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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-04 - Orange Coast Pilotr ~·· t .M!.DIT!.RRAN!.AN ·sr:A ... . • • "' • l . . •.. s•i8id..-.. Jtepof.tt 1-. . . • Map .spots territories occup~ by !JrJ'1'1n .. war, .. ,iQt:Eawf: '.Bot~ ·.sides reportedly "were massing lrOOJ:!J ,along the, Suez Caila1 ioclay, b)lt-Elfpt h.11 told . UN''Secretary.Ge'*'al'U··Thant1it-will extend. the·. Middle Eut· Ce.fire· ilY. ode month: 'Officfal >end of · cede~flie· was · due Frlday.-See !\Dry, Page 4. 1 ,. i · · J -·'r ~ ~ • A:bs~nt Supertj~r ~Bfu~ts Attempt to Ou~t Thomas . • 1By JACK BROBACK ~ • :ii( '?' o.Hr Pllet Staff Tbe Orange County political pot., 1t boilihr point since two ~w auperviaora took office Jan.' 5 and elected Robert ISB.itin board cb1irm1J1, conUnued to lteam today. Lat.est developments•lnclude: -A computer was blamed for a 'letter sent to Robert White, Orange County Medical Center administrator "inviting'' the medical center administration and ltaff to cough up $100 each for a party l!Onorinr Battin next T.....tay. · ~David L. Baker, at.ent In Wuhing1ao. D. C. when Battin drop-J!ed his Tuesday morning bombshell call· ing for the ouster of County Adlpfniatr'U~e OOif=er Robel'.t 'l_bomas, u~ ,<l.is'pJeasure at 1ucb actKJn dur· in(hli~. -SUpervloor. Ralph Clark, 1he swing voi. In ~decl<ling · the late ol Tbomaa, denied U..t . be had made up bis mind • f • -. ' f.,ive Coveragt:. Of Moon Walk . . . r,,; three,.major televl1lon helworlll In Souther• Calilornl• ~,-carry live covuaae· of the jApolio H lanar landing scheduled early Friday momblf. j Bolh Channel• 4 (NBC) and 01oMe1 7 iABCI will carry ll1e teliocolt !nim 12,30 to uo and C!laMtl I (CBS) from l to i ,30, . ' a.m. • 'Coveraae of the fint of two lllnar walks, ochoduled to belin 1t apprOlimately 1:50 a.m. wW be u lollowa: Aile, 5,41 to 10 a.m.: NBC, 5,41 to 11 a.m. and CBS, 6-11 a.m. AddlUonal C9Verage Is acheddled for Saturday activlUes but ,Jocal coverqe has• JIOt yet been ID· . _.i. '· 1 ... • • llel'8-Bo N . ,, •• .. in . Trouble;, • Governn&ent Tales· ,firer . ,.. . . . . . , • .~ • • • '. • • • • • • • Ie ·ear ~,Excited Cre·w·men • ' ' ' 1 , • • ~ ~ ' _, ... --.,....... ~,--. -. In .. Lunar -o ·rbit . ' ... ' ' : . . SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP-) - Apollo 14's· ·excited astronauts circled a moon they called "wild'' and 4'fan-ti,.stk:" today, ready to attempt a bullseye landing Friday in a narrow vaUey in the bleak and rocky lunar higblands. ''Wow, this is really a wild place up here," exclaimed mlsaion comm1.11def. Alan B~ Shepard Jr. ahortly alter-Apollo 14 fired into lunar orbit early today. As they passed over the F.r:a Mauro landing aite, Edgar· D. Mitchell said: .. Jt 111re )ooka; rough down there. As interesting as thil is from orbit. it just whets your appetite to get down there." "Fantastic. You're not going to believe this. It looks just like the map,'' said Stuart A. Roosa. They shot into orbit after .. an -82-hour journey £tom their home planet. Just hours earlier Mission Control relayed the good news that a battery with a low power reading would not prevent the landing attempt. The 1ta'ge was 1et for man 's third landing on the .moon when Shepard, Mitchell and Rooia tr,iggered the com· mand ship KlUy Hawk's big engine on the backside of the moon at 11 :01 p.m. PST to rweep into an iniUal orbit 67 to 196 miles high, The firing occurred during a radio "' blackout and It was not until 20 minutes later when Apollo 14 reappeared around uie~ edge of the ·moon that orbit was confirmed. Shepard's voice broke the ailence with a-subdued, "We. had an utreme~y fine butn." But then the ·commander. who haa waited •nearly 10 yeara for a crack at the moon since· he became America's first spaceman, ~Id not contain himself, and burst out with, '"lbil ~s really a wild place," a phrase repeated five minutes later.· His crewmates, who had been relative. ly silent on the mission. joined in Shepard's enthusiasm 11 Apollo 14 raced across the face of the moon .and they gazed down on a desolate , wondrous scene of craters, rugged mountains and flat plains. Each man had his own impression. Shepard: "It has all the grays and browns and white11 and da(k craters that everybody 's talked about before." Mitchell: "l think the best description that comts to my mind is that It looks like a pla~ter mold Qiat somebody has dusted with grays and browns. But it look! like it's been molded out of plaiter of Paris. It's really rugged." Roosa : "1 can. see off to my right (See APOLLO, Pace Z) THUMBS. UP FOR STUART Apollo 14 Wifo Join Roosa Rolls· Royce Firm Future Rocky; Receiver Named Biggest County Sweep Nets 30 Drug Suspects LONDON (UPI) -The Jtoll!·Royce Company. traditional prestige 1ymbpl of British engineering excellence, went fnio. recelvtrsb1p today. The U.S. chartered. .accountant firm of Peat Marwick Mi\. chelf & · Co.. wa11 named receiver and mariager of the company. The .company said it ·bad run into a serious cub crisis due to escalaUn1 costs of developing and building • new jet engine for the American Lockhetd Co., asked for appointment of a rtetiver ' By AllTBUR R. VINSEL OI ltte 0.111 ,., ·ttllll Striking at dawn , teams of lawmen today inlt!ated Operation Daybreak, lhe largest roundup of suapected psycliedeUc drug and narcotics wbolesalera in Oranae Coast bl.story. The alleged dealers-iri-duth were beln& rousted aleepity from their beda wllboilt incident. Raider teams fanninc out tr.. t110 •taainl .... -In Coota -and Garden Grove-by mid-mornJnc had ca)>" lured about 30 among 61 IUlpecb named in a 'three-month probe. Lawmen from KVtn police aaencte1 and the State Bureau of Narcotict Enforcement were engqed in the sweep • which will surpau tut 1WDmU'1 lilnilar Optralkm Harv.eat. They carried indictmenil and felony complaints -first lisued by the 11171 Orange County Grind Jury -based on a aeries of large«ale dnig sales to undercover aaents. Sc~ of the aweep is IO widespread that two deputy district 1ttOrney1 were 111lped, Juat to .,.wer legol questions "We're having very 'few problems," and man~er and asked the government aaid Coat•· Mesa Police Detective Lt.· tO look.inlo the company'• finances . Harold Fiicher. ,'The annOunCement of a recelvtr ,rid' "Most are being~rousted from 11~ .. , m'anager lo' run Jt In Place of the prt5et'l he ad<led, SQ"ing this eleD)ent of surprilt management waa made ifter ROiis-Royce' was part of the' strategy. halted all . stoc~ ,excb.llnse. dealings ,In Busy booklna: officers had processed the comP,any's shares In the ctlajs that 20 suspects into ~a Mesa City Jail threatened to force it out of buslned' by 10:30 a.m., with paddy wigona brinl· tor want of sufficient funds.· 1 ' ' Uig in· more from Jocationa up IDd The opening price on the stock tx· down the coast. --d>ange-W-ednelday waa 41.12-~ and it "We're corning along pretty well.. finished at 93 cents, a fall of ' 19~ cents in Ill list trading day. The We've gal 12 in custody now," uid suspension was ahnounced juat lifter the ~~~ Grov~ Detective Sgt. Wayne market .opeoed today when the{'t w11 Rlldera assembled it Colla Mesa and a •lf\&le Rolls quotation of to cents. The financlaJ crisis rocked tbe. London Garden Grove police. beadquartera for Stock Martet and atocks of eleclr~1l $ a.ni. briefing ltllions btfor• movmc and components fl~ which tupply the Into the !~Id. troobled Jel enaJne gla~I also fell . Detect.Ive · Sgt. John Re1aD was Appointment of a recelv• does not 1pearheading the Costa Meu a~1 ~ constitute bankruptcy, but leaal 'experts lnvO!ving five teams of detectivn and said it amounta to 1dmll!k>n by the BNE agents, while two groups worked existing management or Its inability to the Garden Grove area. carry on for lack of fundl. State agent-ln~arre Jack Le1ve)' 1ald Tht move came only houn before the ran11. qf ~cqotrablnd confiscawct Jn an expected aovernment atatement to ' (lee OPERATIO~ P•le_I) (S(e llOLIB-ROYCE, Pap I) • ' • f ·-· •• \ao·Q -·f ' It kZ' • • 1 I ~6r .Dtives ' .,. T ' . SAIGON (UPI).-A,.fon:e of 20,!IOO ~pll1, Vietnam... l!acked bY, t,OOll Ame;rlcan Wopl' , and U.S. otr powei: ~'on Ille. borcJr' of ,LaOI iocJn, and front dilpatcbes said a Soull1 v~ namese foz:iy into Llol . may be · bn- minent. . Wllile 29,ooo u .s •. and Soatb Vlelnanwa troops swept 1croa the nortbwNlem corner. of South Vietna.meae ·~and_ aa unknown number of CambOdiana Ncked by American planet mo.ed throucb the (:ambodl~n-border: rq:kllll ieekfna two Communiat .divillona. • The total of more than 50,000 inta Jnvolved In the coordinated drives wu he,lieved to be the tarrest aucb'operotidn of the Indochina 'war. It brought a 'Wll"!P Ing !J:om Com111un1st .China .thot Peldiig wUI aupport' the c6mmuni1t 'forces "until final Victory:" (see story, pap 4}. The miliilry aituaUon inllde i...o Jlltlf Was wortiening for the ' govelnment. A VientJ~ne <llJeatch said a .Nottb VIet.o namese . force which captuncl Mupnc Suoj Wednesday had pushed Ii miln wealward. Banglcok dlipaldin lilld Thailand had· sent 1peclal lo=1 to Ille border of ·Laos opposite the Comrmmilt thrull~ The U.S.· Command In Ol1llOUllCin& Ille 29,000.nlan drive In nortlm!elmi Soutb Vietilam jult below ·the demilltariled zone (DMZ) lil~ the tlgblelt llOWI emborgo ol the Indochina war -a six day blackout The command art-o nounced no .U.S-r~ ]"ould enterµ .. but ft left open the quellion of whether l!ootb Vletnomeae lorcea woald enter. In Wulllnitoo, Del-Socmory !lee INDtJ9llNA• PIP II 'Cea& I . Wutller , It'll be a 1UMY n In ~ County Friday, but you bolter ' bundle up il you'"' out In early morning boun -the Imp ii tab- bed al II cJqr-. INSW.E TODAY. · A/Ur a ab1~ncr of more tMta ·~ veor1, Ja.ckN K~Mdil 01'0Uii and Mr eMldrim ,... turned unannounced for a private vitwin.Q of protroib o/ ll<ratlf ond lhe• Idle Pr<aidcnL Pogt 4 • .. _ ' g:::. ~ .~ -.. ·-.. ,~--11 ---" ......... , .... ... .. ..,... 14 -· . --. --.. __ ,, --. --.............. .....LIAlllllRI • ,..... -,..,, ~·· 1 1 -M ·-~ 17 _....,, i.t-~••> ' -. _.. ..... , ... --.. ' I - t , I I I DAILY l'ILOt s Knott Hit \ ' With Suit ' : Over Farm ,ll<rry lorm elonetr Wolter Knott and ellhl prlnciJ>llll In bis Buena, Park organllotloll -among them the plain- tiffs' brother were sued for $9.75 million today in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit charging the group with fraud and unfair cxrmpeUtlon. 'lbty are occ:uod In tbe acUon med by C. Fulton Silaw and Kay Sbaw ol Old KacDonald'a Farm Inc. of breaching an qreement ~ between the parUes when the Shaw1 le!I U.-Park in late 1111 la< lllelr preoenl MluloD Viejo lo<allon. ;tbe SbaWI claim Ille Knotts agreed not lo ,_nl that Gld MacDonald's Farm still existed ln Buena Park and they also allege that the berry farm O'll'J'ler'S promiaed not to we any en- tertainment, advertising and literature linbd te Ille Maclloolld'• enterprbe. • .• . County ~Qhless • • Toll Sets Record " I Unemploymenl figures for lailuary. in. Orange county set a 13-yeaT bi&h · wfth 8.2 percent of the county's work force jobless. • The 43,300 personi: out of work in J anuary represenJed ,an ,ll,lpercent in- crease over the Decernblf, when 7 •• puctnt or 39,000 were out of work. With seasonal adjustmenll, the rate for January and .December were the same at 7.7 pereent, Mn. Alta Yetter, Orange County analyst tor the St1te Department of Human Resources said. 'lbe seasonal adjustment ii made ln r to compare county jobless rate.s state and national rates. last time the unadjusted or actual rate exceeded 8.2 percent was ·, 1958, she said, when 9.1 percent jolllets. , ,. stood at 4.2 percent with 22,300 unemployed. Contributing to the bad news for January were S,600 workers relea!led ' from service and retail firmt -$00 more than were laid off in January, 1970, While 400 aerospace joba were created in January last year, 900 were eliminated last mon!Jl. 1"1 12 mon~ aerospace omployment bu dropped to 55,IOO jobs from 68,200. · "We expect another 1,000 aerospace workers to be laid off in 1971, certailnly not as precipitous as l•lt;F·" Miu INbinsky said. I I From Page 1 The Sblwa allege the agr«ment has been ~ bftacbed and lbe Knott group .11 atated lo have blrtd former MacDoukl'• aide Jack Shaw to b-al.n anim•l• and explolt "cer1ain tecret, unl· qm and novel acts" hitherto privileged lo !be Mocllould otpnbaUon. 1be Sha,va 001' operate the Old MacDonald'• Farm Garden Party on Puerta Real in Mission VJejo. ...... _ dashes) will begin after rest period. It will go to cone crater (upper right) about a mile away. Re- turn, if time permila", will include swing throu triplet craters. • MOON WALK PLANS -Apollo,H astronaut.. Alan Shepar,d and Edgar :P..titchell. pran two outiD.gs on lunar surface during their P1'-.~ned S31h·hour stay on the moon . First (dashr· at left) will involve settine up experiment... cond (dot. and long ~~~-=--~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Orange County labor situation ls we don't see any major artas rovement during the fint ball l," Odessa Dubln.sky~nlor analyst for HRD said. djusted rate. of ~ ent rcent by ~ of February iy 8,2 pt(cent in Man:h, INDOCHINA ••• Melvin R. Laird defended the bl1d:ou{ and said not a single American wu Joat from enemy action in the first six days of the ope ration, Dewey Canon Ill. He implied that the blackout was at leas~ partly responsible. They claim their business has been hurt by Knott's use of their name and traditions and they assert tbat the birry farm operators have Ignored frequent warnings and continue to use MacDonald animal acts. APaii~:g~.1 Pistol-packing ~r6~ tar,, J'itnuary unemployment Analysts .In Washington said ma!!ing of the· till'ed troops on the border had a dod barreled objective -to show F M d Han!i the vulnerability oJ their staging roy . ea 14.t,~ just south of Sepone in Laos and Among those acts is a chicken which rings a dinner bell, trained rabbits and pigs which shoot down 1lldea to a d.lnner awaiting them at the bottom and various- ly trained goab arM1 mules. Judge Rol>ert A. Banyard oet Feb. 18 u the date on which he will discusS the possible granting of a temporary order requested by the Shaw group. From Page 1 ROLLS-ROYC~ .• the crater Humboldt and it's just aa impress.ive as the pictures. The thing that strikes me .about it is the dark areas aren't quite as dark as I thought . • • It's really easy to follow the landmarks." Miss.ion Qmtrol communicator Fred W. Haist Interrupted their sightseeing with, "I hate to puU you away from the window, but l 've got a flight plan update." Mitchell had lo sneak in one more description. '"Ibars the most stark and desolate looking piece of country I've ever seen,'' he said. And Mitchell has seen a lot of bleak countryside as a former cowboy from a dry, desert-like part of New Mexico. Plrllament on Roll1-Royce'1~anclat "lt looks like you could walk along situation. P.rime Mlnlster Edw Heath that darkness and fall Into' nothing," held a three-hour cabinet meeting he added as Apollo 14 passed over a Wednesday night to dlscupl the crisis dark area. · hitting tbe 65-yt.ar~d ti.rq{r About half an hour after they achieved 1be former ~rty 1avemment orbit, the ground relayed word the third gave Rolll-~'lbore than 'lH million stage of their Saturn S booster rocket to belp to..tdl devtlopment and pro-had smacked into the moon as \planned duction '#the revolutionary new RB211·22 and bad sent shudders reverberating )d~~ under a March, 19A, ~ntract through a seismometer left in 1969 by lo ~the engl.ces for Lockheed 's the Apollo 12 astronauts. new Trlltar .iru...i 1 ~-hope' the Impact will tell Luf ovember, lbe present con~ .din rnffch about the composition of se"atift government promised an ad-the moon's crqst to a depth of 20 or diUonal $110.8 million for the project. more miles. A company ltatemen& said the money Shepard a.ad Mitchell are to separate promlaed in November had not been the landing craft Antares from Kitty received. It aald It wu promised' after Hawk at 8:50 tonight. For more than "a satisfactory report by Independent four hours they will check out the accoun1a(lts" but the money was not spbldly-legged craft before making lhe pald although this work was completed. dangerous and difficult Dnal descent. The ~mpany statement said it no longer ls possible to go ahead witb the Lockheed jet engine project under the present contract and blamed rising costs, wholly beyond the financial resourceJ ayailable to Rolls-Royce." lt ·eaJd Jones of money committed to the project, coupled with tosses ex- pected when It II terminated, are "likely to exceed the net tangible assets ·of the company." The statement said heavy unemployment II likely among tbe com- pany's I0,000 man work force . Arraigned in Murder NEWHALL (UPI) -The step!alber of a 10-year-old girl found slaln and 1exually assaulted in Placerita Canyon near here was arraigned today on chai"gcs of murdering her. Big Quake Hits Near Indonesia BERKELEY {AP) - A large earth· quake in the vicitily of Indonesia was recorded at 7:49 a.m . today by the Unlvers.ity of California Rismographic station. The shock registered a 6.7S Richter scale magnitude, strong enough to cause damage In populated areas. The 1964 Anchorage, Alaska, quake registered 8.4. The Honolulu Observatory of the International Tsllnami Inform at I.on Center said the quake was located near the west coast of Sumatra. Indonesia, with a magnitude of 6.75 on the Richter scale. ,,- Robs Posh Laguna II slow down the buildup in the south ll D• through use of the Ho Chi Minh trail. 0 apses, _ JeS ,Sepone, on the main North-South Com· munist supply route, is lS miles inside By PATRICK BOYLE Of l'lle D•tty ,lllt Sloff A middle aged woman brandishing a pistol early this morning robbed Laguna Beach's fashionable Surf and Sand Hotel of$ 1,300, making the startled night clerks lie on the floor as she escaped with the cash. Police said the woman, described as being 40 years old with grey hair, entered the lobby of the resort hotel shorUy after midnight. She approached the night clerk, Harry Thompson, and asked him for a room. Thompson turned to point out a picture • _ I' } J Laos from the massed allied troops. of th.e hotel so tbf woman • e ogging It is there that the mountain paMes h:Afoom location and w . from North Vietnam emerge and it is b to face his cus , she was er Ith a hillor1 of high from there that supplies are sent pointing a gun at him, ce said. fol southward. ) Just then, the night employe. ~o;.:,t .IUfltl'Y 1 There had been no official r~rt ol Perry Herrell, ente d the lobby and : :::'Jell any actual South Vietnamese cro~ina the female bandit ordered the pair to ictim of a coronary attack. into Laos. Lt. Gen. Due Quoc Dong. st.and back while she helped hersell to commander of the South Vietnamese contents of the cash register. eral services for Leroy F. Mead, airborne division, told newsmen today 47, of 3206 New York Ave., will be The Surf and Sand is Ui'e headquarters htld Saturday at 2 p.m. ln Pacific View at the newly reoccu pied U.S. Ma?ine of Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler a Chapel, Corona del Mar. base of Khe San)a: "Wa are rtad7 to the national press corps when President Mr. Mead was found apriwled on the 10 into Laos if we ll't ordered to." Ni.xon is staying in San Clemente. sidewalk at New York and Gisler avenues Leon Daniel, a veteran UPI cor~ The two clerks told police the woman about 1 a.m., two hours after be left. respondent lo Vietnam and I U.S. Marine put the cash receipts into a black leather for a run, pallet tald. in the Korean war, reported from th• handbag and then ordered the pair to A neighbor, Carol DePiazu, found village of Lang Vet, a oneume Gree11 lie on the floor behind the counter. Beret camp a milt and I half from Mead's body, clad in sweatclothes, and th bo de.r YES S , NO The woman then walked out the door Ul'ed poll-and the victim' w"e e r of Laos, that there were no1 ... Su. nl' !mmln aymg and the clerks told police they did not unco inned reports of an ent Investigators said the victim bad been 1 1 , hear any sound of a car driving away h mass ve oray into LaOt. from the hotel. taking medication for igh blood pressure He said Lana Vtl waa ahaplng up As Job Demands Surf and Sand owner Merrill JohJlson and that he underwtnt cardiac IW'gery lnto what appeared to be a brain center was summoned from his quarters at sil: years ago. for such a foray with South Vietnamea the hotel and police were called. Johnson He leaves his wife, Ruth, and a allter, units moved into the Lang Vel area Exceed Supn,ly first estimated the )OS!! to be about ' Mn. Betty Graves, of Dllnola. on the Xe Don River, wbicb forml £ $3,500, but a careful accounting check the border between the two c:ountrlu. revealed that only $1,300 in cash had Forward American unit! lncludlnl a The Harbor Area'Yoµth ,Employment been taken, Huge Bequests Bared mecbaniled squadroo were deployed a6- Service (YES) is: having to say a difficult Johnson said the woman did not take jacenL to the border. U.S. adviserl wltb word (NO) to a lot of job applicants any checb or coins, but only the paper NEW YORK (AP) -Mirtha Baird the South· Vietname1e units were rtluo- for a very few reasons. currency from the register. He said Rockefeller, stepmother of Gov. Nelson tant to talk but one said, "if my men -Not enough work is available for that the hotel does not oormally have A. Rockefeller, baa le.ft $37 million ia (the South Vietnamese) go, l 1won't be young people. that much cash on band, but the large btquutl to charity, goin1 ·with them." Another pld, "WI -And young people outside the Harbor amount had been due to many customers Mrs. Rockefeller, who was 75, died would probably stay on this aide of Area, from as far as lvine and Mission paying their bills that evening. Jan. 24. the border and wait for them." Viejo, are calling for jobs. Ir:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=============================• "The kids are just coming in droves," says Mrs. Florence Hayos. YES director. She notes that the new school semester gives some teenagers more time for employment. Not only that. but a YES office In Huntington Beach was forced to close, shifting the demand for employment and income to the Costa Mesa facilities. "We're getting 20 applications a day," she explains. saying many are from Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, plus south Orange County. Anyone who needs a hand -from baby-sitting to housework, lawn care, carpentry, heavy labor. sales or janitorial work can tap a ready source of willint: help, The YES number is 642-0474 and Mrs. Hayos is there afternoons, "''bile a donated answering service can take calls anytime. Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups , rstorase Limp Table R•t· $299 MOW SZJf by HERITAGt° Gordon J. Barkley waa arrested Tues. day for the strangulation of Kathy Murphy, who dl.sappeared Jan. 24: while at a slumber party at his North Hollywood home. Fro1n Page 1 DAILY PILOT ...., ........ ........... c ......... " .............. .. .. Niii ,..., ... .,,,_ OltAMGE COAST PUlllSHING COMPAlf't ko'll•rt N. W114 ,,.. ... lllt ..... l"llWllNr J1ck k. c.rl1v Vkoe l'ralOt!ll .... Gonenl Malll9lr Tllom11 K••Yil f.dlllr Tl101111t A. Mvrph;ri• Mtnttlnl E~lllf ttich1r4 I'. H1M SOV1h Orotllt Covnlt Editor -Cllf9 #l•r UO W•I ltY Sl!Wt Ntwp0rt ··~ :rrn W•t l11M1 ht,!IW.,. Ll9VM 141d!i nt Hr•I Avoru1e Hlll'lllnllten hltll1 11'71 tllcll fl°"'ln',,. a.Ii atrr'Mftltl a5 Jiltf'lll •I C.mlno R .. I ' OPERATION DAYBREAK • • • pre-raid deals runs from LSD, hashish, opium, peyote and olher hallucinogens. to amphetamine compounds, heroin and barbiturates . He said most bookings are for sale of narcotics and dangerous drugs. Small amounts of contraband drugs -plus two loaded weapons in the Garden Grove raids -were being found, whlle a few additional suspects not named in warrants or indictments were caught. "We're pretty certain this will be even more successful than 0 p e r a t I o n Harvest," said Costa l\1esa's Lt. Fischer. The _overnight raid triggered h•st May 28 reached inland as far as Fullerton and netted SO.plus suspects, many of \\'horn are now serving state p r i so n term!!. "We've got a lot of 'reds' tnvolved. a lot," added. Lt. Fischer In reference to evidence taken during the past three months. Several thousand dollars In state-1llot- ted funds was expended in gathering evidence which led to Issuance Wed· nesday of the Grand Jury indictments and complaints. lnvestlgators said the male and female &uspects range ln age from I~ to 35, while a 49-year~ld mother allegedly in partnership with her sons WJS charged ln It.st yt.ar's similar series of raids. Su<r""e"tM drug peddlers namtd In the Grand Jury documents were all to be booked at the Costa Mtsa City Jail, pending tmmtdiate arr1i.lgnment. Authortlles said incidental arrtsts - those persons caught In company with named suspects -would be handled by the pollct departments serving v.·lth communities. Followlng initiation of the roundup to- day. Lt Fischer said it couldn't have been pulled off so well without full cooperation of the agencies involved. Some 50 detectives and officers from various departments were detailed to the individual raJd.s, P,IW transportation of suspects and booking procedures. Besides BNE agents, they inc!Uded men from Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Seal Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, G11-rden Grove, Cypress and Tustin. Deputy Distric t Attorneys Pat Bryan and Jlrn StoUer were sent along to clarify legal questions concerning searth warrants and related matters. Investigators charged that s o m e suspects were lnvolved in several Illicit deals with undercover agents, often with huge quanUties of drugs obtained. Innocent Man Jailed In Courtroom Mixup LONDON (IPJ ) -Peter Bedford, call· ed as a wltne55 to the Loodon Court of Sessions. dutifully turned up Wed- nesday and stood patiently outside a court-room door. When he heard the name "P. Bedford" called, he stepped forward. A burley policeman led him Into a cell. lt wasn't untll Bedford had banged nngrily on the cell door for 10 minutes that red·f•ced officials freed him and 'Apologized. e:xplaJning they'd mlxtd him up with a prisoner of the umt name. Commooe End Tab!. ke9 . $I J9 e NOW S10t HERITAGE------, MADRIGAL • Bedroom e Dining Room • Occ11lon1I 20~ HERITAGE--____, IARACINI e hdroom • Occaslonal 20f R•t· $14t NOW S11t You •r• invited to visit our showrooms displ1ying: e HERITAGE e DREXEl e KARASTAN HERITAGE----. BRENTANO and Norman Court 20•1. OFF Your favorite dt1f17Mr will bt h4PPM to aJ.ri.tt 11ou H.J.GARRETT fURNITLJRE ,ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' ' Op1t1 Mon., Thur1. & Fri. E•ts. TRT OUR lllYOLVING C:HAatH 221 S HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 646-0276 , ' )' \ \ 1 i i I \ , I • • ,. ! 17 • Huntington De•eh EDITION -• YOL 6'1, NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS. 36 PAGES ORANG~ cOUNTY, C>..Llf()RNIA ·. JHURSDAY, FEBRUARY ~. 1971 TEN ceirs . -' . ... -~-- County's -Political Pot Continues to By JACK BROBACK OP ... 0.lty P'lllJt Sleff The Orange County political pot, at bolling point since two new supervisors took office Jan. 5 and elected Robert Baltip board chairman, continued to 1team today. Latest developments include : -A computer was blamed for a letter aent ·to Robert White, Orange County Medical Center administrator "inviting" the medical center administration and .WI to cough up $100 each for a party honoring Battin next T.....S.y. -Supervisor David L. BaW, at>oent in Washington, D. C. when Battin drop- ped bis Tuesday morpinc bomboheU call- ing for the ouster or County Administrative (){fi~r Robert Thomas, ezpressed displequre at such action dur- ing bis ab5tnce'. • -Supervisor Ralph Clark, the 1wlng vote in deciding the fate of Thomas, denied that he had made up hb mind to vote along with Battin and Supervla:>t Ri>nald Caspers of Newport Beach next . . ,,,OON WALK PLANS -Apollo 14 astronauts Alan . Shepard and Edgar Mltclfell plan t\fOollJllilB on lunar 1urface during their planned 331>-liour' stay on the moon . First (dashes at left) will involve setting up experiments. Second (dats and long Tuesday to fire Thomas. -Thomas, despite being resigned to his ouster, issued' a lengthy statement to the press defending bis cooduct In the po.gUon. The statement was very mild in tone. 1be computer error was eiplalned by Dr.' Louis J. Cella, Santa ·Ana physician who supp>rta Battin. Re Wd Uae com- puterized fonn letter !Olicltlng hu1ds for Battin was sent to all facWtlea listed In an Orange County Medical Association bulletin ol convalescent ' Pier Beer Sale Hearing Slated For H untiµgton Astronauts Whoop It Up As Apollo Circles Moon The state Alcoholic Beverage Control Department has scheduled 1 public hear· jng on a protest against the sale of beer on the Huntington Beach municipal pier. The hearing will be conducted at 9:30 1.m. Feb. 17 in the city council cham- ber&. The hearing was sought by the Rev. Ed~ard Erny of the First United Methodist Church, Huntington Beach, and several other ministers ln Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley who oppose the proposed sale of beer at a sandwich bar on the pier. ·The bar, called Neptune 's Locker, will be operated by Ron Smith who received permission from the city council last year to convert a fresh fish market into a small restaurant and sell beer. The application to the ABC was . for permission to sell beer on the premises only. The protest by the Rev. Erny says that many juveniles use the pier area and beach, police problems will be in- creased and that "inciting to mob action 11 always an increased possibility where there has been consumption of alcoholic beverages." The minister also argues that allowing the sale of beer on the pier will put pressure on all concessionaires along the beach to seek a beer license ln order to compete. John Kelly, district administrator for the ABC department in Oran&e County, 1atd his department would be recom- mending approval of the llceme at the hearing. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Apollo 14's excited astronluts circled a moon they called "Wild" and "fan- tastic" today, rtady to attempt a bullseye landing Friday in a narrow valley in the bleak and rocky lunar highlands. "Wow, this is really a wild place up here," exclaimed mission commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. shortly after Apollo 14 fired into lunar orbit early today. & they passed over the Fra Mauro landing site, Edgar D. Mitchell said: "It sure looks rough down there. AJ interesting aS this Is from orbit. it just whets your appetite to get down there." "Fantastic. You·re not goini to believe this. It looks just like the map," said Stuart A. Roosa. They shot into orbit after an 82-hour journey from tllelr home planeL Just hours earlier Misslon Coat.rot. relayed the good news that -battery with a low power reading 1'0U1d not prevent the landing attempl 1be st.age wu set for man's third landing on tile moon when Shepard, Mltchell and Roosa lriggered the com· mand ship· Kitty Hawk's big engine on the backside of the llKJQl. at 11 :01 p.m. PST to sweep into an iniUal orbit 67 to 195 miles high. Tht firing occurred during a radio blackout and it wu not until 20 minutes later when Apollo t4 reappeared around the edge of the moon that orbit was confirmed. Shepard's voice broke the silence with a subdued, "We had an extremely fine burn." But then the commander. who ha11 waited nearly 10 years for a crack at the moon since he became America '1 first spaceman, could not contain himself, and burst out with, "ThiJ is really a Wild place," a phrase repeated five minutes liter. His crewmates, who had been relative- ly silent on the miaslon, joined ln Shepard's enthusiasm as Apollo 14 raced across the face of the moon and they gazed down on a desolate, wondrous scene of craters, rugged mountains and flat plains. Each man had hls own impression. Shepard: "It has all the grays and browns and whites abd dark craters that everybody's talked about before.'' Mitchell: "[ think the best description that comes to my mind is that it looks like a plaster mold that somebody has dusted with grayti' and browns. But It look! like it's been molded out of plaster of Paris. It's ~ally rugged." hoapltala wblch listed the center u OM ol the 11me. White said he wa1 aw-prised to get the letter "to say the leaat". The misstve nilled tbat Battin "baa attaWd the corpu1en~· torpid county bureaucracy" and listed the medical center u part of that bure.lucracy. The i.u.r, •l&ned by ceua furti>e< stated lroclcally, "We hope that tbe Orange County Medical Center, ill acl- mlnlstratloa and staff appreclat. Bob'• leaderabJp and his many effortl on our beball." Superv1tor Baker wu paJ'ticularly disturbed because BattJn Jut Tuesday ignored a written request ftom Baker to continue the 'Ibomu matter unW be returned. He-added, "If there are My legitimate charges they llhould be aired In clow.l personnel aeaion where Tboml! would have a chance to answer them." Baker &aid he wu copee,rned with "the demorallzin& effect of BaUin's • •• charges on lbe entln counlY 1\111.. D bu been proven time and time· t&aln that we have the beat county .tad Jn the entire country." Clark, alter bavinc been . quoted u telling Thomu be llhould realgn the poat, denied Wednelday that be bad .modi a final determination of the t.aue. "My mind la . not clooed. ·and I - Interested In Mr. 1bomll' -· nnl Tu<lday. I want to heir bll nplanltloa of~ innovations inataned duriDI 1dl Mo miniltration." · 50,000 in Drive U'.S. Troops Sweep to Laos l:iine SAIGON (UPll - A force of 20,000 South Vietnamese backed by 9,000 American troops and U.S. air power maa1ed: on the · border of Laos today, and front dispatches said a· South Viet· namese foray Into Laos may be im· minent. While 29,000 U.S. and South Vietnamel!ie troops swept across the northWestem corner of South Vietnamese and an unknown number of Cambodian:. backed by American planes moved through the Cambodian-border region seeking two Communist divisions. The total of more than 50,00ll men involved In the coordinated drives was bell~ed to .be ~ largest .such operation ·of the lodochlna war: It brougbt,a warn- ing· fr<im Gomniunlll China that Peking wUI sUpport tbe 'Coinmun.ist 'fQkts ''until final victory." <-~. page 4) •. . -~ lnill01"ioa I~ WI ~'the ~1. A Vlentianl ~IPll<~ llld ii ';liorf!L . VW. nameJe .force, which captured ·uuonc - 1111!1,' ·-11 hid ..... !'lliiDM -··"'· B1111krik ~lipal<bes iild 'Dlalland had sent special forces to the border of Laos Opl)O$ite the C:Ommunist thru.iL .. n,e U.S. Command in announcing the 29,(IO().t,nan drive in north~stern Sout.h Vietnam jµst be)ow the dep'lllitarized zone (DMZ) lifted the tight.est news embario · of 'the Indochina w1r -.a aix day blackout. The command an- nounced no U.S. forces would eDter 4ot but it left open the question· of whether South·Vietnamese forces woul!i enter. Suspect Faces COurt Hearing In Knifing Death Paul A. Stenerson, 22. will be arTaigned on murder charges at West Orange Coun- ty Court Friday in the stabbing death of a Huntington Beach man last weekend. Stenerson and his 17-year old com- panion, Candact Neal, both of Downey, are held without bail. Juvenile court proceedings will be instituted against Miss Neal, according to oUicers. Stenerson has been accused of crashing a Friday night party at the bomt of Arthur E. Bashaw, 22, 321 17th St. and slabbing him to death with a switchblade knife. The Neal gitl, who accompailied Stenerson during hiJ alleged fllght fi'om POlittl oflcers, bu betn char&ed WlUI being an accessory to the murder. · Both were apprehended by police in Downey last Saturdly. Nigeria March Routed LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -Police fired teargas Wednesday to disperse thousanch of students marchfng from the ma.inland to the l!land of Lagos to protest the shooting Monday of a student at Nigeria's University of Ibadan. DMZ TH AILAND CAM.SO DIA • .. .. ·:. .. : . .. ,, .. i: PLlllU , \•.: . .. .. .. ,. ,, :· • . . • . . .. ·: .. .. .•.. .. . .. SOUTH. CHINA SE• : .... ,.,.,.. .. ' . , u, ... A PUSH BEGINS. AND F.AA\ILIAR· NAMES CROP UP AGAIN Kho Sonh, A Shau Valloy, Parrot'.• Boak and Fishhook Huntington Drug Haul Largest in West County By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI Of Ille lltll'f P'll" Slttt A series of nlg)lt ralcia by state and Huntington Beach narcotics o(flcer1 land· ed six persons in jail Wednesday and led to the seizure of what authorities allege U the largest cache of hard narcotics ever confiscated 1n West Orange County. Sgl Bert Chadwick of the Huntington Beach narcotics bureau n1d oUlcers con- fi8cated 110,000 doses of benzedrine, 8,000 secobarbital tab)ets, 2,000 doses of LSD and mescaline, eight pounds of marijuana as well u hash!Jh, heroin and opium. No value bas been placed on the alleged contraband.. _ The raids Wert conducted after 1everal weeks of undercover lnvesilpUOn by the St.ate Bureau of Narcotk:s Enforce- ment and HunUngton Beach detectives. They began at I p.m. at 14932 Penfield Circle, Huntington Beach, wbere David N. Owmel, 30, and Joy Hoekhu, 26, were taken into custody on ,chargea of aales and possession ol dangerous drup, At 7:15 p.m. the officers knocked on the door of Terry Schutt, US, 10232 Stan- ford SL, Garden Grove. and 'arrested him on charges of selling marijuana. Fifteen minutes later, other .detective.a from the combined narootica detachment Invaded Huntington Beocll qaln 111!'1 .., rested lbrft peraons. Tilktn into cuatody on sales and pouession chargea Were transients Arthur B. Lee, 20, and Rob!rt Perry. 20. Both were picked up ai Fifth and Olive Street. Detectives further arrested .J o b n Cornett, 24, 8461 T)Tone Circle, Hun- tington Beach for allegedly _..1ng a loaded and concealed firearm. Meanwhile, ln Garden Grove, the of. ficers ralde,d the borne of Judy and James-Craves at 12811 Adele SL, and arrested them . on drug sales Charle.I and posseaaion of marl~. Both aro 23 yem old. Narcotics offlceri wound up their "" UvlUts at l!lldnlchl wltb the arrest of Beverly Sidener, ZI, and Robert Sldentr. 36, at their W Hartlonl Ave. botno in Huntington 8-11. Weiidaer . ·- "We feel it should be Issued on the condition that no alcoholic beverages ahall be sold, furnished or dellvered off the premises. We feel it would not be contrary to public welfare and morals." Kelly said that his department took this position after investlgatlng the points In the protest. Rolls-Royce Hit by Money Crisis u·u be a aunny n lri °'- Cow>ty Friday, but yoo btittr bundle up If' you're out ID early morning houri -tbe Wllp la tab- bed at 38 dllna. ·INSmB TODAY Afkr • •*""' of mqra IMA um llf"''· Jochk K,,.,...ir Ona.a.tit and Mr chU4r1" 1'1• turM:ct VrtaMOa,nc~d /or a privet• tMtoi11g of protmill of ht:raelf ond tho· )014 l'ruidtnl P.og1 f. 'll1e hearing officer will be a represen· tallve or the state Offite 0 f Administrative Procedures, Los Angele.s. Peace Prayer's In TEJGNMOUTH. England (UPI) There have been so many heated arguments at meetings of Ttignmouth Town Council recently -In one case one councillor punched another oo the nose -th11l members have decided to listen to a pe•ce poem before each st!slon from now on. LONDON (UPI) -The Rolla-Royce Company, traditiollal preaUge aymbol ol Brillih enlineerltlg ·ucelleoce, went into recel•enbip today. The U.S. chartered accountant firm of Peat Marwick Mlt· cbtll &: r.o., was named rtceivel' il\d manager of the company. .-:.. Tbe company said It tiad run info &·terious cash crisis due to eacalatlng COits ol developing and building a new jet engine for the American Lockheed Co. asked for appointment of a receiver and manaaer and aske.G the government to look Into the company's finances . The armou~ment of a receiver and manager lo run it in place of the present management was made after Rolls-Royce· halted all stock exchange dealings In the company's shares in the crills that Ufreatened lo fotee 1l out of biJ.sitf&s for want of sufficient funds. The opening price on the ltock tX· change Wednesday wa. 11.12-~ and It finished at 93 ctn~. a fall of 1914 cents In !ta last !roding day. 'rho· llU!peMion WIS announced just after"µ.. market opened todar when· tbtre: wu a 1\ngle Rolls quotltlon tf 90 cents .. i Tbe fin•nclal c:rlal.s rocked the London Stock Market aod, stocks ol eledrlc'I and component& finns which lllPP1Y the troubled Jet engine giant 11$u fell. Appointment of;-recdVtt dOes not consUtute banltruplcy, but legal experts sald It •'!lOWlll to admlsalon ·by the e11sUn1 management of its Inability to carry on for lack uf f\lnds. r . 'lbe mote came· orl!y houn bdort 11t 11pected SoVtntment statement-to Parliament on Milt-Royce's ·financial iltuation. Prime Minister Edward Heath fltld I three.flour cabinet mtetl"I Wednesday nl&bl to d!llCUOI the a1ala ' bltU,,. the !$-year-old firm. Tbe ~r' Labnr Part)' 1onmmenl Ifft RoUl'R4yce ...,. than 1114 mllUon to help · lowanll devt~IMlll and pro- duction of the revolutlollirJ -RB211·22 jet engine Wider a Marth, '1111. contract to suppl)' tile en11... for Lockheed"• new IS-tut Trtatar alrllnir. Last Nowmber. ' tbe . p-al eoc> aervatlve 1ovtrnment prom!Md .u Mf. diUooal IUO.I mllUon for the projec~ I ,1 ......... ,. -. ..... , ....... --.. Or-. c..., ,. l'tf* """ • -..... ,,.. ,....... a.n = : w-.J :::n .. ::-.• ., t I CAii.~ PllOI H '"""'· F"°"". ~. 19n Re~ning Of Parcel Requested A move 11 belng made 1n Huntington Beach to mone a land parcel after a developer rued a plot plan to build apartmtnts on it. C'Altmcllm&n Jerry Matney, a member of the city'• •:1ulU«nrtty study com- mitlee, lnil'.:aal the mm by nq~Ung the COUDCll to ad "with eome urgency" on an application to build 246 units on an 1.7-acre parcel on the southwest comer of AUanta Avenue and Newland &treel He reported that the committee had heeu studying the area and would recorh· rrliend that the arta presently zoned R2, RS -for apartments -be zoned Rt -!tJr llingJe family homes. On a· moUOn by Councilman Al Coen, the CCM>cl1 approved a 31).day delly in comideradon of the plot plan ''within which the planning commission and staff be directed to review tht parcel for a · zone change back to RI." The tnotlon carried 5 to 1 with Coun- cilJn.IJI J1ck Green slating be was "very much opposed" to the procedure. City Attorney Don Bonfa warned coun- cilmen tbat legal risks were involved in puWna a moratorium on building permita durlnc a stody. ''The change would be from a less restrictive use to a more restrictive use that would be less profitable to the developer," Bonfa said "If a court test firids the rezone not supportable the city might be held liable." Bonfa sajd there bad not been enough case law established for him lo give fuller advice. He explained tbe test would be whether the case would come under the city's police power provislOM - the sections of the government code . referring to the city's right to protect the beallh and safety of cilizem. "It's extremely doubllul In my mind that a ccmmtttee study that would sug- gest I new zoning because It would be more desirable would be supportable," he added. Matney pointed out that the grounds for the committee's recommendation wouJd be ~ on preserving the "in- t.grHy of the neighborhood." Matney'a original request wa!I for a two-month continuance but the Ume was ~t to 30 day!!, at!er Planning Director Ken Reynolds suggested the plan could be reviewed in that tlme. 'Ibe application, which was to have been considered by the planning com- misalon this we<k, ta by the F{edrku Development CorporaUon of FUllertoo. The corporation is .etlng a condiUonal ~pti()o to .UOw an 1verage denlitf. of 21.U anJts per ICfe .on the PIZ'l;t , The parcel praenUy is a milture of R2: and R3 zones which allow a density of 21 units and 34: units per acre reapec- Uvely. Matney's move drew an angry blast at the denaity study committee from Councilman Jack Green. Green said that he was not impressed with the committee and aald that the group had not carried out lnstructJons of lhe council. Gr.een aplalned that the committee had been·· iskea to consider changing the allowable densities in R2 and R3 t.0ne!I. He felt Utls was a better method of cutting down on the number or apartments than rW>ning properties. Matney resented "the slur" against the committee and named some of the planning commissioners and planning stiff who sel"'n on lL Henry Fredricks, president of the development corporation, could not be reacbed for comment this morning. U.S. Singer in Cuba MIAMI (AP) -The Cuban radio says American folksinger Pete Seeger held a jam session with North Vietnamese 1tudents In Havana Wednesday. The report, monitored here, said Sttger was in Havana to meet with the CUban Committee or Solidarity with Vletnam, Cambodia and Laos .. DAILY PILOT 'OAAHG! co,4$1' ,.\JILllHIMG COMl''.'ICV l•ktt H. W,M ,.,_ldlnl •nd l"vltlbW Jt,k It. Curlty Vitt PmkMftl tr.c o.ntr.I ~ l'hom•• Kt1Yil f.lllltr 1M111u A. Mw-phi11• M ....... lfl;«" Al•11 Dirlii11 Wal Onl\Of c:.unty ~IW AllMrt W. Iii•• ~It!• Elltw HntleftM IMdl Offke 17175 h11clt hultYtr4 Mtllhit M4rM11):0. h 11tO, 92'11 .....,_ L••-tttdlr m .,_, A-.ioti C•t. -..: D W.I 9ay ltrwt ~ fttdl: "11 W.I ..... ....._,. ... ~ ........ Iii c;.,,..,,.,.. ·-· • . -.. . .. .. ·. l·· -, -' ,. . -· ·': ... : ,,. .. [ " Shy Guy "Twiggy,• the youngest and probably .the shyest of lhe giraffes at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills, peeks from behnd a tree at the African wildlife preserve. How does one hide a giraffe, anyway? Or, bow does one giraffe bide? Bid by Phoenix to Quiz Police Prober Rejected By TOM BARLEY OI 1!11 D•lty P'llot ll•ff A move by Gary Harold Phoenix to again become both defendant and defender· in bis Orange County Superior Court ripeokldn•p trial Wl.!J rejtcted ,to- day by Judge William L. Murray. The !jurist, •Who ha.s earlier allowed ~ 4Q perl<lflallY question witn~ -1111oog them Deputy b istrlct Attorney Michael Capizzi -qu ickly rejected this morning the Costa Mesa man '!! bid to question Huntington Beach police in· vestigator Ronald Anderson. Phoenix made the request after Deputy Service s Held For Long-time Beach Resident Mrs, Lula Nicbols came to Huntington Beach In 1900 from Arkansas. She died Wednesday at the age of 98 in Stanton Community Hospital. "She was active in club work in her early years, but not recently," her daughter, Miss Zexie Nichols, said. "I think she'll be remembered more for helping others who had no one to help them." The city .named Nichols Street, near Warner Avenue and Gothard Street, after her. Mrs. Nichols and her husband, Geo~e, farmed the area known as Winlersburg. He died in 1947. fo.1rs. Nichols was a member of the original Community ll-1ethodist Church and was active enough In the Royal Neighbors of America to be named a charter member at the age of 90. For years the Nichols' home stood at 7614 \Varner Ave. It was torn down recently. Funeral services will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. in Westminster Memorial Park. ~1rs. Nichols will be bW'leJ beside her hu!lband. Survivors Include a sister, Mrs. Johnny Gardner of Midway City; the daughter, ?i.tiss Zexie Nlt'hols also or Midway City: two grandchildren; six great grandchildren, and six g re a t -g r e a t grandchildren. Mus ic Makes Eating Pay Off The sound of music is sweel today at HWllington Beach High School. It's sweet because the Oiler band earn· ed $S38 for uniforms equipment while selling McDonald's hamburgers. The band played from 3 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.. Wednesday, In front of the McDonald's Restaurant at 20362 Beach Boulevard. The object was to draw more customers and srlit the take. "It was a rtl winner. We more than doubted. our 11lu \\'edoe9d ay," Chuck Stuart, McDooald't manager, rtported this momin(. The $SSI will be given to the Huntington Beach High School band boo<ttr club whlch wlll distribute It a.s needed. Stu.art said the flO.(M} 11plit was so IUCttD!ul it may become an aruwal evcnL Public Defender Roderick Riccardi ques. tioned Anderson on bis search and ex- amination of the auto allegedly used by P~nlx to kidnap.and rape a number of women victims. Anderson's testimony followed that of Phoenix's former landlady. She said ' Phoenix was with her in her bedroom late last July 25,..,.... the. date of his irrest by H~ntington Beach police. , Dianna SpW'lock reluctantly resllfied th at the 29-year-0ld bachelor spent the night with her in her bedroom before he went to the Huntington Beach police station to establish that he was being sought for a series of sex crimes. Officers assured Phoenix that such Indeed was the case, booked him and lodged him In the city jail. Linda Lane, a shapely fellow boarder. at the Spurlock residence, testified Wednesday that she and ~frs. Spurlock compiled notes on Phoenix's activities shortly after his arrest on charges of rape, assault with intent to commit rape, sex perversion, kidnaping and robbery. Those notes, the defense alleges, pro- vide alibis for seve ral of the occasions on which Phoenix is said to have raped and sexually humiliated women In four Orange County communities. Phoenix is accused of 33 felony counts, all allegedly committed in a 28-day spell last summe r. Seven Cleared In N arco Raid Seven persons have been cleared or all charges stemming from a narcotics raid by Hunliogton Beach narcotic!! of- ficers a "'eek ago. Complaints v.·ere refused by the District Attorney against lhe followlng persons: -Donna L. O'Leary, 25, 106 Alabama St., Huntington Beach. -Paul E. O'Leary, 22, same address. -Peter D. Lindgren, 22, Anaheim. -Allan F. Nichol, 20, Hermosa Beach. -David M. Moore, Tl, Westminster. -Charle!! L. Hollis, 21, Garden Grove, -Rhonda R. Vowell. 19, 62t2 \Varner Ave., Huntington Beach. Felony charges against three olh'r persons arrested in the Thursday night raid on possession and sales charge!! of narrollcs have been filed by the dl-'trict attorney. They include Gab riel Ros.s, 21, no ad · dress; Sharon Rose, 20, 14251~ Pacific Av,., \Vestminster: and Marjorie J . Crt!f'n, 26, of Anaheim. Ross and ~liss Rose have been bound over to West Orange County Court for preliminary hearing Feb. 25. The Gree:n woman faces arraignment at the same court next Tue!lday. Narcotics officers claim -they con- flscatt!d one p o u n d of marijuana, 53 tablets of LSD, t,000 benzedrine tablets an<I a major quantity of heroin during the raid at 1'.liss Ro.se 's Westminster home. Huge Bequests Bared NEW YORK IAP) -Martha Baird Rockefeller. 1tepmother of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, has left $37 mlllloo ln bequu:t& to charity. Mn. RoclteftUer, who was 71, died Jan, 24 . • . ' ~ Teachers BI.ast Report Beach Sch,ool Figures Calle d 'Inco rrect' T-mn ill the llUlltlngton B""ch City (•~) School ~let c:ootel)d the dlatrlcl. II DOI heoded for the financial rocu .. Tbey AY financial flguna quoted by Deputy District Superintendent Charles Palmer are wrong and the dilb'Jct will not end fiscal 1970-71 with only 112,ooli 1n reserves, Palmer contended last month that the dlatrict'• .......... had dropped to almost noUtlnc IDd major program revisions migbt be neceasary. He blamed the fizlan. cial woes on the lack of state funds {because less children than eipected entered d1'trlct ICboolt um ytar) and t.be $300,000 in u.lar1 · lncreuet given to teacher1. Today, li19kesmen fOr the 221-member district teiChera a,asociatioo, ~,ft er several meetings with adrhinistrators, i1sued a rebuttal to Palmer's elabnl. A four-man committee including Gary Reboln, prealdent of .the teachers' auociation; John Bethel, vice president of the assotlaUon; Dave Borkenhagen, cbalrman of the teachers' salary com- mittee : Ind Mn, DoUie· Mclure, aalary negoUator, drafted the rebuttal to Palmer's statement, with the approval Biggest · County Sweep Nets 30 Drug Suspects By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M Di ll, P'llft lllff Striking at dawn, teams of lawmen today initialed OperaUon Daybreak, the largest roundup of suspected psychedelic drug and narcoUcs wholesale.ra in Orange Coast history. The alleged dealera-UHteath were being rousted sleepily from their beda without incidenL Raider teams fanning out from two staging areas -in Costa Mesa and Garden Grove-by mid-morning had cap- tured about 30 among 81 suspecb named in a lbree-month probe. Lawmen from seven police agencies and the Stalt Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement were engaged in !hf_sweep which will surpw last summer'• similar Operation Harvest. They carried indictmenll and felony complaints -fint issued by the 1971 Orange County Grand Jury -based on a serie!I of large-acale drug sales to undercover agenta. Scope of the sweep is so widespread that two deputy district aUorneys were assigned, just to answer legal questions "We're having very few probletn!l,'1 said Costa Mesa Police Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. "Most are be.ing rousted from !lleep," he added, saying this element of surpri.se was part of tbe strategy. Busy booking officers had processed 20 suspects into eo.,ta Mesa City Jail by 10:30 a.m., with paddy wagons bring· in~ in more from locations up and down the coast. "We're coming along pretty well. We've got 12 ·in custody now," said Garden Grove DetecUve Sgt. Wayne Wilson,. Raiders assembled al Costa Mua and Garden Grove police headquarters for 5 a.m. briefing sessions before moving into the field. Detective Sgt. John Regar. was spearheading the Costa Mesa area sweep involving five teams of detectives and BNE agents, while two group!! worked the Garden Grove arta. State q:eot~l:n-cbarge Jack Leavey said tbe range of contraband confiscated in pre-raid deal& runs from LSD, hasblsh, opium, peyote and ~ther hallucinogens, to amphetamine compound&, heroin and barbiturates. He said most bookings are for sale of narcoUcs 1nd dangerous drugs. Small amounts of contraband drugs -plus two loaded weapons in the Garden Grove raid! -were being found, while a few additional zuspecb not named in warrant. or indictments were caught. "We're pretty certain this will be even more successful than 0 per 1 t i4> n Hanreat," aald Costa Mesa'• Lt. Fischer. The overnight raid triggered last May 21 reached inland as far u Fullerton and netted l().plUI suspecll, many ol whom are now serving state pr J 1 on term.!. Court Plea Set By Book Store A book store owner's demand that Westminster police be ordered to cease their alltged hara!ISlllent of his premisa at 6532 Westminster Ave. will be debated Feb, 10 in Orange County Superio!' Court. Judge Robert A. Banyard will be asked to rule on allegaUons by attorneys for No-No Books 'N Things that police cloaed the premise!! on the direct orders of Police Chief Conner Collacott shortly after the store opened last Dec.:!t. It is noted in the complaint that Westmiditer city council ruled al Its ~ling ·Immediately followllg clomre that the !!tore and all such outlets specializing in adult literature required conditional use pennits and an additional police pennit. Attorneys for the No-No group argue that the city ordinances calling for those permits are illegal and unconstitutional. ol the m-member auoctaton. "About OM-tblrd of our money comes from the state. The other two-thirds i.!I raised in local taxe1," teachers said. "U we have 40Q.&OO Im children than we budgeted for, there ah>uld be 1bout- $200,C(l(I in the budget from local revenue: that isn't needed for the mlssin~ children.'' ''If that local money is already belne spent. what will the district do if tboM 400-eoo children do come in?" Teachers continued : "At least seven--, and-a-hall teachers figured in the budget have not been hired. That means ~ savings of '50,000." "Every year we are saved from finan. cial disaster in the brink of time,'' the teachers' statement nad. "And we expect to be saved. again this year." ,. Last year the district put more than 100 teachers on notice that some might lose their jobs if finances came up short. None was fired for lack of money.· "We were not informed by the a~ . ministraUon. We had been directed te work on program and curriculum next year with no warning it mlgbt hav8 to be cut" "None of these facts (relating to finan- cial troubles ) were brought out in our recent salary negotiations. If informaUora is there now, it was there· then." "It ls inconceivable that either party to negotiations would have ignored sucb facts had they been made available at any time during the 10-monlb negotia~ tlons ," teachers said. "We teachers: are not convinced that program cuts aro inevitable." "The teachers salaries 1hould nol have come out of re!lervea. The district knew about a six percent cost of living in- crease, it should have been planned." "The 1970-n Wdget increased by about $1 million. Only $300,000 went to te1cbers' salaries." The teachers then went on to 1ay:· "We feel the board (of trustees) 1 n d staff are working for the community. We believe the staff and the public is entitled to know the true financial condition of thi!I school district." Teachers then suggested tbal the di!llrict all!lwer four questions to clarify the situation: "what i!I the total budget for 1970-71? How much is based on overe!ltimated enrollment and wW not be spent? How much i!I based on !talf money aDCj. will not be received? What balance can be rea!lonably expected at end of year based on these figures?" Jn their closing remarks, the teachers said: "We are aware the budgeting (If this district is tigbt. Parents should be aware that they constitute the elee~ !orate. They play a role in .determining the tax rate in thi!I district. The ~m­ munlty should also be aware that if more state money Is to be fortbctiming1 the voter mu!lt apply pressure on his state legislator." Teachers offered no estimate on hoW much money they thought the district would finish the year with, but said they believed it would be much higher than $12,000, Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on H ER/T AGE Groups ' r5tor119 Ump T1bl1 R19. Sltt NOW SJJt Com End T bf-l19. SI Jt moot 1 t NOW Sli t HERITAGE ---. MADRIGAL • Btdreom e Dining Room • Occ11lon1I 20 ~ HERITAGE---, IARACINI e BH'room • Occa1lonal 20 ~ by HERITAGt ..,. l14t NOW 111 f You 1r1 inYit1d fo vi1 it our showroom& di1pl1yin9: e HERITAGE e DREXEL e KARASTAN HERITAGE--~ BRENTANO and Nonnan Court 20~on Your fatJoriii dtiigncr UifU be hopw to °'&isl uou l H.J .GARRETf fURNITLJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,_ M•"' Thn. l fri, Iv& TIY OUR U VOLV1Nta CHAl tal ' 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 M6.0276 ·I 'r " ' .. ~-. Jobles sness • Hits Record In County Unemployment figures for January In Orange County set a 13-year bigb with 8.2 percent of the county1s work fora: jobless. The 43,300 persons out of work In January represented an ll percent in- crease over the December, when 7.4 percent or 39.000 were out of work. With seasonal adjustments, the rate for January and December ~re the 1ame at 7.7 percent. Mrs. Alta Yetter, Orange County analyst fur the State Department of Human Resources said. The seasonal adjustment is made in order to compare county jobless rates with state and national rates. The last time the unadjusted or actual jobless rate exceeded 8.2 pen::ent was in April, 1958, she said, when 9.1 per~t were jobless. The Orange County labor siluaUon is bad and we don't see any major areas of improvement during the first half of 1971," Odessa Dubinsky, senior research analyst for HRD said. The adjusted rate of unemployment •·ilJ hit 8 percent by the end of February and probably 8.2 percent in March. Last year, January unemployment stood at 4.2 percent with 22,300 unemployed. Contributing lo the bad news for January were S,600 \\'orkers released from service and retail firms -500 more than were laid off in January, 1970. · While 400 aerospace jobs were created hi January last year, 900 were eliminated last month. Jn 12 months, aerospace employment has dropped to 55,900 jobs from 68,200. "We expect another 2,000 aerospace workers to be lai{! off in 1971, ~rtainly not as precipitous as last year," Miss Dubinsky said. YES Saying NO As Job Demands Exceed Supply Tbe Harbor Area Youth Employment Service (YES) is having to say a difficult word (NO) to a lot of job applicants for a very few reasons. -Not enough work ls available for )'\>ung people. -And young people outside the Harbor Area, from as far as Ivtne and Mission iejo, are calling ror jobs. "The kids are just coming in droves." says Mrs. Florence 11ayos. YES director. She notes that the new school semester gives some teenagers more time for employment. Not only that. but a YES office in Huntington Beach was forced to close, shifting the demand for employment and income to the Costa Mesa facilities. "We're getting 20 applications a day," she explains. saying many are from Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, plus south Orange County. Anyone who needs a hand -from baby-sitting to housework , lawn care. carpentry, heavy labor. sales or janitorial work can tap a ready source of willing help. The YES numb e r is 642-0474 and Mrs. Hayos is there afternoons. while a donated answering service can take calls anytime. . . I -~ ----• -, -. --'j· ' :::;; :l UNFLAGGING -Mrs. Louise Shepard, wife of the Apollo 14 com· mander, directs banging of Flag from second floor balcony of Shep- ards' Houston home. Hanging F1ag are (from left) Julie, 19· Robert Williams, 24, Shepard's nephew, and Laura, 23. Flag was pfesenled to Astronaut Shepard after his first space flight 10 years ago. ' Fa1nilies Wait Apollo Crew Wives Unruffled THUMBS UP FOR STUART Apollo 14 Wife Joa" Roon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) The ·leaves in the front yard need raking because the man of the house is away. On the front door hangs a tapestry with ·a message needled by a Benedictlne nun : "Many angels stand in the sky as the rocket speeds to the mooo on high." Tht tapestry was a gift to Mrs. Stuart A. Roosa, wife of the Apollo 14 com- mand pilot, from Sister Mary Lucy Bar· rttl who teacbu at Sacred Heart Academy, a Roman Catholic school nestl· ed among the ·strawberry patches and red clay bills near CUiiman, Ala. "She's my aunt and she's a space nut." said Joan Barrett Roosa. a Tupelo. Miss., girl who taught school for a while, married a man destined to be an astronaut, and now keeps house for him and four children in an unpretentious old brick, ranch·type house in El Lago, Te:ir. Like the wives of the other two moon voyagers, Alan B. Shepard and Edgar D. Mitchell. Joan Roosa seems unruffled by her husband's potentially dangerous assignment. S~ even jokes about it. ''I tried to get the flight controller to send Slu a message that I bad· loaned my Neiman.Marcus (department store) charge card to my two sisters who are visiting me from Mississippi," she said. "He said he was afraid it wou1d blow the mission." Rooftop Recreation For Chaprnan College? She said she had a few anxious moments during the trouble wilh the docking shortly after Sunday's launch, but decided "Ole Stu will fix thal." Miles away, in the exclusive River Oaks section of Houston, Louise Brewer Shepard has closeted bersel£ in her two- story white colonial hqme with her two grown daught~rs, other relatives, and Mrs. Richard Abbott, her close friend. She has refused to . talk to newsmen about the mission untif after splashdown. Rooftop recreation may be one way Chapman College. Orange, may solve its land shortage difficult.ies. College officials are studying the pro- spect! of building a three-story educa- tional center that \\'ould be housed under one roof. On the 200.000 square-root roof would be tennis courts, 1 running track, football field. a putting green and a baseball diamond that may serve Chap. man's team needs. The concept lakes advantage of the present stadium by converting its con- crete benches for use In five lecture halls, a college spol(esman said. The Live Cove rage Of Moon Walk The three major tele v ision networks in Southern California will carry Jive coverage of the Apollo 14 lunar landing scheduled early Friday morning. Both Channels 4 (NBC) and Channel 7 (ABC ) will carry the teltt:ast from 12:30 to 1 :30 and Channel 2 fCBSJ from I to 1:30 a.m. coverage or the first of two lunar walks, scheduled to begin at appro,;lmately 5:50 a.m. y,•lll be a.s follows: ABC. $:45 to 10 a.m.; NBC, $:4$ to 11 a.m. and CBS. ~It a.m. Additions.I covtrage ts scheduled for Saturday activities but local cover11ge has not yet been en- nounced. present gymnasium would 11.so be: re· tained with its interior being gutted and converted to other mes. Chapman officials are working up pr~ posaJ:i for funding lhe IU million project with a combination of prjvate gilts and federal money. The departmenls of Hea:Jth, Education and Welfare and Hous. ing and Urban Development are con· sidering the plan. Synthetic turf would be used lo free college planners from lhe traditions that bind playing fields to ground levels. The fake, green sluff -al f3 a square foot -would cover the rooftop recreation areas. Underneath the single roof would be located dormitories, fine arls facilities including two theaters, classrooms. lec- ture halls, a student hall and athletic facilities. While college official.!! say they are it least "six months away from com· pleUng tin.ancial arrangements," it is possible groundbreaking for the complex could occur before the end of this year. College departments are submitting space needs requests to planners, a spokesman said. The propo.sed complex: voould cover most or the block boundtd by Walnut Avenue, Center Street. Sycamore Avt:nue and Orange Slrttl Jn Orange. ConvCr$lon t1f this area ~ the three-story complex relieves the college of the nttd to purchase as much As two city blocks that would be required If the college were to build facilltles with a similar amount of space. Wednesday she had a flag hoisted over lhe tree.shaded f150,000 home. The flag , she said,· once new over the U.S. Capitol. Jt was given to Shepard after bis first space flight on May 5, IHI. ltfrs. Shepard is a stylish blonde 7;flose husband's investments in oil and banking have made him the richest man in space. Victims of Air Crash Identified Victims of a plane crash in the mist. covered Cajon Pass northeast of San Bernardino Wednesday have been Iden- tified as a mortuary employe from Anaheim and two friends. Warner F. Julian Jr., 32, of 1617 W. La Palma Ave., was believed to have been pilotin:g the Piper Tri·PaCer when it slammed into a power company acctss road. . Julian, owner of the plane, wu killed instanUy along wlth OeMis D. Waite, II, of Temple City, and Teresa McNeely, 33, of La canada. Both JuUan and Waite were employed by Hill Mortuary, in Templt City. h1vestJgator1 said visibiUty wu lts1 than a half.mile when Julian's plane era.shed 20!> yardJ from Interstate lli, the-Barstow Freeway. 'l'Taffic on the thoroughfare -primary route from Los Angeles to Las Vegas -was stopped in southbound lanes for a time as a result of the crash. Julian·, car wis parked at Bracket Fl!!:ld near La Veme, where the trio took off. H DAILY '1Lllf :t Services Probe Due · Supervisors to Review County Progranis '!Uk foroe lludlea ol CllWlly lslan<b. englneerlns oervlca1 clola proctSSlng and the county medic•! center wm ordered Wedoeaday b1 . Robert W, Battin 1 chalrn)an ol the 8olrd ol Supervisors. In hil. leCOlld lenathy atatemtnt read to feUow board members in the pcut two days, Battin appointed his colleaguu and hlmaelf to In deplh studies In the ne1t all month!. 'I'Uuday, Battin rMd a statement calling for the fuing of County Administralive Officer Robert E. Thomas. He fall<d lo gel lhe necessary three votes to achieve hi& goal, Wednesday Ballin said the board "is foced with 1 big job If we ar. 1olng to efrectuate ~ goal set by Mr. Ronald C..pera and Mr. Ralph Clark on !heir joining the board and with which 1 agrtt -namely that we review each funclloo of government from zero to pment ..-. '"Ibis means that we will not accept as a starting point last year's budget plus flve percent for pay raisea and !hen ICld programs to lhe eatent perm!~ Jury Requested To Delay Firing Of County Chief A member. of ~ 1961 Orange County Grand Jury has asked the present Grand Jury to urge couoty supervisors to delay lhelr propo&ed firing of C o u n t 1 Administrative Officer Robert Thomas "until Jt bas llme to make a careful study" of the situation surrounding tbe proposal. Mrs. Beatrice Russell of 1444 West Bay Ave., Newport Beach, re minds Grand Jury Fore'Tlan Doreen Marshall in he r Jetter that many county depart- ment heads "spoke approvingly -many enthusiastically -o( Thomas an d the job he was doing for the county" when the CAO was discussed during sessions or the 1969 panel. "°tr11. Russell served as secretary te the 1969 Grand Jury. Mrs. Mars.hall declined comment Wednesday on Mrs. Russell's request. A board vote on the firing or retention of the county administrator is scheduled for Tuesday's meeting. Flying Command Post Notes Anniversary OMAHA. Neb. (AP) -Ollidals or the Strategic Air Command celebrated Wednesday the loth anniversary of their airborne command post but the OC135 plane carrying the headquarters staff was prevented from landing by a freezing drizzle. The command post, known as the "looking glass," serves as an auxiliary SAC headquarters in the sky. It has been aloft continually since the inception ot the program In 1961. ted by rWng revenues," the board chairman continued. He admitted lhat lhe board, In lhe als monlha Jell before •dopllon ol lhe budget, will not be able to lhorouaJ>ly review tBieh department from zero, "but we ca.n COD\plete the 1tudy of some and strongly ura:e department heads to do a like tNnalysls ol their own." BatUn asserted lhlt the board "can bt five timu rnore effective thaq by sltUng as a review board of cul and dried budget presentations." Oark was assigned.to lnvestlgate small county island.1 to determine if fire and police protect.km and other services pro- vided by the county could not be better and more economically provided via con· tracts with 1djolnlng cities or even an- nexation. Phillips was asked to study recom- mendations toward combining engineer- ing aervices into a alngle deparlment or building Jocatlon. Caspers wu urned to lnvuU&ate ~ processing. • Battin said thli area of county services baa been severely crJUCized by 0 our own county people 11 well u by private taxpayers. '1 "Complaints of overcharjea to-otbero departmeots, delays in delivery. fn.. accurcies in . wort1 waaie. etc. are widespread e1101..1gb that t.hey should be determined by a full aca1e study to be erroneous or they lhould be cor-- rected," Battin stated. Battin said be would head 1 atudy of the Orange County Medical Center. He repeated that he favors combinlnC the medical cent.er and a ~ UCt hospilal In one physical lnstltulion ..ilh common management and p 1 an t facilities. The board chairman said he would assign a study area to Supervl.Jor Devid Baker wben he returns from Wubln.eton.1 D.C. Health Planning Group Dissolves With B lasu Orange County's Comprehensive Health Planning Association (CHPA), dealt a death blow by the Board of Supervisors last week, voted itlelf out of existence Tuesday night. But not without tak.in& a few potshots at its ''enemies." Dr. Wallace Gerrie, president of CHPA, blamed Dr. John R. Philp, county health officer for the demise of the planning group, and charged that the action had "put health planning back two or three years in Orange County." Dr. Gerrie called the new Orange County Health Planning Council, sug. gested by Philp and approved by the supervisors, ''more political t h a n volunteer" and said It would not receive the required endorsement of the Orange County Medical Association. Gerrie said lhe CHPA had many ac- complishments to be proud of. "We were the only county In the state which never had an appeal from one of its decisions, we held more hearings than any other county." The CHPA was organized under federal law and new hospitals and additions to existing hospitals had to have CHPA approval for a license and to accept Medi.Cal payments. The Orange County 1s90elalion was organized in 1969 and got into trouble in mid-1970. At ·one time a committee of the organlr.allon held up approval or the expansion of Santa Ana Com· munity and Tustin Memorial hospitals. This raised a furor ·and Gerrie charged that it was about this time that Dr. Philp began the de struction of CHPA. Having little funds the organization depended upon county space and loaned help to be matched by federal money. "Dr. Philp began to withdraw the help we needed about six montM qo, '' Dr. Gerrie .charged. "I think he wtnted. and has gained, full control over bealtla planning in the county." Gerrie said funcliom of beallh planning are now suspended u far u • local organiul.ion iJ concerned. ' That Deadline Really Friday A spokesman for the Department o[ Motor Vehicles, somewhat red faced, explained today that the deadline for renewal of vehicle registralion iJ Friday and not today. · It seems cards sent out by the DMV. which were print~ last March, warn vehicle owners they will have to pay a penalty fee if they don't renew by Feb. 4. As the spokesman noted. it was a typographical error, and the renewal deadline is Friday midnight by malt or Friday 5 p.m. at the local DMV offices. In Orange County DMV offices •art located at 72.0 W 19th St., Costa Me!a; 15062 Jack!on St.. Mld"ay Clty;. -1330 E. 1st St., Santa Ana, and 10ll W. Canada, San Clemente. Lihhers Bake Cakes TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -The women's lib group at Florida State University, an opponent of the Jdea that a woman's place ls In the kitchen, decid- ed to raise some cash so the meuibers held a bake sale. f f l I " L ~. ~ /1 T)A 1J ~: ~ ~o~-6~PM M1L.Y '" f"\ CJ9:!5 LIQ. ;11:~-S:OQPMSdllOA"{ · DISC.OUllT5 YMROU!SllO"TSTORE; INCLIJl>INcfr Ctll ..... •CR'(STl.L •~TE.1!'.L COFFEE T~~LES •S'IPf BOllRDS • LOUNGE Cffltl 1(5 ·20-50% <H ' I I I I C\IRISfW,'ii DECOR. c-.~o~ ~OFF t:IANI H Ca:FE.E. GA-~t>E.N 2'140WT~H~"t·~AOfLtMR·,i<t-b10 v :f OA!LV PILO I Jn,.~. F•bf""1 4, l\11 Nixon Send s sets cone11t1o1u Share Plan Egypt to Extend To Congress Cease-fire Pact WASRINCTON (AP! -President Nix· on sent to a 1keptlc1! Congress today • ~bllllOfHl·year ceM:ral revtnue-sha.r- ing plan conllllning a new proPQ$ill to eneour1ge states to work out for themaelve~ how they would 1hare their money with localities. The President said the plan would grow automatically to provide an estimated $10 billion a year in no-strings federal money to state and localities. In a lengthy me:ssage to Congress the Pmident made clear that general revenue lharing is the cornerstone of his "new federalism" policy. ''In the final anaJysls. the purpose or general revenue sharing is to set our states and localities free-free to &el new priorities, free to meet unmet needs, free to make their own mistakes, yes, but also free to score splendid successes which otherwise would never be realized," the President !aid. The.re is considerable rani: and file support for the plan, but it was de· nounced in advance by the two men v.·ho have the most to say about what Congress does with it, Rep. Wilbur Milli <O.Art.J, and Rep. John W. Byrnes CR· Wis.). Nixon said the plan would reduct needs ror heavier property and sales taxes, open new job opportunities at the state and local level, decrtase competition between domestic and defense needs: ' and attract more energy and talent ~ 1tate and local governments. The broad outlines of general revenue $haring had been sketched out earlier. 2 Unions Accept Ne,v Rail Pact; 2 Still Ref use WASHINGTON (UPI) -The nation 's railroads aaid today they had reached tentative agreement with two of four unions on a new contract but reported liWe progress toward a settlement with the other two. The chief railroad negotiator, John P. HilU Jr., said he reached tentative aereement Wednesday nlght wi t h negotiators for the · Brotherhood of Maintenance ol Way Employes and the lfolel and Restaunnt EmpJo,.es llnl"!r· which represent about 93,000 r •i 1 workers. But not much progress was reported by Hiltz toward agreement with the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks and the United Transportation Union, which represents 300,000 other workers. The.re was a brier rail strike Dec. 10 but the workers returned to their jobs under an emugency law passed by Congress to prevent a strike until March I. Hiltz said at a news conference of effom to reach a aettlement with BRAC and the UTU : "We hope to reach agree- ment with them before the March t deadline set by Ccngreu. but these two unions are making agreement extremely difficult." Eighth Victim Found In New J ersey Bl ast LAMBERTVILLE, N.J. (UPI) -The body of an eighth victim of two ga~ explosions in a residential neighborhood v.•as pulled from the rubble late Wed- neslay night. Mrs. Florence Waldron. like six of the other vi ctims, was trapped by the second expl osion in the home of a fmgbbor . She went there to help persons injured, stunned or left homeless in the first blast. THESE ARE COPIES OF OFFICIAL PORTRAITS OF KENNEDY, WIDOW Jacki e and Two Chlldren Viewed Likenes11s in Visit to Whit• HouM W ashingto11 Revisited Jackie Lured Back by New Kennedy Portraits WASHINGTON (AP) -Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis has returned to the White House for the first time since the 1963. assassination or her first husband to visit the Nixons and see new Kennedy portraits on display. The new portraits by art.ist Aaron Shikler of New York City were to get a press review on easels in the East Room today and wilt be on display there for tourists for about 10 days. The former first lady had told friends she never want· ed to return to the White House because of its tragic memories. For 1'.frs. Onassis' visit. however, they were hung in place for !he first time. Kennedy's portrait was in the Green Room , replacing Claude J\1onet 's "A Morning on the Seine," a gift to the \Vhite House from the Kennedy family after the president's death. But a special invitation from President and Mrs. Nixon lured her back to see the new portraits of hersel( and President John F. Kennedy hung in the White House for the first time. The late Presiden t is pictured almost full length in pensive mood, head bo\ved and his eyes obscured. Mrs. Onassis was depicted somewhat impressionistic· ally in a long gown. Her portrait was pla~ alongside the doorway to the ground-floor diplomatic reception room. opposite one of her successor. Lady Bird Johnson. And she brought along her children, Caroline, 13, and John F. Kennedy Jr., 10, on the three-hour visit Wednes· day night which was kept secret until well after their departure. These are expected to be permanent locations for the portraits. commissioned by the White House Histori- cal Association at a cost of $15,000 each. President Nixon led a tour that included his Ova1 Office and hosted a dinner in the sec<lnd-fioor family quarters with the Nixon daughters, Tricia and Julle, on hand . They were accepted after Mrs. Onassis gave her approval. Mrs. Nixon described the occasion as "perCeclly de- ligbtlul-very warm and relaxed." There has been considerable interest in Mrs. Onassis' portrait and one version was published in advance. The White House had expected to have a ceremonia1 unveil· ing of the Kennedy paintings, but Mrs. Onassis requested they simply be placed on display. Nixon had sent a military jet to bring the Kennedys to Washington from New York. They arrived around 5 p.m. and stayed until 8:35 p.m. PopUlar Singer Aboard Airliner Forced to Cuba MIAMI (UPI) -A Delta Air Lines jetliner enroute from Chi c ago to Nashville. Tenn., with 28 persons on board. including singer Bobby Goldsboro, was hijacked today by a man who ordered it flown to Cuba. The Federal Avialion AdministraLion said the hijacker made his mo\'e at 9:35 a.m. as the DC-9 was about 100 mile!! south of Bowling Green . Ky. - about a half hour after it left Chicago's O'Hare Field. Goldsboro and three members of his band were among the 23 passengers aboard Delta 's fli ght 379. There was a crew of five. Goldsboro recorded the hlt record "Honey." Viking Re cords identified the band members as pianist Ron Oates. bass player Steve Sc hafer and drummer Jan Kurtis. 'There \vas no description of the hi· jacker or report on how he ordered the plane hijacked. "All we know is that a male passenger requested service to Havana," said a Delta spokesman. Vow to Back C:om11aunists Red Chinese Accuse U.S. Of Extending Asian War By Unittd Press International Communist China accused the United State!! toda y or escalating the war in Indochina and said it has the obligation lo support the Communist forces "until final victory." An official statement by the Chinese Foreign 1'1inistry broadcast by Peking Radio and monitored in Hong Kong said the Chinese people "absolutely will not tolerate U.S. imperialism to do what it likes in Indochina." "We have the responsibility and the obligation to support the people of the thl'fle Indochina nations until fjnal victory in the war against U.S. aggression and for nationa l salvation.'' t~e statement said. It stopped short of threatening outright Chinese intervention in Indochina. Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma of Laos said today in Vientiane his country . would protest to the Soviet Union and Great Britain, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva conference, if allied troops enter Laos. He said he knew of no such incursion and reported new Ccmmunist advances to Laos. "Red" Prince Souphanouvong. leader of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao move- ment in Laos and half brother of Prince Sotivanna, appealed to Souvanna to stop South Vietnamese troops from entering Laos. An urgent message dated Feb. 2 and broadcast today by the Kahoaan Patbet Lao Radio said lens of thousands or Saigon troops were massed along the border and that American-trained com. mandos were operating deep in Pathet Lao te?Titory. He warned that Souvanna v.·ould "have lo bear heavy responsibility for the great disaster aris ing from the U.S. im· perialists and their lackeys widening the war in our country.'' Bad Wea th er Plagues U.S. Commun ist China said large numbers of U.S. and South Vietnamese troops were posed "to invade southern Laos on a massive scale. The U.S. military command acknowledged 29,000 allied troops were near the border but said no U.S. GI's would enter Laos. -tr -tr -tr Potentially Dangero us St orm BuiUls Up in Rockies U.S. Accused California ., Uftl!!D l'llllS INTlltNATIONAl SW-r" c 1111or"I• -· "'llSHV Ill""~ toftV Wltll -llltll clMI t MI l lltllflJ coolt r ltmP1•1l11r11 t" '"' lnltrler. TIM l.01 ,.,,.,1,, '''' llad 1 l•w COLD ltlcfltt ef ttrtr morn•"' foe. "'' \• -. Clllle (tnll't's ,...tdktot<I 111911 W>\I 1111 flll¢IHO JO, w Mlt"'"" trom we11.,.,,,.,., ''· \\ TG11i.rtt•t ,_, Mii ''"" /"Olft " \,,,, fAll 11 .,._ Clwf( Cfflt.r to llw ...... , 30s Iii COIW tlltlurk , " Te mperature• Of Escalation; Bruce Hits Back I r UN/TIO l"ltlJI /NT'lllNATlOHAL .l,lllitnY Albu<IUl'<IUI A!l1~t11 "ncnor101 I Ol!Dn l ult110 Cllk 190 CI01Clnn11I Cltvt ll<'Cll Dt!ltl DMvtr ~•Mo!l'ltt O.IT.tt Fr""° Hll'll \.OW ,.l'ft, '' ·10 s. ,, f » » w .01 PARIS (UPI ) -The Communists said : ~; today the United Slates had carried lCI 21 .ct the Indochina war inside Laos and Cam. ~ ,", ·" bodia and \Yas trying to "cover up" •• .It t'· ., '° .a• 1"' operations. The United States re- ~~ ~ •1' jected the accusations and s a i d it was ,, ,s :~! Hanoi that had Invaded Laos, Cambodia lM1'9 wn llO t'H l"lttll-.i ,,.,.. l""9 wl171 tl!t -~ .,_ I~ .......... .-..it .Id ...,. ......... 1111er1 Nl'tl tt 1lr llW Yttlbl!l.... r11-l11t 'tMI 9fll: to -'"lia. 11'1 (tflfrt l tM _ ... , .,_.. 111111 -.. 11 "'nn ,........,..... ,,I Wl•tMll r1not•ST•!-"""" ttMo!ulu h"'l•MllOl11 J.c:k-Mlt ,_, ~ ~ 11nd South Vietnam . '' n U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce IU.0... -· _,.., Wllll 11111111 "'!OtflW' /11 lfll 1111 11'111 11\t 10tl1r ... Mwftl-11'1 llltif\I ..... ,.. l!'IOtll;o I~ I/It """'r 41 •' r~ i.w11 01n rt1 ...., 11i.1u )~ 11 ts HI lllt"'1 .... ,., ..... lS lo 7J ... lowtr w111m . Samt llltM Wtofnetff' t lloO 11r1•flt!H lrl1rto1 l'IOI? f!w.lllllM! LIM •••ell 4),P, lenl• MMkt '°41, l urMnk 111-'1. Ml, W!IM!I 41•JO, l'lh'Nlltltl ft-ll, ltfw.t11M ,NJ, Ptjl"I 6-rl"t• JJ.1'l, ltk4'f'Wlcl S~l.5. 14n 0119o tcMt. $11111 •1r11t11 ..,... 11111 AMM!m.J11111 ... _ I Coufal SWlftY llMl1¥. l.lt M v1ri1~lt .,,~ n••M ffOll ""'ll!f!I: ilol.H't ll9<0"!'1"" Wtslt rf1 I) IO )0 k.floll '" •llt t_, '"'' •!It Frlll•J. H11~ 1.i1¥ •1 II '1. , .. , •• , ,,,.,,.,., ... '4', '"""' ,,_ '' .. ,, '"'~ .... lffll-•"-'" ,...,.. ,,_ ll to 6! W•lf• tr,.,1>••11\ir• U Sun. "''""''· Tidr• P'l•tl hl111 l'•rn low $t<OM !<It~ TMUlllSDAY 11111 1111.,., i ._ 1 "'· ~ "/HJ It It"·"' S.1llt m. !t I"""'' .O t I Oii •II'. J l $tit J'''""'· hit l ·M•"' V .S. Sum,...,,, s-. tlM/, tr"11,.. drlnle. r•111 •"If 'M •lltolf'Oll •l,...11 1'M f'nll•• Mllofl "°"' "" lllfldllt• 1g ll!t 1 1•'''" k•• ....... ....,,,, nw ~•-.ii be -"""" ••• tl· *'"" "'°''"'°' wll!I wl'oll #II' N•• 1-1 Wt111'11r $•rvlct l•rmtd 1 llt· t6"l 11tv lll"9treu1 11er.., In ,,_. -111. .,~ l:(l(•!tl. Sllow or 1r,....,1 wtrnln•• W11't h'vfd tor I te 1111, ••t• t-am "'" tt""'' ftl1ln1 111,t&IJtfo 11'19 MlfWtll 10 IN 'tl'll•t l •NI wv!,,.•n A11t1tl1Klll1n1. An '''' et llt tv• 1now w1tnlnt 1 In· cl<JCll'd ••M1 el Ml"""°"· 5GUlll O..k· e11. taw, ''"' Nf'IH'ttl!•. Ptltfr!nt ~•IUI• t ltlttl t wlft '"'' ''°"' tft• Mlawe1t le !l!f 111111M r11 ,..., 11tl•tl!•1n1. #111 1'1(11 col \!9'1 lcttt GA.io1t11, N C • 011•!111 111, nllJl!l, 11111 If '"" •ti tddect trnift" 11!11. l l'I Vftll lot Allf!llU Lovhvlllot ·-· Mhtml Mlt..tVltet Mlflllffl>Ollt N..., Orlftlll tllot 'l'Oft Otldt l1CI Olt•111otM C:lty ""''" ~t•lnt1 fth•lteltlllh!• !'ft"*" I• r 1111&u•th r 0tt11nd. Orr ltt11dCltr lllH &!vii ·-Sttr1mf'!lo !I, lOlllt 5111 P'tlfl(llCI ''~"I• Uook•n• : : ·" said Hanoi had shipped massive forces ,. .f5 into Laos and Cambodia In violation :; ~ of international law and said today's .u " .11 aetuSations were a plot to cover up ~ : M tht use of Laotian and Cambodian ter- '' ,, .01 rltories for North Vietnamtse and " '' ·°' &all!llite armies. ~S S1 n ,. "Throughout your slatemtnts runs the n : .01 failure to mention the long-standing and rJ ,, continuing massive presence of North ~ ~! ~1 Vietnamrse forct1 In Laos, Cambodia ,. ,, and Soulh Vittnam," Bruce said. "Into ;: .!; !; :ill three t'OUnirles Hanoi has sent its ., ., force11. clande11tlnt:ly. illegally. In great ~ ~ numbers and tn defiance of the wishes 1t ,, of lhe governments conctrned and of "!: : ,, lnlern;itional agrtements to which North ,. )J M Vfe lnam fs party," Bruce uid. From Wln- CAIRO -EIYPIWI i'nlldont Anwar Sadat aMOunced tonJchl EIYJll wUl obaerve the Middle East cease-fire for a further month -until Marth 7. 'lbe sources said that the word was r<layed on the ~ that Thant would issue another report oa the status of the Arab-llraeli puce talks within the nut 30 days. The siJ.-montb-old cea.fire is due. to expire at midniaht Friday. Israel has already aareecf to accept an 11· tension. Thant issued a repott Monday in which be expressed guarded optimiSm over progreas of the talb belni cooducted by his special envoy, Gunnar V. Jarring. He appealed to all panin to withhold f.ire -a statement directed mainly at Egypt, which has said tt wo uld not extend the ceue-flrti unleu there wu progress in the talks. The source1 aa.ld they did not know run details of the conclitlona: under which Cairo agreed to the one month e1tenlion. but one wu a stipulation that Thant would i!sue another report on the talks by March 5. Presumably Cairo coald bue a decision then on further extemioa of the cea.se-- fire, provided Jt bellcved thert wu con- crete evidence or pN:lgrus in the Jarring talks. Israeli foree:s along the SUe-z Canal geared for battle as a precaution but Israeli leaders said they would not resume fighting unless tbt Egyptians did. D i p I o m a t i c report, reaching Washington said Sadat would extend the truce until March S, but would insist in that timt Israel must implement a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for Israeli withdrawal from conquered Arab territory. The leading Beirut newspaper, An~ Nahar, carried a similar report from Cairo, quoting official EgypUan sources as saying if Israel refuses to withdraw, Prisoners Seize Two Dade County Guards in Miami MIAMI (UPI) -Forty maximum security oonvJ<.'b beld two euardl ho.stace for. three hours toda y inside the con- troversial Dade County Jail to protest the alleged beaUng or an accused jailhouae slayer of a preacher's son. The: guards, John .Mravinb:, 29, and Roy Rheal Jr., 35, were relea.sed unharm· ed after jail supervisor Jaek Sandstrom agreed to listen to the demands of the convicts, including their protest,, of living condilion.s in tbe jail which a judge recenUy termed "a makepil" CharJJe Buchanan, a 21-year-()ld con- victed armed robber, slid the prisoners in cell 6C2 on the Sib noor decided to grab the guards "after we heard screams last night from the hole where they got Johnnie." "They beat Jonts .and a sick guy,•• Buchanan said. · Jones, a 20-year-old convicted armed robber, is one of two convicts accused of strangling 17-year-old Cloyce Bradley Cook, a preacher's son from Pledmond. s .c., in an overcrowded cell just nine days ago. Egypt "would have no other COW"tf: but liberation." Defense sources in London said Eaypt and Israel massed weapons in W>- precedented numbers along the Sues Canal as the cease-fire deadline •Po proached. Th• aou.rces said Egypt had 50,000 lo 80.00> troops with l,500 tanks, 1,000 artillery pieces and an unspecified: numbu of landing craft 'Ibey wre backed by Russian-made SAM? and SAM3 antiaircraft missiles. An lsraeli military source In Tel Aviv estimated the number of Egyptian troop1 in the canal zone at 100,000 and said they had amassed more m 11 it a r y hardware than confronted Israel before the 1967 Middle East war. Israeli troops waited in formidable defensive positions with air support from American-made Phantom jets. Israel accused Egypt of violating the cease-fire Wednesday with a t h I rd straight day or flights over Israeli canal positions. Israeli mitilary corTeSpondents suggested the Egyptians wanted to aathf!r as much reconnaissance data as they could before the formal cease-fire ended. Girls Reveal Fascination With Manson I _LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The ru111Way girls who Charles Manson picked up and took into his fold are doing their best to save him from the gas chamber. Two of the young women who Wt:rt part. of the "family" but not actually involved in the Tate·LaBianca murders testified in the penally phase of tht trial Wednesday and four more were waiting their turn. Lynette Fromme, 21, the very first female to join his nomadic harem fiv~ years ago, told the jury that Man.son once hit her so hard that he knocked her clear across the room but ''it was jll!t what J needed." Another follower, Nancy Pitman, l t . was ordered from the wilnul stand briefly after she taunted I.be judge, CbarJes H. Older, lhat he was trying to hide facts in the case and asked when Manson was going to be allowed to tell his story. Miss Fromme said Manson struck her because "I had kicked • blby, bec1U11 I wanted some attention.'' Raging Fire Kills 4 In Quebec Building QUEBEC (AP) -A fire raged fat more than seven hours in a downtown apartment building early today, killinr 4 persons and injuring 17, firezrien r~ported. Firemen said none of the vio- lims had been identified. Seveft of the injured were taken to hospitals. Witnesses said they saw occupants or the four-story building. unable to ret out the front doors, throwing themRives down from the fourth floor. Gls, 1J'orst Ene111.y U.S. vehicles slog through Vietnam mud just three miles from Laoa border during most recenl buildup against enemy posllions in th11 area. Sometimes even the weathtr ca.n OOcon1e-a formidable enemy. - I. J r 7 • • Fount ·Valley • , Ted•Y'• Pl•al N.Y. St.pk•· . . . YOC. 64, NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS, 36 'PAGES ' ' ' OU'NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 197.1 -. ' ~ County'·s· .Political :Pot Continues ·to Sitn,mer . ' ' By JACK BROBACK Of 11141 ~Hy PMM Jt.., The Orange County political pot, at boiling point since two new supervisors took · office Jan. S and elected Robert Battin board chairman, continued ·to ateam today. Latest developments include: -A computer· was blamed for a letter sent to Robert White, Orange County Metlical Center administrator "inviting" the medical center ad.ministraUon and staff to cough up $100 each for a party , honoring Battin neit Teusday. -Siipervlsor David L. Baker, absent in Wasbingtorr, D .. C. when Battin drop-.. ped hb Tuudlly morning bonibshell call- ing for .the ouster of C o u n t y Admiftistrative Off~r Robert Thomas, expre$Std djspltaSUre ,t such act.Ion dur- ing his absence. --Supervisor Ralph Clark, the sWing vote In deciding the .fate of Thomas, denied that he bad made. up his mind to vote along with Battin and Supervisor RonaldvCaspers of Newport Beach next .. Tuesday to lite Tl»mas. -Thomas, deiplte being resigned to his ouster. lssbed ,a lengthy statemenl to the press delendin:g hb c:oiiduct ·1n the position. The statefnent w13 very mild in tone. The computer error was explained by Dr. Louis J . Cella, Santa Ana pby""&lelan who IUpporls BatUn. He said ti, com- puterized form letter soliciting funds for Battin was sent to all faclllues listed in an 'Orange County . Medical Association bulletin ' of convalescent 1 • , , • NAU.,llttl, li\OON,WALK .PLANS --;-/ipo~14apAA"J.lll . disbes)J'fil begi~.~.~r~t ~ .. i~.fill ~9.\0 , Shepard and Edgar Mitchell pian two .outjl!gs , oo ', '.cope c:rater (upper :nght) about· a mu~ away. R ... lunar surface duriz\g their p)aoned ~'4,hour stay . lurn, U. time pernuts, will mcludt sWlllg tbrouah · . on the moon. First (dashes at left) 1'.ill;· involv.e triplet ,craters. setting up experiments. Seco9d (doti, ·and ·.ions · Pier Beer Sale Hearing Slawd For Huntington. The state Alcoholic Beverage Control Departmenl has scheduled a public hear· lng on a protest against the . sale of beer on the Huntington Beach municipal pier. The hearing will be conducted at 9:30 a.m. Feb. 17 In the city council cham· hers. The hearing was soughl by the Rev. Edward Erny of the First United Methodist Church, Huntington Beach. and several other ministers in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley who oppose the proposed sale of beer al a sandwich bar on the pier. The bar, called Neptune's L<icker. _will be operated by Ron Smi_th who re;ce1ved pennission from the city council last year to convert a fresh fish markel into a small restaurant and sell beer. The application lo the ABC "~ . for permission to sell beer on the premases only. The protesL by the Rev . Er_ny says that many juveniles use the pier area and beach, police problems will be _in- creased and thal ''inclling to mob actwn Is always an increased possibility wtfer"e thert ,has. been consumption of alcoholic beverages." . The mlnlster also argues that allowmg the sale of beer <ln the pier will put pressure on all concessionaires along the beach to seek a beer license in ord~r to compete. John Kelly, district administrator fOr the ABC department in Orange County, said his department would be recom- mending approvsl of the license at the hearing. Astronauts Whoop· It -.Up . . . . As . Apollo Circles Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (API Apollo 14'1 excited a9tronaub circled a mOon they,· called "wild" and "fan· tast!C"·. today, ready to attempt a bullseye-landing' . Friday in a narrow valley in the bleak and rocky lunar higblandl. "Wow, thi9 i! really a wild place up here," ex~Jaimed mi!sion commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. shortly after Apollo 14 fired intp JUnar orbit .early today. Aa-qtey passed , over the Fra Mau~o lariding site, Edgar D. Milchell said : "lt sure look! rough down there. As interesting as thiS is from orbit, It just whets your appetite to. get down there." "Fantastic. 'Y;ou're not going to believe this.~ It looks just like the map," said Stuart A .. Roosa. ~ sbot into orbit after ·an 82-hour journey from their home planet. Just boura earlier Mission C:OOlrol relayed iM good newa that a battery with a low power ruding would oot prevent the landing .attempt. The 1tage -wa •11t 1for man's third Iinding on the moon when Shepard, Mitchell and Roosa triggered the com· mand ahtp Kitty H1wt'1 big engine on tbt backside of the moon at Il :Ot p.m. PST to sw~p Into 1n initial orbit 67 to 195 mllea high. 'The firing occtlrrtd during 1 radio blaclmut and it was.not until 20 minutes later· when Apollo 14 r.eaP.peared around tht edge of the moon that orbit was confirmed. Shepard's voice broke the silence with .. . 1 subdued, "We .ba·d an extremely line burn." • But then""the commander, who has waited nearly 10 yetr1 for a crack at the moon since be beeame America 's firat spaceman, could not contain himself, and burst out with, "Thill is really a wild placz," a phrase repeated five minutes later, His crewmates. who had been relaUve- 1.Y silent 011 the mission, joinedc in Shepard's enthusiasm as Apollo 11 raCed across tDe face of the moon and they gazed down on a desolate, wondrous scene of craters, rugged mountains and flat plalns. Each man had his own Impress:~. Shepard: "It has all the gr11.ys and browna; and whites and dark craters that everybody's talked about before." Mildhell: "I think the best description that comes tc my mind is that it Jdoks like 1 plaster moJd that aomebod)' has dusted with grays and browns. But it looks like It's been molded out of plaster of Pari9. lt'9 really rugged.'' hosplllja whidh lisi.d the center ., one of the~. While' said ~ was aurprised . to get the letter "to 9ay the least''. The missive· noted that Battin "'114s attaclced the corpoilen~ torpid county bvreaucracy" and listed the medical center as part of Jltat bureaucracy. · '\'II< letter. aigned by Cella lurlher stiled ironically, "We hope that the Qranp County Medical c.nter, tts ad- mtnllfiiUon and staff appreciate Bob's luderatllp and his many efforts on our behall." Supervl.9or Baker was p1rtic:ullrly disturbed because Battin last Tueld~y ignored a written reque9t from Baier to continue the Thomas matter until he retumed. He added, "If there are any leglUmate charges they should be aired in clo.sed personnel session where Thomas would have a chance to answer them." Baker said he Wl9· concerned with "the demorafuJ.ng effect of Battin's • cbar&ea· oo the eotlrt counly atall. It bu be«i proven time and 'tlinl qaln that we . have tho beat counly lllall (II the entire c:ountr:y ... . . . Clari, after havlni boon quoled u telling 1bomaa be abould rellin lbi [ioat, deoled • Wednesclay that be bail', made a llnal dejmnlnllloo of the laluo._ "My mind 11 not cloaed and. ~ am lnteresl<d in'Mr. Thomu' -nGI Tuesday. I want to hear bll apluatlon of. Jmovitions inatalled durtaC hia Id· mihiltraUon." . ' .. 50,000 in Dfive U.S. Troops .Sweep to L~s L~ne· SAIGON (UPI) -A force of 20,000 South VletnameR backed by 9,000 American troops and U.S. air power massed on the border of Laos today, and front dispatches said a South Viet- namese foray into Laos may be lm- ;:i:(ltinent. :f~, While 29,000 U.S. and South Vietnamese troops awept across the n0rthwe9tern comer of South Vietnamese and an unknown number of Cambodian::: backed by American planes moved through the Cambodian-border region seeking two Communist divisions. The total of mort than 50,000 men involved in the coordinated drives was believed to be the largest such operation of1be Ind0ctiilia'w8r. lt brought a warn- ing lrom Commubl1Mlhloa that Peking wtl.l support tbe'Communiibforcea ''witil final victory.'"(see ,alory', page 41. The military situation inside' Laos itself DMZ THAILAND CAM BO DIA .. ·:. .. ,, .. ... J~ :rllllU ... . ... ... " ~· .. . . , .. ·~ ,, . ~ " .. SOUTH· j:HIH4 8(A. ' -~!Or the ' . ' .t .• ,.. • -1allpatCb,-iaid fl!l''le"y1ei. ~: r~-Whicfi , capi~Mm·~·.,,.,-..11\."' Suol' Wedni!!d.ly had pushed 15 mtles J-.;.. ;· ' • • , . ""twiird. BanP.hk dlspa!che. aald Tbajland· .had . ..,,i >i>'Cial;forces to the border of Laos opposite. the Co~munlst thl'l!'i. . The' U.S. Command in ahnouncing the 29,ooO-man drlye In north~~tem South Vietnam jUJt . below the . demillt4rized zone (DMZ) lifted the tlgJ'Ji;est news efnbargo of the Indochina ·War -a 11i:1 day blackout. The command an- nou~· no U.S. forces would etjter Laoa but it left open the quesUon ' of' whether SouUi Vietnamese forces wo'uld enter. Suspect Faces Collrt Hearing In· Knifing Death Paul A. Stenerson, 22, will be arraigned on murder charges at We11t Orange Coun· ty Court Friday in the stabbing death of a Huntington Beach man last weekend. Stenerson and his 17-year old com· panion, Candace Neal,· both of Down~y. are held without bail. Juvenile court proceedings Will bi instituted against Miss Neal, according to officers. Stenerson has been accused of crashing a Fridey night party at the home of Arthur E. Bashaw, · 22, 321 17lb St. and stabbing him to death with • a switchblade knife. The Nea1 girl, who accompanitd Stenerson during his alleged flight from Polict ofiCV'9, has been charged with being an accessory to the murder, ·Both were apprehended by police in Downey last Saturday. Nigeria March Routed te~~~~~~d1:;~~!;;:=:n~ ot students marchin& from the.maintaiid to the Jsland of Lagos to protest ~e !hooting Monday of a student at Nigeria 's University of Ibadan. 