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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-02 - Orange Coast Pilot.. .... ... • esa oman -- . . . Standout Snspe~t In Mes·a R .ank Job ,, N abhed by Police • • ' I Taken to lftah Mesa Girl Flees Gunpoint Rapist Sexually abused at gunpoint in a plush Salt Lake City motel room , a missing Costa Mesa saleswoman is safe today, 1fter escaping to end a 600-mile terror trip in her own hometown . Quake Jiggles Norther11 County A minor earthquake shook North Orange County at 7:47 p.m. Monday rattling dishes and nerves, but doing • little damage. Caltech seismologists rated the temb· lor at 3.2 on the Ri chter scale and pin· pointed the epicenter to be at Brea mid· way bewteen the 12-mile long Whittier fault and lhe 20-mile Norwalk fault to the soulh. The sharp jolt was followed by about 10 seconds of rumbling, rat tling and roli· lng motion underfoot. The earth shock was not related to the Feb. 9 ~r quake centered at Sylmar, but Orang'e County residents as far away aa Laguna Beach ttported feeling Mon· day's tremor. Orange Coast Weather Things gel back lo normal lVeatherwlse Wednesday. with the wind& dying down and tempera· lures spurting back up to 65 along the coast aand 75 further inland. INSIDE TODA\' Go~rnor Reagan's Comm is· siun on Educational Reform in California. headed by Santa A nan Robtrt 11on.ron. sees the need fo r some changes in the way we rlfll our school&. Pogoe 12. (.1H/'ff'll1 1 Cll#tl119 U1 , (lattl"" 1•tP. """(' ,. Cr~·l'f 11 De111r Hefktt ' 1"1i.r111 '"''' ' 111""111n,,...I t '1111114:1 1•11 Hl,..K.,. U • .t.nn l.l llfttt U Mtvl11 t Mlltliilll '""'"'" H Nllllflt l Nnn l•J °''"'' c_,, u ,_,. , .. u llKlr Mtr11111t t•ll TtltVltlfll I ,,........ ' ¥hlllltt • Wlrllt Wttll 1• Wtmtll"t N-t 1).11 W.tl" Htn t-1 • ( Her alleged kidnape.r and rapist Lt now a. prisoner too. Paul H. Anderson, 30. waa captured in Green "River, Wyo., and booked into Sweetwater County Jail pending in· terrogation by FBI agents and ex· tradition. He was the object of an Orange County manhunt as the result of a carbon copy kidnap case the day before, authorities revealed today. Anaheim police said Anderson had been sought since Friday, when a 20-year-old woman was abducted, molested and finally released. The Costa. Mesa cause. originating at 6: 15 p.m. Saturday, ended with the vie· tim's escape. .. The 25-year-old woman was last seen v.·hen she dropped off another Fashion Island department store employe at her apartment. Detective James Blaylock said the vie· tim 's roommate became conrerned later when she was overdue. · Checking the area Sunday, the room· Jflate found the victim's car locked in a market lot at 2701 Harbor Blvd., two bags of grocerie.s spoili~g inside. • By this time, nearly 24 hours had tlapsed and the frightened women flag· ged down Patrolman Robert Johnson. Just about the same time, the victim telephoned from Sall Lake City to report she was safe after being treated at a hospital and released to her parents. She said she was kidnaped from the lot at gunpoint. No address was listed £or the suspect, but Costa Mesa police had been alerted that he might visit bis former wile. Santa Ana·based FBI agent Charle! Sullivan said today he couldn't predict how soon Anderson would be returned to face charges. Detective Blaylock said the victim mi~ht remain in Salt Lake City until authorilies were finished talking with her. , Authorities said Anderson was driving a 1971 ·maroon sport" sedan listed as the suspect vehicle in the Anaheim rape and abduction Friday when apprehended in Wyoming. • Sweetwater County Sheriff's deputies claimed he had four 1uns, two rifles and two handguna, In the vehicle when captured. Costa · Mesa Police DetecUve Capt. Robert Green 1eld today the fact the. victim escaped In ber hometown waa purely coincidence. l WILL NOT FACE DEATH Convicted Murderer Hulse Seal Beach Nabs Standout Suspect In Mesa Robbery A suspected bank bandit whose bright blue cSr. baggy yellow pants and Afro hairstyle didn 't blend into the Orange County landscape was quickly captured after a $720 Costa Meia stickup MOnday. William A. Counter, 22, Los AngeleS', was arrested by Seal Beach police 30 minutes after the noon hour haldup. He is said to fit the description or · the man who robbed Crocker Citizens National Bank, 3390 S. Bristol SI., escap- ing wi th the only other customer in hot pursuit. Investigators said they also found $727, 111 yellow ban k message envelope and a slip of paper with : Holdup, scribbled on it, in Counter's car. Seal Beach officers Michael Vasquez end Robert Gayton said a countywidi radio description of the suspect and getaway car prompted them to notice Counter. He stopped his vehicle northbound on the San Diego Freeway and refused to discuss the matter when placed unde.r arr'est . Bank t.etter Mr1. BeUy A. Sandstrom · 1aid I.he bandit who robbed her wrote out a deposit 1lip and aet it doy.'n at her window covered with several tl.ollar bills. I Sht Afi!,jle lheo.allpped her the boldUJI note and asked for all the largt )!lit, which Included so-called bait money U1ed In prostcution evidence. Just as he was leaving, however, 15« BANK JOB, Page II • ees a IS_ , Newpftrt Traffir . L Study · P~an -CatJell Youth,'17, Guilty, 2nd Trial Looms By TOM BARLEY Of ''" D1H' 11'111! 11111 Hatchet killer Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse was found guilty late Monday of first degree mwt'aer in the slaying of Santa Ana sertlice station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Hulse may now yet have to stand trial in the mutilation sla ying Of Mission Viejo schoolteacher Florence Nancy Brown. In the Carlin murder. il took the Orange County Superior Court jury less than six hours to decide that Hulse, a burly J7.year·old, used an axe last June l to hack to death young Carlin in the restroom of his Sanla Ana service &talion. Hulse. 16 at the time of the murder. received the verdict with the apathy that hes marked his demeanor throughout the two week trial. Judge Ronald CrookshAnk scheduled March 26 for imposition ol a sentence that could mean a life term in state prison for Hulse. The youth's age rules out the death sentence. The veteran jurist will rule that same day on a further plea by Hulse !hat he is Innocent by reason of insanity. Judge Croolcshank's ruling will also determine the prosecution 's further ac- tion on additional charges filed against H-in C1'.lnneetion with the killing last J!le 2 of Mrs. Brown. _. fhe Garden Grove youth Is charged wf#:i being an accessory to the murder of 'I.Mrs. Brown. 31 , of El Toro. Steven Craig Hurd, 20, Hulse's alleged com· panion in lhe Carlin killing, is accused of J>oth murders and goes on trial March 22. The jury quickly rejected 1tfonday • arguments by defense attorneys Robert Green and Michael Gerbosi that Hulse's uSe of drugs and drink and the head injuries suffered some yea rs ego in a fall contributed to tbe Carlin killing, They were urged to do so by Deputy Distrld Attorney Martin J, Heneghan in a final argument that asked the panel to recognize that the murder of the 21-year-old attendant was planned, prtmedi(ated and merCileM .•. lour psyChi 3ttlsl.s testifted' luring the Hulse trla l that the youth was sane at ' the lime of the kill ing and knew what he was doing when he used the hatchet' on Carlin. Codefendant Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, waa a key prostcution · witness In U:it Hulse tflal. We testified with tlle promise that he will be allowed to plead aullty to lesser charges. Taylor told the court that It was..decid4 @<! by Hurd and Hulse long before the IStt JWLSE1 Page !) ) • • DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY A'FTERNOON, .MARCH 2, lf•7f VOL .... HO. 0. I lfCTIOflll,.CI ,A.II In-Good For111 UJl'I Ttlll"llel9 Amanda Cadsky, 15. wades in the water ·at a beach near Sydn ey, Australia. Amanda apparently doesn't have a care in the world. What teenage lass in the world would, if she looked as good in a bikini as Amanda does? Newport Traffic Study Labeled 'Front, Ploy' By L. PETER KRIEG 01 11111 Ol ll't' l"llet lltll Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers Monday nighl labeled the pfanned Newport traffic st.udy'a "front" coyering the City Council majority's attempt to deflate the petition drive that forced next Tuesday's f'acifiC Coast Freeway election. "The ploy did not work. , .you were not fooled .. " Rogers .said to Uie 250 persons gathered at Newport Harbor' High School for a Freeway Fightets• ell'Ction rally. The vice mayor said Mayor Ed Hirth launched the study Jn a conrtdenUal memo to city cooncilmen, a conlldenUa.l memo that Rogers had released shortly after it was delivered end from which hr quoted again Monday night. Rogers had blasted Hirth when tMI first released the document .In a state- ment he later retracted, Rogers called the mayor a patsy to the vtsted Interests in the city. • Rogen Monday nlghfSif~ attacked the DAILY PILOT for allegedly opposing the Fretway Fighters' anti-route cam· paign . He said the newspaper wa1 one of the "combined powers of the vested interests" and said It wqs biased. The Vice mayor charged that the newspaper, "Wants you. the people, t.o fall .Into a fa!Se sense ot sec urity until it is ·too late .•. the daily has -since the outset -worked hand--ln-glove with those-who wou1d devastate your town. "We might call their program a pUot project for environmerttal destruction and punishment of -people who have the audacity, la challenge the position or thi press." Rogers also made refertnce: to "• tidy trio of ex~lected officials from your city" who he asserted had oppoaed the n-eewey election "like snakes emeri· lng from the grass of some acrlcultural preserve .•. " He added, "thank God lheir •inJster schenle failed." Rogers later -0rrered to lnlroduee former ma yors Jame!: B. Stoddar4. Charles E. Hart and former vice mayw Hans J. Lorenz. The three (ormet municipal officfn had filed an unsuccessful lawsuit 1n an effort lo block the freeway election en ground& that such a quesUon properly (See TRAFFIC, Pa1e ll • - ,t OAILY PILOt.. s Police Holcl Suspect in Mari's Deatl1 A Santa Ana man hat been charged with murder_ in the disappearance of 1 disabled laborer whose body - u ·he ts: dead -may never be found. Sam~ C. Tyler, 50, of 164-0 W. Myrtle St., is ,_qect.ed to be arraigned Wed-- nesdq. In ,teptral,Orange County Judicial District Coud: -He ajnady. haJI be<n l!m!ljed, boolted lat ThW'Sday oo suspicion of soliciting to commit murder, but was re-in· ttrrog1tM just before arraignment on that._ d!arge Monday. Declining to exp!lin, the talk led lo a search with the auspect along 15 miles of San Diego, County coastline Monday afternoon for the body or his mi1pected viotirn. C>arles A. Noble, 45, of 818 S. Town,end St.. was listed as ·a missing person Feb. 17 when his mother filed a report with police. QueaUoulng of mutual acquaintances led ~ to center their investigation on-TYier. - . lP.Vfll1igator1 theorize that Noble wu shet to death in Santa Ana as a reJUlt of~· m11ital triangle and his body later dumped alongside the lonely shoreline. smce no corpse was fO!lfld, detectives ti-lie high Ud.., could have washed it eut to sea. • Deledive Lt. Harrel Davis said the case bq been a particularly unusual • one and. pr ailed . bls homicide · Jn· vesttiators for piecing bits of evidence together. · If no body ls ever found, Tyler could still be convicted of murder based on 'circumstantial evidence, as ln the highly pqblicized case of L. Ewing Scott 15 "ears ago. CONNERY BACK AS JAMES BOND LONOON (UPI) -Actor Sean Connery will return to the screen as James Bolld in "Diamonds are Forever," ac- cording to an announcement today by United Artists Corp., Vt'hich will release the film. Davtd V. Picker, presiden~ of the fil m company, said CoMery had signed ior the 1uper-agent 007 role and that 'filming would begin in April. It will be Connery's sixth film as Bond, the character created by the la~ Ian Fleming in a series or adventure novels. l utscUr, Matc h 2, 1971 Oops, Sorry Presi dent Nixon, in a\varding Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Afitchell th e NA~A Distinguished Se rvice ?-.ledal (top photo), appears to be asking "how did that happen?" after drop ping the medal. Below. astronaut Alan Shepard jokes with the President about the in cident. A-pparent Lo~e Triangle Ench in SA Man's · Death An apparent love triangle ended in death for a Santa Ana man t-.Ionday in the Riverside Coun~y community of Meadowbrook near Elsinore. James W. Nash, 40, of 1601 \\'. Flora St,, Sant.a Ana, 1969 chairman of the Orange County Young Republicans. died of gunshot wounds lo the head ant! chest, according to Riverside County Coroner Dennis Ely. Nash's fu lly clothed body~ and thlt of Mrs. Betty Ann Hunt. 39, \vas . found on the front lawn of Mrs. Hunt's former home about 1:30 p.m. Monday . Near the bodies Jay Cecil flunt t'ritically injured with apparent self·in· flicted gunshot .... ·ounds. Capt. Russell C.. llav.·k of the Elsinore sheriff's station sa id . Hunt remained in critical condithin today at Riverside General Hospital. From Page 1 Using a .22 caliber rifle, Hunt is beli~\.·· td to have shot Nash three ti mes and his \1•ife four times before putting the gun to his own head, Hawk said. The Hunts 11ere separated and in the process of getting a divorce. TRAFFIC STUDY HIT ••• was an administrative function of elected officials. The election was forced by pelitlobs bearlng signatuus of nearly 10,000 persons (t,300 the minimum needed, were verified by tbe city clerk). Rogers said the petition drive was a Cle.ar iMJ.caUon the people "are ready and able to stand up." The traffic atudy1 endorsed unanimous- ly by the council, will begin as soon as a consult.ant is bittd, which the council wW do upon receipt of a recom- menda tion from a citizen£' advisory com· mlttee. Rogers, pointing out it will be another year before It is done, asked, ''How long can we ~·ail. "These councilmen (the five who en· dorsed tbe •·no" vote in the election} who now feel that the entire freeway matter mtUt hinge on the great study have ·only recently come to this con- clusion." ' DAILY PILOT "4 .......... ... __ .,_._ OJlANO• COAST rVILl~ING COMrAHY ••t.•rf N. Wte4 ''"!"'°'' •M r u011.ntr J ee\ •. Curl•v VI<• l',..!Mnt •IMll G-e1 INM,_. lh•111•• ICenil """ lh•M•I A. Mu rphl11• ""-'*"' &!IOI' CJ.erl•• H. l••• •ichcril P. H•ll .o\aMlftl'll """""" Edi~ ....... c."9 Mtwi: :DD W.t l1r Slrftt f'...,.,,, a .. cll: Im H--1 h,ilwYlrd , U11i1M IMCll: 221 For"t A-H~ l•clll t11n flflldl lotult'¥•r$ SM '*"-te: • N"1ll El t.amlnl !l•I Rogers sald the council didn't ask for a study ~·hen it voted unanimously in support of the Badham bill that .,.,·ould have eliminated the entire Newport Beach segm ent or the route. The election Tuesday will not ac- complish that. Jn fact. City Attorney Tully Seymour has indicated legally it may be nothing more than a straw poll. 1'\*o·o propositions will be on the ballot. The first is an initiative that seeks to rescind an agreement with the state on street closings along the route or the coastal free\vay through Corona del Mar. The second is a proposed charter amendment that. if passed and ratified by the state legislature, would require votes of the people before the council could sign any such agreements in the future. Rogers was one of five speakers who addressed the rally. The others "*'·ere former mayor Paul J. Gruber, attorneys Arthur Strock and Roy B. Woolsey and Vin Jorgensen. Woolsey, as he had done at a Chamber of Com inerce talk last week, made a plea for "an over"*'·helming yes vote" say ing anything less than 7;. or 80 percent \*''ill be "*''orthless. }fe maintained Ne\.rport Beach can stop the free\vay. He cited San Fran- cisco's suc~ssful efforts in halting one there. Jorgensen's talk, although not as in1- passione d as his remarks to the charnbcr "'hen he said "it is time for radical measures ... to get the state's attention." told the audience to be w;iry of promises of help Crom the chairman of the State High"•ay Commission or officinls of neighboring cities. Commission Chai rman Fred C .. Jen- nings last "·eek pledged 10 seek commis- sion review of the freeway rou te if the city's traffic study shows sOme mod ifica- tion ls necessary. The mayors of all four adjacen~ cities also pledged support to route modifi ca- tion within Ne\l·port Beach as long as Jl .,.,·outd not change 1he route as it affect their communities . "Jennings can't do a thing," Jo rgensen said, "he'i; one of srven 1nembers." Jorgen.~en pointed out the commission 11dopted the route on a 4 to 2 vote •·right here (the high school auditorium~ ln 1963 and the man Jennings succeeded voted ai:1ainst it. "And the mayors. \\'hfll can lh<'Y do? -nothing," he said . Strock, strollln~ the stage almost like he was haranguing a jury. rrlt<'ratrd nrgoments he had voi ced earlier that the free'o*o'BY route was adopted .,.,,!~ meeting federal requirements for en- vironmental considerallons. Gruber assailed the freeway route and the effects it would hnve on the cit,I'. I The coroner's office said Nash 11:nd ~lt·s. Hunt had been seeing each other for about four weeks, acco rding to re1>0rls fro1n neighbors, indicating the rno!ive [or the double slaying ,~·as a •·1rian gle affair." Nash . an insu rance claims investigator. V.'as the father of four children. Last l'Car. he v.·as Orange Count}' chairman for State Senafor John L. ll:irn1er"s can1paign for st.ate attorn~y genera!. Nash . a retired f\.1arinc Captai n, <ilso assisted in the campaigns of Ri!p. Jloberl H. Burke, 1R-Hunlington Beach~. \Villiam Teague. Republican candidate for Congress and David Brandt. 196!1 candidate for the Sant.a Ana Unified School District. Ne l\'port Mayor Stresses Cit y Traf fi e Problem "Just out lawing the (ree"ay v.·ill not solve the prob!en1." So declared Newport Beach !>.Iayor Ed Hirth this 1nornlng respond ing to accusations by Vice ~tayor Ho\Vard Rogers that the cily 's planned traffic study is just a '·front." Hirth, as he has said before. offered hls "complete sympathy with the desire to have no freew11y in f\el\'POrt Beach .'' Ho'o*o·e1·er, the mayor said. "\Ile ha"·e a growing, serious traffic problem. Just outla"·iilg the free\va}' wi ll not solve it. .Jt is essential to detennine acceptable solutions to this problem.'' J-lirth said the traffic st udy ''is a serious effort to do Lhis and is our best hopt.'' He said ll \\'ill be continued "earnestly·• after the election and \.\'ill be con1pleted. The traffic -study. to be. under the guidance of a nine·member citizens' com- tnittee. "*'·as ordered late last year to ··detern1ine the .best solutions to the overall Newport Beach traffic problem.'' The citi1.ens' committee. "''hose members are personally div ided on the 1~acific Coast Free.,.,·ay issue, has been interviewing consultants to do the study i!nd is expected to make its reco m- n1enckitlon on one of them to the council in the near future. •lirth "'as one of the five clly coun- cilmen 'A'ho signed I.he official arguments against the propositions ln Tuesday·s freeway elections. Joining !Tim .... ·ere CouncUmen Milan Dostal. Carl Kysnla. Richard Croul and Lindsley Parsons. • Rogers sigilesf the arguments favoring passage. The seventh councilman, Dona ld 1'.1cln- nls , has strongly Indicated he supports the anti-freeway factions. Allies Thwarting Reds Laos Drive Frustrates Ene1ny Offensive SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military sources said today the South Vietnamese drive into Laos had frustrated Communist plans for a dry season offensive and that U.S. air ralds had cut truck traffic on the Ho Chi Minh trail by half. U.S. helicopters flew more South Vietnamese into Laos today. Vientiane dispatches said Laotitln regular forces had opened a major of- fe nsive Jn northern Laos and that heavy fighting was re Ported at Nong Het, a village on route 7 seven miles west of the border -0f North Vietnam and a major Communist supply route. The reports said U.S. C130 transports and 40 helicopters were flyicg rein- forcements o( CIA-trained irregulars and regular Thai troops jnto the northwest headqua rters town of Long Chen to back th e new offensive. Spokesme n in Saigon said a 6SO-man South Vietnamese bauallon \Vas flown in today by a fleet of American UHI (Huey) helicopters to an area southwest of route' 9, tbe road that is the axis of the South Vietnamese drive across the Ho Chi 1'.1inh Trail. 'fbe reinforcements were I.he f i r s t marines to go across t.he border in the driv e by 16,000 infan try, paratroop an d Ranger forces. !l.1ilitary sources said all of South Vietnam 's three marine brigades -fro m 10.000 lo 13,500 nten -had been moved up to staging areas inside South Vietnam and held in reserve. Jn a day of major developmen ts: -Communist troops in Cambodia today destroyed 80 percent of the nation's on ly oil refinery at lhe port of Kompong Som, 120 miles southwest or Phnom Penh, and tem porarily closed the airport there, Direct rocket hits blew up fou r or the six storage tanks there and caused explosions that did other he11;vy damage. -The U.S. command said at least 15 American fighte r-bombers attacked North Vietnamese missile and an- tiaircraft sites 13 miles east or the border with Laos and 17 miles north of the demilitarized zone. It "'as the 16th "protective reaction" strike I h ls year aga inst miSllil~ sites firing on U.S. planes bombing the Ho Chi f\.linh trail. -Field reports said B52 bombers today bombed Communist forces around the South Vietnamese Isl division fire sup. port base at Hong Ha II, also kno wn as hotel 2, 10 miles south of highway 9. UPI front dispatches reported fvlonday the base had been abandoned. Its loss \Vas announced offic ially today. -South Vietnamese ·spokesmen disclos- ed that a tribe or about 900 Laotians was found in the 'beart of the battle area in Laos -the first civilians to be reported in the area. Capt. Cao Dai. a 1st division officer, said they were living in bunker type houses as protection again st U.S. air raids and had been conscripted by the Communists to repair roads and carry weapons. From Page 1 BANK JOB ... customer Charles F. Schmitt re alized a robbery was in progress and chased the suspect out the front door. No weapon was. found in the Harbor Col!ege student's car when apprehend ed. Mrs. Sandstrom said the man .,.,·ho robbed her simulated one with his hand in his coat pocket. Counter v.·as picked up in Seal Beach an d returned to Costa 11-tesa by Detective Richard Frederiksen for questioning . Evidence was turned over to the FBI. wh ich will prosecute since bank robbery is a federal offense . -U.S. mlitary sourCes said the North Vietnamese for the first time had n1oved heavy Soviet-made T54 tanks into the Laotian panhandle. Soutlt Vietnamese spokesmen in Saigon said at least 52 lighter PT"J6 amphibious lanks had been destroyed in tank battles and by U.S. air power. South Vietnamese military spokesmen said the ARVN. Marine rei nforcementa \Ve re flown into Laos from the major forward operational base at Khe Sanh, wbicb itself came under Communist mortar attack Tuesday fqr the fir&1 tUne since America n troop:! reoecupied the plateau a month ago. B11111phrey Dintaer Lin·ked ' Mine W 01·kers President Indicted in Conspiracy \VASmNGTON (AP) -\V. A. ''Tony" Boyle, president of lhe United Mine Workers, was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of con- spiracy, elllbezzlement ~nd making iJ. legal political contrihut1~ of $49,250 from union funds. Included among recipients of the con- tributions was $30,000 to a dinner for Sen . J1ubert H. Humphtty In 1968 and various others. · Two other United Mine Worker of ficials name d in the s a m e indictment were John Owens, secretary-treasurer. and James Kmetz, direc tor of UMW's political arm, the Non-Partisa n League. Atty. Gen. John N. ~1itchell said the 13-count indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here. Boyle was charged in one count with embezzling $5,000. in another with con- spiring to embezzle and to make illegal politicat contributions totaling $49,250, and 11 counts of actually makitlg such contributions. The $5,000 11'as parl o( the $49,250. Kmetz was charged v.·ith the sa me conspiracy an d embezzlement counts and in two counts of making il!egaf political contributlons. Owe ns was also charged in the con- spiracy count and on one count of making illegal political contrib utio n. Named as unindicted co-conspirators are Suzanne Richards~ Boyle"s executive assistant, and .Robert Howe, former director of the Labor's Non-Partisan League. · The indictment charged that bet 'o*o'ecn 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 66-year-old, ssa.O()(l.a-year head of the UMW, joined v.·ith 0'o*o·ens and Kmetz to contribute $49.250 of U1e union's general treasury runds to political campaigns of various candidates seeking federal offices, a violation of lhe Federal Corrupt Prac- tices Act. The defendants were u~ing the non· partisan league as a means for the union to make contributions to the can- didates. according to the indictment. The indictment also charged that in orde r to conceal the nature of thesc con- tributions, Boyle and Owens authorized Kmetz and Howe to ma ke illegal con- tribu tions out of the league's funds . In addilion, the indictme nt said, checks wrillen on the league 's bank account "·ere dr~wn to "cash" in the :imount f 'ro1n Page l HULSE ... event that the auendant should be killed v.·hen the gas slation "'as robbed. Taylor v.ill be used by the pl'osecution in U1e Hurd trial. Hurd , accused bv lawmen as the leader of the gang Or drifters "'ho they allege butchered ti1 rf. Bro"*'·n ln a '·devil cult"' murder that featured sa tar: worshiping rites be her killers. has been declared to be sane and able to face trial. of the authorized contr ibution. And. the indictment alleged, these amounts would be deposited In th;; personal accounts of Kmetz and Ho"·.; who would .,,,·rite checks on their accounLs paycible to the candidates or committees. Those named as recipients of the con- tributions and the amounts they are al· leged to have received are: Salute to Humphrey Dinner Committee, $30,000, 1968 ; Democratic Congressiona: Committee, $5,000 in 1969, $5,000 in 1961! an d $2,500 in 1967; Republican Victory Dinner $2,000 in 1969; Republicar. Leadership Dinner, $1.000 in 1968; former Rep. Arnold Olsen. (D-Minn. ), Can1paign Co mmittee, $1.000 in 1968; Salute tc Re p. Jolin Saylor (R-Pa.). Committee, Sl.000 in 1968: Re-elect Wayne Morse COmmittee, $1 ,000 in 1968; Republicar: Victory Gala , $5,000 in 1967 ; D. C. Com· mittee for rormer Rep. \Vayne L. Hay~ \D-Ohio). $250 in 1968. The maximum penalty upon coavictior ,o;ould be two years in prison and :. $10,000 fine on each count of th~ Corrupt Practices Act violation and five years in prison an d a $10.000 fine on eacr of the conspiracy and embezzlemen! Missing Y acl1t With Six Aboard U11dama ged A cabin cruise r reported missing wit~ six persons aboard bet"''een Catalina Island and Sunset Beach, "''as found safe Monday afternoon near Oceanside. The 26-fool cruiser Toa d If, skippered by John Ec kers of El A1onte, was spotted at 12:45 p.m. by the USS Benicia, • 164·fool Navy patrol gtmboat on a nava: exercise. It was 23 miles west o! Oceanside. All six persons on board the Toad II we re repo rted in good condition and the cruiser was towed back to Long Beach Harbor by the Benicia. A Coast Guard search 'o*o'aS launched (or the cruiser wheo it failed to arri\'t at Sunset Beach at 3 p.m .. Sunday, as scheduled. Reports from Ca talina in- dicated ·the Toad~ II was having engine troub le . 11.lrs. Gayle Eckers. wife of the skipper, contacted the Coast Guard Sunday even· ing. She reported her husband, Johh: Frank Eckers. 52: Greg Eckers, 18; Dennis Montgomery, 20; Paul Wedd~, 24, and a ma n named Cecil, alJout ~. as missing. All were in good health v.·hen !he Toad 11 was found. Three others. originally on the cruiser, had flown back from Catalina becaUSl! ol the engine trouble. The Coast Guard had an 82-foot cutter, Point Mobard. and two helicopters, searching the IO-foot "·aves Monday. Th!! Benicia was not on the sea rch, bu! spotted the Toad II first . PRUDENT BUYING Th roughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quit e evid ent -that wh en money is less plentifu l, people bu y better quality. This is contrary to popular beli ef, but makes good se nse if you th ink a bout it. When you have to conc ern yourself with value and performance, you ar e likely to buy better quality. At Ald en's in the last three years , our per un it sale hu been more ex pen1ive carpeting , refl ecting this fact. Co nseq ue ntly, -we have 'the-I a r g e ?t' selection of finer qual iti es yo u will se e anywh ere, a ll at competitive pri ces. The en d result is cus tome r sa tisfaction , prid e, and recommend ation s which provide ou r ove rwhelming source of new busineu. l SANTA ANA. ORANGI TUSTIN C•ll ..• ALDEN'S •I D HILL CAA,[TS & DltA'l"llS .., 11l74 Irvin•, Tustlrt, Cal. l)l.J)44 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. -COSTA MESA 646-4838 l I -,. -· ---~ ••• : . . .. • Huntington Beaeh EDITION Today'•· Flnal N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL. 64, NO. 52, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, M>:RCH 2, 1971 TEN CENTS ' ' • Joint _. Meeti·n.g Called for Airpark ·Proposal The Huntington Beach City C.Ouncil vdll .hetr a presentation by the planning at.aU Dn UJe proposal for a $3 million municipal airpark. The councilmen Monday night schedul- ed a 1tudy session with the planning commission and the city's airport com· mltttt for 7:30 p.m. Moliday, March 22. in the council chambers. Councilman Al Coen proPosed the study 1ession to evaluate the nine months of work put Into the proposal by the staff. Coen uid that aome · citizens were under the' t~lse impression that the coun- cil bad already prejudged the airport. "I feel we should have a study session on ii," he added. Mayor Donald Shipley agreed, but com· mented. "R.igbt now .I'm not for any airport in the center of the city." Later Shipley 11id of the airpark plan, "The first knowledge I had of this w~ when I read about it in the paper, I think that goes for the other coun- cilmen." >.1; proposed by Planning Directllr Ken Reynolds and his stalf, the airpark would combine recreational, industrial and conunuter flights. It would be within a quarter of a mile of the Central Park, running north-south from Talbert Avenue to near Garfield Avenue between Gothard Street and the railroad tracks. Planning aide Jere Murphy described the plan to Orange C.ounty Airport Com- mluionera last week. He said that it wpuld be · a landscaped· park covering 68 acres in an industrial zo11e. The 2.500-foot runway would be used by light, private planes And short lfilloll com· muter turbo props. Murphy said lhat the main benefit of the air.park "'iuld be that it would sp,ur industrldi development 'and thus brbaden the city's tax base. Roger Slates. who is chairman of both the C<lunty airport c:ommisskm and the Huntlngtlln Beach planning C<lmmi.s.sion, said that the presentation WU· purely informational. "Several commissioners complimented the ataff pl~n and were impressed that the city was addressing itself to the problem of providing better air service," he said. Several months ago, Reynolds offered to describe the proposal to city coun- cilmen, but the council suggested that the five-mem~r a i r po rt committee, formed to study problems et Meadowlark Airport, should fint be briefed on the Idea. The airport commiUee has had one meetilli with the staff on the proposal, Reynolds · said. At the March 22 meeting the council also will· discuss architectural guidellnes with the planning commiasioners and the Design Review Board for any struc- tures that may be constructed In the area around the new civic center that will ht built opposite the Huntington Btacb High School . • Ille or ers • 1e n icte V .S. City Bid Huntington Gets Honorable Nod Huntington Beach lOi!it !bi bid to become an All-America City but picked up an honorable mention for it.s efforts in civic improvement. Eleven cities attained the All-America title for 1970. Huntington Beach wa.s among the 11 runnerups. The oootest ii co-sponsored by the National Municipal League and Look Mapline. Wlnnera were announced th1I week. ''I'm happy we were acknowledged with a certificate," Vice Mayor Jerry 1.!atney siild today. "But I think our inability to move ah ead on the Top of the Pier Plan cost us the title." The Top of the Pier Plan (downtown renovation). landscaping of Pacific Coast Highway, and plans for a central park United Crusade Dinner Slated For Campaigners A colorful Hawaiian dinner with en- tertainment provided by native dancers will be the backdrop Friday eveni~g for the honoring of campaign workers in the West Oranae County United Crusade. Tbe crusade·s annual recognition ban- quet will be held at 7 p.m. in the Disneyland Hotel, Anah'eim . C o m m u n I t y dignitaries, Industrial, business and professional leaders will join with crusade workers in honoring the 1971 campaign team. A man and woman of the year will be announced. Crusade President Jack Feehan of Huntington Beach said that awards also will be presented to the company and employe groups that C<ln- trlbuted through the AlD program. There will be a press writing award, outstanding newspaper of the year honor and a presentation to the outstanding finn and employe group in West Orange County. were presented lo the All-America Com· miUee in late August. "If downtown property owners had made up their minds to help the Top of the Pier Plan I think we'd be an AJJ.America City. I think we 're one, anyway," Matney said. Bill R<edc ~of ~ee. c\IJ' •P,CJ.l<esmen who traveled to Portland, Ore., duri11t th• AllgUll c:ompeUlloll, uld at thal time most of the cities hid presented programs alODJ racial lines. More than 100 cities had originally sought the All-America title. Stories on the 11 winners will be in the Marcti 23 issue of Look. The eleven All-AmeriCa Cities for 1970 ' are: Ardmore, Oklahoma; Binningham. A I ab am a ; Bloomfield, Connecticut; Dallas, 'Iel:as; Enfield, CoMecticut; Fitchburg, Massachusetts: Gainesville, Florida ; lndianapolis, Indiana; Lakeland, Floridaj Lumberton , and Shelby, both in North Carolina. ~In tht rllllllerup class with Huntington Beach were: Butte, Montana; Florence, South Carolina; Hazelton, PeMs)'lvanla ; Lakewood, Colorado; Mountain View, California; Muskegon, Michigan: Pon Arthur, Teus; Rockford , I 111 no is ; Somerville, Massachusetts, and Virginia Beach, Virginia. Ul'I Trill!MM Little Boil Lost He doesn't know his name. but nurses at San Diego's Hillcrest Receiving Home say he is quick to make friends. The boy, about 2. was found ah;an· doned in a supermarket. Auth· orities are trying to locate-his parents. Cold Winds Leaving Coast; Santa Anas Next in Sigl1t Gusty, northerly winds that bave chill· ed Southern California for the past five days are erpected to die tonigh t. Santa Ana wind! will bring 75 deirte highs to Orange County Wednesday, the Na- tionaJ Weather Service predicts. Early today, the bri.sk north~rly winds shifted direction to blow from the nortbeast. creating typical dry, Santa Ana condllions · a.ni:f increasing wind velocity below the coastal canyons. March, indeed, had blown in like a lion. The Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots today, as small craft warnings continued into the fifth day . With the diminishing winds tonight, inland portions of the count/ may expect near frbst temperatures with lows of 33 degrees. High .Court Bans Park ·Freeways WASHINGTON (API -The Supreme Court ruled unanimously today that federally fu.oded bighways may cut through public parks only in "the most unusual situations." The decision , the first interpreting re- cent environment legislation, .blocked construction of a sil:·lane interstate hiahar ln • I p&rk~tliMqM, ., Tenn.1 and dirlCW:d . a federal Cisttict OOW't fo '"'"Ill* Jn. tubalU!IB.lilqlitey.• of lhe government's liuthortzation of the project. Sepaking of Congress' intent in pauinc laws to protect the environment, Ju11tice Thurgood Marshall wrote : ''The few green havens tha t are public parks were not to be lost unless there were truly unusual factors prestnt in a particular e&§e or the COJ?t or ~.(JU'lllMlill'~diMtlRUQn resulting !rom al~ative routes reached extraordinary magnitudes ." "If the statutes are to have any mean- ing, the SPCretary cannot approve the destn1ction of parkland unless be find! that alternative routes present unique problems." The ~.-ion . was a stunning setback to the Tl'ansportation ~artmtnt, which had approved running Inttrstate 40 through Overton Park in the middle or Memphis and to the solicitor general's office, which aefended the Transportation Department's interpretation of federal law. Both the transportation law or 1966 and the high'*~Y act of 1968 prohibited the secretary of transportation to authorize use of federal funds to finance construction of highways through public parks if a "feasible and prudent" alternative route exist:!. Marshall said the legislation reflects ''the growing public concern about the quality of c._..-Oatural environment" and was ''designed to curb the accelerating destruction of our country's natural beau-ty .,, Overton Park is a 342-acre clly park that contains a zoo. a nine-hole golf course, an outdoor theater, nature trails, picnic areas ind 170 acres of rorut. A luau dinner will be served and a Hawaiian group, the Labaina Lunas, will entertain. Tahitian, Samoan and New Zealand dancers also will perform. The crusade, whic h assists 31 member agencies, fell .short of its goal this year,.. A total or '456.000 was coflected in Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Westmmster. Mldway·Oi· ty, Seal Beach and Sunset Beach - 8.1 percent of the target. Study of Oil Levy on T~p In Huntington Beach $120.000 was C<lt· lected, while Fountain Valley'& ·con- tribution was $30,000. Sacramento Flights Action Postponed Huntington Beach COJncilmen postpon- ed action Monday ni&hL on 1 call for the Public UUllties Commlu.ion tt authorize direct. fll&bts to Slcramente from Orange County Alrport. COt.tneflman Jerry Mat.nrrJ..euuttd thal tbe staff contact Ntwport Beach official1 to see whether lhtY ba•t any objection to an incttase hi n11hta from the airport. I • Hu~itington Fiscal Status Reason Beliind Action An· oi1 tax . will be studied 1galn In Huntington Beach. . . Councilman Nonna Gibbs called at Monday night's council meetint: for the staff to study a bar~! levy "to see if Ibis is not something that c0uld help the city in Its fiscal trlsil If thert r'eally ii a crisis." Told that the fiscal difficulties were real, &he added, "Thtn I can't see why we art tlr•ggin.a: our feet on IL But rather tb.tn be emotional about it. 1 Utink wt &hould have ~ in-depth study brought back for Che ne.11 council meeting." City Adml.nl!t.r1tor Doyle Miller, who "recommended a thre«ent pe:r barrel tax Jut 1pring as part of a package to finance civic improvtmentl, aftlnned that t.ht report WCMJld be ready at the nut· meetin1. · I Councilman Jerry Matney also asked for. the staff to give a projection of costs on the program for building the civic center, library, fire stations a n d city yard. The oil tax was the crux of a bitter battle last spring after it was recom- men~ed by Miller. It pitched the staff into cooOicl v.·ith the chamber of com- meret and the oil companies. 1be ataff lort. ' · When Miller made h i 1 rerom- mendation, be propcged a thrtt-oent per barrel ~ estimated to brif'la the city MS5,000 a year in revenue. Lat.er a tw<M::tnt per barrtl lefJ -that would reap $300.000 annually -Wu discussed, bul this also was rejected. -ln a complicated formula, the oouncll opted for ft ijve percent utility tAx. boosted the le\ry on apartmenta and mobile homes and dropped the $1.50 per month trash collection fet. This wu UJed ·to· help . pay for the new civic fa cilities ind to ll)eet redem~ Lion costs o::. $6 million in park..bonda. Finance D'uector Ben Arguello satd today he was more conctmed wtth the city's budget probfems oe:ll year rather than this ynr. "Jt looks like we art going to catch up on our expenditures thli yur, but next )'tar it looks as if the city's rivenue will orily equal the pi:Qent budget, pl~ normal salary increases. We may be able to hr"'...:ik even nert. yrar 1 but only If we hired no new emplo)'e.s and . do not eipaild ~our scrvlcta to meet tl)e popul1Uim Jocreise." · Prtl\millAl'JI nsures Oil l)>e t91J.7t budget will be elucHed in May. • • • • • !..,.. ' .. -· - UPI ltlt!lflttt S111olclng Tree Travelers in Cadillac, Mich., often do a doubie-take When the'y see the smoking tree of North Mitchell Street. Whal they don't see at first glance is the smokestack located be· hind the big fir. Missing Yacht With Six . Aboard Undamaged A cabin cruiser reported missing with six persons aboard between Catalina Island and Sunset Beach. was found safe Monday afternoon near Oceanside. The 26-foot cruiser Toad ti, skippered by John Ee.ken of El Monte, waa spotted at 12:45 p.m. by the USS Benicia, a 164-foot Navy patrol gunboat on a naval exercise. lt was 23 miles west of Oceanside. All 1ix per.sons on board the Toad II were reported in good condition and the cruiser was 1owed back to Long Beach Harbor by. the Benicia. A Coast Guard search was launched for the cruiser when It failed to arrive 1t· Sunset· Beach . at 3 p.m., Sunday, as scheduled. Reports from Catalina in· dltatf:d the Toad 11 wu having engine trouble. . Mn. Gayle Ecker1, wife of Die a.kipper, contaded the Coast GIW'd Sunday even· inJ. Sbe rtported her h111hand, Jotm; Frank Eck•n. 52; Grti 'F.cktr1. 18; Oennia · MOnigomtry, 20; Paul Wedde, 24, .arid a man named Cecil, about 50, as ml13ing. All were In &ood health when the .101d II was fOWM!. Three others , originady c'i the c:ruiser. had flown btck from Catalina because of the "'ilot trouble. The Coast Guard had ah 82-foot cutter, Point 'Hobard, ·and two· hthcopttra. ...,-chllli the 10-(oot '"""' Monday. T)1e Benicia was not on thl · search, but gpotltd lb• Toad II l~st: "' Conspiracy, Embezzling Asserted WASHINGTON (AP) -W. A. ''Tony" Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers. was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of co n- spiracy, embezzlement and making il· legal political contributions ol $49,250 from union funds. Included among recipients of the con- tributions was $30,000 to a dinntt for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and various otherS. Tw8 other United Mint. Worker officials .iamed -in the s a me indictment were Johll Owens, seaetary-treasurer, and James Kmetz. director of UMW'1 political arm, the Non-Partisan League. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said the lkount Indictment was returned in U.S. P istclct Court here. Boyle was charged in one count with. embezzling $5.000, in another with C<ln- 1piring to embezzle and to make illegal political C<lntributions totaling $49,ISO. 1nd 11 counts of actually making such. contr-ibutlons. The $5,000 was part of the $<9,2SO. Kmetz w11s charged with the same conspiracy and embeulement counts and tn two counts of making illegal political contributions . Owens was also charged In the con- spiracy count and on one count of making illegal political contribution. Named as unindicted co-conspirators are Suzanne Richards. Boyle'a executive assistant, and Robert Howe. former director of the Labor's Non-Partisan League. The indictment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Bo)'le, the 66-year-old, $55.000.a-year head of the UMW. joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute $49.250 of the union 's general treasury funds to political campaigns of various candidates seeking federal offices, a violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac- tices Act. The defendant! were using the non- partisan league as a means for the union to make contribution,, to the can- didates, according to the indictment. The indictment also charged that in order to conceal the nature of these con- tributions, Boyle and Owen11 authorized Kmetz and Howe to make illegal con- b'ibutions out of the league's funds. In add ition, the indictment said, checks written on the league's bank acC<lunt were drawn to "cash" in the amowit of the authorized contribution. Oruge Coat Weather Things get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, wilh the winds d)'ing do,.,11 and tempera- tures spurting back up to 65 along the coasl and 75 further inland. INSWE TODAY Goutrnor Reaoan'1 Commis· sion on Educational Reform in California. htl'Jdtd b11 Santo An.an Robert Hanson, .sers the Mtd for some changes ha lh• wav tot ntn our 1chool1. Page Ji. \ t 1. ~:.lll' _t'iltd " --:: -Y, f,'...reh 2, l '.,.L • . .. Mesa Girl Flees ~2f-~point Rapist . ' --.. ·~ abustd at gunpoint in a plush Salt. .. Lake City motel room, a missing ·~ Mesa sale a woman is safe today, aft.et eecaping to end .a 600-mile terror !f!P in her own hometown. ' Man Arrested 30 Minutes 1 After Holdup A SU!pttted bank bandit whose bright blue car, baggy yellow pants and Afro hairstyle didn't blend into the Orange CoWlty landscape was qui~kly captured after a $720 Costa Mesa stickup Monday. William A. Counter, 22, Los Angeles, \\'as arrested by Seal Beach police 30 minu tes after the noon hour holdup. He is said to fit the description of the man who robbed Crocker Citizens National BB.nk, 3390 S. Bristol St., escap- ing with the only other customer in hot pursuit. Investigators said they also found $727, a yellow bank message envelope and a slip of paper with : Holdup, scribbled on it, in Counter 's car. Seal Beach office rs Michael Vasquez and Robert Gayton said a countywide radio description of the suspect and ge taway car prompted them to notice Counter. He stop_ped his vehicle northbound on the San Diego Freeway and refu&ed to discuss the matter when placed under arrest. Bank teller Mrs. Betty A. Sandstrom said the bandit who robbed her wrote out a deposit slip and set it down at her window covered \Yith several dollar bills. She said he then slipped her the holdup note and asked for all the large bills, which included so-called bait money used in prosecution evidence. Just as he was leaving, however, customer Charles F: Schmitt realized a robbery was in progress and chased the suspect out the front door. Gasoline .Tanker T!l\Ck Explodes · On "Uighway 101 SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -A lanker truck loaded with about 10,000 gallvns of gasoline burst into names today and blocked the main highway betwee n Lo!' Angeles and San Francisco for four hours, the California High.,•:ay Patrol &aid. There were no injuries. The driver, Robert Ba11s, 43, of Compton . .fled from the tanker before the explosion Which occurred on the steep Cuesta Grade on U.S. High way 101 about four miles north or here, officers said. Patrolmen said flames shot hundreds <lf feet in the air lighting the count ry. side for miles as the tanker section burned to a ball of charred, molten meta l. Traffic backed up on both sides of the highway for more than two miles waiUng . for the blau to burn itself ouL Officers said firemen were afrai d to spray water on the blaze for fear the v.•ater would run down the steep grade carrying burn ing gas with it. Patrolmen said the fire was apparently started by sparks from a rubbing na:t lire on the truck. OIAM61 COAST DAllY PILOT Oll:AHOE COAST 'U"-1$H1NO COMl'AH'I' l.obttl N. w,,, Pr"ld .. t "" hb!W..r Jtck R. C11rr,., Vici l"rnidtttt ...... 0-.-•I MIMttf Tht1111t Ktevif f.dltlr. The1111t A. M11rpl.i111' MllMflnf lld!Jof A/111 Dltkl11 Her alleged kidnaper and rapist is now a prisoner too. Paul H. Anderson, 30, was captured In Green River , \Vyo., and booked lnlG Sweetwater County Jail pending in· terrogation by FBI agents and e~· tradition. He y,•as the object of an Orange County manhunt as the result cf a carbon copy kidnap case the day before, authorities revealed today. Anaheim police said Anderson had been sought sinCe Friday, when a 20-year-<lld woman was abducted, molested and finally released. The Costa Mesa cause, originating at 6: 15 p.m. Satiird ay, ended with the vlc· tim's escape. The 25-year-old woman v.·as last seen when she dropped off another Fa.shion Island department store employe at her apartment. Detective James Blaylock said the vie· tiro's roommate became concerned later when she was overdue. Checking the area Sunday. the room· mate found the victim's car locked in a market lot at 2701 Harbor Blvd., two bags or gr~ries spoiling inside. By this time, nearly 24 hours had elapsed and the frightened woman flag· ged down Patrolman Robert Johnson. Just about the same time. the victim telephoned from Salt Lake City to report she was safe . after being treated at a hospital and released to her parents. She said she was kidnaped from the Jot at gunpoin t. No address was listed for the suspect. but Costa Mesa pol ice had been alerted th at he might visit his former wife. Santa Ana-based FBI agent Charles Sullivan said today he couldn't predict how soo n Anderson would be returned to face charges. Detective Blaylock said the victim might remain in Salt Lake City until authorities were finished talking with her. · Authorities said Anderson was driving a 1971 maroon sport sedan listed as the suspect vehicle in the Anaheim rape and abduction Friday when apprehended in Wyoming. Sweetwater County Sheriff's de puties claimed he had four guns , ty,·o rifles and two handguns, in th e vehicle when captured. Costa Mesa Police Detective Ca pt. Robert Green said today the fact the victim escaped in her hometov.·n was purelY, coincidence. . ' Bedtson Resigns As City Attorney For Seal Beacli Seal Beach City Attorney Jim Bentson resigned Monday, He told city councilmen he was quitting his post to• de\1ote more time to his family and his private law practice. Bentson. 43, y,·as appointed eight months ago when a new council majority took over leadership in the city. Since that time. he has been the legal arm of the ne\Y council's stormy action' in firing City Manager Lee Risner and tutting down the River Front Redevelop- ment Agency. some angry cilizens who are trying lo recall part of the city council h a ,. (' also threatened to fire Bentson if they should win. He did not refer to those threats, hoy,·ever. in his resignalion. No replace· ment has been named for Bentson·s job. Valley School Panel To Hold First l\ieet The Fountain Valley School District's Superintenden t-Parent Council viii\ hold its first meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m .. 'Vednesday in room B of the city 's community cent.er, 10200 Slater Ave. District administrators will host an open session of questions. The district orchestra will provide music. • OAH, "f P11..0T Sllll l'h•i. MICHELLE O'BRIEN, DARRELL STILLWAGON, LYNN ALVAREZ (FROM LEFT) SIT IN AT CITY HALL High School Students S.y Litt le, Learn Mu ch During Day at Helm of Local Government Government Day Students Take Over City Local government in Huntington Beach got a facelift ~1onday. It \':as student government day. Olfi· cials with years of experience took a back seat as young people v.·ere allowed to hold the reins of the city. It \\!IS a practical lesson in democracy that seemed to impress the 27 students from htarina, Edison and Huntington Beach high schools who acted a§ the city's top elected and appointed officials. •·1 took a lot for granted before," Body Found; Believed To Be Humboldt Coed From Wire Se rvices EUREKA -A body beliewed to be !hat of missing coed Sharon Wilson was fow1d near Arcata today, but authorities in r\apa County reported no nev.• develop· ments in the mysteriou s disappearance of another college girl. ?\1iss \\''ilson , 20. a Humboldt State College student. disappeared last Thurs· da y. Ar cata authorities, \Yho gave neither details on the cause of death nor made positive identification, said only the body of a young woman \vas found near the ~tad River. Meanwhile, Napa County Sheriff Earl Randol said he had no information one '~ay or the other on whether the elusi\'e zodiac killer might be involved in the disappearance of the other coed, Lynda Christine Kanes, 20, a Pacific Union 'College• sopho more.' · Miss Wilson4 the dau.gh;_tr of lYlr, and Mrs. John L. \Vilson ·of etmcord, was last seen Thursday by her roommate. Laura Hink. \Yho said Miss \Vilson told her she v.·as going to cut a class. Miss Hink .!old Humboldt County sheriff's deputies that when Miss \Vilson missed a settlnd class that afternoon she thought nothing of it. Sheriff's detective Lt. Roy Simmons Autopsy Ordered In Queen Mar)' Figure's Death LONG BEACH (AP) -An autopsy v.·as ordered today in lhe death of retired Rear. Adm. John J. Fee, the man who was hired by the city or Long Beach lo direct conversion of !he ocean liner Queen Mary into a museum.convention center. said Miss Wilson's car was identified Saturday where it was found parked at a beach area near the Mad River estuary five miles north of here. The car v.•as operable. and t~e ke y v.·as in her coat Y.'hich had been left on the front seat along with her glasses. ln the vicinity of the car ~·ere found three lipsticks. her glasses case, and a $20 traveler's check she had not en- dorsed, he said. Blanpied Heads Library Board .Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied of the West Orange County .Municipal Court has been elected president of the Orange County Law Library board 0£ trus tees for the 1971 term. Serving under Judge Blanpied On the seven·member board will be : Superior Court judges William L. Mur~ay, William S. Let and Bryon K. McMillan, Count}' Supervisor William J. Phillips, Santa Ana Munici pal Court Judge Philip Schwab and Tustin attorney Frank f\lanzo. Judge ?-.lurray was elected lo what will be his sixth consecutive ternl as secretary. Judge Schwab, the outgoing president, will serve as chairman pro tern and t-.1anzo V.'ill represent the Orange County Bar Association on the new board. Tax Hikes Ite1nized SACRAi\IENTO (li Pl l California's counlies hiked property taxes by 31 percent last year. to $L65 billion . State Controller Houston J. Flournoy reported Monday. admitted acting ?\1ayor Darrell Stillwagon of t-.1arina lligh as he admired the gavel bel\veen city counci l sessions. "Noy,· l know a lot about how the city ~·orks. It's been quite an experience.'' Mayor Stillwagon and other student offici als ·were given tours of all city departments, including the police and fire stations and lifeguard headquarters. They were also shO\Yn the new park sites in the ci!y. Then Stillwagon and six other acting C'Ouncilmen sat next to th e city 's elected officials for both the 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. council sessions. Bety,·een sessions they ate chicken dinners y,•ith Ille council. They said little, but learned much. ''I understood most of it," said Lynn Alvarez, "but these meetings go kind of fast, don't. they?" The nieeting finished at 10 p.m., perhaps because there 'vere relatively fe\~· public hearings and perhaps be<:ause !11ayor Donald Shipley had urged lel101v council mep not to keep the students up too late;. "When you look around there is hope for the lov.·n." Mayor Shipley told the students. "\\fe have students with voting rights on the city's environmental council and V•e have appointed a 19--year-old lady (Golden West College studen t Patty Truesdell ) to the parks and recreation commission . This is the way ,,·e are going-to go." Student government day also showed marked gains for Women's Lib. Instea d ol one woman on the council. as is presently lhe case, there were three and both the police and fire chiefs 1\·ere girls. So were the city administrator and city clerk. In fact, the girls had about an equal share of everything with 13 of lhe 27 st udent leaders being female. In addition to Stillwagon, the counc il ll'as made up of Al".arez, Jimmie Payton, l\1ik(' Vanbor. Rosemary Castro, Kevin Haag and Michelle O'Brien. Joan \Va11is y,•as city administrator and l\furk Johnson he r ass istant. Linda \Verner was city clerk. Rogef -Purkey city attorney. and Mi ke Spence and Judy Lindsey shared the job of city treasurer. Other department heads 1,•:ere Garv l\ta!hiot. public Y.'orks director; Ren"e Orton, police chic/: Kim Huggins. fire chief : Vicki Call, harbors and beaches director: Mike Orta, finance director; Lars Danielson . building director: Terry Howlett, planning director; Erin Muellen· berg , Ecreation and parks director : Diane Enriquez, deve l o p men t coordina tor; Bill Payne, purchasing agent : Sh aron Akin. public information officer: Hoger \Vo jahn. \Yater superin· tendcnt; Dan Fuson. oil field superin- tendent, and Cathy Hirko, library diret· tor . Police Hold Suspect in Man's Death: . .. A Santa Ana man has been charged .,,,:•ith murder in the disappearance ol a disabled laborer whose body -if he is dead -may ne\'er be round. Samuel C. Tyler, 50, of 164-0 \ll. Myr!Je St., is expected to be arraigned Wed· ncsday in Central Orange County Judictel Dis trict Court . He already h&d been arrested, booked last Thursday on suspicion of soliciting to commit murder. but was re-in· terrogated just before arraignment on that charee }.1onday. Declining to explajn, the talk led tD a search with the· suspect along 15 miles of San Diego County coastline Monday afternoon for the body of his suspected victim. Charles A. Noble, 45, of 818 S. Townsend St.. was listed as a mWing person Feb. 17 \\"hen his mother filed a report with police. · Questioning of mutual acquaintances led police to center their investigation on Tyler. J Investigators theorize that Noble was shot to death in Santa Ana as a result of a mari1al triangle and bis body later dumped alongside the lonely shoreline. Since no corpse was found. detectives theorize high tldes could have washed it out to sea. Detectil'e Lt. Harrel Davis said the case has been a particularly unusual one and praised his homicide in. vestigators for piecing bits of evidence together. If no body is ever found, Tyler could still be convicted of murder based on circumstantia l evidence, as in the highly publicii.ed case of L. Ewing Scott 15 ~·ears ago. .. Fountain Valley Councilmen Set For Expe1iment Fountain \'alley City Councilmen will try a ne\\· experiment at tonight's & o'clock council session. They'll tack a study session on to lhe regular meeting. In the pas I, councilmen used time before the public session to revie w and study in depth ctrtain proposals. But many councilmen have fel l study session.s 'Should be more open and part of the regular council meeting . Tonight they y,·i)I study the city's agreement y,·ith Teen Help, a youth counseling service. and they'll talk about community center expansion. The city has agreed to provide Jand for a Teen Help office. but the youth group has run into trouble finding an office building. The community center expansion has been delayed because of controversy over \Yhether it should be a civic auditorium or a multi·purQgse tiajl . No action is scheduled on either item. but \l'i th both on the regular council agenda instead of in study session. action can be taken . Yoga Less ons Slated In Fountain Valley The llindu mystic of yoga \\'iii seek a place in Fountain Valley. starting Thursday \vith 1,1·eekly yoga lessons. Renee Ta ylor, y,·riter. lecturer and traveler, of Redondo Beach. v.'ill teach the class at II a.m. in room B ot the community center. 10200 Slater Ave. Police tentatively listed Fee's death as suicide. The y .said he probably died of carbon monoxide p:>isoning after his body was found in his garage near his au tomobile. The car's engine had been running. Fee. 57. quit the Navy in 1967 to head the Queen Mary project. The liner made her last voyage last Saturday, n1oving ·to a permanent moo ring at 1 Long Beach harbor pier, PRUDENT BUYING His wife Marge found the body, police said. Fee. a Naval Academy honor grad uate, was awarded the broni:e star in \Vorld War 11 and later was com· manding officer of Naval shipyards at Pearl Harbor and Long Beach. Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes qu ite evident -that when money is less plentiful, people buy better quality. w•t Ot•• C-ty f:dllOI' Alb.it W. 11••• AMOtltlf ldlll:lt Irvine Firn1, Santa Ana Th is is contrary to popular belief, but makes good unse if you th ink ab o u I ii . When you have to concern yours elf with val u.e and performance , you are likely lo buy better quality. H19tl11tf'H a..• Offk• 111 75 l11ch lo11l•v1t1ll M1lll119 Ad4 reiu P'.O. 1011 790, t1•~1 o ..... Offtu& l.......,. • .. tt11 m ll0t1t1 ..,_ (Olli Miii: DI W•I .. 'f $!rwt NtwPOr1 IJ•C't'll »lJ M....-pon Bow: ... 1n1 Stn Cl-It: JOS NorTll El C.111nl"" 111.•I ,..., ..... ,,,., 142-4111 Cl...an.4 At1....ml.t't '42·1671 • Clear Way for Suit Trial The Jrvine Company and city of Sant.;i Ana have cleared the Y.'BY for trial ()f the lawsuit that challenges the ir eight· year-<lld agreement on the disposition of 938 acres of prime industrial property in the Red HUI Avenue·Marine Corps Air Facility area. Both parties ha\'t filed denials of arguments by the city' of Tustin that the agreement of ~1ay, 1963, is invalld in the lght of Loc11l Agency Formation COrnmlsslOn <LAFC) aclioo which puts the sector wilhin the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine. Action by Orange County Superior Court Judje Robert Banyard on the ._,last or a series of pretrial maneuvers by both parties to the lawsuit nOw means lhal the issue can be settled ln a trinl court, Santa Ana City Attorney \\'llllam Mock s1id today. ''Tuslin filed it~ suit against us last Augusl and claimed at that time that our annexation rights \\'ere prejudiced because of agreements made with the Irvine Company." ?\lock said. That agreement was designed to allow Sa~ta Ana to take over the disputed acreage in May of this year. It was drawn up. ?i.fock said, long before the creation of a city o[ Irvine was ever con sidered. LAF C action \Yhich presently places the area sought by Santa Ana and} Tustin within the city of Irvine boundarfes will have to be ~onsidered by the Superior Court judge v.·ho rules on the lawsuit~ Mock said. "Our llgrecment is still i~ fott_~ Mock said. "All v;e have done is dl"ny the basis of the Tustin lt\\'SUit and ask the court to rule on the validity of our understanding with the Jrvltle Company." , Al Alden's in the lest three years , our per unit sale ho s been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact, Consequently, we hove life I e r g e.s t selection of fine,r qualities you will see anywhere, ell at competitive prices. Tile end result is customer satisfaction, pride, and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business. • ALDEN'S SANTA AN.t. ORANOI TUSTIN Cell •. , ALDI.N'S RID HILL CARPITI & DRAPERllS \1374 lr'llln•, T1,1rtl", Cet. ... 4144 • C"RPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave, COSTA MESA 646-4838 l \ • TutstiaJ, Mal'tf'I !, 1971 H OAILY PILOT :J Hulse Guilty, May Face Viejo Murdei-T~iaJ By TOii BARLEY 01 n.. 0.111 "It.I Sllff ~ 1 Hatchet killer Arthur Craig "Moose'' dlu!Se was found guilty late Monday •of first degree murder in the sJaying of Santa Ana service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. .. Hulse may now yet have to stand -trial in the mutilation slaying Of Mission , Viejo schoolteacher Florence Nancy Brown. , ln the Carlin murder. it took the ·orange County Superior Court jury less •than six hours to decide that Hulse. ,. burly 17-year-old, used an ue· last ·.Coastal Fis h ',Record High ,. DDT Levels Samples of bonito and jack mackerel caught recently off the Southern Califor- aia coast have been found to contain DD'I" levels .significantly over federal safety limits. Food and Drug Administration officials reported Monday that three of 12 bonito ' and three: or IO jack mackerel exceeded ·the limit of five parts DDT per million parts of fish . The samples were taken 'Primarily within 20 miles ot San Pedro ·although some came from as far north as Morro Bay and as far south as San Diego. "\Vith 30 perce11t of the jack mackerel ' and 25 percent of the bonito samples over the limit, we are concerned that our find· •ings may indicate a trend." Fred Shallit said. He is supervisory inspector for I.he · FDA's Los Angeles district. He said more testing would be done be- . fore conclusions 011 DIYJ' content of bonito .and jack -mackerel populations would be made. Nearly all the bonito and jack mack· erel caught commercially in the U.S. come from waters off Southern California. The recent samples showed bonito reg. lstering over the DDT safety limit with counts of 13.8. ti.I and 5.1 parts per mil· lion. The remai11der of samples taken ranged from .3 ppm to 4.9 ppm. Jack mackerel showed concentrations or 11.0. 10.3 and 6.5 parts per million, while specimens below the federal stand· ard ranged from .4 to 3 ppm. O!her fish samples revealing insignifi· cant amounts of DDT included smelt, an· chovy, pompano, sa rdine. grunion, alba· core. squid, oysters and sculpin. The sin· ple abalone tested had no DDT content. Sh;ilJit said . The samples tested for DIYT' were fresh , Shallit said. Canned bo11ito would have a Jcr;ver DDT content than fre5h fish , be· cause the oils in which DDT lodges are squeezed out and replaced with mote palatable vegetable oils in the canning process. Since 1969, the FDA has forbidden !ale m canned jack mackerel with a DDT co11· tent over five parts per million. District to Ask . Ne__w B_us Routes In Orange County f\.tembers of the ne1v Orange County Transit District board took their first po!!ilive step "'1onday. They voted to as_k the Southern California Rapid Transit District about the possibility of extend· init bus routes in Orange County. Board members (three of five \\•ere present ) also discussed finances . The district is empoy,·ered to levy a five-cenl tax ri\te beginning next July I. but ha!I nfll vet decided \\'hether to assess all 1 of it· or part of it. The board agreed to study the possi· bility of forming a technical advisory committee to check on the necessity of a rapid transit study. Cypress Mayor John Kane! suggested & committee of county department heads plus advisors from private industry. l\.iembers of the board are Kane!, WeSlminster Mayor Derek McWhinney, Richard D. Lynn, Corona de! Mar at· toriney and county Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers. For A el s T ry Paper Refuses Clay Title MANCHESTER. N.H. /UPI) -The ?tlanchestcr Union·Leader h;is refused to publish any advertising for closed· circuit telecasts or the heavyweight championship fight between Cassius Clay and Joe Frazifr. William Loeb. the paper's publisher, said Monday he v.·ould in no way lend 5upport to those ''who propose to line the pockets of this drafl dod&er" - a referen ce to Clay. who was stripped of"b.is title for refusing miliiary induct.ion. CONNERY BACK AS JAMES BOND LONDON (UP IJ -Act or Sean Connery will return to the screen as James Bond in "Diamonds are Forever." a..:- cording to an an:wuncement today by "United Artists Corp .. which will release the film . David V. Picker. president or the film company, said Connery had signed for the super-agent 007 role and that filming v.·ould begin in April. It will be Connery'!'! 11IJ1:th film 8~ Bond . the character crea~ed by the late Ian Fleming in a series of adventure novels. Junt 1 to hack lo death young Carlin in the restroom of his Santa Ana service station. Hulse. 16 at the time of the· murder, ~iVed the yerdicl with· the apathy that nasi · mkrked his d e me a n o r throughout the two week trial. Judge Ronald Crookshank scheduled March 26 for imposition of a sentence that could mean a life term in state prison (or Hulse. The youth's age rules out 1he death sentence. Th~ veteran jurist will rule that same da,y on a further plea by Hulse that be i1 _iqnocent by reason of insanily. Judgt Crookshank's ruling will also Oops, Sorry determine the prosecution's further IC· lion on additional charges filed agairuit Hulse in connection with the killing la.st June 2 of Mrs. Brown. Tbe Garden Grove youth is charged with betng an acceuory to the murder -0f Mrs: Brown, 31, of El Toro. Steven · Craig Hurd. 20, Hulse's alleged com- panion in the carlin killing, is accused of both murders and goes on trial March 22. The jury quickly rejected Mo!Xiay argument! by defense attorneys Robert Green and Michael Gerbosi that Hu1se's use of drugs and drink and ~the bead / President Nixon. in a\varding Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell ~he NASA Distinguished Service Medal (top photo), appears to be asking "how did that happen'?" after dropping the medal. Bel.ow, astronaut Alan Shepard jokes with the President about the incident. Apparent Love Triangle Ends in SA Man's Death An apparent love triangle ended in death for a Santa Ana man Monday in the Riverside County community of ~1eadowbrook near Elsinore. James W. Nash. 40, of 1601 W. Flura St.. Santa Ana, 1969 chairman of ttle Orange County Young Republicans. died of gunshot wounds to the head and chest, according to Riverside County. .. Coroner Dennis Ely. Nash·s full y clothed bod y. and lh:tl of Mrs. Betty Ann Hunt, 39. v.·as found on the front lawn of ,._trs. Hunfs former hotne about 1:30 p.m. Monday. Near the bodies Jay Cecil ilunt rritically injured with apparent self-in· flicted gunshot v.·ounds, Capt. Russell G. Hav.·k of the Elsinore sheriff's station said. Hunt remained in critical condition today at Riverside General Hospital, Lockheed Chief Flies to London For Rolls Talks LONOON (AP) -The chairman (I( 1..ockheed Aircraft Corp. flew into London todav for talks I.hat mean life or death for ·the RB211 jet engine that forc~d Rolls-Royce. the prestige aeroengine giant, into receivership. "I"m still hopeful that something can be done," Chairman Daniel Haughton told nev.•smen al Heathrow airport. "My talks will begin almost im· mediately, OUr airline clienl" are hoping that something can be resolved very shorUy. There ia no actual crunch date ," he Mid. . Haughton and orJicials both from Rolls· Royce and the British government were expecred to hold a meetfng ""Friday to ·begin the complicated negotiations over the falt of the RB-211. Haughton told reporters the R82I~ situation was "not much different one way or another." Rolls-Royce contracted to build the RB211 to power Lockheed's TriSLar airbus on a fixed fee basis. - Using a .22 caliber rine, Hunt Is believ- ed to have shot Nash three times and his v.·lfe four times before putting the gun lo his own head, Hawk said. The Hunts were separated and in the process of getting a divorce. The coroner's office said Nash end t\-1rs. Hunt had beCJl seeing each other for about four week s , according to reports from neighbors , indicating the motive for the double slaying was a "triangle affair." Nash, an insurancr. claim.~ investigator, was the father of four ch ildren. Last year, he was Orange County chairman for Stale Senator John L. Harmer's campaign for state attorney gene ral. Nash, a retired Marine Captain, also assisted in the campaigns of Rep. Robert H. Burke, (R·Huntington Beach), William Teague, Republican candidate for Congress and David Brandl, .l?fi9 candidate for the Santa Ana Unified School District. Poisoning Peril From California P ottery Bared PHILADELPlllA I UPI) -The City llealth Depar!ment. warned loday there may be a threat of lead poisoning from the use of certain "California Tempo'' ceramic dinnerware. Dr. Norman R. Ingraham, health com- missioner, said tests shov.·ed an 18-month· old area child died from lead poisoning and that the "probable source" was a ceramic pitcher which had been used to store the child's grape juice. tngtaham said the lead poisoning warn-· ing applied to .. California Tempo" blue, terra-cotta and olive pattern ceramic dinnerware in the "Poppytrail '' line manufactured by !\-1etlox Potteries of Manhattan Beach, Calif. The health commissioner urged anyone v.·ho has dishes in the th r e e colors to stop using them immediately and to return them to the store from whlclr S l d D l ? they v.·cre bought. ~ earc l all es roy • He said tests showed tlial the foods EVORA. Portugal (UPll -The town with high acid content, such as fruit council Monday ordered all stray dogs juices. tomatoes and vinegar, can draw and cats to be caught and destroyed lead from the glaze on the dinnerware. because. they said. the allimals ftlled ~He said some of the dinnerware Items the ~!reels and had become a general "exceed the seven parts per million nui~ance . A team cf expert dog and n1aximum ltad release'' standard set c11t catcher~ spent the day searchin~ by the U.S. 1'"'ood and Drug for tile enemy. By nightfall they had Administration and the U.S. Pottery not found one. ... A~iation. · I inJurles 1ufrered some years aco in a fill «>!llribuled to tht Carlin kllllng. 'Ibey were urged to do ,. by Dtputy District Attorney Martin J. Henec;han in _,_a ,.final arg~mtnt that., asl(td the panel to recognize that the murder of the . 21·year--old attendant was planned, ~itated and merciless. FoUr psychiatrists testified durlng the Hulse trial that the youth was sane at the time of the killing and knew what he was doing when be used the hatchet on Carlin. Codefendanl Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, was . a key prosecution witness in Traffi c Cut the Hulse trial. He testified with the promise that he will be allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges. Taylor told the court that it was decld· ed by Hurd and HuJse long before the event that the attendant should be killed when the gas station v.•as robbed. Taylor v.111 be used by the prosecuUon in the Hurd trial. Hurd, accused by lawmen as the leader ol the gang of drifters who they allege butchered MrP. Brown in a "devil cult" murder that featured satan worshiping rites he her killers, has been declared to be sane and able to face Lrlal. 'S. Viet Attack Thwarting ~eds SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. mintary sources said today 1be South Vietnamese drive into Laos bad frustrated Communist plans for a dry season offensive and that U.S. air raids had cut truck traffic on the Ho Chi f\1inh trail by half. U.S. helicopters new more South Vietnamese into Laos today . Vieotiane dispatches said Laotian regular forces had opened a major of· fensive in northern Laos and that be\vy fighting was reported at Non6 Het. a village on route 7 seven miles west of the border of North Vietnam and a major Communist supply route. The reports said U.S.-C130 transports and 40 helicopters were flying rein· forcements of CIA-trained irregulars and regular Thai troops into the north~est headquarters town of Long Chen lo back the new offensive. Spokesmen in Saigon said a 656-man South Vietnamese battalion was fl ow n in today by a neet of American UHi (Huey) helicopters to an area southwest of route 9, the road that is the axis of the South Vietnamese drive across the Ho Chi ~1inh Trail. The reinforcements were the f i r s t marines to go across the border in the drive by 16,000 infantry, paratroop and Ranger forces . f\1ilitary sources said all of South Vietnam 's three marine brigades -from 10,000 lo 13,500 men ,., ., (. l; ' • '~~."'<. > f., I 2-1 .. C«tifiato -witll fllllllJlllM $5,DOO 8'i. 111u. A111111l 7ield I.J I% -had been moved up to staging areas inside South Vietnam and held in reserve. Jn a day of major developments : -Communist troops in Cambodia today destroyed 80 percent of the nation 's only oil refinery al the port of Kompong So1n, 120 miles southwest of Phnom Penh, and temporarily closed the airport ther e, Direct rocket hits blew up four of the six storage tanks there and caused explosions that did other heavy damage. -The U.S. command said at least 15 American fighter-bombers attacked North Vietnamese missile and an· tiaircraft sit.es 13 miles east of the border with Laos and 17 miles north of the demilitarized zone. lt was the J6lh "protective reaction" strike this year against missile sites firing on U.S. planes bombing the Ho Chi Minh trail. -Field reports said 852 bombers today bombed Communist forces around the South Vietnamese Isl division fire sup- Port base at lfong lla II, also known as hotel 2, 10 miles south of highway 9. UPI front dispatches reported Monday the base had been abandoned, Its loss v.·as announcetkifficially today. -South Vietnamese spokesnien disclos- ed that a tribe of about 900 Laotians was found ln the heart of the battle area in Laos -the first civilians to be reported in the area. l ·llonl~ Certific•lt Ac· c011nts wiffl minimum SSOO h l•"'t. Ann111I Jitld 5.39% ' I WI LL NOT FACE DEATH Convicted Murderer HulM ' Thurmond Clarke Ri tes Wednesday In Pasadena Funeral services f-Or retired U.S. District Court Judge Thurmond Clarke will be held at 11 aim. Wednf9day in -All Saints Epfscopal-Church-; ""1.3f""""N. Euclid Ave., Pasadena. Judge Clarke, a longtime resident of Corona del Mar died Sunday in Los Angeles' Good Samaritan Hospital. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Athalie Richardson Irvine Clarke; of 4833 Brighton Road ; a daughter Mrs. Frances Clarke Ray of Rochester, N.Y.; his step- daughter, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith of Middleburg, Va., two sisters and seven grandchildren. The family has suggested that con- tributions may be made to Good · Samaritan Medical Center, 1212 Shatto Place, Los Angeles. Whatever yqur Jons-ranie &ottllS-=-6 new a.r, oollege rent annual rate on Passbook accounts is 53, com- for the ltidt, an liddition to your house, or that long1 '•poUnded daily with: interest paid day in to da.y out. deserved Europeaniour-you'll reach them faster at Annual yield 5.133 . - · Union Federal Saving•. So if your present sn.vings aren't ata.ctinr up with your dreams for the future, now's the time to ret To meet the apecial needs of your family, we offer a smart-and start building the Union Federal wa;y. wide variety ol aavings plans, And we always pay tha No matter where you are now-or how hi•h you wish highest interest po6Sible, plus every savings benefit, to go-you'll get the good life faster at Uruon Federal including insurance o{ accounts to $20,000. Our cur· Savings. UNION F~NQ~AR~11 SAVINGS 9 11 Orange County Regiona1 Oftice1: Pounla.in Valley O Seal Beach Fountain Valley, 17400 Brookb~t 81.reet, Phonf (714) 962·1378 "<r" .. Seal Beach, Roumoor Shoppinr Center, 12601 Seal Beach BouleYard. Phone 431·3528 Regional Offieet: Lonr Beach-Bitby Knoll1 O Gardena O Malibu ~fain Office: 42$ South Sprinr Street. Lot An1elN • I • ' f DAILV PILOT WleJu ... l Pollution In Hot Air By DJCI( WPT WASl{JNGTON -What gurely must ~ tlle meat dismaying ntws 6! the year thu1 far was the recent' report that the number of 1pHches delivered ea ch week In New York City has almost doubled In the past decade. A,ctbrding to eslimaies publish!d in the Wall Street Journal. the weekly average ii now about J 1.000 spetches, ctimpared to a mere 6.000 addresses JO yearr; aco. current projections indiCate that by 1980 the figure will nearly double again. ri!aching a rate Of 20,000 spe~hes ~r V.'ttk. Although slati!tics ror ~ n1tion as a whole were not given. there is no reason to auppose they v.·ould be any lw conJlernating. Such evidence as is avaUablt suggesta that the entire country Is experiencing an oratorical explosion. NEWS OF THE big upsurge In lectern loquacity hit like a thunderbolt at the national offices or tht PlaMed Pl!rer1tion Soc:\l!ty. a ~ivate organization dtdlc1ted to bomb1st control. Franklin Spieleutt, director or the society, told me hi$ aroup bld been ' The \ ILI1 <li1 Illl'II'IE/lR ' \ Side --~-·''i under the imp.rl!ssion th.It platform volubil~ WIS ll!veling off and pe:rh1ps even declining slightly. "This blows our whole anti~locuUon pro1r1m right out or the water," he 11jd. "We hid been relying primarily on educational campaigns to rally public C1J1po1ifton to rostrum g1rruUty. "Obviously, however, that approach Lsn't wcrking and stronaer ac~jon is 11etded." 1 said. "what do you regard 11 the main harm resu1ting from rampant apetchifylng!" "AT PRESE NT. ecologists do~'t know for sure just what impact all of this hot 1ir is having on the environment.·• Spitleutt admitted. "Ofle Jong ra-nge ef. feet may be the melting: o! the poll! · icec1p. "There. i& no doubt, however, that e.xpogure to too many speeches adverJt.IY affects the human body, c1usinc. amonc other thlnii::. acute exasperation." I &1id. "what bomb1st c o n tr o 1 meuures ill the planned peroration socie- ty prl!pared to r!COmmend !" Tuuday, Mare'-!, lt»l Army Says File I\.ept On Senator WASHINGTON WPIJ -The Defense Dtpartment 1cknowledged today that lt had kept a file on Adlai Stevtnson liI Md other wcll·known public figures in a widespread effort to cope with civil disturba'!ce.s. But it sai d the pr•ctlce had been ordered stopped. Robl!rt F. Froehlke. an assistan~ defense secretary, testified : "There was a file bearing the name of Sen. Adlai Stevenson III in the fitld office of the Army's investigalive and coun ter intellia:ence. unit in Chic1go and that this file consisted wholly or prim1ti· ly of newspaper clippings." He said there were "undoubtedly files prepared containing material relating to a 11rge 11wnber of well-known public Ugures.'' frothlke told the Senate Constitutional Rights Subcommittee tQat tbe file.s had been destroyed. The Defense Department issued 1 new directive effective Mon.day prohibitin& .. physical or electronic gurveillance of federal. state or ICK:al of!icia1s, or of candidates for &uch office&," Frechlke !ilid. He saJd the new directive would pro- hibit use of covert &urveill1nce of persons or organiz:atjotts without 1 p e c I f I c authorization of the Defense Secretary or bi& deslgntt. Froehlke nonethelei;s said military 1urveil11nce 1ctivitits. aimed al coping with civil violence that might require Army troeps to supprts1, woul d be con- tinued. The implication was that milit1ry in· tell.igence would not refrain from wat- china civilians in such instances if tbey felt it l:lteessary. To protect persons ind property in an area of civll disturbance. with the greatest tff~tiveness, "military com· manders must · know 111 tQat can be learned about th1t area and its in· habitants." FTGthlke gild. He said military snooping on a br oad scale was nece.s&ary during ~ the late 1960s "because civilian 1gencies - federal. state and local ba d demonstrated a lack: of capability to provide the quantity and types or in- formation believed to be necessary ef· fectively to cope in a timely fashion with the emergency llll!n prevailing . Froehlke appeared in the wake of testimony last week by 5eve.r1l former undtreover men for the Army that agenUI infiltrated, photographed and followed thougands ef civilians, &torinl the in· fermatien in dossiers and ccmputerized files. Egypt Expecting Action by U.S. In Middle East By Ullited Press Ialtr111tloa1l The semiofficial C1iro newspaper Al Ahram nid today Egypt expects the United Stat.es to make the next move in the P.fiddle East diplomatic m1neuver· ing now that Isr1el has refused to withdraw from Arab lands seized in tbe. 1967 war. Israel pr1 iged Secretary of Stile William P. Rogers' ~ppeal to the Soviets to avoid propagandizing in the quest for peace in the 1'-1iddle East. LEVELS FIERY BLAST Bog1rt Mat• 8 1call Airline UPI T•..,...... PAN AM AD SUBJ ECT Humphrey Bot1rt Bogart Photo Shakes Up Recall l\'EW YOltK (UPtl -Lauren Bacall w1S an1ry. There was the picture of htr !ale husband, Humphrey Bo1art, staring out of a macuine advertlse, ment plugging an airline route to Casablanca. ''How dare tbey do ii," Miss Bacall said. "It's the wOrsl sort of Uivaslon of privacy." Faced with !\liss Bacall's wrath . the airline, Pan American Airway&, said !\londay it will stop using the ad out of courtesy to the famous actress. A spokesman for the airline said a letter was on its way to MW Bacall telling her of the decision. The advertiseml!nt displayed a photograph of Bogart and the famous line "Play it again, Sam," which was aUtlbuted -fo the movie •·cau.blanca" although never actually spoken in the well·known Bo1art film. "Bogart didn 't do this sort of advertising when he. was alive, so why &hould they be able to make him do it when he is dead?" Miss Recall u.id. The Pan Am spokesman said the company decided to drap the ·ad-after !\tiss Bacall, currently starring in the Broadway muslc1l "Applauu," tele- phoned Pan Am'a advertising 1cency, J. Walter Thompson, &nd. threatened a l!\\'!iult. Gunfire Sprays Crowd In Pakistan Protests DACCA, Pakistan (UPI) -At least one J>l!rson was killed and &even wounded today \\'hen Pakistani security forces opened fire on a mob blocking the hi.Jhway near Dacca Airport, three miles ouU!ide of town. It was the first death In a wave of protests across Eut Pakistaii today following the. government'a decision to postpone the constitution1J assembly and replace civilian provinci1l governors with martial Jaw administrators. Thousands of angry citiiens and students roamed Dacca today, &toning English and Urdu langua1e signs, looting gtores and burning cars. Transportation and business were at a standstill in a sporitan~ strike. Security forces opened fire on the mob near the airport when it refuJtd lo let police and troops through . This evenin&. a mile-long procession of demonstrators, mostly mill workers c1rrying iron bars and bamboo rods. headed out of the industrial seetion of the ci ty toward the business cente.r. The constitutional assembly hid been gcheduled for Wednesday. to draw up a new constitution with which to return Pakistan to parliamentary rule lfter 12 year& of martial law. law administratnrs , and imposed pre~ curbs in an effort to damp down the ill feeling bttwecn the two wings o[ the country. lt1stde lob"! • .. ' Dynamite Hinted: ' . In Capitol Bo.mh ~ WASHI NGTON (UPI) -An Army firs t impression," Joyner uid. 1 bomb expert testified today "we re.ally One rl!port u.!d eve n a j1nitor wht do not know yet" whit kind of explosive regul arly worked ln that area did nOt WIS used-in the-bombing-at-th1--U.S.______know that lhere was a false will h• Capitol Monday but spl!culated that it the washroom of the type. mentioned could have been 1 15 to 20 pound by Joyner. dynamite charge. Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Callf.), wanted Capt. Edwin Joyne.r or !he fl7th lo .know how ~any bombing Urr~1ts ordnance battalion at ft. f\.lcNair, which against the Capitol ha~ been r.ece1vtd was called in quickly to help Investigate in lhe past. Pow.ell Sa'ld the six s~ch the blast early Monday that wrecked thrl!ats w~re received Monday f0Uow1ng an area of about six offices in the th~. bombtng. . , Senate wing. spoke al the opening of ~ow can you provide ad~quate secur1· a congressional inquiry. ty without makinc the Capitol an armtd . camp?" Tunney asked. Asked about the ki~ o.f .~mb that "We caMot guarantee a bombing will was u.sed, Joyne r teshhed . Yf~ really nQ\ ha ppen. But we could restrict accl!Ss do not . know. B~l w~ do have a to certain areas -some of the hypothesis .. We bl!hev~ it was a clock-catacombs and to maiiy of the corners related device. Very li.ke\y It co~d have and crevices where it's t>05slble to hide be.en dynamitl!. Assum.mg it wu, 1t coUld explosives,'' Powell replied. have bel!n 15 or 20 pounds. Rtsponding to questions hy,.Sen. Mike Gr avel ([)..Alaska), chairman of a Senile PubJic Works subc:Gmmittee invesligatini; the '300,000 blast, Joyner 11id that much dynamite "would be very easy to bring into the Capitol." "It could have been briefc1se &izt.'1 Joyner said. "It would have been .,.ery easy for a man to walk into the building Sunday aftl!rnoon, and place a bril!fcase and walk out." Thi! bomb was placed in a small, unmarked men's lavatory on the ground Uoor of the original part of the Capitol, about 60 feet from an area dirl!ctly benl!ath the well of the Great Rotunda . The room w1s used so seldom that Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and many Capitol police did not know it existed. That led to speculation that the bomb· Ing m I i ht have been an inside job, or at least that the bomb was planted by &omeone thoroughly famil iar with that a.rea of the building. "The bomber knew what he was doin1." Mansfield said. "He loeked over the pJace. He knew the hours the Capitol WI S open." The FBI ·has control over the ln· vestigation. The Capitol's police chler. James W. Powell. &aid "several leads'' had been developed but the FBI dis· counted_ gome. reports that afficeis . ace investigating a specific area or in· dividuals. At !he Senate hearing, Joyner said he believed the bomb was placed behind a marble watt in the washroom. "We can 't be sure but that is our Two Women Strangled In Boston BOSTON (UPI) -Two nude, stran&led women. one with the cord from an iron still. around her neck, Wl!re found Monday night in a first-noar apartmenL An autopsy was scheduled for today on the bodies of Mrs. Thl!resa French, 29, and an unidl!nlified woman believed to be her roommate. Their bodies were found on the living room floor of Mrs. French's apartment. Polle!! arrived al the scene about 7 p.m. after a cruiser from the nearby Jamaica Plain Police. Station was hailed by an unidentilied woman, accordinc to authorities. l\.1rs. French, had lived in the twC>-&tory clapboard apartment for four years. The Other woman, described as being in btr late 20s or ear!v 30s was believed tt> ha'Ve-lived-there 'less than a year. Neighbors said both wl!re friendly and quitl. "There's no evidence o[ a struggle," an officer ~aid, "no evidence of anything ransacked." .41 .• . "Y.'e intend to throw our support be.hind the controve.r1i1l project to develop 1 contraverbosity pill," Spie\cutt replied. "Research thus far indicates a breakthrouch may be near on a pill th1t suppresses grandiloquence f o r period• of up to 24 hours if taken recutar· ly. "ln •preliminary tests, the pill even worked on U.S. senatorg and women's lib leaders. "If these contraverbo&ity devices fa il to halt the rising speech rate. we'll have to a&k President Nixon to try Al Ahram said Egyptian Foreign '!\finlster Mahmoud Rlad a&ked Monday ·what the U.S. position is going to be now that Israel has announced its in· tention not to pull back to the pre· 1967 war borders. Riad rnlide the request to Donald Bergus. the diplomat who represents American lntertsts la Cairo. Bereus replied only that the United States will keep strivinc for a pe.1ce setUement in the. Middle Ea.st. The iiuistence of Sheikh Mujibur Rehman . leader of the East Paldst1n Aw1mi League. to fo rce through a con- sti tution providing for virtual autonomy for East and Vi'est Pakistan spurred a boycott by West Pakistan political leaders. Pre!!ident Yahya Khan Monday pt'lstponl!d the assembly until the two sides can work out acctptable ground rules. 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T•tYlll w1r11!flt1 11111 w1r1 1" ttlKI 111,.1111o fl\IOlfl!t ln 1n4 dtt111 t rtll el S11Ull'ol•11 (fllloffllf, ~I "' I l lfll ltftl N•~lll -blewlftl 11'111 t rld llo\t "" o"t •n19M ltfl/I •:wit~ Ire<"\ '"-111c1nc lrt<1rl1••11•. tft,.,,,,,fft '"' In. "'"'' "•II••• el t 1l•lorn11 1nd 1011lll· HI! .... II IMI At!l~ftl. Temperat•re• l'f UNtTIO PI SIJ IMTllNATIONAL ftft'IHttl\"l i I nd 1rttl1Ut!lt11 tor 1111 u ........ •••IOI! l ftdi"' ,, ' ..... Al1t1n~ ""'"'' Btlltn 11.111111 C1t lc1-' C'"''~"-'11 Cltvt11nd 0&1111 0!11•1• DH Mt""" o.tr!llt iollllfll l'ltnlllulu 1"'1111"41~\I IC1~1~ Cltv L4' V .. 11 LOI Anttltl Leu11vm1 Mtmflllt1 Mltml M+lw1u".- M1nntlHh1 ~ ..... O<IH~I NPW'l'wn Cl':lt"'6!!oll City ..... ~ P1!111 '"""'' l1t1l•ll"l•ll•1 Pl!Ct lll• .,,,, ~" Portl11'1d. O•t 110"' C!IY .. ,. ••c••"'"'"' )I, Lev!l Sill L•k• C!'V 1•11 Ol•1te jt n F•111tll(~ !f•"lf $~·ft· Vt~cevv•r • NII~ u.. Pree. ., u If n I.II 0 11 31 ?O . " ,, j\ .0, 3• '3 " . " " .. " i l ,, ,. 0) ·" I' M '' ,1 ,, '1 .01 n " ~ . ~ " ,, .. 11 1J . " }) GI ~ " M I' •S JI )0 11 Gf .. . " " . " . " n • 11 IS GJ ..., u .. .. " " " " " " ,, ., 0 )I 11 :s 10 M " Most of our loans are made within a fi fty-mile radius of Laguna Federal offices. If you need money to build, buy, or refinance a home for your family, call or visit Laguna Federal -the associ ation famous for REDUCING-RATE HOME LOANS. 8 Monard! Bay Plaza Laruna NirueI 499·1840 496-1201 AND LOAN AS SOCIATI ON 260 Ocean 4venue L&runa B.ach, Cali!ornia 494-7541 601 North El Camino Real San Clement. 492-1195 I • I· ! • . . . . ' . .. ..... - " - • • Fountai11 , Valley N.Y. Stoeks VO L. 6'4, NO. 52, l SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1971 JEN CENTS Joint Meeting Called for Airparl{ Proposal Tbf. Huntington Beach City CoUncil will hear a presentation by t.he planning staff on the proposal for a $3 million mu'ni,cipal airpark. The councilmen Monday night schedut. erj a study session with the planning colnmission and the city's airport com· 11\Jltee for 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 22, in the council chambers. Cou.nc.ilman Al Coen proposed th,. study Sifsion to evaluate the nine month! of work put into the proposal by the staff. • Coen said that aome citizens were under tht false impression that the coun. cil had already prejudgeti the airport. "l feel we siJOUld have a study session on it." he. added. Mayor Donald Shipley agreed, bul com· mented, "Right now I'm not for any airport in the center of the city ." Later Shipley said of the airpark plan, "The first knowledge I had of this was when I read about it in the paper, l think that goes for the other coun· cilmen." As proposed by Plarutin& Director Ken Reyoolds and his stalf. the airpark wouJd c o m b i n e rtereatlonal, industrial and commute r flights. It would be within a quarter of a mile of the Central Park, running north-south from Talberl Avenue to near Garfield AvVlue between Gothard Street and the railroad trai:ks. Planning aide Jere Murphy described the plan to Orange County Airport Com· missioners last wetk, He said that it would be 1 landscaped park covering 63 acre.a in .an induatr:ial .zane. -1'be. 2,500-foot runway would be used by light, private planes ind short takeoff com· muter turbo prop!. Murphy said that the main benefit of the airpark wiuld be that it would spur industrial developmtnl and thus broaden the city's tax base. Roger Slates, who Is chairman of both the county airport comthlssion and the Huntington Beach planning commission, • Ille or ers Ie {1.S. CJty Bid Huntington Gets High Court Bans Park Honorable Nod· Freeways ... Huniington Beach Jost Its bid to become an ~JI.America City but picked up an ho{IOrable mention for its efforts in civic iinprovement. ' Eleven cities attained the All-America title for t!no. Huntington Beach was among the 11 runntrups. The · contest. is c°'11ponsored by the NaUonal Munlcipal League and took M.aaazine, Winners were announced this wee"L - "l'm happy we were acknowledged with a certilicate," Vice Mayor Jerry Matney said today. "But I think our inability to move ahead on the Top of the Pier Plan cost us the title ." The Top of the Pier Plan {downtown renovation), landscaping of Pacific Coast Highway, and plans for a central park United Crusade Dinner Slated For Campaigners 'A colorful Hawaiian dinner with en· tertairunent provided by native dancers will be: the backdrop Friday evening for the honoring of campaign workers tn' the West Orange County United Crusade. The ' crusade's annual r~ognition ban· qu!t will be held at 7 p.m. in the Disneyland Hotel , Anaheim. C o m m u n i t y dignitaries. industrial. business aad professional leaders will join with crusade workers in honoring the 1971 campaign team . A man and woman of the year will be announced. Crusade President Jack Feehan of Huntington Beach 1aid that iwards also will be presented to the company and employe groups that con· tributed through the AID program. there will be a press writing award. outstanding newspaper or the year honor anti. a presentation to the outstanding lffin and employe group in West Orange County. A luau dinner will be served and 1 Hawaiian group, the Laha.ina Lunas, wln entertain. Tahitian, Samoan and New ze'aland dancers also will perform. The crusade, which assists 31 member agencies, fell short of its goal this year. A .,-total of $456~000 was collecte4 in lftmtington Beach, Fountatil Valley, Garden Grove. Westminster, Midway Ci· ty, Seal Beach and Sunset Beach - 83 percent of the target. 11'1 Huntington Beach $120.000 was col· lected. v.·hile fountain Valley's con· trihution was $30,000. " ' Sacramento Flights Action Postponed • l1untington Beach councilmen postpon· ed 1ction Monday night on a call for the Public Utilities Commission to authorize direct nights to Sattament4 lroin Orange County Airport. (:ouncllman Jerry Mainey augge&ted that the staff contact, Newport Beach ofUci1l' to see whether they have any objection to •n lncrtJase hi nJghtJ from the airport. were presented to the All·America Com. mittee in late August, "If ·downtown property owners had made up their minds to help the Top of the Pier Plan I think we'd be an All-America City. I think we're one, anyway," Matney said. Bill Reed, one of three tity spokesmen who traYeled to Port14nd, Ore., durll'lg the August cohipeUtion, said at that time most of the. citle11 had presented programs along racial Jines. More than 100 cities had originally sought the All-America tiUe. Stories on the 11 winners will be in the March 2.1 issue of Look. The elfven ,\II-America Cities for 1970 are : Ardmore, OkJahoma: Birmingham, A I-ab-a m·a ; Bloomfield, Connecticut; Dallas, Texas: Enfield, Connecticut; Fitchburg, Massachusett5; Gainesville, Florida: lndianapoli!, lndiana; Lakeland, Florida; Lumberton, and Shelby, both in North Carolina. In the runnerup class with Huntington Beach were: Butte, Montana ; Florence, South Ca:olina : Hazelton, Pennsylvania; Lake:wood, Colorado; Mountain View, California; Muskegon, Michigan: Port Arthur, Texas; Rockford, 111 i no is ; Somerville. Massachusetts. and Virginia Beach, Virginia. Little Bo11 Lost He doesn't know his name. but nurses at San Diego's Hillcrest Receiving Home say he is quick to make friends. The boy, about 2, was found aban· doned in a supermarket. Auth· orities are trying to locate his parents. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court ruled unanimously today that fede rally funded highways may cut through public parks only in "the most unusual situations." The decision, the first interpreting re- cent environment le&islation, bl~ied constrOC'fiott of 1 aix·l&M Interstate highway throu11h -a park In-Memphis, Tenn., and d.ir«ted a federal district court to "engage in a substantial inquiry,. of the government's authorization of the project. Sepaking of Congress' Intent in passing laws to protect the tnvironment, Justice Thurgood Marshall wrote : "The few green have ns that are public parks were not to be lost unleu there were truly unusual factors present in a particular case or the cost or community diirupt.ion resulling from alternative routes reached extraordinary magnitudes.'' "If the statutes are ta have any mean- ing, the secretary cannot approve the destruction of parkland unless he finds that alte"'rnative routes pre.sent unique problems." Cold Winds Leaving Coast; Santa Anas Next in Sigl1t The decision was a stunning setback to the Transportation Department, which had approved running Interstate 411 through Overton Park In the middl e of Memphi! and to the solicitor general's office, which defended the Transportation Department's interpretation of federal law. Both I.he tranl!lportation law of 1966 and the highway act of 1968 prohibited the secretary of transportation lo authorize use of federal funds to finance construction of highways through public parks if a "feasible and prudent'' alternative route exisl.5. Gusty. northerly winds that have chill· ed SOuthem California for the past five days are opected to die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bring 75 degree highs to Orange County Wednesday, the Na· lional Weather Service predicts. Early today the brisk northerly winds shifted direction to bloW from the northeast.. creating typical dry, Santa Ana conditions and increaslna wind velocity below lhe coc:stal canyons. f.1arcb, indeed, bad blown in like a lion. The Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots toda y. as small craft warninas continued inta the fifth day. .With the diminishing winds tonight. inland portions of the count/ may expect near frost temperatures with lows of 33 degrees. Marshall said the legislation renects 1'the growing public concern about the quality of our natural environment" and was "designed to curb the accelerating destrucUon of our country's nalural beau- ty." Overton Park is a 342-acre city park that contains a zoo. a nine-hole gnll course, an outdoor theater, nature trails, pk:nic areas and 170 acres of forest. Study of Oil Levy on Tap Hu.iitingion Fiscal Staius Reason Behind Action An oil tax will be studied again in Huntington Beach. Councilman Norms Glbbs called at P.fonday night's council meeting for the staff lo study a barrel levy ''lo see if this is not .something that coul~ help lhe city in lt.s fl.seal crisis if there really is a cri.W. •· Told that the fiscal difricullies were real, ahe added. "Then I can't see why we are: dragging our feet on it.. But rather than be emotional about it. 1 think we should hive an tn-ck!pth study brought bac.i: for the next council meetin&. ·• ,. l 2 , ' , City Administrator Doyle Miiier, who recommended a thre1-<:ent per barrel tax lait 1pring Ill part Of a package to finance civic iqiprovement1, affirmed th11t tht ttiport would be ready ai the next meeting. " • Councilman Jerry Matney also asked mobile homes and dropped the $1.50 for the staff lo give a projection of per month trash collection. fee. costs on the program for building the This was used to he.Ip pay for the· civic center, library, fire stations and city yard. new civic. facilities and to meet redemp- The oil tax was the crux of a bitter lion cost.son $6 million in park bonds. battle last spring after it was recom· Finance Director Ben Arguello aaid mended by Miller. It pi tched the staff today he was more concerned with the inlo conflict with the c.hamber of com· city's budget problems next year rather merce and the oil companies. The staff than this year. • lost. "ft looks like we are going to catch When Mille~~ h l·s rte0m· up on our expendituru thl1 year, but mendaUon. 'he a thie&«nt, per °'xt year ll looks as· U the city's ·revenue barrel levy est ated io 'britta the city will on~y equal the ,present budget. p1us $U$.OOO a· year 1n revenue. µter ,1 .(" oogna Ill~ Increases. We may .be tw~t per barrel le_vy -that would able to bre1ik even next ye'i.r. but only reap $300,000 aMualcy' ...::. was discussed, tf we hired" no new emplnyes and do but this abo Was rejected.· not exp1nd . ~~r1_~rvlcea to meet the tn • complicated fonnula, (he council population incruee." opted for a five perce:nt utility tax . Prellmhu1ry nguna nn tl)e. 1971·72 boosted the levy on apartmenta 111d budget will be studied In May. said that the presentatiod was pur'ly informational. • ''Several commissiooer1 complimented the staff plan and were impressed that the city was addressing it.self to the problem of providing better atr service ," he said. · Several months ago, Reynolds offered lt! descri&e the proposal to city coun- cilmen. but the council suggested that the five-member a I r port committee. formed to stady problemJ 11 Meadowlark Airport. ahould first be briefed on the idea. The airport committee has had one meeting with the staff on the propouJ. Reynolds said. At the March Z2 meeting the ~cit also will discuss architectural guideUnes with the planning commis..ioners and the Design Review Board for any struc- tures that may be constructed in the area around the new civic centu that will be built opposite the · Huntington Beach High School . n icte • • •• •• •• -, Ul'I Ttl.,.,...,.. Snaoklng Tree Travelers in Cadillac;, Mich ., often do a double-take when they see the -smoking tree of North 111itchell Street. What they don't see at first glance is the smokestack located be- hind the big fir . Missing Yacht With Six Aboard Undamaged A cabin ctuiser reported missing with six peraons ~ aboard between Catalina Island and Sunset Beach, was found safe Monday afternoon near Oceanside. The 26-foot cruiser Toad II, skippered by John Eckers of El Monte. was spotted at 12 :45 p.m. by the USS Benicia, a 164-foot Navy patrol gunboat on a naval exercise. It was 23 miles west of Oceanside. All six per!Ons on board the Toad II were reporled in good condition ~ the-cruiser. was towed back to Long Beach Harbor by the Benicia. A Coa1t Guard search was launched for the cruiser when it failed to arrive at Sunset Beach at 3 p.m., Sunday, as scheduled. Reports from Catalina in· dicated the. Toad II was hiving engine. trouble. ~Ira. Ga~le Eckers, wife of the skipper, contacted the Coast Guard Sunday even· Ing. She reported her husband, John: Jl'rani Eckers, 52; Grea: Eckers. 18; Dennis Montgomery, 20; Paul Weddt:, 24,, and a mah riamed Cecil, 'about 50, as mWlng. All were In sood health tth'.en the Toad II was found. Three olhl!rJ, origlnaUy on the cr:Wer, • ha~ Down back from ' Ca.tlllna bec&Uff of the engine trouble. ' ' 'Mle·Co11\ Guard had •n 82-foot cutttr, Point Hobard, Rod twO he:Uoopters1 searching the IO.foot waves Monday, Th& Bt.nlola was not on the search, but apottcd lhe Toad 11 first. , Conspiracy, Embezzling Asserted WASHINGTON (AP) -W. A. "Tony·• Boyle. prel!lident of lhe United Mine Workers. was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of con- spiracy, embezzlement and making il· legal political contributions of $49,250 from union funds. Inclulkd among recipients of the coD- tributions was $3(1,000 to a dinner for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and various others. ,. Two other United Mine. Worker-officials named in the s a m e indictment were John Owers, 5eCJ'etary.treasurer, and James Kmetz. director of UMW 'a political arm, the Non-Partisan League. Atty. Gen: John N. Mitchell said the ta-count iruJictment wu returned in U.S. District Court here. Boyle was charged in one count with embezzling $5,000, in lanother with con· spiring to embezzle and to make Illegal political contributions totaling $49,250. and 11 counts of actually making such -~~!P~.9FS· The SS.000 was part. o! we $49,250. Kmetz was charged with the same conspiracy and embezzlement coun!J!: and in two counts of malting illegal politicaJ contributions. Owelll!I was also charged In the con- spiracy cwnt and on one count of making illegal political contribution. Named as unindicted ~nspirators are Suzanne Richards, Boyle's executive asaistant, and Robert Howe, former director of the Labor's Non-Partisa n League. The indictment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 66-year-old. $55,00Q.a.year head of the UMW. joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute $49,250 of the union's general treasury funds to political campaigns of various candidates seeking federal offices, a violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac- tices Act. The defendants were using the non· partisan leagu~ as a means for the union to make Contributions to the can· didates, according to ttie indictment. The indictment also charged that in order to conceal the nature of the.se con· tributifns. Boyle and Owens authorized Kmetz and Howe to make illegal con- tributioOs out of the league's funds. Jn addition, the indictment said, checks wiitt~n on lhe. league'l!I bank account were drawn to.. •·cash" In the amount of the authorized contribution. Oruge Coast Weather Things' get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, with the winds dying down and tempera· lures spurting back up to 65 along the coast and 75 further lnland. INSIDE TODA\' Got7trnor. Reagan's Commi.t· sio11 on Educational Reform in California. /l.t:adtd. b~ Santa Anon Robert Hanson, sees tM nttd for some changes in tht wa11 we ru.1i Ollr 1chools. Paga J2. ' Mui.el ''"'' .. MMllMI' ...., ... °''"" ttwft,, 11 ...... . , ... , Sltdl MalMh 1•11 Ttlt•ltlM ' TllMltr'\ ' WNIMI' f Wllllt W•Y 16 W-11 MIWI IJ.11 Ww141 ..... , ... • • .; .'D.C.1LY PILOT ti Tursday, March 2, 1971 Take 1i t o V tah , -' ' ' -·Mesa Girl Flee·s Poli ce Hold · Suspect in Man's Deatn -~ll1' abused at gunpoint in a plush 5'lt Lake tlty motel room; a missing Costa Mesa saleswoman is sare toctay, -after-escaping to end a 600-rnlle terror lrip in her own hometown. Man Arrested 30 Minutes After Holdup A suspeeted bank bandit whose bright blue car, baggy yellow pants and Afro hairstyle didn't blend into the Orange County landscape was quickly captured after a $720 Costa Mesa stickup Monday. \Villiam A. CoUnter, 22, Los Angeles, ~·as arrested by Seal Beach police 30 minutes after the noon hour holdup. He ts said to fit the description of the man who robbed Crocker Citizens National Bank, 3390 S. Bristol St., ~cap­ ing with the only other customer in hot pursuit. Invesligators said they a1ao found $727. a yellow bank message envelope and a slip of paper with: Holdup, scribbled on it, in Counter's car. Seal Beach officers 1t1ichael Vasquei: and Robert Gayton said a countywide radio description of the suspect and getaway car prompted them to notice Counter. He stopped his vehicle northbound on the San Diego Freeway and refused to discuss tbe matter when placed under arrest. Bank teller Mrs. Betty A. Sandstrom said the bandit who robbed her wrote out a depoSit slip and set it down at her window covered with several dollar bills. She said he then slipped her the holdup note and asked for all the large bills, '4'hich included so-called bait money used in prosecution evidence. Just as he was leaving, however. customer Charles F. Schmitt realized a robbery was tn progress and chased the SU3pect out lhe front door. Gasoline Tanker Truck E x plodes On Higl1way 101 SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -A tanker truck loaded with about 10,000 galk1n• or gasoline burst into flam~ today and blocked the main htghway between Los Angeles and San, ~rancisco for four hour,s, the California Highway Patrol said. There were no Injuries. The driver. Robert Bass, 43, of Compton, fled from the tanker~ before the explosion which occurred on !he steep Cuesta Grade on U.S. Highy,•ay 101 about four miles north of here, officers said. Patrolmen said flames shot hundreds of feet in the air Lighting the country. side for miles as the tanker section burned to a ball of charred, mollen metal. Traffic backed up on both sides of the highy,•ay for more than two miles \Vaiting for the blaze to burn Itself out. Officers said firemen were afraid to spray water on the blaze for fear the \l.'ater would run down the steep grade carrying burning gas with it. Patrolmen said the fire was apparently started by sparks from a rubbing flat tire on the truck. DAILY PILOT OkANGIE a>AST '°UI USH INCi COMl'AN'I" aob•rt N. w,,, l'r.1c1..,1 Mod Pui.11.ri.r J1ok •~ Curl•V" 't'ke rfftllHiir .nd ~•I MIMttr l1i•111•t K•1.,1( IEdl!Ot-, l h•lll•t A. ,_...,,,~ill .. 'M....,1"' l:f liot' Al111 Dlrklrt W•I Or1110e COUl'l'Y lfltw Alb.rt W. l1f11 As,oc11111 (dll'Ot HMtlllft'N ...... OffMe 17171 a.1oh. l 11ur • .,.,, M11ll111 Addr111: P.O. l •x 790, !2641 --l.ltflll'll l•cto: m l'«•I Awn1111 Ca.It Miu: JlO W1U .. y $!•"' foltwp0rt IMcfl: SU) NfWP(lrt I0\1~11'4' hn Clltfllellll : ~ NMll fl C.mlloo lltNI Tef•t ts 171!1 '42-4U1 a -.HIM M.,..,,.... '42·H71 c.r-1111,, 1"1, ~ c....t ""'"'' ... "" ~... ""' -•*'°"• IUlltlf'I U.W. . ..,.. .... ..... ., .,..,..._" .,.....,,. '"'' M ,.,........ --..i )99(111 "'' lfllMIMtil~ -· 1«*'1111 tilt• ..... "'" " ...,.,, ... di .,. °"''' ""'-· c........... ~-. .... UfTW ft.ti -...wn W IMlt ll.11 _,.,'"' '"''ltw'Y ,. .. ~. •a.n _......... ' Her alleged kidnaper and rapist is now a prisoner too. Paul JI. Anderson_,_ 30_,_ was ~~ptured in Crecn River. Wyo., arid booked into Sweetwater County Jail pending in· terrogation by FBI agents and eK• tradition. He was the object of an Orange County manhunt as the result of a carbon copy kidnap case the day before, authorities revealed today. Anaheim police said Anderson had bttn sough t since Friday, v.·hen a 20.year-old woman was abducted, molested and finally released. The Costa Mesa cause. originating at 6:15 p.m. Saturday, ended with the vie· tim's escape. The 2S.year-old V.'oman was last seen when she dropped off another Fashion Island departroent store employe at her apartment. Detective James Blaylock said the vie· tlm's roommate became concerned later when she \l.'as overdue. Checking the area Sunday, the room· mate found the victim's car locked in a market lot at 2701 Harbor Blvd., two bags of groceries spoiling inside. By th is time, nearly 24 hours had elapsed and the fri ghtened woman flag- ged down Patrolman Robert Johnson. Just about the sa me time, the victim telephoned from Salt Lake City to report she was safe after being treated at a hospital and released to her parents. She said she v.·as kidnaped from the Jot at gunpoint. No address was listed tor lhe suspect. but Costa Mesa_polic~ had bet!n alerte_d that he might visi t his former wife. Santa Ana·based FBI agent Charles Sullivan said today he couldn't predict how soon Anderson would be returned to face charges. Detective Blaylock said the victim might remain in Salt Lake City until authorities were finished talking with her. Authorities said Anderson was driving a 1971 maroon &port sedan listed as the suspect vehicle in the Anaheim rape and abduction Friday when apprehended in Wyoming. 1 Sweetwater County Sheriff's deputies claimed he had four guns, two rifles and two handguns, in the vehicle when captured. Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. Robert Green said today the fact the victim escaped in her hometown was purely colncidence. Bentson Resigns As ·City Attorney For Seal Beach Seal Beach City Attorney Jim Bentson' resigned Monday. He told city councilmen he was quilting his post to devote more tlme to his family and his i:!rivate law practice. Bentson, 43, was appointed eight months ago .,..·hen a new council majority took over leadership In the city. Since that time, he has been the legal arm of the new <."Guncil's stormy action.<1 in firing Cily Manager Lee Risner and cutting do.,..·n the River Front Redevelop- ment Agency. Some angry citizens \vho are trying to recall part of the city council ha v e also threalened to fire Benlson if th ey should v.·in. He did not refer to those threats, however, in his resignation. No replace· ment has been named for Bentson·s job. Va ll ey Sc hool Panel To Hold First Meet The r~ountain Valley School District's Superintendent-Parent Council will hold its first meeting of the year at 7:30 p.m .• \Vednesday in room B of the city·s community center, 10200 Slater Ave. District administrators will host an open session or questions. The district orchestra y,•JU provide music. CAIL Y ,llOT Sllll PMll MICHELLE O'BR IEN, DARRELL STILLWAGON, LYNN ALVAREZ (FROM LEFT) SIT IN AT CITY HALL High School St udents Say Little, L••rn Mu ch Du ri ng Day 1t Helm of Loc1I Government Gover1a111e11t Day • Students Take Over City Local government in Huntington Beach got a faccillt Monday. It was student iovernrnent day . Offi- cials with years of experience took a back seat as young people v.•cre allowed to hold the reins of the city. It v.·as a practical lesson in democracy that seemed to impress the 27 students from Marina, Edison and Huntington Beach high schools who acted as the city's top elected and appointed ofiicials. ''l took a Jot for granted before," Body Found; Believed To Be Humboldt Coed From Wire Services EUREKA -A body believed to be that of missing coed Sharon \Vilson v.•as found near Arcata today, but authorities in Napa County reported no new develop· ments in the mysterious disappearance of another college girl. J\fiss \Vilson, 20, a Humboldt State College student, disappeared last Thurs· day. Arcata authorities, who gave neither details on the cause of death nor made positive identification, said only the body of a young woman was found ne<:ir the Mad River. Meanwhile, Napa County Sheriff Earl Randol said he had no information one \11!.y or the other on whether the elusive zodiac killer might be involved in the disappearance of the other coed, Lynda Christine Kanes, 20, a Pacific Union College sophO{l"Jore. Miss \Vilson, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L, Wilson of ConC<>rd, \\'as last seen Thursday by her roommate, Laura Hink, "'ho said Miss Wilson told her she was going to cut a class. Miss Hink to!d Humboldt County sheriff's deputies that when Miss Wilson missed a second class that afternoon she thought nothing of ii. Sheriff's detective Lt. Roy Simmons A utops y Ordered l n Queen Mary Figure's Deatli LONG BEACH (AP) -An autopsy was ordered today in the death of retired Rear Adn1. John J. Fee, the man \\'ho \Vas hired by the city of Long Beach to direct conversion of the ocean liner Queen Muy into a n1useum-convention center. said 1'-1iss Wilson's car was Identified Saturday where it was found parked at a beach area near the Mad River estuary five miles north of here. The car was operable. and the key was in her coat which had beeh. left on the front seat along With her glasses. In the vicinity of the car were found three lipsticks, her glasses case, and a $20 traveler's check she had not en· dorsed, he said. Blanpied Heads Library Board Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied of the West Orange County Municipal CoUrt has been elected president of the Orange County -•Law Library board of trustees for !he 1971 term. Serving under Judge Blanpied on the seven·member board will be: Superior Court judges William L. Murray, WUJiam S. Lee and Bryon K. McMiilan, County Supervisor William J. Phillips, Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Philip Schwab and Tustin altorney Frank ttanzo. Judge ll!urray \\'as elected to v.·hat \Vil! l>e his sixth consecuti ve term as ~ecretary. Judge Schwab, the outgoing president. will serve as chairman pro tem and Manzo will represent the Orange County Bar Association on the new board. Tax Hikes Ite1ni ze d SACRAtllENTO {U PI) Californi<rs counties hiked property !axes by 31 percent last year , to $l.65 billion, State ControJ!er Houston I. Flournoy reported Monda y, admitted acting Mayor Darrell Stillwagon of ~tarina High as he admired tht gavel bet .... ·een city council sessions. "Now I knoy,· a lot about how the city works. It's been quite an experience." Mayor Stillwagon and other st.ude nt officials \l.'ere gi\'en tours of all city departments, including the police and lire stations and lifeguard headquarters. They were also shown the new park sites in the city. Then Stillv.·agon and six uther acting councilmen sat nel\l to the city's elected officials for both the 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. council sessions. Between sessiops they ate chicken dinners with the council. They said little, but learned much. •·1 understood most of it,'1 said Lynn Alvarez, "but these meetings go kind of fast, don't they ?" The mei!ting fini~hed at HI p,n1 ,, perhaps because there \vere relatively few public hearings and perhaps because i\-Iayor Donald Shipley had urged fello\v councilmen not to keep the students up too late. "When you look around there is hope for the to.,..·n," fi1ayor Shipley told the students. "We have student s with voting rights on the city's environmental council and we have appointed a t9+year-0ld lady I Golden West College student Patty Truesdell) to the parks and recreation commission . This is the way we are going to go.'' Student government day also showed marked gains for Women 's Lib. Instead of one woman on the council. as is presently the case. there were three and both the police and fire chiefs \\'ere girls. So were the city administrator and city clerk . In fact, the girls had about an equal share of everything \l'ith 13 of the 27 student leaders being female. 111 addition to Slillwagon, the council was made up of Alvarez. Jimmie Payton, Mike Vanbor, Rosemary Castro, Kevin Jfaag and Michelle O'Brien. Joan \\''allis was city administrator and Mark Johnson her assistant. Linda \Verner was city clerk, ROge"f Pu1'Key city attorney, and Mike Spence and Judy Lindsey shared the job of city treasurer. Other department heads .,..·ere Garv 1'-falhiot. public works director ; Rene Orton, police. chief : Kim Huggins, fire chief: Vicki Call, harbors and beaches director; Mike Orta. finance director; Lars Danielson, building director: Terry Howlett, planning director: Erin Muellen- berg. Ecreation and parks director: Diane Enriquez, development coordinator; Bill Payne, purchasing agent : Sharon Akin. public information officer; Roger \Vojahn. \\'ater superin· tende11t ; Dan Fuson. oil field superin· lendent, and Cathy Hirko, library direc· tor. Police tentati vely listed Fee's de1:1th a~ suicide. They said he probably died of carbon n1onoxide poisoning after his body was. found in his garage near his automobile. The car's engine had been running. PRUDENT BUYING A Santa Ana man has been charged "'ith murder in the disappearance or a ditabled laborer _who.st body -If he is dead -may never be found. Samuel C. Tyler, 50, of 1640 W. ~1yrtle St.. is expected to be arraigned Wed- nesday in Central Orange County Judicial District Court. He already h&d been arresled. booked last Thursday on suspicion of soliciting to commit murder. but was re-in· terrogated just before arraignment on that charge Monday. Declining to explain, the talk led· lo a search with the suspect along 15 miles of San Diego County coastline Monday afternoon for the body of his suspected victim. Charles A, Noble, 45, of 1118 S. 'fownsend St., was !isled as a missing person Feb. 17 when his mother filed a report·w1th police. Queslioning of mutual acquaintances led police to center their investigation on Tyler. Investigators theorize that Noble •as shot to death in Santa Ana aa a result of a marital triangle and his body later dumped alongside the lonely shoreline. Since no corpse was found, -detective.'\ theorize high tides could have washed it out to sea . Detective Lt. liarrel Davis said the case has been a particularly unusual one and praised his homicide in· vestigators for piecing bits of evidence together. lf no body is ever found, Tyler could still be convicted of murder based on circumstantial evidence, as in the highl y publiciied case of L. Ewing Scott IS .i.'ears ago. F 011ntain Valley Councilmen Set For Experiment f'ountain Valley City Councilmen will try a new experiment at tonight'• I o'clock council session. They'll tack a study session on to the regular meeting . In the past. councilmen used time before the public session to review and study in depth certain proposals. But many councilmen have felt study sessions should be more open and part of the regular council meeting. · Tonight lhey will study the city's agreement with Teen Help, a youth counseling service, and they'll talk about community center expansion. • The city has agreed to provide land for a Teen Help office. bul the youth group has run into trouble finding .an office bulldinf.' The community center expansion b.as been delayed because of controversy over whether it should be a civic auditorium or a 1nulti·purpose hall. No .action is scheduled on either Item. but ""'ith both on the regular council agenda instead of in study session, aclion can be taken . Yoga Lessons Slated In F ountain Valley The Hlndu mystic or yoga will aeek a place in Fountain Valley, starting Thursda y vdth weekly yoga lessons. Renee Taylor, \\Titer, lecturer and traveler, of Redondo Beach. will teach the class at 11 a.m. in room B uf lhe community center, 10200 Slater Ave. Fee, 57, quit the Navy in 1967 to head the Queen J\Iary project. The liner me de her last voyage last Saturday, moving lo a permanent mooring at a Long Beacli harbor pier. His wife J\farge found the body, police said. Fee. a Naval Academy honor graduate, was a\\.·arded the bronze star in World War II and later was com· manding off icer of Naval shi pyards at Pearl Harbor and Long Beach. Th roug hout our 77 years of carpet retailing, on e fact becom es quite ev ident~ t hat when mon ey is less plentiful, people buy better quality. Irvine Firn1, Sru1ta Ana This i• contrary to popular bel ief, bu t makes good sense if you th ink abo u t ii, Wh en ·you ho ve to concern yours elf with volue an d perfo rman ce, you are likel y to buy better quality. Clear Way £01· Suit Trial The Irvine Company and city of Santa Ana have cleared the v.·ay for trial or the lawsuit that challenges their eight- year-old agreement on the dispositio n o( 938 act'f!s of prime industrial property in the Red HUI Avenue--1ttarioe Corps Air Facility area. . Both parties ha,'e filed den ials or arguments by the city or Tustin that the agreement of May, 196.1, is invali d in the lght of Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) action wbkh puts the sector within the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine. Action by Orange County Superior Court Judge RoberL Banyard on the laat of • series of pretrial n.1aneuvers by both parUes to the lawsuit now means that the iasue can be settJed In 1 trial court. Santa Ana City Attorney Wllllam Mock aaid today. ''Tustin filed its suit against us last ( August and rlaimed at that time that our annexation right s were prejudiced because of agreements made with the Irvine Company." Mock said. That agreement was designed to allow Sant3 Ana to take aver the disputed acreage in May of ttus year. It was drawn up, Mock said, long before the crea1ion of a city of Irvine was ever cOn5idered. LAFC action which presently places the al't'a sought by Santa Ana and Tustin within the city of Irvine boundaries will have to be consldered by the Superior Coutt judge who rules on the lawsuit, Mock said. "Our 11greement Is sllll tn force ," ?\:Tock said. "All we havt done Is deny the basis of the Tustin J1wsult aind ask the court to rule on the validity of our understanding with the Irvine Company.'' ( 'At 'Ald en's in th e last th~ee years, our pe r unit sale has been mo re ex pen sive carpe ti ng, r~flecting this fact. Con•equent ly, we hove the I a r g e s t selection of finer qual ities you wil l see anywh ere, all at competi tiv e pri ces, The en d resu lt is cu stomer satisfaction, pride, a nd recomm endations which provide our overwhe lm ing source of new busin ess . SANTA ANA. O•ANOI TUSTIN C•ll ••• ,,.. -ALDI N'S RID HILL CARl'n l & DllAPllllll 11l74 lrvln., TV•tln, c.t. *'14"4 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave • COSTA MISA 646-4838 ' I • • ' I I -. • ... • I. I \ I ' l -----~ •• Newport Bea~h Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 64, NO. 52, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES 'ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1971 TEN CENTS Newport Eyes Supreme Court Freeway Ruling Orange County ~pervisors might have a strong word Jn any futu.re crossing ol Upper Bay by a freeway route through Newport Beach under a ruling issued to- day by the United States Supreme Court. The nation's highest tribunal, acting on a Tenne~ case. ruled that ledera\Jy. funded highways may not cross public parks eJ:cept "in the most unusual cases." The proposed Pacific (4)ast Freeway routing thrOUih Newport might well edge . Mine Union Chief Boyle Indicted WASHINGTON (AP) - W. A. "Tony,. Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers, was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of con- 1piracy, embezzlement and making ii· legal political contributions of $49,250 trom union funds. Included among recipients of the con. tributions was $30,000 to a dinner for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and various others. Two other United !I.line Worker officials named in the s a m e indictment were John Owens, secretary-treasurer. and James Km elz, director of UMW's political arm, the Non-Partisan League. Alty . Gen. John N. Mitchell said the 13-eount indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here . Boyle was charged In one count wittt tmbeu:ling $5.000, in another with con- spiring to embe.zzle and to make illegal political contributions totaling $49,250, and II counts of actually making such contributions. The $5,000 was part of lhe $49,250. Kmetz was charged with the same conspiracy and embezzlement counts and in two rounls of making illegal political contributions. Owens was also charged in the con· 11piracy count and on one count of making Illegal political contribution. Named as unindicted co-conspirators are Suzanne Richards. Boyle's executive assistant, and Robert Howe, former '()irector of · the Labor 's Non-Partisan League. The indictment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 66-year-Old. $.55JXIO-a-year head of the UMW, joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute '49,250 of the union's general treasury funds to political campaigns of various candidates seeking fedtral offices, a violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac· Lices Att. Chilling Winds Get Replaced By Santa Anas Gusty, northerly winds that have chill· ed Southern California for the past five days are expected to die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bring 75 degree highs to Orange County Wednesday, the Na- tional Weather Service predicts. Early today the brisk northerly winds shifted direttion to blow from the northeast. creating typical dry, Santa Ana conditions and increasing v.·ind velocity below the coastal canyons. March, indeed, had b\ov.·n in like a lion. · 1'he Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gust! lo 3fl knots today, as small craft v.·arnings continued tnto the fifth day. With the diminishing winds tonight. Inland portions of the count/ may expect near frost temperatures with lows of 33 degrees. Quake Jiggles Northern County A minor earthquake shook North Orange County al 7:47 p.m. ri.tonday ratUlng dishes and nerves, but doing Uttle damage. Calteth selsmologisla rated the temb- lor at 3.2 on the Ricl1Ur"'1cale and pin· pointed the epk:enter to be at Brea mJd· way bewteen the lZ.mUe loog Whittier fault and the 20-mlle Norwalk fault to the south. The sharp Joll was followed by about 10 seconds of rumbllng, rattlina •nd ro1I- tng motion underfoot. The earth shock was not related to the Feb. I killer quake centered at Sylmar, but Orange County ruidents a& far aw&y as Laguna Beach rl!porled feeling Mon· day's tremor. \ ' into Newport Dune& Aquatic Park, also knawn as Harry Welch Memorial Park. Located on the easterly lide ol the nar· rows near the mouth of Upper Bay, New· port Dunes is a county-owned park wbicb has bee11 operated by lease to private en- terprise. Final designs of a new freeway brJdge across Upper Newport Bay, and the bridge approaches, likely would deter- mine whether or not th.e span would en· croach on tounty parkland. Little 8011 Lost He doesn't know his name, but nurses at San Diego's Hillcrest Receiving tlome say he is quick to make friends. The boy. about 2, was found aban· doned in a supermarket. Auth· orities are trying lo locate his parents. J.C. Penney Left Fortune To Wife, Kids NEW YORK (UPll -The lat. J. C. Penney. founder of the national chain of retail stores bearing his name. left the bulk of his $35 million estate ro his widow and four thildren. The tycoon's 28·page. with three codicils, will, was offered for probate Mo11day in Manhattan Surrogates Court. Half of his estate went to his widow, Mrs. Caroline A. Penney. He left $105,000 in be.quests to 19 colleges and universities, $700,000 to the James C. Penney Founda tion, Inc., and $500,000 to an organization In Riverside California, identified only as H.C.S.C. Foundation. Joseph E. Freund of Short Hill. N.J., described as a "long time financial adviser," -..·as left SlOO,OCIO in trust. r.tosl of the remaining property was left lO two sons and two daughters, Roswell K. Penney of Onnond Beach, Calif.: Kimball Penney of San Francisco: Mrs. Pttary F. Wagley of Baltimore; and Mrs. Carol P. Guyer of New York. Penney died Feb. 12 al the age of 95. Dana Project U lt does. tbe state under the new SU· preme Court ruling would need county approval, aceordlng to Keith McKean, ex· ecutive assistant to Haig Ayanian, t hief engineer for the Divisidn of Highways' District 7 office in Los Afl{leles. Paclfie Coast Freeway will in part be built with federal funds. · The Supreme Court ruling was the first interpretation of recent environment leg· islation and blocked construction of a six- lane interstate highway through a park In Momphh. TeM. McKean uid that since the le1islation was adopted, the slate has been forced to negotiate with local g<ivernments in cases where park trossings are involved. "We get_ togeltter with I.he local agency, usually the parks and recreation commis· slons," he said, "and either offer to re. place the land we have ta ken with ad· jacent property of equal value. or else offer a design we hope they will find compatible.'' • McKean explained· that If the loc.t.I agency Is satisfied with the plans, a state- ment. or concurrence is usually all that Is required lo meet the "unusual situa- tions" clause In the Jaw. However, he said.:'If they do not a'gree, thf'n we have a problei:i>." He said If the federal government does nQt overrule the local protest the depart- ment would h!Ul,t to replace the road. Toda y's Supreme Court ruling also i11· eluded a directive to a district ('Olltl to •·engage in a substantial inquiry" of the government's authorization of the project. The new environment legislation has been cited in the local battle to block, or at least relocate, the Pacific Coast Free- way through NewpQrt. Attorne y Arthur Strock, a leading spokesman of the Freeway Fighters , has repeatedly cited the laws and said other (See COUNTY, Pate l) Route Rally Draws 250 Rogers Flays Councilmen, Daily Pilot By L. PETER KRIEG Of "'-Dtlh' 1'11!" Slaff Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers Monday nightJabelrul Ui~ plaMed Newport traffic sb.ldy a "front'' covering the City Council ni.ajority's attempt to deflate the petition drive that forced next Tuesday's Pacifit Coast freeway election. "The ploy did not work. • .you were not fooled," Rogers said lo the 250 persons gathered at Newport Harbor High School for 1 Freeway Fighters' election rally. The vice mayor said Mayor Ed Hirth launched the study in a confidential memo to city councilmen, a confidential memo that Rogers had re.Jeased shortly after it was delivered and from. which he quoted again Monday night. Rogers had blasted Hirth when he first released the document. In a state- ment he later retracted, Rogers called the mayor 1 patsy to the vested interests in the city. . Rogers Monday night also attacked the DAILY PILOT for allegedly opposing the Freeway Fight~rs· anti-route cam· paign . He said the newspaper was one of the "combined powers of the vested interests" and said it was biased. The vice mayor charged that the newspaper. "Wants you, the people, to fall into a false sense or security until It is too late ... the dally has - since the outset -worked hand-in·glove with Mesa Girl Relates Terror Gunman Abducts Victim at Parkiiig Lot of Market Sexually abused at gunpoint in a plush Sall Laio Ci!1 ~ f'!""• a mlqin& Costa Misa saleswoman ls sare fod.ay, after escapin& to end • 6()1).mill terror trip in her own hotiietoWn. Her alleged kidnaper and rapist Is now a prisoner too. Paul H. Anderson, 30, was captured in Green River, Wyo .. and booked into Sweetwater County Jail pending In- terrogation by FBI agents and ex· tradition. He was the object of an Orange County manhunt as the result of a carbon copy kidnap case the day before, authorities revealed today. Anaheim police said Anderson had been rougbt since Friday, when a 20-year-old woman was abducted, olested and 1ed down Pattolman Robert Johnson. fll!alb'.r~, • ' J"l\, ...... l·../I" -~. !he ylctipl The C<>sta ~lw "c&u!t. or glli~g ai " 'leleplli>Md"lnllh Salt t.aii'Cily toiOpirt S;l5 p.m. Saturday, ended .with the vie· · 1be: ,was aafe after be.l!\I treated a~ tlm '1 esCape. 1.hcllpJtal and relea&ed.to ·•·parenta. The 25-year-old woman was last seen She said she w11s kldnaped from the when she dropped off another Eashion lot at gunpoint Island department store employe at her No address was listed for the suspect, apartment. but Costa Mesa police had been alerted DetecUve James Blaylock sE.iid the vie-that he might visit his former wife. lim's roommate beeame concerned later Santa Ana-based FBI agent Charles when she was overdue . Sullivan said today he couldn't predict Checking the area Sunday, the room-how soon Anderso.n would be returned male found the victim's car locked in to fate charges. a market lot at 2701 Harbor Blvd., Detective Blaylock said the victim two bags.of groceries spoiling inside. mlght remain Jn Salt Lake City until By this time. nearly 24 hours had authorities were finished talking with elapsed and the frightened woman !Jag• her. Irvine Firm, Santa Ana Jury Selection For H artelius Case Continues Clear Way for Suit Trial The Irvine Company and city or Santa Ana have cleared the way for trial of the lawsuit that challenges their eight· year-old agreement on the dispositio n o( 938 acres of prime industrial property in the Red Hill Av enue-Marine Corps Air Facility area. Both parties have filed denials of arguments by the city of Tustin th at the agreement of May, 1963, is invali d in the lght of Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) action which puts the sector within the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine. Action by Orange County Superior Coort Judge Robert Banyard on the last of a series <1f pretrial maneuvers by both parties to the lawsuit now means that tbe issue can be settled in a trial court. Santa Ana City Attor11ey William Mock said today. "Tustia filed U.s suit against us last August and claimed at that time. that our annexation rights were prejudiced because of agreemen ts made with the Irvine Company,'' Mock said. That agreement wu designed to allow Santa Ana to take over the disputed acreage in May of this year. It was drawn up, Mock said. long before the creation of a tity of Irvine was ever conside red. LAFC action which presently places the area sought by Santa Ana and Tustin within the city of Irvine bo41M1aries will have to be considered by the Superior Court judge who rules on the lawsuit, Pt1ock said. "Our agreement is still in force.'' Pt1ock said. ''All we have done is deny the basis of the Tustin lawsuit and ask the court to rule on the validity or our understanding with the Irvine Company." Jury selection continued today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of a Corona de! Mar physician accused of arson and bribery while both sides in the litigation awaited the outcome of a writ filed Monday in appellate court. Defense attorney Matthew Kurillch asked the Fourth District Court of Ap- peals in San Bernardino to dismiss charges against Dr. Eb be Hartelius, 50, nf 2345 E. Coast Highway. after Judge James F. Judge dismissed a series of prelrial motions. It appeared today t h a t local cons· ideration of the appellate writ will be deferred until jury selection is completed. At that point it was indicated, the ap- pellate benth wlll be asked to indicate ii.ti reponse to the arguments filed by Kurllich. those who would devastate your town. "We might call their program a pllot project for environmental destruction and punishment ·of people who have the audacity to challenge the position of the press." Rogers also made reference to "a tidy trio of ex-elected officials from your city" who he asse rted had opposed the freeway election "like snakes emerg· !See ROGERS, Page Z) * * * Mayor Warns Vexing Road nis Remain .. Just outlawing the freeway wlll not solve the problem." So declared Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth this morning responding So. accusati ons by Vice Mayor Howard Rogers that the city's planned traffic study is just a "front.·•· Hirth, as he has said before. ofleted his "complete sympathy with the. desire to have no freewa y in Newport Beach." However, the mayor said, "We have a growing . serious traffic problem. Just outlawing the freeway will not solve lt. It js essential to detennine acceptable golutions to this problem." Hlrth said the traffic study "ls a serious effort to do this and is our be.st hope." He said it will be continued "earnestly'' after the election and will be completed. The traffic study, to be under the guidance of a nine-member citizens' com· mittee. was ordered late last yea r ta "determine the best solutions lo the overall Newport Beach traffic problem." The citizens' committee, w tt o s e members are personally divided on the Pacific Coast Freeway issue. has been interviewing consultants tn do the study ·and is expected to make its recom· mendation on one of them to the coun cil in the near future. Hirth was one of the five city coun· cilmen who signed the official arguments aga inst the propositions in Tuesday's freeway elections. Joining him were Councilmen Milan Dostal. Carl Kymla, Richard CrouJ and Lindsley Parsons. Rclge.rs signed the arguments favoring passage. The seventh councilman . Donald Mein· nis. has strongly Indicated he suppo rts the anti-freeway facUons. Orange Coast H~rhor Pilings Going In An appellate court spokesman today commented that the appellate bench may decide to allow the Orange Counly trial to proceed. A verd ict against Hartelius would enable his lawyers to then file an appeal against lhe ruling, it was litated. Hartelius was charged with arson, burning wlth intent to defraud, burning in!tured property and bribing Witnesses following investigation of a fire at his offices last April D. 1''eatlter Things get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, with the winds dying down and tempera· tures sptrrting back up to 6.'i along the coast and 75 further inland. By JOHN VAL TERZA OI I~• D•ltf '1191 S11H Dana Harbor. merely a dre:am 20 years ago when the first ideas for the complex were conceived -will echo with the sounds of even more equipment thi!I spring as the last·minute push beglM for its inaugural summer season. Now in 1 very brief slumber. the $2$-million harbor. soon will fee.I Its first piling bell!l driven home into a boat basin wbic'h ~oOn will houui hun- drc~s of smtll mft. TJie hist.ofit certmnny of the. fini:'\ piling Is scheduled for mid-March. aay officials of • Marine Capital Inc., of Newport Beach, the flrm which holds the lease for boat facilities. Simultaneously, officials of the county ' road department will be drafting con- tract.! with a paving firm which • will instaU all the harbor 's roadways before the start of the summer season . Landscaping and other finish work to the public portions 'Will begin as well this spring. Bob Wtneard, deve:lopment engineer for the Orange CouiltJ Harbor Dtstrict, said this wttk that-much of the. initial private development or the com"1n wlll btoome a tut tube of aorta for Invutors wilting to llef! the actual lmp11cl of the firlt summer wsoit Only the downtast b a 1 l n of the uniquely-constructed twlri marln1~ will be developed for 00.1. berlhl lhil 1um· mer. he explained. But. by · ntx't "fall more solld plans for the wtsttrly marin11 and the partel earmarked for boat haul- ing and repair will have betn made. Wingard seid despite early spring con- struction starts, several of the faci litie! set for opening in I.he summer could be del"yed -particularly the restaurant and motel developments. "Both developers are awfully eager to get 11tarted, bl.It I.here Is 1 lot of construcUon to bt done," tht engineer said. Bob Dahlberg, president of M 1 r In e Caplt..1, 1ald thl5 week that bia firm ts going full bore for a May t complellon date for the first increment of aUps. In his details, Dahlberg d~pelled peralstent rumors that because of the hundred'-or names on ' waitin( list, !Ste DANA, Page l) I Deputy District Attorney Alphonsu., Novick's tase agaln~t Harteliu! ha! been frequently delayM by what he alleges are: atlempts to intimidate key pro- secuUon witness Reba Vaughn, 'IT, or Costa Mesa. Mrs. Vaugttn has allegedly told Novick that she ha11 betn threatened with death if she testified against H&rte.Uus. The attractive. wnman discussed the case with Judge. Byron K. McMillan in the jurist's chambers last wtek. Thal consultation was followed by withdrawsl of Harte\ius' ball and his admiuion lO Orange tounty Jailg, 4 Judge Judge later rt:stored the phys!· clan's ball at $3(1,000 but lnsi!ltt:d on procttdlng with the trial efter denying Kurlllch's motions for a change. of venue and dlsmlSBal of charges. INSIDE TODA\' Governor Rti:agan'.! Commi.!· sion on Educational Reform it& Californkl. headed by Santa Anan Roberi llanson , stta the need for tome changes in tht wcy Wt run our sthools. Pagt JZ. C•llfttllll 1 CMC-IM u, 1 CleiJlflM 1•tt Ct!llln 11 C,._l"f IJ 0..1~ NO!lfft l lfllef1-I ,_ 6 lftttri•llll'l'lffll t '1ft"'I(• 1 .. 11 "°"SUH 14 '"" l.9n4'" u ,........ t • M11¥•1 ,,,., " Meli.Mt Mtw\ ••I Oflfltt Ctu~lr II lWI• 1 .. 11 ttoc-M•l1t•h IMI 1.1 .... i.IOll • "rllellwr\ • Wttll'lt~ I W~lft ... ,. U W'l"'fll't Mtwl l)•U Wtt!f lflttrl l •t I { I • J DAILY PILOT N Ballot 'H't4esduu ·Newpo·1--t Route. ~:Ittil.ing R~ported &ate"""tnghway Gommiss.ion Chairman Freel C: Jennings said tocjay the Attorney Gtoeral'1 office has ruled that Newport Bt•cb "cannot legally rescind'' the Pacific Coast Frteway route agfeenlent. Jenning& dfvul&ed receipt of the ruling, wblch he aa1d was only preliminary. in his· response to a letter of Newport Btac:h Vtce .Mayor Howard Rogers. flottn had written Jennings after the laUer had said the state woold likely sue the city if the agreement for the freeway through Corona del Mar is unllateraUy cancelled by the city. Volen will ballot next Tuesday ln an inlftative election asking the City Council to back cut of 1he agreement. which covers street closures along the adopted route east of Bayside Drive . In a second questlon, a proposed charter amendment seeks to require future referendums before the council can sign any more street·c l os i ng agreements. Jn response to one of Rogers' que stions . Jennings l\'PUld say only that ''should the city rescind the agreement, the Hichway Commission will decide at that Ume the appropriate direction to take.'' He also pointed out. ho~·ever. "both sides entered the agreement in good faith and \\'e (the state) have spent several hundred thousand dollars on this project In reliance of the agreement. "The commission is charged with the stewardship of state highway funds, and." he said, "must ell:ercise that ate\•:ardship in a legal manner." \Vhelhcr the agreement will be can· celled or not, even if a "yes'' vote prevails Tuesday , is sti!I not clear. City Attorney Tully Seymour has pointed out lhe wording on the ballot sa}'S "Shall the City Council rescind .. .'' "It is not a directive to do so,'' Seymour has said. Although the council has no choicl'! but to proceed with enactment <1f the charter change, should that measure pass. it too, could be blocked since the state legislature can veto the amend· ment if it desires. In a letter to 1'.Jayor Ed Hirth last week , Jennings had agreed to seek com. mission review of the freeway route if an upcoming traffic study to be com· missioned by Newport Beach does. in fact . show "n1odifi cations" of the route are in order. Jennings, in that letter, did not say if he v.·as referring to the West Newport or Corona de! !\-tar legs of the freeway , or both. Jennings declined to comment on other matters surrounding the free way e!ec· tion. itself. or its result, saying •·r can 't commit the commission, or even myself, at this time.'' Fron• Page l ROGERS ON FREEWAY ••• lng from the grass of some agricultural preserve .• ," He added, "thank God their sinister scheme failed ." Rogas later offered to introduce fonner mayors James B. Stoddard, Charles E. Hart and lonner vice mayor Hans J . Lorenz. by the stale legislature, '"·ould require votes <1f the pe<1ple before the council could sign any such agreements in the future. Rogers was one of live speakers who addressed the rally. The <1thers \\'ere Conner mayor Paul J. Gruber, attorneys Arthur Strock and Roy B. Woolsey and Vln J orgensen. The three former municipal officers Wooisey, as he had done at a Chamber hnd filed an unsuccessful lawsuit in an or Commerce talk last \\.'eek. made ? e!forl to block the freeway election on plea for "an <1verwhelming yes vote'' grounds that such a question properly · h was an administrative function of tlected saying anyt ing less than 75 or 30 percent will be worthless. officials. I He maintained Newport Beach can The election "'SS forced by petitions stop the freeway. He cited San Fran-bearing signatures -0! nearly 10,000 · . r1sco s successful efforts in halting <1ne persons (t,300 the minimum needed, were there . verified by the city clerk). Jorgensen·s talk. although not as im· Roge rs said the petition drive "'as passioned as his remarks to the chamber a clear indlcaUon the people "are ready h h 'd " d abl to 11 d .. w en c sa1 it is time for radica l .a~ ~fies s~d~~p~ndorud unanimous-measures .. :to get the state 's attentl~n.'' 'ly t... lbe coimcil :will .bfain u ji°"n .. toldJhe ay.d1ence to,~ wary of .ll;l'on11.se1 "'7 ...,. ' n ~ h"" •11 cf ·he1p from "the cna1rrnan ot the State as a co~sultant is htr:d. wh1c !l!e Jtlahwav Co · · 11· ·a1s f counell will do upon receipt of a r¢e0~· ~ r / · ~ss1on <1r <1 1c1 o •-f "'-· • d · J,,; • neighboring c1t1es. rnenOil.tiOD rom a cllu.cns a v1sory \.vm· Commisslo Ch I F d C J plittee. , n a rman re . e.n· v,. ... ers po'nlin11 -0ut it will be another n.lngs la~t \\eek pledged to seek co1!1m1s. 1""tl • 1 . F' ,, sion revi ew of the freeway route 1f the year before it is doQe, "sked, How city':s traffic study shows some modifica. Jo?g can we wa!L . lion is necessary, 'These co~.nc1.l,men (t~e five who . en-The mayors or all four adjacent cities dor!Cd the no vo te in the elechon) also pledged support to route modlfica· who now feel .that the entire freeway lion within Newport Beach as long as matter must hinge on the grea~ study it woulc( not change the route as it have 0~0ly recently come to this ~on· affect their communities. • cll.lslon. . . . . "Jennings can 't do a thing.'' Jorgensen Roge rs said the, council did~ t ask said, "he 's one of seven members ." ~or a study when ll voted . unanimously Jorgensen pointed out the commission 1n suppoi:t ~f the Badharn b~IJ that '"'ould adopted the route on a 4 to 2 vote have elmunated the enhre Newport ';right here (lhe high school auditorium \ Beach segm~nt of the route. . in 1963 and the man Jennings succeeded The eleclloa Tuesday will not ac· voted against it. compllsh that. In fact, City Attorney Tully Seymour has indicated legally it 1may be nothing more than a straw lpoJI. ' Two proposiUons v.·ill be on the ballot. 1 The first js an initiative that seeks .to rescind an agreement with the state <1n strttt closings along the route <1f .the coastal freeway through Corona del )!tar. 1 The second Is a proposed charter 'amendment that, If passed and ratified ' • OU.M•I COAST DAllY PllOT dlAHW! COAST PUaLliHIMO CQMPANY w.~..t N. w,.4 P'rn:d9"1 •114 ,.,,.u,,..r J1cli: k. c ·u·f·1 Vici' PruloMnl at'4 ~I Mt lllftl" Tf.1tr111 K'11.,.j( flllltf' Th•tr1•1 A. Murphli11 ~'""'""" £d1JIH' L. "''''' x,;,, Htwplll'/ aNd'I (Uy Edit« ... ..,.rt .... Offk• JlJJ N1wp•rl loulewtrtl M1ill119 Add1111 : ,,0 , I•• lt 71, '1••l 0 .... OHkeo C.ht Mett: UCI WMI 111 Strff'I ut..,,.. 1 .. cti, m "°'"' ... ,...,..., kuntl"D'-" •••""' \1'11~ tNdl loultv•rd •S.11 (ltmel'llt: :IDS Hllrtf\ •1 Cimino RtJI , .. ,,. 1tr 17141 '4J-4JJI a....,... ....... .., MZ·•''' From Page l COUNTY ... provislomi of them have also been vio- lated, He has also said lhe legislation requires route p\11nning to be governed specifically by environmental considerations and says the cooslal freeway was not. rn the Supreme Court's opinion. au- thored by Justice Thurgood J\tarsha ll, the additional stipulations were touched upon. 1\.1arshall said the legislation rc(lected "!he growing public concern about the qualitv of our natural environment" and was "designed to curb the accelerating de.i;rruction of uor rountry's natural beau· ty.'' A major rontention of the Freewa\' Fighters has been that U1e proposed route of the Pacific Coast Free\\·ay does just th.:it. - On lhe park aspect. Marshall v.·rote, ''The few green havens that arc public parks wl"re npl lo be lost unless there were truly unusual factors present in a particular case or the C<ISt of co1nmunitv disruption resulting from alternativ.e routes reached extraordi11ary magnitudes. "If the slatutes are to have an y rnean. inf, the seeret.arv cannot approve 1he cir· struction of parkland unle ss he finds that alternative routes present unique prob- lems.'' The dec4sion was a s.tunnin~ setback to the Transport11tion Departmenl. ·which had approved running 1nterstate 4 !hrou,ll:h Overton Park in the middle or Memphis and to the solicitor general's of· fiee which defended the Transportal ion Department's interpretation or federal Jaw. Both the Transporlatinn Act or 196& and lhe Highwa .v Act <1f 1968 prohibit lhe se<;- ri-tary or traMoortatioo to authorize use of fe-Mra l fund& 10 rinaore consrruction ol hi~hwa\'& through puhlic parks if a "feasible and prudent'' 1l1ernative route ext.11ts. Newport Beach Clly Att orncv i\Jllv St\"ITlOOr this morning SRid he C'l'lll!d not rtfl!r "'comm,nt nn the rull!'lg "uritl/ I ha,·e hart a chance to read It ." He indirated. howe\·er. tl1111 It could alsn apply to the entire Mv crossin.i::, itself, if any or th3t area Is desl~ated for open ~race before the freew ay Is actually built. I P~lice Hold Suspect in Man's Death A Santi Ana man has been charged with murder in the disappearance or a disabled laborer whose body -Ir he is dead -may never be round. Samuel C. Tyler. 50, of 16'10 \V. Myrtle St., is expected lo be arraigned Wed- nesday in Central Orange County Judicial District Court. He already h&d been arrested, booked last Thursday on suspicion <1f S<11iciting to commit murder, but was re-in· terrogated juSt before arraignment on that charge J\1onday. Declining to e1plain. the talk Jed to a search with the suspect along 15 miles of San Diego County coastline Monday afternoon for the body of his suspected viclim . Charles A. Noble. 45, of 818 S. A11otl1e1• Su11d H1111f Townsend St.. was listed as a missing person Feb. 17 when his mother filed a report v.•ith police. l.efln llarl pushes sand onto beac:h al end of Park f\venue on Little Balboa Island. City is spending about $5.000 to replenish beaches all around Bal· boa Island. Sand is fro1n Irvine Co mpa ny's nearby Promontory Bay project. Comp.any is givin g the sand to the city. Cost of moving it to beaches is be· ing borne by municipal government. Questioning -0f n1utual acquaintances led police to center their investigation on Tyler. Seal Beach Nabs Standout Suspect In Mesa Robbery A suspected bank bandit v.·hose bright blue car. baggy yellow pants and Afro hairstyle didn 't blend in lo the Orange County landscape was quicldy captured after a $720 Costa Mesa stickup Monday. \Villiam A. Counter, 22, Los Angeles, was arrested by Seal Beach police 30 minutes after the noon hour hold up. He is said to flt the description of the man v.·ho robbed Crocker Citizens Nali<1nat Bank, 3390 S. Bristol St., escap· ing 111ith the only other customer in hot pursuit. Investigators said they also foWld $727. a yellow bank message envelope and a slip <1f paper Yo'ilh: Holdup, scribbled on it. in Counter's car. Seal Beach oflicers ~lichae\ Vasquez and Roberl Gayton said a countywide radio description of the suspect and i:;ela\\'ay car prompted them to notice Counter . He stopped his vehicle northbound on the San Diego Fr:eeway end refused to discuss ipe matter when placed under •r?'est. • Bank teller fl.frs. Betty .A. Sandstrom said 1he bandit who robbed her ~Tote out a deposit slip and set it down at her \\'indov1 covered v•ith SC\'eral dollar bills. She said he then slipped her the holdup note and asked for all the large bills, ,~·hich included so-called bait money used in prosecution ev idence. Just as he \\'SS leaving. ho\vever. customer Charles F. Schmitt realized a robbery \\'as in· progress and chased the suspect out the fronl door. Orlie Parkhurst Services Slated funeral servicts for Orlie L. Parkhurst of 1423 ~1ariners Or i\'e, Nev.'J)Ort Beach, n•ill be l p.m. \Vednesday in Pacific View Chapel. Newport Beach. He died Saturday al the age of ~ . Mr. Parkhurst \\-'as a design specia list v.·ith DISC Instruments of Santa Ana, an engineering firm, He is survived by his v•idow. Norma, of Newport Beach: a daughter, Mrs. Mike Edwards of Santa Ana ; a siste r, Mrs. Ken Norgard ot Laguna Beach. and hi~ moth- er, Mrs. Grace Parkhurst. Pasade11a . Burial will be in Pacific View J\1emorial P:irk. Newport Beach. The family suggests that contributions may be made to the Orange County Can- cer Society. PBR Board Eyes Capital Projects Thl' Ne\\•port Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commission will make 11.~ final recon1menrlations on capital in1· prO\'t'menl projects for the 1971-i2 fi sca l year \\'hen it meets ronight at i : 30 ~·clock in city hall. The co1nn1ission is expected to lake heed of a proposed policy now before the city council that would direct the city staff and agencies to pare recom- mendation! to the bone. Also before the tC<lmmission \\'ill be a progress report on the interim plan of park facililies and a report on the planned \\'idening of Balboa Boule"·ard. Sac1·a111ento Flights Action Postponed Huntington Beach councilmen postpon. cd action J\tonday night on a 1ra11 for lhe Public Utilihes C<lmmis.sion to authorize direct fl ights to Sacramento from Orange County ·Atl'J>ort, • • Councilman Jerry ~1Blney suggested th11t the staff conlact Newport Beach officials to see \\'hcther they have any objectio n to an iocre.ase h1 flight! from the airport. I Mesa Council Revokes • Firehouse Bar License The Costa Mesa City Council A1onday night revoked the Firehouse bar's business license for operating a pool table without a city permit. But it's business as usual today, pen· ding a legal maneuver against con- stitutionality of the municipal ordinance on entertainment machines. Nude and near·nude entertainment the bnr appears to be the real target. The hearing -conducted with s"·orn testimony as in a courtroom -\\'as brief. Altomey Berrien 1'.-Toore represented operator Ray Rohm. \\'hose bar has become a thorn in the side of city officials. Autopsy Ordered In Queen Mary Figure's Death LONG BEACH (AP) -An autopsy ~·as ordered today in the death of retired Rear Adm . John J. Fee, the man who was hired by the city of Long Beach to direct conversion or the ocean liner Queen Mary into a musewn-conveotion center. Police tentatively listed Fee's death as suicide. They said he probably died or carbon monoxide poisoning after his body \\'as found in his garage near his automobile. The car's engine had been running. Fee. 57. quit the Navy in 1967 to head the Queen f\1ary project. The liner made her last voyage last Saturday. moving to a permanent mooring al a L<lng Beach harbor pie r. His \Ylfe Marge found tht body, police said. fee . a Na\'al Academy honor graduate. \1•as awarded the bronze star in World \Var 11 and later was com· mending officer of Naval shipyards at !'earl Harbor and Long Beach. City Clerk Eileen Phinney swore ln each witness at Moore'• request, with the agret!mcnt of City Attorney Roy June. Since the permit for the coin-operated pool table was denied Jan. g by council aclion, the b1r has been cited 52 limss. Moore quizzed Sgt. Jack Calnon, or the police vice and lr1telligenct detail , aOOut how many he iss ued. ··None sir," said Sgt. Calnon. "On how many occasion! were you personally preent?" Calnon started to estimate, but 1'.toore cut him off, requesting a definite number. "Once sir." he replied. Te!timony continued with DetectiVe Di ck DeFrancisco acknowledging he issued or was preseol, when all 52 cita· lions wi:re made. Moore made a point that 26 convictions of nude dancers and Rohm Feb. 9 on \'ice charges are under appea l and therefore not yet imposed. He said this -plus the fa ct none or the 52 citations have been heard in the court either -should not prejudice the council in its vote . Rohm testified that hi s $150 ch erk \Vas refused last September when he applied for the annua l pool ta ble permit. "Do you have that check?" sais 11-fayor Robert f.t. Wilson. R0hm saiO he turned it over lo the attorney. "His attorney can 't find it in the files." quipped r.1oore. drawing a burst of laughter. "None of us are infallible." Councilman Jack Hammett moved to revoke the license and the vote was quick and unanimous. Councilman \l/i!Ham L. St. Cla ir added that every time he shoots pool at the Firehou se. some patron engrossed in the dancers onstage gets hostile. "You have to push them out of the way to get a better sbot." he explained. 1iloore told June he will file court action challenging the city's right to regulate pool tables. J une said be is confi dent it will stand. Investigators theorize that Noble was shot to death in Santa Ana as a result of a marital triangle and his body later dumped alongside the lonely shorelin~. Since no corpse was found , detectives theorize high tides could ha\•e washed it out to sea. Detective Lt. Harrel Davis said the case has been a particularly unusual one and praised bis hom icide in· vesligators ror piecing bits of evidence tocethe:r. If no body is ever found , Tyler could still be C<1nvicted of murder based oo circumstantial evidence, a& in the highJy publicized case of L. Ewing Scott 15 1:ears ago. Fron• Pagel DANA. •• boat slips will be nearly impossible to obtain at the new harbor. ''We have started making the fin1t mailing to lhe initial 2,500 persons who signed the wailing list over the put yeari;," he said. ''Obviousl y, lots of water has passed under the bridge and many of those pe<>plc would no longer be interested." -The name! have grown on the llat on a first-ccimc. first-served basis. But despite their numbers: Dahlberg said chances are very good that persons signing up for slips now would have a chance at a berth for this corning I all. In a move to eliminate hoarding or creating unfair advantage in renting the precious boat docks. f\1arine Capital will be sold from a harbor dock. - "U a slip renter sells his boat. the new owner will receive privileges no different than someone al the tail of fhc waitirlg list. \lie rent the slip to the man . not to the boat.'' he said. The police would eliminate the practice common in Newport Harbor which rarely results in a vacant slip. Subleasing of slips will be forbidden al Dana as well. Many <1f the f-0recasts covering available boat space at the new marina will be reserved until summer. Dahlberg said. giving the firm 's staff a better chan~ to evaluate trends. Dahlberg. obviously tcstatic at the potentisl of the harbor. terms the Dana development "fantastic." "This just has to be the greatest harbor ever developed on the West Coast. The facilities are going to be outstan· ding.'' he said. PRUDENT BUYING • Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one feet become• quite evident -that when money is less plentiful, people buy better quality. Thi• is contrary lo popular belief, but makes good '8nse if you think e b o u t it. When you have to concern yourself with value end pe rformance , you ore likely lo buy better quality. At Alden's in th e lest three years , our per unit sole has been more expen•ive carpeting, reflecting this feet. Consequently, we have tlie I a r g e 1 t selection of-finer qualities . you will see anywhere, all et competitive prices . • Tlie end re•ult is customer satisfaction, pride, and recommendations whidi provide our overwhelming source of new business. SANTA ANA. OUNal TUSTIN C..11 • •• ALDIN'I RID Hll.L CAR,n& & DRA,11111 11174 lrvlM, T"9tlf'I, C•I. ..,, ,,.. I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Avei COSTA Ml\A 646-4838 ' ' I J I I ' • ' , Costa · Mesa Today'• Final N.Y. Stocks ~OL 64, NO. 52 , 4 SECTIONS, '46 PAGES ORAt\IGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1971 TEN CENTS • Mesa Council Revol{es Firehouse's License The Costa Mesa City Council ~1onday night revoked the Firehouse bar's business license Lor operating a pool 'iable without 1 city permit. But it's business as usual today, pen· ding a legal maneuver against con- stitutionality ot the municipal ordinance en entertainme nt machines . Nude and near-nude entertainment the bar appears to be the rea! target. The bearing -conducted with $'A'orn testimony as in 1 courtroom -was brief. Attorney Berrien Moore r.epresented operator Ray Rohm, whose bar bas become a thorn in lhe side of city officials. City Clerk Eileen Phinney swore in each wih1e55 at Moore'1 request, with the agreement o! City Attorney Roy June. •. Sinc'e the permit for the coin-<lperated pool table was denied Jan. 6 by council Plane Crashes Craft Burns; All Die in Wilds A small private plane crashed shortly before noon today in the rugged terrain of north.east Orange County, burning and killing the occupants. Orange County Fi.re Deµarlment units were on the scene and sheriff's deputies en route to the isolated spot. A .fire di:;patcher said the plane wal!i a · Piper t~. but-It v.·as not known !low many victims died in the charred ~eckage. Location of the crash was on Skyline Drive. near Black Star Canyon and the county's Main Divide truck trail normally used by lire unibi. The area is on the Jolmson Ranch, just west of the Riverside county line and south of the San Bernardino County line where all three meet. No ihformation was available im- mediately u to the downed plane'• point of origin. ·U.S. Mine Union Chief :Gets Embezzlement Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -IV . A. "Tony" Boyle, president of the United flf ine Workers. was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of con- 1piracy, embezzlement and making 11· legal political contributHlns of $49,250 from union funds. InCludtd among recipients of the ron- trib~ons was $30,000 to a dinner fOT Sen. Bubert K. Humphrey lrt 1968 and Yirlous others. Two other United Mine Worker officials named in the s a m e indictment were John Owens, secretary-treasurer, and James Kmetz. director of UMW's political arm. the Non-Partisan League. AUy. Gen. John N. Mitche U said the' lkount indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here. Boyle was charged in one count wi!h embeztling $5,000, in anollier ·with con- 1ptring to embezzle and to make illegal political rontribulions totaling $49,250. and 11 counts of actually making such contribUU<ins. The $5,000 was part of the $49,250. Kmeb: was charged with the same Crash Victim Teresa Martin Services Slated Fun eral services "-'ill be held Wed· nesda y for Teresa Ann t.1artin of Costa Me.aa. a former top athlete at NeY•port Harb<lr High School who died of injuries suffered in a Utah accident Feb. 26. She· was 22. Rites will be conducted al 2:30 p.m. In St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in NeWP._c>rt Beach. MJ:Ss Ma rtin wa!i faLally injured in an automobile accident in Heber City, Utah. while returning to the University of Northern Colorado v.·here she was a senior physical education major. conspiracy and embezzlement counts and in two counts of making Wegal poliUcat contributiom. Owens wa1 also charged In the con- spiracy count and on <ine coont of making illegal poliUcal contribuUon. Named as unindicted co-conspirators are Suianne Rlcbafils, "Boyle'• eltCUllve aMJiltant, and · Robert HOwe. former director of the Lab<lr01 Non-Partisan Ua111e. The indictment chArged that betweel\ 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 66-year-old. $55.000-a-year head of the UMW, joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute $49,2.50 of the union's general treasury funds to political campaia:ns QI various candidates seeking federal &fices. a violation of the Federal COrrupt Prac- tices Act. The defendanta were using the non· partisan league as a murui for the union to make contributions to the can- didates, according to the indictment. The ind ictment also charged that in order to conceal the nature of these con- 1-ributions, B<lyle and Owens authorized Kmetz: and Howe to make illegal con· lributions out of the league's funds . In addition, the indictment said, checks written on the league '1 bank account ""·ere drawn to "cash" in the amount of the authorized contribution. And. the indictment alleged, these amounts would be · deposited In the personal accounts of Kmetz and Howe v.·ho would write checks on their accounts payable to the candidates or committees. 'l'h<lse named as recipients of the oon· tributions and the amounts they are al· Jeged to have received are: Salute to Humphrey Dinner Committee. '30,000. 1968: Democratic Congressional Committee, $5,000 in 1969, $5,000 in 1968 and $2,500 in 1967; Republican Victory Dinner $2.000 in 1969 ; ~epublican Leadership Dinner, $1,000.in 1968; former Rep. Arnold Olsen, (0.Mlnn. ), Campaign Committee. l l.000 in 1968; Salute to Rep. John Saylor (R-Pa .), Committee, $1.000 in 1968: Re-elect Wayne Morse Committee, $1 ,000 in 19611; Republican Victory Gala. $5,000 in 1967; D. C. Com· mittee for former Rep . Wayne L. Hays (O.Ohiol, l250 in 1968. action. the bar ha s been cited ~ timu. Moore quiz.zed Sgt. Jack Calnon, or the police vice and lnteJUgence detail, about how many he issued. "None sir," said Sgt. Calnon. "On how many occasions were you personally preent ?" Calnon started to estimate. but t.ioore cut him off, requesting a definite number. · "Once sir," he replied. Testimony continued with Detectiv• '-~ ... ,· Little 8011 Lo1t He doesn't know bis name, J!r nurses at San Diego's liillcrest Receiving Home say he is quick to make friends. The boy, about 2, was found aban· doned in a supermarket. Auth· orities are trying to locate his parents. 2 Publications Fail to Receive Council Okay A pair of publications ,fa iled P..1onday night to win permission for circulation In Costa Mesa . City Council members left the door open to la ter approval of required business licenses when both s1.:~mit ad· dilional inf<irmation. One ii; Sherwood Forest, an un- derground press sheet, while the other is Jndependent American P<ist Office, an advertising packet hung on doorknobs in plastic bags. Sherwood forest representative Barry Weinberg argued unsuccessfully for his gr:oup. Members wanl permission to sell the paper on the street and later establi!ih three coin-operated vending racks. Couhcilinen have asked for submission of a second class postal permit establishing Sherwood Forest as a newspaper. Dick DeFrancisco acknowledging he issued or was present, when all S2 cila· lions were made. Moore made a point that 26 convictions of nude dancers and Rolun Feb. 9 on vice charges are under appeal and therefore not yet lmposed. He said this -plus the ·ract none of the 52 citations have been heard in the court either -!ihould not prejuaice the'council in Its vote. Rohm testified that his $150 c beck was refused last September when he applied for the annual pool table permit. "Do you have that check?" sais MaYor Robert M. Wilson. Rohm said be turned it over to the attorney. "His aUomey can't find It In the files," quipped Moore, drawing a burst of laughter. "None of us are infallible." Councilman Jack HBmmett moved let revoke the Hcense and the vote was quick and unanimous. Councilman William L. St. Clair added that every time he shoots poo1 at the Firehouse. some patron engrossed in the da ncers onstage gets h<istile. "You have to push them out of the way lo get a helter shot," he explained. ?i1oore told June he will file court action challenging the city's right to regulate pool tables. June said he ls confiden t it will stand. "lt all depends on bow mucb mpney CS« FIREHOUSE, Page ll Suspect Colorful Seal Beach Nets Man in Mesa Heist A lliuspected bank bandit wh<lse bright blue car, baggy yellow pants and Afro hairstyle didn't blend Into the Orange County landscape was quickly captured after a $721) C<lsta Mesa stickup Monday. William A, Cou nter, 22, Los Angeles, was arrestat by Seal Beach police 30 minutes after the noon hour hO ldup. He is said to fit the description of the man who robbed Crocker Citizens National Bank, 3390 S. Bristol St.. escap- ing with the only other customer in hot pursuit. Fired Worker Fails to Get- S.uit-Jiuna... , !lo appeal Is pl"11l<d by an employe fired four years ago as a result of losing his $2$0,000 slander suit naming former Costa Mesa City HsU superiors last week. Robert A. Warren and his wife, however, still maintain the verdict by an Orange County Superior Court jury was unjust and overlooked evidence sub- miJted hy. their attorney_ Mrs. Warren said if attorney Ronald Steelman filed an appe al and they won, the city would just file its own appeal and drag the four-year case <in further. "Why bother? Why cause more expense to the taxpayers?," she asked, ques-- tioning Assistant City Attorney Robert Humphreys' assessment of a $10.000 cost to v.·in the case. She said their own fees totaled more than S6,000 and C<lnsumed most of their savings. Attorney Steelman said he was shocked al the verdict. The jury ruled that Warren, as charged by the city. fals ified time gheets during two weekends of emergency standby duty as Street Department equipment opera· tions forema n. The Warrena maintain he was on duty, but inadequate cily communications records failed to show he was. He named former City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie and Street Superintendent Har ley Bogart In the $250.000 slander action, charging their remarks damaged his. ability to gain employment. \\'arren, a to.year employe when fired and nciw similarly employed by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, asserted both individuals Indiscreetly discussed the reasons given for his dismissal. Investigators said they also found f727, ' a yellow bank message envelo~ and a-slip of paper with'.Holcfup, scribbled on ii, in Counter's car. Seal Beach officers Michael Vasquez and RObert Gayton said a c.ountywide radio description of. the suspect and getaway car prompted them to notice Counter. He stoppt;!d his vehicle northb<lund on the San Diego Freeway and re.fused to discuss the matter when placed under arrest. Bank teller Mrs. Betty A. Sandstrom sai<L the bandit who r<lbbed her-wrote out a depos it slip and set It down at her window covered with several dollar bills. · She said he then slipped her the holdup note and asked for all the large bills, which included so-called bait m<lney used in prosecution evidence. Just as he was leaving. however. customer Charles F. Schmitt realli:ed a robbery was in progress and chased the suspect out the front door. Mesa Salesgirl Safe After 600-mi\e Terror Escapade ' ~ • • .... ill,..). 1-l't " ~Uy 1bU1ed II lllJ1ll01nt lll>I plu&)I SOit Lake City motel room, a misling Costa Mesa saleswoman is aafe \Oday, after escaping to end a 600-mile terror trip In ber own.hometown. Her alleged kidnaper and rapist is: now a prisoner too. Paul H. Anderson. 30, was captur ed In Green River. Wyo.. and booked into Sweetwater County Jail pending in- terr<igalion by FBI agents ind ex- tradition. He was the <ibject or an Orange County manhunt as the result or a carb<ln ropy kidnap case the day before, authorities reve~ today. Anaheim police said Anderson had been sought since Friday, when a 2G-year-old woman was abducted, molested and finally released. The Costa Mesa cause. originating at fi :lf'p.m. Saturday. ended with the vie· tim·s escape. Chilling Winds Get Replaced By Santa Anas Gusty, northerly winds that have chill· ed Southern California for the past five days are expected to die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bring 75 degree highs to Orange County Wednesda y, the Na. tional Weather Service predicts. Early today the brisk northerly winds shifted direction to blow from the northeast, creating typical dry, Santa Ana oonditlons and increasing wind velocity below the coastal canyons. March. indeed, had bl<iwn in like a Jlon. The 25-year-0ld woman wa1 last seen whtn ahe dropped off another Fashion Jsland department store employe at bet apartmenl. Detective James Blaylock said the vic- tim's roomma te becam e concerned later when she wai; overd ue. Checking the area Sunday, the room- mate found the victim's car locked in a market lot at 2701 Harb<lr Blvd., two -ba gz of groceries spolling inside. By this time, nearly 24 hours had elapsed and the frightened woman flag· ged down Patrolman Robert Johnson. Just about the same time, the victim telephoned from Salt Lake City to report she was iiafe after being treated at a hospital and released to her parents. She said she was kidnapt;!d from the lot at gunp<iint. No address was listed for the suspect, but Costa Mesa police had been alerted that he might visit his f<irmer wife. Santa Ana-based FBI agent Charles Sullivan said today he couldn't pred ict how soon Anderson would be returned to face charges. Detective Blaylock said the victim might remain in Salt Lake City until author ities were finished talking with her. Authori ties said Anderson was driving a 1971 maroon sport sedan listed as the suspect vehicle in the Anahe im rape and abduction Friday when apprehended In Wyoming. Sweetwater County Sheriff 's deput ies claimed he had four guns. two rifles and two handguns, in the vehicle when captured. Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt. R<ibert Green said today the fact the victim escaped in her hometown was purely coincidence. A 1966 graduate of Newport Harbor High School. Miss f.1artin received the Girls' Athletic Association'!! High Point Se:nior Sportsmanship Award based on her four-year athletic career at the liChCIOI . Her major sport in high school w;ia tennis and she rontinued to compete in tennis in college. Court • Ill Freeway Picture The Orange County Harbo r Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots today, as small craft warnings continued into tbe fifth da y. With the diminishing winds tonight, Inla nd portions of the count/ may expect near frost··iemperatures with lows of 33 degrees·: Orange Coast Harbor High officials recall Miss Marttn as a highly skilled team co m· petllor who received all-star awards for interscholasti: competitions in baskrt· ball. volleyhall, field hockey and softball. Mlss.Mac.tin is survived by her father, B. Donald Martin nf Mission Hills: her mother\ P.1rs. Anit"a J, Martin o[ C".o!ta Mesa : a brother. Thomas Alan Martin, Costa .Mesa: and her grandmother Julia C. Marlin of Cardiff. Or. t'harles H. D!erenfie\d will officiate at 1erviCes Wednesday. Burial will follow in .Pacific View Memorial Park. Corona del Mar. Tht family suggests that memorial contri buttons may be ma&: to the Terry Martin Scholarship Fund In care of Newport Harbor Hig h School Girls Athletic As.-;nclatlon, 600 lrvlne Ave., Newport Beach. • The "memorial fund will establish 1 perpetual trophy for outsll!Ddlng senior girls' ~ennis playen 11.nd provldie a 1chol1.rshlp for a seninr girl planning to major In physical education In college. County Could Bar Crossing Dunes Park Or•nie-County ,aupervlior• might have bridge approache!, likely would dCttr. a litrong WIH'd in any future crossing or mine whether or ll<lt the span would tn- Upper Bay by a freeway route through croach on county parkland. Ne wport Beach under • ruling issued to-If it does. the state under the new Su- day by the United States Supreme Court. prcme Court ruling would l!@cd county The nation's highest tribunal, acting on approval , 1ccordlng to Keith McKe~n. ex- a Tennessee case. ruled that federally· ecutive assistain t to Haig Ayanian. chie( fl.lnded highways ma y not cross public engineer for the Division of lUghwavs' parks except "In the m<>st unusUal District 7 off ice in [.()s Angeles. Pacific cases." Cou~ Freewaiy will In part be bullt wlth The propo.sed Pacific Coast Freeway fe~eral fl.Inds. routing throu&h Newport might well ed1e The SUpreme Court ruling w11 the first Into Newport D\fne,1 Aquatic Park, also lnterprttallOli of recent environment lea:- koown as Harry Welch Memorial Park. islatloo and blocked construcUon of 1 1i.r· Located on the easterly 1idt of the nar· • lanf lnter1tlte blP:ny through a park rowr near tht .moottl ol Upper B1y, Ntw• h1.Mmiphil, Ttnn. port Dunes is ·a county.owned p11rk whlch McKean uJd that 1ince the Jq:lslation has ~ea opertted by luse tll ptiv1te en. was 11.dopted , the «late hai .been forced lo terprlle. ne&oliate with local gover11menta In cues Final designs ol 1 new frteway bridge whr.re park crossings ire involved .. ncross Upper Newport B1y, and the "We get togelher with the local agency, l I l usually the parks and re creation commis- sions," he said, "and either offer to re· place the land we have taken with •d· jacent property of equal value, or else offer a design we hope they wiU find compatible." McKea n explained that if the local agency ls satisfied witb thi plans, a 111tt- ment of coocurrence is usually an th1t Is required to mtt:t the "unusual aitua- tibnl'' clause In the JJw, However, he said, "If they do not agree,. thea we have • problem." He said if the federal government does not overrule the loc1fJ1rottst the depart· menl would ·have to replace the , road. Todly'1 Supremt O:.,n ru11n1 also h1- cluded a direct ive to a dl!trict court to "engage in a aubstantial Inquiry'' of the !See COIJNTY. Pare ZJ ' ' Quake Jiggles Northern County A minor earthquake shook North Or2nge C<lunty at 7:47 p.m. Monday ratUing dishes and nerves, but dolnj: litlle damage. Caltech seismologists rated the temb- lor at 3.2 ori the Richter scale and p~ pointed the epttnter to be at Brta mid· W!IY 1:iewteen the 12-mlle long WhltUe r !ault and· the »mile Norwalk fault · fo the south. The sharp jolt was folklwf:d by 1bout 10 Sttonds of rumblins, rattlin1 and roll· ' in.It motion underfoot. ,,,. The earth ahock wa1 not rel1ted to the Feb. t killer quake centered at Sylma.r, but Orange County residenta 11 far away ag Laguna Beach reported feeling Mon· day's tremor. .j " • ·Weather Things get back to normal weatherwlse Wednesday, with the win ds dying dovm and tempera· lures zi,ru rlln1 beck up to 6S along the coast and 75 further inland. INSIDE TODA. Y Oovtrnor Reagen's Comm.i.s- tion on Educatloncl Reform in California, htaded by Santa Anan Robtrt /{at181)D, sees the netd Jor sQmt changes in. tht way we rim our schools . Page l l . . I NU;tutl ~1141• If N1lltfttl "'"" •I °"'"" (O\lfl,,. 