Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-13 - Orange Coast Pilot.1 • 7 --. Marine .S.uspeeted Of Raping Teen DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * JUESDAY Al'TERNOON, APRIL Jl, J.971. Laird Rev eals Navy, Air. Forc e To Stay in Asia WASIUNGTON (tiP!l -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the United States will maintain naval and air forces Jn Southeast Asia, indefinitely but tJiere will be no fresh commitments of "'.maS:sive . manpo'."er" there, Lairq alsl><.said ,1he American combat rfl'le in V..te&:iam will ·eQd this sununer, but thal tl'.S. fortes -will be involved in 1otne fPrm.s 'Of defensive con:ibat beyo1d that pofnt. _ , He refused to uy when the American J)resence in Vieblam might completely end. · Jn a Pentagon news conference, the defen-at secretary said the Vletnarlllzation progtam is succeeding and that the new thrust of Defense Department planning is aimed for when the war is ended. In this respect, he said, the United States should give financial and arms assistance to the nations of Southeast Asia that would enable them to make the best possible use of their own manpower and resources. "We should not make the mistake of committing massive manpower to that fart of the world," Laird said. "Military assistance -yes; American ground troops, manpower -oo.'' Laird said he does, however, foresee the need to maintain other forms of U.S. military presence in Asia. He declined to comment on whether they would play a combat role and left open the length o( time they might be needed. The defense secretary summarized: "To say that we would not have a ( «:ou t l\'eather Fair skies following low cloud! is the general forecast for Wednes-- day along the coast. with tempera· tures peaking at 65 on the seashore and up to 7S inland. INSIDE TODAY ft was just a casual killing after a beef in a Seo.l Beach bar. By Mansan family standards, it ws hardly wort h mtntioning. But a man p11lltd a trigge r thret timts and another man died. Logbook. Page 9. Ci!llwllle t CillOlltl tit 7 Clltttlf!H •H CMl!tc:a IJ c,.u_.. 11 0.•111 Netlat • •••..mi ,.... ' l....,•1-1 11 P'lft.,.~ 1 .. 11 """""-ll AMI I.....,. IJ ......... ' M•rrl"' I.Ir.MIMI t ...... " Mvhltll .. ..,.. It H.noMI Htwt W °'*"" '-""' ' •• ,,,.. """' 11 ....,,. 16-17 Sled Mmlh 1 .. 11 T....,,.... 11 l'llt•tfrt 11 ..... ,...,. . Wit*-··-,, W_.-1 N-l)<U . .,.. ...... ... presence in Asia (after Vietnam) under the mategy of realistic deterrence , •• would certainly be misleading. "I would envision that U.S. prMence in Asia as far as naval forces are concerned, as far as air power is cbncerned, that thiS :would be a part of the rfillistic 4eterren1 we woold ma)ntain in Asia." : 'Without 'making · i.y predictihn of a specific a ate, La'iril ·said· comb a t responsibility in Vietnam will be turned over to the Vietnamese command '."in the summer period." He denied that the mauling suffered by tbe · Sou t h Vieblamese army during the invasion of Laos had slowed down this process. Laird explained tO the newsmen: "I wou1d not have you think that we would not have a security force (in Vietnam after this summer) or that it (See LAIRD, Page J) 4 Suspects Held In Murder Plot On Mayor Daley CHICAGO. (UPI) -:-Four persons have ~n arrested tn connection 'with. ·an· alleged plot to assassinate Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson and make a "power grab" in the ensuing racial strife. The Chicago Daily News Monday quoted· an unidentified source in the Cook County state's attorney's office as saying the four were part of a militant group planning to hire assassins to kill Daley and Jackson, then make a play for power. Earl Preston Dillard, 37, and Howard Harris. 33, were arraigned Monday on charges of solicitation to commit murdr. Assh1tant Slate's Attorney Marshall Weinberg said two other men, Charles Whiteside, 35, and ·Terry Simmons, 38, were arraJ.ined Thursday on the same charge. Deputy Police Supt. John Kelly declined comment on lhe details of the arrests, citing court decisions which prolfft the rights of the defendants. He did say, however, that others were being sought in connection with the alleged plot but declined to say bow many otbers might be involved. Dillard and Harm, desctibed as unemployed laborers, were arrested Saturday and Whiteside and Simmons on Wednesday, polk:t said . Felony Court Judge John P'. Hechinger ordered all four held on fS,000 bond each and 1Cheduled a hearing for April 21 . Offletr1 of the Chicago Police Gang Intelligence Unit (GJU) Aid the alleged (See PLOTl'ERS, Pace I) a 0 $250,£!00 ' .Taken in Bank Heist NEW YORK (AP) -Two masked holdup men escaped with $250,000 from a branch bank In Brooklyn today while a third companion held 13 persons hostage in a Staten Island borne, police said. Police said some .of the hostages, held all night, were related to the bank'! manager, Charles A. DI Sogra, who al5o was held captive and forced to open the bank's vault. All were released unharmed, police eaid. Police said the three armed men invaded Di Sogra's home on St2ten Island Monday night and took him to his sister· in-law's home Where a total of 13 people were held hostage. While one bandit remained with the hostages, two of the men forced Di Sogra to dri¥e them t.o .th~ Ft. Hamilton branch of C.Ommunity Nation&! Bank and Trust Company in Brooklyn at about 7:30 a.m. and ordered him to open the bank'l!I safe. Police said Di Sogra apparently h•d only part of the combination of the two- lock safe, and the holdupmen had to wait for a woman cashier to arrive t.o open the lower part of the vault. The men escaped with $250,000, leaving several bank employes h a n d cu f f e d togelher, police 1!18.id. They forced)pi Sogra to drive them away from t~e bfe, dropped him off and abandoned •the ~ar 20 blocks away. ' Blind W atchcat R outs Burglar In Costa Mesa Watchdogs are often credited with crfme prevention, but Costa Mesa police today offered the tale of a blind cat who attacked a burglar and wa! beate.n off with a basket of Easter eggs. Tbe intruder got away with nothing. Investigators were called to the home of Mrs. JoeAnn F. Lawton, of 3136 Bennuda Lane Monday when she returned from Laguna Beach t.o lind it burglarized. Someone slipped through a bath- room window and ransacked bedroom drawer! before crossing paths with the Lawtons' blind watcbcaL Police were told the animal will attack anything at.range that move.a, due to ita b!lndneu. Debri! 1e1ttered around the living room indicated the burglar protected himself with the Easter basket and contents befort Oeeing out a door. • ,_ ' . •w ateh Cat~ . . . ' Bents Bnr.glar In Costa •esa--· ·- • • Ill I . Whale .. pt. Ta,le --'.> • ...~ - - ,. 1 ' ' ' 111' I T 1 '-"""t Marcµs .Lee'11ontgomery.~2, ,Deti:olt •. ts not so .sure this-.concrete and steel playground whale is friendly. Even when daddy went inside to show Marcus the whale is toothless, the tearful boy refused to follow. Mru_-ine Held ih ·Rape Case_ A· young Cami) Pendleton Marine faces charges of forcible rape.and auto theft .in what police in San Clemente described todaf as a sordid case of the violation of a 14·fear-old girl -an act suggested and encouraged by her mother. Robe.rt Dean Smith, 21, a member of the 2nd Infantry Training Regiment at Pendleton, was arraigned this morning on the lhree felony charges in South Orange County Municipal Court. His bail has '1een set at $121500. The mother, a 1 S1n~Clemente· ruident., also was reported in custody at Orange County Jail. _(!Waiting court action on two counta of being an accompollce In the two rapes, which assertedJy occurred earlier this year in a San Clemente motel room. She was arrested earlier in the week it1: the South County Courtl building where sbe went to answer 1 bench warrant on a traffic vlolaUon. Officers said District Attorney's aides recognized the woman In court and ordered her arrest. Police a11ege that the first lncldent occurred Feb. 23 when Smith and a companion were: in the woman'• motel room. The mother assertedly encouraged the Marine to ylolate her virgin daughter "to calm her down." lnvestlgatora said a neighbor heard the conversation and subsequent acreams coming from a bedroom •. The se<Ond Incident aflegedfy occwTtd on March 2 at the same mo~J. The neighbor then ooUfie~rf)01ioe, who launched an investigation. Smith, authorities claim, was abaent- wltboutrleave at the time o( the alleged 1exual acts. Afttr the l!lecond incident be (See ASSAULT, Pace I) wa Irvine Co. . ' Asks Board I For: Delay By JACK BROBACK Of t11t 0.if)'. Plllt Iliff Orange c.ounty Board ol S1Jpervl80r1 Ohalrman Robert Ballin In a wrprf.w nlove this morning tried to kill the Upper Newport Bay land swap agreement without · further negotiaUons. His effort failed. Battin, the supervisor from Santa Ana's First District, was responding to an April 12 Jetter from Irvine Company_ PrC!ident Willlam R. Mason. MU>n asked the board to extend the April 25 deadlllle for netotlations. , Battin responded with the allegation that the letter watt "self-serving," He asserted Orange County shouldn't discus!: "any further possible new agreements on the Upper Bay lll1til the Present agreement II' terminated." Battin moved that the board reaffirm Its action of last Jan, 5 in which It voted unamimously to t er m I n a t e the agreement. But,8altin added the wonll "without condlttona.'• Superv!Jora Rolph CWk and David Baker objected "to these words. BatUn agreed lo delete thent.The Battio motion tllen pas8'd • lo I w l !h . SUJ!erV!Jor William 1Phllllpa ·dissenting, · Baker followed with a motion fo e1tend diaella!k>M: on the agreement far go day1 orunUl-June 29 .. Jtpassed unani~ly. The Irvine leUet which seemed to raise the ire. ot Battln and Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport . Beach stated tllal negoU!iUom carried: ~n to date with Caspers. a~ Y:l\ttin . or t b e i r reprtsentatives·~ad not made any worthwhile prosre.ss. Quake-dama ged S'trlp:Repaired Traffic will be !iick lo nonnll Wednesday on the Golden State Freeway In earthqual:e-devutaled Sylmu and surrounding area; . comple~ a n emergency repair PfOgl'am two weeks early. / . Still Dlvltfon .of Highways o!ficlals crtdlted contradorl .Jlgned lo seven emergency repair progr&m.1 adding up to ! IUt mJUlon wflb >pMdy mloralion. A oormll dally :1oad of 'i'l,000 vehicles will have use of the Gol""1 Slala Freeway, while 36_.000 more wW have dlrecl access lo the Ant.elope V a f f e 7 Froewai. Ci>mJijg just M days alter the teb. t quake, the ._.inc Includes repalr of 10 bridges wrecked and 10 athera badly damaged. , A major share of the H-bOllr treeway1 repllr wu done by Guy F. Atldnlolf Company of Lolli Belch. ) ! OA!l Y PILOT s BeachGroup To Study Canh1e Laws • , Tht Newport Beach City Council Monday nl&ht did an al>"'l't about-lace land cwdtred the Parb. Beaches and ltecreatien Commilllon to 81U't al1 immediate study ot dogs on-the beaches. Dllrlllc the afternoon study .... ion coum:Jlmen aeemed ru<ly to tackle the controversy themselves and thereby ~ what will almost cer\ainly hecome"OPe of 0. year's biggest isslles. "We've got to make a decision one way er the other, as soon as possible, and not •let in the mess Laguna Beach did a year ago,'" Councilman Don Mcinnis of Wtll Newport bad aaid earlier in the day. When the subject. arose during tbe bullness meetipg,~howe~er. Vlce Mayor Howard Roges reYersed field. ''We . have got to carry out the atlc process and let everyone their say," he said, commenting e PBR panel should cOnduct iU public hearings, make a recomqiendation fo the council, which subsequenUy· will t!ave to conduct more hearings. ·'!be council instructed City Attorney TuiiY 'se)'l!lour to prepare two different ordinances; one patterned after thal which was finally a~ted in Laguna and the other similar to Huntington Beach's, which bans dogs from beaches totally. 1 11te Laguna Beach ordinance bans·dogs from beKhes aod certain parb durina: the summer, rrom Jlll1e 15 to Se.pt 15, 6etwee.n lhe hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rogers. in urging the longer procedure, took a stance contrary to his Freeway Fighter ally, Mrs. Margot Skilling, w~ had asked the council "t.o act as speedily as possible." t She said -with the county and the citiet of Laguna and Huntington 'S'e.ach banning &gs this 1Ummer theJ'll all be coming to Newport beaches. • "And the county health department ls eonsidering condemning beaches that allow dogs," she warned. From Page J LAIRD ... would not be involved in some combat. n "Some. people go away from these SteeUngs. with the impression the comb~l forces we have in Vietnam then will .emain around defense lines and nol protect the American presence. ~ ii aot true. Tbey will protect the American aresence." Army sources elaborated that the 5ecurlty forces left in Vietnam after the inajor U.S. combat role JndJ wW be authorized to set up ambushes and launch small attacks against Communist troops as part or their defensive role. · Laird said although the N or t h Vietnamese Anny still has the capability to attack bases In the northern portion of South Vietnam, he believes the Laos invasion destroyed enough supplies an4 crippled the Communist war ma~ine sufficiently to preclude a sustained offensive. He said th' success of the Laos !nvasiOR wUI best be judgtd in September and October .. when the enemy wil}. be hurting for supplies.'' "Any attack is a serious attack, but the capability for a suslained (Communisl) attack is not great," be comm,nted. Yooog Drowning Told NEW YORK {AP) -The result.s of a second autopsy performed oa the body of Whitney M. Young Jr .. former executive director of the National Urban League, attributes his death lo drowning. The results disclosed by the league Monday contradict the finding of the first postmorten examination performed ~n Lagos. Nigeria, that a subarachno1d be.morrlu.ce was the eawe oC death. oiA••I COAJT DAILY PILOT. " ............ -·-s. CZ ea QaAHOE COAST f0\lll.1Sl4•G OJIUNC'( t.Mrl N. W•M ......... ..w ..,,..,..,.... J•cl a. C11ltv VP ,,._~ Ml C.W.•I MMllfitJlt T\-•• k•••il ..... llt-t$ A. M .. rpl.iRt /llUMtlrll Elf!• O.•"•• H. 1 .. , 11:;,l.1"4 P. Nill .t.IMl91U ~ l.1111"" OfflH< C.lt MtM1 J;lll .,,,., .. y 1trwt ........ ....,.: JD) .._, ............ ~~~m,_..,,._ t.!llflllr',.. ._,.: 1"11 J.eadl .......... $M1 ~l • lit .... I.I C--biW D.t,l\,Y PILOT, .... _.,, '9 ~ ... "'--",_ It ...... &Wr ~ ..... ..,. ti! ....... "" ............... '-di. .......,, .... 0-, ...... """'ht"'"' ~ ._.\II Y1l..,. ,_ ~I r --· '1'9£ ......... _ ~ ........ ~ """"""' ,... .. ..... ,.., ....... ca. ..... 1a1r11trrr en•• 64J.-4Jl1 =; ..... "'111'41-Ntl .. O' 01 Al le,at P?S"N Tthf' I r 4tM4JI ~-lf7I. err.. c.... f'WlllMll c:-.-y. --...... """'',.,.. ........ _,.. ., ........,1_,. ~ _., .,. •••• .. .irw .,.. ... ,,,,.. ....... ~""' .,.._._ lfCltllll dlM "'1 ... ,.w 11t N_,_, I .art ... c.:tt -.., C•!lftnlll, hillo(.11"*' ... D"W UH .._flt'f l tf -u Uff "*"""'' ""11111.., ffttjo<,lflonl, n tt -"'11. 1 I 1 • ,. .., • .. ' . • ,. • , !." • i ' •• I . 1 UPI TeJWfltlt Button, Baitton -Heavy Bombing Told South Viet Troops Nearing Fire Base 6 SAIGON ( UPJJ -Six lhoUS'11'd Soutb Vietnamese troops operating behind the greatest U.S. 85.2 bombing attacks tn e.ight montba moved to wllhfn a mile cf belieged Fire Bi.ee II today in twin attacks from tbe North and South. Tbe U.S. Air Force droppec;l .two more 11h-t.on fllockbuater born~ on the Conununilt forces. · The counteroffensive to relieve the base 300 miles north of Saigon near the converging borders of Laos, Soutb Vietnam and Cambodia jumped off UUs morning when JI foi:ce of 1 , S II O paratroopeH landed. from U • S . helicopters three miles south of the base and 4,500 infantrymen landed two miles to the Sooth. A spokesman said the two forces met no resistance as the paralroopera advanced two miles to within a mile of the base and the northern group advanced a mile. But Communists 1rOund the base sent up sucb a heavy barrage cf antiaircraft fire lJne of four South Vielnames beliccpters reaching the baae was shot down. B52s have hit Communist buildups ar~d the base for a week and today a spokesman said 18 of the bi,g bombers Oakland Poverty Program Loses Government Aid dropped 540 tons in wh at he called the heaviest one-day bombing since Aug. 6, 19'0. In addllon, Cl30 cargo plane:a parachuted in two more of tbe 7'fi:-ton bombs which Cl:evastate an area the site o! a city blo4 'l'be first two blockbusters lo be used ag~t CommWt troops "'ert dropped Monday. The North Vietnamese moving in from aos six mile1 aw ay ove rran Fire Base 6 March 31 but were driven off tbe next. day. Tbey since have held the base under siege despite heavy strikes by U.S. big bombers and . flghter·bombers a n d helicopter gunships. Zodiac l{iller Suspected fu Coed's Stahhmg Deatl1 SARATOGA~ (UPI) -Authorities fear the Zodiac 'killer may have struck again in Uie fatal stabbing of an lS.year~ld Saratoga }'ligh Sch9ol coed whose body was fountl Monday by her father. Charles Bilek, an ThfB engine.tr who brought his-family t.o th is country as refugees from Hungary, joined sh.erUf's deputies in an all-night search for his d~ghter Kathy, ~ had been missing since Sunday_ past year in nmbllng and sometimes coded messages mailed to newspapers. In a message lo a newspaper last month, 7.odiac claimed that "viclim 12'' was buried in the snow in the Lake Tahoe area. Nixon Assails Steel Contract In Third Alert Bilek found the body of the blonde honor student In some bushes oU a hiking trail on the grounds of the Villa Montalvo Museum. WASHINGTON {UPI) -The Nixon "One thing·s certain, Miss Bilek'! Admin.istration said today the steel workers' rettnt contract setUement with murder is almost a carbon copy of 8 the can industry was inflationary. He double killing here almost two Yelf3 urged-the union to be more restrained in SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) -The city of ago," a Santa Clara County bomlcipe contract talks this summer with the basic Oakland's $1.11 millioo poverty program detective .said. "And aU three could well steel Industry. was cancelled today by the federal be the work of the !<H:alled 7.odiac.'' 'lbe White House, in its third inflation government, the regional office of the The area where Miss Bilek's body was alert, said the three·ycar can contracts Office of Ecooomic Opportwtily announ· round is only a short distance from the providing 9 percent wage and benefit ced. scene where two young girls were slain increases each year "represents no h H. Rodger Betts, regional director of Aug. 3, 1969. progress toward the declining trend of t e agency, said OEO (,'bier Frank An autopsy Monday revealed the girt wage increases that is essential if we are Hugging her attendant's leg, Button, a nine-month-old chimpanzee, looks as though she has just seen a ghost. But attendan ts al the San Diego Zoo say Button looks that way most of the time. She was born in Ghana and has j ust recenUy taken up residence at the zoo. Carlucci would notify Oakland that funds had been stabbed 49 Umu with a short· to regain increased stability of prices and will be cut off April 30, although a bladed knife. AuU!pgy surgeons told costs." "tefmination grant" would be made so sheriff's Investig ators the stabbing of The inflation alert released by th e t~a.t th e Oakland Economic Deve!Opment Miss Bilek appeared to be relaled to the President's Council of Economic Advi- councll can "phase out lts operations in 1969 stabbings. sers also cited increased freight rates in an orderly manner.Ii Deputies said Miss Bilek's long-sleeved the railroad and trucking Jndustries, The federal agency said it was ending blouse was partially torn from her body higher cost for lumber. the failure of con· the federal grant because city officials and there was no evidence of sexual sumer meat prices to fully reflect lower indicated they dQ not approve the local assault. wholesale prices, and high w a g e agency's activities. Police have concluded the 7,,odiac killer increases for construction workers. The Oakland Poverty Agency grant for definitely is responsible for six victims, The report also cited a 48 percent hike Long Beach Man Held this year was vetoed by Gov. Ronald and could have committed the 17 he in New York City taxi fares as an Reagan in February and was ei:tended on boasts. His claims have been made in the example of what "artificial barriers to a temporary basis by federal officials. competition" can mean in consumer The current funding deadline ia April 30. prices. It said cab fares in the city, Betts ha1 been critical of a political C t S k where the number of cabs allowed has In Wayne Gun Thefts A Long Beach man bas been arre!led by Newport Beach detectives i n connection with the theft nearly a year ago of a gun collection from the BayshortS borne of actor John Wayne. Held in lieu of $62,500 bail is William Lee Montgomery, 43, who was arresled at his home at 3661 River Drive at 7:30 p.m. Monday. According to detective Ed Rudd. Montgomery has been linked to a portion of the gun collection which was recovered las t month from the governor of Baja California. At that time. 17 guns from the 30 originally reported stolen were personally picked up by Wayne in Mexicali. Rudd said the guns, valued at $12,000. were beld by Gov. Raoul Diaz who would return them only to the actor. The official told po\i~ his state police had impounded the guns during one of their investigations and he had duly notified U.S: government officials. Rudd said Diaz asserted the U.S. officials told him the insurance had been paid on the collection and there was no interest in its recovery. The governor claims he kept the guns -most of which are mementos that are inscribed with the actor's name - because he thought there might be some senlimental value attached to them and Wayne migh t have wanted them back. Rudd alleges that Montgomery took tbe guns during the burglary of May 28, 1970 From Pagel PLOTIERS ... solicitation took place in a vacant apartment on the west side. The arrests were made by the GIU, reportedly following a tip concerning the alleged solicitation. Details of the alleged plot "'ere not immediately re\'eaJed and police mjjde no mention of lhe ~ amount of money inYolved. Daley is \'acalioning with his wife in Florida , where lhcy have been since his re-election a week aJIO . Jackson, in Nashville. Tenn., to address a raUy at Jo'i.sk University, said he is "deeply coocerned about the alleged plot involving plans lo assassinate me. ..W, hope that. whatever the fa cts are established t.o be, the law will be soundly Et:nforced in the pursuit of justice as it afftcts me, the aceused and the well· bting of our city. The democratic Judicial process cJnnol be suspcnd6d In timH such u these lrrespeclive of the s.eriousness of the s1tu1Uon." Tup a ma ros Kidna p 1nduslria l Leader M01'TEVTOEO IUPJ) -Jllcardo f erres Terra, a Uruguayan industrial!st. appa rently was kidnared by leftist Tupamaros lerrorlsts today, Uruguayan police &aurces said. They s:ild h' dlsappenred moments after ht lert his hon1~ for ""'ork In an 11utomobilP The rar was f o u n d abandoned 111:h Uie cnKtne running I and transported. them for <Hsposal te Mexicali where he has some bustntss interests. There are still several guns from the collection in the Mexicall area and the delective said he is hopeful the entire collection will be restored te Wayne. po8ilion · taken by the agency direct0T1 rans on ee s not been increased since 1937, are twice Percy Moore, and was dissatisfied with those in \Vashington ~·here there is no 1teps taken by the Agtn!=y's board of u s Red. m· restriction on the number of cabs. directors to Wscipline Moore. , • 11·ec tg The council said it feared that if the steel workers got the same settlement On Monday night at a mettlng of the F from the steel industry as from the can directors in Oak.land a f iv e .day 0£ Space iJ.·ms industry. tile steel firms would have to suspension against Moon could not be raise prices, making it toughe r for them voted on because of the lack of a quorum. WEST COVINA (UP I) _ Sen. Alan to meet foreign competition and resulting J d S Moore, 46, whO Is paid $20,900 a year to Cranston of California said Monday the in increased unemployment not only in U ge elitCDCeS run the agency, has been opfnly opposed federal government could re 11 eve the basic steel industry but also among to the current members ·of the city 1 . th · d t s•·el·us1·ng ,·ndustr,·es. I Th unemp oyme11t 1n e aerospace in us ry <.<: N B l counci . e council , on its part, by making it "profitable" for the firms to Council Chairman Paul \V. McCracken, e\vnort ui der approved a resolution urging that tum to such domestic needs as housing, at a briefing on the-inflation alert, . r Res· agan·tshveto of funds be sustained. pol(ulion and education. refused to indicate what the 0 T Ince e veto and city council action in The Democrat, in remarks before a administration would conside r a fair fi ax Charges Febfuary, the re&onaJ OEO office said, group of commun ity leaders, said, "The increase in steel industry wages, saying odpert •11ion,s·d olub 1 eti 'uS""' .. · Y ''have go"ernmenl and e•erybody else keeps this w o u Id be inappropriate with . ecrorai.c s san a y. ' ,. ,. · Ward Wilsey of 445 •··ta Ana Ave wasting precious lime trying to come up nego 1a ions comrng up. ildll Betts said the cutoff or funds for the d A f th · J Newport Beach, former Orange r-·nty'' · witb complex formulas to get in ustry to s or e economy Jn genera , .....,u Oakland Economic Development C.Ouncil, •t C k ·d h f h building contractor, was s e n t e n c e d convert instead of taking the sim ple steps 1• c rac en sa1 I at rom i s Inc., does not mean that the city cannot h t d t · d t t a · t. f 1· t t · d. t Monday to serve 10 mon'"· In 1·a11 and . t at arc guaran ee o get Jn us ry e ex mma ion o 1rs .quar er in 1ca ors. ~ get fede ral poverty funds . But he said it rod h ood d · "IV · t I · t tr pay $4.000 in fines on t'-~ coun•· ol p uce t e g s an services "'e so ere no on y going o see a s ong •u= "" means that another agency must be d 1 d ga•· b t the ,., · d 1· " fail~ng to report income and defrauding esperate y nee . n u re some lfl 1ca ion u1e savings and loan firms . found to carry out the programs. ''All you need to do is make tbe switch pulse beat of the economy is quickening." profitable," he said. He said there ha ct been s o m e .Federal Judge Frances Whelan in U.S. Cranston sa.id the government should improvement in the price picture since District Co~rt in Los Angeles also Big AlODl Test SJatecl emphasize domestic needs rather 1han the last alert in December. but there was sentenced Wilsey to flve·years probation. ''far away wars," "provocative missiles·• "less visible progress on the wage front.'' He was found guilty Feb. 111 after the \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The United and ··unwanted supersonic gee-gaws. '' Concerning the steel ind us tr'! longest criminal tax trial ID the b1story of States plans an underground nuclear He said massive amounts of money negotiations, McCracken declined to say the local federal courts, just one "day explosion almost five times more should be spent by the government in the what if any steps the 11dministraUon short of six week.s, according to poW!rful than past underground blasts, it domeslic area through contracts '.l'ith might take to assure settlem ents were proseculor Arnold Regardie, assistant was reported today. private Industry. more moderate than in the can contracts. U.S. attorney. J;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,--Operaling as Eagle En.terptises Wilsey was convicted of filing false in~e ·tax returns for 1963-64-45. failing to report ;56,000 in income and filing false statements wllh savings and loan associations. Regardie said \\'ilsey was charged with b~l~ng several savings and Joan firms by b1lhng them for construction work never perf~r~ed, boosting bills over cost. or requ1r1ng subcontractors to pay extra money lo Eagle Enterprises which wa! never credited to the savings firms. The now defunct Eagle Enterprises had offices in Costa Mesa, Anaheim and Carden. Grove. The largest development of the firm was the Tustin Acres lB<klnil apar_tment com.plex at 650 W. Pifaln SI., Tustin, Regard1e said. From Page J ASSAULT ... assertedly took the \ft>man's auto and credit cards. Potier said the Atuine "'as round asleep in the auto last' Weekend on the side of a highway in Gila Bend: Arl:t., lligh"·ay patrolmen \here telurned the auto to California and Smi~"WU relened to military aulhoritle! at Ca mp Pendleton. Local police wert: notifitd of the man'!! arrest ft1onday by base provost marshal aides Sm J l h ·' urralgnment included a charge of @:!°a~ theft auto, making the woman 1 v1ct1m In one fel ony and tht defendant In two olher!i. The woman 's car, officers said, had 21.000 miles logp;ed on It 1fter U was 1aken from San Clemente. Police said the girl, a San Clement e lllgh School student, was relta.litd to tuztody of fnmily frif'nd!! pending leg1I ai:tlon against her mother. c SEASAME STREET Sesame Street is about the only street rn the harbor oreo that hasn 't hod o carpet installation by Alden 's. In our thirteen years, we hove carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block. The formula is SIMPLE -we try to moke each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably ca rpeted her home. (I f we haven't, bring her in with you .) SANTA ANA. OllANG I. TUSTI N Ca ll •• , ALDEN'S RID HILL CAllPn s & DRA,I Rl l S ,.,,4 Ir.I"•· Tu1tln. c.1. Ul-U44 • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. t OSTA MESA 646-4838 , ' 7 )'1 \ ' I •• • . Huntington Beaeh Today'• Flnel N.Y. Stoek• voe. 64, NO. 88, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRI~ 13, 1971 1EN CENTS Newport Land • Ill Huntington Auctioned Off Newport Be.ach Councilmen Monday night auctioned off nearly two acres of land the city owm in Huntington Beach and for the most part, the proceeds kept the municipal fathers watching in •tunned silence. It was .. the last section of an SO.acre tract Newport bought in Huntington Beach half a century ago at the awesom e price of $385 per acre. Acting Newport City Manager Phil Bettencourt fidgeted but kept writing the numbers down. Dennis Starret was at the council 4 Arrested In Alleged Daley Plot CHICAGO (UPI) -Four persons have been arrested in connection with an alleged plot to assassinate Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil rights le~der Rev. Jesse Jackson and make a "power grab" in the ensuing racial strife. The Chicago Daily· News Monday quoted an unidentified source in the Cook County state's attorney's office as saying the four were part of a militant group planning to hire assassins to kill Daley and Jackson, then make a play for power. Earl Preston Dillard, 37, and Howard Harris, 3.1, were arraigned Monday 01 charges of solicitation to commit murder. Assistant State'• Attorney Marshall Weinber1 said two other me11., Charles Whiteside, 35, and Terry Simmons, 33., were arraigned Thursday on the same charge. Deputy Police Supt. John Kelly declined comment on the details of the arrests, citing court decisions whlch protect the righ1" of the defendants. He did say, however, that others were being sought in connection with the alleged plot but declined to say bow many others might be involved. Dillard and Harris, described as unemployed laborers, were arrested Sa turday and Whiteside and Simmons on Wednesday, police said. Felony Court Judge John F. Hechinger ordered all four held on ~.000 bond each and scheduled a hearing for April 21. Officers of the: Chicago Police Gang Intelligence Unit (GIU) said the alleged aolicit.a.tion took place in a vacant apartment on the west side. The arrests were made by the GTU, reportedly following a lip concerning the 1lleged solicitation. Details of the alleged plot were not bnmediately revealed and police made no mention of the amount of money involved. Daley is vacationing with his wife in Fl orida, where they have been since his re-election a week ago. Jackson in Nashville, Tenn., to address a rally ai Fisk University, said he is "deeply conCt!rned about the alleged plot Involving plans to assassinate me. "We hope that, whatever the facts are established lo be, the law will be soundly enforced in the pursuit of justice as it affects me, the accused and the we~\. being of our city. The democrat~c judicial process cannot be suspended in limes such as these irrespective of the seriousness of the situation." Cranston Seeks U.S. Redii.'ecting Of Space Firms ~wEST COVINA (UPI) -Sen. Alan Cranston of California said Monday the federal government could re. l i eve unemploymet1t in the ae.~ospace 1~dustry by making it "pro(itable for the firm~ lo turn to such domestic needs as housing, pollution and education. podium. "'Downey Savings bids $369,900," be said. Walter From e , representing Rinker Development Company, eased himself out of his chair, "Mr. Mayor," he said addressing Ed Hirth, "l ~alize this isn 't in the rules, but may l have a five-minute recess." The mayor didn't hesitate, "In the best interests of the city. I'll grant you that." be said, his face beaming as lhe price built up. The council was in the midst of auctioning off the 1.93-acre tract it owns at the intersection of Brookhurst Street • • ! I ' and Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach . And the bidders were going hot and heavy. Downey and Rinker were the only ones eligible to participate since only they had submitted sealed bids two weelu earlier. In those initial offerings, DoWney had come in with a price of $338,000, $11,000 more than Rinker. If Rinker wanted to bid orally, It had to beat that '338,000 by five percent. After that, the bidding was to be in $5.000 increments. Both sealed bids exceeded the property appraisal. But when Bettencourt opened th• r aucUon, Frome didn't hesitate. He •tepped forward and offered "114,i(lll. The figure quickly moved lo Downey'• $369,9(XI when Frome laked tor ume. He walked back to t.be lectern slowly. "Rln.ker Dtvelopmenl bid! $37•,900." St.arret was on bis feet. "$379,toO - Downey Savings Ind Lou." Frome stood, the entire room by thi.! time dealhly still. "Rinker bids $384,900," he uid firmly. StarreU, sUU unshaken; 1 t e pp e d forward and Bet1oncourt interrupled, hall seriously, but trying to add a UUle levity to the awesome proc:eedlnga. "Are you IUl'tl )'OU doo't Wint to round off your bid," he aald,·"maybe $390,000." "Downey bids 5389,900," Starrttt laid coldly, giving Beuencourt an fey •lire. Fn>me came forward, 1 Utile men! alowly, "Rinker blda '3&(.900." Starrett came right bacli:, "'399,llOO - Downey S.vinga." 'l'hty each bid once more and Frome asked for another recess. "$414,900 -Rinker Development," he said aft.er the brief con1ultation . The figure was already twice as much per acre as the city paid for property at Newport Center. Starre~. no mcer Ille pJdure •! composure, Joottd 1t Frame, wilted forward and with • jert In hit '°'"' aid, "llown<y Savtncs IJld Loan b Id I $41$,900." It WU P'rome'I turn, but be WU finished. '"lltW you,,,--be llld, •lor I ahould II)' you think UI, we're all' throogh." "Thant you very much," Mayor Hlrth said, first to P'rome and then to Starrett. The money le< the land wUJ ao'to' the clty'1 Water Fund, from where funds to buy the property CllDO IO yean qo. Wage Battle Vowed Police, Firemen Handed Setback By ALAN DIRKIN Of tM OMIY l"lllt s .. ff Police and firemen 's a.ssocllt.ions vowed today to pu..h their fight acalnlt the city of HtmUngton Beach over salary increases despite a court 'setback Monday. "That was just the initial· show cause hearing," said Bob La Marsh, pre.sldent of the 126-member firemen's association, "Now we'll file the second part of our case In which we'll ask for relief and have the court order the city to bargain in good faith." La.Marsh was referring to Superior Nixon Cites Court Judge Raymond Thompson'• denial of petitions for wrilt of mandate. Complaints filed by both associations asked the COW't to set aside lut year'• aalary resolut.ion -which granted 8.25 percent ral3es to all city employe11 -and submit the issue to arbitration. The firemen are asking for raises from 11 to 13.5 percent and the police for hikes averaging 11 percent. These were repottedly the amounts agreed upon In meet and confer sessions with city administrators but denied by the city rouncfi . The dispute, which has been waged l' alley Aspirants since September, conUnuea as teams from both Ille polla llld flnl auoclatlono u. beginning work on om y-'• ~ requests. Thb lilllation 1111;11 bring I !urlher decline in labor rtl&Uorui 11lnce city adminiatrators .ilave warned that ~ are presently no funds available for anything but merit increase• next year. "Based upon our preeent revenue projections, we have nothing for coet of living increases or adjustments based on surveys of other citiea," Assistant City (Ste SALARIES, Pa1e l) · · ~lnflatWnary'· Steel Pact Three Trustee Hopefuls Support . Unified District DAILY l"ILOT i11tl 1"11919 ' TED HOFFMAN INSPECTS ORPHANED CHICKS AND DUCKS It H1ppen1 Ev1ry Easter, Hum1n1 Society Compl1in1 Chi~ken Plight 'Cute' Easter Gifts Face Death Easter chicks are not curvy creatures found sunbathing on the sand during a week's vacation, according to the Huntington Beach Humane Society, Humane officers describe Easler chicks as unfortunate little feathered creatures found struggling to stay alive in unhappy homes throughout lhe city. Some are in pet stores illegally. "Roosters can't be kept in Huntington Beach,'' said Robert Starkey, director of the local Humane Society, as he unloaded 50 tiny chicklings taken from a pet slore. "And 99 percent of these are roosters." Some of the small ones were already dead. Sharkey said the pet store hadn't fed them properly and hadn't cleaned their cages. "It happens every Easter," Sharkey added. "Peol'le think little chickens or ducklings make cute gifts. But .after It's over we get the calls to pick them up.'' He expects to pick up more than 100 little chickens during the next two weeks. "lf we can't give them away outside the city -to a farm -we destroy them." The city law on rabbits. chickens, ducks and other fowl is tougher than most people realize. Under the age of four weeks they canot be sold in groups of less than six at a limr -group orders are allowed for a legitimate business. Roosters are strictly unwelcome in Huntington Beach. And Sharkey said people rarely take proper care of the feathered creature!!. "They can also pass di11ease on to children,'' he added. "If you want to give something cule for easter, or anytime -stick to puppies,'' Sharkey recommended. Safeway Stores to Drop Separate Joh Categories WASHINGTON (AP) -A union attorney said today Safeway Stores, Inc. will drop separate job clas.slflcalions lor men and women tmployes and equaliie their pay scales. The separate classifications and lower decision ," he added. The union had charged in its lawsuit tha~ lhe separate classifications and pay scales were discriminatory. federal law requltts equal pay for equal work. WASHINGTON fUPJl -The Nl.ron Admlnislratlon aaid today the 1tetl workers' recent contract setUement wJth the can industry was inflationary. He urged the union to be more restrained in contract talks this summer with the b11ic sfeel lndu.try. The White House, in Its third inflation alert, said the three.year can contracts providtng 9 percent wage and benefit increases each year "'represent.a no progre!s toward the declining trend of wage increases that la essenUal ll we are to regain increased stability of prices and costs.·• The inflation alert releaud by the Prtsident 's Council of Economic Advj. sers also cited Increased freight rates in the railroad and trucking industries, higher C08t for lumber, the failure of con· sumer meat prices to fully reflect lower wholesale prices, and hli:h w a g e increases for construction workers. The report also cited a 48 percent hike in New York City taxi fares as an example of what "artificial barriers tG competition'' can mean in consumer prices. It said cab fares in tbe city, where the number of cabs 'allowed bas not been increased since 19f7, art t"·ice those in Washington where there is no restriction on the number of cabs. The council said it feared that !f the stee l workers got the same tettlemenl from the steel ind ustry as from the can industry, the steel firms: would have to raise prices. making It tougher for them to meet foreign competition and resulting in increased unemployment not only In the basic steel industry but also amon1 1leel.using tndwtrles. Council Chairman Paul W. McCracken, at a briefing on the inflation alert, refused to Indicate what t h e administration would consider a fair increase in steel industry wages, saying this w o u I d be inappropriate w i th negoUations coming up. Pay Hikes Asked By OV Teachers Te~hers at the Ocu.n View School District's 13 c1mpuses Tuesday called for acrou-lhe-board PIY r11.ses. Three trustee candidates in the' Fountain Valley School District support the Fountain Valley School District aupp<tt the Idea of a unified district serving Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley east of Beach Boulevard. 'I'1ley were asked their posiilons on unification Monday night at a candidates meeting at Fountain Valley High School. Mary Hix, Paul Huard and Fred VOS.II also said they agreed with the proposal of splJUlng the Huntington Beach Union High School District Into three separate, unified districts. Another Fountain Valley candidate, Richard Plum , did not lake a stand on unification, while the r t f t h candidate, Donald HuleU. was not present at the candidates night. The question was asked after It was learned that truatet1 of the Fountain Valley district had officially adopted a three-way unification proposal. District trustees made the decision an hour earlier during a special meeting. 3 Large School Entities Backed By Ocean View Trustees of the Ocean Vk!w School District enthusiastically ~dorsed a proposal Monday night which would split the Huntington Beach Union High School District inl.CI three large unified districts. The unlficallon plan, developed by Ocean View and Fountain Valley School District admlnl!trators, calls for each district to serve students f r om kindergarten through the 12th grade. Ocean View Superintendent Clarence Hall said everything had been done tG Insure that each of the new dl!trlcts would be equal In size, wealth and student population. Neither Incumbent trustee, D a I 1 Stuard or Mrs. Fr1ncl1 James, is seeking re-elecUon, and none of the five candidates hai • v e r served on. t h 1 school board. The three-w1y unification proposal would create one ctistflct east of Beach Boulevard, up to Edinger Avenu1 and another district we.at of Beach Boultvard. The third dWrict would reault from the combination of what is now the Weslmln!ler and Seal Beach elementary school districtl. "The three-way 1pllt would create a district for w with 1 potentlal mulmum. of 37,000 students. '11lat'1 an Ideal IW!i'' Mrs. Hi.,; aaid. "l'm totally oppoeed to unification along the enUre hlJh IChool boundary, and the three-way propoaal aeems the only viable one," You 18ld. Plum's only comment waa: It would 4'be a battle." Huard said he ap-eed the three.w1y plan Is dea.irable, '111 things 1tay the same." He added, howewr, that changes in school financing, Gn 1 atate lev!.I, might make other unlfJcaUon botmdarle• desirable. Jn 1bort, three minute speeches, the four candidal.el outlined t he I r qualifications this way : Mn. lllJ': •1As a flouaewife I can represent the community and continue the woman'• viewpoint on tbe board. I'd like to see revisloona 1D the report card and reading c 11 n I c 1 in each &ehool." Vou: "Schook muJt leach children (See SCHOOLS, hJ• l) Wutlier Fair skies following low cloudl lJ the general forecut for Wecfnea.. day aklnll the coast. with t.mpera- tul"Q peaklng'at a 00 the seashore and up lo 7S Inland. INSmE TODAY The Democrat, in remarks before a group of community leaders, said, "The eovemment and ~very~y else keeps Wf!Sling precious lime trymg to come up with complex formulas to get indu&try to convert instead of taking the simple sleps th•I are guaranteed to get industry t& produce the goods and services we IO desper1t.ely need. , pay for "light-duty'' clerb, generally While pay scales differ acron the country, Taylor said the company move would close • gap of 11 much.tlJ 40 ctnll I"" i...r bd""' -IJICI ..... pay, ,..u111g tllo' ac.ie tor llOlh '' •boot 12.80 per hour . They afted for I raise m I ltlrtinl teachtr'1 u1ary from $'7,173 to '8,000. The top teaching sal1ry would be raWd from lll,935 lo Sll.000, under their proposal. One dl!trict would serve the combined Wutminster-Seal Beach area. Another would take In the FGUntain Valley and Huntington Beach elementary dlltrtcts east of Beach Boulevard. The thlrd would consist of the current Ocean View School District and the remainder of the cumnt HU)ltlnglon Beoch City School DlJirlct weat or Beach Bou \evard. Although the plan would mean that the Ocean V"aew School District would tole iU idenllty, Trustee James Shaffer said, "We Mould. do tnything we can to have a unified IChool diSltlct by July 1972." It """ jurt o .....i kUling afttr p bee/ fn a. Seal Beach bar. Bu M"""'" famUu •londams, ii 1.01 hardlu tD o r t lk. tl'W'ntkmfng. But a man pu!Ud o tnooer three timer and cnofhn man ditd. Logbook, Paq• ~. "All you need to do i.! maie the .switch prcfitable," ht Wd. ' Cranston said the government abouJd ~ emphaSlz.e dome11tiC needs rat.her than Hfar away war1," "provocative missiJ~" and "unwanted aupersonlc gee.gaws. He said massive amounts of money ihould be 1ptM by the government ln the domestic area throu1b contracts with private. Jndualr)'. I women. and "heavy-duty'' c:lerb. mostly men. had been the t.Qrgel of a ...mlt filed by the AfL.CIO Retail ·ct e r:lc.'s · IntemaUonal A!JMJCl&Uon In Oregon. "It looks as though they decided th is was illegal and that they would have to gel rid of It !IOOntr or later and to !lO ahe•d and do It now," said Carl T. Taylor, general counstl of lhe uni on. "I thlnk ll ii 1 very lnleUl&enl ) Taylor said the in~Uonal union had not been directly inf~ of Safeway's decision, but that , ,Lift· eompany was Minding letters to Uf\k)ft locals arQund the country, asking U the action i a 1aU1Iactory to the ~ In addi~lon, teachers proposed an 1utom1tlc 11,000 raise every thr« years for fl'acM:r1 who have been with the district more thin ten year1 and have more thin 45-unlta of 1radoate work . Trusteu accepted and filed the teachers' lnlUIJ. proposal 'lf'itbout comment. Trultee• Jen!fally aareed that the three unlfl districts wouki have more public aupport than unlficitlon along Huntington Beech Uaion Hilb School Dlllrlct boundlrlc.,. .., I ==Ut J . fir: j =.""" ,. '°"'11f'r t C,.....,.. 11 l'1'N .....,. M Dt•rll NtTk9' • ...,. , .. ,, ltlHtwMI I"-I 1• Martita M-11 l11i.t1'-4!t '! ,....,..._ I ~ 1 .. 1 "'""" II ......_ IJ WMflw • ... ~ IJ Wflit. W111t '' M.lllliu I WtfMl'I """ 1*-11 MenilM 1.lutl-' Wtrlll ,...,,. .. ., •• I :f DAil Y PILOT K Tutsday, April 13, 11111 f'roM P•ge l Runtingto11 Candidates SALARIES ••• Shapely Blonde Admtnl!ttow Brandtr castle slid lhb So far, the views ol six candidates for the H untlngton Beach Union Hl&h School District Board ol Trustees have been presented in lhia space. The vie w1 of three more ca.ndida~ for lbe board are offer- ed toclly. There are 17 candidales In 111. They are ,.eking lhe two "~"' Qll ,thf AprU,ao ballot. Th~ vtcton . \Viii join three other men on the governing board of the 52-squa.re-mlle hllh scliool dJJt'.rlct, wb!Ch draws students from five elementary districts -Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Ocean View, Seal Beach and \Vestminster. roornlfll . Lut year money wu la.ken lrttll the conlln&ency 1ccount and Ille prior ~eer'1 _ _ _ _ • _ •urplus to pay about rroo.ooo in ralsts. G . Testimony "Wt won't be able to do that next 1ve s year.'' Ca!llt 1ald, .,because the money isn't there." I Fpllo\ving are candidates' answers to que~tlOtlS poseid by ~h~ Huntington Beach League of Wo- men Voter~. All candidates \vere given an opportunity to respond to the same questions. Both Lai\1ar1h · and Officer Ron Pomeroy of the police officers association argued that the purpose of the lawsuit was to establish a set of guidelines for • A ~hapely blonde waltres• today testified that Sugar Shack tavern ownt.r Mary Jo Jennings ordered her to write out a statemeot that was later filed in lA1 Angles Ftderal Court by ari attorney for the Los Alamitos bar. department warned lter she COllld be arrested for just being a waitress Jn the bar and that her children could be taken from her aiid placed in foster hemes. RUNNING FOR TWO SEATS Attorney Jone1 Jones Seeking 2 Board Posts Donald A. Jones. 9332 Silver Strand Drive, Huntington Beach, is an attorney. He is seeking seats on two school boards -in the high school district and In the Huntlngton Beach City (elementary) Dislrict. Q, What program or policy changes would you favor? "l have no specific changes in program or policy in mind. To take a definlte position on any such point would require that I have at least as much information on the subject as the present board members. I do not. ··A doctor who makes a diagnosis and recommends treatment w l thou t personally examining the patient, or an attorney who makes a judgment ~'ilhout en independent examination cf the facts, generally find themselves in untenable positions. !\fy tendency is to fully examine every issue presented and then make a decision thereon ." Q. How do you Jeel about unification? ''First, I do not belle•e lhat the tntttue In the siz.e of an organization lends Itself to automatic improvement. On the contrary, the larger an organization is, the more difficult it ls to administer It properly. "Second. I strongly favor voter access to elected representatives. A Board member can better serve a smaller segment of the population by keeplng communication lines open. "Thus, if any unllicalion Is to lake place, and 1 don'l particularly favor It, such unification should be done so as to maintain smaller districts. The voters can then be beller acquainted with their representatives and elect those that are doing Lhe best job for them.·' Q. \\'bat are your feeUng1 on teachtr tenure? "I favor teacher tenure 100 percent and am totally opposed to those who would abolish it. Contrary to those ~·ho would abolish It, t feel th3l tenure is a major factor In obtaining and keeping competent personnel. Proper procedures coupled with diligent appllcatlon thereof, are suffice.int to protect agalnst the incompetent. "I do not belleve. however, that teacher tenure should protect anyone who advocates the overthrow of our government by force and violence. It is foolish to grant such persons freedom !'O that they may teach our chlldren to deprive au of us of freedom." Q. How would a voucher system or 1tatewlde property tu affect local school fiaanees? "I feel the voucher system ·would destroy our 15ehool system. Far many ycaMS, certainly, private schools \\'Ould increase sharply In number. The compel!Uon would tend to decr~ase quaUty of education by 1ower1 n g !ilandards In order to attract students. Thus we \•;ould have, al best. a several years drought in education, and perhaps a pern1anent one "The statewide property tax ~·C1u!d perhaps eliminate th' need for unification by obtaining the broadest possible tax base. I do not fa vor 11. however. since l feel that property t;i-..: alone i1 a poor method of financing school~ Establishing a higher rnin1rnum t;ix r:ite that can be Imposed v.·ithout election by a school di st rict, coupled v:hh fl dd1\lonal funds from a different and broader \:ix base, \vould accomplish a great deal 1note." Beach Woman's Death 1'rial 8ct A Huntington Be:.ch woman arcu~:d of Jdtllng her tt·llu8band 1'11rch 29 v.111 appear In Superior Court Friday to lac, charg's of murd'r. Dorl! Barret!, 40, of 18182 Sher l.alW. ~·as turned over to the hlg~r court following a pr~llmlRary htaring March Z9 ln West Orange County i\1unicipal Cour1, W!1tmln1ter. , She ls In cwtOOy 111 the women 1 &ect.lon ol the Orange County Jail. No bail has been set Mrs . Ba1TJ:tt wu arrested at the home of MlchJel Burke, 18641 ll11rtlett St., HuntJngton Beach, afler her ex-husband, Jame;s, wu &hot several times In the chest while m&kJng a coffee table in Burke's garage. SEEKS SECOND SEAT Attorney Logan Logan Advocates Program Support George Logan, 6111 Summerdale Drive. Huntington Beach . is an attorney and currently 11 a trustee of the Ocean View School District. Q, What program or policy cb1oge1 would you favor? "Emphasl! to retain dedicated personnel, and a t t r a c t outstanding new personnel to the district. "Competitive wage/benefit structure is mandatory, but cannot by Itself be sufficient to attract premium per10nnel. Direct Invol vement of board , administration and participation of educators in decision making on curriculum content is required to create a sense of opportunity for the professional educator. to provldt insight to board members and to oplimiz.e full utiliz.a\Jon of the academi c talents within the distrlct staff at all levels. "Providing full financial su pport lo academic programs and teaching staff is a board tunclion. "Certa&i boatd"mimbel'I have 1oe 16ng condemned lack of quality educational programs and facilities on defeated bond issue!i and tax overrides. Asking for a blank check ls unre11lstic, as ls blaming public apar.hy ~or adminlstreUve !ilaff. Educational programs arc a board responsibility ; unless each member understands, belleves In, knows the relative dollar value of each aspect of the program, he Is not doing his job. Further, unless public understanding is achieved, support for additional funding cannot be anticipated. Boards mwt inform the ccmmunlty, sell their a cad em I c programs and motivate public support th,mselve!i. "Re-tslablis~ community confidence in the board ttirough personal conduct, sensitivity to the community, improved academic programs, and person a I extension of board members thelll3elves to gain interface with parent! and studenta whom they serve. "Quality education. and fair return for tax dollars Jnvested is the Board responsibUity. Meaningless tirades on individual philosophy, personal attacks on fellow board members and o t h e r responsible segments of the community have seriously affected respect for the district and impaired prof es 1 Ion a I educators' abilities to function properly. Board seats arc not a suitable platform for partisan differences and similar activities. "Revise district programs lo provide meaningful, curreiltly utilii.a.ble skill:. and talents for non-contlnulng students. "Total vocational currit'Ula must be updated and in~ated into the regular academic program. to avoid complete compartmentalization of s l u d c n t s prematurely in their high school careers. Examination should be centered about basic trade areas similar to current trade school programs." Q. How do you feel 1boul unification? "Unification is inevitable, and the time element prior to forced unification is critical. Leadership for element1ry school distrlct:ii to develop a workable and palatable plan for several unified dl!tricls must come from the high school board. Preservallon of ll c ~de m I c continuity, local control of the di11trict:<1, and community goals and identity arc mandatory.'• Q. Whal ire your feelln1t on leaeher ttnure? ··tenure Is stale-mandated and hx:al boards have llttle influen ce on i\..s regulation. Profess1on1l educators are tnllst seriously affecttd by Jnequit ies wlfh!n the system and changes to and/or .a replacement sy1tem 1hould be a product of professional educ al or 1 esiablishing standards of performance, conduct and a review system. Strong education11I a~iatlonr within dialrlcll. and re\'iew panels of his pecr'g ar' the \uught~t 1urirs 11n educator can fact." Q. How would 1 ,·ouC'ber 1y1iem or tlate\lldr property tax affect 1cbool finances? "Any systtm to expand financing tu sta\ewidt prop or 11 on I potrnlially threatens local control. l would prefer to promote and sell educatiun rxre!lcnc' to the ttxpAytrs, for their ~vpport A ('onsclenllous bonrd wllh ootstanding prni;:roms 1u1d demonstrated student ai•h1l'\cn11·nt will never lack adequate lw1d1ni." " HAS MIXED FEELINGS T1ach1r L1Wson i Lawson Urges Study on Bonds future ncgqlialiona. ''It the council Is going t-0 do what it pleaaea why bother to sit down at the table and lalk?" Pomeroy asked. He said that his association would have been satisfied ii the council had called for a rene1otlatlon or the salary raises last SepU!mber Instead of rejecting the .agreements reached with the city administrators. "lt'1 a darn shame when you have to hive an outside perscn {the court) make them stick to the agreement.'' Pomeroy commented. The police officers association has riled a 1uit claiming $650,000 in damages to the association as a result of the dispute. The figure does not represent the diffe rence between the raises requested end the hikes granted. The firemen have a similar claim on file, but have not set a particular damage figure. Both LaMarsh and Pomeroy denied that their member• were militant as a result of the dispute. "The men's aUttude ls that what \\'e \\'ant, other than the money, is a policy on procedures on how "'"e establish \vages," LaMarsh explained. "We are asking the city t.o set guidelines so it does not become an arbitrary Big Daddy syndrome where they make decl!ions without ba!iis." In rejecting the agreements last Jon K. Lawgon is a teacher at September. aeveral cowicllmen indicated La~·ndale High School. He lives at 6591 they·were mlndful of the growing number Kilda Circle, Huntiogton Beach. of layoffs in West Orange Couoty and possible budget problems the city might Q. What program or policy cb11n&'' encounter from a decline in revenue. woald you favor? "On Tuesday, ~larch 9, The police arsoclatlon already has the voters of Huntington Beach Union begun surveying 1alarle1 in ccomparable High School District defeated , for the cities Jn preparation for meeUngs over d · ne1t year's salaries. secon lime. an attempt at a lax The aiaoclatlons will meet with the -Override. In July, the tax rate will revert city'a personnel director, Ed Thompson, back to 85 ctnts, and, therefore, the main before July and then the meet and confer Freda Garofalo told Deputy District Attorney Bruce Patterson and the first siit member jury in Orange County Superior Court history that abe objected to the statement and was told by Mrs. JeMings: ''You can tell lie upon Ile but above all don't tell the truth ." She identified a document aubmitted as evidence a1 a trped copy of that statemeot and condemned the ,ignaturt! on the document as a forgery or her own signature. Mr1. Garofalo also condemned as lies a number of stat,ments in the document referring lo alleged harassment of entertainers and waitresses at the Los Alamitos tavern durPJa: 1 period last summer when nude 48octng was offered at the bar. Mrs. Jennings, a 34-yeal'--Old redhead , "'as one of the featured pei'formers at the tavern and she was booked by Los Alamitos police on 11 number of occasions for lewd conduct. She was 1entenced last November to 90 days In jail following htt conviction on charge.a of lewd cooduct and bidecent e1posure. That sentence has been stayed pending the outcome of her appeal against the con~ction. Mrs. Garofalo today rejected the !itatement's allqaU001 that off i·c er Thomas Hicks of lhe'Los Alamitos pollce Newport Woman To Write Book On Pat Nixon l!!Oal of school board should be one of sessions will continue with the city N~wport Beach relident Gloria Seelye maintaining the level and quality of administrators befort! the agreements has been tapped for the prize assignment education as it now stands. To are submitted to th' city council. of writing Pat Nixon't biography. accomplish that goal wlll require 1 grea l Mrs. Seelye, of 11~ Harbor Island Road. \! fonner woman's edllor of tbe Los deal of study and reneclion before an From Page l Angeles Herald Eumlner, a long time answer can be reached."' family friend or the Nbon1 and a native Q. How do yn11 feel abbvt ualficaUoa? SCH 00 LS • • • of Whittler, the Pre1ldeol'1 home town. ".\lixed." News of the eelectlon wu rele&Hd Q. \\'hat are your feelings oo teacher how lo learn. It can no longer be today In a story from Wuhlngton by UPI • I 'T !he goal of education to mere!" train correspondent Helen Thomas. .aeiin. ' e:,ure! Vt'lt,y, Jf -w'I: dlda't J According to &he UPI, the Ne-,.t ha'' !hat law w Id •-bl 1 t children to slmpl" respond to their ~,-. e wou lJ'I: a e o ge J Beach resident was one o{ 11\'etll rid of the <lead~·ood around here!' environment The.y must team how to be writers who put in a bid to do .• book ·•·Good teachers don't need tenu re; creative end act upon I heir about Mn. Nixon. ,• p;:ior teachers shouldn 't have it!' environment." ''She trwla me and I'm thrilled," aald ·· 'R1.ght now 1·1 prov1·des a b II Plum: "I'm a little old fashioned .. n um re a Mrs. Seely,, who ba1 volumlnous flles-<ln for mediocrity.' Sc hoo\1 are for reading, writing and the President's wife and 111 well along "These are three charges often heard arithmetic. We'v' gotten too much h d lh ~'hen the subject of teacher tenure comes td4catJonal jargon and too mucb with her book. whic Bhoul go to e \lh ul•· h publisher, Prentiss-Hall, tbls fall. up, Teacher tenure is a very 11ecessary experimentation w out rea ~ In t Is 1 d d 1 part of the educational system. The laws district." Dark-haired, b ue~ye an vtvac ous, 1 whe was a atudent at WhltUer High ~ vlng teachers tenure were originally Huard! "The key Issue is who do you School when Mrs. Nlxon taught bwlneis eslgned to protect teachers from feel Is best qualified. Al a professor or course• there. She remembers Mrs. political Jn I er fer enc e, general management at USC I understand th e harassrnent. and outside pressure. There problems of education, research and Nixon as the "youna;est and prettiest" of is a myth abollt tenure that once the managing a achoo! district." all the teachers. probationary period ends the teacher is Mra. Seelye has followed President assured a job until retirement or death. Nixon's career since he first ran for This Is not true. The Jaw provides for a T Kid Congress in 1941. She is closely due process procedure than can end In 11pa111a1·os nap acquainted with the Nixons' family and dismissal. There are about twelve close friends. including Mrs. Helene reasons for dismissing a t'acbcr. If a J11du slriaJ Leade1· Drown of Rolllng Hiiis. also a former cause for dismisslll arises, then it teacher at Whittier High. becomes !he responsibility of the ~IONTEVIOEO (U Pl) -Ricardo ~lrs. Nixon approached the biography administration and/or the board to take Ferres Terra. a Uruguayan industrialist. proiect with some trepidation but is action. teachers should nol be dismi·ssed being completely cooperative. Mrs. apparently ~·as kidnaped by leftist s et h h d a n be of lnle · "They ar' all ties ." she said. Patterson said he will prove in U1e two- day trial that Mrs. Jennings needed the* false statemenl to seek federal court action that would halt lAs AlamitO.! police action against the contrcver!lll tavern . Mrs. Jennlna:s is formally charged with. subornaUon of perjury, sollclllng the ' commission of a crime and offering and. preparing false evidence. Opening statements today w e r e witnessed by a party of students from Saddleback High School and they were welcomed by Judge Samuel Drelzen with the com ment that they were viewing the first six member jury in Superior Court history. Both lawyers and the defendant agreed to the precedent ~ setting jury reduclio• ?tfonday and witnessed for \be first lime the seating or a four-woman, two-man panel wllh a male a_lternate juror. Huge Blaze Ravages . Tiny Kentucky City 1'10RGANTOWN, Ky. (UPI) -Fire' destroyed an entire city block in the do~'t'ltown area of this m o n l h central Kentucky city !\.1onday night, causing an estimated $1 million damage. Mayor Richard Saling said at least 10 businesses, including two hotels and lw• restaurants, were destroyed. The fire began in an abandone& rileeting ha\1 which last week had bef:rt> condemned by state fire officials. DAILY PILOT O~AHGt COAST l'Ull.llHIHQ COMl'AH"I' Robert N. Wt•' l'rnllMnt W l'lllllltllef J.1:1r: •· c .. ,s..,· Vic:• l'rald.r.t I ncl G-•i M•,....r lh1111•1 K•••ir Efllot'. l~'"''' A. Mur,lroi111· Mtnttlnl lfl'91 Al111 Dirlr:h1 'Well Ol"•lltO C:-ly UltW Alllert W. l1f11 AMDCJllM> lflllr H1111tl .... 11 .._. Offtc• 17a7i •••ch ltw1•••t4 M11li111 A.lclr1H : r.o. •·c 790, •2••• .,_ "'"'" UOUM ._di, m l'••I A- C•hl Men: Dll W•I l1y $!,.., MtwPOrt IMCll: »11 HfWlll)f1 ..,!wt,. hn Cl-It: JIOS HW111 II C.ITlltlt "811 l•l'P••• 1714J '4Z-4JJI Cl•tnM An.rttd.t '41·167. for arbitrary or unsubstantiated reasons. e ye as a um r rvic~·s The present law gives such protection .. , Tupamaros terrorists today, Uruguayan \\.'ilh her at the \Vhite House and at the ~=-~:.· ~~t, ro!:"':'~"n:S~.~~ Q. How would a voucher •"•tem or police sources said. Nixons' villa, ''La Casa Pacifica," at San .i1•i.1 """"' .. """~-'-""* ' Clemenle ~• . too ••odll(td ·"'1t!ltllt .,...;i.1 -1 ~tattwlde property tax affect achoo! They said he dillappeared moments · m11t1e11 ti ~"' ....,_._ .--fl ., 'Th Mrs. Seelye also plans in-depth oaoce1 , ' e \l()Ucher syslem Is after he left his home for v;ork in an Interviews with the President and the S.cond ci.u -''"' 1Nld 11 "-""' .__,. probably one of the grtate1t threats to automobile. The car was f 0 u n d •nil 0.1. M ... , etnltfT!i.. IWlcr\JltlM publlc education today. The system would Nixons' two daughters, Tricia and Julie, ~~·~~i.~11~:: ,,:r.,:~t.:,.,'h~~~ ~ require more funding than at present. ,~·;b~on;;d:;o;n•;;d~w~i;lh~th~e~e;ng;in;•;;;ru;n;;n~in;g·;;;;;;;;;;;;;b;;e~lo;re~sh;•;wr;;;•;;P•;;up;;;h•;;';boo;;;;k·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ The system would be a waste of human resources. The system would lead to cxt,nsive duplication of facililie1 and services. The syst'm introd11ces a 'market place concept.' It introd11ce1 a profit motive into education. It would create compeUtloo in advertising for students. "Some basic questions: -How much more wlll it cost? -Would it prevent or encourage social and religious stratification and segregation? -Who would accept the disadvantaged child, low IQ child, and those vdth behavioral problems? -Would the American tradition or separation of churdl and state be violated? -Would pttrents and 1tudents be exploited by profit-seek.inc sthools?11 Huntington Teen Held in Hit-run Police lhis morntna: arrefted .an 18- ye ar-old Huntington Beath youlh on felony hit and run driving charges after an accident in which two of' his passengers were lnjurtct Ofricer~ said Edward Belt Brumley, 20021 Port Circle. wa.s drivlfta a light foreign stdtn which rolled over on Pacific Coast Highway in the bluffs art•. Police said Brumley was aeen Je1vlng the crashed automobile by a wltneis who observed the 5: ts a.m. crnsh. Although pas:sengers Jostph A. Reed, 21. and rt-Obert 0. Callahan, 2(1, both or S.ant& Ana, were taken to lluntlngton tntercommunity Hospital by 3mbulance, neither was admitted . Reed, a linotype maC'hinlst, la the ton of William Reed, publlc Information officer for the city of llunllnglon Beach. - SEASAME STREET Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn't had a carpet installation by Alden 's. In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block. The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven 't, bring her in with you .) IANTA ANA. OltANOI. TUITIN Call , • , ALDIN'I RID HILL CAIPITI & ORAPlllll 1W4 ll'\'I~ Tultln, C.I. IJ .. S)W ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I i ;I -' . ·- Tur$d.ty, April ll, 1971 H DAILY PILOT 3 s. Troops Near Fire Base 6 Blo ckbuster Gunmen Net $250,000 Bo1nhs ·Hit Bank Robbed W hile Hos tages Held Nea rby Red Forces NEW YORK (AP) -Two masked holdup men escaped "'ith $25U,000 from a branch bank in Brook.1)11 today "'hile a third companion held 13 persons hostage in a Staten Island home, police said. Police said ~'me of the hostages, held all night, were related to lhe bank'!! manager. Charles A. Di Sogra, who also was held captive and forced to open the bank's vault. All were re I eased unharmed, police said. U.S. For ces Will R emain In SE Asia WASmNGTON (UPI) -Defense: gecretary Melvin R. Laird said today the United States will maintain naval and air fortts in SoU:theast Asia, indefinitely but there "'ill be no fresh commitments of •:massive manpo..,.-er" there. Laird also said the American combat role in Vietnam will end this summer, but that U.S. forces will be involved in some forms or defensive combat beyoad thal point . He refused to say when the American presence in Vietnam might completely end . In a Pentagon news conference, the defense secretary said the Vietnamizalion program is succeeding and that the new thrust of Defense Department planning is aimed for when the war is ended. In this respect , he said, the United States should give financial and arms assistance to the nations of Southeast Asia that \\'OU!d enable them to make the ~est possible use of their own manpower ~urces. ,; '\Ile should not make ilie mi~take of fommitUng massive manpower to that .fart of the world," Laird ~a.id. "Military 1-ssistance -yes; Amer.1can ground Jroops. manpower -no." Laird said he does, ho\vever, foresee ·the need to maintain other forms of U.S. 1Tiilitary presence in Asia. He declined to p:imment on whether they would play a ;combat role and left open the length of µme they might be needed. ; The defense secretary summarized: "To say that we would not have a 41resence in Asia (after Vietnam) under :the strategy of realistic deterrence .• , iwould certainly be misleading. ' "I v.·ould envision that U.S. presence in q.,sia as far as naval forces are 'concerned, as far as air power is <concerned. that this would be a part or ·the realistic deterrent we would maintain ~n Asia.'' • \\'ithout making any prediction of a specific date, Laird said combat 'responsibility in Vietnam will be. turned over to the Vietnamese command ''in the ~~ummer period ." He denied that the }llauling suffered by the S o u t h !'Vietnamese army during the invasion or ).aos had slowed down this process. I ·Grove Woman , ~Killed by Car A young woman was killed and her roommmale critically injured Monday night in Garden Grove when they were litruck while walking across Chapman A venue near Magnolia Street. police reported. Oe;.d nn arri11al at Palm Harbor Hospital at 7:M p.m. was Janet Mar lene Bougher. of Garden . Grove. H 4! r companion, ~1arlena Henhne, 17, suffered fractures of the pelvis and right leg. Driver of the car which ~·as westbound nn Chapman ~·as Tim Brown, 16, of Garden Gro\'e. He was not cited but the accident is under investigation, officers l aid. Pollet said the three armed men inva(ied Di Sogra's home on Staten Island P.fonday night and took him to hi.!! sister- Jn.Jaw's home where a toLal of 13 people wtte held hostage. \Vhllt one bandit remaJned V.'ilh the hostages, two of the men forced Di Sogra to ~rive them to the Ft. Hamilton branch of Community National Bank and Trust C:Ompany in Brooklyn at about 7:30 il.m. and ordered him to open the bank 's sale. "*" :« ;,f l • • ·~ \ ..... ' ,;. • .,'1'!. 4'.~;..,.. ~ ~~~· ......... · ... "' lol-;. U,I Tl l .... 19 S·t·r·e·t-c•h A Golden m ant I e ground squirrel stretches to full heig~t for peanut offered by fri~nd in Bend, Ore., "'here spring sun is luring squirrels out of their \Vinter sleeping places. Wounded Deputy In Good Sl1ape A 11heriff's depuly who accidentally &hot himself while cleaning his gun Monday night today was reported to be doing well and recovering rapidly in Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital . Sheriff Capt. James Broadbelt said deputy Darryl Sot.her, 23, of Santa Ana, shot himself in the lo\\·er abdomen at his home while he was replacing his freshly cleaned revolver in its holster- Sother was rushed to the C:OSta Mesa hospital for surgery. Doctors quickly removed the bullet from his intestinal tract. "It was a freak accident," Broadbelt said. "We're only too glad this yoWlg man came out of it as well as he did." Water Worries Quality in Coun ty Under Fire • •0range County Is getting poor quality Wattr from the Metropolitan \V1lrr rfistrict and will continue to get it if Wes.sure iso't applied, accordlng 11' t;ngdon "Don" Owen. manager of the <:p"_!-nge County \Vater District To bolster his claim , Owen ha:i: asktd tc; county's 13 local water agencie11 to rtake a door-to-door survey in selected _.,,, to determine the amount of moMy tRlng spent by residents and business rnns to buy water toflenen or bottled \later and to replace ficilkies damaged ~ poor quality V.'aler. "Ov•en said the Colorado River wattr li:iw being delivered to the county MWD i of poor quality because its toll'll s.wlved solids tTDSl is averaging about s parts per million and rising. The gher the TDS. the higher the ••II c;t>ntf>nt and the harder the water. tc<.'l'lrding ta the water executive. ()vten w11nt.~ f\fWD tn deli vt.r Northern Californi• wat.u to the county beginning In 1974 but he does not hc:>lieve the agency \l'i!I do it. The northern water has an average TDS of 300 ppm . Qwen charges tha l MWD has contracts for the purchase of state ~'ater and is building distr ibution facilities throughout thf'-southland, but plans lo buy less northern water than it has a right to purchase. He. said the rea11on for this is that Colorado River water is cheaper to furnish . 0v.'en's stand Is backed by two local \l'ater department e1eculim. G u 1 1.enain. head of the Anaheim Waler Dcparlment, flatly s1ys he fel11 the u~ of Colorado Ri ver waltr for domesti c purposes should be discontinued. John Fon~y. Orange water ~uperintendent, e~Umales that 20 pertenl of the city'• waler customers are u~ing water 30ftenlng dtvict3 ttnd ttn equal number are buying botUed water. ) Police said Di Sogra aoparently had only part of the combination of the two. lock safe, and the holdupmen had to wait for a woman cashier to arrive to open the lower part of the vault. The men escaped with $250,000, leaving several bank employes h a n d c u f f e d toge ther, police said. They forffii Di Sogra to drive them away from the base, dropped him off and abandoned the cat 20 blocks away. Girl's Mother Held With Rape Suspect A young Camp Pendleton Marine faces charges of forcible rape and auto theft in what police in San C\emf'nte described today as a sordid case of the violation nf a 14·yea'r.old girl -an act suggested and encouraged by her mother. Robert Dean Smith, 21, a member of the 2nd Infantry Training Regiment at Pendleton. was arraigned this morning on the thrtt felony charges in South Orange County Municipal Court. His bail ha:i been set at $12.500. The mother. a San Clemente resident. also was reported in custody at Orange . County Jail, awaiting court action on two counts of being an accompolice in the two rapes, which assertedly occurred earlier this year in a San Clemente motel room. She was arrested earlier in the week in the South County Court.! building where she went to answer a bench warrant on a traffic violation. Officers :said District Attorrley's aides recognized the woman in court and ordered her arrest. Police allege that the first incident occurred Feb. 23 when Smith and 1. companion were in the woman's motel room . The mother assertedly encouraged the Marine to violate her virgin daughter "to ., I . •• • ,, ' . . . • ' . • • Button, B11tto11 Hugging her attendant's leg, Button, a nine·month·old chimpanzee, looks as though she has just seen a ghost. But attendants at the San Diego Zoo say Button looks that \vay most of the time. She was born in Ghana and has just recently taken up residence al the zoo. I l ! SAIGON rU PI ) -Six thousand Soutb Vietnamese troops operating be.hind the greatest U.S. BS2 bombing attacks in eight months moved to within 11 mile of be.sieged Fire Base 6 today In twin atlacks from the North and South. The U.S. Air Force dropped two more 7\l:·ton blockbuster bombs en the Coll)Jllunist forces. The counteroffensive to relieve the base 300 miles north of Saigon near the converging bordefs or Laos, South Vietnam and Cambodia jumped off thi, morning when a force of 1 , $ O O pl\ratroopers landed from · U • S • helicopters three miles south or the base and 4,500 infantrymen landed 'two miles to the South. A spokesman said the two forces met no resistance as the paratroopers advanced two miles to within a mile of the base and the northern group advanced a mile. But Communists around the base sent up such a heavy barrage of antiaircraft fire one of four South Vietnames helicopters reaching the base was shot down . B52s have hit Communist bu.Jldups .around the base for a week and today a spokesman said 18 of the big bombers dropped 540 tons in what he called the heaviest one.day bombing since Aug. 8, 1970. In additon, Cl30 cargo planes parachuled in two more of the 7li2·ton bombs which devastate an area the size o' a city block. The first two blockbusters to be used against Communist troops were dropped ~1onday, catm her down." Z d• }Zi}} S t d co~~~~~~fi~~orsa~~d :u~=~~i:n~ h:~~~!