'MO!c9•t .Del" .. , . • . , UPI,_. A PUSH BEGINS AND fAMILIAR NAMES CROP UP AGAIN ' Kho S.nh, Ji Sha.,.V•lley, P•rrot'a INk and Fishhook -· . . . ' Huntington Drug Haul- Largest in W esi County By RUDI 'NlEDZIEtSKI Of tM 01lly Pllfl 'stiff A series of night 'raids ·by state and Huntington Beach narcotics officers Jarid· ed !Ix persons in jall Wednesday: a.Dd led to the seizure of what authorities allege is the largest cache· of bard narcotics ever confiscated ln Wtst Orci.nge County. Sgt'. Bert Chadwick of the Huntington Beach narcotics bureau nid·officira cdn- fiscated 110,000 dose.s of benzedrine, 8,000 sec<1barbital t.ableta, 2,000 doses ()f LSD and mescalirlt, eight pounds of marijuana as well as hashl9h, heroin and 'opium. No value has been placed on the alleged contraband. The raids were conducted after .everal weeks of undercover inve9Ugatien by the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforoe- ment ·and Huntington Beach detectives. They began at 6 p.m. at 14932 Perifield Circle, Huntington Beach, where David N. Channel, 30, and Joy Hoskins,· 28, were taken into custody on charges of sales and passesslon of dangerous drup. At 7:IS ,.m. the offtcers knocked on. • the door o Tet:TY Schutt, 18, IOZl2 Stan- ford St.., Garden GroVe,. and arrested him on charges of selling martjlltna. · Fifteen minutes later, other detectives from the comblDed narcotics detachment invaded Huntjngton Beach qlin and iar- rested three per90fil. Taken IntO CUltod1, on sales and paaeuion cbanea: were transients Arthur e.. Lee, 20, and• RobVt Perry, 20. Both were picked up ·at 'Filth ao4 Olive Stre,et. . . DeteCUves further arrested · Jo. n Cornet~ 24, 6461 'l)rone Circle, H- , tiogton Beach for allegedly ·)Klllelllni a loaded and ·concealed fireann. ·, . ' Meanwhile, In Garden Grove, the ·of- ficers raided the home. of Judy and James Gra~ 1t l281L Adele St., and -them otl drug .. ,.. chari• and possesiiob ·of · marijuana. Both are 23 Y.eart old. . · NarcoUca 'officers wound up their .e- tiviUts at midnight with the arrest of Beverly Sidener, '2f, Ind Robert S~. ·36, at their 502 Hartford Ave. boml In Huntington Be.cl!. "We fee l It should be Issued on the condition 1hat no al<:Mollc beverages sh8ll be sold , furnished or delivered off the prtmlses. We feel It would not 6e contrary to pub Uc. wel!are and morals ." · Kelly said that his department took this position alter Investigating the polntl Jn the protest Roll.s-Royce H·it by Money Crisi·s · • The hearing officer will be a reprCJen· tatlve ()f the state Office o f Adminl.strative Procedures, Los Angeles. Peace Prayer's In. TEIGNMOUTH, England (UPI) - Tl\ere have been so many heated arguments at meetings of Teianmoulh Town Council recently -In one case one councillor punched another l)n the nose -the t members have decided to listen to 1 peece poem befOre each ses9ioa from now on. ' . LONDON (UPI) -The Rolb·Royct Company, tradlllonal inatige aymbol ol Br1Ulh.tn1ineerir\I tl"ctllerice,, went into r~tribip today. The U.S. chartered at'toiJ,dtut firm of Peat Manrlck Mit- chtU Ir Co.. was ..named-.recelver an.Ii manager of the company. " The comptny uld It had run into a llCJ;ous cash crisis due to escalating costs of developing and building a new jet engine for the American Lockheed Co .. asked for appointment of a receiver and man111er and asked the government to look Into the company's finances. Tbe announcement of -a receiver and manager to run it in place of the present management wu made after Rolls-Royce halted an ~•td:.k exchange dealing• lri the company's-sbare8 in the p-lsis that U!rea~a>e<I,. to force it out of ba.•loess for want of sufficient funds . The opening price on the stock ex- change Wednesday was fl.12-~ and It fin ished at 93 cents. a fall of 19\i cents in Its last trading 'day. Th11 suspension was announced just after1 the market opened today when there wa1 1 1lngle Rolla quotation of 90 cents. • The financial crtsla roclced the London ' ' Stock Market and stocks of · electrical and components !Inns which supPly the troubled jet engine giant a1su fell. Api2Q_lntment of a receiver does riot constitute bankruptcy, but lega:l experts said It amounts lO admission by the e1J9tlng management of its inability lo carry on for lack of fun~. , The move came only boors before in e~ gove~ment statement to Part1ament on Rolls-Royce's , fin~nclal tltuat1on. Prime Minister Edward Heath ' held a three-boor CObJoet meelljll Wedoeaday olgbt to -the crlcil bltUng the SS.year-old firm. 1be , former · Labor Party iovf,Ment gave ROlla-Royce more than 1144 milliol1 to help 1towards development ind pro- duction of the revolutionary new R8211·2Z jet engine under a March, 1968, contr~t to supply the engines for Lockheed'• new 25-seat TrillJr airliner. Last November, the pre11ent con- servative government promised an ad· dltlonol fllU million for th• projeCt { • ! 1WL Y l'ILOI H Thwlcl.o, f"""'7 4, 1171 R~zoning Of Parcel Requested A move II being made In Huntington 'Bfacfi to f.ncoe a land parcel after .• developer filed a plot plan to build .,,artmentJ on it. ·eouncilman Jerry Matney, a member of the city'1 mu!U-de!lllty study com- rnlttee, inWated the moYe by requesting the oounci1 to 1ct "with some urgency'' on an application to build 24& uruts on an 1.7-ac::re 'PlfC'I· on the southwest corner of AUanta Avenue and Newland streel Be reported that Ibo committee bad been 1tudytng the area and would reeorn- meod that tbt area presently zoned R2, R3 -for apartments -be zoned Rl -for slngle family homes. OD a moUon by Cooncllman Al Coen, the council approved a. 30-day delay in contldtraU.O of Ibo plot pi.. "wtlhln which tbe Planning comml!.!ion and staff be dlrected to review the parcel for a zone change back to RI." The ·motion' carried 5 to 1 with Coun· cilman Jack Green stating he was "very much opposed" to the procedure. City Attorney Don Bonfa warned coun- cilmen that le1at risks were involved in putting a moratorium on building perm.Its duritlg a study. "'Ibe change would be from a less restricUve use to a more restrictive use that would be less profitable to Ibo developer," Bonfa said "If a court test finds the. ruone not supportable the city mlgbt be beld liable." Bonfa 1aid·tbere bad not~ enough case law established for him to give fuller advice. Ha uplalned the lat would be whether the case would come under the city's poUct power provtslOll! - the sections of the government code referring to the city's right to protect the health and safety of citizens. · "It's utremely doubtful in my mind tblt a commltlee study that would aug- JHt a new zoning because it would be more desirable would be support1ble/' be added. Matney pointed out that tbe grounds . for tbe committee's recommendation "ould be based on p"'servlng the "in- tegrity of the ntlibborbood ... Matney'• original request was for a two-month continuance but the time was cut to so days aUer Planqing Dlrtctor Ken Hayno!ds suueoltd th~lan could be reviewed in that time. The appllc.aUon. which was to have been consldered by the planning coin- mlaalon lhll week, II by the Fredric:U "Dev~ CorponUon of Fullertoo. The COl')IOl'Otlon II Meting a coodiUonal · e:rceptioo to allow an sverage dem.ity of 21.Sf unlb per acre on the parcel. The parcel -Uy ill a mixture of ll2 and RI IODtl which allow a demlty of 21 units IDd U units per acre rea:pec· tively. ~tney's move drew an angry blast at the density study committee from • Councllman Jack Green. Green said that be wu not lmpreased wilh the committee and 841d that ~ group ·had not carried out lnltructions of the council. Green..aplained that the comm!Uee bad been ul<ed to contlder changing the allowable denalUea in R2 and R3 tonN. He felt thls wu a better method of culling down on the number of ape.rtments than rezonlrig properties. Matney merited "the slur" q:ain1t the comm.Jttee and named some of the planning conunl!sloners and planning Ila.ff who serve on il Henry fudrlcks, presidtllt of the development corporaUon, could not be reached for comment thl! morning. U.S. ~inger in Cuba MIAMI (AP) -nit CUban radio says American fotblnger Pete Seeger beld a jam .session with North Vieloamese students in Havana Wednuday. Tbe report, monitored here, said Seeger was Jn Havana to meet with tbe Cuban ~ CommJttee of Solidarity with Vietnam , CambodJ1 and Ltos. DAILY PILOT IOAAMI GOAIT PUM.INtlJllCI COM'AMY A•ffrt K. WeM ,,..IMll .... ,,...,., J ee.IE I. Curley v. P\'ftlMlll .,.,.. ._. •• Mwe*' n.011111 Kee.U IElllllW T\oll'l&I A. M•r,hl11 MtNllnl lfl;tt Ale" Dirki111 Wiit °'91'1ft C-IY !lllllw Alt1rt W. let• Alltc"lt &llllr Hntl ..... ""''OMc• 17171 ......... .,,,,,,4 Main., M4'9M1 P.O .... 1•0. 92"41 --..... ltildlt th .,...., A"""*' C.tl M9Wl 1 2'I W•f ••r ll'Nlt ......,. lftdll •11 W.t ............... ,.. Ifft ~I • Nwtll II c.«llM AMI t . . ';.:; . ' Shy Guy "Twiggy/' the youngest and probably the shyest of the giraffes at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills, peeks from behnd a tree at the African wildlife preserve. How does one hide a giraffe, anyway? Or, how does one giraffe hide? Bid by Phoenix to Quiz Police Prober Rejected By TOM BARLEY Of 11'11 01Hr P'llof S11tt A move by Gary Harol d Phoenix to again become both defendant and defender in his Orange County Superio r Court rape-kidnap trial was rejected to- day by Judge William L. Murray. 'Ibe jt.ailt, who hu earJier alloftd Pboeillx to personally quest.ion witnesses -among them Deputy District Attorney Michael Capiizi -quickly rejected Ulis morning the Costa Mesa man's bid to question Htmtlngton Beach police Jn- veaUgator Ronald Anderson. Phoenix made the request after Deplity Services Held For Long-time Beach Resident Mrs. Lula Nichols came to Huntington Beach in 1900 from Arkansas. She died Wednesday at the age of 98 in Stanton Community Hospital. "She was active ln club l\'ork in her early years, but not recenUy," her daughter, Miss Zexie Nichols, said. "I think she'll be remembered more for helping others who had no one to help them." The city named Nlchols Street, near Wamer Avenue and Gothard Street, after ber. Mrs. Nichols and her husband, George, farm ed the area known as W1ntersburg. He died in 1947. Mrs. Nichols was a member of the original Community Methodist Church and was active enough in the Royal Neighbors of America to be named a charter member at the age of 90. For years the Nichols' home stood al 7614 Warner Ave. It was tom doYrn recently. · Funeral services wiU be conducted at 1:30 p.m. in Westminster Me morial Park. Mrs. Nichols will be buried beside her hwband. Survivors include a sister, ~trs. Johnny Gardner of Midway City: the daughter , ?i-tiss Zexie Nichols also of ~11dway City: two gra nd c hildr en; six greet grandchildren , and six g r e a t • g r e a t grandchildren. • _J Music Makes Eating Pay Off The sound of music ls 1weel today at Hunting+.on Beach High School. It's sw~ because the Oller band earn- ed $S38 for uniforms equipment v.·hile 5elling tilcDonaki's hamburgers. The band played from 3 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., \\1tdne.sd ay, in front of the McDonald's Restaurant at 20082 Beach Boulevard. The object was to draw more customers and split the take. "It was a real winner. We more than doubled our sales Wednesday," Chuck Stuart, Mc.Donald'• manager, reported this morning. The f534 will be glvtn to the lluntlngton Beach lJlgh School b3nd booster club which wUJ distribute It as needed. Stuart illid the 50-&l split was ao aucce!l5ful it may beeome 11n aMual event. Public Defender Roderick Riccardi ques- tioned Anderson on his search and ex. amination of the auto allegedly used by Phoenil: .to kidnap and r11pe a nwnber of women victims. Anderson's testimony foUowed that of Phoenil's former landlady. Sbe said Phoenix was with her 1n her bedroom late last July 25 -the d a t e of hls arrest by Huntington Beach police. Dianna Spurlock reluctantly resUfied that the J9.yea r--0ld bachelor spent the night with her in her bedroo n1 before he wen t to the Huntington Beach police stati on to establish that he was being sought for a series of sex crimes . Officers assured Phoenix that such Indeed \\'IS the case, booked him and lodged him iii the city jail.· Linda Lane, a shapely fellow boarder, at the Spurlock residenct, testified Wednesday that she and Mrs. Spurlock compiled notes on PhoeniJ:'s activities shortly after his arrest on charges of rape. assault with intent to commit rape, se x perversion, kidnap ing and robbery. Those notes, the defense alleges, pro. vide alibis for several of the occasions on which Phoenix is sai d to have raped and sexually hwnlliated women in four Orange Cowity communities. Phoenix is accused of 33 felony counts, all allegedly committed in a 28-day spell last summer. Seven Cleared In N arco Raid Seven persons have been · c1eared of all charges stemming from a narcotics raid by Huntington Beach narcotics of. ricers a week ago. Complaints were refused by the District Attorney aga inst the followin g persons : -Donna L. O"Leary, 25, 1(16 Alabama St., Huntington Beach. -Paul E. O'Leary, 22, same addreu. -Peter D. Lindgren, 22, Anaheim. -Allan F. Nichol, 20, Hermosa Beach. -David M. Moore, 'rl, Westmlmter. -Charles L. Hollis, 21, Garden Grove . -Rhonda R. Vov.·ell, 19, 6242 Warner Av~ .• Huntington Beach. Felony charges against three other persons arrested In the Thursday night raid on possession and sales charges of narcotics have been tiled by the district attorney. They include Gabriel Ress, 21, no ad - dress; Sharon Rose, 20, 142Sl1n Pacific Ave., Westminster; and Marjorie J . Green, 26, of Anaheim . Ross and ~11ss Rose have been bound over to West Orange County Court for preliminary hearing Feb. 25. The Green woman faces arraignment at the same court next Tuesday. Na rcotics officers claim they con- fiscfllt.-d one pound of marijuana , 53 tablets of LSD, 1,000 benzedrine tablets and a major quantity of heroin during the raid at Miss Rose's Westminster home. Huge .Bequests Bared NEW YORK (AP) -Martha Baird Rockefeller, stepmother ot Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, has left $37 million tn bequest! to charity. Mrt. Rockt.lt!ller, who wu 75, died Jan. 24. ' Teachers Blast Report . Beach School Figu1·es Called 'Incorrect' ~ lo lbe Bulltlngton Beach City (ailmatary) llcbool llls11i<t conlend the dlltrlct II DOI belded for the fi:Jancial roclu. · They uy financial !!gum .quotad by Deputy Dlltrict SuperWendent Charles Palmer are wrong and the diltrict wUI not end fiscal 19'1o.71 wtth only $12,000 in reserves. Palmer contended last month that the dlltricl'I ,.,.!VOi had dropped lo almost nothing and major program revislons might be neets1ary. He blamed the finan- cial woes on the lack of state funds (because less children than ex:pected errtertd dlstr!Ct ICbooh thll yur) ud the $300,000 In Nlaey lncreues glven to teacbers. Today, spokeimen for the 225-member district teachers UIOClaUon, a f t er several meetings with admlnlstrltors, islued a rtbuttal to Palmer's clalml. A fO\D"-man committee including Gary Reboin, , president of the teacher•' 1uociatlon; John Bethel, vice president of the associaUon; Dave Borktn.h&gen, cba1nnan Of the teachers' salary com· mittee ; and Mrs. DotUe Mclure, aalary negotiator, drafted the rebuttal to Palmer's 1tatement, · with the approval Biggest County Sweep Nets 30 Drug Suspects - By AllTllUR R. VINSEL Of IM DINF l'lltt Sllff Striking at dawn, teams of lawmen today initiated Operation Daybreak, tbe largest roundup of 1UJpected psychedelic drug and narcoUcs wbolesalm in Orange Coast bl!lory. '111e alleged dealers-UHleath were beinf rousted sletplly from their hem without Incident. RaJder teams fanning out from two staging areas -in Costa Mesa and Garden Grov!-by mid-morning had cap- tured about 30 among 11 IUlpecta named in a three-month probe. Lawmen from seven J>;9lice agencies and the State Bureau of Narcotica Enforcement were ena:aged in the sweep which will surpass last summer's Jimilar Operation Harvest. They carried indictments and felony complalnts -first issued by the tm Orange County Grand Jury -based on a series of large·sca1e dru& sales to undercover agents. Scope of the sweep ts so widespread lbat two deputy district attorneys were assigned, just to answer legal questions "We're baving very few problems.'' said Costa Mesa Police Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. "Most are being rousted from sleep," he, added, saying this element of surprise was part of the strate1Y. Busy booking officen had pr~sed 20 ampects into (Mt.a Mesa City Jail by 10:30 a.m., With paddy wagons bring· ing in more from locations up and down the coast. "We'rt coming along pretty well. We've got 12 in custody now," said Garden Grove Detectlve Sgt. Wa)'Jle Wilson. Raiders assembled at Costa Mesa and Garden Grove police headquarters for 5 a.m. brlefing se salons before moving into the field. - De tective Sgt. John Regar. was spearheading tbe Costa Mesa area sweep involving five teams of detectives and BNE agents, while two groups worked the Garden Grove area. State agent-ln<harge Jack Leavey said the range of contraband confiscated in pre-raid . deals runs from LSD, hashish, opium, peyote and other hallucinogens. to amphetamine compoundl1 heroin and barbiturates. He sald most booklnga are for 1ale of narcoucs and dangeroua drugs. Small amounts of contraband drugs -plua two I01ded weapom in the Garden Grove raids -were being: found, while a few additional suspects not named in warrants or iDdiclments were caught. ·"We're pretty certain this wW be even more auceeaful than 0 p e r a t i o n Harvest," ·aa1d Colta Mesa's Lt. Flkher. The overnight raid triggered laat May 28 reached inland u far u Fullerton and netted 50-plus suspeda, many of whom are now serving state p r i so n Jerrm, Court Plea Set By Book Store A book store owner's demand that Westminster police be ordered to ceue their alleged harassment of b1a premises at 6532 Westminster Ave. will be debated Feb. 10 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert A. Banyard will be asked to ru1e on allegations by attorneys for No-No BookJ 'N Thinga that police cl<>Hd the premises on the direct ordus of PoUce Chief Conner Collacotl shortly alter the store opened last Dec. 31. It is noted In the complaint that Westminster city council ruled at its meelinf immediately following closure that the store and all such outlet.. specializing in adult literature required conditional use pennits and an additional police permit. Attorneys for the No-No group argue that the city ordinances calling for those permits are illegal and unconstitutional. of lb. 22$-me-r aaaocla!on. i'Aboul one-third of our money come1 from the st.ate. 11ie other two-thirds ii raised in local taxes," teachers said. "'lf we bave 400-600 less children than we budgeted for, there 9hould ·be 1bout $200,000 in the budget from local revenuer that isn't needed for the missin& c:.hildren." "If that local ~oney is already beinl spent, what will the di.strict do if thoat 40IMOO cblldren do come in1" Teachers continued : "At lea!t seven· and-a-half teachers figured in the budget have not been hired. 'lbat means a savings of "50,000." "Every year we au saved from finan-o ci.al disaster in the brink of Ume, •• the teachen' statement read. "And we expect to be saved again tbls year.'' Last year the district put more than 100 teache rs on notice that some mJgbt loae their jobs if finances came up short. Nooe wu fired for lack of money. "We were not informed by the ad- ministration. We had been directed t1 work on program and curriculum next: year with no warning it might bav .. to be cut." ,.· "None of these facts (relating to fina,... cial troubles) were brought out in aur recent salary negotiations. If information is there now, it was thert then." ,, "It i! inconceivable that either party to negotiations wou1d have ·ignored sucA fad, bad they been made available at any time during the 10.montb negotia.• tions," teachers said. "We teachers are not convlnoed that program cuts are inevitable." "'Ibe teachers salaries shouJd not have come <1Ul of reserves. Tbe dl!'lriot kne" about a !Ix percmt cost of living m. cruse, it should have betn planned." _ ''1be 1970.71 budget increased by about $1 million. Only $300,000 went to teachers' salaries." 'The teachers then went on to aay~ "We feel the board (of trustees) a nd staU are working for the community.· We believe the staff and the public iJ entitled to know the true financial condition of this school district." Teachers then suggested that the district answer four questions to clarify the situatlon: "wbat is the total budget for 1970.71? How much is based on overe!timated enrollment and will not be spent? How much is based an ate• money and will not be received? Wbtt balance can be reasonably expected at end of year based on these figw"ts?" In their closing remarks, the teacher11 !&id: "We are aware the budgeting of this district is tight. Pare:nts should be aware that they constitute the elec- torate. They play a role in determining the tu. rate in this district. The com· munlty should also be aware that if more state money is to be forthcoming, the voter mu.st apply pressure on hi! state legislator.'' Teachers offered no estimate en how much money tbey thought the district would finish the year with, but 11aicl they believed it would be much higher than $12,000. Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups 'Stoqpllmp T1bl1 •••• 1299 NOW SJJt •-' •-•(... R•t· SIJt Conrmoat ~nu ·~ t NOW 11., HERITAGE---. MADRIGAL • lodroom e Din ing Room e Occa1lon1I 20! HERITAGE----. BARACINI 20~ • lodroom • Occ11ion1I by HERITAGt ... • . . -'l . ... ,.,,, NOW S11t Ycu 1t1 ln¥it1d t• ¥isit cur 1howroomr displaying-: e HERITAGE e DREXEL e KARASTAN • ' HERITAGE--~ BRENTANO anti Nonnan Court 20•;. on H.J.GAl\l\ETf fU-RNl~RE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opeo M .. ., TloWL l Prl ,,.._ TlY OUl llYOLVING CllAlGI 2215 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CAUF. 6-46-0275 646-027' 1 Ne voi:. 64, NO. ro, 3 SECJ10NS, 3~. P:A'~ES . OUN~ <;OUNTY, CALIFORN~ • Tl-JVRSDAY,FEIRIJARY '4, 1971 • . TEN CENTS · '. " County's POiitical Pot Continues to Simmer Sy JACK BROBACK OI lttt DaYr Pll1t St.n The Orange County political pot, at ::~ln~~hc!ntJ!~c~ t:d n::c::ek't~~ Blttin ttoard chairman, continued to •team today. Latest developments Include: -A cornpu'ter was. blamed for a .letter Wit lo Robel-t White, Orange County Medical Center administrator "inviting" the me.dica) center administration and ataff to cough up $100 taCh for 1 party bonorin( Battin next Teuoday. Tuelday to fire Tllomu. ~~laor Dav:id L. Baker, a~nt -Thomas, de.spite being resigned to in ·wub'ington, D. c. wheri Battin drop-his ouster, illued a lengthy statement ped hb Tuelday 11\0rntng bombshell call· · to the pr,,. defending hb conduct In ing for ~ the ouster of C o u n t y the position. The statement was very Admlpistratlve Off~r ~rt .Tbomts, mild in tone. e!Pressed di.Jpleasure at such action dur-• 1be computer error was u:platned by inf hb absence. . Dr. Loub J. Cella, s.nta Ana phystcllln ..:..:SUpervlsor ·Ralph CJ8rk, the swlnt whOt supports Battin. He said the com- vote 'in deCKIJna the: 'fate of. Thomas, ' puterized f«in' Jetter ··IOliciting funds denied that ht bad made up hia mind for Battin wu ·sent .to: all ·facilities lo vote along wl~ Bettin and Supervisor listed tn an prange COOnty Medil'al Ronald qupen of Ne~ ·Beach nut Association bulletin of convalescent . "' -. ~ . ·~ ' ' .. ~ ' . • ' DAILY PK!oT,...,. ~ ..... '*""' OPERATION DAYIRIAic CATCH' u~'LOAD0ED 'FROM COSTA MESA PADDY WAGoN Narcotics Raider• From 7 A.-ncfn Swept Up RIC'Ord Haul Of ·SIHpy SvtP,eCt• Temporary High Rise Ban ~ To Be Offered in Newport By L. PETER KRIEG ot tilt Oalty P,11ot Sl.tf Emergency legislation that wou1d tern· pc>rarily ban all high-rise construction along the Newport Beach shoreline will be introduced ·at a meeting of the City Council Monday night. The ordinance, if adopted, would establish a 9Ck1ay Building Department moratorium on the issuance of permits for construction of any building more than 35 feet high within the boundaries of the proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District. Councilman Carl Kymla , chairman of 1 council-planning commission committee studying formation of the district, n id he will, however, depart from normal procedure and ask that a public hearing be scheduled on the ordinance Feb. 22. Pointing out that state Jaw allows adoption of emergency measures wltbout hearing; Kym.la said his panel feell the public. should be given an opportunity to comment on the proposal. As proposed, the civic district would Include that· area south of the Pacific Coast Highway through West Newport, the proposed realigned Bayside Drive, Ocean Boulevard and Brighton Road. Creation of the district is intended to provide strict building controls al'1lUIJd the Lower Bay and ocean front that would include restrictions on height. design and density and several other 1tipu1ations. Kymla last month had indicated some hip.rise would most likely be allowed eventually, but it would bt carefully ' ' . regulated alld tied clo>ely to open spact reqlllrements. Kym!• slid the ban will be sought beca111e' of the number or high-rise pro- jecb the city expects to be submitted in the immediate future. Among those known to be pending are the Balboa . Bay Club apartment prQjed and niultl-family development on the sites of the Fun Zone and the former Rendezvous Ballroom. Kyml' said the emerget>cy ordinance is nee~ <lsimply beCause we have no set-'Of tools to control development in the district now." He pointed out the council has given evei-y indication 'it supports the Civic DU!trict concept and the corrunittee feels its effect should not be pre-empted by any construction before the district can be created. ''Thia action." he aaid, "ii necessary to allow cornpleUon ot planl tot the clvJc diJtrict." -• Blast Rips Building In Winchester, Va. WINCllESTER, Va. (AP) -An ex· ploalon ripped out the cotner oectlon of a two.storY brick building housfng docton' offices and private apirtinents here today, injuring two women and touching off a fire that threatened the remaining Portions Of the &l~ucture. Firemen said 1 natural gas funace tn the basement exploded. The main gas line wu broken, Crf:4.ting an ad· dlUonal baiard. Police cleared tbe area. Narcotic Agents Conduct Record Raid in County By ARTllVll R. VINSEL 01 .. ..tty Pllet M41H St.r.iklng at dawn, teams of lawmen today inltiated Operation Daybreak, the largest roundup of auspecled psychedelic drug and narcoUcs wbolesaJers in Orange eo .. 1 history. The allegtd dealer&-in-death were beini rousted sleepiJy from their be<b without incident. Raider teatnS fanning out from two staging areas -in Cost.a Mesa and Garden Grove-by mid-morning had cap- tured about 30 among 81 auapect.s named in a UJree..month probe. Lawmen from aeven police agencies and the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement were engaged in lhe sweep which will surpaSs. last summer'• sintllar Operatk>n Harvest. They carried tnd!clmeuta and felC!ly complaints -first iNueid by the 1971 Orange County Grand Jury -based on a series of large«ale drug sales lo unden:over 11ents. Scope ol the aweep la ao widespread that two deputy cUaU:1Ct attorneys were ass!MDed, juat to answer le1al questions ''We're bavlnt ftrY' few problenl!," oaid Costa Mesa Poltce Deledtve Lt. Harold Flscber. "Most are being rousted from sleep, tt he added, saying thil element of surprise was part of the strategy. Busy booking oflicero had proowed 20 suspect! into Colt.a Meaa City JaJI by 10:30 a.m., with P.addy wagons bring. ing ln more from locations up and down the COB!t. "We're coming along pretty well. (See llAID, Piie ti Rolls-Royce ' H~t by Money LONDON (UPI) -The Rollo-Royce Company, traditional prestige symbol of BrJUsh engineering excellence, went into receivership today. The U.S. chartered aC((IWltant finn of Peat Marwkt Mit· cbtll & Co-~ • was named recetm and .manager of the company. The company said It bad run into 1 serious cash crUi... due \o eacalatlng cotLs of developing and building a new jel engine for the American Lockheed Co., asked for app0lntment of a receiver end man aa:er and ask~ the government to look: into the company's finances. ' Tbe aimouncement of a receiver and manager to run it in place of the present management wu macla after Roll•Royce halted all stock excbanae dealin&s in the C:O!l1PlllY'I share& in the crisis that threatened to forte it out of ..... busioeas ror want of aulficfint ·ftmda. 'lbe ·opening pnce on the stock e:z· change Wedneiday was lt.12-\\ and It finished at 93 cents. a fall or. 1111\ cents In Its l•st jt1dln1 day. The suspension waa announced just after the marke't optned toda;y when there was a sinllt Rolls quotation ol llO cenu. ·~ The financial crbls rocked the !<>n«in Stock Market and stocks of elecbical and comJIOllODts ftnils which oupp!y th• troubled jet engine slant aJs.. lei!. ..APl!O~ o a receiV<r does not consUtute bankruptcy, bl.It lqal experta said Jt lf110Unts to adtnl.sslon by the ex..bting management of ita: inability to carry on for lack of funds . The move came only hours before an expected government 1latement to Parli&ment on Rolls-Royce 's financial 11tuat!011. Primo Mlnlattr Edwar4 Heath hospitals which ll!ted the center as one of the aame. White aaid he was 1urprised to get the letter 11to siy the least"' The missive noted· that Battin "hai attac!ced the corpulent, torpid county burtaucracy" and listed the medical center as part of that bureaucracy. Tlte · letter, •taned hy Cella lurtl>er st.led· ironically, "We hope that the Orange Counl)I Medical Center. Its ad- rn4U~ation . .:net staff appreciate Bob's leadenhlp and hb many eflorts ·on our behall." Supel"o'.iler B~ker wu particularly dfstu~ because BaUin Jut Tueadly Igoored a written request from Balter to conttnue~ the Thomu matter until he returned. He idded, "If there are any leg!Umate charges they should be aired in closed pemrmel session where Thomip would have a chance to answer them." Baker · uld he wu concerned with "the demora1Jiln1 effecl of . B>Ulll'• 50,000 in Drive V.S. Troops Sweep to Laos Line · SAIGON (UPI) -A force of 20,llOO South Vletnamese backed by t ,000 American troops and U.S. air ~wu.. mused on the border of Laot ·tciday, and front dlspatcbes said a South Viet~ · namese foray into Laos may be . im- minent. While 20,llOO U.S. and South Vietnamese troops swept aCross the ncirthwestem comer Of South Vietnameae and an THAILAND unknown nwnber of cambodtarr-backe:f•-+------ by American planes moved tbroogh Ille Cambodian-border region seekina two Communl!t division,11. The tOtal of• more than 50,000 men DMZ involved in the coordinJ,ted.1 drives wu believed to be the largest. mch operation of,'the IndOchi!ia .war. It brought a warn- ing from Comm""1at' China that Peking CAM BO DIA will support tbe'Communilt forces "unW fll1al victory." c ... itory,'pqe.4). :i::ii.· i0Wtari:o1111au.n ~ i-ltaeli 'i~~1wr '~\he .,,,.._.t.1"• ViOOtlane (ilpitoli said ' ·Naiiib· Vlot- -for!:< which captured Muodi ~·~·hod pullled,-U;-w~t\"ll!d· . 1111\!ikok dispafchei said Thallilnd had1 sent special fOrces to the borq~r of Laoa opposite the Communilt tllru!t. ·• .. :• .. .... ;:. ruuru ·~·. . .. .. ' .. '• ,. .:: ·, ' M1keo1 Delle :· . .. .· .. " ·: ' " .:;. SOUTH. CHINA SEA .. ,___ .. ' .~ MMAtWtl •• • UPI ..... The· U.S. Command In announcing the 29,000-man drlve in northwestern South Vietnam jusl below the demllitariud zone (DMZ) !Uted the Ulhi..t news embargo of the Indochina war -a &ix day blackout. '111e command · an- nounced no U.S. forces \would ebter Laos but it left open .the quesUon of whether South Vietnamese forces would enter. A PUSH BEGINS AND FAMILIAR NAMES CROP UP AGAIN Kho S.nh. A Shau V1ll1y, · P1rro1•1 Beak 1nd 'flllilhctok Astronauts Whoop It Up · As Apollo Circles Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Apollo 14's e:zcjted astronaut,, clrcled P moon they called "wild" and "fan- tastic" today, ready to attempt a bullseye landing Friday in a narrow valley In Ute bleak and rocky lunar highlands. "Wow, this is really a wild place up here," exclaimed mission commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. shortly after Apollo 14 fired into lunar orbit early today. As they passed over the Fra Maufo landing site, Ed.gar D. Mitchell said : "It sure looks rough down there.-As interesting as this is from orbit, It juat whets your appetite to set down there.'' "Fantastic. You're not going to believe this. It looks JU!t like the map," sa.id Stuart A. Roosa. They ahot into' orbit after an 82-hour journey from their home planet. Jusl hours earlier Mission Control relayed the good neW! that a battery with a lnw power reading would not prevent the landing attempt. The 1tage was set ror man's third landing on the moon when Shepard, Mitchell and Roosa triggered the com· mand ship Kitty Hawk's big engtne on the backside of the moon 1t 11 :0\ P·m· PST to sweep In!<! an Initial orbit rr Crisis held a three-hour cabinet metUn1 Wednelday night to di!CU!I the crlats hitting tha 16-year-old firm. The fwmer Lah<M' Party 1011m11ne11t pve Ro!l•Iioyce more than 1114 liltllloo lo liolji toW1nfs developmeor and pro- dUcUon of the re:voluUonary new RB211·22 jet engine under a March1 lNI, contr1ct to auwty the enginei ror Lockheed'• new 25-leat Trlst.ar airllner, Last November, the present con- servative aovernment promiled u 1-S. (liee IIOLUROYCE, Pip 11 to 1~ miles hlgh. The firing occurred during a radio blackout and It was not until ~ minutes later when Apollo 14 reappeared around (See APOLLO, Page 11 , Former Officials Ask State Court For Vote Block The three former city officiall who maintain the March 9 Newport. Beich freeway elecUon is t!JegaJ today asked the California Supreme Court to Ay so, loo. Their attorney, Angdo Pabnierl, who failed in 'an attempt. lo get • superior Court. ju4ge to block the electioa Monday, today fired a similar plea with the state's higheat court. He ls aeeking a writ o( mandamus that would prevent the dty from conducUng the elecUot\. As of now, votinf ls JCheduled on two iasuea. Tht first Is an lnitlative measure that seeks to direct the City Council to rescind an existing .agreement 'With the state on the clo&ill_g of meets along the route of the Pacif>e Coast Freeway throuJI> Cor· ona del Mar. Th&. second Is a charter amendment that would require the countjl to conduct refereridoms before any arid all future freeway agreeme"nts could be slped. 11\e former coancilmen·-tormer may- or.a Charles Hart and James B. Stoddard and fonrier vice mayor Hana J. Loreni - mailltdn both mattm: are adrnlntstralive and not &Uhjecl to •ot> . They alao CQlltond both tnvol•• 1ts1 .. wide issues and therefore not tubfect to municipal vote. The~ plea "" rejected by Judgt Rob- ert L. Corfman Monday who 11Jd the le· aality of the 1 .... , coo Id be looted alter the vote and that he aaw notlllng wrona with havlnc at Jtasi a plebucite on the 1 1uue11 anyway. L l • Police Shooting Suspect Pleads Insane at Time A rttired engineer accuaed of the shooting and wounding or two Newport Beach poliCemen pleaded Wednea!ll1 that he · was insane at the time of his arrest. Arthur Lambert, 81, added not guilty. by ...... ·of Insanity to the nol guilty, plea already offered \o Orange County; Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillaL The jurist accepted the new plea, con. finned the · trial date of March J and &eheduled a pretrial l!earlng !or Feb. 2&. It Is ezpected that the reports o! two ~hiatrilts will be available for the judge at the pretrial JJe1Slon. Lambert ls accused of attempted murder, aasault with Intent In coinmlt · m\D'der and 191Jult with a deadly wepon. He la held tn Orange County Jail withoul bail. Orulfe KnoUHit With Suit Over F8rin Berry firm ploneet Walt.r Knott and ei,111 llrincfpals in hil Buena Park orpnluUon -among them the Pialat tiffs' brother. wwe sued for $9.75 million/ today~ in an Orauge O:lunty Superior Court la-t chargtni tbe group wtth fnllll and unfalr oompellUon. 'llloJ are accuaed in the ac\lon filed by C. Fllltoo Shaw and KO)' Shaw of Old MacDonald's Farm Inc. of breacblng an agreement reached between the partia wben the Shali's left Buena Park In late t• for · their present Miaslon VleJolocltJon. '11le Shan· claim the Knott& agreed not to represent that Old MacDonald'• Farm ltill exilted in Buena Park and they alae allefe that the berry farm owoen. promiled not to use' any en- tt~.radverttslng and literature llllked to tba Ma~d'1 ent.rprlse. Bot N~port l1111e1 •• , . Big · Cro:wd Seen ; • ·For 2 ·Hearings1 I .- 1 • About 300 reside.at~ are &oiQI to find out tor themselves Monday aJgbt why Newport Beach not.a to buUd a new City Hall. They WW be at the old ()1)1 {or Ont ol two public hearlnja on matters dear to tbelr bearta -and If ~y doo'I know aJ. reac!y, tbey'll llnd out the cjty council chambers can accommodate maybe one third of them. The rest will settle in the foyer listen- ing to a crackling loud.speaker u tbe council takes testimony about Promon- tory Point and height limits at the plan- ned Civic Center. ' Same, as i• the put. may drift behind the etterlor shrubbery to sneak a sound- t.S. peel: •I tbe proceedings throu1h tbe Window. p.m. meetln& toergue 'the varying mu.. Jt1 of two obviously very h« Jssue1. .~ The first, a city proposal to ettablilb a ~ "afght plane" above which no civlc buUd·-... bal• at Newport Center could protrude, has Harbor View-Broadmoor residents µ. fear of losing their precious v1ews « the ~ bay 1Dd beyond. l "i Balboa fsland residents will be there in·;f< force lor the secon<(, the Irvine Com· pany's appeal of a Planning Commission rejection if its proposed 626-unit apart •. ment comple1. on Promontory Po.int. For apparently different reasons, four ol the seven planninr commissioners vot-,· ed to deny the requested use permit for .. the multi-lam.Uy develwment of the 30-... acre tract that, borders Pacllic Coast Highway but overlooks the harbor from directly above Balboa Island. '!be' Shin allege the qreement hu been ripeatedly brtadJed and the Knott group ii ltl:ted to have hired former MacDonald's aide Jack Shaw to train animals and exploit "c~tain secret, uni-. que and novel acts'' hitherto privileged to the MacDonald organization. MOON WALK PLANS -Apollo 14 astronauts Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell plan two outings on lunar surface during their planned 33%-hour stay on the moon. First (dashes at left) will involve setting up experiments. Second (dots and long NASA PM!o das)les) will begin alter rest period. It will go to cone crater (upper nght) about a mile away. Re- turn, if time permits, will include swing through triplet ~raters. What may turn out to be a record-high citizen turnout ii ei:pected at the 7 :~ Reagan Tells Assurances: Island residenls criticized the proposed ~ density of tbe project, the traffic it wouJd ' create and the oversaturatlon of nearby racll!Ues, especially the isla1d beaches • it would cause. ' · Irvine Company officials argued that · the project was far leas congested than a number of other apartments comtruet- ed recently. The Sbaws now operate the Old MacDonald'1 Farm Garden Party on Puerta Roal in Ml!atoo Viejo. They claim tbe1t bustneas bu been hurt by Knott'• use of their name and traditions and they assert that the berry farm operators have Jgnored frequent warnings and continue to use MacDonald animal actr. · Among U.. ects. ll a chicken which riflP a 4inDtr bell, trained rabbits and pip WhJch ihoot down slides to a dinner awailini them at lbe bottom and various- ly trained gOlb and mules. Judge Robert A. Banyard set Feb. II u Ute date on which he will discu.a Ille poalbt. granting of a temporary order nquested by the Shaw group. I'...,.. Page 1 ROLLS-ROYCE •• dllional 1110.8 million for the projecl A company statement uid the money pr.omfsed in November had not .been rectlved. · "a satiafactory report by independent 90COQDtants" but the money was not pAid altboujb um work was completed. The company statement said it no lqer b possible to go ahead wltb the Lockheed Jet engine project under . lhe -colllnict and blamt<J. ,rial., COits, wholly beyond tbe flDanclal tetour'Cel ayaJlable to Bolll-Royce. '' It .~ lqsoea o( OIOll<Y: conimltf..t . lo the project, coupled wlth loss~ ei:: peeled when It IJ t.rminll<d, are .,lltely • lo ei:ceed the net tangible assets of the company." 'nle statement said he1vy unemployment Is likely among the com· PIDY's 80,000 man work rorce. * * * Local Dealers Aren't Worried Orange County Rolls-Royce dealers have ncetved no word about how the r~ivenhip of ·the British luxury car and airtraft engine manufacturing firm will affect them. A spokesman for Roy Carver Rolls- Royce in Co.sta Mesa said "!he automotive dlvlskm of the company bas always been profitable." "\Ve've heard no word of problems affecting the car dfvlalon sales and no Indication that should ei:pect any dif- ficulijes. We're rellly not too worried about that aspect of the flnn'a financial difficultJes," Joe Davtdson of the Carver dealership sald. Stocki of ~w Rolls-Royce automobile.! flave not been affected to date, he added. AutomobiJe.s sales aocount for less than three percent or the firm's total sales. -------. DAILY PILOT ~01 CO.UI 1"'U8ll~ING CCIMl"AN'I' Ro'-ort H. WoOfl ,,,...,.,.., .... "1.lblllfler J1c• l. C11rl1y Vici l'NllOlflt -0.-11 Mll'lftll" I d!,., ThoM1t K1ovfl Thom11 A. M1i1rphino Mlfloltlnt EOltor L Poter krlo9 N......., kOCl'I City Edltor M..,.rt .... Office 221 I Witt lollto• l11i1lo¥ord M.1111119 Ad11h1111 ,:o .... 1171, fJ66J --c:." MIM1 SlO Wat la'I' I""' LltUN lilocfl.t m ,,_, ,._ H-.t--.a.tdll 11111 l..cft ...,lrnl'll lu ~I .. Nw1lt II C.11'111111 lt•I From Page I APOLLO •.. the edge or the moon that orb it confirmed. was Shepard's voice broke the silence with a subdued, "We bad an ei:tremely fine burn." But then the commander, v.·bo has waJted DeiU'lY 10 years for a crack at the: moon aince he became America's first spaceman, could not contain blmself, and burst out with, "This is re8lly a wild pl!lce," a phrase repeated five minutes later. His crewmatts,. who had been relative- ly silent on the mission, joined in Shepard's enthusiasm as Apollo 14 raced across the face of the moon and they gazed down on a desolate, wondrous scene of craters, rugged mountains and flat plains. Each man had bis own impression. Shepard: "Jt has all the grays and browns and whites and dark craters that everybody's talked about before.'' Mitchell: "I think the best description that cornea to my mind is that it looks like a plaster mold that somebody has dusted with grays and browns. But it looks .like it's been·molded out of plaster. of Paris. It's really rugged." BooN: '.'J can 1ee oU to my rl.j'ht tl\f: ,crater 1 HumlJol~~ and it's just 8' lmpnssive as the pictures. The thing that strikes me about it is the dark areas aren't quite as dark as I thought . . . It's really easy to follow tbe landmarb." Jamboree Road ' Extension Open To Auto Traffic Jamboree Road extension, the 120Q. foot stretch of roadway that aomeday will bridge the Corona del Mar Free- way, was opened to traffic Wednem!ay afternoon. The five-lane artery, connecting Jam. boree Road from Pali.!ades Road north to Jamboree Boulevard and MacAr;thur Boulevard, was completed in mid-Novem· ber, but has remained unopened as the city awaited delivery of a sophisticated signal control device. The controller, described as a minia· ture computer capable of operstlng the signal strictly on the basis of traffic flow . is as anvanced as any in the area, accord- in.1? •.o Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe. Tt.e entire MacArlhur..JamboN!:e signal system cost $54,000 including about $15,000 for the control device, Jaffe sald. Actual road construction, in addition, cost $270.000, of which the city paid a~ proximately $82,000, from city gas tax runds. Monies from the state, the county and the Arterial Highway Financing Program paid the remainder, Jaffe said. Benjamin Nolan, assistant director or public works, pointed out the state con- tribution, totalling about $38,IXKI was Te- ceived to cover the additiona l cost of raising the profile of the road in antici- pation of the construction of the Corona del MaT Freeway that would cross under it. Two Facing LSD Rap in Newport Two men are in custody in Newport Beach after they were arrested by police on charges with possession of $5,000 worth of LSD. Cary Carl Mlt<:beU, 20, of Connecticut, and George Gallo, 21, of 9B5 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, were arrested Wedne9day afternoon on suspicion of possession of dangerous drug• for sale. Detectives said lhe pair were stopped In lhtlr car at Cllf( and Dover Drives after they were asaertedly spotted dlg- glng a container out of the a r o u n d In tht Westcli fl area. Detective Al Epstein alltjiled the con· talner had about 2,700 L.SD tablets ln It, wb1cb are v alued at about S2 each in lht illicit drug market. Ball bu betn atl at I0,250 for Mltobell and $3,125 for Gallo. ' ----------------------- Police Name Suspects In Operation Daybreak No New Tax . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan offered Californians "every a.!lsuranci! in the world" today that their property tu.es will not be increued U tbe legislature passes his atai. bud;et and reforms weUare and Medi-Cal. They claimed the additional traffic" would have little impact on surrounding roadways -a fact later supparted by • both the city's and the lslanden' own ~ traffic experts; -anQ offered to create additional beaChfro1t in con.)uncUon with 1 a n~by aingJe..famlly development. •· The planners voted it down, however,~ one of them contending the plan conaU- tuted spot zoning and the other aaying be voted •ao• jwt because so many people · Despite tfle monumental paperwork problems involved, lawmen engaged in Operation Daybreak began releasing identities of suspects as they were booked today. Here is a partial list of adults named In Orange County Grand Jury ac- cusations. 24 of them indictments aod the 37 others felony complaints. sever~ juveniles had also been taken into custOdy. Indictments naming tnany more of the arrestees are ei:pected from the Grand Jury, thus transrerring cases directly from local jurisdiction to Orange County Superior Court. · Booked by 10:30 a.m., predominantly on charges Of sale of narcotics and dangerous drugs, were: William L Peten, 23, truck driver, of 1992 Westminster Ave., C.osta Mesa. Peter S. Bodenltoffer, 20, student cf 256 Esther St., Costa Mesa. l.afT1 L CocO, 19, glass shop laborer, or 2338 Richman Way, Costa Meta .. Sttve11 R. stow, 24, mus.lcian, of 2094 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa. Gayle J . Skow, 21, ·his-'Wife, af the same address. Todd W. Wdlma1, 18, of 714 36th St., Newport Beach. David E. Grllflth, 22, construction worke of 216 E. 20th St., Costa Mess .· From Page 1 RAID ... We 've got 12 in custody now," :said Garden Grove Detective s,t. Wayne Wilson. Raiders assembled at Costa Mesa and Garden Grove police headquarters fot 5 a.m. brlefinr sessions before moving Into the field. Detective Sgt. John Regan was spearheading the Costa Mesa area sweep involving live teams of detectives and BNE agents, whlle two groups worked the Garden Grove area. State agent·ln-<:harge Jack Leavey said the range o{ contraband confiscated in pre·rald deals runs from LSD, hashish, opium, peyo te and other hallucinogens, lo amphetamine compounds, her oin and barbiturates. He said most bookings are for sale of narcotics and dangerous drugs. Small amounts of contraband drugs -plus two loaaed weapons in the Garden Grove raids -were being found, while a few add.itlonal suspects not named in warrants or indictments were caught. "We're pretty certain this will be even more successful than 0 p e r a t i o n Harvest,'' said Costa Mesa 's U. Fischer. The overnight raid triggered last May 28 reached Inland aa far as Fullerton and netted 50-plus suspects, many of whom are now serving state p r i s o n terms, "We've got a lot of 'reds' Involved, a lot," added Lt. Fischer in reference to evidence taken during the past three months. Several thousand dollars in state-allot- ted funds was expended in gathering evidence which led to issuance Wed- nesday of the Grand Jury indictments and complaints. Investigators said the male and female suspects ranre in age from 15 to 35, while a 4~year-<>ld mot.her allegedly In partnership with her sons was charged in last year's similar series of raids. Innocent Man Jailed In Courtroo1n Mixup LONDON flPI) -Peter Bedford, call- ed as a witness to ..the London Court of Sessions. dutifully t1Jmed up Wed· nesday and stood patiently outslde a court.room door. When he beard the name J.\.f, Bedford!! c1Ued, he stepped rorw1rd. A burley P,Ollceman led him into 1 cell. It wasn t until Bedford had banged angrily on the cell door for JO minutes that red-faeed 0Incl1l1 fJ.,..s him and •PolORi:zed, ei:plaining they'd mhed bJ.m up with 1 prisoner of the aame name. Crall B. Sedey, 21, of 114 36th Sl, Ne wport Beach. , RaJpll S. Pattoa, 21, laborer, ol 1760 Pomona Ave., Costa Mesa. Aotbony D. Beasley, 19, laborer, of 8702 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. John L Bron, 19, student, or 18'f1 Fairhaven Ave., Santa Ana. Joan.a Yoan1, 20, maid of the same address. Salvador Colloio, 23, student, or 5331 Kingman Ave ., Buena Park. Keith E. Joba&on, 22, machinist, ef 2185 Santa Ana Ave., Cmta Mesa. Patrick F. Flaherty, 20, laborer, of 1330 Palisades Road, Santa Ana. Michael M. Snoody, 19, electronics assembler, of ill Westminster Ave., Newport Beach. Sylvia L. Silvas, tf 114 36th St., Newport Beach. Pvt. Kel~ H. Whitney, 20, of El Toro Marine Corps Alr Station. Frlllk B. Boyd, 21, of 216 E. 20th St., Costa Mesa. 'f Patrick E. An1oa, 19, or 7545 Mei:iCo Way, Buena Park. Pvt. James D. McGhutls, 19, Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station. Keith G. Hart, 18, San Francisco. Pvt. Fred L Erby, 20, Santa Ana Ma- rine Corps Air Station. Steven Phillips. 19, of 3134 Bray Lane, Costa Mesa . Lennert JobnlOn, 22, Los Angeles. "It bas alwa.ys been our ~ tion," the governor said at bis ~y news conference, "that we will never pass a ta:x on to 'local govemmenl This doesn't answer the problem ·to change the pocket out of which you take the money from the same in- dividual." - Reagan criticized veteran LegiJlaUve Analyst A. Alai) Posl, who cauUoned the Assembly Ways and Means Com- mittee Wednesday that tbe I0.7 billion budget "may become known . as the Prqperty Ta1. Increase Act of 1'11." Reagan charged that "rnariy" of Post's "dire warnings not only,.,have been con- flicting but inaccurate" in the past two years. The Republican governor aaJd the non- political legislative fi3cal watchdog ap- pears to be "getting into a philosophical area which I didn't find him particularly getting Into In yean past." Post >ald the budget is "full « wtsbful tflinking" qi.at counties will 'follow tbe state's lea4in cutting back welfare and health care service. He predicted local government will be forced to pick up some of the state's burden. Reagan agreed that county supervisors ''have to conform" to state welfare and Medi-Cal cutbacks and acknowledged that "if the counties disagree with us . .. they are on their own." didn 't lite it. ·/ The light plane dilemma~ revolves • around an alleged promise there woaJd be no high-rise on the Civic C.enter site. The ·city plan would establish a cert.a.in plane that, underneath it, any sir.e build·. ing could be erected. Since tbe graund IJ , uneve., this would allow structures of varying height!. What has the Harbor View Hills real·' dents di!:turbed even more, however, is the fact the proposed sight plane 1overns only the southerly hall of the property. There is an 8$-foot limit on the remainder that they insist will surely block their · views. , Planning department personnel aay,t however, the height limits were estab- Ushed after several public heariags five years ago at which time they demon-• strated no . residential views would be blocked. • 'lbe.J say they are prepared to show 1 the newcomers all over &Jain, however. Huge Bequests Bared · NEV( YORK (AP) -Martha Baird Rockefeller, stepmother or Gov. Nelson I A. Rockefeller, has left $31 million in • bequests to charity. • Mrs. Rockefeller, who was 75, died • Jan. 24. Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups Enclaada 'Storaae Limp Table ..... 12ft NOW Sllt C»mmoae End Tabfi ~ ••. 11 If HOW Slit -HERITAGE---. HERITAGE----, BARACINI MADRIGAL • Bedroom e Dining Reem I Occ11lonal 20i •Bedroom • Occ1slonal 20! byHERITAGt You •r• invited to visit our 1howroorn1 di1pl•yin9: e HERITAGE e DREXEl e KARASTAN HERITAGE-·---. BRENTANO and Nonnan Court 20% OFF Yo11r favorit• dtslgnir wW bt ham to omit »'OU H.J. GARRETT .fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opoo M•, -. l fri. ....._ llT OUl llVOLYINI CHAIM I 2215 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. M/>.0275 646.0276 ~ .. ' . -• -.. -··-. . • . ' f;osta Hesa N.Y. Stam• .. ' i VOC. ~. NO. 30, 3 SECTIONS, 34· PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . THURSD>.Y, FEBRUARY 4, 1971 TEN C s \ ( County's Political Pot Continues to . Simmer By JACK BROBACK Of flle Dilty rllM Si.ff '!be Orange County J>Olilical po~ at boiliDC point since two new aupervisora tDot officf: Jan. 5 and elected Roberl Battin board chairman, continued to !!Wn'today. · Latest development! include: -A computer was blamed for a letter ae.nt to Robert White, Orange County MectAcal ~ter administrator "inviting" tbl! ·medical center administration and Iliff Ill cough up $100 each for a paity bonorlna Bottin nul'Tuesday. -'&Jper>ilor David L. Baker, aboent in Waablqton, D. C. when Battin drop- ped. hla Tueaday morning bombshell call- ing for the ous!er of C o u n t y AdministraUve Officer Robert !I'homas, expr~ displeasure at such action dur· ing hla, al\Rnc:<. -Supervisor Ralph Clark, the IWing vote . in deciding the fate of Thomas, denied that he had made up his mind lo vote aloni •with Battin and saPervbor Ronald Caspen of Newport Beach nerl Tueaday to fire Thomas. l -Thomas, despite being •esigned lo his OWiler, Issued a lerigti>y statement lo the presa delencllng hla COlllNcl .In the position. The statement was vrry mild in tone. The computer error waa explained by Dr. Louis J. Cella, S&!\la Ana physician who. supports Battin. He aaid the com- puterized form letter 'solklling funda for Battin was sent to. all fadliUes · listed in an .Orange County :Medi~· Asaoclalion bulletin of convalescent bolpltala ·wblcb 1il1ed the -u -ollhtlllDO. . While oaJd be WU ~ lo get the letter -"to aay the leut". TW mieraive aoted that 'Battin "has attacked the ~(, ~ county buruucraeyi" · llid listed the medical center 11. part ol t&t · bartaucracy. • Tiie ieJtor' aiped by Cella· further stated· ~. , "We · ho~ d\lt. the Orange CcQity Medical . Ceqtar, lit ad- mlillatra\l!lll, aod .1Wf appr~to lob'• • ltadenblp and bli ....,, e!lortl oa our behalf." ~ ' Supervi>or Baker WU partlcularly clislurl>od *-Bottin 1a¥ Tueaday Ignored a wrllten-request from Biker to continue ·tile · Thomaa • mi,tter unW be teturoe<l • He idcled, "If there are any l<lllin\.•le charges they lhould be aired in cloaed personnel session · where .'l'homas would have a clwlct to answer. them." · · Baker ·"said be Wl\S .' c:oiicmied with "the .d<moraJWna effect of. Batlll)'1 ,. . ... es ~oas a1· s F.O..a11 Imminent? American Units · On Laos Border SA!GON (UPI) - A force of 20,000 South ·. Vietnamese backed by 9,000 American troops and U.S. air power mmed ori the border of Laos today, and ·front dispatches said a South· Viet· · namae tor•y into Laos· may· be im· I ;.-. , , ,.,,, ' ,> . ~ . 4,~llonqut,s Orbit A round 'Wild' Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston IAPI - ,\polio 14's excited astronauts circled & moon they called "wild" and "fan. tutic" today, ready to attempt a t-Jll!eye landing Friday in a narrow vailey in ~ bleak and rocky lunar IUghlands. • "Wow, this is really a wild place up here," exclaimed mission commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. shortly after Apollo li fired into lunar orbi t early today . As they passed over the Fra Mauro i,nding site, Edgar D. Mitchell said : "rt. sure looks rough down there. AJ interesting u this Is from orbit, it just *Mb your appetite to get down there." ' "Fan.taslic. You're not going to believe this. It looks just like the map," said Stuart A. Roosa . fhey 1hot into orbit after an 82-bour jOQrney from lhelr home planet. Just hours earlier Mission Control relayed the good news that a battery with a low power reading would not pre.vent Ute' landing attempt. Tbe stage we set for man's third : ng on the moon when Shepard, · II and Roosa triggered the com· -,, ship Kitty Hawk's big engine on ~backside of the moon at 11 :01 p.m. PST to sweep into an initial orbit 67 to· 195 mllea high. The firing occurred during a radio b)Jckout and it was not until 20 minutes Iaftir wh'en Apollo 14 reappeared around the edge o( the moon that orbit was oonfirmed. Shepard'• voice broke the silence with a sbbdued, "We had an extremely fine burn." :BUt then the commander, who has •aited 'nearly 10 years for a crack 1t the moon alnce be became America's firJt apaoeman, could not contain himself and burst out with, "This ii ·rtally ~ wild place," a phrase repeated (See APOU.O, Page II While,21,WI U.S. and South Vietnamese troops swept .across the northwestern comer of ~South Vietnamese and an unknown number of·Qunbod~ backed by ·American planet moved. through ljle CamhodlaJH>order region , aeeking two Communist. divi>ions. The ·lolal o( more. )ban iO;GOO men !JwtilWd' " :the ........... driV.1 WU believed lo be the·large'lt 1UCh'9Puallo• of~ IDdoctdna 'wir. -n-'1r0ogbt 1 warn. Int 1-Comrmirilat.Cillna that P-g will qport 'the C<ilmnllllat filrces "until fiDaJ victbry." (see atory, page Cl. Tlie-nillit&r,; aifulUon ln!ide Laos it.aelf wu wonenlng for the go•emment. A Vientiane dl!patch ·aaid a North Viet· namt.!le force which captured Muong Suoi Wednesday had pushed 15 miles westward. Bangkok dispatches said 'lbaiJand had sent special forces lo the border of Laos op~te the Communist thrust . The U.S. Command ' iii ~unclng I.he 29,000..man drive in northwestern South Vieiaim just below the demilitarized zone . (DMZ) lilted the Ughteit news embarlo of lhe Indochina war -a six diy blackout The command an. nounced no U.S. forces woold enter Laos but it left open the question of whether South Vietname5e forces would enter. • ln Washington, Defenae Secretary Melvin R. Laird defended the blackout and said not 1 single American was (See INDOCHINA, P11e tl Gas Attendant, Bandits Go Separate Ways A Costa Mesa aervice station attendant and two young bandit.a: went their separate waya Wednetday night, follow· ing • ~ armed rdJbery. Terry C. We.nstron ran north -as ordered -from Bob'a Gulf Service, while the robbers ran IOUlh through a vacant field . Police said Wenstron waa lpproached In the station at 2348 Newport Blvd., about 1:45 p.m. wbill!I he was dwting the ga pumpe. He wl! confronted with a plrtol. "You must be kidding," be declared. "No," replied the gunwlelder em- phatically, as be cocked the weapon. Wenstron ·said he wa! ordered to run after the money changed hands and glanced back to see the pair heading 1n the opposite dlrecUon alllO at a dash. . " r : ; ! • • ·I . I • DAILY r tLOT ,_.. ... U. • .,,.. OPERATION DAYBREAK C,llTCH 'UNLO,AD~D' ,~OM cOSTA MISA 01'ADDY WAGON Nucatlca Rofdor.1 From 7 AfOnClu Swilpt up .R-rdJHaul·Of,S1MP.J,s.i.,.C11 '. • ' ' . • • , I • ' J I 1 ' . Leroy F. ·Mead Collapses, Dies While Jogging Police Name 25 ·suspeets \ In Coast Area Narco Raid A jogger with a blrtory of high bleod pressure and heart surgery collapsed Despite the monumental paperwork and died during a run on the aidewalk problems iovolved. lawmen engaged in near his Costa Mesa home Wednesday, Operation Daybreak began releasing the vlctlin of a coronary attack. ldentlliea of auspetts as they were booked Funeral servieea for Leroy F. Mead, today. 47. or 3206 New Yoi-k Ave., will be~ Here l8 a partial list of adult.a named held Saturday at 2 p.m. in Pacific View in Orange County Grand Jury ac· Chapel, Corona de! Mar. cusatlooa, 24 of them indictment.a and Mr. Mead was found tprawled on the the 37 Gthera fe!Gny chmplainl!. Bidewalk 1t New Y«k and Giller avenues Several juveniles bad also been taken about 7 a.m., two houra after he left into custody. for a run, pol~ said. Indictment! naming many more of A neigbbor,.,Carol DePlam, found the arretit.ees are expected from the Me~d'a boc!Y' clad In· IW~~o~, and Grand Jury, tbua ttantferring caw notified poliee and. the victim a wife. directly from local jwiadlctlon to .Orqe l~vestlga!Ora. said the victim had been County Superior Court. · taking medication far high blood pressure Booked by 10:30 a.m., predominantly and that he underwent cardiac IUl'gery en charges of ule of narcotlca and alx yeara ago.. . . dangerOUJ drugs, were : He leaves his wife, Ruth, and a 111ter, WUlla.ill L. Pete a,, truck dri Mra. Betty Grave!, of Illinois. of lt92 Westminster~ve.,'eosta Mesa~er, Nigeria March Routed LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) ~ Pnllce fired teargas Wednesday to disperse thousands of strident.a marching from the m•lnland. to the Island of Lagos to protest tlw! shooting Monday of a student at Nigeria11 Uniwrsity of Ibadan. ' Pd« S. BodeUoffer, 20, student of 256 Either St., Coata Mesa. · fAIT)' L. Coco, It, gl.,.'sbop laborer, qf 2331 Ridlman Way, Costa Mesa. S&tte• R. Skow, 24, muaiclan, of 2Q9t . Orange Ave ., Coat.a Mesa . . G•yle J. Skow, 21, his wife , of the &ame address. Todd w. Weflmaa, II, af n1 : 31111> St., Newport Beach. David E. GrWtth, 21, construction worke of 218 E. 20th St., C.OSta' Meia. Cnig .B. Seeley, 21, of 114 Jeth St., Newport Beach.· Ralph S. P1lton, 21, laborer, of 1760 Ponima .Ave., Coata Mesa. An~ny D. Beasley, 19, laborer, of 8702 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. John L. Brown, 11, atudent, of 1811111 Fairhaven Ave., Santa Ana. Joann Youn11 20, maid of the aame addreu. Salvidor Collozo, 23, student. of 5331 Kingman Ave., Buen1 Park. Kiwi E. Jobs•, 22, machinist, .t 2115 &anta.Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. 1Patrfct F. Fl1btrty1 7.0, laborer, of 1330 Palisades Roaif, Santa Ana. • Mldoael M. Saoody, 19, ef""'1>nlca assembler, of 412 Westminster Ave., Newport Beach. SJlvll-L SUv•1, of 11f 36tb St., Newport Beach, Pvt. Keltb H. WllltDey, 20, of El Toro Martne Corpa Air StlUon. l'nllllt H. Bo)'d, II, of Ill E. 11111> St:, ·Coita Mesa. Rolls-Royce Hit by Money C ... r1s1s P1trlck J:. Ara1on, 19, of 7545 Melico Way, Buena Park . Pvt. Japan D. McGlnnll, 19, Santa Ana Marine Corpe Air Station. Keith G. Hart, 18. San FrancllOO. Pvt. Fred L. ~y, 20, Santi Ana Ma· r16e CorPo Air Statloa. I . LONDON (UP!) -The Rcills·Royce Company, traditional prestige symbol of !rJtiah engineering e:rcellence, went into feceivership today. The U.S. chartered 1ccountant' firm of Peal Marwick Mlt. c:he1f & Co., was named receiver and manager of the company. ne company said it bad run into 1 serious ca.sh crisis due to escalating costi of developing and building 1 new -]~t engine for lite American Lockheed Co., asked for appolntm~t of a receiver and manager and askec. the government to toot into tbe company's financea. I The anncxmcement 4)f a receiver and m.C.,er to run. It in place of the present managomenl WU mada after ljoli•Royoe '1111*1 all 11.ock exchange dealinp in the' C!)mp&ny'1· Iha.res in the crisis that threatened to force It out of business for want of sulficient funda. Tbe opening price on the stock et· chance Wedne>day waa 11.12-\\ and it finished at 13 cents, a fall of 19-'ii cents Jn Jts l•st trading day. The suspension •11• announced just after the market opened today when there was a slnele RoU. quotiition ol 90 cents. ,I . '!be financial cm~ ~"Lllftddn , lleld ' • li>rtHlour .cihlnit." ~ Stock Market and stocks o1 elactricii J Wednesdaf, ~'to dilCuu th;· crllla, apd --la ·ftrma whlcil 'IUPPIY ~ ' hitt1"'1llt.-.,4r'-old. J)rm, troubled jet engine giant ·1ia<. fell. 1 The fon11er Labor Party ,.....,..nt Appointment of a recdver does not aave Rolla-Royce more than $144. mUlion consUtute banitfupt<:y, bot lega) eaperts ' lo help 'towards deftlopmeat ond. P'°' said it amounts to admisaion by tH ducUon of the molllllonlry new RBtll.·22 esl1tin1 maqagement of Ila lnabillty )0 jel eJ111M uador o -· 1Jll, -carry on for lack of funds. I to aupp.ly the enP-for Lockheed'• The move came only ,Jlbura before I 11u!w ........ Ttlltm' eru.. ' an expected government ltatement le lt t.ul 1 NOV;t~r., ihe ~ttl '-ClOn" Parliament on Roita-Royce'f . """°lill . lerv,tltt =ien!1 pninillod an td- situaUon. Prime Minister l!:tltori' llealb '' ~... ROYCE, P ... 11 ...,_ l"f!U,., It, •f JIM .Bray 1-, Ccllta 1MeN. • Leuert'•......-. 22, la ,Ancelet.. . ' ' l ·,. •· Peace Prayer's In 'l'tIGNMOUTH, Eni1anc1 CUP!) - There have bet!ll so many heated or~menls el meelincsof Telpmouli> Town Coutlcll recently -in one case ·one ~Ulor -~ •another on.Jhe • .;.: -th1t member• 6ave · ilecft!ed ·to listen \to a ,Uc< poem btfore each ata1lon from now on. • •, chargo!•· on the entilo , county 1iall. It bu been proven time and time apln that we have the beat county staff in tbe entire country." • . : Clark, aner having !>Oen quoted, u telling Tlii>maa he sbool~ realgn tfie, 1'!>11. 4enied Wedn"flay that be liad ~ a final determlriation of lhe llsue. "My .mind ta , not clqoed and I ·U!l Interested in Mr: 1bcmu' ruct1on neU Tueailay. I want lo .Ilea? his eapianalloa of 'tJinovationa ins\alled cl4rlni hla ad· mlnl!tre.Uon." Drqg Tra.de . ' ' Suspects Rounded Up , By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. IMtty ~lilt ,..., Striking at dawn, teams of lawmen today'inlilated~Operalion Daybrut, tbl t8.rieSt roundup of suspected J)aycbedelle drug· and narcotics Wholesaltrs in Orinp Coast~.,\ . . ' .., Tbt a!Mged dealtn-iJHle&th were beinl ' _..,,. 1ieepll)I from . their beda witllout ~ •~T t. ... ! •• .Re, ~am~ 1.;,,;;,,1 out !J'O!'l two alqlnr reaa .,. lo eo,.1.1 Mesa and Glrdeo rov~'Jrlid-rr>onlln( hJd cap. tilift abOl!t 111 ln\oag II suapeda named In a U.-mocli> probe. Lawmtn from seven police agencies anc1· 'the State Bureau of Narcotics · EnlOrcement were engaged in the sweep wblcb"wlll·surpaM last summer'11imil&r Operation Harv.est. ' I Tbey carried indictments and felony complaints -first ts.sued by the 1971 .. Orange County Grand Jury -baaed on a series of largHCl)e drug ulu to undercover agentt. , ,Scooe of the ._ ta 10 widelpread tbai lwo deputy d&tr1'ct attorneya Were uslgned, just lo ·anawer. Jqal queailons "We're having very few problems, .. said Cost.I ·Mesa · Police Detecliva i.t. Harold Fischer: '1Most .are being rousted from aleep," be,added, saying this element of ourpTiaa was part of the strategy .. Busy booking officera bad proceued 20 suspects Into Costa Mesa City Ji.ii, by 10:30 a.m., with paddy wagona brfn& ... ing in more from locaUons up and down the coast. · "We're coming along pretty wt1ll. Werve a:ot 12 in custody new," aaid Garden Grove Detective Sgt. Wayne Wilson. Raiders assembled at Costa Meaa and Garden Grove police headquarters for S a.m. brle!ing sessions before movlnC into the field. Detective Sgt. John Reean wu spearhead1ng the Costa Mesa area sweep involving five teamJ of detective! and BNE agenta, while two groups worked the Garden Grove area. State agent-UH:harge Jack Leavey said the • range of contraband confiscated ia pre-raid deals runs from IS>, h11bish, opium, peyote and · other hallucinogens, to amphetamine compounds, heroin and barbiluratea. He said most bookings are for ult (Su OPERATION, Pase I ) 0r .... C:.aa 11'eadter It'll be a \Allllly n 1n Or- County Friday, but you better bundle up if you're out In early morning hours -the temp b tab- bed at 38 degrees. • . • _ INSIDE TODA 'Y After a abst,ne• Ot .more 'thml sewn '1fOr1, Jacki• Ktnncdr Onauil and htr thUdrcn n:· tuTMd 1uaa.1ow~ed !Or a prioou ·vkurlng of protnrib o/ heraelf and th~ lOtf Prt.sidcnt. 1 Pape 4. (Ill.,. • 1 =="' ..u ,_ " ,_ " --u o.-11 ......... , ... ' -·. ......... •11 .......... 11 A.,.~ IP Mllnt ... L~IJ -.111 ....... ,. -. _....,. --... --.. =-..: .......... ..,. -. :.=: '= ="'..::"'":J • 1 • :1 DAILY PILOT t Judge Nixes Phoen ix's Dete~s~ Bid ly TOM BARLEY of "" Dotltr l'llllt 111.ff A move by G•ry Harold Photnil to egaio .become both defendant and defender in his Orange County Superior COurt rape.kldna,p triaf was rejected to. ~ bf Judge WUlllm L. Murray. . ''l'hl: jurllt, who hu earlier allowed • Pbotnil to pemnally question Wltoessts -among them Deputy District Attorney Michael Clplu.l -quickly rejected this mornilt: the Costa Mua man's bid to que1Uon Huntlngton Beach police ln- Yellllator Ronald And•"'"· 'Plioanlx made the reque.t after Deputy PubHc Defender Roderick Riccardi ques- liolWd. Anderson on his aearth and e•· amlnlUo·n of the auto allegedly uted by 'Hloenix to kidnap and rape a number o~ worpen victlms. Andenon's tesUmoey followed that of Phoenix's former landlady. She said Pboeni.J: was with her in her bedroom late last July ~ -the d • t e or his arrest by Huntington Beach police. Dianna Spllrlock re,luctantly reslified that the 29-year~ld bachelor spent-the night with her in her bedroom before he went to the Huntington Beach police statlon to t!:tabllah that he was be.lng sougbt for a aeiielll of sn: crimes. Officers assuted PhOenh: that such indeed wu the cue, booked him and lod(ed blm In the city jail. Linda ·Lane, a shapely fellow boarder, at the Spurlock mldence, i..tlfled Wednesday that she and Mn. Spurlock compUed notes on Phoenix's activities shortly , after bis arrest on dw1tl of rape, assault with intent to commit r1pe, RI perversion, kidnaplng and robbery. Those notes, the defense alleges, pro- vide alibis for several of the occasions on whlcti Phoerui lt aald to have rapea and sezually humiliated women 1n four Orange Coi.inty commU11ltles. Local Deal,ers Aren't Worried . Orange County Rolll-Royce dealers bave received oo word about how the receiVenhip of the British luxury car aod ,lircrlft engine manufacturing firm will aflect them. A JJ>Okeaman for Roy Carver Roll• Royce In Coot.I Mua Aid "lhe automotive dlvisioa of the company bu alwa)'l .beeu ll'Ofilable." "We've beard no word of problems dectin« the car divilkln sales and no indicatlon that ahoald expect lily · dlf• fl<ulUn; W'e'l'e l<ally not too -al>out that upect of the ttnn'1 llnaDclal difficulties," Joe Davidson of the Carver dealenblp said. Stocks of new Rolls-Royce automobiles. hlve not been affected to· date, he added. Automobllea Wea account for Jess than three percent of the firm's total ulu. Fro•Pase l ROLLS-ROYCE .. dlllonal •no.a million for the project. A company statement said the money promised 1n November bad not been re<l!lved. "a satisfactory report by independent accountants" but the money was not paid although tbls work was completed. 1be COmPJ!ly statement said lt no longer Is possible to go ahead with the Lockheed jet engine project under the ,resent contract and blamed rising costs, wholly beyond the financial resources available to Rolls ·Royce ." It said losses of money commltted to the project, coupled with losses ex- pected when It is terminated. are "likely to iexceed the net tangible assets of the ct>tnpany." The statement said heavy unemployment is likely among the com· pany's 80,000 man work force. DAILY PILOT HAM0& COAfT l"Ua&.lttllMO COM"A.IC't R•Mtt H. W.M '"911MN .. l"lllllllJW Je&k R. c.r1.., VIOi ..... *"i .... a.-91 ~ TI.011111 ICttvll .. "" TH''"' A. M1,,tiln• MtMll ... efltw C.... M ... OfflM JlO Wed l1y Strt•f Melll119 Ad4rt111 P.O. In 1160, 9262' -.-.. ..,.,, ._,.1 llH WM ..... hlli!_,. utuM 9tldl1 m ,..,., ..,._ "'"""'"" ~I 1111J l •dl •llllltYa~ '" ClllNllM: as """' a1 c.mn ••I MAIA l"Mt. On Reagan B•dget . ' Democrats-Slate ' I l County Meeting SACRAMENTO Allembly Democrats, armeJ with a sharply critical report from Legish1itlve Analyst A. Alan Post, say they will bold hearings on G<tv. Ronald Reaan's IU.'lttrity budget in Orange County. No date hu been set for the hearings by the Assembly Ways and Means Com- mittee. A committee spokesman said Chairman Willie Brown (D-San Fran- cisco) is waiting for lM committee'1 Sacramento bearinl 1Chedule to be set before aMouncing the dales of the 1tatewlde hearings. · The spokesman said the hearln1 dates will probably be announced early nert week. Republican hdmlnistration's propoula bJ _ predominantly Repubtlcan county of· ficials. . \ "We are really going to try to avoid attacking this budget as DemOcrall againlt the govemdr ,'' Brown Aid. "W• .. wlll use Post's anal_y1is as a framework for inquiries and let the chips fall where they may." Brown, an outspoken young black liberal from San Francisco, has no doubt where the chips are going to fall, evu '. , in Orange County. MOON WALK PLANS -Apollo 14 astronauts Al~n dashes) will begin after rest period. It will go to Shepard and Edgar Mitchell plan two outings on cone crater (upper right) about a mile away. Re- 1be unprecedented move -budget hearings have always been held at the State Capitol -was brought about by Poet's report on Reagan 's $6.74 billion spelldlng program for 1971·72 whlch wu delivered to Brown's committee Wed· nesday. Walter Knott Has a Suit, E-l-E-1-0 Junar surface during their planned 831h·hour stay turn, if time permits, will include swing through on the moon. First (dashes at left) will involve triplet craters. setting up experiments. Second (d_o_t_s_a_n_d_l_on...:g=---------------------In it, the Legislative Analyst predicted proposed economies ill welfare, Medi.Cal From Page 1 APOLLO ... five minutes later. llis crewmates, who had been relative- ly silent on the mission, joined in Shepard's enthusiasm as Apollo 14 raced across the face of the moon and they gazed down on a desolate, wondrous scene of craters, ru,gged mountains and flat plains. Each man had his own impression. Shepard: "It has all the grays and browns and whites and dark craters lhat everybody's talked about befo~." Mitchell: "I lblnl: the best description that comes to my mind ls that it loob Jike a plaster mold that IOmebody bu dusted with gniy1 IJld browna. But It loob like ·It's been molded Out of pluter of Pirla. Ir1 really rugged." ltoola: "I .can aee off to my right the' crater Humboldt Ind lt'1 just aa imJ)reulve aa_ the pictures. The thing that atrltes me about it ii the dark areal aren't quite aa dark aa 1 thought . . . It's really easy to follow · the landmarb. '' Mission Control communicator Fred w. IWae lnturupted their •ill>lletlng with, ''I hate to pull you away from ~ window, but J've 1ot a fllgbt plan update." ' Mitchell had to &!leak br one more d<ocrlpllon. •"lbat's the most 1tark and del.Olile Jdoting piece of country I've ever 118D,11 he uld. And Mitchell bu oeen a lot of bleak ccruntryaide 11 a former cowboy from a dry, desert-like part of New Mexico. "It looks !Ike you could walk along that darkness and fall into nothing," 1le added as Apollo 14 passed over a dark area. About half an hour after they achieved orbit, the ground relayed word the third stage of their Saturn 5 booster rocket had smacked into the moon as planned and had sent shuddere reverberating through a seismometer left ln 1969 by the Apollo 12 astronauts. Scientists hope the impact will tell them much about the composition of the moon's crust to a dtptb of 20 er more miles. Shepard and Mitchell are to separate the landing craft Antares from Kitty Hawk at 8:50 tonight. For more than four hours they will check out the spindly.legged craft before making the dangerous and difficult final descent. Landing is slated for 1:16 a.m. Friday. The goal is a pinpoint setdown in a valley of the ragged Fra Mauro highlands on the eastern side of the Ocean of Storms. The site is between. two crater clusters named Triplet and Doublet. To reach it. Shepard and Mitchell will have to skim hazardously close to the tops of ridges and hills up to 8,000 reet. DMZ TH AI LAND CAMllO DIA and education would force local govern' Berry farm pioneer WaJter Knott and · From Pagel ment to assume responsibility for a eight principal! in his Buena Park bigger portion of shartd programs. organization -among them the plain· • 'fhlt means a property tax increue tiffs' brother were sued for $9.75 mllUon of more than $275 million a year, Post today in an Orange County Superior said, and he noted Jt cou1d go even CoUrt lawsuit charging the group with OPERATION DAYBREAK ••• of narttitics and dangerous drugs. Small amounts of contraband drugs -plus two loaded weapons in the Garden Grove raids -were being found, while a few addiUonal suspects not named · in warrants or indictments were caught. "We're pretty ce.rta1n thiS will be even more successlul than 0 per at lo n Harvest," said Cos~ Meu..'s Lt. Fisch~. The overnlibt raid triUeftd last May 28 reached inland aa far as Fullerton and netted 50-plus 1wpecll, many of whom are nOW aerving state p r i so n terms. "°We've got a lot of 'reds' involved, a lot,'' added u. Fischer ln reference to evidence laken during lhe past three monthl. Front Page 1 INDOCHINA. • • Several thousand dollars in state-allot-higher. fraud and unfair competition. ted funds was expended in gathering Anticipating that finding, Brown and They are accused in the action filed evidence which led to issuance Wed· Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (0.Van by C. Fulton Shaw and Kay Shaw of nesday of the Grand Jury indictments Nuys) announced the Ways and Means Old MacDonald's Farm Inc. of breaching and complaints. Committee would tour the state for "fact an agreement reached between the lnvesUgators said the male and female finding" hearings beginning with Orange parties when the Shaws left Buena Park suspects range in age from 15 to. 35, County. in late 1968 for their present Mission while a ff.year-old mother allegedly in Brown said they are looking forward Viejo location. • partnership with her sons was charged te hearing a ringing indictment of the The~ Shaws claim the Knotts agreed in lut year's similar series of raid!. not to represent that Old MacDonald's Susoected drug peddlers named in the Farm still existed in Buena Park and Grand Jury documenla were all to be p z· Sh ..: they also allege tha~ the berry farm booked at lhe Costa Meaa City Jail, 0 ice OOwng owners promiJed not to ""' any en- pending immediate .arraignment. tertainment, advertising and literature Authorities said incidental arrests _ Suspect Pleads linked to the MacDonald's enterprise. those pel'IODs caught in company with The Sbaws allege the agreement has: named suspect. -would be bandied been repeatedly breached and the. Knotf by lb• police department& serving wllh Insane at r:me group i• stated to h•v• hired former communities. ., MacDonald's aide Jack Shaw to train Followhtg initiation of the roundup to-animals and exploit "certain secret, uni· day, Lt. Fl!cber said it couldn't have A retired engineer aCCUJed of the que and novel 3Ms" hitherto privlleged been pulled off so well without full shooting and wounding of two Newport to the MacDonald organization. • cooperatiOn of the agencies involved. Beach pollremen pleaded Wednesday that The Shaws now ope.rate the Old~ Some 50 detectives and officers from he was insane at the time of hill arrest. MacDonald's Farm Garden Party on various departments were detailed to Arthur Lambert, 11, added not guilty Puerta Real in Mission Viejo. the individual raid!, plus transportation by reason o('"insanity to the not guilty They claim their business has been, of suapects and booking procedures. plea already offered to Orange County hurt by Knott's use of their name and. Jolt from enelDy action In the-first Besides BNE agents, they included Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan. traditions and they asstrt that the berry men from Costl Mesa, Huntington The jurist accepted the new plea, coo-farm operators have ignored frequent 1iz days of the operation, Dewey Canon Beach, Seal Beach, Newport Beach, firmed the trill date of March 3 and warnings and continue to use MacDonald JII. He J.mPU~· thai 'h blactoiit wU Llguna Beach, Garden Grove, Cypress scheduled a pretrial hearing for Feb. animal acts. . at leut partly reaponaible. and Tu.Un. 25. Among those .acts is a chicken which .. Anlljits In wuh!Nton ·..id mwlng ~)',,District Attorneys Pat Bryan It ii expected that the reports of rings a dinner bell, trained rabbits and of the allied' troops 00 the border had and Jim · Stouer Wert aent &long to two psychiatrists will be available for pigs lVhich shoot down slides th a dinner clarlly Jepl questions concerning search the judge at the pretrial session. awaiting tbem at the bottom and varloua-, a double barn1ed objective -to show warrants and related matten. Lambert is accultd of attempted ly trained goats and mules. Hanoi the vulnerabWty of thelr-staging Inv11tlgators charged that some murder, assault with intent to commit Judge Robert A. Banyard set Feb. area jllll aoUth of Sepone in La<11/and IUSpectl were involved in several illicit murder and assault with a dtadl)o wepon. 18 as the date on which he will dlscuu to slow down the buildup in the south deals wlth undercover agents, often with He is held in OranlJe County Jal! without the possible granting of a temporary thtoua:h w:e cf the Ho Chi Minh traU. 1_b-;ug:e:quan;::U:ti:es:o:f:d:rug::=s :ob:ta:ln:e:d:. ;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:ba;;:il;;:. ;;;:===========o:;;r:;;de:;;r:;;r:;;eq:,u:;;es:;;ted=b='y:;;lh:;;e=Sh:;;a:;;w:;;gr;;o:;;u,:p:;;. =; Sepone, on the main North-South Com~ munlst supply route, is 15 mlles in1lde · Laos from the massed allied troops. Jt is there that the mountain passes from North Vietnam emerge and it is from there that supplies are sent southward. There had been no official report or any actual South Vietnamese crosslnl into Llos. Lt. Gen. Due Quoc Dong, commander of the South Vietnamese airborne division, told newsmen today at the newly reoccupied U.S. Marine base of Khe Sanh : "Wa are ready to go Into Laos if we are ordered to." Leon Daniel. a veteran UPI cor· respondent in Vietnam and a U.S. Marine in the Korean war. reported from the village cf Lang Vei, • onetime Green Beret camp a mile and a half from the border of Laos, that there were unconfirmed reports of an imminent massive foray into Laos. He sal~ Lang Vei was sb~ing up into what appeared to. be a brain ctnter for such a foray wiih South Vietnamese units moved into the Lang Vet area on the Xe Don River, which forms the border between the two countries. .. .... :·: Pl l lKU \·. . .. .. :• .. ... :· • ·~ .. .. .. .. SOlSTK C HINA S !A Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups rs-.1.1n-. T1bll lt•t · S2tt NOW SJJt by HERITAGt -•-~ ~ibli ••t· Slit \Nl'Jlmoal c.nu 1• t NOW StOt 11.., .• t•t NOW Sli t You ar• invit•d to visit our showroom• dis pl•ying : e HERITAGE e DREXEL e KARASTAN -HERITAGE --- MADRIGAL HERITAGE --- IARACINI HERITAGE----. BRENTANO and Nonnan Court • Bedroom e Dining Room • Occaalonal 20 ! • Bednt0m e Occa1ional 20 ! Y·o11r favorite de-signer will be ham lo wrist uau 20•1 • OFF . ,,_ A PUSH BEGINS AND FAMILIAR NAMES CROP UP AGAIN Khe S1nh, A Shau Valley, P1rrot11 l eek and FJ1hhoolc PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. Moo. T1hn. & Fri. bts. TlY OUR RIVOLYINli CHARlil 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF • "46-0275 646-0276 ' I l ----.. • Saddlebaek ·vo r. 64, NO. 30; 3 SECTIONS, 36 PA'.GES . ' . .. • ' I ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' ! ' • I ' ~ . ' ' . THUltSDA Y, ;fE)RUARY ·:t; 1971 • ' . .. . ' , . TEN' CENTS . . .. Capo Beach Alufilni Relriemher 'GOod·Old Da yS' Capistrano. Beach rea~urateur Mickey Yslas is chairman of his class reunion thla year, but findinl his old teacher MU be tough. Were she alive , she would be about 130 years old. o.. And no other teachers art available t>r the eveot, because w:hen Yslas and •~ dozen other students went to school In Capistrano Beach there \ll&s only ine teacher, "Miss Barkiru:." •· Down the M .. ·ISS'IOD .. Trail Chairman Named For POW Project • MISSION VIEJO -Marilyo Ru...ll nf Minion Viejo hu been · na,ffied to Head the Saddleback Valley Yo\Jlll Republican "Concem for Priaonen of war" project. . . · The project will aid the diatr1bution of ktters and · petitions requesting the felease of nam.es o! American· prtsonen of war in· Southeast Asia. Mrs. Russell also is seeking volunteers to man Ute project's headquarters at 17332 Irvine Blvd., Tustin. e Leqtu! Fo.....U , LAKE .FOREST -A basketball league for boys 1 i-12 and 13 and o~e! bas l)een•klrmed in Lalu! Forest.. , · L<igue p)a1 will be oo Moodiy. Wednesday and Frtda)' at the ,v.illaie park. ~ member. of the club llill 1 WW l\lpei;viM all games. """'. :Sien • up at the Be~Ch aOO Tennis C!ubi office . ~ ' . . ··'ludge T.iks · '1.AGUN~ HILLS ~ .. Judge Will!P' Smiil\ will discuss "The Principles _and Practices of the , Amerlcari . Judicii.1 System" 7 11.m. Saturday in the Great Western Savings ,Community Room, 2411)0 Et Toro Road. · The program is sponsored by the ~ad­ dlt back Valley Young Republic.an Club and will be followed by servICt of' coffee and dessert. TICO .Ne•" Schools Seen EAST IJtViNE -Two new elementary adx>ols rrlay soon be authorlud for the San Joaquin Elementary School District. Trustees have authorized applications applying to the state for building aid for one and possibly two new schools tf their projected enrollnv:nt and house m..int deems them eligible. ; The next schools will be built in Lake FOrest arid in the Deane Homes section of Mission Viejo. · The '. same plans used for the . con· attuction of Regina School in Aegean Hills will be used for at least one and maybe both sites. Judge Delays Murder Suspect €ourt Date /i.11 eight-day delay wu ordered_ Wednesday in the arraignment ?f . a LakeWood man accused of the killmg cif 1 46-year-old widow whose nude and strangled bod y was found in Modjeska Cinyon. _ Judge Paul Mast set the new date tn. Santa Ana municipal court for Glen Dile Ferguson, 36. The unemployed con- 11ttuction worker is held without bail in orange County Jail. _fl~eriff's investigators say Ferguson Is lhe man who strangled Zelma, Rachel WjtgtNteln of Norwalk last Jan . 15 and ~ her naked body in 1 Modjeaka ravine. The corpse was found next day by a part)' of hikers. Ferguson was arrested ab: days la~ in Artesia, close to the bar at, which Mr1. Wltgemtein was l1rt seen alive. Strange Sandwich Brings Complaint CHAALESTON, W. Va. <IJPI) -A clean-cut young man pOli~lf u lted for an eg sandwich at the Quarrier Diner Wednesday. When the sandwich arrived, he rolled It neatly in a paper napkin and without batting an eye gulped down the whole bundle in a few bites. On his way out. he turned and scowled : ''That was the touihest egs: sandwich I ever ate.'' \ Aod 13 'studenll ""81n& from e1eme .. tar)' : to lilgb school i... roMned the entire lludeol body. 'oli Sunday, the Dine availible a1umnl of the now \lanflhed one · room schoolhouse will gathei • at Yslas' Margarita , lnn ' to .'abate ,okl Utnp-.back ~hen milk .coat a)~ a"qiwt, the town bad dirt roada:and·flverybOdy went to class in 1 single room . : "We couldn't find all of t.ht s:t~Ls,". City B~nds Split Into Four· Issues · Two city council=n . clta!lied their minds In San Clemente wejljie;day and whit followed was another rpaj(lr lbuffle ill the April 21lballot prOJ>O:litioft ooverijlg fl million in recre•tioll -bonds. Instead ·of clumping all four major recreation projects. -a ·new clµbhowe, a youth center, pier entr.ance _Uld ~ parka -into one, councilmen cboee to sel 1up ·foor ee)iarate• ballol pro- pooitiool. Each would require I two- thirds majOrlly vo: _ In the act!On launched bf Counctbpen Stan . Nortlu:up and. Wade ' Lower, the paoe( yielded to beliefs that community leadeJ:s whldl they ""1111lted te the put few weeks reflected pesaimilm about 1n _qmnjbua bond JMUUre. . '!lie \>elief WU boosted. Wedneaday with the receipt ol poUllolll lr<>m· the San Cle....i. Ana-"" Cnllf,.~ and" the ·~~-.,, ...... ~ Tbi:clubl and dozens of pri'(ate dtizeo11 who .. have~· written , the ~ly .In. re«nt day• ~ that the $400,00P clubhoole be a --te ,Jsajie, '"ll>e ·more I thoughl.aboul I~ the mor~· J was convinced that the total package wouldn't p8S11," Northrup told cow;ictlmen. Dr. Low.er, who . later cast the only ~ting. vote on the fllOUoq to aeparaie the issues, said he hu "covered the enttre •town in the last two weeks and J still haven't found anyone" ln favor of the bond issue. "J llave alwa}'ll ~ a&ainst the sholgtJD. approach to bond is.sues," be added. -' Several phll"' of the bond Issue •till require council action. In coming weeks each councllman will select five citlzem to 1erve on a 25-man citizen's committee which will work fbr pasuge of the four separate bond items. Special legal counsel will have to llCan the latest resolution separatinc the bond segmeDts. Councilmen meeting In study session next Wednesday night also will meet with representative of financial con-o aulting firms to decide if 1 special flnan· cial consult.ant should be hired for the bond issue. on election d.. the recreation revenue measure will share the ballot with can· didates for trustee positions in the Capistrano Unified School DIStrict • n d the Saddlebjlck Co"""unlly College District. No other revenue meuures will be oo lhe billlol City Clert Ma:s: Berg. •tokl CounCilmen Wednes:!ay he bellev.ea bltndln1 the city issue on the school ballot · eotlld aave $1,000 or more Over tbe cost eltimlted for a special election. Foes to the omnibus approach to the bonds told councilmen Wedne!day that the timing tor the vote praenled a problem. Ducks Lose In UCI Tall y UC Irvine bu recti~ed the 11111 of ducks baged in the university'• ~n. Joaquin manh by the aeven- member San Joaquin Gun Club which baa exclualve rights to hunt In the marsh. Dr. Gordoo Marsh, chairman ol the wildlife preserve committee responsible for the 200 1ai mi.rah oear lhe UC campus, . said. the tiny seemed "low." Slightly.more tban·CIO binil wera- baued. be 11td. ' Mani> aa1d he waa 'llrllln(" the gun club te rind out how many hunter1 were uslng the marsh dur- ing hunting ...... which ended Jan. t&; Under terma ol the 13,000 lease to the 1\111 club, hunters are to log the number and typea of blrda shot by members. ,. said Yllal, wllo explolnod that lht school bad all l"'doi up to iuih ichool. "Some of the.,ooys and girls are pretty old." 'l1>e teacher traveled by train· from Santa 'Ana ·each day to. teach lht 13 children from tbe ·nine or 10 house& in Lbe' k>wer Clpiltrino Valley, in the secood public school in the Clpistrano · Bay area, , . The fJ.rat. San. ~uaa School, wliis one of the fin! in ,Otanp Count1. "Everything Is t0 changed from - da)'I, Yalu. rtmemben. "San Qemente '!II ' not' thel<; ii, WU just for the cattle, then." 111e prosperoia :Yalas, who now oWns almcist a bl<icl:'-of. Doheny Park )load Corrqnerclil ',lnrildl~, ·. WIP. indllstri~ urly in his years. , "In 19'27 I wUtked for 10 cenb • a day,;, he I al.id,' ."but we could buy a qUaz:t of' 1 mllk (fro'ln 1the BUchheuns for •I five cents.'' By 1933 the ' economic altuation WIS much iqlproved; Ml~ IOI a job from Ctarenoe Brown clelrlDl·deadwood from the orange • orchards tot 12 ~nt.s per hour. Capistrano Valley rancher C a:r·1 Buchheim will be OQt: of the "'boya" of Yslu ' reunion. 'M!e "girla" ·.UU' living in the area who are ewpected are MlrY Travln1, Erliitda1G1tav11; Betty Estrada. Martha Saucedo and 0 a i a y Wift. '. terbourne, who was a lludeiit and lolcr IUbltitute teacher, , · Of .\I Hernra of <;a~ -. one of !be Sunday .-U, Yifao -. "Al' lklpped !Our &i'lcfet In 'low'er - and went up to the high 8Cboel m&: Capistrano when he wu nine or lt years old." · Altt< ~r' the fonnor •-..a& revlalt the 1ite of the old adlool --now Just· 1n· old duplft tftlod lllllplJ "25860-25862 Calle DomlnlO·" . \ Mass N-ear -Laos . Borde~r . . ' Excited· Cre:wmen . . . ,. In Lul)ar Orhtt , • ' ' 5Q,O~O~en ~r~paring " For Drives SAIGON (UPI) -A force o1 211,000 South · v.tetname.se bac~ by t,009 Ameri~ troops and U.S., air power: massed on the border of Laos today• and' !rm diipatdi9 11111 I 5CJiith Vlef.. ,... .far~ tnto ~ot rii,aY"'be fm. • JJ)..b)e!Jt., ' ' • r I Wbile!i,OOO·U.S. aAci·Soulh Vlein..,_ troopa ·awept · across the northwestern coiner ~ OI South Vietnarhe.ae ind an unknown DIJ.Qlber of Cambodians' backed ~Y American planes moved through . the Cambodian-border region leeking two Communist divisions. .. ' Tustin 'Hig~ D~ttict . • I • • . . I • May Be Cu~ lr,tto Thirds By PAMELA llAILAN Of Ille ~ '"" ,,.., Th• Tustin High 'School Dlltrtct mar be carved into three , separate unified school diltricta w:hen the votera go to the polls in Jtme of 1972. , Ralph Gata, Superintendent of the San Joaquin Elemenllry School District, ~!bed the plan to the Board of Trustees Wei:tnadly, but 1tre11sed the fact that this Ja only me idea. "If the public indic1tes it would like to ctmlder IUCh 1 move it's going to take a great deal of work,." said Gates . · He outlined three poeaible alternatives. Ono Is for the dlalrlct. to aupport a proposal which would unify the San Joa· <iuln, Tustin ~tar)' and Trabuco dis~ 11onc· tbe tllstlllg-high school boundaries. 'l1>e other would be to oppose unifjca. ttoo· C9mpietet1, and the third Is to dr~w up a plan fer three separate dl!tricts. 1be board was unanimous in Its dislike of one sprawlin& unHied distrlct along the bowidarles ol lhe 'fl!llln High School District. ' "I think it· would ~ ridiculous to • u n I f y along· the high school di!lttjct boundaries," said Board chairman Gra- Uan Bidart. "Even Loe An.eel.es LI start- ing to decentralize because a . massive district just doesn't work." Gates said If Vo(ers deCide to unify into three different district.a, the boun· darles would •bave· to· be drawn up ac- cording to tbe"diatribu1iion of'wealth. "111e law prescribes that there can be only 15 percent difference in assessed valuation pe~ pupj.l when .districta over the state average are divided," uid Gates . He emphaiiud that the dllflculty arises In the fact that this assessed \laluatlon figure mu~ bt a seven year projectlon Into the future. He added that boomclari<s whtdl mi1ht be <>lnsldered woold be the Tllltln Elementary Oiatrict ar one. the Irvine Ranch boundaries (which comprised the orf&lnal San Jo.quln District as another , and the Mission Viejo, El Toro, Laguna Hills, and Trabuco ma• (which ·were the old El Toro dlltrid) u the third. TH.uMas up FOR ',sru,t.RT Apollo 14 ·w ife Joan Rooaa Ceremonies Held · In Dana .Harbor· County offk:ia}a and repr~ntatlves from a Newport Beach de velopment firm launched I.he first of .the private, 1dry·larld projects at pana Harbor Wednesday - the first segment Of bOat slips. Countf Director of Harbor•~· Beaches and Parka KeMeth ,Sampson and Fifth Diltrict Superviaor Ronald Gaspers .join· ed officials of Marine Capital, tnc., of Newport Beach at the ceremonies. The Ne1NP0rt Beach flr~. which won the county lease for all ' the boat allpa in ttie marina, e:s:pecll to complete the first sevetal ' h\Jndred sUps In the downcoaat · butn before this summer season. Those illps, offielals said, already are reserved , ind the walttn1 list for more boat berths hu hundreds of names. Nigeria March Routed ,LAGOS.,N!lerta (UPll, -Poll~ fired \earga1 Wedl'leadv to-dJ!l>erse thousands of students marching from the m1inland lo the Island of Lagos to proteat the ahootlni Monday of a lf.udent at Nigeria'• .Unlve{a~ty of.Ibadan. Fire Losses Set ·Record Clubhouse B'/Qe Boosts San Clem ente Dam.age Toll • I ; ' ' Bf JOHN VALTEllZA Of .. Dl"1 ,.. , .... San Clemente's structurlf .. fire I~ ln 1970 were the highest I~ the.-city'• • bbtory -l17S,IOI. ' In :blt IMaal report lo-city councilmen. F~e Chief Merton Hacketl llld·the cooU1 Community Qubbou,,e blue and two m•jor house Urea later in the year contributed to the dollar toll in charred properly. The 1919 fipre )'aa '38,181. Ria department, Hackett 1 1 d d e d 1, answered more fire alari\W than ever before -35 general alanna:, 139 ~·,uR alarms" and 50 non·lire~C.111 req'uhina· 1Wf work. The city's . toiat re.Cue a J a,r m a amounted to· Ill, cclmparccl to IJll In 1919., . . TbJ cily'ha~' 1to·ltre ~Hie, 'dllrlnc the )'llf, lbe•chltl d!ct. 1ndiorily tliree fa be-a!•i;ihl "<1'"·"-ded for the, en\11'• year. , As espected, a "huge .lhire of the .work wu done bf the · two fuJJ.time f~emeri ,.ho along wflh lbeebiel -• 'out of fire head<iuarlen. Tbii c11y:11mall 1quad pumper, capable or,belna Ultd ·~r u,a ,~,vehlcle .or ..... 1\., flreflghtlnJ r!C, IOU uaed OD ·~I '9& P.rcent of ~ y .. r'• calla. )'ulJ.tboe firemen Don Hod-. 1n encJMef' and Sl!eiclon Schmid! llalf lhal ~ vdllcle .. Dut~ the year the rii .wJ uaed P"· iao ball1, cOiiipared' to -39, f-Of "tl!e. ~ 1"8er trUcka and' It , for.the i:blel'I llalJon· WqOo, wbicb doubfu II • uitll • . a ~~t '• trtud1 .of peak pei:toda for fire ' departmont "'"'"" · Ibo~ tbli between 7 a.m. anq IJ>.m. wljen· fUll.tlme m<n .,. 0n Cliiiy, 21111 alarmiwero pboliea iii. . • . Durlnc & other boun o1 eoch ·day, When 110 fpll·tffue -I l"'!f ~1" )Ilg, lhe department ,experienced 7$ ~lli: • qi.,, .. '!14 1111• -• lhe te..,illf c:ontrlbutor1 ,. to San Clemente'• 1971> bl• .... be aald. ,! . . ~ . . ~--... · .. Tlie to'tai . of' more' tbap 50,000 ·men Involved in the coordinated drives was believed to be the la~gest such operatioai of the Indochina war. Jl brought a wam. ing. from Communilt Chin1 that Pekin« will.support the Communiat forcet 0 until final-victory." (see story, page 4). The military situation inside Llol It.self wu 'worsening· for the 1<1vemment. 'A Vientiane dispatch Aid· •• North Viet- namese force which captured' ·Muoni Suoi · Wednesday , hid pUJhed IS . mi!eo w~ward. Bangkok dispatch" ·II.id Thailand had · sent special forces to the border of Laos opposite the ·Communist thrust. The U.S. Command in announcing the 29,000-man drive in northwestern South. Vle,tnam just· below the demilitarized r.one (DMZ) lifted the ttghte;i ·news embargo of the Indochina war -a Six day· blackout. The command in- nounced· nO U.S. forces would enter LaOI but«tt .left open the Questloil of Whether South Vietnamese 'roree! woukl enter. · In Washington, DefenSe Secretary Melvin R. Laird defended the blackout and said not a 1ln1Je American was lost from enemY action In the first six days ,of the operation, Dewey Canon Ill. He implied that the blackout wu at Jeast partly responsible. Apalysts in Washington taid massing of the allied troops on the border had a double barrtled objective -to ahow Hanoi the vulnerability of the ir sla!liJ!I area just south or Sepone In Laos and to slow down the buildup in the aou«b. through use of the Ho Chi Minh traU. · Orufe / We .. dler It'll be a sunny 73 in Orange County Friday, but you better bundle up if you 're out In early mornihg hours -the temp ls tab- bed ti 38 deg..ea. ' INSIDE TODAY After a..abunce of 'fnOrc tAcm :''Ff" ll'{J''• Jptlde. K'e"MdV Ona.sill and · hit' i chtidre" R • turned u.;1aftnoUnecd for a pnoole l>ifuiing of• prolnlita of h<rHfl and Ille !ale heridcnl. . Page 4. 'Qltlfllnllit 7 ,... .. ....... ,. ..,_..,_.,, u-~ ,.... • c....... ,,.. _...,, ... . 'Ctllllft ll ,........ ... ... ~_. U Gn111M CMfY' It ,5;~ :i =,...., .. : ,... ' .... MMl9'I 11111 l'~lll .. f1l .. M•1W1M:•oj~I M ,.......,.. .. ,....., . .,~. ""---,. -....... . ~ ....... " 11 ...... """ 17•1t .,.,.. ... Lie ..... 11 WW111 ....,_ ._. ., z DAILY l'll01 ... """""'' r.-, ' 1971 Biggest Raid Nets 30 on Drug }lush Charges Ar~laiteet Issue Lawmeo flom seven police a..,.clu Harold P'llclllr. aod Ille Slate Bureau ol N"""'1ca "Moot "'9 beil!C l'OOllld from sleep," Enlcicement ..... qqed bl tbe -be added, AY!q ,thllelemeotol ourprtM wbldl will _...1as1 ownmet'11lmllar ,,., part ol iJle :;tr11qy. · OperatlOa Harvat. • . 