lina city hall to de· mand action and twice in the last two days Mrs. Peggy Sword. 9092 Bobble Cir- cle, has complained to the police about gaseous smells in the area. "I don't know what is being dumped there, but last night we almost got gased out of our homes." she sald today. ''Tbe dump must go -it simply must be removed." Pe titions are being circulated among resident!il in the southeast sect.or urging the council to act against Ute dump, located at Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street and used fc>r Ute dtpos~t of rotary mud from oil drilling opera- t ions. Homeowntr.s ire planning to turn out in force at Mond1y evening's meeUl'lg of the · cUy council when the ·staff 11 upected to preae11t . a report • tbe problem. .atj,. Adminis?'1tor Doyle ,..MUter who has ' ordered police hellcoPt'er pilots' to check dumping opei-atlonil: &I: the lfte and earth ·samplt! of ·Joada taken for anaty1i1 said tod1y thllt ·he bu ncit yet formulated a recommendation for the COlllldl. The city attorney' a• office also hu been asked to conduct l'elell'th to tee if the owners of the Gimp, Joeepb and Gari 1St.evel'100, ire violatinf any public nul..sanoe laws. Miller u.id that one ana:le that . Is being explored is the pmlblUt}t of tht city bQying the property: "The pro. blem then is , what do . you do with Jt?'' he commented. "We must .figure out 1 way to make that property com- p1Uble: with the surraundin& residential wes." The city his already purchued about CS.. DUMP, Pap li Scenic Route From New Park To River Eyed t.IH 1t from there and we only did what wt were a.sktd le> do." Dickenon ls b1ek in Orange County from a trip to Flora, Ill., Dulaney'• birt!Jplace and the place where he "as seeri, according to DickerJOD, within the Jut two weeks. Dicker.son's trip was fruitless but the fraud lnvestip.W apparently remains convinced that Dulaney, YT. farmer Newport Beach res:ident. is DOW bacll: Jn this country after an 18-montb 1c>j0um In Europe, moat of that time being spent in Germany. Dulaney took his attract:iw wife Marlene and two children with him shortly tie.fore the burst of the financial bubbl~ tliat had been supervised by him from plwh office bullding.s in Laguna Hills and Seal Beach. Sblpley is accused of one count of conspiracy to commit grand theft and forgery ; four counts of grand theft and thrtt counts of forgery. Identical warrants were signed for the arrest of nilaney and his wile. Investigaton today believe that the (See DULANEY, Pa1e %1 Westminster Father Files for Election Mort.on, until today a Republican ton· gressman from Maryland. pledged in hearing earlier this week he will use the post to help try to change ~e nation 's priorities, placing the protection of the e11Tironment on a scale with the economy and national deteme. Rerouting Effort Snagged Edmund C. P. Sheehan, a Westminrter parent, ·bas become the first candidate to file papers for the April 20 trustee election in Huntlngton E::sch Union Hlgb. S<:hool !>~trict. .Sheehan, 39, ail. AkohoUc Beverqe Control officer. filed his papen Wed- nesday. He , livea at 8901 Elvira St., W estminlter. Confirmation wa11 by unanimCJUI cOD- stnl; no ~ting voice was heard, Morton, the first Eutemer named to the poet ln many decade!!. was oppoeed for the pmilion by a number of ~CJYA­ servalkln sroopg including the S I er r a Ctub wtdch .said his conservation record was dismal at worst and lackluster at lie!t. Senate Republican ~Leader Hugh Scott o( 'Peiansylyaal1 ,said fmmedlately liter Mortoh'S ~Uon w:as conf.lrmed that he 11 ua t.eortoa·s·oppOnent.s will change their mindi. "t ara Cert.a\D all of llMIM: 1'bo have had jult -c:Olictm will find they '"' met with complete understanding and cooperatkln." Scott' uid. Scolt 111d j'e ts or tl>e opinion Monon will take thf· sime pith on m1ny vital iuud u ;ih;ti-titen by former Secretary WaiM J. Wchl. Hic:UI ""' fired rrom the C.binet by l'T'llldli!ll. Naon 1118 lltl y .. r after the ~Prealden't said the two men no lancer Dared a MMe d mutual un- dent•i>dl ... Hl<:ker1 llllml1latlon at the bqlnnlng ol the NIDl•odroinlltrtlion wu·~ opposed by nioSt coneervation groapt. MO.I of lheae ,,...,!"' lttar <hanged tbelr mind and ...._..., Hkkel'a dlamlntl. ' ,. '• Huntington Freeway Move Loses Support Groups By TERllY OOVILLE Of .. __,. ...... SMft A campalcn lo cbaCt the route cl the propoted Huntfn&too Beach Freeway IUffered two •tbtcb this -'t. Truateea ol the HunllJiCton Buch Union lll&h School DlstQct nfllaed lo aapport the route chonp effort tlld t ,,...P ol Huntlnjton U..cb homeownm decided to oppose any chtnse. High achool trutleel toot their stand because the district com four citie&, one of which. Wutmlmte:r, opposa 1n7 change or del1y in the freeway. Trustees Ray Schmitt. Ralph Bauer and Matthew Weyuker qr:eed that lt · wa1 • ctty blttJe •nd the ICbool dlltrlct ahould dly1out of,lt. M ... wbllt • ..,,ertl homeownen along ~ Weal 8treel met Wednetdq nlPI to~•l theJr •-itlon In the pt -a, cbaqe W\1lclrwould brln& a.i ~ ..... , cJoiol to them. "The cMnp 'Al(IMtd·by-~· woald•bmf the fl'eewt)<<elo!ln G«hald. modi ckleer to lhe ,central part.•• Mra. IUcbard Botabtcb, -Del1toce Dr., llunUqton Betcb. atld lhb mOminJ. Mn. Bolibocb nld llhe orpnhed the homeownen' meeliDi wlllcb dmr.tbout eo people. "Most of ua l All!ll """"' here after the orlginal frent'ly route WIS adopted." The proposed rou&e chance would bring tbe freeway south aJonc Gofaant Street 1-td of N..,ltnd -. II woul~ ning west from Newland to Gdblrd to a 1 point near Heil AWllUC ' iD P'oaatain Valley. ' Monday nl&ht the Hunllqlon llOoch City Council will .......,. J!I dedll<>a on the freeway . The city plmnJnr '!lft is tD report to Uw: council aD1 the efffd.I the route cbln19 would Uve on tM city. The city of · FOlllllllD Vt!kJ II already on record favorilll a route change. : "HunUnatDn Buch'• decltion wlll be 1lptticuf. .. atYI Mi¥.-lri "'"'"In-dent -of. the P'ountain -taQoy . Bcbool -I I -Tcii.irtct ... ,..,. 1er • ._ . ,,....,,.-..... ..a •• -...... .... Tho cmmn'mite tlOl\c -,.i -would cut lhNMlgll t11e Wlli!<I · 1o1 o1 tht dlatrlct's ~ -~u • , /, Foontaln Vtlley ........... W\11 lir&e HunUngllm Buch to ...... t• t -,, I ·~ \ I. ' •• Oloufe ~ ... " ........... !• QMUll •• 1 .......... ... ~· .... .... .... C'.l9mlY " 0.-. ,. ............ . cc• ,, ..... ~ ... .... ! .... ,. ........... . _.. ..... ,.......... . . -. ... -. "' ..... .. .. ........... ,,.,, 11 ......... .. . ' - I ------ k Old-tim~rs· Reca~l , Start of Mud Dump Fight Loni·tlme ,..ldents cl HunUngton lhoWd be zoned Industrial or roo-1. S..cb believe the p.-...nt controV<rSY "'Ille clty anUclpoted Ille )lfdlleml over lho.$tev'""" btotl>tn n>tID Jlllld _ tllal ,.,Wd ~R aa4_ =;l ""' d-'JUllJ btpn 10 ~ .,. wiloll homes out but we laol," plan- -w.re ftnt •pproved for the ..... nlllll director Diet Harlow aid. . O!dUmers recall that a significant bat· The CODfUct besan Wheft tbe1,~ !tie took place between city planners Lyon Developmtat ~y of NtWP.OSt . and developers over whtther the area Beaeb fUed • tcmtaUve ' tract· '!Dip · to ,..60t.llh of Atlanta Avenue to the coast build 296 homes Hit the · mud dump " ~~ Haill!flo 4._ ao4 Mqnnlla stNJol "Tbe Newport Wal d<cWon w11 the • The ,...v~ atreaa_!Y ~ lty Uy to optnI.ng up Uie aru to rt11idenU1l "1eo 1!!11* dnclOr !llll.lor!I ~J'P who "'t" Jlollow -•·!Md. ,......_,. .... ·-.... -llal i. ' . ...... · _... i , · , · , · · .. Lyoa appUcation waa denied by lie loot ":tloltla ud dM ---~(,. ·the_ plaMIJ1I ciompilalon, but th•t body called Newport Wiil, wu aJProv«I by wu OVlmllld by tbt council. the counelf Dec. lt;" lllO, · and homell Trtpp prepared 1 ten-point report. were COJ'llb1lcted two years later. ouUlJlln& 'his opposition to resldenttaJ development ln the aouth.ut settor of the city. Buloolly, lit clalrOlld lnduattlal - had already been etl.lblllhed. H• pointed nut that the devP.IORJDent would be near the Southern California Edi!OO plant, lhe county stump dump, the rotary mud dump, the sanitation district's treatment plant, oil wella and ful':I 1toragt tanks. belt to rtsldentlal, except those lotJ with u.JaUng lnduttrlal fa cilille1 on them. "Tllo city dJd , evorylhloc It eeul4 to stop Ute bulldert," Harlow a aid. "We even had soil borings made of the land In the hopt of coming up with anm• findinp that would dluutde t h • developer from build.in1." -UCI Minority Study · Change Lashed •·tn l!IM the city had initiated a 1.one change procedure to rezone tht area 10 industrial," Harlow said. ··Part of that thinking was also based on the possibility that the Coast Fretway woufd run about a mile Inland gi ving good acce.ss to this indll!trlal belt." The mud dt1mp, for the depoglt t1f oil drilling wastes, hall been used 1lnce the mid !930's, One of thr owners. Jo11eph SltverJOn, recalled that they put up 11i1711 uyin« "This Is . a Permanen~ Mud Dump" around the facility to let potentlal ho.me buyers know whet was there. ·" MAKING CHANGES Vic• Chancellor Hoy .. From Pagel ·.~ 'DULANEY ... riosses of investors in the financial groups !' controlled by Dulaney will amount to at least $3 million. All his varied en· ~ terprises are in bankruptcy court in ]-Santa Ana awaiting proceedings that may :depend on the trac~.:; of DuJaney for f'• final accounting. 1 Most of the investments handled by { Dulaney came from rezidents: of Laguna 1 retirement communities and a long list } flf their names i.s today held in the .: bankruptcy cow1's bulky files . ; Shipley recently a p p e a r t d in ~ bankruptcy CQurt as a witness and he ; testified at that thm. that the only con- : tact he had with Dulaney after his ·. bo.&S Ien the Laguna Hills "Taj Mahal" '; for the last time wa.:; a telephone call ·:' he received from Munich. Shipley did not reveal the substance flf that coaversation from the witness • bo:x and he refused outside the hearing : room to answer any questions concerning . his year long association with the mis.sing . Dulaney. , Dularley's Seal Beach Proff'!ssion11l ~Building at 13820 Bay Blvd .• has now been foreclosed. His Lag una Hills l>roies.sional Building at 23521 Paseo de Valenci a has been claimed by a creditor and is on the market at $2.3 million. Uncleared loans IU'ited by reoeive.rr. Include a $500,000 loan made to Dulaney by the Atlantic Co. of New York and ;i ~.ooo loan obtained by l h e stockbroker from St. Bernardine Hospital Jn San Bernardino. Investigators said exactl y $10,000 hss been ~paid on Uie San Bernardino loan. World Financial Trends records in· dicate that Shipley earned $18.000 a year ~s vice president. Dulaney pa id himself $.16,000 and his wife Marlene earned $12 ,000 as secretary oC several of ha corporatlons . DAILY PILDT OUHGE. COAIT ,UILl~lNG COMltAHY Robtrt H, w,,4 ,,.."'91t ., ... 1"11-.illlllf" J1ck R. Curl1y \11(.9 p,.,idenl •r.d ("""''' M.lyttr Thofft •s ic,,.,a lliidll•• Thtrr11c A. Mu1,hi111 Ml,..t\rll 'Edo,or Ali" Di1ki11 W_,1 0.11119 CO!ffl!y l!dUor Alb1rt W. l1!1t AJ.otltll '"10< H1111tl1t1t•• .... Ill OM.• 1717!i 111111 .. Wll'f'tr4 1i4,1n111 AclGr ... t P.O. h 11 790, 12Mil °''"' ....... lAfUI'• 9"dl: m '""'"' "-c a111 H11N: ~ .,,,.,,, a1v 11,..tt ....... rl 111'11! 2211 Wiii &111111 loylt Vt td .... Cltll!Wlt.: al Horii! ti CMIN bet , By GEORGE LEIDAL . l!f ... ...,. """' lltff A. prectderit iietting attempt by UC Irvine to shift it!I Educational Op- portunities Program for m i n o r i t y students into the "mainstream of ·unJ.v~fty admlnl!tration'' was criticized today by the black who head,., the present program. Timothy Knowles. EOP director since 1969, aald the new UCI plan "never addressed ltaelf to the need,., of minority 11tudents." · "People hired by the university to run the EOP program were never con- sulted on the new plan. We were told either to ac~pt Jt or leave," Knowles charged during a monthly breakfast meeting between UCI administrators and newsmen. Although Knowles' leaden.hip of the minority program a& UCI bu been at- tacked by other minority groupa on cam- p111, the ~" plan places the 26-year-old former athlete.. u · an aaocilte dean reporting to the 'delJI of student affairs on a leyel equal to usociate dearu1 of financial aid&, admiaalon1 and the registrar. John C. Hoy, vice chancellor for 1h1- dent affairs, characterized the EOP recr-ganization ".as part of a general administr'!-tive conaolidation ln the 1tu· dent affairs area designed to increase effectivenesa. We belleve it' will require the general student affairs adminiJtrator to include minority problems and op- portunities ln his thinking." Hoy said the controversy surrounding the separate EOP program had diminish· ed Knowles' effecUver)eS!. "We 've tended lo find ala.ff energies focused on an identity crisis in that 'EOP' was not a positive tag. but rather • label" in- dicating minorities had received special treatment .. Morale was low and there was real conflict bet.ween black and brown elements," Hoy said. UCI Is the first of the: nine state university campuses to move ad· ministration of its minority programg into lhe "mainstream." Hoy maintalM that other unlversities in the naUon .. without separate programs, have work- ed mare rapidly lo meet the needs of minority students." Knowles said he objected te being hlrtd to "do one job and then being told to do another or leave." Under the reorganizallon he loaes power t• control EOP policy. A Chicano appointee, Julie Garcia, whe began work today as associate dean of atudenta "will relieve Tim of aome o[ the preuures on hlm from ather minority ifrOUps," Hoy said. Garcia, formerty a COUDH:lor at Hun· Ungton Beach High School, . will report to the lcllng dean of llud<nll and be reapoMible for coordinating academic advillng, cowuellng and academic aup- port for minority studenta. Three other present minority staff ad- mlniatrator1 will be reassigqed. Two of theM! wW report to Knowles. They are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Milner will a.ssi5& Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and Fernando Cordero were appointed to the UCI Counseling Center to serve under it.s newly appointed director, Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arrangement pro- vides three centers where minorities may come for support." Knowles nid the key to the entire project wa s the appointment of the associate dean of admis!iona and he charged that "that appointment la not being considered under UCI's affirmative action program" to insure appointment of a minority person for the job. After Hoy said "we're looking for the best qualified person to handle that complex assignment and would be deli ghted if we were to find a brack capable or handling the duties" Knowles said, ''I'm insulted." Signups for Little League Starting for West County Three LitUe League organizations serv- ing Huntington Beach and Fountain Val ley will start signing boys for summer baseball over the next two weeks . Signups are scheduled in the Fountain Valley, Huntington Valley and Sea View leagues. Boys who will be eight -years-old by Aug. I up to those who are 12-years-o\d may play Little Le.aaue baseball. The Fountain Valley Little League, serving boys who li ve within the city bounda ry. will register players from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. this Saturday or Feb. 6. and from noon to 5 p.m. this Sunda y or Feb. 7 at the league field on Ward Street, one block south of Talbert Avenue. A general meeting for parents: of old and new players in the Fountain Vall ey U!ague will be held at 7:30 p,m., Friday. in the community center, 10200 Slater Ave. For information phone Robert \Yelch, league president. 847-0890. The Huntington Valley League serves boys living ln Huntington Besch north of Adams Avenue and west or Beach Boulevard. It will hold signups from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. Saturdsy, Sund11y and P'eb. 6., 7 and 13 at Bushard School, Physical Fitness Pr(>.gram Sw.rted At Boys Club ' A ~-~lcal m .... p'°"am has been developed bY Pat Downt:y, direcior of tht Huntinglon Beach Boy's Club,' to ape up Ill< local youth ag .. Stoll. ' ' "E""ll lltclu<lo·puhupe, pullupo, bar dip, rope dl!nl>. ilOlpo, wau Jump; otan· dlq b~-mil• and mjl• run," oo.nirY1 : Ctrtlf ' ~ 1>t 1w1rded for com- pletlni thtftm two leVelll,.wltll trophy la 111o-prtio· 1!>f' !lo)il Who' '!"kb the 1ltlld .tnet. . -.''lf•' boilll 'M .-1111.i .. mp a lltll4' bit' ~ ..... Ibo Jut will Jn. creue a boy't Otneu and at the aame time ...-.,. a pl for him to oboot tor." bone)' aplalned. 'Ibo -pneram la tlllored to flt -" ... -. with the reqult<menll for winnlnl • certlllcOlt dlftrana for ucb ,ur. · For example: an el&hl·Yffr"Old must do tieht .......... In the f1rll ltvol, 18 In Ibo -1 ... 1 and 27 In tho thlrd. All ll-ftlJ'-Otd would bave to do • ou-.ol D, 42 and 61 pualM!po. All'/ bby ~ the areo cl a ond JI tao ~ the Boy's Club for t l.50 a year. hr tnfarma.Uon phone '3&-Ml5 ar drep ,by tbt club tl Sl9 Yorktown Ave. 19699 Education Lane . For furlher In· formation phone Chuck Fuller, league president, 968-4933. Sea View League Is for boy11 whn live south of Adams Avenue and west of Beach BouJevard. Sea Vie"'. slgnups won't start until Feb. 6, 7, 13 and 14. from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. in the club house of LeBard School. 204:51 Cralmer Lane, Huntington Beach. For information phone ~n Bose, 96&-1887, or Dave Bergdahl, 952-5647. Alt new boys who plan to play baseball should have their birth certificates with them ta regi.!ller and money for fees. The price may vary with each league. Holiday Lottery Prize $1 Million NEW YORK (AP) -The New York Statl! million-dollar special holiday lot- tery was won today by Charles Klotz, 61. Detroit, Mich. Second prir.e of $100,000 wa! won by piu.a·maker Albert Ficalora, 28, and his wUe. Winifred, Jl, Brooklyn, N.Y. Norman L. Cooke, a bacheltr and Consolidated Edison Co. drafllman, of ~1anhattan. won third prize of $50,000. Maj. William J. Dita!, J r., 30, his wif e., Mary, 21. and their two dlllitren, won fourth prlzt of $25,000. Ten other grand Uer Ucktl holders won $10.000 each. Apartment Zone Action Delayed A request for ionln( to allow 48 aplrt· · ment unlta in Fount.a!n Valley wa1 delayed Wednesday by the planntns com· minion unW planners c~~J?rratlcate commercial UMI for Ult p rty. 011rlt8 llhll hed all!ed f R-4 ChlP wan~ COf?U1\ertlal zoning err t.71 ~· at the IOUthwest corner of Brookhurlt Street and Le Alameda Slrett. He al• w1nted commercial 16nin1 en 1,'11 tcra .... to the apvlmenll. Commilllonen =ted a total com-mercial pteltare bt • better t111, and beld up apprev for fUrtl!er ltu4y. Nudies Get Con,·icted LOS ANGELES (UP)) .-stalffll dancen and four manacera of alPtcluba which reatured nudt enterU.lnrMnt wwe coftVkttt Wedne>day cl 11111.,. lawd perfortnancta. TM munlclpal court Mt sentencing for P'eb. 11 for the empleyM of Dee's 007 Club and the 1.ebra J\Mm. Old council atKI planning commisaJon minutes 1how U111t the development com- pany waii; l'luccessful because it! attorne y, Dale Heinly, argued that the land was actually ioned RI -for single family homes -and the city could not deny the tract map. ''That argument waii; based on l!I technicality really becl!luse the proper ty had ju."lt been annex ed by the city and alt annexed properly iii; automa tically given RI zoning, the most restrictive use ," former planning conunlssiontr Dr. Henry Kaufman recalled . ''It was a loophole, but, even though we were in the process of rc1.oning, our attorney adv ised U!'I not lo go lo court.'' After the Newport West tract was approved. several others were C)kaytd until in 1965 the Urban Land Institute panel advised the city to rezone the "When you are buying in, you 1hnuld know what you 11re buying ne.rt to.'' he said. "You should know your neighbors. T wouldn•t want to do anythlnl to hurt my neighbor who waa there before me." WilHam Dodge. public relalion!li offictr for the William Lyon Development Ccm· pany. said that Newport West was one of his compan y's most succt1sful devtlopment~. "I know tha L iutH:l ivision did exlremtly well," he said. "We are stll l continui ng to build in that area because wt fetl it represents a good va lue. "The homeowner 111.~n h11s had 8 tremendous 11ppreeiation in the value of his property. Thill is usu.ally the c11se when homes are built within walking distance of the ocean." From Page 1 DAILY ltlLOT lrtH ,_ UNHAPPY ABOUT CHANGES IOP Administrator Knowles DUMP ... 30 acres of a former coun ty dump neit to the mud dump and plans to build a comm unity park on ii . Day 1aid that the Steversons have offered to sell the land lo the city at about $15,000 an acre. ··eut engineers estimate lhat to clean It up would cost about another $20,000 an acre," he .added. ''They 11re being very" cooper11tivl':. but It 's still quite a problem In us. Something has to be done with the oil wa11tes Car Hits Beach Cyclist A 16-year old Edison High School stu· den t is Jn the hospit..al today recovering from Injuries she rr.ceived Wednesday morning when her bicycle collided with 11. car. Medical authoril irs ~t Huntirlgton lnterconununity Hospital sald Theresa J , Thomas, 10011 SprU C!rcif'!. HunUngton Beach. is in s.atl~aC'tory condition. Officers !aid :-;hf: was pedalling her blcycle in 11 crosswalk lesding across Brookhurst Street near Atlanta Avenue Around 7 a.m. Wednesday when the IC· cident occurred. .Jame!'i G. Thompson, 25, a rl':s>dent of 20901 Belgard Circle 11.nd drivl':r of the car, told afficers he was lryinlJ to makf'! a right tum onlo Broolthur11t Slreel itnd Ctlllided with the bike. Choose from hundred s of fabrics and over 20 wood or paint finishes. There are combtnations of beau· ti.fUI fabrics and decorative wood tones to blend "'ith any decorator colo r plans. • tn this cltv -the further yro haul the more. it· costs." The county'1 Air Poll ution C.onlrol District I APCD) has served the oper11klr1 with a notice of violation of tht publia health and safety code. alleging that on Jan. 12 pollutants from tht site co.O· 11tituted a public nuisance. ··Thi!! was not an order, not 11.n In- junction. but more of a w11.rning tn the fileversons to correct tht problem," Edward Camarena, APCD engineer, er· plained. The dump is licensed for the depo~lt of dirt, gravtl, rock, glass, plaster and asphalt by the county's Water Pollutton Control District. Camarena said that the AP CD bl':lieves tllat the source or the roul smells Jan . 12 was wastf'! malerials from an oil refinery. Tht: A PCO zet up a meeting with homeowner!! ln Edison High School Jln. 19 and asked about 150 persons present to fill out complaint forms, giving the limes and description of the objectionable odors. "So rar we have received only 10 rorms back,'• Camare1a addtd . Your choice H.J.GAl\RETT fURNITtJRE ~ROFISSIONAL Opw M .. ., Tlotn. l fri, hOL 2215 HARBOR ILVD. INTUIO~ DlS ll5N!RS TU OUl UVOLVINI CHAl•I COSTA MESA, CALIF. ---------------------.:•..::••:..·D::l::.75 .... 027' I I I 7 -. . ... ~ ~ Newport Beaeh EDITION VO~. 64, NO. 24, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES THURSDAY, :J..4NUA~Y 28, TEN CENTS • Small Merchant·s Irate Over License Fee Hi.ke By L PETER KRIEG Of the D1111 l"litt I liff Although cheered from the rooftops by big business, Newport Beach's decision to double the $25 business license fee bas aroused the wrath or hundreds of small merchants. Llcenae Supervisor Stan Hirschberg said this morning he hu received nearly 700 telephone calls and at least 100 letters complaining about the increase enacted by the city council last month. Newport Harbor Chambe!" of Commerce arguments succeeded in co nvincing the city council to dumr plans for a gross receip~ tax that would have eliminated the flat fee structure and placed a r heavy burden on bil business. Throughout the months of debate on the tax plan, however, there was hardly a peep from the little guy. Until he got his bill about a month ago when it •as too late to do anything about it. ~inchberg said the respoMe was furious. "My telephone didn 't stop ringing for a week." he said. The complainta are still coming ln, · and the bills must be paid by Monday to avoid the payment of a 25 percent penalty. Many of those protesting are out-of. town businessmen whose tax, under the adopted ordinance, was raised from $2$ to 175. Many of the.se complainant.a minced no words: "l don't do $70 worth or business a year in yoor lousy city. I bopt you can build a new city hall with this," came the ~int respome from the Korber Hauling Service in Santa -Ana. Frank W. Fee, an Independent newspaper dealer, vented his wrath with , ..In my opinion it is grossly unfair and unjustified to double tht bwiines.s license tax in one year. I wish lots or bad luck to those responsible ... The $50 fee would have been $40 for the small Newport Beach buslne~1nan Stock under the graduated tax originally pro- ,.,...i. Even that may, ·or may not have helped the part-timers, who picked up a few dollars a week on the 1ide. Many, ljke Mrs. Fatth Bowlus of Balboa Island , wrote in, "Because my profit from my , . .businea amount& to only a little over twice lbe coat of the present city license, I am givinC up my business. "If the time should come that people who do only a minimal amount of business a_re , not 'wiped out' by the cost of the city llcenae. I would ap- preciate you le'lting me know." The majority of complaints dealt with the inequity of the flat fee -tbt l.Dequity th' city administration· had trltd to relieve with Its p~ Calq:~r~ structure. "I U$lk you're trY."1& to rob me but you do .have me aver a barrel so enclosed ,fmd cbect t.r ·dolble the amou nt," said George W •. Gellatly:,.owner of Builders Eled.roc:lkl Speeialilts in Tustin. V. B. Krug, in a letter to the Clty Council,. called the fee ~tr~ and said. "Why should I pay the same fee required by (major departme11t stores)?" "Don't YO;U thlnk this is .unfa.lr? How did such a prDpOsal ever pass the board of Councilmen?" A number of firms from outaida the city uid they would no longer HrVice Newport Buch client:;, ·The Orange Coast Carpet Cleaners told Hirschberg, "Because of the ridiculous increase in the business liceDM rates this year we have decided to do no more work in Newport Beach and will tell anyone that calls us fer OW' service the &ame thing. ''Our last year's bualneu tn · rfeWport Beach didn't amount to more than ·$150," the letter said. ThCY' go on an on, and they make their point, but It appears to be too little, tbo li!te, There has been en in· dicatJon from the City counctl that It feels the matter should be reoptM:d. Mystery Deepens Newport Man's Successor Held in Theft, Forg~ry I ' I I I Chapped Lips Gordon Henderson ol Thief River Falls. Minn .. shows 'the effects of sllb-zero temperatures in America's "frozen north." Henderson was outdoors Wednesday, follo,ving the progress of the \Vinnipeg, Can ., to St. Paul, Minn. snowmobil e race. Oil Tanker Runs Asl1ore, Spills Goop Into Atlantic NEW YORK (AP) -A lanker loaded wi th "2.0,000 gallon.s of oil ran aground and sprang a leak today off Rockaway Beach on the AUantic Ocean, the Coast Guard reported. COunty ·on Long Island. The Coast Guard said a barge h a d pulled alongside the Verdon to take on some or Its oil. A spokesman said a tug probably would try to pull the ship off the sandbar at high tide around 8 p.m. By TOM BARLEY Of "'-0.Jly P'll•I SI.ti' Joseph D. Dulaney's successor to the bankrupt Laguna Hills enterprise left high and dry when the Newport Beach stockbroker left for Germany bas been booked on charges of g r a n d theft, forgery and conspiracy. James E, Shipley, 38, of 169!11 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach, was arrested Jan. 22 by FBI agents who picked him up in Los Angeles. He spent five days in Orange County jail before being Police E~ UCI Coed~s Sea Death By BARBARA KRErBICR Of ltM O.llY ,..... ll•ff .. Laguna Beach detectives are in- vestigating the death of an attractive UC lrvine student whose body was recovered from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach shortly before noon Wed- nesday. The victim was identified as Carolyn M. Jones. 21, of 1287 ClUf Drive. UCI officials said she is registered thi1 quarter as a senior. majoring In history. An official of the Orange county Coroner's office said that on the basis of pr eliminary examination the cause of death is listed as ''apparent drown- ing." pending completion of an autopsy. However, lacerations were found on both wrists. according to de tectivea and lifegua rds who recovered the body. The incision!'; reportedly were unusual, run- ning lengthwise from the hand rather than across the wrist. Other bruises and abrasions on the body probably were caused by sharp rocks in the area, detectives sum'l:ied. Neighbors said the young woman, whose parenta 1 live in Glendale , had lived In an apartment at the Cliff Drive address £or one year and four months. Her body was recovered floating in the water about 25 yards offshore, in the vicinity of Seal Rock, by lifeguard U . Eugene dePauli.s. It was clad in underwear and a yellow T-1birt. It could not be determined immediately how much or the oil leaked Into the .... fi'orgit Intervene• released on $250 ,000 bail. But the arrest of the man who moved from the vice president's chair to Dulaney's presidential office after the organizer of World Trends Financial Inc. left for Munich, Germany, in June, 1969, was far !rom pleasing today to the man who Is heading the search for Dulaney. "This is just what I didn 't want," said Deputy District Attorney Joe Dickerson .of that office's fraud division. "There are more than Dulaney and Shipley tnvolved in UliJ meu and the arrest of Shipley only draws · tbre!r at- tention to our search." But FBI agent Philip Sheridan uld the arrest of Shipley wa1 carried out at the request of Orange County aqthoritles. and the Huntingtan Beach executive wu picked up on an unlawful flight warrant. "That's all we kno'! about It," he said. "The Orance County people can take It from there and we only did what we were asked to do." Dickerson is back Iii Orange County from a trip to Flora, m .• Dulaney's birthplace and. the place where be wu. seen, according to Dlcker::on, wtt.htn the last two weeka. Dicker80n's trip wu fruitless but the fraud iDvesUptor apparently remains convinced that Du1aney, 37, former Newport Beach resident, is now back in this country ~ an IS...month sojourn iD Europe, ID08t of that time beqic (See DULANEY. Pal" ti k ~. 1,,.. ~ University Atmcked for Change in Minority Program By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tlM O.llY P'llW ... ,, A precedent setting attempt by UC Irvine to shift Its Educational Op- portunities Program for m In or It y student.! into the "mainltrea:m of university administration" was criUC:iied today by the black who heads the present program. Timothy Knowles. EOP director since 1989, said the new UCI plan "never adc!reued !lull to tbe needs of minority 1tudent!." "People hlrtd by the unlverahy to run the EOP program were. never con- sulted on the new plan. We wer• told ei~er to accept it or leave.,"· Knowleii: charged during a moatHly breakfast meeUni between Uct admlnLatratcn and newsmen . Althouib Knowles· leadtnhip of !ho minority program at UCI hu been at- Senate Okays Morton As Chief of Interior WASHINGTON I AP l -The Senate today confirmed President Ni x on ' 1 nomination of former GOP Chairman Rogers c.. B. Morton to be tbe new secretary of the interior . Morton, until today a Republican con- gressman from Maryland, pledged in hearing earlier this week ·be will use tile po$1 to help try to change the nation'• priorities, placing the protection of the environment on a acale wit.b the economy and national defense. C.Onfirm1tlon was by unanimous con- aent ; no dissenting voice wa.s beard. Morton. tbe first Easterner n1med to the post in many decades, was opposed for the position by a number of con- servation gi-oups including the S i e r r a Club which said his conservation r~d wa1 dismal at worst and lackluster at best. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Penn1ylvanla aaid lmmedia:teJy afttr Morton'• nominaUon was conLirmed. that he il·aure Marton'• opponentl wUI chlD1e t.be.ir minds. tacked by other minority groupa on cam- pus, the new plan places tbe 21-yur-old former athlete u an Uiociate. ~ reporting to the dean of student attaJra on a level equal to associate deans of financial aids, admlasiona and the registrar. John C. Hoy, vice chancellor for stu· dent affairs, characterized the EOP reorganization "as part of a general admtnl!trative consolidation in the stu- dent aUair1 area designed to increase effectiveness. We believe it will require the general student affairs administrator to inc.Jude minority problems and op- portunities in his thinking ." Hoy said the controversy sWTOunding the separate EOP program had diminish- ed Knowles' effectiveness. "We've tended to find staff energies focused on an idenUty crisis in that 'EOP' was not a positive tag, bu t rather a label'' in- dicating minorities had received special treatment. "Morale was low and there was real conflict between black and brown elements," Hoy said. UCJ is the first of the nine slate univenity campuses to move ad- ministration of lts minority programs Into the "malnslieam." Hoy maintains that other univ'enltiea In the nation "without separate ~ams, have work· ed n,iore rapidly to meet _ the needs cl mloority student!," Knowles said he objected to being hired to "do one jqb Ind then being told to do another or leave." Under the reorganlzatioo be loses pOWer to oontrol EOP policy. The c.oast Guard saJd It was a small leak, and thal it had been "stopped ar severely reduced" about two tours after tbe ship -the SS Verdon - went aground abaut 9 a.m. The ship. owned by the Spentonbush Transport Cc. of New York, was aground In the East Rockaway Inlet, between Rockaway Beach and Atlantic Beach, the border between Queen.s and Naauu CCC Enters Freeway Suit '.'I am Certa,in all of tbole who have heel Just concern will find Ibey ore met Wi th Complete undmtandlnl aad cooperaUon," Scott u.Jd. Scott 1ald he II of tbe opln!oo Morton wW ·take tbe same pith t1lt-many vital luue1 as that taken by former Secretary Walt.er J. Hickel. A Chicano appointee, Jullo Garcia, who (See MINORITY, Pap 2) Theft Suspects N arco Addicts TWo ' men accused of an e.stlmated 711' blqJirla In !ho E>s!b!uff &eet!on of ·N~ Beach have bee.n found to be addi~ to narcotlCJ or In dangar of bet'oming• addicted and committed to the c&llfomia RehabWtaUon Center at Norco. Orange CoUnty Superior Court Jlldfe Byrui K. McMiiian ouspended burglary chalpl 11alllot Charles Jooeph Pe..-· tung, •. and Robert McClure, 23, both of ""1g Bel<b. 1tt.r ru<llng doctors' repo<;11 on U.. defendanto• uoe ol dnlp. Both men were arrested i-. Nov. 12 after rookie pal:rotman Mike Sullivan halted !Mir ..... pe by putting • bull" through the windshield or the Ir auto I '· -. . . Former Newpcrt Beach Councilman Al Forgit has been allowed to intervene for the defense ln the lawsuit to atop the March 9 freeway/election. A bw!ng · on the requested writ of mandate is scheduled to· take place Fri- day at 9:30 a.m.. In Superior Court before Judge Robert A. Blnyilrd. Forglt's ac:Uon, in r etftct.. Drlnp a Freeway F}ltitera lawjtr lMo the CJR, as had been recmnmtnded last week by City Atlom<Y 'lllltY Seymour. Forgit will be , repreoented by Roy B. Woolley, hlmoell io ~fol city council ~te lut ,ear. &th .are members of Uie CIUuna COord!nat!ng Committoe. 1ponoon of the petition drive that ... ts tbe elecllon. 'l!ie tupoyen lal~ bnlu&bt by lonntr Mayon Clisrles Birt and JIDlll B. Stoddlrd, and former Vice MafO< 1U111 J. Lorem, clolmo tbe lnlllottve motlttl ICheduled for eJeCt1on on Ulqal Ind that tax monies lhouJd not be rpe11t for an lll•Jal <lecllol!. In Uieir motion med with Judie &nyard, For&ll and Wool1ty clalm that most of the cost of the el~ hu already been e.rperienced tn the printing of ballots. City Clerk Laura Laglot, the tecbnlcal defendant in the suit, Aid tJlil iftomitig that ol the 111.000 toil! ' the • eleCtlon will CORI, llO _. IJwi •11111 Jil been committed. , • ~ She 1Bid !ho county bu told'-h<r !! m.ay even be able to wrUe elf f:*' abate o1 °"' n,,. ... Forglt la a!IO c!alminJ !bit the pl1!n- Wls delayed too long In brl-!Mir actlOn. T&e lltlptlon wu filed Jin. 1$. 1l1e councll ICheduled the ·-Dec. 21. Jn their wrtt, Hart, Stoddanl and Lorens elalm both pl'OllOOittono IOllA!red by Uie cct: l'!lllk>ni "'"1d be -ed frpm the blllqt ... l"8 l'\)llndl that IDIU1Uve ......,,.. mlay bo employed "only with -to munlctpol lfllirl. "lnlltoUve """""" li>IJ Dill 'bl ~l>­ pl!ed to •ell wldeb ..,,~ In n1ture," the. cOlilplaW ~~f, -' , ft alto claims, ;"Ibe ~Ion ln- ltlaUve la violative of botb tbt-atate 17 and federal constltuilons and by Jm- pairln1 the existing contractual obli,a- tions under the exl&llna: freeWay aa;ree- ment aoulht tb be rescinded." Proposed by !ho C(:C to 10. ~ore the voten are two questkml.. 1'bl , first .eep to·h1v' the et.lstial freewl)',.,,_. mMl w!!b the otote for · the roule of Pacific Cout F ... w1y throutib' eor.na de!Mor~ Tllo .-Iii• 1 Proi-4 chlrtor -thet would . rtqlltr.· Mun ~~ l!<fGrJ ihe ellyCOOlllCil-1<1 have the lllthorlty to •tan 'lllY uf, ll!eddlllonll·--to.· . Five memben of tbe City Coullc!I !londly uroed "' write the loimll ,...,auvt blbOt ·ar~ W1inC a 1100" ........... ~~the coarl lllowo die eloc:tloa. 'Jbe .mriDoi!.. .,.._. ._.. wrl~ tea by tbe • lllrbor -,.,_., l'tll>ten Ind. .lit CIU.... rAlordlnlllllC ' Coft\mtttet. • , A dod~:"oy tllo,,,.,-j on.Ille -Of thi • -iii Ii no( Upocted unW eorly nixt wML Hickel was fired from the C.binet by Preltdent Nixon lite Jul ·yeor If~ !ho ' Prel!dent 'lald lbe two men no longer Wred '1 Mnte of mqtual un- clelsWidinJ. · ' ' · Hlekel'1 nominatiCJn at tb;e_' blP.minl of tbo--Xlna odminllt!'--..tolall)I ~ by moot -·---Moo1~··111 .. · Joter·dW!pd 1bllr mJndfncf -· Wcbl'• ....,._'. Im' t. -'r.tinJ the ;..J lleC1'0llrY ·wlll ·Jndii.i,~ # # ,.. -.1><>9t o1fihort•eo1 i..-..1n~'. Biiio' Sorbera~! ml~ oiid ""°t tO'do --·~ bll:-""'ilmA ~ '' I ' ';'...--""'f'; I• . 0r .. ,. w .. t1aer n-~ s.;,~ Alli wblda wl!I llllr 11J1 1 Utile deMrt type di. comfort f'riclof. eindtnc .......,,. tnil> u..· too rla !be !nllnd ...... I Locoily lt1J ~ lo. the middle 'IOI. INSQtE TOD~'Y A "oood raVObctr°"°~H 1""" raa1 · aa.....i• ifdiiCla rdi could tf"ij 6<' tile ~µ,~.....-ied!I bar if 1't wtrt tn 1Artl.8. SH Paoe 2'. ................. __ .. --M =-..: =---:i -M -. --. ................. , --.. " l I' i • • 2 D~l.V PILOT I/ : ,· -• • • Is Angela Davis Ttj.al · Due for Orange County? ' By TOM BAKLEY OI llM Dtltr ,MM l1'fl' : Many Orl.llle County Superior Court officials and employes are con- " vinctd tbat their courthouse will be the setti ng for the mur~er trial of former UCLA profe~r Angtla Davis . .' , No official approach has been made to Orange County by the California Judicial Council but it ls known that Chief Justice Donald Wright ol the California Supreme I c.ourt inquired about ~ity condition£ ln the Santa Ana j courthoule during discllssion or the Davis trial. -It seemed almost «rtain Wednesday th at lawyers " • (ot the accused black militant will ask for a chang.e of venue from Maria County -the scene of the courtroom ~ '~ holdup and alayings that led to the fllln& of charges against loll", her. J Seoui!J. in the county courthouae was recently slrtngthened to the point that offldala are conflden,t that their new precautions will measure up to con- dltlobl imposed by any judge wbo decided to move the Davis trial to the South- land. f' · c:ourtbouse aources aay that" Orange County and San Diego are very high t oq the list of aites to be considered should Miu Divis' lawyers get thelr change or ventle. "It'1 a posaibillly," confirmed Superior Court Adminilitrat.or Leslie McCartney, •·and QUef Justice Wright did mention Orange County's security measures during a San FrancilCO meeting I attei:ided. "But he may not have been serious about it." Mccartney added. "There bu certainly been no official approach al though Orange ~unty might be a ~oi:kl c:boice for people wanting to get as far away from. Marin County as possible. • ·''nllt'e not to say that we want il here;" McCartriey ·added. ''That big trlal"ll go'lng to mean bi& prot)lerm for someone but if It was assigned to w we would do tbe very best we can.'' . ' !•· ~ ,... I I ' ' I ' • • i l i I ! I ! : ' • MAKING CHANGES Vice Ch•ncellor Hoy OAILY l"ILOT Iliff l"'-'11 UNHAPPY ABOUT CHANGES EOP Adminl1tr•tor Knowle1 Fro• Pllffe I . ' I :MINORITY PROGRAM • • • began work toda y as associate dean cf students "will relieve Tim ()f M>me ()f the pressures ()n him fr om oibtr minority groups.'' Hoy aatd. Garcia. formerly a counselor at Hun·' tington Beach High School. will rep«irt to the acting dean of students and be reap«insible for coordinatfn& academic advising, counseling ind academic sup. port for minority &tu.dents. Three other present minority !ltaff ad· ministrator5 will be reassigned. Two of these wlll report to Kn owles. Thty are John Clayton and Ed EiC() bat. Steve . DAllY PILOT OIL\NGI COAST 1"1JILllHINIS (OMl"ANY lt.~rt N. W.H J1ck It.. C:url•v Viet l"ralftl'll •nd !Stf\111111 M.1~ n.e"''' K••"ll .... ,.,. ...... Offtlie 221 l W•sl l 11be1 loulev•td M1ill11t Mdr1111 P.O. I•• 11r1, •2661 --C..t• MMil .. w.tl ..., ..,.... .... -'*"~ m ...,.... ,._ tfl,WI,....,.._ ..,.I ln7J ~ lelM'VI .. .... ~l .. N.m ., c.a. wi ' fo.1ilner will assist Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and fernandQ Cordero were appointed to the UCI Counseling Center to serve under its Dew ly appointed direct.or. Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "'ne"'°· arrangement pre>- vides three centers "·here minorities may come fOr support.·· Koowlts said the k'-Y to th e enlire project · wa 5 the appointm,nt of the associate dean of ad missions and he charied tba:t "that appolntment is not belog considered under UCI's aff ir mative action proaram.. to insure app<iintment of a minortty .person for the job. After Hoy said "'we're looking for the belit qu.llfied perscin to handle that cOmplu:. · wtp.ment and would be dflilhtd ;it wt we.re to find a black cB~:ot.b&ndlina.tbe duties" Knowles 5'{d, '1'11!'\qlall¥-" · ••n.•1 'Q:""tnsult tf you're talklni about onf9 beint' able lb find the blue ribbon qualJUd·for-lhltjob in a white person," Kni>witl•~ • · . He .rauea· Uiat . wjthOut a minority person diNcttnt Ute admissions process "UCl wl.11 never meet tbe needs or black people." · Thi• yur'o •110,0IO· EOP bud&et hH produced and • &ti.ves 230 d\inorlty students out •of a total enroll~t of 5,000 at UCl . "You 'll never meet the 10 percent enrollment aoaI wttbout a minority lid· nu.ion dlrectllr,'',.Knowles charaed. Hoy said the new plan would be J'MVll!Jll\ed 'el' 1be, •ftd of the aprlng cpaarter to doloo:-·111 ~· ~kelei.oi:i ldentified A• Suicide Victim ME!IC!iD (UPI) -A llceleton found on the bank or an lrrtgatlon dltcb ln Merced County has been identified •S the remilins of Willie Hing Dane. 74. San FrancllCO. Sherl!l'1 deputies uld the appannt IUk:tde vk:tlm WIS lden- Ufied by muns of a lapel pln and other tt.ma found In his cloth!nc. Thi victtm'I fanifly Hid "* Wal I niUYe ol hU!nl i nd hid told hi• lani117 ,.. he 'wat r.ttritn1" thert when ·he dtup. peared last Aqu1t. Officers 11ld the vlctlm 1pp1rtnUy shot himself to dtath. •• I Bottomless I . Beautms 'Benched' By Al!TIIUR R. VINSEL Of lM DlllY' l"tlll lllff A bevy of bottomless dancers from Costa Me11 '1 Firehouse bar had their day in court -the whole day -Wed· ne.sday, a.itt ing on benches and waiting. The 9 a.m. hearing finally commenced at 4: 10 p:m.. but reS<llved only one of the 2G-plus indecent exposure cases. "He re il is my kid's birthday and all and I gotta sit around this place,"' said one weary woman awa.iting Garde na attorney Ray M. Legg. "I've served half my a en ten c e already," ·remarked another, who likely bad a bard night's work ahead. Judj:e Donald Dungan had before him 23 original case1 consolidated ln\8 cne, plus three more involving nud.ie dancers arr es led more recently. The majority -some fncluding multi · pie arrests of the same dancer -involve indecent expost1re~ charges, while lwe counts are of lewd conduct. A wb<lle new series of cases is now in the works too, based on arrests made since last Novem ber under revised aec· lio ns of Ca lifornia laws on nudity and entertainme nt. Defense attorney Legg was delayed until after noon recess, so the women aged 21 to 30 years -some statuesq ue. some petite -talked shop er played with their assorted children. One brought her German Shepherd pup, with a bandaged ear. Legg and City Prosecutor Robert G. Skinner conducted I n -c h a m b er con· feren ces until after 4 p.m .. when Judge Dungan convened the hearing in Division Three. ''Tell Mr. Leag tc bring his people in. We are ready." "These are the girls from the Firehouse," whispered ()ne man in the courtroom for a different case. A young bailiff looked them ()Ver ap- praisi ngly and his sergeant frowned. Only aboul 12 or 15 of the defendants filed in. while lhe others were represented as being there, In 1pirit, through their attorney. "'Let me start this way so we know who's here. It's goi ng to be like roll call in the Army," said Judge Dungan , naming off defendants. He arraigned three dancers arrested more. recently following roll call and they agreed to have their cases con- soli dated like their sister defend ants. Judge Dungan then dismissed charges against one, P.1iss Leona Gray, for l.llek ()f prosec1.1tlon at the reque.at of the city attorMy"s office . The case against her evidently wasn't strong enough. "'Now as to the rest of you. I want you to listen carefully," Judge Duaan said, expleinlng how and when the re- maining bottomless dancers would be handled. Defense and prosecution agreed to call no witnesses. but to simply argue points of law before J udge Dungan after he has read and reviewed all ~ cases remaining. Legg and Skinner will 00 this Feb. 4 al 10 a.m. in Division Three. They return to Division Three on Feb. 10 al 1:30 p.m. at which tin1e Judge Dungan will rule on each case. He ag reed to rule on the cases of Jacqueline featherly and Patr ic i a Cassells at the earHer se~sion. however. since one is enrolling in coll ege and the other is leaving the state. He also instructed hi! court clerk to ht ce rtain each of the 26 police and arrest reports submitted to him is legi· ble. "I don '1 want that 20th copy they sometimes try lo pawn off," observed I.he bespectacled judge. "And may I suggest to both counstls th11t you bring your lunch on Feb. 4, because we are going ri1ht straighl throu gh without recess ," he ~dded. Firehouse.connected cases tnvt1lving operator Raymond C. Rohm and niaht manager Norman Orey were · among those called during Wednesday's pJ"Oo. ceeding. Drey was In tht cburlrclom with his wife Cynthia. named in t.l\ree of t.he bottomless cases. Judge Rutter's Mother Dies After Illness Mrs. Abby Holatefn Ruller, mother of Orange County SUJ)trlor Court Judie · J. E. T. RUlt'1' Uled Wedntld1y nJ1ht al the •1e of '18. She died In her homo 11 lOll VII !Jdo loud lftor I J"'flltt Jllnesl. A native of VirJlnla. Mrs. Ruller at- tended Vassar College. ~ moved to Newport Buch ln lMO end was a member of the A11l111n<e Le1p ol Newport Harbor Ind St. J1ma Epllcopol Church. Her husband, Thoma1 Rutter dted taat July. · SM leaves her ion: a 11.sttr. Anni Hol1tefn of Santa Monica; two nephews. George M. Ind WJIJl1m 'S. llolallln, both local real re!tate devt JoptrtJ lftd four grandchildren. F\lneiotl tervlcts will be held Friday &t 11 a.m. at St. J·1mer !:pilcopll Church. Tht family h111 suueattd memnrtal contributions to the Harbor Day School. OAILY l"ILOT Slllf PMi. BURNED BUILDINGS, CAR, ASSORTED RUBBLE REMAINS AFTER ELDEN AVENUE FIR! In Costa MtH, A Spaict•cul•r Bl•t• Erupts In 1 Fl1sh ind KHpt Firemen Hopping From Pqe I Big Fire Destroys Two DULANEY ... spent in Germany. Dulaney took his attractive wile Marlene and two children with him shortly before the bur st of the financial bubble that l!.ad been supervised by him from plush office buildings In Laguna Hill!! and Seal Beach. Apartments in Mesa Shipley is accused of one count of coruipiracy to commit grand tbeft an d forgery ; four counl!I of grand theft and three counts of forgery. Identical warrants l'ere signed for the arrest of Dulaney and his wife. Investigators today believe that the losses of investors In the financial groups controlled by Dulaney will amount to at least S3 million. Al! his varied en· terprises are in bankruptcy co urt in Santa Ana awaiting proceedings that may depend on the tracir; ()f Dulaney for a final accounting. !\.lost ()f the Investments handled by Dulaney ca me fr om residenU of Laguna retirement communities and a lo ng list of their names is today held in the bankruptcy cour t's bulky files. Shipley recently a ppe ar'-d in bankruptcy court as a witness and he testified at that time thllt the only con· tact he had w!th Dulaney ·after hi! bo~ left !.he Laguna Hill s "Taj Mahal" for the last Lime was a telephone. call he rectived from Mwich. Sporadic e:rploslons of magnesium marked a spectacular blaie that destroyed two C.Osta Mesa apartments and e garlge Wtdnesday night, lrJjurlng one among 17 fl.cemen battling It for .nearly a half.hour. One ()CO.lpant managed to uve his clothing and personal efftda, but they were stolen immediately by looters. Battalion Chit!f Ron ColemllTI, who directed operations on the scene. said damage could reach $12,000, including contents of the structutes. The alarm came in at 7:01 p.tn., sending fire trucks racing to the 2300 block of Elden Avenue . P'lames had engulfed the structures at 2324 and 2326 Elden Ave., by the ti me they arrived. ''E\lery time we put water on th e fire it kept blowing up," said Chief Coleman. He said the · blaie was caused when gasohne fUme11 Ignited In the garag& while La rry Graham, of 2326 Elden Ave., was cleaning a foreign car's dismantled tr~rmJ.ssion. · r Choose from hundreds of fabrics and over 20 wood or paint finishes. There are combtnations of beau- tiful fabrics and decorative wood tones to blend with any decorator color plans. ,. Your favorite dt1fgner tofll br happy to iu1f1t ~ou ''Actually, there was very Utt.le gasoline wed." Chief Coleman remarked. Drifting across the noor, however, the volatile fumes reached a wattr heater pilot flame and in 8 nasb the structure was on fire. Chief Cllemen said the magnellom parts hampered efforts to control the fire, since the light ml!tal -used in military Incendiary weapons -i! hllhly flammable .. ''Everytime we hit it with the I" inch hoses it looked like lhe Fourth of July ," he said, describing the fire "'hich drew crowds of the cu rious. Fireman Jack Schuitt received medical treatment afte r he stepped on a nail which was driven through his boot and into the sole of his foot. Duri ng the height of th, blaie, William T. Perry. 21. of 2324 Elden Ave., manag. ed to salvage his clolhing and pile ii nearby. . ''This Is really pat.he,tic," Chief Colemen u ld, noting tha t juveniles who gathered ·to watch the excitei;nent 1tole the ~l_othlng. Your choice H.J.GARRFfT fURNl"fURE ,ROfESSIONAL INTERIOR OESJ6NERS o,... ...... Tltul'L &· ""· .... TRY OUR UYOLYINa CHARal ll Ii HARBOR IL VO. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 646°0271 '46.027' I • , ,....., , lm 11 PILOT·. NIWPO.RT BEACH FASH.ION ISLAND STOR·E-WIDE STORE HOURS: I.WON. AND FRI. 10-9:30 TUES., WED., THURS. 10-9 SAT. 10:00-6:00 SUN. 12:00-5:00 __ ....,...;.::...~ - I . ' . 96 Men's Sport Coals MEN'S WOMEN'S Quilted. Bedspreads Boys' Towncraft Sport Shirts Sport Shirts Reduced lo Clear Better Double Knit Dresses Year around weight. Most •II sires. Good Sunflower print design, puff quilting. Brigl,t, colorful plaids. 4/5 00 color selection. New price -29" 1 ·R ... or·b11tton-down 188 Mlny atylol & fabricL 7aa 1 oaa Queen or king size. .,.. Short 1IHv11, Button-down New value ' collar. Aut .. plaids & lOlid1. Ml11y ind Junior. Orig. Orlglnally collar. Sites 1·18. NOW Odg, JS.00-47.9S NOW . Orig. 3.98 · NOW 9.00.IS.OO NOW to 22.88 to 2S.88 NOW Orig. 2.91 . Men's Better Suits MEN'S CIHnup, broken lots, yoar eround Gigantic Sweater Clearance! Women's Sutts-3 Piece Style Girls' Dress Clearance Boys' Pant Clearance weights. 123 suits for your selectio,n. GROUP I GROUP 2 GROUP 3 Vests, Cardigans, Pullovers. 588 Variety of casual styles. Wicle color M- Orlt. S75-S90 Orig. SfO Orlt. Sto-$100 Wools, Acetate & Polyester 19'8 Mlny styles •nd colors. 188 lectlon. Orig 3.98-4.98 99¢ 198 NOW NOW NOW Mne's si1n. $, M, L, XL. Missy & Jr. Speci•I Group. Sizes 10.18. Slim - 34ss 59ss 6488 Orig. 5.00 to 7. 98 NOW Orig. 25.Q0-4S.OO NOW Orig. 3.00.7.00 NOW Slim •nd Regul•r. NOW 42 Men's Slacks Save on Men's Dress Shirts 100% Wool Ski Sweaters Car Bed/Bassinet/Cradle Combo Boys' Sweater Clearance ' Casu•I or dreSs patterns. Sizes 28 to 38. Mi.n's or ladles. . Excellent selection of styles and colors. Regular or 788 Button-down, spre•d, long 388 Broken-sizes 128! 1788 Light. weight, port•ble 7aa chooM from cardigans, pullovtr1 or falho • point collar's. 'Asst. colors. Continental Orig. S.00 to 7.91 NOW & colors. Orig. 10 only. Ion 1woater1. 188 3• Orig. 11.00.1 S.00 NOW 17.98 to 2S.98 NOW Orig. 14. 91 NOW Orig. 3.91·7,98 -' Sizes 6-18. NOW L.,___ __ M_E_N'_S _DE_P_T. _ __.I ._I __ a_o_r_s _D_EP_T. _ _,, J BEDDING & BATH SHOP I .._I __ s_Po_R_T_1N_G_G_o_o_D_s_ . ....1I· MENS VEST SUITS 24 only. Good 1izes. Ttt. 'Now" Suit. 9 88 MENS ;;suci<LER?.r~i.A~~s"·" Now 0 ~~:;t2~;t'..~-~-~~-~.1 ... ~-~~~-l-n_~: .. ~·eo:1:.r~;i NOW 4. 99 MENS FRINGE LEATHER JACKETS . 14 ooly-> ·"10"· 39088 Split cowhide .......... -...... Orig. so.oo NOW MENS BETTER SPORT SHIRTS v .. 1.1y of •tyln to....... 3 •• 7 · •. 8 5, M, L, XL. Orig. 6.91-11.91 NOW • • • TOWNCRAFT HANDKERCHI EFS 100•;. cotton. P•ck•ge of 4. ........................ Orl9. 1.00 NOW 044 WOMEN'S DEPT. MICKEY MOUSE SWEATSHIRTS Short 1IH ve1 only. t.1i sset'ru'N1e: Nvr::oN ~~t ~~ lda•I p•nt top. 3~N1~:SPL "1T .. COWH·10~1t~~ Natural only. Limited sit es. .......... _ ............ Orlt -10.00 FASHION BLOUSES White, p.1stel1 & print1. 100,-. polyester ........ __ ----··· Orig. 6.00 NOW 2,11 NOW 3,88 NOW 2,11 NOW 4,88 Long & 1hort 1IH v• 1tyle1o CARTOON CAPERS FORM ELAINE POST Llmlfod ,;,.~ 4 88•6 8 ft ............. ...... Orig. J.00-11.00 NOW • • 0 MISSES & JUNIOR SKIRTS & PANTSUITS '"•10"'"'' •1'"'· I 2 81•4 88 ~11S~1E1S "& ~a~,~;-'j:MA1~~~ • • Solld denims & pl•ids. 44 ~'U~~~ZHOM_E.ifP"lJN"'"A°N~·L3E'°tiA~TS NOW • Fa1hlon•blo flare lelj. 4 88 Limited slzu , colors. _ ... . .. Orig. 7.00 NOW • MISSES & JUNIOR PLAID PANTS Foshlon•ble tiara leg. ~11S~1E1S ·a.··JLiNfoR·;·PAN~r~t1~~ NOW 5.88 L•te1t 1tyling. Li mited sizes. 12 88 23 88 . _ .. Orl9. 24.G0·21.00 NOW e • • MISSES FASHION ANKLE PANTS 100,-. polyester. 7 88 Assorted colors. , Orig. 11.00 NOW • ACRYLIC KNIT SKIR T SETS Gold, blue •nd purple. 6 88 ~iSs'E'S' 1 0o0;~---coTToN .. 8E1~1~00 ANKN~: PANTS Permanent preu. 3 88 All 1izes. ·---·· , .. _ .. .. . .... Orl9. 5.00 NOW • NOW 4,88 NOW 1,44 WOMENS HANDBAGS As1t. color• & stylu. jEuWE'L·1ReY ··cLos·e8U\s'·00 a 1 • 00 Pini, ••rrlngs & nKkl•c ... Your choice ............ --·········" .. Orl1-2.00 SEAMLESS SHEER HOSE ...... '01"' & llylOL ) 2/1 00 y..,r cholca. ............ Orl1_. _ 3/2.tS NOW • fOO'/o COTTON FLANNEL GOWNS 'j\Pt. colon. · · 2 88 1,.ken sli: ............................ ~ Ori• 4.00 NOW • · SH I FT GOWNS lrVlh.t look. '~CK~~s·. "c"OAT"S::V~e·s~~1· •.oo NOW 4.88 . Mony 1tyln . m•nY fabrlu. - Juol°' & MIHJ tl•OL II 0N ·~ 1,11.32.11 _,, ........... _ Orig. 6.D0-50. ~ L•~• "lectlon 9' •tJI&.... ,,. • M15SY & ·JUNIOR DRJ;$SE• \ ~~~~ .. ~.-~~~ ... ~11.11 ; '. NOW ll•loll BOYS SUITS AND SPORT COATS Slngle •nd det.1bi. bt'Nated 1tyll1h. Sinn a.11 '"'"' & "'ulon. 12,88 .............. ·-··················· Ofil, 17 ..... 21.11 NOW BOYS TOWNCRAFT DRESS SLACKS Penn Prest, .....tron. AwallaWe In phi. ellv., Wack. n•YJ· 2 99 11 ... a.11 .... & ollm. ............ 0.1• 5.'* NOW • I GIRL'S DEPT. GIRLS SEAMLESS HOSIERY CLEARANCE • .._ "" .... •11• 1 0 Stock up" now. ················"········-········~··-··· .. ·····-···· ... • pr. GIRLS SUNGLASSES CLEARANCE Mli"y styln to cheoae from. 50 1 JO so .. •ftnow •• Orlf.1 ........ NOW• • • GIRLS ACCESSORY CLEARANCE .._ l•wol'Y, tltht~ -•.. .22• 1,99 Many mora ................................................. . GIRLS COAT & JACKET CLEARANCE lrok•n llxes-meny styl .... Sizes 4-14. Orl1. 14.00-25.00 NOW 6.88-14.88 INFANT'S DEPT. WARM & COMFY THERMAL SLEEPERS Gripper or bell.er waist, A11t. color1. Sla:• 1-1 ........................... Orig. 2.St-2.lt NOW 1.88 CORDUROY C RAWLABOUTS A11t 1tyles & colors. Slz .. '/1-3 ......................... Orl1. J.lt.J.SO NOW 1.99 INFANTS & TODDLERS POLO SHIRTS loy• & girls stylu. Sizes y,-4. .. . ... Orl1. 1.31-2.00 NOW .99 CRIBS REDUCED TO CLEAR All h•rdwood ·construction. 6 white, 3 walnut ............ Orl1. J7.tl NOW 24,88 DRAPERY DEPT. DECORATIVE WOODEN POLES UnflnllhH or painted. 4 to 12 foOt len1th1 ... --·· Or ig. 1.7t .... 4f NOW .so VINYL REED CAFE CURTAINS DM<oratlv• coter•: .~;",;~.:;" '•".fo\v .44 1 .88 ............. -......... Or I PRINTED DRAPERIES 100% cotton screen prlnh. 2 88 41'':1114" ........... ., .. -............................................... NOW • TIER CURTAIN CLEAN-UP ChMM from solids or prints. All sins •••il•ble. oaou• I 1.11 OflOUP II 2.11 I PIECE GOODS DEPT. SYNTHETIC PIECE GOODS Acettt.1-.. ttrt" or sheath llnint. ·1·0 45" wide. .... " ........................................... -....... NOW • yd. )iYLQN REPTILE PRINT '°'''""or ,..,._,-... '2.44 ~., ~ .......................... ·Orlt. SAi HOW • . . ylf. BEfTER FABRIC CLEARANCE l,~lltd end ii1eontfnueif. • WOMENS UNIFORM' SAVINGS Clioooe' tiom '°"°"' or;eynlMt)u. lel14•or "'""'· I Ju•I«, MJH, & Hall 11-..>". '4.88' ..,.. ·11· . , . , 48 . ' ·1 4~ yd .... ~ ....... ..t-or1g.·1.oo--12.o1 ,: :"'1"· .... ,,· ·1~ ••a.Jr•. •.. eaoup11 1 ~~ • SHQ~~'.~~r:f'" j j · .GIFTS & DINNERWARE ·. IJl!ON~TONE CO,,EE MUGS How 3.88 , ~ .. '.':.~.~--..... Orlf. 1.21 NC?W oll NOW 4.18 " ' l,lt:tw·~·· NOW .... NOW 9088 NOW ••••• DICOAATIVE 'WALL MIRllOR' GildteMtr ...... ~Ir. _: ...... ~ ..................... or .. 4t.H Nt:IW 34 •. 88 MODEllN CERAMIC TABLE DlrCOll ,.,. •nil ..... '°""1·c.,.; .............................. Ori• 6.11 llAR ·OLASSWARl!'s1 rs . hleen ., c....c• ........ ................. .,..._, ' .......................................... Orft, ,...., ... ............ c ... ..... -... -............................ -..... O.)f.1t.lt NOW ~··· N-.loll Ht:IW 7oll ACRILAN* BLANKET Solld colort. 'ull or klnt sip. ....................................... Ori• 12.P.16.11 SCULPTURED BLANKET Revolutionary Vellux. Full 111• etnly. . .... Orl1. 15.ot ACRYLIC TANK COVER SET NOW 5,88 NOW 11.11 ~==~~::;~•: ........ --.---,-·········.-·""" ......... HOW 2.44 BOUTIQUE SOAP SETS Boxed or 1laff J•r1o AvocHo tr"" ................... ----.. Orig. 2.00 NOW .so QUILTED SPACE SAVER Delu1• 2-tlar cabinet. 1--onlr--s l1o ........... . .... Orl9. 21 .tt NOW 10.00 DOVER DRY BINDING LUBRICANT :.~~-~--~~-~~~ .. -............................... Orig. 1.ts NOW .99 .. FALKENSCHUH 5 BUCKLE PLASTIC SKI BOOT :!:..'"~--~~ .. ~~~~-.~~k~lg. u .n NOW 29.88f ZENITH JUNIOR SKIS-SA.BLE BINDINGS . :n~~~--~~--~~-~~--~-~-~ ............. Orl9. 6,P NO\¥ 4.88 ' BOYS OR or RLS SKI PANTS ~~-~~--~-~~-~-·········· .......... Orig. 10.tl NOW •••• LADIES OVER·THE·BOOT SKI PANTS < ..... ...... .. ...... 22 •• 26 •• \ Orig. 25.tl te 34.tl NOW e te e 1 ATOMIC• METAL COMB! SKI I ~r~~,~:::~~z::~~s~i.. Now '"1.-Q-T-. -E-P-IC_U_R_E_®_F_O_N_D_U_E_S_E_T _____ __, :u~Z. ~-~--~-~---~--·~ri,. 12s.oo NOW 99.00 !! 69.99~ HOUSEWARES In thing for entert11lnlnt• 1 6.88 Green only. ...... . ...... Orl9. 1t.t5 NOW COPPER ESPRESSO COFFEE MAKER For true gourmet1. 7 00 2.only, .... __ ................. Orl9. 11.tS NOW • MARBLE SLABS A mutt for c11ndy maker1. S-only-l"x12". . ... Orl1. 10.00 NOW SoOO COPPER GOURMET COOKWARE Decorative and u1eful. Jell• or Fl1h Molds. __ _ ..... Orl9. J.00 NOW 2,22 HARDWARE DEPT. HEAVY DUTY CARRY VACUUMS For <•r or homa. 3 only •.... _ .......................... Orl1. 2t.t5 NOW loll DECORATOR WALNUT SHELVING 4tx301t12. Speclal buy.............. .. ........ Orl9. 11-" NOW SWAG LAMP FIXTURES 5 diff 1rant model1. Limited quantity. . .. NOW USED PORTABLE POWER TOOLS S•nd•r• -Dril ls - 8.44 8.81 5.00 KASTINGER• MARK Ill SKI BOOT ~.~~.~~.-~.1.~-~--·---............. Orl1. 3t.tt NOW 31.99\- KASTINGER• SLALOM SKI BOOT l•okon '''~ .................... 0 •11. 4f.H NOW 39.99 ._I ___ TO_Y_D_E_PT_. -----''· MR. REMBRANDT BY IDEAL Unu1ual artist • ................................................ Orig. 4.H NOW ELDON POWER·RIDE SUPER 1.88 ~ '"" Xl·7D. l• ... •Y 1 7 88 19 88 run. Orl1. 25.tl 1-2t.n NOW • to • KENNER SUPER SPIROGRAPHS . :~~·~~;;~MATfE LH°Ot ~i:EELNOW 3 •88: · ···· ·· . .. . .. .. . .. . ............... Od1 .. 77 NOW a59 MARX TRAIN SETS .......... 01"''1' ........ 4 44 11 18 .... OrlJ. 4.44 to 14.11 NOW • te • MATTEL STAR SEEKER =!~:i:~~ed ·~-~-~-·-············ Orl9. 7.11 NOW 3.88 I I AUTO CENTER '----------------'--' El TIGRE TIRE CLOSE OUTS I Sabre 111w1. . .. .............................. .. , NOW FURNITURE DEPT. CLUB CHAIR, BLACK PLASTIC Gla11 belted daluxe. All 1lae1 redvc.t. 6t5x14. 23 00 Rici. Cu1h. front & back-c:•1ter1. 58 00 ............ Plv1 Fed. t•• •NI exch•n1•-NOW • Contemporary styla ......... Orl1. 61.00 NOW • PINTO MINI BIKE DEMO ~!!~!,~~ty~~;.~bl• lnHrts. 89 00 !p~.~~: .. ~~--~-~-~--~~-~~ ~j~t 1st.ts NOW 25.00 ,.. ............................... Orig. '"·" NOW • :.~!,R.~~.~.~~~.E.s.,.1~~:M SIZE 6 00 . 3 DRAWER BACHELOR CHEST Plus .is P.l .T ......... Ori• 17.U NOW • IA.'." Plastic top. W•lnut finish. 69 00 ALUMINUM MAG WHEELS U "xlr'x'1" ................ O•lg. ,,... NOW • DoluH II Tlfn, 7". '""· , .... ,, 24 7• :~~~:.!.E .. ~~N.~1;:.T ~'"MONTH ou°A14A:?~E s~~AR BATTER~SIA. Twlo ''"· ........................ Orlf . l:lt.01 NOW 79.00 lpoclol .. ,. ..... II Tftn. ...... ., 18 88 2 UPRIGHT MIRRORS ~e'lf'c'O:&ii SPECiAf ...... NOW 0 be. ~·~!~~-"-~~~· ~:i.~~'.if:Z/'· NOW 49.00 pr. =::"-~~--~-~.~ .. ~~.~--~·-············· .. ····NOW 16.88 \ GARDEN SHO~ Headboard. Pull 1111. One •nly. . . ........................ Orl1. 11.ot NOW 7,00 I' SE LF-STARTING CHARCOAL ...~_-E_N_::._c~-~-ES-T-•• -s.!-E-.. R-J-.~-M---.. -.-.. -.. -2-1_9_0_0_, ~7~:-:~;~~~RCH iiQEC ' ' ....... !'OIV •19 T.V. DEPT. \~;!:-;o~oR TV"~:S~! 449• NOW • • tr~::i~~R~T:;~1:i.ROr • ow .44 ; ....... ,, .... ,,..,,,...... ""' ,._, M .. lt, 369 00, I H.P.·-............ -119 00 .. w ...................... °""·...... Now · • M:CULlal7cc"k cilAfN ..... s ... A ... w .......... Now • ·" r~n~~E ~ ?!~.·~ ................ '" .... •. ~"'.11 N-41 loOO -1I -ll" llOr ... chol.. •• ~ --... "' vw J.:'~{;r::a::ouc•rcliAfN"'sli" NOW • " 23" COLOR n CONSOLE ' • AUfo.flno hml-lltll<k•Pk fer IMtoot 359 00 --.. Auto. l:I" Nr 1 9 8 I"" ,. ............. ·~w .... Orft· 12 ... S NOW o ~":''f;IV°E"FAifTmil~·tl NOW I• o e ISO WATT STl!REQ ,...,,_ 1 ._., ~=-:,:'·,::-;~ ~.::' .. Now 329•00 P°A~iiS::.::LA:sfcll'~:'To ~~~NT ~; STl!RIO.C,OMPONINT SET Tul=V-"' Tr• ..., ........ ' 1 fta1 71 wott .... -· Oorra .. tvrntoWe 229 00 .... .ft ~ NOW 11 IAOt ,OR •-~ AM/'M ttwM rMa.. Ottf. 2"·• NOW e LA DYi CAMERA DEPT. PENNCAEST MOVIE OUTFIT ..... .. -.. ,..-• .....,.hi..... 99 •• ..._ ,.... .................... Orlf. 1 lt.tJ NOW • lrl111 Mcie ,... tnett '" ywr a.11' 11~1ii!cfi!ic "Mi:iW'i.t"· .... NOW t;:~;:~:;~.~~·=·~ NOW 109oqG :-::,::~~ .. ~ .. ~.~~~~.~-·-···-·-NOW ' ..... ) . ' , t l • • • I I l I I '' • • I MKA.nr: .10b M~Ootild .JO Madi• Co .JO -·r, MKYP l .25 • N.. .. \•----------., -.J -""" a. Cllf. I • ~~-----. n •• ..., • ...._ii:. iw1_-"s._c:_ Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List 11i. ...... (Im.) ......... a... a.. - DAJLY PILOT 1l ,. .. . . ~.~..... ----·- Costa Mesa " I T~d~Y'• Flmal 1'.r.--stoeu ~OL 1>4, NO. H, 3 SECTIONS , 32 PAGES ORANGE COUN!Y, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANl.!~RY .2~. 1971 TEN CENTS --- Bottomles·s Dancers Warm Benches • Ill Court By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tlHI D911Y 'lltl 511H A bevy of bottomless dancers from Costa Mesa 's Firehouse bar had their day in court --the whole day -Wed· nesday, sitting on benches and waiting. The 9 a.m. hearing finally commenced at 4: 10 p.m., but resolved only one of the 20-p!us indecent exposure cases . "Here it is my kid 's birthday and all aad ' l gotta ·s.it around this place," said•one weary WOman awaiting Gardena attoraey 1JWi M. Legg. "I've· served halt my sen ten c e already," rema rked another, who likely had a hard night's work ahead . Judge Donald Dungan had before hi m '3 original cases consolidated into one, , . plus three more involving nudie dancers arrested .more recently. The majorily -some Including multi· p!e arre!ts of the same dancer -involve indecent exposure charges, while twe counts are of Jey,·d conduct. A whole new series of cases is now in the y,·orks too, based on arrests made since last Nove1nber under revised sec· lions of California laws on nudity and entertainment. Defense. attorney Legg was delayed unW after noon recess, so the women aged 21 to 30 years -some statuesque, some petile -talked shop or played y,·ith thei r assorted children . One brought tter German Shepherd pup, with a bandaged ear, . ' ':t-..; ~ ... :'"' ... :~f" ~"'t·* l!~ .... "' . ' Legg and City Prosecutor Robert G. Skinner conducted l n • c b a m b er con· ferences unUJ after 4 p.m .. when Judge Dungan C<>nvened the bearing in Division Thref!. . "Tell Mr. Legg to bring his people in. We are ready." "These are the girls from the Firehouse," :whispered one ma. in the courtroom for a dif[erent case. A young bailiff looked them over ap- praisingly and his sergeant frowned. Only about 12 or 15 of the defendants filed In, while the others were represented as being there, in spirit, through their attorney. "Let me i;tart this way so we know wbo's here. It's going to be like roll j , DAILY ''LOT St•H ,....._ BURNED BUILDINGS, CAR, ASSORTED RUBBL! REMAINS AFTER ELDEN AVENUE FIRE Jn Costa Me~, A Spectaeultr Blau Erupt• In • Flash and KMp• Plre"m.n Hoppln9 Grounded Tanker Spills Oil Into Atlantic ()cean NEW YORK (AP) -A tanker loaded with 420,000 gallons of oil ran aground and sprang a leak toda y off Rocka~·ay Beach on the Atlantic Ocean, the Coast Guard reported. It could not be determined immediately how much of the oil leaked into the ' .... The Coast Guard said it was a smell leak, ind that it had been "stopped or severely reduced" about two tours after the ship -the SS Verdon - went aground about 9 a.m. The ship, owned by the Spentonbush Transport Co. of New Yol'k, was aground In the East Rockaway Inlet, between Rockaway Beach and }+tlantic Beach, the border between Queena and Nassau County on Long Island. Storm Hits Northeast; Four Lost at 100 Below By United Prtss International An intense storm raked the Northeast today, stacking snow ln heavy drif ts. closing roads and bringing biting cold temperatU res. Four hikers from the Rutgers University Outdoor Club were Jost on mile-high Ml. Washington, N.H., wher the wind-chill factor was 10\l below zero. A search team waited al the base of the mountain for a break in the weather lo resume the search called off by the bitter midwinter storm . The four young men, a· from New Jersey, were not found by three search parties Wednesd ay, one of which reached the 5,600 foot level of the 6,288-foot mountain, high~t tn the northeast. The temperature was 30 degrees below zero on the mountain, and the w I n d s 40 miles per hour. Mt . Washin1ton is the windiest ~t in the United States. with average winds over a:; miles per hour and gales as high as 231. The storm showed mercy to no one. from Ontario's premier to a shell fisherman from New Jersey. Premier John Roberts was ~scued \Vcdnesday after spending the night with 400 other stranded motorists at a highway service center near Ingersoll, Ont . A Point Pl easant. N.J .• fisherman, Richard Knapp, spent a harrowing night in an open boat amidst howling winds and frigid temperatures before he waii rescued Wednesday. The men were only two of thousand11 who suffered as blizzards closed half the roads in New York Stale and im- mobilized much of southern Ontario. Upstate New York today con tinued to shiver under biting winds and near zero temperatures, and a 25knile stretch of snow~Vered highw.ay from Buffalo to the Pennsylvania state line remained closed for the second day. call in the Army," said Judge Dungan, naming off defendants. lte arraigned three dancers arrested more recently following roll call and they agreed to ha"ve their cases con· solldated like their sister defendants. J udge'Dungan then dismissed charges against one, Miss Leona Gray, for lack of prosecution at the request of the city attorney's office. The case against her evidently wasn't strong enough. "Now as to the rest of you, I want you to listen care.fully," Judge Dungan said, explaining bow and when the re- maining bottomless dancers would be handled . Defense and prosecuUon agreed to call no witnesaes, but to slmply argue polnla of Jaw before Judge_ Dungan after be has read aod reviewed all 1b CllleS remainin1. Legg and Skinner wUI do this Feb. 4 at 10 a.m. in DivisiOn Three. They return lo Division Tbree·on Feb. IO at 1:30 p.m. at which time Judge Dungan will rule on each case. He agreed to rule on the cases of Jacqueline Featherly and P·a tr i c i a Cassella at the earlier session, however, since one is enrolling in college and the other Is leaving the state. He also instructed ·hi.I court derk to be certain each of the 26 poUe& and arrest nport.s oubn)ltted to him ill legi· ble. "I don't want that 20tb copy they aometimes try to pawn off," oblrrved the bespectacl<d juqe. "ADd m1y I llJQNt to:.bot.b. Colm1tls that you bring your limch1 on Feb. 4, becaUIO we an &9iJ1ll rtsJll stralgJ!t throu1h witheut. recess." he added. F.~~ caM involving operator RaymOnd C. Rohm and. nJ&t!t DllOqer Norman Drey were among ~ called during Wednetdly'1 pro- ceeding. .Drey was In the courtroom with 'his wife Cynthia, named · in · three of the bottomleascasea. Apartments Gutted .. Magnesium Blasf,S !'uel Mesa Blaz~ Sporadic explosions of magnesium marked a spectacular blaze t h 1J t destroyed two Costa Mesa apartments and a garage Wednesday night. injuring one among 17 firemen baUling it for nearly a half·hour. One occupant managed to save his clothing and personal effects, bu t they were stolen immediately by looters. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman. who directed operations on the scene. said damage could reach $12,000, including contents of the structute.s . The alarm came in at 7:01 p.m .. sending fire trucks racing to the 2300 block of Elden Avenue. Flames had engulfed the structures at 2324 and 2326 . Elden Ave., by the I ' c-j," ~'"rl ;i.. \it~ ti • ' . 1 -p~Study .., . UCI Coed's Ocean Death By BARBARA KREIBJCR 01 ttl• t>•llr 'Utt St.ff Laguna Beach detectives are in- vestigating the: death of an attractive UC Irvine student whose body was recovered from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach shortly before noon Wed· nesday. The victim was identified as Carolyn M. Jones. 21, of 1287 Cliff Drive. UC I officials said she is registered this quarter .!19 a senior. ma joring in history. An official of the Orange County Coroner's office said that on the basis of preliminary examination the cause of death is listed as "apparent drown- ing.'' pending completion of an autopsy. However, lacerations were found ()n both wrists, according to detectives and lifeguards who recovered the body. The Incisions reportedly were unusual, tun• ning lengthwise from the hand rather than across the wrist. Other bruises and abrasions on the body probably were caused by sharp rocks in the area. detectives surmised. Neighbor!! said the young woman, whose parents live ·in Glendale, bad Jived in an apartment at the Cliff Drive address for one year and four months, Her body was recovered floating In the water about 25 yards offshore, in the vicinity of Seal Rock, by Weguard Lt. Eugene dePaulis. It was clad in underwear and a yellow T -shlrt. time they arrived. "Every Ume we put water on 1he fire lt kept blowing up." llld · Q1ef Coleman. He sakl the blare waa cal.lied when gasolinl!! fuines Ignited in the aarage while Lany Graham, of 2328 Elden Ave., was cleaning a 1ore1.gn car's disinanUed transmission. · "Actually, there waa very llWe gasoline used," Chief· Coleman remarked. Drifting aCT918 the floor . however, the volatile fumes reached a water heater pilot flame and in a flash the structure was on fire. Chief Coleman uld the magnesium parts hampered effortl: to o:Drol the r~e. since the llJbl metal --in military incendlary Wea(IOlll -Is bJPly !Jammable. . "Ev<rytime '"' hit tt -t!)e 1~ inch booes It Joo!<.d llke 1he P'ourth of July," he said, deaaiblnl the fire which drew crowds of the curious. Fireman Jack Schuitt ~ived medical treat~t aft.er he stepped on a nail wbich wu driven through bis boot and into the 10le of bis foot. OIJrlng the bei11rt ol !he bl.,., Willtam T. Perry, 21, of 2324 Elden Ave., mama· ed to aalva1e bis clothing and pUe tt n<arby. "Thi! Is really pathetic," Cblef Coleman said, noting that juveniles who 1atbtred to watch the acitlmllllt ltOle the clothing. ~· i . ;. "~"'~* Mesa"ii .Pie.uls: GJdliy : --- •, In Food Fraud Case A Coata Mesa man and the I01n com- pany mana1er who handled the financial side of a fraudulent ffOMJI ·food llCheme pleaded pilty w i.,.... cbortt.. Wed- nesday in Orange Cotinty Saperfor Court. The decision of William J . Wooll , &l, of 2014 Wallace Ave., and Harold B. Massey, 46, Anaheim, to plead guilty to disturbing the peace followed by, juJt three days the earlier offering of guilty plea! by co.defendants PbRip F. fi'ooll, 31, o[ North Hollywood arid John Milton Turner. 40, of Glenda.le. Judge Raymond Vincent immediately sent.e:nced the elder WooU and Massey to 00 days in Orange County Jail. &th men were ordered to serve six months probatio n. Philip Wooll, the C.Osta Mesa man 's son, was fined $40,000, a record Orange Surgeons Work On Man Injured In Mesa Crash A Garden Grove man whose car unet· plalnedly veered Into a Costa Men telephone pole at 12:45 a.m. today waa itill undergoing several hours of -plNtic surgery at mid-morning. County fine for a grind theft eonvlctkri. Turner was fined $10,000. The decision of the four men to plead guilty cut by an estimated four weeks their trial on the original charg~ cf grand theft and COtlJPiracy. Judge vin. cent dlm:iS!!ed those charges against the leodel Woon and Maley. AD four men were accuted In 1n Orange Coonty Grand Jury indictment of directing the operations of ·Family Plan, Consumers Affiliates Corp, and Consumers Services. tttree freer.er plan organlzations with which they were link· ed by Investigators. Their salesmen signed more than ZOO families to contract.! which promised 860 pound!! of frozen meala and realted products for M82. Contracts binding the victims to that amount plus suMtanttal interest were passed on to Massey who wis manager of the Liberty Lo a n Company of Anaheim. Each contract holder got just 300 pounds of foodstuff.a: from a supplier who was unaw1re of the deception in. volvfld and wu hired to deliver the Family Plan prOducts to hlll supplied list cf home1. Brando 'Mafiatized' The Coast Guard sald a .barge h a d pulled alongside the Verdon to take on some of il! oil. A spokesman said a tug pn>bably would try w pllll the •hip off the sandbar at high tide around a p.m. UCI Shift of Eo·p Scored Dennis N. Guenther, 20, of tJ21lf•Dt,le St .. · darden Grove. suff«ed 'l!\ustte facial laceraUom and profuie '1 o • i '(ir blood -D1U1g lbnlu!lh the wtad!hteld. HOLL\<WOOD (UP1) -Marlpn Brando will ptay the title. rolti In the acreen. ..moo ol Marlo.Pmo'o novel '"I.be Qod. !other," Poramounl Plclurea IDllOUllCOd w.,mewy.