11 lllt(ft. , .. ,, ,._. #•rlt-'1 111-11 T11"Nllll t "'""" . W .. lllW' I 'flllt• "'"~ " W-"l 111 ... 1>1• W1rW ""1 •I J - Z ~M..T PJLOT I. Police Hold ' I -. .,;;..- l SEC Post -. . -Nixon Nominee -. Suspect in . . MiiWB~eath ~ Santa Ana man has t>ttn charged wtui:murder In the cllsappellfince of a ~dlsa.bled laborer wfiose biody ~ if ht la dead -may never be foJiit. · ·Samuel C. Tyler, 50, of 1640 :W ... Myrtle SI.,· Is expected to be arraigned Wed· nesday In Central Orange County, Judicial District Court. He alreally hi.d been arrested, booked last Thursday on suspicion of 501iciting lo commit murder, but wu n·in· terrogated just before arraignment on. that cbarce Monday. Dttlining to erplain, the talk led to a search v.ith the suspeet Ilona 15 miles of San· Olego County eoastlint ?.1onday afternoon for the body of his suspected victim. Charles A. Noble, 45, of 818 S. ToWl).5end St., was listed as a misslng person Feb. 17 v.·hen hi! mother filed a report with police. Questioning of mutual acquaintances led police to center their investigation on Tyler. Investigators theorize that Noble was shot to death in Santa Ana as a result of a marital triangle and his body later dumped alongside the lonely shoreline. Since no corpse was found, detectives theorize high tides could have washed it out to sea. Detective Lt. Harrel Davis said the case has bee!] a particularly unwual one and praised bis homicide in· vestigators for piecing bita of evidence together. If no body is ever found , Tyler could still be convicted of murder based on circumstantial evldenct, as ln the highly publicized caae of L. Ewing Scott 15 ~·ears ago. Fron• Pagel FIREHOUSE • • • those guys have." said June, who pro· secuted the long, 1967-68 Baby 0o11·s topless bar case. Baby Doll's finally v:ent out of business due to the economic !!rain of legal r .... City prosecutors are working with the District Altorney to initiate action under the st.ate·s old Red Light Abatement law. .. This method -which has shut down five. county ban featuring nudity - dates back to lbe tum ol lhe ctntury and control of pr~tution. June. said until 1ucb lime a!. Moett: files court acUon to challenge tbe. city's amusement machJne control t h e Firthotlse will be cJted every day it optrates. Jr :r..1oore act.!. It would hall citations until the law was 1tticken or upheld by a higher court. Anthony Quinn Discusses Fil1n Screen actor Anthony Quinn will discuss his Oscar-winning role in "Viva Zapata" follo"·ing a screening of the film at UC Irvine, 7 p.m. Wednesday. The program is eighth in a series or film-lectures which bas brought filmdom notables to the campus to discuss literature in film. The showing v.·ill be held in Room 161 Humanities Hall and is open to the public free of charge. Novelist and screenwriter Niven Bwch, heads the "Literature in Film" series as a Regents Professor at UCI during the Winter quarter. ORANc;I COAST DAILY PILOT OltAMGE CO.Alt PUILl~HIMG C'OMPANY Rob1rt N , W11d Prn:oen1 1nc1 P11bll~ Jtc~ R. Curley Vk1 Pruldmt 1r.<1 ~rtl Mt,..._ft" lhor111t K11 vil Edllot lhor11•t A. M11rp.,in1 ,,.,,,..g1119 f d110r Ch1rl11 H. l101 Rich1rd P. N1!1 , .t.ul1!1n, Mt,..Q"!l'>ll Eol!ori. C°"• M"• Offk1 310 W11i 81y Str11t Mallin g Add r1u1 P.O. lo• I i60, •262' OtMr OHien H1WPOrl 811cll: m :i Nl,..~Ofl l ou: ... 1r• ~•-l11cll; 7T.: Fott1t A•-~ ~1,1<1t!"O!O.i ltlCll: 1711:: BttCll l ot11••11d $111 Cltmtnlt: al NO<lll El '•n'lll'IO Re•I DA ILY PILOT, will\ """ld1 1t comblMd lhe Ntvn·Pru .. It """"IJJ'>(f dtllY t•UPI S1111- •t'f' In MP.,11-llCllllo~I tor' lilll!J"\t lt.u>, ,..,..._: 1111c1>. Cll!t M111, "'v~1!"511"" ~1Kfl. l'tMllfilo Vt lllY, ~•" Clt"'4fllltf Ceptfilf'•M 1rd 1rdc11ca1tk, t ie'!t "'1!n .,.. IQltwl tellllf<ll, .. rtr.CIPll 111"lnllfl9 flllll II at »O wur •Jt Mrtot .• CO.It Mn•. , ... , •••• 17141 '4l:04JJ1 C1...etJH ..... ,, .. 642·1• 71 CIO'(flf!ll, 1911, Ori~ CIHt fl~lloM ... c-1ny. NP ..... , 1f0tlh, lllvllf•I~ U!IWltl ,,,_lllf' w 1dvt"t .. men11 lltrtlft _, DO r~d wltlWl.ll •Pttltl llt"'f Wl'!iUltn ol c•jl'IOh: •-· &«Of.id cltlt ,.., ... p11fd •I ~,..._, Sff(ll .... (0511 .... , C•HWftll. SlltitC•!PllOn ~ Cl""" U.2l fl'ICl.illllfl t>'I' rntll H .11 "*""'If' """'',., w u1111ion.. il.u ,,....1n1r. • • ' •• . • .. . • ' ' ., ).- ~-~·. .. •• . ' .... ' • •· • r\. ' . , •• ' - ....... -... . ~ . ...... • Hearing Slated WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senai< Banking Commiltet voted Tuesday to reopen it.s hearing on President Nl.J.on'1 nominati on or William J, Casey to head the Securities and Exchange Commission. The committee chairman, Sen. J o h n Sparkman (D-Ala.l. said the deci!ion to hold another hearing March 9 was by voice votr. The committee then decided 12-l lo open the session lo the public. The dissenters were lhree Republicans \Vallace F'. Bennett, Utah, John G . Tower, Tex., and Bill Broc:k, Tenn. Casey also ~· II be asked al the new hearing about fees paid his law firm by Roosevelt Racewa y, of which he Is a director, the committee said . Casey. a New York City tax lawytr, said last week he hoped the Senate panel v:ould reopen its hearings . He said he was confident he could "eqilain my act.ions and that it wlll be ev ident no wrongdoing was involved." Sparkman said one matter troubling the committee about the nominee has been resolVtd satisfactorily. '"He has advised the committee !bal he will now put his holdlngs into a blind trust," the chairman said. , Snow Job i11 Corvallis The committee voted tentatively Feb. 10, after hearing Casey testily briefly, to approve his nomination. At the Feb. 10 hearing, casey said he would prefer to have his holding1 handled by a tnfstee but not plactd in a blind trust. This replica of a Volkswagen "''as sc ulptured across the railroad tracks that skirt the south end of the Oregon State University campus in Corvallis. Ore. It took students six hours to build it. Several pass· ersby stopped to help "push" what they thought was a re.al car off the tracks. There is no record of what the engineer said when the train came by. Sparkman emphaslz.ed today , however. that this approval was contingent upon a satisfactory resolution of some further questions about the nominee. The nOmlnation has not been sent tD the Senate for action. Unfinished Home To Be Studied By Mesa Council Manufacturers Directory Autopsy Ordered In Queen Mary Figure's Death The questions will be taken up at the new hearing, he said . The members plan to ask about three civil suits filed against Casey. Only one or these was brought up at the Feb. 10 session. Has Data on Coast Firms Jury Selection For H artelius Case Continues \Vaming neighbors lbey may yet be disappointed, lhe Costa Mesa City Coun- cil agreed Monday night to probe whelher a coatroversial unfinished house is a public nuisance . Writers get writer's cramp. Domestics get scrubv,.oman"s knee and surfers get ktiots on their shins. So what do the ladies ol the Costa 1'1e_sa Chamber of Commerce staff have among occupational hazards? Overlooking the fact they sit a lot, the female manpower behind production o( the new 1971 Ha rbor Area manufac- turers' directory have sore ears. "They made more th an 3,000 telephone calls," Executive Manager Nick Ziener said toda y in releasing the com- prehensive handbook. Carrying just under 600 firms. the catalogue is ava ilable to Chamber memhcrs for $2.50 and ~5 to others who may find it useful. The Directory of Manufacturers in the Greater Costa Meaa Area conlains an impressive array of facts and figures many cili:iens might never suspect. Coordinator Marge Wagner and her team compiled data on 598 firms, 326 Fro1n Pagel COUNTY ..... government's authoritati&n o( the project. The new environment Jegislatlon has been cited Jn the local battle to block, or at least relocate, the Pacific Coast Free- way through Newpo~L Attorney Arthur Strock. a leading spokesman of the Freeway Fighters. has repeatedly cited the laws and said other provisions Of thtm have also been vJo- l11ted. He has also said the legislation requires route plaMing to be governed 1pecifi cally by envi ronmental considerations and says the coastal freeway "'as not. In tile Supreme Court's opinion, au- thored by Justice Thurgood Marshall, the additional stipulations were touched upon. r>.1arshall said the legislation re(]ected "the growing public concern about the quality of our natural environment'' i nd was "designed to curb the accelerating de..,1 ruction of uor coun try's natural beau- ty." A major contention of the Freeway Fighter! has been that the proposed route of th e Pacific Coast F'reev.·ay does just th::1t. On the park aspect. Marshall wrote. "The few green ha ve ns that. are public parks were not to be lost unless there were truly unusual factors present in a particular case or the cost of community disruption resulting from alternative routes reached extraordinary magnitudes. "If the statutes are lo have any mean- lng, !he secretary cannot approve the d~ struction of parkland unless he find s that alternative routes present unique prob-- lems.'' Th!' decisio n was a stunning setback In the TransportAtion Oeparlment. which had aprroved n1nning Interstate 4 throuizh Overton Park in the middle of ~1emphi." and to the solicitor general's of- rrte which def!'nded the Tran•portati(l n Deoartment's interpretation of fede ral law. Both 1he Transportation Act of 1966 and lhe Highwav Act or 1968 prohihil the stc- retarv of transportation to authorize use of fedt>ral funrl s to finan<'P con.~trucrion or ht~hways through public p::1rks if a "fea!ibte and prudent" alternative route exi~L.,. Newport B~ch Clty Aflorne~ Tullv S"vmour this mQrninR said he cnulrl not offer comment on the ruling "until I have hat1 a chan~ to read It." He indlcitted. however.1hat It could also app~ t.o the entire bav crossin.ll', itself. if ani Of thet area Is desiAA&ted fnr o;>Pn space berore the freeway I• act ually built. 2 Boston Police1nen -Answer Cai!:-Shot BOSTON (UPll -T"-o policemen wire shot early TUesday. officials said. The two officers had responded to • call in Ute city'• ghtUo. lectlon ·and wert apparen1 ly trying to make an arrest when they were shot. Details were 1ketchy and police had no reports of the offlctrs' cond!Uon. '"'ithin city limits. The list runs from AAA Propeller Service to Weaver's Production Service -not quite A to Z -but close. Products include an incredible in· \'entory from artificial ora:ans to racing balloons, f\-Jexican food, machinegun am· munition belts, surfboards, moon rocket parts, dainty lingerie, vitamlns and chemica ls. Data offered in capsule form includes name, owner or top executive, products. number o( employes, address and telephone. Top on the size list is ~lcDonnell Douglas Astronautics, Huntington Beach, v;ith 6.500. follov•ed by Collins Radio and Philco.-Ford Aeronutronic \vith 2.000 each. The total is 41.068 employes, running do~'Il to one-man operations. Largest concentration is in the Irvine Industrial Complex, ~·ilh 100 in business and a dozen more locating there now. Ziener said the new poll shov.·s a great increase over the September, 1969 edition, with_ 462 manufacturers and 3!1.346 emp1oyp. \ • r "In. order to .spread tilt tax btse to operate obr faat-«roiiit\g city, the necessary development or our communi1)' must continue to be h I g h I y sophisticated," he added. "A long range five to 1'1 year industrial development program of seeking selec· Uve types of manufacturing firms \Yill be a top priority chamber goal," he concluded. LONG BEACH CAP ) -An autopsy was ordered today in the death of retired Rear Adm. John J. Fee, the man who \¥llJ hired by the city of lAng Beach lo direct conversion of the ocean liner. Queen Mary into a museum-convention cenltr. Police tentatively listed Fee's death as suicide. They said he probably died of carbon monoxide poisoning after his body was found in his garage near his aulDmobile, The car's engine had been running. Fee, 57. quit the Navy in 1967 to head the Queen Mary project. The liner made her last voyage last Saturday, moving to a permanent mooring at a Long Beach harbor pier. His wile Marge found the body, police said. Fee, a Naval Academy honor graduate, was awarded the bronze star in World War II and later Wa! com· manding offictr of Naval shipymls at Pearl Harbor and Long Beach. Burglar With Key Gets School Funds A burglar with a key ta. the building slit a bank deposit bag 'll!"nd stole $589 in receipts from the Estancia High School student store in Costa Mesa over the weekend. Donald ?if. Lowry notified police Mon- day after discovering the receipts miss- iog from the campus store's file cabinet. Jury ieleclion continued today in the Orange County Suptrior Court trial of a Corona del Mar physi~ian accused of arson and bribery while both sides in the litigation a~·aited the outcome or a "Tit filed ~1onda)l in appellate court. ' ·0erense attorney Matthew Kurilich asked the Fourth District Court of Ap· peals in San Bernardino tD dismiS! charges against Or. Ebbe Hartelius. 50, of 2345 E. Coast Highway. after Judge James F. Judge dismissed a series <if pretrial motions. IL appeared tod ay that local cons· ideration of the appellate writ will be deferred until jury selection is completed. At that point it ~·as indicated, the ap- pellate bench will be asked tD indieale it.s teponse to the arguments filed by Kurilich. A;n. appellate court spokes~ today commented that the appellate bench may decide to allow the Orange County trial to proceed. A verdicl against Harteliu.s would enable his Ja.,..'Yers lo then file an appeal against the ruling, ii was stated. Hartellus was charged with arson, burning with intent tD defraud, burning insured property and bribing witnesses following Investigation or a fire at his offices las t April 9. A hearing on whether John Wakula's property at 1128 Gleneagles Terrace qualifies was set April S, 11;ith prior investigation. Residents of the Marina Highlands are.a appeared twe weeks ago to ask city a!sinance. Wakula, or 648 Beach St., began work on the home eight years ago before giving up due to vandalism and other reasons. He has said he 'll leave it as Is fo r a century if he pleases. City Manager Fred Sorsa ba\ said the property is now posted agai nst trespass- ing, ~·hile Mayor Robert f\t Wilson says no oaiinances are obviously being viola1ed. Norman Slatter, of 1136 Gleneagles Terrace. asked iI some law could be amended to apply to unfinished homes. City Attorney Roy June said yes, but Wakula would be Immune because the house was begun in 1963, before any such amendment existed. He agreed the structure is unsightly and Wakula is inconsiderate, 1ugges_Uag the association proct:ed with a civi11:uit as a private nuisance. One of the most vocal members la Sig Fidyke, of 1132 Gleneagles Terrace, an adjacent lot. He debated at length over what 11 or is not a public nuisance. an eyesore, a firetrap and a danger to life and limb. Rogers Blasts Council, Pilot at Route Rally Deputy District Altorney Alphonsus Novlck's case against Hartelius has been frequenUy delayed by _what he alleges are attempt! lo intimidate key pro- secution witness Reba Vaughn , '!1. or Costa 1'.1esa. Mrs. Vaughn has allegedly tDld Novick thal she has been threatened wilh death if she testified against Harteliu.s. The attractive woman discussed the case with Judge Byron K. Mcfi.fillan in the jurist's chambers last y,·eek. That consultation was followed by withdrawal of Hartelius' bail and bis admission to Orange County jails . ·'tlr. Fidyke. you say you're willing lo go· on the spot," remarked Councilman William L. St. Clair after discussion of possible civil action. "Why don't you? Why do you want to put the council in the middle of a neighborhood squabble?" F'idyke and his supporters said they went to the council because they felt inadequa te to cope with the year1-long problem. "Wt: don't want to hassle !he city council. We just don"! know the inll and outs." said Dick Willard. of 1133 Gleneagles Terrace. By L. PE~ KRIEG Of 11111 O•U1 ~lltl S1tff Nev.'porl Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers t.-tonday night labeled lhe planned Newport traffic study a ''front'' covering !he City Council majority's attempt to deflate the petition drive lhat forced next Tuesday's Pacific Coast Freeway election . "The ploy did not work. • .you v.•ere not fooled ," Rogers said to the 250 persons galhered at Newporl Harbor High School for a Freeway Fighteri;' election rally. The vice mayor said Mayor Ed Hirth launched the study in a confidential n1emo to city councilmen, a confidential memo that Rogers had released shortly afler it was delivered and from which ht> quoted again Monday night. Rogers had blasted Hirth when he first released the document. ln a. 1tate- menl he later ret racted, Rogers called the mayor a patsy to the vested interests in the city. Rogers Monday night also .attacked the DAILY PILOT for allegedl y opposing the Free,vay Fighters' anti-route cam- paign. He said the ne1vspaper was one or the "combined powt:rs of the vested interests" and said It was bl3sed. The vice mayor ,. charged that the newspaper, '"Wants you. the people. lo Jail into a false sense of security unt\I i~ is too late ••• tbe daily bas -since the oulset -worked hand-in-glove with those who would devastate your town. "We might call their program 111 pilot project ror environmental destruction and punishment or people who have the audacity to challenge the position of the prtss.'' Rogers also made ref,rence to "a tidy trkl or ex•lected -o(llclals from your city" who he asserted had oppOsed lhe freeway election "like snakes emerg- ing from lbe. era$$ of some agricultural preserve .. -" He ad dtd, "thank God their si nister scheme failt'd." effort to block the rreeway election on grounds that such a question properly was an adm inistrative Junction of elected official s. The election v.·as forced by petitions bearing signatures o[ nearly 10,000 persons ( 4,300 the minimum needed, were verified by the city clerk). Judge Judge later restored the physi- cian's bail at $30,000 but insisted on proceeding with tht: trial after denying Kurilich'1 motions for a change or venue and dismissal of charges. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley finally moved to schedule a formal public nuisance hearing in 30 days and the vole v.·as unan imous. "They may not be happy _ Maybe It \Von 't be one," he warned. PRUDENT BUYING Througliout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one feet becomes quite evident -that when money is leis plentiful, people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but mokes good sense if you th ink ob out it. When you hove to concern yourself with value ond performance, you ore likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the lest three years, our per unit sole hes been more expensive corpeting , reflecting this foct. Consequently, we hove the I o r g e 1 t selection of finer quoli~es you will see eny,.;here, ell et competitive prices. Tlie end result is customir 1oti1fection, pride, end recommendations whicli provide our overwlielming source of new business. \ I . ' . ALDEN'S " IANTA ANA, O•AN•I TUITIN Ctll •• • CARPns • DRAPES" Rogers lllter offered to Introduce rormtr mayors James B. Stoddard. 1 Charles E. Hart and former vice mayor flans J . Lorenz. , ALDIN'I RID HILL CAIPITS 6 D•Atlllll 11v4 '"''"'Tutti"' c.1. IJI iJ44 1663 Pla71ntia COSTA t<UA 646-4838 Ave. The three former munlclpaJ officers had filed an unsuccessful lawsuit In an I . ' ' . ' I 7 -.-:-.---··--.. -' ' --. --------- Sad.Uehaek Today's Final VOL 1>4, NO. 52, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlf.ORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1971 TEN CENTS Utilitie·s Win Tidelands Use Over Protests The State Lands Commisgion Monday granted permission lo two electric udlity ftrms lo use public tidelands at San Onofrt for sand excavation allied with development of two new nu c I ear generating plants. Southern California Edison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric won • the permission by unamioua vote , dt!pite protest from 'a Santa Barbara ttolagy group. The foes contended th1t 1 delay should have been given to allow time to study r,ssible effects on thr: marine ecology o silt and mud. The utility firms sought the permission as one of many official acUons that would allow the construction of twin nuclear reactors costing a hall-million dollars. Lands Commission staff members told the three members of the panel that a thorough study had been made or possible silting effects -studies which showed no damage imminent. Sand on two parcels on tbe beach down coast of th!! existing reactor would be d4g !>Ul in the project and stored on another section of public tidelands on the bet\ch. The Shoreline Preservation Conference. Incorporated. of Santa Barbara sought the delay in the commission decision. Federal and state pollution agencies consented to the sandmoving project. • Despite lhe swift approval of the dig- ging ptrmit, other governmental ap- provals far more crucial have not yet come for the generating prTJjtct. The Slate Public Utilities Commission as . yet has not granted a permit af convenience and necessity sought in weeklong hearings in San Clemente last fall. - Some action, however , is e1pecled this spring . Further extensive hearings. conducted on a federal level by the Atomic Energy Commission, probably will be acheduled along the South Coast sometime in April. Matters of a more technical nature are e,xpected to emerge at those hearings. Ille or ers Ie n icte $170,000 Firehouse Cost Seen San Clemente city councilmen Wed· nesday are expected to formally launch the construction of a new fire department headquarters building by hiring the architectural firm of Renfro and Jordon to draw the plans. While no official cost or size has been approved for the building, the council is expected to set about a $170,000 figure to the new headqulrrters designed . to occupy what now is a huge pa~k~ng Jot and driveway near the existm& department. - Fite Chief Merton W. Hackett has 11roposed a building measuring about 800 square feet and standing two stories. In his plans the structure would be capable of hou sing a full-time depart· ment, complete with l iving quarters, reception areas, a darkroom, a training.room and ample storage areas. The arcMitects who will be hired for the drawings include Marvin Renfro, t~ Original designer of the civic center and 'Willard T. Jordan. Costa Mesa coun - cilman arid an architect with years of e1perience· at firehouse design. lf · the project goes to bid later ~is year, the existing fire department off~cts would be vacated soon after work b~gms. Hilckett said the fire rigs would be temporaily moved back to . the _city 's (irst firehouse. an aging Spanish bu1\d1ng near the city yards now used f?r ~torage. Construction will not remain isolated to the fire department project, howev~r: Vacated garages and offices at c1v1c etrtter will be blended into the police department operation -becoming more cramped by the day. Preliminary plans call for use of the old fire equipment garages for more denUon cells, storage and office space for _a growing detective and patrol di vii ions. Critical Film On War Policy ' Set at School A film produced by actor John Wayne -critical of the U.S. foreign policy in Jpdochina -will be sho"·n for the (irst time in the San Clemente area March 13 at San Clemente high school. SJ)onsored by TRAIN Ito Rest?re America·s Independence Now) the film ••No Substitute for Victory" will be shown at a p.m. in the Triton Center. SJll)kesmen for the sponsoring group said the movie includes narration by Lowell Thomas and appearances by military officers, combat . veterans and former Presidential cabinet members. "The military leaders and combat veterans who appear in the film all insist they were hampered by policies designed to be less than successful," TRAIN publicity chairman Pamela Johnson said. Tickets -$2 for adulll and St for students -can be obtained in Capistrano Bay buslneSSC!s or by calling 492·2419 and 492-7838. Income from the San Clemente showing will. 10 toward paying back expenses of making the movie. None of the guests in the tiroductlon received payment for \heir appearance, TRAIN spakesmen said. !\' ail Deliveries Hit W);sHINGTON (UPll -Stn, Alan Cr11nston (0-Callf.), says tht U.S. Postal Seryife·ls guilty of '' Inexcusable dlscr1mlnation" through a new policy which eliminates tratler-by-trailer m1il delivery in tr•iler parks built after last July I, ' WILL NOT FACE DEATH Convicted Murd1r1r Hulse Hatchet Killer Hulse Guilty; Eludes Death By TOM BARLEY Of ffl• 0111' ,111! Sl•tt Hatchet killer Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse was found guilty late Monday af first degree murder in the slaying of Santa Ana service atati'on attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Hulse may now yet have to stand trial in the mutilation slaying of Mission Viejo schoolteacher Florence Nancy Brown. In the Carlin murder, it took the Orange County Superior Court jury less than si1 hours to decide that Hulse, a burly 17-year-old, used an ue last June t to hack to Cleath young Carlin in the restroom of his Santa Ana service station. Hu1se, 16 at the time of the murder, received the verdict with the apathy that · has marked his demeano r throughout the two week trial. . Judge Ronald Crbokshank scheduled March 26 for imposili'!n of a sentence that could mean a life · term in state prison for Hulse. The youth's age rules out the death sentence'. · The veteran jurist will rule-that 59me day on a further ·pfea by Hulse that he is innocent by.reason of insanity. Judge Crookshank's · ruling will also determine the proseeution'1 further ac· tion on add itional charges filed against Hulse in connect.ion with the killing last June 2 of Mrs. Brown. The Garden Grove youth is charged with being an accessory to the. murder of Mrs. Brown,_ 31. of El · Toro. Steven Craig Hurd, 20, Hulse'.:• alleged cOm-. paniOn in the Carlin, kjlllng, is ~ccused or both murders and goes on trial March 22. Clemente Club View Paintings Capistrano Beach painter Charlotte Light will demonstrate aUa prima portrait painting for members of San Clemente'111 Am and Crafts club at a monthJy meeting March J l at the San Clemente United Presbyterian CJiurch. Mrs. Light, who hu received formal art tnstn.ietlon In tht San FrarilC3CO Bay area, USC, and abroad. was I.he w\Mer of the best·ln show award al lut Dtctmber'a showinc of the San Clemente! art group. Tht meetin' wll.1 begin at 7:45 p.m. Othtr entertainment will \cnlude seltc- lions by organisl Laura Mae Shelor. ; . Boys Club Carnival Site Eyed San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr will report on progress Wednesday of negotiations between city staff and aides of the South Coast Area Boy's Club, which is seeking use of Plaza Park as a carnival site, despite op- position by nearby residents. Carr has met with club officials on ihe issue of finding an alternate site for the club's major annual moneymak· ing activity. Oflirials ol th. clUb two lft.u . ago sought use of the park., but resident.a near the park and several city COWl- cilmen agreed that the carnival would be 11n impositian on the q u I e t neighborhood. Mayor Walter Evans suggested the use of Linda Lane Park instead, but initial response from club officials was negative. Last year's club carnival al Plaza Park drew complaints from neighbors who said noise of machines and people was a nuisance. Other itetns on Wednesday's council agenda include : -A report by Carr on the unsuccessful search by the city for a buyer of the old city hall and city yards. The property, which served as San Clemente's fir st civic center. was reappraised earlier this year and placed on the market. Thur far there have been no takers. That fact could reinforce an ide! by ,..1ayor Evans to convert the old city hall from its p r e s e n t use an auto parts store (the tenant is vacating next month) to a temporary replarement to tbe fire-ravaged community clubhouse. -Consideration of a final bill by Bpucher and Drielsma for charges above original estimates for the recently sub· milted working drawings for the new community clubhouse. -Adoption of the formal argumtnts for 11assage of the million-dollar park! and recreation bond issue along with itemized tax information showing exact cosU to taxpayers if ttie revenue measure wins approval April 20. -Establishment of .a dedication date for the city's new, $2.f>.million water reclamalioo plant. Original city plans included invitalions to President Nixon 11od other majo.r oflicials to dedicate the nonpolluting sewage treatment facili · ty .. -The setting of a study session late this month to discuss in depth the ex· aisling city policy on street maintenance and construction. OAIL V '°!LOT Siii! P'l!Mt Ecology lti Actioti Ecology-minded San Clementeans are shown at the Market Ba sket as month-long drive gets under way to recycle ne\vsa pers. Only lied bundles of newspapers are sought. not magazi ne s. Shown are l\.1rs. Lois Wellman, City Manager Ken Carr and Rod Luckman, 7. Capo Selects Architect To Design School Site Trustees of lhe Capistrano Unified School Di~trict have approved the employment of an architect to draw a plot plan for the Capistrano School site. The facility, which was the district's first high school and is now used for fifth and si1th graders, will eventually become the district's administrative center. It has not been decided if the historic building will .have to be torn down or if IL will be remodeled. Two buildings, the art facility and the gymnasium will event.ually be demolished to comply with state earthquake safety standards. Use of La J?laya S~reet Superintendent Truman Benedict said that the plot plan is necessary because of Jhe impending demolition af Las Palmas SchOol In Seri Cleme nte. this summer. As Parl{ing Lot Up in Air The abandonment or La Playa Street ln Capistrano Beach for use as a school dis trict bus parking Jot is temporarily stuck In red tape . Joe Wimer, Director of AdministraUve Services, told the trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Mon- day that although the county road depart· ment is willing to recommend aban· donment. it doesn 't own lbt entire street. The county OWM only hall of lhe street. up to the center llne. The state owns the rest. Trustee., authorized 1 letter of llppeal to the state to abandon it.s half. but do not know how 'Ion i it will Lake if approved. "St11te officials Indicated lo mt th 11 t lt would be possible to secure the · prC>- ' perty, but v.·e will have to pay s nominal fl!e:• said Wimer. "They didn't say what 'nominal' Is.'' The distrk:t is seeking abandonment of the street between Victoria and Las Vegas streets. It had previously proposed the bus parking lot fur part of the Serra School pla ylf'OUL!d. a move that was contested by irevefil community organizations. After agreeing to seek"'1tile lt9I! of La Playa street as an alternative, t h e cli11trlct appealed to the coonty. Wimer said the county road department w l I l recommend abandonment .to the Board of SuperVlsors and will proceed with public hearings be£nre making 11 final dtclslon on Its half of the street. !I ' -. "We have to find a new location for our textbook repository, central library, and instructional supply center. All these functions take place at La: Palmas," said Benedict. The superintendent said these functions may have to be temporarily moved to the old Capistrano School gymnasium. "But t would hate to do this because of the community functions' there,·• he said .. Benedict said the district will negoti•te with an &rchite<:t to design a p I o t plan on the basis of a five year pro- jection. It will locate the pos!ilble 1ites for the administrative center, warehoust, and bu!lneS! afflce. Trustee Fred Newh.11rt Jr. painted out that when a time came!! to buUd on the site, the buildings will have to be Spanish, eerly Cali!n rriia or mission 11rchltecture since the pr~rty lies within tho controlled Architecture ione of the cit.y of San Juan Capistrano. ~ Conspiracy, Embezzling Asserted WA SHINGTON (AP) - W. A. "Tony" Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers. was indicted today by a 1pecial federal grand jury on charges of con· spiracy, embezzlement and making 114 legal political contributions of $49,250 from union funds. Included among recipients of the con- tributions was $30.0CKI to a dinner for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and various others. Two other United Pt.line. Worker officials lamed ln the s a m e Indictment were J ohn Owens. secretary-treasurer, and James Kmetz. director of UMW'1 political Brm, the Non-Partisan League. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said the 13-count indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here. Boyle was charged Jn one count with embezzling $5,0CKI. In another with con- spiring to embezzle and to make illegal political contribution.s totaling $49,250, end 11 counts of· actually making such contributions. The $5,0CKI was part af the $49,250. Kmetz was charged with the same conspiracy and embezzlement counts and In two counts of making illegal political contributions. Owens was also charged In the con· spiracy count and on one count of making illegal political contribution. Named as unindicted co-conspirators are Suzanne Richards. Boyle's executive assistant. and Robert Howe. former director of the Labor's Non-Partisan League. The indictment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Boyle. the 66-year-a\d, $55.000-a-year head of the UMW, joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute $49 .250 of the union's general treasury funds to political campaigns or various candidates seeking federal offices. 1. violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac- tic es Act. The defendants were using the non - partisan "'league as a means for the union to make contributions to the can· dldates. according to the indictment. The indictment also charged that in ordet to conceal the nature of these con· tributions , Boyle and Owens ;iulhorized Kmetz and Howe to make illegal con- tributions out of the league's funds. Jn addition, the indictment said, checks wriUen on the league's bank account were drawn to "cash" in the amount of the authorized contribution. Orange Coast Weather Things get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, with the winds dying down and tempera4 lures spurting back up to 65 along the coast and 75 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY Governor Reagan'$ Commis· sio-n on Educationtil Reform. "' California. heOOtd by Snnta Anan Robert Hat1son, see.s the need for some changt.! in lht way we rtrn our schoolJ. Poge 12. c.u .. ni11 , c111t~111t u• 1 C1tttln.1 l .. U C.mln U CrettwtN II OU!~ Ntllc:H l lllllll'lll ... " • •~twrtlh!lllt!ll ' lll~tnct 1 .. 11 H~·1•-.,. 14 "~" ''"'•'* u M,-f M.,...,. """"" le ,..tlfl'll l NIWI l.J Ort-Ceu111Y U s-h 1 .. u ltfdl M1rktlt 1 .. 11 TtllV!tleR f ,,... .... , ' WHlMf 4 W~lt. W•t~ 1• womtll'\ Hr1n 1•1• W•tlill Mtwt 4" • z DAILY PILOT SC Tutsdar, M&rtll 2, 1971 No Evide nce of 'A buse' 2 Students 1 Dad Mad Over School ·Incident 'Feeling' Allempta by tru.tees to placate an Irate father who claims bis daughter was "abused'' by a school aide on an elementary school pla,Yground failed Mo!ldlly. Trusteu of the Capistrano Unified School District told Jerry V;inMeter of Mislion Viejo thal an intensive in. \'estigalion into the lncidenl which allegedly occurred at Viejo Elementary School ha.I "faUed to turn up evidence of wrongdoing.'' Van Met.tr charged that his S.year~ld 11daughlet was roughly handltd by a noon duty aide -not a teacher -on the school playground to the extent that Sawdust Fails To Get Action For Permit OK Artists seeking a temporary use permit for lhe Sawdust Festival this summer found themselves d~ted off Monday nigbf after waIUng more than three houri for Laguna Beach planners to reach their agenda item. A small group headed by artist Ed Van Deusen listened with apparent disbelief as City Planner Al Autry said .. lhe city staff hadn't completed its report. The group. which sat through a lengthy discussion of zoning laws, variaras, site plan reviews and gas stations, learned the staff is compiling lengthy comments from department heads aimed at Jtotiing out problems concerned wilb temporary use permits. To..aoothe ruff1ed feathers:, commission chainnan William Lambourne said the planners will review the m~tter next Monday night and give a strong ex· pression of !heir feeling. \Vilh this to go on. Lambourne in· dicated, the Laguna Artists and Gallery Ov.ners Assn. wouldn 't be further held up on plans to conduct an art exhibit and sales at 935 Laguna Canyon Road from July 16 through Aug. 29. District to As k New Bus Routes In Orange County Members of the new Orange County transit District board took their first positive step 1'1onday. They voted to as k the Souihem California Rapid Transit District about the possibility of extend- ing bus routes In Orange County. Board members (three of five were present) also discussed finances. The district is empowered to lev y a five-cent tax ra te beginning next Jul y I . but has not yet decided whether to assess all of ii or part of it. The boa.rd agreed to 11ludy the possi- bility of fonning a technical advisory committee to check on the necessity of a rapid transit study. Cypress fl.fayor John Kane! sug)?:ested s committee of county department heads plus advisors rrom private industry•. Members of the board are Kane!, W~inster Mayor Derek ~fc\Vhinney, Richard D. Lynn, Corona del 1.far al· toriney and county Supervisors Ralp h Clark and Ronald Caspers. Anima l Owner Fined MYERSTOWN, Pa. (UPI) -\\'hen agenli of the Society for the Prevent:on of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) raided Rudy's Jungle Playland, th ey foun d three dead lions, 10 dead monkeys. and about 1511 other animals: near starvation and unat!e:"lded in freezing \.\'eather. O'AN•I C:OAJf DAllY PILOT Clll.AHCO:< C:OAaf f'Ul\.ltHINO i;OMl'AN'f' R•Mrt N. w,.4 P'r•llltnt W ~ltlllf J1c\ l . C vrl11 Vkt f'rt$"'-'I' IN G«w1I M ....... 111~•• Ktt•il ...... Tlrit111 11 A. Mvr1tlii"• .......... '"' ~lllw C\1rl1t H. 1.••t l icli11' P. Ntll Aulll111, Mlf'ltlin8 Edlllo ....... ~ Offtc• 111 For1d A•tRv1 s.. c:1 ...... OHkti J05 Nerti! El C1111iR1 Rt1I 0-"'"'"' C.11 Mff•: Ut Wt'll llV Strttf NIWlll'ff • .. c111 »» N-t aou1w 1rof KlltltLnf'OI\ t trldl: inn a .. ai MulwtrC DAllV .. u .. or, w11t1 wtt\dl 1t C'tlnlll~ 1111 M~,...., It 1'111111""" ll•HV "°'_. M-Ii•• .. ....,..,.t. tlltlllolit for UOWll hlcll. fol..,.../ ~ C:.to MAI. MllftllrlfNlt tlldl. l'"-ltltl Y1lley. lift C~lti/ CIPll..,._ .,,. "*""~ ...... wt .. -~111111 edllllfL .. rltlc .. I trlftfltlt ""' I) tf. ,,_ w.i .. ., Str..:. C.r• "'-· , .. ;t 1 r f714l 14Zo4121 Cl•lft94 .Uou;tbl11 6~1·1171 S.. Cl a1•1 Al O.,•Twh : T•••••••• 4ti-+tn i..,-.... .uh, ....... : ,...,. ••• 4~"'6 -' °"""""'-1'71, ~ CMtl ~1111 .... Clo'nnllf. "° -...... lllu'l"'9"'-adll•'llll """'"" .,,. •""11-h ,......... .,..., la ,....\IC.. w""'-' .,.clll ,... '" ... "" " *""lltll _._ .....,, (i. .. ,.. .... Otll .... __.. hKfil .... C..11 ··-· (illfotftl•. "'*""1111 "' urrlllr II.ZS IM:'lllll~I llP" -II ttJJ -lflly1 '"'11Mtf ilttl!M!llm, U .11 -It!••· the cblld'1 arms were bruis~. ue aald be was not asktng for lhe alde's d.i!mllsal, but' wanted the board to take stcps to Insure that the part t.ime aide would not come in contact with his child ai:aln. He said his child was coming home from 1c.hool nervous, upset, and often crying. VanMeter suggested that the child be moved to another school or hcive her schedule altered so thal she is nol on the grounds when the aide Is. Superintendent Truman Benedict said the district's investigation and a further itlvt!tigation by the Orange County SheJ'iff'a Department turned up no wltne~ . or evidence to all"ppOtt the chUd'1 clory. He said the aide had Worked for tht'! district for 18 1nonths and had never been involved in an incident of that kind before. "It is a matter of an adul1's word over a child's," said Benedict. The superintendent said the board was aware of the fact that the aide refused to take a polygraph llie detector ) test, but there was still insufficient evidence to file a complaint against her. He said lhe school· principal has tried to arrange to have the aide work in a dll!trent part of lbe playground away from the child. Or.' Robert Beasley asked the parent to try lo change the child's attitude about the incident to a more positive viewpoint. . VpnMet.er said he didn 't know ho\v tha{ wa1 possible but · he said he had instructed the child to obey orders of all teachers and aides at all times. Benedict said the district will not pursue its investigalion any further, particularly since there were discrepan· cles in the chUd's story as to where she went that day when not on the playgrowtd. Democracr, By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 01 1~1 CIUIJ l'Ull 1111! Bea Mann and Chico Senna, the lwo foreign exchange students in Laguna Beach thi:> year. received practical education in the wor kings of democracy v.•hile participating in a series of govern- ment workshops in Sacramento in early February. The t\\'O students. here in lht Arl (;olony for a year on the American Field Service (AFSI program, participated in the Boys and Girls Slate program. held yearly In the capitol c.ity. Newport Traffic Study Labeled 'Front, Ploy' Chill y Winds Leave Area ; ' Santa Anas In Purpose or the program is to give persons wilh leadership abilities a chance to •·feel" how real democratic govun· ment v.·orlci. Delegates from throughout California. while-attend ing the con- ference. build a representative govern- ment by electing officials. making a legislature and presenting bills. Bea. [rom Switzerland and Chico, from Brazil. \l'ere among 57 AFS students: invited to the government work.shop. Joining the exchange students were MO regular high school students: from variou s: parts of California. By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lh• 0111, Pllol SllU Newport Beach Vice r-.·layor Jlow-ard Rogers Monday night labeled the planned Newport traffic .study a "front'' covering the City Council majority's attempt to deflate the petition drive 1hat forced next Tuesday 's Pacific Coast Freeway election. "The ploy did not \Vork. . .you "''ere not fooled ," Rogers said to the 250 persons gathered at Newport Harbor High School for a Freeway Fighters' election rally. The vice mayor said Ptiayor Ed Hirth launched the study in a confidential memo to city councilmen, a confidential me mo that Rogers had released shortly after it was delivered and from which he quoted again Monday night, Rogers had blasted Hirth when he Paper Recy cling Project Called S uccess So Far A pilot newspaper recycling program launched 1.1onday in San Clemente already is a roaring success with an estlmat.ed two tons of newsprint stacked on opening day in a covered van. The activity. under jonnt sponsorship by the city and San Clemente's Backyard Ecology Group, will last throughout the month or March, and if it Is successful, could become a regular service in the city. Two-dozen San Clemente High School students have offered to help stack the bundles of castoff newspapers In the huge covered trailer van parked at the Market Basket parking areas in Shore· cliffs. Spokesmen ror the ecology group. however, have asked thal donors of the newsprint follow a fe\V easy rules with their contributions. Tying stacks of ~peri; y,·ith twine or cord is slressed to conserve time and space in the van. Donors also are asked lo sift out any "slick" paper stock from the stacks of newsprint. Paper with filier -used in magazines and weekend supplements -can not be recycled by the Garden State Paper Company of Pomona, the firm 11•hich has donated the van for the month"s: period. Lionel Burt , a spokesman ror the ecology group and volunteers \Viii ha\"C to cull out the slick from the pulp. •·we're not trying to disc.our.age dona· lions by any means," he said. "but it makes it so muc.h easier U the stacks are tied up and the magazines lak en out." Garden State will pay to the city $5 a ton for the castoff nev.•sprinl \Yhich bec omes clear paper again after going through a patented bleaching process. El Toro Tract OK\l De\"elopment of 32 acrt!s al Muirlands Boulevard and Lo:; Alisos Boule\'ard in the El Toro area with construction of 140 single family homes has been ap- proved by the Orange County Planning Commission. The developer is Southwesl Contractors Inc . first released the docWQent. Jn a state- ment he later retracted, Rogers called the mayor a patsy lo the vested interests in the city. Rogers Monday night also attacked the DAILY PILOT for allegedly opposing the Frcey,·ay Fighters' antl·route cam· paign . .He said the newspaper was one or the "combined po .... ·ers of the vested interest!"' and said it was biased. The vice mayor charged that the newspaper, •·\Vanis you, the people. to fall into a false sense of security until it is too late ... the daily has -since the outset -worked hand-in-glove \vith those v.•ho y,·ou1d devastate your town. "\Ve mlght call their program a pilot project for environmental destru ction and punishment of people '~ho have the audacity to challenge the position of the press." Rogers also made reference to •·a lidy lrio of ex-elected officials , from your city" v.·ho he asserted had opposed the freeway election "like snakes emerg· ing from the -grass of som e agricultural preserve ... " He added, "thank God !heir sinister scheme failed:' Rogers later offered lo introduce former mayors James B. Stoddard, Charles E. Har t and formtr vice mayor }lans J. Lorenz. The three former municipal officers had filed an un!luccessful lawsuit in an effort to block the freeway election on grounds that such a question properly v.·as an administrative function of elected officials. The election v.•as forced by petitions bearing signatures of nearly 10,000 persons (4,300 lhe minimum needed, v.·ere verified by the city clerk). Roge rs said the petition drive was a clear indication the people "are ready and able to sta nd up." The traffic study. endorsed unanimous· ly by the council. will begin as soon as a consuhant is hired, wh ich the council will do upon recei pt or a recom· mendation from a citizens' advisory com. n1ittee. Rogers. pointing out it will be another year before it is donli. .asked. ''Ho\v long can y,·e y,•ait. Se11tence Given F or Beating Gusty, northerly winds thal have chill· cd Southern California for the past five days are expecle.d to die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bring 75 degre e highs to Orange County Wednesday, the Na· tional Weather Ser\'ict predicts. Early today the brisk northerly \\inds shifted direction to blow from the northeast. creating typical dry, Santa Ana conditions and increasing "''ind velocity below the coastal canyons. fl.larch, indeed , bad blown in like a lion. The Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots today, as small craft warning s continued into tbe fiflh day. With the diminishing winds tonight, inland por1%ins of the county may expect near frost ten1per<1lures \l"ilh lov.·s or 33 degrees. Along the Orange Coast nighllilne te1nperatures will reach a low near 40 tonighl and a high in beach cities of 65 on \Vednesday. !i1ountain and deserl regions of Southern California continued to be bla sted by gusts up. to 55 n1iles an hour. The Cati £ornia 1-lighway Patrol con- tinued a blanket ban on use or campers and trailers in San Bernardino and Riverside counties due lo blowing sand, reduced visibility and gusty \\"inds. Winds in inland counties are expected to drop off to about 20 to 30 miles an hour by Wednesday. The v.·eather service said the storm front which has brought Lhe chilling winds may leave behind some high cloudiness over Southern Califomia Wtdnesday and bring showers to the northern part or the slate. Hilltoppers Pla11 Greenbelt Talk 01'1 TtLtllhOto L lllle Boll Lost He doesn't kno\v his name. but nurses at San Diego's Hillcrest Receiving Home say he is quick to make friends. The boy, about 2. \\'SS found aban· doned in a ~upermarkct. Auth· orities arc trying lo locate his: parents.. Station Doesn't 'Look Lag una' Say Plam1ers Representatives for Standard Oil Com- pany \Vere noticeably absent at the Laguna Beach Planning Commission meeting Monday night. The company, which proposes to build a gas station bene8th a lowering Star Pine in north Laguna, has gone back lo the drawing board lo add a touch or village atmosphere, Ci!y Planner Al 1\utry said. Autry added he took representatives lln a recent city tour to point out village atmosphere which may have inspired them to ask for an extension unlil March JS for preparation for a new design. Standard property manager Gerald Buck failed to gai n approval of his '"n1etal giant'' design for property at 1251 N. Coast Highway during a planning session last mnnth. E1·en overlays of additional building decor. sluinpstone and J an d s ca pin g The 57 AFS students made their own assembly and presented bills during the two day workshops. Chico presented one or the bills which gave the right of bail to juveniles. It passed 56 to one. Bea made poln ls for the \Vomen's Lib movement. as she was elected "Speaker of the Assembly." She was elected to the post by a landslide, de£eating both male oppon111Jts. "'It is really easy for ~ople to UD· derstand each other and v.·ork together in the democratic system," commented Chico. "1'he workshops were probably our best experiences here in the Unile.d States." "r learned a lot about y,·orking wllh a Jot of people at one time ." Bea said. •·v..•e had people in the assembly fron1 all over the world, and y,•e all worked together beautifully. It y,·as really fan· 1astic·• While in Sacrainento, the students at- tended a talk given by Gove rnor Ronald Reagan. "He spoke quite a bil on \Velfare," Chico recalled. "After that, we had a very long question and answer session .... ·ith him." Following lhe tv.·o days or democracy at the state capitol. the exchange students from the Orange Coast AFS chaplers went to San f'ranciero for somt •·fun and games." according lo Bea. · 1'he youths visited Flsherman·s Wharf, Chinatov.·n and several of the other Bay area attractions before returning home Feb. 8. · Cost for the trip to Sacramento was: borne by the local Af'S chapters. This \1·as the first year foreign students ha\'t been invited to participate in the Stale program. de signed to set off the fan1ous Star ff } 0 d' · J>ine fai led lo dazzle th e commission. ote r 1nance "It doesn't look one bit like Laguna." t'01nplained one commissioner during Barin CJ' Delayed 1'he Laguna Greenbelt and the city 's former consideration of the conditional ' ~ ne\\' outdoor gathering ordinance head use R.CrniH . Another suggested it rnighl The revised draft of the controversial the agenda for the Thursday meeting fi t con1fortably into th e 1niddle of Tor-CR tcom mercial ~ residential) ordinan~ of the Hilltop Homeo11·ners Association ranee. y,•hich defines standards for beachfront of l..aguna Beach. "The land would 1nake a lovely park.'' hotel developmenl will no t reach !be The 7:30 meeting, scheduled for Top au1hor Ainold Hano suggested Monday. Laguna Beach City Council at its of the World Elementary School. y,·ill Cit ing the adverse effect of gasoline \Vednesday night meeting, a plannln1 feature both greenbelt chairman James fumes on the at1nosphere. Hano declared department spokesman said today. Dilley and City Councilman Roy Holm he didn 't care if .. they come in with The planning commission. at it.s Feb. discussing these two subjects. the most gorgeous gas station im· 16 meeting. agreed to recommend the following Dilley·s in I rod u cl or y ;iginable. this tree i~ a living monument." ordinance to lhe council \1-'ith a number remarks concerning th e greenbelt pro-Countering City Planner Autry·s com· of modifications:including a 50-foot max~ ject, Jaycee !>resident Rick Balzar \\"ill menl that the C'Ommercial site is too imum building height limit. take residents on a tour of the proposed small and poorly l<>cated for a park, The council. upon receiving the greenbelt through a co lor slide presen-llano expanded his park to a mall, modified ordinance, \\'ill set a date for tatlon. ~Llggcsling the city also purchase an its oy,•n public hearing. A young El Toro J\·larine v.·ho beat Councilman Holm will then explain abutting gas station lo create a 11·alkway Ho\Yever. the planning spokesman said, and kicked a 65-year·old San1a Ana the city·s new ordinance restricting out-to the ocean. the revised draft has not bee n compleled ,voman after he tried to rape her hns door gatherings and its possible effect on Planners agreed to dcrer consideration and will not be ready for presentation been sentenced to one to 20 vears in the community. of the request until l\1onday, March 15. to the council until its March 17 meeting. state prison . • .,.--;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:, Billy Don Hall. 22. of the El Toro I ~tarine Corps Air Station drew that sentence from Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. l\1cr-.tillan arter the jurist ruled that tl1e defendant. v.•as not a tncntally di sordered sex offender. Hall was arrest.ed at the El Toro base last Jan. 10 shortly arter Santa Ana police identified him as lhe n1a;i \\ho e11rlier that day attacked the y,·om:in in the ba ck alley of lhe downtown area. The Marine v.·as routed by passersby \Vho saw him beat and kick the y,•oman \\"hile he attempled to molest her. She has since recovered from her injurits. PRUDENT BUYING Throu ghout our 77 yeors of corpet reto ilin g, one foci bec omes qui te evident -thot when money is le ss ple nti ful, people buy better qual_ity. App.arent Love Triangle Ends i1i S A Man's Death This is controry to popul or belief, but moke s good sense if you think o bout it. Wh en you hove to concern yourself with value and performance, you ore like ly t o buy better quality. Al 'Alden's in the lo st th ree years, our per un it so le hos been more ex pensive corpeting , refle cting th is foct. Cons eq ue ntly, we have th'e I ·a r g e s t selection of finer An apparent lo\'e lrlanjllle ended in death for a San ta An man Monday in the Riverside Cou community of Meadov.·brook near iore. James W. Nash. , of 1601 \V. Flora St.. Sanla Ana, chairman of U1e Orange County Young Repu blicans. died of. gunshot wounds lo lhe head and chest, aCC'Ordlng to Riverside County Coronrr Dennis F.ly. N111sh 's fully clothed body, and lh~l of Mrs. Betty Ann Jlunt, 39. was round on the front lawn of fl.1rs. Hunt's former home about 1:30 p.m. tifonday. Near the bodlt! l&y Cecil ilunt critically Injured wlth,,Rpparcnt sclf·in· flicted gunshot v.oounp:s, Capt. nussell G. Jlawk of lhe Elsinore sheriff's station said. Jlu nt remained In critical condillon today at Riverside Gtneral Hospital. Uiing a .22 caliber rifle, Hunt Lg bell!!\.'· ed to have shot Nash three times and ' his wire four times before putting the ~un to his O\.\ll head, Hav.•k said. The Hunts v.·cre .separated and in the process of getting a divorce. The coroner"s office said Nash llnd l\lrs. Hunt had betn seeing each otht•r for about fou r weeks, aceording IG reports from neighbors. indicating the motive for the double slaying was a •·trla ni;:le affa ir." Nttsh, an insurance claims investigator, "''RS the falher of four children . Last ye111r. he was Or11nge County rha!rm3n for St11le Senator John L.. )farmer's campaign for st.ate auornty 'let;ierttl . Na!h. a retired Marine Gaptain, Riso assisttd In lhe campaigns of Rep. Robert If. Burke, (R·Hunlington Beach), \Villlt1m Teague. Republican candidate for Congress and David Brandt, 1969 candidate for the Santa Ana Unified School District • q ua lities you will see anywhe re, all ot com petitive prices. . -., The en d result is customer sati sfaction, pride, ond te comme nd ol ions which provide our overwhelmin g sou rce of ne w bu siness. ALDEN'S SANTA ANA. ORANGE TUSTIN C..11 ••• ALOI N'S RID Hl1.L CAR PI TS & ORAPIRllS 11l74 Irvine, T'uttln. Cal • IU..l'44 CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I ' . Lag11110: ~aeh Today's Final N.Y. St.oeks VO L 64, NO. 52, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES • OllANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 197f .TEN CENTS ------- ' Hulse Guilty, May Face Viej·o Murd.er Trial . . ' By TOM BARLEY 01 !M O.llr Pl~I lltll Hatchet killer Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse was found guilty late l\.1onday of first degree murder in the slaying of Santa Ana service station attendant Jerry \Vayne tarlin. Hulse may now yet have to stand trial in the mutilation slaying Of Mission Viejo schoolteacher Florence Nancy Brown. In the Carlin murder, It 1.ook Lhe • Mine Union Chief Boyle Indicted WASHJNGTON (AP) - W. A. "Tony" Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers. was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges or con- spiracy, embezzlement and making il- legal political contributions of $49,250 from union funds. Included among recipients of the con- tributions was $30,000 to a dinner for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and \'arious others .. Two other United Mine Worker officials 111med in the s 1 m e indictment wert John Owens. secretary.treasurer, 1nd James Kmetz, director or UMW'a political arm, the Non-Partisan League. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said the 13-count indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here. Boyle was charged in one count with embezzling $5,000. Jn another with con- 11piring to embezzle and to make illegal political contributions totaling $49,250, and 11 counts of actually making such ronlributiorfS. Tile $5,000 was part or the $49,250. Kmetz was charged with the same COllspiracy and embezzlement counts and in t"'·o counts of making illegal political contributions. •Owens was also cha rged in the con· 1piracy count and on one count or making illegal political contribution. Named as unindictecl co-conspirators ire Suzanne Richards, Boyle's executivl!!! aasistant, and Robert Howe, former director or the Labor's Non·Partisan League. The indictment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 56-ye.ar~ld, $55.000-a·year head or the UMW, joined with Owens and Kmetz to contribute $49.250 of the union's general treasury funds to political campaigns of various candidates seeking federal offices. a violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac- tices Act. The defendants were using the non- partisan league as a means for the union to make contributions to the can· dldates. according to the indictment. Thi! Indictment also charged that in order to conceal the nature of these con· tr1butions. Boyle and Owens authorized Kmetz and Howe to make illegal con· tribut.i ons out of the league's funds . Jn addition, the "indictment said, check! written on thi league's bank acC"Ount were drawn to "cash" in the amount of llie authorized contribution. Orange Coast Weather Things get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, with the winds dying dov.·n and tempera· tures spurting back up to 6S a\cng the coast and 75 further inland. INSIDE TODA l' Governor Reagan 's Commis· s1on on Educational Rtform in Colifornia, headed by San.to Anon Robert H!lnson, S6t!1 the nttd for $011lt changes in the way we run our !Chools. PG gt J 2. <•llfMlll• , C:ltKl!IM I.I• I (\f!Ulti.i l t.2t ~""' '' (,..,,...,. II °"'"' Nelkft ' '''"'l*' "'" ' IMltl't.'-llfll • l'llllMt lt.H • -.. Aftll L•"'Ht I' ..... ,,,., ' Mvlllel ..... , If "•tloMltl ..-w °''"" c:-ry u '""' , .. ,, S1'<1! Ml,._lt 1•11 T•'--*'"'°' t tltt•H•I t W1l tllt• I WlllH wa.io 1• Wt-WI NIWI IS.1 • Wtl'ltl Nt WI t.J Orange County Superior COOrt jury less than six hours to decide that Hulst, a burly 11.year..old, used an ue last June I to hack to ,df:ath young Carlin in the restroom or hi! Santa Ana service station. Hulse, 16 at the lime of the-murder, recelved the verdict 'With the apathy that nas marked hi1 dem e anor throughout the two weet trial. Judge Ronald Cn>ok,bank scheduled March 26 for imposition of a sentence • U'lat could mean a life term in state prison fof. Hulse. The youth's age rules out the death sentence. The veteran jurist will rule that same day on a further plea by Hulse that he is lngocent by reason of insanity. Judge Crookshank's ruling will also determine the prosecution's further ac- tion on additional charges filed against Hulse in connection with the killing last June 2 of Mrs. Brown. Tbe Garden Grove youth is charged with being an accessory to the murder of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro. Steven Craig Hurd, 20, Hulse 's alleged com· panion in the Carlin k.iUing. is accused of both murders ·and goe.5 on trial March 22. The jury quickly rejected P.1onday arguments by defense attorneys Robert Green and Michael Gerbosi Lhat Hulse's use of drugs ahd drink and the ,head Injuries suffered some years ago in a faU contributed to the Carfin killing. ~y were Wged to do ao by Deputy Dbtrlct Attorney Martin J, Heneghan in a final argument that 1sked the pine! to reCognize that the murder of the %l ·ye1r~ld 1Uendant was planned. pwneditated and merciless. Four psychiatrists testified during the Hu1se trial Lhat the youth was sane 1t the time of. the killing and knew 1se oes a Letters Sent Hotel Firm· Urges Height Support A letter lrom the Laguna Hotel Corporation of Los Angeles \lrging . sup- port of the Laguna Planning" Com· mission's recommendation to the City Council for a SO.foot building h e i g h l maximum is beini circulat.ed in Laguna this week. Each letter contains a stamped postcard 1ddressed to City Hall and stating, "I SUpi\ort ~ Pllljlllinl Corn· m~sioft and lts RtcomrrtendatJoh for tne Progreu and Development for-lhl CJly of Laguna." 'f'he letters, 11lgned by Barbara M. Schweitzer, pruldent. An! headed Laguna Hotel Corporation, 1325 Comstock A11e., Los Angeles and addressed, "A Challenge to the Citizens of Laguna." It refers to the forQlcoming council hearing on the CR (co mmercial-residen- tial) zone for beachfront hotel develop· men! as "A decision as to whether Lacuna will go forward into the 197bs with new lil1 iod proaperity for . its people and bu.slness concerns or whether it will lan(Uish in old fashioned com· placency." Referring to the issue of height limits, the letter states, "Your planning com· mission has recommended they be ex· tended to a modest 50 feel. If this proposed ordinance is enacted, new capitll wiU be attracted to Lqun1 to dJvelop mqdern faciUtil.s Jor your N~il culturally and ..gs:onomica®. "BuL tbtre an ·tboit amongat UI who • . . the city .,.ill improve physically, fear progress .• . . fear that oely old time charm and the old fashioned way of life will preserve Laguna . This stagna· lion can onlY destroy lhG very wonderful way of life in one of Southern California's most attractive cities." Recipients are urged to "get behind your planning commission , • , let them know you favor progress . . . act now ... by signing and mailing the enclosed post card." Joint Rec Facility Use In Laguna Under Study An agreement ror joint use of recrea- tional facilities between the city of Laguna Beach and the Laguna Beach Unified School District will be considered for appro11al by tbe school board at tonighfs meeting. The Community Recreation Agree- ment, drafted after several conferences between city and school officials. pro- vides for the use of school facilities, such as gymnasiums and tennis courts, by residents through the Recreation Department. Before it takes effect. the agreement must be approved by both the school board and the City Council. Newsrnan Keavy To End Ties With News Post Hubbard Keavy, executive edito'~· .. of the Laguna Beach News.Post, plans to end his association there in the coming months. Under Urms of the agreement, the. city "shall be financially responsible for damages or losses to district facilities and equipment" when holding recreation aclivitiet!i on school property. The. city is also responsible for pro· viding additional liability insurance in case of an injury on school property al a cost lo tbe city of from SIOO to $300 per year. Tbe formal document was drawn up after several years of a verbal agree· ment between the city and lhe schools lo clarify certain areas of responsibility ~tween · the two agencies. Other items on the agenda for the 7:30 p.m. meeting include a demo11 slra· lion by El A-1orro Elementary School students of their ad11anctd reading pro- gra.m and a report from District Superintendent Dr. William Ullom cf a recent meeting he altended. The meeting was held with the legislative consultant hired by Schools for Sound Finance, of which the district is a member, a group fighting adoption of a stitewide property tax. The school board will meet In the dlstrlct o!ficel!i, 550 Blumoru St. Lagunagrlns By Phil lnterlendl "Oh By the Way, Thl1 Set of Si9na.~e1 With E.very HouN· We Sell Within Two llock1 of the leich.'' ' Council May Approve Bus Service Federal Grant The Laguna Beach City council $26,666 from Its general or reserve. funds •. Wedne sday night w!U be asked to appro11e When it took 011er the floundering bus e:! 1 line last year, the city acquired one a. Una! application for a f era grant. relativ ely new and tv.·o old vehicles. under the Urban Mas! Transportation One of the latter now is totally out Act ol 1!164, for the acquisition of four of service, the ltcond used only on new buses for the city transit Une. 1tandby. If approved, the grant would yield An "environmental statement" in sup- $53,334 o! the estimated $80,000 cost port of the grant application points out of upgrading the bus l!iervice. The city that upg rading of local bus service will would participate with an allocation of Improve the environment by providing r an alternate to private auto use and using buses with modern engines design- ed to reduce pollution. Lagunans Slate 'Drunkard' Visit Group travel arrangements are being made by Laguna Hills Travel tft take Orange County residents to Los Angeles Friday to view the re11i11al of the popular melodrama "The Drunkard ." Transportation will depart at S:45 p.m. from the administration building at Ltisure World and the price or the enlire evening Is $Jl.~. whicL includes transportation. dinner and a tickel to the performance. The three·act play, lo be staged at the Alexandria Hotel, is being revived by William Jal'\lis, who starred in the production for more than 2S years at the Theatre Mart. Resel'\latlons may be made ,by calling 837-3720. To date city officials have inspected three types of bus, one electric, the others using either natural gas, propane aas or gasoline . . The statement points out that the passenger load of a private car on a local trip a11erages 1.3 persons and 1 21-passenger bus would eliminate thl!! neM of cperaling 15 of 16 internal com· bustlon engines need in carrying 21 per60ns. Mail Deliveries Hit WASHINGTON (UPll -Sen. Alan Cranston ([).Ca lif.), says the U.S. Postal Service ·ls guilty of '1 inexcu1.1ble discrimination" through a new policy which eliminates trailer.by-trailer mail delivery in trailer parks bullt after last July 1. Kea Vy. who for 2S years was Los Ange.lea bureau' chief for Tbt Associated Press,. said he will_ "phase out" cf lhe twice-weekly Laguna Newspaper opera· lion in the coming months. , Revisions Suggested Keavy has moved to Newport Beach. He said he will remain as 'txecutl11e editor of the News-Pott until June 1 but plans lo work rewer hours dail y. Kea11y. who hat1 been in the newspape r- fie:ld since 1921, retired from Aa:aociated Press in 1967 and later joined the News. Post. He said he plans to spend more time on a newspaper syndicate he started more than a yur ago. &m in Minneapolls. MlM. Ott. 2-4. 1902. Xeavy attended Columbus College ... .in Sioux FaUa, S.O. Keavy'a flrsL newsp.ptr job was as a proof reader. He later be<:1me 11 reporter and 1 colwnnist. He ls known by friends IS I eourme.t but Ke1vy calls himself simpl)' "1n enthusiastic cook." Dog Law$ to Get Perusal A len5thy ieries ot propoltd revisions to the city's animal control· regu1at1ons will be considered by the ·taguna Beath City Council Wednetd1y nijht following propopb drawn up by writer Arnold Hano at the suagesUon of the council. In examinlnc u illin& laws durlna dlscusaions that led up r lo lut ye.1rl referendum on the do& control ordlna~. Hano told the council he fobnd a numbtr of lnt"Onslstenc:ies and art11 where lsw1 could be made more ttlective. ' • A list of 10 sugesled.changes prtptr'_f!d by Hano was referred to the city manager· and SPCA for study and wtl1 tie aamined, 1long with their reporll. by tht rouncU. A number ol tht J!l!lpollla have tD do with increasln1 pellllties for 11iol1· 1 Uons to provide funda for more effective enforcement of the leash law and other regulaHons. Otben would provide lon~ waJUng periods tor the redemption , sale or ·J destruction of stray 1nim•l1 picktd up and held at tht ani?osl shelter. City M1n1ger Lawrence Rose limit• hla rtcommendationa to the fee prOflOSll, &tneTally approving the Jnauses ·in flle light o! rillllC ..LWI since fees were eil•bllshed in l!lll!' The 1pc1 report polntl out that If lmpoundiOI periods are .. tended It W()Uld place -. flnanci1l burden on tht society end require refmbursement from the city for c1tt 1nd feedlnl e1ptns1. what he was doing when be used the hatchet on Carlin. Codefendant Herman Hendrick Taylor. 17, was a key prosecution witnw in the Hulse trial. He testif.led with the promise that he will be allowed to plead guilty to lesser ·charges. Taylor told the .court that it was deeid- ed by Hurd and Hulse long before the event that the attendant should be killed when the gas station was robbed. . u .na PRD Action Continue·d One We el{ By BARBARA DUARTE Of ,... Dally ,,lltl 11•1! A handful of high rise and rapid growth opponents suggested Laguna Beach is attacking zoning "hind end first" durin1 a public hearing Monday night. In light of new propoials, com. missioners agreed to continue the second public hearing on PRO (planned residen- tia l de11elopmenl) and CUP (conditional use permit) standards to a March 8 study session to deal with height, density, building size, aideyards and setbacks. But consensus of the. comm1ssion seem· td to be iaolng standards are needed now. rather than after adoption of 1 General Plan. Whe11 newly· appointed City PlaMer Wayne Moody gets to town. he may look at "our re verse osmosis type ol zoniJli" and dn a "pirouette and hightail it.out of here ," declared Bill Leak. Leak, a furn iture refinisher. asked planners to shelve both procedurea as well as ask the City Council to return a recenUy passed CR (commercial· residential) zone for .more study. To" continue. in this "llloglc&f tluhion taxes credulity'' fnd benefits only '·drug· gists , who sell tranquilizers," Leak con· tiaued. Directing three pages o~ trP'writtm opinion to the commission t he bulilnessman asked reference to a uneed for increased urbanization" be stricken from the intent of the PRO zone. He also asked density be measured on bu.i!dable land to prevent speculator! fi:om buying •'cheap unbuildable pro- perty" and constructing 1 large buildin& rn one corner. Engineeer Merritt Trease proposed PRO building be limited to five or less units per building with 100 feet between structures. "Inevitably someone with drag· will ask for 100 percent over allowable height." Trease declared. "It will go to the City Council and 1·m concerned,'' he added. "I'm disturb- ed a1 the group pwhlng highrise because it's not in the best interest of the commu· nity." "It's hard lo understand these ordinances," said l!!ng1neer Fr e d Marchand. "We need time to study them or else go to the General Plan first." Marchand asked densi ty based on buildable acreage, aetbacks. space between buildings ·and maximum size be 11pelled out in the PRO, and provisions for density eliminated from CUP. "I would like population growth he.Id to zero," announced Amo Id Hano. The writer, a. vocal advocite of lhe villagl!! atmosphere philosophy contained In I.he PRO zone, said la rge scale develop ments are incompatible with this thinking. Apologizing for further whipping a dead horse. Hano harked back to the 1970 Cordoba hillside de11elopme.it proposal and the question of bulldlng acreage. He "noted, on the basis of a 113-acr• site .. the pl~n would have -Contained a density of 8.6 unit1 per acre In lighl of a geological survey wh ich labeled 30 percent of the land unsound. .. Forget the rhetoric," countered Loren Haneline ,-developer of The Seas motel in Sleepy Hollow. Haneline s11ld he Is concefned with development of hlll!!ldes and underlined a need for proctdures tq deal with it now. Resigns in Scandal OSLO (UPI) -Prime Minister Ptr &rten ind hll non-Soclalbt eoa.llllon govtrnment resigned today ln the wake of 1 aca~dal Involving the le:aking of a confidential reporl on Norway's negoU atlons to enter the EUTI)flean COn> mon Market. ' • • •· ... . -......... . • - %' DAILV PILOT Tufsday, Muth 2, 11171 No Evide1ice of 'Abuse' 2 Students Dad Mad Over School Incident 'Feeling' At1<mpta by· tnlSl<a to pkcate an lrate father who claims his daughtf:r 'vas "abus~' by a school alde on an elementary school playg round railed Mondlly. ~Trustees of the Capi1trano Unlf\ed School DistMct told Jerry VanMeter of Mis,,ion . Vteto tJmt an Intensive in· ve!t.lptiop. into the Incident which allel'd.IY. OCCL!.?Ted at Viejo Elementary Schqol has •'failed to uun up evidence of wrongdolng:"' • Van'ldelet .. charged that his &.yca r--0ld daughter was.r•y handled by a noon duty a1de -nol a teacher -on the school playground to the extent that Sl\wdust Fails To .Get Action . F~r Permit OK Artists seeking a te mporary use permit for the Sawdust Fesllval this summer found themselves dusted off Monday night after waiti ng more than three hours for Laguna Beach plllnners to reach their age nda Item. A small group headed by artist Ed Van Deusen listened with apparent disbelief aa1'ity f lanner Al Autry said the city stafrbadn't completed its report. The group, which sat through a lengthy discussion of zoning laws. variances, site plan reviews and gas stations, lea rned tfie staff is compiling lengthy comments rrom department beads aimed at ironing out problems concerned with temporary use permits. To soothe ruffled feathers. comm ission chalrmait William Lambourne said the planners wtR review lhe matter next Monday night and give a strong elt"· pressio n of their feeling. .r.- Wlth this to go on. Lambourne in· dicated, the Lagun a Artists and GalJery Owners Assn. wouldn 't be further held up on plans to conduct an art exhibi t and sales at 935 Laguna Canyon Road from July 16 through Aug. 29. District to Ask New Bus Routes In Orange Co1mty Members ()f the new Orange County transit Di.strict board took their first posiUve atep Monday. They voted to ask the Souttiem Calilomia Rapid Transit District about the possibility of extend· Ing bus routes in Orange Cmmty. Board members (three of five were present) also discussed fi nances. The district is empowered to levy a five-cent tax rate be,11'.inning next July t. but has oot yet decided whether to assess aJJ or It or part of It. The board agreed to aLUdy th e poss!· bility of forming a techn ical advisory committee to check on the necessity of a rapi d transit study. Cypreu J.iayor John Kane! suggested a committee of county depa rtment heads plus advisors from private industry. ~1embers of the board are Kane!, \Vestmlnster ~1ayor Derek r.1cWhinney, Richard D. LyM, Corona del litar at· toriney and county Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers. Animal Owner Fined MYERSTOWN, Pa. IUP I) -When agents pf the S<fciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to An imals (SPCA) raided Rud y's Jungle Playland, they found three dead lions, 10 dead monkeys. and about 15(1 other animals near 11tarvatlon and unarc··2ed in freezing wea the r. OP.ANGI COAST DAllY PILOT OllANCl~ COAIT r u&L.llHINO COMrAMY ~.Mrt H. w.,~ ~ r rMl4tnl •N f'llOl <•l'otf J1c~ It C11n ,., Vkt ,,..lcllnl IN G.i9r•I MIMfW Th•"''' K••Til .... 111111111 A. Murr\1111 Mtiwtlfll ll!dllw 0.1rl11 M. l111 IUah•rl P. Nl1' A11hl1n; Mllllllnf ldl10t\ Let ... IMdt OMM 212 f•ll)t A v111w1 S.. C._..Offk9 l05 Horth El Ca,,.i110 ~111 0...... OffkM ' .a." ~~ m w .. , ••r Str..t ,...,.,.. IWCl'I : All H9Wpott l oul .... 1 ... ~--· IM<.111 l1t11 IMCll IO\llwt!'f ,..., .... 111•1 '41-tm ~ MwcM I I '41°1611 S.. C.._.. All hp&ilWbl ,...,.__ 4Ho4411 Let-..... Al l1pa l I ti: , ... , ..... , ...... __,. tonrlilit. tl'h. 0.....,. C:..11 ~l~illf """"""'· Ne -1W... llMtrl"""° •111r111 --If' 1trvw1l.....,t. Mr• -r ito ~· wo111111 ''*lfj ,... ;nMllit II .,,,W.t ........ ...,. clM& ,at ... llW •t H_.n .. 9(11 "fill °"'' """'· C•llfenlt.. ~ iJf c11111f' Jt,tJ 1Mr1fllly1 .., iMll 0 .11 .. ,,_,,, Mnli.ry deitllllll .... V.U "*'11'11¥. • the child's arms were bruised. He aald he was Mt asking for the aide'• dismissal, but wanted the board to take steps to Insure that the part time aide v.·ould not con1e in contact \\'ith his child again. lie said his child was coming home from school nervous, upset, and often crying. VanMettr sugeesled tha t the child be moved to another school or have her schedu1e altered so that she is not on the grounds when the aide is. Superintenden t Truman Benedicl said the district's investigation and a further investigation by the Orange CoWlty Sherlfl'• Department turned up no witnesses or evideoce to JUpport the child's story. He said the aide had worked for the district for 18 months and had never been involved in an incident or that kind before. "It is a matter o[ an adull's word over a child's." said Benedict. 'l'he supcrfntcndent said the board \vas a11.•are of the fact that the aide refused to take a polygraph (lie detector) test. but there was still insufficient evidence 10 file a complaint against her. tie said the sc.hool principal has tried to arrange t.o have tbe aide \\·ork in a dUlerent part of the pleyground away from the child. Dr. Robert Beasley asked the parent to try to change the chlld's attitude about the incident to a more positive view5¥1int. VanMeter 1aid he didn't know ho\V lhaL was possible but he said he had instructed the child lo obey orde rs of all teachers and aides at all limes. Benedict said the district \\'ill ool pursue its investigation any furl.he r, parUcularly since there were discrepa1i. cles in the child 's story as to wher6 she v.•ent that day v.·hen not on the playground. DemocracY: Uy FREDEHJCK SCJIOE!'ttEHL 01 lftt 01111 l'tt.I Stttl Bea Mann and Chico Senaa, the two foreign exchange students in Laguna Beach this year. received practical educalion in the 11.'0rkings of democracy while participating in a series of govern~ 1nent workshops in Sacra1nento in eti.rly February. The two stiide11ts. here in the Art Colony for a year on the American 'Field Service 1AFS J program, participated in the Boys and Girls Stat& program, held yearly i.n the capitol city. N~port Traffic Study Labeled 'Front, Ploy' Chilly Winds Leave Area; ' Santa Anas In Purpose of the program is lo give persons wilh leadership abilitif.!I a chance to "feel" how real democra tic govern- ment works. Delegates fro m throughout California. while atte nd ing the con· ference, build a representative gavern· ment by electing officials, making a legislature and presenting bills. Bea, from Switzerland and Chico, from Brazil. v.·ere among 57 AFS students invited to the government wor kshop. Joining the exchange students were 5~0 .regular high school students from various parts of California. By L. PETER KRIEG 01 l~t 01111 l'l~t Sti ll Newport Beach Vice r.1ayor llov:ard Rogers Monday night labeled the planned Newport traffic study a ''front" covering the Ci ty Council niajority's attempt to deflate the pe tition drive thal forced next Tuesday's Pacific Coast Freeway elect.ion. "The ploy did not work. . .you \\'ere not fooled," Rogers said to lhe 250 persons gathered at Newport Harbor High School for a Freeway Fighters' election rally. The vice mayo r said Mayor Ed Hirth launched the study in a confidential memo to city councilmen. a ctinfidential memo that Rogers had released shortly alter it was delivered and from v.•hich he quoted again Monday night. Rogers had blasted lfirth whe n he Paper Recycling Project Called Success So Far A pilot newspaper recycling program launched Monday in San . Clemente already is a roaring success with an estimated two Ions of newsprint slacked on opening day in a cove red van. The activity, under jonnt sponsorship by the city and San Clemente's Backya rd Ecology Group, will last throughout the month of March. and If it is successful, could become a regu1ar service in the city. Tv.·o-dozen San Clemente High School students have offered to help stack the bundles of castoff newspapers In the huge covered trailer van parked al the Market Basket parking areas in Shore. cliffs. Spokesmen for lhe ecology group. however. have asked that donors of the newsprint follow a few easy rules with their contributions. Tying stacks of papers v.•ith twine or cord is stressed to conserve time and space in the van. Donors also are asked to sift out any "slick'' paper stock from the stacks of newsprint. Paper v.·ith fille r -used in magazines and weekend supplements -can not be recycled by the Garden State Paper Company of Pomona, the firm '''hich has donated the van for the month's period. Lionel Burt, a spokesman for the ecology group and volunteers v.·ill have to cull out the slick from the pulp. "We're nol trying to discourage dona· lions by any means ." he said. "but it makes ii so much easier if the stacks are tied up and the magazines taken out." Garden State will pay (o the city $5 a ton for the castoff ne\\'Sprlnt wh ich becomes clear paper again after going through a patented bleaching process. El Toro Tract OK'd Development or 32 acres at Mulrlands BouJevard and L<ls Alisos Boulevard In the El Toro arta with construction of 140 single family homes has been ap- proved by the Orange County Planning Comm ission. The developer is Southwest Contractors Inc. first released the document. In a sla te· inent he later retracted, Rogers called the mayor a patsy to the vested interests in the city. Rogers Mon day night also attacked the DAILY PILOT for allegedly opposing the Freeway Fighters' anti-route cam· paign. He said the ne wspaper was one of the "combined powers of the vested interests·· and said it v.•as biased. The vice mayor charged that the ne11.·spaper, ''\\iants you, the pe<>ple, to fall into a false sense of security until H is too late. • .the daily has -since the outset -v.·orked hand·in·glove with those who \\'oul d devastate your tov.·n. "\Ve might call their program a pilot project for environmental destruction and pu nish1nent of people who have lhe audacity to challenge the position of the press." Rogers also made reference to •·a tidy trio of ex-elected officials rrom your city" v.·ho he asserted had opposed the freeway election "li ke snakes emerg· ing from the grass of some agricultural preserve .. , " He added, ''thank God their sinister scheme failed." Rogers later offered to introd uce former mayors James B. Stoddard. Charles E. Hart and former vice mayor lians J. Lorenz: The three former municipal officers had filed an uns uccess ful Ja~suit in an effort to block the freeway election on grounds that such a question properly wa5 an admini!trative fWlction of "elected officials. The election v.·as forced by petitions bearing signatures of nearly 10,000 persons { 4,300 the minimum needed, were verified by the city clerk). Rogers said the petition drive v.•as a clear indication lhe people "are ready and able to stand up." The traflic study, endorsed unanimous. ly by the counc il. will begin as soon as a consultant is hired, \vhich the council will do upon receipt of a recom· mendation from a citizens' advisory conl· n1ittee. Rogers. pointing out it \\'ill be another year before it is done, asked. "How Jong can v.·e v.'ait. Sentence Gi ven For Beating Gusty , northerly v.·inds that have chill· ed Southern California for the past flve days are e.i;pccted lo die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bri ng 75 degree highs 10 Orange Counly \Vednesday, the Na· tional Weather Service predicts. Early today lhe brisk northerly \V1nds shifted direct ion to blow from the northeast, creating typical dry. San\a Ana conditions and increasing \\'ind velocity belo\v the coastal canyons, r.1arch, indeed, had blo~·n in like a lion. ~ The Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots today , as sn1all craft 11.·arnings continued into the riflh day. With the diminishing winds tonight, inland port/Jns of the county may expect near frost te mperatures with lows or 33 degrees. Along the Orange Coast nighttime temperatures 11.·i ll reach a low near 40 tonight and a high in beach cities of 65 on \Vedn esday. r-.tountain and desert regions of Southern Califomi"a continued to be blasted by gusts up to 55 miles an hour . The California llighv.·ay Patrol con· Hnued a blanket ban on use of campers and tral!ers in San Bernardino and Riverside counties due fo blo~'ing sand, reduced visibility and gusty v.·inds. Winds in inland counties are expected lo drop orf to about 20 10 30 1niles an hour by Wednesday. The weather service said the storm front which has brought the chilling v.·inds may leave beh:J.nd some high cloudiness over Southern California Wednesday and bring. showers to the northern part of the state. Hilltoppers Plan Greenbelt Talk L illle 81111 l,ost lie doesn't kno\v his name, bul nurses at San Diego's 1-iillcrest l~eceivin g tlo1ne say he is quick to make friends. The boy, about 2, \\•as found aban· doned in a supermarket. Auth· orilies arc trying to locate his parents. Sta tion Doesn't 'L(>ok Lag tma' Sa y Plan11er s Heprescntatives for Standard Oil Com· pony '''ere noticeably absent at the Laguna Bl·ach Planning Com1nission mccling ~londay night. The coinpany. which proposes to build a gas ~talion beneath a towering Star Pint' in north Laguna, has gone back lo the drawing board lo add a touch of village atmosphere, City Planner Al Autry sa id Autry added he took representatives on a recent city tour lo point out village atmosphere \\'hich 1nay have inspired them to ask for an e:<lension until ?\1arch JS for preparation for a new design. Standard property manager Gerald Buck failed to gain approval of his "n1ctal giant" design ror property al 1251 N. Coast Highway during a planning session last month. E\'c n overlays of additional building decor, slumpstonc and I ands ca p in g The 57 AFS studcnLll made their own assembly and presented bills dur ing the two day workshops. Chico prese nted one of the bills \Vhich gave the right of bail to juveniles. It passed 56 to one. ~ Bea made J)()ints for the Women's Lib movement. as she was elected "Speaker of the Assembly." She was elected to the post by a landslidt', defeating both male opponents. •·1t is really easy for people to Un· derstand each other and y,•ork together in the democratic system," commented Chico. "The workshops were probably our best experiences here in the United Stales." "I learned a Jot about working with a lot of prop le at one time." Bea said. ··we had people in the assembly from all over the world. a.nd we all worked I together beautifully. ll 11.·as rea.lly Jan· tasLic" \.Vhile in Sacrainento, the stude nts at· tended a talk given by Governor Ronald Reagan . "He spoke quite a bit on \\'elfare.'1 Chico recalled. "After lhal. we had a very long question and answer session \\'ith him .. , Following the two days of democracy at the state capitol. the exchange students from the Orange Coast AFS chapters \Yen\ to San F'rancie-oo for SOOll "fun and games." according lo Bea. The youths visited Fisherman's Wharf, Chinatown and several of lhe other Bay area attractions before returning home Feb. 8. • Cost for the trip to Sacramento was borne by the local AFS chapters. This was the fir st year foreign students have been invited to participate in the Slate program. designed to set off the famous Star H } 0 d' Pine failed to dazzle the commission. Ole f lll3llCC "It doesn"t look one bit l!ke La guna," coniplalned one commissioner du ring Barin O' Delayed The Laguna Greenbelt and the city's former consideration of the conditional ~ new outdoor gathering ordina11ce head ui;e. pcrinit. Another suggested it might The revised draft of tbe controversial the agend a fo r the Thursday meeting fit comfortably into the n1iddle of Tor· CR 1 commercial residential) ordinance of the Hilltop Homeov.'ners Association ranee. 11·hich defines standards for beachfront of Laguna Beach. "The land would rnake a lovely park ." hotel de\"elopment \Viii not reach the The 7:30 meeting, scheduled for Top author Arnold Hano sugges ted Monday. Laguna Beach City Council at il.5 or the \Vorld Elementary School. v.ill Citing the adverse effect of gasoline Wednesday night meeting, a plannina: feature both greenbelt chairman James fumes on the atmosphere, Hano declared deparlment spokesman said today . Dilley and City Councilman Roy Holm he didn 't care ir "they come in '"'ith The plnnning commission. al its Feb. discussing these tv.·o subjects. the most gorgeous ga :1 station im· 16 meeting, agreed to recommend the following Dilley's int rod u c lo r y aginable. this tree is a liv ing monument.·• ordinance to the CQUncil with a numbe r remarks concerning the greenbelt pr()-Countering City Planner Autry 's com· or modifications, including a SO.foot max· ject. Jaycee President Rick Balzar \.\'i ll ment that the commercial ·site is too imum building height limit. take residents on a tour of the proposC'd !'anal! and poorly located £or a park, 1'he council, upvn receiving the greenbelt through a color slide prescn· llano expanded his park to a n1a\I, modified ordinance, wiU set a dale (or tatlon . suggesting the city also purchase an its own public hearing. 'A young El Toro Marine who best Councilman Holn1 \viii then explain abutting gas station lo create a v.·a lkway 11ov.·ever. the planning spvkesman 1aid, and kicked a SS-year-old Santa Ana the city's new ordinance restricting out· to the ocean. the revised draft has nol been completed woman afte r he tried to rape her ha§ door gatherings and its possible effect on Pl ann ers agreed to defer consideration and will not be ready for presentation been sentenced to one to 20 years in the community. or the request unlll l\'fonday, March 15. to the council until lls March 17 meeting. state prison. 1~:::;:::;:::;;;;;;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;.:. Billy Don llall. 22. of the El TorG lilarine Corps Ai r Station drew that sentence from Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. r.1rMillan after the jurist ruled that the defendant was not. a mentally disordered sex offender. Hall was arrested at the El Toro base la st Jan. 10 shortly after Santa Ana police identified him as the ma;i 11.