~ 0 1ac :\._ er u s pee e A health food distributor who allegedly J ud~e Sentences H ealtli Food Distributor coming from a bedroom . claimed that some of his products cured The second incident ellegedly nccurred I c d' s hh • D ti heart and cancer conditions in hil on March 2 at the same motel. 11 oe S ta n1g ea } c11sto1ners pleaded guilty Monday te The neighbor then notified police, who charges of violaling !he state's health and launched an investigation. safety codes. Smith, authorities claim, was absent· SARATOGA (UPI) -Authorities rear ago," a Santa Clara County homicide Kurt W. Donsbach, 52, of Garden. without-leave at the time of the alleged the ZOdiac killer may have struck aga in detective said. "And all lhree could well Grove, was fined $750 in West Orange h in the fatal stabbing of an 18-year-nld be the work of the so-called Zodiac." County Municipal Court and placed on sexuaJ acls. After the second incident e Saratoga High School coed whose body two years probation. He was ordered te assertedly took the woman's auto and was found Monday by her father. The area \\'here Miss Bilek'!! body was pay by July 30 costs of $2,000 incurred by crPedoil\cecar~:id 1~. Marine waa found Cbarles Bilek, an IMB engineer who found is only a short distance from the the state's Food and Drug Administration ,... brought his ramily to this country as 5eene \Yhere two young girls were slain division. as leep in the auto last weekenndd 0~.~e refugees from Hungary, joined sheriff's Aug. 3. 1969. Donsbach's arrest Dec. 12 at his 11ide of a highway in Gila Be • /1.1 IZ., deputies in an all-night search for his i\n <\utopsy Monday revealed the girl Nature'11 Way health food store in Garden Highway patrolmen there returned the daughter Kathy, who had been missing had been stabbed 49 times with a short-Grove followed a fi\le month investigation auto to California and Smith was released since Sunday. bladed knife. Autop~y surgeons told of his products and advertising by district lo military authorities at Cam P Bilek found the body of the blonde sh eriff's investigators the stabbing of attorney's investigators and state agents. Pendleton. honor student in 110me bushes off a hiking Miss Bilek appeared to be related to the Officers said Donsbach claimed that Local police were notified of the man's trail on the grounds of the Villa Montalvo 1969 stabhings. several of his preparations cured heart. arrest Monday by base provo9t marshal 1'1useum. Deputies said Miss Bile.k's long-sleeved cancer and stomach ulcer conditions ai~e~ it h , s arraignment included 1 "One thing 's certain. Miss Bilek·s blo11:.e \vas partially torn from her body suffered by his patrons. They said the charge of granit theft auto, making the murder is almost a carbon copy of a and there was no evidence of se1ual health foods so advertised by DoMbach \\'Oman a victim in one felony and the ,_:d::.o::.ub::.lec_ki::..::.lli::.•::g_h_er_e_a_l_m_o_st_t•_·o:__:y~e::.•:_":__:_•::.•--'"_"_lt_. ____________ Pc_r_o_ve_d_t_o_he_w_o_r_th_le_ss_. ----- defendant in two others. The woman's car, officers said, had 21.000 miles Jogged on It after it was taken from San Clemente. Police said the girt, a San Clemente High School student, was released to custody of family friends pending legal action against her mother. Qu ake-dama ged Strip Repaired Traffic will be back to nonna! Wednesday on the Golden State Freeway in earthquake--Oevastated Sylmar and surrounding area, completing an emergency repair program two weeks early. State Division of Highways offici als credited contractors signed to seven emergency repair programs adding up to •t.89 million with speedy restoration. A normal daily load of 77 .000 vehicles ~·ill have use of the Gnlden Stale Freeway, while 36,000 more ... ,.ill have dire.et access to the Anti.lope V a 11 e y Freeway. Coming just 64 days after the Feb. 9 quake, the reopening includes repair of 10 bridges wrecked and IO others badly damaged. A major ~hare or the 24-hour free\\'ay repair \\·as done by Guy F. Atki11!10n Company of Long Beach. Billboard Owne rs Wage War on Vandals DETROlT IUPI) -Billboard nwner' escalating their war with sign-chopping vigilantes. are using steel poles inft:tead of wood on new signs. "Let's gee them' cut down steel poles.'' ,;aid Jru;eph Jones, general sale~ manager or a • Lan sing advertising firm which has 1o$l five ~·ooden·poled billboard!! since February. Eighty-one billboards in southe1stern Michigan havt been sawed down in the l1u1t two mon1hs ln .midnight raid~. Several Ann Arbor·area youth~ have been charged with some of the incidents. ·' Winston ' --+-r"/ Real and rich and good e n 11 • • •n•e•~• ••t•f...,(t•"•' .,.., •• ••• •• • • '201111. "taf, LJ mg.fllCOtll'tl IW.I* tlplM. Flt Ripon NIN. '7IL I ' 'I I I ' . I, I 4 DAI\. V PllDl \ \ •· I ~ps Youths Take To Highways '8y THOMAS MURPIUNE Of tlM O•Ll'r Plitt •t•ff VACA110N REVIS ITED: Now that the traffic has pretty well cleared up back to the normal bumpe~bu.m~ on Pacific Cout IU&ftway, It's pretty clear today where the kids spent their sprin& vacation. On the roads, that's where. When you read the reporta. it appeared thal everbyody almost everyplace was quietly gearing up during pre-Euter Week days for a J>O!Slble invasion of the youth corps. Meanwhile, they all made pronouncements that the kids wouldn"t 1how up at their place. TutldiJ, Aprll U, 1971 One Mi9ht11 Roar New Peace Plan ' Partialf Pullback , I By Israel Seen ' I ' I I I • By United Ptt11 latunat!ouJ i I Meanwhile, it waa revealed that rain · Israel, aft.er week.~ of agonlling study, has agreed to a limited withdrawal from the ~ Canal to permit the waterway to be opened for international traffic, diplomatic source1 reported today in Jerusalem. The proposal• may be 1ubmilted to Washington ne1t week, the IOUTctS said. The diplomats said any withdrawal would be accompanjed by an elaborate system of safeguards aaairuit possible deterioration of the military bllanct of power in the area. lll'1el also will apecily that no Egyptian or Russian troops cross the canal after the Israeli withdrawa4 the sources said. floods swept Amman, Jordan today, forcing King Hussein 's troop! to interrupt a hou.ae-to-bouae search for Palestinian guerrlllu. Troop1 instead went to work rescuing Inhabitant... E. Pakistan Forces Begin To Crumble CHUADANGA, East Pakistan (AP) - ; •· ' * Newport Beach polict. in advance of the spring free Ume for 1tudents, restated their earlier anl'loWlcement that "Bal Week is Dead." An American gunner (L) holds hi11 ear11 to protect them from roar of 175mm gun as it is fired against Communist concentrations around Firebase 6. The bue has been under assault for two weeks. Israel has been under pressure from the United Stale$ to make a counterpropoaal to Egyptian president Anwar Sadat's recent call for an Israeli withdrawal that would permlt the canal to be opened pending a full Middle East peace settlement Armed resistance in much of rebellious East Pakistan is crumbling fast before the swiftly advancing columns of President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan's army from West Pakistan. A reported shipment of Indian arms to the !ecessionist forces is likely to do little to prolong the civil war, or war of liberation, as the Bengalis describe lheir struggle. One prominent officer even reminded reporters. "I killed it myself ... " MEA.'l'WRILE IN LAGUNA 8 e a c h , Jawmt.n got a touch nervous and prepared for anything while predicting nothing. In Huntington Beach, the police had their sandmen ready to go. That's the police department's plainclothes beach patrol that requires little more for dress than a pair of Hang 10 trunks, sandah and handcuffs tucked away somewhere. Out of Death Valley at Ballarat, officers of the law were predicting few young people would be foolish enough to show up for the so-called religious festival. But S.000 finally made It at one time to brave sandstorms a n d rattlesnakes. THE COLORADO River got a pretty big play aions a 200-mlle stretch of Its banks. The trick here was apparently a competition to see whelher lawmen on the Arizona side or the California side could arrest the greatest number of wayward youths. Arizona apparently won. Out of the estimated 500 arrests in total. Yuma County Sheriff Travis Yancey claimed 350 arrests, thus leaving California authorities on the short end of the count. * Back in Newport Beach, police admitted their arrests were up by 163 when compared to spring vacation of 1970. Th~. they sugiest.d, might ~ a result of reduced activity. If that reasoning puzzles you, Newport officers explain it this way: If you don't have too much to do, you have more time to watch and the more you look tht more likely you are to find wrongdoers. So there. * IF IN THE SUM it's true that the good old Orange Coast got leu play during Euter Week than in previous years. lhen one thing is certain. The kids 6Ure missed a weather bet. Not in recent memory can coast watchers recall a nicer spring vacation with bright sun, warm days and variable breezes. And 1s soon as Easter Week ended, Ll:le toes rolled In. Avocado Rustling Rewards Increased LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Rewards for !he apprehension and conviction of avocado rustlers have been increased to S550 because of an increase of thefts of the fruit from Southern California groves. Growers said Monday avocados lately ha ve been the object of massive thefts . because they are the most expensive American·grown fruit on the market at about is cents each. AmericanPingPongTeam Will See China's Premier PEKING CAP) -Members or lhe U.S. table tennis team are excitedly looking forward to what promise• to be the: high point of their week'• viait to China. a meeting Wednesday with Premier Chou En-la!. The prospect of talking with the Communist Chinese leader outweighed the team's anticipation of It& firtt matches this afternoon with Chinese ~nnis start. The 15 Americans were told this morning of the meeting with Chou as they left their hotel to practice for todJy 's matches. The American-Chinese table tennis bouts were expected to attract a capacity stadium crowd of 20,000 &pecl8tor!. U.S. team member John Tannehill, a university student from Middleport, Ohio. returned to the hotel after becoming ill this morning, raising the pr0$pect that the American team may be one man &hort in the exhibition matches. The other members of the U.S. team were in high spirits and eager for their first meetings with Chinese players. Besides their meeting with Chou, the Americans on Wednesday will visit the Summer Palace on Peklng's outskirts and attend a performance of a Chinese opera. They fly to Shanghai Thursday morning, where they will sp(lnd the night 'I do hope it'• not polluted!• before · golng on to Canton. They are scheduled to return to Hong Kong S.turd1y. The weather was clear and sunny Monday as the American visitors journeyed to the 2,400-year-old Great Wall of China, and Tannehill pronounced tt a "muaeum piece" which lhe Chinese need as a reminder of their ancient culture. Said Mrs. Erroll Resek of New York City: "If this had been in the United _States it would have been a great tourist attraction and it would be mutilated and cheapened by discarded paper and aarbage." The Americans also visited Chinghua University and met a shy jet propultion expert who taught at the California Institute of Technology and returned to China in 1946. · The scientist. Chen Wei~hang, reported that his students cri!lclzed his teaching methods durfing the 1958 Cu I tu r a I Revolution , and "my eyes were opened." * * * Friendliest U.S. Player Nearly Left Off Team LOS ANGELES (APJ - A Santa Monica table tennis player with shoulder ltnglh hair was almost barred from a trip to Red China with the U.S. team becau.se "we were concerned about America's image," says a top table tennis official. The U.S. Table Tennis Association's executive committee in the end re:jected any such action against Glenn Cowan, 19, because "the lesson here: is that Americans are individuals," GI en n Herbst, Los Angeles, one of !our association vice presidents, said Monday. Cowan had made friends with the Red Chinese team at the recent world table tennis championships in Nagoya, Japan. He "rapped" with Chinese players on the team bus and exchanged gifts with them prior to the Red Chinese invitation to the U.S. team, which is in Chlna now. As it turned out, Herbst said, "a better cross section of Americans on the team ~uld not have been picked on purpose.·• Chicago Takes on Chill Teniperature Drops 28 Degrees iii T·wo Minutes • Callfortdo al' UNIT•O ,11$1 INTlllJrtl.TIONAL E1rlv mornlnt lo-. clou11 •n• lot (DV.,.td lh• $0\!i~1•n C.11ifarn•1 C!Mlt!• llM •"" bv•,,.., ott ti.!011 noon Cooi•'.11 1i'm111r11u•I• 1nd I (~.,'"" ot r1ln wt•t UPKted In !flt S1nt1 81•0..•I ., ... I! w•• moi.tlv 1unnv tod1v In L111 An111lff wl"' lncr111ln1 c10un1 t~PI<· !I'd llJl11tfl! •lld WtdllMdlV T~t ~11~1 1001¥ •nd WIMIM.OIV rtml•"l'O In !hi ·-IOI. °"'"''"'"' .... 11 lll>ICltd le .... l l9'1f to inoder1M IVI lrdllllon lr~m lmot Wtl _, .. !Cl .. t0< !ht L11 ... ,,. lflff ... In. Al IM ~ r...... Wl l I "'°'"'"' Ill'"' II lot tnll tlou41 '""'di 111.i•ntd otl toe' I -jJ....,,.._ tl .. r-. T... "*'flt•lfl ....ortt rt-fl0r1 .. t ill' Pin tM ti _.." ~!tft1 In "'' u-• ee-1 .,,11 .... 1, IM "'.,curv .,..,., u• .. N ....... Ill Ille t0t. 111 IM """ ... u ...... $Oll'llf f'llel'll ~ll' Ind f.o•KUI !MA .... ,. • ., lrlcludt l..Ol'lt •-11 ?f.J:I, ~II M .... 1(1 U.U. lurDln~ 11-1 .. Mt, WU-llMI, P•l'""lt IJ-11, .,,,.,..... ., .. , "''"' ... ''"' ...... 1.-lltf'lfltld 1'>1'. i.11 01-••••• 5-ttll ,,,..,. ......s. '"' Mot11t1 ... el'lli a.me Afll 1J.11. , THE BEST ll:11J•11fllp ''"' ,, ....... , ••• 1111h" l1 1111 of th1 .,..,,Jd't 1'1111 pop11!1r C•l'lll. thlpt. ~t•d II ~.11, "' .... DAILY' rrtOT. • 70 u r 1 WllllHk rotOCkSTtl ;........,--, Coostol '~""" IOCllY, L•tll1 Ytrlt"t •lllft ~'·~· •ftll """"".... .....,,, ~•111 wutt•lv 10 "' 15 ~l'IOll 111 10 .. ,..11, toot• "'" Wttl ... ~t> H•t h 10.WY 11 C<111t11 ,_,.,~'" ''"'' 1rom ,, ..... lflll ftll 1tmH•1•1trt\ 11nM ,,...,_ 5ll TO 1J, W1lor t-°''ITYr• Jt S1111, "loon, Tid es TUalo.r.Y 511<111\f Mt~ I .M•m JJ 5tt-,... l·•·""· 1 • WIO!o!ISOAY f •.,~1111 !!~II ,., )t F "' •ttw ~II 1 m QO M<o"" '"Oh , 10 JO t m. '·' $~o .. a low J 11 • "' f I iu" 1t1w'''''"" S1•1 1 n~ ... NliM>ft ll;lt• I, )C, I '?I, ltfl I f l 1."1 S111nnaer11 I V UNITIO PAall INTl•N-'TIONAL T"I IHft-•11.trt tlf'OH'ICI H tMtrHI 111 no. "li111Wtt1 1 .. Clllc1to Mcw11hv, , .. itl~l"I w"'! l\1d ~ • tl(lll'tl 111911 wl!h • c"11!~ • .S...tn, .. rNdlllt . TIMI (hf'lff •••II~ t~ wtr.,n 11 c111lr•1t Ulft OGmlfltltf tl'le fltlloll !HtJ, Hit~ 1"l lfUr1 c•~lrff ITIUCll 1t !flt nttlllf', ,..111111,,. If! l•lr tlltl .,,., -· "'" llul I (Qif lrl)llt ltlttlttd I 111\t o• '"~""'"'0'"'' ''""' 1ow1r Mlcl\111" IQ ~lt-1 ~0"'t llO"' lnOw!oll Wf\ r-r~ Ill w,0,.,1•1 1"0 w11•••n "•Dr•tltt .,.Mlt OH l ••,..,11 fl ifl Wll nttt<I II\ Cflllrfl Ntll•tl~I . Temperatures l 'f' UNIT•D Plllll INTtllNATIOMAL T...,..,•t11rt1 •.W trtc!,lllllwt !tr tllt J4-nour H•ltd tnall'lt •I 4 f .m, Albl"V ... ,.....,..,.,,. Atle"lt 801tol\ ClllCtflt (1"(1~114111 C~!tPll:I .... 091\•ltl' Dt1 Moiflh Dt!rllll lfldltNlllOlll L11 v"'' LOIA1'19tla Loul1•lll1 M-'>il Mlt"'I MUwtllkM Ml""'""'!t. H9w ()r .. _ MW YM Okltl'IOIN Cl"' ..... ,,,,., SllM'IMI "''*-"'~ ·-· "'"""''.,, ,.,,,.lid l!:t•ld cuv ·-S.rr..,,..,10 St Ll\llt S•lt Lt~t Cltv St" O'-S•11 f'rt!'CllCO k •lllt !Mlllfflt V•n.cai.r~tr WttlllllflOt'I ( Nitti .... Prtc. .. ~ .. " " " . " t.I 4-t .11 " .. " ,. ., '' " . " Q 11 _. ~I 11 71 " .. " .. " .. a " .. . .. "' .. , .. . .... .. . • a .. " ff .. . " f l '' " " " .. JJ u .. ~' " . .. " 51 ,. ... 61 JI .. " " " ~1 11 " " Prison Rampage In Turi1i, Italy Finally Quelled TURIN, Italy (AP) -Rioting convicts who wrecked and burned Turin's prison surrendered to police today and were led out in chains. The last 300 of 500 prisoners who went on a 24-hour rampa1e were marched out of lhe smoke and tear gas fumes in shackled groups of 10 and 15 and hustled away by guarded trucks to jails along the Riviera and a.11 far away as Sardinia. The rioters had howled demands for prison reform and quicker trials. Police, however, said the riot masked an attempted mass jailbreak. Two thousand helmeted riot police ringed the walls under orders to shoot any prisoner who tried to break away. But the tear gas and volleys of shots fired over their beach had broken the spirit or revolt. Two prisonen were treated for burns suffered When the rioters set fire to everything from mattrtlsfl-to the prison heating fuel tanks. several others were overcome by fumes. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan outlined to a news conference Sunday night a plan far opening the canal. It was basically the same 11 the one reported today by diplomatic .sources. Egypt rejected the Dayan plan on Monday. The diplomatic sources said the plan to be aent to Wubington conforms more or less with Dayan'• specifications that there must be e permanent cease-fire on the canal, 8n end to the 1tage of belligerer>ey and ironclad guarantees agaln!t any Russian or E&YPtian troop cr055ings. The Israeli move coincided with diplomatic reports in London that the Soviet Union has aent sophisticated new jets to Egypt because it fear1 the Israeli military has found way1 of circumventing the SAM2 and SAM3 missiles in the canal zone. Today, the Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv criticlud the U.S. State Department statement of Sunday night reporting the flow of IOphlsUcated Soviet weapoftry and aircraft to Egypt. Ma'ariv said there appeared to be "a collusion" between the United StateJ and Russia in a joint superpower effort to wrest further Israeli conceuions on the Middle East lssuea. The Israeli moves were reported as the heads of state of four Arab nations met in Cairo to discuss their common future, the Mideast situation and the Paleatl.nian crisis in Jordan. Egypt's council of ministers also met to coNlder mUIUfel to prepare Egypt for a posaJble new war with Israel. You waited 'til now There are few visible preparations for a lengthy guerrilla campaign. If one ever gel! under way, many prominent officials of Sheik Mujibur Rahman 's Awami League fear it inevitably will fall under Communist leadership. The Awami, which enjoys overWhelming support in East Pakistan, is led by middle-class professional men better equipped for courtroom battles than for guerrilla conflict in the swamps and rice fields. They believe· the tougher, mott disciplined Communists, backed by Marxists in neighboring India, would take over the direction of any guerrilla movement. The Pakistani army has been heavily reinforced from the country's western wing and is rapidly fanning out from Dacca in all directions. For miles around the provincial capital, the army is in firm control. Pakistan's green and white national flag flies from every second village hut. The people are afraid of informers and terrified of reprisals should they be identified as supporters of Bangla De:ih, the Bengali nation proclaimed by Sheik: Mujibur. Thousands have fled the capital, but Dacca nevertheless is slowly returning to something like normal. "We are functioning at gunpoint, we have no alternative," &aid one Ben gall civil &ervant. to get the deal of the year. Don't blow it on the wrong car. 1111 M1verlck 2·Door Sedan 1171 ford L TO Brough1m 2·0oor H1rdtop FORD Your Ford Dealer's got the right cars right now . Price ls only part of a good deal.11'1 what you Independe nt survey. Maverick offers a choice gatfor your money that counts. And your Ford of 2·door, 4·door and sporty Grabber. A9d Dealer can do ju1tlc1 to you on both 1core1. now there's a V·B to go with three economical Maverick's low price has always made It Sixes. simple to own. But what you get for that Ford LTD gives you the strength and luxury of simple price Is a compact economy car that 's c111 costing hundreds of dollars more and a ' not only simple to drive and maintain, but quiet ride that many of the more expensive also has the best frequency of repair record cars can't measure up to. Maybe that's why of any American car, according to a recent LTD is tops in its class in sales. Pinto, Maverick, Mustang, Torino, Ford: Better Ideas whose time la now, See and drive one at your Ford Dealer's today I ' • I, I • Fo1111~in VaDey Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 64, NO. 88, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIC 13, 1971 TEN CENTS Newport Land • Ill Huntington Auctioned Off Newport Beach Councilmen Monday night auctioned off nearly two acres of land the cily owm in Huntington Buch. and for the m03l part, the proceeds kept the mun1cipal fathers watching in .llunned silence. It was the last section of an BO-acre ~act Newport bought in Huntington Beach half a century ago at the! awesome price of $385 per acre. Acting Newport City Manager Phil Bettencourt fidgeted but kept writing the numbers down . Dennis St&-rel was at the council 4 Arrested • • In Alleged Daley Plot CHICAGO (UPI) -Four persons have been arrested in connection with an alleged plot l.o assassinate Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson and make a ''power grab" in the ensuing racial strife. The Chicago Daily News Monday quoted an unidentified source in the Cook County state's attorney's office as saying the four were part of a militant group planning to hire assassins to kill Daley and Jackson, then make a play for power. Earl Preslon Dillard, 37, and Howard Harris, 33, were arraigned Monday on charges of aolicitation to commit murder. Assistant State's Attoroey Marshall Weinberg said two other men, Charles \\lbiteslde, 35, and Terry Simmon!, 38, were arraigned Thursday on the 1amt ctiarge. Deputy Police Supt. John Kelly declined comment oo the dets ils of the IJrTe.sts, citing court decisions which protect the rights of the defendants. He did say, however, that others were being sought in connection with the alleged plot but declined to say how many others tnlght be involved. Dillard and Harris, described as t1nemployed laborers, were arrested Saturday and Whiteside and Simmons on Wednesday, police said. Felony Court Judge John P'. Hechinger ordered all four held on $5,000 bond each ind scheduled a hearing for April 21. Officers of the Chicago Police Gang Intelligence Unit (GJU) said the alleged aollcitat.ion took place in a vacan t apartment on the west side. The arre!ls were made by the GJU, reportedly following a tip concerning the alleged solicitation . Detail! of the alleged plot were not bnmediately revealed and police made no mtntion of the amount of money irtt>olved. 1 'Daley is vacationing with his wife in Florida , where they have been since his~ re-election a week ago. •Jackson, in Nashville, Tenn., to addre~s 1: rally al Fisk University, said he 1s "deeply concemed about. the alleged plot Involving plans to assassmate me. "We hope that, whatever the facts are tie:tilblished to be, the law wi!I ~ soundl.Y ehftirced in the pursuit of Justice as 1t alfects me, the accused and the wel.l· tietng of our city, The democrat.•c jtrdicial process cannot be suspended in i1mes such 1s lhese irrespective of the seriousness of the situation." Cranston Seeks U.S. Redirecting Of Space Firms "WEST COVINA (UPI) -Sen. Alan Cranston of California said Mond~y the federal government could re. t 1 eve ttnemployme"t in the aerospace industry by' making it ··profitable" for the firm~ to tUin to such domestic needs as housing. pbTiutlon and education. The Democrat. in remarks before a croup of community leaders, said, "The &o\l"ernment and everybody else keeps wisting precious lime trying to come up wllh complex formub1s lo get industry to coovert instead of taiking the simple steps tbtt are guaranteed to get industry lo produce the goods and services we so d~ralt:Jy need. "All you need to do is mike the 1witcb profitable," he asld. Cranston said the government should emptu1slte. domestic needs rather than .. ,.r aw 11y w1rs," "pr'flvocatlve missiles" and "unwanted 1Uperso.nlc gee-gaws." Re said massive amounts of money 1hoU1d be ~pent by the government In the domestic 1re1 threu1h conlrac:ta with pri nt< Industry. podium . "Downey Savings bids '369.900,'' he said. .... Walter From e, reprtSe.nting Rinker Development Company, eased himseU out of hill "Chair, "Mr. Mayor ,'' he said addressing Ed Hirth, "I reallz.e this isn't in the rules, but may I have a five-minute recess." The mayor didn't hesitate, "In the best interests of Ole city, I'll grant you that,'' he said, hi.3 face beaming as the price built up. The council was in the micbt o! auctioning: off the 1.93-acre tract it owns at the intersection of Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach. And the bidders were going hot and heavy. Downey and Rinker were. the on1y ones eligible to participate since onJy they had submitted sealed bids two weeks earlier. ln those initial offerings, Downey had come in with a pri<:i! of $338,000, $1 l,OOU more than Rinker. If Rinker wanted to bid orally, it had to beat that $338,000 by Ive percent. After I.hat, the bidding W!! to be in $5,000 increments. Both sealed bids exceeded the property appraisal. But when Bettencourt opened lht sucUon, Frame didn't hesitate. He stclll'<d forward and offered 13$4,900. The figure quickly moved to Downey 's $.169,900 when Frome Mted for Ume. He walked back to the lectern slowly, 1'Rlnker Development bids $314,900." Starret was on his feet, "$379,900 - Downey Savings and Loan." Frome stood, the eoUre room by this ti me dea.thly still. "Rinker bids $384,900," he said firmly. Starrett, still unshaken, s t e pp e d forward and Bettencourt interrupted, haU seriously, but trying to add 1 little levity to lhe awesome proceedings. "M you sure you don't want to rwnd off your bid," he said, "maybe $390,000." "Downey bids $S89,900,'' Starrett said coldly, giving Bettencourt an Icy star!. Frome came forward, a liUle more slowly, "Rinker bids $394,900." Starrett came right back, "'3911,800 - Downey Savings." They each bid once more and Frome asked for another recess. "$414,900 -Rinker Development," he said after the brief consultation. The figure wa.s already1twice as much per acre as the city paid for property 1t Newport Center. . Stamtt, no longer the picture of composutt, looked at Frome, walked forward and with a jerk iJI hLI voice said, "Downey Savings: and Loan b Ids Ul9,t00." It wu From.e's turn, but be was finished. "ntank you," he said, "or I should u y you thank us, we're 111.through." "Thant you very much," Mayor Hirth said, first to Frome and then to Starrett. The money for the land will go to the city's Water Fund, from where funda to buy Ille property CllDe Jill yem ago. ' l.. ' .. 1 Wage Battle Vowed I.~ TED HOFFMAN INSPECTS ORPHANED CHICKS AND DUCKS It H1ppen1 Every E1st1r, Humane Society Complains (;hi~ken Plight 'Cute' Easter Gifts Face Death Eastm-chicks are not curvy creatures found sunbathing on the sand during a week's vacation, according to the Huntington Beach Humane Society. Humane officers describe Easter chicks as unfortunale little feathered creatures found struggling to stay alive in unhappy homes throughou t the city. Some are in pel stores illeg:aliy. "Roosters can't be kept in Huntington Beach,''<1aid·Robert Starkey, director of the local Humane Society, a.s he unloaded 50 tiny chicklings taken from a pet store, ''Alld W percent of these are roosters." Some of the small ones were already dead. Sharkey said the pct store hadn 't fed them properly and hadn't cleaned their cages. "It happens every Easter," Sharkey added. "People lblnk little chickens or ducklings make cute gift.a. But after it's over we get the calls to pick them up ." He expects t-0 pick up more than JOO little chickens during the nexl two weeks . "If we can't give them away outside the city -to a farm -we destroy them." The city law on rabbits, chickens, ducks and other fowl is tougher than most people realize. Under the age of four weeks they canot be sold in groups of less than six at a time -group orders are allowed for 11. legitimate business. Roosters are strictly unwelcome in Huntington Beach. And Sharkey said people rarely take proper care of the feathered creatures. ''They can also pass disease on to children ," he added. "If you want to give something cute fo r ea!f.er, or anytime -stick to puppies,'' Sharkey recommended. Safeway Stores to Drop Separate Job Categories . ' WASHINGTON (API -A union attorney said today Safe>way Stores. Inc. will drop separate job claS!lfiejtklns for men and women employes and equalize their pay tctl~. The sep11rale classlllcaUons 111nd lower pay for "li&hkluty" clerks, geM:rally women. and "heavy-duty" clerk!, moslly men. h11d bttn the larl{et of 1 suit filed by the Afi'L-ClO Retail C I e r k s Jntemational AAociatlon In Oregon. "lt looks u though they decided thi9 was illegal and lhat thly would have to gtt rid of It sooner or later and to ftO ahead and do ll now," aald Carl T. Taylor. grne:ra1 counse.I of the union. "l l.blnk 11 ii a very totellla:ent dec:ision." he added. The union had charged in its lawsuit that the geparate claMlficatiom and pay 11Cales were discriminatory. Federal law requires equal pay for equal work. While pay ICllle."I differ acr0&9 the country, Taylor said Ult company 010\ff: would close a gap of A! much 11 40 tents per hour between men.and worMn's pay. putting the acale for both at about $2.80 per hour. Taylor said the inlemaUonal union had not been directly informed of Safeway'& decision. but that the company w11 scndlng letter• to unioo loals tround the coon try, asldllg if the acUon l 1 saUsf1ctory to the union. 1 Police, Firemen Handed Setback By ALAN DIRKIN 01 IM O.llW f'llfl S"ff Police and firemen 's associations vowed today to push their fight agalnst the city of Huntington Beach over salary lncreases despite a court setback Monday. "That was just the initial show cause hearing," said Bob La.Marsh, president of the 126-member firemen's association, ''Now we'll file the second part or our case in which we'll ask for relief and have the court order the city to bargain in good faith." La.Marsh was referring to Superior Nixon Ciws -4fnflationarY' Swel Pact WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon Administration said today lhe steel workers' recent contract setUeOient with the can industry was inflationary. He urged the union to be more restrained in contract talks this summer with the basic steel Industry. The White House, in it.s third Inflation alert. said the three-year can contracts providing 9 percent wage and benefit increases each year "represents no progress toward the declining trend of wage increases that is essential if we are to regain increased stability of prices and costs." The inflation alert released by the President's Council of Economic Advi- sers also cited increased freight rates in the railroad and trucking industries, higher cost for lumber, the failure of con- sumer meat prices to fully reflect lower wholesale prices, and high w a g e Increases for construction workers. The report al.'lO cited a 48 percent hike in New York City taxi fares as an example of what "artificial barriers to <.'Ompetltion" can mean in consumer prices. It said cab fares in the city, where the number of cabs allowed has not been increased since 1937, are twice those in Washington where there ls no restriction on the number of cab!. The council said it feared that !f the steel workers got lhe same settlement from the steel industry as from the can industry, the steel firms would have to ra ise prices, making it tougher for them to meet foreign competition and resulting in increased unemployment not only in the basic steel Industry but also among sl.eel-using industries . Council Chairman Paul W. McCracken, at a briefing on the inflation alert, refused to indicate what t h e administration would consider a fair Increase in steel industry wages, saying this w o u I d be inappropriate w i t h negotiations coming up. Pay Hikes Asked By OV Teachers Teachers at the Ocfan View Schon! District's 23 campuset Tuesday called for aero.the-board pay r1tse.. Thty asked for a raise in 1 starttng teachtt'a 11lary from f1,l73 to 18.000. The lop l<ldtlng salary would be raised from $13,935 to 116,000, under lhelr proposal. In addition. teachers; proposed an automatic fl ,000 raise every three years for tlachers who hive been with the dlslrfct more than ten years and have more than U.uniLI of aritduate work. Trus~ •9C•pttd and fUtd Uie t<a<li<ra .. ln!Uilf 'ProPOUI W'lth .. u t .. ...... ~ Cour t Judge Raymond Thompson's denial of petitions for writs of mandate. ComplalnlS filed by both associations asked the court to set aside last year's salary resolution -which granted 8.25 percent raises to all city employes -and submit the issue to arbitration. The firemen are asking for raises from II to 13.5 percent and the police for hike s averaging 11 percenl These were reportedly the amounts agreed upon in meet and confer sessions wlU! city administrators but denied by the city council. The dispute, which has been waged l' alley Aspirants since September, continues as teams from both the pollce and fire associaUons are beginning work on next year'1 salary, requesls. Thb 1Jtualion may bring a further decline in labor relations since city administrators have warned that there are presenUy no funds available for anything but merit Ina-eases next year. "Based upon our present revenue projections. we have nothing for cost of living increase• or adjustments based on surveys o( other cities," Assistant City (See SALARll!'3, Page t) ··;Three Tmstee Hopefuls Support Unified District Three trustee candidates tn the Fountain Valley School District support the Fountain Valley School District support the idea of a unified district serving Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley ea1t of Beach Boulevard. They were asked their positions on unification l>.1onday night al a candidates meeting al Fountain Valley High School. Mary Hix, Paul Huard and Fred Voss also said they agreed with the proposal of splitting the Hunlington Beach Union High School District into three separate, unified <listrict&. Another Fowitain Valley candidate, Richa rd Plum, did not take a stand on unification, while the fifth candidate, Donald Hulett, was not present at the candidates night The quest.ion was asked after it was learned that trustees of the Fountain Valley district had officially adopted a three-way unification proposal. District trustees made the decision an hour earlier during a special meeting. 3 Large Scl1ool Entities Backed By Ocean View Trustees of the Ocean View School District enthusiastically endorsed a proposal Monday night which would split the Huntington Beach Union High School District into three large unified districts. Tho unification plan, developed by Ocean View and Fountain Valley School District administrators, calls. for each district to serve students f r om kindergarten through the 12th grade. Ocean View Superintendent Clarence Hall said everything had been dont to in.sure that each of the new dlstcict.s would be equal In size, weallb and atudent population. One district would serve lbe C001bined Wntmin!ter-Seal Beach area. Another would take in the Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach elementary dlllr1cta east of Beach Boulevard. The third would consist of lhe current Ocean View School OllU'lct and the remalnder o{ the cumnt Huntington Beach City School Diatrld wc!t of Beach Boulevard. Altnougb the plan would mean that the Ocean View School Dlstrkt would lo6e Its tdtnllty. Trustee J1mea Shaffer aald, "We should de> anything we c•a to have a unified 1ehool d!Jtrlct by July 1971. 11 TnJstees generally agreed that the three unified distTlcta would hive more public IUPPQrt. than unification along Hunlblpn Btach Unk>n Hleh Scbool Dl!lrl«-llowidartes. Neither Incumbent trustee, D a 1 c Stuard or MQ:. Francis James, is seeking re-election, and none of the five candidates hM e: v e r served on t h e school board. The three-way unification proposal would create one district ea!t of Beach Boulevard, up to Edinger Avenue and another district we:st of Beach Boulevard. The third district would result from the combinadon of what Is now the West.miruter and Seal Beach elementary school dlstricls. "The three-way split would create: a district for U! wtth a potential muimum of 37,000 studenta. 'l'11at's an kl.eat liz.e," Mrs. Hit said. "I'm totally opposed to unification along the entire high school boundary, and the three-way proposal seems: the only viable one," Vou said. Plum's only comment was it would "be a battle.'' Huard said he agreed the three.way plan is desirable, "if thtogs stay the same." He added, however, that changes in school financing:, on a state level, might make other· unification boundaries desirable. In short, three minute zpeeches, tM [our candidates ouUined t he f'r qualifications this way: Mn. Hb:: 0 As a houRw\fe I can represent the community and conUnue the woman'• viewpoii'lt. on the board. I'd like to see revlsloona ln the report card and reading c JI n i c s in each school." Voss: "Schools must teach children (See SCHOOLS, P11e t) Oruge WNdler Fair akles foUowlng low cloud1 Js the gener111 forecal!lt [or Wednes-- day along Ille coul, with l<mpera- tura: peaking at es (II the aeubore and up to 1$ tnland. INSmETODAY It IDOi j"'t o <•'1•ol kiUing aft.tr Cl bttf '"a Stal Bflach bar. 811 MaNOn fomil11 1ro:ndorda, it '°" hardl11 w o r i h mentioning. B•t.a man. p•Ue,d a triOQfT ahr~e tftnft and anothn' man died.. L-09book, POQ< g. .. _ I (lilfcll ... u.. , (~ ,.,. ·-u cm....,,. 11 DNtfll ... -.. t ••1ttr1• ..... ' '"""'~ 11 "lrttl0(9 1 .. 11 -.. """ LtlllHn 11 Ma1JM• • ~LIOMMf l ,> I I \ I ;t DAil Y PILOT H E'rom Page 1 'Owtaer's Orders' Huntington Candidates SALARIES ... Administrator Brander Castle sald this morning. Shapely Blonde Give~ Testimony, Solar, lbe views ol six candidates !or lbe HunUngton Beach Union High School District Board ol Trua\ees have been preJenled In this space. The vie W1 ol three mote candidates !or lbe board are olfer· ed today. There are 17 candidates in all. They are seeking tht two aeats on •tht April 30 ballot. T!>• victors will join three other men on the governing board of the 52·1quare-mUe high school dlstr1~t, Which draws students from five elementary districts -Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Ocean View, Seal Beach and Westminster. List year money wu taken from the -contingency account and the prior yu.r'1 surplu.s to pay about $700,IXKI in raises. Following are candidates• answers to questions posed by the Huntington ~each League of Wo· men Voters. All candidates were given an opportunity to respond to the san1e questions. "We wocft be able to do that next year," Cal!tle said, "because the money isn'l there." Both LaMarsh and Officer Ron Pomeroy or the police officers as90eiation argued that the purpose of the lawsuit was to establish a set ol guidehnes for future negotiations. A shapely blonde waitress today testified that Sugar Shack tavern owner Mary Jo Jennings ordered her to write out a statement that was later filed in Los Angle.s Federal Court by an attorney Ior Ule Los Alamitos bar. department warned her she could be arrested for just being a waitress in the bar and that her children could be lllcn from her and placed ln foster hornet. RUNNING FOR TWO SEATS Attorney Jone1 Jones Seeking 2 Board Posts Donald A. Jones, 9832 Silver Strand Drive, Huntington Beach, i.!I an attorney. He Is seeking seats on two school boards -in the high school district and in the Huntington Beach City {elementary) District. Q, What progr1m or policy cha.nges would you f1vor? "I have no specific chaages in program or policy In mind. To take a definite position on any such point would require that I have at least as much inrormation on the subject as the present board members. I do noL "A doctor wbo makes a diagnosis and recommends treatment w i tho u t personally examining the patient, or an attorney who makes a judgment without an independent examination of the facts, generally find themselves in untenable positions. P.1y tendency is to fully examine every Issue presented and then make a decision thereon." Q. How do yot1 feel about Wllflcation? "'First, 1 do not believe that the increase In the size of an organization lends itself to automatic Improvement. On the contrary, the larger an organiza~ion ~· the more difficult it Is to admini.llter 1t properly. .. Second, I strongly favor voter access lo elected representatives. A Board member can heller serve a smaller fiegment of the populallon by keeping communication lines open. "'Thus, if any unification is to ta~e pla ce, and I don't particularly favor it, such unification should be done so as to maintain smaller districts. The voters can then be better acquainted with their representatives and elect those that are doing the best }ob for them ." Q. What are your feelin gs oo teacher tenure? "J favor teacher tenure 100 percent and am totally opposed to those who would abolish it. Contrary to those who v;ould abolish II. I feel that tenure is a major factor in obtaining and keeping competent personnel. Proper procedur~ coupled with diligent application. thereof, are sufficeint to protect against the incompetent. "I do not believe, however. that teacher tenure should protect anyone w h o advocates the overthrow of our government by force and violence. It is foolish to grant such persons freedom !':O that they may teach our children to deprive all of us of freedom." Q. llow would a voucher 1y1tem or 1latewlde property lax affect local school financts? "l feel the voucher system would destroy our school sys~m. For man\' years, certainly, private schools \\'ou!d Increase sharply in number. The rompetition would tend to decrease quality of education by Io we r Ing st.andards in or<ler lo attract student!. Thus we would have , at best, a several ~·ears drought in education. and perhaps a permanent one. ''The statewide property tax would perhaps eliminate lhe need for unification by obtaining the broadest possible tax base I do not favor it. howe\'er, since I feel that property I.ax alone is a poor method of financing schools. Establlshlng a higher minimum tax rate that can be Imposed v•ithout e\eclion by a school district, coupled ·with additional funds from a different and brotider lax base, would accomplish a great deal more." Beach Woman's Death Trial Set A HWllJngton Beach woman actuaed of killing her ez-hUJbMd ~1:irch 29 will 1ppe:ar ln Superior C-Ourt Friday to face cliarges of murder. Dorll Barrett, 40. of 16162 Sher l.11:ne., wee ~ ovt:r lo the higher C"Ourl followin.g a prellmlnary hear1ng March 29 Jn West Orange County Municipal Court, WestmiMt.er. She it ln cua:tody at the women's aectlon of the Oranc• County Jail. No bail bAS ~--Mrs. Barreit •ts arrested at lhe home of Mlthael Burke, 11541 Bartlett St., Jluntlna:ton Beach, 1dt.er her ex·husband. Ja1nes, waj shot 1ever1I times In the chest while makin& • coffee I.able In BW'ke't earaae. SEEK$ SECOND SEAT Attorney Logan Logan Advocates Program Support George Logan, 6111 Summerdale Drive. Huntington Beach, is an attorney and currently Is a trustee of the Ocean View School District. Q. What program or policy change' would you favor? "Emphasis to retain dedicated personnel , and at l r act outstanding new personnel to the district. "Competitive wage/benefit structure is mandatory, but cannot by itself be sufficient to attract premium personnel. Direct involvement of b o a r d , administration and participation o r educators in decision making o n curriculum content is required to create a sense of opportunity for t h e professioaal edi..cator. to provide insighl to board members and to optimize fu.ll utilization of the academic talents within the district staff at all levels. "Providing full financial support lo academic programs and teaching staff is a board fWlction. "Certain board members have too long condemned lack of quality educational programs and facilities on defeated bond issues and ta~ overrides. Asking for a blank check is Wlreallstlc, as is blaming public apathy or administrative staff. Educational programs are a board responsibility; unless each member understands, believes in, knows the relative dollar value of each aspect of the program, he is not doing his job. Further, unless public Wlderstanding is achieved, support for additional funding cannol be anticipated. Boards must infonn the community, sell their academic programs and motivate public support themselves. "Re-establish community confidence in the board through personal conduct, sensitivity to the community, improved academic programs. and person a l extension of board members themselves to gain interface with parents and students Ytbom lhey serve. "Quality education, and fair return for tax dollars invested is !he Board responsibility. Meaningless tirades on individual philosophy, personal attacks on fellow board members and o t h er responsible segments o( the community have seriously affected respect for the district and impaired p r o f e s 1 i o n a I educators' abilities lo function properly. Board seats are not a suitable platform for partisan differences and similar activities. "Revise di5lrict programs to provide meaningful, cWTently uUJizable skills and talents for non-continuing students. "Total vocational curricula must be updated and integrated into the regular academic program, to avoid complell! compartmentalization or s t u d e n t s prematurely in their high school careers. Examination should be centered about basic trade areas similar to current trade school programs." Q. How do you feel about unification? "Unification is inevitable, and the time element prior to forced unification is critical. Leadership for elementary school districts to develop a workable and palatable plan for several unified districts must come from the high school board. Preservation of a cad em i c continuity, local control of the districts, and community goals and identity are mandatory." Q. What 1te your fetllng1 011. teacher teniare! "Tenure is state-mandated and local boards have little influence on its rtgulatlon. Professional educators are most seriously affected by inequities '\\'ithin the system and changes to and/or a replacement system should be a product of professional 1: ducat or 5 establishing standards of ptrformance. conduct and a re\'iew system. Strong educational a!\90Ciations within districts, and review panels of his peers are the toughest juries an Mtucalor can face :• Q. How would 1 voucher systtm or statewide proper1y tu affect 1chool finances? "Any system to expand fina:nclng to statewide prop or t Ions potentially lhreatC'JlS local controJ. I would prefer to promote and !ell education excellence to the taxpayers, for their liUpport, A consclent1ous bonrd wlU1 ou1.St11nding pro11r1ms anrl demonstrated 11tudent arhl('\'emenl will nevf"r lack adequate lundinc." HAS MIXED FEELINGS Teacher Lawson Lawson Urges Study on Bonds "If the council is going lo do what il pleases \\'hY bother to sit down at the table and talk.!" romeroy asked. J1e said that his association would have been satisfied if the council had called for a renegotiation of the salary raises last September instead of rejecting the agreements reached with the city administrators. "It's a darn shame when you have to have an outside person (the C<lurt) make them stick to the agreement," Pomeroy commented. The police officers association has filed a suit claiming $650,000 in damages to thet association as a result of the dispute. The figure does not represent the difference between the raises requested and the hikes granted. The firemen have a similar claim on file , but have not set a particular damage figure. Both LaMarsh and Pomeroy denied thst their members \\'ere militant as a result of the dispute. "The men's atittude is that what we \\'ant. other than the money. is a policy on procedures on how v.·e establish \vage.s," LaMarsh explained . "We are asking the city to set guidelines so it does not become an arbitrary Big Daddy syndrome where they make decisions without basis." In rejecting the agreements last Jon K. Lawson is a teacher at September. several councilmen indicated Lawndale High School. He lives at 6591 they were mindful of the growing number K1lda Circle. flunlington Beach. or layoffs in West Orange County and JX!Sslble budget problems the city might Q. What program or policy changes encounter from a decline in revenue. would you favor? "On Tuesday, March 9, The police association already has the voters of Huntington Beach Union begun surveying salaries in ccomparable l-ligh School District defeated, for the cities In preparation for meetings over d r next year·s salaries. secon 1me. an attempt at a tax The associalions will meet with the override. Jn Joly, the tax rate \\'ill revert city's personnel director, Ed Thompson. back to 85 cents, and. thereforl', the main before July and then the meet and confer Preda Garofalo told Deputy District Attorney Bruce Patterson and the first six member jury in Orange County Superior Court history that she objected to the statement and was told by Mrs. Jennings : "You can tell lie upon lie but above all don't tell the truth." She identified a document submitted as evidence as 1 typed copy of that statement and condemned the signature on the document as a forgery of her own signature. Mrs. Garofalo also condemned as lies a number of statements in the document referring to alleged harassment of entertainers and waitresses at the Los Alamitos tavern during a period last summer when nude danclng was offered at the bar. Mrs. Jennings, a 34-year-0\d redhead, \\'as one of the featured performers at the tavern and she was booked by Los Alamitos police on a number of occasions for lewd conduct. She was sentenced last November to 90 days in jail following her conviction on charges of lewd conduct and iltdecent exposure. That sentence has been stayed pending the outoome of her appeal against the conviction. Mrs. Garofalo today rejected the statement's allegations that o ff I c e r Thomu Hicks of the Los Alamitos police Newport Woman To Write Book On Pat Nixon, goal of school board should be one of sessions will continue with the city N~wport Beach resident Gk>ria Seelye maintaining the level and quality of administrators before the agreements has been tapped for the prize assignment education as it now stands. To are submitted to the city CQuncil. of writing Pat Nixon's biography. accomplish that goal will require a great Mrs. Seelye, of 115 Harbor Jsland Road, Is former woman's editor of the Los deal of study and reflection before an Fl"Otn Page 1 Angeles Herald Examiner, 1 long time answer can be reached .. , family friend of the Nixons and a native Q. How do yo u feel abbut un!Dcatio.11? SCH 00 LS • • • of Whittler. the President's home town. "~lixed." News of the selection was released Q. \\'bat art your feelings on teacher how to learn. It can no longer be today in a story from Washinatoo by UPI • "T h lhe goal of education to merely train correspcindent Helen Thomas. ttnurt . ' enure! W y, i£ we didn't According to the UPI. the Newport h'v• lhal J,w w ld be bl I I children to simply resnnnd to their ... . e wou a e o ge I"' Beach resident was one of several r,·11 of lh• de•d•ood arou d h i• "nvironmenl. They must learn how to be , ... n ere · '" writers who JXll in a bid to do a book "'Good teachers don't need tenure; creative and act upon their about Mrs. Ni.Ion. poor teachers shouldn't have it!' environmenl." "She trusts me and I'm thrilled," said "'Right "'w ,., prov1'des n br II Plum: "I'm a little old fashioned. a um e a Mrs. Seelye, who has voluminous files on for mediocrity.' Schools are for reading, writing and the President's wile and is well along "These are three charges often heard arlthmelic. \Ve've gotten too much h h sh uld t th when the subject of teacher tenure comes educational jargon and too much with her hook, w le 0 go 0 e up. Teacher tenure is a very neces sary experimentation without results in Utis publisher, Prentiss-Hall, this fall. part of the educational system. The Jaws district." Dark-haired, blue-eyed and vivacious. · · h h whe was a student at Whittier High g1v1ng teac ers tenure were originally Huard : "The ke y issue is "' o do you School when Mrs. Nixon taught business designed to protecL teachers from feel is best qualified. As a professor of courses there. She remembers Mrs. political interference, general management at USC I understand the harassment, and outside pressure. There problems of education. research and Nixon as the "yowigest and. prettiest" of is a myth about tenure that once the managing a school district." all the teachers. probationary period ends the teacher ls Mrs. Seelye has followed President assured a job until .retirement or death. Nixon's career since he first ran for This is not true. The law provides for a T K • d Congress in 1941. She is closely due process procedure than can end in upan1a1·os J nap acquainted with the Ni1ons• family and dismissal. There are about twelve close friends. including Mrs. Helene reasons for dismissing a teacher. If a l11cJ11 sl1•ial Leadet• Drown of Rolling !tills, also a former cause for dismissal arises, then It teacher at Whittier High. becomes the responsibility of the l\10:-.'TEVIDEO (UPI} -Ricardo Mrs. Nixon approached the biography administration and/or the board lo lake F'errcs Terra, a Uruguayan industrialist, project with some trepidation but is ~ction. Teachers should not be dism;ssed being completely cooperative. l\irs. apparently was kidnaped by leftist s I h h d ,_ I ui· 1 · s ''They are all lies,'' she tiaid. Patterson said he will prove in the two- day trial that ft1rs. Jennings needed tho false statement to seek lederal court' action that would halt LoA Alamitos police actiOo against the controversial tavern. P.trs. Jennings is formally charged with, subornation of perjury, soliciting the commission of a crime and offering and preparing false evidence. • Opening statements today w e r e witnessed by a party of students from Saddleback High School and they were welcomed by Judge Samuel Drel.r.en with the comment that they were viewing the first six member jury in Superior Court history. Both lawyers and the defendant agreed to the precedent -setting jury reductiom Monday and witnessed for the first time the seating of a four·woman. tw1>man panel with a male alternate juror. Huge Blaze Ravages Tiny Kentucky City MORGANTOWN. Ky. I UPIJ -f;,.e destroyed an entire city block in the downtown are.a of this m o n t h central Kentucky city Aionday night, caU!lng an estimated $1 million damage. Mayor Richard Saling said at least 111 businesses, including two hotels and twt restaurants, were destroyed. , The fire began In an abandone4. meeting hall which last week had been. condemned by state fire officials. DAILY PILOT OltANOE '°"" ruaLISMING COMr>Jft l•io•tt N. W••' rnsld9!\t •11111 rwi1wr J 1cli II:. Curf•'f Vk• rruld.,t •nd co-11 M.-..Ott' n.,,.., K ••• ;r fClltor-. Th-•i A. Mur,Ji.i11,· M•M9llll t:dllOI" Al•11 Dirlii11 Wftl OrM!fG C-ry Ed!IW .Att.,t w .••••• Auocle!D Edl1w H•tl"ttM 19K1i ~ 11171 l•ech l•ul•Y•r4 M1lli11t A•tr1n: P.O. l•a 790, t2141 -°'"'"' u,,_ 1 .. i;:11, m ,,.,., "-co.11 N\111: DI Wnt 81y Jlrfff NtwPOrt a .. c,., un Nr#JIGrt -.Uln•rf SM Cl1mtntt: J0S Nortll El Cimini AMI OAILY PIL.OT, wfTh 'lllllc:ll b ~the ,., ............... pub!..,.... d•llf ~· ,_ llll•Y 11n .-Jll,.te ICHI ... 1w ~ a.-dlo • NirwlllOl'l ... di, Cal• IMH. N...iliif!M alldl, "'"'"'-'" V•lllY. S.11 ~· C.~•"'-•M SNf111111dl, •"""' w1"' -• noi.n.i cdl11ao! •. l"rlnclNI !lrilllill9 .lllfcll ll •t la W•t 11'( Strwl, COIM M-. T1l1plle• 17141 142..CJ21 Cl9IH'W A•..nkhlt 142·U7• for arbitrary or unsubstantiated reasons. ee ye as a a num1n:r o erv1ew 'rhe present law gives such protection." Tupamaros terrorists today, Uruguayan with her at the White House and at the =~': ~':1· n!:'"":~tt u::'.~ Q. How would a voucher system or police sources said. Nixons' villa , "La Casa Pacifica," at San n 1iw111 ,... ..... .,. ff\len1a-11 w-. Cl•m•"le _, bo ...,,,.muctd .wl1'tloof. &fltCLll ..., statewide property tax afftct school They said he disappeared moments " "'' · "''"11n o1 (9P'ft11f!• --· finances? "The voucher system is after he left his home for work in an 1 Mrs: Seelreh ha\sop pl.adnst in-0.depthth s...s (I••• ,.,aeo r-1+11 •t N""°" ...-probably one of the greatest threats to nterv1ews wit t e resi en an e .,.. co.ii M .. , c•nfWfli.. ~i..c: auto1nobile. The car was found N1'xons· 1wo daughters Tr·1c1·a a•d Ju1·1e 11, c•r•iw a.JS -"'''' ..., mtn a.r• public education today. The system would ' ' ,_1111y1 ,..111r.rv e1n1111111ont. u .2s rNMl'lly. require more funding than at present. /~a~b:an~d~o~ne:d:w:;:th:;;lh;•;e~n~g;;;ne~ru~n;;"~Jn~g;. ;;;;;;~b~e~fo;r;;• ;•h~e~wr~•;P~•;u;p~h~e~r ~boo~k;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;~~ The system would be a waste of human SEASAME STREET resources. The system would lead to extensi"'.e duplication of facilities and services. The system introduces a 'market place concept.' Jt introduces a profit motive into educntion. lt would create competition in advertising for students. .. Some basic questions: -How much more will it cost? -Would it prevent or encourage social Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn't had a carpet installation by Alden's. and religious stralificalion a n d segregation? -Who would accept the disadvantagrd child, low IQ child, and those with behavioral problems? -\Vould the American tradition o! separation of church and state be violated? -Would parents and students be explojted by profit-seeking tchools?" HlUltington Teen Held in Hit-run Police this morning arrested an 18- year-old Huntington Beach youth on felony hit and run driving charst1' after an accident in which two of his r111.~engers were injured. Officers said F.dward Bell Brumley, 20021 Port Circle, wa! driving 11 light foreil(n sedan which rolled over on Pacific Coast llighway In the bluffs area. Police said Brumley was M!en leaving thf! crashed automobile by a \\'itness who observed the 5: 15 a.m. cr<1sh. Although passengers Joseph A. Reed, 21, and Robert 0. Callahan, 20, both of Santa Ana. were taken to Huntington lntPrl'Omrnunlty Hospital by antbultnce, neither was admitted. Reed , a Hnotype machinist. Is the son or \Villiam Rttd. public Information oHiccr for the city of lluntington Btach. ) In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block. The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven 't, bring her in with you.) SANTA ANA. OUNCll. TUITIN (•II ••• ALDIN'S •ID HILL CAIPITS & DIA,llllS 11114 !nine, Tvttl11, CaL ua ,,.. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plaeentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 Newport Bea~h Today's Final EDITION VOL 64, NO. 88, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA.Y, APRIC 13, '1971 TEN CENTS Harbor School Di·strict Faces Salary Standoff By GEORGE LEIDAL ot It. D1ltl' 1"1191 11111 Orange County's Urst impasse proceed- lpg in school board teacher association ylary negotiations has been called by qie Newport-P.1esa Education Association. The action was described today as "a• intermediate step that may lead to a strike against the Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict." lmpaue proceedings are spelled out in recent amendments to the Winton Act, state legislation which governs school district and employe association rela- tions. Brad Thurman, president or the 750- member teacher association said the "N·MEA representative council Monday llight voled to bring impasse proceedings against the board of education." The Winton Act provides for a thrCe. member, fact-finding panel to investigate the causes of negotiation failures . The panel'& fiadings are oot binding on either the board ot the teachers. However, Bart Hake, executive secre- tary of the N.MEA said the procedure will bring to a halt further negotiation of teacher demands. Hake noted the impass proceedings authorized by the 65-member represenla· Live council could be considered a "no support pollilion'' on the part of teachers for the two incumbent trustees seeking re-election to the board next Tuesday . Should today's board study session, the public board meetinlil at 7 o'clock to- night in Costa Mesa High School, or an executive session to follow the public meeliAg, produce some "written response from the board to our proposals" the im· passe proceeding would be withdrawn, Hake noted. District officials were not available for comment on the teacher group's ac· tion this morning. However, adminislra• tors have said the N.MEA salary pack· age would cost the district $1.7 milliod OAILT PILOT St•t P"''- CITY ATTORNEY SAYS HOUSES !BACKGROUND RIGHT) ENCROACH ON PUBLIC PROPERTY Thi1 Photo Was Taken From Cypren Street Looking Eest Along Edgewater Avenue City Attorney Studies Balboa Bayfront Access -City Attorney Tully Seymour Monday night was told to determine if Newpo~t Beach has a case in its claim to pubhc access along the Balboa Peninsula bay. front from Main Street to 7th Avenue. The order came after Seymour in· formed the city council. "lf the city has a claim, irs languishing and about to be JosL" Seymour cited enrrochments into ~e paper street right-of-way thflt he said ranged from protruding front porches. to chain link fences, the latter carving chunks out of beaches belonging lo the public. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers of Balboa said the pfoblem exists throo,llhout New· port Beach and the coonci! shouldn't ptck on one area. "If we're going to clean up these things:." he said. "let's clean them all up not just pick out one block." . Seymour said he didn't have the lime nor the money to move against all the encroachments in the city. He pointed out this was. ii! hi& view. the v.·orst area. "We've got to start somewhere," he l!ltkt. Rogers was adamant. Newport Builder Draws Jail Term . in Tax Case Ward Wilsey of 445 Santa Ana Ave., Newport Beach, former Orange County building contractor, y,·as Ii en t e n c e d Law's Phrasing 100 Suggestive? Councilman Milan Dostal questioned the wording of a proposed Newport Beach ordinance governing dance halls and night clubs that was being reviewed by the council Monday night. The text of the ordinance said it would apply to establishments ' ' w h e r e entertainers are provided, whether as 'social companions' or otherwi9' ... " "What is this," Dostal said incred· uously. "It meant be a holdover from Newport Beach's heyday,'' viewed City Attorney Tully Seymour. ··Sounds like 'B girls' lo me," offered Councilman Lindsley Parsons. Unanimously, the council ordered the phrase struck from the legi&lation. ~1onday to serve 10 months in jail and pay $4 ,000 in fines on three counts of failing to report income and defrauding savings and loan firms. Federal Judge Frances Whelan in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles also sentenced Wilsey to five years probation, He v.·as found guilty Feb. 18 after the longest criminal tax trial in the history of the local federal courts, just one day short of six weeks, according to proseculor Arnold Regardie, assistant U.S. attorney. Operating as Eagle Enterprises, Wilsey was convicted of filing false income tax returns for 1963~·65, failing to report $56,000 in income and filing false statements with savings and loan associations. Regardie said Wilsey was charged with bilking several savings and Joan firms by billing them for construction work never performed, boosting bills over cost. or requiring subcontractors to pay extra money to Eagle Enterprises which was never credited to the savings firms. for salaries alld anothe.r $6.3 million for fringe benefits and educational program improvements sought by the teachers. Io the two and a hall months aince the teacher ialary and contract package wu prese11ted to the board, Hake said, "we have had no written response from the board to our proposals." "There has been DO conscientious effort 011 the part of the board to meet their part ol the negotiaUon process," he con· tended, not.ing that the Winton Act "calls conscientious effort to reach written agreeme111t." Teachers had hoped to have received some written i11dlcation of an agreement by Ptfonday, Hake said. The impasse pro- ceeding is hoped to force the board to put down in writing its reacUons to teach· er demands. The teacher organization, which repre- sel!.ts three-fourths of the district's teach- ers, also appointed a "1Lrategy rommit~ tee" which will meet next Monday nlght "to review possible fublre actions that could lead to a teacher strike," Hake said. Teachers feel the board has not re- sponded to their proposals because "they want to delay negotiations until summer when all the teachers are gone," Hake said. By calling for a fact finding panel. teacbei:s hope to force public: disclolure ol both sides of the pay and workin& co• diUons issues. "A fact-flndini panel actJ to let the community know wbat tbt two &ides haven't taken .mto accouat la their considerations thal J11l&ht lead to an agreement," Hake contended. The board and the teacher group would each appoint a member-to-the pa.HI. The third member would be mutually agreed upon. Hake said the third panel mem- ber probably would be drawn from the membershjp of the American Arbitration Association or I.ht state conciliation Hl'V· ice. Bay Swap Attaclied • Battin Tries, But Fails to Kill Pact By JACK BROBACK Of tftt 0.UY Pit.I Stlllf Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Robert Battin ln a surprise move this morning tried to kill the Upper Newport Bay land swap agreement without further negotiations. His effort failed . Battin/ the supervisor from Santa Ana's: First District, was responding to an April 12 letter from Irvine Company President William R. Mason. Ma5011 asked the board to extend the April 2$ deadline for negotiations. Battin responded with the allegation that the letter wa.c "self-serving." He asserted Orange County lihouldn't dlJcuss "any further possible new agreements on Newport Does About Face On Dog Law The Newport Beach City Council Monday night did an abrupt about-face and ordered the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission to start an immediate study of dogs on tile beaches. During the afternoon study session councilmen seemed ready to tackle the controversy themselves and thereby shortening what will almost certainly become one of the year's biggest issues. ··we've got to make a decision one way or the other, as soon as possible, and not step in the mess Laguna Beach did a. year ago,'' Councilman Don MclMis o! West Newport had said earlier in the day. When the subject arose auring the business meeting, however, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers reversed field. "We have got to carry out the democratic process and let evecyone have their say," he said, commenting that the PBR panel should conduct its public hearings, make a recommendation to the council, which subsequently will have to conduct more hearings. The council instructed City Attorney Tully Seymour to prepare two dUferent ordinances, one patterned after that which was finally adopted in Laguna and the other similar to Huntington Beach's, which bans dogs from beaches totally. The Laguna Beach ordinance bans dogs from ~aches and certain parks during the summer, from June 15 to Sept. 15, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rogers, tn urging the longer procedure, took a stance contrary to his Freeway Fighter ally, Mrs. Margot Skilling. who had asked the council "to act as speedily as possible." the Upper Bay "until the present agreement is terininated." Battin moved that the boa.rd reaffirm Its action of last Jan. 5 in which it voted unamimously to t e r m I n a t e the agreement. But Battin added the words "without conditions.'' Supervisors Ralph Clark and David Baker objected to these words. Battin agreed to delete them. The Battin motion then passed 4 to 1 w i th Supervisor William Phillips dissenting. Baker followed with a motion to extend discussions on the agreement for 60 days or until June 29. It passed unanimously . The Irvine letter which seemed to raise the ire of Battin and Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach stated that 'Vefy Couitedus' negotiations carried on to date with Caspers and BalUn or t b e i r representatives had not made uy worthwhile progress. ''Supervisor Battln's only response to a request for serious negotiations was a memo stating that no joint discussion would be csrried out (on the future of the Upper Bay) until the agreement is unconditionally terminated," Muon aaid in his letter. 'The Irvine Company has maintalned the county cannot cancel the agreement unilaterally and has indicated it will go to court to prove the point. The company also wants to negotiate possible damages due it if the agreement 1S cancelled. Communist China Frees Four American Sailors HONG KONG (UPI) -Armed Chinese Communist junks seized a yacht with four Americans aboard last week but released the yacht and Its passengers after four da ys or "very courteous" detention In a coaslal fishing village, one of the Americans said today. The four, three of whom are U.S. government employes working for the Army and Air Force in Okinawa, were captured while sailing the yacht Venture from Hong Kong to Okinawa, The three government employes are Theodore Seavy, 44, Hentley , ~1ont.; Larry Tippens. JO, Atlanta , Ga., and Floyd Sebring, 45, from California. Seavy and Tippens work for the U.S. Army in Okinawa and Sebring works for the Air Force. The fourth is Bill Baxter. 56, San Francisco, a Christian Scientist lay minister who has been a well-known businessman In Asia for almost 20 years. Seavy had just purchased the yacht in Hong Kong and they left April 4 en route to Okinawa. On April 6, north of Hong Kong, they ran into a fleet of armed Red Chinese junks, Tippens said. ''The junks started to crowd us," Seavy said. "There were 50mething like 20 to 25 junks in the area, with eight to IO of them converging on us." "All were Chinese fishing junk!: with about 20 armed fishermen (coastal militiamen) on eacb one," Seavy Uld. "We were sandwiched by these junks and one rammed Into us, ballhing • hole in tbe hull on the side and crushing the railings and wiring." The Chinese boarded the vessel, waving their weapons and gesturing excitedly. They tied the hands of the four Americans and they were towed to the coastal village, which Seavy said took about 15 hours to reach. They did not know the name of the village. "The fisherme n who rammed Into our yacht were surprised that we carried tio weapons," he &aid. "They instantly became quite congenial. When they brought us to a small fishing village, they gave us what l estimate to be the best they could offer. We were given tea, fresh buns, 11oodle1, rlce .and hot water for bathing.'' Seavy estimated that the village 1n which they were detalned from April 6 until April 10 was "aome 100 miles north of Hong Kon1." Tippens said that after the Chinese became aware that they were not armed and were innocent sailors they "became as interested In us as we were In them." Orange Coast "Either we have the guts to move ahtad and do it right, or we don't do It at all." he said. HP wanted the matter referred to cetm· mittce. but relenle<I w~en other coun~il­ men assured him the city was not goln,ll to force people whose homes en~roached orrto the right-of-way to tear their houses down. Newport Land A11~tioned Another 'Save' For Fire Station On Bal lsla.nd? "They can be allowed to stay, but on a permissive basis." Seymour said. ''but we must establish ownership. "Some of these ~aches have recenlly been fenced off." Seymour added, "and we must act, or the public will lose its claim." . Councilmen said the effort to determine pJblic: 0wnersh_ip to pro~rties through- out the city will ~ carried out as fast *' time and money allows. Evidence Up in Smoke CTNCl!'ffl'ATf (UPI) -The 125 cartons of cigarette.. which police confiscated as evidence last Friday in a then cue were iitac:ed in a rear offiet at the central pollce station. Ofricr:rs d I s c: o v e r e d Monda y ~me-0ne had !ICJUeezed under mesh wire covering the door to the office and esc•~ with all 125 carton1. There wert no suspect.I. \ City Sells Two Acres in Huntington Beach Newp(lrt Beach Councilmen Monday night auctkmed off nearly two acre.& of land the city owns in Huntington Beach and for the most part, the proceeds kept the municipal fathers watching In stunned silence. It was lhe last section of an 80-acre tract Newport bought In Huntington Beach half a century ago at the awesome price. of $385 per acre. Acting Newport City Manager Phil BeUencourt fidgeted but kept writing the numben down. Dennis Starret was at the council podium. "Downey Savings bids $369.900,'' he said. \ Walter From e, rcpraenting Rlnkl'.r Development Company. eaaed himself out of hi• thalr, "Mr. Mayor," he u!d • ' addressing Ed H.lrt.h, "I realize this isn't In the rules, but may I have a five-minute recess." The mayor didn't hesitate, "In the best Interests of the city, I1l grant you that, .. he said, his face beaming as the price built up. The council was in the midst of auctioning off the l.93-acre tract it owns at the inlersection of Brookhurtit Street and Adams Avtnue in Huntington BeJch. And the bidders were going hot and heavy. Downey and Rinker were the only ones eligible to participate since only they had tubmltted sealed bids two weeks e11rller, 1n those initial offerings, Downey had come in with a prict or $338.000. Sll ,000 mol'f: than Rinker. If Rinker wanted to bid orally, It h>d to beat that 1338,000 by .. five percent. Aft.er that, the bidding was to be In $5.000 increments. Both sealed bids exceeded the property appraisal. But when Bettencourt opened the auction, Frome didn't hesitate. He stepped forw11rd and offered $3$4,900. 