· . Pouee In Queens iiald there wu ap- parently no danger of the tanker break· Ing up. . The Coast Guard iiaid there nrt tl"O types of ol.l in the shi p -a light heattn1 oil used in homes and a beevier type used Jn industrial furnace!!. The, ship w~ first apotted by a Coast Guard helicopter. A lifeboat had to tum baek btc.tll9e of roogh seas, but a tua: and the barge later reached ill. No lnjuritt were reported tO' the seven. ntan "Qf'ew. I ' MANSON BELTS .JJ.Is . A. TTORNEY LOI ANGELES (AP) -Charlfs Ma .. ICll'I was ejected lrorn the penalty phtse of tHe Sharon Ta te murder trlil today aftel;: be at.ruck hi• at"torney u they aat olde. by ild< at the coonsel tabif. , , The llflhl punch •J>l'll'<llllY' dia not harm the attorney, lrvtnc Kanarek, and U>t trial condnued after Manaoh, strug. rfll)I with b1:illlts who seized blm, was removetl . University Attacked for ·Change in Minority Program By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. .,.. , .... "'" A ~t setting 1ttempt by UC Irvine to shift its F.ducaUonal Op- portuntues Program for m i nor l't 'I studenla Into the "mainstream of university admlnistratlOll" wu crltlclled today by the black who beads the pretent progr1m. Ttmothy Knowles, EOP dlreetor since 1969, said the new UCI plan "ntver addressed itself to the needs-.of minortty student.." ' · "People htred by the univtnlty to run the BOP .procram _.e never e. suited 1on the oew plln. We were told either w a<ctpl k ufltav•." Knowles charged 'cJurlnf I . Monthly brOIJcfpl meetina betw~ UCI administrators and """"" ... Although Kno-ltodmhip of the mtnorlty prograsn et UCt. baa been at· t.tcked ·by other minority groups on cam- pus, the new plan placts the •year-old former athlete as an aNOCla te dean l . \ reporting to the dean of atudent affairs on a level \equal to auociate deans of financial aids, •dmillkm and the registrar. John C. Hoy, vice chanoeUor for stu- dent affairs , charactertzed tht. EOP reorganb.atlon "as part of a gclperi.I administrative consolidatlon In the;stu· dPnt affairs area dellped to inertue effectiveness. We belleve,,tt wOl require the general student affairs admlniltrrtor to Incl~ minority probWms lbd op- portw\lti.. In hta thlnldq!" Hoy .. 1d thii eonlr<Mrsy llllmlUl1dlnl ·-ille ·-i. SOP flVP40• bad diminish- ed Knowles' e~. ''We've tended to ftnd staff e~ ~focused on an identity crisis in th,\ "'EOP' wp not a positive tag, bat rather a 1abe1" lJ'>o dlcatlng minorities had received special treatment • · ... "Morsle w1s .io,t ,ail :.ua,re •J.t.t ronnlct bet'!._een . .b.i.ck and .. brown elements," Hoy u,{(L ~ - UCI ~ the lira! ol the ninl ltale un iversity cam~ to move •d· mlrllstratlon of its minority programs into the "mainstream." Hoy mainlainl that other univenlties in the na~ "without separate programs, have w..-k· ed, more rapidly. to . meet the needl o! mlllortlf itudenta." KMwles sold he · obJect.d to belnr hir<d w ."do oo~ job and tbon betoJ1 totd to do another or .leaTe." Under Ille : -s1nliattoo Iii I-power to cobtrol EOP ,policy. . ~· ciiiCaiio 1~in!e0, JullO Glrdo .• --!"> begin wotlt· tciday 11 ~· dean of student.I "will relieve Tim . ol IOrile or · the ~ · on him !rom o!her mlnorttf _,, Hoy Ille!. Gar<lo. formerly a ~r 'It Hu .. Ull(loo Buch . !f!gh ScbooJ; will report w '1ho 1<1111( dean ~ sillilio~ ond ·be reiponalble !or' i:llOl'<Jlnatlll( lcodemlc •d,Yl.llDI." """*llill ~. ~ -pori'lor mfno\111''lllliloidl. , Three -pniooal mlnOrrty stall ad-Clee MINOM'Y, Pip II .. ' Nuraes aald he was in fair condJUon, accordlne to word ff9m the .. O~i.lh?I room. Police said Gaenthtr wu drlvtn& wtlt on Avocado Street when hll heavy1aedan """'ed Jn1o the pole 41 feet -GI Fairview Road for unknown reuorw. . Inyet)lpton 0-h••d be moy bav.e taken· the tUri1 from Fllrview ilOod• too fut Ind driffed o!! Into !Ill poli,1 wblcb ""· uodell>qeil. \ ~-' l ' ' l --- ll DAIL V PILOT J • Stock Fr~ud My·~tery Deepens • Coast Man's Succ~sor field on T:~eft,,Forgery _Raps Is-·Angela Dayjs Trial . -' Due for Orange County? By TOM BARLEY 01 tt11 o.llY 1'1 .. 1 II•" M.11.ny Orange County Superior Court offieiala and employes are eOn'. vine~ t4at tbelr courthoUM: will be the Jet.ting for the murder trial of former ·--• V"'I"" • UCLA professor Angela Davis. No official appro.11.ch .has been made lo Orange . County by the califomia Judicial Council but it is known that Chief Juatice Donald Wright of the California Supreme · Court inquired about security conditioo1 in the Santa Ana . cxiurthouse during discw.sion of tht Davis \rial. ~'"'"' It seemed almost certain Wedne.sday that lawyers f • . , for the accused black militant will ask for a change of Ir "' . ~ a venue from Marin County -the scene of the courtroom .. i 4J holdup and slayings that led to the flilng of charges agaln!t · ~ , her. 11r'liiM' ... ai.sv ~ ................ - Joeepb D. DuloY'~' 11_9t••••r to the b.nlaupt IA-llllll ·entei'pli>t left high and dry whtn the Newport Beach stockbroker left for Germany ha s been booked on charges or g r a n d thefl, forgery and conspiracy. James E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Uiwell Circle, HunUngton Beach, was arreslf:d. Jan. 22 by FBI agenb who picked \l.lm up in Im Angeles. He spent five da}'I in Orana:e C.OOnty jaU before Mina released on $250,000 bail. But the arrest of the man who moved from the vice president'& chair to Do.laney'a preaklential n«i~ after the organizer ol World Trend& Financial Inc. lelt for Munich, Germany, in Junt, 19&9, was far from pleasLnc today to the man who iii beading the se1rcli for llWaMy. ':'llllS 1' j.,i w-.1 I didn't want," Nld Deipqty Clltrlct Attorney Joe Oickeraon of that Office's fraud divWon. "There are more than Dulaney and Shipley involved in thi1 meu and the arrest or Shipley only draws their 1t- tention to our search." But FBI agent Philip Sheridan said the arrtst of Shipley was carried out al the request of Orange County authorities and the Huntington . Beach executive w1s pid:ed up on an unlawful ili(!hl warranl. "'That's all we know aboul it," he said. •·The Orange County people can take lt from there and we. only did what we were asked •,, do." Dickerson ls back in Orange C.ounty from a trip to Flora. Ill ., Dulaney 's birthplace. and the place where ht. was ~n. aceordlng ~ ritWt~. Within tbe last two week.s. Dicke rson'R trip wu fruitless but the fraud investigator apparently remnina convinced that Dulant!y. 37, former Newport Beach resident, 11 Mw back in this country afler an 18-month 30journ in Europe, most of that time being spent in Germany. Dulaney took his attractl'le wile Marlene and two children with him shortly be fore the burst &f the financial bubble that haJ 'been supervised by him from plush orfice buildings in Laauna Hills and Seal Beach. Shipley is accused of one. count or ('1)nsplr1cy to commit grand theft lilld forgery ; four counU of 1r1nd theft and three counu of forgery . Identical warrants were signed. f&r the Forgit Intervenes arim. of Dulaney and hla wli'e. Investigators tod1y believe that lhe ~es of investors In the financial croupa controlled by Dulaney will amount lo at least $.1 million . All his varied en- tel-priaea art! in bankruptcy court In Santa Ana awaiting proceedings that m1y depend on the trach·~ of DuJaney for a final accounting. Most of the investmentll handled by Dulaney came from residents of Llruna retirement communities and a Ion« lilt of their names la today held In tbe bankruptcy court's bi.:lky files. Shipley recenll} a p p e a r e d In bankruptcy court as a witness ind he testified at that time that the only con- tAct he had with Dulane.y after his boM left the Laguna Hills "Taj Mahal" for the last time was a telephone call he received from Munich. Secur y In the county courthouse was recently strenathened to the point that offlclala are confident that their new pnicautl<lns will measure up to con· ditiQrls irppoat:d by any juda:e who de.cided to move the Davis trial to the South- Wid . . Court.JM>uae IO\lf'Ctl say that Orange County and San Diego are Very high orl the list of !Jtes to be conlidered should Misa D.11.vis' lawyers get their change or venue. Morton OK'd As New Chief Of Interior CCC Enters Freeway Suit · "It's a poniblllty ," confirmed Superior Court Administrator Le11\ie McCartney. "and Chief Justice Wrtght did mention Orange Qrunty's aecurlty measures during .11. San Francisco meeting I attended. "But he may nol have been serious about it,'' McCartney added. "There has certainly been no official approach aJlhough Orange County might be a godil cbo.ice ror people vtanting to get as far away from Marin County as possible. . "Thal) no\ to aay that we want it bere," ~tcCartney added. "That big trial ia aoiDe to mean big problems for 10meone but. lf-it wu assigned to w we woul4'd<r1be very beat we can." ' MAKING CHANGES Vlce Ch•ncellor Hoy DAILY l"ILOT ll•ff "'9lel UNHAPPY ABOUT CHANGIS EOP Adminl1tr1tor Knowles •I 1 From Pqe J MINORITY PROGRAM • • • minislrators will be reassigned. Two of these will report to Knowleli. They are John Clayton and Ed Eitobar. Steve Milner will assist. Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and Fernando Cordero we re appointed. to the UCl Counselin g Center to aerve under Its . newly appointed director, Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arrangement pro-- vldcs three centers where minorities may come for support.'' Knowles said the key to the entire project was the appoinlmenl of the .aaaociale dean or admissions and he charged that "that appointment. is not DAILY PILOT OllAH0£ COAIT P'IJl\.ISHIHG CIJMP'""" ••Mft N. W•M ~ .... .._.._ J.,~ k. Curl•y vie. l'Nli..nt ,,.,.. 0-.1 ...._ '1\orn11 kHllil Th•11111 A. Mu..,"1ft1 M.rwvlirlll£•11.,. c... ..... Office JJO W11t l1y Sfr1tl Mel'nnt Alll.lr1u: ,,0 . IP 11611, ''''' .,_.,_ N..,._:,.1 9Mc:tl1 Jin _. la!m1 • .,,._.,,.. L1111M leldl!9l ...... A- Ml.IMI .... htefl1 t7VS IM$ leuMN a... <.1......,..1 • ...,. 11 C,.,,.i. A .. 1 being consideriXI under UC l's affirmative action program'' to insure 1ppointment ot a minority person for the job. After Hoy said "we 're looking for t.M best qualified person to handle that complex assignment and would ht dellght.ed if we were to find a black capable of handling the dut ies'' Know les said, "I'm insulted." '·ft'! an insult if you're talking 1bout only being able lo find the blue ribbon qualities for this job in a v•hite person.·• Knowles aaid. He argued that without a minority person direct.Ing the admission.s process "UO will never meet the needs of black people." This year·a. $160.000 EOP bud&et hu J>ro:d~~. •D;d ~ wves 230 minority sfui:leilts out ol 1 total enrollment of s,eoo: 1ruct. · . "'You11 nffir. mMt the 10 percent enrollmtnl goal wltnou\ a minority ad· mJllioa ~tar."" Knowles charaed. Hoy ,.Jd l!M ne..,. pion would b< ne.vtluat.ed at the end of the spring quarter to determine ill effec:tlveneaa. J.Jrihery Trial .. .De1ay Granted . ·11 • 1 A ~ mot.Ion for a lwCMily t deliy,Jn,,ult ,lflOll-llrlbery Imhof br. I Ebbt ~lllll wu-sr1nlld WidDlld.ty Jn,Or-Oow>IY Superior Court. 'b:,.Harttlius, 60, was ordered by Pr.slill6c Judcf WUll1111 C. Sp<ln. lo return to his courtroom Frid1y for ~~-ol bji Im!. . WASHINGTON (AP} -The Senata today confirmed President N i :r o n ' 1 nomination of former GOP Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton to be the new 1ecretary of the interior. Morton, until today a Republican con- (!ressman from Maryland, pied.Jed in hearing earlier thls week he will use the post to help tr y to change the nation 's priorities, placing the protection of the enviroruneot on a 1e1le with the ec<>nomy aod national defense. Confirmation was by unanimous con· sent; no dissenting voice was heard. Morton, the first Easterner named to the post in many decadts, wu opposed for the po1ition by a number of con- !erv.11.tlon groupg including the S I er r a Club which said his conservation record v.·as dismal at worst and lack.luster at best. Senat.e Republican Lea.dtr Hugh Scott or Pennsylvania said immediately after Morton's nomination wu confirmed that he is sure h-1orton 's opponents will chanj:e their minds. "I am certain all of those who hive had just concern will find they are mtt with complete understanding and cooperation," Scott ssid. Scott .said be is of lb& opinion Morton will take the same path on mani, vital issues a~ that taken by former Stet!tary Walter J. Hlcket >• Hickel wss fired fr om the Cabinet by President Nixon late last year afttr the President said the two men no longer shared a sense or mutual un· derstandina. Hickel'a nomln.11.tlon at the be1lnnlng of the Nixon administration was violently opposed by most conaervation groups. Most of these groups later changed their mind and protested Hickel's di1mia.s1L Immediate IMues facing the new gecretary will include what to do about offghore oil leases In C1llfornia'1 Santa Barbara channel and el1ewhere and what to do about a proposed oil pipeline across Alaska. Judge Rutter's Mother Dies After Illness Mra. Abby Holstein Rutter. mother of Orange County Superior Court Judie. J. E. T. Rutter died Wedneeday nl1ht at I.he age of 78. She died in her home at 108 Via Lido Soud aft.er a lengthy Illness . A native of Virginia, Mr8. Rutter at· tended Vassar College. She moved to Newport Beach In 1940" and 'WU a member of the Assistance League of Newport Harbor and SL Jamu EplacopaJ Church. Her husband, Thomu Rutter died last Jul;v. She ltavea her son; a sister, Anne Holstein of Santa Monica ; two nephew1. · George M. and William S. H61steln, both local real rest.ate developer1, and four grandchildren •• Funeral servim w1l1 bl held Trlday at 11 a.m. at SL James Epilcopal Church. The family has suggested memorial contributions to the Harbor Day Sch001. Card Last Rites Held in Mesa Funeral itervleet were l!tld ·today ln Cotti Meu for Bruce • 8. Card. loftl li!Tll . Harbor arta mldtnl I n a restaurateur whG dled Tutaday. Mr, C.rd died of 1 heart attack at Hoag, MtrDOrial HOlpit.al. He wu ~7 ye1r1 old. Dr. Harte Hua. Ni' W. Wil&on St.. COit. .Mui, ii cbarpd with 1raon, buminC ' with l!llelll lo d•fr1ud, buml111 lnourod property and bribing wltntsMI. ~ chtrlM attm from inveat111tlon of a fire l11l April 9 in hl1 offlcn 1t 234.5 A veteran or naval aervice in Work! Wor II. he had lived In the Hltb6< are• for 23 years. He Wll the. OptrtlOr o! the rormer ~ea Spc'lrt restaurant and alto OW'l\6d tht Surf and Sirloin. Bo~ r..U.urtml are In Newport Beach. · He leavea ltfl "ltldow, BtJty, and m . .. - 1 E. ~ H;ab••Y, Corono d•I Mar. li'vllllillbrl llld lh< bllU WU ""1'k· ed \,y 1111 • -1'ft1una of 11solln•. Dr. llli'!lllUI ~ ftH OB ba\I. Don. of lht lomlly home, #1 llq',olln( Oretn Ave ., Costa Mesa ; a brother. Elmer Cl.rd . and • •liter. Mn. Evelyn Tliompoon, both of PorUand, Ore . Former Newport Be.ach Counci~an Al F'or1it has been allowed to intervene for the delenae in the lawsuit to stop the March 9 freeway election . A hearing on the requ~tad writ of mand.lte ls &cheduled lo take place Fri- day 1t 1:30 a.m. in Superior Court before Judge Robert A. Bany1rd. Forglt'1 1ctlon, in effect, brinas a Freeway Fiahters lawyer into the case, as had been recommended last week by City Attorney Tuliy Seymour. f(lrlit will be represented by Roy B. Wool.Hy, hlmstlf an unaucce1sful city councU candidate l11t year. Both are members of the CltizeM Coordln1tin@: Commlttee, 1ponsor1 of the petition drive that 1eeb the elecUon. · · The tup,ayer1 suit, brought by former Mayor• Ch1rle1 Hart and Jamel B. Stoddard, and forme.r Vice Mayor Harul J. Lorenz, claillll!I the. lnlUaUve matters .scheduled for election are illepl and that tax monies should not be spent for an lllegal election. In their motion filed with Judae Banyard, Forgit and Woolsey cl1im that most of !he cost of the election. laa.i already been experienced In the prlnttna of ballots. City Clerk Laur11 Lag los. the technical defendant in the suit, said this rooming tha t of the 19,000 total the el•tlon will cost , no more than »SO has been committed. She said the county has tokl her It may even be able to write off !ta ihare ot tb,Jt figure. F:orglt is alao claiming that tht plain· tiffs delayed too Ion& in brlnglng their action. The llUgation was filed Jan. ~5. The council 1eheduled the electlon Dec. 21. Teaeher Has Quints GRENOBLE, France (AP) -A 29- year-old irade school teacher give birth today to quintupleta. three boyt and two slrla. Three of the cbildrtn were dfferibed u robufi; the other two 11 ''ftqilt." Mtcbtll ·RJondet hid been t:rpeeting twins wben 1bt entered tM: ·bolpttat at nearby Volron. Tbt. mother and the children tNl'e later trmaported to a better equipped hoapltal in Grenoble . !he childnn'1 arandfather, a tailor, a11d: "Thia certainly creates a lot of problems and you can't 1ay It'• really a joyow event bttaUM you've aot to think about r1illn1 theae little wolve1." Mrs. Rlondet and her huabud, Jean- FrarE<lis, 30, 1n ind111tri1J deatsn~, ~ave been• married ftn-111' ytart ind hlft 1 3-year-old aon. Mn. Rlondet said 1 be took ,no fert-Jlity dr~. Choose from hundred• of fabrics and over 20 wood or paint finishes. There are combtn1tions of bt.au- tlful fabrics 1.nd decorl!ltive wood tones to blf!lnd with an y decorator colo r plans. Your ftWOrit1 dttiO!Wr IDfU bt hO'pW to turilt )'OU In their writ, Hart, Stoddard and !Arenz claim both propos.itloM fostered by the CCC petitions should be removed from the ballot on the grounds that initiative measures may be employed "only with respect to mun icipal 1ff1lrs. "Initiative measures 1m1y not be. ap- plied to acts which are 1dministr1tive in nature," the complaint say1. It also claims, "The reaciS8ion In- itiative is violative of both the 1lale and federal constitutions and by· irft. pairing the e1istlng contractual obll&•- tions under the existing fl'ffway llP'ff'" rneol IOUght to be rescinded." Proposed by the CCC to go before the voter1 are two questions. The flrlt aeeb to have the e:rlstlng fretw1y a11te- ment with the state for the route of P.11.ciflc Coast F~eway throu1h Coron• del Mar rel!lclnded. Tht second is a proposed chart.er amendment that would require . future referendums before the city council could have the 11uthority to sig n any and all additional agreements. Five members of the City Council ~tonday agreed to write the form al ne1ative ballot arg\,lmtnt1. urgin1 a "no'' vote on both questions if the court allowa the election. The afflnnative argumenU were writ. ten by the Harbor Aru Frtt"WIY Fi&hten and Ill Citilan• Coordinattnc Committ•. A declllon by the COUJ1 on the Unance of the writ ~ not e>p1Cled unlll I01'l1 next week. Your choice H.J.GARREfT fURNf[URE ~ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. M•.. T!lwL le .. I. .. .. TRY OUI llVOLYING CHAl•I l 2215 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. . 64 .. 0271 646°0271 ' • • . ---. ~ • -~ --'E!- VO~. 6'4, NO. 24, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, ~1971 TEN CENTS ' Mayor Chafes at Fire Department Pres·sur.e As two San Clemente architects took notes, city councilmen Wednesday once again pored over plan s to build a new fire department headquarters al civic center, using a unique deploymenl of manpower. While councilm~n took no action on the matter in their study se!sion Wed- nesday. chanets seemed better for authorization &oon of drafting plans for a 7 ,000.square-foot building capable of Down the Mission Trail Viejo Library Group Formed Mts.slON VIEGJO -A Friends of the Library orpni?.ation has been formed for the ~ Mtuion Viejo brapcb of tbe Ora1Jie ·Cowity Lllirary. . The grOup ii sponaortng i wine tasting party 811 · its first fund raising event for Feb. 11 at 8 p.m. in the Mission Viejo RecreaUon Center, 25800 Monllnoso Dri ve. The new library. a $2$0,000 facility. ts located on Ch:risanta next to the new movie theater. Anyone Jnteresled in becoming a "friend" may call Mr~. Gforge Ragsdale at ~7618. D•nee Clas•e• Offtt>ed LAKE FOREST -Dance classes are being offered in February for aU Lake Fore.st residents. Those interested in learning all -0f the late as well tts traditional dances may sign up in the club office for the 25 week session which will be offered for $1 .25 per couple per week. Bill and Louise ,,_felikejon y,·il! be in· 1tructors. . ti Operation Helpllt1e MISSION VIEJO -OperaUon Helpline Is in need of volunteers. The Helpline, which provides a listener for teenagers and adult.s in need of advice. is iJ>Onsored by the Saddleback Valley Ministerial Association. . If interested in giving time and service to lhose who need someone to tali to al critica l times call 1»2522. 813,000 Salar11 Oka11ed EAST IRVINE - A salary schedule for the position of psychometri!t h8JI been approved by Trustees of he San Joaquin Elementary School Dilltrict. P,ycboroetrists-speci11i:alK In mental measurement-trill begin 1l $13,000 a year and will be able to progress through five eteps of an additional '325 each until $14,300 is reached. . The schedule ii between the lim1t.s acceptable for teacberl I n d ad· miniltnltor•. lfeadler I ~ pe.tky Sanla Ana winda will JJtir up a Utile de9erl type dis- comfort Frldlly, 1encll11g mercury Into the IOI In the inland areas. Locally R'll stay iii the middle 70.. • ,-INSIDE TODAY A "fiood 'ret10lutionory" frorri l;osi German .,standard& could IHll b« tM AU-A.'mtrican boy I/ ht_ Utert in tht: U.S. Se« Page 26, ~"' ·-"" ---· Cl1•· •I ::.r=. .... ,.. Pl --AIWI L....., - •• ' .... " " " • " "'" .. " " ................ . __ .. 0!'11111 '-"' 11 ....... ,..,.. " _,, ,..a .... _.... .. " T.......... IS ,........ ,,. -. ........... W-'• .... ,.,, ............ Ml . .> housing 16 fir!men al a time_. four piece.!! of rolling stock and offices for a complete firefig hting operation. But Mayor Walter Evans, long a foe of rushing the fire department plans, claimed he felt the city was being "preS!ured into approving something right awiiy, a method I don't really likr.." .. San Clemente architects Leon Hyzen, who has &ctively sought the designing job .. and Ricardo A. NiC()I each agreed U.at they could build l new budquarters building capable of aervinc City needs for dozens of years at a "horseback cost" of about $20 a square foot. City Managu Ken. Carr, offered, however, that in the fire department plans, the stress would be on adherence to strict financial limitations of a budgeted $170,000 for the building aad furnishings. it ''ln the past few years we have seen how plaru for capital projects have ex· ceeded the financial limits, including the cOmmunlty Chlbhouse and the pier enlrance· plans," ca'.rr said. '"nle: cit)' should strongly hold the line oo this one:" be added. Carr suggested that if the council approved t~ detigning of the head- quarters, he, Fire Chief Merton W. Hackett, a panel of fire advisors and Ship Runs Aground Near NY NEW YORK (AP) -A tanker loaded with 420 ,000 gallon'! of oil ran aground and sprang a leak today off Rockaway Beach on the AUantic Ocean , the Coast Guard reported. It could not be determined Immediately ~w much or the oU leaked into the sea. . .'The Coaat Guard aakl it was 1 •small ltak. Jed.. that l ·, had ):ieea· "~ . "·' ••:...!.:::..:.< ...... ~·· abildi"'!""''ltoi1r• I, ut -"°'~,-T . DAILY 1"11.0T SMff,.,.... Flooding Check A $120,0QO, project to control fl ooding on Calle Fontana in capistrano Beach is in progreg,s and expected to be completed in aboU:t one month. The mass ive drainage facilities will run along Calle Fortuna to Bluff Park in Palisades area. M cl ntire' s War Victory March Slated Saturday After tumultUOWJ begihnings, t h e march for ··a total victory in Vietnam" by Dr . Carl Mcintire and his followers in San >Cleme11te ls definitely set to traverM seVeral city streets Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The parade permit worked out wilh the San Cleme.nte Police Department shOWt the event will begin at Oki Plsza Park. thel1 bead up El Portal to El Camino~ Real. • After; that the mardt will proceed 11outh ~ El Cimino, West on Palizada oo to ·J!ncioo Lane, -down to Linda Lene -'· tbe new ctty park near the beach. • I Police Chief Cllfford 'i!=•Y said the right 2 hand Ian• and •IP,llder of each roadway hu been approved a1 t mar<bln( -· At the. rally, where the.aut.lpoken Jersey evangellat wlll . '1nake an · pearan°', the marchtn wt11 • lblg rellglOOI) and patriotic IOlllS and heljr addre&ws from Dr. Mdltire and others. One rule in the me of Llnda Line ts that loudlpeakert-approved by the city alter two -U of dispute-JJ1ll8I be polnted•,..wanl. Tile )ll"OXlmlty of mldence• to Old Piua·J>ork -Ibo oripjal. ·1.-lltA! for the rally-eaueed councilmen ta in- itially deny permiasion tor the event. After a personal appearance by the minister, Linda Lane wa1 agreed upon. Mcintire bu lndk:ated · that decorated cars driven by hia supporters from throughout Southern c.allfomi• would al>o -port of Saturday aftesmm '• parade. Tbe oven! lo Ille· flrlt of ..... tl!an llO ectlvlties In miall<r U.S. towns and du,i ~ !or. a total •~ cl the wm 1n ...... ut Aoli. Holiday Lottery Ppze $1 Million NEW YORK (AP) -'1lie -York stat<! mlllliMouar ..,..W\hotldif lot- tery WU WOO today by Qarlu kJoli, SI, Detroit, Mich. t . Second prlz< of 1100,.ewu """ by pizza·maker Alber! F~. 21, and hiJJ wile, Winifred, 20, Bf'ookb111 N. Y,. Norman L. Cooke, a . -and ~-Oo.chlllman,of Manhattan, .... tlltrd 1111zeol '1!0,IOll. 0, z'..f (11-"'-..n\f 0 it-'• ,'MaJ, W)llf!qt ~ 111111. Jr .• • IO, bll ~ r at,..~ ,el,V l.'.w.ist )Ill•. ~·.Jt· . mg.1 c:Nlt!nn • Mtxirocrt'a'·<iiP1l-~m:1a1·-' !~~'M ifa.t .-. Jlomer9, :n, to4a:y •Wd·pillc:o la aim! -'IJO.'ilo eO<li. . hi• w!lo. He uys abe 111<11' blm rqular-Jo --pr1,., ~wtnp. tk:tet Jy. ho1*t• -.r-11,000.'.1>~ .... :1 "~hiU ""' all tbo tlqio," M-,,,. <Wlnnm -·~'bl . ~ told \J<o. "talt nlcl!t, Ille attacked ~ta of tbo .rm..Pl!f..~-~ me 1 ahot." Racetrack N'Ov. 21 •. 1..,..... ' .\ ., alt.er the lblp -the SS Verdon - went aground about 9 a.m. Th< ship. o,.,.ed by the Spentonbush Transport Co. of New York , waa aground ui lbe East Rockaway Inlet, betwun Rockaway Beach and Atlantic Beach. the border between Queens and Nassau C.ounty ort Long Island. The Coast Guard said a. barge ha d pulled alongside the Verdon to tak~ on .!Ome or its oil . A spokesman said a t1i1g probably would try to pull the ship nfl the· sandbar at high tide around ! p.m. Police Jn Queens said there was ap- parently no danger of the tanker· break· ITlg up. 1be Coast Guan!. said there were two lypes of oil in the ship - a light. heating oil used in homes and a heavier type used in industri al furn arei. The ship was first 1potted by ll Coast Guard helicopter . A lifeboat had lo turn back because of rough seas, but a tug and the barge later reached iL No injuries v.·ere reported to the seven· man crew. UC Irvine Coed Found in Ocean; Death Probed By BARBARA KREIBICH Of !tie Dloll' 1"1111 Sti ff Laguna Beach detectives are in- vestigaUng the death of an attractive UC Irvine.:. 1tudent whose body was recovered from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach shortly before noon Wed· netday. Tbe victim w111 Identified as Carolyn M. Jones, 21, of 12'7 Cliff Drive. UCl official• said 1be iJ regi1tered this quarter as a senior, majoring ln hlrlory. ·An official of the Orange County Ccnner'11 office said that on the basis cf prellmll)ary examination the caUH of death is listed aa "apparent drown· In1," pending completion of an autopay. However, lacer1tklnl were fOUJkl on both wrists, ICCOrdinlJ to detectivel and ll{quards who -.e...i the body. Tbe indllooa reportedly were unusual. run-•!ne le!JIUnril< from the band rather than ac:ro11 the wrist. ,ouaer bndlel and abra1ioAI on the body .t•oba&ly -• caused bi'.· ~ rocU ln ~ .art1, de~ivea ~rmiltd. N<igbbon uld . the young "'ll""'· -pa-.. Uve . In Glendale, ·had UveJl. ln an '~ al tbe ClUI Drive aildi'iill ior one ;...,: alid !oar D10IJlld, Her body war recovered floating In the water about 26 C' off1hore, in tbei >ICliJfty •,of S.01 ; by lil<pard Lt. Eal-deP.Wio. n wu 'clad In undC,w,tar ~ a yellow T-eblr1. A i,.,, blue ~.'ind a maio iboe, 1boamttly < ~' tp .tile· v1Cttm,. wore: /OlllJC! !\I • wf!M J\Of?by' c.nnr·• ~u· oe1 jll< 11me of clOaOJ al ~-lY .I a.Ji>, )Ved· . ~; ~t. hOurl beloro \be )>ody ... ~....... \ ' i' ' perhaps councilmen could alt together with an architect and plug in ideas on the layout and lriterior design of tl:e building. Despile the apparent· progress on the headquarters building, however, idea.s about a satellite fire rtauon in the far northern area of the city remain in limbo. "We are not proposing any such project for that area right now," Carr told • I El Toro Question councUmen. Memben of the pme1 .bne beard appeals from the area ncentlJ for • better level of n~ aervlce for Sbotecllffa and the Harbor Eslatel Mel. The need, ·tt wa1 agreed, will lncreue soon as a new shoppm, center, hospital. mobile home park Md houling tracta are completed in the llCtioa 'which' 11 exp<rlencln& rapid lfOWl!i. • I Sanitary Issue Up for Hearing Property owners in the El Toro Water District will be attending a public hearln& Wednesday, Feb. 3 to decide if the dislricl should expand Into the aan.itation field .. 'T'he meeting has ~ called for 4 · p.m. ·at'. Gates Eltme~ Scl!ool .!\I, l!J;'l't$:to' :•1" ~~,.-,--· to obiec;t. The diltrict, which includes Leialue World, Aegean Hills, and parts of Lall:e Forut, Is proposing to form a anttary dl!ltrict so that it will' be eltlible to obtain state funds If lt decide.! to IO into the waste-water management field. ·Many homeowners · attendJng Jut 'J'ue-'Clay·1 meeting of the AlilO · Valley Homeowners AssociaUon expreased con· fusion over the role the Rossmoor SanJta. tlon Company will play. Rossmoor currently l.ake1 charge of SJtnitation for the area .within the El Toro Water District's boundaries. Jim Bierlein, manager of the company, said in a news release that his company has studied the plan and endorse! it v.·holeheartedly. "Since 1964 Rossmoore Sanitatlon, Jnc. ha5 been actively purstllng the reclama· tion of the waste water it collecls,'1 said Bierlein. "At the present time 1t is reclaiming over 1.5 million gallons of waler each clay for irrigation of a golf course and green belt.I and un· derground basin replenishment. The water flowing in the "natural " ri ver of Lion Country Safari is water that Rossmoor Sanitation has reclaimed." Bierlein added that by products from the treatment plant are also being used for land reclamation. But the Rossmoor f a c 111 t. y will eomeday, U it hasn 't alr.eady, reached a point where it cannot treat any ad- ditional volumt! of sewage, according to Fritz Stradling, El Toro W•ler Diltrlct aJtorney. Additional sewage generated by Roasmoor's customers would ban. to be sent on to other reclamation facWUes or an ocean outfall. If the El Toro Water Dh1trlct beeomel a sanitation 1gency It will have · the power to enter agreements with other SCAG Q.errt public 1gencies to treat this u~ ff. fluent. It could either pai'ticipate In the ,eon- 1trud.ion of gome regional reclaination plant or it could COl;l~ct pipelil\U to tJke the ucW: to ~ ocean otiu~n. Financing for the projec;ts would be part of th• SUO;CNXl,000 bond Ala. -"' ... _,,__ llo ' 'j~ under Propoaiticm 1, the "Clean W1tu Act." Thia 11.1tborizel public qeoclel. ilk• !ft El Toro dlltrk:t wanta to become, to receive. 80 percent slate and federal funding for construction projects. 1bil district would only have to pay 20 pen:onl Rossmoor, a private utility, cannot take advantage of thir funding liDce it Is only for public agencies. "lf the district cooatructed requ.ired facilities with the use of federal and state funds, the financial burden of th& dlatrJct would be materially reduced and at the aame time benefit the people within the district, our Customers. Any fa cllitiel!I conJtructed for the pu1'pose of wate.r reclamatiOfl or reclaimed water transmission would in no way hinder the operations of Rosamoor San1tation, but would augment them," added Bierlein. County Okays Rockwell Fire Station Funds supervisor& agreed Wednesday to spend '2:7,717 on lite JftRJl'llUon of ~ pro- posed North American Rockwell Fire Station in Ltl(UM Niguel. The ·41;617-aquarerfoot ait:i,. w .. donated by the c:ompany. with the proviao thtt the county, build a fire atatJoe there within f60 days. The North Ameri<an plut hat recenU, 11«11 OJOld to the Fluor Corporation and tbe fir• station WllUld be 'tor erotedlon of the <1JllJieortnl' and productiGn laclllty lhat the latter firm plJllll for the •ii<. Th• lire statloa. will be .located at the comu cf La Pa and Avila roads. Orange C~unty (!rowt·h F as·test in Southland • . ' . . I ' ' i (I ' " : \ ' -'• . J' i .. • • • SC ' • • Is Angela Davis Trial Due for Orange County? By TOM BARLEY CH 1111 o.tlJ "let Jtttt Many Oran,. County Superior Court oflicials aod employea are con· vtneed that their courtboule will be the setting for the murder trial of fcnner UCLA professcr Angela Davis. No official approach has been made to Orange i!\ County by the California Judicial Council but it is known that Chief Justice Donald Wright of the California Supreme Court inquired about security conditions in the Santa Ana CDWthoule during discussion of the Davia trial. It seemed almost certain Wednesday that lawyer.i · £or the accused black militant will ask for a change of venue from Marin C.ounty -the scene of the courtroom holdup and slayings that led tc the flilng of charges again.st her. Securtty in the county courthouse was recently strengthened to the point that officlala are confident that their new precautlClnll will meuure up to con· dltions impoaed by any judge wbo decided le move the Davis trial to the South· land. Court.house sources say that Orange County and San Diego are very high on the list of site1 to be considered &hould Miss Davis' lawyers get their change of venue. "It's a possibility," confirmed Superior Court Adminiatrator Leslie McCartney, "and Odef Justice Wright did mention Orange County's security meuur. during a San Fr~ci8co meeting I attended. "But he 1n.1y not have been seriow about it," McCartney added. "There ::"'• bu Cfll'tainly been no offk:ial approach althc:iugh Orange County might be a go&I choice for people wanting ta get as far away. from Marin County as. possible. "That's not to say I.bat we want It here," MeCartney added . "That big trial is 1oing to mean bit problems for someone but if it was assigned to us we would do the very but we can." .• :.storm Hits Northeast; . ' ~- ~Four Lost at 100 Below " B1· United Pra1 Iat.erutlonal An lnteOle storm raked the Northeast :today, .stacktn, snow ln heavy drlfb, :.d 08ing ro1ds and bringing biting cold temperatures. Four hlker1 f r o m the _"'ftutgel"I University outdoor Club were ··mt on mile-hiCh Mt. Washington. N.H .• .~Wber the wind-chill factor was 100 below .uro. · A lell'dt team waited at the base ()f the mountain for a break in the weather to resume the search called off by the bitter midwinter storm. The lour young men. a:: from New Jersey, 'were not fOtmd by three search parties Wednesday, one of which reached t_he -.e 600 foot level of the 6,288-foot mountain, ,. bi,helt In the northeast. •. The temperature was 30 degrees below · Uro on the mountain, and the w i n d 1 -40 miles per hour. Mt. Washington is . Pie windiest spot in the United States, .~Ith a•eragl!I wi nds over 35 miles per "hour and gales as high as 231. .. The storm showed mercy to no ont. ~.Jrom Ontario'• premier to a shell .-fi!henna.n from New Jersey. Premler John Roberta was rescued :Wednesday after spendlng the ni&ht with 400 other 11tranded motorists at a ~highway aerviCfl center near Ingersoll, ;Onl A Po int Pleasant. N.J., fisherman, Richard Knapp, spe nt a harrowing night in an open boat amidst bowling winds and {rigki temperatures before he wu rescued Wednesday. 3rd Day's the Charm BALTIMORE !UPJ )-Wednesday was an unus ual day for Saul Emmer, owner of Sol's Cut Rete Liquors. His store was not held up. Emmer was robbed Monday and Tuesday. That makes 12 times since April, and he says "I can 't count the number cf times I've been held up" since I.be business opened 19 years ago. DAllY PILOT ............ H .......... .................... CMN: 111... S. =, rs ' Ol:AHllE Co.uT 'Vll.llNINO (OMPM'f lta~•rt N. W..4 ,.,.niCl'"t W ""*'..._. Jee\ It. Cvrl.., Viet ,,....111 ... 1 •rid o.n.nl M......- Thtll'l ll K..,,11 •"iw Tlte11111 A. Mvrtihl11• "'-•rlloOlflt """' •1ch1 rd P. Nil a.v111 Or1n11 tovnly Edltw °''""' Cet!1 M ... ; UI WHI l1V Strwt .....,.,., ... ch: nu weu h!llOJ low'-",. • U9UM BNch: m ,..., .. , "-....,,"""'" llNCll : 1117J aMCll ... ...,. .... 1M ~ Jil Hirth El ta#IN ..... ' The men were only two of thowsands who suffered as blizzards closed half the roads in New York State and im- mobilized ,much of southern Ontario. Upstate New York today continued to shiver under biting winds and near zero temperatures, and a 250-mile stretch or snow<0vl!Ted highway from Buffa lo to the Pennsylvania state Une remained closed for the second day. Blizzard warnings were issued for the northern Finger Lakes and counties east of Lake Ontario as winds up to 40 miles per hour swept into the gtate from central Quebec. Albany today recorded an early morn· ing wind chill factor of 54 degrees below zero. ln Rochester, more than ISO schools and businesses were closed Wednesda y by the cold wea ther and impassable roads. At least three highway fatalities in the state were blamed on the weather . The arctic blast Wednesday aJS(I struck the eastern midwest. High winds stacked IS.foot drifUJ across the highways at Cheboygan. Mich., and five-foot drifts n e a r Traverse City, Mich, Florida citrus growers and truck tanners in the deep S(IUth fired smudge pots to ward off low temperatures early today. In sh a r p contrast, Santa Ana winds Wednesday gave Los Angeles a record te mperature of 86 degrees. The National Weather Service said early today flurries and squalls ·were expected to drop up to five inches of new snow near Lake Ontaric. Travelers v.•arnings were posted in northeast Ohio. western New Yark an d northern Vermont Md New Hampshire. Elsewhere, strong winds kept gale warnings in effect today for the Great La,kes and along the Atlantic Coast from Maine to North Carolina. Sno w flurries were reported from the southern portions of the midwest to central Thnnessee. Weather over the remainder cf the coun· try aenerally was fair. Early morning tempe.ratures ranged from 20 belcw zero at Fargo, N.D., to 66 at Brownsville and McAllen, Tex. Lewis E. Riehl Services Slated Servioea were held today in Pacific View ~ for Lewis ):;. Riehl , 843 LI VIN D<IV., ·1.qun, Beach, who died Tueoday 11 tbt &Jiii of 7,. Mr. Riehl, a 25-)'br resident of Laguna Beach, wu the former owner of R\ehl'a Cafe. . He is survived by his widow, Edra; a son, ~ o(J Golta Mesa, IUp«Vitor In the Lqufta .a.ch Lifeguard Depart- ment; a "llaughlet, Dorotlly Wold o( La.gUna Bel~; two slate~!' and one broU\er., .. • ; . or. Dillal -of tM Community PrubytOrlan Clillttb win olflcl1t. " Ill• _.._. to be followed by burial •I Ptdfk: Vtew Memorial Park. Festival Accepting Re8taurant Bids ' Wrltlan ..-11 for h1ndlln& of the rtliaurant eoncesak>n on the Festival of AIU poundl U1ll 1Ummer now art beil>I accepltd, F..UVll dlnctor David Youac. cba!tman cf the reet1uraa& com· lllitlal. '""'"'""' todly. .brtou llltenlted In running the rd.lurtnt trom July 16 through Aui;. 29 m1y tubmlt propcs11ls, In wrltblg only, &o the reauval office, &SQ Laguna Clnyoo !load, prior to Moreb I. Child of War \.Va r can make men -and children -old before their time. In this photo taken by 1'oshio Sakai near Da Nang. South \.'ietnam, a Vietnamese boy cling~ to an older brother \vho appears to be wise beyOnd his years. County Quakers Urge President To Re-fund CRLA The Orange Counly Chapter of the American Society of Friends (Quakers ) has urged President Nixon to approve re-funding of the California Rural Lega l Assistance (CRLA ) program. The program is funded by the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity. On Dre. 29. Gov. Reagan vetoed the Sl.8 million granted lo CRLA for 1971. The governor's action came several weeks after a federa l-state review board , including Reagan appointees, had given the agency a clean bill of health and recommended approval . Reagan's fund veto was overriden by Washington, but only for one month pending a report from OEO. According to Laguna Beach member David Monro. the. Quakers first took action on the fund vetc following Presi· dent Nixon's State of the Union mesiiage. Mr . Nixon, born in Yorba Linda and ra ised and educated in Whittler, is himself a Quaker. Monro said the group sent Ni1on a telegram requesting approval a. n d quoting his "power to the pecple" state- ment from the speech. The telegram noted I.Ge social effect of CRLA, staling that through this agen- cy. "the rural poor had experienced legal .service previously denied them .'' Controversy around renewal cf ~ funds was heightened when Sen. Alan Cranston ( O.Calif.) held up Senate ap- proval of Frank Carlucci. Mr. Nixon 's new appointee as Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity . Cranston asked that Carlucci first state his opinion of the CRLA funding veto prior to confirmation. Adult Classes At Laguna High To Start Monday Laguna Be1ch High School will be~in the sprin g semester of 11dult education classes Monday. Sixteen different classes on a v•rlety of subjects 1tt. being cffered lo the general public for a tuition fte of is each . All classes will begin at 7 p.m., unlw otherwise noted. and students may ~gister and · pay tuition at the first cla!s meeting. The program of courses being offi!rld are: Mondays -beginning and 111dV'lnced art. room S2; weldln9 and metal sculpture. room 43: woodshop, room 4:1: basic print making, room 53. Tllesdays -Crafta and city aculptur-- ln@. room 52: photorr1phy, developlna, printing and enlargina. &:30 p.m .. room it·A: beginning French. room $$; driver education. $10 fee , foom :n : crtaUvt Weeving, r()Om S3 and bf!glruilnl Sp'ntah, room M. WedDHdti15 -humanities, di8Culllcn of modem philosophical trenda. room M; creat.lve stitchery, room 13. Thinclays -autolhop, room 44: Jewelry making. room &1 : tnte.rmedl•te Spanish, room 3.1 : advanced Spantsb, room 32. Paris Talks Put Off PARIS !UPI) -Americ1n. South Vitt· names., North Vietnamest and Viet Cone delegates took a breslt ln Lhe Vietnam peace tal k' today. The regulllr Thursday 8CSslon was postponed bec1use cf the Vietnamese Tet New Year fettl val. The riex-l meeting will be Feh. 4. UCI Change As ·sailed . Sc~l Attempts to Shift EOP Program Ii)' GEOllGS Ll!IDAL .,·al' ........... ff A ~ ..Ulnl aUemJ>t by UC trvlne ~' shift" It.! ' Educational Op- portuntUel Propam for m I 1 o r l t y student• thto' ·U>e 1'm1lmtream. of unlveratty 1dmlni!tr1tton" WI! criticized today by the black who beads the present program. , Timothy Knowles. EOP director since 1999, uld the new UCf plan "never addreased ILaelf tc·the needs of minority atudents." "People hlred by nie university It> run tht EOP program were never con· suited on the new plan. We wtre told either to accept it or leave," Knowles charged during a monthly breakfast meeting between UC! administrators and nl'!wamen. Although Knowles' leadership of the minorily program 11t UCI has been It· tacked by olher minority groups on cam· pus, tht new plan pla~ the ~year-cld former athlete as a• associate dean reporting to the dean of atudent atfairs on a level equal lo associate deans of financial aids, admissions and the Black Musician Claims He Was Shot by Manson LOS ANGELES (AP) -The pen11ty trial or Charles Manson and three women followers conv icted in the Sharon Tale murders starts today with a black musi· cian reporledly ready to testify that Ma~n ahot him with a gun similar lll one used in the Jc;Ulinls. Bernard Crowe, 2'1, ol Hollywood has said he hu a buUet lodgtd in hll back from the aJle1ed shooUng incident at his apartment on A.ua. 1, 1989, eight days before the Tate killings. A witness at the Tate trial said he went to the Crowe apartment with Mansoo and saw him enter carrying a long barreled revolver. Crowe was the firsl scheduled witness of 10 the prosecution said it would call in trying le persuade the jury to sentence the four defendants to death in the gas chamber . They were convict.ed Monday of murder~nspiracy in the slayings of Ml11 Tate and sl1 others. Chief defense attorney Paul Fitzgerald ts to present a motion alleging that the death penalty and the penalty trial required by California law are un- constltuUonal. He will ask that I.he defvi- danta automaUcally be sentenced to life imprlaonment. As the hearing opened today, Fitz- gerald asked to enter a plea of not guilty by ruaon of inwllty fer his client. Patrl· cia Krenwinkel. The judge did not immediately rule on the motion buL swnmoned all attorneys inlo ehambera ·to diacuu the surprise twill, which c1me ju1t before the perralty phase of the trill was about to cpen. Ml.M Krenwlnkel, 2:1 , was convicted cf murdtr~splracy last Monday along with Charlea Man.son and two other wnmen memberii of his hippie style clan. FllZJ!rald told the OOW't he realized lt wai'I "very unu sual" to make a chan1e of pleA at this point but added "I mlli:le a tactical decisio n in advance or tria l and perhaps it wa!'i an erroneous decision." He said he previously felt such B plea would amount lo Miss Krenwinktl admit· 1ing the charges. "Now, however, the !.ituation has changed remarkably," he said, noting that the defendant now laces the life-or-death decision of the jury. Fitzgerald said Wednesd11y the penalty trial rules offered the jury no guidelines upon which to base their crucial decision between life and death . "The decision Is left to the absolute discretion of the jury," he said. "In all other situations than the penalty trial a jury deliberates under the couri·s Instructions and reaches its verdl c!.'1 within the 1re1 deline1ted by the judge. "But in lhe m011t Import.ant decision of alt, whether a human being should live or die, the jury has no guidelines, no standards, no criteria." He said that onct I.he penally verdict was in, the motivea which moved the jury to choose life or death would rema in "obscure, disordered and lrratlonal ... " Lost Student's Body Found in Estuary OAKLAND (UPI) -The body c:if a student at San FrancisC9 Stale College, miSlling since he went sailing Jan. 12. was found floating Wednesday near the mouth of the Oakland Estuary. The Alameda County coroner 's cffice identified the victim as Wallace N. Clark Jr .. 22, of San Rafael. ~~~ ~oo oo a oo & fi.O.e 1 Choose from hundreds of fabrics and over 20 wood or paint finishes. There are combtnations of beau· tiful fsbricg and decorative wood t.ories to blend with any decorator color plan ~. registrar. John C. Hoy. vlct chancellor for ltu· dent affairs, characterized the EOP reorganir.ation "as part or a general administrative consolidation in the ttu· dtnt affairs area dt.!igned lo increase effectiveness. We believe It will require tbe general student aff airs adminis trator to include minority problems and op- portunities in his thinking ... Hoy uid the controversy 1urroundin1 the se parate EOP progr am had diminhih- ed Knowles ' effeetiveneM. •·We 've tended to find staff energ ies focused on an identity crisi11 in that 'EOP' °"'as not a positive tag. bul rather a label " in- dicating minorities had received special treatment. "Morale was low end there was real conflict betw~ black and brawn elements ," Hoy said. UCI is the first of the nine atate university campuses to move ad - ministration of ii.'! mino rity programs Into the "mainstream.'' Hoy maintain• that other univerailles in the na tion "without separate programs. have work· ed more rapidl y to meet the need!! of minority i;;ludents.'' Knowles said he objected to being hired lo "do ene job and then being told to do another or leave .'' Under the reorganization he loses power t. control EOP policy . A Chicano appointee, Julio G11rci11 , who began work today as assoclale de11.n of students "will relieve Tim cf scme of the pressures on him from ether minority groups," Hoy said. Garcia. rormer\y a counselor al Hun· tington Beach High School. will report. to the acling dean of studenl.s and be responsible for coordinating ac~demic advis ing, counseling and academic sup- port for minority students. Three other present minority staff id· ministrators will be reassigned. Two nf these will report to Knowles. The y are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Milner will assist Garcia. Willie Ann Adams an d F'ernandn Cardero were appointed tn lhe UCI Counseling Center to serve under its newly appointed director, Jerry Harvey, Hoy said the •·new arrangement pr\1-' vides three centers where minorities may come for support." Kn owles said the key to the entire project was the appointment or the associate dean of admission! and he charged that "that appointment Is not being consi dered under ucrs affir m11tiv e action program " lo insure appointment or a minor ity person for the job. After Hoy sa id "we 're looking ft>r 1he best qual ified person to bandit that complex assignment and would be ~lighted if we were to find a black capablt of handling the dutie..~" Knowlea s11id, "J"m insulted.'' Your choice H.J.GARRElT fURNITURE ~ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opt1 M•., Tlu.ira. & l'rl. lnL TlY OUR RIYOLYING CHAllil ,· ,, 221& HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALI F. 644-0271 646-0276 < I I I . -• . . -. , Lagonalleaeh Today'• l'lilal N.Y. Stoelul VOL '64, NO. 24, l SECTIONS, J4 PAGES ORANGE cou~. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, '1971 TEN CENTS New Chief of Stormy By TOM BARLEY Of lht DtllY 'Li.r lltff Joseph 0 . Du!aney's successor to the bankrupt Laguna Hills enterprise lefl higfi and dry when the Newport Beach stockbroker left for Germany has been booked on charges of grand theft, forgery and conspirsCy. James E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lcwell Circle, Huntington Beach , was arrested Jan. 22 by FBf agents who picked him up in Los Angeles. He spent five days Jn Orange County jail before being relea!ed on $250,000 ball. But the arrest of the man who moved from the vice president's chair to . ' . Dulaney'• preaidentlll office after the organizer of World Trends Financial Inc. left for Munich, Germany, in June. 1969, was far from pleasini today tt> the man wbo is headini ·the· search for Dulaney. "'Ibis is just what I dJdp't want," said De puty District Attorney Joe Dickerson of that oflloe's fraud division. "Tbere are more than Dulaney and Shipley involved in Uii.s mees and the arrest of Shipley only· draws their at. tenlion to our search." Bill FBI •&enl' Phjllp Sheridan aaid the arrest of Shipley was carried out at Uie request of Orange County authorities and the Huntington Beacl'i~ exeeuUve was picked up on an unlawful fliaht warrant. ''That's all we know about U,'' be said. "The Orange County people can take it from there and we only did what we were asked to do." Dlcbnon is· back in Oranp County from a trip to Flora, Ill., Dulaney's birthplace and the place where be was Stock seen, according to Dlcker::on, within the last two weeks. Dickerson's trip was fruitless but the fraud investigator apparently remains convinced that Dulaney, 37, former Ne .. ~rt Beach resident, Is now back in this ro.mtr)' after an IS-month sojourn in Europe, most or that time being spent in Germany. Dulaney took his attractive wUe M:itlene and two children with him shortly before the burst ot the financi,al bubble that hall been supervised by him from plwh office buildings In Laguna Firm HUis and Seal Beach . Shipley is accused of one count of conspiracy to commit grand theft and forgery: four counts of grand theft an d three counls of forgery , Jdentical warrants were signed for the arrest of Dulaney and his wife. Investigators today believe that the losses of investors in the financial groups controlled by Dulaney will amount to at least $3 million. All his varied en· terprises are in ban kruptcy court in Santa Ana awaiting proceedings that may depend on the tracil'!; of Dulansy fo~ a final accounting. · Most of the lnvestroenta bandied by. Dulaney came from residents of Laguna retirement communities and .a long list of their names i5 today held In tbt bankruptcy cowt'a bulky flies. Shipley recently appeared In bankruptcy court u a witness and be testified at that time that the only con- tact he had with Dulaney after b1s boss left the Laguna mlls "Taj Mab.al", for the last Ume was a telephone call he received from Munich. oe eat ster Not ltlueh Spill High Rise Grounded Ship Initiative Springs Oil Leak Plans Told NEW YORK ( APl -A tanker loaded with a>,000 gallons o( oil ran aground and aprang a leak today off Rockaway Beach on the Atlantic Ocean, the Coast Guard reported. It could not be determined immediately how -much of the oil leaked into the .... The Coast Guard said it WU a .lma.11 le,., Ind llf>I It bad been "stopped or severely rtduced'' about two tours after the lhlp -the SS Verdon - went aground about 9 a.m. The ship, owned by the Spentonbush Transport Co. of New York, was aground in the East Rockaway Inlet, between Rockaway Beach and Atlantic Beach. the border between Queens and Nassau County on Long Island. The Cout Guard said a bar&e ha d pulled alonpldt the Verdon to take on some of its oil. A spokennan said a tug probably 'WOUid try to pull the ship off the lll!ldblu' at hich tldt ......t 8 p.m. · Poli .. lo Qt!.-.aJ4 -· WH 'P' parenUy no dqer Of the tanktr break· inc up. The CoMC: Guard l&id then wert two types of oU"!n the *Ip -a l!al>t helllna oil used in hornel and i heavier type uoed ill Irdiistrial lumaca. The ship 'll'M fifst lflotted by a Cout Guard helicopter. A lifeboat had to turn back becaUle of, routb seas, but a tug and the barge later reached it. ·No injuries were· re.ported to tbe seveo- man crew. Laguna Beach automobile lllelman Spero Janise 1aid Wedneeday he plans to launch an iniUaUve for the J>ISSlle of I city ordinance roqWrlna volnr Ip. proval .. of all commercial high rllt •true· tureo. ~'""•' • ' Jlllile'• ~ """""""" *""1~ ... qull-e approval oL illl.,-jori\11. ol .Ibo vottrl to approve Mt new atluctiire more thin two rtorirt htal>. ' Trash Recycling Overload . Told by Laguna Council Jn a ktw to the LagWla Beacb Plan. ninf Commisaion Janise said he will begin circulating petitions to enact the ordinance by the initiaU•e process. Under the state t~n code, the sl&oatures of 15 percent of the regi!tered voters are required to put the measure on the ballot. There are 6,921 registered voters in Laruna Beach, which means that 1,038 signatures would be required. The proposed ordinance sent in the letter to the Pluming Commission ltltes: "The city shall have the power to erant approval.for a commercll.J bulldlng higher than two stories only If the pro-- posit.ion to make such addition shall first be: submitted to the qualified eltt· tors of the city at a 1peclal or general municipal election, and a m1jorlty of the votes cast on the question of making such addition shall have been cast In fa vor thereof." By PATRICK BOYLE Of 1M 0.llY l'l!tl SllU The swill running ecology movement had some of the wind knocked out o( lls sails at Wednesday 's Laguna Beach Cit.y Council trash study session w~en the practical side of waste recych n& was presented . Representatives of the newspaper, glasa and can reclamation industries told the council and about 100 interested residents that reclaimable trash collected by spirited citizens has in many. cue• exceeded the facilille.9 to reclaim 1t. Many or those attending the meeUng were members of Pro-env ironment P~ pie (PEP ) who had marched to city hall from the House of Hyun Restaurant. The (l'Oup's leader, Mrs. Luisa Hyun. presented the council with petitions bear· ing more than 1,000 1lgnatures urging the council to explore all avenuea· of trash recycling. One of thoee avenues was explained by Robert Maynard of tbe Oraoa:e County W.ut.eplper Company, which purchases old newspapers. Maynard said it ls not pracUcll to collect something tb;at can't be IOld IJICI the numbe r o( coUect<d nenpapers has now greatly uceeded the amount that can be handled by reprocessing plan ts. "We oow have the greatest 1urplU8 J have seen in my 2U years tn U'ie buslnesa/' Ma~ said. He noted that wliereu the price of news~pers 111' mOrltht aa:o wu '20 a ton, the 1urplus hal caused It to fan to 14 a ton, ~ cited tbe recent failure or the Newporl 8eldr nenpaper collectloa prvjeet 11 1'tbe way not to do it/' aq1111 It was ''practlcally _,,mlcalJJ rlc Bl~ck Population Uicre11ses. to 71 % ·~G'ION (AP) -The Nrgn> ~ of the naUoa'a Capital In· i:rt.ad Irom Ii to 71 prreont In the 11111111, according to pr.limlnary "'- °':iodtcau-.... tho! the lllsttlct of ~·1 black populatloa wW .... Unae In ·~· For uampla. the ctly'a acboOI rniOl!ment Illi1I ,_. ta • porant black. 'l1lt 1'10 populatiin ol Wlllllqtoo I• -tiYto 11-7il,llO, wlUI Illa N ..... populaUon brine 537,711. impossible to collect at a home level." Newport Beach had collected, on a trial basis. bundled news~pers from 6.000 homes in the city and the project was a faifure. Maynard said a San Clemente project to begin March I, wUI probably work better because the papers will be taken by the residenl.S to bina located throughout the city, One advantaa:e or recycling the newspapers. Maynard pointed out, would be a reduction in the city'• rubbish collection bill due to lack of heavy newspapers in the garba&e. He also said the county's IAndfill dump sites would lut Ionaer. But he did ltreSll the Industry could not ablorb · tbe amount of paper now being collectrd Ind that new equipment would hive to be ~. One machine wbtch take1 the dye out of newsprint and re--rolll It costs Pl million, be said. "If the stato doctdtd to aavt all 11' paper," he added, "it would have to go to the dUmp boitd Instead 011 ....... Speaklna . I« tho· bottl< induatly, Laguna~ mldmt Paul Griem , m J>™idal of -llocltinr Gia" Com· paoy of Loa . Anpleo, -tho btggat problem wfth reeycllnc bottles WU pt• tin,: them to the plants. He 11ld the bottles hlil to be IOt'ted from the other san.ce, ~uiring· etlber added ti'llh collecliml ~ or ...... pfeln-lly coopmtlon. . A ljloWman for 1111 can illduJlry, John Qallqber ot Ille'. ~ Cln Compootl, -his lndi!lrY -·1t-1tmilar problrma, but @I< I ·1· tllll Ji!ln. nfni the ale o( ~· ...,_ talners, prCJP,OIOd by -~ecoloplo, Wit! not the IDIWel", ~ Search for Body Ends in Tragedy NEWHALL <UPI) -The search for a 10-year-old girl who disappeared from a slumber party in North HoUywood Sunday ended tragically Wedne:aday when her body was found by a family on an outing about fi ve miles aoutheast of here. Authorities ul.d the body of Ka thy Murphy was discovered lylnl: •face down in 1 clearing in spanely populated PIKeri~ Canyon. There . was no immediate indication of the cauae of iiNtb and aherllf's drputi.. aald tlliro ....... aliN she had -·mol<lted. An autopcy wu ordered. Police uld Kltby'a mottwr, Barbara Marpby; la aenlntl I lnnn at the T....un.I .UJaod F<drral eon..t!onal lnltjtute oa a narcotics vlolatlab and brr lather, Doyle Mmplly, lluD Valley. wu ai'rested Tuelday oa IQIPldon. of l•llure to provide aupport. Her body was ldentllk!d by her crandfatl::ler. Robert Mltcbell, •: •Iona wttb bil wife, wu ber pardila. • -' Day Instructors Namedhy~rd Griem told tho oounc:U ht loreaaw Two ultnded day~ have·htrn the birth of I e«npltlnly -.lllduatry !~ln_ted by the ~ p.mnun11y ~ ~~~ ..':C :::. '1ll:''=~)ljf!.-... gram o( collectloa. -of OaltIMW! r:appolnted Ill tho -!acuity lie Jll-... J!ID.e ' .~ alaq fw I I bliltolj -llo' "Ille ovenlntl every ,...., o1 -·oDd ..,. lamed 41..tllDo: Slol -~ at Tllltln ill to colodi.. -Tllo ciy :hireo lllP -. ' ~ Ciizal to rm Ille ....... -~ llallrr, I ~ wllh tho and 11111 U-IUI • baur, Gr!«n San a..,.... PoUce ~ wW aid. -pollce -· .... ;,. J •• .;:,.~ =~,:~= ' .!:-=·=.t.":lot:~·; Oie Obi)• way lll ~ wU'ta·~tloil .. W.-uld; .;_.\:;w;4c~ ""11d be feulble. dwtna the Sprln( quarter. , . ) ' . BodyFound ~ . . ' DAIL V ,11.0T Stiff ,.._.. DON WILLIAMSON, KARLA ALLEN PONDER 1971 PROGRAM New Year Brings New L;-ook to Laguna'• Pageant of the Ma1te" Pageant Will Feature Famed Works of Europe The gleanings of an art is tic "treasure hunt" tha t took Laguna·s Pageant of the Masters producer Don Will iamson through museums. galleries and churches in a dozen European cities last fa ll will make up a major part of the 19n Pageant. Unveiling the program for this sum· mer'a production. Williamson said the six-week tour, which Involved "what felt like about 1.000 miles of walking," yield- ed a rich harvest of prints, postcards, slides and art ·~s from whlth future "living pictures" can be created. Of the 28 Items on the program, In- cluding a total of 41 separate art worka, onJy three, The Venice Bell, Holiday's pa.lnting of Dante and Beatrice and the traditional Last Supper, will be duplicates ol previous presentations. Three or four pieces in the multiple ptt.M:. .. taUons wlll be adaptatiom of ll!Orks Jnr!uded In earlier Pageants, wtniamsOn said. Two of these are the Porch of the Maidens from the Acropolis in Athens ind the Elgin Marble!! from the Parthenon, which will be combined with three statues known as The Satyrs Jn a''hlllalde presentation titled Tribute to Ariclent Grrecr · to clole ·the fin! half di the program. .'A·...,. find, unearthed by Williamoon ~ ~ m;~ ~V:~~~tal~ ~: llicbel Wide. which will br ....,...led On the l"ine BOwl 1t.11e In much-larger· I thiHJ!e"IIze. . I .......... .,._ 1•-'" .............. · ... ~~ ~tm ... -K'lll .. ·•. •.....-.;1:1,.-.. . '~l11<111:1n .,,id and bflHtant ...m.i. studded ' w!tll jewels ' Irom the"hOiin~ 1 of 1'lat Mikhail ' P:jodorv!Ch. now ~~ In ,the Kr,tnlln .Annl>rr ill M01COW; ~· . Sculpture prnrntetlona wm include the , ....... pn-nld>e flt:Um o! •I!t. l.oiCIDia. SL Hef«t;•Ven>nic: and St. Ar*Olf ·ll'rom •illatdo the dome o( SL PeW'1>J1r Rome. , • Fnin• -n..-. Ill Pll'la. I brtlIIant I l ...,........ I , >fililed .sLW. '!fndow ·wUk lie..,.,.., In cOi:nblna~ 111th If I dellclte.. atatue.• of 'OUr 'tady tifPirls. ' A challenge for casting director Karla Allen ;~ a bronze scul pture by England's Lucette Carl...,Tight, depicting an angel lifting a young girl from the ground, probably th~ most difficult posing pro- blem in the program. Third item on the program wlll include eight colorful ship.s' figureheads from old·Ume vessels. now displayed In the hold of lhe Cutty Sark in Grttnwlch, England. Other Pagennt innovations wil l be a pair of plaques by Giotto, depicting the Creation of Adam and Eve, formerly. on the Campanile in Florence, Put no:w kept in a museum; an airy oil painting tiUed Walk by the Sea by Spain 's Joaquin Soro\la , from the Sorolla mueeum In Madrid; a giant mural from Pompeii, to· be posed by 20 models an the ~pper stage: a delicate gilt bronze inkweD with 1 single female figure and a drawing of Don Quixote and Sancho PlllJI by Honore Daumier. Castin& of the 1971 Pageant will pt under way this weekend as volunteer modtb are photographed, meuurM and catalogued In two casting MPklnl backstage at Irvine Bowl. PerlOnl who would like to partlcJpate tn the P•teant i re· lnvtt.ed •to attend rrom 7' p.m. to t 'p.m. 'Saturday * If" I p.m. to 5 p.m. SUnday. • Flag Con.tempt Rap· Dropned Jn Mi~i.~«an r :-; . , ,,} ~ue o.:i~~~~b. :;);~ w-.~ that an Ann ~..,6or ·-dldUIOI act ill conlempt o( U. American na1 11y 1111na It ror t>art of, -o1 his creatlom. · The artist. Davld.OllOWlkl. II. ·dubbed_ the nhlblt In qUootlon. "J. Z4pr Hooter, the Alw.merlcl.n c r l m •· ~.'' ll Cil:l!llil&ed of 1 ,v1,caum. ·~· feltu""' tba•acdpt·of. *"' heJd and I .,...I .. r,ekMllifrOm1 an Amtt1c~ag. In Waters Off Laguna By BAllBARA KllEIBICB Of Ille DellY """' '''" Laguna Beach detectives are I.no vesligating the death of an attractivt UC Irvine student whose body wu recovered. from the ocun off Crescent Bay Beach shorUy before noon Wed- nesday. '.l'hl victi!J! ... lde'Jttll!4 u ·Cirol)'ll M. Janet , 11, of 128T Clift Driv'e. UCI officiats said lhe Is ngiltered tbil quarter as fAtentor, majoring In history. An otfldil o( the Orange• GounlJ'. eoro~·· ofllcr said that on the ham of pfelimhlary eumtnatiOn the causa of death it listed u "appartnt drown:- ing," pending completion of an autopsy. Howevei, laettallons were found on both wrists, according to detectives and ljfeguarrui who recovered the body. 'n>t incisions reportedly were unusual , nut;. nlng lengthwise from the band rather than across the wrist. Other bruises and abrasions on the body probably were caUHd by sharp rocks Jn the area, detectives IW'miled. Neighbor& aid the young woman, whose parents live ln Glendale, bad Jived in an apartment at the Cliff Drivt address for one year and four months. Her body was recovered floating II\ the water about 25 yards offshore,. id the vicinity of Seal Rock, by lifeguard Lt. Eugene dePaul!s. It was clad in underwear and a yellow T·shlrt. A Ion& blue coat and a tingle shoe, apparently belonging to the victim, were fowid ia the water nearby. Coroner 's deputies set the time of death at approxjmately 4 .a.m. Wed· nesday, eight hours before the body wa.a recovered. Record Warmth Will Continue Warm, record letting weather ls e:r· peeled to coDilnue tbrou,ab Friday, ~ cording to a spokesman fOr the Orana:t County Harbor Dlslrict. Officials 1t Ole. Orange ·OJunty Air Pollution Control Dbtrlct prtdlcied liltle or no: smog tbrouah the weekend. A spoke8lllltJ fqr the Barbo< Depart- ment said fail; WM~r and high cloud& were rxpectod to continue through U. weekend witll Ulht -rly wind.! at five to 15 knots. I I • 1. f • ~-Dlll Y P!\OT SC Th~~)', Jlllu.tr)' 28, 1971 • ,. ... ·. " .. .. • ·' ' . ,. . .. ' ' . • Is Angela Davis Trial Due for Orange County? By TOM BARLEY or ., Dt11J "*' ·s111f Many Oran&e Coutity Superior Court officials and employes are con· vinetd that their courthouse will be the setting for the murder trial of fonner ' • UCLA professor Angela Davis. No official approach has been made to Orange County by the California Judicial Council but it is known that Chief JusUce Donald Wright of the California Supreme Court inquired about security cooditions in the Santa Ana courthouse durin& discusaion .C the Davis trial. It seemed 1lmo1t certain Wednesday that lawyers for the accused black militant will ask for a chMge of venue from Matin County -the scene of the courtroom 1 holdup and slay1ngs that led to the flllng of charges against her. Security in the county courtboulle wa.a recently strengthened to the point that officials are confident that their new precaution• will measure up to con· ditions l.Qlposed by any jud1e wbo decided to move the Davi11 trial to the South- land. -Courthouae IOW"Cel aay that Oran1e pxmty and San Diego are very high on the list of siles to be considered should Miss Davis' lawyers get their change of venue. "It's a J»SSlbillty." confirmed Superior Court Administrator Leslie McCartney. "and Chief Justice Wright did "mention Orange County's security me.aaUrea durina a San Francisco meeting I attended. "But he may not have been aerious about it," McCartney added. "There bu certainly been no official approach although Orange County might be A go&r choice for people wanting to get as far away from Marin County as possible. "That's not to say that we WMt It here," McCartney Added. "That big trial ls going to mean big problems for someone but if it was assigned to us we woola do the very best we can.'' '.:Storm Hits Northeast; . . ~~Four Lost at 100 Below :· Jly UD!ltd Preti !Jltautloui The men were anly two of thousands who suffered u blluards closed balf the roads in New York Stlte and im- mobillied much of southern Ontario. Upstate New York today continued ta shiver under bilinl winds and near zero temperatures, and a 250-mlle stretch of snow-covered highway from Buffalo to the Pennsylvania state line remained cloud for the second day. Child of War \Var can make men -a.nd children -old before their time. In this photo taken by Toshia Sakai near Da Nang, South "Vietnam. a Vietnamese boy clings to an older brother who appears to be wise beyond his years. County Quakers Urge President To Re-fund CRLA 'I1le Orange County Chapter of the America n Society of Fritnd1 (Qu1ker1) has urged President Nixon to approve re-f~nding of the Californ\a Rural Legal Assistance (CRLA) program. The program is funded by the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity . -~--· UCI Change Assailed Scho(Jl Attempts to Shift EOP Program , . . " QEOllOI LlllDAL .... ...,,..M9ft A ~ni ieiti/11 att<mpt by UC lrvint -to lhtft tts Educational Op- portunities Prograra. for m i ri or I t y student! into ' the "mal.Mtream of unlvtr111ty adrninlltraUon.'' wu criticized today by the black who heads the present program . Timothy Knowles. EOP direclor iince 1989, uld the new-tJCI plan "never addressed lt.telf to the needs of minority 11tudena." "Ptople hired by the university to run the EOP progrtm were nrver OOl'l- Nlted on the new plan. We wttt told either to 8Ccepl It or leave," Knowles charged during a monthly breakfast meeting between UCJ adminlslratora and newsmen . Although Knowles' leadership of the minority pro1ram at UCl has been at- tacked by other minority 1roups on cam· pus. ttie n~w plan place1 the 26-year..(Jld former athlete as a• auocialfl dean reporting to the dean of atudent 1ff1lrs on a level equal lo Associate deana of financial aids, admiaslona and the Black Musician Claims He Was Shot by Manson LOS ANGELES CAP) -The penalty ttlal of Charles Manson and three women followen convicted in the Sharon Tate murders start& today with a black musi- cian reportedly ready to testily that Manson shot bim with a gun similar to one usad in the killings. Berna.rd Crowe. 28, of Hollywood has uid he has a bullet lodged in his back from the allelled shooting Incident at hit apartment on Aug. I. 1969, eight days before the T~te klfiings. A witness at the Tate trial Ilia.id he went to the Crowe apartment with Manson and .saw him enter carrying a long barreled revolver . Crowe was the first scheduled witness nf 10 the prosecution said it would call in trying to pe.r1uade the jury to sentence the four defendanta to death in the gas chamber. They were convicted Monday of murder-conspiracy in the slayings of Miss Tate and six others. Chief defenae attorney Paul Fitzgerald 111 to present a motion alleging that the death penalty and the penalty trial requ.i red by California law are un· consUtutlonat He will ask that the deff.ll- dants automatically be aentenced to life impri11onm enl. As the hearing opened today, Fitz- gerald asked to ent.er a plea of not guilty by reason of Insanity for his client, Patri- ci a Krenwinkel. was ''very unusual" to make a change of plea at Utla point but added "I made a tactical deciJion In advance of tri,I and perhaps It was an erroneous decision." He said he previously fell such a plea would amount to Miss Krenwinkel admit· ting lhe charges. "Now, however, the situation has changed remarkably," he said, noting th.al the defenda!Jl now faces the life-or-death decision of lhe jury. Fitzgerald aaid Wednesday the penalty trial rules offered the jury no guidelines upon which to base their cruci al decision between life and death. ''The decision Is left to the absolute discretion of lhe jury," he said. ''ln all other situations than th e penalty trial. a jury deliberates under the court's Instructions and re-aches its ve rdicts within the area delineated by the judge. "But In the mos t important decision of all. whether a human being should llve or die, the jury has no guidelines. no standiirds. no criteria." He said that once the penall y verdict was in , the motives which moved the jury to choose life or death would remain "obscure, disordered and irrational ... ., Lost Student's Body Found in Estuary reglrtrar. John C. Hoy. vice chancellor for irtu- dtnl affairs, characttrlted the EOP reorgani7.ation "as P.art of a general administrative consolidalion in the 1tu· dent affairs area designed to lncreaee effectiveness. We believe it wtil requira the general student affairs administrator to includ~ minority problems and op- portunities in his thinking." Hoy said the controversy surroundlna the separate EOP program had diminish- ed Knowles' effectiveness. "We've tended lo find sta ff energies focused on an identity crisis in that 'EOP' was not a positive tag. but rather a label " in- dicating minorities had received special treatment. "Morale was low and there was real conflict between black and brown elements," Hoy said. UCI is the first of the nine 1tate university campuses to move ad· ministration of Its minority programs into the "mainstream." Hoy maintains that other universitle11 In the nation ''without separate programs, have worll:· ed more rapidly to meet the needs or minority students." Knowles said he objected to being hired to "do one job and then beln& told to do another or leave." Under the reorganization he loses power t.t control EOP policy . A Chlcano appointee, Julio Garcia, who began work today as associate dean of students "will rel ieve Tim of some of the pressures on him from ether minority groups." Hoy said. Garcia, formerly a counselor al Hun· tington Beach High School. will report to the acting dean of st udents. and be responsible for coordinating academic advising, counseling and academic 1up- port for minority students. Three other present minority staff ad· ministrators will be reassigned. Two of these will report to Knowles . They are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Milner will assist Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and Fernando Cordero were appointed to the UCI Counseling Center to !ierve under ita newly appointed direclor, Jerry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arran1ement pro- vides three centers where mlnoriti~s may come for support." "1 · An intense 1t«m raked the Northeast •today, stacking snow in heavy drifts, ~'closlnl roads ind bringinl biting cold _ temperatureJ. Four hiien f r o m the ;.Rutgers University Outdoor Club were ht Oil mile-hlgh Mt. Washington, N.H., 'wber the winck:bill factor was 100 below ..... A search tetrn waited at the base of the mountain for a break Jn the weather to resume the search call ed -oU by the bitter midwinter storm, The (our )'OWll men. 1:: from New Jersey, litre ll'!l lound by lhf,. 1Urth Pfrlies .iednoi4ay. one of "hlih reacbt4 Uie ~ ,a>o toot level of the &,218-.foot mountain, Blizurd warnings were issued for the northern Finger Lakes and countJes east of Lake Ontado ~s winds up to 40 miJu per hoiir sWep't Jnto the st.ate from central Quebec. 1 Albany today recorded an early mom-ma "'"'1 chill factor "' !II deifees below .. ,.. On Dec. 29, Gov. Reagan vetoed the Sl.8 million granted to CRLA for 1971. The governor's action eame aeveral ·week:! 11.fter a federal-state review board, Including Reagan appointees, had given the agency a clean bill of health and recommended approvtl. Reapn'1 fund veto was overrlden by Wasbingt.on. but on1y for one month pending a report from OEO. The judge did not immediately rule on the motion but summoned all attorneys Into chambers to discuss the surprise twist. which came just before the penalty phase of the trial was about to open. Mlae Kr.enwink.el. al, w1.1 convicted of murder-conspiracy last Monday along with charles Manaon and twn other women members of his hippie style clan. Filller•kl told the court be reali~ It OAKLAND (UPI) -The body of a student at San Franclscn Sta te College, missing si nce he went sailin1 JAn. 12. was found fl oating Wednesday near the mouth of the Oakland Estuary . The Alameda County ct1roner's office identified tht victim as Wallace N. Clark Jr •. 12, ot' Stn Ra fael . Knowles sa id the key to the entire project was the appOintment of the associate dean of admissions and he charged that "that ;ippoinlment Is not being considered under UCl's affirmative action program" to insure appointment or a minority person for the job. After Hoy sa id ··we're looking for the t>e:si .qu.Ufied person .to handle that complex assignment and would be deligh ted if we ")'ere to find a black capabl• cf handling the dutia'! ~owles said, "I'm in11ulted." btat In Ille northeast. 