·ho earlier th at da)' attac ked the \.\'Oman in the back alley of the downtown area. The Marine -M'as routed by passersby ,1·ho sa\v him beat and kick the woman "'hile he attempted to molest her. She has since recovered from htr inj uries. PRUDENT BUYING Through.ou t our 77 yea rs of corpet retaili ng , o ne foc i becomes quite evident -t ho+ whe n mon ey is Ion plentiful , peopl e buy better quality. Apparent Love Triarigle Ends i11 SA Man's Death Thi s is controry t o popula r be lief, but mokes good sen1 e if yo u th ink o b out it. Whe n yo u hove to co nce rn you rs elf with value ond perform ance, you are likely to buy better quality. At 'A lden's in the lost three years , our per uni t sale ho1 been mor e expensi ve carpeting, re fl ecti ng th is foci. Co nse que nt ly, we hove the Io r g e st 1e lecti on of fi ne r qu alities you will see a nywher e, oil ot comp etitive prices. An apparent love triangle ended in death tor a Santa Ana man f.londay in lhe Riverside Counly community or f\.lcadowbrook near Elsinore. J ames W. Nash. 40, of 1601 \V. Florn St .. Santa Ana, 1969 chairmen of tr.e Orange County Young Republlcan.s. died of gunshot ~'Ounds lo the head and chest. according to Rl\1erslde Q>unly Coroner Dennis Ely. Nash's fully clothed body. and lhJI of ?\1n. Bttty AM 1-lunt. 39. was found on the front la"-n of Mrs . Hunt's fonner home :ibout 1:30 p.m. Mondiiy. Near the bodies Jay Ctcll llunt critically lnJured with appartnt seU·in- flicted gunshot wounds, Capt. Russell C. 1-Iawk of the Elsinore aheriff's stalion said. Hunt remained tn criUcal condition today at Ri vertldt General Hospital. Using a .22 callber rifle, Hunt Lt believ· ed to have shot Nash three times and his v.•ife four times before pulling 1ht gun to his own head. l-lawk said. The 1-lunts v.·ere separated and in the process or getting a divorce. The coroner's office said Nash t1nd Mrs. Hunt had been seeing each othe r for about four w c e k s, accord ing to reports from neighbors, lndicaUn1 the motive for the double staying ... "•s a "triangle affair." Nash. :in insurance claims Investigator, v.·as the father of four chlldre-n. • l.sst ytar, he was Orange County chairman for State Senator John L. Harmer's campaign for state attorney general. Nash. a retired ~1arine Captain, also aliSlsted Jn the campaigns of Riep. Robert H. Burke, tR·Hun lingt.on Beach}, William Teague,· Republican ca ndidate for Congress and David Brandt. 1~9 candldate for the Santa Ana Unified School District 'J Tlie en d re1u lt is cus tome r satisfacti on , pride, ond recom mend ations which provide ou r ove rwhelm ing sou rce of new business . ALDEN'S SANTA AHA. OJ.ANO E TUST IN Call , , • ALDIN'$ RED Mill CARPETS & Dll:APIRl lS 11S74 Irv!"', T11tfln. c .. !,' .....,,... CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia lve. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ' I I I I . 7 I · 1 t ,, t1 t I • ' • San Clemente Ca istrano VOL. 04, NO. 52, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • Today's Ft.al TUESDAY, MARCH 2. 1971 TEN CENTS . Win Tidelands Use Over Protests The State Lan ds C.Ommission Monday granted permission to two electric utility firms to use public tidelands at San Onofre for sand excavation allied with development of tv.·o new nu c I ea r generating plants. Southern Californ ia Edison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric won • the permission by unamious vote , despite protest from a Santa Barbara erology group. The foes contended that a delay should have been given to allow time to study possible effects on the marine fJOlogy of silt and mud. The utility firms-sought the permission as one of many official actions that would allow the construction of twin nuclear reactors costing a haU·million dollars. • Lands CommiMlon staff members told the three members of the panel that a thorough study had been made of possible silting effect,, -studies which showed no damage imminent. Sand on two parcels oi1 the beach down coast of th! ex isting reactor would be dug out in the project and stored on another section of publlc tidelands on the beach. The Shoreline Preservation Conference. Incorporated. of Santa Barbara sought the delay in the commission decision. Federal and state pollution agencies coiisented to the sandmoving project. • Despite the S\Y1ft approval of the dig· ging permit, other governmental ap- provals far more crucial have not yet come for the generating project. The State Public Utilities Commission as -yet has not granted a permit nf convenience and necessity sought in ~·eek.long hearings in San Clemente last fall . Ille or ers Ie n 'Firehouse Cost Seen San Clemente city rouncilmen Wed· nesday are expected to formally launch the construction of a new fire departm ent headqua rters building by hiring the architectura l firm of Renf ro and Jordon to draw the plans. While no official cosl or size has been approved for the building. the council is expected to set about a $170,000 figure to the new headquarters designed to occupy what now is a huge parking lot and driveway near the existing depa rtment. Fire Chief Merton W. Hackett has proposed a building measuring about 800 square feet and standing two stories. In hls plans the structure would be capable of housi ng a full.time depart· men t , complete with living quarters, reception areas, a darkroom, a training room and ample storage areas. The architects who will be hired fo r the drawings include Marvin Renfro, the original ~signer of the civic center and Willard T. Jordan. Costa Mesa coun- cilman and an architect with years of experience at firehouse design. lf the project goes to bid later this year. the existing fire department offices Would be vacated soon after work begins. Hackett said the fire rigs would tie temporaily moved back lo the city's first fi rehouse, an aging Spanish building near the city yards now used for storage. Construction will not remain isolated to the fire department project. however. Vacated garages and offices at civic center will be blended into the police department operation -becoming more cramped by the day. Preliminary plans call for use of the ()]d fire equipment garages for more dention cells, storage and office space for a growing detective and patrol divisions. Critical Film On War Policy Set at School A film produced by actor John Wayne -critical or the U.S. roreign policy in Indochina -will be shown ror the fi rst tin1e in the San Clemente area March 13 at San Clemente high school. Sponsored by TRAIN !To Restore America's Independence Now) the rilm ''No Substitute for Victory" will be shown et 8 p.m. in the Triton Ce nter. Spokesmen for the sponsoring group said the movie includes-"arration by [.()well Thomas and ap~arances by military officers. combat veterans and former Presidential cabinet members . -"qi,e military leaders and com bat veterans who appear in the film all insist th'!y were hampered by policies designed to be less than successfu l." TRAIN publicity chairman Pamela J ohnson said . Tickets -$2 for adults and $1 for i lulebt.s :. .... can be obtained in Cai)istrano Bay businesses or by calling 492·2419 and 492·7838. Income from the San Clemente showing will go toward paying back expenses of making the movie. None of the. guests In the production received payment for their appearance, TRAIN spokesmen &aid. J\'[ail Deliveries Hit WASHINGTON (UPI\ --Sen. Alan f.ranst.on 10.CA.lif. ). says the U.S. Postal Seryi(:e la guilty of ' ' i n u c us a b .1 e discrimination'' through a~ new policy .,,hlch elimln11te11 trailer-by-trailer majl rlelivery Jn trailer parks built after lssl July I. • WILL NOT FACE DEATH Convicted Murderer Hul1t Hatchet Killer Hulse Guilty; Eludes Death By TOM BARLEY 01 I~• D•llY Poot $1111 Hatche t killer Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse was found guilty late Monday o{ first degree murder in the slayi ng of Santa Ana service slation attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. Hulse may now yet have to stand trial in the mutilation slaying Of Mission Viejo school!.eacher Florence Nancy Brown . In the Carlin murder. it took the Orange County Superior Court jury Jess than six hours to decide that Hulse, a burly 17-year..ald. used an axe last June I to hack to death young Carlin in the restroom of his Santa Ana service station. Hulse. 16 at the time of the murder, received lbe verdict wilh the apathy that has marked his d e me a n o r th roughout the two week trial. Judge R-Onald Crookshank scheduled March 26 for imposition of a sentence that could mean a life term in state prison for Hulse.. The youth's age rules out the death sentence. The veteran jurist will rul e that same day on a further plea by Hulse thal he is innocent by reason of insanity. Judge Crookshank's ruling will also determine the prosecution's further ac· tion on additional charges filed against Hulse in connection with the killing last June 2 of Mrs. Brown. The Garden Grove youth is charged with being an accessory to ~he murder of Mrs. Brown. 31. of El Toro. Steven Craig Hurd. 20, Hulse's alleged com· panion in the Carlin kill ing, is accused of both murders and goes on trial March 22. Clemente Club View Paintings Capist rano ·Beach painter Charlotte Light will demonstrate alla prima portrait painting for members of San Clemente'11 Arts and Crafts club at a monthly meeting March 11 at the San Clemente United Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Light. who has received formal art instruction in the San franicsco Bay area, USC, and abroad, was the winner of the bcsl ·in show award at last Oecejllber's &bowing ()f Oi,s. San Clemente art group. The meeting will begin at 7 :4~ p.m. Other entertainment will icnlude selec· Uons by organlst La uri Mae Shelor. Boys Club Carnival Site Eyed San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr will report on progress Wednesday or negotiations between city staff and aides of the South Coast Area Boy'a Club, which is seeking use of Plaza Park as a carnival site, despite op- position by nearby residents. Carr has met with club officials on the issue of finding an alternate site for the club's major annual moneymak· ing activity. Officials or the club two week! ago sought use of the par~. but .~esidentl near the park and -several city coun- cilmen agreed that the carnival would be an imposition on the q u i e t neighborhood. Mayor Walter Evaru suggested the use of Linda Lane Park instead, but initial response from club officials was negative. Last year's club carnival at Plaza Park drew complaints from neighbors who said noise of machines and people was a nuisance. Other items on Wednesday's council agenda include : -A report by Carr on the unsuccessful search by the city for a buyer of the old city hall and city yards. The property, which served as San Clemente's fi rst civic center, was re.appraised earlier this year and placed on the market. Thur far there have been no takers. That fact could reinforce an idea by Mayor Evans to convert the old city hall from its pres en t use an auto parts store tthe tenant is vacating next month) to a temporary replacement to the fire--ravaged community clubhouse. -Consideration of a final bill by Boucher and Drielsma for charges above original esrimates for the recently sub- mitted working drawings for the new commun ity clubhouse. -Adoption of the formal arguments for passage of the mil\ion·dol\ar parks and recreation bond issue along with ite mized tax information showing exact costs to taxpayers ir the revenue measure. wins approval April 20. -Establi shmen t of a dedication date for the city's new. $2.~million water reclamation plant. Original city plans included invitations to President Nixon and other major officials to dedicate the nonpolluling sewage trea tment facili· ty . -The setting of a study session late this month to discuss in deplh the ex· sisllng city policy on street mainte nance and construction. DAILY Pll.OT S .. rt Pftolo Ecology In Action Ecology-minded San Clementeans are shown at the f\tarket Basket as month-long drive gets under way to recycle ne\\"Sapers. Only tied bundles of newspapers are sought. not magazines. Sho,vn are Mrs. Lois Wellman, City lo.1anager Ken Carr and Rod Luck1nan, 7. Capo Selects Architect To Design School Site Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District have approved the employment ol an architect to draw a plot plan for the Capistrano School site. The fac ility, which wa s the district's first high school and is now used for fifth and sixth graders. will eventually become the district's administrative center. II has nol been decided if the historic bu ilding will have to be to rn down or if it v.·ill be remodeled. Two buildings, the art fa cility and the gymnasium will eventually be demolished to comply with state earthquake safely standards. Use of La Pia ya Street Superintendent Truman Benedict said that the plot plan is necessary because of Lhe impending demolition of Las Palmas School in San Clemente this summer. As Parl\ing Lot Up in All· -. The abandonment of La Play a Street in Capistrano Btach for use as a school disttict bus parkin g Jot is temporarily stuck in red tape. Joe Wimer. Director of Administrative Services. told the trust~s of the Ca pistrano UnifiE:d SChool District Mon· day Ural although the county road depart· ment is willing to retomr\')end aban· donment. it doesn 't own the entire street. The county owns only half of Ult street. up to the center line,• The 1tlte own& the rest. Trustees 1uthoriud a Jett.er of appeal to the state to abandon Ila half. but do not ltliOw how Ion g it will 1*ke if approved. •·state ()r!ici11l1 indicated to me that it would be possible to secure the pr~ perty, but we will have to pay a nomina l fee/' said Wimer. "They didn't say what 'nominal' iS." The district is seeking abandonment of the Street between Victoria and Las Vegas streeU. It had previOusly proposed th~ bus parking Jot for part of the Serra School playground, a move that was contested by several community organizations. Aft.tr agreeing to seek the use of t..a Playa slreet as an alternative,. the district appealed to the county. \Vimer said the .county road department w 11 \ rte()mmf!hd &bandonment to the Boord of Supe rvisors and will procetd with public hearings before making a l\nal decision on its hall of the street. I ''\Ve have to find a new loca tion for our textbook repository, central library. and instructional supply center .. All lhese funcUons' take place at La : P'ii.tnl3s," said Benedict. The superintendent said these functionll may have to bt temporarily moved to• the old C<ipls!rano School gymnasium . "But l would hate to do thi5 because of the community functions there." he said . ·Benedict said the district wlll negotiate with an architect to design a p I o t plan on the basis of a five year pro- jection. Il will locate the possible sites for the admlnislralive center, warehouse, and bu51ness office. Trus!ce Fred Newhart Jr. pointed out that when a time comes to build on the site. the buildins::s will have to be Span iah. early California or mission archllecture si nce the property lies within the cnntrolled architecture zone of the city of San Juan Capistrano. ., Some action, howtver, is expected this spring. Further extensive hearings, conducted on a federal level by the Atomic Energy Commission. probably will be acheduled along the South Coast sometime in April. Matters of a more technical nature are expected to emerge at those hearings. Conspiracy, Embezzling Asserted WASffiNGTON (AP) -W, A. "Tony'' Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers. was indicted today by a special federal grand jury on charges of con· spiracy, embezzlement and making it· legal political contr ibutions of $4!1,250 from union funds. Included among recipients of the con- tributions was $30,000 to a dinner for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968 and various others. Two other United Mine Worker officials named in the ' a m e indictment were John Owens. secretary-treasurer. and James Kmetz, director of UMW~a political arm , the Non-Partisan League. Atty. Gen . John N. Mitchell said the 13<ount Indictment was returned in U.S. District Court here . Boyle was charged In one count with embezzli ng $5.000. in another with con- &piring to embezzle and to make illegal political contributions totaling $49,250, and ti counts of actually malting auch contributions. The $5,000 was part or the $49,250. Kmetz was charged with the same conspiracy and embe:tzlemenr counts and In two counts of making illegal political contributions. Owens was also charged In the con- spiracy count and on one rount of making illega l political contribution. Named as unindicted co-conspirator1 are Suzanne Richards, Boyle's executive assistant, and Robert Howe, former director of the Labor's Non-Partisan League . The indi ctment charged that between 1966 and 1969 Boyle, the 66-year..old. $55.IJOO..a.year head of th e UMW, joined wilh Owens and Kmetz to contribute S49,2SO of the union's general treasury funds to political campaigns of various cand idates seeking federal offices. a violation of the Federal Corrupt Prac· tices Act. The defendants were using the non· partisan league as a means for the union to make contributions to the can- didates, according to the indictment. The indictment also charged that in order to conceal the nature of these con· tributions, Boyle and Owens authorized Kmetz and Howe to make illegal con• tributions out of the league's funds. In addilion, the indictment said, checks written on the league 's bank account were drawn to "cash" in the amount of the authorized contribution . Orange Weat•er Things get back to normal weatherwise Wednesday, with the ,.,.inds dying down and tempera• lures spurting beck up to 65 along the coast and 75 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Gover·nor Reagan's Commis· siu1t on Educational Reform in California, headed by Santa A nan Robert HansQn, ates t~E!' need for some changes in the way we ru·n our sc hool.s. Page 11. C•!ll•rlll• 1 Cllte-1119 l,lf 1 (llUlll.. 1•11 <•"""' u CrttS........ II Of!•!~ fft!k.. • l"Clihlrltl PH• 4 1!:111t!'lt111mt11I J ~!~•11c• \ .. 1\ "' ... "-,. ,-nft 1.111Cltn. ,, Me~l4' ' ) ~·· l'•llCI• 11 NltkMlll He.,. .. S Or•'"t C-ty II '""" , .. ,, S** Mlrlttb 1•11 '''""""' ' ' Tll.-i.n. f Wttffltf I Wl!lt. W•lll 1• W1mt11'1 HfWl l).lt W.Mf..... .., ' z DAILY PILOT SC Tutiday, March t; 1971 No Evidence of 'A buse' ' . 2 Students l ' Dad Mad Over School Incident 'Feeling' Attemptl by trustees to placate an Irate father who claims his daughter wu "abused" by a 5chool aide on un elementary $Choo! playground fallcd Monday. Trustee& ol the Caplst.rano Unified School DL!ilrict told Jerry VanMeter of 1'-lisslon Vleio that an intensive in. vestigatlon into the incident whicti alleged.Jr occurred at Viejo Elementary School has "failed lo lurn up evidence ()f wrongdoing." Van Meter char~ that hls 9-year~ld daughter was roughly handled by a noon duty aide -not a teacher -on the ichool playground lo the extent lhat the child's arms wttt bruised. He said he was not askJng for the aide's dismissal. bul wanted the bGard to take step.s to insure that I.he part time aide would l\Ol come in conu1ct v.1th his chltd a~aln. Jtc said his chUd was coming home from school nervous. upset, and often crying. , VanMcler suggeslecl that the child be moved lO another school or have her schedule altered so that she is not on the grounds when Lhe aide is. Superintendent Truman Benedict said the district's investigation and a further investigation by the Orange County Sheriff's Departmtnt turned up no \Vltne1se1 or evidence to iupport the child'• atory. • He said the aide had 'Worked: tor the district for 18 months and had ne\•er been involved in an incident of Uiat kind before. "It Is a matter of an 11dult's word over a child's," said Benedict. The superintendent said the board was aware of the fact that the aide refused In take a polygraph (lie detector t test, bul there was still Insufficient evidence to file a complaint against her. He said the school principal has tried to arrange to have the aide work in Sawdust Fails To Get Action For Permit OK Newport Traffic Study Labeled 'Front, Ploy' By t. PETER KRIEG Ar{itl.s seeking a tempo use permit 01 lh• D•llY PllOI Sr.II for -the -Sawdust FestI this summer Newport Beach Vice l-.1ayor H0\1't1rd found themseives dust off Monday Rogers Monday night labeled the planned night after walling rn than three Newport traffic study a •·front'' covering hours for .Laguna Beach lanners to reach their agenda It.em. the City Ccuncil majority's atten1pt to A small group headed by artist Ed deflate the petition drive that forad Van Deusen listened with apparent next Tuesday's Pacific Coast Free.,..•ay disbelief as City Planner Al Autry said election. lhe city staff hadn't comEJeted its report. "The ploy did not work .•. you \\'ere The group, which sat-through a lengthy noL fooled,'' &gers said to the 250 discussion ot zoning laws, variances, site -persons gathered at Newport llarbor plan reViews and gas stations, learned High School for a Freeway Fighters' the staff is compiling-lengthy Cf.Immen ls election rally. from department heads aimed at ironing The vice mayor said 1t1ayor Ed Hirth out problems concerned with temporary launched the study in a confidential use permits. memo to city councilmen, a confidential To soothe ruffled feathers. C<>mmissio'n -' memo that Rogers had released shortly chairman \Villiam Lambourne said the after it was delivered and from which planners will review the matter next he quoted again hoionday night. · Monday night and give a strong ex-Rogers had blasted Hirth when he pression or their feeling. \Vith this lo go on. Lambourne in- dicated. the Laguna Artists and Gallery o~·ners Assn. wouldn't be further he!d up on plans to conduct an art exhibit and sales at 935 Laguna Canyon Road from July 16 through Aug. 29. Dist1ict to Ask New Bus Routes In Orange County ~lembers or the new Orange County rransit District board took their first positive step ~onday. They voted to ask the Southern California Rapid Transit District about the pos.!libility of extend· ing bwi routes in Orange County. Board members (three or live were presenr) also discusstw:I finances. The district is empo11•ered to levy a five-cent lax rate beginning next July I, but has not yet decided whether to assess all of It or part of it. The board agreed to study the possi- bility of forming a technical advisory rommlttee to check on the necessity of a rapid transit study, Cypress Mayor John Kane\ suggested a committee or county department heads plus advisors from private industfy. f.1embers of the board are Kane!, Westminster Mayor Derek McWhinney, Richard D. Lynn. Corona de\ l\1ar at- loriney and collnty Supervisors Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers. Animal Owner Fined MYERSTOWt>.', Pa. (UPI) -When agents of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) raided Rudy's Jungle Playland, they found three dead lions, 10 dead monkeys, and about 15(1 other animals near starvation and unar e~ ...!ed in freezing weather. DAllY PILOT OJIANG~ COAST PUIL.liHIHO COMl'AHY lobort N. w,,., P'r•ldent and P'\1111111\tt' Jack k. Curlty Viet P'ralf.,,t •nd Otn.r1I ,_,..,.... lhem•• Ke••il l!'dllw Th11111•1 A. Mu r.tr.1111 M41Mtlr4i Edi"" Chtrl•1 H. Lee1 l idi•r' P, N•ll AMllfMll ,..,,...,,. Ed11..,. Paper Recycling Project Called Success So Far A pilot newspaper recycling program launched Monday in San Clemente already is a roaring success wlth an estimated two tons of ne\\'Sprint stacked on opening day in a covered van. Th_e activity. under jonnt sponsorship by the city and San Clemente's Backyard Ecology proup, will last throughout the month of March, and if It is successful, could become a regular service in the city. Two-dozen San Clemente High School students have offered to help stack the bundles of castoff newspapers in the huge covered trailer van parked at the Market Basket parking areas in Shore. cliffs. Spokesmen for the ecology group, however, have asked !hat donors of the newsprint follow a few easy ruJes with their contributions. Tying stacks of papers \1·ith twine or cord is stressed to conserve time and space in the van. / Donors also are asked to sift'" Out any "slick" paper stock from the stacks of newsprint. Paper wlth filler -u.!led in magazine.!! and weekend supplements -can not be recycled by the Garden State Paper Company of Pomona. the firm ,,·hi ch has donated the va n (or the month's period. Lionel Burt. a spokesman for lhe ecology group and volunteers will have to cull out the slick from the pulp. "\Ve·re not trying to discourage dona· lions by any means," he said, ·'but it makes it so much easier if Lhe stacks are lied up and lhe magazines taken oul." Garden State 11·i1l pay to the city $5 a ton for the castoff ne,vsprint \Vh ich becomes clear paper again after going through a patented bleacjling pro1:css. El Toro Tract OK\! Developntent o( 32 acres at ~luirlands Boulevard and Los Alisos Boulevard in the El Toro area with construction of 140 single family homes has been a~ proved by the Orange County Planning Commission. The developer is Southy,·est Coniractors Inc. first released the document. In a state.. 1nent he later retracted, &gers called the mayor a patsy to the vested interests in the cily. Rogers Monday night also attacked lhe DAILY PILOT for allegedly opposing the Freeway Fighlers' anti·route cam- paign . He said the ne\l'spaper was one of the ''combined powers of the vested interests'' and said it \\'as biased. The vice ma yor charged that the ney,•spaper, '·\Vants you, the people. to fall into a false sense of security until it is too late .•. the daily ~as -since the outset -worked hand-in-glove \l'ilh those ''ho would devastate your town. "\Ve might call their program a pilot project tor environmental de struction and punishment of people who have. the audacity to challenge the position of the press." Rogers also made reference to •·a tidy trio of ex-elected officials from your city" who he asserted had opposed the freeway election "like snakes emerg· ing fron1 lhe grass of some agricultural preserve. _ . " He added, "thank God their sinister scheme failed." Rogers later offered to introduce former mayors James B. Stoddard, Charles E. Hart and former vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz. The three former municipal officers had filed an unsuccessful lawsuit in an effort lo block the freeway election on grounds that such a question properly was an administrative function of elected officials. The election was forced by petitions bearing signatures of nearly J0,000 persons (4,300 the minimum needed, .... ·ere verified by the city clerk). Rogers said the petition drive was a clear indication the people ''a re ready and able to stand up.'' The traffic study, endorsed unanimous. \y by the council, will begin as soon as a consultant is hired, which the council will do upon receipt of a recom- mendation from a citizens' advi sory con1· mittee. Rogers. pointing out it \Viii be another year before ii is done, asked, "How long can \l'e y,•ait. Sentence Given For Beating A young El Toro Marine Y.'ho beat and kicked a 65-ycar-old Santa Ana womnn after he tried to rape her has been senlenccd to one lo 20 years in state prison. Billy Don Jlall. 22. or the El Toro ilarlne Corps Air Station dre1v 1hat sen tence fron1 Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan arter the jurist ruled that the defendant was not a mentally disordered sex offender. llall was arrested at the El Toro bnse last Jan. 10 shortly after Santa Ana police identified hint HS the ma;i .,..·ho earlier that day a!lacked the \\'On1an 1n the back alley of the do.,..·ntown area. The Marine \vas routed by passersby \\'ho saw him beat and kick the \\'Oman v.•hile he attempted to molest her. She has since reC<>vered fro1n her injuries. a... ....... OMc• JJJ Forett Av•n11• 5-C.._..C>Hk. 105 Nert). El C1mi11e k••I Apparent Love Triangle ' orw ~OMcM Cfll• Met1; »Cl Wn l l1y StrM M-' lffdl1 »» N""1IO"I loul..,ll'lf Hllllll"9"'1 aoKfl-1 11f1t 1 .. e11 10!.lltv•tf bA1LY P'll..OT, wllll wfllell 11 COlftll~ tM H ..... ~r ... , i. ,ul!U..-..i l111ty lftflll' S- 4tV In ........ Mii-1w ~ htdt. NtWllOf'I l .. tfl. Cfolff Mftt, Hllllllne- l!Mcll. l'Olllllllll Yfllrf, Stn C"'"""'tf C.pblr-•rod INd!Htcll. ,...,. w'lll'I - "9CllMl l '\Clllloft. ~rlnclMI """""' lll'lfnt It> 11 ·S. W.I llY ilf .. t. C.lt Meta. ,...,..._ f7141 M2-4JJ1 Cl-"'M "'"'"'"" '42""'" S. Ch &tis Al D1paluah: , ........ 4tJ-MJt i..,... .... IJI D1pa"'4•1 , ••• , .... 4t4-t4'& ~. 1tn, ~ c-.. ,,....,..... CWoMl!y. '" -11w-. niwinn... tdltttltl "",... .. ·~~" ...... _, N ,........_.. •11M111 JMCllll ,_. '""'*' .. ~/-. ,K.r., tt9U ,. .... ,.w II .,...,_... .. Kfil ~ C..I• M.1. (•1 ...... lit, S~ ....... ho etnJtr A.JI fl'lfnfl'll'rl bl' mtn OJI """"'"l~j lftlllfllry ,,_, .... , .... U.JJ lt'IOfltlllY, • Ends in SA Man's Death An apparent love triangle ended In death for a Santa Ana man l\1onday in the Riverside County community of l\1cadowbrook near Elsinore. James W. Nash. 40, cf 1601 \V. Flun1 St., Santa An11, 1969 chairman of tr.e Orange County Young Republican s. died of gunshot wounds 10 the head and chest. according to Riverside Ccunty Coroner Dennis Ely. Nash's fully clothed body, and that of Mrs. Betty Ann Jlunl, 3!1. v.·aii found on the front la"·n of fo.1rii. Hunt 's former home aboul 1:30 p.m. Monday. Near the bodies lay Ctcll llunt crltlc:tlly in jured "''ith apparent self·in· flicled gunshot \VQUnds, Capt. Russell G. Hll \\'hpof the £Islnore .sherlff's stulion said. Hunt remained ln crltlcal condlUun today at Riverside General Hospit11I. Using a .22 t'.allber rifle, lfunt is be\lev· ed to have shot Nash three times and I his wife four times before putting ihe J,:un to his n .... ·n head . ffa,vk said. The Hunt s "'ere separated and in the process of getting a divorce. The coroner's office said Nash 111ond ~trs. Hunt had be~ seeing each oth~r for about four .,.,. e e k 5, according lo report.'i from neighbors, indicating the motll'e for the double slaying was a "triangle affair." Na sh, 11n insuran~ claims investigator, "'a.!1 thc father of four children. l.ast ye11;r, he \Vas Orange County chairman for State Senator John 1 .•. Harmer's campaign for ~tate attorney general. Nash, a retired Marine Captain, also assisted in the campalgns of Rtp. ltobert H. Burke, tR-Huntington Beach). _ Wllllam Teague. Republican candidate "-'fdr congress and David Brandl. 1969 c3ndidn1e for the Santa Ana Unllled School District. \ a dlffertnt part of lt>e playground awa.y from the child. Dr. Robert Beuley e.sked the parent to try t.o change the child's attitude about the incident to a 1nore positive viewpo;int. VanMeler said he didn'L know ho1v that was possible bu t he said he ha cl instructed lhe child to obey orders of all teachers and aides al all ti1nes. Benedict said the district will not pursue its investigation any further, part!cularly since there were discrepan· cles In the child's story as to \\'here she went that day 11·hen not on the playground. Chilly Winds Leave ' Area; Santa Anas In Gusty, northerly winds that have chill· cd Southern California for the past five days are expected to die tonight. Santa Ana winds will bring 75 degree highs to Orange County Wednesday, the Na- tional Weather Service predicls. Early today the brisk northerly \\'ind:) shifted direction to blo'' from !he northeast. creating typical dry, Santa Ana C<>nditions and Increasing ll'ind velocity below the coastal canyons. fo.larch, indeed, had blo11·n in like a lion. The Orange County Harbor Department reported increasing gusts to 30 knots today, as small craft vtarnings continued into the fifth day. \Vith the diminishing winds tonight, inland porti'Jns of the county may expect aear frost temperatures with lows of :13 degrees. Along lhe Orange Coas! nighllin1e temperatures will reach a low ne1:1r 40 toni~hl and a high in beach cities of 65 on \\'ednesday. fo.1ountain and desert regions nf Southern California continued to bt.· bla sted by gusts up to 55 miles an hour. The California High\l'ay Patrol con- tinued a blanket ban on use of cainpers and trailers in San Bernardino and Hiverside counties due to blowing sand. reduced visibility and gusty winds. Winds in inland counties are expe(·ted lo drop off to about 20 to 30 miles .'ln hour by Wednesday. The 11·cather service said !he storin front which has brought the chilling \l'inds may leave behind some high cloudiness over Southern California \Vednesday and bring showers to the northern part of the state. Hilltoppers Plan Greenbelt Tails, The Laguna Greenbelt and the <·ity's new outdoor gathering ordinance heacl the agenda for the Thursday meeting of the Hilltop Homeo\1·ners Association of Lagu~a Beach. The 7:30 meeting, scheduled for Top of the \Vor\d Elementary School. ,1·ill feature both greenbelt chairman James Dilley and City Councilman Roy Holm discussing these t"·o subjects. Follo\\·ing Dil\ey·s in Ir o d u ct or y remarks concerning the greenbelt pro- Je<:I, Jaycee President Rick Balzar \\'ill take residents on a tour or the proposed greenbelt through a C<>lor slide presen- tation. Councilman llolm \viii then expl::iin the cily's new ordinance rc~tricting out- door gathe.rings and its possible erfect on lhe community. l,illh• Boy Lost J.le doesn't know his name, llut nurses at San Diego's Hillcrest Receiving lloine say he is quick to n1ake friend1t 'rhe boy, about 2. \11as found aban- doned in a supertnarket. Auth- orities are trying to locate his parents. Station Doesn't r 'Look Laguna' Say Planners , Representatives for Standard Oil Com- pany were noticeably absent at the Laguna Beach Planning Comnlissio n ineeting fo.londay night. 1'he company, which proposes to build a gas station beneath a towering Star 1-'ine in north Laguna, has gone back lo the drav.·ing board lo add a touch of village atmosphere. City Planner Al Autry said . Autry added he look representalive!I (•n a recent city tour to point out village <ilmosphere v.•hich m;:iy have inspired them to ask for an exlcn sion until March 15 for prl'parauon for a new design. Standard prop<!rty n1anagcr Gerald Buck failed to gain approval of his "metal giant" design for property al 12;)1 N. Coast High\vay during a planning SC!'Sion last rnonlh. Even Ol'l'rlays nf additional building decor, slumpstone and Jan d s ca p in g designed to set off the r amous Star 1'111c failed to dazzle the com1nission . ''It dnt•sn·l look one bil like Laguna," con1p\ained one comn1issioner during foriner consideration of Lhe conditiona l use permit. Another suggested it might fit <'ornfortably into lhf' middle of Tor- rance. "The land v.•ould inake a lo,·ely par.k." author Arnold Hano suggested J\londay. (iling the adverse effccl of ga solinr fumes on !he atmosphere. Han o declared he Qidn 't care if "they come in ll'ith the most gorgeous gas station im· aginable, this tree is a living monument.'' Countering City Planner Autry 's com· m('n! lh<1l Lhe com mercial site i!'I too s1nall and poorly located for a p:trk, llano expanded his park to a mall , suggesting the l'ily also purchase an abutting gns station to create a walkway to the ocean. Pl anners agreed to defer considerallon of the request until l\londay, ~·l arch 15. Democracy-, By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL 01 Ille OtllJ l"lltl 11•11 Bea Munn and Chico Senna. the two foreign e,xchangc students ln Laguna Beach this year, received practical education in the workings of democracy while participating in a series of govern- ment workshops in So.cramento in early February. The two students. here in the Art Colony for a year on !he American Fie'td Service ~AFSJ program , participated in the Boys and Girls State program . held yearly in the capitol city. Purpose of the program ~ to give persons with leadership abilities a chance to ··feel " how real democratic govern- ment \\'Orks. Delegates from throughout California. while attending the con· ference, build a representative govern- ment by electing officials. making a legislature and presenting bills. Bea, from Switzcrlat¥1 and Chico, from Brazil. v.•ere among 57 AFS students invited to tht• governme11t workshop. Joining the exchange students were. 540 regular hlgh school st udents from various parts of California. The 57 Afi"S students made their 0\1'11 assembly and presented bills during the two day \l'orkshops. Chico presented one uf the bills which gave I.he right or bail to juveniles. It passed 56 to one. Bea made points for the \Vomen's Lib 1novement. as she was elected "Speaker of the Assembly.'' She was elected to the post by a landslide, defeat ing both male opponenlS. "It is really easy for people to un- dersland each other and v.·ork togelher in the democratic system." commented Chico. "The v.·orkshops were probably our besl experiences here in the United States .'' "I learned a lot about working with it lot of people at one time." Bea Sl'lid. •·\Ve had people in the assembly from all over the 1vorld, and we all worked together beautifully. It \\'as really fan- lastic'' \Vhile In Sacran1ento. the students !ll- tendcd a talk given by Governor Ronald Reagan. •·He spoke quite a bit on v.·elfare.'' ChiC<> recalled. "After that. \Ye had a very long question and answer session \\'ith him.'' f'ollowing the two days of democracy at the state capitol. lhe exchange :r;tudents from the Orange Ccast AFS chapters went to San Franci~o for some •·fun and games." acC<>rding lo Bea. The youths ,·isiled Fisherman's Wharf, Chinato\1·n and several of the other Bay area attractions before returning home Feb. B. Cost for !he trip to Sacramento wa! borne by the local AFS chaplers. This \\'as the first year foreign students have been invited to participate in the Stale progranL Hotel Ordinance Baring Delayed The revised draft of the C<>ntroverslal CR icommercial residential) ordinance \l'hich defines standards for beachfront hotel development will not reach the Laguna Beach City Council at U.!1 Wednesday night meeting. a plannini department spokesman said today. The planning commission. at its Feb. 16 meeting. agreed lo r~commend the ordinance to the council \l'ilh a number of modifications, including a 50-foot max· imum building height limit. The council, upon receiving the modified ordinance. will set a date for Jt-S own public hearing. Ho .... ·ever. the planning spokesman said, the revised draft has not been completed and will not be ready for presentation to 1he counci l until its ~1arch 17 meeting. PRUDENT BUYING " Througho ut our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes qu ite evident -that when money is less plentiful , people buy better quality. This is contrary to populor belief, but ma ke s good sen se if you think a b o u I it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performonce, you are likely to buy better quality. Al Alden's in'ihe last three years , our per un it sale has been mor e expensive corpeting, reflecting this foci. Conseguently, we have the I a r. g e st _selection of. finer qual itie s you will see anywhere, all al competitive prices. The en d result is customer satisfoction, pride, and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source 'of new bus iness. SANTA ANA. ORANOI TUSTIN C•ll , • , ALDEN'S RID HILL CAAPl!TS & DRAPIR IEI 11374 ln1l~ttf1'17 ,.,. 131-3344 ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 .. I I I JIJ DAILY PILOT SC Playing l1ate1•esi Ga11ae Home Buyers Still W aitii1g YORK IAP) become mort fa\lorable OVER THE COUNTER ···-"'*· ................. ,... "...,..."'Iii" t •• ..._ ..... ~ ................... rtltil " ........ ~,, ..... w ~ NASO Ll1tin9s far Mand1y, M1rch 1, 1~71 T h e strategy elements w a I l · a nd pay.Jess supported by " anything comparable conhnues ..... ........ Ml Houses th11t last ) ear re because of soulld reasonl1lg, ii trend lo ras1er terms has developed so s¥11flly and strongly that few housing officlals can re 111 e m b e r ma1ned unsol d because or a s -'1~":' ~.?!~~~~l '~~ .:~ I 11 • 1~1tOl1m1n1•l •lb Fit percent and 9 percent ra es tH1ton11 Stcu•ll •• '"""1 0.11111 Ann o ... , •• s~ of borrowing now remain •~• '°""''' Bink •v.,,•,,•, .. 1.000 I OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISALI WAl!HOUSI OP!N TO THE PUILIC so•;. OFF lilt I liDll<IGt• 5AlllTA I'll-IJ:S.4la -DEl.ll•S WAHTl'D ••• If ro11 ore 111or Ml•t T~epllo11e ""''"''"' S.r.lc.e, Yov •ro 111or tHtlitt All of rovr c.ollt. TELEPHONE ANSWERING IUltEAU 835-7777 0 Don·t settle for Jess. • Don l seule ror .anything less than the best interest rate on 90..<fay Thrift certJf1cate<s. Invest a m1n1mum of $3,000 00 1n our 9()..day Thn ft cert1f1c.ate.s, and ) ou II earn a sohd 7~~ per annum. And Avco Thn ft pays JI ~~'")W· l:o:ecu11vc ofl1ces 111 W Oyer Rood S.1n1.1 An.a , Cal11 Account~ proltcltd up lo • rn.illmum of $10,.000 by Thrift Cu1r•nly Corpo1•hon of Ullforn~ only If p1ovldfod 1n tht Ullforn1• f1n•nc1•I Codt A co;y Qf Ch•plH I !Guilfllnttt Thrift Accounts) of 01vl\K>n 7 of the C.loforn11 Finoinct.11 Codt m•y be obt.tntd upon requt\I l~tltlfT GUARANTY CORPORATION OfCAUfORNIA 1c; NOT AN INSTRUM£NT ALITY or THE STA TE OF CALIFORNIA. Avto i Thrift Otw~IQn ""'' h1'1'11mOl)C'r•hon11nct 19?1 •nd h1' "'''' l•1ltd lo p<11y fund§ on dem.nd NEWPORT BEACH 210 1 (71 4) aJJ.3440 • , THERE ARE 20 AVCO THRIFT OfflCES IN CALIFORNIA. VISIT OR CAll YOUR NEAREST OFFICE. ln•ur1nct & lrt<lv1 ,. Unsold at 7 25 percent because 1.i11 11ac:k1 1<1n1uc Bulk 1fld l•u1! Ltllijr b l th t d feel 111 a1ncp so 51, 111 Ell uyers no 1ng e ren 11, 8 sy1 1~ , 114 111,n r 7 d 6 7, i.t£mp • 1•'• 2 h Gltlttlt lhey i::an v.Bit or an isrv. 111< '"lo"' 01e11" w Httll NC ll" ~\1 Giel> RuD pe r-nt Shi• a... J..(1.1, 5SVo Go!O c IC •·<-UV1 111'1 ~11 ;!JI ac0 ll The U S Savings & Loan v. N&nk ,, 2' ,, .. , • ,c l"'~rtn" Ol> 0 I League savings Y.h1ch represents the F ldU~~ .. ,r.:,· 10 2i;r:1t~ and loan 1ndusl.r~ ~lp~°'$ .,:• J '8l:""M,s,c AID In< \01~ IG .. G>ffn ""I the bulk: of AITS I"< • , r.i., Gr1111 11£ AVY. co f"' t •o Grev Aav calls the 1.n.r1e 1" , .. J Gr!ve P· \\ h1ch provides mortgage monev s1tuat1on a tradeoff Ac<nltn 2, , 7,,. gu I lnl Sure 1n Aon>1r 11: 2•, M H:~C::~ ~ A"""" W l6 ' 1•" Ht1Uh In teresl rates are falling, 11 Aa• 1 "• '~· 1 ' He1111<1 F I.II S ' l~>o II lierll Joro b t Al• I"' " J>o ~·· 1bd1 Co sa~s u pnces are r1s1ng A1111e H µ., ' Hklac: 1,.1 And so the question Does !:~'s': 1~1, 1~ ~att"' 11 pay to pla y the Y.a11ing Al<M Lt> •1•· ""'• f.!or1'1"11~ A!dtll er '" ,.,, Ho:w.<•O GI gan1e" The evidence suggests Auco L"" 1 .... 1:•· Howm 1" be •11 TK.11 1 o • Hvc~ 1<1 that to a point 11 can All• B•• l'• • H<>11 i>P bl 8 t Al!t<I fo 10 ,JOI Hijrl I' played pr o I 1 ta y U A•l•n P, "'• i•1, HY•" c11 r I .llot Cr.,, ' '• H•tt1 1"1 someti me 1n the u ure in Al""""' 5 ~ .,, 1m19, S• terest rates will cease falling ~~n,.,;::g ,~•\ 1~,· :::i•·N~c': wlule prices are expected to ~"'eiC["P.., 10,, '~: :~:~ •• ~ 10 Cont'nue r1s1 ng A"' ~ '"' •~ 1 '' 1"1 C:on• Am F!nrt ] o 111, lnt•m In And 1t is Lrue also that Am "~'' a• • • 1n1"'' G A CrM't "' ~~'' I"! 6W1h to delav the purchase of a A Med<• i"• )Q 1111L111 c Am TCI~ t~ ~ 19 lnl Multi! home "h1le seeking a one half Am wt o ll • 1~ 1n1 Sf1 t t A~IWI tt 1 l • IOfllc• pcunt drop 1n mor gage ra es An~~u 11 11 es1~ •• sou1n be h I t An~rn In I' o l "h J6Cob• F ma y oot t e smar es A•cs I"<' ''" 1 t Ja~u,, c 0 125 OOO AMt" M "'ll~.J~m W3I stratcg\ n a , Ar~ MoP , • 11•, J•m•• F mortgage for 20 }ears a one-:·;~:·.: 1:: t;,~ j1~;r-111,rd, half point d1rterence amounts Arrn • ~ • • l' • 10.r•n M Arv ~I I" " • 1(01 (p to only $7 or $8 a month :~CC' 8~ ~ 1~1• ~~~ .. 1115~ Al 8 percent for example A• c~ • r 11'• 1• K~1.s1 pt ' Au!o Sci 1 1'o K•"'•r the mortgage costs $209 12 "• 1 At • ii:,..,.,. be 'hi llak~r tt•, '31o Kiie Grn At 7 5 percent I mon Y P." • p._,. 1 i ~ 1(•¥•m 1 7 t P.~n1 .. E'U~ll1<ta•T tab 1s $201 40 a percen Ilk~., ••r ''" 7"· Kee-.... c. $193 83 at 6 5 percent $186 -40 ~~~:":~ ~ .~ ~ .J ~:lie'l,.. and at 6 percent $179 11 ~:~':.! ~ ~~1~ ~:::~s.c The difference result ing ::: ,';;'" 1:~. ~? ~ ~~~' /10 from one half point therefore "'"' 11,.. 11 1~1. ii:,,, O:u• ••'1l H~ •' " K•Vll PC m•ght not be ~orth the nsk 'J"'' L~b oi. ~ o 4 K1no "" 111"0 ,,.,., '" 1 1(11191 fl of losing the house of ones io111uD• "' 10 , n" Kin. to be bell II -.1 5M " ' ·~ i':ft•P Vo• dreams It might er "'''h' .,, • L•nc• 111 ddl l I .,.<\loo<;• loll-lA (.1 l_R.,, to consider the a t ona "' Booue e• , ., "• l•nt w<f 10 $8 an investment In better :~~~·Ar \~. 1;; ~:~~~ CP I 'loo C•~ 1ft • 1"" l"'1 Co•I hv ng llr~otn ~l• 1, Leliur c; Ho"•"er fhoSC 0 n (' h tt} f '1r n•• I" "1 '' lPWll BF .. . ~r~· !;c~ •1 t ., Ll'1 s,,,,1 poml d1frerences add up Note "t""" " I? , 1l llaunlt Br~<I P.• ,#, 1<'• l0()18'" lhat the holder of a 6 percent " ,,~h· P n ' Loo ~~ h llw,01 ~'• f1> Log E!t 1 mo1 tgage pays $30 a mont ·~nn '" l~~c~ r I hid ~"WPS '1 lT ~A•<IGEt Jess than lhe fam1 y o mg r1.: ..._,~, •., "• M•I ;in, t t I t 0:•1 W Sv '!'< 711 .... Ml 1-rl an a percent con rac s I rm~11 ),j 1 s M"""' c h r , M b But -"""" M ,..,,o M•• "''~ \\Ort waiting or. a} e '••~, 11 11 " "' ar,,.., h h ' h r lien C•rt11 •, •'-1 M1vl L" even t oug ra es ave a .-.c 1o110~ r , 1" Mt3or sw1ftl} few f1nanc1al men ~~: r'"' ~l! r· ~~)~·" foresee 6 percent this year ~!i! ~ c~ ; ; t : ~!.:,,~1• These small differences add ,,..,e 1• 1 • , • rld •n .-~, r;, ''"''•~•c• E> up 1n another wav too Over ~ • .., NG n>o 11>, 1.<11u w rev·~~ C 1• "" \\lal~ Cl the 240 months of a 20-} ear c•n1•• ?11, ,, ~ 1a1e• r r .:~~ VP~ l•lo 1• Yldw GT mortgage the d 1 e r e n C e .:ent L•D 1 , ''• ~'1111 .. , bety,een a 7 fl percent and ~~:~;ee<, 1~ ; ~;·; ~J~. 'vi~,; • " 8 perce"t rale totals r~ ... 1 •• in• 1 "~ """1' Ge• " " c"e• ind ~ , l • ru ;;rf SJ 852 80 and much more 1! ·~-.. •1 1 "1• 1• Min v1r -··B A.I 7'<)1•.Mo •·c~ I d Sma rtt' r~ 1 n r,, 1•-. " Moa ~c 1nves e ,,., ,1 s 111 .,, , "'<itlw-R The difference between 8 r '"1 "' 1•< 1•! Mon1 cc1 c1 111i. J'11t.Moorr 0 and 6 percent adds up to ,. , .. u • ..,. "'-'• •\_.e s C lh U l'I ~I 1• Morron K ' very substantial figure 1 M19 "'~ '" • •M.,.. frA b d CIArt All '! ]9>0 M!Qlr WI some $7 202 40 ase on a ,,~ '"o , , 1•, 1Ao1t~ 11 r 880 t'.. "'°"' O 1 , •oMct (I b lot.al 0 $50 18 \ersUS r,..., r~ 1~, "" Mulllli' 986 ,, Coq1r (P '! 60 Mv•l>l'I P $42 411 toll!! I' II o ~ My~t LL Worth W''''ng it out" Hard co1.,,, ~rr 31>, lS'~ NCC 111<"1 ·om -1, " ~ N1,,8~ 0: to say Any ram1ly now ~~ ~~ l', f~," ~:;c~,~ P'"' mg lhe game must \\Ork rc,,.,1 Pl '111 1. ,. 1~0 c ' r~m 11 '" 1<>, 011 ~"' L :. out the equa11ons careful!v ro.,. P y ,. , 11 Na1 ""~ ro..,, ~ I • , N P~l•M Present housing costs poten cm~ '"' 11 , 11 ..,&1 'K'l h (""'" lt'I < •'-H.ol ~., tial sa'l"fn{ts in moving I e cmo • c 1•1 ~ , Ntt s " b Id rcmr•" • , l NEn Gt: value of ui 1ng equity rn .:1~ .,~0 >'1 , ,, NJ N ••G t .-111 <"orto. 11 , J" • N l,~ln f' stead of paying ren c ~1• , ,., 1•· Nltl• • I th I k g t tooo r L 1•, ·o,, N•tl• 11 s It wor a 1n OU a c ...... nt: 11 l • HC•r t1 , I • and I h e 0 <"or o 5 S .. ~ ~ N£u• 0 I mor gag now Co,m ¥r 11 1••· 1<1w NtiG ren.got1al1ng if rat~ drop' r• vud 1s !:'1 Nw P 1 • r,0 , O:o 31 '• ND•"l C • Does lhe mortnage lender -,,,, ~ 11 11• ,,, Nycl P•c /' '""'" ), l>,01•v•M pe rmit thfs \\lthOUI com ('y~. ( I. I. Df't•D Ar'! f'l~• •1'<1 '• ~.:>t>o l (t phcat1ons or dries he cha rge na .. • \1 1• 11 o 1 !.f-< • I r ? :'.:!• ' (p •• ''•Op! ~••n a prepaymen ee ""' o ~ , 1. 1111 c ., I I ..,, , ~·n :>ti'• y-, Or~• 11•1 Perhaps the mos cruc1a D••• 11c\ , • 1 , D•MCn! r I th t ... l'.>1 •I· .. ,,, 4 .(11••r I' acto r a t momen IS u1t o~v•• ro -, • o ~r 11 .. th I r I d ase'!'l•v M!r 11,.]f;,0•1(.11 rea o con 1nue 1ncre "• ._ ... c~ r it p '"" B• 'n housing pnces Even some :m:.,.. 1 .. i • ~·· ~·c G•,• 'l""'o ,, • ' .,, , cc a of the lnrge corporal e ~1111 1r 1 11 • t "'P~nc",' 0 ' iJ"1 c'n r 11 1' , P&nol builders who "ere supposed ne 1a ~ "1 ''. P•r•• or f\• ~. • • 111 Perto.• M to bnn< econom1e~ lo the 1n n•m c• 11 1 11 Pft•k• c On•Ao r ,Po~w H :===========================.:_~d~u~s~tr:y~e~•~pe".:'.c~l_1l~o~r~a~1~s'.''_IP~'~'~':"'.:.. ! o., "~ • , 4'• P11 F ,..., '1(1' '•~ Poult•P o •c, J 71 11 , P~\ltllt 'l r !•I t '• ? P,v L O• r-----------------------~ I I I I I How to buy ! i stocks. i I I I I I Over4 mtllion Americans have read thts book, which wa• I I commissioned by Mei nil Lynch. We llunk it's one of lhe best I I gm des lo investing ever written For a free copy of this 259-I I page besl-selle1, iust mail the coup0n No obhgalton I I I I -..:.a1nr I 1 1 1 ;:::':':,.,, Z•P i 1 I Ionic phnnt-Buo.tnt.<i.• 11honr I I " ....... ·~ .. " .. ~ ............. "·-." ............ ""-"' .. -...... I I Merrill ~ch: We look for the trends. I f\1cTr11l Lync h Pierce, f'enner & Smith Inc I II Sergcrstrom Ccnlcr. Santa Ana 92702 -Telephone 547 7272 II tIOOO North Main Street) I '" I L--------·-·••••••••••••~ ;Jn 1•r L lo ) 1• P~••I Ml "oN J~~ •l t Lii , Pe!rlt1 T l'VI• D!J I"~ 74 1 Ptnn P•o llin<fn ~ i1 , 11> P~ G&ll ".:Int PO • ••.Peo11 w. D rl·~~ 0 1, 11 • Pel Clll r:l P• ot I 1P, Pen b C11 -'~~ l n Pt>I Sub t:btr 1~ •'• ~ P'1o!on E<"" I •II r.'\o )? Pltdm1 A f"<I~ Sv> 1~. 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"I lL ij" tt;, •' .1~· JI •• Hl. -XII J.1•, 11 111, -~. l 11<1 I llt\I -'0 • ,,, 6' 61 fl+• ',,, ~ •1\o -h 1• J, .... u *''-' t •• > • Lean Houorcd HOLLYWOOO tUPIJ Actors Divided On Scott's Snub For his own reasons Scott HOLLYWOOD (UPI) has an Inordinate pride In his George c. Scott is absolutflly profession. Unlike many, he correct in the eyes of mosl takes acting serious ly. By VERNON SCOTT movie actors : it is lolly to Perhaps that is why many single out one performance of his peers consider him by an actor as the very best. among the world's greatest It is just as foolish lo single actors. Scott v.·ou!d snort at out one girl in. say. the Miss the assertion, but his work America pa g ea n t and is . u n q u est io n a b I y. proclaim her the m 0 st outstanding. beautiful in the country. At a gathering of actors Scott's argument is not with this week his refusal lo be the · motion picture academy part of the Academy Awards per se. He believes it is an was de fended by some and \ affront to all actors to put attacked by otllers. them in competition with one "I support him." said ,_-. _ another as a handicapper Anthony Quinn, himself an f.i • might do in a horse race. Oscar winner. •·t don't Iii -,,----~.,------------"---"...::....::.::=.:.:..:.:.:::::. __ -. necessarily agree with what _ __JJ ' 1 he says. But he should speak ------ Director David Lean was awarded the Order of ~1erit by the Argenlint> Producers Association for his f i I m , "Ryan'• Daughter." out his thollghts. If that's the OAIL Y I'll.OT S11H 1'1!91t TV DAILY lOG way~· feels I cannot critici" Best Actor hifl'I. Another star of m a j o r Bill Cullen Oeft) receives Lhe DAILY PILOT Distin· magnitude asked that his guished Performance award from entertainment Tuesday Evening MARCH 2 6:001J I ll N1w1 Jerry Ounphy. 0 KNBC NEWSERVICE * SPECIAL CLOSE·UP of O!!,GANIZEO CRIME In SO. CALIFORNIA 0 HYPO "Macl\o." " Puerto IUct~ aroetr In °'EI Berrio" Is thre1t1ntd 1tte1 11vln1 1 policem1n from 1 IMn1g1 11n1. J1iml1 S1nche1, Mi1· lam Colon 1uast. 0 (1}J Cl) GE ABC Nwi1 ti tllt Weill: ..,.um1" {wts!ern) '71 Clint Walker, B1rry Sul1iY1n. m Dnid FrNI Show 1E1 Felony Squid m Y1RkH '•lnltr: l\t Work ti Winslow Ko11rr 0 KNBC NllWMl'llct Tom Snyder. El!) l'lfltr• IOI l1¥1n1 O Tiit Alltn Slln I'm LI Crildt l ltn Cri1d1 0 Co lor · MARLON BRANDO 9:00 0 !D@ m Fir1t luHd11 T11~ * "THE APPALOOSA''! ia: 111tur1 on tht 1i11 11yte of 1111 O Sb O'Clodi Movlr. "Tiit Appa-Amtrit1n steelworker; reoort 011 !ht loDU" (western) '61 -M1rto111 ~mini ski industry In lh1 Rod - B11ndo. Anj1nett1 <:omei, John 1es ind !ht urtun·Jtl'lt p1obl1m1 11 S11on. "cowooy, 1n ut1ped mu1· · h11 t1used: hlmed report on people dtrer llles to stiff 1 ntw lift with who do not btliev• !n lhe l.M"'• 1 ho,111 breedin1 r1nch unUI his viewpoint on cancer cure; lt1lu11 m1inilictnt Apprloosa 1l11!ktn Is on .tll1 Dutch Klbouttri P1rtJ, Am· 1101111 bJ 1 Mt.dtin bandit 1terdam'1 laurth b111est polit1t1! 0 Did: Yen Dytit ' p111y: ~ncert of electronic music by lhe first Moo1 Qu1rttl. m Tiit fllDtstont1 0 TM FutftiYt "fh1 Witch.~ M (D (1}l (])SIM Trek lm11in1tiY1 thild 1lmo1t m1~e1 fD Mllfflnttnd ''Thi Autumn Wo1ld" Kimblt tht 'iiclim of 1 mob. M•d•· @I!) flalltr F1mJtr leine SheNtOGd, Pt1ricl1 Crowley J!UUt. II> Ncltlclt1• 34 m CI!JI!m Siii tititl of !ht €D ltl111d1 111 !ht Sun Wo1ld A clt»t look 11 prut11t1d at 6'i) LI MDII f1111lllu con Con111llo lht popUlll ci\ie1-1mon1 lhtm m Kl'l.N NIWI H1wthornt/Grt1 r. Sin11pore. Macao, l11 Ye11s. Tl-lu1111-ht11 OM or mor1 ol tht "Stven De1dly Sins" m11 bt found. eJ1) Htllrwood TtlnltJc1 T11111tr1 "Montst111!.~ lilli1n H1!1main'1 1d1pt1tion of 1 1utpen1eful Frtneh p11y by Emmanuel Rab ies unters 11aund 1n Idealistic youn1 ottlter in th1 Spanish ottup1tion forCIS ifl Venezuela in 1812. ,:15 EJ!I All Sludit 1:30 0 Ctlldid Callllfl m Tll• f1Jin1 flua ED KD41tt>M1• l.od11 @I!! S.1edld r~m /Mu1!e.1tt m "Oii De.Mr1 lleport tm) LM Olwldadot t;E QCNIWI m ai1nen1• m u Cofrrtitudon tm) N1ttdl1 name not be used bul said. editor Tom Titus fo r his performance in the drama "Scott is a fool and making "David and Lisa" for the Westminster Community a lol of noise to no purpose. Theater last season. Cullen is in costume for his But I'm 11 member of lhe role in ",.\ 1'hieves' Carnival." Academy and I have a vote. ___ _:_ _ _:_...::.::=:::::..::.:::=...::.:::::. _________ _ When it comes time for me to vote for best actor my only thought will be for what George put up there on the screen, not about his popping off." One actor observed thal Scott was just drawing allention to himself. "I don 't agree,'' said Ricardo Montalbt1n. "He did the same thing 10 ye<1rs ago when an Oscar would hav e helped his career.'' Quinn spoke up again. "I don't believe George gives any thought to his career in terms of awards. He is interested only in what is thi: final resul t of his work." Dick Crenn<1 said. '"The Academy membership shouldn't consider w h 11 l George says or does off. screen, only his performance in ·Patton.' " An actress wh-0 ha~ never won the Oscar listened lo the men quielly then !I a i d . "Wouldn"t it be great if George won ."' ''Why?'' somebody asked. ''It would prove l he Academy Awards isn"t a popularity contest." the actress said, '"The academy is alw"ys taking a rap for volinii: for personal fa\•orites. H George \l.'On, it would put Mesa Sets Youth Sl1ow 'Alice in Wonderland ' The Costa Mesa Ci v I c Playhouse has a n no u n c e d tryouts for its most amibitious young people 's production - a musical version or .. Allee in Wonderland." A cast or more than so characters will be selected for the production. Auditions for young people Course Set In Acting A 1:ourse in method acting will be conducted on Tuesday ] ~~!lll!@l evenings at Troy High Schooll 1 in Fullerton by Her m an Sood.man. T~oy High drama teacher and Orange County theater critic. Instruction will be given In breaking down a scene, cold reading, acllng preparation and character development. The fee is $4 for the ll·v.·eek SEAN CONNERY " JAMES BOND an end lo all that." session. 7:00 8 tlS Ntw1 W11!1r Cron,lle. CJ ml NSC News DIVld 8rtnkley, Frank McGee. John Ch1nt1ll&r. 1:30 1J 9 Cl) Alt 111 the f111111 cimn The actors at the party Classes wil begin r..1arch 2.1 O'Connor, Jten St1pl;:11n, Rob Rtln-changed the subject but only in Room 53l. f' u rt her O Wiier• My lint? e1, Silly Struth•ri 1t.u. Archie •t· after they agreer! gener;:illy informt1tion may be obtained temots to buy cut th1 b!ac~ t1mlly that George C. Scott never by calling Boodman at 879- m @OO l Ltv1 Luc, IEI Dr11n1t lht street __ _ . ~· Tut~day, Marth 2, 1971 DAILY PILO T • Na111ed Execaitive VP ' BL'RBANK I U PI ) greatest profit n1akcr of 1hem ment faltered. however, and Richard D. Z;inuck, fired RS all, "The Sound of MU5ic.11 a series of losing pictures put production chief at 20lh Ctn· In recent years his judg· the studio in the red again. tury-f'ox Studios al the ln-lrj ===================:::'.::::; stigation of his father, v•ill'IL -~;~N~A~T~IO~N~A~L~G~E~N~ER~A~L~T~H~E~A~T;;R;E;S;~;--joi n rival Warner Bros., it was announced Monday. Moving with Zanuck to Warners March 8 is David Brown, Fox 's former crealive director \\'ho was ousted with the son of board chairman Darryl F. Zanuck. At \\1arners, the younger Zani.:t•k will have the tille of senior executive vice president and rl:!porl directly to Ted Ashley, chief executive officer. Bro~n "'-'ill be. the senior pro- duction executive in New York City. Ashley said in a statement : "r..1r. Zanuck will contribute imporlantly to the Warner production team, as \l.'ell as lo the general management of the company. by reason or his long experience, fir~ as executive vice preslden! in charge of production and subsef!uently as president flf 20th Century-F'ox." At 28. Zanu<;:k took charge of the Fox lol and bailed the studio out of financial trouble with a series of hi! pictures, inc I ud in g thC' Benja111iu Due For ·Portnoy' l'rl.~ I.. n f'.M. s~1.-S:Jl·I & 1• loo.-l:JO..!.a ~ ' fr•1 •ESERVEO SEAT ENGAGEMENT •\\ I . 'al ~1i11'-• ...._Ul4 S. .'.lNAH I --=---&3S-7ll01 PORT THEATRE 2905 E. COAST t-IWY., CORONA DEL MAR-673-6261 IO ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS e BEST PICTURE e BEST ACTOR-George C. Scott lol!to• '•"lrtsvl • 0 BEST DIRECTOR ~="~'~·:~·:~j~~·~!~~,~~:~"~·~,·~·,....1 1 ~·;;T:; 6PRMORE ~;:;s·o:·' THE rw.wet• ONE llOW!l OfJHL rvr"'Ul.Hn .......... ~[.U ... llOW A .. arrOll •ICTUl!ll 1 ,, A war movie • •CISS llJ~lll -..-- Al R PD RT :~:~:~e Ulll IT Klfrt• BURT DE.IN war movies!" UllCASTER • llARTIM -R" Rttd. JE.IN SEIER Hohd•y M•g.,;ne ii N••••'!"'& JACOUWNE BISSET 11111 ls pl1nnint lo mOYt In clown -~S:'~'~'~'~]JOO~-' ~P'~'~'°~'~m:an~c~e·~~~7~88:0~·-:;:~------if~;;;;;;;;;~ll GI fenl111 "NCT 01)4lr1 Th!1l11: 0 C1ndid C11111r1 'Q"H" ,, ,, ........ '" EoaU•h· m "'""''"'"''' .... P1°·c.lr Your Own II '~~~~~~~] l1n1u111 vrrslon ol Td11ikov1ky'1 @m Cadtn1 dt An1urlln "-~m 00111. bro1dc1sl in ahreo •.1t11,10:DO II SCIJ CIS .,., ... Hour A bt· ll!d{ 0 Pt!at H1rm1n Adlu c.onduct1n1 hind-the·!teMJ \'ilW of 1 Whitt meml>t11 of !ht Boston Symphony Hcu!t S!1tt Dinner. "ISO futured '0 ' w • Orchestrl. is tn 1ppeu1ntt by htl'l)'Wl ilhl sc a1· 1nne1·s m ''"" ~. u.;., ••• ,.,., • ., .. ,,u,u '"' ~····· · . al Ml Amor pc11 Ti mid~ .Ali. tm) Sl11pltn1tnh M1rl1 0 lit 5 Ntws KtYln Stndus, Barne1 Marris. T/11• DAil. y· PILOT. in rnoprrnlinn 1oi!11 B11enn Pnrlr's m M°"le ;amt 0 @00 fm Mtrt11J Wllll'p, N.D. Jl.fov1elond \\lnr !rl 11st'11m. n/fers renrle rs a cl1n11ce tn parli· 7:30 ll 9CIJ lntr1J Hillbllllu Ont 011.rttr Wtr~ Nm Clpale 11~ 11nt1011unrlf' bnl/oling fn se/r>CI ropul.ar 1oin11e rs ill of Jethra'1 dlildhood awe1theuts m Ntws Gtor11 Put~1m, litl fish· lht '"Osca r Derby." l\leek'~ 11nrntion fnr two in fl.Je xico Ciry c.omu ta Beverly H1ll1 ta visit, ind min. or Ho110/11/11 011d o plact nf /1n11nr at lht Slurs' Hnll of f'n111e Jtlhra tears she h11 muri111 on Q) Quot ttr AdYentur1 •ttt It Au·ords Bo uqurt 111 llollyu·ond au1011 thr 1lOt1onnl wi1111er. her mind. lou1llen Adt11 1uest&. Snow:' filmed ift Wyomint Vole 1101n by filli11g out nnd cl1pp111g out tins bo/lot: CJ m Julll "Swin1 low. Sweet £Il Dt·Rt·Mi -- - --- _ _ --_ --_ Ch111ty." Cort 1nd Earl J. W1111·1 tm) fntivll Muluno dorn brt•k the11 Pltc·banb to help ~Y th• hosoital bill o1 • well-10:10 O Dsar W11k Mov11: "C•i"I Mr 1 ~t.:irk an ''X" In the box \vhich appears in peld telrviMa n 1p1ctm1n, plmd by W•r'' (d11m1) ·•• -Bina Crosb1, 1 front of your selection \lote for only one person Phit Silve~. Barry fit11er1ld, Rise St1v1n1. or film in each category. Please be sure to complete 8 Ylr1inl1 ;r11!1m Siio• Guull Frank McHurk." priest ls iu l1nad 1 the 25·\\'0rd statement al the end of the ballot and lndude N1ncy Kulp, M11 Broo~s. 10 1 d~wtrodden P•!iJh ind hilpi I f ill in your name, address and phone number so you Cuo1 th1?1 i"11n111eph1"1 1nd Dr. thi P•'.~"h.ind i!s pec~1.1· .~01111 in-1 can be co11t01cted if )'Oll \Vi n the. prize trip and ban-Paul Fine. (lude Go1n1 Mr W11 ; "~• M1· O @(])(J)Thl Mod Squid rt•": ·1n1 Day Afttr.fnrntr". s1v·' quet invitation. All ballots must be returned 1in "Wile.om• to Our Cit~." Thi aquad e_n Academy Awar~1. Best Produt-1 person or h:-1 niail) lo the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m. trl I Ii d th I th I lS· 11011. Be~t klnr (B1n1 Crosby); Btsl I on ~Jonday, ~·larch 29. u 1 ° n 1 1 tr 0 1 Support1n1 M:to1; Bisi Di1tctor; yt1r-o d boy. Best Str11npl11: Best Original I D Millie n S Mevlt: "Cilp t" (tom· 5tcry; Bt!I Scn1 "Swin1!n1 en 1 I 1dy) '62. -lldlt Cltt!On. 1Ct1h· St11". edne Kilh, .Albtr1 Din•"· " mute. GJ 1111 Jolllll Nnn tattered !1nltor In • th110 Pari11 ft'I . 1~11n1 tioust 111ee1 10 snenu 1 '="'"' lnctrt1du111brt wom tn 1nd htt l1ttlt l irl. 11:00 iJ Q!(I) Im Newl m Tflltll cw Cotueq-wencts CJ ~ (I) m flews m " T1ku I Tlllef D a> Nt'l'I m cr~•111• 30 0 Mw1e: "Tiii u., '"' ttrt11 1 ID LI Du1t11 taupt rirl" (d11m1) '6Z-J1net I Munro, Leo MtlCtrn. I 7:55 all Cutstloil di S.1undol m MOfit: ''Tlir" Codl1llltrt" (dra. 1 1:00 8 QJ C1J Cr11n Auu 011~11 Dou1· m1) '4t-John W1y111, Wtrd Bond. 111' pllnt to r1otlf his rurtl l11m-m lut Hit Clod! ' hoUH wh111 Mr. Klmbtll 11111 flll R11litin I throu1h hi1 porth 1nd Injures his I tool. 11:30 IJ Qt Cf) Mtr1Ciritfln1111111 form. CJ er;'! Don K!!Ottt ShO!I' Cu11t1:i tr mOYit T1r:111s -Jallnny WtiH· I lommy Smot"etJ, Gwen Vullon, muller. Lu. B1rter tnd Bu11e1 I Thi 1(1111 Cou1ln1. Cr1bbt-1u est·Sttr. m Tt T•ll tht 1111111 0 @ ({la;) lohnnr tanon . f!9 r1111 Clllt>ll l111lntn·mt11 0 G) Didi C1vrtt 1 (D MO'l'lt: "loomtl'tll(' (my1!11Jl ail Soltrhet '47 -01111 AlldftWI, Jl flt Wy1tl I 1:05 Ci1' Lnll Wt 1:00 IJ Ma,i.: "ht W11Po11" (drlml) I llJO 1J QI Cl) MM Kaw S!n11B Chu.1 '$7-Sltvt Cothrtn, lizabtth Sc.on. I 111 ''i4e tnd J11nnlne C. Riley 1r1 O O Nm 1 autst-1ter1 111 tfli1 11brotdc1st. m .,l•Nllhl $1\ow: "IR Ot• Q I· I Prldt llnp "Wonlltr Could I LIYt uio" "11ood en tllt SuR~ 111d Th111 AnJ Mo11" '"d "PJroqutl1 "Mifn1t1tt1tl lltuPnttll. N 1 Jot.N Miss R!ll'(I 11umbtr1 Ill I "Dutr. Not Desire" tnd ''\'IO!llln' 2:)0 IJ Mtrit: "Heltfifl" ld11m•) '48 I Oil." l -W1lhtm Ullott. Mari• WindtM. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES -_:::;.:..:.:;,::,:~:;::;~=- I I D '"M1• Hllfll" {1dv1nturl) ''I-I W•l1er P14iton . .loin Bt"ntlt. I m "Tiit 'ffholt Trotll'' (m~lllll'fl l1 'S&-Sllw•rt Gr1n1er. Donni llttd. I 1:00 m •rift'Y" (drtma} 'lt-JaM!lt I C1elft. WHl11m lu"d11tn. I lle•t Actor 0 i\IELVYN DOUGLAS for ''l Never Sang For ~'ly F<1lh er" D J1\r-.1r.s E.'\RL .JONES for "0fhe Great \Vhite l-lore" .. [' .JACK NlrHOLSON for ''f"ive Easy Pieces" l R\'.<\N O'N'EAI , for "Love Story" C GEORGE C. SCOTI for "Patton" Best Al"lreu 0 .IA:'J'E ALEXANDER for "The Great \Vh1te ~ !~ope'' In GLENDA JACKSON for ''Women In Love" ~ ALI i\1.<\C GR . .\ \V for "l...nve Story" ['i SARA 1i11LES for "Ryan's Daughler" ~. C'.<\RRIE SNODGRESS for "The Diary of 1\ Housev.,ife" lfest ~Jnli m1 1•1r1u re of 1970 D ''AIRPOH1"' !Univ ersal) n "FIVE EASY PIECES" !Columbia) C "l,OVE STORY" (P<lramountl l "~1•1\"S""J·J " !20th Century f'ox) C '"P.t\TI'O~"' t20th Century Fox) WHY I VOTEli t'OR THIS PICTURE un 25 \\'Ords or lcs::.l· .... , ... , .........•..• , ... ....... ' .... ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' . ' ........ . ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . ............. Phone Name Street City .~ddress ' • • • • I • I '1 I HIW•Oll II.I.CM •• •' 1~0 """"" lo !o~oltw• I'~• 111+ ·· 0 1 J-1)'0 ENDS TONIGHT 81rbr1 Streisand '"FUNNY GIRL'" Also 11z•· STARTS WEDNESDAY Exclusive First Run Ell iott Gould Don Sutherland Marcia Rodd "LITTLE MURDERS '" EXCLUSIVE .......... , ..... ~---~·~·~-· • FIAY STARK·HEl'W!E11l l'IOSS ,..,...,. '"" Barbra Streisand George Segal The Owl andlhe~t ~ SlAllTING W(DNl50A Y ' "THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOC K HOLMES" B1rg1in Matinee -t:OO II "Hald Itek tllt D1wn• (dr•· ml) '41 -C"'1S.1 Beyt!, Ollvf1 di lmln-lld. .#0 l:JO 0 "'St11ct)f Dlsllofttr1bl1" (dre· m•J '51 -[110 Plfttt. 1111111 lelr~. Every W1d ne5dey. 1 p.m. ~IXICJ ""''""'"''",.'"'"',,. Mail ballot to: "Oscar" c/o DAILY PILOT I' (d11mt) '£.t -Pht1h1 Wood. Sit¥t 1 ' fret llefreihrnt"" •cQ"'" 1po Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 _____ ; ' ' • • • THaATftll "'"°' .. ....U.S. <OlfA ....... -,. .. ,,., .. ~ ............ -------· J.l~o lorboro Hershey In "THE IAIT MAKER"' f RI EDWARDS HARBORci:r:Al "A•IO• l lVll_ AT WIUOl'I ST. COSTA MlSA 146·0~/l 2 MILlS SOUtll I SAN 01(110 fWY. IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER EDWARDS HARBOR c1i:':a 2 HA•eo11 I LYO. AT Wll.SOl'I I T. COlfA MlSA t46-0!IJJ 2 lt\'.(S sour~ Of SM D!UIO f"WY. 2nd AccuNmy No111lltff Ali MacGraw Ml. Ryan O'Neal \ '\I [!;I''~· ClllOR 1\~ @1 -, I ... s-=--."" DUSTIN HOff"4N' · "lllTU BIG "4N" PanaviSiOn~Technicolor1 [!:;P]o Chief Dan George • Foye Dunaway 2 1£ST SONGo-lfSl COSTUMl-llST SOUND TlACK-Jull• Al'ldtrw.-"DAlllNG> t ill"' .. • • lllA(;H •LllD. <Ill 1.LLll • , ••• ~O•I• ,..,. • ..,,. •••-r-••7·••o• 'HUNllNOI OH •tAC:M Ali. Ill.•""'"" lltu J~\Oft ••lwlnl• -"FOOLS" ;',ii;f':··-;~:::.~ .. ~ t:. ·~;:· ,;.;·.: •IM •effrl ._..,. '"Tt l! f~tm Wllllf 90Y II M1,-.·' ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTRESS-- ~. 1W.a 13~h~wi/f,, dirl dl611io 111.!f ~ fidtut. J r/Jll. .. fi6dli/"f PHBI CARRIE SNODGRESS diary of a m1>d housewife a ha·.~ nc•-v tim '-~,..-o,....-r,,.. i"l~"--ll!JO L.....=c_ ___ J STAR S RtCHAR o·aENJAMIN-CARRIE SNODGRESS I " " " " 'Jl •oo • " .. ' ' , .. • J " . • ' '" • ' .. .. ". ''· .. ' . • • •• " ••• ' " .. . "" " .. ' . ' • .. • Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ..... Nl'f'\1IOlllOOlll::"'llllE•l"'1E::"'"'"""'l::'llZllC::::0::0:::::: .. "3JOJi:l:;:;!;;:I tWt.I Mlttl LR" Cine C111. ' ·~ " .. , '" r: " " '!1 ,:,i • ,t ' " " ' '" ~ " "" ' " ,1 il~ "' s ll ,, .. , " • • ,M " " .. " " ' " ' " ' " , ' • ' " " ,,. ' " "' ~ • " ,, >M "' " ' " .. ' " ... ,,. ,.. . ,._ '" ••• n n~ ,,. 11lo ll~ ;s~ , •• ••• ,p r • ifv! ll •• ". " ···~ ' . ... '" ... • , ·x •• " ,.. :,.i ,,. l!: " ~· '" ,. , • ... " ~. " ••• ,,., " . " " ' " • " " " "' '" " . ... ••• •• "' "• Stocks l1·regular In Active T1·ade 1'• IY 11\d r1 tYP'!• I r:~f~ ,14 l•Ou•r.<o ~ l t<I> M C9 r:tr. o~r,r. Co ~, '°""N 611 ftl90Yl\e pl 6 Tt '' Cr 1f('l'IOI ll f fflneCo 1 T•nnK .., A NE\V YORK (UPI) -rhe stock mRrket closed irx~ f'klo on an irregular note 1n n1oderately active tradu1g i::~!.~ ~~ Tuesday ~:: g t 1 so.o The DO\V fones lndustr1al Average shO \Ved a l:::: ni:i : gau1 of O 07 at 882 60 near the close Standard & r.~o 10., n Tt~P:l.<'I ~ Poor s 500 stock index \\as ore O 04 at 96 96 Of the le• v 191 Tt• O fO 1 656 issues crossing th e tap 697 pointed higher r,~ ~ 1 oe \\ hUe 664 retreated +~~OIO.Gr' ~0 l Gm8• 0, A volu1ne of around 15 000 000 shares \I as up r11omJw , w fro1n 13 030 000 shares traded Monda) r~ goop l~o k d l<'l(W•M .0 One analyst noted that the mar et is ue fo1 r ,.,.., "c '° T l'l'ltiM ~ a pause 3nd tlus is exactly what 1s happening r m••n ai now after several 1nonths of s11arp gains i"le added f~~~P~• ~ that a decline of 40 points on the Do1v Is possible ~:'~~~ I ro over the near term but said it \\OUld not be re +~~~11:2! tob garded as a severe drop :: !~~ .!;!. 1,.,20 Closing prices included AT&T 48% off % f.~:~. ~.o. Chrysler 27 14 unchanged DuPont 134 off 11h Gen f :~:=: 4 ~ eral Electric 108~" up 1 Gene ral Motors BO~B off r •"'c " ~~ "" c '"v 14 IB M 338 ofr 1 Southern JJartft c 47 111 Texato T •"1 1 on f •ve1 to 36 unchanged an d US Stee l 3114 unchanged ~ ~.:t ~ n 1/ . " • " • • .. • " " m "' • ·~ .. " " " ' '" ' " , " , " ,. '" " " . ' " ... .. "" • " '" " " • '" n • " " ' • .. • ' . "' " .. ' '" • " • ' .. '" " • . ' " ' ' " ' . ~ 4l • :~ n;• f"C• :i% ~ ~~~ P ~ "o -T-. ,, ,. n " ,, " ,, l ~"U nd 80 • ll""c•" l ll" • TllW P•SO Tl\W D 4f0 .., lo Tv(on GI': 11 lwf" C•" l~ t (O P • ,,. .. ~I " 2tl # • '9J ;, ' "" lU t1 • 'I' '" J 100'• "' ., 194 • 1, •i )j ' ' " '" ~ l " ' ~­'l n • s• ,. 121 ~It· 'J Jr~ ... " . ., , ' . , l U 44 I• 1• I " ~. Is H• .. . ' .. ., )I • 31 H • • " ,, . . .. 11 ~)I, Jt ~~ ' .. 0 , •• l}(I t I ' 1h , , " . • " " ., .. -------1 ' . ' . . . . DAILY PILOT J J "' ' " " • >oo •• "" ' . • '" .. • ·~ " . " . " " .. " "' " . ,,. 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""_,. 11 .... -.. ,,,.. -. 9(1 -I ,. + l• " ?ti'• + • ll]i,,. + I , -~ n ~ 11•.+q . " '" " u • -+ • • + '" -" 2 ~ + •• "" ' --J .. -• n~ -i... " .. -. al + lo ,., 2• + • 9'i + • , . ' • • 0 .,_ 1t • 11. • • •l'I -1 • 0•1 lOo -t \o ~ 11..-: -t-• }1 • 7J•· ' ; . ~. ~··+: t G -~, 2D 101t t 11 ,, ~. >•S>•+· N 1'4 -• :.~•i"• ' ~·· -(, ,,2 .... -. ... u l l + ~ 11 I J&>• -1\• J • J " ,, '·-·· 7o 11 1 -v, 1 I f '-+ 0 9 f \o -. ' ' 2) )] 4 •• -• • . --___ , --.__... J2 DAILY PILOT Controv ersy Seen Education Reform Report.Finished TRY THIS UNIQUE ISLAND DELICACY By TQ~t BARLEY 0t 1M Delly l"llet 11111 SANTA. ANA -A 70..page report on the slate and future of education in CAiifornia is in the hands of legislators today, They are being urged from the govcnwr's office to enact many of its recon1- mcndations into JaM'. Ilona\ education as one ·of the most significant rtporU within the report. He stressed in an interview the group's unanimous expression "that every Califltrnia n should have the opportunity to Obtain a saleable skill. It is the final report or the 23 • member Governor's Co1nmission on Educational Re form -an invesugat1ve body drawn from all segments or the community and ordered by Governor Reagan on July 28, 1969, to chart California's educational future. ··we stress that word 'op- portunity' and we are urgi ng I he enactment of legislation which "'HI ensure the pro- vision of opportunity fo r every student graduating from the public secondary schools 111 have acquired a saleable skill at that vital stage of his life," he said. Commission C h a i r m a n Robert E. •tanson of Santa Ana believes the final product of his group's 17-montll probe -0f California's schools and educational policies will , if on- ly par ts of it are implemented, lead to streamlining and in- creased efriclcncy of many educationql funcVons an d !he • eHmination of many wasteful policies. His commission report also demands that the state Boa rd of Education be given the resppns1bility of devising a master plan for vocational education in California. That plan should cover. he said. the development of vocational education in high schools. SEEKING REFORMS Commission Ch1 irm1n H1n1an COST $20,1100 Hanson, the m an a gin g partner of a Santa Ana ac· counting firm. and his col· leagues have drawn nothing beyond basic expenses for 17 months of \\'Ork. ··our report cost $20.000 and you'd have to pay at least 10 times that to gel anything comparable from a research organization,'' he said. He admits that some of the rommission's conclusions are going to be controversial and. possibly"-far from acceptable to ma:ny of tile educators and officials affected by them. "But I do hope that there can be the kind of non-pa rtisan approach to these issues that has prevailed throughout all our deliberations and which has enabled us to thoroughly concentrate on common sense solulions divorced r r om politics.·• Hanson said. Hanso n regards his group's recommendalions on voca- n n -tr These W ere Ar cl1itects Report SANT A ANA -Following Is the membership o r Governor Re a ~a 01' s Com· mission on Educat i onal Relorm in California. -Chairman Robert E. Han son. Santa Ana. manag1n~ parlncr, Arthur Young and Compan~· Accountant s. -Executive Secretary J, Stanley Green, Los Angeles, ~upcrln1cndcnt of Scvl'n Coun· tics Gas Company. -(gnrad Brinrr, Clare· moot. chairman, School of Edu c a t 1 on , Claremont Graduate Schools. -!\!rs. \\'ilma Cbidla,v, Cho"·chilla. housc"1fe . -Philip Coclh<l, Sacramen· to. college student. -\\' i 11 i a m Cunn ini;ham, !\r11'POrl Be a c h , superin· tendcnt, !\ c "'port· ~1 es a Unified Schoo! District. -l\lrs. Oeonnr Griffiths, Long Beach. "housewife. -(;eori;e (j u s taf so n, Sacran1cntn. assistant state supcrin1endcnt of public in· 5truct1on -Jal·k llornhack, San Diego. supcr1ntcndenL San Diego City School D1s1nct. ~ ~l rs. !\l art•ella Joh nson, Los 1\ngcle~. read in g specialist. l..-0s A n g e I es Unified School Di~1rict. -Jiw. D. ~l ack 111. Oakland, lobbyist. Brotherhood o f Teamslcrs. -Hai~ ,\larash\ian, Tor· ranee. d1rcctnr of plann1n~ and deve\opmrnt for Southern California RP g ion a I Oc· cupation Cenlcr. -!\1rs. Elai nr Pltifer . S11n- la Barbara. teach<'r . -Harvard Powr ll . Los Angeles. president. A. J. Jndustrics Inc. -!\t. J ack Hand. Trmpte Citv, superinlcndrnt. Temple CitY Unified School District. -James lt ry n4lld s. Pacoima. presidrnl. Rrynolds Prinlsign Comp;in~·. -J:;dwin Hich, \Valnut Creek. president rmCrltus, L.ick \Vilmerd1ne High School. -Rollin Russell, Van Nuv!I. vice. presidenr. Boehne SoUn· dnve Company. Hal s e h upp e r t , Sacramcn10. \·1rc president, Bank or America. -fl1r1. Charles Schwab. San R11facl. housewife (resigned durini: commission term ). -Anthony Slf'rra. I.a Jo\1<1, member. state Board of Education 1 resii:ined during commission term ). -Nc"·too S&.e"'ard. t:ureka, vice pr('!l1drnt, Kr~:M·TV. -Thoma' Wel~11. Long Be11ch. dean. School of F.A'.IUC8• lion. C11I S1.1le LOTilil Be11ch {resiJtned during com mi ssion trrm 1. regional occu pational centers and in community colleges. ess," he 9 ai d. •·reacher •·Jt's the only way we can education ... does not provide bridge the widen i[lg g a P early enough involvement with between i n creasi n g I Y the t~acher·pupil relationship sophisticated employer re. and such involvement should qutrements and the skilled be ea rly, as ea rly as the output of trainees leaving freshman year." public schools," Hanson said. That progra m on vocational "If the Qualifications Com- education is going to cost mill.sion is formed it should money, Hanson conceded, and be given the responsibility to the comment brought him to develop programs that would an area of the report thal require teachers I o con- scems certain 10 create e<1n· tinuously update I he i r troversy school finance. knowledge and tea ch in g "We worked on the basic skills," he said. rccommendation that we "It would be ideal if we should see the adoption of could eliminate the present a statewide lax on all taxable lire credential provision t1nfl real and personal property. substitute a requirement for augmented by other forms of periodic renewal of credentials statewide taxation. for the based u po n performance purpose of equalizing the abili· criteria. ty to finance the educatio nal "Wit h reasonable and un· program of each s c h o o I complicated renewal criteria, district in the state," he said. no compete nt teacher should STATE SUPPORT fea r a renewal requirement,'' ··oeliciencies will e x i s t Hanso n said . whatever method we might __ H_is_c_o_m_m_i_"_io_n has also ad· select far lund allocation," he painted out. ''At that point, \\'e think, the slate should pro- vide support for the schools based upon the educational n('(!ds of the indivi d u al districts. "Wt 'll have to determine the ratio between a particular school dlslrict's abi l ity ~assessed valuation per pupilJ and its effort (operation tax rate)," Hanso n explained. ··Equal edu c at i onal op- portunity implies u n e q u al distribution of .. resources.'' "We have also rtcom· mended that all legislatively mandated programs be fu nded by the state and we wan l operative dates deferred for one school year to allow for proper imp lementation.'' the commission chairman said. Pass.a ge of school bonds should be on the basis of It-'~~<\·+'~ ti simple majorily ;ind parents of stu dents attending non·pro- fi1 privale and parochial schools should be granted some form of tax relief for cxlra academic tuition, the commission also urged. His commission also looked into "'hat it called the ·'shock- ing status '' of the Californ ia Sta te Teachers Retirement Fund and re comm en d e.d legislation \\'hich would p!ace the fund on a financially sound hasis. 5YSTEfll INCONSISTENT The commission looked into another aspect of !caching in California and was equally shocked at what ii called lhe "inconsistent. complex and in- £'flcctive'' system of teacher preparation a n d creden· tinlting. What is needed, Hanson said . is t1 long. hard look at the \\'hole structure of teacher credcnlials . His group's report ' UrJ?es the creation of a com· "''~\'~\. mis~ion with the suggested ti- Ile of the Teacher Develop· mcnt. Qut1Hricatlon and Slan- d:irds Commis~ion . Its goals. he said, will be !l"r provision Clf a ll't1Chinc s~·.~tem which will hring iiboul high standards. ease of ad· ministr11lion and ('0~1 . What i.~ bad Iv nee rte d. l·lanson said. is "A single rrc-ten!ial for trachin~ in California embracing all ex· \' isling \f'vels Cl! creiicntials , ncet>ssa ry for !he various elemenlary and s'!ronda·ry teaching position~. ~ TEACHER J NVOt.VE~tENT L~ ''All other positions in· c 1 u d 1 n g a d ministrative, \ s~ialist and teaching assis· tant posts would be eppoinli\•e , ~I thr dis<'retion of lhe l0t·Al ' schntll rl istrirt, subject to broad gulrielirn'!s developed by tht commisston ." One of the first jobs of the suggclited qualification com mission ~bould bt lo f'X · 'lJ"lne tht ''p r estnt u n ~a l I ~fa c tory teacher prt'p:iratlon program~ I n Califomia."' H an~n s11id. "Teacher prepera!inn in lh~ broad sense Jacks locus on 1he t<'achi ng • ltarn1nR prOC·I------- vocated a speedy de.alh to district elections, for e.iample, "''hat teachers know as should be retumed ta the ''tenure" -perm an e n t county clerk's office." Hanson fmployment in a particular said. "ln many other matters school district. the districts themselves would "It came inlo being because be responsible for their opera· teachers wanted protceiion lion and there is no reason against bias and discrimina· to believe that they can't ade· tion in dismissal proceedings,'' quately meet the needs of the Hanson said. "Our Califomia population." Education Code guar1H1lces all The Hanson commission also teachers due process and our argues that local sch o o I commission couldn't see that districts have little option, if ii was necessary to preserve any, in the selection of ap- t.his archiac regulatfon. propriate textbooks. • ' Ag a i n , ' ' he said. ''The current state textbook "elimination of tenure will program in grade11 one take nothing from the com-through eight provides books petent teacher. But it will help on a ratio based upon enroll- to restore cc'lnfidence in the ment.'' Hanson saht ''These teaching profession by remov-books then go to local school ing the image of 'life pro-distrirts anti we found in lcction. regardl!!SS of com· many cases that titles of the petcncy' which the wcfrd books or the ratios or both 'tenure' creates in the public are not appropriate for school mind." children based upnn the needs It could be controversial, of suburban. urban, rural and Hanson conceded, but no more migrant students. controversial· than his com· "We found," he said . .''that mission's recommendation his inefficient anti ex!remely thal the office of county costly program provides many superintendent of sc hools and books that are not needed and county board of education be consequently are not used. abolished. His commission recom· REC0fl1fl1ENDATIONS mends the · removal of 1he "Our recommendation to the "outdated anti unneeded" of-governor is that lextbooks fi ces and the establishment printed or purchased should of up to IS regional olfices be those orclt"red by school of the state Department of districts from approved lists." Ed ucation which would take the commission ch a i rm a n 01•er some functions currently said. handled by the county offices. "These are just a few of lhe things wc set out to do CL ERK CONTROL and they are. perhaps, worthy The outdated offices do of placement at the top of nothing that could not be het-our list of I 9 recom· ter handled ·by the StJggested mendations," Han~n said. new format. Han son said. and "We have not done elimination of those olfices everything we set out to do," wou!d enable both loc;it schoCll Hanson said. ··But we all districts and state offices to strongly feel that we have streamline administration and guidelines and proposals on educational procedures. which those who follow us ''C o nt r ol o f an d can build a solid sensible iUCKORT FARMS OF omo BANANA CHIPS }{el'• i1 1omething different in sn1ick foods ! Tantalize yo~ taste bud• with tbi• C?"isp tropic island delicacy , • , Hickory Farm• o! Ohio BANANA CHIPS m"d e by &killed proce1sor1 on tbe Philip- pin e lsla.nda. The native fmit is ideal for this product. Coconut oil, honey and sugar are specialty blended to enhance the alreidy delightful banana flaVOt. Sample first and then buy enough for your hungry family to eet right from the box. Then, add a little island atmosphere aad good eat· ing at your parties. BUY flRST BOX AT REG. PRICE OF 59~ . GET SECOND BOX 10 (: FOR WEDNESDAY, MAR. 3 THltU MONDAY, MAR:. 8TH BANANA CHIPS CAN BE SERVEDINMANY WAYS : • .<\dd Banana Chlp11 to crackers or cookiaa crushed into pie cru8t: 1tir into paddings or pl• fillin11s for ext~ taste, or rl11ht out of the box u a tu ty n eck! • Ct11•h and sprinkle Ban1na Chips on coffee cakes. Add !Cl 1'lllt1lar cookie Dt'pie dou11h be· fore baking. • Ban11J1a Chipti can be 1dded \Cl muUins, pancakes, cake mixes, i1e craam toppi ngs, cereals, and whi ppi ng cream. South .Coast ?taza LOWER LEVEL BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY COSTA MESA PHONE 540-6991 responsibility for. local school system of educt1tion." .~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • • • I 1 • . -' I 1 I 1 , I l I I - , l11tsday, ,.,arc.h 2, 1971 s OAILV PILOT :J :Viejo High Students Doubling as Teachers ARTS MEANS CLEAN·UP Dolores Mor•n Turns To • DAILY l>ILOT Sfl lf P'MI• BRETT NORRIS SERENADES INTENT O'NEILL SIXTH GRADE YOUNGSTERS J1mes Jennings, Kelly Blick ind Jill Brady (At Right) Listen To Basics 37 in Progran1 Older Students .Teach Mission Viejo .Youths By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 1M a.Hy !"lie! SllH J .... . • The "now" generation in Mission V1e10 is updating an educational principle o( the then gene ration. Just as older students ln one-room t choolhouses heJped their juniors, 37 Mis- sion Viejo High School students help teachers in neighboring elementary and junior high schools add meaning to learn- ing. k One hour a day, five days a wee . the high school students trek lo nea_rby La Paz Intermediate or Linda Vista or O'Neill Elementary schools. . Some. like Brett' Norris. bring sk~l\s that younger sludenL'!I would otherwise miss. Brett. a 17-year old senior. teaches music to sixth graders at O'Neill. "\Vilhout Brett I don't know what l\'e'd do.'' a sixth grade teacher said. "None o[ us has any background in music." . h So Brett meets the combined s1xt grad1e classes about n~n each day lec- turing to prepared duplicated notes ~bat include basic information about musical notation. rhythm, lime and k e Y signatures. .Brett describes each lesson and demonstrates on an autoharp how !on~s may be plucked to play the music 1_n the lesson. Students later take their lessons into · a practice room to~ \\'Ork out the songs by themselves. . Brett who composes ''rock, class1cal, blues a'nd folk music with a jazz orien- tation"' also totes his guitar ID classes for demonstrations. In a recent cl~ss . ~iith graders y,·ere treated to portions of his •·Marlborough Country'' - a tongue in cheek fol~ n~mtx>r that gently ribs the quality of hfe 1n master-planned suburbia. However Brett usually sticks lo the basics of i'nusic thCQry. One basic ''ac- complishment" Brett cite~ is the unusu~I excitement his charges display for thei r practice of the elements of ~hy,~hm ~r beat -''the basis for all music. Thei r practice involves dancing at the close or the music sessions to reco rded up-tem- po twies. . "Have you ever seen a group of sixth graders actually want to dance with ceach other?'' Brett asks. Since they·ve learned how music sprang from man's identification with the basic drum ~at, O'Neill's sixth graders are now anxious to \vriggle and \\-Ti!he no lon~er ran· domly. but in time with the music. ~fission Viejo High School's three·ye~r old \Vork Experience Program 1s responsible for ?rrangin~ the. classroom teaching experiences for 1unior . and seniors. \Vhile 37 \rork as teai;her a ide~. more than 350 others are. involved . 1n job-learning experiences 1n the high school and community. N ur se r I es, restaurants. stores. gas stations, m~at mArkets. offices. farms and b~~~1es offer vocationa l training opportunities to the students \\'ho leave ~I fo~ an hour daily. Mrs. Ruth ~1ader e)'p~ed. She is coordinator or the Work Ex· perience program. Among parlicular suceesses of the pro- gram have t>«n the .student store which is entirely run by students y,·ho ha~le :sales. purchasing and payroll accounting for their business venture . Last fall, 10 ~1ission Viejo st~dents helped with classes for the educationally handicapped at four elementary schools. • "\\'ith personalized, one-to-one help from our students. some of the educa- tionaUy handicapped youngsters made their nrst gains. their first responses," ~frs. ~1ader noted. Karen Van Dyke. 17, nffer~ Another r\nmple of the student aide portion of thi' ~1 ission Vie}o program. She helps out in a kindergnrten class at Linda Visla Elementary school . Her particular strength is in reading Dr. Suess and other stories to the attentive little ones. Karen also "gels involved'' b Y participating in educational games such as "Colors on Parade" in which students march about the room and follow musical directions for the color they've been assigned. "Greens stand up. pinks sit do"'Tl ••. " the record player lil.5~ and if Karen forgets her c:olor for a moment, a five-year old is likely to remind her to follow instructions. Karen's presence provides a change ol adult scenery for the youngsters and a chance for the regular teacher to give individual instruction when needed. Others in the program work in sewing classes. with mathematics students, as woodshop aides. in English classes or in drama or science. A drama project that began as en· tertainment for the Work Experience st udents' Christmas Party, has with four public performances earned $160. Cynthia Nutter wrote and directed "The Perils of Percival Penniless'' while working \l!'ith drama students. Drug Abuse Unit Wins Approval Of School Board A steering committee to help fight drug abuse in the Capistrano Unified School District has been formed by the Board of Trustees. Voting unanimously Monday, the board authorized the formation of the com- mitt.ce which is to draw its members from community leader.~. "The school Ciln provide information. type pro gr a m ~ but these aren't enough ,'' said Jeff Olsen. Director of Projects. •·\\'e need parent education, additional co u n s e I in g beyond what the school can provide. and other pro. grams that can involve the entire com- munity._'' He said the school district should pro- \•ide leadership and become a part ol the community CtlmmiUee. "\Ve need all our forces working logetber for the same goal." said Olsen. ''There are enough in cidenl'i in our own community to justify the need for new program s." Del Curtis or San Clemente praised the effort to coordinate community.wide programs and said various service clubs would be willing to support the new committee. T" ' Trusiee Nofie Famularo added thal the committee should Investigate what steps the Federal Drug Administration should take to limit the manufacture of harmful drugs. The members of·the ~rd of trust ee~ v.·ill meet with Superintendent Truman Benedict to decide how committee recruitment is to take place. The district already has formed a four·man team to help solve drug pro- blems. Tile team, made up of two ad- ministrators, a student, and a community reprwentalive. v.•ill lend Its Ideas lo t.he new steering committee. Tax llikes Item ized SACRAMENTO (UPI) California's counties hfkcd properly taxes by 31 percent last )'ear, lo 51.6!1 billion, Stale Controller 11ouston t. Flournoy reported ~ionday. -"· Supreme Co1u·t Alina F. Sykes Rites Conducted Bars Freeways ~femorial services were(' 0 I d u ct e d ~1onday for Alma F. Sykes, a native TJ h P k Californian and South Laguna resident lrOug ar S who died Saturday at the age of 76. WASHINGTON fAP) _ The Supreme Following the services ;it McCormick Court ruled wianimously today Lhat ~tortuary Ch apel in Laguna Beach. federally funded highways may cut private inte rment was held. through public parks only in "the most BECKY VAN DYKE LEADS SNAPPY COLORS PARADE John Niccoli and Ricky Zeidman Step Along Thurmond Clarke Rites Wednesday unusual situations.'' Mrs. Sykes. who lived at 33 1 Treasure funeral services for retired U.S. lie Is survived by his widow, Mrs. Th d · · '" 1· t · · District Court Judge Thurmond Clarke e ec1s1on, ure trs 1nterpreltng re-Island, is survived by he r husband, cent environment legislation, blocked will be held al ll a.m. Wednesday in construction of a six·lane interstate Sydney and a son, Arthur, of Laguna All Saints Episcopal Church, 132 N. highy,·ay through a park in Memphis, Niguel. Up until the time of her Euclid Ave .• Pasadena. Tenn .. and directed a federal district Judge Clarke, a longtime resident of court lo ''engage in a substantial inquiry" retirement, Mr~. Sykes worked as a Corona del Mar died Sunday in Los Athalie Richardson Irvine Clarke, of 4833 Brighton Road : a daughter Mrs. Frances Clarke Ray of Rochester. N.Y.; his step- daughter, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith or h1iddleburg, Va ., two sisters and seven of the government's authorization of the saleslady for a large department store. Angeles' Good Samaritan Hospital. project. ,-~~-'-~~~-'----'~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ grandchildren. Sepaking or Congress' intent in passing laws to protect the environment. Justice Thurgood Marshall wrole: "The few green havens that are public parks were not to be lost unless there were truly unusual factor~ present in a particular case or the cost or community disruption resulting from alternative routes re ached extraordinary magnitudes." "Uthe statules,are to have any mean· Ing, the secretary cannot app rove the destruction of parkland unless he finds that alternative routes present unique probl ems." The decision was a stunhi ng setback to t.he Transportation Department, \\'hich had approved running Interstate 40 through Overton Park in the middle of Memphis and to the solicitor general's ofrice, which defended the Transportation Department's interpretation of federa l law. Both the transportation law of 1966 11nd the highway act of 1968 prohibited the secretary of transportation to authorize use of federal funds lo finance eonstruction of highways through public parks if a ''feasible and prudent" alternativf' roule exists. Marshall said the legislation reflects 1'the growing public concern about the quality of our natural environment'' and y,•as "designed to curb the accelera ting destruction of our country's natural beau- ty .'' Overton Park is a 342·acre city park that contains a zoo. a nine·hole golf cou rse, an outdoor theater. nature trail s, picnic areas and 170 acres of forest. Blanpied Heads Library Board Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied of the \Vest Orange County h1unicipal Court has been ~lected president of the Orange County Law Library board of trustees for the 1971 term. Serving under Judge Blanpied on the !leven·member board '"'iii be : Superior Court judges William L. ~iurray, William S. Lee and Bryon K. ~1c~lillan, County Supervisor William J. Phillips, Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Philip Schv.