'nle figure: qulckly moved to Downey's $369,900 when Frome asked for time. He walked back to the lectern slowly, "Rinker Development bida $374,000." Starret wat on hia feet. "$379,900 - Downey Savings and Loan ... Frome stood, the entlre room by thls lime deathly 11tlll. "Rinker bids '38•.900." he said firmly . Starrett, 1tlll uMhaken, ' t e pp e d forWard and Bettencourt Interrupted, haU seriously, but trying to iidd 1 little levity !See LAND, P11• 11 The Balboa Island Fire Slalion appears heeded tor still another stay of execution. City Councilmen Monday night gave every indication they will nol accept the recommendation by Fire Chief R. J. "Jan Briscoe that the station be done in. "Our budget guidelines call for ma.inttnanee of 'an existlng level of services,' " 1 a I d CouncilJllan Donald Mcinnis, "and this certainly is a part of the p~t level." Cotmcllmen Carl Kymla and lfoward Rogm tald thty concurred, as Mayor Ed Hirth nodded accord . That addll up to four votes in favor of the flrt:houx. Briscoe had said the city could &ave $113.000 annually by dosing it down and servicing the Island from the ntw central fire headquarters to tht1 north on Jamboree Road. The almost annual threat to the 40· year-old firehouse on Marine Avenue hart been met by the usual screams of protest by lstande:rs. 1 Weather Fair skiea Jollowlng low clouds is the general forecart for Wedne .. day along the coast, with tempera· lures peaking at M oo the eeastiore and up to 75 Inland. INSIDE TODAY It uw jw.sl 4 COJual .killing after a btt.f fn a Stal Btoch bar. By Manicm fam.U~ standards, it ws hardl~ too rt h mentioning. But a man pUlkd a trigger th rt• tlfrn!s and another man died. Logbook, Pagt 9. C1Hfoti'll1t I Clllctll!1 U' ' (IMfl""" lto'I Clfl'lln IJ ,,...._.. 11 --. ••l•1t• "'" ' 111*911"""111 If 'Ill~ 1 .. 11 -" Allll l...._ 11 Mtllklt • Mlrr .... L~t Mwlft ,, MwfMI ,.,...., " NlfltMI N.... W Ot-MIN (IWl!ff t St1¥1t ""* It """" 1a.1r llldr M1rfrltl 1&-11 T1lwft1N II TIIHIWI 11 WM,,_ f WI! ... Wnfl 16 .............. , ..... .... , .. If.wt •·• I t OAJlf PILOI • Wherever Bal Week Is, It Isn't in Newport By JOANNE REYNOLDS. Ot ... o.111 l'lllM tllft HAVING .RAJSED the. GboJt ot Bal Week Past, It's now my duty to put It boc:t to resl Based on what I saw and heard last week. Bal Week -Easter Week. spring vacation, call it v.•hat you like -is a thing of the past Ob surt:, k.lda: &till get oot of 1cbool for a week in tht middle or spring and they no doubt go somewhere and bJow off a lot of steam, but appartntly they don't go to Ne~port Beach or Hilnlingt.On Beach or Laguna Beach to do 1t any more. BAL WEEK, 1971 p,._,enled all lbe fr!Jhtenll\g Hpecls of a dull week in midsummer. Granted there were more amats by Ntwport Beach police thi.t Year than there were last, but officers point out &bat thls could be the reault or the decllne in activity. Tbey Point out th!lt crime ttpOrts and traffic accidents decllned this ytar. And with leu Ume aperit taking a crhne or accident report, offictrs in the field bad more time to bm:stlgat.e the loud party calls and disturbing lhe pe.ace reports. And having more time to tnveaUiate these things led to the increate of 1~ in total arres~. But according to police, a better indication of the decline of ~I Week 18 the crime statistics. A!J of Good Friday there had been 48 Part I crime.!! (rob- bery, grand theft, auto theft. a!Sau.lt :ind burglaries) committed. In 1970. by Good Friday the tally was 57. P.!isdemeanor reports show the same declme. There were 89 in 1970, but only 81 this year. REVEALING AS the statistics are. I decided I'd eee for myself whelher or not there was any life left in Bal Week. Alter what I NW Thurlday night while cruising around Newport's former hotspots with the police. I can ooly conclude that tf E&Jter Week in Newport Beach isn 't dead, it sure isn't breathing very hard. For starters, the activity around the jail was mostly created by the large number or police officers who had been assigned to handle the crowds of ar- restees. 1bere were tbe olllcen, but where were the kids? Once aut on the street. things were even quJeter. There were whole blocks of Balboa Boulevard without a car -parked or moving -to be seen. When patrolmen took in two very drunk juveniles at tbe Fun Zone, there were almost more uniformed police on the scene than there were b.vstanders. TllE POUCE RADIO wu pretty quiel Most of the calls Wert warrant ehecks er officers calling in to say they were breaking for dinner. Costa Meaa IOWlded like It had more action than Newport Beach. · Balboa Island ahowed. the few mnainin& signs of Ufe, but it was still not qu.Jte the SJmt thing 11 the yean when cara tryin,11: to get on the laland were backed all the way up Bays.Ide Drive to Ccaat Highway. It took us about five minute& to cross the bridge and travel lhe length of Marine Avenue. But at least there were some kids there and there were even a couple of house! that aounded. like they hid the maklnas of partlea. Jt was still a far cry from the Bal Week or yore. "I DON'T KNOW," said Sgt. Wayne Connolly, my escort for the evening. ''It aeema llke a lot of the local kid.I have even gone somewhere else this year. "The ones we have encountered here thil week art much lw hostile than the ones we med to g:el I lmagine the ones that wanted to really let loose have 1one ta the river whert: they can do what they want without being bother· ed." What.ever the reuon, the de~re ol the kid! his led to the decline of Bal Week.. After passing a couple of motels with their vacancy 1lgns lit, Con· nolly observed that If future Easters get much quieter, the Chamber of Com- merce might be tempted to start a promot.ion o! 11pring vacation In Newport Beach. Newport Rejects County Juri,sdiction Over Bay The Newport Beach City Council 1'-1ond1y night told Orange County supervisors the city won't 11low the county to 1ssume sole jurlldlction aver future development cf Upper Newport Bay. Tbe cooncil adopted !I resolution filled with platitudes 1bout the county's Inter· est in the e!lUlry'a ruture but which ~ lected aupervlson' attempts ta turn Big Atom Test Slated WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States plans an underaround nuclear eiploalon almost five times more powerfu.I than past underground blasts, it WU re.ported t.odly. ' DAILY PILOT c,JiwtGI CO.UT P'UILltHIHO COM,AMV ltffrt N. w,~ "'"*"' .... P'llllllfrlW J•c• l. c~rr.., \Ike' J'nHftllf ..... cr-.1 MtMtW' nit111•i .... .,,, lfll!W 1\.111•• A. M11t11lll•• M......-.... 1:.1w L Ptl•r Kritf "4"1*"1 IMdt Cl!y [fl!IW ~.-,.rt .... ~ lJJ) N1•11•rt lt11l1~••tl ),f.lli~t Alll.l,,u1 •.O. It• 1111, tJ,61 ...... _ Co.It Mft•: UI W•I lf1' $1rft'I L ....... IVC!I: tt:! ,.,nl "'"'""''" .............. 9-dl! HIPS ... ~ ~ ~ (....._,., • Ntr1'I II CMllM .... development studies over to lts own Ocean and Shoreline Development Committee. Mayor Ed firth cited year-long efforts of the Upper Newport Bay Cooperative Planning Project (UNBCPP), a group composed of city, county and Irvine Company officials, and said that Is where the planning study belongs. On a unanimous vote, the council said it "reaffirms and re~mpbasizes its desire to cooperate with the County of Orange and ether appropriate agencies and institutions (In planning efforts)." However. the rtsolutlon slates those planning efforts should be guided "by the interim report now being prepared by Uie Upper Newport Bay Cooperative Planning Project." Hirth, who along with Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Irvine Ca in p a n y Prtsldent William R. Mason, comprises the policYr board or the UNBCPP. aald that Interim report will be ready May 3. "We want to decide, based on this, what our next conclusions shou1d be, 11 the m1yor slJd. He aaid Lbe city wants to show support for the county·s elforts "but the planning project has been at this thing for a year." ''It's best to wait and see what It says," Hirth said, "the report wlll make some firm recommendations ahd will also say what other information is needed." Councilman Lindsley Parsons 1greed. ''We started thl.s thin&," he said, "I don•t like the idea of the county coming dov.·n a year later and taking over.'' Vote Amendment Now in Assembly SACRAMO:NTO (UPI) The Assembly Rules committee today cleared for noor 11ctlon Stnale-paqed leclslaUon to ratify the 18-ytar-old voter amendment to the U.S. ConsUtution. The amtndmtnl would empower 18-to ~year~ld.! to cast bllloll In all tltctlons. including statt and local contests. They cwrrenUy art empowered to volt in Presidential and Congrtsslonal elections. Thlrty·seven olhtr states mWlt endorte the Amendment before II becomes law. The Rules COmmlUee approved and sent to the full Assembly raUf1c1tlon leglslaUon by Sen. Mervyn Dym1lly (0. Los Anitlea). Assemblyman llcnry WaxmRn t{).Los Angeles), car r led vlrtu11lly Identi cal le.glsl1tlon In the 11.ssembly but abandoned ~ ~elsure 1nd joined Dym1Uy 1s 1 coauthor and will m1na1c It on the noor. I Tustin Trustees Issue ' Dress Cotk ControversY,·Held Over Until May 10 Ill' OIOROI LWIAL Ot "' a•llY ...... ~ A crowd or dress-code-Issue devottts forced the Tustin Union High School District to move its board meeting Monday night into Tustin High School cafeteria. While the meeting place shift s:itJsfled the seating needs of 200 persons attending, the board's failure to 1ct on the landslide 'llTIUen vote calling for abolition of the dlatrlct dress code did not placate them. Board President Chester C. Briner of Mission Viejo explained to the crowd . made up rrm;Lly of long-haired boys and pant-suited or mini-dressed girls, that the board would not act on the dress code until ll.!I M11y 10 meeting. The board reetlved In the meeting agenda, a superh1tendent'1 report on a parent survey that showed 675 parents who want the code .abolished and only 11 who y.•ant It to remain as is. Several persons in the audience attempted to present updated data that showed 901 parents had written replies to the district survey that called for abolition or the code. Their attempl.'l \rere ruled out of order. f'igures supplied to the press indicated 96.4 percent or parents sought an end to l h e controversial Tustin dress code. Briner said the board had e11tabllshtd an April 12 cutoff date for rePJies to the code survey, but had not indicated it would take acUon on those replied Monday night. Tustin board candidate and member R<ibert Bartholon1ew, of Santa Ana. objected to a suggestion made by Brlner that the board appoint another commHtee to further study the tuue. "\Ve agreed we'd maie a decilion lorught based on the: review by the ( parent organizations) Coordlnating Council and the survey r e p I i e s , ' ' Barlholomew said, to an autbreai: or Unprecedented Polic11_ Rules on Budget Approved An unprecedented policy setting ground rules for the preparation of the 1971·72 Newport Beach city budget was adopted unanimously by the city council ~1onday night. The guidelines slipulale among other things, the new tax rate shall nol elceed $1.20 per $100 valuation (a two and one- half cent decrea~e), the eouncil must approve the hiring of all replacement personnt'l, there shall be a frttte on manpower at the exisUng level and a IS percent decrease in miscellaneous er- penses. In ether action Monday night, the council: -Said it will schedule a public hearing Medic Helped To Save 135; 'Not a Hero' on a proposed repeat or the tidelands use fees at Its next meeUng. -Referred back to committee a proposed resolution on seJt.goveming procedures. -Sent an ordinance giving the council final authority in the issuance of use permits to the planning commission for study. -Authorized a $10,000 expenditure for remodeling of the offices of the Community Development Department and City Attorney. -Approved tentative tract maps for the lrvlne Company's 111-acre, 232-unlt Spy Glass Hill subdivWon north of San Joaquln Hills Road and a 42-lot subdivision ln Big Canyon. -Approved the final maps for an extension of the Bren-Harbor View development dividing 17.16 acre,, into 75 lots and the final map of a planned expansion of Park Newport Apartments dividing fil acres into eight separate Jot.!i. -Authorized a $M0 expenditure for cleanup crews for the Corona del Mar aMual spring cleanup and beautification drive. -Sent a proposal to change the name of Palisades Road to Bristol Street to the Planning CommWion for public hearings. -Approved expenses for Mayor Ed Hirth In the amount at: $(29 for his. trip to the National Rivers and Ha r b or 1 Coof"ene< IJ\ Wuhlnaton, D.C. Jut month. Harbor Problem Center Hunting, for New Site Besldea o v e r c r o w d In g due to but residential devtloprne.nt, unless It HMl Jim Fulton is a man who doesn't widespre1d acceptance by the young, tbe existed -as did the clinic buUdinf, sinet see himself as a hero. Harbor Area Youth Problem Center has clo&ed -before tM area was establlahed Yet he was recently awarded a Silver another problem today -finding another for resldenUa1 use. Star for gallantry in Vietnam comblt. tiew location. Only a commercJal or professional zone Fulton, 29, who is currently stationed at Sympathetic but helpless, the Costa will be acceptable for the Youth Problem El Toro MCAS Is genuinely modest about f\1esa Planning Commission Monday Center, recent reC!lpient of 1 $1,500 his part in a medical evacuation nearly a night voted 1gainlt a zone exception Disneyland Foundatlon C o m m u n J t y year aio ths.t re:iu.lted in his winnipg the permit for the faciJ.lty to move. Service grant. !" Now located at 333 E. 17th St.. in l Cit ff! I •· ~ Mond ,._ medal. Y o c a~ all'~ ay u"' t.one aupporting chetr,s from the audience. "We'U have 110 .!iUCh outbursts from the audience no matter which side of th# issue they're on,'' Briner said, gavellin~ down the abolition advocatu. "lf this can't be an arderly meeting '''e'll maintain a closed meeting,'' Briner said. Bartholome\v amendtd 11is remark tit indicate he did not mean the board should" act on lhe dress code at Monday 's meeUng but rather that the issue had been stud.Jed enough. Truslee June Smith or Tust in. was asked by Briner lo "survey the current fashions for glrls and boys to see the kinds or tbings that are available in tht: stores for school v.·ear ne.1t year.'' That suggeation was met by a very obvious jab in the ribs by a girl wearing hot panL, \vho v.·as seated in the audience with a boy whose long blond locks stopped • hair's breadth short of violating the present code. Althoug!t Mrs. Smith said she though' the board had enough infonnatlon with Y.'hich to make a decision, ahe told the audience "You have to understand that with the information we've gotten, some only minutes before the board meeting, v.·e couldn't make a rational decision an !his tonight." Added to the written survey respon,,e/ presented to the board were two other surveys. J im Hicks, Foothill HIRh School student, representative to tbe board. said the lnterschGol Council had polled school administrators in Orange Caunty district.s that abolished or have rela.1ed dress codes. "We polled 34 schools and received 29 replies," the neaUy, but mod-dressed youth told lbe board. He sald the survey showed most· admlnlstrators found little er no change in the appearance ol students or ln student attitudes following revl.llon or abolition of dress codes. A document prepared by the Tustin · Secondll'f Education Association for the board, reported the results cf survey taken among 200 of the district's 300 teachers. The data indicated 77 percent or the . teachers polled felt a dress code wu • UMecessary; 63 percent believe th• district needs no dreu code stronger thari. i.!i spelled out in state law, and 63 percent.. said they supported the code only because it W&J UJelr obligatlon to support district policy as employes of the district. f'rom Pagel LAND •.• commercial zone, lhe volunteer agency exception -rmll pll atl ·-• fil'•• According to the official citation he was t"" ap c on -.i..., ....., had tentaUv@ly obtained • former fee .!hould never have been accepted nor to the awesome proceedings. . the medical corpsman on a Marine medical building at 1814 Fullerton Ave., the hearing scheduled. ''Are you aure you don't want to round Medevac helicopter which was getUng 111 an R2 residenUal neighborhood. "I'm afraid it was cur mistake.'' off your bid," he suld, "maybe $390,000." wounded 1farines, South Vietnamese Zoning ordinances prohibit anything Planning Director William Dunn tald "Downey bids $389,900," Starrett said. soldiers and civilians out of a hamlet Problem Center representative Streeter coldly, giving Bettencourt an icy start. King, of 740 San Juan Lane, Cost.a Mesa. Frome C!ame forward , a little more near Da Nang which was under attack. 3 T J • d He commended the center's service to slowly. "Rinker bids $394,900." While under heavy fire, Fulton and the eellS Il] UfC troubled young people -well over 2,000 Starrett came right back, "$399,900 - crew chief left the helicopter to search with a variety of problems -since the Downey Savings." the village for wounded. Ill A UtO Crash organi.zatlan opened 16 months ago. They each bid once more and Frome The ci'tation says he made this Lrip rour "I am very sorry that we dld not tell asked for another recess. you ln advance." Dunn added. "$414,900 -Rinker Developmenl,0 he limes lhat day, bringing out about 135 Three Orange teenagers es ca Ped Citing almost constant overcrowding said after the brief con1ultation. people. serious injury today when the car in at the 17th Street suite since The Center The figure was already twice as much Fulton, a native Californian who was which they "'ere riding crashed into a opened. King told the commiS11ion a new per acre as the city paid for property at raised in Michigan, says details of thal light standard in Balboa. hGme must be found within size and Newport Center. mission are a little vague. "It wasn't a Preliminary reports indiC!ate the three budget limits. Starrett. nG longer fhe picture o[ day I had planned on remembering for girl s were traveling westbound an Ocean C.Omrnissioners agreed to remove the composure, looked :it Frome, walked' the rest of my life." Boulevard near the intersection of L hearing from the agenda until it can be ly h I. 1 Tustl •t th I lb th forward and with a jerk In his voice saJd, current e 1ves n n. ,.. a Street when their car collided wi e rescheduled for another address and not II Fut•-ta"oned I Da Nang ''Downey Savings and Loan bid 1 me, wn was .' " n pole. require payment of an addiUonal filing Air WI ., t9,900."' with the First Marnle ng. ..J Traffic Investigator Stan Bressler said fee . .,, "it hid beePt a pretty quiet.night. We'd the Impact knocked the pole completely The cent.er operates weekdays from 4 It ••as Frome's tum, but he wa.s come back from a night mission at about orf its base and spun the car around to 9:30 p.m., y,•ith a 24-hour Hot Line finished. 10:30 p.m. and about 1:30 a.m., we got ~ending il rear end first into a nearby telephone setup, referrlhg young people '"Thank you," he said, "or I should ny the call. . tree . u'ith a wide variety of problems to proper you thank us, we 're all through." "Being a medical corpsman, I didn t The lrio v:as taken to Jroag ~1emorial agencies for help. "Thank you very much," Mayor Hirta really know what was happening because llospltal .,1·here officials described their Organized in the flarbor Area. It has said, first to Frome and then to Starrett. I didn't have any communlcatlon!ll injurle~ as mlnor. Their names were not nonetheless drawn voluntetr support and The money for the land will go to the equi pment. When we got near lhe hamle!: available for release pending notification young help-seekers from Seal Beach to city's Water Fund, from where funda to though, T could see the horizon burning, of the ir parents. San Clemente. buy the property came 50 years ago. he explained. 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 The medic says he remembers the SEASAME STREET helicopter landing on a bridge near the little village and he recall' picking up about 10 wounded Marines and then some Vietnamese soldiers and then a lot of wounded civilians, most of whom wtre children. "The main thing on my mind WI! to get the people on and gel the hell out o( there," Fulton e1plalns. A TO.year Navy career man. Fulton says he didn't plan on being a medic for Sesame Street is obout the only street in the hasn't hod o carpet instollotion by Alden 's. harbor area that the Marine Corps when he enlisted. "Like about 70 pereenl of the hospitalmen, I didn't even know we serwd as medics for the MarineJJ until after t signed up." he notes. But duty with the !\larine Corps doe1n't bother him. He says he will put in for duty y,·ith the 1t1tirines again after bis tour at El Toro is up. Currently serving In El To r o • ~ personnel <iffice. Fulton has aliio served as an aviation physiology technician Al Norfolk. Va., Jn the intensive care unit et Great Lakes Na\'al Hospital and in tile Aviation f\-ledical AC!cdaratlon Lab in Pennsylvania. In spite of a row of ribbons whicti represent various clt1Uons and con1mendation.~. Fulton tnslst.1 he Isn 't anything special. "I don 't consider myself a hero. The pilot and the ~pilot -in r1ct all the pilots and co-pilots I new with -they really did some out.staodlns Oying. 1 un<l1rttand thf:y were put In for lhe: Navy C:ross and lhey deserve It," be says. Bell Tower Silenced OAKLAND tAP ) -The b':lls at FrultvAle Pre~byter\an church have. been !iiltnced temporarily. The Rev. Robert Dow Nicholson explained rt1onday that he discovered a if~' :kr:3 \s nuUng In the bell tawer of hiJJ church, and he didn't want to disturb her. In our thirteen yeors, we h~ve carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Meso, Newport Beoch, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach . One neighbor tells another until often we hove worked in every home on o block. The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make eoch customer hoppy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't, bring her in with you.) IAHTA ANA. Oll:ANOI. TUITIN C.11 ••• ALDIN'& llD HILL CAIP'ITI I Dll:AP'lllll 11Jr4 '"'M. Tu1tln, c.1. ........ ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4138 ' , Costa Mesa Today's Final N.Y. Stoeb YOC. 6-4, NO. 88, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE coyNTY, CACIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIC 13, 1971 TEN .c&l'rs Harbor School Di·strict Faces Salary Standoff By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tM OlllY 1"1191 lttlN Orange County's first impasse proceed- ing in school board teacher association ~lary negotiations has been called by fhe Newport-Mesa Education Association. -The action was described loday as "a• lritermedlate atep that may lead to a 1frike against the NNport-Mesa Unified School District." Impasse proceedings are spelled out in recent amendment.! to the Winton Act, at.ate legislation which gGver1U1 school district and employe association rela- tions. -Brad Thurman, president ol the 750- 4 Arrested In Alleged Daley Plot CHICAGO (UPI) -Four persons have been arrested in connection with an -11eged plot to assassinate Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil rights leader Rev . Jesse Jackson and make a "power grab" in the ensuing racial strife, The Chicago Daily News Monday quoted an unidentified source in the C.ook County state's atlorney'g office as saying the four were part of a militant group planning lo hire aMassins to klll Daley and Jackson, then make a play for power. Earl Preston Dillard, 37, and Howard Harris, 33, were arraigned Monday on charges of solicitation to commit murder. Assistant St.ate'• Attorney Marshall Weinbtrg said two other men, Charles Whiteside, 35, and Terry Stmmom, 311 were arraigned Thursday on the 1amt ~· DeJM!IJ Polloe Supt. John Kelly diclined comment on the detaUs of tht trreSt5, cltlng court decisions which protect the righta of the defendants. He did say, however, that others were being Sought in connection with the alleged plot bllt declined to say bow many others might be involved. Dillard and Harris, described as unemployed laborers, were arrested s.turday and White.side and Simmons on Wednesday. police said. Felony Court Judge John F. Hechinger ordered all four held on $5,000 bond each 1nd scheduled a hearing for April 21. Officers of the Chicago Police Gang Jnlelligence Unit (GIU) said the alleged solicitation took place in a vacant apartment on the west slde. The arrests were made by the GJU. reportedly following a lip concerning the alleged solicitation. Details cf the alleged plot were not bnmediately revealed and police made no mention cf the amount cf money involved. Long Beach Man Held in Thefts Of Wayne Guns .A Long Beacb man has been. arres~d by Newport Beach detectives 1 n connecticn with the theft nearly a year ago of a gun collection from the Baysbcres home of actor John Wayne. Held In lieu of $62,500 bail is William Ia: Montgomery. 43, who was arre~t~ at his home al 3661 River Drive al 7:30 p.m. Monday. According to detective Ed Rudd. Montgomery has been llnked to a portico cf the gun collection .,.,.hich was recover~d last month frcm the governor or BaJa Califomia . Al that time, 17 guns from the 30 originally reported stolen w~re ~rsonally picked up by Wayne in Mexicali. Rudd said the guns, valued at $12,000. were held by Gcv. Raoul Dial who would return them cnly lo the actor. Tbe olficial told polia: his state polia: had impounded tM guns during one of lbeir in•eaUgaliom and he bad duly noUfied U.S. government offlciall. Rudd Aid Diaz asserted the U.S. officials told him the insurance bad been pakl on tbe coUecUcn and there was no interest In its recovery. The governor claims he kept the guns -most of which are mementos that are lnecribed with I.ht actcr's name - because ht thought there might be some sentimental value attached to them and W!lyne might have wanted tbe.m back. Rudd sllegrs that Montgomery tooll tbe cuns during the burglary of May 21, lr70 and transported them for dispcsal t• Meiic111i where he h11 1eme bwloeu Interests. There are still stveral guns from the colltttlon in the Mexlc11li are1 ind I.he detectivt ~aid he It hoptful Ult entire collection will ht restored t• Wayne. member teacher association said the "N·MEA representative council Monday 11igh1 voted lo bring impasse proceedings against the board cf education." The Winton Act provides for a three. member, fact.fi.nding panel to lnve.stigate the causes of negotiation failures. The pane]'s fiadings are not binding an either the board or the teachers. However, But Hake, eiecutive secre- tary of the N·MEA aald tht procedure will bring to a halt further negctiation cf teacher df!mands. Hake noted the impass proceedings authorized by the fl>member represt:!nla· live council could be ccnsidered a "no 1upport posilioa" on the part of teachers for the two ihcumbe.nt trustees seeking re-election to the board ne1t Tuesday. Should today's board study session, the public board meetin1 _at 7 o'cl<1Ck to. night in Costa Mesa Higb School, er an executive ses.sioa to follcw the wbllc meeting, produce some "written t"esPoftSe from the board to our proposals" the Im· paue proceeding would be withdrawn, Hak& noted. District officials were J10t available for comment on the teacher ll'OOP'• ae-. lien this morning. However, admlnlstra· tors have said the N.MEA 11alary pack· age would cost the district $1.7 mlllicn for salaries a11d 1not.her $6.3 mlllicn for fringe benefit.! and educational program improvements !OIJght by lhe teachers. In the twc and a haU monlha since the teacher salary and C011tract package was preseated to the board, Rake . .said. ''We have bad no written response from the board to our proposals." "There has been no conscientious effcrt 0111 the part of the board tc meet their part ot the nelJOtiatlon process," be con· tended, noting that the Winton Act '1calls ccnscientlous effort to reach written agreeme11t." Teachers had hoped to have _rectived some written indication of an agreement by Monday, Hake said. The Impasse pr(). ceedin1 is hoped to force the board to put down in writlng its reaction!! lo teach- er demands . The teacher crganiutlon, which repre. seot.s three-fourths or the district's teach- ers, also appointed a "strategy f'Ommit· tee" which Will meet nezt Monday night "to review poMible future actions that could lead to 1 teacher strike," Hake uid. Teachers feel the board has not re. sponded to their prcpo31l! because "they want to delay negoti~na until summer when all the teacherl18ie gone," Hake aaid. By calllng for a fact llndJnc panel. teachers hope to forc.e public diJcloture of both slde.s of the pay and "°'tlng COi· d.lUons issues. "A fact-finding panel actr to let the community tnow What tbe two sides haven't taken Into accouat in their consideraticns that might lead to an agtMment," Hake contended. Tbe board and the teacher group would each appoint a member to the puel. Tbe third member woold be mutually agreed upon. Hake said the third panel mem- ber probably woold be drawn from the member&hlp cf the American Arbitration AssociaUon or the state conciliation len'· ice. Sl{yscraper Ol('d J Planners Endorse Mesa Tower Twin Whale Tale ·l I Marcus Lee Montgomery, 2, Detroit, ls not so sure this concrete and steel playground whale is friendly. Even when daddy went inside to show Marcus the whale is toothless, the tearful boy refused to follow. Harbor Problem Center Hunting for New Site Besides overcrowding due to widespread acceptance by the young, the Harbor Area Youth Problem Center has another problem today -finding another new locaticn. Sympathetic but helpless, the Costa Mesa Planning Commlssion Mcnday night voted against a zone e1ception permit fer the facility to move. New located at 333 E. 17th St., in a commercial zone, the vclunteer agency had tentatively obtained a fonner medical building at 1814 Fullerton Ave., in an R2 residential neighborhood. Zoning ordinances prohibit anything but residential development, unlts1 it existed -as did the clinic building, since closed -belore the area was established for residential use. Only a commercial er prcfessielnal rone will be acceptable fer the Youlh Problem Center, recent recipient o! a $1,500 Disneyland Fcundalion Commun It y Service grant. City cfficials agreed Monday the :rone excepticn permit application and filing fee should never have been accepted nor the hearing scheduled. "I'm afraid it was our mistake." Planning Director William Dunn told Problem Center representative Streeter King, of 740 San Juan Lane, Costa Mesa. He commended the center's service to troubled yoong people -well over 2,000 with a variety of problems -since the organiiaticn cpened 16 months ago. "I am very sorry that we did not tell you in advance," Dunn added. Citing almost constant overcrowding al the 17th Street suite since The Center opened. King told the commission a ntw home mwt be found within size and budget limits. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM DtllY f'li.t Steff Considering economy, ecology and earthquakes, the Costa Mesa Planning Commission Monday endorsed a second senior clUzens' project to stand as a skyline twin beside Bethel Towers. The vote was 3 to I, after lively debate leaving a city oouncilman and a Baptist minister ruled out cf order. Ccmmlsaioner Nate Reade made it clear he supporta the new Costa Mesa Towers in spirit, but wanted more time to study the federal financing method. This -plus fire aafety -was the key concern. A series of citizens questioned the project, including Cooncllman William L. SL Clair, who finally clashed with Rev, Harley Murray cf the W e st e r n Association of Baptists Inc., sponS()ring agency. By the time the 4().year federal loan en the $5 million tower ia paid cff, the nonprofit organization will own it cutrlght. while now plaMlng an adjacent Third Inflation Alert N~ftll A8ks. Steel Unions I ·'Go Easy _ in Wage Talks' WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The Nixon Adminlatratiori said today the ateel workers' recent contract settlement with the can industry was innatlcnary. He urged the union to be mere restrained in contract talks this summer with the basic 1leel industry. The White House. in its third inflation alert, said the three-year can contracts providing 9 percent wage a.nd benefit increases each year "repreSf.Dts no Judge Sentences Two in Tax Case SAN DIEGO (AP) -Bu1inessman John S. Alessi<> was sentenced today to three years In prison and fined $20,000 fer income tax evasion and conspiracy. His brother Angelo drew one year and the same fine. The sentences were imposed by U.S. District Court Judge Bruce Thcmpson, who heard their pleas of guilty March 10. The brotheni were named in a 27-count Indictment returned by a federal grand jury charging them along with three ether family members with conspiracy, income ta1 evasion and failure to report income. When the pleas were entered, U.S. Atty. Harry Steward said the federal government would ask fer dismissal of the ether charges naming as defendants John Alesslc's son Dominic and two other brothers, Tcny and Ruwll. pr'Oifelll tcward the declining trend cf wage increases that is ellsential if we are to regain increased stability of prices and costs." The inflation alert released by the President's Council cf Economic Advt. sers tlso cited increased freight rates in the railroad and trucking Industries, higher co.st !or lumber, the failure of con. sumer meat prices lo fully reflect lower wholesale prices, and high w a g e increases for construction workers. The report also cited a 48 percenl hike ln New York City taxi fares as an e1ample of what ''artificial barriers to competition" can mean in consumer prices. It 1aid cab fares In the city, where the number cf cabs allcwed has not been increased since 1937, are twice those in Washington where there is no restricticn on the number cf cabs. The council aaid It feared that !f the steel workers got the same settlement from the steel Industry as frcm the can Industry, the steel firms W()Uld have to raise prices, making It tougher for them to meet fcrelgn competition and reaulting In increased unemplcyment not cnly in the basic steel Industry but alsc amcng steel-using industries. Council Chairman Paul W. McCracken, at a briefing on the inflation alert, refused to indicate what t h e admlnlstraticn wculd consider a fair increase Jn steel industry wages, saying this w n u I d be Inappropriate w i t h negotiations coming up. Newport Land A11~tioned Blinn W atchcat Routs Burglar In Costa Mesa City Sells Two Acres in Huntington Beaclt, Newport Beach Ccuncilmen Mcnday ni1ht ancticned off nearly two acres cf land the cltf owm In Huntington Beach and for the mO!"t part, the proceeds kept the municipal fathers walthlng In atunned silence. It was the last section of an SO.am tract Newport bought In Huntlnl{t<ln Beach half a century ago at the 1weaome price. of $335 per acre. Ad.lng. Newport City Manager Phil lkttencourt fidgeted but kept writing the numbers down, Dennis Starret was at the councll podium. "Downey Savl'1gs bkls $369,900," he said. Walter From e , nprtsenting Rinker Development Company, ealltd himself out of bis chair, "Mr. Mayor," he said addressing F.d Hirth, "I realize this Isn't In the rules, but may I have a Uve-rninute recess." The mayor didn't hesitate, "ln the best interestl of the city, I'll grant you that.'' he 1aid, hil face burning u tbe price built up. The council was in the midst <if auctioning off the 1.93-acre tract it owps .al the Intersection of Brooihurst Street and Adams Avenue in Hunlin&ton ~ach. And the bidder& ..... Sol"I hot snd heavy. Dowl'lf:y ind Rinker were the only ones eligible to participate since only thty had 1ubmi1ted sealed bids two week.a earl)lt. ln those initial offerings. Downey J'lad come in with ll price of $338,000, Slt,(n) more than Rl.nker, If Rinker wanted to bid orally, It had to beat that 1338,000 by five percent. After that, the blddlng was to be In $$,000 Increments. Both sealed bids uceeded I.he property appraJJll. But when Bettencourt opened the aactlon. Frome dld.zl't hesitate. Ht atepped rorwanl and offer«l 13M,IOO. lbe fliW• quickly moved to Downay's ~ llOe wh<o From• asked for time. lii .wo!Je<l bocli to the ledern slowly, "Bid~ .b.niqpment bids 1371,too." storre1~1Pa ill his feet, "1311.1100 - Downey :;avl'1p and Loan." Ffome.stood, the entire room by this tlrq~ deathly 11tUI. '']tlnker bid1$384,900,"he11id flrmly. Starl'ttt, at.ill unshaken. I t t pp e d forward and Bettencourt interrupted, half aerto~y, but try Ina to add 11 Ultle levU;y JS.. LAND, Psse It .. l Watchdogs are often credited with crime prevention, but Costa Meg pollce today cfft~ the tale of a blind cat who attacked 1 burglar and waa beaten elf with a bNktt of Easter eggs. The Intruder ~ away with nothing. lnvtlltlgaton were catltd to the home of Mrs. JoeAnn F. Lawton, cf 3138 Bmnuda LMe Monday when abe retumod from Laiun• Beach to find ~ burglarlztd. -slipped tllroul)l • ball> room window and ranaacbd bedroom drawera b@fort cros.slng pattw with the Lawton!' blfnd watcheat. Police were tcld the animal will attack anything stranrt that moves, due to it.. bllndl1el3. Oebri.tJ scattered around the livln¥ room indicated the burglar protected hlmstlf with the Ea1ter ba1kct and cootenta belore Geeing out a door • medical and drug centtt. Councilman Sl Clair demanded to know bow soon other ncnprofit venturu can be expected from the Bapt11t group. He emphasized the word ncnprofil "I'm speaking," young Rev. Murray declared, adding, "I listened lo you." The two men then continued speaking: at the same time, addressin& each other directly instead cf throogh actin& Chairman H. J. ''Jimmie" Wood. ''GenUemen, you are out of crder!" (See SKYSCRAPER, P11e Z) * * * Mesa Skyline Fire Laws Impact Told com Mesa-enacted I e g 1 s I a l I e n requiring that all tall buildings have fire sprinkler systems may have a sweeping impact on federal bowing prcjects acrou the nation. Econcmic studies are making City Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley Jncreasingly cptimistlc about the prospecla, be revealed Monday night. His comments came after the Costa Mesa Plannin11 Commisslcn endcrsed a new 18-storly tWia to Bethel Towers, only to be built by a different church group with difierent federa] aid. The city's mission Involves cbangtng the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development {HUD) policy, since it now does not require sprinkler systems. Bethel Towers has none, and bu had three serious fires, cne fatal and all cf which would have been limited In ICopt or prevented by sprinklers. Costa Mesa Towers must have such a system under city stipu1aUon if it is finally built. The s p o n s o r In g Western Association of Baptjsts Inc., heartily approves. Councilman Pinkley conferred with HUD senior cJtlzens' prcject chief William Hughes during a Waahin&ton D.~. visit three weeks ago to promote sprinklers and other benefJta. Cost or such inltallaticns Is a key factor, since in the ca~ of Bethel Towers it would have been about 2.5 percent of the $3.3 million construction cost. Pinkley says ii HUD will agree tn pay the initial cost o( sprinkler systems. It appears the reducticn in fire insurance CSee FIRE SAFF:TY, Pa1e l) Oruge «:out Weather Fair skies fellowing low clouds la the general forecast for Wedne• day along the cout, with tempera. tum peaking at M on the seashore and up to 7$ inland. INSWE TODAY It 10(1J ju.t a c:wuol killing a/141' a bet/ in o StoL Btach bar. B11 Man.san frrmilu standardl, it ws hardly worth mtntioning. But a man pu!Zld a t7iggtr th.re• tbnt1 and another man died. Logbook, Page Q. -" MotMI l'Wof• II ftft!Mel Mftt .. or-.. e.o•TY t ..,,... .. ,......, ,. Sllfh t&.lt .tldl Mlftllh ""'' ,........ 11 TllM!wt 11 ·-. Wllltt .... 1& Wlfflff"• ft-, .. ,4 --.. I DAft. 'f r t\. OT St•ff ,.._.. MODEST ABOUT MEDAL Sliver Star Winner Fulton Medic Helped To Save 135~ ' 'Not a Hero' HMl Jim Fulton is a man who doesn't .ee himself as a hero. Yet be was recently awarded a Silver Star for gallantry in Vietnam combat. Fulton. 29, who is currently stationed'at El Toro MCAS is genuinely modest aboul his part in a medical evacuation nearly a year ago that resulted ln his winning the medal According to the official citation he was the medical corpsman on a Marine Medevac helicopter which was getting wounded Mar ines, South Vietnamese :soldiers and civlliaru: out of a hamlet near Da Nang which was under attack. While under heavy fire, Fulton and the crew chief left the helicopter to search the village for W<iunded. The citation says he made this trip four times that day, bringing out about 13$ people. Fulton, a native Californian who wu raised in Miclilgan, aays details of that mission are a little vague. "It wasn't a day l had planned on remembering for the rest of my life." I Currently he lives in Tustin. At that time, FuJton wa.s staUoned in Da Nang with the Flnt Marine Air Wing. "It had been a pretty quiet night. We'd come back from a night mission at about 10:30 p.m. and abou t 1:30 a.m., w1 got the call. "Being a medical corpsman, 1 didn't really know wb1t was happening because I didn't hive any communlcatio~ equ.ipment. When we got near the hamlet, though, I could see the horizon burning,'' he explained. The medic says be remembers the heUcopter landing on a bridge near the little village and he recalls picking up about 10 wounded Marines and then some Vietnamese soldiers and then a lot of wounded civilian.!, most of whom were children. "The main thing on my mind was to get the people on and get the hell out of there," Fullon explains. A 10-year Navy carttr man, Fulton says he didn 't plan on being a medic for the Marine Corps when he enlisted. "Like about 70 percent of the hospitalrnen, I didn't e-nn know we 1erved as medics for the Marines until after I signed up," he notes. But duty with the Marine Corps doesn't bother him. He says he will put in for duty with the Marines again after his tour at El Toro is up. currently 11erving In El To r o ' s persoMel office, Fulton has also served as an aviation physiology technician at Norfolk, Va., in the intensive care unit at Great Lakes Naval lfospllal and In the Aviation Medical Accelaration Lab in Pennsylvania. OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OU.NCE COAST PUILISMING COMl'ANY ll.t1b1r• N. Wied Prn .a"'1 i nd "'""°n''- J1c• II.. Curlt't' Vl(f 1""si1Hnl 111C1 G_,ll MtMOtl' ll'lt1rru1 Ktt•il Edll0t ll'lt1"''' A. MY•1>l'lin• M•~•glno l:d•lflr Clttrlt i H. loo1 Jlic~1 rd P'. Ni ll ·'""'If~. MtntQl"lf £01 1111~ C o~• "'"• Office l JG W11t lt'f' Str11t M11Ji,.9 Addr111: P.O. !101 I ~6G. ,1616 OtMr Offlc" Ml'*'JIOF"t !t1<l'I: nJ) Nf'lll'f'Oi'"I !OY'..,tnl i...o.,... '"''-"; n;: For111 ..,....,._..,, lol .... tlftOI01 lll(l'I 1111" !1Kh llMllfvll'd '-n Cltmlntt: JOS HOtl!\ El CtmiM llt>I DAn.V ~l\.OT, w1111 wll 1l'I h tomb1"1t'd ,,.,_ N_ .... u •• II 1111llll1hc• OlllV ·~C•fll , ..... ••"f' Ill IQ1t r1i. eOlllOl'll kl< U9Yfll ltK.11, Nc.W1191"; ltt(ll, CO.i. "''°'' H\lflll ... lM audio .._,,,,. 1111111. s... ,, .... ..,i.1 c_.,1tw,..., ••" s111c11c11:c11, 1io..,. .. 1 ... - r')M••I UllllOll. Prlflc!1ttl P<l"""9 Dltnl II •I ~ \W.I~ ••1 .Str-.., (0110 Mc11. , ... , ... 17141 ••2·4121 Cl111ll1N ~lll .. 642·5671 C....,.,llM. 1'1l. ONl\fe Co n t ~lltlll\tllnt c-r.1nv. Nt -1torif1, 1111111•11-. ti11JIW11I l'!tlMtl' ..-tlfftf"l\11~11 l'llft'I" l'fll"f' '10 r~M ,.ltMuo '"'\II ~­ l'flllJl9n ol ~; ·-· S.U,'lll clau ~ 1111d ti Nttop6t l a11cl'I ..,. c .. 1.i #-, Ct!l'°'"'I•, Subtc•ffll\o'I ltr «,....,.. t:.JS -.•tt>f'l'l "" 1n.111 n 1J tMftllll'f'I 11•llllo"f' •t1!1..., ......... JI -•hly 'TlitsUt. A"" u, im ·111 Swap Issue RedChinest Chairman Fails Set Free • To Kill Bay Pact 4 Ame1·icans " • By JACK BROBACK bt -. o.11Y r1111 l hllt Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Robert Battin in a surprise move this mornlng trled to kill the Upper • Newport Bay land swap agreement without further negotiations. His effort failed. Battin, the supervisor rrom Santa Ana's First Di.strict, v.·as responding to an April 12 lettn-from Irvine Company President William R. Mason . Mason asked the board to e1tend the April 25 deadline for negotiations. Battin responded with the allegation that the letter w.as ".telf·serving." He asserted Orange County shouldn't d.lscuss "any further possible new agrtement.s on the Upper Bay until the present agreement is terminated." Battin moved that the board reaffirm its acUon of Jut Jan. 5 in which it voted unamimowly to terminate the agreement. But Battin added the words "without conditions.'' Supervisol"I Ralph Clark and David Baker objected to these words. Battin agreed to delete them. The Battin motion then passed 4 to J with Supervisor William Phillips dissenting: Baker followed with a motion to e1tend discussions on the agreement for 60 days or until June 29. It passed unanimously. The Irvine letter which seemed to raise the ire of Battin and Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach slated that negotiations carried on to date with Caspers and BalUn or their representatives had not made any worthwhile progress. ''Supervisor Battin's only response to a request for serious negotiations was a memo stating that no joint dlscus1ion From Page 1 FIRE SAFETY •• ever a 40-year loan term will actually be cheaper, He estimates $300,000 on the new Costa Mesa Towers' 40-year HUD contract wilh the Federal Housina Administrati°". Financial estimates and negotiati•ns are continuing to determine the extent of fir~ ~surance reduction in such high-rise buildings compared lo cost without the protection. "lf they can do it, I am going t& recommend that we go baclt to Washington again and recommend that HUD . build this into all projects,'' Councilman Pinkley said. He brought back paperwork from the March trip showing :116 HUD projects com pie~ o; golng up in the COU1try, the vast maJor1ty -Jf not all -without sprinkler systems. .. Better senior citizen safety, not just for our own old folks but all across the country. That's what we're after" says Pinkley. ' He has adopted the campaign as his own pet project, based on a Costa Mesa Fire Department safety probe of Bethel Towers spanning Ill four years. The review has also led to ordinances now in the worb requiring sprinklers in all , buildings over five stories, plus a variety of other structures. From Pafl" l LAND ••. to the awesome proceedings. 1'Are you sure you don 't want to round off your bid," he su.ld, "maybe S390,000." "Downey bids $389,900," Starrett said coldly, glving Bettencourt an Icy stare. Frome came forward, a lltUe more slowly, "Rinker bids $394,900." Starrett came right hack, "$399,900 - Downey Savings." They each bid once more and Frome a.sked for another recess. "~14,900 -Rinker Development," he said after the brief consultation. 'The flgure was already twice as much per acre u the city paid for property at Newport Center. Starrett, no longer the picture of composure, looked at Frome, walked forward and with a jerk in his voice said, "Downey Savings and Loan b t d a $419,900." It was Frome's turn, but he was finished . ''Thank you," he said, "or I should say you thank us, we·re all through ." "Thank you very much," Mayor Hirth said, first to Frome and then to SllJ'rett. The money for the land will go to the city"s Water Fund, from where funds lo buy the property came 60 years ago. Dust Storm Rips West Texas Area LUBBOCK, Tu. (UPI) -A dust slorm laced with 60-mlle-an-bour winds turned the sky red, cauaed car wrecks and cut vi&1bilily so low across drought--crlppled west Texas today that residents could not stt aCJ""OM the street. '"If I had an airplane today. I could go up about 1.000 feet and homestead one of tile best farms in l.ubbock CUunty," said Deao Nichols, 1 farmer . "On real bad days like today. crops lose up to one inch of topsoil aad It takes seven years to replace that one lnch .'' Farmers shut down Irrigation wells to prevent dust damage . Twe.nty--0ne cars. lheir drivers hampered by the reduced vls1b\Bty, piled togelher on itn lntr:r1tate highway In Amar illo. Ter:., ~nding t:lghl persons lO a hi»p1taL would he carried out (Oil the future of the Upper Bay) wttil the agreflment Is uncondilionally terminated," Mason ~aid ln his letter. The Irvine Company has maintained the county cannot cancel the agr~ment wtilaterally aod has Indicated it will go to court to prove the point. The company also wants to negotiate possible damages due it if Ule agreement 1a cancelled. From Page 1 SKYSCRAPER •• Wood snapped with a sharp gavel rap. "Sit down!" Closing the hearing, Wood called for a motion after Robert Humphreys , assistant city attorney, uplalned that important tax and financial questions must still be answered. Commissioner Reade s u g g es t e d re-Opening the hearing to discuss the issues further, but Wood emphasized the city council can do this when it considers Costa Mesa Towers Monday. He reminded all present t h e commission makes recorrunendations solely on quality of planning -nol tax technicalities -and a poll of the panel indicated members John Leonhardt and C. C. "Chic'' Clarke were also ready to vote. Chairman Charles A. Beck was absent. ''1 have not.bing against the Baptists. I'm a Baptist myself." CommiAsioner Reade remarked. "I just want more lime to study it." Baptist arganiiers have pledged to pay $21,310 per year on a city contract oovering police, fire, sanitary and olher services Bethel Towers is exempt from paying under federal Jaw. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) project was built on a 50-year loan directly out of the U.S. Treasury, under Section 202 of the HUD code. ' Th.is proh.ihits such tax payment. The sponsoring SOulhern C a I if or n i a Assemblies of God Inc., agreed to support the various city services when some legal loophole \\'IS found. So far, it hasn't been and local taxpayers foot the hill. Speaking Monday night, Rev. Murray assured commissioners Costa Mes.a Tov.·ers' construction under Se<:Uon 236 of 'the HUD system will allow 4iis paYl1).E!n l hut the city w8nts federal confirmation. He explained the second-18-slory. 210- unil fa cility for the elderly will be financed by the Federal Housin g AdministraUon through private capital much as any individual homeowner gets. "We can do it. Jf the city had the papers tonighl we'd sign them," he said enthusiastically. "I'm afraid this isn't going to fit together as easily as you think ," cautioned attorney Humphreys. He theorized HUD and FHA financial experts will consider the $21,000-plus service contract promised by Costa Mesa Towers promoters and knock out a few 8eclions it will designate as taxes. The final vote spells out thal construction Is contingent on this ability to pay for city services required and rendered. while being exempt from regular property and school taxes. School support accounts for 55 percent of a property owner's tu package, while residents of either tower will have no children in local schools. A variety of other conditions including sprinkler system installation and a 24- hour, trained resident manager were attached to the zone and helaht limit permit application ei:ception. Neighbors of Bethel Towers, 666 W. 19th St., who spokt. generally oppose another one at 660 W, 19th St., on property owned by Howard Lawson o! Newport Beach. Archie Mann , of MO Beach St., criticized plaMing in general, plus the clouded tai: picture and said Bethel Towe.rs tenants come to his doughnut shop to unload various troubles. "I come in contact with them every day," Mann continued. He suggested the city should develop more parks as a deterrent to venereal disease, drug use, crime and other youth-oriented social problems. Planning Director William Dunn said most Bethel Towers renters seem pleased. noting the waiting list Is as long as the current tenancy roster. George Brink, of 665 Beach SL, complained of Tower1·caused environmental effects. saying he realized It was a small point but one he wanted to make. "Our wind velocities have increased drastically. Another structure will put our neighborhood in a wind tunnel ," Brink added. ''Throughout a good part of the year we are in the shade,'' he concluded. Tom Manus , of 2561 Portola Driv1 and Nonn French, of 2865 Stromboli Rold, both raised the earthquake question. '·An IS.story building will sway real nice and the IOSI of life will be hllhtr when it falls ," said Manus. French pointed lo put history, when l.nd.11"9 came from mile.a ar<IUnd to bathe In local mineral hot springs, building Chowing Down General Chairman Bill Huscroft (left) and assistant cook Don Muhli g get the message-Dennis Helsper. 10, likes pancakes. Look for Den- nis at tbe head of the line April 24 when Orange Coast YMCA stages its 17th annual pancake breakfast in the parking lot at Richard's Lido Market. Newport Beach. Celebrities will cook for the 7:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. fund-raiser. J Newport Builder Draws Jail Term in Tax Case Ward Wilsey of 445 Santa Ana Ave., Newport Beach, former Orange County building contractor. v.·as se ntenced Monday to serve 10 months in jail and pay $4,000 in fines on three counts of failing to report income and defrauding savings and loan firms. Federal Judge Frances \Vbelan in U.S. Dislrict Court in Los Angeles also sentenced Wilsey to five rears probation. He was found guilty feb. 18 after the longest criminal tax trial in the history 0£ the local federal courts , just one day short of si1 .... ·eeks. according te prosecutor Arnold Regardie, assistant U.S. attorney. Operating as Eagle Enterprises. Wilsey was convicted of filing false income tax returns for 1!16J..6.HS, failing to report $56,000 in income and filing false statements with savings and loan Cleanup Project Slated in Mesa A community cleanup campaign is being organized for Costa Mesa by the Odd Fellows and Rebekah lodges. in cooperation with their junior girls Theta Rho chapter. The April 17 and 18 event is endorsed by the Costa ~,ess Beautification Com· millee and will run 8 a m. to 7 pm. both days. Oun1psler containers donated by Dewey's Rubbish Service will be placed at Stater Brothers Market, 707 W. 19th St.. for disposal of old furniture, chairs, beds. and other junk. Theta Rho girls will sift the trash for reclaimable items such as newspapers, aluminum cans and glas s, according to Grand Noble Gerald Am Poarch. associations. • Regardie said Wilsey was charged with bilking several savings and loan firms by billing them for construction work never performed, boosting bills over cost, or requiring subcontractors to pay extra money to Eagle Enterprises which was never credited to tbe savings firms. Oa~and Poverty Program Loses Government ~ Aiil SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The city of Oakland's $1 .6 million pcverty program was cancelled today by the federal government, the regional office of the Office or Economic Opportunity announ- ced . ll Rodger Betts, regional director of the agency, said OEO Chief Frank Carlucci v.·ould notify Oakland that funds will be cut off AprU :JO. although a "termination grant" would be made so that the Oakland Economic Development council can "phase out Its operations in an orderly manner.'' The federal agency said it was ending the federal grant be<:ause city officials indicated they do not approve the local agency 's acti vities. The Oakland Poverty Agency grant for this year was vetoed by Gov. Ronald Reagan in February and was e1tended on a temporary basis by federal officials. The current funding deadline is April 30. Belts has been critical of a political position taken by the agency director, Percy Moore. and w1s dlssatisfied wilh steps taken by the Agency's board of directors to discipline Moore. SEASAME STREET HONG KONG I UPI I -Arl'rled Chinese Communl!t junks st:lzed a yacht with four Americans aboard last week buL released the yacht and its passengers after foor days of "very courtt<Ki" dete.ntion in a coastal figh!ng villaae, olio or the Americans said today . The four, three of whom are U.S. government employes working for the Army and Air Force in Okinav;a, were captured while sailing the yachl Venture from Hong Kong lo Okinawa. The three government employes are Theodore Stavy, 44, Hentley, Monl~: Larry Tippens. 30, Atlanta, Ga., and Floyd Sebring. 45, from California. Seavy and Tippens work for the U.S. Army rh Okinawa and Sebring works for the A1r Force. The fourth is Bill Baxter, 56, San Francisco, a Christian Scientist lay, minister who has been a well-kno'f'R businessman in Asia for almost 20 years. Seavy had just purchased the yacht in Hong Kong and they lelt April 4. en rout. to Okinav.·a. On April 6, north of Hong Y.ong, they ran into a fleet of armed Red Chinese junks, Tippens said. "The junks started to crowd us.." Seavy said. "'There were son1ethlng like 20 to 2.5 junks in the area. with eight to 10 of thetn converging on us." '"All were Chinese fishing junks vdth about 20 arn1ed fishermen (coastal n1Hitiamen) on each one.'• Seavy said. "\Ve were sandwiched by these junks aqd one rammed into US, bashing a hole in the hull on the side and crushing the railings and wiring." The Chinese boarded the vessel, waving !heir weapons and gesluring excitedly. They tied the hands of the four Americans and they were lowed to the coastal village, which Seavy said took about 15 hours to reach. They did not know tbe name of the village. . "The fishermen who rammed into e\ll' yacht were surprised that we carried no v.·eapons," he said. "They instanUJ became quite congenial. When they brought us to a small fis.hing viUage, lhly gave us what I estimate to be the bf.st they could offer. We were given tea, fresh buns, noodles, rice and hot water for bathlng." Seavy estimated that the village in which they were detained from April a until April 10 was "some 100 miles north of Hong Kong.'' Tippens said that after the Chinese became aware that they were not armed and were innocent sailors they "became as interested in us as we were in them." Ecology Program Set at Estancia In Costa Mesa ""The First Day," a challenge for action in preserving the environment, will take place April 21 at Estancia High School, Costa Mesa. The school's Ecology Committee ti,.s arranged a day -long program involving 4o speakers from UC Irvine, UC Riverside. Orange Coast and Golden West Colleges and area businesses and government. The sessions running from 8:05 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. will replace regular class schedules for students and are open to the public. "lt is time ll'e tried to go beyond tbe apathetic and verbal approach. It is time to become cmmmitted to action," Ecology Committee adviser Michael Lan· dino Jr. said. noting •·uninformed action is often destructive." The diverse views to be presented on 'The First Day "will be thought provoking and provide motivation to learn more se the proper decision can be made." Lan- dino said. Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn't had a carpet installation by Alden 's. In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block . The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven 't, bring her in with you.) • themselves a arut lodge. ALDEN'S "Then tMrt was a (rtal earthquake thal actu11ly cut lhelr water off," French c<>nlinued. Quake damage has been minimized as CARPETS i ll issue, since Betht.l Towers, dfsl1ned SANTA ANA. ORANGE, • DRAPES TUSTIN Call , .. by architect Don Fears, who also has lht ALDIN'S n<w blueprin1'. is subject 10 1lrie1 RID HILL CA•••n 1663 Placentia Ave. s1ancl1rdo. & DlA .. llll COSTA MESA Ti..-Bethel Towers foundation Jncl11t'les 1U74 lrYtn•. Tv•tln, Cal. IOI;: UI '344 646 •939 steel plllngs root~ In concrete 50 feel ll.,!:::.:;::: _________ ,!:::::::::=:... _____ .:_;,;_""'..;.:.;;.:_ ____ .J beneath the surf act of the property. 1 l ' ) • . Saddlehaek N.Y. St.oeks YOC. 'M, NO. 88 , 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIC 13, '1971 JEN CENTS Dres·s Code Hassle Causes Furor • Ill Tustin By GEORGE LEIDAL Cl 1M O•ilr Pllft 11•11 A crowd ol dresg-code-issut: devotees forced the Tuslin Union High School District lo move its board meeting Monday night int~ Tustin High School ealeteria. While the meeting place shift satisfied the seating needs of 200 persons attending, the board's failure to act on the landslide written vote calling for ibolition ol the district dress code did not placate them.· Board President Chester G. Briner of Missifln Viejo elplained to the crowd , made up mostly of long-haired boys and • San Onofi.~e Defended • On Quakes Spokesmen for one of lhe two utilili~ seeking federal permits for twin nuclear re.actors at San 6nofre reiterated this week that the existing complex at the coastal site is built lo withstand earthquakes even more severe than a M"1gnitude 8 temblor alona: l he Southland's two major faults. In a ract sheet issued berore the pending local hearings by the Atomic Energy Commission on the reactor project, spokesmen for San Diego Gas and Electric Company said the reactor in operation at San Onofre has been designed to "resist damage from a quake far more severe than any which could be hypothesized from any of (the two faults)." Both major faults are scores of miles away from the Onofre reactor sites. The San Andreas, the West's largest fault lies 60 miles from that segment of the ~astline. The San Jacinto, the other major fault , is 45 miles away. The spokesmen, quoting Seismologists for the !inn, said those two earthquake faults are the only Southland ones capable of producing . quakes o f . magn itude 8 on the Richter scale. Temblors of the severity are much more extreme than the deadly February 9 ghe.ker which struck the Southland. One small fault exists much nearer the reactor site, Utty admitted, but that fracture, named the Cbristianitos, ha~ been proven inactive for the past 100,000 years. The Chrislian itos lies one mile eoutheast of the plant. Utility spokesmen said s c i e n t i f i c rep:>rts say the fault where the February quake and its aftershocks occ~rred has shown evidence of movement 1n recent geologic time. "If that area ilad been subjected to the game type of rigorous geologic and 1etmnic investigalion as the_ San O_nof~ area this evidence (showing selSTnlC ad.J~ity) would have been noticed," the report said. The entire seismic issue, which held i;omewhat of a secondary role in testimony last year before the ca1ifomia Po.blic Utilities Commission (PUC) took the front se3t In early 1971. Along with the PU~ granting ?f the state license for the twin reactors (issued after the great quake) came astringent condition that the Atmolc Energy Commission intensively examine the seiimic factors al San Onofre. The federal comm issi on is expected tn sci'M!dule local hearings on the federal permit for the . react?r complex for llOlnetime later this spring. The nrm issuing the lnfonnation on the quake resistance at San Onofre holds 21). percent interest In 1he half-bilhon-Oollar project. Southern Ca liforn ia Edison Company hol,d the major. remaining interest. Testimony by expertJ from both flrms Ls expected to touch heavily. on the Kism ic factors at the AEC h~ar1ng~. And opposition-much of 1t local-will preably dwell on possible. quake damage as well. Bia Atom Test Slated " WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Unit.cl Stites plans an u~ground nuclear explosion almost f1v~ tlmes more powerful than past underground blast.I, it wu reported today. pant-suittd or mlnklressed girls, that the board wouJd not act on the dress code until its May 10 mttting. The board received in the meeUng agenda , a superintendent's report on a parent survey that showed &75 parents who want the code aboUshed and only 11 who want it to remain as is. Several persons in tbe audience attempted to present updated data that showed 901 parents had written replies to the district survey that called for aboliUon of the code. Their attempts were ruled out of order. Figures supplied to the press Indicated 96.4 percent of parents sought an end t.o t b e iets Down the Mission Trail Ski Film Slated At Viejo High MISSION VIEJO -"Once in 1 Lifetime," official documentaiy film of the 19'10 world ski championship... at Val Gardena, Italy, will be Shown to the public free of charge at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Mission Viejo High School multipurpose room. The Mission Viejo Kiwanis Club has arranged for the exclusive showing through Dick Barrymore Productions, maker of the widely acclaimed film . Featured is Olympic champion Biiiy Kidd, firSt American male skier to win a gold medal in world competition. • Mosaic Making MISSION VIEJO -The art of mosaic making will be described to members and guests of the Mission Viejo Association of Artists and Craltamen Thursday, April 15. Guest speakers will be Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dendel who have been involved in mosaic making for the past 13 yeani. The meeting, open lo the public, will take place at 7:30 p.m. in the Linda Visla Elementary School multipurpose room. • School Bid• Oper1 EAST IRVINE -The old El Toro School will again be offered for sale, but this lime the minimum price will be $10,000 less. Trustees of the San J o a q u i n Elementary School District h a v e aulhorized bids lO be opened May 5. Minimum bid must be $50,000. The property. located off Olive Street in El Toro. was offered for sale once before at a minimum bid of $60,000, but nobody wanted it. Terms of sale will be 10 percent down and 180 days to close escrow. Zoning will have to be mutually agreeable between school district and purchaser. YMCA Sponsors Outdoor Fitness Morning Clinic Sin Clemente area resident! are welcome to join the new spring session nf a YMCA-sponsored outdoor f i t n e s 1 program which will meet two mornings a week in South Laguna. The unusual course will include tests for htart rate, blood prusure, body fat percentage, osygen consumption and mobility before and aft.er the three-month session. The class alto will include callJthcnic.'I, jog.,..alk Intervals, yoga exerci.les and modified versions of volleyball and badminton. Meetings will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. at the Y Camp Dolph behind Laguna Beach Country Club. The registration fee for the course limited to 30 partidpanta Is $35 for new memben. Re.tum.Ina: membe.r1 will pay 12$. Registration JnformaUon and olher details are available by calllna 494-MJt. I controversial Tustin dress code. , Briner said the board had established an April 12 cutoff date for replies to the code survey, but had not indicated it would take action on those replles Monday night.. Tustin board candidate and member Robert llartholomew, of Santa Ana, objected to a suggestion mape by Briner that the board appoint another committee to further study the issue. "We agreed we 'd make a decision tonight based on the review by the (parent organiz.ations) Coordinating Council and the survey re p I i e s , ' ' Bartholomew said, to an outbreak of ear Rape Count Jails GI, Girl's Mom A young Camp Pendleton ~iartne face! charges or forcible rape and auto theft in what police in San Clemente described today as a sordid case ..D~ the violation o1 I H.yt!M>ld &irf -ld .UUeslOil and encouraged by her mother. Robert ·Dean Smith. 211 a member of the 2nd Infantry Training Regiment at Pendleton, was arraigned this morning on the three feloAy charges in South Orange County Municipal Court. His bail has been set at $12,500. The mother, a San Clemente resident, also was reported. in custody at Orange County Jail, awaiting court action on two counts of being an accompolice in the two rapes, which assertedly occurred earlier this year in a San Clemente motel room. She was arrested earlier in the week in the South County Courts building where she went to answer a bench warrant on a traffic violation. Officers said District Attorney's aides recogniz.ed the woman In court and ordered her arrest. Police allege that, the first incident occurred Feb. Z3 when Smith and a companion were in the woman's motel room. The mother assertcdly encouraged the Marine to violate her virgin daughter ''to calm her down." Investigators said a neighbor heard the conversation ar.d subsequent screams coming from a bedroom . The second incident allegedly occurred on Mareh 2 at the same motel. The neighbor then notified police, wh11 launched an investigatkm. Smith, authorities claim, was absent- without-leave at the time of the alleged sexual acts. After the second incident he assertedly took the woman 's auto and credit card!. Police said the Marine was found asleep in the auto last weekend on the side of a highway in Gila Berni , Artz., Highway patrolmen there returned the auto to California and Smith was released to military authorities at C 1 m p Pendleton. Local police were notified of the man'a arrest Monday by base provost marshal aides. S m i t h ' s arraignment included a charge of grand theft auto, making the woman a victim in one felony and the defend:.i;nt in two others. The woman's car. officers said, had 21 ,000 miles logged on it after It waa taken from San Clemente. Police said the girl, a San Clemente High School student, was released to custody of family friends pending legal action against her mother, Dana Harbor Builder To Discuss Project Orang• County Harbor DI 1 tr I cl Enalnttr Jam<1 Balllil(u. an erpert oa the construction of Dana Harbor, will dilcusl the '21)-million lkvelopn\ent and Its local Impact W«inHda)r ,1n Son Juan Capistrano. BaiUJ!atr wlll speak a< the noon luncheon meeUng of the C.pbtrano Beach Chamber ol Commtrct. The evtnt will be held II Pile 1114 CLVl'a Rest.auranl Gueits are weloome. I oupportln& ~ from the audienc<. "We'll bave no .1;uch outbursts from lhe audleoce. no matter which aide of the lssue 1he)''1' 6n," Briner said, gavelllng down lhe 1bolltioo advocttes. "II J}ili ?n'l be an orderly me_eUOI we'll maintain a cio.t ~Un&,'~ Brjner &aid. Bartholomew amended his reaiart to indicate ho did nol.....,, the bool<I ahoold act· on the ~ eode ... at ·Monday'• meeUng but +rather that ti. issue bad been studied eDOUlh. Trustee • June Smith of TusUn, WU asked by Brlntr 'to .. 1urvey the current fashions for 1Irla and boy1 ~ aee the • kinds of things that are available in the stores for school wear nexl year." Tb.at suggestion was met by a very obvious jab in the ribs by a girl wearing bot J)&Dls who was seated in tbe audience with a boy whose long blond locks stopped a hair 's breadth short of violating the present code. Although Mrs. Smith said ,.ne thought the board had enough lnfonnalion with which to make a decision, 1he told the audience "You have to understand that with the inlorrnation we've gotten, some only minutes before the board meeting, we couldn't make a rational decision on this ton lg ht." Added to the wrlUen survey respomes presented to the board were two other surveys. Jim Hicks, Foothill High School student representa:tlve to the board, said. the lntem:bool CWncll had poU<d school aclminlatraton In 0ranp Counly dlstric:1o that abollsbecf or bave relaxed dreu codes. "'We polled 34 ocboola and roceiY<d 29 replle11" tbe ntatJy, but mod-dresled youtll told Ill< board. He said the survey lhowed moat administrators found little or ni> change in the 'appearance of 1tudents or in student attitudes following revl8ion or aboliUon of dresa codes. Ire ase DA"-' HilBOR IRIDGI! DID,.,,. SnTLE: APPROACH DID Rap.airs To Bt Compl1tod Within A Few Doya Bridge Patt!hed Dana Rep 1 air Work 'Not Unusual' A three-quarter-inch &hift Jn an approach apron to Dana H,arbor's new bridge is being repaired this week by workmen using jacks and concrete injectors. And despite some local rumors lo the contrary -apokeirmen for the Orange County Rarbor District stressed that the slight sagging in some o( the compacted soil "is not unusual" in marine construction. The bridge, which 1eparates the two basins and allows access to an island in the harbor, I didn't settle-only one approach shifted, said Harbor District PlaMing Chief Ralph Hudson. The county officials sald that besides the stabilliing of the settled apron, crews have replaced electrical conduit which waa knocked off alignment by the gradual settling. San Diego Gas and Electric crews have completed that work. The utility 's local manager Bill Webb also said the settlinC was apparently minor and the conduit work was routine. The line which was affected bad never been energized , he said. Hudson said the repairs to the island- 11ide approach will be completed within a few days ,and county road department crews will begin installing lhe ,Permanent pavement over the bridge m coming weeks. Masked Brooklyn Bandits Get $250,000 in Holdup NEW YORK (AP) -Two masked holdup men escaped \II;~ $25(1,000 frnm a branch bank ln Brooklyn today while a third companion held 13 peraons hostage In a Staten Island home. police said. Police said !'me of the hostages, held all night, were related to the bank's manager, Charles A. Di Sogra, who also Lee Geronimo Services Slated Roman Catholic servJces are scheduled for tanl&ht and Wednesday morning for JO.year-old la: Anthony Geronimo Jr., a Mlllion Viejo lifih grader fatally lojurtd In a e1r-bicycle colllalon d u r I n c the wetkt.nd. Rosary for lite O'Neill Elementary School 1tudent wtll ~ held at 7:30 o'clock °""g)il al SL NlcboiJI Ollbollc Clllll'cb 11 :ICU El Toro Road. Lquna HUis. ~~ Will be e<Jebraled lll<ro W~y,ai 10 1.m. Let WU fllally injund iul Saturday when hlJ eyele and an auto c:oUJOed at •n lntertee:Uon near his home. He teavq his parenu. Mr. and Mr1. Let A. Gtioalmo Sr .• of 21111 La Pala Lane, Mla!lon Vle)O: a broihtr, Anthony : o Wlu, Mlcbellt LyneU Gtronlmo: and hb grandpartnts, ~:r. and Mn. Doniinlc Goronlmo OI Cleveland. Ohio. [4neakl f,\onuary In San Clemontl · i. In diup °' ""'"'tments. was held captive and forced lo open the bank's vault. All were rt 1 ea a e d unharmed, police said. Police said the three armed men Invaded DI Sogra's home on Staten Island Monday night and toor. him to his sister- Jn.Jaw's home where a tot.al of 13 people were held hostage. While one bandit remained with the hostages. two of the men forced Di Sogra to drive them lo the Ft. Hamilton branch of Community National Bank and Truat Company in Brooklyn at about 7:30 a.m. and ordered him to open the bank's safe. Police said DI Sogra apparently had only part of the combination of the two- lock safe, and the holduptnM had to wait for a woman cuhler to arrlva to open the lower part of the vault. The men e&Cllped wltll !250,0llO, ltB•lnc several bank employes h a n d c u f f e d togeiher, pollee said. They forced Di Sogra to drive them away from the base. dropped him olf and abandoned the car 20 blocks away. Evidence Up in Smoke CINCINNATI (UPI) -The 115 can.as of cla:1rette1 which poUce corifilcated as evidence last P'rlday In a theft case 1ft.re plaeed In 1 rear of[lce at the central police 1t1tlon. Officers d J 1 cover e ct Mooday tomeone had squeucd under mub wtre cove.ring the door to the off lee and ucaped with au U5 cartons. <fbr.re weu no IU$1)tctl. • Blockbuster Bombs Hit Red Forces SAIGON (UPI) -Six ihou!aod South Vietnamese troops: operating behind the greatest U.S. B$2 bombing attacb 1n eight months moved to within a mile o( besieged Fire Bue 6 today ln twin allacks from the North and Soulh. The U.S. Afi. Foree dropped twe moie 71i1..toll -bombl .. lhe Commun!sl -Tbe ('OUDteroffenslve to relieve the base 300 miles north of SaJgon near the converging borden or Laos, South Viet.Dam and Cambodia jumped off this morning when l force of 1, I 00 paratroopera Janded from U. S • helicopters three miles south of the baM and 4,500 infantrymen landed two mllu lo the Souih. A spokesman said the two forctl met no resistance 11 the paratroopers advanced two miles to within a mile of the base and the northern group advanced a mile. But Communists around the. base sent up 1uch a heavy barrage of antiaircraft flre one of four South Vletnames bellcopters reaching the base was shot down. B52s have bit Com1D11D~l buildup! around the base for a week and today a spokesman aaid 18 of the big bombers dropped 540 tons In what be called the heaviest iDe-day bombing since Aug. 8, 1970. In additDn, Cl30 cargo planes parachuted in twi> more of the 71ii-ton bombs which devastale an area the 11.ze or a cny block. The first two blockbusters to be used against Communi!t troopt were dropped Monday. Bell Tower Silenced OAKLAND (AP) -The bells at Fruitvale Presbyterian church have been silenced temporarily. The lltv. Robert Dow Nlcl>olson <J<Pllln<d Monday ihal he diacov•r<d a gnt1 dove ti nesting in lhe bell lower ol his church. llld be didn't WJl;Jlt to dlsturb bet. On EUltt, ba nld, Ille dove lald two tdl in her new home. The bells will be gJlent unUI the bablea art hatched and can ny away, the minister reported. Weadler Fair ikJes followlnl low clouda ii the 1eneral forecut for Wedne• day along the COISl, wlih tempera- turea peaking at 8S on tht sea.shore and up to 75 Inland. INSmB 'l'ODAY It """ fut • """"' killlna ofur o b .. f ma Stol Bt0<~ 00.. Bv Momon fomUv 11ondord.!, It 101 hardl11 to o r t h mntfoning. But o man J)1'U'cd o trigger Chrec times and OJtOthtf' 1M7" died. Loobook, /'ago II. I r ~ I I • ;! OA.ILY PJLOl SC La9unc Gives View ;. I Proposed Sign Law Criticized A8ked to comment on a proposed county sign ordlnan<.