1 ' temperature was 30 degrees belo.,. "leTO 00. tbe mountain, and the w l n d s .lit mllea per hour. Mt. Wasbin&tcn i& ·lie wtndldt spot In the United Stat.s. • "Ith aver11e winds over 35 miles per bour and 1ales as high as 231 . .. 1be storm showed mercy to no one. • trom Ont&rio's premier to a shell ~tJ.sberman ttom New Jersey. .. Premier John Roberts was rescued Wednesday after spending the night with • 100 other stranded motorill.8 at a ~qhway service center near Ingersoll, Ont. A Point Pleasant, N.J., fi!herman, Richard Knapp, spent a horrowing night lri an open boat amidst howling winds and frigid temperatures be.fort he was rescued Wedne.sday. 3rd Da y's the Charm BALTIMORE !UPlJ -Wednesday was an Gnusual day for .Saul Emmer. owner of Sol's Cut Rate Liquors. His store 'A'as not held up. Emmer wa~ robbed Monday and Tuesday. Th3l makes 12 times since April, and he says "l can't count the number of timeir I've been he ld up " ~i nce the business opened 19 years a110. DAILY PILOT N..,.., .... ll•ils;t• ..... l.epM .._. ....... .... C.... ..... .. C' 'I OlANOll: '°4ST l'UllllNrNO CJ:lllllNW/ Jl:o'ot rl N. W.M P'nllollenl •rollll l"ftl.._. J es\: It~ Via PT•IO'.,.t 1rA ,.,,.,.... Thorn•1 1Ctt¥11 Edl11r Jhom11 A. Mij1phl11• M1n19ln1 tdlttr Ric~11" P. Ht• St\1!11 O!•"lfl Coun!r li•lltf' otfl .. C!llle Mn1; Ill W•! lt'I' S!'"' .....,,., 9"(111 ttll Welt 1•1116• .... llYtl'C. '-""""' a.tdu ID "''"I A-Miii'!""'*° lllk!'lr 11111 ... di •ev"'1m .... Gfllnlillll: .. filtrlll 11 ~ .... ' In Roche1ter, more than 150 achools and bu11nesHS were closed Wednuday by the · cold weather and Impassable ro&da. At le.a!lt three highway fatlilitles in the stlte were blamed on the weather. The arctic blast Wednesday also struck the eastern mfdwest. HJgh winds stacked 15-foot drifts across the highways at Cheboygan, Mich., and five-fo0t drifts n .ear Traverse City, Mich. Florida citrus grower.; and truck farmers in the deep south fired smudge )»ts to 11.'ard off low temperatures early today . In i'i harp contrast, Santa Ana winds Wednesday gave Los Angeles a r~rd temperature of 86 degrees. The National Weather Service said early today flurries and squalls were expected to drop up to five inches of new snow near Lake Ontario. Travelers warnings were posted in northeast Ohio. weai.ern New York and northern Vermont and New Hampshire. Elsewhere, strong winds kept ga le warnings in effect tod8y for the Great Latts and along the Atlantic Coast from Maine to North Ca rolina. Snow Uurries were repor~d from the southern portions of the midwest to central Tcnnes11ee. Weather over the remainder of lhe coun· try geiierall~ was fair. . Early .mortling temperatures ranged from 20 ~ow zero at Fargo, N.D., ·~ .. seat BroWDJVille and McAllen, Tex. ~wis E. Riehl Seniees · Slated . ' ·-.. strilod ..... ii.Id· today In Pacific View al+.J !er !AWis' E. Riehl. 8'3 La Villa t>flvt •. t.llun• BO.cii, who died T\Judoy at Ille ..... of 71. , Mr. Riehl, a •ytar resident of Laguna Beath, was tbi· folnier owner of"1tleh1 's Cafe. ·He la ·aurvived~by bis widow, Edr1; 1 ICll'I. RodMJ of. Colla Meaa, auperfl11or In th LopDa Modi JM<auud Oe\>orl-ment: • dlllil*'1·'Doi;othy Wold' ol LlpDI ~'-h.0 elite.rs and one . brO&her ·-.. • '• · ,Dir .. ~ .• ~.cil the ccmmun1ty · "'"llijm:Ollftb will officlat& at .tho. -'111, ... ~ .b1 llurlal· At, l'aclllc View M.mortol Park. Feati~al A~eptiog Reata..irant' Bids Wrll.teo 11aiiooola !or hlndlinl of the rutaurt'bt eoaceaatan on the Futl.Yll of Art.I lfOUlldl this summer now art. btlns acc:optad. rClllvol dlreciOr Dovld Youna. cha.ln'nan of fM rtltlurlllt com· m-.. IJlllOtll!COd today. i f'.11~: .....,1-.d In runotfl&· the ........,...,, flot!I July 11 lhrotljh Aut· 111 may 1116"riiit propouls. In writing oa17, to tlle re1Uv1I office. 11SO Lqun• Ooa7011 llold, prior to Much t. According to Laguna Beach member David Monro , the Quakers flret took .action on the fund veto following Presi- dent Nixon's State of the Union meua11e. Mr. Nixon, born In Yorba Llnda ind ra ised and educated ln Whittier, ii himself a Quaker . Monro said the group sent Nixon a telegram requesting approv.al and quoting his "power to the people" state- ment -from the speech. The telegram noted the social effect of CRLA, slating that through this agen· cy, "the rural poor had experienced legal service previousl y denied them .. Controversy around renewal of the fund s "'as heightened when Sen. Alan Cransto n (0.Calif.) held up Senate ap- proval of f rank Carlucci, Mr. Nixon 's new appo intee as Director of the Office of Economic Opportun ity. Cr;in!ilon asked that Carlucci first stAte his opinion of the CRLA funding \•eto prior to confirma tion . Adult Classes At Laguna High To Start Monday Laguna Beach High School 1¥1ll b6aln the spring semester o( 1dult educaLlon classes t.1onday. Sixteen different cl uses · on a variety of subject! ll't being offered to "the general public for a tuition fee of $5 e1cb. All ctasaea will beglri 1t 7 p.m., unlm otherwise noted. and atudenta may regisler and piy tull.iOn 1t tM Crat, class meet1n1 . The program cf course• beln1 offertd are: Mond•ys -bt!ginning and 1dvanced art, roam ~2 ; weldlnll 1nd metal sculpture, room 43: wood.,hop. room 46; basic print maklna. room sa. Tueld1y1 -trafts and clay. ICUlptur· Ing. room 52: photoer•PhY. d~loplftl, prinUn1 and enlarginc, ·e:!o p.m., room 71·A; be111nning Fr~ rGOm 15; drtver' education, SIO fee, rt10m »: c:reaUv1 , ~!:~m SS and betl"*'"!. Spin.lib, . W ,.. -bumanitle!, dltct11tkm of modhn phiiosophJcal trendl, room 5$: creaUve llitebery, room 53. Thmd.,.. -outnohop, room '4: Jewtlr1 maJW>a. """" 11 : tnt.rmedi•" Spanish, n>0m 13: •dv•nced Spanlab, room n . Paris Talks Put Off PARIS (UPI) -Amtrlcon. South Vltl- namete. North Vietnam• aftd V\lt COnl deleaates look a break ·in °'8 Vietnam putt taJka today. The r.,ullr Tbunclay session was ~tponed becau11 of the Vietnamese Tet New Year faUval. The next meeUn1 will be Feb. 4. Choose from hundreds of fabrics and over 20 wood or paint finishes . There are combtnations of beau· tilul fabrics and decorativa wood tones to blend v.'ith any decorator color plans. Your choice H.J.GARRETf fURNITtJRE ,RO~ESSIONAL INTIRIOR DESl~NERS o,_ MM., Thur~ l l'rl. .. ... TlY OUI llVOLYING CHAIGI 2215 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. .... 0175 646-027' I I 1 l I I i I I I I San Clemente Capis:trano EDITION . Tedlly'• l"leal ' N.Y.S*U ,, vot:. 6'4, NO. H, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE ,COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, .J~NUA~Y .28,. "71 • . ' . Mayor Chafes at Fire J)ep~rtment Pressure As two San Clemente architect.a took notes, city councilmen W~esday once again pored over plans lo build a new fire department headquarters at civic ttnter, using a unique deployment of manpower . While councilm~n took no action on the matter in their study seMion Wed- nesday, chances seemed better for authoriz..ation soon of drafting plans for a 7,009-square-fO?t building capJble of" . Doum the Mission Trail Viejo Library Group Formed MISSION ~GJO -;. Friends of the ·LibrarY ~ has been formed for tho IH'....,.Vlefo brand of the. Ora&t County Library. --.- '!be group Is ~Ing • wlnt ta.U.C party u it. ml l\1ncl raising ••enl for Feb. 11 at I p.m. in tht MJMion ViejO ftecrealion Center, 25800 Montanoso Drive. The new library, a ,250,000 facility, b located on Chrisanta next to the new movie theater. Anyone interested in becoming a "lriend" may call Mr~. George Ragsdale at13G-'H~t. DaMe Cl ... 1e1 Otftted 1.-'KE FORF.ST -Dari~ classer are beinJ offered in February for all Lake Forest realdents. 'Jbose: interested in learning all of the late b well as traditional dances may sign up in the club office for the 25 week session which •ill be offered for $1.25 per couple per week:. Bill and L-Ouise Melikejon will be in- structor11. e Operation Helpline MISSION VIBJO -OperatJon Helpline ls in need o! volunteers. The Helpline, which provides 11. listener for teenagers and adults in need of advice, is sponlOttd by the Saddleback Valley Ministerial A.seoclation. If tnterl!Jted Jn 1iving time and service to th<>&e wbo Mfltsomtone to talk t. at crilical ti!Ma CiU B.»2$22. •13,000 s.z...., Ob11efl EAST IRVINE -A alary ochedule for the posit.ion o( psycbometriJt baa been approved by Trustees of he San Joaquin ElementMy School District. Ptychometrista--lpecllli.sts in mental measurement-will beJtn at f13 ,000 a year and wll1 be able to progreu through five steps of an additional $325 each . until flt,300 la reached. 'l'lle ocbedllle ii betweea the limit. ~le for teacbera 1 n d ad-- miillslnt«s. ....... C.aJt ll'eatlter ---.. -.. --.. --.. .,_ c-tr '' --.. -.... .,.. ,_..,....»ti ·-. ·-.. -. ......... It ._,, ..... , .. " ........... H houslng 16 firemen at a tim e, four pieces of rolling_ stock and offices for a complete firefighting operatiO(I. ~ But Mayor Walter Evans, long a foe of rushing the fire depar.tment plans, claimed . he fell the , dJy waa; b e i n g "pressured into approving something r ight away, a metbod I don 't really like." San Clemente archit«t& Leon Hyten, who has ectively souaht the designing Floodiag €heel' job, and 'Ricardo A. Nicol each tp'eed that they could build a new htadqutrters building capable of · 11erving city needs fo r dozens of years at a "horseback cO!t" of about $20 a square foot. Ci&y Mana11er Ken Carr,, offered, however, that in the fire department plans, the stress would be on adherence to strict financial limitatlon1 of 11 budget.ed. $170,QOO for the bWldinc and furnishings. • I DAILY ,II.OT .......... A $120,000 project t-0 control flooding on Calle Fontana in Cap1$1:1J10 Beach is in progress and expected to be completed in about one month. The massive drainage facilities will run along Calle Fortuna to Bluff Park in Palisades area. M cl ntire' s War Victory March Slnwd Saturday After tumultuous beginnings, th e for the rally-caused councilmen to in- march for "a total victory in Vietnam" itia!Jy deny permlalon for the event. by Dr. c&rl Mcintire and his followers After a personal a.ppearance by the In San Cl~\e I~ definitely set to minl!ter. Linda Lane wu qreed upon. travent sewn! dty atreets Saturday Mcintire hu indicated thlt decorated afternoon at.~ o'clock. 1 " e~, ~(ven by his supporters from The. parade ~permit workM out with ~boat Southern California would the ~-Cl~nte Pollce Department abo become part of SlturdAy afternoon'• lhow1-the .. event will begin at Old Plaza parade. · · Park. u..i ·bead up El Portal to El n.e·'....t Is the first of _. tllan Caminp. RtaL ' '!.. .., Aller that the', -di will proceed lq a<tMl!ea' In ~ U.S. taim ·and IOUth on El Clm:lfo, west on Pallzada ctiJel ·~ for 'I total vicb;J ti tbe on to ~ i:ane;. lben down to Linda wan Jn ec.lihaut.Aa'la. Lane and tbl! .W\dty park near the beach. ~ Polk.e Chief Cllffofd Murray said the rlcttt 2 hand l1ne and II.boulder of each roadway has been lpproved 11 the inard>IJll ...... ' ', .At tbt raOy, where the our.poken New Jersey evangelilt trift \ make an ap- pearanoe, tbe mar:cJililn w1ll ling relirloul and palrlotlc• ~p .and hear ·-from Dr. ll!dntlre and otben. One rule In the ..... of lJnda Ike la that • Joudapoabrs--·---by•llte dty an.r two -o( dlapll6--mast be po!mled ...,,ard. Tiie pmbiitly of realdollCes to Old Plua·Part -'Ibo crtctiill.lintendad ttte c!JJd Tale -!New Twist ' ' ill!XICO'Crtf (UPI) -Marcial Moron Romoro, 32, today a.ad pollce ii ahest hit wife. He ,.YI Ille beat. him r...,W-. 1,. . "~ hill 11)11 all 'the Ume," >Ion>• told ·police. "Lisi nl&h4 &be allacked me wUh 1 ahoe." Holiday Lc;>tteey Prize $1 )fillion NEW YoilJt (.IP) -.'J'lil Nilir York Stale mllJlon.<lollar opeclai • holldq Jot. (ery WU WOll 0 loda1 ~ QwJea JDola, fl, Detroit, Mich. f • \. Second prize of 1100,D WU -by pizza-maker Alber! ,,.,...., J9,.IJld hil wife, Winifred, Z. 8rool1JYo. N.Y. Norman L. Coolrl, .--~ ad COnooffdaled l!:dllan co. .....-... of Manhallan, ..., tNrde!ol fllO.OIO. Maj. W!IUq> JI Jr.,. Z, 1111 "tr., 14ry. :at. aod their m dllldHn. -lwrth prlle,ol Ja..IOll. 1en OIMr srand Uei' Odm llDlilon won tl0,000 each. ., In CONOlatlon prise drawlnp, llcAI holdtfs won from fl,IXIOltb:.-,elf.· ... "' Tiie wlrmert ...... -•llJ.lllo ,....ii. o1. UJe lourth .nco.ol >qi..,.. Racetrack Nov. 21, lt'nl. 4'la; the put ·fe:w year& we have ll!m how plam for capital P<OJl<!a have u· ceeded the !hlanclal llmill, ln<ludlng the co=e;Jty clubbouae and the pier entrance plana," Carr uld. , ''Tbe .. ctty .lbcl&ld 1tron11Y. hold . the tine on "thi!-; '1nt," he added. Carr suuea\e4 th1t If the council approved lht dulpln1 of the bead· quart.en, he, Fire CbJef Merton W. Hackett, • pone! of Ore advllon and perbape · councilmen could ait io,ether with an architect and plug in ldtaa · on the ' layout and inltrlor desi&n of lte building. Desplte the apparent· progres1 on the ~1dquartttt bUikfurg, however, idei.s about a satellite fire station in the far- northem area of the city remain In limbo. hwe .,.., not propostq u y such project for · tbai area rifht D1iw," Carr told •• .I El Toro flue•tion coondlmen. Members of the paoel • blve boord appeals from UJe vii ·.~reetn6Jr for .. betttr level of firt lel'V1ee ror Acncllffl and th< liarbor Eslatei'...._ ' The need, tf WU agreed, wm.IDcreai• aoon as ' a new-alK.ppinc center. holpital, mobile ho~ pari: Ind bouaing tradl are completed In the teellon-which la uperleocing rapid srowth. .. • l Ship Runs Aground Near NY NEW YORK CAP) -A lanl<er loaded with Ul,000 gallons of oil ran aground and sprang a leak today off Rockaway Beach on the AUantic Ocean, the Coast Sanitary Iss~e Up for Hearing Guard reported. It cciuld not be determined lmmediately Ptoperty owner11 in the ~ Toro Water District will be attending a public ~~in& Wednuday, Feb. 3 to decide. if the district should e.xpand into ill& IU\i.tation ~w .moch of the oil lelked lnto 'the field ; sea. The meoling ha -called for .f Tlio·co..t·Qlanl uld ;1,. ..... omall ' ' . . . . ' ' ' .,.. ~-r;« hlf<•••·""·;,11 . lill1'f!··!t(e; •• ~ 1"!""' .. <r --~-redllced" 1""11 ._ tours ~ ,.,....., ••• to objecl - after Jba lhip -the IS Vlljoo -Tiit clillrlcl, ,,_, ~ 3 -iliftiue ~ • •·"" ' . ' ..tarfd, A ..... Htii., d 1'arii of , · ,,,. .lblp, .-by the !j!dcll-"'-I, 1* propostn1 to -•· • , Tranaport ,co.-of N ... York, WU...-dJa1rk:t .. that tt wilf be eJl&lble to ~ the Eaat Rockaway Inlet. between Obtain ata.te funds lf it dee~ to ao Rocklway Beach and Atlantic !each, Into thl! wade-water m-..--t fitWI the .border between Quel!ns Ind NaMIU · ---w., · Courity on Long llland. . Many homeowners •Ctendinc lut '1'llf' Coast Guard uid a 'bar .. ha d ~r"• meeting of the Allio Valley pulled alqside the V~don to take on Homeowners Asaoclltlon ex~ con- wne of lb: oil A apoblmln ,Aid .• fuaiOa 09er the ro~ the Romnooi Slnlta· ... probably would try to pulf the abip tion com-·y will pl•v ff the -at hilh lido -·-· ~· lo R!."l!MNIOI" CUIT'eftijy tall:• ...__ of p.m. '"-•o; POiiet In QllOelll oald lhlre WU ap---for tht area wttllln the El pat<lllly no daqir of the tanl<er-· Toto W-·Dlltricl'1 bouJ\d&rle1. lnl up. tlllri 't Jim Bler1etn, manqer of the -pony. t The:;:::~ ,.:1".. a »Pl"'l::.U: Iii<! In •.new• releaae that hit compiny m>f' "liaed in homes and a· beavter type Mt 1tud1ed the plan and endorses It used in industrial furnaces. wholeheartedly. Tbe ship wu first spotted by a Coa1t "Since 19&4 Rossmoore Sanitation, Inc. Guard helicopter. A lifeboat had to turn ha• been adlvely pursuing the reclama· back because of rough 1eu, but a tui tion of the waste waw it lied.a 0 and tht barae later reached lt. co • No injuries were reported to the aevtn-1ald· Bierlein. "At thf: pr!!sent ttine it man crew. is reclaittlin& over 1.5 million tallcins UC Irvine Coed Found in Ocean; Death Probed of water each day for irtigatloo of a IOlf cwrlM!: and areen belts IJtd un- dersround basin repleollishml!nt. · Thi! water flowln1 in the "natural" ·ttver of Lion Country Safari i• water tblt Rossmcor Sanitation bu reclaimed." Bl<rl<ln added that by producla fronr the treatment plant are allO being used for land reclamltioa. But the Rosanoor f a c t 1 l t y • will oomeday, If H hasn't a~eady, tead>ed a polht whtre Jt cannot trut any ad- dlUon1I volumel' ot. ••I'· ~acootdlnl· to Frill Stradllni, El Toro Waler. Diotrlc:I aUorney. . · Addltlonal ' aewap 1-..i:! b!y . ftounMMC'I CUltomer1 would b&J't to ' be aeoi cin IO.oiber reclarnatloo ·1acU1u. or aft ocun f'tiqUaIJ. = · ' ~ · u llJO 'El Tar.· waier Dlllrlct -• .matJoii .... ., ' It will .. be ... tlio po•n•'"'lo '-.,..-wllb .<lllllr ., • . . public a&encies to treat this exe111 ef. fluent. , It could either partk:lpate Ia: tba .con- struction of 1<1me retk>naJ rlclamaUcm plant or It could -t plpelimi ·lo t.ake the aClll to an tX::lln aUttau.. -. ' . ' Jiofiictn1 · llr' lllt · ,...., lftllld . ., port of Iha ~ -.. _,_,Ilia-Jut~ • ~-'" ...... ..._,waur ~~~~=~ to re<ielve IO ·perOent llatt and ·federal lundlnl for constlUdloa P<OJecta. Tl:ll d111llct wotild only hive to P,Y 20 -'· Rosamoor, a privlte utllily, cannot take advanta,~ of this fund&Jc 1lnal it ls only for public qenclu. "u the dlatrlct COllllructed required faclliu,. with the ... of fedaral and stale fund•. the financial bw-d>n al the dlMrlct woul4 be 'materially reduced and •t the wne ttme benefit Ibo poopi. within the dlitrid. our ~ ll1f1 lacll!tie• -fir the -of water reclamation or reclaimed water transmission would in no way hinder the operations of . Rosamoor Sanitation,. but would augment them," added Bierlein. · County Ok~ys Rockwell Fire Station Funds ' ' ' l ) • r 1! OA!l Y PILOt 4 .. • Is Angela Davis . Trial , .. .. • I " .' Due for Orange County? • •. By TOM 11.uu:!:v Of Ille 0111r Plllt 1t1H Many <>mce' County Stqierior Court officials and employes ara con- vinced th.It their courthouse will be the setting for the murder trial of former UCLA profesaor Angela Davis. No official approach has been made to Orange County by the California Judicial Council but it is known that C'h.ief Justict Donald W/ight of the California Supreme q,urt inquired ~ut security_ conditions in the Santa Ana ~ durini di3clwion of the Davis trial. It seemed almost certain Wednesday that lawyers for the accused black militant will ask for a change of venue from Marin COurity -the &eene of the courtroom holdup and slayings that led to the flilng of charges against her. Security in tbt county courthouse was recenily strengthened to the point that· officials ire confident that Uteir new precautions will measure up to con- ditions imposed by 1ny judge who decided to move the Davis trial to the South· •. land. • Courthouse aources say that Orange County and San Diego are very high , , on the .. ll.tt of sites to be considered lhould Miss Davis' lawyer5 get their change olv-. l3 t'a •· possibility."' col\firmed .Superior Court ·Admini11trator Leslie MoCll'1nty, \'and Olief Jualice W.rJabt did mention Oranae County's aecurity l< 1D6llWlm durlq a San FrlllCi&CO meeting I attended. • ,••:aut be •may-not hive been serious about it." McCa rtney added. ".There lw '*'"1n!Y. been no off)clal approach althougb Orange County might he a gool! dlOice for people wantinl. to get 111 far 'away from Marin County as pos.slble. "'That's not to say tblt we want lt here." McCa rtney added. "That big trial is going to mean bii problenu for someone but if it was assigned to us • .. we would do the very best we can." :·'---------------.J ""-" ~Storm Hits Northeast; •• " ' ,Four Lost at 100 Below , .... . ' By U.Uted Pren Interutloul ~,An fMeme It.Orm rabd the Northea$t ':t'oday, st_acklng snow tn heavy drifts, Cfusini roads and bristging biting cold ~peratur.es. Four hikars f r o m the : eltgen, Uniftrstty Outdoor Club were .tiit on mile-high Mt. Washington, N.H .• ,"f~r the wtnckblll factor wu 100 below :aero. A aearch team waited at the base of the mountain for .i break in the .... u-;o. ,....,,. lhc .. &earch called off by the bitter midwinter storm. The lour young men, a~: from ~e,w ~~sey, were not found by three search parUes .jt'edl>efday, one of wbicb reached \he '9.,800 foot level of the &~' mountain, bllhest Jn the northeut. • ·:.,_The temperature wu 30 dqrees below ·iero on the mountain, and the w i n d s :io miles per hour. Mt. Washington ii the Windiest spot in the United State.s, ·With average winds over 3S miles per hour and galu u high u 231. : ', The storm 1ho~ mercy to no one, :rrom Ontario'• prtmier to a shell :~herman. from New Jersey. ... Premier John Roberti was rtscued . WednOlday alter spending the night with :lro other atranded motorists at a ~~way service center near Ina:ersoll, Ont. A Point Ple1s1nt, N.J., fisherman, ftiehard Knapp, spent a hom whli niaht in an open boet tmid!t howling v.dnde •nd frigid te mperaturts before be was re3CUed Wedn~ly. 3rd Day's the Chartn BALTIMORE (UPl)-Wednesday wu an unu5ual day for Slul Emmer, owner of Sol'5 Cut Rate LiqUOt5. His sto~e was not held up. Emmer was robbed· Monday and Tuesday. That makes 12 times since April, and he gays "I can't count the number of times I've been held up" since the. bualoeu opened ii years ago. DAILY PILOT .....,.,. .... I' • IM ._. ........... -·-cw M... S.C IS Olt.M40E COAST l"UILISHtltO CtJJU»rf a.oMrt N. WN4 l'm ..... r •rA ......... J•&k It. Cwlw Vic• "'"6!1"'1 •rAI Gtllwel ~ Tllelfl11 Keirvll IGl1M' lhe"''' A. Mv?ltlrt11 M•M11"'1 ltlltlt lli(~l td '· "·· Jo\J!h O'll"f'O '°"'"'Y lrtllW Otflcn c .. 11 M111: .JJll wn t 11v s....., ~I I Utl>: ml W.11 11-.,1 ... 11¥9P'C • ......... 1111(11: 112 .. _, ,.,_ H"""""°" 111~~: llllJ 1-11 ........ 111 1i1n c.ntrlk: • Ntr1h I.I ~-AMI ' •1 DA"-l P"°"• .... •ldl .. ......, flll .... ,_. ___ _ ..,. ....... "'""" .... u.-· ... ~ .,.....,. ~ . C9M ""-• """'""-*' ~ .,.. "-"'l~ \111tr(, ....... wlftl -,..... ......... Or .... C..t ,........., - _ .. '""I.:: .. "" -.. _ .,,,.,__ ..... - ---~-· .. '1i a ; r-7 •h•• '4Mll'I" t a au PW,..,,,..,._...,. ... AAJll .. tUhl cats •21• --~· .........-._. -...... =-~ii:. .~· MiCiNIM .. I - ..... .. ,teetll im£11 --A~ The men were only two of thousands who suffered aa blizzards closed half the roads in New York State and im- mobilized. much of southern Ontario. Upstate New York today con tinued to shiver under biting winds and near zero temperatures, and a 25G-mile stretch of snow-covered highway from Bulfalo to the Pennsylvarua slate line remained closed for the second day. Blizzard warnings were issued for the northern Finger Lakes and coun ties ea st of Lake Ontario as winds np to 40 mllu per hour awept Into' the" slate from central Quebec. Albany today recorded an early mom· inl wind chill factor d M degree& below aero. In Rochester. more t,han 150 schools and busi nesses were clcl6ed Wednesday by the cold weather and im passable roads. Af least three highway fatalities in the state were blamed on the weather. The arcUc bl1st Wednesday also struck the wtern midwest. High winds &tacked 15-foot drifts across Ille highways at Cheboygan, Mich., and five-foot drifts n .ear Traverse City, Mich, Florida citrus growers and truck farmers In the deep south flred !imudge pots to ward off low temperatures early today. In sh a r p contrast, Santa Ana winds Wednesday gave Los Angeles a record temperature of 86 degrees. The National Weather ServiCf! said early today flurries and squalls were expected to drop up to five inches of new snow near Lake Ontario. Travelers warning.s were posted in northeast Ohio, western New York and northern Ve rmont Ind New Hampshire. Elsewhere, strong winds kept gale wamtn.as in effect today for the Great Latu: and along the Atlantic Coast from Mi.Irie to North Carolina. Snow flurries were reported fro m the southern portions of the midwem. to central 1'!.nne!lsee. Weather over the remainder of the coun· try aenerally was fair. !:arly morning temperatures ranged from 20 below zero at Fargo, N.O., to 66 1t Brownlvll!t and McAllen, Tei:. • LeWis · E~ Riehl . . . Serrir.es Slated ~·-=---held today in P1clflc View Cbapei'hr' Unrta E. Riehl. 813 La Viola Drift, Lquoi Bea<ili. · who died 'l)l°""Y at t11e"ap,oi 71., ' · Mr.~.,_.~ resldenLof Laguna _Btacb, wu tbl termer .owne:rlof ftith.l 's Cafe. He is ~ by hi& w,idowJ. ~r1 ; • a son. Rod"'>"ol Coota Me,., au~ In the Ll&ui\*:l*dt Llf""1ud DePak· ment; 1 daltlllter. Dorothy Wold ol Lllqna . atacb-: two sisters and one llrO&htr .~ .. • • ,.. .. ... , "' ,or. Dilloaw ., 'tbi .~11,. Pti!obl~·~ will ~.at the !!W;~ to he followed by 'biii!al at :..-ftCUIC Vilw ~emorl1I Park. "Feitivaf Accepting ~taUQJJt Bid1 Child of War \Var can malce men - and children -old befo re their ~ime. In th is photo taken by Toshio Sakai near Da Nang, South \'ietnam, a Vietnamese boy clings to an older brother 'vho appears to be wise beyond hi s years. County Quakers Urge President To Re-fund CRLA The Orange C.Ounty Chapter of the American Society of Friends (Quakers) has urged President Nixon to approve re·funding of the California Rural Legal Assistance ( CRLA ) program. The program is funded by the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity. On Dec. 29. Gov. Reagan \'eloed the $1.8 million granted to CRLA for 1971. The governor's action came seve.rlll weeks after a federal·state review board, including Reagan appointee.,, had given the agency a clean bill of health ,and recommended 1pprovaL Reagan's fund · veto w11 overriden ~y W asbington. but only for one month pencli na: a report from OEO. According to Laguna Beach member David Mon ro, the Quakers firs t took action on the fu nd veto following Preti· dent Nixon's State of the Union messa1e. Mr. Nixon. born in Yorba Linda and ra ised and educated in Whitti er, ii himself a Quaker. Manro said th e group sent Nll:on a telegram requesting approval a n d quoting his "power to the people" state- ment from the speech. The telegram noted the social effect of CRLA. stating that through this aa:en- cy , ··the rural poor had experienced legal .service previously denied them." Controversy around renewal of the funds was he ightened when Sen. Alan Cranston ! [).Calif.) held up Senate ap. proval of frank. Carlucci. Mr. Nixon'I!" new appointee as Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Cranston asked that Carlucci first state his opinion of the CRLA fundina velll prior lo confirmation . Adult Classes At Laguna High To Start Moµday Laguna Beach High School wW be&in the spring u mester or. adult. education r lasset Mondly1 Sixteen differen\ cluus on a v1rkity ·o1 subjeds are be~ offeM to the aaneral •public for • tuition fee or $S e&Ch. • A.11 claSH& will begin at 7 p.m.. unlew otherwise · noted. and students rtlly re11ister and.,,1y ·ruiUon: at the lint clasg meettna. The program of courses beinl offered are; Mondays -be.ginning and 1dv1nced art. room 52: welding ind metal sculpture, room 43; woodshop; room 45: basic print maldng, room 5.'I. ~ · Tueldays -Crafts and clay 1CU!ptur- Jn1. room 52 ; photopphy. d•veloplna, printing and enlargincr. 8:30 p.m .. room 1 11·A: be&lnnlng Freocb. room•l3: dri'* edctetUon, llO •fee, r0om air cru.Uft .... room 13 aod betlM1na Spenllli, room 3.1. · • WedDeldt71 -humaniUei, di!OJllion of modern philosophical trendl. r- '661 cnillve •tltcher)'. room ll 111nda71. -au toabop. room. 44 : jewelry mlktnc . room &I ; llltermedl1te Sponllh, room 13: advanced Splllllb. room 12. Paris Tallt~ :fpJ Pff PARIS· /Vfl -Amtttt1n,.~ VJet. . namen1 N«'th Vltto_1fnae· and ·Yfilt °""' dolega* 100k o· bftak In Ult VJoln111n peace talks "today. The rfliul•i-'Miuraday MJs ion was postponed because of the Vlttnamcse Tet Ntw Veer festiVll. The next mtetlng will be Felt. 4. UCI Change Scl{.pqt Attempts to Shift' EOP Program . . • lly GllOllGll: L&'ID.\L ·: ........... . A pr0Cll4ent ~ a\lempl by UC T"lnt te shift 4tl ·Educational Op- portwtiHu Proeram for m Io or It y atudenls Into ·the "nia.inltream of unlvd!S'slty admtntstrltion" was crltlclied today by the black who beads the present program . Timothy Knowles, EOP director 1inct 00, 11id tbt new UCJ plan "never addteeled it.self to the needs of minorlty 1tu<ftEt!, ., "People h.ired by the univer&ity to hm the EOP procram were never ccn- sulttd on the new plan. Wt w~rt told either to accept it or leave," Knowles charged during a monthly breaklut meeting between UCI administrator• and newsmen. Although Knowles' leadership of the minority progr1m .at UCJ has been al· tacked by other minority groups on cam- pus, the new plan places the 26-year.old rormer athlete as an associ1te dean reporting to the dean of student alfainl on a level equ1t to •ssociate deam of financial aids, admissions and the Black Musician Claims He Was Shot by Mamon LOS ANGELES (AP) -The penalty trial of Charles Manson and three women followers convicted In the Sharon Tate murders starts today with a black musi- cian reportedly ready to· testify · that Manson shot hlm with a gun •imilar to one used in the killings. Bernard Crowe, 23, of Hollywood has said he' hu a bullet lodltd in h!s back from the alleged shooting incident at hi.8 apartment On Aug. L la&s, eight days befo~e lhe Tate killings. A witness at the Tale trial said he went to the Crowe apartment with Mans on and saw him enter carrying a long barreled revolver. Crowe wa.s the first scheduled witness of 10 the prosecution said Jt would call In trying to penu1de the jury to sentence the four defendants to death in the gas chamber. They were convicted Monday or murder-conspiracy in the 1layings of Mi.as Tate and six others. Chief defense attorney Paul Fitzgerald Is to present a motion alleging that the death penalty and the penalty trial required by California law are un- consUbiUonal. He will ask that the dtt'en· danla 1utomaUcally be 1entenced to lift imprisonment. As the hearing opened today. Fitz· ge r..ald asked to enter a plea of not guilty by reuon or inaanlty for hi.9 client, P1tri· ci a Kremrinkel. The judge did not immediately rule on the motion but aummoned all attorneys into chambers to discuas the ·surprise twist, which came j1111t before the penalty pha!e cf the trial w•s •bollt to open. Ml!e Krenwinkel , 23, WIS COllVict.ed of mu'rder-coilspirac y last Monday along with Charles Mamon and two other women members .of his hippie etyle l'l4n· Fitzgerald told the court hi reallz.ed it WI! "very un111ual"' to malt a chanae of plea at this pOlnt but added "I made 11 tactical decision In advance of trial and perhaps it wai 1n erroneou!I decision.'' He said he previously felt such a plea would amount to Miss Kremrinkel admit- ting the charges. "Now, however, the !l.ituation has changed rell)arkably," h:e said, notin g that the defendant now !•cu the life-or-death decision of the jury. Fitzgerald sa id Wednesday the penalty trial ru les offered the jury no guidel ine! upon which to ba.se their crucial decision between life and death. "The decision Is left to the absolute discretion of the jur y," he said. "In all other situations than the penalty trial, a jury deliberates under the court's instructions and reaches il.1 verdicts within the area delineated by lbe judge . "But In the moat important decision of all. whether a hum1n being should live or dlf, the Jury has no euldelines, no standard!, no criteria." He said th1t onct the penal ty verdict was In , the motives which moved the jury to choose Ille Or death would remain "obscure, d.laordered and irrational ..• " Lost Student's Body Found in Estuary OAKLAND (UPI ) -The body of 1 student 1t Sin Francisce State College, mis.sing since he went sailing Jan. 12, was found floatina Wednesday nut the mouth of the Otkland E1tu1ry. The Alameda County coroner's office ident!fied the victim as Wall1ce N. Clark Jr., 22, of San Rafael. Cboose from hund reds of !abric• and over 20 wood or paint finisbe!i. There are combtnauons of beau- tiful fabrics and decorative wood tones to blend with any decora t..or color plans. registrar • John C. Hoy . vlct ch1 nce\lor for stu- dent affairs, characterized the EOP reorganization "as part of 1 general administrative consolidatlon ln Ult •~ dent affairs area deSigned to iricrease effectiveness. We believe It will requtr• the general student affairs admlnislrato r to include minority proble mii and op- portunities in his thin king." Hoy a.aid the cootrovetty surroundifll the separate EOP program had diminish- ed Knowles' effectiveness. "We've tended tn find staff energies focused on an identity crisis in that 'EOP' was not a po!litive tag, but rather 1 label" in· dicating minorities had rec eived special treatment. "Morale was low and there was real conflict between black. and brown elements." Hoy said. UCI is the first of the nine st.ate university campuses to move 1d- minislration of its minority program• into the "mainstream.'' Hoy malntaln1 that other universities in the n1Uon "without separate programs, have worl· ed more rapidly. to meet the needs of minority students." Knowle s said he objected to being hired to "do (lne job and then ·being told to do another or leave." Under the reorganization he loses power to control EOP policy. A Chicano appointee, Julio Garcia. who began work today as associate dean of students "will relieve Tim of some of the pressures on him from elher minority groups," Hoy said. Garcia, formerly a counselor at Hun· ti ngton Beach High School, will report to the acting dea n of studenl..s and be responsible for coordinating academic advising, counseling and academic sup- port for minority students. Three other present minority slaH ad· ministrators wi ll be reassigned. Two of these will report to Knowles . They .are John Clayton and Ed Escobar. Steve Mil ner will assist Garcia. Willie Ann Adams and Fernando Cordero were appoinled to the UCI Counseling Center to serve under ill newly appointed director, J erry Harvey. Hoy said the "new arrangement pr(). vides three centers where minorities may come for support." Knowles said lhe key to the entire project was the appointment of the associate dean of ad missions and he charged Lhat "that appC'lintment is n&t being considered under UCl's affirmative action program" to insure appointment of a minority person for Lhe job. After Hoy said "we're looking for the best qualified perso n to handle that complex assignment and would be delighted if we were to find a black capable of ha'ndlin'l the duties" Knowle1 said, "J'm insulted."' Your choice ,ROFESSIONAL INTUIOR DESlwNERS o,_ Moo. Tllurs. l ff!, IY-. TlY OUl WOLVIN• C:HAl•I 2215 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA , CALIF. H6-0271 H6.0276 . . I I • l I ' I ' I I I I I I DICK TRACY llU(OLIC llUFFALO: IT IS If/Gil TIME llJUANI' I BLJRIFPTHE FABLE.D ltmtllE.T, CfN.iED OUR 1N!>AN1' lllCKT:~Wi>, AND Sl&N£0 A NON· AGG~1'5510N PACT. WMISA'" 611r fHLOW? / Mun AND JEFF IF SHE WANTs T~"1' SPANIARD LET +lER ~VE l\IM··SEE IF i CARE! _..n-1 JUDGE PARKER 1-28 ll4E JUDGE ELMO HAI' HIS E,\R' ON me W.MNEQ ME R'EC.EIVEfl: NEXT ID MINE WHEN raA.T M16MT 'fOU CALLEP, ABBEY! WHEM I BE THE ASKEP TMAT YOU BR'IN5 YOtl' CASE! Sl'Z>TE~, I k:EPT MY ~~"I FINGEli.'S CROSSED! PLAIN JANE • MW' IQNO POSSE$ION OF ~ It CHA26E -.· 6'1M w~ocrr tS &EING J. f'ERMIT •• J.ND, w.PE AGAINST ~HE POESN'T ElM.Ol' Fi\~L IN LINE •• I 'M· PUSHING A IC'.IP'N-'P fl:AP ! •.r Chesm Gould ly Tom K. Ryan Mf.MO: C.\NCEL ~"RMISJiCE C~LEJlRAnoN. By Al Smith ly Harold Le DollX RIGHT UOW I'P IEJTER 60 PQYN ro POLlc.E • HE"DOUA.rTERS. IJf P .\IE 'tl::ll Hi\VE A TALK WITH TELLING El.MO &EFORE I HI~ ELMO's GIVE VIC TREMANE IN JAIL? A PHONE CA\..L: IF I" DON'T rat HIM, ME FIND OUT BE- roRE THE NIGMT IS CN ly Frank Baginski PERKINS I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 47 Advr rtislng medium 1 Up for-·-· 48 Zod iac 6 Employs s19n 10 Hard hi t 4'l Part or 14 Enterta in-tht bcdv mt nt form 50 lll-111a11ntrrd 15 Down the --· child 16 Forbiddtn 54 Full 17 Positivt muttcn-thcp e!t ctrodt whiskrrs ,18 Dt ligtlts S7 Sertnity 120 Lov lnCJ 58 Bedridden 21 Rainy 5'l Star in 122 Projrct ing Crtus corntr 60 Frr11ch 23 Wt nt incomr ~ulc k1y bl Boys 25 ombints b2 Usr a 27 In a state paring knilr of action b3 Mort than 30 Beal occaslon1l ly soundly Jl Brtak down DOWN a sentencr 32 Pr om isr in l .... Ztopt ll" m111 iagt 2 US dlvorcr )3 TV control ctn Irr pos ition 3 Rivtr of J6 Dairy Enr1arn1 ~rodocl 4 Re lglon 31 tupld 5 Prrc e lv~ 38 Rtmtdy ti tncrr1srd 39 Noise 1 Stdlmtnt <40 Scold 8 Pitt t out -41 Non·winntr ' Waltr body 42 0ccurto 10 Slows down -4.t Large soup growth dish 11 Imposing .tS Suddrn 1rsidtnct: <hanQe 2 words " 1 V'strrday's P11zzlr So l-nd: llCll!'a r as -· ··-: 2 words 13 Clio, Era lo, Tllalia , r te. 19 Ftminlne namr 21 Sm1ll 24 Common contractlon 2S Pitktd cut 2b Masttr ,,_ 27 Copitd 21 Arab ian judgt 211 Happrned JO Occup1Uon 32 ~Ind of vtllltlt: 1nfOl'mal 34 "Born_._ .. 15 Pl1nl l7 .St71i,1h, 1/28/71 38 Killd of ml!'al: 2 words Var. 40 Cross' companion 41 Pull with lorcr 41 Gtnrtll cours rs 44 Point 4S Plot 411 Writ lnd lrs bland 4 7 Iii opt flbtt 49 f'rtsrnt 51 Rav~ 52 Entr' --: lntrrm lsslori 51 Numrtlc1r suffix 55 Ptlly dtmon 511 Expirt S7 E~prrt MISS PEACH YOU KNOW, )'OU'f<.E Not A SAO .5 0 1i!:'.T, !~A STEVE ROPER • • • • • • • • • • • ;r M~AN, YOU'J('E! NOT 5UCH A CReBP Ll'L AINER SAUY BANANAS WI-la-rs THIS f'aVeMeNT DOING HeRe? 1\lilT STuPID Pi1RK COMMI SSIONeR ! .... GORDO MOON MULLINS ® l\NIMAL CRACKERS -'t ~I!. Wlll!llE 1"'~ NJro MA1«!£S HAVe 6W(Jllll> 'It> '11/lf um.e. CCMN::r tt:'l!ISMOillil- ly Joh11 Miles . ,.,.,AT 15,· YOY'RS ~l<ALLY NOTA WOJtTHL.695 .LITTLE PUNK! ly Mel LOOK, "'4J'R8 NOT soNOr. lllTHe" ! ly Saunftrl and Overgard OIRK/ I OIDN'l MllS. BLUNT SAID kMOW -.btJ W1:1tt 'IOI.I W'E~ iAP9IHG """"'llNG THEIZE .' , WITH MR. llOPER, DOl..L.Y.' I DIDN'T ' WAWT 10 ... YKWOW ·~BUTT IN/ ! ' '1' •• lly C.harles M. ScWs . ' • • .. • . . " - -- THI ITl:AHOI WOIU> -MR.MUM ly Charles lewttl 'ly Gus Arrlo!:it ly Roger lolen -fAc'E n; Lll!J!-11' I/A lll\llr EealOMQ, l/OO'Vt. G0r 'Tl:> Pll/ fat IT! DENNIS THE MENACE -¢11-1· I ' ' ,I ' ., -. ,• • • ' ' ._, i•·• ·" :..·• ·:.:• I I t ~ 'dAJt.V PllOT SC Th11rsday J1nuary 28 l 971 Your Worth Complete-Nelv York Stock L~t Pyramid Promotion Scheme OVER THE COUNTER aw1w ..... l•tw IUIW _..,""'• II .. ,,.,._ .... .,. t 1111. ,.._ M.UD 'nc. .. 9't lllil;llM!ll ,..q.11 • rr.atlc•' ~"""' w All'l1t1IMIM Fast Spreading Deception l .... ., ................... .,,..,:.; .... ,.,"'""'/.-. .J:::"""'"'"'"'"'"'IAb•CV~ F4 11.bbtLb I 10 f>rltf' AC" 1!111 1 41 II• A.i.M lkl !~:::::<M'Tt :: Adm~E~ 1611 kEW YOR.K (AP') If t"' I ll t UO Pe~P l1 0 21\<oWebb R• II I> 12 , Ad M 11• 07 -1'n. IOllOw ~ bkl yrOdn •'• 1 \ U fl\ S!.d S • S'/t Weld!r 6 , 6..., A<l<lre•~ 1Su t~. ·:~=llPdll\IOlb~ ~:~·::i ·~ lt~ ~~~ ~~111 ~rt 21 ... 7i/;: ~!il~' 8"; ~: ~ n .. ~~m~~!• 1 "6 By SYLVIA PORTER back the $1,800 outlay you Commission recently charged ~Ol'IM•:,,ion.~~~~ ~~;1!: ~~1 lt: ~"" ~f.'fr~ ~. 11>:. 1t1> w. c•' P rt: ~ ~ri*n e1~0 A friend or ne1ghbor mv1tes make to become a distributer several multl level companies o"'''' inc ••e Holt!•• 11 :n w • ., ... ,. '~~ '~ :;~:~ ~ti o•. 1 , A, .o>iw 10c> • E h the not •ctUlll tt1nutliolobm •• Y'lt W11111<1 1n .. 11 l~W•tn Pvo 1•'-<1i\;A 1Prd of•I! you to an ' opp or I u n 1 t y yourseU ac of 5e six with. v1olatlng the law Even uons bu1 1r1 ••P. Hoov.,. ~ ~} w lh•d• 3 . J'• w n; w11 .sv. s'4 !J r,.·~~"~" meetrng at whtch )OU are would have to sign up six more significant a recent i:.'1~~''1:1cai.• ~~ ~~~d Rl1 1,,., 1,;: ~:~~h~c. 1f~ 1f': ~;;,"1wPi 2~,. ';!:. A~1on• 1. ed th th I " th f N y k S S m1r11v l Howm 111 21 v ... weih R;E l! tt'i\ Wrlllhl W 33 lJ< A• GI> 110 present WI IS pan u more to cover eir own ees ew or tale upreme :~"'",, wt.le11 1111,1 Hv(~ ,..., •l:o ,.,., w11 1 9 •• ..,., Yrg"v E J'i\ 3 ~ :l~~~.,c1n1~· You agree to become a and so on Court declston ordered one ~•!fir• cou<i 1111<1 PP Jf',;, »"> AIDt hn• ~ hlYI beotto ""' Hull G11 u,~ I~~~ ... --=r~ ~-"'[c•n Al~m I d1str1butor of a h ..... of cos-Here, how the pyram•d such company to repay chasea l1t1~ec11 o• Hu " " ,. , .. , ,.. oSt•no 10 '"-SOid (1)1(1) nltt HY11! CD 2~ :IH1 A ~•!Id 1 :kl metics 1n your area you will builds l 6 S6 216 t 296 m1l11ons lo New York de11tr ..,.,~e • Hy.r1 1m 11 14 2.. Al ea CD 20~ not Only earn SUbsl.ant1al prlr 7 776 46 656 2 7 9 9 :\ 6 feSJden\S W 0 bought fran out Ille dlY Prlcr1 1m•llt! sr 1\'o l•o A leaLud pl 1 h dllntt th•Olltl'I HYdl Ah ~-~ • MUTUAL All"'ILud l .0 h h d r dO not lr't(lvd• nd N~c JO 30<:,, A. oQ Pw I 11 fits on your sales but yol.I I 679 616 10 007 696 c 1ses on t e or.-.un s o re1111 m;aroup 1n1,1ro 1 J 'I' , '"' ~ t d d ~-l mtrkl)<iwn .,... com ln1 Cont 9~, O eM "° will a lso rec.e1ve a $31)1) bonus AFTER JUST JU steps the repea e an p e r s J s t e n m11~1on 1nrrm ., 2.. l ~ 1~M t 11 1si, for every new d1Stnbutor eqwvalent or the en t 1 re fraudulent busmess prac ~~kP~0't ,~~ 1~ i~1 ~.~>h ~..,, ~ UN ~11 ~5,~"16:i I h r I I [ N Y k Ct t S A.ID Jnc f 9\1: 01 t/uir t 2l 7J\, F DS Al &<I s per vou sign up pus a s are o popu a ion o ew or 1 'f ice A.its inc 3~• l"" int sr pr 11 19 , .... u os h [ I d ed Al I ASG 1nd 4~ ~\'o Jn!!"1 9 fJ 10 A, :15,,',,"ut ~ t e pro its on all sa es ma e is involv ter on y two Jfopeful!y th e beg1Ming AsG Pt i 10 ion,, 14,,. ~ b h I ' '' ,A ... Ii !><>"!I ''" ''' AIPhtPC -Y eac or your recruits more steps the enttre ""'P ua crackdown and reports such A.,',,.", , '• ,· • ,·~, ,,, .. ," ~ .. • A1co• 1 BO r' Ii uu ,. i~ : C!T'°~~ -J~,.~~r!,-":':"_;il Am• SU~ I W You can assure each dis lion of the US IS involved astodaysw11lhelpyo1J avo1d~ft'"\1~E• :,...,~l.1:::.Y1'W;1 ~ .. 0,: NEW 'YORK !APl lmp Gh 69 7 ss~~~:~_.10,0 tr1butor you recruit that he The pyramid mevitably col being gypped Jn this aU-ch1efs :1,,.• ,l"C/';>• r-: : .1:~~YF 23 • 1l . -r e lo own~ qva-Inc l'<IB 094 1 ol Am E• Ql1 60 I h t d I " II F IJ~ 41o !•l ons °''opl c<I by lr>CltPnd )91 o I• Am Hes• JO or she too will be generously apses w en new v1c 1ms are no-lndtans ea "berl• 10 • 11 J 1~ <11 ,. , n. /.I"' on11 Anocl-M<1•"1 ~ 911 1 37 Arn•H DIJ w b I d dd t I A.lcol•c • • ~ • l<~A Noc "' •" on ot ~vrl •• INTC.N a 79 9 ~ AA1rF r 80 r ewarded for signing up more una le to tn a I iona pro-Keep in mind that a key Ai co L!ld n • ll 1C•111' St ~ l~'' Dta1u1 inc are Inv co" n 9'114 lO Am Air n ao b Sn.<>rtS Allr. S•v 1'0 l 'Ka,, pl II 1 19\'; thp Pt c~ i> whkll Mv Cud 8 ~9 8 19 AB•~•' USu d1str1 utors m the organ1za y~~ sign of pyram1d1ng mullt level ~I~~ c.';: !~ :._ ~:1~• c;,., 1 he~ ,..,u, ·~ in·~ sos 1i o~ i1 11 " Brn<I) 1 io t1on If you hnd only ONE Moreover, your profilS de-distributorship operations 1s !~ad~Y•o 1?\\ 11~ ~:;~mr i?"" ~gj'<l <1(b i1h"~~ 00~" 1"i6~10~1 G~'1! • 61 !~B~~~ ,1;f new d1str1butor a week you'll pend largely on how successful that most of the money mak A El L•b • 1, 1 Kellen • 4/ (,,,;;,.,;) wecin...iv 1v1vr 9 1; io 19 A can 011 1s I d d I d Am E•o• e •II, ..:e wd '.IO~J 1 ~' II d A>• Pr()ll •CW • 19 Am (Pm•n get$300each week-PLUS a youare1n urmgan e u mg 1ngemphasistsNOTon us1ngAm Fun 1 i:i.K•u11 E a\,>:; 9 'At>e<1n 104 12• srock ~11"l(lltl A Cnan1.io h [ [ ll I th II A Gtffl 61 1>69 4 1<ey~ Ff) 16 1 A<ln •~l1 Funds $el «1 911 979A(rySug 1411 e ty pro 1t on a sa es you o ers your skills to se a worthy A Mid eP 17 • 17 .. J Kev1 CY• 15 " i.1~ Grw n 6 16 & 91 vAr Py 1 01 / 67 ACrvs Pl< so d th k Among the products 1n _,, b I th Am Tel• 711 , :N:V, K•vil t'C 9 u 1ncom 4\M ••l nv Rnll •SS •91 ACranCI 111 an ey ma e pi ..,.,uct u ra er o n AnrtM.>i a 71,,., 79 " King 1n1 J ' 3 1n•ur a si 9 34 1, el 20 l'I ii 111 AO ~1T.i ~ I ed Pyrall]Jding mu!': k y, 9 I\ n El 3..: , V> Advh s S 11 5 81 Ivy 1 &I 1 J I Am OualVe>I FOR THE PRIVILEGE of vov in w recru1tinganapparently:~n 1,:; :::,, Jl:111r~1 cp i:n 1!....,•n• Fd 9J1JOol6J Hncock 1ss •~ ... 0uv1 P1MA •--d b t fevel distrfbUtlOn marketing ' M 9'~ 9 K a V I ~,,, ll•~ Aftll akj 121 I 90 Jotinsln 10 4120 42 AmE Pw 1 IO UC\..vhllng a tstr1 U or you hm1tless number of other :::.i:~ Jlf 37" 3, • K~e~lr 0 ~3 •• 3~ Arvr e '~l 1 :1J KPv• one Fvn<I• Am Exp Ind k 'lk t t promobons1nrecentmonths dtrbto l AkMoP u 15'h L•nc1 1n 31 ,,.31v.A1AmF unaval APOiio 9))!0lOAml'~pptA6 ma ea o en tnvesmen is 1 u rs supervisors ec r L 0 11. ,,, ,~Aii.iaie 10531117 cu• Bi 19 a1001 A c.enlnsso 111800 co s metics, soaps and ArfffW H 3111 38 • an •• ,,,_,,l',Alpll" Fd 11111219 CY1 e11ta1n61A Cnrn,Pf!30 0 Use sunple arithmetic to ~~c~· B<rt 1,,. .ll~ t:~ W<1 3i: 4 • AmcaP 6 10 , 61 cu1 B• 1 511 9 11 Am Ho•' 40 If this deal tempts you or detergents, floor w a x e s • warn you against pyramid ~~1~<1 s~11 !.i:' n: t~d"c~f 1~,., 11 • !:;: ~~i'n 1~ ~~ 1 ~ ;1: l~; ~l ~ tl f ~1 ! '"'r-1~ p1t 6t tr you know anybody now con whirlpool baths automatic deals B,•,',"••••• '°"'•, "••" ~'••"•' ,<:. 11 11 ~ Am Eo v • 91 s 43 cvs )1 "as 19 •1 Am Hc•P ?~ de •--I ed telephone answerers auto .. .. 11, 1n,.t.mer E•ce•~ cu.s11011 111sAm 1n~11 50 SI rrng u=oming mvo v JO safety devices arr fresheners Before you enter any sales g;:c: =11 2~ 21~ t~'i,'i.,Z11• !l" 1~ f~.,1e ,e1\51091°'o ~~ ~! ~ Y ~ l: ! ~i~f:1 !J such a deal 11 personally have arrangement study the local ::~r;;: ~g,': ~~~ t°...!! {,d~. ,r..! 1 ; i~~" ~~' 9.io 1e:~~·b 1~1 1 ~ !~.1~::0'1'10 heard of three already in Typically each recruit gets k h k th I ti &Ndt JO 31 " L... 2JZ' 21 ~ s oc1< • u ' 1 u f(n1c1< G• s is '69 A.m Photo 16 Vol,ed), heed my warn•ng $100--$500 for eacb new recruJI mar et c ec e repu a on 8,u, ';'51, 14¥% 1~ ,:,.~nG~• 16 • 1:. ,..,.. G tn 6 ci 101 L•>< r.n~ a a? '11 A Rt•Ov o'v or the Company With your Seip lt>CI J,,. 4V, M11 Rily I~ I 1 Am Inv 5 4 S 48 Le~ Rsch lS JO 16 n Am Se1 ll What I ha .. , descr•bed is often new investors are re sent Mi; 11 11'111 Ml lkfl ,, • , ,. Am Mui ¥ 01 , 91 L bertv •1 6 '' Am 5~1P 40t> • local Better Busmess Bureau ee'1<: H• ., •• M•n n M 4_.. 3~ AmN G1~ 110 3 JV tire s11< s •O s 90 "' s ... ,u 11'(1 a classic • ' p y r a m 1 d pro-qurred to buy thetr products ee11 L1b ~1 1. a" M•ncr c 1 4 Ancnor G ovP L te n• 1 1 1 '~ AmSoA1r 10 r d t bl bo th honestly examine your owne Huc w 101-o1o~•M••Mtg 16,,'18, C•c1 1os 1 uLlncN~t 1011101AmS1d1 motion type of mult1lcvel rorn lSfl uorsa Ve em llln kills Bro Son ~, 43 MermGr 1a!1o.1• Grwn 1o is11l9t;,~1s Sayi~1 ~.,,sz,~:4115.a d b h h the td]es &re )Ofty-soundlllg le g S II rlct1t l" J"" M Browr ll > Jl locm' I 11 I 9S Can~<I Jl ~~ lJ Oil AT & T wt 1stn utors 1p SC eme -one Do Back HI 330,:, l4'4 Milul LP ,",'' ,'"', c',, In~ J! U .~ ~~ CaP 1 0 16 10 11 Am T& r 1 6~ of the most rapidly spreading but your position generally n t sign any contract or ::~hee 't' 1'~;, 1;"' ~~o,,o,• H , ,.., ". \JO 1 •2 Mui JQ6 196 ,..w.twk 60 depends di''elly on the m'k' any large Investment '-· ,. ' -•• • ,•, • , .. ,•,•,oc,,• ' •. n Lu!h 8 0 1111'111 !"I AWW 3Pll 15 deceptions to US JObseekers ho I It I 11<1'5 C•P .~ 1~ ~~"~ 11 6 A H ohto • Ma11na n 1 1 9 s1 Aw D•e! 1 u today amount of your investment wi t u consu 1ng a awyer 8 •d~n 61· &'t, Merlo in 31 " lii.r. ~( nt1 00:.. .s s1 , 01 Manhtn ~ eo ~" Aw • 1pt 1 •l THE FEDERAL Trade first :;~~&5~ ~.~~ .. Mid d Cl 2~(1 2i~ F~ntl 8 l 64 I JO~:~. "'Fa" 1 ~6:1 ;i~ ~er~~c 60 Schemes (lf thlS SOrt notes Brwn Ar 11, 11><.MIOtex l • l ' Mock S'ID 6 ~Me'> Inc U 5 6 6 Am~tek 60~ the US Post Off1~. are like ll!"llO••••••••••"''"SS:•"'""'""'"""'"*"!•mt•o:;o1aim.,••n•e,.••*•1~I =~~t~a. '~ i:,. ~~<1: Ge.a~ 191n '°v; B ~o CD :~ :#to M•J• Gtn 11 611111 !<MF In( ro h I tt Pt th I euno co 3,, J.\lMlss ._.IG ff1~1~ s:vrc~ 134 9 1 ~:~;.1r ~1,~1 ~\111 !~J;''1n~SI c a1n e ers -exce e Byrn<1p s 25 •15,,.Mo lhch 2~. 2 ,Be1con JJ401l JOM&•ners 126 11 61 AmP(O dfg tak h hgh r CIC L 9 ... 10 MOd Sd I t> 1 ,lle g l(nt Ill I J'lMldA Mu <31 Sil AmocoPt wl s es are muc I e CAI w't~ 11(~21\?Moriwk R :n,.;3 Berk c.111 6\M. 6 60M«JdvCo1 \9!1 1J01 .t.mpe~ Cotl> Mos t Of the people who get F1·nance Br1·efs Cmbdv N 0 lO'N Moor COi 9 ,~. 811 r F(I • SI 7 II Moody . t7 91 ,. " Arn•lar 1 IO Clr'IOO M 711 to Monm Pl< 11\<o l? 4 Boncntk30 0112,, 616/3 MIF Fd • 11 9 16 Amstr pf7 6 f caught are 1n the lower middle C•nnM e 11 19 MO<)rt P 9, 10 llos!on .--. MIF Gth s 6 569 Arn''" pt6I k I CtnraO 3 l\'I MOor1 S 17:r.:,, Jlr.4 8011 Fdn 11 1112 11 MvUS G• 1C q/ I J Amsled 1 6C income brae et or recenty C•P M•ot 19v,19,,.M10•1•A 21.n...,Bo1ton '" 916MuOmG sJ9 Sll6 Amt• 31 d th th C•P Sow I • 9:1.i M!gTr wl J • 5h llrwn Fd 365 119 lvlu OM n IOJ<111• Anacon I l'O unemploye For em e MILAN Tenn !UPI)-!IT NEW YORK l UPfl -Stan cao 1n1A ,._ s~Mo1<'1 M 6'n 1 Bulock Clt:lv~ Mut s"" 1Soll5(>1 AnchHoc~ 1 t I 12 ~ oo 000 ti C"PTc~ J '2 ~¥.Mot C:lvb lS 11 ~ 8ullck ' l IS ol8 Mut T ' n~v~ I Ancot<P Sv~ 1 yp1ca VIN".,.. ouay 1s d dP d t I C c ... ~,, n 1 71,M~rer a~ 9 1 C•ndn 19001os111EAM1.11 10161D llAnd C•v!)O Telecommun1cat1ons a ar ru enia orp a c,rte Bl J , 3h Mu111.1 Es 1•, J, Ovd, ',",,,•,•,•,111a1 Ind 1Q•J10 •lAp~c'1eC<1 is truly huge and crucially un diversified financial services c1 rr Go 10 , ?o:r.:. M,ver LE ''"' 19 ~ Ne1w 1 t1a1 secur er ApcoO 1 1'11 portant d1v1s1on of International c • .., NG 11'o11,.,111c ,,.., s _1 , 111v ... n1 1so 1 1650 A~~" wn 11 0,0,pL coo fl rm that owns Ster\Jng Na ~••1 ca.. 1 i >-<. N1rr10 c 16 , o , llu•M Fd 6 n 1 ?l Bo;r<1 s oo s 06 APL E' B 16 The catch is that the supply Telephone and Te I e graph Ilona! Bank & Trust Co of c!~t'~P5 ~;; g • ~~:!;~ c~ ~~ 1~ •l~~p.~r 19 ~l : ~ g,".,'li. ~ l: ~~ ~~~1."c 1,p 0o of new recruits runs out and C-p announced a I l 4 C•n• Lft b av., 9 Na• Equ1 10 '1 ~Cao t 1nv J •l 3 76 Pi s ~ 110 111 A c•toN <Pf i v• New York announced plans cnarn a ~ , :i Nat G&o n v. 1• cao t Sh• 01 • 91 1ncom s u s 11 A•cn oan I"---who r,,1 lo s•gn up m fl n expans•on of , ts en. 1 o s • S\O NAt Lb J11, l• , cen1 s~• n (),ju'' soc~ 1 IJ 1 ~· A 11 PS• 1 °' llV-X' 1 10 to register as a bank holding Chni L•a 1 1 N~11 Med 21 21 c~a"r, n11 Funt:$ Nel G•!ll a 81 9 6( Arl•n• o $tr enough new prospects to pay telephone sw1tch1ng equipment company by J une 30 ~~:.! 0'4 1~·· 1:11 ~:; f.'::it 1{,,: ~.! ~:~nsi 1j ~ 1~:J ~:~;: ~~ 1~cif 1~i~ ~~',';',~0SP1 1~6'10 off their hefty license fee • plant here The company said Standard Prudential said it ~~r .~·ti ,f~~,t;~ ~!: 1h~ ;::: ~ ' r:~~ l 11 ,5,S! ~::10'::' d l~ !~ l! ~~ ~,;:;;:, J>~t IS"° investments are left holding 1t ~warded the contr-act to 1 t dd t I cnr" Pf 10J 109 NEn GE 11"' u-. spec l n 111 N ~n sr,, "11n11 " nick p1J 1s h b In the bo pans o acquire a 11ona ~llA<1e1 6t,; 7'1>NJ N•tG 10.,,.1~,c~•!>eCr801 No ~•" 1s i11s11Arm11.v tD t e ag a Ve case J E Staub & Co of Bell banks in Ne\v York State '"d ! 11z Mfl rn~ 1~ Nk~tn F ,,,,. 11v, C•Pll 6 61 111 ocn11ph 6 9~ 6 9J Arn co p ;,, uldh t slg " ll1UA 21t.18t(;N••A ""•S Fund at,9110me9a 61)8620Av nlnd l )OU wo ave 0 n .. p Tenn become a multi bank holding nr u f!I 11 111:Ne1 • e ... •s Frm 1111 111l100 ~~ iJ n so5 A•h<1 01 110 six new distributors to pay company Divestiture of c~~lt/t/ ~'::;~:.,,~~ •• 11.t'a 11l:i5~ ~~~ '~;tr·~~h°~~\.1rns 1~i?1~~J :~g g~"!io NE\v YORK Am Cini M~r 1l\l:r14 ,NEYr OU 7:;, 3,cn~t 169l18J00Nel 11J3HJJA!d5p l;/Ob ~?~ I 000'1 OF OIL PAINTING$ WHOLiSALI W.AltlHOUSI OPEN TO THE PUILIC -er1can subsidiaries engaged 1n non cunion o • 1 • .,. NPA Ga• 16 ~ 11. co1001s1 ocpef'h 115 131 A"a T ~"•P Ai I ed t ill t C'°w Co 10 21 NW N•tG 10 4 101~ Eoytr J'9 (J6 0pp AIM 1Cll11111 At~-lfl<I r Ines announc I W CU banking activ1hes will be car tO<l'~r o •;-, ~~NW Posv 2l n ~ Fund 10 11 11 n oTc SK 9 9S o a1 ArlCvE 1 J6 t ti I I nd d t d d COR•r Co fl ... N<>el lhc 7'14. G""'" 6Ul 6SI Pece Fn<t 7 •7 eu At! 11.chlld l ransconnen a a semi rte ou over an extene co1emsv 2>1 2>i1 Qhp A.ri 9 l 9\IJ 1ncam •l'l10•1Pou1R~v79 B 6 •AtRc~D111s tr tin !al fl'ght' by 28 od r t 11 De 31 Col n> F 1Jlo 14\tr Ono W•' 23'1 1l 1 V~nt • 61 S 10 Ptnn Sq I Oil I Oil Al Rich pl :I anscon en per1 o 1me un 1 c Cqfon str :n"' 11 i. OPr S.C•n 11 • 16"' co1 Grth 11''1161 ,,, M~r •lo\ 4 :16 A• !!err Pll ao so•;. OFF e t On Mar Ch 2 1980 th f d Corne.! 1 • T>, Ormon! ,,,, p, corns Bd 4 34 S 26 Prt!it 13 I~ IS 11 A11o' Cn~m I perc n e irm Sal com ctr sov. !1 , lie TP 20 10 ; cw1r11 AB 1 P 1 51 P '" Jp 9 :u 10 11 tt~· Co o 1'1J I! IDIHGElt 54NTA AH .. Ame r1can s announcement com C.Al '"" 11"' 0•• NII 8 , 1 cw in c 111 1 15 Pine st 11 Mn 66 Inc Olla Com Tel 27•1!\'>QxyCel 13 1,'comP M ¥111Qdf l>95' En 6'1< Ill.I Aurora Pr<>:! P'"-IU- ~ DEALE•S WANTED f1Jllowed similar action by WASHINGTON (UP[) corn H n ~~ PEC 1,n n is comoet 6 11 135P1on fnd 1!861!~ ;.ut,,m 001~ Ci>m Pv 1• 1•J,p0b!t Br ., ,1 ,comp Bd 972100'/Plon Inv lO• 11•• :_uom~n Ind Un1ted A1rLlnesonTuesday General Dynamics Cor p Comp .o. ~~ s""P•c AYo ,, 5 ,comp Fd 'n 1os1P9r1h l?S61J7l,..•c~c-0 P1 CmD Cm 5" • Poe F1E 3l l! ComH~ • ' • SI P< t~ Fuf'd> ., D 3 w Now your od'Nl't11i"f en full ti,... wttft .... PtTI'SBURGH -Wthhng house Elect,r1c Corp announc ed Wednesday that it will sup- ply the nuclear steam supply system and 1n1bal fuel loading for Kansai Electr1 Power U'.l m Osaka Japan TlLIPHONE AHSWlllNtj IUltl.t.U 835-7777 Prim• Comrnercl•I Proptrty-17,h I' Coat• Mea-AAA Ten•nt 'no OOI uSll ""~lr..S-lttO ,..,~.,. "' t•oll "'llY HASTINGS COMPANY· PH. 642-6900 received a $17100 000 addition cmo 1nsi •<> • • P•~co co 3 , 4,, ccncoro 1 H 11 &1 ~ ... ,. ',",,",'°,,' :~~ov 0~<110'10 F CmP Ttt 1 1 ~ Pencol 1 , i:i. con•ol In !\ 'lS 11 67 " '" .<>vne tnc to an Air orce contract for com"• 1 ~ ? • p~ •r or lOI• 11 ton 1 Ml 11s 1 Is N llo• '' n u n •vne• 011 ~ k hF Con Fl:<>e~ 31 3l p ~ H 1 11 ,conl C.111 976 9 3~Po Fun~ 997 991 •von PdllO wor 1n connection wit Ill Contr1d 9 1 9 ; p:~ f"',, p "-6~. co P L<f i. ~1 1 '•l Pro Po 11 '01 11:& r., .., 011 JJt (I Con1ren 1,, 1 P•ve e l? 1l Cn1V C•P 1111 UJl Pro•<!" •61 110 a1rcra ~:ger5 L 1;,:1:\'!:H•I Ml 9 10 cr~wo• 1 91 6•1P•ud srs 10001097 Co>m Yr lO lO , ,.,erle\ T 11 1 78 ~1C " WO~I 6 I• I 31 PuE n~m F~nd.o o<> B"tM:~W SO CHICAGO !UPI) P'oples ',~,,,',",, ,",".? \S, ~·. 'o~'wln J'• 1 , ceV!lh M 66 UY ~s GQ~lt 1~ 00 ~JO ea~•O T 6~ • " .-.. ?OV. i. 0 D•l•w•rr c.roop G ";'~9 t 13 0 63 8•11 GE l 81 G Co d I I Crul<o , ,., ' Pen~ P•c i , 1•• D•t• 11 11 11 IS 1 9$ 8 n 811! cl 8• )0 as announce pans o ,,0 ,, , 0 , ,,•Pee• w1 1 ,._, oe1w 11uu1s ~~0"' aanoor Pvn1 'P > t •9 11 Oeta 69'16 l"•e<t IJ1B00a&noPc!7 build a $13 m1Jron hquef 1ed ,',',",', '•" ,," ,6 • P~~~g pf 66 ' 69 oodo c:o-u 111: ]_; 111: ... ,," 1 •1 ~, ~, Bk Qrca1 1 34 Pn l $ b 11 21 Oe~e! llSl lSl VOY•~ 6U 4 8&nk o! NY I natural gas plan and storage 0•1a D•1 s • 6 • Pn 1 Y ~ 1,,! orerf F<I 11 ll 11 ts R•vt r 10 01 10 96 B•nk Tr 1 so fac1hty near Mahomet Ill g:::1nG'p 'J.: '~~ P,1~k,':'•,.. 66 '61 • o eyt L• u 1111 •l :o~~:itn 1t ~ is,~g g:~'4:./ l15, 'D1vl1 l'd S1" Sl< err "' 20>,(,ll~Eiton&How•td SChYslr IS211665&&1?c lnt lO southwest cf Chicago g:;0,Ml~ 1: ._'iv, ~i:O )0~~ ~{! f,Z ~~Iii 1r U l~ ~ Sc~n~<1etn•Fu"':i'n•v• 1 ~:::~ ,x/aP11 O ... lb Ag 37 3a Pr\>d Min 7\'o l lr>c:om 613 010 So><:I 3'15~?'5 8tlh Ind OSe Oelhl I"! tO•• 11 PybS Niii 7l • l~ SCICI l '° 'U 8~1 1S :10 15 30 B1tnln Pl2 ~ STAMFORD Conn (UPl)oei~~Ch 6~~"'y,PvbS NC 121>110 Sloxk ll?Ol••l com St o)8j711l•ut.thLb 80 Ze C d De! ca"T 1, r~:i. Pvblt~r Pro 11.<t Ef)er1t ll ~ 11 II Se-curry Fur><ls Ba•• t1b ! rox orp announce 0.1 18 n :23 Purep;a 1 • 1¥o Ev e1 11 II ll 5S E,outv 3 1J 1.s.i 8••~ ca so Plan' .. consol•date certa•n D•w•• E J ; :i;.o P B~n,., 11\l:r 71"1 Em u :>c 111 & JS 1" ... ,, 1 ~s ! 60 aearlnq_• 1 w D•m(r 1 r,,1~Pvrt~St i. 16 EnerfY l1J9!1l9 lJ • t.617 ?9Be•tFd•I r ts I b d Dsc In 5" si;.POw (P 5 .. 61oEnD•~ 6 l 6 10seie~ Am 9'6 1Q1l Sttkman SO o t opera1ons ase 1no1vt•CM 3 Jy,Oual CM 11 ~11..,EQu ly 19•'11se SP<>CSlSJ&16198oc!Okk ;e Rochester N Y Xerox said D<>cuttl 1n 10 ,, RT Sy,1 ''• 7 Eout G ~ 1 re 11 ~1 sent G!ll • H t 00 Be«~ •1r 11 On~n L l• l•V,R•d Ovn I 9'>EQul Pro 19 •?8\~.,-11 F~ 10 Alt:• BelcoPe! -SOI> the action mean~ a reduchon now Jon J1 , :ll Rana 1 c ~s 11 F~ di 9 99 10 91 She& "'" 11 69 JO ?6 Belden 1 60 Dovl' OB lJ ll Jlansb Et ?!'-.16 1 Farm Bo ttl 911 Sh Dean 111•117•8rll >iow 60 of 250 10 its 13 000-man work n ""' N ' J R••ch C<> 8Cl 11 F <1 Desi • 11 s d• 'll 10 ;1 ee11 1., •con Oun~ln D ls 11\'t llaym Cc 19 ~ 10 F d'f l v C.rr;up s 11m~ FuMs 8em ~ Co <O force there over the next few o •Iron is , 16~• Rect:11 EQ 1flli JS'4 capt 111311 !7 C•otl ft 1>1 • •9 Bend• 1 60 "•eeks EtP1nf 11-.11 ~Rr1C<rd 4~~81,;, E"•• IJOl1128 MvP>I 11 111.J.6!1.f<nd•Pll " E•PIC: wt l , 6 Rldd Pu 2J 2J 1 Ev >t ll ll U ll lro" 9 12 9 f1 aen1llCP 60 X I Ea~! St: 11 l ,., lllle• S!o 16 JO F del lS611106Sm t: II 9 n 912 Ben 1 Jp!)_.l.O erOX IS e Jmina{ing llS Econ Lab 2l 2l ~ llDA<f E• JI JI\ Pur n 10 l 11 16 5,.,, Inv 9 Ol ~ 1• Beno et t d I E<fvc .Sy~ 7') oll.ollln M 11 24 ~oem 5!J !6!Swnv GI •6' I!" B<>nouo! !1> commun1ra ion pr o Uc s F ~. E.1 l' H I• 11.o t 0,, 1 1 Tr~no n to 7• <n sov• l<>Y l J Oil 1• ll Be ~~v P~" dJVJSJOll and one of its ex 'f~~ s.,, 9 o , llov c~• ''• 7 , F nanc ti P og <.~re ~ • v. I 1 B~ ~ ;ti 111 ~d• Se 6 • l•ll U> Slov l l?• lhnm •IO 4•0 5H."' (;t •61 ~611 llol~r·~ •0 ' !oratory de el o pmenl EN• • ~1 lly~n 110 511o 5s, •ndv~1 11) •11\•" ~ "01•• F.l•c..-Dk ss V fl N~c H "' Sad ., J\• J, lrn:'om 5 '" 6 n Ste•dm"" f vnD> Bl• Jo~n •S laboratories as s e par a I e Eu""' • • I '• Scan n E J J ven • 1~ • 54 Am nd 1 J 01 B ·~ Laue Fl ( S~! ) j ~t~o t 11> I 6>oFs F V• 10111 71 FdvC ~7· l ]S llot•,..11 J6 crgan1zallons E1 O• • '" ~ nV> Stl cot ~. FJ 1n o • 1 !II 1 JI si•" RoP 1 ~ Blue fl~ 1 1 1~ 11;;===============,IF MOd I l'> • Sc Ind ' , , "' lnG B SS 9 ll 8~ 1? 1119 o eo~b e 11 ..-, EPaSOI 11,111~s.cot Son• 11 1 ~"'"s ..-tlllO QS (•P OI> ~·~~a~na co .i) En•ov C J,!,41) SCf Ol>I H 11 >1J 1 Fst Mull t /l Ill Sloe~ I ]\ lJSSa !C~> 7511' God loves you. This 1s a message of Christianity to every child, man , and woman And 1t JS a message that has practical •alue today In our Sunda y School, children and young people up to the age of 20 learn to know and cxpcr1encc God's love tor them Above all they learn how they can turn to God for answers, for healing, for 1nspttation, and to fi ll every nght hu man need They also discover that God's Jove never fail~ Your children ;lre welcome to come .and diSCOVer th1s love for themselves 1n our Sunday School OlllSTIAN SClENCI SUNOA Y SCHOOi. Cotta Me1.-Flr1t Church of Christ, Scientist 2110 Me"' Verde Drl-t.15 AM Huntington &.•ch-First Oturch of Chrltt, Sclentltt Ith 1 Ollvo--9 311 11 00 AM N.wport hech-Flrtt Church of Chrltt. Scl4lntl1t JJOJ VI• Lido-9 15 I II 00 AM Hewporl loed>-Second Chllrch of Chrlot, Sclentl1I 210o PocHlc View Dr, c.,..,. def Mer-10 AM " WATCH l'EET AND LEGS IN YOUR YOUNG CHILD fir llllY eRANT ... J! a young child has any Irregular gr owth pattern such as ho"' legs knock- knecs feet turning in or ou t.. l'lt be 1;ure to mention 1t on the next \ 1s1t to yo\lr fRm1ly doc tor or 1)1>()1atrl clan If he lh!nks there may be a problem he may suggest that a n orthoped!I:". spc-c1allst ta.kc a look Bcwlegs and knock «nttt ere usually normal growth patterns and tl"ellln'lent Is not nect'SSal'Y Sometbnet though they could be ti1soct-ated with club fee~ obesity or • nervous COl'ldit1on. Ftoet turntn1 In er-out e&.n usually ~ corrr.ett'd hy meJIM of special stioes v.lth a cotrect- lnc t.r YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US whftn you Med a dell~ry We w!U de- liver prompt!'/. without ex tn chtr;e Jtl'eAt mJlny people rely on us fnr their heaJth ~ed11 \Ve '"f'lt:ome request• for dclJVCT)' 5f'J'Vlet and chn.ra1t l!lcc::ountt P411 LIDO PHAIMACT lll ""',,... .... N..,-..... •41·1HCI "-hll""f En1 D R• ,~. 11.l. Sc: o•o A l~ 11. ~\t N• un••il I Su ~ • •d MY Bond nd ~""'' ) ~""Sea•• pt n +7l fs 5••• ~176 •619 Grh t 9l /S9Bon•Mm 111 Eon Coro r H•S.• Cr'rll> 1. l <F!f C•P 601 Sumi I~ llM 80dPn 11'(1 Eau I 0 I 10 • !~">St•"! r l l Fie F>1d s •8 ltth J 7~ J ~ B~roWar is E I• Tet 6 6>o ~vc C. o SI• 6 ~lo Glh S 61 6 ll Sv"c • 9• 9 ~l Bnrm•n> •O ra (e o 7,. ?i s.eve'! UP ll0 ,61 Fne! Gt~ ,11 <61JTMR AD I ll l15f!IO<S Ed l 111 F~b lek 3 l~• 5m tk M ''• 9 Fovndf , Group l ~~ch Q Pl fi ~l I°' Ed a I U Fa no I • 7 ~l<IS s 1 7 Grwtn U 7'11S61Ttt~~c l~I J 9l oon1 Inc Fn<1av '•"'•sC•IWtt 16 '6 11nu9T~mPGll•.O l>'oB~n•A.r so Fn•rh 11 ,11 SoNE:Ttl jl 41 1'99 llT~wrMR '14 '6'BrqoS J«la f•IB01! 6S">M! SwG•CP l&\,llo Soe<I ll OJ•lll '~'-"'P 1 3,~!0'l &~t Mvl?O l'l!C. Re~ I • Sw ES•t 11 .. 11 ,Foy•Q f9S101/l r1tv ED 9'1 ~6ler 1!MY pl? F,1,. Mtg 70 iov. 5CltCe•Y •• ·~· F•ff~~I n Grov1> ludor d 11 IQ n ftJ II IT PP! ·~ F1PMtUn ?3 1l 1's ondrn ,5 ,,.16 ONT( t2•fOJ7WnCGt 711 15 8dWYH~f l FJI WF!n l V. nl S!d 11."'llll 11 'll (irv<ln 610 6 1l Twnc Inc 3 97 • 1'i l<lwvHel pl l ~~~'},.. 1~~1~10 s1an HPd 19 J0 '7 U11 6.SS 111U I Mui 98610 111 ~WV GI (IQ [.'' 01, '' • '. '· s1er1o Sir ll l u,,. 1ncom 2 H 115 Un ro !S7 10 48 0111(1vnuG, ' n • l (I •• .U Fttteim !11 900 Unon Svt uro o-O Ofm•1 5V• SI> ••~w l > • '' ••Mo• 0 Of 0 • Sroad lJ 44 I('' Bwnjnrp XI Fo<I <;rnt 11 JH~ Sub>e lv ' N~I Inv 7 l1 ! 00 Own h~ l SO Fotom ~ «:.. Su•dAI F 9 ' ' Fund Inc Gtp Un C•P 9 '° 10" llrtflU..... n F•~•1 CP !"'' 6 ,SIAt'>o Fd 3 , J .... Cmrc f H 1011 Wnien n:itll Sl Bvcr Er170 Fr~kln E lOVi 11111 TOA lf'CI ,,',"••'•'" i~J"{,, ,•,~,,,',"•un11111 f undl BuOd C::o Fque IJW • i;, •'4 lamp~ "" Ac e"' I 01 1 l>I BUdtF pl 60 Fqu1 BOW l \11 6 Jo T1sie f Iii.'• 11'4 PllOl 1 !l 1-,, lncom 13 '111• 4 8Udoel •rid C.Al(<flO 1' 21>lavor W 1•1i lJ~F~nd A<fl l ll•lS l(tn llllll'ISyf(FOflll\O Gttlnlr.I l4'rll UV. TV Com '"' 10 • G•l ... y I 34 t Ol Vang I 91 9 76 8uh~v•W l(t c;1, sve ''"' in,. Tenn1nl 71W ?l Gao Sec '61 t 61 UFd C•n 129 1 •1 Sunier Ramo G Alrcl[ 1\~ 2\t Therm A 1\t l'lo Glb••flr I Of 11-S V•lue Lint Fd f!limlr.11. 1>'1 so (> Kine!' JV. ,.,., TU!nr Co ,, •• "••' o.,.,,, "'' ''' • •A VII Lin 6 ?I ~IS llU•l lf>CI 1 AO G Lalwr I'"' ni. Tll!nv In .... .-"" Jnepm S 05 S 5J Bur/Nor Jlf Gitt E,1 'I> tOll Tim._ Ind 11-l\'o 11•1 Fd I 14 '~ SPI S I 5 19 S 69 11Ut1Nor pl S.S Giiian 5\0 J~ Tl!1n G11 • t •Ji com St ll l• U '3 vnc1s ~Pl a lP Ju 9Yrndv "II) Gi,11"1 .)0 31~Tr9( Cg JV1 :mGtthFd " 791 '°'v1ndrbt 614 ?'I avrfll~' 60 Gle•sn W 1l'l'l l4\lo Trntn1 190:. :10 Gr11'\ Ind 19 JI 1' JI Vanod t 36 • 11 G!Ot't ltvb 1\lf JAo 1rncnl 7 l~G!.l&f'<ln JS71 1521var 1n<1P •11 ,S);'J Gold CY' ll 11'4 T•l!ln 011 14 14-\l "1Aml!!on V k!ng 6 !A 6 61 Cllba! (~ 10 0-LS .... u ... T•[Mott H ll/• ~ HF1 • 51 '94 WI\ IM In 'n 10 u Cad•n<e. lf>CI r:::r(ti ''' f'4 Tr co Pd :16 JI (;1h 116 I CM Wat~ MY l1 IO 13 61 C•I Flnenl IJdwY C ~ 1.\t Trld•lr • 4 •h H1rb(lt I 10 I IJ W~ I nQ ln G Q\111 C&llthn M<>11 P!\Cn 11.0 14 TY10fl Fd 10~11 H1Twll 11 .. 11'9 E•~lr J902069c1mpRLlr. 4.1 ••1rtn St 1~11\ll UMl!9( J'i . M&C L•v tis t7J !vrs• l\U l6'>1Jcffmp S1>llO II Mio :lJli 24 Un 11111'1'1: 11'1 ll \lo ti.Ob Gor 1 /0 1 /0 1'\l)tl 10 17 1111 Cen!.oull.v l reenMt 11 '411~Ul\McGlt 1!'r I H.cli: 'j61l16J l"Cnv II\ COn 8r""' •0 rntl ll£ If~ 10 US a-nal t ~ Htt ot 7'I 150 Tru11 11 21 12 IS CCIII Pac J JO rove ,., l'lt ~ UJ F.nv.. 21'.1 ~ 11'M H M•nn IS 10 IS IJ Wtll•I 11 ti ll.151 Cantll! 1 10 Grwll! 111 a •~ U! s ... er 4S •1 Mu~1n1n l .o J n Wtittn ll H 11 61 Cai> c 8d(t9 Ou•rd" ( _j\. JI'> u TrkL u .. UI• ICM Finl i 51 '21 wrruir ? A 10 ~1 !lrl)rUI! 1 " fl----------------151 C.t-W•il ln<I I II 66' ~tl•I• 60 Grw1h l tl 4 :Ill Wlnc" Fd ~ '2 .S • •rcC&O!I s SEC SUBpends Boston Finn 1'1Con'! • 31 I If W!nll•IO I IJ ~SI tt<I PLI 1 o(o l'r W t ll 91 U.oll W •r Fcl 6 tJ 1 0-5 ClrP Tt< 1 &O Tr unn 3 n Worth ? n ? 7f C;arrl•rCP oo !I'!!• CtP ' IJ '" le 91•• 10 OS 10" c~rr(i I ]29 l•2' .... !>l<eQIS .. r'5'EZ0 ...... 1C1rtW1I Ca l::!..h:frll. 1 ;&" An ..... "' l\Ynd•l'dl t•l omttt.d !Cl CorP acG Cv•o tO ...__, for lhon dnl9fl• ... trl wltlch •\•neM:CP l 1•• trl<ltd I~ 10 111tr• IOll 1fld carrlld c~ an ct,t,I ~ WASlUNGTON (UPI) In ftjll 01V10E HOS 1t1 1n,,,,•I .... CeMD 1n1 JO u11l1u 01t1_1 .. ldenlllltCI l•l 1>!111 Ctnt Fdr The Secur1t1ea and Exchange •Kirt lbJ dt<;ltred or P•l<f to for lttl$ lr.:.111t'l°1\~d r••r no '"Yltr ••!11 It! Parmtn! on ~·" IPS 1 lO Co--•s&lon b•s su-nded the •ccu"'u'~'""' orvldlfld•t ,,,, ... 1c1 ,._., .,,,L•I:• 1 "u" "'Y~ YlfT! (t ) C•l~ itlut tloelll f1l •nn111I .nMPw 1,?0 underwriting business f) f ''" 111u1 110t.I( 01vlcleft<1 1~1 1111d •hit c:i:l~'t:. 1 y11r-l1tHI lli'l~t'td 0"'!119111 IU Ptr C'nTefU t11b Sterman and Gowell Inc of t~111 111 11or11_ 1>el<1 1111 v•~ !~) .,.r c:1"0 1 60b &stQn for 4S days end llUSptn c•M rn 11on1 1•11 in M'*•u•TC'I fl' c1.-1 1e~ 110 celvt.,.~IP or reor1~nlr1tlof11 hi uo!!•I ~:~.!.."1. :1 il ded two partners MaMlh&IJ 0111r1111r1io111 ttl 111-ciiv1~no1 rwr, cr-1 St !In• Sterman and David Gawel\ when iuvld Cwll W8•r11111 Ct:edb•n Inc da [ II Ill FRACTIONS (II lnO t1le MHowlnit !~~dbf>ptl.,:; for IS ys rom a secur es fl•ur~ h frKtlon In l7ndt (II lndl(l!t• ~:;;::s NY) activtUGJ The penaltlc!I grew 1o11ow11111 flll\Jrt It 1r101on n ,.,,,, (rl h•tpM.a"~ , followlftO I ~ ... I• lt•CI on In 1.Wlht C~\.O M1 do 0Ul Of Ch&rges Of raJJure to !o) IOI owl11t 118\tt• It l<;at:!lftn lh 11tlh" ~"'f~" rot keep proper records and e.x (t) rndk;•!" to!IO'#IM 1111v ... 11 •••c•ion ,;::-:,.,.,'1 If\ 161ttl 5htmNY ) llf tending improper credit t-01~!'.!'!~~~~~:!'=="'="'~~ ~~i~':~l., customers 1. ''"• 0t:10 • I ! ' I I SC O.lllY PILOT lJ. Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List I I _______ .. 4-. • ' !JA OAIL V PI LOT TllundJy, J•n1.1ary 28, lq11 Teachers 'Hamper Minority Pupils' RIVERSIDE t AP) -An anthropologi st says studies anow Ang)o and Meiican American youngsters start ..cboo1 almost even in basic Wlls. the lhird grade.. reports Sa~ dre Prasad. the J.1e:Ucan· Americans are <1ppro1imalely a year behind the national achievement average. Mrs. Prasad's findin gs were based on studies of kin- dergarten children at two Riverside schools. She is an associated in anthropology al UC Riverside. She said the M ex i ca n · American children fall behind because they are ''turned of(" by teachers. Many teachers, she said. stand behind the children and continually r o r rec t pr .. nunciation. Yet by the time they leave Her views were seconded by Edua rdo 11 e r n a n d e t Chavez, coor d in a to r of Chicano studies at U C Berkeley. He said teachers should accept Chicano and black pronunciations and syn· tax, especiall y while the very young are learning lhe basic skill of reading. SONY e EL£CT1lONICS PIERCE-SIMSON e COJ,!PASSES IENDIX HAND IUIUNG .& MOUNTED MOOELS IUTCHIE DANFOunH All GUIDE SEA Alj)UA-METER e ENGINES GULL AERO e HOllE CATS FINANCING .-,VAllA8l[ M!llJDIAN SAIOTS VOGill'. WATElt SK$ I I ) ; ,/ -. lie sugges t ed that the Eng lish most young Me xican- Americans speak in the first grade should be considered a legitimate variation of English n1 uch as the English s poken by wh ite children in Mississippi a nd New York is accepted . "' mYE, DAN • IT910N FENLl!Y OM ff !ht Pllllllc'I llYlrlt1 lplr11, lillllfll, 11 tllfln1 ''""' camp.ltk lly lht d•'f, Tlmt Wit wh• -l"lltt ltntr•I (Oft!r•rineH ff -fllllll' cr111. Now•<11y1. II •Pf"•ro .. mt lr~UI lft ttl!i119 P"'IH1lt111I ••Y- cll0ie91cll ht lp d11>,11.,. It lltw lhem cltl t ol Ito• -· .r.ccordl•I 11 t '"'"' ntwl 1l1ry. lht Michl91" 5111• h1lch.,·y 1cly1lly ha1 1 1 .. m ol PIYdlelot,1111 111 Hit ltl'lf Wiit IMCll ... kh .. 'l'•l ... W•• '"'"' llOI 10 M • :IUCIC1r i.r tt11 tint It! lly th<ly .... ,_ .... ll1hy. bill it _...,,, Jffm~ th•t Nlchtry ,.....,, ll<Jl lhl Wiiy IMllllCll ff lhtlr Wiid c..,1ln1 11111 mike 1llor1·llV... 1p1r1 Whtll IUtlltd loolt, Th1 hlk htty I liff IN <h lhtir Chl1'9H It ft ... oll lh1! tom• i. !ht wr11c1 ltaklllf IM" 1 h1nd..,1. I! thl1 kl•• 1pr1.il1, 1n9!er1 will "'"' 11 1w1p tholr hir11 for • hlth 1.0. In trdtr It ctmt A"ybOdy wilt! • hith 1.0. k11Gw• lht l111P1rttntt tf INSUllANCE. 51m1 1wr1nct •tent >hOUkl l>e ca111ulltd tw9Wll r ty, lo•t Ylllt IOchtr. Wt ti •YitON "EHLEY INSUllANCI wUI k pH·-,, "' ..... .,..., """'"" Wllll you. P•Ml•PI ii'• Plr1tel, •• p1r1>1p1 II """Id IN Mpcl1tee. Or., i., 11 l'02 Mtl,,, N1111llfl!lt... lffck. P-l.M-,111 , • , wllhlv! tD llfl· llo11, DI (OUrM. WE Will NOT BE UNDER SOLD NO FINANCE CHARGE IF PAID IN 90 DAYS NO DEALERS PLEASE NO PHONE PRICES ® HAllDCRAFTED (l~llOM ACOlOI. FREE 1 Year Service Policy and 3 year Pictur• Tube Warranty with the purchase of a ny color set. yoUr hom• -yo11r Mt tu1tom tuntd It your r•c.•ptlon •r••· I 4111 Dl EJc1w ~iv • Gi•nl 25 di•. Chromaco!or Twbe • Gold Vid10 Twner • Awlom1tic Tint • AL1tomal ic Fi111 T unin9 e Tit.,o I 00 Ch e~i i. S.Metlen.1 Zenith Chtofllac:.e., Telnl11en-(23 In. 41a.) l-4SI J Zenith Color Portables start at Ail-Al STlllO ·1ADIO-TURNTAILI $279.87 AMI TAPI UCOIDU • PUYU l Gr Mi' pniciaion T a11• Arm "&LOR ANTENNA 6 1peaker1 -2 Hom• Sound Encloiurts l~O W•tt Outp41f. THI PINllT IN THI INDUITIY Our Cost With Purchase Of Any Color Set SAVI $250. COLOR TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE 9021 ATLANTA ot MAGNOLIA llTWllM llACH AND llOOlHU•ST llN lHI LUCIT DISCOUNT CINTl•I HUNTINGTON BEACH 961-3329 SERVING ORANGE COUNTY FOR 20 YEARS Russ Take Big Lead On Ven11s CAPE KENNEDY (UPI I - Russia 's successful landing of l an automated probe on Venus gives the Soviets at least a five-year lead over the United I Slales in the exploration of the surface of another planet. I And there have b e e n repealed hints from Sovie.LI scientists and com mentators1 1 that last December 's Venus 7 landing was just the startl or an extensive planetary ex· ploration pror::ram. i The Un ited States also has, a mbitious pl ans to explore the! planets, but severe budget cut·1 backs have delayed some pro]· ecl!S and lhrealened to a ff eel I more. The scope of the U.S. program may be revealed Fri·! AIR CONDIT.ION Wilt: GAS NOW .•• 6 RECEIVE $100 CASH Upon compl•tion of 9•• •ir-conditioni ng in1t1I. l1 tion. You'll 9et $100 In cash .•• with th• TRADE IN of your old h1•li"'il or cooljn9 1quipm•nl upon d•liv•..., of n•w G•1 Air C ondllio11i119 (off•r inch F1brw•ry 211 IT'S EAST TO HAVE GAS Alll CONDITIONIN• ••• WITH A NEW FINANCING-PLAN THAT INCLUDn PAllTS AND Sl!llVICI! Of THE UNIT f091 UI' TO 11 YIA91S. gas air conditioning day&night "' CALL US NOW AND GET ALL THE FACTS PACIFIC HEATING CO. ~;;se.:;,he~ .. ~r~~~~~' b~:~:~ AIR CONDITION/NG SPECIALISTS to Congress. In any event. lhe U.S. Is 2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD. devoting most of its planetary • funds lo "ploring Mars Call Us for Prompt Service and Repair because scientists say the red planet has the besl c hance LAGUNA BEACH J.AGUNA HILLS-VIEJO ol harboring some form or 494.9745 837•2000 life. 11~~;;;;;;~=•••••••=~~~~,r~;;;;~;~r~~=:il Russia appears to be con· eentra ting on Ve nus. Three probes in addition to Venus 7 penetrated the t hic k Venusian atmosphere during the past four years. There have been no announced Soviet fo.1ars missions since 1964, and no pr ior ones succeeded . America's Mars progra ms of lhe 1970s begin in ~fay when the space agency will launch two Mariner television scouts designed to orbit Mars and flash back photographs of 70 pellCent of the Martian surface. These will be the first spacecraft to orbit another planet and scientists hope the Mariners will operate Jong enough to show seasonal changes on Ma rs. America's big step In unlocking the secrets of the planets is oow scheduled lo come in 1976 when two large and sophisticated V i k i n g spacecraft will land softl y on Mars and search For life. The $800 million Viking procram will mark America's first at· tempt to lan d on another plaoet. In addition to the Mars ex· ploralion, the Un ited States plans to send a Mariner past Venus and on to Mercury for the first time in 1973. And t wo pioneer probes \Vil\ be 1aWlched In 1972 and 1973 on t wo. year, half-billio,-mile missions to within 100.000 miles of the greal planet J upiter. The space agency had hoped to receive funds in the up- coming fiscal 1972 lo 51.art work on an ambitious series of automated spacecraft to capitalize on an unusual align· men! of the outer planets and make ''gr:::ind tours" of them in the late 1970s and early 1980s. EYES RIGHT " DI. LOUIS J, HASILFf.LD bl ind ne11 t •rt bt • m~­ jor h•••rd to lh• driver who 1uff1" from ii. It c1n b1 c1u11d bv m1 ny diff111nl lhin91. l11id11 your own p1 .. on1I 11wol of phy1ic1I re- 1id1n"' lo ~ql1rir, loo~in9 ,directly into on- • comin9 h1 1d- ~ li9hh or into i '9li1t1nin9 1now '"'" wind· .,11%..I wilb dirt • • • remedy for 9l1r1 blindn111 ind you 1lr11dv h1Y1 i+. It i i loc1!1d ne~I lo the 1cc1l1r1tor '"d l1 c:1ll1d the I RA.ICE PEDAL Slow dow11 when yOll ob11tYI l><ighl lighh or olh· 1r '.ill1r1 prod11c1r1. loo~ 11 th1 1id1 of the ro1d insl11d of di- r1ctly 11 oncomi119 h11dli9hl~ 111+, de NOT 1111 dirk 9 111111 fo r.ducl t l111. They will eho r1d111c1 your 111i119 1bility, c11! •M r11llv inv;l1 Hew lon9 h11 it b.111 1h1c1 yo11r 1'1'11 •tr• tl"•mi11td'1 Ctil 147-1211 for •11 •ppoi11!m1nt or 1top 1,. wlti!• ,ltoppi 119 •* tit• fj.,, Poi11h Ct11+t t, M•i11 St. •I lt•c.lt l lvd. THE BEST R11dtr,ltip poll• provt "1'11· 1111h " it 011• of tlto world '1 mod pop.lit c.omic; 1kip1. R1111i ii 111oily 111 Hit D ll'r l'llOT. No11olgic? You II 2 64 like the quoin! ,1y!1 ••. brovght up·lo·dott in onodized meto!! 2 ·ql. soze. 2 .1i~1tJ-ploi11 • ....,g nify 2 8 , stiavirtQ mirror .-.. · "'super,_,,. cold cuts ro f saver ·. J ~0 82j '°'•• 121 round iar food savers ·!,.___.<! \ plastic assortment laundry bcnLet. 9 qi. 66~ ot 19·q!. wostebo•ket. l 1· 1. 1·q! po1I or do\hpon. ff. A g rMI group of l>elper1 !hot wen'! ru1t, doiter•ot break! ~·1ee '' oil, air ond gas filters l111toll !~ yoor· sell, ord sove! f o,...ou1·fot·quol1!y lee loiters i" J lypes .•. ,hec~ l.icky'~ low prLtt s! Buy"'°""· booster cable 1 32 Co!ot·coded, ~otherpr oo! , .. oil·grro1r ·ond·mo11lu•• ••1i11o n!, w.rh posiri~(lio~ gr•p, 8·1oot olv"'"'llm cobl~. :fM./J •v•••• _,,,,,., 931 '6oc• "'91 .............. . assorted knives L/ltloty, Kind"'.ith, s 2' or cvr ...,d fru•t ,. knile .. "eoch toc;11lkni!e 0f 97~ butche• kni fe . Swi...g·owoy monuol typ•;1ok>K most,inl 147 OTid ,hcJpe1. Wilh mouoting broc:kets. pineapple cutter 148 The sharp on1wer lo most cul!•ng ptoblem1. f,..., quality sloin!en 1!eel blode1; duroble tleetwood hoodle1. C.h the cor• OOl1 quidlly, ~sily ... 1111 you •r1or fresh pit11· C1pp1• fT•ol• "'Ol'I oftwn! tu/'tJcNor1 -...,./r••' 29j bun ba1ket1 •••••.•...•.. •11r'fl t oJ.,, 271 b-nbaginhtnty ..... tlupol"lf long gown 717 Dron!otic ot·hori. ;ow• wit It ffu;d, body-following linei ••. thl pvll• ll1rouvh woist ood buttoll skirt derignotd to pt rmit o pro.-ocolivt Uiow of leg. lo who tever d-vree ii desirtd. Fosr.ioned of cor11s1ing-soh ocetc!M ,,, 11.e lop in vi't'id pri1111, skirt in coordi1t- 01ed lolids. S·M-L poly•1rer pant suit 1057 I he ordi1pe"5obl1 pont 1wi1 of t o•y· core polye1ter , . , pull·on pooh ortd i.leevelr u top: l•o,. l •ppe<ed, otld oc· rented with gold· color bunoo1 orod teo1·d•op 1ob1. MOl"(COl~;Slolo. 'ID "golden 7" teLoE• , l••lt't• motor oil 7 011 treatment ':..~ ""' 78~ Gi.,. you• r.ogir>e o l!'Mt! Help your oil lo do 11-\ worlt better, 1mok11 !111! Golden 7 prol1ct1 ood 1eol1, 10"'" o•I. 11 99.tlU~ wire set 313 lt Np thos• sporlc plugs !iring! Eliminole1i lho~ "miHr 1i"1hol rob your cur ol powtr ••• l'>Okl it oct Ii~• o bucking b•or<o! f,,... quol;ty f'!Olot 0t1 ...tril "'sccn•ty thol losh long ••• better pro!ect•Oll IOI' "'Dk!'· SxT rear seat speaker 1(1tpjhl 1ou nd wher1 y-wonl iti front, bock, 0( bo1h. l'•HOld.,.itd 3-363 way 1witch; ports o"d in1tnKtio111 indvdl'd. :~~-~~~b·a_:~~~-~(.~-~.'.'..~ .. 9 9~ f:..~:~~~~~-~(i~~~ ....... 2'3 ~~!~~:,., ....................... ] 64 AWAIUIU ,, .. n IKIT MK•I c.ttn sri<fr·o" flowers 12• Tru,ty "'l•p·noh " to help p•t .,.nl ba1hf11b ood d1owt r occidt 11h. ~f·o~~"'I· •oft , MJ111lory. 1011 1 (~'rM 1 '<: .1 •• •• ' ,.,,. •' • , • "· ...... , .. -1 ~~-l~o,\~!(:1~·1·~ ''· ·~ .. ,. '• ., . . 11,,,,',~D l •r'L ~-.J.