·ab and Tustin attorney Frank Manzo. Judge Murray was elected to what \Viii be hls sixth con.secutive lerm as secretary. Judge Sch"'ab, 1he outgoing president , will serve as chairman pro tern and P.:lanzo will represent the Orange County Bar Association on the new board. . Teenagers lo Scrub Larruua Niouel Cars " I:> - A car wash at $1 a hood will be held in Laguna Niguel Saturday from 11 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m. with members or Niguel Teen Scene supplying the soap and elbow grease. The cleaning event __Jl,jll be held at Frank Wheeltr 's TeX~ Station at lhe corner f>f Chaparosa Avenue and Crown Valley Parkway and il'! the first fund -rais- ing project of the newly organized group. The fun ds \Ylll be used lo fl~ance ac- Uvities Qf the high·school aged teenagers. ' '"-T"'"''·!t ''"''•'I' Buili!~tOward the gooa ~ . Th~:piii~ Federal wa~}:•~f~:~ ,,,,.,,, '· ·: ··tt ...lLl;. , .• -~~ .. ,~~t~$'.i;,I .' -·4' f'""''i"i -~--~, ., ,. - _.. . .. 2·Tlll' Certificate Ac.celtts witb 11111111111111 $5.000 111- l lCI. Arl1111I ri1!~ 1.11% Whatever your Jong-range gMl&-& new car. ool\ege (or the kids, an addition to your house, or that long- deserved European tour-you'll reach them (aater at Un.ion F"edera l Savings. To mef!t the special needa or your family, we offer a wide variety of aavingB plans. And we alway1 pay the high~t intere11L 'pouible. plus every savings benefit, including insurance ol acoounla to $20,000. Our cur- ' , . rent 11nnuA I rate on PAst1book acooUfJf.il ia 53 . com~ poundrd daily with interest paid day in to day out. Annual yield 5.13%. So i[ your present savings aren't elaclting up with you r dreams for the future, now'1 the time to 1et .sma rt-.i nd 11lllrt building the Union Federal way. No matter where you arc now-or how hi~h you wish to go-you'll get the good life faster at Uruoo Federal Savings. UNION FEDERAL SAVINGS ·-• • " . ., '\ 4SD LOAN 4SSOCl4TION Or1n1te Coun ty ll.erional Ofllcet: Fountain Valley D Bt,al Beach Fountain Valley, 17400 Broo'llhunitSlreet. Phone (714) 962·1378 Seil Beach, Ro!limoor Shopping Center, 12501 Seal Beach Boulf'Vi., Regional OtllCH: J.on1 Beach-Bixby Knolla 0 Gardena 0 Malibu Main Office: 426 South Spring Slreet, Loi An1ele1 ~-r 1.,1·3528 1 • • • r • - i DAlLY ,!LOT Wicka I Pollution In Hot Air By DICK WEST WASHINGTON -What gurely must be the most dismaying news of the year thus far was the recent report that the number of speeches delivtred each week in New York City has almost doubled in the past decade. ·According to estimates published in the Wall Street Journal. the weekly avtl'iJf: is now about 11,000 speeches, compared to a mere 8,000 addresses 10 yea rs aCQ, current projections indicat.e that by 1980 the. figure will nearly double again, reaching a rate of 20,000 spee<:hes per .... ·tek. Although statistics: for the nation as a whole were not given, there is no r1:a10n to guppose they v.·ould be ariy less consternating. Such evidence as is available 1uggesu that the entire country Is experiencing an oratorical explosion. NEWS OF THE big upsurge-in le.cltrn loquacity hit like a thunderbolt at the nalion11I ()fflces ()f the Planned Peroration Society, a private organization dedicated to bombast control. , . F'ranklin Spie.lcutl. director of the 50eJe1y, told mt' his group had been ( The ILfJ. <IP IHI'll'IEllR Side ' ' under the. impression that platform ·\'olubilftoy was leveling off and perhaps t.\•en declining slightly. "Tltis blows our whole anti~locution pfoa,ram right out of the u·ater ." he said. "We had been relying primarily on educational c.11.mpaigns lo rally public opposiUM to rostrum garrulity. "Obviously, however. that approach Isn't working and stronger action is netded." I said. ''what do you regard as the main harm resuJting from rampant speechify ing?" "AT PRUENT, ecologists don'L know for sute just what iml'Jact all of this Mt air is having on the environment:• Spieleutt admitted. "One long ran1e ef- fect may be the melting of the polar icecap. "The.re is no doubt. however, that exposure to too many speeches adversely afftcts the human body, causing, am<>ng other things. acute exasperation.'' I saill, "what OOmbast c o n l r o 1 measures is the.a\anned peroration socie· ty prepared to~mmend'?" • Tutsday, M1rch ?, ]q71 Army Says File l(ept On Senator WASHINGTON !UPI) -Th< Delense Department acknowledged today that it had kept a file on Adlai Stevenson 111 and other well-known public figures in a widespread effort to cope with civil disturbances. But it said the practice bad been ordered stopped. Robe.rt F. Froeh1ke, an assistant defense secretary, testified : "There was a file bearing the name of Sen. Adlai Stevenson III in the field office. of the Army's investigative and couriter intelligence unit in Chica10 and that this file consisted wholly or prlmarl· ly of pew spa per clippings." He said there"'were "undoubttd.ly files prtpared containing material relating to a large number ()f well·know n public figures." Froehlke told the Senate Constitutional Rights Subcommittee that the file1 had been destroyed. The Defense Department i.ssued a new -directive effective Monday prohibiting "physical or electronic surveillance of federal. state or IQCal officials, or of candidates for such offi~s." Froehlke said. He said tbe. new directive would pro- hibit use 6f covert surveillance of persons or organiiations without s p e c i f i c authoritation of the Defense Secretary or hi5 designee. Froehlke n<>netheless said military 5W'Veillance activities. aimed at coping ·With civil violence that might require Army troops to suppress. would be con- tinued. The implication was that military in· telligence would nol refrain from y.·at· ching civilians in such instances if they felt it necessary. To protect pe rsons and property in an area of civil disturbance with the greatest effectiveness, "military com- manders must know all that can be learn1:d about that area and its in· habitants," Froehlke said. He said military snooping on a broad fitllle was necessary during the late 1960s "because civilian agencies - federal . slate and local -had demonstrated a lack of capability to provide the quantity and types of in - forma1ion bt:Jieved lo be necessary ef- fectively to cope: in a limely fa shion witb the emergency then Pfevailing. froehlke appeared in the y.•ake of testimony last \Yeek by several former undercover men for the Army that agents infiltrated, photographed and lol\owed thousandii: tJf civilians. storing the 'in· formation in dossiers and computerized files. Egypt Expecting Action by U.S. In Middle East By U11te.d Prtss In ternallooal The stmiofficial Cairo newspaper Al Ahram said today Egypt e1pects the United Slates to make the ne1t move in the 1'1iddle East diplomat ic maneuver· ing now that Israel has refused to withdra \v from Arab lands seized in the 1967 war . LEVELS FIERY BLAST Botlrt Mat• B1c1ll Airline - ~No-no' Bogart Photo Shakes Vp Becall NEW YORK <UPI) -Lauren Bacall w1s anary. There was the picture of her late husband, Humphrey Bogart. staring out of a ma&az.ine advertise· ment plugging an airline route to C1Yhlanc1 . "'How dare they do it," ~iss Bacall Pid. "It'r; the worst sort of invasion of privacy." Faced with ~li.ss Bacall's wrath. the airline. Pan American Airwayl5, said 1'.tonday it will stop using the ad out of courtesy to the famous actress. A spokesman ror the airline said a letter v"as on it.5 way to MW Bacall telling her of the decision, The advertisement displayed a photograph of Bt>gart and the famous line ''Play 1t again, Slim," which \~·as aUributed to the movie "Casablanca" although never actutlly spoken in the v•ell·known Bogart film. "Bogart didn't do this sort or ad vertising when he v.·as alive. so why should they be able to make him do it y.·hen he is dead?" Miss Bacall said . The Pan Am spokesman said the company decided to drop lhe ad aft.er 1'i iss Bacall. currently starring in the Broadway musiCal ''Applause ." tele· phoned Pan Am 's advertising agency, J . Walter Thompson, and threatened a !aY.'SUit. Gunfire Sprays Crowd In P aki,stan Protests DACCA, Pakistan (UPI) -At least one person was killed and seven wounded toda y v.·hen Pakistani security forces opened fire on a mob blocking the highway near Dacca Airport , three miles ou tside of town . It was the first death in a wave of protests across East Pakistan today following the government's decision to postpone the constitutional as.sembly and replace civilian provincial governors with martial law administrators. Thousands of angry citizens and students roamed Dacca toda y. stoning English and Urdu language signs. looting litotes and burning cars. Tr.11.nsport.11.tion and business were at a standsUll in a spontaneous strike. Security forces opened fire on the mob near the airport when it refused to let police and troops through. This evening, a mile·long procession of demonstrators, mostly mill v.·orkers carrying iron bars and bamboo rods, headed out of the industrial i;ection of the city toward the business center. law administrato rs. and imposed pre~ cutbs in an tffort to damp down the 111 feeling between the two wings of the country. Dynamite Hinted In Capitol Bomb WASHINGTON (UPI) -An Army bomb e.1pert testified today "we really do not know yet" what kind of e1p\osive was used in the bombing 11 the U.S. Capitol Monday but speeulated that It cculd have been a IS lo •20 pound dynamite charse. Capt. Edwin Joyner of the 67th ordnance battalion at Ft. Mc Nair, wblch was called in quickly lo~lp inve$ligate the blast early Monday that wTecked an area of about six offices in the Senate wing, spoke at the opening of a congressional lnquil')'. Asked about the kind of bomb that was used, Joyner testified: "We really do not know. But we do have a hypothesiJ. We believe it was a clock- related device. Very likely It could have ~ dynamite. Assuming it was, it could have been 15 or 20 pounds. Responding to questions by Sen. Mike Gravel CO.Alaska), chairman of a Senate Public Works subcommltlte investigating the $300,000 blast, Joyner Pid that much dynamite "would be very easy to bring into the. Capitol." ''It could have been briefcase site." Joyner said. "It would have bffn very easy for a man to walk into the building Sunday afternoon, and place a briefcase and walk out." The bomb was placed in a small . unmarked men·s lavatory on the ground floor of the orjgin;U. part of the Capitol, aboul 60 rcet from an area directly beneath lhe well of the Great Rotunda . The room v.·as used so seldom that Senale Democratic Leader ri.1 i k e r.tansfield and many Capitol police did no! know it existed . Th at led lo speculation that the. bomb- ing mi g ht have been an inside job. or at lea st that the bomb \\'as planted by someone thoroughly familiar with that area of the building. ''The bomber knew what he y.·as doing ," Mansfield said. "He looked over the place. He knew the hours the Capitol was open." The f'BI has control over the in· vestigation. The Capitol's police chief, James W. Po"'·ell, said •·sever al leads'' had been developed but !he FBI dis· counted some reports that officers lite investigating a specific area or in· dividuals. At the Senate hearing, Joyner ~a id he believed the bomb was placed behind a marble wall in the washroom . ··we can't be sure bul that is our flr1t lmpres1ion," Joyner said. One report aaid even a janitor who regularlY worked In that area did not· know that there was a false wall in the washroom of the type menlioned by Joyner. Sen. John V. Tunney {[).Calif.), wanltd to know bow many bombing threats against the Capitol had been received in the past. Powell said the six such threats were received Monday following the bombing. ,.Row can you provide adequate securi· ty without making the Capitol an armed camp?" Tunney asked. "We cannot guarantee a bombing will not happen. But we could restrict access to certain areas -some of the catacombs and to many of the corners and crevices where it's ~sible to hid!.' ei:plosiv es,'' Powell replied. Two Women Strangled ~~o~~StT~:de.stt \ women, one w'ith .!he. cord f~ iron sti!I around her neck, were found f\-1 onday night in a first·floor· apartmenL An autopsy was scheduled for today on the. OOdies of Mrs. Theresa French, 29. and an unidentified woman believed to be her roommate. Their bodies v.·ere found on the liv ing room floor of Mrs. French's apartment. Police arrived at the scene about 7 p.m. after a cruiser from the nearby Jamaica Plain Police Stition was hailed by an unidentiried woman, according lo authorities. 1'1rs. f'rench. had Jived in the twi>slory clapboard apartment for four years. The - other woman , described as being in her late 20s or early ,30! v.•as believed to have Jived there les.!I than a year. l\eighbors said both were friendly and quiet. "There's no evidence of a struggle." an officer said , "no evidence of anything ransacked." .-• "We int.end to throw our support behind the controversial project to develop a Ctlntravtrbosity pill," Spielcutt replied. ''Restarch thus far indicates a hreakthrough may be near on a pill tbat 1uppresses grandiloquence for peried! of up to 24 houri if taken regular· ly. tsra1:l praised Secretary of State William P. Rogers' appeal to the Soviets to aveid propagandizing in the qu11l fer peact in the r.iiddle East. Al Ahram said Egyptian Foreian Minister Mahmoud Riad asked Mond.11.y what the u .. s. po~ilion i~ going to be now that Israel has announced its In· tention not to pull·back to lhe pre-1967 war borders. Riad made the request lo Donald Bergus. the diplomat who re.presents American interests in Cairo. Bergus replied only that the United Statts v.·ill keep striving for a peace settl~ment in the Middle East. The constitutional assembly had been scheduled for \Vednesday, to draw up a new constitution with v.·hich to rt!tum Pakistan to parliamentary rule after 12 years of martial law. The insistence of Sheikh 1'1ujibur Rehman. leader of the East Pakistan Awami League. lo force through a con· stitution providing for virtual autonomy for East and \\.'est Pakistan spurred a boycott by \Vest Pakistan political leaders. JL@@&1Ilooo and we love it! "In preliminary tests. the pill even v.•orktd on U.S. senators and wcmen's llb leaders. "If these contraverbosity devices fail to hall the rising speech rate. we'I! have to ask President Nixon to try j1wbonin1 against it." -UPI President Yahya Khan l\I on day postponed the assembly until the ty.·o sides can work out acceptable ground rules. At the same lime. he replaced provincial civilian governors with martial Winds Buff et Southland Blowing Sand, Dust Prompt Traveler War1tings California ar UHIT'!> PRiii IHTll:"IATl•M.t.L ~""'" C•lllflrnl• w1•mtlf allt~tlt !off'i will\ the lfKrflM ot !~t 1tren1, '"'"' wl"'' w~!tll 11rlltr !t!l4l~l11ttd Cir. Ill fflt 0-M'! UHi b\/flt ltof Ul\!t l Wflft t . I .. lfl: A11ttltl l..it T II w4\ ~\1111\V '"" "'' l"'tt ,.,, 111~...,. ou• llv •1r< m•'"''"' wlM I. Ttm ... •tlll••• Wirt II~ 1li11\llV 'II IS M .... Gt¥'1 ll<t~ Wll /,(I ·~'•e41•"' ~I.~ c\Ou4~ "'"' UHCl...:I lefl•fl\t '"" Wtf-~IY Th' It '"" '" "''~' 11 1h, (!~le Ct nll' 11 @•nc•H t• llt .fll '"" ntt r ~ In tlw M1llur11. ll'lnl\lallou! •lie Sowll\trll Ct lllflf"!f '""'"'tlOl'I .... , wtl\t1 dtfl'lllfl .. 11\1 -lthe• ~ot:l\ltf, II •l• M!"'"Y t l\CI W•l\0¥ t ! IN bl'I Chfl With Jlltl\t lfl ~ .... " \I PI WliTH(l fOTOtiS '" co .. tal ~t"tlll Wl'l'lt wlM• teo.v. 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" " .. • " .. One hundred percent of our savings from Orange County savers is invested in Orange Co\Ulty. Most of our loans are made within a fifty.mile radius of Laguna Federal offices. If you need money to build, buy, or refinance a home for your family, call or visit Laguna Federal -the association famous for REDUCING-RATE HOME LOANS. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Orllflle County'• 1Arge1t, First ond Stron1e.i irulependent Federol 'a l\!onarch Bly Plaia Laruna Niru•I '99·1140 ,96-1201 ~260 Ocean Avenue Laruna Beach, Cali!otnia 494-75'1 ~1 North El Cami~o Real San Clemente 492-1195 • .. t - ' t 1972 Role Obscured WASHINGTON (UP!) - Vice Prtsident Spiro T. Agnew said today it would be premature fo speculate on "''hether he will again be President Nixon's run n l n g mate in 1972. He was asked In 1 copyrighted interview with Lu- cian C. \Varren of lhe Buffalo Evening News if he or Nixon had given any consideration to that matte1 . Agnew replied : ''ti's not on· AMA Links Jy premature Crom his stand· point, I think he \j,'ould be v • ..,, uocircumspec• •1 he M arii· uana, v.·ould make a determination Talks Set In Rail Deadlock WASHINGTON (U PI) -Of. flclals of the United Transportalion Union. who have been free to call a na· tionwide rail strike since mid · night Sunday, agreed to con- tinue talking today w l t h negotiators for the major railroads. Representatives of the union and management scheduled a bargaining session for this afternoon. The negotiating panel met for five hours r.1onday at the labor department. Tllfldl1, M1rctl 2, 1~71 DAIL V PILOT $ Spending Halted In Penmylvania liARRISBURG, Pa. <UPI) -Gov. Milton J, Shapp, saying "the moment of truth ..• has finally arrived," cul off all state spend!ni until the Pensylvanla Legislature agrees on • new tax program. Sbapp MQJ1day refused to sign a $2 billion general ap- propriations bill. Ht said the bill it: unconstitutional because the Je1is1ature has not passed the laxes to pay for tbe speft· · ding programs. Shapp said the state lrea!urer "quite pro- perly" had stopped writing chtt:ks. welfare pa y men ts and highway w o r k e r s salaries. both paid out of speciaJ funds, were unaffected. ''The moment of truth, which I have warned against for many months, has finally arrived," Shapp said. "Years of operating state government with decisions based upon political expediency and ~·1th no attempt lo eliminate waste and inefficiency, have run their predicted course." ROBERTS, BRUCE TAYLOR (L, R) GIRLFRIEND DIANE VOELINGER '('c)" Su1pect1 in V1c1ou1 Death of 7-year-old Brother Brought to Jail as to who should be his run· ning mate now. But it is from / 1ttpOt€1lC€ mine, al s'o. I really haven't A strike moratorium voted by Congress expired al mid- night Sunday. State employes will have lcJ work for awhile w i l h o u t P•Ychecks. and state suppliers would have to submit bills for payment later, . said the governor, a Democrat who took office in January. Only Republicans c o n t e n d e d Shapp'.! propo.sed 5 percenl income ta:z: was \\'astefully hiih and his freeze of state paymenl!l was a political move to force the tax through. given a Jot of thought to it LAS VEGAS (UPJ) _ An Brothers Held in Attnck yet" American fi,1edical Association The vice president also told \\'arren he v.·ould still refuse report lo be released in June his daughter, Kim, permission wil l sho w that marijuana Labor Department sources said Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson had warntd negotiators l-0 come up wiQI I their own settlement or he ~·ould put forward a plan of his own. The sources said the Labor Secretary might ask !he union and rail firms to submit the ir unresoh•ed issues to arbitration or to a standing industry labor management committee proposed by a White House panel that ln-J vestlgated the dispute last year. Are you getting enough to wear a black armband in smoking causes impotence and •' ···:-r, -"'~-... - On Family; Drugs Hinted symbolic prott"st against the birlh def ects, the president. war as she did last year dur· e\ec1 of the group said r.1on· ing an antiwar moratorium. d ay. But he added: ''I don't think Dr, \Vesley Hall of Reno , \" ' . ) , .. ·,,t " • • ... ;;;o •• :1;. ;.) . ,. "•' l' .\.•I I•\ i" '111' out of life? RUBIDOUX IUPf) -Two young men armed with a barbecue fork and a kitchen knife attacked and kilted their 7-year-0ld brother and se rious· · ·fy wOurided four o l h e r members o( their family ti10n· day in what authorities said was a. senseless ra mpage. The two brothers. both wearing shoulder-length hair and beards, were arrested a'! lhe home o( a Criend seve ral hours after the bloody attack. Booked on one count or murder and four Ctiunts of attempted murder "·ere Bruce Taylor, 23, who au1horities Pakistan Giant U.S. Mou11tai11 Cli11thers Will Try Untained Peal{ SEAITLE (UPf) -Ten American mountain climbers announced today they will at- tempt te reach the summit Whales Put Off Limits WASHINGTON (UPI) Commeree Secretary Maurice If. Stans has banned the kiJJ. iag of whales by a n y fi shermen operating from U.S. ports. His action put an end to the 30().year-old U.S. WhaJ. Ing industry which in recent years had dec line d lo only one whaling firm, and that as a sideline. The Interior Department la st year pul eight species of whales on the endangered 6pecies list. but t h a I order did nol prohibit dome~lic hun. ting for them. The United States will Ctinlinue to import, mostly from Japan. wh11le pnxiucts from species other than those on the endangered list. ENTER NOW THROUGH MARCH 5 of lhe highest unclimbed mou ntain in the "'Orld -the 25.792-foot Kinyang Chhish peak in Wesl Pakistan. Warren Bleser, leader of the expedition. said in a !alter today to the American Alpine Club that his group "'ould at· tempt the climb in the Karakorum mountain range in the summer of 1972 if lhey get approval of !he Pakistan government. Bleser said there have been only t;1.·o previous attempts lo climb the mountain -by a British team in 1962 and by a Japanese team in 1965 -but neither reached the sum mit. He said those expedition5 lried lo go up the Sou!h· Southwest ridge but his group \\'oul d try a "more direct and more difficult line t h a n previously climbed.'' "Today the objective in mountain climbing is not just getting to the top." said Bleser. a climbing instructor at the Un iversity of Washington. "The important thini;i is to make a good climb.'' I hare entirely con\lerted her Nev., told a news conference said \\'as known as "Jesus'' in that respect. " B 1 h • t' Id the A~1A study would show lo his friends ; and his brother, · · · u 5 e s a ... year-a child an d I assume she'll a higher incident of impotence Robert , 19. Also taken inlo mature and I have no com· a mo r g marijuana-smoking custody \\'as Diane Voelinger, plaints at all to make about males and an unusual number 18, a friend \l'ho allegedly was htr. l think she 's doing a of bir th defects and menial al the murder scene and fled ma rvelous job in school and deficiencies in the babies of with the susrv>rts. She \\'as terribly interested a n d in-..-~~ I cd d h ood marijuana-smoking mothers. booked on suspicion of the ~ou~ica~i~n :~d ~\l;o~'t ex:~t Hall predicted that \vhen the same charges. her to agree with me about report was released the use ' Criminal complaints \l'ete to everything." of marijuana would drop. •·we be "filed against the suspects Agnew also refused to back know marijuana i s al today. dowTI from his charges that dangerous drug," Hall said. Sheriff's deputies said the the lefevision netvtork news "F"or instance. the re port will operations are dominated by suspects would not speak to a small group of men and i;:how that a 15 or 16-year-old authorilies and thC"re \\"as no some of the e 11 st er 0 girt V.'ho has snlOked mari· apparent motive for the at. ne\\·spapers are biased in their juana for a fe\v years has a much higher cha nce of hav-tack, although it had ove rtones editorial stands. ing a baby with birth defects of drug use. Because of the Of the broadcasters, he and mental deficiencies." serious conditions of the vie-saiQ: "I still feel that state· -==========~II ment is accurate -that the re r tims, deputies could 'not ques-is a tremendous concent rati on STARS lion them to determine how of powtr in the hands of a Svcln1y 01111rr 1, •o• ol *"• The U1'U represents about 150.000 train members. It join· ed ~·ith three other unionists Dec. JO in st.aging • one-day \\"alkout. The strike ended \\·hen Congre& intervened. DtAMOHDS AND ESTATE JEWELkY PURCHASED Seulh Co11' Plt1t Coi le Mt11 540-9066 lri1tol ti !ht St" Ditto h.y. Come to this Chrislian Science ltc!ur1 ~ (ll1tl"<ll ., C~r!lt k lt11lbf JUI P'1cHle Vl"' llrl'l1 Ct....,t •11 Mir HAMS " • • • So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our llt m. lrt "" fln'"f co•n·ltlf Iowa ~rktro -011r 1low 111,., c11rlno mtlhOd, ,.,1 Wl&een11n hklco•¥ 1nc1 tPPI•-1rnokl119 •nd »-hour o .... n blklno loon•Y '1' 1111c1 ..Ol81t ••• 11ntq,... In t ll "" '*°'Id. $o 4'!\ciollt 1tld •l>l>fllt lno " lull WOl/ldn't kl\OW Mw to lrnprt.,. lflll ,..od...c:t W9'vt bMn m1ktnt fvr 3, yur"I. Slllrtl 1lktd loo, ll"Olfl "'II IO bottom '° ftltl ttch <ltlKlllllt 11nllerm 1lkt ''" M 111rnovtd IPflot1IH1ly. Compl1t111 llektd t rod !llld\I' lo 1trvt . Or- ll1r your Hon11 11•1<1 H.tm i'OO•Y• •n tdvltlturt In hlfTl>IG\l'metll yev'll f\IVtr lcrgtt, the suspects entered the home few people in the networks worltl'1 t r•t• 11tro!o,;11J. Hit RETAIL STOR•S or why. and the public needs to be cohirn n '' 0 11• of th• DA ILY 21700 r. C011t Hlghw•y, Corori• del M•r--671-fOOI f h. PllOT'S t •••I fttturt t . 1222 S Terry Lynn 'fay\or, 7, died i..'.''.'.w~a~re~o~t '1:1'~· _____ _i,;;;;:,:~;;,;;:;;:;,===dlk~;;:;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~·;;•,..~k~h~u~n~t~, ~A~oa~h~•~tm~===;'~'~S.~2~4'~1~ o( massi\'e bleeding caused by multiple stab wounds. His parenl!l, BerniCf, 44 , and Charles Taylor, 49, who had lived Jn their ra nch-style tract house in this so uthern California Ctimmunity for a dozen years. '¥\·ere in very serious Ctindition at Riverside Community Hospital. A sister. Elizabeth, 16. also "'as in very serious condition, and a thi rd child. Margaret, 131 was !is!ed as fair. ''All the victims had been stebbed and slashed numerous times," a sheriff's i;pokesman said. Margaret told authorities before she wa5 taken to the hospital that Bruce "started acting craz.v and began stab- bing us" in the predawn hours. "He went mad, He went crazy and stabbing. stabbing e\lerybody," she said. • • How to saves9.00 and 20 minutes of hassle next time you fly. Take a look at the map. Orange County/Santa Ana airport is a lo! closer than· you think. And a lot easier. Think of the time you'd __ sav..c. ... The traffic you'd miss. No big crowds, and no long walk to the plane. You'd even get your bags much faster. , Parking? Let's say you stay a couple of days in Phoenix. Tbal's 3 days of airport parking, right? At L.A. Intern ational you'd pay $15.00. At Orange County/Santa Ana you'd pay $6.00. You'd save $9.00. Hughes Air West jets 3 times a day to Phoenix from Orange County/Santa Ana. Jell to all kinds of the West's most exciting places. All filghts leaving from the airport closest to you. So think it over. And Ihm jet Hughes AirWesL Hughes Air West to Phoenix from Orange County. Fot iaemlllo call your travel agent or HaaJies· Air Westt Lo~& Beitcb, 432 44441 Costa Mesa, ZE 2-40001 Santa Au, 540-2060. I ·.) ., .. "' 11 .. ••• r:1, . ,, "' ... ~ . ,,. '. ;..- • ., ,. • I • l I ·• I ' t • 8 DARY PROT EDITORIAL P A GE Politically Unreal President Nixon has lonr been aware of the stead· Uy.worsening plight o! states, counties and cities as more and more tax money has gone to Washington, leaving local governments lighting against · hankruptcy. His proposed revenue·sharing plan reflects this awareness and concern. U by some miracle it were to become law, 19 cities in Orange County would receive a total of $7,352,973 from the federal government in the next fiscal year. Estimated city shares on the Orange Coast include Costa Mesa, $394, 346; Huntington Beach, $657,711; La· guna Beach, $188.4-41 ; Newport Beach, $545,164 ; San Clemente. $184 .668, and Seal Beach $41 ,936. (Figures for Fountain Valley and San Juan Capistrano could nol be determined at the time of the announcement last 'veek.) The local impact of these figures varies according lo lhelr percentage of the total city budgets. In the case or the county budget, the "windfall" would amount to only 2 percent of the $72 million raised through prop· erty taxation. Benefit to ·property taxpayers -again. 'IF the measure should get thro.ugh Congress -\Vould be only indirecL OCCicials in eight key Orange County cities for the most part said they would not lower tax rates but instead would spend the money on streets, storm drains, parks, fire stations, libraries and in one case salaries. Only one ol this group said he would recommend applying the money to a reduction in the city's tax rate. All this checking and speculating about what 'vould be done v.·ith the money, if and when received, appears to be a waste of time, however. House Majority Leader Hale Boggs. visiting Los Angeles last Friday, 'vas asked w,tiat chance President Nixon's revenue sharing plan }Jas wiU, the current Congress. Boggs' reply: "None." or collecting taxes while allo\Ying another elected body to take th~ credit for the spending. Boggs said1 "Why shoufd members of Congress be responsible for ralslng $225 billion in revenue {for th.e federal budget) and haye nothing .to .say about how it 1s spent?" Boggs offered a ray of hope for financial relief from another direction, however. He said he supports a takeover of all welfare costs by U1e federal govern- ment as an alternative to revenue-sharing . This couJd, as the congressman suggested, mean more to a state .such as Calilornia than would revenue· sharing . . It would appear that the President's revenue-shar· 1ng proposal can be written of! as a politltal gesture that does not square with the politital facts o! life. . If California, including especially Orange County, 1s ~o _have any real relief from \Vashington money drain 1n the near future. it will in all probability come by means of welfare reform. \Vhatever form it takes, it can't come too soon. ' . Mills Abused His Power The leader of the state Senate renected no credit on himself or his party Vi hen he rejected Gov. Ronald Reagan's request to address a joint session of the Legis· lature tomorrow on welfare reform. . Senate Presi ent Pro Tern James R. ~tills {0-San Diego) expla' that he \vas rejectin~ the request be- cause th~ vernor did not stipulate that~e would speak on specifi egislation. \ It \V a Jame excuse. The governor is entitled to the resp t of his office and whatever his views on "'elfare y be, they warrant wide exposure-partic· ularly to e Legislature. • -____ .. -.,. ,._ '~ l91't"I ~~ Boggs' elaboration reflected a well-known political fact o! life: One elected body "ill not accept the onus . Mills s. ms to have been serving notice that poli· tics come firs , even before resolving the state's tang· led, expensive weUare program problems. 'SACK UP. FIRS"f 1 ANt> WE'LL NEGOTIATE LATE!?;." Satoe Strategre Objectives as i•• Canabodia Fog in Laos Clearing Away W ASHJNGTON -Perhaps il would be useful to recount here, because it is not being done elsewhere, the in- formation on operations in Laos recelvtd by President Nixon, and on which he relies. It dilfers quite markedly from impressions con\·eyed by newspaper and televisi on analysts basing their judgments on what must be considered, with all due respect for their energy, courage and talents, random observation. The fog has be· gun to clear away and what ls happen· ing in Laos is com- ing into clear view. What can be seen is not quite what the President m i g h t h a v e desired in more hopeful mo· ments. but is near enough to it not to be disappointing. In its origlpal conception Otis advance into Laos would have extended about 25 miles to Tdlepone to b I o c k the-- main roads of the Ho Chi ~1inh trail and disrupt the main flow of Communist supplies for Vietnam and Cambodia. JN EXECUTION THE advance was halted by General Abrams about 16 miles into Laos. and thus short of Tchepone, afU?r transversing and blocking two of three motorable roads, immobilizing pipe Jines. and destroying a significant volume Cl! Communist supplies. The advance was halted not because it 'll'as being met head-on but because elements of three North Vietnamese divisions moved on the flank . Abrams \\"as not in such a great hurry to reach Tchepone and decided that lo CClntinue the advance would lengthen his flank. Thus, he would be risking on a much smaller scale a flank exposure si milar to that of the Gennans in World \\'ar 'Ricl\ard Wilso~ ·--'"'-·· .. ·/ 11 ~·hen they dashed int.o St.plingrad, and there was no nttd for It. The loss of a fire .base by a South Vietnamese Ranger battalion was not considered of strategic slgniOcance. nor "'as the confusion of certain helicopter pilots and tank commanders in the chaos of war anything out of the ordinary. AT THIS STAGE, therefore, the Lao- tian drive may be compared to that In Cambodia nearly a year ago. They have the same strategic objectives. All of the optimum objectives jn the initial stages were not achieved. But, if the Laotien operation turns out as well in a year's time as that in Cambodia there will ht!: little military basis for a serious quarrel 'll'ilh Nixon·s judgment. The information on which the President relies emphasizes the remarkable suc- cess jn CamOOdia so far. The major objective there has been to prevent the North Vietnamese from moving south and opening a corridor to the sea from which they might resume the supplying of their forces in Vielnam. A month ago, as the North Vie1namese undertook to do \1·hat the allied forctts were trying to prevent , the fall of Phnom Penh wa5 being predicted on a daily basi&. The capital has not fallen, Norlb Vietnamese casualties have been very high owing to greater South Vietnamese firepov.·er, and the North Vietnamese have been kept in the north. IN THIS YEAR, ALSO, the stability of Cambodia as a state has been remarkable. There has not even been the pretense of an indigenous Commun ist movement like the Viet Cong. Thi~ opera- tion. like. that in Laos, is conducted wholly by South Vielnamese ground rorces. llo\\·ever, 75 percent of the air support in Cambodia ls S o u t h Viet- namese. Therefore, in both Cambodia and Laos, the strategic objective of combined South Vietnamese a n d American military operations is being achieved : disrupt ion of Communist supplies for an extended period. The strategic objective suppo rts the politico-military war aim o f withdrawing all American ground combat forces from Indochina. So, what is to be said about th is? That the President is lying or dissembl· ing. or is being led astray by his military advisers, or is covertly trying to win a military victory while holding at bay his enemies in the Senate and at the sufferance of a deluded ' American people? ts THE OPINION or a f\tcGovern or a Hatfield, or a prize -seeking journalist to be considered more credible lhan that of a President who has so far kept his pledge on v.'ithdrawal, kept his pledge on the duration of the American incursion into Cambodia, an_d kept his pledge to reduce American casualties and involvement in ground combat action? On !hat broad basis, it is dirficult lo challenge the Nixonian credibility, but he is trappe_d ne1'ertheless in the pedantry that anything ha ving to do with Vietnam 111 all lies and deception. At the beginning of both the Cambodian and Laos operations Nixon's honesty was challenged. Again it was challenged. in effect. v.·hen the Democratic presidential candidates joined in a resolution calling upon him lo withdraw at a certain date. The effect of that resolution was to feed distrust or Nixon at a time \rhen he was trying to do \.\'hat the resolution called for, an objective he lhink11 is being far advanced by the crilical operation on the Ho Chi ~1 1nh trail. 'The Truth About Dragons' The dragon is a m}'thical beast - or in non·fiction, an overgrown lizard found in remote C()rners of the world -used as a fictional de vice to show man as a brave and heroic creature. But in "The Truth About Dragons: ~n Anti-Romance" it's the dragon that's heroic and man comes off Jlttle better than .11 precocious; O\·er·evol\·ed liz.ard. The book. ciuthored by Hazard Adams. give an account of the la!!t days of California as seen through lhe eyes of a 606-year-old dragon named f'iredrake. WHILE A.D.U1S resorts lo the rather tired device of a great quake that sends m06t of california int.o the ocean, the ----- Tuesday. March 2, 1971 Tift editorial pope of the Dail11 Pilot seeks to b1form oud sthn· uloU -readers b11 pre1enli11g this ntw&poptr's opinion& and com- tuentary on topics of i1ttert$t and Jlg11ificance, bl/ providing o forfl m. for the erprtsrietl of oti1' re(l(fers• opinio n&. and by pr1.senting flie diver.st view- points of -informed obstrVtrl and 1poktsrofn on 1opics o/ tht ®w. Robert N. We«!, Publisher . ---------- . The Bookman tale ht unrotd~ prior lo the calaclys1nic evtnt is an intriguing sludy of th e f~ll cf man through his O"'tl insensilivily. Firedrake is a channins. erudite, middle·aged dragon ,,·ho Is the guardian of the v.·estern hoard. a treasure kept in the hllls behind Santa Barbara. His observations on man's loss of ilnagination and his misadventures wlth a young gtrl. Lilith and her motorcycling knight. Bobby, take up the bulk of the novel. . . THE POINT OF the book is Ob\'lOUsly not to show ~·hat superior beasts dragons 8re, but lo hold up a n1irror lo life In the Se\•entles. And Adams. v"ho is dean of the School of llumanHics at l!C Irvine, does so \vj\h poignant accurac)'. Ills characteri1atlons of 'I h-t • two principal human characters are net11ly drawn. Lilith Is Involved in a nunlber of "causes '' and Bobby Is h<':r foil - an tSClpist who ~ould rather \\'ander aimlrssly on his motorcycle. Adams 11. at his best. ho\.\·ever, In hUetchts of the real tstate agents. atn>!l)itt tng[neers and olhcr men !hat wander Into Flredrake's domain. They are small uttr!cal lriumphs. ) THE AlJTl'IOR DOES stumble 11 bit ·on the dlaltct he 1ives to Bobby and JJllth. At limes tht!!ir ('(ln\'trs1tion with each other a n d with Firedrake. tend5 . to be suited. Instead of the natural flow of slang that it should be. But this is a minor difficulty that he manages to smooth out as the story progresses. And in the end, this combin11tion or myth. ract and satire turns out lo be a delightfu l book v.·hich lihou ld be read by lhe eco activist as well as the fantasy fan. "The Trulh About Dragons" is Adams' srcund 1101·e1. Jn addition to a number ol noo·ficlion \\'Orks. he has also \\-ritten for the American Scholar, Chicago Re\•iew and Poetry, tie lives in Ne1vpGrt »each '>''ilh his "'ife and t\.\·o sons. '"The Truth About Dragons: An Anti· Romance·· ! 179 pp.) $6.~. tlarcourt Brace Jovanovich. Dear Gloo111 v • J. S. R. Gus: .,. Why not abolish ALL forms of ta:u1tion and start clean? For In· stance. legallu marijuana and tax it he_avily : tri£\r the present tax oo c1sar~lles, and institute a na- Uonal lottery. -R. D.R. Till1 , .. ,,,, rtlttth , ... .,... •hn, Ml ~IUT!I~ fMM tt !'11'1 ft.......... lf!!f ,..,.. Ht -" " ."""' .,, .. Deltt ,.let. • Algae Are Blighting Our Lake Legacy ( '~ ~ t -;;""~"r ' ~· [, -Jtoyce Brier ·:. ~ op;· • j ........ _ -~. Anybody who lives or travels in the 1-1idv.•esl must be conscious of the proximity of the large5t lake cluster in the world, which is also the. most important inland transportation system in the woMI. The Great Lakes in tbeir present Conn are about 1&1000 years old, and ~·ere excavated by the ice sheets, though. ''excavated'' Is an ' oversimphf1cat10n o! .,, a complex geologi- cal process. The ~ ~~... lakes 1n fact com· /', ~ '~--......:. ... \ pri se a river sy.slem ~. 111 though you _can't see '>''ater motion from the shore, h e n c e they appear to be slable bodies. Early in the lSOO's, only a fe \v-score thousand people lived in the drainage basin and now the population of ·the basin is around 30 million. Fifty years ago the lakes abounded in big fi sh, halibut, pickerel, pike, and the smaller bass and trou t. Today these fish are scarce, and commercial fishing has almost vanished. The answer of course is pollution. FOR SEVERAL decades the 30 million, 8nd the industries providing their livelihood, have been dumping wa ste chemicals into tributary rivers or directly into the lakes, forming algae \Vhich leave at least the lower lakes stagnant. Erie is the v.·orst. Once clear and blue lo sailors. it is now gra y.gree n. ;ind this sta gn ation is extended in to Ontario, \\'hich lies below Niagara Falls . SU\>Crior and lluron are still blue, but :\tichlgan is losing its clarily. This rloesn"l make sense in a technological civilization presumed to be able to tak e care of itself. The presumption is obviously faulty, not only at the Great Lakes, hut O\'er m11ny other river ~yslems of the United Slates, and son1e in Europe. So far there has been little but talk about this slow destrucllon or th" grealest fresh·,\'aler resource on any continent. Excepting P..lichigan, Y.·hich Hes wholly \1'ilhin the United St.ates, the lake s are O"'ned almost In equity by the United States and Canada . But seven-eights of the pollutants originate in the t;nited Stale~. due to industry .and population density. 'TDJS JOI!\,. OWNEflSKTr Is • complicalion, but s h o u I d n ' t be insurmountable in an effort lo reverse the trend. In 196~. a }oint commission \.\'as charged \\'ilh finding a solution, and Te(ently Issued a 174-page report, saying l'~ric . Ontario and the upper SI. La\\•rence River are seriously polluted, Injuring '"health anrl properly ." ll rccomn1cnds a ban on phosphorous-bllsed detergent.s and other rcstrlction3, but curiously the dispatch does not menUon industrial chemical~. In any case, the PJOJ>OSrtl ts more easily made lhnn f!nforced . Tho dett:r&enlS come dirf'Ctly from home s, more diffi. cult lo control th an industrlal pollutants The com1n\ss1on estimated a cleanup cost of 81.37 billion '4or the United Stalf!S (about a m1N1th's con of our Asian '41&r), and ;211 million for Canada. • A Value-System Worth Passing On As t remarked in a column a few months ago, most parents of tetnagers and collegians are disgruntled because their children seem to repudiate the parents' value.system-and thi s is what parents .are proudest of passing on to their children. .But, to me, the only value.system \\'Orth paS5ing on is one which <illo'>''S the children to maintain an open mind until they are old enough to make in· dependent judgments. r am not speaking: of such buics as training a child not lo lie or cheat or steal. 11ost par- ents do not com- plain about these things ; they feel re- jected because the children follow a different ethical or social or political path, and view the priorit~es of life from a dilferent angle. BUT THE VALUES that are inherited without thinking are rarely of much deep or pennanent use. Every church knows that it is the converts who ar9 the mo~t informed, persuasive and balan- ced members of the congregation, for they alone have taken the trouble to investigate and understand their new persuasion. Beyond lhe basics. all that a parent ha s a right to do with a child's mind is lo instill a sense of fairness, lo encourage curiosi ty, to Jrieep as many options open as possible. WHEN ritv OWN younger children v.·anted to go out and ring doorbells for Senator fl.l cCarthy in 1968, I refused to let them, and carefully explained \\'hy. l !old them they had no right to their ''opinion'' because it was formed by what they heard at home; and ir they lived in a household that supported Governor \Vallaet:, they would ha ve wanted to ting doorbe.l111 for him. Both liberals and conservatives make the mistake of indoctrinating their children \.\'ith their own views. and caricalurizing the vie ws o[ the ir op- ponents ; so the children grow up either as doctrinaire as their parents1 or they rebel and swing to the other extreme. Both reactions are unhealthy reflexes, and not the mark of an independent personality. OF COURSE, \VHE.i'l they gro.w up, I v.·ould like my children to share my broader value.system ; but I can do this only by v"arning them not to accept any doctrine simply because the people lhey know and like happen lo believe in il. I want them to investigate all the all.ematives. and if they settle for mine, it will be because our minds coin· cide. not because they have been coaxed or coerced into my corner, Neither the youngsters who conform oul of passivity nor those who rebel out of resentment are going to make intelligent citizens: the former will perpetuate the mistakes of their parents, and the latter "'ill make the opposite mistakes. This is why real progress is so :slow. ~Hunters, Make It Dear' \\IASHlNGTON -A ladies' lobby, \~·hich questioned the manhood of deer hunters, has provoked enraged howls from the firearms lobby~ The battle of the lobbies began when the Friends of Animals, led by nine fan1ous and beautiful women, protested turning deer hunters loose in New Jersey'1 Great Swamp National \Vildlife Refuge lo reduce the herd. The lovely ladies. Including Lauren Bacall, Ali Mac· Graw, Patrice ~fun­ sel and June Havoc, at'Cused the hunters of slaughtering deer to prove their viri· lily because they faiJ .. on belltt proving crowidJ (like) a boudoir." "~'E'RE NOT TURNED on by a show of masculinity v.'hich takes place In the forest through maiming or occasionally killing helpless animals," mocked the ladies in handbills. "Hunters, ma k e it dear. not deer. Will )'Ou? Won't you? Can't you?!' Cut to the quick, the Firearms Lobby of Aml!:rlca issued II.$ own handbill& assailing the "female show buslne,Ss personalities.'• These audacious femafes had compared ''hunters to the Infamous pervtrted ~farquis de Sa.de," whined the lireanns lobby. The pls' plea lh8t huntera p r o v e their "virility (in) a boudoir," lns1 ead of by killing detr, Was branded as ''the most dh1bollc1 I (schtme) of 111.'' The firt1trm1 righters called for contributions to do batUe agaln3l the ladies' Ideas, not in the fields nor I.he bedrooms, but in the courts. IN A ''DEAR f\JEL" leller to Derense Sec retary l\1e\vin Laird. Rep, Bob Sikes, D-Fla ., a power on th e Houst ~1ilitary Appropriations Subcommillet, has protested the Pentagon's personnel policy. The f irst to be laid off. invariably. are able young employe:i> while older deadheads are kept on the payroll. • "The result Is a higher prictd organization and a low morale in the junior ranks," \\'rote Sikes. "You are 8e1Uog cloae to the point where )'OU have all chiefs and no lndlans." The Congressml'ln J:Ot back a bland, unresponsive lcller from a Pentagon subordinate suggesting that Sikes support. legislation to pern1it older emp\oyes ID rtlire earlier and lo reduce the mandatory retlrcn1enl 11ge. B11 Geor ge --- Dear George: /" llow can I gel up a blrd·watchin& group In my neighborhood? MAYBELi.ii ,.._pe:a.r .titaybell': Well. fir:!. and mMl importanlly, gel to know a lot of birds. <Write to George and have your ·useless y,·orrylng done by a weless v.·orrier -but professional!) ' t , " I ' !.--~ d t ed ii ed " ke eir nd p- r ey e. es, nt p, y his pt pie ,. all for in- ed rm be! ke ill ''· ite "' •• nse b use '"· ncl off, yes the iced the are you.. nd, goo port s IO the • • CHECKING •UP• Group May Upstage ' Governor Wife Rulls Away SACRAMENTO IAP) -A eroup or social w or k e rs ttireatened to upstage Gov. A Reagan today by releasing roulld Age . 40 hdeetdaoeils 5 .of his prized welfare reform program a day before . The LeglslaUve Coalition for JADE, E~1ERALD AND A!askan king crabs. Too bad .. r Welfare Reform saia jt got SAPPIURE wedding rings. Time somebody started lo the information from sources That's what the jewelers are farm them. Only -part that's inside the State Department eaten is the .legs. Jf a crab of Social Welfare. se\Hng now. In addition lo ~ose~ a leg in~ right sea50n, This is the plan Reagan gok! bands. I 41aid wedding, it will grow. a uew one . Our wanted to unveil in a televised not engagement rings. An in· Chief Progoosticator. predicts joint session of .the legislature creasing number of such rings future king crab farmers will in Sacramento Wednesda)'. \~ith stones, il's said. are bought and paid for by harvest a· leg or two from When Democratic I e a d e r s 1,1·omen .•. IT'S CLAThtED a each crab, then throw the rest tumed him down, Reagan ac-back in. But I think our Chlef cep'ted an invitation to gi.,,e Prognosticator ~ay be a Uttle the &ame speech to the Town Jlaive. l:lall of Los Angeles at a QUEENIE lly Phil lnterlandl - T11esdi1J', Marth 2, 1971 DAil V PILOT 7 Sdf1$ She Plott~d __ ~)aqotout State Cites -Davis Evidence SAN RAFAEL. Callr. (API --The prosecution in thu Angela Davis case .11ays there is "overwhelming evidence" that she plotted an abortive courthouse escape in which four men died . And to allow the ~ tant to act as one ·oner own defense attorneys "prac· Ucally guarantees a disorderly trial," the State of California. declared Monday In a 200 page memorandum opposing a series of defense motions. The memorandum was filed in }.1arin County Superior Court by Asst. Atty. Gen. Albert \V. Harris Jr .. the chief prosecutor. Un prison convict was being 1:rltd :on chargt"S of a_ssaulting a guard ·with • knife. The prosecution memoran· dum charges Miss Davis COR· spired with Jonathan to arm the lhree convicts in court, kidnap Superior COurt Judge .Harold J, Haley and others and hold them hostage to force the rtlease ot the Soledad Brothers. .. "ln the days preceding the invasion of the courtroom". she WI$ a close companion of Jonathan .•. 1cqulrfld two ol the weapons w h 11 e ac· complll)ied by Jonathan" and "visited the scene of the crime with him the day befor• the crime." the memorandum slated. Killed In the shootout were Judge Haley, you ng Jackson, convicts Ja1nes McClain, who was nn trial, and William Arthur Christmas, a wltnesll in the trial. Another convict wilnes:!!, Ruchell Magee, waS wounded and face! the sam• cblraes as Miss DaYis. LSD-related P~ychosi~ Alleged in Tate Trial man can make several hun· dred dollars a monlh by sell- ing his own plasma. Not too whole blood. just the plasma. The medical boys have figured out how lo withdraw safely from a donor e.,,ery two days, they say. lN EUROPE. a~corporation president is aOdre~ed as Mr. President, not as Pete or Joe or ·old Jim. Bob, ... THE AMERICAN DIENTAL ASSOCIATION re:)orts the average dentist lfves 71.2 years. • .DID I TELL YOU the German scientists have isolated the love call of the herring? They have. It goes squeak. squeak. .UN· DERSTAND THOSE great old Laurel and Hardy movies, dubbed in 'swahili, are gross- ing dandily in Afraci's Kenya ... -JAPANESE LA~1EN are studying the possible use of lip prints as welt as fingerprints in identification . h.n;ichcon Wednesday. A newspaper -the Oakland Tribune -already had printed an extensive report or what is ~upposed to be in the plan. "Yes, I think that aaya it." .;....... ____ _ MiS.!1 Davis claims that the charges against her a~ a frameup and that as an avov. ... ed Communist she is beln~ persecuted for her polltical beliefs. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Tweed said fi.1iss Krenwinkel · Harris' memorandum says Patricia Krenwinkel w a s still surfered ' ' r e s I d u a I the motive of the 27-year-old "acutely psychotic" when ex· evidence" of her mental II· fonner UCLA philosophy in· amlned after the Tate-LaBian-lness. THE USUAL runaway wife, it's report¢, is about 40 years old, give or take .a f.ew seasons. Find thal surprising. Thought it was mostly the younge r ones who flew. But our Love and War man has learned otherwise lrom the researchers. That woman who proves she has the get-up-and· go by doing same, he says, is apt to wait until her youngest offspring drops out of school. At this age, he 'says cynically, sh.e 's old enough to take care of her3elf, but still young enough to hope somebody el11e will, so goes. The governor's o f f i c e dismissed the reports as speculative. ··1 never comment fl n speculation ." said Paul Beck, Reagan's press secretary. Reagan Said Unsure Of Quake Repair Tax structor was to hold ho.'ltage!I · ca murders, and her mental "I believe that at thi s to obtain the freedom of the illness may 'Have been caused particular time her thinking so-called "Soledad Brothers." by chronic use of LSD, a is so distorted she ~ieves The state said Miss Davis defense psychiatrist testified what she did was righl and had contended the Soledad Monday. , was oul of love," he-said. Brothers were going to be Dr. Andre R. Tweed was Tweed. who said he had given a "legal lynching." one of a parade of defense examb1ed 12.000 persons for CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. •·\Vasn 't Samuel Colt, the in- ventor of the revolver, a murderer ?" A. That was his brother , John. He murdered a printer. And no matter how you may feel i!;bout that, it v.·as wrong. Used a hatchet, incidentally, not a revolver ... Q. "Bananas stored in t h e refrigerator .... dt finitely w 111 tum dark. won't they?" A. Not if they 're in a bro·wn paper bag, I'm told. . .Q. "Is it true the younger the father, the more likely the infant will be a boy?" A. Statistics indicate that, mysteriously. lT'S LIKELY YOU'VE heard we're running out of HE HATED to see woinen . smoke .. Murad Ute fQ.urth ~as his name. Sultan of Turkey 400 some odd years ago. Hated so much to see them smoke. in fact, he passed a Jaw against this vice, and roa med the byways in disguise himself to catch offenders. It's reckoii· ed by some that Murad the Fourth in his five-year reign put more than 12,000 Turkish women to death for smok~ng. Nobody, not e ... en t h e· Aimrican Cancer So c i e t y , ever pressed the point more enthusiastically. Still, the practice continues. Pity. Your qUt:stlons and con1· me11!3 ore Wl!'lcomed and. will be used in CHECKING VP toherever possibl.t. Ad· dress letters to L. /tf. Boyd. P. 0. Bro: 1875. Newpo.rt Beach, Calif.~ 92660. Riles Asks 1 Board Fo,. College Systems But he conceded "I don't In the meantime, t be Republican governor cleared his schedule for the rest of the "'eek to devote as much time as possible to laking the program lo the people of California . liis half-hour address lo Town Hall , a forum of businessmen and in· dustrialists, will be carried by television Jive in -the Los Angeles area -and probably in other metropolitan regions of the state. ·'Tue governor considers this program to be the most significant and most im· SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Go.,,. Ronald Reagan i s reported unconvinced of ti1e need to increase even briefly the gasoline tax to help repair roads and highways damaged by the Southern California Reagan Asks -"Dialogues With CSEA portant program he has SACRA}.fENTO (UPI) . - presented since his election Gov. Ronald Reagan has open· irr 1966." Reagan's office said. ed his door for formal Reagan will return to dialogue ·with the 113.000- Sacramento immediately and member California St a t e begin a series or five by.in· Employes Association over vitation-only briefings on the s a I art e s and worker program for C a I i f or n i a grievances. ne1,1·spaper e d i t o r s and publishers. The unprecedented action -'"-_,,_ came Monday when he signed 'W' )..( "1:l • an executive order I o Aid Reforms strengthen what he called the "spirit or cooperation and mutual understanding" with · Outli11ed CSEA, By Governor The directive will provide a means for CSEA represen- tatives to meet with a governor's representative ··on gene ral s a J a r y ad--SACRAMENTO (UPI) -justments as well as emptoye Gov. Ro11ald Reagan has in· benefits," he said. Earl Coke. formed the counties that his 1,1•elfare refonn proposal will the governor's secretary of call for removing substantial agriculture and services, was numbers of mothers. children named as the administration's and disabled from public liaison official. assistance. ~1eanwhile, the CSEA today New State School Superin-expect a lot of enthusiasm" Also, a larger share of old opened a mass rally before tendent Wilson Riles has pl'o-for the· merger and suggested age assistance would be borne its board of directors to test d. I " by relatives, able •~1'ed reci· Sentiment of the Tank--end-file SACRAMENTO (UPI) - d t br h. g ne board it only to "start a 1a ogue uvu pose es a LS in o pients would be required to over Reagan's refusal to pr!). to govern the University of on the su bject. seek work and parents 1,1•ould vide for pay hikes in the 1971· earthquake. The Soledad Brothers are psychia.trisl,S . summone~ by IJiaces of drug addiction. "The damage doesn't war· three black convicls a\.,,alting the defense in an attempt lo d'eplcted "acid'' as an rant it," Slate Finance Direec-trial on charges of murdering save Charles ~!anson and his hallucinogenic drug whose U!C tor Verne Orr told the a Soledad State Prison guard three women codefendants Coold lead !<>me persons In Assembly Ways and Means in January 1970. One of them from the gas chamber. The "suicidal or homicidal urges.'' Committee Monday. is George Jackso11, whose 17· eHor1s were expected to con· QU!er psychiatrists were Orr said based on curreot year-old brother, Jonathan, centrate on th'e quartet's waitipg to testify for the other ·estimates or damage, we're smuggled tun.s Into the ~all~geQ!>'. de~ilitating use ~f two women defendants, Susan not convinced it is necessary." courtroom where a San Quen· LSD. l Alkfns arid Leslie Van Houten. He said Reagan believes the.---------'-------------''---------'----...:.:...:.: increase wouldn't be needed •·for even a short time." Orr and his ~sistant, Roy Bell, reported the ad· n\inislration believes the federal government will pay for most damage to public structures caused by the Feb. 9 quake. This included 1,1•hat Bell described as "something over $100 million for repair of pub I i c buildings, including schools. New federal laws also make funds available to cities ,.,,hose revenue" from the pro· perty tax is reduced by quake damage, he sai'd. "It's almost like a direct pipeline into the treasury," Bell said. Orr's remarks came on the heels of ,Senate Filiance Com· mitltt approval of a bill te?n- porarily inctta&ing from seven to eig11t cents on the gallon the tax on gasoline. The levy would be lmpo.sed up to six months but Re agan could repeal It sooner if. sufficient road repair cash w a s generated . The aulhor, Stn. Lawrence \Valsh ID-Huntington Park l estimated the quake caused $49 million worth of damage to all roads, bridges and related highway structures. He said he wouldn 't.-seek a floor vote until Reagan in· dicated the bill was nettssary. CWed11.e§dar ~ CZJiur~day 011.Ir 4pm CJ'ill Clo§ing Introducing California. state colleges and Earlier, Riles made his first have to support unmarried 72 proposed budget. More than community colleges. appearance as Superintendent pregnant minors. 5,000 v•ere expected to jam INROLL NOW! This would ''bring higher of Public Instruction before Local taxpay er! w o u 1 d the Sacramento Municipal PSYCH0'0c'y"e'E"'RNETICS COMPLETE o-1N-NERS h Id a legislative committee. He finance a greater share of Auditorium for the rally . education together." e to the controversial /lid to Several CSEA chapters call· WlllllND WOlKSHO' the Sacramento Press Club outlined to a Senate finance Families with Needy Children ed for the board to consider M"'" c-· cw..-enc• c.., .. ,_ subcommiitee w h a t he L•ll• Arnwh••• r>.1onday. (AFDC) program. but spend a possible general strike to Mire~ 1"21 lftn1t1-1 LlmilMI regards as the "most pressing less for the aged, blind and d r C•K nn1 ltMN• ., c1u1 "J.s1u Riles described the present areas of need in California ll;ba~c~k~e~m;;a~n~do~o~r ;m~o;re~pa2y~.;;;;;~;;;;~ Uc regents, slate college disabled. education." ., · r t r R • trustees and community col· "a1or ea ures o eagan s lege anvernors as "in· They are: v.•elfare package, it was learn· "" 1 k. t ''Accountability" -he said ed. were outlined to county dependent groups oo ing ou schools and teacher! should officials recently by the for themselves.·• become more "accountable for ' ·d Al h h "I don't think we ought to governors a1 es. t oug their educational product." some eleme11ts have changed, play those kinds of games," Finance -he advocated an the package still is basically he said . referring to the three unspecified statewide properly the same as the one Reagan separate boards. ..Let's put tax to equalize education fun· intends to announce publicly the junior colleges. state col· ding. Wednesday. Jeges and univcr5ity under one1--=--------------'-------ll board of regents." IA,vtrl!1tm•nn Asked v.·hcther he felt this would destroy the state's master plan for higher educa- tion -enacted in 1959 - Riles replied, "1 don't think il ever \\'Orked very well." lie added that the st.ate coordinating council for higher education -charged with im- plementing the master plan -is composed of represen- tatives of the three institutio113 who look out for their cam· puses' own interests. Riles said a super board could "get rid of fragmen- tallon'' between the three in· stitutlons. "Now ... f;,_~iic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Artfficlal T eelh NeYer Felt So N1tur1t Before Foe the fini time . .:ience ofl'trt a plaat.ic ~m that holds den· turtS 11 they"ve never bttn held befort-form1 an ela1tic ~m· brane that htlf)s hold you1 dtft· '""s lo tllt 110111101 liu"r.s of your 1'1aNlli. It's a revolutionary discovery calkd flXOOESt<' for daily home use. (U.S. Patent f3,003,968) fl XOOENT holds dentures firmer ••• 1tul 111CtJt romfetJ/abl:y. You may bite h1rdtr, chew betle:r, eat more naturalh., fJXOOE/l."t last• for houl'5. Re· ai3t1 moi1turt. Dentures that ht are neent1al to he1llh. Stt your denti1t rtii:ularl)'. Ge.t easy·to- U!le flXOOENT Dtnturt Adhesive Crum 11 an druii: count.er•. COAST SUPER MARKET COAST" SOPER MM!<E'f' 334TE..c.-~.-,•~dtt l".- Featuring MANNINGS IEEF Cv1tom Trimming For Specl1I Occ:11ion' f:: ; ~ ... •t ""9M 11 "tw-t&Ul,flll ' . i ~. Delivery begins 1 p.m. '" 673-3510 MON.-SAT-t te •:lO-S•Hl•f t te I ~--~ c stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~d~~7 youve never heard it so good • • • I • ..... TuudlJ', Much 2. 1971 . --• ~ • • • • ... ! •" Money Scar ce Charities Ha ving Fi nance Trouble ••• 4 ...... . .. • LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N<ihCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE •1l• MO, P'llJI IA.I -MOTICS Ofl T•USTll.'I IALI fllCTITIOUI • us IN I ,, NAMI MOT1c• TO CllOJTOIJ LMtl ,.., a1~ MOTICI lfllVITU1• •101 lTATIMIHT llWlllO« COUIT o' THI "'' N01 lal> NOTICE IS Hfl~IY flwn fflet ,.,_ The tollowl ... MfMlll II Hll'lll -"-ITATI Of' (ALll'OllNIA P'Olt °" """*'• Merell , •• 1f,,, at tl!ll to.nl • '""'"•Of ltW fDUfllllPI V1ll<tt ll : THI CCIUQY OP' OUM•I l'doc\ A.M, flrit11ti.I FH1f1tloll, ~llC.. Sl;llool Dllltlcl OI 0''"'' C.u11tr, DONALDION'S OEl"T. &TOllE. *°' Mt. A...cH t O.iw1,1 cOl'Hnllloll. at lr111IM 9' Ctlltorr\11, will rt<tl~t Mtlllll ~' ~ ~11111 .. •11110a IJ6'1 Et1111 9f SAA.AH M. Ol!llEH. 1u1!1lltul.cl Ttu$1H llllClff ...0 .._,r111t!ll lo 2.00 ll.No. Ofl llW Ulll 0.Y tf 1.twlo 0. Do!lllV.KNI. IM 0, Orfttll:. Otalloed. 10 11'11 lllffd ti 1'1111 rtftf•.. It 111 Mtr<PI, 1,11 ti lht 94"1.(t ol lt ld ~I Wti.h N141 NOTICE ., HEJU;1y GIVEN to ll'lt !ht N11tlct of 0.1111!1 teCOl'<IH Ill~ leoli.: dltlrlct ll11rtPlttll\f ~rtn'4111 ti "°"'IClll T11l1 ...,,1,,.n It btl"' conouc1..i llr afflf>on ., ..,. -. ,......,. ill~tnt '*· ,..,,. us, OI ottLclll lt~ord .. 11"14' wltl bllb wl~ bt ClffMCI t...:I to\ h'Wll!~ld'utl. 11111 t it """"' lltlilllt cr1lm• tftln1t C0trnty 119<0fW " Or•-c-iw. r1.0 tor Ill• h11!1llallcm DI "'"'• Publl1hed 011ntt Cw11 O.lly PllM 11>1 ltld ff<fd9lll .,.1 r ... ulr.cl ~ flit Ctlllornlt. WILL SELL, 11 PUbllc t >KllOfl II Mlt"r Ind Nlttlltl LHrnlnt Ctntt"· F..,..UlrJ' 16, n llld Mt•<ll Z, f, 1-, with !flt llf<t1Nl!'Y V91Khe<f, In to hll llt tt llldOtr IOI' Cltfl (N Yffi. S11ffllft IO bt l11•nhll.cl ln tCtOfdt t>CI 1tll 311·11 1111 ollkt OI '"-clttlr; of 1,.. 1~ 11 !lmt of 1111 111 Jt wtul montY ol wlll'I IHClllu1!on1 now on 111.t 111 11\t ICC:. __________ _.._ '"'llltd "''"'· or 10 ,,,_, "''"'• will! ,,... UnUM Sl•lttl on m. 11d1JW•llt. l'v•cti.ti"' D"1tflf'r'ltnl of th• "°""11111 L EGAL NOTICE TM ~ry VOIKl!tr1. lo l II t fl lllt t lllttl'I« 10 kit. No. I, 11111 Vt ll<ty k'rloct! OhtrlCI, Nu~ °"" 1 -----~-~------uncttrtltf\ed 1t""' Of'llct Ol lllt i!Terntvt: G1ra.n Grow loult¥t rd, In lllt Cll't Lli!MllO\I._ Lt r>I!. corntr of Ttlllffl •n.d ..... 111 MllCHEL.L. HAllT a. llllSCOI!, tU o1 Gt rcltn G•OVt. (0trnly Of Ortl>ft, Ntwllnd 51••1, FOl.H'llllfl V t I!• V, By WUIS CASSELS default on their c Iv i c ClllTlll'IC•TI Cl' llUltN•IS Civic Ct llltf OrlYt Wttl S.11t1 An• Slt't ol C•lll!irnl1 •II 11.i.1, !ltlt , '"" c11110 ... 1. tJJOI. Ull'I S...ltr llt/J., Jb!J'ti •IC,ITtOUI HAMI! (1!lfOrnl1 '2701, wftl<ll '11 lllt ot1C~ !n! .. e1I -lltlll I" II unGtr 1tld 11'1' OROEA OF TME llOtllO r espona I es, I nltd II•• Ct•lllY !It h of IM.ftll!tll ol Ill• uncttnltlltltl 111 t ll 0,..S of Trull In lllt lfn<l*flY tllulttd OF TRUSTEES, FOUNl AlN 'VASHING'fON -Private Have you written lo lhe {~~~~1 ~,, ..... •' lid MOnrov11 m11 .. ,. Pttlt ln!"' fO the tllt!t ol Jn ••hi CounlY •!Id ST1!1 dt1Ctlllfd VALlE'f SCMOOL 01sT111cr II h 'I I If I · hi h h Id c lllornlt ulldtt ,,... Hid d•<-nl, wllll!n four mon!llt tf!ft 11: Loi 10 of T•td No. 4iM, If WILLIAM C. CRANE. co eges, osp1 as. we are compan es tn w c you o AYt .• cc11r "'"'· •, POAiioN PACK 11>t 11,.1 oubllc•llolt 01 1111, "°°nci 111own on , M11 r..:oroed tn l ook CLElll< 01" 1HE 10A110 agencies and c u I t u r a I shares exprtS!ing your views ~1~~,~~ ·~0 n•:;,~ 1111111 ,.1., 11,m 1, 0111t.:1 Ftbt1111"Y 1,, ttn ' i.ia. P•11~• M io M 111<11111¥1 .i Publlthtd o''"'' co111 o,uw 1111ot Organl••llO"', which a r e ·' , f ' c<1m-ltd o! !~r toflowl111 '""°"' whott W•LLACl 0, OEll:EN Ml1tt!1111toot Mto1, •tcord1 ol Ort "'ft M•tth 2, t, lt11 'U.11 ..... '"' on this subject . I not, you re ""n' 111 ,..,11 ,..., pl•t• 01 ,,,111,"" Et«11to• o11M w111 o1 COl.H'lh', c11110•1111, 111c1 proa•ttv lt •ho dependent on phllanlhropy part o( the proble m I i 1111 .. 1· lht •bev• Mmlli *"-"' ""°'ltd to Ill' commGfltv tn.cr .. n •1: LEGAL NO'TJCE -'------''----·----I ·~.Id ·T-• '"''"' 9062 A!ohe MITCHILL. HAllT a llll:tKCI )1$11 Kl!frv LIM, Co1t1 Mt .... Ctlllotfllt. rather than tu funds for their ~ Dr llllflll"''°" ll•iKh c11u , •U CWk ct11t., Orlwt wn1 Stld ult wm "' m1t.:11, b\/f wllllo\11 1 _____________ _ financial support, may be in oli.d M••c~ 1, '"1 · ' ''''"A,.., c 111ttn111 ttNI OOY..,,,., o• •1rr1n1v. '~''"' 01 tmPlll'd, ll•ll: ..., ANIMAlogl'c DOll•ld T,_.,111111•• ltll DHHt •H•rdlll9 llllt . ····•••Io n or HOTICI TC t:•liOITCllS serious trouble during the next .., ..... $!tit (If C1lltoml1 0••"11• COUfth'' ... ,,.,,,,,, flt' •• ..,.,. tMUmlWI MH. to OIY 11\t ••m•1111n• 5Ufllll:!Cll t:CUll:T 01' THI f On M .. c .. 1, 1ti1. o.fott -· ... NOii !"/' Pubtlll\td Ora-COii! Ot llv l'llol P•lnc1atl "'"' ol ll'lt llOI• t.ftU•e<I lw STATE 01' C•Ltl'OllN!A l'Clt ew years. l'11bllc In •NI fol' ••Id "'''' ", ...... uw ,...,,...,.,,, tJ •1111 Metdt J, '· , .. lt11 U\d 1Jte<;f, lo-wit \.l.W...SJ Wiii! IMtrHI 'THE COUNTY Cl" O•AN•I ·····" Oonlld T ......... lll>t• .. _.. 41J.1l ltOlll A11tutl l, 1fl0. I I In H(d n.ctltl "'-· A .... .,, "Unless something Is done lo substantially accelerate private giving, there will be a multibillion dollar deficit in private giving b y 1975," says Peter G . Peterson, board chairman of Bell & H owell Co. to mt tt bt tl'le ~ Wl'IOll nt"" Pt .... ldtd, I N! t ll ltlltr Wfl'll lhtn ltCutff Etltlt 1)1 llOBERT S. DE G•AS5E, II ivbKr!bt<I 10 lllf wllt'<l11 il>1t•11mtnt Ill' Wld dtecl ol ltuil, Ht AOllEllT OE Gll:AS5E, t~• 1108Eltr net Id-Ifft.cl he t~1cu1..i 111c H mt LEGAL NOTICE Dett Ftbr1.1•1"1' U, 1971 ,T. CU.Ill: OE GllASSE. Dtcttud. !oFFIClAL SEAL) • FINANCIAL ,EOE•ATION. INC.. NOTICE IS HEREI'( CilVEN lo Iha Cltrtntt J Turntr ll•lt Ila 111 tudl TrvJlto (redltotl OI Ille l boVt ntmltd dt tltdtfll Ncl••Y P.:011c.C1llto<n!1 ltOTIC• TO C1t•OITOll:S llT~ lloi.rt I. Whlll>tY IPl•I 111 P1r.ot11 htvine clt fm1 t 8t!n\I Or1nee Coun!y s u"e•1011: cou•T Off TH• Truit Officer Piiot 11'1• u ld dttr<ttnl ''t rtc11'l•ff to Ill• M• Comml\\lon E•Plffl STAT! Oil (ALll'OltNIA "Oii Publlil!H Ottl>ft C6ltl Otll'I' lf2·1I' tPlt••t, whh the rite., .. ry YOucfrt'l't, 111 Dtt. 4. lt1' TN• COUNTY 0' Cll:•NG• Ftbn.i.,t' tJ '"" Merell 2• t, lf1J fl>t otllce ol tri.. <'-111 ol tl'le tllovt , "ubll'l'le(I Ort"9• Cotti Otllr "lklt NL A4*4H tlll!lltd cvurl, or lo ar.1 ... 1 tlltm, wllll v fl M1•cll J, t, h . Jl, 1t11 .ist·ll e1111, 01 ROIE•T JAMES fll'l'E LEG" NOTJt•. the rw<"''"' vouclltt1. to th• undtr• . t lM> kn0w11 ti llOIEllT J . Fll'l'E, 1'1.1.o c. 1!1ntd I I Ille ofllCI ol lltr 11!0tMYll Peterson headed a com· •-•"" -'• LEGAL NOTICE Otte11..:r. w1TTMAN •nd SCMMIOl, 1so1 w111c11rt l _. NOTICE 1$ HEIU!'8V GtVl!M le tllt 1•11 *' Or .. Suitt ;no, Ntw'°'"I lltKll. Callto•nl• mission of pron1lnent citizens '-" • T.,.7,,. crldil"" of IPlt 1bov1 Mm..t 11t<e<1tnt NOTtt:• lo c•101To111 t:iuo, wll!(11 11 th1 Pl•<• of bu1l111•1 v.·ho made a careful study ----J9" r' NCTICI! TO Clll!OITOlll "''' •II ""''°"' hlvlnt <1411mt 19t1n1• STAT• 01' CALll'O•NIA 1'011 OI "'' u ... ,.,,,1,....., In t ll "''"''' ..... ~ ~) SU,ERIOll: CCU•T Cl' THI lht lt!d dtctdent ••r ttc1ylrtd to fill TNI COUNTY C, 011:.ANGI ltllllflo IO the Hla!P ol IOld dec;~111, of the outlook for private ,_.. --, IT•TE 0 , CALi,c•NIA lllem, w1111 11w nacH11" \'OllCh111. In H1. •·'642> w1t111n IQvr mon1111111.,..111111r11 111bllc•· th ·~ l'O• THI! COUNTY C' 111_, oltit• OI 11\t <+trk ol Ille l boYI f1t1t1 ol JAMES A. llLAll:E. ·-· lic>r> ol 11111 nol!ct. POW Situation Calls phila nthropy during e 1970s. I ; OllANOI!! t ntllltd cwrt, or to Prt .. nl ,,,.,.,, wlll\ JAMES ANGUS I t.ARE, '"" JAMES 01te<I Ftbtu•rw "· "" Jt found that m any private ! -"'-· ....... 221 !h• l\ftu,.ry VDUd ... r1, lo I II t EOWARO llLAR E, Otc1111td. EVA G. DE GRASS~ Eilt !t cl M•RTHA F. MELCHER, u...itttlt ntd 11 c/c RDnlld H. "•tnn1r, NOTICE IS HEll:EaY GIVEN lo !ht E•tcut•!x 01 lh1 Wiil C h a r i t a b I e organizations .....:: o.ce•~•d A110,,11v 11 L ..... llS w"' TM•d s1.e11, c•f'dllot1 cl "'' 1bov1 Mme<I dtttdtnt 01 111e •bow• "'"'td dKtcJ111! I d Ing ' th -NOncf: !~ HE •EflV (il\'EN to lht 51nl11 Ant, (ellfo•n!t '7101, which 11 11111 111 Pt<Mllll htvlno cl1!m1 tttlnl! WITTMAN ANO SCHMIDT a rea Y a re runn In e ~O H'.);..lJ_ lff~ crtdllo•~ 01 1~ tbovt nam.c1 dett denl 111t Pltct 01 bu11111H ct ,,,.. un0t•1l•llf<I tilt 11ld dtctdt nl .,. 1tc1~1r..i to 1111 IHI Wt1!c11f1 or., suu1 JM For Talks on Status By J OHN A. CAU.COTT GENEVA I UPI) Tho pliJht of Amerl~•n prlloner! in North Vietnam has co~ vinced the lnternallonal Com- m ittee .C the Red Crnu of the need to revise the Geneva W1r Conventions. Hanoi for aix y e1r1 has 1 nfused to permit Red Cro1s • deleg•tes to v isit the prisoner11 1 as provided for in the third ·of the four conventiorur. I Jt claim s the war in Vltt- nam is a civil coan ict. and D eath J\'o tlre1 CAllT•ll foyrlt11• (T00!1l Ct<tlr. l4ll E. llu•lon St ,. A~thtlm. 0 1!t ol dttlll, Ftbr111rv H. SU•Yl~acl bY Plull>oll'ld, Wt Vflt: lwO dlUI~ lw1. °"""' Su• C•<ltr •1111 JudY Mooru brotllu" Ptul 111d Mtlvl~ McMur!y; a•r- '""· Mr. 1/111 Mii. G. 8. Ewt nl! -t••l'lclc:Pllld. lttwlCtt, WtC1nt1111y, J l'M. '""-Ftmlly Co1onl1I 'ul'ltral HOmt. CCllUJIM fl1\t M. Cobu•fl, llt t l..,,1 OI 1'1Unt11n V•lltr. 01t. flt Ottlll, Merell I. Sv,...lvtd "' t l1l1ro, 'lor•nct I!. Wt llt. Miidrid' o. .. .on •M Evtl"ln ~t. 11,...kft, WtdfWl.dtY, II AM, OlldlY l r{l!lltt• Chi,.. ti. lnttrmtnl, 'Ottll Ltwn Glt"IJ•lt . 011. 111v 11r11111r1 Mottv1ry, 1a.nn, Dl•t c- 1i t1. Gwl•udt K~orllP. Aot 1J, ol 1110 NtWPo•I Mwd , No, It, COii• Mt••· Ot!t ti t1e1th. l"Mrv•,.,. ,., 511•YIYtd bY "'1111tncl. lltl- .,, .P. Kn.ct•H; oon, Jonn C K"°"''' dt"'nt•r. Ciro! Kne'"' tltlt•. Mri, £eln. ...._; lllfM 1rt MClllkJ•tn. •It ti N"" Yti11. M-lt l '"VIU't Wiii bt l'ltld In Ilene. Nt¥td1, tt t Mvta •111. M 1 11101ulw•v ,,.,.,.,..,.!"/', DlrtCttrt. LOHO Ctr• 1..tllt. )ft f . 1111 II., C.111 M111. Dtlt IA Niii, Mtrtf'I 1. S~rvhttd IV NH •utlltort. Artt-it1 L-, •nct No•t- 1',,..... Y.unt . IMlll OI Coitt Mt ... : ont 1rtlldd1u•httr, Strvlctt Wiit bt lrt!d ftl• ,,,v, M1•cll S, In Clltr l•~t. ll wl. 11111 &ro•dwt Y Morlutry, lorw1rctl"' dlrte:lort. MAllflN Ttrtll plonn Mtrlln, 411 Co111 Mtll St., (11111 Mttl. DUe 111 dltlll, 11'.ebrutry 2' In Hebtr Cl!r, Ul1h. s..,,....1vt0 by. ltl'tltf, •· Oont ld M1n 1n, Ml11lon Mlllu ""''""· Anlll J Mtttl11, Costt M1s11 brc1htr, l llem11 "l•n Mt tlln, COii• Meot: '"nd- l'llO!twr. Jull1 C, Mt rlln, Cirdl!I. StrtlcH will bt lltld Wtt111t1d1y, Mt •d! J, l:JO flM, 51. Andtew1 PftlDVlt ,lt n Chvrch, w!IPI Or, Cnf tiu H, O!ttt nllt ld etllcl- 1Une. l11tt r.1Mnl, l'l<lflc Vltw Mfll'IO•l•I "''t. 'F1m111 "'"'"' lhOH ... r ... 111t 11 ""'' memorl1I Clfllrlblltlon .. 11t111 -lrlblllt "' ll'lt Ttr" Manin sm.1tr1hl1 l'uncl, N..-t Ne.-Ml"' k!Wlol OM, tOlll l,...lnt AYt ., NtWHtt llt tll ..,._, Ped llt Vltw Morl~try, D1rtcttr1, PAll:llMUll:ST Ot1it l . •ertPlur11, un M1.i,..,1 Or., Htw-1 1111cn Otte of dffll'I, Frb. JI. SU,.,1Ytd b¥ wllt , Nor1111, ol lllt homtr .on·ln-l1w 111<1 d1uolllf•, M•. 111d f.lr1. Miki Edw••d1, S&Mt Ant; btOthtt·~n.11• Ind 1h!t1. Mr. tllll Mro. l(t11 Nottord, LatuM llffcll; rnllllt•. Orttt "1l1cl\ll<1!, '°'""'"'· lttYlcu , wtt111t1d1v. M1rur 1. I PM, "•Cllk VltW Clltllt!. tnt,,mt M, "•clllC VltW "'"'"'Ill '•''-,.,..,11v IUI· •t•I• ,_t wl1Mnt tt "'''' m1motl1I contt(IM.ftlon1. 11.... <onf1'111!11t '" t~t O••~ot Cw111r C•nctr \oclth'. P1il!ic v1..,. Morlllan" Ol•tc•ct .. ll•TTl 'I' M•tlt L. ll1lt.t, Alt 14. al 64' W. lttn Sf,, Cftflt Mei•. 01!1 el ""'"· l'tbtuuv ''· turv1Ytd Ill' d•u•M1t, Mr1. Mafllr~• Morrhc~: lour brotl\lrt, lv1111n.ct. S11v10. H..,orlu1 111d Emllt Cott, 11! ot Ct ntd•I I"'• tt•lldt~lld11n1 two 1<11l·1rtncic~ll• d'ft\, llOllfY, Ktnl1M. Tutl!H,, 1 l'M, ltll 8totdWtY Clltl>tl, lttc1ultm MIU, Wt6'1tldlV. 1 AM, ii. JotcM1111 Ct lflDllC Cl'lutch. lnlermtnt, liclr c,011 CtmotlrrJ, a111 1ro1a••1 Mct1u••Y· D!1tt111r1. THOMPION Lie !. T"-lmp1cn. 11)1J FC•t loYt Wty, lrvlnr 011• ol dt•lh, Fto 71. SU,....fYf<! b1 ... 11 .. Ml\drtd; fOl'tf, S!tY•ft lltY Ind llttl~ll(f 0.U T-..-, 111 ol 1111 Plllm11 brO'lher. ,red Tl\On'IPlln. Oll.!•l!om•. GrtYHldt .. ,.,,, .. to Ill' !ltld Wttlnt1- d1v, Mt rcll J, 2 l'M, •I f l, ll:o1H,.~• N•t!-l Ctfl'ltlttY. Pol~I Lom1. Ptcll\C Vlw MOr!l/t ,.,., OlrHlot1. ARBUCKLE & SON "'ESTCLIFP MORTUARY f¥7 E. 17111 St. Costa J\ote11 IU·<!!I • BALTZ MORTUARIES C...... del Mar . , . OR U&M Cotti Mesa ...... Ml. IJ.tU4 • BELL BR OADW AY MORTUARY lll 8tt.t"111 CMLI l'tle&a u J,1IU • MtCOllMICK LAGUNA llEA Cll MOllTUAllY 1'11l LI"""' CuJ• Rotl. •H-Mll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C.mel<ry Mtrtury O..pd UM PaclOc View Dm't Newpon kodl. Calllonf1 fff.!7• •• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL BOMB _/ 7111 Biiia AYL Wnlmlutar .... -e SMITllS' MOllTUilY lt7 Molo It. -.... --' tbt Americans. therefore, are "crimlnala" unprelected by the regulation. 1be lnlernational Re d Cron, which is the guardian of the Geneva conventlona, ex· perienctd the same difficulties in tbt Ytmen and Bialran wars. To cover UUs ga p It wants the conventions revised so that combatants captured in civil wars and guerrilla e<>oDicts received the samt rights a s prisoners taken J n in· lernalio nal wars, Red Cross legal experts believe that as Jong a s a com- batanl open!)' wears a weapon he sbou1d receive full pro· tecUon u a prl!ont:r of war regardless of lbe t ype of con- Olct. As lone u there is no 1uch provision, they said, North Vietnam 1n strict ltgal terms it not violating the Gene:va Convention -which It signed June 2.8, 1957 -in refusing the Red Crosa the rigbt to vl!lt· American POW.a, "Wt bave requuted the r igbt t• make visit! several times 1 year ever since 1965," e<1mmittee spokesman Alain Modoux said. · "Strancely, Hanel dces not really hive the r1'ht te refuse aucb permluion but neither ls it Yiolatin& t b e con- venUona," he .aaid. 'nle first reason why this Is ao d ales back lo 19'7 when Hanoi signed tht conventions. JI presented a ttservalion to article 85 . of the third con- vention on prisoners, just tha t article which involves R ed Cross v isits. North Vietnam claimed In itJ rtservaUon that any person captured within ill ttrrltory is not a priaoner of war but a "cr iminal" ''The se-cond major problem which makes the situation 110 complex is the argument ever whether tht war in Vietnam is an international v.·ar or a civil war," Modoux e1plained. Tht conventions a pply to i~ lem11tional conflicts, he said, while Hanoi claims the war in Vietnam is an internal conflict. Thus. U.S, prisoner1 can be branded as "brigands " by llanoi and the Red Cro~s is powerless to d o anything about it. For this reason. Hanoi also has refused tn ct1mply wltk Red Cross regulation~ which demand full prisoner Usts and prisoner exchanges, red, and eating up their 111,1 •II "''°"1 11••!"9 c11tm1 .,,,1,..1 In 111 m1t11rt p.,1,1n11>9 10 '"' ••to•• '"""' wUh ll'lt nei:t111ry voucr.trs, In N-rt l ••ch, c1111, 'UM t · { J lh · •( MA"f A WAftR ~ff(H'f'IOJo& "" 11ld dtctdeM t•I •tovlrl'd lo flit Of 11!d Otc.cltnl, wllllln l°"r montht 11\e otllct of !ht cl<ttk ol IM tbOYt Ttt: 011) •w.rtn reserves o maJn a n etr .....-... ,,. ,,. •' ,. 111,m. will! ,,,. ntcu••rv v""cllt rs, In '"'' tllt llttt •~bll<lllon of thl1 ncllce. tnllt!td '""''· or 10 011 .. nl trw.m, with •'"'"''' fOt E••<u lrlx services to the public. '""'""""~ r11e ollicr 01 1111 cler• o• 111e 11loY1 Ot!ff Fdtr111,.... 1'. 1t71. tht n1Kt111ry VOIKMri, 10 111 • Pubnt11tc1 O••not cw11 Otll'I' OUM t nll!ltcl courl, c• to o•t11nr th1m, with Ntf\CV Je111 ,.,.,,, E•tc111tb u111t.-l~ntd 11 !ht olllct 111 Pltr 11101~~~ M1rdl J, t, U. 1J, 1911 '"1·11 The basic d i f f i cu It y. '"' nectu•ry YO>K,,.11. to !hi u,.. ol IPl<t wm of Ill• M. JACI( MALL, •I' Et•! 1l'fh U'tfl P llt,.ltntd II 111, oltlct of hl1 1l10•11•r1, •boY• n1mltd llt cldtnl Cotlt Meu, C11tfor1111 t'l611, which 11 l'!terson says, is that giving TAFT, ACKERMAN IL MAIU(S. 1\'41 ll:ON•LD N, l"llEHN•1t ,,,. ~l•c• ol IM.fllllfff ol ll>t Ulldt fllt n..i is not keeping pace with the !tn v1c1n1 e 11w11~•rd, Swllt 61J, Lo• At1 .. 111y '' 1.tw ln •It m1tte,. ""''"Int lo the ••l•tt•l-------------- A""•lu. C1lll0tnl1 '°°"' which 11 1111! JU W11t Tlll<41 Slntf. ol ltld Mc-nt. wl!llln •-mcnt!l1 "-46'JJ rising costs of h ealing. e dura-P!t ct DI IN•lntu 01 11\f ..,,..,,,,1,,..,, 111111 an., c11ttat1111 nm ,11,r tr.t 11 .. 1 oubllc111en or 11111 nct1c1, Cl!RT1,1c•T1 c• ll UllNl'll tional, and -soc!al ser\•icc in· T ests to C t in 111 "''"r'" a•r111n1.., 10 111e '"''• T' .. '"'"'' 11111 Ml-4)l1 011.a "•1>ru1ry 1•. un. .-1t:T1r1ou1 NAMI' u ol .. Id de<:llltnl. Wllhln ._ monll'll AllW"'1' ,., l!llK Ylr1• . G • 0 r . 1. n • E' . I ! • r •• Tiie undtrlltMd Ito Ct•llfy '""' .,. .slitutions. 11t1r rM 11•1t ~bllc1ll<111 ..i th11 notlct, Pv1>lllfltd 0••111t Cw1t Ot •I' P1101. Admlnl1tt11PI• conctu<t1n1 • IM.!1l11tH at nu w. Gl.Vl·ng seems to •· StUCk Otled l'•b•Ul!'Y J. 1t7l • Ftbl'IM!'Y 2l t nd Merell l , t, H, It'll Wlt!HIM·Wln·Annettll ti Wt1tm!111ftt A•t,, l1nt1 Ant, C1lllornlt . ut:: ll Ull.TON W. MELCHEll:, II •li-10 Tiie E1!tl• ol tilt -r ll>t llcll!lout 1!"11 hllllt cl Jn a r ut. Year in and year Deaths From E~tCU!M ot Ille will .,. Abovld nl mtd dtctclt nl WILGAll.O COATINGS, '"" '"'' llld '"' t bO'ole .,.,..f<I lltttderll LEGAL~'OTICE N. J•CK HALL 11.,,, 11 com-111 ol 1111o fellowlnt "'"°""' out, Americans give to all TA,T, ACKl!llMAN • MA•111 .. l'I 41t 11111 111~ ''"'' w1>o1t nt mtt '" 1u11 •"" pl•<•• ,, P h i I a nt hr 0 pi c causes ' 11'41 1111 Vlcentt l lw• .• SWll• 411 t:tll• MHI, t:1IU•~I• '26l7 rtlkrtfl<:. '"' ., foll_,, Ln Aflftltl, Clll .. rlllt ttMt IAll"" Ttt: MJ·l"'f Jol>fl Wiii, !QI E. Wllllllrf Avt, (including churches) a sum P em'ci'llin T111 uni t2'-01• NoT1c1 To c•l'c1To•1 All.,...., 1or A•lftlftlt1111r1. !. A .. L1ovd Moc:k.,11t1un. 711 E. All., ... YI ltr l11<11tor SUPllll:.10111: COi.HiT Of THI wllll-111 .. Wltl·Allnt•M 2!11 51, equivalent to slightly les.s than Publl1ntd 0•111111 Co••• O.lly Pilot STATE OF CALl•C•N•A Publllhltd o,.ntt C••I 01!1v PllOI Ot!td Ftb. lt, lt11 2 percent of the Gross Na· Ftbruuw t, ''· n. M•tell 1, lt 71 Xli·11 ,011 T~~Ac:::TY Cf FtOrllt ,t' ,, • ..., Mtrch J, ,, 16. •1\~; John Wiii P CHICAGO AP) T I Llood E. t-lockt ,,1'1'1111! tional roduct rGNP). In 1'69, ( -e s s L EGAL NOTICE "'· A"'1St siatt of c1111ornr1, o,,,,..,, ce11rtl'!': r I th GNP . -_ . El!llt Ill CARllll' M. JOM N!ON. LEGAL NOTICE On FeD. !t, 1tn, bffo•t "''· 1 N&ro-or examp e. e was have been developed w hich Ott•••""· P b11 1 , " d ,. .• on• NOTICE IS HEREll'I' GtVEH lo l~t u c n ... !Or ltld 511ff, Pf•llOntllY $932 billion, an giving totalled are ex.....,..ted to make ""~Sible c 11T1•1CATI Cl' 1u11N111, cr..i110 .. of tht '"""' "'mid dect01n1 I All :ntt •Paeartd John w11r •n.d L 11 Y If $17.6 b illion. ...~~ """ •IC-llTIOUI NAME tlltl t!I Ot•IOnl 111vlng tl•lm1 1v1n1! NOTICI! TO c •IDITO•S Hoc~•"mltll known •o mt lo bt Ill~ a reduction in the n umber T"-1111d1ril•~"" 10 ctttlly thtY ,,, ll'lt ,,Id dtc:...:11111 ••• •t<1ul•ed 10 flt• SUl'E•1011: cou•T OF THI ""°'" •flew n•m•• '" 1ub1cr1i...r But lhe COStS or phiJa n• JT•TI OF CAlt•OllNIA FCll; IO !II• within ln1trumt11I 1 n d r d ih . • . conducllng ~ nu1lntl• .i P.O. llllK 010 fl>tm, with Int "I<:'"'"' YOUthtr" 1" THI! COUNTY o• oll'.•NGll tc-ncwltdgf(l lllty t•tcu!td lht Umt, l hropic institutions have bee n -o ea s from pen1c1lh n tcYl111, C1l!forn11. u11c1tr 1111 11ct111""' 1n1 cHlct cf tl'lt tltt• 111 th• t boYt N A ... Uf !OFFICl•L SEALI • jlrm ntmt o1 FLO RAL M ... SlEllPIECE$ t lllllltO COll'l, or to P•tlllll Thtm, wit~ t. r ising a l a rate about 15 per-reaction and at the same 1,.d 1~,1 111d '''"' 11 com1>11•tt1 o1 ,,,.. nttt•••rv ~ou'"'"· 111 th• un. £11111 o1 WILLIAM JOMN~ON, 11•1 Oo•o111v w. Jovct cenl greater than the annual . ' 11,, touowlno Pt'1o111, w11o .. n•''"' 1,. lltrol1n•d 11 "'' 11111t1 01 Pltr 111orntY1 : 1u1ow11 •• w11111m P. Joll111011, 1110 kn.aw~ ~~i'::ir.,~"g~-::,•1:~or11l1 time, alJOW more people to lull alld plact• ol rtt ldt!'I« t rt at CUHARO Ind !':IRK, IJ1 NOr!h Ron, 11 Wm. P, Jollflion, Otctnltd. Ort"ll• County growth of the GNP, Thus, the . 1011o... . S..fl!t Afll, C.1ttfo•11l1, t'llQ1 whlth h !Ill NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N fD "'" g'·v,·ng gap ge•· 3 li.ttle w i·der ta ke t h e drug with safety. c111,111 E. s1o1n 11 11e4 w1111c1 ol•t• o1 ....,.1 .... 11 01 ,,,.. u11dlt1l'""" crtdllor1 ol 1111 1bov1• M m1 ", d'c101•~\ ~~.';;"';':;:ion E•olru ~ '"'·• No "· Col1• Mttl. Enid M In 111 "''"'~ ~•l•lnl-to !ht tlttTf 11111 t ll person1 lltY 11t C t "'' tit n1 > • ' This was reported recently • ·• ~· "• '"' ••Id dtctdtnl ,,, 1tc1u1,tc1 10 11141 ~bflt11ea O••flll• Co••' 0111'1' "11111 e ach year. 11.,.n, JIOI w1111ct Av•. No. H, co.ii of ••Id cf.Ktllfl'lt, •lftlln 10Y• ""'"'"' tllem, wnn tht ntttntf'Y ¥0!,H;l\trt, In Ftbru1ry 2J 1n.c1 Mttci'r 2, t, 1,, un W. h b Mt.I 1fler ll!t ltrll Pllblicetlon ol lhl1 nollct. " 11 out im portant n e \V y researchers at the annual · •· o11911 Ftt"''"' 5, 1911 tht o1r1<e 01 "" ctt rk o1 111e •boYt 40l-11 sources o f funds that will meeting of t he American OtrtctcFH,!Rt'Es"t'. SLO•N 11 !11':1~~.~;.~u!1i:.wut.An11t•td ~;~111'!c~:";;!.:,. or..,~c:;:,~'101~ "'~~ LEGAL NOTJr:E amounl to many billions of 5 1 tEcN 11~ M.l sLgAtl c0un1 ot tM Eot11e ot 11w 1boY1 dfrilontd •1 th• otllt• 04 ""' 1110"'"1:1----=cc-c~------- dollars, we will soon feel the Academy of Allergy. 1~! °Ft:,u:;.,.."1•1,,"J:,'1, bti!;, "''· N1mt0 d1tt111n1 c.uNAll.O '"" ic 1111t. 111 "°"" 11011. 11:1EscLuT1oN 0 ., TMI' A I. led 60t) 1 Noll•¥ Public Irr llld to• ltld 5111•. CUN••o tftd Kt•K S•nla Ant , Ct lllotnlt t11C1, which 11 I OARO OF SU,E•VHOlll full force of a charitable n es ima persons °'''°"'ur •PPtt•M Ch•r1" E. 5111,~ 111 Ntn11 .,.. •he Pl1ct of 1>u11neu o1 111t ullder11,,,..., o• 011:.•NGE ccuNrY, •1 d ' h It 11 tnd Enid M llWll ~llOWll 111 mt St nll Ant, C•MI. t'11t1 ln •II mt llt" oerl1l11lroo lo 11'1• nlllf C•LIFORNIA c risis,• says P eterson. 1e eac year as a resu ,0 Ill' th• ,.,.on• wtio.~ "'""' , .. T11: so ... ,11 01 111d llKltdt~•. wnn1n tour mon111t ,,..,"',,,. z. ''" The American ASSOC'iation Of Of ••,ere a t'•rg·JC reacU'on to 1uto1crlbttl lo !ht within l111l•umt'11! t llll AtlomtYI llr A•mlll!11r1trl• lftt< IPle n,.1 °"Dllt11lon ol llllf nollce. On motion Cf SuPll,...11« Ctll'f''• du"' "" f<:: •c•llllWl<tdte<I 11\tv l •Kultd lllt itmt. Wltll·WUl-An!ll~"' Otlltd Ftbruarr J, ltll -"'CC<lllacl •...i cer•led, 1"-foUo..!nt Fund-Rai!ing Counsel, v.·hich penicillin The researchers cOFF1C•AL SEAL! Put11lt11tc1 o,,,,,. cw11 0111v PHot !~::11n~·,.~:1~bl•,.1111.w111.A,,,..,~H1 111:~"~,1~,:','.'c~~ •• ·~=--···· ,,,,, "- l'ncludes -t of the lead1'ng " JOAN E. '°ULE l'tbrlltl'l' f, U, 23 11111 Mt rtl'I J, 1'11 -..,,.... .,¥• ··-· sai'd that ~•ha~ 50 1,·mes No11,.,. Public -c1n•o•fll1 )Q).IJ ot tht 1!1t1tt o1 "" 10 '"" 11 ••t art>t1111w 1ut11rrl ud ti professional fund raisers. sees ,.... ,... '°""''ct o •• ,,., ~lloYt 111......i •cH1nt oro¥JcJe t1ructu•1r 11,, aro1tct1on ttn'lc.tt mo-d1'e or diseaae• which ~!...comm,,, ,,",•,Ion E•l>ltt• LEGAL NOTICE ~~.·.·.•,0_•."' JUltl( Cnlr; Ind only one likely source for the •"' ~-·--·-WHEREAS, 1~r. Botru 11 M 11>t °"1n1c,. needed increase In philan-......,;dllin ""n cure but "·y Publl •l'ltll 0..•11•• cw11 01!t¥ "1101 S•nt• an1, t:1t1t. ""' nr..t 11111111< con...,.11"'' •NI ntetHllr -·~ ..,.. • UK Ftbrllt!'Y 2) •lld Mtrcll '· t, 11, ltl1 4117.71 l ·l1• Ttl: Ml.fJll •tc1ul11 !ht loc:•l Ptrk, rtcrt•llon •"' thropy . were thought to •• alterg1·c NOTICIE lO CllEDITCll:I """"'"tn ... Admlftltlt•lrlx Pttkw•Y ftCUlllf1 '"" lt•Y!Ctl ""' ~ LEGAL NOTICE SUP•••Olt t:CIUllT 01' TN• •lllt-Wlll·AnM•ed P"OVldtd wrtll1n Co1111,., s ..... 1 ... Art• Somehow corporations m ust sTATl ol" t:111.iFc11N1"' •011 0 , , 0 , •. ,,., ••• ,, -· ,, • to the drug a·• were oot Pub11~ ""'e .... • •T ''"' be persuaded to make much IN THI COUNT'!' OF OR•HOI!: FtOrUll"I' •• u. n t nct Mtl'Cl'I 2. 1'71 NOW, Tl'IEREFOAE', eE IT HEREBY' . .1 JO • ...,. Ht. A.a!N 302·11 ll:ESOLVEO l~,r I llfltlflll Ul>Oll ti'• larger contributions to v oluu· given I • ClllTl .. ICAT• 01" (Clll'CllATION .. 011 E1t1!t Ill ELSIE SHEPllrtO, Ot<ra!ld. OUtI!lon ol prcYidl~v , ... •bovt 8dd!llOllU ta lz ti U t h • . h lllANtACTIOH 01' IUllNE$1 UHOlll:. NOTICE IS MEll:EIV GIVEN to "'' h'HI ol ·~•eroded u ..... 1ce1 wl!hln 111'5 ry organ a ons. p o now , p ys1c1ans a ve .,1criT•ous NAM!' cr..i11or1 01 1111 1bovt n1mt0 dt cta•n• LEGAL NOTICE coonry ~ery1ce A•t•s wiu o. lltld In Although corpora tions con-h d t I r t t• I ,~. u ...ier•l•ned CorP<H'll!o~ dotl ''"' 111 .... IOlll ht•l"O (ltlm1 agaln1t lllt Ch1mbt•1 o• the 80brd cl 5upetYllOfl 3 0 re Y 3 mOS en Ire )' lle•eOV c•rlllY !h1! rt 11 cond11c'flng ll'lt s1ld d.Cedenl I,. •t<l~lrtcl to flit 1•11 Jffl Ill ttlt Ccun!V ol OrtnQt In Ille Countv t rol 8 huge proporlion O( the b th ,. i' d d t 1•mtll/tl •ttlflnto bu1lntH ti ~tll 111,m, wllh ll\t n10ttWl'l' VllV'h~tt, In HOTl(I TC CfllDllORI' Adll\l"l•lttl!on 8ufldlng, llS No r 111 t' · Ith h I n e pa 1en S wor an c 1111 dtl s.o1. C.tPlit••no ae1c~. c111rorn\1 IM oftlc1 Ill iht clt •k 01 1h• 1trov• 1u,.1 •1o 11 t:OUllT c• THI! svc•mort St•etl, s11111 An~. c11110,111A, na ion S wea , I ey Pay a memo ry as to whether he ever undt• tht 11c1111out i1rm "'"'t ol Rttdl~• ... ru1tc1 <"""· 11• lo Prntnr ttrtm, ~l!h STATE 01' CALtPC•NIA FOii: on !tie lO!h d•Y ct M"'•"· 1t11 ~' relatlvely insignHicanl role in . . • • & Guld•nce St•Ylct• o1 Sot1tl! or11111• ,,,. ~eceu•"' YCud'lt rs, 10 1~e THE COUNTY o• OllANOE tht "'°"'cl io:oo 11·c1ock A.M .. which dt•t rtl . had a pen1c 1lhn reaction And co..11,. 100 1...,, •aid 11.111 11 tof'l'aned u-n101111<1 11 111t o1t1c1 ot "'r •tta•~Y1. Ne. •..aut It ""t re11 '"'" :io ,.0, mor• •h•~ 60 d••• suppo ng communi t y h h d . ol '"' loUowlM lO'Po••tlon wh111eMclCE NNA & FITTING. P.O. lloK Jll•. ,, " some persons w o a never '''"'''''•••••••··•I••••,,,, r~llow•· 1•lCIO El Toro Rofd, sun, A, L•oun• f:9!11t cl FRANK AUGUST FUNA • • ,tt, l~t d11te 01 lhl• 1tt1olu!lon. services dependent on private -ed th d d.d t k v • HlllJ, C•ll!Otnlt t2'U, whkll h tho tlto kn.awn ti FRANI( A, FUNAR O IT FURTHER RESOLVEO lh•I h'] th nJ. Q I $!!00 TeeetV e rug I no nOW Ch1rl•1 Otvlno11 Contlrudlon. lflC • Dla<;e '01 bul!ntll OI -!ht UN1'1llt "f'd Dtt1111td, 111 Ille t vPnl 111cll adi!lll0111I ~t,...lcPi P 1 an o., .. y. n Y whether they would have an lW1 Ctm!no dt E1!rtl1&, C•P11"1"8 1n •II ,..,11.,1 ... ,111111n/, 10 tlM •"•t• NOTtCE IS MEREllV G IVEN to lht art 111thorlzH1 , '•• 1u111c1e111 ta PtY mllllon or last yf'ar'! total lltt cll, Ct!l .... nlt cit -•• Id df(~enl" wlt!ln fcuf monlll1 ~l!urs .,, tM lboYt ,,. ...... lftctdtftl"" •u<'PI •dilltlonol e•'""'"' lt NICft glvl."' Of lt7.6 bl·t1.·on Caffie a d verse aCtiOO. WITNE!S Ito htlld lllh U!~ dt Y Ill t ftrr !he !Int Pllbilettlon of 11111 notlct . llltl 1!! Pf•tont tr1wt110 d1l"'1 lf t ln1I will Dt lt wl..d 1nn1JOllY uPOn tll t••tblt •"e FtDtutrv. 1'11 Dflltd Ftbn.it rv 1', 1171 lht teld dtcedenl lrt •t<IU\rff 111 flit 11r11Mrt'I' wlllll11 tucll C111111ty S..•Yltt from corporate coffers. An a c ademy study group Cll••IH OtYIU.,.. Contl•11(!itlll, HAZEL SHEPARD lONEV llltm. Wflh ll'lt ntCHll!'Y VllU(l'lttl , Ill A•111. ewceol wlltrt rulld1 ••t olntrwl1• Feder.I tax l.ws " ·m·•t repOrted il performed :skin 1"'· 0 , .. ,,,,,, E•ttu1r1x ot 111e wut '"' 11111c1 01 tllt clt•I ot "" 1bov• •w1il1blt !tom 1ttwlct ell•••~' colltdtd , CM.t,llLES • 01 ll'lt •bow ntmed drcf'Otnl tnt!tled court, Ot 10 Ptttfrrl them. will! oursu•nl to .Sttllon 1•JIO.n 1 ct tllt II t I W 5 tests on 1.160 pa t I en I s, Prtsldt"' M<ICENNA IL FITI'INO lh• n1ctu1rw voucllt •I. lo lllt un, Gcve•nm•nl Cflll•. corpora ons 0 g Ve Up . . ,. th . h h . I ELLEN (. OAVISSOH, I YI Orwlllt W. McCtrtftt dtrs!tned ti <lo PLUNl(ETT & llE IT FURTME ll: 11,ESOLVEO lllol percent o f their income lo lnjeC 1ng em Wll c em1ca s Ste••'•"" ,,0, ••• 2JJI PLu111t£TT, 11torneY1 •t L1.,, •11 OllYt 1~e •tt•ilo.... 111cludtd wlll'lln Coun•1 Ph'.lanthropy ,, •• cla•·m 3 ta called reagents which c ause STATt: OF CALIFORNIA I 1011 11 .,..,, 11 •. , swtt•,, AY•., P. o . Bo• JH, M111111""'"" at1c11 5trv!c1 Art•• Hos 1a •nd 11 m•v IU X . • • , COU NTY OF ORANCiE lH. LltWlll Hlllt, C•lll9rnlt tUJl Ctlllor11l1 t7flf, '""l<h 11 Ille Pklct bt IHl'lf'rMlv d•tc•lbW tt . d tdu ction for It . peruc1lhn allergic persons t o on 1~11 lllh d•' 01 l"1bN1rv. 101, tie-T••: 11111 1)0.,.., ol' t>uslM11 of lhe unders1011"" •~ 111 U ld P•-11 11 to prtYldt Ioctl ""' B th • de,elop Weals O the Sk .ln Iott mt, I Nol•!'Y Publl< lfl 1114 IOI' ••Id •ttoollt'I'• 1or lltCUll"I• mt ll•n Derfalnlno to Ille Ulllt DI ricrt .. tlon t nd Plrllwav ltdlllitt t n.i ut ~ averagt corporation n • COYnty '"° 51111. •u lal"" rnt•tln, <1u1v Publl•lltd O••"lle cwil Di ltv Piiot 11ld decltdeflt, wrtll!ft rour mcn1111 1t1e1 Ml'\'l<tt 10 '°"""' 5t"'lct A,., No. actually gives Jess than 1 per-commlu l°""' 1n.c1 1wo•n, Ptrio11allv Fdl•..,.!'Y 2) 1nd "''"" i. '· it. 1111 1~ •:~• i~11<•11s ~~,v11' ""'let. 10 which • .,,,,,,,. 