-e, LagWla Beach planning commissioners Monday night agreed tbat Ill ban on billboard .advt?rtiSing was fin,, but restricUons "SUUested for business signs seemed a IJtUe severe. New planning director Wayne Moody was instructed to convey this reaction to the cowtty Planning Commission's public hearina: on the ordinance today and also to supply the commission with a copy of Laguna 'a somewhat less restrictive sign ordinance. The county legislation would appl y specl{ically to two-mile corridors beside arterial highways and freeways designated as "scenic." These include Ortega Highway, El Toro Road, Santa Ana Canyon Road, Riverside Freeway, Laguna. Canyon Road, Laguna Freeway, Santa Ana Freeway, San Diego Freeway and Pacific Coa1t Highway lrom Seal Beach to San Clemente. The proposed SR (sign restrictions) district. would ban all outdoor advertising structures or signs (billboards) near the scenic routes and restrict necessary business signs to wall signs with a maximum area of 150 square feet per business. Professional nameplates and signs denoting the name of the shop could not exceed two square feet , illuminated 1igns would be limited 1o int.ensity and no moving or flashing signs would be permitted. No roof signs would be allowed. Newport Council To Study Beacli Dog Ordinances The Newport. Beach City Council Monday night did an abrupt about-face and ordered the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission to start an immedlale study of dogs on the beaches. During the alternoon study session councilmen seemed ready to tackle the controversy themselves and thereby :shortening what will almost certainly become one of tbe year's biggest issues. "We 've got \o m11ke a decision ooe way or th~ other, as soon as possible, and not step m the mess Laguna Beach did a year ago," Councilman Don Mcinnis of West 1'ewport had said earller in the day. When the subject arose during the business meeting, however. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers reversed field. "We have got to carry out the democratic process and let everyone have their say," he said, commenting that the PBR panel should conduct its public hearings, make a recommendaUon to ttie council, which subsequently will have to conduct more hearings. The council instructed City Attorney Tully Seymour to prepare two different ordinances, one patterned after that which was finally adopted in Laguna and the other similar to Huntington Beach'1, which bans dogs from beaches totally. The Laguna Beach ordinance bans dogs from beaches and certain parks during the summer, from June 15 to Sept. 15, between the hours of 9 a.m. and fl p.m. Rogers, in urging the longer procedure, took a stance contrary to his Freeway Fighter ally, Mn:. Margot Skilling, who had asked the council "to act as speedily i.S possible." She said with the county and the cities (Jr Laguna and Huntington-Buch banning dogs this summer they'll all be coming to Newport beaches. "And the county hea lth department Is considering condemning beaches that allow dogs,'' she ·warned. O,A.N•I· C:OASf DAILY PILOT OR.ANG<! COAST l"UlLISHINO COMl'AH't' Robort N. Wood l'l'ftklllll •nd f'ut>lblw J.,1 k. c.n,.,. \lic. Pralll...t end ...... MIMw' Thom•1 K•nil EOUor CommiUion chairman W i I 11 a m Lambourne noted that the ordinance would be effective only up to the city limits, but since some of the territory would be regarded as falling wlthln Laguna 's sphere of influence, comment was in order. Moody said strenuous opposition to the county ordinance is expected from sign companies. He also pointed out that any affected areas subsequently annexed to Laguna would C<lme under the city sign code. U.S. Forces Will Remain In SE Asia WASHINGTON (UPIJ -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the United States will maintain naval and air forces in Southeast Asia. indefinitely but there will be no fresh commitments of "massive manpower" there. Laird also said the American combat role in Vietnam will end this summer, but that U.S. forces will be involved in .some forms ot defensive combat beyond that point. He refwed to say when the American presence in Vietnam might completely end. In 1 Pentagon news conference, the defen1e secretary 11td the Vietnamisa~i9n pro~am ii succeeding and that the ne.w thrust or Defense Department planninc Is aimed for when the war is ended. In l.bl.s respect, be said, the United States should give financial and arms assistance to the nations of Southeast Asia that would enable them to make the best possible use of their own manpower and H.110urces. "We should not make the mistake or committing massive manpower to that fart of the world," Laird said. i'Military ass.latance -yes; American ground troop!, manpower -no." ' Laird 1aid he does, however, foresee the need to maintain other forms of U.S. military presence in Asia . He declined to comment on whether they would play a combat role and left open the length of time they might be needed. The defense secretary summarized: "To say that we would not have a presence in Asia (after Vietnam ) under the strategy of r ealistic detemnce ••• would certainly be misleading. "l would envision that U.S. presence in Asia as far as naval forces are concerned, as far as air power is concerned, that this would be a part or the realistic deterrent we would maintain in Asia ." Without making any prediction of a specific date, Laird said comb a t responsibility In Vietnam will be turned over to the Vietnamese command "in the summer period." He denied that the mauling suffered by the S o u t h Vietnamese army during the invasion of Laos had slowed down this process. Johns New Clerk For Capistrano Robert Johns, city planner ror San Juan Capl1lrano has also !>ten named acting city clerk. Johns accepted I.he post offered by the city council M o n d a y at the recommendation of Donald Weidner, city administrator. The planner, who had been serving as acting administrator before Weidner was hired, was officially relieved of bis administraUve duties. The council did not authorize extra compensation for the clerk post. Battin Move Squelched . • Chairman Fails · in Bay Swap Proposal S·t-r•e·t-c·h A Golden m a n t 1 e ground squirrel stretches to lull height fo r peanut offered by friend in Bend, Ore., where spring sun is luring squirrels out of their winter sleepink places. ·By JAOK BROBACK Of"" Dtlll',."1111 llllt Orange County Board of Supervisors Olalnnan Robert Battin in a surpr~ move this morning tried to !till the Upper Newport Bay land swap agreement without further negotiations. His effort failed. Battin. the supervisor from Santa Ana's First District, was responding to an AprU U letter from Irvine Company Presidenl William 'Jt. Ma$0ll. Mason asked the board to extend the April 25 deadline for negotiations. Battin responded with the allegation that the letter wa.<; "self-serving." He asserted Orange County shouldn't discuss "any further possible .oew agreements on the Upper Bay until the present agreement is terminated." Battln moved that the board reaffirm Its actlon of last Jan. 5 in which It voted Can Company Condem-,;,s Capistrano's Council By PAMELA HALLAN Of tM Dall' Plitt Si.ff ls the San Juan Capistrano City Council discriminating against beverage contain- ers? Steve Grozik, an official of Continental Can Company, says it Is. Grozik assailed the council Monday for p'assing a recent resolution to stem the problem of litter and waste disposal created by the sale of beverages in disposable, non·returnable containers. T.be resolution calls for the support of legislation to limit the use of the containers, requiring a deposit on all beverage containers, supporting research· in the manufacture of biodegradable containers .. and encouraging citizens to be 1nore responsible in their disposal. One section of the resolution, the part that Gr02ik strenuously objected to, was the support of legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution on such containers. Groz.ik said •·jwnping on this kind of bandwagon is very popular, but is not the answer." He said non-returnable containers represent less than two percent of solid wast~ in this country and that legislation ouUawing the containers would only "scratch the surface of the litter problem.'' He added that one-v•ay containers make up less than 17 percent of lhe voJume pf roadside litter· with paper proc;tucts • produciog 60 percent or the mess. "Vet you didn"t pass a resolution banning paper," he said. Grozik said the answer lo the problem lies not in banning products but In programs for recycling and reclaiming them. , 1 He called for rescinding the resolution and appolntidg a commlttfe to study problems as they relate to ()pistrano. ·'It probably is discriminatory since it aims at one area , but getting rid of twG percent is better than none at all," said the resolution's author, Councilman Jim Thorpe. ; "Until I hear from the people that they don't want this resolutio~, I'm not going lo change my mind," he .added. The aiuncil agreed to review the resolution at its next meeting. Blind W atchcat Routs Burglar In Costa Mesa Laguna Asks U.S. Grant For Festival Minibuses Watchdogs are often crediled with crin1e prevention, but Costa Mesa police today offered the tale of a blind cat who attacked a burglir and was beaten off with a basket of Easter eggs. The intruder got away with nothing. Investigators were called to the home of Mrs. JoeAnn F. Lawton. of 3136 Bermuda Lane Monday when she returned from Laguna Beach to find it burglarized. The color!ol Festival of Arts trams may reappear on Laguna's streets this summer. Festival directors learned Monday night. Director Mrs. Helen Keeley, who heads the tran1portatlon committee, told tbe board that City Manager Lawrence llose has promised there will be adequate transportation lo the Festival grounds either by city-owned minibuses or rented trams. ·'The city has applied for a federal grant to purchase minibUSt.s," said ~1rs. Keeley, "and it thi.s comes through i• Orne. the city will serve the festival with its· regul'ar bus line. "As an alternative, Mr. Rose said he u·ill arrange to lease vehicles and the new owners of the Venice Trl\m Company have advised us they now have three trams that meet s afet y code requirements and are seeking three more." The trams operated by the former Venice Tram Company owners were ordered off the streets last year because of safety code 11iolations involving brakes and windshields. Someone slipped through a bath- room window and ransacked bedroom drawers before crossing paths with the Lawtons' blind watchcat. Police were told the animal will attack anything strange tha t moves, due to its blindness. Debris scattered around the living room indicated the burglar protected himself with the . Easter basket and contents before fleeing out a door. If the trams are leased, Mrs. Keeley said, the comp>ny will requi<e that Billboard Owne1·s drivers be at least 25 years old and recommends women drivers. It was W W rurthe' suggested that high school age ar on Vandals students could collect fares, she said. To compensate for loss of parking DETROIT <UPI) -Billboa rd owners, spaces along the median strip at the escalating their \var with sign-chopping festival grounds. directors were told. the vigilantes. are using steel poles iii.stead of city plans to circulate the trams or wood on new signs. "Let's sel!' them cut unamimously to t e r n1 I n a t e the agreement. But Battin ad ded the words •·without conditions." Supervisor11 Ralph Clark and David Baker objected to these word!!. Battin agreed to delete them. 1'he Battin motion theq,_ passed 4 to l with Supervisor William Phillips dissenting. Baker followed with a motion to extend discussions on the agreement for 60 days or until June 29. It passed unanimously. The Irvine letter which seemed to raise the ire or Battin and Supervisor Ronald caspers of Newport Beach stated that negcitiations carried on to date with Ca~pers and Battin or 't be i r representatives had not made any \Vortbwhlle progress. "SuPervisor Battin's only resp0;ns:e to a request for serious negotiations was a memo. stating that no joint discUssion would be carried out (on the future of the Up{>tr ~y) until the agreement is uncond'itiona!J.y terminated," Mason ·said io his letter, · The irvlne Company has maintained th~ county cannot cancel the agreement un1laterally and has indicated it will go to court to prove the point. 'The company also wants to negotiate possible damages due it if the agreement is canceHed. Saddlehack OKs Computer Time Purchase Plan Saddleback College took a step into the world of computers Monday night whea trustees approved hiring a computer coordinator and purchasing computer time from nearby Santa Ana College. The plan was approved by trustees after a Los Angeles firm conducted a study and concluded the school's time- c o n s u m i n g , much-standing-in-line registration process sh o u Id be computerized. The plan will relieve the faculty of many clerical duties now involved in registration, the consulting firm slated in its report. As Saddleback College can not afford its own computer, the fir1n recommended the school enter an agreement with Santa Ana College for use of its equipment at a cost to Saddleback of about $1 ,000 per month. This \.vould compare with about $3,000 per month for the school \o rent !ls own equipment. the consulting firnl reported. In approving the proposal to hire a fa~ lime staff member to implement the plan, Saddleback President Dr. Fred Bremer noted the coordinator's salary would be approved by the board at a later date. Bremer noted there were funds in the 1971-72 budget to add tilt member to the staff . The consulting firni, Norris and Gotfried, estimated the school would have to pay $15.000 per year to hire the coordinator, "·ho woyld operate Santa Ana College's equipment. Trustee Al Brannon asked J I rri. Anderson. a representative of the firm if the school could hire the person on 'an hourly, as·needed basis instead of tuft lime. i "You need to get started with a nucleuS of someone who can continue in the program," Anderson responded. "I think you would lose an investment if you did hire him on an hourly basis ." minibuses continuously from municipal down steel poles," said Joseph Jones, The first of 10 seminars on drug abuse parking lots to the. festival grounds. general sales manager of a Lansing B for parents and students w:lll be held ?:30 Location of the eight parking lots is advertising firm which has lost five ig Atom Test Slated Drug Seminars Slated in Viejo p.m. Wednesday in the Mlsslon Viejo shown· on a map, especially designed by wooden·poled billboards since February. High School lecture hall. artist Dixi Hall . which is, being Eighty-one billboards in southeastern WASHINGTON (UPI) _ The United Robert Minier, literature-phllolOphy distributed with Pageant tickets. ~Tichigan have been sawed down in the States plans an underground nuclear teacher and ce>ach will conduct the free The transportation proposal will be last two inontbs in midnight raids. explosion almost five times more sessions which will be held Wednesday presented to the City Council April 21, Several Ann Arbor-area youths have been powerful than past undergrollnd blasts, tt evenings through June 16. _liM~";;·;;K;;e;;e;;Je~y;;to;;l;;d;;th;;e;;;b;;oar;;;d.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;ha;;'~g;;ed;;;;w;;it;;h;;so;;m;;•;;;;ol;;the;;;;;;in;;c;;id;•;;nls;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;w;';';;';;'P;;';;';;l•;d;;l;od;a~y;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Topics to be covered during the series Include an overview of t he narcotics problem; physical. medlcaf and physiological aspects of drug abuse; the probation department; educational techniques; Teen Challenge ; law enforcement; psychology and drug abust, and the legal aspects of drug abuse. The closing sessions of the series u•i\I consist of a student panel focusing on the drug problem and a summary session discussing what parents can and should do about the problem. SEASAME STREET Sesame Street is about the only street in the hasn't had a carpet installation by Alden's. harbor a rea that ·, Tlio111•• A. M11r111riiM M"'°'Oin!I E•I'°' Ck1rl1s H, loo1 rtlck••d P'. NtR ,._111..-.1 Mtiwolr!o IOltonr. i... ....... Offk• 21? For .. I A•t11110 5-Clea• '' Office )05 Nori~ El CeMi110 Kttl --COii• Mt.1· DO Wnl ••Y Sit"" Group Favors Junking ~Instant Tenure' Idea In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block. NIWJlif' ltotdl: llD H~I '°" ...... kuft•~ ••di: 11111 l.oi leu1"•,.. ,...,.,,.. (714) Ml ... )Jl Q..ww .A .. ffftt.1 64·l·l611 S-C' rts Aft D.tt••-••: Ttltt_I ·r 4tM4U ............. Al ••• ,, ..... ! Tilf1111 .. 11 4f4.t4M ~· ""' or.,.. tMl-1 ... llfl .... °""""'' .. -~ I"""'"'""'°· .......... --., ... ~ .. """""' fNf .. 1+10COllf ........,, 14*-ltil ..... ....... ~ ...... ..... (,_ ,.._. Jl"lll tf H~ ltldt ,.,.. C... ......... C•l...,,.lf. ~ ..,. af'l'tW A.JI _ .. ty I Irr .... ti Jf ~I "'1llflry ft9tiMil*"-b.Jt MllPll•, An ad hoc committee on tenure Wednesday wlll ncommend to the state Community College Board ot Governors that "instant tenure" be eliminated for newly·hired faculty members. but th.at the concept of tenure be retained. The committee's recommendatJon, to be presented ll.t the board's Sacr1mento meeting, was released Monday by 1nember Hans Vogel. president of the Trustees or Saddleback Community Colleg,. "Tenure will remain as a concept," \'ogel said "'hen 11sked If the committee has discussed the elimination of tht muct>-attacked process whereby faculty membtrs rnust be rehired each ytar. ''Tbe tntenl Is to remove the evtb of !enure. ·• One of these evils. Vogel said, was the so-called "lnstanl tenure·• undtr which 11 new in!ltructor must be retalned after his fir!!! year un\tss tM college ran "show c:iu~" \\•hy the person should not be ( rehired. The ad hoc committer., which was compased of community c t 1 l e g e ~dministrators and trusttes fr o m throughout the state, will recommend in:iitead that a new teacher may be released without prejudice and without cause after one ye&r. Vogel sald the proposal calls ror an initial one-year contract, after which a new teacher could enter a :o;econd ono-year contract. After the first two years, Vogel said a f3cuJty member could stlll be relea:iied without cause. Under the commlltee '• proposal, Voael said a faculty mmber will have no tenure until be enten: 1 contract !Gr his third year of teaching. Vogel e11:ld the committee Jn Its two meetinas never discu(l.'ied complete tllmination of tenure. He noted that lf the state Board of Oavernort adopt. lhe recommtndaUon, It would carry the force or law and would require n• leglslatlve action . The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't, bring her in with you.) SANTA ANA. ORANGI, TUSTIN C.11 ••• ALDIN'S RIO HILL CARPnl & DAAPIRlll 1014 1,..1n., Tvstia, C.I. Ul-J14t ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 \ \ . Laguna Beaeh N •. Y. Stocks voe 64, NO. 88, 2 SEGTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,.CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIC ll, 197 r JEN CENTS • Meet Laguna Candidates In Laguna Beach Unified School District trustee elec!ion April 20. 12 candidates are vying for three board sear.,,. Th e D.41LY PILOT will before the election present pictures and stori es of those seeking to serve. Of the candidates, eight seek election lo two fnur·year posts and four seek election to a two year term left by the resignatiu11 of trustee \Villiam. Wilcoxen. Below ore two of the four·year candidates. l Candidate D'lsidoro Says Peggy D'Isldoro, 25, of 2985 Rounsevel Terrace, is a teacher in the Santa Ana School District and plans to teach at the junior college level In the fall. She moved to California from Ohio in 1968 and only recently completed requirements for her Ca Ii for n i a secondary teaching credential a n d Community college instructor credential. She also recently received a master'& degree in English at Cal Slate Fullerton. "I am rUMing because I have spent so many years around schools that J might be able to contribute something," she 1ays. "l have been a permanent substitute teachtt out hen for the past three years and the schools al'f; my principal concern." ''First, I am a pragmatist," she says. "I believe in utilizing traditional and innovative teaching methods. The traditional approach to learning has taught many successful businessmen, artisls and scholars." "Today 's school situation and students are exposed to more complex stimuli." 15he says. "Therefore, innovative methods <>f education are practiced." ' \ DAIL'I' PILOT lltn ,.IMle CANDIDATE TEACHER Peggy D'l1idoro Dr. Munsat Cites School System Financial Crisis DAii. 'I' ,.ILOT 11111 ,.IMle PHILOSOPHY PROFESSOR St1nley Mun11t Auto In.jul'es Lagima Tot, 5 A rive-year.old La(una Beach Jirl Monday suffered minor injuries when she ran 1nto the palh of an oncoming car while playing In front ol her homt>. The girl , Stef11.n y KU!hner, of l!.45 Skyline Drive, was knock~ to lhe pa v,.ment when the driver of the au.to, Jerfrey o. Whitaker, 16, of 1597 Skyline Drive, 11werved to avoid the child. She Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oavld Kushner . She wa5 taken lo South Coast Community Hospital wht!re she was trtate<l for minor cul.8 and bruises and released. ) Dr. Stanley Munsat, 31 , of 970 Baja SI., is a professor or philosophy at UC Irvine. A native of Michigan, Munsat received his doctorate degree from the Univer sity of Michigan and taught at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, prior to joining the UCI faculty in 1966. Munsat hai; been a Laguna Beach resident for the past five years and has two children , one of whom attends Aliso Elementary School. "I think Laguna Beach has good scbools," Munsat says. ''The town is very fortunate to have the school system it does. But it will get harder to maintaio them because of the Jack of funds." Alth<lugh be £eels the schools face a financial crisis, he does not think this factor should lead the scbools to deteriorate. P..1unsat feels the system can continue to be improved with current funding by greater utilization of the teachers in determining school policy and problem areas .. "I propose that regular roundtable workshops be set up with teachers and board members discussing in depth the problems which confront the teachers in the classroom," he says. "Naturally, the school admini stration is &n the lookout for such problems and raises them with the board through the superintendent,'' he addJ. "However, direct, meaningful dialogue between teachers and the School &ard in an .atm01Sphere of open exchange elf ideas can mily benefit our schools." "Fundamentally. the school& ahould aid in the development of informed and thooghUul citizens,'' he aays. "'An,.UU,C · which stands in the way of this ii • problem." Evidence Up in Smoke CINCINNATI (UPI) -The 12$ carU:lns of cigal1!tte1 which poll~ confl!Clted as evidence last Friday in a theft caag were placed in a rear oftlct at the central police $talion. Olficers 41 s c overed Monday someone had squeezed under mesh wlre covertng the door to lbe mfice and e!ICaped with aU 115 c•rU:lnJJ. There were nt IUlpccil. ear City Aide To Face Operation Laguna Beach plaMing commissioner Robert Hastings advised C<>mmissloo chairman William Lambourne Monday night that he will be unable, for reasons of health, to attend meetings for lhe nest several months. HastJngll said he is leaving Sunday for Houston, Tei., wtiere he will enter St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital .for open heart surgery, lo be performed by famed heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley. He will be hospitalized for about three weeks, the commissioner said, and doctors estimate his complete recovery may lake three to eight months. Hastings said he had written Mayor Richard Goldberg and offered to submit bis resignation from the PlaMing Commission if this is deetned desirable for the city under the circumstances. "I asked his advice as to the correct procedure to follow," said Hastings. a retired teleph<lne company e1ecutive who was appointed to the commJasion following the city council election last April . He said the mayor planned to confer with the city attorney regarding the legal aspe<:Ui of non-attendltllce at meetlnp and p'1Jll1iRd to aoh!tirldln this W.011: Hastings bas played an active role tn such commissiOn p r o j e ct 1 u undergrounding of u t i 1 i t i e 1 en4 development of parking structures. He also served for a time as general manager of the Laguna M o u I t o n Playhouse. His departure will leave two vacancies on µie commission. Newly appointed commissioner Jack Eschbach resigned last week and his replacement bas not yet been named ... Grove Woman Killed by Car A young woman was killed and her roommmate critically injured Monday night in Garden Grove when they were struck while walking across Chapman Avenue near Magnolia Street, police reported. Dead on arrival at Palm Harbor Hospital at 7:35 p.m. was Janet Marlene Bougber, of Garden Grove. Her companion. Marlena Henline. 17, suffered fractures of the pelvis and right leg. Driver of the car which was westbound on Chapman was Tim Brown, Ill, of Garden Grove. He was not cited but the accident is under investigation, officers said . Pilots Aid Company With Extra Flights WASfllNGTON (AP ) -Eastern Airlines pilots, in an effort to help their company generate revenues and avoid employe cutbacks, have offered to fly extra trips this year al regular rates instead of overtime. Capt Thomas Crane. chainnan of Eastern's master e1eccutive council of the Air Line Pilots Association. said Monday lhe pilots also have offered to defer payment for the extra tlme until the end of the year. GI Held A young Camp Pendleton Marine flttl charges of forcible r~pe and auto theft tn wW ll!>llct In S.b Clemente ~bed today al a aordid. case of the violation of a 14-year.cld girl -an act auggested and encouraged by her mother. Robert Dean Smith, 21 , • member of the 2nd Infantry Training Rflglment at Pendleton. was arralgned lhll morn1n« on Ille thr,. ftlony chlrgu In South Or•ni• County Municipal Court: Jiii ball bu been set at $U,500. The mother, a San Clemente ,._Sdtnt, also wu reported in custody 'It 9rllJI• COunty Jail, awaillng court action on tWo counts of being an accompolict in lhe two rapes, which mertedly occurred tarller this year in a Su Clementt motel room. t ' • ire ase By Phil lnterl1ndl ...... ---·--====--..::..! .. ._ ;;_-"'>":::> Caution: Palntin1 May ~e · Hazirdous to Your Income ~--=..:.;:_ Festival· of Arts Ready ··, To Am Beach Financing The Festival of Arts Js ready to give the city of Laguna Beach substantial financial :;upport toward the Main Stach ~haae. ~ls wu indicated Monday followJng an e1ecuUve session of the festival's board of directors. Details of the support. which will be offered in the form of a new lease •greement with the city, are expected to be revealed to the city council Wednes- day night. The council has scheduled. a special study seulon at a p.m. to receive the report of the Main Beach Development Committee , appointed last December to study alternatiYes for development of the city.()Wned be•chfront. Annual bond payments on the mile. Jong, $3 million beach purchase now amount to approximately $225,000. When the beach purchase was W'ldertaken, it was with the understanding that a major tax increase could be avoided by using a combination of bed tax and Festival funds to defray annual payment:i. Partial commercial development of the area as a 10urce of additional revenue a\S<l was suggested, but this met opposition from sectors of the community envisioning total park development of the beach. However, the payments have been a conUnulng burden for the city. In December, the city co u n cl I appointed a five-merr.ber commlttee to Bell Tower Silenced OAKLAND (AP) -Tile beU. at Fruitvale Presi>yterian church haYe been silenced temporarily, The Rev. Robert Dow Nic.b<llson explained Monday that he discovered a gray dove is nesting in the bell tower of hls church, and he didn't want to disturb her. sWdy all beach development proposals and report back with alternative ~!11mendations. The committee, made up of William Wllcoien, chairman Harry Lawrence, Vernon Spitaleri, Vernon Blackman and Merrill Johnson, met weekly for the next several months and will present 11.8 findings lo the council Wednesday night. Festival of Arts sources indicated today that these will Include a new lease agreement with the festival u a source of revenue for beach developmenL The new agreement presumably Would include an adjustment of the re1tal paid by the festival lo the city far use of the cily~wned Irvine Bowl Park facility. Under the existing lease, the city receives 171/z percent of gross revenue from ticket sales, a share estimated at $75,000 for this year. Wounded Deputy In Good Shape A sheriff's deputy who accidentally shot himself while cleaning his gun Monday night today was reported to be doing well and recoYerlng rapidly in Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Sherilf Capt James Broadbelt said deputy Darryl Sother, 23, of Santa Ana, ah<lt himself in the lower abdomen at his home whJ.le he was replacing his freshly cleaned revolver In its holster. Sother was rushed to the Co&la Mesa hospital for surgery. Doctors quickly removed the bullet from his intestinal lract. "It was a freak accident," Broadbelt said. ''We're only too glad this young man came out of it as well as he did." • Ill Rape, Theft ·Sbt WU an::etted e.arUer la the Wetk ln tho South County Courie buUdlng whue 1he wenl to anawer a bench warrant on a tra!llc vlolallon. Ollicen llld District Attorney's aJdu recognized the woman in t'Otlrt and ordered ber arrut. Police all<(• that the lint Incident occurred Feb. 23 wbtn Smith llld a companion wtre in the woman'• motel n>Olll. The mother amrtedly OJlCl>Urlfled 1ht Marine to violate her vlrila da\lihfer ''lo calm her down." ' lnmU,alon oakl a oelPbor burd !he converuUon and subaequent tcre1m1 comlna from a bedroom. The """'"" Incident allqedly occumd on MlJ'Ch I 1t the lllme mote.J. l The ntlahbor then notlfied ponce, who !a•nc:hed an lnv..ilgallon. Smith, authorities ci.tm, was abient. wlthout.le1ve at the Ume of the alleged aexua1 1cta. After the second incidf!nt he •uertedly took the woman's auto and credit cards. PoUoe uld the Marine w111 found uleep ln the auto Im weekend on the ~de of a hllhway In Gila S.nd, Am., Hlgbway patrolmtn there returned the auto to Ctllfomla and Stnllh wu released to military authorities at C a m p Ptndleton. LotaJ poJlet were notified of the man's armt M"""'7 by base provoat manb>I 1ldt1. ' Blockbuster. Bombs Hit Red Forces SAIGON (UPI) -Six thousand Soulh Vietnamese troops operating behind the greatest U.S. B52 bombing attacks in eight months moved to within a mlle ef besieged Fire Base S today in twin attackl!I from the North and Soulb. The U.S. Air Force dropped two more 7i,;.ton blO!lkbuster bombs on the Communist forces. Tbe counteroffemlve to relieve the base 300 m.Jles north of Saigon near the COZM!rg\ng borders of Laos, South Vietnam and Cambodla jumped off this morning when a farce of 1 , I o O paratroopers landed from U _ S . helicopters three miles sout.h ot the bue and 4,500 infantrymen landed two miles to the South. A spokesma n said the two forces met no resistance as the paratroopers advanam two miles to within a mile or the base and the northern group advanced a mile. But Communists around lhe base aent up such a heavy barrage of antiaircraft fire one of four South Vietnames helicopters reacbtn1 the base wu shot down. Bib have bit Communlal buOdup1 around the base for a week ind today a ... ..., .. llld II of Ille bl1 bomben di~ 640 toos In Whet be called the heaVielt one-day bomblng sinCfl Aug. 6, 1970. Jn additon. Cl30 cargo planes parachuted In two more of the 7~-ton bombs which devastate an area the size a! a city block. The first two blockbusters to be used against O:lmmunl!t troops were dropped Monday. Beach Access Zone Raising Little Hassle If Ille Irvine Company dotsn't object to a new BRO (Beach Recreation and Development) OYerlay zone to be applied by the county to ita coastal holdings, there ls no ruaon for Laguna Beach te <>bject, city planning commi.ulontr1 agreed Monday nlgbL The commission was invited to comment on the proposed zone prior to today's public bearing before tbe Orange County Planning Commission. The propelled BRO zone requires easements for public access to the oceanfront at least 10 feet wlde and not less than 1,000 feet. apart. It also pr0Yide1 for control of such 1truct.ures aa seawalls, piers, boat launchlnc remps and other installations that might diarupt natural dirft. "The Irvine Company ha1 no objection to this zone,'' planning director Wayne Moody t6Jd the commllslon, "In fact lheir own plans provide for more beach access. Thty uy, and I agree, that the overlay doesn't help designate the type of access. We need to determine the best kind o( access." 'Weather Falr aklu f4llowln1 low clooda la the general forecut for Wednet- day along the cout_ with tempera· turea pukJng at SS on Lhe 1eashort1 1111d up to '1$ Inland . INSmE TODAY II """ jtut o c:aaual kW"'41 after a bc•f in o Stal Beach. bar. By Mana"" fomll)I 1tondanla, it ws hordl11 to o r t h m11'tioning. But a man pulled a trigger th.rte time• and anothtr man died. Logbook, Pag1 9. c.11 ...... i. • CMdllflt Ut J Clelll,... »U Ctl'Jlk1 11 c,..._... ,, DH!tl J™fc" t .... ..,.., ,,... . •11ttrta1-.itt It l'lllll!Cll '"11 =~::.,. :: -. ~ llfff!MI. • r t OA.llY PllOJ T ..... Aftll l.l, 1971 l.ag!ltuf Gives l'iew Proposed Sign , Law Criticized Aaked to comment on a propoitd county sign ordinanct, Ulguna Beach plannlni commissioners Monday night •grted thal II.I ban On billboard advertisin& was fine, but restrictions JUggut.ed for business signs aeemed a little severe. New planning direetor Wayne Moody v.•as lnstructed lo convey this reaction to the eount)' Planning Commission's public hearing on the ordinance today and also to supply the commission with a copy of Laguna's somewhat less restrictive sign ordinance. The county lt1ialation would apply apedlically to two-mile corridors beside arterial highways and freeways designated as "scenic." These include Ortega Highway, El Toro Road, Santa Ana Canyon Road, Riverside Freeway, Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Freeway, Santa Ana Freeway, San Diego Freeway and Pacific Coast Highway from Seal Beach to San Clemente. The proposed SR (sign resb'Jctions) district would ban all outdoor advertising structures or signs (billboards) near the scenic routes and restrict necessary bu!IJ1e53 signs lo wall signs with a muimwn area of 150 square feet per business. Profmlonal nameplates and 11i.gn! denoting the name of the shop could not exceed lwo square feet, illuminated signs would be lim1ted to intensity and no moving or flashing signs would be permitted. No roof signs would be allowed. Newport Council To Study Beach Dog Ordinances The Newport .Beach City Council Monday night did an abrupt a.bout-face and ordered the Parks, Beaches and Recreatkxt Commission to start an immediate study of dogs on the beaches. During the afternoon study st5"ion coun.cllmen seemed ready to tackle the controversy themselves and thereby shortening what will almost certainly become one of the year's biggest issues. "We 've got \o· make a decision one way or the other, as soon u possible, and not 1tep in the mess Laguna Beach d,id a year qo," Councilman Don Mclm!li of Wut Newport had said earlier in the day. Wben the subject arose during the . business meeUng, however, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers reversed field. "We have got to carry out the democratic process and let everyone have their say," he said, commenting that the PBR panel 11hou1d conduct Ila public hearings, make a recommendation to the council, which subsequently will have to conduct more bearings. The council instructed City Attorney Tully Seymour to prepare two different ordinances, one pallerned after that which was rmally adopted ln Laguna and the other similar to Huntington Beach's, which bans dogs from beaches totally. The Laguna Beach ordinance bans dogs from beaches and certain parks during the summer. from June 15 to Sept. IS, between the houn of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rogers, ln urging the longer procedl!l'e, took a stance contrary to hlll Freeway Fighter ally, Mrs. Margtit Skilling, who had asked the eounell "to act as speedily u txissible." She said with the county l!.nd the cities ()f Laguna and Huntington Beach banning dogs this tummer they'll all be coming to Newport beaches. "And the county health department Is considering condemnlng beaches that allow dogs," she warned. DAllY PILOT OltAHGo:! CO.UT l"UIL ISKINO COM'AMY l•lt•rt N, w,,4 '"''""' ........ llaMI' J,c\ R. Cwr4ty Viet ,,_kltnl •NI G-al MIMtor lll•Mlt kt ... JI flllw Commission chairman W,1111 am Lambourne noted that the ordinance would be effective only up to the city limit&, but since some of the te.rrilOry would be regarded as falling within Laguna's sphere of influence, comment was in order. Moody said strenuous opposition to the county ordinance i.! expected from sign companies. He also pointed out that any affected areas subsequenUy annexed tG Laguna would come wider the city sign code. U.S. Forces Will Remain In SE Asia WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the United Stat.es will maintain naval and air forces ln Southeast Asia, indefinitely but there will be no fresh commitments of ''massive manpower" there. Laird al.so said the American combat role in Vietnam will end this swnmer, but that U.S. fortes will be involved in some forms of defewlve combat beyond that point. He refused to say when the American presence in Vietnam might completely end. ln a Pentagon news conlerence, the def ense secre t ary said the Vietnamization program is auccetding and that the new thrust of Defenae Department planning la aimed for when the war la endtd. In this respect, he said, the United Stales abould give financial and arma assistance to the nations of Southeast Asia that would enable them to make the best possible use of their own manpower and resources. "We should not make the mistake of committing massive manpower to that fart of the world," Laird said. "Military assistance -yea; Ame.rlclll ground trooll-'!. manpower -no." Laird said he does, however, foresee the need to maintain other form.s of U.S. military presence in Asia. He declined to comment on whether they would play a combat role and left open the length of time they might be needed . The defense secretary summarized: "To say that we would not have a presence In Asia (after Vietnam) under the strategy of realistic deterrence • , , would cerlainly be misleading. "I would envision that U.S. presence in Asia as far as naval forces are concerned, as far as alr power Is eoncerned, that this would be a part of the realistic deterrent we would maintain in Aaia." Without making any prediction of a specific date, Laird said com b a t · responsibility In Vietnam will be tW'Ded over to the Vietnamese command "In the summer period." He denied that the mauling suffered by the S o u t h Vielnamese army during the invasion of Laos had slowed down this proces1. Johns New Clerk For Capistrano Robert Joh ns, city planner for San Juan Capl1trano has also been named acting city clerk. Johns accepted the post offered by the city council M o n d a y at the recommendation of Donald Weidner, cily administrator. The planner, who had been serving as acting administrator before Weidner was hired, was olficially relieved of his administrative dutles. The rouncU dld not authorize extra comperuiaUon for the clerk post. S·t-r•e·t·e·h A Golden m a n t I e ground squirrel stretches to full height for peanut offered by friend in Bend, Ore., where spring sun is luring squirrels out of their winter sleeping places, Battin Move Squelched Chairman Fails in · Bay Swap Proposal By JACK. &ROBACK bf tM 9'lflY l't"I Sllff Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Robert Battin in • surprise move this morning lried to kill the Upper Newport Bay land swap agreement without further negotiations. His effort failed . Battln. the supervisor from Santa Ana 's First District, was responding to an April 1% letter from Irvine Company President Wllllam R. Ma!IOn. Mason asked the board to extend lhe April 25 deadline for negotialions. Battin responded with the allegaLion that the Jeth!r wa.o: "self-1erving." lie asserted Orange County shouldn't d1Jcuu "any further possible new agretments on the Upper Bay until the present agreement is terminated." Battin moved that the board reaffirm its action of last Jan. 5 ill whkh it voted Can Company Condemns Capistrano's Council By PAMELA HALLAN 01 lk Dtilr l'llrl Sl1H Is the San Juan Capistr:rno City Council discriminating against beverage contain· ers? Steve Groz.ik, an official of Continental Can Company, says it is. Grozik assailed the l'()uncil Monday for passing a recent resolution to stem the problem of litter and waste disposal created by the sale of beverages in disposable, non-returnable containers. The resolution calls for the support of legislation to limit the use ~f the containers, requiring a deposit on all beverage containers, supporting research in the manufacture of biodegradable containers, and enc<1uraging citizens to be more responsible in their disposal. One section of the re.solution, the part that Grozllc strenuously objected to, was the support of legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution on such containers. Grozik said "jumping on this kind of bandwagon ls very popular, but is not the answer,'' He said non-returnable containers represent less than two percent of solid waste ln this c<1untry and that legislation outlawing the containers would only "scratch the surface of the litter problem." He added that one-way container!! make up less than 17 percent of the volume of roadside litter with paper products producing 60 percent of the mess. ''Yet you didn't pass a resolution banning paper," he said. Grozik said the answer to the problem lies not in banning products but Jn programs for recycling and reclaiming them. I-le called tor resclndlng the reaolu.tlon and appointillg a cornmtttee to atudy problems as fPey relate to Capistrano. "ll probably is discriminatory since it aims at one area, but getting rid of two percent is better than none at all,'' said the resolution's author, Councilman Jim Thorpe. ·'Until 1 hear from the people that they don 't want this resolution, I'm not going to change my mind," he added. The council agreed lo revfew the resolution at its next meeting. Blind W atchcat Routs Burglar In Costa Mesa unamimowly to t e r 1n I n 3 t e the agreement. But Battin added the words ''without conditions.'' Supervilors Ralph Clark and David Baker objected to these words. Battin agreed lo delete them. The Battin motion then passed 4 to I w i th Supervisor William Phillips dissenting. Baker followed with a motion to extend discussions on the agreement for 60 days or until June 29. It passed wtanimously. The Irvine letter which seemed to raise the ire of Battin and Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach stated that negotlatklns carried or. to date w\th Caspen and Battin or their representatives had not made any worth\\·hile progress. •·supervisor Battin's only response to a request for serlow negoUatioruJ "'" a memo stating ·that no joint discussion would be carried out (on the future of the Upper Bay) untJI the agreemenl is unconditionally terminated," Mason said in his letter. The Irvine Company has maintained the county cannot cancel the agreement unilaterally afl4 baa indicated it will go to court to prove the poinl. The company also wanls to negotiate possible damages due it if the agreement 1!'1 cancelled. Saddleback OKs Computer Time Purchase Plan SaW:lleback College took a step into t.be world of computers Monday night when trustees approved hiring a computer coordinator and purchasing computer time from nearby Santa Ana College. Laguna Asks U.S. Grant For Festival Minibuses Watchdogs are often credited with crime prevention, but Costa Mesa police today offered the tale of a blind cat who attacked a burglar and was beaten off with a basket of Easter eggs. The intruder got away with nqthing. Investigators w~ called to the home of Mrs. Joe~ F. Lawton, of 3136 Bennuda Lane Monday when ahe retun'led from L1gun1 Beach to find It burglarized. The plan was approved by trustees after a Los Angeles firm conducted 1 study and concluded the school's lime· c o n s u m i n g , much·standing-in-line registration process s h o u Id be computerized. The plan will relieve the faculty of many clerical duties no\f involved in regi.!tralion, the consulting firm stated in ill report. As Saddleback College can not afford its own computer, the firm recommended the school enter an agreement with Santa Ana College for use of Its equipment at a cost to Saddleback or aboul $1 ,000 per month. This would compare with about $3,000 per month for the school to rent jtJ own equipment, the consulting flrro reported. · The colorful Festival of Arts trams may reappear on Laguna's streets this summer, Festival directors learned Monday night. Director Mrs. Helen Keeley, who heads the transp()rtation committee, told the board that City Manager Lawrence Roae has promised there will be adequate transportation to the Festival grounds either by cily~ned minibuses or rented trams. "The city has applied [or a federal grant to purchase minibuses," said Mrs. Keeley, "and it thi.s comes through ii!. lime, the city will serve the festival with its regular bus line. "As an alternaUve. Mr. Rose said he \\'Ill arrange to lease vehicles and the new owners of the Venice Tram Company have advised us they now have three trams that meet safety code .requirements: and are seeking three more." The trams operated by the former Venice Tram Company owners were ordered off the slreets last year because of safety code violations involving brakes and wind!hlelds. Some<1ne slipped through a bath- room window and ransacked bedroom drawers before crossing paths with the Lawtons' blind watchc1t. Police were told the animal wi.K attack anything strange that moves , due to its blindness. Debrla 11c11:ttered around the living room indicated the burglar protected himself with the Easter basket and cnntents before fleeing out a door. If the trams are leased, Mrs. Keeley said, the compaoy will require lbat Billboard Owners drivers be at least 25 years old and recommends women drivers. It was W W V d ) furll>er suggested lbat high •school age ar on an a 8 students: could eollect fares, she said. To compensate for loss of parking DETROIT (UPl) -Billboard .owners, spaces along the median strip at the escalating their war with sign-chopping festival grounds. directors were told, the vigilantes, are using ste:el polei inatead of city plans to circulate the trams or \\'ood on new signs. "Let's see them cut In approving the proposal to hire a fUU lime staff member to implement tbe plan, Saddleback President Dr. Fred Bremer noted the coordinator's salary would be approved by the board at a later date. Bremer noted there were funds in the 1971-72 budget to add the member to the staff. The consu lting timl. Norris and Gotfried, estimated the .school would have to pay $15,000 per year to hirl the coordinator, who would operate Santa Ana College's equipment. Trustee Al Brannon asked J 1 m Anderson, a repres~ntative of the firm, ii the school could hire the person on an hourly, as-needed basis instead of fuIJ time. "You need to get started with a nucleuS of someone who can continue in tht program," Anderson responded. "I think you would lose an investment if you did hire him on an hourly basis.'' minibuses continuously from municipal down steel poles."' said Josepb Jones. The first of 10 seminars on drug abuse parking lots to the festival grounds. general sales manager of a Lansing n· A T s (or parents and 5tudents will be held 7:30 Location of the eight parking lots ls advertising firm which has lost five 1g loin est lated Drug Seminars Slated in Viejo p.m. Wednesday in the Mls$ion Viejo shown on a map, especially designed by wooden·poJed billboards alnce February. High School lecture hall. artist Dlxl Hall, which is being Eighty-one billboards in southeastern WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United Robert Minier, Jlterature-phllosophy distributed with Pageant tickets. Michigan have been sawed down in the States plans an underground nuclear teacher and coach will conduct the free The transportation proposal will be last two months in midnight raids. explosion almost five times more sessions which will be held Wednesday presented to the City Council April 21. Several Ann Arbor·srea youths have been powerrul than past underground blasts, it evenings through J une 16. _ijM~r;;s.;;K;;e;;e;;le;;y;;l<>;;l;;d;;t;;he;;;b;;oa;;r;;d;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;c;;h;;a;;rg;;e;;d;;w;;llb;;;s;;o;;m;;e;;o;;f;;ll>e;;;;i;;nc;;l;;de;;n;;l.!;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w;;a;;s ;;'epo;i;;;;'';;'d;;;;tnd;;;;a;y.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Topics to be covered during the series include an overview of the narcotics problem; physical, medical an d physiological aspects of drug abusei the probation departmenl; educ at Ion al techniques; Teen Challenge; I aw enrorcement: psychology and drug abuse, and the legal aspects of dru1 abuse. The closing sessions of the series wilt consist of a student panel focusing on the drug problem and a summary ae:ssion discussing what parents can and 11hould do about the problem. SEASAME STREET Sesame Street is about the only street in the hasn't had a carpet installation by Alden 's. harbor area that 1\om11 A. M11r.t.i11• M-1"'8 e1rlor Clit!'ttt H. Lov1 Rlcli1f4I P. Htft Aallllfl; MIMGll'lll hlt.r. lat• ...... Offk• l ll F.r11t A•t1'UI S.. C.__..Offk• Group Favors Junking In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we hove worked in every home on a block. JOS N1rt" [\ C111tlrt• lt.111 °""' -(Dllt """'. QI Wnt lty Sir.et "'""""" ... di; »» """""" ... _.. Hulltlnlllll l~I 1111• Mtdl ltvlflttf4 DAil 'f I'll.OT, wllt! w!tldl 11 ~ ""- "_.,..,...., II tuOl l ..... "llY ,,.c.pt s-M'I • ....,. .. 11111"'"° fw u.... hldl. ~I 9"dl. C•i. .VO.., H¥ftl"""" •IMfl. '"-Niii Vtlltoy, ltrt c--..., c...i-~ .,,.. .., ... l .. Kt;, ... """ - """""' dllllrt. ~ff,11 '""""9 """ a. et ·• W.l hJ Sir•:, C.tt M-. 1ll1111l1•1 17141 MJ-4)11 Cl..affM .Wua ........ Ml·l&l'I S. a....t9 A.ft D••"•••ts: r ••••1• 4,2 .... 11 &....-......... ., •••• , TMpl 11 4f4-f4" ~ tff\o ~ CNtl ............ ~. ... fllWt ......... U""rrtflaow., .. ,..,., "'*""" .. "'*"',._.. ........, .. , • ~ •"'*"' ..-i.1 ,.._ ..... ., """""} -· ...... -•'"' )111111 .. "'-' l•tdl ,.,,.. 091t .li&&M, C•lNlnl... '~lfllfll !If ~ tLll IM!l!fllWI .., "'4111 Q 11 ....wy1 ""'119ry ••llMI .... , IUI -1111,, 'Instant Tenure' Idea An ad hoc committee en tenure Wednesday will recommend to the state Comrriunity Colltie Board of Governors that "instant tenure'' be eliminated for newly-hired faculty members, but thal lhe concept of tenure be retained. The committee'•, recommendation. to be presented at the board'• S.cramento meeting, was released Monday by member Hans Voael, president of the Tru~ttts or Saddleback Community College. "Tenure will remain •s a e<>ncept," Vogel said when asked If the committee has dlscusltd the e!lminatlon of tM much-attacktd process whereby faculty members mu.st be rehired each year. "The Intent is to remove tbt tvlls or tenure ." One of the~ evils. Vogel said, w11 the so-called ''instant tenure ·· under whleh A new Instructor must be retained after his first year unles s the college c11n "'how cause'' ~·hy the per son should nnt be rehired. The ad hoc committee, whleh wa!I composed of coromunlly co 11 e g c administrators and trustees from throughout the st3te. will rr<:ommend instead thnl a new teacher may be releaaed without prejudice and without r:1use after one year. Voael said tht proposal calls for an lnltlal one-year contract, after which 1 ntw ttaeher could enter A srcond one-year cootract. After the. flnt two years, Vogel said a faculty member could still be released '\\'it.houl eau.9e. Under the committee's proposnl, Vogel satd n facully member will have no tenure until he enters a contract for his third year of te1chln1. Vogel said the committee In Its two meetings never discusstd complete elimination of tenure. He noted that If Ole stale Board of Governors adopts the r«ommendation, it would carry the forr.t or la•' and would requlrt ne lc&lslaUve action. 1. • The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home . (If we haven't, bring her in with you.) ALDEN'S likNT A ANA,. ORANOI. TUITIH C1t1•, •• ALDIN'I RID HILL CAR,ITI & Dlt.lPIRlll 1W4 1mn., Tw•tll'I. C.f. ,.....,.. CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 .. San Cleinenie Ca isirano voe. M, NO. 88, 2 SECTIONS , 26 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRI~ 13, ·1971 Dress Code Hassle Causes Furor • Ill By GEORGE LEIDAL Of "'-Dally 1"1 .. 1 S!•ff A crowd of dreS!-code-issue devotees forced the Tustin Union High School OJ.strict to move Its board meeting Monday night into Tustin High School clfeteria. While the meeting place shift satisfied the seating needs of 200 persons attending, the board's failure to act on the landslide written vote calling for abolition of the district dress rode did not placate them. Board President Chester G. Briner of Mission Viejo explained to the crowd. made up mostly of long-haired boys and pant.suited or nllnl-dressed girls, that the OOard would not act on the drwi code until its May 10 mttting. The board received in the meeting agenda, a superintendent'• report on a parent survey that showed 175 parent!: who want the code abolished and only 11 who want it to remain as is. Severa! person1 in the audience attempted to present updated data lhal showed 901 parent.a had written replies to the district survey that called for abolition of the code. Their attempts were ruled out of order. Figures supplied to the press indicated 96.4 percent of parents aoughl an end to t b e controversial Tustin dress codt. Briner said the board had established an April 12 cutoff date for replies to the code survey, but had not indicated it would take action on those replies Monday night. Tustin board candida te and member Robert Bartholomew, of Santa Ana, objected to a suggestion made by Briner that the board appoint anqther committee to further study the issue. "We agreed we'd make a decision tonight based on the review by the (parent organizations) Coordinating Council and the uvey r e p I i e a , ' ' Bartholomew 68.id, to an outbreak ol supporting cheers from the audience. "We'U have oo aucb outbursb froiu the audience no matter wnich aide of the issue they're on," Briner &aid, gavetung down the abolition advocates. "H this can't be an· orderly meeting we'll maintain a clOeed meeting,'' Briner said. Bartholomew· amended hJ5 remark to Indicate he dl<t oot mean the boa id should act on lhe ·dress code at Monday'!' meeUng bbt rather that the Issue had been studied. eDOUJ&h. Trustee June Smith of Tustin, wa1 asked by Briner to "survey lhe current fashions for &irla and boys to see· tbe • kinds of thing! tllat an available In tbe Mes for school wear next year." Thal suggestion was met by a very obvious jab In the ribs by a girl wearlng hot pant.s who wa11 seated in the audience with a boy woo.. long blond tocks stopped a hair's brtadth short of violating the present code. Althoueh Mrs. Smith said she thought the board had enough information W'ltb which to make a decision, sht told the audience "You have to Wlder1tand that with the Information we've gotten, some only minutes berore the board meeijng, we couldn't make a rational decision on this tonight." • N.Y. St.eks JEN CENTS • Tus·tin Add~ to the written survey rl!Sponse.s pre.lel1ted to the board were two other surveya, Jiin Hieb, Foothill High School ltudenl representaUve to the board, said the lnterscbool Council hod polled achoo! administrator. in Orange County districts that abolished or have relaxed dress coda "We polled 34 ICbools and received 29 replle!," the neatly, but mod-dressed yooth told the boonl. He said the survey showed i%t.st administrators found JltUe or no change in the appearanC!: of 1tudent.s of' in 11tudent attitudes following revision or abolWon or dreaa codes. • ear ire ase San Onofre Defended On Quakes Spokesmen for ooe of the two utilities seeking federal pennlts for twin nuclear reactors at San Onofre reiterated thla week that the existing complei: at the coastal site i.s built lo withstand earthquakes even more severe than. a Magnitude 8 temblor along t he Southland's two major faults . In a fact sheet issued before the pending local hearings by the Atomic Energy Commission on the react.Ol° project, spokesmen for San Diego Gas and Electric Company said the reactor in operation at San Onofre has been designed to "resist damage from a quake far more severe than any which cou1d be hypothesized from any of (the two faults)." Both major faults are scores of miles away from the Onofre reactor sites. 'I'he San Andreas, the West's largest fault, lies 60 miles from that segment of the coastline. The San Jacinto, the other major fault , is 45 miles away. The spokesmen, quoting seismologists for the firm, said those two earthquake faul ts are the only Southland ones capable of producing . quakes o f magnitude 8 on the Richter scale. Temblors of the seve rity are much more extreme than the deadly February i shaker which struck the Southland. One small fault exists much nearer the reactor site, they admitted, but that fractu're , named lhe Christianitos, has been proven inactive for the past 100,000 years. The Chrislianitos lies one m i 1 e aoutheast of the plant Utility spokesmen said s c i I! n t i f i c report! say the fault where the February quake and its aftershocks occu_rred has shown evidence of movement tn recent geolDgic time. "If that area had been subjected to the game type of rigorous geologic and 6eismic investigation as the . San O,OOf'."' area this evidence (showing semruc Acti;ity) would have been noticed," the report said. The entire seismic issue, which held somewhat of a secondary ro.1e ~n te1Uroony last year before the Cahforrua Public Utilities Commission (PUC) took the front seat in early 1971. Along with the PU~ granting ~f th! state license for the twin reactcrs (~ssued after the great quake) cam~ astringent condition that the Atmo1c Energy commission Intensively examine the 6eismic factors at San Onofre . The federal c<>mmission is ei:pected to 1chedule local hearings on the federal permit for the reactor complei: for sometime later this spring. The firm issWng the information on the quake resi:d.ance at San Onof~e . holds ~ ptrttnt Interest in tne half·billion·Oollar project. . . Southern California Ed11100 Company hold the major, remaining interest. . Testimony by eiperts from both flrms Is expected to touch heavily. on the seJsmlc factor! at the A.EX: heanngs. And ()ppo51Lion--mach of it local-will proa..bl.y dwell on po.ssiblt quake damage. as well. Big Atotn Test Slated WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United State.a: plans an underground nuclear explo1don 11lmost five UmtS morl!' pow~rful than p8l.!il undtra:round blast.a, Jt wa! reported today ... ,! Down the Mission Trail Ski Film Slated At Viejo High MISSION VIEJO -"Once In a Lifetime," oflicial documentary film o( the 1970 world ski championships at Val Gardena, Jtaly, will be ahown to the public fret: of charge1 at 7:30 p.m. Thursday ht U'Je Mission Viejo High School mulllpurpose room. The Mission Viejo Kiwanis Club has arranged for the exclusive showing through Dick Barrymore Productions, maker or the widely acclaimed film. Featured is Olympic champion Billy Kidd, first American male skier to win a gold medal in world compeUtion. • Mosaic Making MISSION VlEJO -The art of mosaic making will be described to members and guests of the Mission Viejo Association of Art.isl.ti and Craftsmen Thursday, April 15. Guest speakers will be Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dendel who have been Involved in mosaic making· for the pa.st 13 years. The meeting, open to the public, will take place at 7:30 p.m. in the Linda Vista Elementary School multipurpose room. • School Bids Open EAST IRVINE -The old El Torn School will again be offeffil for sale, but this time the minimum price will be $10,000 less. Trustees of the San J o a q u i n Elementary School District h a v e authorized bids to be opened May 5. Minimum bid must be $50,000. The property, located off Olive Street in El Toro, was offered for sale once before a1 a minimum bid of '60,000, but nobody wanted il Terms of sale will be 10 percent down and 180 days to close escrow. l.ontng will have to be mutually agreeable between school district and purchaser. YMCA Sponsors Outdoor Fitness Morning Clinic San Clemente area restdenL'I are welcome to join the new spring session of a YMCA·sponsored outdoor f i t n e s s program which will meet two mornings a week in Sooth Laguna. The unusual coon! will Include test.s for heart rate, blood pressure, body fat percentage, oxygen consum ptkln and mobility before and aft.tr the three-month session. The ells! also will Include calisthenics, jog-walk lnterva\1, yoga ei:ercises and modified version" of volleyball and badminton. Meetings will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:30 to 10:30 1.m. at the Y Camp Dolph btlllnd Lajuna ll<ach C.Untl)' Club. The regb:tration fte for the course limited to 30 parUclptnta 11 '3! for new memben. RA!ltuming members will pay 125. Re:glstraUon fnfonnaUon and other detaUJ art 1v1ilable by calling 494-9431. .. Rape Count Jails GI, Girl's Mom A young Camp Pendleton Marine faces charges of forcible rape and auto theft in what police in San Clemente described today as a sordid cue of1be violation of a 14-year.old girl -an act wggeated and eDCOuraged by her motlter, Robert Dean Smith, ll, a member of Ute :kxl Infantry Trainlng Regimenl at Pendleton, wu arraigned th1I morninC on the three feloqy charges in South Orange County Municipal court. His bail bu been set at 112,500. The mother, a San Clemente resident, also was reported in custody at Orange County Jail, awa iting court action on two counts of being an accompolice in the two rapes, which assertedly occurred earlier this year in a San Clemente motel room. She was arresttd earlier in the week in the South County Courts building where she went to answer a bench warrant on a traffic violation. Offic:era uld District Attorney 's aides recognized the woman in court and ordered her arrest. Police allege that the first incident occurred Feb. 23 when Smith and a companion were in the woman 's motel room . The mother assertedly encouraged the Marine to violate her virgin daughter "to calm her down." Investigator! said a neighbor heard the conve rsation and subsequent acreams coming from a bedroom. The second incident allegedly occurred on March 2 at the same motel. Tht! neighbor then ootified police, who launched an investigation. Smith, authorllies claim, was absent~ without.leave at the time of the alleged sei:ual acts. After the aecood incident ht!: assertedly took the woman's auto and credit cards. Police sffid the Marine. was found asleep in the auto last weekend on the side of a highway in Gila Bend, Ariz., Highway patrolmen there returned the auto to California and Smith was released to military authorities at C a m p Pendleton. Local police were notified of the man's arre!l Monday by base provost marshal aides. S m It h ' 1 arraignment included a charie of grand theft auto, making the · woman a victim in one felony and the defendant in two others . The woman's car, officers said, had 21,000 miles logged on it after it wu taken from San Clemente. Police said the girl, a San Clemente High School student, was released to custody or famlly friends pendins legal action against her mother. Dana Harbor Builder To Discuss Project Orange Comity Harbor D I 1 t r I c t Engineer James Ballinger, an expert on the coostrucUon of Dana Karbor, wlll diACUSll the $2G-mlllion dewlopment and lta local impact Wednuday• in Slh Juan Capl.Rraoo. Ballinger will speak a tht noon luncheon meetlng of the ~Capistrano Bcacb Chamber of Commertt. The event will be held at Pete arid Clara's ResllluranL Gu6ta a.rt. welcome.. --- DANA HA11101t. IRlDGI Jl/DWr ~Er APPROAQI DID · ~Tf-~~ed Wlihlti A Few O.ys • • B 'ridge Pai~hed Dana Repair Work 'Not Unusual' A three-quarter·lnch shift ln an approach apron to Dana Harbor's new bridge ls , betn1 r~.palred this week by workmen uslng ·jlcks a.ttd-concrete injectors. And despite aome local rumors to the contrary -spokesmen for the Onnge County Harbor District atres.sed that the sli&ht saga:ing in some of the compacted soil "Ls not unusual" in marine constructloo. The bridge, which separates the two basins and allows access to an island in tbe harbor, I didn't setUe-<>nly one approach shifted, saJd Harbor Di.strict Planning Chief Ralph Hui;tson. The county of!iciala said that besides the stlbilir.ing of the settled apron, crewa have replaced electrical conduit which was k~ed off alignment by the gradual settling. San Diego Gas and Eleclric crews have compleltd that work. The utility's local .manager Biii , Webb al.lo .aaid the aellling was apparently minor and the conduit work was: routine. The line which was affected had never been en'ergized, he said. Hudson said the repairs to the lsland· side approach will be completed within a few days ,and county road department crews will begin installing the permanent pavement over the bridge in coming weeks. Masked Brooklyn Bandits Get $250,000 in Holdup NEW YORK (AP) -Two TnUked holdup men escaped with $251),000 from a branch· bank in Brooklyn today whill!! a thlrd companion held 13 persons hostage in> Stattn Island borne. police said. Police said •"me of the hostages, held all night, were related to the bank'! manager, Charle. A. Di Sogra, who also Lee Geronimo Services Slated Roman' Catholic 1<rYIO!t.att scheduled for tonight anii Wednesday morning for 10-year~ld Lee Anthony Geronimo 'Jr., a Mission Viejo !Uth grader fatally Injured in a car-bicycle collllkln d u r i n g the weekend. Rosary ror the O'Neill Elemmtary Sehool 1tudent will be btld at 7:30 o'clock tonight at SL Nlcbolu Catholic Church at 24251 Et Toro Road, Laguna Hilb. Requlem Mm will be otlebraied there Wedneldayattoa.m. IA< wu fatally injured last &iturday when hll cycle. and In auto.collided at an U,teroecll<'1 n<ar hb. home. He leavea his parents, Mr. and Mtt. Let A. Geronimo Sr .. ol 21t81 La Pala Laoe , Miulon V"jo; a brother, Anthony: a 1iatu1 Michelle Lynett Geronimo: and hlJ grandpauniJ, Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Geronimo of Cleve.land, Ohio. w. .. 111 Mortuary tn,San Ctemenle IJ In charee-ot irran1ements. waa held capUve and forced to oPf!n the bank 's vault. All were re I ea 1 e d uhharmed, police said. Police 11aid the three armed men Invaded DI Sogra's home on Staten Island Monday night and took him to his sister· in.law's home where a total of 13 people were held hostage. While one bandit remained with tht hostages, two of the men forced Di Sogra to drive them to the Ft. Hamilton branch of Community NaUonal Bank and Trust Qimpany In Brooklyn at about 7:30 a ~m. and ordered him to open the bank's safe. Police aald DI Sogra apparently had only part of the combination of the two- lock .._fe, and the holdupmen had to wait for a woman cashier to arrive to open the lower part of the vault. The men escaped with '250,000. leaving several bank employell h 1 n d c u f f e d togetller, pollco aakt. They !°'ced DI Sogra to drive them away from the but, drtpped him off and abandoned tbt car 20 blocb •w•Y· Evidence Up in Smoke CINCINNATt (UPI) -The 11$ cartons of ci1arettes which police confJSCaled as evidence lut Frld11y in a theft cue. were placed Jn a rear orflce al the central pol,lce station. Officers d i s co v t rt d ~ay someone had squetitd under wn coverln1 the door to the office and escaped with all 12$ cartons. There were nt suspecta. Blockliuster, Bombs Hit Red Forces SAIGON (UP!) -Sb thowand South Vietnamese troops opuating behind the great.eat U.S. Ba2 bombing attackll In eight months moved to within a mlle ol bCllieged Flie Bue c today in twin attaclta from the North and South. Tlie 11.S. Alr Force dropped two more 7~ton blockbuster bombo on the Communlal !orceo. Tlie c:ounteroUwtve to rdlev• the base JXI milH north of Saigon near the converging bordert of Laos, South Vietnam and Cambodia JlttlijJ<d of! this morning when a force of 1 , 5 O O paratroopen landed from U • S • hellcoptm three miles aouth of the base and 4,500 Infantrymen landed two miles to the South. A spokesman aald the two forcea met no resistance as the paratroopers advanced two milts to within a mile ot the base and the northern group advanced a mile. But Communists around tht base Rht up 11uch a heavy barrage of anUalrcraft fire o~ of lout South Vletnamell helicopters reaching the base was shot down. B52s have hit Communist bulldupa around the base for a week and today a spokesman 1aid 11 of the big bombers dropped 540 tons In what be called the heaviest one.day bombing since. Aug. 6, 1970. In addlton, C130 cargo planes parachuted in two mort of the ?in.ton bombs which devastate an area tbe size o~ a city block. The first two blockbusters to be used against O>mmwtW troops we.re dropped Monday. Bell Tower Silenced OAKLAND (AP) -'l'IJe belb at Fruitvale Prubyterjan church have been 1ilenced lempor&rUy. The Rev. Robert Dow Nicholson uplalned Mancfay that be disoovered a gray "dcwe la ... ung In the bell tciwer of bll churcb, and he didn'l want to dilturb ber. On Easter, be oald, Ille dove lakt two •'-8' In her new borne. Tbe beU. will be silent until the blble1 are batched and can fly away, the mlniater reported. er..,. Weadrer Fair skies following low clouds la the general foreCaat for Wedne• day along lhe COIJt. with tempera. luru peaking at 1$ on the seashore aocl up to 71 tnlantl. INSmB TODA 'Y . It to01 juat a earual killing ofUr a beef In o .ft.at Bcacll bar. B» !laM<m fontil» 1toMordl, ii w1 ho.rdlv 10 o r t h mcmtioning. But a man J"Mllcd o trlggtr three ttmr1 and aMtMr man died. Logbook, Page 9. -.. ......... ,. "'"""'' ........ ---' ..,..... ,..... ,. ~ lf.11 .... Merl!"' ... ,, -" -.. .... .._ . Wlln. ...... ,. ~ ..... 