• '•~"' 1 ¥~ • •t.,, ~ I ' :. f ' I Russ .Have Satellite U.S. Pl1oto WASHINGTO N (AP) -Whefl a ~search associate at the Maine State Museum decided he needed a satellite photograph or the northeastern United Sta~s for a new exhibit, it seemed • simple enough task to find one. Certainly, thought Ron Kley, with NASA, the Air Force and the National Weat~er Service all having picture-taking satellites whipping around the globe, one of them must have caug ht a sna~hot of New England. Right '! Wrong. None of the agencies had ev.u been much interested in a space picture of Maine e:.:cept the Weather Service ~ but that was on a cloudy day. 1 With a chuckle Kley realized the only people in terested in peeping in on Maine on a clear day probably were the Russians. The Russians~ And so, .. just for the heck of it,'' Kley said, he wrote the Soviet Embassy here. A prompt reply referred him lo the Soviet Academy of Sciences in Moscow. Kley wrote ~Joscow. Could the academy help? Certainly, the Russians replied. In fac t, they said, they had the best knowa satellite picture of the northeastern United States in existence. They'd be glad to send a copy. For $100. It took a while for lhe small museum to find the money, but Kley finally received his pi cture last week, ending a search that began in December 1969. "It's of excellent technical quality," Kley said in a telephone interview from Augusta. "We can even pick ou t small offshore islands. The only proble m is that it 's not a single photograph. It's a mosaic of several photographs. "In fa ct, it's a paste-up job that looks Jike it was done with a dull pair of scissors during a short lu nch break." Like any disgruntled consumer, Kley has written the Soviet Academy com- plaining lhat he didn't gel his money's worth. And while waiting for a reply he's hoping that maybe Apollo 14 . NASA's manned lunar fligt.t scheduled for takeoff this wff?kend, might come up with 11omething better. But if Kley ever decides to arrange an exhibit on Moscow, he says he knows where to go for his satellite pictures. "Those," he says, "our government probably has in abundance." Ex-Guatemalan Leader Drowns MEX ICO CITY (UPI) -Former Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. SS, drowned 1n his bat htub Wednesday. Authorities said he ap- parently collpascd whi le entering the tub and fell face down in scalding waler. Dr. Jorge Cortes Ramirez, coroner of suburban Naucalpan. said Arbenz was "very badly burned" from the near·boll- ing water. He said there wa s no evidence of a heart attack . Arbenz' widow, Maria Cristina, said she would fly her husband's body to her native El Salvador for burial, She said she wanted no help rrom Guatemala where a right wing revolt forced her husband Into exile in 1954. l i • • YOUNG LADIES HAVE AN EYE ON MISS LAGUNA TITLE Nancy, Frances, Nanci, Jill ind Jeni Six Laguna Area Girls Seek City Beauty Title Si:ic Laguna area girls ha ve entered the 1971 J\1 iss Laguna Beach beauty contest to dale, the city Recreation Department announced today. The pageant, co-sponsored by the Recreation Department and the Junior Woman's Club, will be held on Lincoln's Birthday, Ftb. 12, at B p.m. in the Festival of Arts Forun1 Theater. Official entrants so far include JeMifer Bradley, 16, 273 Beverly St; J ill Greenwald, 20, 263 Fairview Sl.; Marie McCarty, 16, 2975 Alpine Way; Nancy Henderson, 17, 163 Monarch Bay; Fr!lflef§ Cotterell, 18, 1267 Starlit Drive; YOUTH GRID MEET SLATED Persons interested in organ izing an All-American youth football pro- gram in Laguna Beach are invited to attend an organizational meeting tonight. The gathering will be at Laguna Beach liigh School boys gym and starts al 7;30 o'clock. The program is for boys aged 8-13. and Nanci Nichols, 16, 1325 Cerritos Drive. The contest is open to all girls between the ages of 16 and 24 who r!"!ide in lhe Laguna area fr"om Irvine Cove to South Laguna. Deadline for entry is Feb. I. Entry forms are available at the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast Highway. A panel of fi ve judges for the contest includes Byron Griffith, Hollywood agent representing GE Artists ; Oiris Robinson, television SW' of Twelve O'Clock High ; Robert Carter, television and movie actor and singer; Penny Bay shore, instructor for John Robert Powers schools; IJld Kam Nel;oion of Wah Di!:ney Productions. Miss Laguna and her court will reign over the Winter Festival and other events during the year and will be the reci pient of numerous gifts donated by bualne.ss firms. These include • dinner at Victor Hugo's; a trip to Disneyland ; wetsuit From llobie's Surfboards ; flowers from Macres Florists; dinner at the Merry Mac Restaurant; gift from Marriner'1 Stationers and a colored portfolio fro m Pran Hunt Color Productions Inc. On the morning alter the pageant, the que en and runners-up have been Invited to breakfast al the Cottage Restaurant. Thundq, J....., J8, ,1'71 s DAILY~~ I. Relations Unit Eyed Public Hearing Announced for February • ~ Elfl.blilhment of 111 Ora.nae County HWWI Relatloos Commllllon moved one llep ._... reallzaUon Wedoeldriy with the 1etttnt1of • pobllc hwinC for Feb. 14 on Ille long1tudt.d propoul. . AJ p-opGHd by • 11-member task force named by the IUpervilort lut August the commlalon would be e.tablilhed beglnnJo( March I and would have these functionl: 1. Investigate, study and initiate action to raolve problems "laUn& to prejudice, di&crlmination and diaorder in any held of human "laUons. 2. Recommend JeglalaUoo of all levels of 1ovemment to prevent and 1Ueviate aoclal problem> ·In employment, houlin( and other ....... S. Coosult ud cooperate with public and private q:encia, ln developing pro- grams and techniques for achieving harmonious Intergroup r<latloN and conummicaUooa within Orqe County. 4. Provide a resource for the lndlvidual whose problem in the IOCial sytlem ha• been caught up or bypaued in the bureaucratic structure of the com· munity. To achieve the listed functlon1 the ~mmissjon would have the duty and power to: Receive and hear specific complaints and probletn1 of dlscrlmin.ltlon; to dilcuss tach matter with the appropri•le public or private agency for their ac-- tion.!; to investigate when appropriate, make flndlnga and report these flndlngs. Emphasis is to be placed upon nttda In the ~u of education, housing, police-- communlty relatlons and employment. Thi propoeed comm1"ioa will have 20 memben of whom at le11l eight shall be from the Mujcan-Am.trican 1nd Black communities. Of the 20 members, fi ve will be named by the Board of Supervitora, five by th e League of Cities and the remaining 10 by the initial 10 member1 from a list of eligibles propoeed by concerned ind ividuals and groups within Oranae Coun ty. A three-rntmbers staff is proposed con- si.sting of an uecuUvt dlreotor, an asals-- tant and a typist clerlt. Cost of operatin~ the commission for the flscal year 1971·72 is estimated at $53.000 with $.12 ,500 for salaries and $12,000 for commission member fees al $2.S 1 meeting, limited to two a month, Co6t for the last quarter of the current fi scal yur is ~ti mated at $17 ,800. A problem which may con front the oommi!sion -the subpoena power was atudled and a possible solution sugaested. 'The c.ounty Counsel ruled that the county bu no powtr to delegate sub- poena power to a comml.uion or com· mltt.ee. However, the 1UperTitor1 may 1ppolnt • county Hearing Officer. Such as officer could conduct bearln&s on behalf o! the commisalon and would have the power to l1sue 1Ubpoenas com- pelling attendance at the hearing. A Human Relations Commission has not met with unanlmOUll approval. Two weeks ago the League: ct CJtie1 voted JU againat formaUon of such• body. League represe:ntatJve1 wue concerned v.'lth the lndJscrlmtnate me of the sul> poena power and with the 1atk of elected officials on the proposed commls9lon. The Orange County Police Chiefs AssociaUon allO expresaed coriceaned in· terest. Huntln gtcin Beach Chlet Earl Roblta111e asked for further information ror the chlm' group. 'I'he tuk force 1tudy wu made •t Ille requeat ol Ille 11111 county Grand Jury, tbe Humlll Relatkn Councll of Oranat County, and Ille League ol Woman Voters ol OrlD&e County • Selection guJdeltnes !or: commiaion membership include tblt each appobttee lhou.ld "be aen.slttve to and havt an uncle1tandlng of human relatlonl, u demonstrated by prnlous active IJ> volvement in IGlvfnc problems of human concern in the conummtty or iDttrelt group !nlm which be II oelected." n.. lkleml>er !Ilk .;.. ~ .,...tad the outllno.or Iba Jllcipooad oont mlilalan re~ntod Ille --Coandl; Ille Leque ol Cttlel; atcutno au lsUnts to the superv'9or1; cowd.Y .j. ~tratJve o(flce, plannlng, ~ and welfare dfpartmenta. • CouOty Aclmlnlltrattva O!!ktt ~ E. nomu tervtd u cbalrman ot tt tuk force. Orqe Coast rtsiden= inl Included J1ct Turk, H Beacll; Doyle Miller. city -lstr of Huntingtion Beach, and Mra. El* Kroucbe, Coat. Mesa. ;: Birds~ •Layover~ Migrators Stop at Lion Country By FREDERICK SCllOEMEBL Of .. IMltr """ .... Lion Country Safari ln Laguna Hills has become qui~ • "home away from home" for thowands of migratory and local birds and animals, Bill York zoological director of the pre!erve, told members of the Friends of the Laguna Beach Library Wednesday night. "In fact." York uplalned, "it'a coettng 111 an e1tr• ~ to eoo pounds" of feed per day. But wt really don't mind feedlna: them." York said that many birds en route IOU.th for the winter have stopped - and decided to at.ay -at the African vtldt, because "they know they wlll be safe tram being abot by hunters." The new arrlvala generally blend in with all the other animals 1J1d caun no grNt problems. "'Ibe blrdl wW ride on the backs of the giraffes. antiiopes IJld rhinoceros or simply fly around Efforts Go On To Extend Mideast Peace By United. Prus laternatioaal Eff<rts to extend the Feb. 5 Middle East cease-fire deadline wera being pursued on several fron ts today while Egypt expre.ssed peuimism over lack of proare.u ln peace talb. The Big Four ambaaaadors to the United Nations, npr•entlns tbe UnJlld St.ates. Soviet Union, Britain and France, announced after a meeti ng Wed- neaday they would meet acata feb. 4. ne IMOUllcement prompted speculation among dlplmnats they will urge a ceue- flre e1tenak>n. U.N. negotlator Gunmlt V. Jmlng and Secretary-General U Thant were dilcuss-- ing the altuatJon and there were reports that the call for an extension mlaht come eJthe:r from Thant or from a meeting or d1' U.N. Security Cowlc!I. There was further IJ)eCUlaUon that Egypt might announce IJI extentlon on ill own before the truce ends. EgypUan U.N. Ambal!ador Moham· med H. El·Zayy1t, however, opreued dlsoourqement Wednesday at Israel's reaction to Egypt'• siJ:-polnt peace pro- po&als. the. preserve," YCl'li uid. } ''Tht bird• eat larvH in ~ JMX1di.. paru lte:s of the animals and wblt w provide them with. All in all, tt mUii an lntereatlng food chain." \i York, in addltlon to Jiviq hll t.alt. brought with him a tour~ month-old lion cub which ~ u instant hit with young arid old alike. • • The zoologist also had planned to brttC a llama, but the animal wu Ill wtdl a sore throat and unable to come. York noted that there bu been a sharp rise In the number of ,.._ at Ille 111• ol Ille driv.......,. • We al!o h#ve many reptiles, frop ..a turtles which have always been l!it dlgenous lo Ille aru, runninl ....... the p~e." ; "We have found bobcat and coyofi track!! near the praerve boundarla. Some of the bobcats have tried to ctin6 the fenca .and go after the fla~ but so far we 've had no fatallUu." - Recently over Christmu, Yor~ 111 deer were driven to the "from the noise and 1moke tn bJlJi where they had the rock fesUval," Dlll'IJ, adjacent to the safari grwndl. . "Normally, we see three to four cW e1ch morning, as they come down fnllll the hills to the boundarlea of t.'9 pi WiM to find out what's going on," York Aid.~. Jack rabbits and cottontalla art amciai the many "local" rt.!ldenll •t dll llfUl and get along with all of the 1Dim1Ji. excepl the cheetahs, York noted. · "U we see rabbits wllh the ~ we do our best to weed tbem B; he Aid. • FOOTBALL COACH BANQUET SPEAKE~ LAGUNA -Saddleback Coll ... r.,. bi ll coach Vincent McCullouab wtll aput at lhe Father-Son Banquet. •t l :IO p.a. Feb. 4, lpOlllOl'ed by Ille Par..t T- Gulld of Crown Valley ElenmstuJ. School. '~ The banquet, to be held •t the ICb:d. In Laguna Niguel, will be ~ by fUn11 of Sa:ddleb1ck'1 1'70 ~ gamea. Appearing with e o 1 el McCullough will be Dove Limo...._ who wu named "Out.dudlnr Offail'! Lineman" for the All-Mlalion C.aat..- flrat team. " . ' The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the '18tion's h·ighest interest 'qn insured . savings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very personal service. • ' Highest interest · at utual ~@.'lings Corw d9I lhr otnce: 2U7hitCOMIHlgfM•'/175-6010 Other offiee1 tn COvfM. Welt Arcadia. Patadlna and Oltflfs't • I I C JWLl 'ILOT Ecuador Charges Coercion by lJ .S •. _ 'What are you going to he unemployed at when you graduate?' Here's One For Book By DICK WEST WASHINGTON -One ol the moot discussed books this season is "Tbe Greening of America," which tells bow the younger generation is saving the l"OUlltry from whatever it ii I.be older generation baa: done t.o It. . Amoog other things the older genera• lion has doae, ocoording lo the book, k ponnlt r.cluiolo<Y lo run ~ampant. If it becomes tecllnically poulbJe to do 90mething, the book saye, the older generation will do It simply because U u technlcally posalble. lJUle or no thoulht la gt.en to whether !he project u really needed or what Ill ultlmal< Impact on ooclety and the environment wlll be, the book uys. Being over 29 mysell, I resent this 1lleg1tton, and ., does Dr. Dmimoff D<epthink of the ll<epthlnlt Institute of Applied Research and Storm Door Do. WERN I llAN Into Dr. Deeplhlnk at the Trauporlation Deporlm<nt thia week. he dl!closed of an airplane that £lies upside down. ''Thanks to 90me recent breakthroughs In aeronautical engineering. it is no• technically possible to build a plane tha t fl ies better upside down than it does right s1dt up ," ht erpl1tned. "Tbe aerodynam i c pinciple tnvolvecf hert probably ta too eomplk:lted !or the laymll1 lo UlldersW>d, bul •uically the blood ruoblni to the passengers' heads as they fly upside down glves the plane addiUoo.al thrust." Dr. ll<epthlnk opened hia briefcase tnd pulled out a small drawing board lo which wu attached a set ol blueprints. "'Jbeae are the p!ans for the American version of the upside down transport, ::ommonly koo'll"d u the UD'I"' he said. "Aa you can see, it will bt capable )f curyiDg more than 2,000 puseogers In an mverted potltlon." "rrs BEAt.rnn.." J said. ''but have ~·oa '''•''"eel 'What effect Dying upside down will ba•e oo the pasaengers?'' ·;we cooducted uttnsive tests \Yith IIlimab fJyin« with their Ifft. over their beads and no harmful eUects were ooted.'' • "Tbal"s re.assuring," 1 Aid. '<Whit animals did you use in tbe eiperlment?" "'Jbrtt-toed sloths." "You seem to have toacbed all the ~logic.al bases." r said. "but are )'(U certain there is a genuine need for the· United States to build a plane of lhis type?" '"Absolutely," he replied. "We have lo dO i l to keep Britain, France and lhe Soviet Union rrom doing It." I doubt that even the younaer cencr• lion wou1d quarrel with I.hat. -UPI Ul!llT ...... FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZES IN CONSHOHOCKEN, PA., WHERE 41 WiRI INJURID: 40-mph Wind Gu1t1, Rapidly Forming Ice Hamper'ecf Flreft;hter• . . Blasts Rip, Row of Homes Philadelphia Suburb Devastated After Gas Leak PHILADELPIDA (UPI) -A series of explosions ripped through a row or ~1 in the suburb of w e s t Conshohocken Wednesday nigh t, leaving one fireman dead and two persons miss- ing. At least 48 other persons were injured, one critically. Firemen ~arched the rubble of the homes today for the bodies of the two missing oceupants. The explosions and the fire that follow- ed, appartntly triggered by leaking gas, de!troyed at least five homes and damaged six others. It raged out of cootrol fer m o r e than three hours. Utility poles burned like catdles. Fourteen persons, including seven fire men, were hospitalized. Four persons "'ere ad mllted to the intenal.ve care. unit at Sacred Heart Hospital in Nor- ristown with burns and injuries. Joseph Powers, 20, .the dead fireman, we working a hose line with his l w i n brother, J ames, when ·he was struck by flying rubble. Debris trapped at least nine other firemen briefly when a. wall collapsed. \Vind s with gusts up to 40 mile s an hour hampered firefighters' efforts . Ice formed rapidly on firemen's coaL!I, apparatus, telephone poles, t re es , Vietnam Deaths Rise Reds Trap Cambodians 18 Miles South of Capital SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces cut oU .a bauauon of Cambodian troopa today 18 miles 80Uth of the capital of Phoom Penh. No attempt was ex- pected to take the Cambodian capital itself. In South Vietnam, the U.S. Command reported that American combat deaths rose sharply lo 50 last week -its GREEN BERETS TO QUIT WAR SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command today lllJlO\ll)ced the closeout of all Special Forces operations ln South Viel· nam and said Uie Green Beret. symbol of the elite troopers. will disa ppear from the battlefields of Indochina. 'Ibe lasl major Green Beret in stall ation in Vietnam, the Sill special forces head- quarters at Nha Trang, ceased operations Jan. 15 alter nearly a deca de. The command did nol specify when all the troope would be out of the country. highest point in more than two month's -because of an increase in helicopters downed. The 24-hour lunar new year cease-fire in Vietnam Wednesday, however, saw fewer violations than any truce period in the last five years. U.S. spokesmen reported Uiat Communist troops caused a total or 78 incidents during the period . One U.S. soldier was killed and three v.·ounded . In neighboring Cambodia, the baltallon of government troops was cut off at the t.own of Saang . A battle at dawn two miles from the town left two Cam- bodians killed an d 10 wounded, according to field offi cers on the scene. They said " 10 Communists bodies were found and "another 40 Communist \\'ounded y,·cre carried away." UPI reports from the scene said that the government troops in Saang \\'ere cut off there from the capital v.·hen an estimated 150 Communists entrenched themselves around a broken bridge over the Bassac River. tn lhe capital, the curfew was relaxed for the second day today. It WU imposed after a Communist attack on the Phnom Penh airport last week and subaequ.e:nt terrorist atlacka inside the city ltaelf. sidewalks and the. street. Walls of fire, with flames leaping 00 to 75 feet into the l!lky, spread along the 100 block of Front Street. Workers from the Pbll1delphia Electric Co., whkh services the area with gas, shut off power at 12 :40 a.m. The blaze then was rapidly brought under control. Adolph Vivian, 59, a resident of the next block, beard the blast u be wa1 preparing to go to work. · "I was sitting on the steps puUing my shoes on, ready to go to work and all at once. . .I look out and I see a ball or fire come up at me , towards my place," he said. The nut time he looked out "we had another explosion" be said. There were about "three or four e.i· plosions," he said. Vivian's home is on a hill overlooking the block. Impact or the explosions knocked out the window or bis kitchen door. Drugstore Drops Shoplifting Rap Against Udall FAIRFAX, Va. (UPI) -A charge of "concealment of merchandise" against former Interior Seaetary Stewart L. Udall was dropped today after the lawyer for a drug store 1dmlt1ed the arrest was "an error." Udall , 50, was arrest.eel Jan. 16 when he walked out of a drug store in Fairfax County near his McLean, V1., home With a llO-cent pack of cigars. Udall said at the lime the incident 'vas "a horrible mistake" and said in a statement he handed to newsmen at the courthouse today that it was ''an absent·minded oversight.'' The lawyer for the drugstore said "great study" convinced the drug firm the charge was "an error" and asked it be dropped. County Proseo.itor Robert Horan agreed , saying it was "traditiooal in misdemeanor cases" to go along with the business firm. In his typewritten statement , Udall said, "other than ordinary traffic tickets I have never been charged with violating the criminal laws of the United States." He said he did not have the slightest tntention of stealing the cigars and was innocent WASHINGTON· (UPI) -Ecuador bas Mbed -more AmerlcaD !Ulla boall oil Ill cout !or a total ol 17 since JUL 11, Ille Slate Department said today. 'llleae'........, occurred at about the time the oouncll al Ille Ori•nlzation of American stftel approved a n Ecuadorian requeat to hold a fore.!Cn m!nlsWs meet.bi&. Saturday on the tuna --eray. '!be three ve.M:ls reportedly seized IOIDe Ill mlle:l\df. the coast of F.cuador ftM: ldenttW u tbe Je&notte C, the Colmera aod-the Weotern King. All ,-boats ...... tUan lo the F.caidorlu PQr1 ol Sallnu where they pnibUJy ·wfll be ,.Jwed after paying moy~. 'lbo·O.IS foreign mtnilters -t Satur· day lo ~ Ecuadorian charies of U.S. 0 coerdoo .•• and economic agresakm." '!be" OAS voted 2:14 Wednelday nJshl for tbe fo~ mlltlsterl' 1t1alon, lg~ noriDg a U.S, State Department prvpolal for uj>ltraUon of Ille dlspule. The Uoll<d Stetes. llhllalned from the vol<. '!be meeting .... ochoduled Saturday. In the put two ....U, Ecuador bas aone oa a ahlp seizing spree. Ecuador claJma uclllllve flshlnl rlihla up . to 200 miles from ite couts. 'Ibe United ·states cootencl• tbe rights u:ten<' only U mlJea from the couts. It wu the !Int time the fi.sbing dtapul< bad been broagbl before the OAS. Ecuador ut.d the hearing, ~ the Ualted States bad used 0 coerclve" meuurea by imposing a one-year embargo on arms sales to Ecuador. 1be American arbitration proposal, ad- vanced earlier Wednesday, proposed talks involving Ecuador, Peru, Chile and Senators Call Rogers to Meet Over Cambodia WASHING TON {UPI ) -The Senate Foreign Relations Committee called Secretary of State William P. Rogers to a closed meeting today to find out what is going on in Cambodia, and whether U.S. military action there violates Congressidnal restrictions wted last year. ''The purpose of this meeting is lo find out what's going on out there," a committee s;poke!rnan said. "We know there have been Americans on the ground In Cambodia. We saw the pictures in the paper." Defentte Secretary Melvin R. Laird WedJlesday gave his version or U.S. in- volvement in Cambodia al a dosed meeting with the Senate Armed Services Committee. An amendment by Sens. John Sherman Cooper (fl.Ky.), and Frank Church (0. Idaho), prohibits the use of ground com· bat forces or military advisers in Cam· bodJa. Laird te3Ufied there had been no violation of either the language or the intent of the amendment. Foreign Relations Committee members wanted specU!c information from Rogers about eyey,.i lness reports that American servicemen were on Uie ground in Cam- bodia, citing pictures of soldlers dressed in civilian ciotbea to back up their ques- tion. Record Lows Numb East J udge J . Mason Grove ordered the charge dropped. Udall, now in private law practice tn Washi ngton. D.C., was arrested by a policeman who was in the lt«e al the time. Travel W amings Go. lnw Effect in New York ......... ........ ,..,....,. TeMperst11rea _ .... _ ol!ll'•t• olllCll,,,_ ''"~ llulf•lo Cll!ct911 Clncl"~n C!..,.el•nd 0.llH OtnV011r DHMol,,. O.trol! 1"1lrtMlllk1 Frnno "-· ........ ·-· J1d1Mtl\lll .. ICtMM(lh' L1iV-1 L• ""9el._ V.S. S••••r• .. ~;:;: , LOl'ANC>ILl:I CUl'O-C* ~ J MIMll •rl-4 .... I! ....... 1\911 .. """ """*' Mlhlt--*" '"''' wtlftl r«onl lcrw1 et -lo-M"-"'tlh Cltlont. At i.tll IJ .. ti. • ........ H .. 0'1MM 911• ,...ttid rMCllNie ....., .... .... Tft ,,_"* ... ._._.~ ........ ,.....,..ti .... Ofile VII'" bNlltflt 111111 .,_ ,.._ -iCJ{JwiN klu'"'°'"' IHlflO!l to "'-Ce!llrl l .._... ...Im s.f""" , ....... Atl lfldl " .... ,_ "'" -'1'11 .......... _, .. IOlllM9ttwr.. lf!lllt(YI, -11'1-"~ ..... ,. ~,. -"*" °"'" .... ""~ Wiit Vl..... f'"1\flfld, Or4!. ,, • .,.1 .... ...,.,... ..... 111 .,,.. ""' ~ '"' -fflll ~ -1111 the "'-·- 11 ·IS ., .... ,, " '°' -n u " .. • 0$ ,ti l• ., .M It IJ .N II °' .II .. ,, .. .. It ot A1 .... .. .., ... .. ,, ,, ., .. II ..... " ,, .. ,, " .. .... n '' "' D M .... 01 ..., ·" oa ·I• .Al U M " .. ., " M M " M " n . " " .. .a 0 .. . .. n i ,, • 0 Talk Under Way Over Oil Gripes TEHRAN (UPI) -Negotiatioat opened. todaJ blt1l'Ml representaUves IA_, majar ,......-on companies and the Pfnlln pl! olalel lllmed at averting a crisl1 In Iba oil lndullry. Jnn'• Mlnlater ol Finance J amshld --· ..... Ille talb p_.....i .. ~ ..... the first ,_ -lafolylnc -. from Jnm, lnQllldSladl-st ..W tbl oO comp1n1 rn.,,....,--IMl-1"1• .....r lo restrict the negotlatlolll to the 1'eni. Oalf area. '~ad. Risk.' I Hits 103; Still Going Strong LONDON (UPI) -nnnc:a J-. who WU rduled a Ille Nnnce poUq '10 yun ago on grounds abe bad a bear! condition, celebral<d bet I03nl '*tbda1 lodoy • f:•pltal Tour the Unil<d States on th< fi.shing limit and stlbmltlirlg the question to the in~ temaUooal OOurt ol justice fQr a'bind"' de!<rmi>atlqn. The foreign ministers· already arp gathered io Washington for a discussion of bow to oombat political terrorism. -· Laird Points To Military Budget Boost '. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today next 'year's military budget will be in· creased. ma inly to ·achieve an .all- voluntcer Army and te maintain U.S. Technological leadership. W~bout giving figures for the fiscal 197%Jbudget to be 511bmi1ted to Congress Fr~y, Laird said "The defense budget will show an increase in ·fund! requested but still continue to follow a downWard trend as a percentage of total federal spending." In remarks prepared for the Com· monwealth Club of Calllomla, he added: "Thia increase will be related primarily to our efforts to achieve zero draft call! by July J, 1973, and will also under- score the need for the u.s: to maintain technological leadership in light of the momentum or weapons development by the Soviet Union." At the same time, Laird said, American involvement in the lndoc.hina 1war "by any measure -casualties." operations, manpower levelS', budget - is down significantly." Laird said the Nixon Adminlstratio n Inherited "a one-track policy f o r 'terminating the war," b ase d ent irely on Paris negotiations. He said as the prospect for resolving the conflict by diplomacy alone appeared "more and more remote,'' lt was necessary to adopt a policy of "Viet- namization." turning the war over to the South Vietnamese. But he said "We continue to pres5 for a negotia ted settlement because that would be the quickest way to end the war." A similar policy, he said, is being tarried out in Cambodia where under terms cf the Nixon Doctrine the Cam- bodians are rupplying the manpower and the United States is fumishing assistance in the form of arms, equipment and air power. Pro Penny Pincher Levels Phone Suit NEW YORK (UPI) -Robert Warren, a song writer. arranger and publisher, says he has kept track of all the ti mt he ha s spent waiting for telephone dlal tones, or waiting to get an operator or a business representative. Warren says he has spent 3,675 minutes v.·aiting in eight menths. Since he values his time at $5 an hour , he is sui ng the New York Telephone Company for ' $306.25. ""'l ........ ...... ~ ................ ~..., ............ •1•"'"'· ... -.................................... l!t.1111""- -..... fH!I. Pel•••I .... ~ t PalNY ...... n.G. P•IM .,..... .... ,W IN , ............. •:M•""· I r A ·e tN. a.,.. 0..., 1'Ht. :lnl':Jltll .............. ltt1.",.',·..,.~ ... ........ ~ .. ..........,.. w ............ . "-! Yort c-1· llllt ., Ub ()'It.no. ,,_,_.... i.. TM ~ MrlloM ti "'-<Wlll'Y $1, Lou1' WW .-..tr _.,, •"" fir .,_ Mn .... City of 1x1r~ 1'IN\IY IOI hi tftt lftltrlor S.,, oi... 1,1 ¥1114''1't ot tM "a<llk (Hit 1111", Stfl "•111(11<0 J I '°"'"'" Ctlfl0rnl9 tfllot ld wmme... SHt!lt •·' lllr1 -•Mr wlrl! .....,...,""" 111 ri. l.olteM J. '°' 11 fN"" !OUllOtl1. 't''tlllnt'lOll " .. ... " SJ " -~ ~ .... ff " •'Ibey cenabll7 mac1e • biC mlolak• with me,'' Ml• JenneU said at tbe ._. kr retired Cllurdl AmlJ Sill«"l. About 100 guests attended a mlfee puty ror her thb1 momlng and more stopped In for tea tb1s afternoon. Patricia Nixon oscortl Prlnql:I ~hla ol Spain on a lour of the new John F. Kennedy Center for the Perfonnlng Am . In front row (L to Rl are Mrs. Emil Mosbacher. wife 0£ the chtet or protocol, PrinceS'! Sophia; Tricia, and \Vllllam Blair, director at the center . ........ .., .....,11111'1 ....... -.... 11:16 1.m. ' . ·-. Beat Birthda11 Matthew Winkler received a "welcome home" bug from his mother on his seventh birthday. The Lima, Ohio, boy made rnedicaJ history, doctors said, by surviving rabies. He left the hospiW Wednesday. Report on Kent State ·Ordered Suppressed CLEVELAND (UPI) -A federal j ud&e today ordered a apedal Ital< Gnnd Jury report on the killing or four Kent State University student.! d~atroy~ because It would "prejudice the I n d i c t e d penona" and they would not Kidnap Plot Jury Grills Heat Expert HARRISBURG. Po . (UPI) - A federal gr8nd jury ln- vesti1ating an alleged antiwar plct to kidnap a presidential adviser and blow up the heeting systems cf f I 11 e 1011ernment buildings h a 5 questioned an expert on the hearing systems. Joseph· M. Joynl, an en.ginffr with the General S e r v I c e • Administration (GSA) In Washington, O.C .. testified Wednelld.ay a f t e r receiving full immunity from progecution . He had pleaded the Filth Amendment to i ll questions Tuesda,y. get a fair trial. Judge William K. Thomas of U.S. Diltrict Court here, however , refused to halt the prosecution of the 25 persons Indicted by the special state grand jury even though he aee1.Jsed the grand jury of violating its oath of secrecy in the report it iS!ued on ttie shooting deaths of the student! 1ast May 4 by Ohio N1tional Guardsmen. ''The vice or the vk>ll:tion of the oath of Ha'ec)' ii that the grand jury flndll com· mi&sion of criminal offenses and ascribes g u I I t to participants," Thomas 1aid. "These findings and con- clusions. unlawful violations of the grand jury oalh of secrecy, prejudice the indicted pmom. "If allowed to stand, these findings and conclusions will irreparably injure their right to a fair trial." It '9.'as not tmmedial.el y determined what dfect the Thomas order, handed down In a suit filed by several of the 25 Indicted, would have on their prosecution. State Attorney Gene r a 1 William J. Brown uld he did not know what position the 11tate would take. Ran Away, Swiped Car Preacher's Son Strangled By· Miami Jail Cellmntes MIAMI (UPI ) -'Die Rev. pearance aJld extreme Calvin Q:>ok Is a Church of politeness and told the youth God minlster who rurui a to call bis fat her when he 11 m s 11 , p&rl·tlme electrical got back to the jaU. Cloyce businw in a South Carolina promised he would. townofabout3,000. When Cook called that puttiJli Cloyoe In ouch a· cell wu an error ln "com· mon aena.e." The Cook> arrived Mondoy and, wltb Rainwater'll hel p, got Mn. Fulcbettl i. drop cborgei ofter poytng her the tw il cost to get her car back from Titusville. " Thursd•Y. Janu1ry 211, 1~71 CIAILV PILOT _i l -; Coors Hi t ByFI'C On Prices 3 More Metropoli tan ''\ Job less A .. reas Named WASHING TON (UPI) _: The nwnber of metropolitan areu suffering from substantial unemployment has risen to to~ lbe b1gheat in aeven yun. WASHINGTON (U PI) 'Jbe new total wu ~ Wednl6day when ~ Labor Adolph Coors Co., a ltadin& Departmtrll added three mort cttia to its aublltantial unem· brewer, was accused by the ployment list _ Atlantic City with 8.3 pen:eDit joble!s rate: Federal Trade Commlu.lon Buffalo, N.Y., with 8.8 percent and Kalamazoo. Mich .• with (P'TC) today of price fixing and other antitrust violatlona. -7.1 percent. The nc aaid Coors and 'M>e department's official definition ol aubstantial unem· it& dirtrlbulora set wholesale p1oymen.t is a jobleas rate of at least 6 percent. The total ol 40 auch areu ia the hl&hest 1ince March of 19M. prices for Coors beer, pro. Five smaller labor market& were allO added lo the list vided suuested retail pri~ of time areas suffering from the same problem, bringing arid tried to ~rce retallera that total lo 6Z2. The five addttiart! were Bakersfield; lwfichi- into sticking to the suquted gan City-Laporte, Ind.; Par9ons, Kan.; Biddeford-Sanford, i' I • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • ' ' • 1 When Cook and his wife, Rainwater, the judie told him Irene, heard that their son, of Cloyce's trouble and pro- Cloyce. 17, had been arrested mised to help him if Cook on a car theft charge, they and his wile came to Miami. scraped together the money Cloyce. who had no p.ast for the trip to Miami lo try record, scored low on a jail to help him get out of trouble. classl!icatiQll test and was Instead, they will be taking placed in a cell with Ill other his body back to Piedmont, prisoners charged with crimes. S.C., for burial. Cloyce was ranging from murder to drug strangled to death In his peddling. Officials eol)Ceded Rainwater wu Lo liln the nectSUiy papers to I e t Cloyce out of jail Tuesday. but on Tuesday morning guards found Cloyce'1 body with a braided rope around his neck and 1 knotted lowel over his mouth. pricetags. Maine: and Benton Harbor, M1cb. ''Coor s encoura 1es.~~--'~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~ distributors to eliminate retail . ~ price. cuttl~ by persuasion AM••tc1.•a':°L.&R•l•TYPAMILY1c LoTHIN•t CHAI N \ and 1f that 1s not successful . · - to !lop making deliverle.! to price cutters," the nc said. grimy jail cell. r•~·~====~······················-Pollce have charged two convicted armed r o b b e r s , Johnnie Lee Jones. 20, and Melvin Shelton, 111, w i t h murder. Criminal court jucfaes here will meet Friday to launch refonns at the jail, which Judge Paul Baker called a "1nakepit. •• First step will be to separate inmates according to age, health and t b e aeriomnes! o1 their crimes. C1oyce had left bis home nearly three weeks ago with only a few dollars in his pocket to come to this city of high.priced hotels and )pll m-etudded beaches. He said his dad wa.s too strict and his mother had been nagging him. Cloyce had been upbraided by his parents late- ly for the "bad company" he kept. Once in Miami , his money soon ran out and he got hungry and homesick. On Jan. 17, he came acrO!s a car belooging to Mrs. Josephine Fu5chetti. She left the keys in the Ignition. Cloyce climbed behind the wheel. cranked the engine and headed foc home. He was arrested I n Titusville, halfway up the Florida coast. and brought back here Friday to face Dade County Magistrate J a m e s Rainwater along with 30 other prisoners . Rainwater was impressed by Cloyce·s clean-cut ap- Death Row Tenant Gets Ne w Chance CHICAGO (UPI) -Charles Townsend's address for the Jut 15 years has been Death Row . Statev!lle Penitentiary in Joliet. Wednesdsy a federal judge overturned his murder ainviction and ordered that Townsend, M, be re-tried within four months or set free. U.S. District Court Judge Sam Perry uid the conv iction and death sentence Imposed on Townsend in 1955 were un - constitutional because h i s rights had been violated. Perry said Townsend h ad been give n drugs -truth serum -belore he confessed to the 1953 slaying of Jack Boone &nd three other!. a Singer floor model and demonstratDr machines, plus used machines, at great savings naw-Mn some Toucb&Sew*sewlng machines by Singer! 'A T.Urmirk of fl-IE SINGER .:.OMPANY COSTA MUA COSTA MISA HUNTIN•TON 2lOe H1rMr 11~11. lfACH ~lrttl & ""''~ l!dl•t•r •I 1.-dl J.0.16.U 10 t.11'S 111·10.1 Mui~ (NII ~llU H11'Wr ( .. !.,. H1111H't'..,ie:., kKll . Umlt«l--llnt-fllll ..-ved. MlnY one of a kind. All ~ condltkNd. The machines that inspfred . others to b.Jy-and machines traded In on new ones-that's what we have too many:o<I Huny inl $00.00 to $00.00 n.Slngw 1 1038" CNdt,.., ... \QI "'" 1t-.vm'u.now-wtlt*IY,gl'budget. SINGER For address of lhll Singer Sev.1r1t1 Center nearest J"OU, see White psgeS under SINGER COMPANY. OIANll GAIDIH •IOYI Jt '~"""'" ••• , ffll (~•JIOTMI~ Jtl·1tU ••4flt ''T~• (llY'' <M"' 1 •• . , •. ' I .. ~ ·, ... .. ' .. CHARGE IT! USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD, MASTER CHARGE OR C.H. BAKER CHARGE AT 30 CONVENIENT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LOCATIONS •IQ, TO It.II-AND I Vl•Y ONI l WINNI•! 'INllT IMPONTI lllD 'AIHION-lllllT ITYLll,,. D•lllY ---.•• IVlll IOOTl-lLL 11111 AYAtLAILll l'OUll PAIM l'ON THI PlllCa Ol-1 SOUTH COAST Pt.AV., COSTA MlSA -I ULLOCK'S FASMION SQUARE. SANTA ANA-IROAWAY'S ANAH EIM CENTEI, ANAHflM •• '· . . . ·' -· • r / • • • COSTA MESA-1601 Newport lhd. at 1611i • • l GARDIN GROVl-11'72 Ga--011..i. • 1 I l I I • - ... •• D~Y P1:1'°?'1 ;tJ.~RI~ ';t\GE. _ • Youth to· 'the Rescue A public ·opinion survey of 18 to 21 ye.ar olds re- ported by a national newspaper indicated that among tliil croup environment.I Issues !Dppod their list of con· cerm, more important even than the wir in Southeast .Mia. Any jdea that this is just a cue of youth giving Up aervlce to another passing fad is inva1id, if actions of younc people in the San Francisco Bay Area are a true tndicalor. Jipuaokeopl•J· It hand!.. uW!ty bWinfS au!Dmitlcally, ~P• the city payroll, han41ea llceDJmg, koep1 track' of capiW equipmen~ controls in..,otory and purcbulng, provldea. inStantaneoUJ lnlOJ'matidn· for police and llrll departments, ketpi traclt.of:ltbra?y book circ1llatl0n and performs many other fact-Ondlnt chores. Most . important of aH, the"~ gives city manage- ment refined. under.standable, up.to-the-minute infor. ma~on _for dtelsjoil·makine. The computer made po~ibli projection of a. highly factual five-year plan and adopUqn. of program·budgeting'Whlch would not have been praCU. When word of the collision Or two SU.ndard Oil taitkers and the resulting oil spill spread, youngsters by the thousands volunteered th~ir e{forb in the cleanup. They showed up where hard, dirty work was the only way they could help. ~al ,without con1puter aid. · ' . ,Prjvately~ed.. lar&Hcale computers· some 1·0 miles di31aut from city. haJl do all the work ta'ken tram· typewriter terminals and telephone lines. -i\nil in the doin~, free city officiala for tb.eir primary work Of policy· makmg and governing, instead of data pTOCe"ssing. · One group worked '° hard, Ignoring cold and blist· ered bands, that a worried San. Francisco police official called on the Red Cross to bring coffee and· bandages to the scene. Orange coast city coun~1 are ·getUng ~·~ .mesaag'°' . ' ' A harassed Stap.dard Oil supervisor slimmed it up: "I'm sure proud of these kids," he -said. j'l don't know wbat we'd cto·without them."" • ,, l;t!ll>e'1a S~of§ Next: Smiday ' ' . ., . .. . This ~ Will ~· _ _.ve the vpte· with which to further exp..., ~-'lt" a go<lil .l!ol they'll do so , -to 111• tionefit of all.'lhtbugh a cl'einup of our.air, land and water. .~ : · 1111~. bettor kno'lq·as•German or tbree-day mu· sles._;8 i>:tnild experience for children.~But ftl they in· ' feet ilieir"mothers in ·early'prelJlancy, the'· efftct on tho babies can bo deafness, a heart conclitioll,-br~.cbma~o or partial blindness. . ,.., , ~ · · Colllputels ':ti>l': ~es Mwddpal ' govemmoull.m ·finlily moving ln!D ·the computer qe. A small computer is now used by at.least one city on the Oran~ ~ and expansion is planned. Children need protection against. two~)dp. of m• sles. Allhouih jmmunized already agalnat ~ 10-d.Y measfes. they·it.i.11 need protection apinst:l"llbella. This in tum, is protection fOr. mO.tben. _ ~ · . . A new epid.emic is ' due. The co'unty health depart:- ment and medical association have arranged free imniu· nlzations for boys and girls aged I through 12 at IC)Iools in the area between 11 1.m. ind ·.4 p.ni. next ·SUilday Jan. '31; \ . · ' t. The California leader, however, appears to be Sunny· 'file. That city of . .100,000· has gone. on the assumption that tr&di!i""'1 •PP'°*I'"' n'o lo~ger are sufficient to meet~ liMdl'ibf.a gn)Wlllg city. • Already paying for Itself, Sunnyvale's system Is an advanced one performing aerricea beyond mere clerical For the nearest clinic lQcation, Phone ~ Of Dimjls Headquarters, 5-l7-6124, <or' your Cliainbor o{ Commerce or local school. Connecticut'• Cotter Admit• He Brafce Law He'd Make, .. :01' Dodd Proud WASHINGTON -Bill ·Cotler, the fnwhman Democrat juat dl!dod 'from Har11ord, Conn., tO llD the "Houle· Mal mce bold by that famous Seoale '1lliple Tcm 'Dodd, b olf to a llart lhat '""1ld m>R old Dodd proud. lil a sworn statement to Houae of. fidall, Cotler 111d be look in only $5,570 for hll nceni campaign. At the same time, hla: c.ampaign 1ru1Uttr f i I c d a . ota-in Hart· fonl lJstin( "5,211! in dmlatlona. Under tho fede"1 Qnupt Practices Act, a Howie er Sen.. all andidatc must ...,. out ... correct and itemised 9CCOUnt of each contribution received by him ac by any pcnon for him with biJ knowl - edge md content, from any 1ource, in aid or aupport of his cand.liiacy.'' A8llD ABOllr Ibo cllscrepancy in his campaign finance reports, Cotter acknowledged that he Was aware at man,y -baides lhose U.t«I ln hll Home reyort. ''1 could recite a put many people wbo gave me money d1lrini the campaign," he said. Why, tbon. did be not report tbom. .. WU Uked. "NoW" that you call it ,. ."',L• to my attenUon," he said, "I can 1tt exactly what you mean." He promiled to take the matter up with the clerk of the Houae to find ou t how to straiPWt it out. Although Cotter admits, in effect, that he broke the law, what he did was no worst than what some of the foremost p:illUcaJ figures in America have · been doing 1f0r year1. Indeed, Cotter'• .candor: pall film in a belier light. mittee to Re-Elect Kennedy took in about $600,QIXI. The Senator himltlf then pn!tended that all of lhil waa done without his knowledge and .consent. 11lE FACT THAT th.ia J)i-etenR of oblivion is utterly preposterous h&11n't rtopped dozens or Senate and House candidate.s from making the aame preteme.. Indeed, &Orne took the fraud even further. Instea d of establishing finance committees in their home atates, subject to 1tate campaign rep:irting laws, they set up committees in the. DiArlct o( Columbia. 1 ~ no fOdt. "1•1'1 Uist. Th"" they W.aloil 60! '°' rUortin& Ulflhlng to ~ al>dll tlijli' ~o ftMnce5. '· ! "'. ,• FOli El.AMPLE, 1uch Senator! ' as Ted ltennedy, D-Mus., Ed Muskie, D- Maine, Uo}'d Bentsen. [).Tex .• and Bill AL THOUGH 'l'HJS kind of flimflam Brock, R·Tenn., IOltmnly sv;ore in their .'•'"'ha.a been systematJcally ignored by the official statemenl! that they received Justice Department for year•. there are not a penny in campaign contributions. a few men honest ~nougb to llick to Over in the Howe, identica1 report& the letter of the law. were filed by the likes of Oklahoma's An eiample this year waa ~natnr Carl Albert. the new Speaker, and Jame.s BuckJey, the Ne.w ·Yo rk Loul&lana'1 'Hale Boggs, the new CM!serTative. who filed a complete report Democratic leader. of all his conlributiom with Senate of· How do they get away with it? The , ffclals . The docwnent.aUon is IO massive trick ls to 1el up a committee, which that the Secretary of the Senate's office theoretically collects and spends all Ute is having difficulty finding 'room for money for the campaign. it. "This has really foultd tbinp up," In Senator Kennedy's case, the Com-grumbled one staffer. Lef~ist Bigots on Campus BJ JAMD E. WHETMORE s..- J5111 Dinrld The proud claim of ed11eaton ~ to bt that the universities and college1 of the nation were the places where freedom of speech wu most honored. rttOtd of academic and intellectual most of the time. permitting the official represen~tive1 of the trustee. and the people to <kl the work-but fully confident that they (the left-wing bigot!) can at any ctmen moment and for any de.sired peritxf of lime literally take over the inslituUons. Same top educational officials stt:I anardly came recently at Stanford make t.bat claim, phruing it in VerJ University when Ambassador Henry NO AMOUNT OF ''deep regret.s., can flowtfJ and inlpir'IUonal language. In Cabot Lodge waa effectively deprived aller or diminish the fact that, when lbe ~ of 80 claiming, however, of his right of free .speech and an tht chips were down , the lefi-wiDI bl(Ota u..lr manner no longer. aqua.res wtth audience of IOIDe IOO persons was depriv· were in control. They set out to auspend their pbrues.. Rather, the9e spokesmen ed of it1 companion freedom to listen. a democratic freedom-and they ac- ._more~ than proud. Tbe nullification of these right! waa complished that goal promptly, meeting '111111 11 becaute the claim limply bi accomplilbed by a gaggle of rude and. ~ no rui!tance • h 1 t e v e r . not true mnymore. As 1 matter of fact, offensive becklen wbo booted, chanted Unfortunately, no brancb of government, tf1Ce1 ii a srut deal of evtdenoe in pro.Communist slopna: and streamed ob-no court, nor lhe Civil Liberties Union o.. .,.,_. of the past ball-dozen JUtl tcmities. atems particularly concerned 'With en-=i .....,,...,,_ Iha .~ nl •I--forcing either the rights of the apeaktr or"° -~·• I ·~ u ---TllEIR Allt!AULT began (ond wq • or 1iIO ~ of .Ibo ...S.-in this ~,=I the n•tion all loo often tolerated) before Ambassador Lodge ••• 'caae. and tbls~ll truly a ud thing. .,.. • .,. wllere froodom of lljleOCb even lntr-. \\'. Gi<M Campbell, II ~ diHdor of tho lnolllute sponsoring. Ille . The real saw-. howeY<r. ;, that , . , .... ~~ wa inundated by lhouta of ,ov,tr~I period ottbe lut .ane-half doun ~ Ta period, It hu become •'oh*. .. "pl.p off campus" and four-Jetter :T!!r,i=n~,.:fbeenClUr tn:'-~· .~ --thal free opooch no ..._., -i lfm'bqe a1 be prelocod Lo\lle'• ~-•·-· -a ll ~ r!Pt oo Ibo WI>-romarb. Lodae .receiv«I ·the ...;,. • prood cii.deb of r.... •peecb into wistful fl tlla natlcn. Ralller, ll bu . evf11 .._ • troatmont "'1en he ,_ :i, ... ~&ll<d captives of 14!1-winl lep, under tho .....,.. to-.. the aaoemblage (ond tt wu "'"' fl rs ,. .-1 ond !acullJ ,~. N• looser '""" oducaton claim thal lillt.ton wbo el'il.~ ' the univeraflitl Ind collqes of tbl nation _ ~ ~-~ -:, . J, Campbell 11WTOnder«I to ... ,_ .~-· ""-a··--.~ .,. -ond aonouncod .. '1 ""'·~P-~-'ofapeedl ~!!' 1 •-ID 11111 leictllealaC bovo no alternaUn but to caned. tho' la' moot honohd. Thal la .• on1,. en. I • amb•••dor'• ...... .. dAYO.Wbon Ibo controUIDa lef}wtor blpta i -permit it to be IO. TllAT WAS A DISMAL tlalerneril. lft. &j.• • ~'-' 1 ~-·.a that lhould 1hame \M, 1 zt'.i J 1 _.-.healta-Cf tducatcn not only at Stanford; I ~ l...t --hen. Wbln I camnu• of.ficlal . . . ,.... ··-·· ·-" I 1111. Jaauaty , 1171 1111111 admit that ••no ollemaUve" exlota • ' to .,_,.llatlon of tbo right ol freedom ol ·IJIOidl, U...'11M ·splril of democracy 11 Cliod'ln that ploCe. Tllo ~ bi,ot. do ... ""' tho dally affaln ol tho tnstilutlonl, nt>r !lo they bother tbemstlvtt wltb routine mat- tmi. ~. tbe1 merolY loaf around 'Quotes ' Wine ..._, 9.F., retleeted ~"Only tho b..t Jawy•" !'tit to Ille top of lhe prol•uioo. Thi nit ol. 111 run for the A!stmbly." Dear Gloomr Gus: ''My · .;il>pathy for .,... ownm caught ln chain-reaction eoD.Wona In 'Ibo log ~ nol high to tiettn witb tioo;ouoe Ibey usu1ll1 UWI drfy. tnc to Milt conditions. Bui f blow 1 gaAlr:et when r think what they do to my colliakln Jnaura.nce rate! -1. W. A. What If a Mighty G~nie Said It? "Whit can I do for you." How often ·we hear thete words from people we meet or talk to over the teltphone. They have become a trite and unctuous phrase in our trite and unctuoua timea -a doubl..wt' -slon which translated Ulorall,y, !Do often muns "Pleue don't ask me to do any. thing for you. I've got troubles enoutlh of my own." But what if, once in your lifetime, I .. , mighty genie able to do 111ything whis- J)eftd. In your ear, "What can I do for you?" And meal Jt. TRE POISmn.rrY is ao startling one would hardly know where to belfn. BUt I think-I'd. at lea.st uk him for- A molehill I couldn't turn into • moun- tain. A bum~fr:et highway through life or, •t least, one with pleuant detours. A rea11y good lkent cigar. A mlllion-Oollar nest e&f tt hide in a hole in the backyard, and another milHon~llar nut eu to hide in the front · yard, where no thi~r bother• to look for buried loot. A lifetime pu1 to all pro football games. A CREDrr CARD iuued by Ft Knox. A pretty red-haired girl friend durini the week and two other pretty red-haired &lrl frlendl for the weetmdl. An old-fashioned aold railroad watch with a gold chain and a 10Jd.mounted elk's tooth. A gold toothpick-Ind three ,_. for guesta, Cinderella'1 sJm olipper. Ten Patton · tanb and a 1wonl called Elcalibur. A laltr date with the LldJ in the Lake. A 'l'E1E-A·TETE 'lritb Ibo 11 .. dl,. llor,jem"'- A mall< carpet for -flyln1, a 711 pllnl· for winter trtpt. A cryotal partrldct In a platinum pur u... ~T· 1n ........ and ... -1n • andtwodllUllorialDKa>- tucky. An hour Ill hell.lo talk to Adolf Hitler, A yur cm·tht -t ..,_.of andoot Alhens or!Ulol-~-\About 10 Gr 11 minutel aboard I b~rp <11 the. Nllt wlllt Oeopltra wht._ Min Anthan1 ... tlUt al town •ttendinl a war. A MOlJTllFUL of maMI and two cupfuto of ambn>ota. · Two -.italoa of my own bonlertnc a valley tlnutlh Wbtcb flowed a stream .......... llultflll lloida. A villa In P111C111c. A hut tn • snab-frtt Eden. "What can I do for you?'' Well, t ""'" lha1'1 •bout alt thonk you, ... It. Anylhln& elle I'd neecl-euch u • an '"' -ia-J could 1et for 111)'1111. After all, you hive to IN•• .rnethinc for a fellow to do lac blmH.lf-othorwile· bo mJclU 1ot ljlOlltd. Lesson Not Yet U people could comprehend "social pathok>gy" half as well as they un- derstand the pathology of the body. we might be wtll on· our way to solvin& somt of the world's most pressinf prob- lems. When one says that force really ac- complishes nothing, and that one war only breed& the germs of the next, one ls invariably · met with the rejoin- der: "Well , then, what wue we su~ ~to do -.1 klt!er-jnst alt there and let h)m take over tht·world by force?' .. But this is a false ( a n d eS!entially meanlngless) <jUeS- tion. Obviously, by the time a cancer met.sta!i1e.s in the body, it is too late for anything but radical su'rgery, which may have as much chance of killing ttie patient as of curing him. By the .time the cancer of Hitlerism spreads. it b already too late for anything but the mos t radical surgery, Which is war. ·Yet no one would pretend thli is better than preventive medicine, which detects the caneer in its tarliest ltqet and stops it at the inceplion. IF WE HAD GENUINELY learned anything from World War I, it was that World ·War II waa bound to happen unless Europe federated itstll in some way or other. Instead, the same old power polftice: persi.!ted among naHons, and the cancer o( Nuiism swilUy grew in ~rmany. Taite a small. but equally dramatic, example -that of CUba. We supported a corrupt and reactionary regime lhere of War Learned for many years. and almost guaranteed that the Cuban body politic wruld breed a Castro, or his C',ommuni.st equivalent. We really offered the Cuban people little choice betweeri reaction and revoJulioo. WAR, ON THE SCALE it ill practiced ln the modun world, is not a "natwal" phenomenon; It is a form of ·aecial pathology. cawed by the same things that cause bodily disease -neglect. grttd. ignorance, unwillingness t o sacrifice a lesser pleasure for a greater good. The League of Nations could have been made operable, just as the United Nations can be. Nations that unite on a dozen scientific. educational and com- mercial ftont.s can unite to prevent the pathology o( war, if tti ey re.ally wanted to. Now. with the nuclear bomb. sheer self- interest should dictate .such a policy, but the lesson has not yet been learned. YOU HAVE TO FIGHT a Hitler, as you have to cut out a malignancy; but that is no argument against non· violence -it is merely a prOor that il you don"t help make things better, they will get worse. If we bad treated Germany after the first World War as intelligently and humanely as we did after the .strond. there wrukl have been no Hiller. We stopped him, but the threat of another war looms larger than ever. All we gained was time -and what have we done with it? Scouts Carry :the Word "Boy Scouts al America are mobilizing to flght teeG-age drug abuse. Jn mid-lfll a ready-made force of I million Scoab and their adult advisers plan to enter 1 program designed to ltla' other youngstert away from drugs. Tbil will depend on the auceeu of a ptlot program call«! "Opontioo ,llu<!b." llltUat<d in Loo ApColOs In f!f.-ber, the pn>1ram rnarkoc! tbo...tnt ttme Boy -ofAnwlcabM.-·lolc- tl.me trldlUon of naa-tavolvement In co. -onlal ooclal in>-. Plllladelphi•. Pr:oTidmct, RJ .• aalfl Del Moina, Iowa have joined fc:rca 1oWlrd the 1DCCt11 of •'Operation 'Jtueb!' • ol being bonul In pruenijng facta. only. Irving J. Feist, praidcnt ol !be Sa>ut.. !I.id. ''There's been • ereal deal or yoUth-to-youth premlfe toward the use or drup. What we're trying to do ta revene tbat pressure. What we:'rt trying tQ do JI start with our own kids~ and male them understand wblit if1 ail ~· 8C0'1I' MEMBERS plan to carry tM IN REA.CRING OV'f' 1o drug-involved word to others in their eHort to youth, Boy Scooto .;. to -gotUng -ge ""' ol harmful drugs. "IIlll>" ~ .-1Ilps, family, Prinled card> si.Ung goab ol "Opon. Nllgtorl or aceptlajlal ~ Ilion Roach" wtil be bonded out bJ -Fa~ •-ftia:wlll be ll':'O'ft¥ who wW w"r a lapel plll 1 · 1 c to boys wtthoqt ........ or inadiin& 'Reach'. kout leaden .,. lollowllll lbe prlDdplo Mn. ,,,._ -· • I ' .---~----·· ........ -~------. , Dtar a-it: I whit •uthority 1"" sbould contad My aeJcbbor hao a cat , wbidi · :I 'riu•st you et!l up City tt.Ii b al""11 teytn(. to catch blrdo. • aad•1ak ID spuk iii Ibo .. tcatdlor. lllooUld I talk. to him .-tllil "'·II' Ibey tey lo 'stv• you U.. • t10 'dtr<etlt to 'tbo au!bOrlua! clopalcha', wrlle bock. If IO, ml! · .f · Dear Georgt: IRAT& Why ildn~ !"" n<r niiiillOa tho . Dear lratt: kind of girl who doesn't drink, I havt found It less Uttn meless smokt or h•ve anyttilng to do to try to lallt. to a cat 1boul with men? Why doa't girb like Cltchinc b I rd• • Clb are lhlt 1et menttoned in prlat? mreuombll about·t1111, and, n-en w. !:. Wont, hYPOttiUcal: A Cllt will Mill De•r w. E.: .YOU one thin&, do anottw. M 19 So what's to say! . ; By·Phil-l ntertandl Thursd1y, Janu1r)' 28, 1971 Tll~·;.IJady l~awn1aker 'Singes Ea-rs ~ "'~''.\:! • • • _ W.ASHlNQJ'CffCf~fAP) -male animal manure ? th1l 1he IMb'nW tbe ean el tically every cerntr. ·~lt'bi0g says men ··1 said I didn't Wlf\l it, }lepJ. Dan '.l\Oltenkowsii el.. .HCC'P"itr base, tboOah, wu WbOrpMtend she Lalk! like but not lhe way .the\ qboled Jllinois, chlinhan ol the' ti_;• clllb but the' Women'! a ~k driver are misquoting me," she said, 1 , Defll~lic,.CapfUS In the lut ment, tht OWll. the deprived. The w,11.wkber..1 chet:red loudell wllen Bella predicted President Nixon • wOuld k>se DAil V PILOT 7 ~•Y!•T1~ DeTllflff · - FA~SE TEETH llffl LeeM, leHc-D.!t• ... .,.... Lba1 ,_ i.IM ~ .... OI' "°'JIM' ... ~'Pot mor• Mcurnr o.DtUl'OI ,.,,..Cl• oa JOW' • ... "" ~ ~ \. •• .~ A • ' · How a boot •g<mip U1at she Congre~, when he declined e· for Peace ora:anizatlon ;i:;.!;$:!§::::;::;:-• · New l'q~~-· ,.tfew~t ron-su.~ested J:&oose. Ooor~eeOPr tn break precedent and stat whicb she served for years .irmwomari, a . l"a~er who Wilham "Fisbba1t" M 111 e r her with the Cf.UCUS before· as · national legislaUve direc-=kl• •AB'l U189 ~ f boktl dllltU1-Jn 1972 and caUed for more tnm.• . ...._. wau. •'I.De _..r. , 1"8'J'SITtl .. 1101 uld. lfo su.ann:r, Women in 01ngress. There are .-y; outr -..w. pqiwe1 lha4 a• " ha1tts war and weais an ''llP" perform ~ imp0ss1ble sCxu~I her efOcial: swearlne:lo as a tor. ,' pt y _'WOmen unite" button on act. when be told her she cqresswoman? Not true, sOme .300 of her comrades· : ~i;:Jnzle-dazzle blue-and· couldn't wear her f~unou1 llilp-Bella Jayl. bro'ft't midi, is well on her py hats ~ _ her campaign . Mrs. A.tJ&uc, U. won electioo iQ-&nllS. -if that term can way .to becoming a Capitol: trademark -on the Hou!le . Jn New York City's polyg!Ot. deScrlbt women pacifists - legend• after just a few days floor! 191.h Dl!'trict, a '' 11 pp e r y crqwded the Capitol steps to _ in of(lce. • ··Act u .. a 11 y , just poliflcal pole Inc I u d In a: hear her take 1 special "peace Trouble is,• she says, the• automaticaily took jt off G!'eenwich VUlqe, 'the Upper pledie" which followed her stor_i.fS•aren't qulte true. anyway," she said, addil'!g she West S41e and some of the official swearing-in. Dlit she n;spond to a sug· never had worn a hat ib her brightest most iJmbi·tj•us Sht vowed to wor.k for gestion sbe i~ke a spot on years of cOurtroom ind tie ver young poliUcl~ any...-here. f.ottign and domestic peace the Agricultilrt Committee· expected to ·in the House . It's an electoral jungle, with and addressed her pledge to with an exP1,tjve meaning And what about the Story . rival· political clubs en praC· 'women in the peace move-- " IS •ft ~ttt\J ""' t.Ml\b.. ... ,_. now , 6:.'n.ntU1v•r. <Wt .. ,.~-,Aflt~anl, , at ·! . j.ammelil • 11.U_ff~Mft. re«pUon ;n •n..Eauc•t.fon and:~~=~==;;;==~ Labor Committee· room,' she lr l!ll~ma~ly greeted faM and 6escrlbect htr · .!lill-formative plans tQ· organize gr1J&-root s pressure outslde. .Conlfi'ess to force changes in!!lde. "This is 1 tou(~ organiza· Uon to aet to res Pond," she 'I sald. . · • Btlla's toi.1&.h •. tao. .Km.s. 1.tKE UNC1ELEN s& :\'WHAT ,A NICKEL ·' . ~ .. ... . . ·. ' Will B,UY ,.:-.. ..... 'CHECKING •UP• , Women St~t -Day At Faster Clip Ry L. ~I. 80\'D IT HAS BEEN ES- TABLISHED that w om er. in general find it harder to quit smoking than do men ... • AMONG the · underwater treasures to be found off the African coast, il"s said, are tons or ivory elephant tusks ...• WHAT FEW PEOPLE realize is it's perfectly legal to change your name wHhout going to court. ceed and exreed, what other words come to mind that end in "ceed'": None? No wonder. There aren1t any othecs, says our Language man. WHY IT SHO ULD TAKE 32 months to get an ordinary pa~t oh a n~w invention is a myste~~· but that's average , . , . AM ASK.ED HOW many rpersons first reported missin \urn out to be the victims jt:\ '· I ' I 1 •) ' or murder. Just about one ' •.1· in 3.000 . . . . ONE fl.tORE SPO'f WHERE the worn ~' outnumber the men by an y. enormous margin now is East t Germany. I '' ANOTHER . 'THING t h e -to.. 2666 ·HARBOR ltvD. . . ' . 1546.;7080 COSTA MESA: • n _'WUIQAYS. 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 . DO YOU FEEL fairly chip- per when you first get up in the morning? Or does it take you awhile lo get into eear? Nevermind, it's your own bu s ine ss. Personally, however, don't mind men- tioning ·rm 8 pretty slow re~.archers are.. !r>•}ng IQ figure oJ¥.. ~1' say, is "'hy ••• breast cancer is So fr'ltich more • - common a mong women who , . CLOSEOUT IXTERIOrt''!!ST~INS have a lot of money than among women who don 't. That's not so baffling, thought 1 0 Go! • ti11ncll1 Glidden •11d llt1, • wild •11ortm1iit, 0 H you Ii~• lo find 1 b1rg•in you'll be i11. H vou'•• lo tdod ti.on tl1nd b1,k fo1 ll.1 money••"•"· • • 11 ]'J,OfF ~ . . ' '32 GALLON .. ' . TRASH BAGS . . ... 'li~mjjllaj 0 S• 1111,,*iiitr.t• c•11 .,.dil1ley• t1 e1ti irid odot Ii.: fr11. (J .• lw1.w1 ..... 9111 tit.• oder ....... frM 71 ~ , ... ._1.11 "' tllll ........... _ ..... ,..,..,....,. l. 1'11 • ...... Ill IMH 11111 ... "" ... 11111 M tltllr ... Ill.I A t1119h 11111 ,,..d. out of coto• fibr•. l.ut H1nhey, olre1dv toek t~e CC>C•I •, 0 Niae tolort l efter • Monlh 1f hi1 feel y1u'U 11•wor 1•• t1i ..... lwf.#i1y ...... 11ice.I 1s9 0 U1e f<H 'h•tll hi9 if you're • bit rubhido pr..lut1r. 0 fill if with w1ler end drop one o• th• Jolly 6 !11• G i1nt. c EA. 3 DRAWER PLASTIC CABINET Now yow c111 put 1w1ryl~i_!lt i11 iii ,r.q , Q f W1tc:I! 10• d owll try !1 peck it' fw11 of #ore1d 11 I t 111'l filo·my fi1hin11 lur••· 2•a } If -~ ,. I .,, ' .. ftarter. Moot men are, it turns oul The science boy's now say far more women than men get up with an optimistic bounce, eager to have at it. In office jobs, it's known, women tend to do their besl work before noon, men after_ liERE'S to the years or 1835 and 18.'J6, the only time in American history when the U.S. Treasury had er.o ugh cash on hand to pay all the Government's debts -clinkl I. Rich women are not as inclined as poor women lo breast-feed their infants. But that"s not the answer . evidenlly. In surveys confined l exclusively to \\'O men who · ~ never have breast-fed. the in- cidence o( such cancers is \'• still much, greater among the ""7-... ...... .. .,,..,.~ "l.. t ,f • f -,.:.·a ~~ll.:,__..&I . ~., 'f""''".(---~~·~-r;''>l';"i};;l'''" .. X""'-2' so,.ntone I j ":::!:l'.':;J:llllls:l!:llltllllil~:iS?:S::illllBiltmrw;1)tllJiim ........... llllil .. llilllll:llll,llllWll~'! FURNACE REFLECTOR SCHLAGE ENTRY · LOCKS · t Environment rich than . among the poor. .• :" So study continues. CUSTO~IER SERVJCE -Q. , 1 ''What's Your Name Game .• ma n siiv about a Dennis?'' A. All h-e . knows about "Den--..• nis" is it's "sinned'' spelled Lab Added At Caltech backwards . . . Q. ''HQW. w· long "·ould it take you to A. Maybe one minute. That get sunbumed on the moon?" l is. you can pick up a good _ sunburn in as little as 50 minutes here. THE REMEMBER" PUEBL.0 He•r Lie Htryes. chief r•diom•n· of th1 PUl&O, tell his 1ye,..ifn111 •ccount of tht_ l'U•ILO s1it.ure. N1'WPORT HllGHTS ILIMINTARY F HOOL 1Jth ltrMt '"~ Seme An• Awenw, NIW..,, IMCh ' frW9y, JeMery Jt-l :OG ,. ••• -11 .H DeMtfM • • ,. • .-,, Late• . . 0 " Antique Kit DEFLECT·OR$. A ""' ""' .. , ..... "' ,: I· for 1 loo•• er w1rn·ou l le,~. With lwe> l1y1. 0 ~ol 1omo 0 lii9 pl1111 for 1om1 new d1 p1rl111•nh tO we'4 ti~. lo cl••• lh111 •111. CLOSE OUT WAS 200 J.'8 ACR.YLIC MOD . SPRAY 0 u •• d to h•wk thi, for 'the kidl. bot t~o t rcwn·up1 h1wt do ne 1om t pr•lty int1r11tint lh int• with thet• llwely p1 inh. 0 COlori you .;ouldn't ~.1; ...... "'"'th ........ . tf..y 9iw1 tll•"'· Somo ••• ,1;11 h ...... a i• ii I•+• f.,. 'ilinMf. WITH llRO~N'p 0 0..11'1 •• 11th• h .. w-••• r.ili1f i1 hore . N1w yow c111 .tir1tt th• ho•!....,.,,,. y•11 w•llt !I. 0 No mor1,with the hit hoed end aoloil fool, l Now you 901 llel toe• oowl tol4 1101e1. l 129 RUG RUNNIR 0 'ul it dow11 wh111 it ••in1 •114 your t oo4 c1rp1! wiU lut Jo1191r. 0 Meyho you'll n1,,1r ,,11 it up end Ille c1rP41t ,,. • ., 1utlo1t th1.ho1110. 0 !Ii• foet l•11tth. 17' I. 2~~· :';:.:=:i::=11m:::imllimilliliiill ....... . . .. . . ·~ . •I • • . ' MIRCURY ,····· s'WlfcH · · . '. . . . ·' If you 1till h••• • 1n1pft•• lift i11 !he ho¥tl, why 1111 111 . yo~r lkiM •11i111t 11•;..,1., ~ii tlfti.11 •• ,. . fit ri9ht'/11.f•,l'•· 1pol Y111 fook'i th1.110ity •11• .,1 !llf• lwo,:Y c1l1~. ~. ~ ''" , • I • • O Si m-pie to i1l1l1ll ~•w-or i11 fl.1• ohl 1pol. WITH DEAD LOCK 3aa 4aa DELTA FAUCETS 2x4 ·-·· ' ·' M cidtr~ onl hind opl r•li on, mi• with 1 touth to !he 'rit ht or th• I.It. ! wolck th •I fir loll duff, ii ct n bu•n you. I Mod ol IOOWf •• 500 WF. New lh1I 1n1wen • lot of •u• qu1ttio11J J o1111'.t. it1 ·~ .. I , 1.1> I •' .. ... .. ' ,,1 n' 1 • •. . . .. . . ~ ~1: ,,. . • t·, f~. '1• 1;' , . J ,, . ., ,, .· ,. ' ' .• 'l Ii •• • ,, '• ;. • • • • I Tenured Professor Dismissed LOS ANGELES IAP) - Truste es of the lkampu.s state college system have fired a tenured professor for the fint time in the ne arly 11 years lhe colleges have bee n ruled by a single govern- ing board. Dr. Ernest J. Eckert, 44, of Cat State Los Angeles was dismissed Wednesday because he permitted a graduate !IU· dent to teach one of hi1 classes while he t a u g h t mathematics for pay at the University of S o u t b e r n California. USC is a private Jnstitution. Under rules of the college 1ystem, a tenured professor is guarani~ a lifetime of employment, provided he does not c omm i t an "ex- traordinary" offense such as a major crime. Eckert, a former math department chairman, waJ not present when lhe board an-- nou nced its 9.-2 vole to dismiss him. His attorney said the action would be appe.aled to the state Personnel Board. The charge againat Eckert was brought by lhe college's president , John G re en I e e . Greenlee also accused Eckert of making false reports about faculty leaching loads. William A. Norris, one of the trustees who opposed fir - lng Eckert. said the aclion was unde s erved 21nd "disproportionate to the of· fen se." Norris contended the pro- fesi;or had not received double pay in holding the two j o b s because he had not been paid much for teaching an ad - vanced math course 11t USC. The firing of Eckert, 44. overrode the recommendation of a facult y advisory panel which said the professor should onl y be repMmanded. Colleague -Of Manson Joi1is Race BER KELEY, Cali f. (U PI ) -The la test clndidate in the Berkeley mayor'a race is a form er member of Cha rles Manson'& "Family," who sees tl'e con victed m u I l I p I e murderer as "a beautiful person.'' Larry Melton, 22. said Wednesday he was running "to vindi cate C h 1 r J I t Manson .'' "I want lo say lhinill the way Charlie woul d say them. J want to be ma yor the way Charlie would want t h e mayorship done ." Melton, whose nickn ame is .. The Rabbit," was the ftr.tt nf niM persons 'nlesday to file offici1l entry papers for mayor. "Once you've been with a beautiful perso n like Charlie, yau'rt always with Charlie," Welton uid. Melton said he mel Manaon In San Francisco's Ha ight. Albbury district in lllU when he arrived from Detroit. He thin lived with the "Family'' at tht Spahn Ranch ln the ...,, Fernando Valley from the fall of ,,. to the - of Jtll. -OW-Uc mt.Ill havt btf:n frl:med. •• Melton • I I d . "Cllorlll WU tlle type of .....,1· .. 11-~to ~Ute.'' I.,. L ' I Th11nday, Ja11111ry 28, 1~71 Governor Confirms Medi-Cal Deficit Reasons '• SACRAMENTO (UPI) -F ·z d p . All N ..J _ f G A "d cam1ru said ~ had 11een Gov. Ronald ReagaD conf~lll! lll, e to ro1ect eeus or overn men t l, bop«! tbot about 117 million that part of tbe threatened would hive been 11ved by Medi.Cal defi cit was caused moving some patienla Wbo did by failure to accurately pro-published report which gaid this fiscal year. cos t control! and court losses. tiaJ recipients were Included The "medically need y '• not need costly fUll-time ject the numller of people cutbacks in Medi-Cal .services A Medi.Cal official, Richard Camilli 15ald r.hat last spring in the caseload projec\lons. generaUy are not welfare reel· medical care from nursinc elitible for government health resulted mort. from ''book· Camilli, deputy director of 48,000 "medically need y ' ' Reagan told reporters ln San pienb but low tnc.orne persons homt.S I nto "intermed11tt care service5. keeping error11" than from the health care services, repor~ persons w e r e not Included Francisco that Los Angeles wbo can't pay their medical facWUes." lmp1'ment.ation el There are 108,000 more "excesses\.' originally blamed Tuesday that an updai.d projections du r I ng con-officials found a "differential that cost cutting program was d bills. Often they are elderly needy Californians eligible ror by the governor. report to the legislature now sideration of the bu get by between the original estimate delayed. "-' ·ndl t 1· I d 1· It th tat I · I t d th h d t Th and need .......... psive nursing Medi"4! benefits than were Last month, Reagan ordered 1 cat.es a po en 1a e 1c e s e eg1s a ure. an e ea coun . ey -I"""' He said n million of the e r iginally anlicipat.ed, In-a cutback in medical services of SIU.I mll lion. He said lhat Los Angeles notified us immediately and borne care. deficit was caused by a legal eluding 48,000 who were not lo recipients along with fee Of lht sum, $73.6 million County improved its system Vt'e lmmediately cranked the There art about 2.4 million case brought by the California counted until Los Angeles cuts to such. providers as doc· was ca used by failure to cor-of estimating persons eligible figures in ." Callfornians in the Sl.2 billion Rural Legal AJslJtance coin& County improved Its caseloa d tors and nursing homes. He rectly project all the eligible for Medi-Cal. And when the Tbe governor added, "ii was Medi-Cal program . whose CQSt againlll Ule stile. He 1ald n• projection techniq ues. said the cuts were needed recipients -many of them new figures were fed into the not an error by Los Angeles is split SG-50 between the funds bid been budceted in Reagan dtscMbed as a to avert a threatened $140 elderly -and $19.7 million statewide caseload projection County, it was a chang e in f e d er a I and st a t e case lhe administraU•n lo.st ''distortion" W@dnesday a million Medi.C1tl Dudget defi cit from a comb inatlon of delayed system, another 48,000 poten· their syslem . governments. the case, SINCE ·1929 WHITE FRONT COLOR PORTABLE TV'S WEICOl 15-IN.* Dll.IXE Cl9 • Wal1111t 1rai11 finish cabintt • Built-in antennas 1199 • Brilliant, life-like color. •Measured diagonally. -lOWPllCI •UL !II"* CUI TV I CAil ' • Automatic fine tuning • Walnut finished cabi· s339 net & matcfling cart. •Pict. measured diagonally. , ...... , "'·" MITmA 18''* Cl.• .. ASAI ,• ~lid 3bl! works Ki a drawer chassis • Au-: *33B tornatic flle tllning. •Pict. measured diagooa!ly. OlllHl.,..M.tr ICA 14 IU* CUI PllTAll.E •· C.mpetor trotted for ~ng life mell""' *22B • Built-in a!I charmel antennas. •Meas. diag. . ....... ,.. *·" WllCtl 18''* CU PllTAILE 1 • Big. screen cnlor enjoyment • Walnut grain *249 finish cabiflet • Built·in antennas. •Meas. diag. OllllOWPllUIMl.T ZIMll llG DIN Cl9 TV • Custom portable w~h Chromacol« ~cb.<t •399 tube • Walnut g11in finish ctbinet. ... lOWllKI PHILCO:ADMIUL 18''* COLOR f • Advance design powerful chassis • Y02CHOICE t Automatic fine tuning • Custom wood S I I f grain fin ish cabinet • Built-in all chan· ~ nel antennas. •Measured .diagonallf. ~ MMl.ftlU .. I ~ REFRIGERATORS UNIVEllAL 10 CU. FT. SIZE • Full width cross top freezer • Dairy bar & deep *123 dol)f shelves • Glide-out shelves O•t IOW PIKI ADMIRAL NO·FROST 2 DOOR • Independent temperature control for big top *284 freezer • Twin porcelain crisoers • 15 cu. It. ' "' .... PllCI tn.tr NDIGE NO DEFIOST 2 DOOR • 18:7 cu. ft . .capacity • Silelm on bo~ doors *28B • Cnspers, dairy bar ...... P'llCI JI ••• , PllLCO 17 CU. FT. DUPLEX .• ft~ .defrosting In eilher section • l ots of •317 tpetiahltd space • Only 30" wide ....... ,. •RP• 18 CU. FT. •LEX • Side by side oever 1"eds defrnsUng • Door *392 shelves, lights in both sections. ... ... ,11(1•11.tt ADMllAL 22 CU. FT. 9lEX • Stl)lrate temperatuce c11nlrols • Never ll!eds *48! d9frost\ng • All deluxe features ' .. llt. ,tKI '"·'' CBI, UPllGIT fWliiU • Mlriirlll 21 n. It. chest . "°''' 30 Cl. It. .,ipt hwllolnl87 1bs. lrttilJ holds lnJI !h . ..... HtU ..... , Ollt .. NKI •222 •211 · . ' ' .-SE ' 11.m.-AIB ·-·-... --I· '197 • M~lt telectioll • ftarc.w. lltrrior • &Mt..t. ,... .... •Wm .... ptWttl!Yt vifri1 t!llkAI ....... ...,'"·" ~~~~~~~-'-~-'---'-~~~-'---~--'-~~~~~.::.c.__--'-:.=_~~~~-=-=:..--'-~~~ PRICES SLASHED ••• OUT THEY GO ••• SO HURRYI FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON STEREOS, TV'S, MAJOR APPLIANCES wf~l'm'n1 COLOR CONSOLE TV'S 21''* IX. Cl.11 llNIU • .ldmrtic fine tuni11g. • Olympic custom TV. •Measured diagonally. "Measured diag11nally. 'i2'99" 'ijj" RCA 20 IN.* COLOR CONSOLE • Detuxe features • Walnut finish cabinet 1399 • VHF/UHF tuning. •Pict measured di1gonal!y. PACIAID IRl 23''* elm TV • r rend1 Pro~tnclal cabinet • Alltomalic f!rie $499 tlll'llr19 • VHF/UHF lt1riln9. •Meaiured dia9. , MOW OHL Y • AtcuColof for the best viewing ever • r u!ly *479 automatic fine timing • Wa lnut. 'M!as. diag. · 011 tll.PIKI Jlt.tl 81125''* llPll Cl.M JV • Biun! saw made • Chmmacolor picl. tube •549 & auto. fine tiring• Table model. •Meas. diag. ..... NKJ.1t.t 7 2r call TV-1111181 CUI • Olympic home entertainment center • AM /FM· $548 FM stereo radio & phono. 'Measured diagonally. ( ......... ,11•.•1 RCA 2r•• COl.IR TAILE .._ • Brilliant Hi Lite picture tube • All c:lwlnt!I aUte>-•449 matic fine tuning. "Pict. measured diagonally. .. 1.0WrtlCI AUTOMATIC WASHERS . ~-I JS! :an.. .., ~ FlllGEITE AUTOMATIC ~ PIRTAILE WASIB t • S~ln dries 5 lb. kOOs • Rolls llllf.wf!ert • '149 Ide.ii wau.er ll'llert ~ is hno.i1M-IN: iA k~c~"· llO'tll. bat11rno111 • llo ~ill Jllvrnllin& ...., G.E. 2 SPEED WASHER • Handles blg family size loads • Filter F!o lirrt 117B trapping system • Multi cycle selection '"'"''"' NllGE 11 LI. 10 CYCLE • Top of line 3 11"ol washer • All ~. wanted •211 features to save you time •nd work. ... l ... l'IKI NORGE 18 LB. 8 CYCLE •Two speed wasMr wrtll r:ushbirtton cnntrols • 1194 Heavy duty ¥1 hp motor • V!riab le water temps. OftlOW•lllCt WlllLPIOL Mil Tl-CYCLE • 2 Sj)tlds • Water temp. 3nd water level controls *!07 • Seti cleaning filter • Holds big wash loads ........ , .. FRllCEITE SPIN llY WAllB • 10 lb. caf)ilcijy • No speclal ph11nbln1 *18B WEITINGllllE 18 LI. llAD • Two speed, t!Mllti-qclt w1Sber • Speci11 care '188 for pennaneirt press febri~ • Heavy duty ... ...... IQ' ... ,, Uffllll I IAm.11 lllPDIAI. • VJ hp motor • High carbon steel cuttin& •u bl&des • Contiooous feed mechanism ..... HIU-.n l.L 1 QT. CAPACITY lllPllAI. • f'l>wert~ ""lo< Ind shinlw steel 1nndt~ *28 • [po~y case.motor tlolSing •Snip on mounting ......... , BLACK-WHITE PORTABLES MllTmA 12"* LIGllWBGIT • Built-in carrying h:wll& and all channel in. *BB tennas •Rugged high impact case. •Meas. dlag. cOM,•ttalft.tr AC/DC TV IAM/FMlllllC8111118 • 4" screen meas. diag. • Plays on batteiy or *79 electric power • Solid state chassis. ---PHILCO 22"* CONIDLE TV • Custom walnut cabinet • All channel VHF /VHF 11 BB tuning • full lide!ity front speaker. •Meas. dl•I· OUI IOW f'IKI SANYO 12"* AC/DC PIRTAILE • Solid state instant play chassis • Electric or optional battery play. 1 Measu1ed diagonally UIMPAllAl1Jt.t1 *BB ZENITH 22"* TABLE MODEL • Exclusive bafldcrafted chassis • Perma Set VHF *15B fine tuning • Ugtited indicators. •Meas. diag. OlllK.PIKtlH.tJ RCA 12 INCi* DELUXE TV • Minikin docoratnr cabinet • Sol~ st~e VHF !nd *89 UHF tuners • Built-in antennas. •Meas. diag. lOMf,1.ft .. , "·" ··w;-Al!Yill!'!llh W ii &i J , RCA• ZENITH 18 IN.* TV'S • Crisp, detailed pitt11re instantly • YOUI (MOt(E Bui!t-in antennas for all charmel re-'11 ' ception • Up front tuning contiols and sound. 1 Meas11red diagonally. FAMOUS MAKE RANGES CAii 811 I IATilfl •• GAS • Giant oven 31ld 1lide..out smokeless broiler • *208 Time of d.JY clock and timer • Automatic lighting Oii tM.PWICIJlt ,tr MAGIC CHEF 30 INCH GAS •Full •ldth oven with window • Scpara1e broiler t147 • Four fuU size surface bumers ... • . "" .... l'lkl' tn.•r GAFRll I SATIUl TWO OVEN • 30" e~~ level gas range• Everything you want '273 for cooking convenience • Smokeless broiler ....... '9Kt~ .• , O'IEIH I MllllITT 30" GAS • Spacious full width O¥en mi glide·out smoKe-*134 !ess broiler • 4 bumers & central W{lrk area .., .. rtkf; MAGIC Cllf ~ Cllll Onl • Oversize oven with window • Glide.oirt broiler *188 • Storage compartment • 36" gas range ffl Ill. ,llCl 1"·'' TAPPAN WITl IBf CLEAN llV&r • 30" gas range with tonUnoous cleaning oven •211 • Clock and timer • large brniler ... ... ,..""'' ' MAGIC CllEf W ME • Se!f clean oven • run width oven 1188 • 2 piete broiler • 35" wide. ' GAFFEll I IATRB • JO." gas range, window in door • Clock *17 4 and timer. ... .... ,111a1tt.tr INIEICllMTEI lllllAVAlll • Gaffers I Sattler multl-<)cle • f'l>rce~i• in1tr-1187 ior • Built-in soft food d1S1»$11 • ~y instillation -... """I"·'' G.E. TOP LIAD PllTAILE • Rolls f~ bble to sink " enters • 3 w1y 't51 hith fl!lS""' wash systam • Soft food dislltl!or ---1fll ' STEREO CONSOLES i-!189 '189 UNIVERSAL 8 FT. STEIEI • Custom made exclusively for White frorrt. • •m MuttiJiler tnner • 4-speed automatic changer ---MOTOROLA STEIEO COllltLE • French provincial c1binet • 150 watt amplifier sm & AM/FM-FM ster~ radio • S1Jlid state on tff. ,llKt .... ff MDTOIOLA WITH TAPE DECI • Ultra-modern cabinet • 4 track tape, 4 spud •2• ctianger • AM/FM-FM stereo radio ---AIMllAL ITEIEO CDllllU • 115 Witt solid st.te amplifier • Mediterranean •• cabinet • 4 speed automatic ch3'1ger • Radio. ...... ,.. ...... , PACIAM IRL 8 FT. Clllf • Provincial or Mediterrariean styling • 300 watt $448 ampl ifier • AM/FM-FM stereo radio l'Kl.U,llC&IA G.E. WITH 4 TRACK TAPE • Stereo b1" deck & automatic changer • AM/ •• fM-FM stereo radio • Spanish style Clln~le --- AUTOMATIC DRYERS -~ : WEmrlHOllSElllB.llYll : Wl1H HIGH SPHD llYDI ti • Ferl!llltlll prrn sett•~1 • P!rmallelll P'!!