8'loy -.. -\\Id ,_ They tarried -II, aod lllooJ IO llllpecll 1llto Colla' Mau City Jill complalnll -IJnt luuld by tbe lrll by IO:IO 1.m., with paddy ,....Olll btlni· Orange County Grand Jury -baud ing ln more trom locations up and on a serits of large-scale drug 1ale1 down the coast. to undercover agents. "We're coming along pretty,, well. Scope of the sweep ta 110 widespread We've got 12 in custody now, said that two deputy district atlome)'I we"' Garden , Grove Detective Sgt. Wayne assigned, just t.o answer legal quettloDJ Wilson. "We're having very few prob1em1:• Raiders usembl~ at Costa Mesa and said Colla Mesa Police !lei.dive LL Garden Grove pOlice · beldquarl<rs for I a.m. britflnl 111dlm1 before moving lnlo tbe field. ' Doloctm &ct. Jolin R<cu w11 .,.,-.., Iba Calta-· -._ bnol•lllC 11" tnma ti cle1e<Uve1 and Bli!: .,...., wblll two groups worked the Gardea. Grove area. Sta1e qent-ln<haree Jack Leavey said the range ot contr1blnd con!lacated In pre·rald deals runs from LSD, hasbilh, opium, peyote and other hallucinogens, to amphetamine compounds, heroin and barbiturates. He llld m01t book.lnas are ~for sale of oareotla ud dangerous dnlgs. . ' I Small &l!IOWlll of c:onl(a(\an!I drugs -pl111 t .. loadod.weapoo1 II the Garde ' ' Grove r11dl -,.... beilJC bmd, wblle a few additional 1mpects not named in warrants or indictments were caught. "We're pretty certain this wUl be even more succeaful than 0 p e r<a t·I O'Jl Harvest,'' sa:ld Costa Mesa'• Lt. Fiscbtr. The ove:n:right raid triggered last May 28 reached inland u far as Fullerton and netted SO.plus suspects, many of whom are now aervlna: state pr Ison """'· ••we've got a to't of 'reds' lnvotved. 1 lot," added Lt. Fl.scber in rerereoce to evldtllce llitD durtne the put three monlht. Several thousand dollars la stat°"81lot~ ted funds was expended in gathering evidence which led to issuance Wed· nesday of the Grand Jury indictments and complaints. Investigators said the male and female suspects range in age from 15 to 35,, while a &year-old mother allegedly in partnership with her sons was charged 1n last year's simUar series of raids. Clemente Balks Live Coverage Of Moon Walk The three major televlston networks ih Southern catilornia wW carry live coverage of the Apollo 14 lunar landing lcl!eduled early Friday morning. Sanitary Distri·ct OK'd El Toro Homeown!3rs Approve Water 1Joard 'Plan . " On Fire Station Bolh Channels 4 (NBCJ and Channel 7 (ABC) will caJTy the telecast from 12:30 to 1:30 and Channel 2 (CBS) from 1 to 1:30 a.m. Property owners in the El Toro Water Dlltrict approved plans to form a sanitary dlltrlc:t Wedneadly. • With only four property owners representing only a litUe more: lhan an acre of land opposing the move , the Board of Directors of the district were granted the right to eiercise water reclamation and sanitation po,wers. cost, which you would have paid 11 Rossmoor, a private concern, bid bullt it, you'll by paying only 20 pereent and at the same t.lme will be getting some of lhese state; funcb you pay for back Into your area," said Dan Boyle, engineer for the El Toro district. Include an ocean ouUall, and the other is tying into a proposed pipeline to the ..... to be built by tile Irvine Company. "As population increases we will have · to do aometbing witb the reclaimed water we cannot use,'' said Boyle. "Now that you have approved the formation of· the sanitary di.strict we 'll be able l<> find a way to use: it or d!Jpose oP. it. " By JOHN VALTERZA Of 11Mo Dll1' l'lltf Steff City COuncllmen in San Cle~ente again balked at Immediate hlril!C of an architect for a new fire department beadquartan Wednelday, agHelng In- stead to c:ooduct lntemews l<r tbe job tn a week. After brief dllcusslon of the plans Bus Firm Denies Union Charges Of Poor Safety Olllcllll ol the Commwnty Charter Bua Company denied Wllon charges Wedneadly that they have be<n ignoring aalety standards In the upkeep of their vehldea ml the training of their drivers. The allep.Uons were made by the Teamsters Union whlch is acting as repreaentaUve for 35 ICbool bus driftrl .. rtrllre In tbe Compton-Long Beach area. 'Ibe union has threatened to spread the strike to Orange County where the .... company ftamporls all the <bildren from Ille San Joaquin Elementary Sdlool Dlllrtc:t ml one-third of tbe bus load from the Capistrano Unilled Sdlool Dlstricl. Drew v...,.,. Eucutlve Vice Prealdenl of. lhe bull company, uid the wlloo'• complalnta were "completely false." "'Ibey cl.airll U)lt our drivers liJl not properly trained, 11 aald Young. "Each driver 1oe1 through our own rigorous ttllnlni In 1dd1Uon to palling a special Highway Patrol tut." 11>e union hu claimed that drivers were suppUed with the answers to the lllghway Patrol teal before tbey take It. . . ''Of oourae we know what quesUons will be uked," aald Young. "We prepare our drivers in the areas covered by the teal, but we don't 111pply them wllh answers.•• The unloo allO ha1 c:harged that the bus cOmpany supplied the drivers with first aid c:erUlkatea without providing any fratolng. "We have a quallfled first aid ln- ltrudor on our staff who gives each driver about 10 houn or training," uld Young. "Thia allegation ls enUrely un- true." Ia response to the. union allegaUon that driven were told to falslly ufety checks whlch they are supposed to perform on their buses, Young said. "We Inspect them, the Highway Patrol Inspect.II them, and U a driver feels a bos ii unsafe she doesn't have to drive it." "We have 1 close relationship with drivera in Orange County and they are on our side," sald Young . ••1 don't think the strike wUI enter this county." DAILY PILOT ....,.. ............ .... _...... -·-c..M ... S..Q111c OlAHG• COAST PUILSSHING aJl/ilNAV aoDert N. w,,4 ,.,.Ill ........ l'WIWllt J1cli a. c_.,,,., Viet f'ntllwll ...... 0..-1 ~ 1111111•• ICH¥11 ll!•lttt 11itM•• A. Mr.trp!r.1111 M8'1911ftt !"fl!Of> Rich1r4 r. H11f a.Ill Of.,,.. COlll'll, ldllW -C•'9 M-1 »I Wttt l.y Strwt MIWPD't hKlll nn .,., ...... ..,,,....,... ~ a.c:h1 tn ,_, ......... loll H~ a.ct11 1117J atldl hulMlrC Ill ~I al Nw1fl E CM\lrle 111. .. I to construct a $170,000 headquarters on civic center property, the council agreed to scan the qualifications of three aeparate architectural partnerships in a 1pecial study seuion Wednesday night. Only one of the three applicants, Willard T. Jordan (who would work in partnership with Marvin Renfro) has had ei:tensive ei:perience with fire department designs. The other two applicants who will be bucking for the job are partnerships of Rick Nicol and Leon Hyun and Eric Boucher and Arthur Drielsma. Jordan, an arcltltect and city coun· cilman in Costa Mesa, bas been the choice of City Manager Ken Carr for the job, having designed several fire ital.ions for Orange County and other cities. The interview process Is expected to be similar to that which yielded for Boucher and Dr1e1sma the job for the riew community clubhouse. Each applicant ii asked to present a resume of quallficaUons and tug· geaUons far . the treatment of the ar<llite<\Ural proje<I. The let wbkb will be paid the winner Is 5.5 peroent of ihe total coot of Ille buUdlng. Councilmen have given no lndle1tlon wbeo Ibey woold ac:t on ~ plwe of the long-awaited fire department upgrading plan -hiring of ·(our new full·thne firemen, plus laW>Ching of a unique croo-tralning program Uling a special cadre of on-duty police officen u an lniUal attack crew at major flm:. Money for the fire beadquarten eX· p. ... eJdlb Ill tbe <lfy budget. Re v enues to hire foar new full. lime men (brtn1tng the total of fUll.Ume persoMel to seven ln the department ) ii expected ln next iiacal year'a revenue. Both expenses. however, wlll not be borne by property tax paym. Both tbe $170,000 for the 1tatkm and the estimated ft0,000 for the men will be paid by the city's clgaret smokers, whose state; tax money for smokes returns to the city each yea_r. Two Facing LSD Rap in Newport Two men are in custody in Newport Beach after I.hey were arrtsted by police on charges with possession of $5,000 worth of LSD. Gary Carl Mitchell, 20, of Connecticut, and George Gallo, 21, of 98S N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, were arrested Wednesday afternoon on suspicion of possession of dangerous drugs for sale. Detectives said the pair were stopped in their car at Cliff and Dover Drives after they were assertedly spotted dig· ging a container out of the gr o u n d in the Westcllff area. Detective Al Epstein alleged the con· tainer had about 2,700 LSD tablets In It. which are valued at about $2 each In the illicit drug marlcet. Bail bas been set at $6,1$0 for ?i.iitchell and '3,125 for Gallo. Coverage of the first of two lunar walks, scheduled to begin at approximately 5:50 a.m. will be as follows : ABC, 5;45 to 10 a.m.; NBC, 5:45 to 11 a.m. and CBS, 6-11 a.m. Additional coverage is scheduled ror Saturday activities but local coverage bas not yet been an- nounced. Rolls· Royce Firm Future Rocky; Receiver Named LONDON ('UPI) -The Rolll·Royce Company, traditional prestige symbol of British engineering excellence, went into receivership today. The U.S. chartered accountant firm of Peat Marwick Mil· chell & Co.,. was named receiver and manager of the company. The company said it bad run into a serious cash crisis due to escalallng costs of developing and building a new jet engine for the Ame.rican Lockheed Co., asked for appointment of a receiver. and manager and asltecl the government to look into the company's,financea. The announcement of a recelver and manaaer to run it in place of tbe present manqement waa made after Rollt-R.oyce halted all stock excbqe dealings 1n the company's shares in the crisis lbat threatened to force it out of busiDt!! for want of sufficient funds. The opening price on the stock ex· c:hange Wednesday WBI 11.U.1' and It finished at 93 cents~ a fall of 19'11 cents in its la.S't trading day. The suspension was announced just after the market opened today when there was a single: Rolls quotation of 90 cents. The financial crisis roclted tbe London Stoclc Market and stocks of electrical and C0111J;l0nents firms which supply the troubled Jet engine giant al.w fell . Appointment of a receiver does not constitute bankruptcy, but legal experts said it amounts to admission by the existing· management of its inability to carry on for lack of funds. The move: came only hours before an expected govemm.ent statement to Parliament on Rolls-Royce's financial sltuaUon. Prime Mi.nlste.r Edward Heath held a three-hour cabinet meeting Wednesday night to discuss the crisis bitting the 65-yeaMld firm. • The former Labor Party government gave Rolll-'Royce more than $144 million to help towards development and pr~ ductlon of the revoluUonary new RB211A2 jet engine under a March, 1968, contract to supply the engines for Lockheed's new 25-seat Trlstar airliner. Last November, the present con- servative government promised an ad- ditional $110.I million for the project. "lt would have taken 51 percent of the owners of the 4,750 acres which comprise the di!trlct to keep the board from aSIUmlng these new powers," said Frltz Stradling, attorney. The first action to be taken by the district, which Includes most of Leisure World, Aegean Hills, and part.I of Lake Forest, will be to authorize a rtudy of the district's present ~ future sanitation needs. "lf we decide: to build some kind of reclamation facility we will bring it back to the taxpayers for their ap- proval," said Hugh Walker, president of the board. Sanitary services in the district are currently provided by Rossmoor Sanita· lion Company. The company reclaims all the w a t er it treats and puts Jt to beneficial use. But the time i.s approaching when the Rossmoor firm would have to expand their facilities and perhaps construct an ocean outfall to dispose of the effluent that couldn't be uaed. Uthe company bad built these facilities it would have had to pay 100 percent of the: cost since it is not a public agency, a figure that would have been passed on to its customers in raised f~ll. Now thal the El Toro Water District is able to enter the sanitation and water reclamation field, it will be eligible to receive fUndl made available under the Clean Water Act passed by catUornia voten last November. lf lt decides to build a facility of It! own or participate with aoother district for a regional facility, the district will be able to receive up to 80 percent of the cost of construction through federal and state grants. "Instffd of paying 100 percent of the Boyle said there are two plana. to look into now. One ii partlcipaUori in Los Alisos and Moulton-Niguel'• proposed water reclamation facility which will Temporary High Rise Ban To Be Offered in Newport By L. PETER KRIEG 01 t11t ODii' Pllft Stitt Emergency legislation that would tem- porarily ban all hlgh·rise construcUon along the Newport Beach shoreline will be introduced at a meeting of the City Council Monday night. The ordinance, if adopted, would establish a 90-day Building Department moratorium on the issuance of permits for construction of any building more than 35 feet high within the boundaries of the proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District. Councilman Carl Kymla, chairman of a council-planning commission committee studying formaUon of the district, said he will. however, depart from normal procedure and ask that a public hearing be scheduled on the ordinance Feb. 22. Pointing out that state Jaw allows adoption of emergency measures without hearing, Kymla laid his panel feels the public should be given an opportunity to comment on the proposal. As proposed, the civic district would include that area south of the Pacific Coast Highway through West Newport, the proposed realigned Bayside Drive, Ocean Boulevard and Brighton Road . Creation of the district is intended to provide strict building controls arcnmd the Lower Bay and ocean front that would include restrictions on height. design and density and several other stipulations. Kymla last month had Indicated some high-rise would most likely be allowed eventually,· but it would be carefully regulated and tied closely to open sja<* requirements. Kymla said the ban will be sought- because of. the number of high-rise pro- jects the city expects to be submitted in the immediate future. Among thcde known to be pending are the Balboa Bay Club apartment project and multi-family development on the sites of the Fun 1.one and the former Rendezvous Ballroom. Kymla said the emergency ordinance is necessary "simply becall.5@ we have no set of tools to control development in tht! district now ." He pointed out the council has given every indication It supports the avic District concept and the committee feels its effect should not be pre~mpted by any construction before the district caa be created. . "This action," he said, ''is neeeaaary to allow completion of plans for the civic district." Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups rstor1p Limp T1ble R.eg. S29t NOW Sllt byHERITAGt lteg. Sl4t ' I NOW S11t N ati'7e Restless Ycu ar• invit•d to vi•it our •howroom• displ•ying: El Toro Girl Sues Lion Country The "roar" of an ts.year-old El Toro girl will be heard In the Orana:e County Court House April 14 at an unfair labor practices bearing involving Lion Country Safari of Lagwla Hills. . The girl, Heidi Gatton!, flltd charges Dec. 11 against the park and Teamsters Union local 23S, contending she was ~ forctd to Joln the labor union as a condition of her employment. Although the wit ls filed ln her name, Mias Gattonl says many of her 125 fellow employes support the action. The girl says she: had no lnte.ntlon of. calling for any strike at the pa'rk and is on good terms with her employer. The suit wtll be heanl by 1 NaUOllll Labor R.elstions Board (NLRB) e:xamlnor in April. An NLRB spokeJman said the chlrru brought by Miss Gattonl hid already been investigated and an unfa ir labor practices complaint had been issued against Uon Country Safari. the Teamsters Union. The agreement stated that the union would reprtsent all non-management employes of the park who deal directly with the public. She said In September a unlon official brought contracts to the park for the affected employes to sip and that was the first •she knew of the agreement. The union official told her she had to join the union or lose her job at the park. The glrl said 1he began worltlng at the park operating 11 ride for children and was later moved to duties u 1 car rental booth operator. She is now a dog·and-cat kennel ketptt. Lion Country general manager HaJTy lleatb uid the entire: problem arose because the employe.1 involved "felt they 1hould have been in on the origin.al Mgotlatiw wt th tht Jabor unions." E 'd T bl-~.,. ''3' commocse n a • HOW s1ot -HERITAGE---. MADRIGAL e ltdroom • Dining Room • Occ-aslonal 20 i HERITAGE---, IARACINI' 20~ • Bed,,,.... • Occ.aslon•I Your favorite derigner wtU b11 ham to as.tilt 11ou • HERITAGE • DREXEL • KARASTAN HERITAGE--- IRENTANO and Nonnan Court 20"• OFF H.J.GARRETT fURNrrugE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS OPff Moo., Thon. & frL has. TRY OUR llVOLYING CNARGI 2215 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. • Miss Gatton! said she was hired by the. park when It opened ln June, 1970, but knew nothing cl a labor contract the park man11ement bad 1l&ntd wtlb 1'lfowever, we have 1 signed contract with the Teamstm and we just can't violate the agreement," he 1dded. 'lhe I park management contend.1 the 81J'tf. ment with the union b legal and Uuit no omploye bu beeo IJred for not Jolnlnl L---------------....:--------------------' the union. M6·0275 646.0276 I . . I • 7 I I I I I I ' I \ -. - - ':Lag11•.•a Beaeh ' E'l>ITI O N • • ~ I I I ' YOC 64, NO. JO, J SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALli;QRNIA .. ' • ! • " TH\JRSDAY, FE~RUARY 4, · 1 ?71 TEN CENTS .,. \ -:-. Laguna Councilmeri: Drop 1\ ' . 'Happenid g' P·rohe ' By BARBARA KRED!ICH Of ni. 0.ltW 'llet Hat! ·Laguna Beach city councilmen agreed Wednesday night to drop the idea of .eeking a grand jury investigation of the "happening" that disrupted the com· mmlity•at Christmas time, but to proceed with efforts to bead off any repetition of the event. Citf attorney Jack Rimel told the council 'his inquiries led him to believe the Grand Jury would not accept a city request to look into the happening. . 1be jury's function, he said, iJ generally Un;Uted to investigation and indictment! in criminal cases, irt- vestigation of alleged rnixonduct of public olliclala and uarntnation of finances and operatin1 methods of public bodies. · U the jury shouJd afree lo investigate the happening, 'he aaid, it would be in its own mannp, on tile basis of the first ·two of these functiOns , and without guidelines~from the city. "It is not· the function of the jury to advise a·; city 'bow to manage ILi affairs," Rimel ·Mid. In ··his opirdon; the· attorney Aid, in· Pistol Pa~ker Laguna Hotel Robbed by Wo man By PATRICK BOYLE Of fll.9 O.lly ,1111 .118'1 A middle a1e<1 woman brandishing a pimol early this morning robbed Laguna Beach's fashionable Surf and Sand Hotel of$ J,300, makiag the startled night clerks lie on the floor as she escaped with the ca.sh'. Police said lhe woman, described as ~ing 40 years old with grey hair, entered tbe· lobby of the resort hotel shortly atfter midnight. She approached the .night clerk, Harry Thompson, and asked him for a room. Thompson turned to point out a picture of the .hotel so the woman could choose her room location and when he turned back to face his customer, she was pointing a 1un at him, police said. Jwt then, the other night employe, Perry Herrell, entered the lobby and the female bandit ordered the pair lo stand back while sbe helped bersell to coritehts of the cash register. 'lbe Surf aod Sand is the headquarters of Press Secretary Ronald-Ziegler and the national press corps when President Nlxon Ls staying ill San aemente. The two clerks told police the woman put the cash receipts into a black leather handbag and then of<lered· the pair In lie on the floor behind the counter, _ The wort)an then walkec! out the door and the clerks told police Uley did not hear any sOund bf a car driving away from the hotel. Surf and Sand owner Merrill Johnson was summoned from . his quarters at the hote.I and police were called. John.50n first esUmated tbe lw to be about '3,500, but a careful accounting check revealed that only $1,300 in cash had been laken. Johnson said the woman did not take any checks or coins, but only the . paper cqrrency· from the register. He said that the hotel-does not normally have that much cash on band, but the large amount liad been due to many customerS paying; their bills that eve.nin&, C ·i c· · "l 'D' . · · "" · ..J -' _ 1 y ou,ncz . ress "'o.ue ' . I . . Under Study in Laguna The appearance of barefooted, shirtless persona al City Council meetings ls unbecoming the dignity of Laguna's 1overning body, councilman Edward Lorr Goldber g Names Lag una F lorist To Commission Laguna Beach florist Jack Eschbach, 3.1. has been named by Mayor Richard Goldberg to fill the Planning Commission vacancy created by the resignation of commissioner Thomas Johnston. The appointment was announced follow ing a brief Clt.y Council executive 1ession at the close of the regular Wednesday night meeting. An attempt to fill the vacancy twl'l weeks earlier had failed when·councilmen ~re unable to agree on a candidate for the planning post. Eschba ch. who. with bis parents t.tr. aq.d Mrs. William Eschbach, operates a family flower and gift shop at 230 Broadway, is an award winning floral designer. active in community beaUUfica- tibn efforts. He has served on lhe Chamber of Commerce beautification committee, is an alternate member of the Main Beach Development committee and currenUy Is assisUng the Laguna Greenbelt fU!ld drive. •E.schbach, who came to Laguna Beach nine years ago from Allentown. Pa ., ts unmarried. He lives al 365 Lookout Drive. • Building Activity ~ax for Laguna Laguna Beach building activity' con· tihued at a slow' pace in January, with 38. permits for construction valued at $217.562 Issued by lbe Building Depart- me.iat. ne figure was a shade under the Januaiy, 1970, valuallon of nsa,111· for 411 )>ermits. Three permit.. for new one-!amily dft{llngs, with • total valuatloft $15? ,950 were Issued, along w it b one permit for a $23,137 commercial struc· lure. Two swimming pool permits added $7,900 to I.he figures and the balance of the permits were for a aarage, walls, fence• and altu1Uons. f.eiterated Wednesday nll:ht a1 be renew· ed bis "dreu code" proposal. Lorr rec!lled that after visits 1.o council meetings in neighboring communities some. months ago, be had proposed postinc a sign in the council chamber banning such informal 1arb. At that time there appeared to be no disagreement, the councilman said. but tbe signs were not installed and Lagtm1n5 are sUJl tum.in& up at meetings minus shoes and lhirtl. He therefore put hit request for a council chamber "dress code" in the form of a motion. Councilman Charlton Boyd objected. "The objective is werlhY," be. said, "but this is not the way to do it. If we deserve respect we must earn it. You can't ordain or edict it." Mayor Richard Goldberg said he would second Lorr's motion. But city attorney Jack Rimel had reservationa. "I suggest you hold this over to the next meeting Ml ·I can determine what control can be taken over the type of drtss people wear to public meetings,'' h~ advi!ed. Laws th1t permit the ouster of persons who disrupt meetings make no reference, In dress. he noted. Lorr said a sign designatin& the proper manner of drw for persons enterint: Cost.a Meu.'1 Civic Cehter 11 prominently posted ....... The council voted to defer the matter to its neit meetln& pendJnc a ~rtport from the attdmey. Crane Operator 'Lowers' . Laguna The world dropped one foot tn Laguna Bead!. Tuesday, but hardty anyone notic- ed. Thal'• becaUJe moat Art Colony dwellers are busy looking at what's baP. pening on the st'mt. not looking up. Lquna.'1 sign ordinance, which went Into effect last April 15 and unmercllully IO!>ped oil tbe top of the Hotel Laguns tower, also toot It& toll on the world. Those who did look up nw the large World Savings letters frontlna on Fomt Avmue drop a fool ill line wttb the IJl)tJ. Ruoori IM the delay, aceoNllnt to city sl!!ft-lnspector Biii Meyer-, h the savings and loan flrm '1 head office in Los Angeles couldn't get together on resigning with the sign company. And, 11 the crane operator who was lowering another worker who ••s lower- in& the letter• remarked, "l wlah every city could come up wltb rules like UW:. '1 . vestigaUon by an 1d hoc committtfl would serve·no ~ beyond reopeninl wounds. C.OUOCilman Rey Holn:., who had brou.&ht up .tbe possibility of a Grand Jury investigation, said, "J would ' hope and pray lhe events would not be dragged up again. Nothing constructive could come of it.", Rimel said the matter of rock festivals and similar large &atberings is' "not a *•I problem'• and probably co u Id best .be cOntrolled by legislation on a statewide leyel., "When these things happen," be said, "ylMtlg ' PeoPte •come to them frOm all over the counlry. One small communitY auwit ~-with th.em." · Cow>cllme:n agreed \o drop the Grand J'.ury idea and to instruct the city manigef io cOnsult ·with : the U&gue of California Cities with regard to ob- taini,hg stile iegislatlon. .' · • On ltle local .Jevel, councilfqen agreed to adopt as an urgency · otdinance· ·at tbeit ne1t meeting a crowd control otdfnanct drifted by Rimel· at the re- ~~ of the council. Clty -inanager Lawrence ROse' had ask· ed permission to review wording of tht ' . ' . ordinance before lt1 adoption, in the light of a supreme Court -decla1oo overturaina a CarmelJolter~ or~. ' Councilman Ed'!'ard Lorr, . noting rumors of 1 new "happening'' at Easter, pulhed for Immediate adopUon of the ordinance which , he aald, hid betn reviewed by, lhe chief of 1>9llce. He propoaed IO,me minor correctlofll, including . reduction 1rt1'm 2,5001 to ' sbo the number of persons constituUnc an outdoor gathering fer which a ll~nse would. be· required. . The council alJ:eed to have 'the ord.i.nan. "' ....te....i llld pmented at Ill nm !'netting as an ur1ency ordinance. ~ tloo In . thia form would pat· the Id Into effecl 'lmmedlat.ly, without the CUlloniary second readi(ll llld ~ watt for adoption. Urgency ordinances may be· adopted fM the proi.ctiob· ol p u b 11 c -· weU~e.and safety. It woold provide for mlct control ol all · Olltdoor .gatbertnp with ncanl to pennlta, clean-up fee1, water, food. sanitaUon and medical faclliUet, IMICUri- ty, traUlt central ..and advance. ad .. vertising. • I • ' ! U.S., South Viet Tr.oops • • Mass N·ear Laos Bor-der Excited C·rewmen . . In Lunar Orbit t ' I I ' SPACE CENTER; Jlooltcn (AP) .- Apollo 14's excited uirooautl dfded. I lJl!IOll \h<J .. C11/9~' mil,~ tutic" toda~, rMctr ,.,.\0 . at~ .a, bullse~e landing l'riday in a nam>w valley iri 'the blealu hcl rocky 'lullar highlands. . ... "Wow,, thil . is really a wild · plice up here," exclaimed minion commahdir A lac B. Shepard Jr. lliortly alter Apollo 14 fired into lunar orbit early today. As' they passed over · the Fra Mauro Ian.ding. si~, Edgar D. Mitchell said: · r~~1t sure looks rough down there. As interesting as this is from orbit, it just whets your appetite to get down there." "Fantastic. You 're not 1oing to believe this. It looU jWit like the map," said Stuart A. Roosa. They shot into orbit after an 12-hour . journey from their home planet. Just hours earlier Mission .control relayed the good news tbat a 'battery with a low power reading would oot prevent the landing attempt. The sta1e was set for man's third landing on the moon when Shepard, Mitehell ltld Roosa triggered the. com· mand ship Kitty Hawk 's big engine on the backside o( the moon at 11 :01 p.m. PST to sweep into an initial orbit 67 to 195 Ulile! bigb. The firing occurred during a radio . . "' ti'lackout and lt ·WU 1MJf. until· 20 mlnutea · • . ' I . '• '\ ,.. la1¥ wtiel\. ~DO!la ll rea"'°ued •arowid a\i/•lit'.•.rilii,~n °'!ii~·-· ~-........& ... ! ~·· '' YI'~,._ ' ' " I ' . ' Sliep8,tjl'• vo!Ce' b~ the 1ileDc< 'will> I IUbdbecs. "W6 bad: an e:&tnietf fine b-.. . ·, I . A ~· ' . But then the commender, who has wa'ited ne'af1y· 10 yearS "fqr , a ciaCk . . ' at the moOn 8Ince he becanle .America'• first . •pacem"an, could npt ' . contAJn hi°'5e11.~-and bur!t o~t wttb,' ','This' is rt aUy a ·wild' plitce," a phrase ·r~~ated flve ;mlriutes later. , · HLs ,t:ri:Wmates, who· had" ~en relaUve- ly .sl!ent ~ 'thfi . mission, joined in Shepard's enthusiasm u Apollo 14 raced acrou · the face of the moon and they g~ down on a desolate, wohdrous sct11e ~r cr4ter1,. rugged. mountafus and nat plii.":s. Eacli man had·~· own lmprpa.ion. Shepard : "It ha.s all the grays and browns and whites and dark craters that everybody's talked about before.'' Mitchell : "l think the beat description that comes lo my mind la that it looka like a pla.'lt~ mold that somebody has dusted with grays and browns. But it lookl like it's been molded out of plaster of Paris. It'1 really ru1ged.'' -. Laguna Aide Orlandella Moving; School Po st Open Laguna Beach lchool board member Dr. Anthony Orlalldella aJlJIOUJ1Ced Wedne3day that he ii moving to a new home in Dani Point, creating an unex· peeled vacancy on the five-member board. Orlandtlla said be only recenUy .made the decis:Jon to move from the Llguna Beach Uniliett School Diatrict and want.. his decilion known immediately in view of the upcoming achool board election. Laguna Police Raid Pot Farm The physician, wbp wriuld have been up for -: election on April 20, bad previously announced hiJ intention to be a candidate. Orlandella presenUy a South-Laguna resident, 1aid his new home in Dana Ponnt· will be out Of escrow by mid- March. He uld he lnttnds to move as aoon as possible after the house hu a:ooe through ucrow. Upon ·moving from the district, be muat resign hla board position. The doctor was appointed to the five. member board of trulteea in January, 111&9, after the resignation of trultee Don Tobin. He 1ervea u clerk of the board. Io addition to IU1 private practice, II 1 Laguna Belch fumer found he ts the nead uro1oiiJ1 at South Coast his field in1disorder th1s morning, Community Hospital. He baa chUdrtn be will recelYe litUe oi'mplithy · attending Aliao Elementary School and from the police departmtnt. Thurston Intermediate School .. The officers are .the culprits wbo "I have been mc.t. happy worklng uprooted many ol his plan ti. will> the. dedicated people an the,bo&rd Police said the flelci;-· -mm w1>o have the lnlerelt ol all IChool plot of cultivated earth In the 100 P<t-1 and -ts at beort," block of Woodland bdrive, wl1 ~ 1 Or:ln6tffa ~, .ii 1 IJflOllDclna Jds sproating at.Our 200 marijuua • ftllpaUoo. 1~1 wlD mill· it Vf!rY much."· . plAntsi '!'be Neptation ran,..i In • Jlotrd •P:ealdent Lam T111ot', • who bel•'t f tw In ...... , 1n·•-ls' tlao up for ,....lectlon In April, llld "'' '°"!. ,0 ~~,... -· -the bolrd-..Olild opttlle wlthOiilj "° police officers maki~ the -l-ber•' until a .·-'· •la.Jo .... ._,.., ...... ••-··very at 6 p.m. .c_•1y "~" '""""' '""K'll.....-'l.\QllCllC ~v i·nui~ take1 hll aul on July 1. · decided it was time,for t tuirveat. Orlandllla'i IMountement leavu only The officm pulled {Ip, !bout 30 Taylor • .... UC• Irvine -·---Dr. of the plants and reibif*. this .-,.. r•v--mornlng 1n uproot the ,,.malnder si.,,1er,IJ!!11111at ... candidalea "for tho ol the crop. --,,. • l~o tiOll'd 1ea1a at thl• time. FililiJ d!adUDI I& Feb. IS. . '' -' • THUMBS UP FOR STUART Apollo 14 Wife J~n Roosa. Old Ma cDoncild Sue s Knott' s In Animal Fight Berry firm pioneer Walter ,Knott and e!R;ht principals In his Buena Park ori;anizatlon -among them the plain~ tiffs' brother were 1ued for $9.75 ·mUlion today in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit charging the group with fraud and unfair competition. They art ace\Ued in the action . filed by C. Fulton Shaw and Kay Shaw· Qf Old MacDonald'~ Farm Inc. of b~achir),1 an 1greement reached between the parties when the Shaw1 lelt Buena Pirk in late 1168 for their present Mission Viejo loca_lion. 1be Shaws clalm the KnoUa agreed not to represent that Old MlcDonald'a Farm 1Ull ex.isted in Buena Part and tbey1 a1JO allege that the berry farm owners promised not to Ule any en- ter~lnment, advertising and Uterature linked to the Mac.Donald'• enterprlle. 'Pbe .shaw1 allege the aafeement has been repeatedly ·breached and the KnOt.t . . . 50,000 ·Men Preparing for Drives SAIGON (UPI) -A lorco ol lll,llOO South Vleb!amelt backed by t,llOO ~ ll'OOp! Def U.S, air -~ on the border ol ~,today, llld lr<fut c!iJpatcheo ~~ a lloUtll ~ ~1 loray IDIO ta.. may be lm- ~m·ent, · Whilo2ll,ooo u.s •• nc1.Soulh Vletnameao troops : swept across the northweatam comer of South Vietnamese and an unknoWJl number of Cambodlans ba~ked by Ap'terican planes moved through the Campodian-border. region aeeking two Commw'll.st divlslons. The-•total of · more · than ·IO,OCO ·men Involved in the coordinate({ · drivu wu 1 ) belieVed to be the largest sUch· operation of the 11ndochina war. It brought a wim- ing from Communist China that Petinl wll1 s'uppott the Comm"unJst forces "until linaJ·vtctory." ·(see story. poge 4). The military sttuaUon inside Laos ltaelf waa worsening for the govemmenl A Vitnfi&ne · di!p8tcb aid a North VJtt.. namese force Which captured MUOit& SuoJ· WediieSdiy had puJbed 15 Dillel westward. Bangkok diipat.ches said Thailand had sent special forces to ·ilJI border of' Laos opposite the COmmunlat thrust, 1be U.S. C.Ommand in announclng. the 29,000.man drive in northwestern South Vietnam just below the demllttarlied zone (DMZ) lilted the llghleat newa embargo of the Indochina war -a sir day blackout. The command an- nounced no U.S. forces would enter ·Laos but it left o~n the question of '.Vhether. South Vietnamese forces would enter. In Washington, Defense Sectetary Melvin R. Laird defended the blackout and said not a alngle American wu Jost from enemy action in the first six days of the operation, Dewey Canon m. He implied that the blackout .wu at ~st ')>&rtly responalble. 411a1ysts, ill Washington said ma•tna of !lie allied troops on the border had a double barreled objective -to 1how Hanoi the vulnerability of their lla&lnl area just 80llth of Se.pone in ~ Ind In •low doWn the bulldup In the IOUlb through use of ·the Ho Qi! Minh trail. group Is atated In have hired fonnei; We.div Macllol!ald'1 . ~Ide •Jack Shaw In .train . ll'll be • 8UMY 73 In Oranp animals ' and esplo:lt "cerllin aecret •. unJ. COUnty Friday, but you better que and novel acts" hitherto pr:ivllea;ed bundle up if you're out In wly In the Mac:Dcmald orgm)zatlon. morning hours -the temp ~ Ill> bed at 38 degreu. The Shinn. 110w operate the Old · . MacDonald'• Farm Garden Party oo INSW E TODAY Puertl Real .in Million .Viejo. , After a abs•ntt of more than They, 'dalm t!elr .!>-bu1be<n 11uen V••ri, Ja<kio Kn...tv hurt·~ •Knott'• u.e 'Of· 1lheir namt ,attd .Ona.uil atad Mr ch.ildreft n· 1ra41-,and 11iey -)bat the·bel:n 1¥,...d .u,'l"nnoll'llad • 191 • • form Oll«&to'l 'biYe ·~ .~ ·J>1!1><11• ~bf.'ptolnllll of warninp and-oe·IO UM.MacDonald hlrad/ oitll th• 141< Pr•lidcn~ aftlnial acll. . .Page 4. • Jimon& 0'°9e ICll 1a I ·chicken Whid;t C•H~ 1 -• ~ M l'ltfl'l'""a'111Met~tidflr11netnlbb1tt a.li--1·"'1=::. -~ ••• ..~~lf--1 plgs wbkb •boot down 1lida: to a dlnntr tM1tc1 1.1 =., '=. !: naltlftg them at tbe bottom and various-·=:-:.1m : ;;:' ,::is 11 lf tralned goat.I and ·mules. ::,c: ,... 1: _,. ..: Judge Robert A. •Blny1td aet . P:eb. ,~ • =1.::-i ~ 11 11 the date en ·w~ht be wtll dllcuts ,:... •;1 ~= • the paaiblie cranth\I ol. a ·te"'P.,J?ll'f' .-.. L-.n ,, ,...... --""J order requated by the Shaw lf'OUP· Mini• L.ktll• '' w.r• ..._ W: ..___ ___ _.;.::__:::_J • I • "I DAILY "LOT :ti. l tlwilil.U. FtbruWr •• ltn Biggest Raid Nets 30 · 011 Drug Push, Charges Arehltttt Issue Lawma from ....,, Police apnclot llld lhe Slllo Buruu ol Nat<Ollcs Eof__. wao qqed In Ille ~ which wUl......,... lul ---· a!ml1u Opentfo1r Harveat. · 'Ibey cm1ed indlctmuil ml lolooy complalnto -lint• IAued by lhe 1171 Orani< County Graod Jury T bo>ed on a series of large-11eale drUg aalel to undercover 1&e11ts. , SCope of the sweep is go widespread that two deputy district attorneys were assigned, just to answer legal questions "We're having very few problem1," ~-Coata Mua Police Detective Lt. Clemente Balks On Fire Station By JOHN 'VAL TERZA· Of lllt Oelb' Plllt St9ff City Councilmen in San Clemente again balked at lmmed!ate hiring of an architect Jtir _ a new fire department headquarters Wednesday, agreeing ln- atead !O conduct llltmlewa for tbe job .... ..a. Aller brld dllcualon ol the plana Bus Firm Denies Union · Charges 01 Poor Safety Officials of the Communlty Charier Bua Com-denied union c11arg,. Wedoesday that they have been lgooring safety standards Jn the upkeep of their vehicles and the training of their drivers. The allegatlom were made by the Teamaters ·Union which II acting u representitlve for 35 .school bus drivers on .trike In tbe Compton-Loog Beach area. · ·· The union baa threal<ned to apread the strike to Oranae County where the bus company lnnaports eU the children from the San Joaquil'I Elementary School Diltrict and one-third of the bll.! load from the Capiltrlno Unified School Dlltlid. : ' Drew v....,, Executive Vice l'nlldent of •the bua company, 81ld tbe union'• complalats were "completely false." 1'They c1alm that our drivers are not properly trained," lllld Yowig. "Each driver goes throucb our own rigorous training In addlUoo ID ·pa15tng • •peclal Highway Palm tell." Tbe union baa claimed that driven were tupplied with the answers to the Highway Patrol tat belore they lab It. ''Of coune we Dow what quesUon1 wW be uked," aald'Y01D1g. "We prepare our driven tn the areaa: covered by the teat, but we don~ aopply them with answers." The union allo baa charged that the bus company aqpplled the drivers with first aid certllicala without providing any training. "We have • qualified !Int aid ln- ltrudor en our staff who gives taclt drlver about 10 hours of training," said Young. '1'hil allegation ls entirely un- true." In respome to the union allegation that driven were told to falsify safety checks wblcb they are aupposed to perfOJlll on thelr buse!I, Young said. "We 1nlpect them, tbe Highway Patrol Inspects them, and If a driver feela a bus ii unsafe she doesn't have to drive ll" "We have a cloee relaUonshlp with driven in Orange County and they are on our aide," &aid Young. "I don't think the strike will enter this county." DAILY PILOT HWllqlw ..... -· ... .. _ to construct a $170.000 headquarlers on civic center property, the councll agreed to scan the qualifications of three aeparate architectural partnerships in a special study session Wednelday night. Only one of the three applicants, Willard T. Jordan (who would work In partnership with Marvin Renfro) bas bad extensive experience with fire department designs. The other two applicants who will be bucking for the job are partnerships of RJek Nicol and Leon Hyzen and Eric Boucher and Arthur Drielsma. Jordan , an architect and city coun· cllma.n in Costa Men, has been the choJce of City Manager Kett CUT for the job, having designed. several fire ataUons .for Orange County and other cities. 'lbe interview process is ezpected to be similar to that which yielded for Baudler and llrielsma the job for the new community clubhouse. Each applicant le: uked to present a-resume of quallflcatlorll and 1ug- ge1Uo111 for the treatment of the archll«tural ~Ject. Tbe fee which will be paid tbe wlnoer is 5.5 perceot ol the !<llal cost ol the building. Councilmen have given no indication when they would act on another phue of tbe loog-awalted fire ciepartment upgradloi plan -hiring of lour new fuU.tfme firemen, plua launching of • unique crou-tralning program using a apeclal cadre of on-duty police officers as an truUaJ attack crew at major fittt. ¥1ney for the fire beadquarten ez-penae ulata In. the city budget Reven u' et: to hire four new full. lime men (bringing the total of full-Ume personnel to seven in the depllriment) II upected In next fiscal year'• revenue. Both expenses, however, will not be borne by property tax payera. Both the '170,000 for the station and the aUm1ted $40,000 for the men will be paid by the clty's clgaret 1moken, whose 1tate tax money for smokes returns to the city each year. Two Facing LSD Rap in Newport Two men are in custody in Newport Beach after they were arrested by polle. on charges with possession or $5,000 worth of LSD. Gary Carl Mitchell, 20, of Connecticut, and George Gallo, 21, of 985 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, were arrested Wednesday aftetnoon on suspicion of pos!lession of dangerous drugs for !ale. Detectives said tbe pair were stopped in their car at Clltf and Dover Drives after they were assertedly spatted dig- ging a container out of the gr o u n d ln the Westclif( area. Detective Al Epstein alleged the con- tainer had about 2,700 ~D tablets in it, which are valued at about $2: each In the illicit drug market. Bail has been set at $6,250 for Mitchell and 13.W for Gallo. llaroldFllcblr. "MOii lro belnr roualecrfrom lleep," bl 8'lded. aa!'tilc tblr ·-or iurprtM WU part of tbl llraleO • 8uq -.S olllcan had proo•ed Ill -" ~ Coata ..... Clll Jet! bJ IO:JO a.m., with paddy •af• prll>l- lng in more ,from locations u and down the coast. , \ "We're c:omlrig along pretty 1-nll. We've got 12 in custody now," said Garden Grove Detedive Sgt. Wayne Wilson. Raiders Mseinbled at Costa Mesa and Gardeo Gme police headquartm for Live Coverage Of Moon Walk The three major television networks in Southern Ca.J,ifomia will carry live coverage of the Apollo H luoar landing acbeduled early Friday morning. Both ChaMels 4 (NBC) ard Channel 7 (ABC) will carry the telecast from 12 :30 to 1:30 and Channel 2 (CBS I from I ID I: 30 a.m. Coverage of the first of two lunar walks:, scheduJed to begin at approlimately 5:50 a.m. will be as follows: ABC, 6:45 to 10 a.m.; NBC, 5:"5 to 11 a.m. and CBS, &-11 a.m. Additional coverage ii scheduled for Sattttday actlvltlell but local coverage has not yet been an- nounced. Rolls-Royce Firm Future Rocky; Receiver Named LONOON (UPI) -The Rolls-Royce Company, traditional prestigt symbol of BrlU!lb engtneerlng excelleoc:e, went into receivership today. The U.S. chartered accountant firm of Peat Marwick Mit· chell & Co., was named receiver and manager of the company. The company said it hid run into a serious cash crisis due to escalating costs of developing and building a new jet engine for the American Lockheed Co., asked for appointment of a receiver and manager and ukeci the. pernment to look into the company's finances . Tbe announcement of a receiver and manager to run it in place of the present management was made. after Rolls-Royce baited all stock exchange dealings in the company's shares in the crisis that threatened. lo force it out or business for want of sufficient funds. The opening price on the stock ex- change Wednesday was ,t.ti.'h and it finished at 93 cents, a fall of 191/a cents in its last trading day. The suspension was announced just after the market opened today when there wall a single Rolls quotation of 90 cents. The financial crisis rocked the London Stock Market and stocks of electrical and comeonents firms whlc:h supply the troubled Jet engine giant alsu fell . Appointment of a receiver does not constitute bankruptcy, but legal experts said it amounts to admission by the ex..isting management of its inability to carry on for lack of funds. The move came only hours before an expected government statement to Parliament on Rollll·Royc:e'll financial situation. Prime Minister Edward Heath held a three-hour cabinet meeting Wednesday night to discuss the crisis hitting the 65-year~ld firm . The former Labor Party government gave Rolls-Royce more than $1'4 million to help towards develOpment and pro- duction of the revolutionary new RB2IJ,:22 jet engine under a March. 1968, contract to supply the engines for Lockheed's new 25-seat Tris tar airliner. Last November, the present con- servative government promised an ad· ditional $110.8 million for the project. 5,a.m. brieflnl aai1ens belore movlo& lnlt tho !lold. D1'9cttte let Joblt. Retd WU ............. lhl.Coola MUI area llWffP • tinoDlwlni U,. !'11111 If\ detec:Uvea and llNll ..-.. .-two groops worked tbe Garden Grove area. Stali .. ent'll>dlarle Jock IMvey Hid the ruse ol cooilabucl coofilCalAd in pre-raid· deals nw from LSD. haahlJb, opium, peyote llld other hallucinogens. to OD1pbetamine compollllCb. beroln, and bort>ituralel, He uJd moat boM'QP are far Ule of narcoucs and clan(eroua ctniga. Small llllOWltl ol -drup -plua two lolded ._ 1n tbl a.,...., Grove rslds -were ·belntl' ,.,.,d,. wlll1e a few additional aiapecta not named lo warrants or lodic:tment.s were c•uaht. "We're pretty certain this will be even more successful than Ope-r•itton Harvest," said' Costa Mesa'• Lt, Fischer, The overnlgbt raid trlggettd 1u1·May 28 reached inland as far as Fullerton and netted 50-p\us . suspect!, ~-1 of whom are now serving state-pr i 1 on tenns. "'We've got a lot ol •rects• involved, a tot " added Lt. Fischer In refutOOI ' , ID avid .... tal<en durlnl the put lllrM months. Several thouland dollars In state-allot- ted IWlds was expended in gathering evidence which led to· issuance Wed- Delday of the Grand Jury indictments and complaints. lovestlgatoJl said the male and female suspecU range in age from 1$ to 35.,.. while a 49-year~d· mother allegedly in partnership with her eons was charged tn 1Nt year'• similar series .of raids. Sanitary District OK'd El 'foro Homeowners Approve Water Board Plan Property ownera In the El Toro Water District approved plans to form a sanitary dlltrlct Wednesday. With ohly four property owners representing only a litUe more than an acre of land oppoalng the move, the Board of Dlrtctors of the district were granted the right to e:s:erc:lJe water reclamation and sanitation 'powers. "It wouJd have laken 51 percent 0£ the owners of the 4,750 acres which comprise the district to keep \be board from assuming thete new powers," said Fritz Stradling, attorney . The first actlon to be taken by the district, which ' includes most of Leisure World, Aegean Hills, and parts of Lake Forest, will be to authorize a study of the district's present and future :ianltation needs. "If we decide to build some kind of reclamatioit facility we will bring it back to the tupayen for their ap- proval,'' said Hugh Walker, president of the board. Sanitary services in the district are currenUy provided by Rossmoor Sanita· lion Company, 'Ille company reclaims all the w a t e r U treats and pull Jt to beneficial use. But the time ii approaching when the Roumoor firm would have to expand their facilities and perhaps construct an ocean outfall to dispose of the efnuent that couldn't be used. If the compilny had built these facilltiell Jt would have had to pay 100 per«nt ol the cost llirlce It is not a public agency, a figure that would have been passed on' to its customers in raised fees. Now that the El Toro Water District is able to enter the sanitation and water reclamation field, it will he eligible to receive funds made available under the Clean Water Act paued by California voters lart November. If It decide• ID build a f~cillty of its own or participate with another district for a regional facility, the dilltrict will be able to receive up to 80 percent of the cost of construction through federal and !late grMts. "Instead of paying 100 percent of tbe cost , wbitb you would have paid lf Rosstnoor, a private concern, bad built it, you'll by paying only 20 percent and at the: same time wW be getting !<>me of these state funds you pay for back into your area," said Dan Boyle, englneer for the El Toro district. Boyle said there are two plam: to look into now. One is participation in Los Alisos and Moulton-Niguel's proposed water reclamation facility which will include ltl ocean outfall, and the other is tyln& into a propoaed pipeline to the ocean to be built by the Irvine Company. ••Al population increasea we will have- to do something with the reclaimed water we cannot use," said Boyle. "Now that· you hive approved the formation of the sanitary district we'll be able t.O' find a way to use it or dispose or it." Temporary High Rise Ban To Be Offered in Newport By L. PETER KRIEG Of tflo n.lly •ii.c lltft Emergency legislation that wouJd tem- porarlly ban all high-rise construction along the Newport Beach shoreline will be introduced at a meeting of the City Council Monday night. The ordinance, if adopted, would establish a 90-day Building Department moratoriwn on the issuance of permits for construction of any building mott than 35 feet high within the boundaries of the proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District. Councilman Cari Kymla , chairman of a councll·planning commission committee studying formation of the district, said be will, however , depart from normal proctdure and ask that a public hearing be scheduled on the ordinance Feb. 22. Pointing out that state law allows adoption of emergency measures without hearing, Kymla said hiJ panel feels tbe public should be given an opportunlfy to comment on tile proposal. As proposed, the civic district would include that area south of the Pacific: Coast Highway through West Newport, the proposed realigned Bayside Drive, Ocean Boulevard and Brighton Road. Creation of the district is intended to provide strict building control• anrund the Lower Bay and ocean front that would include relltric:tloos on height, design and density and aeveral other stlpulaUOns. Kymla last month had indicated aome high-rise would most likely be allowed eventually, but it would be carefully regulated and tied closely to open space' requirements. Kym1a said the ban will be _ aoughf because of the number of hlgb-rllle pro- jects the city expects to be submitted , in the immediate future. Among those known to be pending are the Balboa Bay Club apartment project and muJti-family development on the sites of the Fun Zone and the former Rendezvous Ballroom. Kymla said the emergency ordinance is necessary "simply because we have no set of tools to control development in the district now." He pointed out the couno1 bas given every indic:Stion it supports the Civle District concept and the committee' feebf· its effect sbouJd not be pre-empted by any construction before the district catf be created. "This action ," he said, "is necessary to allow completion of plans for the civic:: distrtct." Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings on HERITAGE Groups tstorqe Lamp T1blt --, •• ,. $299 NOW S2Jt by H'ERITAGt 11,o,. $149 I \ NOW 1119 OMNOI co.t.IT PUal.WtlNO COM,AN't Roltort N. WoN ,, . ...,, .,,. ,........, Joe.It It. C11rloy Viet ...... 1111111 •111111 OoMral ~ TftOll'IOI K.01'!( Native Restless You ire invit ed to visit our showrooms di1pl1 ying: r E"tor J\Olfttt A. M11rpJtlno M..,..lrit l!llltor l.iOari P. Hal a.vtl'I 0r.,.. """'" lllfllor -CO.le M ... 1 • Wal llY S"-t ""'*" 8tl(flo1 ~ "''" .... , 9tl!S.WNI • UllilM .. c:111 m ~, ... _ """'....,.,. ltodt1 17''5 hodl hulwtnl kli °"'*""' .. Ntrlll II t.rlllnl lltoal El Toro Girl Sues Lion Country The "roar" of an ta.year-old El Toro girl will be heard in the Orance C®nty Court House April 14 at an unfair labor praeUc:ell bearing involving Uon Country Safari of Laguna Hills. The girl , Heidi Gattonl, filed charge! Dec. 11 against the park and Teamstus Union local 235, contending she was forctd to Joln the lallor union as a condition of her employment. Although the suit Is filed in her name, Mi!IS Gattonl lays many of her 125 fellow employes support the action. The girl says she had no Intention of calling for any strike at the park and Is on (ood tel'ml with her employer. 'I'he suit will be heard by a National Labor R<!latlons Board (NLRB) examlnor In April. An NLRB spokesman said the charaes broughl by Mi,. Gatton! had llready been Investigated and an unfair labor pracUc:t.1 complain& had been lsalltd against Won Country Safari. the Teamster• Union. The agreement 1t.ated that the union would represent all non-management employes of the park who deal directly with the public. She &aid in September a union official brouJht contracts to the park for the affected employes to sign and that wall the first she knew of the agreement. 1be union official told her she ·had to join the union or lose her job at th• park. The gkl 1ald she began working at the park operating a ride for children and was liter moved to duties as a car rental booth operator. She is now a dog-and-cat kermel keeper. Uon Country a:eneral manager Harry Heath said the en.tire problem arose because the employe1 lhvolVtd "felt they should have been In on the ortclnal neaoU•Uons wlthJhe labor wllons.::___ commooe rna T1bfi ••9· ''1' HOW $109 -HERITAGE---, MADRIGAL HERITAGE----, BARACINI e ltdroom e Dlnlnt Room • Occ11lon1t 20~ e lecfroom e Occa1lon1f 20~ Your fovoritc dtaigntr will be happu to 01$Ut wiou e HERITAGE e DREXEL e KARASTAN HERITAGE----. BRENTANO and Nonnan Court 20% OFF H.J.GARRETf fURNllURE~ PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op11 Men., Tluan. l ftl. 1 ..... TRY OUR llVOLVIN• CHAl4H 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 646·0276 Mia Gatton! said 1he was hired by tbe park when It opentd ln June, 1.970, but knew nothing ot a labor contract the park manaaement bad 1lgntd with .iHowever, we have a &lined contract with the Teamsters and we jUlt can't v1olatc the agreement," he added. 'lbe \ 1)8rk management contend& the agree- ment with the union II ltgal and lhll I no employa baa bttn Ured lor not Jolnlnl th•unloll. '--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' • i ' I < • ' • • ' San flemAm~ ' .. -TeyJey'll H MI ... _ . . Capistran~ • EDl.Y·ION N.Y. 8ie elJ• , YO[. 64, NO. 30, 3 sedrioNs, 361 PA6ES . . ORAN&E ·COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TEN CENTS .. Capo Beach Alumniltelnemher 'Good Old DayS' Capi>trano Buch restaurateur Mlwy Ylllu I! chairman ·o( bis clau .....UOO this year, but finding bis old te.cher irui be tough. were..i.• llive, lhe would be . •i!oul 130 yean: old. . And no other teachers are av;lable ~ µ,t fivent, because when Yslai ~ a dozen other students . went to ICbool In Capiatl'lllO Buch thett was only ant teacher, "Mis& Barkins." Down the Miss.ion. ' ; Trail Chairman Named For POW Projeet MISSION VIEJO -Marilyn Rwsell of ~ion Viejo has been· named to lfead the Saddleback Valley .YOW)I Rlpublic8n "C:Oneern for Prisoners of War" pfoject. The project will aid the distribution of letters . and petitions requesting 9'e release of names of American prtaooen Gf war in Southeast Asia. 1 Mrs. Russell al.!o is seeking volunteer& to , man ~ project's headquarten at 17332 -~ Blvd., Tustin. 9Le11f1Ue FOf'lllf!ll LAKE· FOREST - A basketball league fbr boys 1-12 and 13 and over bas Ileen formed In Lake Fons!. . 1-ue play wlll be · on Monday; 'fednetdly •IOd Ft1day at the vill ... nark. A ~mber of 'the club. otalf '!Ill ~-all 'pmes. . ' ''Sil(n • up at tOe BeatjJ and T~ qlub omce. ,, 1""11e """" LAGUNA HILLS -Judge Wiil« Smith will dlllCOSS . "The Prtncipler and Practices of the American Judicial System" 7 p.m. Saturday in the Qreai We(lem Savings C.Ommunity Room, 24100 E1 Ton1 Road. 1'le program is sponsored by the Sad- dleback Valley Young !!<publican Club and will he followed by oervtce o( coffee and dessert. "'-Ne10 Sclaoob Seen EAST IRVINE -Two new elemeritary tthools may soon be authorized for Ole s&n Joaquin Elementary School District. Trustee3 have authorized applicltioM applying to the state for bugtting aid tor one and possibly two new schools if their projected enrollment and house count deems them eligible. The next· schools will be built in Lake Fore.st and in the Deane Homa section of Mission Viejo. ·The same plaiu used for the con- 1ituction of Regina School in Aegean Hills will be used for at least one alid maybe both sites. Judge Delays Murder Suspect Court Date Mi eight-day delay wu ordered WOdneoday Jn the _arraignment ol · a Wewood man accused of the killing ef a ff.year-old widow wboee nude and ·~angled body wu fOund in Modjeska Ci.Ayon. Judge Paul Mast aet the new date ln' Santa Ana municipal court tor ·Gkn Dile Ferguson, 36. The unemployed con- sthletion • worker is held without bail bflt>ranie t.OUnty Jail. ~Uf'1 investigators say Ferguma b•~ man who strangled 1.elma Rachel Wj_!ienst.ein of Norwalk last Jan. 1$ and dllmped her naked body ID a Modjeska . ''"""· The torpoo WIS found nm day b~o,,.ny or hikers. was arrested sil dayt later tn ~1 cloee to~tbe bar •l _ wlticb fdri.'Wltaenstt:in was la1t setn aUve . l•r ' S.trange Sandwich ~ings Complaint CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPI) -·A clttn-CUt yoong man politely uked for ..; • .,.. 11ndwtch at the Quarrier lllnor wednetday. When the sandwich ml•ed. ht "fYlled II neaUy In I paper napkin and· witboUt batting an eye guJped down the whole bundle In a few bites. On hi> way out. he turned and ooowled: i.Tblt> w•• the tougbeat eag uodwieh t ever ate." ' . And II lludenta rlftllnl fnllll eJein.n. tary to hlch ochool ..... fOrmed the entito lludent boc17. On Sunday, the n.lnt available. alumni of the now vlDilbed o ri e • r o o m schlolhouee will-11ther at Yslu' Mugarjta Inn to.'lhare ~IJI ~ when muk cost a Dietel a quart, the town hid' dirt roads and eVer jbody went to du.s in • aingle room. "We couldn't find all of the students," G.ty Bonds Split Into Four Issues Two city councilmen changed their minds Jn"S,n'.Cl~te Wednesday and what follo~ :wu'anotber major shuffle In the April 211·~. proposltioo covering $1 million th rtereation 'bonds. · Inltead of cJumpin'g , 111 four m,ajor '' .. ' . recr~;aUon projectl -· a new clubhouse. • ~lh center, pJer entr~e and local parb ...:... into one,. cooncllmea . chose to set up , four eepara~ .ballot pro- po1iti0Ds. Each· would reqWrt 1 two- thirds m1jorily wt;:. • In the action launched by Councilmen Stan Northrup ,~-_Wade •Lower, the pilieF yielded · to beliefs" thit· community leaden ·wlllcb they corisulted In the pa,ot few wttb rtflecied1 pesslrili;nil about an omnibus bond m·euure •. 'Ibe belief was booStid-Wedflesday with the receipt ol ~-!tom the San CleJ)\tnte Ari• and r;;t:~b and the CcJllll.iei ~ •?"' . tWcliiota• Jssbe. r ·;-·-r1 J' .• , •• '191aduho and-·•(lrint•dt!MN w.bo -~~. written the r city 1n recent aay1'urai!I' )lulf tlle "l4Dl.Olll cl-.... -~ -·. . ' . . !""' '"l'li< more 1 '.thought' 111ou1 • tt. the more r lr11 coovincecj "IJlat the Iola! ~~~dn't ~ass,'"' N~rthr\lp told Dr •• Lower, -who later ca1t the only disaentlng •vote on the JQotioa tp 1~atf: t&. iuUes,.-uid· be · hu{ "covered the en~ to~ ~n 1 the. l,a,t two weeks .and I ltill llann't found •D)"Olt .. ln ·favor of the bond lssue.' ' · "i hive ·always been against · the shotpn approach ,to bond luues," he . 1di!04.; . ""'1'al pha,.. ol the. bond wue 11111 requtre council action. In COl1\inl weeb each COW'ICUman will select five citUenl to l!n'e .on a 25-man cittzen11 committee · which will work for pas.a:e of the four MJ>lrate bond Items. Special JeaaJ cmmseJ ·wiU have to 1e1n the latest tt.aolution 1eparating the bond aegmenls. Councilmen meeting in study session next Wednetday night also will meet wllh representative of financial con- sulting .firml to .decide if a apeclal finan· cial consultant should be hired for lhe bond i&!ue. On elect.km d~. the recreation revenue measure will share the ballot with can· didates for trust~ positions in the Capistrano Unified School J)lltrid 1 n d the S-ellock Community C';ollege Dlltrict. No other reveftUe meuurea will be "' the hallo!. City Clerk .. Mu Berg told Cooncilmen Wedneaday he belleva blendlnl the city issue on the 1ebool-ballot could 11ve tl,IXIO or more over the eost .t.lmrted for 1 special election. · Foes to the omnlbul approach to the bonclo told COW>CJlnien WedModay Ula! the Umin& for the Wit praenled a problom. Ducks Lose ' ' . In VCI TaUy UC lrllne bp,ncolved the W!y ,ol duckl blaed'1• tlle unl.....ity'1 · San Joaqutil -by the, oeven-member San J~ Oun Club which hat ercluolve rlghta to hunt Jn the ....,,, ' . 'or. ~Mani).· cllalrman of the wtkllile preome commit~ !UpOllllble fO< the 200 ..,.. lJllnh near the UC-campus, aid the tally atemed '1ow.", Slilhtly mono than 400 blrd1 were baa~: w. lllld. • • M.rolt talll ht ,... wrl!lnf . the 11\111 -clilb to find out how' many iluntm ,..,. min( !lie manli .... ~, . hwJUnl ....... which . ended Jan. 16. Under terms ol the IS.000 leaae to the 11111 dub, .hun1'rt are to liltl the number and types of btrda 1bol by IMlll.bert. aald Ystaa, who 111>iainoct'tbat.the llChool "Everythlna b IO chanled fnllll tho11 had all l(l'odel up to btgh ochool. "Some daya, Y&lu nmembert. "Sin Clemente of the boys and girb .... pretty old." -.01 then!; It WU Jii.t . for -the 'Ibe teacher tr.Wled by train from . cattle, then." Slnta Ana each dl,Y ·to .teach the 13 'J1le. prosperous• Y1111, who no.w owna chlldrtn from the nine or 10 houses almost a block of Doheny P~ Road in the k>wer C,pbtrano VaUey, in the commercial buiJdincs, wu industrious secoDd public ICbool in the Capistrano early: in bis y~an. · · Bay area. ' · "In 1921 I worked for 10 cents a The fint, San Juan School, was ont day," be ~ '.'but· we C'tUld buy a ol the flm in Orang.i County. · quart ·Of milk from• the BllCbbeims ·for . . five .,. .... " terl>ournt, who Wll ~ lludent lild lite!:' By 1133 the economic lilllltioo Wll lllll>otllUle tea-. much Im~: Mickey Col •job f"!O' • Of Al Hem'ra of , eapiltmlo -. CllJ<oco Brwn cleartnc deadwood from one· of the Sunday ,-, v,ia. I01I. tlle Or&lll• --lor 12 ..... per "Al .ll<ipped !«Jr l'ldu In -· -hour. • and wen\ Up to !hi . high atbool' I I Capl1lr111G Valley rancher Car 1· Caplatrano . wbien· he WU nine• or · 10 Buchheim will be one of the ."boy1" yeara old." · · . . of Ylllu' reunioo. Tbe"'girla" illll livinC Allor dlnnor the former lludeafl will tn the an!I who .,,, 'njiected 11< Mill' rmitt .the 11\o of !be-iild ocbbol - Tlavll)&, ~~vb, Betty !Jstrfilo, _,..Ml' juot 11! old dupltt-Ullld llllpj1 Martlll Saucedo aod D 1 I 1 y Wirt-"251811--Calle Jlomin&o.'' . ' U.S., South Viet Troops . . ' Mass Near---La-os .Border Excited Crewme n In Lunar Orh·it: SPACE CENTER; Houol<iO (AP) Apollo lf's a:tited• utronmdt drtMd a moon they called "wild" and '!fm. taaUc" 'today, re8.dy tO ·•tteiWIK a bolbeye llildJng Ftkfl)" in I ' - valley in ' the bleak and rocD ilinar h~; . ...t.},(1'~}5·;. .'f Q.'~ ·'·~ ··w'oW; thll : .. ~!\·· !!I ~ up hetr,"·~ mllllbrr.~iier Alan B. SbepoM Jr. oltor'lly afttr·Ajlollo H 'llred lntO•ltmlr orllit WI)> today.' . ·Al -thty 1;,liled ovtt tttt :F.ra MaUro landing atte; Edgar D.' Mitcbell aald: "It -•loi*s rouah ·"""" t!Jere, As intere.ting II thJI ii from orbit, it just wtieta•your 1ooeuie:1o ,a-. !here.'" ''Fantaauc.:.\'.ou.'re not 1olng-to believe thia. It Joob jlllt like the: map," uJd Stuart A. llOOA. . ' Tustin Hig:h DiStrict ' .. May Be ·cut Inro Thirds . By PAMELA HAU.AN Of rtN DeltY PHH lleff The Tustin High ' School District may be CMYed into three aeparate tmified school district! when the voters go to the polil In Jilne of Im. Ralph Gates, Superllltendent ol the San•Joaquin Elementary School District, described the plan to the Board of Trusteeo Wedneaday, but 1treued the fact llllt this II mly "" Idea. "If the public indicata lt wou1d like to consider sqch. a IDOYe It's going to take a great deal of wcrt," Aid Gal.el. He outlined three poalble alternatives. One II for the -district to support a propoaal which would unl{y !be Son Joa· quin, Tultia. Elementary and Trabuco dtatrlcll alone the uiltlng high achoo! boundaries. The other would be to-oppose unifie> U011 completely, ond tho third ii to draw up 1 pl.-n for three 1eparate diltrlcts. The board wu l.lllJlimous In Its dislike of one iprlwllng unified dl!trict alonf the bow1darlea of the Tuotln High School District. "!-think tt would be ridiculous to u n I f y 1lorlg the high. achoo! diltrtct boundaries," said Board Chairman Gri· Uan Bldart. "Even Los Angeles b llarl· Ing to decentralize because a muslve district just doesn't work." Galea said if voters decide to unify into three different districts, .the boun- daries would have 'to be dra~' tip ac- cordlng to the diltri_bution of we'.1:1,tb. "The law prescribes that there can be only · 15 percent difference-in aueAed valuation pet pupil whf.n· district.I over the state average · are divided,"· old Gates. He emphuized Ula! the .dlttlculty arises In the fact that tbia useaed valuatlon figure must be a aeveo year projection Into the (Jrtun. He added that boundlrte,.,,hicb rnigbl be considered would · be the Tuotln Elementary District u one. the Jnrille Ranch boundaries ("hich comprlaed the orialn1l San J_,ln Dlllrtct u ·anothet, and the Mission Vltjo, El Toro, Ll1U11a Hilb, and Trabuco are11 (which were the old El Toro 'dtatrlct) 11 the 1hlrit'. ' ,UPl!T~ THUMas· U(' f'ORI STUART Apollo .. !'4. w it. .Joli n '110oia ' Ceremonies Held. In D~a HarhQi ... · County oJficlalS and · repf.~ti\lv8 from a Newpdrt. Beach dl!velop'ment ftrin launched the firlt of the private, dry-lirid projects at •Dana Harbor Wednesday - the first segment of boat 1llps. County tDtrictor of Harbor•,· Beachel aild Parka lteruleth Sampaon .aod Fifth Dtitrtct' Supervl!or Ronald C11per1 jOfn. ed offic.iala qr , Mirine Capl~I. Inc., 'Of Newport BeaCh·at the ceremonies. • 1 TI)e' Newport Beach firm , which "'!" the coonty Ieue for all the ~I 1ltpa In the marina, upeda to complete IJ>e firil aevei;al h,undl:ed slips in. Ute doWncout "basin be(ore th~ summer RaSon. ThOle 1llpi. officlah said, already ~e reserved. and the w1!tiri1 lilt for l1)0re . boat berths has hundi'eda of names. Nigeria March Rou ted LAGOS. Nigeria , (UPI) -Police f~ed tearga1 Wednelday to disperae ·lbousanda of studenp marchlitg from tbe -m1inland to the llland ol Lagos to protest the 1hootJ.n1 fdonday of. a stu,deJti at N~~·· Univenh.y of Ibtdan. . Fire Losses ·set··Record ' . Clubho r.,,se B~ Boosts SaJJ. Ckme1r1e Damage T oll .. By JOHN VALTERZA ..... _.,,, ....... San Cemente'1 1tnlctural fire. louea In 1'70 were the bllhest in the ci\y'1 history -1173,90$. Jn hi• llUIU8l report to city councilmen, F~e Chief Merton Hackett aald the C011tly Community· aubhoule blaze ind two major house fltet later In the year contributed to the dollar toll In charrad property. The lllt fllure WQ 118,JSi, H~ departmen~ llackitl; I d d e d ' answered more Ure .alarms J than ever before -SS aeneraJ al~, 138 "still 1l1rm1'1.ud IO non.ftrt alll .riqulclnc . Iliff work. The city's .total rucue 1 t • rm 1 1mowrted to . HI , compared to ~ Jn 199. . Tbe city" hlluY> In e11111111et cb-inf' the year. the chief aaid , aod only three f1be .ll1rmo<:werelr1C9<i!ed for the eotlra year; Al-. 1~pedtd, ta bua:e .ihm of: the nk '"' dollO by; tlle two· NIMinle firemen who along wtOi tho' clllOI w0rl out of fire beadquartm. Tbe ctty•a lllllll 1C1111d pumper, capable of being tlMld either •'I TelCQt vebk!la or 1mall flr_eflghlmg .rl&, wu aMll ao about•· perCeat of the y41ar '1 calla. l'uD·Ume llremen Don H~, ,. .. .-• .and Sblldon Schmidt .ian Iha! I l vehicle. llurtnc the Y"r. the rJc WM Uled .... 330 calll. compand, .. 31 for the two lqer tnlcka '""'1 . II for • Ille c:lllef'I tlatloa W-, wbich 4'Nbla U 11reicue antt. · . · · 1 • . · · .HlckeU.. ·lludY . of peak. porloda 1.r lift ' deparlment -lee• oliowed thll bllwoen 7 a.In. arHI a p.m., whell full·Ilnie tnen are OD chrty, )IO. a1lrms wVe phoned In •. °':"Iii( Iii>' oilier houis .cf each W'0 wheil nc> f\ID·tlme pel'IC)rlMI were "9lk- llif. the'<lepartmenl uperlenojd 71 c~ Clpmj ~ mat<hei wett•the ~~ ·-ibtrt«I •to· San C1emoata'1 .. 1m bluoo ...... Id . ·' ' . ' .. 50,000Men Preparing · • • • 1 . . For Drives , SA!GqN (UPI) -A"f9r\:e of :111,00I Soulb .Vletnameoe . bac~ by l,OOI Amertcu .1rnopa and·-u.s. 11r powu mailed Oil \he btJrder of LIOI tqdq, ~tru#,.~aald·-­n~rpt.· .fot;•Y · hi~ Lio. ~·be!" Imo mlnenl ' . • Whil& •,oao·u.s. a so.Ida VJett=·i1 troopi'_ 1irepl •.e.... '!he llOr\lioniolorn ..,,,.;. ol South . Vietnamese and 111 UninoWri numbtr· of Cambodiau backed by Amertclll pl..., moved !htovgb .lbl Cambbdjap-border region •kin& two Conimimbt dlvblons. . The total of more thin I0,000 ·men Involved .Jn the ~ drt,.. .Wu belle'nd to be the lq<st•IOlcll .,;.ntlon o1·t1w Indocblna .wor. It llroogbl 1 ...,,.. Jna .ftom Communist CbJna that P~ wl.11 luPPort the Conuiiunlill forCa "antll flnll. flctory.'" ,_ oiory. pige 4). • .. . Tbe mllJtary lltuatlon lnllde 1-' lllell wu worsening for the 1overftrnmt. Ii V(e~ dilplt<h alfd I llOrtll'.VJil. ~ (orco which c'iptl\ted ·w_, Suol Wednesday hid pUolted II Dilleo weit.tr•rd. Banakok • dllpatchM· .. 1c1 'll\l!IWW had , 1en11pec1-1 '""""'·to· llit bor)ler. of 11.. oppaslte the Conuii-thrust . . nie ·u.s. Command 1n ~ tho 29,tllo-inan drive Jn ni>rlhwmmi Soutll vi.tn.m Just bel•" · the demlll1artaed 101!0 \DMZ) lifted the · llOteat ..,.. einbargo of the IndoChlna 1 War , -a 1ix ~Y blackoul, Th!> ..,..,.,.s , ... nouncid no U.S. forcu :wauld el!W'1- but it 1"11 ~n the qUesuoa of -Soath Vietnamese forces would ·emu. ' In Wuhingtoo, Def-Secretary Melvin R. Lalrd defended the blackouc and said not a single American wu I01t from 'enemy ·~ in the flrat six days of the operaUon, Dewey Canon ill: II« Implied that the blackout WU at leut1partly responsible. Analylts. In Wublngton aid muoJnc of tho allied ln>opa ... the border hid I double bllm!led. objecUve -to obow Hanoi the Ylllnmblllty of their •llllnl area just aouth ol ·Se-In Laoa ....i to slow doiln the bolldup In. the · - throqh ~ of the Ho t'lll lllnb trail. C.wld It'll be I IWlny 73 in Oruip County Friday, but yoo beUer bundle up if )'OU'rt out in early mornlp1 hOlln -tho tamp b lal>- bed It' •, ~llJ'MI. . , .. . 1 .INSmE TOD4" . Al"' • obff11<:e of ....,_ Ul(lf. ston vror•. Jatlde lrmMlfW Onauil and l'&tr chUdrn ....,.... ~ turn4(1' unarin.Ouric1d Yor a private. vt1wiilg 'bf. promuu •I l h•rllJI """ .1hr· i.itt 1!!1~t Paa< 4. ' ~ 1 .......... M l ~ .. ll .... ' • =-"':. ::..":. l: ,_ .. ___ ,, ~ ......... ,. ..... .. f ........ -lJ.... ... .....,.,..,, ..... ,........ ... Tl llU::Mll a ......._ • ....... ""' ......... ~ . -.... 11 ·-.i Am ......... 11 ·:...i•" ....... .. ~U....11 ........ .. I DAJ~Y PILOT T~...i.,, ft.bnlMJ ~. 1911 Biggest Raid Nets 30 on Drug Push Charges ) 117 AllTllUll R. VINSEL • ... DMtt ..... Mitt Slrtldio ii·-. ...... of .. ..,... '*' ~ ~ Doybrttk. tba lupot ........, of aupect<d psydiedtllc ctr,.. and narcotics wholesalers in Orange Cooll blllocy. Tb< allqed dealors-ln<leath we"' being -'llliopll1 r .. m their beda without lnddenl Raider teams fanning out from two ·~ area -1n Costa Mesa and Golilen Crove-by mtd·momlog had cap- ~ about IO &mOOI fl suspects named In i lbl'ee.moath probe. Arclaitect Issue Lawmtu from seven police ~1 and Ibo Stale )luroau of NarcoUca -........ .,e.t1ntho- wblcb will -Lut -·· -Operallon llarvtlL 1bey canted lndlctmeall 1114 felony complalnll -flnl imled by Iba 1111 Orange County Grand Jury -based on a series 01· tarce«ale drug aalt1 to undercover agents. Scope of the sweep is so widespread that two deputy district attorneys were uslgoed, just to answer legal quesUom: "We're having very few problems," l&ld Costa Mesa Police Det<eUvo LL Clemente Balks On Fire Station By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. Dallr ,, .. , 119" City Councilmen ln San Clemente again balbd II Immediate hiring of an arcbltect for a new fire department headqllllfera Wedlleoday, qroelng in- stead to conduct interviews for the job In a-t. After brief discussion of the plans Bus Firm Denies Union Charges Of Poor Safety Officials of the Communlty Charter Bus Company denied Wlion charges Wednesday that they have been ignoring safety standlrda hi the upk .. p of tbelr veblcleJ and the training of their drivers. The abegaUons were made by the Teamsters Union which Is acting as representative .tor 35 tchool bwi driven on strike 1n the Compton-Long Beach area. 'Ille union has threatened to spread the otrike )o Orange County where the bus company transports all the chlldttn from the Sao Joaquin Elementary School District and .... third of the bus load from the CapistrlllO Unified S<:bool DistrlcL Dmr Young, ExecuUve Vlce President of the bu company. saJd the union's compl&inta were "completely falst." "Tbey claim that our driven are qot properJy tralnod." said Young. "Each drJver eoes through our own rigorous tralnlng In addltion to passing a special Highway Patrol test." The unkn has claimed that drJvers we~ supplled with the answers to the Highway Patrol test before they take ll "Of course we know what quesUons will be ated." said Young. "We prepare our drivers 1n the areas covered by the test, but we don't supply them with answers." 1bo union alto baa charged that tho bus company supplied the drivers with first aid certificates without providing any tralntng. "We have a qualified first aid in- ltructlr Cll our staff who gives each driver aboat 10 hollr! of training," aaid Younil:. "Ibis allegation l5 entirely Wl· true." la response to lhe union allegation that drivers were told to falsify safety checks whlch they are supposed to perform on their buse3, Young said. "We imped them, the Highway Patrol Wpedl them, and U a driver feels I but , la 1ln5ife she doesn't have to drivi.it." · "We bave a cloae relaUonshlp with driver1 in Orange County and they are on ogr side," said Young. "l don't think \he &trike will enter this county.'' DAILY PILOT """"" ... " ............ ............ .. _,_ C....MIM S.CI , ... OltAKI: CO.UT l"uat.IMtlNG CCM,.AN't to construd a •110,000 headquarters on ·ctvte center proiterty, the councll agreed to scan the qualilicaUon.s of three aeparate architectural partnersblps in ~special study session Wednelday night. Only one af the three ·applicants, Willard T. Jordan (who would work in partnership wiUt Marvin Renfro) has had ertensive experience with fire department designs. nie other two applicants who will be bucking !Qr the job are partnerships of ~ck Nicol and "Leon Hyun and Eric Boocher and Arthur Drlelama. Jordan, an architect and city coun- cilman ln Costa Mesa, has been the choice of City Manager Ken Carr for the job, having designed several fire 1tations for Orange County and other cities. The interview proceas la expected to be similar to thal which yielded for Boucher and Drielama the lob -for the new commWlltY clubhouae. Each applicant it asked to present a resume of qualificaUom and sug- gesUom for the tuatment of the archit<eturai project. The fee which will be paid the winner is 5.$ percent of the total coat of the building. c.ouncilmen have liven no indlcation when they would act on another phase of lhe Jong.awaited fire department upgrading plan -hiring of four new full-tlme firemen, plus launchiDg of a unique cros&-tralnlng program using a special cadre of oJHtuty police officers as an lnitla1 attack crew at major flrn. Money for the fire headquartera cx- peme exists in the city budget. R e v e n u e a to hire four new fUlJ.. lime men (bringing .ihe total of full.time personnel to seven in the department) ii expected In next fiscal year's revenue. Both e1penses, however, will not be home by property tu payers. Both the $170,000 for the stallon and the estimated $40,000 for the men wlll be paid by the city's clgaret smokers, whose state t.u money for 1moke1 returns to the city each year. Two Facing LSD Rapin Newport Two men are in custody in Newport Beach after they were arrested by police on charges with possession of $5,000 worth of LSD. Gary Carl Mitchell, 20, of Connecticut, and George Gallo, 21, of ~ N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, were arrested Wedne~ay afternoon on suspicion of possession of dangerous drugs for sale. Detectives said the pair were stopped in their car at Cliff and Dover Drives after they were assertedly spotted dig· ging a container out o! the. gr o u n d in the WestcliU area. Detective Al Epstein alleged the con- tainer had about 2,700 LSD tablets In it., which are v alued at about $2 each in the illicit drug market. Bail has been set at $6,250 for Mitchell and $3,125 for Gallo . Harold Fllcber. "Most .,. being ....it<! from sleei>," be added, aaylq tbll element ti llll1"ile WU part ti the llrotaaY. Busy bookiDC offtcen: bid proce111d 20 ,_.. Into Costa 11... City Jail bJ ll:IO a.m., with paddy wqona bring- in&: ln more from locaUons up and down the coast. "We're coming along pretty well. We've got 12 in custody now," said Garden Grove Detective Sgt. W1yne Wilson. Raiders assembled at Costa Mesa and Garden Grove police beadquarten for Live Coverage Of Moon Walk The three major telev i1lon networks in Southern California will carry live coverage of the Apollo lt lunar landing scheduled early Friday morning. Both Chanoels 4 (NBC) and Channel 7 (ABC) will carry the telecast from 12:30 to 1:30 and Channel 2 (CBS) fr om 1 to 1:30 a.m. Coverage of the first of two lunar walks, scheduled to begin at approrlmately 5:50 a.m. will be as follows : ABC, 5:45 to 10 a.m.; NBC, 5:45 to 11 a.m. and CBS, ~11 a.m. Additional coverage is schedu1ed for Saturday activities but local coverage has not yet been an- nounce4- Rolls· Royce Firm Future Rocky; Receiver Named LONDON (UPI) -1bo Rolls-Royce Company, traditional prestige .symbol of British engineering excellence, went into receivership today. The U.S. chartered accountant firm of Peat Marwick Mil· chelt & Co., was named receiver and manager Qf the company. The company said it bad run into a aerious cub crisis due to escalating costs of developing and building 1 new jet engine for the American Lockheed Co., asked for appointment of a receiver · and manager and aske6 the government to look into the company's finances. 'I'be announcement of a receiver and manager to nm it in place ol the present management was made after Rolls-Royce baited all stock ~change deallnga In the company's shares in the crisis that threatened to force it out of business for want of sufficient funds. The opening price on the stock ex- change Wedoesday was 11.U.\I and It finished at 93 cents, a fall of 19~ cents in its last trading day. The suspension was announced just after the market opened today wben there wu a single Rolls quotation of 90 cents. The financial crilis rocked the London Stock ~farket and stocks of electrical and comp:>nents firms wh.k:h supply the troubled jet engine giant alsu fell. App>lntJPent of a rectlver does not constitute bankruptcy, but legal experts said it amounts to admission by the existing management of its inability to carry on for Jack of funds. The move came ooly hours befort an expected government statement to Parliament on Rolls-Royce 's financial situation. Prime Minister Edward Heath held a three-hour cabinet meeUng Wednesday night to discuss the crisis bitting the 65-year-old firm. The former Labor Party government gave Rolls-Royce more than $1"4 mUUon to help towards development and p~ duction of the revolutionary new RB211-22 jet engine under a March. 11168, contract to supply the engines for Lockheed'• new ZS.seat Tristar airliner. Last November, tbe present con- servative government promised an 1d· dlUon1I $110.I million for the project I .a.in. brieCLD1 Mlllom before moving IDlo tba lleld. Detective SCI. Jobn ltepo WU rpearbud1Dc tbe Calta Mtll area sweep hm>l'!lnl !he tams ti detocUvea and • • BNE qmta, wblle two groups worked the 0'1*n Crov• area. Stite qept-liKbarae Jack Leaver said tbe rana:• ol contraband <X1nfiscated in pre-raid deala runs rrom LSD, hashish, opium, peyote and other ballucinoge'ns, to ampbelamine comPounds, heroin and barblturate1. He aald most booklnp are for sale of 11MCOU<1 and danjjeroua drugs • Small amOUDll of cootraband drup -pl111 two loaded weopooa IA the Garden Grove ralds -were be~ found, while a few additional susp9cu not named ln warrants or lndictmenta were caught. ••we're pretty certain ~ will 'be ~en more successfu1 than O p e r a t i o n Harvest," sald COl!lta Mesa's Lt. FlscPer. The overnight raid triggered last May 2.8 reached inland as far as Fullttton and netted IO-plus suspects, many of wboq1; are now servinc state p r 1 a on tenm. 1'We've eot a lot ol ·~· Involved.. a lot, I' added JJ.. Fischer In rdmnce to evidence taken during tba put three months. ' Several thousand dollars in state-alto~ ted funds was expended in gathering evidence which led to issuance Wed· nesday of the Grand Jury indictments and complainls. Investigators said the male and femaie suspects range in age from 15 to 35, while a (9-year-old mother allegedly In partnership with her sons was charged in last year's l1mllar series of raids. 1 Sanitary District OK'd El Toro Ho1neowners Approve Water Board PlaJJ. Property owners 1n the El TOro ,Water District approved plans to form a sanitary d~tricl Wednesday. With oQ]y four property owners representing only a little more than an acre of land opposing the move, the Board of Directors of the district were granted the right to exercise water reclamation and sanitation powers. "It would have taken 51 percent of the owners of the t ,750 acres wbich comprise the diatricL to keep the board from assuming these new powers," said Fritz Stradling, attorney. The first action to be taken by the district, which includes mo.!t of Leisure World, Aegean Hills, and part.I of Lake Forest, wilt be to autboriu a atudy of the district's present and future sanitation needs. "If we decide to build some kind of reclamation facility we will bring it back to the taxpayers for their ap. proval," said Hugh Walker, president of !he board. Sanitary services in the district are currently provided by Rossmoor Sanita· tlon Company. 'Ille company reclaims all the w a t e r it treats and puts it to beneficial use. But the time is approaching when the Rossmoor firm would have to expand their facilities and perhaps construct an· ocean outfall to dispose of the effluent thal couldn't be uaed. lf the company had bullt these facilities it would have had to pay 100 percent of the cost 111.nce it is not a public agency. a figure that would have been passed on to ill customers in raiJed feeJ. Now that the El Toro Water District Is able to enter the sanitation and Water reclamation field, it wlll be eligible to receive funds made avallable under the Clean Water Act paued by California voters last November. U it decides to build a facility of ita own or participate with another dlstrict,for a regional facility, the' district will be able to rf:Cf;iVe up to 80 percent of the cost of construction through federal and 1tate granta. "Instead of paying 100 percent of the cost, which you would have paid if Rossmoor, a private concern, had built it, you'll by paying only 20 percent and at the same time will be getting some of these state funds you pay for back into your area ," said Dan Boyle, engineer for the El Toro district. Boyle said there are two plans to look lnto now. Ooe is participation in Los Alisos and Mou1ton-Nlguel'1 proposed water reclamation facility wblcb will include an ocean outfall, and the other is tying into a proposed pipeline to the ocean to be bWlt by the Irvine Company. "As populaUon increases we will have to do something with the reclaimed water we cannot use," said Boyle. "Now that you have approved the formation ot the sanitary district we'll be able to· find a way to use it or dispose of· it." Temporary High Rise Ban To Be Offered in Newport By L. PETER KRIEC DI t11t o.nr ~ll•t St•ff Emergency legislaUon that would tern· porarlly ban all high-rise construction along the Newport Beach shoreline wlll . be introduti!d at a meeting of the City Council Monday night. The ordinanti!, if adopted, would establish a 90-day Building Department moratorium on the issuance of permits for construction of any building more than 35 feet high within the boundaries of the proposed Lower Newport Bay Civic District. Council.man Carl Kymla. chairman of a council-plaMing commission committee studying formation of the district, said he will, however. depart from normal procedure and ask that a public &earing be scheduled on the ordinance: Feb. 22. Pointing out that state law allows adoption of emergency measures without hearing, Kymla said his panel feels the public should be glven an opportunity to comment on the proposal. A3 proposed, the civic district would include that area south of the Pacific Coast Highway through West Newport, the proposed realigned Bayside Drive, Ocean Boulevard and Brighton Road. Creation of the district is intended to provide strict building controls an>lllld the Lower Bay and ocean front that · would include restrlcttons on height. design and density and 1Jeveral other stipulations. Kymla last month had indicated some high-rise would most likely be allowed eventually, but it would be carefu11y regulated and tied closely to open space requirements. Kymla said the ban will be sought becaUse of the number of high-rise pro- jects the city expects to be submitted in the immediate future. Among those known to be pending are the Balboa Bay Club apartment• piyject and mu1ti-family deveJopment oo the sites of the Fun Zone and the former Rendezvous Ballroom. Kymla said the emergency ordinance is necessary "simply because we have no set of too!S to control development in the dillrict now." He pointed out the council bas 1iven every indication it supports the Civic District concept and the committee feels its effect shouJd not be pre-empted by any construction before the district cap. be created. "This action," he said, "is necessary to allow compl~tiO_!l of plans for the civic di.strict." Last chance to take advantage of Big Savings an HERITAGE Groups Enelnada r5toraa1 Ump T1ble R•9. $1,t NOW S1.1t byHERITAGt Re9. $14t NOW $lit I J:oilort N. WoM P...Wtnl ..... l"vlllllfw J1c• a. C.rloy Native Restless I Y,ou ere invited to visit our 1howroorn1 di1pleyin9: Vb ,,_lftnt ttAI ~I ~ 1110111•• KttYil Ellltff' Jlto,,.11 A. M1t,,hl111 ~Int ftllw Ate~trd P. "'I SWiii cw..,.. ewntr 1m.r -C:.t1 M_.1 m W.I e.ty llrett f\INJ*I IMdu tf'tl 'olftll a.1101 ...,lntN • L...-w .. "'' m ...,.., A....w Hwlt"-"" t.tdl1 17'11 ltW! aov,....l'lf S.fi ~I • N«fll II C.mlnl RMI • El Toro Girl Sues Lion Country The "roar" of an 18-year-old El Toro girl will be heard Jn the Orange County C.Ourt House April 14 at an unlalr labor practices hearing involving Lion Country Safari or Laguna H1lia. The girl, Heidi Gatton!, filed charges Dec. 11 agai.nSt the park and Teamsters Union local 235, contending sbe was forced to joln the labor union as a condlUon of her employment. Although the suit is filed in her mi.me, Miss Galtoni says many oI ht:r 125 fellow employes suppart the action. The girl says she had no Intention of calling for any strike at the park and la on good lenTll with her employer. The suit will be heard by a National Labor Relations Board <NLRB) e:rarninor in April An NLRB apoktsman sak1 the charges brought by Miss Galtonl had already betn inve.sU&ated and an unfair labor practlcts complaint had been ! issued against Lion Country Safari. lhe Teamsters Union. The agreement stated that the wUon wou1d represent all non-management employes of the park who deal directly with the public. She said in September a union official brought contracts to the park for the aftecttd employes to sign and that wa s the first she knew or the agreement. The union olflcial told her she had to join the union or lose her job at the park. The girl said she began working al the park operatin& a ride for children and was later moved to duUes 11 a car rtntal booth operator. She is naw a dot:·aD<kaL kennel keeper. Uon Country general manager Harry He1th said tbe entlre problem 1roae because the employe:s lavoJved 11fett they should bave been In on the ortalnal negoti.sllon! with the labor unions." --.,.~~ T br-J:•t· t 11t ...,,"moot ~ng 1 '' NOW $109 HERITAGE---. MADRIGAL • hdroom • Dining Room • Occ1tlon1l 20~ HERITAGE--- IARACINI • Bedroom e Occ11ion1I 20~ e HERITAGE e DREXEL e KARASTAN HElllTAGE--- IRENTANO and Nonnan Court 20"-OFF Your favorite dc.si"ncr wiU be ham to a&1i1t 11ou H.J.GARRETI fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS OpH lloo .. Thurs. & Fri-1,.._ TRT OUR RIVOLVfNIO CHARGE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6~6-0275 646-0276 Miss Gattoni said she was hired by the park when It opened tn June. 1970, but knew nothing o( a labor contract the park mana1emeol bad •lined with• "However, we have a signed conlrad with the Teamst.en and we just can't violate. the agreement," he added. 'Ihe I park management coqtends the agret· ment wlth the union ts legal a.nd that \ no employe hu been fired for nnl joining lbeuruon. · ~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 I I I I I • Lodge Names New Leaders A new slate of o!fklers ls at the helm of the Trygve Lie Lodge, Sons of Norway, headed by William Moss, pmldent. other r.iew leaders are Einer Rasmussen, vice president; Mrs. Harold Hammer , secretary; Miss Rag n h i Id Moe, assistant secretary; Len WoUord, couuelor; Harold Hammer, treasurer; M r s • Paul BergfQrd, toci.al director, and Mn. 1borbjom Hansen, =istant social direclor. Others are Mrs. Rasm\lSSt:n, marshal; Mrs. Erling Laurvtk, assistant marshal; otto Hoeg and Hans Eggebraten, guards; Herb Anderson, trustee, ud Mrs. WoUord, newsletter editor. SWI others are Mrs. Harvor Ermund, muaician; Mn. a., Nielsen, publicity; Mrs. Anderson, blsiorlan; N 11 s Nilseo, Robert Wolhon llld Mrs. Erman Chrlstoffr<soo, auditing oommlttet, ud Mia Eileen Moss, queen. The lodge meets in the Elks Hall, Newport Beach, the ~ cond Saturday and fourth Wednesday of each month. New members are the Mmes. Robert Markham, Ted Perry, Richard Petronave and Berit Austin and the Gunaar Hermaosens, Agnar Tannen, Bart MorteDSOD1 and Jent.oft Edwardsens. Lodge members and guests will gather at 6:30 p.m. Satufo. day, Feb. 6, for a dinner of Iapskaw and flatbread. Games will be played follow· ing dinner. Book Review Series • Thursday, 'Mary 4, 1971 DAILY I'll.OT '' ,. 'lm·;possible' Accomplish~d · .. By JODEAN llA.S1'1NGS color b yellow, wanted lhe fllrnlture ts not as <Stbetlcally problems that _. lint Ille or .. DlllY '1"' '''~ We.stem Wblt6 House vivld pleulni as lt used to be. aame. • Chuckling that they couldn't and warm with color and Repreleolativtt of the Los Jn many inllaocel _..,...... really talk about the Western eparkling wUh ~. to Ana:eleJ.based c.anneu and receive cmunlt5'ona ' from White House because they with the • uctptlon of the Cbaflln Jl'ho work out ol tho merd>andlle whlcb ii aold II. didn't have time to .go .to President'•\ all tbe'bedroomJ , Corona del Mar stl.KiloJ the competl.Uve retaJJ1 Price, Wasbingfon tor clearance,.Jer. are done in bright Doral&. team emphasized tbe services rather than Oii a fee bull, ry !!arrls still provided a They also wanted to lo-. a decorator is able to provide. and delivery· on mett:haDdt. glimpse of some of ·the corporate furnlttire from 'thelr , _Wor~ ·from an in· Is causing jhe principal deairating p rob le ms en. New York apartment which dividual s Ooor plan and using headache tOdly aiuce :llOdl:i countered. definitely was French and at etiBUng furaiture, ID entirely are ai a mlnlmuql. .... Harris and Jeff Whetmore, times difficuJt to combine with different effect can be ob-Hill looU tori at ,....,,, tit members of the in t er i o r heavy Spanish. ~ through the' use of .4 blue for wall ' colOn n&hei deslgni.Jlg firm that ,turned the "Even the President doesn't new _eolor s c b em e m t.laan • tbe currently )llmllf San Cletnente house into throw everything out when he carpeung, drapes or ~brics. yellows, mint aad lime gem(' hhome" for the First Family redecorates " be said The decorator then JS able and stressed the prop et spoke and showed slides dur-Hill, an ~uthority ~ period to stay w 1th 1 n the allotted relationship of line apd mllJI ing a luncheon meeting of the decorating,. stressed the im· budget. in the hanging of pailtinp. ~ Women's Am:iliary to the portance.ofwhatperlodpleces GET SERVICES EARLY "A single ,painling dona"t Orange County M e d l c al . are compatible rather than He advised that anyone Con-have to go In tbe center tl Association Jn the Royal Coach what periods. templlting the bulldlq:, of 8 a wall," be ldmoftllhed. • Hotel. BLENDING FUllNITIJllE new home avail herseH of The moot d II fl cu lj Because of its age, the . the services Ot a decorator d~aU.U, problen) "'-tbeiil Western White Hou·se required All periods o{, .furnit~e will early, citing an eiample all? • some remodeling before the work in with today s con-where an ardlltect, 1n i:tesign. "Moving frcm a ~ '9 deairating team could go to temporary styles but ~e ing a bedroom, failed to 'leave an apartme1t; you bave &O work and time was of the hardest to blend a~ Victorian enough wall sPace for the bed l condense." essence: the home had to be · and Early American. Con-1be de.signer 1'0tb 'around;=======:;::=~ ready for occupancy in ap-temporary lurnlture·has_ to be the client's ur.style and Hill The DAILY pt'LOT- proximately a month to six good because it ia 90 ·sample, claims that ia all his nine Scho/arsh1·p weeks. be s1r..-. years of experience be hasn't Tops in local s,......;.·.' "Because of st r in g e n t Mediterranean, so pop~ar encountered two clients or two ,......, ,.._ Recipients of $ 2 0 0 security regulations we. 'had today,. actually came mto scholarships are Miss to have a different badge for favor 10 the early l900s, but every area in which we were the youthf~ decorator regrets Carol Longtin Oeft} of working and by the end of that todays ~ass-produced Costa Mesa and Miss the day our shoulders were Mary Jo Siebenaler, sagging," said Harris. ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGt 50% off . Author to Lead Tour l THINK California byways will be explored for m e m b e r s and gllests of the South C o a s t Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi at 10 a.m. tomorrow during the third in the annual ·Celebrity S e r i e s Book ReYieWs. A daily columnist as well as author, Leadabrand .bas traveled world~wide but is mainly interested in Southern c.Jifornla. He writes the series of California By-ways tr av e l books and is editing a new series. Huntington Beach, stu-EERIE FEELING luncheon meeting. dents at the California The •·0 tallation of th t Speakers will be Mrs. D. "'"' e vas L. Hildenbrand, N e w p 0 r t Hospital S c h o o I of communication system gave Beach counselor for the Fami· Nursing. The awards him an almost eerie feeling ly Service As"""lation, and were given by the Luth--especially when he had to """' eran Hospital Society pass the "bot line." Miss Anita Farrell of the House of Delegates. It was a fantastic feat, he Tustin <ifice. claimed, One man would dig FSA, a United Fund agency, a dilch, anolher lay cables TH INK offers marriage counseling, Sweet Adelines and cover it over and another and help for al c o h o I i c ! , would come along with the Geist Oriler Showroom W•rehouse open to publle, Buy •t de•l•r's prices. Custom Frames •v1ll .. able. L1y-eway on Master Char«Je or BankAmerJ .. ea rd. RENT -LU.SE -SALf Houn -t a.on. to 6 p.m. MC11141ay thni Saturdof. Presented by Miss Carlotta Willlame, author Russ IA!adabrand will introduce his newest book, "California By. ways." He also t.as written two children's book s based on travel. Miss Williams, diredor of the series, will p re a en t thumbnail sketches ol other new books and discuss current literary trends. children and senior citizens. Harborlites Chapter, Sweet grass. Jc II -. ~ L ft All couns<lors have masters Adelines convenes every Mon· "In three days the zinnias """1 I WJUL ORIGINAL OIU, LTD. degrees in social work and day at 8 p.m. for programs were three feet high," he quip. 1619 I. lcht•· Smftl AM: Ptto.e US 460l graduate students from the in College Park School, Costa ped. • 11111 ~~~..!.~Nell DEALERS WANTED .- University of Southern.,_M'.'.'.':es~•:·~~~~~~~~~~M'.'.'.:'':·~N~il~o~n:,~w~h~o~se:,.::fa~v~or~i~le~~~~~~~~~~~,!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Tee Tattler tEdltor'• Not•: A colvlllfl of wome<l's te. 1olf Karts will 1Ppe1r each wMk In tllf DAILY PILOT. To rff'Ort tCOr.t for tllf week, P!.eaM rMll The meeting is open to the public and reservatktns may be made by calling Mn. Howard Means at 54MllOI. Proceeds will be gil'en to Pi Beta Phi phllnntbroples. Club members will gather tn the Linda Isle home of Mrs. Richard Elliott at 10 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 11, for 1 California and San Diego State1· College now are doing field work there to earn tbelr degrttS. Luncheon chainnan is Mrs. John Valentine, who will be assisted by the Mmes. Frank A. Tyler, Dean Boggs, W. Torkells and Miss Phyllis Marr. Mrs. Hart Hickman is presi· dent of the alumnae group. tlltm to P.0, Bo~ 1560. CD1!1 Mtw. TlllY mrnt be r.alved bT Mond•Y.) aA.ltCMO SAN JOAQUIN ,lllLO SNOTS -Fll1hl A, the 'Mrrtel. J-KH!er, 31: Gii Ide, 41 1 1'11\1111 8, Mrs. C1rvl O'Skea, ~I FH91'11 C, !ht MllWI. Ootllld T•\rMtt, JfJ WOOdrow Ll(lawr, Marte SM!lw, Ill Fll1llt 0, tllf Mints, Fr1M aed(mln, 371 Hert.rt LIWrenu, Third Community Concert ... etST aAU. 01" ,OUllSDMI! - Flrrt PllCI, tllf MrML Robtrt LI"'" lntston, R1mlro MOr1tu, T•lm...,, 59: ~ Pia«, tfll Mmff. Frank AtklnlO!I, How1rd F•rwell, Harvey G1li.DMr, H1rvev McClure, .01 Third Noted Soprano Offers Operatic Repertoire Pleet, 1111 Mmn. J. F, Ct.Kn, P•ul Ell Lee ~•1 Of841ch, Ide, Rlchllrd Leutw11er, W•r· Soprano Miu a -..u ren Colllnt, Lunsford J-1, Cerl offer seJectiOOS from her Sler1son, Bob W1ll•t1· 61. lllVINE COAST operatic repertoire IS the MllT PLU S PUTTS-<:1111 A. third ' ( . "-the Mmes. R0111tr Tllfiwr, 11)1; w111ram · guest artis lD ~ Lester, IOI: Aobtrt Girdner, P1u1 Laguna Beach Community Rife, 1101 Class 8, Ill• Mmes. DOn Lenk. 1031 Robert WeN, 1011 Lesne Concf;rt Serles. T1rr. IOI/ J1mes B. T1v1or, Rotisrt 1u111r. lot: ci.ss c, the Mmes. Miss Lee, a native of LoJ Jo11t1 Tyson, 1os1 c. s. Hog1rth, 1141 Angeles, will appe8.r in the W. It. KJ&S.t, 1171 t•• ArrnstrOfl'<I', JK!t O\IM, Cert HU11ren, Willer w, Laguna Beach lllgb School w~~~~No oAY -Fl~t. -Mmes. Auditorium at 3 9.m. on Sun- Ed N-tand, Lenk. Robert Shffffer, d y Feb 7 J. H, V•n•ble1 , SU1 Ste~ a ' •• Miu ~'""' Muuer, 3171 Third, FolJourina study with Dr. ti\& Mmes. Noni Jamn, P1ut Rife, "--e 8ff Freeblllrn. Aoblrl Smltll, 3111 Jan Popper at UCLA, the Fourlll, Ille MmH. Roblrt Y•rdl•Y· · • ed B th o.v1c1 811ten11.w, Miu °" ~. Wl!rte, singer rece1v a ayreu 3"· EL NIGUEL scholarship from Sieglinde ICLIECTIC-Flr11 Tum, the Mmes. Wagner, granddaughter Of KtnM'lll Teet, Lowen He•cock, 411 • hard second THm, Edw••d MacK1111l1. Ric Wagner. Wll!)ur LIY'f', Peuf Rllte, Rlella•d Her study in Germany led H-11, Wll!llll'I E11n, Roland Sltafoos, Roi..rt MeC•fftry, ic111n1111 s1ue1, u: her to :star status at East 'rlllrd TMm. 1111 Mmes. Robert Be II • K I h Ope d sct1uhm1nn. Aidt Gouin, M.11., NIWb'f, r n s om SC e r an John MOfT"ow, Lewis Hofmen, Edw•rd to •-ter appearan-as guest At1son, W11111 Carpenltt, Jostpl\ UI "'..,. MaJst. Co1v1n w1111i111ton; H1rrrson artist with the San FranciJco c~~b~sM.ANO NET -A Fl~hl Opera and guest artist for t11e Mme-. Alch•rd Au•""*'• 111 Teet, the opening of the Los Angeles T.11 Wiiiiam W1l5er, 191 J""n Fr1ncli. ,,; Jee• a 111sc1e1. 1s; a Fll•hl· 111e Music Center. Mm11. A•r e111ev. ''1 A•r Hendtlnon, 'r=========:;:::;! n 1 s1111oot. t11 Hotm1n. 15; J""nr . SWilrlltr, 76: C Fllghl, thl Mma. ErlAt Pt1erson. 105; Elvin Wlllb, 7'1 Alcl!1rd Kronm1n, 1001 Fred Gtrdtr. ''' R•r Htti.r, n. 1,000'1 o• OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISAU WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC 50°/o OFF WALT DISNEY'S "THE WILD COUNTRY" STARTS WED. MESA lHEA TRE 548-1552 Her repertorie , performed through the world, includes "Dido and Aeneas," "The Magic Flute," "Cosi fan Tut- te," "Aida" and others. Admission is by membership only with limited reCiproclty seating available for members of other Community Concert Assocla:Uon.1. Residents in the Laguna Beach • San Clemente area may contact Mrs. Amy Godshaw for information. ~ ., sabina'~ C1nlt-0ffi.-ctttu,.. Jtwtlry 90.ft A!lanl1 AVf:.-4iuntlngton B1ad'I Neitl l'O NEW Lvc:k~'s--961.olll 'WalJieM . BUYING POWER PUTS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET! REGULARLY PRICED $1194 WE HAYE JUST PURCHASED A FAMOUS MANUFACTURERS' STOCK OF BRAMBACH CONSOLES ~·"''*''"141 ..... Wfli .......... ..,. ....... t..'"'94 • , , ••• ..... ~ ••••fMtl '-' Uhl w.ct ,,_ .... ..,... -,,._. ,.,...., .. , tt.n.. M.... ., Trelllllltl..... Aft h9MI ,.~ ••tt•• fl•· ... ,c... ..... _ ...... .......... 1 SOUTH COAST PLAZA ONLY AT WAWCHS • °' ,... .... ,.11111 ., °""' ifltl!WC!llftt Cotti Me1a Phone 54Qr.ll6S C•ll "' ~-----.~-~ All STORES a111un The Opening OJ Our New Beq;µliful Locatio1111 In COSTA MESA at 3030 Bristol 2 BLK. S. OF SOUTH COAST PLAZA THE DREAM SLEEP qUEEN COMBINES BO" IN • LENGTH &60" WIDTH TO GIVE TOTAL SLEEPING COMFORT AND VALUE. Thi1 12 .. Piecc Sel Complete 11'.SIMMONS nu MIADik>AIO I FUMl wnK TWiii OI Ml Silt SR The 13-Piece Complete Set THE ORTHO SLEEP qUEEN This queen size set com- bines luxurious sleeping comfort and big budget value for years to come. .. THIS IS TI!ESALE·Ybtl'VI! BEEN. WAITING FOR IA. VIII M 'QS ' · < •'" •• SPECIAL • .SPECIAL • ; ' ~ -KINGSIZE DREAM SLEEP sn ·~. ..... ~_..,.WIM ' •qloNl(i., ..... _ _..