1).14 --.. I I ~ CWLt' PllOl SC La9t1RG Gives View Proposed Sign Law Criticized Alked to comment on 1 proposed county sign ordinanct, Laguna Beach planning commissioners Monday night agreed U..t 11' ban On billboard advertl.llng was llne, but rutrictions suggested far business signs seemed a little tevert. New planning director Wayne Moody was instructed to convey this react.Ion to the county Planning Commi.Won's public hearln( on the ordinance today and alto to supply I.he commiuion with a copy of La.guna,1a somewhat less restrictive sign ordlnan<e. The county legillatioo would 1pply spedflcalb' to two--mile corridors be!i4e arterial ·hfgh.,.ay1 and freeways deaignated aa "1eenlc." The8t include Ortqa. Highway, El Toro Road, Santa Ana Canyon Road, Riverside Freeway, Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Freeway, Santa Ana Freeway, San Dlego Freeway and Pacific Cout Highway from Seal Beach to San Clemente. The proposed SR (sign restrictions) di.strict would ban all outdoor advertising structures or signs (billboards) near the .scenic routes aJ'Jd restrict necessary business aigns to wall signs with a maximum area or ISO square feet per businw. Professional nameplatt.s and aigm: denoting the name of Ille shop could oot ei:ettd two square feet, illuminated signa would be limited to intensity and no moving or flashing signs would be permitted. No roof signs would ht allowed. • Newport Council To Study Beacli Dog Ordina1ices The Newport Beacb City Council Monday night did an abrupt about-face and ordered the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission to start an immediate study of dogs on the beaches. During the afternoon study aes1lon councilmen seemed ready to tackle the controvul)' them.selves and thereby shorten1n& what will almost certainly become one ol the year's biggest lasues. "We've got to make a decision one way or the other, as soon u possible, and not 15tep in the: meu Laguna Beach did a year ago," Councilman Don MclnnlJ of West Newport had &a.id earlier in the d~. When the subject arose during tbe business meeting, however, Vice Mayor Howard Rogers reversed field. "We have got to carry out the democratic procus and let everyone have their say," he said, commenting that the PBR panel ahould conduct Jts public hearings, make a recommendation to the council, which subsequently will have to conduct more he.aring1. The council instn.icted City Attorney Tully Seymour to prepare two different ordinances, one patterned after that which wu finally adopted ln Laguna and the other similar to Hunllngton Beacb'a, wbtch bans dog. from beacheJ totally. The LalUJlli Beach ordlnance b811.1 clop from beaches and certain parks during the summer, from JLme 15 to Sept. 15, between the houn of 9 a.m. and a p.m. Rogen, In urging the longer procedure, took a stance contrary to his Freeway Fighter ally, Mrs. Margot Skilling, whet had asked the council "to act as speedily as possible." She said with the county and the cities of Laguna and Huntington Beach banning dogs this summer they'll all be coming to Newport beaches. "And the county health department ls tonsidering condemning beaches that all ow dogs," she warned. DAILY PILOT OUMGti COAIT PUll.1MUMO CXW,,Al4V le'lttrt H. We14 ,,..lftfd •1'111 ..... """' J.c~ a. c.rt.7 V1l:t' ,.,..llMI 111'111 co-11 ~ 'Tiie11111t k1e•!I t"tlllf' Commission chairman W 111 l a m Lambourne noted that the ordlnance would be effective only up to the city limits. but since some of the territory would be re1arded u falling wltltin Laguna'• sphere of influenct, comment was in order. Pt!oody said strenuous opposition lo the county ordinance is expected from sign companies. He also pointed out that any affected areas 1ubsequenUy aMt:led to Laguna would come under the clty sign code. U.S. Forces Will Remain In SE Asia \VASl-IlNGTON (UPI ) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the United State1 will maintain naval and air forces in Southeast Asia, indefinitely but there will be no fresh commitments of 1'maS!ive manpower" there. Laird also 1aid the American combat role in Vietnam will end this summer, but that U.S. forces will be involved in some forms o! defensive combat beyo11d that point. He refused to say when the American presence in Vietnam might completely end. In a Pentagon news conference, the defense 11cretary 1ald the VietnamlsaUon program Is aucceedine and that the new thrust of Oefe.ruie DepartmO!ll pla!ining II aimed for when the WU 11 ended In th1a respect, h< 1ald, the Unlted States ahould CIV"t financial and ar.MI assiltance to the naUom of Soutbust Asia that would e.neble them to maki the belt possible uae of their own manpower and resources. "We abould not make the mi.stake of committing massive manpower to that fart of the world," LaJrd 11ld. "MJUtary assistance -yes; American ground troops, manpower -no." Laird u.ld he does, however, fottsee the need to maintain other forms of U.S. niilltary pmence in Asia. He declined to comment on whether they woo.Id play a combat role and left open the length of time they might be needed. The defense secretary summarized ; "To say that we would not have a presence in Asia (after Vietnam) under the strategy of realistic deterrence • , • would certainly be misleading. "I would envision that U.S. presence in Asia as far a1 naval force1 are concerned, as far as air power is contemed, that this would be a part of the reallitic detenent we would maintain in AJia." Without making any prediction of a 1peci.Uc date, Laird said combat responsibility in Vietnam will be turned over to the Vietnamese command "in the summer period." He denied that the mauling suffered by the s o u t h Vletnllllese army during the lnvulon of Laos bad slowed down tbil process. Johns New Oerk For Capistrano Robert Johns, city planner for San Juan Caplltrano b11 also been namod acting city clerk. Johns accepted the post offered by the city council Monday at the recommendaUon of Donald Weidner, city adminlstrator. The planner, who had been serving as acting administrator before Weidner was hired, was orflcially relieved of bis administrative duties. The council dJd not authorize extra compensaUon foe tbe clerk post. S·t-r·e·i·c·h A Golden m an t J. e ground squirrel stretches lo full height for peanut offered by friend in Bend, Ore., where spring sun is luring squirrels out ol their winter sleeping places. ·Battin Move Squelched Chairman Fails in Bay Swap Proposal By J&Clf: BROBACK bf ltl9 Otil'r PllM SUtt Orange County Board ot Supervisors Olalrman Robtrt Battin In a aurprlse move this morning tried to kill the Upper Newport Bay land swap agnement wlthollt further negotiations. His effort failed . Battin. the supervisor from Santa An1's First District, wu responding to an April 12 letter from Irvine Company President William R. Mason. Mason asked the board to extend the AprU 25 deadline for negotiations. Battin responded with lhe 1.Ueaatlon that the letter wa11 ·'self-serving." He asserted Orange County shouldn't discuss "any further possible new agreements on the Upper Bay until the present agreement is terminated." Batlln moved that the board rt:affirm Its action of last Jan. 5 in which It voted Can Company Condemns Capistrano's Council By PAMELA HALLAN 01 rM OlllY P~ Slit! ls the San Juan Capistrano City C.Ouncil dlscrtminating against beverage contain- ers? Steve Grozik, an official of Cootinentat Can Company, says it ls. Grozii: assailed the council Monday for passing a recent resolution to stem fhe problem of litter and waste disposal created by the sale of beverages Jn disposable, JlOD·retumable containers. The Tesolution calls for the support of legl!lation to limit the use of the containers, requiring a deposit on all beverage coo.tainers, supporting research in the manufacture of biodegradable containers. and encouraging citizens to be more responsible in their disposal. One section of the reS<>lution, the part that Grozik strenuously objected to, was the support of legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution on such containers. Grozik said "jumping on this kind of bandwagon ls very popular, but is not the answer." He said non-returnable containers represent less than two percent or solid waste in this country and that legislation cullawing the containers would only ''scratch the surface of the litter problem ." He added that one-way containers make up less than 17 percent of the volume of roadside litter with paper products producing 60 percent of the mess. ' "Yet you didn 't pas!; a resolution banning paper," be said. Groz.llr said the answer to the problem lies not in banning producta but in programs ror recycllng· and reclaiming them. He called for rescinding the resolution and appointing a committee to study problems as they relate to Capistrano. ··Jt probably iJ discriminatory since it aims at one area, but getting rid of two percent is betltr than none at all," said the resolution's author, Councilman Jim Thorpe. · ··until I hear from the people that they don't want this resolution, rm not going to change my mind," he added. The council agreed to review the resolution at its next meeting. Bli1id W atchcat Routs Burglar l n Costa Mesa unamlmously to t tr m in a le the agreement. But Battin added the words "without conditions." .. Supervisors Relph Clark and David Baker objected to these words. Batun agreed to delete them. The Battin moUon then passed 4 to I w i th Supervisor William Phillips dissenting. Baker faUowNi with a motion W e1tend discussions on the agreement for 60 de.ys or until June 29. It passed unanimously. The Irvine letter which seemed to raise the ire of Battin and Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach staled that negotiations carried on to date with Caspers and Battin or t h e i r rtprtitentatives had not made any worthwhile progress. ·'supervl5or B1ttin's only respoDSe to a request for serious riejotiattons was a memo stating that no jolnl dlscU!91on would be carried out (on lhe luturt of the Upper Bay)' until the agreement Is unconditionally terminated," Muon said In hla tetter. . The Irvlne Company has maintained the county cannot can~! the acreement unilaterally and has indicated it will go to court to prove the point. The compa.ay alS<> wants to negotiate possible damage!: due it if the agreement is cancellerl. Saddlehack OKs Computer Time Purchase Plan Saddleback College took a step into the world of computers Monday night whea trusteEs approved hiring a rompultr coordinator and purchasing computer time from nearby Santa Ana College. Laguna Asks U.S. Grant For Festival Minibuses \Vatchdogs are often credited with crime p~vention, but Costa Mesa police today offered the tale of a bliad cat who attacked a burglar and wu 0beaten off with a basket of Easter eggs. The intruder got away with nothing. Investigators were caUed to lbe home of f\1rs. JoeAnn F. Lawton, of 3136 Bermuda Lane f\londay when she The plan was approved by trustees after a Los Angeles firm conducted a study and concluded the school's time-- c o n s u m i n g • mucb·standlng-ln-line registration process s h o u Id be computerized. The plaf1c::!ill relieve the faculty of many clerical dulies noW' involved in registration, the consulting firm stated in Its report. As Saddleback College can not afford its own computer, the firm recommended the school enter an agreement with Santa Ana CeUege for use of its equipment at a cost to Saddleback or about $1,000 ~ month. This would compare vdth about $3.000 per month for the school to rent U., 0¥.·n equipment , the consulting flmi reported. .. The colorful Festival of Arts trams may reappear on Laguna's streets this summer. Festival directors learned Monday night. Director Mrs. Helen Keeley, who heads the transportation committee, told the board that City Manager Lawrence. Rose has promised there will be adequate transportation to the FesUval grounds either by city-owned minibuses or rented trams. "The city has applied for a federal grant to purchase minibuses," said Mn. Keeley, "aOO. ii this comes through i• time, the city will serve the festival Drug Seminars Slated in Viejo with its regular bus lint. "Al an alternative, Mr. Rose said he will arrange to lease vehicles and the new owners of the Venice Tram Company have advised us they now have three lrams that meet safety code requirements and are seeking three more." The trams operaled by the former Venice Tram Company owners were ordered off the streets last year becaus~ of safety code violations involving brakes and wind.shields. returned. from Laguna Beach to find it burglarized. Somecne slipped through a bath- room window and ransacked bedroom drawers before crossing paths with the Lawtons' blind watchcat. Police were told the animal will attack anything strange that moves, due to its blindness. Debris scattered around the living room indicated the burglar protected hilnself with the Easter basket and contents before neeing out a door. lf the trams are leased, Mrs. Keeley said, the company will require that BiJUJoard Owner·s drivers be at least 25 years old and recommends women drivers. It was W W V d } further sugg.,ted that high school age ar Oil an a S students could collect faru, she said. To compensate for loss af parking DETROJT (UPI) -Billboard O¥i'ners, spaces along the median strip at the escalating their war with sign-chopping festival grounds. directors were told , the vig ilantes. are using steel poles instead or city plans to circulate the trams or wood on new signs. ''Let's see them cut minibuses ronttnuously from municipal down steel poles," said Joseph Jones, In approving the proposal to hire a full time staff member to implement tlW! plan, Saddleback President Dr. Fred Bremer noted the coordinator's saJaey would be approved by the board at a later-date. Bremer noted there were funds in the 1971·72 budget to add the member to the staff. The consulting firm Norris and Gotfrled, estimated the schooi would have to pay $15,000 per year to hire the coordinator, who would operate Santa Ana College's equipment. Trustee Al Brannon asked Ji rn Anderson, a repre5entallve of the firm,. If the school could hire the person on an hourly, as·needed basis instead of !WI time. "You need to get started with a nucle~ of someone who can continue In the program," Anderson responded. "f think you would Jose an investment If you did hire him on an hourly basis.'' Parking lo•· •· the festival grounds general sales manager of a Lansing • The l1rst of 10 semin1r1 on drug abuse .., "" · B' A T SI for parents and students will be held 7:30 Location of the eight parking lots is advertising firm which has lost five 1g tom est at~ p.m. Wednesday in the Mission Viejo shown on a map, especially designed by wooden-poled billboards since February. High School lecture ball. artist Dixi Hall, which is being Eighty-one billboards in southeastern WASHINGTON (UPI) _ The United Robert Minier, literature-philosophy distributed with Pageant tickets. Michigan have been sawed down ia the States plans an underground nuclear teacher and coach will conduct the free The transportation proposal will be last two months In midnight raids. explosion almost live times nice sessions which will be held Wednesday prtsented to the City Council April 21 . Several Ann Arbor-area youths have been powerful than past underground blasl1t it evenings through June 16, _11M~rs;;.;;K;;ee;;;;le~y;;to;;l;;d;;th;;e;;;;bo;;ar;;;;d.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;ha;r;;g;ed;;;;w;lt;h;:'o;m;e;;;of;t;he;;;in;c;id;e;nt;s.;;;;;;;;w;a;';';;'po;;;rt;e;d;tnd~a;i;y;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. Topics to be covered during the aeries include an overview of t b e narco,lcs problem; physical, medical an d phys.io\ogical aspects of drug abuse; the probation department; e d u ca t i o n a I techniques; Teen Challenge: 1 aw enforcement; psychology and drug abuse, and the legal aspects of drug abuse. The closing sessions of the series will consist of a student panel focusing on the drug problem and a summary session discussing what parents can and should do about the problem. SEASAME STREET Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't had a carpet installation by Alden's. TM1111t A. M.~t"" Mallott .... l!tlit.- Clri1rl1t H. l,.,., .i,l.1r4 P. N•R AHltlt11; MIMtll\t •t""" l.ettM ..... Offlc. 2l? ,..,.,, A'f'tllWI s.. ca-. Offk• lOli N1rtlri El C11111i11e l.e1I Group Favors Junking 'Instant Tenure' Idea, In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every home on a block. •• • An ad boc committee en tenure Wednesday will recommend to the ,late Community College Board of Governors that "Instant tenure" bt eliminated for newly-hired facully member&, but that the concept of tenure be retained. The commlllft'1 recommendation, ta be presented at the board'• S.cr1me.nto metling, wu released Monct.y by membtr llans Vogel. president of lhe T:-usttes ot Saddleback Community Colleee. "Tenure will r~maln 11 a conctpt," Vogel said when asked If the committee has discu.ued the ellmlnation of tbe mucMdlacked proeu1 whtrtby fa<:Ulty mtmbers must bf rehired each year. "The Intent Is ·io remove tbt evils or ttnure .'' One of these evils. Vogt.I said, was the so-c.alltd "instanl tenure'' under which a new Instructor must be rtU1lned after his flnt year unlrss the college can "show rause'' \\'hy the person should not be rchlred. The ad hoc comn'llltet, which was compoatd of commu.nfty c o I I e g e admlnt!IZ-«ton: aod trwtffs fr o m throughout the slate, will recommend instead that si new teacher may be released without prejUdlee and without cause after one ye.at~ Vogel said the proposal calh1 for an lnlttal one-yiar contract, after whieb a new teacher could enttt a second one--yeu oonlr1ct. After the first two )'t911. Vogel said a faculty mcmbtr could sUll be relfaltd wllhout cause. Under the committee's prcposal. Vo1el said a faculty member will htYe no lenurt until he enten a contr&ct for hill third year of teaching. Voael said the committee In Its two meettnss never discussed complete elimination of tenure. He no'ed that If the, ttate Board of Governors adopts the: recommendation, lt would carry the force of law and would require nt le&:islaUve action. \ The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. , Ask YOUR neighbor -we probably ~eted her home. (If we -haven't, bring her in with you.) I SANTA ANA. OltANOI. TUSTIN Call • , • ALDIN'S RID HILL CAR,ITI & DllA,111111 1U74 lrvlM,. Tllrtfn, C1I. ......... ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 .I ~ I j • I • I For The Record Marriage Licenses Casual l{illings: A Sign of Times By ARTHUR B. VINSEL Of tllt 0.llY ~llM Slaff CASUAL KILLING ia so common today a typical horn· lcide gets minor menuon, compared to murder in the Manaon Family faah.lon. This is a fact of life in crime coverage. By U'lia cruelly ruliaUc criterion -how many para· grapba a lost life is worth -the kil· Ung of Claude LaBean hu litUe clus. No Hollywood jet set angle, no spec- tacular savagery. His murder was just as tragic and senseleas, however. Cl.AUDE, 39, waa buried last Oc· tober. His killer, 54, got life in pri1100. The case of The People vs. John Shelby Burrows got only four para· graphs in last Thursday's paper afttr it was closed by Burrows' guDty plea. Claude was the klnd of &UY to whom you nod each night after work, dropping by the ne1&hborh0od bar. He was the semi-friend you tt0mehow never get to know. "CLAUDE didn't like trouble,'' said bartender Tony Lee, recalling bow his buddy paid with his life for help-. in& to atop a fight. f11tsdq, .If lJ, 1171 DAILY PILOT 9 Vall~y Man We lfare Fr_aud Suspect Arr ested ~ On Publi c SANTAANA-AnAn•helm st., Huntington Beach, ls Grelz, 28, 011111; El Cortlgo Jnv .. uaauon alhl•dly i Committee SANTA ANA Ron Talmantei of Fountain VaUey bas betn named to the county Citizens DirecUon F I n d i n " Commission by the Leque of CJ ties. Talamantez, 16850 Olive St., will 1ucceed Nat Neff Jn repre1entln1 lbe first supervlsorial diatrlct en the commWlon. Neff resigned last month. Talmantez is employed with McDonnell Dou1!&1 in Long Beach and has been acUve in Boys Oub, Jaycee and LltUe League activities in Fountain Valley. 1be CiliitJ!S Direction Finding Commlttee is the public voice In the Oranae County General P I a n n i n I Program. 2 Countains AMA Delegates ;woman 11 the twelfth person accuse:d of receiving 1 n Lane, Mission VJejo. revealed that Grett was living t esUm1ted •1 .111 in welfare Wellare offlciab uld Mrs. in the home and contributln& f arrested in U\e past two wee~ funds with the false claim that Johnson falsely clalmed that to the family aupport. 1' in a crackdown described by her husband bad abandoned the father of her child had Mrs. Johnson ls •~ ~f ~ d i s t r i c t a t t o r n e y ' s ber and lhelr one child. abandoned the home and left unlawfully receivina $1:et8 ID .~ investigators as a "war on Investigation 8 11 e g e d l y -;;h~e~r.;;lo;;;;s~u~ppo;;;rt;;;;;th;;;;e;;;;m;;inc;;;;r;;. ;;;;w;;e;;U;;are;;;;f;;wxb;;;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•~ welfare chiaelers." re1tealed that Bertucci •tJ !I Mra Lucille Qiristensen, 35, machinist, was living at home and that his wfe worked at a w1a charged with welfare local bank throughout the fraud and rtleased on $1,000 period of t.he alleged welfare b&IJ from Santa Ana municipal violations. court. Also charged with welfare InvesU&atora claim Mrs. fraud Is Mrs. Patti Jean Chrlsleme.n applied for Aid to Johnso~, also known as PatU Families With De pendent Cttildren funds on grounds that her husband bad left her to suppart their five children. They found, they said, that Christensen was in fact living County Finns Win Contracts at the home and had been SANTA ANA _ Orange working fUll lime s i n c e County Supervisors b a v e January, 1961. The couple awarded two contract 1 alleaedly purchased a $26,500 Ill borne within lhe last two 11e1rs tota ng $ll0,503 for county " projects. and was malting mortgage A $72,590 contract was given repayment.ii of $155 11 month. to the Be:ll C o n s t r u c t i o n Mts. Christensen is accused Company of Anaheim for ••··Your 5k.pp~f\~ P•i..1ie. of defrauding the Orange Orange County Medical Center 1 ·,. 0-k U.ltiN\o.~ 6iic&lf County Welfare Department of alterations and improvements. COAST Su;iR MARKET Sl,768. and Charles R. Benton ef lnvesllgators cl~im that the Laguna Beach received a S34T£.c...t.-,•l)r.,.,...li'\tr LARGE I., : SELECTION ~·. OF DRUGS •• 1•• AND \;: ' BEAUTY AIDS 12 cases prosecuted to date $37,913 contract for interior MON.-SAT.-t t• 6:JO.-S..Hcry t ,. I ' ' '· . ' ,\ • more than $15,000 within the at Los Pino.s Boys Camp. · :.• have revealed frauds totallingli~re~m~od~e~li~ng£o~l~lhr~e~e~ba~r~r:ac:kJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:'' IRVINE -Dr. Warren last two years. Boslick, dean of UC Irvine's Court action is pending TOTS, LEARN TO SWIM School of Medicine and Dr. against two Orange Coast Vincent P. Garroll of Laguna reside n ts accused of AT YOUI ORANGE COAST Beach have been elected defrauding the w e 1 r a r e YMCA Callfornla delegates to the department . ' The troublemaker -Butrows -was ordered out of the Red candle, vowing to return. He did. He coincident. ally met Claude right ,outside., as the vicUm was leaving. He shot him three times in the chesl American Medlcll Assocla.-Mn;. JO!ephine Rodriguez CALL '42·ff90 ),.~t~~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~B<~rt~u~c:ci~.~2~1~,~o~f~l~t~806!!_~A:ca~c:1a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ Death Notlre• aAKl!lt 'kH'enee I. t t ktr, 10t E. llt!llH, M- '6rt llMcll. Ol!t ef <Heth. Mrll n . svrvlved b't' two dtvrhten;, C"'ryl S~f'Ol.llt. Ill Newi.rf ... ell; Andrt SM'1, lltton lt""'ff, loul1len11 tnd tour 111. ''"· St!'Vla1 wrn ht "'lei Thurldtv, 4 !OM. Wn!ellff (f\epe!. wf'lh lttv. ll:ll;lltrd Ovnlt~ O!lld.ilnt. W11tetlff Cll1pel Mor- tutr"!', ......,, Dlrecmn;_ (lllLL Mlldrtd M. GtllL A11 st, of 139S Shen· "°"'• COJlt M111. SVf'VIVl!d llv two 111n .. L-tll W, (rill, S&nt1 $uunn11 Ot lt C•!/1, W•1!m!n11tr1 d•u.hter, Gw111 Hoyt, Coll• Mtlt; 11\0lh.tr, Mrt. Miidred M. How1rd, Cellt Me111 1fv1ni.1n 1r1nd- cMldrtn1 ttirtt lrtlf"fr1'111chlldr111. Sf..,. lc,t wlll !>6 hlld WedM!Wlay, 11 •M. lleU llrMllWtY Ch•HI, WI'!!\ Mr .Et•I LI ll1ron offltletlnf. lnltrmenr, H1rtior llnr M1111or111 Ptrk. ltll llrwdw1Y Morlu· 1ry, Olr1cror1. ISHLl!R Htrrv C. Elhltr. U10 W, Jolll\110n 51 .. H~t!. 0.tt fJf dttlh, .¥<"11 U, Stf'VICU ""din' 11 "•cl!lc Vltw Morlut..,. OllU11'1TH Gtlt! C. Griffith. M.CI. Ate t.ll, of 1»7·A Beker SI., (0111 Mew. Otlt of d11!11, A11r!1 11. Svf'Vlved bV w!lt, M,.. l'rtncH Grllfllh1 111111, Wlll11m I . G. GrHfllhl lint 1r1ndcfll1d. Strvlct1, Wedntldlv. 1::rl "M, 51. Jol>n tl>e Dlvhll Epl1C$P1I Cl!11rcfl, COlll M111, with tntomllmtnl t i H1rtoor llttl Mtmatltl "•rll:. ht! lr&1dw1, Mortu11"1', Ol•tcJOfl, HANllN l lrrnth A. "'"'"'· 24U Col!"e DrlW. COiii M,,., 0.tt of dttlh, APl'll 11. Survived bY two dlUlhleri. Mrs. Glorlt Nobody heard the bluts over the jukebox. But big Tony saw the glint of gun metal, held cloae by Burrows' side, when he barged back into the crowdtd bar, glancing coldly around the room. TONY TALKED about it the nett night. "I came running around the bar and aaid: 'What do you think you'rt doing, you crazy sonalobitch?' and I grabbed him and took the gun away." You could tell Tony wu shaken. "Dammit, I'm no hero. I didn't even know Claude had been shot. l was just doing my job, "SOME GiJY who was sitting nett to Claude before he went outsid6 just ordered another drink. He uid we au have to iO sometime. "I almost hit him,'" ta.id Tony, furiolllly polishlng a glaas. He bounced around behind the bar, filling orders, Jun· ling ice cubes with a too-jaunty atUtude that didn't qutt.e c:ome off. Claude was his friend. Tony poured himself a shot of tequila and slugged it down. Sometimes you force a laugh to keep from crying . "THAT GUY'S 86ed out of here for a:ood," he added in a grotesque understatement on a caaual killer kept behind bars ever since. Only occasionally is Claude mtntioned now. 'lbe bar Itself is closed. His friends gatMr elsewhere, Outside of them and ty.io tragedy-stricken families nobody will re- member for long the principals in the Red Candle killlng. This is the way life is. Nobody wiU quickly forget the Manson Family and ita famous, mutilated victims. Every August, on the anniver. sary of a mind.less, unfeeling massacre, the names will be revived in print. Tate. LaBianca. Manson. Atkins, Ktenwinkel. Van Houten ..• THE KllJ.JNG or Claude LaBean hi.d liUle clas.!1 com· pared to the gruesome {Drays of Charlie's circle when it comes to the stark dimensions of hea4line-1rabbing bor. ror. One incident at the Red Cindie, which reopened that night after police left with witnesses' atatementa:, .offers a final, fitting footnote to the casualness of the killing of Claude La.Bean. "One of the cops came back in awhile. I figured he needed more information;" aaJd Tony, pouring another shot of t~uila. "~o, we got everything." said the officer, explaining the reason he returned while the auspect was being book· ed on suspicion of murder. "MR. :SUl\ROWS remembered he left some change on the bar." Morr-, Cotlt Meta; M ... lltlfy ,ttt,1;~;:;;;;;;~'.;;;~~:~;:;;:~;:;;~~~~~:;;;;~:~1 A•otln, Ml11ne1111t11 riv. l•lndCllll(I....,. Servicn i nd lnltrrntnl wltl Ot MJd 111 Aut!ln, Mlnnttolt, h ill Co1t1 Metil Mtt!w1rv, fuwardlno dlre<:lon. WOODCOCK H1rold !>. Woo<kocir.. 41'·H C.llt CldlJ, LttUl'll H!!b. Otlt of ~·'"· Aorll 11. SUf'Vlvlld bv t<>n, Roi.rt ll. WMUICk, Corlt Mtw• !we er1"6chllClrtn. 51rvltt1 wer1 held tocllv, Tu1sc1tv, 10 AM, WHI· cliff (l\lpel Mor!u1rv. 1n!erm1nl, F1fr· fl1v1n Mtmorll l ,.,,.,,_, Ftmllv ..,....,, tt>ol.I wlthll!t to m1k1 mtmorl1I cenlrl· bullon1, plffH tflnlrlbutt ta 51dclltt>tdl: Comm1Jnl!Y HOl-l!tl. L•t~,.. Hfllt. Wnt- ctlff (h1Ptl Mort"''"°' u.-iUI, Olrte!Ol'I. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%7 E. 11th St., Costa Mua llMUI • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar .. , 8'7S.1450 Co1&a Me11 ..... , . . "'°104 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cotita Mesa LI B-"33 • McOlRMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711 Lqu1la C.nyoa lid. 4IUIU • PACIFIC VIEW I MEMOlllAL PAl\K Cemttery Mortu111 Cllapd a500 Paclftt View Drive Newport Beach, Calttendl 114-2700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 'BOl Boise Avt. Westminster ltW5t5 • SMITH'S MORTUARY U'1 Mahl SL -!l11nttnato• Budrr Does God send sickness? Many beli ... that He dooo. But Christ Jesus healed ~.and preeented the idea of God u Truth that mikes men free from every kind or bondqe. An undemanding of God ., Truth is healing people today of all kinds of diseue. , Each week in oar Wedne9d11 eYening testimony meetings you may hear individuals ttD how they have experienced the healina and regenenting effect of Truth in their liYes. COITA MIU. -PlllT CMUltCM Of' CMlllT, KllMTllT *' ~-Ytfft °""-C.lt M-. -11• "11'1· "UHTIMOTOH 91ACM -•lllST CMUllC" oP C:MJllllT, K11HTltT ""' ... Otl'l't, .. ..,..,.,_a-tr -11• •·fil· NIWJl'Oltt llt.~ -l'lltlT C:MUIC" 01' C:"llllt, KllNTIST '* V'6 "*' .,...,.,. ._. -11• .. M. HIWHllT llACM -llCOlrfO CMUtCM 011' CMJllllT, ICllNtltf )It• he.Ilk WllW Ottw. ~ ... ~ -11• .. "" The· Great Freeway Holding Pattern. Thars how it is getting to Los Angeles area airports. But not on Air California from Orange County. We know you can fly to the Bay Area from L.A. airports' cheaper. But is it worth it? Think about that over- grown parking Jot known as the Los Angeles freeway system. Inbound in the morning. Outbound in the ... afternoon. But on the other side of the fence, the lanes are wide open. Especially for commuters using Orange County Airport. Our airport. And we have even more going for you. From Santa Ana, we have eleven flights daily to Northern California. At convenient conunutirig times. We go to San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose. If you want to get to the Bay Area in a hurry, call your travel agent or Air California. (Check into our Palm Springs and San Diego • flights too.) We won't hold you down. AIR CALIFORNIA Wilh llCG\Cthina new wider the ,_ •.'t• . " 4,.-..J .. • t • r I 0 DAllY PILllT SC Tursd1y, Apr!! U, 1971 Money's Worth CJ1ru1er Flights OVER THE COUNTER .......... Kw ...,....,. ........... ,-.. •1 •""'•llMIWJ r ,,_,. ,,..,, h.UO ll'ric• ... ""' ~ .... II W IMN!lllo IU'**°Wll V ---- NASO Listings for Thur1d•y, April 11 1971 ... ... ..... ... 01ily Way to Fly N~W Y0ttl( {Al') 1tl• •ia j. ": tol=~•Cln.i C1~ ~ /3) h1oat charter tour s:!\:".!1 A1~'!~: :~::" c By SYLVl4 PORTER Some time In the ne.x-t rew months, I"\ waier you'JI ltf: a p1<:lure tn this oe.,.; spa per or a croup of forlorn An1erlc1ru1 •HUng or I) mg on the floor of 1 major airport rn the U S or • Europe Under the picture will be • capUon reading hke Uus .. Group Stranded By Cancellation of C h 1 r t e r • f"hght'' or "Illegal FH,ghl • Stalls \Vould-be Vacationers at Airport." Some lime also 1n lhe nf!xt few months, I'll ~ager ) ou U rtad • nt'W iitory telling of thousands of Aml!'r1c1ns '.(stud!Jlts parucularly) 'Aho ',a1gned up for cut-ralC' charter filgbts, paid in full amved at the airport to find that (I) no 81!ats were avadable for them .. on the fhght they expect~ lo board; or (2) the fh ght w1111 being dela)ed for up to a whole ~·eek or (3) the fhghl had been abruptly cancelled. or (4) the !rave.I agent who had arranged the tour had gone bankrupt or absconded and the fhol1! trip was off \Ve are now enterLllg the peak season for O\erseas lra\el and even 1n the fa ce or 'the 1969-71 recession, the likelihood IS that all records for vacations abroad will be ~hattered by summer's end In 1971 alone, the 1nformtd .estimate 1s that 3,800,000 of \'OU will nv oversea5, • prunanly to Europe This year ·alone, your spending for overseas flights and for your foreign vacations (exclod1ng the Caribbean) ts projected at '•n awesome $3,800,000 000 : Both would be all-time peaks. And of this number. 1,100,000 -or nearly 'JI' rut ol four - ·will fly by char-Ur plane and ·'"""' $700,000,000. You'll do to for tllree very vahd reasons (1) Vou can sa,ve ~ much ,.s ~ percent on your airplane · µcket alone by going via . charter flight, and because of ·this single factor you can take •trips yo.i couldn't even dream • Ot otherwise • 12} Most charter fhghl.5 are •iate, well-managed and "compan quite favorably with • re1ul1r 1cbeduled 1 1 r I i n e Aight.s. to h tr.. «<.ollltf S•nk, ef\VI '' opera rs are ones l , 111av••roc. ., 1nc1ut-,,.~ U1i responsible and ~·eU Informed "~~~·t T•vit '~o: about th• tra\••I they ar• In 9•M• •!Jo Jto ~ Lin l1t •• ,. 1' 1'1~ f\Ht '" rttwnmending •••I!.,.. & 1•\o 1Si.. 11 UT :r. \/'• Ill II~ 11 Cf\I l •lff But there 111 an illegal frln1e ••tt ,., ,.., »\a c111tl9f> lMw 906 ST\\ ,_\~ C!vl1$e 1n the charter 01gbt industry u v. •k• l4\~ .. w PltlsS ,, \/'• N tnlt J/4o lfl• ltl:n M r. -.hk:h Is blackerung the 1-""'• 11it1u• .. reputation cf the entire Held "111 u~ 41 c~'.~u~f nd ht -• 1 Ml c1 11.o '"cir,•--a w CT1 you must eam ._, .. "..s 1• so '""' ou how to '''01d ::Vs 't:.c 1~: 1rt! ':::..-''" There are charter flight :~1 ~::ci •;t: 'I~ :=' f,~ 1rran11ers who are no more~~~ ' ~~ '1• • ....,1 c;, than b1gb-ru t:.'IS\lte promoten; "'dd1.., w 11 ""com c., r· A~v Ill» •"" S -· It :ind are shockingly 1gnor11nt All" st.r 111. 11• ... ~om .-1111 Air Ll'ld Jlo M1 om l'I• about the tours !hey put AJMe H• 4'• 1 mPI c111 and ol..&~a Alflwll II IJ\t IOI• lnO together -ui=oi; tao you Atco1K 4~, SI~,.,..., T.: mu.st lum how lo avoid ~= ~ '1.11 '!:l:.""r.. "Tra\•d abroad " ha., a lot 1n !JM-.!:~ 1~ 1! :,,:,,.,.k -mon with fam1ll1r"1 .. ,.,. S'I. S\oo -u '""" Alter EllUI U>.o ll'lo •Mell consumer goods You c•n buy Altl'ft I•• n uv. .., i Aloe crm l'• J\\ Oll'fl y,, 1t 1n a wide range or brands, :l~.. ~ ~~ c:::. ~: grades quality, t~pe~ and"'"''"'" n 1111i nrt fin ' Am C"'f' 14'0 J(t• llTlr Fff guarantee! You also ca~buy • e1 L•b 1t• rto i;.Yft com Or L. ... ... E~p f.p.\, f!\. U•IUll•b 1t at list price you can utlY ..,,,., '°I"' :u1• "'' D•"l' M k·• •· I I Or Am """" ...., t O.sa C• 11 mar "" uvwn or 11a e "'" c;, .. , s.1-0 .s.~ 111 °'" ~ou can buy 11 "hot" from a ~M~~ ~ ~ g::: ~r.' fence ....., w.id 11i.o 11~ O•ta111 " ... ....,u, !•• no 0..1, Fd To be more specific ""'-1 u•"'" o.v111 ''" Mk ... 11' I 1 II 0.lllJI ( There art the individual Nw 1"'4 '"' ~ o.cor 111 Al"d May ltto 11 O.ltl\I A1 fares .avaJiable on the MkMoP •w. ii:u 0.1111 ou -· If A"-WIG I] l.J't P.t Cl1'T scheduled a!rltnes whiu1 o er Amtv '" p., 5'1 P.t '"11r th n bill' ArrrrN "4C lol"" l5 ~ El you e greatest es:i Y in ..,,..,.kl• 1•1• 141\ 0 11,,., c•r schedules, and !he highest :-:rc:" l~ Ju ~ g~1::DI' ..,, guarant.ees or service a n d a11i;1, 1.1 141• 15 oix '"~ Auto Sc! II.ti 1 DIK1' C•U mpon&bihty These are at 1•1n1 A1 •11 .,,. 0ocu1.i .~..-M lfl'o 10\.\ Dor.al t.J the very top or tht pnce 1111 '"te ru. •'• 0ow J1111t It"" ttr 11\0 lt\lo Do-vi• DI range !lk•m lllt 2il 211~ oun1r.1" D h h k l•rr"• 111 :r... •Ill Dupl~~ Then t ere are t e pac age 111u111 F '(l• ~• ou,1,.,., and OUp !1111mrl1 5''~ ~~El ,. r"' tours, ei:curs1on gr th~ll Mk 111~ 21 e.u • 5~ fares offered by th~ scheduled l::fi:'" rr:! ~~ •• ~",j"L 'b a1rhne.s and their agents which 11 ... 1 Std ,..,. '°'~ e~~t ~~ l ... k H•f 5! !..t Elf'•I l!"I .art subject to lim1tahong that =~ ~11 ~ ~~ ~1::r si!' do not apply to normal faru :~.¥"lo: !,~ ~'V; E1 ... Hiid but which still have bulll-10 s111ch• "' .~ .. ~l:''~ d Sick Hllll 25\11 ....,. El<telr C~ servtee guarantees a n 1-... El m '"' F:m•S 011 " ( I th IOQ!h.C 11\lo 'lftt Eftltff c negotiab1uty mean og e "'"I AH 1M-k""' Ent""" 1t tickets may be exchanged for 1~:11.!;•" 'r•' 1~!1 ~=~·': .. other dale.'I and 1irhnes) f;~1k1Sc1 j!1' fi:: E"""' 011 '""-A lP!I 13'4 l".rll' 1"K These are next down on tu•: :~ .... • 10111 !O\li Fll'A c. I ,... l uc:kb M 11"\lo 1114 Fl C..:e price 1... IUC .. W l»-TJ\li '•"'' Cir Finally there are t h e l....,1191,. w. ' ¥111 T•k ' Ufl'I Sim V'4 ~ ¥1rNY I! charters which can be bought crc i"' 1m i"'6 i"•rrlnm 11IW y ,. "" Flndl•v from a vanety of sources and •mbr N SS\ • .. 1,.. °'"' 11111 MPI 102 167 Fl.,.r1'11 In a vanety of forms. Some c.,,,..,., a ts " .. ,., .•~•, C11W"ld,l'A'NIM'I charters include transport•· c., Mtll 2114 t11r.1o i"s1f' """ I hi'• oth • lud Ct• Swtl .,,,, ~-Flf',o.11 W1' tier. on y w I'll:; tts me e C••lft Air s;, 9.1. .. ,,,,, "'1 •· °'• _,_. l& {'tf' TK l !I~ F1TWnl' 1rral!lgemtn1.11 on L.11.: •'"'"'"" cir• C• ,.,. J11iFklm1r well Some charters are flown by lbe scheduled 11rline11, tome by tbe larger Amer1CAn non- scheds and !MIJDe by • mixture ol European companies of varying degrees ol reputaUon and performance. The charters are by rar the ehe11pest -and thus, of course. 1s their great Jure. Avco Tells 3 Months' Revenues ~.Japa11 Auto Makers Shaking Up Detroit NEW YORK ( UPll -Th• 1 1\ay Japanese automobiles are :1rabbJng a ma1or share of the • Amencan market for foreign :cars worries Detroit The J01panese maker11 have t•;ltured about 30 percent of the market for imports In only a few years. Most SJgn1f1cant is that both 1he American ;markeLers of the Nipponese cars and illdependent automo- bile trade expert.'! say they ha \'e done so more al the ex pe.nse or Detroit's compacts and m1n1cars than European t.ars "The Japanese are mainly responsible for the enormous J:rowth of imported car sales '" the last fe" years 1n sp1te el Detroit's 1ntroduct1on of J.<ery small c11.rs " said an tchtor of A11tomo1h•e. Ne\\5 Take Subaru Thi~ mOOerate.\y pnced fron1 "her.I dn\e import made bv FUJI Jfeavy Industries 1• Japan 1s relatively new lo Amenra Vet ltt1chael t Sanyour \\ho left Volksw11gen to become president of the American companv dlstrtbutlog Subaru. noted that Subaru sales l!'feW ·~fast the~ pass~ s::i.1~ of the French Peu,!!"e<>t bv 12 oercent l•st \ellr In 1969 Pf'•1p:eol nutsold Subaru in lhe Ln1ted If Y.• .,. Mt ul .. .t.....m.. s..,.1,.., T •• ere Ht wett1 .. eH _.,_, ..... TflrPHONI ANSWE•INQ. IUllU.U 935.7777 -·~ ., 1,H8'1 Of OIL PAINTINGS WHOUSAU WAlllHOUSI GnN TO THI PUIUC 50°/o OFF Wit&. IOIHOllt, tutfA ANA ................ DIAi.Cat Yl'AH"flD TAX SHELTER SYNDICATIONS ....... llt.Mt , ... ~­,.,... .......... ··~ ................... ....,,. ~ .., .,, •.. "''' ,. ""-' ftil. ..,,,. .,, "" ,...,..,. "" ...,__ w~sfttsfeMJt ... -•011aT M. AllLtlllON• fU·lflJ AAK. Ylhf4t .... lffM 1,. Stat~ two-tG-one Th1s ye1r, Sanyour hopes to sell 20,000 Subarus. That could pul Subaru e\•en 1\1lh Renault which has been on the American market in rorce since \Vorld \Var 11 But San}our admits it would take him a long tlllle to catch the 1¥.o lop ~!ling Japanese car11 ln America Toyota J o I d 114 898 cars In the US last year an:! Datsun sold 100,541 Neither of thltwo Japanese leader~ threat.ens Volksws~en ""hlch sold 565 000 m the U S la~t year, Sanyour pou1ts out, however that the Jape.new. have cut Volk!Wagen'~ !hare or lhe us market from 40 pf'~cent to about 35 J>(rcent Se' era) Japanese cars on tht U S market-aside fmm 1he learters-.oi;eU 111' o u n d 20 000 One g~s under A.TI Amrr11::an nAme the-Coll made for the Dodae rl1' 11J1on or Chrvsler by the lthts11b1sh! Compa nv nt Japan An other ls !ht! ~!:uda made bv 1 rrl:ith el1 111mal1 comoP'I\' ft i11 ~oltt 1n \Vt.stem Pnd Sou"'"rn stair~ ._1th !he op11on of eith er ::1 l"l'ITI\ ent•t1n"I ml'l!or (Ir a \\'~nktl rot11.1tn.( comh11~rio11 rn1nnr 1'1atda m<1~,. hta1+11ne~ !nmetlme 11izo bv <'e~trovinr a <1h1nment of brAnd new c11rs br, .... ,~,. of a ri"r"c:t ~tazda dec1<lcd ii wnuld bt loo l:'Xoen~l\e to takr th,. C'"'rt h:irk to J11pi>n to rorl'trt \hr ill:'rf'ct..t •o 11 1unl.:,.-l the"'I !\:ifct\' defcctt h11\t ht-I'., '"' ,J P""'"'~' auinm"\c-f'rll' h'"""tl 11rohlcm 1n !hf' T'"•ted <;1 .. 1e~ 1.:i~1 ''~r mort 1h11n h:ilf nf 503 fl(l(l fore-1gn cnrt had '"' hf' r,.r111'M In cnrrtc! •uir,.1,, rirfrt'\11 "er,. Jaoiintef' m~''" r.01•trnme-nt f1gi1~11 •hnl\ tl1:it 1monrted r•.,·e with lrt.t tli1111 2fl oerctnl of !hf' tnt,,J m:irkt>t 11f'C(ll•nted 'l'I~ 11bn11t •n nio,,...,,, or ~11fctv defect~ necess11at1na: re.r"•ll All .lanane~, r<>ro; "l"""' lllt' Sub:in1 and 1he J)id1r ro11 :i"f' m11rkf'1ed 1n Amer1r11 h\I :tUb!1d1;ir1e' nf fh,. m:ot f'T( 1n 11101'1'1 Rut S1v•,nur \\h"' 11'\1'11.; hit MBA JOI H11r1 ;ird h"f"~" 1n1n1nq Vt1!1.:~,1'P"'"l 9n•1 '"• ,.,~~~Its r.a1!:f'd th,. r1101t:il 1,, Will Slretl tn found 5ubPrn 11r Am~ric11. '"" ft t1.11 ~ hritd qu1r1ers in rtnn~tikcn I'\ J MUTUAL FUNDS Complete-Nelv York Stock List Tutsday April 13 1971 SC Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • • '"'' ,.~ lllU J Hlfll I.Aw Clf.-Cllt ,. ~ .~ ' l " " ~ • • , " .. ' •• '" • " • , .. " l ., ,i , " M " • ' "' '',!.~ 'i: '•" \OV. 0 ... ·~· "~ 'l : 5J • so; • • ... ~ • 'jh . . '~ ~ 11 • 1~ • 9 • 8 • 1 ' I • • • 31 ~ • JJ I )>o " . 1) 11 • i! ~ • • • • . " ' . . • • • • 0 . Q .. . .. l~~ l~\'o ~. l : 6... • . ,~... ,.,,., • • ?1 Olio o~ JI l•~• ~-0 Ult. l' ,, 1, '~. It 3"" l 11 l>.. ' • ll ., ~. Sl 311 'o '.l! 1 , • l n• 111o ~o<. G """ ""' I 2'1• l?• 13 .. .. • l • 1~ 10 -Hl- 'I t•ltt N•I ,--------------~ {lldo I M1t11 l.fw CIOH Cllt OAILY PILOT JJ Three CdM Men Lead Company Thrre Coro"a de1 MS:f' businessmen have been named among the top life insurance: salesmen of 1970 for ~ c1denta1 Lile of Cahforn1a They are Robert C Adams Joseph Deutsch and Thomas Van Houten all repreaCl'tl' tatives of Oce1denlal s Robert Hedloff 1teneral agency la Corona del Ma r 'T'he sales perforrnan~ ~ each ot the three puts him among the lending 200 agent. of the company 11 3 700 mu field force in the United Sta~s and Canada -· • : Bank ,\ pplies · 1 l Site.J For Me!!a Wells Fargo Bank has !tied~ an application with the: Comptroller or the Currency"' for its flnt banking house 1n Costa Mtsa Orange Coun ly John R Breeden cxecut1u.,. • vice president S o u t h e r n ! Callrorn1a operations 1 a I d : • property negoti1Uons a re : underway in lhtt v1cm1ty er : 17th Strtft and Irvine Avenul; ' and lf approved lhe ntw ~ flee would be expected too~ In early 1972 ... WeJls F11rgo Bank has S3 ofrlces l.n Southern Callfoma and a total of 215 stattwlde -- ' ' I f 11 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, April 13, 1971 • This latest improvement in Shell gasolines helps keep your car in tune.That can be important for good mileage and fewer exhaust emissions. 1 TCP/2/ helps keep your car in tune. This helps hold down exhaust emissions in newer cars, reduce emissions in many older cars-and helps keep your mileage up. TCP/2/ is Shell's name for a new combination of ingredients. It's '~ • not just an additive, but . , what petroleum i chemists call an "additive pack- age:' I tis an improvement !Asa Ow.tt a linlf lttUJ)OOn per golion i• enough TCP/!/ todotMjob. over TCP, the famous gasoline additive developed by Shell years ago. l 'Ibclay almost all gasolines contain additive packages. They differ somewhat in what they do and how well they do iL TCP /2/ is an effective additive package that provides an improvement in the performance of all of Shell's gasolines. The effecL' of TCP/2/ can be summed up as helping to kee/) yoirrcariit f1111e. 'J\vo of the main pollutants in "a car's exhaust are unburned hy- c1rocarbons and carbon monox- ide. Both are undesirable, and both can go up when your car goes out of tune. In fact, it would not be unusual for these emis- sions to soar as much as 50 per- cent before you even suspect iL And by the timeyourcartellsyou it needs a tune-up, emissions can be extremely high. By helping your car stay in tune, TCP/2/ helps stave off that serious increase in emissions. TCP 121 can also have a favor- able effect on gasoline mil eage. Wh en your car goes out of tune your mileage tends to go down. TCP/2/ work s to kee p that from happening. TCP/2/ can also actually re- clttce emissions from many cars -and improve their mileage. These are older cars that are, in effect, out of tune as a result of deposits that have built up in thei r carburetors. Read on to find out ho w dri v- ing regularly \\ith TCP/2/ helps restore mileage and reduce ex- hau st emissions from these cars. 3 TCP/2/ in both Shell and Super Shell helps extend spark plug life. This helps hold emissions down and keep your mileage up. When spark plugs misfire, a lot goes wrong. Emis- sions go up, mileage goes down , acceleration is re- duced-and you have to buy new plugs. One of the components of TCP/2/ works to pre- vent spark plug misfire. Shell pioneered components of this type and Shell gasolines were the first to contain them. TCP/2/ also helps to smooth out rough running in many worn engines that have 1ost compression. Another component in TCP/2/ is a special a11ti- ici11g illgrcdienl It helps prevent stalls caused by carburetor icing before your engine is warmed up on cool, damp days. 4 TCP/2/ in non-leaded Shell of the F\itun!helps protect against valve wear. One reason Shell of the Future can be made with no lead at all is a chemical element in TCP/2/. ' This element works to protect your engine against possib le valve \Vear. Shell could have left some lead in for the same purpose. But thanks to TCP 121 Shell could re- move all the lead. .r---'"" ..... -, .. - 2 TCP/2/ keeps new carburetors clean, and helps clean up dirty ones. Works to hold emissions down and mi leage up. When exce!\Sive deposits build up on the "throat" of your car- buretor; your engine is no longer in tune. Emissions can rise dramatically, a11d mileage usually goc~ down. If your car is several years old or more. deposits ·may have built up on your carburetor"throat:' Although most of today's gasolines contain a detergent that • I " will keep clean carburetors clean, not all of today's detergents can cut down on these deposits once they've fanned. TCP/2/ does have that ability. It contains a new detergent combination that can start to clean up a dirty carburetor withjustaf ew tank· ful s of any Shell gasoline. This can redll'ce exhaust emissions substantially. And it generally helps mileage, too. Good mileage and fewer.emissions -they can go hand in hand. When you bum guoline more completely here ••• ... you use leM gasoline from here ... I ... and leM pollutants are left over to come out here. • Probably the most important thing you can do is get a tune-up. Over half of all cars need a tune-up. If they all got one, total exhaust emissions in the U.S. would be reduced significantly (and in most cases the effect on mileage would be favorable). •Tu help your car stay in tune, use a Shell gaso- line with new TCP/2/. This will work to hold emissions down-and to keep mileage up. New TCP/2/ is now in Shell, Super Shell, and non-leaded Shell of the Future. r -• ,. I • " ~ 1 TlltldiJ, April 13, lm s OAILYl'llA' I 4,000 Anti-high Ri·se Names to Be Presented By BARBARA KREIB!CH Of tM 0.llY Pl ... 't•ll Initiative petitions bearing signatures or more than t ,000 Laguna Beach residents supportlng a 36-foot building height limit in the Arl Colony will be presented to lhe city clerk Tuesday by Ma rjory Adams Darling, representing Village Laguna. · A longtime retlident and beachfront property owner, Mrs. Darling has consistenUy opposed the introduction of tall buildings In Laguna. The 4,000 names on the pelltionJ Happy Sales11ia1a repttsent 51 perunt of Lliuna'• registered voters. After prtsenlltion to the d erlr., the &!&natures will have to be verified q:ainlt Qnmty voter ~gillration recordl. For the initiative to qualify. &JgnatU{'tl of 1$ percent of tbe registered voters, or 1040 names, had to be obtained within six months. The f,000 names belng presented were obtained In four weeb by petiUon circulaton workin& in neighborhoods and at food markets. Under the lnJUative procedure, a new law a:upported by 15 percent of a DAILY PILOT llllf l'lltJt' Jim n1y Su lton, 7, second grader at Laguna's Top of the \Vorld Ele- mentary School, makes an appealing salesman for the Laguna green- belt effort. He and other students are supporting Greenbelt \Veek (A pril 19·25) by selling stickers and Think Green buttons for $1 a- piece. Fu nds are to raise money for purchase of greenbelt. Water Worries Quality in County Under Fire Orange County is getting poor quality water from the l\1etropolltan Water District and will continue to get it if pressure isn't applied, according to Langdon "Don" Owen. manager of the Orange County Water District. To bolster his claim, Owen has asked lhe county's 18 local water agencies to niakc a door-to-door survey in selected areas to dcler1nine lhe amoun t of money being spent by residents and business fi nns to buy \'i'alcr sortencrs or bo ttle d water and to replace facilities damaged by poor quality watrr. Q\1e11 said the Colorado River water nov.• being delivered to the county MWD is of poor quality because its tot.a] dissolved solids !TDS) is averaging about 775 parts per million and rising. The higher the TDS, lhe higher the salt content and the harder the water, according kl the water executive. 01ven "'·ants MWD to del iver Northern California water to the county beginning In 1974 but he does not believe the agency will do il The northern water has an average TDS of 300 ·PP!l\. ~'en charges thal MWD bas coritracts for the purchase of state water and i!I building distribution facilities throughout the southland, but plans to buy less northern wa ter than it has a rl&ht to purchase. He said the reason for this is that Colorado River water is cheaper to (urnish. Owen's stand ls backed by two local waler department executives. G u 1 Lenain, head or the Anaheim Water Department, flaUy says be fels the use ot Colorado River water for domestic purposes should be discontinued. John Fonley, 0 range water superintendent, estimates that 20 percent of the city's water customers are using "''ate r sollening devicei and an equal number are buyin& botUed water. ]iidge Refuses to Drop Vietnam Maiming Trial FT. 1'1cPll ERSON, Ga. (UPI) -A military judge rejected a plea today by Capt Eugene P.1. Kotouc, cllarged with n1:iiming a Viet Cong suspect, that rharges should be dropped because publicity and "command influence" made a lair trial impossible. Capt. Norman G. Cooper, Kotouc 's military attorney, asked the judge, Col. Madison C. \Vright, to first make • prrsonal 1n1'e~trgalion into the charges. But \\'right rcfui;ed and then den ied Lhe motion alter hearing about 30 minutes of arguments. Three other motions. including one M>cking i1nn1uni1y from prosecution for Kotouc, were expected later today. Kotouc. 36. of Humbolt, Neb., faced a pretrial hearing on char~s that he cut off part of one ringer of al\uspect duri ng Tarstita District interrogation a few hours after the Pity LaJ massacre and that he cut a suspect on the neck with a knife. The massacre and the maiming weff: not dirttUy rtlated, but Cooper charged that Kotouc's name had been Jinked in the news media with those of Lt. William L. Calley and Capt. Erne.st Medina and others charged in the ft1y Lai incident. f'or this reason, Cooper said, "the accused ha11 been painted with lhis prt!judlct through no fault of hia own." He said there was no war, "to erase or retract" statements lod recUy linking Kotoue with the massacre. The only remedy. ht aild, w1.1 dismllsal. Kotouc testified In the Calley trial a1 !he intelligence officer wbo briefed Call ey's command before it awept. through My Lai on March 16, 1961. communlty'1 registered voters must be odopi.d by llie dty coun<il or ploced bel°"' lbe e!tclorito 111 o 1peet1I election. '!be ordlll111ee propooed by VIiiage LllUI'•· ...... p lormect to -btgb rlae, would llmlt bulldlnp throuihout the city to a bel&bt or M feet or three 1torle:r. The movement wu 1peclflcally launched in oppo&itJon to the propoaed CR («immercial·ttaidenlial) or d In an ct seWnr stondanls lot bucbln>nt hot<~ motel develoomett. 'Ihe' ordlnanct J)n>poaea • 100-toOt bellftt limit but the PlllllllnJ Comml.ukm bU -•oded Medic Helped To Save 135; 'Not a Hero' HMl Jim Fulton ii a man who doesn"t iee himaeU u a hero. Yet he was rtttntly awarded a Silver Star for gallantry in Vietnam combat. Fulton, 29, who ia currently stationed at El Toro MCAS ii genuinely modest about his part in a medical evacuation nearly a year ago that resulted in hla wiMln& the medal. According to tht official citation ht was the medicaJ corpsman on a Marine liftdevac helicopter whlch wu 1etting wounded Marines, South Vietnamese soldien and civilians out of a hamlet near Da Nang which wu under attack. While under heavy fr:rt, Fulton and the crew chief left the helicopter to search the village for wounded. The citation says he made this trip four times that day, bringiq out about 1$ people. Fulton, a native: Californian who was raised in Michigan, says details of that mission are a little vague. "It wasn't a day 1 had planned on remembering for the mt of my life." Currently he lives in Tustin. At that time, Fullon was statiOned in Da Nang with the First Marine Air Wing. "It had been a pretty quiet nl&ht. We'd come back from a night ml58ioit at about 10 :30 ·p.m. and about 1:30 a.m., we a:ot the call. "Being a medical corpsman, l didn't really Ir.now what wu happenlng because I didn't have any communlcatlona equipment. When we got near the h•mlet, though, I could set the horizon burning," be es.plained. The medic says he nmemben the helloopter landing on a bridge near the little village and he recall• plckin1 up about 10 wounded Marinel and then aome Vietnamea soldlen and then a lot of wounded clvlllaU, moat of whom were children. "The maiA thins on my mind was lo get tbe people on and 1et the hell out of thert," Fulton uplal.n!. A 10-year Navy career man, Fultqn says he didn't plan on being a medic for the Marine Corps when he enll1ted. tho! r...., be cul to so 1 .. 1. Annowlcln( compleUon of the pedUon· clr6ulaUn& ~ of the lrUtiaUve , VWage Luun~ ~"11'• Arnold llaJlo aold, "'Ifie peopt.,bove oPOk•n. l.qunona wanl no bf(h rise buildings Jn this community now or eve." Hano noted that the. f ,OOO -plu1 signatures on Ule petitions exceeded the vott atven any of the winning cand.ldate1 In Jut year's city council election. At lbtl Um<, Richard Goldberg received 3,tro •otU~ Peler Ostrander t ,828 Uld E<lword ~ .2,711. Space Age Assist "We hope the city council understands the aignificance of lhe mandate and will qulcily enact our proposed ordlnance." Hano said. "It will serve the city no purpose either to go lo a apeclaJ election • at a coot of several thousand dollan or to go to ~ourt in a vain effort to overthrow the people's mandate. High rise Lt dead." City officials have questioned the legality of the iniliative, notlna that state law prohibits use of the lnJtiaUve Jn zoning matt ers. City allorney Jack Rimel bas been asked to &ive • legal oplnlon in the matt.e rs. Ul'I Tt""'91'1 Donald 'Westaway, a bllnd Australian, wears pair of ultrasonic glasses which enable him to tell of any potential hazard in front or him. He can walk into a store and determine iC someone is behind the counter. The glasses send ultransonic impulses up to 20 Ceet. They bounce back. The wearer receives an audible signal from three small sensors over bridge ol nose. Westaway says the glasses are no substitute !or a guide dof, however. Del Obispo Road Pared ' "Like about 70 percent or the hospltalmen, I didn't even know we served u medics for the Mari.oea Wltil San Juan Capistrano city councilmen primary arterial to a secondary collect.or after 1 ligned up," ht notes. met no protests during a public heari ng lo match the county's descripUon of Del But duty with the Marine Corps doesn't Monday .to reduce the width af Del Obispo as il extends into its territory. bother him. He say1 he will put in fur Obispo Road from lOf to 84 fut. Kubota sa id lhe county is tentatively duty with the Marinea again after his "It's rare when a city reduces the plarming to make Del Obispo a dead end tour at El Toro Is up. width. Usually lb the other way around," where it meets the new Coast Freeway. Proponenb or the 1n1i.u .. '!nalnlal• ti is an amendment to tbe buddlq code, DOt tbl!l xonlng ordll\IDCt. Said Hano, "Our trdinance ls tepil: several attomeya have atteattd to Ill validity." 1 Dangers t.o the "healdl,-Mlet1 1nd welfare" or re1ldenlt are ctted bt the petition! as l't!ason.s 1upporUn1 the propo!ed ordinance. These J a e I u d • unslable geo logic cond1Uona, proximity ~ lbe Newport-Inglewood fault. tncnued fire haurd and upsetttns the ectloalcal balance of the CGmmunlty. Traffic Jams Hit East City Due to Strike PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Mort than o million commuters overcame two transit · atrikes today to get to work In traffic that police aald was "movin1 betttr on the ·average" than It had the first day of the walkout. Police reported lraUic 0 signilicanUy heavier'' than Monday, the first day of the strike when 1m1ny peraon1 had days off because ol the Easter holiday. The walkout Monday affected about a million commuter• of tbt metropolitan division of the Soothe.astern Pennsylvania Transportation Authortty ( S E PT A ) • Driver1 of SEPTA's Red Arrow division, which aenes about 100,000 wburban residents, struck today. Suburban communities reportf!d few traffic problema e1cept at main arteriea leading into the city. Extra train,a provided by the Penn Central and Reading RaUf'OldJ continued to carry heavy inbound passenger traffl~ The railroads reported 110me de1a11 but said trains were "moving mlOOthly." Commuters were spared another 1trlkt1 Monday when 2,300 taxicab driven approved a new wage contract. Marine Brigade Decommissioned CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -'!'be 5th Marine Amplrlbioo1 Brigade w a a decommis,,ioned today with the 10,000 men being absorbed by the lit Marlnt Division now mov ing out of Vietnam. A ceremony marking the relW'D of the 1st Div ision to Camp Pendleton 1a scheduled Wednesday. The first ships carrying he av 1 equipmenl of the division have beeri arriving ln San Diego this wttk. A Ioni Jine of 1hips is en route from Vietnam' with withdrawn troopa and equ.ipment. the Navy said, At Camp Pendleton~ Marines called the alr·!lfla armada from Vietnam '"J'be Nixon Lift." tn tbe ceremony Wednesday Brlf. Gen. Ron Dwyer, commander of th• deacUvated 5th Brigade, relieves Maj. Gen. Charles F. Widdecke a1 tbe Isl Division commander. Castro Visit Slated CurrtnUy servin& In El Toro' a said City Englneer Jack Kubota. ft1otorists wil l be able to take Stonehilt SANTIAGO, Chile (AP} ...... The peraonne.I oJfice, Fulton bu a110 served The coullcll also approved realigning Street south to Alipaz which will be a newspaper La Tarde reporta that Olban u an aviation phy1lology technician at the centerline in order to straighten major freeway Interchange. J>rlme Minister Fidel Cutrn hu been Norfolk, Va., In the intensive care unit at several sharp curves from the city limits Kubota said Del Obispo Road will Invi ted to take part in a mainmotb May Grt!at Lakes Naval Hospital and in the to Allpaz Street. eventu ally be a four lane highway from Day rally here May l a1 the penona1 Aviation Medical Acct:laration Lab in The street Ml changed from a the city li mits tp Ortega Highway. guest of President Salvador Allende. Pennsylvan~. 1-~~~~~~~~....::.~~~~~~~.:...~~-'--~.:...~=--'~~~.....:.:.._.:.._~.:.._~.:.._~~:._....:.:.._~~ In spite of a row of rtbborui which reprt!sent various citations a n d commendations, Fulton insist.a he l1n't anything special. "I don 't consider my11lf a hero. The pilot •nd the co.pilot -in fact all the pilots and ~pilotl I Otw with -they really did some outslandlng flying. I understand they were put in for the Navy Cf°'' one! tltty d..erve 14" be 11y1. Car Showroom's Windows Broken Vandll1 Monday night 1muhed two lar&e plate glau wlndow1 at the showroom of a Laguna Beach automobile dealer1hip, but investigators were unable to delennine how the &Jass wu broken. The damage, discovered by a pri vate eecwity patrolma•, occurred at Marqula Moton, 900 S. Coast Hilhway, at about 10 p.m., police Aid. The patrolman 111led the premiJea of the 1ho11Vr00111 and damap to the two large windows was 1et at $100. ' • D Summer Rec Sparks Fly Trustres of the Tustin pnion High S(hool District Monday night took strong s\ands on distr.ct wide provision of s11nmer recreation programs. The \.~!iue spttrked an hour or heated debate during Vi'hich Foothill High School Jiiterests argued th11l proceeds from last yrar"s program should be spent to 191Pl"fl\C their school"s rec re 1 l Ion ftc'iHtie11 . 1Th<: board rlniilly passed a program w;,hich \\'Ould prorate lnc1Jme fr.om the ammrr pro!{rams for rel.urn . to l1dl vidu11I high ~chool~ on th~ ba11~ of i-rtit'lpilllon in . thG b ask~ t b a 11 . ' swimming, tennis, physical fitness and volleyball programs. Foolhill High School S I u d e n l rtpresentative to th, bo•rd Jim Hieb had noted people In the area of his 1ehool had sh0~'11 the most support for the summer programs. ror a time It appeared board member Robe r t Bartholom"'. who reek • reelettion to his seat in tht April 20 eltction, agreed with Hicks that revenue• earned by the program should be returned to Foothill ~ln~ple there had \\'orked hard for it.1 «Utte . l..ater Bartholomew ag with Bo.clrd President Chester Briner of fl,Unlon ' Vle)o who 11id the 1Ummer programs used facilltiea that were buUt out of • five~nt distrk:twlde community 1ervk:u ta1 and lhus all tcbools should be enUUed to a share of the total dlslrk:t returns on the summer program. The board acUon alao p 1 a c e 1 responsibWty for \ the rucce.s1 and operation of the prognm1 on the princlpab ot the rour district high achools, Tustin, Foothill, Unlvenlty and Mlulon Viejo. Each achool will hire a recreation director \0 aupervlle the aummer offerings. Eich director'• $5 per hour .salary wUI be paid out of the oct1vi1y Itta chor1e<1 particlpanlJ. ~I' Winston I """'•·e.•.a.urn• Real and rich and good ••~"•••1~"'",...~._. ••••• .,.,,..,,u• • 1. 0 20 llll ¥. t3 MO-,.._• Pt! ciDnttt.FTC R'llO'I fllOV. '10. I ' I l \ \ I ~ps Youths Take To Highways • ·1r-.u MIJllPBlNE .... ...., ,.... •ttft VAC.'flON llEVJBITgJ): Now lhat th tnlfl< llloi )ll'tUy ....i dared up back In 1111 normal bumper-fo.blunper M Pacific COQt RJOway, It'• Jft11Y clur toUy wlMft f)I l;ids spelll their flllinl .... ~ Oo tllt !Md1, thal'• wllere. llhe~ you road the rip6rlJ, ii •ppeared tllat ~ •lmotl ... ryplace WU QUlllly &torlnl up during ~ll:uler W~k· ~Yi for • pooslble lnvulon of the JOlllh •. Mtmnr!ill•, tlley 1111 madt _ ... tlllol lllt 11141 woul4n'l -up Ii their place. T-. A,rll U , 1'71 ..... -· - One Might11 Hoar I New Peace Plan Partial Pullback By Israel Seen By Ullitad Pren llllenallooal Israel, after wet.kl of qoni&Ing study, hu agreed to a limited withdrawal from the Suez Canal to permit the water ... ay to be opened for intumllonaJ traUlc, diplomatic sources report.eel today in Jerusalem. 'Rle proposals may be submitted lo WuhiJl&"'1 next woek, tl>e acK&rces ukl . Thi dipiomail sllld ey wilhdrawlll would be accompaoled by e titborale 1ystem of safeguards •lairllt poalble deterioratioo of tl>e military balaoce of power in lhe uea. Ind alfo will specify that no E&YPltcn or llualao troops crou the caJllJ after tl>e llr•eli wilhduwlll, the llOUl'Cts uld. Meanwhile. n was revealed that rain fl<>c>dti 1wept Amman, Jordan today, forcing King Hussein 's troops to interrupt a bouse-~house search for Pale,stinian guerrillas. Troops lnltead went to wott rucuirlf inhabitaata. E. Pakistan ·Forces Begin To Crumble CHUADANGA, E"'t Pakl!tao (AP) - Armed miltanct in much of rebellious Eut Pakistan is crumbling fut befGrt the swiftly advancing columns of Presldtnt Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan's anny from West Pakistan. * Newport lluch police, In advance of lllt 1pr1q treo time for .-u, rist.i.t liioJr urller llllllOUllCOmOJ tl>al "1111 WoK If Doad." An Amorlcan gunner (L) hojdJ hil eor• I<> protect tllem from roar of 17Smm gun as it Is fired aaain•t Communist concentrations around Firebase 6. The base hu been under usault for two weeks. llrael bu been under prelSW't from the tJniled States to matt.. a counterproposal In E&YPUan presideol Anwar Sadat's recent call for an Israeli wlthdrawal that would permit the canal lo be opened pending a full Mlddie 1!:Ui peace setUement. A reported ahl.pment of Indian arr111 to the aeceuioniat forces ii likely to do Utue to prolong the civil war, or war o( liberation, as the Bengalis ducribe their 11ruQ!e. Cllw pnmlnent olflcor .... remlndtd nporten, "I killed tt 111)'..U ••. " Mll:ANWlllLll: JN LAGUNA B o ac h , 1awmea IOl a touch l*"VCNI and ~ {or an)111lna wllUt prtdlctlnl American Ping Pong Team .. JIUntin&lno -· the Pollet hod lbelr --roady lo p. 'lbal'• the Will See China's Premier • ,.ii.. .-·~ plalnclothU -,.1n11 tl>al roqulru UUle moro for drtu lllan • ~ of -10 ltUna. lllll4ill PEKING (AP) -Mtmben of tht U.S. and bandcuffl tucUd •way t0mtwhert. tablt tennis team art ezcltedly looking Out of O..lh Vlllley at Wu•~ rorwud to wh•t proml<e• lo be lhe hl&h omcm ol the Jaw wtrt pftdictln, few p0tnt of thetr week'• vbJt to China, • -· f*lplt -Id beJOOltlh OllOOth lo llMtlbl& Wtdn"4•Y wilh Premier Chou -up for lht J6.ctlied rillaJbul l'Jn·lai. 16ilivlll. But 5,~flnoUy lll'd• It •tone The proeptel of talkilll wllh. lhe time to brave aandatorma a fl _d • COftm'ltinllt CJttneae leader outw•tJhed tatutiiliikel: the teain•1 antlclptUon of Ila first Tiii OOU>RADO 1'lvtr IOt a prttty matthu th11 afternoon with ChJnue bis 8lb ik>nt a 200-mUt dretch 6f HI table temt1 1tar1. The 15 American• banlis. 'l'lle trlClc htri wu •pportnlly a were !old W. morninl of lhe meeting eompoUllon lo "' wllelher lawmen on will! Chou u lhty lefi Ille~ hotel lo the AtbOfta •lat 6r tb6 Callf""'1a aide pracUce for today'• matches. could anUt the lfQl4*l number 6f The Amerlcan-Chlntte table tennil wayward ycuth1. bouUI were erpecttd lo attract a capacity ArilGna apparenily Wfllft. Out of the 5tadium crowd of 26,000 spectators. tltbnl\ed 506 '1Tlltl In total. Yllml U.S. team mtmber John TAMehlll, a C.W.ty Slllrilf MN Yan<ey cWmed univer•lty 1lll<leot from Middleport, Ohio, 3IO '1TUll, tllul i°'>tn& Calllernl• nturned 10 Ille hotel •lier becomln& ill au1110rtU11 °" lbl •hort en4 Of the count. thil morn1n&. rwln& lhe prOJpoct thal * the Amtrictn team may bt one man Back · Newport Mach poUee 1hort in the exhibiUon matche1. m ' b 163 The othlr membln of the U.S. te.1m admitted their arretU were up Y were in hiah ipirit1 and eager for thtir ~ ~ ~-~ =~ ~ first mteliit11 with Chinese player•. · .. ~ .._, 2t'tv':"' Besides thtilr meeting with Chou, the ~~ reduced . ~ you. Newport Americana: on Wednesday will visit the offk:tn ~tflla: way: u you don't Summer "Palace on Peking's out!kirtl hive too much to do, you hive more time and attend a· performance of a Chintle to watch and the JDOr:t you look tbe more 0~· fly to Shan1hai Thursd1y = )'OU tre to find Wl'OftCdotra. So mom~c. where they will spend the night * IF JN THE SUM ii'• true tl>at lbl lood old 6rq6 Cout 101 U.. pity dutiil1 Enter W!e.k thlJI in prevlOUJ yt.111, then one 1111n& 11 ...u1n. Thi l<lds --• wt•lher l>el. Not In rtctnt memory CUI owt watchtrs rteall a nicer spring .... 11on wtlh ~t llUll, worm UY• dd -.. -. AM u IOOn u Eaate:r Week ended, the. f,.. roa..i 1n. Avocado Rustling :Rewards Increased LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Reward& for the apprehenlion aJld conviction of avocado ru.atlen have bffn increued to $SIO --of .. incrolff of thefu of the Ind! from Soulhem C.Ufomi• .,. .... o.....,. said Mend.ty avocadoa tata\y have been ~ object ef mwive ll1efta beca-they ue lbl -' expwiv. Amer~ lndl oo lbe morktl •t •bout II Ollllo eacb. 'I do hope it'• :nor polluted!' before going on to Canton. Thty art: scheduled to return to Hone Koni Saturdoy. The weather wu clear and sunny Monday a1 the .American visitors journeyed to the 2,400-year-old Great Wall of China, and Tannehill pronounced it 1 "muaeum pieoe" which the Chinese need aa a reminder of their ancient culture. Said Mrs. Emil Resek of New York City: "If this had betn in the United Statu it would have bttn a ,reat tourist attraction and it would be muWated and cheapened by discarded paper and 11rba1e." The Americans also visited Chin&hua UnJver5ity and met a shy jet propulsion expert who taught at the CaJifomia Inatitut• of Technology and returned to Ollna in 1946. The scientist., Chen Wti-c:hang, reported that his students eriUciud his teaching m4!tbods ducting the 19M Cu 1tur1 I R4!voluUon , and "my eyes were opened." * * * Friendliest U.S. Player Nearly Left Off Team LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Stnta Monica t.able tennis player wJth shoulder lenglh hair w1s almost barred from · a trip to Rtd China with the U.S. team because ··we were concerned about America's image," says a top table tennis official. The U.S. Table Tennis Association's executive committee in the ent1 rejected any 1uch action against Glenn COwan, 19, because "Lhe lesson here ii that Americans are individuals," G 1 e n n Herbst, Los Angeles, one of four aSJOCiation vice presldeflt!, aaid Monday. Cowan had made friends with the Red Chinese team at the recent world table tennis championships in Nagoya, Japan. He "rapped'' with Chinese players on the team bus and e1changed Clfts with them prior to the Red Chintse invitation to the U.S. team, which is in China now. As it turned out, Herbst uid~ "a better cross section of Americans on the team could not have been picked on purpoee/' Chicago Takes on Chill Temperature Drops 28 Degrees in Two Minutes CaHfornla IY UMITlD Ptlll IMTllMATIOMAt. •••11 _,_,,.,, IM ciovu ""4 Mii ....... ~ ~'"' CtlllWftlt utl .. fllW .,.. MllM ttl wtora noon. CM!.,. Hll'l-tfllr.. tntl • <"'-nc• ef r•llt ~ tiuwi• '"' IM J•nt• ltrMr• ., ... II .... -Ill' ..,,..,., IOC:tl' lft l• ....... Wflll lrKrNll/lt ,....,. t•Nt• , .. •• ,,.. w.,,.,..,.r, T ... llltM ..... , .... ~' ._., .... 111 Ille .... -OllnWM W II ...ctM .. ..... .. ,.., ................ lff\ttl""" '""" ....... ~ fW lllt ......... ·--• , ... -.cNt .......... """''"'' ...,., " .. ""' deu<lft .... It • ..,,.... ... .... • -.., ....... tl't ........ l'l'!t ...-ittllt _,_ r..-rtll cit•• Mlft •llf 6f ... ,.. M1lll. I~ Ille "'"' --1 .............. llW....., -11• ...... ll'Mllrl!IM ... lftlr..11• .. -..... flltN MtM•v ,,.,. llrK11t _...... ~ ~; l*'I lttcll ,.... ...... ... !ti "4$, •11r ... !'lc •n. IN. Wll• .._.... '"""" U-u. ·~ ... ....... ..... "'"" ........ l'Nf, .... Otlft, ..... NM• ....... ....,.. ""' .Af'ofMll'll ....... ""'1>7'. THE BEST ... ,.,..,, ,.,,. ''""' "'••· ..,._ .. It •" -<ft.. ..,.tkl't "''" ,.,..,, •Ntl• ifrflll-•••~ H 41111, 11 tfii1 DAILY" ,!LOT. c ... , .. ._., ,....,. LllM •t rlt .......... ftlt/\! 111111 "'9Nllfti Mlllf"I ~ wttltrfl' 11 .. IJ tlWfl '" ~I ttc:11¥ •nf WM!Wtltr. t41tll '°41" 6J. c ..... , ......... "" .. ,_ ,,.... • II ... 1nl..,. t1M-•11oir11 r•lltt '""' Ill tt 1J. W•ltf lt!!!Hrlktft #. 811 .. , /lfoen, TWes '"' ..... " lkW ~ltll .:. . . t:~""'· 1,1 ltel!NI 1ew •• r· l .al •·""· 1.• "IONISOAY '"I' ~lfll .. 0 ;41,l'n. t t 'I"' +ow . 1·11 '·"'· o• 11<$"8 111111 , . , 10•)11.11'1. I .I ltt•"' ~ ''"''·"' ,, lu~ l1M1 1 U '·""• , .. , •tU 1 lfl, Miii! ltl .. ,, .... II\. Stlt ''" '-""' s .. m .... ry ty UMITll Hitt IMTllMATIONAl TM l-1hfr1 ,,.,_.... 1t ..., ... 111 !'wt 1111r!vtt1 Ill Clllct" Metldtw. '• ~ ........... , lttd ~ • ,_ .. ~llh wllll • dllllt. ,..... ... rM<llllti. TM cll-.I ty~fltf ,.,. "'"""' "' , .... , •••• thtt '°"'IMI .. Ille IWllllll ..... ,, Mltll ~rtiw,. ctvt rH -~ ol IN "'"""'' ,.111111111 !n lt1r •1111 ''' Wff• "'''· tvt • <11111 ''"'' rrltttrt• t llllf ti ll'lllllftl"l!Ol'll'I• ,....., ltwtr Ml(lllt1n " Olll•f'Mrn•· !IOll!t lltftl lllllWlt H Wit ,_ltd In w-1.,. ,,.,9 .. ,11t r11 Ntllr••• w11111 O'C~tlltMI r•l11 ... ,, ...Otail In c.,.,11,1 ............ Temparalures J'f UMITID ,.Ill INTl•NATIOflAL '""""''"',.. '"' 1rtd1ll1lllfl !ti" tM H-llaur ••IM lnllhW t i ' t .l!i. AlblllY Al~­ Atllnl• •oJton C~luro Clntlftn•ll Cltllt l•nt 0.llel ""'•ff °'' Mo/flit Detrtll lllGl•N .. 111 ltlVfftl LOI J\ftttlff l1UJ1vl111 ""'""'"'' Mi. ... 1 Ml""M• MIMMIHll~ N .... Ort•IM H..., 'rtn:: Ollt•,,_,. Cltf ........ "'''"' S1ri...11 l"llllH•l.,.lf "'""'"" l"n11Wr111 ""'"'"" "•118 Cl,., .. M S•(r1,,..-i10 SI lWll 11n t.•-• tlf'r Si n Olt" S.n l'ruoc:IKo !11rtt1 $111'.*.f llt Vll\(ft~v•r W1rtolnt!Oft Hit~ t..IWt ,rK • .. . ... H li . " ll u .11 ., . " . ,, '' TI • " . ti ,. .01 " TI ., . " . n " " . • • .0 " ·•' ., . . " ., . . ., •• u ~ .. ~ " t t J) " " ., " li " .. li " . " . ~ n ... ,, 11 .. " " " U 11 " . Prison Rampage In Turin, ltal,y Fincdly Quelled TURIN, Italy (AP) -Rioting convicU who wrecked and burned Turin°s prison aWTendered to police today and were Jed out in chains. 'The last 300 of 500 prisoners who went on a 24-hour rampaa;e were marched out of the smoke and tear gas fumes in sh1ckl1d groups of 10 and IS and hustled away by guarded trucks to jails along the Riviere and as far away as Sardinia. The rioters had howled demands for· prison reform and quicker triala. Police, however, aaid the riot masked an attempted mass jailbreak. Two thou.sand helmeted riot police ringed the walls under orders to shoet Any prisoner who tried to break away. But the te1r gas and volleys of shot! fired over their heads bad broken the spirit of revolt Two prilonera were treated for bums suffered "hen the riotera tel fire to everything from m.a1trtS8et to the prison heating fuel tankt. several others were overcome by fumes. IsraeU Defenae Minister Moshe Dayan outlined to a news conference Sllnday nl1ht a plan for oplllinJ the canal. It was basically the same u the one reported today by diplomaUc SO\lt'Ct:I. ECYPl rejected the Dayan plan on Monday. The dipiomaUc ..,..... sllld lht ptao to be sent to W ashingtoo confonnt mart or Jess with Dayan's speclflcatlom that there muat be 1 permanent ceue-fire on the can1l. an end to the staae of belligerency and ironclad guarantees against any Russian or Egyptian troop crossings. The Israeli move coincided with diplomatic reports in London that the Soviet Union his sent sophisticated new jets to Egypt because it fe1n the !Jraeli military has found ways of clreurnvuting I.he SAM2 and SAM3 missiles in the canal zone. Today, the Israeli newspaper Ma's.riv criticized the U.S. State , Department statement of Sunday night reporting the flow of sophislic1ted Soviet weaponry and aircraft to Egypt. Ma 'ariY said there •ppeared to be "a collusion" between the United States and Ru ssia in a joint superpow4!r effort to wresl further Israeli concessions on the Middle East issues. The Israeli moves were reported as the heads of st.ate of four Arab nations met in Cairo to discuss their common future, tbe Mideast situation and the Palestinian crisis in Jordan. Egypt's council of ministers al.so met to consider measures to prepare Egypl for a posaible new war with Israel. You waited 'til now 'Ibere art few visible preparations for a leqtby pnilla campaign. U one ever getl under way, many prominent offlciala: of Sheik Mujlbur Rahm.an'• Awami League fear it inevitably will fall under Communist leadenhip . The Awami , which enjoys o~rwhelming support in East Pakistln, is led by middle-clus professional men better equipped for courtroom battles than for guerrilla connict in the swamps and rice fields. They believe the tougher. more disciplined Communi1t1, backed by Marxist.a io neighboring India, would take over the direction of any cuerrllla movement. The Pakistani army his been heavily reinforced from the country's western wing and is rapidly fanning out (com Dacca in a11 directions. For miles around the provincial capital, the army is in finn control. Paki.!itan'1 green and white national flag Oie.!i from every second vil111e hut. The people are afraid of infurmers and terrified of reprisals should they bl identified as 1Upporttr1 or Bangla De.sh, the Bengali nation proclaimed by Sheik Mujibur. 'Thousands have fled the capital, but Dacca nevertbeless is slowly rtturn1il1 Ut eomething like normal. ••we are functionlna: at eunpolnt, ... haw no alternative," said one Bet11all civil servant. to get the deal of the year. Don;t blow it on the wrong car. 1971 M1vtr1ck 2.000r Stdan 1171 FOfd LTD Brouoh•m 2-Doof'H•rdt•P FORD .. Your Ford Dealer's got the right cars1ight now. Price 11 only part of a good deal. 11'1 what you Independent survey. Maverick offers a choice getlor your money that coun!1. And your Ford of 2-door, 4-door and sporty Grabber. And Dealer can do juallce to you on both scores. now there's a V-8 to go with three economic al •Maverick'• low price haa always made It Sixes. almple to own. But what you get tor that Ford LTD glv11 YOI! the 1trenglh and lu•ury of simple price is a compact economy car that's c1r1 coallng hundred• of doll1'9 more and a nol only simple to drive end maintain, but quiet ride that many of the more expenelve also has the best frequency of repair record cars can't measure up to. Maybe th1t's why of any American car, according to a recent LTD Is tops in Its class In sales. Pinto, Maverick, Musblng, Torino, Ford: Better Ideas whose time Is now. See and drive one at your Ford Dealer's·today I • ' ' ' r • • • t • I. PAULA HOLT OF AUSTIN DABS AT TEARS She Hid Just Recelv*CI $30,000 From Vet•r•ns Six Miners l{illed QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl By Leal<lnr-Fumes GOLCONDA. DI. (UPI) - Bill Loo1, 30, polished oil hu lunch and trudced down the narrow tunnel into the Ozark· Mahoning Co. Fluorspar mine Monday. His job WU I• Boot Camp Graduates Get Leaves SAN DIEGO (AP) -The flrtt Marines since the Korean War go home on leave Thursday inunedJat.ely after recruit tralnlng. The new policy allow• leave alter nine weeks of tough recruit training. For the last 17 years, new Marines have been required to undergo l!peciallzed. combat training at Camp Pendleton b e f o r e getting home furlou gh. measure timbers 800 feel underground. When he didn't return to where other miners we11:: working, one by one they went to check on him. They were overCQme by deadly, colorless hydrogen sulfide gas. Six miners, including Long, died and a seventh was critically injured in wh31 state officials called a freak accident. Seven other miners managed to scramble to safety be(ore the fun1es could cut them down . "It was so strong it almost knocked me dov•n," said Marlow Ewell, 43, Harrisburg, one of those who escaped. "I saw four different men down. I piissed out at least t:.2;~~~:!!:~~:!(;~:.=:=.;:;;;~;;t::...J two other times gelling out or the mine," Ewell said. Ewell was treated for cuts 1'Er ••• are you taking a nap, or are you analyiing yourself?" and abrasions suffered when -------------------- he stumbled inta the walls of the seven-foot wide, nine-foot high tunnel. No Court Martial Tue$day, Aprll 13, 1971 DAILY PlLll' f Fugitive Charge• -.. . Travel C9n..'pam'*1 - Of ,Angela Fre~d NEW YORK (AP) -Dovtd wllTIJll hid bein 1-d lot R. Poindexter U hu been her amat. acquitted by a federal Q:!Urt Ml11 Davie ?'II :eou.ctM by jury of hiding Ana:ela Davis California authoriUu o n while she wu bel.na: hunted by murder and ktdnlp charau the FBl ~ a ~u,iJUve from for alle1edly lltpj>lyllla • tile .Cllllomtl: -~ . guM u!ed In a courthouse '"lb)s ~· ~nor, sklnniah tn . shootout lut Aq. 7 in San a bta wat," .. 'Potnde.zter told Rafael Four persons Including a judge were killed. ~ newsmen after Ult: verdict was Federal wartanta for Miu announctd in U.S. D11trlct Davi! were issued later that Court Monday. ''The major month whe_n iM was 11.~u~ed battle is in California: over of fleeing aj:ro,.s 1tate Unea to Ange.la." . avoid prosecuuon. The jury of aeven men and Th~ ,p~ecution prestnted five women debated twoJtoura · 44 \tltfte,ses. lnchldlng 'tn0tel and 10 minutes at the end of eMployes ·anct news media lhe week-Iona: trlal. "Thank repmentativu, in an efforl to, you, thank you very m11ch.'' show that Poindexter and Mlss Poindexter, 38, said as he Davis traveled •rO\ll!d · the shook hand.I with the jurors country for eight W~b to afterward. prevent ber arrest. J udse John M. Cannella had They were 1rre:ited totether instructed the jury ta acquit at a motor inn here Oct: 13. Poindexter if it. believed' he Mist Dlv.iS 111 now iD jail .i,n Kidney Victims Get $3 0,000 GI Check A 1pokesman at the Marine Corps Recruit . Depot said Monday that 192 o( the 259 young men who graduate Thurst1ay voted in favor of the Besides Long, the dead miners were identified as \\'ayne Long, 39, Jerry Jenkins. 