>l '157 l cyelt t lV!S tre..ted lalrit3 1 wrinkl1. fl!'t¥ent1v1 cool~ 1111ume11rr °"' .... 'IKI''"·'' MAYTAG GAS DRYBI .. Multi-cycli? fo.r all fabrics inclll11ing ti 87 permanent press. ~ I NDIGE THIEE CYCLE DIYEI • 4 heat selections • 2 automatic cycles pl!Js ti 47 timed cycle • Big, easy to remove &~ei:,:: ..... WEITING•IE llllXE -m-11 • To~ of the line model• Heavy duty• Fully It. automatic, M guesswork. .... MAYTAG CNACT PllT. llYll • Plugs into regular household autlets • Halo af • heat unifonn drying • Ideal IOI' apartments ---•E 18 LI. CllTB •t II I llYll • Especially designe4 10< largo loads • Stops 113 when door opens. •EI Cl. FT. W • Holds bi4 load1 to keep up with bi'fest waslim 11 • -fll!llbut!Ol controls • II flbric we ... ,.,., .... , 78 llllllPcmllP llllWAllEI • Gtfl1ti I Sl"9r .i. ......... C9llrW • ... I 116W *111 Mlf(fioll • ,.,. _""""' ••..at"·'' 20 GAL .w WATll llATB ·llMSll ----~·li .... ...,.,,.. *II --. ... ..,_.f'lllCltt.tr . . 'irCHARGE IT* e UNIAMUICA.ID e WM""IOWT CAID e· MAIT9C11AHI COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYl e JUST Off NEWPORT AVl BETWEEN SAN DIEGO ~REEWAY ind BAKER ST. -ttSTORE HOURS'ir Dolly t2 to 9 p.m. Sat. 10 tot p.m. Sun. 10 to 7 p.m. ' Th11tsdl)', J1nu1ry 28, l~n DAILY PILOT J Before Ba11 Collision, Spill '"' * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * M·eRc~!tvass!~v1Nos Two Tankers May Have B-een Off Course l'\JUVV u..,EN EVERY SATURDAY . ·•: •. 10 A. M.-4 F-i ~Jl. , · ~ . -· . ,•,-. of the center of the Golden Gate Bridle when it rammed the °"""' s~ 1n early morning fog and darkne5'. she collided with her slater lhJp jull weal of the bricJCe. bound ships use the south aide of the channel, while ahlps leavlne port use the 0011.bero hall. ' While the heorla& pro- (ipon Mon.-Thon. 9 IJ11.-4 p.m.; Fri. 5 &A-6 PA "· ' SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Two Standard OU tankers may both have been oft course just before the crash Jan. 11 which spilled more than ll00,000 gallons of bunker oil into San Francisco Bay. All tesUmoay to date bas come from officers a n d crewmen ol the Arilona. Capt. Morris Engllsh was to testify today, the fll'lt. of several wllneues from tbe Ore1on. Bu't Heim, a 30-year nteran of au duty, testified that the "center span horn sounded olmost dead ahead," and be heard the foghorn 00 the brid&e'• gouth tower "well on the ltarboard side," SUI· 1esting the inbound Arbooa may baVt: been close to the center Une of thd channel, which la just six-tenths of a mlle wide UDder the bridge. Helnz. M, of Whitlierl ~Uf., alao told the panel tbe Arizona was on a 56-degree, or north- northeasterly, course ju st prior to the collision. & re s s e d, 1bout 200 demonalraton abouted alo&am and scumtd with police-tn front o( the Standard OU of Cal110mia heodqllll't<ro In San Francitco, about • mile from the hearlnl site. Some demonstraton c&nied Viet COng flags and -pod dud birds on the aklewalk in front or the Standard bulldJng. The birds bore tags readlnc "tbe people's evidence." " '"' BUENA PARK Mercury S.Vinp Bid(., Volley V1tw 11 Unc~n •HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury S.VllllS Bid(., Edlnl'f II Beach TUSTIN Mercury S.Vinp Bldg., lrvlnt Blvd. 1t "owport Ave. In testimony Wednesday before a marine board of in- Ve5UgaUon, Seeood M 1 t e Leonard Heinz contradicted earlier statements by the two ranking officers of the Arlzona Standard that the tanker was in the proper ship lane south Both Capt. Harry Parnell and Chief Offi'cer Jack Tetard had told lbt panel it was the out.bound Oregon that was If Heinz' reckoning is cor- rect, it would mean the Arizona was heading more toward the north end of the span and toward the outbound ******************* WHITE FRONT s DAY ommANT ·PADS With the most effective .7 7 C ol all deodorants. Jar of 75 pads. COMPAREATl .19. ma 11 llZE VIC. IMS Si1es for llUftJ am u11- 1ighls ind c1nisters . By Glamor• l Padco. Rll. ·~ J,11.4' ... J PICllllD 1M BllE CIAIN LICI Cha in lock lor bi- cycles. Heavy gauge steel; SS>JIUg>inst lheft_ With 2 keys. C11U'AJIE IT 1 JI MBAL FILE SYSTEMS ~ file witli !olden • ,,, dleo;k cilt will\ !l'Ofltll'Y indtl. ro ~.AT 1.11 uo.. Twe 1r *'ii drmn; • 1499 (IMI flt gold. By lnUll!Pli. t•U£AT1UJ POCIDRADID .Webco r transistor rMio""M camera S'f\'le case. ipng range re- c:eptiOn·& lull bodied sbund. With 2 year pa rbi_ labof warranty. IES. llUOUftl ' PRIC!Ul .fi.CHARGE IT* ,. ,. 1• -- IANU.MRICAlD WHITIPIONT CAlD lllAtmCHAIM • in the wrong sea lane when Under n1vigatlon rules, In-ship Jane. Police said four p;e.rsons PRICO SLASHBll OUT 11EY GOI •Y IN FOR SAVINGSI • Oil um • 6 01-Cleanser Fresll-11> lotion. Tale )Ill • 6 oz. Moisturizer• 6 oz. 99 pick & sa'le. . FDIMllLI SUI Sift $4 IL EA. lall Pla 11 ll. IZE Sllimpoo Iii a!llll! ritse botttts. "°"" sMgs.. ·-Al•U. -· 2 Foe $1 SpriJll iooled; holds caiiijlll catri"' '"' easy "" ant IP--plication, Dap I Ill lllC-lfSCllllfl PltCE 1.11 PllTll SILEX 1 ~ -w ) ' COFFEE MAIER 9 cap model with u sily cltaoed glass bowl. flaYor selector and keep Wll1TI COl!JoL # 70701 mUM ;:. CUPPll ID · Electric clipp~rs wit.Iii guides, scis<> SOl'S, tomb, iMfruc; lions. HKIO • Ill. llSCllUlfTUT Good looki!I fire plact ac:tessG<I sel Poker, brush, shovel '"d s~nd. lll 118 ·ioMPlll AT IUI ... 6 pc. sbtinless steel set willi . -bot1Jms. 2 COin! sauce- pans, I COin! stillel #3830 .. IQ_ •st11111 l'ltC( 11.11 ' I IEIPACEWWW ~ Wood grain tiaish will stlelf with brac- kets and standards. CDMPllE AT 5.99 ..... ID , ... ConJ>iete set. I r>ekets, 2 sllJt- tlecocis, JJet ' posts. COllPIAE IT4JI Biii IACIET 1297 . --; . ATl't.91 SAVE 16.98 Aerodynamic design trietal lrl!Tle with nylon strings aitd leather bolnld handle. Cover io:UcJe.J. Cllooe finish lme, wliile Yiayt Ult ... nibb« llud slep. 30" overall llei1ht. 11 -120 CDMrlll lT 1UI 111.a 1111111.IACI H,.,.lic fack is Oiml*l wy Jo "" lllued le-sip Mii 2·~0:· JN"IP llandle. fll9faca ,.. tld. """'' ;.ci .... 010-1 21 CMlll All.IS SERVICE FOR 4 Cups, saucers, dinner plates, $ 5 salMs & fruit dishes. Dish- washer safe. COMPAU AT t .tS SAYE $4 IWllDLICllD fOf bath or bedroom doors. ln1er1or knob has fllfll bu1 101 for loc~ing. JOOBKP ftl llC. llSCltlNT l.U " herlastilll battoy may be ndla~ol by plug- illl into llOv ootlet. Has rol flashe!. OUR REG. DISCOUIT . PllCEl• . "'·~'' IC.~ FuUy solid stale radm plays Oft batteries or AC electric with built-in line m -Wittl earphones, hatteries & ~e. .. 181Vlllll AllmM, lJllCe roof top .. -for excell"'I \llf & UHF colo r reception. Wit~ mast and IM'ackets. SrECW. Lllll l'llCI $WO ST.IT[llo- , slaot pllJ chis· sis, my to reld clocl WM Io -t • , ''""· u ' .... 11sa.rtv -. ' ' ,,.,. ~· and a window in a Delfby build.inc WU broken. Meanwbilt WHnetday, both th< coast Guard and Standard OU Aid aerial surveys Clf Sin Franci.tco Bay aad ocean areal lllJoinhl& tt lllowod Ylr)' Utile lrlOe of ,oil. C.-Guard cmdr. Gordon Dickman llld olmoot all the oll has been either removed or dilpel'ltd and no longer pOteS a threat to beaches or shoreline areas. Nixon Asked For Tuna Navy Escort SACRAMENTO (UPI) - President Nixon hu been ask· ed by two Ca ll fornla legislators to send Navy escorta to protect U • S . lunaboats endangertd b y "piracy" in waters off South America. And a repratnlative of the seafarers union says his organization would arm the boats if necessary to protect lhe fi,,hermen. "We're going to protect those fishermen," F r a n k Drozak of San Francilco, west coaat representative of the Seafarers International Union, sald following a neWJ con-- fere.nce Wednesday. "If it means putting guns on those bonts, we'll put them on there." Assemblyman V i n c e n t Thomas (0-San Pedro), told newsmen he wouJd introduce a reaolution asking Nixon "to give support to our veutl!, to give lhem escort and to prottd them." He called for N8'y eocorJs_ "If our commander-m.ebiet cannot send batUe wagons with out fishermen. then we are not much <>f a nation any more," said Sen. Ralph c. Dllll ([).Glldena), who supp<>rted Tbomu. He said the resolution, if paaed, would ''give a little backbooe and courage to the Prea:ldent and Congress.'' The two lawmaten and tuna industry repreesntatifts branded as ''piracy'' Ecuador 's seizures of 14 American vessels so £ar_ this year. Thomas said the St ate Department had ' ' t a 11 e d miserably" In protecting the boats. I Missing Off Disabled Cruiser LONG BEACH (UP!) -Qno, <>f two men aboard a dlsab1ed 34-foot cabin cruiser 'ft! presumed drowned after the Coast Guard salvaged the sinking vessel WedneJday. Rescued was Andrew Sh<n, 2.f, Fort Wayne, Ind., who told authorities his companion, Ronald Glazer. 29, Beverly Hiils, disappeared Tuesday afternoon when he went swim- ming . 'Tbe pair, who sailed from Oceanside Monday en route to Catallna Island, had been stranded since Monday when the boat became dilabled while they changed fuel WW. The boat took oo water but Coast Guardsmen were able to salvage. the VesMI and tow· ed it to Terminal Ialand. Total Eclipse Of Moon Doe ' LOS AN(lELl:S (AP) - Ruldenll Iioro will be able to ... a total .. eclJpae al the moon on Feb. t , says the d1rector of the Griffith Park Observatory. Willian• Kauf. man said Wednuday the total ecUpae, the first sin« ~ Im, -loo oeen from boein- nfng to' 'enct,~barrlngtcloud cove~. '!be --to en .1lie euUI'• lhadow at t : p.m. with total eclipse at JI:lil p.m. he added. '!be .-.lllrJs ltl exit from the lhldow at 12:27 1.nr. Ind the mM WU1 hi•• -the -'by 1:31 .... ' ' ....... .. ....... ' Je DAILY PILOT ARBUCKLE & SON Wet!cUff MQrtllaty 4%7 E. 171~ St., Costa Ttftsl -• BALTZ MORTVA~ Deetlt N o tU,.,s 'B·usinessmen' • Ill Trouble ...;A. .uLE VAL.tL~111-.JL By TOM BARLEY Of ltM DfilJ 1'1191 tllft Vote Set Tuesday to community and we're hop- ing that our central data pool may help a lot of our county poli~ forces to keep tabs oo those we know and those we're su re to know very soon." At that, Enright admits, the countywide rC>Ster may be just a step away from a regional system or recording the known being moved from one sector narcotics traffickers. of the county to another. all "That's fine ." he said. "Yt'.e manifestations of the highly would welcome a multi-<.'Ounty n1obile nature or today's ped- system on th~ lines and we dlers and pul!hers." already have the valuable "If we don 't have this federal and state organizations cooperation at the local level which are always avaUabJ.e we're all doing ourselves a to aid the individual police <fis.servi~." Enright s a id . force. ''We're going to find, when "But our organization will this system gets under wa y, be a loosely knit structure that this central Index Is going that will benefit from that to pay off handsomely for all very nature," Enright said. lawmen in.Orange County." "We don't want to &lei> on The syst~m is still in Its any sensitive toes, we don't organiz.ationaJ stage bu I want anyone to think this is Enright predicts launching or the creation Of a n 0 1 her the plan "in the very near future. bureaucracy, we jusl want all Orange County's s e pa rate "It's something we'll be l·uri.sdictlons to take adv"...-_..e working on constantly both in --s tenns of addition and im· of a tool which will be created ror us' all and by us all." plementalion." he said. "Just Send your Valentine a ring of hearts candle that releases a delicate scent of "]a&Wqe as it bums. Packed in a Valentine mailing carton. 3.95 "It will be more of an in· as drug traffic changes and telligence center than a Ci!n-alters patterns so will our Ital polidbg bureau," Enright index 1'1!COrd those changes said. "It will be staffed on ;~;,'he benefit of all our agen-THE CANDLE l"1>QCK an informal basis by mem~s h U of the district att~ney's office "We're dealing with ighly 308 lold) Ho. Newport l}yd., Newport IHCll and it is ttJe v•..., last ...;i..:1. organized crime," Enright _, WW.I said. "Our own methods must 646-4168 Coron1 del Pilar ... OR 3-SC5I Costa Mesa mi l-UZ4 • BELL BROADWAY A10R11JARY Orange Eyes JC Di-strict of all of us down hefe to be highly organized to meet Op9n 11 to • CloMd Mond•Y• be looked upon as some Sartli~~~~~~~~·.:;,;::.;~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;j of supreme headquarters .in this growing threat.' the narcotics invmJgatioo rield ." 1111 Broadway, Collta ~le. u 1-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 1'1'5 Laguna Caayn Rid. IM-Mli • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Martury Clmpd 3500 Pacific View Drive New port Beach, Callfond1 .... .,. • PEEK FAMILY COWNIAI, FUNERAL HOME 7S01 Bolla A\le. Westrom.nu ... -~ • SMITHS' MORTUARY 11%7 Mola It. Rulhlglell -- By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ........ l'li.t st.tr ORANGE -Voter3 of lht Orange Unified School District will decide Feb. 2 on the pro- posed merger with the Rancho Santiago Comunmity COiiege D11lrict (Santa Ana Collegf:). Because the Orange and Garden Grove Unified School Districts have not previously jointd a junior (community) college district. residenh pay a seat ta x to other distdcts which assume the burden cf providing two-year eolle11e programs for their high school graduates. This tax next year in Orange will bt 98 cents per $100. The cost o£ the mer11er ta Orange residentls will be five cents per flOO plus the 48 cent tu levied this year by the former Santa Ana junior col· lege district, recently renamed Rancho Santiago. If voters approve t h e merger in the Feb. 2 election. a new community col lege Chapman Night C.lasses Slated ORANGE -Registration for spring 1971 evening classes at Chapman College will begin Monday in the art and educa· tion building, '33 N. Glassel!. Class sessions begin February II. Copies of the schedule are available in the Evenlllg Division office. Inquirie! may be directed to (714) 633-8821, Ext. 314'. district would be formed. A new seven-member board would be elected April 20 with three members rrom each of the two uni.~ied school districts -Orange and Santa Ana - and one trustee from an area made up of parts el both districts. The Rancho Santiage merger proposal resulted from studies that indicated mergers with the North Orange County o r Saddleback Community College Districts would not be feasible due to long commutes -from 30 to 60 miles daily -for students. U lhe merger electio n ls successful, only Garden Grove Unified of all school districts in Orange County would re- main outside a two-year col- lege district. The changing nature of narcotics traffic made the creation of such a central pool ''absolutely imperative," Enright said. "Narcotics of all kinds ate being brought into the county and shipped from here to many other locations," be said. "And we also have situa- tions where illegal drugs are Rose Chairrnan Of 1972 Dies PASADENA (AP) -John J . Cabot, Pasadena mortuary operator, died Thursday night shortly after being elected president o( the 1972 Tour.na- ment of Roses. Cabot, 58, collapsed and was pronounced dead at the con· clusion of a Tournament of Roses Association meetlog here. See Ro6ej P,.uneJ r/Jy :Jke Gxperl6 ... MARY ARMSTRONG ..• MANY YEARS A ROSARIAN SPONSORED BY CORONA SHEARS, THE FINEST IN PRUNING TOOLS. SHE'LL BE HERE ALL DAY SAT ., JAN . 30 'TIL 4 P.M. DON 'T MISS THIS ONE . END Ofi THE MONTH SPECIAL CECILE BRUNNER ROSE BUSHES OLD FASHIONED, MAYBE, BUT STILL UNEQUALLED IN , PROFUSION OF DAINTY PINK, FULL DOUBLE ROSES THE YEAR ROUND. HG. $1.ff SPECIAL TREE ROSES BARE ROOT At always, hi1r•d• will ile in full .. loem this summ•r. Us• as fermal bor· 4er •font wallcway1. 129 SUPPlT llMITID FlDWER SHOP SPECIAL! Mixed Colored Carnatlons, cut yest.rday, R•al fresh, RHI pmtyl SPECIAL PANSIES Strong, wall start· eel plant1. Re.dy to bloom. BUY 2 DOZEN ON J' STANDAltDS 795 DOZIN 149 AT 79' EACH ,~i;FREE YOUR FAVORITE CREDIT CARD IS YOUR PASSPORT .. TO CHARGE BY PHONE • 2641 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA "Quollty '"' S...lco 11... ..... CALL 546-5525 SPICIAl.S eooo TH•I SUN OAT JAN, JI Thur.-Fri.·Sal.-Sun. January 2a·2e·31t31 ALBUM SPECIALS OF THE WEEK CHICAGO Ill COLUMBIA Double Albun1 includes: Slng A !\!1•11 n Tune f\id. Lonr·- lincss Js Jui;t A \Vord. \Vhat E:ls<" Can 1 Say, I Don't ·vant Your ~loney, Travl'I Suite, Flight 602, !\lolorbnat To r-.. 1ars, Free, A Free Counlr}', At 'rhe Sunrise, liap11y Cause I'm Going Home, l\.1other, Lowdo\vn, An J·lflur In The Shov.'rr It Hard Hisin' Mornin~ \Viltioui Bi•cak· fast, Off To '\Vork. Fallin' Ou t, Dr<'amin· H fJm!', Mo~n­ ing Blues Aita.in. E\C'cy. \Vhen All 1'he Laughter Dies In Sorrow. Canon. Once Upon A Tin1e, Proi;ress! The Approaching Storm, l\.1an vs !\Ian, The End. • LIST $9.91 I GRAND FUNK LIVE CAPITO~ Double Album Inrludc·~:: lntroduclion, Arf' You Rt:!ady, Paranoid, In Need, J.lenrt Breaker. ln~lde Looking Oul, \Vords of \Visdom, J\1can ,\1istl't'ater. l\.Iark Says Al· ri~ht, T.N.U.C., ln10 Th<' Sun. $)66u. NITTY GRITIY DIRT BAND § ~-"Unc~1 ~~.:.~9:nd hi• 1= = d0g Teddy." §SALE $266 ~ e E a ~ LIST~.98~ ... ·--·:·.·:-:·--~-~·:-:· Creeden~e g Clearwater PENDULUM SALE $26!. 3 I LIST ".91 l r. ~ · .. ··.~· LIST $5.98 HURRY QUANTITIES LIMITED GRANTS GETS IT ON WITH EXTRA SAVINGS BUY NOW & SAYE STEREO 8 TRACK TAPES TOP ARTISTS TOP LABELS Jefferson Airplane Bobby Sherman 3 Dog Night The Guess Who ~~i5e $)94 SAVE OVER $3.00 MOOIHURST AT ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH ' I I ! • ' ' ~ '· I I . . . . . DAILY PILOT J l Spiraling Campaign Spending Faces Crackdown By ROY McGHEE WASHINGTON (UPI) 1·0oo·1 buy a single vote more than is necessary. I'll be damned If I'm going to pay ror a landslide." pollUcal advertising to 10 cents for each voter registered for the last' previous election. That ceiling would apply bolh in primaries and gmeral elet.'- tions. Congress enacted a similar bill last year, but restricttd the expenditure llmiation to radio and television ad- veriliing. Prt!ident Nixion vetoed that bill, calling it un- fair lo broadcasters. Jt was widely believed, however, that another reason for the veto was I h 11 t RepubU~ns have rieher finan- cial resour c es than Democrats, and that sug- gesting !hey give up this ad· vantage was expecting too much ntor11lily from a poliliral party. Other re forms proposed by Peal'!lon and Gravel: Strict public reporting of all cam· pal11n contributions and ex- penditures; an independent, non-political aovernment agen- cy to police campaign spen- ding; free network prime lime f()r prt.Sidenllal candidate•. alld po&!llble to v er nm en t subiidles for campaign ex- penditures for federal oUl.ct seekers. John F. ~eMedy got a big1-~~l!~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~aii!iii!iiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiimiii~!jjj~iiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiij~iiiiii~iii~iiiii~~ laugh when he facetiously at- tributed OU,., admonition to his father during hia presidential ~ '"" °L_e• ...... campaign. Man May Suffocate ' On Wa ste But the truth is no one knows how much lhe Jamily &pent in quest of the nation's hi11hesl office for John Ke n- nedy. Nor does the public know how much Nelson Rockefellu s~nt in h.is fou r campaigns for governor of New York and his three tries for the Republican presiden- tial nomination; nor how mu ch his brother Winthrop spent in four races ror governor or Arkansas. Likewise, there has been no public accounting of how deep the wealthy Buckley family dipped into its private oil-bas- ed fortune to finance lhe suc- cessful election of Sen . James L. Buckley, New York co n- servative. Or. ror that matter, hnw much fonner R e p , Richard L. Otti nger (0-N.Y.) heir to vast plywood wealth, personally spent in losing to .. • • • . • • • • ' • I • ! I ' ' I • • • • • • . • ' • • •' , . • • • . • • I • l ' i t • i • . • • . • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • ' ' • ' • ' I ' i ! \ l ~ , " • . " • ' • • I • l ' '• ' ~ ~ ' , ' ' ' ' ! I ROME (UPI) -All life on earth may suffocate If man keeps dumping p oisonous waste into the oceans, Swiss scientist and underwater ex- plorer Jacques Piccard has warned . Piccard, in Rome for a con- ference of experts on the possible construction of un- dersea laboratories and ''cities," said the problem was an urgent one. "We are living more and more with the sea and we are depending completely on the sea, not only for food but al~r:i for breathing.'' Pic- card said in an interview with the press service of the U.N. Food and Ap;ricultu re Organization <FAO) . "About !~thirds of the at- mosphere's oxygen comes from the sea, p r oduced dir ectly by phytoplankton (microscopic plant organisms) <>r algae. There are no precise values for this process, but <>ne can s.!ly that between 50 and 70 percent of au oxy11en ts produced directly from the sea. churned into the air by wind and waves and carried over Into the land. If by pollu- tlon we destnly these algae. it ls a real possibility that ail life on earth· could suf· focate." Bantlini CRABGliSS STOPPER .. ... i.-.s.-Clll~­~---11- $2!»0 0FF 1,500 IQ. FT. Sill NOW S7.t5 111 AtllAWNS Ustd now, new 81ndinl Crabgrass Stopper nips sprint 's annYal btue- 11ass inlesta t1on !n t~e bud.1! destroys smtll seeds before they can 1row. A!10 !ertil1 zes 11 It ~ills. Utel!ent protecliGn !of 11111a1s and mbtd !awns. Buckley . Kennedy jokingly disarmed &ome of the harsher criticism aimed at his rich man's cam- paign. But it is no laughing matter to two reform-minded senators, J ames B. Pearson (R-Kan), and Mike Gravel (D- Alaska). They have teamed to write a toogh election cam- paign refonn bill that aims. for one thing, to reduce the edge huge private fortunes gl\'e candidates. It •,l'ou!d stipulate that a candidate for federal orfi ce -President, senator or con- gressman -could not apend more than $15,000 of his own or his family's money in an election campaign. The Pearson-Gravel legisla- tion would limit the ~ount a candidate for national office could spend on all types of LOCAL No other newtpeper tell1 you more, eYerf d•Y, eboul whet'1 tolnt 011 in the Gre•let Ore11te Coett therr the DAILY PllOT. --= ---=--=---=--= - B.i WEEDIUZER '&Kl!CO .. & ..-11G <001-1 n.i1u11• ,..,.,,. 1onc11•1•1 CONTROLS OXALIS, CAA•GAASS AND 32 OT~IEA W'llED I ANDGAAHll $300 0FF 2,IOQ 110. n'. llll MOW $10.t l IN DICHONORA r1mous B11H!inJ ~ptrWetdil iier, with [niclt, controls ouU1 ind 32 other wu ds 111d 1rasses. Also ferl i!izes with 11utrfen1s. conditions with ricn 111iner11s '"d ttops l~1ects too. II is the comp Iott Med and teed tor dichondr1. DECORATIVE BARK AttTec.tt.. ~ .... t r-114 ~o-. ,._,.. 1- lt -...,. tM tell ~eel. Dl1eo11 .......... All t,..._ Lar9• 3 Cubic: Feet la91 SPECIAL s11e 0 R 3 ~ s41a USE YOUR CREOIT CARD e B.nkAmerlc•rcl • M•sttr Ch•rtt e Dlntr Club e Americen Expre1s ·NURSERY Hxilli~s noRIST 2640 HAUOI II.VD. COSTA MBA 546-1121 • 'if' •• WO ~lC S ( .. PGOSf '"' 01 .. lll MARKC. BLOOME IST.1924 1t1comm111414 br ROAD TEST MAGAZINE YOUR CHOICE 5.2Dx13-5.6Dx13 6.DDx15-6.8Sx1 5 5.6Dx1 S-5.9Dx1 5 6.SOrl J (878/13) se l .lS.14 (07111 41 7.00xl 3 l.2Sl1 S • (C 78/1 l ) (G78/15) '24:5 l .15r1 4 U7 Sfl4) 1.8 5115 IJ78/l SI OPEN 7 DAYS NIGHTS-TO 9 PM SUN."."' TO 6 PM 95 • • ' • I ~~ Brand New Full 4-Ply 6.70x1 S (7.7Sx15) . (F78/15) • ac lls i'NiWalls F 0 R , .... • 11 .11 •°"·tr. To• t 1, el•• 1111011to•o1.~ •. ,,,, oi .. -,.,1, • BRAND NIW FULL 4 PL T Uniroyal TUBELESS 7.75xl 4 ' 7.75i l 5 7.00x l 3 8.2Sx14 8.2lr1S (F78 /14) (f78/15) 7.3Sxl4 (G7 8/1 4) (G71/1~) 95 $ 95 . MTLOM C~ll if!lo! "". '17.95 6.!l•l<ID7ln •1 MARKC. A1ra;,1 'Ullllil 7.3Sa14 {l71{1 4: • llld . ""~ 7.75.r14H71!1 4; • 7.75.ll S f'71/ll ) 8.SS xl 4 8.SSxl S 9.00xl S 8.BSxl 5 s22!5 .1.55114 8LOOMEs (H78/14) (H78/15) (L78/15) (J78/1 5) fH71114) 1.55115 95 95 (H71•1 SI '26!' 9.00/ $ 9.1 Sxl S lml" ~Dtl IOt~t~RI (l78/1 5) ''"'''' •II l1no lui..• ".SI loUOI fff. k. t .. la. Do,1Mi•t u, .. iiu , WM111W&W iJ,1S In.. • JIHl •'url 11' IJ1tk Super ·Chrome Wheels ••• &ll lin11u•. •ii.fl•• tt.t1 f.4. r .. ;., Tor .•• Wlih1••ll1 ti.ti"''" SNOW CHAINS AT All STORES vws MOST CARS ••• $29.95 I WHIT!WAll I s World's Finest 18Sx14 1. lll:AND NIW' 20,000 Milt GUAll:ANTllD IONDID LINING 2.lA I Oll: & INSTAllATION - INCLUDID 3. MICll:O·MlASUll ALL 4 DRUMS 4. ADO BltAKI ,lUID AS NllDI D $,ARC.GRIND LINING 6, IUfD SYS.TIM & ClfAN IACIUNG PLATE Al NllDID 7. GRIASt & PACK WHllL llARINGS I. ALL CYllNDfR5 INSPICTID IN- CLUDING MASTllt CYLIHDIR. 9. ROT A f( WHfllS & ADJUST IRAKIS 10.ll:OAD TIST VfHICll TO STANDARDS 'PHI RIPLACIMINT OUARANTll ... , ti llNIN' if ii Wms 011ltlm21,DDI Mllt~P~ Senict Cbtr11 3005 .HARBOR BLVD. ' \ ' j GARDEN GROVE-14040 lrookhur~~ : CORNll OF BAKER AND HARBORr· 1 COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH A«EA 557.1000 ' ' • 11" ' ,, ;1 ' • PULLlltTl:>N -1121 E0<lld Sl, -1711-0IOO -· 195. MOST CARS f"VW;-J- l.2!:..l;1 Open llliilf, ••»• Sun. 9-6 l - • I ,I l I I DAIL v PILOT Thu'1dar. Januiry 28, ]q7} Jlefl TV J<'ilt11s Bo~ed IJp -tx-POW Tells _Exc1-uciating Torture lNIMAlegic ., .....,. ., .. NE\\' \'ORK (AP) -A former American prisoner of war ln Korlh Vielnan1 s<iys llanoi-rclcased filn1s depicting hfe in PO\\' carnps bear no relation to !he torture lreat- 1ncnt he had to undergo. ~1nj . James Low, v.·ho was :;hol dov.'n over North Vi etnil m 1n Dc>ccn1ber 1967 and released the fol1011. ing Augusl, made his eornmcnt s in a television 1nlerview v.·11h \Valle r Cronkhite. He described a torture in \\'hit·h his captors used a metal bar about 18 inches long <ind one iuch in dia111ete1'. "They put this in my moulh and a guy . , • put his knee in my back and pulled this thing ba('k against , • , as rar back as he could and the pain is excruciatin g. I never felt a pain worse than that:• he said. ·'They kept asking me ques- tions and then all of a sudden they got up and pushed me do11.·n and took the bar ouL They left for maybe another hour or so •.• t1¥0 hou rs. And lhcu Lliey can1e back again and the san1e treatment started again. "Asking me v.•hat target, what target • . • they had a big rnap out on the table and th ey went through lhe h<indcurr and twine routine and this time they really pull- ed this barlback inside. Blood gushed out from n1y ear ..• niptured something in there. ''This treatment went on and off for about well, six or seven days. Of course, whenever they were torturing me with this bar and what have you, I screamed because it really was excruciating. It seemed like when they 'd leave me they'd go somewhere else and I could hear a person next door screaming, too. The same treatment. I presume it was my partner but I don't know for sure." he said. ·wr.M. l.OOK A.1 'ff.tA.r fo@IOOtN6 PL.AN~T WAY DOWN THfi!f.! 1' The Original Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus Reg,$17995 • Fie ldcrest no-iron King or Qu een size t op shee t • Fieldcrest no- iron King or Queen si ze fitted bottom sheet • 2 King or Que en size bo l- ste r pillows • 2 pillow cases • King or Qu een size meta l frame·o n easy-roll ing casters. King or Queen: head- boa rd plus quilted bed- sp read. Twin o r Full: plasti c headboard an d metal frame on easy-rol ling casters . -- NOW$ Reg. $15995 NOW$ 95 95 FREE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED of Mattresses Specialists! LAKEWOOD 4413 C•ndlewood Avenue c.tnde•ood S"°P't (acrou from UlkewOO<I Cenier) .Phone: 834--4134 SANTA ANA and FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd •. 'cor ner ol Ed inger) Next to Zody s Phone : 839-•570 ANAHEIM 1811 West Lincoln Avenue Between !uclld end Brookhur&I Avenues Just East of Fed Ma rl Phone: 776·2590 Cities Ignore Recycling As Garbage Runs Out Ears NEW YORK (UPI) -The The problem Is growing nation's cities are exhausting more acute every da;-, the their space for garbage industry spokesman said: "In disposal, while the technology Chicago and Akron , land-fill already exists for· converling si l.es are exhausted: Miami, waste into profitable recycled Cleveland and Toledo will run products, a c c o r d i 11 g lo out or space i11 one year - spokesmen for the aluminurn even Oklahoma City has ooly and the recyclh1g of that mel<Jl <ilone could support municipal waste d i s po s _a 1 systems _ with reclamattoD or other substances a pro- fitable sideline. industry. a year and a hair leH:' The al uminum association The aluminum industry paid said this we.?k that a one-slop out $575,000 on its own durini? garbage recylcing plant can 1970 for 115 million reelaimed now be built that v.·ould ex-cans, al $200 per ton of tract salable quantities of aluminun1, Goldsmith said, metals, paper, fillass. sand aAd 1 - ln a relaled matter, William F. May, president of t~e American Can Co., sa id in Chicago that the en.~~.er ~o solid \\'aste disposal lies in cooperation between g?vern- ment and bu si ness leading ta a new industry of resources recovery.·• other commodities from even modest quantities of Y.'ilSte. i~~~e~m~2~!~~~~1 No one is now engaged in such plans, hO\ol-'ever, it was ~~~~~ said. S. L. Goldsmith Jr., ex- ecutive director or the a I u m i n u m association, an- nounced the multiproduct recycling plant scheme at a news conference recently. He said the idea was being presented to the National Center for Waste Disposal, a privately-fina nced nonprofit organiz.atior1 involved in waste disposal technology , for possi- ble developments. LAST OF THE BIG MARKDOWNS Now I EVERY- THING 40% OFF WESTCLIFF Cameras 1132 lrvin.,_Newport leach Westcliff Plaza 548-4935 SERVICE CLINIC ONE DAY ONLY -9-5 P.M. SATURDAY, JANUARY 30 • NORMAL SERVICE • GREASE BEARINGS (Where Needed) • REPLACE PARTS (Where Needed ALL FOR ONLY All Labor Included NEW HOOVER DIAL·A·MATIC HOOVER DOESN 'T MAKE ALL THE CLEANERS IN THE WORLD ... BUT THEY DO MAKE THE BEST! Cleans faster and more effectively bec•UM of a high power, twin-fan motor. 30'!. more efficient on rugs, 250 ~• more efficient with tools. GENUINE VACUUM BAGS 59¢ Per Pkg. REGULAR 89¢ •A ltoo.w- ~ llOlld$ ~l!Hf ....... •Erlrrl•ie 1r-,.,·~­ tuld$ ll:li. '" -(~ Its$ ahe<i : .. . .; . .•.. . -. :-..• ··:- • Vlf!)"I DUI rt jldorl -~rvtf • lklsty 114:11, •Ill' tllM •t'' ..... L ·•1111!iliollnit ..ij~i-.. ....... ou4doo! l'bll QIY!lltllp •*llPW.11111. •T111t~.ilor ­ lO'i ... .ctlOll "1111c11..mc 1oo11, a1!11NloCll~ •Cl•-roll~ .. : ··. • """'s-ttlJ ill -~ICllJv" ..... Model 1020 .. ... .. . . .. . ·.· I I • l I I 1 • l DAIL V PILOT J :J FAMILY CIRCUS bfl Bii Keane Japata, Europe Depenclent Arab Oil Keeps Many Nations Going •lt~~~~ BELLE DI :atrrl'EB. FI.mm WSE By PHIL NEWSOM barffia. The l&raea:I pnvk>ua L28.5 billion barrel1 or to Iran UPI Fortlp News Analyst field, cilscovered In easi Tetu with an e1dm1ted ruerve " tn 1930. cont&lDed five billion 70 billion barrels. OJI, "black gold," has bttn ban-els. The oil of Saud.I Ar1bia and splca of the Orle11t. They seek oil, a major prize In the coatest fo r supnm1ey between the Communist and the non-C.ommunilt world. produced commercially fo r on-Major as these discoveries Jy a little more than 100 years. are, however, lhey do little Iran, aix other Arab counlries1li'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii__,I but it~ importance is suc h more Lhan keep pacr with and Venezuela and Indonesia, that without it, world industry increasing world demand!. la Lhe subject of the current qu ickly would come to a. halt. West Europe, for exam ple, ne1otiaUons in Te h er an a-..o1•:• ""'='"'...:'=. ... Regular Price $1.59 lb. Cut Freah to Any Size I H i g h l Y in d u slriallzed is increasi ng its annual rate between the producing coun-Westem Europe and Japan of oil consumption by on• tr;•• and ••• 1• m1jor com quickl y wou ld be forced to ba 1 d "' ui " ~ their knees if in lime of war million rre s per a Y • panles lhll handle it.I distrlbu· roughly equivalent to the tJon. they sl\ould be deprived of ant icipated output 11f the new Altotether, they account for the outside sources of oil upon North sea fields. which they almost wholly 8$ percent of the world's P~ depend . And their reserves pale into d~tion outaide the United insignificance when <:ompartd States and the Soviet Union. Japan receives some 90 per~ to Saudi Arabia who a e Today'a Marco Polos no LAST OF THE BIG MARKDOWNS Now SPECW. $1.SS lb. 'Whot art we having for dessert to I knew how much room to leave ?" cent of its oil from the Middle reserves are esti ma ted at longer seek the silks and East and Africa. Westernl---::;~;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·11 JE.Qlr\ lnhi Europe is 85 percent dependent on the same sour~. W•tcllff f1fttl e 17tli & lnl• e N,t ...... e Ml.Ot7J Te_ I c ..... ., C"* e o,..._ e 14J· .. 16 .1111111'1 Jllllll lllDI IT/Ill Both the United States 1.nd * * wtttctlH fll-the Soviet Union are, or could become .. 1r""ufficieot. HALLI DA. Y'S We Can't Give 'em Away ••••• SO THEY'LL BE SHIRTS PANTS 9.00-12.00 9.00-15.DO 3.99 NOW 3.99 NOW 3.99 Look For Our Other Good .Buys Too ••. The world 's depe ndence on oil goes far toward explaining the So'Viet Union's consuming Interest in the Middle Easl where most of the world 's known oil reserves are con- centr<lted'. It also helps lo explain the unceasing search for new sources of supply. New finds in western Siberia have led the Soviet Unio n to boast that by 1975 it woold equal current U.S. output of more than 470 million metric tons a year and eventually outstrip It. Red China keeps its pro- duction figures secret but says that new disc<Jveries plus development of production and refining facilities ha ve made it self-sufficient. It has growl- ed a warning to Nationali st China on Fonnosa, Japan and Sou th Korea a g a i n s I at- tempting to exploit polenllal nil deposits under lfl e East Cina Sea. North Sea discoveries are expected eventually to reduce Europe's deoendence uoon Africa and the Middle East and by 1974 to produce around a million barrels a day. 10'.l& lrvif>•, Newport Bep.ch,Celltorriia 926-eQ, Ption• &42· 7Cle1 The discovery of oil on Alaska's North Slope in 1968 was ha iled as the J?;reatest oil find in North America. It wa s estimated to hold between fiv e and 10 billion SALE! SALE! 30% TO 50% OPf GIRLS-PANT SUITS, CAPRIS, T-SHIRTS, ROBES, DRESSES. BOYS-DRESS PANTS, T-SHIRTS, CARDIGAN & PULLOV· ER SWEATERS, PAJAMAS, ROBES. I CHILORENS SHOP 1051 IRV INE AVE ., WESTCLIFF PLAZA e NEWPORT BEACH FINAL REDUCTIONS HUNDREDS Of SALE SHOES GREATLY REDUCW LADIES' ""' 0 NOW S2S. s200 TO '.s1200 MIN'S ""·'• NOW SM.ts s3oo TO s15oo THE BEST VALUES OUR STORE HAS EVER OFFERED ••• ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK . ------~ St•N o,. •• 10 A.M. I Final Clearance Savings Up to SOo/o MES'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING 17th I IRVINE AVL -WESTCLI~~ .. LAZA NEWPORT BEACH PM. l41.0791 SWEETHEART SPECIAL 10°/o OFF VALENTINE GIFTS 20°/o OFF CHARMS • A VALENTINE EXCLUSIVE! For the gift giver wbo la : loving, rnetjculous, wise, cleJ.r, prudeiti, thoughtful. gallant ..• and wants to be loved. CHAR.LES H. BAR.R. 211Mtriflt A._, .. ""'"" hi••"'· c.w. CLIAN°UP SALE iotS THURS.·PRl •• SAT. 17th l IRVINE NIWPORT BEACH WESTCLIFF PLAZA PANrs Vlf.l'.E \\I· "ott \t. NowE;4. SPECIAL RACK DRESSES WERE $40. NOW $5. WITH THIS AD PLAIN SKIRTS & SWEATERS PROFESSIONALLY CLEANED & PRESSED 0'Pllt GOOD THlltOUOH PllltUAlltY 4 MONTGOMERY CLEANERS & LAUNDRY WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & lrvln ...... Newport Beach-64~2392 Optn Manday.Friday 8·9-Saturday 8·6 Ll~GERIE-ROBES BRAS -GIRDLES 1 /2 AND MOH OFF Veta's llTlVAft APPAlll --·· .. ·---- OPEN 10 A.M. THURSDAY EVES. 'TIL 9 P.M. PHONE 642 -1197 • • l • . I· ~ I . • , • -' ' . -• • • . • ., .. ' " •• • " • Thunday, JlnUM"y 28, llf?l J ' . : . . \ THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY JANUARY 28, 29, 30 .. LAST CHANCE FOR SUPER SPECIAL . MAR.KDOWNS j • • • THE 'one·stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENING .. Sample Examples CHARLES H. BAO JllWEURS ' . ' . SWEETHEART SPECIAL 10% OFF VALENTINE GIFTS JUN DAHL Skinny Rib SWEATERS R ... $12-$14-$16 NOW $5.00 HALLIDA Y'S MEN'S SHOP · LAST 3 DAYS HICKORY FARMS .. TOMATO RINGS 16 OZ. REG. 69c NOW Girl 's Pullover HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN'S SHOP . 59~ SWEATERS Bulky kn it, long sleeve Y2 PRICE MONTGOMERY CLEANERS CLEAN ONLY I LBS. NOW $2.95 RION HARDWARE DISHMASTER NOW $33.99 THI STORIKllPIR PA'NTS REG. $9 TO $15. NOW $3.99 1 DICK vERNONS BARGAIN TABLE NOW $2.00 VITA'S Ll~GERIE REG. TO ,~. ' . .NOW $4.99 WUTCUFF C~ERA POLAROll><i201 1i10. $59.,s " ·NOW $42.95 WUTCU"··IHOU SELECTED GROUP LIFE STRIDE SHOES RIG. TG $20: . NOW $7.00 PLUS MANY, MANY MORE--DON'T MISS IT • . . - I I I I I ' . BEA ANDERSON, Edit°' T~wr,M1, JMw~ n.. 1t11 ..... 11 t ' 1l!i1!li'l ~.~. ''·. ,11.1.l ' .,,,!' " ,.; l!Z •• SUBSTANCE FOR '71 -Women's contributions to society will be the topic of a symposium by outstanding women in asso rted field s when the Trojan Guild sponsors il'i annual Woman's Day. Accumulating a wealth of knov:led ge are Mr s. Roger Blanchard (iefl ) and Mrs. Robert 1-lilden· brand. Symposium Attracts Gui Id Seeks Modern Solution to Roles \Vhat is The Subs tance of Woman -1971 ~ Seek in g answers to the queslion \V iii be members of the Trojan Guild, Un iversi ty of Southern Calif orn ia, \vhen they travel to the USC campus in Los Angeles for the guil d's special annual Wo1nan's Day. Beginning at 10 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 4, a symposiu m \Vi!J attract sev- eral hundred guil d members to hear outstanding women in lheir fields dis- cuss hO\V women best can contribute to soc;iety. Members of the panel will include Mrs. Ludl ow Shonnard (Christy Fox ), moderator, and will feature the Mmes. Anna Bing Arnold disc ussing the family center; Howard Ahmanson, career work ; Alex B. Ripley, com- munity work and Leslie N. Shaw, social work. Attending from tlie Orange ·coast area wilt be the Mmes. Roger Blanchard, Robert 0 . Basmajian , \Villiam Hawkinson, Robert Hildenbrand and Michael Blake of Newport Beach; Frank Anderson of Costa Mesa, and Paul M. Johnson, Irvine. Mrs. King Cooper Jr. of Huntington Harbour is serving as president of Trojan Guild and assisting are the f\.tmes. George Demos, Huntington Harbour. Basmajian and Johnson. Following the discussion luncheon \vii be served In Town and Gown. • • ( "' ·~l"t . . . .,il ..,,, RAKING THE COUNTY -Coll eciing funds by the bushel is the aim of members of the Orange County Philharmonic Society who will launch their 18th annual Continuance Fund drive Monday, Feb. 1. Raking in donations are (left to right) Mrs. Charles E'. l{u;: sch, chairmanj Mrs. AllmKatz, co-chairman and Mrs. Harry Healef. ' ) • I! r; Shower of Help Predicted '- 'f1 1t's going lo shower on Mon- 1 day, l''eb. J . t" Rega rdless or what the l~ weatherman might predict. r more than 1,000 volunteers of f~ the Ora n g e County ~~ Philharmonic Society will be i-~ sprinkled throughout tbe area fi hoping to raise funds for the i ·~ ·aociety'! Continuance Fund. J oining the 18lh annual drive will k representatives from each or the 28 counlywide committees. They will contact present subscribers an d mem~rs of the community, and each cootribution received will entitle the donor to membership In the society. The Continuance F u n d enables the society to bring world-famous orchestras and soloists to all Orange County residents. J. Donald Ferguson. vice president of the society and chairman of the drive, stated that membenhip funds sup- port the s.;ciety's neecssary policy or sign i ng in- ternationally famous orchestras. conductors and soloists from one to two years in advance to assure their avallability. The support also keeps the Pharmaceutical Association Fills Rx for Spring Student Joan funds will benefit from proceeds of the Women's Auxiliary to the Orange County Pharma- ceutical Association's Prescription for Spring Fash· ions luncheon and showing \Vednesday, Feb. 3, in the Santa Ana Elks Club. Prescribing fun for all attending are f\.trs. Dean Reavie, Mrs. Ronald Waters and Mrs. Sho Mukai. The show will follow a noon luncheon and 11 a.m. social hour. cost or concert tickets at • re3lislic level : otherwise c6sts would ~ prohibitive, he con- cluded. The Continuance Fund help! underw rite the continuing an• nual free youth concerts pr°'" gra m which serves all county school districts and many private and parochi3J schools. Designed for fwrth through eighth grade students, the pro- grams are presented by the full Los Angeles Philharmonic 0 r c hes l ra, Califomia Chamber Symphony and Debut Orchestra. It also helps support the annual Scholarship Achievement Awards program to gifted senior students ma- joring in music at UCI and Orange Coast College. Society directors assisting on the commiltee are Mrs. A. Bayard Dod Jr .. John F. Grundhofer, Clifford Hake.~. Leon Lyon and Dr. Wilson Little. ~1rs. Charles E. Hirsch Is Continoance Fund chalfutan for the women 's CQnimiU.ees and Mrs. Allen Kati 11 · co- c h airman . Campaljn chairmen for the womerfa committees include the Miries. Hennan Johnson, Arthuf ~R. Burns. Allen Klingensinhh. William D. Rabbitt and James Bridges. Others are the Mmes. r.1. Galbreth I linger, Donald J, Winter, Roberl Herm s , Charles S. Perry. Ralph Moss, George Kay, Nick S.ah4gen, Gerard Gerritsen, G~oo D. lucbardson, A. Cattell Engllsh aod John Miller. Concludin( the list are lhfl Mmes. Black.atone Smitl}; John C. Lirm, John L. Laun Jr., John J, McNaughton, J;. O. Blctett, Harty Healey,.:Loon Drunuky, Jerry Miller and WillOll Little. This Health Remedy Not Safe Prescription for All Ills - DEAR ANN LANDERS : A few. da.fJ -co a fellow my husband works with got sick on the job. He refused to go to the company doctor ind said he t'led his own specialist -a chiropractor. Today the man was back at the mill fee.ling floe. He told my husband if more people went to chirOJR'actora in- stead of to society doctors they'd be better off. He claims all allrntnts are tied up with the nerves of the spine and the dliropraclor tnowa which nervlC!I to press to get the penon well. Ile says It's much ~heaper than fancy medical care, becaUJe the doctonJ are in cahoots wttb thtl drug manufacturers and all they are Interested In Is money. \Vt have been reading your column for years and we believe in what you ANN LANDERS [il say. What are )'Our views on chiroprac- tors? -PITl'SBURGH PEOPLE DEAR PEOPLE: Cliiroprlldon ·.,. we••erful -If ,.a U•e • t~ bltt. ud ...... daf, 8"' W ,.. ... Itek I !lope JIO" win 10 lo 1 ,,.,.ldu na ha1 bee• llcenled by lilt state'• Bom1I of Medical EJ:amlDera. Many llr.tAn art sell..Umttlnc. 1'111lt inens ttiq ••ppear wltbaut treatment. A Pft'IO• wlle U. bee• ma11saged bJ a chiropractor and tell well oftea credllt tM cbtropracior wllll Qvln1 cured blm. Tiie tnrtlo Is, he'd probably laave beu cam u lie Nd ra .. ed • ldmoetf wllll , .. ,.. ,........ -.. ..., - dolropndor1 do -a~ ... -. ..)fuoag!ol Ille ,,..., wlll IOI ,.. 1 lwal.a mm., caocer, •lllbtttt tr 1111tooe1. Ner wU1 It on • .U. 4IHlle er • UaroM lllfed.... ne f•Dowbtc telUmo'IJ wU Cfvea to • Coa,re11iotlal commfftff con11derln1 tM qyesUon, "Should dilrepnctora be ladaded I~ Medicare?" "It b tbf uJver1al oplalo• or be•ltll DEAR ANN LANDERS: Plwe ital< your opinion on· women in P.otatlta. My Ii---the paoliull t:ame out-tblt if" I evtr We such an outfit ,he Would not be, Men with me. He hilel tbtm. Lut weak I trled oa 1eVeraJ pantsuit.s just to ,.. bow I'd look, (J loathe the m.idJ, and the mini Is definitely out.) I thought J looked greit. How do you 'feel ebout women In panl!uits? -CHOMPING AT Tl!E BIT IN BELlr ING HAM PEAR BEIL: Tiie pulJok It fw ... tall, tllm~lpped 1aI wltlli a flat &ammy 114 a 1m1U ·caboose. TM troOlers mDtt he we:U cut ucf UM: jacket mut be 1tr1te11e11t1 prtporllooed. bl .. , eploln, tk pulAlt cu be 1m.Uil11 ti dM r'-"l fll""'. Oo tlle ..... · Opre It cu be • dbaJ&tt. ,v ............. . ,,.bl)' eeee MMnt of tllie waJkblc dlpolen.) 5'"" .. ha atoi. - flTOGJ oppotfflH ·••latt .. pntntt. that Ooald Hllle la ....... for yM, Petu"- DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm 13. Molbtr says I'm too yoong to date. She also says J'm too young to drive and too young lo be out after curfew. The law PY•· I'm 1lao too yoong to drink, too young to smoke and too young ... to work. Whal' can • girl my II<! dof -BORED : •. DEAR BORED: You cu 1toli:Ur4 and accomplltll ·IOIDCtldll. le ldlol. Y• ... mab •lflnlllle lrlo ........ ...., lldttellt tUI will b-,_ _,. ucl ---•tllto1 ........ v .. ••1!11!1 ____ ... _ .............. -.... --..w.,.._ .. _._ Y" ~n a. ..... wM .... 't )et 7M 1lep aU .... w tlld do .. .,.. ,_, How will you know when lhe real thlnllJ come:. along? ASk Ann Lindert. Send for her booklet, "Love or Ser; and How to Tell the OJfference." Send 35 cents In ooln and • long, Mlf .. do dreued, stamped envelope wllh' yd request In care or the DAILY PlLOT,~ ~o DAILY PILOT Officials Visit pistrict Agenda Busy Nut -und promiaeo to be a ~ one for member11_ ol the Veterans ol Fordp Wan pools and auntiarles la llillrict I. Joeeph Borello ol Lo 1 An,elff. Department or ·ealifomla commander, Mn:. Capuu.o of S I D mando, department presl- f' and other otficlals will arrive Saturday morning, Jaa. :ri. The day's agenda includt:s a vWt to the Servicemen'• Center, Anahe im, a noon luncheon in the Charter House and a tour of the Wu Museum. Eveaing festivitie3 start with a cocktail hour at I p.m ., foll owed by dinner and dancing in the VFW Hall, Anaheim. In charge of table decora- tion.! for the diMer are Mn. Jimmy Torrens and Mrs. Vernon Mathews of the Coastline AUJ:lliary. ;. .~ISALS ., !R· DIAMONDS J . :~.GEMSTONES .. !STATE JEWELRY A SUnday morning meeting for auxiliary membeni will be conducted In the Anaheim American Legion Hall, and lunch will be senred by the Anaheim Auxiliary i• the VFW Hall. '. ~·-S.outh Co•1t r l11• ; 1~:"'"~1 1t S•n Ditto F.....,. : Co111 M111 540·,066 The DAILY PILOT- T ops in Local Sports : ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS .. " 50% off --1'1MI••• of -•ot1t1oo1 oO 1 llwtlots Dtiltr Showroom W arehouie open to public:. !, •t dealer'1 prices. Custom Fr•m•s av•i~· . Lay-away on Master Charge or BankAmer1-· <'!#· t .· ·-~ RENT -LU.SE -SALE ~oars-t """·to 6 p.m., M-, tin Saturday . i ORIGINAL OILS, LTD. ~ 61' E. EcBog.. Saattr """ ..... 815-4608 • DEALERS WANTED EARLY BIRD ARRIVALS! 'ff!J~rm? VELOUR SHIF>TS New for 1prin9 ln • 91l1q of heppy C1li· for11ie colonl Tiie1e comfort1ble thlfh will t:ori9hte11 your 1priR9 end 1ummer cl1y1 eh11cl, Av1il1bl1 in 1m1lt, 111Mliu111 1..d ler9e 1lull Se1 the111 11ow -we · ju1I p1c.•14 th1ml $13 ' SAX IOUTIQUf '41-1 011 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Peters th• ultlmete in heircuttin9 lor the b.autiful p.ople _J e ALSO MAKE.UP PATTl·NAILS e INCIHO MMI Vfl'lt\lrl etW. ... _ "1-1111 Your Horoscope Tomorrow Cancer: Restore Self-esteem Beauty Queens Waiting for "the fairest of them all" to be sel ected Saturday, Jan. 30, are Miss Gwynn Geiger (left) of Huntington Beach, u.d Miss Kathy Ferran of Solano County, who are roommates during the Jaycee- SPQI\SOred state finals of the Junior Miss contest taking place in Santa Rosa. Miss Geiger is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Geiger. No Shades of Gray FRIDAY, JANUARY 29 BJ SYDNEY OMAlll\ Aqtoarlu bldMdah c:u •9acome odds &t •Pfl'Oldri pota& of put opportutty. er.am, t.llal polol. ........... eftea ii uodler matt.er. It ii Ute chaU~e ftkti ID- trtpes "-lu. Loaa .... terat • boredem cu .. vade al cr8clal Uma. 11 ii a Wk lolleep ~ ---lnlpirln1 leader1klp ii neceaary. Some fa mo•• utfvtt of WI 1lp tDcblde Jack Lem..,.., Ende Bub ud Fri.a TarkeldoL AlllEll (March 21-Aprll 11)' Be quiet wtthln. Solution to emotional problem ls at hand. Give subcon9clous free play. There are restrictions, but you can ride with tide. Don't try to force issues. Go slow, easy. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Friend makes amends for recent alight. Be gracious. If receptive to social lnvitaUon, you gain, Hopes and wishes can come closer to fulflllmmL Exude chann. GEMINI (May 11.June 20): Gain indicated. A p p I I es esptelally to personal am- bitions, career matters. Gift received from one who may ba9e appeared indifferent. Strive for greater family Germs a Dirty Shame harmony. true. But being meliculoua, CANCER (June :U.July 22): observant and thorough now Good lunar aspect highlights is necessary for personal journeys, education, ability to weUare. Realize it and act synthesize knowledge. Keep accordingly. communication lines open. Be CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. analytical. Restore 1tl f -19): There now ia more esteem. freedom of expression. Your traruformed into money-mab ihg one. Take time to deve.lop concepts. Income potential iJ greater than you might im. agine. Know this and act ac- cordingly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)~ Circumstances now favor your 15peclal efforts. Make co~ tacl.s; take initiative. Empbasite orig.lnallty, in· dependence. Have fa ith in your own. unique abilities. Don't imitate. Be an in- novator. LEO (July 23-A111. 22): Idea! find more rece·puve au- Some special services, tasks dience. You must. however, must be per Io rm ed . take care to make position otherwise, you coold ei:-cry1tal clear. Some tend to perience setback. Do what is misquote, misinterpret. necessary. Maintain steady AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. pace. You are rewarQed for 18): Bright idea can be applying basic prlnciples. 1a;itii;;t;;;:;;'i;;t;;(tii;;t;;(tii;;t;;;:;o;;;i;;;:;;;;;;;;;t;;;;it:it;;;;i'it2ii9j VIRGO (Aug. 1.1-SepL 22)' What you toot for granted could come to end. Be ready with alternatives. Not wiR to preu luck. Let mate, partner set pace. Be wi1lln( 1o ll!lten and learn. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' New approach to w o r k methods iJ needed. B e creative ln outlook. Reallze there ill no need to be bogged down with outmoded concepts. Leo individual could !bow you the way. SCORPIO (Oct. n-Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect points to cbaqe, creative activity, rela- tionships with c bl Id re n. Member of opposite se:s: may issue ultimatum. Let inner voice be your guide. SAGmARIUs (Nov. 11- Dec, 11): You may feel deta.lts are tiresome. Tbls could be Final Markdown 2 DAYS ONLY Fri., Sat. Jan. 29-30 Elegance in Fashion 1,-. Of OIL PAINTINM ......................... ~ WHOLISAU WAllHOUSI ....... 411" ... Of'IH TO THI PUIUC NUMBER ELEVEN 50°/o OFF FASHION ISLAND IUJ e . eDtNG•ll, IANTA A.NA ••Wl'OllT 1 11.ACH -- AT WIT'S END a strand of his ai!ter's balr in it. He has not aeen the top of his desk in three years • He faints when there is a dab of toothpaste on the washbowl. 0 .... LllllS WAHT•O 644-2252 camp on a set orbedsprlngsl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ from a nearby dump. Ii "I do not understand you By ERMA BOMBECK I would neve r h a v e predicted that our middle child would grow up to be a Genn Nut. As a toddler. Dirty Nick, as we called bim, p u t Jte refuses to d r i n k Grandma's soft water because it tastes "icky." He eats icicles that have formed ln the spouting. He is repulsed by dried egg on lhe stove burner. He ooce cooked an entire meal at at all," I said. "When you were a baby I blew on your food and even touchtd my tongue to it before it went into your moulh to make sure it ·wouldn't bum you. Today, you won 't even eat a breakfast roll after me." ''Thal's gross," he said shivering and sticking his tongue out in distaste. "It's a wonder babies aren't sick all the time." eve:rything In his roouth from .=;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pubU<: drinking fou.ntainlr faucets to pleeft: at candy! he found in chairs in the doc- tor's waiting room . He consumed mud, gravel, paper, rubber bands, plastic, cigarette stubs, goldfish and once devoured two c o r k coasters before he discovered they weren't cookies. You can imagine the sbock1 when he said at the table the other morning, ''I can't eat this roll. Someone has taken a bite out of it." ~ enUre table lroze Into a tabloid Of amazement. Thi.s from a boy whose hands look· e.d like a commercial for dirt with the dog licking hls fact. The fact is, Dirty Nick ls an interesting study in con- tradictioru. He will wear the s.ame pair of socks untU the toes snap off. Yet, he refuses to use a spoon that has dropped on the noor until it is sterlliI.ed. He will drink Gatorade from a jug after the entire football 1 team. He will not drink from a glass tha t has U!uched his ' brother's lips. He wears a fur coat of dog hain. Yet, he once threw away a hairbrush that had \ NEW10•T IEAC ... 16 10 W. COAST HWT. ••t.J970 lHE Grat color TV perfonmnct! Prkltd 'to tu• with y'ou. Model C070 bu Glbraltarn1 dmlll and 18" tll.qoul meuur. ICf'e8li with the lhupeK color TV pk:tme anUable. · OJR LmV, LCNV PRICE! ! NowOnly '329" TV JllOP'nON !DRJLA'l'ZD "1>4-t...--t ...... .....,. ......... Sylvania 9" dla.R. meas. • n BA:W portable t'V. Haa built-In VHF It UHF antennas. Converu- ent e&rryina: handle. M"l'$BK. SALE PRICED •14• COSTA MISA 411 L 17" 51. '4&-1614 ~ ,., ... '"' B. TOllO a.-H•-r ....... s-o., UJ.JQI llHlltr 1 M M/f 1 .. t - SEMI • ANNUAL WOMEN'S •VALLEY eJOHANSEN •VITALITY eADORESeFLORSHEIMeHUSH PUPPIES ~ ,, PRICE '' ., b • DISCONTINUED STYLES • BROKEN SIZES PRICED FROM MEN'S • Florsheim • Winthrop Values to 38. 95 12~0TO1890 ALL SALES FINAL CHILDREN'S • Stride Rite • lazy Bones t90 TO 890 •• 54 Ftnlilo11 Island Ne_.i c ...... Opposite • ..-., OPEN MON. & Pll. UNTIL 9:30 P.M. Spacemen Rocket Wives to Fame Ten yean ago wbm Alan Shepard's JS.minute Freedmi 7 flight made hlm America 's first sp!Ceman. hi s wife. Uiu ise, said she •·couldn't have stood another minute," but now st)e enthusiastlca11y sludif'a the Apollo 14 flight plan that will keep him in s pece for "ine d11ys. "lt's like the difference between a short story and DTERY FINAL SALE DAYS ! Quality Footwear For \Vomen and Children 22S E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA S48·2778 2Sl5 E. Coost Hi9hwi11 y .et M.ecArthur Blvd. Corona del Mi11r 673-2990 FINAL MARKDOWN CLEARANCE SOo/o OFF FALL STOCK T••• Chart• Acco•"t W•lome -Fr" Porld"'I i• l"r MOltltt' Cltarp A.wolloble Two ring s for two" lovers ••• bofh ringi; $88.00 Ji1o11t •• u,., ...... 111 •fttl ... bterffl . I• 14K ••1111-Mtlffll1 Easy credit terrn1 • stiul~,,t C1<a:1unts avoiloble.• up to 12 months to Ff lonk>.mericord •Moster emu.,. "THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" E1t1bli1htd 4l Yetr'! flLl/'IJINOJOllf CINTf.JI lttc~ • t!ll"t•• ..... 11"1"" I Mdl tn•Htl HAltf Clt tHO,.,lN• Cl#Tll 1Mt M•rMr l lv(. Wll M ... ... _ 0'1N MON .. THUU. l Jlll. 'TIL t P.M. REBUILT GRANDS 1 AT LESS THAN HALF OF NEW PRICES! • novel," Mrs. Shepard, 1 trim blonde, explai ns in the llvlng room or lheit $150,000 home in Housloo'11 exclusive Ri ver Oaks section. Shepard's flight rocketed his wife, and daughters, Laura Snyder, recently married and Z3. and Julie. 19, into a storybook life of presidents~ society and wealth. But always, lhe central In- terest was space. "I have been trying to absorb all 1 can from the flight manual." she says, poin- ting lo the Encyclopedia-like volun1e. Along Y.'ilh the study goes needlepoint work on the Apollo 14 emblem chosen by her hU3band. '"Need lepoint is great for times like this - you can always work on the background when you are nervous. It doesn 't matter too much if you mess lhal up." In 1943, Polo Shepard in· troduced her older brother to 1.-0uise, a classmate at Prin· cipia College in Illinols from Kennett Square, Pa. r-.1rs. Shepard, her daughters and several other family members planned early to fl y to Cape Kennedy for the launch but will follow the rest of the mission in Hoµston. Joan Roosa. wife of com- mand module pilo~ Stuart A, Roosa, compares the wait before the flight to being preg- nant -more uncomfortable the closer il got. The chubby, black-haired former seventh • grade history ttacher from Tu~lo, r.1i11s., recalls the discussi on in 1966, that started her hus band toward the moon. "1 read him an article about NASA's impending selection of astronauts. I knew it would amount lO that someday." Roosa joined the corps that year. Their brick home in El Lago near the Manned Spacecraft Center is filled with J apanese furniture and painting.! - sou venirs from one of Roosa·s overseas assignments \Yilh !he Air Force. The yard is almost large eno ugh to handle the couple's four children, Christopher. 11 : John. 10; Stu art Jr., II. and Rosemary. 7. Mrs. Roosa .!lays she's ''ab s olul e ly the worst house keepe r in the world ,'' but her husband can't complain because he tosses his clothes around when he's home, which isn't often. "He's spent every wee k at the Cape since Apollo l 3 last spring." she says. "He only gets home oo Friday night and leaves on Sunday af. temoon. Mrs. Roosa and the children also made early plans to be in the spec ial viewing section at the Cape !or the Apollo 14 launch. Louise Randall Mitchell had to postpone some of her graduate studiell for a masters In ~ial education so she could. go to the Cape to watch her husband, Edgar D . Mitcbeli, blast ofr for the moon. It warn't the first time sbe was l".'rn between her studies and her husband. Shortly after their marrla1e in I 9 5 O, Mitchell returned to work with his father in Artesia, N.M., and his bride remained in Pittsburgh, Pa., to finish her studies at Carnegie Institute. "I had promised my rather I w-0u ld finish." When Mitchell joined the Navy and went to San Diego, she followed and waited on tables oh the waterfront to be with him. In 1966, her husband joined the Astronau• 0tl"pS and they moved lo a two-story home in Na~sau Bay near the Space Center with their daughters, Karlyn, 17 and Elizabeth, ll, who also will miss some class. es lo watch the launch. Mrs. Mitchell, a slender, prell y woman from Lebanon, Pa ., enrolled In San Jacinto Junior College and among other things studied geology. "I like rocks heller than my husband does," she says soflly. Currently she is enrolled at the University of Houston and has left rock collecting to her husband, wflo will pilot the lunar la nder "Antares" to the moon's surface. Two Candles Put on Cake She dropped her course load from four course! to only one this semester to have more Hme to prepare for tbe shot. mzawu;w M = The Tee Tattler Mrs. Robert S. Barnes, new· ly elected president Of the Irvine Coast Repub l ica 11 Women's Club will preside when club members gath!'r It. celebrate the cl ub's second birthday Tuesday, Feb. 2. Th!' luncheon meeting will take place in the Irvine Coast Country Clu b at 11 :30 a.m., TAKES GAVEL Mr1. R. S. B•rnes Boarding · Training btllM l ldl .. L_.,., B•qi"ner •nd Advatoc1d J umpin<J and Showin9 C hildrato .,,d "d~lh 545-9911 546-7752 THIS IS THE WINDUP OF WALLICHS JANUARY CLEARANCE beginning with a social hour . Speakers will be Mni. Leslie l'!m.~'11 • · Clayton of the Nation a l (Editor'• Nol•: A column of wom .. n·• !oo 11<>!1 ocor-.. wlll •PP••• ••ch Republican Women 's Club and Mrs, Lewis McDonald of the Volunteer Bureau of Orange County. They will discuss ways in wh ich Republ ican women can serv!' their com· munity through v o I u n l e er work. The club, according to Mrs. Barnes. will direct i t 1 volunteer efforts toward non· political projects during 1971. Other new officers are the Mmes. Richard Natland, vice president ; W. 0 . Severson, reeording secreta ry; Barbara Lu sk. corresponding secretary; Edward Dow , treasurer; Reed 8 au m an , parliamentarian. and JaCk Donnell, chaplain. Committee chairmen are the Mmes. Richard Bo w n a , telephone ; L. J . Haight, C<lm· munity service: A. H. Metler, membership; Da vid McNeely, campaign ; Lee Speocer, pro- gram: Fredrick Parkhill , hospitality; Gerald Choyke, public relations. and E. J. Shanahan, bulletin. Aid at Cli nic Wffk !"I ... OAILY PILOT, To "POrl ocor.. loo-th• wet~. pl••.., mall !hem ta P ~. lie~ 1!.611. C<11ta ~••· TM w mu1t bl rtcolvet! IW MC>l'l<leY .) JIA!'ICHC 'AN JO•Q\.>!!'I I THJIEll •Ll"ID Ml(ll -Fll•hl •, lh• Mm ... P•vl 0.8•ch. SI; Pn!IUP Hali., Gil 1oe, H••alO Sorau •. n : Fllgh! 8. ,... Mmet . J. L. W•lbrl"'°'· P•ul Wlllttlt. 5'; f'll9M (, '"' MmM. Al H•f9, 13; J. E. W•1ftlall, Sol; F119ht 0, lfM Mmft. Fr•nk 8•chr•11n. 56; H•rtMrt L•wrMK•• jf, l'llLD I HOTI -Fl19M A. I h t Mro!M. l urnlard J-., 3'1 J•~• tCPl!er, JI; De8.c:l'I, fl1 Fll•l'll 8, 11'1e M.mtt. J, F. C1•cl'I. l l: PMlllp Carnw•ll, J1; Wllll1m S•~lon, ll'; Ha'" Ca"°"'' 40; Fl!11ht C. ""' Mm.t . Jtme• McDaniel, ll'; Helv, IO; Harwood Pollld<o•ter. 421 Fri nk !.etkmt n, 3~; Rlcti t rd H"lk. :W; 111..0.rl T1!11C1<er, Cl. ll VINll COAIT CRiii CJIOSI -c-.u A, lho M""'". Frlf!'d kl!Mklftr, lll'I; Donlfh• Grav. n: l!ll'w••d Newl1!>d, llot..11 Forbe1. Edw•f"d Miium. M,,..1 Cl1u I , Ille Mmn. 0--•• WoodlOrd, ff; FrO'd C. MfYOf", :IO ..... i Ed A.l<ldlf, 32 ..... ; c11 .. c. ""' Mm". J . e. Kl110, ll; N-11 Nellon. C~frl!o Rt>bt r!J, U V.. L•OUNA •1t:AC" ,.LICTIVll NINll -A Fll.~I, Miu Grtcl• JohnKl!l, Mrs. JOI>/\ Poor, JO; M"-Ktn W~ll ....... lll'hl 8 Flllih!, t~• M,,..., Art Grlllln, 111 LltOM rd D•t!tll~•. ld~MfV klloml~•r, 21'1r; ( l'Jlgnl, Ill~ Mmtl. EYIR9tUM C/\rl ... ll•nMll, U .... ; Wllllem C11Parh , ,.,,.., Butterflies Take to Leg s On the wings of the buUerfl y trer.d. .Belle Sharmeer pan- Hun tingtoll Beach M r s. tyhose ca me through wi th Jaycees and Midway City flying colors -the bright, \\'oman's Club are two more elusive colors-of "butterflies organization~ dedicated l o under glass." a.~sisting at the Rubella clinics ,.,_,_,_, ______ _ Sunday, Jan. 31. ""frs. Jaycees will be on hand at the Marina High School from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., while the Woma11"s Club will be aiding at Westminster High School du ring the same hours. HAIR BEAT I ! t;4Jv.wo I HAIR STYLIST I HAIR GROWTHI WURLITZER ..... tt. .. : Whv 1110•1 mv ht ir grow to 1:0 .. ? t M•t, It. 0. ORGANS & PIANOS Save $50 To •500 HAMMOND 'ORGANS Save $50 To $1000 H11tofito9toto l••cll) A.-t: l •c•111• vow •ant it t• IJIOw f11f. If you dill1to'f, It would t••"' th• opposiff. Accordito9 lo f•J!fbo•k•, it 9 10•1 'I'" p•• month, fMlfliM: How c•n I m .... fll'I' Iii.Ir 9row f••l•r1 I Mrt. D. , C., CdMarl A111..,: l •afbooU h•v• ii lti•t .. .., ••ll9iou1lf 9•ttlto9 1<t•lp tr••hnt 1\h -\ b11f 11nforhr· n1t.ly f09M .. ,. .. •• ,, t•/i• ''""' •1t111191! .. ,.,.... lt ritt.f ltt' "'•0"1· SEE THEM TODAY! PIANOS Save $70 To 5200 f•10•,.1: Wiii h•irc11Uito9 h.1, h•IP heir 9rowth 1 I Mn. T. D .. S•"'• A111l Amwtof: lt't "'• t'i9111ri1119, ... 111 • Mvffi•:tiil h•lp 111•rit•I ti•· M -11•, II wlll nof 111/v• yeut ,,..bl•"'• n-. ..... ,,.. ........ .,._ ... ...,_...,.. ___ ,.... llhe4 ........ ......._., .... ..,_ -••••I ,.._ ,..,.... t.thl M.., .. ...,._., c.... ..... -'"'" ,.. • M•rifll •tno-"' .r • ,,tee ......... ~, ....... , ,.._,.. -It w ull ,_. ..,..,,.,,. " WONS 11 , ...... lat.ntl N•'t:t'; C.n""' 2111 Sea scape Created For League Oils will be artfully applied when members of the Hun- tington Beach Art League watch a demonstration by Don Foster during a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. I, in the recreation renter. Foster, who h<llds a lifelong California teach ing credeflt inl, has a gallery and school in ldyllwild with a faculty of1 professional art ist s. He is in great dema nd by man YI organizatklns throughout the state and Hawaii. His framed demonstration pail\tin g. a seascape valued at approximately $150.will be l.'Olltributed to the Art League . There is no a dmi ssi on charge for the meeting and demonstration 11nd the public is invi ted. Beginning 'I'hursday, Feb. 4. the Huntington Beach IPague will have a lhree-day shtlw l on t.he ma II of South r oast Plaza. Costa Mesa. The v.·ork of 75 members! will be exhibited between 9 a.m. and 9 p.1n. the first two days and until 6 p.m. on the closing date, Saturday, Feb. 6. All art work wili be for sale lo the public. Embl em Club Fullerton Open Sun., 12-5 p.m."""""""":i Large Joi11 the Pant• Seil Flattering long toPs make all sl:r.es look good o.nd all Clgl:S feel young and free. from $'26.00 Sizes HUNTIN~TON IEA.CH INe•t te lorll.+' lr111. f•nolt11,.J Al•: ?24 OR•NGl!,•t• MALL l'ULLl!lilTCN ·- - ... The Elks Lod ge is lhe sct··r --• • • • • tiog for meetings of the Fastest in W est .. ,,.~ i Emblem Club 201 of Laguna Bu~ Jl. Stll It. Try tilt fasttst rrsporise lri the Wrst against !1:1"· ~l· Beach. Members gather the own clock. T'st Oimr·a·Une Ads, wherr tile action Is, In Saitur411'if first and third Tuesday! at DAIL y PILOT. II p.m. YOUR 200 00 CHOICE • COSTA MESA ........ ,.., . u.. ...... (tflMr ··-U>-Ul·ltll "Tyler Miit"' .,._,.. .. ,-ti)! r ! • £ 1 • I I ! • I • • I • • • : • r • • • . • '. • • • : • • ,. " • I ~ . - "'FM City"' ··-Uf·JfU -···--..:......:..-------·------:--.') .. .. .. . . . , ...... . OA!LY PIL.OI' -· .... An Off Year for ·os~rs By VERNON SC01'T equaUy mediocre .i,lb the ex-equally (11 not worse) horrible auspecttd. HOU.YWOOD (UPI) -lt ceptioo of best actor. Two year or t.e.levlalon, Lo convince The day or masa entertain- . waa not a vintage ~ar ror top performances stand out : the entertainment industry the ment for the 12-year-old mind motion pictures. George C. Scott IPatu.t) and American public has more iJ dead -even for IS.year- Not In recent memory has Jack NicbolJOn (Five Easy taste and bralnl than it olds. the motion lllcture academy Pieces). ---.,.,-===-===.,-==;;;;;;;;----I been io hard pressed to fiod The rest Of tbe field might NATIONAL GENERAL THEATl!RS worthy contenders for the Include Ryan O'Neal (Love Oscars among p I c tu r es , StDry), James Earl Jones performera and directors. (Great Whlte HopeJ. Robtrt A prime rea90n for lh~ Mitchum (Ryan'a Daughter) dearth of excellence b1 the Albert Finrley ( Sc r o o g e ) , shoddy attempts lo I u re Pc.ter Boyle {Joe) and Melvin patrons to theaters through Douglas (I Never Sang For sex and nude flicks that have My F ather). run their course. Most lhreadbe.re of all Is Another is the oopycat syn-the category· for best actress drome. Producers have tried of the year. Co·I~'"''"' .. Jock Ltmmon SGndy Dennis "DIE OUT-OF- TOWNERS" NATIONAL GENERAL THEATERS Jason Kotharin Robards Ross ThelJ touched ' ~ each other and. let go ot the WOlld llqp.-.;::1~'-,-e; 8!!'1• l~.:l)=' -·- UC1111Vl lHAGIMINT ALSO-.i.--.n llOW PU. TPll Hnry h.ti• HQlfDlll( W111DA n 6:41 socw aur lAT. ]:JI • SUN.11:JD (8') to duplicate the SUcce!.!1 of Voters have their choice of "Easy Ri d e r ,'' "Midnight Carrie Snodgress ( M a d Cowboy" and Butch Cas· Housewife), Glenda Jackson sldy" with resultant poor box (Women in Love), Sarah Miles office and arUatic dn&ste r. (Ryan's Daughter), R u t hlj•':;~~~=;,~~~~~~~~~';:~~;;""'lil--~:;;::;;:;;:;;:;~§~§~~;:;::::::::::;:---Thus Academy members Gordoo (Where's Pop p a ) , IUid the picking slim indeed Julie Andrews tDarling Lili !. MANY PERFORMANCES SOLD OUT if orse Trader ijenry Fonda plays a wrangler 'vho hopes to sell a stubborn roan that refu ses to be broken ·in '"The IU>unders." a western comedy on the CBS Friday Nl&ht. Movies tomorrow at 9 o'clock on Channel 2. r .; J ;. c :. · ' JANUARY 21 .... lie "-(t) (60) .ltrry Du"phy. 1 .-C "'-rvill (C) (60) Tom '-· , .Dt Allll :llliw (t) (55) SChtd· \Aid ll*ls 1111 Mlllllt Y111 Dort n, llcMrd lilly, Jlct Clrtv, 8~run 8lodl IM E0-1111111 LMia Jtye, !how 11 an N-<:OIJrict whole dfums o! 1 MW lif1 1ni blocMcl by 1 aroup of 1n1rdlist.s bent on buyi111 dylll · mite. O illlCil aJ,......, <CJ <lOJ ''Tiit Good r1iry Strikes Ai•in." Miry th1 Good F1iry decides sh1 llMds 1 n catlon ind tr1pa S1man· till Into doi111 Mr ni1htlr rounds. m .... -.... tt1 1001 GlllSl:s: Tom Pinon, Tamiko Jo111s, Pt11r Brook, Bil Baird. • Otr1lfic lnllll (C) (2 hf) fD R£T ...,,_. tn t111 '.309 (C) (90) "A Memory of Two Mondayl." Mhut Mllltr's play 1bout 1111 b!ut- flOfltludlll •fttt ~bill covtr11t. toll11 worter In th• Thlrtlea. for nominees which will be Eva Maria Saint {Loving), Ali the NEW mutical revue announced Feb. 22. MacGraw (Love Story) and There is no s i n g I e Faye Dunaway (Puzzle or 8. MOTHER blockbuster th is year; no Downfall Child). ~ •RTH "Sound of Music." "West Side One should note the ab6ence SA EXTRA SHOWS Saturdays 11 pm Story." ··aen Hur" or even among contenders of big box ''A Man F or All Seasons." office names. Nominations will be sprinkl· Where are Paul Newman. .. ' J buth c l)3Si Re11c rt11r_v eel among many pictures. none Steve McQueen, John Wayne, of th e m shrines to the Walter Matthau, Ba rb ra cinematic art. Streisand, Dustin Hoffman, In the scramble for best Elliott Gould, Jack Lemmon picture: are: '"Love Slory." and the rest? "Patton," ''Five Easy The year 1970 was one of Pieces," "Airport," "Little flux and reorientation for mG- Big Man," "Catch 22." "?.f.A-tion pictures. Movie makers S.-11," ''Women in Love," "The finally got the message that Great White Hope." ''Ryan's nudity and sex weren't selling . Daughter" and "Diary of a .. but they'd already comm1tted Mad Housewife." themselves to such vulgarities The .acting categories are as "Myra Breckenridge:" .and Bard Plays At College it was loo late to tum back. The coming year is a turn- ing point for films. As one producer s a l d recently. "None of us can aim our pictures for any one seg- n~nt of the audience. 'Airport' An introduction to the works and 'Love Story' both proved of William Shakespeare will thal an exciting, dramatic pie· be offered by the Orange ture draws all age groups." Coast Evening College this ~1otorcycles, nudity, explicit spring. sex, campus dissidents and The class "'ill view the so-called social c o m m e n l range of Shakespeare's plays, movies will diminish i n sampling the histories, come-numbers in favor of en· dies, tragedies and problem tertainment. TONITE -1,30 SNOWMAN IN THE EMPTY CLOSET s"°"' Sram "' &JO p.m. ~~---..., ... ""' ....:....., M2-1411 RESERVATIONS 646-1363 OR All AGENCIES ....... llNe: CC) ..... 11!1 Pltltra t. LMe1 (30) ·: ~ ~ '=' ... ~41=~ ••ea m cas n..s.y Mftit: 1t> ·~..,rd. A JOUlll Mlll'I lntnl in I "'lltln tt ..,.. Pita" (d/1111&) plays. H i s t o r i c a I and It took a disastrous year theatrical backgrounds will be1 ::a~t~f~he~box~~·~H;ic;e~, ~·;nd~~an~=========;=;~;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::~1 studied and the Bard's in·1r fl uence on modem writers will FOR EVERYONE ! ~MWI Southlm ton' chlfltll the "61 -Cini! L)'lllfJ, .left Chandler, 'tJwt• of !tit wutttiw ltllODwnlf'I MllJ Astor. A s1irrin1 IJPGSI of dl111hhr 1"4 '°"· SJ111ll·lctW11 bi1otry. Did:, • .,.. (30> o ~ rn m lllMt .... 1tr TIM ~ (C) (30) ,,........, (Q (30) "Of Mkt and be~:=c:::~ is slaled (o, ~-..~·r··~.... TO SEEi I CUii.BREN Wednesd:iys rrom 7 to IO p.m. ,.. T 1 Lil(r.> Jn the OCC c o u n s e I i n g -"'" .,.,, ...... Phone 673-4260 r, ~ <OIOIO& H > .... .. O}l(J) .. Tlll (C) (50) Mini." O.nnj is non1inatt4 11 Art -...: "lflifrlll Sculplllft." "Grandf1t!Mr el' th1 v .. r.~ Lou 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"jll (I) C1S .... (C) (JO) . J1cobi rulltl. ,.... r..., <101 ID C1111111111 ('CJ 1301 ........ JC (C) (60) ., Lii ....., • ,.,.... (lO) T~ ......,_ (t) (30) IE 11.-u (60) building, Room 7. LI .... , ..... _. C..... t :JDQ@(l)g;)M1•12 (C) (JO) :'I .,.... ii Ill 11t11M1 (C) (30) 'tos 66-Th1 V1nd1ls." A simple 1:11 _..,,PM (CJ I~) tr1llic violation turns Jnto 1 Mrious MM,.._.1.7S .In. 11.u Chlldr•-7k &:• CeMilll c:a..a (JO) case and 1 tee11a1e 1i1l provts to 1 JuM1 1....i s-. 'Diii FIJilll ... (C) (30) be too m ul1r for har own 1ood. "'1'HUNDIRIALL" (j) .C ·-"'" (C) (JO) 0 TIM Al ... Slltw (C) 4 ~ ....... ~!~~) 0 DAN AUGUST-THRILLS "YOU ONLY LIVI TWICI" --I """"" (C) * DRAMA, SUSPENSE-NOW! -- Lii D1ww.6M (JO) "Oe1d WitntSI to 1 IUUln1." Tht n. o..t ~ (t) (30) Q ~(I} I!) Ii. Aqat fC) (60) ~0•111 CMl1" I Sift rr. MC""" (C) wif1 of 1n 1:1:1lst1~ district 1ttorn1y ,. I :• '-* w1,._u, fC) la •l•ln 1ner thrut1r1ln1 • mtmbt1 •'!!!'!'!!!'!II '"' ... -. -«> <"1 '"" ''"",. JOHN w••v.1E Wlhtr Cronkltt. 0 C.llCllll Cllllfl (30) "' n ··-Jltcllllr ,.._. (C) (30) l!I!)MllkM/P .... 1 W (JO) A Howard Hawk$Pro0Jcoon DlwW lrlM.ltJ, Frink Mc:GM, John Ill CNcllrtl • MMI (30) "RIO LOBO" Chl!ICIAtt. IO:OD DID(]) Cl U.. MalW IC) 9 i.t .-..1 (C) (21/1 hr) {60) Guuts ue Bob Nt'lth1rt. Ind Loi Allpln ltb11 YI. Photllli Sunt sons and dau1htus of f1mous ptf· 11 f'tlolftiL lonntu: Lucie Arna1. Dino. Dtsl, I WW'1 11J U..? (t) (30) ind Billy, M1!9dith MtcftM, Dn nl ~ ()) 11.M L11er (30) Martin. Gail M1rtin. M1urtt11 R11· 9 (I) ....... (CJ (:tell 11n i nd F11nk Sin1tr1 Jr. falllrl ..... {SO) (R) D 111 5 ..... (C) (60) ~II (I) Trttll If C.-.11t1tet (C) S11ldtra. B1rnty M«ria. Clllllt a. Ur1q w.n ft> {JOJ o 11rt1r Ward ..._. 1C> (60) .... (JO) ID ..... (CJ (50) Gtol)I Putfllm. II ;' a1 '9 lllW (55) GI~ (t} (60) "A Con'l'tr· Mwlt .... (C) (30\ sallon with B.f. Skil'tlllr." 7:JI 1211 (I),..., Aftlir ('C) (30) g) W.11111 • L-. (JO) "" "II ... .... llC'I ltllit CNll wht~ CiuJ m 1'.str911n 11 liotlpMd (60) lllllb Ra llVOb, • lorm1r ~· IO::SO 0 T\lt It Yt1r Ul't (C) (:)()) .,.. from lllClllM •ho It 11~n1 J1m11 Arnm, Jack Sml1ht lftd Grtl ~ thi l'Hct CorpJ l1r 1 vill11e Moflil tuist. •Ill ~-~ -,.., Wllllll "'> (£o) I"' hit• ... (C) (JO) IM" l.aJ -,.. IJ1ctrtld .. btt (30) ,_ •1r1 lfl 1111 COiby. frllMJ , llllll't (C) (30) ... llld Clludlnl Lonlfl • llll CJ)·-.... ... 11:00 I lllJ Cll el -(Cl -. CC> <80} "b it tro. Wkkfn. ID Cll e ..._ <CJ ..,,._ .. Smith •rid ..llnts try i. lind c.. Yn r., Na? (C) -' t1tft .-111 ••Ma tltlftl to 1111-(C) ~ 1..,.. whm tbl)' l\m found allN: "llllr6ICl NII.-Md W1 """°""Mt •hill W11Hn1 lot Ill ,..... .. ....,... (lllJltlrJ) ....,., S.... Stru1Mr1 runts. '4 2-8ilil Rathborlt. Nl1tl Bnra. •-'-·<CJ_,..., m_,.,....,. '"" -.. ..,. ef U... #lln" (drama} Mi" {mystery) '41--0non Wtlltt, "II Mlrt Mwton, DiaM ... ku. Rita ~ayworth, [vntt SINnt. "'7 ef 1 !Offftlr tnrm1n IOffolitd • .,..: "Y,.,.r (1111'!"1) ·4g I 1' 4ellnf to • Jfiloft dwiq 1ht ..--Otyd lrWpi. ~ti thi e1riy WISt I (}]""' -..... • C.. 1, 111e11(C)130) TIM..._...-(C) ((} Al1n Arkin '" "CATCH-22" Aloo All M1cGr1w '" "GOODBYE COLUMBUS" aOTH ":R'" ...... i lllW (C) (601 ......,. • II """· ...,,11111 .... (C) (30) "Blld ll:JDG a ~Mm Crillll1 (C) M11l111 I'::===::====::::::~\ .... ......,. .., .. Ill FM MtrtOUll 1uelts. ,, • ... Utllll •nd Kim au Cil CD Jltl111r Clflll (CJ pal. AIU KllTIS, MtriJft llllJt, LtlMff -·~('°) ; ............ _... 0- ...... ($5) (tdftll11Kt) '50 -,,.... ,.., 6:41 Ill... -(C) (OJ) ~.... ..... ·, -"" .... _ n JIM ..,_ 111• lobb1 D S lldi ca.lrifQ J111111 M• .......... ..... on, lllf Mamlbol, Ph)illil Mc:Culrt.\'------- f'!! ... ,.. tCI (30) 11:00 llll CJ) .. -· It! -~ ':i,~ t't~ {C) (30) 11, .... --'C<y, "' .. ' ..... ~· "11111 w .... •1111 =; ,;; ~(SS) (C).,.. ............. .. ~(JjJ,£ re 111 (IO) 1 "' :!.-"':..:..i ~ :.: •"lril - -• ·-(Q .. I \ ~ .. -. ' ,,,. . .__(_._ Aoiert , .... Mlwlll O'MNa. ·(C)~-.. ~""' ...... ..,.,. .... l:•.""" Secnt ...,. <•r1,,.., ... -Cludlft1 Colblrt, JllM NfYM, z.•. (C) .,.. ... ,....;r. , .. 1. 11'11) 'll-'-mti St9wlrt. 4;J1 1J (C) ., ....... 1•r•1111) '54 - Cott11I MW., RIJ'll'IOl'llf 81.111 • . . ... "3 In the Cellar" ..... ..... c ..... BOTH IN COLOR BOTH RATED "R" SEAN CONNERY is JAMES BOND P•EMl•it• •NOAOaMENTI All Clllr l'"'lrlrn "'l.OV• STO•Y" CGl'I SHOWN AT ,,.......,,_,f:tt SEAN CONNERY .• isJAMES BOND ..................................... l 1cllnlv1 Drh• .. 111 5Mw111t U.,._. 17 Mfftl 11 Wllll l'Hul ''LOV•I S ANO OTNlill ITIANO•IS" Cl l "".Ml .... ~ .. ,.,.,.., ... !ff) ---.."• CMw ••c...,. ~ ll!lwl"' u .... 17 ..... Wiii! ,.,,._, •ALU IN WONO•RLA.fUt" Il l ,_ QNlf" ... ,... •••• "HO •UH CW •UU" Ill ..................................... •XCLUSIY• OllV .... SNOWIH91 u ... 17 _, .. wlfll patwt "TN• •A•YMA IClfl " l•I ,_ _.... cMtr ,..,.,.. "IOYI IN TMlf •AND" C•I ,,.., ... , ..... c_,. 