«flft,,.Mdiit , . .,,,. -................. , ' ~ ..... ...... W. Simmons combines quality, comfort and maximum 'VOlue in this luxurious king size set. The COlllplele 13-Piece Eneemble FOR ... THE PREMIER quEEN YOU RELAX IN THE KNOWLEDGE YOU GAVE YOUR BUDGET A BREAK WITH THIS COMPLETE ' l :<: .. , ., 'I • ',I + SC WortJa I 0 Question s to Consider •r SYLVIA PORTEii Abciut hall of the more than S,500,ono mobile homes ln our land today are· on indlvldual aria, !QOIUy Jn small towns ot n&nlJ lreU -but the other ball m tn ai...t 25,0llO mobUe bome patb and other loca· tlono. And while a growtn1 number of these parks now tfftr swimming p o o 1 s • cl1bllouse1, fishing ponds ind tvtn Jolf courses, many 5llll are dreadfully overcrowded, IU-l<ep~ ugty. Let's 5a.y you art among the millions of yoons married Americans. college Jtudent.s, elderly people and others who wtll ln the next few years consider living in a mobile home park -if only tern· poraril)'. Hert! are 10 questions to guidt you on choosing your lite: (I) What recreational and other facilities are offered? A typical mobile bome parlr. today wUI bave paved strtell, sidewalkJ, parking faeiliUes, 1 playlf'Ol,IDd. Many will offer such elrlru as 1 1wlmmlni pool_. cormfiunity I a u n d r y buil~ clubhouse, Io If course. You'll pay for any or Ill of these , so make sure you at least know what you are getting. t2) What b tbe monthly 1ite rental charge? •·ind out Jf the.rt: arr any apecial charaes above rent. (3) How many sltes are thett and how bla: are the lob? AvoJd elbow·tHlbow, eyeball -to-11:ytball i.r- rangement.s in whlcb you and your neighbors art just toO close for privacy and comfort and which will destroy all the advantages of your homt. (4) What are the babysitting arrangement!? A tradition of friendl y ne.i&hbors wlthln a park can be a major fringe Wntfll to you, financially and otherwise. You can find out about this with just a rew disc~t ques- lions. (5) 11 the park socially 5uited to your needs, . your lnteresta. your age bracket? You might want to consider an "adults only" park or one geared lo young couples with young children. Check this out first. (S) What ser•lces and utilities are provided and at what typica] costs? Some park! sell lots, but most rent. While tht average today is about $50 for a 4,000 aq. ft. sl~. the range is 1enera1Jy '25 to $leG or more. Include here such services as sewage disposal. water. electricity, gas, phone, fire and police protection, garbage collection. Add up the costs of thtst utilitles and services aJld cheek on which are not included. (7) How much are the Joca111'••••••••• DIRCTM PARTS llAT a lll'AlllD 1tt mn Mi.JCT. L,. .Anything that has moving pub should bave a periodlc ehtek-up to keep it in iood ttliable working order. Not personal property bu:es? 1'biJ usu.mes you own your home, of course. Find out whether there is a monthly or yearly school tu or assess-.1 ment. (8) What are the rules and regu!1Uon1 of the park? Al an l.llu.stratton, check tht n&les on pets, parties, garden- ing and landscaping. la some parks. children are n o t permitted, but presumably you'd find that out at the vory start. (9) What about. storage space for truly bulky belong- ings! LEGAL NOTICE .... ,, PICTITIOUS IUl1NISI NAMI' STATIMl'NT ThJ totlowl,,,_ P ... ton ft lllol11t butllltU M' A•AM EL. 7141 h• Viii• Ot., C"tl Mew, C•HI. At•/t> H. Solomonllrt. :JUI SH Vitti Dr., (Olll Mew, (1111, • Tl'lll b\111.,.11 ll kll'lt COlld~ h 1n l""lvldut l A. H. Sol-11n l"11lil1Jllld Or•"" c... o.11y "rlol, Jtnvary tt. 21 '"" ""*"-"" '· n , nn uo.n only will it last longu but LEGAL NO'f1CE ll will be more economical 11------------1 to operate, will perform bet· ter, will look better and "'Ill give greater pleasure and pride to the user. Whilt' thr abovr . facts could and do easily appl)' to a toe5ter. a two-wheeler. or a lawn mo14·er, they have the.Ir most practicaJ and Jog. ica1 meaning when applied to your body. Make sure all rout pal"ts are in good work-Ull order by scheduling a pb)'l'ldan check-up. When mtdlc:lne1 Ire needed to help -we have them". YOU OR. YOU'R DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a dellvrry. We will de- lfftt promptly without ex-tra charge. A great many PIODl• ftly on ut for their hafth nffda. We W1!lcome requesta for dtlivery aervlc..-. Ind chaf'ICt accounb. PAU UDO PHAlMACT ,.,......,.._ ............. '41·1• _ ... _ , \ 1, .... , OP OIL PAINTIN6S WHOLISAU WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUil.iC so•;. OFF Ulf L •Olffll, IAMTA AllA --:.-OllAlalU W.un'•O ~ I See by Today's Want Ads • "HAPPIN ESS Is LIVING In THE BLUFFS". "SAO. NESS is PtUSfilNG your OIANCE TO 8 U YI " "}lA.PPINF.SS I JOY is BUYING l< 11tEN ID MOVE 10 the BLUF'F'S". "ECSTASY is LMNG IN I~ BLUFFS." Check 100. Nrwport Beach. e "A BIT OF" t;VE'R.\'. 'MIING!" tor 1 Wt:tk Only! 5't 812 tor ~ b rt t tr 1ban avtraar BUYS! e Al? you a RAMBLER~ Wtll now )'(Ml can Ramble on )'OUr aJmott n e .,, ~MBLERI HUIT)' now ••• Cle cllSI 925- ' ' Finance Briefs OVER THE COUNTER • Complete-New York Stock List s.... .. •. (IMtf,I Ml• Uw (MM CllJ, • I ' SC Thursday's Closing Prices-COmp1ete New York Stock ' Exchange List ''"' "".-------------\ flltt.J Mitt LMr CIM Cllf, Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List DAILY Pll.OT ~. F"'nolrY •, 1971 Royal Welcome ., Princess Marg8"'t !J welcomed to Barbados by her convalescing husband, Lord Snowdon. The sister of Queen Elizabeth II flew economy class. Leaves WASHINGTON (UPI) -articulating pol1ey whlch In Ler-anxloul, to ,.;. NATO. Mautetanla. Spain Heir Impression U.S. • Ill Prince Juan Carlos de future yean may caUIO him Spain, they ,. ......... Is i... Ev!'--U s-·•--•-- Bourbon, during hll we<k·IOOI to be 1 ... Influential In lbap-concerned ,ix:;-,;;; attack ~· 1' ,..... -~- vls.lt to the United States, left ing a moderiud Spain that from northeastern E u r o p e the presence of the United behind the impreulon that the he might hope to be. than from the Mediterranean States on a number of fut ... king of Spain will be lnlttMlngly, Juan Carlos area whm Soviet penetration American bues w II b I• · a vigorous mo n a r ch , in-and his aides sugg~ted that ts spreading and Qiinese m. Spanish territory and u em-· teremct In the problems of Spain today II by DO means Dueoce Is develc>plng t n bodied by the '1b fleel In his cowitry, II• future Md the Mediterranean. -1 Ill youlb. ,-------------------~ Spain W<J!lld like to J,, the The »-year old heir ap-stroog American preaenoe In parent to the throne and •• Cat Fa. un' d Master·-!be Medlterr ....... but al the successor to Spall's strongman same time the S p 1 n I 1 b rule, Francisco Franco, con-government feels that It b ceive11 his future poaiUon u only reallst.ic to develop cor- above the intracacles of day J 500 M "les A rect relations with the Soviet to day policy, but ln.ooe Im-' l way Union, which gave aid and portant sense as a referee support to Franco'• memles who can have an important OILDALE (AP) _ Snoopy, 8 I-year-old white cat, 8~ during the Spanish civil war. lnDueoce on the general direo-parenUy went on a 1,500-mlle walk looking !or hll mast.r. Juan CarlOI and hll Greek- tioo of events. But when Snoopy &bowed up at tbe Garrett Clook Jr. born wife Sopbla, sirter of How effective Juan CAr1os residence last week, be found that h1s 17-year-old master, King Constantine of Greece, will prove to be as a monarch Tim Coot. was miasing. visited Los Angeles, San Diego, in uniting tbe yarious factions Tim moved to atickasha, Okla, with bis parents last Houston, and Cape Kennedy, of Spain -the aristocracy, October and took Snoopy. where they attended the Apollo the technocrats, the Anny, But when the family was shopping for furniture soon 14 launch. disenchanted yoolb, I e I t 1 s t after their arrival, the pet dlsappcored from the family To the princ< and prlncea, radicals -l! nearly im-truck. the Apollo launching was a pcmlble to assess, based on Snoopy couldn't be found in Oklahoma but showed up high point of their American his conversations in the United last week at lbe Cook home in this small community 100 sojourn. He spoke briefly to States. miles north of Los Angele! where Tim's brother stlll lives. teclmlcians afterward, show- During contacts with bis When Mrs. Cook opened the door, Sooopy made a bee-ing an excellent command of American bosls and with line for biJ ,favorite resting p1ace under the ironing board, English. ~your Valenlinearingmhezm candle that releases a ddicate ICellt m ~fm;'!' ·as it burm. Pxbd in a Valt:.atine mailing carton; 3.95 . . . ' ... ' I' ,•', -: . ~· ,,.. ,• .:., ~-;;,! 'i . I .. -, ,. .. guests who met him, the then searched the house. Bil fur was dirty and matted, Juan Carlos Ls an ac- prince displayed an active in-his paws nearly raw. complished aviator and piloted THE CANDLE DOCK terest tn public affairs but The Cooks are sure he wu looking for Tim. "There his airliner part of tile way __,_ deferred, on occasion, in ques-was a bond between the cat and my brother you couldn't from Madrid to the Unit.eel JOI l.WJ No. Newport lfwl,, Newport .._.._. tions of detail to aides. He eiplain," said Garrett Coot Jr. He said be would take the Slates. Aides said the prince 64M168 .~: thereby seemed to betray • cat back to Tim ln March. also holds a black belt in o,... 10 to 6 Clo.-Monday• SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) -cldents during the first six ~la~ck~~o~r:=:;co~of~ld~ence~::=:1~n1,=================JJ1<ar~ate~.:~_:::_::_J~~~"":~~~~=~~~~~~=~~ More than eight out. of 10 months of last year. 1- Drug Abuse Heavy In Major Companies lqe companies have a ·pro. Most of the companies said blem ·ot dnJ& abuse among they gave an empJoye caught emplayes, a survey by the using drugs a chMce to Calllcnla St.ie Q>amber of 1tralgbten bbmell oot, but Commen:o dlaclooed Tuesday. about 20 percent of the firms The study abowed lbat the said imn!ediale dismissal was reportod Incidents of drugs In routine In drug cases. the factory or office lncreued The cbamber's survey lft. 33 percent in 1970 over the dicated that &1 percent of the Pf'!"'1,:S1~·Califomia com-·incidents involved employes -o under age 35. Men were tn- pany that doesn't.have a drug volved 67 percent-of the time. problem is the excepUon In almost every ca.Se, the ra1ber thau the nt1e," the chamber concluded. study showed, the employe in- 1be· chamber sent que!-volved had been working for tioiinalre.s, to the medical of. the company less tha11 ·a year. nCen of. 25 flnns employing 'lbe drug · moSt frequenUy aboot I00,000 persons. The In· detected wa,s LW, with mari- dustries ran g e d from juana' second, followed by autonioUve: manufacturing, to barbiturates, ampbetamlnes, chemleals, missiles, public tranquilizers, narcotics and utillu .. and oU. antihistamines. All but three of the firms Most cases of drug abuse said that drug abuse bad been were uncovered as a resu1t detected among employes. of injuries, thefts or attempted Nineteen said they had In-thefts, the chamber roo.d. Cultural Cure Officer Has . Race SolutWn SAN DIEGO .(AP) -Ractal tensionl vanish when d:lfferent coltures mi1, aaya Capt Arthur W. Oulndler, skipper of Miramar Naval Air Station, and bringing people together la a way to mil: them. Putting words to action, Chandler ""P'ised hll men recenUy with •· "touch of soul" menu which included black fbod, an e:rplos:lve jazz groop and lour-g<>10 girls -doubled as a folk quartet. •"nm ts one way we can bring people together ,'' OwMtler uid. "AJ far as I'm cclncemed racial ten s I o n s disappear when people begin understandin& each other's cultures." 'Ille skipper, who In the past year bu treated the l ,000 men under his command to Orien- tal, Mexican, Gennan and other "cross-culture" ex- periments, said the ethnic lunch program Is now a montb1y feature. "Hey, you guys have pretty good tastes," said a white sailor aa he watched the du- · while llet·•· ~u to cmg .... s seoonds of barbecued spare ribs, collard greens, black.eyed peas, ·hush puppies and swtet potato pie. lJke him,. many of the more than 500 aallors who sampled the soul food IA>ok second help- ings -when they weren't rocking In rbylbm wilb the New People Unlimited jm group and the go go girl!. Chand1er's luncheon was held just one day after he appointed the Navy's first fuUUme black ombudsmen to his stall. Aviation Structural Mechanic 2.C. Robert Ozier, 25, and Aviation Storekeeper Airman Mitchell Grebb, 20, serve as minority affairs ad- visers directly on the skipper's staff. •iwe are working up from a basis of peaceful coex- istence," said .Ozier who bas already acted on a problem by getting the base exchange to stock a variety of black cosmetics aslted for by black Navymen and their depen- dants. A VALENTINE IN IRISH BELLEEK Here'•• thoughtful and useful gift for _your Volentine, Mother, Grandmother, Aunt. or ju.I to NY "thenka." Our heart shlped ·dlah In dellcate lrlah Belleek. Parlect for cendy, bon bona, or nibbles. $8. ~..-....~. ... _.... ......... .............. tc.n ... ...., a.,... ... SLAVICK'S Jewelen Sine& 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-I 310 Opoo -...i l'rl. 'ti f:JO p.ao. •• ' .. California Federal would like to give your money a better job. 'Are you happy with your job at California Federal?" Let us put it to work at 5% ... or more. These aren't the times to settle for low interest or for no interest on your money. "Best.ob I ever~ad We11 hire your dollars at California Federal to · work at 5% a year in our Moneymaker savings accounts. HiglJ pay. Great Security." And we have other, higher interest Moneymaker plans, too. Come in and see us. Learn about our full range of Money- makers. One is sure to be just right for you. We11 give your money a high-paying job right now. The job security is great, too, because we're the nation's largest federal. Head Office: $570 Willhite Bouknrd. LOIAnat:let. ACClOUOta are lntuttd up to $20,000 "7' • 'lmc:;J' flftilie tJaited States Oo+abbXAt. Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor ~lvd. • 546-2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave .• 776-2222 a.. Orange Office: 4050 Me1ropolilan Dr.· 639-3033 Oilier convenient ofrte1s throughout lot Angeles, Oronge and Vt11Ma CocMfllL J. • -· • 7 _- .·. . .. ' ' . , . / .• . ./ . ' .:-~ -. ' : i .. .. ,. , ..J.•I -~ ... >' . . ' " . ' ' ·-' ' -- • I ·t • .. J • ' .. ' ' ' ' ' . . . ' .:~~!- ' ' • -. , ·-' . • I _,_ .1- . _t_ \ \ School Told Of Saving Pote11tial By PAMELA HALLAN Ot fM O•Ur l'lltl Sl•lf New techniques (ors tr ea m 11 n t n I maintenance and operations in the San Joaquin Elementary School District .may result in more than '100,000 in savings, a consultant said this week. He is Vernon Mallinson. special con. 11ultant from the Westinghouse Learning COrporation. who presented his findings to the board ol trustees Monday during • workshop. Trustees have paid the corporation $35,000 lo prepare a fiv~year. study .of the d Is tr ~ 4' s administration. mam- tenance and oPerations -basically, •an efficiency sludy. The intent of the report was to provide the district with a blueprint ouUining when and where changes should be mack' as the district grows to maintain "max· imum efficiency and economy." ' Stiment Toair Jail "This study is going to pay for itseU many times over," said Rex Nerison, Assistant Superintendent for Administrative Services. "It eliminates many mistakes we were bound to make i£ we had plodded on, groping around In the dark. No one on our staff would ever have had the time to'f7Yepate such a comprehensive study.·• · ' P.tallinson said the goal of the s~ was to provide an economical m3'1."" \ tenance service and improve custodlM A, and gardening services. Deputy Marshal l.ai;cell? Muller \eads sludMl lour of .the South Or- ange County Judlti~ D't,_strict eOurthouse aq_d its del.eMion facility as part of the Crown V~y Exchange Cl ub's Crime Prevention Week pi:ogra!11. Students fro~ SQ.uth County schools yiewe~ cou.rtroom and Jail action lhre~ day.s th1s wOOIE Seve~1 and eighth gratters from Mar· co Forster ~ufl:ior High Schoo!, S Capistrano, including student body co!11m1ssioner Terre llaine rr the tour groups with jour· ney behind bars. The first area studied was custodial manpower. Plot plans were drawn up of each school and basic standards set. Hours then were allotted for each man to complete designated tasks. "We found that by using maiimum efficiency \Ve needed two less custo- dians," said Mallinson. 11So the two extra men were assigned to a new school , saving th e district the cost of hiring two more for that school." In the area of gardening the study developed interim and long.range plans. Mallinson said they found a great deal of refurbishment to be done, particular1 .:: on slopes which were planted by developers before deeding the sites to the school district. The gardening schedule developed calls for a complete refurbishment program and also recommends implementing a r.chedule for new planting. The study suggested hiring new gardeners. if .a complete program of new planltng ts begun and hiring a landscaping con· sultant to work with architects in plan- ning gardens for new schools. In the area or maintenance. the study found that five more maintenance men all with special skills will have to be added by the time the district reaches 20.000 enrollment. Jt now employs three men. • "In the maintenance area alone the districl will save $50.000 in the next five years and that figure includes the purchase of new equipment ." sa id Mallinson. "Jn the area of custodial salaries the district will be saving $12,000 a year and will still be gett ing maximum efficiency." · Mallinson described various elements considered in the study \vhich, in the maintfnance phase, computed such fac· tors as available man hours , job time t!.Stimates, and priority of jobs. in order to devise a schedule for whe n jobs are to be done and the amounl 0£ time spent. He said v.·orking relationships v.·erc also considered and the study had put into operation evaluation system to check on work completed. Mallinson stressed that preventive mai ntenance programs will be initiated Qnce the backlog of work is caught up. "The report gives us a fine foundation upon which we can bu ild," said Dave Smith. director ar maintenance and operations. "Now is the time to get a grip on lt and really make it a progressive program," Y outl1 Arres ted; Drugs, 2 Guns Seized in Laguna After an investigation, Laguna Beach police Wednesday night arrested a man in his motel room and allegedly con· fiscated two pistols and a large quantity of dangerous drugs. . Police said David Bradley 1i-lcBr1de, 19, of Nipton, Calif., was taken into custody at 9:45 p.m. in his room at the Hacienda Motel. 12.89 S. Coast High\vay. The man made no attempt lo resist and was cooperative, police said. Investigators claim a search of the room revealed two .38 caliber revolvers, 85 grams af marijuana and several tablets of benzedrine and seconal. PolJce also allegedly found a syringe and several hYJ>Odermic needles in the room. The man was expected to be arraigned today at South County r.tunlcipal Court on charges of possessian or dangerow drugs with Intent to !tell 11nd possession ot cooce.alable weapons. Lil>be r s Bake Cakes TALLAHASSEE. Fla . IAPI -'The \\·omen's llb group at Florida Stale University, an oppanenl of the idea ~at 111 woman's place 1s In the kitchen. dcc1d· ed to raise some cash so the member• he.Id a ba ke sale. • Health f nning ~roup \ • ,J Dissolves ~th B zdsts Orange County's Comprehensive Health Planning Association (CHPA ), dealt a . death blow by the Board of Supervisors last week, voted itself out of existence Tuesday night. But no t without taking a few potshots at its "enemies." Dr. Wallace Gerrie, president of CHPA, blamed Dr. John R. Philp, county heallh officer for the demise of lhe planning grou p, and charged that the action had "put health planning back two or three years in Orange County.'' Dr. Gerrie called the new Orange County Health Planning Council, sug. gested by Philp and approved. by the supervisors, "more political than volunteer" aod said it Would not receive the required endorsement of the Orange County Medical Association. Gerrie said the Cl-IPA tiftd many ac- complishments to be proud of. "We were the only county in the state which never hid an appeal from one of its decisions, we held more hearings than any other county." ' The CHPA was organized under federal law and new hospitals and additions to existing hospitals had to have CHPA approval for a license and to accept l\1edi-Oal payments. The Orange County associalion was organized in 1969 and got into trouble in mid-1970. At one time a committee of the organization held up approva l of the expansion of Santa Ana Com· munily and Tustin Memorial hospitals. This raised a furor and Gerrie charged that it was about this time that Dr. Philp began the destruction of CHP A. Having little. funds the organization depended upon county space and loaned help to be matched by federal money. "Dr. Philp began to withdraw the help we needed about six months ago," Dr. Gerrie charged. "I think he wanted, and has gained, full control over health planning in the county." . Gerrie said functions of health planning are now suspended as far as a Jocal organization is concerned. • Laguna Youngsters Score . Above Fi1~st Grade Levels Students in UJC Lag1J11a Beach schools score well above the state and national average on first grade reading tests, according to test scores presented the Board of Trustees Tuesday nighl. But as the youngsters progress through their education to the 12th grad~. their test scores gradually fall in line with the national median. Accord ing Lo Dr. Robert Reeves, business superinLcnde nt of lhe Laguna Beach Unified School District. The newly tabulated. scores reflect the "same picture we have seen over the last several years." On the first grade reading test, the Laguna Beach youngsters Sl'Ored very high with 80 percent of them above both the state and na!Jonal average. Reeves said about 25 percent of the students achieved scores comparable lo third graders. However, Reeves noted that on the second grade reading tests, the overall scores moved closer to the norm with about 60 percent of the Laguna Beach students scoring above the naUonal average. In the lhlrd grade, the score had again moved so that about 50 percent of the youths were above the median norm. Reeves pointed out that one reason the students did so well in the firsl g r ad e was that the district began lo teach basic reading skills in kin- dergarten. He also said the average intelligence quatient (IQ ) of the students was above the national and state average. Whereas the IQ norm is about 99. Reeves said the combined JQ's of Laguna Beach students averaged out to 105. "We can safely say that more or our studen ts learn to read and read earlier than the state results shaw and by comparison to the nalional sample,'' Reeves told the 1iehool board. "We should not rest on our laurels until every child can read to the best ot his ability." he added in caution. The overall test scores showed a gradual decline in hJgh achievement, Reeves noted. until by the 12th grade, the students rank ed right at the national average. Reeves said he was pleased with the test scores and that they reflected the high Priority Laguna Beach families place on education. School Board president Lan'}' Taylor also voiced a gratification with the test results, but said they would be more meaningful if they renected tbe progress or the district. Lang.uage Tutor Course Opening in Capo Beach A :JO.hour training course for volunteer language tut.on, spoMOred by the South Coast Literacy Council, "Ill open Feb. 17 in Capistrano Btach. C1asses will be held fl'Qm 9 a.m. to noon on.Mooda1•.and Wcdnesdll)'1 In the Pall· sades United ~telhodlst Church, 27002 Camino de Estrella (one block west of the San Diego Jo"'reeway Estrella ex it). Instructors will bt ~frs. Onalee Carter oC L9guna &ach and Mrs. £. ti. Wll- brecht of San Clemente. A nominal fee will be charged. I Dr. Frank Laubach's famed "Eac:h One Teach One '• method of teaching English to the illiterate and foreign born is used in the course which prepares volunteer teachers who now work in 24 centers in Orange County. There are no r~uiremenl$ except a (it.- sire lo help others speaK, read and write English better and a wish to e.neourage loreign born residents to participate ' more in community life. The tutoring method has been used in more than 100 countries. For inlomlaUon call 497·1138 or 492-8269. Tbundlt, Ftb<""' •. 1971 s OAJLV PU.of I Services Probe Due Supervisors to Review County Progranis Task lorce atudles ol county · lalands. enalneerln& oervlceo, data processing and the cowity medical center were ordered Wednelday by -W. Battin , chaJrman of the Board ol SUporvbon. In hll oecond l"'llllY lslatemtnl ,..d to• lellow boord member• In the put t"" day1, Battin appointed his colltagues and hlmoeU to In depth studies lo the next 1lx montha. T\Jeoday, Batun read a atatemtnt calling !or the !~Ing ol County Admlnlatr1Uvt Olfi«r Robert E. 1bomas. He failed to get the nectAIJ'Y three votes to achJeve his goal. Wednesday Batun said th< board "ia faced with a big job if we are going to effectuate the goal set by Mr. Rontld Caapers and Mr. Ralph Clark on their joining the board and with which I agree -namely that we review each function or government from zero to present need!. "This mean,, that we will not acctpt as a startJng point last year's budget plus five percent for pay raises and then add programs to the extent perm.it. ted by rlslnl revenuee," uie board chairman coounutd. He admitted that the boord, In the alt .... tho !tit btl .... ·odoptlon of the bildpl, will nol bt able to thoroughly rev5ew tach department from zero, ubut we can complete the 1ludy ot: 10me and 1tronaly urae departm<nt beods to do a like rNJ11ly1ll of \heir own.'' Battin userted that the board 11can be flve times more t!fectlve than by alttlng u a review board ol cut and dried budg<I praentallons." Clark wu uaigned to investigate small county llllllds to determine U f~e and police protecUon and ether services pro- vkled by the county could not be better end more econornlt:ally provided via con- tracts with adjolnlng clUea or even an- nexaUon. Phillips wn asked to study recom- mendations toward combinin& engineer· Ing services Into a olngle department or building JocaUon. Caspers wu nlllltd to lov .. uga le data proc<sslng. Battin aald thil area of county mvicea baa been severely criticized by "our own county people aa well 11 by private taxpayers." "Complaints ol overcharges to othtr departments, dtlaya: in delivery1 lzl. accurcles in work, waste, etc. are! widespread enough that they should bo determined by a full scale study to be erroneous or they should be cor- rected," Battin stated. Battin said he would head a study of the Orange County Medical Center. He repeated that he favors combining th< medical center and • proposed UC! ho:ipltal in one physical institution with common management and p l an t facilities. The board chairman said be would assign a study area to Supervisor David Baker when he returns from Washington, D.C. Saddlehack OK's School Calendar For Next Year Fa1nilies Wait Apollo ·Crew Wives Unruffled Saddleback Community Co 11e1 e trustees have adopted the 1971·72 school year calendar which provides for 176 days of instruction, four three-day holidays and ane four· day holiday in accordance with state and national policy. Monday holidays include Oct. ZS, Veterans' Day; Feb. 21, 1972, Washing. ton's iBrthday, and Memorial Day. Feb. 11 will be a holiday in abservance of Lin· coin's birthday. Nov. ~ and 26 will be days off for Thanksgiving and the quarter recess coinc(des with Christmas from Dec. 16 to 31. Superintendent Frtd H. Bremer said the 176 days of instruction exceeds the state education code requirements by one day "allowing one day's margin for difficulties." Quarterly registration dates adopted by trustees are : Fall, Sept. 13 and 14; Winter, ~. 13 111d 14 ; Spring, March 22 and 23, 1972. Stopped, Dead Duck SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (UPI) Frederick Augustin, 29 was stopped by a trooper for a rauUne traffic check Wednesday. When he opened his truck there were 236 d ea d ducks and 121 dead pheasants. Augustin told authorities he wanted to deliver lhe dead birds .to the county work farm at Yaphank, for which he would receive a total of $1,600 in federal tax deductions for charitable donations. SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - 'Ibe leaves in the front yard need raking because I.he man of the house is away. On the front door bangs a tapestry with a message needled by a Benedictine nun: "Many angels stand in the sky as the rocket speeds to the moon an high." The tapestry was a lift to Mrs. Stuart A. Roosa, wife of the Apollo lt com- mand pilot, from Sister Mary Lucy Bar· rctt, who teaches at Sacred Heart Academy, a Roman Catholic school nestl· ed among the strawberry patches and red clay hills near Cullman, Ala. "She's my aunt and she's a 11 p a c e nut," said Joan Barrett Roosa, a Tupelo. Miss., girl who taught school for a while, married a man destined to be an astronaut, and now keeps house for him and four children in an unpre tentious aid brick, ranch-type house ln El Lago, Tex. Like the wives of the other two moon voyagers. Alan B. Shepard and Edgar D. Mitchell, Joan Roosa seems unrulOed by her husband's potentially dangerous l!slgnrnent. Sbe even jokes about Jt. "I tried to get the flight ccmtroller to send Stu a message that 1 bad loaned my Nelman-Marcus (department 1lore) charge card to my two slst~ wha •~ visrtlng me from MWissipM.." she said. 11He said be wu afraid ft'~ blow the mission." She said she had 1 few anxious moments during the trouble with the docking shortly after Sunday's launch1 but decided "Ole Stu will fix that." Miles away, in the exclusive River Oaks section of Houston, Louise Brewer Shepard bas clo.seted he rself in her two- story white calonlal home with her two grown daughters, other relatives, and CoffEE T~ISLES •SlPf f>OARDS • LOOMCi~ CffAI li'S-20-.50% CH l C\IR ISfl,\ll.~ DECOR Mrs. Richard Abbott, her close friend. She has refused to talk to newsmen about the mission unUJ after splashdown. Wednesday she had a flag hoisted over the tree-shaded $150,000 borne, 1be flag, she said, once Dew over the U.S. Capitol. It was given to Shepard alt.er his first space flight on May 5, 1961. Mrs. Shepard is a stylish blonde whose husband's investments in oil ind bankln& have made him the richest man bl space, Special Problem Discussion Set Laguna Beach residents will haVI!: a chance to learn about the method! of high school instrucUon for students with special problems at an l n f o r m a l discusslan Monday at 7:30 p.m. The subject. of the meeting wtn be the cantinuatioo school, an off-campus bruch of Laguna Beach High School designed for students with academic or social probelms. Nonnon Borucki, bead of the ICllool, and two students will give short presen~ taUons anct then all!wer questions for the public. 'Mle informal meeting will be held at the school district offices, 550 Blumont St., across the street from the high school. Record Player Taken Laguna Beach police are investigating the theft Tuesday night of a $300 stereo record player fro m the Community Presbyterian Church. GREEN c"~D5 12 OFF-H Cef>FEE. GAP.t>E.N 2'i40 WT CAft6T tf ic.KNA"'C• eo«.om D!L !'MR· '+1-7'10 I I I 11 OAllV PILOT Nixon Sends Sl1are Plan To Congress WASHINGTON (APl -Prt.lidtnl Nix- on sent to a 1keptJcal Congren today ' a ""bUllon-a·year 1eneral revenuwhar· Ing plan containing a new proposal to encourage states to v.·ork out for themaelves how they would share their money with h>calities. The President said the plan would grow automaUcally to provide an esUmated •10 billion a year in 0011.rings federal money to state and localities. • 1n a lenithy me!!llge to Congress the President made clear that gentral revenue sharing Is the cornerstone of hla "new federalism '' policy. "in the final analysis, the purpose of general revenue sharing is to set our slates and localities free-free to set new priorities, free to meet unmet needs. free to make their own mistakes, )'es, but also free to score splendid successes which otherwise would never be realized." lhe President said. There is considerable rank aJid lile support for the plan, but it was de- nounced in advance by the t"·o men who have the most to say about what Congress does with It, Rep. Wilbur Mills nl-Arlo), and Rep. John w, Byrnes (JI,. Wb.). Nixon said the plan would reduce needs for heavier property and u.les tales, open new job opportunities at the state and local level, decrease competition bet"'·een domestic and defense needs, and atlract more energy and talent to state and local governments. The broad ouUines of general revenue sharing bad betn sketched out earlier. Thwsctty, Fcbruuy 4, llf7l . . THESE ARE COPlES OF OFFIC IAL PORTRAITS OF KENNEDY, WIDOW J1ckie 1nd Two Chi ldren Viewed Likenesses in Visit to White Hou...,1 ' Washingto11 Bevisite 1 Jackie Lured Back by Neiv Kennedy Por WASRINGTON (AP) -Jacqueline KeMedy Onassis has returned to the \Vhite Hou se for the first time since the 1963 assassination of her first husband to visit the Nixons and see new Kennedy portraits on display. The former first lady had ·told friends she never want· ed to return to the White House because of its tragic memories. But a special invitation from President and J\1rs. The new portraits by/ artist Aaron sqtkler of , .. •v \'ork City were to get ~·press review on fease'6 .. jn lhe East Room today and w/~ be on display the f!J tourists for about 10 days. Seu Condition• Egypt to Extend Cease,.fire Pact , From Wirt Seniees CAIRO -Ecl>tlan l'Hlldtnl Anwar Sad>! announced tonlihl )!:gypt will observe the Middle Eut ceue-f1re for a further month -unW March 7, The sources said that u,. word was relayed on the underttandlng thlt 'lbant would Issue another npc:rl on the status of the Arab-Israeli peace talks within the nut lCI days. The si1-monfu..old ceue-firt is due to expire at midnight Friday. Israel ha.!1 already agreed to accept an u- tension . Thant issued a report Monday in which he expresed guarded optimism over progress of Ute talks being conducted by his special envoy, Gunnar V. Jarring. He appealed to all parUes to withhold fire -a statement directed mainly at Egypt, which has said it w ou 1 d not extend the cease-firt unless there was progress in the ~!ks. The sources sa~they (id not know full details of the <W:ins \mder which Cairo agreed to the, ne month extension . but one was a sjipulation that Thant . would issue aJ¥11btil report on the talks ·by Marc~-Presu ly Cairo could base a decision then .pr.~ urther extension of the ceaµ. -ffri, provided it believed there was con- .rete evidence of progress in the Jarring p lks. Israeli forces along the Sun Canal eared for battle as a precaution but 1 eli leaders said they would not fighting unless the Egyptians a t i c reports readling .:iaid Sadat would e.tten4 the -. .. t1l Marc"'h 5._ but would insist 1t time Israel mUs( h~nt a Security Council resolution calling Israeli withdrawal from conquered rab territory. Egypt "would have no ather course but libuaUon." Defense sources in London said Egypt and Israel massed weapons in un- precedented numbers along the Suez Canal 8.!l the cease-fire de1dllne 1p- proached. The sources said Egypt had 50,000 to 60,000 troops with 1,500 tanks, 1,000 artillery pieces and an unspecified number of landing craft. They were backed by Russian-made SAM2 and SM\13 antiaircraft missile$< An Israeli military sour~ in Tel Aviv estimated the rlumber of Egyptian troop!t in the canal· zone at · 100,000 and said they had amassed more m i 11 t a r y hardware than confronted Israel before the 1967 Middle East "''ar. (sraeli troops waited in formidable defensive positions with air support from American-made Phantom jets. Israe l accused Egypt of violating the cease-fire Wednesday with a t h i r d straight day of flights over Israeli canal poeitioos. Israeli military correspondents suggested the Egyptians wanted to gather as mui,b ~reconnaissance data as they could •rore the formal cease-firt ended. ' ,I "Girls Reveal Fascination With Manson 2 Unions Accept New Rail Pact; 2 Still Ref use Nixon lured her back to see the new portraits of herself and President John F. Kennedy hwtg in the White House for the first time. For Mrs. Onassis" visit, howe ver, the»" were hung in place for the first time. Kennedy's port!ait was in the Green Room , replacing Claude Monet 's "A Moming on the Seine," a gilt to the White House from the Kennedy family after the president's death. The late President is pictured almost full length in pensive mood, head bowed and his eyes obscured. > The leading Beirut newspaper, An· Nahar, carried a similar report from Cairo, quoting ofricial Egyptian sources as say ing if Israel refuses to withdraw, LOS ANGELES (U PI) -The runaway girls who Charles Manson picked up and took into his fold are doing their best to save him from the gas chamber. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The ruiUon's rallroads aaid today they had reached tentaUve agreement with two of four unions on a new contract but reported JitUe progress toward a setUernent with the other two. The chief railroad oe1otiator, John P. HUtr: Jr., said he reached tentative agreement Wednesday . night with ne(Ot.iators for the Brotherhood or ttfaintenance ot Way Employea and the Hotel and Restaurant Emplotes Union. which represent about 93,000 r a i 1 workers. But not much progress was reported by Hilb: toward 1greement with the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks and the United Transportation Union. which represents 300,000 other workers. There was a brief rail strike Dec. 10 but the workers returned to their joba under an emergency law passed by Congress to prevent a strike unUI March 1. ~. Hiltz said at a news conference or effort& to reach a settlement with BRAC and the UTIJ : "We hope to reach agree- ment wjth them before the March 1 deadline set by Congress. but these twc> unic>ns are making agrtemtnt extremely difficult. .. Eighth Victim Found In New J er sey Bl ast LAMBERTVILLE, N.J. (UPI) -The body of an eighth victim c>f two gas exploaions in a residential neighborhood was pulled from the rubble late \\'ed· neslay night. Mtl. Florence \Valdron. like six of the other vicllms, was trapped by the !tCOnd explosion in the home of a neighbor. She went there to help persons injured, stunned or left homeless in the fint blasl And sitt brought along her children. Caroline. 13. and John P'. Kennedy Jr., 10, on the three-hour visi t \Vednes· day night which was kept secret until ·well after their departure. President Nixon led a lour that included his Oval Office and hosted a dinner in the second-floor family quarters with lhe Nixon daughters, Tricia and Julie, on hand. J\frs. Onassis was depicted somewhat impressionistic- ally in a long gown. Her portrait was placed alongside the doorway lo the growtd·rloor diplomatic recep tion room. opposite one or her successor, Lady Bird Johnson. These are expected to be permanent locations for lhe portraits, aimmissioned by the White House Histori· ca l Association at a cost of $15,000 each. They were accepted after Mrs. Onassiiil gave her approval. Pt1rs. Nixon described the occasion as "perfectly de- lightful-very warm and relaxed." Nixon had sent a milita ry jet to bring lhe Kennedys to W1shington from New York. They arrived around 5 p.m. and stayed until 8:35 p.m. There has been a>nsiderable interest in Mrs. Ona ssis' portrait and one version was published in advance. The \Vhite House had expected to have a ceremonial unveil· ing of the Kennedy petntings .. but Mrs. Onaui.s requested they simply be placed on display. ' '· ;,J Popular Si1i ge r Aboard Airliner . ' Forced to Cuba MIAMI (UP I) -A Delta Air Lines jetliner enroute from Chi c ago tn Nashville, Tenn.. \Yit.h 28 persons on board , including singer Bobby Goldsboro, was hijacked today by a man '"ho ordered it flown to Cuba. The Federal Aviation Administration said Ule hijacker made his move <it 9:35 a.m. as the DC-9 was aboul 100 miles south of Bawling Green. Ky. - about a half hour after it le.rt Chicago's O'Hare Field. Goldsboro and three mt'mbers of hi5 band were among the 2J passengers aboard Delta's flight :l79. There was a crew of five. Goldsboro recorded the hi t record "Honey." Viking Record s idcnlified the band members as piani st Ron Oates. bass player Steve Schafer and drummer Jan Kurtis. There v.·as no descriplion of lhc hi· jacker or re port on how he ordered the plane hijacked. ''All ~·e know is that a male passeni;er requested service to Havana," said a Delta spokesman. l' otv to Back Co1111nunists Red Chinese Accuse U.S. Of Extending Asia11 War By United Pres5 International Communist China accused the Uniled States today of escalating the war in Indochina and said it has the obligation to support the Communist forces "until fina l victory." An ofl icia1 slalement by I.he Chi!le5e f oreign J\1inistry broadcast by Peking Radio and monitored in H.ong Kong said the Chinese people "absolutely will not tolerate U.S. imperialism to do what it likes in Indochina." ·'We have the responsibility and the obligation to support the people of the three Indochina nations until final victory in the war against U.S. aggression and for nat ional salvation,'' the statement sa id. It stopped shorl of threatening outright Chinese intervention in Indochina. Premier Prince Souvanna Phoum a of Laos said today in Vientiane his country would prolest to the Soviet Union and Great Britain, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva ainference, if allied troops enter Lao.s. He said he knew of no such incursion and reported new Communist advances to Laos. "Red " Prince Souphanouvong, leader of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao move· ment in Laos and half brother of Prince Souvanna, appealed to Souvanna to stop South Vietnamese troops from entering Lao.°'. An urgent message dated Feb. 2 and broadcast today by the Kahosan Palhet Lao Radio said tens of thousands of Saigon troops were messed along the border and that American-trained com· mandos were operating deep in Pathiel Lao territory. He warned that Souvanna would ''have to bear heavy responsi bility for the great disaster arising from the U.S. im· perialists and their lackeys widening the war in our country." 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Ru•l"I "'' nl9M, ""' IO IRl1 w11 ICl<ltd lr"llM rllfl. • in Rockies Tempe rature• O f Escalatio1i; Bruce Hits Back IT UNITED "ltl!JS INTIRNATIDNAL ,t.llll!nv Albu<luttcl~I Atlen1& ""'"'"''"~· 8011on Bull110 C~IC"ltO Clnt•M•lf Cl~v•!•nd 0•111$ 0--nvr• 0.-• MO•ntl "'"';' , .... ... lfftl 11""°1~1u lr•<HI"'"°'" JIC~!.O~Vllle l&• Vri111 LM Afl9el•i lOUitvl•lt M'°"'Ol!ll M '"'' M tw1u•tt M•-tOl!l\ Np O•lr1n• Hr• Yori!; 01~11.-0 Oll!lllOfrl.t t.:l"V Pl!I!'> So•l,...1 "~·•f<l•lot\lt ""otni• P•TIH1Vr~I! ,..,.1111"!. Ort ll&~!f (jfy tltllt ll!IJ!! . ... S8{tl'f"I"~ S•. Lr>JI\ Stn ~•1ne<1(0 $•••It• S~•"• Mlt~ L•w "rec. " ·10 S. n T ~ . OJ ~ PARIS (UPI) -The Communists said ~ \1 today the United States had carried .-o 11 .01 the Tndochin<i war inside Laos and Cam.. ~ ;: :~! bodia and \\'as trying lo "cover up" ·~ .o .o• the operations. The United States r~ ~: ;~ .!: jccted the accusations and s a i d il was ,, '' .u Haooi that had invaded Laos. Cambodia u JJ and South Vietnam . JI II 11 )1 U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce !: : ·'1 said Hanoi had shipped massive forcts ,. .g into Laos and Cambodia in violation ~ : of international law and said today's ,. u n accusations were a plot to cover up ;~ ~ N the use QJ Laotian and Cambodian ter· ,. ,, ai ritories for North Vietnamese and 1• " °' satellite armies. •S !1 '' 10 ''Throughout your statements runs the ~ : 01 failure to mention the long-&tandlng and ,, 11 continuing massive pr!sence or North '' n °1 Vietnamese forces In Laos, Cambodia . .. ,. ,, and South Vietnam ." Bruet. said . "Into '' " '1 all three countries il11nol has sent its 11 -tJ 01 ., .o · forces, clAndestinel)'. illegally. in great ..., 11 numbers and in defiance of the wishes ~ ~ of the governments concerned and or '' •• intematlonal agreeme.nts to which North " Jt ... ~ " • oi Vietnam is party," Bruct said. Prisoners Seize T,vo Dade County Guards in Miami MIAMI (UPI) -Forty maximum security convict.a held two guards hoatage for three hours today inside the con- troversial Dade Caunty Jail to protest the alleged beating of an accused. jailhouse slayer of a preacher's son. The guards, John Mravintz, 29, and Roy Rhea! Jr., 35, were released uaharm- ed after jail supervisor Jack Sandstrom agreed to listen to the dema nds of the convicts. including lheir prolest.s of living conditions in the jail which a judge recently termed "a snakepit." Charlie Buchanan, a 21-year-old con- victed armed robber , said the prisoners in cell 6C2 on the 6th floor decided to grab the guards "after we heard screams last night from the hole where they got Johnnie." "They beat Jones and a sick guy;• Buchanan said. Jones , a 2().year-old convicted. armed robber. is one of two convicts accused of strangling 17-year-old Cloyce Bradley Cook, a preacher's son from Pledmond. S.C., in an overcrowded cell just nine days ago. Two of the young women who were part of the "family " but not actually involved in the Tate·LaBianca murders testified in tile penalty phase of the trial Wednesday and four more were waiting their turn . Lynette Fromme. 21, the very firs! female to join bis nomadic harem five years ago. told the jury ·that Man90n once hit her so hard that be knockect, her clear across the room but "'it was just what J needed." Another follower. Nancy Pitman, 19. was ordered from the witness stand briefly after she taunted the judi;e, Charles H. Older, that he was trying to hide facts in t.he case and asked when Manson was going to be allowed to tell his story. Miss Fromme said Pt1anson struck her because "I had kicked a baby, becawe I wanted some attention." Rag ing Fire Kills 4 In Quebec Building QUEBEC (AP) -A fire raged for more than seven hours in a downtown apartment building early today, killing 4 persons and injuring 17, firemen reported. Firemen said none of the vic- tims had been identified. Seven of the injured were ta ken to hospit.als. \l,'itnesses said they saw occu panls of the four-story building, unable to get out the front doors. throwing themaelves down from the fourth floor. U"I Tt,....,,. Gls' tforst Ene111y U.S. vehicles slog through Vietnam mud just three miles from Lao.a border duri~g most recent buildup against enemy po11ltions in that area. Sometimes even the w~ather can become a formidable enemy ........ I ' Joblessness Hits Record In County Unemployment figures for January in Orange County iet a 13-year high with 8.2 percent of the county's work force jobless. The U,300 persons out or work in January represented an 11 percent in- crease over the December, when 7.4 percent or 39,000 were out of work. With seasonal adjuslments, the rate for January and December were the 5ame al 7.7 percent, Mrs. Alta Yetter, Orange County analyst for the State Department of Human ~urces said. The seasonal adjustment is made in order lo compare county jobless rates with state and national rates. The last time the unadjusted or actual jobless rate exceeded Jl.2 percent was in April, 1958, she said, when 9.1 percent v.·ere jobless. The Orange County labor situation is bad and we don't see any major areas of improvement during the first half <lf 1971," Odessa Dubinsky, senior research analyst for llRD said. The adjusted rate of unemployment will hit 8 percent by the end of February and probabJy 8.2 percent in March. Last year, January unemployment stood at 4.2 perCf!nt with 22,300 unemployed. Contributing to the bad news for January were 5.600 workers released Crom service and retail firms -500 more than were laid off in January, JflO. While 400 aerospace jobs were created in January last year, 900 were eliminated last month. In 12 months, aerospace employment has dropped to 55,900 jobs from 68,200. "We e1pect another 2,000 aerospace v.·orkers to be laid off in 1971 , certainly not as precipitous as last year," Miss Dubinsky said. YES Saying NO As Joh Demands Exceed Supply The Harbor Area Youth Employment Service (YES) is having to say a difficult v.·ord (NO) to a lot of job applicants for a very few reasons. -Not enough work is available for young people. -And young people outside the Harbor Are1, from as far as tvine and Ptfission Viejo, are calling for jobs. "The kids are just coming in droves ," says hfrs. Florence Hayos, YES director. She notes that the new school semester gives some teenagers more time for employment. Not only that, but a YES office in Huntington Beach was forced to close. shifting the demand for employment and income to the Costa Mesa facilities. "We're getting 20 applications a day," she explains. saying many are from Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, plus south Orange County. Anyone who needs a hand -from baby-sitting to housework, Ja"'-'n care, carpentry, heavy labor, sales or janitorial v.·ork can tap a ready source of willing help. The YES number is 642-0474 and hfrs. Hayos is there afternoons. while a donated answering service can take calls anytime. • r I • ' '1 ·-\/Pl Tl ...,_ " UNFLAGGING -Mrs. Louise Shepard, wile o! the Apollo 14 corr.· mander, directs hanging of Flag from second floor balcony of Shep- ards' Houston home. flanging Flag are (from left) Julie, 19; Robert \Villiams, 24, Shepard's nephew, and Laura, 23. Flag was presented to Astronaut Shepard after bis first space flight 10 years ago. Fa1nilies Wait Apollo Crew Wives Unruffled ~ \/Pl T1_.,.M THUMBS UP FOR STUART Apollo 14 Wif• Jo•n Roosa SPACE CENTER, HOUJ!on (UPI) The leaves in the front yard need raking because the man of the house is 1'Way. On the front door hangs a tapestry with a message needled by a Benedictine nun: "Many angels stand in the sky as the rocket speeds to the moon on high." The tapestry was 1 gift to Mrs. stuart A. Roosa, wife of the Apollo 14 com- mand pilot, from Sisler Mary Lucy Bar· rett, who teaches at Sacred Heart Academy, a Roman Catholic school nestl- ed among the strawberry patches and red clay hills near Cullman, Ala. "She's my aunt and she's a space nut," said Joan Barrett Roosa, a Tupelo. Miss., girl who taught school for a while. married a man destined to be an astronaut, and now keeps house for him and four children Jn an unpretentious old bri~k, ranct>.type bouse in El Lago, Tex. Like the wives or the other two moon voyagers, A1an B. Shepard and Edgar D. Mitchell, Joan Roosa seems unruffled by her husband's potentially dangerous assignment. She even jokes about il "I tried to get the flight controller to send Stu a message that I had loaned my Neiman-Marcus (department store) charge card to my two sisters who ar~ visiting me from Mississippi,'"' she said. ''He said he was afraid it would blow the mission." Rooftop Recreation For Chapman College? She said she had 1 few anxious moments during the trouble wilh the docking shortly after Sunday's launch but decided "Ole Stu will fix that." ' 1tliles away, in the excluslve River Oaks section of Houston, Louise Brewer Shepard has closeted herself in her two- story while rolonial home with her two grown daughters, other relatives, and Mrs. Richard Abbott, her close friend. She has refused to talk to newsmen about the mission until aftet.Splashdown. Rooftop recreation may be one way Chapman College. Orange, may solve its land shortage dlfficullies. College official! are studying the pro. spects of building a three-story educa- tional center that would be housed under one roof. On the 200,000 square-foot roof would be teMis courts a ruMU:lg track, football field , a putt{ng green and a baseball diamond that may serve Chap- man's team needs. The concept takes advantage of the present stadium by converting its con- crete benches for use in five lecture halls, a college spokesman said. The Live Coverage Of Moo11 Walk The three major telev i sion networb in Southern California will carry live c:overage of the Apollo 14 lunar landing schtdul~ early Friday morning. Both Channels 4 (NBC ) and Olannel 7 (ABC) will carry the teleca~t from lZ:.30 to 1:30 and Channel 2 (CBS) from 1 to 1:30 a.m. Coverage or the first or two lunar walks, scheduled to begin at approximately 5:50 a .m. will be as follow1 : ABC, 5:45 to 10 a.m.: NBC, 5:45 to ti a.m. and .CBS, S-11 a.m. Additional covert1ge is scheduled for Saturday activlU~s but local coverage ha.5 not Y't been an- nounced. present gymnasium would also be re- tained with its interior being gutted and converted to other usea. Chapman oUiclals are working up pro. posab for funding the 13.1 million project with a combination of private gills ind federal money. The departments of Health, Education and Welfare and Hou.s- ing and Urban Development are con· sidering the plan. Synthet;c turf would be used to tree college planners from the tradlUons that bind playing lleldl I<> ground levels. The fake, green atuff -at $3 a square foot -wouJd cover the rooftop reereaUon areas. Underneath the tingle roof would be located dormitories, fine arts f•clllti~ including two theaters, classrooms, lec- ture bal!J, a student hall and alhletk facilities. While college officials uy lhey are at least "1ix mooth1 1w1y from com· pleting financial arrangementl," it ls possible lfOUDdbreaklng for the complex could occur before the end of thlJ ye1r. O>llege departments are submitting space needs requatl to planners, a spokesman said. The proposed complex would cover most of the block bounded by Walnul Avenue, Center Strft:t, Sycamore AYenue and Orange Street in Or1nge. Conversion of this area to the three-1tory complex relie\tes the college of the nctd to purchate: u much as two city blocks that would be requ1red If the college were to build f1 ciliUes Wilh a similar amount of space, Wednesday she had a flag hoisted over the tree-shaded $150,00) home. The nag, she sald, onl:'e flew over the U.S. Capitol. It was 11:iven to Shepard after hi1 first space flight on May 5, 1961. Mrs. Shepard ii a stylish blonde whose husband's inYestments in oil and b:ink!n11: have made him the richest man in space. Victims of Air Cra sh Id entified Victims of a plane crash in the mist- oovered Cajon Pass northeast of San Bernardino Wednesday have been Jden· lilied as 1 mortuary employe from Anaheim and two friends. Warner F. Julian Jr., 32. of 1617 W. La Palma Ave., waa believed to have been pilolif1g the. Piper Tri-Pacer when it slammed into a' power company access road . . Julian, owner of the plane, wu killed instantty along with DeMil 0 . Waite, ti, of Temple City, and Tertsa McNeely, 33, of La Canada. Bolh Julian and Waite were employed by Hill Mortuary, in Temple City, tnvestigaton said visibility wu leu lhan 1 haU·mile when Julian'• plane crashed 200 yards from Interstate 151 the Barstow Freeway. Traffic on the UiOYoUghfare -primary route from Los Angeles to Las Vegas -was stopped in !OUthbound 11ne1 ror a time u a result ot the cr1.!b. Julian's car was parked at Bracket Field near La Verne, where the ltlo took off. • ThuNdlt, ,......,, 4, 1971 H DA!LV '"°' S Services Probe Due Supervisors to Review County Prograrris Tuk force .-of COWlly 1a1ands. ...-......-.dala-lng aod the eounty medJcal ctnttt """ ordered W-7 bi 1IA>bert W, Battin, cholmwi of the 11oan1 of Siapervilon. In hll aecood lqlhy llalement read to fellow 'board members In the put two days, Battin appointed hll coll<aguo and hlmldl to In cjepth 1ludles In the nm ·11x moolhl. Tuelday, Battin read a lllalemenl calling for the !Iring of Ownly AdmlnbtraUve Officer Robert E. Tbomu. lie failed to get the oectaary three voles to achieve hll goal. Wednesday Batlin uld the board "I! laced with • big job il we are going lo elfeduale the goal ,.l by Mr. Ronald Caspers aod Mr. Ralph Clark oo their joining the board aod with which I agee -namely thlt we reYiew ea.ch f\mC'Uon of government from r.ero to pment needs. 1"l'his means that we will not accept as a stll1.ing point tut year's budget plua fiYe percent for pay raise1 and then add P«>llflUllJ to the exltJ1t penni~ ted by rillnc revenuea,'' the ~ chairman coallmled. He admlu.d lhat the board, In the siz montbo ldt before ldopUon ol the budle~ will not be able I<> thorOlllhJy review each department from zero, "but we can complete the. study of aome lad strongly W'lt department htads to do 1 Ute re-analysis of lhelr own." BltUn aaerted that the board "can be Uve t1Jnf.I more eUectlYe lhan by altting u a review bofJ'd ol Cllt and dried budget preaenlallons." Clark wu usJgoed to ·tnvestlgate small coonly Islands to delmnlne U lire aod Polle< proleclloo aod other .....,JCH pro- vided by the coonly c:oWd not be better and more economically pn>Ylded vii con. tracts with 1djoinln& cities or even an- nexaUon. Pbllllps was uked to study recom- mendations toward combining engineer· ing RJ"\'Jcea into a alngle department · or building location. C11pm was named to lnveati,ale ~ta proct.lllna. Ballin wd thil orea of coonly aervlca has bttn severely critlclr.ed by "out own county people u well u by private tupayers." "Compllint.s of ovtrebarga to other departments, delays la deliverr. in- 8Call'Cies in work, waste, 1tc. are wklespread enough that they should be determined by a full scale 1tudy to be erroneous or they thould be cor-o rected/' Blttln s.tated. Ballin said be would bead a 1ludy of the Orange County Medical <:enter. He repeated that he favors comblning the medical center and a propoeed UCl hoopllal In one physical lnsUlUtlon With common management and p I an t facilities. n>e board chairman said he would assign a study are1 to SuperviJor David Baker when he relUml from WaJhlnlton, D.C. Jury Requested To Dela y Firing Of County Chief Health Planning Group Dissolves With BUists - A member of the 1969 Orange County Orlngf: County's Comprthensive lleallh Grand Jury bas asked the present Grand Planning Associ1tlon (CHPA ), dealt a Jury to urge county supervisors to delay death blow by the Board of SuperYisor• their proposed firing 8f c 0 u n t y Jut week, voted itRU out or nistence AdmlnistraUve Officer Robert Thomas Tuesday night. But not without taking a few pot.shota ••until it has time to make a careful at Its "enemies." study" of the situation surrounding the Or. Wallace Gerrie, president of CHPA, proposal. blamed Dr. John R. Philp, county health Mrs. Beatrice Russell of 1444 West officer for the demise of the pllnning Bay Ave., Newport Beach, reminds group, and charged that the action had Grand Jury Foreman Doreen Marshall "put health pl&Mlng back two or three in her letter that many county depart· years in Orange County.'' ment heads "spoke approvingly -many Dr. Gerrie c1Iled the new Orange enthusiastically -of 'Ibomas and the County Health Plannin11: Council, 1ug. job he was doing for the county" when gested by Philp and approved by the the CAO was discussed during sessions .. supervisors, "mort political th an of the 1969 pane.I. volunteer" and said it would not receive Mr1. Russell served as acretary te the required endorsement of the Orange the 1969 Crand Jury. County Medical Asaoclalion. Mrs. Manhall declined comment Gerrie said the CHPA had many •C· Wednesd•Y on Mrs. Rwsell'1 request. complislunents to ht proud of. "We were A board vote on the firing or retention the only county In the state which never of the county administrator is scheduled had an appeal from one of It.I decillorui, for Tuesday's meetin1. we held more hearings than any other county.'' Flying Command Post Notes Anniversary OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -OfficialJ or lhe Stralegic Alt Command celebraled Wednesday the 10th 1nnivenary of their airborne command p:>St but the DCJ35 plane carrying the headquarters ataff was prevented from Jandlng by a fretting drizzle. The command post, known as the "looking glass," serve11 as an 1U1iliary SAC headquarters in the sky. It ha s ·been aloft continUally since the Inception ol the program in 1961. Tite CHPA was orglnir.ed under federal Jaw and new hospitals and additiOns to existing ho!pitals had to have CHPA approval for a Uceme and to 1ccept Medi-Oal paYJD<nt!. The Orange County 1110Cl1ti0n wu organi7.ed ln 1969 and ROt 1nto trouble Jn mid-1970. At one time a committee · of the organi.zaUoo held up approval of the expall!ion of Santa Ana Com· munlty and Tustin Memorial hospitals. This r1ised 1 furor and Gerrie charged that it was about this time that Dr. Philp began the destruction ot CHPA. Having little fUnd.9 the organization depended upon county space and loaned help to be matched by feder1l money. "Dr. Philp began to wJthdr1w the CofFE£ T~DLES •S1Pfl!>OAROS• LOUNGE GH~l~-l}-.50% tfF I I I ' I C\\~15™~ DEC01' htlp we needed about six monthl qo,'\ Dr. Gerrie charged. "[ thint he wanted. and bu gained, full control over bultll planning In the county." Gerrie said functions of health planning are now suspended as flt u a local organization is concerned. ' That Deadline Really Friday A spokesman for the Department ol Motor Vehicles, somewhat red faced. explained today that the deadline for renewal of vehicle registration is FrldlY, and not today. It see.ms cards sent out by lhe DMV, which were printed last March, warn vehicle owners they will have to pay a penalty fee if they don't renew by Feb. 4. As the spokesman noted, It was a typographical error, and the renew•\ deadline ilJ Friday mldnigbt by m1it or Friday 5 p.m. at the k>cal DMV offices.. In Orange County DMV offlcea .. re located 1t 72G W 19th St., Costa Mesa: 15062 Jackson St., Midway City; me E. lit St., Santa Ana, and 106 W. ean.ta, Saa Clemente. Libbers Bake Cakes TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -'!be women's Jib group at Florida State University, an opponent of the Idea that a woman's place is in the kitchen, decld· ed to raise some cash ao tbe membe:rl held a bake sale. c,..~05 ~OFF DANI H C<J-FEE. GM.DE.N 1'40WTCA'6r14 ~'t· COltoN~ O!LWtR• 'i+b10 •• I . . . - 4 DAILY PILOY lhun4q, Febnllry 4, 1911 Nixon Sends Seu <:011.r1c1o11. Sl1are Plan Egypt to Extend To Congress Cease-fire Pact WASHINGTON (AP) -Pn!•ldent Nix· on {lent to a 1ktptic1l COngn:11 todly 1 $$-bllliorM.·Year 11ner1l revenuHlw~ in& plan containinc a new proposal to enCQUrqe 1tltcs to work out for therNtlvea how they would 1b1te their money with localltlts. The President 11id the plan would grow automatically to provide 1n estimated SID billion a ye1r in no-slrinp fedtral money to state and localities. In a leqthy mauge to Concras the J>Juident made clear that general revenue sharing is the cornerstone of his .,oew federalism" policy. "In the final analysil, the purpoge of gener1l revenue sharing is to set our st.ates and Joc:aUUes frer-frte to 11et new priorities, free to meet unmet needs. fr~ to make their own mistakes, )'es, but also free to score splendid successes which otherwise would never be realized," the President said. There is considerable rank and file 1upport for the plan. but it was de- nounced in advance by the two men who have the moat to say about what Congress does with I~ Rep. Wilbur Milli <D-Ark.), and Rep. John W. Byrnes <R· Wis.). 'Nixon said the plan woold reduce needs for heavier property and aales toes, open new job opportunitles at the 1tate and loca1 level, decruse compctttion belv.•een domeltic and deferuie needs, and attract more eTieflY and talent to 1late .and local governments. The broad outlines or general revenue sbuing had been sketched out earlier. 2 Unions Accept New Rail Pact; 2 Still Ref use WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th< naUon's railroads aald today they had reached tentative agreement with two of four unions on a new C1lntract but reported ILtUe progress toward a eetUement with the other two. The chief railroad t1t1oli1tor, John P. Hiltz Jr., said he ...ached tenlatiV<I aareement Wtdoe,,day nl&ht w i th negotiators for the Brotherhood of Maintenance Of Way !mployu and the Hotel and Restaurant Employa Un*1, which represent about 91,000 r a J 1 workers. 1 But not much progress was reported by Hiltz toward agreement with the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks and the United Transportation Union, l\'hich represents 300,000 other workers. There was a brief rail strike Dee. 10 but the workers returned to their jobs under an emergency law passed by Congress to prevent a strike until March I. Hiltz said at a new1 conference or errorts to nach a settlement with BRAC and the UTU : "We hope to reach agree· ment with them before the March l deadline aet by Congreu, but thete two unions are miking ageement extremely difficult. .. Eighth Victim Found In New Jersey Blast LAMBERTVILLE, N.J . tUPI) -The body of an eighth victim or two gas explosions ln a residential neighborhood \\'BS pulled from the rubble late Wed· neslay night. Mrs. Florence Waldron. like sil: of !ht otber vict im1, was trapped by the second explosion in the home of 1 rieighbor. She went there lo help pt:rsons injured, stunned or left homeless in the first blast. ' THESE ARE COPIES OF OFFICIAL PORTRAITS OF KENNEDY, WIDOW Jaclclt and Two Chlltlran Viawtef Likana1sts in Visit to Whitt Houst W asl1ington Revisited Jackie Lured Back by New Kennedy Por.traits WASIUNGTON (AP) -Jacquelin! Kennedy Onassis has returned to the White Houae for the tint Lime since the 1963 assassination of her fint huaband to visit the Nixons and see new Kennedy portratu on display. The new portraib by artist Aaron Shikler of New York City wert to get a press review on easels in the Eut Room today and will be on display there for touriltl for about 10 days. For Mrs. Onassis' visit. however, they were hung in place for the first time. Kennedy's portrait was in the Green Room, replacing Claude Monet's "A Morning on the Seine," a gift to the White House from the Kennedy family after the president's death. 'Ibe former first lady had . told friends she never want- ed to return to the White House because of it.a tra1ic memories. But a special invlt1Uon from President and Mrs. Nixon lured her back to gee the new portraits of heraelf and President John F. Kennedy hun1 in the White Hoose ror the first time. The late President is pictured almost full length in pen11lve mood, head bowed and. hill eyes obscured. Mrs. Onas.sis was depicted somewhat impreasionistic- ;dly in a long gown. Her ·portrait was placed alongside the doorway to the ground-floor diplomatic reception room, opposite one of her successor, Lady Bird Johnson. And she brought alon1 her children, Caroline, 13. and John F. Kennedy Jr., 10, on the thr~our visit Wednes- day night which was kept 1ecnt until well after their departure. President Nixon l&d a tour that included his Oval Office and bolted a dinner in the second-floor family quarters with the Nixon dauehttn:, Tricia and Julie, on bapd. These are e.1pected to be perm.anent locatkms for the portraits, commissioned by the White HOUie Histori· cal Associ1tion at a cost of 815,000 each. They 1'"tre accepted after Mrs. Onauis give her approval. h-1rs. Nixon described the occasion u "perlectly de- 1.i&hUul-very warm and rtla1ed." Nixon had sent a military jet to bring the Kennedys to Washington from New York. "n>ey arrived around 5 p.m. and stayed until 1:35 p.m. There has been considerable interest in Mrt. Onassis' portrait and one version was published in advance. The White House bad expected to have a ceremonial unveil· ing of the KeMtdy paintings. but Mn. On111is requested they •imply be placed on display. Popular Singer Aboard Airliner Forced to Cuba MIAMI (UPI I - A Delta Air Lines jetliner enroute from C h I c a a o to Nashville, Tenn.. with 28 persons on board, including singer Bobby Goldsboro, was hijacked today by a man who ordered it flown to Cuba. The Federal Aviation AdmiiUslration said the hijacker made his move al 9:35 a.m. as the DC9 was about 100 miles south of Bowling Green. Ky. - about a half hour after it left Chic110'1 O'Hare Field. Goldsboro and three members of bis band were among the 23 pa1sen1ers abnard Delta's flight 3i9. There was a crew of five. Goldsboro recorded the hit record "Honey." Viking Records identified the band members as pianist Ron Oates, bass player St.eve Schafer and drummer Jan Kurtis . There was no description of the hi · jacker or report on how he ordered the plane hijacked. "All we know is lh11t a male passenger requested aervlce to Havana ." said a Della 1pokesm1n. Vow to Back Cotnnaunists Red Chinese Accuse U.S. Of Extending Asian War By Uaitedl Prus btenatioaal C.Ommunist Olina accused the United States today of escalating the war in Indochina and said it has the obligation to &upport the Communist forces ''until final victory." An official statement by the Chinese Foreign Ministry broadcast by Peking R1dio and monitored in Hong KonJ said the Chinese people "absolutely will not tolerate U.S. imperialism to do l\'h1t it likes in Indochina." "We have the responsibility and the obligation to support the people of the three Indochina nations until final victory in the war against U.S. aggression and for national salvation," the statement said. It stopped short of threatening outright Chinese intervention in Indochina. Premier Prince Souvanna Pbouma of Laos 1aid today in Vientiane his country would protest to the Soviet Union and Great Britain, ·cochairmen of the 1952 Geneva conference. if allied troops enter Laos. He said be. knew of no auch incursion and reported new Communiat advances to Laos. "Red" Prince Souphanouvong. leader of the pro-Communist Patbet Lao move- ment in Laos and half brother af Prince Souvanna, appealed to Sbuvanna to stop South Vietnamese troops fram entering Laos. An ur1ent message dated Feb. 2 and broadcast today by the Kabosan P1lhet Lao Radio !lid tens of thousands of Saigon troops were massed along: the border ind that American-trained com- mendos were open.Ung deep in Pathet Lao territory. He warned that Souvanna would "have to bear heavy responsibility for the great disaster arising frt)m lhe U.S. im. perlaUsts and their lackey1 widening the war in our country." Bad Weather Plagues U.S. Communist China said l1r1e numbers of U.S. and South Vietcamese troops were pOSed ''to invade southern Laos on a massive ac1Je. The U.S. military command acknowled1ed 29,000 allied troops were near the border but said no U.S. Gl's wculd enter Laos. * * U.S. Accused Potentially Dwigerous Storm Builds Up in Rockies Of Escalation; Bruce Hits Back Callfortli• a, UHITIO Plllltt IMTllllM'4TIOM.liL se..it11t•11 C..llto•ll•I w•• mtttlr ,11nnr ~IV Will\ -hllh cJllUCft •I'll •htl'lllV cooler 1tmNr1111r11 I'! '"' ·-· nw to1 .. .,..1,, 1t" httl • fe w COLD ••!din fl e1•lr nwn1t11 i... The \r . J1 C/¥k C.m.r'I 1...a;.ettt ~ltl\ •¥ 11• IU•CIStt \. )"-''1--- Jlt, .... n .. or ''"" WIMIMMIV'I ,,, \. \ ....,. __ .. r .. i.r.t·• ""• wm ,._ !rem '4 '-..fA •' tM Civic c ... ttr 'v ,.,. 111'•4' :IC!> Ill cekMr 1111iou•llt. ,.,,.,. ..... Ml .,. 11'1'1111.... 1•0101 -wlttl the 1n1Jd-I f-l~I '"'"'""" Heu! .U ""' ••• mllU.. .,.,,. tit 11~ 1ftllll wl1ltHllw ''l'lt•itt from .,,.. i. MVfl'I ""II" In ~r11 11111 °"''' .,. ... ""' -.,, lt ..... 1111 1~ 9eKhtl w--Witt\ .... ... motll'f '" "" "' tM ""' ... , ... ... 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" "'"""" ·" Mtltt\I " M-lulu " .~ ...... 11 .. .• J1c.l!....,vl•le ~ ,_, " Lti V"'' " l .. Atlltltl " LOUl•rllte ~ M-hil " ., .... " Mll.,..tulo " • Ml-1"11< " NM Orlttnl .. N,....Yofll n 01tl1M " Ol<lthtn'\t f!ltr ~ "'''"' ......... , " ilhllld•l..,.lt " ....... 1. H P ltt1bu.-.h " ,.0111111d. Ore. " llt•lf C.ll'r " 111'11 l lull " ·-.. h (1'•-IO • SI, loul' " ~rt F r1ncl1«1 " '*""" .. $P0111nt ~ _,. " • •• .. " " " " • ., " " " " " M • .. •• " .. • •• " " .. M * .. " " .. " " •• * " ~ " " " u T PARlS (UPI) -The Commun.iata 1aid today the United States had carried .et the Indochina war inside Laos and cam.- ·" bod.ii and was tryint1 to "cover 1m'' .1• '--" -,. .o• tr"" operations. The United States re- " jected the accusations and 1 al d it was :~~ Hanoi that had invaded Laos , Cambodia and South Vietnam . U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce .t1 ~aid Hanoi had shipped massive forces into Laos and Clmbodia in violation of lnternalion1l J1w and said today's 11 1ccusations were a plot to covtr up ·°' the use of Laotian ind .cambod.ian ter· ·'' ritories for North Vtetnamae and 0t M1lelllte armlea: . "Throu1hout your statements runs the .111 failure to ment k>11,lbe lon1-standln1 and continuinc , .massive pre~nce of North .01 Vietn11.mese fOrces In Laos, Clmbodla and S()Uth 'Vlttnlm," Bruce said. "lnto 1~ all thrte countri~ lf11nol has sent ill '61 forces. clandestinely, 111,gally. in grellt numbers •nd In defianct of the •:isbes or the aovernments concerned and of _,. inttmalionel agreemtnl.! to which North M Vletn11m is party," Bruce aakl. Froa111re- CAIRO -EoPllD Pnaldonl Anwar Sadat announced IGoiCht Em>\ will oblerVt the Mlcldl• Eut ceue-fir• for a furlher month -unlll Mlrdl 7. TbO IOllrCOll uld lhal tho -d WU relayed on Iha undonlllldlnC that '!bani would illut another npGl1 Oft the ltatUI of the Arab-Iar..U peace lllkl wllhill Iha next »day~ 'lbe 1i<1Jdl1h.old ..-lire II due to expire at llliclnilbl Friday. Iarael hu already qroed to accept an ex· -· . Tbanl tuued a repcn M-y In which he espraNd pardtd optimiam over progresa of Iha llllla belnc conducted by his specill envoy, Gmmar V. Ja!Ting. He appealed to all parties to withhold fire -a statement directed mainly at EllYJ>I, which hu llld It w o u I d not extend the ctue-fire: unleu there was progre111 in the talks. The sourcH Did they did not know full details of the conditions under which Cairo •areed to tht one month extension, but one was a llipulation that Thant would issue another report on the talks by March 5. PreaWJYbly C&iro could bl.It a decision then on furthar ..-ton of the .,,.,.. fir<. pm'lded It baU.Vad thare .... - cnto evidence ol Jlf'l*I In the Ja!Ting talks. Israeli forcea along the su.. Canlll geared for batUe as a prec1ution but hraell lead<rt Hid they wooJd not ,...umc filhttnc unlua the EgyptilllS did. ,_ D i p I o m a t i c repc:wts reaching Wa!hlnst<>n aaid Sadat would extend the troce until Match 5, but wou1d insist in that time Israel must implement a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for 'Israeli withdrawal from conquered Arab territory. The leadinf Beirut newapaptr 1 An- Nahar, carried a almllar report from Cairo, quotinJ: official EIYJ>Uln IOUrccs as saying if I1ratl refuses to withdraw. Prisoners Seize Two Dade County Guards in Miami MIAMI (UPI) -Forty muimum .....nty OOllY!da held two 1\1111'<11 hostage for --today INide tbe ..,.. b"oftnial n.d9 C.oullty Jail to protest the allt1ed M&Un1 of an accwed jailbcme lll)'li of a preacher's son. The guards, John Mravlnta, 29, and Roy Rheal Jr., SS, were released unharm· ed after jail aupervisor Jack Sandstrom alfMd to lilt.en to the demands of the convict.I, includinC their proteata of Jiving coodltionl In the jail which a judge rectntly te:nntd "a and:epit." . Cwlie Buclwiu, a . 21:Ye.ar-old con· v1cted armtd robber, aaid the priaoners in cell 8C2 «i the Ith floor decided to IJ'lb the pardl "after we he.ard 3creatna last niaht from the hole· where they rot Jobanie." '1'hey bea~ Jones and a sick guy," Buchanan wd. Jonea, 1 ~year-old convicted armed robber, is one of two convicts accused of stran1linc 17·yur-old Cloyce Bradley Cook, a pre1cher'1 aon from Piedmond s.c., in u overcrowded cell just nin; days aao. EiYJ>\ "would have no other coune but liberation." Defense sources in London u.ld EC)'pt and Israel maued weapons 1n un.. precedented numbers alonf the Sues Canal a.s the cease-fire deadline ap- proached. 1be sources u id Egypt had 50,00D to fi0,000 troops with 1,500 llnks, 1,000 artillery pieces and an UNpecified number of landing crafl 'nley wera backed by Ruasi~made SAM! and SAM3 antiaircraft missiles. An Israeli military source in Tel Avi• estimated the number of Egyptian troops in the canal zone at JOCl,000 and 1aid they had amassed mott m f 11 t a r y hardware than C1lnfronled Jsrael befOTa the 1967 Middle East war. IF"aeli troops waited in fcrmidable defensive positions with air support from American-made Phantom jeta. Israel accused Egypt of violating the cease--fire Wednesday with a t b I r d straight day of fiights ov.r lS"1eli canal po!itions. Israeli military correspondents suggested the Egyptians wanted to cattier as much reconnaissance data aa they could before lhe formal cease-fire ended. Girls Reveal Fascination With Manson .LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The runaway girls who Charles Manson picked ap and took into bis fold art doing their best to save him from tbe gas chamber. Two of the young women who wera part of t~e "family" but not actually involved 1n the Tate-LaBianc1 murder11 testified in the penalty pbue ef the trial Wednesday and four more were w1itina thei r turn. Lynette Fromme, 21, the very fitsl female to join bis nomadic harem five years ago, told the jury that Minson onct! hit her so hard that he knocked her clear across the room but "it wu just what l needed." Another follower, Nancy Pitman, lt, was ordered frnm the witness stand briefly after sbe taunted the Judie Charles H. Older, that he was tryini to bide facts in the caae ind asked ~wben Manson was 1oina: t1 bt allowed to tell his story. Mi511 Fromme said Manson struck htr because "I had kicked 1 baby, becauu I wanted some attention." Raging Fire Kills 4 In Quebec Building QUEBEC (AP) - A fire ra1ed for more than seven hours in 1 downtown apartment building early t.oday, kill~ 4 personJ and injuring 17, ftrerrien reported. Firemen said none of the vie· !if!ll had been identilied. Seve11 of the U'IJured ~·ere taken to hol!lpitals. Wifllesses said they saw occupa.nt.s of the four-story building. unable to 1et out the front doors. throwing themselves down fcom the fourth floor. \IPITI ....... GI•' Worst Ene111.y U.S. vahlcl~s 1log through Vietnam mud just lhroc 1nilcs from Laoa border dunna: most recent buildup against ene1ny positions in that art•. Sometimes even the weather can bccon1e a rormidable enemy. I .. DAILY l'ILDT $ Russians Call 1970 Record Boom Ye~; U.S. Skeptical QUEltlll By Phll lnteMncli Extract of Marijuana Seen • Useful to Cancer Patients MOSCOW (UPI) -Tb< or- llcial economic report for lll'ID told the Soviet people today they have never had It ao good, never had IO much money or 90 , many refrigerato.i;s and 1utomobUe1. But there ii stiU not eoouah meat or soap. The annual rtport of the central stl.tistlcal b o a rd • released Wednesday and circulated today, claimed Jt70 was a record boom year for ecooom.ic growtl. fJ.auru in lhe Soviet Union. W011ern analyru i.Jte Ille,. yearly R1DJmariel mpllcaliy, u fUrtber proof thlt 1tati!Uca can be deceiviDf or evtn meaningless. Bui to oUiclal Sovltll they are gospel. ThJs year's economic report carried special political clO\lt becaUJe lt'IO complet..r the five.year plan that guided the centrally-controlled economy from 1M6-1970. It set the sta1e for tbe new plan to be an- Death Toll 24 Worker Reported Fire Before Big Explosion BRUNSWICK, Ga. (AP) - A worker injured In an er.· ploslon at 1 munltions·malc.Jng plant that killed 24 persons says she saw fire before the blast. Lillie a.tae Rainey, 18, one Model Wins $500,000; Mystified " TORONTO (UPI) - A shapely West German model said Wednesday she will cut abort a North American vaca- tion and return home to collect a $MO,OOO inheritance left her by an unknown benefactor. Caroline Hackmann, 26, was completely baffled when in- formed by the Toronto Telegram she haQ been left shares in a' Munich brewery worth half a million dollars. "l can't understand It," she !laid. "It's ctazy .•. l just don't know." Miss Hackmann wa15 con- tacted by the Toronto Telt:gram when her agent in West Germany. Eric h Wiedemann, appealed to the newspaper ror assistance in locating the heiress. Alaska Editor Fanning Dies ANCHORAGE, A I ask a (UPIJ -Lawrence S. Fan- ning, editor and publisher of the Anchorage Daily News, died Wednesday a few hours after he became ill at his office. He was 56. Fanning wa!I a newspaper es:ecutive in San Francisco and Chicago prior to his purchase of the Daily News from Norman C. Brown, who had started the paper in 1946. or 'the M hoilpilalized with inJurles, said, "There was all this fire and a loud blast, and everything started falling -boulders:, the roof and everything around us." lier statement provided a clue for representatives of the :rhiokol Chemical Corp., Army -'rut FBI who probed the ruins I'll •. ~ Thiokol complu in the Gdi'Mt marshlands seeking the ~·se of the Wednesday blastJ Miss Rainey, speaking from her bed at a Jacksonville. Fla., hospital. said she was on a porch of the reinforced concrete building w h e r e magnesium flares were being made when she saw the fire .start at a steel house trailer used as part of the assembly line. "I looked down tht:re to the trailer," she said. "Thert: was something dripping and the fire name d up." The er.plosion turned lht: trailer into shrapnel, nattened all but one wall of the concrete structure and twisted metal panels of an adjoin i ng warehouse into weird patterns. . Pieces of debris punctured an above-ground steam heat line so many times it resembl· ed a sieve. Surrounding pine woods were set afire and the blaze burned fiercely than an hour before brought under control. THINK Blyle & Hanro THINK JE4.inlnhl WESTCLI'' ,LAZA 111'11 • '"'"'_.,..,.,, a-11 ' nou.nc~ at the 14th Com- munisl Party Congrm: in March. It said 1970 was the finest economic hour for t.he Soviets because : -National Income. l he closest Soviet equiva1ent to a gws.s national product in- dicator, rose by 8.5 percent ·over 1969. It failed to mention that 1969 was a bad year, when the growth rate actually declined. -Real per capita income rose by 4 percent to 122 rubles. $135.42 per month for factory and oUice workers, on the average. dne ruble buys Ht eggs or a few ears of com in Moscow these days. -Industrial production was up 1.3 percent over 1969, al5G 1 slunip year for this area ''Maybe from now on you'D uk what the of the eainomy. 'Luncheon Soecial' ia.'" -Agricultural product.ion swtlled by 1.7 percent, a re- bound from the 3 pm:ent p • p D ~.!!~~'re!. sulfettd Ille rince uts own Westem economists look askance at these ye1rly F h • c • • !i,ures for two main ........ as ion ritics 4..1....~~ they reflttt neither ~~ a~.~:'r; LONOON (UPI) -Ice cubes Unkled In glasses. A few nor lbe often shorlld)" ~.Ruality feet sbuffieQ, otherwise silence. of produtts and bousiJW in That '11ai' the grtt1ing Prince Charles receJved from 460 the Soviet Union. immaculately dressed master tailors and fashion critics Second, the perepnlat claims '~edne.sday night when he mlved at a gala dinner wear· that production ~ls have ing a rumpled old sports jacket. been '1 f u If i 11 e •', and "l don't krww whether it was just stiff upper lip or not, overfulfilled" skip the-1fact but nobody batted an 'eyeJid when be walked into the din ing that the original production suite," said capt. lllll Shlell, general secrttary of the Mas- goals for 1970 have been ter Tailors Benevolent Association. .scrapped. They were set in It was the 2%-year<ild prince's way of replying to crilic- 1965 and what has been ism in the trade magaiine Tailor and CUtter which said last .surpassed are scaled down week: he followed the ''cult of studied shabbiness" in hill goals substituted last year. dressitlg habits. But there was more tor the While the ting-t~'s tailor hit the roof over lbe article consumer in absolule terms, by Karl Dallas, a faahion consultant, the prince maintained including 6.7 million television a regal silence. sets {a l percent rise). 4.1 "I can't resist taking the mickey out of people occas. million refrigerators, 8 million ionaJly," Charles told the audience alter taking off the flve- more wrist watches _and · 17 year~ld sports jacket he wears while hunting and changing percent more pa.ssenger cars. it for tall1. The bulk of resourcts, as Underneath the jacket be wore a wblte dress shirt and always. was invested in in-the blue sash of the order of the garter. A white tie, black dustrlal production. trousers, and black shoes completed his formal attire. MICHELIN X STU1 llt.T CO.D Tian Fm: IOIDl- CHIYTl-ft.YMOllTHS All A1111rlc11t C1r1I ~ SJ6 ""' I , ••. T. at "'"" ... . . • ll.11 IHnt, MIOtnl ......... T•lln .. JU. 171111 .. 40,000 MILi •UAIANTll Atl:forW.HI MICHELINS FIT ALL DOMESTIC Ii FOREIGN CARS HERBERT L MILLER Tl~~f0· -----llNCI 1'21 ---- .._547°5615 ... __ 64%-3314 WASHING TON (UPI) - 'nle National Instltute of Men. Lal Hwlll h" told Congress a britf secret experiment ln- dlcated a 1ub3tance found in marijuana "may be a use.fut agent" for the temporary relief of pain and other S)'mptoms s uffered by ttrmlnal cancer patients. The four me.n and four women, aged 20 &o 71 and all conaldered Incurably tu, VOIWltetrtd to drink a IOIUtion of peppermint fllvored rnati· Juana ertract daUy. The patients a:UU art ex- pected to die, but some of lllem thowed "1timulAUon ol appeute, eupboria, traeued WelJ·belnC • • • llDlf .. ... dU!en,.:• to poln" that reduo- ed the need ,... ncutu pain klllen, lbe r<part uld. The utract wu limllar to the 111bltance to marijuana which whoo llllORd may ca\l!e l'hJ&hl'' amooa Uletl. The 1tatement was based on a single study o( eight patients dying of various types of cancer. But the Institute thought enough or the unusual e~~lment to ill<'lud'e It in the 'government's first annual report on marijuana and health. U.S. Drivers Hit Skids; Ice Glaze Coats Roads By Vatted Prtu IDternatioall Motorbta skidded a 1 on I highways from the Rocky ''I'm excited about It,'' said Dr. Jack D. Blaine of the MOW1talns to the ~ddle in.stitule's center for studies At!antic Coast u freezlng rain of narcoUc and drug abuse. coated streets with ice late "[ hope somebody will do Wednesday and early today. something like il" But Blaine Many drivers never rtacbed said he knew of no plalul for · their deatlnaUoOJ. similar research. Ten cars and two semi- 'lbe doctor who performed trailer trucks piled up on the the experiment rerused to be southbound Ca I u m e t. Ex- named or even lo publish his pres.sway In the Chicago resuJta. The Institute refused 1uburb or Blue Island. early lo identify him because "'the this morning. Sil persona were place where he was didn't hospitalized. want any re.search of this kind One person was killed ln being .done," Blaine said. a beadon collision aloog a snowbound bl&hway In wat<m Minnesota. TraVfleta warn-- inp were In effect: over moat of Ille ltato. Des Molnel, Iowa, pollce tabulated at leut four IC"" cidenla &m>IYiq tojuriu and "ck>se to 25" otben on allck streets 1n an hour and 15 minulu Jato Wednelday. San- ding crewa worked tbrou&bout Ille nl&hl to de·lce I h e highwaya. TbollWld! of school cbllclrtn to southern llllnols rte<!lvtd an unscheduled b o I i d a y Wednesday when Jee.coated roads made travel to tcbool otremely dangerous. LA·Z·BOY • • RECLINERS INCLUDlll IN OUI Storewide Sale NEW LOW PRICES Whether your room decor i1 Early Amerie•"• Traditional, Contemporary, or Moclern, fher• i1 • 1tyl• to harmoniie with th• 9raeiout livin9 of your hom•. Save from $30.00 fo $70.00 on Li1-Z-8oy1. All furniture dr•stieal· ly raduced for• limitecl time. 1865 HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA • 548·5131 Personal service at Mutual ~Ylogs . ) The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest Interest on Insured aavlngs ... 5% to 0%. But equally Important-cares enough to give you very personal service . •• ' DARY PILOT EDD'OIUAL PAGE - Tenure Facts • Gov. Ronald·Jlacan ~uueated ·ln his State of the State message to the, Legjilature lut month that teach~r ' tenure abould he phased' ou~ to he replaced by 1 "ment plf' system. · In confusing protection set up In the law !or both pupils and competent, Innovative teachers with teacher pay acaJes. Governor Reagin once again revealed that he sullera from blind spbts -or some deeply·rooted pe,.. 1anal prejudices -where education at all levels LS con- cerned. . The charge· that tenure "has become a haven for in· competenl teachors" ill totally !aloe. ln the first place, 1 teacher achieves tenure through approval of bis or her administrative superiors. If the teacher later is deemed Incompetent, the blame rests more with the administrators than with the tenure law. Under the law, a tenure4 teacher may be dismissed for any of 14 different reasons-provided there is proof. ~l!roor' Is the key woni; and also the key to the origin of the tenure law. , ' · Not lar back in American history, it was all loo com- mon for .teichers to he 'viclimlzed by school boerd nepo- llsni, j>oUtical patronage and )lresiures, and a h~l of 1 other ti.uinan 1weaineases includirig the fantasies of adol· oscent pqpils. : . . Where pay scales related lo semce existed, 11 was common enough for aCbool bo~rds to economize by arbi· · trarily dumpmg ei1peffen<ed teich~ ·,nd replacing them with YQunger, lower·t>tid. teachers. · When. tenure )NH adopted; ii was not only to insulate teachers from 'pressiires' from ridical groups and the other harassments:but also to provide an order!J process • for d.ism,iasal of teachersp . Amqng the J.,4 r.easons !or dliimissal are lnrompe-tency, Immorality, unprofessionalisni, Ciishonesty and in- subordlnat!Oti. as helpful as th"}' should be In support1n1 and polictnc their profeulo'IJI standards. What the tenure law might ~nelit from II a aimpli· ficaUon of dlamiaal procedures. Under prMent pOllclea, Superior Court procedures put a linanclal strain on achool dlatrlctJ. A· proposal ill before the U.glslature to place proceedings under local school boards wtth a profeaslonal panel In attendance. Dlsmill!ed tenured teachers who feel they have not bad a !air burini·would ltlll have recourse to the co)ll1a. Bui ii seeln! likely the OYerail result would be a aubslan • lial saving In cofls for the school dlatricts. While this amendment may well be in order, any move to return teachen to the insecurity they once en· dured would not be. Tbelr protection against dismissal tor arbitrary, capricious, unsubstantial or unsubstantiated rlasons should he coblinued. A• for .merit ,pay, superior teaclllng should have superior rewlfd, of coune. Some betfer combinaUon of 'basic pay schedules and merit pay schedules, u Incentive and reward for above-average effort, la desirable and probably Inevitable. Bui this ill a thing apart from basic pay scales and the tenure law. In Support of POWs, MIAs ' · Support for the' continuing e,ffort I~ ,wtn . hu!Dine tJ:eatment if not release of Amenca_n_t>~lSOners of war (POW) and men missing in actiqn (MIA) will r~eive a major boost on the Orange Coast next.Afond1y, Feb. 8. Actor John Wayne ls chairman of·a Valentine Lunch· eon at the Balboa Bay Club to raise funds. to send stu· r dent emissaries from ·Santa Monica City College .to Paris ("·- to confront North Vietnamese and Viet Cong official$/. with the 25,000 Iettera they hope·to·collect by the end of" . ' , I • ' r ' I • When teachers with any of these or other named shortcomiftb under the tenure law are kept on, responai· billty Iugefy rests with school ofliclals for !ailing lo ac~ although. ie.,chers and !heir organiuUons have not.been February. . . · Monday's event , should make a useful ·contribution toward keeping the apoUigbt of world opinion on : the 'I iil;id the defendant guilty. Now, JetCroceed with the trial.' ,. pligbl of the POWa. · •' • Father ·of Computer Died Broke Children think that totJ"t one ..,a:son •invented" everything, just u F.4110n ~ said to have invented ~ eleclrlc ltght and Bell 1he teieP-· II Is Iwd ;o ~lain to cbildreD the ••cmnula.Uvt" tnd "coUectlye" ~ lure ol lclentlflc and ~lnv- My -toll lbe other clay -me who "Jnven&ied" tbe computer. An·~ :urate answer .waWd Involve a dozen or more·namet, all col· llbol'atlng or bulid-inl on the efforts of a>e others, and of coune, the root.I or • ~very inveption usually go back much . : !artber than we bnagine. • THE MODERN COMPUTER, in fact, : had its .origin in the mind of CbMlea Babbage, an English mathematician who died exacUy 100 yea.rs ago, and who was born while George Washington was IUll alive. Tbe 1<1n of a banker, who inherited independent means, Babbage waa telf-taught ln mathematics and a classic uample of the British upper-class crank or eccentric who pursues hi:s own interests regardless of wbat people think of blm. He began what we would call today ''operaUona ruearch," and la largely responsible for the modern poSt.llge ayldtm. Before b1a research ~all was collected and It.amped for varytng swns, deptndiog on the distance it was to travtl. He showed that it would be ~ to 11end all ordinary mail for the same flat sum no matter bow far it traveled in Britain. Dear Gloomy Gus: When wlU the picture'• run end? Will there be a matinee? How can these and other questions be asked ol local movie hou!ea when their phone omnbenl produce cnly a set recording about the current fea· ture, showing times and coot of admiasion! It's frustrating. -L. T.G, ""'' ........ nflectl ......... vi.n. .... -9IWl!r ,,_. et ""' _..... hMI ,_ ,,. ,...,. ......... , ..... Dlib' ,. ..... UTE TO deviling the computer p also worked out the fll'lt ctuarlal lablea -wbldl the modem lnsuruce compaoy lives by - ~ the first speedometer, tnvt.nted ae ophlbalmolcope for studl'inl the retina of the eye, and abo the locomotive "cow-catcher." Befbre he was 30,. he began brooding about the posalblllty ol using mechanical means for comput.atlon, and succeeded in getting the British government to Invest heavtly in the projed. According lo one scientlfic encyclopedia, "he con- ceived of a machine that could be dirtcled to work by means of punched cards that could store partial answers in order to save them for addltion1l operations to be performed upon them later, that could print lhe result.I." IN SHORT, THE encyclopedia goes on, "he thought out all the. basic prin· clples that guide modem computers, but he had only mechanical devices with which to put them into action!' lt was not until a century later, when e.ledtonic devices came into use, that his principles were able to be utilized. Disappointed in th~ project, Babbage spent the rest of hi:!i Ille working with the Countess of Lovelace (Lord Byron's daughter) on 1 system for beating the horse races. The father of the computer died broke. Violence in America 'lbe facts may not be, as D. H. Law· ftnCf: once suggested, that "the essential American soul is hard, i!olate, stoic ~ a 1.n1 .. r .. ' or u Rip Brown once put tt: -· ' he I" "Violmce ls u American aa c rry Pe. But violence bu been a notable and continuing element in the national scene at ltut since the penecullon of the Quaken Li 185i6, to SlY nothing of slave revolts and their suppression, asaassina· tionl and pollticll murders, and such in-decent epllodel as the C h e y e n n e Massacre o! llM in which some 450 I& dlan men women and children were slain br 1 con'ttn1ent of Colorado militia (a "brilliant feat of arms." as a local """""per reported at the time). IN A PERIOO ol unprecedented con- ct1111 ovtr American violeoct, Pullller Pr~innlng hlstorltn R I c h a r d Hotltadttt and hls research 111sistant, Michatl Wallace, compiled a calendar of tome 2000 c1ses from the American past under the Utle ,. Americu Vleltaee: .A Deumt•larJ Hllltr')'-" It's an ol~ clUlllag aurvey, a sam pler, an 1n-lrodUCUon to a complei: contemporary .,prQble.m. Jt proves that violence bu been almoll commonplace In our put TbeH accounll. taken mainly from contem,par111 reportl and eyewillles.s Quotes -,._, ,,.... e .. ,,...1,~t ..,.,11 -•"'l!Je only tlllna lbat scares .,. ts deatll. and r got • 1oo1 Uma to llllDI< about lbaL" 1 narratives, la, no matter bow lamentable, an intriguing survey of American life at Jts-well, most unco~ortable. While the editors note that wai' is the most dfj:lnJC- tlve viole.nc;?, they have not attempted to represent the history of OW' wan. These entries bear down on v I g l la n te movements, lynching1, Industrial cono- flicts, assassinations, "l•bor violence•• (often. Hofstadter notes In a brilliant In- troduction, the work of a,gtnta of employers, but nevtr labeled "capttal vtottnce"). The Pullm•n istrike of 11'94 was an ei:· ample of "capital violeftCt" when some 14,000 police. militia, troops and federal mar1hal1 in Chicago put the strike down. ALL mis ta oot an eicluslvely Amtrlcu trait (violence of the ancient Romans. or modern lndorte:slans, his be.en spectacular). The 1960s, however, mark· ed anothtt peak moment in the American record of tllls phenomenon, and the edltorg took their cue from that to setk pr~nts. which are on lhe recoril in abundance. (ProfeMOr Hofstadter, author of ~vtral 1lJnlncant hlstorlc•I works, died of ltukemla at 54 on October 2t, Jmt d~s before thla book •·as published. He was a distln~lshed 5Chol1.r and writer, u this amollnl project attesla.) (Knopf; 110) • Wllllam llocH Woodrow Wilson Jtlflstique Is PowerftJI Nixon Identifies With Intellectuals WASHING TON -The Nixon of · the ••new American revolution" is worth e1· amlning. He is submltUng an ei:~ pansionary. heavily. out of. balance '229 billion budget to Congress to finance it. He ls trying· to l'ill into uistence: an economic nvtval, -beef up the nUlilary. give money to the states, expand 80Clal aervices, end the war. For tbole who doo't understand ttus I I d e ol Piesidenl Ntxon there ii en- 118l>ielllll<fl~ w'"1hy o! furlbe< esPJora.. tion, ln a brief ana- lysis by Dr. llohert A. Nlsbe~ proi.....- of socio loo at, tbe University of Califor- nia, publlahed In the Wall street Journal. Dr. Nisbet'a analysis, in the beginning, seems confined .to its title, ••war, Crlais and Intellectuals," with a almple and true account of the incidence of· American Involvement In Vietnam, which is rare these days. He notes. along with John Kenneth Galbraith and others, the hiatorlcal coin- cidence that a Democratic administration has been in power the four times America has gone to war in this century. WITHOUT AOCUSING the Democratic mentality in high places of wishing war or of inducing it, Dr. Nisbet does draw the justifiable inference that t h e Democratic Party, rfcb in academic In- tellectuality, thrJvea upon and Uiliiks in tenm of crisis -pollUc81, moral, miliLary and other cri1e11. He evokes ·the evidence of Woodrow Wilaon'1 making the world safe for democracy, Roolevelt'1 acalating aeries of crises, Truman's worldwide $2'Ullde apimt Comniunlsl Hpanslon. •Finally, llllrtOllllded by a brl!Hont cot<rie of II> tellectuab, John f;. lte!medY;, on tllelr advice and. witll their. l1ipport', took the fateful step ol Plactili aniformed American forces in Vietmm under open U.S. military command. · Those aame intellectuals -Rusk, McNamara, Sch1eainger, Good w l n, Hll.Srn&n -were in the high councils of government 11 Prt1ldenf ·Johnson decided on massive escalaUon wfilcb is now being undone . THE MORAL TONE, tlle crusading spirit were ln the mold of Woodrow Wl150ll, Dr. Nll'lbet's· 1rgument runa,.. but quite contrary to , the metboda of Republican Pre 1 I de n t s Dwight Eisenhower and·Herbert Hoover. NbOll, on the other hand, b imbued with the spirit of Woodrow Wilson for whom he has a reverential regard. Thus his persistence in maintaining the political integrity of South Vietnam, notwitmtanding the military withdrawal -his concepl of a righUul ending of what was conceived as an essentially moral and Wilsonian intervention. We were saving South Vietnam for the South Vietnamese, and that is what Nixon still seeks tG do. Dr. Nisbet comments: ''NGr should we underestimate the power of . the political intellectuab on Mr. Nii:on'.s mind and temper. Despite the vilification be has had to endure for a quarter al. a century from academy and press, the latter ll!Ctor as rich in crisla-m~ ia.UUes u the former, Nixon ldenUllei with' the intellectual class in a way that neither Hoover nor Eisenhower ~ver did. "IT 1'0ULD BE supremely ironic, hilt by no means beyond rational belief, were Richard Nixon to reveal himself as tfle least Republican of Presidents th1a: ctnt\U"Y. The Wilsonian mystique is a powerful one, and we live, for good or bad, in the intellj!ctual'! age." 'Ibis ill the characteristic of Nixon which Dr. Nisbet understands and so few othen do. The Influence of the intellectual mind on the attitudes of Nixon is proved by his preference over othf!r advisers of the incontestably in- tellectual Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Dr. Henry Kissinger and George P. Sh111tz. Treasury Prostitutes U.S. In this century the United States Treasury Department bas become the biggest money-gathering irutltutlon e.ver devised by men. But despite the reality that money is of vital concern to all human beings of whatever Political atrlpe, Treasury has very few admirable human characterta· tics. The department has about 90,000 em· ~ . • ployu, and indlvkl· ../t"~;" ually they are as bu. :.