111 un!r1<o•D&•1t1'!f LEGAL NOTICE 1a1111r..i Ch11lt1 O•Yluon I NI Elle~ «1'1·11 • s"''': 0 M 11 ororitr!ltt 9e,,..rollv lflC'1t d ta1lt•IY cent of its income. r-.1any of c . Ot•lnon l1'0Wn 19 ,.., 1a Ill' lht 1ta · 1' neau ot 11~a M111 Avtnue •nd MtcArthur the bigger corporations nive 1'·1tN Prt•ldtnt '"" ~•c••l•rv cl '" • LEGAL NOTICE ~;;,ec:~i_:. 0~1!!;!i,~1!~:J.nt llouT1~1n1, ioulllt•f¥ 111 111"1"'• R"'" -l'fCTITIOUI IUSIMt:IS co•PC1•1fl.on lh•I ••tcultd lh~ Wllllln "LU Nlll!n & ,LUNICI TT tl'>d wn1•'1~ ol J•tnbor'M lloul,vtrd Jess than lhree-tenlhs o f one NAMll ,TATEMINT !1111rum1111 on beh•11 ol IM c11r1>0•1t1011 IAll: "'' ,11 cu •• AY•-I" '"" l•vlnt lndu11r101 Com1111~. ,,,... pe"C nt f th · · I Tht lollOWl"ll OltlOn 11 dol"' bull~tll lht rtln "'"'"'· Ind 1c-n.crwlfd1t•d lo HOTl'I TO CllEOITOOS I' 0 llei Ht lo CWnl't 5ffYl(t Artt No. 11, whlc~ ' e 0 l'lr income 0 ••· mt 11111 wch co•PoJ•llon •~t<u!fd lht SUflE'll lCll: COURT 0 , TMll! H~"1j,.,,.11 l••th. Ct!ll, ,161, (Oflll1h cf 11nl11COr1>Cr~tea orONrtl•• civic and charitable causes. euLLOCK'I lll:AVEL eu11EAU, 1 11me. ,, , , , T•ll l)f.JIM., """''' 11""''•11¥ 1oc•1tc1 •w•~•,1Y o1 Al~ \VITNESS m~ ll8~d tl'ld ollltltl te1t, .~'.'e'o~••s'v"o•' 0',',' !,',' ,,,_,,,, "' ••KVl<I• Avtn111, well"'!' of M a t A rt h u r Even that m'.nJ·scule amount F11hlon S<l\lttr, $.lnlt Afll, Ct lll. n v" ,. -II 1 d J1mt1 It. Mltchtll. ,,, Wll1c!Otl'ld1 (OFl'ICIAL ~EAL \ N """" Publl1htd o ...... Co11t 01lly Piiot Oll fYU and 11,d H;11 AY~llllt an(f d ·aws enough stat1·c l·o1n Or' Lt C•~•d•. c1111. tlCll PAUL 0 McCLAlt'I', Jll ' •. FtO ' )" 2l "" M C/I , l"I •••1t•lv 11t ·~· NtWPOtl Frtt .. •Y 1 1 Th!t bvtlllfll Ii conduCled by 1...iJvldUI! tlo!1ry P11bllc . Ct!l!o•nil llt!< of A91Y HOlSTE'IN RUTTER, •Yt •t' ' 1 1' ' lncludlnt tile o~ano~ C.ounh' lllroort SOme Stockholders 10 pUl COr• .$1t ntd J ... Ml!5 MITCMELl Prlnclo&I Ot!lcl In lkl A!lY H, RUTTER, e-t ... aav JOi·1l t nd •ti u11lnco•Po<~lf<I lt•r!t(ll'Y lflC~!M f 1 JH 0,•nqe Count., llUTTER, Otceasl'd, Dtlwetn Ille clllr1 or Cott• Me111 p or a te officials on l h e P~b!ltl!'' 0,,n,:,.1 '"'' ''"' Pilot M~ c0,,..m1,1111n E••l•n NOTICE is HEllE&Y' GtVEH tD lh• LEGAL NOTICE •'Id N1wPOrt le•d•, 1cut11trl~ to "•clllc d r """' Oct. 10, 1911 crrOllC1' 111 II!• •bo•• ntmed dtcH11nt (0111 Hlihw~v e en~ivt ebout making any Flb•u•rv )1, •nd Mtrc~ 7, •• '··~~;: Publl'l'lt<f O••ntt Cc••I D•ilv Pllol ,~ .. 111 pe,.on1 l!t vl"8 cl1lm1 111ln1t LIOAL MCTICE BE IT FURTMEll, RESOLVED '""' giftJ a l a ll. A ny improvement F•brua•Y J1 ,,.d Mauh J, t, 16. 1t11 'l!J.11 111" ""1d dect<1e11t ••• ••Quired lo 1111 HOT1C1 INVITING 1110s th1 Ctork o• rMs llo~•d is dl•tClt<t b EG ll'lnn, Wilh lh• 111ceu•rt vouclltr~ tn NOTICE IS HEREIV GlllEN llltl IO PUbU,n t nollct 111 ltld htt•t~ in corporate giving pro ably L AL NOTICE TICE •~t olfltt o1 tl!r clttk 111 th• 11toovt tllt ectrd or l•u1ttt1 cl tl'le Oc••n tn 111e O•tnllt cwtt D•lf'r Pl1c1. • \Viii ha\•e to a v.·all a Hirmali\'e LEGAL NO 1ntltl1d cw<l. o• lo .,, ... ,., ll!1m, w\tll 111~w sc11oot Dlttdc• o1 Or11111• c11un •v. nt•t<>aotr of t•ne•~I ci<<ul•llOll Pubtlihttl •·1'U I~• 11tce111ry vouchers. lo I 11 t Hunllnt :Oll lltacll. C1tlfe•nl&, will •etelve In 1"11 Ccunrv, Which PUbllcallQll 1P11ll a cliOn by the nOW-Silenl body ,ICTITIOUS I UllHl'SS NOTICf C, T•USTEE'I So\lll Ufl(ff'lltnt<I •I lht olllc~ OI "1! ArlorM¥1: bldl to ~urchtU Su11ollt1 I nd Eeulomt nl, l>t Mtdl ll"C~ tl !1111 1 d•Y1 Prior f t kh Id h • NA.Ml SfATIME1"T l .S. NI. 1·1170 DUJl:'l'EA, CAllPENTER .. e ... RNES llld1 will bt •ttl lVltd uo to ,.oa p_,..., to lht dtlr nl lh• h~•rl11<1, () S 0C 0 ers Y.' 0 3re11 t 'Tht lollOwl"" 1>1tioni lrt dolnt 011 Ftlday, Mirth II. UJI, et 1~·00 HlV : ERNEST J. SCllAG. JRl. ''" M•rc!I 11, 1111 , ti th• Ad..,lnll!,&llC" AVE5: SUPEllVISO llS ltONALO W, quite !ID hungry for dividends butln•n .,. A.M . Ill• Tl COl'POttt!O~ lof C1llto•n••J. MtcAMllu• BIYO .• p 0. lo~ 11N, N'Wl>O'I Ollie• Cl ••Id Sc"-! 0111rl(!, '97J W••ntl C_.,5PE11 5. WILLIAM J. PHILLIPS,~ a. lo Want Corporations I GRfG•S FAllR1C !.OUTIQUE. 3'0) I CorPOrtllon, lcfmtt!•. TITLE IN• Bt&ch, Ctlllotnlt '16tl, w!llch 11 the Avenue, Hu11rl""IOl't llt1ch, Ct lllo•nlt, 11 ... LPM I . CLAll.K, llOllE•T W. 0 V!t LltlO, Nt""°°" lttcll, c ,111, t1UO SURANCE llND T•UST COMPAN'I', tt Pit el o! bUllllttl ol "'' 1>...:ltnl1Md II wPlltPI lllT\t ttld bid• W!~ bt Ootned llATIIN Grt0 •lmbe!tlW t lld Ywonnt Klmbtrly dul¥ t -lntHI TPUtlH """'' •t>d Ill t ll mt tltr• 1>ttl•lnl11t lo tllt fl!•lt Ind ••Id lor ll'le pUrch&1t ol Suool!to NO!;S· SUPElt\'ISORS NONE U1J Andttw1 St., Tuilln, Ct lll. t76t0 ' ovriu•nl lo l)~td ol lru1I •l'<"'~'d Of 1t ld dtctOenl, •!thin l°"r monlh1 tnd Eoulamtnl, 111 1cc<1tdlntt with AISENT· SIJJIEll.VISOllJ CAV!D t... LEGAL NOTICE Tll•t tllltl"'u II btlne (Of\(t\IClfd bY 111 AUfUI• JO, •ffl, II llUI. Ho. "112, •ltt• "'' lltil Pllbllc•llOfl of flll1 notlc1, 51>1Clllc1!1on1 1'1t1W Ofl lilt In Int otflct II ICEli R d W • • R d • !...ilwidu•I fh111bend t 'ld wllt fl tolnt In bo<tJ '4". •••• t J7, 11! Oll•clt l Olltd Februt n' 1•. 1t71 of lt ld Ol•lrlcl. A e S n 1 n l~ntlllt). • llttO•ltt In ll'lt olflCf ol !hf' C.,,,nty J, EOG•ll: THOMSON llUnEll:. T,,_ llldllrt tUttt ftlttt lo ftll""r lttmi STATE OF C.t,LIFOllNIA I l 1 l g a •o G•tt Klml>trlv RtcorMlt' of OtlflVt C.ovnh' Calltarnll, E•eC1.1lor llf t/19 Wiii fl •Ptclfitd unffti i n i lttrMlt 11 COUNTY OF 011 ... NC:.E ! ''· • ... Yyo"'"' Klmbtt!Y Will SELL Af PUllLIC AUCTION ro ol"" •bo"" n•mf<I dtcf<l•nl dHltfllltd1 Ind low lllddf• •••ttl to ,, w, I". ST JOHN, CDUl!ty c1 ... P~blllhHI o,1,,., (IHJI Dtllf PllO! HIGMlllT lllOOEA FOii C.ASH !OIYtb!a OUllYl'A, C•RflENTt:ll & IAllNl:I lu"'!'PI Hdlllontl •urChllh ltOlll tlme and e•.offlclo Cltt~ Of 1~• l!o~•d 11' Mt .Ch 7, t, 1,, Jl, 1111 at.II ti 1111\f ~I l•lt In l1WIUI """''y nf •T: Ell:!ofEST J. SC:HAG, Jll, to !lmt with bid ptlc11 f Ut••nltHI SUPl'Yltot1 of Ortnt• County, Ct l!lorfllt1 W 0 V 1 fire U11llf(I 5l~lfsl 11 Ille to11lh Iron! 'llS M1cArl""1t llY•.. lo JuM 30, 1,72. ht•tbY (t rtltv lht l tlw tbov1 tnd ar Ver , •e tJlaJJ·i, LEGAL NOTICE tnf1'•1'1(• •o thr 01d O••n•• c""n"' ,.,c . "" 1"" An nem1 ••O'lldtd ,,,,Oll'llh 11111 bid 10 .. ,111,.. 11: ... 0111110t1 •11• duly ..... '. ., , ______________ '""''"°""· loc:1tf(I 111 '"' l'OO fl!oc:-N-...tt 11-~. t:1111, t76U tht!I Ul!llJllY wltPI GoYt mmtol! Coclt •Mul•d~ tdo91td bY '"' 1•kr 11.w-.J of Wtll len!1 An• 9...,!tYtrd !Po•mtt!Y Ttl: SH·ttof $.Cl!Ollf OD0-'361. ,, • '""··· mttll"" '""''°' htld ... BANGKOK . Thailand '<AP) Day and night, radio t r an s mitttrs in North Vielnam , Communi11t C h ina and R ussia pour a slrta m of propagandR into Thailand. If volume ls !lny guide, the Communists lieem to be "'ell ahead in the battle o f the air wives. Th1Uand I.a bringing a :i~w lG-lr.ilowatt transmltle.r Into tht: flrlng lint. The govtrnor flf Nakor n P hanom Province on !ht 1'-tekong Ri\•tr. \l·here Ille lransmltler \l'il\ be insL1lled. sa ys propaganda salvos from P eking are finding 1 h ' l r target! among the lnsurg~nts of northeast Thailand. "My province is ooly 100 lcilomtters from Hanoi. but IOO k i l ome ters from Bangkok." ht said. Radio Peking booms in loud and dear tn Thal, but Radio Thailand can be received only with dlfflo:alty once or twice 1 dq wbft the weather ls 1ood. How man1 person1 115ten to Hanoi, Pekin& and ~foscow l"·it21 Wtll t!ll StrttO. Slnll Ant , C1lllornlt , •t-w1 .. , E•tc\llW Tiit Ctlllotnlt 11111 It_~ will Ill' In Ille 1nd dtV of Ftbtut r'jr, lt'1, •NI FICTITICUI IUSINllll 111 right, !lrlt t n.d lntrrnl COl't¥tYr0 Publll!lt<:f 0""'' Cot ti Ot l!Y l"llol tdellllon to tM ~rlct1 <1110lld, l'edfrtt Pl llf<I b¥ a un•nlmDlll ~ott OI ltTd 1, opeo to quest'on but th NIMI JTATIMt:HT to In.cl llCW ~.t(f bv I! u'ldt• tald Ftb•Wln' " Olld "'"'" 2, t, lf, lt11 E~cl .. Tt, t•t ...... llOfl AMlnctrtl •Ill ll""nl ,.,..,..too~ ort1e11!. I • e Tht lollo•1M ptftOfll '" do!no OHCI of Trull 111 lllf ··-•tY sltu••lll '12·71 Ill' l11rnl1htd. II IPPllcablf. IN WlrNE5S WMl!Jll!'OF. ' hl \N' lack of rellable ratings does IM.!11neu ,., In 11111 countv 11111 st111 111tc•lbtd Tll• a ci •d ol T•v••tt• ''""'" llle lle•eunto ut mY lland .r•d H•I lhi• di h FREE Dll:Y LAUHOllOMAT, 1'1.fl fl; LEGAL NOTICE rltht to "lict •~r arid 111 bldt, t lld 711d dtY ol Ftbntt l'l'. H1!. nOt SCOUragl! t em. Ht•bo• lllVll., (l)ltl Mtte, Cl!ll t?.,_, l o! U, In l!IOC\ ,1 ol Fltil AddlllOll to w•1Yt t nv lrtt111t1r!I\' lhe1tl1\, ($EAL1 Almost every major country Aobt•t E. sc111111d,,, ,,, E••• ,,lld to N'w"°'' k•lth1<1, tn !ht c 11v of Doltd Ftb'"'" 1. "" w, E. ST JOMN SI. Apt. l•C, Col!I Mtlt r l'tlN.t' Ntwoo.i 81"<:11, County 111 0•8110~. Sllllt ''""' OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL C°""'" Clt•k flld or-clll(IO has a ~hortv.·ave transmitter H. sc11ntld1•. 176 E•'' 2?n<1 s1.. 0, c1111or1111, a• ,~11wn en !ht M•P CEll:TIFICATE Of IUUNl!SI OISTRICT Clrrk 01 1he 110.lfd 01 suo~·~11ori •• • t t• . ,..Pl, J.C. CO'lll Mt••· fltCCfdtO '" eoc-4, P•~t t4 o! l"ICTtT!OUS flllM NIIMI ev· Gtll•ot G Let•" ()I Or•noe Countv, Ct ll lornl1 1.11:;8m1ng OU 8 par l~An VJl!W Thi' butlnttf it trt1no conducted by Ml e,11.ntou• Mep1, 1~ 1111 oll!<• ol Ttie under,io~e-o do ht•tDY (trt!IY cifi1t OI lht • e~ M•t.el L, C••l~I• o r event,,, So1ne. like the Voice "' un•nco•l>(trattcl IJJ«!ttlen, "'' C'olmh' ltt<"tdfr OI Ot11no•'t:1N11h';-lhtl --••• (OlldV(Tln• • l ,V, ..... llot•d "' "fr111!et' °""'"' Or Amer'·,,. the B r 11 1' 'h •,· •• ~:*,,': .. s~~~~.·.·.. Tht 1t<HI tdO''" •n<I Ollltr (Olll"IO" AoPlltncf b11'111!11 •' !'71. Ult M1r1>or " bll•hl'(I o ...... '°"'' D1!!1 Pil~t ll:F ~. 11 171 ,,.. " ~n,., dt!lgnt!IOll, U i n>. of IM ,.,1 proPtrl't fllvd, CllV ol Cost1 Mt111 County OI flb~1>l'Y n t nd Miich J, lt1! «ll·1l HDTICE 01' MEA RINCI Brondca~lin" Corp., and Radio Pubt11twd o""'' Cot11 D•11Y P11o1. d•ic•lbtd 1boYt 11 11u111or1 ac1 lo bt: Or1111t. st••• of c1111on111, ullll•• ttlt NOT ICE !• ~t•fllv llYe~ •h•' -o Mi•ch ~. t, 11.-u , 1'71 *·11 :JOOO CltY S!r..,t, Ht.,l>Otl 1Lt1ch, 11CllllOUI firm n1m• cl dt1lt n111on which LEGAL NOTICE floerd of Su111rvl1<1rt cl tht Ca.ml'f Australla, take 5 u b 11 el--------------1 c11110rn1•. do•• net •how tilt 1tu• """"' or 11tmn ot o"'"''' s111e o1 c1111or11I• ~., b., .ppro.'h. Other'. tl.ke R Hdl.O LEGAL NOTICE Tti• ..nd,.1l1111Ct l rvtl•! dltcl1lm1 1nv 01 !ht PlnoM 1nttrelltd In 11ld b111t,,.u. Rtl'itu•!on No, '1·127, d111-11 Fetrru••t' 1 --------------I lltblll" !or fllt' ln<orrKl"'ll of !tit IO-Wll: NOTICf lC CllEOITOllJ 1 lt11 dttltrtd l~•I • llt•r!nO .... Peking, rely on tbrl!al.I andj' ,, .... , •l!df'lll •M ollltt <ommon H!;NOEll:$0N'S TV IL •PPl,IANCES '"" SU,.1:111011:. t:DUll:.T OF THE •• P•c~•I !O IUfll hh 10(•! Pll1c. rte•••· CEllTl •lt:A;~~s: llUllNEll Ot•l1n1t1011, II ....... ,,,.... "•••In "''' ttld "'"' I• C<>mOOlfd ol ·~· ST•T• 0, C•l.ll'CIRNIA tlen 1114 o••~.,.y l•clllllfl 1P\d 1t,...ICH v ilification. •tCT lllOV• ·--· ll!• Hit win bt ""'°'· ""' .. 11Mu1 fcllOYol"' ot•IOllt. •lllK• "'""' •lld FOii THll COUNTY Cf wllhlll Coufft• , ..... 1c~ Affl• Nc1 10 ...... COYlntnt (II' '"'"'"ly, 1•0•111 or 1moll911. lddt•IKI ••• I I fQllowJ' ~ CIRAMDI! . ArnericllnS I Tll, u"""r111nf!I do c•rtllv •~tY •rr itt••d\"9 1111., "°''~"!""· or ..,. llol>trf WtntT NI•. I.OJI t.1111tf.urft Ht. A"'n1 •n.d H, •ft(! 111 Olllttllon1 '"'" tc, will are a W a Y ~ conouclln• • builntu •' 1111• E.:1t1w1111 cumD•t11<1t, !& OI Y IM •tmt\l'\no erln-Sl•H!. w~lnl,,. Wiiiiam Cv•ut Nl1 £11111 o1 Mt•Y v1111n11 Clllldt. •llO trt twld bY Hid llw•d 1" '"' Cl'ltmbl'" 1 ' a g gr e !is ors' • or L11 .. Mun!lne!Ofl fl•tCl'I. C•ttlo:ot11l1, y~df.t cll>tl 1,,... of Ille nOlf !tQl"f(J bw xis Notlll RPH SI•«'· A"111tlm t n.own 11 Mtrv 111,,1n11 \chlln1, Dtcttl· o1 -ftotrd cl su ... •vlw'°' DI !"41 "" lfcthl01.11 llrm n11T\t ef "·"'· ltld Ote<I 01 'Ttv1!, ,.wll: 110Ald0.t&, WITNESS out l'l1nct1 thlt 1tth dt• M (911111\' ol O•t"''' 111 ll>t Counlw "1m~rh11i!';ts.'' :tnd 0 f I en PU.LltMING CCMPAN'I', •1111 ""' H id wll,, l11tt•t1t .,,,,..,.., I I Or{IYldfd I~ ol Ftbr111,..., lt71 NOTICE IS HEAEIY' CIVEN IO Ill• "'dmlni1tct1I011 llultdlftl, ,1, N 0 I r 't ll•m It (-...fol 1111 fOll-!M M<Mflt, it ld nett, t dYll!Ctt. If t11Y. """' !II. JIOllEllT WESSE'V NIX (tHJllOtl ol lfrt tbOW llt llltd dtc~nt S•Ctmctrt Strttl, ~·1111 "'nt . Ctllfltrft•t bloodthirsly 01\CS :\( Iha!. wh°'o n•mft In lull t nd OIKfl ol I•""' of tlld OH•I ti Tru<I, ltt!, WILLIAM C'l'llUS NllC 11111 t it PIOOflf Pl1~l119 cl1lm1 11tl lft1! 011 lllt IOtll dty ol l.lt•ch, ltll of Thtir alllrs are \•arlous lv '•1kl•."'" •rt II lollOWI ' (hftro~• In.cl flNnM1 cl !til T•ll <Ttt STAT! OF CAl.IFORNl.t. ) lllr ,,Id d~I .,. rH!ulrtd lo flit' Int Plou• of 10.00 O'CtOI',, AM .t , 11.;cll.l•O L, Mtrll!I. 11116 E~•wlt*r •n<I ot '"' l•u111 crtt!t'd bJ said I 11. '"'"'· with Ille Ml:tilll'l' _,,..,., In "'""" 11mt tn<I plU• 111 ln!!!O•t"1 runnlng dogs. h" n chm f n' I ". MWfllln<iton a •• c~. E. llffl P1dll lt, ()of<! o• ,.....,, COUNT'!' OF ORANGE I "" olflct °' "" cl ... ol , ... #flov• I I •Pt •r lo• In I du"'' Stoos" "r lack•ys. IM• 5111 Ctr,....ntt. flu•111 ,.,,_, lrw e.MllC••"' und•' 111d C.M el 011 thl• 1tt11 d•' ot FP'brut rv. A.o , ...,11111t.:1 cou•'· " io .,.,,..,, '"'"'' wnn :;;•~ ,,1:;111,: °' r ,r.! •bo , or ...;1~~ 1 1 "" D11H fib. JJ. lt11 Trull Nrt~lott t•~utfli lllO <!t!lv••td lt11, btl(W"t ""• ll'le Un<1t .. !tntO. • lllf' MUHll'V ...ouc:l\ttl, ta IPlt -u• Y • The •·uth y 1 et n 1 me 5 Alc.l>art L, Mlrf'ln IO t!lt vnctt,.!tt...i 1 wrl!ttft Dt<1111tlen Nott<T 1'11bllc In •NI IOr uld Coo.intr dtr1itnff ti tht "'11ct of MkNI•! Olon, l'Ylltt or Pit!IC!f'd i...-..lcti will "" i'lf.8'11, o.J<.I e E, lltn Ptdlllt of Oi••~I! t M Otmt!ICI lor k+t, tnC1 l l'MJ S!llt. Ptlldl"f 1 .... r.ln du tr AllO""' 11 l t W UOO Ad1m1 AY....W, NOiiet h tu•tllt< t lw•fl "''' ll'lt "•I thrust Into I aos brought forth s11~ ol c1u11tnl1, or'"'' Cwl'h'1 , w1111'" N<lllcl ot O.f•ult 111.:1 E1tc1111t1 ..,fl'llulonHI 1n11 '""''"· ,.,..,...11r coart Mtl•. t'M6L w1110r 11 11111 Pll(t o1 "'' •l:IOY• 1111111ut1Qn of tht lu'"' • On Ftl)ru••Y 11. ,.,,, Dtlort ""' to 5•11. T"" ltNJtnloN'd (IU1f'd U ld ·-•ttd Rebtrf Wt UIY Nii Incl W\Wtm al buslntH ... ll'lt y,..,.,..19,..., In •II Of '"""'1'°" 1, 1H1che<I ~lff!O .... a fres h strtam • Na•"'• """11c I~ '"" •or ••Id SI•!•, Nollu 01 o.ttun 1nct E1..:11"" 1o s111 (Y"" NI• --" te m• ta bt 1110 m11tr•1 "'''""•"' hi fl>t ttt1t1 of 1ncor.,...•1tc1 ~~•.,n Mrtcn1l1¥ IPate•eO llichtrd L. M•rtln 10 i.. •tconltll In tl\O countw w11tr• 11rt0n1 •l\llH "'"'" t•t •ulltcrlbtd ,,i. dK"""'· wlll'lln ' "'°"'"' i nt' O.TfO thf1 ?'Id d•~ of F•~'"'"'' R11dio Pckinll w ;a r n e d & E lltl' Poo1111 -~o .. n t6 "'' •o 1111 t611 o"°""' 11 loc•IH. to !l!t w11111n 11111•\ltl'lfflt, • n d t111· rlnt l'llbllc~•km OI 1111, nc11c1. 1•11 "' ....... ..,,, •• ,,..,.. ntmfJ •rt Ofllt l "tbruary 11, 1111 ·~kn.ct•ltdoff ID mt '"" "'"' tl!KUtff O.tW l'.WV.r; ,, 1'11 --L~v o•ttE• OF TME ao ... •o OJI "Laoe: l.t: • close nei&hbor of 1ull\cr!bHI 16 "" Wltll Jn 11111~..w Thlt fl (ll'll:Ol'•llOll. tllt •• ,..,_ MlcnHI Dion. .... ~PlllV1$01t! Of" OllJINOE COUNTY, •c•-ttd•M '~"' t.CtCVIM""' -· fol Ct!lfornl•I WllNE•I my hltnd 11111 offl<l•I '"'· l •tcut'O!'-'"" CALtJ<OtltNIA China. u. s. imperlalil!m'• !OFFICIAL SEALJ • alt , Ill!''""'"'· (OFFICIAL SlAl) Wiii (If !ht ......... (Sl!ALJ M11'Y lttPI Mc•!oll lllLI INSUll:.ANCI ANC MAllY lll!:TN NtOll:TO"' Nt,,.,...'9Ud9111 a guesslon •l•insl Laos Is Nol1rv l'11bllc-C1llfc(nl1 TllUST COMl'AN'( N<ll•f'Y Public . c.1~1111 MkttH I o... w. I , ST JOM't t In llt1nc101I Otn<t 111 11 llld TNtlH , Ptlnc:l••I Oftlr. In U• AQft\t A.--, COlllllJ Cltrll: Ind r1-o!lltlo Cl~rl( a SQ I &J'AVe menaC~ lg8 St 0'1"'• CDUn!v llY Tllomtl Autl!ll On11tt (DUllfW Cnll """•• C..Ufw1111 t'M:M OI 1111 lot•d ol SU .. rY\10l"l ., China. The Qiineae people MY commruron 11.u11H n111 Mr COl't'lmlnlen •••!I'll l •h CITO .... ,.,, 0111111 '°"""'' C'1lto•11!1 Al'rll t, ltll J>ubfl•"'41 N.......,.,,, H1P'bor NIW'I l'•tu Aorll ,, lt11 A~ ftr IMCllltor 11¥ Mitt.I I., (tl!tl• l b801Ultly will not rt:maln •11t1l!tf'ltl Oft"'' c..u 1 Dt1IY "rltl, COmbl""' •1111 Dl11w l'!kft, Nnooort Pub11'1lfllll 0t111tt Ce1t11 D1ltv l'l!ol '"'"'''"" t, 16, 22 •nll Mt"" t. lf'1'1 o-1v indiffere.nl to It: F"'""'"' tt ,,.. ""l'dl t. '· '" "" •-"'· C•lllfH'n!• '"""'ry tt, 2J. ,..., ~111»v.rv n ""' N•rtll t. t, 11. 1•11 1'111111111 .. Or•"" c .. 11 0111"1 ,.,lo!, """11'""" 01•flt9 C0t11 0111w 110,... .ftliJ.11 M••Cl'I ,, 1f71 U).11 411).71 2tl•11 Ml ttll 1. lf11 tn 11 ' • Lean Honored HOLLYWOOD tUPll Director Da\/id Lean was awatded lhe Order of Merit by the Argentine Producers Association for his l i l m , "Ryan's Daughter." Actors Divided On Scott's Snub By VERNON SCOTf HOLLYWOOD (U P!l George C. Scott ls absolutely correct in the eyes of most movie actors: It is foll y to single out one performance by an actor as tbe ve>ry best. It is just as foolish to single out one girl in. say, the Miss America pageanl and proclaim h e r the m o s t beautiful In the country. Scott's argument is not with the motion picture academy per .se. He believes it is an affront to all actors to put them in competition with one another as a handicapper might do in a horse race. Jo·or his own reaSOM SColl - has an Inordinate pride ln his profe>ssion. Unlike many, he takes acting seriously. Perhaps that is why many of his peers consider hlm among the world's greatest actors. Scott would snort at the assertion , but his work is, unquestionably, out.standing. Al a gathering of actors this week his refusal to be part of the Academy Awards was defended by some and attacked by others. "I support him ,'' said Anthony Quinn, himself an Oscar winner. "I don 't necessarily agree with what f ....... he says. But he shOuld speak g&IL '( f'1LOT $1111 P'lltl1 T11tM:lay, Marth 2, 1~71 DAILY PILOf I Na11ied Exectatlve VP . Zanucl{ J1·. Joins Warner'g BURBANK f U PI ) greate~I profit maktr of them mcnt faltered, however, and Richard o: Zanuck, rlred as all. "The Sound of Mus1c.1' a series of losing pictures put production chief at 2<llh Cen·f ==l="='"'='="t=y='="'='=h=i='=l=·u~d~g-==t=h'='='"=d=io=i=n=t::h::'=':;od:;:;=•~C•;l::n;. tury-Fox Studios at the in·\ stlgation of his father. wlllr-~~~N~A~T~JO~N~A~L~G~E~N~E~R~A~L~T~H~E~A~T;;;R;E;S;;;::::--~ join rival Warner Bros., Jt was announced Monday. - Moving with Zanuck to ,.._,l/..IL ··"TI'lfD Warners March 8 is David -A::Qln. Brown, Fox's former creative L'll"n"V director who was ousted with ~. i& cS: the "" ., ho.cd chairm'" .•• A··u-o·orv Hroo11RN·ocv u1001mN Darryl F. Zanuck. nll U:UU l\U\ llMI\ JU At Y.' the ~ UtllldDl·rAMHla -~ ~· '"" arners, younger 1..1[' i _t \ 1 L ,. J....J. • ·Zanuck w1JI have the title of --'* -· -. . M .... t~•" 111vn. •n.-t & u P'.M. senior executive vice president 1 P'M. ~r.-l:»I ,, 11 and report directly to Ted s ..... -1::11-s.i:""' Ashley , ch le( executive officer. Brown will be the senior pro· duction executive in New York City. TV I Ally LOG out his thoughts. If that's the • _ 11 ~~ .. ~e feels I cannot criticize Best Actor Another star of ma j 0 r Bill Cullen Oeft) receives the DAILY PILOT Distin· _ .,. _ __,, ;J,.." • Ji~_.. magnitude asktd that his gdu!tshedT PerTfo1rmafnceh.a\\'ardf from e~tetrhtaindment Ashley said in a slaten1cnl : ''Mr .. Zanuck \\'ill contribute importantly to the \Y;irner production team. es well as to the general management of the company, by reason Tuesday Evening MARCH 2 1:00. Bia NIWI .Jtrry O~n~hy. GI KNBC NEWSERVICE * SPECIAL CLOSE-UP of ORGANIZED CRIME in SO. CALIFORNIA O lrtYPO "M1cho." A Pver1o Rk:1" arocer In "El BllTlll" Is tll1t1t1ntd 1ftt1 11vin1 1 politem1n from 1 IHn11e 1an1. J1lml1 Sancllez, Mii· ltm Colon 1uast. 0 @ (})al ABC M0¥1t ti tllt Wttli:: "T11111" (we1ternJ '71 Clint Walker. B1rry SvllNtn, m Olwld Fmt Shn IE Ftlofry $4utd fD Ttn•H Ptlnt.r. Tht Wirt tf Wlnslw Homrr 0 kNIC NNMrvltt Tom Snyder. @?.\) Patt.r~ fir Lh1n1 0 Thi Alltn Slltw Ill l& Crildt l ltn Cr11f11 0 Color . MARLON BRANDO 9:00 0 @ 00 m flrll: TUHdlf TOP· *"THE APPALOOSA"! ics: 1e1ture on th• life rtytt 011111 O Sh l)'ctodl Mll'llt: "fttt Appt• Amerlun thelWOJker; report °" tht loou" (westun) ·67 -M1rklni boomin1 ski Industry In 1111 Jtock· Br1ndo, Anj1r1et11 Comer, .lohnl lts and the ullrtn·.ttyle pnibltt11s It Suon. A cawooy, 1n uuped m111. h11 caused; filmed rt~rt on ,.op~• de1er. tries to stilt 1 ntw lilt Mth "'ho do no! behev• in the AMA 1 • 110111 brHdln1 r1nch until his w1eWQ-O!nt on c1ncer curt: ft1h111 maanilkent A11111loou 1t1Tiion ii on tltt Dutel! K1bollttn P1rty, Am· 1tolen by , Ma.:lc1n bindit. ste1d1m's lourth bl11est po!ltic1I 0 DIU Vtn Dykt p1rty ; eoricert of elecironic musie by !ht First Moo1 Qu1rtel. m 1111 Rlnllton11 B Tht Fu1ttN1 ''Th1 Witch.~ An CD @(}) Stai Trek lm111:in1tiva child tlmoit m1k11 ID Mvflln11nd '1he A~umn World" Kimble Ille vittirn ot • mob. Mad•· £l) fllller ftrn lly lelne Sherwood. P1!r1ti1 Crt1wl1y gunt @II HDtlc.1111 34 Q) I 16CllL I Sin Cit111 .t !hi &D lll1nd1 In !ht Sun World A clou look It ptestnltd 11 (SU Hort f111111itr co11 Consuelo !ht popul1r cilit-'-1mon1 them (D K1'1.M P'lrn Htwthorne/Gntr. Sin11par1. Matto, Lis Ve11s. Ti· Ju lna-11111 oflt or mo11 of 11\t •·seven Deadly Sins" m1y bi lound. ED Hcltywood T1lrti1io11 Tht1tr1 "Montserr1!." Ulli•n H1Um1n'1 1d1pl•lion o! 1 susp!ntlfut French pl1y by Emm1nuel RoblH cent111 1rt1und an idetlistle youn1 offictr In lht Sp1nish occup11ion fflfCU In VtM.1u1l1 in 1812, 1:15 f.t) Art Sludlt 1:30 0 C.Mid C.mtrt m Tiit FtrlnC Nun m Hod1•Pfldat Lodr• @m S.ltdld FH11/Muslt1lt m TH Dfflrt llltptt1 Cl)ltl Olvld*s aJAICHrn 7:001J CIS Htwt Willer Cr~kllt. CJ ml NIC Nt'll'I Dtvld Brinkley, Frink McGee. John Ch1nt:1Hor. 0 Whit's Mr llnt7 m ~(])I Lovt Lu~ C!) Dr11n1t E!i) Clr1H1n11 Ql L& Constltado• m "''""' 1:30 IJ 9 CIJ All In ,thll F11111J Ctnolt · O"Connor, JHn Sttp!~on, ftob ~tln· er. Silly St1utllers stir. Nthlt tt· tempts to bvy out !ht bltek hmlty th1t Is pl1nnin2 lo moYt In down th• st1eef. e ttnd111 c.111111 E!i) Mulit1lt/P1stor's Dtlk Em Ctdtfll ff Al!plti11 ED f1nt111 "NCT Opert Th11trt: ·Quten of Spadu'." M En11ish· 11n1u11• ~enlon ol Tch1lkavsky'1 open, bro1dc1st In 1tereo w_ith 10:00 0 13 ([J CIS Nh'I H6Ur A b1· Peter Hum1n Adler eonduct1n1 hind.the·ictnes vlrw al 1 Whitt member• ot !ht Baston Symphony HouY: Stale Dinner. Alao featured Orch11tr1. Is 1n 1~pear1nct by he1vywti1ht (I!) Cllrht ·tftt LI¥1n1 Wlf4 champion,. .k11 fr1rle1-1nd Mu~ name not be used but said, e 1 or om 1 us or 1s per ormance in e rama ''Scott is a fool and making .. David and Lisa'' for the Westminster Contmunity a lol of noise to no purpose. 1'heater last season. Cullen is in costume for his But I'm a member of the role in ",i\ Thieves' Carnival." Academy and I have a vole. ----------'-------------- or his long experience, first as executive vice president in charge of production and subsequently as president nl 20th .Century-Fox ." When it comes time for me to vote for besl actor my nnly thought will be for whal George put up there on the screen, not about his popping off." One actor observed Iha! Scotl was just drawing attention to himself. Mesa Sets Youth Sl1ow At 28, Zanuck took charge 'Alice in Wonderland' -~or the Fox lot and bailed the studio out o( flnanci:il trouble '"'ith a series of hit pictures, including the from 8 years through high school will be conducted B • • D r; r. RESERVED S!AT IN~AGIMINT \\ ... orraal •.&~1 I~ •-~ ~ "I don 't agree," said Ricardo Montalban. "He did the same thing 10 years ago \l.'hen an Oscar would hive helped his career." The Costa Mesa CI vi c Playhouse has a nnounced tryouts for its most amibiUous young people's production - a musical version of "Alice in \\'onder\and." \Yednesday and Friday from en j81.lllll ll ~ 3 to 5 p.m. in the Community lj•••••••••••••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Center auditorium on the Fo1· •Po1·tnoy' 11 Quinn spoke up again . ''I don't believe Ge<irge gives an y thought to his career in terms of awards. He. is inter.esied. only in what is the final resuU or his work." Dick Crenna said, '"The Acad emy me m be rs hi p shouldn't consider w h at George says or does off. screen, only his performance in 'Patton.'" A casl or more than 50 characters will ht: selected for the production. Auditions for young people , Com·se Set In Acting Oraose Couoty Fai,grounds. EXTRA! Wednesday Night at 10:00 Th• cast .-ill "hca'8e du,iog HOLLYWOOD (Al'l -_MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW - these hours on ~ondays, Richard Benjamin has been ( \Vedncsdays and Fridays. selected by \\'arncr Bros. 10 1 PORT THEAT.RE -No Extra Price! Backstage volunteers also portray the lead character "Patto11" ot 7:00; f'r••lew '' 10 :00 : "Patto11at12:00. are needed for the multi-set Alexander Portnoy in lhc l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ mus I ca I • A d d it ion a I filming of Phillip Roth's besl·lt information may he acquired ·selling no v e I , "Portnoy's by calling the Costa Mesa Complain!." Recreation Dfparlmcnt at 834·1~~~~~~~~~~~~.\I 5303. POR'I' THEATRE 2905 E. COAST HWY., CORONA DEL MAR -673·62" 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS e BEST PICTURE An actress who has never "''o n the Oscar listened to the men quietly then s a I d . "Wouldn't if be great if George won.'' A course in method acti ng will be conducted on Tuesday evenings at Troy High School ~-;;;~;;;~~; in Fullerton by Herma nil l•l"•• Po11l~1wlo 67).40~1 -o,.n 6;45 u .t.C.t.OEMY I . • BEST ACTOR-G.org& c . Scott e BEST DIRECTOR e BEST STORY •nd 6 MORI NOMINATIONI ··Why?'' somebody asked. •·11 would prO \'f the Acadt!my Awards isn't a popularity contest,'' the actress said, "The academy is always taking a r.ip for voting for personal favorites. If George won, it would put an end to all that.'' Tht: actors at the party changed the subject but only after they agreed generally that George C. Scott never gave a poor performance. Boodman. T~oy High drama teacher and Orange County theater critic. Instruction will be given In breaking down a scene. cold r'eading, acting preparation and character development. The lee is $4 for the 11-wee>k session. Classes wil begin March 23 In Room 531. Fu rt her information may be obtain ed by calling Boodman at 879- 7880. Pick Your Own .• 'Osca1·' Winners ~do NIW,O•t llit M •• •• ;~ ••• , ... ,. •• l•~•I••• 11~0 lolo •• Ot l·ll.'D ........... 0 NOMINATIONS ......,=====~ Ill[ llUWIU 0~( MOV£l Of_Jll( I VE.AA ••• llOW A WQOQfl l'lCIUREI ,tQ!SllJllllt- AIRPDRT llllT I DUN LUICASltR • IWllM aAMSUEIG JAGMIWNE llSSET A UNIY(llSAL ~ICTVIJ( @ e> -RexRted. ' HolidayMag8zint 'J • @El Ml Amor por TI mtd Ali. -!I 1 t M I 0 Bia 5 Ntw1 Ktvin S1nder1, . . . , 1M:1 111pt:"n 1 lrt Birney Manis. _Tlit DAILY PILOT. 111 cooptrat1011 wllh Butnn Parks ENDS TONIGHT (!)M0¥1t •m• O @(])CilJ M•ru• WtlbJ M.0. Mov1e/i111d \\lox ]t1u se11m. offers reader.~ a cha11ce to parli· ""'l1rtlr Wird Nm ' c1pate in 'tatit111w1dc bo//oting to selrct. popular winner!! in 7:30 B 9 (I) '"'"' Hltlbillitl Ont -of Jethro"1 childhotrd 1wtetheart1 m Nm Geor1t Putn1m, Htl fish· the ''Oscar Derby." \Veek's vacatio1i f or two in f.1txicn City c.:omu If! Bwerly Hills to ¥1sit. tnd mtn. or Ho110/11lu ond n placf' of honor at tht Swr11J lloll of Famt J1thrD fears l~I his 1111rri11e on m Ount lor Ad'lllntur• •tet 11 AuHlrd.! Banquet ill Hollywood. oivoit the 1101ionnl winnt r. hef mind. Louellen Adtn 1uts11. Sr1t1w." filmed in W)'Omln1. Vote now by filli11g out a11d clipping ou t t.his ballot: OmJ~ll• "S111inll lOlll, Swett @EDo·R1.MI -- - --- ----- - - - Cktrity." Cory 1nd Etr1 J. W1u1· a!) ftrti¥81 Me1lel110 I darn bretk thtlr pim ·bankJ to htlP PIY ttit ho!IPl!tl bill ot 1 wen. 10:30 O Osttr WMkl' Movie: "Golna MJ I paid te\1Ylsion s111ceman, Pl1Ytd by W1J'' (drtm•) '44 -8ln1 C101by, 1 1'1111 Sil'ltr1. Barry fit:11ra ld, Rist St1vtn1, f rtn~ McHurh. A priest ls 1ul1n1d I to 1 dowt1odden parish ind htlpt I lht parish tnd Its peopl e. Son11 !n· 1 elude "Goin1 My Way"; "Ave Mt · 1i1"; '1ht Oay After forevtt". SIY· I en Academy Aw1rds: BHI l'roduc· r tlon. 81!1 Atto1 (Bini Crfl&by): Int 1 Suppor!i111 Acter; Btll Dirtclor: D Vkllft lt Cr1h1m Show Guests l11tlud1 Ntnc1 Kulp, Mel 81t10ks, Ct rfll !hi Ptlntl~I tlephanl and Dr. Pa ul rlftt. , 0 @(}) f:D flit Mod Squtd •'Weleomt lo Dur Cit1." lh1 1Quad lrln la llnd lht hth11 of 1 15· 1e1r-ald boy. Bt1t Scre•npl11; Bt1t Or11lr111I I Sltlry: lest So111 "Swln1ln1 1n 1 I Stir". d) I UI .lohM Ntfl'I GI lnc:.rtld111111br1 0 Miiiie~ S Movlt: ''Cittl" (tom· t~Yl '62 -J1t~i1 Gltason, Kith· 1rln1 Ktlh, Albert Dinan. A mute, t1tl1ttd !1nitflr In 1 chu~ P1ri1 lod1in1 house 111ees lo sh1ll1r 1 woman ind her little 1irl. 11:00 IJ 9 ())Cl"'" m T~ or Con,.qutntts Q @@ m Ntwt Qt It TtkU I Tllltf 0(!) Ntft I 11:) Cint111 30 0 Mowit: "Tlrt Day tht llrttr I 111 U Dutl'll C.111M Firt" (drama) '6Z-J1fttl I 7:55 Clil] CUatlon dt Stpndo1 Munro, lt<i McKttn. I m Mo'l'll: "Tllrtt ;1dlttlltf1" {dr•· I l :DO fJ ~ C1J Gr11n Atru Dllvtr DoUI· mt) '4S-5ohn Wtynt, Wud !olld. 111' plt ns to r101lr hit rur11 firm · m kit tM 0.0: ! tiou11 when Mr. Klm~tll !till fD Jte1lltlH lhrou1h his porch ind lnjurtl llil · I fool. '11;31) IJ IS (JJ Mll'W GriHin ThrH lo1m. Q m Don llntltt SM Gutsta: er tntwil T1ritn1 -Johnny Wllu· I Tommy Smothui, Gllltn Verdon , muller. Lex Bar~tr ind Burl11 I Th• llln1 Cousins. Cr1bt1o-auest·st•r. m Tt Till tht T1utlr D @CII C .lettnnr C.no11 Im Fun Gosptl lvs!ntumt~ 0 Q) Diet Ctvttt I QI M0¥1t: ''llo111111n(' <mrstt ry) [El Sotlrlsal '47 -Dtnt AndrtWI, .lln1 Wyttl I 1:015 C!l LH11 Lilt 1 t :OO I) Mt'llt: "lJlt WttPoll" C~11m1J 1 l :M IJ 9 (I)"" H•• Slnitri Chu· I '57-Sttvt Cochr1n. Llt1btlh Scat!. I lay Prl4t Ind J11nn ln1 C. RlllY trt 8 0 Pt1wi I 1111s1·1l1r1 In lh i1 rebmtdtts1.1 m AJl·NIJl!I Sf! .. : '1~ Old Cltt· I Pridt sin1s ''Wond1r Could I Ll'tll• up," "llttd 111 Drt hn" 1Jld 1 The11 AJ11 Mori" tnd "Plroriu•1 "Mtplfk•I hvailntd:t. M Jot.~ Ml11 Riltf• numbtn i re I .. Duty Hot Dtsl1 .. ' 1nd "Holdin' 1:SO 8 Mew~: "Htlltltt" (d11m1) '48 I On." ' I -Winilm Dliott. M1rie Willdtol. 1 ~tark an "X'' ln the box which appears in front of your selection. Vote for only one person or film in each category. Please be sure to complete the 25·\vord statement at the end of the ballot and fill in your name, address and phone number so you can be contacted i[ you win the prize trip and ban· quet invitation. AlJ ballots must be returned (i n person or by ntail) lo the DAILY PILOT by 5 'p.m. on 1'-londay, Ma1:ch 29. Best Actor 0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for ••1 Never Sang For My Father" , 0 .JAMES EARL JONES for ,.The Great White Hope" [] JACK NICHOLSON for ,.Five Easy Pieces" [l RYAN O'NEAL for ••Love Story" 0 GEORGE C. SCOIT for '"Patton" Best Actress 0 JANE ALEXANDER for ··The Great White Hope" 0 GLENDA JACKSON for "Women In Love•• 0 ALI MAC GRAW for '"Love Story" 0 SARA MILES for ''Ryan's Daughter" 0 CARRIE SNODGRESS for '"The Diary of A l lousewlfe" Be•t JHotlo,. Picture of 1970 0 '"A IRPORT" (Universal) 0 '"FIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia) 0 '"LOVE STORY" rParamount) [l "~t·A•s•J-i " 120t h Century Fox) C "PAITON" (20th Century Fox ) WHY I VOTED FOR THIS PI CTURE (in 25 words or less); ......... ' ........... ' .... . ....................... ' ...... ' ....... . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ' ................ ' ....... . ................. ' ............... ' .... . I '1 I B•rbra Strei•and In "FUNNY GIRL" Alto ''Z'' STARTS WEDNESDAY Exclusive First Run Elliott Gcruld Don Sutherlind Marci• Rodd "LITTLE MURDERS" • •• STAJtTING WtONISDAY Wednesday G ~M•~ Hunr' (advtnlurt) '41-1 Wtlter l'ldJton , .loin l!tnMlt. 1 m "Tlr1 Wllole TraUI" (rnfltlty) '!lt-Sftwart Grs"1tr. Dcrnn• lllttcl. I Name' .........•.•.•••.... Phone ...•.•.. Street Address ..•.....•..• , . . • ... , ..•.. 1 "THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES" o!IAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 m "Pint(' (dr1m•J 'C~Junne I C11ln. Wllll•m lundl11n, I City , ..........•.••..• v .... Zip ....••.. ---------------. ---- 81r-..f1\•tlntt_ Every Wtdnttd1y, 1 p.m. ~~tel,.!!=~~ Also l11riler• Htr~y In "THE IAIY MA((Elll" !1111 DUSTI~ HOffMAN" "llTilf 816 t.UN" PaflBYl5ioo1 Technico1or• [GP]o Chief Don George• Foye Dunowoy WINNER . OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCL. BEST PICTURE-ACTOR Lo., ...... ,, . .,., .... IN MISSION VIEJO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~AN DIEGO FWY Al lA PAZ TUll'°IOff 830 6'"+90 · 1•1\.'l"l't)N G1«11tcm 1: Sl~l'(I' o ~'"'""''"''"''~ ro:•"" IIDl !!AIU. MAI.DEN Ac11t~""Y BEST •CTOll H:.::::. ACTRESS JAMES EARL JONES, -------.. ·-·· ---· ..... ,. --· -. -..... - 1'1111-Y'" M1111to11llll I• "r ' 2 Mll(I 50111H OF SN$ DIEGO fW'I. 2nd Ac11domy Noml- if Th JANE ALEXANDER lfil'l e Great eoior White Hopef1 (1)1.l!llll.-l'IM'lllb _ .. IJ~l"C AU.tio "°PUCTIO~ ~~ilVI~~ llST SONG-llST COSTUMl-IEST SOUND TlllACK-JuUe Andrews-'"DAi.:LING LILI " .... _ ... _ .... .,..-.. _ ... . ..... ~ ·-· ._. . -...... ..... ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTRESS·-CARRIE SNODGRESS diary of a mlUI housewife 8 trank perry,.,, . ~-·~ooe-·~~a .. L.:='-----J • ' • ,. , • J l 9:flll D "Hold l1dl !tit D1wn" (drl· ml) ''I -Cl\tr1tt llOJtr, 01MI dt H1Ylll1nd. u•D "IM•"'•• h•••""',.. Mail ballot to: "Oscar", c/o DAILY PILOT. FrM llltftnllm1nf'I. AIW ltlltM • ..._ '"1"tll 1'11tnt W!lll• llY It Htr1" STARS ~!CHARD BENJAMIN-CARRIE SNODGRESS ' t:JO D "Strld1J Dl1hono11bl1~ (dr•· lfll) '51 -[lio PIMI, J1ntl Ltllh, <•nm•J '6' -''""' ""'· ""' PO B 1560 C M CA 9262 I McQuetn. ox · , osta esa, 6 ----------'' ' • 1, ' '"l..l 't '""'···· • •. -·· -. ~ . . - • , • . . • JO DAILY PILOT s Pf.ayiHf/ l11terest 6a111e OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Ne'v York Stock List Ho1ne B11yer s Still Waiting •.,.wlfo• 11iw 11 la ........,.. ., ~lfltlr t .... """' ~ PrkiN .. fltf ..., r..i1 • _,..,, ......... w -lulla. NASO li1tl"11 for Mond•y, Mlrch 1, 1971 HEW YOIUC {Al'! • Mon<Ur l (Ofl\lllt11 N;w Yort:. Sr~ flcfWll\H 'tkt~ t11ft ,._, "11111 lit ( .... ) Nit-lN Cliff (119 h Mii SPP • ""I'• nll'....., 1 NEW YORK IAPI Alt.hough morP hnuse<i mav be built and sold 1n 1971 th:in In any vear s111N.' l 95'1 thousands or fam1hes <-'Ont1nuc to pla) lhe wailing garnt - w.:uhng for interest rates ilfld other morlgage terms to ~<'flme more fa11or11ble 1'hr 11 a1t-andpayless slralegv I) supported by clc1ncnts ol ~ound rf'ason1ni; bt-tausc a trend to cssicr 1rt1ns h:i.s de\ eloped so swiftly ind strong!\ that few housing off1c1als can remember -l';;;....m==== ... 1 I OOO't OF OIL rAINTING-S , If you ••• "°' '"'"' Ttl.,ho110 WHOLESALI WAlEHOUSI ""''"'"~ S.rvic• You ore 11ot OPIN TO THE PUILIC t tttl119 ALL of your coll1 TELEPHON ! 50°/o Off A NSWERING IUltEAU 935.7777 I• ltlt • •DllrlGE• 1r,NfA Al'tA ~ ...._ m-wot • ~ Cl!Allll W.llNTID t-' 0 Don't settle for less. Don t seule for anything less lhan the best in terest r~te on 90-d.ay Thrift cert1f1cates Invest a m1n1mum of SJ CXX> 00 1n our 90-day Thrift certificates, and you II ~arn a solid 7o/o per afinum -- And Avco Thri ft pays It \le bel>=in )!PJ- [xttuhv' offices 111 W Oyer Road SantJ An~, Ca li I anything com~rsble And 1t.l""="'-'"-"" ________ ,,,.,..,__11! .... w " ._._ AbOTlb \.10 continues r"'"" P1* ACF 1...:1 1-... lhll t.Jbf Ii" Ill Aall.,. IM A,cmtCl1v IO llouse~ lhal last 'fear re wew voiuc 1"~! ai c"'• 1..,. • ..,~''' pr 11 ., u T•l4•, 3,0 •11. !~~e"::u J: ma1ned unsold because of 8 5-.;-1:-!!.'c!:r~~;,1:1 :~..:.11 ~:~ rT\. 5::.c~111: 1!~ 1A:'~ °rfo ~..: .i~ ~~:.~' .~ d 9 t Nlllofl•I !ru1rll tt ., Svc 11 l6~S.,..1trn lh Ji...UnltK In l'l. .,. Admlr•I percent an percent ra es 0.11••• An" ovt t 1 Glb • 11'1 sw Gr• s111 !h u11 C!'lot 1""' ·~ .,.,,.,1.,, ' •o !Tie counle• 1111\k G Altd! 1 ~ j VI S.,,_n Up Uih !!'4 Un IUum 3Ho JJ \ Atln•Lf pt 1 of borrowing now remain'"""'"""' .. 1....,. .. Kin•'' 11° V.s11oo> 1t111 in. i~un McGll • •~ ~fi~'•n~ !rl1tJ•oc:•, i..erwr '• i"'SM lull I I U$ 8knol 11 11~ Ai•Prd Pll 7S unsold at 7 25 pert..-tnt beCaUSC ,,,"', •• ',"' .'r~11•1:1,1, n:~Ell I'• l(' "-fl' Tit 4tV. loOllJ US £1wtl ~!,. ,1,1~ Ar Proa Xlb !I ,,.. • ... .J,• Jl'~ SCtl W•t UV. U'VI U5 Trkl. -• w ilil R bu)ers nolins lhe trend feel 1':1E~ :"! ~~". I It sr:~:~t w ;; ... • t.1" $aHE Tt ' ,.,, ~Univ Alf ,:~ ,•,., AI l~11.M:1 I 1 d 615 ITV• lk t 'lo 10\!i Glob Rvo ,~ t Sw G1t11 lllli Hl'o UP PtnP .... .. A~lO<l• I; they t<in wail or an Ht•!I MC 3'1~' 3!\il GaKI C1t l• u s .. EISvc 11111 ltllo Ut~ tno 11"" JO it> "lbe11sn, M Sbtw Bot ~~JI~ Good LS 711'• 21 Sovrn c,. U-l. lJ'Ao V•lltv G It l»o It• G•• 110 perctnt UV; ~"' j.j\1 " och 0 w c 2 'o 2"" SPtctrv 5\'o 51'1 v.i LO • • ''~ Al•~k• ln!f•• " •p,nk is'r. 21 GOl.I Cl 11' lq 1-. 51'ndvn 11'' ~ VOu1 Afr • ._. 11oo A!l)erto( 31 T"" US Savings & Loan Gvt "'"In ,.,~ x11. !Cl "" • n~. 11"" OTC ir• .-1c1nA1vm 1 1n; '"11r•Mt G 1111 C 1\0 ho $1tn HPd JOl't )2 V1lcr11 n It 'o 111\• AlcnSttlW:t JO h h I the FldU'j.Ji: r1'~ «I G~:l>h ~ 21\.t ,J 5!trt9 Str U~ UV. Ven!•.., l• 1 111... Alt(llClf5 )Or L£'~gue, 'ii JC represen s AAI Co<!• r :,~ 1 \ Giit Ml1 ""' llU. St11w Cl 41"' .. "" Vl1tr.... 11'1 \\ii AUArnLI ,.., nd .,,, ., >O Grttn N•I ·~ 11 II/Mc Tv I 1 S WICISW P :)1\, l)\, AllHI (p 1Ge savings and loan 1 ustry , :;:10 1~ io " 1tt. crnu RE l H. n" swo.i " 1~. 11 1. w1111 6d n 1•1• A Un Luo 1 •o ( Al1S In( •• l\oo GteY """ 1210 ll:i. S11Nr El 21'• u·~ lt'e!le 2. ll. AUPVLUO pl l \\ h1ch pro\ Ides the bulk 0 AVM Co ,.. ·~· grqv, •, '1t fu w. 1ME oc 11\'o llh ••h NG 16 .. 11\o Atlft Pw ' J7 b ,,_I~ In l \o ' Gull ~ '"' '14 i'71Pl HI Ut 11 tr 9, 1°" Alllt<I Ch 1 ff tnortgage 1noney calls t e 1tcu""" 2•\~ , .. 1 H~~~ 11 i!l .. 1!1:? t:~":' ,A ',''! 1•,.• :,'f',h, 11~ 1:\~ ':>it :l~t!lfi"',_":' AdmM It ll• Jiit ... 1111 lft • 11 tii: '' t l 'h -'lllf'O Pe1 .o3 slluation a tradeoff Sure, tn Addtt" w "l~ u:1,1, H~•t<I ,. »Yi atl'l '~""',..: '!~ •;111 ::i~~~n M 1..i.; l7\'o " ltcJsrt 1 _, I .t.4Y """'" i'" 5111 Herff JOl'I u u lH,' toe...,.. " 1fJ 1'4 WellF Ill u """ AlllH Su11t• leresl rates are alhng, it "" s • n,,. 1l~ Htrlt c11 Jl\i a• .i,.;m ,10 , , weu G•• tJ'~ ,,..., .1i1111 c~ 1159 :l~n•-;,• i; • 'Hldoc 1"1 ~ ,:~ '""' llVO 1n•wt1c11 p t, ... :J~9tAu! '4 sa\s but prices are r1s1ng Alt>t•11 u 1'"1 MOion"' .n. '"" T....,..nt ""' n w.1 .. NA 1\o ,.,. A1t.O: ~ •"" d h t Doe ••-,, ''' J'\.o Hoover To• •--, I" W , M<o ,. ' An so l e ques ion s .. 1~:.. 1 11 •"· "''• Ho<!i R• ., itl'> "'" "' • " .. ""'' suv 1 .a I I h I Alaf,; Et l\o """ How d G 91\ l~ T~e•m A 1 ~ l :i.. 1tn PuD 16\'o U • AMllAO SO I pay to p a yd l e \\al 1ng Allee• Lnd \••• 1•'• =~~m ~\j l~•o 7!ol ~:::~: r~ 'i: I~ w:~~,a~1u 1? \o 1~•: ~':'.i.';! 130~ game" The ev1 ence suggests AU Tedi 1 • ~ ~ HllCI "" l6~1 ,1v, r111n GP s 1 s1• Win• Ylh ~ • 9'to ArneH rpJ 50 Al~ 6•~ "• 0 Hur l P IV-. 9\, Tot Ellt j 9'o WIK PL '1 • !2\, AAlrFl!lt 10 that to a po1nl It can be Alllt<I E~ l~ '; ICVI HVtlf C::P lt"• lfl• Tr1c CP<I l l ~ .,.. .. , L 11\. ,,,, "'"A •Un m b I B t Allvn !.• I • o lllo Hv•ll Int ll 1m Trncnt G 1~ 19\o WrOlw E ''• !\1 A8Pe• 05q played pf 0 (it a Y U Aloe (t'fl • 1 • tm1ae Sv 1~ 11"' Trn$n 011 lf•o :Ill Wrl1M W ')I~ Jt A Srnds 110 t ~ lh ( t All>hnm s 't ~·• Imel< Cp ll~ '"" TrlMOll H 5 , 5'i VrcJn1 fO Pio • Arn8Clc11 110 some1mr 111 e uure Jn Alon ::eo 6~o 6'o11"1C1 Nud :io .:io•.Trko Pd :i..'bm.Zlon Utll 14\lolt ~Am Cen~:111 terest rates will cease falling, ;: ~~: ~~ lI~ !~l~.,~1•0 ~,,; ri• :mc~~~~:s \\hile prices are expected to :'"EIF~~~ .~i ,r0 \~\.,:;cn1111 '~~ 1 ~!.;, rn su•vi "' w • ... •F !c1c;~g \~ continue ris1nu Am F ncl ,,..., ~1'\ 1n1rnt G n v; 11~. AD •IT•l !O<I' ., Am l'Jr1 g 'o I ~ Int 6Wlll •) 1 MUTU L "''" Ou~IV~I And it 1s true also thal A r;,,.,.1 •n • 'Ml. JntLel• c 101'> u A 1touv1 Pl 11~ A Mt<I c 1 19•o ?Cl ln1 Mull I ~· 7il, AmE IPw I JO to delay !he purchase O( 3 Am tr V l~'IJ IO In! Sv1 )I l9 Arn E•P tnCI ...... we :I 11~ ll~ IO<llCI I!,, lt Am E~p pf home \\h1le s eeking a one half An•Olt• 1 l . 11 sou1u ~'l'I• 'I• AGnsFo 1!11 d t An~OJ !I I• t~' J~cobs F J 0 , ~ FUNDS A Gtnln• SC pcunl rop 1n mortgage ra es Antt•n tn 1• • l" • Jaouln c • , 10 ~ "' Gn1,. F" ~o beth lt ltrcl l""7'1''"JamW•l••So AmHal14tl mav not e smar es Ar10~ ~1 ''• ,,. , Jirn•• J: '" lo , A Homo t 10 It 0 1 0< QQOAr~ MaP l•l3>oJamsbv 91,10 AHC>IT\OPl 1 s ra egy n a -" •r• W1" 1•. t• J ov Fds l'• 3,,. Arn Ho»P 1' mortgage for 20 years a one-~ r:~ 14 ;.~:ti' ~~l¥"c~ ;~\lt ~"' -~ a;:rd,:to ~ !mM~'i'!~1 ~7 half point difference amounts 'r~d•~ '"\l•l'lKMS 11'd 11 r.11t. wew YORIC fAP11nvn1nr1 crou11 A M11c1.1 .a 41--, y ~ al, l(el•" St ~l'ili Jl~ -Th~ fol-Int QUO-IDS l'ICll • so •• , "'" Mol11r1 to only $7 or $8 a month 1tscc eat ~ ~ s111o Ka1.s1 of 10.,, 21 • 1111o<>1 1u1>!1111e1 11¥ Mui , ., 10 11 ~·~c,. •• 1 10 Al G,. I ,,,, 1' 1(1lv1r 31 ]1!') rne H1tlMel Assoc! Pf09 • " • !1 II IO " Al 8 perctnl, for exampl' Aulo Sci 7 • 1•, K1rn•n " 1~ '"°" of s.cur tin s1oe~ 11u1011 ~-esE_v O•g Ell •1 Al i K1H Grll • ~ •\• Dtet1t• lr.c ft" s.1,.;1 , u 9 14 A" ""11 /1 the mortgage costs $20912 &•~•r ,.,.i 1n, K•¥'"' ,',~ ,•,,• lh• P1"lc11 11 wlllch v,, Pv 112 111 A"'S<r>Sll•:r,'!' A 1 S t th thly Pl•lt P~t: I 1'~ Keir T -.. ""''t l~•lllH Inv Rt1n I 1' 510 AmS.Olt'' ~ t percen e mon P11n1 l"E 11 • 11 '> l(e-ene c11 1,3 , n,,~ cooi,,•,,,,","' ._bffn 11101 10 ,111 11 ,_.,,, ,,··,, $~ I 7 t fl~al"i R•r 1.,o 7•li Kelltll -. • 111 '"~ tab IS .wl 40 a ptrcen ''""~ "' :tto • t(ell Am ! ar ugnr 1vr 1 M 1 os Am srd l 93 93 t 6 It°' 40 "'"""'' F 11 , ... Kt llWd ~ ,:,J ltlklCI) MondtY J Hncoc:~ 111 IA.I A Sid pfj 1J $1 a S percent ou !lwmrt '11"<1 ''"' ktt1r svc-~:>I)\') At>t•Cln ~ ~o ~~ JohnoJn 11 J111.11 Am s1..-11 ..a and at 6 per-nl $179 11 .. A .... , '"· ,. ~ KtuH E lO(o 11'-A.dm(rAllV (, nd kevst-Ful'ICl1 AT&T ~I '-" "'-'~rn :!?\,, >l\.') Keve FID l•V. 17 Gl'Wlh e,, 1,,. APO¥':! tl5 IO ll •m TAT 1.0 The difference r esulting q •• in• F ,~, • Kevs cu, 1s , is, 1"'om , u • ,, Cui st 11 t1 19 I• Aw;itWk 60 "tent TA 9 11 1!'-Kn<$! PC 10 lO:i.. lnlu• t 0, , ,1 Cui 11 19 14 '1 ~ AWW }P!l 1J from one balf point therefore "'" t H~ '' •9 K "' 1 1 • • .. Ad,.IVJ , 11 s ,, Cu• B• t ll '11 Aw P•el 1 1~ !l~t' l,.b ~ ~ 41 Kn91 El • 1 I 0 Al!~I F& •6l10Si Cui 1(1 111 $60 Am Zin~ might not be worlh lhe risk .. l>b M• • 1" • K111; CP • 1 .., A1•u111e1 1 •l 1 r1 cu, K7 s 01 '.s.i ",'"•'0tt '4 ( , !lllluos W 10'o lPo K.MD ~ot JS s"' """''• I tl I 9J Cu1 Sj \l.lj 20..0l m~1"-601 of losing the house o ones .. 11 s.: .. ·~'-•I unce 1 .. 35 lJ\)AllAm,. 11 1, c.':u1 s io4311:tt-'MF tnc '° h be b 'llrlchr HO ' llrocl R•s ·~ 5\lo Alllltlt 10 I• !\ 5S CUI S) 111 I 56 Amiee 60 dreams ll m1g t etter -.1,(t H 1• 1 L•nt wa 10,,'",~· 1t111111 Fd 111617 ,, cu• SI 161 ~ n ~~P•'"•' ,',' t d th dd t I 11 !lociut El 111> '• Ll•lll'I '> • AmctP e '° e 71 Po!1r ) n 1 01 •-11 O consi er e a I 1ona M0<1rh! C'. 11 11'h L•1C1v C11 '1 o.r. 21\lo Am llu• J n l 60 Knlctb 1 :u 1 °" ;,.;;~a~, 1°xi0 to $8 an investment 1n better i:1 c~~ lJ'?~ l~l: ,','i'..,fo;' 1~~· 1i;< Am Dvln 10 n 11 11 Knick GI 's110 .. Amstar pf 61 4 • 'I< .-m Ea•v J It J 61 ltnol Fd • ... 1 0. •rns1eo 1,60 living ~;·~" 1., ,6 , ,!\.lo tfi:" ~c:~ J~" \~ ~ Amtr E•P''"' Ltx Grth '49 1011 Am!•I .J? flowever those 0 n e h a 1 f 6r\1 Sc"' '~ ~ 16 UQU~Jt f i '"' f•Pll I 61 ~ '1 Lew RKh 15 ol& 16 90 Anaccrni, I llrwn "' 0 , lJ lObl,.w 6 0 71 ncme t Jll 10 )J Llllfrtv 6 lJ 6 n Anch Hoc:~ 1 point differ ences add Up Note l\ru~h B• 11*• !Ito Lc•t ... dv 2,. 7'111 ~~••;! Ill •~l Lift Sile J 51 101 Ancorp Svc I "-Jrtb-l• 11 ~LOll E1rn 1' 11 11 s~::~ :7 9 ,1 Lfr Inv 7H l46Al'ICl(l~y 110 I hai the bolder of a 6 percent 11111:1.e• ~ , •i1 Lvne11 ,. .14'~ 1o111 Arn Grrh t ~ 1 71 Linc Nit 10 6l 11 61 Apach•to u "-~~n ro ..,,o GEi lS , 15~o Am Inv 5 51 5 ~7 Ling I 40 A?C<IO 1191 morlgege pays $30 a month 11t •ooP s ,, 31 ~M•/ R11v l \o U\i Am Mut .,11001 Loaml• S•~lei APL corp h Id nc • ~" • ,,, .. , M• lkr! )t ,, •• AmN Gii'> l u J S5 C•neCI una•• I APL pt 8.50 JeSS than the fa mily 0 tng C~I \'I Sv 711~ 1"' M•l'IQI C 8 l 'h Anc~or Gfl>UP C10U 11 1111 II ARA Svc 1 Of t I t r,.,b10 !./ 11, I M1r l.\•Q 11Yt l1 cioll 115 •o~ Mu! 141tl•19Acata 019 an 8 percent ct1ntrac s I •ne" M 711 \1111 !l•c-..• n l'.31U Grwlll 111111 ,.Lut" B•& 111sn95Arca1aN 1111 woTib walling fo r ? J\.1aybe But ,'','.,",,1 B 11i~ 1a •ul L!' n~. lllii '"""'e 117 1911 M111,,. 111 111 t 57 Arc~ D•n 1 ,. • • P, .... ~ n~~Uwuu Fd 1nw too t 16 Mln~ln S 01 J Sol A Ir PSv l GI even thou"h rates have fallen ,',",0 ~!Q.~ :I"• '"'" OTC 11• v~nt 11 11 (<fll M~1 G•th •IO 110 Arl•n• o s" ., "" llJ '" McC0t .. •• At11on 1 H 5 1, M~u•chuoett Co Ar~n ll!hDv swiftly few financial men ',•,•, • .!,~1 s • sv MCOY' '' 21i\I tu• "'ou.,.ltll Frffd Ill t 15 Armco su , '•-• '"'II Mt<llc ... l>I. fV. Fund A 5 •I I 11 h"'eo I JO 6 90 Armc pl 2 10 foresee 6 percent this year ~·.~. ',~ ~1i • • 'llt<t Mii 21\.') ·•" Fu"" 1 111 1 s M•11 1116 u ll "''"' Pfl 1, dd '' 2~ '\oMedtrn '1'\io•lh 51oc:k •m l l •Mln Inc 167l1111Armsl C~ &O 1 hese small differences a ''"' r: .. ''~ ,. • 1Mr10 tn n 11v, Sci co •A• ""~' M•n crh 11" n 0t A•mCk Pll 1s "P 1n another \Vay too Over $:!'°Mt~~ ~! l!!,, 'i::[~~ ~ ,,v. .JI'> 1'''"' • ,, • ,1 M111 Tr 11 is IS" Arm Ru 1 60 ( (..,,!~~ #I • n \ \\ldl<I Cl fo;, iVo lltt~r(k ' '' t OI M1tl!:I 4 JJ I '5 Arn Coro 90 the 24-0 months o a 20-year r ·~ VP 1u' 11 K1te1 1l'o '"' =ea(llnK 1 lJ It lJ •• M11M" 13 Jt 11 :n ""'rn 1n<1 1 c~~! LID ,, J•~V.ow GT 11 ).I e''' en 161 lllMIOA "'" ~S• 601Ash1Cl0111!1 mortgage the d 1 f r e r e n c e r~ .. r. p , • ., 111111pr t•'h ~\'» 11r;~ F~~ : ~ ~ ~ M.-~ co '' 10 1111 A"'•o on «1 -A-"1111' <! UP 10 1•1~ 16 1•W n Ill ti NW 11 '°" IO\o to\o -~ MCF~\1 1)1' i: :!~ ..... :!1,.:: ~: ~:~· ~;~'k " ... n"~ ... l -" ~rom111 so Jf II. \o Uo ~ 1 ~~~:pi.a} ,f1 ~r0 "~ ~'· G1\• 1nn11.11 1-0 IJ ltu 10. IO"' -14 Ill" CJ 1-M 32S U\~ '""' 56"1 l" 1~~ 01: rs >• ~ .. Vi nl11"' ) lU o I !l IO>'o lo lnM tc ! ~ 1U Sl.... ~ ~H~ l • /lF n 1 JO I 1111\• 1 • 1001, ,1111,vc l 10 •1 ~. $0 • SO'• + I IV Inv /' •• Jll• ?J I 7JI~ -I.lo 11v1ny ~ B! lS •~• I•• •l'o lv!n ptJ 31 li6 4Gh olOVo I~\ -\o llY $1t1 !t ::~ l!t? l:1-o .: .: ~~ S1, 1'°«1 111 ?•lo J)'o 71 0 + l'o 1ev (Ill l lO ll ll+'o .Ol'r 1J•o •vE1111 7 2• II 110.. 11 ?Jt.~ \ It" Pn, t 71\• '°'" 29l• -• lore• "e 16 11 , 16'a l'fl• + i,, C uetlPtl t0 <t 1J 11•o 1J + , Clutt1P pt I ,, ll'· ,~ n l + 0 ~NA Flnl 50 ta 1'1>o lt t '9lt.-, NA lllA!lO 7 ,_. ~ q 1, '1 1 oe" SI G•• llJ J3l• fl'• ll ' -1 C1tSG1 1111 It 1&1 11 , 11 , 11 =,;coc1 Col1 •• tl 321• ll\t lJ" + 111 Soc:a 6119 U ' •, ]614 16 ~ l \\ f v, (°'' P1I I .0 110 11. 11'oi "'' + 'o c:w,.: :l~ s:i •I ~~ 2i 0 Ji? t ': COllllll RIO ~ 11 l 16 -. 1•, ! , Co!olnhl t 10 -1l'1" 71 ,+'•Coll ll'ICl l II 11\t It 'o II, -0 Coh In oll JI '9 600 •l •J\• _ , Coll !ft p11 60 11 J9 19 19 t ,C!I~ 1'(111 11 11(~ 12'1 ll o ,CBS ptl 1 JJ 1 u. ll 11 CotuG11 Iii 310 50'· ..a , so 1 -, Colu l'lcl 4'• 11' 111 > 1()11, llG 1 -1 ColSoOh I IO IJ U lo 51, !51•-,CmDf'inllill 33! 71h 11\) 11"6 1 0 Comiso v 10 !U JI o 19 0 l ! \ tl'o (omlSOI r .. ll 11 • 1610 11 , Cc-mwE 100 " ltlo tt ~ 7'"1 '' Cc-mE pit •1 :I09 1 '• •I • 11,1 CornE pl! 1' 5 11 ?r o '"' -1, com .. 0 11 60 31 t'o ' t ComO pt! 12 ~I 11 11\'; 11 ~ -o Ce>m1>1J! Sti 711 l s:!o JS l!" -1, Cem111 $0 169 JI') JI lj ~ti (-Miiis 1 J 14: 110 ~ C-onnM!g 381 ',~ 11 i. " c ... ,at 60 ,..79~19 10 \-'.ConEd•l lO 111 1 l. 1 4 t ~. -" Con Eo 1 " 1J1010.so so .r..,Eo•o1 1 2' 16 0 16 • l't+•o (gnEcJ,P! S JI "'• ' 41 .f-1, ConE pt(• ~s 7 ll > 17 • 32 > + \, t.., F01 I (0 71 11•1 1 • 1 1 Con FCle>l4.lll '105 n•1 11 ) 1'l Con Fr!'llhl 1 I !01 • 101 • 10' o -1 ... Con lt&Jlnt 1l1 J) • JHo 17 -< ConNilG I I\ JJ 1' • II • -~ (Ott• l'owu lSJ Jl • ll'I ~1 ~ • • ConP"' pU ~ 2t& JJ • l J • ll1• -V-. Con1 Air Lin i.1 39~ 3: : .j ; _ Coor Can l loO •91 lHo 11 • "" ... ,\Ii ,contCc_p 0111 ., S5 JS'o 5S ~1 ~ ""11 CDrP I 3 ll l 1111 111'1 v, CICP l'!A1~ Ml 2!'• 21 • lP = ~o ~:::~!, :.t r.: ~~: ~"" ~~ +I Corn 011 pt ? ll ~IN 43 ,,11 C0ttt Sii 10 ll 16 1S"Jo '14 _ ,. Cont Ttl to • ll t7 11 -'J Control D•i. 15 7o-. & !6 -"Conw-IJO :ll/1 10'1 I \• I0 ~-1,CDGkUnlt SO 1060 1' , •t (l CDOPtr1n 1 40 1' l• o 111.t Ill!. + I C-r Tll 1~ 1 1•, "" _ 1 c-r tn1s 'IO 11 , 11 ~ l/U. -•1 C<11>tl#!CI 110 II J I • I , .,. \ COl!l>Rge ,jQQ I ,(11, 1?"' 10lo -~o Cnpwlcl SH I J9 10 IJ>~ "'• Coclntl\8 011 111 .Ill~ ~ 30:r, + , CorG!W J SOI 14 " 4 • oil''•+ l Cowie• Com J 1 "" ll'• 6Yo -•co, sacs! » 1 •'> llo •>o + •CPC In!! 1 IO In 19,. II\:. n :io + • C•lnt 1 Mii> 70 JI Ji 1 31.'\.o Crf<ll!lt Fin I 1 ''4 ''• ~:it -'~rroc~N!I 11.o 9 '~ :!O XI + CrornPK IO •10 !'• I t '" + 'It Crou1eHlnd I I06 10'o 101• 1tll'J CrawCpll 4(11 '1 )61;, l6 ll. -~ CtPWn Co<k II 20 ' 10\lt 10'1J -~I CtwnZ1ll l 10 JO 11 l'l ll J91~ -1 f 19 16,11 16 'lo 16 , _ ·~ rnZ cill 10 II lJ~J JS i l~ + IS Corp .0 1 11 )JI 73 + ' Cud•llr 'IOI 1 11 : 11 : 11: "CllClhV pll2.5 11 IJI llt , 1?9 i, _ \1 Culligan 71 JZ 1,, 1~1 19~ CurnmEn U 7JITJI )1 '"""Duo ,5 41 , 41 •IJ,, + ,1 Curlln wr llO 9• 10 1 10 \ 70'> C::ur!W•A 1 '' ll'o 10 • lo 0 -II CutlerH I XI 111 u•, in, 1,., Crclop 1 !'Ii ?'II 7(1 • lt , 1~. _ ~i Cyprus Mn 2 ,)6 2'~ 11 , :it'-1+. Jl0D67 61 6? +l•Oinll •er SJ 36'> l6 l6 • 01,,_ Co I l! HO St S9 St -t Oart ll'ICI JOD •1 J1 • ll'IJ JnJ -Ii, Dorl I/WI ol 1 II 19 1' It -'t 0111 PfOC:f'l l• ~. ?t • lO'o + "Dl¥toCp 1 ti 11 71 ''' ,,,,.,_..., vco cuJJ 1 SS 5J S5 -J VlnHuo ..50 1, •1~ '" 9 ,+•~ YlnPl.1&0 St... NII th41 I Nltll Uw c;ltM Clll ~I It ti II FoUWNl'I t ~ p 1, 14h 11 FO'O'.DOrt I jl" ffi:" 1111 + ':it F•1 .... lt• .16 1i \o I -1 FrMpl,\11 .IC • 1\1 21'" -\~ Ftlltl>I l 10 ff ''\lo ,,., 11 : -v;; F1111w In _.)I 1().1 l l• I o t\1 -I• !I~ ~ ~~; ~\1 : i: 1:1 [~~, 'lo 1 U<J ,, ~1-•, A"!' • ~11 ,,.,. HI• 11\o j 1rn ~o LXI 16 "'' •S"'° •$lo ... 1mS P4 I II 61 ,,\, 76 • '6\J -... 1mS Pl I •O /J.0170 '"'•110 -47 ttlMtl .. dtt 11 n n ~•rcJDlln 1 JO rtOll •l ., ;l •~w•v I"" ··11 •O '° jQ -lo CA Coro ll 4J~) •3 • •l''o .,. \ r:mlnl C•p ti '6 •.S~• 4S'-+lo '"' nln .56• 11' 71!t 11 111' ~nA1n .. 91q ]II l9.W. 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Ha,.cc Ca I 10 1Ho 16 ~ )j~f + 0 Har1SMt~ 80 Ill 13"7 1311> ll\1 + • HatvAI 1 70.- 0-H~w l El !U -l<JY~ .O IDn I JI 11 , 1! 11•1 + '• Hi1tl'lne ?O JO, ?t 0 JO,+-~HCA l"CI 112 l6, JI , 36 .. +t Hee aMn lit 11 '1'-o 110, •1 1 Htln1 HJ 1 110 ,.,, 16 Ul H~l*ne C~r1 11 lt\o II ' ,.i..: ,_ lo H"lpr Int ... 1210 71 XI 10 -2 tlfllft Pl• r1 91 ll o )2 1 l] H~ m•d .cl& 71 l5'l ll , IS'~ H•lmrhP lO AccounL' prolfrll'd up 10 • m<11umum of $10 000 by Thrnl Cu.1ninty Co1pur•tiun uf C•lilorn1• only•~ providtd 10 th, C..hfom1.1 f1n•nc:YI Codi' A copr of Ch•plfr 8 (G u1r.inlff Thrift Accounts! of D1v~10n 7 of the C..hfom•• fln•nc:1•I Codo: In.II)' he obl•tned upon leQUC\I hel 7 5 I d C'o~"f O ~, l"oMlll Mu• UlilSll>e-t ••• -..-. ll•llll•lt"°' 6<ew ween a percen an r~ ... ••~ 1••,n •Mner 11 11~.n ..... .,.;,.~q '" 1..,,Mll' Fa 111 tS1As,.,OG110 •n 8 percent rate lolals c~!? !f'CI,, f \ eo • .o1r,1s ca1 >F • ~ 110', Fon 11 ,,17 :!? M1F G'" '"" \" A1e1 so 1 7(lb " ·~• ~ H, n " M ,, !IT n•o 111. lloslon ~ ·~ t rt MuUS Gv to 1110 Of """' Transc $1 852 80 and much 1nore if ~~ ,,",,' n ~ 1• ~ MIH VIG 11'4 1 '14 11""~ Fo 3 6, • 01 Mu omc s ~ 1 a. :::C"".,e 1no 20 I,,,_ •1\o 41~ t t PL plD 1 Al J ~~, R 'o ~!., _ 1. e~'.fi' 1, 2 U l) ' 11 o 1,111 + \'I I Mn!1 \ 10 110 lro IOl lOJ _, ~ H .... '"" C•o 111 43, 42..., •1'1_"-1<.,,,!nc 10\J 19 19 u~1 11 • _ • Hetculu no 15 Jt._ 21 1t\lt _ ·~ He•"'F 1 10 THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION Of CAUf-O)!NIA IS NO I AN INSTRUMENTALITY Of THE STATE OF CAllfORNIA Avco J Thrdt Dmsion h•s bf.en ir1 opfr•h..,n since 1921 .1!'1d h.u nevf'r l.11~cd 10 p.iy funds on dftNnd NEWPORT BEACH 2101 San Joaquin Hills Road (714) 833-3440 1----1---- THERE IRE 20 AYCO THRIFT OfflCES IN CALIFORNIA VISIT OR CALL YOUR NEIRE ST OFFICE. ~ U • 11•1 Mo lhch j'i J &i llo<'~ Cllv ~ Mu Otntn 10 1111 •l Vcl I l6 invested smartly c,~'.',',', ~ 1 101~11 ~ ""°4 k l Vt no. eu11~t u 41 " 7t ul s1>r1 11''1' 'J :::C~1~1 "'11 " '"la~ 1(16 MohWI< It 1•Vi :5i:o C~ndn 10 71 ,10,Mul Tnt l'9 1'9 Atiltth Ofi;IS The d1flerence het'll een 3 c: 1 ' Ml• 11 • '' • MOnl Col iroh 11 o w1e1 , n 1 0t NEA Mui 10 ~J 10" AH lltl 11 and 6 ~r-"t adds up to ,",", u" •, .... "''\ 111 ....... " '0'11 11.t ""W ~ 10 Sit 11 st NI! tl'ICI lo 18 lo 61 AllRcnc Ji' lo .,... ,..,_., 711') 11 Moor' S 11 ,., "V Vnl lS n 17 Ml H•I Secur Ser Atl•s Ch 1 bl I ( r 1 Mt9 1!ll1"~Motr1nl( lflo H l•fl•M FO 11'1 I" ll1ltn 1105111111AilasCern a very SU s anl1a 1gure c ~·t W.f I Hli Mlaf Tr A :rn~ 2'?11 CG Fd 'SI 10 '° 11.,..d ! 05 5 ., A TO orp 1120240 b d C1~"'"q '"• l,,.,M19Tt wl SI> S'4caP...nr /95 111 OlvlCI 4 ]8 11'Au•or1a"cp,':,,a some ase on a c nton o , , • '< Mo•ch M ,.,.. 114 r 1p11 Inv 3 or ~ n r; w•11 • ,. M ,. Au!om oaia !O\;:t] Of $:i(l J88 80 Ver SUS i::~ "CP !: 0 .:" ~~~!~;JI> 1~,:, :~~ .~<>II :h• 0t 11 6 •• Pt Slit 1 J9 I fltl Aule>mln lnO r~r1 i: 11 'o 11 M I'll p '' •~'o <""' ~" '31 ll •5 lncem ~ 10 S 'Ill ltvcn (f!rP $42 93f\ 41.1 ,0 0,,,.:• .,, "' ' • > , l\~~nl O F l'ICll 5toxlt t •1 8 t• A•cc Cc wt , .. , ~s~, lS'o Mvfr LE; • '9 • \ fl•'•~ 11 JJ l? 60 Ne! G•!I\ , 1 9 '1 Avco cll 11l \\lorth wa1t1ng 1l out" Ila rd ~~ $~'~ ;; ,_ ~~,. ~~~ •• ~ndc 1i" ,~,; rom SI 1 n: : n Nfuw r•1 s ~· 6 10 Avftv Pa 10 t A ( I t r. 1" n> N !Ctr t , 0 t•o G<wl~ Sl(t 'IN~vw I'"' 10'31~'3 1'vn~I l~c o s ;iy ny am1v nov;~~lP~ ,, ,',.~rG&".1 1,,1 • .., 1~c.,.., l611"N•w Wld nc1uAvonP1110 playing the game must \\Ork ro ... 111111 1n~: n;N·~o'o c •• ~""'c~:':.''Gr P~•" 1"N•wton 1••J!IJ?A1ttcO 131 (O";\ P•V ,,~ 1S N•t L~ 311,. 00 C~1ll 1ns 1:'1'!Nlc~ ST••,,,~,,, out the equations carefullv romn .., ' , 1 wan M;;d 3' )S\!t rc~c1 ~,. 1~ ,, "-l~,~~·1 1• •1 1•' e•b<k 1 311 h rn<> rm n~, U N P•l~nt 66 ti Fr~! J719 M '' 1cnonh 1 )l I 11 8•krDllT is present ous1ng costs poten rrno •~ 1 l • • ,.., jKlt 11 • ll\• str~<t 11·~1111 ""''"~ '•< •" ean GE 1 17 I I h Cmo T'!t ·~ 6t Nat "~" l • • Sce<I ti) ~,1 11111 i=un<i H OOl lV' Bt"91>1' Pun! l!a s av ngs 1n moving I e rem •• '. l NII !II r •ii 110 Ch•rn,.1 u,. 1, °' to1 Fun~ • •• 10,, B11>0P pt 2 I r b Id ' C?~ P~o ,, ~,, NEn GE 19•• 1•'~ Co!o"I~! 1n• Wms 1• ."' •n B~ ol(•I 1 ].I vaue o u1 ing equ1y 11'1-ro,.,cc-ll'li n~ J!-1:11'G "° "°"' F.®tv '"'!~"ell ,, .. ,, .. Bsfl'C't11NY? 'lead Or Pay ng renl ( ntr ,, 1°• 1>\ Nltl'sn F 7' ff ~ Fund IU ta u tll'.I 11111enh '•1 • 61 8•n~ Tr 7 I• I Coo.,.., l 1o•, 7(1 .. Hltls A •P< J~ ~r yt~ 6 71 & ~1 ~"" 1 IM 11 10 '' '-" BttDO 1 J11 Is It Worth taking Oul a ('Yen< 33 :1-1 Nlelt !I •• ""' tncom • 111;,,n "lC <•r lh" II" 6• d CR 1S~ Coro S ~. ~ \ NC•r U'l II ... H~• Vt" 1 l'9 5 « l>A~f: "'nd 1 01 o 17 Ill! C In< IO m orlgage now and then Co1m vr 11 11 ~ NEu• 011 2 • J •Col G•I' u ",, ,, P•ui P•v • .. • 11 B•tn MIQ r~N'•d lS 1 >:. NW HllG 1~ 10\' r,,,...~ flit ) ~, \,. Dpnn <Q • ,! o ,1 8al"" Ml cl I renegotiating if rates drop" ~ " • cc 11 n\l; "w '" " '11 ~ 7j , cwt~ "!I , -o 1 '' • Mllf , ~• , ,. &.o1DJna 20 rul{I\ Q 1>0 1•oHOl<!!I ('> •1 }4 •r.,111 ( 11l llD~la li'1 l<OI tl!h1n o0.50 Does the morl"age lender Cu '' F l>~ 1u Huc1 li•c 10 • 11 oma ,._, , 31 1~ tJ,, 1 •JO '" ,~ ll11v•thLD !O h (VQ t~ C Tl:. lo(,nl\tY M 23 ,ll'\.lo ? I II ,.. ll•.il8l! 11 ~rm1t this without com , '' '"• ·.O•• ,..,, ''• •• c-mof 6 71 in ,.1.,.. "'nt ''" •n• Bt•~ cia '° I"' •"r~ ~ 111 1; OlllO ~er :o 7111,Comt P;I tlllOOl .,1.,.. r...i 11.,•1111eea•MI 1 pl1cat1ons or does he charge g:;-; c~1 a,. !'' 011 si-a1f: • • 1 ' ~:;:~1kFa •: 1~ Jl Pl•n rnv 1n •J 11 " Be.111 FCI• , a prepayment fee" g['~r~ 8.~ ~ *:~:\cs~.':; 1 ~. ';; f11near"1 ° u ~ ... 11 :~1~:i~.,11nd~, .. u Ol u:~L!~~ 01s~ h I ~ 1 Pf~ 01~ 9'• Or,9 ""•I •• S ' c::Ml1I Ylft I:?: I I:' Grwlh J• H 1• l• Stcl Ole-'.141 Per aps the mos t crucia O••tr" ,, ~10 0""""' n n~con r:1,, •n ,~1 "F•• ••• ••1 lttcnAr 1s ( I t th t t lh D•vl~ Fd ~ ' 011~· •p ,,~ 17. r~ II •a 1<", i• N l<or ?6 •1UI• Stl(OPfl ~" ac or a e momen s C .,.~ Mtr ,, ~ 1,i, vr• th• 1" "• Cntv cia 12 '° il ts Pro ioun" 1n i• 1n i1 St e1en 1 IC threat of continued incre ases g:,",', ',~ 1• 51 0•1Clt lJ'\ ,..,, Crn wri1v s" ,, P•o Porll 1 M 1 &.1 B•ld119H t!!b -'~• ., 110 I , O.ibsl !Ir S ' '>MO Ctn WO~t I" ; i.j PrcvcJn! 4 H ~ l• fl•ll How 60 1n housing prices E\en some :t~,'°, ,~", u ~ ''°• P•c Gt~ 11~· 1' 0 t•V•" M 1o1 11 ~• n Pr a S¥s •a 11 11 JJ Brit 1~1rto~ ~ . 11'' l •of •(CO Co !, f;• Otltl\I•'• GrOtJp Putntrn Fu"ll• B~ls Co 00 or the Jarge COrpOrale Vf!CVlf u .11 ... P~n{fll lo I 'lt ~! !'l•'l U Foull 1Al •l2 8encJJ l60 Ot Ii! 11 ~1J,P~no11 0 3, l \1 "1•lwr '"u11 c<eo•t uon1s JOB'""' PIJ builders \\ho were supposed n-•v "" • • ~" P•r~r or l • • lS • 0 11, 111 H G•th 1no1 io t16fn•l1Col 1'1J p 1m C• I)~ 1t P•r~s I< I I ~ .)odt Co~ lS '' l! 14 ln<om ~ 11 3 U Btnfl !1>t 2 SO to bring economies to the 1n o ~Al Ao 1 i ~ P•r-v G U•o 70\o ..lr~~·t u u i u '""~'' 11, 1 JO e,n~...-1 duslry expect to raise prices. ~ :~•rn r ~ ~ ~~· ;:~~~,1~ J~ 2;~; J"v/ F:t 11• ?! 13 11 v11t• • tl 1 H ::n:~:1 ,!~n :=============================='._.""'.".''..':'""."...'."..:'~'-I":":'=. IO J Jl 11 lo P$ul•y P 6~, 'o ~• v J " ' 11 Vov•11 6 15 I JI Bel~ Sii l JO '1;t07,1 ip·; i> p,,.ellt I~~ U V! r.alll".\ lawnrd ll'eve e 1061 II 61 e19 Thr.,. 60 ;:JnMsn L 1611 1~~: P1¥ L Or 11 • 19 G::::;, 1; ~~ 1~:: Rlnlr•! 1S•6 IJ IS B a{k Ok !9 "'ow Jnn •7 • Ofl>o Pttrl Mt 9 \t t > 114 • UU Y 811 <Jo~n 4 C~y o 08 ~•» 21 0 Ptl•I•• T '' • l1 ' ~~~1'1 ; ~~ ; :J Scudde• fund1 El " l•u1> 1 r-----------------------• I I r.un~ln o 11 , Jr>, Penn P1c 1'• 1 o 1 -' In Inv unav-I Bloc:kHR ]6 I) 111, o~ t, ''•Pt c a.w '' U\o 'or 1 !I 1 ~1 Sod ll 1• 3l 1t Blut Eltll 1 XI Orlron 111,!,Peo•IW• l\o9 o ~:.t' j~!';1 ~; 811 11Sll\51BuBllpUJS c.Z PA nl 1 , 11>.l, Pttrotll Sl 5J'lo ~rnri Sc 6 1' 6 ,1 Com SI 10 !J 10 ll loDb e Brio... I I I How to buy i i stocks. ! I I I I I Q,c1 4 nulhon Ame11cans ha\e lead thJS hook ," h1 ch was I I comm1ss1onedbvMe11dlL)nCh \\c th111k1t soneofthebest I I gu1desto 111vcst1ngc\cr\v11tten ~~01.1f1eecopyoftl11s259 I I pa ge best seller JUSL mad the <0upon No obhga t1011 I I I I ~'"" I I Add.,.. I •• C1I) &: Slllll' Zip I I ]Jl)ml'JJhrrie Ou~ll'"~--1h1111> I I "· ... ,, ..... .,~ ... ,, ................ .,, ........ ""~ ""' I I Merrill I@tch: We look for the trends. I I J\ferr1JI LJnch Pierce Fenner & Smi th Inc I Sergerslrom Center, Santa ~na 92702-Telephone 547 7272 I 11000 North Main Street) .. I · ''' I L--•••••••-•••••••••••••• -~" '~ l! 1 11 Pe!llD CP ll ll11:nt•vV 1111'1 1 0~Sfrurl!v f uno' Bc.-inaCo •O toPerll'I •• ! Pl' I S\ID ,, 7J 0 n!~•.. I l• e ~J EQUIV 3 •1 31• Bcl•C,. 2SD §C<!n l •ll '7"\o 1' \ Pnotcn 'Po f l..I I:® !Y 9 71JO1J Inv•$! I ftl I 11 Bond Ind Cl~ svi 1 . 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J "6 .+ to T;cl;"'l(f: CD 'n11 l1~t· ~TJ :1..: 1-:! NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices advanced ln mod ~='"' '1f 4S\~ u u. U'4I " ftl .. tU iii 11lt ll0\4 ,, • 111 1 erate trad1ng on th e New York stock exchange ~· ...,.'" iii' iii ,.~ :l:~ u~ :: d r:::i~~f ,, H ,.'A Hl4 ,.it _ ~ Mon ay l·~o 1 it 111 31~ tt . u "' + \• Shortly before closing bell the Dow Jones In r:= :iJ._1ci ,j fit! 11:: .ui\ + ~ dustr1al Average was ahead 4 45 at 883 28 Stand T•••v tr. H Wl ~ y:: -~~ ard s & Poo r s 500 stock index was up o 22 at 96 97 t::S •• t ~f 'ti f'v. :mo ,, ' Advances led declines 731 to 684 on 1 632 issues 1t::.~ 1~ 1~ l~ 1i; 11 ,~~:.. '• on the ta~e ••• , n1! '° 11 I•~ ' 1 .... + i.. T•JO GI OJ ' 31y, !, 311.1i -A vo ume of around 12 500 000 shares was the !?.Pu"• ,"', l 11\ 1~. 11 •-. ·~ l.t2 ~ ": iu "tit :"" lightest 1n about eight \veeks t::i.~11; s u• ". ,,...,_ ~ Closing prices Included AT&T 49 unchanged r"" r' • '' 10 l't 10 '4 101'4 i o 27 ~I Th olo;OI .0 H~ !-i:: ~n: ~r.:-\ Bethlehem Steel 21~ oft n Chr)Slt!r i;, up ,.. ,~'&~ ~4 n ;g.z ~~ ; + DuPont 135~1 General Motors 80%: up 1A Southern lt:'f~ ~= '' "v. 21. ''' + Pacific 41'1• up % Standard of Jersey 75"1 off lh, r1'"'5Mr ~ JG JO 1 "' ,, 0 + ' Tl Cor11 I 70 u 2J jl 21 -,., and U S Steel 31 ~ off 1A nrr1k ... 1 tc 1)1 '"· ••• s.i1o + \ n r11h11: , .. 4llb 24 ii 11• 11, + \~ One anlyst 11a1d the slower turnover re eels Tob nPck '° ' 1 '1' ' + ~ La d liddl E t d I l Todd 5~ \ 11) .s.i: ,,, 11. 11 -~ concern over otian an ti e as eve opmen s r!!~°"••• •..,• JllAOll .1ti Ah d h k -7t .o Jt '"',., \ not er suggeste t e mar et is exper1enc1ng a •n•co '° 2 11fo 111, 11'!• \ l d th ''" I II Tr1n1 U I lO 1J 11 . 21 "'• + ~. emporary correc ion In a tren at IS l,l<ls ca y r.,.., w ,. • ' JI 1 21 ~ 11\, -upward T nW"I"' II l1'• 3'~ 16'4 -1o T nWF n .of 1 tt"' R 1 N"' = t Occ1dental Petroluem \Vas a heavily traded l :~~ .... • io' r.i r~ ll ' ],~ =,,; tssue after a delayed opening The oli firm had l :~:',' oi:~" 1~ ~ • t~ t~ 4 \lo been m a tradmg hal t smce the middle of last Fri l~::: : ,,~ 1 1!~ ~l ~2it g~: ~ days session following a report that Libya was pre-~,~:,1": 1 'l 1~ ,1f'· ;i,. ~~ :!: t paring to take over control of foreign oil compani es ~~ .::; ,:,1 10 i~ \,1.:o 1 ~ ~ l! \ _ t• operating there l~~lc•~: ,.., 0 10 0 0 f "l••••••••••••••ll<lBl901•C!l•!ll••110•'""'"""' .. ll TRW p 'M 31 '"'\ •ll\ •• 1, T11an GE n .U I .u.. .U\4 fw•nl C•nt JI 32 31 l • lo 51n y Wk l..tO l SI 1 JI jl - , lull Pro. \IO '11 .. .1,1 # .+ T~ !r Co II • l i 1 • 12'1't -Yo jl•llr •Y 40 '' u..:. II\-• 12 + i ull Pro• w 1 ! 3 ' jl ,._ 1 17 ~ 11 11\lo ••rel! 10 t n ll\:o 1 -' uC t' '° l ' ' ' l~J 1P.. 1•h 1~t 4-Sl•~1 (II IO st •l I •l , •l ~ -• un C/'ofm 40 1 ?f,•, ", • ',J • -l"u'•'L •"'• 11• I! 7&~ I! .+ \~ lt1"ff 111190 l1 oil, O 4J •1 -+I unOI 111 0~ -» •.M•o3J-.ll\l-l !"f~' .. , •• ··-'·~nOI Dl\2' o ~~ ., ,UAll:(OIO '' d .i•i '"• .i. '14 ter 0 VI IO !If •n• •11~ H ti.•m o 1J o '3•o ll • • UG CP I 11 to '' 1 "' "~ t ' Sl1yt"LI 1 <1C1 t } ll 'I JI • -uncl1 MO U •10 1• 1 1• > 14 UMC ncl II 1J"o ' • u 1., '"' ~ UeWW1r 1.10 t n,,,, Jl•'o .o. • un61 JlflJO ., .it 4 .it 1" to u ... <9 <ICI JI 11.0 • • lh ... \ s~. VellC I 11 H~ 'l -) ""~ M ..!1b 'j', I • Ho &1o .. 1'o Un I l.ld IOe 10 jJ ~·• 15 ""-1\l!Glte VColl JO lf Of 0 J" uDVeul.10 1 H\l '1 Un NV )l.oo 11'J ffo 51 • ~·•+• tone WltO 14 0 1, •~1 •U .., u"'O •O iY' 11 'll '1111 I U~Cl'l'IP I ~IO IS 1~, 100 -Vt '-COn! U • 11 H 11 -l~l!Mlt G <ICI .n 1 ljl.o Un Ct ~ d• t !1 11 0 7JW JJ\lo -1 \~ tort I d 50 Sl !1,,_ l 10 1 ~' -' UDl'lllC l'l JO lt~ J l -t Unin Co P • 1 •WI •~•+ \ tudWor 1:!0 tt ..... Jt~ IO -u ,..,,vF 1a ll s. !h u" ..: 1 n l$ 10'1 10 • lO::o + 'lo SI W plJ. I 40 S •41• .. \ '' t w•nk l.o. IO 2 1'1a ~! -Un pf6 ~ March 1'71 DAILY PILOT £omplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • " • ' ,j " " " '" • ~ " ' " I ~ ~ • " " " 'il " " 11 l " ~ " " l ' " 10, "' 10j ' " • f~ ~ o\ " ' " " I " lllH Ntl 01•0 l Hit~ LIW (Nit Cl'lt ,, . ' . • • l J •• ' " .. ' " IS llo . " 2l lf -. ' I IJ t l ,,., 1 ! ''h ' •• ' ' " ' . ' 10 .. : ,,~ • • • ' ' ' . • •• 1 : ; , ,, ,,;,· .,J "<Y '· H f' I • 11' "• • ,•,t ·'&. . ' ' •i ,,.. 'tt: ' ~ ~ I llo I i 1 I 1> .. ~ i 1~ ~ ~ "i .. '1 • t I o I] t 1: 1' •• • . ' . 1' l11• 11 ~ n " /,• 0 11. 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' " •• 11•• • • ,. • ' " i . • • " " ~J,: •• Ulo ,, .. •• .. " '" " . •• 1lto .. ' ... " '• " " ~. • !Oh ' . ""' •• " " . ' .. ll'! ' . l " It I] • ' I " . 1 .~. 11 ., ll,! ·,~ I « Ulo 1011 ' . ,. ,\ " " ' 'I ' ·~ 'ii .. ... ~r· " d'. .. " . ' " . ,: ~ • • ~i .. " ' " li • , .. ••• ;.t ,1 • ,., •• •• '" • "• " ' • l l '• ' ' ' " ,, l1l• • ' ... '" 11 • " ... ~ • •• .. '" " ' •• '~t· ' " . • " 'I" ,. " ' . ' ,f1! • " • • .. ... ' . ,,. " . . .. " . " . • • • ... • 1?.: '! I ' • .! ~4 ~· Se ti Ntl IMI I Mitll l-C .... (flt. 1 ' • , • i' ~ · A J ' 1 • 2 '' f)\1 ,, J • l ,, :·. •' 1 ' , •• '' . . . . IJ O' 10~ 1 ) •• °' ,~ •• ,}.,,, 5• l • ll • I J•o s • ,, • 5 • fJ 11)>, t I ' ,, • 1 '"''' 5"I 4l • ,, . ' ' SJ I 1 I 71 10 tt . ' ~ ' . ' ' ' l • • • ' . . 6 J 11 • I? JO 11 '6 I I • l 11 • • • • 11 " ... 11/S~ollll.. 51 10 • ?l jt • ,, -TZ- ' ! " • • FAIR tt• -I ' -~. »• " ,., '• -'~ ,i: t l: I• + .. o .. -... 1•. -• s~ .._ ~ '" l\O -\ • s . -t • J. -• ioi. + ~. ' -. 11'~ -\• 45 . -• '. ~1. ' _., • •• ' .. + '. -. lJ + • " ., • + " II + 1 "'• -. il ~ +~4 7J -I '" - F1tl f, r f1tlutl lko1• !~''' wori1 ou"' up f•lfl" 111 ep1 1 11111 111 th e DAIL'!' PILOl ei !Dr 11 ll•t• t ~try ~I'( ---· - • J 2 DAILY PILOT Controversy Seen Education Ref o·rm Report.Y·inished By TOM BARLEY Ot "'' D.il'f' '''°' 11•11 SANTA A'NA -A 70.page report on the stale and future o{ education in California is in U\£ hands of legislators today, They are being, urged from the governor's office to enact many. or its recom- mendations into law. lt is the final report cf the 23 • member Governor's Commission on Educalional Reform -an investigative body drawn from all segments cf the community and ordered by Governor Reagan on Ju ly 28. 1969, to chart California's educational future. Commission Ch a i rm a n Robert E. Hanson of Santa • Ana believes the final product of his group's 17-monlh probe . of California's schools and educational policies will, if on· ly parts of it are implemented, lead to streamlining and in· creased efficiency of many educational functions and the elimination of many wasteful policies. COST $20,000 Hanson. lhe managing partner of a Santa Ana ac- counting flrm, and his col· leagues have drawn nothing beyond basic expenses for 17 months of work. "Our report cost $20,o® and you'd have to pay at least 10 times that to get anything comparable fro m a research ()rganiz~n," hf sa id. •le a~ that some of the com~i~n 's conclusions are going to be controversial an d, possitil}', far from acceptable lo many ()f the educators and officials affected by them. tlonal education as Cne of lhe most significant reports within 1 the rePort. lie stressed in an interview the group's unanimous expression "that every Californ ian should have the opportunity to obtain a saleable skill. "We stress that word 'op- portunity' and .we are urgin·g the enactment of leglslatior\ which will ensure the pro- vision of opportunity for every studenl graduating from lhe public secondary schQOls to have acquired a saleable skill at lhat vital stage of his life,'' he said. His commission report alse demands that the state Board of Education be given the responsibility of dev ising a master plan for vocational education in California. That plan should cover, he said, the development of vocational educalion in high schools, regional occu pational centers and in community colleges. "It 's the only way we can bridge the widening g a p between increasing I y sophisticated employer re- quirements and the skilled output of trainees leaving public schools,'' Hanson said. That program on vocational education is going lo cost money, Hanson conceded, and the comment brought him to an area of the report that seems certain to create con- troversy school finance. "We worked on the basic recommendation that we should see the adoption of ft SEEKING REFORMS Commission Chairman Hanson ess," he s a i d. •·Teacher edu<'ation ... does not provide early enough involvement wilh the teacher-pupil relationsltip and such involvement should ~ ea rly, as early as the freshman year." "I ~ the Qualificat ions Com- mission is fonned it should be given the responsibility to develop programs that would require teachers to con· tinuously update the i r knowledge and tea ctii ng skills," he said. vocated a speedy ,.death to district eleClions, fot example, what teachers know a s should be returned to the "tenure" -perm an en t county clerk's offiCf/',. Hanson employment in a particular said . "In n1any other matters school district. the districts themselves would "It eame ihlo "b_e,ing be'ca~se be responsible for their opera- teachers wanted proleclion tion and there is no reason against bias -and discrimina-to believe that they can't ade- tion in dismissal pPOCeedings,'' quately meet the needs of the Hanson :1aid. "Our California population." Education Code guamntees alt. The Hanson commission also teachers due process and our argues that local sch o o I commission couldn't see that districts have little option, if it was necessary to·· preserve .any. in the selection of ap.. this archiac regulS:tiOn. propriate textbooks. ' ' • Ag ii in, ' ' he said. ''The current st ate textbook "elimination of tenure will program in grades one take nothing from the com· through eight provides books petent teacher. Bot it will .help on a ratio based upon enr-011- to restore confidence in lhe m~nl.'' Hanson saiti. ''These teaching profession by · remotr-books then go to local school ing the image of 'lire pro-di stricts and we found in tection, regardless ol com· many cases that titles (lf the petency' which the word books or the ratios or both 'tenure' creates in lhe public are not appropriate for school mind." children based upon the needs It could be controversial, of suburban, urban, rural and Hanson conce<k!d, but no more miJ!rant students. controversial · than h.is com·. "We found," he said. "that mi s sion's . reco!""mendation his inefficient and extremely that t)]e office of coun'ty, costly program provides many superintenderlt of schOQls,and" books that arc not needed and county board of education be consequently are not used. !bolished. H is commi9Sion · ree(lm• RECOMMENDATIONS mends the removal · (lf ' the •·our recommendation to the "outdated and unnced-ed" of· governor is that textbooks fices and the establishment printed or purchased should of up to I:> regional offices be those ordfred by school or the state Department of districls from approved lists," Education which would take the commission ch a i rm an over some functions currently said . handled by the county offices. "These are just a few of the things \l'C set out to do CLERK CONTROL and they are. perhaps, worthy The outdated nfrices do of placement at the top ofl nothing that could not be bet-our list of I 9 rfcom· ter handled by the suggested mcndations." ..Hanson said. "It wo uld be ideal if we could eliminate the present life cred\?ntial provision and substitute a requirement for periodic renewal of credentials based u po n performance new format, Hanson said. and "We have not done criteria. elimination of those ofrices everything we set oul to do," a state.wide tax on all taxable real and personal property. augmented by other forms of statewide taxation, for the purpose of equalizing the abili- ty to finance the educational. program of each sch o o I district in the state," he said. "With reasonable and un-would enable both local school Hanson said. "But we all com·piicated renewal criteria. districts and state offices lo strongly feel that we have no competent teacher should streamline adminlslralion and guidelines and proposals ()0 STATE SUPPORT fear a renewal requirement," educational procedures. which those who follow us · . TRY THIS UNIQUE ISLAND DELICACY _ UCKORY FARMS OF omo BANANA CHIPS Here It s.ometb.ia.g different in snack foods! Tantalize your taste buds with thls crisp tropic island delicacy , , . Hickory Farms o[ Ohio BANANA CHIPS made by skilled processors on the Philip- pine Islands. The native fruit is ideal for this product. Coconut oO. hooey and ngar an specially blended , to enhance the alread y deligbtful bag.ana flavor. Sample· first and then buy enough !or your hungry .family to eat "right from the box. Then, add a little island atmosphere and good eat- ing at your parties. BUY FIRST BOX AT REG. PRICE OF 59¢ GET SECOND BOX 10 ¢ FOR WEDNESDAY, MAR. 3 THRU MONDAY, MAR. 8TH BANANA CHIPS CAN BE SERVED IN MANY WAYS: •Add Ban&na Chips to crackers ot cookie• crushed lnto pie crust; lltir into poddionor pie fillings for extra taste, or right out ol.tbe box a.s a t~ty snack! •Crush and sprinkle Banana Chips on coffee eakea. Add to regular cookie or pie dough be· fore baking. • Banana Chips can be added \o muffin•, pancakes, cake mixes. ice cream loppinga, ceTeals, and whipping cream. ·. 5outh Coast ?taz&-~ LOWER LEVEL BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY COSTA MESA PHONE 540-6991 .. But I do hope that there ran be the kind of non-partisan approach to these issues that has prevailed throughou t all our delibe rations and which has enabled us to thoroughly concentrate on common sense solut ions divorced f ro m politics.·• Hanson said. "Deficiencies will ex ; st HanS(ln said. ' 'Cont r o I of and can build a solid sensible whatever method we mighl .--H_;,_,_o_m_m_;,_,_;o_n_h_a_s_a_lso_a_tt-__ re_s~po_n_s_;b_H_il:_y·_·f_°'_.·_Joc_a_I _"_h_o_ol_s.cy_s_Le_m_o_r_e_d_u_ca_t_;o_n_." ___ :__ ______________________________ _ select for· fund allocation," he ' ' Hanson regards his group's recommendations on voca- .:, i:i .:, These Were pointed out. "At that point, u·e think, the stale should pro- vide support fo r th e schools based upon the educational needs of the individ u al districts. Arcl1itects Of Report. "We'll have to determine the ratio between a particular school district's a bi I it y (assessed valuation per pupil) and, jts effor~ ( opetati9J.1 tax tatf)." Hanson explained, SANTA ANA -Following Is the membership of Govern()r R e a g a n ' i:: Com- mission on Educa'tiona l Reform in California . ~ t•Equ1 ·t d,\I cat i·eJi a I op- poiturUly " irhplies u n e q u al distribution of resources." -Chairman Robert t:. Hanson , Santa Ana. managing partner, Arthur Young and Company Accountants. -Executive Secretary J. Stanley Green. tos Angeles, superintendent or Seven Coun- ties Gas Company. -Conrad l\riner. Clare- mont, chairman, School of Ed u ca t ion , Claremont Graduate Schools. -Mrs. Wilma Chidl aw, Chowchilla, housc\vife . -Philip Coelho, Sacramen· to. college student. -W i 11 i a m CUnningbam, Newport B e a c h , superin- tendent, Newport-Mes a Unified School District. -Mrs. Deonne Griffiths, Long Beach. hou sewife. -George G u sta f son, Sacramento. assistant state superintendent of public in- 6trucUon. -Jack Hornback, San Diego, supcrinlenclent. San Diego City School i)istrict. -l\1rs. l\tarcella Johnson, Los Angeles. re a d i n g sperialisL Los A n g e I es Unified School District. -,lot D. !\-lack Ill. Oakland. lobbvist. Brotherhood o f Teaffisters. -Hail!; l\larashlian, Tor· ranee. dirertor or planning and development for Southern California R e g i o n a I Oc· cupation Center. -l\1rs. Elainr rrri£er, San- ta Barbara. tea cher . -Harvard l'ou·cll. Los Angeles. president . A. J. Jndustries Inc. -M. Jack Rand, Trmple City, superintendent . Temple CHy Unified School District. -James Rrynalds . Pacoima, president, Reyno lds Printsign Company. -Edwin Rieb, Walnut Creek. president emeritus, Lick Wilmerdine High School. -Rollin Russell, Van Nuys-. vice president'. Bodine Soun- drive Company. Hal Sc hupp ert, Sacramento. vice president. Bank of America. "We have also recom· mended that all legis latively mandated programs be funded by the state and we want operative dates deferred for one school year lo allow for proper implemen\.ation,'' the commission cha irman said. Passage of school bonds +\.\'l~~ should be nn the basis of a sim ple majority and parents of students attending non -pro- fit private and paroc hial schools should be granted some form of tax relief for extra academic tuition, the rommission also urged. His commission also looked into what it called the "shock- ing status" of the California State Teachers Retirement f'und and recommen d ed legislation which would place lhe fund on a fin anrially sound ba sis. ~,_,STE~1 INCONSISTENT The commission looked into another aspect of teaching in California and was equally shocked at what it called the "inconsistent. complex and in· effective" system of teacher preparation and creden- tialling. What is needed, Hanson said, is a long. hard look al the whole st.ruclure of teacher credentials. His group's report urges the creation of a com- mission with the suggested ti- tle of the Teacher Develop- ment. Qualification and Stan- d11rds Commission. lts go;:ils, he said. will be t1'c provision of a lrachinl! ~ s.vstem which will bri ng 11bout . ~ hiRh standards. ease of ad· ~··. , ministration and minimum \ ... cost . r \ What is badly needed. ' Hanson said. is "a single ' rredential f o r trachini;: in '. California embracing all ex-~~ isling levels of credentials '.\ pccessary for the various elementary and ~ronaary leaching position~. . TEACHER INVOLVE~fENT ~ "All other posi tions in- c I u d in g a d ministrative, • specialist anri teaching assis· 't: -Mrs . Charles SchWab, San Rafael. housewi fe tresigned dul'i:ng commission term). -Anthony Sierra._ I.a. Jolla . member. state Soard cf Education (resigned during commission term ). tanl posts would be appointive ' al the discretion of the local l sc~I district, ~ubject to broad guidelines developed by lht-commission." One of the firs\ jobs of the 8uggesttd qualification com mission should be h'I fl"~­ amine the '1 •pre11 ent u n s A I Is f ac Io r y tea cher preparalinn programs In qJ;lifomia,'' B~nson said. -New1nn Steward, Eureka. \•ice prC':Sident. KIEM-TV. ''Teacher prcpAralion in the broad sr.n~e lacks focus on ......,· _, s faster an.cl easier to find a telephone number the second time you look ~,.,,,."" it up if you circle or ·underline it the firs t time you look it up. . ~ .. @Pacific Telephone -Thl)mas Weiss, Long Btach. dean, School of Educa- tion. Cal State LonR Beach lresiRned during commission term ). the teaching • \earning proc-1---------------, • I I .· , ' .. •• . ' . J. • _,,~ .... ~.$ l , Ii. , ..• ( ' • Gorden fr esh gowns feature print with solid color in on empire line I left) or ponlsdress I right). Gaily printed ch iffon I center) is designed .with o cope-li ke bodice end a ruffled flounce on the skirt. All stress the re· , turn lo the ro man- ' tic, femine look. ' " " ' • • I ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor T~•Nl•Y· Mll'C~ t. un , ... II Dressing Fit for · a Queen ,. • Fashions Modernized Gradually By MARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -Her Ma jesty, Queen Elizabeth. was swee ping with great dignity through the fabulous Schloss Bruhl Palace near Cologne in her skinny-bodiced. small-waisted e ve n i ng gown punctuated wilh the crown jewels. Grand German indus!rialists, ap- preciative of the fact this was the first visit of the British Royal F'amily since the 1918 war, dr opped into curtsies befitting the occasio n. Standing among the privileged dignitaries was the famous fashion designer, Hardy Amics, the man who had created the Queen's gown and , in fact, her royal dressmaker for the tidy time of 18 years. A1nies always is being hounded (or information about the Qu~en. Rcce nll y, during an Australian trip, he was accosted at the airport by a battery of aggressive news people. One impertinent television man thrust a turned-0n microphone under his aristocratic nose and stated that he, Am ies, got as close lo the Queen as her husband and just how close did he get? QUESTION SQUASHED The question, obv iously steeped in innuendoes. wa s squashed when Amies said he gets as close to lhe Queen as any of her C()!l- fidential serva nts. Which Is not entirely the fact. The Queen soughl out Amies in 1953 when a lady-in-waiting, -who seem~d consistently well-dressed, recommended Hardy Amies. Much to the desinger's undisquised surprise, the Queen and Princess Margaret simply walked into the 14 Saville Row shop one dlly and asked to see the collection. Usually Amies, af!\ a staff of four, go to the Palice and the Queen sandwiches one hour of fit- tings between seriou s mallers of handling state affairs. Somehow the light side of life brightens the sobr iety. Last year, when there was a Royal Family special on American television, the Queen aske d Am ies what he had heard about the show during his frequent New York trips. ACCESSORY CRITCIZED "Oh, ma'am. they're all thrilled with the film ," he replied. "What did they say?" "They asked why you always carry suc h a big handbag in your own house." "What did you say?" "Ma'am , I tald them you often walk a mile under your own roof and don't know when you'll be back in you r parlour again." The Queen giggled. Aha, she said, she'd recall the repartee because people are forever questioning her bags and she never has a witty answer. However. the Queen won't change her accesSory image even though tier rrftllincry and handbags have been severely criticized by Lon· don's fashion watchers who ha..v.e printed C()nsistently nasty stories about their "dowdy" Queen. Ami es won't talk about it. but insiders say the Queen has been assigned certain corsetiers and ac· cessory "designers" since girlhood and feels her staff would be in· sulied if she changed oars in midstr eam . She's true blue . Once Amies was reported to have almost convinced lhe Queen to let ~Vidal Sassoon have a serious "go'' at her henny coiffure but, in the end, she issued a polite but firm ro.thank-you. It turned out that the Queen is dreadfuHy afraid that "name" fashion performers will sell their "inside'' stories to sensational publicalloils like Paris Match. However, the Queen's rigid rule or sticking to the stylists at hand often wreaks havoc for Amie.5 who never knows how his carefully- p Iott e d fa shions will be ac· cessorized. It was a big deal when Amies convinced the Queen that crown jewel necklaces could be worn over the fabric of high-necked gowns -;ind didn't neccessarily call for bare skin. And it was Amies who prodded lhe Queen into long-sleeved gowns. Someone had drilled in her mind Jha t a diamond tiara ca lled for a sleeveless gown and for years she refused to fluctuate. , Last week Amles got the Queen into some new long skirts. But he insisted, rather atub- bornly, that the Queen must wear boots. }le was delighted when she acquiesced wit hout a whimper. Am ies go t an old friend, Edward Rayne, a Bond Street bootmaker, to cus tom-make the Queen's new high-heeled patent boots. "The Que en was intrigued." says A mies. During Ule miniskirt syndrome lhe Queen was verbally acC<lsted in the British press for wearing her &kirts too long. She~ kept on telling a sympathetic Amie.5 that minis weren 't royal. But every time he made her a dress he put the hemline an Inch ~horter than . the previous time. Finally, her skirts were above-the- kncc. "Any woman can toler ate gradual change," says Amies, 1 wise man whQ has never outwardly disagreed with hi s "ma 'am". Amies lives like a king in Kens- ingt on where ·be owns a mansi on staffed by four, not including the chauffeur who wh izzes him around London in a huge Ford. He got his slart in 1945 when an admirer. Virginia Cherrill f;"' a Charlie Chaplin actress -gave him a pile of money to get star~ after she married the afnuent Earl or Jersey. I c • Spring Gardens .Plucked • Picture Today, bildea can plan pretty.as-a-pic- ture weddings. Accent will be on the modern, but to keep the picture-perfect effect she · will hold to just the right amount of ~. eld·fflshioned tradition and f e m i n i n e touches . ! ! Bridal gowns in soft, sheer fabrics yield a graceful feminine silhouette, while the delicate, meticulous design offers clear flowing lines. Truly romantic, gowm now are ca~ luring the design of the Southern belle with wide, sweeping skirts that are nip- ped in at the waist. . · · Empire lines still are popular, but this year they are more form filling and h!ghlighted with dainty lace bodices and full lantern sleeves. The bride can pluck a flower garden for her entourage, for bridesmaids' a:owns feature sheer, chiffon floral prints. Her handmaids also can w e a r gossamer light and airy dolled swiss or voile. All are romantic ccmplements to the brlde on her most important and romantic day of her life. A meClley of style end grace is captured in this bridol gown of luxUrious.· peau with I delicate accent of peau d' Ange loco. The softly ploatod skirt features a tubular t rain. .. ,/ \· i . r • ' A pe'4ed complement to tht bride Is this tri,te choice -1 ,printed voile done In tht pe111nt look , I dainty dotted sw iss gown with Venise l1ct trim Romantic t • , ~~_,......,,~-~·Ml'<>"'*''"'-' • ' f • ' I ' ' , .. I • , " ' ' '! ·1 • I • ,_ " • end 1 chiffon which W1ll1ce dt1ign1. tffm• to flo1t. All 1rt Sally I • DAJLV PILOT T11tsday, Marth 2. 1~71 Your Ho rosc ope Tomorrow Sagittarius: Protect Interests • WEDNES DAY MARCH 3 By SYDNEY OMARR. Caoctr-born persons an more conscious of financial security -or lack of it - than are naUves of other iodlacal 1lgn11. R e s e a r c h lndlcales there are more persons born under Cancer in 0 Wbo'a Who ID Commerce and Industry" than any Other sip. apart at seams. Key is to re.vealed. You now· mmt be Obtain hint from Vir10 keep things relatively simple. disctttt. What began as message. Real estate matters Then you avoid extravagance. perhaps simple deception is could soar to forefront. Home, Deal with vital issues. Forego apt to wind, labyrinth-like" in environment, domestic the superficial. various ctirecUons. Stop fooling situation -these now require SAGfITARIUS (Nov. 22-. yourself. special consideration . Aet;tnt Dec. 21): Lie low; don't AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. practical approach. attempt to expand too qulckly. 18): Study Leo message. Don't', .. .:=====-=="· ==i Ae«nt is on partnership, permit emotions to run gamut. Tht Stitchery Nook marriage, legal ties. SQmeone Exercise intelligent degree of CllEWEL ., NEEDLEPOINT may be trying ' to delay control. S t '( e s s ls on Kni ., suPPI!• property transfer. protect spec u I at i v e ventures. • ,1,100ti • 111Cm1 • ''""" your interests. romanet>. Keep resolutions. • c~1um1111·Ml111rv• • OMC v11m CA.PRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Display responsibility. 211 1• ~7iio~·:; _:·u~111 '°'"1 "' ARIES (March 21-April 19) : 10it~9~) 'i;.,~So~m~eiiiii~se~c~re~tsii..~'~' ~· iiiiiiiP~IS~C~ES~(~F~eb~.~1~9-~Maiiii;rch;;,;20~) ';iii::::; Restlessness could result in11 wild-goose chase. A v o i d wasted motion. C h e c k schedules, reservalions. Some ideas conceived now may lack practical base. Relatives can be obstacles. Go slow. I ' TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Friends and money may not mix well. Fulfill p a s t obligations. Trusting others with essentials now would be an error. Know this and strive to be thorough. W r i t t e n messages can be misinter~et- ui>1 T11tP/!fi. ed. Princess Grace as Se rene as Eve r Recent announcement of the 1970 Academy A\rard nominations brings to mind an alumna of the motion picture industry, Her Serene Highness Princess Grace or Monaco . After 15 years of mar· ri ag~. as of April 18, and three children, Princess Grace still ranks among the world's great beauties. She's shown at left in a 1956 photo and at right as she looked Feb. 19. 1971. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Hold off on partnership, legal commitments. Finish what has already been started. New venture now -personal or professional - c o u I d be premature. Double check any agreements. Cure More Deadly Than Habit CANCER (Jilne 21-July 22): Health matters dominate. New approach to per s i s tent problem will be beneficial. Key now ls moderation . Avoid excess. Regulate diet. Follow instructions given by competent individual. -DEAR ANN LANDERS : Please stop telling your 'readers who compla in about ,a snoring spouse to send the snorer to an ear-eye-nose and throat speciaJist -and if he sees no obstruction that $an:be remoVed surgically to "buy ear plugs and forget it." There IS a cure for snoring and I have proved it. First Jet me tell you. I'm not a kook. I'm e practicing physician. '. The facts are as follows : People who ,more while asleep do not snore while awake . The problem then, is simply '.teaching the brain to 1naintain the upper respiratory tract apparatus in the same fiilent configuration as when awake. \Vith 3dequate motivation the snorer ·v•ill program his brain to do this. · First, the snorer should be told that something unpleasant will happen to him if he snores. Penalties which become progressively severe should be inOicted until th e snoring stops. Some of the most effective penalties are : I. A heavy poke with an elbow lo the side. of lhe snorer. 2. A hard punch wi th the tips of the fingers against the chest. 3. A sharp jab with a ·hatpin or pointed instrument - in a safe area. 4. A hafd .slap in the face \Vith the palm of the hand. 5. A hard swat in the face v.·ith a plastic fly swatter. LEO (July-23-Aug. 22): ANN LANDERS Moods rise and fall ; you tend now to be ultra-sensitive. Lover's quarrel is much in the picture. Try to control time!! before the snoring s Lo p s completely. but it will stop, and you can count on it. -R.S.C. -f\.1.M . (TEXAS) DEAR OR.: I aQl printing your letter, but without my personal endoraemtnt. Some of your ··a ttention getting devlceif ' border on assault and battery. 1 have a slrong suspicion that in a good many instances, if this technique \Vert applied, it might end the marriage be£ore ii ended the snoring. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Everybody reads you r ~lumn. Please do the Sitters of thE: World a favor. Print one sentence. <\fld put it in big lelters: "IF YOU WANT SOMEONE TO STAY WITit YOUR CHILDREN, HIRE A SITTER . IF YOU WANT SOMEONE TO DO YOUR HOUSEWORK, H J R E A CLEANING WOMAN:' impulsive actions. One dear do the supper dishes and don't forget to you deserves patience, the pots. They are in the oven. l bought understanding. a new floor wax today. Try it on the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): kitchen floor after you've put the children Stress versafility. You r to bed. Go into the master bathroom objectives may be subject to and you will se~ that 1 broke a bottle change. Move with lhe times. of liquid makeup. Clean it up carefully Don't hang on to outmoded so you don't cut yOurself. Don't touch concepts . ProfesslonaJ, the ice-box cake. It's for my bridge domestic aspirations ccould be club lomorrow .• " in conflict. After [ pul the three kitls to bed, LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): T did everything on the list even though Obtain hint fron1 A r i es I felt I was being taken ad vantage 1nessage. Some plans change or. The next evening when 1 came to due to lack of communication. sil again she didn't even say thank Be prepared for red tape. you. Do you think this is fair : \Vhat Then you won't be caught off should I do? -FRECKLES balance. Stress development DEAR FRECK: t suggest you of basic Ideas. memorizt the line you asked me to SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov, 21): print and recite it to 1\1rs. B. the next Grand i ose f i na n cia l time you sit for her. This woman is arrangements tend to fall taking .ad\•antage of you and if you ~~:f"';.,r-r-~ :..b;~'1 :::l.i permit 1t -you deserve It. l3 1,000·. Of OIL PAINTINGS I t') WHOLESALE WAREHOUSI b ;·out'' for keeps. You can cool it and .· IO stay popular. Read "Booze and You ~"' E. li!:~:"~".~;.!!.NTA ,,.,.,, Draperies cleaned without worry. I PHONE US ••• CCI.LECY (213) 728-7283 or 723-331 t I LAST WEEK!! AT THE-SE -P-RICES!! '1~~1DTH Utill!lt f I ' " t' ltl\J. CIWI" m PRICE INCLUDES Taking down and rehanging!! 