1'11'1 """ .... " .... Cellf" ~ "THUNO•••AU" ... "'YOU ONLY LIVI: TWIC•" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •llCLUIM M~ ......... , """" 17 --"' .... ,..... '"STUOI NT Nllll•I" fl) ......... ~ ....... "1..0V• OOCT .. S"' f•I UNCLE LEN EXCLUStVE ORAN GE COUNTY ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT STARTS WEONESDAY, FEBRUARY 3RD AT CINEMAlAND THEATRE-ANAHEIM ALL SEATS RESERVED It's Loory fo, The Woory Don't gel weary. Read Leary. Bill Leary's one-line com- ments on the world around us can be habit-£ormine. Check today's Graffiti by Leary . • 11__.,L_i WWW __ .__,,..c..-"'-... .INJWOMJ.., ... ELLIOTT GOULD •~A 0A'll0 l WOIP~-1'!•••<1,C~ "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" • .••l•P. "• .... llt--C:.,._00. S- "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" CLOlllt'\'!'CHMAH COLOR ~Ci& W LYE CHAIRS" G .asu111 -· . AIR~Or-A-1 11111UllCAl1u •IUI11A111K a Ulllm&M.l'ICMl ---- "I flYER SANG FOR MYFATllR" • DICK ntACY TUMBLEWEEDS ~UCOLIC llUFfi\L.O: IT 15 It/Gil TIME \'!JU ANP I BLJRlfD 1llE FABLED HAltHE-T, CfA'ifV OUR IN5AN1' !l1CK1'~1NG, ANV SIGIJ<O A NOll- AfrGRESSION !'ACT. ll'AAT:.'IV, ~tG­ fl;L.LOW? MUTI AND JEFF IF SHE WANTS "T!li<r SPANIARD LET tlER tlAVE HIM·-SEE IF ~ CARE! -..rl-l JUDGE PARKER 11 ,, , . . , • By Tom K. Ryan Mf.Mo: CANCE~ A1™1STJCE C!'LEBRltTION. By Al Smith -n-lATS POSS101.E- WERE lb.JIN ATl..ANTIC Cm' 1N 1926? By Harold Le Doux THE JUDGE . WHAT JUND f'065e6lON OF ELMO 1-1,l.D HIS EAR: ON THE WA.RNEP OF A CMAlGE A. 6UN WITHOCIT ll'ECEIVEI? NEXT TO MINE WHEN ™T MIGMT IS "&EIMG A S'ERM.IT •• AAP, VOU C,\LLED, A66EV'. WHEN I BE TME IMPE "6AINST IF ME DOESN'T ASKEP TMAT YOU llR:INCi YOult CASE: ELMO? FALL IN LIME •• SJSTE!l, I KEPT MY rM: PUSHING A FINGEIZ& CIZOSSED! ICIPNAP UP! PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R •• POWER I ACROSS l lJpfoT•·•· b Employs 10 Hard hit ]4 Enttrta1n· m'n\ form 15 Down tht ·-· lb Fo1 b1dd eu 17 Pos1!1v' eltc\rode 18 Oel 1~h!S 20 Lov1n11 21 Rainy 22 Projecting corner 23 w,nl ' qulc kl'I' i25 Combh1ts 127 In a state j of action ·30 Btal sound I~ Jl Brtak down a s'nltnc' lZ Prom ls ' irl maHiag' lJ TV control poslllori 36 01i1y p1oduct 37 Stupid 38 Rtmtdy 3'i Noist 40 Scold 41 Non·winntt 42 Occur to 44 Largt soup dis ti 4S Suddtn t l'llllll' • " lO " .. .. 47 AdvrrtisinlJ mt d!um 48 Z l)(ll1c ~i~n 4'i Part of tl•t body 5() 111-manntrtd child 54 Fut! multon-ch op wh1sktrs 57 Srrrnlty 58 Btdriddtn 59 Star in Cth1S bO Frtnch incomt bl Boys 62 Us' a parln11 knlf' bl liiOf' th1111 occa s ionally DO WN 1 ...•. Ztpp,lin 2 US dlVOfCt Ctll\tr 3 River of England 4 Rtl lglon 5 Ptrttl~t b Inc rtlltd 7 Stdlmt nt 8 Pitcr out 9 Wat rr body 10 Slows down g1owlh ll lmposin11 ''sidrncr: 2 words Ytsltrday's Purzlt SolVt'd: 12Cltaras .. ···: 2 "'ords lJ Clio, Erato, Th1l i1, tic. lfl F1mlnin1 name 21 Sm1ll 24 Common cori1t1ctfcn 2S P lc~td out 2b Master of··- 27 Copltd 28 Ar1b i~n judgt Z'i H1pptt1td JO Occup1lion 32 Kind of vehlclt: lnfonnal 34 "BorJ\ -·" JS Plant 37 Styll1h 1/28171 38 Kind of mtal: 2 'ltOrd S Var. 40 C1 os1• companion 41 .Pull with for ct 4) Genrral COUfS'S <44 Potnt 45 Plot 4b w,st lndles Island 47 Rope flb•r 49 Pttlffll 51 RaYt SZ Enl r' -·: lnttnnlsslon SJ Numerical suffix SS P11tr dtrnon Sb Expire 57 Expert II 12 ll • ly Frank laglnslcl PERKINS II ( .. -II •• .. ~~ • .. • .. II .. 511. • .. • .. • . .. • ··- MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER _.CTUALLY, Mil. ROPER, 1T DOLLY, l'M M>N[>Ell!N6 SOUNDED LIKE THAT.' IF ·cHEAP STEAKS ~ ··TMOLJGH HE WAS Ju5T • WASN'T WHAT 'IQJll WHISPERING/ ·i r-1i-- FAT~ER iOl.D 'JOLI ~I TO HAVE ME IHV£S TE/ ; I ,JPl-.a PEANUTS • llfl!E'5 A 6Elffi.E Jl9ltm • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • 0 • • .,. • • • • • • • • ·~ Thund11, hnuirJ 21, 1971 O~ILY PILOT di Ll'L AINa By Al c.,, SALLY BANANAS By Cllarfft IGllottl ¥Ril~Kt~~~I ~R'!C~! GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS -1'-:soe lll~!!Re i;ie;. 1iJro MA1<1!~S llAVe 6iA)(lAl6 '7D 1FIE! um.e. CCMN::t or::ss Mo411l~ "'-- By John Miies • 1£1 J (W);...,_T~~ .. . 'TMAT IS,- ~·u •~LLY NOTA WO~'THl.E55 1 L:l"llZ PUNK • By Mil LOOl<1 ,.,., .... NOT' so HOT,, l!ITHSlt, By Saunders and Ov~d By Charlei M. Selim IF \00111Qo11!1AT SOll&ILL SWEo &I A '• • AT N{E, l'L~ ilflW(,E\fl/I I ~TLE REMINC!l • • • ~ llllE " 'Milt 5l1f1Q fKXJ'( • • • • • • • • • • • • • 17-• • c • • • • • • --- THI llUNOI WOW! _MR.MUM • :3 By Fenl Jo••• 1i COJ.,16 ON, Ma. llo·IT·>i.I.~ 1 Nl!XT INN!Ne· ~) By Roqer loB•• •• DENNIS THE MENACE . \ ~· '" ,... Wednesday's 'Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List American Stock Exchange List - iai.. 11111 .. UroU.t ..... a.-c .... ai.. Si i.. NII ,,,..,, NIH Ltw c .... cr.e. .... .. ...._, 111111 i..w c• a.. DAILY PILOT • I •'..~.'.,.;••,1·~·• ,.,., °' "•• ·• • •• ';, 1 •• '""'··' \•',• ,, •• ..,-. u · ,-•• ' . !JA DAILY PILOI 1 huriday, January 28, lCJ71 Teachers 'Hamper Minority Pupils' RIVERSIDE (APJ -'" anthropologist says studies show Anglo and r,texican American youngsters start school almost even in basic lkllls. Yet by the time they leave SON Y the third grade, reports San- dre Prasad, the Mexican· Americans are approximately a year behind the national achievemen t average. Mrs. Prasad's Undings were based cn studies ef kin- dergarten children al two Riverside schools. She is an associated in anthropology at UC Riverside. She said lhe Mexican - American children fall behind because they are ''turned off" ' . r l , ..... ACCESSORI ES <') (.-/ . (~ ·:·· ' , e ELECTRONICS ') rtERCf-SIM'SOp.j I ENDIX by tea cher::>. Many teachers, she said, stand behind the children and continually c o r r e c t pre- nunciation. lier views were seconded by Eduardo Hernandez Chavez, coo r d i n a tor of Chicano studies at U C Berkeley. J-le said teachers should accept Chicano and black pronunciations and syn· lax, especially while lhe very young are learning the basic skill of reading. He sugges t ed that Hie English most young Mexican· Americans speak in the first grade should be considered a legi timate variation or English much as the English spoken by white children in t-.Iississippi and New York is accepted. HJ.ND IEA~ING &. MOUNTED MOOELS " WE WILL NOT BE UNDER SOLD llTCHIE DANFOURTH Alll GUIDE SEA A9UA-METU e ENGINES GULL AERO e HO~IE CATS PINANCJNG AVAI LABL E MERIDIAN SAIOTS VOGUE WA If~ SKIS NO FINANCE CHARGE IF PAID IN 90 DAYS STEVE. DAN a. IYltON FENLEY 011• of th• pWltll<'• l•v•rilt 1pOrh, lh.111111, II tlllillf flllft C<lm,l•M '°Y tllt d1y. Tlmt Wll """" tt1t •lllllt h•d ""If i. c..,l•INll will! ,,,.,..ull••· IW!•tll conl•••ln••• 91 th• llnny clln. NowN ay1, ii •llJ'l!t <I .. ..,.. '""' •r• 1en1,.. .,.ie .. i.nar 111v- c11119!iilc•t toelJt dH'9ned lo ""' lll•m c!ur of 1119 l!Oolr. Acconli111 lo • •Ht11t naw1 11try, "'' Mk hit•n Sttl• lltlcl!ory 1ct11•Uy 11•1 I lttm of flf.YC!Wllogil ll M n.t 1111! who !Hell hllchtry·1~wn1<1 '"'"' "" If IN 1 111cker !or tflt tint Ill f ly JlltY '"· Sound• fi1hy, tn,11 ii WOl'ltl, SHml lfof! ""lcllery 1ro111 IHk lt!t wily in1ll1><n ti thtlr will! co111in1 1nd m•~• ll!orl·ll~..:I '"°" wllen •~"It<! loo••. Tt.t h•tchery 11111 teach their chtrgH It tffd ell tt1• IMtnom, 11111 .. 1111 111 11o<:1rlc sl!Kk cH111:ourt9• Ill• aumlt •n•• th1I come 11 th• •urltct IMklnt l11r • hut.Oout. u !hit kl•• spro1d1, •nglen wm ~¥• lo swa, tfoelr kl<H /or • Mglt 1.0. In ord•r lo e<1m1 ho.,.. w!lll • lull crt1I. AnybOdy •1111 • l1ogh 1.0 .• ,..,w, tho lm119rt1nc1 9f INSURANCE. »mo ,,,, • ...,.. •1enl 11tould ~. c1ntulll'CI ..-9ul•r!y, lik• your doctot. W1 11 I YRON FE"ILEY l"ISIJllANCE will b1 p.lt•tl'CI to '"' o• ... v•~r P""llrl m with you, Perhlttt 11'1 PfrfKt, tr pert1'ttt If t.hOllll Ill •P<l•ll'CI. 0••• in •t t'll1 M11n, llunllnglon l•K•. PIH!lll Uli·71lS •• , WI"""! tDll91• lion, If '°""'· NO DEALERS PLEASE NO PHONE PRICES New1971 ® HAllDCRAFl'ED (ll~lllQM &COlOl!l . FREE 1 Year Service Policy a nd 3 year Picture Tube W1rr•nly with the purchase of any color set. Dllivt ry t nd compltte 1dju1tm1nt In your hom• -yo1.1r Ht c1.11tem t1.1ned to your rt c1ptlon . "'''· Eiclusive Gi1nt 2S die. Chromt color l 1Jb e e Gold Video Tuner e A1Jlomtlic Tint e Automatic Fin• T~inq e Tiltn 100 Chti!1. Senutlon•I Zenith Chrornaceler TelO'riilon-(21 ha. 1111.) ._.S 11 Zenith Color Portables start •I AM·FM smEo lADIO-TURNTAILI $279.87 AND TA'1 HCORDU l l'IAYU 2 Grem precision Tone Arm COLOR ANTENNA b 1p1•lters -2 H ON11 So1Jncl · Enclosur•• 140 Witt Output. TH! FINEST IN THI INOUITI Y Our Cost With Purchase Of Any Color Set SAVI $UO. COLOR TELEVISION SAUS & SERVICE 9011 ATLANTA •I MAGNOLIA l lJWllN UACH ANO llOOIHUIST llN THI LUCI Y DISCOUNT CINTll) HUNTINGTON BEACH 961!·3329 SERVING ORANGE COUNTY FOR 20 YEARS . .. Ru ss Take Big Lead On Ventts CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - Russia's successful landing or: an automated probe on Venus l gives the Soviets at least a: five-year lead over the United l States in the exploration of1 the surface of ano ther planet. \ And there have b c e n repealed hints fro rn Soviet \ scientists and commentators, that last December's Venus ] 7 landing was just the :;tart of an extensive planetary cx- ploratio11 procram, I The United Stales also has a1nbitious plans to explore the planets, but severe budget cut-J backs have delayed some proj- ecLs and threatened to affect , more. The scope of the U.S. I program may be revealed Fri-1 day when President Nixon presents next year's budget l lo Congress. In any event. the U.S. is devoting most of its planetary 'I funds lo exploring Ma rs because scientists say the red I planet bas the best chance , of harboring some rorm ofl , .. ~ ..... ,.~ AIR CONDITION RECEIVE $100 CASH NOW ... wan : GAS Upon completion of CJ "' air.cond itio ning inst•I~ I.at ion. You'll 9et $100 in ccnlt •• , with the TRADE IN of your old h••tin'i or cooling •quipm1nt upon d•liv1ry ol ntw G,u Ait Conditioning (off•r 1nd1 F.brut•'( 281 ITS EASY TO HAYE GAS Allt CONDITIONING •• • WITH A NEW FINANCING PLA N THAT INCLUDES PARTS ANO SfltYICE OF THE UNIT fOlt UP TO 10 YU.RS. 1 '-------::::::=::::::-' ~' day &night gas air conditioning · ® CALL US NOW AND GET ALL THE FACTS PACIFIC HEATING CO. AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS 2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD. Call Us for Prompt Service and Repair LAGUNA BEACH LAGUNA HILLS-VIEJO 494-9745 837-2000 lire. Russia appears lo be con-ii,~~;;;;;;;;~;::::::::~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~= cenlrating on Venus. Three! probes in addition to Venu s 7 penetrated the l hick Ven usian atmosphere during the past four years. 'There have been no announced Soviet Mars n1issions since 1964, and no prior ones succeeded. America's Mars programs of the 1970s begin in May when the space agency will launch two Mariner television scouts designed to orbit Ma rs and flash bac~ photographs -0f 70 pe~ccnt of the f..1a rtian surface. These will be the first spacecraft to orbit another planet and scientists hope the Mariners will operate Jong enough to show seasonal changes on Mars. America's big step in unlocking the secrets or the planets is no\v scheduled to co1nc in 1976 when t;o,·o large and sophislica\ed .• Vi k in g spacecraft will land softly on Mars and search for life. The $800 mill ion Viking progran1 will mark America's hrsl at- templ to land on anolher planet. In addition to tile Mal's ex- plorat ion, the United States plans lo send a Mariner past Venus and on to Mercury for the first time in 1973. And two pioneer probes will be launched in 1972 and 1973 on t \Vo -year. half-billion-mile missions to ll'ithin 100.000 miles or the gre.it planet Jupiter. The space agency had hoped to receive funds in the uir coming fiscal 1972 lo start 'vork on an ambitious series of automated spacecraft to capitalize on an unusual align· ment of lhe outer planets and make •·grand tours" of them in the late 1970s and eoirly 1980s- EYES RIGHT - DR. LO UIS J. HASELfELD Gl•r• blindneu con b1 • rn~­ jar h11o rd to th1 dti•e• who 1ulf1r1 lrom lt. It '"" l•e c•us•d by mony diflo•en! 1h ;n9,, B11id•1 your own pe•sanal le~al of phv1ictl re· 1i1lonc• lo qlt rt , l oa~inq dl<•ctly into on- coming ht~d · \' liqhh or in!a '9li1t1nin9 snow •~•n "'ind- ,l\i•ld1 9l11•d with d:rt • , , ctn brin9 ii on. Th1r• ;, on• b11t 1•medv for q1•r• blindntu tnd )'OU 1lr•1dy h•~• it. It i1 loctlotd nt•I to !ht 1ccel1ralot •nd ;, called fht I RAJCE P~OAL Slow do•11 •hen you ob11rv• bri<1ht Ji9ht1 or oth- er 9lt r1 producto . Look 41\ +h• 1id• of !ht roo d in1!•td of di· rtclly •I oncomin9 h••dli9hh. l ul, do NOT u1t d11 k 9l•f•tt lo t•duc1 91•••· Th1v w:U tho rtduc• )'Our t•1in9 •bility. c<1t vl1ion ••n9 1 •nd •••lly 1n•'!• •ccl41nh. Ho• lon'i h•1 ii b1•n tine• vour •v•• ...... •••m•n•d? c.n 141·12 71 fer t n tppoinlm•nt or liop in whi11 shoppi119 •I tht Fiv• Poinh C•11t1r, M•in St. t i l •1ch Blvd . THE BEST ft1tdtrihlp po!lt p•o¥• "P1•- nuf1'• 11 en• of th• ..... orld·s moil pop11l•r com:c 1hip1. R11d if lli1ily 111 I~• DAILY PILOT. No~io\gic? YO<J'\1 264 Joke the quolnt •tyle •.. brought op·To·doie in on.od•:ed ""'Joi! 2·ql. '•ll'. '"1~J eof"' cold cuts r,j ) saver '·~,,/ ""0" 8 2{ loo-11e l 21 round ia r food savers 17 26' '' JSP" S 11 01. 01. or. plastic assortment lo~o dry bo10:et, 9·Q!, 66' or l9·q!. "'Ol!ebo,l.el. °'I' L 1· 1, 1·ol. pod or d•ihpon. eo. A g•eot g•oup of ht:lpe•1 lhot won't rv1!, dotte~ot brea~! ''lee'' oil, a ir and gas filters l"'!oll them yovr- ~elf, ond so•e! f arnou~·for·qool1!y Lee l+lte•~ •~ J 1ype• ... <heck Luc ky\ low pr1(ed Suy now. booster cable /900·! 132 Color·coded, weotherprool • , , 01l·t;ireo1•·ond·m0•1h.1•• •••i11on1, "'"" po1iti.,...oction gr;p, S·loat olvminum coble. IM -ll u•lili•r ... ,, ,,.... 931 phK• matt. ....•....... s ro inless steel assorted knives utility, \.O.,.j"'.ic h,5 2' or cor~d lr111! "I' knilot •• r 1och roo1tknileor 97¢ bokhet k"'fe. lht: ,oo,p .,,,, .... ,, 10 mo11 colling problem1. f o~e qu o!.ty ,too nit\• )te,.I blode1: duroble lleeh .. ood hondle1. .,.,1'rlcolo"·o""lr•1d 29j bun ba 1ket1 ............ . s roinfe IS J reel pineapple cutter 148 Gehthe tor• ovt qvtckly, easily ••• le11 you •nior fresh pi""- opp!e treot1 1 mor e oft•nl •ul'ilcoloro 271 b1tt:1 n bag ashtray ••.•. long gown 7a7 0<'011MJ!ic clt·hom• QOW'ft '°"'h fluid, body·follo•ing Ii roes ,., the pvll· 1hto11gh woi~I ond b111k><l Jicirt d•siQ'!'*I lo permit o provoco!,.e show of leg. duponr In whote~r degree is de~irod, Fo,hioned of cores~ing·solt oc~e .,, 11>.: lop in viv•d prinll, .kirt in coordO"" oted ~ol;.,• .. ~-M ·l. p o/ye sl1r pant suit 1057 The •nd>~pen·,oble ponl •uol of eo•y· core polye11er .. , pull-on ponl·, o ~d ,lee•ele1• top; front 11ppered, o r>d oc- (tnled W•th gold· col0< bu fl on' ond !eor·drop to~. Mo"y col~i 8 !o 1 O, ''golde n 7 '' o il treatment motor oil '"" 7 8¢ Give your engine o heo!1 Help your ~I to do 1!\ work betTer. ,mo~e le"! Golden 7 or oTecll ond seol•, ~ove~ O•!, wire set 3a3 k'eep lhost spark pl11111 f.-ing! Eliminot11 lllo1e "mine1" Iha! rob yOtl• cur of pow11' ••• '"Ok• it od lo~t O buc~i...g brOn(O! '°~ 31* 30,...,_ f i,..e qvo!ity molar oil wit\ "'ICO'li!y lf>ol 10\ts long•., belle< protection for '"°'~· .. , rear seat speaker K•ep the 1ound wher• you wont 11; Iron!, bock, or both. Prtt.0ld•rtd 3· 363 woy 'witch; port1 ond in1t<ucli0nt included. ~~~.1..~~.~=~.:.~.°..1. .. V:.l.'..~.°.~ ... 99¢ ~.!:,~~~~~~1, ~(ir°.~ ...... 2 83 ~~!~:~:a ......................... ] 64 no~1llp sticlr-on flowers 12a Tru•ty '\l,p·nots" to help pr1\olnt lxith1ub ond 1howtr CKtid•lllj. Self·o~~rif>g, 101•, 1onito1y. I I ·' Tl'llndq, J&l'J!Wf 28, 1'971 DAILY PILOT 2JJI Revenue Sharing: Can States Spend Money V{i§ely? • Can state and 1 o c a I "Artistry in Moving'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: W ASH1NGTON (UPI) - President Nixon's rev en u II! sharing proposals raise a basic question about the work· ing of American Democracy: governments speod tu money more wisely and ef!icieplly lhan the federal govt!rnment? President Nixon thinks lhey can. Because they are closer to the gra.u roots, he saya, states and locallUes ought to be aM"e aware or the needs and more responsive to the -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I demaoda of the people. be1an after state and city ,.vemment.t bad failed uttuly to cope with the human pro. bltm• of the Great Oepresalon. From then tuttll now. It has been an article of faith with polltlcaJ llberal.9 that if you want to 1CCOmplish an~ing -whether It be Improving achoola:, a}d.lng o p p re s s e d mlnorl.Un, or finding a cure for canctr -you mwt look to the federal government to do It. 494-1025 580 Broadway r It's a oogent argument - VITAMIN 'C' ~ Price WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS 263 FOREST AVE., LAGUNA BEACH •94-3582 In theory. But in actual prac- Uce, many slate and city governmentt have proved to be Incompetent managers of public money, and some have demonstrated a marked in- senaltlvlty to the needs of cet· taln l!eJl!lellls of the popula- tion such as the old, tha poor and the non-white. 'Ibe centralhatloo of pawer In Wublngton wblch hu tJeen.. eoinl on 1te1dlly 11nce 1933, M tt has taken on more and more responsibllitles, the federal government also has lncreasin&IY pre-empted the richest IOW'Ct of p u b I 1 c DESPITE ALL THE CLAIMS OF •• LOWER PRICES'' COl"YIJGHT© 1971 by l11eky Storn, lnl.-AU •i~~1t R ...... ,d. ~~~.~~~!.!!!!2.~!! .......... _ 79~. Mrs. McGraw, Jr. was in the check-out line et a Lucky in Long Beach when we asked her if she would buy the exact same items or comparable brands at any other market MRS. McGRAW, JR. SHOPPED AND COMPARED HER OWN SHOPPING LIST AT ANOTHER SUPERMARKET OF HER OWN CHOOSING ... SHE'S CONVINCED ••• ~9.!!~.!!~!F ............ _SS~. !;!9.~~J!!~~.:~'..'.. ... " . ··-$1!1 She spent $42.99 at Lucky ... The same shopping list at the other market cost her $48.29, end she had to cross one item off her ~~.!;.~,~nf.~,!!!S -.......... 32~. list ... The other market didn't stock it. YOU CAN, TOO SHE REDUCED HER 12 301 SHOP LUCKY ~!~~~!!!.!9.!~J 001russ 8 7 ~ FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY • /0 AND SAVE FRYERS I .,.. DEL M!>NTE CORN~w .. 22' PIE FllllNG:::'i~~.~ .. --.. -43' ~ GREEN B£ANS~o~1:.~~ 22c @ APPLESAUCE ::~~~J.U-21• llllll"MITnrff 23 .,.c TOMATOES""'."' • DEL MONTE PEARSn ••w 49' ~ PORK & BEAH5:.-:::'w.-24' ... Jiy&yf.-....... CRANBERRY JUICE 69C OCEAN SPRAY q.ouNcl aomr f1""'-NOODLES!~:L~~1... 29c LIBBY'S PLUMS ::'o'l'u 39' .,.. FRUIT CUPS~ua-49' WElcHADE GUrlDllNl 35' .. OLU# .••• -- .,.. DRESSINGS:W~~ 34' Cf-ISU.• Oii CA1Wlll! MAYONNAISE~~'tl~ 59' ""' APPLE JRllES~w---31' ... Jiy&yf.---. CHUCK ROAST lUClllT TOI' QUAUTT IONDED IEIF 48~. ... Jiy&yt.-- CllNG PEACHES 27c LADY ur 19·0UNCI CAI . .. . ' .. ., • > • \'. ,,. ·""' ~ ' • , l ,")if..."\ J< SAUCE ='=-•OLm 39c SYRUP:m~ .. ---·--71' Soup (A9tlall IJIK ... llOOlll.I n 20' l•K OLCU ......... -·-·····-- BOUlllON CUBES ~ ......... -.22' TE RIZER -NO""O"''-•9< NOE JKO.L/At ................... _... l.' t A.!"~,,,. v): • '1 ' ,..1 ' t .. ..,,,,· 0: J , •... \. !I.. ,, j ~ PARKAY :rt::.A~·-······ .. ~·-30c FOREMOST MILKMAN~\":::_ 1" BIG DIP ICE MILK ... , .. ,._59• COTT AGE CHEESE ~'ig,.__33• ~ , :.i '·1· '-1,1 t . {\, ' t(1. ...... .;"~ ... COOKIES "'"''"-""'"'"' ..37' °""" 140LtlG ....... ,-•M- HAM ,,...._,,_1'111.1,c:oom 5nc HAM·--NJ.fCNID fllU!llA.:IWl-llOUHIOYUI---0tri. OICAt.,,YD------- CHUCK ROAST ......... 58· .. tt<llfCWWIUTT~ ... , __ _ SIRLOIN STEAK 98' Ll<.n fot u.wn I .... IUD Ill. PORTERHOUSE STEAK $)17 JAIUOff-llCITfOf'ffAl.m"-119-.. CUBE STEAK '"" $)05 lKllfCWWAUn-... .. !~,~~ ... ':.!~~TURKEYS 36f.. ..,. MACARONll:.:"-='.'.'or. 36' BIRDSEYE BEANS ::~ ••... _25' O""' CRAB MEAT~:~~111t1 1" VEGnABLES ~~~:::!.a.1wLra..37c ,,_.lfylo.._.._ Ac-t ....... .,.c ORE-IDA ONIONSg:~':" ..... 22' FISHSTICKS ~~~~."..~ 19• PET RITZ P ES::~::~~ 35c ···Katlkf/.-- TOMATOJUICE 3oc HUNT'S 4'-0UlfCI U.JI CHILI & BEANS ~::•:. __ ,27• BEEF STROGANOFF !~~~:_ _54• EGG Roll Cll•ll 11111 .... l DI llllUU' 75' •OL tll. •• -•• -........... _ FRIED CHICKEN :::_·;:~~-1" OH BOY POTATOES ..... ,..._35• ·~·~ SKINLESS COD~ .. ""---79' FISH CAKES :':l.'::..~---34' ... Jiy&yt.-...... POU SPARERIBS •tn11-....U.SllD------ ~.~~.".! ~!.~TURKEYS 39~ BHF llNK SAUSAGE 29< M<COT ILUIO••••••••••····-·•••M-'"OL Pll, STANDING Ill ROAST ,......, 98< ~ '1r9UoUTIW-._ EllTRA LEAN GROUND BHF-ROUND QUAUTY--88l ···livB.v"-~ CORN OR PEAS 18 LADY LIE llANO GOlDHI C 16 OLUN-YOU• CNOICI . .,.. DEODORIZER :':'.'=." __ 49• SPIC 'N SPAN MOZ.•• 93' .,... SCOTTTOWEls::...~1· .,.c KIBIUD 5'1=-~::.~_1 14 HORSEMEAT 1= ...................... 25' Do• FOOD l.WfOllOlltCIWAICll' 88' O"" " JU.Ul ........ , .•.... ,M KAl KAN CAT FOOD~'\:~_15' • .,... :i.· "' . I • • ..... '~ ' . # ' , ,L • ' • ,. ' .... •~-~~~~-.r11QUM_59c ~.~~)lIJ_E_E_R ____ l69 GOLD SEAL VODKA 3•• •WAltlOITll------..JOI tlT......_. .. , AU.'tc:1Tn1111 wmiue.11wrJ Prk•1·a,. DfM01trtted &c•pt on falr·Trad•d and GOYentment Controlled I...._ ALL MEAT BOLOGNA WIUOWI cnn•llD •••uu1 OI TlllCI 67' IUQD-1·POUNDPll. AMERICAN CHEESE =: ... 69< •lfMALU ...,.11.JCU ..•••• U-IL , .. SLICED SWISS CHEESE 89' uta nun ................... tli4L ,._ HARVEST DAY BISCUITS 8' lr1!Dttl • -ITTl.f •• ' ' ••• Ml.,., OSCAR MAYER BOLOSNA 49' IOtU-ltl 9U1 •"'* ....... NL ... LONGHORN CHEESE ::.':" 69< •IU 111*111 tMJMI ,., ..... 11-11. ... LEO'S SLICED MEATS 35• lllf lllllS.•MllY.IPICYU !fl.,., LEO'S COOKED HAM 59c AIC0 •••• ,., •• , •••• , ••••••••• 1-C. ... ARMOUR STAR FRANKS 62• .tu.11Ur ........................ tlt,.. MAIN MEAL MEATS :",. l'l7t llMlt ........ M4l. &d.11'""' ..... ... I. \ HUNT'S KPCHUP 47c ROYAl DESSERT:~::---·-9' .,.. BREAKFAST~~~~'19' CORN CHEX CEREAL ~: •. _47• ~ MIX~-::~.~~~561 31c »~'. · LOW DISCOUNT PRICES O~ HOUSEWARFS 8 BEAIJfY AIU :;' TOMA.YO n.ov1a aonu SALAD Oll~m-~~ .,.. Dill PICKlES::'o':."l: 45' -aM•-•l'nlt HEINZ VINEGAR:::_m 33' STARlllST TUNA :wo. 37' I .,.. COFfEEl';'~...._2" COFm l':':.wo-89' INSTANT~~\:9-1" KAVA INSTANT~. 99' INSTAHT::'::0-. .1" Roll$ llUYlllDAT ltUDT" .33< UT-llCT.rlL-•••••-- Mlx ........,....,.,llO,oUICAll 63' O"" 4'0LML.... __ M_,,,_ SUGAR lWlN :;'.~.'::::.""' 39' CREME HONEY :::r:'~--38' ""'CANDY~~"" 35' TEA BAGS~--...... 26' .,.. CAKE MIXES m'r~-35• CHINESE DINNERS 95 C JA..._wntl ""'"""' CAii DISCOUllr lllCIO ••• ror QllAUTI' flODUCll BANANAS (i) POTATOES ·-1oc .. ltllT. n•n 1._ 1.1. ll0.1 llSSl11 10;:.::, 39c tUCKY fEATVllU THE llHEST QUALITY AHJOU •LUS. THE sue. CUlENT WINTEl-TIM! flUIT ••• AT lOW MlYOAY PRICES. * STW •* INIYES . snOPTWO """'"" . I lflll ,.It If Ht• tad lht Jn I '"' dP " "' •IJ ,,.,,.., su,. 63c .,, llmblll llHa. FRESHABYES:m':.':~ I" TODDLER DIAPERS ::":.~-1" ROYAlE TISSUE::l'a ,.,, 31' PARING KNIFE-3" BLADE "'°"" n.. ~..,. b ... DIXIE Town~"·"'" 57' MUG TREE = 94c TYDBOlClEANERn••"'--79' _,.. __ ,,, .... _ 49• DIAL SOAP:::'... 21' FRYPAH ::" SNOWY BLEACH:= 46' J::,';::..'":.:",:;,:r.:,";: $147 CHIFFON LIQUID:~:' 42' ·-fRYPAH :.• nx1n mr::-11• •I'' ~DEODORIZER~" 45' =~-::::-..:.":.:~ CHEER DmRGENT:.".: 'I" VICKS YAPO RUB ~ DRm DETERGENT :r ... :.:.'.'.!,.··:::.-::-9ac BOLD DETERGENT:.:'.~.· '2" DASH LOW SUDS =:.t. '2" -PIRTUSSIN I HOUR IVOIYLIQUID::',,\:' 57' ~~~t2~~~--.. PERSOIWIVOIY::.'I:."' 30' ~ =--~==•1ot LAVA HAND SOAP::"" 14'. ...:..... ___ ,,.. Shop Any Day ••• Save Every Day •.• With L11cky Low· Discount Pricing Policy. . SCOPE MOUTHWASH .._1111 mm,_ •1 revenue -the income tu. Some of the money wblch Lt suck«! Into Washington by federal Income taxtS Is now being returned to UnanctalJy strapped 1tates .and ciUea throu&h what an known to bureaucrats as "categorlcal grants." A categorical grant Is one that can be spent only for 1 specific purpo1e. It com· e:!I, ln short, with light federal strings on it. C1tegorJcaJ granta have pro- liferated over the years unUl there now are about 1,200 diC· ferent types. Beyond any doubt, a vast amount of wute. duplication and sheer boon· doggling i! hidden in th.is bureaucratic maze of pro- grams. What President Ni.Kon Lt propostn1 IJ ellmlnatloo of 10me of tbeae apecW purpose grantt in favor of living rtates and cities large blocks of money which they wou1d have wide discretion in spending. This idea ls adamantly op- posed by some p owerful Democrats OD Capitol Hill, In· eluding Rep. Wilbur 0 . Mllls (D-Ark.) chairman or the HOUie Waya and Means Conr tnJttee in which any revenue-- sharing bUI must originate. Mills has little confidence to the abWty al lower echelons of eovemmeat to make wise use of blln.k<heck federal grants. Nlxon recognlRI that many stattS and cltitl have rathet poor performance record!. But be contends that an alert cJUrenry can make state and local government m o re responsive, more efficient and more creaUve. If t he declsion-maklng powen now concentrated in Wuhington are w Id t 1 y dispersed among at.ate capitall and dty halls, he says, every c!Urien will ftnd htmself closer to a center of power, and In a better position lo Jn. nu~nce governmental deds!ODI that affect him and hls llOc.iety. The Prell.dent may be wrong in thinking t h at OemocraUc proceaaes can be rtvlt.allzed, and sell-govern- ment made more than a alogan, by mtoring to lower echelooa of govemmenl eorne ol the power that bu been rathmd Into Wllblngton __. the past four decides. IN LAGUNA R:ll.\E J7JS....C...H~ ,, ...... -' O.p 4f7°IJICI SITT PACKAGES W!JWl.lYll'IWltQI( w•Ttii II Miil ,,,,, llUll65"' PEANUT ,. BUTIER kO ADllTMI FUlL Ill PlllllYAIMS POUH ouT11 cons· \ ' ' . ' ' O"" Nl•HTlY 1:41 P.M. IUNDAY AT 1'41 P.M. "IT.S ONE HELL OF A FllMl A COLD.SAVAGE 'AND CHILLING COMEDY!" __ ......., ••••,_,,t ,,....., ~. IOI CM.I. llOI °""' ... ANl lfAmff nMI - TWO 110 HITS "VALLEY OF THE DPLLS" -Af.IO- "BEmlD TilEi YAUEY llf Tl'.! lllis" -X-ltATID+-X- F n.. DAILY PJLOT-L Tho One n..t C.rts • .. • • ,_ -' . ., I • . • • • " STARTS THURSDAY 10:00 A.M; END-OF-MONTH COME EARLY, LIMITED SIZES 9UANTITIES AND COLORS-HUNTINGTON CENTER ONLY WOMEN'S OXFORDS Ortf. I.ft N 11.tt H•el •nd fl•ts 4aa A1sort•d siJ.•I NOW WOMEN'S DRESSES Ort• 7.0I to 12.00 Mi11•1 end half 1i1e1. 4as Assorted fabri cs and colors NOW JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR Ori• 6.00 t• 10.01 Colorful tops o1nd 3as bottoms NOW WOMEN'S SUPPERS Winter warm 0,.. J.tt t. 1.tt A11orfad sizes 2" 311 NOW i. BOYS' AND GIRLS' SHOES Oxfords and slip ons Oriti. 4.H N 6.tt NOW MEN'S DRESS SHOES 3.88 0r5t. t .tt f9 ZJ.tl NOW 6"to 14" WOMEN'S SUITS AND PANT SUITS Wools and Acrylic• Ortt-10.00 .. 40.00 19.88 Assorted colors. NOW WOMEN'S U9ht Wt. CARDIGANS Solid colors and stripes Or4f. 7.H ,. t.00 1°00 '"!. Acrylics S.M.l. NOW 4.88 WOMEN'S BLOUSES Fa1hion . tailored end ltant tops Wesh•ble Orig. 1.00 to t .00 NOW 2.88 STEP-ON TRASH CAN Orl1. 1 J.tt Avocado, Blu e, Poppy, Gold, Copperfone 8.88 NOW THREE-WAY PAPER DISPENSER Gold, Avocado, Blue, Poppy, Ori .. l .tt Coppertone NOW S.88 4-PIECE CANISTER SETS Gold, Avocado, Blue, Poppy, Coppertone GIRLS' SKIRT SETS Veit end t unic 5tyle1 Size1 3-14 ANKLE PANTS Meny 1tyle1 & febric1 Size1 3-14 0,1,. 11.tt NOW 7.88 Orff . I.DO te 10.00 211 3sa NOW ""d Ottg. I.DO te 6.0D 181 388 NOW to WASHER AND DRYER 4 speed-full cycle ren9e 6•• d,..,.r-Perm-Pres.-cycle Sli9htfy used -I set only NOW SQFA MOdern Feshion One only STUDENT DESK 40" Welnut 9relned two only CARPET SAMPLES AU ct>lor1 and iA••orted· 1in1 NOW NOW GOLDEN PINTO MINI BIKE °"• 4tt.•• '223 Ofit. ll0.00 '299 Orfw. Jl.to '18 JVi H,. En9ine, Ouel lrebt UDU~ 149" · . ' Reer Shock• ' •NEW DYNAMO COMPACT ''MOTORCYCLE ' =..~·· 4-speed Trentmiulon ' °"9· ltt~ I" ndleb•r•, 1trHt llc.ftM '21 ·3 I p!«.Y NOW · '-.:U· larracllda MOTORCYCLE . -71LM 210 cc fo9fno, I 11,.•d NOW $400 ' ,,..,.holoii, ii .. .,.,. 0 r '' ()Nl;Y , ' ' ' .. WOMEN'S PAJAMAS MEN'S SHIRTS FASHION STYLED Orlf, 6..00 eN 6.10 Bru shed flennel. 288 Solid colors. NOW Orif. 6.91 te II.ti l on g Sleeves assorted 38!'788 Colors end stripes NOW MEN'S TOWNCRAFT JACKETS GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR I 00 "· cotton corduroy Orft. 1t.tl 1088 We1tern 1tyli ng NOW Orl9. J.49 ta J.91 Gown1 end P•ieme1, Flanelette, 199 Brushed nylon & nylon tricot NOW POLAROID COLOR PACK II BOYS' SCHOOL AGE SWEATERS Includes ~ilm , fl•sh, c.11e, 31~ batteries end _elbum NOW Puttover1, Cardigens, Belted Ori• ..... hi •.•• 2ss and sleeveless NOW FIRST FLOOR WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR TOPS 8louse1, skirts & pents Solids and 1tripe1 Orif. 6.00 eM 1 D.00 3 .. 411 NOW i. WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR Tops end bottoms Orft-6.DO te 16.DD 4.88 8roktn 1i:1e1 NOW JUNIORS TOPS AND BLOUSES Shells, shorts end L/S Ori• 4.0D te 7.DI Penn-Prest, NOW DESIGNER COLLECTION 1.88 Blou1e1 -tops •nd vests Jeckets Pents-Midi'• OrJt, 7.00 te 19.DO 381 SIB NOW to LADIES' HOSE Attr•ctive color• leducN to S.M.l. 2 for 66« RAYON CHEMISE HOSE long weering Rayon S.M.L. NOW O rf9. 1.75 soc WOMEN'S HALF SUPS Combination Hip Hug9er Pent, end Helf Slip. S.M.l'. LADIES' GOWNS Waltz: length Assorted prints and colors WOMEN'S ROBES Waltx length. W•sh•bl •. MEN'S SUITS Orig. J.OD NOW 1.22 Orig. 4.SD ta 5.00 NOW 1.88 Ori9. 1 J.OD Giid 14.00 NOW 9.88 Two button, wid• lapel, center Orlg. 55.0G ta 75.DD vent or double breasted NOW 34.88 MEN'S BUCKLER PANTS Pennprastll Plaids Fashion shap•d leg' MEN'S PLAID PANTS SO 1. cotton -SO i'. Polyester Wesh end Weer NOW NOW Orig. 1.,1 4.99 Orff. 7.tl S.88 SECOND FLOOR GIRLS' SKIRTS Scooters, A-l ine & Pteeted er19. 2.5, t• S.DD stripes--pl•id1 & solids. NOW 1 ••,0 288 GIRLS' FASHION DRESSES Dress y end ce1ual styl es Broken si1e1 NOW NYLON QUILTED ROBES W arm end cot.y Orlif. J.00 ta 6.00 l 88 to 388 Orl9. 7.,1 Sit es 7-14 NOW 2.88 COOL WEATHER ACCESSORIES Toboggan ca ps & Fur Ear Muffs. LEATHER JEWELRY Ortt-Z.00 te 2.2, NOW 88« GIRLS' CALf.SETON HANDBAGS NOW BOYS' JEANS AND SLACKS Orl9, 2.00 1.22 Western Roun d leg je•ns Orf9, J ,,I ta S.TI Tap ered ca sual sl•cks NOW BOYS' DRESS SLACKS Plaids ONLY so•t. Polyester 2 ••. soo end 50 "/. Cotton NOW PRE-SCHOOL PAJAMAS S.44 Ski Pullover Orig. 2.29 t• 2.69 1 a. i'. Cotton NOW 1.88 BOYS' SHIRTS Chokers, br•cel1t1 and Orlt-I.OD ta Z.DD Plaids, 101ids long and Orlq. 2.tl ta J.50 NOW 4 for 5oo Ring s NOW 66Cro88C Sho rt sleeves 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~ THIRD FLOOR ..--~~~~~~~~~~~--. ~~~~~~~~~~~~--. BRYON NELSON GOLF SET TOY IRONS Safe heet Electric DOLL CLOTHES Dr•s1y-Sporhweer Size I I '11 Modern t••n dolls WIZZER NOW NOW Cu1tomi1.e your own Oeceh--Hour1 of fun NOW NICKLAUS GOLF SET I lrons-3 Woods Orit-1.11 44c Orf9. ttc 66c Ort9. 1.JJ 99c Orif. IJt.tl Aluminum she~-2 1et1 only NOW 10811 Orig. 129.,1 8 -Irons, 3 -Woods. Alumin um shaft-3 set s only NOW 10488 LUND SKI GI••• 1ki w/bindin9 Orf9. 59.11 3 pair• only NOW 49.88 PINE MOUNTAIN LOGS Burn brisldy 2 ~ 3 hours NOW ONE COAT LATEX PAINT I 0 color• Qverts onty NOW Orft . ttc soc Orig. '·'' 1.44 AUTO CENTER BEt(EW COBRA TRAIL Bl"' I 2Scc, 2-cycl• Entin• CMt-'''·" 4-speed Tr1n1mi11ion NOW '350 KEYSTONE MAG WHEELS I-piece •luminum 4 ... '99 w/lug• •nd hub, 14" Ford & Chev. ,EL TIGRE MAG WHEEL • I 0plec• aluminum, fih Dist NOW 'br1kei, w/lugs •nd hubs 4 ... '99 ttd OllL M.71 lfrt Olll. 14..11 14'7 lllL 17.n 1111 MIL 11.JI SCANNER C. B. BASE Complete with mounting °"" 14.tl herdwere •nd controls. NOW 49.88 . ' AUGUSTA MOTORCYCLE CHROME WHEELS -™·" 250 cc Twin, 4 cycle en9in• $ I 1peed tr•n1mis1ion -USED 400 I ONLY NOW Ori9-lf.H 14" ind 15" high quaility • t88 Chrome finish NOW .. GREAT SAVINGS -FURNITURE AND CARPETING CLOSEOUTS :!:: 50% ro75% OFF HOT WHEELS Latest Style• Orig. NOW Metal ······················-····-··············--·· .77c .SOc Si11ler -····--·-··-· .... ·-···-····-····-·········· 2.99 2.2Z WOMEN'S GOLF SETS Orff. 109,ft Betty Jameson 11 pc. set -Aluminum sheff NOW 85° KODACHROME MOVIE FILM Double 8 MM Camera s Fun for the fa mily NOW MEN'S DRESS SOCKS Over the calf Orif. 4.Jt 1.88 C harcoa l O NLY Reg. lg1. NOW MEN 'S Wool Pullover SWEATERS Assorted stytes IOO i'. Virg in Shetland wool NOW MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Ori9. 12.fl 7.88 Fant astic bargains on these Selected sport.shirts Orig. J.91 t. ..... NOW MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS 1~. 2" White end assorted colors OrhJ. l.t~ Long sleeve Long point button 3 SOO collar. NOW for . CASH BOX Remova ble money drawe r 9"xl 2" special buy NOW ELECTRIC BLANKETS I 00 "/. Acryli c Double Bed Single control -Colors BATH TOWELS Thick 'n Thirsty Screen Print s 24"x4b'' NOW Spec:ioly priced SPORTSWEAR FABRIC 3.44 Orig. Z0.00 13.88 as:. Orig. tk yd. t. 1.09 )'11. 3b" wide machine wa 1heble 48' 66' Soli ds end Prints NOW J'. to ,... REMNANTS 20°/o to 40°/o OFF Original Price PINCH PLEAT SHORTIES 24". 30''. lb" -45" and 54" Oriq. 5.9, ,,r. ta'·'' JW• L•ngths NOW 3.66 pr. HIGH GLO ENAMEL Orf9. J.69 4 colors Quarts on ly 1.77 NOW VELVET TUFTED HEADBOARDS Twin Si t e. Oriq. J2.tl G old Color. S Only. NOW $12 CHAIN SAW 15'' bar Ori .. lit.ti Larg e fuel tan k NOW STORAGE BUILDING 9998 I O'x9'-Chelet style l only Orif. 1H.n NOW '" CASSETTE PLAYER/RECORDER 12 volt neg. ground Orit-119.tf S wetts output p•r ch•nnel 94 98 NOW o PORTABLE B TRACK STEREO ' Auto, Home or Port1ble a.+tari•• includ•d 0rt1. n .n NOW 68.88 EL TIGRE TIRES 1 ply Potvester 36 mo. Guarent•• Ori9 . NOW Orig . E 71.14 l 0.95 28.44 J 78-14 40.95 H 78.14 ll.95 34.44 F 78-15 34.95 PM I',£, l onll old u,.. NOW = .• rt' . . -,, Ir • ' ' ' . . ' I '• i ... 1 •• \. , -~-·.-.. r It J ,.,... OAILV PILOT H Plunkett, :M;anning, Pastorini Picks NEW YORK (AP) -Quarterback Jim Plunkett, the 1970 Heiaman Trophy win. ner from Stanford, was selected by tile. Boston Patriots today as the No. 1 pick in the Nallon•I Football League's college draft. The Patriots l<Jflded J>lunkell, holder of the all-time major college records for passing and total offense yardage, after spurning numerous offers lo swap the top choice in a package deal for established pl.ayers. . Plunkett, 2.1, p8!3ed tor 7,5-« yards and ~ touchdowns during his three-year co llege career and totaled 7,887 passing- rushing yards. Plunkett reportedly will seek a ~.ooo contract. The P1triGts, Who dralted first because. their 1970 wonJolt record w11s the wont in the leape, have another high-!llaritd quarterback, In Joe Kapp. '!'be New Orleans Satnla, picking se.. cond, selected quarterback Archie Man- nina: of Mississippi, as expected. The Houston Oilera picked a lhird quarterback, Santa Clara's ,D 1 n Pa·stOrini. MIMing and Pastorin! aJso are strap- ping 200-pound plus passers. The Misais- sippi ace , .11. running threat as well In his college career, passed for 11481 yards last season despite missing several games with a broken left arm. Putorini sat out almo6l half lhe season Halos Get Pitcher Voss to Brewers In Angel Swap By GLENN WHITE 01 I~• OlllY ~1191 Sti ff Bill Voss. the only Angel tver to •' hit a grand sla m at Anaheim Stadium, will be wearing the uniform of the .. Milwaukee Brewers this year after being traded awa y by the Halos. .. 1be former Newport Harbor High- Orange C.Oast CoUege baseball ace was philmiophical about the deal which ends the happy situation of playing in his own backya rd. Taking his place on the Angels' 40-man .roster is pitcher Gene Brabender, 6-5, Laver,Ashe Clash Again Tonight in NY NEW YORK (AP) -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver, winner of six straight tennis championship matches and $60,000 in a period of 21 days, put a foa m pad around the bottom of his lefl foot and 6aid : "It gets tougher every match. The pressure is all on me and they're serious- ly oul to get me." He was talking or tonight 's match against Arthur Ashe at Madison Square Garden. It is a return of a $10,000 winner·lake·all match between them on Jan. 21 in the Garden. Laver beat Ashe, 7-5, 6-4. 7·5, but It was a hard victory for him, with two of the 9els ending in l!Udden deattt tie-breakers. "It could have gone either way," Laver ~aid . The Australian left-hander has played six: matches against the world's best and he has won .!iix as well AS the unprecedented money for tennis. But not without its toll. Three of the six matches went to five sets, against .ror.n Newcombe, Tony Roche and Tom Okker. There were nine sudden death sets, wit h Laver winning sis:. At a gel together Wednesday with Laver. OklCer. Ashe and Newcombe present. the feeling was litrong that Laver will soon fall. "\Ve've got to get lo him sooner or later ... said Newcombe. 220. Brabender, 29, was 6-15 with the Brewers ln 1970 and will probably be used primarily in the Halo bullpen. Voss told the DAILY PrLOT that being traded really isn't a letdown. ''I wouldn 't have played much with the Angels and you don 't make money 1lttlng on the bench. ' "Frank Lane of Milwaukee told me I'd probably be playing quite a bit so I guess that's rPaJly what's best for me ." Voss admits the Brewers are a young club and can't be considered pennant contenders for awhile. And he believes the Angels have the ta lent to be solid flag threats. The 2$.year-old outfielder says he bel ieves Ange l manager Harold "Lefy'' Phillips lost confidence in him early last year when he went into a hitting 6lump. "The manager has lo have confidence. When he gets the idea you're tired or can't play everyday it begins to affect you, too. "I think you have to have someone who'll say the job is yours for a year, Jet's see what you can do. You'll I in d that most of the top teams do very little platooning." It was Phillips who came to Voss' resrue in early 1969. Former lfalo manager Bill Rigney had shelved his young outfielder early but when Phillips took over he gave Voss a new chance. Bill came through as the club's No. 2 hitter with a .261 average. At the start of the 1970 campaign Voss was a demon at the plate. fn the season openers at Milwaukee he had five hits in eight times al bat and drove in six runs. Three of the hits were for extra bases . Jn his first ten games he had 1:1 runs . batted in and led the American League in hitting, averaging over .600. He wound up with a .243 average. playing in 80 of 162 games. "Lane told me on lhe lelephone thi:it he wondered why I didn ·t play more last year. I told him lhal pitchers got me out a couple days in a row - that was the reason." Voss says_ "Bul I guess there really isn't much lo complain about. l got tn play in my hometown end not man y guys get that chance." Listed Telephone l11vit es Problems, F an1ily Th1·eat A major league baseball player's wife told this column the rigors of having • a listed telephone number -an ti:- perience that was finally terminated when some sick 50UI called up and threatened the player's little boy . The gal, who asked not to be named, told or how the phone calls got out --------WHITE WASH ·-- eL•IU• WMITI of cbntrol, especially with people calling and' asking for free tickets to the game.s. "Kids call uylng they couJdn't afford lo !>Uy ticket.., or that It was • birthday, etc., a!'lking if my husband could help :-out. I "He dld leave tJckets for awhUe but , then these guys' friends would call. I recall oooe when I told a fellow we couldn't help, he called me namea. , "On 11oother Instance a man phoned, saying he was e:olng to Vietnam and ; · wouid like ticket.. for himself and family. ! 'nltn when I waa ewekened by the ~y i thre.tlf:nlng our little boy It really bigDlf:ned WI so we got the unlisted number." .... .... .... .R•m•' 'J'rade Foolbll? Mial's Wt ol Uie Rama, MW' lbt tltey've trHed away their srett lbtebac•· ~ Irie ol M115e 81abh111, J•ck Pardee alNI Myro1 Poulos'? The tl'IJ' .,...... Mte7'w ti.. tklt contender& the past few weasons ha11 been a great defensive emit, led by the tplt ndld front four and lboae standout linebackers. Now t It e J trade off (to Wa1blngton) the llnebaeker,. I always thought tMy 11boold trade the backHeld. Only tta101 behlod the swap this cor- nf'r sets 11 the age factor. BaaxfJan 11 31, Pardet 3l aod Pottlos M. Gradually pha1lq them nut Is one ttilng , . , but 11hoollng thtm 111 down Utt rapids In Utt 11mt c1noe doesn't seem logical. Bill Cole. longtimt coach at Santa Ana High School, died Wednuday while undergotng surgery. He was 71. He coached Santa Ana to • CIF fo6tball title and earlier had guided Tustin to a CIF basketball crown. Offlctah ot Davey's Lock« (Newport _., report • loo! ru ol llalht 1e .. 1y. Olle bolt had n 111~ r.r U ,..,._, ·~ the Uta.& rn1e from J...'1 pouda. The Harlem Globetrotten are: at Anaheim ConvenUon Center toolght (SJ with only general admiae:ion tickets left. They'll be II Ibo Forum Saturday (l p.m.) IJld Sunday (I p.m.). u.,.t c.J.m11wn, fatlltt of Ute _,.,...,... Ullllled Sdleol Dlltricl wpa I leCdelt, .... ef ca8C'ft' at 71. Mr. c-m.pa.. ... twme:rty • pltdMr -... n.tnk '"'"' end P111'1#et,Ma Plll H11 _. Met eerved aller Lelly O'Deol • IM 014 Su Diep "''"""' "-· YC>lllh (a.13) 1-.11 m1y come lo Laguna Heach. 'J'berl•1 an or1anlz.11tkmal mettlnR ol tile fP'O'ip' fonlChl (7,:IOI et lAIWI• High boyo IJ'l" wltll lnlemUJd Pfl"IO"I Invited to •ltend. with a knee Injury but still paased ror 1,015 yards Aod II tooehdowns. He also is a place kicker and punter who sparkled in post-season all-star play. The Bulfalo Bills, picking fourth, broke the quarterback string with the ·1tlectlon of swift J, ·o. Hill, a wide receiver from Arizona Stale. Richard Harris, a 265-pound tackle from Grambling, became the first defensive player piCked, going to the Philadelphia ·Eagles as the No. 5 selec- tion. The NV Jets tapped running back John Riggins, a 6·2, :25-pounder from Kansas. Riggins broke Gale Sayen' / career rushing mark at Kansas with 1 lhree-y.-ar total of 2,70& yards. The Atlanta Falcons, drafting seventh, selected Joe Profit, 1 2 0 8 -p o u n d , breakaway running back from Northeast l.A>uisiana. He wu a little All-American. Les Ang~lr,1 immediately goiJW f o r linebacking help to replace: the· departed trio of veterans ient to Washington used the Re<tskins' fll'fl 'choice to select rangy small college st a T Isaiah RobertS<lfl of Southern University. Robertaon; 6-3 and %20 pounds, runs the 40 yards In 4JI seconds and was. credited with 112 solo· tackles end five pass interceptlorui J33t season. The Chicago Seara, drafliDB No. ll, picked running back Joe Moore ot M.luourl, and Denver followed ~with the seltctlon of offensive tackle Marv Montgomery of USC. The PIU&bur!Jh Steelers selected wide receiver Frank Lewis of Grambling, thal school's second representat!Yt In the first round. Lewis , virtually IJllltoppable for the college division powerhouae-until slowed by a leg injufy ~t , season, still caught 25 passes for 411 yards and ~ght touchdowns. The :eackers, '"exercising an elevated pick ear'Dtd in the Denver trade, chose Ohio State running back John Broclc- lllgton. DAILY l'ILOT l'M .. I by l.M l'•Y• Tbt San Diego Chargers selected 2:28-- pound running back Leon Runu nf Long Beach State, a 28-year-old two-time Little All-American, who was rehabilitated after spending 4 ~ years in prison on an armed robbery r harge. Jn his two years at Long Beach, he carried 62.S times for 2,6V3 yards and 47 touchdowns. The Oakland Raiders picked Ohio State's brilliant cornerback Jack Tatum, n e Rama, making their second pick In the first round , sought lo plug the gap in their defensive line left by Talbert's departure by picking Jack Youngblood, 243-pound Florida defensive end. Rams Trade 3 Linebackers To Redskins WASHINGTON -The· Washingtan Redskins received the starting thl'ft! linebac kers of the Los Angeles ft.II.ms today in exchange for their first and third choices in today's draft, five un- disclosed picks next year, plus tight end Marlin McKeever. Jn addition to linebackers Myron Pot- tios, Jack Pardee and Maxie Baughan, the Redskins i:eceived from the Rams defensive tackle Diron Talbert. guard John Wilbur and running back Jeff Jordan plus a fiflh choice of the RalNI in today's draft. Redskins coach George Allen said the key to the trade. so far as the Redskins were concerned. was Talbert. "I think we got in Diron Talbert our first draft choice. He knows the system and we needed defensive linemen. He '4'ill set the pace. "He's one of the top lO linemen. If you follow the draft, you will see there is a scarcity of defensive linemen. Wa need someone who can help U9 now. None of this building. The defensive linemen in the draft are questionable." He said that in the t h re e veteran linebarkers . he gol the experience the Redskins need in that department. • NEW YORK -In another trade today, the Green Bey Packers 11ent quarterback Don Horn lo the Denver Broncos for Alden Roche. • WARM UP DRILLS -A porlion of the Mexico City contingent visiting Fountain Valley High School display their drills in preparation for the Five Coun· ties invitational 't\'restiing tourney Saturday. Coach Cesar Del Rio checks out the positions of {from left)· Cesar Regueira, Juan M. Flores and Fausto Rubio. LOS ANGELES -Los Angeles' Juha Widing slammed in a pair of goals early in the third perkld but Buffalo'• Gil Perrault came hack with one on a power play as the Kings and Sabres battled to a 3.3 National Hockey League 34 Mexicans End Bus Treff:, Await Action By ROGER CARLSON Ot 1"-Dally 1"1191 $!111 Fountain Valley High School looked little diffcrenl today than it has any 01her da y , . , except for a dusty blue bus parked in fr ont of the sleek new school. A dusty blue bus. But. it v.·asn 't just another bus transporting youngsters. This one had come from Mexiro City , br inging a touch of cultural exchange and JO Mexican ·wresllers for com petition in Orange County. Inside the Fountain Vallr.y wrestling room, were Raron coach Vern Wagner and a combination of hosts and visitors sparring. And despite the lack of total un· derstanding between boys because of the language barrier. there was total compatibility. Coordinator and coach Manuel Andrade and his group were 2,400 miles away from home (Mexico City ), but he and his contingent appeared at ease. His team was going through stef)!I necessary to acclimate it with ClF Southern Section rules, rather than the International standards il u s u a I I y performs under. But Andrade seemed unconcerned. ''We 're not so concerned with dil· fercnce in International wrestling as op. posed to the style here. Wrestling ls wrestling wherever you go. ''The big thing 111 the cultural exchange on a first-hand basis. Thia Is a chance to a~ to know one ano~ and to change some of the wrona imprtSSlon1 and op\nloM that many people may have. '"There are a lot of wrong ldus' formulated in both countries, founded on the antics ol 1 few. And tlUa !JI a way for students from thole countries to rind out for tbtmtelves rather than 1 to base opink>nt ,lb'k::tly on what Uwy hear or aay tbrouch rlKlio, tele:vlaba and the MWSPIPl"I•" H~ grappl... ..,,._nt Polltecbnlco, Unlv .. 11ly ud Ftd<tal Dlslrld bJP ochool1. and beotdel side lrlpe lo tile normal attractions availlble to vilitof'I !Disneyland, Se1 World, etc.) his group has been spread out during the day attending cl11.1ti at Fountain Valley. 1Ughlighta of the latter venture, of eoorac, art ln the Spanish cl.-., ac.- cordlnR IO Andr1de. Illa tllere U..t 111' visit.on find themselves authoritiel, I 1\tuatlon any teen11er woul re.IWI. Yanks Have More Power, • Says Mexican Mat Boss Usually when two groups of athletes from different parts of a nation. or foreign cc:npelition as is I.he ease al Fountain Valley High School. the firsl reaction or question that comes about is how does the home team or area stark up? Three high school wre stling \.cams from Mexico Citv are allending claSSC's, work ing out in ihe af!ernoon anti cnm· peting in the evenings in preparation for the Five Counties wrestling tourna· ment at Fountain Valley Saturday . Coordinator and coach Manual Andrade was quizzed about. how his team measures up wilh Soulhern Californ ia athletes: "America n wresllers have more power. We saw them last summer when we had 200 down for our tournament (The fifth annual Mexica n National College Wrestline: tourney, considered the best setup in Mexico by many ). "Some.thing else that hampers us is that physical education is not mandatory in Mexico. We lose a lot of prospect! that way. "Bul aLhletics in ~fcxicn is all free. irs npen fnr all the people. so each ye;ir it's gettinR better. "We don't have any Ind iv id u a I challengers to titles in the Five Counties tourney, but we do hope they all perform v•ell .'' Two who are given shale; at mak- ing the finals by Andrade are 98-pound Anibal PacheCQ and 136-pound Cesar Regueira . Pacheco Is 14. the latter 18 and both are from lhe Politechniro outfit. The best grappler under Andrade In hia six years of program building has been Enrique Jimenez. ~ lie Wednesday night. • CORVALLIS, Ore. -Sam Whitehead's 20·footer with one 8econd remaining In re3utation pla y Tuesday night gave Oregon State a tie w Ith Long Island and then the Beavers went on to down the New York club, 71-70, in overtime. JOH NSO N GETS OK TO LEA VE TARS Newport Harbor High School ls searching for a varsity football roach today following Ernie Johnson's release from the Newport-Mesa Sc hool District. rree ing him to accept the football coaching job at Cerritos College. A special board meeting Wednesday night resulted in a 4-1 -1 decision to grant Johnson an early contract release, effective Monday. "The 'main reason the board reversed Its earlier denial or contrart release h1 because it was reallied Cerritos woul l wait for Ernie even If he was obliged to fulfill his contract with the district,·· aaid Dr. William CuMingham, tht Newport-Mesa District -dlief. HOSPITALITY• iiOuNO •-·Pirt.:.,, ltl'~ico City!',.. delegation lo the Five Counties wrestling., wurney 'at 'Fountain Valley S1turday takes a short llq\lld 1 break. SllUn1 (from left) are Oscar·C•rden••, Mol·. sea Gonzalei, Ernuto Bernal end Marlo Ui.nal. Fountain V11ley coaclt Vern Wilner 1nd, MplclD coach Cel&l"DeLRlo '1re alro slandln&. . ' ' I . ' . . . . .. . ... If pA!LY "LOT Hu skies Upend Rustle1·s By CRAIG SHEFF Of "'o !Hlh ~1 .. 1 t1'11 A driving lay.in by East LA reserve gua rd R fl n Richards with two seconds re- maining gave lhe Huskies 11: M-ill victory nve r Golden West in a Southern C a li f o rn ia Conferenct basketball crucial on the winners' eourt Wed- nt<sday night. The loss was Golden West"s firlil in five circuit games and althou11h the RusUer-, re- mained io the No. I spot. two other teams (Cypress and LA Harbor) are no w just one gamt back. And the Rustlers have another tough lest f'riday ni11h1 when they visit LACC. The combination of a hot Eas1 LA shooting hand in the second half and some Golden West foul problems helpe d the Hu:r1kies lo their second wi n In fivt-circuit outings. East LA rired up 40 !-!hot!I In lhe second haU and 26 found lhe ra nge (GS percent). The Huskies fought back from an eight point hal ftime deficit (44-361 to battle Golden West righl down to the fin al bw:zer -11nd even after. The lead was either lied er !):Changed blinds on 13 dif- feri>nt occasinns in the: second half. . . Jo nes Engineers 56-55 Co1neha ck Again st Estancia By Gl.E"\N WHITE Of lilt 0.tlf ,t .. I il•tl Casey Jone1, namesake or the legendar)' r a i I r o a d engineer, en gineered a bit tif b.ask.etball legend Wednesday night •t Estanci a High as he led Corona del M.ar 's Sea Kings to a 56-M triumph over the stunned Eagle1. Jone6 , a slender sophomore, look an inbounds pass with four seconds lert then sent up a reverse 1hoi that swished the net with two seconds to go for the victory. Seconds before J o n e s ' memorable effort Corona de! Mar got a huge break when an errant pa ss hil an Estancia pla yer's foot and rol!ed l'IUl or bounds. still in possession of the invaders. From that out or bounds play came Jones' winning score. It was an incredible come· bac k for coach Tandy Gillis' Sea Kings who had trailed 30-ll at one juncture. Gillis said he has never seen anything like ii in hi s 20 years of playing and C<laching . ope ned and then reducin& tha margi n to 53-~2 with I: 13 left. However. Cr1ig Hays nailed a pair of free throws with S7 seconds lo play and the Sea Kings still looke d like losers. But. 24 seconds later Jones was connecting f!l n a pair of free throws to make it ~S4. Then F:stancia lost control of the ball v.·ith 19 second!! showin11 on the clock. A JUIDIJ ball was evt-ntually called in the scramble £or possession and Dtln Sumner won the lip, send ing it to Jones. The rest you know. Corona del M a r , In• cidentally. had twn start er~ foul out midway through the last qu.:i rter-one its high st·or~r for lhe: night. And a third regul11r had four fouls over his head. Orolll M"°t• l l!DtTIOI Cenlu IC•I•<• ~:;J T•l•I• C•••n• di! Mor !U ! ft tt ~ If ' ! ! 11 i j f 1; 1 e 1 ' l ! ! • '''I• • 11 J 111•11(11 11 ti fl If ~ f : ,, & • 1 ' ! 1 I I 11 11 n u Srtr. ,, Ou•r'll•I Cor""I OU M•r ' I 11 11-.U El!tnclt 14 If I 11-.11 Go lden West had a lhree-po~t edge <!7-Mt w;t h '''° __ H_A_N_K_M_OO_R_E_<3_3_1 _D_R_IV_E_S_T_H_RO_U_G_H_C_O_R_O_N_A_D_E_L_MA __ R_F_O_R_A_B_U_C_K_E_T_B_U_T_IS_A_L_SO_N_A_l_LE_D_F_O_R_A_N_O_F_FE_N_S_l_V_E_F_O_U_L_._ lefl when East LA hit five "I thought we had it lost when thal bad pass came," Gill is said afterward. Ac· counting for his lf~am "s amaz- ing comeback, he cited ag- gressive play as the primary spark-that and a 5 7 . I shooting percentage the last lwo quarters. Calendar point.! in 11 row in the next minute to lake an ~7 lead. The Rustlers' B r i a n Amhrozich. who had sat out almosl 11 minutes of the se- cond half with four fouls. then hit on ll driving lurn-.around jumper to knot the 11core up with 2: 15 to go. The Huskies then went into 1 semi-st.all until just 42 second! remained when 6-3 guard Sam Sullivan scored on a lay·i n. Ambrozich then followed with ;i short jumper 20 seconds later to set the atage for Richards' heroics. Rich.ards' winning goal ran the score lo 93-91, but !he clock was allowed lo run out Instead of being slopped . After the players were call- ed back onto the court and the clock reset at the 0:02 mark, East LA 's Kas Joane added a free throw on a t~hnlcal !nn a Ru st l er player) which 1,1•as ct1Jled just after Richards' shot. Thal of course was the clincher and with Easl LA Inboundi ng the ball there was no hOpe fnr the Rustlers. -·-·--~ ......... .,,.,.,..., ·-(••I- _..., w.n '"' •• ff •' ,. 11 ! 11 • • • ' " • • ' ' • • " " " • ""•·· l<•lftl!N: ~ ti 11 fl Gel-WHI 44. l!I JI LA U Fres hm en Do1ninate Bue Spuad \\'ilh only three lettermen returning. Orange C o a st Cn!lege's Lrack and Q~ld team will depend primarily on freshmen this season. B.=ick for coacb J i m 1-tclllwain are Ralph Dean. Tim Owens and Kevin Buller. Dean and Owens run the mid· dle distance eve nt.s while Buller ls a quarter-miler. Orange Coast will be hurl co11sJder1bly by the loss of Geor~ Barnell, the 1970 Pirate o{ the year In trick and Held. Barnett, an a 11 ·r o und performer. is eligible to com- pete this sprln11 but will plU up the 11port to concentrate on foolblll, 1ays Mc lllw1 ln. Toppin< the list of freshmen a.re Dare! Blood (Newport Hattior), Matt r , • 1 1 e y f.Mart111 ), Bill Van Note (Coron• dtl M1r !1 Da ve Lou· fell: (~Dela). Eric Frlested fee.ta Meu). Tom Richm•n ('Marini) and Dave Divis (Colla Mesa). 1m.,_cu ni-...11i 'nW!:f,. ..... 11--sldftO'bKll •• VCI n.n .. ,... ,~ c:.n '- .._ II...,. 11 a.ft Di.. Mt .. """ .... , ....... c ....... ,,.. ............. .,. (9111 4 ...... 1 Jlrt,, .,.,_ I-fl.,,_.' l'*""I ..... ..,. ...... ,'--9.a...Cfl ll:f l.,.. ,.ft., .... l,_.. llj'IM -· ,,, .. MlfUI ~ ... 1"""91 '"" Mlf'dl ......, Mt, .... APllOnll' ,11 .. ...,. ...... 11111 p-. Mffl• .,,.,._ ... t I • h C.I 11 .. Yt .. ~ . ..... ......,, 1 ............. ·~.,. ,,. .. """' ,._... °""" 1"'-1 ~ ........... AMWllt ••lf¥1 ..... ...... ........ c...i e- ..... .,.... "' .... Mllrlll ..... ,.,, ...... c...~- f!Mlt "' ..... ~ .......... ~ Clllt llttll,.. ti ·-Mt •• Ml., 11 llll'l'll'fl Ullfor1tl1 !If""' 11"1J 11 '911 Dll9 •• ,.. M.-r ~....... ttl""11fl 11,..tt •• 1111 o .... ill .• ~ • ., ,._., ... llM!t ., ~ • ....,. ... lall!I CMtl ~ .... ,~. HB Junior Tallies 31 In Victor)' By PHIL ROSS 01 1~1 Ot l!¥ '1111 Sllft Junior Steve Brooks tossed in a seasona l high of 31 poinl3 in leading the Huntington Beach Oilers lo an 82-56 Sunset U>ague basketball vie· tory over lhe Weste r n Pioneers Wednesda y night in the losers' gym. The win was the seventh loop triumph without ll loss for coach Elrner Combs' Oil City five and set up Frida y night"s titanic showdown with unbea1en Newport Harbor on the Tars' noor. Jn addition lo helping Hu n- tington rip the nets for a scorching $9.3 percentage (35 or 59 I from the noor, the 6-J Brooks assisted his partner in the Oilers· double post - 6-2 Wes Thomas -in doing bang up delensive job on !\.1ike Dunn, We stern "s superb 6-4 1~ .sophomore center. The Oiler duo pl.=iycd out of Hun tington's customary 1-2· 2 zone and sagged inside to sandwich in Dunn v.henever the Pioneers attempted 10 pa ss lo 1heir soph s1ar. Brooks made 14 nf his pt>inl production in the third period when Western had rnr lted a seemingly comfy 16-point Oller spread to nine al 48-39. The ;winners thr.n pushed through. nine straight markers In ttie neX1 1:39 and \vere suddenly silting atop a l&.poinl edge again 157-41 ) with Jess than two minutes to go in the third quarter. Huntington left no doubt about the outcome in the ln~I 3'h minutes of the contest by scoring 13 of the game's flnal 15 points. Combs kept his squad on Its toes even into the final going by yelling various forms of encour1gement. In fact. the amiable mentor didn't ·relax on the bench until the last minute or so of the tiff. While Brooks accomplished the brunt or his offensive fireworks mostly from about 10-12 feet away. Thomas (19) was a dt.adeye from the cor· ner • ahd 6-2 J im Worthy (14) tf.r1oi lied the ptoneers un· d~lh. ttUfiUqton enjoyed a 38-23 14vantq:e on the boa rds with Brooks , grabbing 15 a n d TbMna1 •l d'. Duo~ R•ced I.he ICOrlng for Wtttmi (M ) with 11 polots. E · E . lll1I• Tars Set Vp Showdown Tho1np son Tops JC Scorin g Estancia seemed to have the game under control from ear- ly in the first quarter. Classy shooting and sure rebounding had coach Gary Carr"s ch aps in l!I 33-18 halftime lead. Tt1>i1M B•1Xolt>al! -UC ltvl1>• •I LDllllll ftl 51•1• H<l•w Orletnt l. W•••llln• -CO•OOI• det ,...., ,, M•vnot;•, E1t••cl1 or 5A Vt llw, M••lllt "' Hunrlngtao B••cll, Wt •tern .,1 N•wPor!, LO••• e! We1lrnln1l"-f' loll •I 11. Tu1!ln t i St n Ct1rn•"I•. IC0Plll1 ti Mlnl1>11 Vl1lo ltMllfl 11 l ;!ll. L.-cc .i Galdon W••I O:JOI. By Downing Lions, 68-61 Bu t the n came the reversal as Esta ncia see med In be trying to hold its lead instead of widening it. The Eagles look four shots In the third period and only seven in the last as they apparentl y left their moment um in the clress- in.11: room at the h.:ilF. l'rkltv 81s~!l~•ll -lolunllnvtan B .. cll •t N•WPCt1, M8rl"• •I Wrolmlt'I!••· C:orcn• dol Mor •I s.-V•lltv. Coll• M••• •I Mogr.o!la, E<lllon ot Eotu lclf , Founl•ln V•ll•Y ., LOI .-1.rnltoo. Volt <>tll t t L•Quno ll•t <ll. MIHl!lfl Vielo of Or•nv~. So" C!1rnont• •I Viii• P•r~. M1, (o•rn~• "' Un!veroll., •• Misslon Vl•lo. St. Anll!O!lv •I ,....,., Ot\, Gold•" we,1 o• LACC (111 ti I I. By ROGER CARLSON 0t IM D•lt'I ~Ult 11111 Newport Harbor High 's ex· plos ive Sailors fizzled for a hair. then detonated for a come-from-behind 68-61 Sunset Le•gue basketball v I c to r y Wednesda y nJ1ht over visiting Westminster te keep pact wllb co-leader Huntington Bfach. Thus roach Dale Hagey ·s Bluejackets set themselves up for their most crucial test of lhe year when they host Huntingto n's Oilers Friday in an issue tha l will provide the Sunset loop with a single leader for lhe first time this: Y ikes Fla tte11 Sain ts 111 72-3 8 Runuiv c1 y By HOWARO (,, HANDY ~1 arina·s paper Vikings have complclcd the first h.=ilf of the Sunset League season and instead of reigning with a crov.'n as prCdicted. ate pastinR the shreds together preparing for a second half surge . On paper, the Vikings v.•ere: prcsl'ason fa\"orites to cop the Sunset lA"ague g o n f o I o n , Jnst rt1d. they \\'ill be hard prcssrrl lo J!ain a tic for lhe lop spot -or for that matter. the runnerup position in the final standings. 'l'hr ~·1kinR shi11 sai!erl over the troubled water~ nf lhc San- ta An.=i Ht,:!h.Sa ints \Vcdnesd:iy night t0 pos1 its fifth ,·ictory against two defeats In league 11tay, 72-38, on the losers' court. 1-llinlington Bea ch a nd Newport Harbor ca ln1ly closed 11ut thr wei rd first half of the ca111paign with undeft11ted , 7-0 records. two ·full games in front of the Vikings. A quirk in the schedule. however, brings the Oilers and 'llars face-to-face on lv.·o OC· casions in the second half or the league. To further brighten the hopes of coach Jim Stephens' crew, the Vikings get both leaders at home in lhe second half \Vhile Marina held 1hr lrad throughou1 Wednesday nigh!. lhe second half was a rou!· marred. slow·moving affair with 45 infractions called du !"· ing the game -32 in the second half and at least 15 in the final 60 seconds. Stephens kept center Kipp Rilird on the bench for •he !irst quarter and half of the sro:ind and starting gu.=ird Andy Thurm didn't p I a .v bt'rause nf the flu. \Vhe n Bairrl did i:::et into the action. he sco red 15 ?(lints in ihe second hal f and 17 for !he game fnr hif:h point honors \rith teammates Arian Sanders and Bruce r-.1iller each hitting 16. Morin• '"' " " " .. !'>~no'" ' ' ' " D•n• ' • ' • l\ooo•n ' • I " Mlllu t " ro~~~~~~. ' ' • ' • ' a••ro I ! ' " twOIOI ' • Srnll~ ' ' ' • 8•d<lw1~I • • ' • lot•l1 " " " n S•ftf• A~• UI ! " " • .. "'·~·~ ' ' • " l r>l>tn•• l • ' • ll/OWft ' ' ' N•oMr ' I j ! 1-i• .. •ll • F..,..,, • • 8'/t ro ' ' l ' wo:i:v ' ! • • • pl;?.'"' • • ' • A " ' ' ' ' 11•1• l ttn '"' Olla~ " " • t ••lftl "'• ..... 1~ I~ n if=.li Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: "ftMAIN Of'flCl:tth & HIU, l o&Ang•ln • 623-1351 WILI HIRl M GftAMI RCY PU.01::3933 Wlllhlrt BIYd., LA • 311-1295 LA. CMC CIHTIR! 2nd & Bro1dw1y • 825-1102 •HUNTINGTON 11!.ACH: 11 Huntington Ctnitr . ' (714) 917·1047 SANTA AHA LOAN ll"YICI AGlNCY1 1905 N. Ml.In ft.• (714) 547-9257 •MHTA 11fOMtcA: 718 Wl lthl1'9 BIYd. •313-0746 *IAN PIDlllO: 10th & P•cllk: • 831·2341 •WllTCOVINA: Eu tlend Shopping Ctr.• 331 •2201 •PANOftAllACrrY: NHS Van Nuy1Blvd.•812--1171 *TMZANA: 11711 V•nlu ta Bouttv1rd • ~14 *LONCI llACHi3rd l LocOO • 437·7411 *°"'So""""-1"'~1,. DOl~Houn-hato4,. ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION year. lt wa s the eighth straight victory for the Sa ilors. reled fourth in Orange County. Hag~y ·s side look the lead for the first time with 6:01 left in the th ird quarter and once :t got the upper hand, Westminster v.•as unable to recover. Newport's Larry Gcnlosi look a pa ss from John Kazmer underneath to score the bucket that ga ve the Tars a 3&-35 lead : hut the score was tied three l i n1 es im mediately following heforc Kaz mer tank- er! a burkct to make it 44-42. Westminster couldn "t make up lhe defici t .=ind wfcn 6·8 E:ric Snulhwick lcfl lhc game on personal fouls with 3:20 \n RO ii gave Newport a better opportunity to penetrate the Li ons' defensive inlerinr. Coach l)on Le a \•ey 's \Vcsl minster quintet managed one l a.~L izasp, narrowing the rount 10 57-55 .,..·1th 5:07 left. hu! ,.oung popped in four of his 14 ;it 1hat point and the Sililor~ 1\Crc hon1c frf'C Ne1\•porl had opened .=i rtion with an atrociou.~ shooting cl i~play. m:inaJ;:ing only twn or 21 ~hots fro m 1he Field in 1he First qurirtcr. nu1 tl1e nulsidc firev.·ork~ {lf K;n.n1cr and Taras Youni;i. alnni;i: v.•ith sonie corner shots b" Gcnr ns1 .. •dow lv turned the hdP in lhe SC('Ond.half The v.•1n11rrs nctlrrl 2~ or 71 in all fron1 1he fiel rl for 4 0 .8 p crren\ v.·hil e \Vestmins1cr WAS collecting on 22 of 56 for 39.3 percent. N""" Nor....-/"' ' 11 .i 1f Gt"lotl 1-iOI! Z.'~".n~"'" ~.,,.,., $wl(~ J~•l1 Wt•trnono!•t (II) l D 4 10 . ' . s j l 11 o a 1 o 10 l • 1' l j $ 1 -ri ,g ,f J ft It ... I• i ' ' • J 1 1J . I ... • S lD l I ~ : 1J l u 11 Golden \Ve sl College:·.~ Chris Thompson continues lo lead lhe area junior colleges in scoring. according to the latest basketball statistics compiled by the DA I LY PILOT. Thompson, a sophomore. has scored 467 points in the Rustler~· 21 games for .a 22.2 average. Teammate Brian Ambrozich has a W.6 average, canning 432 poin!5 . Saddleba c k ·~ Eric Chris1ensen holds down the No. 3 posil ion with 348 poinl~ and an 18.3 a\'e rage in !he Gauchos' 19 games. Top scorer for Orange Coasl is S!evc Mcl.endon wit h 29$ poinls ( 14.8 \. The fourth leading scnrer in the area is Golden West's Jin1 Anderson. The former Rancho Alllm itos High product is hitting at a 17.0 clip per geme with 375 points. G•lOon W11t (11-J) • " " " 1¥0. <"""' n..,..,.,1.,n " "' "' .., "' ' ""'b'Pl•Ch " '" • "' "' J im ,Ind•'"'" " •• " "' ". Mt<O. Do~._., " "' • '" '" lllt~ l!l••n., " .. " "' .. J iil """""" " " .. '" " Cu•t Ct<tt<>'I .. ,. ' " " C•,.ln G'""""' .. " " " " Ku r! ll•Own " " " " J.,. C•""m " " " " ll >eO. M•nn " • " " M•I 1>1•'1 • ' " " M.--w~:"'•'d ' ' • • .. l\iU 1o<1,,•I • ' " O•••" " " r<t!•'• " '" ~I o I 9/1 ... i •ddl1b••-11·10 • " " " l vt . ' t~·;.1 ... ,." " '" " "' 11.J S""•'-M1n•nn " "' • '" u,, Tam G••nn•• .. .. " "' ". l>Otl Hln~•"0" " " .. •• " 8e~ l 111•¥ " .. .. ·~ " lllt~ Eow••dl " " ,. " .. G. Dorne<11cnlni " .. • " '·' O!~rro , , .. l ot111 " ... '" 11'111 ". Ot1n11 Co-st U·11 f • " " " 1¥1, St1vo M(L~'1tlon " >M " "' l•.I Tim Cenroy " '" " "' 11.• C•rl1 l•c~rr " • • "' .. l ••"' Go•wlUu • " " '" ,. P•ul Holrn•• " • .. '" ••• l " Wlllltl .. " " "' .. !loll "'""" .. • • '" .. 0..1"1 Dlllle " • • • ... """~ (1!1 " " " • ... Sr<!vt ~tlbY " ' • " ... ou,.,~ " " " lot•lt " "' )(15 lll1 H .D Meanwhile Gorona del Mar was slicing the gap. trailing by six when the last frame Wto11t1nv -Founl•in Vtllt~ 11 CDl!I M•11 !I I, E<ll\On .I! l M .. ltrnl~ P l, S•n•• •.no •I 0••'11• CN 1t !l:)(ll. Swf"1"l1"1 -UC ~111!0 8•r"H•f at ui: 1,...1no n ·u). K eyes & Co., Blast Costa Mesa, 81-60 By RON EVANS Of l~o Diii¥ ,! .. I 11•11 Massive Jim K ey es , operating like a machine in- side and a. devastating full c!'lurt press. spearheaded by quick guards Kermit Olson and Joe L<lpez , fue led fired up Santa Ana Valley to an 81-60 decision over mistake· ridden Costa ri.1esa in an Irvi ne League basket ball con- test Wech1esday evening. Keyt-s . a burly 6-6 center, almost scored at .,..·111 against the smaller t.tustan~~-'fhe Falcon star. the leading point makrr in the Irvine Lea11:ue, endt'd the gamt' with ~7 points. !\eyes co nnected nn 1.1 of 18 field goal attempts and :idded nine of 14 free throw1' in his awesome performa nce on the Mustang flMr. In arld1t1on tn his offensive prowess, KeyC's w.=is also a tower or strength on the boards. Hr pull ed down a geme high of 17 rebounds and cornpletely eliminated t he SCC<lnd shol for lhe Mu.qlangs. As Important as Keyes w11s for Santa Ana Valley, not enough can be said for the play of Olson and Lopez. The duo har&S!led the Mustangs all ni1ht in the Falcons' man- to-man press that forced Costa Mesa Into 24 turnover!! . Besides forcing the Mu.slangs Into numerous mistakes. the Falcons pressing defense made Costa Mesa t.o hurry its shot selection. And hy hurryinp; against the Falco ns' hawking press the Mustangs played rig ht inlo the hands of Keyes & Co. Against the pressure C-Ost1 Mesa found the range on onl y 19 of 68 attempts. That averages out to a percenli\ge of 32.8. Not many games a re "'On v.·1 !h that kind of shooting percentage . especia lly with a mRn like Keyes operating on the other end of th~ fl oor . Santa Ana Valley's ~hool inr percentage 'A'as much l>Ptter v.·ith a mark of 44.9. The bl~ rliffercnce was when the ralcons missed. K~yt-s wa s usually around to pick off the rebound. Anrl the bi.It'. guy rarely misses :is the Mustangs sadly round fl ut. l~om•• ~.v~:""" or • .,., LllO•I F Yoo"~ l'o"t • Bain"'"' 1-1 •11 '!~~rr~ ,., .......... litll Tollll •n~" 8t•OQ .. M1tc~IO,l11t! """' lt•tn 8o•or To1•1i Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highf3st Prevailing Rates: @k I ' ' . -lnr•le Qub COMPOUNDED DAILY AND PAID QUAR'TIRLY.• 5.00"le-5.13% PnlbOOk; No Minimum. 5.25 o/o .5,39 "le With a $2,500 bel1nce Jn your 11vlnge 1ccount, you ar1 1llgible to become a member. Sub1hlnlla l savlng1 ire av1ll1bl1when purchasing m1ny Items Including automobll11, fumlture. appliances, Jewelry. Plus many ''" 11rvicn -mon.y order9, aaf1 deposit bOXMt t ie. ThrM Month Certtncalti; No Minimum. 5.75 '1°-5.920/• On• Y•r Ctrtlftcate; 11,000 Minimum • 6.00"le -6.18"- lwo-Y11rCertltlc&te; '5,000 Minimum • • Eflttt/v9 Mnuat f •rttfnga f . --~---~--. COAST , AND sourHE~N reoERAL sAv1ru Gs I ----:-;---+ ---:vi------' • INSURANCE TO $20,000 Start Yorn· Engi11e s! by Deke Hou/gate ... '4-·--' tlili7!!I. ->i.<"(,, ~ .. - You 're a golfer. l·lo1v \\'nu)d .vou like your loca l government I? rn<ike g.olf illegal? You're a parenl. Mow would you like your c1ly counci l to tell you )'Our children cun'l play ball in your O\\•n front yard'.' La1vs p<irullrl lo lhl·se are heing passed indiscriminately ai,:::iinst on<' 111!!liu11 r,r mnre C;~lilr•rnia motorcycle enthusiasts. ti lore. than 95 pel'{"c·nl "! tht· <tl'llilab!e dirt riding acreage avail- able in fuur Southern Lnhfr.r111a f...'Oln1l1!!.<; ha!: been closed in the last 12 months, Ttus sort of lhin~ 1s fa st !:iccomin g a national trenrl. C~uck <.'.l<iytun. p11hlishrr of the 11eekl.v Cycle News. bo ldl y headhnes the story Crisis in Uu.• 0.1)'1. To the. ov•ners of L7 mil- lion motorcy('lc'\ in California , 1l c.:erlainlv is at least that. To many it is a ca~<1strophe. · !\lotorcycling people and con.'icrvalionists 1\•ho are their most vocal enemies are working up lo a showdown that could h;1ve 1mporlant constilullnnal and cultural consequences. Out of the ir current dl'halc should come an ans1~cr to the question they pose: "\Vho hav e more rights. hun1ans in pursu it of recreation or !hr fragile fl or<i and f:iun:1 of our l'nVironn1enr ~" l:.'l0f.)f(1!1i."it."i Get l~i1· ... t Lit•l..:s The ecolog isll> got in !heir first licks in a series of lrgal maneuvers in 1970 that included enacln1e11 t of Californh1 state laws. count y and cit}' ordinan1·es or dubious Constitutionality. JTEJ\7: Los Aogell's County su~r visors made illegal any off-n1ad motorcycling on undeveloped land in its jurisdiction. rollowin ~ this lead . ()range. S:in Bernardino and Riverside County lcgislath·e bodies passed ~imilar ordinances. . JT E:\I : In Kern County, '"'hrre riders for years had enjoyed ase. or Bean CHnyon. surrounding: property owners pressured law enforcement officials lnltt citing cyclists '"'ho croSHed their land. 1\1ore than 100 prosecutions for trespassing are still pend· ing. Some officials C<1nllde that !hey hope none of the cases will ever ~o lo lria l. JTE1\·I; A rider near Ne\\hall reported discovery or a serie:1 nf deadly booby traps nlont:: a punular cycle path-invisible '"'ires stretched across the trail taut enough lo behead an un· \\arv victin1. ·i \'obody. of course. hl an1f's thi~ on conservationists. Tl hacl lo br the 'K'Ork of so1Tir sick person. I 1\1(1 ltloto1·t·~1,·l1•s Si!I'' 1•t1ste1I ITEJ\1 : Good San1aritan niotorcycle club members cleaned 0111. a hnx canvnn ne;•r Lanc;1stcr.' As the final truckload of lilt.er left there b,v thougl1\!css can1rers was being carted _off, there was Ilic pro perty ov.·ncr. nailing up a no motorcycles sign. !TE~1 : In Riverside a U.S. Burea u or Land Management offi cia l issued a statement U1at riders are s1ill "'elcome on pub- lic land in his jurisdiction (Sri n Rernar11ino and Riverside coun· lies\. He snid county ordinances couldn't be enforced on teclcral laTi d. lie alsn cau1 innf'Cl lha1 riders n1usl respect the rights of others. ir>cludin~ a11in1a l Hnd pl ant life. !TF::\1: At Pt . l\1ui;u. con.~crv;i(ioni$1s are fighting eslablish- me111 of a fcncl'd·in cvcle rccrcatif!n area on ecology grounds. ITf.f\I : In Anaheim a Pi1v nrdinnntc 1vas pa!:Sf'd to forbid r\'cn 1he ridin~ nf 11 rnin1h1ke on the pn1perty of its owner \\1lth- nut rolice and fire clcparl1nenl pcrrnii.si'1n and a permit issued at citl' hall "Like nl<ln)' flf these laws." rt·porrcrl Lo1nita llonda dealer Tnm Co~grnv(', "ii 1.~ unr11fflrrcabl1~. \Vhen I Jived in Anaheim J 1Yant ecl to try IQ furcc !he 1ssuc . but my Ja\\'yer advised mr not tn "II!' sciid hC' doubted that a rolicrman l\'Ould come out and 'l'rite inc a lickel. even it I called up and requested iL And if J got cited. my 1'1\\'!-C'r said , the case wnuld get thro.,.,.n nut of court before I could get lhe lall' tested. I \\'as just gning to wJste my ti n1c.'' Rest r·ief i1;11 s C:11I l <•1f IJ 11 r•ca~1>11nf1I P Fif!h l in~ a srnse or rrustration. thf' molorcycle people ha\·e spent 1nuch {Ir 1970 tryinr? in ge t organized, both to lobby for re· pe11 I nf \\'hat thl'y C'onsider uofair la\\'S aod to present their argume nts against fu ture unreasonable restrictions. Cosl!'rO\'l' i~ onf' of lhe lenders nl thl' nr~anizing mo\'f', being !he head of th e nC'W l\lnlorcyelc Co uncil IJf California 11nd aclive in lhe nalional\y or~anizctl J\lnl ore~1cle Ind ustry Counril. "l.a"·s are ber11111 inc: muddier!." Cosl!'rove 5aid. "Some of the polir e are gcllin:?: furi ous hrrause many or the new laws are unenforceahle. and lhe}' pul the police officer in a bind. "To be~in ,\·ith. \1'hJt's ii polirrman In do if he catches me ri1Jin!?' snme\\·herf'. anrl I prnduf'e a pirt'e nf paprr th at says I hH1c pf'rmi ss io n lo he lherf'. llo\\·'s he check me nut? !l's a Int of lrnuhlr. "Anot her lh ini: 15 thAI i;:ootl ridf'rS c;i n'I he caught. There·~ ft new sport around hf'rt'. A nu1nbf'r of the good molo"'('ros~ ridfr~ '"ho co n11)(!te at Ast·ot have a game they pl11y. Th ey f'all !he sheriH's office ;ind lell lhcn1 that lhf} arr _goin~ rirlin_g at the ~ll)ugh at Sepuh·rda Hild \\'i1 minc:tno. \\'hrn the sheriff's depulif'~ _gel !hrrr . thf'y ran'! r:1lr h <ln~·bod~·· "Things like that rf'a ll y pol lhr police do11•11 . and thJt'~ not ~ood.·· (11scr01'(' brl1cvro.; !h:i l :i lfll. of npposilinn In orf·rnacl riding ls crratrl1 r•ut nr a lrirk (If undrr!'tri nd ing or the snort . ''\Vhen pcnple lalk ahn111 ITIO!f)rcycling. lhr.v think in gen- eral lcnns. ·• Cosgro1'(' s~irl. "I !'an tl'll betaust. of the l)'pt' or cus!nmcrs I have thut the lawmakers don 't hav e the right pic ture. ··one rider is a kid 1\•hn h.is a minibike. All he ca res lo do fs ride around on a vacant Int in the neighborhood. Another calls himsel r a tr.'.lilridcr. but all hl' really \\'ants lo do is jusl ride <1rnund the campsile. One couple I kno1v has a pair of Trail 90s, anri thev 're rock hounds. All !hey use their bi kes for is to ride around ·l(lf)kin~ for r(l('ks. "Another type. or tra il rider likes l.o e)(plore !rails. He'll ride out to the end of an olri trail just to sec 11·hars at the other end. "The real <Tnss C-Ountr;v rider likes to go from Bars\ow lo J"'ls Vegas. and the lc~islators base niost of their objections to dirt ridin~ on this small group. They talk about closing off the desert to the rider. If they do. I say lel's close off lhe desert lo everybody. Knievel Set For 011tario ONTA RIO -Evel Knievel, king or the world's motorcycle stuntm<'n. will attempt a world record-setting ju m p nver HI aootmoblles at Ontario i\fotor Speedway on Feb. 28 , it was announced lod<iy by Dav id B. Lockton, p~1dent of the speedway . Knievel's jump will performed 3n hour prjor lo lhe 11 a.m. start of the Miller High l..ife 500 chrunp\onshlp •lock car roce over the 2Y:t· mile O.M.S. ovel. The Mon1an11 11aredev\I will be attempting In break hi!! own reco rd lc;ip of 18 cars sf't la.~t yrar In Se11t!le. He ha~ tx>~o succc11.11:ful in three. rilhcr a1tcn1pt.