~ ·~':'\ man u ·YoU and I, ~ but collectively they comprise a s p r 1 w l I n 1 bureaucracy designed to sel'\le, not "the people," but lb own ellgtnt interests, since money is always on exigent matter. The department Is bound ·by rigid laws enacted over the years by confused Concruses, with an adhered growth of thousands of reguiaUons understood by few e.rperts, and by the common clUzenry, not at all. Dear Gtorae: How do you cook hard·boUed eggs ,. they peel easy! OS Dear OS: J never cook haz'd..bolle.d eggs, just raw onta. la that the only lovelorn problem you have? What a dull life you must lead. Go get Into trouble and write back, Dear George : 1 admtre you not only for )'OUT jokes. iou·,.. witty. Bul your col-. umn lm't St'XY enough. M.l. Otar ~I .I.: Ytah, 1 agree. What can J do with questions about ha.rd-boiled egas? Of the ll0,000, doubtless several thousand are assigned to what is loosely called public relations, though rtlatlon to the public is hard to discern . • THE PRIMARY purpose of Treasury public relations J1 to "justify the ways of God to men," as the poet Milton put it in another frame. That ii, the press agents are there to make the department look good and even C017, and to rationalize seeming lrration~IUes or blunders in Treuury activities. 1 For instance, Treuury no lGnger trinta 1 $2 bill, a most convenient curtencY denominaUon in an inllated smafl.Co6dl economy, possibly because superttioo1 bumpkins tore off the comers. t 25 years of press agentry bas never,1, ally erplained the lack. Then, there b silver. The press agents tell us it is no longer possible to stamp out solid silver coins because sUver is aequestered for teaspoons and the like, and anyway, miserly idiots hoard the good coin!: In consequence, our coini..ge re¥mbles, In weJCht; keel and appearance, the delmed metals -of every out~f-the-panls baHon in the backwaters or the world. SUCH JUNK WON'T buy much anr.wbere anymore, but It i\s hl(rnlliatlng to have to carry it, tnowific it ls phony. And of course the cold myth ~tuated by Treasury bu left Ii! wkh paper for any; pUrcbaJe over a dollar. • Treasury tried 1tampln1 oal ,oome Ken- UC No. 1 in the Nati6n Catlfomla c1n be genuinely pleased with the acadtmlc accoJadea given two of its major untversltits, one public, lhe Q1he:r private. The American Council on Ea\Jcatlon has ranked the University of California al Berkeley as the oubtan- ding institution In the nation in the • "!lily of· ita graduate education. Stan- ford came in fourUt. Harvard, ChJcaeo. Michigan and Yale Wtrt other top win- ners. More than 8000 echolm ln many fields made the judgment. This is an honor of particular Im· portanc:e in vtew of the student unrest that has In the recent past di.Jrupted most ol theae campuses. tn Stanford's cast, for inslante, Its rise in the national rankings over lhe p&st five years was largely in tht. field of hum.1.nltlts: an arta con,,iderably criticized by its mort dedicated 1tudtht •Ctlvlsll. Tms DOl!S N<n' M&AN, ol c:oune, ~ c.-l .~ . . • • Utat either university ts automatically freed from student unrestand di.uenl tt does mea1 that 1t'ltb such pretil(e, both can work witll added ~Ide toward whatever accommodations re•sonably must be m111de In other aeademlc a~as. so that the akills ao evident on both campuses can best be rttade available to all serious students. Nol jum on the studeDts' ttrmS, but on the con-- sidefed terms of academic excellence. lncldentally, If 11ny Stanford alums feel some dlJc:ontent because Cal Outranked their farm, thty can be somewhat mollified by the fact thal the aurvey wu made before the Rose Bowl game. Caltromla ftahare Strvkt \ There are others but Moynihan, Kiss-- 1 )inger and Shultz serve to make the 1 point. In domestic affa'irs Moynihan's influence has helped to create the social thrust of the greatest proposed reforms in decades . In world affairs Dr. Kissinger has responded lo and cultivated in Nixon the WilsOnian concept of mission which Kissinger himself ·would define in terms of sell-interest and the exercise of world power. DR. NlSBET'S ANALYSIS refreshes the mind of the first-hand observer. Nixon during the campaign talking privately about bringing lo Washington the greatest coterie of intellectuall since F .D.R. Later, in the White Hfufse. his frequent referel"US to Wilson and his reverence for the mission-motivated Democratic President. His preo:ccupalion with words, phrases and bis pride of authorship of speeches in which he follows Wibon. His sympathetic un- derstanding expressed .in private of what motivated Lyndon Johnson. And thit present Wilsonian undertones of Nil:on's contest with the U.S. Senate. This is not the stereotype of Nixon preferred by present day intellectuals, but it is what Moynihan saw in Nixon In his impassioned farewell to the White Ho11se, what Dr. Nisbet, from an entirely different viewpoint, sees in h,im, and what in the end may become better understood generally as he proceeds with his new American revolution. Coinage nedy half-dollars, and the idiots scooped them up, so now Treasury has sur· rendered and gone over to the enemy. It wJll issue a new Eisenho\l.·er dolla r calcWated to please and enrich the misers, and not to jingle in the pocket.s of ordinary citizens. Treasury hopes to profit $600 million by it, which even Howard Hughes woald call a smaU fortune. This is plain prostitution of a fWJction of gO'Vemment, c!Olk.ing the worst aspecl of prostitaUon, a sort of pimping -0pera· tion. As you would know. it's complex and beyond understanding. Thert will be three types of the coin, and lhey will not be acquired for $1, but· from $3 to $10. They will benefit speculators and the Nevada gambling joints. If you don't visit Reno and Vegas,' as some don't, you'll probably never heft one of these elegant medallions. Well, there are a Jot. of ways to acquire moneJ, some honorable, some dishonorable. So just sit down and figure out "your government," as successful politicians are always piously describing lt. ----- Thursday. February 4, 1971 The editorial page o/ Uu: Dmly Pilot seek& to inform and stim- ulate read.era by J)resentina thi.t newspaper's opiniom and com- mentaTJ,1 on topics of in tertst and 1ionlffconce, by providing. a fonim for tht ttpre11ion of our readert' opinions, 011d bv presenth117 the diverse vino- point1 of Informed ob.servtra cuuJ .rpokt.smen on topfc.s of tf't dau. Robert N. Weed. Publisher .. - ' Thursday, Ftbnwy 4, 1971 DAILY Pilat '1 Bomb Rips ~­ Draft Unit Io·OakJanJ Bes.ii ·-.1 ·ae.,_ B••dfet --USHER'S-GREEN -·~ . Analyst~ Warn .. of Tax B9ost . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Atlembly Speake,' ·~o~ most devaslallng co~ents RRIPE' SCOTCH--· 1 · • '!be lelblalure "" Wider • Mor<!ti (ll-Vao N ~Y • > • . come lrof" tW. -artisan START THE NEW YEAR Off . , . Vz galnow .•• ~~~!~.~:I:(:~~~ I ~~~~:~~ ~~:S~;~~ ~~o~·:~!::::::.. ~'!!!!'~-~~~~!~~.. !11 99 in front ol the arrny induction. RonaJd Reagan's budget. the environment and stimulate head, 'from rural Groveland, 1:==~=~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::===:: center Jn downtown Oakland I "'lber're· In for a terrific employment. But he · said · part ~ c'u I a r,I)' criticfzed . eiploded early today, iliat-\ ~·· tald Preside•t RaJph Democrats ;,under no Rea~an•S ·P.rop6"$ed "tlo'sed ~ ' -·.~ ... tering a ooren windoWI and , P. Thiel cl the County clr·cumatan c~s will_ do end!'apf>ropriatiO~on ':..irare Fastest in The .West ., damaging four bulJ$flngs. i J 1 ! _ ... -Case SupervJaors Association. • anything whatsoever" to lh·· • . .. ..., ' Buy It. Sell it. Try the· fastest response· in the West against No injuries were reP.Drted. A.ltWW "The Potential for l.ncreaaed creaae Jot:iafproperty ·taies. • !hlch would lunlt state spen-• your Own clock. Test Dime-a-line Ads. wbere the acUoo 1', A.Janitor inside the elgbt.atory • count1 property taxes u a M the legislature began slf. ding to·tl!~.budg~ed 8Il)ount. in Saturday's DAILY PILOT.' federal building which houses S hed--' -d 'result , of Gov. Ron a 1 d,l.JUng~~throu~~gh~· lhe~~b~u~d~g~e~t__;U~nd~e~r ~lh~eig~ov}ern~or~·s~b~u~dg~e=t~, ==:===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====::: the-center said he' was "too C Uf..e Rea1an S proposed new budget Reagan prupmed Tuesday, the this WGU!d be $677 m11lion. ' f~ back" to be in danfef. -may ~ as mucb as $300 An ,1djacent dinette 's win-l F' . H' • · million. <low was shatlered In tt,;, er· • , OT . ea.J'ing : LesfJlaUve Al)al,yst A. Alai> plosioo and its sign 0<1tly · I .. . Poll c:JUtfoned the Assembly , • 1 ~ Ways~ and Mu.as Committee was demoh~: Dam~ge to OAKLAND ~<UPI) -Split· Wednelday that Reagan's N.? two other adJoining bus1DeSSes of a n.s mi1llon legal billion budget "may become ~alnly was confined to broken betften ·San Francisco known as the prop,eny tu w~ boolh In ,_1 1 !layor · josepb L. Alioto and lncreapo act ol 1171. • ,.. ..... ne UVJJ 0 ~ w·-1.:.......... tate Post -the legillature's non-• patklng lot across the &treet former. -NU&'"'" .1 political fiM!al "8tchdog - allO was sh.attered. tifticlals will go before a said the budget lS ..-"full of • Police said thty .. had been l~eral gra_nd jury at -Seattle, wtahfUI thJnklng" that;eountles bpped a few minutes before \Vash., on Tuesda~ will follow the State't 1e the 12':32 a.m. lllast by an This was reported Wed-tn cutting back· .weliare' ind anonymous . caller ~b9 told nesday in 8 copyrighted story health care .,vtCes. He Utem the wrong ~auon. They . predicted local government i rushed to the nearby central by lhe Oakland Tribune. will be forced to•pic~ up some ' building instead. The newspaper, which fint of the atate's bOrdipi. The expkision was heard made public the f~spl.lttfne 1 ~AUred E. .(lquiat (D- through much of Oakland and. arrangement late in 1969 said ~~ oae), suqested that the the police switchboard I s ~~ have been ' su~ ltJia • "give ~ tovemor flooded with calls. naed to tesUfy before the exactly what he alks Ior, then The bomb squad roped otr d jury They include at-everYbody can see who'r .kid· the area and began Im-tomeys r:1 ~fficers of tS utility ding whom." # ~ mediately to Investigate lhe 'dsl\i:icls-In lhe Stale of -"--"--"- . causes of the blast. W~n. U l4 u "It must have been a pretty Afloto admitted in 1969 he Q heavy charge for the damage paid aboul .$802,000 of a $2.3 verspent that was done," a policeman milliOn legal fee to former aaid. Wasltington Attorney General S Aid The cenler has been the Jolin J . O'Connell and In tate 0 focal point of frequent antiwar assiStanL Alioto was paid the protests and was the scene fee ror recovering $16 million d L ot the major stop the dralt for lhe ls utility districts m Sai . ost week demonstrations in an 1ant1-trust case against 29 Octobe r, 1967. electrical manufacturers. SACRAMENTO (UPI) The Reagan AdministraUon reports that $51 million In wellare overpayments have been "scaUered to the winda" due to miltakes by county workers, but adds 1 t a t e regulation changes are needed lo help solve the problem. Rural Poor Will Pay Some Legal Aid Fees Slate Director of Social Califohua • Rural L e g a I Welfare Robert B. Garleson Assistance, says a Reagan ad-said Wednesday that a study minJstratlon official. of the department ol. finance SACRAMENTO (AP) - Rural poor people will pay whatever they can afford for legal aid under Gov. Reagan's "Judi-Care" program design- ed to take over fr 6m Lew!B~ Uhler, director of showed an error rate in the Stlte Office of Economic deciding. who ls eligible for Opportbnity, said Wednesday how much welfare r£ 4S.so the t concept is to percent Jn adult programs ~ enaure that an at torn e Y 25 percent ln aid to dependent Raiders Net -iDdiYidual c.1SU and -... • does t use the clients to ·The :study found "current pi:om. · wide-ranging social .; net OYerpayments of · .Sl · D C h ·c11use1., million" in tht past year. Half rug ac e "Whe .the client's paying of the amount was federal 10 cen an hour, 50 cents money, a thlrd was state funds SAN ANSELMO_ (UPI) -an hip. dollar an hour, .and the remainder .county d you can. assured that cauSe, funds. Six persons were arreste that suit . that problem is his Asked if the money could Wednesday night Jit raid dur-cause use he's paying for be recovered, Carleson said· ing which Marin COunty and It," Uhl~Ba'id~ -~ it "has been .cattered to the stale agenta said they co~ "He's t, just there, dredg· wi.nd5 to • lot of recipient.." flscated 50,000 LSD tablets. ed up b: some attorney as It co u 1 d oot be · JegaUy J50 kilos of Jll{l,r ijuana and a convenient vehicle to get recovered, he illd. · 17 pounds or pashlsh. that caute presented in the ADYl1tT1ttMENT Those arrested In a hillside court son\ewhere. That's the - house were identilied as insurance we th ink is vital FALSE TEEtH Richard J. Lauzon, 20; Sheryl in "'this Pf'Jgram," he told a L. Ledina, 19; and David meeting of the Federated Logan, 21 . all of San Anselmo; Republican Women of John R. Burkes, Zl, of New Sacramento. Mexico ; Larry M'.Xlre, 21, of Reagan'& forces are prepar- Oroville ; and Frede r I c k ing his "Judi-Care" program Griswald, 25, of AUanta. . to take the place of the con- They were booked for in-trovers.ial CRLA when its tem· vestigalions of possession of porary federal grant of more marijuana and d a n g e r o u s· than $900,000 expires after Ju. drugs for sale. ly 31. That LooHft Need Not Embarrass A. lmpotted damask mulli-qullled cover I. Ortho'• exclusive Crown-Flex ~nter DOEs"·.11 AGAIN Reg." $349.95 Again Ortho save~ you :real money on this luxuiy-lavis~ ileep set! It's the very top of the ni:i~: It's desjgf)ed and constructed to give yqu t~ uqRost in comfort and support features. Features like: exclusive Ort.ho edge heavy ,duty tempered stee l unit, fiber lock sisal Insulator; urethane cushion support ·and vent!- . lated and reinlorced borders. Ortho.Plik a Double Bonus NOW ONLY • . INCLUDING THE ORIGINAL $ . ~ 0 FAMOUS . . .,_,,~., RTHO·PAK • Aeldcreat no-Iron King or Oue9rt slze top &l'ieet • Fieldcrest no-Iron King or Queen aize fitted bottom sheet • 2 King or Queen slzo bolster pillows -2 ptUow ceses • King or Queen slzo ·mattress Pad • King or Queeri alze metal fnlme on easy-roUlng casters. . 95 . -"' '. ' SAVE DOUBLE. BONUS ~ _. · SAVE fOft MIUNI .,. aU hef'9 In this luxurt- OUI Queen! NDt only do you sleep on the mott carefully d1!1 lgn•d •nd eon. . 8'nlcted mattrns nai11ble, but you ara King or Queen: headboard plus quilted bedspread Twin or Full: pfaallc headboard tllld metal frame on easy-rolling casters FREE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Mahnd p11t1urdm.,.11lff ORTHO-GENIC .TWIN OR FULL Rog.$1HEnJoYll>e.opeclal,._. s I I uvlng ftlturea of the twin Of full •. , whlle you 9'1j0)' the very ume, high qu1Uty featur.s of the exclualYt Orthoo GenlC, \l)e unique aleep ut Ci1ho'• \ ~~O;!J~~~.!'!ENSSJIZES 1 ET. 1 . M't'l1'9 )'Utlf l'l_'OM)'Whlle you -.va your · ~I nwt °'1hO to oner lhla kind DI IDW wtuel ......_ Orttloo#lt a: DoUl:IJe own Crown Fla centtr auppott anum IOU Of"'""'" PfOper .... ,.,.,.,,,...... MOW port fOf ye1ral lrldudM lpld1I Pot*te w, ff Y® sm at rorst Nationll then 7 olt1tr comenient reasons. Our locltlolts. Of' OftANOE C OUNTY '"'"'~IM ......... ~,'°' • _......., .... _ . _..,,..,., .............. Stwfnt The nation's largest chain of Mattress Specialists LAKEWOOD 4433 C1ndl1wood Avenue Candlewood Shopt (acros• lrom Lakewood Cenler) Ph!'ne: 634-1134 ·SANTA ANA_and FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (cornar ol Ed i nger) Next to Zody'• Pho{la; 939 ... 570 , ANAHEIM 1811 West tlt)coln ·Avenue Between Euclid and Brookhur at Avenues Just East of Fed Mart .Phone: 776-2590 OPEN OAIL Y 10· 9 •SA! I 0 6 •SUN 12 6 • IMMEOIA T£ OHIVEHY •CREDIT TERMS AVAllABlE • BANKAMERICARD •MASTER CflAllGl I I I • J I DAILY PILOT Th11rsd1)', February 4, 1971 OUR VALENTI ES ·SALE ,STARTS NO • • • •• • • • , J . •' ' ~ • , I ' , DON'T MISS THESE LOW LOW PRI ES!!·· • AUTO. DRYER-WAS $19995 • • • WIS~ We&tfnghouse - 1 ~~! /\VV IJUT¥ (~: ---------- Pwmanm,,.. Di,. ' lloilil 11E5111 llldrlc""" . .,_ dryfna temperature ooloc· · t1ons lnclucHn1 Auto-Dry/ Perm.nent Press, R•cular, Lcw,Alr.f1uff • llme Orymnd Auto-Dry uftfnas on timer • Easy.to-ruc:h Int cohcb • Balanc:ed llfr flow sysl8m • Multiple exhalllting • ._,.,n.,.mel basket Mocfol DG 500 G., Dryer ,(u,• with 9a1 dryenl SAVE~ S30°·0 - SAVE $501111 MODll SD 5 GE BUILT IN DISHWASHER 3 Wash cycles ••• Daily kllds, pots n' pans, rinse n hold. Built in soft food disposer reduces hand rlnslnr , •• J level thorit-Wash for complete cleaning ac:tion. AutomBtlc 1inse·&fo and deterrent dispensers. Cushion ruard interior. :';:ass Now $)9CJ95 • J nsh cyclts lncludini Perm1rient Prtss ll!d Soak Cycle plus specl11 Httlnp fer [Itri Wash •nd dtllclll tlbrics. 4 ntet lev1ll- 1avt1 w1ter, det•rr.nt 3 wnh/rinst temper1tures. Mini-basket tor th~• hlnd-'IUll ind f1ss than 2-Jb. lold1. Model WWA 5500l. COMMERCIAL DRYER features Permanent ~ress Cycle with COOL DOf N ::i~E 13.~~5 Riah spr•d drrin1system 111\µ V1rilbft Time Ory Control Air nllff settini8i1Qlp1City l iftt ._ Trip •.. •KY to Sii Ind,. tor Cltlllin(. Poreel1ln EMmet Drum tnd 1'Cycl1 " ittditltor li1ht. Model ODE 5800L SAVE s20°0 I • GE 17.6 FROST-FREE REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER Lare• lop freezer featura 2 Ice fjap; stores lil!f ll 340 cubes. Jet-freeze compartntent for•ertni fast tr.zins. Hold! up to 165 lbs. of frozen foods & It's k:f.rnd:errlldyl Refri~erator has ~er 12 cu. ft. of frash foods atonp. 3 adjustable canhlever shelves, twin ve11tabl1 crisptfs, covered meat storage, egg bin, butter and cheese keeper. Rolls out on wheels. :'3":ss 5 Now s34995 " -HARBOR CENTER TV and APPLIANCE . , 1300 HARB<)R COSTA MESA 540-7131 l1 HOURS: DAILY 9:00·6:00 • MON.· THURS.·FRI. 9:00-9eOO • B~nkAmericard • Master Charge • Tiptons Revolving • • DAILY l'ILOT 9 r ·o !S-A V'E UP JO $100 ' ON sv.LVANIA'S ONCE -A -YEAR SALE! • Tbls II the &al.S ent that 1mart buymhave been WBiting!or. Now, for a limited time, yo1.9can get all the'quality and eqineerinf a~ence Sylvania home entmainment products are famous for ••• and with up to $100 in aav· bigs. But don't delay, i! you m)a thia opportunity you may have to wait a whole year !or another chance at borpina like theae. SAVES1QO Plus.Three Feature Patt colOrTV model CL883. The bltplt color itcrtm. available: 25" {dli.i. mm.), lDlbnt l'Usb-button Tuninc cl*• perfed: color clcture instantly. Solid ttate IGllln. tar tOOuij ctwm&. Ult u.IJ:lnM\t ta reliability, Now Only~.~~. 8491• - SAVES75 Ou~ding sa.vinp on Sylvania New DlmeMional Color TV with th• bigest pieture em: 25" dllc-me-.~. Gibraltar1111 cbusis, with Jut.ant Color• ind AFC. Med.U.emn11D 1tyled color console model CI.858. Now Only 649 11 TV RECEmON l!IIMULAnD TM-tr..i-r.. .._._.,. l lMlrlc '""""" !11ti. • The sale yaJ 1ve waited a year fur, Is on. S4W: IJP70l/OO Scandlnm.n aty*i eoiot' TV model CL828 with the blaett 9CtfJeft-..: 25" dlac. rneM. Hu tbe klnf-Hl• Gibraltar'"' C-... wttb AFC. SAVES4() NowOnly 57911 TV R.r.cEmOtf DULA.Tl!D 'N-r.-..-M-1-~ ......... Syl..nia tm&dMd mmpnant..._ model MSllO llld-PV/All ..... 111 -.OndloUld·----table. SJtftDia--.:1 Alrq .... lplUen.,tllMda.t~-,, I 1-. SAVES25 Now Only 229" Big 25 inch {diar. meas.} ac;rfen Sylva~ color TV model CL810. IDcludK pud- butlon AFC and the IGjbrtltar 851ilJ 21 ~.dia(oDll me-ire ICr'tllft eok>r TV model CE81. Perfect tor the bedroom or any room ill your home. Hu lbe lon1:urelGibniltar 8SftiJ cbassia with AFC. Mldltmanmn styled colpr TV model CL87I wl&b the SyJnnla Pim Three F•turt Pict. Jncludll 25" (dia(. meas.) New Dlmnllonal Q>lor picture tube, lnstanl Pu:ah-batton TwliDI and 10lid ltlte !Gibniltar .lOQ'Hll clmlil. Medltan~ 1tyled color TV/atm:o enttrtalnmeni cent.er mo6ll CL479 with the Sylnnla 'l'tua Tbrte Fllture Pick. Nn Dlmemloaal ColorwtUr th bl,,_ color tmen a'flllablf, 25" (diaf. me&). Imtant fUU.button TanJnt tor a perfect color picture inltanU.y. Solid aate !G!bl'lllli l@nll dmlll tor tbt uUlmale lnnliabllily. Abo lncludet 111114 lllato All/FM plul Fll- ndio andautomatiC stereo tumtablt, plm the S}rlnnll .W.~ S-. chassis. SALE PRICED AT 5:39" • YOUR CHOICE SAVESSQ Now Only 599•• HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED ATTHESELOW SALE PRICES! SALE PRICED /'J 429" SAVE.S75 NowOnly 774" CbOOl!e from four autbflltically d-.i(Md !umltuni ltyJ• wllh all lbe lllOlt. Jooked - ror featuiw. 25" dia1onal meuurt pidwt tube tbat combines brighln•.•nd con~ trut ror the sharpe5t picture available, •• and there~ more, , • The Sylfanla Gibraltar'"' ch .. il with solid copper clrcultl and plUf·ln tranlilton often unuaial· ly reliable pedormantt. Instant Color'11 lives you IOUDd lnstantJy ••• a picture In N~;o~iv 104988 1• than 61teonds, Automatic FlneTuniqlllUnlyou a per!ectlytuntcl pldure every time you turn on your set or chlnfe ohannell. Nft DimtmioDll Color by Sylvania, It's a sharper way of lookina: aL tblnp. And Ill salt priced at your SylYania dn.ler now. 1-tediterranean M.yled color colliOlt model CL829. Superb French ProvlnclaJ styled colot console model CL833 with rOHtte omamerit.ed bue raJI and cmed abdoltlep. Authentic Early Amtrican ~tyled coior conaol.• mi>del CL832 with simulated tlrawers, bullnllud ICllloped Jlllery. E1.ea:1nt Italian ~lndll atylld _. . ..i. mocill CL835. HARBOR ·CENTER 2300 HARBOR • BankAmerica rd COSTA MESA • Master Charge TV and ·-APPLIAN(E 540-1-131 • Tiptons Revolvint ·. HOURS: DAILY 9:00 • 6:00 • MON.· THURS~· FRI. 9:00 • 9:00 • ~' I • .. I " • '' • • DAILY PI LOT I ' Bro1a::e Menaento An eight.foot tall bronze statue or Sir Winston Churchill towers above Baroness Spencer-Churchill (left) widO\V of the British statesman, and Mrs. Wal· ter An nenberg, wife of the American ambassador to England, at the U.~. embassy in London. The statue \\'ill be shipped to the Churchill Memorial and Library at Fulton, :hfissouri. Histor,y Isn't Bunk DAVENTRY, Engla n d (UPI) - David Steele agreed with Henry Ford tha t "history is bunk " and or.dered his bulldozers to clear away loca l ruins to clear a site ·1o ·build , a hotel. Bui today developer Steele has sent the bulldozers away and called in archeologists. 1 "It's true I se nt the bulldozers in. W~o wants to know about lost c i t i e s any'ilo·ay? We'd taken olf about four feet of top soil before the ministry arrived," Steele told newsmen. The ministry meant govern- ment archeologisls who bur· ried lo the site to back up claims by amateur digge rs that the bulldozers were ruining the site of the long lost Roman city of Ban· naventa . · This could have been the birthplace of St. Patrick, they told Steele. The developer, who earlier had re ared amateu r archoologists would interfere with the hotel buildi!lg, listen- ed and changed his mind. Demo Magazi~e Out 'New Democrat' Wants Strength in farty WASHINGTON (AP) -A watcben wbo ...,. lnlar.lled band ol )'OWlg II b er a I in pollUts an'I wlllini lo Democrats, asp~ to match finance a publiCaUon which the Republican Ripon Society thumbs its nose at the as an in-boase Eslabllshment ' Establiabment '' aadfly. is turning out a ' magazine aimed at needling 'lbe New Democrat plans the Democratic party to move two main themes for this toward the left. year. The young Democrats say "The first is to draw on \heir goal i8 to s~ D e m o c ratic intellectuals, the party. U.slng lhelr pubUca· political' activislB and m. tion, The New Dem,ocrat u "a dependents to propose a series bullhorn lo attack old Politics," of platform statements for the they are lnle•t upon reforming 1972 Presidentia1 campaign," it in their own lmage. said Schlesinge r. 1be New Democrat, seven .. And the second Is to pro-lssues old, was founded last ; .. ~ ...... April by stepben SchJesi ........ r, vide .~th articles on the .. 16., Democratic Presidential can- 28-year-oJd ton of historian c:Udates -what their positions Arthur Schlesinger, a While House aide in t h e ad. are, wb,at they're thinking and nUnlslratlons Of n....-iden•• bow they deal with the events .i-'Q i. as they come up." John F. Keruiedy arid I.yndon B~ Johnson. So far The New Democrat eluded, and throe parl-Um<rs. "l do some poUUiaJ free- lance wrltlai and Ill)' us!>- . tant, Lee Larson, dots some ~eaChin&, to make a little money each week," said Schlesinger. The magazine claims a paid circul;.Uon of l,500,000 wJlb ano t her 1,,50 0 ls1ue1 distributed free to colleges, universities and sympathetic Democrala Schlesinger aaltl The New Democrat has 27 cor- respondents in 17 states and \Vashingtoa, all chosen "on a hit and miss basis." The ~ts are c:on- centrated in the East· aDd South. ''purely by accident," and he's looking for helping hands in the West and Midwest. "We got our initial idea from 'the Ripon Socletyr which came•into being at the same point of despair among liberal Republicans that Democratic liberals face now," s a i d Schlesfuger, the magazine's editor. has published articles on Sen. •::====;:::I=== II Ednpmd Muskie and wh.at the!" editors ~ as his Iden- tification With the Democratic Establishment; the effect of Ben Wattenburg and Richard Scammon's book, "The ~al Majority," on stands taken.~ Democ r at f c presidentl.aJ "That ls,'' be aaid, "we have hopefuls; and, the possibllty a party of no ideas, conlrolled of a fourth party in 197%. by an old and tired leadership Sehl · 'd with no hoi>e. ef change in esmger sat The New the future." . Democrat operates on an $800- a-month budget that's too tight Scblesillger, Harvard '64 and to meet a payroll for two Harvard Law '68, said in an full·time staffers, himseU in- interview the. main function,1-=-=::...:=::::::..:::=:_:::o.=========='ll of , the magazine is "to c)!allen.ge t h e Democratic Establishment." "Our purpose is, in effect, to radicalize the party," be said. Since the first issue was published nine months ago, I The New Democrat has miss-! ed three issues. The '6,000 Schl esinger raised to launch the project ran ·out "so we spent July, August a nd September. fund -raising." Today the magazine's major financial supporters are two New York businessmen. John Hickman, 33, and Tim Collins, 30, whO, Schlesinger said, "were McCarthy and Kennedy **'*****~********** MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association ~... ~l'!!P.t' 1~'-'V V '-'~C:l'I EVERY SATURDAY .... ;·~ .. 10 A M.-4 P .M . ,·,, .. )··~ ~ Open Mm·Thun. 91.ni.-4 p.m.; Fri. S t.m.-6 p.m. BUENA PARK Mertury Savings Bld1., Valley View 11 Lincoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savings Bldf., Edinprot Buch . TUSTIN Mercury Savlnp Bld1 .. Irvine Blvd. 1t Hewport AYI. * * * * * * * * *'* * * * * * * * * * •••••••• THUllS.. PRL, SAT. & SUll. ' ' COUNTRY ROUND-UP RCA Coun·•lr-y- • REG. 4.98 LP's 94 REG. 6.95 TAPES ~ 86 L y 2ZIJO HARBOR ILVD.-Corner of Wilson .St.-COSTA MESA· JOIN THE t ' 'SELLERS · CIRCLE' WE'AE SAVING SPACE FOR ••• • ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily) gives yo u a n advantage you get through no other advertising me dium . It reach- es customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn 't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sellers C ircle" •.• You-r Direct Line to Direct.ory Results 642•5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT I ;J " ·1 l ~T.::lw:::Nd::lJ::•.:.'-="'='--4"-, .:.19::.71:.._ ____ ~AILY 'ILOf JJ CHECKING. •UP• · Bain1l1a;ker May Have An~wer ~o Prayers MEXICO bJTY (UPI) -ico's land is.arid or semi-arid. ''But these pellets are not areas be obliged to _.lnform tha_t'1 the chance we v.·ould old Muic:an Power ud upt Second 1X1arriages Do Too Succeed The Az~ priyed to the. But sal•• told .UPI, "P'rh.aps heavy enOUll> to fall to the the nearest aldi<ld w11en they bin to tal<e." O>., -ckMldl..., dlml crotesque god Tlaloc to bless the' largest amount or ll"able earth. When ' tbe cl~ are spot cumu1us clouds. Since only planes flyiJ:Jg at or: in qrlcultural ..., oa lhelr arid lands with rain. land in Mexico ia found in Jeeded with sliver iodide, the But it bard1y ever raine<f in Us 'deserts:" iOdJde crystals aabere to the ~ with the ex• ct an alUtude of 33,000 to 3$,000 a replar bull. "But ra~ ,Mexico's deserts. Salas' propo.sal is to seed ice droplets giving them more longitude and l 1 t It u de , feet would be in a· poeiUon mlldlW on a maalvt lcale Guillermo P. Salas, a UJe cumulus cloud banks Y.'elgbt. · . specially adap(ed small planes to spot the cumulus clouds, baan't been tr~ anywhere mod~n-day rainmaker, thinks' localed oVer desert areu on ".J:tte pres.sure In the cloud could be dlspatched from the Salas suggesled an alternaUve ~·;i..;;:,";ho;;:;,.;JA;.;;:;;:;;:;;:~ he may have the answer: to a regular basis,·thus providing ls a~ changed and both of airfield to seed the cl()Uds. might be the use or. weather;: the Aztecs' prayers. ' the water that would tum the theseJ pbenomerta CIUBe the · He said tither dry icfl or 1atellltes. ., Salas, president of the col· deserts into green, fertile ice dfopleta to fall to earth. liquid nitrogen could also be The scientist said that some I e g e 0 f e n g t P. e e r s , fielda. When they reach the warmer used. further experlmentaUon may mineworkers, metallurgists, "At certain times of the year lower atmosphere tht pe1lets "It doesn't matter when Ule' be necessary •. But he said '\ oilworkers and geotoalsts, will the cuffiulus (the tall , bllloy change to water." water falls,11 Salas sakf, "as ''Mexico has more experience By L M. BOYD An expert who has looked into ask the government to let.him clouds) are higti enough l'n order to carTy out an long a~ the seedin& is ill this kind of thing than KWS LIKE UNCLE I.EN , hive a band al provoking rain (15,000 feet) so that the water effective seeding wogram, repeated over and over again. any other country in' the OUR LOVE AND WAR 1 this sad SitUltion gives two by 11rUflclal means. in the clouds turns to ice," Salas said be would propose There might be a cloudburst world." He recalled.that some MAN contradict.s the elderly main reaSOlll' for It. ~. the Sixty.two percent of Mex· he explained. that' planes flying over desert that would cause d1mage, but private companits, notably the content.ion tha't a divorced " oper~tor keeps too manyl-_:~:;::::..._~.:::_::....::::::....::::.:::::::'.::::::::: ______ _:.::::.=::::::...:::::=..:.:.::_.::.::.:___:::.:..;=::..:::::::..:::=~.:::_!::.:..:::.::::::!::::::::~=::..::::.!:::=========1- woman ls a poor marriage ,. records. Or two be doesn't risk. In a recent nationwide •keep enough. 'It is this surv ey'· he says, 87 out or authority's contention that a 100 wives who . had been smart experienced file clerk ~appy when pfev1~y mar· who knows what to bang onto r1ed . claimed ~ll' second and what to toaa out can make ~ages. were Just dandy. or break a budding company, It IS: obvwm w~at happens and be suggests the wist mostly he says, is they wed manager hire such too Y04QG: the first time employee at the outset. around,. bu~ learn enough out of the experience to make MOST TV NEWSCASTERS the secorid stisioo successful. yeam privately to · 10 into · "No man,. should be afraid politics. Most p o 1 i t l c I a n s to marry· a woman unless she harbor some ,simill ambition has divorced five husbands," to be TV ntWscUten. ~Most he says, 1'9r widowed three." tanners secreUy wish they JUST ·AebUT ;\LL 2-year. old childten in the world have flat ~et, knock knees and pot bellies. Ugly, aren't they? ..• . NOW THE SNOW SLOPE BOYS have devised a rig that looks like a bicycle with skis instead of wheels. It's so simple, they say, even a sportsman already over the hill can de.scf:nd m o s t gracefully. Might try lhal . • . . WHAT FARM BOYS know that city boys doo't is an irritated goose is more dangerous than an unruffled :snake. CUSTOMER SERVICE-Q. were doctors. Most doctors • w0ufd ljke to l>e genUeman farmers. Most n·e w spa per editors wouldn't mind taking . g>,t chairs of college pi:<> f..,rs. Molt college pro- f essors think they would ~tly enjoy editing niwspapers. Finally, m 0 st pr_olessional foolbaJl players w~ to coach, most coaches want to own teams, and most tewn owners want to be George Blanda, but richer. THE FOREGOING comes to mind because a client asks, "If you could do anything you waDted for a living, what would it be?" That's easy. Woatd rather do what I'm doing. For instance, the timid fem8.l.e mouse rarely travels mori than 40 feet from her nest while the braver male mouse someUmes s t r a y s beyojid SO feet from home base1 Name another business, besides pest control, where you get paid for knowing thinr,, like '1bat. 'What's more, the hOurs are flexible. "Wasn't it old Irvin S. Cobb who referred to a crowd of night ladies as 'an anthology of pro's'?" A. That was Clifton Fadiman. He also called them a jam of tarts, a flourish. of strumpets, an essay of Trollope's and a parade of. loins. C unning fellow , Fadiman .... Q. "If all the U.S. coins minted in one day were tossed into a single pile, how much would it be worth?" za.1 question.s and com- A. Maybe $1 million. ments are welcomed and wiU b~ used in CHECKING HALF T ff E N E'W UP 1fteretter possible. Ad· BUS~ES started up dresJrJ,eiterJ to L. M. Bo11d, every day fold within . two ., .P~ O:rJ!oz · Jl75, Newport years. So show the statistics. 'Be&.~ Calif., 92660. Temperatures. Soaring As Congo Goes Modern KINSHASA. the Congo (AP) - Temperatures in t h e Congolese capital are rising in proportion to development. The average of 98 is six degrees higher than t h e average temperature when the Congo got its independence JO years ago. Concrete buildings a n d asphalt roads keep the heat they draw all day from the sun. Thirty years ago Ki.Jshasa was malnly green and there were ority two asphalted roads. With few exctptions buildings were low sheltered by the trees. Dirt r0ads were flanked by flame and mango trees. Colonies of monkeys chattered in the hardwood wenge trees of a wood that covered what is now the select riverside suburb of Kalina. On the outskirts of the city the authorities planted im· ported cuttings of eucalyptus, a tree whose roots and height made it ideal for combatting earth subSidences aod p~ tecting tl'!e lightly bu i I t African homes against storms. Would you like a· fresh start? You can have one. The Bible says, .. I will put a new spirit wiuili. you," And it shows that God , as Spirit, is the source of all the inspiration, joy and freshness that gives our lives real me~ If you would Jilto a fresh look at yourJife, you will l'i!ioy hearing the Bible 1"'"""'"' "Spilitw to be i<ad in our<:burch this Sunday-r Won't you come and join us? CHRISTlAN SCIENCE dtURG1 SBMaS \ , cdsTA MISA -first Ch•r&h ., Cllritt. Sc5-tllt ~ ll.t-M .. y.,. Dt,. C•1te M9M -11 .... l HUNTINGTON llACH-Flnt Ch•rc• •f CINtlt,'kJlilttlt "' ..., otl ... -f:Jt .-11 •••. . . . NIWrOllT llACH -first C•11tcli •f Chrht, k.._tht JJOJ Yl1 Lhl• -9:15 -411 •·M. NIWPOlT l!ACH -SH•t1tl Cit•"'" .t' Cltrht, kl-'tt JIOO Peclflc Ylt:w Dt., Cet ... HI Met-11••· 2666 HAftOR BLY~ 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 mMMER 0 Rutttcl power. S11per 1h•rp f•ct.ry .c1,.1. 12•• LONG . HANDLE ·PRUNER WITH SAW 0 A de1I to k11p yo•1on +lri• grouMI 1114 11fe from f1ll1. D Thin you 90 •hied incl cut the limb whi11 you't• d•ndin9 11"41r it. · 0 Wh•t c1n w1 do with.f+lin91 like th1t. 839 5/8x60 n. GARDEN ~ I HOSE NYLON REINFORCED, we he we lo ••Y th1t lo11d or it do1111•t look llli• the de•I it it. Got br1u couplin91 •t both end1. AMI, •• tfie lilt Gr11f 11iil, 1 hol• in eithtr end of th. h011. 3•• TOOL MATE Now c:1ny '"'rtlhin9 with you •Mi ••"• 1111lii119 !hos• h1le1 in yo11r pocktft frotn 10011 tool1. MoWed hi·iT:p1ct pl11li• with 1loh •rkf eo111p•rlTlf1Ms fot • .. .,.;thin9. 6'' DIP & GRIP ' ·-0 Dip the tool ind t•I 1 9oo4 11011·1lip 9rip for If, D M•r\ your 1 .. 1, with ow" tP"i•I color. A-1r11yM yo11'll 911 lo h1n9 011 the111 for o littfe whit• lon9ot. 1•• . SEED .. i.n..,., 16, 1171. T.,...Y7 11·•· •I II·•· M~' c'-. ....... "'IMI .... htff .... 9t ,... o.,.,..... "''wtft...,. .,..:ltb ,..i tllnr ""· tt. 1m. lAlltt tlltt, wt'M 11111111 flf •mellllnt.J CASTING RESIN Now f!Vlko y1ur 4Wll 1h1ff, .Aiht~ ...... ,,.,,. .. ~1rb111. •Ml thi1191, C-01 Willi the l•f1fy1t .114 colori119 i1 ... ,n.blo • 110, 3 69 . GAL. B.LACK & DECKER '1/2" DRILL ' 0 n., r••I c11np•cf d rill witli th• pow1r t• h1c•'1t in 1to"'• l!l11011ry, ple1tic1, ll'l1t1h, <11llt4 wood. 8 Owl.le h11141od 9rip 'for ••1i1r co11h•I. 1999 TRASH CANS SWING TOP OR SWIVEL TOP """".:::""' 0 You h•v• • cholct of :: wh1!1,.tr model pl11111 Ytll, Non• of them pl1t1t fily ' •1d1 b1c1111• they ht•• to 1 empty th11f1, lew t••• 1in't ~ •• thtl to119h 11 , 1''' TUB ENCLOSURE SWAN DHIGN l __ ,_j_.tifra:ZO •••uliful w•v t• "''••'o"'' • tob 111!0 • 1hewor roorn for• lot lt11 th•n •11 1clditio~. 0 Got th• 1lidil'l9 doors with '"""~un 1tch1d 1w11t d1ll111, 111d th• 10 ... 11i.r •.• .wi.o ..... ry1h1n, lo 111••••• fin• fh'i119, FLOWER AND VEGETABLE SEEDS 0 Swill limt to 91t 1om• 11ed1 ,,.J dirt • lit!lo ,.;ctory 91rd1n. !Only this ti1111 it i1 1 fi9ht 191i111i hi9h food pl'ic11.I 0 11'1 •••Y lo 9row thi1191 in C1liforni1, 1 littl1 tffert '"' M11n1 N•tu•• do11 the rel!. O Or, jual 9row flow1r1 i nd 11! o••r •' th• in-l1wt • .... .,d.y. ' , c PKG. P"INT THINNIR 0 111 yl r '"'*'' con, w1'lll dr1w off tho Ml! 9r1do of thi111iort..r ti..:-.. .,. ~ D Get 111 yo11 w•nl, l111t if you'r• •11offl1r store, j111f w1Ur en by • 25C GAL PAINT STRAINERS 0 If 011 p1i11t i1 911ti1111 little old, wh, ch11ic1 p11Hl119 it 011 with 111 tho Uttl• cr11d 1tuff tlt•t ftrll'll. 0 Str1i11 it 111d t•I 111 yo11r 1non1y1 worth. I 111'1 I p11Hin9 yoll 01111ow11 2 FOR 5c SINGLE EDGED RAZOR BLADES N•"•' '''""to hive el!OUth of th111 wh111 y•u ••nt to fl111th 011t • c•reful p1 l11tin9 jolt. Not good fir tho 1i •• ,c1 li11f th•y ... t · wo1141t1 on 9l1n. WOOD SCRAPER . .. ' • 0 R111101re1 old p1i11t , • ., •• ''" ·•·rt .u ot11r •ttl11 with tht 111w stuff, 0 My wif1 tlYI 111 tr••I for rer11ciwl111 old wt• 1110, Iii.rt I e•11't fitvr1 "'hY 1h1 Ith it pU1 11p to b19i11 willt. :'25' UN 0' WAR SPAR VARNISH 0 Thi fino1t •1rnl1h -"" c111 bvy eiW tlie P'fiC• c1nnot M 111•1 f•t ltii1 tjUtlity l"'l'Wli•fl. Ch11p1r ~''"''we h•~ 11111 w.·11,,., •• -..ru 1111'• .,.., tit .. t1wlftl ftl. Mit. lf't I , .. , M'""'1 hi th1 ''"' '"'"· 11 DAil v l'IUIT Plaza Fund Increased SANT A ANA -Increased costs in development of tht dty-county civic center in tbe hurt of Santa Ana have led the Civic Center COmmissk>n to increase its commitment t.o the Plaza of the Fountains by IS0,000. The county will now pay '300.000 to the construction fund of $655,<m. The ballnce ii to bt paid by the city. The plaza is the third phase of the mall in the city..collllly civic center. lt will eventually be surrounded by the county courthouse to the west, the counly Jaw library to the south and the proposed state and ftderal buildings. Bar Group Installs SANTA ANA -New officeni and directors of the Orange County Bar Association have been installed. New officers are C. Arthur Nisson, Santa Ana, president; Garvin F. Shallenberger, San- ta Ana, president-elect; Jamu P. Slack, Fullerton, vice presi- dent and James W. Obrien of Westminster. secretary- treasurer. New directors are Donald A. Rusoon of Fullerton, and Richard L. Bowers of Garden Grove. For The Record Death Notices O.t"a.tllNO •· Clwrl11 G1r1Mrlrw, Jr. A•• S1, •I '41 S!lto Clrct,, H11nll11tlllol l•Kto. O.t1 ~ lfnrll, F•bru•rr 1. Sunrrw., 0}' w/11, Or...,; Clllldren, Cllfrllt f ,, Jal'rl"'y W. ,,.. J1rnr L. G1rbarl11C11 Jt1n,.. M. llort, J1ner L. Fouch, Pllh POPt 11\d Cen11l1 P111l1e1"; Jolin O. •l>d Do111ld O. kl111; bro!lltr, Jo"n L. GtrbarlllO/ tlllt r, l"rtdrl-1 Whl!t. $.tnrlcn, ,.,ldfiw, 2 l"M. Comm11nl!y Mtthodlll Cllurcll, ""' Htll Av1., H1111t!119ron Bttth. lnltrl'f!..,I, Good Shft>f\lfd c...,,,,,,._ smn111 Mortu1nr, DI· rKtor1. MIAD t 1Jloy F. MNd. J'JOt Ntw York Avt., C.1!1 Meu. Dltt of cM1tll, l'llO. 1. Sur- ¥1-...d b'f wl!t, 1t11!111 1l11<1r, Mr1. ltlt¥ Gr1¥t1. lllJnol1. s,...,1c11, Sllvl'tlll', 1'11>- l'V9tl' '· , ,.M, P1cllk Vltw (II.IHI. ,,.. l1r,.,.,,1, P1clllc Yltw M-111 P1rlt, Ptclllc Y!tw Mortue.,., Dlrtc1or1. PENNIN•TON Mirt1ttl M. ,.tnnlntton. AH U , of lltll f m1, M11nr1 ... 1on 8HCll. 01t1 of ON!lo, Ftl!Olttl' l. s11 .... 1w1c1 lw d1utllt1r, l'tui. Int MtM11rr1Y, Munlitotton a11cll. Stlv· I* Wiii bf ... Id Frklly, 10 AM, lm1"'1. Cl\tHI. Entcl'rtb!ntnl, For1t! l1~len- 01l1. Smlt1!1 ~1,-,, Olrtclil'I. SM•P.t•D El11t Sht,.lrd. A11 U. of 1026-11 Ylt M1rl-1 E11t, L11111"' Hm1. 0.11 or det!ll, F1ttr111ry 1. S11rwl~i!'d by 01uthlt r, Mr1. M111I ~y; 1l1!1r, AH $11 .. , PW!ll nd. O•fll'OnJ lwo f•tflCklllldrtn; - •r11l..,r11>e1chlld. Ptlv1!1 ..,,.1u. wtrt tltlO F11trt11r'I J ti McCtrmlc-l tl!llli lMch Cll1o>el. !nttrmtnl, Ctdtr Nlll1 C...,tltrv, W11hln1!on, O.C. MtCClrmlck Lttu•i. lltach Mor!11e,.,, OlrKlor•. Tl!Ml'l•TON M•rlorl• l{ftlllttn T11mPll l011 ....... 11, OI :uu 1111 Lido, Newroorr B•1ch. Otlt Of Ot1ih, FIO<Ulr}' ). S.,, .... 1-td Oy lllrtt -· 11.obtrt T., or L• H1br11 Wiii o .• MunllMlon Bt1ch1 Stm11tl J. Tun11t1011. Sin 01190; 1wo dlulhfltr,, M'I. l11r1Mr1 M..itr, Shtrm1n 01-11 Mt1. Mir~ 01· •tn, litwPOrt lltlcPIJ nln1fffft 1r11\dchll- 9rwn; l'wa t•t1l..,rl<ldc:llUar1n. Strvlcti Frid.IV , 10 AM. II. Andrtw1 Prfttn'Nrlt n Cllurc~. IMtr..,.nl, W1tlmln1t-r M-- tal P1r1<. 81!11 Co111 M1•1 "'°""''"'• Ol1tcl01"1, ARBUCKLE ~ SON Westcllff Mortaary U7 E. I7tlt st.. Cost.I rtfrs1 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Coron1 del Mir . OR S.."51 Colt.a Meu . ml UU4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 8roadw1y, Co1ta Tt1etl U l-IW • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 La.1unll Canyoa Rod. •H-M15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK c.-., M-.ry Cbapel l$M PldDc Vie• DriYe NewpOrt Be1dl, Callfonla lff.S7• • PEEK l'AMll.Y COLONIAL FllNERAL --'lltl-An. ll'etlmlluUr .. :.ww • S&f!Tll8• MORTUARY 117 Miio St. A........ -- Tl'lutsda)', Ftbtll#J 4, 1971 Physician Pleads Innocent in Case Board Talk Set In Forest Marin~s Learn Se.a Ditch Teclmiques LANCASTER-A former Santa Ana physician •ccllled of calmly gunnln,g down bis medical partner in 1 Lin· caster service sllUon last Saturday has pleaded innocent to muTder charges. Dr. D1niel D. Lovel1ee, 62, •ppe•red Monday for •r· ralgnment before Ju d g e Wil!J1m WriJht in Antflope Valley Municip1l C.Ourt. He "'" advlaed ol the SANTA ANA-Stzrvtv!q an alrcrllt dllchini at 1 • a requlm qulcl: thlnkin1 ud 1ood lraintnc. Eocaplnc a •iDklnrl jet or chlraes, entered hit plea and trw)>Ort aircraft ••• p1ting wis ordered brought back SANTA ANA -Subjects back to tbe surface or nut Monday for preliminary r1naing from bu.man relations releuing a d r a 111 n g hearing. to refuse disposal wW be parachute . . . findlna: and No moUvt bu been offered discussed Saturday in a joint 1rtUng aboard the one.man for the shootlng ol Dr. Hug~ meeting of Orange County llferaft ... then m1ybe having Clemmer, '6, who was killed to survive for many days on llUlyora, and tbe~county Board litil · Uo • u , t lnatantly by two of tile .45 e « no Tl ns are J ciUber bullets fired dur1n& the of Supervisors at Loa Pinos some of the per.Ila of dltchlng morning incldtnt. Boys Camp on 0 r t e I a at aea. Dr. Lovellce, bls ptrtner Highway in the CJeveland N1-Third Marine Aircran Wing in a urology practice for five tional Forest. aircrews are ffi!Uired to know years, 1tood by calmly at the The remote site for thf first how to avoid the ri.sb in any itetne after 1urrende.ring his joint seuion of city.county of these situations. Every gun and submitted to am.rt leaders in several years was thrte years they m u s t Mur.derer without resisting. selected so the officials could complete. a seven hour course LOI Anpltl County SherUf's "&et a.Vay from tdepbonu in water aurvlval. q -JDID.th befttt beln& 11Phantom,11 or A-t Skybiwk," feund. ditched 1t 1t1. W1ll1ams also explains the There ii 1 rubber life raft in use ti new equipment Ind the pool and once the Marine dem00.1tr1tes how to properly has , .. ..JI._ .. L.~ ......... free hls use the de-uJter. A person can un._"1:\1 '"" ... ....,,. survive for 1 long time on Kit pan and ta~r the life raft Utile tr no food. the nme u if be were in tbe He must have w1ter to middJe of the ocean with no aurvive for any length of time. help around. Afttr the two hours in the clusroom the Marines 10 to Tbe next phase of training is the tl.ation twimmlng pool for the parachute .-drag. Tbe pracUcal application of what Marine fastena a parachute to they hive learned. bis fll&ht gear, the harness is free blnu<U by releuln& the harness. As &000 as he linlatles the parachute drag, be must tak1 a swimming test and be classified as a class A or n swimmer. Class A swimmers must swlm SO meters caN")'ing a ten pound pipe, then swin1 100 meters using the four main strokes: back stroke . breast strpke, side stroke, and free style. Class B swimmers only have to swim 50 meters and tread water for 30 seconds. The training the t.1arine receives during this course may some day save his life. SUrvival at sea depends upon tbe individual's will to live and how well he is trained in water u Richard Grll!ln aald !ht ud other dlsnaptloos llld have 11lt llltl i. boon -Orde red t .. madicaf men mat ln !ht a real dlscuulon.'' ~ In the claaaroom, where station lot at 8:45 a.m., at The meeting was requeattd the -Mar1ne1 are · taUjbt the which time they allege Dr. by the county League of Qtltl fundamentals of w I t e r They are rint strapped into attached to 1 long rope which the "dunker," a mock.up of an Is attached to a power wench aircraft's c e ck p It . The at the other end of the pool. "dunker" 51.ides down a Tail He is dragged through the and into the water, then turns water jwt as 1 parachute over. The Marines must lree would dr1g him if be would tbemselvu juat u \bey would have ejected over tbe ocean on if they were Jn an F""'4 a windy day. He mwit then I_::__:_ _____ _ survival. Drives Get UCJ Help T C t Lovelace opened flre with five which bu 1 committee atu· IW'Vival. They learn .bow le 0 oun y WIOlll watchinc. dying the fw;ibllily of ID in· Ult sign.Ung devices, abark The swipect had an office ter-covernmental couoci1 for rtpellant, water . de-11alten, SANT A ANA -c.anvicted in santa Anl in 1960 and 611 the county,. and an emergency radio. killer William Westwood "the reoordll lbow, but Jett for San-Mayor Edward Just tf Capt1in M. L. WilUanu, the Man" McClellan has been ta Barbara County and flnally Fountain Valley, league prtal· Fliaht Equipment Officer with ordered to return to Orange returned to the Los Angeles dent, will open the meeliJW. El T or o ' s Physiological County Superior Court April area. Robert Battin, chairman of Trabiing Unit, demonstrates 5 for a rerun of the 11"~ He Is a past president of the board of supervisors, hu to each clua undergoing the phase of a murder tria the Antelope Valley DI.strict been invited to be co . tralnlnc, the right way to free ended in hia conviction on of the Los Angeles County chairman. tancJed shroud lines of the charges of killing two patrons Medical AssociaUon ind serv-No formal agenda is plait-parachute, frft the •\ pan, of• Stanton bar. ed as Antelope: Valley Hospital ned, but a wide variety of inf1ate the raft, ant get~t..qto Judie Byron K. McMillan staff preaJdent six month! last subjects bu been eUered for the raft. ... '6'"» IRVINE -Employrs at UC Irvine a1ntributed f7 ,TOS to charity lhrough the AID- UnJted Givers plan during 1970, according to Ralph O. Laue, UCI persoonel mtnpger. Lau.e uid the averaae an- nual contribuUon by UCI employes, including l!lgilty and staff, rose to $37 "'6ing 1170 from 12$ during tho prlnr set Feb. 9 as the date for year. discussion. He may be anoat for u long 1 pretrial hearing into thtl-.i;i;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;ii;;;;i;;;;,,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii0;;;;;11 McClellan case. But it is not r e1pected that McClellan will be returned tn orange County from Death Row until the April trial date. yur. McClellan, oow 2t, drew the death sentence · three yean ago when a jury held h1m respomlble for the ~aying of two patrons of the "Gu lJibt" bar In Stanton ud agreed that he should 10 to the gas chamber. But the death penalty wu reversed when the California Supreme Court agreed with• 1111':., Laguna Niguel trial lawyer Tom Keenan that the jury in the penalty phase of the trial had not been in1>tructed by Jud&e Samuel Drelzen to d I a r e g a1r d uncorrobcl'ated evidence 1bout hla p r l o r criminal reoord and contactl wlth the law. Judge Orders Valley Man To Hospital SANT A ANA - A Fountain Valley photographer who ad- mitted that ht forced a 17· year-old Costa Meu girl to participate in acts of sexual perver1lon bu been found to be a mentally di80tdered &el offender. Oran&e County S up t r I o r C<>urt Judge Byron K • McMillan sent Robert Charles Albrieht Jr.. 32, of 18862 Arbutus St.. to Atascadero State Hospital after reading the reports of two psychiatrists who ex1mined the defeodant. Albright earlier p I e a d e d guilty to se1 per>'ersion charges. Kidnaping and drugl charges filed against him at lhe time of arrest were drop- ped wllh that plea. I Arresting officers s a i d Albright forted the girl into his car !art Sept. 11 and com· pelled her to participate in unlawful sexual act.a: at knife- point. He wu 1rruted after a high speed ch•se of his euto throuch Founllin Valley and Co&ta Mesi. Pact Okayed For Station CYPRESS -A 183.718 con· tract to build the county's Tri..C!Ues fire station I n Cypreu bas been approved by the county Doud of Superviaors. . The new ataUon wtJI rtplace the current one houaed in a trailer 1t 1 site near the Los Alamitos Racetrack . There were If bids on the Job to build 1 thrtt-englne staUon with a JS.bed donnltory. Plans were drawn by archltects Tom 1 n d Truskier of Huntl.ngton Beach . The new rt.Ilion wtU serve the thret communlUu of Loi Alamitos, Cypr .. s and La Palma. Frfckltft--,. Mini. ,.. .... -> ...... •· (Only 2 .... wide) t.ltlll S...,. at 9* h- llila... • ..., .•. ..,. .................. ................... ·Frigidaire 16.6 cu. ft.· Frost-Proof Refrigerator FRIGIDAIRE FREEZER Tllil frillj*' Wt-lllelllllhl ........... • S11ptr·Sur1• wa1hln1 Med$ little ot no prHiMlnl- • 4 CJCllS. E•tll • pl111 •lfl'Mf. • Order interchlnp- «ift front P111tls .,,.,..,,.. • Optional desl1111r ioor hninf kit. COSTA MESA 411 E. Seventffntll St. 646-1684 dally ,_, Sat. 9·6 DtorStonp! s2999s Radio Dlapatrhecl !JV and APPLIANCE SERVICE Wt Plt'lt a11r •-lltt! M ,.._ ''"'lcr tr....:~1 1lllfld wllll '•<fOtl' tr•lllfd ''"'kt N>t<ll llSI$ lo GtHvrr tr>d nrvlc1 ~ ptOlllllCr, wt ltll. Wt Mif ... t -t ill t fW '/"Ill llttltr '"'61Xfl Wllll btlllr 11rvk• ttr i.s.i ...... ,, come. In !Od•~1 POI SHYtCI PHONI 548-3437 Laguna Hiiis Pla1a 1-.irt .. S..-.0.1 837-3830 dally 10·6 M/F 10.9 ' ,, SAVE 22.65 I ENTIRE STOCK ' \ ' i· SUPERB i ; SILK SUITS our lowest price ever for the1e suits! Magni!· icent 90I wool worsted wlth 10!! silk for that look and feel of quality and year• round versa· tility. Two and three button single- breasted models in regulars, shorts, longs. Rush in and take advan- tage of this money-saving opportunity I I THIS LOW PRICE INCLUDIS COMPUTE ALTIRATIONSI A MERICA'S \.ARG~ST ,.AMllV C LOTHING CHAIN OPEN SUNDAY 11. 5 • GARDEN GROVE -12372 Garden Grove Blvd. COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th Thursday, ,,bn.11ry c, t"n DAILY PILOT Ii! Vital Statisties for the Orange Coast Area Marriage Ucetases LAS Vl!GAS -M11rl-I~ i uu.d ,..,. llle.W.: W~· HTAHA -Ji n. 11, Jtld~ ~J .. ~ y~·;nr~ l•ac:~ •.. S • WA -J111. t~\:rits l1nclv.J f+ ~.~ 2 loro "'-'(,,. a1w, ~ncl r,:J:li' CNrilol'lf, 11. DI' M V~~Wi1S$~HG -J1n. u, ~ Jie,n. of ~111, 111111 ... iic,~~,x.~r: '!'"'~. '11. Jal\~ ren1, 01r Grw 11111 fi,.~ flu II\. 1r" of t111nf111111on c:Jlf.MYl!llll -Jin. 11, Jtlclllro Stlvfn, U, Incl Lllllt V1r1, 2J, 1111111 ol l •oUnl 911c11. ANFUi0-4.0ZINSK/ -Jtrl. I" JiWOh (hlrlft 2~, 0 $1;i 0 HO Incl (.111rloll1, 16, of Cllllt Mew. M~EH·FLEMlH~ -J1", H. Kt nnllh ltor, 11,;,f 111ml11S!tr trld L!no1 • !I lll'IOl't. c°"s"rtHl llA ts -J•"c 11. J'•rv. )II, 111d M.,lon, ». bo!" of Hun. lln•ll!l'l INKtl FAILIHIJ..OlltS'jlNE -J1". n, A•Clllel ~'-~-·i,, "sa,':,''.J:..""' Mtrolfe M Elli 1111 -Jin. n Mk hHI El,,.. 1, tlld Fr11>eti G11rldt1n, ~"°' '""l~M~o. SP. II.LIN EHlll UE -Jin. n. .,., W~1m. l . Founltln V1Ue1 "'~!'c' 'lrtf,nn, . of Ari.11. ..,0111 · H -Jin, 1 2, ~· 'W II'"'! XI, r. Hunll•ICl!Cl'I u~ltr llld Mir 1¥11 t•n. 21. DI MAv''.i.ieY -Jtn. 11 .... Id G .. ,,, ot Nt{jli.I 811c11 •nd P1!rlcl1 Mtr<1<1trJ ,,n. q_I K"'' Ana. W LW Ill .,.AJICH R -Jtn n, ~k Jt[i;'· Jr ,( I ol W11trn/'"''" '~'•"" •°'~'• "'cl <1<1 "· 1, 01 L• M r1c11. 5K· I K -Jiii. 2J, Sh!ven t ic!, t Ind Su1tn Ann, 16, bc>Tll ot Cttlt_ Mn1. I LOOGeTT·FEAAO -Jtn. 2 l Mtrill!U J., o 1 ol' Coli Mtl• ind Jot n. }1 of $1111 An1. 8LAl(ELT·81!111G5 ROM -Jtn. 2J, PhllllD Loul1, 24. 1nd Ch1rltnt 'lulit, to. boll'\ of '!!'' Mfil, LU A·HOOP -Jin. , Ttrrv wtYnt. n· ol Cwlt Mr.r.· tnd Ja.n Rlc~lt, A1..t:e'IJ.t~R~DI ..! . J•"· il. Tr.om•• """''"'' II. ol 81lbc>I i ncl J1nlc1 "l!IJ ,, ... Qf Or111C11. CLA 1<..MullELLA -Ji n. i l . Howt rd Dv1r. 51. ot H11ntlnot1111 l!le1ch 111<1 Fr1ncr1. 5(, o1 w.,1..,1nst,.,. G~V!R·~EE' -Jin. 2J. 01111~1 hi.lti'''1 ·w•lim1!':fPr.PlhY Lou. lO, l"R ICE·~Hl!F -Jt n. 21. Wtl!tr ~H lfne~'7s. of ,:O~::ft~~J, ,1~"· Ctrol Ill EJIS-COOPEll -J•n. 11, K'nn,!11 cl'llrd, "· Incl VIVlll" M11I"'· MLbolh of HuflJl""ton llttch. 11<1 EV·IONNIF ELD -Jan, 21. Oonlld Lirw!1, :W. of Htwoor1 8e1ch Ind Lorf1, JI, of '°"°"' dll Mt• Dissolutions Of Marriage IN-SINK·ERATOR MODEL 11 SALE THE NO. 1 OISPOSER Why do wom1n b11¥ rnor1 ln.Sink·Er1lor1 thin 1ny olhtr di1po11•? B11utiful COH01ion- prool 1t i i11l111 11111. E•d u1iv11 likt th1 "Wrt nch1tt1" 1111! It h you cl111 j1rn1 ,,,;. ly. And mcr1, No wo11d11 !ht woftdtrful Mod•I 77 h11 1 lifeli"1 t co1101!on w1rr111ty, AR d1 S-y11r p1rh "'•"'"'1· loo. Tht q111 !i. ty th1~ l!'ltdt ln-~ink-Er 1l~r th1 Numb1r One diipo1tr b1lon9• on ¥~ur k1tch•"· MODEl llJ SALE $4999 $2599 RIG. $17.91 REG. SJJ.11 REPUBLIC "GEMINI" WATER HEATERS 20 Gal. • • • • 547.99 30 Gal. • • • • 549.99 40 Gal. t t I I 559.99 50 Gal ••.•• 574.99 Thi1 q ut 1i•y 9111r1nl1rd 9l1u li111d w•· t1r h11t1r i1 1q11ipp1d wilh s1f1tv ltfl'lp, 11 r1q11ir1d by l1w, W1 ht•• 111'11 day in.+1U1tiofl 1w1il 1bl1, if you wh~. AU "''"''I in1t1U1tio11 p11l1 i11· clud1tl. C1U bv 1110" -ln1t1ll th1! d1y. All wo•l 011111 by 1T111l1• pl11mb111. 1"4STALLATION AYAll.AILI • OPEN MON.· FRI. 9 A.M. -9 P.M. SAT.·9A.M.-6P.M.-SUN.10A.M.-4 P.M. ~ " .. ... (,~a.er-......... "SUU/-.ll«ICM• _.. •••• ' llRl\ --j llKt1 -· llH~I -11111 ' . ' ........ SArETY l'OB TOU • TOUB Merit c. II .. •• he& II II •1f \y ROADTIST MAGAZINE POCKETBOOK DATSUN • TOYOTA i OTBtBS s 5.21113-511113 i.lllll-i.85115 5.8115-5Jbl5 ld.+~lllloi1 . , ... 11.1 .... , ... _ '* .......... Belted or UNlllOY AL Whitewolls LAREDO •2.95EJtra s15•s 1.$1113 1171/IJ) . s19•s '""" ll"" (5Jl/1t} (111/111 l.Hx1J (tll/lll 5 ....... 524' '"'"" 1.11115 (111/15) 'ft114(171(14) 1.n.14(f11{1ll iJ511t\l71J14J T JS.IS(f Jiii i) *22'5 1."-14 IMJ&/14)· 1.55111 IMJl/151 *26'5 , ...... 11 ltll/lSI BRAND NEW full 4 Ply MARKC. BLOOME UNIROYAL 6.SOx 13 TUBEl:.F.SS ·~· ,, 95 " ,,;. t &· 11.<--.n l•O \11' h• lJ lu ... ~ ~ ~= ill Y.; " ' UMIBOYJlL TUBEJ.Ess · IRAND NEW FULL 4 Pl Y 7.75x14 {f78/14) '7.75115 {f71/15) 7.00113 1.25114' 1.25115 7.35114 (G71/14) (G71/15J SJ095 SJJ95 WllM CHI ... U. ,.... .. ..... . llMl MlllMl 8.55114 (H78/14) 8.55115 (H78/15) 9.00xlS (L71/15) 8.8Sxl 5 (J78/15) All Yl•• lull.. "·n .. IUI ..... 1 .• i.. , ••••• """-"'ti.ts ...... A PRECISION JOB • , • RE~. 57.15 PRECISION JDS ... =~· POLYES'IUl b GLAU WHICH CIM COS! MORE ELSEWHERE FOR Ill CARS: * ORIGINAL EQUIP on 7•7"1• ~· ~1R~U=CK~Sl::CA~M;P~IR~S~;--.:M1ilr~i~i:,.:~,o~"f!'~70~C~~r,:~·-=~= ~~ '.'. ··-~- ,01 TIUCIS, C&MPflS, PICIUPS, DUl"UI. VAiii. "~ 6.70xl S 7.00xlS 1995 :;-~: PJSf ... .... Whee is· INCl.14" & 15" ••• FORD, PLT., & CHEV. CRAGAR Super Chrome Wheels••~ ; • 3005 HARBOR BLVD. CORNER 'oF BAKER AND HARBOR COSTA MESA • NEWPORT BEACH AREA 557-8000 FAT MAX llADIALS 2 SUPIR BELTS or RADIAL PROTECTION! SJ6~~ hf.&,. ... SPcttAI. 11 All SlltS SP•CIAL 10 POffft' ••• BRAKE RELINE • •••• RIPLACIMEllT ., GUARAllTIE ••• •I l.mM if it WUrt: o.t leltrt Jt•llln "'' Swrkt tuft• SJS!~ ~ CARS ~ I. UIMll MEW" 21.MI Mil£ J. c·rusE I Nl:l IRll. C.UUAHTCU IONDEl LllllMCi l[UIMS 2. UIOt Alffl lllSTAlUTIDN I. AU CYllllMIS •Wid INCLIDEI INCLUDIMCi MASTCI J_ MICIO-lllEASUlf All 4 HUMS Ct\IMOtl 4. IOI IUKE FLUll as Nl EDllli t. IOTlll WllfQS di 5. dC·lltllD UNllK Al1"1f ll.lllS i . lll(I SYSlUI & CLEAN ll llU lfST vtMCll 11 IACllNC. PUTC IS llEU!t:I STMIDAHS .. Me,. C. I'"'"• Will W.f 0., lt11 Th• AS.ftlrHt"'6f * •1~1if• Whtl Cylilftrs it M(OO "" Jltl u. '* UVllS Twen ii 1100 "t' ... , .. 511' u. * flllfT 51WI SUl.S n ltlllll llfJ •• SIJI ..... * Ht1111 SrlltllS if NllHI Mty ••••• S!ll ..... * lllasltf tfl, h1tl, ftL ttMi111 11trt cett n "..., GAROEN GROVE -14040 B•ookhurtl -530-3200 • • ANAHEIM · BUENA PARK 6962 Lincoln Blvd. -126-5550 FULLERTON -1321 Euclid 'st. -t70.0100 • • • ' J 4 DAIL V PILOT · Men in Service ,_ - Naval Aviation Structural Mechanic, Set'OOd Class, Earl W, Frost, son of Mr. and 'tltn. James E. Frost or 539 Catalina Drive. N e w po r t Beach, Is an aircraft main- tenance man with the Golden Dragons Attack Squadron 192, •board the USS Kitty Hawk, which is currently deployed to the Western Pacific. Mr. Frost ls also a feature v.·riter !or his squadron's monthly publication "Dragon's Tale." Coast Guard Se a m a n Rttruit Stevea A. Scotl. son of P.tr. and P.1rs. Hugh A. Scott of 606% Shields Drive, Huntington B e a c h , was graduated from eight weeks of basic training at the Coast Guard Training and Supply Center. Alameda. Second Lieutenar.t William L. Robinson, son of Mrs. Shirley Robinson of 425 W. Main. Tustin. has been award- ed silver Ydngs upon gradua- tion from the U.S. Air Force navigator school at Mather AFB. U~utenant Robinson will re· main at Mather for specialized aircrew training b e f o r e reporting to his f i rs t permanent unit for flying du- ty. Lieutenant Robinson. whose father. 1'1arvin R obi n s on , resides at 9831 Zinnia, Foun- tain Valley, was commissioned in 1970 upon completion of Officer Training School at Lackland AFB, Tex. Army Specialist Frur A. Kinney Cook, son of Mr. and M'5. Roy A. Cook, 643 W. \Vllson. Costa Mes<i. recently was named soldi~r of the month for the 52nd Aviation Battalion near Pleiku, Viet - nam . He was selected for his sold ierly appearance. knowledge and performance of duties and military oourtesy. Spec. Cook, legal cltrk for the battalion, entered the Army in October 1969, oom- pleted basic training al Ft. Polk, La ., and was stationed at Ft. Sill, Okla, before ar- riving overseas. Specialist Four Carl F.. Panter. son of 1'1rs. Peggr Preston, 68 S. Oak St .. Laguna Beach, recently received the Army Commendation Medal ·while serving with the :>2nd Signal Battalion near Can Tho, Vietnam. Spec . Panter earned the awa rd for meritorious service as a supply specialist with the battalion's headquarters com pany. Ainnan Loren B. Crook, son of ~1r. and ;.1rs. Dale E. Crook of 3136 Trinity Drive. Costa J\tesa . has completed basic training al Lackh.nd AFB. Tex . He has bt't'n assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex .. for training as a medical servic~s specialist. Airman Crook _1~ a 1970 graduate of Estancia High School. ri.tarine Pie. Brian S · Schirm, son of Mr. and ri.1rs. Raymond J. Schirm Jr. of 3105 Mountain View Drive. Laguna Beach, was gra~uated from Engineer Equipment t.lechanic Cou rse at the ~tarine Corps Base. Camp Le· jeune. N.C. Na\'Y Petty Officer Third Class David A. Shuld a. son of ~t r. and Mrs. Philup Loeser of 342 E. 18th SL, Costa 1'1esa. Is now serving aboard the sub- ma rine tender USS Simon Lake, part of the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific. Airman John P. Woods. son of !\tr. and Mrs. Phillip E. Woods of 21851 Newland, Hun- lington Beach, has completed basic trainin~ at Lackland AFB. Tex. he has been asslJ!;ned to Lowry AFB. Colo, for training in the supply fie ld . Crash Kills 3 In Cajon Pa ss SAN BERNARDINO ~AP) -Three persons "'ere killed When a light plane crashed and burned Tuesday in the Cajon Pass area northeast of here. authorilies reported. The Federal A vi a t ion Administration in Los Angeles said the craft was badly burn· ed and not lmpledlalely 1den- Uf1ed by registration numbers LOCAL N• olh•' 11•w•p•,.r lell1 y1>11 m•re, e•orv 4•v. •bout wh•t'1 '''"' 011 11'1 tho Gittler Or•1191 c •• ,, fhtll .... DA.ILY r1toT. Thursday, f"tbfuitJ •. 1971 ~ F Midl!ti8i!J~~~ ~NCE 1919 I WHITE FRONT ' ' AN UNBEATABLE COMBO ~ •• MEN'S MATCHED WORK SETS s SHIRT s PANTS 100% cotton twill is hard to beat when it comes to lasting wear! In black, oltve, spruce or charcoal. Panis have 4-big tunnel loop s, 2-regular loop s, heavy duty 11pper, 4-large pockets. Sizes 30-42. Long tail shirt with 2 button flap pockets and long sleeves. Sizes S-XL BUY•E THAN ONE! HI-CREW SHIRTS l 00~~ cotton in hi- crew. short sleeve slyling. Spring co !ors no guy can re sisl 1 Royal blue, maize. lighl g1een and while. Sizes S·l. COMPARI AT 1.19 PalCID •o• A llLLOUTI MEN'S LONG WEARING WHITE WORK HOSE 100% collon with lot~ of wearab1l1ty. S11es 1D- 101·i. 11 ·1 Jl 'i, JZ.13. 4 pr$1 for - ...... '·-~~~ ~ • ,_,. I '• ~""" I -.;,~,. .•• --.._._ ~ ~ -"'-1 CHARGE YOUR PURCHASES TODAY! • ~ SHOP WHITE FRONT WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE! BIGGEST SELECTIONS. FRIDGffiE 10.6~· REFRIGERATOR • full width freezer chest • Pushbutton defrosting feature • Glide-out shelves • fu ll-width crisper • S~ialized storage throughout • Delivery, normal installation inc luded (w ithin our del ivery area) •Plus 2 year parts &-labor warranty OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE '139 •SAVE '40 HUGE ASSORTMENT OF PLASTIC HOUSEWARES Save now! Dish dra iner, round or rectangular dishpan, 8 qt. waste basket, gallon pitcher, II qt. pail, and many others. A gieat choice. COMrARI AT l FOi 1.99 s FOR DATE MATO caMETics Compact, liquid, brush-on, eye makeup; lipstick, nail polish. COMrAll AT Ste TO $1 IACM 2 FOls1 RIVAL 2 SPEBI 11.BDR txclus1ve cutting and blendmg "r.tion. 32 page 1ecipe book. SAY! us• ,.M·sa·u· VACUUM BAG ASIEMINT Replacement bags for uprights or CdnlS!ers. By Glamorene or Padco. OUI llG. DISCOUNT PIKl l PlCiS. fOl 1.44 3PIG.s1 FOi SPECIAL SILICTION! THOUSANDS IN GROUP! Top quality major label LP's origi nally sold for do llars more! Sensa- lional assortment in- cludes albums fo r every music fan . Too many artists and titles to list. EA •• WILKINIM .:;: RAZOR BLADES Super sta inless double edge blade~ in dispenser pack of J. WEBCOR LIGHTBI MAIBIP MIRROR 2 sided mirror, regular and mag~i­ !1ed views. m plastic case! MC-2. SAVE 5.88' QUI IEG . DISCOUN1' PllCE 12.11 s7 . DUPONT GOLDEN 7 Oil trea!ment that helps quiet engines. stops 011 burning. # 3~ 11. OUI llG. DISCOUNT PllCI 2 fOl 1.S• FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE ... USE OUR CREDIT TERMS OR JUST CHARGE IT WITH YOUR CREDIT CARD TODAY .•. ! \ ,, • • • • ,. , ni· . z. II , ' • ' 11 ez. shave cream; concentrated lather in regular or menthol. 3·:~:s1IL • • '~11U·SMlllE" ·1'.BIOJmKS "Motorized "Tru-S mo~e'' diesels that emit safe, realistic smoke from stacks • OUI llG. DtSCOUNT l'llCl 1.44 2~~ BASKOBALL GAME SH Offrtial size basketball, regulation tlet and hoop, net locks. Backboard sin 24x36". OVI llG. DISCOUNT l'llCI 10.t7 sg RODDY :·.10 SPEED :BICYCLE 5YW LIGHT BUUS Stock up on tllese long.life electric bu lbs, 40, 60, 75, 100 wait. COM&>Al~;~:sll.74 FOi !!GALLON TRASHCANS Ribbed construction, tight fitting lid, sturdy handles. GUI llG. DIKOUlrT 'llCI I fOl 5.ta 2 FOls5 BIKE LOCK All CHAIN 36 inch cllain with sturdy lock secu1es bike to rack. #A-LC·4. out llG. DISCOUNT I'll(( 1.7t 81 Shimano derailleur gears, center pull caliper brakes, racing saddle, white line tires. 27" tires, 22" frame. #817/876. OUR RIG. DISCOUNT PRICE S4.97 •SAVI NOW! s ' AM·FM 1.lllGITAL CLOCK RADIO Wake to your favorite radio statioo or gentle buzzer alarm. AFC for drilt-free FM reception. li ghted dial, modern, low silhooette design. OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 29.97•SAVI1.97 MULTl·B• G.E. PDl'llllll AC/DC RABID PlmRAPH · Sohd stalo, AM/FM/SW. Plays all size records; 45 leatherette case. Batteries. rpm adapter. Rugged case. 829 • 814 A great collection of tools most wanted and used around the house; hammers, pl iers, wrenches, squares and many, many others. OUR RIG. DISCOUNT PRICE 2 FOR 1.54 •SAVI 54c FDR 2 s FOR SINCE 1929 'WHITE .FRON • F~SHION CASUALS! 2-PC . KNIT SUITS OU R REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 4.71 Acetate knit gets to show off all its colors and styl ing in ou r grea tes t collection yet. Card ig an s, novelt y necklines. Spring colors of blue, pink, maize, mini, lilac. Sizes 10-18. llYLOll ITRUCH KNIT TOPS ....... s1 DISCOUNT PllCI 1.61 Shell~ with mock or turtle- neck styling in a host of per~y spring colors. Navy, red, It. blue, yellow and more. AU wi~ back zipper. S·M·l. ~~; ....... S! IMSCOUMT "'" U7 A W!Jllh of fabrics 1nd co10Js! Chavesrtte acrylic, ~Ion", cotton knit, 1eetate. Elastic putl'(ln w1is~ rully wido 1•1· 8-16: *CHARGE-IT* e IANU.MlllCAID e WHITIPIONT CAlD e MASTllCHAl•I COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST Off NEWPORT AVE. llTWllN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY ond BAKER ST. :*STORE-HOURS'A' Dofly 12 to ' p.m. Sot. 10 to I p.m. Sun. 10"' 7 p.m. DAILY PILOT IS Cal Poly Students Honored Nineteen 11.Udenta r r 0 m coinmuniUes along the Orange O>ast hAve been named to the dean's lilt at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo !or the loll quarter. 'Ille student and their ma~ jors are : , From Uuntiagton Beaclir Norman R. Franklin of 11171 Woodstock Lane, industrial technology ; Jimmie R a y Hypeock, 17S62 •Cameron st., industrial technology ; Victor Montgomery, 9332 Molokai Drive, architecture ; Elizabeth R. Severson, 001 Florence Circle. history; Linda Lee Tercyberry, 8461 V a I en c 1 a Drive, social sciences, and Mark D. Weller, l 6 6 0 l Edgewater Lane , finance . Fttm Foutain V a 11 e y : Robert John Lammers, 11931 Santa Catherlnes St., ornamental horUculture. From Lag. 'l Beacll: Richard John Krantz, 505 Graceland Drive, architecture. and Mark LeRoy Siz.elove, 1475 Bountt Way, business admln· istraUon. From Newport Be1cb: Jane Thais Fletcher, 1107 Euex Lane, home economics; Dohrman S. Grant, 1 2 4 2 RuUand Road, architecture: Becky Lyn Hoo.,er, 302 Enero, child developmer.:; Margaret Ann Vitucci, 1731 Bed.Cord Lane, mathematica; Donald Chri.! Stine, 114 Emerald Ave., architecture, and Frederick F. Keller, 18802 Saginaw Drive, farm management. From Soalb Oran1e County: Anthony D. Thompson, 1(15 Marquita East, SIF Clemente, -electronic engineering; Paul Michael Hine, Dl7 Calle Chueca, San Juan Capistrano, biological sciences; Erle Peter Tulleners, 2 S 6 7 2 Chrlsanta Drive, Mission Viejo, animal sciences, and Penny Lew Parsons, 30411 Mirador Court, Laguna Niguel , home economics. Easter Seal Programs Set at Night Two new Monday evening programs are being oUered at the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center for Crip- pled Children and Adults of Orange County. One Is being offered to fami- ly members and friends of stroke patients and the other to parents of handicapped children. The program to assist fami- ly members to cope with lhe problems and needs of the stroke patient will be held on the third Monday of each month from 7:30 p.m. t.q 9:30 p.m. Psychological a n d physiological iropllcatlons for the sltoke patient. as well as the Impact of stroke on the entire family will be part of the discuss ion sessions. The second program for parents or hand i capped children wW meet on the first, second and fourth Monday of each month from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p .• n. Content will in· clude a sharing of experience4 among parents, guidance by the professional staff and question and answer periods. Persons wi shing more ln- fomation may call or write the Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center at 1800 E . La Veta St. Orange, or telephone 633- 7100. Army Man Tells Why He Fights VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (UPI) -A career Army Of· ficer recalled his decision to flee his native Hungary at a1e 18 in the letter which won him the Freedoms Foun- dation Defender of Freedom award. U.S. Army Capt. Tibor Bierbaum, 31, Fayetteville. N.C., won the award, f11000, and the foundation's George Washington honor medal for the t>est letler from a serviceman on lhe subject: "Freedom -Privilege or obllgallon?'' "When I Ion Hungary, 1 knew I carried the obligation to help otllers resbl llUCh op- pression," Bierbaum wrote. "Wherever m)' shadow falls, I want this story lo be heard -the eoun1r1erur>1 U• •Uenl under Communist rule are noi content lo do IO. The CO!Yr munltts In Vietnam would creale such a allence there and the world would call It peace," he wrote. I ., ' ' . Jf OAILY PILOT 'rhu~do1, FobM\'>~.-t?71 ,.....~~~~~~~~~-"------"--'--'-- ANAHEIM · East Anaheim Cellter Lincoln at St. College ELVIS HITS! EA. I •Santana Al~ ovollo~lt $446 & $546 01 I treck tape ••••• Sale ncn VICTOR CAMoEN ncn almost inlove ' APPLE GEO~E NA~~ISON ALL THINGS MUST PASS • $ 5!111 1 -fd Ha ... You Anflime, M s-t LoM. Woh-W.h. lm't 11 A Pity SIDE 2-What· la Life, If Not For You.; Behind That locked Door, Let It Down. Run Of The Milb ·SIDI 3 -e.w.,, Of llarknee, Applo Scruffa. Ballad of Sir Frankie Cri;p, Await. ~~On You All, All Things Mot Pw· $1D1·4.-I Di~ Love,,:\~ Of Dying, Im't .It A Pity, Heal Me Lord ' . ' · , . . . $1DE S -Out Of The Blua.-·l;', 'Iolutny.'• Birthday, Plug Me In ' Also available in 2 volumes $4' 46 $ji!E 6 -'.11omombodoep,Thonl\> r., 8 k t . The Pepperoni on c ope •••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale EA. Your C·hoice! $ SALE • Elvis Presley • Carpenters 0 The Partridge Family •Elton John • Henry Mancini 86 REG.14.98 Also available $446 on 8 track tape ......... Sale TOP SELLING ' 45RPM'S SALE EA. FREE! POP POSTERS . . CAMDEN HARMONY HEADLINER SALE$ 46 · • The Aristocats •It's a Small World •Treasure Island REG .. 13.98 • Johnny Mathis •Tammy Wynette • Showtime • And¥ Williams • Ray Conniff • Johnny Cash '• YOUR CHOICE $246 I ----~ •• • • • Fu rn ds Raised After a Fas.hion Show - . ",.-SIGATS s·er ~Pooling efforts to present a benefit fashion show are (le ft to right) the ,.fmes. Dick Robinson. Sh i·n l ch i Hamashige ail d Richard Wallace. In sprlnJ. a young man's fa~y may turn to though18 of love, but women's, ~pea.Uy in ~ange Coun , must ·turn to thoughts of new ward· j robes if the fashion circu tis any indi ation. \ ! Two major beneft shows will be presented on the same day, and a month later will be another. Sprinkled in between an myriad parades, given on a smaller scale as programs for clubs' luncheon meetings. .. Children's HospiW of Orange County will benefit from the potpourri ot couturier collections which will be unveiled after a luncheon Tuesday, Feb. 16, in the Anaheim Con\lention Center. Selling tickets to the annual funding event are members of the 16 guilds in the county, Including Llttle Mermaids of Huntington Beach; Punch and Judy Guild. Costa Mesa ; Cinderella, Newport Beach; Tres Osos, Mission Viejo; Queen of Hearts, Laguna Beach, and Small World, Irvine. Chairman is Mrs. George Cokas of Cinderellas. Fashions are Crom J, W. Robinson's. Serving on the committee are the Mmes. Reuben Tucker, William J. Ktlly, William Beck, John Yeiser, Leo C. Baroldi, Richard Voelzke, E. E. Yoder, William Rarick . YOU'VE COME A LONG WAY . . You've Come a Long Way, Baby is the theme selected by the Lawyers' Wives of Orange County for their gala production, scheduled the same ev~ ning in the Disneyland Hotel. The style parade will be from Edna ?t1acMaster''Dress Shop, Fullerton and will include designs by Estevez with furs and other costumes worn by models from California Mannequins. Underlining the theme \vill be a production number stage<l by mem4 hers wearing costumes depicting fashion through the ages. These costumes are being shown by Ross Corbin of the Costuine Trunk, Santa Ana. . Centering tables will be Barbie dolls in bright red hearts, which are be1Qg made by Mrs. J ose ph B}Tnes of Mission Viejo and her committee. Benefit chairmen are Mrs. \Villiam Byrnes of Santa Ana and Mrs. Kenneth ' Hinsvark of Villa Park. . . rroceeds will support the Legal Aid Society. Two offices are main4 ta~ed in Santa Ana a'hd Anaheim to help Orange Countians in need of legal assistance. 13TH FASHION CONCERTO Fashion Concerto, Opus 13 \\'ill help underwrite expenses for the Orange County Philharmonic Society in presenting its annual series of free youth concerts. This popular show, featuring collections from I. Magnin & Co., will be presented Wednesday, hiarch 31 . in the Newporter lnn. The 13th annual luncheon show is being arranged by Mrs. Miles Lar· son and Mrs. Richard D. Allen. Formal announcements o( the benefit are in the mail to an impress4 fve list of patronesses who have indicted their early acceptance o! subscri~ ing to tables of 10 -many for t'he 13th year. Committee chairmen are the Afmes. Edward Schumacher, Paul Queyrel, B. J. Lang, Allan Browne, James Owen, David C. Duff, David G. Newbro, Raymond C. Dosta, Charles Friedman, John R. Sparling, Robert Chapman, Ralp h M. Tandowsky and Michael Brick . • IEA ANDERSON, Editor · lllllrlll•r, ,...,_,, 4. l t11 1'111 o • • YOU'VE COME A LONG WAY--Orange County Lawyers' \Vives fashion show will feature the full circle or fashions for women. Modeling contemporary designs are Qeft to right) the Mmes. Chet Her· berl, George Bethel and Julius Austero. MUSIC FOR YOUTH -'frispired by the free youth conce~ts for Orange County students are (left to right) Mrs. Dorothy Hutchison, Meri Hayos, Monica Myers, NiCKKovalenko and Kristin Hoganson . The 13th Fashion Concerto will raise more funds to fur· ther the continuance of these concerts. (Dampened · Hopes Soaked Up iJ)/flood of Home Remedies 1 DEAR READERS: Recently I printed a letter from a 13-year~ld bed-wetter who signed herseU, "Night-noater." At present I am fl oating in a sea or sug· gcsted cures for what 1 now :ea1iie is a major world problem. Mall has come rrom 50 states. plus Aukl and. Nc1v Zealand. Guam, Cnraca11. Ven ezuela, Kamloops, British Co~umbia. Panama, Singapore. Tokyo, Sa igon, . Hong K?ng and Samoat-HctU ·~~uLfir 1hl• word or caution: Before taking any of lhelle suggestions seriously PLEASE read the last paragraph in this column. Troy, Ohio: [ had four children in tlx years. Tbey wtre all bed•·etters _ the ohte&t w•s 10, th11 youngest Wfl.5 4: You can Imagine whnt my •·a~hlng WRI like. A neighbor told me 1he dried her kldt up by c1.11tlng off liquid$ afltr • ANN LANDERS 4 p.m. I took her adv~ and within 30 days AU. the bed·"·etll.ng in our bouse stopped. New Roebelle;-N. Y.: It-anyone suggests to "Night-floater" that she cut of! IJ. quids, tell her not to listen . Children NEED liquids. The sure cure Is lo buy rour alarm tlocka and set them two hours apart. After a week of gelling -up every two hours there will be no more nlght-lloallng. Palestine. Ttx.: ~ty gr11ndmother's cure for btd·wettma bas been a f11mlly formtlla ror years. Tell "Ntght-noatt.r'' to put copper peanks bth1recn her loe111 when 1be retlre1 and keep them tbtrt< a:ll nlgtic;-Tb1 wm preve11t lhe dtcp 1leep durlag wbJd& btd-wetUng occurs. London, Ky.: "Nigbt..Ooater '' hall a weak bladder. The best way to strengthen it is to do the Royal Canadian Air Force exercises. 'l\?11 NF to write lo the Toronto Police Department. They all do it there. (The RCAF exercises, I mean.) La Crosse. Wis.: ''Night-floater" should lake her problem to the Lord. dry as the Sahara desert and she's J will start a Novena for her tomorrow. been that way ever since. Olathe, Kan.: Cblldrea who wet tbe Oakland, Calif.: Ttll "Nlgbt·Ooater" htd do not get enoug.b mlotraJ1 iD tlttir tt take one teaspooll of honey at bedtime. dlel. Tbey should eat cabbage, beau, H0ne1 bas a moli'ture aUractJ•c ability broccoli and Brus.els sprouts. ta.at hold! nald li tH body dui1g 1~p. ~tuncie. Jnd.: OUr 5-year~ld niece Poughkeepsie, N.Y.: Our JI-year.old came to live with us when her mother twins were both night-floate rs. Our famt- was ill. We were warned that she was ly doctor suggested counseling. t wa.sted a night-floater. Her father b~ht along a w!lole year be.fore t finally k his ru66er iheef.s aiKI extra Did.linen~. "'"~aO~iUiln 3 monifiS1iOth ti>ys Wert lold him we wouldn 't need it because not only cured, but lhelr grade! Improved I didn 't 11tand for bed-wetting in my :tnd they began lo behave like human house. Belsy and 1 had a Jong talk. beings. f told her 11 she ruined my mattress Tampa: Bed-wetting Is no tmotlonal 1'd tRn her hide. The· next morning problem. It's laziness and habil. 1 know she was soaking wet. t gave her\ the o( two electrlcJI 'devices that work. 'the spanking t promi!led. The next ,~ht minute 1 drop of water hits the sheet lhe same thing h~ppcned. [ t~ked an alarm rings and all hell breaks lOOSt. her 11s11ln. The lhird night she was ll cured both my gir'ls In seven weeks. • "T\e Brlde'11 Qukle.'' An1 LanWs' booklet, 1n1•er1 some ot Ute mnt th,. qtttnlly •sked quatkiM abtal •edallis. Tt rfttlvt ytur apy el Ud1 .._ pttHDllvt ~ ... write te AR I • t 1;. hi Cln> ol lloe DAILY PILOT, --a Joor, 1<11..-led, 1111..,..i ........ and 35 ce1l1 11 cola. I I -..... , OAJLV PILOT Thursday, Ftbniarr 4, t•n . . -..... . ' ' .... Your Horoscope Tomorrow Sagittarius: Consult Partner FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5 By '1'J>NEY OMAllR ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11): Don't miJ: money 1 n d friendship: You could lose both if not wary . Be reaponsl· ble, conservative. F r I e n d 1 may argue 1mong themaelves. TAURUS \April 20-May 20): If you are In doubt, do nothing. Th~e are incomplete area; me.ans wait until you obtain 1ddltional lnformaUon. GEMINl (May 21.Ju 20): You can disregard one who •Inga blues. Be optimiatic, in- dependent. Put ortgtnal con- cepta to work. Refuse to be beld b&<k by 1<Cret lean. One who means much to you will cooperate. CANCER (June 21.July 22): If you attempt to skip essen. tials, you J n v 1 t e din.~ polntment . Ac c ent thoroughneis. B e 1pecific, metlculot11. Cooperate i n "' charitable effort. Honor may come throUgh special lll'OOP· Dec. 21): Be positive or lecal AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-1'<11. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): aspects. Obtain proper II): Past prornbea, oblli .. Some desires aeei:n tern-cleara.nct for special activity. tiOnl may retard current proo porarlly out ol range. Key Mai. or parlller ahould be sreu, plans. Koy II to is to fit toeether puule pieces. conaulted. Cyt'1 ta v or•· modernbe conctptl, ldeu. Oblaln hint from eucer waiting game. Avoid mom ambltlool. IWlilDI oo to pul me.ssage. Not wi.se to take based on lmpulae. could be coatly error. anything for granted. Fine for CAPRICORN (Qec. 22.Jan. PISCES (Feb. l!-Mar<h 20): social activity. 11): Some obllgaUona must Mortgages, p r o pe r ty ae~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): be ful!Uled, pl-nl o r • Uanenll, final d<!:ialonl con. Steady paC6 acblev.. goal. otherwlae. Keep med,lcal, den-cernlnC long·ranie projects Adjuatrnenl Indicated 1 n lal appolnlmenls. 'j'ou may are bll)lllghled. Imtead ol \ domestic aru. Mate up for get 'SUl'Pfiae refuzil. Give beinl boged do'1rn, crute r«:<nl bruh 1 la le m en t. thought lo special ,estment pollclu, planl wbkh brllJden IJBRA (•·~ -~ 22 I opportunity. fulure prospecla. ~ .... ~'· >,,_;,,:_~....:....~~-'-~~~~....:....-=-~~~~ Time to end status quo. Meana unusual relaUonship should be settled. Find out where you stand and wby. RefUJe to be anyone's door mat. Message will become increul.ngly clear. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Check inveatment potential. Avoid wasting assell. Find ways to consel'\le. LUKUI")' item is fine if it doesn't drain you e:.conomically. You can af· ford to wait. No rushing. SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 22- .:MOTHERS IN SPOTLIGHT -Members will honor ~;their mothers during a luncheon hosted by Balboa .-: Harbor Alumnae of Gamma Phi Beta. Proclaiming them "queens for a day" is Alison Christler, who places the regal crown on the head of Mrs. Robert G. Andrews while Mrs. A. G. Christier waits her turn. At Wit's Encl Two rings for fwd lovers ••• ~: .. ~'.~Talk Poses ,. ~~ Cha 11 enge I Boys' Ranch Provides Program Projects Displayed At Alums' Luncheon Fashion Bag Ufication? I might have a few I'll tell you what kind of in the back room that you could try on. Follow me." &hape the country Is in. In We passed by rack upon By ERMA BOMBECK botluinas $88.00 ---r· What on Earth Should We r;Do Now? will be answered by ~tary Gange as he points out I :almilarities or youth or today ~ 1U1d yesterday for members of l:the Monday Morning Club of Laguna. • Gange, special consultant for a gas company. is prom- inent in · agriculture, banking and co~munity affairs. With humor a11d optimism, he will discus.! Challenging opportuni· ties which fa ce youth in shap- ing the world. Work at the Joplin Ranch. discussed by its director, 111nd a performance by the boys chorus will head the program for the 11ext meeting or the . Caliiornia Retired Teachers Association, Orange C o a s t Divisibn. The group will meet al 2 p.m. Monday. Feb. 8. in the Laguna Beach Presbyterian Church. Pictures of philanthropies i;ponsored by Balboa Harbor Alumnae of Gamma Phi Beta will be displayed when moth· ers are honored during an 11:30 a.m. luncheon Thursday, Feb. 11, i11 the Huntington Har- bour Beach Club. Special guests will b e mothers of Gamma Phi Beta girlll from this area attending college at lhe pres:enl time. The pictorial dillplay wilt in- clude the Gamma Phi Beta camps for underp rivileged girls in Denver and Van- couver. projects of the ln· ternational sorority. They also will include pro- jects of the area alumnae chapler which i n c I u d e American Field Service, Mardan School, HEAR Foun- dation, Hoag Memor i al Hospital, Pesbyterian and con· tributions to famllles Jn time or need. Speaking during the af· lernoon will be Mias Marg1rel Russell who will d I s cu 11 Decorating with Paint. Mrs. B. F. Page is luncheoa chainnan. Illinois, a dress !hop owner rack of pant suits. Finally, draped a guMy sack over she opened a small closet with one of her unclothed man--a key and d~played three or nequiOJ one morning. By four dresses. "This is it?" I asked. lunch, she had sold 30 gunny "Take it or leave it," she sacks at •t each. As one shrugged. satisfied customer said, 1'It's I selected a knit which she the only dress I've been able prompUy stuffed into a plain to find in weeks." brown bag. "In case you have young children at home" she Some of us are not so lucky. explained. I have been searching for a On h drea.s for three weeks. I have t e way out I noticed lo14l..W-- &lyer.&I .... llllJMnt.C'CDWlll ...U.blo.•opto12_ .. ,., ..---a... "TllE STOJW CONFIDENCE ll1JIL'l" The speaker will address the group at a noon luncheon meeting Monday, Feb. 8, in Ben Brown's restaurant I:Xlr- ing lunch. fashio•ll will be shown from the Caribbean Shop. On the upcoming calendar ls a bus trip to Hollywood for dinner and a visit to the Carol Burnett television show on Fri· day, Feb. 19. Paul Colburn. division presi· dent, also will talk about the latest developments regarding the Lagu11a Green Belt Move- ment. Upper Bay Program not been able to find one a mannequin draped in white. wHhout lep. Evening dresses She looked so feminine. "Oh, have legs. Cocktail dresses Miss," I said returning to the h department. "There's a dress. ave legs. Even nightgowns Couldn't I try on that one?" have legs. The reason, or "That's not a dress," she coune, Is the fa s h i o n u id, "The palnters are work· blctlash. When the consumers and the designers cluhed 00 :th~ay. It's a canvas drop •11f1..:f:"'...e8 -=--· OPlll llOW. TllllL a·m ~ t P.IL Mexican · Mood Styles Show ·Russian Arias Scaled hemlines, the only safe plaei! "Give you iz for il?" I to go were to panll until an a.a.id desperately, agreement could be reached. .;~~~~~----~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:ii~ Some women look great inil them. And fem inine. But as Chapter Fetes Members of the Laguna Beach Chapter of the Order d Eastern St ar will gather at 8 p.m. tomorrow In th e Masonic Temple. Hosts for the meeting will be Mrs. Orville Suppiger and Mrs. Ernst Bacon. On Monday, Feb. 8, the chapter wUI join th< San Clemente Chapter in honor of Mrs. Elsle Mitchell, grand worthy matron. APl'RAISALS DI AMONDS GEMSTON ES ESTATE JEWELRY A Mexican mood will prevail when Bethel 321, J ob' 5 Daughters stages a spring fashion show on Saturday, Feb. 6. Tan:le de Mexico. which feature s the newest in spring styles along with a salad bar lunchton will take place at noon in the Oak Junior High School cafeteria. Laurie Clark, bethel queen is chairman or the event. Assilltlng her are Mitzi Eilts and Mrs. Llll ian Holman. THINK Bonnie Cashin Russian songll and arias will be presented when Upper Bay Associates er the Orange County Philharmonic Society meel in the Newport Beacb home flf Mrll. Robert A. Crawford al 10:30 a.m. Mon- day, Feb. 8. The program will b e presented by Charles and trina Berger of the Orange Coast College faculty. Dancers In Line TAKEOFF Tl'Ht•t•t lltw ··Avallt~lt for •• 8 To 22 Inches In ONE WEEK! REDUCE QUICKLY, EASILY, (ffORTLlS$lY. INCHES A.WAY'S EXQU. Srvt EUROPEAN $1.END£RlltNG METHOD TAl(ES OJF THOSE EXCESS INCHES EXAcnY WHERE NEEDED! NOW YOU CAN IE INCHES Sl1M· MER IN JUSl ONE VISIT, ;~EAD WHAT FANTASTIC RESUL. TS THESE WOMEN '"'AVE HAD WITH THE EXCl..USIVE NEW FIGURE CONTROL. METHOD• UNBEl..IEVABl..E? e"NO ST/IRV A TION DIETS • NO STRENUOUS,EXERCISE • NOSAUNAS • NOCONTRACTS • / Lose Inches in Minutes INCHES AWAY _....::.c .. ta Men ................ 642-3003 . t m-No..,..rt BIVd.- AM ... lm .................. nt-4141 91 I S. Brookhurot St. On tario .................... 916-5205 451 N. Mount1ln Ava. '•ll•rton ·l o Habra ... (213) 697·1112 345 $, Horbor l lvd. \ Before coming lo California my father llaid , "You look from New York, Irina Berger like 50 pounds of fertilizer conducted her ewn televi.sion in a 2a-pouod bag." (My father series on Russian culture and has a way with words.) made her profellsional singing I feel absolutely subversive debut with an all-Russian pr~ buying a dress when the other women are holding out by gram in Carnegie Recital Hall. buying pants. r slithered Into Charles Berger ho Id ll a dress department the other degrees in musicology and day and whispe red, "Pardon voice from the Eas1man me, Miss, I understand you School of Music and in English have some dresses." "Who told you that?" _ from the University of "I have a frie nd who plsys California, Berkeley. bridge with the mother of a They will be introduced by stock boy and she said .•• " Mrs. William R. Mason, pro-"You've been mlslnfonned . gram chairman, and Mrs. Beside!, if we did have them Stanley Le Lievre will conduct they would all be midi a short business meeting. lengths." Luncheon hostesses are the "I understand ," I said knot- Mmell. Al C. Flegal. Robert ting my handkerchief. "I'd be B. Smith, Kenneth R. Swift, willing to have them 1horten- Emmett O'Donnell and Lyn-ed." don 0 . Brown. ··no you have any lden- Fullorton Opon Sun., 12·5 p.m.---- Hall It'• so nice to liav• 'b cri1p cotton around the hou 1e .. , or or a coffee ... or off to th• market. Ckoo1e yours from a rock-full. from $10.00 Sizes SIZES 14~.2·~ I I I ' I I SHOP 1 1805~ NEWPORT BL YO. COSTA MllA fV1 M:. N. 1atti St.1 ·• 84 HUNTINGTON CEHTER HUNTIN6TON l lACH I N•rt t• hrt~ .... hr11lm., Al•• U4 011.ANe•P.ftllt MALL ,ULLlltTOJt I r Looka~n. They'reHush Puppies~ F1allerlng fnhlon foofww. Yours In thi1 snug fitting ml~lf boot by Hush Puppl .... A otyllsh mUll for fNery feminine wardrobe In crlnkle patent ' Perrnan.,t front tie with aide zipper. $25.00 * SO.o * Wh llo * l loe k Siz•s: 51/i to 10 Widths: Ne rrow I Medium SAME BOOT WITHOUT LACE M•t I V1te11. Wl'9tts: N9"'9w, ~I••· a W•lte e .... a Nny • ... ..., a Crillkll ,.,.. 11..t S2200 I \ ) 54 fASHION ISLAND Nowport Contor Opp. Broodway -644-4223 Al .. A!hamb,. , I I r DAILY PILOT j8 Lodge Names 'lmpossibl.e' Accomplished ~~ New Leaders ly JODEAN llASTINGS color i. yellow, wanted the !Urni!ln la aol u eathellcally problam that ,,.,. jml:\ltti or .. ~ l'tNt si.11 Western White House vivid pla••1•u• u tt med to be. Ame .._ .._...... . ,. .. Chuckling th:l.t they couldn't and warm wilh color and Repreaolltives of the Los In many lnstances c'nf.-1 realty talk about Ute Western sparkling wllb freshne.as , 90 AngeleHued CUnell and recefve commiMlona f,r oa White , House because they with the exception o{ the Cballin who wwk ..,t ol tlle merchudile wblch ii IOI¢& didn't have time t.o go to President's, all~ bedrooms ~a ~I Mar studio, the compeUUve retail pr_l1C•,1 Washington far cle'arance, Jer-are done in bright norals. team empb,ulled the lfl'Victs ratber than Oii a r~)llfli. ry llarrb still I provided a They also wanted to In· a decorator ii able to provide. and delivery on mtr~ glimpse of some of the corporate furniture from their .Workln& ·from an in-is e&ualn& the pr l n.oj.'~ decorating prob I ems en-New York apartment which cll;vlduaJ.'1 Door plan ud Uling headadle today· airlCe ~~ countered. defiilltely was French and at uisUng funlfture, an entirety are at a mlnlp11mt. ~ · " A new alate of officers is at the helm of the Trygve Lie Lodge, Sons of Norway, headed by William Moas, president. Other new leaders are Ehler Rasmussen, vice president; Mn. Ha·rold Hammer, secretary; Miss Rag n hi Id Moe, assistant secretary ; Len Wolford, c:oumselor; Harold Hammer, treasurer; Mrs . Paul Bergford, social director, and Mrs. 1borbJorn Hansen, ass!JtantsocialdirecW~ . Others are Mrs. Rumussen, marshal; Mrs. Erlin&Laurvlk, assistant marshal; Otto Hoeg and Hans Eggebrafen , guards; Herb Aiiderson, trustee, and Mrs: Woliord, newsletter editor. SUll others are Mrs. Harvor Ermun<l, mllllclan; Mrs. Ray Nielsen, publicity; Mr 1 • Anderson, historian; N 11 s Nilsen, Rol>ert Woll!OO and Mrs. Erman Christoffreson, auditing committee, ud Mila Eileen Moss, queen. 1be lodge meets In the l!:tb Hall~ Newport Beach, the se- cond Salunlay and fourth Wednesd13' of each DlOllll!. New members are the Mmes. Robert Markham, Teel Perry, Richard Petronave and Bent Austin and the Gunur Hennamens, Agnar Tanners, Bart MortellSOllS and Jeotoft Edwardserui. Lodge members and 111..u will gather at 5:30 p.m. Satur-. day, Feb. f, for a dinner of. JapskaUI and f latb read . Games will be played follow- ing dinner. Harris and Jeff Whetmore, times diHlcult to combine with dlfferen~ .~ect . ~be ob-HW looki for a members of tbe l n t er t.o r heavy Spanish. tained' thrOOgb tbe me of .8 bl!Je for' wall colors designing firm that turned the . ''Even the President doesn't new ,color • I c b •me m than,1tbe CWTenlly San Clemente house into throw everything out when he carpetin«, dripea:_ or fabrics. yeUowt, mint ud lime "home" 'for tbe First Family redecorates," he said. The decorator then is able and slrts5ed the pr spoke and s~owed slides dur-Hill, an authority on period ~dgstay " 1 th l n the allotted ~laUon!hip. of line .~ • lng a luncheon meeting of the decorating, stressed the im-et. lD the hang>.ng of pa111 """" Women's A-ary to the · portance of what period pi<ces GET SERVICES EARLY "A single painting --~ Orange County M e d I c a t . are oom,pa.tible rather than He advised that anyone ~ have 1?, go Jn ~-~~ Association in the Royal· Coach what pencxls. templating the buildiag of a a wall, be admOnilbect.. ~ • Hotel ho ail ·--u f 1be moot d 11 n .... 1t "··-f ·1s th BLENDING FURNITURE new me av ur;i~ o decora•1.... problem of tbeln ~use o l age, e the services ol a decorator ........ . • Western While House required All periods of furniture will early, citing an example all? ~ some remodeling before the work in with today's con-where an architect, 1n design-"Moving from a hwse:JO d temporary styles but the ..: tm t ba to ecorating team oould go to hardest to blend are Vlctoriarr ing a bedroom, 1allecl to leave an apar eta ; you · ve.~ p WOrk and lime WaS ,Of the and Early American, eon. enough Will Spate fOf the bed, I eondense." " essence : the home had to be The designer wotb around ready for 'occupancy in air temPorary furniture bas to be the client's•lilestJle and. HID proxi mately a monlh to six good because it is 50 simple, claims that la all hie nine · Book Review Series Tho DAILY PILOT-' Local S~ Tops in Schola rship weeks. ' be slressed. years of experience he .,..t "Because of st r i n·g en t Mediterranean, so popular encountef"ed two clients or two · Recipients of $ 2 O O securit;y regulations we had today, actually came into·~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ favor in lbe early UIOOs, butll scholarships are Miss to have a different badge· for the youthful decorator regrets Carol Longtin (left) of every area in which we were that today's mass-produwt working. and by the end of =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"! Costa Mesa and Miss the day our shoulders were11 Mary Jo Siebenaler, sagging," said Harris. Author to Lead Tour ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS 50% off THINK California byways will be explored for m e m b e r s and guests of the South C o a s t Alumnae Club of Pi Bela Phi at 10 a.m. tomorrow during the third in the annual Celebrity S e r i e s Book Reviews. Presented by Miss Carlotta Williams , author Russ Leadabrand will introduce his newest book, "California By. ways." A daily columnist as well u author, Leadabrand bas traveled world-wJde but iJ mainly interested in Southern California. He writes the series of California By4ays tr av e I boolL!I and is editing a new aeries. He also t.as written two children's b o o t s based on travel. Huntington Beach, stu-EERIE FEEUNG luncheon meeting. dents at the Galifornia The installation of the vast Speakers will be Mrs. O. Hospital S c h o o I of co mmunication system gave L. Hildenbrand, Newport N · Th d h' Beach counselor for the Fami· ursmg. e awar s 1m an al most eerie feeling were given by the Luth--especially when be had to 1y Service Assocl.ation, and eran Hospital Society pass the "hot line." MW Anita Farrell of the House of Delegates. It was a fantastic feat , he Tustin office. claimed. One man would dig FSA, a United Fund agency, a ditch, another lay cables THINK offers marriage counseling, Sweet Ad elines and cover it over and another Geist Dealar Sho wroom Warehous• open to publie, Bur. at dealer's prices. Custom Frames avail- .~ e. lay-away oft Master Charge or BankA meri- card. UNT -LEASE -SALi Hows-to.tLto6 p.n1., M--,ttnSal•doj and help for a I c o h o I i c I! , would come along with the children and senior citizens. Harborlites Chapter, Sweet grass. Jc II -~ L ft OILS T All counselors have masters Adelines convenes every Mon-"ln three days lbe zinnias ~ I lUJ\I I L D. degrees in social worfc and day at 8 p.m. for programs were three feet high," he quin.. 161t L •.n--, S... AINI ..... 13M60I ORIGINAL d t t d t.s f th r WlSTCLIFP PLAZA _..,,... Miss Williams, director of the series, will p r e 1 e n t thumbnail sketches of other new books and discuss current literary trends. gra ua e s u en rom e in College Park School, Costa ped. 1n11 , 1rv1ne-H..,.rt •-11 DEALERS WANTED University of Southern. _:M'.'.esa:'.'.'.:_· _________ _:M'.'.'_'"'.:.·_'.N:'.'i~xo"'.n".•_'w'.'ho":"sc'...."fa~v"'o'.'rl'.'.te~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ California and San Diego State1 • The Tee Tattler CEdllflr'I tiotti: A col11mn of women's tr. toll K Mtl Wiii -·r •Kii W.-In~ OAIL'V PILOT. To'-' KOru fol' the week, •lf,ne !NII 11\em to P.O. Ba !WCI, Coat• Mesa, They ~I bt rtottved br" MOnU'f.I llAllKHO SAM JOAQUIN PlaLCI SHOn -Flkllll A. .,,. Mmaol. J-KHi...., Jl1 _ Gii Ide, •11 F\19ht a, Mn. C...... O'SkN, 4'1 Fl41h! C, t"9 Mina. DoMld j T•I-. ,,, WODdrow l..Kkntr, Mlirk S/wllef", It/ Fll,.i.t D, rhl Mmn. Fr•nll kckfMl\o 371 Heftlirrt Uwrwiu, ... Sl!ST SALL 01' POUllSOMI -Flr1t Plk1, rhl Mmn. Robert LIY.. 1n11sllln, ll•mlro Mor•llt, T11m...,, 5'/ StcOlfld PIKI, the MmlS. "r•llk AlltlnlOll, .._,rd F1rw.ll, H1rv1'1 G•ll .. her, H•rvt1'f McClllr1. '°' Trllrd, Pl1t1, rhl Mm11. J, F, O:aclt, P•ul De!lldl, Ide, ltlcti.l'd Lllltwlltr, W1r· ren Col!lnt. Lunsford Jo"'"-C1rl Sl1r1-'M, Bob W11l1c1, 61. lltVIHI COAST H I T PLU S PU T TS-Cl111 A, tit• Mm". R1111tr Turner, ID-11 Wllll1m l.e11tr, 1D11 Robert O.rdner. P1ul ll llt, 11•1 CllU l!I, the Mmn. Don l.tl>k. !OJ; lloti.rt Weed, w11 LesU1 Tarr, ID11 J•mn II. T1ylOI'. Allbert Butlff, 10!'1 ci.11 c. the Mmet. JOM Tyson. 1'051 C. S. Ho111rtt1, lU1 W. 11. l(ldder, 1171 lk1 Amll lront, J1ct Dunn, C1rt Hllt1r.,., Wtlltr W. Wine, Ht. Ml!l!TINO DAY -Flrsl. the Mmet. Ed Mewl.Ind, Lenk, llaoert Sllaollflr, J. H. v1n1bl11 . llJ1 Stc:oml Min -'Mrlill .... M...s...,., 3171 Trl!rd, rhl Mmes. Hovel J•mn. P1ul A~. 811 Fr.-b91m, Robert Smllll., '111 Fourth, the Mmn. Robert Y1r"dler. O.vld l1119ntlnt, Miii ON DH Wl'llle, lit. l ,000'1 O' OIL PAINTINSS WHOLIUU WA•IHOUH OrlN TO THI PUIUC 50°/o OFF The meeting Is open to the p.iblie and rese.rvations may be made by calling Mrs. Howard Means at MS-4i108. Proceeds will be given to Pl Beta Phi pbilanthroples. Club members will gather in the Linda Isle home of Mrs. Richard Elliott at IO a.m. Thursday, Feb. 11, for 1 College now are doing field work there to earn their degrees. Luncheon chainnan is Mrs. John Va1entine, who will be assisted by the Mmes. Frank A. Tyler, Dean Boggs, W. Torkells and Miss Phyllis Marr. Mrs. Hart Hickman is presi- dent of the alumnae group. Third Community Concert Noted Soprano Offers Operatic Repertoire Soprano Miss Ella Lee will Her repertorie , performed offer selectiollll from her through the world, includes operaµc repertoire as the "Dido and Aeneas,'' "The third guest artist in the Magic Flute," "Cosi fan Tut-Laguna Beach Community le'" "Aida" and others. Concert Serles. Mist Lee, a native of Los Admission Is by membership Angeles, will appear in the only with limited reciprocity Laguna Beach High-School seaUng available for members Auditorium at 3 p.m. on Sun-of other Community Coocert d Feb 7 AsJOClatioru;. Residents in the ay, .• Following study with Dr. Laguna Beach -San Clemente Jan Pepper at UCLA, the area may contact Mrs. Amy singer received a Bayreuthl1God~gshia~wi!jfoijrjjinljoiirmiiiatiiioiinii . .,., scholarship from Slegllndel Wagner, granddaughter of Richard Wagner. Her study in Germany led her to star status at East Berlin's KomL!che Oper and to later appearances as guest artist with the San Francisco Opera and guest arUst for the apening of the Los Angeles Music Center. COUNTRY" STARTS WED. MESA THEATRE 5411-1552 ~rdt-Gltl....c.thlme J.w.r'l' , _. AIHlnlt A-.1.-Hun!lriglon I t.di Nut ta HEW l.udtr' .... MMlll 'WctlJichs BUYING POWER PUTS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET! REGULARLY PRICED $1194 • WE HAVE JUST PURCHASED A FAMOUS MANUFACTURERS' STOCK OF BRAMBACH CONSOLES W1Mt • _, hr JMI 41 , ...... ...,,. ...... ..,. ~ I t1•f1tlMI I p r • & 1 ..... .... ···-·-ht Pt.I W.Ct .,_ .._ lfy4-_ ,,_, _,.., ,_ M.,a. ..-Tf91111t'l...r. A9 MM~-~fte­.._Jc ....... -..... .. c..,...I SOUTH COAST PLAZA ONLY AT WAWCHS Caste Mesa Phone 543165 .,. '" ..._. .. r .... .,. OfNl'I ll'lllrwt!llllt C.I .. , All STORES atnRATE The Opening Of Our New Beau~fulLocatio111In COSTA MESA. al 3030 Briltol 2 B(K. s. OF sourn COAST PLAZA The 13 Piece En...,,ble Complete THE DREAM SLEEP QVEEN COMBINES BO'' IN. l ENGTH & 60" WIDTH TO GIVE TOTAL SLEEPI NG COMFORT ANO VALUE. Thi• 12-Piece Set Complete · W.SJMMONS flU ttlAOIOA D & FtAMI WrTM TWlff 01 FVU Sill SO' ' The 13-Piece Cori1plete Set THE ORTHO SLEEP QVEEN his queen size set com~ bines luxurious sleepi comfort ond big budget value for years to come. THIS IS Tiil! SALE YOtrvl 1111!1'1 WAITING FOK U. l'Br U. \'Ill SPECIAL. JPKIAL .. ·1 DtGSIZE DRUMSWPSET Ntt•chMpry_....WIM ..... ,, ....... .... -.. _foctvr.. ... h i. ··-..... ~ ...... ..,,. ~ ......... ...... ....... w .. Simmons combines quality~ comfort ond maximum YOlue in this luxurious king size set. The complete 13-Pieee En ..... ble FOR THE PREMIER QVEEN YOU RElAJC IN niE KNOWLEDGE YOU GAVEY.OUR BUDGET A BREAK WITH THIS COMPLETE .. • • • . • . :- . • ( • . • . ' I' ~ I ' ( . ' I! DAU. Y PILOT s ' lf.fonetJ'• Wortla Complete-New York Stock List Your OVER THE COUNTER 10 Questions to Consider NASD Lktlnp for Wodnotdly, l'ff""'ry l, 1 '71 ............... ,"" ............................................ 1 Before Buying Mobil, e Home !:f!',.Y ..... ~,·.-•• "' •• :o -:: ............ ~-:-::f ·-t...._.oi ... M r::f:U~ft: il~i w~'•• 1{;1lb.M if.re . \ "'1 .. ~ ·~,iJ""':; ::'"al '"' •"Ms T"'J. f!\'' l5 ...,.," 4r .. -· ,BJ SVLVlA :PORTER Find out ii there 1re any 'ftiese might l'llll' from ""6 ~ ,.., ' ,_ ,., f" :_ ur ... 'fL, · 1v. :.'ftP' lt. ~11 t=; i;,Mnlet, J1 t bllf or tbe J'00ft tJlan JpeCiif char.Ct$ lbov~ ft_nt tnu\kJ lO I boat but il'S. I ~,.. _Not,, •t =II I(_ '¥ 7\11 Utll 1f 2' fat p ~ i C. 2, 000 moblle homes in our (3) How many ail.es are vital polnl Your moblle\bome ~ ~ .. ~~ ~:oa~· 1~ ; ~:'roe~ sa 1t~ ttN ••~ ~ : ' -. ,.h'it b od•Y m on individual there and how big Jlfe the itseJf might not hive sufficient =-'~"k..