48-hour service! Penney's exclusive new process cleans all types of draperies beautifully, draperies that could never be cleaned before (even beauty pleats at no extra charge). Makes them look and feel almost like new. We also re-line a nd re make at reasonable pric1L ennelfJ DraplttJ CIHnfn9 When the sleeper awa kens suddenly as the result of any of the above attention-getting devices. he will ask. •·What happened?., He i.hould be !old firmly, "You were snoring. Stop ii.·• This might have to be repeated several I work Friday and Saturday evenings for a certain well-known fa mily and you \\1ouldn't believe the things I an1 expected to do. Last Friday \Vhen I walked into the fiuse, Mrs. B. handed me a note. She dashed out lhe door shouting. "I haven "! time to tell you these things. Your orders are \.\Titten down." Drinking may be "in" to the ki<.\S. ~ OPEN 10 THE PU I LIC (t' you 111n with -but it can put you i so•' OFF ' -F'or Teenagers Only.'' Send 35 cents'.'°""~~:~· ~·~"~'~';"~·~·~·~·~··~·~=~~~iiiii:::iii::iii:i:::;:~:;:::ii::iii:ii::iii:iii:iiiiiii::i:iiii:~::::..:::::::;.;::O:::~~~~~~~~~~ in coin and a long, ·seH·addre!lsed.11-· --- stamped envelope \\•ilh your request in care of the DAILY PILOT. Desserts Served In Style Proper attire for all aspects of college lile will be modeled by Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority members v.•hen the Mothers' Club of Tau Delta Chapter, Un iv e rs i t y of Southern California, sponsors its annual benefit . M o r e than 4::.<l invitations have been mailed to friends. alumnae and parents of ac· live members to attend the dessert lashion shov.· taking place in the Los Angele s Chapter House at 1:30 p.m. Thursday. March 4. Proceeds will augment scholarships and provide other fund s vital to the sorority . Ports O' Cati is furnishing the fashions \Vilh M r s. Barbara Benedict narrating. Assisting \\•ith the event i~ ~1rs . David L. Fraser of Newport Beach and f\.1rs. L. Eugene Pickell of Balboa Island. Models will include Lau.rie Fraser. Susan Duffy, Kathy Pickett and Lauren Kalmbach. Forum O ff ers Cjty Hi sto ry The city of Orange's history will be related when the Orange County S p e a k e r s Forum meets at 9:30 a.m. Tuesda y. t.!arch 9. Members ll.'i.ll aather ln the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Wayne Reafsnyder. Assisting her will be Mrs. J . If. Howard and Mrs. Ellis Porter. Presenting the history will be the Mmes. T. JI. Ockels, Ernest S. Ro5', E. H. S!l\iJJI and L. L. Williams. Here is whel the note said: '0 Please Ebel/ Club's Visas Stamped for Touring New Laws Reviewed The beauty of Switzerland \\'ill be brought to lhe Ebell TRAVEL GUIDE Vic tor Sickinger Colum ns Pri zed Clubhouse Thursday. l\fa rch 4, when Victor S i ck i n g e r presents his color and sound 1notion pictures during a noon luncheon meeting of the Ebell Club of Newport Beach. The former news press photographer for the Chicago Herald-Examiner and Chicago Tribune also was with AP News Service and Pat.he. He. speaks fluent German and was ab le to gain easier access to 1nany places and events and more information than n1an).o other photograph- ers traveling, abroad. His film 011 Switzerland in· eludes magnifictnt mountain and lake scenery including the a\~e-inpsiring Matterhorn, an- cient cities, castles. fountains. pictu resque villages, I he Jungfrau and the Trachten· fesl. which lakes place every IO years. E. Robert Lemkin, attomeyl at law, \\'ill speak on the Dissolute People -Rev isited I when members of the Orange County Le g a I Secretaries As~ociation gather Thur!lday, i\1arch 4. The 6:30 p.m. d i n n e r meeting will take place in the Iron Horse restaurant, Orange. beginning with a soc Jal hour. Lemkin, whose discussion will include up-to-<late in- formation on domestic laws, forms and proce<lures for the dissolution of marriage, is a graduate of I.he University of Colorado and earned his JD degree from the University of Utah. I Mrs. James M. Stewart, nomination and e 1 ec t ion s chainnan. \viii present the' slate of officers for the up- coming year. Mrs. Paul P. Smith and Mrs. Sally Ogush are committee members. Awards Fashioned Speakers Vie For Top Award Marian Christy, f a s h I o 11 writer for United Feature Syndicate and The DAILY PILOT, has been awarded prii.es by the Men 's Fashion Association in all three of its n1ajor catrgorles. 11iss Christy won first pl:tce -the LULU -Cor her !lyndicated column ' w h l c h appears in more than 100 newspapers throughout the United States, Canada and Australia. She won second place in the te!evi~ion category and third 1n compe:titioo in volving • The public 1s Invited to a newspapers with a circulation finalist contest sponsored by of more than 400,000. the L a g u n a Toastmistress Miss Christy now has 25 Club at 7 p.m. tomorrow in nationa l aw a rd s . including the Coast Inn restaurant. three Penney·Uni verslty of Selection of a representative i\lissouri Awards f or best frocTI the local group to vie fashion reporting in t h e at Council level will ht made country and she is the only culminating three months of American honored by Rome preliminary contests. designers who presented her Speaking O\lt for the honor "'ith the Ente Italiano Della "'ill be preliminary wi nners, Moda International Award. the 11mes. Thomas McKerlie, Andrew J. \Vood and Joseph ~ also hojd.s the New York Dickerson,... Couture Business Co u n c i I ;=======::;;,===.II prizt, nine cilatloos from the National Footwear lnlltitute &nd nine from the Men 's Fashion Association. The DAILY PILOT- The One That Cares Frigidaire! Jet Action 1-18 lb. Capacity rinses great! T1ll0fff w11hlng iclion-1 piec11to18 \bs .•.• or any lo1d fn betw1en. No attach• ments to edd or store. S.ye1r NllJon.. Jtt Action Wahing. GenUe, controlled water currenta deep- c11an clothes. Ptrm1nent Press Care plu1 Auto· matlc Soak cycle. 2-potltkln I~ Seltctor. 4·poslllon Water Tem· perature Seleclor for flexlbUtty. wld• Prol•cllort Plan.1-yearWarranty for repair ol any detect In !he entlre product, plus • 4-year P1otectlon Plan (perts f""il~;;;;.,.,,..,., only) tor lurnlsh!ng replace+ men1 !or lt'IY delecllve p1rt In the complete Tr1ns- mlsslon (except bell ), Drive Motor 1nd Water Pumps. Slmple AOUer-mltic Mechan1- ls patented. No geara to weir. No oll to leak. Frigidaire! Flowing Heat Dryer with Fabrics Selector Radio Oispatch•d ~ TY & APPLIANCE SERVICE F rl9idaire •RCA S.]lvania • Maytag For Dependable, Fr iendly Service Call 543-3437 .,. . $179 95 e DURABLE PRESS CARE e I PIECE TO 18 LBS. e NO STOOP LINT SCREEN e GENTLE FLOW ING HEAT e EAS.Y LOADING COSTA MESA 41 1 E. SevtntMfttfl St, 646·16B4 dally (.9 Sat. 9·6 ,-------. .. _ Notlo .. •Id• 'rotecllon Plan 1-ye1rW1rranty for repair or any <11tect ln the enllre product, plus a 4o ye ar Protection Pltn (p•tt• only) tor rumltt.-- lng rep!1c:ement for defective Drive Motor 1nd Pulleys. EL TORO l.a<juoa Hllh Piao IH•I te S1v.011l 837·1130 dally 10·6 M/F 10-9 I J l ' • TUMBLEWEEDS KE, I'll LIKE YA iO ME.ff AN OL!:> ACQUAINTANCE. OF MINE HOGARTH Ht!M!l "mE HANGMAN!!..HOAGY .W I HAVEN'T SEEN EACH OTHER FOR A · L<:t«;11ME! Mun AND JEFF MORNU·~: MUTT' A -:.-· ,,_ ... , ... ,, .... . .. _ ..... , ......... -. JUDGE PAR«ER I DON'T UNDERSTA.J.11) 't'OU, DRIVEi?! I THOUGHT YO\I WERE FILING A. 1:.1DlllAP lH.t.26E AGAJM5T ELMO ~ WHAT .A.i'E 'IOI POING HERE WI™ HIM?' PLAIN JANE WE\IE &EEN HAVIMG A LONG TALK, UEUTBIANT ! By Chester Gould I'M GOING TO WORK! oN 'roLIR !\ANDS? By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux WMAT MR'. PRIVEltS Tln'IN6 TO TElL 'f'OU, UEUT91AllT _ tS IT'S ALL SEEN A MJSUNPERSTM.IDtHG! Hts PROPPING Tl-IE CHARGE A6AIN5T ELMO! By Frank-Baginski ; I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER l PERKINS ACROSS l Mountain passes ' 5 Greil numbers: lnf01ma1 ~ 10 Pa1licle 14 "Step .. --•": 2 words 1 l S Love, in Ro me l& Oe.ar: Jt. 17 Newspaptr I featurt; 2 words J 19 Trea5ury ' Drpt. employee: . Abbr . • 20 No1h's landing p!a.ce 21 Camr logtthtr 1 22 Capable: I Suffix , 23 Hybr id 1 animals 1 25 Hoo's partner 2!. Ant imony: Prelil JO Title or respect 1 31 Strip 1 34 Kind of , eclipse 1 )b Young, immatur e person 1 JB Mr. Harrison I )9 Along about t April : J ) WQl'dS • ' 17 I I " I ' " " ' ' ,, 4l Sta: French 43 S11rrou!1d 44 Spanish tltlt 45 Wore away 47 Place 49 Coin 50 Sta tr: Abbr , 51 Monty hoarder 53 Dour 55 Fish 56' Ont h1vin11 an advantage - Slang bl Mad : Sld11g bl Kind of sterl-mak1ng furnacr: 2 words 114 Help 05 Blitis/J monty b6 Mt ans ot accrss 07 Portion or mtdicint 68 John Jacob --···· 69 Blac k: Pott. DOWN l Andes shr ub 2 --aboul: ApPfO~i -mate1y : 2 words ) Kind or bt~n 4 Mix up S Boy's name 6 Dan ish county 7 l . 8. Johnson e.g.: 2 word s 7 .. " Ytslerday's Puzzle Solved: B Attempts '!Calendar <ibbrevi ation 10 Comba! 11 Musica l ins·trumtnl 12 Spoken 1 J Lion ltatu1e lil Machine part 24 Speaks impe1frct!y 15 Safe- cracktrs: Slan g 26 Viscous mud 27 TV control 28 Or igin1tts 2'J Exclamation of C01'1ltmpt Jl Nolst 32 Evil bring JJ Put fo1th 35 Act 'de fianlly 37 Formal proctdurrs 40 Sediment: Abbr. .3 /l/71 41 Polict investi9ator : Slang 46 Lower in ra nk 48 Range <1f <1m~·s abilltitS 51 Broods 52 Small Eurasian deer SJ Pleased 54 Gray wolf 55 Rio dt Janeiro's beac h: Informal 57 Unit of printing 58 Find fault 59 Fragrant essentia l oil: Var. 60 "At what t imt 7" 63 kmy fink: Abbt. , .. MISS PEACH . I . Fl«NCINFZ, 'IOUANOI \Vfl.t.. GET Mltllfl1EO SOliEOAY. STEVE ROPER WE WILL/./AVE A ~EAL. BIG- W!OOING-1 AND SUY A "u6' COUNiflV ESTATE •• U'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS ' I ~· .,,,... ···-- MOON MULLINS IF I 1-!ADIH' ~Cli' OF A BoER,BABY, I WOULDN1T INTERFEfl.e WITH YolJ WATCHIN' "THE HE,ART·THR08 HOVI< 10NIGHT. ANIMAL CRACKERS •. LYLE, I'M S()tE <,l()()'tE TAl(ING> THIS f.Ali: I 100 SER!OOSLY •• -I MEA~ •· ~E HADSOME. UllUSUALl-'l ~UMID WfAT>lE~­ ~0 8\G !>EAi. ! By John Miles I --·· ~ .. .. . ~ . - -IN Wf.llC/./ WE WIU.. ~"'" TOGETf./E<Z: FOl<EVE<Z: ANO EVE/<:. SEE, ~CN{ TH.AT'S 'T><E P41<T I HATE A80UT 1r: .. By Mell By Saunders and Overgard ~ ISlol"T SACK YET, OOLLY.'·~SlT DOWN AND rLL DEAL A HANO OP 61N WH1LE II-£··· By Chatles M. Schulz ...-~~~~~~--. ' .. ' 1\IERE AF.f. NO OCEANS IN '"THERE />11£ NO OCEANS IN I 1llOU6HT '/OO WAllTED VS KANSAS.TufRE ARE NO OCEANS IOWA. "THERE ARE .. ' 1tl 60 IN 1tJ PETAIL -' I 5J " ' ' • 1 ,. • IN NEBRASKA. Tllexf ARE NO OCfANS IN NEVADA .• 1llERE A!E NO OCEANS IN M1Nllf5CfA. • ... ... T11rsda1, March 2, 1971 DAILY PILOT JU ' 1 TtiAT15 EAS'/ FOR <.OJ TO 51>.<,1/- 1-' ~. • .. . By Al Capp By Charles Barsotti o~.~~~ ..it. S<>"Tru. ~~ ~ Q~~carn. teQ~~~· By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bollen _ IJ()() i!-~EM'T T>lE Ollf 101rn -me FRIZZ:IE.S ! ' ~ ~ TH£ STIANGE WO~lD MR.MUM DENNIS THE MENACE • • ' [ WAS JUST 7HINKlN' •.. .IF MY 4tXJ1H WAS FULi.. a Q:Xll(l5, l COIJLONT qLOWTHIS M01?N ! • J f DAILY-PILOT Aaron Even Money · Bet to 1"0p Ruth's Marl{ ATL.Al\'TA IAP) -Baseball's most revered rtt0rd -Babe Ruth'1 714 C'Rn~er home runs -is In jeopard)', says Jimmy ''The Greti" Snyder, La.s Vegas odds· maker who tabs Atlant1's Henry Aaron an even money bl.'t lo break iL Snyder 1ays the odds art' against \\'illie ritays, No. 2 on . the all·llme home run Ust. surpassing the Bamblno's mark and that Aaron is •·a .'1·1 fa vorite to hit more home runs than Mays careerwise ." Snrder fijUrtd the odds at the request ()f The Atlanta Constitulion. which revealed them today in a banner story by Charlie Roberts. The n~wspaper said Snyder spent &e\ era\ days mulling over l he possibilities and considered 11uch factors as age , health and durability of the two superstars, possibility of an injury and the type parks they'll play in during tht> waning years of their careers. San Francisco's Mays, who will be 40 May 6, has hit 628 homers in hi!I 19 ytars with the Giants and Aaron, J7, has fl92 in 17 seasons "'ilh the Braves. "This is one reL'ord I'd hate like hell lo see broken," said Snyder. "Lei's go with Aaron at even'"mi:,ney that ht dots break lt~ Now J ~lf!kure it'a .. 1 May1 does not make it. "So much of this la feeling, analyilng th is kind of thing," he &aid. "What am J, a Greek computer?" Snyder say& he figuru Aaron wll l have four more season.a -two 1reat ones before dropping to 15-20 homers a year. "I figure it's right down the middle, touch·and-go whether he gets the 123 homers he 'll need to pass Ruth," Snyder said. Another Overpowering Win For UCLA Cagers, 71-69 SEAITLE IAPl -UCLA, the nation's lop-ranked basketb11ll team. watched 11 11')..po\nt lead evaporate In the second half ancl hacl to scramble ror its life lo claim a 71-69 Paciflc·8 victory over \\'ashinglon Mondny night. The Huskies dUeled UCLA on I nl'ar· even footing in the first halr, then surged from behind in the second to go ahead by one poinl with S6 seconds left in the contest. \Vith only 29 seconds sho"'ing on the C'lock. Curtis Rowe bucketed the tihort jumper !hat gave the Bruins a one-point advantage and ultimately the game after S~ve Patterson sank one or '"'o frte throws after lht> buzzer. The Bruins outshot and outreboundeff !ht Huskies during 1he first half, hu1 m1naged only a 38·36 lead before the intermission. UCLA threatened lo carry it away_ in the second half as they raced In a quick eight-p:iint advanlaR;(' and widen· ed il lo a 53..\3 lead. their greatesl or the night. with 13 :40 to go. But the Huskies batlled back to R ~.}53 lead with 7:48 lo go, then lO.'it it until Charles Ouclley's free-throw pul them back on top 69-68 with less than a minute left. A record Husky crowd of 9.~2 was near collective cardiac arrest bifore Rowe iced the game. Rowe had 18 points in lhe contest, but was edged fnr game scorHi11: honors by teammate Henry Bibby 'l\•ith 21. Dudlt>y was high for Washington with 11 points. The shooting of Bibby. who had been In a season·long slump, was pleasing to coach John Ylooden but it was Rowe's 10-foot accuracy early and late that decided the contest. The victory gave the Bruin.<; a 22-1 re- cord, identical with liSC, but the Bruins are a leg up in lhe Pac.a race as the teams head for !heir ri.tarrh 13 showdowri battle in UC LA's Pa uley Pavilion. The UCLA win. incidentally, ga\•e the Bruins an 11:..0 Pac-8 record and offically Fans Have It Their Way·· But SC Win s PliLL~IAN. \Vash. I AP\ -An unrul,\', program·lhrow1n.i: crowd "'as calll'd on a lechnil"al ri.1onday, t>nding the Southern Cal.\\:ash1ngton State Pacific-8 basketball clash 13 scconLs 'arly. 11 was a 75-64 victory for t:SC over \\:su·s Cougars who "·ere playing the season's last game before 5.000 highly parti~n fans. The crowd had been warned three limes about throwing objects hefore referee Lou Soriano called lhe technical or. the crowd. WSU coach '-l arv Harshnu1n didn'l call the 0H1c iating poor as the crowd suggesled but he said the "turnin,R point" was when \\'SU's Jim ri.leredith "·as called for an offense foul and a basket was not counted. Early in !he second hall Soriano halted th' game and had tht> announc'r warn lhe crowd. Then at 13:fl3 11 hand ba.11 was tossed on to the court and the game was again stopped. Later "'·hen l:S<".~ Or1na Pa.'!ctl foulrcl \Vashinglon State·s .\l ikr c;omf"Z. about seven spectators .i:athcrt'd around Pagett anrl pointed at him. ·'•n 1ni: "You, you. you:·· Southern Cal, tr11i!1n1; b~· lo1.1r poio1.' )ate in the ,game. l'fln1e ha<·k (•11 $Orne super free throw shoot1nf:. 11ncl the re- , bounding of center Run Hill'\, 11110 coo- ti-olled the b~ckbonrcl!I dutinR 1he roug h going late in the gamc. eliminated California 's surging Golden Bears from the Pac·R rarP. Tne Bears, winner~ of their l~st lhte' in ll. row, have an 8-4 rnark· and retained, Until !ltonday night, a mathematlcal chance of tying for the crown. The Wa shington reeord dropped lo 5-6 in the Pac.a race. fourth behind Cat, and \\'SU descended io 2·9, a rung rrom St~nford's bottom-place 2-10. In games Friday nigh!, Cal is at UCLA. Stanford al Southern Cal, \Vashlngton is al Oregon and WSU is at Oregon ~l. The following night the California and northern team~ 1witch respeclive foe11 and that sets up" the USC-UCLA showdown. S ports Clipped Sliort Ex'-Sailor Coach In Line for ost Former Newport Jligh Sailor basketball coach Dave Waxman may be one of the leading candidates for the head cr1ge position at San Jose State College after the resignation of Dan Glines Monday. \Vaxman has been !he Spartan frosh basketball coach for the past 8eason. The Spartans l."Ompiled a di~mal 2·24 record this pas! season, losing 21 in a rn1v at one point. Glines had a 911-lfM record In five seasons al the San Jose helm . • LONDON Corona clel ~tar's Ro Laver v.·hipped Australian Tony Roche. and Yugoslavia's Nikki Pilic ousted defending champ Marty Rirssen of Evanston. 111., ,_.tonday in the semifinals of the Rothman's International tenni s tournament. The finals "''ill be held Tuesday "'±th the v.·inner pockl'ting $7,800. Laver, who set a n1oney.winning rr('ord of more than $200.000 a year ago, has already earned $1 17,000 this year. The S7,800 first prize is the richest purse t'\'er offered in Britain. [o ~al1ng fello1v left~· r~oehc 6·3, 7.5, L<1ver reached his peak in !he c1~hth game of the first i>l't hre11k1ng Hoehe·s ser\'iC'e with dazding haC"khands. \\'ith a 5-2 lead 1n the second set. Laver ran into a spell or trouble, losinfi: three straight Ji:arnr~. After droppinq his ser\'tce in !he eighth game. he called for a new pair or shocs But after losing the ninth gan1r. as well. he chang- ed back to his old onl'~. • Nine of the 10 at-largr be r 1 h s in the National Colle~111te 1\lhlr!1r i\ssoria· lion basketball lournament 11ere flltrd today. Serond·ranked ri.tarq uettr. wu1ner, 11( 36 st raight, and 24 ·0 this ~cason, runth- ranked Jacksonville 21·~; 10th ra1t'd Forc»Jam, 21·2: Jlth·rated Duqut·~nt•. 20.:1, Vlllaljova , 22-6, Notre [)an1l', JR-7, Hous- ton , 20·6, Utah State. 20·6. and New :\le:it- ieo Stale accepted bids todily. F'ordhan1, Ouqut>sne and \'illano1·a - the East's three at ·largr tcarn s -will take part in the East !1r<;t round a!IJng with 1he champions or the fl ·y L<•a_gue, Middle Atlantic Conft>rence and Southern Confer('nce. Picked to play in the r.11dwrst regional were Houston and :\n!re Dan1r ~lar· quette ~·ill mt'ct Jacksonl'Llle 1n lhe Mideast regional. In addi1ion lo Hou ston-Notre Da1nr, !he midwest regional al Houston ll'tll 1natch New rile:it1co !'ta!c against the South"·cst Conference \\IPner. The lwo winner." v.11l arll'ancc 10 \Vichita Stale ri1arch 18 ~nd 20 to pl.iy 1he l'hampions of the Bii;t F.1ghl anll ~1is~nur1 Valle~· conft renecs. The \Vest rci.:1onal at l"tah State "'ill n1:itch champi eha1npi entry. ~iona Western Athletic C:Onference and Weber State, Big Sky , Utah State and one at-large e winners advance to the re- l the university of Utah March JR a w. 20 to battle the Pacific Eight and Coast C:Onference winners. • 'EW YORK -Mark Howe, 15-year-old n nf Gordie ltowe, the Detroit Red \lings' star, was named Monday to the 1970·71 Junior All-American hockey team. Young llowe, a forward, plays for the Detroit Junior Red Wings of the Sou lh Ontario League. His father is the Nalional Hockey League's caree.r goal· SCQring leader. • PHOVO, Utah -Stan WatLs, Brigham Youn~ head ba.'iketball coach, wa11 in in· lcnsil'P ca re flt Utah Valley Hospital after undergoing a 12~2-hour operation ri.1onclay for ren1ova\ of a cancerous tumor. \Vatts. 59, has IX'en coach flt BY U for 22 years. The school said Walls would be ho:o;. p1lf11i?ed sever11I week~ and would miss Salurrlay·,.. in1portant \\'este.rn Athletic Conference game against archrival Utah . The "·inner of that game is assured of at least a tie for the WAC crown. • CLARKSVILLE. Tenn. Ke n Strphenson hit a one·and-one free throw situation "'ilh three second! remaining here ri.1onday niJthl lo give Auslin Peay a 96·94 baskelball triumph over seventh· riinked \Vestern Kentucky , "It "'as probably the greatest effort in thr nation tonight." said coach George Fisher. "''hose team finished the sE'ason at J0-14. 5-9 in !ht> Ohio V:illry Con- f l'rence. • Or-IAHA Marquette Un11·ers1ly survil·ed a strong second-half challen~e In defeat Creighton 66-61, stretching i1s b:1.~kelb;11l season record to 24-0. The Bluejays, down by 11 at !ht' half, revi\'l'd their defenses to give the t-;o. 2 rankrd \\'arriors a contest. Creighton po"·erhouse Cyril Bapt1s1e scored fi1·e slraip;ht points to put the Hlucjays ahearl S3-S2 with 8:34 left in the garne. And a Mike Caruso jump shot niade it 5.">-52, but th'n Creifi:hton ran oul of st~am. College Cage Poll Te•ll'I W·I !'ti. I lJClAo rJJI 11·1 •'1 ~ M•'Q'tl!t( i.1 JJ.O •1' J lJ~( ll·I W • ~~"'"' (1\ 71·1 Jll ! l"tnnwl•~n+~ 1•~ "'° ~ 5 C~•Ol<n~ 19·• l1t 1 W Konluc~v 10·• 7'1 I ~enTutky 70·• 167 0 J•,•\O•W•ll• Jl.) )51) IC. Fardh•m ll•J ~J• Tt•"" 1 I, D1111~tl1>t 1'. N C1roll1>• tJ. O~lo SI, 1•. Ttnn•UHI 1, 'HCU1!Gn 11. No!rt o.<im• 11. Lon0Be.1t~~· 11. ll>dltn• l •Stllt 10. lJtt~ St. ... 1 ""· If.) "' l•·l ,,, 16-J " 1'.J !& 70 J ,, 11.1 lJ Jl•4 7' 11·• 10 " • 70 10·1 ll lf Mays 1tay1 around a long lime 11 1 player-coach, giving him some shots at pinch·hilling, 1t would "give him some kind of outside chance. But if he plays thrff more years, to 43, he'll have to hit 87 more lo pasi; Buth ... and the games he plays will have to gel less. I figure it 's 4·1 he won't." Snyder cites Aaron's home park as another factor. one he calls •·a park thal;s easy to hll in." '1 He says wind and distant fences in San Francisco's park are against hitting home runs. ''They score a hal! I run more a game in Atlanta Stadium than they do in St. Loul.S' new park, for inslant'f:," he said. "The llall has a tendency to be livelier these days , regardless of what they con· tend," Snyder added. "That's got to help' Aaron and l.1ays. Let's just say playing conditions today are a helluva Jot more cooduei ve to hilling home runs. "I can't h~lp wondering how many Ruth could hit under today's condilions •• , or how many Aaron and Mays would have hit v•h en they could spit on the ball and apply slippery elm and a lot Qf such things.'' · Ruth srent five yea rs as a pitcher, which SnyJer .said may have kept him fr01"9 hitting 900 home runs .. He also says-''1f ri·la)'S had played ht~ "·hole career at the Polo Grounds Ln New York he "'ou!d already ha ve broken it. " "If Aaron plays 22 years lhe way Ruth did , he'll sure as hell make it. He 'd only have to hit 24 and a fra ction a year for five years to catch Bab!:'. But projecting all the aspects, I'U say even money he does." CURTIS ROWE (LEFT) OUTREBOUNDS WASH ING TON 'S STEVE HAWES . UCLA WON , 71-69 New Twist • ID Fish Tales Fish sto ries of a fishy nature are bound lo pop up no"'' and I hen when olltdoor lovers ,1?.et together. Such tales ha\'t' ah;o bcrn knn11·n to grow in· crcasingly "'i!h l'Onsun1pt1on of a certain kind or relrestuncnt. The story you arc about to read is i;upposed!y lrue .... it was cl1spatched by !hi! company that 011·ns lrvine Lnkc, the place where it all is said to have taken place. "II wasn'l the size of the bass that Larry finch of h-1anha tt;.in Brach caught that 1nade big 11e11s <it Lnke Irvine, it \\'8S lhc \\'ay Finrh c:iught it. "finch. fisnu1i.: in Sierra Cove for trout. hooked a small rainbow cslimaled at 8 ounces. \\'hen thl' hooked trou l \\'8~ brought in close In the boat. up shot a 217-pound bass to gulp his dinnrr. "F'inrh suddenly \\·as battling: both trout and bass. lhe lflrgemouth hit the hook and Fineh landed both fish for a double ht'ader. ·'His corn111cnt: 'I didn't think a bi1~S that size could swallow a 11 llOle trout.' " 1\I the same L:ike. llunlington Beach's Richard Blaurlro got a trout limit. "'hich included a I lb., 14-ouncer. * * * t'lsh And i::a1ne authorities 11 arn of dan1,erou1ly thin and soft Ice ro\'erlog surfaces of Southland lakes a n d reser1·oirs, whlrh are open lo Ice fishing for !he ft rst Ume. Particular c:aulion goes to lhe laiy guy who mii;:ht try and run a snowmobile onto ice \\'hieh lnok s strong but may ----------\VHITE \VA SH ----- GLIENN WMITI' aclually not be hard or thick t noug h to support ~ucb weiJ:hl . * * * Bill \'ail or Edison Jligh's CIF Class i\AAA football ch11mpions. "''as one nf sc1·t>r<1I c::o<1ches 11 hn spoke al a grid cooches' clinic Saturd::iy at Lo)nla t.:ni\'crsity. .Vail "'as on a panel which discu~sed n1aking a loser into a winner. Alsn on the day's program "''as ex- Newpnrt •Iarbor bns~ 1-:rnie J ohnson, who gave a field dcrnonstration on in- di vidual defensive play and \1·hlch fet1lured some of the ~('1\piir1 hnc111en. Jim Slangeland, llunt111g1on Beach High grad ol several ~ e<1rs back anrl now hear! coach at ('a! State /Long Beach 1 spoke on goal line offenses. Stangeland·s 49ers !ird Louisville in the 1970 Pasadl'na Bo11I. 24·24 * * * Noire Oa111e basketb all \\hil Au~tin Carr ha~ a university r<irrrr 1rorinp: average or l4 points prr µ:amP, ~econd nnly to ex-LSU flash Pete ,\Jara\ icb, 'A-ho sported a 44.2 a\•eragc. Third 011 tllr all-timr list i~ 1)~rar Rohertson, who hil :u a 33.8 per game cli p 'l\·hlle pcrforn1 lng for Cin· cinnati . * * * Latest ne"'·s frnm ~!unich. site of next year's Olympic c;amcs: The pool in the sv.•1mm1ni;: slad1um has been filled twice antl trsted ror leakage. The ad1us1able hnl!11m has bren installed. ancl lhe hydr:i11!1c rnechan1s1u is ready for use . -Its 1unclion is In raise ahuut a 1h1n1 or the boltom of !he pool rro1n a de[)1h of three n1etcrs to 60 l'rntin1r1rr~. the .acljustmrnl bein~ infln1tel~· \ariablr. 1111h ii viC\\' lo post·Olympic use by children and disabled persons. The game was phy!itc::il "'1th 24 fnul~ beini;t called •!lain."! !he hn~t Co11~ar!'. which maddened !he fans. ~e,rr no1ed l!S a ptare of gen!"! h>"1Spllali11', Bohlrr 1urnecl "'hite hot in lhfo ftn11I n11n11tcs <15 L'SC m11cle its mad dash from bch1nit. Supreme Court Backs Haywood A hand ball wa11 tossed onto thr court, haltll'\IP play one lime. a box of popi:orn '''as tiurlecl onto the head!! of Ute Troi11n p111rers anothf'r time. Tht referees tried to qultt the ctn" rl clown by asking. ovtr the public address s.\1Slem. for a re1son1ble tone of 101ce. \\lien it didn't com~. Sorill'IO t1lltrl a lechnic.11 fool on the !tns and wA.lkPcl •ff the courl . Riley wound up with 21 points hul '''"5t!rl'e guard Dana Pagel!, "'hn hit 11 11 nine of his free throws inch1dinc the clu1ch ones In the lite goina, ""as •n .1Hcrn1te hero. J im Meredith h,cid 2~ !o pace the lo5ers. • ' SPENCER HAYWOOO \\'ASHINl:ToN !AP , -s, e11 ce r llay\lo'ood has won the latest rQW\d In !us 11ar "'ilh pro ·bi1skc1ball. Rut, while the f\at1onal R;i sketball Associalion h11:o; him on its mind. il's also thinking of bi;::gt>r and hrtler things. H.-v·~·oort. Scatlle's controversial Siar "''ho jumped to the SuperSonics from Dcn\'cr of thr rival American Raskctball Assoclation e11rlier ~g iea~on, won U.S. Supreme Cuurt ~l"ftmsion Monday to rtturn lo action wlth lhc NBA club. ·rhr tt:?11i.;-ue. 11•hich t·nntf"nds hr Is \rlnl~l1nfl. 1\f' rule h11rr111i 11: p\111·rr wltn.•e ·rnllegr 1·!as.s has not been rr11du11ted , 11·Hs grantrd a prelimlnary 1ojunction last month by the ll S <.:1rcu1t Court in San Francisco, pre\'cnuns Ha)'\l'ood frnm playing The man ~h1.v11('r)(I 11!:11 s b11skl'tball for. Sam Schulrnan. has lnshcd out at NBA comnliss1oner J. \\'111ter Kennedy and 1 rival o~·ner. Schulman said Kcnnrdy nnd l.JJs AnJltles Laker owner Jilrk Kenl Cooke u~t'd •·t1e\lio11s 11ncl mallcinus." he.ha1 \llr in the hencllln~ nr the 11a~Wnod ca s e whtn !he forn1t·r IJ<on\·rr Rt'!( ket star . brcan1e discnchilnlccl with thC! riva l Amcr1c<1n Oa~krttiAll Assortntfnn Sehuln111n i;ald l'ooke lntd 10 1nflue11c::a Kenntd,v last December lo declare ) Jfayv.·ood a free agent but that Kennedy bnlke<t. "I \viii not tolerate Cooke "nd Ken· n(d)"! mnliclou!ne.ss or de\ 1ousness,'' said Schulman. "l feel bad ;it>out all of this but I wl\I fight II lo lh e biller end . I love basketball t1nd I don·t "'Rn! lo hurt It but maybe it (the NBA) "'nuld be belttr off under new a'usplees. ''Of course we 'll certtiln!y r1hlde by the court's decision," said NBA Cf'lm· mi~~ionrr \V"ltrr Krnnl'cl)'. :it1dlng. "\1'e'll br di!CUSSin1: it \vilh our t11torncy~ first thin 11. in lhc mornlnµ '' Kennedy nlso predic ted HI a m11g1tt!ne: • arjicle that \\'1th1n 10 lear~ th~ :\BA \1 111 ha\·e four t.tpans1nn team~ 1n Eurnpt -1"·0 in Italy and one ap1err 1n Spain and (freece. lie acldtci that present pldns cell fnr the league to go ltnm 17 IC'I 2!l team1 hy 1975 wilh lhe Sou\h\\C~I anrl ~1rx1e; primary targets and Hav..!!ll a po!1.~1b1htv. ''The evf'ntual goitl t~ 23 te11ms.'' · • "Kenn rdy sc:1id th' lc11;ql!r' could ha\ e hvo te11ms nperatini.: in Jtnt~· n!''l'I sr1sr n bul ii \\nUJcln 't be prarl1c;i! tn ~o in· lernation~I 11nlil air f,1rrs <1rr rut 1tnd I here are fr.ur Eurrip,.~n tc.~n~r. 111 pr1111dr t cheduling cont1nulty . • . Rustlers-..,, Post 6-1 !riumph By JOHN CASS 01 ... °'"' 1"119f "•" Jt was a typical cold and windy day at Golden West College Monday, but it didn't make any difference t • RusUer pitcher Gene Barker. The crafty Golden West right-bander, getting his first win of the season, Umlled Sad- dleback to flv-: singles and • bloop double in leading hi1 club to a 6-1 victory in an error-plagued non-conference lilt. Barker, a former Rancho Alamitos High star, struck. out nine and walked just three in lgoiflg the route for coacb Fred Hoover 's club. The victory evened Golden WC!t's season mark .at 4-4, The Rustlers were scheduled tD open Southern California Conference action a g a i n s t Cypress today at La Palma Park. Golden West also has a home circuit tilt Friday against LA Harbor. The loss was Saddleback'i fouM;h in a row and ran its season mark to 2-7-1. Only two runs were earned in the game and both clubs had trouble fielding a n d throwine: the ball in the bitter cold and windy day. Saddleback committed s i :r errors resulting in f o u r unearned Golden West runs. The Rustlers miscued four limes. A walk to the Jim Hogan and a pair al errors gave lhe Rustlers a run Jn the first lnning and another free pass, Hog,an's double and an error produced the second Rustler run in the third. A single by Steve Shapard, a bloop double by Terry Boyles and an ensuing error on the play gave the Gauchos their only tally in the fourth. Golden West then added single runs in each of the third, fourth, seventh and eighth frames. JICk>O!'I, 1D Ml"en, 11 aona1, I! Smit/\. c l1tce. c (l mPDtl[, lb S/\1P1rd, cl • .,.,1,, lb llOffff, IJ .. on. t1 lll1dtlld••· ' H1tt11, t Hol,.,.._ t1 Tolll1 • ' ' ' ' • • • • • • • • ' • • ' . ' . ' . U I Gtldtr! Wiii !•! .. ' ' ' ' . Jim H119111, cl Mick, lf klrlrr, 11 C11rr1n. 11'<1 Kelltr, lb Olldrlck, lb &~!HM, c 11tren1111111r, IF 8111, rf Ad1m1. 1b • 1tomm111111g1r, lb H1mllton, !b l1rktr, p . Tolll1 ' . • ' ' • ' • • • ' . I 0 ' ' ' . ' ' ' I ~ . Scttt 111 1111111111 . .. , ' . • • • • ' . • • • • ' . • • ' . • • ' . • • • • • • .... ' . • • ' . ' . • • • • ' . • • • • ' ' • • ' . • • ' ' Saddlro1ck GolGtri W11t ' ' . 000 100 000-1 ' ' 101 110 11~-4 , • MD Wins; Chargers In Setbacl\. Mater Dei, behind the five- bit pitching of rlgbt·bander Dave Ki ley, downed invading Rancho Alamitos. 4-1, to highlight non league baseball action Monday. Jn the only other area tilt , Edison rell to host La Quinta, S-1. Aiat.er Dei scored a single tally in the second and wrap- ped it up with three runs in the fifth. Gary Simpson had a pair of hits to lead the Monarchs at bat. M1ttr Dsl lfl 11t r11n1 S11tr1r, 11 ~ 1 1 O Llllnt rl, II l 0 ' 0 Collte•. lll l 0 0 0 Slmp10I\, Cf J I 1 I C!outh. c ! 1 I I ktmmtttl, rf 1 0 I 0 S~loSan, 11J ) O I o A01rt11, tb J O o o 1(111'{. 0 J 0 0 0 lo!fl1 '' 1 1 1 lll•ncl!t "'""*'°" 111 •••11 11>1 l.llVIOl'l,111 '0 00 lltoG01r1, d l G I 0 LovMr, II j 0 0 0 Ar>dtrlOn. "c ' 0 I 0 l(ylkt!tth T, !I < I 1 0 lllt~I. Jll J 0 ' 1 Stokk1, lb J 0 G O l!d'w1rdi. ,, 1 0 0 0 G111'11t <• t o o o T1t111 J! I t I lctr1 ltJ ln11l"n ' ' . 1t1ncho Al1mlte1 ooo 001 0--1 s J Mtttr Del 010 O:IO •--"' 1 J •OlN!t 111 11trflit•1 \ ~ ~ ~ J ' ' 0 1 ' 0 0 , ~ ! ! I O I I 1 ° ~ t ,! 1 : ~ I.II Qvlft!l,"0 • r "' ,.i l'UtlOUt't ,i· ' • I I Mt u,,.,, l 0 ~!t!!~·1.1 , A I s;rin., c l I 8'/lr.:, .~ : !, 1 ' Jwu CJ, ti j l(Ofl. ni I ~?,1F.~ • ~ , I I Vlf!\11'1', 11 1 ~. 0 0 Tt1111 11 Ii j l e-n lftnln" !tllOll 000 001 o-' ~• 0111nt1 llJO OOl • -t ' I . ' T11tsd.1)', M.11ch 2, 1~71 D.lllV PILOT Jl Marina Sextet Makes It Tough On Cage Rivals By PHIL ROSS Of .... O.Ur '"'' II•" Kipp Baird, Bruce Miller. Bill McGuire, Dean Boldan. Briian Sanders and Andy Thurm. What do the!e ball dozen name• have 1n common other than the mere fact that they play baaketball for the M1rlnl Vikings? Well, for one, the six at hand have Liken tuma 1n be1nC the Vlklngs' top individual scorers in dJrferent g1me1 lb Marlnm 's glossy 22-6 season record. Still alive In the second round of ClF AAAA playoff act.ion wllh Morningside next in their path tonlgbt. the Vikings haw goUen the biggest polnt·producing spurts oot of the 6-5 Baird, a strongboy who usually muscles bis way in for UIY crJpplet when not popping from 12-16 feet away along the ba.at:llne. SUNSET LEAGUE CO.CHAMPS -Coach Jim Stephens' Vikingii share the 1971 basketball tille alter a 12-2 loop mark. From left- George Waggoner, Ron Rewoldt, Andy Thurm, Rick Smith, Brian Sanders, Dean Bogdan, Kipp Baird, Dave Sadowski, Jeff Butt, Bill 1i1cGuire, Bruce Miller, Mark Adams. A varsity starter as a sophomore and junior, Bllrd hu m-.riaged to pace the Viking scoring outright in 16 coa-- tests while sharing high-point hooora with 1t1iller and Tburm. The trio had 12 polnta apiece in au early, prueuon wtn over California High. In addition to having ~ared top honors with hlt two senior mates In the victory against Cal Hlib. eleventh lfldlr 1'-tlller haa abown up alone It the bls;h 1pot ()Q tlqle &lml scoring docketa in five other lilts with hll h!ih Mini 11 In an 87-35 Sunset deeislon over Santa Ana. He la one of two underclaasmen on the rostl:r. Vike Nine Upended By LB Poly By ROGER CARLSON Of !ht 011/J Jllltl 11111 l\tari~a High 's va r sity baseball 'team we11l down to its second slraight non.league set. back l\1onday afternocn when three Long Beach Poly hurlers combined to shut out the Vik- ings, 2-0. P.tarina's host Yikes were unable to gel a runner past second base as pitchers Glenn Ogawa, Dale Adams and Mike Jiutton limited coacll Ray Allen's crew to three scattered hits. Brock Pemberton accounted for the only extra base bit for Marina, opening the sixth inning with a double to left center . But the Yikes, trailing by two, were unable to pick him up. as was the case in the first three innings. The only ether baserunner to get te second for Afarlna was Bob Towle, who singled lo center and stole gecond with none eut in the second stanza. Poly, meanwhile, picked up a marker in the third i11ning on a walk. stolen base and crisp single to center by Leon Washington. An insurance tally \vas earn· ed i'n the fifth frame when Pat O'Sullivan doubled Adams to third and the latter scored on a peg over the catcher's head. Viking pitcher Mike Beattie went all the way for the hard luck defeat. striking out four and allowing four hits. The only time the Vlkes had more than one runner on base was in the initial inning. Dave Campbell opened up with a walk but was erased from the basepaths when he y,·as going with tbe pitch and Pemberton lined to I e ft . Campbell was doubled up at first. Tony Cresci then follo.,..·ed with a clean single to left. M1rlftl 411 C.lmPb~ll. I~ Ptmbe'r!on, lb '''"; JI! Win, rl ,."Wit, Cl W1ll1, , 8row11, :lb l!f)e!ll1, p Wheeler. II lot1lt .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " L.en1 IMOI ,1tr .. 0'511lllv1n, 11 i L. W11J\lntton, lb ' M1gutr1. II J ktmmt"r. lb l Wlllfl . rl·CI l o~u911h" c l P•lce, lb a wrnn, er 1 H1v11. rl o ,..g1w1, p O Ad1m1, p G IC w11~in1T0<1. I'll 0 Zl"I" pr 0 H"'l!cn, " o To1fll n • • • • • • • • • • • '" ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' • • • ' ' '" • • ' • ' • • • ' • • • • • • • • • ' • ' '" ' • ' ' • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ••• L011g 8t1Cll POI¥ 001 OU 0 ·1 4 O M1ront OCO 000 0 -0 l I Final Hoop Scoring CltlST\lll W' LlAGUI '''''' t I• ••t 1. klluln. Fool!llH 14 1IO '20,0 1 MtlnfllY, Vlllt '•rlt; \' 2-.i 11.t J. J•ci<JOl'I. Or1nt1 4 lJ2 16.6 ;: ~t~~:::i;;.: Tc~~ 11 m i1:1 6 r t011g, e 1 Mod-11 m 1 I 1. loG<I, Vlllt Ptra, II !"' :•: I luYell. Footlllll h lj j" t s .. 1im, Tu1t111 h 1 1 .I 10 (li•l Sl•l"mrVt t, l(fl. IJ 109 11 ' JolU\)ffl, L M, 14 209 14. t IRVi/111Uii111 ,11,tr • 1 Kevn. SA V1l .. v 14 7 0.1111' EU11'1(i1 II ~ Ou 1111, Los ,..11mllos 11 •· 511w1r!. M11noll1 1• 5. ltlU!lt , M~nollt U 6, M1clt1n, ;~rt Mtlt H 1. Grl1WY, ""' 11 9 H. M-1, t 11'1(11 H I Fi11>er, fO~ H 10. 511n1"°"' Mt•• 1 i SUNllT' LIAGUI •• • •• ~· ll" n~ ~,.~ l~ "·\ !II \!:i HI IH 1 [)\jnn, W~ITll'll II ,.s 20,J 1. 1•00~1. "' ,, 11) u s l Vwnt, l'{t WPOrl Htrbotl l 1H ll'.o • SllOl.lifl, .i.n11111m 11 m l .t l 1111~ Tr1om11. !'I.I . 1t !" \ .>, M1l1t11Ml,.,..t. \Nm, l f 1t 1, karmtr, ~'"•'· H••bor 1• ?l)S 11,, I Dtl•d. M•1 ln1 n 201J ',!·.i "?ld•l\t~. "'~•1191"' ,. "' 10 M il~, Mtf!~t II !II lf Vikes Ta~kle Monar~hs Sea Kings Down Oiler Nine, 6-0 CIF Playoff Cl mh Set Tonight Oft-injured senior guard McGuire. a sporadic atarter both this season and last. enjoyed a four-game skein u the squad's hig h. point man in preseason tiffs against St. John Bo9CO, Centennial, Uls Alamitos and Katella. Marina High's streaking Vik- ings, possessors af n I n e straight basketball victories, meet Morning.side H i g h ' 1 Monarchs at FOUJ1lain Valley High School. Tipoff is slated at I o'clock foc the CIF AAAA se<!Ond round match and awaiting the winnef" is a quarterfinal berth at Long Beach Arena agaln.!t the survivor of the Bishop Amat-Pasadeaa clash. Fountain Valley is located at 17816 Bushard SI. Coach Jim Stephens and his Vikings are up against a speedy team that employs a fast brea k, tone press and excellent .rebounding ability. Marina's quintet has become somewhat predictable of late, that is the Yikes generally play as welt as required to stay In the game, then turn it on in the final quarter to pull away from Crustrated foes. At no time during the cam. paign has Stephens voiced happiness with the overall play of his team from start to ftni!h. He cpnsiders the key to \_ 11tl1111t L~ Mtor1111 Mlnllllhl• M R-IGt . F DMn '-S .. s ll1lrf F ROOI-.. S ,.., 1otd1n c l1111r•m 114 6-0 MUI.tr G Hldunon ,..o .. l lllll G Wrlllt'll :I.II upending the MonarChs' wagon the ability of his front line combination of Kipp Baird (&. 5) and Dean Bogdan (6-6 ) to control the a!fenslve boards -which is Mornlng.!lide'1 forte . "We have to prevent Morn· lngside from taking the boards and runnin g its fast break, and we've got to handle their press. The latter problem will hope.fully be solved by guards Bruce Miller and Ron Rewoldt along with forward Jeff Butt. Bill 1t1cGuire, the VJkes' second-team AJJ.sunse t League guard, is still on the dotffitful list, hobbled by a leg injury. With McGuire aut, Stephens Werts Butt at a glW'd post. Marina's 53"'8-win aver Montebello In the first round aaw Bai rd leading the scoring attack with 15. Morningside counters with three sophomotfs in t h e starting lineup, paced by 6-5 forw ards Gary Dean and J ackie Robinson. Dean ls the leading scorer with a 17.5 average and is a three-year letterman for coach Jim Harrlck's Sky League champs. By BOWARD L. HANDY 01 lflt Otlly Pl .. 1 S111t Dave Vilas had a big open· ing day for the Corona de! Mar baseball team htonday afternoon as be pitched two-hit ball for five innings and con- tributed a three-run homtr to lead the Sea Kings to a 6-0 victory over visiting Hun- tington Beach High. Bob Palmer. a soph omore playing his first varsity game. also drilled a line drive homer down the left field line in his first official trip lo the plate in the first inning to give Vilas a cushion on which to work . However his worth has been described by Stephens 11. "very Important to us in a differen t sort of way. He'a our quarterback and get-it·logether man who really doesn't IOOn! much." Slx-foot·six junior pivotman Bogdan paced Marina with 17 and 25-point efforts in key Suntt loop wins over Westml and Ana.helm. But his moat integral contrlhuUon hu bem evident in his steady rebounding Tt'Ork, as be and &1rd hive been able .to control the boards wben the VWn&s have en· joyed the height ot thelr succeu. Thurm and Sanders, meanwhile, have been the firemen, or top relief aid. A g.1 senior backcourt performer, Thurm "does a treat Job in relief," according to Stephens. Sanders usually -comes off the bench, although hls role has diffe red from Thurm'•· Says Stephens, "Sanders has re:ally playtd a key role and has started some. (He accounted for 24 markera m ane lest against Westminster). ''However, he's really been important a1 a relief man for the big kids. It's very hard for someone M and 220 potmd1 to play a whole game without tiring, so Sander• la important.." While they've never been atop the tum scoring slltiltlc1, g.3 Jeff Butt g.2 Ron Rewoldt and ~10 Ceorge Wagoner. 111 seniors, hav~ nonetheless added value to the Viklnga' tlre- po\\•er. Livsey Tabs GWC In Playoff Tilt FV Drops 7-3 Verdict To Bruins Vilas gave up a single In the first inning, a stolen base and a walk to put two runners' on with one away . He v.·as saved from a possi. ble score by poor base running aner an outfield fly ball brought the second out. A lbrow to shortstop Mark Johnson was relayed to Larry Denner at third for a double play. In the second frame , Vilas walked the first batter but was again saved by 1 double play. Called good ball handlers and excellent ootalde ahoolf:n v.•ho can also play on the boards well by Stephens, Butt ~nd Rewoldt are penciled into starting berths tn tonight'• crucial. Waggoner has seen minimal duty as of late but, "we put him in there when we're 1tandin1 around and need a lift." says Stephens. Tennis Summaries By CRAIG SHEFF 01 Ille Otl" 'II•! Sttft One major di fference Jn Saturday night's junior colle1e regional basketball playoff game between Golden West and Barstow colleges could be the caliber of competition the two conference champions have met. That's the opinicri or Orange Ccast College basketball coach Herb Livsey, who was beaten by both teams early in the season. Golden West's Rust le r s defeated the Pi rates, 100.73, in the second game of the 1970-71 campaign and Barstow edged the Bucs. 6US, in the December Antelope Valley tournament. ''If I had to pick S()meone I'd pick Galden West, prirnar· ily because af the competition. Barstow hasn't played near the competition Golden West has." says Livsey. The game is set for Rio Hondo College . The OCC coach adds that Golden West appears to have better overall balance and that Bantow'1 malo at r eng th seems lo be its inside game. "But on a gi ven night, they also havt overall balance," says Livsey , who has seen the Desert Conference cham- pions play four times the last two .!lea5()n.!I. "They have a pair or fine shooting guard! who have a lot or conrldence -basically because af their bi1 front line . But they have noth1ng like Chris Thomp!on, ( Go Iden West guard). Their guards are just not all-round like Chris.'' The Vikings' court general Is >IO guard Dick Silva who i!'I averaging more than 22 paints per game. Up front, Baratow's two top S•rst.w IU.f) .. LA l r1t1 lK/\ t r •1Yt rt1Gt I ) Wnt LA tt Ort11tt Cet11 11 LA Vt l!•, I S P1lono1r II Wll!tlttt l'rlll~ ,, ~0'11 .... lllt 11) L• VHM J\I " """"'lllt t J ~tYIHI• l'r ..... .. (lll'UI 71 LA TttOt TKll M Ml, $1" J1tlfttl ~· C1I Sl11t tl•) ,~ 1t UC Jl:l•trilff Frell'I 11 Ct,..,fll'IJ ti Ml, 11n J•clnto lU P1IO V1rdl •1 Mlrt COtt1 ., °'1•11 J'f ll'flCMrltt V1t11r r " Vlcter v1111~ 11 C:1nvo11• 1'11 M'. S1" J 1cln10 tf ,.,~ v1r~1 101 Mlrt to111 If Otttrt ~ lm ... tl1! VtllfY " \llcter V1llt, • 18,,tvw Wflll D~ IOffl'I " ~ " M .. " " u .. .. '" " " " .. " " ., M M .,. • " M " ,. " .. u .. guns are 6-1 center Alan Smith and 6-7 forward Neal Rasbury Smith is the sixth ta p re· bounder in the state with 15.3 caroms per game .Silvas is the third leading scorer among California JCs with a 22.8 ave rage. "They are a very physical team. Their blg guys try to beat you to death. And although they are not 1 run~ ning team , they 'll run if they get the chance,'' says Livsey. Defenslvely, the Pirate coach says Barstow pla yed in a zone against Orange Coast. "They do not put any pressure on the guards and ir they let Golden West come down and take its shots, lt'1 all over." LA Fair Cuts Out Racing POMONA -After nearly 40 years of harness racing a.!I part of the annual 14-day race meetings ar the Uls Angeles County Fair, the colorful sul- kies will be missing from the scene this fall , Fair officials disclosed this week. When racing with pari·mu· tuel wagering returned to the California s p o r ts picture in 1933, harness racing and thor- oughbred racing shared center stage as top attractions for the patron at all C~llfornia Fairs with raci ng. Since then, how· ever, the harness racing sport has f!leveloped a home or Its awn at the Western Harness Racing meeling at Hollywood Park, and no longer needs the subsidy and support or the Fairs. according to a Fair John Cole learned 1 lesson Monda y on the opening day of his second season as the Fountain Valley Barons' varsi- ty baseball coach. In fact, Cole wa1 taught his lesson by an old merr tor-Long Beach WUiOn's Skip Rowland, who brought his BruinsJ nto Orange County and returned to the Queen City with a 7-3 victory over Foun- tain Valley on the losers' diamond. Cole, you see, graduated Crom Wllson iJI 1961 and he played spl it end on the Bruins ' footba!I varsity under the same Skip Rowland. And 1t1 on day • Rowland's baseball squad rolled to Its fourth consecutive win in the young sea son while dealing the hosts a setback their first time out or the starling gate in '71. Last year's Moore League runnerup outfit had to post five runs in a sixth Inning rally to negate a 3·2 Baron advantage and get home free:. The Bruins parlayed a trio of singles, two walks, a pair or errors and a flelder 's choice into the five·run frame as shoulhpaw Baron starter Steve Fox was chased from the mound in tht midst of the fireworks . Fo:r was relieved by righthander Dave Lynch, who retired the last four Bruins: in a row after being vlctimited by a teammate's miscue on the first baller he f11ced. Fountain Valley picked up all three of its runs in the bottom of the fifth stanza when base hits by Gary Varney and 8111 DIMarla were coupled with two Wilson er· ror11 to push across Randy Renk. Fox 11nd Mike Shimaji with tallies. Pat Marley led the Baron attack with 1 double and a single while Fox was the los- ini pitcher. spokesman . "It is with regret that ~·e L~• •"c" ""~1:'" ~11 "' ,111 are forced lo give up harness ~~~-'!I..',' 3 } : g : racing as an integral part of H«llll"t¥ 1 i' • 5. 1!tw1t1, II 1 1 our Fair racing program," iolll'IJOl'ls..•1·11> 1 l t Phil D. Shepherd, Fair secre-~=I••· ,. ' I r I ~1vls • ., t 0o 0 tary·m a n a g e r, declared in llYer. 11 j ' kl th lmlM•, cf ' 0 ma ng e announcement of M1rd'lt1t. • o o o the move. "ffowever, our 14-0 T!i':l':'"· • JJ 1 t : d.ay fall meetln gnow overlaps '"'"'1111 \1111" u, 11 , in its entlr:ety with the h•rness $~1m111. '' ' 1 f t meeting at Hollywood Park •. ~~tw.·r· ti : I ' 1 The Sea King burler limited Huntington to two singles before belling his homer with Denne r and Stu Karl aboard in the fifth. Reed Johnson ca1ne on In a relier role and struck out five_ batters in the last two inning~. . Palmer hit his round·tripper with teammates K e i t h Samuels aand brother John (Palmer) an the base patha . Samuel.!1 and brother John doubled prior lo the round- tripper. Hwftllllfltn l ttcll ffl Slnt ltt '""~Ill ILi '"°" 6-1, f•1, ·~· 6-o, ltdtlt !LI won ._,, 6-1. H ... 1. TOYl•r !LI loot,_., WOtl .. , ... 1, U. J•co1Kt11 {LI 109! J.f, u . '"°" '-1, '-'· .t.lltn tl'I Wfll .. 1. I f, fled 7•7, loll M . Dfll'°I" 1(11WOIYI! tl'ld '°"'" IP') Wll'I .. ,. .. J, 1.0. '-1. ,, V11tniu•lt ind Sclllldh1utr t - .. 1 ... ,, 11111 , ... ~··· Vtrtltr Le Ovlnl1 111\'JI CH\\) 1•11911 II"•'" l'h mllron Ul!j io.1 to 1'11trion t\.\ I.fl loot to "U'1d (LI J.h IOI 10 P1rton1 fl) S·11 lelol 11 J~kll'll <LJ~,:d (I ) INt l-41 wtll .. J. 1.J. f.,1~ Ill lo$! Ml flM 1·11 - ,..J1 lcll t.4. l'tlc:I Cl) loll l.f, l•I, D.f. 7 ... _, .. H,'111-0ttl'lood !I) N1t ,Vt .II ... Str1"61'1•H'" ILi ... / .. J1 ttott Tr1m111ltoUl·littclmttlO CL) ........... , A.ndtrM!l•Mcl(l,..,..'t Cll lot! I _.,,, '"'· ·~"' llllMlt lln 0 1 Mtllff ...... Devil tnd 11!1111,.111 IL) won 1·J, "'' llffoltl V1nAm1ritor1,u G111r, ct s11~11;n, 11 0trr1r, c Fullltm, p Sl1t11, t .. ' ' . "'4, IOI! l·I. etw.n (H) loll 11 ~!loll lt:I Bowm111 11\d McC1r1tr Ill won 1.1, ~-6/ loil te Mlfffl 41/:,>"'l' "' II ,... 6·1, 6·2, loll 2... G11nor !•) Mt; dtf Wiik • ... : 0 JV 1co.t: L1t11... S11cl1 ''"' El Lllln.t !HI Iott l.fJ II M l -7 • ' . ' . ' . • MOdtlll l'·•· .. J ... ,. 0 0 l'lllftlllft Vtl .. , 111) llf) t-.IM .,..... !oolomon CHI lo•! 1>41 .... '"'· '"'· 0 0 'lltfll1 Mllltr (H) loft No 0.1, '·'-'1>'- D 0 Tlf>det !l'J won .. , '~. !ltd 7.r, Dlwt>lll lrc.t~ J~ l rwlo•. lb • • • • • • G 0 lool 1·1. llWCl!tr·llttcll (Hl 4•1 Ruutll-0 0 Mlll~r (Fl WOii 6·1, M, ltll .. ,, 5t1n!on !E l .. ,, lotf H ; Hit .Ml~ A .... lerd, " vrn111m, ~b Kt~nt11v, p11 Tot1l1 O O dtl•111ttd. M(C,.nn (El .. l,' 4, I O Sl11w (FJ WOii ,..,, '1·, IOit 1.f, l t lltv·Wt! 1~1 fHI IMI , .... Ml .. . • • 7 °"'· loll •. ,, "'· :1 .......................................................................... .. C1rtn1 ft! Mir UI .. ' ' . • • ' ' ' ' • • ' . ' ' ' . 'ltio:tr, II sr1rr, If S1mYf!I. lb·•1 J, P4lmec, ti eish"", er l!rldo11111, c II. P1lmtr. •!·lb M. Jollnson, H Otnn1r, 31> 1 1-er, 111 Kiri, 1t1 Vll11. p R. Joh~IOll. o Tol1l1 ' ' ' . ' ' ' I • • .. . Sc1r1 .., lftnlnp • fl r•l • • • • ' . ' . • • • • ' ' ' . ' • I ' • ' • • • ' • • ' .. l'l1111llng1Q11 lr•c~ 000 ooo 0-41 ~ o (Of'OM Otl Mi r Xia 0J0 •--4 1 1 JC Playoff Pairings Set Paiflngs and Sitts for the regi onal roond of t he junior college basketball playoffs thl1 weekend have bee n an. nounetd. Galden West, lhe Southern California Conference cham· plon, will face Oe.1ert tltle. ht.Jatr Barstaw Saturday nlaht at Rio Hondo College In •n eight o'clock game . JC lttti.1111 •tltlltf' U9"r l ftdl" O• "'"1• \'''"lne Mor,,l. 11.t1 !JI'• v1n111r1 W1111r11 11111), ,,..J "· Son lrr~•rdlne CMIUlonl l••ll, 11 Cl'llHt Y CotlfQt, Sttvrtt• S111 l'r•ncli<O CGo!d•11 Crtfll, 11·1! ;,!.c.a,,':,'j..';t.-(C.1111r11), 7•1 t Ctrrlt" f~ij:"'lJl·I, trrt -• L•wt• rte "" JOIOu!n I• CVtlllll· ,,..., ..,. l unt ~Coldtll V1l1tVI, 11, 11 Sltrrt Coll t. ,, .. ,., GelGtn ti! (SfUl'lfr~ (lhtof11l1I/ n .. , •1 • .,.,ivw 10.1.rl). u;,, • Jllo 11onoo CoHMt, 5t t'llrH, Alli n Htl'l(oc~ 1c111tr111 ,.,,,, ''" 11tf'fMll ICo.111, I ·10 •I 0 1¥111" Ctllt"' t 1ru•H•· • LO!'lt lltacl'I !MtlnM!ll1~), 24J, t;y1 GOLF TIPS GET MORE FUN OUT OF LIFE! GOLF INSTRUCTION Clots "A" lnstructon GROUP LISSONS •• MONDAYS TUllDAYI Wl!DNllDAYI THURSDAYS IATURDAYI 7:00 P.M. I01H A.M. 10:11 A.M. J10I P.M. 11;00 A.M. P'ltll Ull OF (LUii AND A OAMI 0' OOL, $9 •O• 6 LIHONI PRIVATI LUSONS -$6.00 oo. or $10.00 for 6 Golf Equipment Sale BIGGEST EVER CLUBS-25°/o to 50°/o off LADIU SHOIS WI HAVI THI Valu•• to $12.00 NIW INnOMATIC NOW $14.95 CAMllA STOP0ACTION SN y-lo .. tt.o ht 1 "' ..... ' $2.00 i\ciP MAT'S COSTA M!SA GOLF RANGE 1111 NlWPOlT ILVD. -At the Or•• C.vaty Fair OreuM1 --ALIO -and we simply do not feel that ~~11"~·1 " l; ! j ! we can continue to present a lt1i~1l~· 1• ' 1 : L-le••• •11etvll•t • °"' '"'"' 6 0flM' -l'll C!lfl II lflt • • • ca.liber or h a r n es s racing 0 ••• ",1 · n 1• 1 ! '-NEWPORTER INN SKIP MAY"S NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE worthy or pu tting on exhiblllon L';:~~,; i' ~ : ~ PAR 3 GOLF CO.URS! 1117 JAMIORll RO. be.fore our llUpportcrs," Shep-t•wu...,'"" '' 1~"A~ o-1 ' , Sl.OO with tt111 •d w"ll ••v• At th• Haw,.rtar ''"' herd said. l'OUM1t11V11!1'( OOOOJ00-1 . l·-----------~·----------------------.. "'""'' • I , JI DAILY PILOT TueSd.ar. March 2, 1911 • I 'I • Everyone Hes Someth ing That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With e Want Ad ' I~ .._ ...... I~ I -...... l~I _,,, ... I~ I -··-I~ I -· .. s• I~ I -..... l~I ............ l~ General GtMJ"•I General General Cost• Mesa ·.!------* * * * * TAYLOR CO. * TRANSFER COUNTRY CWI olJn.Ja Jj/e 2629 ltarbor, C.l'i-t. 546-8640 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES \'OUR PROBLEM to SPECIALISTS Property Management Real E1t1te STEPHENS lo KAYE &fS.0122 ANY'IThfi: VIEW· $23,000 Spacious 2 Bedroom home on Jarge R-2 Lot overlookins Santa Ana CounLry Oub. Many fruit trtts -drive thnt san.&e Jor boat or tni.1-GOOD "BROADMOOR" VALUE Ranch style 4 BR. Cam rm & formal dining. Convenient to community pool. $62,500 ''Our 26th Year" Thinking of I SELLING? 1 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CG., Realton 52 Linde Isle Drive Cust. 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. ........ $215,000 For Complete information on 111 homes & lots, please call:. UlllHlUf ti()MfS Real Eltat, 17M000 Under the market price. l)y.'J\. er m111t aeU immediately, IPllrklloa 3 bedrm, 2 bath 2 •12?Y home with f.amUy It bonus room. Heavy ahake root, fully carpet@d. rantu. tically landscaped Ii; more. Now only $30,950. C a 11 5'15-8424, """""""""""""""""""""'""i ". CorOM del Mar Retirement In Corona del Mar $23,000 o THE RF:AL .~ ESTATERS Let us help, w'e \\'I ll buy your house today for i~ full value. The only ad- ditional chare;e i.!I l ';b of the selling price. Ko gimmicks and no addi· tional expenst-. W• need heuMal It doesn't d>st 11.nythiru: to ca.II 11.nd find out -you might even save!! GE·T EASTSIDE l l~DROOM $1',500 \Vo11•! Ynu better hurrv or it 11·ill be iton<'. it nttds 5omr "'ork-but "'hat a price -caU NO\V! ACTION • NICE-N-EASY \Vill ~ your re\\·ard 11·hen yo u set this · Charmer, 3 bt"d room doll house t ha I rrntures hard11·ood nOor.~ cover. ed "·ith rich nylon Cflr· pet. 2 tiled balhs \\'ilh pullmans. f'Xtrn l11.r2r Pnclo~ed [llllio, 1:ould bt" family rm.. el<'ctrlc buill-in kitchen. sepa- rate dining room, brick rlreplact'. 2 car ~ara,el' ~·ith rl1>ctrie door op- cnPr, walkini:; dlstailcc In the very bl.>111 Mchooli.. No down VA or mini- mum down F"HA. A.~k- FA2STEmii' offr•. COTIAGE IN THE CITY $23,500 St'" this homP. Jr '.s lo- caled in Costa i\lrsa just off Baker. It's a R"rrot \'alue becausr ynu R"Pl :i good size OOdrooms, 2 !ipacious ba1hi:, doublt garA.i;:t. 2nod nclghbnr- hood. Close to Catholic church & school. N"o monry dov•n to \'E'I~. Total pmt. \\' 11 I bl' $190.00 ~r mo. !·!URRY~ FROM OWNER SAYS SELL! 4 IEDRM. POOL Ownf'r ha"' n1ovrd to northrrn Calif. lt>D\'inc this-hom1> vac3nt and n1ust JiQuldate-immedi· lltrly. Hr has redu<'rd !ht prire for fill'! s!'ll. A beaullful 4 bedroom home in thr ?t1f.'sa drl l\lar dcv1>JopmenL Spa- ciou~ built-in kilchf'n. 2 qu<'en !ilZf" bllth"°, spar· lding hratNI 8nd filtrr- ed pool. Nlrt>ly land- !U'llpE'd front & rear. Nn dol\"n to \"els. Rf'ducrd to $29.950. Don't \\·ait on thii: onf'' FARROW 2700 SQ. FT. OF LUXURY 111ls &eutlful S11ndpolnl homt" ha~ be"n upgred- rd in rvery \\'Ay. Job ll'llnsrrr f•ircr~ snli>. No\1• \·acanl lhr 011 nrr 1vants 11.clion. 4 J\lng si?:I'.' bt>droon1s. 2Y.r lilrrl hflths. 11e11. !11m. ro<>n1 "'llh brick fircplllcr. SeJ). form. dininl! roorn. Opt'n nlr c11thNlr11l rril· io~. Deluxr sh11,1: ca1"1>£>l- ing lo 1111 room~ f loor lo C'eillnl! cu.~tom drnprs io<'ludrd. Profl'l!sion111lv h1nd~capcd a 1 I r o "r $43.000. No d n\1'Tl lo Vtts. Sri' it no11' COMMERCIAL LOT+ 2 BEDROOM RENTAL UNIT $19 ,5~0 Hl;"re·s your rhanf't" In ln1·rsl In ~·n11r futur". Thi~ prnprrt.Y is J.oented in C<lf;ta ~l••sll busin1>ss distrirt -it Jill.~ n prf'~· eot lncomr of ~140.00 ptr mo. and ha~ i;:rca l J)Olrnlilll r n I" f•1!•1rr grov1lh · :ii $19,~ vou can't n1l~s . 1·nll nr111:! COSTA M•SA DOLL HOUSE S2l,500 Sf-p this homr lmml'dl- atel.1·. a channin:i: :l Wdrm locAted In a clrnn residPnlial arrll of Coi;. I• ~lrSA. Vf't• buy II f11r no monf'y oo~:n, your pa:i:znent Jnrludlne: lax1·~ and ln1urant'i' "·Ill ti.> Sl8e.OO mo. flurry 4 ii won't l11.J1l. 2629 Harbor Blvd. 546-8640 OPEN EYES. 'TIU 8:30 1&29 1-l•rbor. C.!\l. I 2111 San Jo1quin Hillt Ro1d THE BIBLES' HOME Now hert>'s a delightful, quallty buitt golt course hOme, It's perfect for a club swinging COUPie. 2 Super size bedroolTl.'l, a ' At " price YOU can ~ord. l'D"o=v=.=.=s;;ho=,=.,====01 Check into this charnung one1 ---------,-,.1 bedroom home plus income * EXECUTIVE VILLA I NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. Gener1I · 642-4620 for only Entertainer's paradlle w/ $32,900 pretentious view. Delux Call Now For An 5000 sq ft ot custom 'design General · General * DUPLEX * HORSES-Yi ACRE Fabulous View (DO YOU ENJOY king size living area & a 4 BR. + AIR CONO. f ~.'s~e~~~11~~~t!~RQ= . _Bra~d N.ew Thi~h~~~!~t~1!.Co~~!n the ~~~·sc~:;:~m 1;~~~;; t owners unit + ~ income Pacific panorama Jn Laguna lllE'p-down .Living room and and minimum mainten. Blk. to ocean, Pool. Modern 3 BR. 214 ba, upper; 2 BR., l\~ ba. lo11·er. $62,500 fnciud· es the land. Owner wili con- 1ider trade fol' home on pen. insula. Appointment To See features in this 5 BR, 5 673-8550 ba. 4 car gal'age home 1-o·THEREAL ~ESTATERS $169,500. 548-7249. $29 900 uni1. Beach. Custom built in new thr <J!her In !he kingslzed anCE'. Don'i miss this one • __ Portofino area. Huge l\'ood master Bd1m. Thia rwo story _ price has just been re· ~ ' . . . . . EHi Bluff e SPECIALISTS e SALES • LEASES \ , r II 11-11 f COSTA MESA pi.1n£>lled mas1<'r suite. Full offrl's a fonnal Din. Rm., $64 950 il':lrs n _ ro _1ng gre<'n I s. I v1ew1ivingrm1virhmassive ~parklinl::" Bi l Kitchen., duccdS2000.to , . DREAMY LOCATION Call; 673-3663 642-m:l Eve1. mountain view 111 rul'al sel• ( P ex * $48,000 p 1 V ~ 1. 1 U l()Uf ti()MfS and dreamy house with 3 bd· . . . 2 BR . a OR e1ues irep ace • B·o•kl··t ,.,, L•• Fam ~ Ung. C1rclllar dn,,c. 4 ma~· f~l un1ll1, near golf ,1 , Tl 1 4 ' .. ~ ' · ..... · ,... rma., 2 baths. % Blk. to the SI b . any e.1 ras 11s arge Rm FOUR BDR:\1S AND I RMI E.ta19,t7~ lli\'P BR'~. FOR:\l~L DIN· course. eeper. ring paint B<:rm has Counler kitch, THR°EE BATifS. Ne~ cpt!i 2041 E. C""t H"'l"· beach. Try 10% down, Ask· ING. Cozy bf'a~. fin:pta(·e. brush & ~et lhese rents fcmlal dining . even set up & drps • eleganct' thru-0ut. c::or-o.i Nlt,Calll. ing $54,900 {ast Double-0ven built-in kitchen. where they belong. for an e!e\'alor. A must 10 Block wall fenced • 3 Car I !!~~!!!~~~~!!::~ DeL•ncy Re•I Est•t• Panoy. mun&y rm. Panel· N '" DioJ &l>-0303 I G'"". ,upoubly 1..00..:ap. COUNTRY RUSTIC POOL-HOME 2828 E. Cout Hwy, CdM t'd family rm. \\'alk-in clos-ewport · 644-7270 i.. ed. Less than a year old aDCI "'l' VJ t D I O-ets. Carpt'ts th1'1out, fll.!ly •I ..., IS a e "' I prioed oo ""at 142.950 with "PICTURESQUE" 3 lkdroom, 2 both, lamily GREAT VIEWI N•-rt B•••h 644-1133 AIR CO~D. Brick lrontagl'. . . ...., F.. · low down FJIA or VA terms. room, firt>pla~. h rd wd Of hal'bo< & oc'an. Att<. •Plitl--'--'-------1 Riding trails & ring. Fenc-1rv1ew 'l~lll!l!ll.111111111!11!1!!1~ J tlooNI, crpll, drps. lge POOL lev'I home on R-3 5100 sq. Fountain Valley ed. Bus I0--1\<:bools, :\Un, IO I 646-8811 ,.. un•·t·····able! Quiel trt't' 'th pl t I d ~--I I Id 1 1 • . l1-ee1••a)'s. Unbelit>\'able at 11 l;.,_ .. ''· to loads of "OLD N •· r. I '' 200 ,~ n.. Bl d I ..,. w1 en y o ec .... ,,,.. t ot. ea. or •Pl. uniu. "FOUNTAINHEAD" I (anytime) -HARBOR COSTA >IESA ... .,.,. ortn1:a.al \..VS a j eaa. ·S .000. ~I ...... -.:an v ., S •·-4 BRJ I hOm very ow $29,900. A mu~!, "£"" • \VORLO QlAR:\I." Check $30.500 1 CdM B . J ul)('r s ....... ., rp c e lo stt. Call 17141 962-J.i&i.1 ~:~;;:::.,.,.....,..,,,.1,'"'.~~~:~~~~iii _,, thi,. 3 huge BR's. Loads I .' · Y apri t. on y. on I~ cor Jot Rm for boat/ ~ T-WO Sf P.=R•TE HARBOR ISLAND f ...., . h Roy Mc Cardle Realtor 8 111 Gru~dy,, Realtor trlr, xlnt Jnd5cpg. J2x40 cov c "' "" This six bedroon1, five bath of pBJieling. Deep pile 8 ag l8lO Ne"'l)Ort Blvd., C. rt!. Call. 6-12-4620 patio. Close to school. "'" fORL~T [ OLSON '" RF.AlT'ORS 19131 Brookhurst Ave, Huntington Beach EASTBLUFF HOMES E cpts. Forced air heating. 548-7729 & den hon1c is loca1ed on the 220 . 17tH 646·0555 \V alk-in closets. service 1 ,..~~'l"~~~~~!!! CHARi\IING Duplex b Y shag crptg, drps, water On lai'ge 30' x 180' Joi. Two mos! exclusi\'l' Island in the Evenings Call 644-7003 owner, <Jn l\Iarguerite. Xlnt softener. "·d 1 1 ,., 1,_..,_..,______ porch. Pantry. Lots oJ stor· MES• DEL MAR · """ rooo1s eac 1. arge 1 · bay_ Pa110 wilh plush land· • "" uicome.. Elli1·Schrad1r Rltrt. chen!li with earing areas, scaping. Deep front ierrace 1 age spece. New paint in & Owner aelling beautiful }.fesa ** 675-49~3 ** 192_6606 double garage, manicured \\'ith own beach, Pier & out. Covered patio -water· Del to.far hOnle. 3 Bedrooms.1 ----------·j"==~~~".',,--~ landscaping and completely 1· 1-~ 000 fall. Heavy :\hake roof. Boat 2 baths, large livin!'.;" room Costa Mesa BLDR'S Sacrifice-Span. style independent of each other. Realty Company acces!. Dichonwa wns. 'vith fireplace, Spacious ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; nu custom .,.,r. -· , Priced to sell at SJ4,9j() with Sprinklered. Double yard. kitchen with 1as builtina. S1500 dn. Loaded 1~·/ Xtra!. ............ Ip. ~;iv. I BAYSHORES -•-la •• "'SOO lD'ii. 00\VN. Shown by ap. . BEST BUY Dog-run. FHA-VA terms. Water softener, forced air 4 Bedroom-$22,950 Shakes. Frpl. Ci-pt t}uiJ()Ut. BARGAIN l pointment only. Coldvvell,Banker Firsl time offered. DellOO! 2 I-Tow can· you miss. Only heating, v.·alJ to wall carpet. _o;prnklNi, lndscpd, fn c I · Our 1ransferred owner .\1UST ........ ! bedroom, 2 bath homf'. PRJ. $23,500. Hurry & call (71-1) ing and drapes thN out. I \Valk to all schools Including 10223 Pheasant A,·e. sell his sharp 4 bedroom VATE BEACH. Lovely ca. 962-5.38j. Double garage and covered Orange Coast College &: ali 1_53_7-<l~l80=~~==-- hon1e \l'i1h large-family 1 thedral bean1cd ceilings in patio. $31.500. 557-7315. shopping. 4 Large bedrms, 2 BIG HOUSE I room in Eastbluff. Redecor. 833-0700 644-2430 LR. Log burning lireplace. baU1s, dining, shag crpts, Little Pr ice! ! alcd in 1970 ll'ith lwruriou.! l\lod. kitchen. self-cleaning e gar., 9 ingJe roof. TER.RIFIC 4 l:.R! Fam rm! ' * A-FRAME * dbl • h I 1 ~ . 2-Sfy. beach hOme, xlnt cond . f' I · $22 ~ s b · shagcarper,harxl.-.ome wood HARBuK VIEW oven, A·l rrfng. \\"asher & uJ price ,.,.....,. u mil Bonusroom!Likenewcrplg, paf'l('ling and dtt0ra1or wall I HOMES dryer, thick shag carpclJI, 3 BR., 1~~ ba. 2 car gar. terms. \\'e have the key call drps, blck wall, only $31.750! ~vtrini;s. An excellent lam. ~ 220 E. 12th 646-0555 A beaut. 5 BR. home: 1<.·et 1 drapes, elee. gar. dOor .. VA. 19131 Broolchunt A""· 81rE~~i/~j;,fib~ f>4-0-ll51, Heritage Realtors, HAFFDAL REAL TY ily hofilt' .,.;tb an overW.td Evening~ Call 644-700.'.l ba~. Jovely shag ~tg., sell· CANT BARGAIN PRICED Huntington Beach lmmac, 4 Br .• stepi 10 ocean. lopen evts.J, 842-4405 Eves: S.11·24-W gai'l.ge for Dad 's v.·ork.shop. l cleaning ovens: n!ady to $36,500. 2~ Ba. Only S300 per mo. Huntington Be•ch Top valu(' ar only $43,900. B/B move inlo! $J9.500. Includ-PURE PLUSH-$28,500 BUILDER OR Phnn .. 67~ 0·'""' · 1 I This magnllicent lirtl• man· w/S5()() option money. • ·'-· "YEARS Of' mg,,, ood. • c•YWOOD REALTY HANDYMAN sion on the norh side ol Cm· "" REAL ESfATE SERVICE ·CORBIN 642·823S 675-3210 ta ~lesa. \\'alk to schools BIG 4 BR. PLUS POOL ONLY $2~250 HOME & BUSINESS tions. (1.) Dl'ntlst oUicc --+-l BR !2.) home. .l BR Bh·d. hon1e on I/arbor ' JN THE HARBOR AREA .. 6306 \\.'. COl\~t H"·y., NB 548-1290 and shopping. A little cash CORONA DEL MAR MARTIN S II T f d will as.'!ume this TIIA Joan $24 500 DUPLEX I e er rans erre wilo 6'-% •nn"ru .,.,,.,,. ' So. of ]fwy. Exr.eptlonally RE l O a t;<' interest or no down 80 4 Bd. +Family rm. wrl) dreora1ed 2 bdrni. ,c:,_ 1 A T RS 644-7662 Popuhu· "T" plan in Mes/I del GJ's. Ne w on the market. No down T1rms ~~1., 1\'/parking fo r 5 cars. COOL POOL + I i\Iar with ~ \'l'ry Jarg, bed· \Von•t last . CALL or as.!iume 5~2% apr. loan $.J~ . .:.oo. c . f'()Om!li. Look close and you Walker & Lee and have pa)ments of only 675 ]000 h<1rming 3 BR, 2 BA area wilj also !ind 2 lovely pa· $123 a month. La.r&e rooms • hOme in pritneoiocation. Hrd-; 11os. & a "Dougtiboy" pool thru out. 4 bdrm. family rm. ~·d Ors. crp!s & drps, huge too! CloSe to alt schools & Ri'altors No down GI. Open lil 9 p.m. Large 9lxl36 R-2 Lot 1tith older home that can be rent· ed till you are ready to b~ilt. Ov.·ner 11·ilJ lrade for Unbelievable! Ynu can't miss triplex or 4.pJex. Can add on a home like this. Tree cash. llned st, }.1odern plush decor $25,500 5(6...2313 from deep pile eail>l!ting t 1-oTHEREAL ~ESTATERS . '·. . ; BETTER'N-NEW •I 32.x26 pool. Needs some pai./lt I shopping. It's one or our 12700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 54().1720. I &. your green thumb. O"'Ilei'.s newest 111 S30.100. \Viii sell 51~9-191 Open 'Ill 9 P~I TARBELL 29SS Harbor transl. FP $24,9j0. GI or F'HA tPrn1~ or VA 1111th no. BELOW FHA I 1 Sparkling 4 •-•room and F'lf,\ lern1s. Call 817-1221. Ln;.'\.I thing doivn! I . . NO DOWN TO VETS 1 ramily room with garden • COATS' A~priusal. Hug~ 3 BR. big. 10% Down to olhers. I kitchen. Located in quiet A STONE'S THROW ,. big lam rni -~1~lcs. _an , ..arg:elbedrmwfhn,•dlloors, residential area on large decorative \\lallpaper. Queen. sized bedrooms. 2 baths. De. luxe built-in kitchen that sparkles. Ai\1·F~f intucom. Covtred patio. Gas BBQ. Boat access. Heated kidllt'y 1haped pool \vilh all 1 h e equipment. Near beach. Very Jo\v do11·n. Hurry • Be 1st. Call 1714) 962-!»85. F1irvi1w TO THE BACK BAY • bl1ns, crpls, drps, ,·patios, bltns, 20x20 rumpus room, corner lot. Room for boat $24,950 PRICE 17141 Beach Bl\'d ,, lltgn Sch . WALLACE BBQ -real sharp. rn..ooo. block ~·alJ, t>nclosed rear or camper. Loads of e=<lra l bedroon1, seriarn1e hu.i;r ()p('n 'Iii !I p.m. REALTORS GI oi· FHA terms. Call yard. VA apprnised at.,.. storage, All terms available l1nytime) Family Roon1. 2 bl'autiful STEAL IT AND RUN -5(6...4141-&l7·1?.:!I. $2(,600 at $32.000. Call 546-,j,380, I ORI.ST E OISO.\ 646-8811 ' .. !!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! baths. Pohshcd hardwood BtACHI ONLY Sl6 800 (Optn Ev1nin9s) f mM Perron 642·1771 Heritage Realtors, (open Roman Villa I noon. Toi\·e~lng _shade trees, Just J\stcd • Unbelievable' and pve~. I 19131 Brookhurst Avt, surrounq th1~ I.JO It. farm-1 · . ,. · $1 750 TOT•L !!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!O!!!!!I H. & H G ' . Gn . '"" .. , • ''"· OU "" "' D. OWN I ~I OPEN HOUSE 1-5 Homfuogto" Boaoh IS ers arage sized IQ,1 .. ,.. v I appraised o •h •-h c h' 17141 B I Bl d H 0 -h ~ '---;-:;~:-;';7:::..._ RE,Al TORS anti approved Not one thin o f' ,,.·ac ron1 I is COt· cac i \' .. tgn ""' Open House Everyday I -LOOK I E . ..:q1Jisite: rt1rditerranean sty!. . · , !B~l' 11 Ith fireplace on over. No qualifying nrcessary and Open 'til 9 ri.m. 3 br on immense ocean vie>A' • i111; -his and her garages. dime for Vets. Don 1 drag sii.c lot !!URRY. CALL! <1ssun1e 10111 governnient loan 299 Broadw1y, C. M. lot. Cul-de-sac. lots or trees. A GARDEN lleavy Clllhrdral ceilin.es. ~' wyO\la' '1"kt.eCrALI&. Lee Wal.ker & Lee \\'ilh low rcrulikc payn1ents. INSTANT HOME 3 Bedroon1, 2 ba1h, db!e gar-S24,!}j(J, IINO Linden Pl,o.£:.7'.1. KITCH N w111J conncctu1g den, Jiving :1 n1as1ersizrd brdroom~. rrnn1ac. 1astc(ully <Jccor. 2 age. lmmcdia!e po~~e&sion. Owner. Day11: :>-18-ll92; E ~111 .. fo~·er &, dining rm. R 1 fantastic FI R E PL,\ CE, BR, den hon1e. Lovely yaJ'd. Leon Vibert, Rltr. Eves; &12-1122. Once in a whilt-you iel to b~;;~~~-.a~e ru~lcb:E'~~-~~~ ~90 H••bo"', B''.1~?d".' '' •l <l•m•' iG82e~~~1~;E'r ~,r::~r!· l~~~~Nl.ki~cr~ed~ ,::~ p"E"T•Etcl!BAff. S3RR9.E950T.T RLJY :;tS--0588 Eves: 67J.6,j34 NO QUALIFYING! .• ·°"'ith ~!.';! ~-ho~1u'1 llAke t~~s. Jt's •• ' • ,., '' "'2 ,,.. 0 I 0 .. ,. " Cash to FHA "•n. 3 B<. JUSI Vt::aUtJ ! 3 Vt::droom 1o university and shopping. 5'1.'.>-9491 Open 'I.ii 9 P:\I ' "~ -:_.)., or 54 .:; 1 , home•. ~ I I A must 10 see. Dial 645.0303. s·HADY w lk & L COLLEGE PARK just pa inted. Like new shag "'-, ami y room, most 1a~1e. a er ee 1 642·5200 cptg &: kit floors. Listed ully decor&ted. Lovely free -Cl. -And 101~ "' Jun _ Bi1.; yard I '----------·I Very neat 3 bt'droom 7 bath $23.500 ... Try S2J.OOJ! Agt: form healed &. filtered pool rOR[5l E OL ~O\ I I hOme 1\·ith 5a' ';O assumabl, 67' ~, •'oo ">o<a-"t'.' poo( I to p!11y in and big poo[ 10 Rr.al!n1 .~ -.. .rctiJ<I • ' " •'""'' or re. I I I TRIPLE ls' I ! ! /l\1·im in. Big shadp tr!'cs 10 7682 Edinger INCOME 11_ loan. I furry for thl~ one~ '.\IESA Verde "rea, 2 sty, Jaxin11:. Be first in line. "" RE .Al TOPS Tile "'iseO\\'l sez ... ,be quick k<'ep 1"t10I under wi1h a vt>ry ! 1714) 842-1-t;U or ;tt{l.jl40 I 2 Furn. bachelor ~nu~. C!O!:e Arnold & Freud • BR & den, zit b11., bltns, $45,950 142-2535 TI( nice 3 b<'droo1n home to ]i1·e 10 ocean " shopping in New. 388 E 17th St C 11.1 $39.500. By <Jwnr, alt 4 ~ \o ·THEREAL \'"'\. ESTATERS 2299 Harbor. Co11a ~Jesa on lhese REE (3 1 Bed-in, Jn Cnsla ;'\l!'sa C'IOSI' to BLUFFS port Beach. S28.fOJ • you ~115, 5'' .: . ~6-17a!! room home~ on one 101. O\\'n the land~ Spanish Villa ~~~~ ci~~m~:~~; s~!~i $f'27~~~ng. 1>46-7171 1 FANTASTI~ VIEW George Wil liamson ITHE Fastest dn\v in the v:~~~~;t,u~~~pt~s~~~r-======== Super sharp 4 BR, 2 story llO\\'! GT;H930 C~Jl. us 1_0 lit'c this 'harp ne1\• Realtor \\'est. , .a o.1ly p i I 0 t bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot IO\\TLOO.lse, Jge !iv rm .. for. listing in th<-Bluffs. 3 Bed-67M350 64~l564 Eves Clas~iried Ad. 642-5678 Classified ad. Leis Than One Month11 ·. ·, ' n1at din area, beaut walnut ~&CQI 1Wm!. 21 ~ Baths, cul-de·sac :;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~;~=~:::=~~§~~~;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:/Rent down buys this l bdrm· C:ilbinets, 2 bl!.th areas. crp1s S street, ancl lrrrific view. 2 bath ana To10i·nhouse ~-d ..... ,. 2 pool•. ••P. pi•" "·"" Only $11.j(• $@\\~~ ll,£fl' . . ,, ..,, ~ C. 9 prime a~a. priced right y1.1rd. \l'alk 10. beac.h & shop., Dad's Hideaway REPOSSESSION I You'll love lhr carefrrr fun I -V $20,SOO! Lg liv rm. w/w p1ni;:. FP S23.500. GI or FHA . . filled Ille In the Rtulf~. d \V/ tt!1'n11. ea:u 847-l.2'11, ! "Franciscan Fountains" re. Priced fo~ cr111ck .~air. No\\' I CALL 613-~ TO SEE The Puzi/e with fire Bui/f.fn Chuck/• crprs, rps, D. relrlg, Ig mM: aalr . Parent • retreat model. vacant. 1n1medlate posses. I patio & POOL prlv.! Full 4 BR. 2~~ BA, fron1 8: ~nr s 3 ioB"l:, 11ic 11 , 11 rrs1drn1ial area. 0 r::'°:m~·'!,,..~ :: ,J' :~i~e' $~;u~8.4-7 ~2-1 °' FHA sprinklei·s, pa1\o, nu1ny rx· -... a l tn~. !l{'\I' crp1s & •-·· · ·u£ • ..-to form four timpl. word&.. MOM IJ'a~. Buy GI 111 $41,000, 1norc, Low dn11 n, fHA: nn • I l71-ll Beach Blvd .. lltgn Bch cheaper lhan ntl'i'. Best in dO\\'tl, GI. OK. Coll RA.y -'=========o P Y G N I R I 1 ~ ,,., 9 w .. , 1'"""""10" ""'"-c'""· H"'"•~ '"'1'°'" 1 TOP ·o• THE ·HIU 1 I I-I I • 1 . i "t=n i p,m, L•rwin Realty, Inc, 5-iQ.JJjl. • • • _ • • ; • LIDO WATERFRONT 21562 Brokhur11. H.B. ~B &"F)~ST 'Nfo:\v LISTING, family iize l APTS •• 320 LIDO NORD 546-5-411 •nytime lin(!Pr co11~11·uct1~n 5C'f: !ht' kitchen with blrn~. 31ge bt'd-+ ~-,Br-E"T"R_LTI'E'-r-1,. $1<10,000 Pri~ with i% Isl BEACH UNITS plans111 IOlii1-lannrrs_D1·1\·c. nns. 2 I.IA. nt'rds " Ji!llt" 1 I I I* I · 1 T.D. 6 Beaut. tum. units; Dover Sho11:s . .i i.. ;1 Bi'd· T.L.C. buo >t"··o , h"y ,, • • il II rrntal units close lo beAC'h • I -b h '" " c:nr ~l'ngt'I 111 , room . . rn1-'. · .) ll! ~. ~rlecl 12··.200. T·•ke 0 ,.,, 6','o GJ ' S(J r · · bt' Nt!11'Jl0rt Shorrs, fu\J title. .., " , t. on ~"1mm1ng ach. ....,,,1 1 ~m 111~ t• your 011n Nilru·~ & tu~1on1 10,,111 11ind as~umf" monthly· I y 0 0 I T I \\'IU con.~idcr In.de for boat ""' "'-"' e o ,_, nio. ., details. AU w1Lb ou1stanO in1: • · IJr maximum '85.000 lge, • I gal'l\~t~. o,~1)' 8 yrs old. Vicw1. P.Q,v J. \\'l\rd Rhr p;1ymt'nt1 of only $156 Incl r-,.---,.--~,ncr'-lr--1 i Title of 0 new rteord ,. I BR. house. l $139,.i()(), 30 r dn. 6-JO.ls.;o. Open Dall).· {'\'Cl')lth1ng:: • -• • • • 1.a.e: '"Throw Away that • Bill. Grundy, Rltr. ; CA.LL ~ •••·1414 -SH•RP-•N-"HE-IM ' Larwin Realty, Inc. ':~~~~~;::'.._.,Cfgar, Mother. You'w Cane "' ~~ ~ "" " "" 2J~i62 llrooklwrst. 11.B., r to th f ~ I 'Do\'er Dr., N.B. Ml-4620 ~ By o\l"ner. I br, hra11'(! pool, 5(6-5(11 anytimt R E DY I T I 8 -0 your-. j REALTY I.Re indoor. outdoor !em rm, I I I I' I' I G Ccnlpl_,. tti. chuclif• 3~1«1 $15,500 FIXER N11r N1wp1rl P•1t Offlcr tll'C bltn.~. frpl<'. 1\ti.ny t'X · * 90'/, * _ _ . . . . by flllin11" tlta ft'lillil'IQ' word1 1\ lutle lm1J:ination. pa.int and REPOSSESSIONS tras. $30.900. Liberal rerni~. JO"'r Do1~n. 901,~ nctw IMn on YOll dmlop l'Oln lllp No. 3 b.low, rncrgy \1 1111 JYLAke this 2 BR, SJ)A.rldirw clean tiom11. llOMll _7if,>.~6i. ------thl.s redecor. 3 " {Rm, rn1. ...r.#j i~~"'N'UM' s'o'uR~o,,,,viru.r :r Ii r I' I' I' I "orJ'lhan '' 1 cozy home. f.x. nc1\•ly1>R lntPdk<'t1rJ>t!lr.d ,2. CUSTOM FOURPLEX T••ni rir ct1ntt'r floor plan. " -_ . _ ...• Cdlrnt rcntf!l are11 for ID> :. 4 & 5 hdrrns. SQ111e. 1\llth Choir,. J\'ewriort Ar{';i . $j1,flH0 Bl!n~ .• ~rw l'nrp, 1-'tnef'd @) ~ I I I J J \'t'l!Q~·~ i;et It 10 ~llevr_ lt. pools. n!A·VA COllV. ltrms, Hn1 221 ~I. ~lark 5.ii-~jOO ('l.!rnrr lot. Good Cosla ,\fi:lill rujr:t' OF YOUlt I I I I Lar~in Re•lty, Inc. Crom 117.00(.) 10 $40,000. · ! ll"IC'. Jmntrtt Pt1'>•1".•~. I 21:~2 R,,,.khu'"· Jl.B. C.111"' & "'"'' I•~. llDl'SF. """''"'' ""''' Oho MORGAN REALTY SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 S46.S41l 1nytim1 Ii~~ Ad.11n1!1 Al 't", !lfi2.J.i2:l OPEN f[OU~F: rolumn. 1 673.6642 67S·6459 171•1 Beach Blvd. H\in Bch Open 'UI 9 'p.m. SPECULATORS $2.l.500 . Existing fl!,\ lo.an payment~ $200· per' mo. P.LT.I. Low ttoo·n paymf'nl. l Bedroom 2 bllth, crpts, drp~, FA hr111, dhle garage, patio, hlln rangr. & ovt'n, bit: hf'droom,_, ni<'f' neighbor. hood , \\"£>11 landac11pcd It fE'nced. See today, l' 1llage Real Estate '62-4471 (::::) 54'·111J Fo. RESULTS .YOU CM 0.- pe_nd on, Call lhe S1iper- ::i 11. I e s ma n .. n111ty Pilot Ci•~~!fl~ 6-12-.5678 • place )"our ad It Chal'llt It! Hunti,.toft Beach ...------... OI L'i-LALza ;L $26.tso Spacious 3 bedroom corner home at FHA or VA terms. Excelltnl locallon lot 1hop- plng, AChools & freeways. Pa cific Shores Reelty 536-8894 Eves: 536.l2JO lrvlne $55,000 Wijl buy a beaut. 3 Br. 2 ba. hOnie in the prestige arta .. , Tllrtle Rock Hllls"& you own the land! Everything has been ' done, au Jndscpd, ,, sprinklt"red, elec. garage door opener, largf' patio, self·clea.ning oven, etc. Call. ired hill .., Realty Univ. Park Cente1·, Irvine Call anylirre 833·0820 J-IO~!E lN TIIE TREES with view or ocean, rustie inler· ior. 3 BR, 2 BA surl'OUndirig Frank t.loyd \Vright fire. Place. $55,000. ENGLUND REAL ESTATE 318 Thali11. ..... 494-8093 *** Tuesd~, Marth 2, 1971 DAILY• PILOT J8 I~ [j] I -.. t ...... I~ I -.. ....... l~I A,Mt~•b"'-1~ l-1wo-Jftl r.; ... _,.1 .. -!1'1 ~~ L19una &@•ch Sllver1do Income Property 16' Ho'1•• Fur:nl1Md ~~~= 300 Howo1 Unfum. 305 Apts. Furn. 360 Apts. F~m. .360 Apt. •Unf)lrn. TEENAGERS 7 VERY, "" rustic fix•,.. upper. 3 br,. raised-frplc. I UNITS $11,700 DOWN \I/ell located close to recreation & shops Huntington Beach Cost1 Mesa Beac:on Bay Huntington Beach Costa Me•• Here's a home for fam'11y har. ;.iooo down, lmns. t;l0,500. mony. For teens~ 2 ~. M~m BACHELOR cottage, furn. \V11.lk lo beach. 1111. last. & security fee. 536-1611. RENTAL. -3 BR. plus dining SINGLE 1 BR run apt. S175 I -BR. Condo; all bltng, fAfRWAY roonl p!u1 2 baths -.$250 yrty, 613-87U niahts/531-4000 rt.frig, tncl patio, pool. rooms & bath upstairi, ~~~~~~~~~~I openinG to rumpus room & · ~ large deck. For parents: lleal Eitate. ., [.IJ} 1 Bedi-oom, 1 bath each 7 Units turnlshed E."<cellent rental record Shows g90d t't'turn t;ll7.000 Full Price per fno. 1st and la~t plus dl!l)11, Some furn. Quiet. Sl30, ~!st dr~. ~~n. &I~~~ Costa Mesa 67:'>-5034. VILLA APJS. L1gon1 Beach el"erythlng's 1!0\\'nstairs • Gentr•l . private master bedrooni, !iv· * SI'UDIO CO'IT AGE Realtors ?fl.I M"'rbor, Costa Laguna Beach ·2 & J BR'a Mt>sa, REMARKABLY ing room wllh •fireplace & FURNISH.ED built·in kitchen. PLUS ocean Acreage for t ile view & J o w mainlenance ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 150 Artistic litudio ·cottage at Victoria Beach. All \\'OOd paneled, skylights, frple. 3 BR z BA Jg llv nn with UNREl.lEVABLY Jo'OR lease I Br, furn, Ocean PrivJte paUo, pool • tndlv, lrpl~. New 'crpt!I, dble gar. EXTRAORDl,NARILY View. Deck. Adlt1 only, m laundry fae. Gardener furn. $225 t,10. 301 BEAUTLFUL pet.s. $250/mo. Utt!. 499.2865 Near Orange Co. Afrpo:t A yard. $41.900. Call • ..A'Otan · REAL ESTATE 1190 G!tnlli"yre St. 4~.9473 54!Hl316 Laguna Niguel BY 0\VNER: 4• + l br, 1'4 ba honie c:in landscped 'lot. Comp! pvt pool, covered patio adj to house, fully .crpted, all bltns, cabin p!ayr1n above dbl gar. \Valk to schL 10 Min. to Deh. $36,500. 495-5748 aft 3 pm. Lido Isle *REDUCED* Immac. 5 BR., family rm. 45 Ft. Lot street.to. street. By app't, only $93,750 LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lido 673.7300 Mesa Verde MOBILE HOME PARK tiO Acres. Potential mobile REALTORS home park site. Smog.free, SINCE--1945 ju.st minutes from Riverside. 673-4400 Preliminary engineering in. =~-~---~-,.-°"" eluding park design com· PVT party wants lfi lo 20 ple!ed,$3.3-lOperaere,Su~ units from owner, Jl'lit your 1erms. For further Newport I r.1 es a arta. information, please call R.E .• 54(1..6::::_::7;2=-· __ ----- Knox with Eckhoff & Assoc .. Inc . Lots for Salt 170 1818 \V, Chapman Ave., 4 CEr.tETERY Jots. Blue Orange, Calif. Spruce section. Harbor Rest 541·2621 Eves.Wlmds 538-9~35 Memorial Park $ 7 0 0. • 548-3075 =-='----- LOTS OF LAND R·3 Corona Del Mar .• $80,000 Mount1in, Resort Desert, 174 $185 Month ?-.tlSSION REALTY 494-0731 Broadway, C.M. 64&-3928, Vil D'isere G1rden Apts UCI. Adults only. Lido ltl• 2012'l Santa Ana Ave. eveR: 613-4577. Adults, no pets Mi7 1'h'I. Joaehfm,. Apt J..A COZY COTTAGE .1 Br. gOOd Putting green, waterfall & BEACH Apts. F'un\lshed l • $16.6215 Newport Be1ch area. Yd for pet. $90. s~am, flowers eve~here, Br •. & Bachelor. Garage.lii&&;;o;;;;;"'"iii!i••iil _ _;... ______ I ALA Rentals • 645-3900 '' pool, ""· 1Wm, billi'""· 1200, 12'5, j2;0, 32Jl Nord. EL CORDOY-r. a..ts FOR LEASE '-'-==~::_::..c,,c..:..cc.1 .BDQ'5, Sauna, fu.rn .• ull{um, _1:.:H:.:'..:6!.:::l-!09:...:::.;7 _____ 1 ll cn~ Be11.utlfully furnished. A sl>f!C· NR: Harbor l;li; Newly Singles, l BR, l BR + den, ial 2 SR, den, 2 patios. Close decor. 3 br & tam, 2 ha. 2 BR. From $135. See it! Newport Bt1ch 20n Charle St. '42-4470 k . $275/mo. 5'1~7885 -Parsons Rd., 642"610 • 0 -••-b> ''' 1•-,, ~--m. to beach. $450 Mo. or ma e "'WV R 2 ""' ...... .., '"" ....,.., otter . EASTSTDE 2 Br. RIO. Encl Between Harbor&: Newport, BEACH DUPLEX 2 B · ing 1 & 2 BR Spanish style JEAN SMITH, RL TR gar. Olild ok. $140. ,_2_s_Jk __ N. 3_9_1h._____ BA. 4. hse!'i trorn oce~. Pk.r., prestige apts tor aduJQI. Ell:: ALA Rentals e 645.3900r-u!H pri $IS5/mo. til June tra lrg liv rms, ah8.g Cpt'd & 400 E. 17!h St., c.~t. l:ith, 962-8983 di-n'd thruout. DWhn spa.c 646-3255 2 BR duplex-Crpts ,\ * * * * · r t drapes. Stove & refr!g. El Puerto Mesa Apts BACHELOR apt~ a.ll elec, closets, btaut. pooij. ttc-.1 4 BR. Priv. sta\l"\l•ay to Pref. aduhs $170. G45-Z7$8., swlm'g pool, encl gar. 1 room. encl gar. , 1 beach. 'Pool. $850 Yrly, * * * * blk from o<'f!an. $140. 210 liome Show Rltrs 675-7225 HOUSE in court, 2 Br, crpts, 1 Bedroom Apt1. Cedar. 543-1131. . drps, patio. 976 W. 17th St. * $25 WEEK&: UP* Park~Llk• Su"oundi'?ll H~sts Unfurn. 305 No. A. Cr-.t. MS-~9. $15.j incl. utilitles. Also furn, ?-.IESA MOTEL QUIET • DELUXE 1 G~ieral Fountain Valle y Ponl & Recreatioa area. h.ltchen. TV's, n1ald 11ervlce. J.2 & 3 BR APTS :::::;;,::._ _____ .I ;-;;;;;;;-;;-;--;;;;;;:--;;;:;:::;I QuJet Envimnme,.nt. Off lleated pool. 646--9681 Also FURN. BAOIELOR FREE RENT BOOK 4 BR/2 Ba, bltins, dbl gar. street parking. No childre:a, Prv " * l{td p-• K.LAi.'1ATII River. 1-4/10 ac c:rpts/dl'])!I. J Rn. Oceanfront. iii June pauo5 ....nl R·3 Yorn• Lind• .... 1m.ooo ------- R.1 Newport Beach .. $50,000 i\f·l Anaheim ••••.• 3145,000 R·l El Toro Rd .•••• $164,000 C·l San Clemente •• i13o.OOO R·2 Paint Springs •••• $10,500 Home Show Realtor s 3535 E. Coast Hwy., Cd)1 on paved rd. Xlnt . fishing DROP IN AND 213: 37s.s121 no pt>ts. lath. $l:l5/nlo. Ulil pd. Nr sY.op'g * AduUa only & hunting. Club privil, 24 BROWSE Arllrs. no pets. 673-8088 MARTINIQU~ .APTS I, ,. 1 y k tt · ''' Huntington Beach 1959-1961 1'1aple Av~. m !I ""· 0 t't' a 0 m s 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Fireplace, ,.... DUPLEX l·BR. '"''"·· I blk. lm Santa Ana AV'e,. CM 5. \Vill srU for orig. inv. Costa r.1esa u ~42 C. C. Ferrell, 1777 Oran<>e carpefs and drapes, double 3 BR, 2 ba, bltns, frplc,I,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ocean. Sl.'iO Yrly incl util, No Mgr, Apt ll3 -646. ·>e garag':, big fenced yard. fenel'd yd, gar. Close lo t di &t2-l272 Ave·, C.rit. 548-3077 Rent $2'25 per month, maybe OCh & sC"hools. Chldrn/pet ok • $130 UP .. pe s, a ts. · * $130 UP * Real Estate Wanted 184 lease with OPTION. Refs. $225 mo. 536-9672 GIANT l & 2 BEDROOM! * 2 Br, apt 'til July lsl. GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM!' WALKER & LEE, 3 BR hse • vr.'fw lhruout, Gorgt'Oui>, park·llke setting. $170/mo. Garage. 300' to Gorgeous, park·like setting. 675-7225 disposal. drps, patio. No ~losed ga~ges f~ r 1nax. beach. 642-38.1?. Closed jtii,tages for max· Realtors ts . Call 962-857S,lor Info 1mun1 secur1!y. Quiet slreet. ON ba.Y, near Lido, 1 BR i1num ffeU,rity. Quiet 1treet. 2790 HARBOR-BLVD. pe Adults, no pets. 2020 patio apt. Boat slip avail. Adults, 00 pets, 2020 ----------176 ACRES Clevel11nd National ' , ·-l•bulo"• horn•.•, 4 $3500. Down . 6~~ 'M loan • k ......,,£.... " "'' Forest. Creek & oa trees. BR 4 BA den family rm like new. 3 br, lam. Vacant HOMES NEEDED blti~. s99.ooo, & $124.ooo'. $28,000 .. FP. 499-1901, 496-3949 CJ.ose lo Reagan's ranch. $1350 per acre. Terms. Call Good tin. Owner 494-2339. Newport Beach owner 8J7.n19 , . Houff• fw s.!1 I~ Classification I OO. f 49 Re.111 £1t.11te, I.el Gener.111 .....__~ Cl•ssification 150· I 84 EXCITING VALUE * Choice mwlipt, '°"" Costa ~fes11 acrrage If you want a 3 bedroom home with warmth and llanin lttalty charm. !his is.it. BJ:ickJiJ-e. 642-6560 place, shutters 1vlth over. draperies in every room, Apartments for salt 152 wall to '\/all carpeting. Extra large patio 1vith built·in bar. LIDO ISLE -r.1ust sacrifice, be-que. Curved brick entry 6 beach apts. All furn. fi walk and de corative brick cai-garage. 7% loan. Lease fence. 'f\ro years old and land to yr. 2018. Owner. better than new -1~~ % as· 1 -"'-'-'_09_7_d_'~"-·----- For transferees. \\'e ue the exclusive agents lor a na· tional coq)Oration. Call local agent before you list-847.6612. financial I~ AT ADAi.\15 • 4 Br. $110. Drape~. fenced i"ullerlon A\'e iHarbor to $!&:> month. fi73-6450. Ful!erlon Ave (Hubor 1o ---C:.:.C:::C.CC:.:.---1 Yard. garage. Near ocl'4!.n. 19th, then So. until 2 !:Ilks "°'B~R~-7l'-o'bf~k~---l 19th, 1hen ·S:> .• until J blka LEASE 536-0346 So N 1 2 0090 1. , poo , oc to ocean, ·r · . of eY.'JXlrl B vd. 64 ""' Single adult $135. 833-3:)35, So. of Newport Blvd.) HOfi'i[ & BUSINESS 1-l-rv_in..;•.;..· -----i•DELUXE I & 2 BR". FUm 644--0631 ev.,. &12-8690 NE\V 3 BR. 2 BA, crpls, or unfurn. Bltns, crpts, 2 BR upper • Walk to beach. * FREE 2 Bedrm hott~e converted in. drps, htd romm. pool & drp~. pool , gardens. $250 incl ulit. Yeatl)'. Ava.It RENTAL SERVICS to Dentlst'1 office + 3 bed. -rec incl. Prefer family. NASSAU P-ALr..fS, 177 E. _-3~/~·L~213=~/~-·~·~'·~94~4~3~, -----l~t& 1.Iesa. • Hunttneton ••~ h l""".17662!11an che1ter .,_2~2"_d_S_1_ .. _C_M_._&l_2-_364_» __ ~N H. h "-cb rm hOuse, ~.., per monl ~w 1 ewport e1g ts u.:acb • Newport Bea B • lor both. Ed Riddle, Realtor, ~833-8~'--"~'~~-·----I DRIVE BY "".,.:,.,-,--.....:::_,,-..,-,,-I J.2.3 BR APTS. us1ntss 646·8811. Mesa Verde CLEAN I o1· 2. Br .• Arllts, Ask about our DISCOUNT Opportunity 200 J-----------1 147 Flo1ver St. I Br furnish-no pets. Lg kil. $13::>$150. PLAN Call 636.0220 1 BR cottage Util pd .... $7.'i SPOTLESS 3 br 2 ba & ed, Best Jocalion in C.!1'1. 7A21 E. 16th St. NB. 646--lSOl · • * CANDY SUPPLY t BR home rurn ...... $99.50 fam. lf>86 Myrtle~vood, $240. &16-0920 San Clemente VILLA MESA APTS. DISTR. * 2 BR C.M. tot/pet OK .. $110 mo. 499-LOOI, 49(i...39-19, * DELUXE 1 BR & 2 BR, Prlv patio. Htd pool. {PART OR FULL TIME), 3 BR vacant kids OK .. $130 h Bachelor apts. $Jj "'kly & * WALK to Shop'g. A!trac 2 car encl'd gar. Children VERY HIGH INCOME 4 BR vac. kids/pe{s OK $170N •• •.w~po-rt_B_ .. _•----• I up. Furn. incl ulil. Monthly 1 BR. furn. Adu 1 ts. welcome, no pets pl~! Now available in Orange 2 BR horse ranch •..••• $1-10 3 BR, den + lge dorm or terms avail. 998 El Camino. .~130/mo. Phone 492-Ei313. $165 mo. 719 W. Wilson. County and surrounding STAR* LET 776-7330 gtudio, 2 ba. Nr bt>ach. $295. 546--0451 Apt. Unfurn. 365 646-1251 CHARMING Laguna Beach areas. All Jocati011s are com. FREE Rental Book-Drop in 644-5049 or 673-3211 l-$~2~5~P-.-,-W~e-e~k~&~U~p-. Generel SEACLIFF r.tanor Apt 1 . l'tore5 & apt. on Coast Hv.'Y. me1X·ial or factory turnished and Browse. We have plen· Santa Ana BACHELOR & l BR. Bachek!r, 1 & 2 BR, 116 sumable loan. Commerco'al $30 200 142-2535 ' Property I'---'-''_"'"-' __,Jl•I 151 C lassification 200,.260 by us. Quallfied ~rson will I WALKER & LEE BA •137 r;/\_•1 '"' ...... v lot 80' X 105' to alley. y, • TV -& maid serv avail. Just for Single Adults · " .,,.,.,..,wu. -., mo e LEX Ownerwillfinanceat7.5%. becomedistributorforour Realtors, ?790 ll.arborDELUXE 4 BR h se . A:.r.v·t . CM In allowance + re g. MODERN DUP Broker. candy (Nestles, Planlers, Blvr1, at Adams. Sunflo\Ver & Timber. S.A. ,....., IC oria, · · SOUTH BAY Cl:.UB discount. Crpts, dl'Jll'i, patio, 3 BR. 2 ha. + bach. move-in Tootsie Rolls, Z.1llk Dudi;, Option lo buy. For info 2 R~l turn apt in Cdr-.1 In APARTMENTS pool, chlldl'en ok. 152[1 rond. $·12,500. \Ve have many Realonomics Corp. 675-6i00 etc). You must have 2 to 8 $120 • Lrg 2 Br. Dpb:. Ideal ~6-10:'.4. f'xehange for i;ervicei; of Newport Beach' Placentia Ave. 548-2682. 1'----"_'"_._ ... _...Jll ~I more ·income units. Please hrs per \\leek spare time cpl. Child ok. Good Joe. S t -An H • ht \\'OJnan Jn ovet'SPelng elder. 880 Irvine Ave. MESA VE~O~ caf! . Condominiums (days or eves). Blue Beacon * 645--0111 an a a eag s ly couple. 67::H.1621 (IIVine and JGth) BURR \VHITE Realtor for sale 160 IRED 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, wuh/ $2100 CASH REQU GREAT LOC. 2 Br. RIO, • 2 BR., 1,; ACRE* HOUSE Trailer, 1 Br. (714) 645-0550 dry attach. Locked p:r. 2001 Neivport Blvd., NB POPULAR ri1onticello split· For more Infomiation write: Cpts/drps. Kid,; ok. $150. Ket'p Horses. $200 i\1onth $115/mo. util furn. $60 dep. ,_ t __ ,_ N , 67' ~'" 673 0859 Ev•< VISION" 673 •-10 67'8800 QI 11 swr ...... ir; uuseta. r. ahp r . ,,....,_........, · · Jevel rilodel. 2+Z:den, Adult "DlSI'RIBUTOR DI ALA Rentals e 645--3900 ..,J ,,.. der adults, . no ch! c t'Cl'l, fl50 Own 54.0-5599 ~ OiARMING nearly new 3 section. Rec & pool facility. •23, P.O. Box 1139. Co. ON ~~ ac! Sm! but nice 1 Br. :;U;n;i~v;•;;rs~i;ty;;;P;;a;•;k;;;;;;;;;;;;j1Fno~"'u"Ni· ~";"-'d>7~79i0r~T)Br: I . e :EWL v' bdnns., 2 baths & lamily $22,300. 01vner. 540.1481. vina, Calif. 91722 Include cottage uu pd ll~ FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. RENTAL ,FINdDIERdS DECORATED rm. Large kitchen w/elec.1 ---------phone number or call (2131 · ' · fret To .. 1n or s hi 1 1 Blue Be1con * 645-0111 4 BR.&. family rm .... $335 Exception1lly nice! QUIET 2 BR',1. Gar A Poot St~~: f~I~~ r ;:;;g~~e~: _ln_c_o_m_~_P_ro_p~•.rtv _ _,,...-1_66 ,:;~~1·;!."':::;8~·U7R~G~E"'°'R,---,,,~,~"d'. J BDR.t'1'., Family rm., park 3 BR., lam. rm. &. din. !';s 2110 Newport Blvd., CM 645.0111 CrpUi, drps. Adults only, no door. See this before you 4 UNITS, 1 yr old. Comer like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids Tur\lr R~k •.• , ...... " ·. $30 WK • l per, wl kit 4J5W.19fli,CMte M ... pets. * 6-lUl042 Ne"'port Bch. Agent, Dick :l BR & d rm 3~Z:l • TV "!~:=:;cc__~---1:;'~'-,i:;:=:.::;:;.--;::.,.-~I buy. $39,500. lot, 1-3 BR, 2 EA, frple; Joy, D•ys: 673-3663, Eves: OK, brk., $200 a month. NO · " in. · ...... ·2' $35. 1olald ger, linen.~. ":B Ibo p I 2 Br. Untum Atil. Stove a: GRAI-IAM REALTY &Uj.UJ4 2·2 BR, 2 BA, 1 nicely FEE. 540-1720. 4 BR., 2~1 baths"""" $3 5 & tcle. &>alark r.totel, a a eninsu a 6-12-2253 ""'°"--:--,...-,-.,----,,-.I rclrig· lcl'd, Garage. Pool. Classification 300·355 I ,,.rt ........ "'"' 11 ~I C lassification 360.370 ....___"_""_'· _I~ Classific•tion 400·4b5 Classification 500.51 o 1'---''_'_"_'_''_'_~111') Classification 525.535 FINE FA:\1lLY HOritE furil. 2 BR, 1 BA. 4 pvt I ~c:..:::::..,_,_---= BUNGALO\V l Br. Stv/R_ef, 723ll=l~N~p~t_B_I'~'~· -"'="-~'~'-"-,--l2 BR, rrplc, balcony, 315 All util pd. Adlts only, no Good Heights area. 3 BR gar. C. !If. S765. mo. inc. Money to Loin 240 Cpts/drps, sn11 yd. $!15. AVAIL now 1 & 2 Br. lurn. E. Bay. Winier rates $175 pets. Mgr. No. 9, 383 W. & family rm. 2 Baths. Huge S59.950: P. O. Box 212· Cd1'1 L ALA Rentals e 645.3900 Pool, rec rm, gd location. mo, Yrly $225 n10. Inquire \V ilson St. separate master BR. 2 OFFICE BLDG. 1st TD oan DUTCl{ GIRL clean-2 Br. No pct!'i 01' c hJ Id re n. No. C, 673-5121or548-7771 IN'~·E='A~T~=2~B~R-,~,-.~,.-.-. -.-m-1'' Frplcs. Service po re h; Net income $26.500 7'3 INTEREST RIO, <;IQ, enc.I gar. $13~ 646-51124. Corona dtl Mar___ Jen1:,:e4J'd._new ~rpta. Chilcl lo•t '""""' I lSD Classification 550.555 ·gara~ on alley. enclosed Singte tenant "AAA'' ALA Rentals e '4S..3900 "SINCE 1946.. CiOIET. studios $115, 1 BR's, OK, sml pet. 3l6A, E. 21Jt yd. $35.CXXI. Price $270,000 2nd TD Loan $125. No chldrn or pPls. St. C.M. 646-3348. GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414 Returns 10~ on cash inv. 4 Br. on ~ ac. Dbl gar, fncd 1st Western Bank Bldg 2135 Elden Ave . CM, see CHARMING hillside ho1ne W. R. DUBOIS INC. Terms based on equity. yd. $200 Lse opt avJ. Univen;ity Park mgr Apt 6. ~ ... : ~ 3 S~~io 2~!P~~~ w/vieiv, Newport Hts •1 ___ *_'4_>_n_66 __ * ___ 1642•2171 54s.D611 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 ~O::l:o::l:y::l:s::::::l:S::l:31:::3-::l:O::l:l::l:O::l:I ::::i:::N:=ii:::g::l:h::l:ll~1L-G"""1-8"'R-.-d-,-h-w-,h-r-. -,-,1-,,-ny f),, .rt• drps, nr So. Cat Plaza. S200 548-7983 Serving Harbor Area 21 yrs. LOTS OF ROOM. 3 Br. Huge iri $130 M!;r, 7458 James SI. mo. Drive by 973 Valencia. "r.tAKE Room Fo-r~o~.~,.-IANY Day is the BEsr clay to Sattler Mortgage Co. yd, chldrn & pets. 318.i. 4 BR., 21.~ baths .•••••.• $-100 642-8017 & fi-16-2278. ON TEN ACRES Call 545--0ns Mgr. run an ad! Don't I 53900 1~--'-'_"_'"_'_tio_n_--')l!~J d y' ' .. c I ea n out the? delay .. call today, 6-i2--5GT8 33(j E. 17th Street ALA Renta s e 64 • TurUe Rock 4 BR, vu •• 3395 $14C 1 BR. $175 • 2 BR. 