~ 111 18 cars and thi! \\'ill l?t hi~ r!r-51 try ever fn r 111. Drags Attract Stars POMONA -Old faces and new o&rs .lire expected to don1inate the t Ith annual Winternalionels drag racing championships Feb. 5--7 al the L os Angele s Cou nty f'airgrounds. Dozens of new machmes, rnost of them prepared for veteran co1n petltors in the popular Top Fuel, Top Gas, Funny Car and Pro Stock categories are among the list of nearly SOO entries recorded by the National Hot Rod Asso<;ation iii preparation for the $270,000 classic. -· I "• •1 •I ",. '' .... ,., DAILV PILOT 15 Ott tlle Sl,epes No Blown Snow This Time Ai·ound By ESTHER BILLINGS Of .... O.llY l'llft ..... One consolalion about skii ng coodltions such u we've been having, tht snow wJJt not blow away. Surface.s ca n beat be described as "hardpack," with "heavy" the midday altemate a.s the snow la softened. The reasons are the warm weather we've had day!!, caus- ing the snow lo melt and setUe:, followed by cold nigh ts, causing the snow to rreeze up. Except for snowmaking areas such as Holiday Hill , Rebe l Ridge, and Snow Su m· mil. these conditions will generally prevail until we have new soow. about the lechnique! of tour· ing. One doe.!! not nt:ed !he !pecializtd tou ring equipmenl Nordic skiers u.st. in all 111- stances, bul it is best lo have bindings which can be adapted lo the sport, unless primarily gcMng downhill. Andy wears a titarker cablr with a "clou." Wh en the cable is disengaged from the rear gu ides, the boot heel can move up and dowR in the cable. According lo NflRA officials, many of the new cars reflect some radic al de signs inclµding trends tov,rarn rear engine fuel dragi.1crs and twin-engine gas dragstcrs. One in particular, th e brainchild of Ray and Larry Bright , incorporates the twin· engine theory in a fuel dragst<'r, one of the first of ii s kind to appear on lhe drag strip. CHAMPIONSHIP FORM -Founlain Valley High heavyweight Bob Walker (righl) displays the form that has helped him to an 18·0 record t his year . The 233· pounder has 14 pins and four forfeit wins to his credit. He'll be in action Satur- day at the 1' .. ive Counties Invitational meet at Fountain Valley. Nonetheless. many of our local ski areas ha ve complete e-0verage and plenty of sno\\'. Spring-type "coMt'' snow can be found along w it h "hardpack" and "heavy." When re-engaged, the skier can move from Nordic, or cross-country, back lo Alplnc. or downhill, skiing. Marker also makes a "sleckbacken '' at the same price as the clou and a cheaper "budget tour." To wear the bindings, drag out that pair of nice . com- fortable lace boots 110 one wanted lo buy at the last ski swap. They're fine for touring. lnnexi ble p I a~ I i c boots would never do -again. unless primarily go i n i; downhi ll . The Bright Boys, father and son frorn El Segundo, are rely· ing upon two injeeted Chevy engines with a total displace· menl of 618 cubi c-inches to po11t•er the 1500 pound ma chine which son La rry will pilot in the NHRA \Vintemationals. In early tests. the radical ne w machine was clocked in I he low seven-second bracket and veteran obscr\•ers claimed the car ''launched '' harder titan an y other car they had seen. At least. four rear-'€ngine fuelers will be in action at Pomona. including the hi ghly· touted creation of fQrmer win· ner Don Garlits. whose su b-- six-second runs with the new car recently startled the drag racing fraternity. 111 the F'unny car ranks. world rhamp\on Gene Sno\v (1f Ft. \Vorlh. Texas \\•ill unveil l\\'O new cars, one of several that will debut al the \Vin- lf'rnationals, while w o r Id chan1pion Pro Stoc k driver Ronnie Sox is slated lo pilot lhr latest ve rsion of Sox & J\1 artin Plymouth wizardry. Other veterans such as Don Prudhomme. defending Top Fuel Cham pion Larry Dixon, runne rup Tony Nancy and p opula r .Jnhn Weihe nieanwhile will rely on the popular herni -Chrysler (or Plymouth) for power. utilizing the "convent i'onal" sling-'Shot dragste.r set-up . The rich event will include continued qualifying pl us class clirninations oo S al u r d a y , followed by Eliminator final.!! on Sunday, \\'hen Win· ternationals crowns in all eight categories featu red by RHRA this year will be dccid· ed. Area Prep • Basl{etball Result s Junior V•r1i1• !Il l 1141 M, .. ,.,,, Vl•l• ""Thill Li111t 1111 Va1t (tmP (•l V.'el•""n• ( 17) St•tfy n;n F Ull Normand•n F il) C•ol•Jrtn ( \111 Wi'•~n..,n (. 161 9,,.nnen Melen 011 G l\6J L.ac~·• Stll'ring sub'' Foo1n•ll-Scol1, (\/11•n H~llt>m• Foo1n111 71 . Minion Vlelo ~-COM (~•) (O f l!H•n<:ll Carl""" 191 F 19) lmne' GriQ•bV (ll F 11<1 Fero Warl<ln lllt ( (JI ll•own Lowore• llOl G Ill Conte• COl'•OY (Sl G 171 Ranou!llo CaM 1ub· Slew•rl (5\. E1!1ncla fub: McGre11or !11. H6U!lm~; U-lt, Hunrln91on !U J !H l w111er11 Gorl~"d i•I F (761 So•'"' Ax•!w:>" 191 F ll) S1"1d~;· Ciar~lll (1!) ( fl!> At>l><>tt ClllT\ 11) G 1•1 Kr11c• Dfl'"lt r !l\ G l•l O~Plll'f kOt"•nQ wb" 1<11M•n;1on Bt•c~ - BO<Kh"r 1 Halnimt · W~'"'" 7'.1.19 Wes1min1!1< (JI) (41 ) NewPorl H•rbor Al~'1 II~ f 16) l ••:.O•' Co•• 11•) F !11 Sor~n Swlnw•c• 101 ( Ill Htlv•• H~"" COi t; ti•) JOl\nw:on Wnl!t 0) G nti BO"Wmln Su1tlnQ sub~ Ntwl>Of l-l uc\l'f " Tft01>1o>on 1. Wt•lmin>'••-WilVI •. Coo~.11 '· H~U!<ml' "IPWOOr! 11. We!minl!pr 70 Ma rina lH I fllt s ... r • .r.~1 ~~'' !II F Ul ""'""'" Ford lll r (Ill Tfler Sw1n1on (I\ ( (4) Kl!n;inbe1; Adam• 1lll (; !?l Zo•at• llo••I<'• !lll V 161 1-1111n S(o•i,.,., >ut>• Mer;01-S""k' •, Han'~" I, H•llM ~' 5,....lb• l. Woll• • $•"'~ Ano-TollO!.,,,, I Ho lflimto M .... 1,... lC·•l. So~nom0<1 N1w,.r1 Hlrbor {JI) (+4) W111trn .M~ml<11 l!I F Ill) Cos•ov 5Gm<!r> 111 F l•I Wl!w:on Hofrnft$ 10 C 1101 Gull:>ord Coko1 Ill c IJl Prl.i>•'>• l ouolpr IC! G !II) it.I••• Scoring 111b• N~wno•• He•l:>ot-We>;>O ~=~~I '\ ... 1,,.,,.,. 11. w111•c• J. L•nv l, H.>l!fjme: P<•Wl>Od 1J, wooorn 1J l!:dl'<On (II) !HI M11n11!~ ~lhOrr (I.II F i111 ~ell!•• Whl!t !II) f ()1! KlnOr~ F?r~ l~I ( (0 H•US(f Zorbd (lll G rn l indqul" Wil'>Oll J;j) r. Pl Brown Scorlno Jub•· Edl.,..._Mlll, 11. Mer· nonde• 6. M.crn<>ll•-~+ '· Hotl!imt €d1Jon ~70. EdlW>n (19) OU (Mii M1•1 ~(!>Orr ClO) F t•> Z•t<nl'°"~~' W"i•• 181 r !11 Sw•ln Mi/11 {11) C <JI Gollnld' llrbf-1 !71'> (; ()) V1lt<1lln< w.r,,.,., c7oi v OJI D••"'•' S<:o•inv sub• E<!';1o.>--l'ord I. '1••· noroo.l 6. w;...,o~•go• l, l'11Jtt 1 (°'lo M••"-M!rro•! 6. Qu1n•iv•11 I, l'tJ! l. $mitn l. Lift Jines should be short as another incentive for the Unbeate11 FV Star weekend . for much of the skiing public has switched temporarily lo beach attire. Epito1nizes Mat Skills Hardpack conditions extend to Mammoth ~1ountain and June Mountain, where weather has been l>eaut iful and clear. As a matter of fact. it is Besides a backpack nr ltnapsack and proper clothinr. all else you might really need 011 a short guided toor Is ;1 pair ot inexpensivt cloth "seal skins" for uphill walking. By ROGER CARLSON 01 !fl• D•llY l'llel $1•11 Fountain Valley H i g h 's undefeated h ea v y we i g h I '"Testier Bob \Valker s t rode to lhe 1niddle of the n1aL facing a ru gged adversary in C-Osta Mesa ~Iigh's JirTI r-.1i ller in the finals or th e Orange Coast Invitational tourney. Fierce determination and concentration was evident as the two glared at each other in the moments prior to battle. It wa s ren1in iscent of a movie scene pitting 11 pair of gladiator5 in mortal com- bat. "This is it, concentration. Psyching up for you r matches plays a big rote . It's like when you go to 111ar. everybody's scared to death. You have lo be mentally prepared," says Foun tain Valley coach Vern \Vagner. "And Bob is a living example or what we try to teach here. H{!'s mentally read}'. and ht' uses his skills lo his best advanlage," adc15 Wagner. His 233-pounder is one of the Favo rites to cop a Five Counties Invitational t i t I e Mater Dei Tou1·n ey Set An 18-hole gulf tourney, complete \\'ith trophies, prizes and a deluxe dinner following. is on tap Tuesday at r-.1esa Verde Country Club in Costa ~1esa. The event is sponsored by l\later Dei High Sch0ol and donations of $16.50 inrtudr alt costs. Shotgu n is slated tenta11vely for noon . Saturday. perfect weather for !:Id tour- Currently W a I k er is 18-{), ing, where one expects to pick 'Y.'hich includes 14 pins and hi!i way and dawdl e as he four forfeits. He's not been observes the wilderness. extended into the second two--And what better place than minute segment of action yeL June Mountain. where former He has one fina l tuneup for , Winter Olympic gold medalist lhe tourney \\'llh a dual match Andrea titead La1vre11ce -our at Costa Mesa tonig ht (8). only Alpine racer to win {1\'0 in one Games -is conducting Walker is also exceptionally cross-country tours and giving ('motional about hls team- mates' chances in dual meet przat;S.skl~~~soh~~ her fi ve action. He's constantly on the childre R with her at Mammoth sidelines cheering and ex· Mountain, a batch of Aln ine horting his mates to victory trophies. and a new ~oal - prior lo his own match. to experience the wilderness "Wrestling is an individual and help others do the same . sport in a sense. but at Foun-Touring is something vou 'tain Valley we're like a fami· do '\'ith other people. and it ly. \Vhen one of us l!'oe.~ tn 1he i~ both challenging and fun. show 1ve all go. That's wh,\' Families can share carryi ng we 're a winning team," says ii lunch and gel lo'!elher uH V.'alkcr. lhe be aten track. This is nut h a sport which should be J!-T e Fountain Valley reco rd tempted , however. wilhnul. speaks for ilse lf with a /ourth some instruction. straight Irvine League li tlc One must know ho\.I' to avoid apparently on the way. dangers. what to do i11 Longer, unguided trips re· quire special supplies ror na vigation and emergenele'!I. An excellent IC...page boolrlet on the subject for :iikier. sno\\•shoe r and snowmobiler is available for 2fl cent!! by wr iting the publ isher. SCIA . Tne .. Box. 103, Conco rd, Mass. 01742. Translated from Norwegian . the new booklet. "Respect thr Mountains and W l n t e r Weather.'' is just off the press. One of the points stressed Is to be in .Rood condition before starling. The Bongo Board. a platform on a roller on which one balances. offers six basic ski-rela ted exercise:ii which de~lop ba la n e e, ('OOrdinalion, and leg strength fa st at home , the whole un it tak ing up almost no space. II Js th e only thing I've found which gives all these benefits. \Vagner also c red i l 's emergencies. and how not to Y.'alker's cat-like qu ickne ss for get lost. as well as something his success in pinning riv als. Jiiiiiiiiijji .. ijij!ij!ijij,jijiiiiiiii "For a kid weighing 233 I f)1Unds he's very agile and quick. And in a lot of cases 11 's easier for him IJ) pin an opponent instead of going for a decision becausf' of hi s con· lrol and strength." A pin is recorded \\•hen !he shoulder blades are flat for a period of two seconds in prep ci rcles. Sat urday 's Fivr; Counties Tnvitational involves 22 teams, including Lhree con!ingents from Mex ico City. Consolation action begins at 7:30 with fina ls billed for II. \Vagner opines that Dann.v ~l1nrta or Calexico High will present the stiffest challenge for his unbeaten heavyweight INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING WARDS DOES IT ALL! l,,,,,11 •11,,,,:\ PHONE 892-6611 Bask etball H1!f1!.-£0110~ Lit Uni llPI(~ ( 10) ,.. .. t•ll so"..... Proceeds of the tourney will As for the futu re . the Baron rTia1nstay is hnpe.ful of winl1lng l\/\/LlR[l FOR FREE ESTIMATE G~•ner I lJ) ~ Wln"'ID !101 F (hfo'10n">n •11 f l,•l~ist•(lm (~I (, Stand in gs l •I '-'•n°•1 be used lo aid the Mater Dei llH (urlh up a~t ~C~a-1 ~P~o~ly-(~S~'~"~L::__"'~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ !•ll 110..., golf team. !JI 1111111• -------(•11 ~on"" Obispo). --- SUNSET LE,.GUE W l PF P~ 11,.1111no10" B•,rh I n W6 J.111 ~~~7r,::i;1 H••bor ~ ~ :~J TI1 (:j,,1m!ns1., 1 • •I• •7' Anah~lm J • J11 •n wn•e•n J •10 •06 Loor• a l•I d i St n!t a,_ 0 I l'I~ U'I Wfdrw1d•v'1 ~<••II H11n11,,.,1on 8••ch 11, W111frn ~ M •<ln1 11. Sonll .. ,.. 311 NeWPOrl H•rt>O< U. We1Tmln•tu 61 An•llelm M, LOllrl SI Frld1v'1 G1m11 Hunlll\Q!"" Be•ch II Ntw00t! MtrTnt •1 Wtll"111111tr An•helm •• We•llfn Senti 4N 1t lo.,• (Ollf.n 1111 r. Stor.no '"M Nonr H•lll•"1~ L"9vn~ e~,.,~ 'llo·JO. E l Oot1<10 l!!\ (SI) Lt;unf lfl(h Hoili1I~ !'! f /11i G•rn~r L~le•r fl!I f If) Wln'~'P Ptfi•l11 I•! r 1•6 1 (hrl.,~n•o" Sh~rbf'<:' !l ~l (. !Ill Cnll•" JO"'' i!ll G fl) Fl1111P 5co•in~ •v~• Obv 1 Hall!Orn• El Oor1<1o 19 ll. JC Sta ndings SOUTHEll:N t .. l CON,,EIENCI' w l "" ~· Gold•ti W<\I •it .01 (>PfH• 301 HI L .. M•rl>Or l 7 lJ• 'SI Rlo MOr><lo l J •!• •l• E11I l " 1 J lQ JI'• L,.Cc 1 J lH JS• l .. Soulflw,,I 1 • JtJ J,.o) Wf<l~efdlJ'I S(0•'1 E•Jl l .. o.. Golden W111 ti l .. M•rbOt' S9. l .. C( SI Ria Hond<> 111. l .. ~oYl~wtil N _,r!011'1 G-u Golden Well •' L .. CC Ejjl L,. ti (ypru1 U[ 5ol.olhWflf 11 LA l11rl:>or II.lo l+Qndo., l»t SP SPORT RADIAL GERMAN IMPORT DOO IONI RADIALS SIZES: R ... $4).tS SALi 1651:14 1651:15 $34'5 l',l ,T. tl.tl Ji. tl,16 HERBERT L. MILLER TIRI CO. INC. llNCI 1'21 SANTA ANA -.... 547-5615 ' .. 6~2-3314 • Sale Tennis Dresses Over 100 To Choose from. Pennsylvania Tennis Balls White -Doz. 7. 50 Wellow · Doz. 7 .95 Sleeping Bags & Back Packs Canteens -Mess Kits Special Pack & frame Regular 42.95 Spetial 29.95 10 Speed Bike 59.95 • 79.95 94.95 Up 3 Speed Bikes 48.95 Up foldi112 Bikes Tires -Tubes -Accessories OPEN 9 TO 6 CLOSED SUNDAYS -- ~ • T2000 WUson Steel Rackets Custom Strung with Nylon 32.95 Wilson Kramer Autograph Srame 16.95 Mens & Boys Tennis Shorts Mens & Boys Tennis Shirts Converse -lack Purcell -Puma Tennis Shoes RawBnrs & Wilson BasebaH Mitts Spat-Bill BasebaU Shoes Adiraodak Bats ~~~~~~~~.-~~~~~--~ Trxi Shoes 10.95 to 24.95 Cltampian llallbal h Samless .Halllballs Paddle Bal Paddles Table Temds Sets 538 CENTER ST. 64 .. ltlt • • O.All 't PILOT -. • ... ... CAIL'!' PILOT 11111 PIWll LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTJCB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE NOTM:• or T•UITll 't t•L• N-OTK• -...... ,.. lllOftC• TO (ll:l!DiTiiis ... 1.n_,.,,, lllOTtC • DI ULI °' hll6olf c... llH'llllOI COU•T °'" 'TNI °" w ........ ,. ~ ............ lttn, lt11, •••L r•or1•l'Y "' ..... .,,,,, TAKE NOTIC& !twit • tl'UllllC ,,,,. OI" CALlf'OfllollA ro• •t ......... •'tied! ...... , •! """'" M•ln r••V•TI SALi ,..,.,.. wlll 119 .......... ,.. ..... THI COUNTY Ofl' 011.t.11•• ""''""""' 1111 w...t """' S1'ttl ., ow NO .• dl4t "' ._..,h;cll'l ., °'-~ ... .... -~tHI c_,., Cw•"*'"· ... TM c1 ..... s..i .. t. I~ 11\f 5-rlW CW'1 "' ~ ,, ••• lfM lllfl ..... of F .... ...,,.. lt11, ol Etllto flt Tltli.lS IA A. I Tl l!'I, DKU .. ,.,,., (1ltt.f.,L1, UNltlO CALIFOltMIA Of C11!torfll1, tar fly C..,...., flt OltAMGE Mltl .. ct.di ... M. lft 11111 ~ fd, llAMI(, Tl'tlotM W •1.>Cc••-TnntM '" 1111 Mltttr IOf !JI.I l!t!IN of "' tlM ..... ., '~'-·· tll N«lll MOr1ct 1$ HEREBY G!\IEM lo '"' 11no.r IN Dffl .. T..,., ""•(It ........ Tlt!C•• M l!MIGH. o.u ...... lr~I llrMI, ....,., AM, (.allf«"'-, <•Hl!Ot• ot HM -•• lllmacl ci..; .... nl Chl Ull'Mil....,.• 0....,lflll"*'I Co • I MOT ICE IS HE lilt I V 01\IEN I"•' i. ~r .,...,.._ ~ 10f "'9 lhel 111 per>Ottt ,...1.., (tllm• 1111,,., ll..,11114 ,.,,,.,....,.M •. tlld <K9rcltd Merell J DONALD EMIGH. 1• M ml.,lllrotw Ot-,.....,,. z ... in. (Odf, ldllblf l+.o .. ;<f <fo<-.il ••• rtc111lr.a lo Ill• Ulfl .. IN/. Lii • .., 1101. P•t• 11 ,, " lly 1:11111 ot PATltlCIA M. l!ft\151-i, ~lJ. i. ~ SKll9" )tAULI, Sit ••511n 1111.,,, "'"" 1111 ,...<t•H•~ voucn•n. ln O!llclt l lttcardo "' O•.r•1t C""""· wrn 11'11 11 '""'•!• .. 11. II lftt hl1~1ot R•lr~·· Olt!tkl, Tl\t' ..-11 -oflla ot lly ti."-11f .,.. INVt Cellforl'll, t lvoft It •KU•• on '*" olld 1111•1 bl611•r. \Ubltcl ,. c.t>!lrmol(o., lllU-of 111!1 .....,.._, 11 ti 111•11t11 ~tlllff <OtJfl. or to '"''""' ~. "'"" a•blMl'llH 1., I•-•I Unl!e<I C1Hlor.,!• crt .. 1, SuJ11tlor (""'''· on or •lttH.ol 1 m.-of 11111 ctnltol ~ Ulft ll'lt N<CiWtY ......c1>111, to tho ""' Barill, I C•1!1ornla n•1Nr11latl. by •••IDR 1111 itt> der of l't'bru1ry. lt11, el M -'led 1n "" ••••• ol 1111 C111;n1V aeri!•""" 11 uw olflc• o1 hit Allorntv ot !1'111 bt11ch of <t'1•1n 01>1l1111of>t "" ottlc. nl M.lr."t!N M. OSTIOW, Mllth """1lr1 •••1*<111111. ~ COPY If !oellm ~. l'••flklln, o• Eao! 17th Sl•••1, oocvrord N tRY, nollc• ol whl(h brotcn Sul!1 Ill. 0 11 WIJ1n1,. loiil•vtra, l•v~•­ IPll ••.-a •111r1ct '"ulotllno, •• Col!• Mt"' Ct lllornll fl6J1, which 1, w11 rocOl'lltd M•• lttn, 100, In •-Ir 111111, Cevnl• 01 loo •nw loo. ~'''' r~ lo nw 1 .. rd Or lho I'll,.. !ho ploa of l>uolr>ell ot "" wnii.r1li nt<1 t1'l. P1t1 701 . ol 11!d Ol!•c1•1 llt<o<1h. ct Colllo•n11. all tno t11nt, 11111 oNt nlnt Comml .. lofl. i. 611 Ille with tltl In 111 m•1t•r. pertolnlnt fll 1111 ""t' '"a ••·r..:e.de!I JUM lOlft , "10, 1~ lnt.,•11 of oola flCtllH ol "" time C .. ol IM ... , .. ,.,,.. 1v11t1011 for of ••Id OIClclitnt, wllllln • "'°!'lhl otttr SloOll tJ)2, ""' fell, ol oo ld Olllclol ol d@llh olld 111 lht rlthl, 11111 1n<I l'Ubllc ln-tiot" Ill• flttl Pllb!luillon 01 1111• 110lkt. •1eard1, wll! ••II •I oullllc owcllOll ln!erttl !hit 11\t NII!• ol wi. 01c111M DATED! Tllll 10tl\ d•~ ol J111111ry, O•l9CI J.,,,,.,., 11. ltll !o llw hlt hHI bloa.r tor c•1n. ••V•bll hao ocoulr td b• -r1llon ,, law •• 1'71. Cli l>Clo R. Jtuuoll In l1•!ul mon11 of lh• Unl!Mt 5t•t•• 01....,....1,. 011,., lhtn or In ,..,111.,., av OltDl!R 01' THE llDAltO 01" E•ecutor ot llW WI!! DI II tho 1lm1 ol 01t•. •!thou! "'''""1' to thll 01 o•l<I dKl01tC1, 11 11H1 l!r'ftl 5U .. l!ltVJMlJIS OF OltAMGI!. COV NTV, Illa obo'.o• namtd U 'tclenl •• lo 11111, -Hulon '>' 1ncumb•1nc ... ol doo ll" I" 1na to tilt clr1oln ••II C.lr.lll"OltHIA. Sl!llM I . "ltAHllLIH. the lnttrCil convoyt<I IO or.:I now htlCI P•l!>P*tlv olluotoa In !ho (11Unlv ot Or1,,.1. (11!.Jr.L) 11' ••If 11111 $troll, tw ••Id Tiwolee ur.:ltr ••1d Dl'ld •1 Stl•• or (ill!o•nle. •••rlcul1rl1 dttcrlMd W. E, ST JOHN Cttlt ~'' Coltll>tnll fUJ7 T•ull In lne 1>rC11>or1Y •llu111 In Oro"'t If followo · (OOJnlY Clark -11-<1lllclc> Cit!'\ Toi' l11•l .-i.zut CovnlV. Collf0t .,lo. d•octlbtd ''' A -·h•U lnToro•I In !Ill l•l .... i l<I OI '"' .... , ol Suo1rvlW1 ol .1111 ..... , ,., E•KUIW A LHHl>c>ld E•••1• !fl '"" lo Loi 11111• Cftll•d by '"' l"'•t "''" Drt"9• C"""ty, C1U1otnl1 Jl ub•IOM<I Orono• Coo1I 01!1V Pilot 1 ol Trocl ,.o. )70I , I" tn• Cl" J1nu1ry 1. \fl7 bttw"n A.NTOINETTI! llv Mabel l. C11t1h , DeP ulY J1nu1tY 1• •ncl Ft bruory ~. II , 11. °' Nowporf l11ch. coiinh or Oron••· w. AYIES 1nc1 DONA i D I . Jr.Yltf'S. Jl11blllM<I Or1ng1 Cwot O.lly Pllol ltlt )el 11 1t1l1 of C•lllornlo, II ••• mio roc0tdtd Jll .. fW lbt nd onll wilt . •• Lei•! J1nu1n ;>I, 0 11 IS.·71 In booii llO, ••G" U lo JCI lnclu•I•• '""""· •• 1.,,0., '"' IOCO !"I· ol Mltc1!11t\lllU1 M11>1, In ll>t OfllCf VESTMENT CO , 1, lt u tl!; trio !oUll't ol lh1 Coiin" R•cwO.• OI 011a Cou..r.. lnltreot In ond to 111a ltlH woo 11'11 le1-clcl Hlllt Ctlllf'CI DY lnot IHIPfltd t• ltOSl!RT M. EMIGH orwl C•rl•I" 1 .... aattd JUM '· 1•~. °" PJr.TRIClA M, l!MICH by AUlt llfl'lt "' ,,,.. btl-n Tho lrvlno (om•&nv. r.coratc1 SDl•mi>fr 11. 11'61 h• '""" •• ltooor , ind Gerold J, C"oun. •1U. "''" o111"'41 ol Olll(lel lt1cor1ll LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 11 lonff. rtcordtd J"M 11, 1"4 of O••"'t (911n!v; '"tlhor wlll! o In 1\-10l'f, P•<>f I, OUld•I lle<:or<I•. ono..1\111 1nttr•01 In 111 l""'lll"""'l fltl I01tlh1r wltn •II bwllCI;,.., ind Im· !h.,Mn. •••Vemtn!O """' on the ••Cll>•rlT S•l<I ••01>•rlV Is ""D•• commonlv •new<'\ cov.,eo 111 u ld 11111 or lllot m.v ,., J!I wolnur Slrfff, H..,.._.1 lt1c~. h••••lttr bt COl\llrll<lt<I ., .1., ... C•Hlotnll. """on. T..-m• ot ••It , <11h 1n tt ..t .. 1 -v 1"h1 '"'"' td<lrou i nd 01~1r com'"°" ot th• U"l!td 11&1•• on C611llrm1lllft d1•l1n•ll...,, IP ,.,y, 114 ll'lt roil prOJ>lr!V OI 11lt, or 11rl co . .n •nd 11t1 (rt<!IT: d11ctlbH 1Do•• lo l>U•Po•tt<I to 0.: !ht te•m• ol '""~ crll<lll le be 1ccertl1bla 11•0 C1mpv1 Dfi•t, Ntwport llttch, !o Int Jr.omlnltlrllo• ond t.._ .-....... C•lltornl•. 1111t<1 Cowrr. A c11h <lffOllt Of 'lot l"nt Ufltlt••it nl<I Tru1tt1 dl.r!1Tm1 •nV tH• thl " "IVI!. HUNDREO DOllA.ltS ll~b•lltv to• eny fncorrPCtntOl of lh• 11500.001 mu>I occom1>1ny t~• ofl••: O!•td o<ldrHO 1n<1 •'"" cwn....,n niTt nce 01 <••h to D• ••Id .,...., con-d••lvnal!on, II anv, onown h•r•in. tlrmu ion of u l• bv tnt Su""rlar Coutl; for !Mt our-• ol oavi<11 obll11t l""' t~x••· 111utoolCI .,.ym'""· comm11,,1tv .. curld bv 111a Dold, tnchHlln, t~••· Gu••· lnt1tool ind lni~••ll(• 111•11 be ch•'llH arwl •••1n11s ol lh1 Tru1!ff, •>fOrllff •• 01 '"' cto .. ol a.crow: 1av111cn . U 1nY, """'r tnt l•tm• of o•t mlnol!on ol title. rtco"ll119 el con· 01111 OHd, !nlfrnt t~f•ton. i nd 19•.111.15 ••••net, tltlt 1n1ur•nc• "!lo 1na •!hor In U"PllCI prlnc!p1I of !h• Noto 11cu•e<I normal ••P•n••• of '''"''"' oholt i... bV oala O.td, with ln!t•tsl th1tHn h•ncll-.f In '"' no•m•l f11M"'1 T~i '""" Mov J•d, 1'7D 11 I" otla Nolt u"ll•rtlt nf'CI rutrveo !ho rlt nl to· ••!•ti Plant itt Progress P•ovlaf'CI. onv ""' all bl<b. Dale!! J1nunrv 7th. 1'11 11a1 nr o"oro 1rt ln11il-.f 1nd "'U•I UMITEO C"l l,,OllNIA &ANK. to1 tn w•ltlnt i ncl miY ti. dill ......... Construction \rork continues on new, $2.5 million emergency power plus all steam and air condition· power plant under construction at lioag Memorial ing. It is designed to handle hos p ital expansion, Hospital in Newport Beach. Plant, scheduled for which e ventual!y will Include 11.story wing on site completion in March, will provide hospital with of current power plant. --'--'-~~~~~--'-~~--'-~~~~~~'---'-~~~~~~~~~ East Germany Has Clear Picture Of What's a 'Good Revolutionary' BERLIN (UPI) -A good revolutionary gels good marks in school, wor ks overtime without complaining, obeys his teachers and other superior~. 11nd turns off unnecessary lights. them that conformlty 13 the bes t policy. ··woo is a revolutionary today?'' the organization ask· ed at youth meetings in schools, factories and clubs. The answers given were displa yed prominently In the Y oung World, (Junge Welt ) official youth new spaper. Fritz Wengler gave an construction worker, said a political mass propaganda ." good revolutionary works a 111 addition, the number of second shift H il is necessary a r rests of youths for what to make up produ ctio n the Commun ist.s ca l led deficit.s. He apparently meant "disturbing lhe peace through overtime work without pay. rowdy acts" h as Increased No such discussion would sharply: be comple te without a con----'-~L-E_G_A_L_N_OT--IC_E __ _ t ribulion by Watter Ulbricht, c hief of state and Communist Party Firs t Secretary. EOCl"ll• 111. M·W• Tru•lff 10 Ill• Aamlnl1tr11w 11 ltw Oflkt &I .-i1rolCI $. l1v1r ~i1 11tOt~v1 OST•OW ORUCICl!ll Aulhot lH<I s1 .... 1.... NAIATllt • 'icu•ET. S~ll• IU. '171 LEGAL NOTICE •~n Wll1i'l!•1 I OtJl1v1ra, ltvorlv HI t 1 1• Jlubll1~9CI Ntw""' Hort:oor NfW• '•Ill Colllott•I• f'D':l1~. or 1n1v be llllOI r .. LEGAL NOTICE <omblned wllh ,..,..""'1 IMch, C1lllcrnl1, 1111 •lfl<• or Iha Cle•-ot ltlt Su"tlor 1 --------·==-------·l''c"c·c.:."c·c'c'·c'c'c·c'c"c' __ ~o==--~uc·c": 1c oiir1 '' any u,,,. 111.r 1t1t 11 .. t •uMI<•· lion ol 11111 Notlct 1nd blhor• lllt CEllTll'IC"TI 0" •USINISI P·Mn LEGAL NOTICE m1~ln1 "f tne •II•. l'ICTITtOUS NAMI! ClltTll'ICATE 01" I USINlll Dtlt<I 1n11 u a ••• , JtfllMll'V, 1m. , _______ _ Tiie Urwlft$JGMd ~t c••t!lv '"' ,, l"ICTITJOlK NAM• SUl'lltlO• COUltT 0" TMI J. OOMALP l!M IOH <-uc:t!<111 o 1>w1ln111 II 117·H Rlvt'l!d1 The 11nd1rolQMd do Ctrlll~ "''"' trt STATI 0" CALll'ORNIA l'Olt Ad""l"lllr1lor of Illa l 1l1lt ti Or .. Me,.,...,..! S•och. C1!1lcrnio. un<lf r c:<>llOoJ(!i"g o bu!IMH 1t UJOI Columblo THI COUNTY OI' OltANOI PATllCIA M. !:Ml5H lh1 flctlllou1 firm n•m• ol l(.t I OUTI. Loni , Hunllnvlon S.och, CetUoml•, und•r CIOt Nu.,,llor OSTROW, DltUCllllll, QUE t nd 1~1t •1ld fltm lo COtnPo•f<I !he lic!lllou1 firm ntml of ll .. L 0-.ltll NA.I.Ir.Tl• & lliUltl:T ol Tllo lollo•I ... Pt>'On, Wll""t .,0m1 EMTEllf>RISES ind f/111 111a lltm It SUMMONS (MAlllllA.lll av MAITIN Ill. Oill!OW '" !vii 1na ploc1 ot ru ldtnc1 to 11 com~aHd ot 11•1 lollawlnv "'''°"'• ""'°'" In ,, "'• morrltt • "' Petltlentr'. A"'"""'' llr A*"lftfll•IMf' !oll.,....1• "1me1 ln lull u>CI FllCft ol r111dtflce PEGG'!' l . RUB LE Incl lttll>Ondt.,I: '111 Wl!lfllrt l""l1vord Svrtl~I• A"n dt M•rqu•tt•, 11]0 s ..... ii •• IOllOW1: LAWl!EMCE D. ll USLE ........... "ltto, c .1-..11 .. 1. Ano Ave .. Ct1d1 Mo• ... (1111, K1!llryn A, ll•udn. 15l0! Columbll To tho RliPon<ltnl: Publlohld Or•nt• (Htl D.itv •It..! D•t•d Jtnuar• ''· it1! l•~. 11unllnvron ltoch 'l'h• H llllllf>fr hi• lllfd , ••lltlon J111u1ry Jt, n , lJ, Hl1 14-TI ST.Ir.TE 0" CAlll'ORMIA, Ellen L. Lacy, ""'J Tvrent ClrClo, concttnlng yoiir m•trllit. Yoii ""'' ORANGE COUNTY : Huntlnolo" Stich Ille • wrhttn ,,1_.,11 within IM•tv LEG AL NOTICE o .. J1,.u11'V l1. 1'71, bllort "'"' I D•ltd Jan. 6, 1'11 d•v• ot lh• G1l1 tho! 11111 oumm""• Not••Y Pvbllc ln l!'CI lo• ••Id Slot•. l(a!ll1•n A., B111d•Y lo O•tvfd on you. II vou l•il lo 1111 •t•oon•tl• •PHartd Svnthl~ An" dt M1t· Ell•n l. Ll (Y a writ!•" rt1oon•t within 1uch lime, -----~---------· 0110!10 known lo m1 lo "' lhf ""on Stott ol Calll,,rnio. Ort nge Coeuntv: your dofoull m1r bor on t1rlld arwl lht Tl'IJll NI. illtJ wll-"•mt 11 IUDt<;tl-to tht within 0" Janu1rv 6, 1971, t>e!Otl mt, I court m1y tnlor • ludGmt"I c011!1lnl"t NOTICI 01" l•l .. CM AND Dl,AUL T l"•':~""•;..nl Ind l(kn.,....\Nlgtd •h• ••-NotetV Public In ona for ••Id 5111•. !nfu.,cllvt or other o•dt•t conc:t rnlnt AND o" lllCT10N TO CAUSI IAll Q~ll 1 J t ••m•. otro .... allv 10P1•rlld l(e!hryn A. 81ud•v <llvlol"" cl •rooertv, ooout•I t1101ort, OJI II.Ill f"llOPIJtTY ~Diil DllD ( (. St~l l Ind El!tn l . LICV ~ ......... '" m• lo child tUllOllV, child ouo•orl, """"'''' OJI TIUST MltV !!•th Morton ' be tho""'"'" whoot hl mto 1rt •ub1crlbo IHo, <Hit, ""' t uct. ellltr tllltf 11 IM THE MA.TTE ll ct !ht D ... -• Nol•rv P"b!!c -Colif0tn I tel to th• wllhln ln1trum.,..1 1nd m•Y bt tr•nlMI bv tM <owrt, '" PrlnclD1I O!!k• In ock.,owlf<lttcl lh•v 1~ocullld lhf ••mt . 11 VOii wllll 11 ,...., 1111 •t•lca 11 Tru11 mod• Ott llOSS I . H05Tl!:Tl[lt, Otano• Countv !OFFICIAL SE.Ir.LI on olt...11tv 111 l~h """•'• Vii IMll!• I wldowtt, J.l>CKSON lt0$S HOST!"T LlR My Comml .. lon E lret •nil JOVC I ltUTH H05TETl l!ilt. ~uobtnd ' ' XP J••n L Job<! a1 .. ~ ..... ~11, II '~" VIV• ""I""' ..... wlt1. To FllSl AMlllC•· ., •• , Anr I t . lt11 Ncrorv Pwbllc.(:111/etnl• ,111..,,., If 1ny, "''' .. lllH •~ time. " ' ''-Publloh..:J Or•nof CaA•I O&Uy Pllol Prin<lo•I Otllcf In ISF.Al) INSUlt.11,.CE COMP•M'l'. Ttuotff, dllld J1nutrv 11, F1b•u••Y '· 11, 11, 1'11 111·11 O••nof covntv Di lt<I Oct. JO. lt1t Doc...,bt• 11, 1'49. •ocorald Doctm .. r Mr Comml~•lon ExoirH w. E. ST Jri'fN 11. ltit, •I Docum1n1 No. 1.QDt, t~ Morch J, 1'73 Cler• Sooli: tl1t, •••• HJ el Oftlclo! ltt<etdl. ' PublilhO'<I Orong9 Coos! Clal!v 'Hot, ar llut h Hotht lM. In !ht olfkt ol th• Counlv lt..:o,....r ' J1nu1r~ 1. U. lJ, ?I. 1•11 11·1! DeDu"' or °''"'' Coiintv. C1lllo•nl•. •ocurl"' '. ClltTIF ICA.TE 0' IU~IMlll MICHAl:L .... DION •m611t othft <tbl111llon1. • "°'' /or l"ICTIT!OUS NAMri "'·000.00 In lovot al l"AUL E. O'ICA.I N LEOAl. NOTICE: He is clean shaven wilh short hair if a young man. and modestly dressed if a young woman. t And t here is no place for cigareUes or alcohol on lhe barricades. In ract, there are no barricades. ansv.·er that v.·ould delig ht persons in authority all over !he v.·orld ... A revolu tionary gets lo ~·ork on t ime, gets good marks in school, <X>n- serves electricity. respects lhl!: law, observes rules. i~ honest, and repeats no slanders," he said. •·A good revolution11ry ex- presses h im.<ielf through in- novation and attal·hment to the community, through ef- rorts to help the socialist society," Ulbricht said. NOl'ICI 0 1' INTINTIOH TO E)l l CUT!. S!.CUlllTY ACOlllJIM!.NT (SKI, •Ul .. 1t1 U.C.C.) Nollet h ho•W~ 1lv~n lo lhi' Cft<!llort or VAUGH N BOWEN, 0.0lor, WhoN bu1ln•» •d<lren lo 1111 w ... 1 CGIU Hlot>W•Y. M1Wt><ttl lh•ch. (OVM• o/ Ore"'9e. Stilt of Ctllfornl1, thl l 1 1tcud· IY lnlueo 11 ebout to bt 1r•nlo<1 lo JA.MES W, BRANOT ln<I N.lr.N I . llRANOT, th• So<:urld Port,, wkg•1 u.,,l.,•u l<kl••U ,, .mi Wornot, Hu1'· llngton l11ch, Cownr1 01 Or•nt•• s1111 ol C1llfo•nl1, In PfCll>ptfy loc•IMI I! tO'll W'"'"'· Hunti<111ton a11c.,, (oiintr of Oranqf. Stll• ol Calltorni•. l'he und•ro ianNI dl>f• <••lltv h~ t• LEGAL NOTICE A.ntrfll Y •I L1w er oraor. <-'1Cllno 1 b"•IMn ot 371 • Mic~loan 1------~~~~------ISM A.~oma .lvo""' MOTtCE 15 ~Elr;BV GIV(N th-"'. A••·· Ccnl• Mf~I. C1lllornl1 t1•?t. und•r ,.....,. (tlll M•••· Colllorftll o bre1cll of in ollll•lllon ,.., •hi.,", lht flctltlou• ll•m n1m1 of FOWLE.JI ClltT1•1tA.TI! OF •USllllSI Tll: (1IO s-t•IUl u id o...i ot l"•u•I h 1 otcurl•v h" A550C1ATf.S 1na lh1t 01ld lkm I• l'ICrtTIOUI NAMI .lr.lll,...VI 1" PllHI-eccurre<I In lhoi lhu • It.lo ""''" 1 comPOot<! of th1 !ollowlng ••'""'· wh0<;1 Th• ....... ,.igMd ao <•r!llV tti•v ••~ Pub•lohfd O•i noo CGll! Di l!v f"llol, •o11ull 1., tl\I ••Vmtfll o1 ln•l•llmi~lt n•m• In lull •"d P!•<• ol rt1lat nct ~on<l'1Cllng • bu1lr1en ol 'l!I l(tom1• J•nu•,., 1• 11· 71. 11· 1911 1l·'1 II !n1 .. 111 onlv, which bocl me aUll T his is the picture or 11 "r~voluUonary" lhe E as l German Comn1unist Party Is holding up to young people to emulate. It shows that East German leaders do not want radic al youths or rl!volulj onaries any more than .authorities in capitalist nalion,s do. if a revolutionary is consider ed as one who rebels against the e1ist.ing system and tries to change lt. There certainly is no room in Russian-occupied E a s t Germany for bomb lhrowers or ar sonists, protest marchers, campus reb els or even beatniks or hippies. This was made clear by a campaign of the F ree. Gemu1n youth, the East Gennan Com - munist Party youth organiza- tion, to stifle d issent among young people and convince An unusual definition of a revolut ionary was given by Eva Maria Stiller. a young c lerk' in lhe Baltic seaport of Rostock: "Above all, a r evolutiooary m inds hi! own busine~s." Silvia Becker, a student in the cily of Luckau. must have de lighted her teachers. ''As a revolutionary I will study avidly and graduate ·with honor.!." she said. "Discipline, goo d ma r ks , soci al respcnsibility a re revolu· tionary quaJilies." Lutz Graeser, a teacher In Halle, said a good tll!:Volu· lionary is a good teacher and vicl! versa. Lutz Heuer, an East Berlin "A young revolutionar y ls expert at his work and masters modern technology a s well as socialisl economic theories. A young revolu- lfonary I o v es progressive literature, art, songs and j oyfulness." The campaign re rlected the fear o r U lbricht and other leaders that youth might be contaminated by the wave of protest against authority in • Wes t Germany and olher western nations. II also reflected the b elief or the leaders that the Com- munist Party has Jost touch with youth. F or e xam ple, the party leadership in the Leipzig area said. "our work w ith youth is the v•eakest link in our 511<1 o•DP<'t!V it deCtlbe<I In IN'"''" fl: All fi~lu••t 1nd t<lulPmtM ol !hll M1r~ll ~11"'''"'· ~~•• ' w;nt) bu.•ln•n k""wn •• W.lr.illMER BE.Ir.CH MAlllt:ET ~fl<I l<xai.a at BOll War ner. l1un11,.,1,,n B••c~. Coun1y cl 0•1nge. s1111 "' Calllornl•- It 11 lotlowo "'v@_, WHlmlntl~r. Cetlrornlo. undtr !ht-.., oe la n1!• °" J.,,.. l , lt1t, w C L. "owl•r, '7H Mic.hi1on .,..,,,, locllllOtn. Ih m n•na or ORANGE COU N· LEGAL NOTICE •1>b,.<1u1nt monlf>IY lnll•llmtnro ol t~ Cot!I ,,,..,., C1lll. lV STIEEL I ULIE 011!' oncl !hi! oold llftll. O.tld J•nu1rr JI, lt71 llrm ;, e<>m•>1>1e<I of the lollowl"• ''"""'· p .... JJ O.llt11UN1I ti•H, " 1nr. STATE OF iAti:ci:~·I~, ~.~1~•,n_:',";,",,';,11~~1:, end •1•<u ol ClfltTt,tCATI o, I Ul tNISt Thitr• Ii now owlnt •n<I unooid u-~· FICT!l'IOUI NAMIJ ••Id nol1 th1 oum of tH.oaa.ae 1rlfl(l111, OillA.MGE COUNTY G~too V, Cort11tl, 17•1 "•ch•co Th• uncloroli nMI dOlf <•rlllv th~ ar~ 1n<1 ln l1to1I lherMn lrom M1v )1, !"0. Ol1 J1.,u1rv 71, U ll, be!or• m•, • Jr.vi .. WCi!mlnster. Call!, Ctlf'I01.>Cll"' 1 bu•lnou 11 75' w· 1,1n a .. ffl lOll ol ••la Dttlch '"" li•loul t, MolotV Putlllc 1" I nd for 11ld Slot1, Wit1l1m A. Remit.,, inn 'Ot llllO St , Co•to Mt•a, Ct llr..•nlt , undf, 11'o II lo .1111otiy cle<llte<I lh1t '"" ""'''' a•,,.onlltv aoo•••NI C l. ~owl•• k"own ltn•. Hunlln91on l101ch. C1!ll. '"'' tlcllrlo.JS tlrm nimt of SI R HOLROVO''. ol H<d u.,.1ld •m-1 ol 11i<t 11tlt to mo •o be !ht "'"on w~o1e n1m• DotMI Janu•"' !1. lf1t. ena 1~11 181a llrm 11 com,.o••d ;, •"II •It Otho~ •um• 1.-.:u•l<I !no •till 11 111Docrlllf'd lo t"• wl!hln ln1Tr11m1nT G"°'g' V Corblrl 1~0 lo!lowlng ••r1<1n•. °''" "'"'' ,. 0.f<I ol Tr11JI h lmm...,11!•11 duf Incl ond •ck.,owlfd9t<! ht •~•cu!td !ho ••m•. Wl!ll1m A. 11'1mlr 11 full ,,.., Pl•<•• .,1 rt .. t!tn<• '" ,; ••v•bl1, 1na nollc• I• h•rob• 1lvtn \0!11cl1I S•~U Slllt ol (&llhlrnlo. Orong1 COtJMy: toflowi · ol !ht •loctlon ol l~t u"""ltl1Md to M•rv BtTh Morton 0" Jenuary U, 1•11 bolOtt m•. HolRord w M Wolklno lllJ 1.,....,. cou•t THE FIR ST AMElllC H TllLI! lh• ~3me wilt !If' Dfllvertd 1n<1 lh• Mollrr Public (I lforn I Not1rv Public in ""d lor •tld Sl1t1, 5!teo!, Costa Mui, (l ilt .. Sindt• l tt INSUltA.NCE COM~•NY, Tr u 11, • <ontld.,•llon 1~..., .. lo• ~•id "" o• 1f1•• Prlnclo•I OTtlc• tn o•nonolly 1pp1ot0a Goorge V. Corblri wa!klno, IOS rown1 S!rMI. Coll• Mett. thor..,ncllf. to Hll I~• ••-•tv ~ncrl- "" t•ecvttd u curlTv •v•oem~nl o• 1~• lllh div cl Febnie•v, If/I. AT Or•1111• Count• end Wltll•m Jr.. tllaml•n ~nl)Vt" to mt (t ill. !h•r1ln In !h• "''""'" PrlVldf<I In ••l<I ,,p0 O'<lo<;k A.,M, ,, 1/l1' ll•~Ch l\lvd , Mr Commtu lo" E••in1 !o bt IM ••riono whou n•m•• ''" D•!"ll Jonu••v l!, lt7t DH<I ol Truot, •nll ""lie• 11 fo•in,r Uun!!ng!o" Ot1<i'I, Coiinty ol Orlntf. /lp•ll '· 1•11 •ul>!.crlbtd to rne wimin ln1!rum1n1 i nd ~olrova w. M. Wllltlni ht robr 1lv~n !till th• 11na•,,.lt nl<d Sti t• of c11uornla, Publ\\hon or·1ne1 Co••! 0111 .. PllM •t•.,.,wl•Oge!I lh•• ... ,.cuttd mt 11mt. S•ndtt l •t Wol-!~• i>.r•to10t• ••tc111M1 •~d tltl!vortd '" So I•• "' O.nown to !ht S•cu•td J•nu1rr 11, Februory f, IL 11, 1011 '1t·11 (~EA.lJ $li lt f>1 C•lltornlo, O••"fl Countv: ••!a Ttttllt• I wtll!tn d1<ll ••llon of Pfr!v, 111 bu$!n•~• n1m~~ 1n<1 oaa,. .. e, -------J •1n l . Job!.! On J tnuor Y 11. u n. ti.for• ,,.., • 111a Dtltch •f'd doftul! "'" 1 wrll1•~ u•f'CI ~v !Ill Debtor for tho !~'ft ~t•" LEGAL N OTJC P; No!lrY Pwl!Uc" Col\lorn\I Noto,., Publlc In an<I 10, tt !d Stitt , a....,,..., lot '"" ••It or ••Id trOll•rtv 110 P••t. If dllluent lrom ttio 1bov1 ----_ ___ Prlncip1t Olllc1 In P•t11>nollr 000,,,,d Holrova w. M, Da ted: J1nu1rv U. lt11. ' tr•· Mont. NOTICI' 01" tULK TltA.NS,1111 Ota"" Cownty Wotkino •rwl Slnllt• l H Wt!~I.,. -newn IOI Pout E. O'IC1I" Oiied J tnu•rr !!. 1971. Cl*<•. 1111~1 11 u .c .c ) Mv CO<Tl.,,lulon E1olro1 to m• 10 o. th• •1,.,,.., whou "•mto Orlt l.,11 rtctra 1., !llf Olfko et tt>t Jtm., W, Bt•nG!. MotlC• i• htrobv •I~·~ to th• (r!!liltor. Mi t<h 1. lt1l l tf 1ttbKtl~ ta lhl •1111\" lrul,umonl Coii"IV ltf'Cordor al Or1t111• CWfll¥ S..cur ... Path of JAMES W. llt•NDT •nG HA.H t Publi1hMI Ott"!!• COi•! Doil¥ Piiot, ond IC-"*"'IHltf"CI th•V tlt*<Uled lht c,,',','"", .,11 en 1·11·11 '' Documonl Na. Ne .. 1· er1na1 e'•NoT. T••n•f•ron. wtooo• 1>w11 ... u 1c''c'c"c0c":_:'c"c'c':·c':'c0c"c'_'c"c·_•:·_'c'c"c.:.":_:"c' 1 •~m•. SPcu1•d Pa•1• •""'"" h tell Wl•nft, !iunll.,,t0n loich, !OFFIC!.O.l SE•LI l>Ubll ..... d Otl nt• (fllll Di lly Piie•. Publi1ne<1 O••"V• Co11t Dt llv p ;1ot. Coiint~ of Oran<t•. s11te ,,1 c1111ornl1, LEGAL NOTICE lorrt lM Ltw1s J1nu1•v 11 •nd Fob •. !!. II. 1tl1 llS.'1 J•nuo,., 71, lVll 163·1! n.11 , t.u1~ •••n•f" ,, •bout to l>f Noltr~ "11b!lc.(1lll"'nl1 . m1a1 !• VA.UGHN !!OWEN. Tt1n1!ffff, ,_,,.,,, Ptlfl(l••I Olllco !" LEGAL NOTICE w"o" l>w•I,..,. """"" h 1111 W•ll CERTll"ICAl'I! 0 1" I US!N I SI Dr1nlllll! Counlv ---'°"''' Hi .......... NeWl>Otl l•t cn. couniv Fl(JITIOUS NA.Mil: Mv Commlu l .... l!-•iro C1J•T1FICATI" 0 ' I UilNISI ol o-1~o1, Stt l! o1 (•llf0<nl• Ttil 11nd•••l•nf<I ao ~e•llfv tht v "' Morch 1. 1f7f fJl T~• u .. n:)~!~:.:0'!'.,.,11•c:,~,., •h, 1, .. T;;ii"~~~~ • .'~u~,1~;,:~·~::,~. 1~~~ ~:,u'~'.": ..... ~ "6~!~~~~ c;r: .. ~; ~!~,~.~~ J:,,~~1:.;"':"l. ,~·;~·.·,,., c"~·' •. oi~V~ ~;~;· •1cTtt1ou1 ,,~r.',,.'•"N; t 1 c~nduct•nq • Ou•l"H' 11 11n:1o1 Dutll>IDlof Or•"t•, S!•l1 n! (Alll0tnl o. .-;16", und•r lhl tlclll!OIJI 11•m n1m1 --------lno li l-lnt "'"'" oro _,_ R1v•' . Cl.. Fo1JnUl_n v.11... t,108 !aid •'"""" lo ats(fl~d In Q•nfrl l o! SEA R llOOFIMG CO.Y.•Al<V t nd LEGAL NOTICE buoln... ••. -.... Co11tern••· u...ier !rt@ ltc•ltlou• 11,,.. nom• ,, Alt 11oc• ,., t•aa .. ll•!u•~•. ~vlom1n! ·~•' ••Id 1i..., i. <om.,,,••d "' th~I-------_ JON•Tl1•MS of LA.Sl .. FAIR '"d ,~., ••Id lltm 1•1•"" •ood .. 111 of t~lt Motlf! !OtDCffV tollowi"G .... ..,., ..... ho•• nom•• I" lull ,,_.11 POllCl!:LA.IN, 1Sl~N.!~0~!~ i.o,::,~~ LEGAL NOTICE tn"""°'".<' ftl !h• lallowlno ""''on ... nou b••r ' ""I"•\ bul1""1 k"""'n IO •nd ftl•(fl of ru•dl~<• Ir• •• !Ollft\01 l'!(T!llOUi •Ul lNl!SI N1wPOtl lelcll. C1llfftml1 ~.·:: 10::, .. :1111 '"a o<•<• of tt•latnc1 w•,MER l!IEACH ":"'""'E~ •n<I ~O(tlf<I Jot.n P. O'(Mnfll, )flol d•G SI . .. .. ,., 11'.llTIMINT Suu ..... G•I• lll1bY. "" Sl'ltrtler Noncv Sharon So•clor. 1071• Our1noo :: ~;~n:..~';~;;.H0f~:~:;;:'n;o'"(h, owntv N•s~:~" ~··~"~ .. ~.~1~1; 1,141 F llrotto r~ 01T~r 1c11ow1111 oeroo" ;, aoi"' ll~1it11H Dt.. Co0!1 M•••, C1ll!1tnl1, R;v•• (I• Fovnl•in Voll•v, Call!, T~• but• t••n•lor .. 111 "' conoummAt•n Wa v. Tuifl,., Coll! Jo"ot~on Grev• lll••v. U17 l h1nt1r Not Weathermen Ol!MI Jin ,, 1911 fl lh l!!h 0 I FI) M4lllCf:TWE~T. 111lt ...... on w... °"-· ClKI• Ml\I, C•ll•o•nl•. N•n~v Sh1ron 5o•ctor ~11:" 1~ ~~ c'a11r 1,1 8~~~lnnt~ ·~:~:· S•~~:·l~•~C~~l~tlon. Ill/ I. l~awnt•. P 0 So• llll Co1!1 Mou, (1111 , Tnlt bu•lnou It ~int <onduclt<I 11, S1ATE OF C"'Lll'Ol!NIA., 1711? &oacn lloulf••rd. Hunl,nt !"n a11<h, Dell<I J•""'" •· 1171 fl61~ I' norln1rohlp_ OllANGE COUN TY· Counl\o OI O••nQ•. Str!• ol (olilo•nl• J P, O'Conn•ll l ut!nn "I Gov, ?100 l"o,..,on Wor Sv11nno C.•lt l l•bv O" J onu•" '1. 1111. btfor• m•. • So r1r •• known lo th• T•on.ffr~~. OO•l~ld W Mo•Tnn 111<10 11-G Co1to M•'"• (1tll 121li l>ubll•he<I o .. ,... Cu•t Dolly 1"11~! Natuv P'1tll•C In anG lot l~;d St•!•, oll bu1ln•n .,~..,·• •nd •ddro""' "''" Slan l. F~hfine lnh tlu•IMu h b1lno c"nducltd br J•nuorv '1. H Ind Fo,rv1r~ 4, II. o•r1on811V •l>P••tf<I NI,.(¥ 5n•ron ~o•c· bv Tr1n1•orar ••• lht th••~ ..... It•! ST•TE OF (AL IFOllN1 •. • .. 1"alvld .. •I \tit llJ.'1 lo' known to "'• lo b• th• o•r.nn a 01t, II dl!l1t•nl lrom !llt •Dov1, Ito' OllA.NGE COUNTY @.uflon 11· Cl¥ Priest Now in Public Eye NEW YORK (UPll ''there is a great m ythology surrounding you -muc h mort than around me," Rev. Daniel Berrigan told the m ilitant Weath ermen si1 months ago. Today, the We1Hhermen , whose bombing of buildings created scares in more than ooe city, have lap~ Into silence. and Be rrigan is cam- manding public a ltention. The lean. ascelic looking 49-- year~ld Jesuit priest is RC· coled b y the FBI of being one or the ro<:orl!Jlirators In an 1Jleged p lot lo kidnap ; • presid ential aide J{enry Klss-- inger and blnw up the h~ating systems cir rederal buildings. Jiis brother, Philip. 47, a • Josephlte prle!t, ha! been in- dicted for conspiracy in the case. • Bath brothers a re now ln federal prl110n In Danbury, Conn. for burning d raft rtoorda with nslpalm t n Q:ttontvllle. Md. In 11611 to protest the Vietnam war. Desple their repuUIUon for radtetltmt, the Be r r I a 1 n s h11v1 1lw1y1 Indited they 11bbor violence and friends m1Jntaln they 1rt Jncapable "' illldlm, • plot -.. e1r' z'•a beclutt tomeone ............ ~~who&iadod , __ ,.. __ ~\·~le -·-··-...,..,· btc MtlJt!W ...,, Worf: 111:1 aplwo ......... It .... -'toOtoWlioUllnn<o, w~o~• n•m• h 1ubutlbM1 In '"' "'•thin NON[ On Jonu~•Y '• "''' • .,,,, m•, 0 Publl•ti•d O••"lf Co••! Dill• Pllol, none or whom had he ever "The townhouse f 0 rev e. r lnttrum .... I ..... 1cknowl-td 1n1 •• D•t•d' J1n .. ••v )1. 11TT N"tarv PuDllc In ""' tc7 ••la !Ill•. J•nut •• 1I , 1' ..... Ftb•uory •. II. LEGAL NOTICE mel, and warned them analnsl destroyed our belief that arm-""10',",~,,,,',":.',;,""· s1on111 bv . 11•uG~N aowEN. ""on•ll• •~P•..-~a J°"" ~. o 'c°"""11 1'_ 0 _" _______ ---;--'-•c·c"l------e "" T•1n1lt1~• ·~~ St•n l . F1nrlfli1 o~a Don•ld w S being "seduced by viol~ce." ed ~lruggle is the only Tea! Z':i':,vet~~b:ftortoncaiitorn" J•~~:~:n;:, 1~;~not Cot1t D•lly ~1.1?: Morion known 10 m• to "' th• '""'n' LEGAL NOTICE T·,-,-.,------- "1 hope your Jives are TevoluUonary struggle,'' Miss ,.,1nc1oa1 0tt1c1 in :r.~~~ 1.:';,'::,~1n~'!t111'~:~1~,;: ,~:: p.,.711 HoTic:, ~~.l'1~11,..,~~00:u.c1 go me l h 1 n g m ore than Dohm s aid. " ••• Tht deaths ~·~·t:...C...'70~'1~ Eoo1,., LEGAL NOTICE !o'ifi",:,ei: !,',',,....... ce11ti,.tCAT• o" 1u111o1 1s1 coLLA.1"11tA.L r th f • --' --'ed A ! , 1'71 ~ .. tCTITIOUl lll&MI Nol!c1 to lyr•bv l lvan bw ltlt - gabotage," Berrigan said . O ree nenu! elKl our P bl l>f<t ~~· • c 1 O.'I¥ p·i 1 sn1•11y I!'. s"ct• ,. ... undt•ll1"ff "" c1t111v ~• •• d1ol•Md 1~11 , •wt111c "".,"" ,.1_. Th' tape ••• lo •-carr"'ed milit.ery cooeept of what we J•"~','.! 71. Ft~::;:~ •. ":1'. 11. 1;11 110'.;1 CllTt,.ICA;:e:.. •UUN lll "',,','=,~,,0', ".,.",'.',',~hlor11l1 CDRll1.>Clln1 • bu•l.,11t •I u1 .. Cw11 1.,, aooc•ln.d coll•l•tol will i. .....,. ,, uo:: __ ~ ., ..._ ., H""W" 511111•1 ltac:ft, CoU!inol•, ul'ldtr t111 l'lour Of 11·00 t 'CIO<• Jr. M "' h ~ th d d 1 lhe amounl of public interest LEGALN'OTICE ,ICT1T1ous NAMI O••not Covn•v tt>t 11c1111eu• 11,.., nt""t 11 JMOO•v·s "" ihv 01 F•D•u•"'· ,.,i, Ir iU...,1,,~ l rou11" e un ergroun o • h 1 r th n.. u,,..1.,11no<1 tll>f• c~•'"• "' h Mv c..,., ... 1 .. 1on l!•Plru '"" th•t ••la """ i. com-.d 114 !"dint•• s'"". s'"'' Ano , ,.,.,,., _ the Wealhennen, and the In t em, or ear o em P-lt'fllt c-""'""" 1 w .1 .. .,, §I 11n Se M•I" Foti• .. ••• 1. 1•11 '~' 1011ow1,.. ,..,..,.,, whoot n•m• 1n Or•"••· 1111 • .i cell!Ot.,1• .. ••offers a very speeial op. cttT11'1C"Tr; o, I USI Nl!'S sr . s.on•• A"'· c11110 ... 1 .. un<le• "'* .,...,Hohed o''"'~ Co11t Dolly Pl!QI lutt 1nc1 "'''., tt1ldtn<t !t •• t&ll°"'" 1011ertollon "' °'11,1.,,1j . V j 11 age Voice weekly ,1Cl1T1ous NAMI! 11c111ou1 ll•m nomo ol SILYll. DOLL.Ir.II J1nu1"' 1, 1•. 11, 111, 1tn :lf.71 lt-t'I Eliw'••d 1tur1M11. a s.1 1, R. c . "'IHI (,.,,· 1.,111,r t newn1aper oblained • copy, portunity to break this m yth Tt.t unc1~t1!0Ma a~, cprt!I• n, 1. SALOOM '"" th•• w la ll•m 1, com...,..., Lent, cor ...... 1 Mt • w1i1.1n •Ofrlitroli r. , 1,..,, i..r' 1 •• lh I fl • •• d h con<1ucl1.,. 1 blnlnPU or 11111 C11i'n<1ul1 of '~• 1o1i....1ne "'""'· whow "'""' LEGAL NOTICE D1t9CI Jt nulfv J, !'11 bock btt. 1 •l•lnlHo ,,_, •'-••' • authenticated it and ran • a 011r1snc:S. • .an a s you Avo .. Foun111n v1u,~. c11110tn•• ,,,., 1 .. 1u11 1nc1 p1no 01 r11ldtn<:• to •• Jt. E. 11u11..,,. , .. , oi "''" u•ri11t, , ;.,.,.n•11;,,;• h SIP.reotyped 8! mindless, in· unc:1tr lht llctHlou• li•m n•m• or tollo••: 51•1• 01 C1lllal'ftl1, O••n1• Coiinh: u •l1<:1tl<•I lliturt .. • ell ••ht1'··'· candensed v ersion of t e "RAVELING .ir.uro SERVICE ..... that Rlcht f11 l lc:cl. Ult Amborv.(ll)d Or,. Jl-llHI °" J ........... J. 1'7t. btlor. ,...., I 11 "~· •Ito!\ 1 ltlllfl ' Wiii .. ~· transcript las t wet.k. different to human life and ••Id 11r,.. It "'"""''"" "' tht •011ow1,.. 5o p,,..,..,.. Cl ltT~~~~::i:u~" N',,'{1~"111 N1>11,., JluOU< In ,,,.. 1or u lcl 11111, ' ••II •lln~. 1 11,1' 1111.....i1,.., j •-r _. death determined to raise hell .,.,oon, whooe n•m• In lull •...,j Pl•<• c11eo:1 •·n ·11 l"hr u...i.rol1M<1 cto cerlltv '""' t•• ,..,.,....,,,,. "'"•'"" 1to111r1 l!awar' o...,.. o111 , Shortly ~ ort. thf t ranscript ' of •••lftn(1 t• 11 !otlt>w.: lt:lchArd s. 1t1ccl ltutllt<ll• t.....,., to mt lo o. "" "r""' Thi• notlt• 1, ,,,,. ,_ 0,, , al a 'Y hour o r pl•ce " Edword A 11•uoglt. nin c1lon<1u11 5tt •f of C1111ornl1, Oton1• C111mtv: cO<>ductlnt • ""'I""" •I 11•1• I ••<" WllO•• n1m11 lo • b•c lbotd 1 11>P 1 ! " " ., t"Ce appeared, We I l he.rm e n · Jr.v• .. Fov..iain v11 .. ,, c1111ornli On Jon. n, 1111. Mic•~ ""' 1 M&iorv lllvd . Huntlnvton 11..;h, c e11,,,.n11 . .,,,..., · u ' 0 w •h n with '"• P•ov1111n1 or S1<:lllft tst h I • "' !ht /lc!lllOUO firm • f < ••• (YC'• ',~tu,mom~,1 tnd l <k-IMtld "° 1•1Cul1d l ul>Cllvhlon (l l, el '"° U"W"'"' c-' • P 0 k. 'woman Ben'a ~·,ne T e eller 11lso Indicated c11eo J•n. s. 1911 Public !n •nd ,,., ''"' SI•••. ,..,,.,.,.uv " "' 0 .. ... 1 t c 1 -•r IU E, A. 11-<•ot• eooftrtd lt:lch0t' lticd k-n '1> ""' CtT'I', and lf>tl llld llrm lo COIT'Pffldl COl',ICIAL SE.Il l_) "'D!i!i: 'J:~u~,:,";,~11•,I~ Of C1tlf1m!1, Dohrn I.o ld the underground Berrigan may even have had S'•'• •• C1111ornl•, 0r.,.., coiinlY: 10 t>t '"' ••rta11 •hoo• n1"" it •uboc•tO. of tM 101-1"' "'""'" whoti .,.m., M1,., 11. H..,,., LYNDA lllADLEY l' .berall'on news ser ,tce that serond thoughts 1ibout the 011 Jon '· 1•11, 1>11or1 mt. , Noltrv 1<1 11 '"' w11"1" 1n1tru,,,1M ond In ~j111 '"" •l•cn 01 r•11C1tf1Co •rt Nottrv Pub1k<•lll1N1lo DONALD J. Mlill,tll Pubti< 1 .. 1r1C1 for 11ld St1!f, .... on1t1Y 1ck.-ltd1f<I ~I 1•1eutt1 1111 ''""' 11 R::!:i " kllm 1 S JUI •111tt1 "•lnclrt1I 0111<1 •~ .1.11__., 11 Liw the group Wa' Chan,.,,. ·,,, reoord burning at Catonsvllle. ·-•rid Ect-1rd A. llkc•1l1 known <OF F1C:1AL 51!.AL> · • '·· 1 Or1"91 ccun'Y •m WU•••• 0 •. , ''''' .., • • '' mo '' •-,., ••••-w•-•• -om• ••-<. ,,.,., Dr.. HuntlntlOfl lt•<h, "le~•'' It M c , , E ' •• .. "J h ope ··• ed t/1 t ,.. " ~· "" .. .. " Cl> $1<>•• ' •-• ' y °'""' u en n ''' lt'flf1'Y Hllh. C1t1 .. -•. "''' strategy. She indicated born· lnue a you a re 11 ... 11\crlbtd to "'' wl!~ln +n .. rvmenl Nolt<¥ Pvb!lc·C•lllornl• •f!C11. •• .......... nlWllOF N ..... ''· 1tn •11til11111!1 O•tnt .. , .. I 0 II b. th I remaining uneasy about its •Rd 1ck1111wl"'•-.f h• t•*<ulM tht ....... Prlncl .. •I O"lct In ~:~·J, 11 ltn l"lllllllhld 0r.,... Cffll Ct llY l"llot. J,...,.,... JI ltn • I • y " 1 "'1 1ng wa.!. on e way OU as tOF,,ICIAL SE AL) Ortne• ClllH'llY n, • J1nv1,., 1. 14 !L n. n11 ,.,, ' -..n r II I ' . (sabotage) userulness and that M•rv I( fl•nrv MY Commlttlll'I l!~•f••• "-" ·'-khm•I S•. LEG" NOTl-a avor e ac JC. Notorv Pvbll<-C1tllornl1 Nov.,., 1•n ' Rl(htrd "·Chane& LEG'L N ~ ~ "ll Is time for the move-you realize th11t the bumin11 P•ffl(ID•I o111c~ ,,. Pu11111.....i oronte Cotti o.uv "l!ot Stolt ot C•11"'"'1'· o •• ,,.. Cl\l'fttv~ , ______ • __ OTJ:_cC.c:E:_ __ f------,cc------- d r 'I h th oreng1 cou~tv J•n. u, t i, 21 tM ,..,, 1, un io.11 On Jin.u•,., 11, lt'1, t>t~ro me. •1-IAR IHI menl to "0 out Jnto the air, own o proper es, w e er •• c-m••••-,,,,,,, Not1r~ Pllllllc In '"" fflt" 111<1 ""'· T~m1 , .. ,,, •• • C Ill I "·-~" -· ""°" It _,..., R• I F •·~-·1 HOTICI TO C'''''''' ,. I COURt .,. THI to <irganlze, to risk callina: aton,sv e, or n ult'! case Nov. 11. ttn LEGAL NOTICE sr. ,:ii•.~ ... R. a..:..C. ii~ tUPl1t•OR couir 0,. TM• 1'AT• .. CA&.IPORHtA flOR ti • ... d u to of Chase Manhattan 0 r PubHslotd o ...... C~•·' D•IJv Piiot. "" lo bo ltlt ....... , ...... "'"'" ITATI .,. (ALl"ORNl,t, •OR TMI COUNTY 0, ....... ra 1es anu ~onstra ons, J'"""v 1. 11, 11, 11. 1t11 11·tl ,..,..14 •r• •11~ •• ,, ...... ,, IM ... 11111 .. ln•tr·--1 THI "1• A~IMt th I .ny-··-el b me ..... ..... ~"~" COUNTY OJI OIAJol•I NOT•C• 0, H•••··· ........ -c:onvince a t mass llCI ons . """'L 91!, y no ans --CIRTll"ICATI OJI IUSIMllt I nd Kil"""""'"" fllty ukutlOI 1111 • .... A~1111 OJI WILL AHO CODICIL AND LsiT. · 1 ·~ r ~ · ~rt guaranlee1 1 change of CQn-LEGAL NOTICE '1tTll'H>U1 HAMI ''"''· ''''' Ill 1>11r1tk 1C111V, •h• •-" 11 i-1Rt r•sTAMlHTAIY Jga1ns urc: WI lnu In .!IUPr-T1't """''lltnocl -. Citrlll¥ th• h CO~FICIAL !EAL) 11 ..... l"tlrld'i ICtllv. DK•l lld ll:itolt Of ITf'WAltt CAJtJllH of rebellions do malte • dir· sciousne.ss, the risk. remaining c-uc:llne • WllMll •' 111 T-n & JN .. L Jobi! ,.OTICI IS Nfltll V Gl\llH .. "" J ... I t• STEWA I T CAltPl!NTIR T:, I I I h I ... f"·"661 (C•l<'il"'' 01 1nge, Ct Ule.n!•. uno.r ""' ,_.,.,,., "llflll(-Ct liltf'ftll cr .. Ow1 flt lly ·-n--.c ..... , lrl'lllAIT C.lr.ltPl!JtTI• MO -· o ference.,'' lht 13id. a ways very grea a 1CllRTl,n.ATI" ... DISCONTlllVA.N(I tlcllllou• lltm ... ,... Ill Ml! ME ....... Kl! P•lnc!Nt Diiie• '" .... , •II "' .... ' 11..vlnt •Ill""• •Mlrt1I"' ' ... --Is . d t I a•hol••• wilt Chang• peoplr 0' Ull ""010111 Al.lr.NOONMIHT O• UI" ITUOIO •M ,,,,, •• ia llun 11 0••-'"""" llW .. 1e1 ....,....,, • 1uc:.re no In c. t o.n & PtCTtTIOUI HAMI ,-.... --, ......... I-~·-. -t "'• COl'IWftlUlll'I E'A•lt.. -'" '""1' ... ,. "'" JIOTICI! IS HERllV (;IVIN """ r h -• h ~ th ' • '"'"D ..,......, "''' .,,.,._ ""' ,.... -· wlltl h "'"'WtY _,.,,, 111 (AltOl.INt: ALll!N (A.lltJllNTI• "'' whelher or not Berrigan's or t e wor!f': lnu t11uen em H ., ERSIGNED c!ot1 hlroti¥ "''"' 1 .. 1 .. 11 11111 •lou o1 rto1Mntt ""••<h 1. ,,.,, "" Olflc• ,, "" c11rt " "" '"""' ,1..,. ,,.,..NI , "'"i.. .., PTWelt . I ' r rth h ., B ~tl!I~ ln11. tltttll'°" ll, DIC. lt l'O It M tel..,..,: •ubll•rw.1 O••Rll• CMll DllJv Pl~!: IHllhlH t1<1r1, ., .. •t-1 """'· will! WUI -CMICll '"' --... _o ~ message hid any impact nn Rga M u er c ange, er-he 1 ~·-" do b\11lM11 """r tt>t Ml Ml c,,..,,, ,11n E•l•flC ll 0r1 .... J•ftlllrv 1._ 11. 11 •"" "'~· •. 1•11 ,.., tM 111c:1t1•rv -"'"· 11 "" _ Litton T•itimll'll•rv -11 ..,,_. t".. Weathermen but Mlu rla:•n aaid. 1«1 '-• 11 .... .....,,., " 1111.w Eh1 .. ,.1 ... , l'9Ufl• 1rotvt1. c1111. "'"· _,.,_ 11 "" lfftc• .,, hh ,,,.,,....., flf9"""' ., wMct. 11 llM'<ll ..,, "'-· ·~ . --''------------,11 SU Orchid Av•. Coran• dtt Mlt. D•llOI J1""""' .t, n n. LEG" NOTICE HAltlttS AHO HDlllNGIS\¥01tTH, 11n ••'11ci!ltrt ... -,, ,. ,~. '"' •-~•-•a comm · d 011· ·•c111/'ot'?tlt, Mlkh 11u1111tn w•1 """"'"' ,,.,. ,..,. c111n ru. w .. 1 ,.,."" ...,..,.. '" ..... LIVIUTI unique 0 LEGAL N011Clt ,_ ... 11 "" 1o111'Wlnt "''-· """" s111t 11 c111tan111, o,.,,.. c-.... : "' ,._ L• An91411. "' ""'"" ,.... """ ht1 "-... au11est that an explosion list ,..,,.. 1 .. 11111 ...... 1..,, o1 Htll6tflc• 0n -'-"'" .. 1t11 . o.iort '"'· , ,...,, ~·111°'111' """ Wl'llcf> 1 • "" 11111:• '"' '*"'"' ''· 1t11, •' •11111 ....... ~ t G II • •• 1• 't '1>11owo. 1••11: Noll,., l'vMlc In •nd tor \Ila lt•lt, P'ICl'ITIOUI IUllHlll .....,_ 11 1111 llflflr•ll-In Ill In "" C'tlltlr""" .i Dlltrl.....W ""-M•ru• n I reenwich VI age PKTtTIOU;·~Ul•HUt 11.1 ... A. M1t1tr, '11 orthltl •••·· _,.,. ·-·..i ""'Ma er-t_.. MAMI 1t&T'IMINT .... __ :'i.""~;"',!.':1n \._~~".,..~ ~.~ ::1.<t:rt;...''c:'o1ct;.1c,,._c..,,!'! t-•--· which -11•00 coiled •••• '''''"'"' c.,._ !ltl Mar, c .111. '' ,... tte o. '"' .,.,_ ""'"'' ,.,,,,. Thi ~11""1"' ...,...., 11 ...... ._ ""11,.1 ~i«llM 111 ... ,, -o. ,,,,-,,. -'"'............... .... c ... 1111c111 for lr•n•..;llon of .... 1Jn•1t It ....... -1,,, !ft ""' ... 11~1~ ln1lru ....... 1 • '" -.-n "bomb flC'" • red th TIW tlHO"Wlflf ..,.._ lrt delr" ....,_, '· 0.tld Jt-f'V M, 1'11 . C.Hol JI_,., H. "" • wry . scar e ..... lt'IO<I. ••; OUIRtttllY ANO fWli.l!ltC ,,.., "" •bOft 11(11110\ll ........ Ind ..... ICt-lMf""""" llK\ltld"" ..... , •llAM EL., •• lo• VIII• Or. C:111t RIV, JOHN •• OOHl!ltTV w. ,, $T JOHN, •-I Th ,.. C Or N 111 Now 11•fll(l1vl! l>I "'*'lc•lkln ll'wff•ttt. ••t .., 1011,ICIAL Sl!A.ll Mew,'''"· l•Kvfo• of"" wm If ,....,1• <••• -·p -Py. ree per80nl 1 1meu1 .. .. • -111o ·~ "" o1t1c1 e1 '"' COtJnly ,,_, .,.,_ 1. •--,,,-, .,_,,. ~. ''" v•' d o·-. th I • I ltoth• Wlt111m l. JwoHk , !Iii HOlla•v _, 0 C '"' ,~· -· v•,.... '" · .,.. • ..,.., •• • ""Heft Mmld --·· DUltVIA, CAltl"IHl'llt I IAl"lt led 1n e bast which nn let !ll•ld. ,,. __ , l•ldll ltnllt<I c. Hl•lot ... ··-°""IY· u<WJt• ••1"'11 M • Nlllltll l"ublle . C11ll(lf' .. l1 Or ' Cott• ......... C•lll, HAltltlt & HOl.lllMtweRTlll. • .... lltN•IT ' KHAI JR ,.y ... ol !l'CllM 1 ... of Ill• (/vii Coto. r rlncl11! Olflct t" TMt "'"'-It INlfll ~19 h tlll Wiii C....,, altd. tm MkAr'IMlr .......... o ...... Utt btlltvtd wag cauaed when 1 ... ~ Tri•-Wiy. L•tynl ,_,., WITNl!l l ,... h•nd "''' ltlll , •• ol o,.,.,. '°"""' ." hodlvllul l \"A--· C1"""'111t ... I N........, tMcfll. C•ttMinlll ttMJ --· m·~n, bomb ... •k.o. •••• i:-... L '•!1,·,···~·'. Mii J•-"'· lt'1. My COR'll'!ll••lon l!-•l•t1 .. H. $61~1•11 fl• (tll) .......... T•...,.._, ,., ..... ...,, ..... ,,.., .,.,,. a . ui 111n: • ; 1 •m ... w 11111,,. '· 111111.,. "~ 11, "n tl'v1>1111111:1 0r-eo.11 o.11y 1>1161, '"""""' ,., l•l(llfW • .,,,...,., ..,, '-tlu-celJar fnldt I milta:kt lfllltl..,,... 0,t~ .. CM1I D1!1Y l"++el Publlll'IH °''"'' C.lflf l'llllr Jl llt)I, Jl._.11.,,.. Or•"'' CNll Dtll'f' ~11!11. Jl~IMI"' JI, :It "II F"'1.!t rv '· n , 1"11111\hld Or1 .. t Cfftl [hll1 lf11&1, P\1&1111!1<11 Drlfllt C11tll '"'' "'" ' • J_.ry '· I(. JI, II. "" lt•71 Jill. 1 .. Jl, • tNI ,., ., 11n tJ·ll J1.,u1,,. 1. U, JI , :tt. ltn t&-11 UP1 110·11 ~•-rv H. l'Htu••J ._ •!. it, n11 ,.,.11 J•...,••v 11, tt .. l'tl&<u•rY l , "" ta. II - ' ... ' .. . . l11ursdu, ..l.t11uary 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT 17 Everyone Has Someth ing That Someo ne Else W enh DA.ILY PILOT CLASSIFl!D ADS . . . You C•n Se ll It, Fin d It, Trade lt With 11 Went Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l~I _,,,,.,. I~ I -~ .. l~I -~-l~ I -..... I~ I -~.. I~ I -1 .... ~~~1 :.~~ --- General General General eflnJa J~/e COUNTRY CLUB LIVING Newport Hti9hts Aru Enjoy OJ'M' ol "C 0 s T A ME.5A'S FINEST'' located $1500 Below Market "'" WEs="'" SHoe. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES PING CENTER. Amp I e room fnr your large furn i- ture. Three GIGANTIC BEDROOi\tS, llf'W golden harvest 11hag carpet. Double LOG SIZE fireplace in 1he family mom. Frrsh spark- ling white df'Ct'.lr Inside and out. Bright, cheerful kitchen 10.'ilh ~arden view! $2900. fn. itial FliA Investment . OUR BEST VALUE! Al Only $3.l ::.OO. 53 L ind a Isle Drive AC't Fast: Private, carefrre community lh'ln£ l.z mile h·om blue Par 1flr. Swim-Home on lagoon, 5 BR .. 41h ba .. \Y/4 frplcs., jacuzzi tub, hd\Yd . firs., scp. !iv. nn., din. ming, tennis, rf'crMllon arra rm., !am. rm. & brk!st. rm ....... $175,000 l\t yoor rioor·st.-p. 3 chl\rm· ing bedr0C1m ruilet.. Color For Complete information on all home1 & roordina1er1 alt elrc. kitchen. lots, please call: Formal dinin~ al'('a, Lush BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR dN'p pilf' carpclini;. l.Aul!:r 133 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.8. 6"'l"'46lO encloSf'd tttrium patio. 2-car I~!!!!!!!!":"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!"":!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,., g11!'fli;:t-. LO\V LO\V DOWN 1General G I or assume existin~ FHA 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 -,;;";";"~'.;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I loan. A true 11teal: CaU 11 • (TI~I 9fi2·~. TRl-PLEX $39,500 (3\ 2 Bedrm units, separate one for owner. Li\'e in 11.nd try $600 dO\\'n FHA. HOME & BUSINESS 2 Goori C·2 locations in Costa Mesa. Call u11 for details! Newport •I F1irview Beau1 1fu! bayfron1 liome with deslrahle l:as1ern f'..X posure Impn>ssl\'P rropif'al entry Expens1\·e!y landscaped rxtrrior Lovely bayside li\"ing Rm , opens onto spacious terrace Large family room formal dining mom j Bedroms, 4., baths Brand ne.,.,· anri ready to be Jived in $157,500 FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Rrallors l~n :n ArookhtJTst A1·e. Huntington Brach PERFECT TAX SHELTER Evening11 Cali 644·7003 NEWPORT BLVD. 0\\'n TEN Comm.-rrial rent. V 11ls plus addilion.al resident· ( 1111 &. pRrkini:" income in EAST rrrn srREET shop-A pini:: complex. Rental in· com!:' offsets all expen11es in. LIDO eluding payment~ en11bling $37,500 buyrr to take full deprecia. Xcel Terms tion, tax anri Interest deduc. Looking for Prime, Prime tion~. Priced to sell at Exposure Balboa Pf!nn. 2 $119.IK)O \\'ilh 293 down, Call Unitll . TremendOU!I Potent. "lllliJi! .. ~lll!!!'!!~l!l~J iaJ -Walk to shopping . To-p: day~ best buy • Don't wal!. 646-7171 6'46-8811 (•nytlmtl I ~INCE lM~ 673-4400 'OTHEREAL 1, ESTATl:Rs UNBELIEVABLE STEAL $15,850 GREEN THUMB? TWO HOMES ONE LOT NEWPORT If you h<1ve nne. \\'e h~ve th!! SHORES Look _ 2 -2 Brrlroom homes property for you. Jt s Jn"-', on one lo! • WhM a buy . This 2 bedrm. 7 yr ol1t homf' moriern. 4 hedrt")()m bfoauty Sunny day11 11·ill fin" you Built to owne~ needs . But Is truly a b11rga1n huntf'rs I on a .~weepin11: rorner lnt in clo!<e to the oce11n in thi11 3 perlett as a home + income special. Closr to shoppini;, !he College Park area nf bedroom. 2 bath Newpor t nr as 11n investment. Exrel- schools. and r"ln!y 3 1n1les to Cosh1 J\1rsa . In back, Yflllr Shorrs home with " bre11.k-lf'nl access 10 shopping anrl lh~ bea('h. House is bl'1ni; Jlnwrr lo1·cr lnrnrls \\'ill fas! rwm. Just r.-riuced t(l M:hools • Hurry -Come 1n- pa1nted 1ns1rle & ou1'. 011·n.-r 1lrhght ar the L'Omplete S29,9:ltl. thi~ hnme h11s nel'.' vestigafe and lnvrst. says sell. This bargain won't GRC:EN llOU~E 11.nd separ. shag carpels. new paint, and DIAL 64:'!.0303 Jasl long! 111.-sharied la!he covered nf'\V dishwashrr. The pur-FOREST E. OLSON COATS area. A mo~t unusual prop. chall4? price. includes tor11I REALTORS ~ & crly at $28.990. u.~f'. ?I all the rommunily 2299 Jlarbor, C.l\f. ~ ~~t~~~! ~ co:Ts ';,."~~;~rs~~'.·~~~~~~er:_~ PRE PD INT \0 THE RCAL '0 C~TATCRS . . W WALLACE 11on call 646-7171. Open Ev1n1ng1 • • e 962·4454 e · REAL TORS ABANDONED~BEACH DIRT CHEAP /$19 ,950 Th11.rs righ1! You can'·! buy I the dirt for this prlrC'. Spark· li ng modP11l ~ bedroom. 2 full bath". llui;:!r counlr~· I gty]~ kitchen \\'ilh liltl'sl buiJt.Jn i;, L.lndi:c11pi11s:: to ~r'feclion Trrrs anri /1011'<'rs. 1 Troplc11.l .s::rrrnhousr. Rr11•k patio & pl11ntcr.-;. T1k1 hchls Low, lo .... · do"''Tl !.· mn\'e r11:ht in. A mus! lo 5rr' ~ C11ll (n41 962·Y.iR:i FOREST E. OLSON lnr Rr11ltnrs 19131 Rronkhur.:t Avr. BEAUTIFUL CLIFF DRIVE Qu11lity c11s1om rnnsrr11r•!1nn' I Bt!!er th11n nrw conditlnn' Tnily minimum rarr yard! Loc11.tl"<i in mu,..h rlf'sir.-d 1 Newport llf'ights! J Brn. j rooms, 2 full haths. H1 1R" Family Room, Prlcrd Ri.11;ht at $49.900 .• Call &16.71TI. • Let Us show you lhis very special home today. -544--4141-Max. ttcccpt or write your (Open Ev•nings) own terms. rLow, low rlown) • ..,,;,,,;,...;;,.. .... ,;;,;,..,.1-'";';:~;;;~~~iiiil4~1 AC LAKE SAN MARCOS, Macnab-Irvine Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 CRISIS 01\'n"r l)UI r>f work, hr>nlf' rn11s1 bC' ~olrl immNl1a1cly. 4 Hedrr.nm~. farnily rm, fire· plnr.-. 2 s l!11")' on hu e:.-. hUJ!:C 1 .. 1. A ~k1n1< s1n.:1m . .'\11hmi1 FORCED SALE $44,500 FULL PRICE. WALKER Ir LEE MR. LEVINE JNVEST.MENT DEPT. Once 1n 11 J1ff'tim" we come 545.9451 \0 THE REAL \""-ESTATERS . . " llp('ln ~uch 11 v11h1,. in !his 1-========= spacious ,\lrs1t V1>rrlr hnme. DUPLEX 3 111r£r tx-droom.-;, 2 haths, ON BAYFRONT lari.:.-rnrnrr !n! wirh mom Pi!'r & fln11t, \\'ill hold 40 f!. lnr 11 boal. $18.000 5"• 'Yr llS· bo::it. 2 BR. l -h11.. upprr; 2 sum11hl.-lo11n. Only $30,,iOQ. RR. 1 \:: ba. lower. Price • Catl 546-2313 $107,000. r.O· THE REAi, '""-ESTATERS " . . '" " . ' .. Call; 673-3f'i63 &12.2?.\.1 Evr:o;, 11ny 1"{'a$1}n:ihl.-nfr.-r lpt"nrl-1-====7""""'-7'7-in~ f n re1~los ure 1.Cali EMERGENCY SALE 5-1;).8 !24. Bring your olrer on this prime associated BROKERS-A EAL TORS ZO:ZS W Bcilboo 67l-l663 Irv. Terr . 3 BR. home w/ ONLY ONE LEFT pool & many extra~ lnr T11 ke erivantag(' or la.st yeaf'll choice living. A11king $59,500 hldg. <'t"~I and invrst now in by 11nxious owner. prime View proprrty-have CORBIN only nne la1e 1970 model • lefl ! E.'tclusive Dover Shore11 . o T HE REAL ""-ESTATERS ' . . I Me1a Meadows MARTIN 4 BR,·' Ba., pwdr rm., f11m, .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Nief', J;trge 3 & fam ily on rm .• dining rm. Open \Vttk· QUIC'! rirad l'lld strf'f'I loca-ends. 1644 Galv::y Dr. 2107 STERLING AVE l Three 8f',drooms Shaa: Carpet~ No Down VA 60x100 Loi Panf'lling Only $24.9~ BUY JT! • )1:csa\'fr~, 'J\rnt'1r 546-5990 BALBOA DUPLEX $34 .950! Will trade for bay. front a!ru:Je. duplex or tri· plex 675-3000 lJ II\\ ,\ Ill" \1"11 111:.\1 •. , '"" r • ' • •. ~' ' lion. Oflertd on no do\\'Tl REAL TORS '44-7662 Roy J. Want, Rltr. 646-l:i.'JO p;i.yment 1rrms !n Vl'ls or $25 450 rnA. E"'"'!:' .,;, .. ,.VA Near So. Coast Plaza ' Joan also 111 J\4%. $28,500. 4 BR + Den Rentals 4 Bedrooms. 2 hathR, fire-A~suroe 6\13-apr JM.n. Pr,5- 2 BR Cnnrto lurr1 .. • •• • •• $175 placr, hl!n r!Ulge & oven. tli;:e location, large room11, 4 BR Ho11~. ~1esa Verde $265 CllrPf'I~. rlr11pe~. patio, dblt 4 Bedmoma, den. 1¥.Jilt-lns, S.6·5111) ~11r11i;z-,.., S27.75(1. park like yard. Open Ill 9 (neartintrnilheltlt\ Roy Mc Cardle Realtor pm. 540-l 720 LLEGE REALTY ISJO Nr\\·pnrt Blvd., C.M. TARBELL 2955 Harbor ,,,.,,.._.-.... S48-n29 REPOSSESSIONS PRICED AT $17,850 Spul<ling clean homes, some newly painted & carpeted. 2, DUPLEX SJ6,!l10 3, 4 &. 5 bdrmt. Some wlth 23rd k Oranee, C.M. pools. FHA-VA conv. temui, 3 Brdroom 2 bath, family Builder 642-4905 trom $17,000 to $«1,000. fl'Y!ffi home, Complete with Colllni &: Walta Inc. · blln~. crpts & dr11pe,, dl)le 111143 Adams Ave. 962--5523 garngr & boat access. Own. Newport Beach -. OCEANFRONT * e.:-movf'ri to Bostnn anri Pool H mu111 t.ell lmmediate.ly Suh. ome DUPLEX mh You r terms. ~l 540-1.l!il, The .1nv11 1.n~ blldc yanl for Comp, furnished, 3 Br, up, Heritage Realtors, (open out~1rie hv1na. 3 bf'dmoms 2 BR. flown. $n.500 eveS,) and den . convt"rfed inln bf!d. G.orge Wllllemson ~!!"!'~""''"!'!'!!!!!'!"~~I room 11 l""IC'rded. 2~ spadoUA Realt9r 1"iiii;lf~lflliili~llO;;~~I CORONA DEL MAR Mth~. 1~11:"e. t•mlly r'l'IOm 673-4»0 '4~1564 eves ,.ATTENTION BUILDER' s w wilh m11rblP nr~plaee, 20x401-===~.-===o-LUSK HARBOR VIE pool wllh '""" pomp"'" STEPS TO OCEAN Big 3 BR.. It fAm, rm. Yr. comple1ely owrhault'd filter Immac. 4 Bclrm. 2 blllh home. old . Super 1i:r:e ll't lot. ~·llltm. $4l ,50Q tor quick Blint., atrp, dn.pea. 2 Car R.-3, 1.7 Am'S, lop loc&tlon Colla Me~. All utlltties in. Can build 37 units. Good ttrm•. S7S,noo. Lacltenmyer Rlty 646-J!m t ve1: 673·1439 SM.495. u.le &16.7171 g&.J'l.fe. Only $.1.l !IOO. Home Show R1altor1 ' CAYWOOD RIAL TY '' Armctlair J.lou~hunrln;'' 351'> E. Coast Hwy., Cdllf 630ll W. Coa~t Hwy., NB 548-1290 =...,,,.,,...6,,,7S-C'.n=25;--;==-1,"'"=;~;=~;="";;= SelJ idle t~mJ now! For hesl rMulls~ 642-5671 WhUP. El!!phanl DI.me.A-Line C.11 60-6678 Nowt ..... General JUST LIKE NEW ~ Bedrm, 2 DIUh Condomin- ium. comple1rly redet. ln- ('[Udin,11; new C'l!.rptls. [m- mrd. O('{'Upan<"y. Priced be- low markrt 11 t $20,SOO NO DOWN TO VETS Large .1 BR with 20x2Q rum. pus mom, hrdwrl floors , Rear yarri rompl hlork wall- ed with JUmho N"ment patio area. VA apprRised at. , , $24,600 EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Sharp units \l.'llh (21 2 Bedrm & bachelor unit on large lot. Dtile detached garage. Try 10':~ down, only .•• $32,950 263 Costa Mt11 St. OJMn Dally 1•5 .. ----- 'PER;:::!CN -J •• ~.·· ., •• 642-1 7/1 Anytime General Costa M•u $112 per month EAST'SIOE -. ·1~ klfln totll p•yment av1ilable. Oloice 3 bed.rm, Take over subject to ex.isling 2 bath home in ahi;olu!l'ly Joan. Exceptional 3 bedroom, immaculatf' condilion. All Family room, and POOL bltns. h11NfY.'OCKl f I oo r 11 , 'A'ith enrlosed palio. Mov' crp\g, fireplace & qui.-1 re11identl11I loc"rion, A must in condition , • , 11po1Jess !o lil't' al SlJ.000. CaU 11\roui;hou t. Total priee, only ~8424, ~uth Coast $31,950. If you can't bl"Jleove Realtors. 1l, call and §tt It. Realror ~29 Harbor, C.M. Balboa lsl•nd 3 BR, 2 & + g5t hst, pill, rov'd, lncd. nr war, frpl, SlO 1\.1 rin . Edi. O\\·n. C'ar 111t. 67H2ti7 College Park COLLEGE PARK 3 Bedroom, den, rumpus room, pool. As~ume present FHA loan hah1nce. JEAN SMITH, RL TR. 400 t . 17th St., CM 646.3255 $23.500 -VA NO DOWN nr FliA h!rms aya~ahle. Nice 3 bedroom tiomr v.• 1 ! h hard.,..'OOd floo~. dblt-g11r., dinlna: •nd HUCF. lo!. Ex- cellent lutun! potcntisl. CIJI ~5-8424, South Coast Realtot'l'i. IN Me111. Verdf!, by owner, 3 BR., 2 ba, Fam . .rm, Shag carpeting throughout, Elec· rr1c h0m~.di11 hwash e r, trp{c, fire &. bufil11r alarm .sy5t~, AM/FM radio ir1- tel"c:Om throughout. Pario, $28.990. ~9-3422 ~I 0 V ING-TRANSFERTIF:D- Tired of fighting w l I h Jrnllnls? Olli the probl1>m 110lvera -South Coast Re&l Est11tr, P roperty J\fgnage- ment Division. .-------.LL.fo!ti£if7• .1 BNlroom Dre'am Home on l&rtte corner, crfllri, drpri, dpi;irab!e hltnit Jncl. di11h- ~·11sher. Beaut courtyatri pallo & !n 1op locatiOn nr 1chools & &hopping, Cbec.k a ttr11c1ive prict & x!nl tin. anclng. Pacific Shor es Realty ~'6-88!:H Eve11 ~ 842·8728 Realtors 2790 llarbor Blvd. at Arlams 545-046:'1 Open 'li! 9 PM * Monocch Boy * NEW 3 + DEN & POOL t'lRST OITERING ol lhJ1 1parkling new viUa, over 4,.'\00 sq Ir unrier roof plus l,00) sq ft drck &. 115() sq tt finl5 heri .11;1raJte • all rttiml hllVe ocean view " open to deck pmvlri1ng most unu!!U&I rie,ign for indoor/ou1door living. Sl lO,fl(IO. For detall.s 499-2974 or 497·1531, '"'""""""""""""""!!!!!!! Coron• del Mar 54.>-8-424 MESA DEL MAR Here 111 the house yntl°Vf' been dreaming nl. Close 10 11chools, rhurche~ 11nd shop- ping. So clean that alt you n1>eri 10 rlo is ninve in 3 Bl'd- room11, 2 B11lhs, srcluded yArri with room for ho11t or (•amprr storai::e. Lnv.-ly pa- tio for outdoor r nterliiin- tnPnt , Only J,11,900. Cali 546·2.113. 10THEREAL '""-ESTATERS ' . . ' ' \ TAYLOR CO. OCEAN BLVD. VIEW PLUS INCOME Out of this world lli~w of har- hor, ocean aod jelly both from 01.11ner11 luxury .1 ltffi- rnom unit anrl from the sp11cious 2 bedroom inrome uni!. Ont-nf 1ne finf'st riu- p\.-xe11 or it~ kinrl. Loc111ed only a stones throw from China Cove Beach with a J1;pecl111 l;f'11ch location PLUS , •• T \\'O separate two car garai;cs. St.19.500 \0 THE REAL ·~ESTATERS • 1 •, '. \O THE REAL \""-CSTATERS . ·. '' Th11 r's ri,11;ht • 8 full hd rm~! Formal Dn • ~fl . modern ki1l'h • breakfa~1 are11 • 4 l-*==N=E=W=L=l=S=T=l=N=G==.= b11!hs -large LR -white Beaur, 3 BR., J~ ha, Orig, hri('k 1'".P. Pool heatrrl & <.V"Hl..'!truCI. Cheerfu l ki lch. filler. Badminton e<iurl -w/brld.~!. lln'R, f.'ormHI din. 11vi11ry • rnuch niore. you rm. Frpl. w/Hf'alola1nr. Nite \\'nn 't brlirvt' 1hr r1>Hsonabl!' patio. Beach side of Hwy, prier. Hurry. Di11J 645-0.'JO:l. Walk 10 everything. Priced FOREST E. OLSON •• ~'" REALTORS 22!!9 Harbor. Cos1a !\!ei;11 PERSONALITY PLUS MORGAN REAL TY 673-6442 675-6459 DOLL HOUSE ••• Thar the own.-r'~ f11m1Jy h;i~ nutgrtiwn. lmm11culatr in ev- ery rlrt11i1. J Brirm., 2 hath in one nf Ot,\!'s hnegt beach l\rl:'as. $54,9()(), Delancy Real Estat• 2828 E. Coast Hwy., Crl M &14·72i"O \O THF. REAJ, '0 ESTATERS . . . Fountain Valley Lovely Pool Home! 11i X 34 l!!eetrd & F'il1.-rrril LnvPly y11rrt w/ho111 l{Hl f'~ • Li;: t>f'rtroo1n~~ Crpr11, rtrp~. Motivated Seller Lonkini::; lnr motivated huyt-r for hi~ ch.anning 3 BR., '21/s bath &. f11 mily nn. town- house. Asking $29.900. Mo~ 11nxioU~ to move nMJ' em· p!oym('nl. (ired hill JtEALTY Univ. P11rk Cen1er. Irvine Call Anytime 83.1-0'rl(I Salisbury Re 11!~ 315 l\1ARINE AVE. 673.fi900 BALBOA ISLAND BEACH UNITS 11 UNITS only 8 yn old. New- port Sho~~. close to beach. Excellen1 income or Sl,570 mn. 14 gar11gea, no vacan- ci.-s. SIJ.i,000. CALL G> '''·2414 IJ!~llL Nt1r N1wpor1 Pe11 Offlre BALBOA COVES WATERFRONT Prtme Joe. 3 BR. 2 ba. 1ingle Laguna Beach 5fory, Newly dtror. Fenced $31,900 yd, "' ft, ""'' •llP. '"·""' Bill Grundy, Realtor 3 Brrlroom 2 bllth E11rly Call-8.U Dovrr Dr., N.B. 642-4620 forni11 rtylr home. lf'6s 1ha11 MUST SELL BY OWNER 11 Y<'llr old. Y.'hilP \\'a1rr Brand new, fee simple, 1 ''iew. Tiie rnlry with double blk beach, l br, 2 ba., 2 IO.'ood rloo~. open beam ceiJ. frplc, beam ceillngr, w/w lni;:. IQfS of .,...ood thruoul. I C'arpet, huge dbl 1 & r , Bu 1Jt.1n kllchen with dish· 642-7523, washer. Call • =a~Y,-,O.~ • .,..-r-,3,-,0~.~.-.~,-,-. ~,~11,1 .AO tan Charming 5 8f'riroom Rar. H11rhor home. 2000 5q. I!. f)f luxury livin11: nn Ont' noor. F'amily room with firepla ce. F'r.-i;hly deror11ted. Woulrl YOll brlil'Vf! $3:1,85() -Cal! 54ti-2.1 1~. FINE OCEAN VIE\\' 2 B <'>:Int~~ LA1w l n1rrr~1 Lnan! 2 h11, o.-n ~ t'ncl. por,..i, lov: HAFFDAL ,REAL TY REAL ESTATE AA . Pool S38.000. 1936 TPrt-s1fa L.n, N.B. 642-2378. •22.1 OCEANVIEW Ave for sale by owner. View ol Bay & Ocean. 5411-79fl,l \o ·THEREAL \""-F.STATERS '0" IL , BEAUTIFUL new c1u·peting 11nd p11i11t throuiroout makes thi11 3 hed- room hom,. an ou!slanc\ln£ val\1e at $24,7:,0. !'f'ller Is an11iou~ anrt wlll •ccept VA or F'HA term11. Don't wall. Colesworthy & Co. ReRl1 or Newport Beach Otfice 1028 Ba,yalde Dr. 675-4930 ly kit, ~rt bar, 1 ~U rnin-. 1 iw2.~41}!l t.vr~: ::.41-2446 1190 Glenneyre .'>!. 4!U-9473 ~~.n:llfi \\' w crp1 Xln1. rood. Nr. 1 Huntington Beach hr>ach $67.:JOO, 0 \\' n er, * f''Ar.fl LY DELIGHT • 6i.1-iJfim $18,250 NE\V VIF.:"' 4 BR, 2 BA . VA N'l Down 11r FHA S~ tar,, living, rtin1n" ' 1,m,i." CllAnMIN\, 2 br \\'/n111ssive ., "' ·' uSP,C! hrick frpl,.., open Do\vn. 2 Bcrlrm, 2 hRlh Con· rnom . 11.ll hR ve bl'am rf'il· bl"llm.~ 1hruou!, fncci yrl , cor-dominiun1. Lft11:e livin.11; Inn. Sh11ke roof, firrpl11rr, ner lot. s:ui,;;oo , n1;,....2409, room modrrn kilrhrn with artacht'd 2-car 1::arage, Ex· Newport Height• BEST BUY ••• & BEST VIEW I nn CIHI Drive :t Bedroom • 2400 sq. 11. Open Hou11 Sun 1-5 'U20 CHH Dr., Nwpt H&)lta Co1ta Me1a lnvestmtnt 541-nll anytime IN<'OME CrlM. 2 houses. 9'1n rr 1urn. Close to everylhing. $.111,500. Phont-499'..1622 f'lec hlln range & ovf'n; .1::11.r. cellrnt neighborhood, close bage rilllpoMI, plrn1y "r cup-to school!!. 10% down with boal"lfs itnd 1lor11£e RpacP, goot1 financing on balance, ~rp laundry ronm , Cl.rpel~ S44.800. Sant• Ana Cotta Mesa & drapes included, forf.'l'd m· 1----------1 11ir heat, petio, paymon11 _'.& ~ . ~ BEAUTIFUL I , u · ~ w· 1 · ~ '"'~~ '"""°" CORNER LOT m ~1de uvl"'n 1th .Jny Jtf8 than rent. .....,...... _, , ~'*<ii" '667 7 .,_ _.,. 50, co•ST "wv. BY OWN ER • 5 Bdrm, 3 t> '-'-'-'~ llOllYH ., ·_,...,:::::;..~= e-o.u<. Baths, many f'lllra.11. Cloae , lltl fo Irvine !ml. complex & S. new •fto) u•e&u•oa 2 ,.7 ( _ ••• "IOJ <99-'800 t6 ~ I -"J --Coa111 Plaza. Prine. only. , .. ,l •>u1sID _, I n--VI AJ.iYJI -. .-.-.-.-. .. '"'>"''" acu ar ....._..,an ew 540-8391. PJD ILJ n ---OW,JbERZWX Custom bu!lt 2 BR, 2 BA, Santa An• Htl•hts f ·' !'fl hlll~idf! home, walk i ng l ------""~--1 DESPERATE I distance to hte.ch. OWNER TRANSFERRED And I wi5h to !hank you all . Every property HJteri in Jfl70 "''ilh Quintard Rr11lry 50ld, tt ll ~IJrr~ now hll ve lht'ir M11ke oflrr on 1'1('11r-new C11.I. S.i2,500 $1000 as11Umes 7.,,~ GI ilornia Cls.--.~fc. Mas 11flr11c· RETH KE REAL TY lnOl'fKll.lle 5 BR. family rm. live 7~% VA ]Olln, J &PAC-1504 So. Coa~t Hwy 2700 gq. II. 56-2992. Jrn11 be(lrm.~. elrc; hltn~. 4S.1-2R58 TRANSFER monf'y & meanwhile bttck In crptd, drpd, t:ilnck wall fenc-ioo• VIEW of -.-,-,-,-,~& San Juen C•pl1tr1no Ins;: beaul WOOd burning fire. C a I a I Ins , Small but 1 -----~-----1 plal·r. bulldable lot In Laguna. 3 BR, 2~ BA Spanish Pacific Short• Rtalty I $5.~ full prif't. Low on townDoulll!, bltins, c P t 1. 536-81194 Evf'11: 347.59411 l O.W.C. w/ low mnnlhly drpl!, pool, eltc garage, YOUR PROBLEM W. Co11a McM i~ "a 5-way to SPEClALISTS to do it" hornr, ii'11 a 3 .'i. Property Management drn 2 bths. My baU ol WAX Reel Estat• may be your bag. -Qime STEPHENS ·a KAYE In & lel'11 kick II around -. &45-01.22 ANYTIME Ll11 with C.Q. Buy trom C.Q. UNDERPRICED I ANEMIC lt•.75'>. Spaolou• lBR. 1~ ""· CHECK BOOK? &tide C.M. townhse condn. I Thf'n "check" this for VAL- 1..ike new, all bltnR. Pa1io, UE! 3 he-droom1, 2 bll1h1, Pl'lll(!'. Nr pool 6 "lubhu. carpe1in2, fttshly palnled, Adib:, t l4,W> Joan, $148 mo. ftnce<I yard, dOuble KaTllR"· Incl prlnc\ples, lntl're1t iii VACANT i nd priced •I VA tu or leue option, Vac:anl. 11ppral1al ()f S~.550! Ooell\I: Owner 54A.8f'J07 c;ogui ON LY for Ve:ta; !Ow down on f1-IA. TRIPLEX Reduced for Quick Salo 2 Bedroom~ rack, kltchtn Built • Ins, p&f\os, f!nclosed 111"ge1. Sh11~ roof, }ow ma.inten11~ thrunut .• $39.950 r or de1aiLI 646.n11 or 84~25.15. O THI: lir:l\T, ""-CST/\ l "l.f\" payrnentt. Bkr. 493-llil or many other extru. $30.500. 4~' ue1. 6#-D30 day, 673-1028 eve. ~.MDALD IAY NOW'S THE 3 BR.. 3 Ba., "" "'· rm., , d1n. rm., lam. rm rrs.ooo. TIME FOR 716 Em•"ld ll«y By App'L Biii Grundy, Realtor" :R':.'~!"~:bl,~:'. QUICK CASH mod•rn 4 BR. 2 ba, THROUGH A pl.,,..m, .,,,., .,.u, <lrJ>o. dee kl, l11nced, S 6 4 , o O O, Walker & Lee 1 =-=-~~--,-BY Owner 4 Br. 3 ba. fAm $24,950 3 ldr + Den Owher ...... u • DAILY PILOT • R-2 lot near bf'8ch '""P" ""·"'°· °"""' WANT AD POOL 2043 w,.~tcHft Dr. Beautltul Mme. Prlme t1rta. ~ml l Bertrm + den, efltfy hAll, Oprn 'Iii 9:00 PM ()peon tUI 9:00 PM. M0-1720 J sell the old r.tutf TARll!LL 2'.55 Harbor Buy the nrw 1tuH nn It atHum, crptll 4 drps, b11rv;, d11hwa1hi!o:r, DXl sq tt. I Mi trom Sta11 Beach. 968-56511. btme-A-Llne M~n e Tt4J»-2254 e ' ' W H t TE ELEPHANTS" overrunnlni YoW' house! "C..ah" .. .eu· them. thru Dally PUflt 011AAillM ' 842-5878 • I l DAll.Y PJU)T t'l"*I· -2t. 1971 1~"'G!.;":--~l~~:l~I ~-~--;· 5.Hil;j ,1;;-~~13;-~ .. ;".""~~~·~I ;-~ ... ;-~!~I -:---,!(!] L •. ·~ J[t] 1.1.-. " .. -J[!] r~~~-.-;;ll!l~f 1~-rtm•hfor1•I• Lots fore-a. 171 •""'t"*" .... £ ...... ,.,.,,.._.. H1w1iUnf'fm.. l05 tleu•Unfwn.!, d Afih. Pum.• a6I Apts.l'um. S60 Apt1.-Fum. 360 Commorclal NO bott<r vi<-. lo! In • .l,ch Opportunity nt C.,.. Ml Mor Coote -Nawf'OI'! leech ;Goo:i;_;.:,..;,r.;.al.::.;:_ __ ...;::J~C:'oot""::a"'.Mo::"'."1'.".a----r 1 Na'!'J"'rt lleach1 Property 0151 Beacb Hlif., J..aaUN.. Reaa. Attt.U.t. Xlnt rm. 81 c:.111'lltt, MIN. U 2 BA~ _J ba, • ol bwy. • Difft 11,y 50 FEET lllN11IM .. fUINITUU $155 .. SHARP 2 BR. OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, EARN 15"/o DOWN !2000. ~ "" 411. OJ Wknh m.J031; • ••• .,, • TO lllACH """-AduJi., no "'"' (tttn """· '""· dlx. Wint.,.. 1100,0lll cw Dowa 10 am. ,,, ~ 72 JO per . mo ~ .:::i'. 6l8-8800. 57!~~-St. S.autifully ck<ontod ' brd. COSTS l£SS • ., • """"' !250. Adult. ""''· ... ~. $.liOJIOO l..4t.na &l 7~-1'/o MONAROI BAY rare ocean TURN ~l'1iil "'9MI roam berm.. Carpeting. dnp-1 BR. " 2 BR, l~' BA. I ,,,..,.._~==·==~~~=• "AM" TENA1'l'l"S view kit. E:Kdus.iw priv. RE ' Coda Mew 2 Bedroom, unfumlahed di, bulll·lnt. $250/mo. l Complete 1 i.R. Fw'n. Cpts, drp11; nr a:hops; pool. WATERFRONT 2 Br-$250 OC . .._ . • ___ .. _,, ....,,__ ,_ .. _ dllld OJ<. as low u $21 per mo. U"I pd. l""' Mo .. -.. ;~. "li'rly. Pier&: tloal avall. 141,000 aq fl . AltPOM ..... acb rommw:nty . ....,.Q~uuo I . ,..,......., Clrpe-., open ""'am " """ ... v .... W.R. DUBOIS INC. $25,Thll, 496-4819 IWe Can prove It) 2 BR l Ip den. trple, 1% ce11.inc HQJe rear yard. A Walker & lee 100 %0~~~...Y,SE 543--0136 613-9000 Davidson Realty * 545:nfi6 * ----------'on an mvea:tment of $2500 to b&, dbl p.rqe. Fenced in. real nice houae. Chlldren l J BR. furn. $150 incl ulil. I BR. furn apt. ft.25/mo. i-.,.-,--,,=,--.,,,.--1 R••I Est•t• W•ntlld ·1M $25.000 (I u 11 y 9eCUf'td) Prefu adulta. CloM to peta ok. $115 mo. 546-~ or ~ Weitclitf Dr. lnd. item. -.le<:tlon Poot, prage. d J s po 1 a I . l Adult. % block to pier. Shopping Cent•r Site M>unda: lntereatlile, we would everythlflc. 5@..1711 m-0900 Kent Allen. 644).rn.J 24 hr. delv. Month to Mo. Adult!, no peu. 642-2383 Ph. 673-6527 N.B. 10 ac. C-2 downtown San WANTED: Older home w/ Jtk taJk to Our ln NICE 1 b I n;.: t CUSTOM J BR furniahed. acrou •treet J uan C¥iltn.no. or can be roa.Uine \'iew. No brukeni. e lO you. . r w ~. ~e • SHARP clean do8e to Open 'ti! 9:00 PM '-'' Rtllt9I 2 BR. Duplex. BHl1ll. Pvt splil tor developmtal Bkr. Wrl!r-, Cla.uified ad-NO. Wl, du1try hu l'f'O\\'n over 100% re1ponaitk couple or l JIChool~ .I. abo.PPlnc. l BR, LOVELY 3 Br. 2 Ba Condo. 517 W l!tf1 ~ M 54S-34ll yd. 368-A 16th Pl, CM. $150/ from ~ach, $225/mo. 493.-1153 01" ~1706 e\•e1• Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, ?ver the put 6 yeara.11:-e:!i ~ln&le~ 2589 Oran&• 2 BA A f&m rm ., frplc, FA Stunninr view of upper Al'lahiim ' · · 714·2800 1 ~mo~·~Cbild~· ~"-n~•-•~· -"~~~""~~· _ 1 ___ c_._u_&1_U<_7_3 ___ ; Condominium a for .. i. C.OS!a Mesa, Calif. 