30, Orval Ho\hrook. -47, Gale Bates. -42, and Randall Bellord, 34. was unaware that a federal SU Rifael. · Marine War Antputee 1p;iiiiiii=======;;;;;;;;;;;;; CHICKEN ' LOVERS!! Wins Fight With Navy cHrcKEN AND FIXtN'S AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Sgt. Robert L. Jones traveled halfway around the world to delive r personally a $30,000 ntw plan. The recruit depot at Parris check that might help save the Island, S.C., is starting to do Co111ic Bei!Zins li ves of Paula and Gary Holt. the same. The Army. Navy v PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Marine Lance Cpl. Charles "I don't know what to say," and Air Force have allowed Cai•loon Panel Stewart said he knew he wasn't guilty of charges he struck graduated recruits to go home Paula said Monday night, on leave since world War II. an officer nurse who was preparing him for an operation to tears sWelHng in her eyes. She Included In the Marine order HONOLULU ( U Pl ) -save one of his two remaining limbs. turned and hugged l h e is free shipments of e1tra Comedian Bill Dana has begun •·That's why I requested the court-martial," Stewart said Vietnam veteran who had just uniform s and heavy drawing a threi:-times weekly d . th char equipment to Camp Pendleton. cartoon for the Honolulu J\tonday after he learned the Navy was roppmg e ges. arrived at the airport. The plan i.s designed to help Advertiser. The 19-year-old Connellsville, Pa., Marine was original· "I just want to thank you,'' recruiting, th e spokesman The first panel or the ly scheduled for capt.ain's mast -the Navy's lowest level SMORGASBORD lncl11d•1 Gino'• Golden Fried Chicken, French Fri•1, Col• Slaw ADULTS $1.39-CHILDREN 75~ EVERY WEDNESDAY 5 to 9 l'.M. Hoffa Back, Says Wife Improving said Gary, holding the check said. Last month, the Marine cartoon, called ··Ecolo.Jest," of disciplinary action -for striking Lt. Cmdr. Rosemary tightly in his hands. Corps rtplaced the traditional appeared in Su nda y 's Geraghty as she was about to take a blood sample last Feb. ti • '-. 19051 lrookhurat St, d G 20 tough introduction of recruits newspaper. The panels feature 3. rlftlll!!!' (At~·· Paula, 17· an ary, ' are wiMl a first week's initiation problems of ecology and The incident occurred before an operation on his badly II IV~ HUNTINGTON BEACH' suffering from a hereditary · J · I environment, with a humorous dama"ed ri<"hl arm. Stewart Jost both legs la1l Aug. 1 when 961-7666 LEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Teamster President James R. Hoffa is back in a federal penitenliary after a six-day lea ve of absence to visit his seriously ill wife. kl.dney disease that has killed:"~l:'.nv~o~v~m~g~a~~·~•w:e_r_, _m_•'_'_~~~------~'.'.:..:~·""".'_•'."'._:"_".~~~~'.'.'.'.:_ ________ .,!!~~~~~~~~!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-!!!·'/!!!!} "civilian-like" pace. approach. he stepped on a mine in Vietnam. their grandmother, two aun ts and three sisters. They must spend 15 hours a week In a machine that purifies their The president of the twcr million member u n i o n returned to the federal prison in this central Pennsylvania town Monday night in a rented Car driven by his son. James blood. The money donated by the eoldlen in Vietnam and delivered by Jones will be used to pay for the machine and other medical upenses. P. Moffa , 30, an attorney. Hoffa , 58, told newsmen the trip to visit his wife Josephine in a San Francisco hospital. with a heart ailment, was "just fine . "We watched two of thost others die and it was hard ," said the children's fa ther, L. V. Holt, who drives a bread truck. "That's why we 've been so excited about this." "She is very much Improved from the time I first saw her. The doctor was satisfied that my being there helped her with her improvement." Hof fa, who was turned dow n last week in a second bid for parole, was asked how be felt about going back behind bars. The $30,000 wa. raised from donations from 1,000 Servicemen at Vhan Rang Air Force base in Vietnam, Jooes, 22 of Turlock, Calif., carried Lh~ personal check in a black satchel. He was accompanied on the last leg of hit Lrip, from San F'rancisco to Austin, by his wife Nonna. 2@%0rt 0peB@t0@k "' l l! i <r 5 Great Starling Patterns by Reed & Barton Now unt il May 2 ••• you can 11v1 25% off Open Stock price• on these five great sterling patterns by Reed & Birton. Thia very special offer Includes all pieces made in these patterns. An opportunity for you to fill in your service, or begin your sterling at these tremendous savings. With our Sliver Club Plan, you may purchaH your entire Hrv1ct for llx, eight or twelve. There'• no down payment, no finance charge, end, depending upon the 1111 of your purchaH, you'll have up to 12 month• to pay In equal monlhlr amounts. 01 .. hi!H P•Yl'l'l•Rh Arr1nt1d • CM._ Ace""'-lll'flhilll, A-t"IUR ... '"'"'' ·Ml~Al'l'llf14a,.. .... Mltlll' CRll'ff, -. SLAVICK'S Jewelers Sint"e 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644·tll0 Open Mon. •nd Fri., 10 a.m. te •:JO p.m. • • ' { ~ l • \ l \ ' < I • • "N' ' . 'f/i aik e'6perator to get help for you. rtment, police or doctor directly. ency telephone numbers on the @Pacific Telephone .. ... J • DA~Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE A Tiny Beam of Light Bed Cblna's invitation to and friendly reoeptlon ol American J.able tennis pliyers ls being hailed as 1 beam ol light through a tiny hole In lhe B>mboo Curtain. Thal Peking also accorded visas and a warm wel· come to three U.S. c01respondents for the first t I me £\Dee the "People's Republic" look over mainland China In 1949, Indicates possible wider peopie·to·people con· tact. Since Red China boasts a superior table tennis sklll, however, whimsical questions are posed. President Nixon has said more than once that he doe&11 Intend to be the Firat President in American history to aocept defeat at the hands ol the enemy. So what would happen when word is flashed that our table tennis lea.m ls losing by a lopsided margin on the Asian mainland! Wlll we escalate by sending in more ping pong ar· tiata, or wW we accept defeat gracefully? Wags nothwilhstanding, this relatively small ere.ck in the dOor can't .help but focus serious international in· terest 1.li whelhei-the United States is beginning to re- consider ltl position on . the ever-presen t question ol recognizing lied China and its 700 million people. Agnew's · News Views Vice President Spiro Agnew had some more unkind things to say about the news media in his recent Los Angeles appearance. Aqd the news media faithlully reported his un· kindness which, by ~e Vice Pres.ident's own stated standards for news, "!IS poor news judgment. He made lt very clear that he is opposed to "negative news." He took special pains to cite as negatively slanted news a story in the New York Times that a Gallup Poll reports that about U-percent of idult· Americans (about 18 · million people} say they would like to leave. l~e United States to live in Australia, Canada, Great Bnta1n or Switzerland. The Vice President thought lhls was not £air - thal the story should ha\le emphasized that 88 percent or us don't want to Jeave the country. Maybe back where Mr. Agnew comes from. the Idea that "only" 12 percent ol the !olks (nearly one out of eight) would give up lbeir homes and fri~ds and litart over again in a.foreign country might not be news -Baltimore and Washington be.ing what they are. But any place else. the fact that so high· a prorr- tion of Americans feet they would be better of in some other country has to be something of an eye-open· er. One can speculate on how the Agnew Theory of News might manifest itself in the headlines appearing in that imaginary, prize-winning publication, 11The AgNews" (Scoop Agnew, editor): -Smo~ worse in L.A.? "STILL SOME DAYS YOU CAN SEE SKY HERE" -Santa Barbara oil spill? "26 WELLS STILL PUMP· ING OK" -L.A. earthquake? "MOST OF L.A. UNDAMAGED; IT COULD HA VE BEEN WORSE" -SST shot down in Congress? "CONGRESS NOT UNANIMOUS ON SST" -Only 35 casualties in Vietnam? "NEARLY 285.· 000 U.S. TROOPS NOT KILLED OR WOUNDED THIS WEEK" Since the Vice President is so free and candid with his suggestions on how the news media can do a better job, it seems only fair to reciprocate in the same spirit. 'rbere bas been one modest suggestion on how Mr. Ag· new can find more news that is more positive, more pleasant and more to his liking: He might try putting down his political hatchet from time to time and devote more of his public utter· ances and prestige to helping make more good news in race relations, education, urban problems, ecology, transoortation and the like. There is a lot of good in those areas that even a l'.S. Vice President can do. \ Women's Lib V.S. Is 01& Trial as a C:ivili.:ed Natio1a And Divorce Profitability Jn response to a number of letters asking me how J fee) about the "Women's Lib" movement, the answer must be: that l agree wilh much of it, even though I find some of the women who are leading it to be intolerable caricatures of their sex. But as Don Mar. quis once wisely said "An idea isn't re- sponsible ror who be- Ueves in it." Or for who leads it -and if the movement has validity It will soon shake off some of the nuerotlc man· haters whose stri- dent support does more to hurt the move- ment than help it. ALTHOUGH IT is perfecUy lnie thal women have been discriminated • .against In nearly every segment of puJ:!Uc and social life -and common jUstlce demands that we redress this unfair balanoe -It ii equally true that there is one area in wblcb women have profited from their gender beyond all reasonable equity: in the divorce courts. Our whole present system of divorce, alimony and support is (with a few exceptions) geared heavily in favor of the wife and against the bu.sband. Not merely In the assumption that she is always the best parent to have custody of the chlklren, but la the allocation of funds and the legal restrictions upon the husband's fu\ure income. IT SEEMS TO me that any movement calling for "equality" doe' it..eU the Dear Gloomy Gus: If we spent more time explorlng the moon and the bottom of the sea, would we still have the Ume and money to fight wars for other -to.__untries? \. -C.B. Tflh k.ftJA. r f'U'Hn' ,ltw.. ... .._tlMl"ltf ,,_.. el HM .,.,,_,.... llM ,.ir "' _.,. te OloM!lr o.., o.irr l'Utt. most good not just ln demandlnc lhe rights it is enUUed to, but in exhfblling its willingness to give up tbe ~Tongs it has benefited from. This is 'bow It shows good faith to the public and defines itself as a moral force, not merely another pressure group trying to get all it can. One of the basic aims of the "Women's Lib" movement must be to-work for the elimination of our present "fault" system of divorce, where one perty (usue.lly the husband) is deemed "guilty" and the other "Innocent," with the guilty paying uojusWled punishment for his putative misdeedll. Every court in the country knows lhi! Is a fabrication, and that in the vast majority of cases both partJea are responsible for the breakdown of the marriage. WOMEN CANNOT ask for equality on the one hand and continue to profit from the unequal disposition of divorce cases on the other; to live for years on the wrjustlfied proceeds of an ex· husband's labor; lo walk off blithely with the children, the chattels and a guarantee of lifelong support If they choose never to marry agaln. This not only makes a broke and bitter man out of the husband, but a vengeful1 greedy and lazy woman out of the wile. If the movement works tor the llbera· tion of men from this unjust burden, it will demonstrate that It Is more than a man-hater's trade union. Calley Case: Some Considered Views To the Editor: It is generally known though seldom admitted offlcially that soldiers do sometimes in heavy combat situations · k111 captured entmle!!. A strong sense of personal survival may seem to require it -"It's his life or mine." Although it is an illegaJ act, many do not have the moraJ strength to do otherwise. The legions of Caesar, the hordes of Genghis Khan, Hiller's Storm Troopers, and the armies of Stalin and countless other ruthless dictators are known to have summarily executed large numbers of disarmed combatants or unarmed civilians. THE VIET CONG and N o r l h Vietnamese have done so in Vietnam on a number of occasions. All civilized people consldl':r such acts to be barbaric and inhuman -and illegal. The real moral test for Americam ill whether injured national pride and hatred of Communists will lead us to condone Calley'!! self.-confessed acts, or instead that we as a rational and humane people will after due process punish him as our Jaws requirt. The U.S. is indeed on trial as a civilized nation. JEFF I.. KERSEY, JR. They Vsed lllercu To the Editor: Thank God for your editorlal cartoon today (April 7) of the tombstone over the symbols of Ce.lley's maasacre Inscribed with the statements of southerners and congressmen glorifying Calley. l had written a letter to the paper last week, neglecting to put my address on it and I felt I was the only one. alive with a care for the brutality which had been committed until I saw that picture -and that said all I had tried to. MY LATE HUSBAND was a veteran In the USAF and flew night fighter planes in the South Pacific theater from 1942 to 1947, but when he may have been required to shoot and kill it was not with percent of the world's people can loot and ' ·• pillage the entire earth and unive rse for their own high living. The otper 95 percent don't count -they are only foreigners. Kill them, shoot them, burn Letter& from reader1 ore welcome. Normally writeri should convey their messages in 300 word! or less. The right to concieme letuTs to fit space or eliminate libel i! restrtJed. Alt let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but na'1Ms may be with- held on request if sufficient rtawn is apparent. Pottrv will noi be pub- lished. relish, although lhe Japanese had attacked us on our own soil and we were defending it. He could never have done what Calley dld and there were many who had simllar choices to make on the ground, at close range, who used mercy in their decisions of who lo shoot and who not to. · As I said bl':fore, a three-year-old baby cannot lhrow a grenade or aim a weapon. Finally, I wonder how many of those grand protests by the s o u t h e r n "genUemen" would have been made if Calley had just happened to be a black man. J. B. PETERSON Alter the Verdict To the Editor : On1y after the Calley trial "'as over, the IJ.S. public realized they had been putting themselves L •• trial. And when the six military heroes came in with the verdict "guilty," in a few moments of shock the whole sham facade of U.S. glory fell away. Briefly they saw the stark reality of what they had become -murderers, •guilty, the mock halo gone -the halo which has become so necessary. AND TIIE GLORIOUS American capitalist halo -the halo which says five them, rob them -and each man compete for the biggest body count. But now they want to reverse the verdict. They want the halo back. They want to go on living the good life. COLIN NICHOL Survival of Freedom To the Editor : The Mai Lai case has made more of us think than any other recent incident. Most of the easily voiced opinions however cry out for the larger fact base. Was Calley guilty? The evidence is an inescapable YES. Are others partially responsible for his actions? I'll accept a share of the responsibility on the basis of silently accepting the downshouting of Fulbright and his ilk. They make it clear that our leaders need vocal and constructive support. The survival of our ideas of freedom in this world is too important for indifference towards Its challengers. HA VJNG HAD the privilege of know- ing the competent men of good will in the chain of mlllla.ry respomibaity to \\'e the People, I now speak In commendation of their many actions to aid the survival of our system and in particular their actions helping the Japanese, the Filipinos, the South Koreans and the South Vietnamese find their approach towar:d freedom. Why have we kept silent and indifferent as our military was directed to fill the power vacuum abandoned by our allies? Shall we allow their gail't-' to be abandoned, despite the sacrificl': of our young men, in the rush to accede to lbe will of the North Vietnamese! HOW ~fANV OF us have: A. Considered what is vital to the 1urvival of our family and civiJization? B. Contributed time, money o r personal effort to improve t h e environment, system and laws by which we live? C. Resolved to strive for improvement or act like loyal crew members as our own ship sails toward tomorrow 's troubled waters? In summary : My suggestion is, seek not Calley's scapegoat beyond yourself. LYMAN S. FAULKNEn ltllxlng Church, State To thl': Edltor : One of your front-page news items (April S) dated that President Nixon has rescinded an order liberalizing abortions in ml11tary hospitals because h t personally opposes aborUon as an "unacceptable form of p o p u 1 a t i o n control." As quoted . his decision "·as made from "personal and religiou-; beliefs." The report concluded with the parenthetical observation that Mr. Nixon is a Quaker. rn view of the stated religious motivation for thet directive, it 1,; incredible to me that its implication,; have escaped the media, the Justice Department, and the public in general. NEVER IN !\IV memory of seven presidents has a chief executive had the audacity, by direct order, to impose his religklusly ba!!ed moral judgment on any segment of our llOCiety, however small. Yet this is just what Mr. Nixon has done, and with apparent impunity . ff the President's action is not lo bo considered a flagranUy unconstitutional mixture of church and st.ate, then t submit that the following is a reasonably prospectivt news item: "Washington, April S, 1984 -President William F. Buckley has banned the sale of all contraceptives at f e d e r a 1 instalb1tions. The President stated that his decision was based on personal and religious beliefs that contraception is an unacctptable form of population control. Mr. Buckley is a Catholic." ROBERT D. RIES A Well-crafted Novel __ . .....----......,Lieutenant Was Ashamed, Surprised A first n o v e I by Robert Ludlum •"The Scarlatti Inheritance,'' Is sheer enter1.ainn1ent, with all the tension and drive of a good suspense story which. to a degree. it is. "Superior trash," Pauline Xael might label it if it WCN! a movie, which it ve ry well might become. It also could betome thill year's "Tbe God· father," Mario Pur.o's superior trash about 11 Mafia family. It's that sort of gripping, half· believable lllC!rary merchandise. Vet it grabbed me lbrough most of a sunny Sunday whtn I 8hould have been walking on a mountain or watching for pelicans at Bodea• HN<l. IN TUE MID-ltzes the stion of an Im· rntn1tly wea1Uly Italian-American famll y manqe1 t.o embezzle several millions of doUan worth of negotiable stt:uritle& from the Scarlatti family trusl He tranarer1 It lo European banl<s from where It will reach Gregor Strasser, the promWnt and very real member of tbt .. rly Nut party. 1ba American nnanclal t>P.neft1etor then d!Appears. Later I.here ii; eviden<'e he bu become one Heinrich Kroeger, 3 tnllftber or lhe Nati pnrty hlgh com- m1nd. ln lt4t, Kroeger is prepartd to defecl and offtr lhe American govern· ment Information that will shorten the w1r. Krotaer, however, will deal only wllh an ob&cure American lntelllgence of· ficU who, ln SWtb:erland, must deliver a 81111 Doportmtol 1111 with oeal unbroken. ~ • The Bookman ,) This presumably is the real story of the Scarlatti inhult.anoe and how th' Nui party actually was financed by American Interests. NONSENSE? Yet Roberl Ludlum, who Is better known as a Broadway actor·pro-. d11Cer than a writer, has that &ense of drama and pace that only the best story· teUers have, Eric Ambler, say -perhaps even Marlo Puzo. There Is an in· tenilUOnal ctwe ne,,-the end of the nar-. raUve in which Madame Sc.arl1tU, the fling ma.trlarch of the family, seeks to tnck down and unmask lhe h 1 l e d Helnrlch Kroeger, her eon. Wke so many other sctnes here, this, under less 6ktllfu1 hinds. would have been absurd. LIKE "111E GODFA111ER,'" Ludlum·s nove.I ii too long. He , might have l':tlminated 10me of the wea'rina badl: and forth over the ge.ner1Uons wb.lch ex· a!tlineS U'lt Scarlatti fortune and how it grew. The ente.rtalnrntnt q u o t I en t, nonelheleM, 11 high In this well-era.fled commtrcial fiction; this ' '1 up er Io r !rub," like Von Sternberg's ''Shanghai Express" which !\flu Kael admlt.'1 she loved a.ii a young glrl In um. and further admits that when viewed today ti 1tlll pr<lty neatly stuff (World; ltl.95 ). Wlllilm 11010 \V ASHINGTON -No one could be more surprised than Ll William Calley to find himself a folk hero. Intimates say he was so ashamed of his part in the My Lai massacre that he tried at first to keep hi3 ailing father and threii sisters from Hnding out about the ugly charges. Later, he asked his sisters not to attend the court marUal . In his private con- versalio~1 Calley blamed we Army, i• part. for wh11t happened at My Lai. Y e t c0ntrary to aome press ac. ooun1S, he isn't bit· Ctr against the Army but proud to have been an officer. He would llk.e to resume his Army career. say intimates, if U should ever be possible. THROUGHOUT the court martial. he kept his cool, even his sense of humor. When a $5 check arrlvl!d as a con- tribtJtkln lo his defense. for ex1mple, he invited his attorney. George l..atimer, to cash ll and "call It even." YM. lhcre Is no que~Oon that unarmed ch'il1ans -Including old men, won1en and ctuldrcn -were gunned down st My Lal. \V llllam Calley sUlnd~ convicted of kfllJng 22 of lhtm : on' was a baby whom Calley hurled Into a ditch and shot carries out orden: and asks qutsUons afterward. "He is also a loner without friends in high places who might help him. His mother died of cancer ln 1966 ;-'hi.s father --...:..--~.,..._ ' is a dlabelic. All his life the lleutenanl Is Calley really the: hero that Uie folk has been too much on the move to songs make him out to be? Or is he the establish roots •.. mass murderer that the court martial found him to be? Was the Army right in singling him out as the chief culprit at ?-.ly Lai? llERE"S WllAT WE wrote on December 4, 1~9. shortly after the My Lal revelations hit the headlines: "The Ught-lipped Calley is a pe.rfeci. pal.Sy for the Army to offer as a sacr!Hce to public opinion. Army assoclates describe him as a spit-and-polish offlctr who goes by lhe book. He is the &Ort who .----By George ---, Otar George: Whert can I find a husband who enjoys staying home every night? LONESOME Dear Lonuomc : You can't. obviously. They're all staying home every night. (Send your problems to Grorgc. That L,, if you find any griat com· fort in babbling your worrles to 1 lot.ally Inept tltanger.) "FOR TIJE ARl\-1Y lo blame Leiutenant Calley for what happened, though he may not be entirely blameless, is too pal It looks suspiciously as if the Army .elected him a!J a convenient ~apegoal •.• Whether Calley is guilty or not, he dtstrvcs a fair trial, and the Army shouldn't be permitted to wipe Its own hands clean on 1 lowly lieutenant" The day this column wu published, President Nixon had an aide call u.s to ask for mort detalls and lo assure us Ute President Intended to get to the bottom of the My Lal mas.ucre. We subsequently n:porttd lhat the Amerlcal Division, which planned the ac- llon at P.ly Lal, ~·as thrown together h;utlly. It.$ commandt:r, Maj. Gen. Sam- uel Koster. appointed hJs army cronies tind West Point classmAtes to combat commands. LT. CAI.LEY was part of • task force that was untrained and unprepared for Its aSllgnment at My Lal. The offictl'I who trained them In ll1twail protested that they ~·ere too green to be tent to Viet. nam. Nor had the rea:ulat.lonl aovernin& the trulme.nt of prisoners and civilians been taught to members or the America! Division. At White House insistence that the higher-ups shouldn't escape punishment, the Army obediently brought "dereliction or duty" charges against General Koster and other brass hat11. In most cases. the charges ha'Ve now been dropped against the top brass. 'The Army is still trying, appe.renUy, ti) limit the bl1me largely to a Jowly Ueutenant. -----~ Tuesday, April 13, I971 Th.t editorial pog1 of tht Dailv Pilot ietkl to infcmn and stim- ulate T"todtr1 b.-presenting thil newspaper11 opiniom ond com- ~tarv cm topics of intert1t and slgnlfi<aflC<. l>tl pro1>ldlng a forum for the tZJWCsrion of our reodcrs' opinions, a·11d by J)T"ttentfng the diuetfc view-Po'"" of infannf'd observtrs and .tpokt'11nen on topici of the day. Robert N. Weed, Publl&hor • or he ·ch enl ur .. , k n ms " ons ht an on ·as ous the xon ous Iii ons ticc al. "n the his ny all. nc, he nal l bly ent ale a I at and an rol. ES ans -cal the nt, ion ter lhe inst , to wly '· • , ' • ~· • -- • ---~~;o;_-;:";«~P'TLY AT 3 P .M · SALE STARTS PROMPD OORS Will BE MONDAY. APRIL ~~·HOUR TO ALLOW CLOSED UNTIL TH FOR MARK-DOWN. PREPARATION T1;"'~E DOORS OPEN FOR BE HERE W\-IEN 1 • •• • . BEST SELECTION· GENERAL ITEMS 5-PC. VAUGHN-BASSETT CONTEMPORARY BEDROOM. include1 triple dres~r, mirror, king headboard, & 2 night stonds, •EG. $399 ~ow · '$187 . . DRAMATIC SPANISH 5TY1.1' ·rofA In handsome ·feather.like v"inyC .Dlstinctive wood arm trim ! REG. $219 . Now '.$138 ~·~~~-'-'--~-~~~-~ S·PC. VIRTUE DINING ROOM SET. ·Beoutilulpede'!itol 1oble! Limited quantity so don't mi~s y0ur cho'1ce! REG. s159 NOw .$88 ._ ___ _. .... _. _____ --·" ---. -----........ -~"----... .--------·-·-____ ,_...... ____ _ YOUR CHOICE OF BROYHILL SPANISH OR.MEDITERRA· NEAN BEDROOM SETS! Fine quolity! Mognificertt detailing! REG. s275 NOW $158 ----------· ·--------. COMTEMPORARY WALNU T GAME SET WITH 42" TABLE & 4 CHA IRS. Aq ua tweed. Only 2 to sell. REG. s299 NOW $168 .._ ____ _ PLUSH RED VELVET CHANNEL BACK SOFA! Super-soft-foam· cu1hion1l Only 3 to 1el1! PRETTY & PRACTICAL StEEP SOFAS! Prin 1s, velvets, herc.ulonr.! GORGEOUS DECORATOR LAMPS! EVERY PERIOD.~ EVERY COlOR ·EVERY STYLE I .--a.v•rn" $19 t. $179 .,,0 ,. . 0 ·~~ 50% OFF! SPECTACULAR 38"x48"·MIRROR WITH CARVED GOLD LEAF FRAME!. ONLY 6 TO SEL L! REG. $99 NOW $37 FAMOUS LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS! 3-POSITION BLACK VINYL $119 w/wood t6 m REG. $185. NOW ALL OTHER LA-L -BOYS AT FANTASTIC REDUCTIONS QUALITY SIMMONS "BEAUTY REST" l.\ATIRESSES "NO BOX SPRINGS! FLOOR SAMPLES & DISCONTINUED COVERS. AT PRICES TOO LOW TO LIST! ,BE HERE EARLY FOR THESE! BROYHILL·MOOERN & SPANIS.H OCCASION At TABLES. t utsday, Aprll 13, }q71 -. ER 10 Sl'.TiSFV . ~:F~~s~f;Rt~{~~~~:~~~:~l .. ON EVE~ci~,E~u'\\ see Pri ce'v~o~ Never SHOWR ;II Find Values Has Never Believe! Youwould Find! 1h~eb\e 7-Hour Thought Yalu Like This \n cre ' o~n! No Been A Sa e When The Doors Event! Be Here PUBLIC ONLY . Dealers Please. MAPLE DEPARTMENT FANTASTJCALLY POPULAR 18" CHOW TABLES! lh• perfect accent for your home. While Jhev lost! REG $29 NOW$18 EARLY AMERICAN OCCASIONAL TABLES. Distressed plank tops I Dis tinctive, unusuol·11yling. Your choice. REG.$29 NOW$19 EARl Y AMERICAN PRINT SOfA. A111hotnllc uyllng. RIG. $399 NOW $129 EARl Y AMERICAN TWEED t.:OCKER. Pillow""'"· R£G. $119 NOW EA Rt Y AMERICAN PlttOW BACK CHAIR. P1in11 &.tw..dJ. PEG. $119 t:ARlY AMERICAN ~EEP SOFA 2 cnly. 11lG. $499 NOW -•59 NOW $299 • EARl V AMERICAN S-PC. DINING ROOM. Tobie & 4 "'°te1 ch.,irt. lllG. $299 NOW $168 b\RLY AMERICAN CAPrAIN'S CHA Ill llfG. $59 NOW REG. $398 $197 NOW . limited quanr11y. R~G. . $259 NOW $144 .. mJ!l'I., TOP QUALITY! BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED! YOUR CHOICE! FREIGHT CLAIM MERCHANDISE EXCITING FRENCH PROVIN- CIAL DINING ROOM SET. Includes toble, 4 choirs, & china. REG. $499 $298 NOW , HANDSOME SPANISH STYLE RECLINERS! In 1lrong, carefree vinyl. limi!ed quonfity. REG. . . 8' CHEN IL LE VELVET SOFA . ·Channel boc.k. Deep loom <omlorH Gold or olive. REG. s359 NOW $149 TRANSITIONAL SWIVEL ROCKERS LAST CHANCE! REG. s14 9 MAN'S KING SIZE RECLINER , __ ,,IN DURABLE, EASY-CARE VINVL ! CH OOSE FROM BLACK, ,A GREEN, OR GOLD. REG. $139 -NOW $77 I\ RlCAN'Of MART\NSV¥-tEI OCCASIONAL TABLtSBv A~E SPANISH STYLING_\ YOUR CHOICE cl HAllA Qf • NOW$67 ODDS & ENDS DEPARTMENT BASSETT onD & MISMATCHED 7-PC. CALDWELL ROOM DIVIDERS. BOX SPRINGS. SPANISH BEDROOM. Go!d or Anrique While. NOW An1ique white & olive. NOW REG .$995 1 only.NOW $69 $10 $399 ,. CONTEMPORARY WALNUT DESK. In The Carton. $1 o 4 ONLY. -~,...-""-.... --·"'-________ ..;..-t BEAUTIFUL SPANISH DRESSER BASE. IN THE CARTON. 20NLY . $10 1---·-----~· ~~--------STRIKING ANTIQUE WHITE BOOKCASE. $9 t--~~~· ~---~----! CHROME COCKTAIL TABLE WITH GLASS TOP $38 Tl-tlS IS JUST At-' EXAMPLE OF THE MANY DAMAGED, OR SLIGHTLY MARRED, FREIGHT CLAIM ITEMS THROUGHOUT TH E STOR E! THE SE ARE STEALS FOR THE CLEVER, IMAOINATIVE SHOPPER ! MANY 1-0f-A-KlND, t(FT-OVER, AND MISMATCHED ITEMS! All TREASU RES FOR lHl BARGAIN MINDED SHOPPER I ONIONLY! THOMASVILLE EA RLY AMERICAN 80" DRESSER, SPINNING WHEEL. H.tndsome Gun Use. '""'" M"rcu & N.g~• s1.,"d I ONtY. REG. $109 REG.$ IJO NOW , NOW $49 ' 3731 W. WARNER -SANTA ANA -PH. ( 714) 546-6730 REGYJ.AR STORE HOURS MON. THRU SAT. lOAM. 'Tll 10 P.M .,SUN. 10 A.M . 'Tll6 P.M. • I j ' l I I \ TutMfay, Aprff lJ, l •71 If Lawmakers Don't Act CHECKING · •UP• News paper '- At College Searched Emergenc y Welfare Hi!oo Plan Told Ald It Families w I t h el income." But Chairman William T. Dependent Children (AFDC) "We have to conform," he '~cratched' Lo ngest STANFORD ! UP I ) SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The Reqan Administration is prepared lo adopt emeraeocy rate increases for 1 o m e welfare families if th e: legi1lature doesn't act by May t le avert a threatened loss of $700 million In federal funds. who have ne mean.s ef support sald . .,We are not resisting except welfare. Ht did not aay confonnina: te federaJ law." what the other regulation ''We believe they (recipr'ents) abould have a rate: Bagley (R-San Rafael). of the Assembly Wellare Committee. said the state legally could allow a program to run out of money for part of a year a! long as the deficit was made up the following year. ' i -syllable Wo rd? State Social Welfare Director Robert Carleson told newsme:n Monday t b a t resu)aUoru being developed by the adminiatraUon include • rate incru..se for recipients: ef proposals included. increase," Carlt:S<ln added. "lt The rate: increases could won't do them much 1ood if affect about 750,000 perslllll -we give them an increase and 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii moatly motbt;rs and their two months later we run out el money." GOLF TIPS ·, ,. By L. M. BOYD J>ID I TEU. you tbe feot ef ~ averqe A1r Jl'orce man iJ I~ inches loq?. , .IF ''SCRATCHED" lln't the l~est single syllable word in ~glish, what is'!. • .NOTE AlSO, please, a 1cbelar nlmtd Dr. Ira S. WUt way1 mi>st men in prehiatoric times w'tre left-handed. A\iHAT'S the ide:al t4'nperature for an infanl'I rOOm~ A British medical joUmal contends it's 7 5 d{grees F .. assuming I.ht baby thftrein is always kept dreued. Maybe so. It's widely known nj,st American mothers keep tH!lr babies' room far too wirm. That's bad. MET ONE MORE MAN t&iay who's bothered in tht ~ether by nothing so much a-wind. Scares him. he says. 'I)at's the second old boy I've bj)mped int& in lhe last 10 yfars who can suffer the rain, t~ sleet. the snow, but can't stand wind. Both ought le move to Phoenix, Ariz. Of all the major American towns. that'1 the most p I acid, it's said. With average wind School Fire ~A ccidental' ,-: iANTA CRUZ !AP) ~"The lire that destroyed part o(°)he administration building a'· tbf: University of C'1itornia's Santa Cr u z c~pus was accidental in o~io and not arton a1 sLlj>eoted, authorities report . l(bancellor Dean McHenry told a news conference: Mbnday afternoon that the drilnage estimale now runs b<lween $51<1,000 and $650,000. ~ sakl he hopt;I to rebuild the •~ure out of unlventty ~ency funds Jn lime for troi. fall --. ~puty Slate Fire Marshal $.rman SchJerenber1 and ~ campus litt marshal. Borges, aald evidence In the ruins lath to s~ the arson theory that w.t, popular Immediately after t~~ fire last Thurs:lay because itJM.lmed so fiercely. •• ,. a v DI speeds &f five mph . YOUNG FELLOW, I F children wh• depend entirely H . led t .1 ...._ s.c.i.. i11ehMli• • °"" ,,..., " f rt ~ porn ou J a rate oa,.,. _ l"f"lldl<• •• "'• ..• 1n weuare or suppo . incrtl\st ft>rced the program Carl d.d il NEWPORTER INN eson 1 oot spec· y the to run out ef state mODt;y, the P AR 3 GOLF COURSE amount of the increue: but tbe counUH could be requittd to Sl.OO wttti ttih ad _. llleya state supreme court Jast,_'.'.1"""''.':'.'"'.a~se:..".the~ir~)"'.01~d.:_ ___ ~~~~~~~~~~~ you're lookin1 for a t:raft in which you won't be replat:ed by automation. take u p wlgmakin1. No machine can make the; best of the wigs, not ytt ... WHAT D1811NGUISH-searching for photographs and U a Capricorn fellow, says negatives taken at I as t our Panel mau, is the early Friday's violent demonstration a1e at which he finds out at the Universily Medical bo• a tiny muscle in the eye Center. Central Vall ey Railpa'X Would Need State Funds month ruled a 21.4 pe;rcent ,....,artt_ll hike would bring the state into Ctlnformlty with the U.S. Department of H e a I t b , Education and W e I f a re requirements. Denture Invention for People with. "Uppers" and "Lowers" The ntarelt I.hi.as: to ha.We yow help1 protect gutnl from bn11aiJI(. own teeth ii poeliblt now 1nth a You eat mofe naturally-enjoy plaatic aatl'l dlacovery that ac· apolet. com-on·the-c.ob. can pick up a fulJ.grown Lyman caJled the se;arcb girl ... ITS AL90 A QUAINT "threatening to freedom of the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -tACT Wiat a rundown clock tflat doesn't wort at all tells press" and said he would have An inland valley route from the eiact time more frequent-possible cons t l tu t ion 1 l the Bay Area to Ula Angeles Jy than a clock in good working questions investigated. ' cookl be included in Railpu, order ! Felicily Barringer, editor of th Sta f d D ·1 Id "It' but only if some sta1-or local RECENT NOMINEES te the e nor at y, ta s ~ Ire l d·11· ult f agency will pay two-thirds of Pro-r Job Oub include: Of ex me Y J 1c or a ,. t -•-t d the $800,000 annual o-rating East Chicago, Mr. Kwiat, newspaper o e.....a an d ~ f t. 1 " It · elicit, a Railpar dlrtctor justice: of the peact. Of Idaho, unc ion proper y u is Mr. Rivers, boat captain on constantly in fear of having lta aays. the Snake. Of Los Angeles, notes and photo files examined Mrs. Catherine May Bedell , f lh of former Wa shington 1 tat e Mr. Stam-r, a post office: or e p u r p o • e ~ prooe 1· n" congresswoman and one of clerk. Of F&rt Worlb. Mr. cu 10 · A U · ·1 k ·d eight directors <lf the Nati<lnal Driver, a strtet supervisor. Of n1vers1 Y spo esman sai d the Palo Alto officers were Rallroad Passenger Corp. Unless the state meela the present puae;ngu 1chedules. regulation requirements by Rallpax plans are f o r July I it is threatened with a passenger service from loss of $700 million in federal Seattle to San Diego via funds. Oakland and San Jose and Although Carleson declined southweard on the coutal to fully explain the proposed rather than valley route. new regulations, he to I d ~trs. Bedell said Railpax newsmen, "let's just say it would pick up one third of the; would increase the benefits to lually boldl b)th "uppen" and P'1xoon.1,. may help you IJ)ellt "k>WU'I" •r MM' hft111 pouiblt. mort clearly. bt more al ea11e. )fa a rtl'Olulioaarr dilcovery The 1pecia! pencil· point dia. called F1xoo&rn-, for daily home pen~r ltt1 you spot F1xoo~NT uM:. {U.S. Pal. IS.003,988) With with prcciaion ... "'""' n1"1td! F 1XOOVlf manY denture wutttl One application may last round now tat, Speak, laurh. with littlt tht clock. Dtnture1 that fit are worry of dentures comina looee. t11ential to health. See your FIXOD.tNT form• an el11tic denti9t regularly. Gel ea9y·to-mernbrane that helpa abiorb the use FucooF~'T Denture Adhesiva ahock of bitinc: and cbewio&-Cream at all drug; counter•. $800,000 deficit on a valley· =~lh~os~e~w~i~tho~ut~a~n~y~o~th~e~r~s~ou~r~ce~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; roule but that she was "not1,: aware of any offer by the stJite of California" to pit:k up the other two-thirds. HAMS Ltlngme.nt. Colo., Mr. Ben er, 'ed b (Railpax). told a new 1 a body ~"-. fortman. And of accompan1 y two campus -• Calli policerne.n. He said hi!! men conference Monday t h e H h La • San Bernardino, .. Mr. d.d t b • . ,_ m"• Central VaUey pa 11 en g er ug es WSWt Fairweather. an air polluUon 1 no re;a .. m..., an, ...... g " • . • So Good It WiU Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" control officer. and left e:mpty-handed. service i3 scheduled to end CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. Palo Alto Police ch 1, 1 May I. Called Baloney ••What kind &f a sentence; can James Zurcher said earlier he That's the date when the you get for inducing an wanted to identify all perso111 federal corporatlon lakes over LOS ANGELES (AP) _ A abortion in those states where involved ln the demonstration passenger train service from 1ult claimlns b 111 I 0 n a i r e it's ouUawtd? A. Varies. In not previoully arrested. railroads that sign up with Howard Huibel dJed six ye:ara SPllAL SLICI D WHOLE 01 HALF OUr l'ltml ''' Ille llnul corn-ltd low1 1>11rl<lrs -Our 111tw ..., curing m1111oe1. rur WIKOnlln ftlcl<OtY •ncl 1ppl1woe>d 1moklng 111C1 .,,..,, OWfl tNll<lng flonlY 'fl aplc• gllll art unlqut In 111 ,... -•Id. So dtlkloln 11'1d 1PC>tllllng w1 11111 wouktn'I -now llow JD lfl\lll"OW 11111 product Wl"v• been ma1t•n9 ror 3~ y1trs. !plrtl 1llc .. Mo, lrom top to bottom IO 111•1 1at~ dt!l...:t1b\1 uniform t llct un bl! •-• l'ffortleulY. (amp1e1,1y bl.k-.1 Mid rtMly to ''"''· Or· dtr vaur HOll•Y 8ak<ld H•m raoay, 1n 1dv,n!~r1 In h1m-loy,,,.,,t VoU'll lllWI' torg", K He said the v1.olentt al the , Rallpu, and Mrs. Bedell said ago and that state and county ansas, up lo a year· ln hospital wu "lhe most vicious an agreement with Southern officials thou Id take over hia Mississippi, as much as 20 and unprovoked attack oo Pacific i1 e.1pected before: empire was dis..,;.--.. Monday RETAI L STORES years ... Q. "How much of me th c · "--• IM -~73 9000 police I've ever seen." en. arriers not signing with by a i·udge who called 1·1 3700 • Cea1t Highway, Carona d1 •·-• is water?" A. About !WI n ., 6 'The demonstration and 11il-in lirp:•:·::;";;';;' ;;iim;iiu~s~t ~m~•;;l~n~t~a~I n~-"~b~akJ~ne~y~.';;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;£ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~m~s~,iil~riiookhul'llt, Anaheim 635-24 1 percent, if you haven't bun up was staged by the Black to anything peculiar.· .A. "Do Student Union to protest the elephants catch cold?" A. firing of Sam Brldsa:, a black Th.at they do. And the zoorM:n j ltor t ••-h ital give them cold capsult;1 about,-=="n==·="=~=osp===·=;;;;;m the 1iz.e or golf balls. 11 JUST' ABOur ALL those translators wbe work for the United Nations are fluenl In not just two but three languages. That's some:tbing. Countless cltiuns get nlfty in a couple, the native and the adopted. But to master three requires some special knack. does it not? Think so. 'Iberi there's tM UN't Georges Schmidt wbe re:p e rtedly speaks 66 lan1uagea. Remarkable! Your question! and com· menu are welcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wherever poslible. Ad· dres1 letters to L. M. Bo11d, P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Btach. Calif., P2660 • ' • THE NEW SAN CLEMENTE Chiropractic Cente r OIEDICATED TO IENDEI ITMICAL C+lllG,IACTIC tEllVICI TO THE COMMVNITT M-r o4 Amtrlc1n c111,._1er1c Anoe:. C1t110fnll OllrOIM'ICllc Aua;, Am..lun CMlnCH 11'1 Mtnlll .... 11'11 ,..)'Mii & MaRlll'llllllff (111'9,n.ctlC TrMllMfll el N-& M11W11i..lll11M1I MallWl<ll9M el 11M S'1119 ........ , .. 01_...,,, l(AIL CHAI W GllMAI OOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC $JNCE 1f50 l"llACTICll!D ON TWO CONTINENTS NUltSE ON ourv St H1bll IEllNl,..I 81 A.p~!ntment 492·3532 IU AWMlllll S1rr1 ' HOm • 2 KUC Ell' fl.All•t HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN '#3 HOMI IMPllOVEMINT PLAN #4 -cd«TV, .... tfcr dad'l-Bls •·~-•-I TV · 26 iDda (dlq.. mw.) N Dlmenslonal Ookx .,.,., • ._.co or for mom-she deserves the Your liiUt ctrt can en,t0y all her playtime shows s,t'fdia color TV_; CL8lS la Spuhh sty-:;: bait. ti 1ncb (dlq:. m~ eclorTVmod.el CX.79 ill with this Sylftllla91Dch (diaf. meas.) screen black and • ' ~ •. ": , . You can find out fast through your dbrt"ijllriJ11r :.r::Uoa A.PC afMt tbe kma-P9can pain vln.bl on wood compoliUoa. Has AFC wb.lte portable TY. Ha built· In VHF and bow-tie lfe · a em.IL udl011l-liftlGbrilt&l'BSNlchlllilforftllable UHFantenna.CoaMnientcarryinchandle.Modd llGWOlll' •5499s ,.,.......OWRo!JoiUi3ii9s Hn 7mtatsj99s . Yours in next Saturday's DAILY PILOT COSTA MISA 10TAL TELEVISION I 411 I. St""'""'" St. I 646·1614 I Listings Start April 17 I Delly ,_,, Set. f·6 I • ,, • • • I , .. -. ._. , I G!Cll HO• IMPROVEMENT PLAN •s ~ boy wan.ta bk nry own sleroo. Sylftftla component stereo system model CS20 bas AJ4./FM/FM dertd radlo,2'01ntts pea II: mu.'lic power and Dual 1015 autom1Uc stereo record pla)'er with m.qnedc cutridce. Plus AS62 Mrl'O Alrs:u,pemion sptabrsyst.ern, St.and included. OtU s4499s TM-.,,.._~ Oll ~ .............. TV ...::IPDON IUIULATID IL TORO La9una Hill• ~lam (N11t to SIY•on) 837-lllO Dally 10-6, Th ... , Fri. 10-f .. For The Record .Marriage Ueenses Death Notlre• aAK•• l"lortl\t,'.t t. IH1r. 1" E. l 1rtoe. N- Hirt l •tell. O.tt ol Cln!h. Aorll n . Survived .., two dtu1ht1fl, CP!lryl J,rtul1, ol Newllert l llC.IH AMrt Slier!, l 1!1t11 11...,.., loul1l1nt1 111<1 lour 111· t1r1. S1rvlct1 will lie ht!d Thurldly, ~ ,.,.,,, Wtttcllll Cl\tl'fl, with lhv. Rlcht rd Dun!» offit!t!!nt. Wt1tcllff Chlii.I Mor· lv1ry, ....... , OlrKle'I. CRILL Mlltrtod M. Grill, Age 51, or 1J95 Shtn· non, Call• M111. su,..lvtd &Y two i.on1. LllWt!I w. Crill, 51nt1 su11nn1 r O.lt Crill, W11tmln1ttr: d1ut1h!tr, Owtn 1-!ovt, CMll MtMI mo!htr, Mt1. Miidrid M. Mowtrd, C .. 11 MtMJ te ....... i.en trtftO. d>lldrent ~'" 1r11t..,r1ndd1fl l r..,. 51,... lets will bt htld WldMldav. 11 AM, ltll ll'MfwtV ChlHI, wm. Mr .Earl Lt Itron lllllclt ll"I. tntt rMt nl, M1'1ier R .. t Memor~• '••k. ltll lroedw1Y Mtrt.,. • •rf· Olrtclon. llMLIR M1r ry c. Elftlt r. 1'16 w. J1hn11en SI., H.,,..tt. 0.11 cf 1t11ttl, ~H n. Slrvlces Jlllldlnt ti ,.ICllk; Vltw MOttull'\I. GRll'l'ITH (;1111 C. GrlHl!h, M.O. A" 61, ol 1.WJ . .t, I•-•• SI .. Coslt Ma•. Otlt of dff~. A•r!I II. SUrvlv.C IW .. u,, M'I. l'rtnces Crllllth: ..,., Wllll1m I . G. Grffllll\1 IM t•tnddllld. $1,..,lc,1, w.cin11d1v. 1:l0 l'M, St. Jollfl Ille DlvlM l!.l'lt<tPll Chllrcll. Ca.II Mtu, wit~ tnlornW.-1 •I Ht rllllr 11..-t M-•ltl '•111. 1111 lretfwtv fMrtu1ry, Dlrt<larl. HANSIH TutMlll, April lJ, 1971 Valle y Man Welfar e Fraud Susp ect Arr est ed Casual Killings: A Sign of Time s On Publi c Committee SANTA ANA -An Anobclm ;woman Is Ute twelfth perlOl'I arrested lD the pa.st two wttka In a crackdown described by district 1ttorney's SANTA ANA Ron lnveaUgators as a "war on Talm&ntez of Founllin Valley welfare chiselers." ~ been named to the county Mrs Lucille Olrlslenstn, 35, Citizens Direction F I n d I n g w1s charged with welfare Commission by the IA!ague of fraud and re.I.eased on $1,000 ClUes. bail from Santa Ana municipal Talamantez, lP Olive St., court. will succeed Nat Neil In lnveatlaators claim Mra. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL r e p r e s e n t I n g lhe first Christensen applied for Aid to or "" CNllr l'tlM ,,.,. supervisorial district en the Families With 0 e p e n d e n t Children fund,, on grounds that CASUAL JCD.UNG ii IO common today a typical born· commission. Neff resigned her husband had left her to lcide Jets minor mentkJD, compared lo murder in the last month. support their five children. Manacri P'amlly faablon. Talmantes is employed with They found, they said, that T&is ii a fact of life ln crime coverage. McDonnell Douglas in Long Christensen was in fact living County Firms Win Contracts By thla ~ reallltic: criterion -bow many para-Beach and has been active in at the home and bad been gnpba 1 lost We ls worth _ lbe kil-Boys Club, Jaycee and LltUe working f\lll Ume 1 inc e SANTA ANA -Orange 11 .... of Claude LaBean bu litUe clau. League activities in Fountain January, lMI. The couple County Supervisors have ..... Valley awarded two contracts No Hollywood jet tel an&Ie, DO spec. · alle1edly pW"Chased a $2.6,500 tacular aavagery. The Ci.tiuns D i r e c t I on borne within the last two years totalling $110,503 for county His murder wu jwt u tragic and Finding Committee is the and wa15 making mortgage projects. aenMJless, however. public voice in the Orana;e repayments of $2SS a month. A $71,590 Ct'.lntract was given County Gener•I PI an nl n I to the Bell Con st ruction CLAUDE, 39, waa burled lut OC· Program. Mrs. Christensen i!5 accused Company of Anaheim for .... yoli" '5k.p~;~ P~te tober. of defrauding the Orange Orange County Medical Center ·1a. ~ UltiMo..'l< 6'so.l! Hla: killer, 54, 1ot ll!e ln prison. County WeUare Department of alterations and improvements. .._._ The r The P 1 J hn II 7•• COAST SUPER MARKIT cate o eop e va. o 2 Countains , w. and Charles R. Benton of Shelby Bu~rowa got only four para· Jnvestigalor!5 claim that the Laguna Beach received a !3~T~.c.-~.-.,.Qr.,.,.dt!"1.r LARG E L ' SELECTION ~; '. OF DRUGS ,, 1•• AN D BEA UTY AIDS ! ., ., ·' ., graphs in but Thursd1y'1 papu aft.er it. waa closed by 12 caua prosecuted to date $37,913 contract for interior MON-UT-' te 6:JG-S111ffy f te I Burrows' guilty plea. AMA Delega lCl!' have revealed frauds totallingli~r~emEod~e~lln~g~o~r~th~ree~~b~ar~r:•c:ksl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f'' Claude was the kind of &UY to whom you nod each more than $15,000 within the at Lo:! P:lnos Boys Camp. night after work, dropping by the nelthborhood bar. He IRVINE -Dr. Warren laat two years. was the s<ml-rriend you oomehow never get to know. Bostick, dean or UC Irvine"• Courl action is pending TOTS, LEARN TO SWIM School of Medicine and Dr. against two Orange Coast "CLAUDE didn't like trouble," said bartender Tony Vincent P. carroll of Laguna residents aceused of AT YOUR ORANGE COAST Lte, recalling how hls buddy paid with hia ll!e for ht.Ip. Beach have been elected defrauding the w e I f a r e YMCA in( to st.op a fight. Calilomia delegates to the department. ' ' ' ·, The-troublemaker -Burrowa -waa ordered out of American Medical AsMICi&-Mn:. Josephine Rodriguez CALL 642·9990 the Red Cand1e, vowing lo return. He did. He coincident· JI ,-~tio~n:. _________ ~Bt~rt~u~cc~I:., ~24~,~o~f~l~l!808!._:A~c~a'.'.;c1~· ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!~~;!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!i!, ally met 'Claude right outside, as the vicUm w11 Ie.avln&. "· He shot him three time's tn the che1t. · .. , ·: Nobody heard the bla1ta over the jukebot. Bul big Tony saw the glint of run met.II. htld cloae by Burrows' side. when he barged back lnto the crowdtd bar, glancing Ct'.lldly around the room. TONY TAI.KEO about JI the ne1t night. "I came running arowid the bar and aald: 'What do you think you're dolng, you cr1zy mafobltch?' and I grabbed him and took the gun away." You could tell Tony wu shaken. "Dammii, I'm no hero. I didn't even know Claude had been shot. l was just doing my job. "SOME GVY who wu aitting nert to Claude before he went ou~ide just ordertd another drink. He aid we all have to go somet.imt. "I almost hit him," uld Tony, furlowly poliahin& a "'"· He bounced around behind th< bar, filllntl orders, Jua· Ung ice cubes with a too-jaunty 1ttttude that didn't qultt ::-ome off. Claude•aa his friind. Tony pourtid. himself a shot of tequila and slugged it down. Sometimes you force a la111h lo keep from crying. •'TIIAT GUY'S Med oot of here for aoo<I." he added in a grotesque understatement on a cuual twer ktpt behind bar& ever-since. Only occasionally Is Claude mentioned now. The bar Itself is closed. His friend3 gathtr el$t'Wbere. Outside of them and two traaedy-strlcken families nobody will re- member for long the principals In th< Red Candle ldlllnr. This is the way life ii. Nobody will quickly foraet the Manaon Family and iii famous, mutilated victim!. Every Auguat. on the annlver· sary of a mindlesa, unfeeling mauam, the names will be revived in print. Tate. LaBianca. Manson. AUdns, Krenwinkel. Van Houten ... THE KILUNG of Claude LaBean had little class Ct'.lm· pand to the gruesome forays of Charllci:'a circle whtn it come15 to the stark dimensions of headline-grabbing bor· ror. One incident at the Red Candle. which reopened that night after police left wilh witnesses' st.at.ement&. offers a final, filling footnote to the cuualness of the kllling of Claude LaBean. "One of the cops came back in awhile. I fiiured he needed more information," said Tony, pourinl another shot of tequila. "No, we got everything," u.id the officer, explaining lhe reason he returned while the ru.spect w11 beini book· ed on suspicion of murder. "MR. BURROWS remembered he left 110me chllJli• on the bar." l I :I ~ 3 l lr,..th "· Ht.,..ton. 2t14 Col!'" Dl'lvt. c ... r, MtH. 0.11 .or d"!h. A•rll 11. Su,..IYlld &'f two dtU9hltri, Mr1. Glorll MDtrDW, Co11t Mtlll Mr1. lt!ll' 1'111.11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~1 Aut!ln, Mln!l-111 llvt trt"llclllldr1n. Strvlc" int lnll•mtnl wtll .. M id In ,,..,.!!", Mlnn1111>tt. 111111 Co1!1 Mt11 Mortu1ry, f&!'wtrdlnt dlrtrlOrl. ~ .. • • " ~ WOODCOCK H1rt1kl ~. Woodcock. '1t·H Ctllt Cldlt, L....,f\I Ht111. Ot11 el d11~. "'prll 11. lu1'vlvlld lrf '°"' Robtrt II . Wood~k, c.11 MIMI two 1rt ndchllt r111. "-"'ICU -• M id 1ot1l', Tutsdlv, 10 AM, Wnl· c:litf Cllt"I Moriu.rv. lflt6rrnt11!. l'a1r· f>tYlln M-lt l ,1111. F1mllY 11111nt1 .,.._ wl1hl"I 10 "'811.1 ~It! C011lff. blllloN. plMJI contrlbU!I 111 $tddltbedi; Community HOlplttl. L•lllM Hiii•. Wnt· cliff CMHI M&rtutrf. •~IN. 01111ttor1. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUAJIY U1 E. 17~ St., Cod.a M111 '4MMI • BALTZ MORTUARIF.'l Coro!ll del Mar . . . 17s.t450 Costa Meu . . . . . . . . &U-!U4 • BELL Bl\OADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Meu LI B-1133 • McCORJIUCK LAGUNA 1 BEACH MORTUARY 1 J'1tl Llpn• Canyon Rd. -11 • • PAClf1C VIEW MEMORIAL PAJIK Cemetery tt1ortull'J t Clapel uoe hclflc VSew Drtve , Newport Beacll, ca.llforela I IU-1'7• ' • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7'01 Bol11 Ave. Wettmtnner ltWS!I • SMITH'S MORTUARY a7 Main SL -Hantinito• Beacll Does God send sickness? Many believe that He d-, But Christ Jesus healed sick.-, i nd pmented the idea or God IS Truth that makes tnen free from OYOry kind of bondage, An understandina of God os Truth is healini people today of all kinds of disuse. Each week in our WedneodllJ' emtin1 teotimony meefinss you may bur individual• ten how they have experienced the healina and re1ener1tlnf effect of Truth in their li.,.es.. otRISTIAN 5CllNCI Wll)Nl!SIMY MNING TESTIMONY~ (OITA MIU. -l'l•tT CMlllCM 01' CMRllT, SCll"TIST 2Mf MNI Vtr111 0r+ta. (NII MolM -71• ... IR. HUHTINOTOlil llACH -,lltlT CHUllCM 01' CHltllT, Kt•HTln 11111 .., Onw, """''-""' le.Id! -11• ..,"" MIWl"OltT IUCM -l'lltlT CMURCH 01' CHJllJT, KlaHTllf )llltJ Ylf Lite, H•""1 letdl -71• ... M. HIWHll:T llACH -s1co .. o CHURCH 01' CH*-ltT. KllNTISf H• !"Miik View 0tt¥L C.,.... ... Mfr -1•• """ The Great Freeway Holding Pattern. Tha~s how it is getting to Los Angeles area airports. But not on Air California from Orange County. We knew you can fly to the Bay Area from L.A. airports cheaper. But is it worth it? Think about that over- grown parking lot known as the Los Angeles freeway system. Inbound in the morning. Outbow\d in the afternoon. But on the other side of the fence, the lanes are wide open. Especially for commuters using Orange County Airport . Our airport. And we have even more going for you. From Santa Ana, we have eleven flights daily to Northern California. At convenient commuting times. We go to San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose. If you want to get to the Bay Ana in a huiry, call your travel agent or Air California. (Check into our Palm Springs and San Diego • flights too.) We won't hold you down. AIR CALIFORNIA With IOll\tthil\i lllW undCI the IUD. ' • ! j ~ .. • • i I : • ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • • • • ! ~ j ! ) ~ i ~ • I I I I I I { J 0 OAll Y l'tlOT s Charter Flights OVER THE COUNTER ·~llfh'I "" ........ _ta ....... It ..... !Mllfty t A M f-NAiO. f'rke .. .., _..,.._ 1"111 I I f rfle ._ ~t•M-1r nm.,...,i... NASO L1st1ngJ for Thursdiy, April a 1971 ~~------Only Way to Fly N£W VOAI( f.-.Pl~lrl• 11 Tn•l'il<Mnel1!C1 Gr_p By SYLVIA PORTER Some time 1n lbe: next few monUts I 'I wager you II see a picture In lbls newspaper of a c_roup ol forlorn Americans •tt1ng or lymg on tho no0r of • major airport 1n the US or ~rope Under Ute picture will ltc a caption readuig hke tins 1Group Stranded By CanceUahon of C h a r I e r i'hghl nr Illegal Flight Staib: Would be Vacationers ai Airport Some time also 10 the nei.:l few monlhs 111 wager you II read a new story tclhng of tbousaods or American s (students particularly) \\ho s.i,gned up for cut rate chnrtcr Olghts paid Jn full arrived al tbe airport lo find that (I I no lieats were available for thern ojl the rlighl they expected to beard, or (2) the flight was being dela)ed for up lo a ''hole week or (3) the f11ghl had been abruplly canccllrd or 14) the !ravel agent who had arranged lhe tour had gone bankrupt or absconded and the whol0 trip v.as off \Ve 11re now ~n1er1ng !he peak sc11son ror overseas travel and even Jn the face of the 1969-71 recession the likelihood 1s that all records (or vacations abroad will be sbattered by summers end In 1971 alone the informed est1ma1e Is that 3 800 000 of x«• 'oltll fly overseas ertmanly lo Europe This) ear 4ton° your spending for 9'\ erseas fhghL'I and !or vour foreign vacalt0ns (excluding ~ Caribbean) IS proJeCled at 11n awesome $3 800 000 000 $Pih would be all~1me peaks • And of this number I 100 000 -or nearly one oul of four - fllll ny by charter plane and :ypend $700 000 000 You II do so for three very valid rea~ns (I) You can save as much ti SO percent on your airplane Uckel alone by going via Charter fhght and because of tkns single factor you can take trips you cooldn I even dream of otherwise f2) Most charter nights are safe well managed a n ri compare quite la"orably w1lh regular scheduled 3 1 r I 1 n e ltight.s I I ttlK tel (IK NG Nt ,,.... '-ell l!Mtt C1vn1n C f:l) fo.1osl ch:ir1rr I our ON"' "'"" ove• t•n •• "'• ~oo.+nlt e•n~ CtnV PS ope131ors <1rc h n n c s I ,.,...,.."" a. '"°"'' cen• L•b bl d II r I I I I o<k• Cher.ct A res1>011s1 e .an ue 111 >rmc1 11.,.. 1oct rrv1 <:111 o •"'Ul lhe [f"'el lhty tlrt L\ &tll<;p l lo !loo. lllM L n ~ 0 I' II• Sr h Jl \C~w n e n''ndl I Ell P S 11W 1S Chr ... U r COlll ng • VI 91t lhHhCh Bl<lt Bui 1here 1:. an 11Jeg11l fringe 11r11 Ne »" Ml.'" '"" sn1w 1101 57\'o ~ en 3Sr In the chartt'r fhgbt ndustry v v1 e1t1 :M'4 :1-1\lo c11 .s tot h Vt N lln-11h 1111( tn Mtt which t~ blackening ( C lntvf•ftCt CI nU A Id FIOUn ti 40~ I VIC nU II reput311on c.H U1e enlLrc Ile H1111r111t c • ~ M -• h h "I n"'" CP •loo 11i1.c11111nt -a11\1 w IC you mU;,1 ear AFA P•S n '° c "'" 01 how to avoid :1 ~5 '"~ 1~~ 11!: l'°": CP There are charter llight ~M '" 1 "' u c:ll n F(I arrangers "ho are no more~~:~~ 2i~ ,;:IE"; c;~ than high p1cssure promoters Add '" w " 11.,., om G•1 Nlv Ao. 4" S omw P• and are shockingly ignorant"'"' s11 11 • u om H h 1>.lr Ind l"' J•1 om P•v about lhc tours UM!y put " -Ho '"" s ..,. c ... h d h A be ' ll ll ~ ITI• In• toge\ er -an 1 ese tf)J you Ak:Ol•c do sw ...., r.,; I ho to ,_, Aeon Lb S1 S2"" Offtl!S must eam w avnN Alden Et J -'t 1:w. 11o11 ,._ Tra,el ab,,ad has a lol in A ico Lnct 1• • u ,,,, Aoc11 ,., Toch J"' • on ,,. Common w\111 fa m 1 I 1 a r" • eev l-1• s,,. -· Lit A d Eci11 11.. ,,._ orenco consumer <>oods Yo1 can buy A vn B• 1 1s,. o .. s " 1>.ae Crm J l1 Olm.,, it 1n a wide range (If brands "1>hnm • • ~ c 1w co APnGea S S <>11Co grades quality types und Am BvsP ' ' c 111 11:1, />.m ("'I> \0~ U o 11 F..i guarantees You also can buy ,.. E L•b 1v. •~ 1:.VP com 0 b Am eu• ''"ts It. o•n" eb 11 al list price r ~ou can uy ,...., Fn ~·•" •e>.nv M ked "" I I Or An F11,. 1 • t 01111 ca 1t mar uv\\i n (Ir sa e Am GrHI S4\'t 5•" e>. , con 'Ou Can bu' 'l hot fl Offi a A Mid I> 1$ JHio 011 Gen Am Ta IV ,, 11 Dll • P~g r AmW1dlll'IOl)91nP ence A"a" 1~ '"" 1 • 0,.,. "" To be more sp°CJ!JC 1'nheu• 8 II ., Dev" I n Anktn In 10 o l O..L11• c There are the 1nd1v dual • 11• 1><1 • ~ ''" o.co '" Ad Ml'f 0~11 D!Kb All fares avBJ able on t he A k.MoP n 1p.. ne h o [[ AkWG ll l~PeC&nT scheduled a1rhoes wtuch o er A "'" " s 11. s 'I°' o ' [I bl 1' t:rN I"< li JS OtwP~ El \ou the greatest ex1 L ity in Av (It • ••• 0 1.., c ¥ hed I d lh h ghesl 1'1atn sv s s o o ~1 1'a sc ues an !' I A1cc ea 6Jl~~""oo 1 on guarantee' Or service a n d A Gt• LI u" 11, o sc inc Auto l< •l• o •n C u respons1b1bty These are at :: ... ,(! M,.,, ,g 20i ~1e 1.J the very top of the price M 1 P"1c ,.,. ,1 oaw J""" e~.., HY '"' • Do¥1e oe range B~am RI! 111 11"' DI/ti-n O Ba MA' 3 ..... 0.,,pbP Then lhcre are lhe package eaueo F .. • .U'l., 0 "" d Ba""'! ~'''° E~P 1 tours excursion an group e1¥• Mt 21., 1~ E1,,.•r~ fares offered b~ lhe scheduled :::r:: F H ~ ~~ ... ~tit "u.~ airlines and !heir agents which :"'11. ~: ~;.,. ~, E~o;, s, h t l •l ~F P1i E are subject to lun1tations I at :e~ 'N,•111 •, ~ , ., E c. s do nol apply lo normal fares 8 up~ ~~ ~~ ~ :r N~I but .... h1ch still have built in : ·"~h~ 11 .?.,_ ~1,::1 ~ d 8ckHl1 w•-F..,;lrCll ser1 ice guarantees a n &1>11111 e1 r' ,r.; Ern1>S 0 negotiabihty tmcaning the :::,h'.& i.~" ~ ~:~;: ~ "" ed f !losl C:IP 11YI II"° E 1 I tickets may be exu1ang ore a<Mn 1 t"1.. f"~o' ., other dates and airlines) Ir Mk'5".• 1~"' ~~ti; l!!qutvT 011 , .. I\ Ar "411NEr1 K These are next down on uie 8r;'11"'81r 10' ~F,.,., c .. l l Bu<:~b M 11~~ 11\ro FB Ceco price ts eu,11.ev• n ' 131,1, ,,,,.,.., t f inally there are t h e 1111n"' n 1 ~ • F1~ ''~ !lun Sm 31 lJ:lil.F11<1v I!: charters which can be bought ~.l.fwk!'' ~'Ii 71~ ~r,,.,/;! from a variety of SoUrces and c1rni.. N S\11 •, ,•,~ ,o • Cant1 M I 1111 10 nv '" a variety or forms Some Cannon 8 " " ,,,, !~, Car1ttd ,. I l I fll ..,...., charters include transporta c ... M" 111. ,. • F1 P Mo nl hie h 1.,,1 (II> SW.I ·~ l•FIPM u" t.Jor. o y w 1 ol ers 1ncl.l\le c.aan ,.,, ~ y. FPM wt arraRgements on the ground as ~~", r~ ~ ~ ~,:~:""..;" well Some charters are flown by the scheduled a1rhnes some by the larger American non scheds and SC'me by a mixture al European companies of varymg degrees or reputation and performance Tile charters are by far the cheapest -and thus of course 1s their great lure Avco Tells 3 Montl1s' Revenues Japa11 Auto Makers Shaking Up Detroit NEW YORK fUP1l -The way Japanese automobiles are grabbing a major share of lhe Amer can market for foreign tars "orr1es Detro11 The Japanese makers have ca->tured about 30 percent of Jhe mar.kct for Imports in only a few years Mosl s1gn1f1canl ls that both lhe American marketers of the Nipponese cars and 1ndepcrn.len1 au1omo- b1le 1rade experts c;ay they ha1 e done so n1ore at the ex pense of Detroit c; com pacts and m1n1cars than European c:irs Tl e Japanese arc mainly responsible for the enormous i.:rn" th of ln1ported tar sales IP the lasl few years n spite of Dctro1I s 1ntroducl1on of '1erv :i;ma!I crirc; s<11d an ed 1or or Au1omotnc News Tak!' Subar This modeia\ely pnred fron1 'olheel Ur1\e import maitc hv F'u11 11ravy lndustr•<'S 1111 Japan Is rcla\11 ely new to America Vet f\11chncl I San1our who le-ft VolkS\.\a gen lo becumc president of the American company fl1S1r1bu1ln~ Subaru noted that Subaru sales J!l'f'Vi' iO fast they passed sales n he f rench Pcu~eul hv 12 0trt'f'nl lllst year In 1969 Pet j!CO\ outsold Subaru 1n the lin1tcd - If fff e..-••t •llflt AM••nflq Sen-Ice Y•• -_, ••tti•t ell ef f•llf c.111 ' TrLIPHONf ANSWf lllNCi IUll.AU 835-7777 1 000 t OF OIL PAINTI N~i WHOLDAU WAllHOUSE OPIH TO THE PUILIC 50°/o OFF \•It IE IEO NOl!lt S•NT• AJI .. ·-·~ llEllLCll:i "'flNt•O TAX SHELTER SYNDICATIONS Uoot .. Stl ott , .. Siie! ~ .... .__., .... , ......... ,.. ........ ,.,.......,. ._ •• uty 0-' f« .. ,. .. ,~ ..... Sol t'ft ,,,. .. .." ,,....,. "' .... , ......... ,,.,.., .... IOlll'f M AIMSTION• ''J , •• , Aa...c Vlllait• .... ,., ... , States t .... o to-one 11Hs year Sanyour hopes to sell 20 000 Subarus That could put Subaru even with Renault which has been on the American market 1n force since \Vorld War II Bul Sanvour admits 1t would lake him a long time to catch the l\\O top selling Japanese cars In America Toyota so Id 134 898 carri tn the US last year an:i Datsun sold 100 541 Neither of the two Japanese le:ldcrs threatens Volkswar;ien \vluch sold 565 000 1n the US Inst vcar Sanyour points out ho1vever lh:'ll the Japanese h11ve cul Volks\.\agen s share of the US market from 40 perC'cnl to about 35 percent Severtil Japanese cars on !he US market-as Ile rrotn the leaflers-sell a r o u n d 2Q 000 One goes under an AITl'@fJcan name the Coll made ror the Dodge ii v1s1on or Chrysler b\ the ~111.s b1sh1 fomp;u1v Lil Japan Anolher IS the \.1azda made bv a rrl:it11eh small comr>:inv T1 1s soln 1n \Vestem ~nd S'llllh"rn stet rs \\1th the opuon of ell her ,.. ('on1cntlonJ>l motor or 11 Wa nkel rot11tini:i combuc;t)('ln rnc 11r ~1azd<1 mane hen1Hlnr~ ... nmrt m" a(ln h1 rlc~tro\I 11~ :i ~111omrnl of br1nd ne1v car~ hr " ~" or 11 !,.f,.ct \1auJa der1rlcd !t \.\n Id hr t(ll c·n1cr> 11 c to ti1kf> thr c re; h:1('1{ 10 J;ip:l 1 1o rnr~cf'! !hf' 11,.fr('\i.; !lo 1t 1unkl' I thr "l ~ .. fct1 ricfer1~ h"\<' hf>r., ti r Jfl"l:ll1Cc;e a111 rn111(,.rc; I "J'i"'I\ nrohlrm In lhe Un ll'd St" f'\ I i>d 'r1r morr 1h"l'l h If nf :-.ti:! (IOI) fori'l~n cir" I :id tn t-" r"r<1Hrrl 10 rnrrf'(I s11[r!v rlrf1>tl<t "r~r l11n:lr>t' .. r rn 11' ( 0\ ('f'T1fT'l'nl fl$:UT<'\ ,.\10 \ 111~! 1 l'\O"lrlt'd C'llrQ 1\lth lr•\ lh'>rt :zn r>rrC'rnl f th" tnl "' m,.rkrt 11'\01 ntrrl fnr al n t 40 f'lf'r,....fll nr 1'1-'frty defects ~""1111t1ni;: rcr"H All fllOlllW'"" r r" P'rl"f'r\I ti f' S 1b11r11 anri the Oflrir,. rrll ,.rr mnrk,.IM ln Am1>r1ra hv c;ubstd1,11r1e" nf the m"\;('f" l J 110Pn Rut 511 11ur "h" tllQk h " ~IRA 111 !l :tr\ llrd h f ,.... Join"" \ o!k~\IP'?'<'rt ann h ~ :\~SN' ll1C" T:l!\I" I ti r ,.,01!11 11 \\ 1111 Strrel tn fo 111 i; bar 1 r>f Amflrtcil lnr It I f!<t t "'ld quarters In I rnn~ 1krn t-.; 1 Pe~f~V~• N• E• n"'' E1"'"Pr rl>'Mmo" l~~ ,., .. -Q· '""'mo. Oii ,,,,,., ,., I Complete-New York Stock List ~ . •• ' .. • " • ... -~ t~-:1\i I ' " ,, l", '" I ~ • " 11 .Ii 'f • ~ • • l j ~ f~ • ': l • . ~.· ., . . , :; . i' . f, :1 tt ,. ". • • ' " . . _, " " ' " " ' ;, •• • I • • •• • ; .. ' " '. _, N•lto C"I> 'Ill N1 to!d ;.o l•th tCo •I • Al In !no 1 Ault 9.<o 11 Bise 2 70 t C•n •l C40 ol I 511 ~·te~1h'1; n ~:\c~~L" ;f I•' 011111 tO 0LJI pf 111 •I Fuet 11 Gl'nl 70 •!GYP 1 Ol N GrP oU J,() H1t ln<klll ... ~tth><I on U ... , l.••d 1 Nat P nto I N115\lt!n U Ntl 51'1\11 JS H1! Slttl 7 SO t.lfl Ttl 10 HI UEI Ill N•IO<'llt l 15 Ntll!UM «I t.ltVPOW 111 "R~, N f19Ef I 5' N lT 7 3' t.ltwh•ll 011 Howmn! I <I.I Nfwmt pf,511 NVH0<>lt OW "IVS EG wOI NYSEJ pfl IO NYSE! pf) 7J Ni,. MP I 10 Nit Mp! J lS NltMPI 4 0 Ni.Mp! 390 NtMPI JID N og5hr 16'1 Ho folk" W J N.o llnCP SCI!' Norr s M 1 NA Coal 611 NoAMtg 511 No AmPhll NcAmRk l 70 NtAlt~ oU 75 NOAR .. P!I JS N"'tt! VI 9' NorCenG1 611 NO c ... 1 llr ""I Gtl I 1t No nPS In NtNG11 160 No NG I'll d No NG D!6 «I N,5 ~PW 110 ... ""' plj w N P# DI' 11 N Pw pf4 10 NS Pw otJ ID Noth<l1f 1)0 l'l.,Th oo 1 N.,lhP o/l.tS Nwsl A!rl •S N"'111tf>C t,.40 N4owst Incl NWU!ld DIAS N""11ncl DfCS NW\t n DU 70 Nwit51W 1 70 ~""" 1 so Ntrt 5 man ,...,, s pf]..., NVF Co Apr II Monday's aosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange list I •.. Mii .--------------· Ul*o-1 MWI l-a.. a., .... ••1,. .................. "'.,, .................. .,. .. ..,,..I llMk.I Mlfll U. C'-Ot Stocks Sl1ow Higl1 i~~~\~~: .:i.,r~ •• '~ .... r:~,.+ +~ G • • T d • ~=-Gf,.,;n 17 \.; '!ot fytf(OtP ·~ H~ r q .. ~·. am m ra mg "" ·~ !l •ill14 ~\I\ 'ij~ ! "" ~~~cb' If 10 .!! j" l " ll1gh priced ghnor stocks posted shar1> gn1ns uc;1 '" 1 n ll I 1~ -1 UM(!fld 11 • • 1~ -v. today as the stock nlarket racked up a strong ad un, (o .a ti ""' ~ '-Unlll,.td '1f ,, ~~ -v. vance un 1~v 1 • '" •1v. l\ ~i. d d Un C•mP I m I-t \\ "' v. Tra mg \Vas mo erately a('Uve and analysts un c. 11.i• 2 . 't 'y"> '"11 J~ d th i d Un on (0<11 ~1 ...-.. sa1 ere was ncrease part1c1pat100 by lnslltu· u~ • '• ~U ' ' -~ ttons tl" IC:''f"' .~ n~ ~·.: iii· t='g h uo a pf2 !ii if" • ... T e Dow Jones average or 30 Industrials e:los-tl~ .;..·~.~~1·11 I~ I lOI~ -_ l} ed up 6 2a to 926 64 Un P•C Cit '° u~ -· -·r ""' U" J\ .. ll111o + ~ Advances outpaced declines 873 to 564 among ~~r.~:~-;. 1t: !J ~!: ~ -11 the l 699 issues traded on the New York Stock Ex 1.1~1~~:' .J ~ r~ f~ ~ -l'I change On the American Stock Exchange losers ~~i/•lr I to fi" l: Id ;:.,. .:t ! edged out gainers 466 to 450 among 11157 issues ~ ,~raf ~ :,: = v. lraded ~~",e1 .. .2~1 1 • 1' .,.,.. -Analysts wd a good deal or new money \Vas H~I Y,!/ ft Y ~ = DU = U' pourm0 m from the sidelines follow1ng last week's URIT 111 ,.,.a .. .-; .,... D'4 -Iii "' 01\J•n!-'\ ' ,. Mt\ ~ ~ strong sbowmg They no ted too that there wa.s a ij~"Huci JO 51 u~· HU lt~ +l spreading confidence among investors that Presa H~',-F/G "';1fo ,: 1f~ W.: !f• :!: ~ dent Nixon v.ill get the economy moving again tl~F!'S1 1U: 10' ~ru 1'~ ~ l': even though the recovery has been sluggish up to ~~ ~v!-:!..1 {' U :;'~ ~n: = = !: now ~~~~~:111 .= 'ft ~r.: ?i.,.. ~ .t\., Ph1l1p Clark a general partner o( Burnba1n & ~jft~T:C~ i! ~ ;i~ im \l~ + ~ Co and chairman of its investment comnuttee said ~Fl"~111f 5 u till 11" -\\ the market for technical reasons is close to a cellinrr us smeu 1 1'1 '"' t"' \-.i. h ~ ~If~~~~ 'lff ,J~ ,.: i-t,U on the s ort term basis But he was opt1m1stlc \v1th unit u1u n l: ;,~ ~tt ,1 ~ _ tt,lol•r•eligmar•d•' .. '.•.tb .. • .. lo•niig•t•e•rm ........... ..,.,.,.., •• : ~~ ~' u;.1 fir ~ ll\l JO\~ 11 ~ +I _ ~nl~f p I~ S.ltt Ntl IWl.J Mltfl U. CltM Q., '° 1'4 t II' J 11.: 111\ • 1' I 1 I 1 11 It& I'• • 'f. 11•0 10 I 10\0 S •I• IJ l2 .. l2 41 I 6 1 l SS 5J 6 ' '' 1~1 i:·· 1! • ~~ ,~.~ ,. . ~~ 1J..... 1J ~ ~: \'., \'. ' . ' . ! JI , ll "' I' I .. . '/ Q I 10 I IJ • 11 • !~ ~1! ~ I • • • ~ S7 t • I o t I i t , 1 in , 11 • , 11-s • • • .. r, lt.a :t: 1 1fi, I , 11 :r,. 1\o )1 • • Uol t 1 t I I l I 1.W '''• ,, ' ' . . ~ !J': ~! l fit.. H~ i ,, .. 1• l J l " 1 ,t ; l i ]j Jt. 1, lf '"• "~ ,~: ~ ... ~ iii ~"' tJ~ )ll 1~·-10 -HI- It t• , JO I • • • IJ ]J I ••• u 11•. ,. , ... ' .. I l()'o 11) :st. 101 10 .. ' 10:, ' "" , .. SI Sidi 11 l6 .. l ll!t 21 1~!t ,: ~ ,J •• • I~ lS '° , 1' J ~" . " , " l< ,, • " ,... ' " '1 ., 'o ll m: ' '" ••• l1 .... lf 15'• lO 17'• ,, !/lo lf " .. . " ,, 1°'11 ' •.. >I SI~ U 3S\lli ll • " .. " . ••• .. '" . , i!'• ... •W• " ... " "" •• ,,. ' ?: ... I~ .. ~ n '" " "' ' . '" " " ffv: ,, ... •• •• •• • U1. ·~· ~· " " lft •• 1, J ,,, •• • ''• 7l t ' . . lS1 \"J7~ s u lj 150 51 ~ •1 \l'\o 11V. '"''''" 1 ·~ '. ~ ,~:?. 'fr: •11 ll • U\\ 5 •ll (U, SJ 10 lt,,, ,1: ~ 1 lt., 111 ,,... 21•• I t"t t \ " 'l ' 11~. J l \111 ~ JI SN. lt ,.. "" ll'• ,)Cl !)'Ill l1lo ' ' .... l1J 21 M lt'4 3t /l(,, '~ 4 I~ 1 !ti ,,,.. ! I ,, ,,, ) -J·M- St ltl NM Ullh I Hlfl'I LtW (leq C11t. S? 111.'i 10 • H~T +'lo 11111\d Am wt SI • l o ' -'..Rill "•tk '••' "> •, • •'• + \1 lttw ~ura 'No -, lt•wm Pr olO 10 l'-1 I 1 I• -Rll ltldvtl '•h • '•+\•lt-1110 .,.,., ,'> U,,, 11'• 12"--\ RMI El I..,_ a , •i.( llllvl~Tt 1Jo 1 lo l o lo R«r"" Coro ll l , J1o 3'o -11 REOM Od 36 j '' ,,_ ,llHYfl lrocl • ll 1 11 ~ 111-+ ,R"vt~ Ttltt tl •• J 1 Jo ->oR•mArm 10 1a 4.S o 4' ' '' 1 -RtPMt~ I JO,, 19 JI Jlo 9\1 f ""°"'Iii II "'' S t\1 ' 9'1 t Rt1rcllC! Ot 1J 11 111, 11lo o.. Rt1trvt 0G U I• Jo IJ o Rusolle' " ,! 1 1,, ,.. ltuo h n I A ,., u1o 1 ,,-llft.0"1n1111 '" !o s1 lO +, Rnteu Anoe ll 1 • 11 l , ' llt• Noroco /l ll o 1 11 •-1 R!iMtiJ Svcl 9 1•1 H 0 , + ll lblt! Pro.. 'l 11 10 I' + , R1£n1or<l Ind 10'1 10, o II chton 1 Cit ' "!', ' ',/ ', t + 'o RlcoA 11 M"ll ll\1 1 •+••"~'' M~u '11 ~, '' 50 1-1 1 ,lll~~•M•~ of 91 '80 111 1l •-iltROAIQ(lm 00 ir J! • J.s,, ll RI ttFln oar I 16 0 l o _ 0 llOllnltch 11 16 1 '~ 11 ~ Robin no t ·~ 4"o '"' Rog!I (G O ,! ~-li'• :tt~ + ~ Ro! .,. 1n1 ii ~~ l'Oli -\.o lt<lft(O Ttltpr " 10 t\'o 70 t 'l ltott/llU II O IQ ... 11" Ill.I. llOV.~Orl Olo ' "11' 1 "-1 , ii:ow1r~ " I ; 1 1 1 1-"\llOvt Amor Jl ) 7 _ ·~ Rov 8usn Fll l f 7 • 7 t -'' llov• Inn ""' n jjit 11 'o l~ + lol RPS P•od •• \' • • R1tllll •;i:u 'I '!'' • • I' t -\1 Au1Co 1 • 1 • 10 1 o '> -, Auut1<1 nc • ti '' U -I; Runt I Alum ,,, ' ill• 10 • -'o llunlMll "' II S Uo u, R\11!Ca! "° S • l>'• 1' .. Ryen Homts ,. Jll o l ~'• +! .. AV.to'I H1' 4' 11 20 '> ll .. "'f.blnRoJ < 1,1 ~ ~. "~-... •l'l'll d l\d 1 1\, 1 ~ .. Vo !JhnTr~ !IQ •,1 1~ lS~ 1S J + !em Corp 7ol 1 -•·•~Rltr ll/ f 1l1lJl1,=~1&•:J>J\1 ':f 6J o 17 67 :t 1 JusnR 2 111 ~ :~ :i ~ i\ I ~ I ~:n " .... I tlJ., • ,, ,.. n -'• ~yu~"s1! "i~ O '1 11 • 711 -l S.vln 8 M<h l llv. 111:: 11\'o -\ ~tVOY lno " IJ: l~ ii'\':_ lirr• Fl.,,r I I 7 7 •+-ci mniu • 11,, 11 : 11 _ I> chtnut ){1 1l 711. 7~ N hi.,,:; ~Al ' ""' ll1 I.. ( '"' """' -N.0-0111 '"°v'' tol!Ytli 1• 1• !•• J S'o tvtty Atn fl t • t \io '14 -Vi bdA Miii JO 6 i • ''' St'o t• CGl!!I n I '\• 4\'a ' bOP VWd 0 ~] l~t lJli 13\'o -h I~ ok ~ 70 I • l~ f.,, ::,~\~ :1 1( l 1 1 ~1-\1 .. 1011AI II 17 1' 11 KM!tl 12C1 ?I l6 lSI\ ).( o -\I I 11Co I • .0 • ll•\ J. 1~ + h • lg l11 '°' ),1 .11'11 · lli<ch\" •• 7 6l~ 6 ;. 'o ouav1n nd 6 l 0 11 1 I , 1 S.vlctCCI In ?)', 1) )J -~ ~•Yl1CO I 11, 15 o Uo -St•voCorn Jl ,, lo 4 1 _ .~vo onlC 11 , 11 11 ~tron Co '~ 1i """ '7 1 ''"'+VI SGI. lr.d I !ft It 1n f''o 10 !"'""' 0..... l 1 ?\' ,.._ ~ NIH W.rd1 11 10 1, .. 19 ~ 11 h•tlt., OM 16 '.. ', ,~ -• !~~:~~Mt<I 1~1 Jih n'4 14 ~\It lent P lnO ~S ?Ro ,,. ,._. -!lo '! K/• <o ~' :" :v: :v. +. l~ I co "f.u1t 1 ~ n~, n .;. "' ~~~ c11111l0 lJt 1• ~ II I•, < i ' rTKO St 70b '5 t 1\0 "-~ mP•n )OI t 17 ~ '' 11\'o -l'o S~mPlt• Wirt fi 1~1J..6 l~+l'o11-1" 5m•U• -0 1:r,, S Ho .+~ ,ct, St 1 11)11 51:1o !1\11 st~ +ll'o Slick (0<1> 'J ""' 1' '11 -\51tkPf'°' 11' 277 U \ U'• ll -\1:0 ·~ ' n '> 11 17 -111 on •,~ ~ l ~ J , * • Mer llro<! 2 36 JI 3'4 -~ iD'I Pt~ 1'< ~ ]>., }>'o -I ~ DUNl~f' .101 ll l 1 ~ JI t ... Ofll CaP U ? :14 w.. ~ see ~1110 l I•!\ I• .. l"' -l o SC S l0p1 I·~ J~ ~~ ~,·· 'l" ... " 1~ ! ra1~r i n 1 so 101 "I 10 OU Rttt U! t ll~ 1.1.q, 1 ,'o .j. ~IC4,J pf l(jl 11 • •\ 14 + i, ouRov 1io • ~ • • ~l'I + V. wit l'or lr>d •l l't lD JO -\liwnlnvlo ~ Jh J~li J~±~f!::~r~~· ~t ,~f! 1tJ ,1~ i 1\oo ~=~,,~ t!. ·~ 1!!~ 1tt: 1:~ + ~ tt: A1n~n n:, "', s~ •• 'h -1~sd con••~• l' 1 ' 'SMC Ill a,l fl,: f,::: n~ ~\lo Std oc:J1 10e •! 1r. 11'-!Th i .,,std Mot A IS • 0 11'1 Ul', 1f' <&., '1d Pt< C0to ,, II•\ I' . nil h s d si. 1 nr fl ,.. "'' , ... -~ s 111hoy "". S II\• 1!\o l~t -1• Sltl'IWlt~ CP k I JO.lo lOlt r.:i. ~ S!tPMtcll llO 'I it• II a -~SllClull ... , , fM +l'>StrSmkl '° tlO 1s1, :l\lo u"' s11111trn In• 110 '9' ~ jlj~ -I 5 ;f:lmtt '"' '1'1 ''"' t°..: ~a .:t ~ u:1r.~ 1~· rt~ 1"' f; 11t -v. si. .. n c~ n 10 1~ 1; 1"0 -I,\ S!ttl Elte•• 11 •'Ii' ,~, 4'i\ -\lo Sit l E.t,_ ·, • !li f'lll .j. 'i\ 51.,I Prt l'Ot l l!i: •• • 1•••nMll Ott SO ~-~ltrl!CO A lD ' ''-ii!' + \4 Sl0p Shol> to , ,. I~ STP Co<P '° • • )' !''• ron C•~ ID llto 1l 11 I -" 111111\r Wtllt ~ 1f'-!'/\ 1\~• -14 fut vt sn JM I• l\' t1 ,.., + "" 1111'1"111 0 1, ~ ~. I • '-'J 1~ Ju"' r El11:lr I , "d'li S~Eltc IO " , ~ _., + Ol s..,.....cr Ok • \!\1 I~ '111i -;i !Ull Sii ... Ml )I ~ D J i" -{J \l""l(OH ~ •"-,,,, Iii -\11 l\IP Ol\lcl t )J.-. l~ W. 5111QVf~tnt 11 1!~1 ~~ tt~ ! :: 1~r.i:tr1 'SP • 1 ,, .. '' ~ -._ ~n•tov t!Z' o So JI• , .. _.i ynte• Mi 15 lS t l \1\S 'tl'> VKOCClll!t J: ~ , lfZ ,.~ ~ s''""" c.ne 111'11111\/il') 61 S 5 \ SI\ l•mtr Elec I Jlo 3'• lit l•1Y! Ml) • 'ii• '61 .. ,,_ \ft<c~ ""°'" ~ ni! l;" ll!i~\ .. -'l:~':m~~ •I lO't 0• 1 l«hnlt ft"' ~.' JLD 1'\'J II -.. j«Mn celr ••• ' ' ~ + 1\ f("llnl!rD 1 •l'I Hi i\? Tft~tl Ille: J ~ ~ n,, in .. ~ ~ '"'"'"""'' " S 1 S... ,Mo! ftnn• COlll I I?' 11 a I! 1 I 1,;~.·' I 1'l 1lt rlco ;. "'"""' ne I 11'1'1 ltli 11~ + "'° T1<1-(1 '11 ll\li 1j' 1, ••~ Jnc ~ 11>.i l \I 161oo Ttr M ... UI )j 111'1 I ltli THMI P .. r1.IO I lol I'> -~11PI. .it~ '1~ 11 o 1• 111oo I 1-. t~t!1r , " I" 1••-i. ['"' "'' 1 11 I\ l'i" T l(o Inc 1 1 J~ ,!\ t ~T M~t JG11 I "" ~-. Tllrfrtlmtrl • , l•\'t I' I + t~ TOll.l'lth" '° 11•~1 l'• I Tal(dpf4JS 11 I• 1" l:r t ~.Ton'• tP • JI 11 .. u~ "'"' • Torll"CCll'P • l t • ,.._ "' 1 To!t l Pf! NA I>, 01 •-10 •TottlPlt! 10 h i :,1 1• \ town '""• 6 ,-i, ''• ~ i ru·" I.tu .., SI'•~ t••-l't ll"''°' 'I,'> r. 11 ~-1 Wf I ''" Po {t" !' ~· ~ ,..., ,,, l'''t I "I ,, 11r 111 r :)l't-l'Tr•n• "' -R 5-;1111oo ~~ '' l • IJ~~t.i l.!or• 11--\1 urP Co•• Ill ••• ' • 10 11\• u . 1<i71 DAILY PILOT ; 11i.. Htl (Mii I Ml1ll LIN Cltn 0.., S l S141 -'It 8nf~tf le(I n • 21 -to '4 nFln! Ur ,"' 1"4 I , + t n l11ve11 10 !l~o -'Ill U SI Om lll<i 11, n,,.l " UntMl t5o 10 10 l to Untm Tr w! 16~t )t~ \lo Un"lrtPd ~ 11 17 -l'o Uni• A•b 01t U o '6~ +7' Unit 8d Ctr! '"-s + °"' Unllr1n<11 "'' JI J\o UnCol.ln lO<i 1 l UnOc oa ll'I ll lr +'Mo UnU f,;.,.fi llla '11.. Un Nttl-COro 9 I UnN•T Co wt '1 <II ' ._ lo tlnPNO~.•l_,1g.. ••IC +:i..un lle!n u ' , 1 + 7 us $f••mlc I • llto + tl~Hom~ ~v I t 61 -'U!Net RC ,1 1 'i 'U Rltd11m 11 • 11 1 • u R !In /" I )'' 'Uj '~"'" 10 lOlo u Ru 1SQ '.Ill , :Jtto ->o 05 Stnt ! WI 111 11-.. , Un 1 Oii~ (P 1 • i)t 1'Un• Clo• ''• 1 • • un~ Cont ur n • 111 4t Ur 1 llidQ .,.., I~: 1~ I 11~ 8f.t ~"s~&I~ I~ I~! \ \1111St• H 1• • ''"' " Yelle' Mt! ' '•' ~ no., -• v11m1c l>ld l -o -t :O.\/a1c•Oli1r 1 I l l o i I Van Dorn 'XI '9 • :t -0 -1 V1n•u~ d tnl I"•' 'j"' \/• 11 nc 1 I ' \lt~CO ln1I ~f' ,• 1 -T l.t v~n celnd 70 ''-11.t vtn•on 70 -I'll ll•!t<:v '1 '\.; Ill'& + ... II• <D QI \/Ir l !l'l+llv~wtI • U l 111~01 Int '• •• -t vnl•ot Ent t, to \o\ILN Coo .Ult'' -Vol ~Vo 13>:. ,.,_ "Vllf>f• I; ,!'~ l •-""vucCon1 10 ,.. 21 ., l\o llulc lnc .:io ll-llloo -W•b Mlt 70 fJ ' i~ -l' W~('Mul ~I -Wtko N )j~ 11 • 1111 1 l W1llll1m '" t~. ,f • :i:1w We dCR 0 • 3' 3' W1 d I'd• v.r C;I, 1~. -~ 'X:i~oC°nc. XI I 6 -'io.o..llMtl J,() :, 1!•-'W•tn•n Co :ill• J.4 ~ '• Wtld Tu Am ~' We co Ent s ~ S.: + I W•HllGr 30t ll 1 )IV, +. \ ::,"/t~r:i'd I 1 1'•-\,Wt•P•'lJ ; ' ;ftf: !: I'll WHt,111 P!I 121~ o Wt1lbY Ftl'I 1~ w""" o Pet 71 1 ' _ (I, .... 1tn Ffoi lSt "" I'~ _ 'Mo Wn N~cl••r 1~ o~ _ ,, w111rD °"'" 10~ !Ot,\ -I'll W•ol 11 Intl ,_ m-\t W~1r•1n1 IM • • -\i """!lab '°' 6 + Wh C11t.1n1 60 24't 1 -Wl'IHtk" -'O I~ '"' W~lf'il•f El n,'-n,r,, + ~W~!lt19CO I .,., 7tl<, -\, W~lrtetr WI I ' I) Wld1U• '1(1 '"' •i;i.+ ,Wtl<o~Cllll,r s~. s .. + ... Wml'IOll" '°"" :PO'lo -\'t WllJ/llrt d lt\li 11\ri -• Wiiton(~ 1 JJ O I' ~' •'i -\o Wiiton Co wt 1'1 .. 1] IJ -~WK1118r'11 l l''h \jlj, "\I) + W '°" Ph 11 I I• U o 16 +~W--Slf! to 11 .. , ·~· .... + \ Wlfl.ori C:o wt 11 '• 1 \\'-~ ltokttl'lln 40 209 11\o 11 • 1 1'11 + ~ Wol\I lllCl~ll I IOI, If • !~a + "lo WOOCI INI Sll 1! ~!" f! II~ + ~ Work Wr '° :: I!:: ;: 1,::-~ ':rf~::f" M~• 1 •l 11; I, l\41 • ~ W1'C Air 07• I 10 ' I~ lot. -I\ W"•"'° 11111 • •1o t'-i i1' Wvlt l•h ?I 11 , 12 • U'i Wvnn 011 1 ~ lt(1 10 1-W~l1 "O I r 6' t'o V. Vt!~ Ind ••I 111, , .. ""Yonk lla trl• JI U • ll, 11~ Z.•0 M•1 n' '..I 79•o ,. 11\t s \ l"' MQm ,, 1• 6 $>1 I ~~lion FOl)d1 Jl • ' 11\;o If ' • l • 11, , • ..,, 'I~ -11.'1 ' ' . 1• ?1•, n " 7 0 10 0 I 1 111 l 111 10 70, )OJ.\-I 1• nh n1. n, -(\ ~ I I 7 S IS ll\ ts\ ' • la ~,._ .. 11"' • ~$\'t.j.~ lit ?! l l'!O 1S -:U ", "" I'' im l ' Va lJey Banker Takes New Posi I JO I \\ UV. 1 ~ ' • lh t "' It '''"' ... " 'I",, .