· ~ .._:.:, ~ ,f" ~Yi"= i> ~ ,m .!; t:°' i 1 ~ ru ~'tea. mostly in small towns Jots' storage space for anything n· -11M1•V ' 11 c. n• lV. wai1t H 1" 1 PL ~~ 11"' al •.••• th • -·" ..... d •. m~_ .. wtlldl ...... Id«: • .,,. J'A w.:,,i::;-~It:. = !. Jl'li JJ ro..1.1t or rur areu -uut taro o er Av 0 id e 1b 0 w-t.o-t.lbow, oept S1u.u ..... age an ~ _,.. ::::: ~ .. ~ w.1111 N'G 1~ 1;v, ,.., r ,,. '"' :=:.c~· hall are In about 25,000 mobile e Ye b a 11 • t 0 • eyeball ar· personal items. What about=:... 'r:'w1 "':. -44 .. "' ...._,_ ..36' home parks and other Joca-your .... n... pa"""""ea GI im-MW,..._ 1~•· -'"",·Hor~ 11l1 :~ :; m,.I rangements in which you and ..... ..., '"""-& -...... _. _. tionl. And while a growing your neighbors are just too portant papers! 0 u t -' ( • ~ '" :'r ,.:~ ,v. N MUTUAL ..., number of these parks now season clothes! ~ like! .!!. •• flOll ·-lfttl"* -~ ~': mt,, · ,-, "• ;i! .... , close for privacy and comfort ,.... .... ..... Al 2.A otre;· awimming po o 1 s, and which will dest-.. all the (JO) HO\" weD designed and ~ or . ur~ ~ J ,m lr.'n clubhouses, fishing ponds ind '"J well managed is lbe-park·? :.._~ .,. No ~:11 ,:, " 1• FUNDS '" advantages of your home. .,,,11.1¥ , -,, • ATh 4~ no 1 ~ tl'o'tn golf courses, many still An exCtlient Way to check '-'O '""" -p..i "' rna• sr J"' ,:J,t A 1 are dreadfully overcrowded, (4) What are the bab)"itting this pdint is through a lrlllk :i~l 1!; : : ::t'r.::,uc J n~ .. ·• IU·kept, ugly. arrangements? chat with several res~nts of m ~ 1::_: I~, ;:1,-,,,C.:~ 1m 1J.~ : 11, c'Hf.' Let's say you are among A tradition of Criend1y the part about tbe1r e:i-""""41111 J JYa111 aw~11 2f~Jt? Nft: Y01tw. CAP1111" G<.1111 Ii tit r1111.t.ut·M· the millions of young married neighbors within a park can periences with managcmtnt-~s1.a 1r' .:tt = -r::'11 3' 11 i;11-. '°'.=!r. D'I' •:=~ &.,.~ : ~i'"' Americans,, college student!, be a major fringe (benefit lo especially bow tenants' gripes :t;.!T ~ ~ =.:iv it1 1: ::: !'lt.r'"o1ion.~lr~ ~ NII -:::f 1~ Zft*h:o Jr elderly people and othe1'6 who you, financially and otberWUe. and grievances are bandied. =:!, 't 1l ~111 ~:~ ~f ... ll;:"':t...1':t ""fc: :: 1t_g ~ ~rt. ~ will in the next few years You can flnd out about .. this While studying the design, ~ ~ 1m; 1~i.. : t :111 ~ = 11a.:C""-.11 ~,. ;::: f·r:.., ,ff conslder lll'lng ht 1 mobile wltb just a Cew discreet ques· eoosider the view from the Allied Ee •11o •"' w.1 ,.Wt~ ,':':.,.'"'• •,.~ -. i "" 1tu '-" S:. ~ h k U I tions. park and whether it ap-.. 1. ~ o. t n• .. .....,.,,. F 11\:. i n~ w .r;:tr .. .-.... ":i:.,TI A lf'Yllll ' ome par -' on y tem-I Wbll ....... .i;n; "'" B-u IN lfflf fi:I• :w. 4'A Aberdn 110 2 )Q ,,,, I .• 1.1 AmBlkll . porarily. l:fere are 10 questions (5) Is the park sociaUy o you. e ._. ....... 'fl on A 1;1 I.lib •t~ 5 PA NII( 1-lio 1v. Aamrr11rt Foinds:' 1-1~ ,t:fJ·ij !"'c.~•n1'·2g to guide you on choosing your suited to your needs, your .management, use these clues: ~ ~ •5, ~~ '1:.Z ;: ,. ,.._, G•wt1> '·50 1·'' n-•tone Fr.Mftl· • Arn ct~e~1 I ..... ..,., ... I n:z r:v• l~ 14·1: ::S"f -'Pollo •.'5 l0.17 A Ch•ln 1.40 I tt: Jnterests, your age bracket! Are the concrete slabs on-'· Gtlld ""' 11 .,.,.G 1 JV.Advlan S:r:i , .. 1 cvs 81 11.2520.or ACrvS1111 1.40 h• h b"· hom "Medic. HV. I"" "' . A•I t H f101060 CllS It 1 .tt21JO ACy•nld 1.25 (1) 'What recreational and You might want to consider w ic your mo 111: e may ~ T..-.. 1'111 nn ""T 1m 1ru A111'1111a 1~ 1:H ~= :; ''§ :! :'[)111~~~,1~~ other facWUes are offered? an "adu11.s only" part or one be located at least 4 inches !:t::' ,: '=: :Z ~u ' 4"' Af11"• 1 ~1 a.si cw Kt .its 5.-41 Arn Dv•IVe•t A typical mobile home park geared to young couples with thick? Is tbere ackquate off. ~ ·~ ~ i'~ ::::" ~ j~ :f"' ~\~:'r'f: It.~ ;i~ ~::: ~·~ ltllll~ ::"=~~'~ today WiJI have paved Streets, young children, Check this OUt Street parking space? IJ there ~°'"J ~ n .. -~: 1S'4 l• ~<•:vs l~ tli ~= ~ ~~ t'J NnEwp Sii A6 1idewalb, parking facilities, first. a paved \Valkway" Is the 1.tr<M H v Jnto 1<.m 1"" 914 lo Am ovin It.fl 11-'1 Piiier J.st '·" AGnllFd ·21• , . . . A'"!~• I,_ IN Ins Ill '1• J\12 Am Eqty 5.M S.52 nk:tb 1.1• 1.15 A Gtnln1 .Jn a playground. Many will offer (6) \Vhat s e r vice s and park s w1r1ng underground!! Mee Bot $IM s1y, ""' v~ ~ J"' Am~~ Ex••n : 111<• Gt 9.1' 11.01 ~1=G~~?.r'1~ h ~ · · lil." ided d t H 11 1. hied th A11to Sci ~ •Ill Jiit 11! ca.11 •..U t .23 Grt11 9.1• 11.01 A e 1.,, !IUC e4Lras as a swunm1ng u 1wes are prov· an a ow we 1g are e 111rd At .,~ "Iii rit1.ar iv. 11 I~ 9 •.. ~10,.,.n ",_ .... '•'.:' .. ,!~A Pi ' pool. community I au n d ry what typical costs? streets? What security pro-l~a1rit '=:: ':)! u~ c~,. :11~ 3~,. ~~~t •.'» *'• sit s.u ,:04 ~ ~ ij bulldlng, clubhouse, go I r Include here such services teclion is there against mug. L~i:' ~1' M,... 2:~ ~ ef: 1~ii! 1~;-.~'°"crnh !~ ;~ I: ::;, 1~:~ 1f1i t :~'fi:11·.Jl course. You'll pay for any as sewage disposal, water, gers and burglars? What is hllmM0_.,, ~YI ~ t": c. 11V: u 'Am '"" s.ts !.~ u.,. ,..,. ···· A Mttehl" .f' •• .. ..... 3,, Am Mui t.1710.02L.oomls S.J'!es: ..,,, Mofor• Or81iO(these,SOtnakesure electricity, gas, phODe, fire the park's genera l 8J>-&..own 21 Jf Lelwr~ t~\'1\~l AmHGlh l,!73,"6 CtMCI l\MJl.tlliANotGu-2..10 I kn h d I. , And r· II Id Bellt •ll• IS " L.eW1$ BF u ol 11•~ Arie,~ Gra.u,.,.,· • -C1pll 11.CM 11.IM Arn"""''• ·" you at east ow w at you an p0 ice protection, garbage pearance. 1na y, ~'OU '""' 1nc1 •1~ w. u111; Mtt '" 1e1 .... • .... "WI 100 1 .. ~ A ""'°" .e. are getting. collection. Add up the costs your family feel at home ::; ~· :.~ l.1Vi ~ · 11? ~~ fo'~ 1~1: 'i~ Llnh ,..'',~ 1t~ 1::U ~ li:rsi' .JL (2) Wh t . •• thl r th I lh , kt1 U• ~ ~ Lofl 0" 1 12 fd '"" l .f'I t .1I lo~!" • n 5 :II A Sm'I"" a lS tui:: mon y o ese uti ities and services ere . emutaS w 11~ n '--E? ~ 1414 V•nl 40.&1 4-1.51 Mkt Grth i .31 ,:,1 Ams.Ar :,. 5ite rental charge? and check on which are not 11nt_ .. ~ · 41,, •!.._ ~GEi 1"" 1,v. :~~0H°"•hi~-1 •·94 •» ,"d 11.1"111.2• ~''• /"·~ Blrh.•• J .... Miii RllY ll• t •,o Fllftd A 5 .J , ll •as ric 15. 16.6-1 Arn SI Some parks 'seJI lots, but included. t!lll•• .. ·---.. --... IBladl HI 11\o!o M\o'I Melllrrt .. '5 Frid 8 IU 1·4 Id Glh 11.llU.fl A St!lllfUS 8-El 314 .Jlil>MitllJll M 414 ••~ S!~k jU i 1 Tr 13."U,:!9 ms11rl! .4 most rent. WhUe the average 17) How much are the local Sot1M c 11 .. ,,..MenOr c • '"' s.c1 c, iu 5.112 ies 4.u 4.u Am -#1.M tod ·boll~! '000 J &oozAH 16':o11tl.MarMtg 11 l1Vt 11bl<ll'I •'11 t 11 1111n 12.M l!.9'AWal'Mt M ay 15 a u ~ or a"'· persona property taxes? F• 801 ca, ' ~M1rr11 Gr ~ 10>:, B•vrct 1'.» t'.13 ldA Mu s.lt 5.19 Aw '"'Ill ~. f(, SJ'·, the range ,., This assumes yOU O"'O your mance Br.adtn ... Mi M B,_r 321~ JlV, 8Mcoto 13.15 13.11 MOod'I Cit 11.01 lJ,1' AW C.lof f.4) u'I K' " lr1""1 '" •s~'J "' M9Ul LP' 1• 14\'1 s.tr• l(tlf I 4 • 4 5 ll.1111.t..21 Arn tine gen.rally ~· lo 1100 or more home, of course. F1·nd out ara su ~ ~ Mc01n1 21 :11 ~o: """ 6:n •:.O 1" r-o •.n t.n """".., ... ..-... • II""" Ar 11111 11"6 Medic H S'lo 6 . ataT• Fd 4.61 7.30 IF Glh S..61 s ... MM!ell ..... ijiOiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOi;;I whether ther'e is a month ly Brll\ll Bt rv.1rnMec1 Mt• 2•~2S1 >8ondl11r i.n '·~ us Gv 11.t7n.1•AMF 1nc .N Budr:tV 1\lo rn Meatrn ""«11-11 &oslOll St 1.14 l .'1MI.! OtftG J.M S.•1 Nnfll( .. H,.. .. .., .... __.. ..... , .... .., ..,,. .. all .. _ ..... MIPHONI ANIWlllN• IUIUI 935.7777 DIHCTIVE PARTS MAY II Uf'AIUD ~ TlllT •UNT, I.I'll Anything that ha» moving parts should have a periodic check-up to keep it in good ~liable wo1·king order. Not oryearlyschoolta:ior assess· B • f a-c-,,._,.. c'" 1:,.,:111,;:;_Boio1Fon1 •.3tn . .s 11omrn11.5Dn.-.1AMP1""" .w ment. r1e s ~'rt-Wu,.1~ m.-,1~ ~-N ;1~.·, ); ~~~~I'd tit :::f ul l~: 1t:~ 't~ = f':r. ...... ., ltllt :ID" B~lock Galvin: EA Ml.It 11.ll 11.$2 Am1l1r 1.11 (I) What are the rules and 5 ,.• ~ .,71h =r: ~~ ~ tt11i ulkk 1•.211~.» ., 111d 1.1t1.1v1u t:I; 'f.N r.~•lall.005 or the park' •• No "43' >'--. ndn lt .11 lO." It $«111'" S&r: Am .. ~ ,... • • • 1t a -,;; ..... D!'lld 3.&T ~.01 Mlan 10.IS ll.N ANtOll"~i'HI •· an 'llu tr t• ·•· k the NEW YORK ~--·mist ~..:11 '!'I t~ • HotW s lo.st 11~1 11C1110 s.o• u1 · ,,.. I s a ion, cm::C . -.c..ullN c.. 1 ... I~ Mdl'lllk " u,~ ,w, MY \(flt IS.21 I~. Olwkl •.:M "'' AllCll Hoc.k 1 I ts · · · tu ': H, t ·c.I IV. W. Su.NI Fd 6 t6 7.S2 G....ni • 22 10 01 ""'°'~"" rues on pe , parties, garden-Marlin R. Gatn&bf111b bas c.. lfllA ~ , ~ ':' u "' uv. G Fo 9.1110.01 ,.,. s111. 7·24 1·,1 Andc 1.20 ing and landscap1·ng In s•me C•Tdl ""' 8 '. N •oamr 1.ta '·" 1neom s:.U 5"11 "~ ,0 .u · ""'\.. predicted an $1.S billion in-,, o... 1»1;, 1~ M'" y], ;?" ~ ~PU ,.,.. ,.., ~.n SltKt 11t 1·,5 :;cL cw:' parks, children are n O t crease in b U !I i n e 11 ex-C.~ !~ 2l~ ~ =~ °i1 m ~;;~:I/:: ,tjJ it:r1 ~Ge':. t~ ::r~ :~J~ 16 permitted, but presumably -......t· case HG u l~Moi club l l \o ls~~·MIM Funes: -Fd io.3110.31 um 0.111 You'd find !hat oul at the ""', .. 1turesfor plantaodequi"-CU11 C•P NW •~r.o.~11er ,,,. 11.r. 011111 11.wit.~ tw w1d 11.•1 1.t..11 Ar1z PS..1.at • . y Ctnlex •• .«"~ MutRI Et 3 ~ .... COl'n SI I.Jo I. .wlon u,...w11ll Ar'811$ 0 5tr Very Starl. men\ fhlS year JD Contrast • ., V"5 11\llo 1f Mver l.E 2''" ,.,. r.= ~·u 13' ldt Sir• 17,43 11 . .U Armco Sfl I :..... L.ft l\.'t , HtC Ind S'lo N lfttl 1·1, Ito NS! 1S.411J.•I Armc pf2.10 (9) What about storage to much smaller increases cw1111 :Aro ~ N1r•• c ''"" 11 °""' Gr B0oi· · 1.11 1.is -a• ( lrul b k OWf 0 I Jl\o Natew R fl.} It C.••il ,,1, 7.J7 •.11 '·" ::O c!'P'·~ space or y ul y belong-projected by other economirt.s. ctm 'i: 1~ 1~ ~~ ,z;t nw F-11'111 '·'J..f·'s '::~~::ll Arv111 1n11 '1 inga? G . b-··• h . . g: t1t11 u 1• N•' GIO 1m. 1''4 ~ TI:J5 n:r. ,..,. 1,,19 -"hid 011 I.JG ams ''"&"• W 0 JS sellJOrCN at"a.I 70\1Jo11 .... N-' Liii 31 ~ ""'"I lf1 ''° 11.,llffAssd Brew LEGAL NOTICE . .de t·s '" 121 W.ti Mo!1 »IA'' -,·~°"'"cl 11:31 11'." •'.lM .:11 ::r5P~~ . vice pres1 nt of the con· Christ sit llM lot ""'' Pet ,,, 1,;:_ co1o11111: 10.t0 n,t1 ,,.~ y,,·,,, Clloctel I H~ N•I St<:l't -n. E•ulv IDOf l0'7 ""' ..... ., 1"·112 P'ICTITIOUI IUSINEll HAME ST .. Tl!'MENT tollowl"' P••'°'1 I• do/1111 b111ln1n ARAM EL. "" !lot Vint Or .. Call• Mew, C•tll. Ar1'" H, S..lorno~11", , ... 110.I Vlol1 Ot,, COi.i• Meu, C1lll, , Thli b111l"en 11 bllnl Ul'IOllC'-d tw •n lndfvidYll A. H. Sotorr>0nl111 Publ!al>td Ot•nt' Co.st Otltv PllOt, J•nu1rt' 11. l1I Ind Ftl!fu1<r c, II. lt71 l.9f>.7l rerence board, told an an·~~~ ~·i ~ ~~· lj~I ~~; ~~ i~ i=u..o 1:" Ln ::r~~ ~'1, nual economic co11(erence c1111 v 1 21ia n >.:. "q'E" .. ,•,•0 1"' u ?.= ::~~ ::~ AticE Pl5.11 cu,1n Mt lt'"' "'" NK11.. F ~ "* """ ..... S.31 • Ml.!I ~ ......... All RkhflO 2 sponsored by National Bank c11rt Mt 11"" n 11o Nieh..,,A h1:.t ~,,.,Col Grf'I n., 11-'' hll• 1c111 1s.•1 :~R~"1c:~;~s Ctl"t Mer 131~ 1•14 Nlllo ll ~l"-# ComS 8<1 •.ti 5.31 ll•tlm t.5610.~5 Allllct> pn • of North America the · io-c1111111t,__o ,"", ,? .... N-' R• ii JVoc"""' A& 1-"1 1·53 1 .... s1 11.una:iAtt 0,...i 1 0--.. >"-Ncir NG 1·1": ;314 fCWllll C ~-!10,01·f,Ploll Ent 7.U 1:15 A..: c-c-ases ····'d . the Coeuf" 0 ... Hl"i 011 "l'f ::... .,.,. .. A• , . Ion Fnd 11.25 jUf ,,, ' - ''"' Ul\ll come In c.. c11 60 M wPl' Ga• ii ti 1..,,....i8d ::tt ii·~Plln l11w 10.U l.n Auror:C-Pt';J~ second b8!-f, on the basis o( • s,! 1~'4 J~ N: ~~~ 2;t: ~~~ =: Fd ;~ 10:15 P~~to FunJ.~·11 ll." A111orn ca~ new c a p 1 t 1 l 1uthom .... :~ ~ sw 11111 DIA H...:1 Ilse: ·~ ,,., om inc •· 6 4·" Grwtll u it 21 •• ""'""'c'" llld made la'• '··1 year. ll-•A:~ ,,_ Cit "" 51"\llt f¢I' w','• ,,.,._ a.,._ OM(ll I~ 11.'H 11.7S H Hor '1 ... ~ Avco C• wf \II: ~ nic: -"""" -~""! "''' onll Ml 7.tl 7.13 ' •··• ·, >O> Avco pti.20 investment will be stim-•a•~ _ ~. •11~ ~ °""""~ 1~ 1~~ °"' G"' t.s1 '·'1 :: p;;'if 1:·,: :J Av••v Pd .20 YI 1o.a1 Otter 27\; ill'" orp Ld 15,121!-'1 Provfnl ilO 125 Avnet Int only will it last longer but LEGAL NOTICE it \1:ill be more economical 11---------""---1 •-UUUll~ 1 M~ A ,• '"'!anconl 12.6012.60 H Era t:.0 t'IOAvco - by a. .... n.~r J~nin• 9 f ""c-e 1"',. , ... , .',r n!1 C•a U.Sf l,.$7 • A'lllet llf'l.SI lw1,1.111; ~--·· ..-~, 1v. ~ C•n worv 5.ft '~ Prlld S¥J 10.1111.11 AVMt ,, I econom1·c -ntro'-c-A m ~ Oir..r.111 ll '' C•n woai •" 1 '° Put"'"' F.....as: AVOll Po 111 .. v ll). c-Cfll 1'i\ no. PEC Iv! 1J11i 1~ del/Qll M &11'.u .. :1, EQ!,!I! I.Sf '·'' Azll!c on :111 mp tMf S $1'1 Plbsl 8< Sl 'I' 5J Dtl-.ert C,rouP: .Gef1Jf9 l•.1115 .... to operate, will perform bet· ter, v.•ill look better and will cive greater pleasure and pride to the user. While the above racts eould and do easily apply to a toaster. a two-wheeler, or a Ja,vn mD\\·er. they have their most practlcaJ and log-ical meaning when applied to YoUT body. Make sure all your peft.8 are in good work- ing order by scheduling • t>hl'fliclan check-up. When medicines are needed to help -we have th em. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We will de-liver promptly without e:it-tra charge. A great many people f't'ly on us for thi!lr health needs. We welcome requeata for delivery lttVice and charrt accounts. PAD UDO PHAIMACY 111H..,._I ... N..,... hllCll '4J·1 Ill -- 01111 Slllct "'·I! l,IOl't Of OIL PAINTIN•S r WHOLISALI WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUIUC 50°/o OFF I lilt L I OIN•••· SANTA ANA I -·-~ D•AL•IU WANTIO ~ I See by Tooay's Want Ads e .. llAPPINESS is LIVING in THE BLUFFS". "SAD. NESS is AtlSSlNG your OIANCE TO BUY!" "HAPPINESS & JOY l~ BUYING a, THEN to MOVE lo 1hfo BLUFFS". .. ECSTASY i~ l.JVING IN the BLUFFS." Check 100. Ne\\-port Beach. e .. A BIT 1lfTNG:" ()nly! St-e b~ I I e I" BUYS! or EVERY. for I Week 812 tor aome 1han •\•erap e AN! you oi. RAA'JBLER. ~ \\'ell now you can RAmble on yo11r almost n e w SCRAMBLER! Hurry now ••. Ck c.W1 925.. Cll'ISI TK N N t'te: Al/IO '"' WI Deul ll .7* 12.17 Grl~ f.11 10.IO NEW YORK -Western ,_.. '' 714 P'K" I"~~ 33 lS Detwr 12.'3 •.IJ lncom 1.07 1.12 U lttdl .n co ..... J"' ''-~It• 7.06 1.n lnvut 7.4ol -1.IJ kbc:l!W y nion TeJeerapb Co. plans lo eontrtd '"' P,~ ... ,' .. mi"'i o.a. c.x lS.ll 1j.2l v1,11 1.11 1.91 ll•k•OllT ·.•s b ·1d I I li c-to"tn 1~ "" -·• ... · Ornfl 1!·"1 .rs v'"'" '·" 1.:io B•rt Ge i c UI a arge aci ty employ-c.... L llv. 11 "'""'" " '!fl 1~ or.,.. Fd I ... .o.3 ll.-.&r• ID.ll 11.21 ll•MOr Piift! ing 500 •or t er s in ~ \., 1::! 1t: E5k,; ''"' 1m ~~'!f 1•..s R:~,'~ 1~:~r '~:~ t::::" .r.,t Moorestown. N.J. to oentralile crw1"' .... !!l't l!" ,._.... .T ;:v, ~1¥1 Boin 9.U 11.n 11u11r u.SJ "·" 111 o'K.1'·1 .u ._.. .. ..,. ' E no, "6 GfVlll 11.1• 1337 llddw Fln'lds: 81N; flf HY J acceptance of telephone-" m n.;o: ~: 2~'""' 1nc:om •.» '·" 1n1 111v .,,.....u en rr 1.11 C I"" ~I I .ii tM Spel 32.1• 32.76 81rtl0 2.lll originated telegrams b y Dwl l.bJ fflll N et:! J;' ~ Stock II.SI 14.75 11•1 U.4J 1S.4J ll1rd CR .~ I I I Da111Y M 11 II" · t #J '" .91:1v, F."'"1 11.1'2 ''·" Corn St t.t• t.•I 81,lc Inc .• cus omers n se ver a o.ia 0n 5 "'hP.:V " d Etm 11..M 11.1• 11r11v Funds· ll•tes """ lh ,.. •~•-0.ll 6-24 '' .... ,1 >J _._ Emr• SC .II '·" Eciullf 3 ,.· l .st 91le1 Mr ,, 1 nor eas....,m Swa....-.. O.t•t"· p ni m ~ •1:1 ~ii{ f,.,.,, n.u u ,,, invest 1:00 1:n 11111111111 -~ Th '· d ·••·· lo o. It H Slti ' Pi rt ff\'r 'll\'J llll>f'M •.P t .15 V!lr• 4.IO 1,., B-1111" P'fJ.SO I e cenucr, an ~s O.: Ml• 1,11o 1Nr...:1..':c11: ,.,,..11,~E:rG., u; ::~ 1.c""' t.SJ'10.l5 a..u!•'"'K{'~".i'f otlow, will enable customers o.tw h• • ,.,.. <i4tl • "'° EWI ..,.. ..a .. '" s.i.c-s 1s.u u.11 •vii c1o .so in the 41 !tat.es to _ .. B:f tnf f.: fr" ill-""~ ~ r" i=orrlll 11.1111.n ~': 11·~ 11·~ ll•••lnts l ~.. D!to 24 Fwm lo 11.11510.05 ,,,_ ,.·,,11 ·~ B•.t FC15 1 telegrams by dialine a single o.i•c.$ ~ 11 s 1Hi ,~ t" Ot$16 7·1~ ···· 0.11 11:t1 11:.1 l:t!.::. ~· I JI f be o.t 1111' D"l tV. l'lto ~ ~ 11.ts t.SS 10.•7 Sect Dido: .)II o ·rte num r, Western°'"""' E .. , ,,,.._ '"" tvi E.-1i.c1•-"'*"-Flllld1 : BttC!!Alr" Union said. 1be Moores!-DIM\ cr 11'1111"' =P .., ..... 1 >llMI :t E""' 11cs 1ue C•11tl 9.11 t .tt h 1<0P•t ..5'b .,,.., 01tc l11e S 11 " Fi"'9t 1S.1311.lt lnv•t II.Sf 12.6.J Beldtn 1M unit is scheduled to bt in °""' CNI ,., '"' ... , ·"' ••• ,t;~ Pll!"I" 10 ~ 11..31 Tn.i.i f.2710.U a.1c1,.,..1-1 Mb • b Oocu!!I 10"" 11 ~ 11 ,... Solem S.lt 5Ai7 1111 8 f.41 t .41 ~II H-M service y J anuary 1172. Onldin l 11>1 1A :!. 'l:.t '"' ~ Tr.cold 21l5J:5.J2 -Inv ,.10 t.u Bell lntrcon Oow J., 41~ '1 lflhell C 1!" ;ti. FIMAtltl P ... : wlnv GI 4.n 1.12 llem!1 Co M Povlt Da 2N JJ .... •Mllll El 11~ U¥. °'iJ,; ~ff !ff r»m•'"" 'tJl 1~:: ::~1: :.i~ PITTSBURGH (UPI) -g~=kl M~ 1n: 1:=: = ~ ~ J# -s.n •.4 lFrm GI '-'' ,,ff llentlJCsi '·" Whe eling.Pittsburgh s t 1 e I 011r!,.., '''A 1w R:nJ:• 1,"' ,1 ..,..., .. 11 ·~1 1•'• s1 u.• u . ..s le"en Sl"IS.$0 El P•lftt JI~ 17'4 ... ,. ... Fslf' ..... JG.fl 11.n NOm111 Funds: enn 5-1 2.» Corp ha e . ded 10 E -•• ,... '"' Fstt11 DI• 1..U IUt Am lrd J.42 S.f7 Bentl.Olf . s 1r sc1n a per· 11 ..... WI •• RJddr ,,.. !!"!Iii F..i 1\:L': 1M 9.51 MM , 1.n 1.45 e.;iu•i"' E•'t Sfl 17 11\o'I -lfn Siii •• -, ... .... o cenl pay cut slapped on eco~ ._.. "" 2J ..,.. Ea 31 ~ 11 9 -FIO\IC t.M 7.50 er ev ""° salaries of 2.000 non-union ~~u~.!E 1~ ,?,~ =:..,M 22 "~ ~= ='4 ~ ~ ~ ftM 1f.:J'n.-.1 IB~hT~~··~ al J >;, N C ;. t l'tt Sierl 41.M a.rs (.(p OP 1.1' 1.7' .ltd! Dk .ti s aried v.·orkers last Oct. J. €::'er :: :.., ~:: S:: JH\ JN Fief c... '-" .... s1«t U.!tll.s• 1111rJo11n .... shortly after the General 1:,•, •,!~ ,!.... "',.."'','LMt ~.uv.~ l:' tf:i1.21 ""bcl '","'-' 772 :/!:..~:u~3l '1 -,,,.. ""' ~ "'• ""° G• ,..,., .t..1• "·-•• io's1 11·_,. a1u. hU i...o " otors strike began t .. i.i .... its E11rtm ~ N s.:-0E ,.. F"""'" Gji' ....... · · ~'-11r11.s • ........,'6 El C Sn JY; M Ir:' 11 .Y4 6 Gl'Wlh 1 i•.111 Tld'I 1.lS 1.01 'Ill Co • toll on steel business. e1 .,.,, ""' I c.ir ,.,, , tncom 1 a 104 G1 93910.1s i1en .li& wh · . El M<Jdul 2" ( Ind 4t>. Woo '-';;ilal "s-t 33 MR AP 11." U.10 Ol'ld ,,,_ eehng-P1Hsburgh and t.be E-s 011 11\li i11\ Scot SOM 2~?w ,,.., ~1 t.ls ioi2 Ndlrt 10.0J 10.u 110C111M111 i,. I ' • -.,~ Serl POI H JJ°" M~ ' 00 >> >> ~I l.IO •.lJ IWde~ > ~ rest o the steel industry are E=-:' 11.~ "; m s.::.r1sito A • ''' ,.=111 G...V,· · -01 2.i.n "·'' ~-·r.,, in the m·1dst r •·-Entwlll Sil ~11 St1rlt Pl ll .... i~'• DNTC 1.47 · f.\ll owr Mlt 5.2$ S,74 Borm-M .• . O a C'Wiwwer E., Corp 1.., 1~ 591• em. "-t •,\ Grwfll u '· Tr..-i C.•si 7.41 1.ot 8" Eells 1.,4 inventory-building boom as the"'®" ow 11 .. 11 ~-s 3'11 11•11 1.sa 1.1t ,..., E" 9.t0 1t.n BDsEd 111•.•• I! · T ,..., Al '"'" -· ''~ 1 1ncorn 2.1• 2.lS ...,. Fd 11.tl U.02 &our .. I"' July 31 deadline On the Un·1led F,,. C«~ N J SW.I:::~ •,.Jsi ,.~ 8'\'J f'rtedm I.JS t.lS Gt 2.tl 3.lt Brlrll A f ..SO f T IJ\lo 1>'41 Fd fl'MUI lG.02 10.at -C.l...c 1.01 4.11' "1111St l.• Steel Workers Union .,.;a•e ":-1,..el( ~ ~ ~ .. J $w' ,', '" ""F111'1d ire: Gro. nH Mui 9.t1 10.M BtllfMr l.llil ..... , 1')AI '!,.4'1 ~ 9.31 10.22 nlfd 9.1110.•1 BrJllMr "'2 pact nears. The company said ~:::,:-1; 1~ ~~: "''.... tfl'IHC 7.MJ c.l1 u111,,., Svc Gro: Brit P.t . .oe restora11·on or pre-Oct I ... -F,, B°'• "'·~ '™' !i::*tS¥lC Im :m tl'ld T,.., 11."' ,~.'5 ,,._, lJ.111•.n =~!'ft~~...,.. I . &'" ...,.. It•> "\ ' •• .i Pit'->! 7.ll'I 1.91! N1! I"" 7.SO 1.70 VH .. 0 I r r "~ •• e"unof Arn W t.23 Un CIP f.'9 )O..q Mwv II llf 1 eves or sa a.ried employes r-11P M11 = '°"" s Mld\'ft ~' r,i _v. 2:·~ '·'l '·• wMth 11.s211." gr~~~',-11 reflects ... . b . FIPMI ...... . ,, ... Std "= ,.\; ;t """' kc-IO.o.! 10.o..! UMlttd Fuftdl' ak.... . .. improving us1ness "" wl'ln l\1 11~ 11~H 14 '""' G111ra11r 7.44 1.s; Ate m 1.i1 '·'' B=t.. 10 <"Ondltlons and i m p r o v i n g ~~n'FP 1~~ 11~ it:,. ~'f .. u ci;:::. S:C-', •1 t n tnctm 1'-41 1'-7' IWl'IS~ i 511 cost~ " Fllr'SI Oil IJlll 1s~ Silblc Tv m S\O a.r f:j Ln 9AD ~1; lff J:L •runsw11. fa · · Fiormlt :N II' 9'.oNlll F '°'' 10'! Co<n 11 1111 u.m Fd C.•n 1.JO ·7,tl :ucr Ef 1.10 FOii Grnt 3t 31 5z-t:io "d Ji.; 3 ... GtrtlFd A lt'.n" ,.·.·~ lillt Fd· Ulld CO w Foktm -ft TOA Ind ni ~ ~ 1.... Q Vtl Ult .._.· 1.2J :::::•!" "f,.,,M T ASHING TON The ~~I" ct ,#tt 1t:z ~= 'f1,_mlffi H=~· u.a:u. ,_ $.IS s.it ~1J"°t1 1.11 ng11\ls Shipbuilding Div ision F~11• nw "" "'• T,~,.,, w 'm'lil , HFI · •A1 s.M .::!,"',. ,5:~ ::~ .... ~!",',,m·•, f L. . . F~u• toW ,.. 6 • orn !' Gl~ 1.511 L2' """"' o Jllon fnduslries re~1ved o 1t1 cmo , ~!..~, 12} tt,~u~r~r ''' 101""'"" '-'1 '·''aunkR I'll .so 114 2 ·11· dd. I G1rtn1<1 ,,.. 1S1'o '""""' ... • 1111r1w11 •f n 11.'3 •llld 1.52 •.•4 llurl 111C11A a . m1 ton a it on to a G•s ~ ... c 1w. 17\'o {t!!~ c. "'' ,, ~c L•v 19.r; ,..., • k'lll' '-1' J·" Bvr!NO!" ,,1, Navy contract for overhau1 g :J:;:.. ~.,.. f.2 ~.""" t~ :~ f:t..,:. G11r 10.is i::~ ~:; 11. tH 10:~ l~:~ ~.ss r the I " .., T tn Go S SI.I H«I... ... ? .., 1111'1 Mo U.1.5 14.IM lur•"'-' ti o . nuc ear attack sub-&1t1t..t':' ':: ~ TrK fl ''ii Ni H M•111t 11'~ 1t09 eillf'I"" Crow: a..r111 urJw ml.lr1ne Greenling. Glfftn ._I ~ += ·~ 1t; ~"' ro ~ :; ~r ~~~fl:~ Norris Industries In c . g::~'w ~l;:~,~t=-.0J 12~1fil~!1 .. ;33 't::w :~:~::1~•bo! c •. 10 recei~ed two army tcrntracts &=: ~~ 1:~ 1~1~ l~irPi ·~ >: t~ ,fn 1;U !.~~ ::::~ ~'M'f~~"" totahng $9 mtllion for pro-Gcod lS u•; n·~ Tv-Fd M '°"" Tr llftlt l'lll · wt1n11 un.v111 1111111ti ,._ d . GOOdlCFI ~ ··~ Vnlrf( )Ila ~ 1-c SI t.n It Wllld• 1,!MYll! llTIJOlllj• ... UChon Of 105 1'.!M artillery G-lldWv C "-11 ''\Un 11111!"1'1 Jl\loo :n• 1mo G~ 1.~ lM Wt$! Ind '-1$ 1, 1m1t JO 1.11 shell casings. G••tll '" "" ' v~ McGJI 1"' n' ,~a !:U 1:.ff ~1[' t~ i~ :: EfA Great Lakes Dredge & Dock \;;;g~ :.:J i::; w~ Fd '"" '·1 •rarl' • • Co. \\'On a S32 miTiion Army 1"" c ... 11141 •. x "' 1~:D1l::f .~·~Li, ... <"Ontract for drtdging work on New Compttlers ~~~1~~~1·:: ancbOrages opposite Newport All NI• .. ,..,..,..,. (Ollt ~ti! ~~ ·:1&. ~:=:=:::::==:=:=:::==:=:==:=:=:========:!__N'.:'.:e:w~a~, ~V~·~·--------1 WEU.ESLF.Y HILLS. Mass. nC#t -.. trine .,.._,.. tu ""ICJ't '-~rc~J ·'° .; -Honeywe.U Inc. plans to •re tr.l'dtO In it ,11,1,. lob l1'fll uttld Ci ci:n H "' run. OIVll)END$; -......... ,.,. :f:11n~si·'1 Introduce two l1r~a1e com-.... 1... olt•1:tw/1e !dmtlfllolt 111 111u1 @I•" l>fAc.so USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS • ' '1191Lnow •• •11 11 9'.Jra1 '°'l ifOd••td .-1111c1 • tar t1111 tn1 .» puters in its new 9000 se.ries ,..,., ,,. ,....1.,. ,.,., 1t1 ...,.,.,.. en ~' ..r: 1 4 b l"F bru OOC!lmul•INI 4~1 14) NW ln'I l!llll!h' 1:!.i y mu-e ary. 'ffl'' ''' t• ..__ itodt1 111 .,,...... 'nu~.11: 1:tt H--ll ~•·• •·• veor n111 ...... t111111 .........,, Chi ...,,. mi. •f'ltl.I I l ..,.._, '""" ,.-IU!Oil .-~ # ... r-tetnt ilfY'-~ fl) ,.., =:.-; 14. absorbed General Electric'• cOllll 111 •'-"' .... 1111 l'"'' f\I =~•"°''' . . I .A .. :_. n:fll .., ,,..., ('II "' .. ~ ... tlV ... pnnc1pa compul.lOr ope.r1._1;11. c.i.,.n, .... 11or11n1nt1ilfl1 r11 a.-11111 :fl.!s"\. ~aid the new computers ire c1i.1111t1i11t11111 11.1 ..,..,........,1 f'lrl) itt•·trd 1!1':1' ..A~ _..... """"' "-" (wt) .. "...... t i.cy,r-1r •• ~igned tCI COmplle; .,jw FMCTK>M5! (f) hUC9M .....W Fl ,i!'n.904 large«1'e c om p u I e r 1 in-~ " ffac:tleft 111 ,,._, 01 Mtlct191 11t11t111 llf"1t"' troductd in 117') l;iJ Int.em.a--:::e: = ~ tt ":.!" :":.:.~! t~ii1 tlonll Businas M a c b I n e • 1•1 .. ...._ flw!'911.....,, 111 ,..._., ... M ._: Corp1 ind by $pen1 Rand's ~; :::"' ... ....,. ...,. 11 hctlM e wV 'fl• Untvac DiflsioG. ~..,,.k J .. • . . • F1br!q,y , lfl Wednesday's Clo8ing Prices Complete New Y.ork Stock Exchange List '41t• M.t UMl.) Mlfll ..... Clf1t <ltt• ' • DAILY PILOT 21 j I I I I· : . --.. . -·-.. --· ·-. ~-·-... ~------·-· ·~ ...... -..... ~..--...... -. DAJLV PllOT Thursd~, ftbruMY 4, l1j11 ' ROflal Welcome Princess Margaret is welcomed to Barbados by her convalescing husband, Lord Snowdon. The sister of Queen Elizabeth II new economy class. Drug Abuse Heavy In Major Companies Spain Leaves Impression • Ill Heir WASllINGTON (UPI) -ll'licul.atina polley which In ov..-.anx!ous to join NATO. Mauretanla. l~-,--;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 Prince Juan Carlos de fUlure yean may cause blm Spain, they Np>ried, II less ~"•--"•·· .... ,. -•--.I Bourbon, during bis week-long to be r .. lnfluenUal In lbap-concerned lhout an attack A'""""'• ",...... -~ visit to the Unli.d Stalel, lell Ing a moclerlzed Spain that from northellfml E u r o p e the presenc:o ol the Unltad behind the tmp.....ion lltat the be might hope to be. 1 than from the Mediterranean States on • number ol tuture kl!lg of Spain will be lntereslfn&J¥, Juan Carlos an:a where Soviet penetration American bales w l t b 1 n a vigorous monarch,~ and his aides euuested tha\ ls spreading .00 CHlne8e in-S~ni&b territory and.u em- teresi.d In the problems ol Spain today Is by oo means flueJlce II developing In bcldled by the Ith nett In bis country, Its future and \ the MedlterrlQl!an. Its youth. Spain woold lib to ,.. the The 33-year old belt a~ · ' / ~ slrong American pre1ence in • parent to the throne and u c t F d M ' fe the Mediterranean but at the ouccessor to Spali's strongmao a oun as r-same lime the SP an I 1 h , rule, Francisco Franco, con-government feels that it 'ti: cetves ~is future pGS!Uon as M l,e A only realiiUc to develop co.... above ti\• lntrncacles ol day 1,500 ,,· s way red rela tloos with the SOvtet to day pbllcy, but in one im· Union , which gave aid and portant sense as a referee support to Franco's enemies who can \have ao Important O!LDALE (AP) -Snoopy, a 6-year-otd white cat,\ ap-during the Spanish dvll war. Influence on the general direc-parently waJt on a 1,500-mJle walk looking for his nwltH, Juan Carlos and hll .Gfftt· tlon of events. llut wl'"!I Sooopy showed up at the Garrett cOOJ.1.Ji: born wife Sophia, s!M of How effectJve Juan Carlos ~dence lut. week, he 'found that bis 17-ye8.l'-Old muter, King Constantine of. Greece, will prove to be as a mon.arcb Tim Cook. was missirlg. visited Los Angeles, San Diego, in uniting the various factions Tim moved to ChJctasha, Okla., with biJ parents last Housten, and Cape Kennedf, of Spain -the aristocracy, October and took Snoopy. where lhey attended. the APollo the technocrats, the Army, But when 'the family · was shoppblg for furniture aooo 14 launch. disenchanted youth, I e ft I s t after theif arrival, the pet diaappearect from the family To the prince and princeu, radicals -is nearly im-truci. the Apollo launching was a possible to assesa, based on Snoopy couldn't be found in Oklahoma but showed up high point of their American his conversations 1n the United last week at the Cook home in this small community 100 sojourn. He spot~ briefly to States. miles north of IA5 Angeles where Tim's. bz:otber pill lives. ~echnlcians afterward, show- During contacts with his When Mrs. Cook opened the door, Snoopy made a bee-mg an excellent command of American hosts and with line for his favorite resting place under the ironing board, English. ' CANDLE VALENTINE ~ \ Send your Valentine.a ring of beam candle that ttleaoea a delicate llCeslt « "5mitie as it bums. Packed in a Valentine mailing carton; 3.95 , = I I le .. j .. ,,. " •' " .. guests who met him, the then searched the house. Hts fur was dirty and matted Juan Carlos ls an ae- prince displayed an active in-his paws nearly raw. ' c<1mplished aviator and piloted THE CANDLE DOCK ., '1 terest In public affairs but The Cooks are sure be waa looking for Tim. "There b~ airliner part of the way :-: , deferred, on occasion, tn ques-was a bond between the cat and my brother you COUidn't from Madrid to the United JOI (oldJ No. Newpoft llwl., Newport IMdi';" 1 tlons of detail to aides. He extplbalnk,"tosa!Tfmd GlnarrMettarchCook Jr. He said he would take the states. Aides sakl the prince 646-4l68 ".. •' thereby seemed to betray a ca ac · also bor•-a biac• belt In o 10 • ''°"" M ,,. J cident.s during the first six lack of c<1nfidence in karate. · \-SAN FRANCISro (UPI) - More than eight out of 10 large companies have ,a p~ blem of drug abuse among employu, a survey by the California State Chamber of Commerce disclosed 'J\lesday. '-~~~~~~~~~====~==============================:!_~~:::::~~~==·~=:__:::!~~~~~ ... ~~~~==~~~~·~··~·====~·~~· months of last year. . - ' ' Most of the companies sa.1d -- -... \ The study showed that the reported incidents of drugs in the factory or office increased 33 percent in 1970 over the previous year. "'Ibe large California com· peny that doesn't have a drug problem ls the exception rather than the rule," the chamber concluded. The chamber sent ques- tionnaires to the medical of- ficers of 25 finns employing about S00,000 persons. The in- dustries r a n g e d from automotive manufacturing, to chemicals, missiles, public uUlities and oil. All but three ol the firms said that drug abuse had been detected among employes. Nineteen said they had In- they gave an tmploye caught using drugs a chance to straighten himself out, but about 20 percent of the firms said immediate dismissal was routtne In drug cases. The chamber's survey i~ dicated that 83 percent of the incidents involved employes under age 35. Men were .Jn- volved 67 percent of the lime~ In almost every case, the study showed, the employe Jn. volved had been working for the company less than a year. 'Ibe drug most ·frequently detected was LSD, with mari- juana second, followed by barbiturates, amphetamines, tranquilizers, narcotics and antililiitamines. Most cases of drug abuse were uncovered as a result of injuries, thefts or attempted thefts, the chamber foumd. Cultural Cure Officer Has Race Solution SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rada! temions vanish when dUferent cultures mix, says Capt. Arthur W. Chandler, skipper of Miramar Naval Air Station, and bringing people together is a way to mil: thenl.. Patting words to act.ion, Chand1er surprised hb men recently with a "touch of soul" menu which included black food, an explosive jazz group and four go-go girls who doubled as a folk quartet. "Thil Is one way we can bring people together,'' Oumdler said. "All far as I'm concerned racial t e n s I o n s disappear when people begin under!tanding each other's cultures.'' The skipper, who in the past year has tnated the 8,000 men under his command to Orien- tal, Mexican, German and other "cross-culture" ex- periments, said the ethnic lunch program is now a monthly feature. "Hey, you guys have pretty good tastes," said a white sallot as he watched the du- -cing wlllle helping bim!ell to seconds of barbecued spare ribs, collard greens, blackeyed peas, hush puppies and sweet potato pie. Like him, many of the more than 500 sailors who sampled the soul food took second help- ings -when they weren't rocking ln rhythm with the New People Unllm.lted jazz group and the go go girls. Chandler's luncheon was held just one day after he appointed the Navy's first fulltime black ombudsmen to ru. staff. Aviation Structural Mechanic 2.C. Robert c>zler, ZS, and Aviation Storekeeper Ailman Mitchell Crebb, 20, serve as minority affairs ad- visers directly on the skipper's staff. "We are working up from a basis of peaceful coex- istence," said Ozier who has already acted on a problem by getting the base exchange to stock a variety of black cosmetics asked for by black Navymen and their depen- dants. A VALENTINE IN !RISH BELLEEK Here' a • thoughtful end useful gift for your Valentine, Mother, Grandmother, Aun~ or Jul! to 18y "thanko. •Our heart sha~ dish in delicate Irish Belfoeft..fertect for cendy, bon bona, or nibbleo. S6. SLAVICK'S Jewelm Since-1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 JIO Opoo Moo. -4 Fri. 'ltl t :JO ,..... ' . California Federal would like to give your tnoney ''.A.re you happy with your job at California Federal?" a better job. Let us put it to work at 5% ••• or .more. These aren't the times to settle for low interest or·for no interest on your money. "Best.ob We'll hire your dollars at California Federal to work at 5% a year in our Moneymaker savings accounts. I ever~ad Higl] pay. Great Security." And we have other, higher interest Moneymaker plans, too. Come in and see us. Learn about our full range of Money- makers. One is sure to be just right for you. We11 give y our money a high-paying job right now. The job security is great, too, because we're the nation's largest federal Head Office: 56'0 WiW'rift: Boutenrd, Lo.Ancdee. Accounts a.re insured up to $20,000 b7 • llac:J'flltbe United Statet Govmimcnt, Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546·2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave .• 776-2222 Orange Office: 4050 Me1ropol11on Dr.· 639-3033 Other convenient offices "1roughout lot Angeles, Orange ond Ventura Comtf es. • I· > . -~ ...... •.: . -:. ' '· • . .: . - • ' • ~ ' r t J ' 1 .. '" ' . . • . • • " otd of nrmtnl strm of c lal st~iJMl..s qricu'ltural itdln9 tove "' ublic qua re ird hicaqo or oronto, .g. olor art of he body "' lact of near· eratlon -li•nneol '!Br isk 111 uslc11I passages Of • mountainous reg iDn -Jaw, Si.'\at· c 'win Li · late Q st1cle Strfonn on lljtidwa.y s ..... ..... ,. Ti:l!>acco product : lnror111al Toppers Zorit Holst Ski arl!IS D!sclairned • relatlonshl p • e J. • ly Cliestef Gould waNt MVOLDFRl!NO .. TM! MA'>OR! HoW 11 Cl'N I ·FAC! MIM ' AFTIR TMIS MOlX, ly Tom K. Ryan_ tFTIUS IS A PROl'OSA!., IACan! ly Al Smith U'I: '.AIND SALLY BANANAS GORDO OH,GOOO! I tlAVE WEl..1.·· tT AAS -n<REE 'FL.ATTIRES, NO BRAKES ANO A CAR!, ONE HEADLIGHT·· ? BUT I'M IN BEAUTIFUi. . ' • -·--& .. -··-· - SHAPE! 36·Z4·36 MOON MULUNS .----..-,,.-,,.,-.,.. I1U. Ki-VE TO 'SE~iHATiO l!fLIWl' IT1 J<AYO. '.ANIMAL CRACKERS .--------. SZ Cralls· 1111nshlps 54 Journey Ytslerday's Puzzle Solvrd: PERKINS By John Milff 55 ''Everythin!I come s to he ---": 2 WOfdS 59 British naval hero 63 Gain 04 Citrus co ncoction : t 2 words "tl!m 66 Tar source ~ b7 Sierra -- bB Allot f; 69 Trampled 12 Forfeit 70 Writer 13 Had an of boy's obl liJat!on books 18 Amer!CIQ 71 Fasttner Indians ODIN l Explosive device 2 Allege as a f1el : , .. ) --noire 4 Makes angry 5 One who Ukts I orison er 6 h l'IJ 111n --It it": 2 w0tds 7 Auc-tionel!'l'1$ word S As says 9 Sty lt of furnitll'e 10 us llfWSplptf pub I ls her 11 .lileta l 22 Be under the we:athtr 24 Of a lobe 26 Wet nurse s: 21 Of I rel•llvely small arr a 28 CiJmbllng gam e 29 Filled to overflow In~ 31 Early South Amerlc:1n ' 32 Unsopllls• tre ated 33 Pelted with htn fruit 36 Serles of Sl!PS 40 Former kingdom compr ising most of Spain ~I ·-scholar 44 Deposited rggs 47Yo1Jng an irna I: Z words 49 Baseba ll statistic: Abbr. Sl Ont breaking certa in rules 53 Metal 55 She d tears 50 Con!rO• vers ill ,.,uslcal ''" 57 l belher 2 wOrds MISS PEACH ARTHUft'5 FATHS:R A5/CBD H I~ BOSS FOfl. A AAf~E YESTet<OAY? ~51 M/65 F'EACH, ANO WE'RE P'(ING iO KNOW HOW H~ Jv\ADE OUT/ By Mel NO, l!UT Hi!: 60T TWO WEI!! i<S PAV FOi< NOTHING! 58 :.:;-,~,1;, STEVE ROPER __ By Saunders and Overgard 0 0 P 11 IV \ o • -.----....-:::==.,;:;"'"-.,:;;...,-;=:;;::=;:;;:o::="'r-::::7:::;-::;"';'::;:;;'7°i':7~;;;;;;;';'-;;-;;:;/,-';;';:;;;:;<,';LD;;;;:;;<,~"{ 1 coLJ"1 c.',.. ..._ __ ......,PROCO TO MEET ')()1.11 J AM Hf~ ~ TEUMC-15 CATil.t FRAUk'LY, 1 MAO IT COSTS~ RANCHERS CI St --.: MltllOP'ERl BLITIF 'THEPAPER,Mll. R-Jsniw6AC.71JAU..'{ lM<X.16HTrT'l.ffl/T 44.~000AVE'AR:,~ 61 Nu111etlc1I f!OlnY AflE'll YOU'RE SELllp,JG SUS· LUCAS-BUT AS EMCIJGH-OfA PllC>BUM 'a.Jr 'MTH 7DM MIX' ROPER/ OOES T~T 62 ~r:;~~remt:lll 5VJllJP 1tn4-.: SCliUP'OONS, I ALRE.AD"I A RI PORTER / H~ 1b~ ~TH AlJD JO?ALONG AN%-'ER )OUR QU!STl(ll! fl 5 Pronoun 57f'lf JS 1'AKE THE '"MONITOR•/ A 'Ttrl '? C>.SSIIJYl "')~., J;<I K..r; wml ,__ __ ,,,. I C tit • THE Ol+'IER OF ONE OF 11/E AREA'S 'lAR6EST l/ANCHES· • .. "' , PEANUTS • ~ _,, i.: -::, • .. • • • • .. • • • .. • • • ~ ' . .. I Thu'1d<Y, rebnwy 4, 1971 DAil V l'ILOT 23 . ' 1y Al c.,, ly Ferd JohllSOll ~~I'! Nor WllEtl ~~ I'M WWIN<ii "l!ll'M, ~ 50N OF A®N !! l* JTIANOI WotLO M I Roger lolen PUl~IJJI. :%: PJQ!FEfi: l'lllEI. 1Hl!U-~ <,IOU GO AHEAD AUD RWtl!!: WAS lolAW .AS '11'.X) Mke • MiJ I MR. MUM __ -if--. •· _.I;~"' • -,,. r • • ..... " • 21 A. DAILV PILOT Wtdrwsd1.J, f'tbl'u.11,., 3, 1971 VA Hospitals Adapt to New Vets WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sick ot disabled veterans of the Vi'1nlm war are a special breed -younc, skeptical of authority, individualistic - and vetera.ns hospitals must deal with them in new \'lays. That Js I.he conclusion of V e t e r a n s Administration MedieaJ Director Dr. M. J. Musser. He recently sent a memo to all VA hospitals, summar~ the findings or ' ot:es "' mwa. DAN ' IYION ffNLfY W• ..... "lfMfl I• ..........,, Cllletf "rc1119!91hf ci.llM 1 ,_,.._. M ,_ .c.111 '"' •1111 .... _,, .,.... ... a study into the care •ml treatment of "Vietnam era veterans." lie said lbe JUl'\ley revealM a clear need for changes Jn some polic"s and operating pracUces of VA hospitals. "The hospital admission pr~ cess shOuld be streamlined anit consumer oriente~," h~ said. ·~where practicable there should be selective, in- dividualized bed placemenl or Vietnam era veterans. Recreational activities ap- propriate to young veterans should be developed. " W b e r e circumstances permit ward 'rap sessions' should be utilized to improve mutual acceptance a n d OU'f'HJ'.ORS'f . . . . . . ' ' OP(N NIGHTLY 6:41 ;.M. SUNDAY AT 1:41 r.M. rtspeci or all veleran:i for each other." He said volunteer workeri1 in V,.,, hoSpital15, as "''ell as paid staff members, must adopt to new ways. Th~ may mean rock music in the recreatlpn roon1 for example, "In V ,,_ health care facilities we have become aq?ustomed 10 the WAY in which \veterans fro1n past periods o{ servi<.-e have accepted and adapted lo hospital regulations and treatment procedures. As a result, we have developed · a set of expectations as to how veterans should look and how they should act. •·Just as y,·e rnay fail to meet the young veteran's ex· pectations, he may fail to COi). form lo ours . • . there is a very human tendency to respond with disapproval to those whose values, modes or behavior and style of dress differ from our own. necessary to respect the Mahl of the young veteran to have tbem,1' Tbe Vietnam veteran is characteristic of 1 o d a y ' s youth Musse said. He is "less Wnnni: to accept authorUy in a complaint manner. He feels strongly that be has the right to know about things that ar~ feet him and to have a voice in them ." The old phrase ''doctor's orders" will no lon&er suffice to justify a "highly Beach Pair Sue Valley, Manin Court reJfmented environment" In • hospita~ II< said. 14Unlesa they make sense, .. hospital rules wW be ignored by 4>e yowig veteran: Thus the need for more "rapping" with P•tlent.s on various mat· ters. MUSJer aaid no VA hospitaJ has fewer than 11 percent "Vietnam era vete~ans" and the average is lol percent na· lion wide. "One cannot forget that by his service and sacrifice in a most difficult and complex conf1ict, the young veteran has earned his right to health care benefits. He does not lose this right simply because we may oot W>dersland or a~ prove of his appearance or his approach to life. Tb e responsibility is ours and we must meet it if this nation's obligation to its new veterans is to be fulfilled," -._ ... ..._ AIR CONDITION WITt: GAS NOW .... 6 RECEIVE $100 CASH Upon compltfion of g•1 t ir-c:ondltion in9 in1t•I· • . l•tion. :'I . -. - --~~~~~~~.,. You'~ gel ~100 lo caslt .' •• with th• TRADE. IN •, : of your old ~••tin9 or cool1n9 1q1,11pm•n+ 11po~ d1 hv1rv • of now G11 1...ir Co11dilio11in9 (off1r 1nd1 F1b1111•v 211 ~ . ., IT'S U.SY TO HAYE GAS All CONDITIONING-• • • .. WITH A NIW FINANCING rLAN THAT INCLUDfS · '· PA.ITS AND SEllYICf• OF THE UNIT K>I UP TO 10 -.__ YU.ls. gas air conditioning CAU US NOW AND GET ALL THE FACTS PACIFIC HEATING CO.:: Ac~ .. 11111 ......... ,...u.-.. ii ,_ •t• • lluu'f ,_.,. I• ,.ck It ....... I lilly) llMI J'N Cul HWR ...-11Mtl1lly, '/M l'llll'f 111~1 leu rr.wle Wiiii 1'9tly IMl1iti, ll - tllll 1191 ...... i.t.r~ .. 1""1111 I l~I, I ,..,_,, Hlfl '"""r1!11re lino .. II mucJI •• 1"'" ill .... i-rtlHll••• ef 11M111rs 111111 "" tHf '" •n lttt ,. ct+vlftt NII ef _,, lfl "''-111a. llMlcillf Ill (lllf ....... , ...... .. crMle '"" _,, 11111 1lm•• 111 *' ,..111 "' }'MH' ,.,.11 ••'''"'""" ""'""' 1o11 ltf.,..,. •r wr ~ ... 11 ... ., ""' _,, lllY9lwlll Ill 11M11111t .... .. -1n11111 .... 111.i1. ... 11'1111' --.. 11111111 "" "" ,..:k, lflffillt 1111 1.,. tlrll!ll • ntflll lllif lrl Ytry Hlllfrillol """' ef l'llt •nn,e 11M11r1 ,.....,_, "' .. r TOP SUSPENSE HIT Michael Caine "It is not necessary to em· brace such values, but it ;., Damages totalling $125,000 are demanded by a Huntington Beach couple in an Orange County Superior Court suit which blames both the city of Fountain Valley and motorist Paul Douglas Smith for the injuries they suffered in a traffic accident. :· Suit Seeks AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS ~ 2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD. ~ rll .. I• Wf! -ii, _. ....... ,,, Hiii fHf ii rlle ,,.,., lflMtllt el ... ... ,-. •l'Wlllnf. Tiie -• 111.,ici .. 11111 fllere ""Y M .. ,. Ill Y'fllr lftwrlllCt Ctttr1 .. 11*111 11¥• ,.. celll +... •Mtot •~ lewillt MJCll 1 ll1111ereu1 u11111111o11 h ('IOl!lfln. L.t •YllOH P'EHLIY IN· IUllANC'I ch«.11 ye11r ,,._.,lllt 111111 AClllllttll!'ll Cflll!fll fer _,. Cl,... ,..,. '"*'""' lllif ,., 11111l>le ·~ ffdlM .. Chi, Wl'YI Mn'-pvr 111'911111"' llMI 1'21. Sl91 Ill 11 "2 I M•ln St •• H111llllf .... audl, 1r Ctll "6-7JU llllf wl'll c1n 111 ,.... Ht -. Li1t11911, If uttM, 'Get Carter' COLOR -llATt:D l CALL FOi OPINING AND STAITING TIMI Joanna Shimkus 'The Virgin and 1 I The Gypsy' I COLOR -lATf D • I 1 ''Artistry in Moving'' IN LAGUNA NU.T.:.:-.1.\E J7J So1tll COOlt Hltll-r 497-1350 . GIFT PACKAGES WE MAIL EVERIWltERE WATCH llS MAKE ,,,,E 111s1165 .. PEANUT ,. BUTIER "9 ADDJTMS FULL NO rtUiEIYATIYE'S POUND for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway Oscar J. and Ann Wacullk charge Smith with negligence leading to the collision at Edinger and Bushard i n Westminster last Feb. 17 and they hold the eity responsible for the incorrect placement of stop signs at the in- tersection. Those signs, they 1tate, were a contributing factor to a collision in which both plain· tiffs were seriously injured. Their earlier claim again.st the city was denied last May 19. Acrobatics Classes Set Tumbling and acrobatics classes set to music are now underway for Fountain Valley residents from children to adults. Beginning, intermediate and advanced courses will be taught for eight v.·eeks by Charley and Margaret Baker in the Fountain Valley High School gymnastics room. The Bakers set their course to music in a copy of the Danish style of acrobatic ex· ercising. For infonnation on the course and how to sign up phone the city recreation department, 962-2424. IN ADDITION TO OUR SOUTHERN f.RIED CHICKEN AND AUTHENTIC ENGLISH FIS'H 'N CHIPS FISH ~N CHICK NOW FEATURES A NEW FULL LUNCH MENU We're Previewing This Exciting Bill of Fare With A SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER Good thru Thur1day, February 11 FREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF ONE REGULAR HAM.BURGER AT SSc OR REGULAR CHEESE· BURGER AT 6Sc HAMBURGER OR CHEESEBURGER One-quarter lb. of pure beef with lettuce and to111CJto, dill pickle slices, onian and Thousand Island Dressing. NO LIMIT-BUY AS MANY AS YOU WANT AT 2 FOR 1 •. FISH 'N CHICK'S NEW LUNCH ME1NU Grilled Cheese ................ 49¢ Egg Salad ................... '45¢ Tuna Salad . . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . 65¢ Grilled Hot Dog ........•... , .. 35¢ Chiliburger .............••.•.. 65¢ Chili 'N Beans ....•........... 55¢ Chili 009 , , ••... , ............ 45¢ Chili Size ................•... 85¢ Diel Plate . . ' ........ ' .. Ham 'N Cheese on Rye French Fried Onion Rings . . . . . . . . 75¢ 35¢ 55¢ .-Mixed Green Salad ........ . 95¢ '45¢ 65¢ Hamburger .................. Cheeseburger ... ... ' . . . . . . . . . . AND ALWAYS FRESH DONUTS r r FISH 'N CH/CK TAKE 1~ HOME 9041 Atlanta !At Maqnolia) ! HUNTINGTON .BEACH • EAT LUCllT DISCOUNT SHorrlNG CfNTll I Houri: Mon.· Thur. 10:30· 7:30 Fri.· Sol. 10:30 • f IN Sunday 11 to 7 ~ ,. ' • • $250,000 Call· Us for Prompt Service ancl Repair!; For ln1· ury LAGUNA arAcH LAGUNA H1LLs..-v1uo :: 494.9745 837·2000 .- A Westminster n)an ha!:11:::::::::::::::;:::;;;~~~~~~~~~~L been ,sued for· $250,000 by a woman who claims his dog 1 attacked her and that she fell and sufiered further severe injuries as a result of that attack. Mrs: Caroline Joyce Ann Fleming of Santa Ana names Lester Loe, 9292 Asbury Circle as defendant in her Orange County Supe_rior Court com- plaint and alleges that Loe's dog attacked her last April n while she was visiting the home. Mrs. Fleming states she fell and struck her head, ~nfllcting serious injuries, when she tried to ward off the animal's alleged attack. Ping Po1ig s·ignups Set Friday is the deadliDe for ping pong players to enter the annual Fountain Valley Table Tennis Tournament The tournament will be held at 7 p.m.. Tuesday, in the Fountain Valley High School gym. The Contest is open to any Fountaln Valley resident or worker 18 years of age or older, male or female. Players may sign u p between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at city hall, 10200 later Ave., or in the community center at the rear or city hall. Tbe tourna 'ment is sponsored by the city recrea- tion department. Fashion Island Official Talks Reg Jones, promotion direc- tor for Fashion Island. will speak at a session of the University of S h op p i n g Centers, to be held at the Fairmont Hotel in Dallas Feb. 8-12. The meeting is sponsored by the International Council of Shopping Centers. EYES RIGHT DL LOU IS J. HASfLFILD Tlto11 ••01ri1~ced prof111ion1I drivt rt who "'O"I llt1 tn1ck1 ew1r •11r ltl9hw1y1 will t i ll you tli1r1 ••• two c•rclin1I n1l11 for 11f1r clriwi119 1ft1r cl1r~. Firtl, 1lw1y1 •••P yo11r ey•1 T11owi119 • •. 11p incl down 1"d from 1id1 lo 1icl1 to 1wolcl "ltigltw1y hyp· no1i1". Y111r •Y•• h1w1 two clif. f1r1nl typ11 of n1twe e"dl1191 ~b ~ f o r different • :r· li9ltli119 eortdi· lion1. 111 d1y· ligltt ye11 11e b • 1 I thro119h th1 c111+1r cif '"" • y I ••• •I night VOii ••• be1I 011t of Hie 1icle1 of tlt1 •Y•· Se. l •IP tlto11 1y•b1ll1 rellit19. Tlte 11co11cl '"'111 Alw1y. try fe teok ll1ye11tl tit• r11191 •f yo11r he1clli9hh, lite Y1ry effort lt1lp1 •1•p '1'011 •'•rt, Ye11 m111! 90.,. 1111 '1'•11• 1pe11il 11 yovr •••clion ti"'1 10 th•t v•11 c111 1lw•v• ~11119 'fOll• vehlt l1 le 1 tlep in !lte IP•<• eh11d wlt!ch it llt..,,,.. l111t1d bv ye11r lt11clll9hh. Ewtn if you clo "ll'Y liti1e t1i9ht drlwl119, yo11 11111 111t y•11r ey11 ''"''Y "'i1111l1 vov'r1 1w1ke. let 111 ln111r1 tlt1! yo11 111 will, 'With- out ,,,1+11111. W1'r1 111 the f l,,e Poinft C111te1 , M•ill •I l11ch 11 .. d, Phone 1'41·1171 , for SI. Val'W1linti's Do1.,, A lw'r Wfl{lllStion or two, 011 toml ,,..gillJ lhof Sfrf, "'1 cot• o lo# aboW rouf" Cl,_.,,. moNel'i (/].'(!!..,,,,.. skediddle kiddies· Adoroble little <4-inch dolb with moYOble orms ol!d leg~ W/od'iorl occes~oriei.. new! comrol-top pantyhase -1'7 .._,,,,_ rvshton's valentine· plush stuffed onimals 197,. 1333 El1gcirit red ond wh ile pl!JS'h animals with heart-warming oppeol for all ages; each comes (Of'rlplete 'With a Valtntimel7 ~ t09- paplin actian jacket 398 l errific for oU weorftet', oll yeorJ Polyester/cotton shell with :rip,Pfftd front, elasticir:ed side venh, ond locided willt style! Choice of light blue. tOft., peytw, l'l'loize; S·M·l ·Xl. ,..• l)l'CrO sponda: top leh you onjoy gird.tr.. comf0f1 whU• a1nllycontrollifig lummy, hips. thighs cmd dM'Tiert! Newcolon. .,..,..,.,.., ·-·.as bath sets :38' :::: 64' ::.::i ~91 TIWsty C'Oftoit NnJ bolh Mis iQ assorted decorator color' •• • pt'iced ta pcimpw ~ bud~!. slick,,. ••••Y mugs&bowls 26~ ... The Qr• o t 1tod.cible1, i~ Yibfot1I Mod colcir1 lo btighlt~ up Y°"' day. Mcitth •.,,. upl blankets CMcbd kif f05hion, thil lio~ chill· 72 x 90 c:hOlef ai~ )'OU four· s 97 lfeOICJn wnice! Choico of tt.r .. new colon. -~ :• diitt•Y o• JN'~• stoin/011 { spoonsaOd ' farks ! M1oltime's m<>ft fun with ;;, bolo....d Oi1ney cltora<ter k! help out! AJ1 their favor:wileSI: evocado.,. 9oldmisl•d doisy tumblers 4-.-.1 s6 12oz. • • They'r1 bloomin' beovties ••• ond how they do dreu up 'f0'/11' foYQf•le be .. eroges! 1 wo colon. e pothoccrry iClf' look, mama! How easy lo heot ond ba&y foOd jar holder . 56~ feed boby food frOl'll i111t~ili:red ior. loclu seuinilri l>O spills. l'IO ltot-woter burn~! ossott•d <olors throw rugs 227 27x4C 1 hey're ~nder·weoriog olld wander-woshob!t ••• great co~rogoe for ony or110 that 1>ted~ PfOlection .. , or o spot of «ilor. Non-11iid ba<:k1. tltrow pi11ow• as~ ' Thurodq, Ptlwualy 4, 1971 ' 5 - Southpaws Angered Over Findings By DELOS SMITH be rigbtbanded. If II weron'I NEW YORK (UPI) _ The for chance stresses either dur· lefthanders of the world are tng gestaUon or at birth, he ioing to be displeased witn argue1, there would be no ter. a ;'Dewly publUihed theory of tie~fties always resent any Paul Bakan, a psychotogist, implication of frtaklshnen. and he wUI no doubt be hear-But all explanations of the irlg from no small number . origin.! of lefthandedness are of them. "inoonclu!iive," Bakan said, !Jijs theory ls that nature including the one that It ls I.qtended all human beings to the work cl an obscure gene and thert!are ls hereditary. Dakan tried to make hls explanation less lnconclu s.ive than the olhera. He couldn't pinpoint accident.I 1tre11ea which might cause a 1hUt to Jefthandedness but it i 1 evident, he said, that mal~ and twins encounter more stresses in gestation than !emald. In IJ!OfllaneowJ abortions, the result of utreme 1tress, the nte is lept fQI" female fetuses and fewer die at or soon a!ler birth. And tho 1r .. quency ol left-handednen Is smaller among females than among males and twins. StaUsUeally it alao I s establishtd that gMtaUonal and b1nh stresses are more likely In women having their first babies and in cider women bavlnl four or man, he wd. All thla mode him wonder how m&llY lelUea were fint In the birth order of their mother& and bow many were fourth or latu. Among atudenLs at tb Simon Fr a 1 e r Univenlty, Burnaby, Brllllh Columbia, where he II a faculty member, he •lound 115 le!Ues, \M boys . U .~II. Of the PS, M bad betn lit or 4th or lower in birth order while 39 were 2nd or :!rd whJcll llUan de1i,naled "low r!Jk" posltlonl. His "controls\' were 163 righti.,, 262 bo1,1, 291 1lrl1. Lua then hall-2$0-h~ been 1st or 4th or lower,. When contrasted With the counts for lefties, these dlfferencts WW! "significant" by 1 t and a rd a1allalleal analytic lecnhlqoeL RtpOrtlna lo the tocllllltal jouma), ''Nature," !aQn llld they "111pporl !be bypollloals that Ibero II a riatiGolhlp bet ..... left*~ acd birth order ;uuw a ,.lallollablp be ""'I Wl-banclo ednen al)d neurolollcal In- sult ullOcialed lw!lb p.....,.lal or delivery factora. .. ··~----------------------------~--------------------'EVE RY ONE CLAIMS •• LOWER · PRICEs·· ••• Mr1. McGraw.Jr .. of long Beach · Shopped and Compared Her Own Shopping Li1t At Another Super• market Of Her Own Choosing ••• She's Convinced ••• SHE REDUCED 12 30·~­HER FOOD COSTS AT LUCKY • 0 !9,~~!UT.~~~~.-88~ !}.l!fl.UUa.~ .:..~.~ .. --·-· $] 3~ C~lfn.,....,-... ................. ~!~ !!'.!!? ............. 39~ YOUNG TOM TURKEYS 36< .................. -....................... -.. lllo Mra. Thom11 of Son B1mordlno Shopped ••d Com pored Her Own Shopping Li1t At A So-C1lled "Tot1I Di1count• Supermarket. She's Convinced ••• SHEREDUCED 8 1o/c HER FOOD 0 COSTS AT LUCKY • WHOll IODT USDA GIA.DI Hj.• ClllCllNS CHUCK ROAST .IL -.... ~!~1~!!!~~-.. 98~ ~0~~0.!5.~-=-87~ t ' ' #\ . ~ GREEN GIANT RICE ,..,,,.,_,_37• : ... ,.. ........ .., ! PICTSWEET PEAS ...... ,_ ____ 40• l"".t~TATOES :~~~.~ ............. 29' t .bOLE FRUIT JUICES ................. 21' .,....,,... , .... ..,11 W~o. Pl•Mf•I• W/1..,tf.,.l!J . ,PIZZA SNACK TRAY~: .......... 91 ' f > .c:ooK IN BAG-............. -.27' ! ~111t,Olot••lll •i..,N1u111riittl I MORTON MACARONlt::.~~~ ... 24' ! .. SWISS MISS PIES :::~:~ ... -.29' ~ . w· AFFLES _.., • .., "" 41 ' 11 ..... -............................. . • • 48~ ().' .... ~~/. DOLE PINEAPPLE 33c llf JUICE ,20-0UNCI CAif FISH STICKS~;;'!. . ... _78' SOLE FlllET ~:'!';;'! .. , ___ , ___ 111 CREAMED CHICKEN !: :':;.,_, 45' BEEF STEAKS ~.":' .. ~ ........ _ 73• GINO'S PIZZAS::=:::.~~'.'.':.-. 79' LARRY'S SANDWICH :;;.";l,._.81' ···~lkt"-- CHI EFOOD ----.... -69c ff (91(1111CllOW1111111 • I lf.01.N . RAISIN COOKIES:\'!:';:~ ... -... 48' KRISPY CRACKERSl:::::. .. _37• o-< FOOD STICKS::'.'.':::.~'..-51' BREAD::',~~-~~~'.~ ....... 37' <f4 KRAFT CANDY:::':::'.'.'. __ 35• . ' ' , ~; '· LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES £ BEAUTY AIOS • . • . . • :-:-- • : ' . . a... h•. ,.,l•tf 1f 1ttr1cllYl ltJIH 11111 nltr1 , , , ti •h'11J Jflf lnllJ """ r. •••t ·••••bl•· COLGAn TOOTHPASn J & J BAND-AIDS ta.Jc• ,, 1.,..1111 ••• •111 "'". Jln11c 1""~ tt -==;;:;.., JRlttl Clh lff ICrtU:Ml1 kllJ nt llrl 111, Mt ltt tlr 11 ti ••IJ hi• k11I IUltr ttl Mttw. Sll't .,_. OUI lOW 63( IYll,DAY PIKI TEA KmLE lt1irt 11 l1tk 1t, krl •r.U-4ttl 11 •••in• •e1111. hJ• •r 2"'4Qlt "--'l11luflrh•llr1s1. $264 AVOCADO COLOI ---LOW MlYOAT PllC( VICKS SINEX SPRAY •lcklJ C11Jfl clllltl 11111 JISS*IH It• 11•c1s lh c•111ui11 und -, nlft, 1 .. ll111M1l11lU,ttc. 99 \o\ OUM<I SIZI C OUl LOW IYllYDAY Plt(I PLASTIC CEREAL BOWL n 1 rit" sire hr ''''" 111111 ••• 17c c1r11!1: 1u1rt1I ttltu. ···~lkt"-­ ARRID ANTl·PIRSPIUNT A ltlf·ll•• fmrltt: m,s Rt1t11 ••• • ..,. Sal .. ..., ti l&I. HAM· ,,__,_,,_,. 58< ........ i.t.u-NC118101'l1 ••••• -·-lllo S/j,~S~!!!~.:..".'.'.'..'.~--· 5 7~ ~~·l!!:.~~ .... _ .... 32~ %·'·";£ • l OI ,' ].{;J>" J. 'I~ "'. • ' . ' , • ~ or POTATOES::e~~ ........... 49' or SOUP MIX :'.l::';~~.~... 9' ... SPAGHm1:::",::'.:. .......... 41' ROYAL PUDDING, ..... .,. ........... 12' <f4 CAKE MIX:':::.'l,:.~.'.~ .. 57' PANCAKE MIXll'!e.._ ...... _. 62' .,.. BROWNIE MIX ::Z~-.49' .,.. LIPTON TEA BAGS.-.,.. .. 1" TABBY TREATS ::=' ...... ___ J 8• PUSS·N-BOOTS~\:::' .17• BURGER ROUNDS::'..'!:. .... _ 25' GRAVY TRAIN ~~~--.81' ···~~"-""' SPAGHml-O'S 1 ac flANCO AMlllCAM 1 SY..·OUlfU CAii DEL MONTE PEACHES::: ......... 31' ... KR•FT DRESSING::~ .. 33' o"' DEL MONTE PEAS ,,_.., .. 23' ... VEG AU:=<'!!:'..'.~'.':.-22' TODDLER MEALS ~ .. ___ 23• ... ~J,9!~!.~.~~.~~~~ .... 2"2' ... ~&rt.--.. VIENNA SAUSAGE 26C SWIFT'S 4-0UNCI CAM <f4 COCOA MIX l:.~'I • .":'.:'..~ 75' BABY FOOD:::~·~ ... --.. 9• <f4 DOLE PINK DRINK , ·~1 ........... ~c... .... 29 JUNIOR FOOD =:!'.~ .... --13' ""'JAM~~~-~~ ... ss· /DOK FORKEY BUYS -m llT" ....... --.. .......... " . .. ...... ...,.,..., ,,..... .... .... • • • Tiit "UT m-""" .... .,. Jnt • "" " .. .., em """ • ... "' ............ ,.. .............. -in lllT' ..... ,.. --'Ir ... fir . . -;~·: tlUTb mrra&Y IA¥1MSI .~~ •• MAXWELL HOUSE COFFIE ~-~ ...... -... 8f&rf"'" ::::_ '2" . YUBAN COFfEE,_ .... _.93' YUBAN COFFEE-c--.. 2" FOLGER'S~':'.'.'.'.'..-1" .,.. CRISC0=--95' COCKTAIL~('! 28' ... LEA & PERRIN , ..... "' ............. ~-·•h ... 64 POMPEIAN OLIVE Ofl, .......... 85' .,.<BEEF STEW:t.':.':::'.'. ..... _ ....... 65' ... ARMOUR TREET:=~.55• ... NALLEYS CHILl ~l::::: .... _,33• .,.+TAMALES~:'<.::: 24' <f4 P.!.U !,li;.~lU... s3• ... TAMALEs='.. ___ ,, .... 39' ... 4~1.-""' SANDWICH BAGS 51 C . ... 1 SO COl,lllT PWO. . :I • - ' .. • • i { ' J " ' ' j ~. • ,. ' .,.. ~.2,UJJJ~,U.!,,Tl.5.~U.~ ... -.. _29• WHln KING "D"::::::-::: .. _ ....... 58' <f4 SOFTWM1t:l:.'::: .. _25• WHITE KING SOAP-........ _ .. 71' tf' VIVA NAPKINS ~.:"o'.10: ..... 31' WATER SO ITTNER~!~:.": ........... 57' .,.-LYSOL SPRAY l~!:l:..".'.'. ....... 79' CASCADE =·~--·---40• .,... EASY OFF:::-:::.?.:": ........ 67' IVORY SNOW:::.':'=. ................ P' ... WINDEX ~';.",:;:.~;::: .......... 27' GAINES DETERGElfl' ........... -.. 1" tf' LIQUID RINSE U!.."'t'. ...... -73' BIZ PllE·SOAK ~~.--.... 1" SAFEGUARD SOAP :;::',.. __ , .. ,21• <f4 MARGARINE='° ..... --39' LADY lH BUTTIRl:.0~.--82' MILKMAN DRY MILK=:.-.... 1" REDDI WHIPr:::".!.~~ ........... _, 51' LADY W ICE CREAM ~--.. 65' ' ' ' I ' i-•' I ~ " ' ~f'· ,1 .• ; tor QUAU1Y ••• DISCOUNT rllCIO UUlrS' VfOITAlllSI BANANAS@ POTATOES 100"' CHIQUITA u.s. NO. 1 1u11n1 a!WID II A MfCI llLfCn!* OF llllS ~nwr 9c ...... JIU CM 1111 ... 10'e38c . ' Sbop Any_Day ~ •• Save Every Day ••• With Lucky Low Ois~ount Pricing.-~olicy~ ' Mexiean Books Protected NIXlCO CITY (UPI) -A c!ooecf.<lrcull le I 1 v la Io• l)'lllm !DOido Ibo mualy Im· lean NalkNI Ubrary II JllOo 10C11111 rr... tbl!I 40,000 ol Ibo ol<*I, -valulbl• boolll 11111 nWl-1Jlll ID !be nation. The ~ aper-12 houri • da)-· In "tho &ttonl bM," a small room off tbe library'& main floor where scholars study tombs and a guard studies acbolan. "The lalnlaloD lf_lltlll la a tnW'I of 4oQbU'1C our vigUa~." Aki rare bootl aub-curator Juua Yhmoff. "Nolhillg hu ...,. been alolen and we want lo keep H that WIJ;" The room bas about 101000 booka and I0,000 manUICl'lpbl. For the moot fart, they siled dramaUc Ugh on Mellcan history. An neepllon 11 the olde1t book. a trtatiae on pedlalr!U, printed In llaly In 1172. The eleclronlc aumllllDDe 11Ylitm wu lna!alled •llhOut fanfare five yeara aco. A portable teltvl!:kll camera peers from a comer ol Ibo grey.carpeted r-. It bl ' mooltond In Yhmolf'I olf1<e arut In tho office ol lho ~ director. None of tho boolll 1111y be laUn Into other -ot tho library, Al cloalng time, tho room II IOl!ed by a llui• !Iondo«. Authorization lo nod tho "'1rlll !Ji 1llrJclly controlled. Mextcanl must p r e 1 e n t unlvenlty credentlala oulllnlng I h •Ir !nloalkllll. Foreigners ne<d kllen from their embUslts. Yhmol! aald In an Interview that an average of only flv• scholar• use the room eaCh day. He said tho espe!>te of maintaining 10 employes lo handle the vOl.umi:I VI a 1 juatilled "In villw ol the meareh bilftl cirtled out." The library oH!Clal said the atrDD1 !I01I bad not bien well l'lbllciled. "Many scholara and writlrl m 1llll unaw•• ot the exlaWlcl of our materiall." be 1114. No ' ll1tCi>l cUmatlalJI& la ernplorid. Yhmoll ·said tho laclt ol llUmldlly In !be capital was ideal for pr.ei'vtnJ tbl aging pqe1 In their original 1tate. The comerslone of !be col· Ject!oo a;e ..,.-,. by tn .. clacln priest. de 1 crl b In I miallonary d!arll In northenl Moilco In Spanish colonlal times. The library, • dlvillm of the NaUonal Aulonomotla Un!venlty, II bouoed In a fonner Francllcan convent in downtown Mexico City. About IOO mamucrlpll were written In Latin by ~ cllcanl and members of other reni;ou. onlm. '!'bey deal with pbllotophy and law and are being slowly ca!aiofued by \'bmoU. Many ea r I y manuscripts are Jn the 1D- di1enous lanauage NahuaU. T he collecUon tnc:Judet 18,000 private papen end kt- tert of Mtllcan reformer Benito Juarei. Some ICIO other document& were written by Mn!mlllan of Hapsburg, the Auatrian Ar<:hduko proclabned "emperor" in 1863. He wu executed by a Juam flrinl aquad fOur years later. Andrea Sanchez, head of tbe manuocrlpl department, tald the library'• collecUOn of original paper• waa unrtvlled In Lalin America In anUqully and volume • Man Saved By Booklet In Pocket KANSAS CITY (AP) - Police uld a bard-covtr ad- dre!I book In J ... pll Boener'a •blrl pocktl &topped a .zi. caliber bullet !Ired al his chest. Tbe bullel panelraled the cover and aevera1 pa1es. n stopped, Boener oald, at tho page wb<re be bad placed a pbntograpb of hla dau11111r. Barbara, a plutlc mdll COid and a amall card bearln&: a Bible verse . Hoener told police lhal be w11 walking to a bus stop when a wornan tn a car calltd lo him tllal "Wt l\ted a !!Ille bell)." Botner aald he walked cmr to the car and a man in lbe back IHI pointed a ... ~I him and -anded mooey. Tbe tnan shot at him, BolOlr said, whtn be rtplled bo bad no money. THE BEST ••••• , .. 1, ,.u. ,, • ., ....... ftuh" It •11• tf the ••rl4't "'•It pop11l1t comi& 1trlpt. R1MI ff .. illy hi ttl• DAILY PILOT, I \ I .. , 14 DAILY PILOT ...... Satellites Clutter Heavens By VERN, HAUGHLAND WASHINGTON (AP) The llth anniversary of the launching of the. f.J r 1 t American sittelllte, Explorer J, on Jan. 31 , 1958, finds more thm 2,IXM> manmade objects in orbit around the earth. An even great.er assortment or artlficial satellites and space junk lhll formerl1 circl~ ed the earth-more than 2·700 items -ha!:· fallen rut c't orbit and, for the most part, bas disintegrated upon plunging back tnto the al· ITl0$phere. The Natiooal Aeronautics and S p a c e Administration reports that in addition to scme 2,048 earth~rbiting ob- jecta, M ·space probes or associated pieces of debris are out af reach of the earth, moving 'in wide-ranging orbits around the sun. Of these far-away travelers, 18 probes ·and 27 pieces of debrill are of U.S. origin, and 14 probes annd five related fragments are product.s of the Soviet Union. The oldest of them, the Soviety Lunik 1 and U.S. Pioneer 4, have been oot there sioce January and M-arch, 1959, ·respectively. Although most of the earth 1atellites that have dropped out of orbit burned up on J'e'oeltering the atmosphere, a few survived l'H!Dtry and plunged into oceans or land area!!. Included in the latter are six" frigmenls identified as the charred remains of a SDViet satellite, Cosmos 318, launched Dec. ·23, 1969. One 240-pound piece of the spacecraft fell near Beaver, Okla., last Aug. 28, and another weighing 150 oounds was found near PraU, Kan. The State Departme nt notified the Soviet Embassy that the location and lime or the impacts fit the orbital path of Cosmos 316. and that the recovered material could be reclaimed . The Russians have not yet acknowledged the n o t i c e . Presumably they are not eager to acknowledge that any of their spacecraft could have been a hazard to persons or property In the United States. Tf the back from snace. material gOt>s unclaimed, it may eventually be distributed to interested scientists or organizations. The oldest manmade spacecraft still In orbit Is the Navy Vanguard 1 satellite and two associated spent rockets ()r fragments, launched March 17. 1958. Next in duration ()f orbital flight are Vanguard 2 and its rocket, Vanguard 3, and Ex· plortr 7 and piect of debris, all launched in I 9 S 9 • i n February, September a n d October, respectively. California Cows Most Productive SACRAMENTO (UPI) There's no cow In the nation like the California cow in pro- ducing rr.llk. The Stale Agricultur e Department boasb that the solden state's average cow produced 11,521 pounds of milk Jut year lo lead the nation. 11t11 'Was 2,363 pounds abpie the national average. In fact, lhe agency said. California hu been the na· tlOIW leadtr Jht last 40 years in milk production. And California milk ls a bara:aln, the department said. In San Franclaco, a hair ~a lion ii told (or 54 cents In rtta.11 ttorn whlle tbe Los Angeles prlct I• 6Z ctnll. Of· flclalt Aid these ...... among !he low .. in the naUon. ., .... . -. ~ . . • Thursday. FebruatJ 4, 1971 Blondes • Ill Bikinis LONDON (AP) -Smiling blOndes in bikinis are on deck, unhappy Pakistanis are hidden below. Their boat slijls p8!lt coast guiirds and lands at a lonely cove. The ship is a typical cross. channel ''ferry service" run by smugglers. They deal in what 'one prosecutor calls "the most despicable trade in the world -of human bodies." The smugglers often find bizarre ways of outwitting im· migration authorities. T h e re\\·ard is fa t profits. Police say some outfits make nearly $2 million a year. For their bu m a n con. &hip, .. boasU: a German who traband, seeking a better life, uy1 he runs a profitable ring. the trip Is often hirrowing. ..You have ·• few blonde!! the cost is: exorbitant aDd the sprawled on, deck in any risk ()f being caugpt is ter· ca.Se." rUying. He charges 1240 to l7lO per Many lllegal immigrants lmmigrMt. Sikhs, w h o a e later face blackmaU. The ·religion requires turbans and smuggler a threaten to tip off . beards, pay the most because authorities unless the aliens they arouse suspicioni pay protection money. The smashing of one ring A favorite trick is to make shocked the British public with outlawed boat trips look like details .of 40 Indians found simple pleasure crui!es. cowering in a basement after "One co8st guard with a arriving in a cattle truck. pair of ~lnoculars, a telephone ' "Slave· traffic,'' a police of· and an old radio set can't ficial called it. do much about an immigrant The amugglera drew jail • ... ., Dlrt7 1.1 .. 1-.Jr._ • n..., ..... ~, ... _. • btrs .. "1 II I•• • WHITE 'lAUNDRY SOAP •Alltti.d1111'1il'lf . the W0rld'1 lartnt ~=-..... it • Yov111ik1 h for i...-...... • tolp ·--,,.,di ....... ~,. Mask Sm,~gglers' Efforts ' • .. terms up to seven years, Details on how the scheme worked came out lo the trial. Aided by fellow Punjab •Wagers \\ilcJ aold land and jewels to Taise the ·money, the Indians paid $72(1 each as down payments. Later they were supposed to pay $1,680. The Indians flew by aifline from New Delhi to Hamburg, Germany. Taxi drivers, in on the racket, found them secret lodgings. After weeks of waiting, they were herded into the hold of a German fiahing ship, then transferred at sea to a fishing ·~~4~ llG.~ 391~ boat which brought them to an English coastal site. A cattle truck took them to Bradford where they were locked in a basement. After police arrested the smugglers • the Indians were deported. In a similar case, a Belglan court was told tbal a $2.-year- old smuggler known as Harry the Greek made a million dollars by smuggling 2.000 Pakistanis by boat into Bri• tain. Some ingenious schemes use private airplanes. At a recent display flight of planes dating back to the • Mitht • wty to pt.n youf '91'inkltr ry1-.n. but ttti1 low priot ii for ..-ty birch •A "ll'IVtt" for rystems -pru9nb feedbKk into hou• pipi"' • 1/4" dri .. -e9KW'lfd IOCk1t1 • Comptnm wi1h flexible ··-• Qloici1 of MttJic OI' ,....., ... ow~ C:ODUH.G FURNACE FILTERS • Rmt<ftlirtaltt Ital for.,..,.. of ~ce •$Ip joint toldw6en fit • O!M"'"*' intbllll'tion • W• awry ... 1tw... II'}' ,rip.on ll>!dlrtfn flttinp It lffnU. Ml'i• • Do-it..,.ounlff -M lhow you._ l~O Batlle of BrUain, one light plane used the air show as, a cover to sneak six im· migrants · in from the Con- tinent. A two-way smuggling ring flew $500,000 worth of COWl· lerfeit U.S. money from Bri· tain to the Continent, and brought back Pakistanis. An Englishman arrested ln France two weeks ·ago was accused of Qying Pakistanis at night from an airport near Versailles to remote fields in Britain. He allegedly charged up to $2,400 per person. To outwit officials at Loo- don's Heathrow AlrJ>Ol1t J111.• scheme was for Indian ':alt passengers posing as .. al visitors to slip into a mio'I room. ,. A smuggler waiting ltjkie gave each man a janllir's jacket, mop a n d pall. f.bet emerged disguised as aiitf0r1 janitors, exem'pt from ... I immigration checks. ~ti smuggler made $16,800 ~ii months. He got a three~ sentence. ::J., In another s c he ii' et Pakislanis armed with _, passports fooled i~ officials for three years. ·!I-. ONE OF CALIFORNIA'S OLDEST AND LARGEST HARDWARE WHOLESALERS CLOSES FOREYIR ANGELS BUYERS PURCHASED ALL REMAl.NING'. STOCK AT A FRACTION OF ORIGINAL PRICES. THE SAYINGS ARE BEING PASSED ON TO OUR QJSTOMEAS. I LOSS IS YOUR GAIN •Y'f'OO"d . IVll SIZE 4'xl'· SHllTS . REG. 18.U . JAffTY UG DESIGN ANAHllM SAii IEINAIDlllO OWll£Y ·llOIWALI n IOIITT POIOllA GAIDlll GIOY! ' 1 ' 12260 . EAST GARVEY J ll.OCIS IAST Of 5 POlllTS 655 NORTH MILLS JUST EAST Of lllDIAll Hill llYD . 384 ORANGE SHOW ROAD llTWllll SO .. "I" ST. A"D AllOWHIAD J I FIRESTONE AT STUDEBAKER JUST EAST Of 605 FWY. ' 12662 . CHAPMAN 100 YDS. UST OF HAllOI ' ' -; Laver By GLENN WIUTE Of !tit DlllY Plltl Sleft lNGLEWOOD -The're were momenta when the king looked only as regal aa a prlnce -like lhe live times he double-faulted and like a couple of return attempts that went like erranl foul balls. There were occasions, too, when the king looked like he was in danger of being temporarily dethroned. as he faced the challenge of a raven·haired Englishman named Roger Taylor. It all happened Wednesday night at the Forum when. Corona del Mar's ruling JnO!W'Ch or world tennis Rod Laver dueled Taylor in the TeMis Champions Cla.saic aeries' eighth match. . Ram Star Recovering; l{ings Lose SANI' A MONICA -Los Angeles Rams' quarttrback Roman Gabriel is reaivering tod~y,from an operation he didn't expect -on ti.is throwing arm . Gabriel and tight end Billy Truax had IW'gery Wednesday to remove torn knee cartil~ge. Dr. Danny Levinthal also in- vestigated the big quarterback's com· plainJ of pain in his right elbow. . Levin~al removed some I o o s e cartilage from the elbow . saying it pro- bibly ha11 caused Gabriel arm trouble (or two seasons In the National Football League. All the operations were successful , Levintlial said. • B°'5TON Johnny Bucyk collected hia 30Ui and · 31111 goals or the season whil'e ~by Orr · alio llCOred twice on 1 paif of spectacular efforts Wednesday nliht as the Boston Bruins romped to 1 7-3 National Hockey League victory over the Las Angeles Kings. The triumph extended Boston'1 home ice winnina streak to ta games, four shy of the NFL reeord set by another' Bro.ins team In J929-3{). It also widened the defending Stanley Cup champions' Ea'st Division lead to eigh"'l poinU over the New York Rangers, wbo 1 o st to Cblcago 4-2. • FORT WORTH, Tex. -New Texas Christian football coach Jim Pittman, admtttlng •·rve never faced anything quite " like this,'' announced Wednesday that four black players . all st.arte~s. had quit because of the lack of ·social activity" at the Southwest Conference school . Pittman said he was told by Larry Dibbles, Raymond Rhodes, H o d g e s Mitchell and Ervin Garnett -;---all sophomores _ that they are going to tlorkla· State where "there are ~egular social activities such as fraternity ac- tivities and parties." • CHRISTCHURCH. New Zealand - Kadl.y · Harter or Seal B~ach, defeat~d Lany ·Kaligas of Indonesia 6-~. ~I in the third round of the women s singles of the New Zealand Tennis Cham· pionships today. . In another third-round match, Jennifer Reese of the United States ousted Jean Fraser of New Zealand 6-4, 6-0. • West Virginia beat Pitl. its arch rival, 95-91, .Wednesday night with the game being Cinched by a head of lettuce. Pitt was ahead 92-91 with 14 secoods left when a foul was called against the Pan: thers because an overzealous Pitt fan threw a head of lettuce on the court. Wil Robinson converted on a one-and-one situatiOl to put the Mountaineers ahead. ' Hall of Fame Beckons Satch NEW YORK (API -The doors of the Hall of Fame. baseball's prestige pilace finally have been opened to &tchel Paige, Josh Ginson and other greit black players of the past who were excluded from the major leagues until 1947. . · h ,, ••t like the idea ; 1 like 1t very muc;. , the ageless Paige sa id ~ednesday n1~ht when told or the formation of a ~al 10-man committee to select oul!land1~g It.ah of the old Negro leagues for 10- dusion ln the Cooperstcwn , N.Y., shrine. Paige longtime pitching ace of the kirwis 'city Monarchs who finally .made tt to the majors in his 40s, ind G1baon. the late slugging catcher or the Homestead Grays and P I t l s b u r g h Crawfords, are the top candidates for the initial Ha 11 of fame spot, to be announced next week. "There were several boys in the Negro llagues back Jn those ,,dBys. who wei:-e Hall of Fame caliber , Pa1.ge said 1n Kansas City. "Besides Josh G1b9on, there wu Frink Duncan, my catcher o.n the. Monirch.,, and another catcher, W~lllam ferltlns or Birmingham and outfielder Oscllr Cht1rleston, whO wert great, to mention just a few:' • Thursdiy, Ftbrury 4, 1971 DAILY PILOT 2Ji Toils 73 Minutes, Earns .$10,000 However, when , time c:ame to pu11 Otlt the check to the victor I Liver WU fir1t 'in UM -II he hu been in the other 11ven fl0 ,000 clashtt Jn the rich sertes. He wu tough when he had to ,We, working .the comers, and comi..,. blek with a strong second aervlce when the first serve faltered. Admittedly he was inconsistent in posting tht 6-31 7-5, f-2 triumph ~fore 8,367 fans. But when backed to the ,...u he .came through like the champion h< Is and destroyed his genial aoulbpaw ' coun-urpart. . It happened In the -..! set. . Taylor had \lrict broken Laver '• dlsuiet', fallln1 behind quickly four lefVice and was enjoying a Jud of polnll to one wtth Taylor needing only five 1ames to hfo. One more 1ame three more points to win the tudden victory and the aet was bis, which would de th d ~ --• ,._ 1 tie the. match. a ue .. ,,,,. 1.1111;: ae . But that victory ntVer e1me. Howev ·~ Taylor. was again to be shut Rocket Rod was down 0.15 when the off 11 Liver wloi.ded Jn devutlting tide began to turn le1ding to the eventual . >-ttyle, tooftnr tiJ. s~aight poir\ts to nail bre11dng of the dam. ' the. 1et. Laver fought back and won the game. Then ht 'WOil the first four games Then he bro.ke Taylor's service to ,trim '(three of them in · seven minutes) of the deficit to a single g1me. the final aet before easing up slighUy All he had to do wu hold his upcomiri& and tettll:nc for a t-t win. service and the set would be lied. In all he requittd 7S minuta of playing And he did that to bring in the Ue-lime to up· his 1971 wimtitlgs to '80,000 breaker n.ile. , .. not tlld, even in thit age of 1n0alioil. Again be strayed near lhe edge of He "•s reuoQl.bly al.Usfied with his performance -"you're always happy when you win," he 1aid .In the dressing room. The 32-year~ld master of the. court.a told the pre.as he'1 worked on lobbing more and added that he feels he's tuned ht to playing left.handers at last. "By lobbing a bit more I can prevent my man from creeping up on the net. This type of surface keeps the ball from coming off the court so quickly and keep.! him back," Laver s1ld. Taylor, who shocked Laver IBsl s.um- mer at Wimbledon, 1aid the Rocket was sharp. "1 made the mistakes in the second set •.. missed easy voile ya, 11 he pointed out. "1 w1s strugglln1 all the t'-ne, trying to make him play the ba~I , But he ~as running well, He'd 1c1 r after !fe ball ev n when It ~· me I'd' put it away. "And it sn't matter how well ~OU play, he hils sOme you simply won't get." So It was. Now Laver headJ for New York and another fl0,000 match, this one against Denni!! Ralston Saturday at Madison Square Garden. Ralston disposed of Tony Roche In the second hall of Wednesday's 1how at the Forum, 6-2, 7-5, 7-5. USC Five Matches Needle UP'IT• ....... ROD LA.VER w111s EIG~TH STRAIGHT 510;000 TENNIS MATCH. USC·Bruln Tit,anfc Coaches' Pl.aydown Try Falls on Deaf A udwnce Coaches John Woode'?-of UCLA and Bob Boyd of USC are down-pl1ying their basketball teall\S ' confrontation Saturday night BS just one of 14 con· ference games. Sure. That's 'like saying the Olympic Games is just a track meet held every four years or th1t the Ra&e Bowl is just one game in a season or that a suite ------WHITE WASH -------- OLIN" Vll"ITI ln tbe Waldorf A~i• is jwt another pad. . C.Ome, gentlemen, let'• get down to brass tacks. Saturday's game is for the Pacific 8 championship . . . the loser cannot afford another defeat and will have to come back to beat the winner later in the season at UCLA. Saturday's game is also vilal to the national championship -the one deelded by voting coaches ;i:nd writers. And . Saturday's game may ha ve even more far reaching impact -like playing a key part in the recruiting of talent by USC and the Bruins. It's the Southland college game of the century and the 15,500 fans who've held tickets for the past several weeks are sure to back that statement. In lieu or personal gifts a apecial Jerry West program is being prepared for the occasion for sale that night and by mail. Profits will go to a scholarship fund in his name at the University of West Virginia. * * * Tony Bonwell, Tom Allanson and Charlie Buckland have cho1en the Unlver1lty of Wa1blngton to further their football cartt:r1 and educatiop.1. AJI three played at Golden Weit College, Bonwell makblg first team all- state JC ud Buckland hOldlng GWC career records for rushing and 1C1>rlng. AUanlon, hampered much of the sea.on by an injury, is considered a 1real linebacker prospect. Bonwell Is 1 Huntln1ton Beach High «r•d while Buckland prepped a t We1tmiDlter altd AllanSOI played hl&h achNI ba11 at Marina. * * * A Louisiana Tech basketball fan recently hitch-hiked to Santa Barbara to watch his favorite team perlorm. When he arrived in California he had 18 cents in his pocket. That's loyalty of the first magnitude. * * * University of San Diego b11ketball player OM:ar Foster made 1lx free throw1 on orte pl1y, getting four nn two double flagrant fouls and a pair of technical (01111. Ag~inst Bruin Big Three Trojans' Riley Takes ·On Rowe, W~cks, Patterson LOS ANGELES !AP) -At the University of Southern California Ron Riley Is known as the needle and he'll have to be at his sharpest Saturday night. Riley and the undefeated Trojans bal· tied the UCLA Bruins at the Los Angeles Sports Arena in the biggel!ll col1egi1te biuketball game of the season to date. Four straight times the national cham· pions, the Uclans boast a front line of Sirlney Wicks, Curtis Rowe and Steve Patterson from their defending tiUe team. Southern California's main 11tiength has been in the back court The 1lim Riley, &-foot-I ind 195 pounds, is the man up front batUing for the rebounds. Forwards Chris Schrobilgen Bnd Joe Mackey hive between them s.1 rebounds fewer than Riley who has 233 to his credit In the lf-0 seuon. UCLA'• front line has ~ tough. 'I1le Bruins have loat •only to Notre Dame in lS aamts: to datt. It will be up to Riley to take on the bil trio in the 1ame which will send either U~f ... ~ U.CLA to pie fore in the Pacific-I campaign. Coach Bob ,Boyd of the Trojans will have RUef parding Patterson, who took the pos.IUOn vacated by three-time All· American Lew Alclndor . Coach John Wooden of UCLA admill he's worried. Most of !iis apprehension centers on the back court where Henry· Bibby hasn 't played in the same manner he did as a sophomore a year ago. Kenny Booker and Terry Schofield have divided chorel at the other guard position and neither ha1 been rated in the class as the Troj1ns' back court ctew. Boyd ha1 P1ul Westphal, Mo Layton Bnd Dana Pagett who probably give him the btst trio iri collegiate basketball. The Trojans ire slightly favored. Loe Angeles fanJ well remember l h a t the Uclans in the past years have come through in the big ones and that Wooden 's record for the past 4'ili years ltands at 131-5. Both clubs stand 4-0 in Pacific~ con- ference play and it's the conference winner who goes into the National Collegiate Athletic Association's title tournament. In The Associated Press poll , the Tro- jan!! rank No. 1 behind Marqu ette. UCLA is In the No. 3 spot. "l have been a little disappointed In regard to our apparent desire in recent nonconference games, but I can't im· 1gine a UCLA or USC learn tacking in desire when opposing each other," Wooden said. A sellout crowd of 15,500 will be on hand in the Los Angeles SportJI Aren1 for the game. With the tremendous in- terest In the game, and with the sellout, It will be telecast In both the Los Angeles and Sin Fr1nci!CO areas. Thret radio stations will carry the game. "Our ranking is insignificant," com- mented Boyd whose Trojans have been No. 2 on the West Coa!t the pa·st ccuple of years when they took second billing to the Uclans. "We have two fine teams." continued Boyd, who ateadfastly denies 1ny psychological advBntage for eilber club. "That type of thing Is out the window when the Bruins play the Trojans. n !JP'I T•lt!IN,. LOUISVILLE 'S HENRY BACON REBOUNDS IN 98-85 WIN OVED TULSA. Lombardi, Six Players Named to Hall of Fame CANTON, Ohio (AP) -Coach Vince Lombardi and six playe rs -Jim Brown, Y. A. Tittle, Norm Van Broc klin, Andy . Robustelli , Frank "Bruiser" Kinard and Bill Hewitt -were named today to the Pro Football Hall of FBfe. The seven inductees, whose selection swells the Hall of Fame ranks to 70, will be honored at en s h rin em en I ceremonies in Canton on July 31. Lombardi. who died of cancer last Sept. 3, gained lasting accla im for leading the Green Bay Packers out of the National Football League depths and . into 1 dominance during the last decade. His Green Bay clubs won five NFL titles and the first two Super Bowl games, The onetime member of Fordham's Seven Blocks of Granite moved on to Washlrigton as coach, general mBnager and part owner In 1969. He guided the Redsklns to their first winning 11eason In 14 years before he was stricken with cancer. Brown, elected to the Hall In hl1 first year of eligibility, led NFL baU-cal'o riers in eight of his nine seasons with the Cleveland Browns, establishing an all·lime career record of 12,312 rushing yards. He was named 111-league fullback seven times. Tittle, who played 17 pro .seasons and ranks second ooly to Johnny Unitas on the all-time passing list, was the NFL's most valuable player in 1961 and tied for the honor in 196.1 wh ile quarterback· ing the New York Giants. Van Bracklin, masterrul quarterback for Los Angeles and Philadelphia during his 12-year NFL carter, paced the Eagles to the 1958 championship. He coached the Minnesota Vikings for six years and has been the Atlanta Falcons' skip- per since 1968. For further support of that claim , note that a number of schools have changed their games' st1rtlng times Saturday night so they won 't be com- peting for flttendance with the 1ive teleelst of the UCLA-Trojan UH. . Wills Next LA Manager? Robustelli , from little Arnold College, was a hard-rock defensive end for 14 NFL seasons wllh the Rams and Giants. The seven-time all-league s e I e ct I o n shares the all-time career mark of i\. opponents' fumble recoveries. · Kinard earned all·NFL hooors In hi& 1938 rookie year with the old Brooklyn Dodgers and. in six subsequent NFL seasons and two more in the All -America Conference, established him1t:lf 111 one of the most durable and talen~ of all pro tackles. * * * Pk!kieg •P from Wtdntlday'1 Whtte Wa1b: It appean Ute Coll.eam may aet an all-we1tber track thl1 year and If It doesn't, the 1late hllh achoo! track champienshlp1 ml1ht be 1taged at VCLA. The coll~eam •ppareatly •11 all aet for the aew 1yathede 1m11Ced oval until a 1hadew of doubt Wll cai1l over It bo1Un( thl• year'• U.S.-Ru11lan meet. Sf:eml the claa1lc wtttl the Sovtel1 may be beld •l St.anfoord. * * * J erry West will be hnriored March 19 by a special night prior to the Lllikers' game with Phoenlt 1t the Forum. I MEXICO C1TY (AP ) -Maury Willi. who made his managerial debut this winter in Mexico, nys he want.I to manage the Loi Angeles "Dodgen. If aucceasful. Wills could become the major lea1ue1' first Negro manager. •Wills , a 12-year major league veter1n who "'batted .26& la!l year for the 06dgtra, 1aw his club the. Hermosillo Orange Growers, clinch the Mexico Triple A Pacific Coast Club championship Tueld1y night In a playoff. In a telephone Interview Tutsd1y WUls 1ald: "Next, I w111t to manage the Dodgers. But I'm afrllid l may have to wait " few years until Walt Alaton retires. Jn the meantime I will continue to play in the regu11r .eason and manage minor le1gue teams in the winter.'' Willi, who ff:l the major league record for a season witJI 104 stolen bam in 1962 with the Dodgen, added: '"The Dodgers ant me down to 1et some e1perltntt 11 a manager. It has been a tremendous experience and very exciting. Even more exciting than 1teal- lng a base." Wiiis, a 1hort1top. spent eight year• with the Dod&ers before being tradd to Pltllburgh ln 1117. He went to Mon-• trtal in 1969 ror a brief spell bt:fore Los Angeles re·acquired him. The .214 lifetime hitter, who led tht N11tk>nll Le11sue for air consecutive aea10ns ln stolen baR1, oow take1 h.ls ( club to San Juan for the Caribbean baseball champk>nshlps. Wills feels his Hermosillo club will be at 1 disadvantage In the. Caribbean series beeause "Puerto Rico Venewela and the Dominican Republic have more major leaguers than we do." And he noted, .. min)' native· players who are acUYe In the major1 ." Hermoaillo'1 players with major league experience are Zailo Versalles, the former Minnesota and W 1 ah Ing lo n shortstop, and Gary Ross. the rlgh~ hander of the San Diego Padres. He said he would 11rld pitchers Vicente Romo of the Boston Red S01 and Jos.c Pena of the Dodgers to bolster his rotter, Hewitt joined the Chicago Bears in 1"2, ind was a standout au -around end for the. next decade. He played without a helmet until 1939, when the league ordered him to don one. He died m IM7 from lnjurl<!s auffared io • automobile accident. The new Hall 1'f f<~ame. member1, largest group named in thrte years, were picked by the ahrlne's Board of Selectors - one reprtscntaUve from each pro football city plus the president of the Pro Footblll Writers Association. The 1tlcctlon1 were innoonced by Han of Fame direttor Dick Gallagher. l I --. ---·· .... --. . . .. .. • •,-.S',•es, ••• ~·--·--. .... . . . . • • .. . . ' ... . . . %C DAILY PILOT Irvine League Closie I r " • , :CdM Back in.:Gear After 45 -44 ·Win •• . By PlµL ROSS 01 Ille 0.llY PIMI 11.tf 1bat one observer who surmised several weeb ago that a fan need only show: up. for the last two minutes of almost any lrvlne tieague basketball con-- test to witness a worthwhile climax .m\llt've known what he was talking about. Another good example or the aboYe theoriting was on di.splay al Corona .del Mar Higb Tuesday night, where Q1e host Sea Kings turned in their sixth ·one-point league game by recording a : 4.$--44 verdict over the Edison Chargers. And,' It was the fifth obe-point Irvine outing for coach Dave Mohs' Chargers, ·who sank back into the solitary con- finemint of the loop cellar with a U mark. The Co~a 'cre.w of coach Tandy Gillis, meanwhi\e, Improves to 4-5 and ls now entangled in a massive fi\.re.way tie for third place !!long with Santa Ana Valley, Estancia, Magnolia and Co6ta Mesa. Fr1day'1 action finda Corona del Mar venturing to Uie confines of second place Fountali\ Y jlley ·and Edlaon hosting Santa Ana v allef. J Wednesdaf the Sea Kings were in . the lead .all the way. In fad, they "led from the oui,.t with Edison threaten- fug throughout. . But Corml bad to rely on the clutch ' ' , shooting .of h1ark Grig~y , (2~ pointa) and some alert defensive wor.k to car:ve out its narrow triUmph. The Sea Kings led, 45-37, with 3:55 to go and they held the fort .as the Chargers 'potted the contest's last seven points be.(ore time ran out on them. Although injury·riddled Fountain Valley is now in sole possession of the runnerup spot behind Los Alamitos. Gillis feels Santa Ana Valley may still have the Inside track for the loop's RCOnd ClF playoff bertt\. He says, "Fountain Valley is hurting on the boards Without Uill Krlatins.t (for,ward out Jor the season with ·mononuclewis) and Santa Ana. Valley tias been playing well lately. "As· for us, we Know we'll at least be in every same .' so you never can ·tell."' . G!'lgsby topped all scorers in the 'Edison tiff while ·Bill Thomson led .the Chargers with 18' markers. 1111.; 1.41 tettfl ,, CenM U Mir CUI fttl""' 10 1 I 71 Wright Htr'""" f'bl'>•r '""""" 'Mil~ ·~ -Tott II 1 o 1 2 .Gr1111w 2216S.VI.,., ll •.f6S.U- 6 6 2 " Jol\H I 1 • I KHletff t 2 ,, 2 Comann t ,, l 1 'C.l'IWrOl'I ll 11 11 .. '°''" Sitri .., OU111n ' • J • ' ' l ' ' . . I I I J 1 • J 2 I t 2 D It 1 It "I Eflton • l 14 I ll -44 COrol'MI IMI ~r 11 12 U 10 -d ,Whipple to UOP?' 7 Teams · Set ·1 or First ' . OCC Cage Tournament Anotbtr liukelball tournamenl has been added to pit ever lncrea.sing list of Junior Golleie pre oonferenct cage • ciasaicS for next sea$0n with this one hosted by Orange Coast. It actually promises to be a pretty good one with some outstanding teams .already entered. ' Saddleback, Allan Hancock. Santa Ana, ,.LACC, El Camino and Riverside have .. accepted bids to the first annual affair : with jUJt one more club to be selected. · 1be tourney will be held Dec. S..11 • with a pair of first round games on the opening two nights. , ; Golden West, by the ·way, was not invited. • Why did OCC decide lo hold a 1outnament? ,. "We just got sick or playing away • CRAIG SHEF'F :'from home, so the only way to get "games at home is to have a tournament," says Pirate coach Herb Uvsey. The Pirates will drop the Antelope ··Valley tourney next season. but will .return lo the Chaffey and Santa Monica classics. OCC opens the 1971·72 slate in Arizona, meeting Phoenix and .another Arizona JC -either M'esa or Glendale. The 'Pirates' third tilt is wllh the tJCL/% · frosh at Paulfiy Pavilion Dec. 3. * * *. . Toby Wblpple, Saddleback College's JC All·Amerlcan, leails, toward UnlVer1ity of tbe P1clflc a1 hit cbolce of a four-year acbool, an lnforined source says. · ~t, wbo 5tt numerous state JC · ralJDi records W. put sea1on iD lt•d· ~i., Ute G1t1cbo1 to the Mlsslo• Confer· • ence football dlampio1shlp, spent ·last • Weei:enit vt•ld.ac UC Santa 811bara. * * * There still ls an outside chance Golden West may play its final game of the ·current basketball year in it! new gym- \•.nas!Wn. The only delay now is irutalling ·bleachers which have just arrived. That ·is suPpo~ to take three weeks. Tht access ,roads to the new facility llave been completed. Golden West winds it up Tuesday, Feb. 13, hosting Los Angeles City Colle~e. ;_· Ora.qe~1t 11 tided fo"'ftt1 1 wor1t basketball seatoa lD the ctllege't history. ·The Plraltl llave dropped II of %1 games Oil.I campilp wltb six still ·10 · plsy. Tbe word lotlnl effort by an : Saddleb ack Falls : To Owls, 77-69 · AzusA -Tom IM, a sophomore center, pumped In 20 potnta lo lead the Citrus OWIJ lo a 77-89 win over ~t )Vedn<odaY night In Minion Conference basUtball actlOn. • 1be loss ran Saddleback'1 circuit :record lo U . s..1-.U (ttl (tfM 11tl ,.,,,,.. """" Clll'll'-i I I IJ Hk-l'ltll J 1 ) 12 Mtrlf'Oll I l 'Jll ltnllll , a 2 <I I HllllltrllOfllllll.M 7'''° OCC team 'was reCordtd la tbe UIMI campalp'(f.211. * * * Foo.r Otange Coas.t College. sophomqre football pl~yers are expected to play 1or·. the University of California next se<!-SOJ:l· 'Ibey include defe;nalve linemen Harry Carmack, f<uit Clemens and Dave Gleasoo and defp back Bol> C\Jlry. Bue gUard Hal"ley ,Surprenfnt· probably will move on to cal Poly (Pomona) alld anQther guard -Rich Durante - ·will likely enroll at Cal State (Fullerton). Oef'ensive back Paul Renfro bu ·selected Sonoma State while tackle Karl Pederun is expected to choose San Diego state. And defensive lineman Sohn)' Durltin lt!:a'rui tOward the University -or New Mes.ico. ' * * * DoD't· look for Saddleback College to tiave~ .a .do.wn f~tball year . Ulla tall, especlaHy 1lace a pair of blgb]y.to11ted big'b school senior• appear beaded fer tb~ Gaucho· ca01):1:111. Marc Padbuey and Bobby Haapert have been heavily recruited by Gaucho coach George Hartman. Haupert, a San J11an Capistrano retide.nt, quarterbacked for l'ttater Dti la•t season whllt 'Padbui'y was the Crestview League lineman of the-yea.1: while performln1 for Tustln in '70. * * * El Camino is currently the No. 1 ranked wrestling team in the stale wi~h Fresno, Chabot. Cerritos and Bakersfield rounding out the top five . Cypress ls rated eighth and Fullerton Is No. 10, according to the · JC Athletic Bureau. Sophomore Chris Hurchanic of Canada Coll'ege (Redwood City) has the, slate's best individual wreslling re CQrd this season (31.Q). He 's a 167-pounder. Newport Stall Clicks: Tars Rall y, 5247 The Newport Jlarbor Tars came from behind on .the first baskel of the lourth period Wednesday night 8.nd then held on to dump the host Anaheim Colonists, 52·4~. in a Sunset ~ague basketball game. Anntieim had prevailed all the way to the end of the third quarter when Newport caught the Colonists al 00.50. Tflal's whcp the Sailors' reserve guard, Doug Schneider. struck with lightning quickness ... Schneider shot down court at the outset of the final Stania and went in for a ge>-ahead la}'·in on a pass frotn forward John KaJ.mer, who had stolen the ball from ai:i Anaheim player in the backcourl . Coach Dale Hagey then ordered h.i1 charges Into a stall 1or the last 6:30 and the Tars complied by running both standing delay and ro~tion bill control ofrenses lo 'perfecllon. Kazmer and Taru YQ\,l.ng shared Newport high point honors with 13 talliea aplec?<.- ..... ...,. IU•lll• U1) ••1t.ri. Au11t1"' un tttl,tt. I I 4 t . ' . ' 111 I U 6 6 4 II 1 • 5 • I I • 1 ti H l' u 0 • J 0 l lllft!llll ~ I • U Ori""" • ! • u .. r'llf9tWrl ) 4 4 I Slloll1~ l 0 ) I Klflitllt o 7 l t G•rrt1I EPtr<h 4 I " 1\ Wtll\H -' I 2 lf 0.t'll..., I I I II llfllltll • I J f • Llli.y ffJIWIM J127 """"' 'w~ K•r-r iwlt• 'JOl)f' CllOt MclCJt1n"' k1t11t!W "'" Tot.,1 I 1 I 4 Tot1l1 ' ' l • a o I ' Htl"* 11 I 1 I 0..IMI I t I J l11rM I 2 J ~ TOllll Jf IJ lt tt Ttttll " It '' n H1lll ..... tcOIWI (ITM Jl, s.dill~-:Iii, • ti1lt1 JI ~ 111 ~.,ttrt M.,._,, *4trll0> U t 1S 1~ M.,._Jm ti 11 11 1-11 DAILY rllOT ,. ..... n lae r11N Vikes ID, But Still By ROGER CARLSON Of "' DallY PIJOI lttft Tbe depth that has been one 01 the key aSsets to Marlna High's basketball success in l .. ~nt yean ill becoihinl alarmingly ~: following a rash of mlnor injuries and ·assorted ailments. 1 out of action Wednesday night was Jef[ Butt (fever and sore throat) and guard Andy Thurm had just returned from a two-week bout with the nu. Bill McGuire was operating at less than full speed because of an injured ankle and before coacb Jim Stephens could finish relating the recent e:s:pkllts of Brian Sanders, his 6-4 senior fOrward, pulled a muscle in pregame wannupa. Despite the problems, h o w e v e r , Stephens' Vlk.ings managed a iUO win over host Western for their seventh Sunset Le.ague victory against a pair of setbacks. .... The Viking quintet, with Ron RewoldL filling the gap lefl by Sanders, took advantage of a half dozen mLscues by the Pioneers in the early stages of the second quarter and went on to grab an ll·point lead at the half. But wbat appeared to be a root ln the making suddenly transfonned into a lackluster second half perfonnance by the Vikings, who appeared lo leave their incentive and momentum in the locker room 8t the hall. Stephens was fuming afterwards and if one walked into the Pioneer gym at that moment it would certainJy have appeared Marina had lost. "We're trying to get ready for the big ones coming up (Newport' Harbor and Huntington Beach), but there just doesn't seem to be anything l can do to get this team going. "There was only one player on the court who seemed to care whether we won or not," steamed the Viking coach. His team, indeed, failed to display the early season desire that it showed in racking up a 9-4 preleague mark. Western, with three juniors and a sophomore in the starting lineup, almost made it all the way back, pulling to within seven (56-49) with 4:45 lo go. RIVA.LRY RESUME.S-7'11e Sunset League-leading Huntington Beach will vlsit Westminster's defend· ing champion Lions in a Friday night (8) contest. Huntington, led by Steve Brooks (54) and Garth Wise (30) thumped Loara, 83-47, while Westmin· ster got by Santa Ana, 59-50, in Wednesday clash· es. Lions pictured Oeft) are Eric Southwick, Gor- don Blakeley (14) and Terry Meisenheimer (30). But Bruce Miller ended the mild threat with a pair of gratiJ shots and a 2o. footer. Westem's full court press caused more alann in the Viking camp before time finally did in the Western cause. Sophomore Mike Dunn led all scon:rs with 23. When Lights Go Out The y Really Go Out . By HOWARD L. HANDY ot lht D1llY PJi.t S11tf Costa Mesa High's basketball team handed host Estancia a resounding 85-69 defeat Wednesday night just before the lights went out -all over the gym. When they were turned on again, Alan Moore, the Mesa Mustangs' 6-.3 center, Jay prostrate on the playing floor - out like the lights and coach Emil Neeme waA completely enraged. What transpired during the lights-out movement was uncertain in checking with various fans around Atoore who slowly revived and groggily found his way to the dressing room with the aid of teammates. One story had a couple of fans for the Eagles coming out of the stands al a pre-conceived .signal for the lights to be turned out and grabbing Moore, th en hitting him. Whatever the a~tercation, few if any, saw what happened during the period when darkness prevailed. Further checking revealed that a light switch on the wall is all that controls the entire gymnasium lighting system and anyone can walk by , even during game action, and tum them out. Neeme, a man of many moods, quickly calmed down and .said: "I don't know wbat happened myself. lt's really too bad When you llave such a fine game as this one to have it marred by such a thing." The racehorse ~1ustangs showed their thoroughbred breeding in the first quarter by running away from the Eagles, 3Q.20, and . held the advantage for the entire night with a fantastic shooting performance, especially ln the fir st half. Costa Mesa hit 22 of 39 attempts from the floor at intermission for a 56.4 perrenl while Estancia's shorter Bagles hit 15 of 33 for 45.S. \Vhile the percentages cooled off somewh11t in the second half, it was 1 run-and-gun affair from beginning to. end. Doug MacLean had the hot hand Jn the first quarter with 12 points and closed witll 21. Gary Orgill was high man for the Eagles with '23. The A1ustang victory kept hopes alive for a possible playoff berth but the third place entanglement In the Irvine circuit is one that may never be unravell· ed. Five teams have identical 4-5 records behind Los Alamitos (8-1) Bnd Fountaµi V11Uey (54)._ C:tlll ""-fftl fl",, 1" J • 0 14 I 1 > 7 ' 1 ) 1l 10 I .i ti • 0 l lf , 0 1 .2 0 2 • t S O a 11 •• l 0 O O I 0 "91111 .,._,_ "' Or•IH ..... ,,_ .. Ctnltf ltllHf' HIY' "tll'dtrMIOl'I 'To1a1t It" .. "' • ' 1 ,, llldtH t 1 S 14 M1rc~IOfltttl 01t•Moort 3101Mt~n l s 1 11 ,.,i.trtd ) '· 0 • ~""' 1PlJ'A:et4 21 " 1l., s~- , ="'ow 11"1)111• ~ '1 wwttrt " H .. " It 1$41 If ,,.._., 11 Straight for Oilers After 83-47 Crusher Huntington Beach High's No. 1 ranked Orange County basketball team swept to I Ith straight win Wednesday night with a methodical 83-47 stomping of Loara in the winners' confines. Thus coach Elmer Combs' Sunset League leaders continue their one-game margin over Newport H a r b o r in the ra~ for the crown with a 9--0 loop mark. There was little doubt as to the even- tual winner as the classy host Oilers overcame a t-0 Loara lead in the opening moments and went on to grab a 20-point margin at the half. Jn all, Combs' league leaders snapped the nets for 56.6 percent from the floor on 30 of 53 attempts. The free throw shooting was also hit· ting on all cylinders with 23 of 29 at- tempts clicking. Steve-Brooks was the chief whip for the Oilers. He left the game in the third quarter with 26 poinls to his credit. In the first half Brooks hit nine of 10 attempts from the floor in an awesome display. H•lltl111t9• ltKll IU ) It fl '' i, LNr1 c•n ,.,.,," l 0 I ~ s 2 5 12 J 0 J 6 J 1 2 1 ) • 2 10 !lrookt Ttiomet Wor1hY <N .. W•H W1lk1r E1ol• """'" OrOW•Y T011lt 10 a 1 26 Ahode1 S 1 O n Sl1ndltt J J I t Par!lf 1 0 3 2 M1tll0d s 0 110 ''"'" 0 1 0 2 HlfYIY OOIO ll,slr.I ? I 0 S Htrtortl 4 t 1 11 khfKfllllOll lO 11 10 U Tot1l1 ktr. 111 '1Vl rl11'1 0 2 I 1 0 2 1 ' 0 0 1 0 2 a J • 11 11 lt #I H~nlintlo<! !IMd'I ll 16 11 J6-4J LG1r1 15 4 11 ll-<17 Mari111 lMI W"Nn Ufl !ltlt'll ·-· !loed1n Miii tr McGul•• Wt990M• T~~rm Tot1TS "'"'' .. I 4 • 14 MCICINll> '1.illEmff .S 3 J IS H1fr!Mr J21UP1n. •lStDulln 0 2 1 2 loll•• 1123S1,11'1k 25 16 lt '6 Tot111 Sc.,.1 •'I 'IWlrllfl II ft Jtf t. J 1 2 • I I I I I 1 • • • 0 7 • ' s 'n •• '14 S S I 11 21 II 11 .0 ~rln1 15 n If 1)-..U WtJlem 11 10 14 D-40 Mater Dei on TV Mater Dei Higb's Angelus League basketball confrontation with Blsbop Amat in second round action will be televised by Channel 4. Coach Jerry Tardie's Mater Del Monarchs, currently tied with Amat with 4-1 loop marks, will be seen at noon. on Feb. 13, probably at Los Altos High in Hacienda Heights. This Saturday's TV game at noon is the Sierra League biggie between Los Altos and West Covina. West Covina's Spartans (I~) are ranked first in the CIF AAA while rival Los Altos is rated second, losing only to West Covina in first round action, 66-01. • TENNIS-SHOES- Track-Baseball-- Basketball-Football Gymnastic-Tennis Shoes-Sox-Shorts Soccer-truss Country Baseballs-foatballs Basketballs-Volleyballs Succar Balls-Water Polo Balls Tether Balls-lla rllba lls Squash Ballsd!layground Balls Ping Pong Balls-GoH Balls OPEN 9 TO 6 CLOSED SUNDAYS ' I Shirts-Dresses Rackets-Balls ' Sweaters-Jackets Stringing Bicycles-Tires Tubes-lights Locks-Tape Parts-Acce sories 538 CENTER ST. 646·1 919 • • Start Your Engines! by Deke Hou/gate Time's a·wastln' for Bill Hielscher. He has a plan and a Umetable, and he's, g~tUn' behind. Hle.lsthu is a on~man tn.vellng road a.how who campaigns his own super stot:k. Camaro and three other drag cars (t"·o Camaroa and a Corve te) WJder the baMtr ol Mr. Bardahl. Only five years a drag racing competitor, he is one of the most .ought after attractions in the sport. Btlt drag racing i.s only a means lo an end with the candid ~year-old from Irving, Tex. "I started on the di~ fairgrounds with. jalopies and moved llp to what baslc1lly now ii the super modified!," Hiehcher .said, as he began lo unfold his incred.J.ble plan. "There waa pretty good money in Jt, and I was famous In my o~'l\ hometown. But you're not known down the street. We wanted to go beyond th.at. "\Vell. to go NASCAR we'd have to move Into the Sooth, and there is a big budgel To go to Indy, where do you even start? From roundy round racing, where could I go!" Five years ago Hielscher picked drag racing. He has won 40 major meets, earned a Dock of AHRA championships and set 105 world speed records. "We've finally got t.o .a point where we've won more thin we expected to win. So finally it's Ume to make our move, but we're one year,behlnd schedule. "If the economy hadn't come down on us last year, this year we would have gone after lhe land speed record, had a NASCAR car. and then next year would have been our step into Indian- apolis. You know, one step at a Ume." C:ha...,e• Recalculated Planning his moves' Jlke a high rolling crap shooter, Hiel· scher has recalculated hls chances to hit the big Ume.