92626. mg economistl: .say t w , heat. patio, dble ,pr., Back Bly. 2 Pools. Putting l....a.Habn ~ FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. S•n CltnMnt• surpau tbls l'f'lwth over the $225 mo. leue fruit trftt., Extra nice • lrf'ttn shulfleboud 0p-II I Apt Unllll In good location nexl few years. For appt &: Lit 3 bt. 2 ha rum borM only S225 a month. c..n J)Ol!lte. new Y. $345 ~r mo HOLIDAY PLAZA Exception• Y nice v.·anted by pvl buyer. Cand facui call 1'1r. Gregory at 64>1622 54G-ll5.l. H'eritqe Realton, Includes 1o1•aler & garden·g. DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 2110 Newport Blvd., CM RECREATION minded peo-not importAnl 6T:i-35ll. s.10-7060, Mon thnl Sat. C()pen Evea.) lmmed. occup. Must have Ium apt $135. Heated pool. I BR, no pt'li, garage, $95. 160 IT'S like own ing your Park. One block fron1 ocean. 1 BR apl,, SJ40. locluding u!ili!ies. 492-4613 pie move to "TIBURON" -1 ~~~~~~~~~~.I ~;~Ll~~;;::::::::~!I L•!_. a.•ch SHARP 3 BR, 3 BA Ui-level good ref'a:. 645-3483. Ample parking. No children per mo. Aduhs on!y. if you havr. Jived "condo-[: ~ Money to Lo•n 240 RENTALS hJme, 3 car gar, all bltns, CHANNEL front 4 BR, 2~ (: no pell, 1985 Pomona, * 646.1339 • mlnium style" and loved it [ financial I • 1 TD l 1 Charm" Id 1 bd owner wa.nlll action now! ba, }fuge Jiv'g r m , M. GAS trpl, I BR. furn, util -move up to 1'IBURON . st o·an ~nfurn~ :nt~lae. ~· Only $290 per mo. Call lrfr. cpttfdrp1, bltns, I..sc, J350. CHATEAU LAPOINTE pd. Eastside. 1 edull only, wberc real townhouse Uvin&: nn., musiV<e liv. r·m . Hoegee, ~uth Coa1t 646-3378. DELUXE rum 2 Br. apt. no pets. $144. &12-8520 1---------- Apt. Unfurn. 365 General is In full swi11g, 7*% INTEREST w/wood panelling, old brick Realtors, S.5-342-1 . 1 -~J~B=R~. ~,~ ... -.~,.,-,,~horn<--Pool. CJose to shops. $l:i0. J &. 2 BR . Spacious. Pool. I! )'OU haven't tried it -in-Buain•ss 2nd TD L.oan littplact. Ocea.n view, ;wit SijARP 3 BR, 2 BA, quiet On channel with pier" fioat, Adults, no pell. Adu!U. $120 & $150. 19'J3 ''PSI a little time to look it Opportunity 200 acl"OM from the beach. Tru· street. Now vacant $230 per large patio, S45Q per mo. 19-ll POmona Avr-, C.M. Church. * 5-IS-96l1 RENTAL FINDERS Frff To Landlords 645.0111 over. Affiliale Terms hued on equity. • ly an outJtandlnf rental at mo. Call LARRY, ·Heritage 637--0634. or 675-34.15 B•lbo.i Penlnsul• $115 ~lo. I Br, all utU's Qloice Resales Avail Now 11 642·2171 J.45.0611 tJso Mu. Yr. Leue Real Estate 540-USl. 4 Bdrm. on channel $!50 1----------pd. pvt patio, newly rum, \Ve specialii.e in sellinr con. 4¥: 0rc Servtnr Harbor area 21 yrs. 2. 2 bdnn. 6 den, furn., * 3 BR. 1% BA. Cbndo. 3 BR. dplx. pUy rum. $250 e $25 WK-OCEANFRONT adults, quit L ~S--09.)9. dominiums cry u1 for real 2 O per mo S I Mo ,._ a few steJ)9 to the .and S t I •1 . AU "'"·-:ood Real 548-1290 Lovely Bachelors, l -BR. action. pn,perti~s needed, •tt•r ,....,. .. -. at Victoria Beach. Lee Y .. re ria . rec. ~Yt ty Maid service. Pool. Util. l36 E 17th Street Uo d k / . · tac1IU1es. Call 96l-®2-4 or l BR apt tum 'ill June 15th • 675--8740 • ,_D=•~•~•-Pcc.o~;n~t----- buyers wa-iting!! HETU. R•N . pa ec w ocean view. 962-8621., $140 mo. 4405 Channel l ====-~~-~--," I C h F ' $275 Mo. Yr. Le.ftllt'! I PENINSULA Point-nice 1 t MISSION REA,-._,. 3 BR. 214 ba, huge bonus P ace. 675-]aTl. l2' & SINGLE:, TV. LEASE "TIBURON TOWN· as as ..,_,_-'-br, upper. front. $150 u!il v "' '"" llOOI . pet! ok. 1vkly. DANA 34ll1 Coast HOUSE"_ 1000 sq_ fl., 31 (\Ve can prove ii) , , ·• 985 So. C.OUt Hwy., Laguna rm f: I~~~ kldiH~ NWPT BCH:Immac 3 BR, paid, yearly. 675-5055. i\larina "-drm, ''•'• '-th, only 6 m-. on an investment or S2500 to Isl &. 2nd T I ft--"• PHONE 494--0731 mo, r a e&a 1.,... den, dining. 2'ii BA; from I~--~------H1~'f. uo:: uo ~ rua ...,_ 557-3™7. $385. Delta 646-44!4 l & 2 br. Adult11, no pets, I----------old. All pool and recreation S25.000 tf u I 1 Y teeuredl FREE APPRAJSAI..S L•guna Niguel $175 &: Sll5 yrly. 507 E. facilities. Avail approx sounds inler~sting. 1ve v.i>uld Costa Mes• lnv•atm.nt . . 3 B_R's. Lri: fenced yard. &Ibo 81 d Birr 67., ,,.,on Huntington Be•ch 2.1.71 likf' 10 111Jk ro you. Our in. 541-7Jtl ytf 2 BR w/fantuttc Mt. v1e\\' $165/mo. 840 Governor. Call Universitl' P•rk a v · • ......,.,.,... l ----=------- 1 I dusl"" has gto\\'n over JOO"'o •n me 0cc •ti! end or sch1 .,.. (2JJ) &-9656 I ;;;;;;;;;;~;:;:;;;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;; [CS!o~,on~•~d~e~IJM~•~•=== BEAtrrlFUL FUR."'I. APTS. Larwin Rea ty, nc. '.J '' ,J· I' 11'"11"' Qu' · · over !he pa.sf G years. Lead. Crown-Valley Hlahla.nd1. Ph 2 BR, l Ba, lrg kH. din CALL US ...,.. ...... itt, priv, pallo. 962..ffll anytime ina-economillts say it will Money W•nted 250 Mr. PeterlOll 114-521-4573. atta, di.!lpl, 1o1•hr hook/up, For 2.3 & 4 BR. rentals in 1 b~R. ci,~ni:· 2y:lks~=-2 wardrobes. frplc, dressi.rlg surpa1111 this growth over the A VERY w<ll •-•"-'--.. Lido l•le fncd yd. $150. 673-2918 Universlly Park $155/mo, l adult, no pel ~~n!~~~~ rS:,~· i&r. Pool. next Jew years. For appt .l ...a '-'""" ..,. •• ~ • 2 er u._ ri and Turtle Rock ,,,., o~"" · bu11ineu in regional Orange 5 BR. 4"' ba. waterfront~·~ · ~ on ~ v. U'l.H>J£U 17301 K!!i!lson Ln. fl blk \V. Is 1vhat you'll save on this facl.ll call Mr. Gregory at .('ounty shoppin& cente r home w/dock, on Lick> fenced E-sldt! lot. Partially WE HA·VE THEM! LRG, priv Bachelor. Room of Beach Blvd, on Slater). 4 bedrm, ? bath with pool I ~53D-=l_ll60-'-'-,_M_o_o_tl>ru __ Sa_t~.--needs expe.nslon capital of Nord. $1500 Month. furn. $l30/mo. 548-Q;SO & bath. No cook'g. Pvt entr. * 842-7848. & recreation faci!lties. Ex-fllflliate:i $30,000 to $50,000, Excellent Bill Grundy, JUtr. 642-4620 2 BR, aep. home. 1'te yard~ $95 incl util. 675-4537 LRG Bachelor, mature adult cellent investment -acrofis Hou I · frpl I 1160 r " . V L sew vas oppor tu nity. Wr ite N rt•---'-c, enc garage, . n-2 BR 1 b t 1 So over .,,,. Part of rent fur from propol{'(j Fountain a Husband/Wife T••ms Classified ad No. 41, Daily ewpo _...... fant OK, no ""t.~. 646-8226 • a, crp' poo' · yard work or only 197.50. · ~·=1 ..-of hwy, adults, no pe.ts, ley t.1iracle "u e. No Selling Pilol, .P .O: Box 1560, Costa FURN. Knotty Pine guest 4 BR house w/back yard. Sl&a lease. 673-8213. UHi pd. Ref's req'd, 842-2'l19 $23,500 full price No Soliciting Mela, Calif. 92626 bouae. \Jtil paid. Sl25/mo. Vic Paularino &: Bristol. .. SINCE 1946" Cost• Mesa $155 • NE\V 2 Br. Crpts YEN OM 4l5 W. l fril, C•• M•11 2 BR, new apt., bltns, !!hag crpts, drps, patio, gar. $180. 356 E. 20th, CM 642-4905 Balboa Island \VANTED girl (in 20's) to share Island hou.<;f'. • 67>7109 afl 6 • Corona del M•r ~;~ ON TEN ACRES 1 I: 2 BR. Furn I: Unfunl Firepla~ I priY. patios I Pooll. TeD1111 • eontnn Didst. 900 Sfi!a Lane, CdM '""2b11 (1".ac.Arthur re Cout H">'> Larwin Realty, Inc. No Delivery WANT ioan SJ.SCIO payable Suitable Jor B1 c helor . 557-4101 af1er 5 lst Western Bank Blde-1----------·I & drps. stovC!, bltns. gar, 962-6911 anytime Spare Tlm•Your Home fl~ mo. "'/10% interei;L 642-5770. e.&-LOVELY 3 br home, 2 Univenity Park CASA de ORO balcony pat. 309 Lincoln, * COROLIDO APTS * CONDO:".fllj"IUf-.f ~fonfi. U an extra S17 10 $55 per. ** 494.3367 ** SHARP 2 BR/, cmplt11 bll.. Ea.11t aide location. $245 D•ys .U.0101 Nights CASUAL Calif. Llvlnt in a l "53&-~~'8~2~4 ~=-~-~~l 2 Br. studio:; & stree:t levels, cello 3 BR, 2 BA. comp[ day in your spare time/your Mortg•ps, remodeled. Steps to ocean. mo. 642-3863. warm Mediterranean atmos-SJZ-;i..$135. LGE, modern l br SIB5 & up. Penthouses $220. ~ec. Dbl garagt, encl home, taking orders from -'Trust Deeds 260 213/SSS.4969. l'EXECUT====1v=E~~3=8=R-. ~.~.~.~. phere Spacklua coklr CO· nr heh; crpU, drps, ere. Dsh"'hr, frpl, dbl carport. pa1io. Enjoy clubhouse liv· people v"ho contact you 50, waterb-ont w/dock. 2 bl'. Lovely tenced ')Tel. Grdnr l ·BR. 2 ba. home ···• $325 ordiruited apb. deliKJled & 409 Calif. 536-426:1. 847-5169 Poot 673·3378 ing. 2 pools, no outside sounds !ntere11tlng. Clli! Mr. WI. NET RETURN fenced yard. Yearly. 3507 incl $260 642--0506, 642-7755. 3 BR. 2 ba. fam. rm.·· S340 furnished for slyle & com-DELUXE Bachelor Un!ts • =17s=R~.-.~,~ ... ~. 7d7o~pl7.,-.~bl~trn;-,I mainl. \\'ill consider 2nd &k•• "'" ,,,, -GUARANTEED Finl Call 0 ,,1 .,. 4 BR. 2% balh ..•..... S.350 IV lk l o .. Ut'l pd d ' ~. t~-'~'-·~~~--'~-~=,1$165 2 br & den, 1~ bll, 2 Elegant 3 bdrm. 2~9 bath fort e Heated pool e KitCh.. a 0 V<-'f!an. 1 • shwhr, lndry rm, fncd T.D. S21,950. Owner FRIGIDAIRE... on PRIME TR.UST DEED, H U f 305 fncd. F"-itu-lo• ·-'o. en iv/ indirect l'<hting e LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 pa!io & gar. $235 /mo. tEX=83l-=·c=E=''=l'T'=",~o~N7A~L--,E~n7'-"°n•70, IL<• •bopping Cb', s .A. $2500 Payabto S2.674 monthly ou... n urn. s<S-6492.-· " ' -~.'.~·~1to,"'r"ec1·· .. ·· hs 37;.i.ll•25 , Deluxe RIO. Adults only, No APT. \\'alk 10 beach. No =·='="'~"'='~~=~~--• '-'• "" gross e A1pha Bet a ' 1 at 9o/a. EMERGENCY! G•Mr•I pet& Sun1mer increas<'s. See mgr DUPLE.X, 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 to l\fesa \'{'rde Country Oub. c IV · I JtlOO S50 en> Cnsh Required •----------1 · ~, 1· enler, eslm1nster 71,1;,u.l'", 71.,_ •. ~~:; 1 8 •1>:0 Fountain V•lley l BR.·$175 turn. ~· ;Jlh SI. a36-3900. garal(es. oceao view, large, 2 BR Condo. Spanish style. do1vn e Anaheim renewed ., ..-.-. .... ..,.,..... .,_... l R Pri" cottage ........ .,.,., tmLITJE.5 INCLUDED 1 Bedroom, SlB per month, S28.) lease. OR WILL SELL Xlnt finan. by o I\' ne r · laundry. cash out e Garden TODAY OR EVE I BR priv cottage, by stream, 3 BR, 2 BA, crpla, drps, REALTY 36.i W. Wilson 642-~n including urilities. S75,000. ~9-1-2339 j.16-Si!IO. No children under Grove. lge 1>tore, cash out. $35.00'.I bl TD on 3 acre 2 :Rsilven.~ Ca~n ..• $1111~ bl~s. S2'{tlc. ~d fncd Univ. Park Cen!er, Irvine e $30 WEEK & UP Trade"''inds Realty ~7-8511 2 BLKS fro_m_oc-.-.,-n-,=.,~.=,-.1 12· Il l 525-i8.l3 estate parcel \\'/ magnifi· CJ"Pts. rps, Lda.. ya · mo. eivinds Call Anytime 833:0821) 1 BR STUD OS I 2 Ba, Jrpl, hltns, crpt.s, 2 BR.. 2~ bA. Pool. sauna. XLN 'T oppor. for couple. cent view. 9% lnt. 5 yr 3 BR home, kids/pet OK $155 Realty 847-851 1 · or I furn w L•guna Beach d-·. 1,.3•.. , ,,.,, 328 Lo d 0 -11· .. a~-' 3 BR d J kid / t 1185 comp!. kitchen (all P.lec.). I ~'-"'='--''-'-'-"'----.,..., """ "' -N w n. w,"<"r w 1 .......... " r.l uflier Serv. & dog groom· due date 12c;,. discount n, JlOO, I pe 1 l\l · Si"' 1873 Fortin Co. £42-5000 ing st"rv. bolh completely Bkr. 49:i.'Jt5J or 4!»-6632 STAR*LET 77~7330 Huntington Beach W•stmln1ter Free lineni. heated pool. air. $30 WK LUXURY argurrit{'. ·>-' • eond, 'IV & maid 1ervice BRAND new 2 & 3 Br apt.s. Duplexes/Units equip. on !'lame property. eves. 3 BDRM., Family nn., park HEATED lllx36 pool. av-;t. & up. Bachelors. singles. I Soot hwy. 32'l Ma....,•erite. I 162 R I Ow ·11 1 1~~~~~~~~~~1 1 J BH, 2 ,BA. yrly lease. .... Bd "-h .1 .•• sa e eas. ease. nen; w1 ike yard. COl!ta Mesa. Kid.SI Covered patio. pan! fam. $250 per month. 1st & la.st. Daily & J\.1onthly rates rm. steps to U{; • all ut1. 644--1 342 or 673-2222. SANTA ANA, Garden apt!!, 536-2449 aft 5 ...a. EE 541).. 720 .. ~ 1~c-n-.,. ""l'" .,.., .....,.. ewport vd ., at 21st' k DAILY PILOT' for action! tench. lnvest. re q • d · 1~ OK, brk .. $200 a m<inth. NO kit. Bull Un ran-.· Att. 2 ~'-· ,_1 & •-. .,7 -_· 2 ..., N Bl hid pool , Jinen!I. rec rn1. 4 units, 3 BR, 2 ba -(2\ loo'==c-oc--·--oc-c--..._for"9nt n:I F , l . car gar. w/laundry &: 'vtr Houses Furn. or • £42.2611 • restaurant. ooc tails, danc-Call 642-56i8 ~Save! YOUNG \Vomen1 Boutique. 3 BlJRM. + family rm., full sottnr. 4 BR. 1800 IL N~w B/Americard e l\1/Charge ing. 2 BR. 2 ba '1 BR. I Xlnl S. Orange Co Loe, est. dining rm., built-ins., brk. w/\v. 2•,~ yr l1e. $295.l __ U:::n:lu:m:,:::·~---~l:l~O~l mliiClilillilinlli l Village Inn lfo1el Apts ~·,1:;.1n ~i:1~e~pt~ia~;~ 5 yrs. Reasonably priced. PO Houses Furnished 300 $390 a month. NO FEE, 7i4-8393 Coron• del Mar I n~ u~ • \oi !!re u~ .f(M.!'J.l.36 racll , $65.500. ~6-5158. Box 1103 Capistrano Beach, Newport, 50-1720. 3 BR, 3 BA, ?.feredith STIJDIO & 1 BR Apt. CHA R:'l1ING Crean Fron! I Calil. G•n•r•I 1185 • 3 Br. l"' Ba. Dining Gardena home, avail now FOh. lease <lr r ent: 2 BR. e Color 'IV, phone serv. pool Apr. 2 bdr. 2 Bath. <leek. Classified INDEX Advert1ilng Income Property l66 BEAUTY salon, Newport • f. rm Chikittn welcome. at $330 per mo. Call Mr. 2?4 BA, fam rm, din rm e Llneri1. maid serv avail. gar. See to t1pprf'cia1e, OWNER 'S~ACRIFICE sell 'Ai int. to workingSl~2BRyearyatthebeach BIU.Be•con*"'.S.OlJ1 Hoegee, South Coaa:t So. or Hwy. $300 mo. ClipAd .• GoodFORS5. $300/mo. + util.Laguna, 2 d 1 hak par tner, $7000. Terms. Bkr Ch1ld/pet1, slngleA ok. Rea.Hon, 545.-M24. Lach~nmyer Rlty 646-3928, Charge Cards Acc. 49-4193. 4 Units, up exes, 5 e 542-9787 Blue Be•con * 64S.Olll Sll5 ·Nice l BR stove refrig SlNGLE t il eve~: 646-2290. 2376 Newnnrt Blvd, 543.97;;~ ~w=E~E~KE=N=o=E=n-. ~R~oo-m--.-& roofed. bltn!i, inc[ refrlg., =-=c--c-'~~=---.-1 crpls drp~ Single& OK ge room ·W/Ut ··.-. '"' 11~ baths, 2 1g bedrm.11, sun. * SANO\VICH Shop. Costa $95 . Util pd. Laguna Beach Blu..Be•~on * '45-Gltt pai~. I ~!le to H.B. Pier. Townhouse Furn. 330 • • • • • • • • bath only. Near beach, bus decks over priv garages, Mesa. Fully equipped . C.Ottage \V/prlv garden. Senior citizen only iv /ref. * Studio Apt ... $11 Q & shop11ing. 4!»-7079 t."Oncrete driw1, ma hog pan. PhotM! 5i!l-4&48 alt 5 pm. Blue Be•con * '4.S.0111 $135. 2 Br. Stove, refrig, !>hag No pe~. Call 536-3846 Avail EASTSIDf: Costa Mesa, cot· * I Bedroom $130 Newport Beach ·-" Tot ok toge. l bedroom, adults on. elling & much mor('. Sho~:s OPENINGS for wholesale ... ,."'. · now. 12',;, +yield nn attracti~'e drycleaning & for laundry. B•lboa Coves Blue h•con * 64S..OIJl l'l~B~,."'°'z~.,-.,~,_-,-,.-'1'-.-,-..,-.,-. ~2~~~!.sed546-~1':ge, S160 \\'AU"G DISTANCE . :;rQR. p1ice. Top location & Brkr/ Ph. 646-SUO, ask for Chuck. \VATERFRONT. Decor 3 Br. $165. 2 Br. Near beach. Fncd drp!i:. Nr beach. S11limming ES i\IAPLE ST, NEAR 19TH Just For ____ "'_ ... _,J~ Classification I 00.149 Rt1I £t1a1e, I•/ Gtner1I ~~ Classification 150-1 84 O"•nr say11 sell FHA S.· pay Investment 2 Ba. i\lo. to Mo. SJ5(). yard for kids & per11. pool, tennis courts. Children Duplexes Unfurn. 350 645-0349 points. Phone: 536·8894 or Opportunity 220 Bill Grundy Rltr. ~2-162JJ Blue B••con * 64S.011l ok. pell ok. ~irtRlea ok. $165 SINGLES Sl30 mo, lncl util 1 ~6'1~>~2~4~36~.-o=~===-ll -;!-"-:-:-'-~ mo. 714/87~3033. Coron• del Mar I· B•lbo• lsl•nd $120. 2 BR yard for kida/t~~-~------excepJ elt:c. r-.todern Single Adults I """''' I~ Sou!h Bay Club ls ll w~le ~c-1.-,-,-,f-;,-,-,-;,-n-2-o"o.2t.o 16·2 BR. UNITS Partner Desired ---------1 Pl'ls. Avall~ble no\\'!! 3 Br, 2 ba Me. paneled OCEANVU.Sp1c 3 Br. 2 Ba. furnishings, all bltns. Ad!ts for luxury COZY 3 rm cott nr bllY Blue Be•con *64S.0111 fam rm, frplc, bltnA, crpt whr/dry, dshwr, bltns, only. 197;; P1uwn~ St Ex~pllonal -srudio type, all 2 BR. 11; BA . Subterranean garages . 32 spaces. E.Side, c .r-.1. Call ~tr. H.anis. South Coasl Realrors. ~5.&.12~. · TRADE Equity 24x60 Olym. pian n1obile home. located in beautiful Orange O:iunty park for equily duplex , triplex. 4-plex. C.i\l. area. * ~5-SUl * DUPLEX S36.9;iO 23rd & Orang<', C.:11. Builder 642-4905 f\IOB!t.E HOME PARK & shops, util pd $8,') mo · & drps. S250 lease. 968-5363. bale, dbl gar. Refs. (corner of Ford) See mgr, O!!velopment in lo 611. eld cpl pref. Adl t.5, Balboe l1l•nd 2 BR. l~i Bath, fe~d yard, 67s....4ID. No. 3. i\IAJOR SO. CALIF. CITY no pis 673-1162. CHAR"-llNG im a by water tum, $175/mo. ChUd Newport Beach ACAPULCO Apts. attracti\·e. ALL city Ut\hTies & 4 BR. furn. Avail Feb ls!. deco~mr. '1 BRm ~· or 21;:•;"~"::;:i..~1~0·~··~-----ll :'.'.'.'."::':-::-:------Pool, U!il p,alcl. Garden Jiv. St"ll"ers. On J\1ajor $.1i:>/mo yearly. G3!1 & 1o1·tr adlts. Til June i :>th. $190 Sl:ZS • 2 BR duplex. fr-need . CONTEr-.1PORARY 2 Br & lng.. Ad ults, no pers. l BR. Anerial. All Plan~ pd. 646-2130. mo. incl util. 7 2 l ·~ Kids. pel ok. 187:>1 Beach, den, 2 Ba. 1~ patio, 1 blk Slt5 & up. 2 BR S17:J. 1800 to1nplel('. Lo\\' In1eres1 :: BR. home !'Cl. Bavfronf, Ame thyst. See Sat 1;: Sun. £44.8392 or ~i:>-3664. to beach 1.e.aY" S11j/mo. \\'allace Ave., C.l-.1. .F iruincing Arranger!, d?Ck prh•il. i.\j() :'11o. tO June Coron• d•I M•r * * 3 B<lnns. 2 Balhl', close 1 :~°"~"'~'~71~4 '~"~""'~~1~. ~~~ 1 SI35/i\f0 . dlx n'IOh. hm, RE.\DY 10 Build! Projec1ed l;,, Island Rily 673-1200 to f.farina High. $240/mo. compl rurn. htd pool: adlL~. PROt"JT Sl.800.000.00! Balbo• Peninsul• 2 Br. frplc, pvt patio, yrly Call 846-1224. I 11¥} -"'=7",''7·747·"_"";-'='-'_'•_b~"-"-ON LY QUALIFIED lease. Adul1!i, no pets.l·L----8--h----·! "'*1mentthlr~ 0 2359 Newport 548-6332 PRINCIPALS I'~ Br home 11v11U, Feh 1 Stovt, garage. OPf'n 1-3 •guna eac . LRG lovely I Br., cle&n , {{EADY !o DEAL? •ril July J. Util"a pd. Sl8:'>. \\'kends. 52JJ~ Avocado Ave. NfCE 4 BR lam rm. 2BA pool. compl furn. AU ulll NEED INQUIRE. 673-7412. Call eves 536-9485. view h:lme. $285." Nr schla. Apt F 360 pd_ $ll5/n10. No child, no i'l 4/325-4l~: 7141684 ·i'),l5 Coron• d•I M•r 3 BR on double lot. Crpta, Water & gardent:r pd!-'-'-·--"-'"-·-----pets. 548-l316 L ~ •-5 I 170 ___20DAY or EVE. drps, dbl lar&i'e. 3m mo. 642-4032. Gener•I FURN. 1 BR apt . $135. Avail 01• ""r •' SEASONED--'•• •-•---, * OCEAN VIEW * G H 0 -•-R -' ,..,. ........,,.. · . """"'rt.son e11.1tor, L NJg I Feb. 1. 19Zl-B \Vallott. OCEAN front to Coast Hv.·y S2S,OOO & $50,000 executed 3 Bdrm!!., 2 baths. \Valk to 675-2440 .. ..,.,.. ue l BR priv house trailer .•. $65 Adul t!!. No men. No pets. R-3 property. approx. 12.000 by multi.billioft S mfg. 10~ be&ch. Partially furn. Avail. 3 BLKS to ocean or bay. 4 BR, 2 ba. rar,1 rm. l BR duplex. utll pald .... $65 Info .. 838--0033 Mr. D11\•is. .sq. ft. Xlnt busine51 or yield . Call o•'tler 675-~ no1v. SS50 mo., yearly lse. 3 BR, 3 ba, den, din'a: rm, fireplace, erpta, drpl, patio, I BR cottage, utll pa id .. $110 QUJET, stud.loll $115, 1 eR·s home po11ib i l i ty. So. 675.30411_·~--=--=-7 Call: 673.366J 642-2253 eves bltnB, Lease. 673-3477 view. S275 mo . n4: 557-2690 1 BR vacan1, uli/ pe.id .••• $70 Sll-l. No chldrn or pets. Laguna, Sll0,000. ( 213) ''MAK.E Room >For Dad· FRONT house, 2 Bdrrru. 2 Newport Ba•ch l BR separate unit ... , .•.• $90 2135 Elden Ave, CM. See ~1197 d y ., •, .. c I ea n 'out the b . d $223 1 BR ulil pd, tot OK ...... $9j Mgi Apt 6 You don•t, need a gun IO I garaa:e .. your trash is CASH ~ttt.c~nl :~01. 3 BR, 3 BA, large home STAR*LET 77~7330 ~B~E~A7UT='.'•ea=·-,h""•""'l~B~,---,-,~,, Draw Fu' when you place 1.ilh ll Daily Pilot Classified I C t M on channel with pier & float SEUJNG Your boat! "llit" $35 wkly & up, Furn incl 1.;••=ad=tn=""';;;:,~D;AIL;;;;Y~P;IL01':;;::~_,;ad;·=========-=~~~~~::::;::::;::::;~,!.;;°';;g;";--~·~·~·:--;;-;-:;;;;:;:J larre patio, S450 per mo. • 1o1'1th us .. sell it fut. Dally util. Mc;mthly terntA avail. I ' MESA Vr-rde, nr store,1-=="'=-0634=="'=t\'l}.u35=· ====-=Pili>=' ='=Cl;"';;";,.i;· =·=6'tl-5tl'1==3=~:"'~,;;El;,;C.im:;;lno;;·o.546--04::;:::~51~"' I 8Chool1, library, t"lc. 3 BR.I~ • S@"\\d1llA-~£trs· The Puule with the 6uiff./n Chuclle O lleorrortgt1 '-Hfrs cf the f°"r ICtambi.d wordt. hr. low to fer111 four simple WOtdl. I v 0 L N E c ··--- 2 BA, nf'Wiy painted i~ terior, all new faucets. \\'/\V cpl!, fireplace, patio, dtps. blt.\n elec. kitchen. Yr be + cleaning. no pet.a 837-8508 LARGE MESA DEL MAR home with 4 bednns, fa.mlly nn and llU'ft fenced yard, Quiel, ln11k1e 1 tree I . 1-·amlllea only at $27:> per mo. Aaenl m-4141. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Bltns. Fruhly painted, crpfl\ hrdwd On. drps, patio. med yrd, prdener k wtr pd . $225/mo. ht • tut, $50 dep. 557-7027 eves A \\'knda SHARP 3 BR, 2~ BA, 1600 IQ. fl. S!udkl apt, apbl, drps, nr So. Cst Plaza. $XIO mo. DrlVe by m Vt.le.nclL Call 545-G'Jl!I Mar. . LARGE Ranch type 3 BR I lamil)', trplc; f\lll,y crpld, OUICklot BBQ .. covered patio, $225 i\to. Pen"On Re&Jty 6'42-lm LGE 3 br. 2 ba, bltns, fenced. Back Bay area. OJI~&('. Avail Match L S25S mo le••· 4~ • • new \\'ay ot life designed just for single people. It's fun Eving with warm. dy• namic neighbon;. It's a he_alth club, saunas, swim- ming pool, party room, bil- liards, Indoor golf drivin~ range. tennis court&, pro shop and resit'len1 tennis pro. Sing!r. I & 2 Bedroom Jux. ury apartmcnt!i 1vi1h all the modern conveniences avail. able. Furnisl1ed and unlurn. ished. hlOnELS OPEN DAILY HI A.~f .. 8 P .M. RENTS FROM $150 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th (7141 645-0550 SOUTII BAY CLUB APARTMENTS • • • Liv• whe,.. the fun is I COUNTRY CLUB UVJNG Luxury &arden apll!, oJfering cornpl. privacy, b .. au t. lnd.scpg &: unparalleled rec. ~aUonal racllitlC!s in a coun. try club 1rmosphere. Furn. or Unf _. Models open 10 am· 8 pm. ff.e.nts fmm S145. OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMF..NTS 1700 16th St .. NB 642.8170 OCEANFRONT • Lovely Ira: 3 Br, 2 'BA, Children & KOO<! pets welCflme. $275. Feb l · July I. Showing eve• or wknd:i, 2!10 w. Oee&nfr'ohl. STS-1410 OCEANF"RONT · nice 2 Bd. furn dupl", aval111ble lo June 19th.._ S\70 Jlf'r mo. Adulll. 1213! 79>J01.S arier 4 pm. AVAIL Fctc-I . I BR apt, Yearly or monthly, ~ll 291h St. or call n~. 213: 331.Q . ~--·_· ... _._ ... __.!!e J Classification 300.]55 Ap1rtmenl1 fM Rent J /VJ Classification Jb0-170 ~'-"""___,I~ Classificatiori 400-4b5 ~.-"~~--~ .. ]~ Classification 500-51 0 Ptr1onal1 ]~ '--oc~1-.. -.~, 1~; ,-,7,7;.-,~s~2~s. 51 s lost wl f!Mld J~ Cla11ific•tion 550-555 --=--1"_"'"'_""___,J~ C 1as1ification 575-580 , ................ ]~ Classification 600·699 --=----"""°'--__,1[11) c1 ••• jfjc1iion 100.110 1-1~ c1.11ific•tlon 800-136 [ ....... ~ ][B Cl•ssific•tiOn 150.151 I-~··· I~ Cf•tsific•tion 900-912 [•T-dioo ][i] Cli11ificttion t 15.947 I ·~ ....... l§J Cla11ification tso.tto • • ' ' ' • . ' • . • . • ; ' • ' • l • . ' • -! i I r I ! • • . .. ,\ 2 ' .. ' '~ Aµ:k UN IQU!!.:, ~ 3 Br, 2 b1 , beam ctll ., bll:ns, cpl!, dqn;. $27.i 613-6ro4 1. Coste Mese •CORSICAN .1 & 4 BR-3 Ba. Frplc, fam roon1, double i:'U'a&e. Beaut. lounge, Pool. BUliards. Adult & Chlldttns area. .--:.-Rl Riviera Dr. 642..o:nJ • MARTINICj)UE • Park-Like Surroundings DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR A.PJ'S. Also FURN. BACHELOR Prv patios * Hid Pools Nr shop'g e Adults only 1777 Sanui. Ana Ave, 01 ilfgr, Apt 'll3 e 616-."1541 FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 I. 3 BR's CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday 9 to noon Saturday Advertisers may p1M.ce their ads by telephone COSTA i\'lESA OFFICE 3JO \V. Bay 642-5678 NEWPORl ' BEACH 2211 W. Balboa Blvd. 642-5618 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACll 222 Forest Ave. 49-1·9'166 LA COSTA NE\V 1 & 2 br. BILns swim- ming pool & garali:e. All utilities paid. $150 to $170 mo. Adults, no pets. 354 Avocado St., C,\1. 642-9708 ColdweU Banker & Co, Managing Agent 54.1-5221 SAN CLEMENTF! 305 N. El Camino Real 492·4420 !\'rJ llTI·r COU!l.IV dial free 540-1220 QUIET 1 & 2 BR., gru-& I pool. Cpt.s/drp~. Adu I ts 1 _Fc_ou"-n"t"•c.;"c_V_ec.l_l•'-'Y __ _ only, no pets. £.12-8()42. ,\LL NEW CLASSIFIED DEADL'INES Deadline for copy & kflls is 5:30 p.m. the day be· tori! publlcaUon, except tor Monday Edition wt)en dcndllne is Satur- day, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS £RRORS: AcJverUlert should ehcck , their Mtl dally Ir report ClT'01'11 Immediately. TH E DAILY PILOT usumes liability Ior th• first In- correct Insertion only. 2 BR, crpts, drp5, bit.ins, VALLEY PARK pool, rnrpor1. ,,·atcr pd, no APARTMENTS pe1s $140 m<l., 54~14S $170 3 Br., 1~1 Ba, .patio. bit.in~. crpta. drfl~. Ask about our dlsoounr :ilan. MO Center SI., 64U110. SEACLIT~· Manor Apts. 1 &. 2 Bl", l~i Ba. $145-;160. $30 ml~ In .UOwance + reg. discount. Crpb, drps, patio, pool, Infant ok, 1525 Pla~ntia. 548-J682 NEW TOWNHOUSE •.. opcn11 new doors tor ••. YOUNG FAMILIES 2 BR . Apts $160 2 BR . Garden Apt1 $175 2 BR. Townhouses $115 Pre.school center. Adult pool, Children's pool, Prtv pa.Uo1. Elec kitchens. WalJ lo ~·all close1s &. carpeu. 2 play- grounds. Carports & stor- 1 Ir 2 BR, 2 BR, 1~1 BA. ln56 s. Euclid St. Crpfi, drps, sell cleaning {just south ot W~er in gll.$ OYen, encl. pr. Patios, Fountain Valley) CANCELLATIONS: . ~1\38li. 377 W. Wilson. Phone (714) 540-4715 When kUllng an ,ad bi sure to mak• a tecord A.ft. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 of the KILL NUMBtR° ' ~ glv~n you by YoUr: ad,ltf'~-;l~•~ln~V~•~l~l•~Y~--~F~ount~~·~ln~V~·~ll~•~Y;;iiii taker as rece1pt of ~ t'.a.nceJlaUon. Thia • itfl11 number must be pre~ sented by the advertiaer in cue or a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECI'ION OF NEW' AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every ett~·1' lmdir' io kill or cotrect a MW pd th.at bu betn orderld, but we cannot .KUii,.,,. tet to do eo untU Ulf ad hu appeared bt ·~ Pl· .... DJ?ofE~-UNE At:S: 1bne ada a"" • ~lrlctl.¥ CAah in advlnctt bx. m•ll or at any.one ot ciUr of· nce.. NO pbonf' ·orden. nIE DAU.Y 11.Lt11' ~ serves tlW-"*'~ to clu-slf)'. f'd lt. ~ or J"eoo fuio any ad'ftrllllmtnt. And to= t~ NttS :..1o~1 wtchoUt CWt l!llD MAI LINO ADDRESS P. 0-~1!!60, Cocla eta . 26 :J.ounlairu lll..ut.r-Stylo La•ury 1.tl ....... -1_ ' ... u.tas l'ud .... " v-... • '"I t ·-c-.-. ,.,.,.. , ..... ·--._..._ -ll!otor·-irif.J~ ~ • • f '"' - HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults Look Into .... OPENING SPECl!L -1 BEDROOM FROM $115! CASAdelSOL Neat ii! beaches • Ptivale Terrace • Rec Boildlnr• Saunas 2 Pools • Billiards• G1m; Putlin& Green and Volleyball Buill·in Kitchens • Ois~washers • Di5POS1ts • Carptts/Orapes Close to all shoppine: • Private P1rti na ind Storaae ·ALSO: 2 Bedroom w/Firq;f1c1 fro m $205 21661 BlllOkhunt, Hllrtil .... --(714) 962·66SI HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adult ond F~mil1 Sections The posslble.dream •• ;- 1 B..iroom f,,.. $135-2 8"'._ 2 lalta lroM$155 HUNTINGTO.N ·GRANADA Private Te11ate • 3 Pools ~:/Cab1nis • Buitt·in KitchertS Dishwashers • Cilrpef5/0rapes • Wal-:in ~s • Dressin1 ROOlllS Ctose lo Shoppin1. AU Beachq ·~.lel111re Arus 11111 Golden wm st. H~at!it ~. (l14l 117-1055 (Just Soulll.01 Wlrner) SANTA ANA-A~ult and FomilJ<s.Ct!Onf •1 Break the monQ,tc;)ny ... ot!JllNG !mill-I ll[lJ-f1IGllt $1371 PARK PLAZA Prtv'att Patios • Rec BUildinc • Si.un1s • J1cuui • Pool Bllill-1n kit thens • pishwa~ers • Clrpe1s/Qr1pes. Near South Coat Pl111 • Leisure·Artn • frteWl)'S ALSO: 2 S.dro0tn/l Batlt frlQI $167 Town H°"' ;,/I 'klatltsf•Jll5 391111 Sooth-· $saCoJa-(7.14J 54~l214 (2 blocks eart of BrislOI . ..,~ l . . f', . . . - GAS I. WATER PAID 2323 E Iden Ave, 1 CM ' Q 646-0032 or 642-1121 Q NEWLY rurn room, $18 per ,,·eek & up, Pvt entr avail. Phone 546--0451 I LRG Br, full ha, lg closets, pvt enlr, patio. 3 blks bch, bay. 673-1023 aft 6 til 11. BAY MEADOWS APTS. Vecetion Rentals 425 FOR Ren!; Furn trailer in center of Ml!lmmoth Villl!l"', $50 per ~·k. 548--04U tor reservaUons. · STORE w/workshop I n back, TV ttpalr or ap- pliance repair, sm pa.rt house. 443 W. Bay St, CM across from Theo. Robins Ford 646-2971. LEASE Hartm-Blvd filore or office. 1380 sq II. Xlnt location &: parking. Air cond. Carpetifl&. $32S rno Call 642-8060; eves, LIS-2698 BRAND NE\V UNITS all with beam ceilifli.ll. panelin&, pvt patios, frplc, au rec facil- ities. Adults, no t>els. e Bacht:lor • Rentals to Share 430 STORE or Shop avail . ___ 1 dOYln t o wn San Juan • 1 BR rrom S140 • e 2 BR trom $165 • ''NG man will i; hare Capistrano for tm a 11 hcautiful beach home w/ busir.ess or office. $85/mo. san1e. R ef' 1 , Phone 493-Uil, 493-1706 eves 3117 W. Bay St ( bh\·n f.IRrbor 962-2520. S!ore-826 W. 19th SI., CM & N"\\'port Blvd. 1.4 n1i N. 1 -c-,-ll-6'_2-06_"~1'~N-,.-.,---$115/mo. * 646-7414 of 19th SI). CALL &16.0073 * * * * * * Beautiful 1 & 2 BR furn or unfurn apts. OFFERLNG self cll!an. ovens. O/W fin 2 Br), dis pls, shag crpis drps. Jacuzzi & Sauna ba1h: Trader's Paradise Huge Pool. FOR ADULTS only. MERRIMAC WOODS 425 Merrimac Way C.osta Meaa . NEW LRG DELUXE APTS BACH-~m $139.SO I BR-unfum $119.50 2 BR-unfilm $15~.50 FURNI~ED AVAIµBLE NR 1BEACHE.5 t\ OOWNTWN * 642-2015 * 1 BR. turn. $1.30. 2 BR furn Sl.56. 2 BR unlurn, $155. Pool. Bltn1, crpts, drps no children', no pell!. 325-i E. 17th Pl . CM. $48-2738 Have .-$100.000 rqulty in Visalia Walnut Grove: & G.G.. 10 unlta. WANT Or- mze County income prop. Bier/owner, 645-0441 ~.000. Rc!aJ Estate in Pa.Im Desen. for South Or- ange County coast buslnea& venture. P.O. Box 2593, Capo Beach. 496·1412, eves. e DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. Furn or unfurn, $145 & UP. Pool . Gardens. 177 E. 22nd St., CM. 642-3645. '70 VW Van,' b!Ue & while. 2 Bl\. Crp;bJ, drps. $150 unr. :J'rade for.,Jpe,t 1 Trana car! $160 tum. 2658 Or .. Ave, Value S2Tl!t..---.. p:.M .. S4S:.1657. Cal.I Huntington le•ch 1 ~r < lines times dollars HAVE $l&IXXI ,qulty "1 modern E-Slde triplex. Want 8 to U units any ccod, Or. ange or sU Dlero Co's. Sullivan, H1;;8226. $20,000 equity in beautiflll, new Huntt.naton ~ waterfront w/lock FOJl smaller home, tol, Or 1n.. come prop, Owner . scs.at Io-2 Bit units CM $U5 M Loiln $55,800 usumable at 5.6%. Trade for cleu home this area $2S430M I: owner """' 2nd .... 519.112111. ., + QJG REASONS-~~ poo,d ~t;y In TO RENT FROM US! ' MOtil '· ~cjca Fe 2· B~ 2 :S... pool, rec nn, ~·l'O$"f1W'~~~~" lndry. Dllhwhr. All t.lcc. r.crel~ Of'· 1 , ~ ,.,~ Un.turn $15.5. f\lrn il85. 233) on1y. M2-6665. !bet:> mobile borne. ftniall, !d, Jae rm attached. On the bee.eh. Bisi· park In Baja. l'rade-1w equity In houll. ~ valtlf .... F1orida. "6-3107 ·68 Porlche Tarra til 5-lpd. X!nt Corid. 311,000'ml. Tnde ror cbeeptt ear ·w tr , Eve.. Call 491-512 2 BR. $155 Up. • 3 Bl\ f18I> Uf.. Patio, po o I , d,illdren ok. MORA KAI Apts. lS8$1. Mora Kai 1...tM. 'ii· tillt E. or Beach oU ~$1.0,0l))eqln~ti-· Gerflellt, 962--39!M rowhead lot Jn Arrowhi!ad J le 2 BR's, rnoM S12$ Wooda ,w/aoU COW'ze. clUb, Overiooklna: beaut garden lake prtv. for pwr bot.I. paOo .&. htd pool. Adult.. blck or Gene~ ::e ~~,~~;-from * .. Wi O bl!l,Pt,OU •lll ~Tl * 12 Units. Want to ~ for more unlll, So, Callt.. San FruciK'o UM" or lilcKMe C.talina Jsland. Rich Irwin kMJtor l'3«llJ * *' * _ ....... _ ·---. . . I I I ,, . I . . '· ' . . . ' ' ' ' ' -: . .. I ' J: -· > I r ' ' ' " . l ' \ • l 1 ' I I • ..... ..J __ ....... ~~ ~ ••• • .. • . ........ .. DAILY PILOT ....... E. 17th St .• Cott• Mesa; I BLACK Pttaian ~t IDUnd 5tott-otfitT $6() Month near pet &hop tn CdM. ReakmOtnlcs Corp, 675-6700 494-48i'I DESK Space. L&&una Ni,uel OOVER Sho.n!!!! Utt Blk Industrial atta. &c'y ~rv. male. cat with white paws BJI-1 478 day1. and {lea o:illu 543--8531.. Sal FOUND male rabbit Vic BEAUTY on for Lea&e, CataliM. a, Oay St. Ne.wpor1 tully eeiulpped, in 1hopp1nr I HelghtJ 642_5958 c-e.nte.r. San Clt-m . 492-2979 i-· -:::..=~"'----~ 400• STORE, shop, office. FOUND male .. 1 Y!• ltiah $95. 2340 Newport Blvd, I sette r Vic: Victoria Bch. C.M. 646-2544, 548--8333 ~'::o'4-:,.2;;1:::"'c,.,.-,--,-~,,- lndusl l•I Rental 450 !GRAY !ilriped ca~. red ~ea [ r col. Harbor View Hills. NEW BUILDING Fenced storage space for campers, boat.II, etc. Csll....,.. I ~ 644-16'19 Announcements 500 "''KLY. Psynetics lttlUN!. Feb. 9 .. Amer. 1..egion Hall. 1:30 p.m. Dr. Ha.rmon o,1:\U lectutt on Hypnosis .l Self. Hypnosis. I~ Personal• 530 ADVENTURE SAILING CRUISE 1.50 ft. 3 mut Square Rirger, t..eaving 3115/n f o r 3 months. Men & women want. l!d w/desire tor adventure le travel & ability to share expenses. For infonna tion cal.l ?am R.tynold~. {Z13) 378-260.; ,!..__ .... _ ... _-_,][SJ l'eund (fr" ads) 550 "1IJTE Malte1e-lypl! male doc found approx 3 wu lu .., touth of Oranp County Airport. 5'>-<130 SIAMESE kittens. •bout 6-1 .wtc. okL Vlc Harbor Blvd .6.l.ttb St. Cotta Ml!N. Can NEW aetora .A: f)laywrlte1 IW&-31Jt work. leun, earn tocf!lher FOUND l/%1/n am. terrier, in tbt early ~lb tndl-1\on. Sha.kelpean wu a . 9bla:>', Ute coiored, male.. 1 talented ~r. We VJI" 2111 " Santa Ana. eould come up •/another &M 3333 "Hair". Call ~. =..i_ ~·; "'~.'. ~T=1=M=E ~F~O"=R- old:Vlc. bel Mat 6 <lnrc<. I ;:: i!":... aa:...,..1 QUICK CASH .... """ .. -...., .. ,, THROU"H A Vic-: Pel NV Ill' 0raap, g C.llt. SJ>-1301. s.1 !:!.~w. DAILY PILOT FOUllDi.o.:-..:;: .. (Im WANT AD BaoCk) Tlftr 1r.ort hlJred -lie,...,._-"°' 842 5671 For bl<t mults• MUlll • ' . . . . .. . . . ... ' .. ' ~ . " . . ' Lu•;;-l[)J] I l[)J] Jell Waotod, Malo 1'I Help w.-, M & '711 DON'T SCRAM-LETS ~ -;...~:Pn=: PINCH ANSWERS llve-ln.Sday ... k ......... l CONSULTANT. Gen'l load• need1 7 women !or VlvWw Cloven -Grief -Viper -Woodard Colmltloi. W• Rotten -REVOLVING train. Exec poe'1 1v11l, ni Htckltt 1eopper: "He un'ti~'·~·~·~544-,:;..1~46C"'------I help puahinr people around. DONUT rlJi wanted 25-45 He cornea from a Joni line nlcht lhift. No o:P nee: of REVOLVING doon." MR -vomrr m E lllh Job Wanted, ,omala 702 C.M. ha.1 immediate ~ninr tor a YOURSELF (You're Nol Dreaming) But You Can PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES Any Item .Priced $50. or ~ess I (If mere thin .,.. lttm, the ~ml:Mned tettl \ ,._, .. -$50.) \ 642-5618 i \ --~::;._";-'"-· I I .• I t I r • ... _,. Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stov• 2. Guitar 3. Baby Crib 4. Electric S1w 5. Camire ·6. Wa sher 7. Outbo1rd Motor 8. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clerlnet 11. Refrigeretor 12. Pickul' Truck 13. Sewing Ma ch ine 14. Surfboerd 15. Mechin• Tools 16. Dishw11h1r 17. Puppy 18. Cabin Cruiser 19. Golf Cert 20. B•rameter 21 . St1mp Collec t ion 22. Dinette S.t 23. Play Pen 24. Bowling Ball 25. Water Skis 26. Freezer 27. Sultc•M 21. Clock 29. Bicycle 30. Typewrlttr 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclop.9Cfie 33. Vacuum Cle •n•r 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. Jfil1 Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorien Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Projector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool T1ble 44 . T ires 45. P i1 no 46. F ur Coat 47. C repes 48 . Linens 49. Horse 50. Alrpl•n• SI. Orven 52. Ex1rcycl1 53. R1r1 Books ~. Ski Boots 55. High Chair 56. Coins 57. Electric Treln 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. Coff•e Table 61. Motorcycle 62. Accor dion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 65. Wor kbench 66. Diemond Watch 67. Go-.Ker t 68, Ironer 69. C1 mping Trailer 70. Antique Furniture 71. Tepe Recorder 72. Seilboot 73. Sports Car 74. Mettreu: Box Spgt 75 . l nboerd Speecfboet 76. Shotgun 77. Seddl• 78. Dert Game 79. Punching Bag 80. B•by C1rri1ge 11 . Drums 12. Rifle 13. Dool< M . SCUBA GNr These or any other extra thlnt• around th• house can be turned Into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRICT 642-5678 •• ' ·-~--~ --- Thur>Cl17, .!Mtu11y 28, 1971 D.AJLY Pit.al aJ ~~~~~~-~~~·· llllJ ;;.I _ ... d_. 0~l~~~i;'~-..... ··--...-;;;I~;;;;.;-1 .. -..... ;;~;.~ Help W•ntod; M & F 710 Help W•-· M & ' 710 I (An;;Et~lq~uo;;;';;-;;;;tt;C"()IOOjd[,iiFiiujjrniiltuiiiir.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliilii'ii•iirniil!uiiiiroiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiill ·: •' LOOKING I.or mort than just Part Time I CJ-IERRYWD buffet. 0 Id another job? Join the "New STABLE HELP I Europtan ttyle matter CLOSING OUT &aullful ldeu'' Div. <>t Boarding stable. located In piece, 95" Joni 62" hi. GENERA L FOODS. H•lp N.B • ., ... """' part.time ..;,633-~7.715-'-l----~~I DECO~ATO~ OETS CANCELLATION Qthers to e11Nu\c:~. tlll"ir stable help. MU1t be. hard Appllencet I02 OF 11 LUXURY APARTMINTS penonal beauty whtle en-working and familiar w1 1-c...---------·1 Sptnlth &. Medlterran .. n Furniture jo~ltli a profitable buainei;s, livMtock. Please send Jetter O'KEEFE & l\terrnt t".lec ALL BRAND NEW S25-Jl.W wk up, No exp llf'~. outlining: experience It hrs. over111. 11tack~ pair. All auto A decorator dream house on display- No door to door, Exec. posi. available LO ctusWed ad ';'°~~roJ~"~., 1: • .,gt1CKt11~. workif'li S rooms of gorgeous Spanish fu rniture t.ioli.'I avaU. 8-42•2664 • 19, Daily 0Pilot, P.O. Box co .. REP"· ....,, ....,,.. · v.. (was reg. $1295.) * MAIDS. EXPER. * 1560. Co.ilta Mesa. Calif. 9:mti • Am man has dean S l!ICE $498 o,., 21. Apply, PAPERBOYS lato modol • .,,,,.. & A CR In ........... . Ben Boown's Motor Hotel dryers, Rsnhl, roar. Muter C I " ,.1 8 ' S ·1 l1106 s. Coast, s. Laguna FOUNTAIN VALLEY Chg OK 5..11-8637 omp •t• IYl•at eran••n earoom u1 • MAID. part time AGE 11·14 IJO" . 2~ 111 in Oak. !Reg. $349.00 1 ........ NOW $1U.OO 646-7445 • 641-432.l e I ove~Miw:":.e,litf5.Y~~er: G orgaou.1 Sp.tnis h Cu•tom B~ilt Sofa wit~ ~=-,,::;:.:c.::...,.~--11-;;p~A~Y""R°'O~L"L-C""L'E~Ro;;K~ o wnPr movin_g $ t Do matching Love S••t-Cho1c• of beautr ful I MAID t:tead; ~1,1.:!.rk, :-:'1r; r !J . h ital S46-4080 ' . f•brjc,, I Reg. $3 J'l.951 •....... NOW $191.00 ;;~~t494-;~ ~ .. na ac , p~-erJ.1meAPPfi Per!:~~;i I G.E. rP~i~ 15', $75. Crosley Spa nish Dining S•+1 ................................ $75.00 MAID neerlP.d. Mui;t he Dept. l!nfl.g Hospital, N.B. I S25. Pvt ply. 19191 Bethany Solid O a k End l •ble1 A C off•• r.ble1 $19.SO <'Xp'd. Apply, 3151 }!arbor Dr, Turtle Rock, Irvine Te ll Oecoretor Table Lampi Bl•d. C.M. PAYROLL CLERK '1'1-14\l IR.•g. $49.95 1 .......................... NOW $11.00 '!AKE a . t Exper. with payroll deduc:. KENMORE !'lf'W avocado gas Span11h H•ng1n1 Sw•9 L•mp1 " -· time wage~. P · · IR $•9 95 NOW ... 10 time, be a di11trihutor of lion, rie;rsonnel records, & range $150. Used Hotpoinl •CJ· ., · ........ .....•............. ..,_. pure organic cleaners, rood ~n.~. claims. Immed, open. washer $10. 642-5947 CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN i;upplen1ent.s & c<1smelics. 1ng. Call Now? REFRIGERATOR -18' cmss RD FURNITURE ,;.17-4606/673-2064. ORANGE COAST 1op treezer, beaut. cond. MALE wi!h l"mhoc .,,.,, EMPLOYMENT mo. 557-6232 1844 Newport Blvd. (At Harbor Blvd.) & selling experience for AGENCY • COLDSPOT REFRIG., COSTA MESA ONLY llllJ I L1•1••* . ' retail yarrt. Mus( be 124 Broadway, C.M. 645-Jlll e GOOD COND. e pleasan1, good with vec>ple, * 962-9668 ... Mon., Thurs. & Fri. 'TU 9 Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Tll 6 ·l ~ice appearance: GOOd pay. PERSONNEL CLERK ,,I cu Ft Upright Freeu.r .For appt call J 1m G<:irman A 1 714-893-5105. Payroll, Ins., personnel rec· vocado green, ike ne"·· ~==c=-..--..===-1 ords. E x p er desirable. $100. 673-7455 days Furniture 810 Mlsc1lli1neou1 MEDICAL OFFICE Opening must~ lilled thls e GE ELEC was~r/dryer ESTATE SALE! 111 Need 2: Front Ole, e.XP. gd week. Please call today, 9 combo, xlnt cond. 892.9562 From Juxuriou .. Tustin home! typist, Back Ole, exp. know. AM 'Iii 9 PM. afl 5 From 10 am fri. Sat & Sun le.:!;~ in 8.l1 procedures. ORANGE COAST REI<~RIGERATDRS \V/LG onlv &i.e. most beautiful *AUCTION* Frld•y 7:00 P.M. J•nu.ry 29th BANKRUPT ii! REPO'S Write, OaS!ified ad a 15, EMPLOYMENT FREEZERS. $35-$45-$55. Medit, furn! Incl. oil pain!. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, AGENCY ** 646-7820 ** inis. antique art objects, ex. Like nl!W colored 'IV's &: sler. Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. !"' 8 d c M ,,. '''' -· Bdnn • dt'-tt• ,.~ ioMCTiifE~S::°'.h!"IP.~[;;~;,;~roa;:~•;•~Y.;,;;·~·;·,,;;~~'~··;;,;; quisite dining set, China cab-""""• ..... "'• e MOnfER'S hf' J per Building M1t1ri1ls 806 inet, King bdrm suite, quilL Chesll! ot drawers. De&kl, wanted, Mon & Frl, $2 hr. REAL ESTATE ed mattress & B.S., twins, Credenzas, Commodes, Buf .• : * 833·3292 ... * MANAGER: * ALUMINUM matching 8' &Ofa, loveae11.t, fets. M11.ttttases, Vacuums. ' NEED I I l l P bl Elec. 01.,,.an, Lane O!dar , oc11. man o opera e Call for interview Colored Sheets pr ol chairs, ecan ta es • I Al b · I JEWELL 6 ·1 1 chl':St, Maple chain, Show. • : oc usiness or 845-1690 lsl •rade for fencing, sirl ing. & Lamps, • arb . p ants, CO'S Rt 1 b•-d h case. Lots of new carpet, · e. Sil es "6'n · patio covers, trailer skirll! dinetle set, muc more. helpful. CALL MR. COSEN RESU~IES that wotk by l30TI R dh'll Tu ti' Eye level stove, Refri&'1, --• d' 15c a .. ,. ft , Paneling. top e 1 . s n. __ 526-4744 7-9 pm. former pt>rSOtlr>e.1 1noctor. "" Stoves, Wu hers, anti much NEWPORT Beach deve\o1> Sensi ble pri:rs. Eves & grade V Groove 4>:8' sheets 8 Pc knsgr. bed set comp! mo~! m·-t ,,.,m ""•d• f"/C '"--k-wknd~. too, 5;,7-7625 . .., at closeout pnces ol Sl.99 to $225. 8 Pc stan<lard bed WINDY'S AUCTION "-" "~ ._.,.., $6.99. Wood gash windows set C<Jmp $7;1, twin bed« keeper. Construclion acctng RN for House Supervisor ln from S.3.50. 4'x4' aluminum compl $50. Ne\v pool tbl, ex!K'r manda!ory, P lrase small nursing home. Top casement windows $.10. Solid hair dryer, color TV, port a:JME BROWSE AROUND 111end resume to P. 0 . Box wages. 714; 49'!-8076 for ap-core entrance doors from $22 TV, stcrro combo, lli-Fi, 2075'~ Newport ffivd. lSSO. N<wport Beach, 92660 pointment 1 "l h · up. M11ny narrow k short amp~. 111 s, couc es, pie-Behind Tony's BJ.d& Mat1a •, • OPERS.SJNGLE NEEDLE ROUTE Sales-$130 wk to st. hollow core pan,,Js for shelv-tures & misc. 2692 Bayshott jCosta l\1esa * 646-8686 Spec. mach. Exp'd onI.v, Take ov estab .Fuller B\l15h ing $1 up. 500 Unfinished Dr, NB . 642-4062, 646-4048. OPEN DAILY 9 to .c sportswear gd pay. N.B. rte in Laguna. Xlnt pt time picture !ran,ies 75c to $.'i Custom Drana.ries 642-3472, • · wk also avail 542-7573· each. Doorskirui n up, HllJ'd. ,.-AMANA 21 cu ft, 5 yr aid board 24"x80" sheets 39c, Deco~a1or drapery workroom refrig. olive pttn $100. ----------ISaJPsmen-Ae:ents J0-5 Daily, 11-4 Sun. Cla1i1ng out .2500 yllJ'ds of Weber BBQ id cond $25. MILLER.DRAKE drapef?' fabnc an~ made-up Seat y King-az hide a bed, ·' opening ln Beach Cities drapenea. Materials trom gold nauah $75. 10' boat , , are11. Nn e xperlence 'l406 So. Main St., S.A. 75c a vani and draperies • -Ir, xl•t --•, ' hp TEXAS OIL COM·PANY ha11 OVERSEAS • JOBS • 5135 Tetal F•• WHY PAY MORE ? UNIVERSAL 714/956-2251 Open 7 days a week SAYE £ASHI 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ' IBIT 1111! =- A t · (Next to Standard Branda) ~ u " '-""" necessary. ge no 1m-from $5 p&.ir. JS53 Birch St., "'" ""''" ·-t Good "ara•t•r , 546-1032 Chrysler, c/b opt!, ~. por..,.11. cu ... ,,_ '"'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'I Newport Bt-ach. 546.1431 adj 673-2200 . mus!· We train. Air mail I ' to Oran11:e County Alrporl. 1---------- B. P. Dickl'rson, Pre5., F I llO Southwestt"rn pet ro I e um urn tur1 ENTIRE contents (lf 1 BR Corp., Fl. \Vorth, Tex. . . apartment: Contemporary DlNI~G .sE r-Genu1ne Birch furniture 1l in06 old , Pain- SAl~MAKER . • Somf' e~-Pro:-'1oc111.l 5 ladder & l arm tings, dr8perie~. Jampi;, etc. per!f'nce required . Apply 1n 1 chair, Gateleg t111ble with Call Ken 646-0921 or prrson, Baxttr & Cicero, extra leaf and pads. ~7-3807 ' NE\V EncyclopedlA Britan· nica. s.50. Da.ntsh modern ae-t cas. chairll, beige., nu uphol · 1 $20 ea, Bookahelveg $10. .Elegant lamps (wht) 2 lot S1J. Shag crpt remnant!, G all az's $3-SlJ. 54;;...-0MS Sar "~-I I II SOFA -Provincial Custom SPAN, coUf'e & end this, 729 Farad S!, C.M. 642~7238 1 * * * * I=· ---·~-~-~~c · a" ......,ventry nc., u or , S60 Cherryv.•ood bed morn or eve. pt:limr help needed no in· !i.h1rie 8 f1. Ul excellent con· · 211 . 1 k · 1-----------1 W.11 . ' . ditlon comp!, S . Swive roe er 2 RS. '"h d-'· •-·-ve~tmcnt. 1 tn11n , min ,, · & loot 51001 $21J Easy chr P . ~ t & 1"11. """w" a~e ~. 5.17-648J/S.1Q-0614 • * * * 15 642 3701 ' • ' curtains. J i k e new, 56" x WHIRLPOOL \VASHER 1208 1~=·~--~,--,=-,.,.,.~ 35". Baby bassinet, inf.ant SE~VICE STA ~TT. ·al! So. R05l5 SC, Santa Ana 2 Twin beds w/klns:: head-feeding ch11ir, adjustable shifts OJ)(>n. Apply ln per . .an, 542-7987 board $40. 2 bedspreads, Mac Arthur & 4678 Campws king liize, cost $40 ea. &ell draft~ table, puppets, 5 Dr .• N.B. 3 ONLY -Spanish sofa &: for $20 ea. 968-6431. ft. Taperfle."C likis, lnta.nt ·!: T $,s 000 I C seat. 369 E. 17th st., Apt. o , pus er love seat sets, in good cone!, * CUSTOM F1JRNITURE F or aft. 4. &f&-4665 ~ SALES MANAGER. Frozen $89 set. ·2 only -crushed RENTAL Stt ad cl11.Sll :r,o Foods. FeP Paid. Cal! Ann, vt!!vet sora & chair sets. General. 'ca11 54g.34g1. &1.i-2770, Westc!iff Pen;on. goof! c<1nd, Siii! M!'\. 21'"="~· ,,-===c-.=• 11C'l Agency. 2043 Westc!Jff ma tC'hing high-back blue TININ size rnlt.a.\v~ bed & Dr., N.B. ~Also fte johs). green chairs, good cond, $29 ~~.':~~5-4;79~05 new , MOVING -Priced to !M!ll. Tent & equipment, garden tools, lreeier, trundle-bed, Jove seat, teak bar stools, clarinet, viola, dishe1, small it~mli. Call 545-7052. Algo GARAGE SALE Sat, Jan. 30. 2810 Serang Pl, C.l\f. SERVICE St11 . Att. Full time, Ut';f-, 1885 Harbor Blvd, CM. RATIAN group Incl couch, 3:30-12 :30 nlghls. Must be 548-!=1457 2 chairs, ottoman & round neat in 11ppe!U'ance. Apply LEAVING ir;tate, forced to co!!ee t.able. $75. SJJ.3123 25.CiO Newport Blvd. C.M. ton BR~""" p •·bl• sell houseful ct like-new e COCKTAIL table, 21x54, v •n~ or .. SERVICE Estab'rl. F'ul..!er Med. furn. Kings ize bdrm. :xlnt cond. Club chair, iood Sewing Machine, med. 732 Brush rte, $125-$175 \Vk, to Ftel, game set, formal dining cond. 644-1807 w /attachmenta. Zig-zags, st.. al~o pt. time 54&-5745. I rm . set, bunk beds, velvetl-''-'"--'._=-----· I huttonholeli, blind hems, * SUPERVISOR LVN 11·1 oof11 & hi-back chain, G•r•g• Sele 812 embroiders, mend~. dbl · ,., k · 1 rr • d needles. Cost S.109. win ael! 7: 30 a.m. relief 5 1 t, \\-' I Spanis 1 co ee. "" en com-. ends. I modes \a m p s, pictures, LA\VN SALE. Near~ dish-for $130. CUh 548-5846 Park Udo Convalesc:ent r!c:. Must sell this \\-'eek, \\'a&h!!r $~5. 2 DaniAh Mod. e SKI FAMILIES Center 642·8044 call 968-9951. divans. 2 chalr5 $1 5. each. TEXAS REFINERY CORP. Twin beds fl!l. each . Double offers oppartunity for high 2 only • 9 pc. Spanish corner ~rf $15. Rilrig $JS. Paint. incnme PLUS l"f'gular ca~h group~ hke new • tw1n bed ings S5.-S15. 132 Mirtimar, _, to b ",1 s e ~ 5Z, ~mr. llJ)ac:e for bedding San Clemente. ann vac111n o .... 1 11haundan1 frin12:-e hene fits 10 ' -m11.ssi11e Spanish ('nrner ESTATE SALE! Fine lady's mature man in Beach Cities tables, $119 ea . 3 only · clothes gz ~8. ,Jsn Giant arra. Regardless of ex-I 5 pc Spanl~h ...,.·~en din Ga.rare Sale 23rd·31tll! 425 perience. air ·mall Dr. K. r. r m 6t'ls. hke new ~J !!a. Vi5ta Flora NB. 644-1131. Re~rve now! Cabin at Mam. moth Mountain. Sips 7. Fire. pl, etc, $18·$20 ptr day. 5.ll-3374 days. C RY ST A L -lirlrd hollow geodes <ccconuts) • •Pt:Cial clearance price, R & R Colem111.n Rock ShOp, 930 W.' 19th St., CM. P11!c, Pres .. Texas Refint:ry UFF, 18&1 H&rbor Bl11d, CM BEGINS Wed . 9AM-6PM Co ...... , Box 711. Fort \Vorth. ~8·9457 189« Santa Madrina Circle. RIVIERA gofa bed, ladies · ..-bowlina ball &: shoes, record Texas 76Hn 4 ONLY ~ like new, 10 "u FV. nr Garfield&: Magnolia player, roe.ster-ovn, la~ TRAVEL CONSULTANT for '·'· refrigerator1, $7~ ea. 2 962-4161. mower, pi111-Pon1 tb . ' Newport Beach Aaency. hke ne w, walnut finish 2 COLOR TV 25" console, SClfa &46-0555. )'. i\lust be lamiliu \\-'ith pc. Secy des~~· S35 !!~. 2 bed, clock1. re[rir , KOU Ift.VINE Coa.it COwitry Oub :·; Newport Beach area. Must cnly -oew 80 black vinyl clubi. kitchen contents etc. family memt>erJJ\ip tor Ale tie exper'd in Jnternatlonal sofas, ~ ea. 613-8302 eves. h'om member. For m. &r Domertlc ticketing & UFF. 1885 Harbor Vlvd, CM . TWIN beds, cloth.in&: &: mi&e fonnaticn call 67)..9131, Mr. tou". Send nsumr to JOOn 548-!H57 items, 1533 Miramar Dr. Smith J. Miller r,o Mairicn La, 3 ONLY -50fa k chair sets, Balboa Penin . .f'ri, Sat. &. -~U~S~EnD~B~I K~EnS~--a San FranciM.'O, C11.lif. !Mt08. go;xi cond, $48 set. 1 only Sun. rl \.iO..'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I . R' gold M>fa It ch11ir, $85. 10 Spd, 3 t pd Oluter Brake .. 1 TYPIST 45 WPM 1 -only, 101" ma111lve floral EVERYTH!NG & anyttdnr in all tlzes. A}a), have t&Nd ;_I Unu1ual oppor. to ITain w/ print !!Ofa, $ot9. for ll garage sale. Sat A: put.I. 6f2.9MT, - exceptional Jocal firm . Open. UFF, 1885 Harbor Blvd. CM Sun. 708 Iris Ave CdM. FOUND NUDE ing must Ill! fllled this week. 548-9157 Household Goods 114 A Jeaklnr TOOf In ~ Plea11e call 1oday. 9 AM 'ti\ LIVING rm turn, 4 chain, SAVE MONEY ~ This clip. Shore1. I fhi:ed It. T. Guy 9 PM. 110fa -~aug. tables. k TV ping worth $IO on Stainless Roofing C.O, &•5-2780 , ORANGE COAST -4 Chinese mod. Lamps, Steel waterless cookwart, S48-9590 EMPLOYMENT mabog desk, 2 comp! set& Nti down $11 mo . 642-4084 ~B"'EA7UT=1"ru=L~B"'1c-ac-:k-•°"'tu-..,.-·I AGENCY BR furn, llke new . ' phire ntcklace, eurlnp .I: 124 Broadway, C.M. &fS.31u Dys-6/;>-2255, Eve-675-2934. Mlsc1llaneou1 Ill rinc H't from Bankok. ** WAITRESS Ex· pc!rienced, apply in penon, ODIE'S, 2U E. 17th C.M. WAJ'f'RESS • Exp'd, ove.r 21 for Germ a n re&taur11.nt. TIIE BERLINER. l8582 Be11.ch Blvd, H..nt Bch. WAITRESS, Exp'd. In food It coektall1, Age 11-35, App ln per, 630 Udo Park Dr. NB. ALLERGY l'lft p 0 11 1 u r . • 23" TV • Never wom. iuo. 6~1345 Foam mattns11 & irprlng~. Works no,aJ good µ> llt;;al~t;"""S,.~omi'-. ==-=-~I $45. Geld mf'tal headboard, * M&-1525 '*' tLOTHts. Mver worn. t.U S2l. Eltt blanket. $20. BJue 50,, Ro nd COU ble bue st'•. ~ pritt. l'r(isted blond a>pttad US. 67~1031 u . feta ' I hum1n heir '!ts ,20, H "PARTNE""" . w I cane il\lfl18, perfec "'~i..sMT u g e ~ flX-cond SIOO 642...... =~==~·=-~~~~~1 ttulive deftk w/ oventze ~ · JtlJMMACE Sele J'rlMy chair SST-6016 u k for Ann Par'I'ERS wheel $10 0 Jan 29 Cea~ M 11 •a or Ii~ · Porlable G.£. TV J7" $20. w0Men'1 • Club 18th A EVER 1 ,_ ,.. .. _,_ Tahle &: ch&iTI $15. IW'-8330. Am•r!can UAM~M N s epl "" n.1vmra klnr IOfa btd A: male. chair, WEDDING A e111aaement ~15 chain 1&w with n- royal bJue. Price $61$. Sell ring set, White eold w/dl•· tra new ch&ln and dutch. $295 675-7273 mond aettlnc, $190. 546-0077 Uled twleoe. COit $181, wW ' e 21" COLOR TV e ,.u fO< JIOO. MJ.1111. . WANTED: 181. clu!I chtf, \'fl'Y desirable 1ttu1t.lon 4.-tly wk wntr, 5-dy wk IUftlDMl', Write Box Cl, Bal IJ. 3, WOMEN needed to demo"- 11tr1te buut. mink oil . koa. mtticw, mink acxeu'1. C&U tor appt. K-KORP, SJ0..3333 AS MW, •ltes>lna «if& $&\ Good plcture • to4nd $98 ,.:t: ..•••. rJ -"-. R<frl(,, 185, Color TV $L!D. * 16-W!I * • u ~--Call ~. eves : en Ml• ceneni, o.:· ... MJ-m. SIGNS. 1hl>ctnb, poe;ters, for ceJh. ...... l:JD..I "' SOFA IWW:r uMd qullltd wll'ldoWs, tru('k11, low price. pm. I ANY Day ta the BEST day lo run an ad! D on't delay .. call today, 64~11 ltamt with f!dll,' UM DaJI)' l'1JOt 0.Ulliod. 114~11 ·floral, 0tc0tc~ $125. Morn er evea ~. 1 'li'°'1"A'°'G,,-,,A°"i£"'A,..~=...-:=­ Malchlnt lovtM'lll a TS . WE Loan-Bl&y-ltlJ UQ'thl"-chlir. WU ·9(IOO. new, b 5.l)..8337 C.OUt Pawn J: AUC'tlon. 242C $350. BOal triller tor Hobie fa )'OU ad 1n the cluai&d Nt"tJC'l1 Blvd, Ml-M)(), Cat, c:ewt: iioo. 541M6l. SECTION! -.... ,, BABY hithchllr, pta;>pOn. i .u.BOA BA'l c ~u il ""tehtfts tor tt, D ! a I porla·crib, 1tn,1Ut r, S10 each membt'rN.\111 tir ..ie. 6C66TI todul 67~579, 54a.om I ' l ' 'I I • I ' • CWLV 'ILOT TltllrWy, Jalli4¥7 28, 1971 I§] I ._ .. _ 1§)1..._I _ ...... _ ...... ~J§J 11 [..._ _'""'°'~""~!§] CLEARANCE SALE Over 100 Pianos & Organa Jkduced for immed. sale. Buy Now & Sav• l Open Daily 10 tfl 9 Sat 10-6 * Sun 12-5 COAST MUSIC Boats, Rent/Cha ri'r 908 1970 rn 175 I Tonda, l\f I n t <.'Ond. l\1ake offer. * 642-8472 * e 196.1 V\V PICKUP e 6 pass. cab. Excellent condi- r1on, $700. 492-3878 '70 BULTACO .il1atador, ?.")() er. X!nt cond. Bst Ofr: 67S-0739 :>19-0608 nf!rr 5 \VANTED For a beautiful home, 1ow maintenance and archilecur. ally impressive dei;Jgn, &:c the cxcHing ne\\' ''Villai:ic 1-ro11sc" hy Levit t ~1ohtle Syslcn1.~ on rHsplay now at BAY HARBOR MOBILE HOMES 1-Rear end for Coivair w/auto trans $35. '61 Corvair n1olor $50 3 ~rd lrans & rrar end $65 Rear su..-pcnsion S35 :;15-0906. WE PAY TOP CASH for used can & truckll just call us for frtt estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET NEWPORT A JiARBOR Costa l\.fesa * &12.7851 STEINWAY Grand, Artist model, German scale - $1695. Steinway G r a n d , model L in ebony $7895. Kimball Grand $-488. \VARD'S BALDWIN S'IUDIO 1819 Ne\vport Blvd, 642-8484 !'.1UST &'II, Wurlitzer spinet piano, full keyboard and SIN!I !OUnding b 0 II. rd "''/plastic coated ke ys. Spolle!l!I walrrut finish, 1'.tust 5ee, $000. 962.-6521 32' T">l•insrrc111 Chr1i1, fully 30.'l or 250cc 1-londa &rflm. eq11ip"rl. fishing or Cru1s-blrr. Running or not. 5-19.1690 ing. 548-2~34.c-. ---~~I '63 OIEVROLET 6 cyl 1; Boats, Sail 909 Inn pickup, $..)95. Cal J &14-1'18·1. 142;1 Baker St. Costa l\lrsa Just S. of S.0 . ~·wy a t Hartxir 714/540-9470 Ask for SalH Manager l82ll Beach Blvd. Hwitington Beach 847.f)()87 Kl 9-.1tll -TOP DOLLAR H11111rl1Qnd. St e In"' a y Yamaha. New & used piano~ of most makes. Best buy1 in Sc>. Dllif. 11.1 Schmidt Music Co., 1007 N. Main, Santa Ana. '70 Hobie C111 w/lrlr nr\"Pr e 2;,o YA:\1,\HJ\ Big bear. used, in \\'alrr only !I t1n1es, coinple rlbt. S2;,(J. r.tnr_ed in gara~I'-":i<-e _as I * ~iS-3120 * ,.,.,...,_ &II $ll!l.l. Sl .l()(} 1"· '67 HONDA 305 \~sted. 673-8201. Sewing Machines 128 -~---1 NE\V Coronadc Z7 w/1nbrd . J\!11~! ~£'(' lri hf' Ii l' VP , YACHTS ltOYAL~: INC. 2912 \V. Coast 11 .... 1·. NB &Ci--0810. COLUL'llBIA OrfPn1lrr 29', Good cond. S~Z-1. 5.16-l :ilfi )'A)1AHA 250 Endum. Ex- tras. $-1!1.i. * 5'1f>.-9'1~i3 . ~--~ ---H 0 ND A ·;o 350 CB, Xlnt cond, .$.i!}'.i. ... !lfi2-in% * *REPAIRS * Clean, oil & adjust your ma. chine In your home, Spec. ial $3 .95, all work guann- tef'd. 545-82.18. FEMALE Cock-A-POO & \\hl Persian cat. 2093 \\lt11lare St., C.i\T. 1/30 BLK with gray pt Poodle Jt>male dog. 6 mo old. Loves O\ildre.n 557-7039 1/29 COCK-A-POO puppies 6 week!! old ma!~ & Jemale 847-7867 V'l VF.RY Lovable b I k I w h I Sips Ii, YI! l!P 111brlH.rrl. f'111l r11cin.i::. 714. '&16-fi047. 4~1-77.tl ----------Mobile Homes LEAR)'; lo :<11il on Columhia 935 l§l 1!170 Singer Zig-Zaz Auto, h...autilul walnut con."Ole, l\f11kes buttonhole1 , overca:st11 M!11m1, b I i n d hems. designs {!le. Guar. $44.44 cuh, or small pymt1. '45-8238. Spof'llng Goods 130 SURFBOARDS-) 6° 6" single fin down n.U. 1 6 o·• f\\1n fin & wet 11ui1. Otlu. 615-0633. GOLF dub&, 9 VOIT iron!, abnmt nl!'W eond SJ.'i. AMF pool table A cue rack Sl35. -SURF Oaft Hawaiian T4" na1 ""-"""""""'· &<><>d condition. 494-9466 TV, RaclJo, HIFI, Stereo 13' MUNTZ 4 A 8 tnc'k home unit + approx. 70 tape•. $105 OR BEST OFFER. Mu1t Rll. 548-.561l, uk for Andy. marked kitten 6 m o . 642-2433 aft 6 1/28 ADORABLE Ba.~11' I & Cocker puppies. Looks more Basset. 642-7625 1-28 FREE kilens part PenilUl Silver/~-tit 7 ..,,-k~ 962-6358 F. Vly, l /30 PRO-r.tfSCUOU S mama Shepherd dog with 9 tiny babies. 548--0alO 1/28 2 Bluepoint Siamese kittens & mother free lo good home. 962-5930 1128 TEEN Kittens, Jong & &hort ha i r. 5 46-7306 o r 548--0813 1/29 22 with P.'"[K'rl instructor. call :i57-302ll art 4prn. USED COL. 22. fjgg tin, $78.05 JX'T mo, '.'.fi monlh~­ y ACJ-ITS RO\' ALE INC., 2912 \V. Coo.st H1vy, NB fH:MlSlO. * BALBOA 20. !\-!any ext-ras \\'/trailer. Askins; $2150 or reas offer. 675-0012 CAL CAT. xlnt rollfl. trall'r incl. l\lust Mcrif\('{' $&j(l. 0111 5'tQ..1 179 1r 28' COLUMBIA 1969 Day~ 213/6.16--07a7 E\'e~ TI4/&Mv.:iil4 BOats, Slips/Docks 910 SLIP For up to 20' boar across from Nrwport T ~lan<l . $1 .5 0 loot. 2IJ/li9J.-S191. WHITE Mallet.I!:· type male SLIPS AVA.ILABLE-25~ dor. a.15-4130 l/29 ' 40'. 2602 Ne,vport Blvd, FREE b lack rabb it 673-6606 830-45" 1/30 ----Boots, Speod & Ski 911 •70 ZEN mt color TV [ 11 L l 14· Fiberglas Sk.i Boll.I. w/AFC. m ust 1acrlflce r.t•Md.....,... ~ Trailer. nlOtor & ac- ~-can Btwn 6 A i , ~~~;;;;;;;;~~:II ~"~"'~'~''~' ~1~750~.~6<~><>l-0~~2~· ~ _, BOGEN 15 wall amp. 2-15" C•t• 152 ][i] ,;pea.ken Jn cabintta. 2 -9-E-A-UTIF--UL--8-,.,--p-,-,,.-ian. l rlftlpOf'Utlofl Iii ruJilOc mk=I &llld .ttand&. . Mab Offer '45-3Kl. ma.le, ahoU, S mo . • 642-1958. * GARRA.RD ttmnl~~ U4 Alrcratt ....... ~-.... _o_, .... • _____ _ 915 $39.50. IPfdaJ S2T. New At-BUGLE Puppiet AKC Rq. F1. Y RETRACTABLE. Full lantie MDR 445 I:. 176. Oood with drlldnn. Dana J.f'.R. equipped Bonanza, 24 hr .chl!dullng'. tully luured. Triple Wide Cornell H!llcrt'st e F1a.mlngo Paramount e Univerul BaJTingtan e Broadmoor Continental tf Siar General • Hillcrest Trail•rs, Travel 945 20' Sell <:0nt11inrrl, never u5f'rl. Sacrifice by ()wncr Ph: 71+.5:\l-7800. CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa ?t.fesa 54fi..UOD U.IPORTS WANTED CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES Orang'! CounUc!I TOPS BUYER 12331 Bt>RC'h Blvd., G.G. BTI~L ~fA.XEY TOYOTA * 71415J0.-2930 * Traile rs, Util ity 947 18881 Deach Blvd. SP EC I AL --;;;:-;;::;;:::-:;:::;;;:-1'.'.":..· ~B~"'.'.'~'·c_ _ _'P".'h';.. ~84~7':"'':'"'~~ BEACH HOUSE , FURN 14' Tandem Tra iler SF.LL us YO UR CAR 'iO Custom 12Xl3, 1 Dbl Bel.) \\'ilh 4 \\'heel~. AU .-tttl we.Id. ANY ;\IAl\F. OR ;i.lODEL :\Bunk bris. Fl. B;i. TV, Air ('f' cun:<.lruction. '•" St('{!! * 540-IJ93 rnnd, A s1~al $5500. )'am. rlerk plaling. ~15-1361 nr * Park. &12--5/W:i. \\'ill aell. Or trade Auto1, Imported 970 United Mobile Homes for picku p. 6ti-3140 633-2961 '--~~------1 AUDI --COSTA MESA General 950 1--------- c"""' Mobile "''"" Liv'• '67 Oll'VROLET """'""" '70 AUDI 100 LS Ni: 12. 20 & 24 Wide Models 8 P85. 6 cyl, au!o 1rans. r/h, No1v nn displav In 5 S111r 1 ownr priv pty $l250. 4 Door Sedan. Black \\'lth GREENLEAF PARK 492-746.i, ' be\~ int('rior. Immaculate! 1750 Whittier A~nue 642-1350 Only 71•1 actual miles. t847-'62 Trmpei;t, gd cond $22:=i.. 03)' 1 _ 2 BR: r1used cabana has '59 Plymouth. '60 Olct11 boih llv'g _rm, den &. 1,f ba: $125 &16-2813 af! 6. SIU YA TES shag rug In l1v'g & din'g VOLKSWAGEN cm•. lo C.M. •dk pk. "'"'°· Antiquos/Clou ics 953 CA.II bel 11 am or llfl 5 pin 8.16-9428 3'.lx53 i\fobi l~ llomr. C11rporl , 11wnings & 8klrting lnrludNi. No1v pricM 11.1 S12.750. 1r:i0 \\'hillier Av~. C;-.f 642-1350. ~N1\TIONALlO'x55"-, -.... awning, •~I ln clt'an adll pk, C.i\t. s II c;:. $4!"1(1()_ Low rent. ronv loe. 545--6863 MAYF'LOWER l\fanor Hse, 5•Adlt ?K, 2 BR. 2 b&th, '68 Dune Bum WIB 138 $999 AUSTIN AMERIC A RCA ())&or TV 21~'. Xlnt Point ~ 644-4565 9Al!1-9Ph.1. cond. BeautiNI ca•S••t. TOY Poodle, allwr: male, C:am-rs, Sale/RantriO eo~r space, make orr. BILL YATU VOLKSWAGEN 3Z352 van~ Road J2rlt1po11 31111por 1s DATSUN 970 Autos. lrnportod MGI 910 Autos, Imported IMMEDIATE DISBURSEMENT 970 '67 DATSUN RDSTR. Red wi!h black In. terior. Like new. YQYS.31 $899 CHICK IVERSON vw '69 MGB '70 914 '4' Orangr wi1h blark 1nt1'nor. /\~l/Fl\f. chromC' 10.'hce!s. 1323 BE,Jl. BIU YATES VOLKSWAGEN "'.::!S.i2 Vallr Road ~an J uan Ca11istrann RJ7 -48001493-4511/499-2161 '65 Porsche 3 51> SC Sunroof British rac1n::; green, Lie. YCC 525 PORSCHE POHSCHE 'lift fttl -~ 'f'afl:a. Xln1 con <i. Bl;iu _ iin1 I fm I s•1•. By 01>.ncr 83~-2.126. ---~=--.---1 ILASSIC '37 SflPC'ri~h"r nrw h!1u·k lacqul'r, ro111•<n1r~r lflndltiun. i\111~! St'e to brl1cV<' 677.-40iS. RENAULT ·5~ RENAULT, laP" pl:1}'1'r, I i;hop manual, HUNS. $j(), * &12,,,1267 * $2899 ------1 CHICK IVERSON vw SUNBEAM 'f't1 Sunb<'am T i.'l;f·r. 2(>ll VS, ·1-llpr!. ll /11, clran. Ori11:. 011•11<'r. Brst o!frr. fl 37-144.i a fl fiprn. Compleho SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street 5'&.7765 KARMANN GHIA ;,.1f!.:;cJJ l F.xl , ~or ~7 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA l\IESA Emerald .crPrn 11•1rh hlnf'k lr11thpr 1111rrior. A:\1 1 ~·r.1. Lots n1..,rr~ •911nirnAA2. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN J1ll52· Vall(' Roarl San Juan Cari1srnu)() 837-oll!OO 193-4Jll 19'J tll'il '70 PORSCHE !Ill T, :) Rnrly /i, inlrr. 5 sf)(.! tn1ns. 4.000 mi's. 6M-ll2'J. TOYOTA BIU MAXEY !TIOJYIOITIA! llNI BEACH BLVD. Hunt. Beach 147-8555 I mt N. of a.st Rwy, on Bell '71 TOYOTA PICKUP "117 KAR;t.tANN CHIA. Nf>1\' IT"S A hrce7.r .. sell \'ot1r \Vilh 1lc l11:-;r, ,)()" ran1r~r Full pnce $:?7Jl. Take ~n1111l dn1\'n or tr11de. dlr. 4!H-i:il)J. 5'10-3100. #0~448. !ires & hrakl'~. S 25 0 . 1lrn1s \.\•ilh case. u!ir 6a1Jy Da ily Pilot \\lflnt S.12-4ti!t or 6i:J..~!.'i! Pilot Cla.~sH1erl. 6--12-:xi71\ hargn1ns "11lnrP. '60 Ghia . '62 Pn~h-;g-h(lrr. 980 -----Autos, New Autos, New 980 :::troker crunk, 1ir11 ("lulrh.1-------------'------CC:C:.I s:.;,o. s.10-311s . '64 Gold Ghia-$875- ~~19.1/!:i7 * * C.LIT. MG ~ ~ THINI m .. ~ .. "FRIEDUNDER" J2 rtt1por1 jl Il l p Ll II ~-, 3100 W. Co&a:t Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 5'1G-l 7&t UNDER NEW MANAGEMEHT DEDICATID TO fREE G.E. TV SET CUSTOMER SERVICE!! w,n. f•tl"'I ~ (m l'ulthin• '64 P'LYM, "vlo tr•n1 . el• tOn!I , IX NJMl~I ''l M4LllU vi. ~u•o l••nt , f~dlO, l>Nle< (W)( Mjl~l ''J MUSTA.Nli ... lllO. lt .. I\., pwf 1•-.. •<rdlol ..... ,. t r IUZFtlJI $1290 '70 A111ba»ador "' f>VI<!, ll~n~ .• ~-'' \I~•. ~" cond •• 11. 11••~" !N11 4J51l) "70 J4V"LIN "UIO. !r•n•, pwr ~tur /. bf~~ ... rnSl'OQU! '2990 $2790 '61 P'ONT, CO NVE'llf. Jr.ulO l••n•, "''" \t•e< •• ow•. w,n. llO,..., t&<!IG, I>~•!· er IFUMl(ltl $590 '•• 'l.W. '890 ''7 FORD llUID 1111~• , r"".11<>, ''"-"'" IOOSll.l'I'! '65 A"'"•i.ada1 "iiJO 1•1~•, •I• <-. '~· Pl '"'otn1) 1,liclSO.-,,o;!;l><S,.-,-=-11._,,=---=-=· I AKC, 5 web old, $5(1. r -:'ll8-J97tl.;;;c-=~ e Cl: TV, lr.11 par;abte * 5C9-1.82T &It ~ • '68 ~ tori Dodi<" P. U. ROSAR ITO BEAOI, i\fE~ w/stand, ta" -ANY=-oay~-i.-.,,.--BEST--d-..,-1-, 1 w/camp Kina can1pe:r . alri~ I 100 • !<~urn. slp~ 7. On ~.1n Juan Capl11tnno • 00 ~ .. -8 1965 MG UOO !'Nl.11n. l!un!t-r 83• I .-1 W . ....,..f Hwy., N. . b k 1-4800 493-4511/499-2261 "'3.s.tce 541}.T7&4 creen, uc et ~cata. S•IJO. • 5fl.an. 'fr run an ad! Don 't 6, V~ry rood cond. $3200. hf-arh SC'~t park. 9AA-™-10 -m.CdOrn 12'" dela.y • .call todl.y, 6'2-'1678 847·9893. • "766 ~10811."r:: 11';;i=fu?-1ox;io, LDDe Mw! $125 lttm1 with ~II.at, u~ DaUy Fa11f re11ull& ""' Ju•1 • phone 1 1 :r t')l:panrln, Good cond. 1 • f4Ui42S e Pilot ClaultiM. &tZ-a678 call a11.·11.y. &ti-.'"'67! s-1;M , 646-~10 "611 CORVAIR for 11alc. Great Pri. par!y 67~:11116. ror Dune Bt~. r.ooc1 Sl-.Ll.JNG Yfl11r brl:•I~ •·1J~r· ~~<;rll]!lfi7-l\f(; n1hlw<t $11,j, 516-7817 •lte1· 11·h h u~ .. 11cll it f11~I. Daily ' ~f idgf:!. $1100 or bf:11! oflr r. 6 p.m. Piiot c 1-s11Hlf.11 641-567~ I • &i>26.'U • ----~~·~------------! --~-~--~-. - T~d~i. J.uilUfY 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT .:J3 . ......... 1§11 l§J I ..... ...... 1§11 ~1 ~ .... " .. ~ .... ~l~§J~!I~ ~._ .... ~ .. ~ .... ~J§J~:~1 ~ ...... ~ ....... ~l §J~~,~~-_~ ... _ .... ~~l§J~:~1~~ .... : .... _ .... ~ ~~l§J~; 1_A_u_1e_1,_1m_p.l_r_1_oc1 __ ,_1_0_1_A_u_1_ .. ,.._1_m_,po'-'-lod __ ..;9..:7.;.0 ~ • ."."l"."m:°'po'.:-:rt-:od':-"::-".::'-:70-1, :A:::•::l;:•;:!•·~l::m~po!:::rl.:.od::. __ 970:.;.::l:;A:.:u~to:;•::.·.:;l:.:m~po:.::.rt:.;od:.::._.:9.;.7.:0. I ~A;.:u..:l.:.••::•_U;;..;.sod'-':--:---"°-Autot", UMCI 990 Autos, U1ed '90 Autos, UMd TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO IUICK CHEVROLET FORD I MUSTAN• 990 ~ VI "' • -!: 5 VI -G "' G • -< "' - z "' • ~ • ... E ft z " "' 0 1 :!~.~l~!~~r~s N:~~ ~ INVENTORY !.1,1i.~~-~~ eo .. ,,... ' REDUCTION ,.,, " 4 Sfl('t'(ll Ii. AUIOfnatics $51.89 4 Spf'('(J! &. AutomallC'I ~ A11 New corona HT Cpe Super Sav1"ngs • S d • A · p,, Mo. + T•• 1'!70 144 8'<1'" Dtmo ptt utomatic,s ""' SAVE ON AT Radio, Ht>11.ter, Automatic 1970 DEMOS BILL YATES '68 VW o"""~!°',!1. s,.,. VOLKSWAGEN ............ ,, IXEV 4571 fie.Gil LewiJ 328" Vall• Road $1535 S.o '"'° C&p""'00 • ATSUN TOYOTA "''...,.",,..'11""·""1 69 D ~ Dr. Sedan. CXWA 1731 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9.W '71 COROLLA Radio, heater, disc brake!I, fac!ory air, low, low mile~! Take older car or small down. Under lac!, warranty. Dlll Maury dlr. a ft 10 am 540-3 1()) or 494-TJ06. 037327. '69 CORONA Hardtop. Vinyl roof. 4 1pea;, immacula re, Sky Blue. Sac. rifice. Will take trade or finance pvt. ply. Call Sid, dlr. 54Q.3100 or <194-7506 all. 10 a.m. XTS J.1.1. e 1969 Tuyota ! Corolla. U:i m \leage-good s hape. $1050, c an 573.902s. TRIUMPH Lar9• Selection Of VW Compers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used I rnm.dia .. O.llv.ry CHICK IVERSON vw 5'1~3031 E>:t . 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '63 YW CAMPER (QMX082) $799 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle fulad San Ju&n Cll.pistr1100 837-4800/ 493-4511 /499.22fit '68 vw TRIUMPH AUTIIORJZED SALES e SERVICE Radio, rte. FRITZ WARREN'S $1299 SPORT CAR CENTER CHICK IVERSON 710 E. h i SI. S.A. 547.076' • Open daily 9·9: closed Sunday YW Uncle Sam got mr ! ;.,\9.3031 E:ic t. 66 or 67 1963 TR-4 r oad !l t('r -lo 1970 HARBOR BLVD. m i-radiRI tircs-nl'ffiS 11. lle'A' COSTA MESA 1-------- home. $7'~ ,..h. '4!>-21.67. '70 vw CAMPER '63 Tll.--4. Red. New tire!', complctr. recrnr lul1t'-up. Lo>A• milt>. Sfiij . 64G-492S "63 Spitfirf' -Mec hanics Spt'cial. $100 or sell Jor par1!. 5."\6-7097 aft 1 pm. LATE '69 GT 6 Plus, New Pire.llis overdrive, extra clean, S2195. 644-Sj,'i2. VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW, Xlnl cond. New l irell, hrakes, tune-up. '71 lie. RIM. TIU'. S1S95 or bes •. ~&-72RI '66 V\\' Sq. back-Sunroof, nf'I\' t iff'l> & exhaust. 1~vt party. 642-102\1. ----------"6!1 V\V BUG-Xlnt roncl . Mus i S('il. S14!l!l. C11.ll 113.1-2761 ---------V\\' '68 Turquoise Ghia , Fully <'quipJlf'd, pop-1op, load- rd . dlr. (062BSWI Only 9.000 n1lles. Must 5£'11 . Will tin- Rncr. Call 494-7744. WANTED I'll pay top dollar for your VOLKSWAGEN today. Call and a~k for Ron P inchot, 549.3031 F-'lr:I. 66·61. 673.0000. 1965 V\V Orig. owner. Xlnt rond. Nrw !ires, brakrs. etc. 5-4.000 mile~. '71 Lie. Pd. Must sell! $8 50. 9G2-9921. "ti6 VW St:-dan, F"a~ air, chro1nc Porschf' r i m s , Radio. Xlnt corKI, SI 12~>. 8. 'lfi--06 7 6 1 IN a n1illion, l111n1aculale '67> VU', yellow convt. OriJ.: $1095 '67 SUNDIAL CAMPER tUQH 6921 $1795 '66 VW SEDAN <TRT 5.10! $895 '66 VW SEDAN (RU}; 081J $895 '64 VW SEDAN t J KF 4021 $695 Harbour V.W. '61 VW BUS ..t)PM Lemii! 9 VOLVO 1966 Jfarhor, C.M. &l6-9.i0.J 1l1M l•ACH tMWV. :tU 893-~ • 5.l7-682-I NEW-USEO.SERV. ~ '61 VOLVO '2 Dr. Sedan, Good et"onon1i- c11l tr11nsportalion. Spet"ial this w~ek only. Lie. KJB226. WILL FINANCE $299 CHICK IVERSON vw '64 BUICK Wlldca.t Ur. hrdlp, A re-1 bartsin $597. Rh!t! Oilp, 2145 H.arbot BL, CM 54!MJ93, &U-9700 CADILLAC CHEVROLET '70 NOYA -----1------------ FALCON '57 JmPf!ri11I. good l.'Ond., full pwr/a\r. S2.i0, Call alt 6 pm, 5.16-8016. ~----JEEP Convertihle. Automatic, radio. t699BSOl $599 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 V Ille Road San Juan Capi11trano 837 .4M(X)/ .fSl-4511/ .t99. 2261 64 PLY. Sports F\U'y, Illa! llE'w. Hl-~rf 383, B I M, ~~;~le, lotJ more $950. '66 PLY MOUTH Sporllll P'ucy 2-dr .• air cond, Pit. frSO, 962-3579 PONTIAC PONT. '68 Bonn., hard top, a ir cond., all powr options, powr antt nna, AM/FM r•· d lo. New polyala!s callbral- f'd tir:i., low mi. Orit. prlv. ply mu~t ll!lcrifice, hlth MAVERICK '70. 2-<lr ~B.n, book $1.185., mW nfter. Rllf. F'ull factory equlp'd , 495-41'24 or Bu~. 540-11176. '69 F'alcon }'u!ura we;n---6 <:yl. 1 _S_l595_ .. _l~"-l_P~'~"-"-'--'-'-"--1 .-'68.C.:.,PO=N~T=l~A~C~E-,-..,-,~ti-w-,~,.-I P /9. t1 ulo. radio. $1995. P vt MERCURY wgn. F'Acl a lr, Pfl/pb/pw, ply 11•17-:1:-.96 11Ct 5. AM/FM r11dio, adjust i lttr- }'O R D , }·.500, COE, t•rw•losed, alurnl11u n1 Vll!l. i:OCMt rorwti !io n, cheap. :1:"112 Gilbl'rt Drive, Hunllng1on Rt•ach. 1969 MARQUIS In.-: whl, rack. Llke new. Broughem 4 Or. H.T. S2695/offer. Owner 644-4MS. E XCELLENCE '66 PONTlAC wacon, atr & P ERSONJF"IEO all, A terrific buy at nnly Thi11 bfoautHul top ol th e $697. Blue Chip, '2145 Harbor Mercury llne has 1he popu-Bl., CM ~l93, 642-9700 l11r dark ivy grttn metallic '62 PONTIAC-$275 tlnl1h with m11trhini; intrr. CAT ALINA 2 dr. Hd top. ior anrl bl11<.'k l11nda u roof. Clean! 5'46--414) 0~ 833-llS'f Equipprrl 'A'llh 11..11 the lux. 1969 EXECUTIVE Pontiac ury fealurt>~. Auto 1rans, fil· rllo, healer. powrr ~lerri ng, Rlation wagon. 9-pau. Prle- powrr br11kr~, powr r wi11. a l lo .ell. ~l769. rlo\\'s, powr r Sl'nl 6 way, RAMBLER '60 AMBASSADOR a ulDm .• radio heater, air cond. S'Dl . 830-0554 ~uperh cond, 11lereo lape, net.\' tires S1500. 8JS-..4687. * '66 VW-Sunrwf, 47,CXXI mi. Xlnt cond. O'A'T"K"r, 40,000 m i's. Sc-e to bl'lirve, $10!Y.i. 5464343 a ft 4. BOUGHT Porsche. mus! sett 'li!l V\\' ln1n1rd. Xlnt rond. $14;,Q. 536-9454. JAC 7!13 $599 2 Dr..()r Coupr. \18, automatic, 1 ---------~ po'A'tr slerr1n~. rllr, ~1 u111 19&1 f'Al..CON HT 6 cyl. srl!, 11 ill 11kr 1nide. <ZVE. slick, burkrt JU>11s, radio, 366' Call 494 .7744. nrw lires/clutch . .$525 . i---B=u=1c=K::----i==. 6:::4=N=o=v"'A--i_.,_,.,._. '-' ~-~~ '67 fo'ORD Custom H.T. 1o·11cl l11c1ory air l.'Ondi1ioni nit sci of ('Xi;t>lll'nit prrmiu m Vogue l ire~. A~k for demonstra1lo11 In !hi.• outstanding t'IU". Lie. YWV4RJ. Joho.o;on J. Son, 2626 1111.rbor, C.M. 540-5630 ·=· '63 RA·MBLER. Pa/Pb, fac· tory air. SJOO. Call 962-18+1 aft fl pm S8jl) *** 968-9766 '67 VW Bu~-A M/I-'Mt , 1unroor. huil l-in hf-d. Xlnl eond. "60 VW Bug ~9971 '65 V\V 9 pass dbc wagon. 51200. Xlnt corKI. Call a rrer 5 pn1 67:.....IS.35. -----'65 VW Runs ~ nttds body work $525. or best oiler. 67J...4.l!ll '68 VW Sunroof, lo mi"s xlnt. l.'Ond . Sll9S. 673-2271 or 54&-41'2fl CHICK IVERSON 1----6 G S 2 Door llardlop. Au!oma!lc, air, P/s, slt:rM. Vrry ' 5 ran port 6 j•.vlinrler. d lr. !OSE 57:1! clean. P vl ply, $ t O 9 5, "68 VW BUR, radio, COCQ milt.~. exhaust ~yslem, Good cond. $1275. ~8-9585 '64 VW S Q U A R E-B-A~C~K SEDAN Gd MP<.'h Cond, • 962-11141 • VW ~J4!l.3Q.ll E xl. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA ft1ESA '66 VW, Nf!'A•ly rehlt r ngirw. Xlnt rond $7JO. 642-1573 "66 VW }·astback iiny time ·bt..i.•n 12 pm & iunroor & xlnt mech roncl. 10 pni. $975 or bs! ofr 642-3186. I -''-'=--~~---·I .... VW--41.000 ,;;:c;;;d VOLVO cond. Best oiler. Must gt>ll. 673-172'1. VOLVO 2 Door Hard1np. 4 spt'ed. (2S7079! $799 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN J28:>2 Valle Road San Juan Capistrarl() R37-4RIX!/49.1·4:111 /4~2'261 l\.fu~t srll ~ \\'ill tinant'e. CaJI 541)..5:i2~ _,_,._1 _77_4_4·~~~~~~-i '6.'i ~·alcon Squirt>, 4·dr wgn, '69 CHEV CapriCf', R/H, Air 2~9 V8, R/H, 111ir, 3-spcl, ~'(lnd . THpr deck, S1r11.!o Orig O'A'rl('f. 831-1445 art huckrl :ow1tlll, Xlra Xll'Rn 6 pin. &· 11. 1·rry good huy et $1691. 1 .-69~c-0-00-1-,.,,~ .. -,-;-,.-w-.-,.-,~ir, Rlue Chip. 21 4;, ll111rhor Bl., lllf'reo, pwr di"<'. brk!. pwr CM . S40-4J9:1, 642-9700 strg. Nf'w !ires &. brake!. '611 Chf'vy Hiseayne 2 dr 6 $199j. &14-S!Ml. ryl, 3 ~111.ffi ~ fi7~1-l045. l,.~"6~,.-,-,,-.-,-,-;-,-sso=.-.~,-, ~F-ont-o e ·66 JUVIERA.. Ful\ P"'T, • '57 CHfo:VY, orig & perf. Stn w~n $1~. * Art 5:30, '611 COLONY PARK 10-pa~s SI•. W•goo. Ale. °' w STUDEBAKER br11kf's, k lire!. Clean, good 1----------·I l.'Olld . See to appreci11te 11.H~r 4pn1 or Sat & Sun. 2612 f.fe11a Dr. (upper bay) LEAVING For 11ctlve duly. 1.1u~t SRrrifi('f' "62 Mercury Best o ffer 5'16--4232. ----1!16!1 MERCURY Colony Park !'la lion Wagon, Loa ded, ~.<nl mi. $.1100. 494-7185 MUSTANG ·59 sruo t..ark; Xlnt cond. Gd w/w tires, r /h, air. $.125. 673-8132 T-BIRD '65 T·BTRD. lully equlp'd , A real barg11.in, f1'97. Blue Chip, 2145 1111.rbor Bl., CM, 540-4l93, 642-9700 '~-----~ '69 VW Bug-Xlnt cond $14.'JO. * * * ~~7·3841 28:1, $•Ml. ~&-07~7 * '64 T-BIRD, iuod condltion, • \\'ANTED. pvt parly. vw AtrnlORJZED Xlnt rond .. $19:-iJ. * fi·lfi-2022 * 58 000 ·1 bug, '67 or later, Cle11.n & SAL~:.<:: e SERVICE • )147.;,31;~1 * ___ '69 JO pa11s. Ford \l/agQn. '69 Muslang Grarwle, VS. Alr. ' ' *~~1~'· S45-7lTI• '62 VW Grn Sedan- $400. Af1 6. 5.16. 7393 r rasonA blf'. !:>-1!1-42"22. FRITZ WARREN'S Fo. RESULTS you <:an De. '6!1 Ch"vY Bl ~eRyn" Air, powr rQUifl . i;:ood ('Qnd. fully f'11ulppf"li . f''or mo!"!: 1 --~~-'7--'---·I ---SPORT CAR CENTER d c-'I 1 s 2 d r 6 r~·I 3 sprf'll :'.0,000 mf, !!46-72!17. lnro r1111 495-;ll!29. '64 T-Bird, Good cond. '().It F~1hrk, t'U<'I injec1ion, ~ ~n on, "-' 1.1e Ull_E'r-$119~> nr 'lffrr 1>1:,....104:; ------Takr over payme~ Nu ti~_,,, h,k.<. Xlnl '"'· 710 F •. l.~t St .• S.A. 5'17·0764 .sa l t>sman .. Daily Pilot · '65 LTD 4 door, Xlnt rond. '6.''1 MuJ1t11ni;t ronvt. Aulo., VS . '62 v~v Bu~. R&H , ne"' tiff'~. rehlt. rng. Clt>an. S-IT:l. ;\1u~t srll. 5-l~Zi~. • , I I --· $700 Afll'r 3:30, ~7-JTit Cll'an, S13CXJ. 646.~70 I Opr-n daily 9-!I; elo~ Sunday Classified 642-5678 -place 1 .rhr .".Yrllow Pae;t>~" of owner nn Y. ·'"·"VI.I mL. Good rond. Movlnf . or \Vh ilt Ell'ph1U11 Dim{'--A-Li~ f"flr brl'll rr~ull~! 642-567!; · ____ your ad s, cha.rgt> I!' rl11~s1fierl . . &42-:.671! f-~11(.', 11ir $1llOO. 646-Jll90_. -I off Pr. 642-4 .• 993. F'o r ~sr rf"irults! 642-5671 Auto•, N.w 980 Autos, N•w 980 A_u_t_•_••;_N_•_w ____ 9_BO __ A_u_t•_•~·-N_e_w ____ 9_BO __ A_u_to_s_,_N_•_w ____ 9_80 Auto1, New 980 Autos, New 9IO ~----= Au to1, New 980 ANCHOR MOTORS ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST TRANSPORTATION CENTER ALL MAKES & MODELS 1957-1967 I'""' ...... ""~·"" . ' .. ~ . '""'"' \ '' -.. "' ' ..... ~ WE CARRY OUR OWN CONlfl ... CTS •' ' DOWN PAYMENT NO E••'V""'' Of A9• I Emplovt d Ct~ l ~v i· _... Ct r Al Anc.hor Molo" • EVEN IF 1 YOU H_...VE NO CR EOIT e E.Z I UO· f'1 GET TERMS e W EEIClY, SEMI WEEIC· 1' LY I MONTHLY P_...'l'MENTS e 0 1- VORC EO -NO RED TAPE PROBLEM HERE WI DO NOT •IOUl•I ........... ~.,.,.. rv"tt:.-· ~-t '1\.,...rrt.li"9't" '~I ....-------------~ MANY OP OUI USID CAIS CAllT OUR FAMOUS ''ltlO CHICk" GUAlANTll I 100 7. UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE PARTS & LA BOR" I ON ALL CARS WITH ""RED CHECK " L-snr•t• .., IM ,..!n<nl!l~IO •Motti•. Tr•nsml.,lon. l'tr•r EnG Goocl !or 1' D•Y• 1 -------------"'65 Plymouth '6S Ford '66 Chrysler '65 Ford 1 t D•. IC.T. .. Al•LANf * .. 11'1111 .. .,.,. ... t. FACT· •I Vt., • S~. f?'I'· Fully F•~•o•r Ell'lllP. Oll:V AICll (OfjO. 114" AU'-lk'. llt.H, "· Kt-10 Pf'rl. ~NOOtOll 18181 FtclGry Air. !tl!llQF'I $699 $299 $599 $349 ,ULL l'•IC• ll'ULl. l'•tc• l'ULL f'•IC• l'ULL l"lltC• -·sTDOCl1e '61-Ford 163 Pontiac '63 Chtvrol•t STATION W.1.00N CAT.I.LINA STATION W.1.0.0N l'ICICUI' 1 Oil. H.T. VI. A11!0. I S,_., (V:itUI), V•t . tll!O. !r4nt. IOI"-Tr1..,1., •&H. (IWl· 'l·I, Auto, 1t1n1 .. Ill· ..... "''· dlo & HNI«. (SI.I.di) $299 $99 $399 $399 PULL l"lllC• PULL PltlC• PULL l"lllC • ll'ULI. "lllCI '62 T-llrd '65 Pl~outh 'SSf o,d '63 Dodto ........ ,.-. COMYI Tlal.a •PAlllLAH• ... 11.tlo & -••r. IG"• v.-.• ,,,.. tnl'll., , .. Aulo, 1Ju11., llt.H, VI. 2 OW!' H.l . V·I, A~ Ole. t. flHl9'. ($1((). ~·· lr•m ml1o110n. ... , ... COOU Ml • OI MS21 $299 $399 $49 $399 'ULL ll'•1C• P"Ul.L P•1ca .. I.ILL 111•1Cll "ULI. "111c• '66 Olds '62-Ford '60 ilOntlac '64 Valiant ... OALAJUa aON!tl\111.,Ll STATION WAOON \I ... ·~, ''-·· , •• .-Meo .. Holter. tOA" .... OUtom.llc; ltt!ll· Awt.. Tr1111. 11.0111 a. lfllttltil, rM l9 4 llMI· •111 .. _, ... llLJnlll '"' tr. IDMJ2Jll H•1., !O'tklfl $699 $79 $149 $499 "ULL "lllCI •ULL •lU P"IJLL "•tea Pllt.i. ••• ,. c..11 & ........... Ow ........... •Cs•• , ...... , ....... ANCHOR MOTORS COSTA ME'SAo,.:::·~·:o..:~~·:~ 546-3050 tl HAILA 11 .. AHO L ALL CAllt lllLUt l41C I LICINll ' • - THE YEAR OF THE PINTO reduced prices. YOU SAVE! THl AU NIW 1'71 IMMEDIATE DELIVHY Tk 'IM• •• • ·~·~ IA I LS l...t, ,. "--"-· 1.00. ,c. ,lilt• It •• " ... with '' "'°· -'••l•t, fully .pf olvo<olo.., ._lflllftMoor, I ,.,1~ "-••ln1a. nil t ,,_ •lo" olee•!•1 UI• t <•a• .... .__ .... ,(- t WE SAVE! FRIE GAS ONLY 4'!) .~ ··-• • ' I '""•.tns~,....,. ..... ,...... .......... . ·•2•7•+ 11•J.n,... '-" .., • .,,_.,.,.... 1nM.n , .... ""~~··tM.ll w-.. IKAMl'Uoi.n ,_ .... _.__.W.Jl "N -.....i.-......... -...... --•'-.......................... _.._..,...,_ .. ,,_......., __ -..~wna.11 .. .....,_ ...,,.,.._......,.-.i ..... '1111 !U~ ..... ..... .,.., . l • ' . . .. -·-... ·-. t 1 l ,, ' I '• • .... .. . ' ' •• .• -I .. . ' •, • • ' ' -~ .. . • • • Buy The DAILY P'ILOT For Peanuts! H1l'9't h1r11'a here'• h•r1'• . lat but ftol i-t. . htr11'• CHAPIUE BROWN ••• 1nd LUCY ••• and UNUS ••• and SCHROEDER ••• and SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to bave the whole Peanuts gang come and vlslt yow dally. '• • ' ' 7