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Unfum. * $170 * I I~ garage .. your trash is CASH items with ease. use Daily 3 BUR.l\.f. + Jarriily rm., full 3 BR ., 2''1 ba1hs ........ $350 Uttl pd. Poor. Ga.1·den LJv. Fireplaces I priv. patios. 3 Br 1\4 Ba, patio blt·lrn:, s.vlces and R1.,.irs 'vith a Daily Pilot Oassiiied Pilot Classified. 642-5678 Cash f aSt I. .dining rm., built-Ins., brk. 3 BR. 2 ba. fam. rm ..• $3,lO ing. Adi ts, no pets, 740 W. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. crpi~. drps. Mk about our . . 1 ;•~tl~. ==================~ .$390 a month. NO FEE, 3 BR. 2 ba. l1on1e ••.•.• $325 18th St., cn.t. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 discouni: plan. 880 Center Classifieation,b00.099 1, lst & 2nd Trust Deed• Newport, 54D-1720. i d h.11 S~J"°N~G"°L°"E~S"l~l3ll=-a"ll-,-ctil~.-ox"'oe"p"t (i\-facArthur nr Coast Hwy) St. 642-8340 I 'rm I FREE APPRAISALS WE Like Kids • 2 Br. s:tv/ re I elec, modern bar etc. ./ v DELUX 3 BR 2 bath -·-· if Sma.11 class1·1,·ed ads Coste Mu• lnvutmenl re!r, '"",~.CID. $13ll. Ad""' oruy. 1915 """"' * COROLIDO APTS * Towohse. Bll"' 'd•hw,.., · · 548.7711 anytime ALA Rentals e 645.3900 I corner Ford). Mgr apt. No. 2 Br. studios & street levels, patio, pool, cl~bhs ins. C las$ilication 700-710 I $90. Tlny hse \vi nice yd, REALTY 03_·~===-~~-~ $185 & up. Penthouses $220. 545-5270. ' 11~ I do ideal mature V.'Oman. Utl pd. Univ. Park Center, Irvine e BEAUTIFUL.LY clean 1 Dshwhr. frpl, dbl carport. LIKE NCYJ'HJNG ELSE! V a Blue Beacon * 645-0111 Call Anytime 833-0820 & 2 hr apts. Pool. Crpts Pool. 673-3378 Large, clean 2 BR. Frplc. . H , & flrpi<;. Arlulls only. $130 ,-orr I 1 1 II I Ad 1 N occ '------,..,-' ouan or Rent COZY CO'J'TAGE . xlnt Joe. ., 60 0 ,2 2181 ea~e. r e x. a e ec. u ts. ear . c1.ssification 800.836 b1" Duplexes, to ,,J ...... -. l~e. new W/rt view 2 RR, 109-A Clearbrook Ln, CM [EJ 8 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;1 Yd for pets. $00. Furn. or Unfurn. 355 NICELY furnished 1 & 2 I . BA apt. All hit-ins Incl* BEAUTIFUL l &: l BR. [ ;.1, •nd SUpplits j L ' Houses Furnished lOO ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Br. Trailers. $110 & up. d•~hwshr, dh1. gar. Adlts Contemporary Garden ApU. _ . r". se li"ng ;,.:;:.;:.;~...;....;. ____ Balboi Island 8albo1 Peninsula 132 \V. \\lilson. 5-18-9:)77. only. fi13-6992. Patios, frpl cs , pool. Cla,sification 850·858 General GOOD SELECTION $67.50 BACHJo:LOR Apt . ?11an Costa Mes a $145-$160. Call ~5163. LOVELY 3 Br. 2 Ba., cpts, 1 132 IV w·i Call I ;ijiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiil~=~~j~~~":: I • b LANDLORDS OWNERS d-•. bltru. Yearly lease Ye;irly or v.·i ntPr re11!als on y, · 1 son. "THE CA.BLEs'" Jo PROPERTY MANAGERS Saii1~bury Realty 67J..(;900 Bu!T Whi!e Realtor _54_s-_95_7_7·------~ NEW NEW NEW 2 DR, 1~~ BA w/ gar: $150. •i \\'e will refer tenants to you Corona del Mer 2901 N'pt. Blvd., NB fi75-46.1(1 $115 mo, 1 BR, All util r>Ald, Adil.I, Cpts, drps, fncd yd. Pvt patio. Newly tw-n. 2437·0 Orange Ave. 636-4120 Classification 575-580 Merch1ndi1• ._-_·""'_,._·_:i_m_ ... __,Jlit I C lassification 900.912 tr" of ch"'1<• ••• M•ny Newport Beach Ad""'· Q"i•t. '48--09;9. VILLA CORDOVA desirable tenants on our Harbor View • BEAUTIFUL 1 a: 2 BR. waiting list. LG E. 2 BR. l 1,'2 ba, frpl. SMALL sleeping & sitting Contemporary Garden Apt.s. ALA Rentals. * fi~5-3900 Homes Furn. or unf. $22::...235 mo. room. re!'itroom facil, $60 QUTET·SAFE Patios, Jrplcs, pool, $145 • $80. Util pd, Bach at the bch 3 bedroom, 2 baths, ltL"<urious REALTOR 642-7000 mo, $20 security. 64&.8-164 40 Unit Adult $160. Call 54&-Sl.63 ij ,_r_~_...,, __ "_11_••_...JJ!lffl Try one! ; . I ' ' Cla1sifieLtion 915.94; Phone 642•5678 • yrly. Ideal student. carpet & drapes thruout, all DUPLEX 1 BR. furn or Apartment Complex SHARP trg 1 & 2 Br, Blue Beacon * 64>0111 built.ins including sell clean· ]~ unfurn. near shop'g. Quiet. 1 & 2 BEDROOMS cpts/drpti, bltns, quiet bldg. ing oven, fenced yard, green Apartrrilntl For Rent mil No dogs or cat,s. !»8-7720. E"t•rla•'"rn· g w,.11 he a pf•••· No pets. Infant Ok. S130 BEACH LIVING l Br. child bel k I b & T • • 1150 "'"9-"'1 -t & par w th ca ana · ~mmmmmmm;.:.m~IATTRACTJVE E-side.,Studio ui-e, Decorating this lovely, "" · ortir iu, ~ --. & pet ok. Urn inc $130, pool only steps a\vay. This apt. 2 BR. ·111 BA. Pool. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 ... 11 1 ho 1 1 Id spacious apt will be 11 joy. A'ITRAC like new 1·2 BR . ..,.,au\ u me on Y yr, o . Apts. Furn. 360 No pet!'i. 646-6610. • Special cabinet space Lg pool, cpts, drps, diq>l, LAGUNA 1 Br. apt. Xlnt loc. Convenient to Fashion ls-$155 ~ SHARP 2 BR. • Lock garages w/ lg ator uU pd, 1884 Monrovia. Nicely furn $135 Ull pd, land & all shopping. $350 pr. General }feated Pool. Adults, no pets • Sm cell • Lndry • Patios.,~"8--0=~"'"=·----~~~ 1 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 month on lease. Avail. ---------, ~farch l~t. Please phone HOLIDAY PLAZA (teen ok), 642.9520 • DW/displ •Huge gas stve NEW 3 Br owners unit, frplc, JUST Big Eoough & close to 644--20ll Eves. DELUXE Spacious 1 BR * $15 per week 11 P • Special soundproofini all bltns, s~g crets1 drp~. J11hop'g, $9S inc util. .,:..;.:,;c=,~=.-~--,=-1 turn apt $115. Heated .pool. w/kltchens, $25-per Wttk • Deep :i~ootor. &haC clOsed gange. ·tmme:d; OC.. ALA Rentals e 645--3900 CLEAN 3 hr hse, elec bltins. Ample parking. No childttn up Apl.3. !liOTEt., :rlS-9755. c1trpet& drapes cupancy. 545-2321. 2 frplc, s1Jndeck. Nr: Sehl 196. p GAS &0 \VATER .PAID NE\V apaclous 1 & 2 Sr. $95 • UllJ pd, Nicely furn 1 & •hp'g, "'l--0~.,A Aft ~:30 • no pets. ;J omona, BAOIELOR apt. comp! turn. l'" '" .>¥t Ci\I Mo. to Mo. From $ ..v. Bltns, crptS, drp1. car. Im· Br. \V/ Jrg yd. Sngl ok. v.'kdys. TncJs util's. $110 mo. 2426 Bl B 64'0111 CHATEAU LAPOINTE 2323 Elden Ave, CM med, occupancy. 54~2321. u• e a con * .r llOUSE WITH PAT10·2 hr, Ne"'POrt Blvd. 642-8400. IN Ba k B DELUXE f 2 B t ear c ay) * LRG deluxe 2 & 3 Br Balbo. Island 2 ba, conservative couple • urn r. ap · Dana Point See Mgr. Ted Woodhead apts. MESA VERDE arta. or ~ingle. $200 mo, least!. Pool Close to shops, $lSO. ==---,-----.,-646-0032 Call 546-1034. Costa Mesa 440 Dahlia. Adulta, no pe!s. SlNGLE, TV, pot>I, pe~ ok, ,..:,"'-:::.=,..:,, ___ _,.. 1941 Pomonll Av,., C.l\f. $25 &. up, 11.·kly. Dana 3 Lg Br's, 2 Ba, new cpt,,, EXTRA sh11rp :l bfilrm. 2 Costa Mesa CUSTOM FURNITURE Marina Inn, 34ll1 Coast drps, no pelt, children ok. bnth & family. Crp"· drp•, !fwy Av•lf now '!""mo ""_., DA RLING cottage, 2 BR. RENTAL. Ser ed cla~s 810 -· HACIENDA HARBOR ·"' OoN • .....,..,"' ... blfnl &. fully furnigh11d. Ne11-r ,So. Coast StJQppinjt f11m. rm. lirepl. patii:I. Ava.i~ * Ca.II 518-3481 * Huntington Bea ch NEWLY decor 2 BR. cpl.a, Cenh•f. Avail lcir lease At pool . l 215· &ll,.J64$ 0 r Balboa lslend d I I dt'pll, bltns, 2-ear ~· fi7"' ""14 BEAUTl!o'l.JL t'URN. APTS. Quiet A u t L vlng $160 673-71!09 on ly $250. mon1h . Call ~ $11()..$16;'i Q I • r 1..::,::.,:..;:,_:::;.--~~-J ~1151. Heritage RtAltors, 1 BR h~e. lencd, fJrep!. -Pref 2 S!y, 2 Br. cll'n, 2 Ba. ' · u t i, priv. pa IO, 1 BR. $115/mo utll pd. 2 (Open e-'~'~"~',-----adUs. No pets. 646-857l aft Avail immrd. Yearly ~SI' 2 w1.J,rdrobe1J, trplc, dresit!ni;i ALL ~TIL. P~ID Br. $145. Adlts, no pell . .;; SZ85, or until June 19, $250. rm, !Qcked &:l'!p. gar. Pool. I .l 2 BR 11. 3150-$1•0. Shag 820 Center 51 64~. Dana Point ~ pm. 673-3245. ~una~ Rec nn. I cat'J)et!I, bit.Ins, encl gar.1 ,,::.:,;:;c:,::T,1'.;cc:_:._c::;~-1 SHARP Eastslde, 3 bedroom. f 17301 J\ee~n Ln. (1 blk \V. llgts. S~immlng Pool. Ne"•ly QUIET 2 SR, crpts, drp$, FOR leai;e 3 BR., cpld, dt'f!J, ~$265 per month IDEAL for 1 adutt y ur1 of Beacb B1vd,· on Slater). d~r _ Benul laodicpd. bll·ift1J. Mlftz, no pets. SUS. j~ yd. 2 patios, $265. mo .. 8 111 F\•ll• Re•ltor 546 0814 1 br, frp lc. No pets. ear Y + 842-7848 · • ~100 $1 SO, c\e1tnlng/brtAkllge r, · $170 Incl utils, fir~2975 · Adults, no pets. 1,.:"""=-'---~--~- rlepos.it, 496-6208. <1'9z..ss60. 3 BR suitable 3 nict ch11dl'f'n, • l BR, $1 3.j J)('r m()nlh. 241 Avoca do e 646-0979 2 BR. Ul}f. W/\V epti., drJ)s, 1o S200. \mn1ed. &16·-1326 Ba lboa Peninsula Including utiliuet bit.Jn· ruae. Mulll only. East' Bluff early t\,\1 or tl/e. • 125 \VK-OCEANFRONT T~t'lewlr1<!~ P.lly fl47·&.S1.!_ _ _ Nn pets, !i-18-4245 4 hr, lam rm, fenced. A\•811 2BR. crpt~. drps, ylltd, I Uivtly Bach(>Jort, l -BR. DELUXE Bec.hC'lor Unit.' • 1 OU!'LF.X, 2 BR. nnr. Prlv. L.i.r. modtrn 2 Bit. 1 be, t.fal' I. $4;;()/mo JM?. Rt'f8; garage-. No pet~. Ca I I Maid strvire. Pl)()\. Ulll. \Valk to Octan. Utll pd. ftni;NI y11ri'I. Childrtn OK N•w crpt, nr schoo\8, 'Bltns. rt'Q 'd. fltt..1 627 CoMl<lf'r unf. &to.862:i • 6t.''loo'8740 • l.fNOBORr: CO a.1tl-2:ii9 Sl:il ,\In. li:\7..(1-110 E:ves. ~tora$tt, $16.'>. ~1496. • ' < 0 t I I • • ! 1J OAR. V PJlOT T11tsda7, Marth 2, 1971 Apt.., Apts., RMms 400 lndustrl1I Rin11I 450 Lost 555 Blbyslttl.. G=erd:.::..;•;;nl;;nt:......,...,....,,...-I l.Apls._!F~u!'.;,,:::.;· or~U~nfu~rn~.:_:m~-AptL~F~u~;~"::.· !"':!:U~n~fum.~:.;:3::,7:0 I ;..:F~u:;:•~n~. ~•r;.U:;:nfu:::.';;":.· .;3;;7;;0-;:F:;:••~•~·::•:•.;U;;nfu;;.;,rn:.;;;·_.;37;;0~JCOu.EGE or worldni 1tr1 CO'iiMmcw...INI>umiit * REWARD * OUUSI'lAN zmtMr w 111 AL'S GARDENING Sant• An• Balboa lal, •hr kit & TV 500-1500 sq tt, l3c to 12c Nei,hbo:b:lad ~ racoon kfd. babysit. .My hom•. Fenced tor 1ardenirl&: A: i ma l l 1H1~unt;:~l~nt~l~oo~1~S.;,;•~cli;,==;;H;;;u;;;nt:;;l:;;nt~;;"":;;,' ,;Be;:;•;;'*':=::::::= 1:'.Se:;n:::t::e.;.A::_n:,:•:_ ____ ....;::;;;;:::.;.;;;;; _____ , nn, tele, $&/mo .tr up. * San Clemente 496-1840* naped. Any ltnowledre )'&rd. Lu nche 1. , =~~~:~ 1~ -:J 615--3613. NEW bid&, 1728-2300 iQ tt. please call 646-U93. lads Pomona/Wilton atta. C!t! CdM, O:ista a.teu., Dover ·1 FURN room in prlv. home, Nr Baker • Fairview, 1 just want h.im baek. WUJ d1e 50c hr. fli'.50 wk. ~1395 Sho~•. 'Vestclltt. ofa Quinta .JJormoja Casual ..Ute Uvlllg. Enter La Quinta Her- mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- Uned walk ways to your apt ALL UTILITllS INCLUDED 1 BR. Uni. $150 -Furn. $180 2 BR. Uni. $180 -Furn. $210 3 Spac. fir. plans, d_ecor. furnishlllgs: Uve within romantic setting w/fun or pnvacy. TOITllced pool, prL sunken gas BBQ's w/ oeculded ... ting compL w/Ramada & Foun· taln. * Color co-ord. kit w'/ indireet lig hting. * Oeluice rang• & oven1 * Plu1h aheg crP.fg, * Bonu1 atorage apace + Cov. carport * Sculpt ured m•rble pullinan & t ile bath1 * Elegant rec:reetion room. FURNISH!D MOOELS OPEN DAILY Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego Frwy .. Goldenwest College. San Dieco Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on Beach 3 bl.ts. to Holt; w. on Holt to ••. LaQuint 1 Hermo•a 714: 847·5"41 MJDldcffAJIS. ' Costa f\leaa; Kitch privil yr, leut. Sulllva.n, 540-4429. U caged. Reward, no que1t. 8ulld1r1 PROFESSIONAL main- '"IJNmdlllnl" \ •. Nr. OCC. 549-1061. Stor•t• 455 uked. BRICK, block, concrete, tenanct, prurun,. tree work, * ~.. PER week • U" LOST, SIAMESt C 3. t, -. '"-·--levtling a"rinkltn, -sts, dileue, "'" " STORAGE l""ce t:ir rent, f•m·'e. 8 Mo•. Wu w•a•I"" ca.rpen .. 1 , llVl.LBOI! ' .. ..-"1"°"""1RfSr w/kltchens • .S:Zi ~r week ..... .., .... all type• nmodellng. No v.·eed control. Otan up job!:. flL.... A l.!I MOTEL S48-91S5 fenced yd, covered, red nea collar. Vic Job too ·1ma1.1. Lie. Contr. Tenni. Georp, 646--5893. -iws..,w,,,.ati ·up P · · yr-around rental 545-8461.. Brookhurst & .Atlanta, H.B. ROOtlf for rent In pvt borne, STORAGE aara&e tor rent, SlOO Reward 968-192!1 a.It 96J..6945. JOHNSON'S GARDENING $'.-HAllFlMW empt lady prefd, pvt bath. 118 per mo. Evei: 673-7469, 4 P?>.f Carpenter Yard care, clean-ups , ~tc-w.1 :M-239~, C.M. D 547 1421 planting, 1 pr l n k I er s EMPL'D lady, pvt ha & ent. ays: -LOSI': CdM 9.>, of Hwy a CARPENTRY 962-2035 I Exchange re.f'a. s7o. mo. Rent1l1 Wanted 460 German Shep. ll'f 9 mo'1 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job I .AL.:::,5c::::::Lac.nd_"_'_P_ing-. -T~,-.. ,...._...;......, _____ , male, blk &: tan. R.tward. Too Small, Cabinet in mir. _ _, --'•li fcwehlldrwt \ 642-5076. RELIABLE couple want one Call am 675--0493, pm .. -removal. Y ... u ttu"""' ng. ~·~~· 1 HC Delux room, N.B (1) bedroom apartment 67J..3933. qe:s • o th' r cabine t!. Truh haulin&, Jot cltanup. mN ..,,,_. """ 545.3175 if no amwtr leave Re~•· •"rinkltts 673-ll66 Avail til June Utb near beach (clean) twin LOST: \Vhlte male Cock-....,.. .. ' A---kl•'---'*-'673-4""-'-'m.:.;_*c..._=1 beds, :Auiu1t •September. !Mostl Poodle) Vic· msgAnd•·,..•,t. 646-2.172. H. O. NE\11 Lawn.s, ~.Comp! ......_ •· Tel. 714: 327-9685 or 977 a.poo, Y • lawn catt. Clean up by job tlllMMllMIC.,,..,.--, Guest Home 41S s. _RJver11de Dr., PaJm ~~~. Bch. Reward . REMODELING Ir IUpa.i.r or mo. Frtt e1t. For into rio*.-.. ..... cefl'ler, * PRIVAT E ROOM Spnngs. GOLDEN Lab-do• -·I· Spoclall!al pist,11~mm'lb,I re std,•,_ ~8::97::-::"::":..::°':..::M&-0032::.:::;.·:_ __ I ~ bu! '"' ,._,, • ane .. '6, ca ne s, EXPERT J • --.•-••biit...,9Plrt· !or am arory pt'"rson. l or 2 br unfurn houte or 1 1 CdM •· -~ lo• apane1 os .... wan.1 marl.It., tonn.lca. 644-7598. _..,, Comp! 19 ardo ..,..__.,o.._9dt.tngtMkidL Brl&"ht. cbt-try Carden sur· apt. Employ~ lady & 9 return or inronnation. Call a ....... enet. e I n-#!:&ft. roundings. Nurrltloua meals, yr old son wUh no pets. 673-60lO 5 10 7 pm . C1rp1t Service in& service. Fret ••I · I~ '\ ....,_. IMl.Y IOtDDmn' CDnDt Call 548-4753. Approx: $100 mo. Needed by 645-fl345. -~~· ,. .. ," •• , ... .,,.... I A ., a 43 1.t:ar. 26. References. SIAMESE cat, vie in K-Mart Diamond Carpet CleattJ.na EcXP=-ER==-. H-.-waiian~-~~G-ard~.-... \~'~ ... , r;'"af-'-:..r" .. - -+:, , ~I Rentals to Share 0 SU-2037 a.It 6 pm or Sun. Avocado St. atta, CM. Whl Ava: alze room $8 Com P le te Ga r den 1 n g 4i.~::' =.-=:.~'=e -\VANTED: \Vorking ,i:i r l 2 CAR Garage fn Coste. coll, w/ G.G. taz. Rew. ~p~ &. in&talla~~~7 Sttvlce. Kamalanl, 646-4676. ....,.. · betwn n & 26 to abart Mesa. To ~ wed for;l:~"~'-~3~184~-~~~~~~ SMALL Land i c a"l n r . I.:!:".,::,.~~ J hr hse In C.M. No ator~. Call Tl!ny, The Cement, Conc ... te General Cleanup &: .h.ulln1:. 365 :ri • .,. • .-,.~ chlld~n. Call Monika at Rl!al Estattn ~2313 646-7188 or 642-0570. Apt. l/nfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. Ac~ ~~o.. ..-NI. 642-2000 Fri &. Sat betwn I fnitructloa ll 1•) •• CONCRETE. Floors, I ~::::.:::..::c.:c::.:::.::: __ __ ;.·~------~I fi.!.~~ fM $11SPtr..mtl :i 8:30 am -5 pm; Sun & Misc. Rent•ls 46S patlo1, drives, sideW5.lks, Hauling l ~F;ou:::::n;:l•:;l:,:n_V::.e::.l:;l•::;Y~..,..-· 11 /'IOfWI¥ r..u.~ Ofl1HT...,... JI 543-3820 l ~;;;;iiijiiijiiijiiij;::ii;;;;; I alab1. Rea1. Don 642-8514. I ~:::;;;;;;::,.. ______ , Coste M11a (7u)l\1....oo _,,""·. Mon ca · • FENCED storage atta.11 YARD, Garage cleanups. I---------3 BR, 2 BA. Condo. ~ car ,,..Qlllllr'nv' J 1~ .... ~111....,..-a.1.n.cw I GIRL to share small 2 Br oil surta~; Costa Mesa. Schools & PATIOS, walkl, drivts, in· trees dirt Jvy removal, aklp LRG dlx apts. i14G 2 Br, .i'arat:e. Pool, $225/mo. Call Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts house w / 1 am e. Call Call 64G--0281, 962-7813. instructions 57S stall new lawn1, saw, break, loader. backhoe. 962-8745. USO 3 Br, 2 Ba. Hid Pool. 1.::536-=l7~23::.:ol::_to~' .:5':.::'°::..!:Pm::::.. --F '' U f 370 833-2S40 8·5: 646--4604 aft 6. _:.;;;.,.:.;,_..._;;____ ~":.:mov::::::.:'::.· ::;-::,,:~.::'°':.:.c':.:'L;_-I C •• B h .;.;;u;;'".;.'..;o;.r..;,;.n;.u;.r.;.n;;' .....C. ~ IT'S YOUR MOVE ~"~ WORK job loo HAULING, gon'I d"nup. Newl)> dee. Play yd. p ..... G d G i;N:,;•;;;w.;po;rt;;;;i;i';;i•;i;c;;;;:;;;;;;; -WILL share my 2 BR, 2 ....,..,u:.o~• , m tree serv. Handyman. Reas. Drps, Bltll&. Patio. Child. •r en rove G I b I t / tud t I small, reasonable. Ftte enera a. poo' •P w ! en or Pwson~I• E ti H S ... 11,ck 54.&-8615.,._ ·=-="''=-·~--~--ok. 12th MO. FREE-EASl'GATE MARINER SQUARE w"king •id, N.B. 642-89T1 fNOUSJRY CAREERS ' m. ' ·~ ' TRASH & Gsngo dean-up. 1998 Map\o Ave. 64U34< AREA O•an. •paol<>us 2 BR APARTMENTS PALM MESA APJS MALF;ll•m~• " coup\• 2 2214 College Ave. 646--06Z7 ~ts~A d~~lo e~%~· ~~~: Annot.uices the availability o1 • Br. Jum Balboa Penn. $100. P ersonals 530 AIRLINE & TRAVEL Child Care !1t~~fti'!. a~1.Ftee *BRAND NEW* laundry facllltlts. Walk to 2 &: 3 BR units for adults 1 BR W'lfurn Sl3500 mo. 673-1U6. 1.:..;:;;::::;:;;;. ___ ....;;;.;1 LICE,..SED J\fOVING, Gara&e clt1n-up shoppinl'. Nr trwy. $170 mo. dtyesirtnby. ~ .. to, ~:.•am,,,. 1!s_t i::,u,._ l BR tum .•. :::::::_: $149:50 Gara ge• for Rent 435 ADVENTURE Day Care for Children & lite haulin1:. Reuonble. LA COSTA APTS, 111 2 BR. "·" 897 u.•" u• "" uie .-~ SAILING CRUISE-C OPERATIONS AGENT Mother of 3 will care for your Free estimates. £.15..1602 Bltns, a~pool & gar-c1219>=::.:~=.o'Yc:·.:::.~=.::.:·--tigious \Vestclitt atta of Bache:o~ ~ f'OR motor homt!, trailer, 150 ft. 3 mut Square Rigger. •TICKET SALES child whlle yoU work. Hot aa:e. AU util pd, S1SO to $170 Hunt'inglan Beech Newport Btach. R boat, etc. 1652 Npt mvd, CM. Leavina 3/lS/T1. f 0 r 3 • RESERVATIONS IWlCh le inacks provided, Housecleaning FROM $230 2 B apta $175 mo. 64'-1 6425106 e AIR FREIGHT"'"GO mo. Adults, oo peb. / OK vu.s. • • · montha. Men & women want. .....u.. fenced yard, playmatts. De-M• .. 0 , • .,;.,., "--lee CM ""9101\ ·•-· 'Ir mo. mo. l ---~------I e COMMUNICATIONS --~ ~ .. ~Avocado, , · vu-NEW LOVELY GARDEN ror l1uurmation phone •• . e POOL GARAGE-Storage only. eel wides.ire !or adventure aire child 2 yn old, or older. Carpets Windowa. f1oora etc. APT. Lr& patio &. e.ncl Robut M. Buckley, .Manag· e SAUNA Available Man:h 4. .t: travel & ability to share • TRAVEL AGENT Vic of Atagnolia &: Edinger Resid. 'z. Commc:'l. 548-4111 WILSON GARDEN AP'f'S. a-arden. 2 BR, 2 BA. Shag er, at (714) 645-0252 or write •JACUZZI * Call 897-4885 * expenses. For in!onnatlon Airline Schools Paclflc in Fountain Valley. across 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee. crpls, .drps, bltns, encl gar. to The Office of the Man. l56l ?>.tesa Dr. Santa Ana Office Rental 440 call Pam Reynolds, 610 E. 17th, Senta An. street trom Vista View DAY work. General Clean- New cpU/drps. Spac Near be ach. 21662 Ager, Jl,fariner Square Apls,I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..!!!!!,. (213) 378-2605 S4U596 school. 847.7181 Sunday-Fri. ing. Reliable. O\\.·n transp. grounds. Adlta, no pets. Brookhunt St, Apt B, 1244 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. 1 BR. furn. $130. 2 BR furn $100 MONTH FULLY LICENSED * PIANO LES.SONS day afternoon. S20 wk per 1.:'"::1c:-9::330::_ _____ _ $140 I mo. 2283 Fountain ·6~4&-0841:=::::_______ 921164 hlld Bay & Beach Janitorial Way E. (Harbor, turn w. -1,... ,..·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..I i lss. 2 BR unfurn. $155. All Utilities P•ld Renowned Hindu Spiritualist Your home. Cer t If I e d "·~~-'-------·I Crpts, window•, floors etc. ~1 l 'Id W I Pool Bllrui, ,..,.,.,ts, drps, no N. 1 d t-" ... Advice on all matters. teacher!. r.tuslc System1. Contractor on "'son · Chi ren • com• PARK NEWPORT-care frtfl · -.. tee Y ecora"" ou1ce am . Res. & comm'l. 64!}..1401 children, no pets. 32&-J E. ki 111er. 8 N ' !Ave, Marriage. Business ?-1r. Hathcock, 646-1368. ---------lmmac. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Studio livg overlkg the 'vater. 7 17th Pl. c.M. 54~2738. pie Pill' ng. auv ewport Reading! given 7 days a VIRGO sw!m school leison~ ?llY \Vay, quality home HOUSE OF CLEAN HARBOR GREENS apt. 4-plex. Priv. patio. pools, 7 tennis els i750,000 Costa Mes• BWlvd .. ECoL'1a hMesa. week, 10 am -10 pm. 6 months thru Adult. Garden repair. \Valls, celling, Doon Complete House Oeanihl' GARDEN & !ITUDIO APTS Crptll, drps, bltns. Lra: play Be.ch. l or 2 Br. Also 2 • , ac 1nmy1r, 312 N. El Camino Real, Grove & Balboa 111 . etc. No job too small. 64Z-M24 &ch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. At'l!a, CUI-de-sac st. No pe11. sty Townhouses. bE!ec. k~~ LRG 1 le 2 BR. apta. lO Realtor San Clemente 656-2.550 547~, 24 hr ana. HtV. 1 • 1 -.-c-om_e_T::.::u.::;;;.. ___ I 2700 Peterkin Way, C.M. 17871 Bell Circle. 842-36n. pri. pat or bal su trn par,.. min from colle~. ocean & 186() N~v.'J!Ort Blvd., c .r.J. NCIT_'.4~92-~9~1~36~,ii4~92~-00To7~6 -:;;;yl'~~~-~~~~~~ ROOM AdditioDS. L. T. l...:'·-------- WALK To OCEAN opt ml.id ser, cpts, drps. .......uld walk to shop'g, He• Call 646-.:.928 Eves: 673-4577 S '( J S ' 546-03'{0 Ju.st N. of Fashion l&l at .. v NOT responsible for any ~ Construction. Single story or ml ey ax 9rYIC9 * REGENCY * 1 BR. Crttt!, drps, aome w/ Jamboree & San Joaquin laundry !l!.c., CUl>O".,_& prol. SUPER.-DELUXE QUAUTY debts other than my O\Yn. I Services and Resseln I 2. Estirn .• plana & layout. 2 Br, l Ba. crpti;/dJlls, sell frplc &. patios. $120-$150/per Hills rd. 644-1900 for Ieasina: Rent from dl130-I $155. l~~kG 1·2-3 room, up ID 3,!XXI sq. Albert Earl SetUe C/O ritrs.1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~~ ,64::1::·:::15:::11:__ _____ ~ • 13th YEAR LOCAU.Y • Adu!•· about '"' •count O'I Vera Olsen. Le e burg , -1 cleanlni gu ovtn, encl pr. mo. u. Info. . · ft. oUice aultes. Jrnmed. oc-\\'ALKING Deck Coatings o QuaJitied • Rl!asonab» J Patios. ~3605 377 \V. \VU. LINDBORG CO. e 536-2579 1-':::::C.E_A_S_T_B_L_U_F_F___ Pla~ntia Mgr. Apt H. cupancy. Orange County. Oreion 97401. 3/2/TI. 8 b 'ft" all types. Lee Roofin& Co, \V. A. SMILEY son. l BR, crpts, drps, refr:g., 64~ J..irport Irvine Commerc-SINGLE? WIDOWED? 1-'....:Y_';.;'-'-n.::g-----C.M. 642-722'2 free est. Certified Public Accounl'1 I *DEWXE 1 & '.l BR'•· Furn bl!iis, $135 mo. incl ul il. 1 Bdrm. 1 ba. apt. All bltns, BAY MEADOW APTS. Complex. adj. Airport.er Divorced? Over 21? Additions * Remodeling 642-2221 anytime M&-9666 1 Also l BR Studio, 2 ba, carpeted, draped. Frplc. 1 Hotel & Restaurant, bankl, For a sell explanatory mes. COSTA MESA Gtrwtck &: Som, Lie. 01· unfurn. Bltns, crpts, year old $175 Month E SCHOOL Central Business Services drps, pool, ia r d en 1 . tt'frig., bltns, ni!at ocean. · · Btam ceillnis. paneling, priv. San Diego &: N'pt Fwy1. pge 24 hrs a day call PR • 673-fi04.1 * 54~7170 eTHE TAX ADVISORS NASSAU PAL.'fS, 177 E. U45. Tradewlnds Realty 816 AllfJGOS \VAY patlO! recreation facilities. UNCROWDED PARKING =,,.:;'.....,::::::::.:"';:..:541~-""1:::::__,18th & Monrovia,~ dl.Y ·+ Llc'd Contr. Remodtling Penn. ottice-Reu Ratea 22nd St. CM. 642-J&Ci. 847 -&ru. •75-10~0 0 AU Adults, no pet!. LOWEST RATES FOR ladles only, SS massa&e full day se!&iollll, Planned Additions, Plans. Layout 328 No, Newport Blvd. * fRESH AIR >' * 2 BR. trom $165 * Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. gw'al SS. 17434 Beach program, hot lunche1. Aie• Karl E. Kendall 548-1537 1 BR. Dupltx. Stove &: -.... _... .... Rm. 8, Newport Beach t'''"·' ,. ., .. _ 6 3ll AM 6 OO PM Opposite Hoag Hospital Retrig. No children, no -ts. Walk 3 ""·-to •·· h' --·-• -Co rt B k Blvd., H.B. 847-S213 -.., •U""B : • : • G I 5 • F-A-• Call 64' "•- .. ~ WAll a<::a.C • 381 W. Bay St. !btwn "•·bor 833-3223 u esy to ro en ..," wk-COMPARE! 6(2..4050 ener• 1rv1ce1 i _c;_•:.:.c•c:"="..:::=-"'-~=._ $105/pet mo SUD \V/&ax b" BR / 0 -I will not ~ re1ponsible for ..., ;,;;;.;;;.,;... _____ _ · . Beaut. 1c 3 apt. w w WESTCLIFF area-2 br, 2 N Bl d 1' · N 0, 0-5237, INCOME TAX SERV W t. • .~,,,, 1""" • -v · nu · FOR un· mediate occu--d b'· th h '.::..:~::.:='------1 Hus•··• B"•y•, Call M-· a r , ..... ., ... · crpt., drps, bltns except ba, CJD. frplc, patio. ~~yv•• ..... -J a ny e u o er t an lDY1 . utUIU .... • ....,..... 1rA & 9 ·- 9 kd 972.-A \V, 17th St. 548-{;954. "'~" 7 of 19th SO. In 0-•ge Coun""• molt eo~ z S "th 54.5--0820 after 6--Rl!pair .-. up. a..11• pm w ys. retiig. $225. No pets. -1 ll Adults. .Sl7D-;l80. 16O1 ,..,, "' own. .-..on · m1 • CARE 1., Y'"' dtlld-my o I •-•· A 1 R d CALL 64&0073 lo .. ely g·•den 'om m, I Bulld-8erv Mo1t Things pen t ve1 Wl<luu. pp s 3 B • crpts, rps, stove, * $140 * Bedlotd. Also new garden • 0 DANCE JeS10ns; Latin & lovely, Jge, clean homt. ii;s avail. 548-0588. 1842 Ntwport, refrlg, Ftnced yard, 1arage, ASK A~-\ a · nt 1 , 2 br. 2 bA, CID, frplc, FURN 1 Br. Sll5: 2 Br complex, Comm'l profess. Anlerlcan. lntroductory oft-, ~m~•:.· ;C~.M;:.·~.,..=-=553::1::_. __ ,,,,G_•_rd_•_n_ln_g::.._____ CM mature Adults. rio pets or uvu our !!roll Pan. dishwshr. Adults. 16 6 5 unf $185. Crpts, d r ps, & med ical 1uites, in San r: .i • children. $140. &12-~1. 2 BR, crpt~. drps, bltns, car. Irvine acrois from Coco's. 8wlm'& pool. Close In. 145 Juan Capistrano •adj to er S4 per hr. 673'7185 OITLD Care my home, rates GARDEN se r v t ce , maln· Gordon N. Warren P .A. NEWLY DECORATED pon. S25 Move-In A11fwance. $195. 642-0239. E. 18th St .. at. 548-0049. Bank or AmericR. 835-8035. ALCOHOWCS Anonymous. to 1ult you. Pre-SchOolera ttnanc~. cltan-up, seeding Since 1951. 675-3345 725 Utica 536-1462 Phone 542-7217 or write to pref'd. 545--1506. , el c. Call 892-8956 ~~sal~rwa~/r :.r·21:i~ 2 BR. 1 Ba, Di!hwsr. ~frig, A N~w Way I;: Llhe 1: ~ ltf~~ ~ie~r 1~a~~; DESKEI SCP~C~ 1 P. 0 . Box 1223 Cost.a Mesa. ENE~R;;G~ET=i'°c;=y,:.u_n_•_m-'ot"'h•"'•' ;C:;OM~P::LET~E;::::Y::,,,,::....-c~.-,-.-. s~~~~E~~8;i St.~~·>;,°~ Placentia Ave. 636-4121) Cpts-Drps. Natural beam in ewport •c rar cpt/dp. $165. 54~~. JOS No. •m1no •• Social Clubs 535 \vilrllallysit weekly. Ba~t Cleanup, trash hauling by tection. 546·4528 evt.i/wknds ceilini, patio le pool, :ir OAKWOOD GARO EN ' S'1n Clement• & Fairview 11rea. 557-69j2 job or mo. 897-2417, 846--0932 LGE 3 bt, 1 "-ba, c r P 1 s, hospit11J Quie t. View. li676 APAff.TMENTS H;;;u;n;;tl;;n;;g;ton;i;;i;Be;•;ch;;;;;;;;;;;;Jrn.l/ii~4~9>44=ii~20i,M4iiC-IRVrNE COAST .Count r y NEWPORT Helghta; area. Lrg Garde.nin,.. Servic;-Ironing drpi, dsh9.'lhr. DownstaJra. Cam ••2 ·192 On 16th S1'"t btwn Club r.1embetship for Sale ... No -·· 2 ohUd-n ok 1165 eron, .,.. -J CORONA DEL MAR . ye.rd 68nd box. Balanced by ex-rienced Japant~ IRONING my hOm• 11.15 -r ,,.....,, '" · · "-·ino and Dover D•. ON BEACH' Call 492-1153 Ext 54 • .. -,,.. Cll1 alt 4 pm, 545-3215. 2 BR, w/w cpt1. drps, .u-v(ll4) 642•8170 • Deluxe office or business ' ' · lunch. Xln't C&'f'. 645-2754 • 968--0183 • hr. Bring 0 ,,.,.n hanaera. 1.::=.=.;_,:::::.::.:::.::=--1 dshv.•sr, sto\'t., nr 1-lunigin __ .!.:.:.:CC.::.~::..:.:___ ,..,, g•nd "' P•"--~1 -'.jii;ii;ijjiijjiji;ijjiii;;lliiiiiiiliiii;ii;ii;;iiii 545-7641 2 Br atudiirPvt patio, encl . . "6· """ • • • gar, l~ ba, crpts I drpsl Cntr, No pets, .$1 5 5. F'OURPLEX, 3 BR, 2BA,•1 Bdrm •·•••••••••· $20.l moUtUpd.0\\"NER67J.6757 I ~st lndFOll'ld ]ml* * * * * *Janitorial bltns. No. cr.t. .$165. Adults.1.:64c::2:::·S:::'12:=:_· ------D\V · trplc, lmmed ~i~p~ * 3 Bdrm •• •••• • • from $235 NE\VPORT BEAOI Civic . . L:iJ M9-!Mll. BEACH BLUFF Apts Sm. Adults. lnq. .. * 3 Bcinn .............. $375 Ceni er, 300 fl lo tCOO ft.I ";;;;;;;;;;;;~--Ill-----------------""'\ SPARla.E Janitorial. \Vin· NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA. dish wash· Patrice Rd . 6 4 2 -4 3 8 7 Furniture Available Answ. & s ec re tar I a I. dov.·s, floors, crpts & cons tr * LRG 1 BR. apr. All new era, pool, patio. 8231 Ellis. &12-l771. Carpets-drapts-di.&h\1.'Uber 675-1601 Found (frH ads) 550 cleanup. A complere comm'l crpts. drps, We & paint. ..... cu77 °'1 ~,, c,:.::.B.:R:.:."--,--B-A-. -,-,-.~\-,. d I . I ~:;..;"°"=""',--;--=,,--~~ 1.:..::::.:::..:;;;:;;,:.:;;.;.;___:;;.;11 T d ' p d. sen•. for Free est ca.JI, Bltn 11,., "° "''1 .... _.. or .... ·~ beate poo .saunas-tennis 1i670 SA."llTA ANA AVE. Ci\t ra er s ara I Se 1· ;) mo. .n'1"'U"I;) • _ _.:.:.:.::::..:..:::..:.:.:::::::.:.__ -·•-at·•, DIV, $240 mo. vi GUINEA Pig. Owner please 962--0672. 998 El Ca l C~t WALK TO BEACH II •= .. v. = rec toom-0eean C\\'s From lOO sq. ft. 35c sq ft. m no, .1 • Adults, nr Hoag Hospital. patios-ample parki~ 675-2464 or 541-5032 identity, CHU Dr., c .ro.t. If Maintenance ATTRAC. 2 BR apt. Adults LOVELY NEW 1 & 2 BR's. Jmm~d occup. 642-4387 or Security guards. h not claimed will be given 1• only. Near Harbor & Crpta, drp1, dsh .... ·ashers. 642-1771. HUNTINGTON 5 NE\V oUlces, 17877 Be11c c'::":.::'!."c.:':::33--0~,;:·":o·~~~-11 1nes QUALITY Maint. Experts \Vilson, 0.1. 67>3181 btwn 709 Palm • 847-3957 .:;::...:_______ Bl. Lo\\·est rents 842-2525 H.B. area: Female Siamese personal CRl'l! or cmnm'J Ii 8-5. LGE 2 BR, bltns, 6' bar, Newport Heights PACIFIC or 213: 394--00l5 cat, chocolate brown color. • te!id. property. Free itst. DLX 2 Br. 1~1 Ba. cpts, Close to ocean, encl ~ge,N '"1c;..E..;_2_Br ___ P.;:oo"'t.-S-""_d_ec_k. 'ill OCEAN AVE., J-J.B. OFFICE for rent-3331 E. 17th" _968-::::::::5656::·::·:_ ____ ~ t I mes 49'2-0'40. drps, stove, dshwhr. &Ar. All util paid, $11;;1 mo. Bltns. cpt/drp, adi\s, 00 CTiof) s.16.1487 St, C.'-1. Fum shed, ut SMALL Parrot found Vlc. Painting & Children oi<. Sl45. 642-79)8. 536-1766 peis. Sl60. 6'12-8001. 6'12-8006 ore open 10 am-6 pm Daily 1..c"':::;:c'·c'l::GO:.:·..:"'.::'"c.2::4:::50::.·-~-Et C11.mlno &: Fairview Ave, dOl larS P1perhanglng 2 BR. 1 ~; ba, Cp!3, drps, • WALK to bl!ach. dtluxe \VJLLIA?lf \VALTERS CO. DESK SPACE 5-lS-5941. patio, No pets, $17~ mo incl l & 2 BR. $135 +. No Sen Clemente 222 Forest Avenu& FOUN D Rabbit, med. siztd, No \Va1tln&: util. 54&-8803. summf't increases. Royal --2 Br $155 u~ 3 BR $180 Vic Elden & ?>fonte Visla, "-----------------_.} *WALLPAPER * SlOO. l Bdr. DL,-. Bit-ins. Hawaiian, 720 12th St, H.B. DELUXE 2 BR., 2 Ba., up. Patio. pool, children ok . Laguna Beach c .r.I . 645--0424 aJt 5 P~1. IV H. n. C I I 1 , _,__ G ti!. . When you cau "Mac" Cpi.J-~ bal G CHEZ ORO APTS bltins, dshwhr, rec. room. Jnq . rental bonus no11'. ant 1 .....,sert a 1 • ou · IA.l\e reeory Jot • u !lits, 548-l#C Sf&.1711 like n;:~nt J~: 96~i.8o.ar. 8234 Atlanta, 1-2 BR. pool, Adults only. $180. 49l-2259. ltfORA KAI Aptt, l SSSl 494-9466 BLACK & "'hite female pup-of-state, health. Have Cl paved toad. Want T.D., Or. LESCO Palntin• Contractor private g~. \Vashi!rs. A1ora Kai Lane, ~ blk E .ON the 0C'f'an in Huntinrton PY . .!klnora sch! area. Mesa rnrner 90xll7 3 bldp. Eq angt property. Time R.E. East Bluff d-n. •--38·, S""'-7727 Sant• An• of Beach oU Garfield, Bch -l"t:w deluxe office! del l\lar 540-9680. <.12i\1. F.P. $681\f Inc. $445 SJ:i-2.125 or ask for Audrey Jnt/e:xl 2 Story •pecialiit . . ,. ~ ~ i;#.~~~~==~~~l i!~~=·~=---=.::::::::1 .,.. Also. acc o u a l. ceil. I bltn 96U9!M. avail ;\larch 15. Crpt1, drps, S~1ALL white dog. Vic mo. Owner C.~1. 646-85.58. 838-2896. sp,.yi ng, Lie • •--, 2 BR apt -w w, drps, s. LL Newport Beaoh ample parkin~. s.1&-25i9 \Yilso n & Pomona c .r.t. H h 0 Park "'"1199 •• NliWPORT BEACH disposal, laundry 1pace. No VILLA MARSE I ES 642_3277. orse ranc . range 35'!0 RETURN, $40,000 eq in ~ VIiia Granada Apt1. pets. 962-8578 for in1o BRAND NEW 3700 NE \VPORT BLVD, NB Acres. 4 BR. 3 ba, pool, alt 2 or the fin!!sl iaundromati; =E~XP==E"-R'-. ~p~,~1,-,,-,-. -1-,-.. -,_-kl Four bedroom1 wUh bal<:on. 1 Br. untum apt. Encl gar. SPACIOUS VISTAA DEL MESA •ON 'I1iE BAY •15032 \~UNO : ~I~ & whl pu';Sy, ('()nd. 1 Acre +. 10941 in o.c. Tradt for ap~, ('()m· Exter. v.·ork by hr. Xln't ie, above&: "ltlow. Gracious Jrg patio . .SUS mo. Water l & 2 Bdrm. Apts. partment1 6rJ-2~G4 or 5' · ·ir: 8 a 0 8 Penins a. ~leads A\•e 1rd lor Red. m'I or 111ncl. ref'•. Dlck Fleldlng, Hun. Uvtna: & quiet llilrT'\)\1ndlng pd, adlta only. 842-4549. Adult Living 1 & 2 BR. F\irn & Unf. Dish. Business Rental 44S 6i.)..69IO. ::ling, Cal. P~p. 8Js.8921 Sll-3535 or &14-0637 eves. tington Bes.ch, 968-406.}, for family with ~lldn>n.1-'::::..=:::.:=.:,.:.::.:-',"-~ I furn. & Unfurn. waaher • Stove and Re!rig -FO~ND Vic. Cameo Shores. 'iS Acre val. $18,0DI) eXcluL Have 21 ' aloop w/Mad & re . PAPERHANGER, flock, lod · Nur Corona del ?-.Jar Hlj'.h .$50 moving allow. Ntw 2 Shag crpt'g. Lrg Rec l'.f'nter. SUITES available, '-ledlcaJ cAhco cat, flea co!lar, no . • f • &boot. Plreplac:e. wet bar 6 Br from S135. Cpl!/dtps, DWnvuher • color cootdlnat-Occupi1ncy In J\tarch profe$sional bldg, l 7 612 1 lJ 6~J.-936G 1ve attR, zoned or horse&. frig. !lad .stroke, unable to vinyl, guar., titimalt.s, !hf bltns, fncd patios, play ed appliance•· plwh aha.a: RENT Sfattll Sl60 Bc-ach Bl\·d, 11.B. Park!ni:: a· ' · Free & clear TRD as dn. use it. Could use small mo-Hangman, 547-584 6 built-in kitcben appl ianct1. a~a. M&.7277. carpet _ cbolee of 3 color Tustin & Mts• Drive A 1 r .c on d : ~t ~At 1 n g AFFECTION~TE . mixed pyt. on free & clellr hme, bile home tor two. Anybody Schwartz ' 835 =~.S ~~r !"Co~ L•aun• Beech acheme1 -2 batht • ataJI * 545-4855 * Carpeting: JanJtonRJ ierv i:i~~~3. Collie, vie. H.B. id inc prop. bier 642-2436 WMt to 11v.·ap! 536-2598 CUSI'O~! Paper Hanging, in. sho\vera: • mlm~d "'anl· 1 ~~~,..;.;::__~~"'---Inquire Suite 8 or call :l BR 2 ba leased wtrfrnt Have 19" table model tt· ter/exter. palntina:. Save on f.tani.aina: Aaent 541.szzt OCEAN VIEW. Lrr Bachelor robe doors -Indirect light-BACH6LOR & l br 11,pts. 540-572~. ' ~TALE German Shep. approx rond '\II/slip H~ llrbr ap. mote control TV in Xlnt ,';:;';;:"'<-':;·,;53::;1~·"19:0-''::·-,,---J TOWNHOUSE -Ov.·ner'1 4 &: 1 BR •Pta. CpJ•. drpa, ina: 1n kltcbtn • breakfasl N4'r ~50y, Eves. 6Tr7876 or RETAIL store allail aflt.r 2 .11!0'1 ~lk &: tan. 641-ll~6 pro.x°si4i\1 eq' ron Inc. Prop co nd. \Vant portable remote B-A J NT 1 NG : H 0 n e 8 t . Br, S Be, al!O 2 Bf. '2\i bit-Ina, petlO. Walk'r dial bar • huge private renced M-~.. ...1 1-h D .. _ e\·t~ NB · 1 TV · Xl -• p t1 cl 10 town. 100 CllU Dr, " arrh ::it · ~~1 '""P · · or 4 BR hsl". or L111 v1c. cont.ro in • nt couu. guaranteed work. Lic't1. Ba.6...:. l'JI-.~• oa. En I a r • Laguna Beach. 494-M!lS. patto -plush 11.ndicaping • OCEANFRNT 3 hr, 2 bs, \'acatln1. 440 E. lith St .. FOUND female pheasant. Z13/S8.l-86:?7 C\'ts/wknrb. * 5.16-1131 + Local ref'!, C'all 675-5740 I !'~~~-------I,~!:!::;;=;=::..::::::::::::._ I brick Bar-B-Q's • l&r&e heat. avail Jl,Jaf'('h l . Junt. 15th. C.i\T. 673--01,IO. San111 Ana Htight.s area. 1 • aft 5. I ~ M11e Verde ed poOl1 &: l~nal. $350/ 2210 \V o r 1 540--0!!04 Eves. 3 BR. 2 ' ba Ba.ycrrat, San Fra.nclaco Ptnin. GI Fount1ln V•lley 3101 So. Bristol St. mo. . cean ron STORE for lt>ase, 109 22nd . . $40,000 eq. ·r or: JOla or land. appraisal $40,000. 3 Br 2 ha, LARRY'S Jnterior1, quality ALL NE\V 72ii'ii upatAin. Gar. Newly 1 N l So Coaa Pl---' "-A S!, N.B. $125 mo, FE:.\1ALE We1maraner. Vic. TD's, \\·atetfrnt or '!' $18.00() view of bay, 11i yrs old. pa In 11 n g ' cu & I om VALLEY PARK dtcor. Oiild ok. No pets. C?J fi I. S1ont•. An• t ,._., .H11nt1 na 53 1·536.l CostA T\-1f'sa 646-6947. be.1. at 5'~'0 a!tume. \V iil Tradt Jor 1oca1 prop. d r a perl e I' 64 5-53.'(). APARTMENTS Sl50/mo. M?-8400. PHONE: 557-8200 LAS PALOMAS Industrial Rant•I 450 A parakeet on Bal Pt.nn. help for ritto deal. 613.nM 67l-TI84 557-7•~. 2 R. N I d I -·• '"AP.-1ENiTS •o~a~ll_!6~1>-~'1>1~7~.~~~-,.-liH<ii~~~;idj~7-;;; "~-....::::;.:c::::....,_~· loITTCH Boy ~· 1·1y , •• opena new c!oon tor B t:W crp • rps, c 0"""' I =====:::::i:C:::::i:!l!~ ,... ·'" ' ..: . llOR.CiE • gelding. 7 yrr. Have '69 cad. sedan De ,. .. s 1 t.erv. , •• YOUNG FAMILIES gar, ne•.t thoit'r. Adult!, Ii Brand new trom $140 SMALL UNITS r ound Silver llusky, female Sounri 1 aiflf'd \Viii trade Vlllt; fact air, ful) lthr int, S38 avg rm. Deluic 2 coats . 2 BR. Apts $160 no pet•. $145.64.>-l515. CAN'T BE BEAT I & 2 BA.. furn.-11nturnished COSTA MESA Feb 9th 633.004)2, Orange. tor bi:ti ~r ! · full pv.·r, paddtd top. Ai\t/ Lie .. Ins. 962-SlA~ Gilmort. 2 BR.. Garden Apt• $175 Newport Be•ch "'I I h dlah\\'Uher. Heated S95. I S167. Pe.r 1'-fonth S..\1ALL. malt, brindlf' dog. Call &14-5049 f~1 s!tl"t"(I. etc, \VMt camp. PAINTL~G/paperlng. 18 m 2 BR. Townhou.,s $115 SINGLE STORY pool &: lanai. Cf:ntral gi1s lmmedl11.te Occupancy 3-2~ mo·~ old. 642-0883 or 613.,1711 ~r or similar. 83.\.9.lOI tn Harbor area, Lie &: l BR. A~rtmonl $210 IUCJ-1 apt.. Puk J'\ewPool1>0tf. South Sta Atmosphere heating & alr~ndlllonirw. Ne1' fi500 sq, ft, unit, l81h & Lost SSS ll•ve·. 160°'" •-•. Ne\'I· Sevt'ral SmaU Lo t& bonded. RAt '1 furn. 6-12-2356, ,--Av\ now. Vltw. Gym. •· 2 BR.. 2 BATH: Gas k V.'&ll'r ptild. Prh11.tt. \\'hlftier, 110·220 powu, ;;,;.;;_ ______ _;;.I ..nv '"'" PAINTING, proft•sionsl. All Tl'nnls cl ubs. Acth.;tif'S. Carpets & drps pa Uos, Color choiee aha1 plenty of parki ng. FEl\1ALE German Shtphttd, da. trtt ~ rlear. eq S40 per Lake Elsinore work guar n, Co l n r PN•ICbool aiiterr. Adult pool, S195. 171-3.232 x 2370 d~•. Air CbndlUOned carpedna. See: ftobttt Natttta•, lUtr, emv."S lo "Gretchen." Lost a.ere:. \\~nt: C";. Mo1or Trade tor COior 1V specialist. 64&-7~: 517-1"41 Children' a pool, Priv P&tia.. 644-<lC!S t'V'l!:1/wknd1. Pr!vale Patios Santa Ana 540.4988 Co!lla l\Tesa. &12•1435 Vic: Goldenv.'t'.st & \Varner. homt>. TD s or 11. l\.ftyen, or Trost Detd IN Elec kttchenl. Wall to wall LG. 2 BR 1b.ldlo, l"' BA, HEATED POOL 1400 "'t.~ \\'11.rnerAve. SJO twd . 61&-2381, 674-4858 61J.6T;i6. * !>IS-37« * Ll~'d,t.. ~~ esra~tl~ dllltts 4 carpeta. 2 play. crpt&,, dt'pl, bltns A OW, Plenty of lawn North of SOu1h Coast Plaza TIRED ot thal old tumJturt? 1.DST: Saint. Bml&rd vlc What do you have to ll&dt? Havt: 3 BR tw:n home Bir UQ!t. Chuck, 66-0&J9. ~ Cl.rpor1F .t: liar· Neu Hoit' Jtotp. $190. Ol rport It stonre Shopplnr Cente~ neu SBn It'1 relny not that hard c .l\f. RE \YARD! CaU Llst lt ht.re _ in Otanst: Bear $30,000 eei $8400. \\'1tI11 : ,1ST~::;,;::;;;,::..;~~'--1 .,e. M~l!7, 6U-17Tl. HIDDE.~ VJl.LAGE Dleao • Newpon Fl'(Je"·ays. to rt.pla~. Juat watch the &1~315, or S42-96SJ. "'-unty's l•-•f -ad 1n~ Car, P.lol or home. TD'1 or ~5:> P 1 aintins: le ANY~ ta OM! BEST day to GARDEN APTS. Com?nlently lorattd tt1rntr furniture & mllcellanecrJs .:::.:..:::::.:;:,.:.:;;.::::;::. __ I....., ... ,..... ... u. !!! paper-ng ng, nter 'Extt'r. 1725' S. Euclid St. run 11.11 ad! Don 't 1'00 South s..i111 \V1 rne:r & BtlsloL columns ln th• Oa.ullied LOST: Blk flu rry fem&lt. cat lni posl.S.12-56il M}',rs, 67U756 fuit t at. 545.34!,9 OUat ftOUfh ol Warner In delJ1¥ • .c&U lod~. 642-5678 Santa Ana 0 546-1525 St>cl!o n. In Eas!bl~ .* * PAINTING/paperlni. 18 )T~ FountaiJI Vallt )') ltema with eut:, 1ise Dally A cood \\'llnl ed 11 a gQOd 611 * * * * In Harbor arta. Lie &: Phone (714 ) 540-4715 Pilot 0...Uled, 642-56il 1,,..,..,..,..,.!l!!!.,.!!!!I!!!. lnvestmtirit \\'t 'l1 hf.Jr> }"OU 11eUI &f.2-5618 White Elephant Dlm~A·Llm b(lndtd. Jttf'1 furn. G42-2Jj&,J I , ~alntlng & P a perhanging Holp Wantod, M & F 710 Holp Wantod, M & ~ 710 Help Wanted, M & ~ 110 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Fumlturo 110 Pl•-/0 ,._o 126 Dogs 154 BEAUTY Optr w/clleattle, GIRL. FRIDAY, O.C. AlJilort I i""'i"i"'"i"iii". iiii PBX Te.I. AN. Sttv. Work T£LEPHONE APP? SEC'Y. in Ll.IUna Sch. Elcp'd, !&at Pt.timf, our ottice, Cd1t1, ._ ans terv oper (2S-SO pref) 8 pm. Ntt<I~: aetf assured Fl time 3-11 shift 4!K-!ns.5. busineu penon who enjoys RECEPTIONIST·lyplst, c:.~r calling stranger1. 833-3656 or 40 yrs for sna.11 office. fl ~'"'='=089=. ~--~-­ hr day, S day '"k. &12-35.» \VANTI::O ~len to show new aft 6 pm tor appt. coe.tlng, Maintenance tree. RESTAURANT: Now ta.king 5 Year protection under nor. SACRif'ICE, by 0 w."; PRACTICE TWO ..... b .... SU\cyt.' ..... Quality cuatm Vectra. m fa ORGANS old. One male, one tem .• YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT llex. hn. Rent cir comm a.rta, Must be up'd bkkpl', WiU paint any rm uo. &U-23n N.Jl. type ~":poi. undenttnd Jnt I exter, Frte u/, f5yrs 1 office procedure•. Pt t1me exr-. Also carpenter work. BOOKKEEPER. J\flat be ex· no\v. $3 hr. Re1unw. Write any kind. ~-70-l6. prrienc~ in bookkeeping Clauifled 1d No. 120 Dally I rundamentab. Salary <lpen. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Co&ta Plaiter, Pitch, Repair Heal th plan, ~l!rement plan.1 _•~l•_"l':c.;..• ~CA\~l!~._!126_26 ___ _ I·---------Peacock Insurance 401 •PATCH PLASTERING j Glenneyre, Laguna 'eeach. All types. Free estimates 4g.1_1087 ~trs. Bradley. Call 540-6825 * lt£AD \VAITRESS-6 Da v.·k. Dinner House. Penn. 111trrvie1v1 9 to 12 noon. SAM'S SEAFOO D 16 2 T 8 Pacilic Hwy. Hun1. Beh. 1----------I CAR hops or voaltressts:'At. Plumbing I t 1·1 c ilve ''"/bubbling 1 ~:-..,.:--:0-:--::-:-personality, part time. Tht' Plumbing • Elect • Repair I Zoo Resiaurant Coast l-1\\"Y HOSPITAl.JTY JI o s Tr. s s $7.50 per hr & :'.1cArlhur SERVICE, has openings in 642-Zl'jj 642--0506 ! Cosme1ologis1. lic'd for salon Irvine area for marure 1 PLU~lBING REPAIR I Assist !O owner. Top salary "''om e n l o o k I n I ! o r No job too small .!. • 642.6857. inlt>rettinl', part lime \\'Ork, • ~2-31~ • CHURCH ORGAN SALES-\\'dcoming newcomers to f. your area. Sale1 · e x p . Roo 1n9 i\tAN • Demonstrate plPe ti: d . bl ,1 1 •• . I . L eall'll ,.,.w; uaveca.t. e ectron1 r. ge terrHory. CAL!.• 547-3095 LEE Rovflng co. Roofing ol NE\VPO{tT O R G A N S I ~~·=c;c~·=i,;...c"-"~-all types. Reoo\•er, rrpairs, 64~1.)30 ' HOUSEKEEPER, child catt, roo! coatings. Lie/bonded I iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-9:l> am-6 pm "''kly basis. since '47. 642-7222. Salary open. Ref's 54B-9Zli. T. Guy Rool!ng. Deal tf 0 U SEKEEPER/Compan· Direct . I do niy 0\1.·,1 work. /) ·' ion, Jh•e in to care r 0 r 645-2780, 548-9590. Loco 3 elderly v.-oriian in lovely Sewln9/Alteratlon1 home on Balboa "'-aterfront. c:"J J Pvt. bedtm & bath. Give A LTERATJONS, restyling, Expert filler. Top refs, N .B. area. 646-270.l Call Ruth Call . EUROPEAN.--.~...,-"-m-,~k~i,-g all cus!om filled. Ver~ reasonable. 673-1849. Alt1rations -642-5845 Neat, accuratt>, 20 years eXP.1 rn. I JaJhion references It exper. Write, Classified ad No. 109, Daily Pilat, P .O. Box 1560, Coata fl /) J Mesa, Calif. 92626 Jallln 1-ISKPPR/BABYSrrrER e WAITRES~ES Apply In Person 78 Fash io n Island for teacher ,1•/2 school age children, h1arch lhru June, sch! days only 25 hra v.·k $35. ~1/have O\\'n trarup. 962-T:Xl3 alt 6~ 30 •Verne. The Tile ~fan * I Cust. v.·ork. Install & repairs. • N•w por t Beach HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. ~rge Allen Byland Agney 100.B E. 16th, S.A. 547-0395. No job too sml. Plaster '!J!!!!l!!!!l!!!ll!!!!I!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!! I JIOUSE\\'IVES-3 0 pen in g patching. Leaking sno"·er -;: p tJm 13 hr repair. 847-1957/846--0206. CONSULTANT. Gen'! foods I e. Aver. per • 11eeds 7 women for Viviane No exp. nee. \'1e train. For CERA~1IC tile new !· \\'.oodard Cosmetics. We appt. call Ml"'I. 1.1uller remodel. Free est. Small train. Exec pos's avail, sm • 546-5TTO • JO. bs \>.'i!0 l~n1e. 53 6 ·2426 , ,.0, •. '"l<&I .....,... INTERESTING Telephone S3J;.888:; IC '~oo=.K~/H=SKP~'=E=R-. ~N.,....,-,-,~,-,-~ 1 work from home. Must have Tree S41!rvlce .duues~$l7 per da>', Fri. private line and at least TREES. !ledges, Top, Trim, Sa!. Sun. ea. "'k, Live in. four hoW'lJ dally. \\'rite, cut removed, hauled . Ins. 1Pihi;ii67i3-.1.5ii"i28i.iiiiiiillliii I CWsltied ad No. 108, Daily uo '"~ 9· J h Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1:560, Cotta ~··· ., ~--" es.a, ....... u . 'IJIQIJ(J, Upholst ery . . Gxeculi11e applications for me.I cond. Xln't adhesion to * COOKS. al; metals, llbergl.s, glasa. ~ lo"'"I· 2 m1l<hl.,. xlot pedll)'ff. AKC R<c. r.1elody velvl't ch a I r 1 . Prices you v.-on't bl!Uevel Jntertsted parties on 1 y , Beaut lamps. 1.f td it \VARD 'S BALD\VIN STUDIO plraae. $.16--0142 or ~1022 cocktail " commodg aet. 1!19 Newport Blvd MU434 333 E. 11th St. CM. ~~5;cu5f~nof d~:~:~~~ablt"s2 HAl\1MOND. S te,l n way, ST. BERNARD, AKC ftg, i\-1t'dlt queen-double hc!nn Yamaha. Nrw & used ~autlful r:'8'rklna:1. 11 ••ks. aets. Dinette. Guns. stereo planos of most makes. Best Needs Jo\e, attention 4t equip. Mlni • blkr. \Va I I buy1 l.n So. C&llf. al Schmidt :~l s.200. f73..7646 or plaques. Must see to ap. r-.1u1lc Co., l£I07 N'. ?ttatn,,1~~.~~~~-~--­ pn!ciate. &1'2-9492 Santa Ana. AKC UIASA Ap90 pups: BAR &tools beds a.ntlques H.OBART M. Cable Upright Champ sired, top quallly, colt. table' &: nl~ mo~'. piano, In tiood <:one!, $195 adoplrable 1 shaggy 111 t I e 642-9522. or best otter. ~l. ~~1. overs. (714 ! • orSH\VASHERS, No -one ~ra1nics, \\'OOd, Ille, teJTazo, under l8 need apply. COJ.... brtckv.·alJ, counters, furn. & ONY KITCHEN, 32li 1141·. concrete. Finish surface, bor Blvd., C.M. prolecta again.st rust. grease, RESUMES put )'Our an. gasoline, solvents, most de. r d ·"'"I Al 9' SOf,\ \\'/ niatchlng chair, S I M h i DACHSHUND pup1 , plicatlon on TOP. \Ve con1· lute acids & ,....... lne. 50, green, Vt'l')' good condition. •w ng ac ne• 121 mlnla•-AKC 9 ,_ck • pose & print 50 copies -remains flrxible under ·wide ''""" -.. ., ONLY $15.00. Call f>.ls.a&:H range or temperatum, Is $200/both. 64-t-5465 'TO SINGER Zir·l.at" auto, tan &: 'matx>Pny re d , lor appointment. I heat resistant & will not &U"-b 11 n k hem• ?tf a k e & n4/633-401&. ...-M lscellant1ou1 Ill buttonholrs, overcast, t:lc.1--.------~= 2 RM furn apt. in Cd:\t in port f.lamt'. \V/beautlful walnut cabinetMlrua~ SCHNAUZER t"xchange for services ol Chem ical Associates $3i.50 cuh or sm. pa.yment.J puppies, AKC rer . 7 wka. wom'" io °''""''"' oldor· of California UNIQUE AUCTION •rrongod. 54>-8238 ** CAii ..._2ill ** ly couple. 675--0621 • Any f.nd111ttial or ~tail e PCK>DLE Pups, pun!bred I LOOK ING FOR .c. B"'I""' Con CA\l f'or O.m. REPAIRS mlnla. g WJu. 'Btk lem&J. ·1 CH IEF ENGINEER TO $24,000 M.S./PhD in chemical or mechanical engineer· ing. Responsible fo r R&D i.'1 resin & bonding I techniques. S. A. firm. CHIEF ACCOUNTANT TO $12,000 Degreed. Responsible for A/R, A/P, P ayroll. Prepare statements • setup systems. Strong supervisory capabili· ties. Beach area. ACCOUNTANTS TO $14,000 GOOD SOLID onstratlon. ANTIQUES.IMPORTS Clean. oU, adjust any sewizl& es, 545-1800. • CAREER? 17141 548-3'277 UNREDEEMED m0<hl"'· 2 •k> only !l.9S. e SCHANUZER PUPS-Ratt One that really clicks? * WAITRESS.EXP'D' PLEDGES ~8238 black.!!, ma.le at 1tud, Don't overlook real estn1e N t _, 21 NO Pt!ONE """"""'i"" 846-0839 sales .•. a catter In real ~~~t"rAppiy in pe~n. COAST PAWN & Sporting Goods l30 ;~-;-~·;,an Shep~rd pups. estate sale~ can be l't'll'ard. Surf & Sirloin, 5El30 \V. Coast AUCTION HOUSE .270 REMINGTON model 160 Rin-Tin-Tin blood lint. 61 inr in a number of "'&ys. • • llv.·y., N.B. with \Veave.r K-4 scope, v.'ks. 837-5487. financially ... pride ol per· * WARD SECRETARY * March 3rd , 7:30 pm Redfield_ mounts, 2 extra e ELEGANT Afghan Pupe, ..,, ~onal acco...,nlishment. , • clips $125 AKC Bl k k"' U .. .,. E:>ep'd .. mature/~uth Coast · . ac mu = • ver. more time to enjoy the good 1.~2 .... -•-• all 4 Con1n1unlty J-lospital, 31872 -•Q'Nl,I Stor•, Reateurent, ~~ · th!ngs of life ..• anti many 242' N t Bl d CM · -Coast Hv.y. So Laguna 11 ewpor v ·• Bar 132 * Golden Retrievers more~ \'es. you'll have lo 4!'19-1311 e:>et 356 AKC 714/532-6588 • 1 hllve a. real estate license. 2 Stainless stttl slnka, ateam. · ·1 But we can help. \Vith e\'l.'11· • \VA l TRESS-DINNER S~ARS 100 lb pressure spt'RY table ~alad counter v.·/com. AKC Lab-2 males: 1 yello'A". ing cla.sses you can keep JiOUSE Exp'd-food & ng compressor \>.'/l HP presiior, walk.Jn refrigera. 1 black. 9 v.•ks .... Reu . your present job v.il!le you cocktails • 6 da "'k. Inter. motor, bra.ntl ne"" p11 id t /co re &. doo 646-3478 or 54&-J041."""' lt-11.I'n ivith UJ. When you view~ 9 to 12 noon. SA1t1'S $259, v.111 sell fo1· s1:;o. ~o· r°:nv.: It 7mu~nlt bre~d GERMAN Shepherd, AKC have your license issued lo)' SEM-UOD. 162'78 Pacific hose & gun included, Has . . 494-l.f57• registered, 8 mo, $100. the State of California fyou 1-Iwy., Hunt. Bch. auto cut-on & cut-ln + nHxer, misc. * 846-t7l9 * may be ·surpri.sed hoiv fa st \\'ARD SECRETAR\' bu ilt.on dolly. Alter S: TV, Radio, HIFI, DALMATIANS AKC . you can qualify), you are Nur!iing area recept. Person· 644-tl51 Stereo 13' _ _. 0 .;, -3 ~~· te,-.. ays: .,......,""' ; IU•tt well on the v.·ay to a highly nel Of.pl. Hoag Hosp N.B. * AUCTION * 25" Admiral color TV , 5 pm; 548-9576. respected, high earTiiitt ca· X · RAY TECHNOLOGIST. Fine Furniture modern walnut cabinet, 1 REGISTERED toy F 0 x rttr. \Vith or "·!thout special & Appliance-: " yr Jell ~n warranty, Xlnt Terrier puppies. Cbamplon \Ve 're-a top Land lnvestn1enl procedutts. South Cosst AuctfoM Ftidsy 7·00 pm ,cone!, S23J. 642--0584. sired ~131.f Corporation, publicly held Con1munity 1-lospital. 31872 w· d • A .,.. a· . 6 YR old Se I 1V . and fast growing. We n ... >d Coast Hv.')'., So. Laguna. in Y S .uc ion ern .. ars ~or •ADORABLE Boxer puppies, people in this area to grow (i14) 49!}-1311 Ext. 356 2075~2 Nev.'POrt, C.\f 646..s&s6 ·~-~114~' repair. $Th .. AKe tte'd. 6 wkl. Call ew with us. Sincere people .•. j ~I Behind Tony'' B!c!g. r.tat'L 4 or "''.k ends 830-7929 \\'ith an honest desire to be· I llf!l!rt..) ROYAL electric lypewriter, '70 RCA color 'IV 24" Hor1es 156 come a part of our company. Mffthlndlse V 20.. carrialile $100. Royal $300. 1----------·1 Call. or con1e in. we \\']JI 'standard typeivrlter $75. Call 893--4943 RANCHO Rosalido, 1752 be pleased to have you look Re n1 \ n gt 0 n e 1e c tr 1 c 23" 'IV $35 Orchard Dr, Sanla Ana llts . us over and learn more ..,....,,writer $18:'.I. B 11 e , COLOR TV $12.i New management. b o "' · Antiques 800 'J""" Jail 1 11 h·• \ LlC Uphotst~rer -Quality v.·ork. Anthony's Up h . Service. 642-5827 N.B. about how a career in real electric stapler $15. 64&-9076 • 548-6529 • s 1 w a ac cu OOTTa s, 2131 Westcliff Dr. • -B.S. in accounting. Hea· e1tate sales may "click" for COLLECTABLES after 4 pm. lor Info call: 54~1953 Ne wport B•ach ~ ..t vyexper.in·state&fed· you. ~ .. tore important.• ,we Very fine Netsukes, snuff •SKI FAMILIES I ~ I I[ i I] I . eral taxes. Newport ":ou~? l.lke .. you to koow how bottlrs, $20-.$l:i0. Original Reserve now! Cabin at i\lam. f,.1 to You i • 1,1,-------.-.... ~--.-,j[• lf .. I' EmpJoym111t . t e BUSBOY e • I "e click . phorographlc plates from moth Mountain. Sips 7. Fire.l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii-~·;;;; ~·-· 1'.. I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;~-9.3 pm. 5 days a ~·k. • Beach. Orange Coun1y Area • Curtis colleclion of Amerl· pl etc $13-S:lo per da)'. 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiim II I i\PPLY fN PERSON I .1TI4J. 835°3233 can Indians $25 ea. Hand-53'1.3374 days. KIDS are allergic, Help me! I: Job Wanted, Mal• 700 IRVJNE PERSONNEL ru('n'~i",,e ,>.;;..~ . colored plates.English kings MAM. MOTH MNTN. • to a. good home only Boats, Power 906 COOKS ~t t kno .. ,,..........., & knights in armour.from / h Id 1 1----··----- SCRAM •LETS soups ; ~1:ces. H:u;s~ SERYICES~AGENCY Los Angeles Area • \\'illiam i\Ieyrick collection, ~fobile hOme & cabin. income ;e ~ 1 ~kn ~he~~e~S~ogs 33' 1964 OWENS FBRGLS WAREHOUSE (213) 981.SOC..O I $"6 ea. 54S-0201, Suite 206. property, Sale or trade, m e e eep BRIGM'TINE $11500 BY :~ .. ~I ~hol~:a.Ys ~~~. ~ TRAINEE i FOREMAN LCOA INVESTMENT ANTIQ. marble top chest, 531-3374 ~-~~x !small blk coll;e~ OWNER, TI4 i 00u5. ANSWERS medical insurance. 2 weeks Prtfer 24 or ovrr for begin. I AND REAL TY, INC. parlor table, old \rg ornate G EN U IN E Aquamarine • / l t' ALU~1TNUM boat, 4 vacation. Call 833-8666. I ntng position otferl~ xln't TO $11,000 A Subsidiary of Land cash regis. 499.3266 stones from Brazil. Cut & FREE • 2 Toy Poodle~ &eats, lull flotatio'n. Xlnt Prying -Rebel -Di1·01 -CUSTODIAN Days for sel'V potential. No typing, figure 1 1 Consultants o! America, Inc. 802 faceted. Only $12 each &. ~mh,•ml'p'ag'::Yl b:~:~· flem~e cond, U15. 968-9384 Divert -END of your ROPE . . 1 Complete charge o Appliances up. Hurry! 673·0802 ... '"' •i=u ovmg conlractor. Counues fin@sl aptitude I: "'iilingne1s lo . . RECEPTIONIST _ ORAL hom~ tog:eth!!r. Meye r Boats, R•nt/Chert'r 908 Title o1 a ~"' record re_. bldg, gen•J clt>an1ng exp. learn. warehouse, sh1ppmg/ SURGERY. Experienced, KENMORE auto \\'asher, 2 Re!rig's $'15 ~. $~. motors 546-5880, 549-1366 2/-111'.".:~. ~""''°"°"""'°""",....""'°- lease: "Throw Away TI1a1 Ci-only. Southco, 546-5.122. , , receiving (not traffic ). 5-18.-0373 late model, xlnt cond, $i:). elec &. gas, 20 b1kr spart LOVABLE d 1 40 NEWPORTER for b:ire g;u·, Mother, You've Come lo DAY care, 2 yr old in N.B. 488 E. 11th (at trvinr) C.l\f. S , Also GE auto washer, good parts, power mower i 12. "·' .... Poodyogl '• s"ht male boat charter. $95/day. Call the END ol your ROPE." .. ~2 1470 uperv1sory exper. * SALES CLERKS cond $40, Guar & delivered. 64&-5-i79. stauua•u e , eepdog Fttd, 646-9550 a.It 6 home. Pref. live-in. Eves -• I All hlt N d goodl :-~~~~-----,=I Co i\-1 PA N ION. Escort & "'k ends lree.. Call i\-tr. mandatory. S.A. area. 546-ai77. 347-8115. SLATE pool table, s·x1·, used :;,~~ "'~lrn~ ee :a rd. Boat•, Sall 909 Driver "'/Buick Riviera. Kearl 8 to 5, (213) T;)J-1411 *LVN J to 11 P.M.* Fun and part time KEN1t10RE auto \Vasher & l n1onth. $300. Call alter 548--0813 or 836-4493 3/2'1---------- \'oung. 6' tall, 11·e11.groom· e:>et 210. 549-3061 -APPL\'-malching elec dryer, Xlnt 5, 544-511 1 CUTE 6 VICTORY 21 (CF 4753 BS) ed, used to better places • DENTAL ASSISI'ANT • Th• Tobacconist Inc, cond, $80. Gua r & delivered. pup months ~: need& work. See a I ( lil I I ...,__ 't MARRIED man to usume 11,, .. tl .. glo• Co•I"'· 1-l.B. 546-8672, 847-8115 FIGffT POLLUTION &: elll'n Cocker and ',i Sheltie. l.<>vt"s Bayshores Marina. Make un recess on · uut:Sn Desk only. Dental exp, nee. Fuller Brush route. i\lr. " " " "" money for your club. Ardyth children hsbrk. baa had oUo•· 0 .. ,, •~ ( 213 ) drink or sn1oke. Has 0\111 BUYER • GAS d & bit P k 548-9409 • .,....,.,. d R r Ins .. accl's rec., some Sat's. lioffman 832-0548. Salesm•n-Saleswomen ' ryers tt ese • shots. 548-6046 :l/2 382-3087 eves. f:3-5&4~an move. e s . Fringe ben's. 11.B. area. Membership Sales TO $10,000 $800 guaranlee to qualified ::~~'r.t::·ch~~il~fa~ QUEEN MARY FREE 10 gd home. Comb. '70 ERICSON 23, Well equip. J b W t d F I 702 Call 8am.9pm, 846-3540. $1254200 Wkly atralght sales 2 To 3 Years exruir. In persons. repairman. 531-8637. Lloyd's of London certificate Beagle/Gennan Shepherd -4 ped, xlnt rond. Sips 4. 0 a n e • ema e ·oE NT AL ASSISTANT-commission. Independent ,.... Spectred Corporation opening $00; 548--0201, Suite 206. nios. old , Shots Hsbkn, Gd wf ir l t p 11 . de s t r e d . AIDES r or conv.._iescence, Clkh, 1 irside 11.ss•t for Hunt. co ntractor basis, man or purchasing or machine nevi location In Newport R~~~iio ~~~EiiR TENT Trailer, add on tent. wfchild. ~6-6326 J/4 213/792-812-1. elderly care or family care. 1. practice, Exp'd or rec womM, civic orienred, 1\•/ parts, raw stock, etc. I Beach. Top sales personl'll!:I • * 64&.7820 * * Sleeps 1. Extras, -lik~ new. 3 i\-IALLARD ducks. 1t1ale 1·s~AB~OT~.~fb-'1<~1,-,-. -N-,-.~,,,.,,-•• -. Homen1akers. 547~1. schl _grad. Gd salary. Call membership sales ability for S. A. company. needi'd to introd~ce excJUn~, GE dbl dr re!rig, swing out $400. Call aft 5: 84&-9.196. and female laying eggs. $175; J\tercury twin outbrd, He lp Wa nted, M & F 710 res. 8J6.l309. leading Oiamber of Con1· revoutionary auty tee· O!AR.i't-GLO GAS BBQS r•Vatt'r and feed crock 5.9 HP $75. &7 5 ~400 9 , 1 1 Oran Co Se d niqut'. All areas. Un11mlt!d &helvt"s, late mod In perf N hol 1 all &42-6413 63:>-3366 _________ • DENTAL ASSISTANT *I meree n i::e . n . tlal hfl i\i L cond. MS-4709 e"'" w esa e, sizes.,l:;;;;;;,.o;=:::::--:=-::=:l;;::".'.O"°=~~~~~ ~~ One yr or mort' exper, only, photo & resume to C1U11ifird earning poten · ss ' e 894-4442. Aft 6 (ZlJl 964---0763 ADULT Siamese cals male COL U j\f BI A 26 A-lark • d --· apply x Ra p n I ad •63 Daily Piklt p 0 ner, &15-4121. \VHIRLPOOL auto Y>uher & ,., l•mal• all .... Nood II ~. I I . I I Liz Rein e r s .... cu · · )'. 1. or · • · · dry Both xi t nd \\ff: loan-Buy.Sell anything. '"' · -...us om ntenor, x n 1 P e rsonnel A gency , time. 548-8844. Box 1560, Co!ta ~fesa, calit. EXEC. SEC'Y SARAH Coventry needs n. = eac;rGuar Ir d~iv~red'. Coast Pav.·n & Auction. 2426 t~1~me. 54 6-7 3 0 8 ; co~. Prof! s s I on & 11 y1 4:500 campus Dr., N.B. DE~'TAL ASSISTANT 92626. TO •1.JV1o or pt time help. No In· '"" o"T2, 847 o115. I NeY,:port Blvd. &12·8'100. . . 3/4 maintained. 557-{;98L ' I E I •tEN 2! ed 1 ..-v vestment. \\'ill train. lttin ,,.,.,...,,., ...., AOO"'BLE ·~ ·'\ Call For Appointment xp., contro program. " 1 o,·er "·ant or 25·· PROFESS. t r i m m e r ~ • u 'e'."" Y COC·3· '69 COLUMBIA 28. Days. 5-ll).2118 546-5613 early A.'.'.1 auto route. :i.tust Top skills • \Vork for age 20. 530-l407 & 543-0066. Furn itu re 110 lawnl'mJ\l.'er, yard vacuum, poo mixed puppies, & v.·ks Z13: 636-0151; eves: 71~: ~I • DENTAL Ass. T , live \\'. of Harbor. 8~7-!19i9 top management in the Secretar y $500 WHY BUY. ut il I railer. Misc. &l&-3333 ~~~588~ to id. ho~1e4 64&-5774, 713: 333-3438 , ACCOUNTING CLERK e;hairside, E"'perienced i\10LDERS, Fiberglus·Exp'd hfanuracturing. Assured fU· M•'scollanoous CAPE COD CAT BOAT II I I technical field . Ne'"'port 1 s1 bl , 1 r TURKJSH .__ 6 Ex'pd in 11 p 1ases o ac· *" 64f3.j~11 ft in hand Jay-up. Apply In per. ure. a " non ..... e ense r. W t d 820 . '""'6vra, months 18', fbrbl&. (2131 834-3883. counling .. ihru g "n.e ra1 1 DE''TAL .... 1. ,._,, P•'I son 940 w 17th St c:i-1 Beach. vine co. Lovely ores. Top FURNITURE?, an• old, white, male kitt~n I :~,...~"""~=--..,--= ledger 1r111I balanct , in the or 'full lim;" ).latu;;~ Coastal ~~reation i'nc.. .. benefi!r Call l\fi~s Laura, RADIO CONTROL f or 5'1&-7308 :it4 Boats, Sllp1/Dock1 910 Re:tl Esta le <1evelopn1ent * 968·5782 * :-Of 0 te1 111 a 1d 1 , Ex. 551-6122.' Abigail Abbot Per. I B• Flexible I to,.fODEL AIRCRAFT. Single \\'DOD pa!io, lrer for mov-15 TO 2:; FT. slips avail.( field. Salary orwn. Send PERlENCED ONLY. Apply sonnel Agency, 230 W. \Var· Re . on multi enginl! 642--3683 ing, Approx 14'x20'. odd for power boat!. Private resurnf> to Bo)( \5011. San· Dffi!SH VASHER·. '.'lach op'd.. ner. Suite 21 1, S.A. nt mo. 10 mo. with sh 540-3385 3/4 J w t & I II t A l\f/ . day s\11J1. Age no in pemn, Costa l\1rsa Inn, SECRETARY 100°/o Purchase Option Musical Instrument• 122 ape. agoon. 8 er e ec. aY'I. • a na. rier, Call for intv. Galley C.\.J. SECRETARY-JR, Nev.-port Jnd. Jtem selection SPAYED female cal, 4 l'l'S· Bayside Village, 300 E. ASSEMBLER aJe, 673-4110 NEED 4 SALES:\otEN TO $575 Beach Brea. Type 60, s'tt 24 H r. Dely. \VURLITZER Spinet piano, old. To good home. 673-4868 Coast Hwy, NB (Not under 20 ) 90, lmov.·ledge of gen'J. o!· CUSTOM fl keyboard . Spotless walnut aft 6 pm. 3/2 38' Slip $75/mo. Private TRAINEES * DRIVERS * Part time SlOO ,1.k. Secretary to operations fice procedures req'd. Send Furniture Rent al ~21 lllust see. $475. 10 MO. old bluepoint Siame5t' bath. N'o. 2 Balboa Coves, l~ Tmmed. opening.~ ror girls No Experience Full time ina "'·k manager. 70 Typing, 90 re sume to~ B 0 I s E 517 w. 19\h, C.,f. 548."81 kiUen. has had ab o ts . N.B. Call 6r.>-4331. I · d All CASCADE Resident111l Com· ,,.. PIANO & V · \ f JI w good finger extenty, ' N I \Vork in Orange County llut SH XI 't •t• I A'l&helm 774·2800 oice essons, u y 548--0802 all 3 mp. 3/.j Boats SpeH a Ski 911 position.~ 1nus1 be fillrd !hi~ I ecessary. ror interview call i\lr. . n pos1 ion w munities, 9841 Airport Blvd. LaHabra 694-3708 crerfentialed Teacher, l'ree l\llXED blk Jab retriever 6 . • week. Call No11·~ 9 A~I ·1t1 ;\fus1 havr clean Calif. dri\" Goodwin, Edgewater Hyatt varied duties. Sanla ~\~~. Ai~'.:·~::sron~l~eles, lesson every 3rd mo . 0 old fr. ndl 18 CHRIS Craft run11.bou1 9 Pi\I & Sal. ing rt'Cord. Not under 2J. House 213--134-&450. Cnll Ana. SA~tFJCE. ;\le:dlt. style 540-4757. ~~ very ie 3Y.i inbrd. Fast. Xlnt Cond. S795 ORANGE COAST I YE LLOW CAB CO. Tues. & \Ved. M P'.\t only. Secreta ry ~~=!;~ 011~"r:_·n, ?a~~!~~~ FENDER electric p iano, ~UPPIES _ l\tixed breed ~:· IA<>;·ne; ~1M 1 ~~~ EMPLOYMENT 186 E. 16th St., C.i\f. ~URSERYi\!AN exper. SelJ. To operation~ mgr. T~ 60, sr. bed (clean!, Mb.,,, ,00 Gd~bal ohobwmano\1bottomX\n1\, 6 wk.a. Free lo good home'. S48-;~07~ays 'on1y:',·,k 10, AGENCY • ,·-g • go-·1 •·o•k SH 90. 3·5 Yrs ex""r. Indus. .1 soo au o ••· I ECG TECH1''1CIAN' • South " ' ...: " · .. -Ibis, che81 of drawrs, sm ' ...,., 536-4174 312 T 121 Broadv.·ay, C.i\I. s.1:;.3111 Coasl Community Hospital. •~%--0724 trial bckgmd good. dinette set. AU or separatt". cond. Need money. 494-&84· om. ATI'RACTIVE \\'Oman. retail 31872Coast 11~-y. So Laguna * PART TIME SEC'Y{ MISS EXEC AGENCY Call 646-8375 Offic• Fur n iture/ ~:i~~E ~~'~!~':~~~Boats, Storage 912 sales. Sat & Sun 'only. Ten· 49!).-1311 e.xt 356. * LITE BKKPG. BOOKKEEPER 410 \\'. Coast 111"'Y·. NB 8ARGA1NS: i\fust se 11, Equip. 124 childttn/guard. &i2-HH9 3/2 LOCKED, fenced storage for nis Atlair, 6-15--05'1:). EXP'D. Service: Sta, i\tgr. ?oton. thru S.t. No typing., fi4a.l9l9 Stove, refrig, t\l.·\n beds, .... 0 1 1 .. ~ \VHITE N z -'··d bbl boat or campen 50c per A'lBULANCE DRl\'ER f"\\, Hi-gallon~ae unit. Xlni 1-. ~-, job. Benell'" & Hc•llh I TO $500 SECRETARY • Experience .. h., h n YAL e eclt C typewnler, t'w edlAl-i ra t. foot -r lti C t I .. ......,, .... uuuu .., ,.._ .... rm sets, cou c ~s. un· 20" cani11.ge $100. Royal 462-5930 Z/2 .,,, ',.,~~ mon . a. time, single, rot under 21. auractive sal p I us prof insun..nce. P U R A p required. Call 6-12-0542 for finished can1per, 82a Dar· d ~ 1 ~,i~~~~=~~~~~,,~~~-~~·~~~~~~~ I · f' · · 'lARK C. BUl\l\IE co. ayro ' Al • I · appointment. 1 stan a.-u lypeivr trr ..... RABB IT v.1th hutch Exp pref. a.18-3-156. ,. 1anng. or 1n1 V, conlacl ,. re I, C.i\t. R I t I I l Bob Scudder 2800 \\' Coast 3005 Jiarbo' B\,d., c .•t. 1 Bookkeeping thru trial y I h em n g 0 n e e c r c 5'15-3200 3/2 Auto · · * SECRETAR , wt i\fOVING mus! sell all typewriter $18i Bates . I lf!i 2 SALESMEN Hwy. N.B. 7 to 9 pm \Vk. Ask for r-.lr. Johnaon balance for small com· catering rxptoritncr. l1ZJ. W. furniture and household electric stapler $15. 64~9076 141 BASENJl puppies male TrwportaUon .._ Keed 3 1..-on1blnation ntw & I days. PART time sales opportunity pany. Good typing a Coast Hv.y., N.B. goods. 781J Talbert Ave. Apt after 4 pm. & female. -4 • mos. old. . _ .. usttt auto ·sa.lesme.n. E.tlceJ.. I fRE~ R.'1 .k.. BO B.aloo.a for 3 licensed Rql Estate. t N SH S la SERVICE Sia Salesmen, 1· No. 17 A, H.B. Pl /0 826 Papers avall. 557-7799. 3f4 tent corrintis~ion k demo Isl .1n exchange for !!d aa.lespeople. Private desk & mu& ' O • an full tlme/l·PI time, at le11~1 8' SOFA, neVl!r used·, quilted 1no1 r9an1 COCKAPOO 10 good family plan Jl01lplta1ization & med!. I coo~ g &. gd company. phone. Call for lnlervle"'· Ana 2 yrs exp. Not under 21, lloral, scotchguarded $125. CLEARANCE .... Good house dog:, gentle wi Camper•, ~•le/Rent '2.0 cal' Retired v.·1dow "11 ~hr hm W. E. L1chenmyer pl"!f married. See Jerry 11atchlng lovesea.t i 75 . SALE chil dren. 49-1-4446 314 CAMPER SEE AL TETREAULT "00'1 1 ~.' ",,~y""E"mwpholo "°''1 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. 7am-4:30pm, 2590 Newport 'l3>-1!*15 YOUNG adult k1ttle1 all t.'01· ..... · ymen Call 646-3928 Eves: 673-4577 Ov P I< ~ SALES MANAGER elsev.<here no barrier. Ref's Blvd., C.~. DREXEL mahogany poste1· er 100 lanot "''"ans ors, 54&--U>S; 548-0813 314 CLEARANCE SAl[ HARBOR AMERICAN req'd. 675-72'13. PART time tnintts, llS or SERVICE Sta . Pump Jal. at· bed. matching curv~-front Reduced for lmmed. aale. FR.EE stow I: refrigerator. 1969 Harbor, Costa Mesa Coll. No exp llf!C. The Zoo 1endant. Lube mom l'Xp. dresser & hanging mirror. Buy Now & Savel You haul. 54~5251 3/3 BABYsfrrER. m1tture "·o-e FRY COOK e Restaurant, Coa1t Hv.y ' pref'd. Not under 2l'.l. Cd:'d $160. 67>2153 Open Daily 10 tU 6 Large selection pre '71 • !\.tcArtbur. 410 W COAST HWY 6T~l12 DESK. 3'5, v.'OOden. di·.._.,_.. Fr! 10.9 * Sun u.s Campera Now Sluhed to man 2 chldrn, my hon1e, full time """'" COAST MU SIC I )lg] after v hl & ~11 day sun1· APPLY J:-1 PERSON Payr oll Cl•;.k •~2s SUITE H SERVICE Estab'd. Fuller drawers. Type"Tlter tbl, Lott tnd Ftud $49 0 ¥11 mer. O....·n lna.111, lf\llnt', .,... N. B. Brush rte, $125-$J7j "'·k. to Xlnt cond, l\lake o!ft?r. ?>."EWPORT &: HARBOR . ACT\IAL 833-.369S Expe:r. pref'd, lype 40, x.ln't st., also pl. tlm~ ~5145. 642..5676. Co!ta M~sa * 6(1.28St PACTOIY THE RIGGER I "· \o<a\O<\ by°""'· RATTAN ,.1~ 2 <haJ" & SALE -INWOICI BABYSl1if.R/con1 p. ,.vr1 NEWPORT SOF1'BALL Pi TC II ER "1 0Q9f 154 SHOWCASE It v.·k ('ndS, l old('r child. P 64"2716 neflied. Good team. Pleue end table, ahag carpt't, P~cl1ce organs • 2 manual, DEALER .i\lay live .In. 968.6117 alt -&. t\O. 16 FASHION ISLAND t er1onn.f AQ•nc' ~ call &4z..4Sl2 oranie. Kodel Z1 yds. 3 mo 32 pedal. Allen. Baldwin. W£1MARANER, ma I es, FOR l4&-077~ NE\\'PORT BEAot 133 Do;;2:~;Q' N. • TELEPHONE advertislnit llld, like ~"'· 644--0368 Arthan, \Vurll t?cr & pipe. AKC, ch 11ne, 8 wk, shtr., Et.J')QRAOO CAi\fPERS .uABYSl~R-Hte hskpnr. GAL FR IDAY from our pleut.nt Newport FURNITURE atrlpping·Any Tenn1 & trades. Newport wrmd, pet, hnt, 1h o. THEODORE 3:30 Pi\t...earlv rve dally, Typist. Rental Agent Experf. p R 0 r ES SfONAL ' phone Appoiq!tnents otflcts. Hl'b' wage1. Morn-awrage cllalr or rock1•r Org11.n1. S.fS.1530. 64l-4-4j9 P"l """'""'INS FORD L 1 ve t n I o u I. Fu l I ence. Call Loraine, &IS-2710. 10licltor ~ Dana Point, SA.TI 1n1 or ne, 1hlft1. 645.3030 •trip~ $5. &n-3445. ~')I'UDlO grand, S'G'', X1n r J\m.!".bm-tt"rrl'Cr P::..·';;: L" ,.., lime-Sum~er. 6'JS..110t \Vrstelltf Personnel Al:fn. CJemenle, Capistrano &rea. • Onlyl 33, Mr. Mtdrid NEW walnut dlnlna -roon1 cor.d. Make offer. Pvt pcy.1 9 wlta. Pvt r:y, C'.ur.i:-lo:· 20:0 HARBOR BLVD. BABYSI'ITER • my home, ey, 20-!3 Westcllll Dr., N.B, Work in Y0\11' ov.11 home. TELE.MIONE SOLICITORS •ulte w/ 6 chairs. $295. 968-2!il5. slred. s.1~10~ CCSTA Mr:.SA 642.0010 C.J\ol., 2 prt·schoolen agt$ GOOD foster homr wa.n!ed Flt\~t dea.I In 11nia. Phorl(I Exp only. Top $$. No Mill· ~avlng Jtt:a. 54HT69 BALDWIN OrJs n & spenK"r. 0Al~MATIAN Pup, ah ow 3'-CAMPER, J beds, l;e 1 &. 3. i\ton·F'rl, 7:45 to ror l'f'lard<"d girl Ph : 1135-1 465 between 9;00 a.m. Ing, \l-'Ork et horn• 213: Sell idle !tnms nowl like oow, full pl'ldlll potenl\11.l, Loves people.I cupboa.rds, lc.i bax, $400 or ~:15. 64S-1q72 after 5 968--6127 11tt 4 pm. and neon. 737-3007 & 21 3; 765--8.~25 Call 642-!678 No11o•! k('yboard. SlGOO. 64~-4Z:-7. 612-1!137. btsf ofr. ~ ' l I i I I ! I I • I • • 12 DAILY PILOT -·"'" I~ I _..... l§l I -..... l§l I .......... J .-.1 ..... ,,,... l§l I -...... l§l I ........... l§l I : _,,,... l§l I· ....... '"° l§J ' !~-..;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Cy~let, Blku, 925 Antiquo1/Clo11lct 953 Autos Wontod 961 1 A_u1o_1,_l_mpo~-"-td--""-01 _A._u_1o_s;..' _1m_po;....r1_oc1 __ ,_10 Aulot, Imported 970 -A;,;--.;;;.• ..;U;,;tod;.;.. ___ 990....; Autos , Utod Scooters ~ '" 1------• ., W!LLYS joop •""""" WE PAY TOP DOLLAR PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC DODGE 990 A utos, l!tod 99il OLDSMOBILE l"U'U'VU'I TMllll HONDA ... "FRIEDLANDER" 11711 •UCM (NWT, •I 537-0824 • 893-7566 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ '64 YAMAHA 2SOCC Good d~pendable bike. Been r idden approx. 3 mm. in last tv•o years, on sfreel. 5 Speed. New battery, front tir,., clutch. $1 85. """""' '66 650 TRIUMPH s:~. Clvlpped, Extend~ forks, Inquire l!lSlJ "'allace St., No. A, C?.l 1968 KA\VASAK I 175 Buchwhacker. Rebl!, bored to 201. A-1 Gd. Shape . .$325. Call aft 5: 53&-3905. RACING dlrl b i k e , '69 l\tonteu Scorpion 250c~. 2000 mi's, Xlnt cond, $38a. 673-7746 aft ·s pm Lall! '70 KA\VASA.Kl $500. Immaculate. Extras. S7t5. ~fust M'e, Mfr83S5 5-speed Stingray bike 5 * Good condition * After :>. &14-4151 • 'lifi HONDA 90, dirt or Sfrttt. Good cond. SI ~. M7-1141 HONDA 160, good corithtion. $100. can s.1&-!1101_ 19!i6 NORTON CHOPPER r.lAK E Of'F'ER ! : ~? ! 67;).2749 or 673-0321 B.S A. 650 CC'. Exct'llent oon- dilion, must ucrlfice. sr;o. :>!8-1487 YA'.\1AHA 305. Good running cond. Sl50 or best oHer. 642-25'10 TRJU~f PH 500 Daytona. Xlnt cond, $750 or Best. 67.5--0706 or 675--6874 TACO 22-4 HP Xlnt cond S75. 548-1961 '70 YAi\lAHA 125 ENDURO • $400. cat! a.ft.er S, 544-Slll Honda M ini Tra il 50 Good cond $150. 673-7267 l wheel drivt". Xlnt runnin,r FOR TOP USED CARS ----- c<>nd. 1450• " bost 0""· 11 Y'"'' '" b "'"' cl•ao, '63 Ponche Super '64 VW BOG '7Q VW BUG • M"'"" ci ... J< .• ,. Oonl. I '69 CHAR-GER 'if DYNAMIC '88' 642.-6518 see us llrsl. aulo alr, lull pwr, $6500. D 8 • 6 BAUER BUICK CPe. Bahama yellow With blk ROW J9IJ 217 ACT contact Commercial Nat'! . . une u991e1 95 234 E.. 17Ut SL interkir, AM/FM, chrome 5799 $1699 Bank Derek L«kinf 17141 I VII, automatic, radlO, ~aler, 2 Or. l!Ardtop. dlr. Mu11t aell . ·s2 CORVAtR en& .. 4 •pd Co.sta Me.sa 548-7765 wheel1, recent en ii n e CHICK IVERSON S27-4jlO. ' power steerifll &. brakes, Full price S895. IZUE 36.'i/ trans-a:<le & 6w;pension. PXW982 CHICK IVERSON • 1970 COUPE de Ville by I factory a!r-vinyl roof, Jow Call 494-Ti44. Complete. runs good. SlOO. Autos, Imported 970 $2399 VW YW pvt party, $jl85. n(~~:SwJoactory warranty, '60 01.DS 8S Fact air. All 1,. Alt '"''· 2 "''' "'' AUSTIN HEALEY CHICK IVERSON st!h1031 Ext. """ "'·""' Ext. ",,. 67 * 6734698 • 1 ''"· xi.·, """· ""-"''· bed trlr, $22j, 64fr2525; all $2595 616-1275 fl 5 6, 968-?586 vw 1970 llARBOR BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '63 CAD convt-Top cond. a · '68 SPRITE, like new, !WOO COSTA MESA COSTA MESA Full pwr. ReaJOnabll!. Pvt PLYMOUTH !TEN) '70 licensed Calif ml. Jt'• beaurltuJ, but mu11 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 '63 VW, Reblt Engine pry, 673-5()48 or 557-2257 BAUER BUICK dune buggies. Street legal, c• ... ~-1.970 HARBOR BLVD '69 vw SEDAN lo mi ·•. folly • q" t p ' d . "'I. 9 " 5, -~2' &ft 6• COSTA MESA • s;;o. 536-334< CA MARO Variow colors, Your chOict', c830=,.8936cc.:_:.·===~=~ 1 -~..,,.:=-'=-'-C::'----1 VOLVO 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mf'sa 548-776.i 1969 P LYMOUTH $1850. &M-1408, 644-0753 all 1964 AUSTIN HEALEY Spttdste.r '57 Carrera GT R&H, ZBK617 ' 6 pm. 3000 Mark Ill. -4 seater, Exceptional mnd. Extremely $ 1295.00 1960 CORVAI R Reasonable. H.B. 842-7636. rare. RebJt eng, blue $2896 w/black int, rontinental 19'1'0 VOLVO l« SEDAN t<.lake Otfer DATSUN radial tires. Laguna Beach RADIO, HEATER, Harbour V .W. 546.7817 After 6 l'f.f 4M-4672. AUTOt.lATIC, DEMO DUNE buggy, rebh eng, !e•s than 500 mi's $400 or bs! oCr 54S--0501 New '71 Dahu~ 1970 PORSCHE 9us, 21.000 l81U BE•CH BL. .......,, 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. I ~~~~,.,· ":.",.:<ll!l~<;:! ±'°~""-·~Fll!--t-'_",!--'.H_U_N_TIN-:--:G_TO..:.._N_B:.E:.•_CH:.;;__ er. Sale price $2099 dlr. ~ Sports, Race , Rods 959 1 ( • PLl21452270l Will take '68 912 TARGA, Xlnt cond, ~61 VW .66 QIEVELL.E s.s. 396 eu ca~ .in trade. Will finance S4400. RM w/btk inter. DOUBLE CA.8 PICKUP in, -4 spd, new tirts. lo private party. Call 546.3736 67~2X>27, 54&-3389 VEU.0&4 m;·, uooo ttrm. 548-002. _o_,._,,._ ... _u_---~ TOYOTA CHICKs11199VERSON T.uckt 962 '69 DATSUN WAGON $2197 '69 Datsun Pickup With 48" Parris Valley Camp- er. dlr. Sleeps 4 people. CYN\V287} Will take car Jn trade or finance private par- ty. Call 546-8736 or 494-6811 Want Older P.lJ. · \Vil! trade '64 Yamaha· 250cc. Approx. SZOO value. 534-6996 '70 rnEVY 1; 1'on P.U. 6 Cyl, r/h, tool lxlx & lumber I rack. 646-7335 I '61! flOO, top cond, new paiul 1 inside & out. lo mi's, 4.spd, $14:,0. 541-7188 YoU'U really like thi• car. VW Ju.st like new~ 4 speed. dlr. 1970 TOYOTA CORONA SED R & H. (YWT917) Will take RADIO, HEATER, ~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 a trade or finance private AUTOMATIC; DEMO #7S26 19@'0 HAROOR Bl.VD. par ty, 546-8736 or 494.6811. '68 DATSUN ALL 11l7l'S IN STOCK MKII CORONA • COROLLA 4 Door. Automatic, air cond. "e.llJt LeuriJ dlr. 1WQT 71-4) Will tAke TOYOTA trade or tinance pr iva le par- ty. Call 540-8736 or 494-6811. 1 DOT DATSUN 1966 H"""'· C.M. 6'S·9JOJ OPEN DAILY '67 CORONA AND COSTA ~A '68 VW CAMPER * DELU XE SUNDIAL * Like n,w. New tiger •18n NO\V IN SI'OCX 1971 1~2E -4 SPEED &. AUTO?t1ATJC, 164 SEDANS Overseas Delivery Spec. ..De.GA LeuriA 9 VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. &1&9303 U'VLl'U'U THINI ~'VO~O' "FRIEDLANDER" 111M ASA.Ch IKWY. )JI 893-1566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SERV. ~ Autos, Used 990 a '69 CAMARO RS-Ora.n&e, Air cond, dllC brakes, auto !ram, $2300. 673-5.nt. CHEVELLE '66 CHEVELl.E SS 396 • 11pttd, bucket 1 e a t s, po sitraction, tachometer, '63 Dodge Ilfut d@luxe GT. CUSTOM SUBURBAN SJOO. ~1161 ask for Orin 3 Stat Station W19on or Dave $2,195 '64 Dodge Polara. 500, P/B, P/S P/W, Air cond $850. 318 cu. in., 2 bbl. Enaine 6'15--0787. ' Auklmatic tr1nsmilslon Power !ilttrtng FALCON Po~'l!'r disc brak,1 Power rear window '63 FALCON S T AT I 0 N Air mndiuoning WAGON, ext': e I le n I con-1.ic,nse YPU 440 Carefully maintained by "'°-,,.-.,.=----- Company for manarer 642-7722. CHEVROLET dltion. 5425. 642-906j. Good condition, 50,000 ml. GET the best transportation $150 can buy: a "just gef me thrre and back" 1961 .,......,.=F.,.o,,....R.,.D ___ 1 ..... •h• DAILY Pn.oT, '64 COUNTRY SQUIRE ~.~·~.~;'.~~%; ~1argare1 Gre,nman 642-4321 o..,vrolei Impala. 348 en-. . . gin runa well thre peed Station Wagon, V8. Au!omanc HU:st ihifter' c her ~m e dlr. Power Stee r ing wheels, new interior, good f0'.1"8Ml Must Sell. FuJJl l----------1 body and pa.int (with excep-Pnce s475. Call 494-7744 1969 PLYMOUTH Lion ol one smashed rear '67 Fairlane convl-Below SPORT SATELLITE fender). 644-7201. whl~le book $795. Sharp & '36 Chev Y Nomad-Never red. New brakes, clutch. Two-door sedan. , .$1.995 raced, new 327/(51) hp, tront Lo ml._ 3 • spd, VS, PIS. 318 Cu. In., 2 bbl, Engine end, hydro, custDm Jnt ., 84&-llS5. Automatic transmission sttecl OT strip. $4!XXJ In it, 1963 Ford. 1954 8 cyl. Po11.·er steering ask Sl!XXJ or best oller . Chrysler. For aale for parts. Air conditioning 64;).-1324. 646--6761. Only 18.00CI mi on eneine '71 Chevy SUper Van-10, V8 '69 ECONO van, 25,000 mi. License ZVE 497 eng, lo mi's, E.'Ctras, '71 ~mi camper conver .r. I.apt. Excellent condition, comm'! plates, 50,boo/S yr S600 &: T.0.P. 53&-9606 warranty, $2975. Eves ; '60 FORD GALAX IE SUNDAYS 18835 Beat.h Blvd. Hun~on Beach W -7711 or ~G-0442 '6j Chevy pickup, 6 cyl, 3 1 -------~-­ spd, radio, 3 ft bed, Xlnt '65 Datsun WCIC)Oft cond. S925. 494-7TJ5 4 speed. d!r. Real Nice? Must 'jg FORD Van, new eng & sa.critict! \Viii trade or fin- tran.s. Good shape. $595 or ance priv1r~ pa.rty. 54fi•8736 4 Door. Automatic. Owned by lltUe old lady from Lei.sure \Yorld. 16,000 actual miles. IUOA 765) Take small down. \Viii finance pvt. pty. Call Pat--54(}.JJOO dlr. aft 10 am. -paw wide tires. COLONEL Franklin Atty, * Low mile5, new ~ng . personal car & Co. car -'6.i CHEVELLE Malibu SS ·59 ford, Xlnl rond. 518-3926. $200. 4!»-5922 See at the DAILY PILOT, 110 \Vest Bay Street, C.Osra r.1es.a, ask for !ltargaN!t Greenman offer. 833-1017 (Jr 494-6811. . ., FORD 1> TON P.u. FIAT F-100 1t $500 •962 .. 981 * -----'57 CHEV. pickup w/li.fl gate •------- -• & '"''· 1750. Ph' 64&-2486 "THINK" 19-5 Pi\11 Auto Le asing 964 r:::.gr,;WIJ lEASE /,If~ Mal A NEW l9TI. Set PINTO "FRIEDLANDfll" $50.QQ mo. ""' HACH ILYD. (36 mo.) eopen end RENT A NEW 1971 PINTO $4 DAY AND I Hwy. JtJ 893-T:i66 a 5.17-M24 NEW·USEO-SERV. ~ '69 124 SPYDER * S2500. Pvt Party '61 ?tfalibu 2-dr S700. '66 VS hrdip, l8,900 mi's, P/S, S250 or Best oU'r BILL MAXEY * 64:)..2633 aft 5 pm * Mustang, PIS, Fae a.ir auto, R/H, w Is I w · * 642-5930 * 642-4321 s·u95, 548-7111 675-4819 1--.. ~,-;i;f,-;;;v--!-------- !TIOJY(O!TIA! '64 Cherry vw Bug'. BUICK • Doo:~~.o~e~~. oyl -M'"".-,-~""'~1,..~"':.,..~-~-~-.-y -l~~~:i ~~~~~~AN Rebuilt engine & transm. '70 BUICK (563 BSO) Must sell. $395 full C 11181 BEACH BLVD. New paint. onvert. 3SeatStatlonWagon Hunt. Be1ch 147-855$ Cali 642-141 3 I price. Call 494-7744. THE SPORTI ONE $2,495 I mt N, at O:ut Hwy_ on Bell VW SQBCK .67. xln't cond . LE SABfl.E CUST~M '65 IMPALA SS. 4 1peed. This na.shly tulip yellow v.i1b '67 LAND CRUISER reblt· eng. s1495. 4 Dr-H.T. VS, a_utomalic, R& Mags. Gen. 1usp. Hearjers. bla~k top & interi?r. Aulo.. 383 Ct.I. In., 2 bbl. Engint 9G8-57S2 H, power.ste,nng & brakes, 1 ..:i..=":..:c'":o•-:·..:'.::7~C:l::O!:.c7___ mobile has been dnven only Automatic transmiasion factory air. factory warran.. a '56 WAGON • 12,000 ~i. and must bt ~een Power steering 4 Wbeel drive, warren bubs, '66 Bug, reblt engine, new rubber. dlr. Take clear brks, $850 or riffer. car in trade or small down. 54:;....7s10. 540--6654. oow Call (TRB 332) &tcrifi<O! Call '63 vw SQUARE BACK I Ira 540·3100 or -494-7503 aJt OZX-057 _ 10 A.M. $499 '69 YELLOW w/ blk int Corona Coupe. Like new. Ltiw ml. Sl.6.XI. 962-3190 TRIUMPH '71 SPITFIRES NOW ON DISPLAY CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA VW '69 Bug, sunrl, lo mi's, xlnt cond. Must 1ell best oir. Aft 6: 67~2476. ty, l557ADNI 4 dr. 6 cyl. 3 spd. and driven to appree1111e. Power disc brakes $3795 $12.:; FIRM 549-1690 Fully equipped Wilh auto. Power rear window '65 MALIBU 4 rlr, llU!o, l trans:, radio, heater, power Tilt steering wheel BAUER BUICK owner. 52,!XXJ ~fl'!. . .$li5Cl. s~eer1ng, power brakes, tae . Air conditioning all' cond., etc. 4 near new Llcen~ YPT 357 234 E.. 17th St. 1 962-«198 lire1. Ask for demonstration. Excellent condition Costa ~fesa 543-776.i '67 Impala cp, v.s. au1o (7QMZPJ. JohMOn & Son, 40000 m iles , 1 l11ct 11/c, r/h, mint Pvt pty 2626 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa ' ~~~:M ~~~· ta~'.1 -S1_3'tl_-_._l_•_ .. _A..o"go."'-'-•_S_tc.. _CM_ 1 540-5636. S« at the DAILY PILOT, chrome whee 1 s, $3700. CHRYSLER 1970 MERCURY 330 West Bay Street. 64&-1461 MARQUIS CPE. Costa Mesa. ask for '68 BUICK '68 CHRYSLER SHOWRi':'~ ~~~OF CAR M•'i~~·MWI Attractive medium turquoise 4.. MILE ""' with Blad< lolori,,, ' .,. Come In for a test drivel SKYLARK CUSTOM NEW YORKER Ptrl' A LITTLE Speed Trans. fZVG884) FRITZ WARREN'S '52 YW BUS 2 Dr. H.T. V8 automatic, R& Mobile Homes 935 KICK IN YOUR $2195 B"ll J ' SPORT CAR CENTER SUNROOF H, fX>W" """"• • buk", 4 Or. H.T. Full power equip.. ment plu1 factory air condi. tioning, vinyl roof. (VID232) mist finish with white inter. B~A~N~K~-,..-..,...--.,~~-,.~1965=1 ior and landau roof immac-Plymouth Barracuda 4 1pd. ulate! premium equipped, Xlnt cond Best offer over auto trans, am fm sterw S550. Call her 5 PM, 642-9511 ;adio, heater, power stee~-'5.1 PLYMOUTH 2 dr, black. 1ng, ~wer brakes, Fae air orig corid, 19 mpg $3l0 or condH1on. Truly :o;potless Trade. 64:>-4687, THE BEST OF LIFE! I onH • BI S rt C t 710 E. 1st St. S.A. 547-0764 H , 0 d od 1 . factory air. vinyl root, buck- BOTH WORLDS THeODORE • • PO Scar en er O""n dail 9-9· closed Sunda aru 10 n m e • imm8.cu-et seats. (WEF197> ROBINS FORD ,.-Y ' Y late, rl!Cent engine NUV767 For a beautirut hOme, Jow 68 GT-6 wire $1995 maintenance and atth.itecur-2060 HARBOR BLVD., 1833 !-!arbor. C.M. 540-4491 . • d . ,"'"", ' I whl~, .. . $199 ! C A ·GS Fi" 12< •tx>rt ,.,,..Rod 0" ' n• '. '"'· 0 mo. CHICK IVERSON ally impressive de&ign, See OST MESA 1158>" noo36 "0 2698 BAUER BUICK 642-0010 w/blk int, Michelin X ~::;.::c.,· .=:~,:::~·~~cc.=·:..... __ , the excitinii: new "Village ~-~-~~----1 '64 TRIUMPH, ntw tirts. VW House" by Levitt l\!oblle Autt! Strviq, P~rtJ 966 radials, ma.g whls, Lucas 234 E. 17th St. Systems on display now at driving light1 830-4489. shockJ. batL lr top, $.3.;JO 1970 HARBOR BLVD, Colla "Mesa , ~:7765 BAY HARBOR 1959 CADILLAC JAGUAR +T.0 .P. W.9597 '1t 6 COSTA MESA '69 BUTCK Riveria "loaded" MOBILE HOMES AIR CONDITIONER '69 Triumph, gel mnd, Sl050 '69 VW Bug, Xlnt cond, New 2S,OOO ml 'i, 2 yr warr. Sl450. I 1425 Baker St. Cos!a ~fesa RADRAlADT!OOR JAGUAR ~rPboMst olier. 646-4240 after \vht walls, brks &. tuneup. Pvt pty, 642-6667 or J S 1 SD Fwy. H bo ., · Other xtras. Sl450 cash. $2495 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17!h SL Costa Mesa 548-7765 1967 C hrys l e r 300 convt-Loaded. Rcrl w/blk top. 40.000 mi. Pvt pty_ Will trade. SlSOO. 548-7463 f'Ves. CONTINENTAL "'' . o . . " "' r WINDSHIELD WIPER HEADQUARTERS 67>-3762. 714/540-9470 MOTOR '64 T riumph TR 4, $800 ~7281. --------- Now OPEN MUST DISPOSE OF THESE Th• only s""""'" JAGOAR "'"' olf.,. 536-9167 "'" ** 1967 VAN * * '70 BUICK ESTATE . ., L'"'°'" Comn TE S dealer In the entire }{arbor VOLKSWAGEN Fe! reblt nlOtor. M/sell Lcaded-Xlnt cond. CONTEMPO. 1 M THIS WEEK-END immed. $1500. :'"4-7543 ;tit 5 WAGON 5-12-J120 Area. ---------I '1" S;)5() **'* 673-62;,7 LAGUNA HILLS FOR APPOINTMENT Cnmplete '68 VW BUG '69 VW Squareback Stn "'Rn, VB, aulomaljc, P .S., P.B., ra-1970 Lincoln Conl1nental. 4 Zl301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. SALES auto, S1695. Aft 6 PM: dio, healer, factory air, 9 Dr. air. leather. $5.200. Call (Corner of ~loulton Pkwy) 1959 CADILLAC SERVICE VTS-907 962--4033, Days: GE 1~. pass. factory warranty. Low 675--8:W3. LAGUNA H" •"' TRANS?tl!SSION PARTS $1299 -'t•• IZBE432t _;_.:..:;=~~----~ '63 VW Bus cam""r w/rbll "'-' ge. · 1 CORD Prestige adult community ad-READY TO TAKE A\l/..\Y! ,,~ $4795 EXCELLENT CONDITION • BAUER CHICK IVERSON . ., •ng. Rad~. othor x~... I jacent 10 Leisure V.'orld. BUICK Af 5 n -. .,, _... 1st CALLER BUYS 1=-'::;';,,' ~P~·m;;.,. c.«::;2·,;1';:-20:::.... __ ! A ?.10 DERN Clas1ic. '70 oo::aUthuJ SUrroUuuings, alJ vw 1"~·-•ppointrnents, put-542.312(1 IN '66 V\V BUG, Xlnt cond, BAUER BUICK Cord, auto, air, all pwr , ~~.. FOR APPOINTMENT 5-19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 New tires, wht wired in-$6500. Contacl OJmmercial ting green, hobby shop, =~---~---1 COSTA MESA 1970 HARBOR 31.VO, ter .. S975. 67:>-2027. 54s-3389 234 E. 17lh St. N ·1 D-ruc "-k Lock. ~ much more. '60 Ch~vy par1s. 2 dr Impala., 11; Costa l\fesa. 548-7765 at P<l • '-""re ing, CALL 830-3900 '&t Ford Fa.irlane will fit 234 "!:. t7th Stru:t COSTA MESA '71 RED VW Camper, r(ght ~7141 827--4310. Falcon, Comet, etC. 260 vs, ~---"~~..,77_6_5 ~~= ·10 vw BUS: Still undPr ofr thp boa!, Sl.150. savf' 1962 Buick V-8 spec. sta ...... :;.;:.-'C.::C.O~R"V~A..,l~R-- WHO aura. trans, rear end, front ~9 Ja"''Rr 3.4 sed. 37,000 warrRnty. Xlnt Cond. S2950. S:ilO. J36-9153 dys, 5.'IB-1222 11'aJ:. Runs good. Sl95. U nite d M obile Homes .. ~ I 646-5.190 ---------\vindshield. 'j6 Chev 4 dr. mi's. Near new 3.8 eng, 5-16-4528 Alt 6 p.m. eves. , -'-=·~=='7--'61 CORVAIR WHERE Wa_gon part~ 549-1690. radials, orig. paint, mech. '6."l vw BUG W/SUN ROOF '68 VW, l ownrr, 2£,Cll)'I ml'K, '70 RIVIERA romple1e $61'.I. 1767 A-Npt. Blvd., C.M . J.A-u-';to~s-+.W"°a-n°'t-od..---~968~ perfect. $1000. 549-0022. REBLT ENG. XLNT COND cncoa mals, \vhi r,-w all !lSS-7586 eftl'r J::tO Open 1 Days '64 SC, like ne11.', must see. AFT 6: ;).18-784S lircs, 11uto tr11nK, Ilke ne~·. CUSTO;\{ CORVmE WHAT WE PAY TOP CaU 1964 V\V BUG \\'ith radio, Sl300. 84&-lo77 F'uU po11.·er. fa ctory air condi- and like new -4 near new•1-~--------1 tires etc. See and ask for '67 Fury lit, fa ct . air cond. demonstration, 916 BEQ. Ma~y xtr~s. Orig. ownr, J'Otmson & son 2S:i Hilrl>Or xl n l ca.re. ,'J45-7992. Bl., Costa Mes'a. 540-5630. '65 BARRACUDA, 1 l t ck M ,69 M _ shill, Clean, New tires, ;650 trc. arqu1s cash 642-01S5 4 DHT. 1--·------1 A\VARD WINNING STYLING Attractive light Ivy yellow 1969 PLYMOUTH with dark ivy green interior. SPORT SUBURBAN Black interior&: landau roof. 3 Se at Sta tion Wagon Luxury equip~ !hroughout. $2,695 Auto. trans., radio. ~aler, po11.·er steering, po11.'l"r brak-38.1 cu, In., 2 hhl. Engine es, power windows etc. This Au1omatic transmission excellent car reflects '\.'ery Pow'r steering carelul maintenance. Driven Power brakf's, disc front only 24,000 miles. See & Power windov.·s drive to appreciate condition. Power seat (WY B 923) JohnsoH & Son, A ·tomatic speed control 2626 Hftrbor Bl., Costa l\fesa Power rear window 540-j6JO Air condi!!oning '6.'; MONTEREY: R / H . Licen~e XSS 4.13 Strong Solid & Quiet. $675 Excellent condiuon, Pvt lltY: 644--5965. 41.000 miles MUSTANG '70 MACH I Se~ 1'! the DATLY PILOT 110 V.11'.'st B<\y Stree t Cn~r~ Mt'~ll. a~k for !11argaret Greenman BU\'-SEU....LIST-TRADE _ .. 19d:1" '"" RVr..i •r.. J -'4 VS, automatic, AM FM sler-BEST • NE\V '' RESALES CASH 646-9115 11ft fi 26·.000 m>· oo o•w molo•. '66 V\V c-·an?back. good ,,·,,ing· . AM.FM ste...,. ra. 1962 CO ~ 27 Call TED Today! MERCEDES BENZ $600 962-226S COnu, ..... Private party. dio, vinyl roof, factory v.·ar. speed • rape -r.1any extr11.~. eo, fact. air. Loaded (487- 642-43Zl ' '"'l'" .,,2961 ,69 VW BUG Call 962-8195 ranty. f794AFBl super Shftrp, Adult owned. AGU) Tok, olde ..... a .. -o• --===~-=--I .,..,,. '1\1 """>-'70 VW BUS: Still under war· $4295 Mus t M'll , Best of I er ' .. ue ' PONTIAC lO:<ljl)' delux mobile home, !or used cars & trucks, jll!t ZVC 708 r-Anly. Xln't cond. $2850. 644-..ot393 anytimf'. sm. dn. Will !in. pvt. pty.1----------1 setup In nice adlt pk. ~ call us for free estimates. $ 1599 546--4~ aft 6 pm. '68 C\:irvett' Coupe, Mint dlr. ~3100 Call Pat. '68 2-dr Bonneville hardtp, to appreciate. Alt S & GROTH CHEVROLET .67 V\\'-Xlnt cot\d thru-out. BAUER BUICK cond, Air. FM tape stereo, '65 Mus tang fastback-perfect Full power, Inc I u d in I wknds: 548-2897. CHICK IVERSON S900. Call atrer 4 ; 30 , 234 E. 17th St . mAg5, See to appreciate. cond, For :i.ppt call AM/F?.1 radio , New '70 • 2-1· x 60' ~Tobile hme. Ask for Sales ?tlana.gt r !'-1 lsell $4000 below price. 18211 Beach Blvd. Mov'g. Compl w/all nu Huntington Beach turn. 53&-2494 M7-6087 KI 9-3331 ~ ~~~uNER-i bodrm. I WE PAY CASH $17'95 *** MD-7258 , e 10x55 Beaut Cond. S Star Parle in Calta Me1a. Owner 548-4046. FOR YOUR CAR YW 646-1286. Cm la Mesa 54s. 7765 All 6: Mf--0465. 644-8909 c ali h1 r 11 If' rl p1o I ygla.sa ___ C_O_U_G_A_R__ '6:'> CONV. Auto. r/h, ex-prem um tires, X nt cond, ~19-3031 Ext. 66 t'lr 67 SUNROOF' 1968 VW·Immac. '66 Bu ick Wildcat P/S, r 1B. Orig n11.'tlcr, $1895 Rea: 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Prrtect for summer. All the P/W, Air rond, Xlnt cond . cepl ionlllly sharp, $850 . 495--41.2.\, Bull: 494-07~. COSTA ?.1ESA rx1ras, Must At'll, 544-4002. $1360. 642-40l3. '69 Coui;:-ar, a ir con<f, vinyl _54:::::8 ~46~1~1·=====-·lii<Ciici-Wi-;;:;:;;;;;;.~ ESTATE iale 1970 __ ....::=:.:.:...:....::::: ___ lcV\~Y~v""'-'-'-'--"-.::....:C:.:...=::_ -'---,-6~9-B_U_l~C-K ___ "P· new tlrts. lo blue book. OLDSMOBILE '66 GTO 389 fTi-powcr, 4 r.1ercf'drs 250, 1400 mi's, air. Large Selection b "'~~ convertl'd to eamper S2300. Call aft 4:30 pm -·---------1 speeO, posl , mii.i;:ll, $1900 or PS '''lo ~,-, & •••••• Of VW C Y ..... n Dial. Elel' ttfrig, .. _ , ff 6,.3861 " " " ' 5-l9--3l63. '69 Olds "2 2 D• HT . ur.:s 0 rr. ,,,,_.. · ra~tt'ed, ~7-7191 Tr us t I ampers, qucc.n • .'li7.e bed , etc. Mag ELECTRA 225 -Dc>pt. Vons, Kombi's, 111hl~. his;: 1lres, apecial DODGE ONE OWNER .... 1•000 Ml. 70 G~ND Pnx. One owner. pain1. Only !i.ooo ml si~ 4 Dr. H.T. VS, automatic, Beautiful silver fox .mis! fin-A,_f-F?tf. All pnw~. Yf'llow, ('--RE,~fODELED 41x8 air-cond. $2900. Space rent $53. Pool. l5liO Placentia, NB_ 548-42&1 CONNELL CHEVR,OLET 2828 Harbor BJvd. Costa Mesa 546-1200 '69 _,\18 _230, ~w rni::. trl:is, Buses New & Used COmJlletr rebuild. Otassis is power slttring & brakl".s ·l-96_9_D_A_R_T_S_W_l_N_G_E_R I ish with burgundy Interior. vinyl lop, $38."ill 673-'44.")4 f.11chehn!i, llf', am/fm, im-• 11, '59, but we have S500CI ractory air. vil'l)ll roof, fAc'. E 'pped 'th RAMBLER mac. S~lOO, 548-.~. lmmedl1te Delivery invested. ?t1ust see ilr driv' tory warranty. !YXR3731 TIIE PERFORM~"R! ~1 w1 auto trans., CHICK IVERSON $3395 Flashy compttitlon orang, I :11.d10, he111er, power steer-_... • !\'I •ppteelate. S2800 fi rm. wilh white a1ripes. ~hdau ing, po\t.'er br!kes, power l9'7 Ambassador 9tO VW • l"!l9 ?t-lonrovia. N . B , root. EquiJlped 11.·ith 3~0 -4 wlndo"''· .1tr COnd. lf you SOLID VALUE! MG ' ' • Trailers, T ravel ~ ·GS Tnw~ Ett Tca1t"· 20·. 1 TOP DOLLAR Twi n B"!d , full y self-contained. TV antl'nna, I for ........... I ~ TMINI I a .. ~ .. fi46-4<t:» days only. I h _ .. l 1 I 54§..3031 Ext, 66 or rr BAUER BUICK BBL engine,• 3~d !r11n~., Are. a.-':' 0 pease, pecue 2-dr. hll.J'dtop. C'.old metaJllc: l97tl llARBOR BLVD. '66 VW GHIA 2.'\4 E. l7rh St radio, heater, etc. Thi~ beau-~~! mi.~s lhls f 1 "e car. finish w matchJni Interior. COSTA P.~A Yel1011.·, 11.·lth Black land11u eo1111 }.lesa 548.7765 tiful car stiows c11ttfuJ m11in. ,{ ~8· Johnson & Son, 26..~ A\r cond1!lonlng. p ow er '69 VW "FASTBACK top, new \•alve ;n::i XNH6:1 '&I BUICK Rl\'if'ra, lull p11.-r. le~anre-and loving care. ~~ Bl., Costa J.lesa . .11terring, po"·cr brakes, ftUIO. efl.1)1 roll ca.nopy. Uke nev.·! CL EAN \JSEb CARS Y\VD 1n . $1199 I air cond. l mmaculate. Dnvf' It f()fl8.y. Only S l77~. · · lrans" radio, hrHICr, near ~ Sonora Rd, CM. Moe Andy Bmwn .$1299 fX'VJ2.'.l6J. Johnson I.I Son, ''4 OLDS ne11.· 1ire1, ell~. Dri\'r1 heau. 20' TANDE?i1 Axle, db:, t.ell· THEODORE ''FRIEDLANDER" CHICK IVERSON Sll::.0. 644-6248 ~26 Ha rber Bl., Costa r.te111. Cutlass, bucket Je&!s, p/1, tltuliy, Only $9:.0. (\VAR.889). CHICK IVERSON vw CADILLAC I "~""' p/h. good """· .. w .,;,.. Job""" • Soo, 2626 11 ...... contained. New never bttn ROBINS FORD ""'· &low whol•sal•, by OV.'nef'. 71.4/5ll-T80D. T ,.lltrt, Ullllly 947 14' T andem Traile r \\'lltW..-Whtcl•. AU 1teel \t.'dd- .ct construclion. 'i(" Steel dl'ck plfttlnJ, \\'Ill ~II or tr•de for pickup. 3166 Sicily, (~Aa Verde) C..i.\f, NO m•Ue.r wtiat 11 Ls, you :D;(I Harl>or Bl"". Costa Mest 642.tl)U) 1~;:c'e c;,.~ VW S.\!.3031 &'<1. 66 or 67 ·s,q Con"~rtibte, Io a. d ,. d . l '67 DODGE MONACO :~n·~~8~8.S42S or best off-81" Cn~IA ~1ell11.. ~I0-56.10 NEW-USE O-SERV. "'~""1 E." .... , 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $<200. c., 11 ......... pn• ' . . . STUDEBAKER ----------.:. 19'10 HARBOR. BL\'D, OOSTA MESA pty., S!ln Clemente TI4: :l Dr. }f.T. VS. 11.vloma t!c, rt· ~/BOJ~~ 8S ndHohdayb, ~/S,.IC'.::---,------1 IMPORTS WANTED ~ /,,,..~~CO;".'.ST~A,i>~l~ES~A~--1--~ij~iii\"--492-280tl. dio heater pcV1·er !teerl"" I -. ir co ·, ""w,.,ra;ces, '62 DAYTONA 2-dr hrdtp. Or ,._,, -WANTED · • .... orig. owner. x nt, --0'.M~. v' 4 ~ b k · anae ._.nue1 '61 KARlfANN GHIA: Bli< *' CREAM Puff-1961 Cari. 1 hr3kf's Jarlory a\r vinyl • ·~1"'• uc . 5e11.t1. tires TOP s Str(ER. -MGI I v./\\'hlte .... conv top, J't!blt ru Pit¥ top dolla.r for !'OUr Sedftn OeVil!I', 1 OWl'lfr. Se! roof, l..o~ milt-age. 1~21711 1 '66 4-Dr Cutlass SupreJpe •• 4 mo old, $250, 646-1!112 BIIJ. MAXEY TOYOTA ---------eng. Extremt"ly dl"pendablt VOLKS\VACEN toda,y, CalJ "tgr, :1121 w. Coasi Hwy, $1595 P/1, 11uto, •ir. Nice family T ·BIRD 18881 Beach BJvd. • '67 !\-!GB GT a j tran11. 5475. Eves -l!H-1380. ftnd _,sk for Ran Plnchot, NR. car, $950. 846-ll!Ui H. Beach. Ph. M7-13M GOOD SHAPE $1.'100 IT'S WONDERFUL 1 he 549·~1 Ext. 56-67. 673-0000, 1966 CADILLAC Convf'J'tiblt OLDS '64. lo mi'5, ~""tin!!>, ./ '62 T·B IRC\ I DAILY Pll.OT DlME • A ** ~2266 • * many buy1 In appllaneta VW . '64 Beetle • Vt:ry rood w/blue loll & l!!a1her "fn-BAUER BUICK 2 rir, xlnt. S600. Call 646-:W71 Has E\•rryth1n.i:• Cond •• can &ell It with a OAJt.Y PILOT WANT ADi M2-5671 -LlN'P;S COii )'OU Jwt t pe.n· The "Yrllow Pa~s" of ! you find In the Ct.ssltled mech. MM. lerior. Or\giMl owne r . 23·1 E. J7th SI. Turn unused 1te.m~ into quick rondlfJl)n S6CM't 67:MIJn niea a day. cla11[f!td , • -fi.CZ-5678 AdJ. Check Thtm now! $8j() * • * ~115 •92-0000. Cosl1 Mrsa 5-~71G.J ci.~h. call 641.-ri6i!J 1-·or b<!sl rtsult~! 642-fl671 •