· "This year, if pcmlble, we want to go after both the salt aat records, and we want to mUe the Pikes Peak nm," he said. "It's something We haven't!llied. (Pikes Peak.) It sounds exciting. Being as we can't fit the big schedule in like NASCAR or Indy, we do have the spare budget to make Pikes Peak. "Then next year we'll probably jump into NASCAR quick, right at the start of the year. With any luck -and I'm hoping that politics.wise the economy is gonna make a sudden move up- ward -it's possible we could get to Indy next year. But the way it look.s, it's gonna be a year after that." The economy, or course, has drastically curtailed available sponsorsttip and endorsement money fo r all racers. Tteo Special Record• Sought \\'hat's this about both land speed records? Actually Hiel- scher is after two special records, the mark for a stock automo-- bile and the current wheel-driven vehicle record held at 409.277 m.p.h. by Bob Summers. "The one I want you don't hear much about." Hielscher said. "It's ror a stock production car like you drive on the street, with a carburetor. The horn will toot, and the lights will bum. "lifickey Thompson and Craig Breedlove both have worked on it, and they got It to 181. The first year I tried for it, we v;ent 188 and took their ncord out, but we blew a motor in the proc- ess. \Ve still went to set lhat'n over 200." Hielscher will be a parbler in a project beaded by Bob ?i.1c- Grath of Huntington Beech to put the official piston engine mark up over 500 miles an hour. To Bonneville purists, and even to the people who give official recognition to records, there is no such thing as a jet record or a rocket record. Hielscher uplainS' why: "They're not wheel driven. When you use jet thru.!t you're not turning the wheels. Don't get me wrong. Going 000 miles an hour is fabulous. I haven't reached 600 yet. So I'm not knocking their 600. "If you're using a piston driven car, it's just like you driv- ing on a rainy day and trying to go 120 miles an hour. Jet thrust just pushes you forward. There's no tire spinning to get you out or control. "This year I ran unorficially 203 miles on hour on this 200 mile an hour record I'm telling you about. With tire slippage and me using uo about 60 feet of the salt. I only averaged 186. because I was all over the place. The back wheels were spinning 011t of control." Fou,. Year• in Making Tbe streamliner after Summers• rte0rd Is tbe Olympian, four )'ears In the miking so f1r. It Is 33 ft. long. 3 ft. w-lde, t ff. high. bas t"·o turbtH:'h1rged Chevy engl.nea and w-UJ run on either LPG (liquid petroleum ga1) or pump 1asoline. The two engines will produce between 1,SOI and 2,400 b.p., depending on boost pressure ia the hrrbo. l\fcGrat .. , will drive, and 1s far a1 be is concerned the speed prolfammed for the Qike boHlw b1ped vehicle Is llmlted only to the maximum speed of the Fltt:stone titts he wW use. They are rated at 525 m.p.h., whereas ?i.tcGratb claims bis car can reacb a speed of 687. uwe went to go to 500 miles ao boor," said Rielscber. "Jets are going six. So you tell tbe people that you Just set the new land speed 'record 11. say, 411 mlles an bour, and they say some- body just ,. .. ent 600, l ju.st M°"ember bearing about H. They just don 't understand one Is englne driven, the other Is jet thrust. We'll have two engine• pottbt1 out J,5llt ltorsepower. The last car Ibey had on the salts, the Blue Flame. they bad 5%,000 hne· power. (Blue Flame builden clllm Sl,eot.) Ol11mplan McGrath'• Bab11 In addition to Hielscher, another partner is Jack Lufkin, but Olympian is the baby of Afl'Grath, a veteran Bonneville hand. Hielscher explained how Important the 500 m.p.h. barrier was to AfcGrath. "Everybody has his O\l.'ll thing in life,"' Hielscher said. "He and I baslcallv the same, We both like to set records, only Bob doesn't care if he has any. as long as he has that 500 miles an hour record. He wenb to go 500 so bad he can taste It. So be will have the first shot at It." Basketball Standings SOUTH COAST COMl'lll:INCI w L Ill' ""' C1rrltot • I J!t "1 Ful11rton t t sn m St11 Dina M'M S 1 151 t16 Mt, S•ft Antonio ' J tlJ tSS Sin Oll90 ' J ••I ru S1nt1 lo111 1 J Soll .ut Or1nM co.nt 1 S n• "41 Wltl11tlf11'1 f<-S..11 Otno ,lt\tM llS. Fwl!tr!M 114 (0.-tr11mt 1 Ctrrl'-' '2. J1ft OllM l1 Ml. S111 A11tonl1 to, S1"11 AM. • S1tvnl•¥'1 01'"" Orlftff' Co.Ill 11 Full.,ton Cll'rllat ti Ml, 5111 Aldto'lle Siii Di.to Mtll al l1nl1 lo.Ill l1n Dltte. bTt MllSIOll CONl'lllfllCI W 1. H P• •l•tfll.. t I JH Dt CPltffn s ' m J11 Cllm J 2 It! JU "" eem•r.tlllo ' J m m P1lom1r ~ t t!S 4'J S1HIMllClr J .J 't, ... s.v111W111't1'~ t s .., m GrotMMllll t • JOO W WMl!l1Mr'1 ltlffl ClltVI n, $911dllbtel 61 ll lWlrtlcle If, Clllllff ti S.11 ltr111nlllll ... P11o!Nr S6 ll!ithM11tr11 "· Oro.1ment 1' ,,,..,...,._ ··-G~"""""'' 11 Sffdltbtet Cllllllw .r SIR ll1t1W1rlll"" S(lulllw11ltn1 11 lllwttlll (l"vl II P1toll'ltt lllYIHI! ltAOUll! LOJ .t.11mtt°' 1"11111111111 V11l1w c-• d<f1 Mir Cott• Mtu E1ltncl1 Mlll"Olll Sl11!1 Alll Y1lllW l!dltoll w .. '" . ' ... ' . .. ' s "' ' f ,,. I S j.IJ 4 J Sii ' "' I f .. .,..._..,.. ,_ COf'Oflt kl M•r fJ, Etllst111 4o1 (Mii Mn1 U, 1!11111d• ff '°"n11r11 v111n 11, Mnnoll1 SI' LQll Altmltt1 4$, SA V111ty ff l'rfM'l''l•-SA \lel ..... 11 Edl..,. .. ... "" •n SU '" ... "' m COl'lllll dll Mir 11 il'1111111l11 Yllllll' LDI Alam1tot el Cosl1 Mn.t MllMlll l'I. 1!1l•Mlt 11 OCC SUMSaT 1.11/o.IUlf w ' .. Hunll ... toll lilld'I t I t '1 N......,, Httllof I 1 SI.I Mlrlnt 1 7 tot Wfttmliu,t.,. t S SH Wl'lllf'!I • J ,,. ...... ltllfn J • -.... t .. r1 1 I (5.) Stn .. Allll 0 I CH Wlfi11Mt'1''11 s- Hunll11t11011 lt"<:I'! P. Lotr1 41 N _ _, H1rbo, n, Al'llhtl"' ,, M•r11'11 U , Wtll"'" 10 Walll'lt,,.f1t ,., S.ri11 ,t.rie " ,,,_.,_ Ml rln1 If Allahttm w"1.,11 •• $11111 ..,_ l4vll'fl"110fl ll11dl •• Wtllmlnlltf l.Ol•t II H•wl'Ol'f H1rbor .. •Y n• ... "' ... "' '" ... Barons Eye CIF Berth, Win,67.-57 By RON £VANS ot 1119 ... IW , .... It.If Composed Foont.aln Valley utlll2:ed a brllllant tone prtSS and a patient oUense almost to perfection Wednesday night en route to a well ckterved &7..:i7 vlctory over vlsltin& Magnolia's Sentinels. 1he win Jett the Barons all alone in second place in the Jnine League basketball rice. Belo"' taking the floor against Mapolla, coach Dave Brown admitted the Barons had lost mucb of their defensive capabiliti6. But Brown's worrjes were never in evidence against the. Sentinels. Led by the Gerber brothers, George and Pete, the pressure was simply more than Magnolia could hand.le. In fact, during the first half the Sentinels only man.aged to take 14 shots from the field. The rest of their time wa.s spent losing the ball to the Barons and playing defense. "We really did the job tonight," commented the hap- py Brown. "Now we're going for that sec<1nd spot in the league and a berth in the CJF Playoffs." After pausing to accept a handshake from a well wisher Brown added, "we were really down after last weekend and when we pressed Edison they just killed us. But we came back tonight. We jwt seem to play better in this gym." Wblle Fountain V a 11 e y ' s defense received. most of the credit for the important win, credit also has to be given to the Barons' offense. Against Magnolia's man·to- man, the Barons ran an ex.· tremely patient offense that constantly worked for the good shot. And the patience paid off, particularly well for Rick Power. Power's deadly I S • f o o t jumper was on target against the Sentinels and before fool. in~ out with sHghtJy over a minute to play the Baron sharpshooter notched 2 2 points, all on field goals. George Gerber, smallest player on the floor and the most e1citing one, and hard driving Ed Pitts also had good offusive outings for Ole: Barons. Gerber drilled. in 12 points while Pitts added 15. Thu~do)', FtbtllltY 4. lffi DAILY '1LOT r7 Estancia Loses LEGAL NOl'ICll LEGAL NOl'IC!: "' ~ . ...,. ll'ICTIT..Ut I tit I •I 11 llAMI PK'TITIOUI 1\tllltftl (QTl,~TI! CNI' .. tCOlfTINUAIK• nATl.MlltT NAM• I TATltMSllfT ... VII Atill/H. AtNIOOMMINT If' 1"' "''""-,.,_ 111,. .. in. Tiie fe~ ..,._ It .W. ~» flt'Tfftovt UMI -.i-1111: 1111: • THI UNOlltllONIO ._ W*' JONATHANI ANTIQUll , •1NI MAll;ICITWlrT, "'9 ,..._ Wey, twlff't tt11t, .tftctt'tlll IL DK. !t it .-O•Cl!LAIN, :ta» W, C..d Hk1P111r•w, "· O, lell IJU C•I• M9M. Cllt:f .. lit cNM .. ,_ IMf-wllHt "'- Trit.ons Outswim HiWMtt .. Kii, C•l fer111t1. tH» • '., f)ctl'*'t nm1 111-flt lltlM 11\M,_.._ ~ G11t •im. ,.,, lflt11ltr •llrlwll N. Ot't. 2JOl •P...,... wn •t Jll Drdllf ,. ...... eor-*' M•r• Of,, C..t1 Mffl, C.l~111t. I Wt 11-4. (_.• M-. C.llf, nt# C.llftffllt. which MN» -... "'91'1'f Jollllllell Ot-•111'°1', 2111 IM11ltr nil qifttU It Ml• ClflfUCMil W ~ fll Ille fell~ H-• ....... ~ C6tl1 M-c.•11r11l1, '" IMIYJ.iivtl, lllf'llt Ill fllll 1M pr.u el ,_lftnt• - " ""'' •' .,,__ .,.. 1111 ._ I~ M, Gl'I' It 91 '91,_, ~; t ,., ..... ,..,,:;'*' ""' c uc "'' P'VltlllNof Ortnte CM•I DtOY Pli.f, ll1)M A. MLl .. r, fll Of'dlll Aw~ lvUfli. O.le l ln't J-ry .ti, • "" ,..._., Ao 11, Ctf'OM fl! Mir, C1flf, lll'uM....... o,.,.. CM-' 0.HY Plltl tm 1#-11 cw"tk•l9 for lf"llMtCllM "' llu11M11 Laguna, 83-12 • COach Ben CUmmlnJs' San Clemellte Trltons highll&btod the area's prep non·leasue swimming action Wednadoy by taking an 13-11 decbton from the host Laguna Beach. Artilts. In other acttoa, the Estancla. Eagl•• lnvl<i<d Long Beacb Milllbo and came away wlth a 48-38 loss while Costa Mesa's Mustangs acorod 41 point! to tie for second with Antbelm in a th.rte-way mffl won by Lakewood (70), whlcb hooted ' the affair. San Clemente swept every event ln dumping the Artists ol coach George Carty as the Tritons' Joel Hartman WU the only ~ble winner of the day in the 200-yard and 406-yard freestyles. · Larry Blatterman (SO free) and BQb Petrina (breast) were individual winners for Esten· cia while the latter joined Milton Kawabe, Doug Weiler and Steve Webster on the win- ning 200 medley relay combo. Matt Waidelich captured the 50 freestyle while R o n Misiolek: garnered the only other first place finish for coach Don Utter's crew with a win in the back.stroke. ...... Liii ....... (11) 1411 CMlt MIN 141) ·-11!: l:::,1er:!~l.IY-l, LI°""'*, WI"' 2DO Fr-I. Nit! (.Al 'L Gttdoll 1r.:o .. ~ ~-1A1. w1111111111 ,1,,.,.: loO 'r-1. Wliclelldl ICI L E.,...11 ~.~ :t. lll'tl!M !..,), Wln111,... t!mr; l .20011:J.'e=I ¥:fle~l •• Gttt11 ILi Wllllllfl!I 1111\1: t:iU~o. '· Nin (..,), 100 ~IV-1. FtYll,4'11 (LI 2 Fllootn ,U-L, J. w110t!1c11 !CJ, Wlftlllnt tlrfll : !"oo F~l. Gr1tt1 ILi J, M<AllllllY !.f.t l. lllrlUllO t/o), Wfri11lne 1111!1: II» hd<-1. Mlfloltll (Cl l· °"""' ~~.~ J. Pumollrew (A), Winn ,.,. tlm.: 400 ffi!I -I, llt.Dlborll!lllh (Al '·, ~ryfltld IL/ 1. Nrwm111 ILi. Win· n no tlm•: ~:o .t. ILllOO ,ertltl-. ll'r•Wltr IAJ t. HtnllY :06.t.' SoonlQll tCI. Wlnftlne llmt; 1400 FrM Rtlty -1. LlktwOti, Win-n no llrnt: J:l0.4. LMllWIMI 11ll ·-17JJ CMft Mat• n n """"" m n1'f: •=i'T::.tiv-1. l1k.....ood, Win· fAlfO l F'ri-\· lllllll I~_!, 5tr'1i.n ~:05.1.. .. "' (l), '""'"" lllfll; IC~ 1 F1o\5'~·c ... ~~-11..l :t., W1tlll'1 l ), mnl l'!Q lllM: 25.l, 00 I 1'11 ti M~tty-1, Yw-.t ~~ L She bY (LI 1. Mtl'f'" U;J, 111111 ll1n11 1 :lk.t. \0\ Fl'l'-1. M11911tr ILj 2. M-11 'L)oo ·~;!_/C~t::'""·' 'r'~i =m~ ll'~. 1 Sciultr tCI. '¥11111111'111 ~ma: 100 ll(l.-1. $htibw lL! 'L llMt \?'5..,:a. ~ {LL-Wlnnlf'lll ti""': 400 Fr.,._1, Lurid tCI 2. Mlf'IMLI ILl ), H11tt IL i. Wlllltlllll tlmt: "no'·•r,~t-1 . "'er ILi 1 Y1rnacl f~.J.s. toY•r ! I. Wllllllr11 lllfll: 1.ioo F'"' Rtla'l'-1. L1k1WllMI, .VIII' fl nll llmt: J:Jl.O. (;Ml CMll Miu 1'11 !Ml Llll--4 (Ill A111Mf1n 200 Me·cllev ·11:•1•¥-1. CMI• Me11 ""'1-·· Ptl'llKOI!, Lll'!Qsltlll, Jt. WI! 1m1r1J, Wlnnlr11 nm1: l:Jl.2. 200 l't-1. TomNn Ill 2. l utllr !Cl l . Glsftw Ill, Wlnnlrtrl lfm1 : ~:n.1. »JO Frff-1. T"'/'\'.,, fCJ 2. l<t11!tr Ll J. OUcli.11 L . Wlrinl1111 lll'nl: ... 100 .lnd!vldutl M-.lllY-1, P1nl«Oll 1n1 2. •mPMll Ill J. Gl1D IL ), Wl'ln!na Im.: l :ot.1, .so FtY-1. l1n1•~n \Cl 2. Mc.1.nfnty (Cl J. Giid (l ), Wlftlllll !Im.: 21,7, 100 Frff'-J, 11. Wlllrmort ici '· Tom!f11 ILi ll. S11ll1r ICJ, W!ft111111 !lme: 55.t . .SO ll•Ck-1,. ll'llln:iort ~I 'l C11r11111tU ~J 1 Gu-CLI. 1"" 11!1 time: .so l rllst-1, Pt111-cotl (Cl 2. .hl"ulry 21, 21 •flit •llDNlry A, 11, Ulllltr 1IM ....... flclltl9W fllfllf, ...... ~,,~ IL) :si. , .. ,,, ll~ W111ritt11 ltn 11>n LEGAL NO'l'ICE ~:"~ :_iut"'klrl....!~.,.~..,'; 'f&i fr.. rMt't-1. C111l9 M.. of Ortl'IM C-"o', llllMr ti. •-.Vltlonl ll•11•'9n. l'fli,,.,,,.., II:. WMll'TIOI"•, LEGAL N011CE ....... of SKllM Wt " IM CIYll CMe. lvtlwl. WIMlllll rl""': 1:.1).1. Cll1'1PIC/o1'1 OP IUllNlll WITHISS my llenf lfllf ltltl Mii .t V.-OT-O .. COODOTOAJ Ptc1'1TIOUI MAM.I .t•MMry. Im. 1.1 MllllLlll (•) t•I l ftlllde N '"' Tiii Ul!Rftlf'*' .... artlfV M 11 llel.'19 A. M.Ultl' ' ' JOO MMltY ••v -1. lt'ltl'ICll w:~:•:: c~tY::.:,~ ::: cOIWlvrttnt • Mlnllt ti t1'2 se. Mal11 •~blltl'IM °"'"" CotJt O.llY Pl itot, ll<•wallt. P.trl .... W.ttlll', W1btl1r). TM• COUNTY ... OltANll St .. s.1111 AM. C1HNrllt1. llM•r tllt ,1t11. 14,. n, a .,,. , ...... ltn '5-71 Wlnrill'lf tlnw': 11.0.t. -. A .. JMI tldtl..,. fl"" 11111'11 ti l lLVllt DOLLAlt iao ;, .. ":"I. 0.Ylll !Ml 1. S.ll!lftrt '-•l•fl"' Tltl!lllA A. STEtN, DtCM• SALOON •NI tfltit wlc firm It"""""" LEGAL NarI.CE Ill 3 SmtllWOld 11!!1. Wlnnl111 t!IM: ti! .r ll'M t.lklwl119 ,...._ wlllM -n11--==c=::-c:=::=;:,-:;::;--:::;:;--l;SIJ.' NDTICI! IS HEflflV GIVEN ti ""-Ill 'VII •1111 ,1ec1 fll ta'*"CI It •• •U,llllOR COt.ll'J elf TMR • '"'" -t. l. 11.tltnl'llll ff) 2. U'ldllol"t ,, tl'M tbtY9 MmM """'""" •11••11 STAT• 0,. c.ALl~••nA ••• -..n-IM) 1. ~ tM), w1 ... "'" •II ...,_ l\aYlfll ct••-"'''"' IU<lllN lllcet. , .... "'"""""" Dr,, TM• COUNTY ,. .. .,._..,. •• ~lftf lllMf ~.t. tM "" tl9t'llltnl ,,. r .. ulrlll ti lilt ~~~· ·..., A,. a · ltldlYr..i&I MHllY -I, C.t.ft. thn, with tl'M '*"Mll'Y _,,., .. 111 l ldltrf I lll«I NOTICa W HUlttH .. Of! Pft"IOH ...... IMl I. w.-m-Ill 1. """ 1119 offlu .t t!lt cllt-., IM ....... , ... "' c1•ttmlli Or111H ~· POlt PllOMT• o• WILL AD ,. •• (Ml. WJMIM llll'lt: 2:t7.S. tftltllM Cflllff,.,. ti lt'tMllt tlllm. wllll Oii .IM. IL 1t'1, ......_ fM, 1 'Mtll 'Y La"alll Tl.ITAMIMTAltY 1111'1'1 -1. Grtflf tMI t. Wtllti' !El lfll _..,... ¥el.IChtn. ti 1119 ~ l'llbllc M W fW NW ...... _11.,. .... ,,If HAlltLDWE fl. IU .. LINOSL•Y~ :L Jthn-(M ). WllllllM ttm.1 Sf,.t, '""""" ti tl'M tfflcl .t llll A"'°'flllll' _..rlll lltld'I.,. ltlcd ~II ti -o.c-M, lCll ..... -I. DIYll IMI r. l ltrlflt· Slll111. s. Fr .... 1111, ~1• ... , 17tll llrMI, .. M,,,. --wlllw "''"' .. ~ MOTICI IS HElltEllV GtV•N Tilll ' •I 1. ~ (Ml W!Mln9 tlmt· C•I• Mnt, Cllllf«111t m.11, wllldl h M l9 ftll wttllkl I~ l lMll l lllic f11 ~let H1tlofltl Tt'Vlf 11M11 mtll • · lfll llK• " IM."'-tf Ille ~111'11 -llt *I lfll ......... AMtel.ntfl Mt tlW MRlll • Q,J. 111 Ill m.n.rt "r'llfltfftl ,. """ •fll• ad:1-l .. ttl.I Mml. 1itf1 11fr ~M tit Wiii 11111 W ICll tteir -l, G~ (MJ !. el uld Hclodtnt, wlllll11 A IMlllhl 1tltr 10,JlllCIAL IEAll "" fll L 11.,.. Tlll.,.,.,.ttY le Kr#loln CEJ t. .._,., IMl, Wllllllnt """flnt IH.!Mluntll" tl'll1 flt!~ =ll't'l"t' "' .. ~~ lltori'llt ~. rtft~ t9 wt.lcll .. tnlH tjma~ DA. 01!M .ltllllll"t' U, lt11 • 1 fir ~ Mrtk\111rt INI ttlll 111• -.. ,.. -,, 01"1111 fMI 1. M•rit· CIMHMI II: •• ,,,. .. 11 ~"llCll•~ ~· Ill ll-and "''" of l'lllorl1111 "" NIM Pltri (/.II) t,. $1WMilfs 11!'.t, Wl1111ltW e: .. .c\llel;: ff 11'19 WIH fl ,:.,·~,::loll lf""I'" 11at bttft Mt tor l'tllnll"' 1t, lt7f, !Ima: l:Sl,I. ltle •llo'a lllmtd •«Htnt Nov u, lttl It t •30 1,111.. 111 IM ,_.,...., fl 100 lrMlf -'· ~''"' IEI 2. Cit~ llLIM •. l'flAJO(Lllll. ·P11bllil!H. °''"'' Cotsl 0•1IY "11°' o ... mn..,, Ho. ' tt Mid caort. ,, !Ml 1. y .... IMl. WIMlnt llM: 1 l_CllJ.. .,, ... , 17'11 ........ J111. I ... 21. " •rMI ....... nn I0-11 100 CIYk Clllllf Orlvt w .. t. Ill 111• -"'" "'''" -I, Mllllll111. w1 ... C..tl MIM, C•I~ '"'' Cltf' tt Slflll ..... c111wrt1e.. flltll !lmt· )•31 0 T•h 0141 '°"!Mt LEGAL NOTICE D1IM Ftb,lll f'V t. ,,,. ' ' ' ' Alttrffl .... l l!MVIW W E ST JOHH .... It Pvlll1"19d °"''"'' C11\I O•llV Piiot cOurif., Cltrl( LI Mlll._M 1111 ltl l fNllC J1n~r'I 21 1rMI 1'-tb/'ljlr'I' .. 11 , 11, P..-u! ltAllWOOO, SOOIM AMO ADt<IMIOM Ptt'ltll 1m 201•11 caaTIPtCATI 01' l\11111111 llt ·---c:.itw Dftv. C-lllC1'11'10ltl MAMI P. O, ... 1M1 l • Mllllk111 c•• ft'I 11t111el1 LEGAL NOTICE Tiit \llldtl'lltnlll doH att1rv n. h M...,.,. ... di.<•....,. t'MA 1Qll tMdll't' ll:lflY -I. /o\!Hlklll. c~dllll ' ioonlritu ,, S21A Ml<lllltll Ttlt 1n•1 .... IJIJ w11wlln1 tlm•: 2:0J.I. lo.vi .. c .. 11 Mtt1. Ctllfor"l' fU16-, urid1r A.,.,....,.""' PttttltMr :IOll .. , .. -1. klltlW fM) ,, WW. ...... , th• fldlll-firm 111m1 tt FOWLl!llt fl'llblltlwd 0<'111.. (Hit 0111'1' Pllot. 1!1r (I!) s. Jtft-lfll (M ~. Wlftllllll tlm1: CllltT~!'~~:T~:J:" M~U,:~11111 AISOCIATl!I 1111 fhtl wlf rum rs """""' ... s. 10. lt11 ~71 2:03.0. Tiii lll'ldtrtltntd !IHI cir&llY 1"111 11 <om-If of tht tollowl,.. ltf'IOll. wllotl Jll l"rll -1, lttld !Ml 2. Ml'ltr (Ml CMdllrflfll 1 11\HlntH 11 10214 °"'""'° 111"'1 lft fl.Ill 1,.,., 111c1 ot 1"Mkle11e1 LEGAL NOTICE ,, Wnllr"lll fM), Wlft"I"' ti""': t1A. lllY.,. Ct.. Fount1t11 V•lll'I' ,,,. I• •• fll\o¥1's: l--~==co-=::::::-::::c:::::--100 lrMl!Wldltll Mldln -I. c.r1wll:Wd C•ll!omlt, under 1119 flcilff-!!rm fllfPll c. L, l"OWl•r, ,,,, Mlclllll!I lo.Vt.. SU,l!lltlOll COUIT 01' T•• CMJ t. N•l-(Ml a. GllroY (I!), WJA. ., LASH·l"Alll 11141 thll Hkl tltm 11 e .. ~~ '::""· C•~1;· 1911 STA1'1 01' CALl,O•MIA fl:Oll 1111111 tlmt; l:Ol'.O. --"' If Thi toltowl ... ''""'' ~ ·~·l" F.iwi.r THI COUMTV 01' OllAM•I! ",,., -1. T-lktll (Ml '· c .. ,.11. -In full ...... •IKI ... TMl•t11e1 STATI! Oil' c'AL,ll'OllNl/o A':t 11l'ooPTIOM !Ml l Slotbldr. (l!I. WIM1111 tlm•: tt.S. 1' It llfllowt : OllANGI! COUNTY · ' Cl1'ATIOlll a HO ;:,.. I Tlftftllltlt CM) 2 c.a... NlllCY 111111111 SHcfol', lino! Dur111t1 'It 111 tlll M•n•r "' "" Adltlllfl PlllllO>'I l'lllo CMI ll.-Glirw (EJ WIM" 't1m1: lltlvw Cf .. 11'ou11t1111 V•lle'I', c1111. • .... -'"""', .•• ,, ~· .:· fot'~kl "'s~·.,.· "' ll:OlflltT STEPHl!N KlolltP. Milll'fllll . 0•1111 J•11. 11. ltJI 0 •• • -• ,.,~,. $1.1. NtllQ' Shll"ll! SJtelor lff'Wllll\I' •-••If C. L. Pew11f t-THE 'EOPLE Dll' THI! STATI' OF SD ltdr. -I. Wlllll., (f) 2. lllld STATE OF CAllil'Oll:NtA, I• IM to bit IM ,,..,.,,. wtla5I ,,.,,,. CALIFORNIA: IMI l. Dlf'udla (El. WIMl111 ti""': 31 .~. OllANGI! COUNTY: 11 wlll-crlbtd M IM wtttilft !Nlf\untllt Tt HOWAllO M. OECKEll SD lrNtl -I, Crtwtror• !M) f, Ofl JtlM./t fY 11, 1911, ._.,_ ml, 1 t1141 t<lc,_t....., Ill ll!falllO' IM Ufl'HI. 1¥ ordfr ot 111111 COl.'rt """ 1rl lllr'Kv SIWl\'1 IEI a. Nllftlfl (M). Wl11111fte Noltl't' Pwbllc 111 1111111 "' u kl Slllt. (Offkl•I s..n "'' .. ....._ (lltid '11111 reciul"tl " IP"'' -"" tltnt: 16.5. __,.lfY -rM NIMY SlllrM S'I(-Mii'\' ,.._,,,.,. btflt'f lht JUQe " 111111 CIUrt Ill 200 ''" 11•1•11 -1, £1t1ncl1 (1(1 ... tw kncrlrlri ,.. ,.,. II bt ""' ,..,_ ~~·7 ~tic iii Ctllferl'llt "" COl.f!ltv .. Ofln ... Sl1t1 GI c..u1om11, dtl. O..UePlt, W.ottll', lllrUlllJ. Wlfl. wllol9 ,,."" 11 tllblcrl._. .. tM wlllll11 O,.":,,!'Clvri:: et lfll _,,,room If o-''"*"' I .,. ftllll tlma: l;J7,I, IMtNfflltlf 11141 Klll-llffM th• n · MY CMllTllw.tl Eulftl ...... , 1S. 1m. ,, J:lS AM .. "' !hit Y4talt¥ t(:U!ld nw Mrni.. " '11 ' Im h 'I'. "'-" ...... ~ ,.. llWW ''"'"' Siii Cll!Ntllf ltU 1111 LI""" l .. dl tOf!ldtl S.1ll ' ,,, .... 'o·o-' Cotl1 Otll't Pllet It tllV, wlly 1114 "'°'11111 lllollt.d llflf ; Mtcliev ll:1!1y.-\. Siii C'-111•, Mtl'Y l tlll M........ 11 .,, ' N l'llllM tc:COl'dllll II tM Ptlllllfl w ll!CI flint: liM.4. Nottry P11bllc • C•llfol'lll• J•tM11TY 2t, l'Hnlln' ... 11 •••• 1"1 lll·n ti\ fllt 1111"1111. \sf J~''r'1wt1~~1n..Ji~1n1~ T:1~ '•lncl••I Offlc• Ill LEGAL NOTICE Glvlft 11ndlr ,.,.., 1\.1111111 W 1111 tit . 1 Or•n•• Cou11tv Ille s-lor COl.ort lff Ill• COUllf¥ If ' ';,...,_,, SorlNttf' ISi 2. Olrno1141 M'I' Comm1H10ll l!••lrt1 Orlllff. Slllt tt C1llfetril1, flll1 Ulll (S l, Am1"11 !Ll, Wlnnlnt1 ilm.: Apl'll f, 1'71 P.-Uf d•ll tf J1riu1ry, lt70. 14;.)o 11\dlvl~I MM!lrr-1. M. Wlb.on Publlll\M Or1n1• CN1I 0.11" Piiot ClllTIPICATI 01' IUSIMUS (SHI •u-tor c ....... 1, o, .... ~ f'oullfYI IS~ J. o. lllflll ) :t.. Llntbl>'k JlflUITY :it. ,9bfutry 4, 11, II, 1tn 211-11 l'ICTITIOUI MAM• WllLl.t.M E. ST JOHN s , Wll>lll.,. I~: 2: .s, Th• lHMl.,lltMtl fOl'I nr'llf\' ltley ere Cou nty C!lf'« •rod 'l'-l V !SI _ 1, F11hlY1 CLl LEGAL NOTICE c.....wrtl111 a blltlftlSl 11 ~ W lt!h C1erlf; ti tt11 Su•ulor CDUrt I. lllf' I \• W o~M -i's'i"•·'· W $1 Colll MH1" C•Ufor111t, vlllkr !ht of !ht SllM of C1ll'9rnlt 100 Fl'I'-. M 1rtl11 • ltl " O o tO• HO'•O"D'' C ·--' 0 ' . , -· •Ml 11111 "14 fltw1 It comtOJM of •v Ar'lllur I!. K,....,. If. J. E. Wtl ttrv. w n11l119 flll'lll; p -•• fltfllle.us f rm "'"" I .. • • lot ttie ov .... "' r1111• . Oli . '~'· wnu1_11 ISi 2 OlmONI ClflTll'ICATI 01' SUllNISI 111• fo111'ftf'1 ... --·· wlloH "'"'" In o .. u,.., ISi 1. Mtvtrrnflll llJ. Wlnnln1 ilmt: l'IC1'11'10UI M.t.MI fUH ,,... •ltcn. tt Rllcllftc.I 1r1 •1 lOrNI! 1M ll:O•aaTI ujs. Th• U1111ertl1111d doe• uttll\I' '"' b 1o1i-1: c.,.. .... Sllllf'" ts 002 •&~~·tt'i :.Ji~ri1n. '1/l:;:'; conch1ct1111 • 1M.11lM1• '' ln·H 11t1...-1ci. .... 111..,.,. w. M. W1tk1M, aos T.-. 11iw1 ll'Yl,.. '"''"',. 1·01.1,' ' Or., N""'llOl't l"cll, Ctlllol'11l1, Ullfft' SltM!, Costa Mt''' Ctll l., S.rM1r1 LM Tu1t111, (tllflnlll tHM '.:» l',..._l, H1rtm1n 15/ 2. LlMbl<lc 1111 flrtlll-flml 11"'" of K-1 toUTI· W11k\ftl. '°' Tl'ftf'll9 StrNI, (;(Ill• .V..S., ltlll Uf.1lJ1 "! 3. T•ltolt !Sl, W Mlno 11M9: QUE tnd 111•1 u !ll tlrm 11 ~_.., C11lf. OUI ~1"1 '' 1,,, ol 1P!1 ltllOWllll ,.,11(111, WhoH fllll'll th!M Jtflllll"t' 1t, 1t7l """"""' flf' Pit!......, l•l" 1.''11::;;k1. (~~~ J..l~"1~ ~yg!~ 111 full tnd pt.ct "' r11l••11C1 II II H••rw• w. ""'Wl'ltlM Publlshell Ot•lltlt C...d o..11'1' l'llet · 46 l'llflowt: S111C1rl L .. W1lldM Fpbtv•ry 4, 11, 11, U. lt11 J•T·TI . di' "'" 11:111~1. St11 Cltl'/llllll. S'1'11lhl1 An11 di M1-"9:, 1730 S1nl1 Sltlt of Ct1lfer11\1, D'fllll C1111'11y: WtMlllll llmt; ••O ... AM Avt,. Ct11!1 M"'' c;11lt, Oii JllW•TY 11. ,,,,, Mfrlft !'fl•· • LEGAL NOTICE UllltHI' s.tcll 11 •\'"'Ci-tit 01ftolf J111ut'Y ''' 1'11 Ntttn' •llbtlc 111 •1141 flt' .. w S11t1., ____ -=-c-=-c=----I>~ STATE 011' CALIFOll:ltLA, ""~11ty '""''"' Mtlrl'l'll W, M.1· T-.,_ -Oll:ANGI!. COUNTY: W11klrw tMI S.Mtt lft Wtttlra --laft C""'-" ttl I U.--11-91 Oii .t1n111rv 77, \'11, Mftn rne, 1 11f "'' fol N 11'11 --'11'11111 ,..,,_ NOTICI 01' l alACM AMO Diii.i.ULT ~MWllY~•w-1 . ll•Ulll. Slldl MOltTY PUlt"c In 1nf 191' .. w ltttl, ,,.. llltolcfl._ 19 t111 wl!hlll 1Mt,,,_i AND 01' ILCC'TM* TO Clo.UH SA1.a "1 .. ~•vnu .... 9-l. --1111 ......... IYfllfllt Anll .. ""''. ,,... ·-=--....... fMI' _......., "" OP ltlAL , ..... n t.HIOll• 0110 ;a 1111 lrnl: :\ 1. \SI t. H """' ~ 1'e tM 19 ._. t11t ......_ 11,_ 01" T•UlT IS J. 11'l:;J;, L W 11111119 t1r:i.' .....,.... 111-11 ~ ,_ 1111 w1!111ri (Oil'l",ICIA.1. IE.Al.I 1N THE MATTEI fllf tl'M Dwll .. •·t ' , l111lrvment tfllll .a;,_...... lhl 111· LlfftlM 1.tw1l Tf\llt """' 1Pr llOSS I!, HOS'tnll.11:, . "'&I Vld ISi 'L M1-11 IQlfed tM UIM. Hel•n' l'ubMc-C1l1+ot11l1 1 ~,, JACKSON 11:0$1 HOSTETl..1.11 '5 > \' l l). V"Mlllll llnw: 2'..16. IOlflcltl s..11 PrlllclN1 Offln '" 111d JOYCE 11:1.t'TH HOfifT\.1.llt.. ~ Ylllu1I f!M,.Y-t . ,a.,.,1~ #Mf'V hlh Mtrlfll'I Or•flM C.0.ftl\I' ,,... wffl, T1 l'il•S'1' AME'lllCAN 1'1TLI! U1!w~ 11:,•111~:L :&. •wrrll Sl. N011ry l'11blk. • Ct\lt..-11l1 Mv commtullll E11,rr11 1NSUlltANCE COMJIANY, Tl'lllttl. Htt!J SD '° Ft....-f. Alkr,,,.,, ISi t. PrlllClltl OfflC• 111 Mardi'· Tf74 OICtmMr It, !Hf, ,_,,.. OtctmOe• ftunllllll ILi 3. NI llllnl. Nl1111l1111 Ortlltll CW,,,.., P1$11tMd Or-C:Olft 0.11" "llol, 2't-ltff, a Dtcumll'lt No. !Of, I" ml: a,u. ' ...,..__ IL! ' ·--MY CommlHllll EUltM J111111no u. ti. 2t I,. , .. '· 1'11 11·11 loot ""· -.. , °' OMcr.I •KONJ 100 a:;; . ~ (''" Wl 1 • -..,,,,. 1, nn 1n "" offk• of "" c-iv "''°'*" l~) l · ••tmt" SI. ""1111 !lnWl Pllblltllld °"'-CMlf 01rt'1' •11.i LEGAL NOTICE <ii Or11111 Cou111\1', C1llflflll1. NCV""' ·~· ••dr.-l. SllMt\' il) t IU1tll JtnwtJ' 21, 'llbnlll't' 4.. 11, II, 1171 212-n •m-.itllr obll••llci•,., 1 M'9 fol' (SJ :t.. Ho Ill 'f· W1nnlM fi'D,' SSA. tu,000.00 111 fl...,. flt l'.AUL E. O"l(AIN $11 ,, .......... Jl't'CI u . ·G1Mt11 LEGAL NOTICE JllOTICI 01" IN1'1M1'ION TO INeAlllf .,. otd .... !SJ 1 MlloM (LI Win" 11t llmt: IN Tltlf SAL.If 01" ALCOHOLIC NOTICE IS HElll!IV OIVl!H th•' "ko """ ll:f14Y-1. l1ri Cl1mt11lt. P...-U l lYlflAlll J1ftl.l8n' 2t, lf71 :.ldw~::, ~ ;~.r11:1~0ll ..::rltl' wll.:!~ wrriill111 llm1: ;,N.t , CllTllltcAT• 01' 11.1111111• TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEllN : occurl'ld '" 11111 thtr1 ..... """ : Ski Movie At Newport l'ICTITIOUI MAMI SUbJtel ,, IUVlllCI " "" nce11~ d•l•11ll In ,,,, ,,.,.,,..,,1 of lft•l•tlmtnll T111 unt11r111MCI d• urtlf'I l~l't' '" •••llfll for, NllCI 11 l'ltreb'I' •l\l't" 111•1 ol 111'9rett ~ty, wlllcfl btc•"" '"" cond11tlt1'11 1 bvtlllftl 11 11'2• IHd! lilt vnd1rli1nlll •-111 le .ell t rcollo!lc .., uld 11011 "" JuM t, ltJO, Mid 11vd., Hunll"llOll l11dt, C1 Ufornl1, ul'Mlfr tt.Yttltt• •I IP!I ,r1mlu,, fffe•llM!ll tubse<1111tnl ll'!Mllll'I' 111111tl1Mnls of ,.,... 11M flctrtlou1 ltr"' ,..,... .t II.I CYCLE 11 folkl'Ni: lerttl. CITY, tllff 11111 whf .llnn 11 coml'Otld 17U N1 ...... 1rt l lW,., Costl ~w, Orll,,...IWll l1•n. II lft'f, o1 !hi lelloWlntl' --•· wllt11t fllll'IH Ctlll, Tiwr"1 It now l'ftf'lllf •ncl llf!Hhf -111 full 111111 pltCJH 11 tn/dtllCI tr• PuflUlllf le UKll lnftllllori, 1111 II"' llfd 11of1 !ht 1um ot S2t.000,0f ,rlnc:IHl1 ll f&llOWI! d1r1i.l!ld 11 •HIYll\9 to lllt 01Hrlmt'11 •11111 Jri'9r•" """-ll'Oll'I M1y ''· HJO. aobll't I'. Sdlm1I Sr., 7671 Aibtl'ft ol AkllllaUc ltvlt .... COlll'tl I• lt-llCI llY re11011 ot "kl bl'11dt 1M dtftull, DI'., HJJ11ll11t!D11 111c11. lltlcfi•,. II .... .,,.,...,, -ltctlle11 .t Ill 1tcal!Ollc II Is MrlllY dKllrtd lhtl !tit """'1• Cl'!Mc•. nuy, s111111,., H"""" lltYfl'H• """"' Ctr llc""'"J for ltlHI of r•ld 11111111• 1rnou"t " 11kl nctlt ?i.fembers of the Newport ~:=·J111. n.1tn .... ~~ ... s:t~':E"~11 .. WINE, IONA ~ ·~ ~~ 1:"1',:,,.,:f,~~ :. ~1.:: Johnson Sparks Lions Over Santa Ana, 59-50 Harbor High Sehoot .ski club lltobll't F. Sdl!Nt Ir. PIOE PUI LIC EATING PLACE l'tYlblt, lllff nettle• II 119......, tlYlft , ll:lcMrd I, CMllU AllY-llHl•lllll llf "'rottsl ltle ISWl!la f111 !ht tlKllM ef fM ~ .. 11111 11 art curttntly selling ticket.I Sl1te .. C1 llf'tf11l1, 0t1111• Ce.unf¥~ " Midi llCfl'IH(,1 fl\llY Ille fl Yltfflflll QUff THE il'lll:ST AMEll:lCAM TITLE r W Mil'-kl • On Jtllutl"t' 11, 1t11, Nlor• ""• I ,.,.!Id II lll'J' offta fll th• 0-rlmlftl 1NSVllANCE COM I' AMY, Tr v 1 t 1 • or I arren u:r I movie I N•lll't' P11bl1C 111 1nd tor ul4 s1111, "' Alcflllfltlc' lrwer"e c.ntrtl, or ll'I' !Mrlllncllr 19 1111 1111 ,,_,., cleKrlllM at the school auditorium ,.r'l01141tl'I' ••P•••111 llobttt ""· Sdtm•1 """ tt "'-o..amn.nt ., Akollalk lllfl'•lll 111' 111t ma1111er ""'y\cjftl 111 111• • Sr, 1111111 ll:ldl1rd fl. C11tnc1 II,,_ ,_ 1..,.11'111 COllll'lll, 121S 0 St...-t, OllCI ti Trutl, 1Mll llOHCI It fllr'lll9r Saturday and Sunday, to raise ,.,. t• i.. n.. ,.......,. wt1o1• "''"" s1ct11n1111t. c.111er11t1 t51114. 11111,.. llMllW ,,.,..., ""' "'-ul'Mlfr1l•M11 f _, f f I t I . ll 11"1 '1.fblc'lbtcl I• tM within l11tlrumt11I ••l'Vfllll't fer •e11l11 4" lfl'llcled ll'I' t1w. lllA!OfOI'• nlCl.lltd ,,... 411....,.. ft Uu\.11 or u Urt r ps as we •nd •dr.llowlllltM .,., ••tCVIN ""' T~. , • ...,1... .,. llllW LlellllM tor Id T"""" ' wrltllll dKlttllloll ol as school improvements. ~m•. ti.. 111• of 11c1111llc i.....1r1tet. Thi! ::Jd brHdl •rid c1et1u11 ,,... , wrtlhln (0,FICIAL SEAL) IVll'I el 'f'll1flellltn ffll'I' 119 elll11Md' ffmlnd f1w the Nie tt1 Mid,,_,.,... Over 200 club members are J1111 L. Jobsr '""" ,,,., flfflCll"' 11111 °'""-"''· o.t•· Jt111,11rv 11. 1tn · By RICHARD PRIEST Lions •-m cfri"v;"• th•lr l•ft tiy ••]Un<$ '"'-•:eke•· NOl•rv "11Dllc.Ctllt«111• MAllCIAL c. s. i11 P1u1 E O'll'1in .u u -.. curren -• UK: u lo:) Prlncl11I Ollla Ill MAll:Y GAlllo.11:00 0 Ill Mt rtcOnl '111 1119 Of'llcl " "'• Of 1111 0111'1' ,.; .. , 1111t sideline and scorin& at will. f 0 r t h e t w 0 n i g h t or1n1• CoullfY "llbll•llM Ot•nt• CMJt 0111" PHet c°"~ 11t1eorw e1 0r1111, CWfltv, A high scoring burst by the "th tud I Mv c.,,..,m1111o11 •u1r.. Fett\11,., 4, ltn w..n c1utornl1 on 1·21·11 •• Ooc.lolfMl'lt Ht. Turnov rs lagu d the Sal t penormances Wl 1 en M•rPi J, 1tn 11651 \Vestmlnster Lions in the third The wi·:-rps, pl.aym· g wltb"ou't· ducats going for $1.50 and J:~~1~ 1?,'~t':M c,.a;:~., 01~~~ ~~· LEGAL NOTICE , ,.ubl1"': :~,..: 4 ~c:'~t ?:iiw "lot· quarter 9r Wednesday night's •uno adults for f2 . T,.Jld .,..,,,.... • e • • · 1"'" Sunset League basketball con-the aid of U center Eric Th fil · -minu•· LEGAL NOTICE 1uP111t1011 cou11T o• TMt LEGAL NOTICE e m 1J a _.. ~ ,,.,, •• CA' ll'OllMtA ••• rronlatlon between the Liollll Southwick (who was out with l: · .. winter aports producuon ID ...... Tiii COUNTY 01' OllAHel! IH THI IUP•ll:IOll COUltT 01' TM• and the Santa Ana Saints se111t a twisted ankle moet of the Id ca11.T11'1CAT• 0111 1u11M•11 "" ,......,. "••••• color by one of the wor 'Ji 'ICT ITIOlll MAMI! NOTIC E 01' Mti.11:1MO 01' l'•TITION STATlf OI' CALI IN AMO the visitors home with a 59·50 game), were able to pull down foremost photoarapbers of Thr v11111r11inH t10 ,,,,1,.,. th•Y •r• ,011; P1to1AT• 011 w1LL 11110 1'1111T 11011 Tll• co~~:' .. ~,~ •AM otlto loss, running their loop record a majority of the rebounds. (OllCIUdlllf ' bu1lntff ,, till Kr1m1r CODICii. TO U.11' WILL' AND TllT"" IN THI MAT1'111 01' TN• COH· • SUCh events. Ave., W1tlml111!1r, C1!1'°111l1, under !ht Mt NT AMO 1'011 La TT I lit S llll:YATO•IHIP OP TH• llT.t.TI! to 0-9. The Lions' full-court press flrtlllouf firm n1m• ot OlltAHGf COUN· T•ITAM•ll1'AllY llOMD WAIY•OI OP aOtTH ,.A'f'NI IMOOll, COM· The third quarter was the was successful in causing the TY STEEL ll\ILE OIE •IWI ,.,,, ••I• E1!1te .. ELSIE SHEl'AllO. Dl<:N~~. s••VATIEI firm 11 comlOltcl of !hi fotlOWllll ""on1, NOTtC!" IS HElltEIY GIVEN t~I NOTICI OP SALi Oii de c i d Ing per Io d for Saints t.o throw the ball away GWC M ""'°"' llllm11 ln tun 11111 p11cu e1 H•rl'I lhHtrd unev "'' 1111<1 Plt••ln 11:1.AL PllOl'lllTY Westminster as it sank seven many limes. Th• h 0 8 j S' oves r.ildfl'ltl art It fol\o¥1't: 1 '°ettti." for •roblll ti Mil tnd NOTICE IS NEll:EBV GtV!tf lhtl 0-.1 V, Corti1rl, 17U 1'1cllect llrtl Codk11 le ltl1 Wiii ll'ICI Tffllrntnl SEClllllTY PACIFIC N"'TtONAL I ANIC, or 17 from ttie noor in eom· defense showed il, worth as AVf .. wtflm11111t,, c1111. 11111 tor luu•nc1 1f Lo11ers Tett1ment..,... , """°"'' binklnt 1 1 , , c 1,, 1, 11, • f . Wllll1m A. ll:tlf\lnli.. inn Fo•bt1 ,. l'rlltlontr ClllNI W1lvtd), tlfff!Mll CO!IH'"'''' ol 1111 •boYI Con1trvil0flll!' par1son to our of &even 1t kept its opponent. from s 1 L•"'· Nllfltlneton •••ell. c.111. n~t •• Wllldl Is fl'l.H• tor tvrtlllr ••rtlcullrJ, E•••t, wm "" 11 ,r1va1e 111e M field goals attempted for the taking many shots from the Game Iles 011.., J•1111•rv 11• 1•11· 11141 11111 1111 11m1 •1141 "11<9 " 11t1••111 or .n« ,HNI,... 11. ttn , 1119 111r11111tt•' Glorff V. Cet114orl 1119 Hmt 1\11 btlll Jtl fol' FtbnltrY deKrlbfd tlll •t-tlY, lllll or '"-"' Saints. in!iide throughout the second w11111m A. 1t1m1rn 1t. lt'JJ, 11 t :JO 1.m .. I" the c1111r1room lo the Mkl •nl~rt'I' wrn 1wo rK41M Thi · W · h I Th 51111 ef Cltltor11L1, 0<'1111• Counl'I': " 01J1ttfn.fflf No. 1 DI Uld coutt. 1( 1111 1on-l11t office · s win puts estmmster, a r. at forc.ed the Saints G Iden West College will °" J,,,.,.,., 1t, 1t11 ••or• ""· • ., no cwic c1111er o,..,. wist, 1n S1Cvrt1V P.clfk Nft10111I Slfll last year's Sunset champKln, to resort to their outside o Het11Y Publlc 111 Ind tor .. 1• s1111, in. c11y ot $111•• .t.n1, C1lflol'fll1, sin OIHo o11trkt Trv11 Offkt at a .. s mark for its league shooting and pulling down the play its remainin~ tht rhee =.-~~11r~~'~m~':,.,.,':'m ~Of!ll~ °"'"" F~r it ~~ff. ro N::. 1;;:11 outings and into a tie for many rebounds and turning basketball games in e i. be "" ,.,..,. """' .. 111111•• ••• Ct\lfll\I' ci,r11 hn'oi"o c111f.,,.n11tnn Orange Coast Colleae crvm. lllblcrltlM' lo 1111 -~111 1rit!Tvtntnt '"' M(k•MMA AllO "ITTIHI, Th• llkl ~ •• 1 ~-,.,., ,. I" tell fourth place. them into time consuming .., ... 1<1cnewi.o...t 1111? •~oKVIM Ille •11n1. ••1 o•¥tLLE w. McCAll:llOLL 1, clltcrl!IM 111 111111lbt1 /o 1n11:11M1 A d k h I f th n Id I nasium. CSEALI "· 0 .... ""· l\frlfo Ind 1_,,.,11td lll!'tlft .... ar or.se p eyer or e e goa s. Tht switch was m ad e ~=~· ;,:~ . centorril• 11111 ••-.•~ ',"'-· 111111,,."-,,11rll'KI, .,.. 11 rnctf'I ,..,1,111'1' tllKT1., Lions was the deciding factor WNlflll11lltr Ut ) L-• ... 1t1 •• 111 u111m_....., <-c111 •tt l·n the runa••ay third -ri'od. 11 fl because bluchers have not Prl11C1•11 otrlc• 111 1't11 '"''....,... 1" swtti t1111r11, c1111or"11. ,, • " -M1hlftllllmtr 1 1 -Ortntt Courrtll ""'""""1 .... hltltMll' D1MC1· il'lbnlery l 1911 Junior J ay Johnson, \he only teulllwldC 1 1 been lrllta11ed and access ,,,., commlWM •••I'•• Pvblr111M or1111• coast 0.11.,. p;1o1 · 1x11i11,. A he f thl Jolln'°"' ' 1 roads to Golden West's nel'f PVb11~1'dto~~= co.11 o1n.., Pllflt Fellnltl't' :I..,'' lf71 ~"'n T111t '°"'°" of MCllM s. T1w"'"'" • " ' • mem r o s year's vanity 11 , ' 1 S011th, 11:1111• 1 w .. 1. " '"' s.11 who was not on either the ·~111" s • gymnasium have not been J•rw•r,-14' 21' 21 "111 F ... '• 191 "'71 LEGAL NOTICE 11n11rd11111 ,.,.,1i;1111. 111 Hit <W"'" I ll ' " ' I Sltm1n1 t I let~ LEGAL NOTICE of Or111t1. ,1111 of Ctlltorril1, tc:~lrie junior varsity or varsity L•"''" J 0 comp C\I, "'" to "'' ott1c1t1 11•1 o1 w11 11rie. teams of last year, continually. ~~: ,~ ; The Rustlera wUI meet LA T .. m. 11ot1c1 TO ;111A•:_•:::s 011 1utK llej~t=,.:i• '°~irw·~ '°1111 ,,,, ' •h• l • ' • plagued Santa Ana's bese·line s1t111 A111 u11 Southwest Wednesday. Feb. 10 MOT1c1 To c•101T••• cs1e1. •111"1t1 u.c.c.1 1ou1~we•'•'IY 11111 01 '"' s1111 Ct1111 ' " • f ]~j th tU•llOOO (OUOT O• TMI N"O O ' -o ' • ( '''''' HOollw111, 11 c-«Yld bY lltntllt L. defenst by sinking four of T11omis : 6 at .. p.m., o "'" ng e 1T1oT1011 cAL1,o•"'' POii: ., ··N':w~o;~ .. , ,t,_-,•g11:~s ' ... T~ .. 1 0ot•11 ,, '"' 11111 o1 c..11ror1111 bY ll " " • six attempt~ field goal.s in M•MI s • Orange Coast~anta Ana Ult TMI cou•TY 011 oaAMI• c1u111rn11 c"'°''"1111 Tr1111t1F'Of,, ¥111011 d11d' r..cotdlf M1v it, 1rn" 111 booll P rid F Mt. ,.,.,.,, lMlllttt Mid-h 1100 wnt c .. 11 m '"' IQ of Ollll•· 'llllktt "I"' lhe third quarter. "'" 1 ' at 7. On F ay, eb. It Elllf• o1 111'.trldt K111 .... '''° -flOW" •• H1111w1..,, N-llOP't •••ch. Cflll""' e1 11 d"""' 150.00 '"' sou111 • l • ' " ' ' 'Even thoo•• o"t was for a :'!!!•., ; ! Goklen West will face East 1 .... P•lrlcll Keltv, O.ct•lld. 0r11,.. .. 11111 of c1n1trftl1, ""' • bu!lo. x • '°" 1!'111 from 111 1r111 ,.r" 111•1'111119 gu •·· • NOTICI! II Hf.ltEIV OIVEff to 1M trtM11r 11 •bovt te 119 made 19 C 1119 lnflrttrflon ti tfl~ 111Ut11Wftl1rl' losing cause, Kirk Byers of 1.-,.,",, • 1 ' LA in at o'clock UU follow1n1 Cl"lll1tOt1 o1 t111 •MYI ritmlf dlCMfll w. VAN01o.0111,F. Tr1Mtt'"· 11111".i l!nt of 1114 St••• cet11 H11hw•Y ' ' ' ,. ' " ' • h wl !!Mil 111 --• 111¥'"9 ell\,,,, 1Ml11tl 111.11111111 .....,, .. , 1, nu He ll~ w1111 nw wvt11111l1r1Y 11111 et !°Hit Santa Ana tried to spark his N•""r 1 1 an OCC wrestling mate tb the .. 1c11 dKMtlll •r• , .. 111...,. to ri11 """"•NI. L•• .a.11111.,. c-1y o1 i.• 11a w ..... •• Mid IE"'' •oct w .... teammat., with • ten-point .l.k;•I• I • Mt San Antonio 1/IMI, wllll Ille _ .. ,,. _....... Ill Ahetl ... ,, ... " Ctllfotftll. It &l\oWll .., .. ,.,.,. .. CNft 111 .... , ' ' ' s ' I HtflM" I I ' ' lfll offkl " 1111: dol'll ol tlll 1bOYI Thi .,.,..rlY to bt trttttt.rred 11 recenhtl 111 lloak 11 '"' 1 tlf second half effort. Tot•'• 11 1 The final RusUer home et1tl!ltd cor.irt. w 11 .,....., 111tttt .. w11h *''" 11 J100 w1111 c"'' ~1t11w1y, MIKlll-Mt", 111 "'' l'fflc• et • ' Th. l.ck·l"•'~r Sai·n•· w•re '""., -· t T od F b ni. "*""'"' YOUCllttt. lo the ~ N_.t IMch, c111n1'1' of Dr•111e, s111t '"-'°"'""' reclnflt ti .. 1 .. '°""'"'' -IJC' ...., game 1s se ue ay, e • '"""MCI " .,. tlfktt ., ~11 •llol'My•, ., c.11tor1111. lfllllCe Mlllh w w .... E1ll ,._ unable to stop the fired up W11lmlllfl... u ,. 23 at I •lflllrist LACC. HAltklS ANO HOLLINOSWOtt:TH, 6-111 l •I• ,,_,.... k lltKr1llM !ft ._.., .. 14 MUll!wlill1rty ~Ill of "" Sitt• ' • . " l _____ _:::_::..::_.:..:::...:::.:..:_:""'=:•:•:M::_ ___ ,:•_:•_::..::__=.=..:..:,:::-::..·::..::...:..:::_ ___ 1w"' (.ll'tf\tt'y '°"""",.., "" ...,,..1 ..... : A" l1ldl 111 trMt. riwt11r ... 111111<1"1!11 c°"' H1t11wl'I' •.oo '"'' llllM• 1ou111 Clllftnlll ~ wtllcfl Iii 1111 llllCI ,,.. Miii win Of !hit Automoblle bu11-Sf' 21' JI" WHI tf.IO lffll lllt!'ICI " llullllftll If 1M llM9t'1~ lft •II ·-ti HEWPOJIT IMl'DllTS tl'ld N111111 :IO" W W' Wftl, Htttltl wllll ~. USHER'S GREEN ~-_ fffltfP E-SCltTCH "'• I I START THE NEWYEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVl~IGS &.o1mt.•lllllfl'-t1 .... SJ 12,_WllJU.mW .. ~tlf.•tVI IMtt.rl Hrl•lllfflll ti ltM ..,,,. ., 1«1llf 11 J!• w"' Co•'' H!lhwlv, u l• llflU\'l'l'wntlfty 11111 of w.. 111tt MN ~. "'111111'1 """' ll'litfttlll eftw M--1 IMdl. COVl'lh' of Or'1111t. Sl1'9 C-1 Hlell'nY. •.at lftfl lhlnct--Ill "" flf'lt '"'91klli.ri 11 t1111 flOfl<I. ., e11110f'll11. ,,. ,.. r ••-' ts.oo ""' 1rt "" 1>1• J11111tl"t' •· 1t11 . T1'll 11u111 "'"''" wrn N CMlllfM'lt*i Mtlllt If Mtlt111111S. 11•v, .tOMt4 1, OOHlllT'I' 111 .,. 1t1er "" 11111 d•Y " r<ebrv•'"'• s.1.i .. ,... 11 .,,,,,_ .. "" ' •r f1tt<11tor ttl 1111 wtn of t•n, 11 llflk " Al'Plttkl HT • SA, !111 Mlr!IM111trlY 11,Cll ti, tf 1!111 !ht '"°"" llllMd OKMlftl. &JOI ~ lllllltY•rd, lft Mtl'lll, I/Ml IM llOl'lllltlttrl'I' ..... f"' tri. M.t.111111. llOl1.l .. IWOITfl c-1\1'., l• """'"'Stitt fl! C1!1tornl1, Ill 1111•11tntel _,,., "' 1111111 ....... ~ '1J1 Witt CllllWY I,._ S. fir 11 ~ 19 1M Trtfllf.,ee, Mid loll ml .,,. 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'· • 'Romeo' Planned Youtll Symphony P1·aised Br TOM BA!lu:Y dual on IL ptrcuS!lon. 04 ,.. Otit, ... .., 11111 Mlt.s Stem alrea y has a lt1alcolm Hamilton was his There ~ been no areat.er well placed foot i to wbat usual brilliant self at the ~"\ICC't$S lD this c U r r e n t · seema destined be a keyboard for tbe Bach and By New Thea,ter Magor's Missus Ross ~n Tepper of Huntington Beach will play the com~c . rol~ of Mayor Schinn's wife in the Long Beach C1v1c Light Opera production of "The Music Man," opening a three--weekend run Friday at Jor- dan. High School auditorium in Long Beach . Orange County's n e w e s t community theater group, the Actors Center Theater, has announced a partial list or 28 cas_t members for its first p r e d uction. Shekespeare ts "Romeo and Juliet." The company, organized by producer-director Louise van Vianen of Costa 1'.1esa, will pN!sent th!!: classic tragedy in April al Santa Ana Valley High School. Playing the lille roles will be Don Narajo and Christy Smith, with Ruth Wagner ca.st as the nurse:. Othen in th!!: company are Ron Filian as Escalus, prince of Verona : Steve Marion as Paris. Steve Uhler a s J\tercutio, Bill Cullen as Ben- volio, Bob Rigg as Tybalt. Frank Rutherford as Sam~on, Glenn Eckenroth as I Gregory, JJ, Laws as Abraham andi 1'.f i c h a e I T~ck:abery as B&lthasar. Roles remaining to be filled Include those of Lord and Lady Montague, F r i a r Laurance. Lord and Lady Capulet. Lord Capulet's uncle, Friar John, the nurse's ser· vant Peter, an apothecary, three musicians. three pages, danetrs and extras. Backstage staff members include Ron Filian, assistant to the director ; Carla Trick, set designer, Bob R i g g , choreography and S t e w a r t liyslop, stage manager. Performances will be given at the school, 1801 S. Green· ville St., Santa Ana. on Thursdays through Saturdays from April 15 to May l. Information may be ob-- lained by calling 646-6749 after 5 p.m. 'Endgame' At Irvine Next Week "Endgame," a play by Nobel Prir.e winner Samuel Beckett, will be staged next week by the UC Irvine School of Fine Arts in the new Studio Theater. musical season than the Loi brllUant future whl young pianists Shibley Boyes and Angeles :hilbarrnon_ic Kan~ff sWI bas to ake bis Ralp h Grierson and Orchestr~ s SalurdJy morrung flrat real foray into t e world percussionists William Krafl Sympborues for Youth and the of music. But it would seem and Mitchell Peters brought happy, hour-long bids for the from the brilliance of bis Von home to us cnce more the musical interest of e u r Weber that the door is already sheer beauty of the final younger set have drltwn pack· ajar and simply walling for movement of the Bartok. ed houses at the Music Center. this talented young man 's Conducto'r Gerhard Samuel Youth ls not confined to the decision. and his delightfully informal audience and the &eeond con-Both watched and admired orchestra once more bn)Ugbt cert in the series Saturday with the: rest of us while more their messqe of mualc to drove this welcome point 11easoned performers did their an audience that included home with two of oor very 10!0 spots in B a c h ' s some very small and very gifted soloists proving to be Harpsichord Concerto in D well behaved future (we hope) very much en the side cf Pl1inor and Bela Bartok's con· muslc lovers. It was a youth and therefore, oor C!:rto for two pianos and privilege to be there. teenaged daughter assures us,.;;:;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ much more "with it" and to the taste of said younger set. FOR EVERYONE TO SEE! Phone 673-6260 Thursday ~tt,~ J Ill ~ (C) (2.>•) fJ!l Na ,.,,_.. • tllt 'hlltl• (C) (90) "Hird Tuw1Jin'." R1lph Metttr stars. Miller's Play 'Price' Excellent on Video Master's candidate Michael Van Landingham of Costa Mesa is directing the drama, ~·ith his four-character cast comprised of Larry Lott. Bruce Bouchard. Thoma s Culp and Anne Carol Pearson , all of Laguna Beach. The play will be presented Wednesday through Saturday, Feb. tl)..13. at 8:30 p.m. Admission is $1 and tickets are available at the Fine Arts box office or at the door . Sixteen-year-old S t e p h e n Kanofr won a tremendous ova· lioo from all age groups present with a well nigh faultless rendition of Carl 1'.Iaria Von Weber's Concerto for Clarinet -a rarely played offering that is long overdue for some of the limelight awarded lesser works for this instrument . Then young Lori Stern slep· ped from the ranks of the Los Angeles Philharmonic's ranks to equally delight young and old with a seasoned performance of Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E Minor -another glorious score with Pl.lltUARY 4 Ev•ning l!!l Paatr. fw UriDf (30) l :llD. a (j) C1$ -1\Wlill•r Mewl•: (C) "1\1 ,...,.. (tci·ll) '68 - GIOrlt H1milto11, 5'"11U11ne Pltshtttt. l:tl 8 Ill .... (C) (60) Jmr DIHlpllJ. Member of 1 scitntil'lc rtM•rch I Kae •••** (C) (60) 1roup po$Seutl 1 lerrilyin1 powtr. De Mt1 ._ (C) (iO) Tt nl1 · 8 Tiie f11ritlw (C) (60) tin l lltth: Don MUHIJ, Jtr!J Col· IJ 0 (]) 9) Matt •ot111 llf li111, EllzlMlll Ashley, hew l'riu. ;rtNdlddy (C) (30) "Wi!I 1ht 8 COLOR! "THERE'S NO R•I Di1na Plt•st stand u,_ .. Dan-* BUSINESS LIKE SHOW nr ii fl)!Ud 10 tpolofil• to • IUSINESS"-Part I lin1tr for blowinr wp OYtr hu 1Ulr1 ETHEL MERMAN! rudtleas. Di1n1 Ross 1utsts. a .. ,_ II!)-{C) (30) MIN: (C) "fWt't -Lie: I-4t Ptrllwillt (30) "' • ..._ I.lie SM lnl1•" _, P11t I (musicel) '54-Elhel Mt1· GI NttHh (60) 1111n, l>Dnalcl O'Connor, Muil1n l :lO II tD (IJ i13Ada11-ll (C) (30) Monroe, Dtll DtlllJ, Mitzi G17nor, "Man Bttwltn." Rtttl i1 Mtd!td .lohnnit Ray, Hulfl O'B1i1n. Top for hi1 ltith i11 fellow man. "•ude'ti1t1 111m 1dds lhlir diildr111 D DAN AUGUST-THRILLS "!hood. * DRAMA, SUSPEN.SE-NOWI IJ Diel ¥11 .,... (30} 0 @ (}) &) DI• A1pel. (C) (60) •• n ...... (C) (JO) "Thi l ••." W1 lllf Pidpoll au.sis ID ~ (I} Star,,. (C) (llO) IS I retirtd juil&t Wflo hlS killtd • art .... : "Slifcfltry # 2."' 111 IPj)lltllll~ Utlirm.d ltrlnttf. T«lr11icl1.1t1 of n11 MMlll. CJ C..W c. ... (JO) l (J)._/ ...... /Speru tt) E)MlllklM/"*"'t W (JO) ,..., '••!tr (30) • HlllT c..... ... Allpl&il• ""'°"' J4 (C) (60) -IT! I T• AMlblrt (C) (30) 10:00 a -\!U m Dllll Mtrtll (Cl U Mn fMllilr .. C..-. fGO) Guats art Ruth I LIUi, P•ul ........... (q (lO) ly... Zt10 Mostll, Thi Dinr-A· 1:15 m ewtil'• PM (C) (II) l1111 Sisttrs, Tht Goldditttrs i nd K.11 M1dfotd. l!ll 8 Ct_, C.-1 (30) 0 Iii S ,.,., (C) (60) • n. ,.,., ""' 1c1 (30) a 1anw wan ,..... <C> <60> iii Cll • lliPft "-" (C) (lO) ID,..., (C) (60) c;..,,,. Pu1111m. Cl ll••J 1 .. 1 ....... (C) (30) GIJ ! IBCW: I A ,.,. c..titlltiM1 9 (I} m .... ('C) (lO) (C) (2 hf} -Jtobtrt Hutchins vs. CD ...... Jv./llhlk* (() Wl)'M Marris. .. This dltl1t1 le: CIOll· 91'I "-t lllJM IC) (lOJ elution ol 1 ltfles otfN by S1ntt fD> Lii ....... (:Kl) 81rb111 City C.olt1p. II MC ""' (C) 81 E1111ltd1 t11 ltc111 (30) 7:•. CIS &Millil JI ... (C) (JO) Gil Ethll11 111 KIHJWIOd (60) ! 111 lllC lli,tlHJ, Nn1 (C) (JO) lO:lO 0 Thl1 II Ynr Lift CC) (30) •r• 111, U... (C) (30) I Ralph [dw11ds hosts. ()}) (l) I lM lllCJ (30) tll l ill J111111 tint (C) (30) ID u I]) Or•IMt (C) (JD) ., l11ctrtiltl•IN• (30) • lamJ1 WllH• (30) (II) OJ lllSIPI (C) 130J i (I) Trd • Cs 1111•• (C) Cllrill ta1 L.1Mt •11 ('> (JO) i 1:oa e arn m " ... (C) ....,. <.101 G @!llm...., 1c1 «I!)Sl•Jlt•t1ll Mwie (55) 8Ca11 '" T111 Dll! (C) ED .... "• (C) (30) 0 m Nm (C) 7~ 81 IHCWJ n:a u11um MHtilll 11 MIM: "SIMt*l Htl ... •~tl ,,.... (C) (90) A p1tlit• 011 the tllt SIUtl W11110rr" (mystt!y) '43- urllln 111dia11, 111mt4 in Loli An1slu 81sil R1lhbone. J'li1ll 81VC1. 11\d ~I. Tlw a,eelll follows t m MW: "Slainl17 ts II._" )'GUiii ftntja, ntwlJ 11rho1d l1om (lanluy) '47--0l'id Mlftn. llil Alilona ~nd. 11 Ill .. u (II Ml'ril: "Cnellttl CiTtle" (dft· II hokl olll.o his idt11tity. 1111) '!>&-JoM Smilh, f l)' Spt in. D ID Ci) m n• Wiltlfl (C} (60) @CJ)''"' ..... Gu11tJ are Jot ,hmtlh. Johnny ml...,..,.,. ctll II rr.f. H«1111el M1thi1. G1ot1e Csrhn ind /.Oby 11:15 ii) fut•e Fll• Uml11. 8 NTl'O (CJ (30) 11:30 I) 9 Cl) Merv Criftin {C) fJ Q'Z (]) E!J AIMls S.itll 1MI Q QI (jJ m ~11111 C1rt11n (C) ,_ (C) (ID) "W111ni Train to Boll Nt\llh~I\ S\I~ 11 host. Guub: ll tim1toM." Hayes tnd Cully PllH Gwtn 0~~.IS, Manlrn M1ch1el1. • 11 priY1!1 111nl1 hl1td to thw1rt 1 Q Mt'lll: "Tiit Sip ti the lttll robbtl)'. WilUam Windom 111ssb. (drt mt) •a.-SuS111 Pel11s. 0 lfllliM $ lllM'it: (C) "TH Ra-0 Q'I Oiek Ctfttt (C) Danny Kt tl htdlllt hblla11"" (oomedy) ·sa-1unb. S•ridr• O.t, fttl H•rriton. St1He1· 12:00 (j}} ~Did; Ct1ttt (C) br1intd wif1 If E11rli1h bulinen· 111111 tries to l1u11th htr ln!eritt11-lZ:JO D @ (jJ m I IPIC!ALI lu1111 riiSltl lttpll•urhtt1 succtufully in LllMl_l111 (C). (60~, The lu111r mod ult th lolldon ''St " I ltrm1111tes its dtKtrrt olb1t Ill· ai 1rdl C.:::"· (C} (lO) :icrlioll" in 1 ll'IOOn 1111cl!11115 miln • " T..: I TWM ·{C-) (IO) llOrlh ol Hit Rim of h i MIU/O Cute1 •!"ft• .. "" (C) (30) "Tiit a @rn m tl•IC1AI L111111 Mlllit trC111 !*. ~onned bJ tilt l111•1111 (C) (60) '41ollo I( mlnM• lllll lltcPt CMc liatit O,Sll. bf minrOft comm1nde1 A11n II tlJ{l)f..., Affair IC) (30) Sheptrd . CMDT USN, commtnd Ga..t H (C) (30) rnoclu!t pilot Slu1rt A. Roosa (Mtj. e LI hllll (JO) USAF") and lun11 tnOdult pilot [d· By RICK DU BROW llOLLYWOOD (UP() ''The Priet!," Arthur Miller's play about I wo estranged brothers \Yho meet afte r 16 years to dispose of their dead falher's f u r nit u re. was presented in an excellent pro- duction on NBC-TV Wfd. nesday night. The 90-minute '"Hallmark Hall or Fame" offering sta r, red George C. Scott and Barry Sullivan as the brothers - one a policeman, the other a ri ch doctor -and Fielder Cook directed the play, which was produced by D a vi d Susskind. But, as on Broadway, the scene-stealing performance - beca use of a wonderfully entertain ing and humorous role written by Miller - belonged to David Burns as an elderly Jewish furniture dealer who arrives at the set· NIFTY THEATRE l07 M•l11 St. H•irtlllff111 le.ch "A LOSS OF ROSES" Olr.ctffl b' T•111 TltMs "MAONll'ICINT Dll,,MA '" Tom 81r1ey-01!1y PHor FRl.·SAT.-1:30 ~do "fW"Olt llA.CW •• •t t1r.. ..... _ •• l•hl-· 114• .. 1. --01. ,.,,~. Michael Caine Britt Ekl1nd IN "GET CARTER" ALSO Frank Sin•tr• IN "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" ElCLUSIY( ORA .. !;[ COUNn ROAD SKOW INl;A;(MENT NOW SHOWING All SUTS llUllYEO 7;15 ID c:..llitll • S.C'"" (56) 11r D. M1tc11tll (Coll'l4r. USN), it IM8¥'1rtMll 5rlM• (C) ('°) 11Pl(led to l1nd 11 1·14 AM. !.-':.;.-------~~! ID Tt T~ .. TIWHI (C) (80) l:OO m All~i(tlt SM (C) "hit Ckl Reserved Seats GI w-....• 141 1n11w (C) (JO) Mist Lltltlf," "'MiJti ScliMI Ctnli· ~ow At Bo11office And By Mail I (J) Jl'9 """'1 (C) (SO) Hlltisl," and "tiubt1 .. tlM Wilt· ''---"-"-'-"'~1~2~'"'..;.1_' ... ..;_ __ ~ I n. _, (C) (lO) lilt DtM." ir ,,,..... (C) (50) IJ 8 ())I lflC1ij I L1111r Lind· SllOW TIMll' AUNISltOll l'l!Cll-* 6 AM Fri on 7 lane iq (C) (lOJ Tht lyn1r module, '''"' oRt1111111A n.z.11 & W.MJ. prel. APOLLO 14 MOON· '"Anl•ttl." llown bJ ultorYiub SMP· oRc 1111111 fW .IO' "'·'°' WALK 11d •!Id M~chtll, llill touch dow11 "lL 11111" 1:~~11:;;~~~'-''" '·1111• 1:11 GD .... """ Mllllul (!JiS) l :•e@()J llil-!C) (IOJ "A 1111"111 11 tht Trick." Jockly is IUIPfdtd wt thrwllll hor11 11cts. a ~oo m-.. <CJ <301 •'Tlit Return 1f Dtrrl~ tht lf!d.~ Stlft1ftf"'t nrtll h11thlld H· c:omH .... r1oc11. • ..... ,,.. ... fC) (to) Cllllta: Olcti li"IOfY, Ttilfl V111 Otvm. llldi "ellOll. L11 1"4IOI 11Mjtm. OI tht lu111r 111rtte1 !fl th• 111117 •ll Pll, & IAf, 1'111 ....... :a '·•· 1111 of frt Mturo. !SJ.ID' $.I.It) l:ll IJ MMt: "'l\t lilt MIMtll" (drt · 1111) '47-Su1111 M•r•ul, Rabin Cu111mln11. IJ-(C) D MtvMI: (C) "'59lal c. .. II••· 1111(' (dr1111t) '~t-frtM Sl111t11, Sll'W\tf Mtclaint. Duft M1rthl. J:JO 0 Male: (C) '\ ... hr UI" (di. 1111) '5' -Kirt Dourtts. lrl&Tlllll \ff.1.-hHI ,.1111. (11.H & •t.M! IAT.-l1JI & l :lt ,.Ill. (51.11 & »-•! iu11.-1111 ' ,,. '·•· 1Ji.•, fl,11) rll. ti I 11-AlllL t TlllU I 1:11 & 1111 (f.Llt & P .M! Cl.LL IU·lltl POI UOUP IATll -2c --111111t 111u1111rt11 "owt 11Tlll11011 & lrtl'llCJ Oscar Voting HOLLYWOOD (UPl ) -1 ~.,.maJJ:ci """ Ballots have been mailed for """"' 1 • preliminary voting in six O~car c~tegori~s, including art,,miwm1m:u•llf j d 1 r e<:ILon, c1nematography,11· "'stumc design, film editing, "DARDR TllAllAM•R" ."_,., ;;~,...g:.~11tiv::r 11 lli·----N•A•T-l•O•N•A•L-G•E-N•E•RA-•L•T•H-E•A•T•R-E•S----: • .r ...... ttMtfUlll',"'l"5r.NfAllClli~ ~ MANY PERFORMANCES SOLD OUT "THE ARISTOCATS" the MOTHERevuo EXTRA SHOWS I EARTH Saturdays 11 pm ALSO WALT DISNEY'S ~,;:;: Jbuth Coa st Repertory "THE KING OF THE GRIULIES" • l!H010 P:C.lMilll ENGAGEMENT! AU M.t<.Gr1w • l tlll O'N .. I "LOVE STOIYH IDfl) SHOWN Ar •:lt-f:I0-19ilf TONITE -1:30 SNOWMAN IN THE EMPTY CLOSET UIMltr U M1ut It Wiiii "••tnl 'LITTLE fl•USS & llQ NAUY' rrn 11 1 °"'" Mt'lrtl e JM Ntm1i11 "C.C. & COMflANY" 11) ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• k•CNtlvt Orl't .. hl iM ... lfltl $H ll c .. 111ry fllirn Ftttl'tt f ''THUND•llALL" ... '"YOU ONLY LIVE TWICI:'' ...................................... ~ ~-·~ """ " ........ ,. ,,_, -j ' ".' "'""' " ,._ ....... , , ......:... "IAIYM,,KEI" (II . ~~I "I OYS IN TNE IANO" (:C) ''WEDOINQ "IQHT" CGfl l •••.•.... ,.,,.,, .. , .........•....... , .... , ..... HARBOR BLVD DRtVf-tN ---, IXCLUllVE OllVl ·IN SNOWING! UllOlltf 1r 111ir.1 ff wllll p.trtnl "flOOLS" fCfll -----tsl·l111 ,.,,,. • SKIM coi.r '••IYA '"Z" CllJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• lo•ch11iv1 Drlv•l11 !fll.,.!r'ltl lttHr! Sttjll!W11 • C1U11 8l1~1ly ""l:IVATI Ltfll: 0' SHEILOCK HOl..Mll" !0"1 l'tv1e a.11 S!or C111 "IT'S A MAO, MAO, MAO, MAO WOllLO" 101 1111111111111111xgxXJXJXJJIJllCllCCJJ All Cti.r l•Cl•n+vt Drlv .. 111 $111.,.lfll -...... UM tr 11 Mw1I 81 Wltfl l"tr .. I ........ ''GIT CllllTlll" !Ill -~ liwt '"nll Sl1M11f1 • liM. 1(-ltly M7 ... ll "Dil:TY DINGUS MAGEi" 10,.I ( ........ ORANGE Oll+VI IN ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. , .......... , ..................... . RESERVATIONS 646-1363 OR ALL AGENCIES 111 "AltlOll IHOMllO Cl JI l!:DWARDS HARBOR,:r.:.1 Jason Katharin Robards Ross They tou<hed each othef and let go al the (J(lUSIVE llllAllMlllT ALSO-~ si-11 NOW PLA.Tllllii M .. ry F .... WIEIDA.YS 6:45 SAT. l :JO • SUN.12:lG D. H. L•w1111c•'1 .. CHETEMNE SOCIALClUI" (QP) "THE VIRGIN AND THE GYPSY" (R) ••• Th• M•st H•n~rM Mavi• ''Z'' We1kd1ys -o~ il:O; 111. 11111 Sufi. -1l:U 91~ 549-3352 COL\"~llll.% 1·1~·11 ·1:1".~ •• ,. ,. ll:Y f:-1; \I !.I"' 1·l.• ;-· • ;; ·:• J RICHARD HARRIS · ALEC GUINNESS Oe••ell a.hind e..,.rf. i.1·· .-""" ELLIOTT GOULD .,~tancli"9 "'• fl•VIDl ..0.1'!.~ ---n _. • "I LOVE MY ... Wlfl" _,,,thf991 ._...,"",.,.. ·~oo·jl;-fl/T~'··- l'lUS ~ 119dford;,, "TIU THIM WRllJ IOT Iii "Ill" wuau..., OIH8l mtlnG8U GIGYOUNG•ANN JACKSON CAC COlOR {i)CDJ ;::::The Baby Maker Jason Robards· Katharine Ross "--''~ -~--·­I~ JW,°"'Slfl AlSO-aAJl8AkA HERSHEY IN '1HE IA8lMAll.[R" .. ~ .. -... ,...<) .. ~ •• , .. WARNER OQIVt tN 2.GO Pia CAll..OAI IN,.,... _11 .... IN f'lllt Cll"'Nlt2,_ . ......,_,.,._ ...... ~.-, ....... ~Cl.I m __ __,,,_. ._ ~;...-.. 1rm .. 11u A L.1• n .· ~-IJ,.CC;oo • • .,,~ ·~·~ N nu: VIRGIN • '1\"-'''"'"' AND nu: GYPSY (;..,~ ....... ,__. D .~ ...... \~ .... ·~ M ' ,• ..... " . ..... .. .. . . . AH C.1sr 1''1mlly 'lf"' 1'1111.,111 "SON OJI "l-Ul&l!I:" 111 l"l•t e Jttt WJM "l"UflNSTUI'" il l N MIS 10 1!.JO l!DWARDS CINEMA VIEJO IAll MCO rtlf, AT I.A I'.: TUMtOf'f llO·ltto I 1 l I _,,...,•,1m DAILY I'll.OT • Eve ryone Hes Somethin g That Someone El se Wants CLASSIFIED ADS You C.n Sell It , Find It, :rrade It With • Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results -..... J~I -,.... I~ I, -"'.. I~ I _..... I~ I --.. I~ I -..... I~ I -....... I~ I ---l~I -..... I~ Gtintral efinda J d/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 72 Lindi Isle Drive DRUXE Waterfront Apt Gener ii 3 Bedroom, 2 B1th Fl:r1r Upper $22,500 General Near So. Coast Plaza Corona tdal Mer 328 Poppy -2 br view homt', complettly rem ode led. $47,500. Owner 6T>M28 4 Bidtooms, 2 ba~ fltt-Cfft• Me11 place, bltn ranae le own. I;:.:;:;;;:.;:;.:;:::, ___ _ Clrpel5, drs,pes, pe.tio, dble W 0 RKSHOP INCLUDED. garqe. $71,150. FanWOc 3 bedrm Mesa Rov Mc C1rdl1 Realtor Verdf! home on quiet lrH lined cul-d~c. 2 Mau.Ive J.810 Nt1'-port Blvd., C.M. fireplace1, beautilul Htmtlneton ....... Entertainment Center BARGAIN HUNTERS! 4 BR-CabantPDOI $25,900 4 BR. .fam. Rm. $19,500 Traditional 6 BR., 51<> ba. home on lagoon, w/dock. Furnished, decorated & lndscpd. 2 master bdrm. suites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $200,000 Own It for leu than rent. After Oo'A'n Pymt. only $355/mo, No other ~ Can also be uaed for Pre .. tlae Bu.s. Office, City Ll> ense Approved. All It needs is some paint, a little elbow arease. and some tender lovlna care, it bu everythin&'. you need, a aood neilhborhood, covered patio, latte built.in BBQ double prqe and a price 'tar that tell• you it'• a stul! So iet with and save $$ on this one. 5t6.8640 ~7729 rnil'limum upkeep yard , Ui'jlCllJI'. ti()M.ll I"""'"'""'!!!!'!!!!"!'!'"!!!!!!! •pukl"" Int•,...., .u bitna, Fl91 E.a.te, 11H000 . $26,500 . 2 baths Ir Iarae muter Wow! You can't rniu on a home like this. Private tree lined cul·de-aae sedulloll. Modern • plu.a decor from deep pile carpetlna to wlvet flocked walls. Queen-1ized bedrooms. De.lt.aXe built·ln klkhen that 11parldes. AD the extru • Bar, Tropical prdens, Kidney shaped pool witb board It 1llde. Near beach. E·Z terms. Hurry Call (7141 962-5S85 And IGlid u a rock. Onl;J I years youn1. All tbe: modern convenlencts. Famlb' alzed country ldtc:hen with latnt dect bullt-im. 4 &ood aJzed BR'1. 2 laviah bath&. Wood panelled family room. Ankle dee:p carpeting. Sprin!dttt. Room for boat. cw-c1e.qe ana. Fantastic terms. Try. low down. Where in .the world can you find a atarter bargain like this! Better hurry -Call (n4) 9&Ur585. For complete information on a ll hom11 & liJts, please c1ll : • • • • BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Would You BeHeYe •• ? 133 Dover Dr., Su ite 3, N.B. 642-4620 Real tot Gentr•I General SOOO Sq. ft. Commercial l-=-""~-H,,",."°'-:·-c_.M_. _ ""''""• PLus. • .COM-Eight Bedrooms j;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11 -------1 PLEI'E "'" Bu PLUS. • • FR + DR + POOL WALK To BEACH B / B COMPLETE IAW>dromat Extra sharp 3 bdrm. homf', unique country kitchen v>'ith used brick trplc. Yes, ttK>re is anolher trplc. in the spae. io11s living rm. FonnaJ din. ~. aunken tub in matr. bath, wrought Iron entrance, beaut. y&rds. 3 Car carage &: room for boat & trailer. Assume exist;ng fltA loan, $293 per month pays all, $39.500. 22 YEARS OF in•!""' on• in op.,·ationl n.ars right -8 fUl1 bdrm&! REAL ESTATE SERVICE PLUS. · .$800+/mo. Sc:h. Formal OR -PR -modem IN THE HARBOR AREA Income. kitd!. -breakfast area -4 E.xc. Irvine Terr, •2 $79,500 baths -larve LR -white Qnfy $69.950. 4 BR. ·3 Ba., lnall a ~at k>cati~.:.: .and brick F.P. Poci heated &: d. Dbl I p C'f. ... pment Cueeo and tilter. Badminton court -m. rm. • frp e. etf. cl ) . cl F Sal vh?w of sunsets &-bay lights. ear 1n Uded. or e av1ary -111\lctl mon'. )'O!I _, ONLY as a TOTAL .Pack. v.'OO 't believe the tta.!Onable Centr .... ly located, 5 min. from anyplace. age. price. Hurry, Dial 64.).(13()3. EXC.-JUST LISTED Cameo Highlands. 4 BR., din. rm .. huge Jiv. nn. Parklike Realtor F.d Babson 548-5412 settif1i. Everything in A.11 iil:il:il:iliili:::lil:il:rl cond. $53,500. Ii !ORI \I J: Ol \O\ Pr.At '"(!P 2299 Harilor, Corta Mesa YOUR HOME Uniqye liome1 hu a "'orid of enel'i)', a bundle of en- thusium and countlest great idell all stored up .. waitlnc to ti. unleashed on the 1a1e of YOUR HOME. UniqUe Sales People are ready to present a profes. slonal marketinc program designed to sell YOUR HOME at the beat pouible prioo. l u.i have fixed that house up reat neat • now you de· serve to have your name In the paper. C&lI UNIQUE. People-read our ads. _ • don't tht'y'! Ui'jl()UI'. ti()M.ll FIMI Ellett, 175«IOO 1~ E. CH•t Hwy. COl'w. o.I Mir, c.lf. 3 BR. + Famlly Rm. bednn. Ab90lute m111t to Elepnl fireplaoe. Huie fun. att at $32.500. Call 5'5-&U4, ily rm, 3 Bedrm, Parklike -"°"=.::lh:..C::°':::u::t:..:Ro=ol:.:ton=-:·c__ ya""' • abade + .truit trees. MESA VERDE Prime location, No down Lovely 4 BR, 2 BA + fa.m . temui. 540.lT.ll nn. home. Nr school, lib. TARBELL 2955 H•rbor It shop'c cntr on quiet at. REPOSSESSIONS Elec bltlll, llke new lu1h shac cr pt thruout Sparkllnf clean bome1, .me w/Spanlih Ule enll)'. Bltin newly painted A-carpeted. 2, FOREST l OLSON FOREST l OLSON 3, t & 5 bdmu. Some with bookcues ln pal'lel'd llv. rm Inc. Realtors pools, FHA-VA conv. terrm, w/\lltd brtck trplc, By 19131 Brookhunt Ave. Inc • .Realtors Jrom $17,00l to $40,IXXl. Owner, $.1l,950. SST-6837 6., VA + POOL 19131 Brookhunt Ave, Colllnt I Wattt Ine. GOOD 5 BR, hse on Lon-1• -· ..i.__ _.,, ...,.,.. Auume 6% VA loan payable iiijjjHiuniijjjtinp>n-jijjilloji•ii'ijhjjjjil _.3 A ........ Ave. ..._......... donbeny ln No. C. M . .,.,,0 -_ r!!-_ --.. Auume exls"~-rnA loan at a Jow ~· per month on .,.. ._ * NEW LISTING * '"~ th!, ohvp-4-llodroom home $lDOO"Ti -n: ,-Si.po to octan. 3 so l% ha. of approx. $25,750 w/lntere.at in F-·n••,.· V-"..., ....,,~ u r mar111.et ... at only 6'4. $ZOO down "" au~,,. .,....,. Ch)ly $24,950 for a spacious Bltiu. 2 Ctr aarare. Good home has carpe:ting and COl'l'll!r 3 bednn home with condition. P&,IXXI. paymnt. Chu. C. MarUn drepea thrUOllt and ia ready detittd bllru incl dllhwuh- CAYWOOD REAL TY Rltr. ~1195· to be moved mto. This new er. Hu 2 )owly J>lltiol A 6Xl6 W. Cout Hwy., NB EAS'I'SIDE -S%.% loan listins is .,,.iced at o"iu .. _ .. _ ,... '"' privacy 1alo!'f:, near acboola SCl-1290 available. O»ice 3 u=i111, ~'',uv. and will .. _ 10ld ... ,, __ , iy ...., JW -uu ii: Xlnt ahoppinl. Check at-2 bath home in ab .... ute weekend' . C&li now ro-a~ cond All " r· tractive t~a at 1010 down. DUPLEX •w.,950 immaculate ltion. pointment. P Ill ••-• I JC-.. co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS Open Evenings 675-3000 mn.\\ ,\ llL\fll llE.\U'\' l:\f. _. bltm, hardwood lloora, ac c -r•• "•• ty PERFECT TAX 23"'1 " Orangt, C.M. crptg, fl.replace A quiet If ~ Eve1: 5.1S-9M6 SHELTER Builder Ml-4005 residential location. A mu1t FOR THE lAZY MAN BEAUTIFUL It you want all your yard w"k and ....... naln"n· CUFF DRIVE • 962-1454 • EAS'fllLUFF OWNER LEAVING ·STATE EST l~\9 ~'~ l~;):J . . ance taken care of, then, Quality oostom. C'OrlStnK'tion! don't fall to see this 4 bed-Better tlwl new condltlon! ~m townhouse with 3 full Truly minimum care yard! 1 -~rw=~o~7H~o=M~E=s~1 bal ... '"'only $24.950. Easy ""'""' M m""' desiral low down payment, FHA Newport Heights! 3 Bed· ONE LOT tenns or assume exlsting rooms, 2 full be.th!. Huge . S%.% Joan with TOTAL Family Room Priced Rlght Look-2 - 2 Bedroom homes PAYMENT of only $161 per at $49,9oo. ~ 'eau 646-nn. on one lot -What a buy ~ month. Let us lhow .,..,., thii v•..., Built lo owners needs -&t tPtCial home t;i.y, .... ,,. perfect as a home +income ~ COi.ATS or &5 an in\."E'stment. Excel· lent access to shopping and WALLACE sehools -Hurry -Come in-REAL TORS 0 THE REAL \""-CSTATCRS Own TEN commercial rent-to see at $33,000. Call 162-4471 ( =.) 546-1111 ala plus additional 1'1!1ident-* BEACH HOUSE * 54~24, South Co a at BUY OF THE WEEK Jal & parking Income in 2 BR. +. 2 Blocks from c"°:.::::":::"'::":.::..· ---~--I EAST lTrn STREET ahop. ocean in N'pl Beach. You Ut.950 • VA NO DOWN or Thl5 4 bdnn • 2 be.th. am pine complex. Rental In-own the land! $24,950, JllA tenni. Deep shag ranch atyle home on b11 tot, come ofuela a.11 expeme1 Jn. George Wiiiiamson carpefuia:, mh&ive stone 1& Uv rm. w/lrplc, w/w ch.\(iing payments enabling Realter fireplace aeparate dlnln& crpta over hrwd firs, huge buyer to take ruu deprecia-•73-4250 64J..15'4 Eves and Lua:~ dble 1araa:e. Thi• yard! Full price $23,950. tion1. Priced to iell at S sparkling 3 bedrm home ls Submit all terma! Ca 11 l!f.. c EAST IDE TRIPLEX now vacant and rttdy tor 847-122'1! '11.9,000 with 29 10 d<>wn. all Sharp units with l2l 2 Bednn ocaipancy. Call S4S-8424, SEYMOUR REAL TY for details. I& bachelor unit on lttae lOt. South Cout Reallon. tn41 Beach ffivd., Htp Sch Dbio d•!aci>od ....... Try M 0 V !NG-TRANSFERRED-$29 995 10% down, only.·· Tired of fi&htin& with 1 $32,tSO tenant&! Call the problem After )'OU 'PQ!'k YoUr boat or $27,900 Stroll up to a wry pltuant 3 b!drooTn, 1 bl.th ho~. well kept and ready tor you. Livln1 room with fireplace, big back yard for kid• and an auumable loan. Phone .... "3S. , THr: Rf.I\!. ~ J:STl\'J LR'.o ASSUME 6% loan . Our transferred owner MUb"'T sell his &harp 4 bedroom home with large family room in EastbluJf. Redecor- ated in 1970 with luxurious shag carpet. hanMome wood paneling and dt'C(lratar wall cvverings. An excellent fam- Uy home \\ilh an oversized garage for Dad's workshop. Top value at only $44, 750. vestigale and invest . --<S5'4161-44141- DIAL £45.roOJ. (Op~n Ev1nlns•> TRl-PLEX $39,511 PERRON '42-1771 IOlven _ South Coast Real trailer walk into a verf College Perk Estate, Property Manq:e-nice 3 bedroom, 2 be.th home. ment Division. l .ivlng room witb Palo Ver. 3 &: Family, 1%. bt., like: new crpta, drpa, 3 years new • better than model! aose to school1, 1hoppg A tteeway. KRAFT REALTY, 842-1418. SACRIFICE 3 br, 2 ba, tam rm w I frplc. S21,000, Assumable T%9'. !l&i-1864. -~ 673-"61) Owner Says Sell Reduced $2000 HIRISI [ Ol\O\ "' P E A L10R~ MESA VERDE FIXER-UPPER Owner ~te • house ts (3)' 2 Bedrm unit.a, aeparale 2299 Harblr, C.M. not finished. Are you willing one for owner. IJve in and 1 -~H=U~G=E~F-A~M~l=L~Y~ 1 to "'" 1$$$ '"' """'· Com• 1ry l600 down FHA. and complete this. Have tile ROOM m""'°" of ,.,.,.. <ft•m• -N•wporl The most outatanding value 5 bdrms -FR -formal din- on today's market in a lux· ing -den -just about every- ury (nearly l!m sq. 'ft.) 3 thing + 2nd story patio. bedroom home. Consider Make this .YOW' 11ummer pro. their features: large separ-ject -Hurry -Dial 645-0300. •• Fairview 646-1111 . (•nytlm•) 220 E.17tli 6-0555 Evonlnp Call ~ KING·5m FAMILY HOME * 5 Bedrooms * 3 Balhl * Dlnlng """"' * Large Family Room • 2400 1q. n. * Heated and Filtered Pool * Corner Lot * Mesa Verde'1 Fineat * CaJl For Inspection !if6..2313 EXCLUSIVE 56-8(24 de stone fireplace. wan to OUR omCE. 4 BR +.rum-IN Mesa Verde, by owner. 3 wall carpeot and let'• .... pus + pool A.uume n1A sume this 6% VA Loan. lCl!lfl. n....n n .. i ... 1 to 4 • BR, 2 ba, Fam. rm, Shea Phone M2-2535. "'t""' ~ carpetiftl throuJ"hout, Elec- 356 Princeton. For •PPL trlc home, d I 1bwa1 be r , JEAN SMITH, RL TR. trpto. fire ~ b"'"'" olum 546-4147 646-3255 syatem, AM/FM radio ln- 400 E. 17th St., C.M. teroom throughout. Patio. O THF: Rf:.I\[, "\. 1:sTl\TI:RS Huntl-H•rbour COILEGE Park, by owner $28,990. SfS-342'1. Tired Of Rent Receipt• SACRIFICE -$19,MO - • 3 br, 2 ba, family nn, XLNT FAMILY HOME 3 Bdrm_ 2 bath area Town. :ri.fqnltlcent 4 br, 4 ba, fll'l!place, lge 1enced yard. Mea Verde 5 BR, 3 ba, Liv, hoUle, prime area, priced -watt"rlront Imme in Hur>- 5"-% FHA, payments $165 Din, Fam. 2 Frplc's, El" •·h 118850, ,_ 1. tln.gton Harbour. 101 ' -900 •~g~u: r,. t ' · ... iv rm, wa10--n1. 07' dock. C·'I mo . ...,,, · ~ """' kit, intercom, nr school•, wl w ept, dl'P9, W /D, nfri&', ' ... .., .... Corona de) M•r OJuntry Club. 546-51511, lg patio & POOL prlv,f 592-UIOl for appt, Princlpa.ls BEST BEACH A $61,500. FUU price SJB.850 -1ubmit, 1 -onl~y_. -------1 This home is in Costa r.1e.u.s best area, it's a 4 Bedroom 2 bath residence with a fam. ily room a n d sparkling s\\.·immlng pool -Ranch stylC' complete with rustic wood exterior. -It's 8 yn young and beautifully cared for .• Owner askinc $29,950. Make oUer. 546-8640 etc family room with wet bar, formal dining, 21h baths, nearly new shag carpet, heavy shake roof. On1y 103 dO\\'TI. $31,SOO. Call 67:J..8560 I ORI \'I [ Ol SO\ ' Pl/ft•Oli'; REA OWNER ANXIOUS Call 847-1J21! Irvine VIEW + POOL Only l% bltu. to be0<h A SEYMOUR REAL TY --;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j W·'" 1_... .. 8 t .... ;treet In Jr. walking dist. to &bops A res-Price reduced to sell now! • ....,. "'""" '"' taurantl. Versatile home can Leaving area. 4 BR, 2 story, 1Il41 Beach Blvd., Htan Beh Realtor 2629 Harbor, C.M. If! .. THE REAL \""-ESTATERS ,)• f •• • ' TAYLOR CO 2:29'3 Harbor, Costa Me&a QUIET CUL·DE·SAC Redecorated In and out. Four &Inns., Dining room, family room, two bath hOme with sparkling gu kitchen and loads of cabineU. Double LIDO NORD garage. large 22'x26' cover- High and over one block to iRiiiiiiiiiiiiio;;&;;;;iiiiii be used ... 2 BR. -'" den w/ Come to ZS Sherwood St, CM * * * * --M-OCATN Hoigh~. Enjoy ""t''"'""" Pri<• Roduction molhor.in·tow qtn. or; BR. $23.lOO. NO qoolilytrc. Take OUR NEW L 10 in a I~ yard ~itb a lux-from '63.500 10 $59,900 for It. den 1or !arzer famJll'. ovu F1fA loan. 3 BR • urious pool and jacuzzi. Add quick aale. Strikins, large $58,500. move-in cond. Aat ~ 3 bedrooms and 2700 Sq. Spanilh home, near. new, Delancy Real Elf•t• Dana Point Ft. of everyday living while ~ mq, ft. Owner transfer· 2828 E. Cout Hwy., CdM owrlooking Newport Har· Ing East . anxiou1, must aell. -~=--~mo 4 BR w/atrium, $29.500. 5%% loan. Beautiful vlew. 252!r. Yacht Dr, 494-5430. In HUNTINGTON llEA~H 215'2 lrookhurst (comer Hamilton) Larwln Realty, Inc. ........ FAMILY HOME •• ,. Jor Mother, with a cheery kitchen, loads ol cupboard apace, snack bar, family rm. A cov. patio. Fenced yd. fbr the kiddies; 3 BR. 2 B1. Walle to thoppinf, schools. while being 1'M!lll' rwimming pool, teMis I rott $32,950. SUPER BUY $17,850 Fully improyed. 3 bedrm, 2 bath & family room. Bltns, dble garage. carpets &: drape1. $183 a month pays everything with iow dO\\'n payment. Call 540-ll51 for delails. (Open Eves.) 70' Bayfrt, 5 BR, 4 ba & guest ed, enclosed and well light- ap!. Pier/&Jip. Lux Jiv-ed {for evening entertalr>- ing. $260,000. men!) custom , patio. Avail. REDUCED $30,000 able with f1lA-VA TERMS, Prestige Dover Shores 4 BR, at a bargain price of -only bor. A house with every-S Bedrm, tarn • dln rrru. ''MOM & POp;;- thlng for only $69,500. can ~fay lease or le ue/option. You should take a Jook at 546-2313 this n!Ct-2 BR. home -421 \o THEREAL ""-ESTATERS LEASE 4 BR Meaa Verde $165 Orehid • walking dirt, to all con11enlence1. Priced to sell a t $32.500. Dover Shores * PRIME VIEW * * WO;I $2;,soo t ired h·111 Exec. Secluded Contemp. GI /NO DOWN I Ideal for enterlalning. Old world charm! JU celllnp, :ntA/$1300 down! Approx. REALTY fam rm. formal DR & J',i $34,950 VACANT_ U.IMEDJ.1_====="-'-='- ba .... Now only $109,500.' ATE POSSESSION. BEACH UNITS "Our 26th Year" I ~l!lll!l!lll!lllll!l!ll!lllf~ Wesley N. Taylor Co. lo . EMERGENCY SALE REALTORS 11 rental units, Newport Brin& your otter on thl1 prime 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road Shore1, clo1e to beach. 14 Irv. TerT. 3 BR, home w/ Newport Cenler 644-4910 garage~, only 8 yr1 old, no pool & many extraa for vacanci~'· Excellent y<?ar choice living, Askl!ll" $59,500 around income of $1600 mo. by nxio"· 0 .. ~ Macnab-Irvine 220 E.17tli 46-0555 1'35 txl> ' -... ,, Realty Company Evenings Call 548.3265 CA~,L . e .I '''·1 •14 COR·BIN- OPEN HOUSES LIOO ISLE THE TIME TO BUY -t.•,.",T.IY.. . MARTIN OAILY I to 5 SPECTACULAR IS NOW I 1206 P .mbrok•, W1tclf. \Vaterfall into trOPical bath· This selter·s vacant home Is Nr•r Nt,.port Pott o rric• REAL TORS 644-76'2 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, priced ing pool. 30' Living room going begging! He's In a $28 750 MORGAN REAL TY '7:1-6642 '7$.6459 leaded windows, brick I& $210 total per month! 3 BR, Univ. Park Center, lrvlne ~ 1 0 2 BA, crptd, fenced? Won't Call Anytimo 833 •-OPEN DAILY 1-4:30 wrouaht iron. S,uw Ml t. last! .....,.., lll c Venlng Cenyon Rd: ba'a, 4 car gar. n7s.ooo. HAFFDAL REALTY Squeeky c I ea n, charming c"":.::"'"·c.:0,,•:::1·.::":::S.:..7::24"9:.· ---342.440;; Eves: 541-2446 LagUM Beach Shonclltt11, w/priv. beach. Fount•ln V1Tl1y 4 • PLEX 3 BR. 2 Ba. Lge. liv. rm. w/ ---------·I u1ed brick fil>lc. $58,tnl. BLDR'S Sacrlflct -Span. Walk to Broad\\'ay shopJ>C. Scenic Properties 675-5726 style nu custom 4 Br. (1) 3 BR, 2 BA; (3) 2 BR. OM SUITE H 132.lOO. $1500 dn. Loo.dod No va--cy Pri" -~"-• H E OME w/xtru, Shake1. ~1. Cpt ...... · ··~ "''1N· I In ... 1_ • • ., Out of town owner. 2 Sweet au Its ...... attr. thruout. Sprlnk, lndscpd, hom". Both roomy 1: home. tncc. 10223 Pheuant Ave. KRAFT REAL n like. Rent from the l-BR. 537--0380. 142-1411 apt. PllY• the btll1. IS52,500). BY OWNER, $25,400, 4 Bil. NICE 3 'Br, w/Wn nn. Nr: UNIVERSITY REALTY 2 ba bltni trplc ~ererl F'rwy i new elementary * HARD TO FIND * rn beautiful Laguna Beach. Ocean view home. 4 BR. 2 ba. Good cond. Niu yard. Xlnt neighborhood clo1e to schools. Pri~ at '$36,SOO. ~~rz ~SOIJJH LMa.Nr.~ right! Call eves: 642-MaJ with Bay View. 4 Beclroonu, mood to talk price. He'• • NEW LISTINQ-5 BR. 2422 22nd St., N.B. den. huge lanai. Remodeled asklnc $67,500 for 3500 ft., 4 Bdr. + Dtn 3001 E. Cat. Hwy, 673.6510 patio'. tncd, nr' ichools. schl. \Vant to sell fa.al! Steps to bty. Beaut. tum.; \Ve'll help you Jell! 60-EGrB G42-22G4 Princlpala Only! 89M076 Real family home, 4 ~-19&1. 4 BR., format din. rm .. den F1mlly Rm. dbl , ovl!ns, 2 l'l!trig., "'asher, ;;,;==:=:=:=::=;:=:;:,:.,:;:;=.======-="======;;:;==.: dryer. Many extras, $6.1.950 _ .... ....,..c.-- • ... '"10 rooma. 2~ balhll. n1u•I see! &: pool, Lef1 make hlrn an liuge oversized rooms, built. 73-4366 off•r~ in bookshelves, rozy den. Call eves: 6 · I ~ n11.tunl brick fireplaee, No Lachenmyer R ty. 642-1235 675-3210 down c1 .,. FHA t•nn" Call 646·3928 or s.t.>-3483 540-1720 _. .. CRISIS Coldwell.Binker TARBELL 2'55 H•rbor Call: 673-36163 675-8886 evtl. associated BR OKER5-AEAL TORS 102S W Dolboo 67l·J66J BUILDERS REPO .....__--~VACANT VIEW LOT Qy,•ner out of work, home ~ DOVER SHORES -NEW MODELS Ownrr'lli lo!'ls on this 3 bedrm niust be sold Immediately. Very latgt'. Great outlook. Undtt construction • tee the home can be your gain! Re-1 Bedrooms. lamily rm. lire-133-0700 644-.2430 Home Show Re a ltor• pl&n& at 1033 Marlnf!ra Drive, ~:': 11~a ~:s~il~. ~~~ nc~; ~nee· ~11tory $3~n :g~ ~u~ "Armchair Househundng" Dover Shores. 4 &: 5 Bedrms, FHA. S27.~. Cllll Riiy 1· AJ:. ng ' · u m 1 CORONA DEL MAR 3535 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 4 .\ S batb1, .select your own Gault. 540-1151 , Heritage any rt'alOnable offer (pend· COTTAGE 675-7225 colors l custom detalls. All ing r o re c I o & u r ~ ) . Call 1 bi k -with outstanding Vlew1. Roy Real Estat.e. 545-S424. oc lO beach English Waterfront Colesworthy \outh { oast -;;;:-~-·· & Co. Realtor JUST LI KE NEW N"",,art Beach Of.lice 3 Bf!drm, 2 bath Condomln· 1028 BayJlde Dr. ium, completely ttdtc. in. dudtnr Mw carpetl. Jm. TRANSFER med. occupancy. Priced be. YOUR PROBl..El'\f Jow marltet •t to SPECTALISTS $20,500 2 Bedrooms, 1 balh Qualnt, peeked roof, ahtnatc J. Wa.rd, Rltr. 64&-l560, Ovenized R·2 lot 5\de1, wann wood Int., mag. Open Daily. Room to add on nlflcent trees. 52' Prime BY OWN li·~- Asklnc $43.500 trontag~. Pitr/11ip, $179.950. LEAVING AREA PETE BARRETT RLTY 4 br, den, fam rm. 3 bi. • IN Vf '-~TMf NT •• REALTORS SJNCE 1!WS 673-4400 642-5200 BEST BUY • """ l d,..., many """· Comer 101. Between lt'vlne Industrial Complex ft So. Coaat Plaza. stl).S39t $4000 down in Dover Shore~ Proporty M•n•9•m•nt 1.P~E~R~R~O~N~=~64~2~-li.!n~llj/!i\t:flii::""~i\':~F,;~j RHI Est•I• e BALBOA ISLAND e CUSTOM FOURPLEX BAYFRONT HOME 4 Btdrm. huae family rm. den, l baths, double ttoor opt'ns to t.ltrtnt 1la11i tnlrY hall. Macnillcent, fireplace, ~1120 STEPHENS & KAYE s.11 buy , .. ., toeauon Cl"'" N'""'°" ""'" Sl<.txl> $110,500 OWNER TAR BEL L 2955 H•rbor 645·0112 ANYTIME oann. bomt. Rm. to bld. ·Owner 213/!lfll-7039. 548-1936 or &U-46S4 Rl'ductd to $44,950 I ;:::;:;:--::::::-::::--:-;-:::-l•!!!!,;;;;;;;.;;.,9,;,;;,;,,,,., ISLAND REALTY HOUSE HunllntT Watch the NO matttr w1\at 1t 11, you Ca.II tell lt with a DAIJ,. Y PILOT WANT Alli 54g,ina Sell the old ttutr Buy the. new atutf ,-1200 Mt. OPEN HOUS£ column. Sell thf old stuff ,,,. .,,,,.5-108 Evea. BllY \he new 1tuU .· s~~~lA.-J£t-~s· The Pun/• with th• 6uilt-ln Chuckle e m~1.r\::"':®Aus 11 r r t I' r I'. ·1· I 6 fof:=r, uiliu1 I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LITS ANSWlltS IN CWSlfllED 700 ROOM TO GROW 2100 Sq, fl. Iarnlly bome. 4 Bedrooms. 3 baths, on %. acre. pro!ealonaUy la.nd- 8C&l)@d. Several decks. Axil table till! family room with fireplace 6" wet bar, Built.in kitchen. Mauive 1tone ttre.. plaee In living room. t..un. dry room: Double prare. ~.llt.O. Colt - ..AO tan REAL ESTATE 1100 Glenneyre St. Ui-9413 '4..:JlS e ON THE MA LL e ln Monarch 8a)'. A IPJC., cf\&n'nlna: 2 BR. home w/ hUf! vlflw cteck. 8eautif'Ully deau'lttd, Private commun. lty, $59,500, e SPliCIAL HOME e For aPtdal cousik. O&&t. bft, hlllakll!: b:>me w/a h1.1.1:9 pLa.yroorn, 2 ft'p!CI.; while wattr vltw, Victoria Btach area. S:U.500. Bt'TllKE REALTY 11114 S. C.t. Hwy. 494~ The fUtest draw in tn. Wut , • 1 0.ily Piiot Owlllotl M. llW!il j I ~ I J --. . . . : • .. , .. . . .. • • ... . TAllnda1, 1tbru#1 ~. 1971 ........... - I ~ -..a. Howwt ~ 1-Property ~ ~ Furnished 300 How11 Unfvm. 305 H._ Unfum. 30S Aph. Fum. Mt Apia. Fum. Mt Apt. Unr.im. * ui!IEE ARCH.BAY I< PANORAMIC VIEW LUCKY ·~1" 5 dupluu + Gonorol COii• MeN Newport Buch Cotto Mo.. Huntlng!Gn Boocll Co"""' clol Mer Owner etf~ tlr ~ tint ot jet1y ' main chl.nnel. 3 bk. Ea. w/fenced yd. Fix· -* time dm larle ~ botne. BR .• 4 hi. borne w/torm&l up . 6 lnctta.*.e rents. 2.4c LANOLAlRDS .. OWNERS N_....AR NEW-2' bcdtooml lt VIEW ot Udo, ocean 1: REMARK:ABLY DELUXE Bachelor Unlhl • * COR()(.100 APTS 5 ~ ttudy, !t.m.Uy dia. rm., study: 2 trplca, acceu. 15% dn SllOM. Alt. PROPERTY MA.NAG£RS den. lii t:lk! BL Bll-tn 0 Catalina, Clean, aha.rp 2 BR UNBELIEVABLY Walk to Octa.n. UtU pd, 2 Br. 1tudial 6 atrttt Jevell. ~ 5 •thl. levet arass "''et bt.r 'Ne.,idy redecoC' 6Ts-.8989 \Ve wW reltr t~u to )'OU It R. Db! gar-pati o , A den home, ~aut crpt'd EXTRAORDINARILY lJNDBORG CO. 536--2519 $183 6 up. PenthoUIN $230. yard, new kitchen lnclUdina on' sand; .beaeh. $169,500. ' )J) .• Unlts-.Eutaide. Co 1 ta tree ol charge • • • Many ea.11)ftinc I. dnpe1. Largt A drp'd. AdltB only, "° pell BEAUT11'UL La~n• le1ch Dlbwbr, D'PI, dbl ' cvpart. ' t brtUr.ut room. ~"a W ~ Dr. 9., •P9'1. Mesa. Arclljtecl de1lrn. na deairable ttnanll on our fenced yard Nr achool1 • $395 mo Incl prdener .l Val D'iM·,.. Garden Aph -. Pool. &n.3371 --1Jrm •-~~ I ' waitina IilL <hureb. No Pell. 2!9 Sierlts. wstu 642-:m? •ll 6 ~ Ad $30 WK LUXURY B" ·~ -w J • 3 Br .. ~ • .... _ · ~-"" Bill G rundy R .. lter vsc.llC~• Io w ma!.,. ALA R<nW. * 64>3900 Ults, no pet. ~~ -• - ' appt. Principals only.~-ass Dover Or., N.e.. Mi.462o tenanct, .iood return. By . CLEAN 3 Br & den. 2 ba, Wltends, Putting JTffll. wa~rfall " • up. Baclll!krs, al.nllt•. 1 Soot hwy. 322 ~te. i;W. ,,.. . BALBOA COVES Owmr. 642-444! CUTE ' ~nv.-Priv 1 lrplc, f:ncd, crpt/drp&, $225 4 Bedroom in lovely Baycrftl ·~am. flowet"I eve:ywbeni, Bdrm, steps to bch, all util, fU..l.S42 or 1'1'~2222.. penop_a domaia. All -J90 ori lie. S6-45a or 6'1s.1'34.. arr.a.. Forrn&l dinina. tam--4& pool, rec. room. bllllud1, btd pool,, linel'tt, ree rm, DEL"UX 2 BR. l ba, w/~, OH ~RATA CENTRO WATERFRONT Incl util. 408 Bll<i<N'll Rd. uy room attnctivdy ""'°'· .BBQ'•. s.uoa, tum....ium, ,,..taunnt. oockW1o, dallc--11 6 t1rpc. I"" t B..'idrooma. 3"' Bl.tbs Prime loc. 3 BR. 2 ba. aingle 2lrd A: ~. C.M, ALA ~ntal * 66-3900 SHARP 3 BR,. 2 BA, quiel ated • $4!iO • yearl,y Jeue. . Sinclt1, 1 BR, 1 BR + &n, inc 1$4,;: lDO; 35 Ft. + Lot story, Newly de«lr. Fnced 'DUPI.EX S36,950 ffiDEJ.A·WA~. ~ l hr ilftet. Now vacant int per 'Mil' Real Eatater1 -Sf6..7ltt 2 BR. fiom S13.5. Set it! V-iUaa:e tnn Hotel Apts t street' to Strata yd, 30 ft boat Jip, $79,SOO Builder 642-4003 holne. You 11 kwe tL $130. mo. Cal.I LARRY,, Heritage or 546-2313, ml PtLn10n1 Rd., 6U-86'70 494-9436 3 BR 2 ~ DupJeJ.. Bl~ I .' 1 $'12,500 Bill Grvnc:ly, Re•ffor ALA JUntah * 64.').J9IX) Real Eltate 540-lJSl.. 3 BR, 3 B&. large ho~ Betwet:n Hartior & Newport, ddtwr, lndry rm, tncd patio, LIDO REALTY INC. &33 Qover Dr., N.B. 64.2-46:20 Lots for Sale • 170 $1U ~ 1 BR. Private Ct>ttage. SPAR.KUNG w/ nu paint On channel with pier a: float, 2 B1ll: N. 19th. ~':i. !e~~uur:.. $~ pr. $235. MO Iris. 6U-l302 I un VII Lido ,7),.7300 NEWPORT Bch, by owntr, Patio. &side Cfl.f. Ir. cpta 2 Br car tam large patio, $450 per mo. CASA de ORO 11 t p ?of c 3 BR, 2 Ba, epll, drps, SIOVf;, ** 40' lot. Oea.n 3 br, 2 Dover Sho, ~s Westc l iff V1EWlotl..qunaBeach 8200 Blue8e•con*'4S.0111 welc tt4o ' ' 631--0634or67>3435 ~:43~~or.TI4;494-l~ ~frla, dwhr, iarb dlspl. area \\alkmr distance to sq. tt. All uti1 In, paved CASUAL Calif. Uvinz' in a S2'0/mo. 67S-2698. bt.. Newty redecbiated. · 11tr00. Ge:ntJe ti o.,,, n hi 11 8i1lboa Coves ALA Rentals * 663900 PIER •' ht on-Channel, WUJn MedJterraDl!!an atmoe-Lklo ltle I Large patio. fT1.50I!. ~!m scri~~ilt!~R& ~a~ slope. XJnt building site. \YATERFRONT Deco 3 Br 2 BR hse In eourt. Cl'pll lovely extra lge patio, lat pbere Spaclous color co.. I-"=-"=------_c_o_•l_.4_Me __ .. ____ ~1 I · Kt1 5-2512 after u pm li e pool ' Lge iot Ir. circular ~ cash or $10,500 tenns. · r • & drps. U45 mo. No pets. 3 bedrm, 3 bath home $400 ordinAted apta • dHflned Ir. BEACH Apts. Furnished l El CORDOVA Apt * OPEN DAILY 1-4 * d r Ive.' I de al home Owntr 642--0138. I ~ ~ Mo. 10JU""0· $350. l or 2 smaU clilldttn. 3171 per mo. (l) 637--0634 furnished for atyle &: com-Br.. Ir Bachelor. CaraJ'e. $ m V.la 0Jlte.' 4 BR. 3 Ba. reali311caJly pri!:.'ed. 646-46llli-.tms -horse country -N. u rundy tr, 642-4620 \Vallace, Apt 6. 64ft..2719 '\'ATER.FRONT 3 BR~ 4 Ba. fort . Heated pool.. Kitch. $200, $225, $250. 33) Nord. · $65,000. Broker 615-53XI. LOVELY hom• 1,,lly •-t'd Tu s t t n . hi 11.s.viP.\\'S. All \VATERFRONT. Decor. 3 2 BR p . ,._ home. Newly ndec. Oa san. en w/ inJlrect lla:h•I .. -e , ,.,n_<_• _ ......... _,.._,-....----.OPEN ·HOUSE SAT/SUI'{ • ., ... ., ' Bd. 2 Ba. Mo. to 'to."~. • garg. alio ..... .,ts, d be h 11000 M n.• -~ '·N •---L ID17 Ow-Jo St, 64l-C470 u.1• Vorde -dra-•. 2 b•. 2 b•, d•n, utilities. $890fl. Less for " .,....... Y ac · 1 o. .......uxe RIO. Adult!: only, No ewport _.Ql ,... -• .. _,. .... ~.. Bill Grundy Rlb'. 60-4620 drps, stove, relrig. Quiet Bill r-··• ru-64" ·~ '_._,__,_._,...-..--. ___ REFRESHMENTS served in ' _ patio. 2<:ar &ara1t. f\lm. cash.~. ~lboa I 1 nd tropical settin&: for adu1ta B .... d ... :Y:..1 u. _..,_ pets, l BR.-t175 furn. ·-J.· ·• F recreation room. Be 1ure 10 LO V El. y · prof«,!ionally ClOBe lo bCh. Call alt 6:30 Mobile Home/ 1 a only. 1 blk to slmps. 3 R. P . ., .. y turn •.• ·$250 US or 1tt these Charming l IL 2 la~. pool home-3 lge rt·· :2-32921 ~ov~ng to Tr•ll•r Parks 1n 5 BR. 4\.9 ba. on .\Yater. $169/mo. 646-«30. ~:!~m~eait;•••••;4g:~ 365 ~INCL~~ s· I Ad I BR Spanish rtyle, prertip br,' 2 · ba,' l frp!cs. film ~ mu.s se ·• once. :. *WATERFRONT Deck w/view: dock pr:ivil.,BACK Bay, 1ge 3 BR. 2 NWPT BCH. lmm•c 3 BR. • • 1ng e U ts apill for adult.I. Extra lr&: rm <Concrete patio· over--i:. . · S:.00 )fo. l\larch l to June ba, e.ttns, Fncd, Firepl. cul-• $lO WEEK & UP liv nns shag cpt'd A df11'd he~ decldnc. wrouibt iron MUST SE4-BY OWNER Oloice loc. Vi_lla SS. Bayside 1!I d!-&flC, March 1, $265 le~. den, dining, 2',i BA; from l BR. or STUDIOS furn w/ South Bay Club fl • whole thtuout.' Owhn, spac cto.. fence encl pool. By·cwner Bra.nd new, lee almple, 1: Village. Quahty thn.ioul .Im· Salisbury, Realtor 673-6900 675-4623 or 64&-2661 $385. Delta 646-4tl4 eompl: kitchen Call elec.>. new wa,y of 1Ue designed ets, beaut. pool, encl aar. $32,500: ~. b"1>lkl beacbeh. 3 bilirt 2 ba, 2 mClocb~~~~ •~pooau~~:.· Corona def M•r EXECt.ITIVE 3BR. 2BA . Newport Heights Freelinef1$, heated pool, air. just for Jlnile people. It's c am ce nas w/w u '""""" • · co~. 'IV Ir. nwd aervice fun L>vin .. with warm, dy. FAIRWAY SUPE'll ' l o catlon-15,6 ~l huze dbl 'r•r opt $27,500. 673.5848 eves. *OCEAN VIEW LD\.'ely fenced yrd. Grdnr I-BR., .sharp, good atta. 4 ail ··-... M:yr\iewood. 3 'BR, tarn. 642-7Si1 . R I E .... w tu 114 * Ind $265 oo~. 642-27$. Rml (If duplex, cpls/drps, avnaily ._ 1.fonlhly rate• ~~ c1"'ub-.. ·-·· 11.·-· •• APTS trplc FHA-VA pending · ea 1 an -3 Bdmu.. 2 baths. Walk to Old 1 • 1--1ui ....... VILLA tz1.50o. 0Wner C99-1901 or. (1) BLU.FFS-ANGELITA beach. Partially furn. Avail. 2 t;lR newly dee. Mils, 2 gar. er coupe, no pets. 2Q80 Newport Blvd. at 21st ming pool 'pvty ro0m bil-• 4~ on Vista CaJoil . now. SS.SO mo yearly be children OK No peta. 2'178 $130 mo. Bia. ~2414. e 642.~ 9 Hard&, indoor Soll drfvma · _ Spacious t 2 br, 2 ba. -l·slory WE are th:e exclualve ~nts Call: li73-366J "642-2253 eW:s Placentia. 646.5637 Sa nta Ana B/Arnericard e M/Cbarp ra.nie •. h:QJN: courts. 'pro 2 & 3 BR's Newport Beech plan on chQJCe -:orner Jot. I for a national corporation " [ * 3 BDIL'f. Unlurn, $150 ,.. • • • • • • • • shop and~ tennis pro. t--..;....~~-----1 By owner. $39.500. Mf.2189. NEED HOME.S for transfer· 2622-B Santa Ana Ave, CM. 3 BR, 2 BA. Full carpet, e $100 MO-& Up Si •• 1 a,. 2 Bedroom IUX· THE e:UY LIFE .BLUFF.$ ees. Call local agent belore ~or ~1541 air-oond.. dshwhr, stove, e SZi WEEK & Up ury apartmenta With an the Private patio, pool • lndiv. laundry fac, Near Orange C.O. AirpoH:' A UCJ. Adults only. r b I ..... •'DJuU ,, you Ila!. 847 .fi612. trplc. Covered p a t i o. e $5 NITE z,, Up m_.. __ · _, __ ,_,..,..,1 avail. a u ru-. upgraw:;u 1'I • ' "'-puJa• E. PI••, ,.... ......... $175. 3 BR. Children OK. I R .... ~~.. .~ • I u II y ~" ....... "" ......... .., A •• 2 BR --• J .--u .... "" ., ... -......,"""" ,... c S'l1JDIO Ir 1 BR APTS. ablo. n~<-~ ··• W1fllrn. oge •.... · ......... e on belt. 2"-•·. 3 BR • d•n. By Fncd. i·d. 20.l4 Prt!sldt>nt Pl. re~ ~-•·--· Dr • ~---I L ~-le 7fl "" .. '"'~· """'" ._......._ • Complell! motel facilities 1•'--" ~·. ~ve .. .atom, . pro u. owner $46 SOO. &K-2290. NEED older commt>rcial 2 BR. house unfum. l17'o. 646-1145 646-6255 SA. 540-6329. ""'B-• ea~, A-pt·• --deCOl'ated • move 1n ool}d. ' 1 · bldg, ample parkin&, this ........... r; '" "''"" = sunipUl~ ~tr tuite. Ideal. BY Owner 3~BR, den, 2~• vkinlty, approx 4000 sq ft. Garage, close to shopng 2 BR. Dupln. 1 child. No Santa Ana Heights 2376 Newport Blvd. 543.grx; l.Y. sitOJiJtd on corner. EVery BA, Pool $38.000. 1936 1131~2364 c e n 1 e r. Eves. .t!M-94n, pets. $ 14 O I mo . 1980 • • • • • • • • MODELS OPEN DAILY 10 A.bf. • I P .M. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. hllr. Mn. Joachim, API S.A 516-<215 DELUXE TOWNHOUSES eXtra.: CAIL NOW for app't. Tereilli. Ln, N.B. MZ..2378. Apt Units Jn &ood location 494-2250. Wallace,. 548-2802 ~ = 4mbr·A:acc~ ~ NEW LRG DELUXE APTS I Aak111g $42,!IOO ~·won't ta.it. Newport Heighh wanted by pvt buyer. Cond Coata Mesa 2 BR. Cl'pts, drpg, 1 child $1?5. 673-22.i9. BACH-.furn $139.SO ! Aak for Etta Frttman · not Important. 675-3all. OK. Eastslc\P. CM . $175/mo. 1 BR.unfurn $140 RENTS FROM $150 ON NEWPORT BAO< BAY 1 1 • ·--· • ~VEU' qUality 3 BR home SPOTLESS J bedroom.-2 Call 548-3348. University Park 2 BR.-unfur n $150 I In. Nt>wport: Helghtl, 2 ·bl.ka LEASE on house (any cond) ~th, bonu~ room, builtiru;, 2 BR Nu paint, drapes, eopts, FURNISHED AVAILABLE . from H1rbor High. Corner w/lol suitable for bklg 4:i' fireplace, arpet, .\ drapes, stove refrig No pets CALL US ADULTS ONLY NO PETS I . , . ~~·~ves ~ipala only. boat. (2l3} 28i-~t. ~~ ~~ ~~;.~.. 673-7"3. . . For 2·3 &: 4 BR. ttnlals in * 642·2015 * NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. S Ir. 4 BR-3 B&. Frplc, tam room, doub1' aarqe. Bu.ut Ioun1e. Pool Billiards. 31$ ?tifARINE AVE. 673.6900 • 646-nn ~23l3 l"NCD yd for pet, gar for University Park *Stud• A t $l lO I BALBOA .ISLAND ~.' San Juan Cap11trano finlncial If•) $!~2 tlR's. Garage. Fncd car + 2 Br for ~u. f1¥i· and Turtle Rock 10 P C714} 64U5SO HONEYMOON 1 BR. "' BA Spanbh " ,.id. No ,.;,.. N• 11th ~ALA "'""1' * 64N900 WE HAVE THEM? * 1 Bedroom $130 * FREE i COT.TAGEJ """'""""· bWM, cpt1, Sant• -Ave. 548-35.10. Dano Point MAPLE ST, NEAR tm1 SOUTH BAY CLUB RENTAL SERVICE ' $17,900 ·PRICE drps, pool, elec £"&rage, Linda Isle HURRY! Yachtsman'• 645.0349 Coita Mesa • HuntingtoJt I Pl 1 ... .--~n.1 many other extru. $30,500. Bu1ine11 APARJMENJS Beach e Newport ee.ch ease. news"-• or ~"'2 644-2260 ~ 67J..1028 eve. ODDDrtunity 200 5 BR 41~ ba. watertro I paradisP. • Spanish ocean-FURN. 1 BR apt. $135. Avail • • • 1-2-3 BR A.PJ'S. honeymoon.en only, Okler '--'"=i:c::;.:;='-'----"'"'-homo. w/dock on Lldon front villi. $450 mo. 499-2128 Feb. L 1922-B 'Vallace. •-~--~-but cu· le '' Silverado PARTNER Adults No meo No poll A5k about our DISCO t ~" ,..,..,..,, Nord. $1500 M~nth. Dover Shores "SINCE ~!Ul'" • • • Live where the fun it I a bU&'a ear! ~e 50 X .150 3 BR home w/dl!n, living Wood finishing re.moving and B .,...,_ Info .. 838-0038 Mr. Davis. PL.AN. caD 636.0220. f Jot . for tu~ ~n1ion. room w/frplc. Fixer upper. v.'OOd bleaching service. Re· ill Grundy, Rltr 642-4620 4 BR. tarn rm. den, bltn 1st Western Bank Bid& ATI'RACTIVE :z BR. apts. e MARTINl9UE e ~ Cbotce Ea.slside di.ta Mesa. Fenced yd patio $l2 500 mavlng okl finish from Int. Newport Bea ch slv/rel. Unobstructed view. Unjverslty Park S155. Adults only. N r. COUNmY CLlJP Park-Like Surroundlnts f ~bmit ~ur 1 terms. Don't ?oilust Mil. 64~~~ ' · It Ext. "'OOdwork, Home, MOBILE llome, Lido area, Pool. $9511/mo. 646-2130 Days 133-0101 Ni9ht1 Harbor & Wilson. 67>8181 Lu.'Cury ~V,,U:';,, ottering DELUXE 1•2 A: 3 BR APTS. I w""" "'1kls Ont. & L Univer1ity Park !~'.n:,1; ~'~: =-~~n~ ~:~ l BR, king bed, crptg. patio, El Toro ~b~tw="~ .. -'~· ~~=~=~ compl. privacy, beaut. A1ao FURN, BACHELOR ' a er ee I .... _, pool, Bay 500'. Adulta, no 3 BR. 2 ha. home •••• $325 QUIET, studios till, 1 BR'a lndscp& • unparalleled t'!'C· Prv patios * Hid Pool.I I RELAX & LIVE nish remover. N'o.-. .. o.-. .. ers pets. $200 mo. 673-3409 3 BR., 2 ha., bltina, cptg, 3 BR. 2 ba. lam. rm. •. $340 $125. No chldrn or pets. reational facilities-in aCOUJ'I.. Nr shop'g • Adults only • Realto-Go! . on hand. Low overhead. Will DOCK 51)' &· •-··· 3 br· drps, 2 car &arage, nr shop ..... rtl, •··• 4 BR, ''• • ••75 2135 Elden Ave, CM. See 1777 .,._-h. •-· A-. CM •• r .. awtmming &. tennis. teach . .$1500 requ~ & good ,......,,.., 1u r.v<;a v .,.. M A try cl ub atmosphen!, Furn, .-... ... ....,_ ... i 2790 ~atbor BIVd. •l Adam.1 Spacioua 5 BR, 2 sty family worker. Oear $l7S 5 day v.·k. 2 ba. Yrlyi Sumn:.er llJe: center, lea1e $225. ~8 2 Elegant 3 bdrm. 2% bath i' pt fi. or Unf. Models open)() am. Mir. Apt ll3 • 646-.'tSU I 545-9491 ()pen 'Iii 9 PM home._ l% BA. bit.Jn range 68!1-200rl ext 48 anytlme 3507 Finley. S.U.1134. Fountain Valley to\llJl.hoUses •••••• $375.$425 BEAtn'. Bach Ir 1 Br. apts. 11 pm. Rents from $145. INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY *Z23 'OCEANVIEW Ave for &'oven&: dishwaabtr. Qopla ' ' . Houses Unfurn. 30S I BR, 2 BA, ~··.-d-. i eel h·11 $35 wkly Ir. up. Furn incl OAKWOOD GARDEN ADULT UVJNG I' w~.b)' owner. View ~f Bay di'p&, Beeutltut Courtyard. YOUNG Womem Boutique. -r"' .,,.. r I util. Monthly terms avail. APARTMENTS Lri dlx 2.Br. 11,.i Ba w/pr. &: Ocean. 53-79113. ~e~~~i. By own-;'1~ 3Re°a::!b~~.~ General :!:.· s:'1 ;0, %!tewi1: ' 1~: ~~l ~R~Sl BA. 1700 ~~ii~· NB !os~~.P~-li:.e11 :t: ' ! Box 2703 Capiltrano Beach, * >~"E RENT • !or col· Realty 847..gjll REALTY C •· •-· ho J =====~~~~·I CptJ--'bi'·-W •·· pd [~ lfl:JEX ] Ca.Ill. lecu;" rents " showing 4 BR condo-Drps, crpt!, Univ. Park Center. Irvine u~il'' ;d~; 1~ 8 ~~: OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba. 63i; .• 4ii1. u.... a"" ' , ~· [ ·1t::!:!r'· J IJIJ ~~~~~n~p~=\:::. ~~~ancies, 2 BR, kidsfpets ~/~:se:1~~r50~ner, Call Anytlme m<mo s~~ BR. U7a • 2 BR. ~:.· 0:,· N~~~: ~ ~~v~v~o(i)' :~ I 1 1~ ty shop. Terms. Great op-Huntinnton Beach Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Util pd. Pool. Garden Liv. I ~=~~--~~~ EASTSIDE ...._fOrS. ii& pt'y: 213 I 592.5525 or 714/ l~J Acre hone ra nch, kids, ··• ing. Adlts, no pets. 140 \V, 3 BR, 2 ba, % blk from AcrM,. for sale 150 846.7038, IX'Ui!ltaitie•"'pa™ld' OK. $12tl. 3 BR To"•nhouse, crptfdrps, Cost• Mes• 18th St., CM. ;::,·$J,ak~. ~:!u ~e~ B=.~::w~r~!1~fe! ctessif lcation 100-149 ·HElP retif'td too eai'ty! STAR '• LET patio, carport. No yard CLEAN 3 BR, 2 BA, 2-1ty, l BR. $120 Ir. $125. Spacious. 1'11. 557-3009 aft 6 pm lni ga. oven, all wtr I: gas ..-------,· IDEAL FOR DESERT Restless. need interesting ns.73311 work. $190. To 11tt, leaYe bltns, clbhse Ir. pool $200 Adults. Pool. Idtal for 2 BR furnished. acro&1 slrfft pd. Htd pool.. JU E. 20th : I ·.·~':' IJiJ AS!~x~~~E~c':~1E~ ;::!··youM::~~;;s~~;t $140-CozylBRcottage,Stv :~~e,bac~ll. We 'll ~;.~$50 cleaning deposit ~~~on. 543-9633. 1993 from ~h,64~~ro. ~~=l~ARDEN APTS. C_l.essific•tion 160· I 14 with Jota: of water! $100,CO> Investment & refrig. Lg Yd for 101 It pet. l BR 1%. BA Crpts drps Duplexe1 Unfurn. 350 FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. •'Kii MO 2 BR Io-r y, • .._ 2 BR Unt:urn. Newly dee. Do\\'11: 6'1'0 Int. onJf for 2 Opportunity 220 Blue Beacon* '4S.OJJI Children ok .. No peiH. L<it: E xceptionally n ice I fy, utn' paid. 37045;..ho~ New cpts/drpa:. Spac l•---'"""--"'--~lf •] yrs. · then ammortlze in l.i $150 ·Clean 2 BR. ~. Yard last &. security deposit. S225 Costa Mesa 2110 Newport Blvd., CM Dr, 673-6573 grounds. Adlli, no peta. . Yr.J. For more into. write: Affiliate for kids pets. Garg. mo. 536-0258 I===~~-~~--n40/mo. 2283 Fountain Philip' White & Co. JI Blue Beacon* 64.S.0111 2 BR, l 'ii BA, Condo, all 1 BR, $125, Pleasant garden DRIVE BY SINGLE furnished. Util paid \'Vay E. (Harbor, turn W. Cle ssilic.ition 200°260 , 80: Bank of America Bldg. 4Yiz0~0 per mo J BDR.\f., Family rm., .... ..i. blln&, avail now at $lTa surroundings, Quiet & cl0&e 147 Flower St. I br tumlshed. $28.85 week, 224 Newport on Wilson). ~ B' Sa n · 921 I .,..... lo shop'g. No pets or Best location In C.M. 645-5488 Blvd, N.B. I I I~-.. way n ie&o O like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids mo. Call ?.fr. Hoe&ee, chlldren. 54~920 I =-='----,~~~~~ HMwforAent e . 1 AC 1.ot in beaut Calif RETUR·N OK, brk., $200 a month. NO 545-3424. Agenl . NICE J BR. Dplx. Quiet. 2 BR upper. Walk to beach. LA COSTA . pines, Modoc Cnty. lOO's of FEE. 54~1720. ~ I.SE., new 3 bdrm.:-1 PRIVATE Patio. 2 BR . l'~ Sep. by garages. Adults $250 incl util. Yearly. Avail NEW 1 A: 2 br, Bltns, IWim· Clalsificetion )QQ.)55 pines on all level gmd, LONG hair ok • 2 Br, RIO. ba., frpl., drps., crpts., ~~: bl!:1f~~:·st:'~ over 30. No pets. 543-1021 3/J. 213 I 447·9443, min.a p::>Ol & prage. All $~. 96i-3190 1 C\\'t can prove II) re(rig. All important-Gilt. built-ins, ~~ mi. from beach ping Adults SlS5. 642--0461. &VIALL Bachelor apt, all LGE l BR apt avail Feb. utilities paid. $150 tG $170 ,\plftrMntlforRtnt: 2% ACRES hi&h desert In ion an investment of $2500 to $150. SJ6..7332 or 827-3445 ' util, paid. $85/mo. 5 thn.i June, $175 mo. mo, Adulta; no petl. 35' I~-----~ Joshua Tree. $2450. can $2.),00J ft u 11 y secured) ALA Rentals * &&5-3000 $225 lse. 3 BR. 2 BA, children Lido Isle Call 646-8464 TI4/521--09&8 • 827-8000. Avocado St., CM. 642.9703 Classification 360.-370 alter 6. ~9390 sound.s Interesting, "''e would 3 BURM. + family rm., full OK-no pets, crpU. drps, LRG sunny 1 Br. nicely turn. 1 Bdrm for tt.nt 3lrd &: REGENCY '. ' [. "'"""'rtm9nt s for iale 152 like to talk to you. Our In. dining nn., bullt-lns., brk. bltlns, fpl. 968-6800. \VATERFRONT, Jge. 3 BR, $135. Gar &:: lndry rm. No Oceanfront Now unti1 June II •] .....,. dustry has £"l'O"''ll over JOO% $390 a month. NO FEE, 2 BA, scp. din. nn. $~50. peU. 642-2550, 546--0292 -1st call 6T:>-4693. 1 « 2 BR. Crp!J/drps aelf f'entl&s ,.. over the past 6 ye11ts. Lead-Newport 540-l720 For lease 4 BR. Dutch JlaYen mo. lease. 673-8886 NICE 1 il 2 BR. Tnil CUTE nautical 1 br until cleaning gas oven, enci pr. 1~-----_, LIOO ISLE • Mu.sl 118.aifitt, Ing economists say it wUI • · on cul-de.sac. l"-ba, bltns, en Patios. 543J605. 371 \V, WlJ. Clas1ification -400-465 6 tx:ach apt.s. All turn. 6 iurpass lhia growth over the $145 • 3 BR. l~~ BA. RIO. fresh paint thru:iut. ~58 SSO • up June. Couple. 20ll 43rd St, son ~ car p.raae. 7% loan. Lease ~ .. t few yoan. For •PPI & Crpts, drps. Kids ok. H 1• 1 H bo 1 1 ~ 1.n E. 16th St. No. 42, C~f afl 6 or wkends. 1-;w;·,...,,..,..co==-I [ J I nd 2tll8 ·-Blue Beacon* 64' •111 un ing on ar ur •--~~-• I B• ru $15tl · I ·1 4101..i E. Oceanfront • 2 br VILLA MESA APTS,.. •---u ~ a to yr. . 0\.\-ner. facb call r.tr. Gn!"""" at il"'ll ._u,_ .... ,,. ,.., rn. inc ut1, 2 BR Pr! ~·-64" ·~ d ,,.~.J Pool d J J upper duplex. $19 5 /mo . v patio, Hid pool. C ~· ays. 530-1060, ?.ton thru Sa.I. $225 · 3 BR on 1 ac. Frplc, HUNT. Harbour "'·atertront Aduits~ts. ~~a · yearly, util paid, 6Ta-4508 2 car encl'd pr. Chlldrm Cle11ific1tion 50()..5 10 ~metery INVEST $14.461. on ·a good crpls, drps. Family \\'elcome .• 3 br, 2 ba, trplc. deck A U f welcome, no peta pleue' Lots/Crypts 156 TO and collect $170.13 per Blue Beacon* 64.S.0111 &: dock. Lse or lse/option. A,t1. Furn. 360 s7o UP. 1 Bdrm Bachelor pt. n urn. 365 $165 ~mo. 719 w. WiOOn: fA:l mo., 36 months. Receive the ON BEACH Yl"rnd Vacation $550. 644-2200 By owner. 1Jnits. l32 W. Wilson, CM. Gener•I &46-1251 PllrsonMs ~ 5 CE.VIE'TERY Jots $250 31th month P:'fJlnt of $1.5,374. hie, only $110 Incl util. Irvine General Call 548-957? --,M=E"S"A,-,V~E"R=D~E~-1 C le ss'f 'c.etion 62 5•535 each. Pacific Viev' fl.femorial Phone Broker, MZ.2171 ALA Rentals * 64().3000 1 It 2 BR, Avail now, htd 2 BR, cpts, dl'PS, bltns, wuh/ 1 1 Park. TI4 . 76'74J. SEASONED not balance 2 HOLIDAY PLAZA pool, Rec rm, Good loc. d I I@ . es SPAC Br tncd yd, children NEW 3 BR. 2BA, crpts:. No childttn or peU. 641;..!>82.f. ry attach. Locked gar & , .Lott .s ,_... 2 GRAVE lots. Good location SZ,000 Ir $!'.(1,000 executed & peta M'lc. $130. _ drps, so·x7:;. hid comm pool DELUXE Spacious 1 BR Don• Point RENTAL FINDERS stor. Lrr ci011ets. Nr. shp'g. Jn Pacili_c Vie\li' l\femorial by mulli.bifHon S mlg. 10'1'. ALA Rentals * 64,..3900 l _ ;nc1. "'-fer l•mHy !urn apt $135. Heated pool. FrH Ta Landlorda Sa>.Owner54().559g0 548-l209 Pk I 646-61£8 y1 Id Call wner 67-.62J9 •=-.-,... Ample parking, No children C lti1 sification 550·555 · nquire • eves 67;.:iws. 0 a Corona del Mar S275 lease. SJOO w/out lease. • no pels. 1965 Pomona, SINGLE, TV, pool. pets ok, 645-0l 11 HARBOR GREENS [ I ~ Commarcial • • BR. on doobl . t Crpts: 557-7130 CM. $2.j &: up . wkly. Dana 411 W. lM. c..t. M_. 'GARDEN & STUDIO A.PfS .,_,ndon ~ Property ISi Money to• LNn 240 d;pes, tlbl e ,-: ~age '. TIIR1 TLE1 RoekBr V~ills ~· CHAT EAU LAPOINTE ~wy~ lnn, :Will p.st Ba.ch. I, 2, J BR'a. from Sl:UI. · 1 JD L uxur ~"" ....,ue DELUXE Ju 2 B t $180. New 2 BR apt, bltns, 2700 p knO W C.M .Clas1ific•tion 575.510 EARN 15•/o st oa n ~1::· 6~z!i Roberbion $415 Mo. Bia'.. ~ Pool. Close ri: shop:: ~: "F_ou=n"l"'•"in;...:V.;•ocll;;;•,_Y___ ahag: crpts, drps, pAtio. 546-0370e n ay, . ~ L •• ·-· 1o-~ A~·11 no .... I --gar. 3S6 E. 20th, CM SEA .' [ •a...---1 $100,000 Cuh Down 7.2% INTEREST '2 BR. Adult.I . No pets. Patio. ..,.... -n uw s, · LGE bach apt, pvt entrance, 642-4!!05, CLIFF Manor Apt.II. 1 SliO,(Q) Loans at 7%4~ 2 d TD L Yearly l•ase . 5 20 % l!Ml Pomona A\·e, C.M. Utll paid. F'urn. Poot $125. &:: 2 Br, 1% B&. J].45-SJSI. ' • ~ "MA" TENANTS n oan Avocado. 837-7865 or REm'AL * CU!n'Ol\f FURNITURE 549-3997, 64Uln. Balboa Island P> move in allowance + I Gi•11ificetion 600--699 l~.000 sq ft . OC Airp:wt ~9485 t-\'es. Charming older l·bdrm. un. RENTAL. See ad class 810. I 'H'un-,t'lng~ton~~ .. ~.-c'h-----------·I reg. dhcount. Crpta, drps, I I l[i I I W.R. DUBOIS INC. Terms ~on equity. BAY A Ocean vu, prv rd. rurnl.shed unit, lge. tam, rm., Call 54S-348t I.SE 2 Br. 2 Ba unl. Sto\'t patio. pool, infant ck. 1529 . L'*"••~ t • 54.>nfi6 * 642.21n 545-6611 Steps bch. Immac. 2 Br. massive liv. rm. "''l"'OOd refr!r, crptsfdrps. Heat Placentia. 541-2682 ~~-,---~ c~'om 1'nlum1 ScrvlQC Harbor atta Jl.yn. $21Jj, 673-6904, 673--6719 paneling. old brick littplace. Balboa• Peninsula BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS . Adlls only. $215. 675-0486 $1 70 I Classification 700°710 -Sattler Mortgo .. Co Oce vi J $1~165. Quiet, priv, patio, for sale 16' · LOVELY 3 Bt. 1 blk beach, •n ew. ust acrou 2 v.•ardrobts, frplc, dreulng Balboa Peninsula 3 Br., l \ii Ba, patio bit.ins I' I . ' ll~J 336 E. 17th Strfft from the be-acH. Truly an • H • WK ~~·~moNT C!1Jts. drpa. Ask about~ .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;o;;;;o;i in belt area, $300/mo. No .., '""""i:.1\..1.,. nn, loeked sep, 1ar. Pool . d'-··~ plan. 1111 ~-nt•• •a..... , I \ po'· or ehHd-. ....,. '"""" (llllstandlng renlal at '~-1u Bachelors. 1 -BR. Sau•• R-I 8" ~ ...c .... . EXCEPTIONAL Entrance c h F I f "' '""' ~ ,250 mo. YT· lea~ ..,...vcv .... "'" rm. ,.., ?.fature adults. No S 6424340 I •t V ~-c •-Oub as as C t M ~taid service. Pool. Uti1. 17301 Keel10n Ln. (1 blk W. pets. $115 + util. 675-tl"" -;:;'t,·•;;;r,-iib·-,,:;-; .. -.,,,I C 1·11ification 100-836 o" esa e.-. .. , oun .. z · · • 01 a eu MfSSION REALTY .. ~ •740 e " SHARP 3 BR. ~ > BR Condo •"··'•h tyl uo....., or Stach Blvd, on Slater). after 6 pm A week.ends. 2% BA. 160() I f ' I ........... s e. 111 & ~· Truri ~-·· 911;; So. Cout Hv.y., ....... 84"1°'0 ft s····· • ~ Xlnt .:..... b ., -~ Co-· del ••• , • --· c-· ··1 Mor sq, . lllUIU •Pl, CT'ptl, t ~-._... r. ~:·N~c~;~nde; Co1~,:.:P.:~nt l s:C::~a~pr!~1~~~~ =~~E:~Wttping ·--m. lfd~l~::;or;/$9~Mki~~U ----~'!.'·o~v~byCs~J~~!: 1 ~iflcetion 850-851 sa.n1 I •nytime rm. 2 Bath, dble gar .• lg oct'lln vk>w. aunken living HUGE Bachelor Rm It ha. pd. Rr.ft req'd. a oae to Call M5-07111 ?itir. I l~ L.EISURE World b c • t buy patio, bltna. fully crpld &: room massive stone f'rpl beam ttU. So. of Hwy. Priv 3 Points. 842-2%19. ~-Quiet Adult l iving I [" , =-~ 2 BR, :2 BA, crpt, drpl, Mortvo , drpd, Beautiful ttte lined n<·. ;,,.,, _.... 211 .. ·~ ...... · entry. ,No cooldna. $1o:i. "' .. BR. .... b ..,.. Ll'I d!Jt kltcbe 1•·-Air '" ~·1111• ......,.'";, -"'oru 1 BR. rum apt. Bltrui, .,,, ... _ ""9! • ..._ c:pts ltns t>waut. . . ·-n app ... ~ .. s. ' scree!. $250 Ptfonth. Now va. ' u•.l•......,.., ·---1~~ ' • • • !b • cond. 0-,nP.r m-3121 or Trust DMds 260 cant. Call Heritage Rtal E&-N~CE 4 BR. latn nn, 2 bll Cosio u.10 avail, $125/mo. TU ln-j ........ t'U. $170. Jncl all Util. a.1117&Ut1on 900·912. 3J7-433S I tat ~·llil. i 11 . 1 view home. $285 Nr achll. mos dianapolis M>-0760 ON TEN AC!lES Ad1!1 only, no pets, ; .. lfiiJ $ 000 DISCOUNT ' c. Ol>f! e\e5. \Yater pd 64l-4Il32. I 6 J BR. r.._ zu Awc::ado St. * ~ [. "' Du 1 •plltexes/Unita 17, LARGE ~TESA DEL ~IAR l BR Condo aU bit.~ re-.. w-" 6 Unf'lu"l ~ 162 Prim TD na .... $261'4 per mo I Newport S..ch LRG 1 BR. v.·/14 crptc. l"" .... encl .. • tlo, tonle tUrn.. F'lnp.lactt I ,m. patios I BEAUT. Country Cub vliii . I e -__.. ' home wilh ' bedrms. family . bluu. I •dull. no ..... 1132. • .. ......... -1• "-~ s~ ' BR 111 BA ' Ii . · 9 1 S 9 -_ al 9?C, J yr Jli¥ out. Cuar rm and large fenced ya.rd ., ·~-pool, quiet. $1:1>. ~ ~ ..... _ • '--'"''' -·... • , pvt patiol Cl.ui ic.a:f;iof'-• 4, "'•NTA ANA r.~., apt• "''1.lh Ml recoul"lt. U11e.rit. Qultl, tn11de s Ire et : ATTIUCTJVE 2 BR. $2:i0 Yearly. &I__... I Bedroom, 1135 ,_ mon... IOD Sea IAM, O!M "'-21:111 Cf'Pt, dl'J)f, bll-ln1. S26o mo' >3" • U..V!: . I n• -= ....... .1... . B 'CHE LOR "PT $115 ..... u.. (MacArthur n: <hNC. .,_, For tut1btr Info call Jeanni [• . · , I 4 unlt.i, -3 BR. 2 be • (2J : ........_._ ~ or •"'"· F'tmiltes only at $273 per Ytl)'. NR'ly decorated. "" "' lncludi,_ utllitin. -J FAwards 961-632.1. . ......... . ~' 2 BR, 2 ba • 2 Bn. f 1 NO malttr Mull b 19i. )'OIJ mo. -'Rent 546-4141 Davi<bon Rlty. 67J.9060 64G...3589 67>3767 /Tndewm& Realty 847-3311 2 BLKS from oct&n, J Br. l"'I. ificat• 910 990 b&. Bltn· klld\., Cpll, Orpg e&lt sell It wU.b • DAD..Y • AIO!li'TICELLO CONDO. Par1t Lido 3 BR, 2% BA SII.5, 1 BR. f\Jm, uurs pd. FURNJSRED Bactwlor •pt 2 &, frpl . bltn1, crpfs, 2pe~~. '~0v:t.1~~· of.~o ........ fMt • Pa.tlos, a:~ laundr)' DAn.Y PlLOI' WA.NT JJJ., 4 BR'J/Cpl1 thruouL Cpts. d~. bll·ll\ll. 'Nr slo~. AllO t Br. SI30. for rent S100/rno; Cl.II drpt. $23S It $250, 32* PF:"r.i. $1'*0. Refa rw.'d, ········••1.!l~ool;!!l'8, ~,.!!:•:!! .. !!:·c!'~•!;:61!!!:'?14!!:.•_ CIJl ~I. dwp ff. $~/mn. e M>360I Fireplace 1715. fi-42-3791 lJ83 Pomoria, Cl\f. 548.0723 J 64&.~, 5J6..(1296, 1'fll1\19rite. 67~, 543-7933 S#-m11 or ~107S. ·~, --'-~.:.;;...:;c.::..__ Adult & Ol1ldrena area ~ Rivi.en. Dr. su.o:soo IRVINE & I 6th I ! ,, I ' DAIL~"'f fl loll--11--"'-"' ._ .... """__,[!JI!--.. ~ l[!J I---·-I[!] I----~![!]!·-"'""" I[!] I -~.__I _-___,J~ I ... , ·· I~ -----~~~~~---~~--~~1 ~--~1 ~;;;;~~~--~I ~~~ J.flt, Unfum. J65 Apt. Unfum. J65 Apt. Unfurn, J65 Apls., 1. Apt~. Roomo , , , ,4IO Office RIM•I 440 P...-to m ,..,.... ( .... ~) .. 1~---------Furn. Or' l./nfum. 370 .Furn. or. Unfurn. 370 C•t1 Mot1 !!,uni'"""" llHch Newport llloch SLEEPING rm. llO ,.. mo. ~Dl'!i.vxE QUALll'Y SWIDISK MUIAGI MlllllOll sm; Co-. mh *STUDIO APT.* 2 Bii, blb11, ,.1'11:, '""' 2 Bii, nr ,._Hoop. Crpt>/l'H=u=n=ti=ngt=on=llo=•dt===H=u=nt::;lnp!Gn~=Bo=•=dt=== Vov en!> A ba. A<!Wla,.no l.J.l roo":;.iup "'MOO ... '1 AND SAUNA -.,.;, 6 lllk-Ht Wlloon e !'BEDROOM Jhq ~II thrUout. Upstaln drps.· bllns, wuhr I dryrl· peta. ns5 Elden. CM. See tt. ottlm d::' Immed~ Trained tech. tor nluatSoa. I: ~' Hll _. 'cv1 . •·l~ 8Ams w/oceu vJew. Also 1 BR. space. 1ar. paUo. 646.&125. .La Q. -.JJi Mar. No. 6• =· Jrvinl ~ ~ Private l'OClfDI. under ~nt •':,AtdmaJ • ADULTS OfllLY crpts, drps, retrlr, bltnl. ,4217 Dana Rd, N.8. -• l C05rA Mes&. dole llO occ. Complex. adj. A1rparttr • o~ 24 ..... • Sbthrr. I Ana. or .. • HEATED rooL 1135 mo., Incl ul l l. I BR .• Yeady. Ill<>. G"' • Utn a '(!f'mOiJa 135 • 165 ulll pd. P'e.W. Hoi.l & ll>•lawUI, banks, 262, Newport 1Mf. 1 ;:-~·~===,_;,C.::.it 1024~1asionApl.D.CM Tradewinds Realty, waterlncluded.Nr. Bayt only. Ideal tor · student SanDlegol:N'ptFwy•. COSTAu ...... • ....,LARGEloYflwbrown4 ,.,~ · · Casual estate llvlng. Enter La Quinta Her-64>-ss>l UNCROWDED PARKING • ...,.... ·•·-~· /...,, <0n1 col ·--=~ .. ;:_-,-__ _:::;5'0J:::::559:: II oc'EANii.iiN'riio.8"0<i0Ck. Beach. Cara, pat i 0 . mosa's lush green atmosphere"-stroll tr........ . NEWPORT 'INTERIORS ...__,. ... .,, , I~ OCEANFRNT Vu. Sundeck. 613-.m. ~ ..,..,.. YNG college or workini girl LOWEST RATES .lNMOUNCES 1ar Sit nlt,0 ~So. Lquna. A'MlL\C. Like new. l BR. Beach. Smog ' rift. Nev.·er lined walk ways to your ~t. Balboa lal. 'Kit &: TV rm Owner/inp-. 2:1.Tl DuPont Dr. Tom ~ 1 t t NoW at o:c. 'Ptlnd s.nta ~tt~. ~ts~l~. bbt;;; dlx 2 Br, bltns, epts, drpe. ~~~~-Bi~ls ~~iy~ara~ All UTILITIES I CLUDED tele. $65/mo .t: up. 6T5-3W Rm. 8. Newpart Beacb Deslper, _, joi:.:'U:~ Ana. Hureyt au2i $150 patio, lndr)'. gar.·Nr shops avali *'6T3-7MO. 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 NEWLY furn. room, SU per m-3223 .Courtesy to~ atudkl. S1'Wd>. 3S3S Eat · l"'!ul,., 307 Avocodo & t>l•" l)65. Adl1', b•by 2 BR. Uni. $180 -F um. $210 ..... & up, Pvt ,ontr avail. DESK SPACE c.ut H-. °"""" del Loot· SU Ailt 9, ~5-0984. • ok. ~2131 2 Bednn, l% ba, crpts, drf'IS. 3 Spac. flr. plans, decor. furnishings: live Phbne 540-0451 2 BR. 1 BA. Garden Units. WALK TO BEACHI I :~s642~~2-~;1~· $l?O within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. * Sl5 PER week • up 222 Forest Avenue. $.:J~;,o1:,:lb? ~~-!:Ct~ ~t_~ :.~:e rd~ Shaa crpts, drps, dshv."hr, LOVELY NEW 1 &: 2 BR. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ'a w/ w/kitcM.ns. $27.50 per week La9una .Beaeh Dlvorc.dt Over 21? ~taikd male cat patio, beam ceilings. frplc, Crpts, drps. Dishwashers. Santa Ana seculded seating compt:wffl:amada & Foun• ·lip Apta. MOTEL. 548-ITS5 4M-9MI For•a ~It e:Qlanatory-... w~ .a loll vJe pr, 2650 Elden, 537--0062 !_119~P'.!alm~Sli*i.-_:8'~7-3~95-7, ~~~~~~~~~! tai.n. * SML sleeplna: .l. ailllng ES p CE "'' •• •-a ...... -n WHtclW m.i.-HM .&ta aft 7 pm &: Sun. $165/mo. O K S A '"'" °'a ~ .....,. .--.. $140 * Color co-ord. kit w/ Indirect li9hting. · rm, older adlt. All utll pd. -~-., .. ~~ -tollar. ArllW'tn ·to "Garr". · ILLA MARSEILLES h ·~ "" ·~· --~-· BEAtrr. 3 Br, 2~ Ba studio ASK about our discount plan! BRANO NEW * Deluxe ring• &: ovens * Plush s 19 crptg. #<»/mo . .,.,U""O'ft1'0. JDS No. ~I C.mine R9tl TRIM-A-WAY AT tiOME Pia call 5fl.Q57. apt Bltns, new Cl'Jlt&, drps 2 BR, crpls, drps, bltins, car. SPACIOUS * Bonus 1tor19• spece * Cov. c1rport LADY only. Heated PoOZ. San Clement• Enjoytd by movie, TV .wt, LOST • Wed, tr11m, Pd &:. paint. Avl Feb. No pets. port $25 Move.Jn Allow· * Sculptured merble pU!fmen & til• beths Kitchen privil. Nr. 18th &: C9UC2ll A: beauty IJl&I. Very quick. bri.eelet; Nawp-ort • Of ~i-'8 El Camino, a.nee. 725 Utica_: ~2462. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Aptt. * Elegent recreation room. Harbor, CM. 6f6.-0li69. CORONA DEL MAR 561767 or 540.9538, Lqurw.. Kffpukf 4J. )'fl. *FRESH AIR Adult Living FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY EMPL. lody. Priv. ba. • 2Rm•wlo.p'1ba,pvrenlr,ALOOHOLlCS . .....,._., =· 64'-1150 « Ope~t~ ~~DBER~~lc, Walk 3 btJq to Beach! om:~~ co'i:':!:i.inat. Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego ent. Kitch. privU, f10 ln Priq:, aptldrp._ util pd. Phone 5U-72lT at write . to ~c-'-,.__,.,,_-.,,...,--..-t 4 •v 1 Frwy .. Goldenwest Coll_ege. East C.M. 642-5076 $1.S/mo. Owner. m.6751 P. o. Box 1223 Co.ta Mesa. BlJC • white 1potted 9\9lir ,2-car pr, ~dlt1. 00:$3'.XI mo. Beau11. bdig 3 BblR•-~pt. w w1 ed applian~ • plush shag San Di'ego Frwy to Beach Blvd So on SHARE_, ___ , Jd ·••-.._.__ • -.... it" hl. ,Oxlktr dlaln. gas, wtr pa .... Nr . 109-crp s, rps, ... ,.. excep carpel . choice of 2 color • ·• • Room & Board 405 llll'..,,"'· cp vu~ • ._...V•rbal Encounter """' A Oearbrook Ln. refrlg. $22.5. No pets. 5.J6.I7ll schemes • 2 baths • atan Beach 3 blks. to Holti W. on Holt to •. . • oc Airport arta.'Tel A ans Seuion. 613-?55S ~13~rarice I: m, Ill. NEW3BR ., •-• WALK TO OCEAN aOOwers. rilrro!"l!d ward. LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 9·47.5441 EXCHANGE pvt 2-rm apt service incl. ownen.uru , .. ..,. . $Th mo. ~l467 -------, ST. BERNARD Llc No. 4'1: all bltns, shai crpls, drps, 1 BR. CrptJ, drPs, some w/ robe doOl'S • lndlmet 'Ught·1.,,=========""';""-===-=-& board in CdM for v.-oman 1 l[S] OaJc1and tl wkl old. Nr closed prage. Immed. OC· frple& patios. $120-$150/per Ing In kitchen. breakfast Apts., Apts., t~p elderly person. NEWPORT oUlces, c p t1, Lost Ind Found • Newport Blvd, CM Reward cupa.ncy. :i 4 0-19 7 3 or mo. Adults. bar • huge private fe nced Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 6 · drp&, oou.n view, from $65 . SfJ..llll 54~2321. LINDBORG co • "'""'' patio . plush landscaping··---------Newport •-•ch J"'iif;'~moS;.~o:nr~AI::•~•~pm:'l:'.!~~~~~~~1 ~==---'-=--1 · .,.,.... ,-~ Rentals to Share 430 675-4644 , LADIES watch, v)c Harbor 2 BR. Unfurn.-Children ok. CHEZ ORO· API'S .brick Bar-B-Q's ·large heat. Huntington Beach Found (fr .-I•) DO Shap'r Ce n le r, CM. No. pets. Heated Pool. 8234 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, pool, 1!!131poo01ta$o• Ia8n•1 1· 1 1 St * BA YFRONT * 3RD Fem. roommate (20-25 *c N!:,!'P0300RT181 EA1 °',~Mlle · " K~psa)te· value •. Rnaid. Cpts/drps. 126 Mon~ Vista private garage, Washers, · • r s 0 • Higb·rise, beaut. 2 BR. furn yrs) to share l BR 2 BA en'""• 0 _,, 543-8986 Ave ., 01 dryers. S36-8038; 531):.2727 C1..iiMi.N,ofSo.C.oa11 Plaza) or ll1lfurn. From $29S. ll21 hse w/patio & trplc: 1 blk Anwa.t:SecretUia.l.675.16Ul P~~ I~ \~te ~:: ~REW='=Afu,"=:-.-~F~.,.-~M~alotnul,-_,.•'I * TOWNHOUSE * BEACHBLUFF Apt1 PHOSNanEl·.•5A57n!..._ ON BEACH! w. Coast Hwy, Npt Bch. from bch, conven, loc in AIR COND., OCEAN VIEW t . . a w/red cOiiar, "Sasha, .. bt 2 ER, 1% BA. crpt&, drps, NE\V 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishwash· I :=====i:l~=·~=='I BBAA010tE<iLOUiiR~&t-1t'io;;,,.,p;,,.:;:,: I ~N~B~·~•'!""5~or~wknd~<1:•~64~>-~93'1~3; ~ .. "'°", O<d•m'•""nl•s, ~!.hoJ!_ centtt ·= btw · 6 &: 7 PM vie Mesa Dr ,A: Sa,nta ~ patio Ad"''-1160 134 E I "--. ..,..,,,_ ---e Bltchelor Apts, From $215 N .,_ E s1· 7876 STRAIGHT male 25·35 -u .... ..,,:i CM uo '"2 • "4.a, • ' e~. poo • pauv, Nol.L ~. e 2 BR uni. ~m oM'>::: r ony, ves. :>-or ' · ' i~ SANTA ANA AVE, rM 1''0UND: 3 or 4 month old · .nlt'"Vl'I ' Me!P<ly.J..n. 548.1768 MU·f'n or &17.3957. CANl BE BEAT s:"' ......, 4!»-2250 lina.neially stable, Dttd to v•u ... ~LD:csr=~·--u~-,,..,._1 ~M~-1,,-'I • 2 BR Furn. From $285 ---------« &hare 3 BR apt, turn'd. blk From 300 sq. tt. 35c eq tt. dart female kittef!, Mi1ht "' 1··"• _, ar, an LRG. 2 I: 3 Br. Crpts, drps, ADUL TS-2 br STUDIO Carpets.drapes-dishwasher San Clemente to beach $150. ~9S74. 61~2464 or 54.1-5032 be part Burmese or 1. Male Gmnan Shepherd, freshly painted & clean. 1%. ba., patio, balcony, gar-SINGLE STORY heated pool.saunas.tennis S'fOO NEWPORT BLVD, NB Siamese. ~ black and tan, lone hair. ~~· '646-0027 or ~~~i::~;OCt'an.ml. Sou2th8,S.R• A2""°'BATHphere rec roo01-0eean views 2d!R~; j~:;~!!!ti;acra::, ~~m~:n:t=rity~:::. •ONnIEBAY e FOUND black & tan preg-.::;;',aft:· femat• * DEi:UXE=~1,-k~-~2 ~BR~. ' · · · • patios-ample parking v.T • f U d' . ·ed · $150/mo, 6Ta-4331. 675-2464 or 5U.so32 nant female cat vie, Vic- • 2 br studio, 11,i ba, patio Carpets&: drps Security ruards. rm. aste u Y ecorat . 5 NE\V oUiees, 1,,_, Beach ~~~ ...... ! Valley Road. Coclcatlel, vk. 17th. • Garden Apts. Bit-ins, prlv. &: yard, encl gar. Waler Mr Conditioned HUNTINGTON Adults Only -$180. LAGUNA beach front apt. •v" .,.,_,......., Jrvtne. ~t'r.17 Reward. patio, heated poo~ frplc. pd $150 mo. 1 child ok Avail Private Patios 214 Calle Patricia furn. \Vill share w/studt'nt Bl. Lowest rents Ml-~ -_ LOST male S1amnt cat, Adults. $145 mo •. ~5163. aft F b 6 842.-4549 . HEATED POOL PACIFIC Casa Contents, 492-2259. or empld adult. fM-4658. or 213:394--0015. FOUND • ca..lico cal wlout 11 V NEW DUPLEXES NEW~ ~~from $~. Cpts, Plenty or la1vn Fo. RESULTS you can [)re... \VANTED ·the right woman Cd..\1 Orn~ aultea 1500 Ml·,_Wl:;;64:;~·:;~n:;W:._ .. _anrc~·-~~~oa--collu-~. I ·"'"W'-~="r/Mc.Mf'O"'.cqnol"-'=lo;-·.,--,~·-·1 1.2.3 BR. Wuher/dryer hook· drps, bltns, patio, fam sec-Carport & Storage ?ll ~7~ ~i!S7 H.B. pend on. Call the Super-to sh NB Blutts hm. Pvt ft. or leu. WUI redee lu~ . up,·encI gar, patio, trcd &Ir. tion, plov ·-a, No -·-. 1-llDDEN VlLLAGE 0 Salesman. .0·11.. Pilot ha, all priv. $80. 644--0369 crpt. Prlv. prkl:. 67$-4120. BROWN & white spotted ...., ... ., .. -~ fc open 10 am-6 Pm Daily , ~ 1 ---'--------1,,..,;""',-,.="~7.:===l iemale puJ>VY found vie Oak Mes& Verde area. 546-1034 846-7Z77 GARDEN APTS. \VILLJAM WALTERS CO. Clusified &t2-56'78 • place 5 NEW ottlees, 178Tf Beac~ St., C.M. M&-5:258 2 BR, 2 BA, bltns, gar; 1 BR w/stove &: retrig, crpts 2500 'South Salta your ad&: charge It! For beat results! 642-567! Bl. Lowest rents 342--2525 · lRISH Setter, male, I mae, vie VletDria Bch Jan 25th. iioo ,.,..,.s "'' . ......._, a.cross st. from lg park: & drps. Nr beach $125 mo. Santa Ana Q 546-1525 l\pts., Apts., Apt1., or 213: 394--0015 · ~ra:C:~ ha;i:a~,~~ $155 mo. Call aft 6 PM Tradewlnds ReaJty, 847.SSU. l'~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l ;;:F:u~'~n~. ::o:_r.;:U::n:.:.l::u:,:rn:,:·_:3:.:.7:,0';;:~F::•:r:n~. ::or:..:;U::n:.:.lu::rn:,:::•_:3::7.:0;::F::u~r~n::.· ,:o:.r.:U:;n;.:f,:u:;m::;·_:3::70.: l .!!~~!.!~~!,_-~·"!!l~536-<0jRi~31:X,,;ncc-;:;c;;;in.:; ' 5..'>?-30S4. Business R•ntal -.. •· '111¥'1 AVAIL now. Sl59. Attrac 2 Apts G I G I G I ORTHOOONIC retainer ,lnltructJml DUPLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 BR. Kids ok. All extru, F '' U I 370 ,_•_n_e_r_•--------'•~ne.;.r_• ________ ,_n_e_r_• _______ SI'ORE w/worklhop In 100·~ at Li~~·-School. i ;;;~;i;iiiiiiiii;;;:.~1 · · ,__ Pool ~.7510· •• 7 •<>= !Jr.n . or n urn. 1-'"' uuu ... a guages, OCt"an View, ...... 6"'• · ;7DO'"" • '" -wJV back, TV repair or ap-543-3090 $285 lease. OR WILL SELL LRG 2 Br. Redec. Bltns &: Costa Mesa "" -"':-'-,..-¥ pliance repair. am partlcWH'="ITE='-,~-~,~~,..~-.~.-, Schools & $'15.000. 41»-2339 refrig. GaJ'i avail. $140. 7U 1 Jiiiijjjii;pijiijiij!iijiiiiii ., f· house. -443 W. Bay St., ~ w/blk apoU found vie lnstructa..1 NEW Spacious 1 & 2 BR, JncUanapolis, ,H.B. &45--0760 11 VILLA CORDOVA .. •., f '. across from Theo. Robuia On.nee " 19th st ~MOS b11:ns. crpu, drps, garage. .. Your rttt~move' ,_._~ Faro &16-29n. · · l<AI\ UN FURN t 0 w n h 0 u I e -MALE G Shepherd about lmmed232J. oceupancy. <1'ftr1973 Brookhurst & Adams. 3 br, ! LEASE Hartxir Blvd store 1 ""' oid. Vie -~ .. -"•'e or 545-. NEW NEW NEW or office. ]3IK) eq tt. Xlnt .._ H'".1 He .... ~·~-!~-"ba=· ·,_1200 mo. Avail 2/2(). !-• -; a " o -SHARP lrg l &. 2 Br, .............,. _ should 1....0: to ·.~-location A parking. Airl"'o-==-· ~· c,'.,O-='--~ cpts/drps, bltns, qulet bldg. I ""' ,,. cond. Carpetin1. $323 mo FOUND rabbit, New port No pets. Infant ok. $130 l BR. w/patio, encl garg. Luxury 40 Unit Adult Call 6'U--8060; eves, LIS-2698 West area, H.B. &: $150. ~9722. 547-2682 i1l5~m;.bw~~~~dults. Apartment Complex lu · store-826 w. 19th St., CM l~=---962~--~~,--- $30 wk-1 per. w/kit $35. Ava e · · I t· ~ F $115/mo. * 646-7414 ONE In rabbit, Eleam.ere Maid ser, linens, TV i tcle. 1 & 2 BEDROOMS ~;( 1, E UTY Sal 1 Le Ave, Meaa Verde area. Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt Irvine .fURNl.SHEO OR 1• j ff " Ii."' . Biwty fRlrlpped°': 1n°:hopp'i:l~--==u_,,,--,-,--,--.,. Blvd. 646-7-445. UNFURN. .1¥1119. ! ". · ~l center, San Clem. 492-2979 LARGE tiger striped . eat, * 2 ·BR. elee ·bltns, lock. NOW LEASING! t .. , l 400• sroRE shop office 11'8Y, ~ collar. ·gar_ Mesa Verde area. Big New, .family and adults units • Spacious Apartments $95. zwo 'Newport Blvd; 494-53Tl ~Josets. $155/mo. No pets. with total -recreation club • Special cablnet space C.M. 646-2544, 548-8333 FOUND S..lde C.M. female 557-;8400 µti pre-school. 1, 2, &: 3 • Lock garages w/ lg slor b1k &: wbt shaggy dog, very LRG 1 Br. apt. All new bdnns trom $150. Nr. shop. • Bm ceil • Lndry • PaUos lndu1trl11I Rental 450 friendly. ~1475 &tf 5 pm crpts, drps, t!le &: paint. ping, golf, schools. Just • Dwhr/dlspl • Gas stove Sltns, $145/mo. 546--0451. S011th of San Diego Fwy. on • Special soundproofing 998 El Camino, 0.1. Culver Dr., Irvine. 833•3733. • Shai carpets, drapes 2 BR, 11,2 Ba studio. $175, PARK WEST util ind, P•tlo. 339 C.brillo. APARTMENTS 548-880~ or 84fr3648. Qv.·ned and Managed by * * QUIET 2 BR, gar The Irvine Company SMALL UNITS COSTA MESA $!15. Ir: $167. Per Month Immediate Oc~pancy 5 mo. Old temale tortile 1bell ·cat. 494-1586. PARAKEET .~ Vic ff.pi>or .t: Gisler, C.M. "545-1248 New 6500 .q. lt. unit, 18th It Ftir that Item_ under $50, Whittier, 110.220 pov.~r. tt;Y the. Penny .Pincher 175 ITS YOUR MOYI INDUSTRY CAREEIS AIRLINE l WVB. r OPEltATIONll AG!M' , • TICKEI' SALES ' • RESERVATIONS e AIR FREIGRT.t.:ARGO • COMMUNICAnONs • TRAVEL AGENT ' Airth,. SdMolt Poclflc 610 E. 17th, Sant• AM 54USN PIANO LESSONS Btifttnera. Jn~rmecliam. .. ..,, theor]';-....U... ete, CaU Bruce, (U.0.t mu. ic bqmd).. NMm, x ... Verda. & pool. Cpts/drps. Adults only, no pets. &12-0042 GAS & WATER PAID 2313 Eld•n Ave, ~ CM plenty or parking. ---------- See: Robert Nattres1, RJtr. * ~ta Mesa fi.12-1485 646-0032 or 642·1121 * * * * * 2 BR ;150/mo. Pool . Conv. Laguna Beac;h · Beautiful 1 &: 2 BR f\irn shop'i· No childl"t'n. 313 E. OCEAN front speetacular or unfurn apls. Ofl'ERING 17th Pl. 548-6532. vllla. Huge rms. 3 frplCll. self clean. ovens. O/\V (in NEW 6500 sq ft M-1 spacel;<----------------,1 * 2 BR. $14J. Priv yrd. ~ grnds $600 M 0 • 2 Br), displs, shag crp1s Blln range, cpl.Ii, drps, no I ~=~=-=-cc,.,.-=o-drps. Jacuzzi & Sauna bath: pets. 673-TI78 LGE I BR., quiel area, $165. lfuge Pool. FOR ADULTS 150 • 2 BR, 1~1i BA. Cpts. util. incl., mature adults, only. No pets. Call eves 499.lj7l MERRIMAr WOODS drps, stv-d\\·hr. gar. No 'II. pets. 7r.6 \V. Wilson. 642-1958 Lido Isle 425 MerrlmAe Way Costa l\tesa AITRAC lg 1 Br, cpts, drps, THIS JS IT! Male Bachelors ' 'B~A~Y~M=E~A~D~o=w~S~A~P~T~S".' bltru, patio, gar, adlts. no only. Lrg I BR. nu crpU.. pets. $135. 646-1762 $1£,0/mo. UHi pd. 67~1892 DLX 2 Br, 1 ~1i Ba Studio. Mesa Verde Bltns Cpts/drps. No pell. I :.:;:;;;:;_;c;,c,;c:. ____ _ Avl Feb. 1. $160. 546-0451 .,/ 2 BR upstairs. Gar. Newly LG 2 Br, 1% ba studio ap.!, decor. Child ok. No pets. no pets, families only. Pr1v $150/mo. 557.8400. patio. 126 Joann St. $140. Newport B•ach BACHELOR APT-$100. PARK NEWroRT -""" * 54&.1098 * tree livg overlkg the water. East Bluff 7 pools, 7 tennis els $750,!XXI Spa. From S 1 7 j to ACH $450-Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also BRAND NE\V UNJTS all with beam ceilings, paneling_ pvt patios, frplc, II.II rec facil. ities. Adults, no pets. • Bachelor • e 1 BR 11-om $140 e e 2 BR from $165 e 387 \V. Bay St ( btwn Harbor & NeYo<port Blvd, '-' mt N. of 19th SO. CALL 646.0073 NEWPORT BE 2 sty Tov.'?lhou.ses. Elec. kt ., -Villa Granada Apt1. pri. pat or bal Subtrn parkg LRG 1 &: 2 BR. apts. 10 Foor bedrooms with balcon. opt mail ser cpts, drps. min from college, ocean & ·~.above A below. Gtac!oo! Jusl N, of Fashion Isl af could walk to llhop'g. I-las llvin& It quiet sutTQUnd.ing Jamboree & San Joaquin laundry fac., carport & pool . for family with childn'n. Hills Rd. 644-l90il for leas-Rent from SlJ0..$155. Ask ,Near ()Iron& del Mat HJgh Ing lnlo. about our rtiscount. 1846 ·SehooJ. F1replac•. v.-et bar IL Placentia J\1gr. Apt ti. buiJ1.tn kitchen appliances. BACHELOR apt $19j. Vi!!w 646-8564 135 AMIGOS WAY 644°2991 Park Newport. Avail now.,~=~-~~~=~-< ·Coldwell Banker &: Co. Rec Cntr gym sauna pools 1 BR. furn. $130. 2 BR furn Manq\Jll Aaent 541-5221 871-3232 ext 2370 days $15:1. 2 BR unfum. $155. 644-0()89 eves Sat Sun Pool. Bltns, crpts, drps, no TOWNHOUSE • Owner's 4 ""=°==,.--,~~-:-;::;;:c I children, ,.. pets. 325-J E. I 2 B 2\1, WESTCLJFF 2 Br, adulls, 'lb', 3 Bil, II. ao r. l I /d •• , .. ~ 17th Pl, CM. 548-2738 n.. PetlOll. Enol iar . ~pe~~r: ~: s175: e DELUXE 1 & 2 BR"~. •rm-.."i033 ~g..7533_ Furn or unfum. $145 &: UP. ,ountaln Valley EXTRA LARGE Pool. c;ardcn!I. 177 E. 22nd ALL NEW l & 2 Br, 2 Ba, c/d, bltni:, St.. C~t 642-3645. VALLEY PARK pallos .. ene gar. $18i/up. 2 BR. CrplA. drp11, $1 50 uni. APARTMJNTS &.JS.3708 Sl60 furn. 26;,8 Orange Ave. , . , .•~•• "'""°'"for c.~1 . ;,.i~t657. r -LIDO ISLE • BacM.lors only , •• YOUNG FAMILIES Lgp 1 BR apt. all util'i pd. SPACIOUS & quiet I & 2 2. BR. Aph $160 Sl.60. mo. rn.1892 hr, reu. ratts. 2020 2 IR. Garden Apts $175 f'ullerton, 642-8690. t llR. TownhoutH $115 NOW'S THE Huntington llo•ch 1 IR. Ap1rtm1nt $210 -R 2 BR. 1156 Up. -3 BR TIME Fo $180 UP. Patio; pool , fi.e.KhOol centtr. Adult pool, children ok. J\IORA KAI .QWdren'1 pool, Priv patl«!i. QUICK CASH A.pl.I. 18881 J\lora Kai Lane. Eltt kitchens. \Vall lo wall ll blk E, ot Beach ott cloMtt &: ctirpels. 2 pJa,y. Garfield, 962,.899.t ......... ~ ~ '"" THROUGH A I BR. Un!, exlra •'°""-1.p. bllns, crpts, drps. $130. l 1·725' S. Euclld St. DAILY PILOT BR. FU>~. 1145. Gu pd. Poe' Patio. /\dlt.!I, no pciL~. (j ... t llOUlh of Wamer ln 536-6TI7 Fountain Valley) WANT AD ,._.,,..,...,~"7-.....-.,--,-~I , Phone (714) 54M715 LRG 2 BR unf, redec, bl1.J1~ 642-5678 &. Hfrlg. Car av!. $140. 1 ~ Idle lie.ms nowl O U 642-.56711 Now! en turn • $12.J. 7U rn- dl11.nspoll1t, lm. * MS-0700 HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adullt Look Into •.• '"·ENINGSPECl!L-1 IEDROOM ~ $141! CASAdelSOL Near all beaches • P1ivat1 Terrace • Rec Building • Saunas 2 Pools • Billiards• Gym • Putlinc Green ind Volleyball Buill·in Kitchens • Dishwashers • Disposa:ls • Carpets/Drapes Close to all shoppinc • Private Parkin& 1nd Stora1t AlSO: 2 Bedroom w/fireplate From $205 21661 Broolhunt. Huntiniton Budl-1714) 962-5151 HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adult and family Se<tions The possible dream ••• t Bol""" from $131-2 Bol1oom, ! Ball• f""" $1!16 HUNTINGTON GRANADA Private Terrau: • 3 Pools w/Cabanas • Built.Jn Kitchens Dishwashers • C.rpets/Orapes • Walk·in Closets • Dressing Rooms Close to Shopping, All Seachis and Leisure Areas 17111 Golden West St .. Huntln1ton Buch 1714) 147-1055 (Just South Of Warner) SANTA ANA -Adult and Family Sections Break the monotony ... OPENING SPECIAL-I BEDROOll fRilll $1ln PARK PLAZA Private Palios • Ret Building • SJunss •Jacuzzi• Pool Buill·•n kitchens • Oishw1sheB •carpets/Ora~ Near South C.O.st Plaza • Leisure ~reas •Freeways ALSO: 2 lltdr>om/2 Bath from $167 Town House w/1 \l Saths From SI 75 3900 So<llh f'°"", Sontl !no-1714) 11~3214 (2 block> tlSt of Mstol and M1cArthur) Managed By: HlllOK MANAIEMENT CD .. INC. • w/oUtees It drlvt-ln doors. By owner. 646-5033 days; 646--06!1 eves. Trader's Paradise NE\V bldg, 1'728·2300 ,q, ft. Nr Baktt I Fairview, l yr be. Sullivan, 540-4429. Storage 455 LARGE. lock • tJ'P, storaa:e apace available. 64&-6.195/545-9863 Rentals Wanted 460 $200 OR LESS., 2 fr or more lse. 2 BR w/ deck or patio, Catamaran, damqed, very gar. Start Apr. 1st. refs. fast prototype, 20 ft w/eus. a\·aU. Penln1ula, proximlly tom trailer. Will trade as Is N.H.Y.C. Wm. 0 . Hind, Box for kite ~boat. 644-1938 662, Bal. 92661 after 3:30. 2 CAR Garage Jn Collta !<~or HEALTH I NEED Hi- Jl.Iesa. To be used for Deaert. Cal.outotstale.Have 1torage. Ca11 Terry, The 2 bldg Cl com CM. Inc $445 Real Estate.ni M6-23U Fp 1611M ~ t42M ALS0-3 ae Misc. Rentals 465 Palmdale Eq $2'.!P.f. ~ F need ton. 100 hp Johnson O.B. ceni. 6 e • P •p&ee gat fuel tank bB.ttery cabin for campmi, bol.1.!11, etc: l box , ·~, bl -Call 6(2-6560 .. an ..... ca e ..... ..., I ~~~~~~~~~~1:value. Trade for niolorcycle I. of equaJ value. ~78 11•1 Xlnl 3 )T. old "'"''"• w/ . saddle, bridle, etc. Trade ......... I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~lfor motor bike, ofc. equip., I· . 1portlrc equip. Val. $500. Auto trantportation 525 S4o.7823. l=~~--c-o.-=-o­WANTEO: Person to drive '69 4 dr, Crew cab "-Dodge 'M VW Bui, pert, cond. P.U. All hvy dty w/&tr eond. to Cleveland, Ohio. Rer1. Alao 22' Air Stream trlr. 642-157$ Trd for ·Dodce or Cortez Personals I 5j(i motor hrn. 548·5750. Have 2 br Seahaven home, ADVENTURE 11,500 ,..11,. Wan1 oid<r SAILING CRUISE downtown Htg Sch 3 br or 150 fl. 3 mut Square Rtaer. 2 br widen. o..n: 536-1633; Lea.vine 3/15/n for 3 Eyn: .ame or 962-0154. months. Men It WOrMn want. Trade equity In beiutitully ed w/desire tor advnture camJ.for '70 Landeau Mo. A trawl A ability to share tor home 23• deep, I for e:s:pe.naes. For .Information late ~IS~ Wq ~. call ~:;e;;1~ ed w/xtn. sib1, 541.9'J!IO FULLY UCENSED * '62 Corvair ~ Van, new Rt:nowned Hindu Spiritualist tires, bllcket IMla, carpet- Advict on all mt.nen. ed, panelled, bed, ltoVt, tee Love, Man'laa:e, Buslneu chest. Trade tor ama.11 car. Readtnp t\Vf:h 1 da,JI a s.l&-1131. week. 10 am -10 pm. l·.-.-.,-~-cWILL-=--..._--,,.,'QI 312 N. El Camino Raal, MUSTANG and '66 , di.EV S.n Oementl! convtrtlblt for 22' TRAJL. 492-9136, '492.oo76 i:::n. "WEID ft It reap" .. clean * • Call 646-5108 '* * out the treasures &: tra1h • turn lnto cuh ttlru a Dally * Pilot Oaulfted ad. MM671 * * lines times dollars . Have (a) 3 BR, lllrn, Bit Bear,~ equity Cb) 2 BR, beach ~ Ventura, $'1000 r®itY. WANT delf'rt home or ! T? Myen, 67J.QSI. Clear '70 Shula A.C. mtr hm-Loaded, Want aeuoned 2nd T.D. aa FP $7000 w/fafr dlacount. Bob Lockhart, S8i9 W, 19th, CM 646-2301. 20 acres 6 )T old Rlwnlde subwtl Oranrt Grove. $90M. EQ, Iii M' f'OR W>d. · 1-fbme or submit. Call "4-25.lB 1957 18' Mercury Trir. Trade for O'\lft'Mad camper far Fonl Thick. 548-1050 aft.er 5 PM. 2024 Fedttal Ave, Costa Me ... Baytront dUplex, near""'· on Bil~; f ·br, 5 be.1 Ip rootn1. For T.O.s or T f'J1b. cipaif. Ev•" m.299 196.5 Conoafr MONI, Mpd, eood cond. 'n'ade IDr ~ cyct, or what Jtave )'OU. 1 CAIL 962·3m2 or lfT·lllS I BR, 3 BA, 21lll) ~. W-dlJI, Oovtr Shn art&: NB. Mint ooncl. Tn! l22M ... comm'l, Ind. prop or Untti, 0.C. Dy "'·""' .....,._ -Have , new 2 8R. 2 be.th house in New,On leach. clear. Want Ioctl vacant lotJ or tot. Balhoa B a r "-Mita. 673-1QI __ Trad~ Kirby vacuWn da~ tor w/attachmentt I: ao. »lilMr tor eleetne ~ typewriter ct f ta.U • 147.JOU, * * ------' • • ! I I I ' ' I I I '" I ' I ll I '" I ~ ' ..... _·---.. ·:JI':--..:·--~\~-;:-;> :""l .•l" ·-·-... ~· .~ ........ ~· .. ·.~-: .. . -~ .. . ( ., ···--. ~ -... ·--_.... -. ---- • Thu"""7, ,.....,. =:4,:::1::97=1=-= J[fl]1~1 ;;;-~l~~~I ;;;---;;;!~~~ Joi> W•ntod, Mole 1'11 Help W•ntod, M" F 71D H•lp W•nted, Mi. I' 710 Holp W•nt.d, Mi. F 710 Furniture llOl'umltu,. 110 1[11] I -------.· When You Wqnt it done right ••• E's CO o K-b o u eekeepcr tor -"'-FRl~OIARDStii;;'R;i;--·1jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;m;~~~-~i!i!!;!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I SCRAM-l . ~ ';'.;":.i..~.M;,,5 !."r ,.1::r:~~~:~s Talerit Showcase CJ.OSING, OUT ANSWERS 646-$00. lnun<d.opcnlngslorvrbw/ Pop·SIOa "1ono" Groupo DECORATOR GETS CANCEL~ATION Customer Service $500. exper. AllO, traWe opeD-Jam Jn&iona welcpmo OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS n,irt)' _. Blton _ Tarry _ 1n1. Dee. bckard. plu• con. ina:•. Call now, 9 am.S pm, 1 _.="'=~,561_,'="'=· ::T-""<'to,.',,..,, Sp.1ni1h & Mecl lt.rrtnffn flum lture Actfnc .-STRAlGflT 11truction, able to work Wfltk. ORANGE COAST ROUTE Sale..-$130 wk to et. ALL BRAND NEW Two bJ"Oltbera who were dJf. ends. Call Loraine, Wtt1t.. EMPLOYMENT T~ ov atab Fuller Brush· A decorator dream house on display- tuent· One Wtnt tnro pol-clltt Personnel Agency, 2043 AGENCY ~=~so~~~~ time 3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture J ( I Call one of the experts listed be/owl! , Illes ~~ the other went \Veatclltt Dr., N.B. &15-2770 12-1 Btoadwoy, C.M. 645-31.U SALES (was reg. $1295.) STRAIGHT. • DENTAL ASSISTANT • SACRl"'ICE $498 Motel e nd /or Apt Mg.. O..k """:· Dental exp, ~-Logal Sec'y to $650 STOP!!! I"' • • • • • · • · · · · • Experienced . mature eX·Air Ins., acct s rec., &Qme Sat •. Xln't akill!I, min s yn Calif. LOOKING & ACT C om pl••· M•dit•r•n••n e .d room Suite ~o-e ot!!cer dffirts to re. F)ina:e ben'ir. li.B. area. law in 01k •. IR•"'· $1<49.00 1 ........ NOW $111.00 ~ I~ < •• Call o~---846-3540. • Sales minded person, see far 7 I S I h [ I~ I I I locate in or near beach .,... .. ....,,m, 11 Gor9•ous Spanish C ustom l ul t o 1 wi t SWW--,nd~ ...,_lnllftepairt ~and"9J*n area. Reply to P.O. Box DENTAL AS~ISTA .NT. Keypunch to $500 ~=it). .. ~~I = ~:;. metchin9 Lov• Se•t-Choic:• of be•utiful 11~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. ~----;;;mm; :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;~m; 1526 Laguna Beach. Exp'd., -full time. Reeep. Min. 6 mo'11 e:<pe-r, Key tape right man, Earnings com-f•bric:s. I Re9. $319.951 •.•..... NOW $191.00 ~ nd I I H~ retired 100 early! tionist • Ass~tant. Over 25. t1r ffiM 024/029. Lovely N.B. mence immediately aht1uld Sp1nish Oinin9 Sets _ .............................. $75.00 Gardening Le scepng Re-"' need interesting PHONE. 646-3535 firm. bcinexcesst1l .,,..,. ...... wk. Solid Oek End Tables & Coffee T•bles $19.50 Babyslttlftl ;>1>eu, . . ,.,._ ,_ ANTHONY'S LANDSCAPING: Including: work. Mid-fifties. What DENTAL Assistant. chair-Ne. canvassing or soliciting. T •II Oecor•tor Table limps COSTA MESA Garden StMrlee patlol, de<:kinl A fencing; have )OU to otter? 644--0416. side. Exp'd Expanded duties NEWPORT Interviews by appt1lntment I R.9• $<49.95 I ........•................. NOW $11.00 PRE.SCHOOL 644 4860 Reas. 837·!mL Job Wanhld, Female 702 Hunt. Bch. 847-1549 or Personnel Agency only g.3 weekdays. &i>zrn Spi nish Han91n9 Sw.9 limpi lBth & Monrovia, 71 day+ M thl maintenance COMPLETE Prol. Serv. 968-4591, 133 Dover Dr., N.8 . SALES .I Reg. $49.95) .•.......................... NOW $22.50 full day sessions. Planned on y State llc'd contractor. Call SHARP MOM • 30 yrs • DENTAL Assistant, chair 642·3870 ATTENTION' LADIES CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN prngram, hot lunches. Ages Exp. horticulturllt 968-1928. • TOP SEC S~ Exp. slde, experienced only, age ~~~""""""!"'""l~ Sru·ah Coventry Jewelry has 2-6, hrs 6:30 AM-6:00 PM. NB-CdM-lrvlne . w/handieapped + mentally 35 or under.' LlvE-IN mature housekeep-t1pening.s for 5 ladies, to ·RD FURNITURE $18 wk-COMPARE! 642-4050 The best costs no tnm'f!! M•sonry. disturbed, Music instructor 40CH990 or 837-3792 J)'r. Must drive. Care for 2 show our NEW line. No l844 N Bl d (A H bo Bl d ) or 838-5237. AL'S GARDENING BRICK, block, concr ete, + 7 yr. Church ln.YouPtth EXCHANGE Pvt 2-nn apt children, 5 &: 7, Prepare investment. collections. or ewport "'!# • t GF r V • BABYSIT my home, 10 mo's for prdening & small carpentry, house leveling, Counselor. $3 hr m · &: board in CdM for woman som..! meals, TV room &: deliveries . Ph: COSTA MESA ONLY 10 5 yrs tlld, 24 hrs day. landscaping services. call , all types remodeling. No time pttferred 673-4980 10 holp eld~ly -rson. board, friendly atmosphere. 545--4296/828-9478 'Tll 9 --" ba k 54~ SUvlng Newport. all. LI "-tr CED T 1 "-r-3872 Mon., Thurs. & Fri. Loving care. F'"'" c job too sm c, .....,n · EX PERIEN e e._,,V'" 6'75--06ll. Salary open. 830-. Sarah Ct1ventry Inc., full or''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!'!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ yd. Harbor & Victoria area. CdM, O>sta ~es.a, Dover 962--694~. Operator Msire full·time .,..0 M t Ii h I needed I .!= 110 Shores, \Vestclill. 1 t . "-·1a M•sa FEMALE attendant , LOCA>• N EN· P· me ep. •no .n· Appli•nces 802 Furniture 64>1473. Blockwalls • Patlos emp oymen m '-"" 1 t ,i·1y EXPERIENCED ONLY vestment. Will train, min.•-'-'--------p R O FE SS JONAL main-Call T · l ., • ., ""A" P easan person 1 ' "" ''"'7 "'83/54" ~, ' OR •· & WHY BUY RELIABLE child care, Sidewalks-Driveways area. Ont a vu.-.xrw, For Vending Routes. Cal l age~ . ....,~ ..........,. KENM E auto was1n:r warm at mos Ph ere· tenance, pruning, treed'~~rk, Lie. 54~3173 AM t1r eve I eves. Elderly gentleman. Live--in Collect, (3121 642-3757 -Mr. •SECRETARY• matching elec dryer, Both Cong'n'·-• playmates. 9 mos sprinklen, pests, ....,ase, L' be <•8 JOl!N d rti · xlnt cond $90 cruaranteed cu weed control. Clean up )lbs. Painting & HOME Health Aide. 1cens· + salary, catl twten Logan Suite 3121 -to young a ve sing mgr., . · .~ • fURNIJUR£?. Id 4 yrs. Mesa Verde Terms. Ge<>rge, &16-5893. Paperhanging ed. 3-4 days a _week. pm, 673-2006. HANCOCK CENTER .. to \\'Ork in adv. dept. Need & dehv. 546-8672, 847-8lla. ~· E. XPERT Japanese Reliable. Reis, 835-5279, Chicago, Jllinoi.&606U. .shorthand, typing & LADY Kenmore ault1 BAB)'SI TTING &: * EXTERIOJt..INTERIOR * 835-5727. FURNITURE personality. $4~$500. to washer. late model, Xlnt Be Flexlblel Housekeeping. Llve-<>Ut $30 garde~r. Complete garden-won't be underbid Custom EXEC SEC -~Log, Prob, LVN · 3:00·ll:OO shift. start. Call Mr. Pee~. cond, $8S guaranteed & Rent mo. to mo. with Wk. , "·•·>·n r..n wk. Own ing service. Free est. .,._ft , ..... ,.. -SALES-Park Lido Convalescent 645-1401. deliv. 546-8672, S4?-8tl5. lOO P h O • ...,w _, 645--()345. \vork, finest paints. "''"" Phann Scien term, MTST, Fm' local dept. sh:lre Center 642-8044 °lo urc •se pt1on transp. 548-1051 esUcolor consul~. Refs, type 70' SH 100 492-2428 e TOP COMMISSIOM Secretal"l DELUX G.E. washer Ind. item selection CHILD care, my home, al· AL'S Landscaping. T ree lli. bonded. Full financing ' ' e co. BENEFITS MAKE full time wages, part Financial secretarial skills, w/mlni basket dryer: 20"' 24 Hr. Dely. ternoons only. Prefer school removal. Yard remodeling. av'ail. 492-5338, 543-5085 AIDErl~For conr:;:~~· Quality line to sell lime, be a distributor of top job, able to relocate, bike w/converter & training CUSTOM age. Nr College Park school Trash bauUng, lot cleanup. LESCO Painting Contractor He~= en'• 547~. · Apply in person pure t1rganic cleaners, food call Loraine Westclilf Per. whls. 546-2026 Furniture R1nti1I bus stop. 54&-1695; Repair sprinkl ers. 073-ll6G. Inter & Exter. 2 Story --ro Mn:. Thompson supplements & rosmetlcs. SC1nnel Age~cy, 2043 West-e REPAIR man has clean 517 \V. 19th, C.M. 548-3481 CONSCIENTIOUS & loving We 1i!,~:~:~!"rcu~ery Specialist. Also, accoust Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 W. T. GRANT CO. 637-4606tS73--2064. cliff Dr., N.B. 645-mo. late model washers &. Anaheim 774-2800 C"'· lnfanlJi to 1 )T, daf gpraylng, Lie & in s · H" .. ···'e··•-· 13 hr Personnel Office t.IAl{E..UP girl for beauty SERVICE STA ATr. all dryers, Rsnbl, guar. Master LaHabra 694-3708 Wish. 54~1'13 mt1rn. t1r .,.,. "~99 ~ ~ ... t1ra " ·-nc or evu. Newborn care .....,..., · and Plumbing Repair 9811 Adams Ave., Grant Plaza s ..... on, a cuve appe...... e shifts open. Apply in person, Chg OK. 531-8637 MUST sell 6 rms t1f near-new round the clock. 675-2761 eves. No Wasting e 545-2929 e Brookhurst & Adams, please. 548-9840 or 64&-Slll Mac Arthur le 4678 Campus MOVING-Must se ll new s pan i sh.Mediterranean \Vll.J.. babysit .your child In 10 Yrs exp in Harbor atta. * WALLPAPER * & F 7Ji Htg. Beach MARINE carpenter, expef°. Dr., N.B. Kenmore gas dryer. furniture. g• bl ack my licensed home, ages l Avg lwn Sl0-$l2 per mo. When you call "Mac" Help Wanted, M An equal opportunity Also, Marine painter, exper. SERVICE Estab'd. Fuller Call eves, 64~1146 .naugahyde scifa I: ll>veseat, · C & M Gardenin&' Serv, i••• 646-lnl / thru 5, Mon thru Fri. 646-'12IS. 548--.... ., * ACCOUNTS PAYABLE employer Apply In person, Basin Bn111h rte. $125-$175 wk. ro Building Materials 806 $150 fen' both pcs. King-aize 549-4030. liiim"";,:;c;;;;;;:,;;;;;--,;;;: PROFESSIONAL Painting. BKKPR !~~~~~~~~~~I Marine. Inc., 829 Bayside st., a180 pt. time Ms-5745. bdrm set; coffee table & JAPANESE-American Gar. ~ · I; -NB -•1 .~ "300 tch ' od 9• CHILD care. My home. dener. Exp, Complete Gar. Exter. 1 storY. low as _.... Typing, f i 1 in g, posting. Full time t1r part time con-Dr, .. or CIU ·~ • SEAMsmESS for 1 ai 1 ma 1ng comm es; Large play area. H t1 t dening & Land!caplng. w/gd paint. Ava nn. $18. Cor.struction exper. des'd. cession help. Orange County MATURE lady or man/part maker, (age 30-45) 3,000 DOORS gold velvet sofa &-lov~eat; lunches, CM 66-3298 1 =>.oJ50. Accous. ceilings sprayed 2-Send complete resume 1£1: Raceway. Mr. Re d ding t1r n. time. Retail sales, * 673-1731 * 100,s of Seconds from Sl Up. game set; hi·back velvet ~ coats .-is. Roy, 847-1358 Classified ad No. 66, Daily , 111"0 llB6. li -del>' -"A2..0342 be . derorator chairs; pictures: BABYSITTING <f• o.--q · .,.. . * SHAMPOO GIRL * N. ew interit1r. doors. ginn. NEW Lawns, re--seed. Compl Pilot p O Box 1560 Costa!----------lamps; etc. All less than DAYS ONLY I lawn ... -. Cl•an up by job PAINTING: Ht1nest, guaran-' C~,;. 9"""" ' Assistants Beauticians Hall'· mg $5.50. Solid exter1t1r doors 3 mo old. Pvt ply. n 4: 'PM ~-t-dwork.Llc'd.Localre1'5. Me&a. cull. IJOllO GRANT BOYS MEDICAL ASST. • ' 1-~ I 112 100' ,, B>' 64U728 after or mo. Free est. For info "'" dressers Hair Stylists Hair s .._. ... ng a . s · 636-3597 CHILD care Mon thru Fri. 897·24l7 or 846-0932. Call 675-5740 a!t S. Back ofc. w/some front ofc. Models & Girl Friends: Call: folds, louvres &: sliders. I ~~--~-~-~- Vic. Wilson & Pomt1na * Ratdential _ Apts * PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs Adm In Assist to Pres. Ins., lite typing. Roy Alvaradt1, HAIR HUNT Paneling 1st grade 4·xs· 5 S:~ish m= ~~ Schls. 642-5426. I * C.Ommerclal * tn Harbor area. Llc & Mu.st have deill!e or eqwv. * MISS EXEC AGENCY ERS SALON &M-2151 day or sheet~ $1 .99 ea. \Vood sash headboard, lik~ ne,v, $l59. booooo. Rer• !um. &12-2356. bus!neH """ S!art!ng a'1"Y *SALES CLERK 410 W. C...t Hwy., NB window• rrom $2. 4.,,. Alum. Babysitting by reliable Complete Care 646-9855 FIRST Class Painting & $550 mo. Call n4/m44U, Full time only 646-3939 s:~ gal, 24-35 Typing, inum casement windows $30. ~riik:~~!~ f~ J:.:: mature A:°~~~ home. 1 ~~p 1 ~~~r ~~Z:~ paper _ hanging. Free est 1 to S pm, Shorthand. Call for in-Door skins $l Up. Hard 1 ~ard dressers in walnut finish, Call 545-3459. Apply in person MOTEL MAIDS -Pt time terview: 675-3632. 39c a sheet. A um1num $25 ea. UFF, 1885 Harbor BABYSITTING Eves &. Service. Kamalanl, 646-4676. INT , Ext•r p .. inting. APT. MGR. kir 12 2 B!t. Ask tor Mr. Wilcox wk-days & wk ends. Please sheets for fencing. siding, Blvd CM 543-9457 wicndi. My home. ;15- 1283 General Services Lic'd "'.: F • m ..... 3ll yrs tum. adult units. ft1r partial bet.veen z.s pm only call 494-7557 Lag Bch. SUPERVISOR LVN ll-7:30 patio covers, trailer skirts. SAC~;cr _ 10 ~s near days, Eves. 5f8...<Kl. -'-'-----"'.'."--·) 'mChs. kree645-08oo rent. 642-9520 aft 5 pm. MOTEL MAID, part time. a.m. rel. sh., wk ends. 15c a sq ft. Unfinished pic-NWPT Hghll area. Lrg yard. Husband Busy! Call Moose exper. uc • · Park Lido Convalescent lure frames, hardware, new Medit. furn inc. 8' sand box. Balanced lunch. 545-0820 after &-Repair PAINTING professional All ASSEMBLY The Grant Boys Exp. nee. App11Yd !nCMperson Center 642-SM4 locks, cabinet knobs & pulls black naugahyde sofa & 54 Bulld-Serv Most Things k ' c l r NEWPORT BLVD 2205 Harbor B v • · · loveseat, never used, $150. Xln't care.645--27 . wor guarn. ti 0 TRAINEES 11;,0 " \VOMEN -Fantastic op-fromsurplusinventories. Bunk beds, 5• coUee table, Carpenttr Rm: Gutters I nstalled. specialist. 64&-7081; 547-1441 5 Immed. t1penings fDr girls COSTA ~fESA NEAT rnlddle age &wo~, portunity to earn over 10-S dally, 11-4 Sun. 2 end c t1 mm od e s, Quality \\'ork. Rea.sc>nable. PAINTING-Ext-Int 18 yrs. w/rd eyesight &: flnger dex· Equal opportunity employer Pt·time, eves. Fish ps, $100/day. Learn revolu-MILLER·DRAKE hide-a-bed, Spanish King CARPENTRY Free est. 968--Dlll exper. Ins .. Uc. Free est tetity. Call now. 9 AM-9 PM. w ANTED; Hairdreuers, in-Huntincton Bch. S7U1'28. tionary new beauty tech-2406 So. Main St., S.A. b d rm, ve r y r 1 n b I , MINOR REPAIRS. No Job DITCH-DIGGING • Jte..pipes, Accoust. Ceillnp. 963-9126. ORANGE COAST crease your salaries 30%. OLDER woman with good, nique. Guaranteed place-(Next ro Stand8J'd Brandsf 213/925-.J622. Too Small CahiMt 1n aar· 1 sprinklers, trenches. etc. * PAPERHANGING EMPLOYMENT *Call 673-8250 * basic cooking skill. Apply ment 1:: dintele at oor loca· 546-1032 I 'l'"""'So.,ra'""'&,---c"'ha-ir-•"'•tt'",'""'S49"1 aies & o t be r cabinets, Reasonable. 543-0W & PAINTING. * 968-2425 AGENCY H 0 USEKEEPER, live-in, i6iin-09;i;;ii;77iiiMr,..Ziiim,..m,.•,.•,...,.. tions or your ht1me. 557-22111~~~~~~~~~ .set. 3 sofa & love seat S«S-8175 U no ahswer leave I Hauling Plaster Patch Repair U-1 Broadway, C.M. &L>3lll CdM. Must be good ~th l ~M~~~s~L~yo~ns~.~~~~~'.l~F~u:r:n:it:u~ro:_ ____ :'':::O sets, S85 set. three 10 cu. msg at 646-2372. lL 0. I ' ' children. Needed 1m· OVERSEAS , ft. refrigerators. $65 ea. An.Jef"..on MOVING, Carage clean-up * PATCH PLASTERING A RESUME puts your ap-mediately. $180 mo to start. I~ UFF, 1885 Jlarbor Blvd, & !·1 h li Re..,oable I ~ 3 only-double bookcase head· REMODELING &: Repair 1 e au ng, • AU types. Free estimatrs plication on TOP We com• 675-27!!0. Merchandise V boards. 57 ea. Walnut & ·CM. 548-9457. Speeialist, Comm'!, Tesicien· Free estimates. 645• 1602 Call 540-6825 pose & print 100 copies ~•H--SKP~~R/~ch-il~d-c-a-,..-.~W~o°'tk71n-g JOBS '-· -------' white double headboards.1 ·G=-.-,.-9-e"S~1'1e----,8;;;1;;;2 tial Paneling cabinet&, YARD, Garage cleanups, Plumbing ONLY i;t8.50. Call~ pa.rents. 6:30 am 'Iii approx • . • \Vhile they last $2 ea. Any l---°'--------1 mai-Ute, formica. 644-7598. I trees dlrt ivy removal, 1kip 1--;;;-,-;;:;;:';;;;;-;;;;:;~;--1,~fo~r~a~ppo;:;•~nbn=•~nl:_.-:;;;;;;-;;;;;;;l 3;3() pm. 5 day wk. 3 childrn Antiques 800 lamp in sttlCk, 2S% dis-CHERRY inlaid 96" dining CARPENTRY all kinds 6m. loader, backhoe. 962-i.745. I PLUMBING REPAIR AUTO SaJesman must have 2 sh:lry hse. Own traru;p, count. End & cocktail table & 6 gold crushed or lg .. concrete v.°Ork free TRASH & Garage clean-up, No job too small selllitg exper. ~ lot. Blue ref's req'd. 546-9390. aft 6. TRUCKLOAD of Eastern tables, as is, $5 ea. UFF, velvet chairs $200, lg. swing est., •7914 anytime days. $10 a load, Free -est. • 642-3128 • Chip Ault1 Sales, 21 4 5 HSKPRS Emplyr _pays lte. $135 oak--Chlna cabinets, round 1885 Harbor Blvd. CM. set $10, misc. furniture & ".eo·i,·ngs Anytime, 548-5031. Plumbing. Elect. Repair Harbor, CM. 540-4 393, George Allen Bylind Agney Totil FH fooled tables &: chain, 548-9457. hshld items galore, all kinds 7 SO hr .. 2-9700 547 ·~• 1 aded · '-:;;;;'--'..,.---;~-.,-;-:-:: antiques & much more. Sat. Housecleaning $ . per 106-B E. 16th, S.A. -u.:i...... bureaus, lamps, e w1n-1 Custom Draperies d PAINT Accoustical Ceilings,!:.;.;;.;.;;.;.;;;,;..°"';;:.----642-27":>5 642--0506 BABYSITTER, occasslt1nal HOUSEKEEPER wanted E? dows, school house & Feb. 2, 9 am ti! sol ' 9135 $10 ea or trade, 531-6927, CLEANING & Pa Inti ng. LEW TAKAS & SONS evenings, in my home, • Mon thru Fri, 9-4 pm. 153U WHY PAY MOR grandfather clock.c; etc. 185 Decorator drapery \\'orkroom ~~~~~~ Ave·• FV. t1r 636-3UO \Valls, woodwork & floor COMPLETE PLUMBING E. Balboa Blvd, N. B. Cascade Ln HB CBtwn Pasadena Ave., TUsttn, oU closing out 2500 yards t1f ==-;:c==-,:-:--;:=·I Ce ment, Concrete __ stripped rugs shampooed. ~HR SERV. 646-8340 67~36.54. Bolsa & Bea~h) 892-0702. UNIVERSAL 1st St. 838-3233 anytime. drapery fabric and made-up MISC. boating items. Com- Rt>l's & 'tree est. 53&-8069 Roofing BARMAIDS, 21 • 30, Exp. HOUSEKEEPER 714/956·2251 CHERRYWD buffet. Old draperies. Materials ~m passes, horns, pumpe & Jots •• CONCRETE. Beat The SUN Brite Malnl Carpets, ;.;.;--=------·I not needed. Escapade Room, Ll~in. C.!\-I. 545_7663 European style m a 1 te r 75c a .Y~ and d'.aper1es more. Inflalable boat. Elec. Bad \Vealher? Floors, noon, windows etc. Resid'I FOUND NUDE Costa Mesa S48-9069. Open 7 days a week piece, 95 .. long' 62" hi. from $5 pall'. 3853 BII'Ch St.: trim tabs. Fishing gear. patkls. Reo.s. Call Don & comm'l. Free est. A leaking roof in Dover , . HOUSEKEEPER, 2·6 f.1on. !'!~~!""'~~~~~ 633-7151 Newport Beach. 546-,1431.,.adj Shot shell reloader. Elec. 642-8514. 537-fl621. Shores. I fixed \t. T. Guy BARMAID·ExPd. Apply m f'ri, 2 children 1l & )2. PART Time baby&itting & ~'-,~-----,1,.02,. to Orange County Airport. snioklng oven. Saili ng PARTIS. v.'&lks, driveways -•H•ou=SE"'°""'o'°F"c'°L;;E.,-A"N-Roofing Co. ti 4 5. 2 7 8 O , person.C 8M 1£1 4 pm, 686 W. 494-4366 after 7 pm. hsekp'g, for 2 6cbl chldrn, _A~p~p_l_i•_n_c_e_•_____ 2 only-5 pc dlnette sets. $19 dinghy. Huntin6 knives, Sac. -mo'oo • -poured In con· Comp1 H CJ · 54°9"!111 t9th, ' · EXPER &J.eS 7 & 9· Hrs 2--5 pm 1°KELV, 2 dr. •-ezer/ref. set. 1 t1nly-7 pc antique 968-8873 ... •" ete OUM' eanuig , .,... J • . BEAUTICIAN'S Space !or HOTEL· . • . kd In HB Call alt 5·30· ir u-.. ~~=-~~-,,,---,-1 crete 35c sq It & up ~7630 642-6824 w ys, · · · Exe. cond. Ct1sl $650. Sell whit(' dinette set \\'/floral · LEE ROOFING CO; Roofing rent $25 week New in· Room reservatioru&I. Apply 1n 536-!568. $200. Eves &tz.8062. chairs, $35. 1 t1nly 5 pc 1800 E. Balboa BI v d . lNST'I.. nu & used patio !\-Iesa Ciearung Service ol all types, r ecover , 1 .· Newport-Beach person only. Newporterlnn. 'P"AR""'T"-ti"·m"•'".-25,,--;:hours=:;;:-,:;:8:::;:,h bl k & h"t d' tte. set Peninsula Point. Fri. Sat '''al~<. drive, lawn, saw. brk ,.,,.__,,,,~, w;-d0,,,, Floor1 '1c -pairs roof coatin ... Lie enor, · ,..,,..,.. ... ,..,..,..,..,..;;;I REFRIGERATORJ~ \V/LG . ac w 1 e ine · ; & Sun. 10-6. Studio couch, ........ , ... ~ "' •" • ·-o-· 642 0844 or 968 46221 ' week. Sales...,"Oman for ar1 I k ne $49 UFF 188a & remov 54.S-8668 tor est. Res & Commc'I, 5484111 & bonded since 194 7 . · · -• FREEZERS $35-145-$55. 1 e iv, · · play pen, porto crib, chests, &12-7222. BEELINE FASHIONS oiler • gallery in Newport area. ** 64~7820 •* Harbor Blvd, CM. 548-9457. appliances, gla.<>S, decorator CE~JENT \\'ORK. no job too HOUSEWORK. Exp. Ironing I !h Start $2 hr. 644-6144. B YFRONT I 1"" Small -a~nabl•. Free , _ _.Rt CdM N l Sch EA~ERN Qu-•,·ty-\Vestern xtra income, xtra co es, ·.-.· EC d -n A 1 cu.s om .... n, items, odds & ends. No •''""" wa.nl.C1.le. i ,p '"' ...., 1 il Ned 'b' T ' .,. nEL range,avocao--~·upho'achrw/ot!oman.cwrHES• Estim. H. Stufiick, 548-8615 Bal area pttf. 646-3664 . Prices! All types Roofing. ft1r am y, e 3 JO • .. PAR time posL JOn, ma · used 9 mo $85 21N 11 • Lyle, S7J.-7980. work from home. For appt ~ • -· non-studl'nt. Shelve books in W ·11 CM ·64>3862 carved, antiqued chr, kng GARAGE Sale, Decorator Child Care Bay & Beach Janitorial 17141 o••ts" 622-1766 -1. , libr""" 3 to 9 P:i.t. Mr. a ace. • · headbrd. match. nite stands. · F I Crpl•, windows, floors ete Sewin9/Alt1ration1 o.)U"' ..., or • ~J USED elec Maytag dryer, .,.,,. "'OO. items, urn., amps, sm. CHILD home any BOOKKEEPER White, S..~548l '-C~""';';;;;;-;;c-:::;:;-::":::;:;: appliances, misc. Sat, Sun, care, my d •-"";..;:;';:,· i.&'-Co~m;-m;',..t,..64:;;&-;;:1;;4-0i,-!-. -Don'! • • PRESS OPERATORS Wo New healing elements, Xlntr;VALUABLE on·g o'>I pal-1"' 204 E en'"" Star Ln hOurs, Hot lunch, fence 1· FI'ITING Problem? COSTA l\1ESA • . nd $75 962-3481 •r v-T· v -... " yard. 548-3834. HOUSECLEANING fret! Joann special\zea in F'ull time-Ex:pcrienced a! men, work for plastic mold-co • :>'. • tings, 1mported mar b 1 e Dover Shoreg. C"mtr•ctor $15 per day 548-9863 custom titting. Play clothes least 1 yr. Call far appt, PE ONNEl ing plant. 546-3370. *NEARLY. OC\V 11ot1ver dln'g table. Moved, must ESTATE sale-Thurs thru Income T•x to party dresses. 897--6481. 642.0042. IR\/INE RS );R;;-.;E;,,:;C-;;E.,PT;ml;;O;;;N'-1s"T"/Boo;;;;;:;;kk;;;e;;;:e. vacuum. $35. sell lhis week. 646-0732 or Sat. Antiques, collectables, NEY,' constr. Addi t it1 n s • EUROPEAN dressmaldng all SERVICES •AGENCY per needed for sml animal MA64YT5·,-1564G";Ut*;:-';7:Hiih3SOO.:-&l,;::"1'-;;22l:::::l,.:•;,•,::':.":.,.-::,,-= clothing, ski equipment, ~:~ia1~:~rre~-~rpe~~ Smiley Tax Service :~~~~~~~~·Very reruon. BUFFUM'$ 488 E. 17~~~·~~ne) C.M. ~~:~~B~n~l bet\\·n. Mt!T~~,;~t~~;as!~. & srro~· o,~~end b~b~s: ~~S:.h~~~O;ch'!:d~~~~1'.(lr 1110,<,~du':'.lstt ~;n.) b~ de;~:~ • 13th YEAR LOCALLY • Alterations -642-5845 -NEWPORT-~~..,,";,;~~~~;::';~ jiR~E~S~U~M~Efis·""'17-ha"'t-•"'·o"r"k-;::,by Nearly new! 67~1894 compl_, $20. Swivel rocker GARAGE Sale : Small elec. •• a.o N t curat 20 years xp fADY _ For Restaurant former personnel director. 1 KENMORE auto matt c & foot stool, $20. Easy chr, app'I. dishes & glasswart, 642-5991, &-8 pm. Qualified • Reasonable ea · ac e, e ' Now intcrvie\ving work. E:xper. des'd. Call Sensible prices. Eves & washer, $45. 1 Westinghouse $5. 642-3701 clothing. toys, books etc. GEN'L CONTRACTOR I W. A. SMILEY Tile 54:,.1686 wknds, 100. 557-7625. eleclric dryer $30. 841-1034 lo8::'. ::..;P,;IU1J;,:;,;;w"-"'•"A'c"'K'"".s::C0:Cr<:a:-, 9802 Cornerbrook Dr., H.B. Remodeling-Room Additlonli Certified Public Accounrt ---------! HOSTESS/MGR. l===~;;;,::;:::,==='-==========,;.;;========1 mekln colored, rever'!lible 9Af..1-4PM Thurs, Fri, Sat. Llc'd/ins 645-0991, 673-6809 642-2221 anytime 64~9666 *Verne, The Tile J\lan* Attractive fashi<lnable wo-cushions. Xlnt cond, $125. BEGINS Wed. 9AM-6PM Additions * Remodelln&' I HOME TAX SERVICE Cu1t. \\'Ol"k. Install & repairs. man with restaurant ex· [i " 962-0842 18944 Santa Madrina Circle, Gerwick & Son, Lie. Fed, & Stale 20~ belt1w last No ~b too s~I. Plaster perience. J\1u&t be cap.. . "' S T~rCLARY1t~•~'ZEK°u1<1u¥.~JI l:,:::,:,;SO,CF""A'",-:n::,.:::,::,-:u:;sed:;-, qu;;;;;;l!;:;:ted F'V. nr Garfield & Maanolla 673--6041 * 5.J.9.:-.2170 yrs return. Appt. avail. patc~ing. Leaking sho\ver able of \\'Orklng with the 111, w.ru" '-¥ noral, scotchguarded $125. 962-4Hil. Lie'd Contr. Rl!modellf\I 1NTA!' ttP. Da,y 675-1283 ~pair. 811-1~7/846--0206. public as \\'ell as the r..tatching loveseat $75. I •s"H"A"K"L,-E"°E'"P"R"O"D"U""C'"'TS Additions Plans LayoUt Eve 548-0417 CERAMIC tJle ne1v &: duties required as a man. Alt::.':, Jti. ~-:':;"'~ih"' :kl. ){. ~· "~ 535--!95,; Naturally Organic: ft1r beau. Karl E kendall' 548-1537 INCOME TAX SERV remodel. ~e est. Small agl'r. Salary position, ~~_J!i. it .... d-"1.!. .=!.._,.,• fo~r1dc ... , '!°,';~" ~ );B;i;E;;Dc;;RM;;;--:,.::,:-, ':oailed;;;-1;:,;;,k;.-llttioon, ty, heal!h, cleaning. 548-8418. · • k jot>s ,~lcome. 536-2426, xlnt, comp•ny benefits. ,.. ,, •••-r-......... 1• ,,.,.M_ &16'1017 10 W-"' .,..NG DECK $4 & up. 9 am""" pm w dys. ,..,.,oo.,,. rtOdwon:isC01•111JX1idirig:ton.rrlbers t--Maple dre&ser·· 5 drawers . ., am· r11n. -· 0 I kn& A ti ....,........,.,. 1'.losUy days and no holi. .,_,, bl~ ~ 15 COATINGS pen evta w • PP ~-~~-----t ~TAUlUS _,aJ.~MN',O::,,.. rmay .. 61 u-ICOIPIO $3.~. 2 chaise loun;:es ea. Garag•Rummege Sale Of all types. Lee Rooting avail. 548-0588.1842Newport, TrH Service days. IM-~ 2 ,-;~ Jl.v.t 62,.,. ocr•11 &1~1286. Friday, Ff'b, 5th Co., CM. 642-7222 for lree C.M. :--1 --~ wAf 20 J Seri-. 33 '-11 63 lmwtioof• HOf'. 21 l,TU;;;R,;Q,;:U;;0:,1s"E,-,al"a"'nt'°arm=:--::,.:;:fa 2'24 t.1agnolia, Costa Mesa -·•s Rd T T_. Appl y in person -.. •O-3,Whm oMGood _41 C!lit. Gordon N. Warren P.A. ·~. fl ges, op, nm, NO. 1. FASlUON TSU.ND ~~..,..n '•v"~ 35,.-" .. °"r. ,.•!::-~ 1$3(). Maple coffee table $15. Hou11hold Goods 814 ROOM Additions. L. T. Since 1951. 675-3345 cut, removed, hauled. fna . NE\',.,......,RT BEACH -· H<ln1P" F Doth in very~ condidt1n. Si 642--4030 Big Jt1lm ~rv OIMIMI· 1vw,. 37S!!mo 67o.,rJngJ U.arrTAIJUS Com;tr'llction. 1lgle storY (If Ironing ~NAf 1' ISM JIWilh 6:= Hor. u in 642-3643. 2. Estlm.., plans & l~t. I Uphol1tery .1., 'A J95h:Mld 6 Pfd.1t b0:CUNC;:;:,;AN:,.,Ph=)'f;:e-:type=:-d:;;i::;nl:::n< M7-15U. IRONING _v homt Sl.25 ""r CONSULTA NT. Gen'I foods JU~I 10Ml:t ..OM1oot 70!'togrel .. v "" ---------1 ntoeds 7 woml.\n for Vi~'"' ~7-1U'1..l II Oldrr '' c-tlftntfy 7l H# J.1"31)..fl. table & 6 chilolrt, Good cond . MY Way, quality home hr. Brin& own ban.gen. Fai;hlon Draperlf's & \Vooda~ "·smctic•. Wt !<~"!¥,i';;!-J~ 12v-•2Splrttt 7273!!.. -. ... ~. .,,,.. Dres&er & 2 Nte stands lll !loo 54" ""'•\ n.1 ....., ISYOl.ll' •lWllllll .,...,, #<AJ rtpllr. Walll,ce ng, n, · ;)<o(V"I Interiors. Uphols t e r y, train. Exec pog's avail, sm CAHCft '"~ A4Yau 7AFlrlrth CAPttCIOlM $20. 646-113t. etc. No job too small. Jen1torf1I turnlture, auto, carpets, inv. 544-1464 ~JUHi it 1s1,1p1 ASMenrr 75T«!O.. oec.n 4. ..;.:;:;__AS;:.-"N"EW""!'"! --~ ,,,.,_ 2' hr ans serv d I ·•• f '-,-,-,,=,,--------) •,.., 16 f~ "60!hfn 76Corftpl~ JAPl" , .,.,_, . • rtpt'r)' ce:an1 . ._. r ec 1*•COOK JULY ... 11,yi~ ~~C:,w. f.:.:iw 1.1i.~· *Sleeping llOfa SiS * WHJTE & gold linen ('()n. vertlble dbl bed couch $75; oU·\.\'hltc ,-tnyl club chair & 0Ho1nan $35; 23" Packard Btll B&\V TV w/itand $40. £73--5496 or 6TH184 bclwttn • 8am&r8pm. Mi1cell•MOUs Fu~ture Vl'\r dUttVL-..O.U-:;1m~ ~ wm'r:~i~r ••DISHWASHERS J.l&.2S-3 1,v:;-41'Romomie 7'r.eod -·-~~~~ ~642-6S60, e.Vt';&: 64S-.2020 . ......,..,._ C--·-.• Exp'd;-Mon-be· clean. -nrat 20Llfl 50Anroa IOM i .AQU.WVS NAUGAHYDE 60fa, 8', psi~ .FURNft'UREStr l pplna. leuk>r'IBl help tor Spring SA547·1897. . andover 21.Applyln-non uo 21u. 51Mfl./ 1111 , •• ~ 1----------1 ••-~t -~· Wood •-cl · Crp1' •-upho! •· ~JUtY lil nw-52Rlll.... llR.«t ""',' green . Good co nd . ORNA~tENTA' -..., In #MIN _ .,........ • taruna:. • • LTC Upholsttrer • Quality only, Surf & Sirloin, 5930 "" .,,.._. I " "" _ _.:, •· our 10' vat b o d wt·•-·-•ui. » 23Poslttori SJMd .,.______...... ffL '' Rt•se>nable. 968-84~. t"b•. plant1, •addl••. •-'di• ~· -· • am po e • fNIJ1VS v.-ork. Anthony•• Uplt . \V, Coasl HV.')'., N.B. "., :MW'"'* s.&lo _ __._.... :a.1~ " ..._ ~ ........ ~. fltt Btrtpped 4 Service. 642-W'T N.B. lg'i"-lS.2637 ~~ _u~ ~~':!.. &.Ul.0 r.rusr SA<.'t'tf~ m.y 2 mo bttp, etc, 962-0144 6 pm Ch~nf waxed, walla~ cttU~l Turn iliosf White Elephants ''\\'HITE ELEPHANTS" fli~~H!j 270f 51 1)Qyl 17klrNN i men old Splnish OAk Klna--1z & Wknd 119 detntd. For U'nl es ·...., ~ PUo viaeo 21""'°""'1ty ~,._.loit'1 .. ,__, • /u. ,~ bdrm set. ~26 ~H"A"N""o"L""o'o"'M'"·"'3"•"·7·•n..,,--, Complete Yard ~NI C. J. Party, 9684J69. ~~=1.w~t 1 oveminnlng your house? ~:f : i:t:=' i:~ ;:~;::::;' 1i1~te s· \VHfTE soaf, d ow n model, Jack ;11('tion, g 541)-4831 "Cub", .Hll thtm thrU l0-21iel• '' .O.Gool ®"'"-()lf'~ J-??.~ cushlt1ns, $35. 8 nun pro-harnosa, 10 treadle, many ~!!!_~~~~~--!_ ____ J~~~~~\$1~;;;~~=~=====~===~~---jfoctor &. sl id~s $10. 644--01~2. acces~. 6~~1. pauy Pilot Clau tlitd ' ., t \ u ;r ' DAILY PILOT • .......... I~ ! ·d-lf§J I ~~~I Mlscolla-. 111 Pl.,_/Orfan1 126 llUll Id -""' 2 Doto 154 Aircraft f15 Cyclot, llbl, lli1 ._I ~-'"_·---..11lil 1i f'"" ..... !§JI! .. -~- ~N~loli~, .. ~ltol~m~-~-!·~i!-~!.!'"'"lot . ~ -. w......i I~ 1.;.c;;;.. __ .o.;.;;.;.. __ ..:.:.; ---'---"-----1 lo v ab 1 e lb a I e pup 1 .1 .0.;;.:o.._.;... ___ ..;..;_ Scoote.t t2S * AUCTION *' CLEARANCE Blk/Chlhualma/Poodlt mix WANTED: Malo German '66 S.una UO, Nav Com 1-=="'----t .a. beige wtt/dillluahua/ Stephtnl; up to I monthl 300, 300 Ol. UOO Tl' • Friday, 7:00 P.M. SALE terrtu mix 3 mo. 968-2319 old. WW bave &OOd home 400 SMOH -O Time """' Ftbruery 5th Over 100 Plana. 6 Oraans 216 and kltt ot room 5t8485i8 top. ~ Private part;y BANKRUPT' REPO'S DA .. _·--ed I aft 6. 549--Wa. Latemodelcol<ftdTV'sand .. ...,.. wr .a.e. NEED good home tor PIES \;;,--,.,=..,--;-===:al stereos. Bdnn aelJ, Dinettes, Buy Now & S1vel ··suaar" Lovable all PUG PUP C1mper1, S1l1/R1nt 920 Open Daily 10 til 6 ¥.'ht / C hlhuahua / Ttrrter 9 wkr old, AKC ftl. Champ. Divans, Loveseata. Mat· Fr. 10-9 * sun U.5 mix. Female small bred ion bkirOund. See at Laauna CAMPER tttues, ~•fl, Commodes, M ~ -Bu.Uets, Cedar chests. Dt&kl, COAST USIC 4~ mo. Good with adults, Sch Pet ShOp. ...,....,,., .. Drtssen, Swae Jampa, Nile NEWPORT A HARBOR 53S-nBl; 539-8466 2/5 DOBEltMAN puppies, AKC CLEARANCE CAMPER '67 Ficonollne HD stands, Headboards. Cap. Casi& Meaa * $42.2851 LOVABLE befre/wht male rqil,, Championship •tock, Superva.n J>eLuxe. Big 6 ta.In's chain. Eyeltveitlec. LOWRY Holiday sp inet Poodle and Witt Haimi ideal pet, Auured ecur:lty. Ovtr a doztn brand new I Red·E·Kimp. SeU-col). range, Pl bltn Wedgewood organ, mahog finilh, $350 Tttrier mix 4 mo. Needs 1 ..:71::<::,1894-<37::;~,:•·c.,.,~---·I ft. to 11 fl. e&mPtrl now lained + full cabana. Cook Center. Lota ot new cub. 962-4387. gd home lows children. D A.CH SHUN O pup a, &lashed to Complete maintenance lo carpets, Retl11'1, Freeur, Sewing Machines 128 546-3562; aft l pm miniature, AKC, Black & $ OYll date $2100. 548-6959. \Vasher. Showcue Dishe1-836-449l 215 tan " mahogany red, 49 ACTUAL HONDA l96S-305 Scrambler service for 12, Mlac & much HELP! Movire to apt this n-t/fi33...t018. FACTOIY for u:Je or trade. We want BRAND new Brother awing H I more! ••eek. ome for yr. 1m. INVOICI I two Honda CL lOO's or will ~~~· uaed once, $35. fam. type dog want~. A11 PoalUvely no added dealer take best otter over $300. WINDY'S AUCTION THE: ffiE:ADOWS I SWTOWldad '1 Irvtnt O:azwc1! Real n11'&l living yet clOM to ...... -""" rocreallM ALL rucTRIC Choose from 1 OS floor plans, you name It! Adu\11-Poll O.K. Prive,. Club--$300,000 Recrutlon Center shots A licensed ~32 I _.,. I(• }f J chara:est Every unit ready Ex. cond. but needs clutch Sporting Goods 130 or 963-4924 2/6 Marini Fqtiij T•t . Y. for Immediate installation on and shlftillg adj. 962---7689. 14 BEAUTIFULL'Y COME BROWSE AROUND 1----------LOVELY calico Manx yourb1Jclcoranew1971! '7t1Hooda.,350cb,5000mlle1. FURNISHED '68 On Bilm ' TOP DOWR ~ BILL . YATES VOLKSWAGEN S2m Volle .Rold San J ... c.,la1rano 8!7-/~499-- '10 Dune • ._, .... body, ..... brake """' " -· to be street Jep.I. ·Ena' in xlnt cond. $8':1 or trade for tn.MpOrtatlon c a r • 642-48211. * * VW DUNE BUGGY For Sale S4SO w I t h flberglas1 body, Call after 5 pm, 54G-3803 ... CLEAN USID CARS See Andy Bnlwn THEODORE ROBINS FORD WE PAY CASH ' FOR YOUR CAR, CONNELL CHEVROLET Trucks· ff• Autos, lm~rtod 970 20751b Newport ffi\'d. .210 Remington model 100 lemaJe 1 year. Also white _ THEODORE Perfect cond, •n Tag. $495, MODELS , 65 CHEVY VAN AUST!. N Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'ls wlth Weaver 2.5 x 7 power ma.le Jor inside only. (7131 General niv ROBINS FORD n tlna 536-0098 or Costa Mesa * 646-86116 variable scope, 2 extra 43fr7730 1.oog Bch 2/6 ~2-9405, :;·for Casey. (Dir. 'l'!U&3) Window Van. 23> eng., auto.,1----------I OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 clips, $135. Also .243 Savage FREE to qua! home. Lovable LATE '68 Sl!araly 18' trl-hull a100 HARBOR BLVD. R.lH, US Mag whffla, belt-'67 AU1Un Mln1 Cooper ''S'' SALEll model 99F with Weaver K-4 br/wht" Spf'inier Spaniel 160 1'lerc. ~· x.ln't COSTA ME.SA 642.0010 YN":~~C-e:'is 4. ~ee oo;;~: 14851 Jeffrey Rd. ed tire!i .. ;~.ow miles and rebuilt eng &: trans. $2.000 Inventory. Clearance W._ANTEIDl30.to557-73b•~.· u·-', fem, q needs gd borne. -"'-""-·~Wl2000_A_N_._T_E~D-I_. __ 10~' Troplcana cabover Also various Hodak& 100 aharp, ~. 830-3618 orbestoffer613-6348 . ..., ao:u. 54J..6642 2/6 camper-jacks, mono-matic ID lnine 65 Ford % ton king bed. AUDI LANGE akl • boots. man's LOVABLE blk Lab pup 51h 23 ft. trailer tor boat. toilet, 50 gal water w/50 -"""--·-5'8-0855_______ V-3, auto, radk> &: heater.1 __________ 1 before busincu propetty tax. size 11. reu. 892--0010 H.B. mo. btt to qual home loves __ _:•:_,83::.;.7'"308=~.o•__ lb pressure pomp, gas or DA\VES 10..Spd tourlnr bikes, New paint A rubber $895. ,70 AUDI 100 LS Xlnt saviflv on imported, TV R d' H'FI ch 11 d. 1-52 3-9194: Boats, Ma Int./ elec refrii, shower, U ~loodia l!Mipd touring bikes. 5 ml South ot Tuatln, and 54~715t. d~rative acceuories, close. • a IO, I I 5"3-6641 2/6 s.rvlce 902 8-3628. extremely lite Wl!i&f\t 420 14 mt, s. of Santa Ana Fl'wy,l'CH=EV~-P-.-u-. -wl-th-Cimper out Items & late deliveries Ste reo 136 ....;:.:;..:.;.::;. ____ .;..;;. 1---------E. 17th St. 646--7706 (2 mt N. ol San Diego Frwy) shell. Lots of xtras. Mu.at 4 Door Sedan, Black with ot exclusive furnishings. 1 4 Hall grown kittens, Hsbrk. BOAT Repair &: Remodeling. ,Cycles, Bikts, ----W-ANT--E-0---Sell, make otter 54s.-01n beige Interior. ImmacUlate! • Open 10·5. W.J. INTERIORS, 2 Allee Voice of Theater ","" 11ovabandle and3 fplmalfcy'ful. ca binetmaklng, 5"-0437, Scooters 925 305 or 250cc Hood& Scram. 832 0515 .51 C>eV .,_ ._ pickup n;; Only n4 actual mllet. (847- 3841 Birch St, NB. 540-1371 speakers $650; Dyna.co tuner ma e e es 646-5219 ---------"U , """ ...,., • CBY) (near O.C. airport), Slill: amp S50; pre-amp $40; 543--0127 2/5 ~ ......... -=~-",:,·~R,;wml_,;"';..°'~"°~l_5'_~_1=6'0-l -======~~-1 ~t~ tirn, good oond. $125. 1· ILL YATES dual changer $75; 2 Kl.J{ AKC Beagle • 1 .,,. old Boats/Marine I ............ • YAMAHA 250 Enduro. Ex· CONJEMPO ·~-.270 Remington model 760 .,. Equip f04 CHEV -· with gpeakers $30 ea; Realistic female. Needs fenced .,..M., _ _.;:.;...:_·_____ _.... tra.s. $495. 1951 • P.U. _,, 1 VOLKSWAGEN with \\leaver 2.5 x 7 power ..... ""'~" .,~~ 1• '"'""' bll hyd -•-·"-• bl 2 amplUier $60. ~. Good w/klds. Outside dog. y••!AHAout~-~. !.o •--e Q * 5'16-9453* re ro, new~• v.,;a e •cope, eroa ~· -" ~ H NDA COMMUNITIES ~· 32852 Volle Road clips, S135. Also .243 Savage NEW Panasonic atereo 540-8638 e\.'eS. 2/5 power $100. FIRM unu.l!I $425. 642-nM model 99F with Weaver K4 k'l I FM tuner w I 2 DOBERMAN AKC 6 yr old 545-5184 -Mobllt Homes 935 '70 ECONOLINE Vlh. V-8, 837~~ scope S13d. 557-7315. 1peakers:. Outlets for tape, male. Good temperament Boats . Power to6 ''FRIEDLANDER,. e LAGUNA HILLS auto, all xtru. 4000 orta:. TAPE recorder, Roberts 4 turntable & earphones, only but no children. 673--0174; 1---''-------1 THE BEST OF 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. 1~m~U~"~·~963-"34;;;'-"';i-'iJ,.t;;;;:-il----·~M~W:!_ ___ 1 track model 16.l}, stereo, $75. 673-2259or497-19l6. 896-5165 2/-t 65-31' FairUner Expre11 BOTH WORLDS (Comer of Moulton Pkwy) 11958 Chev. P.U. %. ton. 8 w/amplifit'r Sro<l. Tuner, LATE model 23" colored NAUG Divan 1 ft double _Cruiser, Rigged for fishing, For a beautiful home, tow Pmtige adult community, tt bed, aood coDdltion $450 "JO BMW 2002. 13,000 mL • LaFayette, dual di a 11, Motorola Comole TV. A-1 box springs and mattress extras. Low houn. Clean maintenance and archltecur. adjacent to Lets u re FUU.f 545-5184 Mag wbll, radio. $3350. "11 • AM/flf stereo $30. 494-9538 concl. $200. After 6: 3 0 with bed frame. Kitchen 64{Hll74 aft 6. ally impressive design,. See World, BeautilUJ. surround-'SO Ford Truck $250 lie. Pvt pty, 642-0777. eves. wk~ays & all day Sat. 6032 chair. 673-1431 2/5 '61 25• Chriscn.ft Cavalle:r, -.,,---======= 1 the excltinr new "Vulap 'ings, Ill luxwy appoint. u ts. 540-3802 CORTINA ~iOVING East -Custom furn.; appliances; port. Jacuzzi; Elna sew in&' machine &: misc, Make olr. 644--0104. CCo~rt~"~°'~·~· ~H~.B~-.;..'1<"imoo J ~~~~~~~~~: J outrigpn, radio, f I u 1 h House" by Levitt MobUe t,nta, Ptlttinc llftn, hobby • ,46 OfEVY P.U. W/CAM· . _ MuNrz 41 & 8 track home 1 [E] deck, needs Cart!, $3000. System11 on display now at P, much roore. PER $225. '67 Ford Cortina, good cond, unit + approx. 70 tapes. Nlandlkqtita IL ~-:,:,:.~=·-~~-~--\ BAY HARBOR CAU. 830-3900 * 536-451! * $500 or best offer. Must fl05 OR BESf OFFER. I '·;;;;;;;;;;~·;~~ 2'.' Slarcralt alum cruber MOBILE HOMES e SANTA ANA ..u. 675-5934. Must 1;ell, 548-5613, ask tor i I 120 hp. Cabin, plley, etc. 1425 Baker st. Costa Men. 4MO w. FIRsr sr., s .A. **FORD panel truck-Goocl\-"==D,.;A=TS""'U=N---1 i\IATCHED Rt or Jade Andy. Cover, trailer. Top cond. JWit s. of s.O. Fwy at ijarbor FAMILY community, abun. cond, _Many extras. $795. je\11elry (necklace, ealTings BRAND new 18" GE color Pttl, General &SO 1_1969_._l4300c.__·_494--0359 __ ~-~·I n4J540.9470 dance of recreation for chil-1,962-~:'.""~·~.,----=;1--;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;--1 & ring), from Bankok &. TV in cloeed style cabinet ZODIAC 13' inflatable. Alao, Tl I W 'd Cor II d~n. nr. td. schools, lhop. Auto Ltaslng 964 '67 DATSUN never "·orn. i1so. 675-1345 w/sturdy wood stand. Only PERUVIAN guinea pigs, aailing dinghy. Sa.cril.lce. r P t 1 • ne p1na: prlv dub houw , ----------IR.dstr Red with black 1nttt • after 6 pm. i350. 673-2259 or 497-1906. "'"' .,....., ContinenQLI • Paramount ' cAi.L 839-3880 ' 1• • • j 1"°;;.::;;,""'.:.....~--=7 1;;."";i;,;;;,i,.--;::;;;;:--;;:v beaut Jong-hair, giving up I"'~"-='":.,,..-~~~~~ BaJTlngton • Universal Buy the mobUe home • Jor, runs like new. Needs i IRVINE Coast Country Club '70 ZENrnl color TV hobby. $LSO -'2 ea. Boats, Rent/Ch•rt'r 90I '70 Homa SL 100 'QJ KAWA. F1aml.ngo • General of you;r choice move WE LEASE detail. ZKHOSO, Kelly blue ' family membership for sale wfAFC. must sacrifice 644~. 250CC, bothperiect,lowml., &roadmoor •Star ln to any one'ot our book saya th1a car should 1 from member. For Jn. i~. Can Btwn 6 le: 9, Cats 852 32' Twinscrew Chris, fUlly make otter. 492. 7014. Hilltteit • Cambrldp "OPEN" parka sell for il.S85. Cbkk l&)'I formalion call 673-9131, Mr. 645-4357 equip'd, Flshln& or Cn.rls-~ • ..,*~'7"o"'eu=L"'T"A°"CO"""M"a"'ta-d7o'°"· \ CHAPMAN ' All MAKES "sell this one fOl' Smith'=~---~ GARRARo record-<hanger· MANX kitt•n, r"'"'nablo to 1""· 54s-2434. 250 cc. Xlnt cond. Bsl Otr. MOBILE HOMES NOW OPEN!! $899 EVEREST-Jennings premier player, Diamond stytus, reg. home that will spay her. Boats, Sall 909 GTa--0139. m N. Harbor, S.A. & MODELS CHICK ·IVERSON wheelchair w / accessorle1. $39.50, sPCCial $27, New At· 53&-0476 • •68 YA.MAHA. End u r o, ___ *::....:".:41531::.::="1'5~.:.....*~.,-"!~~~ETR0===~--.1 Co't '~::n ~"II 1250 o• make lanb. • Mu•lc 445 E. 17th. · Ox55 D lTER, Jurn, 2 YW .....,.,, """ • .. D •r~ '70 Hobie Cat w/trlr never Ve .... """""' cond, must sell, T••'plo Wldo Cornell BR 1 ba u-. offer. 642-3816 G d turntabl ogs ~ '" l>"""' • , ...... ocean view. l-~~~"==-=-~~-I S'I'EREO, arrar e, used, ln 'Wlter only 8 times, l -'$3'-750'."-644-40'11~=7·=-=-~~-Hillcrest • F1amin&o $58 space rent incl. utilities. BAUER 549-3031 Ext. 86 °" n • 21" COLOR TV • Sansukiamp $l75 l·AK-C-POO--D-LES--l-B-l-t-ii~ 1n a:arage. Nice as . :zso YAMAHA Big bear, Paramount • Untvmlal C.M. Park. (GB &ill), 1910 HARBOR BLVD. Good picture Ir: sound $98 112-3838 • • oy new. Sell $1195, $1500 ln· comple rblt, $250 Barrington • Broadmoor American Mobile Homes 1 __ ..:co:.:,:sr.oA"-'ME-"'·:,SA.,__~--l l, * 646-l525 * male, 2 male cream t~ 673-8204 due W Star * 545-8241 * BUICK l--.~B~J~c"v"-c"L"E"s"'-'-e~-1 1~·nt =~w1;= tu~: miniatures, l fem. cream ";;:.:,,=' -=·=".=n"·~'. ~ .. n= .. ~..,..~·. I * 54.S.3120 * ~~rain• :merest DOT DATSUN mlnla.ture. 646-0142, 3l1 E. of uiJ '67 Honda 450, moditied & CHAPMAN "10 Buddy, 3l x44, awninp, OPEN DAIL y AU type&. Gd, cond. Nicely 1 i~$25~. ~546-071~~·~· ~~~=~ 17th SL, CM 115 lbs, 88 aq. ft. . e.xtra dean, '550 or oiler. skirting, land9caped, Adult In AND palmed. a.a.. 642-1272 • DALMATIANS :;';~725, "" !400. Call 962-31911. MOBILE HOMES Pk. Pet. OK. 1750 Whittler, COSTA SUNDAYS SIGNS. .sbo-cards, posters, ll s AKC • * CAL 25 * '68 TRIUMPH fJOO -1233~ ~-~~· .G.G. Sp 11, CM 543-0768. um F'AaJI BhJd. windows, trucks, low price. flff to -You * * &12-1937 * * Best otter Must Sell! • '66 MOBILE Home 10X50, MESA Huntlllrton Deacb A1orn or evea 962-3881. 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·~~~ I ==c=-~-=~~~ Racing & cruising gear. new • 548--7890 eve. e lOO's Mobile Homes Avall. 5' mcpando, Good cond, N2-77Sl or ~ CONN organ, artist model; IRISH Setter!, AKC, l male:, eQg, $4995. n4/644.2M(t ..,.. B·"ta-Matador ~ able. New & Resat~· Choice ."'°",,::;::·:....:,64&-541~=0---l female, 8 wks, shots, Fl'l!'I! "" 111 ...... ........_ .... ~ Parks. CalJ u.s before )'Oll Motor Homes MO 234 6 '69 200 rdm. Yellow. S.spd, ! P.B.h console TV; stenotype AKC Boston Tenier female ,IJ46.39>l;::;;;;.::·==,,.--:,..-=· I l2' Single sail sailboat, Extras. sell or buy , Save. Save. _ COlta 1tb1&E. 17th t6".7765 PirelliA', reblt e~. Pvt pty. • mac , 557-7644. needs fenced yard, Good BLACK Miniature Poodlea, slip, wood, $XO. Doem't i485. 642-0241 Save. YOUR "second home" on 0 Must aell. 6'75-f915. 15'x4' DOUGHBOY swim w-kids. Outside dog . Eight Weeki Old, $40. leak . .fM.339.f '69 Honda CT 90 Trail. United Mobile Homes \:heels. Completely '65 DATSUN P-llp, R&H, 41 pool. w/filter, ladder &: dlx 540-8638 eves. 215 *Call 673-1361. * CAPE COD CAT BOAT Yellow. $275. 6-t5-Jl4.0 633-2961 sell--cont&lned beautitully LEASE ~. New motor. Xlnt cond. ' slide. $250. 968-9031. GO home fncd yd. Lovable ONE beautiful jet black Poo. 18', fbrbls, (213) SM-3883. Eves: &U-t267 cared for '70 Landau Motor A NEW 1971 673-3244 APARTl\IBNT washer $25. mixed bred male dog. dlr, 8 weeks, purebred male, Boats, Slips/Docks 910 TWO 1910 CL-350 Hondu. COSTA MESA Home· Dodp-~red Plf'ITO .::::..::.:.:..==-~--! Canary, stand & cage $10. wht/blk nose & eye1 8 mo. Xlnt l'Olkl, lo ml, '695 each. Ca!uai MobUe Estate IJv'g automatic 23-looter, lleeps $50 00 mo FERRARI * 8J8.2783 * 548-0BU; 836-4493 2/4 $20. 496-6265 Call 67S-l085 Ne 12, 20 & 24 Wide Modeli 6. /Refrl&". runs on gu or • • DAU1ATIAN puppies, AKC, SLIPS AVAILABLE, 25' to Now on dl.!plav ln 5 Star elec., .range &: autxlmatic (36 mo.) WE Loan-Buy-Sell anything PUREBRED German She~ adorable, r ea11ona ble . 40', 1.602 Newport Blvd. 1970 CB 175 w/le5s than GREENLEAF PARK oven, forced a1r furnace, open end Coagt Pawn & Auetlon. 2426 herd, male, 4% mo, to good 4.._~o -4-.1o~. ,,.,... ""~ 300 ml 1~ Whit'"-A <>• ·~ ,__ holdin nk '• RENT N•wport Blvd. "A" 0 •"". l.!"°".'.m...::•·c.:'l!l"'.':·~51':73:.,__~_;21~s; I ;f':~'·iii'~"'~ " --~--="'..:..:~~~--· '""' -..;: venue .....,.....,..,. .... &., g ta , b'6 V"W'"<l'fW • AFGHAN PuPS, AKC. BOAT Slip to 55'. Side Ue $45!1 firm. ~2lTI fACES BAY water tank, · ver1lze A NEW 1971 BRUNSWICK pool table, BEAUTIFUL 6 wk old Pick of litter! Black mask· for sail boat up to 26'. '68 Honda 160 Scrambler, Bayside Village, 8 mo new, gaso.11.netank. 'Ready to roll. PINTO ugU]ation size, all access., Cock--i!.-Poo pupplet free to ed silver. 962--6956 aft 5. M8-l608, 673-8800. Jwit tuned le carbs reblt, Ca.....,ted. •-, 2 BR, den, Extras include ncb and $4 DA y $200 or best ofr. 548-6395. good home. 548-5163 2/6 • BEAGLE PUPS • e 20' SIDE TIE $250. ~2633 ~r/dry-;;: CWltm buUt ramp Jor haullna two Hon-AND AIR conditioning unit. Fedco. 6 Week old Gennan short AKC reg.is * $35 $2.50 PER FOOT e KAWASAKI 500 e 24 wide, $26,700 675-82'11, du on rear, See the 4,. MILE fits any car. S50 FlRM haired Pointer and ! • Good ,... S. .,.,,,2 * 673-6450 * $850 Bst Ofr: 673-5747 675-2418 package to appreciate It. ?" I ~sg;.~-~5~784~~co.;=~:::; I j•~•al~th~. ~55~7~-0896~~-::;::;~2~14! I ~2l~04~W~alla~"~·~"~'1~· ~&1~-~~:'::::':~~~§~;:'";~~?;~;;;§.§;;;~';.-;~=:=:;;;:::::;;:;;;=;::; Ottered by owner below PUT A l.JTTI.,E le MOVING 10 Ha...;\, mu•I 6 Mo. male Shephenl-G,.y. USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK, WE PAY POSTAGE! ~~,jyl1D,':;d1971 ~l~o~': IOCKL:i!.:~OUR sell household i t e m 1 . hound. Has all ghola &. Ii· ~1891 or 541-9250. 962-0144 aft 6 & Sat & Sun cense. 557-7640 2/4 THEODORE 5 SHORT WO RDS MAKE ONE UNE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES LIKE new, tale 1969 Ex-ROBINS FORD NEWPORT Beach Tennis DOBERMAN pup. Tan color-plorer 28', sleeps 6, Dodge Club family membenhip. ed. GClOd with children, 3 1 12 powered automatic, 2 gu 2060 =O~VD., 962-4992 or 4 mo old. 642-4173 2/6 Tl~U Tl~IS 11Mn TIMn tanks, many xtru. Must see SC.0010 Miscellaneous SIAMESE, altered male , to app. S48-5t38 1.,-..,.-..,.-.-.:~=;,..-,.-= Wantltd 820 loves kids. Well mannered Trailers, Trevel 945 Auto Service, P•rf• 966 1967 Ferrari 330 · CT 2+2. Lo mileage. Michelin VXR. Royal blue w/cream in-, terior. Air cogd. &autiful cond mechanically & phystcally, i1sso . 713/47Z-2146 FIAT "'""""""' "THINK" llBBll : ... "FRIEDLAND Bl'' to good home, 492-0228 214 1-----1----·l-----l-----l-----l----·l----l----l--- $6.80 $10.65 $15.90 SPRITE Caravan travel CORVE'ITE Avante &: Dune 11710 llACH ILYD. FllEE Puppies. Lovable, .rJ1,SQ fH-Jtl ~ trailen for tile lmall car. buggy auto body repair, -•· mongrel, Mlort haired, med. ----1----1----1----·I--------1-----1----·1----11 d• ... i~.. 546-9 46 893-1566 e 5.17~ WANTED 1o buy, used, LANGS ski • boo!!, man'• size 11, reas. 892--0010 H.B. CASH for furn, appliances, tools, & misc items. 642-7015 or Alt 5. 543-4227. '"ed 84&-4531 214 $5.10 $8.28 $13.10 $20.10 3 mode "°" 0" -•~ ReuoMble, Aft 5' 1 NEW-USEO.SERV. at Mesa Camper Sales, 2213 Autos Wanted 968 1 Yr ol~ female boxer. Needs -----l-----l·----l-----1-----1----1-----1----1----!'!:~ Blvd, C. M . ---·I ._.. - - -a · a good hom•. Good with $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 ~· - - -..-... children 847-1142· 215 __ _L __ _L __ .L__..-1. __ _,_ __ ,___......_ __ .:....__ -11.-sror-SMAN-.-.i~ .. -.,-. CADILLACS WANTED '68 FIAT 850 TEENAGE klttiel, 5 montM PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 !..,wn}~!s' hitch, bra!<,.. SPYDER Ii: up. Long &: short hair. TO FIGUll COS,T Ul..,..._. &: otbtr fine GM can ** DRUM SET $2CIO ** &46-7308 &. 548-0BU. 214 ' I 1 d • ' b'--' '" Mu1ical Jn1trument1 t22 u 011 y •11• wor •n ••c11 20' Seit contained, never JOP CASH DOLLAR ROSTR. Rtd w1Ut ,.~ .... LIKE NE\V HEALTI:IY blk/wht male •P•t• obo¥t , Incl~• v•ur used . Sacrifice by owner terlor. ~ new. YQY83t 548-51-48 eve or wkend bblt Good Jo, b~,·,,. p,~li,h f•r •• , ••••••• '•Y•• ~•1if111i11t • ••• ••••• •• •• •• •• •• • • • • • • •• • ~ ,.,.1 _ .,.. ra · ·~ • 1ddr111 •r pho11• 11u111b1r. Ph: n--•-... ,...., MARSHALL m.watt stack. but not for a pet 546-64412/5 Th1 ito1t •f your id i1 •• th1 TENT Trailer, eood con. for clean, well cared tor CHICK IVERSON 00~"' ~,,offer. NEED ~ home for :::11uifi,1tl•11 • ,,,·,,, •• •"·•••••••••••••••••••·•••••••••••••••••·•• quality C&h .,.,..., "" guuu 111d of th• 11111 •11 whi'h th1 dition, S250. Wk-<laya after YW 548-4309 minlature dog, female, &ood 1,1, word of your 1oil i1 writ• 4 pm. 968-9037. ib i Office Furniture/ 546-1300. 2/4 N1111• ·················••4••···································· ''"·Add $2.00 ••• ,.if YIU T JI Utlllfy '47 ~ e 54"3031. Ext. 118 or rr E ' 124 '.NTERESTING selection of ra ert, 19TO HARBOR BLVD, quip. 4,1;,. u1• •f DAILY PILOT CAOIUA ' ---· -------1 tieaut. cats It k I t tr n & • Adoilr111 • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • 14' Tondom Trailor AlffltOAIUO DEALE" COSTA 1.IESA r~ Bo• 11r•ic1 wllh m1il14 ti• 64+.7492 2/5 Wllh 41 wheet1. AU,1tttl weld. 2600 HARBOR BL., '6:1 FIAT, 124 Sport Coupe. AB Dick mimeograph machine, all attacllmentl; Postage meter, All $150. 64!>-3433. -pli ii. I cosrA MESA u -·~ 96 (2) 1959 OIEVY P.U. rear Cit,••••••••••••••••••••··•••••••• rn•11• 4 •••••••••••••·••••••••• ~ construction \4" Slee 19,000 m e1 • .., .Lr" ... , tenders w/step1lde1.I -----------~ CUT Hlll-PAm OH YOUl INYILOPI -----------d~k plating, '545-Q61 orSf0.9100 ' Open Sunday HP. 5 apd. AM·FM. 5fO..<D24 642-113' 2/5 S<Z-5845. WW ""· Or .... ·-~=--1 JAGUAR DESKS, elec. typewriter, f I I es , photocopy-Divorce Sale. 968-ll22::· ___ _ ANSAFONE Re:aaonable offer 675-3345 KITI'Y, )"Ollng & altered, lor pJckup. WB PAY TOP male loveable, indoor pet. CASH To adult home. 536-4037 2/5 JI~ J COCK·a·poo, 1 mo., won-Aut:Olfllr ... • JAGUAR HEAD9UARTERS Pianos/Organ• 126 derful dog to good home. 968...7#t 2/6 FREE poodle puppil!.I 9391 f50 fbr u.d mrt 6 troetcs jQst 1br onlt autborbed JAGUAR Cl1l ua tor frM eettmate. doa!tt 211 Ow entft Harbor ~'AY Grand. Arti!t Nantucket, Hunt. Bch . -"•.r..&n" 962.2975 2/6 model, Gennan scale · IUSIHESS RE,lY MAil e '63 GRAND PRIX e '63 KAWASAKI. MAKE OFFER. 551·4562. GROTH CHEVROLET ""L All< "" llalft -1.8211 .. o.eh Blw. Sl695. Steinway Grand , FREE poodle pu~. 9391 model L ln ebony $2895. Nantucket, HB, 962-2975 2/6 Kimball Grand $488. FREE -Gennan , Shepherd WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO pup, female, &18-!m 215 1939 Packard Antlquet/Cla11lc1 953 HllD~ Beach I '-'="'-';.;...-----IM'l.«J87 IQ t-m1 .... Cl• ,__. "°' 11. c..t. W-, C1nknM ~ SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER 1819 Newport Blvd, &t2-84M IMPORTS WANTED MALE Base n j I, &cod 4 dr aedan. 759' ftltm'td Qranr Cowltla IN Htmmond, Ste In' a Y. w/chUd,.n 54Jl.6301. 2/4 2282 R..ilandt Dr., Ne""°" TOP • BUYER COSTA MESA BUICK Yamw. N.,. •used"""" Orange Caaat DAILY PILOT Belch. ~lnL • of most makes. Best buys In H.ER.'1AN Miller 110fa bed. Bn..L MAXEY roYOTA 23C E. l'ftb StrNt So Cl.llf;-atSchmldt--Muli ~only, mode;:. p 0 I 1560 19'29Modcl ·A 18881Be1r:hBlvd.. *-77Q o,· .• 1907 N. Main, S.nta /;J • ;-OX !tutort4 ' Orfr q, R. Bcaclt...... -Ph. 847.S I Ana VERY Lovable rcddiJh fawn ,. ___ Meeo, Calo"f. 92626 RUNS! WE PAY TOP OOlJ.AR '69 Jaguar XKE, AJr, Wh 1..::::::_·~--,,.,,.--:-::-;:-I male c.ollle mix 1 yr old '-'RTII J.45.2416 FOR TOP USED CARS wheela, AMfFM/S\V n.dlo. vi:,~e~'kn~~-~~ "~i med. si. MK--ll42 .. 2/5 0...,. BUff."-lo_• ___ 9_56_1u.,.-., l\ncort. la extra clean. ~~-·-be-•u_ty_,_lillO_.· 1 Mu,*'~~ or Ml·n9L FR.EE to aood horn~ Cl111ffW Dept, _ •v ~~ Chlhuah 537-2/6 1'60 CORVAIR e~UE!l BUICK a '64 XKE e Mov~o . Must aell pllno. ua pup. .........., HM nd ~ '" •M ICE J 1· d1-•~ . 2341 E. 17tb St. Xlnt l'O , .....-$25. Ste betore 1 pm, .-P an • )"OU .._ 5tfl..711f Atltt I Costa Mna 548-7765 546-9501 John Om W, B&Y St., Apl ~ C.M. 962-22!6 2/6 .:.:.: __ ..................... ___________________________ ,,:.:;:.:::,:._ ___ .::;.::;...::i::==;;:.._--.:.c.;..:.c.::i--==:...:..:===-....- I i .. ! • I I l ' I • I ' , , l - .. ThW!d•t ........... 1'171 DAILY PILOT """"' ........ 970 -'-< ............. '70 W70 A-......1..,...wtwol 970 Auf91, lmportod 970 A~·UMd . . . 990 A~ UMd 990 Au!0t, U"" • IAlM',ANN GlllA PORSCHE A~ ''"'"°"°" VOLXSWAGIN VOLKSWAGEN '' vo~vo :. :CAMARO CONTINENTAL FORD OLDSMOBILE. ' '13 GHIA m£ NEW '70 91 lT '69 CA.MARO Z.2& • 1pffd; '$ "Lincoln COnt'l Mark Ill, AUT.IJORIZEO 23.000 ml, loeded wh:xtru. loJm.1·1~ Jikt new $5900. 2104 '69 YW sEDM. VOLVO '6.5 FAIRLANE . ; ~ ._ titattr. (YNL 456) Emttald grttn with black leather Interior. AM/TM. Lots more! •9110101882. :WSEA ' NEW '71 YW 4 speed, nctio, btatef . (YPT. !Oil $1599 Sotcrllice $1875 49-4-3034 WaUa~. CM, ~ SAU:S • SERVICF; l--~;';;;""'"""""';ii;;,.--1·-"...:;:""'iiii::,:;7,;:::--IAutorrtallc, VS, Power Sleet- FRITZ "WARREN'S CHEVROLET CORVAIR "'•· (XWY :152) '64 1''115 Stn Wgn • pWr 1teer., brakes, seaL!i & window1, S new tires &-shocks, Xlnt oond. 2021 Irvine Ave., c.~1. S795 Harbour V.W. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN l87Jl 8EAOi BL. uj4435 32852 Valle Road ' Ht1N-rINGTON BEACH " San Juan Capiltrano &11-4800/ 493·45111499-2261 '63 GHIA CONVERTIBLE j '65 Porsche 1m1 :nn 356 SC Sunroof $599 &.""itish racing ,,een. BILL y A TES Uc. YCC 525 $2899 VOLKSWAGEN CHICK IVERSON 32852 Vatte Road S51,B9 Per Mo. + Tax AT . llLL 'YATES · VOLKSWAGEN 328.52 VaDt Ro&d 8'.n Juan Capistrano 837-4800/4~499·2261 '68 SllUAREBACK Radio le heater. <XEV457), • S1535 IARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 9'lS S, C1t.,Hwy, 1,.B 494·9'j71 '69 YW SEDAN Radio & Heater. (XIH486) S1595 Harbo ur V.W. SPORT CAR CENTER ---------1-------I S.99 ""E. lalSL, S.A. 547-0764 '69 BEl AIR WHY? IAll·WICK o,,.,. dally ... , dOl<d $\mday IMPORTS INC. Au"'-Utod 990 A"lo .. vs, Afr Cood., Powe• Why "" ''"'' Corvair tor , DATSUN · Stetrina. (T At. ~) nothini? Su Pat ·at ConntU -$1"9 Chevrolet. 546.1200. During 998 So. Cst:Hwy, LB 494-9771 USED. •CARS . '' BARWICK February ho haa 1 speclA) '69 RANCHERO whictt lnclude1 rings, rods, IMPORTS INC. bearings, l1'ind valves ps. *Dependable* DATSUN keti & labor all lor 1!'95 ""' VS, A"tomat1 0> 121502C>: MechanlcaHy OK 998 So. Col. Hwy, LB. 494,9'171 oil & """· $1699 * P·r1c· ec1· RI. nht * Lookl11t for a car? 1960 CORVAtR BARWICK " EASY $200. IMPORTS INC. Flnanci11t •Avellabla Call A'to ReferTal !roe of 54<-7817 Alter 6 _ DATSUN 18711 BEACH· BL 842-'435 ~· We have ll'!lle.n '65 Corvair Coru. .. tur~ 998 s. Cst. Hwy. LB of!M.grn 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 HUNTIJl{GTON BEACH ONE QF MANY waiting, All types .l prices .• chargied, 4-tpd, pvt pty, orig ' 1910 HARBOR BLVD, '65 0~0$ 4 DOOR Selltn al.lo wdcome, owner. $550. 5511766 . 1959 ford San Juan Capistrano YW 837..f800/<f9J.45ll/ 499·2'161 Harbo ur V.W. ·~tro~~·c::.ng~!igcl~~: l'OSTA MESA '68 VW FW! power. AU-·cond. 642-4431 ~ • 1966 Corvalr Cors,\, Galaxie, 4 door, VB, P/S, $5riO 540-3ll8 ~N~EW=~17"0.--.9"1"4"','4'' -l13n1, BEACTI BL. 842-4435 Radto. etc. (PCS 919) Auto JJ.efettal Servic~ Turbo-Charger. ~w clutch P/B, Air·Ci?nd; R&ditl, heat. l''SS"°"KAJl.M"", =•ANN=·'""G'°'hi"•-·-A"t:-r. HUNTIJ'iGTON BEACl-l $129.9 · $495' '69 Malibu 2 dr Hdtp VS. & tires. $695 Call 962-81:!9S. er. Exctllent transportation low miloage. lriM g"'" with blacl< Inter.' La-• Selection CHICK IVERSON T•P<.' v;braao>ti<, lacb • CORVETTE oar. 1300 or mal« otter. fl•~~tter 644·1641 • .,. ~ ,.,,_,., __ .. gauges, air 1hock1. Nu tires. ~--i,,,=".c>-021,,:..c:c':..· ~--~~~= ~,., ior. AM/FM. Super sharp! Of YW C YW ,~ M •-u f -'64 Gold Ghi1·$875 (#4702912996). ·amp.rs, 2100 HARBOR ~.,,.;' Make o fer 1967 (orvttte 427 fast· SHELBY '69 GT ~· 351 549.1857 + + c.M. BILL YATES Vans; l(ombJs, 54~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 64;-0466 COSTA MEsA ' · -back. Xlnt cond. Sliver Hp, +-•pd, 0 "" rat>0, ~.c., 1970 HARBOR ·BLVD. "64 NOVA /blk I . • pd AM/FM '"""· c'" 0 ' PLYMOUTH 1964 • 3&.~ SPT. FURY w I Edelbrock Hirise mani· fold &: quad. B&M wgue. fl ight , mags, g a u g e •. Mint oondition inside and oul. Must see lo ap. preciate $1000. 633-5576 , 642-3643. '69.SUBURBAN WAGON Cus!om 9 Pa!Rnger model F'ull power + Air. O~y 9,000 miles. dlr. Must sacri. lice ! Will take trade or fin. ante. Call 494-7144. 1968 ROADRUNNER, 4 apd 383. Metallic moss green. l\1.ags. 355 posl. Tape deck & tapes. flfiOO. 963-6763 e '66 SATELLITE, Air,. pwer, 1 owner, $995. 962-0144 aft 6 & Sal & sun PONTIAC MERCEDES BENZ VOLKSWAGEN B·--New· &U1-..1 '~A .MESA · w nter1or, •• • M<chaoio" •"ara .. t·oe. •-•• .. 98 '-'U.,• 2 Door H~top. Automatic, AM/FM radio, n • W $3000. 673-2259 or 497-1906. = Vallo Rood lmmodlafe Dellvecy -~,6~6-vw~s=m=A~N,__ IUICK • cyliodor. dlr. (OSE 5.73l 435 hp . eng., new 1968 Pontiac LeM•n• 2· San Juan Capistrano CHICK fVERSON I---------I Mul!lt sell! W!U finance. Call tires, elec windows, JEEP dr. HT. Dark grffn w/ 83T-4BOOl49345111499-226l ~ Radio & Heater. (RuroBll '56 Buick Sedan. Good run-494.7744, fadory mags, Call aft . matching interior. 350 TOYOTA 5l9-3Xll Ext.• or.n S895 ""'"oood. $100. '6.1 MALIBU S.S.' 4 apd. 352 S, 646-8311. TOYOTA Lima Crui,.r. per!: cu in, 250 hp, Console 1970 HARBOR. BLVD. 548-6731 eng. Sharp, Sell or trade. ,67 VETTE cond; Used on city streets. automatic w / bucket 1971 TOYOTAS COSTA ~ '70 Riviera GS-Only 12,000 Boyd's Arco 490 E. 17th, Like brand new. $1695. seats. Air cond. Call ml, Air,. CUltom interior. C.M. Fastback • "421", 4-speed, 49'H917 or 644-4270. aft 5, ~318, T~-RAEU NH•EwRl600Ellcc '64 vw· SEDAN $4295. Under warr. 545-IQM. '68 Bel Air Wagon, Air cond, AM/F~ radio. New poly· '56 Jeep sta wag • whl dr. 196'r PONTIAC Spt Cpo '"' G d · d $ l i 0 0 . glass tire$. -Excellent con-V-8 283 Ch Cl $825 • · Corollas, 18111 'BEACH· BL. 842-443.5 '6.1 Buick Le Sabre, P/S, 00•" bl c oAlnt' 5, ., • ., ••• 7 • dition Driven easy ,_,3474 ev, ean. · 4-0,000 miles, 6 cyl. overhead •---------l 4 Speeds le Autometics Radio & heater. (JFK "402) HUNTINGTON. BEACH P/B, Fae 'air, Very clean, nego a e. : 1r0 ........ a · ' $2850 . ' ._,... · cam, standard trant., ra.dio .-• The AIJ New Corona HT Cpe '$695 1 -~.~6~6~vw=~s=E=D~A~N~-1 $595. 548-6898 or 846-3975 '65 SIS Ma Ii bu . Ex· AJ:k for Mr Grannis 546-8640 &. heater. $750 full price. ' 4 s,,... l A"lomati"' CADILLAC copHoMlly doan. · LINCOLN Phone 646-6955. * 548-2168 * 1970 STINGRAY cpe-panel1---------=~~-~-.,,.---! • . · THINI SAYE ON t u to · '68 Pontiac Executive wgn. ~· Radio, Heater. (RJB 871) 1'70 EL DOD AD. 0.. '68 Chevelle Wagon. V-8 . roo , ye ow, au," air, 1969 4 dr.Olntinental Green, Air, all power, adjustable ' l"IU 1970 DEMOS $199 " P/S Like new $1295 05936 loaded, 10 mi. Hu n tags. 'v/wht vinyl top. All Xtras wheel, FM radio, rack. Like m " L • 18711 BEACH BL. 8UMlS 'BARWICK FACTORY AIR CONt>ITION. ~~. . . $5000. Pvt pty 645-4540 Xln8~2640Co~! ~~979 Dys new. Blue Book. Pvt ply, Wt fttttd HUNTINGTO'N BEAOI ING. Full power, vinyl top, '57 VETTE Good cond $450 : ves ., ...... , o• 6°'78'". · · UllUI IMPORTS INC. full I the · •-"· til • '70 Malibu, like new, 3400 • · .,....-..,,.. • ,,,..-""' - -..... ""'~!~~.. TOYOTA " r·>n=rur, t ~ ml'•· D.,.k gm w/LMd8", orh<stoffor. MAVERICK '55 P'""" 4-'Pd m1cu '61 vw· us DATSUN telescopic stttring, atereo, fact ••'r • P"". Pvt pty'. -~;Alt~':::';· 546~-,;;25.1~1~~-. 1:---=-------::-B doo I •-I all .. _... "" "' .,... hydra-matic. Needs minor . 998 S. Cit. Hwy., LB 494.9771 r OC1<a, oc 1 Ow•..:u &=."-. ** 1966 FASTBACK-Orig '70 MAVERICK. Must sell! 893-n&G e 531-6824 be ty llYS200) '""'~ repair. All (If parts. Make N!W-US.EP.SERV. 196& Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 JSA5C97839 '67 SUNDIAL CAMPER '" • $5999 '66 CHEV Impala 2 dr ,.d """"1••~r'<~'~22 ml, .~. auto. Redio & ""'" ofr, 546--0580. auto tr~. air, fi pwr. J1i """"· .,.._ . * Call S4f>-03l7 * ''2 PONTIAC-$275 ............. '68 TOYOTA SEDAN CHICK IVERSON V-8, lo m;·" 1 owor. $1550. l9TO CORVETTE Conv, 454 MERCURY CATALINA 2 dr., Hd top. lB5l MGTD-N~w t-Op, brakes, etc. Xlnt cond. 642-!11L'I 4 Door. Automatic, radio, heat~r. (UHH 379) VW ~ to apps179s (UQH692) ~ibeA. l<;5:!6-<325;(;;;;;;;;' U.-M,tlib,.;-i;;;p;~l-'-"_1~~_::'~s.':.as~P~.'-!:•v~•'!_• ~·~-! Clean~ 54&4145 or 838-1157 SolS.'3031 Ext. fl& or ST ~ '65 Chevelle Malibu Super MERCURY 1969 Marquis '65 LE MANS, autu, P/B, l.971l HARBOR BLVD. -CADILLAC Sprt hrdtp. 38,700 mi's, DODGE Cplony Park sta wg. FUJI PIS, console, $650. 842-2736 .&UTHORIZEO OEALE~ auto R/H w/z/w. 615-4819 _ -------1 power, air oond, luggage or 83g....4816 MGB COSTA MESA 2600 HARBOR BL.. ,71> Ei Ca~no 350, 4 spd, 1969 Dodge D•rt rack, disc brakes, lo mi, I =.66~p'=o=N=Tl=A~CcLo~M~,-,,.~0~.H~.c=-.I $1199 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN '70 YW CAMPER COSTA MESA 13000 m\lei:;. S2700. Swinger xlnt com!. Pvt Pt Y 6. Runs good $500. '69 MGB 18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435 540-9100 Open Sunday ** 494-7185 THE PERFORMER lo71=4/64~Z-=207=6.=~~-7 * Call 545-8126 * .Rdatr •• .Beautiful capaey ye!. Sa~~ua~al~=pi~no Fully equipped, pop-top, load· HUNTlNWAGTONTNEBDEACH 'JO COUPE 0[ VILLE '69 Chevy II 350 3-speed, Flashy competition ru-ange, 1970 MERCURY Marquis '67 FIREBIRD autom, air, low with rich contrasting 831-4800/493-451V499.2261 erf. 'dlr. Ul62BSWl Only 9,000 Cragar mags. si950. 17381 with white &tripe Landau Brougham 2 Dr. Hrdtp w/ pwr strg, good tires. a.EAN hlack interior, Oirome Wire 69 C LA 2 DOOR miles'. Must sell. Will fin-I'll pay top dollar for your Corp p-,~ont wile'• -r. Queens, Apt. 3, Htg Bch roof.. Equipped with 340 4 dwohwt,Ia~a,",,."'•,.· aAt"a0di'wlm'.;t 11350. 494_5617, ~ with radial 6tes, ' OROL anoo. Call 494-7744. VOLKSWAGEN today, Call · "" iu .-~ I =~~~--=--71 BBL Engine, 4 speed trans., "" :-" 1 --=~--~--~ -·' sonal car. Loaded. Low mil. '65 El Camino, Xlnt cond, rad>'o. h<aler. Th'•• •·a"t>'fnJ Very low mileage. 642-6959 '65 ·PONT LeMans 2-dr hdtp. AM/FM radio, lmmac:wate 1970 VW Bug . '71 lie, lo and ask for Ron Pinchot, es. Call Tim Tanner for ap. Hpd, mags, tonneau c<>ver, ...., u " 4-spd, AM/FM. Orig owner. e:indition. ZQF380. Kelly I Loaded dir. 19,000. miles. mi, original owner. Xlnt 549-3031 Ext. 56.67. 673-0900. pointment 842-4435. $1250. 54;;..7098, car shows loving care. Drive LMEAVINSaG ~?r ~fic?tlvMe duty. $950 or best offer. 962-0273. ~Jue Book retail $2310, Our IXNS ·1-l Own·• by 1,.1u, c<>nd. Radio. coco mati .. 69 VW XI ·• N I =~~--~~~.7.~~c I today. XVJ 256. $1775. John-ust en ice ~ crcury "' ""' · nl COuu. cw 1910 Sedan de Ville 4-dr '64 CHEV Malibu 2 dr. V-8, ...... • Son, --Harbo•, Best offer 546-4232. Priee d •-• •· w Id Priced lo sell. Still Undf!r tir' b k •· '71 cl _,., « ~ • RAMBLER . Sl 7 99 old la y uvm 1..e1sure or . es, ra es, ,.,ne.up. hardtop. Gold w/black top. air, full power. Xlnt con , . . Sacrifice! Will finance pri· warr. U775. Call 6~107 lie. R/H. T/W, $15% or Full power 11 air. Many lo mile&. 6Th-2710 -C.M. 54f>.S630. 69 9-pas~ Marqws. station CHICK IY!RSON vale party with~ down. or 67j..1TI4, uk. for Mike. bes<. 546-1281 extras. Beaut cond, 'Lo '56 Chevy good cond Mu1t MUST sell! Urgent! Best CJf· wip. 11,500 mi 's, $3'!00. Pvt ' YW cau Pat ah 10 ,AM 540-3100. 1962 vw Bllfl, Nu pa.int. 'U vw. Wide ovals, Mallory mileage. Only $6200. Like aell ww' take $115 Or belt fer takes! '69 Dart Sport·-""-·~· _'7H_c756~·--~-- bn:kes. Runs ~xcellent, ignition, Special .exhaust. Lo new. Call anytime Ms..6983. aue'r 548-3330 Special. Stick, t cyl, ·n MUSTANG BILL MAXE. y Need1 slight tranl work. mi's, Xlnt oond, $1185. ,67 El Dorado-AM/FM -· ' ' lie. Body&: mechanics xlnt.1---"-------- Havo · aea" d no<d<d · tor 673-2271 or 54(,.4tin '64 ·CHEVELLE. 4 dr. Stan-Aft 5 pm, 847-0118 1970 MACH t .,,,..,,,..,...,,,..,,,,...,...1 stereo radio. Every con-dard tranemw:1on Good 2nd ITIOIYIO' ITIAI -ba~~,.P1ta.,••10rmr 61nPMba.ck now. '66 VW Sq.· bAck-Sunroof. eeivable extra. Black w/blk · '61 DODGE OIARGER: For Mull! sacrifice, Xln t. con- • __,_.. _ w;i new tires k exhaust. Pvt vinyl top, Xlnt cond, 35,000 car. $300. S4s..5226 Sa1e or Trade; for gd vl.n. dltion AM/FM, 5 yr. war· lllll IEACH ILVO. '59woVWrk dov~, 0 '64 0 !..."'.: •. "N"•~~ party. 642-1020. mi. $2900. Call Mr. Webb CHRYSLER Good cond, w/new titts. ranty, 15,000 miles "" u..... .. vw Bus '66. New radial 544-7564 or 67>-2658. $200 Body. damage. Best of· 675-5028 Hunt. S.Kh 147-ISSS brake system; ca'mper un1t ti d' l llOO 1965 Chrysler 300 fer; 494-1990 '68 Mustang-V-8, auto., Pi s. lmtN,of,Ooul:h.mBdt ln~do'. New clutch. GOOD re1, ra M), • l97U Cadillac Brougham Pvt pty. 540--0254 Fleetwood w/Mlclitlln 4 Dr HT '69 POLARA 4-dr air cond, vinyl top , COND. Be11 ofter. M(l.3ll8. tires: Jess than 14,000 mi. FAMOUS FOR-seda~P/b, auto, air. Xlnt AM/FM. Like new cond. Mu.st sell '68 VW Bug, Gd. '6S VW SJ ra ight back , Purchased from&: servict'd DEPENDABILITY cond. $1450. Must eeU. 642-9894. -• -s --• 1 tunrool, low mileage. '$800 • h 96• ""' 1~=~---7-,.-c--= C01ru. ..,., • 111.,._.,.,. a t by McLean Cadillac of S.A. Gol.d metallic f'Xlerior wit ..-vo't '65 Mustang c<>nvt. Auto., V8. 4 wheel drive, warren hubs, 6 p M firm. Call 644-1310 neW rubber. dlr. Take cl'ear · · Call aft '.4:30 pm. 5.12-2000. individually.front seats, spot. '63 OODGE Dan. Good Good cond. Movini. $700 or ' -mo-HAR80R BJ:.VD. COSTA MESA '67 · LAND CRUISER 1969 MGB Xlnt cond. )..ow milea,t $1000 • 642-7144 OPEL '68 KADETTE WAGON ~ . . . . 1967 Ambassador '90 2 Dr HT SOLID VALUE Gold metalic finish w it h matching interior, Auto. trans., radio, heater, air condition, power !leering, po\ver brakes, near n e w tires. Drives Beautifully, fWAR AA9l $1050. Johnson & Son. 2626 Harbor, C.M. 540.5630. '61 Rebel-Xlnt cond, Air It all extrrui. 1 owner. 11650. 54S-0210 Needs, engine work. (WPM lOSl $499 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN "'66~S<d~an-. '>'°·,-,-.-,r-.-c7h_ro_me_ --,•"'1"96.1""vw=•p"1CKU=°'P"'e;-· I ·=c=a:..d::;.'68c:,::C°"on=v:..e=r"t1,;bo;:le~ Jess white Jnlerior. Auto. transportation car. $400. or oiler. 642-4993. car in trade or small down. • Porsche rims, XI n t cond, 6 pass. cab. Excellent condi-FAcroRY AIR CONDmON· trans., radio, heater, power best otter. 642-4219. OLDSMOBILE 1963 Rambler $400. Classic (TRB 332) Sacrific;e! Call Ori 11-"'" ~76 oo· o, 11= .. 497.3878 •leering, power brakes, pow.l-'-=SfliEiBIHRDl--1--~~~~~~~-4-dr. stick shift. Very ~ Ira 540.3100 or 494.r:JOJ aft g owner, u1.;.1. °"""""" · "" ING. Full power incl. door I l!i""" 32852 VAile Road IO A.M. • WANTED, pvt party. VW "'68°""vw=1n~n-,-, "•ho-crt-•nod""'°'n"'oo-r I locks, tilt&. te lescopic ateer. er windows, power scat, fac. 66 Olds H.T. 4 dr. F-85 cond. 833-2200 eves. ·bug, '61 or later, Clean & pan, chrome astro's Ii: ing, 1tereo, Sentinel. Full tory air cond, Sales P_riccd '68 Cus "400", 18000 ml fac Auto. trans. P/S Fact. air. T ·BIRD San Juan Capistraoo 837-48001493-4511/ 499-2261 '69 CORONA reasonable. 548-4222. part!. Call 673-9352 leather interior&: exception. s975. IIFQ 7201 ·ri:hnso~; war, all opt, cost $5400, LCJ mileage. Sharp~ 643-1813 Hlll'dtop, Vinyl roof. 4 1pee1.:, 1 1969 VW BUG-Auto, super ally nicf! inside and out. SCJn5s:Jo '1£26 Ha • · · sacrifice $2295. 213:592-2418. afl 6 PM. '61 T·Bird, '71 lie. New tire!, tuneup eic. See & drive. $375. &l&-2822, 281 Mesa Dr. C.M. PORSCHE Immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac. clean. Pvt pty. Call Ni ck VOLVO IVRD552) 540· · FORD '70 Olds 98 Convt., lo mi's, rifice. Will 'take trade or day1 646--0261/eve 537-3935 $2999 1'967 Imperial 2 Dr HT Sharp, Must see 10 ap- '70 911T fioance pvt. pty, c•1 Sid. • .69 vw BUG • • VOLVO MUST SELL , 65 FO.RD LTD preciato. All "'"· 846-00tl3 dlr. 540-3100 or 494-'7506 aJL CLEAN * $1500 Dark green metallic finish Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 10 a.m. XTS 343. * 67:H707* All 71 's Are Here ~ib .A_, with matching leather. Fu!. l'-'--'...;..---------'--------1 Executive car. Low milea~. ~m fresh. See at if u bou r V.W. '70 MARK II WAGON 1· '64 vw B nern rlh 142 • 144 • 145 • 164 • e"<1' ly eq,;ppod •"'•· '""'" ra· 4 Door Hardtop, vs, .,, .. · · us, Pll 1 g,. . · 111""' E CADILLAC dio, heatf!r. power steering, matte, air. (JJB 717) new motor. Gd condition. aw Call 646-4750 t Speed& k Automatics AUTHOAIZEO OE.&.~(FI power brakes, power win. $599 Automalic, R., H., dlr. (# -----·~-~-1970 144 Sedan Demo 2600 llARBOR BL.. dowz, P?wer seat, a.ir cond., BILL y A TES 4246), Owned by little old '70 VW Squareback:lake ovf!r Radio, Heater, Automatic COSTA MESA I etc. Pr1cf!d for quick sale. man from Lllguna Beach. lse. Lge eqty. Auto . air, $3094 54D-9100 Open Sunday !UOY 7361 $1350. Johnscrn & VOLKSWAGEN t87ll BEACH BL. 842M3S Take trade or sm. dn. Will AM/FM, lo mlles 641N703. Ove rseas Del. Spec. e Son, ~ Harbor, C.M. 32851 Valle Road m;NTINGT6N BEACH fin . pvt. ply.· Call Maury 1965 VW Camper, Sundial . '69 SDV. Beautiful Ure mist 540-5630. San Juan Capistrano - #,000 mi's. Spec. paint, '68 CORONA, vinyl top, Beige $1400. SM-4958. t4.ln. IAlllO Pu! .. "'I h-~. F'ulll "',•,-er Town &: Country Ila wgn.1"",=6·3~s·u~u-1R~E~w=A~G"'O"'N..-1 NOW RAMBLER ***IS TRULY*** AMERICAN!! '68 911 Sportamatie, 1 owner, 540-3100 or 494-7500 aft 10 am. 46,300 mi. Very good c<>nd . "OftM Ln1n:j blue. White vinyl top, blue 1966 OIRYSLER 9-Pair; s 837-4800 /493-4511/499.2261 gold I gm, Blau am/fm. buck. seaL!i, • on flr. lo •tit VW Ghia oonvert\ble. , VOLVO re """ new oc a Y · Immac. New radial tires. itereo tape dk, chrm whls, mi's. $1100 or $100 &: T.O.P. Xlnt trans car. Very $4395. 833-9301 644-2104 wooden strng whl. Asking ,"~&-4-04~~' ~-~,-,..~= reliable. 646-8TI7 After 5. cC:A'1DiitLLI.ALNCC"i'6i77FF1'1.,;;;twood;;;;;i, I ,; .• :;:3 =:;CH~R"Y°"S"°L•E"R-4.,.---,,,.00--,rl V8, Automatic. Power Steer. &.II'~ $5soo._ D4YS 557-6600. Eves .• 67 Toyota Corona 4 dr. R.&H, 1969 VW-XJnt rond. 14 ,000 I ·1966-_H_a_r_bor...c.' _c_.>_1. __ 64_6_-9_303_ All extras, Xlnt oond, Rear Good nd S~zs ing. (FHS 4791 4M-.2935: · auto. Orig ownr. Cleanest mi. Still under warr, See 1 ......... -• leg room . $2950. Pvl pty ;.~~';_y11 aft • p':; 968-oo37. · $599 PLEASE buy my car . Need anywhere. $1175. 642-8495 to appreciate. 544-4791. ' - - -... .. ~7-7572 BARWICK mo--m .. , Po-~ . -'65 BUG Snrf. ,. mm a c , ~ THIHI =·10~c~,,.,...,S<d'"'". -.o."""v"';n-,,-,-,'"11· CONTINENTAL "'° • ..., 11'1 '""-.."' 1968ToyotaCorona·l7,000ml, I---------IMPORTS INC. GOod cond, clean, l owner. A·l cond. Make offer , Miyers Manx S, R. New. YOlYO' pwr, tilt whl, v\n. top DATSUN 673-1483 644--01.04 673--0925 after s. .. am lfm stereo. $ 56 9 5. 1967 Continental '64 'PORSCHE COUP£ '67 VW, R&H, r.bll molor, 493-4473. 4 Dr HT 998 s. Cat. Hwy, LB 494-9771 TRIUMPH ~ ~ 111~ · "FRIEDLANDER" 1964 Cadillao Fleotwood r.bll SAFETY. COMFORT. STYLE .57 ~no w M x •"""' COuu. ""· -White finish with buraundy ' rv gn ny tra! * 675-2179 * Png k tran5. Xlnl brakes, 1 h 1 . -·II &~ Hdrs, gf'ar~. cam, t:r11.ns, Red with matching interior. ,71 SPITFIRES '"" ••Aett IMWY. :lfl Good cond. $1099 or best l"at er . nterror. "~ y po'fo'-mags. Must sell Fa 11 Real nice! IGCD 731 \ JGS VW 1300. Gd rnech. cond . 193-7566 • 537-6824 olfcr. 962-6888. et equipped &. air cond. 962-8225 BILL Y. ATES NOW ON DISPLAY l300 top or moko ofr. Call NEW-USED-SE RV. Show, vory good '"'" S...l =-;,--c-=---,,~,...-,1 642-8479 1964 Cadillac, new ~'• l a·• drfvo ~ay (~•m ~.) '61 Ford. , lll cu. in., 3 ..... EN CQmt in for. a test drive! ---------~ 1995 h all nu '""' ,. ..-.---·""' VOLK.SWAG FRITZ WARREN'S '69 VW Sed. 27,000 mi'1. ~ o\\-·ner, cas . c $677. Johnson & Son 2626 ovt;rdr1\·e, 4U posi·l.rftct1on, 328.S2 Valle RoAd SPORT CAR CENTER _,Perlect,c<>ndition. '1650. Ph: I '6B VOLVO--MS-292!1. H rbo CM 540:5530, Ong. owner, See to ap-'S3 Cad Cp. DeVlllt, full pwr a r, · · · ~iate. 644-fi094 San Juan captstrano 710 E •-1 St SA. 547 "764 FOR SALE -_1 ,~1-•.•51V..,,.......,., · u " · ~ Local awner, tow mileage, & air, good cone!. $750 or FALCON 1965 H.T .. R&H, .,.. ~ ....., " """''"'"'~ n....n dt1ly 9.9: closed SUnday '70 VW Bus 7..paSS. Deluxe ... 557 .,., MY 19~ LINCOLN v~ • 12 500 " 71 . k automatic transmlulon, ra. '"'' olr. -,,._, aft 6. u buckt'I seats new Litts & 70 914 ·•4• '57 TR 3 •-• gd ·• N int. , ! m1. itic er, d' h h' •• all n-mo·~-t r l'k I ' • : n.cu, COuu. t w Extras. &42-4.359, 548-t'fZ4.. 10, eater. w 1te 11ue w 19'-3 Cadillac $400 uo:: ";,"" o , 1 e llf'W M y clutch. Good cond, $485. OtanJe w.ith black interior. brakes, has top. 1315, Call; tires, ttc, Chick'1 special at Call 615.0303 5.000 miles. Loaded whh 673-2912 AM/FM. cluome wheels. 646-S(t)7 or 646-1367 '68 VW. $1225. MONTIO -,.-.-,,.-.~-.-.=-11 ir,. AM/f''M ste~, doori•.~~,~E=co=N~O"'r.r=N=E-. ~X~ln-1-.,.-. nd~. (.$23 BEJ). '64 Tlt-4. Good ninnlng, Xlnt coea""ui~A~·5656Must sell. $1999 Cu•d ... ·,s, 7 Cbpel .Bd. TVlll• locks, leather lntcr1or, etc. New b11b, tliei:;. Magi:;, AM· L YATES clean, blue w/black top . '7W" n eva e ut rue! Must sell, WAY below a new FM r11dio. Panet'd .l Crpl'd. Ill Wire Wheelis, t-Onneau CO\•er, '69 VW But-Xlnl cond. Mu&t I CHICK IVERSON A LOCAL CREAM PUl"F onf!. Ask for CharliP Thomts, $l 300. MG-9579 •.fl ti. VOLKSWAGEN II bah -ml•• 114~ I YW FACTORY Affi CONDITION. J h • So -H-~ n.dio, rtbu\11 clutch. Good AC ' y .. ,, .,.., oN oMnson n, """"' "'uur, '70 CQU•-y •·•an·, l '"· , 557-3841. ING. full power, exti'at incl. c 540 5630 J• • n. """" " 328.52 V•ll~ Road buy at $800. Firm. 546-2050. 549-3031 Ext.. 66 or 67 door locks, trunk opener etc. · · · · radial titts, ps/pb. Xlnl S.n Juan Qaplstrano VOLKSWAGEN DrUNa-E swlbu~w •. ~ •• c,.,•,.m~~l 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Must be zee_n~ !fNH326) CONT'L '.68 CouJ)f!. Immac. cond, 6 pass. $.1,395. p.,., 831..fS00/493-<Gll/499-2261 .,. .,. '"" "" " COSTA MESA $599 Low ml. Full power. Pcy: 499--37'19 911 P«rfffi cond. 13,000 ml. vw Bus 673-3'756. -~,=6~1~V=o=L~V~O~-Air-cond, tand11u. lthr, tapt.i•M~Uo.ST~-.,~11--,.~68'°"F-oro~. ~c-,.-,.,.-m-1 Jrkb Cf'ff'n w/blk lnt. 'fi6 VW Sedan. New paini • '66 VW--41,000 mi. Good ~2800. Eves 4!17-ll62. 500 2 dr. V8, sttl ll'lln~. FREE! G.E. TV SET Witt! ... ,, MW 1 f71 er 1910 1t•rc:l111w . HuPry wltll• offer lf!lh , AM/TM. 5"-0939 & hrflktl. MUitary servict I ~nd. Best otter. Muat 1tll. 2 Dr, Sed•n. Good economl. ib '63. ENGTNE A interior $8.50 or best ofr. 968-8146. -t,lJiiiljj,;.;,.,..,....,c,.. .. -w..=,....,,,,,,,,m'°'t"t.,.., 1-11ac. $'1'5. M ... 1613 ~673-~1~722~·---~--CAI tr&.nsporbltion. Spccial ~ e.f.-good. Body rear tndM. $200 '69 R h GT mu41 st:U. Xlnt cond. Maey e '68 VW, lo ml' ... Xlnt I '61 VW KOMBt Bu i . thl~ ~k only. 1.lc. Kl'B226, &cl' or hf!1t ofle:r. Call 675-27iit anc ero - ~-•eoHtr.673-6703. cond, Wlextru, ·$117$, AM-FM. Sanroof.Xlntca.tt. WILL FINANCE CADILLAC '6G La-•, .. Co""' A'r -1 A1110., 3.'ll V8, P.S .. P.R., Air, ,70 !flJT~ Red w/blk inf. 67S-mt or 546-tUI * CAil .. 99n * $299 .... ~~ri; ~~~~" sll ;_"";r, "st~~ ' ~:~: 8 ply wsw. R ~ H, (479'10C) Allor Map.-a.y or 1..... VW 9"1. v,.,, ad c:ond. '66 vw .. Potf,.c orid, New CHICK IVERSO~ COSTA MESA sacrifice 11395. 2J3,59Z-241S. $1950 ~1913. 1900. ,,.int. M"'I ..U 1675 or h<at YW Call 540.g100 Opeo S"nday "" Conlin'""' Mark Ul. CORT FOX LEASING 1• Porsche,, ~m cond. * 646-1.286 • offer 96J..l'W. OO'''T JUSf wtsa for Full power I l!lir. Oriainal Lo ml'•· Radie.I IJm, MUii '65 vw SQUAREBACK '69 VW, Xlnt rond. $1100 or ~1 Ext. 66 or 67 tumlshi031 for your homit, owrtf"r. Call 6«-21M. M".IJ tf'llt Wttk~. Ml~ kn TOP CONO. 1900 Beat offer. WO HARBOR BLVD. tind .creat bu)'I ln lrWfl)''1 Offtt. 67J..mt., or 5*-tl:il OWNER 673-2957 * 536.4Sll • COSTA llf!:SA Cl11s!lfted Ads. ----------------· I ' ' Dally Pilot Wan< Ada have barpins a:lllore. 2136 NEWPORT BLVD. CoatA Me"" (7141 645o3661 ~. t