• IOt -~ I ~ I l\t -,->t '11 1 16 1 16tl -'lo •I S••t • '1 11)> 7l) I 11 I 6 I ' ~ II .O•o '111 .ot0 I f', llo llo + h ''l'l ?l -· ) I I a 1 ~ -O J ?1\ 1111 l~-~. U Ul. 11 lT' t-11 !0 tit Iii -\') ! 't' ll\. 16 -• l I l t 1~ J/11o -.. ll 11 ~ lo,, 10*o lo n 11'!• 1n; in.-•. ... '"' •'i -" -'l' ~t ~ j.._ Hlo ~-"' '" ~ ,,_.,.. IOI\ 10~ 10 • -.. 72\lo 2Uo 7 .. -lilo 21 11tt n\t -!.lo " " ,. ... '"'• " • '" ~-"' " " " . jJ ~ l" t 1 ~· ' ''--T z- • I -\I; ,!~ + .. .. ?Ho + \II '"--... ' + , • l!lt + "'"'-~ , 'i + \t '" 11 • -... " Sl li + I~ 11~-I , .. Dean R Scblernbeck hllf been promoted to assistant v1ce president 10 the com~ merc1al loin department ot Union Bank s San D I e g ii Jleg1onal Head Oftlcr Sch1embeck has been *"" socltlted with the bank since: 1966 Prior 10 th is he w~ a credit manager for a finance corporaUon Schiembeck • t t e n d e d Orange Coast College Jiit resides with his w1te and two sons 1n Fountaln Valley Viejo Man Gels Honors 1 • • • Mission Viejo bus1nesnnan-' Jan J Blanch.lrd ha., been cited as one of the top life 1n.i;urance 1ale1men of 1970 for Occidental Ufe of C11lfornla Ills sal~ performance put3 him among the top 200 aaenll of the company 1 3 700.~ field force ln lhe Unit~ Slates : and Canada. j Blanchard l! Octldtnlal s ~ general agent m Mission Vl.e4 : Jo • • • Occidental Llfc ls the nt• : hon s ninth leading lift inJ l surance company In terms ol ~ Ila more than f24 billion or ~ llfe 1n~11rance In rorce It 11 ~ 11 sub~1du1ry ol Tranaamerk:1 i COrporat1on J I \ I J J DAIL V "LOT T11tsday, April 13. l'J7l ' • • This latest improvement in Shell gasolines lps keep your car in tune.That can be important 1 TCP/2/ helps keep your car in tune; . This helps hold down exhaust emissions in newer cars, reduce · emissions in many older cars-and helps keep your mileage up. TCP/2/ is Shell's name for a new combination of ingredients. It's •' not just an additive, but what petroleum chemists call an "additive pack· Lu• than. a. lwlf f tea,,JOOn ,,er gallon is en011.gh TCP/2/ -~~todo<h<job. age~ ltisan improvement over TCP, the ~ ' farnou ~ gasoline • additive developed by Shell yea11< •RO- Th<lay almost all gasolines contain additive packages. They differ somewhat in what they do and how well they do iL TCP /21 is an effective additive Jlackage that provides an improvement in the perfonnance of all of Shell's gasoLines. The effecL5 of TCP/21 can be summed up as /1clping lo keep yo1trcori11 f1t11e. 1\vo of the main pollutants in a car's exhaust are unburned hy- drocarbons and carbon monox- ide. Both are undesirable, and both can go up when your car goes out of tune. In fact, it would not be unusua~ for these emis- sions to soar as much as 50 per- cent before you even suspect it. And by the timeyourcartellsyou it 11eecls a tune-up, emissions can be extremely high. By helping your car s tay in tune, TCP/21 helps slave off that senous increase in cmis~ions. TCP/21 can also have a favor- able effect on gasoline mileage. Whe11 your car goes out of tune )1our mileage tends to go down. TCP/21 works to keep that from happening. TCP/2/ can also actually re- clu..ce emissions from many cars -and improve their mileage. These are older cars that are, in effect, out of tune as a re sult of deposits that have built up in their carburetors. Read on to find out how driv- ing regularly with TCP/21 helps restore mileage and reduce ex- hau st emissions from these cars. 3 TCP/2/ in both Shell and Super Shell helps extend spark plug life. This helps hold emissions down and keep your mileage up. When spark plugs misfire, a lot goes wrong. Emis- sions go up, mileage goes down, acceleration is re- duced -and you have to buy new plugs. One of the components of TCP /21 works to pre- vent spark plug misfire. Shell pioneered components of this type and Shell gasolines were the first to contain them. TCP/21 also helps lo smooth out roug h running in many worn engines that have lost compression. Another component in TCP 121 is a special anti· friug ingredi.ent. It helps prevent stalls caused by carburetor icing before your engine is wanned up on cool, damp days. 4 TCP/2/ in non-leaded Shell of the Fu~helps protect against valve wear. One reason Shell of the Future can be made with no lead at all is a chemical element in TCP/2/ .. This element works to protect your engine against possible valve \Vear. Shell could have left some lead in for the same purpose. But thanks to TCP/2/ Shell could re- move all the lead. 2 TCP/2/ keeps new carburetors clean, and helps clean up dirty ones. Works to hold emissions down and mileage up. When excessive deposit.~ build up on the"throat" of your car· buretor, your engine is no longer in tune. Emissions can rise dramatically, and mileage usually goes clown. If your car is several years old or more, deposits ·may have built up on your carburetor"throat:' Although most of today's gasolines contain a detergent that .viii keep clean carburetors clean, not all of today's detergents can cut down on these deposits once they've formed. TCP/2/ does have that ability. It contains a new detergent combination that can start to clean up a dirty carburetorwithjustaf ewtank- fuls of any Shell gasoline. This can redlice exhaust emissions substantially. And it generally helps mileage, too. , Good mileage and fewer emissions -they can go hand in hand. When you bum gasoline more completely here ..• ••• you use less peoline from here ... I •.. and lesspotlutanta are left over to come out here. •Probably the most important thing you can do is get a -tune-up. Over half of all cars need a tune-up. If they a,Ugotoile, total exhaust emissions in the U.S. would be reduced significantly (and in most eases the effect on mileage would be favorable). •Th help your car stay in tune, use a SheU gaso- line with newTCP/2/. This will work to hold emissions down -and to keep mileage up. New TCP/2/ is now in Shell, Super Shell, and non-leaded Shell of the Future. •• ' • Hot Number Sizzles Designers By MARIAN CHRISTY Hot pants: Fashion's coolest new sizz· ler. They're really nothing more than glorified short shorts but they reveal loll! more than the leg. Hol pants -or short pants, smarty pants or whatever you la bel them -are nothing more than miniskirt substitutes. Fashion designers have been trying to cram down women 's throats the idea that the hemline of the season ls the midi. The result bas been widHcaJc rebellion. Women have dabbled in the midi - particularly the midi coat -bot across- fhe.board acceptance of the midi hasn't happened. Designers. in the business of making money. don't dare say minis are out. That would be the kind of statement that could lead to ruination -especially with the vast audience of young. But, on the other hand, the fashion industry is based on the theory of obsolescence. They must fan an incentive to buy. Thus, minis have become shorts.· HOT PANTS Hot pants, being exactly the antithesis or the midi, have satisfied women's desir. to revolt against long hemlines. Even less-than-spritely elegantes who won't or can't wear hot pants exude om and aha when they see the look runwayed at fashion shows. Geoffrey Beene says : "It's their defense against the midi. Even il they're Hot pants, the mini- sk irt's substitute in high-fashion collections, will be seen throughout the summer. A longer Bermuda-length is planned for fall. Cool Controversy unable Lo wear th~ look, their voice has been he1.td." Mollie Parnis, who designs (or mature fashionables like Dinah Shore and Mrs. Lyndon Johnson, agrees that the hot pants hullabaloo is a strong anti-midi reaction: "We've got to admit that women hate the In-between lengths - particularly the midi. "We're living .in a youth-Oriented era • The appeal is for youlMlriented clothes. Nothing screams the word •young' ioude.r than hot pant.s." Women's lib certainly hat helped hot pants march into fashion. Mini skirts swung into action about the same4ime women's lib came into being. The libs fanned the female cry for emaheipation and freedom from lies that bind. Libs have o f l e n called designers ''dictators" and said the long, old· fashioned clothes they created were dreadful shackle$ and stralt jackets. DESIGNERS AGREE At least designers agree on two points. First: That hot pants will be abused - the wroog women ·will wear them and become fashion 's freaky caricatures. Hot pants have already encouraged dirty jokes. They'll also bring on the laughs. Mollie Parnis suggests an acid test fol' hot panl!-inclined women. If they can wear a bikini wi.thout bulges showing, they can do justice to hot pants. Second: That hot pants are moving out of fashion collections as fast as they moved in. The look is just the adrenalin fashion needed. · As for the naughty ConnolatioJll, it's only in the mind of the beholder. When somelhing is a fasl seller In fashion, it is called "hol" Hence, lhe eye.popping little label, "hot pants." Now is the time to get your psyche set for the inevitable. • TO THE KNEE American desigl}ers, now plotting fall· winter, 1972 collections, are inching hot pants down to the top of the knee. You'll see hot panls In Jamaica and Bermuda lengths -and lots of lengths in between. They'll come equipped with coordinated blazers, long coats and caps. Boot.s will continue to be the leg decorations, It takes more than the right figure for hot pants. You've got to have the savoir faire and ego to believe in yourself and " your fashion . A nervous twinge or a silly aiggle isn't the end. Rome's Gregorio.na creates a brightly printed hot pants outfit that comes equipped with a maxiskirt. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Ed Hor •••• u Cartons Packed With Gifts Mrs . Paul Quint of Huntington Beach cuts up an egg carton. It takes approximately four to fashion the spring bouquet al left. By JACQUELINE CQMBS OI l~t Da;I~ ,Jr.I llt tf Up lo your ears in hard-boiled eggs now that Easter has passed? There are always deviled eggs, creamed eggs and egg salad. And Burlelta Quin!, a 29-year..a!d housewife in Huntington Beach has a solution for those polystyrene foam egg cartons that have slacked up. When she saw the yellow, blue, pink and green cartons in the market. Mrs. Quint thought they were too prel!y lo throw out. An enterprising mother of four , she was determined to find a usefulness for colorful cartons and add to the family income. Experimentation led to a variety of hand-fashioned decorative it.ems from ' hanging lamps to noral bouquets. "The designs are so bas.ic a child cen master them. I get so excited because they all turn out so differently. . each incorporating the maker's personality," she said. Mrs. Quint put her ideas to work and now a two.year project is becoming a reallty as Quint Enterprises. To promote • • the idea, Lhe Quints approached Dolco Corp., the manufacturer of the cartons and moved to Huntington Beach last May from .Salt Lake City, Utah to broaden 11-.ir. marll::eting base. The rompany became Interested as plastics have been widely critisized for being nonbiodegradable. It maintains that lnfonnation is becoming avallable indicating that a landfill can pollute acj.. jacent soils and ground water. "As paper degrades, B.'I metals rust or oxidize, various oxide-5, sulfites and other materials are released with an adverse effect." said a spokesman. "The poly· styrene cartoni; are excellent landfill rnat.erials, making a minor contribution as a pollutant." A booklet has been compiled on how lo make a variety of things from the egg cartons including topiary trees, love balls, corsages and enterpieces . "Don't Throw Away that Egg Car· ton '• is ir:to its sCCQnd printing. It gives the basic directions for the egg-carton creations. "Making useful and decorative creations is good sense and good therapy for evmone, ·• said Mrs. Quint "They're easy to make. Let your imag. lnaUon work." Mrs. Quint also gives free lecture- demonstrations to organizations i n Orange and Los Angeles counties. She brings along kits so the ,audience can participate by making a basic corsage. "The entire family forms a production line to make the kits." she added . The Paul Quint family includes Kellie, 7, Mark. S, Adam, .1 and Todd. 10 months. "I have a demonstration almost every day at churches, women 's c Ju b s , bospltals, scouts or senior citizen a:rnups." The petite, vivacious woman believes her project is a boon to those who are creative but limited by budget. It's also a part answer to the 'egg -ol og ica I' problams everyone ls concerned about," 1ht concluded. Try 1 lovely bouquet - miking useful 1nd decor· 1tive 991 c1rfon ere• tlon1 Is good therapy for everyone. It can be fund· raising or fun-raising for the-.coutt or Mnior c:f..._ l11n1. ' J.f DAllV PILOT Alumnae Potluck Plann ed 'lbf: Newport Buch home of Mn. Nell Floe wiU fumJ.Sh the setting when Newport Harbor Area Alumnae of Delta ~lta Delta gather for lhelr annual pot luck lrutallaUon dinner on Wednesday. April It. Mrs. Gary Finney i s chairman for Uie occasion. with I.be social hour planned at 1 6:30: p.m. and dinner at 7:30. 6:30 p.m. and dinner al 7:30. Ofncers for the coming year include the ?.tme&. Richard Randall, p~ldtnt : William . Snyder, vice pru:ident; Ken- . neth Quanz, assistant to the · vice pre.s.idenl: Jay Pierce, correspondifl&: secretary: Don . Bank!, recotding secretary; , 1''ine, treasurer; F. f. Dre~, ; publicity, and James LeSieur, reference chairman. .. • ,, l Alpha. Phi l 'h l To Gat er ', ! ;~ ~ A special proeram ealilled ~All About Alpha Pbi will be .. ~tsented al 10:30 a.m. on o:Wednuday, April 14, when T-. Aprll 1', 1971 Flaws Found • Masterpiece 1n DEAR. ANNIE BABY: You mhsed the boll in your response to the pot-head who tnallted that grass made her more articulate, more lucid and 5h.arpened her rnlnd, MJss Pot-head concluded by saylq, "When J finish tbl1 letter It will be~ masterpiece. If you fall to print it l \\·Ill know you are a Communlst ... " Well, you dki print it, but you said bet "masterpiece" contained 18 misspelled words. four uon-sequiturs and tbree unfinished sentences, and that you had to make considerable alterations before you could print ii. Why didn't you leave her letter alone and print ii as she wrote. ii? It would have been much more effective. You m i s s e d the boat, Annie. -MR. EVERYBODY DEAR MR.: Rtpt yoa are. 1 misled lbe boat, bul I opkd to take a later boat n t.ber th a11 not mUe t1te trto It all. So here's lbe letter 11 It wa1 writkn: 'DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your letter against pot last week W8! a joke. If you dryed up creeps want ,kid' tc. believe you who dop'l you tell the truth? I like my hair long. I\ looks fine. I have yet to see a single Jetter in your column tell the GOOD things about pot. \Vhy is that? Because you are a bunch of fuddy-dudies who are scare w kids to death. Well, it won 't work. fi.1ost of us know more about pot than our plirenls and teachers put together. Getting turned on by Jesus is definately. I'm a 16-year.old girl who lives i,n a medium-size midwestern town. 1 have been smoking pot at least once a day for two years. l l hasn 't hurt me at ANN LANDERS aU. ln fax It has done PW! I k>t of good. Not only ts pol-smoking fun but it has expanded my con.sclentiousoes.s and opened my eyes ta the bealies of the world and wiquestionable. This proves the police are pigs. Grass has not dulled my mind. It h&.5 sharpen it. My think is clearer that it ever was. I am more aware things I iever noticed before. Objlcts that used to look small look large, especially when I. When I smoke, I see mental images in color instead of black and white. I used to be too shye to rpe.ak up in a crowd. Now I am a brilliant conversationist. I g e t stoned yet I am 100 percen t lucid. 1 am express my inmost feelings brilliantly. Feet can te friends. When ( finish thi.s letter it wUJ be a masterpiece. If you fall to print it, I will know you are a Commwiist. In Russia lhey print only one side of story . The side they want people lo believe. I'll be watc~ and waiting. -THE TRUTH WILL WIN DEA R TR UTII: Yo u r letter In the uriedlted form provtd that a penon who ls 1toned is no judge of his llckllty, bis brlll lance of the calibre of bJ1 perform- ance. I should have printed 11 au naturtl the firs t time. DEAR ANN: May 1 say a word to that JS.year.old dope-bead who signed herstlf ''Truth Will Win?" I am also a teeoaser. This Is my country. too. I am well aware of the hatred, the conflict ind the violence that is tearing our nation aparL I know we will pay a terrible price for getting into a war we had no business getting into. I, too, have grown up amidst riots, pollution, racial strife and drug addiction. ' Our generation will inherit the problem of taking care of the ki<h with fried brains, What plans do these spaced~ut \'egetables have for themselves come 20 years from now? People Hke me, woo kept it all together will havf' lo provide hospital! for these sick ones. Keep telling them llke it is, Ann. You wlll not rtach everybody, but some or us DO I i st en . Keep hammering away . -A\VAKE IN WACO. DEAR AWAKE: I plan to -until my typewriter fallJ apart. Tbankg for the eoco uragemenl. When romantic glances turn to warru embraces is it love of chemistry? Send for the book.let, "l.Alve or Sex and !{ow to Tell the Difference," by Ann Landers. Enclose a long. stamped, self-addressed envelope and 35 cents in coin \\'ith you1' request In care of the DAILY PJLOT. 1 5u..m Orange co u • 1 Y Knapsacks Packed umnae bosl a luncheon in I Gamma Kappa Chapter Aiember's of the Exch~gettes and Newport Harbor Exc~ange Club will leave ifome, Long Beach. all car~ behind Friday, April 16, and head for Palm Springs. The annual-trek Area Lawyers' Wives Planning Programs Alpha Phi VIPs will be will include a cocktail party and "The Grass Capades," a theatrical extravagan- spedal pits for the oc-za. Hoping for a lift are (left to right) ~1 rs. \Villi am Boyer and Mrs. Gerald Wool· The Balboa Pavilion will furnish tbe setting !or a luncheon meeting of t h e La14·yer's Wives of Orange County on Thursday, April 15. A social hour \\'ill begin at tt a.m. with luncheon and the meetjng to follow. .caslon, according lo Mrs. ers. :Douglas Corrie, president ~ -------------------------------- '.the Alumnae of Southern fi..liss Virginia Ca r 1 son , associate superintendent in ,charge of lhe Women 's Division of the Calilomia Rehabilitation Centr.r, will be the featured speaker. The group has designated the month of May as Law Month. Mrs. Robert Bean o( Fullerton will be chairman for activities, including a program planned in cooperation with the Orange County B a r Association. To avoid d.isappolntment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white j!:lossy ~bolo-­ graphs to the DAILY P ILOT Womens De- partment one week before the wedding. :orange County. Yoµr Horoscope : A panel of guest speakers :,,.ill include state, district and ;mtemational officers as. y;·ell :as collegiate reprr.sentat1ves. ; Ltmcheon will be served in :the chapter house dining roon1 :by the Mmes. Gorrie. Jack Edgerton and Arthur Aune. Scorpio: Accent Debts Two re!idenU of the center v:ill join her in a question and answer session concerning the drug problem. Area attorneys will be invited to speak to junior high an<F-high school students on Orange County campuses. Pictures received after that time \vill not be used. For engagement announcements it i5 i1npe rative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-- mitted six \Veeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. lcalendar Flipped ,Forward '. Decorations and theme for the summer Jruitallation of (li(fk:ers will be dllCUssed when the Past Presidents' Club of l:lo!,y Eucharist Institute 220 ileets at a p.m. Thursday. AiSIJ. 15, In the Hwitington leach home Qf Mn. John lllc!Wt : A IOClll hour will follow the ibettinc, ICCOl'ding to Mrs. J1ct C.OtllDower, Westminster, r::inations :on :' Agenda : ;Nomlnation or 0Ulcen1 will lake place durlna: lbe meeting bf the Flett Reserve ;Association Branch and Un.il )75 of Orange County, · Following tbe meeting at 2 )l_.m. SUnday, April 18, in the :Knights of Pytblas Hall, frustin, 1 poUuck dipner will be served, : New officers will be. elected In Mlly. WEDNE SDAY, APRIL 14 By 5YDNEY OMARR ARJES (March 2l·April 19): Strong emphasis on travel. publishing. You write and communicate. Take steps 10 initiate long-range p I an s . Rrlu.se to be satisfied \\•ilh the ordinary. Your viev,. 110\V should be a sweeping ooe. TAURUS (April Z0-!\1ay 20 ): Association y;·ith m a t e . partner centen: a r o u n d financia l ·•¥peels. Overcome temptation to be petty. Realize that · key now must be co- operaUon. Check polic ie.s, tu returns, general inventory. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Accent on partners. public relations, legal maneu\·ers. Be flexible. Permit opposition lo have a say. Sense or humor now can extricate you from dehcate situalio11. Act accordingly. CANCER IJune 21-July 221: Basic issues dominate. Selilen1ent of old score is indicated. One you made promises. to no~ may want to collect . Be thorough. Get money's worth. Also. give your fair share. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Romantic intere sts are featured. Some yowigsters may rep.ruent somewhat of a Smiles Form Backdrop For Delta Gamma Day Southern California Delta Gammas will gather In the Pasadena Hilton Hotel on Saturday, April 17. for the Sith Annual Founders Day ~union. Participanls will be greeted by a smile U!eme carried out In colorful sunburst cen- terpiect• and decorations as they arrive for a 10 :30 a.m. social hour followed b y brunch . During the reunio11. hour. Delta Gammas will view an :Teenagers Reflecting ~On Problems of Youth Problems or Teen age rs !odaJ will be discussed from personal experien c e by CIUtltaDd1n& student leadert frtlm Marina High Sc.'>ool, Hwitingtoa Belch, during a meetina; ef tbe Delta Kappa \ Young Duo Entertains Rivierans dilemma. Find out the "why" of events. Avoid superficl.al judgment. Adhere to golden rut •. Then you succeed, ' Irv ine Terrace Associates VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept 22): Home lnfluences dominate. You have to shake ·a ff tradition in order to make progress. This may not be easy. but it will be necessary. Realize it .and respond accordingly. Board Greets Members I LIBRA (Sept Zl-Ocl. 22): Perceive hidden meanin11.s. Ideas abound. Key Is to select quality. Ooo't Settle for second best. You c8n improve techniques. Re I a t·l v e s , neighbor! figµre i>rominenily. Be a good µst_ener . SCORPlO,(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on debts, valuables. You gain by investing in what you feel is of value. Outside advice now may not suffice. Heed inner fee lings. What was a setback turrui in your favor. SAGITI ARIUS (Nov. 22- D e c. ~l): Persona l involvemenll now ire Ukely to multiply. Situation become.t Board members y;•ill be on hand to greet those attendi ng the noon luncheon meet ing of the Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Associates of the Orange County Philharmonic Sociely Thurs- day. April 15. Serving under the guidance of Mrs. Thomas R i I e y , Alta Bahia To Note Conductor complicattd. Avoid panic. A picto rial biography of Cycle is hi.gh: clrcunutlni:es' Leonard Bernsttin \\' i 11 ultimately will favor ' your highlight the 10 a.m. meeting efforts. Finish majdf ~j!CL on Thursday , April 15. of the CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Ja:n. Alta Bahia Commi ttee , 19): Degrtt of confinement is Orange Cowity Philharmonic evident. Bide your time; ride Society. chairman, will be the Mmes. Charles Stephens, first vice chairman ; Cora Peggy \Val· lace, co-chairman; Jesse Cur- tis, recording secretary; A. S. Richardson, corresponding secretary; Lyman Betz, se- cond vice-chainnan, a n d Angus Wright, trea!urer. Other committee chairinen will incl ude the M m e s . Virginia Mayo, Continuance Pund; Stewart Co u I t e r, hospitality; Kenneth lfolloway Jr .. youth concerts; Wendell Jones, membershio ; Claude Pa.tte.rson, parlia!nentarian; Reid Wasson. telephone ; Robert Ramsey, hi.storian, and Wilfred Berls, previe1J.'S. Following lunch a musical program of piano, story and songs will be presented by Mrs. Ralph M. Tandoy;·sky, Auxiliary Plans Evening Pa rty . To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories. forms are avallable in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions ,..,ill be answered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Altrusa Clubs Dine Founders Fund Aided Laguna Beach and Newport equipment. Beach Altrusa clubs \vi\1 host The applicant must plan to a Founders Fund Dinner become self~mployed or enter the labor market withio one beginning at 5:30 P · m · year. Persons interested in tomorrow in the Balboa Bay infonnation may contact any Club. Altrusa Clu b member. The Santa Ana club \\'ill Dinner reseno-ations may be provide decorations for the made with Mrs. Ruth Denhart meeting of Orange County of Laguna Beach. clubs. Dinner will be served atl.--~-------.. 7:30 p.m. Philippine n a ti v e Dr. Carmen Reyes, an instructor at Anaheim High School. will bring exhibits a n d describe tht! Philippine people. She was a recipient of Allrusa funds which aided in her education. The Founders Fund is a national vocational aid project with the tide. Don't allempt to Mrs. J\.far!in C. Sheely, force issues. You get help NeYrport Beach city librarian, from special group, club or will present the program in organization. Make inquiries. the Newport Beach home of AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F'cb. Mrs. William Eytchison. OIAMONOS ANO ESTATE JEWELRY PUR;CHASEO The Veterans of Foreign established in 1952 to aid girls Wars Auxiliary 4043 is and women. Awards from $50'11.---------.ponso~"g d rt to $350 are given to womt!n for South Co11t Pl•i• ... , a car pa y to . 18): Some wishes are Co-hostesses a53isting Mrs. impractical. Revise g o a I . Eytchison for the meeting and Don't price yourself oul of luncheon to follow will be the competition. Your intuitive Mmes. Kenneth Smith, intellect can supply needed Leonard R. Hall. \Vl\liam answers. Social affair y;•ill Laing and Charles E. Kelley, prove stimulating. Guests are invit~·to aUend, which all lire wekome 00 assistance in entering the lri1tol •I th• S•n o;.90 Fwy. Tuesday, April 20, at 8 p.m. l-b~u~s71ne~ss~~w~or;;ld~~t~h~r~o;;u;;g~h~~c~,~·~"~M~,.~·~~·~·~O·~•~o•~•~~ Pinochle, canasta and bridge training or purchase o I will be played in the Com- munity Center. Se.al Beach, · wHh refreshrnonts following, , 126 1.: _J _ of c\.-el'!,e· PISCES (Feb . 19-March and lurther Information may 20): Flexible approach can ~ obtained from Mrs . achie\'e goal. One in position R1cha.rd Frank Ii n . mem- of authority wants to jive you hers.hip chairman for the a chance. Be receptive. Co-group. Co-<!hairmen for the oc-~ "1e iii casion will be Mrs. Lortlta Irvine and Mrs. Pearl Van Auk en. operate w i I h Sagltttrlu.s•Ji";;;-;;;;;; __________________ m;;I individual. Light touch is now best for success. I I PEDEN'U•~ BEGINS APRIL 1Sth Fantastic Reductions DRESSES FORMALS PURSES KIMBERLY KNITS PANTSUITS COATS JEWELRY WMPLI w-'91 111'40 to '70 357 South Coast Hlghwoy Laguna hach 494-1940 t Citation Wheel SWISS CHEESE ltf. l.lf r•. Special $1 ~? fliCt"7 t•!!!S· Sod Coast?lau '""'""' 1115"1 AT u.N 01GO lllSWA'I", COSTA M(\A P1t:M S4Q. ... I Jlll/11'1 Jiii/ii f/111/ lfllll I • ' I ' I ; ' DICK TRACY Mun AND JEFF I~ ~ ' .. HE GoES Ol.ITWITH ALL MY GIRLS.I LooK/ DIVIDE IT UP! ALL THE GIRLS You AND JULIUS cm DIVIDE YEH!O.K FIFTY- FIFTY/ JUDGE PARKER MOW t.\UOI TWE A.lOMA. YOll !:111'.ELL tS THE LON6Ell. i:A.MOllS ~E e..t.RSECllE l!'ECIPE C.ME'F'? S"llCE! LIKE 1 SAID, IT'S &EEN IM THE i:A.M.!LV i:DIZ EIGWT 6ENEllATIONS.' ~<'id~ j::".:\I;::::.::="'=--, PLAIN JANE f. ji r THEMUP- FIFl"Y· FIFTY/ A LITTLE WHILE t..GO "OU SA.It> SEVEN GEN- ERATIONS! 11 DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R .• POW ER I ACROSS l Ttirow off 5 Drclinrs 10 11 l~turt lronri which 1lcohol can be distilled 14 Hera ldic b11rin11 15 Uncanny la Roman t mperor 17 F o~ trat, tor ant: 2 wards 19 Small pand 20 Syn111a9ut 21 Ctastd Zl G8mt af chanct 26' "---Got F Ive Dollars" 27 Ar111tr5 30 Spirit JC Wlngt1 kt 35 Prdume in91td1P11t 37 Bt ill 31 Airport codt for La;O'i, Nigt ri 1 '' B1r91lns 1111in 41 S1111lt bo1 •Z Sltndtr finial 4) Conctrn!n9 4( Dttrtasr 911du1111 ' , I " " I " I :& ' ' ll " ' . >, -"'!'" ... l " ' ., I ' •S l inr intr1srtt1nCJ a cu1vr ii srvrral points 41 Onr who Wil lkS u11strad1ly 50 lntrrirct1on nl disgust 51 Oprn s~in lrs1ons 52 Nrw Yor~ lr~m ~6 Caprrs t.0 Arabian lather til --·-· liw. 2 words b4 Makr untidy bS An •ltoho l round 1n rssrntial !h11ds fib Hind part b7 Proof- rradrr's mark 61 Corrrcts &'j Bick of \hr nrck DOWN 1 G11mrnl 2 Oprra tGl!lpo~tl 3 lolr19rr 4 Kn19h\ of an 1nc ltot rtll91ous f1'11Utar1 ordrr 5 Strikr out m:. ' .. ti, " " ~ " .. -- ' -,_ 7 . " - ,, . Ytslrrday's Puzzlt Solvrd: " 4/13/71 It Lrgat mau~r 7 Small scrap of food 33 l\ncrstor :ib 6u;le call: 8 PastrJ itrm~ 9 0dSt Of1 U1t numbrr s r vrn Var. 39 E~ttnl of ability 40 Elalt 44 Kind of 10 Voufll} thi\d mo~lr \I Sp1m1ing 4& Month 11kr ·--·-< •B Follows 1 words \lowly 12 Footwear 49 Look af!er it em S2 r.ltmbe1::. af ]J Contain <1n NFL 18 619 ou?nt1ty. trim 2 words 53 Bord..-on 2Z Surp1ussrs 54 Rcwnan ·--- 24 Ottupalii.i 5S h1stltutrd 25 Sionilicaot Jtgat . signs practrdtl'lllS 27 \/alleys 57 Vldlaw 28 Run awiy 58 Fellow 2'1 F1H1damental 59 Wittir1rd 31 One of a '2 Numencal Mon9olia11 prefix ptop!t (.) Ht~YY 32 Climbing ~·ne dnnkr1 • . .w " " " ,. " 19 I " ·'1 ,. ·~ ,., ;r I I<' -" " -• " .. .. ~ " ,. -" ' .... , -" , .. .. '" .. PERKINS .. MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER YOU RE.ALLY CREAMED 1H.Al LUSM, PE66Y/ \IA'IERE'D "ri:lJ LEARt-1 10 lHROW THOSE TRICK PUNCHES ? PEANUTS ly Chestw Gould •01~os AAve. l'INOeRP1tllml;:nw1s. 'f\,Jl#5,llUll8U!,S<NICl<S, ETC.. "TW.AT MAK~ TMEM tOENTIFlABl.e.., Br Tom K. Rron By Al Sntlltl By Harold Le DoUll C>nY •• LIKE I PROW!a' TMANk •• \IOU WILL 6ET YOUR' VOU,StR ! ffWMP FOi. PA.TIENCE ! By Frank Baginski I WHEN A PEltSCN tteFUSES 1D Pl('( UI!; 1'AXl:S, oo we MAKE rr rouGH FOfC 111\1? U'L ABNa SALLY BANANAS GOllDO MOON MUWNS i ' f ' ANIMAL CRACKERS • TutMf<17, April U , 1971 Wlldl>Po THAT? ')bu GOT PLlllTY ;o .Al>MIRE ,A80UT YA• SWIVEL! DAILY l'ILOT Jf By Al Copp By Charles llanotti By Gus. Arriola By Ferd Johnlft '7t><J M~ µy Ti'<LENf. .. ~S ... ITISA G~f,AT GIFT. By Roger Bollen KNOCK ·tr OFF I • ... I.all g HEGIC DIC> l~E<J l'l~P 001'" W lo\IDOl.E IWlil!? By John Miles By MeM • • 00 STIANOf WORlO .. MR.MUM (<J o ::°?ERC\vf~L'· c lt:""'-I ".-·.: ::'· .. •• ,, u I ~ e-~ t,, DENNIS THE MENACE -= --JB lfl ~ I I II I -· - . i • 11 Was So Beautiful~ So Moch 'Chall~nge Says Blind Skier ASPEii, Oolo. !AP) -Som.um. Jtan Eymen I* llylnl down the slope1 just u tboucb be wtre back on the ,.,.,,,h di tum. J!Ut then he stopt and 11y1 to blm9tlf, "you must be auy, ~can't aee." Eymert, 15. wbo aklod Ior th< FNodt In 1151 and ti51. beads for tht surrounding mountains nurly every day, working constantly on a todmlqut Ior tht blind sider. "I don't care IC much about myself anymore," be takl, "b\lt 1 can aboot th< other blind and U I oan akl, they can ski too." r;ymere. who wanll lo "ltl with a triend, not a t1dlo or walkie-tarut, '' ii working M 1 S)'ltern whereby a atahltd leader akJa no more than Ihm feet ahead of hia blind follower, talklnl oons~Uy to maintain COfllact. "On right. oo riJht, on left, mol\ll a ht ad," lhe leader calls out. tracing the .,.....,. In lront ol th<m. "I 111"1 to do lhlnp so fast." Eymere llld, "Jt la bard for me to alow down. SomeUma t start Pflrlg like I have two eya an4 thto I •l<lt> and say to ll\fOOll.. 'YOtl must be crazy, you can't see.' " Eymere, suffering frtm diabetes, lost the sight in hla Jeft eye two yem 110 and wtnt completely blindi Wt 5eptember. ' '11 WIS IO depreSJtd thla: ,rinter," he uld, "not belnC abl• to akf," Then one day in Dec:l:m~r a frjend . Clrne to the lodge £ymere OW08 and asked hlm..to go aillng. "t told hlm ha .m1.11t be crazy." i:y..... u(d. '\Bid thet1 I put mi my nta, -and lt'wu so boauwur -ao much cballeoge. "Of course I was very acared that , ·first time and J sUU am sometimes - U. took gull." Eyme,. Uvea Jn Alpon wllb Illa wife; Wilhelmina, and lhe1r two young tom, Ollv<r Uld Qomhilquo. Two-yw-<>ld OUver 90metlinu Join. hta father for a run, bul Eymen: 11y1 Domin.lque, at 10 montbl, Ui ltllJ a bit YOUD& to at.art 1lt1ing. They came to Mpen from New Jersey for a vacation ill y"tan 110 and liked it so mocb they decided to make thelr home here. "I was so disgusted wb~ I knew t wu bllnd," E)'111en uld, "but I told myself tblt IJ what I have to do. lf l have to juat P"' through this Iile I wW shoot myselL l 11lilt to do what tYtr)'OM tlM doea.., Dodon bave told EynMrt fbere It a cllonoe be mJ&h• IOmeday be able to ... qain. But be bu decided .... " the time to learn to be blind. "I prtter to uy I om blind 1nd that ii It," be said. :Vance Earns Player Who Punched.Ref Suspended Angels Find --·.Start. ID• gJo h,· SANDIEGOIAPl-Theheartofth< thinlgameoftheWHLplayoUwies. "There II -no qu .. iion," WH~ Portland coach Gordie Ful!oway WU A Victim: Portland Buckaroos defen&e -Rick Madi£an wu suspended lndtflnitely for president Kinuttrtch .. Id. "He struck not present when the WHL presidet!.t Foley and Connie M•di&•n-bu heel punchingNewell,toockingtheolficiJ!.~ !t~::~~:~tie;"i:t ·hc:;u:~: banded down bl1 ruling but,San Diego's ·- iJoS ANGELES (AP) -F0< Riohle 1dft, Jtm Lefebvre and Sandy Vance, ~ finally paid off Monday night. ~ ~hie hit his first homer for the Loa: t\llgel~ Dodgers and Lefebvre, who ""11 much Of the first weU oi the ,...,.-"" the hooch, tripled across tht &:t$slv-e runs in tbe Doitgers' 4'-3 victory .-the Chioqo Qlbs Monday night. I -VanCe, the Mission V'ltjo resident who ·-re.placed BUI Singer in the atarting l rotation last ye41: when the Dodier ace Dodge r Slate Al._• ltFl 1 .. 1 DRltet• w.. 6'b9o °"'""' ft. ,.. Lou!• o.:.o..n n. SI. ltlulJ ''" "·"'· 7:$5 P.111. 7:SS '·"'- became ill. urned the victory by whirling a thre&-hitter inkl the seventh and tbeo announced he's ready to become a regular starter. "I don't feel I have to prove anything anymore," Vance said afterward. "I've pitched to major leaauers for two season! i now and I feel I'm ready to assume a : regu1ar spot in the rotation." : The manager, Walter Alston. agreea. : "He pitched very well," Alston said. "He I keeps the ball consU!tently down as well • as anyone ·on the staff.'' ! kfebvre wu used u a pinch hitter '.:only twice the first week. But when he got his first slart he tripled in the winning IUM. Los AnRtles wiU attempt to sweep the 1h9ft two • game series tonight IWlien Bill Singer, ().J, .takes his third shot : al his first vict«y, agaimt the Cubs' Milt i Pappas, 1-0. : Allen's blow cleared tM center field : fence .. and brought immediate reaction I from his Dodger teammates. : '"l'bat's the thing that ignited us," said : an enthusiastic Lefebvre. "Richie'! been ; hitting in tough luck all week. He's been : hilting the ball but not getting the hits. ~ Believe me. that Wu gnat to see." ; Allen walked slowly back to the dugout i after .the homer and tipped hiJ helmet to , the crowd. l "Thal homer wu far them end the rest j for the club.'' a mtlllng Allen aaid later. t ''I haven't been pressing but I'm not I exactly pleased with the -..ay I've started 1 the season," he said. "This is the first : season in which I feel the lam are really : pulling for me lo do well." I . Chicago had taken a 1-0 lead in the : third when Glenn Beckert singled home • J. C. Martin wbo had walked . : The Dodgers quickly tied it in their : half of the third when Steve Garvey socked hi! second home ron of the season into tbe right field pavilion off loser Ken Holtzman. RlcbJe walloped his homer in the . fourth and Lefebvre tripled home the ; third and fourth runs in the sil:th for a f.1 advantage . Rookie Jose Ortii doubled home Joe Pepitone in the seventh inning, bringing relief ace Jim Brewer out of the bullpen. The Cubs lost catcher Randy Hundley for an indefinitl!' period of time. ~ The ·Qiicago catcher; making his first • appean.nce o{ the season, suffered an ; Injury to his right knee pinch hitting in · the ninth inning. He was carried from the ; field on a stretcher and left immediately i for Chicago for further tests. - (H/(ACO LOS •HCILll •II r 11 Al ICtul,,g.,-, U f D 0 f Wll!o. H lerttrl, :1tl ' I ' I Mola. r1 1 wmiarru.. " ' o ' o w "••ker. lb S.11!0, Jtt 1 O O I It .Ari.... !t Peflllor .. , ID l 1 0 I W 0.Yls, t i C•lll!«!. r! ) f I I lk.clt\ls. c H-i.v. p11 I I I I LWl.Ovrt. 2t1 Ottl1, cf ' 0 I I ~~Y, Jll Mff"lirl, c 2 1 I I lt .. 1111, ti H.ar•tt1, Ph 1 I I I Vlf'ICI, 11 H1111-. p 2 • t I I,._, II l•Hdl!Mn, 1111 0 I I I coi..-...110011 Tfi.11 )0 J ll J Toltll ' 111 r ~Al ' 0 1 • f G 0 I f I 1 0 • I I I 0 I G 0 1 I I I J I 1 1 J l I I ) • ' 0 J • I I I I I I ll01 -111-ll OQI 101 OCJi -• IP'H1tr11tllf0 ....,_, CL ... t) 1 ' ' 4 1 1 ~ ' • • • • I \l"-.i (W,1.0i .. l/J ! 2 l 4 J .,...... t·lll 1 1 1 • ' ...... -lrt~r Ill -M1rtln. Tlmt -1·0Q "atflflf'IC• -u.«11. eliminated by suspensions for· tortli;ht'1 cold. Foley was suspended for two gamea sUct.,. , _,,... Mu McNab, who was, saw lt a1 1 Western Hockey League playoff-game for throwing his stick in the direction ·ot ; The duraUon .of Madt&_lll'• suspension vindication. with Sao Diego. Newell d.rlitr in the" contest: will bt reviewed at the annual WHL "In Madlgan'a case," he uld, "I doo't The 5-foot-9, 180-pMUJd Madigan wa1 The statw or Madigan was DOt bo.t:rd of governors RMion next montb, think t could have faced our players if the key man involved in a Monday night immediately determined. Carlos Bernier, Kinuewicb said, adding that be did nol 1here was any other decision. Y~ try lo news conference, at w h I c h WHL a baseball player in the Pacific Coast arrive at the dtcisiops liptly. teach them thal the one thing you pre.!ident Eugene Kinuewicb lJIDOWtCed League in the 19509. wai ltupended for 'i'hese actions art lfle.\..result ,of what absolutely do not do is toucb an official." the su.spenslons. an e:ntlre season because of a heated has truthfully l)ttn a very hard day for Kln.-wich also ruled against Portland Tbe action ·'CIJl\t after two separate incident with an umpire and that penalty, me," he said. ''But a 1ame oftlcial must in the incident t:bat had provoked Madi- Incidents ln¥olvio& the players and or a 1Uffer one, remained a pos&µ>llity be able to perform his function without gan to come Gff the bench. draw a mi&- rtferet Dave Newell Sunday nicbt ln the for Mad.i&an. fear o! physical ~·" · conduct and alug Newell. , Ul't Ttl.,.,_19 DODGER BILL RUSSELL GETS IN A WHISKER AHEAD OF THE THROW TO CUBS SECOND BASEMAN DON KESSINGER DB's Paul Wiiiiams Former Area Track Ace Sets Sights on Olympics Touching all the bases on the 1porta beat : Paul Wllll1m1, UCLA • wllb 1t'bo prepped al Hanllngtom Beach Bq-'i, 11 appart.ntly on hit ••Y b1ck from lDJurlea what with bl1 J :5%.4 11ain1& S&uford Saturday, • He placed ffCODd, • lellUI Of • teamd btbind lhe winDCr, ud looked wwaally • ----- offlcl1l and bead basketball coach at Costa Mtu Hl&tl has his foal ti • 1Un1 - or II It a can. He was bJt by 1 bail wbU1 1mplrlnr a recent iame and It now weighted down wltb tb1 plaster of parl1 wrap job on bis left foot. George MacCall, former pro tennis magnate who owned ~racts for such guys as Rod I.Aver, Roy Emerson, Andres Cimeno. Pancho Gonzalez. etc., has moved to Ole Oran;t Coast area . MAX MILLER WHITE WA.S H lle's hanging his hat in Laguna Beach's tmerald Bay. Mill Q • Kini Attl"ey of Corona dei Mar b" I . er · ruts . ------- I 1troag the laat 330, coaaiderl.n& Ills lack of rectnl bard work. Williams tQld Ute column that ht'• Woking Olympie Game1 and '4t'OUld like to ao for tbe l,Mt meters nei;t year. Pau.I allt co10de1 tbat he'll be 1etUn& married In late 1ammtt or early fall -a tlrf he met al UCLA. With the Angels and 0 o i:I & e r I floundering and the Lakt:rs heina; m1nhandled by Ml?waukee: in the NBA playufls, the past week of Southland pre sports has been a bllmmer. Emll Neeme, amplre, b 1 1 k e t b a J l flUl)lfled fer the Paa Arn Games !rials in '" Vtrglala April :SO.May I by long jumpin1 IJ.4-t. laat weekend lD a meet ln Lonf Beacb. , Her leap 11 lbe lhlrd beat iD Utt nation 1 Wa year. Sbe ala& won the 100 16 11.1 and ••chored tJte •iuiat ue rea.1 aeam. Sorry lo see Costs Mesa High faotball coach Mat Miller leaving the area. ·Tue. guy tried to build a program and lnslill pride at a place where winning tootball hu been unprecedented, And from whit 1-uw the past two years he might hive accomplished the goal of having a winner ln anothtr aePOn or ttwo. But the chance to Jive whrre JOU can still see pine lrttS, brealhe clean ab' and not be ryri down by traffic ia aornethina you can I wish a guy out of. Mesa Grid Po st By GLENN WHITE CH !"'-OtllT llli.t Sl!tfl Max Miller or Cosla Mesa will become tho -..! Newport Harbor lllgh School Dlltrlct held Vanify fooll>llI ooach ID quit his job4hb ,.ar, tho DAILY PILOT learned exclusivelj loday from highly lnformed sourets. Newport Harbor's Ernie Johnson re1i1ned in January. The 31·year-old Miller Is eipected to take a combined football-bueball head coaching pO!t ln Northem Galifornla tomeUme Later this month. Hia succeuor al Costa Mtsa has yet to be aelacted. Patterson lnke Pro Contract; Golliday Dies CLEVELAND (AP ) -The Cleveland Cavaliers Monday signed UCLA center Steve Patterson to what team president Nick Mileli tenned a ''big league contract" Patterson scored 29 points in the NCAA championship game two weeks ago to lead the Bruins to their filth atraij:ht national basketball title. The &-foot-9 pivotman wu the second pick of the Cavaliers in the National Basketball Association draft. He averaged 12.9 points and 9.8 rebowids per game during his senior year. • Sprinter Dead CHJCAGO -Services will be Thursday for Jim Golliday, 39, former Northwestern University track star and coholder of the world 100.yal'd dasb record. Golliday died Saturday nlaht of pneumonia. In 1955 Golliday equalled the world record of 9.3 seconds for the 100 dash lo the Blg Ten Relays at Northwest.em. He also wa.s clocked in 9.3, but with an aiding wind. iii the Big Ten conferenee meet at Ohio Sta!e two weeks later. The following winter, Golliday 1et • world indoor record of 6.0 for the SC..yud dash in a dual meet against WJSCONin . • Gabriel D hJOrcetl Power Hitters on Way Out? Thus Miller will brine to a close two aeuona at thl Muatang lnatltulion. Eacll campaign ahowed a 2-7 record. But· that rather cold 1tatistic did not •hc!w the lm_..J pro""" Miller WU ttYina to fl\11 toceU>er .. 'ftlls temlna: ~ may nnect lt., however, W~ with Wo uperienced quarte~. (Pot Kalama and Flip Darnell) jf4ritng a mercuilal set or backs. LONG BEACH -The wife ol Los .Angeles Rama quarterback Roman Gabriel filed suit for .divorce Monday In Superior Coort. ch"llng irTeoo11tllable differences. • Ra .... Get · Mockbee LOS ANGELES -Mod drwu Eart<II M1ckbee has brought his wardrobe to Hollywood where h~ hopes ll will be apprt<:i•ted. ATLAN'l'A !AP) -Sparky And•"""· manaitr of the power-laden Cincinnati ' Reds, foresees a dectlne In lon1 ball : hiltert and a rise in the ltnportanct of ~ quk.k and q:ile players. '!I firmly believe you ~·orft set: too many pllyers hlttlng 40 or 45 homers in the tutuN,.. Anderson 111<1 In an • interview. With the fncttase of new and I lvftr boUparu, "yoo -111 need a : supenu.arn to blC tblt many. No one QR • conailUDtl1 -1 -ban •is fo.t to >en or rigbt cm&# Md that'• wt111 it'• · Pinc to llkc." ' He said U\at most ol the: National '--be.ague teams alrel41 have parks where bome llill blllin& la IOtl&b-They are i Cincinnati. Loa Anaelea, Hou 1 to D. l'ltllburgh, Phlladtlpllia, Pllllbu11h, Sao Fr1ncisco, San Otero and Ntw York. "You 'll 3te mOll teams goln& with just two power hitters," AnderlOn conUnued. "There'll bt mart guys like Ralph Garr of Atlanta: and Bill Ru.uell of the Dodgers.·• Andt.l'lK'ln m11de the prtdlcUona aft.tr being wed If lie thoosht that Reda catcher John'Btnch, the NaUonial Lta.iue home run kin& last year wllh 451 11 rt:ally e1pabl• or producJna 40 or more home ntnJ a ye1r. "John will 1tt hbi 2.5, 30 or U,'' Anderaon 1n1wered. Even ll<ncb blm>eU hu upr.....i doubta of Illa ability to become one o! the current l'J'f:lt home run hitters. Be51dts Bench. the Reds have Tony Peru who hit 40 bomers ln 1970 and Lee May who clubbed 34. Anderson said that lhe importance of the quii:k and agile players i1 lncrtuing on A1lro Turf oc artlR~lal surf1et1 in many parki -six now baW! tt In the NaUonal League. He uJd It will be neceSNJ')' to sacrHicr the 1low, powerful innelder for 1 quick man who can make plays on t~ faster surface. "The Dodgera have a head start on ~~ryone here," he said. "'Mley've tot a bunch or alhletes ovtr there." tnchtded among the latter are Rick Dtsmet, Bob Bomboy and Mason Hungerford. Also •mong the nlfly prospects ii Jon Marcblorlalli. But the new opportunity a.wailing MUJer will deny trim a ch1nce to soothe the many fl'tlltralions th1t Costa Mesa COJichel and playtr1 undt.,_.'tnt in the put two seuona. An lncrtdlble wavt of lnjurtu ripped l &ood Mustang 1qu•d In 1989. Yet th e Orttn and While sUU hune tough, losing htartbreakcrs to Newport Harbor (t-7 ), Orlllte tM). Fountain ValleJ (M) tnd Corona del Mar 02-0), The former 1tfinfte.90ta Viking deftnllvt COfl)ttback WU signed Monday ti, the Los Anse1es Rams as a free agenL e Ef'ielcso• 0 Mt MILWAUKEE -Keith Erltklon of the Lot Angeles La ken. "Who m I 11 e d Sundly'a NaUonal B11ketbaJI Alaocllltlon playoff same against Milwaukee becau1e of itomach pain•, w.u listed ln ut11factory condition Monday nltht after abdomlnal surgery. · Ph)talcims ·11td Erlctl"aon will bt hOlplllll&ed at leu:t a Wtek. Sox's Wood CHICAGO (AP) -An old lmucldeball pitcher failed to fool a limpinl old pro hitter· and it coat Wilbur Wood of the Chicago White Sox • potenUal two.bitter vlctory in his first start in almo3t llh aeuoos. Bullpen ace Wood and the Pale Hose beJd a ).1 lead with two out in the eighth over the CalUornla Angela Monday until AtlfJel S&ate AN .-911 ltMl'C mt" IUrll 1, -A"*-li at Clllcffll 11110 a.m. S::at '·"'· 11 :11 I Jn. !Ufll IS -...... Is It K-Cl,., "''U If. -AN>a!t •I Ml~I Jlm Fregosi bobbled off the bench 11 a pincl>hltter with .. appannt banniw Ansel numer-oo first base. Siar shortstop Frogoal, benchod by an aillrlg hip and bide:, took an 0.2 count and then slaihed Wood'• nnt tnuckler down the left field line for a two-bager scoring the runner from tint to tie the acore at 2- 2. Wood, yield.int: only one unearoed run on two hits until that point, .,.as replaced by Vicente Romo. Next up, Sandy A1omar 1troi:ed a single acoring Oyde Wright., pinch-runner for Frego11i, from aerond to aaddfe Wood with a 3-2 df:Ceat. The Jut time Wood started for the Wbite Soi wu Aug, 10, 1961, when he also lost 3-J to the Oevtland Indians. Since then, until yuterday,_ the flutter· balling: lefty appeared In aome ~ a;ames u a reliever. "It wu a bad knucltle ball 1 threw Fregosl," said Wood 11 he munched a cigar at his locker. "I got hipl on• real good knuckler 1trike fur an 0-2 count. Then, I thought only one thing, I'll strike him out on the nei;t pitch. "But it wu up high and he rammed it \ down the left field line. He just aa easily could have popped it up aod innint: wtu over." Why not a wMte pitch with an 0-J count on a dangerous hitter? Wood bad atrul!k out 8iX and his only walk was a costly one to Jim Spencer leading off the eighth. "What is a knud.lebaU pitcher going to waste," grinned Wood. "My kind of pitcher doesn 't try any waste ball. I'm one kind of pitcher who c.an't second guess himself." Wood, who had a ~13 record last season strictly in relief, will remain In starting rotation until Joe Harlen recovers frorn knee surgery. Sox manager Chuck Tanner wasn't discouraged by hla club's third atraight setback, despite. Wood's fine performance and sok> homers by Rick Reichardt and Jay Johnstone. CAL."'OllllflA CH!CAOO all r llftil all r ~Al ,.IO,,,.r, 2tl 4 I 1 lltldYrcl, 11 4 I 0 0 lwry. ct f I I JOl'lmlent, ct S 1 1 I A.JOllt1!4n, ff ' I Arlllre'W5, 2tl 1 0 I O T.c.ori10111~, r1' I Mtllon, 3tt J ti 0 0 McMulltn. 3tt 4 0 M11r1t11, lb I 0 0 0 kftncer, 111 1 o CM1y, 111 J t o o ltllPlll. lb 0 1 llltk:l'llnll, " 4 I 2 I O'tri.to, 11 l D W.Wlllllllnt>, rf t I ti I Terflorg, c t I Ml)'!, Ill\ I I 0 I Cow..,,1111 11 Alv••ldo.11'0000 Mt1Sa1, c I I Sll'OUO. r1 I I G 0 lt.M1y,p 01 Eo-n.t Jiii l.Ali.n, p I I HttrtnlfW1, C I I 0 f ltutr.111'1 10 Wood,p JOOO E.F1•!1tr, o I o Jtomo, " I o o o ' F•~I. pr. , e I I MclC!n~v, .,... 1 • .., I Wr)g/11, II' 0 I 0 0 civ-.11 0001 Tlfl!>-. '1 I 4 I Tol•I• JI I ' 1 C•ll!Ontlt 000 100 02'I -ll c111<:1go ooe no ooo -1 I! -Jllol'lmtMM, c. Ml~'. 01" -C1llfllnllt !, Clllc190 I. LOI -C1J110rn•• 1. (Ilk.a .. t . 11 - •1rry. '•toe"ll. Mlt -lttkNnl! 111, J-ltont 12). SB -W. Wllllt,,... S -ltk,,.nl . ll"H•r11t •1l0 1·111 I t 0 ) I J.!/l 1 ' t 1 • 2 10011 1 1 0 I I 0 1·t/JJJ21• l ·l/JlltOt Top·rated Netters Knock Off Ri vals JOHANNESBURG , South Africa (AP) -The top.ranked tennis playera In the men's and women's sini1H advanced Mond•y to the quarterfinals of the South African national open. No. l seeds Ken Rosewall and Margaret Court, both ol Awtralla, joined No. 2 seedl Bob Hewitt of Soulh _A.frlca and Vlr&inla Wade ol Britain ill the elite eight. Rosewall diapoaed of S o u t h African Collen llffs, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2 while Mra. CourL defeated Sweden's Una Vattno, 1.a. 6-%. Hewitt 'fCKllhl b1ck to defeat South African P're• McMiiian. 4-8, a.a. 6-2, 6-4, S.l and ·Mila Wide euily overtime Maraaret Price, at.> of South Africa, 6-2, 7-6. Qlff Drytdalt •u a 7-4i, 1-4i, M~t . 6-3 victor ovtr Ray Ruffels and ts Olmeno of Spain overcame Jan Jey 7~,M1 M. Fred Stolle, l\ay Moore, NlckJ Pill' and Owen Dlvidton f'GUnded out Mon.fay's men survlYOta. , Stnlle wu 1 S..S, 7.f, 6-1 victor _,,·er Dorok Sd>meder: Moon lmocked IC> 11 Rebert Maul M. 7~, 2·6. 6-2; Pllic defeated Nikki Kalogerpopulos 6-2. s.t. + 8, 8-4 and Oavtdlon wa1 a !-&, S.l 7.f 8-3 victor over Bob Carmichael. ' ' " I nterscholnstic Program Deterrent to Social Ills 'lbt value ot lnterscbolastic athletic com. j petition to the high sebool level ls something . 1 that has been bandied about since the first '1 touchdown was recorded. l And the recent lrtnd by taxpayers at the polls pours mou salt into the wounds or its supporters by turning d o w n rneasuus to keep key school p('Ojectst including athletics, • Jn '°me"·hat of a nervous state: ~J J\fajor problems exist in the Huntington ' .. Beach School District where many coachu ----ROGER CARLSON ------ fin{! ute~ves, along with their fellow tea· cbersi In jeoparJJy of losinC 'their JK>jilions beciti:sie' Of lack of funds within the school di.stricL ". And the Huntington Beach situation " Isn't unique with similar problems in Santa "' Ana and elsewhere. "· Afany of the voters who are nixing re- :·cent measures aren't so much against alb· • leUcs as they are prottd.ing their modest ri· fun4S. '· And some of the voters' reasons seem ·'.1 valid. H Like: FiKed incomes with no increase in aight, dw~dling or non-existent paychecb or endange~ed jobs. . Here, ho,,..·ever, are a few facts in re- ... gard lo athletics and a possible perspective .... on the ''alues of competition that might oth. ' erwise be overlooked. ;: A recent tw<rfold study regarding the drop out and drug abme rate in New York ti• City clearly indicates: that the interscholas· ~.~tic program is a positive deturent to some -:1 of the current school problems. a:. A Cleveland report coocluded that the -= number of athletic dropouts was l.Z perctnt "" while the overall dropout rate in that Ohio ;, city is 1 st.aggerlna 1~.a perw1t for male students. The New York survty was similar with athletea eopplng out at 1 t.S r•te while non· athletes were (and •re) leaving at almost 1 ~ pen:ent clip. Both surveys magnify the holding power o( interscholasUcs -whatever the part!CU• Jar sport. The lou of economic strength lo the in· dividual. the community and the nation la slaj!gering in regards to the dropout rate and the drug scene stems to go hand in hand with tM problem. -Rtsufts.o( the Nellf York study tn tt:gard to dnig abliie revealed 13 known addicb out of 10,MO athletes -whlch bolls down to a ,0012 percentage, a figure exceptionalJy low when compared with the general lttnd. On . occasion lbere have been reports of minor drug abuse within the scholastk: pro- grllDlJ -such as pep pllla to stimulate the . individu41·s performance on a given oc-- cas1on. The Southern California interscholastic football coaches1 associaUon. however, has gone on record condemnlng the u11e of drugs for the purpose o( gaining an advantage. Their resolution statts: ". , . that the members of the Southern California Inter· scholastk Football Coaches Association do hereby condemn the use of drugs to artificial· ly Improve athletic performance. "Furthermore, the membership of lhls association urges coaches, athletic directors, trainul. pbyslcl.ans, parents, and athJetes to e:s:ereise all possible restraints and con· trols in order to keep interscholastic athletics a unique and positive educational txper. ience . "Finally, this membtrship makes 1 fer· vBit appeal to congressional leaders and all authorities in key leadership position to work toward the control and distribution ol clan· gerous drug$.•· Somehow, in this day of moon visits, and riots, it seems incredible to this comer thal prep athletics is jeopardized Jn any dimen· sion. ·" '" " " Y Sportsman Award Presented to Gorman South Cage Nominees Announced ·'· ·1• <'.I, Newport Beach re Iii de n t Owen Gorman, 41, has Ws received the first annual 6 outst.anding sportsman award rs!' from the Orange Coast Y~1CA. '"· !lllr A father of two, Gorman received the award lrom Bob '' ' Hoffman, chairman of the ~·11.' YMCA Physical Education "" 1'.::ommltlee. .... Gorman is the record holder ~·'• for the 10,000 meter run in the 3•·-senior division and competes ,.J regularly in marathon ~aces. Jll He has been invited to rn participate in the senior bn< Olympics in ~tunich in 1972. , He coaches fitness groups '" 111 for the Orange Coast YJ\tCA. ., .. Swbn f'l11ab ' 1 Five final events a r e !'l" scheduled Thursday when ... ,. Golden West College defends t ita Southern Califo rnia Conference swimming •. champion.ship at Rio Hondo ' College. Prelims of the 50 free start ~ 'Thursday's acUvily al 3 with , the 500 fret. 200 indo, 50 free c ~ and 400 medley relay finals to ; ; fol101v. • • Events scheduled Friday ~ ~ include the 200 tree. one.meter ~ . diving, 200 butterfly, 200 free , " . 100 breaststroke, 100 back. 400 indo and 800 free relay. Friday's action starts at 2. Saturday's program begins at 10 a.m. with the following events : 100 free. three·meter diving, 1,650 free, UJO free , 200 back, 200 breast. 100 fly and 400 free relay. Rustlf!r Ba11quf!t Golden West Co 11 eg e's basketball a n d wrestling teams will be honored Thursday at an a w a r d s banquet at the Gold Anchor, 15070 Edwards Ave. in Huntington Beach. The event begins at 6:30. The Rustler basketball team caplured the Southern California Conference title and finished third in the st.ate tournament in Santa ~taria. Coach Jim Stephens of the South AD-star basketball team has annoonced hl.s 25.man list of candidates for the 6th annual edition of the Orange CIA!nty civil war at Orange Coast College June 19. Stephens has four nominess from his Marina Viking team v.·hile Newport Harbor, San Clemente, Santa Ana Valley, Santiago and Tustin have a pair-each. The contingent will be pared down to a dozen for the game. The roster : L•nc• l!ln1 llol11 Ci••noel, Mark Cirl .. 11 ICororo1 dtl Mtt), 0111cJr l rl!l1n (Co111 Mow). 11111 f1*noo.i IEd!-1. G1•v Df'elll !EH1"'!l1j, flt~ Sc.1'11,illt CFoo!hllfJ. Gtor1e Glrbor (Founr1ln v1111y), 01n llell CC'i1rdtn Grov1 ) Wit f~om•• (111JrrllM!on ll••c~l. Jell St. Cl1lr !L1 Oulnl1), Khoo l11lrd, 1111 McGulrt ,Jill l uff, """' Tllum1 (~rln1 ), Joll.ri K1vner, T1,., Youn1 ~Nt'*POr! 11t•borl, J•rrY M1r11 (P'eclllct!, S•eve K1lot1, Cr•l• A"O•r"'" (S•n (lemen111. Jlrn Kr;e1, Kermll OllO'I CS1nt1 A~• V1Ueyl. 01u1 0!11. llodcY 1110 IS1"ll1JO), P1~I l:rlllOWllr.J. Don Sw11,.. IT~llln), Coast Area Calendar WHEN TO USE 'TOO llUCH' CLUB When makin1 a shot to • green that Is closely auatdtd by h1z1rds, consider the con· $equencesof hltting1poorshot. A typical example is shown in the illustration. Theshotcalls for I ton& iron Qr wood end the cr•en has sand bunkers on the left side and .in front. Unless you strike the shot squarely, 'it probably will finish in the: sand or, at best. short of the ereer). f sufaest uslna: 1 k>n1erthan normal club for this 1hot •• ,. say a 2·iron instead of• 3-iroo. Give ypurseff 1 chance to carry the h1zards even if you tnb·h;t th• shot sliihtly. II yoU should hit the ~II squ1r1lyi It will still '5it down quickly and hold the• 1r11n ($H 1rrow). •• ttnHAft..._.,._ Rams Announce Rugged '71 Slate Coach Tomm y Prothro's baptism into the National Football League as head coach or the Los Ange"s Rams wlU find the ex.UCLA B r u i n July t i -l'lou•IOn ti Cent.,,,, Ollio Cl ,.m. ecT1 lt.ul . • -0.Uet II CohPVm (l :t Sl I.ill. IJ -C!•~lelld •t Col!tt'\I"' (l;OSI .. ..... tf.....lt1IOlf'I 11 Oellljofld 11:00)0 1t.u1. 1' -Nrw Ent141"" II Fo>1bol'o. t t hing •t ·Ith the M1•1 ll ·IO £01) men or ma c w1 s w ,..,1: 1 · _ s1~ D °'" 11 co1"..,"' best in the busineas dur ing a ~ «•;:,>,, , _ 5.., Fr•""'K• 1, coli••"'" rugged 1971 schedule releastd 11~115~ s.ioitt• 1o tlleM•. today by the league office. L•A011• OAM1s After playing an elongated SeP'. 1• -11 Ntw or1e1n1 o :oo CDTI seven-game pre-season s1ate S•Pt, :i. -•u•nt• •t co111wm n :ooi Oc!. l _ Cl>lctto 11 Coltt•u,.. 11:00/ including the annual Hall of 0c1. 10 -11 sin F••nc:I•«> 0,001 Oc!. 11 -11 j1,ll1nt1 (1 :00 EDT) Fame game in Canton, Ohio 0c1. J~ -G•-&•v tt c<11111um (1:00) July 31 agains! the Howton Oct. 11 -M11m1 1r C<111~eum n :OGJ fiow. I -11 111n1mor• lt:oo EST) Oilers, the Rams ope.n the Nll'I. 1~-•• oe1ro11 n:oo EST) Nov. " -$1n F••nChCO II COl!tWm league season in New Orleans 0 :001 Nov, 2! -1! 01!111 C2~)0 CST! Sept. 19. Dtt. ! -Now Orlo1ns 11 Coll1oum ·~ I ff 11:((1) Five Of the el5ul p &yo OK. U -W1!11 n1ton •I Ca1!1eum teams or the 1970 season are t'O~. 1, _ ,, ~1ttbi.lr;n n:oo ESTI on the Ram sc hedul e, including the world champion Baltimore Colts and a first· ever mtellng with Don Shula's ~tiami Dolphins of the American Conference. Not only do the Rams face the world champs, but they mtet the Super B c w 1 runnerup, the N a t i on a I Confere~ kingpin O a 11 1 s Cowboys, the San Francisctl 49ers (twice) and the two at large playoff performers, the NFC's Detroit Li<1ns and Miami. In one la.day stretch in NOV!.mber, the Rams face 1 murderous four.game slate as follows: Baltimore, Detroit, San Francisco and Dallas In that order. Only the 49er game is at home. Tut~day, Aprll 13, 1971 DAILY '!LOT J 7 European 11th Annual Elims Q alif" ' 0 ymg Draws Top Field Abandoned · RIVERSIDE -The f:uropean system ol qualifying cars for professional sports cac races in America will be abandoned" with the upcoming L&M Grand Prix at Riverside. April 23--2$, Sports Car Club of America ·racing director }lank Loudenback bas announced. Loudenback s a i d the European system, w h i c h called for open qualilying with every car JOll the track being timed sepera\ely for each lap run. will be replaced by a system similar to those used in botb stock car ra cing and Indianapolis racing. Qualifying for the l.&~1 Grand Prix at Riverside . the first race of ttie 1971 L&t-.1 Continental formula s 0 o o series, will be held Friday and Saturday. April Z 3 • 2 4 . Loudenback said the new system will be used for all SCCA pro races this year, including the Canadian· American Challenge Cup and Trans·American Sedan Series. ''Each driver will have one opportunity during e a c h qualifying session to set his W I th its strongest lineup mirez of Anahthn ('SJ, '8') ever. Lhe lllh a11nual 'Vest anJ C<>sta Mesa 's Roy T•ylor Coa s t Mutch Game (t967) . Eliminallons gets under way San Diego 's (Ao.'Eayk>t, "ho Monday, May Z4 al t<.ooa won the Border City version or Lanes in Costa Mesa. the same tourney last yt111 ls The event. held each filso entered. accordint to Monday n i g h t • culrninatcs Stoeffler. Labor Day. Lurking in the wlngs art •·we have the fiuest field in nearly all of 1970'1 kip the history of the Elims," sa)'s finishes including D a 1 1 tournament originator and Pohll 's Clyde Lacher (thlrd), director Dick Stoeffler . "with Carson's Walt Block (fourt;h), the potential of the men from Benny Becker ot Ganlen. top to bottorli creating (sixth ) and Doug Jobnlon of probably the m6sl powerful Long Beach (seventh). contingent ever to bowl a A record $8,500 in prii.e tournament l I m i t e d to money is being offered this Southland shooters." year with addlttorial monies Back to defend his htle will a\'ailable to the champion bt San Bernanlino southpaw when he meets the winners o! Cary Madison. l' 0 r mer the Elims held in Sacramaito. winners include Lamar Keck San Diego, San Frai:imco and or Reseda ('IS3-'69J, Bob Ra· possibly Porlland. fastest lap," Loudenback s.aid.1;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~. "He will be timed for three consecuUve rast laps each day , and lhe fastest overall will INC 0 ME TAX determinf his s t a r t I n g position." Al Indianapolis. drivers get one chance witb four laps and in stock car racing, they have one chance with the best of two laps counting. Loude.oback s a id the deci!ion to change qualifying procedures was ba s ed primarily on the lack of drama created by the European system. · With drivers pulling on and off the track at their own discretion, he said, spectators were confused by what was going on. Further, no one knew which lap was fastest until several minutes after it had been set. • • IOU l\.15HHOUUN DI! IAll:lll.A e W 1 f.it•t limt lo 1olv1 vou• I~• p•obl1rn1 new. • E•ltn1ion~ for liling •••iltblt. e SS up. Gu1,1nl11d wo,k-Y1t• 'Rou"d St rvic1 BUSHHOUSEN & ASSOC. 474 E. 17th St. CfllO Mn- ..-2.1111 11141 .... ll•d. H11•tl ... I•• h.ct 147·1121 Throw in an Oct. 31 date with Miami at the Coliseum and the Rams will be playing five consecutive games with 1970 playoff participants. WIDE Flt. MUSTANG, COUGA,., CAMARO, FIREBIJllD, CHEVY II Incl min)' olMrw 2rors44 Ex-coach George Allen will bring the Y.'ashington ~· skins lo the Colisewn for a Monday night TV game Dec. 13 as one of seven regular season home games. There are four preseason outings in the Coliseum giving Rams fans 11 home dates. AU Coliseum games except the Monday night encounter "'ilh Washington will start at l o'clock. General Calibrated" Jumbo 780 'II• BUICK SPECIAL, CHARGER, TEMPEST, f·l5, TORINO, IMPALA. IEL·AIR snd m•ny othtlr• S!z• f71·14 & F7a.1$ tuti.l•tt blaekwtll pJu1 S2.55 tnct s2.e1 .fed. Ex. Ttx .,., 1lrt O•IJ J!.OG 111tt1 ''' tire fer . htlit-Strl,. Wlllt1w1lli! Soie E7S.l' 11.1b9ln1 blaclrw1H plut S2 35 f!HI. Ex. Ttl Pl' tire O•IY $3.DD 11tt1 per lift fer twiit-Stript Whlt1w1t11! fill MONTE CARLO, BISCAYNE, CAPRICE, CATALINA, FUAV, MONTEREY •nd insny ohn • ' ... , Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEA.GUI!: East DIYlsion AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L I J DEAN LEWIS fT!C>IYIOJr@I • GLASS·BEL TED for long mll•1ge • POL VESTER CORO BODY tor strength e'l New York Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia Chicago Montreal W L 3 J . ' 3 ' 2 3 ' 5 J 3 ~'est Dlvlik»I W L Pct. .750 . fRI .500 .400 .286 ·"" CB GB l San Franchsco G , Atlanta Houston 5 ' P<'t. .714 i 2 . ,fil:7 s J .6'..'j .129 .'21 .200 '' ., l 'i"' San Diego •n• Loi Angeles "" ... Cincinn1l1i .1 • 3 • f I 2 ! J ' .. ;.·. ••• s ,,,, ' :i1 .. , --" rf!UIX ·~ . ..,. !' MM>1llr't llt11rt11 5t ll Fr1MllO S, kn Ditto 0 "Ith~ I, Pllllldflpfol1 ), 11 liwilnt1 Clnc:ln"•ll t. "!lenl• J SI. Loult ), liWtlOft I LM Anfflft I, 'hl(tfO 3 TMIY'f 0-t ,lltibu""' 1W1Mltr 1·01 ti Phll tdtl1>hl1 1 S~~rt 0.1). nltM HoutR• (lnllllllllm t.fJ 11 St. Loult fl e<r.z . ., CJIKlnlltll (Q;ul"tt o-t) ,, ""'"" IJ1ro;1 0 1,, 111111t Cl!l,_ CPtlllNI 1-41 11 LM N!ltln !51"9t• •11. "i.11' Ntw Y-IG,ntrv 1)1) 11 ~II (II~ ''tl ... ...,.. ............. PfllMllrtll et P'f'lllldtt.ltl1. 11/t~I Hoallilll 11 k" l'r111Clt<t Cl11ein..tt1 1t A!11nt1, 1111111 ii Lowlt "Liii ..,,,.,ltl, ni.111 (Ill<-11 1111 D .... , "llM ..... V-II MifotrHI Baltimore Cleveland \Vashington New York Detroit Boston ~linnesota ~1ilwaukee Chicago Kansas Ci1.r Oakland California 3 I 3 I ' 3 ' 3 ' 3 \\'esl Dlvlslo11 W L ' 2 3 2 3 3 3. ' J • ! I M-•Y'\ lluvl!I t ttlfornl• J, CMuto ? Oal!lt...r S, M!!w111ktt o 80110n ro. w11hln91an 1 Mlnntio!1 ?. K•n111 CTI¥ t ,_..,,, 01rno Pct. .800 .750 .129 .<00 ·"" ·"" Pct. .1167 .800 .soo .129 ·'" .333 GB 2 ' 2 2 , . ' GR M1 .. rwt11l1 1111n M l " Klfl•ll Cllv !HHIYl'Ht I·~), 11/o"I c .ic1•M !l 1w I n 11 M11w1ulo:tt t~•rwot.s OOl (1!ltot•l1 !~rtmlttl t-1) tt Clllc.llO !l r11'· It~ IJ.41 .._,,ton !SlfC.11 ~I It IVt\lllnt"" fMcLllft l.IJ, nJ9M 11111mor1 !Cutllfr \f> 11 ci..,..•tnd (Mc:O..,..u 0-0) ~'-"' CH!"91t I Nl~•a 0 11 ti Nrw """" tl1M1..-•n ¥111'fOMWiY'I Ot,,,.1 c1111o,..11 " K1~w1 c1,.,, n<•ni 0•~111111 •r Ml~"-'' "'•lwllkM '' Cflfc-.o l•lllmart II Clt'ttl'""' IOU,.. ot ¥11t\tllntt,.., 1tl,1t1 0.lrtM 11 H .. Yort; l ... iiiii ... _ ... iiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-...... .-..... ______ iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;. ____ J -.. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 .. '. < APRIL .SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $3093 14'4 S14111. R•tlie. H11t1r, -4 •f"•tl. :r1J•O Seni~ •nd P•rts for All Imported C1rs ,, USID CAI lrlCJA.L Modem Body Shop for All Coro $ 1295 ,. od lt't TOTOTA COIONA I ' · ON.Dge County's Largest and /.1osl M ern Toyota and Volvo Dealer H.T. ltlH. -4 •P••"· IYCMOI? 1 '~ll t, ________ _!O~Y:H:l:IA!!.l!D:IL~l:Yl~O~Y~l~P!IC~l!A~Ll!ll~l~--------..;-::-:::-:-:::-:-:-::-:-:-:::-:-:::-:-:::-:~::.J' >. • Callbr111d ..• comp1.1t1r· processed tor • 1mooth •Ide SERVICE SPECIAL Tlt/1 weelt: only \L2. °"' S9Killisb will •dj1.1st )'OUI' tir••s.. jll'tclslon b1l1nce botll fnint W'hMls 1_.!aflts lnctLIOldJ 11.1'4 r'f*k ou\tt front lltlttl betrinp, se1~\Jes s3ss FOR Only ... Fits FALCON, VALIANT, DART. CORVAIR GREMLIN, VEGA, PINTO $ for Siie A78-T3, lubel•11 blackwalt plus 11 .90 Feid. Ex. T•x P1f lit• ONLY $3.00 MORE PER TIRE FOR TWIN·STllPE WlllUWAWI Ulll tlllt l ,..,.., ... ,...,., ti - .u .. • to•••·~· ••orl .... ""' ........... ft -.., ...... ""'' -"' ... 1 ... -... ,.i ............ '"""" Charge it at General Tire ... ~r. ..... ... l'l;e..f I \ ll'>Own el CO-Wll TiN ...... CompeutiVtly JJ•.e.d 1t in••Pt""9nt <111t1r1 d•tPlir1n1 tM a-11 li9ft, GENERAL TIRE Don Swedlund Coast General Tire SIS W. 19th, Coat• Mes• So!0-5710 646-5033 Avtry General Tire Service 16941 S.ach Boulev•rd, Huntington l .. ch U7-l850 '------------YOUR SAFETY IS OUR BUSINESS------------:, fa OAIL V ,/LOT Noutfnees AH11011nced • Composer's New 'Six' Step Down Will Geo1·ge C. Scott Earn a11 Emmy? HOLLY\\1000 1UPI\ -The ''The Carol Burnett Show," By JACK GA VER NEW YORK l UPI) ApparenUy Cllarles Strouse btcame Urtd of betna only a composer , even If his tunes for Brotdway musicalt did bring him Tony awards for "Bye; Bye Birdie" and the current "ApplaUM:," just , coop le of hie biJ·llmt 1bows. 111 1n tht cast. three men and thret women. Most of the meloc:hts are plea surable, and tile lyrics, "''hich actually are the libretto, are generally /Iterate, although a bit precious now and then , Naliona! Academy of "The Fhp \V1lson Show" and '"Rowan and .\1arun 's Laugh· In" wer(' norninated for outstanding variety series. Television Arts and Sc1encC's announced 208 nom1nallons fl.1onda y for ils 23rd annual En1my awards, including one for George C. Scott who sa_vs he wlll refuse an Oscar this Monday night he turned up at the off.Broad•ay Crickel Thtater as c.•o mpo ter, 1ibrettbl and lyricist or an intlmate revue l!Ued "Six," apparently because lhert are The production by Slade Bro"·n. Ydth Peter Co"' dlrecling the show <it a s"·ift and professional pa~. Is bless«! in thfo singing .!killlii and personable all.round work of Johanna Albrecht , Lee Berry, Alvin Ing, Gail Nelson, Gilbert Pritt" and Hal Watters. Tuesday Evening AHllL lS •:• 8 .. •• Je1ry D11n,n,. • UIC ..... TM! srir•w. ........ ~udi: lfMll ict Cr1wftrC. U1J Tomh1. Gloril littJ, Jtt W1111Nufll, 1111 £111sttht D'""""' _, t<J "°I 1111 ....._ ....,,.. (rMlnct) '0 -JI-,.,..,, lN ltfllick. l'twl Htfril, Qiill Willa. Tues oil NII ....,. ii Ntw r.n It m•~·! *"' Hll1 11141 •um 1 wlli1lwind fl ldMtJ llflt1 It• MIP 111~1!Jn1 ttiet Nf!UM hill, llllill YM .... m• PW:Uun• e•rr• f19F11ll C_,. ........ di l• l.,.IJ '9 '•tl¥fH1 1:115GiJLN Wt l ;ll IJ '8 (i) "" M1w {RJ Gu1sl~ 111 Chttllf r ri•1 •IHI Sil11n ~ye. 0"" a !i!i w m AK lllt'rit et u.. w•: (C) (90) "Id. I Den't W111'f T• ltt 1111.mM" (e1med7) ·70 - H1ftdltl ltflllfdi. Shi11ey Xints. Ordit!1ry 11'1111 with 1 ''fJ' or11tn1ry f 1111ilp lilllb 11111 1nct lit btcom1s 1 widow11 ht ti1s •tv1st1tin1 sex IPPMI. Womtll wllo """'' llOtlCtd him 1r1 1ud•111ly l1tt1n1l1d by him. m llrW fr• SMw lttck Hudson ii ... JUtll. (I) Dr1,.,C m htln ,... l.IN1 Ill La c.. }II.JI ... ··-'91(1)• ... Ill Pi9ll' , .. ., ·-" tlll_,...,..,. ' l:OI Cl QI @ Cl NIC T ..... , Mewi1: ' (t) (Zllr) ''llellll If 1 t1111fipt1r" (WHfttn) .,, -R1th11d Wldmtrk. L1n1 Horn1. Tow11sptopt1 schem t !o 111 ud Ill Ille loc1I m11sh1I. br· htYi111 ht his oulll¥td /\is useful· CJ la Mita f•IUM •• c.i.u.1t '!I•• J• H1wu111111. 1:11 c ltt IWlt 1:JO a'"',. ea..,, ·""'-.. a!)(l)AIC- DCll•- • M .. F tar llftlll 9 (1)111-• .......,,..1.,...11 ·""'-·-•'--.... _ 1• 8 CIS •1n W1tttr Clank1l1. D IZI MIC 1'tn D1v1• l r1nklty. frill Mc:G•. Jolin cti1M:llltr. GMtr1 My u11r eO (lll lM llCJ ·-.Cl),...., 1111 .. it: (C) (fir)• ................ (CllM.y) '16- FrM GW)'llM, YWinflt DIC.rlt. • r1•1 "Jc It T1nt11WCIOll. July r..lllM 1RI DH Elli1." 18 (I) ltd ., c-.-- l!l Cllflll tltt UM1 Wtt• ·--............. m-- 8 l\1 J11rrtift "SMfth 111 • Windy C11)'." "•t H111&11. N111 M•rtin 1wfl. ID T~• t,,_.11 m Thi u-.t. fil) Clt1U1111t tm Nttldlt t ;M D ~Cf) All ill Ult f111ily Cu · rtl! O'Cannor, Jin" S!1pltton, Rob lh1nu. S1llr Struthus stir. (R) A l.tJrDllM 1nn1Ytr1.uy ptrty IOI" 1111 lun~1r1 Htt1ier1tu intt 111 1r1u· meo1 whtn Glon1 1111 h,r husb•n• Mike l t(U!t i\rtlllt If btl~I rtdll· If P1t111d·c•d Qbndicf t•-• Im M~,;Clfl/,.UIM"I IltK 111 L• tm d1 M1rtu Cnu lelOOIJ~0050 M111W1 Ci eo111 C. Scttt tt!lt ·-Y ht won'! ICCtPI !hi 0Ktf. 8 Q111!!11 I News 0 @ (JJ aJ lll1ra11 lrl1lby 111.D. (R) "Epld1mic." Ors. Walby 1114 i1!11's 1tl1mp\s to blttlt '" 111· lfutN'I lC'i41!Tllt lfll eomplictttd by 1 rich )'IUnt hJpDChondri1c. Micht!t lw t 11tlls. CIJ l1dw Wtt• ,...., OAILV PILOT lltll Pn.i.t Fight to Death \Vayne Beauvais-lright f and 1\aron Patton battle \vith swo rd s as the latter"s \\'lfe. Sally BrO\\'n. \vatches anxiously in a scene frotn the HUn lmgton Beach Playhouse production of "Rashon1on.'' open- ing r~riday. E11tertai11nient Mag 'S liow ' Revived Again NE\Y YORK 1AP1 -Afler 10 years and $JO m1ll1on Hun- l1ngton Hartford is n1ak1ng his third allcmpt to make a go of ''Show'' magazine. The old "Sho"''" d~bled 1n all the art~: theater. music dance a11d flln1s. A great coflee table Item , it had snob appeal and featured lavish photographs printed on !he fines! quality paper. "No11• we re prin1<irily a him n1agaz1ne with a peripheral 1n· \crest in the other arts.'' sa)s BALBOA 67~().41 o,.. 6!45 7ttr.1a._ lal~ "'"'ln•l1 John W1yne ''Rio Lobo'' •nd "On 11 Cle11r Day" STARTS WEDNESDAY Ac•d. Aw•rd Nominee Best Actress - CARRIE SNODGRESS diary of a mad houaewlf• llarlford. f>ne of the heirs tu the Great A!lanl!c & Pacific Tea Co. -the supermarke! L"hain -fortunes. The newest "show'' made its newsstand debut with !he March issue. •·My own criticism of the rnagaz1ne before is that it \Yi!S JUSl too beautiful. Jt was hard to say who the audience "'as or "'ha! the purpose of !he n1agaz1ne was.'' he expl<uned away his tw1 p rev i o u s :1bor11ve attcmpls dunng an 1nltr\ ie1.1 . Hartford ma1nt<11ns t he cl1n1at... for a good film n1agat1ne d1dn t reallv exist until the las! five \'earS "Tht film is now an art for m and lhe major emerging mcd1u1n or communications. Young people today are 1n touch with films.'' he says. ~do l'IW~Oll lf&O< ., •• ''' """""'° I• loOulo• • 0 4o '•lo .• (lo l l l'D HELD OVER Elllttt Gould week if he wins the award. Actors non1inated for best performance in a s i n g I e appearance. in addi\1on to Se11tt !The Prie<!I are J<1ck CaSSJdy lThe Andersonville Tnall, Hal Holbrook (A Clear and Present Danger). Richard Widmark i Vanished). G 1 g Young /The Neon Ceiling1 Nonunaled for be!I attress in a single performance are Colleen Dewhurst (The Price\ and Lee Grant IThe Neon Ceiling anrl RanM>m for a Dead .\l<.1n 1 Comedy ~enes contending for best of the 1970-71 season are. ''All in the Family.'' "Arnie.·• "Love. American Style." '·The r-.1ary Tyler .\foore Show" and "The Odd Cou ple.·• Nominate d for best dramatic series: ''The First Churct'ills." "lronsidl','" ··Net Playhouse.'' '"1'.1arcus Welby, 1\1 O '' and "The Senator.'' '"Arsenic and Old Lace"' will be reviewed by the Irvine Communil y Theater as its final produclion or the 197(}.71 season . with auditions schedul - ed for Saturday and Sunday. April 17 and 18. Directo r Richard Dow has announced that the tryouts will be held at 2 o'clock Sa tu r- day and I o'clock Sunday in the lsland House in Fashion !sland, Ne"·port Beach. A cast of one young woman. 25 to 35. twe mature women, 50 to 65. and 11 men in the 25 to 65 age range will be required The Joseph Kesselring eom- f'dy will be presented 1n the Human1t1es Hall Playhouse al l'C" Irvine. opening May 29 and r unning Frida ys and Saturdays through June. 19 Further information may be obtained by calling director Dow at 833-07!13 ....... MATINllS SAT & SUN m ""' Put"'"'' I 11hm1" . 18 Mutr., Al H11111J lto1l1, SI Mlftii ScMtl Pfebl ... 7:Jt8t11(1)1piC!i111t*ilel 1.. . . alrankperrylilm ir.,uc ...., ".loum11 tt !hi Gil ftllfll M•1u111 , _... ... _, .. _ , -Who Cares? Hiatt Arttic.. ~ lht ".lturN)"• jtJIMtJ 1t:l0 e ""'-: (t) (2llt) 0.Mll fl I No other ne"·spRper in lhe •• .,..1t1t11 ICl'Dt& th• b1r1tr1' . . • Plus 1 ALSO_ 111 ~·orld cares about your com· """"" " Cant"'• ll9rtllwt1! It! Ri•W.. D .. tlt Is Quid (ldYt MU!I) SHE CAME TD SIT WIT~~ munity like }Our community iun.s, •lln1 t~• Cfllt "'' th; ''7-Ttnr llttM111t, 11'd H1rriL BABY AND W•NT AWA'v / ,, IUD COIT doily nev.·spaper does It's I illat4t fll H11Uo11 1., t1 1 ,.int tm litl Mti11' N'" -"'"':!~c;!.D..!:,Yl , _Br~wster M __ cClo_ud " j ~ th __ e DAILY PlLOT. ... B1tsm111 1111M W1111itt 100 m C•••• " A111:111t11' 111r.rvr11D - ,;1. """ """ '"'· '"' • Rl:l:ll\CR NATIONAL GENERAL-THEATRES--1Mrnt•d br...,.. C1m.,1rttll1. 111:00--fTI ft\ Nawi ,. --~-.-~ WITll 1111 ae1.w. (., ·~fllt 111' Ho11or.'' DQJ @ mlMws llAll19R ~,2!.~~.:~~.:.~:.: :!:'."'.,,, ~ ... 1 • .-.~· • Z-~~::-:.~~··l Cr1M1, Midttllt U1ry, Dennis Wt.llllY (w1sttrn) '43 -H111ty Fond1, 0111111_~~~~~====~~::1 •114 Hit&• lldtf. Andrltlll'S, AnlhonJ Quin11. I: Q «fl (I) OJ Tit lll.i S4111• (11)1 CD Mnil: "TM Ollt• Lnt" {drl· 'w.1•1111 h !lie Hunu11 A.ct, lt~1 flll) '(7 _ Daw!• Nrwtn, l nrb111 Pr1.1w " Ptl1 IR' Hie "uad try I• stenwyck. al•1 1 Jl!llll lnlli1n ICCusM et •111Mr Ill 1 1111111 4tMll !own. CD aut llM Cltcl D MilliH S Mw1t: IC) (lftrJ ~A !ft (I) rwry ...... tlr4 .._. Tl_.. (•r11111) 'i3- l.la-ltr1t1 H.,,.,, fr111t1 Nu11n. 'lllllll H tf!IOltiM (llf'llllll -l1:JI. IH) (j) M111 51'ti1e t11r1,iw,1 111 Tebl llldtb 11 Arntt· ia11 l'!CftUry • ""' U.S. citlzeft· ., ID (I) m MtlflllJ C111H OCK ... ht "-1 ftCM;11 wrt~ 11\1 Sl'+'llll\.Mft tubs ftr ld MtM1llO~ Nip '°"' tw 1 • .,,,. .. i irt rommr H"'"°"' cond1.1tt1 t~1 or· qllllil T1111-1, dl•slr• Chtt! rred fo. 1u1s1s. .1 .... •(11111~•* •ttT•tlWll' ·-· ........ , .. ~ ......... B Battle of Champions! * Dick cavett YI. SEARS Cr1ft1m1n £11er I Lawnmower. TONIGHT! II U)Oid C•mt Q) Mlfit: "Sttlt!'I StttPiln" (Kl· ••• D .. """" .... st ... Alllft) 1+) ·~a-Judd Ho1dltrl, AUnt fowl\I. ' Uail .,., T111 '-ttn 11'1 tllt 12;()0 (lZi CIJ Itel c.wtt r.w ...... )Ill Dall ..... "' •1 , ...... ti lflt .W Nyt. 12:30 8 CM1 St., a.,.114 •T• T• .. T,_. • IM@! ..... llCll: Mtttf 1:00 8 Mtril; '"flit IMl111(' jdr.,111} ti ,... ~iat IUl~Dl·Ctrflc '56-Sttrliftl M1ydtJ1, C1• V1111pleN di•ua" l/11 DD,. ... llftllrt « IMllllUA!tatitft. hl!fl '"' m U·fHcM »ew: ''Mrltt!J If ,....." .. rn. ~S.yttr '" hl1111111k• Mft ..,..,, .. "l•fJ ,.,...,. I' ~ lut11 I 1n• (C) "Ort• IMt." ~"'-~ I W.dn •• d~y ID "Sllataa1 Trffk" (dr11111J ·4~ "" -{;ti) Coo/lfl ln1J1d !ell•'l"A CD "lin11 .. Mtt flfl&•,,~ (COlft• I tirmf ::=:; I tdy) '41 -H1nry fondt . ...,,,_ MU't'IE 1 1:eom.,•ti-11•" (aito11nt111e1 ·11 ,.. ..... M.....,. ("'1'tflY) G1or11 R1lt, J11n1 H1woc -w -... ..,""*'· .,,.,.,. 1:00 a ... 1.11e1~·· (mrs1,ry1 ~~ .,,, _.. ,..,.., • .,, ·4~ .. 1te S•'TIOllt S1111tret. Y111 C1ou101 ""' 4;)0 0 (Cl "nt Ctl••" lltdt" (••· ENDS TONIG-HT lc1<bt• !itrtlMl"il "THE OWL AND TH E PUSSYCAT" Alie "SUDDEN TERROR " STARTS WIDNllDAT TU\ NUM&l~ l)IH "°"(l Of TI<r )t~• .. HOW ' MOTIOtl l>ICl'l)lrl' • '11&> !«llll!~ ............ AIRPORT BURT DEAN WCASTER • MARTIN JEAN SEIERC JACOUEUNE llSSET Ako llec.k H11ll''" J .. ti. ""',..., ,, "DARLING LILI " 81rg•ln Mat inee Wedneld•y, I p.m, ,,,, •• ,..,h ...... t"I AOUlTJ SI 00 ENDS TUESDAY WALT DISNEY'S "THE BAREFOOT EXECUTIVE ( G l And "THE COMPUTER WORE I \,;;;;--T-ENNIS-~ES" < G ~ "TORA TORA Bur t lanca•ter "VALDEZ IS COMING" TORA" OPEN 6o4S ~4i~ • .,, .• ,.,~ EXCLUSIVE SHOWING ••• ~T 6th & FINAL "' (nl Ct•H "•f WEEK ~ COllONA l)ll MA~ Both Pictures "G" ALSO PLAYING 2nd BIG FEATURE "THE 12 CHAIRS" Inventive, Craty, Very Funny with Ron Moody-Dom Deluise fl*•• •0 1 a 1" ffrtm•~ ·~i-I •t11h1•t) ·~3 -Reel H\ldtafl r 1pe1 I i~ ...__... '-' l ')'nnv l•vnt ••••••••••-' '-----------------------'' Fan1illar names c~opped up in nom1nat1ons for ulltst<indiug eontinucd perfonnances by an actor in a series· Haymond Burr !lrons1deL ~ike Connors 1 .\1 anni~1 . Hal Holbrook rThc S!11111.or1. Robert Young 1~arcus \Yelby. M 0.1. "FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" -plu1- 'CHEY£NNE SOCIAL CLUI' cDI _,, ................ _,. -... . "''""' •••OI• •-I• ........ , ... . Randall (The Odd Coupl1). !Jest actrtss in a series n01ninees: Linda Cristal ITht: lhgh Chaparr:1l 1. Sus an Harnpsh1re !The Pi rs t Churchills). Peggy Lipton (The Mod Squadl. Nomln•led for best romedienne in a series: M1ry1 Tyler Moore, Jean Stapleton\ (A!l in the Family), Mark.•1 Themas iThal Girl). I Winners 11f the Emm:I. 1 awards will be announced May~{ 9 in a nationall y telecast program from the Century Plau Hote! in Los Angele ' and the Hilton ltotel in New York City. Best comedy performance by an actor 111 a series: Ted Besscll (Thal Girl), Bill Bixby 1The Courtship of Eddie's Father\, Jack Klugman (The Odd Couple), Carro!! O'Connor <All hi !he Family), Tony EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! SOUTH COAST PLAZA I & HIWAY 39 DRIVE-IN SHOWING NOW!! )rrll 1lAT\11£ Af Mw1 )t D11lp EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOW! Meet Henry & Henrieua .. , the laugh riot of the year. "A neC1J Leaf" a: Co•or by MOVIELAB -ct .. A Paramoun1 P<clure Scatfln& W•h•t Mtnhtu· El•IM loh1 ·Jack W-• DUSTIN HOffMAN' "LITTll 816 ~- . WALT DISNEY •..-.et-· 1111BAREFOOI' EXECUTIVE 2NO A.T "VIUO" t"Al.TOIS~'rV'~ "THICOM,UTIR WOH T!NNIS IHOIS" {GI .. " • .. ' ' • -' ' Tut~ . .\ptlt 13, 1971 DAJLV ,ILDT IA FAMll.1' CIRCVS 1111 BU Keue LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'llC!! UOAL NOTICI LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL !IOTICIC - ..... , ..... f411M •1CTinM •llllNlll ·=w .. :=::· ClaTl•IUll OP IUtlllbl N111• MAMI JTA'TIMWT Tht tellewllil ..,_ .,.. Mlflt f"fC1'niou1 •.MM ClltftPK&ts Of' avs1111 ... ),,.. 'f"-lol-W. ,.,_ ii .......... ~ MlflMI ••1 Tiit .,...,,..,.... .._ dl'tlf'I flt II PICTI'TIOUI MAN Ml ITALu...Ml'fllCA YACHT IMl'Oll:TS.. ~HM • WlllW.. .. lltlM C..... Tiii ll!lltnleftilll • Wflf'I """" .,, 1-llYt.ICO IAIMll. M """ .. C-M9 1.-1 CMll Mlel'lwlY, N-1 11:*1 '--• Hl#ltlM'llll 1Miitc1t., C..llMf'flla, ..wctlrw I _,tl!IMI •I 1D hi ... "\• 1r~ · ~ '"" 0.1.... ..IKll C111f vllMf' IM fkl"lew firm llllM ti ~ MM ,..._ C..11 ....... C1llfwfllt. ,,,_, { .--r-r-Mlylla. fl Or-.,. l/ll.. S3 T-11 JeM y,,; N.....,IM. 11*' ,. .. \l't •LIE T. T, ,,,..,INffN4H(;I AHO 111t fktlli.u. 11 ..... -fl COf4COll:O £.:"!-. i) U... ,• Jll .. CW!lt"' Or111M, 11~. C\I~ Cll'I', CtHf, IM"'-OVM&NT lllVIC:I!, ..... .,_. ..W A't'IATIOft.,., "'411 MN flnn t. _.,_. ..-l "'-1"."'l .., Tlllt IW1IM• It ...,_ ...-.aM trr ~ .. Ollcll tvw-111, 111 U. nmo M -~ ti !ht lllllerw!M -If the f9llowlt1e --....,.. Vll'lt\ \.~ilfi..;;>:J-• '" 1 '"'"'''IM fl1rk Or., Nt. J61..+., Ntw-1 ltaui, ,.,_. ~ M t\i. 1MI .iia .t r•i.... 111 11.o• W ,i~ .. t•lifttlU att ~ljjil;i'·oa.AE1 . . ,"_ ,, """*''"' y,_,., '"" -·-la ..... fllNllKl'M ~ • Tlr\1'•11 W.ft TMm.-. ., ... c...... Kfftt s. ldll1IM, ., H ••• , l'rtrit, ";;Ii;.::; Ml'rlll• 9' Ct".-ll!C. NrT'l'fll\ll', 1:"9 L-. Mullll"'IM • 1 1 c II , .. t ... l1J11M1. C1llftr11Ltl, r "'9111Mf Ori-C-1 0.llY 1'1191, 0--.. (, lff,_ Cellfilnlla. Httlll 0. 1MI. Mot .......,... Mtw•I Mardi U. •.,.. ....,n" 1), ltn """71 u•iri11trl o .. .o 111'.tl'ctl It, 1t11 lttel\, ce11tor1111 ·-l"..U •tetlTIOloll lvtlllfltl JIAMtl JIKTITIOUS lllllNIU tTATIAllNT nATSllllltT ,.,.. 1.r1tw1n1 --••• ...... Tl'lt fti!N'lfll ..... .... ~ .... tl/111111• "' 111111-ill SOVTlt MAIH LIOU0-1. nu -Iii LA VIN'TUllA, In.II INlnt .,..,... Mlln Strfll, S.nr. .,,.., C1ll11t11l1, Tw1lln, Ctlllolflll. Lull C111r•. U1I ~ Malll )11111, H.,.,,_ ....-~ lnJO l(•llft ,.,,.,. $int1 AM. Ctl"-1•. """""· C11tltt11l1 C--ltll (llMM, UM '-ilft Mllll lllJIMlll HOllol ... , lnJO IC4llell AYI .. 11....i, S.nte AM, C.llltnr.11, 1-1, C1llfwlll1 Thll ""'llntll 11 Ml ... t-utltd br I l"h~llll Wiii .. <. lN Lii Or.. '""" ,.,!11trll'll1, llllU11'111 .,.. wile. lwl"''• C1l!tot11l1 L.vlt (Ill... 1(11111-c ......... HI Loi OrN ...... Cenc_.., (.ulrM llMI ..... (lllllettoll P..-ilt11N Ortn11 c.111 Diii' ,Utl, T~lt WtlnHI lo Mln9 ~ W A-111 .. IJ. II, 21. ltTI n.i.11 I 0.11111'11 l'ltl...,111\jl. · 7'~ ~ M. Nlllllk1w Cillf, It 11 tolltwt1 .. Houo.t: I ,. ... ~ I •--------------> •uMu11" OrlM• c..1 o.11Y ""'' T1N111 o, Ti'llml'tlOll Lvti w. 01.w-. 111t ci..,-11 •• ' '. .... ... LEGAL NonCE •n " 11, a v. '"' 1Jt.11 1111• " c111*11111, 0t-.,.... c....n"! ,.,_, •Mdl. ce11flnll•. -Oii Mlrdl It. ltfl. a.w. lftt. 1 0.1911 Mll'Cfl H. 1'71 LE0A.L N011CE ,.,.,, UGAL NO'l1CS Nt1arr l'llMk 111 tlMI • 111f it111. ir. .. 1 s, kTll1ttf' •• ,., ICtll'llMl'I C1111 .... 11 ,11¥1111 Wlll- •u1tl1.... Ot111tt C .. 11 0.llY Mlrcll n, • tnll ""'" .. 11, ltn U "'MMllY' IH*lt.. Tll"l'llfil 0 I I 11 ...C!l1 0. lrWH PIC'Tl1'ICMll •utlMI Tllllft-·-19 rM ,. M 11Mi L11n W. Ole..,._r Cll:Tl•ICATI: OP IUllMl:ll MAMI: ITATaMl1" NI.. --~ MIM 11 1\IMcrlNI 1'I ttttt 11 C1Hfll'nl1. Ort"" (ellnl'li l'ICTITIOUl MAM• .... Thf .. "twt"' --.. flint lllllMll , •• ,.,,,,., •• , l\ttUlllt. Hit wtllllfl ln1""""9nt IM -'.,..,......,. Oft Mlrdt •• bl'folt m1, I NllllMY TM u!ldtrlltllll • {trllfy ""' ·~ •·e ' 11: PtCTITIOUI llLlMI .... IMtalt ........ -~Mk ... tlMI "'wl<f ll•i.. --.11Y CtnO\ldl .... bv•ltl .... ,, *' .. ..,. •• u1--~~=-~~C'C7''0C,-O,,.::--':.t.-. MlYAltO "llTAUUNT, JI TNll T"9 ..,.....,..1,,... -<:1rlll'll' M Ill tO•l'ICIAL. II.ALI ,.,..rid lt111t $, $~1tlH, Ml'lll1 0, l'llC.. C•I• MIMI, Clh~I t:a6U. NOTICI ., Tl:UITll't U.L• LEGAL NOTICE MIY•... -Orin... ll'IC,. D TM!I Mlulefl Vli1-. C•llfllrnl1, unoer "'"' tit· lllti1,., ,~llc-(1Utwn!t .... tot M !ht --·· ......... 111"111 MAii 1"41 thtl 1tlf tlrll'I 11 """"'"" Tl' 1"1 ~ , ':j a. Cwntrv, Ortllft, C•llfOl'l>lt. Cllflilt.l(tlJI a llllltJ-. et IGll AU9!.lrtl11 Me'Y ltlfl Mtr'8rl !fWIM, Luti W, 01•*-"' 11_.11 le uMtr 1111 t1cUli..J1 firm ntlM ti SHA·LO-u111oa• DllO 0, T•UtT -...... ., & C...,nlN, Oren ... CillNrNI .,..,_ lllilllt firm ... ,.... 9' SUll'SICI!: Cl:LI ,rl11t ! .. I Offlc. 111 ar1 •lltll1;tlbtd le tM within 1.._rru..,tnl .t lflt 191-lnt per-., '""""' -· LIAlll 1110, OHU T~lt lllllllMH I• ... 1 ... ~"" '°f '00CS 1'1111 thtl .. w firm ll Ollft-..1 °''"" '""'""' 11>11 1.--1...... "'" lllKUIM IM Ill tut1 a!ld .rice. -' r111dtnq ,,. Nollet h MtiOliy (!Wit t!YI 't"ST '\, __ ... ,_,, 1 C:.W-lrl9'1. 114 IM fellMllll -tclll. ""*9 -My (OtnfTllHllll f:~•lre1 -. ,u toOGWll SU"ITY CO"', I Dtl1w1r1 Cw-111111. 1 ~-:_ _.. $1.,..., M, llll.,,llllWI Ill "-11 enC -'"" of IM~ It It ~It, ltll tCl'jlll(IAL Sl ... l.l '"'""' Mlf'llllon, '106 1-1 It .. (NII 11 1N11M. ... Ml(Ctl-l•utlM, • -£... Secrtlll''I' ,, .. ..,.,.., t.llwrl: ~Ml,,,.. °'"'" C...11 C1ll¥ ,1181 JI A/11111 Mtflll Miia, (111,.,1111. Wliol!ltul• '""'" 1'1irtue111 flt IM .... -:, ~ t;;, ~-PwMl.=•~,::...0rc:11 1~llr Plllil, ~~:~n. 2411 A"'9Ulll11, Mlulfn "'°''OI tL • 111111 AjtrH 6. IL lf71 'J1•71 :::.:c7lll~~·:::-11 c!t~: ,!,,~,.a~· Ml-rt 11., ::..,~;~~NllC-:= .-,MAltlt~~~=T QLt~ Metefl n. •IN Ajttli '-I\, lt11 w-11 DI! .. M1ruo 1t, lt71 LEGAL NOTICE Ottntt Ceunh Ml>N .....,. C-lly, tH2 M•ukl MACOu•H '"' rt<ttdH Jul't 17, 1• 4·1.S ,......, 1'111•"'1 MY c-1111Wi lurrn ''· C•ll Mt11, Ctlltotnl1, 111 ...., ... , NM 10111 O!Oci.1 l.c.,. ''"";;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;"""' LEGAL NOTICE St•fl tr C•l"-111., Of-t11t1 '*"'"'! Mtor 11, ltJ• 011H Mt.ref! 11, nn 111 lf\I 9'fkt « "" Cou11ty It~ • '----~~=~=.,-----! Oii M9tfft lt. 1''1. Wirt rnt. • IA* lie ...... lllhW Ora .... c .. 11 O•llY l'JIM Sf\11"' HM\ll!M "' OrlJ*' c ...... IY. C1UfOl'11l1, """ r l'llt Me. NII.I Ntt...., !"vi.ii< In .... W .. 11 111tt, tu~f11.'f:. T:~=~·~~~~. M.totdl )f tnf ...,.II 4 11. Je, 1t11 .... 11 L.tl I:, ICHfttk itullUllll It' 111t lllttlct of Dtlllltt tllol ,ICTITIOVS lt.llllllllS Mr"MllllllY 1-1..W ,._,... 1'111nff t-11 No.trr Allll c.<IMll't li.dltn "' 1111 _.....,. ~ 'J '· f 0 _.. L... E'~R •mo STATtM•lllT 19 "" It ~ IM _..... wl\ofe llllllt tTATI 0' ULll'O"IUA l'llt LEGAL NOTICE Sltlt Df Ct lltlrnl•, Or111M C-f't: tktvtimlw M. 1f1' 111 .... ~ ..... got fncrll pants Of' ~Qltar ar1Q nogQl!y yi;; TM fll.;;.. ,.,_,_, lrt -.r ... II ....-Cr!Wd t. .... wrt1ol11 11111.....,.tfll THI COV..:"!:two•AMll 011 Mlrdl lt. Ul1. M'9t1 mt, t ... 1111 iekl Oflld1I --do, Wiii ti!!. WCf'e them be~--1" tvllMll 11• lfMI ICitMow!tdtllll"' "'KvltO IM._ l:illlt " kATHA"INl I'. l:l:YNOLOS, MOTICI TO Cl:IOJTl•I Hol1rv 1'11~111 In Ind ftt ••kl 111k, Oii w .. llUCl1y Allll 21. lffi al IO:DD -________________ • .,...:.__"----------! OCl:AN. Vll:W MOTfJ .. !Nol Sa. t01'P'IC1AL SEAL! 0to(ltMd. su••••o• co1.utT ., THI ........ 11¥ ....... Id Wllrtn Hlll'lll'-11. '·"'· ., ""' Non~ "°"' enlrlllCI .. <-,, ·-•• Li-·nt lllC~. DOAOTHY W. JOYCE I •••o•oa••• ''' Lt>11 I . )tll,.,. 111• Mt" Alln Clrlntlty !M Ott"" COulllY Court........_ \tut.I -... .. .. ,,., Mlk C1llllrlll1 HOTI(, II Hl*l:IY 01\llM .. ftlt STAT 01' _... -k-IO me II M ltlt N•--· '' "' COoO< C-•r Ori-W111 ,,.,....,,._ Russians Flay V.S. Over Angela Issue (llltw11l1 • crtc1Hw1 tt Ille elloft ,..,,..... H<tfflll TN• COUlllT'I' O' Ol:ANIS "' '"' "" .. o •• ·• ( oo-< "ldl•1• L• (Irr, llll lllllllt-r• ,,lO!ClN I Otf1C1 Ill "''' 111 --~·~1111 ci.lm1 111l11tl .... A-6tn1 lllll'llt •rt Ill t "' " , Wfft tit! Sir.ti) Sant• ....... • .... II . Ctrwen Dtlff, L11u111 lt t c 1'I , Orin" C..,,nty lilt ui. "'""'' ,,, , ... I ... '9 n it ltlllf « ZITA I'. OOl.01111, 1111 ~.",'!':''.,"' •'"'r.• KILMW!lclelll lhlY I'll• r." .. ,,~ 1•,"!!lello, .. '!_"' .. ", ... ,_.I_!~. C.'• •• , •• ,_ M-o •·oo•. "" M .... • '""",,",',ion IEU!rh O .. -" ,,,. ' GO' ••<•I °"' ~ .., -., ,.. "' •r ,,_ --,_ ... tf, I' -· '*'II\ M<ttury '' "' " · ._,_ ' ,,... (01'P'IC1AL IAL) llWflll "*"" c' 1M U11ltM St111tl OlutOll"ll Clfl't'On Or ...... Lltulll IMdl. " bllll!ed ' o:-..... , .. ,, O~l!V ~not "" el'flcl ef IM cltfll °' "" •bow HOTlC[ IS HEl.llY GIVIH ,. "" IMN 111'11 Mtntn •II rltl'lt. ll!lt, .... l11t..-111. (lllvt\lftlll C11Jtw1111. Mt~I! n. •end "''JI'-IJ 1t7I Uf.n MllllM c .... rt. « ,. _, '11111111. w1111 crtcllten 114 1flf ltlovt MllltO Ot<tdtfll Nol•'Y l'\lbllc.Ctll,.mll • ,,.. ,_ .,.W tw 11 u"'tt 111d TI\11 11111•1-I II M\119 cftw.IM .... ' IM """ .... ,., ~.. tt tfle Utt-IMI •II Ml"tOAI l!tvlne Clllmt llllfttl l'rlnd .. I Otflq In dtt4il Ill llli Pr-rlr a11Ul1t In Ora,,.. • ..... ,,, 11rt111rll'lt•, LEGAL NOTICE 41111.,... at .,. ltw Ofllc" " -.. •tr• -.ctftnt 1r1 .-1 ... 1o f11t 0r1,... ceunir iitd <'""'"'' 1114 llitt ••ur!btll 11 l'"*llM ... Ol'I .... Ctlil Clltlf Pli.f MrOWIEH, OltllN & ITlVIA. iJO IE. 11\1111, with tlll -1.llN ""'dllr1 In Mr (;llftmlHilll l:UjrM ft)lllWt · l ~"~"~"~,.~~~·~"~'~"~"~·~'c'~':..'.'"~"'....~"'~·":1·------;;;;;-;;;;;------1c11111111" A..--, Ore~ c1111. ntM, lflt trflu c' '"' dlll'lt « 'lflt ••v• Atrll t, ltll I.ti. ,,. TrKt ,... Cl"' et c 1111 IAlt JUt """'~ ,, tht NICI « i.u1r11111 of •• tnlhled court . ., lo ...... 111 "''"'· will\ l'ublllflltl °'',... (•II 01llr Plitt Mtll, Cou111v of Or111... lftli: .. . IUPll:IOI: COV•T 41~ Tltl llncltt1!1-Ill 111 mlltln "'111"!119 tr. lll(tH1r1 WIUC:tlltl, '9 ~I ~"" MMtfl t1. • ellll A-111 '-It ttPI 0).11 l"tlll t tM It« Mloctlltll-l Mt ... . STATI 41' CALl,OltllllA •Oii le tht u t1!1 " llld dtetdtlll, wllllln dHlllf'll<I t i !I'll otllw <ti 1'111 Altll"Mrt, MOit (°'""""IV 11,~ I• tt• M!i.r~ LEGAL NOTICE •• ..,, Tllll COUNTY 0, OU.NII tour mtnll'l1 ethr lilt flrit ....WIUlllll HUllWITZ, MUI.WITZ • lllEMlll, 00 LEGAL NOTI,.... S!rHt, Cotll Mt••· Clllfllr11!1. MOSCOW (UPI) -In the chlrg1'1 was ma~ to st11e a •1<ttT1ou1 1u11111w11 N1. """" e1 n111 root1t1. ~no s1'"'· ,."_.' 111e11. c1111or1111 "i-.. l•ld ''" wm "' mllff. 11u1 -.ttMut I ttl.MI IT-'TIMINT NOTICI 0~ H•Al:lllll 0, 'ITITION Dir ... MtrOI II, 1tl1. ft6l.3. W!llCll l1 tht lltct tt '°'llMU noov ... llll or wtrrMlf, 1""'''' w 1111• eyes Df the Kremlin, Ange a p 01 it I cal trial "dlttc\ed Tiii followl111 •• ._. ,, Hint ...... 1-. ,011 PltOIATI 01' WILL ANO c . DANll:L ,, HAlllTMI" °' "" UllCltril•lll'll 111 .u m1n.r1 ,... • .... fl)I 111911 rHtroll""' 11111 ,....HIM ... ~ Davia II an angel 0 f II: LITT••• TISTAMINtA•T IE•KU'91'"" "'' Wiii" tt!11ln1 .. "" 111111 ,, ••kl ~nl, HOTICI TO <•••tT"I Nmlir1nc:t&. lo 11111iv IM .,...,._ a&ainst the Communist Party CHICK IVllllON VOLICIWAGIM • .uJ E1t11t OI OLIVl!I. MO II T 0 H IM •!low 111""'11 lflt911tnl wlll\111 fo;r monlht •IMr fht !lrll l'litllCI· l\l'l"lo• COUIT D, THS otcvr ... .-, UW D1f111 lnc11,1flftt 111t communism wbo can do no lflll '"'' ltllllWIY, Ntwl'lll'I '""'· HA-ltlSON. •Ito ,,.w" •1 OLIVI!" M. MCOWIK. ••••M & IYL'llA 11111 Ol 1111• llOll<•. ITAYlf 0, CAL1••1tMIA •o" , ........ ..,.. •• " "'· ......... and wrong. o! the United States, Neiro ciur. H~~~I~~"'· .~~t:'iiv GrVl!N hi 1111 •· c,......,. ,..,._ 0-'M ""'°' 11, 1m THI cou111TY o• 01A111•• 114 "" trv•T• ''''"' ay 111,. 9Hf, erganizaUons which fight for CHICK IVl•SON. INC. CCllU,l. "' CHAllLl!:S M.. HAllllllOH hll !Hid ht~ln On-. (1111, """' --rt •. HlllWllJ • .... ........ ••v•OICU lfltrlUndir with • ..,.,.,, •• The Soviet Union i! rooting 1,•,•,,t CDlll HllllWIY, HIWl'lll't IMdl, • "'''"" --··· -.,,, .-~ .... ,.._, •U.llM l•ttvtw" Ill• Wiii"' 1!11111 tt CHA-Ll!S ... CLA"IC· ,,ovldtcl tt.lt"t!n .,.,,,.Ille ... -w llfllldNI f di I I th "'dn • u · his d '-~ th ._ .. ,_ ..., ,.. ""' AllWM'f'I fw llM..... "" 1bov1 ,..,,.,... d« ... 1111 0«.ttlM. ti IM llOlt MCVnd .,_ lt!d f1U or smlss• 0 e II.I aping, CiY rig an a1auJ.:11i e Thlt · i.u,1 ... 11 11 ...... c.enGU(Mill "" • IUUll'IC• Ill Liii.rt T••11 .... nl tt'( ,. "*'lllled 0•11111 CMst 01H1 l'lle!, MU•WITJ, JIU.Win ' ••M•• NOTICl •• Hlltlf•Y 61\11!111 II "" OtltCI '""''" u. 1m ' murder and cons p Ir a c y entire progresslv1 and antiwar Ctf'llllll'llllWI toe1111to111r. •lllr•t!Ct • W!lldl 11 lftNt tor Mlrdl n, • '"" A..-11 '· n. im ... ,.n •• ,,... •1n11 crM11or1 " "" • ....,. n.,,...,. fte911tnt l'll:ST su11TY co•~. , o-.. t.. 1¥lrlOll tur-Nrtlculen. Ind 11111 lht llm1 1"41 __, SHO. Cl/lftrlla "6U 11111 Ill -11111 1'11wl111 tl1l"'1 ltllNI lllt 10 IUCl'I Ttyf'9e cbar&ts again.st her. movement in the country.' "'" .i1C1 ot l'llltlM tM .. m• "'' 111tn .. , LEGAL NOTICE tn•i ,n-• ••Ill ,,_..,."' •r• •14Ulrw,. 111t "'"""'· ,Y ,.,, I' ... ,...1111,.1 Seld ha the Kre J" h d Th US " ling c.j ele are ,lle!llMll Otifl9e Ut.tt Ol!tr l"llM for AorH :it, 1t11, 11 t :• A.M., 111 1111 AIMl"M'I• W •• _.... wllll IM lll<MUrv ....,dlth1.l11_11'1, llffkt .O.Ut s.critli'Y om s m 1n a e ' • ru r I ....... u' IS.. 21 1911 7J.1·11 Cilll•I-" C.Nrlfllllll HI. J "' Hkl lolOTICI 01' llllTllllDIO ll'LI ~"I"""" Or•ntt (Olrl Otllt Pllel. °'IM tltrk" "'' ·-llllltltl Dllrl. Ill' • Miii a better vehicle for anli· combaUing public opposition ' ' ' t0<r•'· 11 * c1w1., c'""' Crlv9 w"'· 111 ... ~ •• , ,, ,.,-, ,,_ -·• ,_, Mtroi n. • trod ...,,11 " 11. 1t11 ..._h 1o ••1111 111tm. w1111 "'* n1<t111rv ,..,.11""" Or•n• Ct11t Dtll'll' l'lio1. lin ,, LEGJ.. ,._,.... tht CllY of S1n11 .,, .. c111tw11le. .......... .... •••• ,,_ "'1Cft.tr1, lo "'' unc1tril1-11"" "'In .., American commenl The at home all down the e, Al.. Nu1.lldlo O•tld AP•H 1, 1tn '"~f'f S..••IY c11w1 "'-· ii °' noo N. LEGAL NOTIC& " "" 111ot.-.1: McOWEN. 01111"' ., M••dl JD ,,,. .urt1 " u. •m ·71 Soyl.t Propaganda mill ha' T •••• aid. W. E. SI JOHN, Httbor Slvd. COlll Ml11, (111,.,..,11, S'l'LVIA, JJt 1:. Oo1"""an Avtflut, ,,0 1'41U C0<r111Y Cllrll ln1tnd1 lo 1111 M Htlfnul ... ...,,,....,. Ind 1 .. M1, 0.tlllt, C•llfwrlla '16U, .... loo lo found in the cast rich grist for "The San 1\afael trial is part ,ICTITIDUI SUSINISI NA.Ml M(()WIM ........ 1YLYIA J .. n NIUMlll" " "' IE, 10lll ""'"· ••• ilM ""1l1ct °' but.l ... 11 ol"" wlMIOl'•I•-Jn LEGAL NOTICR b \ -STAt•MINT JM l•d CM-""" Co.It MIMI, C1lltor11l1 NOTICI TO <"•OIT9"1 o!! "''"'" -1•ll>lnt 19 IM"'''' ti 111411--..,,,,.,=-~cccc=-o7'C~:-:-::--crlticism of the United States. ()f thl! onslaught Y .-.mer1can ,,.. 10tlowt11t ••• 40!"' 1111111111 ••: ar-c1111.,,.... "" 11K11 111 1rfft, 11.111ru. 1<1wlM11"' su1'11:io11 cou•t o, TN• dlctc1w • ..,111111 ""' men1t11 ,,,. nw J10T1<1 o~ MA"'""'"" u.1.a "It ~ IJO accidtnt th1t the reaction. More and more SWISS CHALET llEITAU"ANT, 1;1• Tiii U.h,. .... '""" wrn " "''' Mtw .... 1wHlr ITATI 0, CALljllO•NIA 'Oft llr11 MrbUcitlon .. lil!t nll!c1. '"· , •• ,. H. N _ _.. It""~ H9-t ltldl A_.,..,. fir ''"''-tull-.,. 41.,_,, 11 111111 St•ul'f IVPllY THa COUHTY °' OIU.MOI Dtltcl A-11t I, ltfl -'rlflllt W, crllWflll'• ftl Ct&Wfll'd baiUng and persecution of people In the Uru"ted States c1111crrn1e. l'vlllllfl«I cr1 .... c11Jt 0111v to1111 Ho. i, '"" 1oc11 .. 11 2n N. ~·"* MO. A"*" CHAl:LIS L. CLA"K 1~.,.11,.,11111 c1 .. ,1111111tt .... Ll'liAIKI Angela Davis coincided with a and beyond it are coming out C~trltl I , Mlrflkl. ,.,, ltnll ....... AIN"ll 11, II '"" It, ltll 11).).fl ''""·· '"" Mtt• 111141 Ill .i..... ....... ltllll GI FLO-l!NCE MAltll OIWl:S. Ao;!m111l1l•11tr OI"" 111111 I ...... ..,... Jr .. M•rel<ll DIWllft. N D d Apl. G. C•ll Mott. Ci lllor"lt , tt1 lflchHlt<IJ, (1UIO<nl1, •lld ll'itl I Mil, Ofttlltd .i 11\1 tbcroot Mmld diK-111 • M "'°"ud1911i, lflC .• 1 l ... I . D~_..i. ptriod when ... the country is Jn defense of An1ela avl.s an l!,....a ... 11 M••H~•. '"' 111111 A111 LEGAL NOTICE 1r1n11tr •lld 1nt111111•~' GI 1111 ••m• win NOTICE 11 MtltltY G1v1H ,,, th• MCOW1111. •"••H • SYLVIA , av w1rl11t .i 111 ••teutltll 1u11tt ., l I lod f I.ti I d d" d to b 't a y Avt .. ""'· G. Ciro!• Mt11. <1111111111. "' mlHlt. ino ,... c11111eerit1ofl ltlt,.lor• crtc1non o1 th• 1b0Yt ,...,..,. •tetc11111 l1f I . Oii•-• Av•. "'-"'di 11. n11 bf ,... su,.rlor cturr en er ng a ptr o po 1 ca eman 1n& an en ar I r r Tonr 011 ... .,., 1,.11 ,.111, •• '"""-llL. ,"'1W w111 111 .1111 en°'"'"'' A1ru 21 . nn. 11 th•' 111 ""''°"' ~•wlni ,111'"1 1111M, P.O. 1u "' 01 c111w"1,, cour11'1 « ..,. ,.,_.,.., repression," the official Tass rule and persectuion and the c111w1111. , ''*''''CAT• 0, au11111111 Iii• tK•-'"''""'1111 °' 1•1111 ""'* 111d d«tMn1 ''' r1w1r ... 1o fll• °''".., Cillf. """ 1111t tt c111wn11, \IPOfl 1 hlitt-nt d f II 1 . t ' I M1rllv11 011w•••· 11•n ... r' I r. ' •1CTITIOUS lllAMI Amt•IC1. H,T.1.1.A. II IHl lrYIM ........ , 1111111. Wiii! "" M(llllrv _.,;;P\ltl, In CTI•) .,...,.. lflltttcl '" f1vor of Arlllllr w. (r .......... news agency sai . release 0 a P 0 I 1 C a N-•lk. c1111et1111. The ulldtrililltd do ctrllf'I thw •r• N-POrt •••di. Ctllf«11t1, ,,,. lfltc• et Iii• d•rk " "'' tbov11 .t.""911¥• 1w AlfMhlltl!'INr oto. C'rtwtw• 111"'""""''' c .. 11 hlcf• ''The Davis case is being prisoners in the U n I t e d Tr111 11w1111111 11 1111111 c011111Kt9ll Wf 1 conc111Ctl111 , bal.-i ,1 iin-• '•rt! ,. ... ,.. Tt>t «111ild•••111111 """""'' will ti ••kl '"1111 ... cMrr1 or 1o 1r•1tn1 """" wllh '"'i.tlM1t1 °''"" Ctt11 0111y "'161 ''""'' <•tt11ior1 e!ld •t•l111t Leu""'• l"trlrtt•M1•. C-<o ••-o, CoO•-•Oo, ,,.., I""• II '9llOW1: ct'" ll'lt fltCeUlrY vO<rd'lert, tt. lflt ..,,.. Ajtrll IL 2t, !7 IM Ml¥ •• 1')1 tl.S-11 E, Spr1u .. , Jr.. Hll'ol• 0.,.._ N st1ged 1fl.tr the worst models Statt3." CP11r1" E, Ml,.1•• riditioui ..... fi•m ...,;;, °' ,.,01 'i' oi1M Air111, 1t11 dH1ltMC1 11 1111 1ttlc• 11 P111 111orn11v: ., M l'l'oduel111111. It'(., • cw•. ,, .( Mecarthyi.m W b )• eh Pravda, t b e Commun1·st toub1l111t<1 Or n• c..11 0111, '1101 1'11": H-'""Y 1:. CAt.L To111 , ,.. Ntw-1 LEGAL N-CE 1uflm1111 o.-"'"'· ~1119 • 11e1 1111 ... u • ' l'AIHIONS encl lhll ~•Id firm 11 Wll!ltl'h Sten., l'rttkl1nt , •• ,. D•O->•O<o .. ·--lo••o, vu I AMII" u, io, n, 1'71 1"'11 COM""9d «"" tt>1lowl11t """""·-. " 1 1 "Su Ir ~· •• , -~...... ... or m.-!.U •ctu1ttv M 111 111d \ldt· flourished in tht United States Party newspaper, dt!cribes .. ,-., 1, ... 11 •!Id ""'' '""'~-• •r• ,",,',, ''" " c1111or1111 ""'· ""'\"' 11 1111 ,.11c1 lllOTICI 0 , INt•N'''' ,0 '"'''' """' e11 1111 •111 ot ,... 11-11c. LEGAL NOTICE .,,. '~ ,. u • .. bull of 1t>t Nltt It-In Ill el t&141 t•tevtlfn. I P11v1 JIYIM ..,,.. in the fillies." Miss Davis as "• well-known '' followl: H•lmvt Ntllflllllfl .. ...~ .. '' '• ~ '' • IN TH• IALI o• ALCOHOLIC,,, •••••••• ,,, .... ··--~-1 ol Ml!drtd L Nor-11\r~t. 11111 ACHll Sf., Jllll HIUmlllll Ml•<ltl ,... •I n Ill ml ti I t SIVl•A•ll .,,.,.,, Miss Divis, a 26-year-<1ld Communist and Ii g ht er f'-4Utt Foun11111 vo11n. c 1111. ,i*l!t!M (),,1111 CNit Otllv ,1111 11kl ~nt, w11111n ....,, -1111 11'11t Alrll ,, 1t7l 1';,'kl1.!llCI~~~ •1:,..,.:,..:.:~ 1~~ Negro, is an avowed against the oppression ef c111t1,1cAT• tll' 1u1111111 11r1 s. NortP1rv1. 11111 Ac1c11 11 .. .._,,11 1>. 1tn 11t-n ""tlr.i Mrbllcitlon 1111 111" ntt!tt, T1 w"°'" n M•~ COii(...,,: Ctllloml•, ••Krl~•• 191i-.: ' '""''"' 1111.Ma l'O<rnlll" Vtlll'f, Ctllf. Ct!N Mirdl JJ. ltTI SWllCI 11 lu .. ~· • .. <O-c •·t d I e N groe " M,,,,,_ c .•• ,, •. '"'' •• , •. , ••.• NO-MA"' Hll.lll:T OIWll .,.... ....... Tnt ~oulil JJI. '"' ti 11\t """' ommunJ.:11 an a orm r e s.. T~• u11c1w111M011 -t11llt'I "' 11 ·-.., •• ... LEGAL N011CE £ • ""wm •••llM tw. no11c1 11 ,..,...., t lY111 11111 d .ot '"' ., 1111 Wttt " !Ml ., lecturer at Uet.A. She is being Pravda said Arr.erica was ~onclud1111 • ""'~r' '' 11J.u L011n A-..... ~::;:•:.,.j1'~";·,~•11t. O:e:.:'':i.w• ,,.111tc1 ffctlltllt = """''11':""t11 •'~ ,. HT! ''f:!:rlc 1111 1:111 ~111 .. L" s1, ,urv11w b.ld )·n eo•-•'on W ,·th guilt f "t•· JC. ·~•• bOUA:n.,. ""11 MIU. 11 """11 '• urMltr ll'lt '""'" '. •-••• IAll 11M lolAll•T "· CAllLTOM tr•.-1 1 ,,_Ill. •ttct 1 1'1rt111 Tr1c:I, It ,... .. Ill I 1'11"' •u• .. ,,.L.I Y O 1..:: v 1....... ""'& fktl!llln t!"" """' " OllAMGI!: lirt I. Herth~; MOTtc• TO ca1orto•s .... ...,,,.... ,...,.. Drtft. •~1,. ..._ tottew. --•tar11911 '" ......, "' NII C1lifomi1's M•rin c 0 u n t y of Angell Davis." p 0 1 I c IE COUNTY llUlll!I. HOSE ANO TUlllllO Mo"-'L-c. •·•·dll SU,11:1011 cou•t ... TNll N--' ..... ,Cal ...... ~ inn H1rbor loult ¥tr.. ""'"'•In 11, MIK . "''"' rlllt"fl °' OrlMI •·•" h .t 'd CO. 11111 11111 u141 tltm 1, --Md of -' ·-....,,.., I ''I Oo C• ''''''' "' tn ) ·~ -·· V111r, '"""'"" tl'lll '°""""'IT •..wn \11 Y1 CA .... ~ ....... 011n battle Jut "f1brlcal.C\I. er case, I Sal ' ffw lo!ltw!111 --· -MIN In STAT• OF CALl,OllHIA, T L T .. , • --l'urtutnl II "'°' l<'tltll'll.... ""' , ___ ,· •.• ,,,,, ·-· •• ,,, .. ,,, vui; w~ •-· o•AHGI: COUNTY: THI COUNTY OP OIU.NtlS A,,.,_ W ·---ul\d t ntcl I I 1 It 11,. Otoert nt -•n• ...,. ... .., Augu~ lo which a judge and ··ne case of Angela Davl!! "'11 }.~ t lKI ~!'!....w..-u, ·.~1 ..... -, : On Awll '· "" bllort ...... Hol1rv lolO. A4'11 'Wll-Or1n11 , .. ,1 Oall~ l'lltl, • ,',','.!..,, ,1 ••• v ... ,_ ' ... ' ,.,.. NOTICI II Hllll!IY GIVl!lll ""'' "" ..,..riff A. -.-lu~• r,, J -ttl lot•lt ol WILLIAM IC. Mc:HOWH, ~ -lnO ""'I ,,,_, , .... ,, .. "'"~ IWIMI 111 ,rl!l•t, ~II 23,. lffl, ti 'ICI :• thr ... ( bl., "'dna-rs we-and the v,.· tnam war are links ........ '°''' MM•. c1111or1111. Pilltll< '" '"" tor .. kl '""· ,.. ...... 11¥ M8r'Cll ••no A11rt1 '· 1-. .tWo •-trv 1r1n11u "' ... •lnftollc "'""" ... , .... , .. , ,1 "'"' " '"""'111fv••· A.I r-'" llfllrld Mlldnd L Norlll~, IE1r! J, 0Ktll... Oc:111 lot lh 1 t.r... • - shot to death. af a single chain of crimes in Oiied ~:~\!.'·~~M'I" J•, H.,,,,,~ •..... MIClfllr. c. lflultr --NOTICI: " Mlltlfl't' ~IVl!H lo "" LEGAL NOTICE o~ IAL~H t"e':1'::.~' llw.a ' w w .. 1 11111 ltrltl. tllJ °' C.11 Id i. me 11 M 11\1 Nriont ..._. ,..,.... ••• crtdltor• Ill' lflt ·-• n1m.,. dKldlM 'utillc Eon.,. l'leC•) '1dt' """'' C1n1orn11, C1111111t ef Ot-tlt'9 Sbe i! charged with buyin& ~ United States," ~ass sad 1•~: :lf1't'~~1~f1. ~:!' ~111;:Net1•rv 1ue1erlbld 11 "" w11111n '"'''"'IMnl 11111 11111111 ,.r_ P11v1M r111m1 u111111"" l'-4lSIJ Ant.n1 deilrtn1 19 .,11 ... 1111 111111,llU ot c 1t11or111t. ' wm ttH " .wt~ all the guns used by the 1n attacldng what 1t calle ~bile 111 ,,,. ,., 11111 s1111. --uy ~~-i.;-,""" .. ec ... , .. "'* ••lft•. ::1: ==:~ =:'1.'T11 •: = c111T1P1UTI Ofl •u11tt•s1 "''"""' 11cen .. "'!! tri. • ..... 1nw """' ~ .. oxi~~~ .=,.:'':."~~; ... "',,:' ... "'dn•--and wUb conspiring ''the -partd trial of tbt ......... Chlflll A, OtlWR "'-" II "'' 1'1'1 -· .. ""' cl•n. .. "" ........ 1111tlltcl (llUrt .. l'KTITllUI MAM• ll lllY tlllc• IM 0.trlmffl "' IH IM rllftll, 11111 11111 lllllr"llt ,, iu r-•• r• -,. 1o M tttl --........, """' I• C1rl IE. wn-10 ''"tnt lfllm wit~ ,... MCIHtrv Tl'll l!Mtrlfffeif ._ clt'lllY tot It Alellllllc l1Y1r1" C1n1ro1, ot br IM\I It 11141 llHlllfttfll 1-.,.1 In Illa ....,. wilh the slain a 11t1 e d courageous Communist. """"''IMoll 19 .,, wtllllft ln•l•Ul'Mnl '""' HO!ery toubllc • C.lltor"" Y01K,....1 ,., tM u'nc1tr1l..,.. 11 1M 11'11<• ("""'UCll"' • ..,.,,... at U• w, 11111 SI,, ""' 0-""-1 tot -'lmllllc ...,.,," dttel"leltt .rtHrtr. w • ~Cl'I "*'-. 1 d 1 t~· 1 t Tass said some of the Soviet •dl;nowl911ttiO 111•~ICVI ... 111e ..... ,. 0••-counlr "' ,..,.. ~tiwnwi· McOWt!N o"tlN & N1. 1. c.111 MH•, c1111etn11, uMer "" ,.,.,..,, 1!15 o '''"'· I.er""'""" ,, miy .,. """''" ,. .. 111,., ,,111 r1ng ea er 0 ll'C p 0 · l°'l'ICIAL SEAL) ~ c;.,em:;gi!wl l xMr" SYLVIA, J.ltl 11,j C..-111 'Affnut, ,.0 . llct!tltut llrm n1m1 114 Cll TAf't cr~:-m~ ,."191'...'fM11 :' .. bt rte.tWd .. teut!wl, wllfl ,ecavtllll l111trtllf IM Her attorn1ys havi argued Union'! leading artltb wrote Miry lllPI ......,,., · • '" "' °"'..,. c1111 """ wtordl 11 "'' DU,LICATING •llcl th•t .. 111 11r"' 11 w " ''" di• .,_911 _,, b •• Id b Pres·i•·nt Nixon ••k>'ng him to •,•,,1!?, .. ','.,'",.",",',wn11 '"''11111" °", ..... m Ctt•t 011"' ;~';': llK• «' 1w1111111 " tti. 11,..,,.1,,.... 111 111 cem.,.... °' "" 111i-1nt Nr-. """"' 11<'111'111" .. ,. '1"' _,Id. 111t1119 o.itd ,, '"'' Mii•, c1nNrnl• MINI! the c 1rges ~uou t U"C ·~ ""'11 " 11• '°· 1• 1 m•ll•~ Hrt11111n1 ,, 1111 111111 ., uld n•m.t 111 fvll •1141 •••t• « r11i.1na 11 11 •.-.it1111 "°' litnl•I •• •••vld.,. lrf llw. n, 1t11 dismissed btcause there Is no "use his infiuenct" to release o ...... c""""' d1ctffn1 wllill11 1o11r 11'1111111• 1111r ""' 111i.wo: TPI• .,11111'" ''1 -11c:•111M "'" 111t D1111rd o . w1•1r1en. M • D I Mr c,,...m1111111 l•l'lrt• LEGAL NcrrICE llr•I ""~llc:tl!Oll of !I'll• ntllet, G1r1kl Ou1M Dtu11t, 1U w. 111~ It .. 1111 11,°' .~~ol>lll{ 11tv.,tr••H. Tt>t1tor"' ol M•nll•I Mu11lcl,11 c;.irt. evidence in t~rand jury ISS av s. AWll •• 1t71 Dll911 Awll .. 1111 COlll M1 ... Ctllf, YI!' 11 ..... ,,.,.... tt>lllMCI I om •11¥ Orin .. '""""' H1..-. t ho h d 'd The slgnert inc I u d ed ,ubllJhild o ...... C111t Dlllr ,,lo! IAll Jl111 OorGlll~ c McN-DtllCI Attll t lt11 ofll(t ef the DePlr!Mtnl, J"dltlH OJ1trlct transcr1p ti s I I D . t A.Ir/I •• ''· :Kl. 11, 1'71 1Jl·11 JIOTIC• TD CltlOITl!ll:S l:IKlllrl• .of"" Will al GOl'~lct 0. Otunt COIWOL co1..-011.ATION lh c. A. GtMwln, 1nytblng illegal c 0 mp 0 J' rs m I r y lt,l~lfl:IO• COU"' 0' Tllll ,,.. ...... Mll\td dt«dtlll $TATE o• CALll'O•N•A. ()in (Clltlflk Sttlll!lf • d LEGAL NOTICE JTATI o• CALl,OANIA ,oa MCGWIN, e1:11N' l'l'LV1A OllAHGE COUNTY : l'r•lltltnt .flltHA•D A llaWILL Tat! leads the "Free Angela Shostakovich an Ar. m TH• COUNTY 01' Ol:AM•• .,. •. Clll-• ,._, () .. A~•ll J 1'11. btf«• "''· • Nl'lt•Y .. :r~~l~~~'i'n1°'1"" (Git! C1t1r :..io:; '"l~!Hl'I ·"-"'' Davis" movement in the Khachaturian and Bo Is ho i P-tl• NI, •..a1"' •.o. ••~ tft '"•11< 1" •rod .. , ••1• ''"'· ,,r..,.•llY, ____ • cc=-cc,.-,-~-----i•n •· 11111 11 .. . b I I . M ClllTl,ltATI OI' IUllllllll t!1t1t. .i GEORGE LOWILL IAltl!". ora"9•· c1tlflll'1ll1.,... '"""'" 0.,1111 0u-01 .. 111 k-11 101 LEGAL N-CIC c..ii 1111111, Cillflnll• &ivlet Union. pr1ma • er In a aya j"·· Iii GEOttOE L IAIClfl:, J ..... !f1'1 UWIM lllt ,, " IM .. ,llMI ""'-Mllll 11 VI' , .. DnohH Ori.-Co.tit Ctltt ~llllt, It '.l.d the ' • r ram e u"" Plisttskaya, Tass said. •1ct1t1ous NAM• •· ol!:ot.01 IA.Kiit, Jt. .. •• GlfOl:Gl ,.,.....,., ,., •••wtrt. ""bltrlhcl •• "" w11111n •""''""''"' •llf1--:--;-..;e.;iTD;<ii;D;0.~---1M~"~"~·~·:'"~'~"~''.' ~·c'~':,· ~·n;·~-~.,.~·~· r Th• ........ ,. ......... (lflllr 1111 .. IAICll. •kl G. L, l-'ICIEll, JI., tltl G. Pull! ..... o ...... (Nil c.n, P!ltt tdt-ll<tlt<I "'eucvt .. th•........ lllOTICI TO CllOITOl:I oiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiimlc...,...ctln1 • i.u11nt11 11 not\\ w. IAICI:", JI:., o..:e11e11. ...,,u ti. :to. u. ,,.. M..," 1'11 ut-11 (Otllcl11 S.•ll •u,11:10• cov•t ol' THI LEGAL NOTICE • Oc11n ''"'' Welk, NtwflOrl llldl. NOTICE 11 HE1tEaY Gl'llN '9 lhl M1;, ltth MOl'tlll ITATI O' CALl.OllllllA 'O" C1ll,.,...l1, ullcltt ltlt nctlllou1 "'"' llllM cr ... llM'I " lflt 1bovt 111med f-tnl 1 •l"!AL NO'l1C£ Nllilt'Y l'ubllC • (IH,,,,,111to Tllll COUllT'I' o• OltANOa Heroin ismovinU tolhe suburbs. The sprtad of heroin addielion is cliKUssed on pa9es 22 and 23 of the Federal source book: "Answers to the mest frequently asked questions about drug abuse." for your frtt copy send in the coupon below. •••••••••••••••••••• Fer a copy of 1ht r~ar1I SOUrct !took: • "AnlWtfS IO 1he MIMI f requfl"!tly 1sktd • • quesllom 1bou1 dru! •bu~" write to : Orua A.butt Quntiom 11'1d Ans wt rs • • • • • • • • • ""~""· .Udrts" 01'(: N1tion1I Cle•""lhoust for Orv& Abuse lnfotmilion • loxioeo e Wuhlnaton. D.C. 20011 SUit: ">"1p: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • " LIL'I SHA(ICI Ill THIHGI Ind 11111 "''' •• -IOlll 1'11¥1111 ct1lm1 Hllllll tn1 ~ l'•l11cJ111 0tnc.1 lft Nt •• .....,, HOTK• ... MA."IMAL'I u.1.a 11ld llr"' 11 ""''°""' ti 1111 t.llNlnt 1tld 6Kldtnl 1r1 r...,lrld 19 1111 11'1111'1, 0•1,... CDUfllY 1E1r1tt" Alltn 01J1, Ottllttd. !!.., 1,', 1:1" WI'"-·· --. wMll n-Ill 11111 llMI llec.t With tht nKIH¥l' vowcM~, Ill tfle tlftkl 1'-411M -'1tl1 f, 1'11 ~OTl(I 11 ltlltllY OlVfH 11 tf1t JOllll N. Hu,,,, ., "" -~ .. rtlllllll(t It 11 t.llowi: tf t11t cllrk" 1111 1bovf tnlllld t...,rl, It Cl"Tl,IUT• O, COl:,OIATIOH •O" l'ut lllflel Oftl'tll CH1I 01llr 1'1lfll etldl!Gtt If 1111 '"°"' lllll'\M dlcldlll! N._.111 ·-• W. O. NIWffltn •U W. LIUl1n L. ._..,., i1t l'flt• If~ 11 ........ , !Mm. wllll "" ""'"''' TIU.lllU.CTIOlt Dfl •u11111••• u1110•" Alll1 .. lJ, :IO. 17, 1•11 7~11 "''' 1!1 -llOll1 ....... 1 .. , e1t1m1 lttlMI IM Hhlll!i:1u~':°::1. t1KVl1911 ,,...,... ... ... , ... _, ••t'Cll. c111 .... n11. -'!t11, ,. lflt u""•ttltM<f It ""' otllc• 'ICTl1'19UI NAM• ltlcl •tctcltnl Ill ,...,1,911 "' rt11 "'"'" M1rd'I 11. lt71 br 11'11 Mt.11'11~1111 C.,,t1. Otttt Mlrdl it, 1m °',.... 111wnty: o.1.v10 s. T1HGLE•. JOO THI VHDEl:SIGNED co1."°""r10H LEGAL NO'l1CE w1111 111e 111CMt1rv ... _,.,,, m ""'wt1c1 Orint• '"""'" H•rOor JIH!k:lll Dritrki, Llll!1n L. s...ctlt' H-M (fllltr Ol'lwt, Sul1t t10. 111-' ....... rll'I' nl'lllv ltttl II 11 t°""'..clffll f/f lfll cltA 114 11\1 ....... , llllllt .. tl!IJl'I. • Clllll'llY of Ori ..... , Sltll 9f Clllflt'llll, 111'11" (111'°"'11, Orlllll C-ty~ lllUI, Ctllf. ""°• Wllltll It 1111 •l•et " 1 1iviln111 IMil ... 11 JQll Wttl c .. 11 IAI: fin It P'llllll lfllm, wllll 1111 ........ ..., -' ivffmlfll lflltr .. In fl-II Oii Mardi It, 1m • .....,, m1, I MllltU""" unotr1lt...., 111 111 m11ttt1 ltW'I' H-1 l•tt.fr C11llor1111 "'"'"r ,0,,,, ,0 c•n•-•I ¥t\lct"" ,. 1111 uPllll•tltntt 11 1111 .it•·• .... ,.,., l"llMk In ........ 111'11 Sltll, Nrlllnl-...... ,.,, " ••Id dec .. 1111 ... ·:.. .... .__ .. ,_ ,..:._ ••• ,.,IHI! ... • ... Jtl\11 H. Hurtt. II lufl!ttllll c•9'tllr - '"' ,,~, ....... ""' ·-"~ ..... SUl'll:IOlt COUl:T 01' TNI of ...,. Alllll'MYI, 0.lrtw, DtVOff, 11'1111 •••!1111 WI.....,. "-•n •1 W, •Hllt'llll't ·-•r911 Ll!ll111 L. •111'1111 four ""'""" '"" "" llr11 & SATTl!IY IH0,1'1 .... "''' 11111 STAT• o• CALl,OltllllA •o• ...... 11. ...., ICU••• tlll WIW>lrt 0 NewM111 tl<I w NIMl\ln II "'°9mtM •-hi "" ,. M IFll ,..,..... wfl9o.t 1111llllUllln II tl'llt ntfl(I, firm 11 -" " lflt ,. .... 1.,. Uf· 1'MI (61/NT'I' 01' DIU.11111 "'11tv1•-· ltvtrtv 1tll!1, C1ll'9rnl1 '"'" .~. -lfll 1 i..t M!l~I « u.nt.U -11 WOl(TIMd II !!It -.tM'll~ l11o 01lld AHll 1. ltTI PPf'lli.., ~ wlll()NI l llCI el W. A"'411 wl'lleh 11 ll'l<f 1l1ct f/f ~ll11t1t ti "" II l\lftn'll1'tl Ill 1111 •ll"ln!'llfll ..... •dl-IN1td lllt utc:lllH All-··~·· W•I-• 11'•• fo!lctwt : ••••• • '•"···· I ..... , ••••• uncltnlOlllll Jn •II '"'"'" .,II I ,,, lcfUlllY ........ II !I'll ••l'IM .. v , 0 • "" WO<O • 0 • • . ••" "'"'''' " ~• dltt ti "" 11...,11'1Ct ef uld ukutlM. O , C · L II: LI 5AIQI 1 • lhllll111 l•IMlll Y1dll Sff"Ylct. Ill,, 1111 LOVINA !MM.A GOO.Ol(ltSEH, 1111 111tlt •I "" wlltol11 9'ur I i'leff 1..,1 .. u"" ill !ht r!lltt. tltll ( • I IA A ll'l<f '"""' n11'11tcl •tel'fl"I !OI Wnt C:..11 llwY .. N_.i l .. cf!, DKtlMCI ...nll'lo tlllt ln9 flr•I """lu!IWI II' !hit IM lllltr'"I ff otld llltll""M 4"'°" Ml" ltfh Morllln ......... I. TlftlLllt C&IU 1110T1ci: .. Ml•llY GtVl!lll .. "" lltlllt. I" 1111 ... _..,.. Ill "" ~nlY tlf o ....... ~:l. ~u::t<•\lletnla Jlt 'i:"" C.,tw Cr. WITl'iltl llt ~111111 11111 lflll dn tt tr ... l!fn fl# '"' ....... Mmtcl dll ... 111 Oil ... Alfll It 1t71 llllt of Ctlllt!'n!1 lltHrlllH 11 tllllwl: r N 1 11 Mitt Ml'Cfl It)! llltt Ill ,..,....,.. h1vl11• tlll"'t 1111"'' CP11rlfft1 l'•l<k 011t, '"-"CEL I Thi! """'°" 114 Let It Ofl~C'l'nt I I N"""'1 ..... taof.,,.. 1111111111 l••m•ll YIOll "" ••" dKloltlll Ill r1H1U1r ... le 1111 •••O•lrl• " Ille Wiii ti 'AlllVllEW '-'llMJ ... ,,,_ .. h :~II • ~~1 •• "" !~S: ••tntn• t•Yktf '"'"· """'• w!lh 1111 llllttt•rv vtudlir•· In OtlrtW -:a ~:,be¥• Nm .. •11: .. 1111 lllff on 1111 '"' '"" .. ,.. n 91 ~u~ltllltcl on..,. C111t D•llr 1'1111 ,llMlllllll Qf-111" CN•I DtllY ,JI., o. L. '" 1111 olf[(f " "" clerk °' IM ....... N•all•r' ••"' •• ,... MIKlll•-· Mtii.. "••rd ef o ...... M1rt11 ll, 311nd A•ll '' U, lt11 ,,,_71 U!'ll '· ll. .. 11, ltn 1't-11 STATI ~-;:r~[~FO•HIA, ~:ll~~:::v It ~J:,-..Nllf11111'~ w: tin WKllllrt awi.v1r-, er~.,.,~~~';"'~~.~~.:; ':,flaow~ , ."AL Ncmc• LEGAL NOTICE cou,.,v o, 011.AHGE. "· .... 1 ... .,, 11 "" '"u,,.. 01,,..11T1111:Nt •• .,, ... " 1t11 ... c." ..... " mi• 11v1111••' \\ltllf• °' ••Id Lii' »1 ""II'' a.r..u l!io 011 tnl1 ltllt ••Y II' M11U1, A.O. IAHIC OF AMllllCA H,liTIONAL T"IJIT Ith UUI lh ...... !4 W11I, llOlll lllt leulh u ... 114 uld !------:oc=cc-------1--------------llfll, lttl«I mt Merv lt!PI Mlll'ltn AHO SAVINGI AllOc:IATIOlll !IY I 1111""'1 fir •-vfl'lx Loi .. 10 1"11 1~mc:1 Hwth, Nttll~I 141111 I Nlt1rv '"b!lc Ill Incl for llkl c ... 11 .... Lu<llll •• 1!111), ., Ho!'l!I Mllll '''"'· ,ubll1f19ll o ...... Ctt" Otlly ,lie! II F11 .. i.w AY-JI\,,., '"'' -· Cll:Tl,ICATI 0, IUllMlll ,-41111 '"" 11111, rtlldlnt ll'ltrtl11, duly ,.,.._ Stlllt Ana, Ctlllorllll ti7'1 W!lldl 11 A•tll IL 1f, 2111'111 Ml¥•· lttl 11•·11 t!til, Plrllltl 19 M'lt s_,111 11ft9Y . ., •1CT1t1ovs MAM• ClltTl,ICATI 0, IUllHl:ll M!HIOntcl •1141 •-"· HfMlltllY ·~ ... , .. "" ,,.c.t °' b'llllMtl 1111 "" ....,..,.,,_ Mid Lii '°· .. 11111 "''Ml SOlflfl. Tiii undt••ltntd " (trUty "'"' '"" ,ICTITIOUI MAMI o. L. • r • d, k 111w11 tt ""' 11 IHI 111 e ll m11tu1 Mtt•I""" 19 tflt ••t•le LEGAL NOTICE t1r111.i 11 11ld '•lrvlrw AYlllW. i. """"""1111 I ltullntU et 12'4 •• c.111 Th• lllllittlll..... -· ctrllty .... It ""' s I c, 11 I , y .. TM "'"'"IOI! " .. 1. dff.tnnt, whlllll ..... lllllllhl 111, Mn! °' btll"lll"•· H..,., ,.,.,, .... Mir, C1\lhlr11l1. u ..... Clfldlldllll • tl/llMll •t 1'Jl1 N1w1r1r; '"" tllkultcl "'' WI"''" 11111 .......... 111 ""' '"''IM 11'11 IVM1Clllon" 11111 llOllCI. NOTICI Ttl (llOITlll•• ""'"' 11 Tfl,tl .nltrl « 1.,9' iG ""fl1fftl-llron Ml!ll II LI CANTINA Cltclt, ltYIM, (1111«1111, uncltr lht tit· IHINll ti llll tor-1!lofl !M .. 111 111,...., Otltl Mtrll'I I .. 1'11 IU,l•IO• COUIT II'. 1'1111 11 !'Al.VIEW l'AllMI. It ""'""'' ·~ LIOU0•1. '"" llllt Mi. fir"' 1, __ .. llllt•rl firm Mmt 01 I• VI H W llld KllllllWltdttO It mt IPl1! 1u(!I IA.MIC OP' AMl•ICA ltATI 01' CAl.ll'OllllllA •ot 1111• "' 1111 111 ._ I, H .. fl of 1111 ftllowlnl -IOlll• ......... 1111nt1 In TILSVt110N & f.Ll(TltOMI( 1ALIS <.,_ell.., .. IKUttd 'II• 1arM. Ill NATIONAi.. TllUST ANO Tllll COUMTT 01" O•AllOI el MIKll!lntOlll MIP1, ltMOtdt ti "'" 11111 .iK• of r••kl-• .,.. •• .. SEltVJCf. 11'111 thll ••kl firm II Wlll'lttl ..,.,., .... I ~ ..... hi'"'"" ••• SAVIHGS AllOCIATION HI, ·~ or ..... ($1,111"'· Clllltrn!1, f11crll•ld t11i...1; tenl ...... of "" lMltwin. ......... """'' "'" "''"" 11'1111 '"'"" m, oll1<1•1 NII • .,, LUCILLI •. ILLIS lllllt ti NETTIE ... GA•••n II ftlllWll Otvld c. Mltlllt, an 'I""" Ct .• "'""' In luU •IMI 1ltc.1 " rMlftooel "" d•r '"" •••• 111 11111 ctrllf1Ult l1t<;l1l Mn'ltl>l1trtlir with ... OlcttlH. liGINHIHG " I ""'' ... "" ......,., Huntlnlltn lilt~, Ctlllornlt lt 11 tolllw1: r!r1l ..... Wrttllll. -&, liulll• ....... l .. lllM NOTl(I! ll •Hl"ll't' GIVlN .. 1f1t 11111 Ill llkl Liii!, UJ lttl WM! ,,.., ''"'' A, OIN~ lttr-l'IHI Cr.. l:kl'le,. l'or-•be..111 Jtldtl. UJn to•,ICIAL SIAL! II • -1• ttmlll!llt•IOI' " (tldllOl'I OI "" •lllOll• 111111 .. ffttdtnl "" SlllllM1•ter1Y Cttl'llr " ••Iii L61 """''...,.., ''"~' t oll!lml1 N.-.1r-(1"'1t, lrv1M. Cell!. MAllY l[TH M()ITOH ltlt •tltlt ef 1111 ........ MIMI lht l 111 ... IOlll 111~!"' clt1mi , .. 11111 lflt Jll1 1MM9 Wullr .... , I I-"'' lwfll OtvMI c. Mltllr.t .,., ... MlrOI :it, lt11 Hlltrv ~utile: • C1lllornl1 dlclHltnt .. 111 dlltdllll •rt '""''' .. II trio "''"" llM " L.. ,., ' •lrtllnll " 11 I n.Kl A. Ohtll "lcfltr• JI'. JHHI '•lntitof l Offlct In (001(11'1', ICNUMAClllll, «M.IJll.Ut, wllll 1111 llltffllrY ¥1Udt«1, In ""1111<1 IHll M'llMI et rllhl -Ill NOr"""'' Slf!I OI CtH ... 1111, Clr"lllft Ceu"": STATI O' CAl.IFO"HIA. Or1111t Ct11111Y MlllTA"D & HOW'AllD 11 11111l1rl tt 11111ltn llllllltd (ll!Wf,., • _,tlll'ICI " J11.!7 i..t Ito lht c"'llll" 0.. Aptll ltn, Mflf'• ft'lt, 1 lllllln 0".-.NGI COUNTY: Mr C-1111111 aJl1l,.t lN T-& Ctwlltrv .... If •tMtnt ·-· wllll 1111 lllClllf.,. llM ef ltlol I.ti .IOJ lllllftll II tllllf ,uDlk Ill 11'1111 ter lf1t1, __...ltf 011 ~ref! "· nn, •Ill'• "" 1 ,..,II t . nn ., .... C.llflll'lll• ftMI V'llldltr1, 11 11'1• ......,,,...,.. " lllt •ltlw •ntlH 1!1t1trlv, •1-1111 ctntfr 11111 ,,..,,911 0 .... 111 (, Mll ltt encl l rucl A. lllll•rv l'ullYc 111 1fld !of 11kl 11'1t, l"uMlll'IH or1 .... c .. 11 01Uy l'llol T"' 1tM111 el Mr Atl•MYt. W••K .. ·-'"" 114 L .. Jll, • •l1l1Mt II' 4J Mll1 011111 k-Tot "'' It 11t the .. r-• lll'IOOl•llr _,IMlt .. ltldl1,.. '· JttHI Mltdl JJ, • 11'111 .......... IL lHI '14-11 Aller"'" W"""" A"111l11ti.1""' tre111, W Ctwtr Otlv1, ~Ill t1um61r u , th-• II r""'1 &lllltt S....lfllrty, I """"' 111-,,. ""'ttcrllld flf ll'lt wlll!l11 k-11 19 tnt "" M IM per--· wlltl W11 _....,*'Iii tlMI H-t l1K11, Ctlll•11le tHtO. whldl 11 oll1t1nc1 9' )11J1 ltlt "' tM ..in1 '"•Trwlftfl'll .,,.. •~i..tld ll'lr,,-111"'• 11 ,..,._rl-le Tiit within I"• LEGAL NOTICE ..U.llllMI tt • ~ etlt!llillltntlr 1111 111c1 el bu1!11111 « IM l/fllflflltfllll 111 114 btel11nt.,.. ••tcuttd 1f1t ''""" 1••u"""I •1111 ff"-1...., Ill ll!tl"'9f ,ull!IP\td Ortnet Cotll 0.111 ,111111, t it 1111t1tt1 H<1el11lnl le !ht Mlllt of 1tlll f'lrul II n.. l1Jt d lff'I 11 10.lll(IAL llAL) 1~· tfllll, C.U• MO. ,...... Metdo n .• -AWll '-U, ltll '4·11 ffetclt,,,, Wllilln ""' -1111 jfftr "'' "" WMI ,., '"' " N kutll 11111 L. Mlfrl« lllutlft' !OFFICIAL llALI Cll:Tl,ICATI ... COll'ClllATID• flrll ll\lb!lc.111111 114 lfll t fllflC., °' UI • °' '"l"Vll:W 'Al:M), ,,..,,..., l"vlollc.(1111..-M• M•rv '""' MlfM,n LEGAL NOTlir<V' DllW AtrH u, ltll r ~ .,. m•• on 111• 111 ·-- ''' -···· .,,, •• '' Htltl"I' ,vllllc • Ctlffllt"ll '" TllAllllACTllN OJI IUllNlll "'"' Jullf G. Jlllllt111 ..... 71 ef MllCtll_, MfJ'-'"' -UMDll ''CllTIOUI KAM• ·-• -C < C <o•-<oo Of-•nt• Celi!lty Prl'ICl••I Offlc1 Ill l~eculrl, " "" Wm .,....... .,,,,,.. """v. • ..-11 Mr ,...,,.,1111111 l••I... OrtMI Cou11ty IA Jl9' llll't 114 !I'll tbevl llf"'ld dff ... llll IXCll'"TIN~ lilttlf1em lff '""" "' "*~ttv ,,, ltn My C'"""'IHlon lall•ll TMI UNOl•llCHl!O COltltOltATIOlll lllOTICa 01' lllfTIJ4Tl4111 TD Wltltct, ·-lfl!f Cr•ll •11, ml,,.,tl1 11M1 J1yfr•c1r•111 Pulllift .. OrtnM (NII OtllY Piii!, Atf'll 1. lt11 doll ~ .. ..., 1•ttlty llltf If II IOnWcf!"' CltlATI SICVltlTY llolTl•ltT Ht o ... .,. Ori¥ .. l~lti N-lltr 11 1uhl111t11 ul'llltt Mlol 111'111, wllflovt •wl1 •• IJ :Kl, !1 '"1 1J).TI ,....,1.,,911 Or•-(NII 01!1r ,!It! I tlllll'WIH •• ,.. .. ,,,. """' (hft, lltl • ,,., U.C.C.I NIWJffl •••OI, Ctllfwnll ~ ""' r!lfll ., tlllrv ...... • ... tll ' ' Mlflfl JO,""" •. u, ,., '"1 fOl..11 1,... .... y ....... A111. (•!1Wttl• """' tlOTICE It ~tltbr et-...11 .. "'' 1"M1 1no ut.•JJ ef * '"'· .. ·-v911 "" Lr•I• IM l)clllklll• l!•m "·-of 8AH , ... 11... of "'-' c." Ir. I. •1t1rMY1 ... ••-lrl• Kll1r1~. 11 11. '" .... ,_."' Ml"1! LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CI: GUllNIY "-'C!NO ..... ""' 11141 !Ir"' c ... -•!loll. Dt~lor, Wl'IOtl bu1lnn1 ,Ullllll\111 o ...... Co••t Oally ,Utt n, ,,., ... ... "''· "" ,,.,, 1 ------;;;,;;;;;:------·1-----===:;~:::.:.:.:.::._ ___ 11' ~.,,.,,...,,""" l9lllwl111 arw1•1Wi. ""n" It'°' Wtrt 1111'1 tlrMI. "'-' -""11 lJ. ,._ n •"41 M•v 4, ''" 111.11 Ofllcl•I ltteol"ll" ••• Jt.. ...... •IMINI •!1<1 ..... ,1_ .. ••ldl, (1H,1nty or 0111191, "''' 1111 ,.l't.. .. Thi 1111 " lfll ., MOTtcl TO c111e1to111 "41"' •• t1t11Wt1 c.i1i.1111, ll'lif • H<ur11y 1"''"'' 11 LEGAL NOTICE "" "'"' us '"' tt '"' s."' flt!f su,1•--· C&UIT 0, THI ,._,.,,CAT• 0, SVllNlll Al.L Mll•ICAN "lilClltS. IMC .• ,,,. ....... , kl bt cr11!9ll br OtDtir .... " I.ft JO -'"'"VllW ••-Ml, ltltl •• 'A"l,.ltMIA •Oii •1CTITIOUt MAMI I .• .......,y, ... 1111 A/It, C11lttr11!1. 11tnTN t9 Wllttt If, Htll•r • Cl. 114 fl -n ·~ "''' 111 IHI lft ....,, TN• ClllUNTY 01' Oii.AMi .,,.,. unlllrilfl,... .. c:1rT1ty ,,,.., I~ WITNl:IS Iii MIMI 11111 11lfl llllr °' c.11 ... 11, kvrff , ........ ..,_ti/II...... Cl•Tll'ICAT• OJI 11,!tlNlll. I, llM n .. M11Ct11•-"''''· Nt. ...... , Ctl'lllvtffl'll • lou•IMtt ll m t!. 1711t Mll"Cfl un. ...,, ..... 210 Wiii 7lil 11 .. LM AnMllJ, •ltTITIOUS NAM&: llllC9hl1 "Or•-<-"· C11llltnl•. E1t111" JOHN "AMIAT 'llA"· 1111 . hilt c. '*"' Mil•. c111t.r1111. Ir-• Al.L AMl•ICAH ""' .... INC. Cl llf,, C.U111Y "' L• """"" 111'9 ,,, Tiit UNl•rtlt,... • (trllt'f' """' •Ill ANCI COMMONLY KNOWN Al: ltlf JCll'IN ...... TT. Ill JA(f( l'U.TT Ille lkftlltul ,.,.,, -" ,A(l,!C ,.,, 0.11. MAlltl.AHC. c.nroml1. lllMlld • tuflntll II • llK• ..... Mtllcltr llOld, 111~1 ••• ., ... Dteh.... SANOS OISTllllUTIHOC COM,AlllY aM VICI ,rMldtnl The ,, .. .., 111 wl'llefl 1111 StcllrllY 4tCION lft C11!1 Mftl tM Sin!& A.111, C4Hlornlt. 1o16tlCl rs Htl:llY •tvrN II 1111 11111 .. ,. """ " --°' "" (COlll'OllATI ltALl llllltltl will w er11IM ... Ill •• ,,....1, •II Clllllr"ll. ul'lllh IM fl<tll...,. rtrm flltN HOTICl It Hl•t•Y OIVIH 'Nit tNlllttn 81 tl'll '"'" ""'1911 ~ "'*'"""' --· W'tllll lllrlMI 111 "-11 !TATI O• c;ALl,OltlJA, ll•tu'tt. "'ldl!lllN IHIUl-1, Mllllwr4 4' YHI IA"HllOlfl llld 11!1! &1141 "'"' 11t. "•leltf. A,.,.H tL 1'71, el ll:ID ll'lll 111 "'"'"' fllwl""' c111111, 111IMf Ille el'llll Ill-ti rt1W-111 11 telltwt! OUMT'I' M Oll.lNOl, II •rod l'Urftl_,.I_ II °"""' ('h'trl119 11 --Id ti ._ t.lllWIM -· e''*~ A.M. 11 lr9111 ef C..,,..,ie, u ld dllfftM .... ,...,,.,. ,. rllt """"· Wliltf ltutt1ll ,,._... IH4 L-rC °" "'" ""' •• , ti M•l'Cfl. "'"· ,,.,.,.,... -"""" ., ... w ••• 11111 Wl'lol• llt!MI '" tun .... 1'11111 °' Wf WM! ltlfl llrH!. City °' Cllt1 w1111.,.. _ .. ,.,. -m.r.. 1n 1111 ""119 L.11 .... """'"'' tHCll. c111t "6tt .....,. ""'"'o A lfOWtll:, • Nll1N tttttl, NfWPlll'I '"°'' Clwflb «or-. rlllffnef lrt •• lt>lllW'I: ,,,,.,., C•Hfwnte CWtrtr "Cno-Sit!• _. ... lltrtl 81 "" ........ entllltt ~. f/T • ..,.,,, Mlrt-Mtolt" lft4 LNW1r• ~ullllt U. ll'ICI ... ukl (-ty 11111 ll•lt 114 C1llfortll1, Ind M lntt1 11.-It ... ec:. I . Mtflll, IH Ill•. ll'r ,,...,, ti C•lllttnl1, I wl• 1ell 11 •1t 19 ,, • ...., ....... wlll'I 111t lllKtlllfY Lllll N""-' .... 00. Ctll, tMtl SllM, r11\ollnt llltriln. llllY' '*""'l1111nH ............ Ctnlrlil GltHl"lllorl. ltrkt l1llrod. Lllllt I, 0111ofltlll, UI 1\lcflln 19 1111 111"'911 IHiltr, fir ..... -cntrt, ...... llNHl'll ...... It IM lfll<t 011 .. Mwcto "· 1'11 '"" ·-· ,..,-..rtr __ , .. D. It, ,,,. IMr .. lcl -tty .......... "'" win NI. ttr ,,.,,,, ''""" lllt.... Ill ltwfl.ll 11\enty tf !I'll Unit .. ''""· el ~lo t ff•lllJtl JAMii E MITCHILL, Wlltt>r 1111' .... ~ Mlf1tllfll •MWn tt "" It M tM tt (tl't.......,,,..ltl Jll ., tlttr 1111 2'fld ••Y Ce! ........ II I, 1111 111 Ill• rt ... !, tlffe .... lfllwttl tf MIT(HlLL. KA"T & l"11C0, 1U Cl'll'lt l 1rlfl Mlt!Jm Mllrt \'k:9 l'rffl~ tt 11'11 __.111111 NI ti ,t,..,11, lt11, tl Wtttw I . Htllll" • C.. Htr1c1 I, M11tt 01N iuoe-111t d ... ltt 111 IM ...... C'""' Of-Not W"1, Miiie A111, C1lltlll'flll ITATI 0' CALl•O•MIA. •IQltliol 1M wllll!n ""11'r11,111f11 ti\ ...,,II tf C1IHN flll lfr'MI 1't M .. I.II ~ LI .... I , Or1nlltld llHC:tAM.I ,,_ty, Ill' N mud! ..,_. .,1'1. Wiiieto 11 ... Jlfft el llu1lntM tr OIAlllOI COUHf'I': II !ht --lllllO ll'tlt'llR "'""'' elld C1!11tt11ll Sflll ef C1llftr11l1, 011 .... ('..,,,f"I': .. 1111¥ II Mc:1u1rv tt Mtltl'll' 1111 lfl4 W-llfMll '" tit llllllt<I ;ft'tllftll!f Ofl ~ "It/ ltJl, ....... IM, • .CkJllWI.., .. le .... flyj _,, -ltlll'llltft J,i !Ir II II-It ll'l<r lf'«lltlf ,,,.,.,, 0rt ........ I, tt7! • ..,.,, Mt, I Nlflry t11KVl'9fl. "1111 ~ lnllt"t*I ... It IM ttltll " ''" ....... ,, "'"'IR .......... .,,. ,.le ... ..... .... .... '"''' •Mlrllll "" ''!""· •II W.111111 111111 .. Incl M11rM"1 UllOI !rt '"'II' 111 .,.,. ,... ulcl 11111, ,... .... , .... tttfl. '"'""'' eltw 1111 !ltd M llclllWI ti .... __ I,, ..... ., .. Wtlltr 111~111~ Mltott In Wltnllo li'llltMI, I Ill"" """"'""' lflt O*ltr fir lhl 11\rM yt1r• IUI -11!, 1 ... 1"4 Htttcl I. Mt1fl & Llllllt J, .P" .. It Clllt Mii .. C1\I~ Mlr'Cll ""1tt. llMI l:lllft Mlrlem ~ k-" ,... 1t1 lftr llend 11111 tffi19ll 1111 tfllcl1I ,,.., Sttnt. •r111fl1lll --" te"'" It.,. llM ..,_ ti, 1m. 0111111 Horii f. 1tn .. h "" ... r-wtlllt fl-Mt IHI #II •1¥ IN ¥1ir Ill 11111 e.rtHllllt Dlttd: ""'11 I, ltll ....... ·-91"1 wllltf'l .... '9 llill Wltl'llll 01111,. 0 , Wlllll'"""-WAT"l H. STITH 1v&w•ltlle t9 flt with!~ ltm,,,..,,.... IM 11t11 • ..... Wl'tn"" ll:CUll;l!O ,A.TY IMW\ll'rltnt 11111 .telll911d ... tll•Y M1111111 M<111lcl,..I CM1, E~tCYltt .. """ """'" ldl-"ffiN......, """""" "" .. _ cs ALI w111 .. I , Hiilfr & .. fo<'lllel""" \llM. er ..... c"'"" ".,... ftlt ................ ~HI! IOlfk.111 S.111 ''"' A, ..._..r (lllll't!IJ " C1lllll'nl1 t&,•ICIAL, llALI JYolkl1I C!ll•ld JAMii I. Mlf(NILL Mtry .. Ill MtrMll ..... " 'll'Mlc" In 11111 ''' J. •Nte11 C. A. Mt411• I Y L. M, Onlt MITCMILL.. MA•t a lltl1CO Nolll'J f'w'!le • Ct lltv!'llt I'll' 111• Ctu(ltr 111a S111t V1'1 ,rMlffllt "111..., l'~tllt -C11ltllf11I• L1NMM"' ,,. Cr.Ill Ctltfiif lrttf WMI 'rlncliM Off1c1 111 It .................. & •1rlt"" AttwMy1 W1ftll' •• IWlltt. (-1111¥ Ptl11Clt1I Olti« I~ Mii C. MAYll !'""° tM. C...,_1 Ml Or1r:· nty 41• C9'"""' 111vt "C1Rlltlll1 Ofu1ff Clun1¥ Plelllllfl'1 &lttrllfl' ell UU1ifl M¥ C t 1911 •1.irtt 1'1---' ..... t•llfw-ilt 1"all ti ........ II. MT temir.111\tfl l~lllH ,, 0, l;.s.J_lrt -,._, .. ~........ .-,,,lt , , 'I Ttll. ....... Lal AR .. I•, CllH. MU AuJUtl 1'. 111 l'lllfil Cl ..... l"~lofllll illtt Cati! DI!!¥ l"llfl 'lll!Jtl!M t.l'll'llt C141I OlllJ '""" l'~llflH Ott~t• C..1! IDtllY Jiii .. , "~lllltf\IHI O'lillt ( .. 1( Otll'y rfoJ'tf 'l#tlt!t~ld OrinM C..11 0.111 l"lllt ,~01111111 frtlllt Ott1I 81fl'll' ~14'1, ...,;Ir 11,. Jt. I _,,. 111,ty 4 1'11 11).11 Mltolll JI; ..... It I. jl, :IO, 1HI t11,)'I M~ n,. » 1M A-111 '-U. ltn Wf.ll .,r!I II. ltM 11).71 .... ff U, .. 1' •Ill MtY 4 ltM t'll.11 Nolrdl .. IM q,;j d.° 1 ..... llFI -'""' • ,, ' -• I " " " ' I .. . ,, •• '" • ' " %0 CAIL< PILOT * Tu.sdaJ, April U. 1971 " ' Everyone Hai Something That Som eone Elsa Wa nts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trade It With • Want Ad l~I _ ..... General PRESTIGE WATER FR ONT HO MES 52 Lind• Isle Drive I _ ..... l~I ---l~I I~ ;mm[ __ ... _-~l~;;;;;ie l -·-l~I _ ... _ * * * *ft TAYLOR CO. * General °""'_,.. Cost• ~ THE BLUFFS Macnab· Irvine 3 Bt, 2 ba, shake root. nr S.A. }'wy, o.c.c. A: s.c. Plua.. Cul-de-;lac lot,. xlnt Immaculate and hardly lived rond. Vacant «>On. ;J).!100 in. Cklke comer Jocatklrt. Rftlty Coml>tJIY by owner S46-5J66 I85o Sq, It . ol living atta .PRESTIGIOUS in this tn-lewJ 3 bednn DOVER SHORES Dover Shores CORONA DEL MAR-"BROADMOOR'' home. Fantastically ~aJ'l>et· Peerless VIEW, Anthony INGLEWOOD, 9 Deluxe Ii isb c-n tht hill on quiet street. Walk to com~ ed and expertly derorated. pool with Jacuzil. 4 bed-units, prime a.rea. :-.1~nity pool from this 4 bdrm. atlracUve AJmost immediai.t poue:s-room1, 3~ batti.. activity $140.000 Or trade. Huirtlilgfon Beoch TOWERING ADOBE SPANISH HACIENDA Irvine OWNER HAS ••• purchued another home, muat seil hls 4 BR. town- hoUR in .. huny! Hll logs - .Autbl'nUcally 1i)rled from the )OU!' aaln. This i& an idtal family home localed near arched court;Yard entry to aU recreahona! facilities & ~ red tiled root. 4 QUEEN-SIZED BR 'S. 2~ .choals. Only $.33,900, P.S. baths. Walk-in clout and Dad can play &oU just VAULTED CEll.JNGS. Mas-8.Cf'Ol6 the street! ho1ne with tormaJ dining room. $61,500. Dim. Sttln&: is. bebevin&: at room win accommodate~ ~ "Our 26th Ye•r" $44,6'0, Call 545-M2<, loukin.i pool tab!,, formal Uinfard I f . II h & ~ • i dining room, 4l:nl sq, tt. For t om p ete in orm•t1on on o or.~es ~ · •EAL TY 1011, pl•H• ,.11, WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RealtorsrWJiM lhJ{j tiu'ouP<!UJ. ri°~.·~ .,.,..,,.. Bill GRUNDY, REA!. 'TO R Jiii San Joaquin Hiii& Road -'1'5-321o Jot app't. Dlwnt..A C..t• M ... l-N_~_l_¥P_ ORT CENTER '44-4910 u!!!.'oa642-2991 c usL 6 BR., study, 5 bath hon1e »v14 !rpl<'s., c:Lrcular stairWay. decorator selected car11. & drapes. Shown by appt. ... $21;;,ccn "" !amily room wllh ,. red h·111 crackling J i re pl a c e. 2a' sculptured pa.Uo. 3 -CAR GARAGE. Only 11,-1 years Univ, Park Q!nter, lrvlne old. READY FOR TIUS! Call Anytime: 83J.OQ> 833 Dover Or., Suite J, N.B. 642-4671) 00 OOL ~ 11",;;;.;.,;~""'""""'""""~~"."':'l"""""'""""""'"' G•n .. : a! 1 G.neral K · l P I~ j ·-;;;;.;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;I •=======I PAD Liat w!Jh C.Q. Buy !rom C.Q. ONLY $29.500. A must to i '"!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!'!"!!!!!!!!"'-I see -Hurry Call cn4) L•guna Boach IG·-•-"•-•_•_I --.....---1 General ..--LA COSTA wilh """"""' .patio for pr• "64~2-1'!!2!'!3!'!5~!!!!!! .... 6'!!75'32'!!'!!~10 East Bluff EASTSIDE "-·~a.!"'f-,:_( vale entertainment or bigl' ---------N~ DOWN TO VETS_ ·'" 0 ,.go Couniy . U~,;i ~t •nou<h for a BASH! uiOh CUSTOM 4-PLEXES PANORAMIC VIEW '"2-5'1!5. - fORL\ I l OISON Lovely 2 Br/2 B•. Condo Lagun• Beach Home IDEAL for ~ar round com. fort &c &raclous relaxed liv· in&". All exterior maintain- anee attended. Te n n i s courts, only 100 steps lo pri- vate beach, also overlooks glamorous heated pool. All elec kit, incl: relrig, range, di5hwasher & disposal Com- pletely carpeted wall to wall thruout. Lower level law>- dry haa w1hr/dryer, ator· age room & double carport. ThJ.S is a corner unit in beaut Indscpe, patroled area. Close tll market & shp'ng. Furn or unturn. Also avail for summer rental. Priced under market for di- rect sale, PhGne: 837.-0791. 5 BEDROOM 10,., Down to 01hers, 1argt .! !:•:turl tul Fall'\\'ay Home UNI shag cl.rpl!ts, fAmily room, <lMlict" 1.oc, $74,IXXI. 4233 Dana Choice "F..ar:l,y'' greenbelt lo- d I • Uedrm ...,·lhrdv.·d firs, bJl11r;, f abulously furnished 9UE mod .. ,_ kit·•-n, ond ,.,., Rd, Newport B. 4228 Hilaria cation. One of the tint & Shiny clran an vacan · " II ..... " ...... \Y NB ''' 981 7039 '" RF Al T ORS roomy 5 8Niroon1, formal WxW rumpos rm. blck Y.'.li. J Spacious Bedrooms & baths Rare :l bedroom in the heart tG move intG -all for ONLY ay, . : . finest; spao. 3 bdrm., 2~ encl rea.r yard. v.11,, appra1s-rorinal dining room vf Mesa Verde, never be-1211.000. Tra•-you••! REPOS, 2-S BR, all trml!I ba. 1plit-level BluUs home. 10131 B-kb""' Ave. dining, family roo1n ho111!' "" '""· -'·· ed ~ ·-" ed al . . . Luxurious family room fore listed Pacesetter with w lk & l Call Pat \Vood · 54$-2300 vut1ltanding Vil.We at r oc-Huolo"ngton "·ach v.•ith taundt"' l'OOm, tons uf $24 600 a er ee ed . •• "-'' ' --==="--'~==-~ J , wiUi ;>rofessional bar an added bedroom .tnat ere-Scenic Properties 675--S'nfi pnce ol ....... 000 • ......., us 1 • storage, huge mastt>r bOO· CORONA DEL MAR \Vords cannot describe ares one of a kind floor or see YGUt broker today! Huntington leach room and easy boat and DUPLEX This magniJicent bonie plan. Island kitchen, down Realtors Ball»• Island Shorecrest camper access. 2480 sq. ft. Cute older home and 2 :;lory $163.820 FURNlSHED stairs den. fireplace in ID~ 1682 Edinger 3 Bd 2 ba + c::onvt·g&r pt f of li~·!n~-~?'"67~1!;J~:i.930. bldg with guesl apt. \Valk to ter bedrm. Popular Jocation <TI4) M24455 or SfO.fil.40 bse will ba, nr wat. ._, [Mt ~ Family living on a quiet cul· ~ ~ & "· • N I -• Ad o.~1 ....... up.o de-sac 1treet in Huntington 1 to"·n ...,acu •• ew y 1.:uec· near ams.,._...,.,. "-&&I to-BUI LO 20 UNITS Pat (covd fncd) SlOM dn. 01'illed • prired right at. . . day, $49.500. On larae 132 fl by 300 Jt. ~ tw Beach. Custom drapes. Ho!· $45 000 -"1 point d"hW•iliu, buiJtin, & • * * * • • BRING PAINT BRUSH 4 Bedroon1 2 bath hornc on Ea51s1dt cul-de-sac. 7 Years young "'Jth lirepl..,t-e & bltns. Ple11~y or yard i;pace lor ch1ldl'C'n. Hun-) for this one as ii is onl,v $ML9j(). Arnold & Freud MS F.. 171h St. C .. \I. 6·16-C1jj tla1•5 i,jlj.jj~' ("VCS **"'*** $23,900 , kil COLLECT $31.0 a month S BR & FAMILY ~your pl.ans are being BalbH P,~insula 2~11 Viata Del Oro ~ ~~m~~::~ ~~: Spacious Contemporary ~1esa •PPtoYed. F.P. only $52,000 e DuPL"EX. 2 Bdnm. up, 2 Newport Beach 644-1133 a de.lightlul place 10 live. Verde borne on large ror-r,r'r:'Ti~~=~, I ~Bdrm>;';;~· ~--;;~· ~-$4~7~,500~~~ EASI'BWFF VIEW Phone 646-n71 or 842.253,i ner Jot . D1vor"C"e SaJe. Sub-/o::;z::;:::~:"z::;z::;:~]C Manhall Realty 61:.-4600 Lge Lusk. 3 BR, 2i,, Ba :,"- 011 ,:2.:5: ••P"""'1=-;S~U~B~M~l~T=::O~F~F~E~R~S~I -SUPER C•;:;•~M~OM i':~~i;~~~;~~ NOW! BUY Why not help the kids buy "F_,""-"...,'-•-ln_V_•.,."•-Y=-=- Beaut1tu1. tri-level :-i bed· 220 ~.11tti 646·0555 their first ho~ on terms ''SEE'TO BELIEVE" roo1n, ! bnih iXtn1c in out-Eas!.>ide Costa M~sa. Gow-~n-Evenings CalJ 64&4579 you both can alford. A Choice Fountain Valil:'y area. '" ,,1 '' VP.-' 1 mtnt reposw!s1011, $21,450.1-~,;:.""'-:,_::o:,:,.;.,:,;:..:__ charming one b e dr oom 3 BR, family ,m, 1% ba, .~...,nu ng-e,;a .iue oca· 3 BR., -v<r<ct pat•", •-am-NO GIMMICKS Lion :ir!USi he lk)!d row due ...... " ..,.. ·home In Corona de! Mar frplc:, patio, sprinklers. -::;:;:;::;::;::;:;i 10 d111orce itnd r-t"nc:!•nb lore-f'd ceiling!, csrp't. Dbl gar-to make this 4 bedrooni, 2 PLUS a iuest apartment LOVELY! ii clo1iure. 1.1.iusanr! of doilars axe. Lge, Jo; t:1n cul de sac. story beauty your home. for income on a we.ll loc:at• ONL y $27 ,500 111 extra frai·.ir::>s 811~ ini· SJ79f)!o. p9.yi, everything, BeautifQ1 custom drape&, ed R·2 lot. OniY 10<;~ dowh HAFFDAL REAL TY Coriander Street FOURPLEX provenlell:~. &-e lhiA ;;nJ -"·ith low down payml. to ca..,,.el.\, niode:n push-but-to qual\tie<l buyen. Full S4l..440S anyone. Act 1:i~t . c a J J ton kitchen and only 2 year& price only $32,'!IX!. Call core.pa~e with othe;· ti«>Pf'I· Evn· 54! 2~6 11e1 ;u fully appl"t'\:ia!e. !.10-1J5J. O~n eves. young, W,500. 673-.8330 tor an appointmetlt GI $50 ~ •• ffiA min :~~~ ~.!~i~i.eB~~n'~~:1ei:!~ I ~ ='1!«:1 Walk Reer.,._&" Lee 00\V. :=u~1:i!i~~·~ Phone now !or .-pop!ntment _ ~ . w gar, John Irwin &: Aasoc. to M""e. :..i6-2313 7S82 Edinger 6.16-4.fro 171.J) 842-4455 or 540-5140 LISTING OF WEEK Vacant 4 bedroom 2 bath, elec bltn.s, range' & oven, dlshwasber, FA heat. fire-- place, carpeUI, drapes,.over-1 sized dble garage, patio, • BBQ, fenCt"d, landscaped, sprinklers, shake roof, cul- de-sac lot, VA no, no d0\.1-'n or assume exi5tlng 6% Gl loan. CRY $29700. I' 1i1Jge Real Estate '62.4471 ( ::::1546-llOJ V.A. RESALE PANORAMIC VIEW 3 Bedroom home perched on secluded hillside. Unob- structed ocean view from ail rooms, yet walking dis- tance to beach. Decks ,& large te.JTaced yard. Built.in kitchen with dishwasher. $42,500. Call - AO/an REAL ESTATE UOO Glenneyre St. 494-947~ 54!MIJJ6 'f!'1ck iJIU.~ ..-·aJ1 tu \~1111 car· 1 peting. bul:!-~n ~ani.;e & O\'rri • d'""'""'' + """•""'· Four Rentals lor U~r. ~"jJCn ·:~i 9 pn1 1 F • U Huntington Beach 1xer pper LIDO WATERFRONT * WANTED * Have ca.sh bu~r for l I: den. RAMBLING SPANISH 3 queen-sized bedr:ooms. Great extra large cul-de-sac lot. Anyone can take over 1ubject to VA loan with a li\tle dab of cash and pay- 11\entll or ll64 per month - includes all, GO MAN GO! * OCEAN VILLA * New, olde world design; 2 Br, den & re. rm. Din. area. Frpl. Kitch. w/range, oven, dishwasher. $39,IXXI full pr. Lo"""r dn. pyt. OK. MlSSlON REAL TY 494-0731 1~~7:ELL 2955 HarbO<i DOWNTOWN 2000 Sq, r1. o! li•inr ..... APTS.-320 LIDO NORD , ._-,., So. _or Hwy. Mini. out ol !own owner will uc-$140,000 Price with 7.,.. ls! view O.K. ll you have lt &: ""'• tor lmmediat• uJ, • T.D. 6 "''"L furn. •mi.: don't ne•J ic pt"'" gi•• SHOWPIJCE 4 +FAM. REPossEss10Ns • '"pl" • , ""'a" 1"' .. Mesa Verde Bargain Sparkling clean bome1, some es. Really unique \Vilb pri· all terma available or as· 6 car praj'.es Ii: utiL room. Us a eall! sume low interest loan. 80 Ft. on 1~ beach. MORGAN REALTY Thru Spani5h arched entry to newly painted & arprted. 2. ''<l<'y in prime re.nta.l .area. BcaulilUI home JUsr RE- ;;, 4 &: 5 bdrms. Some witb J-·uu price $63,000. DUCED for qUid< sale to Large 3 bedrm., dining and Will consider trade Jor boat 67' "'2 67• "59 exciting luxury decor. 19' hnae family room, all bltns, or muimum $85,IXXI Jge. 4 ,.,_.. .,..._ Walker & Lee 3 unitJ;, vu, nr bch & ghops, patiol, very nice. $49,500, 10% dn. 4!H-4925 ... muter BR aui~. 2\.!r baths. dble fireplace 4 mcire. Quiet BR. hoUae. PRIVAYI/:: BEACHES <;.'ft Id' kl h ...... ar inc gounnet tc en :n~ llarbor Blvd. at Adams pools. FltA-VA tonv. terms, S:!S.500. It's located on a fron1 $2.o,000 lo $40,000. Newport quw1 cul-de-sac slrfft wilh Collins & \Vatu Inc. SS-tl Arlam~ Ai·e. 962.5323 •t extra largt back yard ilnd 3 big bedrooms. Assume F1irview FHA loan at only 5%~~ 1vith 646-8811 TOTAL PAY~IENT of only $173 J)'r mo. \VHY WAJT? tree shaded residential area. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 3 Bdntis., den, $41,500. $300 · h ~ kl •· F ·1 wit u1ea ut ""'· am1 Y 54:>1»65 Open 'Iii 9 PM Qujck sale !or $32.950. Call 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 Down; int!lrest Qnly lst year rm with beautituJ buUt-in' _..::::..::=...:;;~:::..::..:.::::...._ ;-,.t.l-8424. on balance. Owner says, '' $600 "SEW " cabinets. Heavy plush car-LOVELY 4 BR. 2 ba, tam L•guna Niguel B AYCRElT ·POOL Just gorgrous thntouf ~ Bed· rn1. tam r1n., kuchen 11'/ eating area -+ separate d1r1· (anytim•} I Baek Bay Area Home Show Re•ltoi-1 place. Patlo. Shake roor. ntiv shag crpts. thfuout, shopping, ;45,000. 492--04 22 •\!!!!* lfiiil 4 Bedroom, 1% bathl. family -~=~"'=;.~m;~· ~~~-I Superb -Talked .about MEA-cust. drps., refrig., washer/ lido Isle ing area. Quiet .!!ll'C'eL 1 ~~~~~~~~~~1 $63.IXXI. B/B COATS .l e pe[g and ooz.y burning fire-TOTAL CASH -Condo like rm, vu o[ valley, close to rm., dining rm. 2 FlttpJ.ac. HONEYMOON ' DOW HO"-tE. Beach Joca. dryer. Antique paneling, ---------1 ~=-='"'°'===-~=-==I mod kit he ALL tion. Take• look . you won't decorator paper, $21,500 . COLLEGE PARK 'Till'· "" ' "· COTIAGE wont to 1 ..... Call 171<) "'""'-85117' Evn. 963-4377. Lawson Pete Barrett Realty 642-5200 Genaral . . . l'ORL\l [ 01.SO\ "' RCAl.T'ORS OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK "B" BEDROOM FIXER Voll~ lall Shuftl•burd-Pool lmai;:1ne over J.000 sq. ft. of brt1ch an>a living. Entcrtainrrs palact'. Pic- lur" vdndo~' living room. Cracklin1; fire- plat1.". Srwt<'iou~ fAm ily room. All t'Qnvcn1encr kil.chrn ·l baths. Painl and i..avr s 1 hOUSllfldS s. F.asy lC'rm~. For 1norl' drtails r1lc<1~r <'all 615- 0303. JOIN THE SWIM SET NEWPORT BEACH ~ummrr 1~ rnmln-:: Tlmr to i:;rl Into thr s>1.1ni:: of things. Forn\8.1 \j\·1n;;: rOOfll, massivr fin•placP, lari:r ('()nv.-ni- ent family room. 4 lfipB· ('HNI hrdrr>nm!I;, \Vall of glass t(I prl11alr 1parkl· lni: !•)1)1. P11cl'd to i;e ll. 0tin'1 hr~1talr plC'asr call 645-0J0.1. Living Easy? TRY 523,950 I>o you want to hvl' nctr the ~at'h ~ Bf'1 !hr prices s:h·r )'OU 2nd lhou,shta !! SH !h i~ r>llP, Owner mu,t !>< ::. Cutt' ... buir!I r:ar s1 .. i r1vu' bedN1om5, Cn.ndlrh··hl dJrilnc mom Brient cl'lf"f"T'Y kitt"hC'n \'tar around peuo Onl1 2 ft:&n old.. \\'Qn't il'.st. Kul'TJ' dla1 (~1. ~Harbor, f"ost& Mf'SI Z2 YEARS OF REAL ESI'ATE SERVICE IN TifE HAIWOR AREA WElTCLIFF . WALLACE REALTORS S AND A VIE\V 100! ! ,,.,., c::""' 968-UiS This i1 the sharpest 3 bed· s:oo.1:xi. Bright, cheery_ contempor-~""""" LIDO EXCLUSIVES room home in this ireat Roy McCardle, Realtor ary and sparkling clean. ~ -54Ml41- (0ptn Evenings) area. lf you have looked 1810 Nev."POrt B\vtl., C.i\f, An ideal honeymoon cottage 00 .•l!t'"~.,; I l.;tl' I 3 BR on 35 f• lot $63,~_ before and "·anted :!!Orne.· 541-nlt no matter hG1v k'Jng you've _ l-l .,., ... - thing extra -This is it! t ,.!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' I been married. 2 Bedrooms. WlrT 13 BR + lam. rm. 40' $69,.9,jij Indoor . outdoor hv1ng al Eastside Cost• Mesa Nl"W carpe~ and tile. I~ EX lovely yard and a douhle- its best• 3 BR. 2 ba., huge Charmer Fresh pa.int inside and out. • DUPL • garage that our owner tella Pool Side Par•di1e 3 BR + lam, rm. 4.}' l77,500 den/dtning rm. Like new 3 _. ed bedr ·' big assumable S~% 'IS-block tram bay or ocean-us is stres.2d for an, ........ _ 19131 Brookhunt Ave. Surround! the 1&132 pool w/ •arp & drape• Olympo·... qucen-... z ooms.. _.' H .. -....... _ Be""h Joi of •-king + 4 BR 2 .. · · .. I be h Brand Loon Better hutT)' -it won't front. Choice NeWpOrt rent-menL Only .$33,90'.I. Call ~ ..... ,..,..,., """ 5 u=-• 4 BR + din. nn. i 5' $78,500 Sill' hid. & lilt. pool v.·/rec-Very love y t • new Y UR OWN BA a-" home w/frpl•, and d 11 last king at $28,r:(I. 546-2313 a.I area. Jmmacula1'o condi. 673-8500. O ·-' reation area. $48.500. cki~~l! t ""'',:. ___ ~e lion. Large 3 & :z bedrooms. CJ"pls, drps, bltns, new paint 3 BR, dining room, tiled lanai and patio ;110,CIJ 675 3000 t.. .. -...,n or mom. rean•Y Good income • 10% ctown. HACIENDA inside. Ouse to shop~. • painted. Extra Jargt doublr schools &: beach .,.,.,,900, garage. GI and f',!A ierm, 537.500. Phone 646-7171 Like Spanl1h? You'll low At terms, 847_122j ..,., f]jllA\' ,\ 8i-:irii1 ll!CAl:I'\' l~I'. ·1 "' CALL NOii' ---' this nearl,· new 4 bedroom, ava1 auoC'. ..,. ... 1 --~==~~---1 SEYMOUR REAL TY we'll qualHy YOU at $23,500. VETS $1 Large Family room. Deluxe 1TI4 Be h B d Hi income apts. $120,000 EST l ~l9 l>lS ·l O ~O 1 --------' W lk & L TOTAL (oSTS Costa Mesa Ma.s1erbedroom Su1te. Heat-I ac lv ., Htgn Sch Luxury 3 BR, dining room, a er ee e.d and Filtered 42' pool for Open 'tiJ 9 PM poolroom, view Sta4,000 No loolin'. ,ou con movo into1-c==::;::====o= I CHOICE LOCATION this doll house v!ilh the 4 &: 3 BR., 2 ba'1. each. One La.are' 3 BR, 2 BA, heavy swimmen. Ea.~y access 10 $1000 DOWN EASTERt;I MANSION mo Harbo~e~~;~ at Adam; /S edJ h trpl treeW8,Y!. Priced right at change in your pocket! w w s c.; carp,. shake roof, vacant soon. Ucocy 4 bedrm. 2\1. bath, Large separate family room, <ll'Pfi, bltn11, Gara1es. Step1 Ne-ar OCC and Plaza. Pool ' • • i-t3.~ 842-253.} well decorated home on Bayfronts, from $125,000 bowmlb la wson Ja. Two story, fiv~ Bdrrn, Four 545-9491 Open 'ti! 9 P~f Bath, pl\!$ d1n1ng Rm. fam· 1-'-""""'-""""""'.., ily Rn1. and large 800 SQ. CORONA DEL MAR nREPL.ACE. modem as to channel. ~.500 sized cul-de-sac IDt.. today's large lot. South Huntington tnmorrow kitchen and more-. Call: 613-366.l &U-22)3 ews. best buy -$29,950 . .FlWGI Beach location, fast ix>sses· Aeoltom: 3416 Via Ltdo ~·1. bonus room. EXCLU· Sr\·F. WF.S'I'Cl.If'f', 0 n 1 yCharming .c~1s10m3 BR., den, ~'T DELA\', CALL 'J'O. tenns OK, •Kln. Asking 126 . .500. Vacant lot J2x88 $34.~ DAY TO L•rwin Realty, Inc. -=========-1 Larwin Realty, Inc. 5 BR ., 311 ba. Bay viev.•, associated $19 !}j() formal d1n1ng, pine paneled ' ' kitchen &: nook. \\'alk lo Big It Lillie Corona. Perf«I Walker & Lee ,,,., ~';:~':,~y~;!' Bch 4 B~~!~E_f :.::. rm ,..,,,546-=~54_,l,..l ~•~ny'°'t_im,._•.:....,_ 1 La,.. lot. 1117,500 2 SMRY 3 br/2~ ba, fam 3 BR., fam. nn. 3~~ Bathl, ABANDONEOll 2 STORY rm y,•/lrplc. all tlec: kil, 45x88 Lot. $93,500 BROKCRS-REAl TORS 1025 W llgtbao •73·Jb6J !or family livlng. $79,500. R.l'altors YOU WIN! Evenings Call &f.4-7003 ~ 7S82 Edinger .............--~ 1n~1 842-44.'£ or ~5140 All the bene,its of lhis spark- ,._1..a. ... -n BA .. Lnm ~~5~8~E~D~R~OOM==s~~1 ling clean 3 BR Mme. Ideal '-UIU~-.um~ * * for home and bminHs on ........_ ,,..u:sw...,.~ Beaut. Harbor View Homes C·2 downkl"'n corner Jot. -res. w/wet bar. lovrly $31.000, carp.; self-cleaning o\·en&: '""'"'· , • 1 • • ....,,... Vinco RealtY 1 HURRY! HURRY! 83u 7oo 644-2430 I $17 650 SPANISH STYLE V1tt';ttll and re:dy lor imnierl· Red Ille roof homt! with .( I.lie ocrupancy. fully im· queen-&1ted bedroom.11,, ll. $59,50() Including the l•i!CI, CORBIN- MARTIN proved 3 Bedrm :i bath uatl:'d on 11 great cornrr. tan1ily rooni ho~I' llltns' Truly Spanish decor. with dble gar. crpts &: ~. $176 Ill.''» lbatching <:11.rpets and REAL TORS ~7662 Per mo. pa.ys t!:\lt'rything-drape! .. (io111cous flrepl.~ce. SPECTACULAR with low down pa.ymt'nl, huge k1lehcn and "~ pricf'd BEACH HOME Cali 546.lRSO, topc!n e1•e1I. "1 S2S.!li0. SUbmil yoUt A-Frame, 1\eps :o ooean 3 terms. Call • lJR. 2 bl!.. OnJy $33,900. I 9 ~:~I Walker & Lee ~v~~.~~~~~ Rf'aJIOl's 548-1190 EMERALD BAY Z790~bo~~d;ti~l,'\~ Eastside Fixer Upper Fantastic white water vl~w 3 BR, 2 BA v.·itlt gnat ~ Jrom this immac. 4 brlrm . ...-~-tentlal for aman, modem 11 riwiuy rm. borne. c.om. ~-\ hc>mt. Comtt lot. Room ror 2029 Harbor. C~1 &of&..0033 DOVER SHORES Under cof\ltruction, Re the plans at l03J Mariners Drive, Dovr:r Shores, 4 It 5 Bedrms, 4 & 5 ball'la. 1elect your own colors Ii custom details. All with outstandln& Views. Roy J . \Vant Rltr. 6'6-lriiO, Open OAily. HARBOR HIGHLANDS Marine.rs School, park A: II· ~. near tl'lla lmmaculatl! 3 BR Ii den 2 BA home. All ~lee bltns: BBQ I. DIW. f'rplc. ?>tu.st be 9Q!d, Miring $34,$0. FJIA I VA tt'mUI avaU. Call ~1r. Ha ~is. Soutb c.oas1 Realton, au.M.24. n1un1ty pools. tennit els., URG~ENTt pool I.;, trailtt. $22.:im. prn•, beach; prlv. patroled • JEAN S~mf. RLTR 1tttt1s for your .ccurlty. !line'-.~ torl'f'~ S&Jr . VIE\\' 400 t:. lith St, C.:\!. UNIEUEY AILE .~·11own by app'L only. $93,0t'(I homt> 1r1 Corona drl Mar-~ SACRIFlCE~ $27.500. 2 Units Del ency Reil Est•te POOL 2 lleclroum, 11i th ~ * MESA VERDE * nn. for 6 fl')(ft w/v1.Nnc:e.: 2!23 E. ~•1 ff")', Cd)t lll'1lt• au1111 ho1M>. Careff'H Lovely, unma<'. Mint. Jst R~. OYef 1/3 acn: X1nt loc. f.W .';'7iO · hv\nt "' •t ~t lklow onerlnrt. Btnur. grounds. Cali Pat \Vood :>4>%!00 , I t"'OR No.-tht:rn ca 111 . mark!'! •1 ~t.5001 cau Ow. pat1o. 3 BR. & family Scenic Propertlt't 67S.57l6 properlJH f'Onlact R1.)' 67>-4~)(1 nn .• 2 biHhjj. $38.::G> GET THE FACTS ABOUT Lge. 3 BR. &. ram. rm.: Sharp home near schools Ii din'g rm. ~ Pa ti 0 . LIDO REALTY INC. 1~ ba's .. brick frplc., bit-in 1 park. 1900 Sq, fl. 2 bath $35,900. ~7-4633 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 kitcl!. On Texas 11i2e lot. areas, brick frpic, 20x20 I TO~\:;;l'N;;1H;=;O;iu;is"'Ei-"..,'-,c:,~8'=-,~,,~x, Nawport Beach ~·Jt -, • ~t g•t• •. , I bonu• rm., 1011 of panelling ~ '" .. .,... • ....,.. "' &: I R.Jr:O Shopping Center; 4 bi·/2'• "windblown sailor", $31.950 w w crptJ, Bltn • ha, Priced belo1v market. • No kiA.n or escrow fee.11. oversized k>t w/patio. Re· By Ov.·ner: 536-4~4 MORGAN REAL TY duced to $30.::aJ. AU tc.rms. !-,--',-~-c=~'--- OCEANFRONT DUPLEX 847-1271 Attention GI buyers- 67l-4642 67S-645' SEYMOUR ~EALTY $2j(J moves you iri 2 br. 2 ba Good Ineomr. ~-~ VACANT J Bedrm + fam 17141 Beach Blvd .. Htgn Bch t1vnhse. AJr 6:30, 714/ I BURR WHITE rm, 1 ba, b It n .11. Open 'tU 9 PM 535-3180. Realtor 675-4630 Crpt.11/drps, frplc, la~ $119.r" :: STORY 3 brt21,.J bll , lam 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. yard. 2 Years old. Vood ' ~ kxation. Take over 6~ % 3 BR + Dining Room rm w/lrplc, all elec kit. BY Ch11ner. Sell or lse/opt I -• ' b din'g rm. <'vn:I patio . 3 BR + fam . rm, •-din, VA, S21S per mo. total. mmac COuu,, a .a.reu, ~ Owner/A.gt ~70 ahag crpla. drI>a. biln RAO, $3S,900. 847-4633 rm. 2 BA. New drape1 &. 1vas.her, dryer. owner ls MEREDmi Gan1ens tri-j ettp, Sprinldtrs. \Vest cliff 3 BR Fam nn 114 BA. Cpl.11, leavifl&' llfta. Lo, lo dawn Jevt>I. 3 br, Jge ram rm, area. nr schools. 5.5% drp!!, bltns. 5'4% G I . pymnt. 847_1%lJ. formal din'& nn. BJ owner I assum, loon. $43,500 -Incl. ~~~alh=~· 546-7806. SEYMOUR REALTY 962-9745. the land. 642-&39 MESA Verde try owner: 3 inu Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch e TOWNHOUSE-2 br, 111 BLUFFS BEST BUY bd Open 'til 9 PM ba. Ureplact", pool, $18,950. BY owner, 4 BR 3 BA, beau! rm. flnly nn. 2 ba. patjo, 1---~------Owntr, 499-J.t&t d ()pc!n di.Uy $29,9&1. 545-2075 For brst ruullll! 6Q..{i67J: ..::.:..:.::::..:::...:::.:____ t'C'OUr, upgraded throoul. I $43.900. 6'4-1429 Costa Mew Coste Mes• TIME FOR QUICK CASH NEW HOMES '00 "'""'" 0 """""'~ 1tbool• &Dd bc1cbt1. IN CLOSE-IN ,., ............ Ii< COST ud In ll:oty new homts, A MESA ... ""' .... '"' '""" -Now5t1liaaPi.nll Unit:! Oceaaniew /PoA.,.,WAlnluA.-< .. ~ Co.r•Mua SMt1Ollf'e11-tt: ,..., f30,SOO (714) 546-0337 THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 2li•>. R.rddu~, CA. 00001. REAL.TORS REALTOR AUTIIORIZED BROKER. llAndolpn. Rroke.r. P.O. Boxl ~ICO.. George Will l1m1on VA R EPO SS F.SS10NS. f91-6) 7i~, ... ,...._,,._."" f7~ M.>1::.64 EV«. ~..._.~~I"-'~------'-~========~~~~~~~~:_ t.TKE To lrade! 0 n t Tn1dcr'1 Pararh~ t"(llumn la tor )'Ou! 5 Unea:. 5 Days tor $5, CaL !0011.y ... 64i.56TI. • • D~L ~ PILQf i)J [ _"r .. I~ I I~ I $11,900 FULL PRICE lot" lhla pat 3 bedroom beauty. Lola Of carpeta with nwtchlna drapes. Modem bullt·lna are in lhb country at)'le ·kltchen : alto • diab- wuher. Mcve·ln condition. At thlll price, YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO RENT. CaU ui; ~d' we'U qualify YOU. Walker & Lee Income P_.-ty 166 Rool Estoto Wonled JM .;;Goo.;.-;;;tet;;.•;.;~----- UDO JSLE..3:10 Nord. 6 beach aptl, Furn. Gar. al' beac:b. Leasehold yr, 84. Alkina: Sl-40.<KKI. Consider tra.de. 642-4097, 5'&-m.J. ext Wll.J.. USWJM Ocit&.o VM!w hPme Cll' i.PComt u n I t , NewPOl't to Caplatr•no 71 ......... 0 ------- !:.i. trade O.C. !"'°""' ,__; 11 .. 1 """· .,, .S!Wta or ™ot"' I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ButlMH ~rtUnlty Cnty acreage er T.D.'1. I• Write, ClauUied ad No. 54, Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CaUt ~· SI'ORE, Office, 2 BR bcUJe, 200 ssa.uw pd Sfop, 1 Br. n1ot yd, Thi.I -Mm'\ lutr 81.,. BoocOft * 6454111 e HANDY TO BEACH 2 Br, chlld ok. Utll pd. $1311. AlA. Re•tall • 64.5.:BXt !30-Utll pd. Y ..... "'3ach. 1! bcb. Co""1. P'L Sngt ok. Bluo &Oocon * ~111 llolboo lllond - IM)l!:D!ATE OCC\lpancy ~ -Unlvm-305 Apt1. Fum. '60 Apt1, Fum. a60 Apt. Unfurn. S6S Apt. Unfum. :-:-~...,.......,,_.,...._ Huntl"lJlon BeKh Coste Me,. Huntington Beach CLEAN 1 ... ,2 ... w,., CASA de ORO * * * Shi.I, drps, blt1ns. GrY&I CASUAL ,..1., 1 holn-1 BR, patio, pool, natural loc, Leue $23().Rtnt ~ ....-.... ......... ,. ln a beam c e 111 n 11, Nel\t 1™2 C hap tt • r • 1 Ln. wann Medlterranu.n ,.tmoa-hoepttal. $165 ulll. ~d. ~ an 6prn or bef. phm!. Spaoou.a co~ «>-1ms camemn. 8U-5lt2 lOa.m ordinated aptt. .. deatped le 1..:.=....:::::::=::...:.::..:=:__ Coate Mis• NEW NEW NEW YILIA CORDOVA 4 BR, cpa drps fumi.flhed for. al;yle A COi1'· Lagun• Beaeh Call ~ti;).. Rt..i~~ fort • lleated {IOQl • .. Kitch· FtJU. ~an view. 2 Br, 2 Q1JIE'T-sAFE Mm:t 841-3531, Eve 1 • en w/ indirect ll&:htinf • Ba, newly dee. Mature adl11 CNear Back Baj) 962--6365. · Deluxe RIO. Adult.I. No pel.s. wf ref'a. Bab)' ok. 499-392'J 40 U"'~ Adutt 1( BR . .$175 film. ~rtment CQ'&' lex Fount•ln V•lley tJTlLITIES INQ.UDED $1Cij, Furn sml oozy pJaee, & 1 BEDR MS CoJfa Med FAIRWAY VILIA APTS. 2 & 3 BR's Prtvai. patio, pooJ • lndW, tawulty tac. Neat On.nc• Co. A!rpn1. Ii UC!. Adult.o only, 20I22 S.nta Ana Aw. Realtors room to add, C-1 zoned, !Kl x Dittrlbvtort Needed mo. 2 BR, arttstlc, near National Marketinr eom-I ,c; .. ::acb=·...:-:;:.:;c:=~--­ pany. NEEDS NOW. Re-Newpor.t Beach 365 w wu .,... ....... nr beac:h. 1-resp em.ployed. FOR Lse, lmmac:. 3 Br, 1~ • aon U"M•ui• Ph; f94-421lo • Entert&l.nioc will be a pleu. Mu •..... Joaclllm, ">! M "'"21> 2790 !-!arbor Blvd, at Adams 180 comer, $42,500. 00 St. fill. new shq cpta &: drps, 2 BEDROOM apt. lit Door. ure. Decorating th1I lo\•e!y, lrplc, b1tna. $22 5/rno. Cupeted. Nice turni.tutt.1;L:;l;:;.do::...;l:;•I;:;.• _____ apaclou.aaptwUJbe ajoy • ~9t91 Open 'Ill 9 PM near Harbor, 01. Will i--J""u~s=r=-'u,..,-,s=TE~D-'-'--1 """'· Broker .,._9659 .sponslble man and woman to service hl.&:h wlwne new prod\ic:t rcutes, ''lfunt Snack Pack", A new multi million dollar advert!Md produc:tL Part er f\Ul time, Company aecured Jocationl, o:m:llnfl'o ci&t apd f&elOry. ggg..gsQ er 2131241-1588 Spac:lowi. Beautiful decor . ./ BEAOl APTS Bac:helor • Spedal e&blnet apace 28 UNl'l'.S Owner going ea.st. Muat sell 2 I: l br. Close IC shopping. nice Baycrest home. 4 bdr:ns, famlly rm, din!na; ~~~ed. Htg Bc:h. $410,000 WATER.FltNT Newport !kl.and. Lt& deluxe 3 Br duplex. Swim A boat deck. J Week min, May-Oct. 673-7861 er t!m) 637-3384 L•gune Beech ~~~~Chll·~. ...... $2!IO. 1 BR. s:m: $250. 320 • Loc:k garagQ w/ Jg •Im ....""'6 ~-.:: Nord &U-4091 or 543-m.J. • Bm eeU • Lndry •Patios n~u~n 'TE 3 B• 2 BA Small ·pets we!-•. V-ext.;., •.u.inn.>o,.u...,., • ....,,.,., ~· 1 uo e DW /displ e Huge xu atve Seta The Mood FOi' * Spanish Elegam:e rm, 2 be.tha, 2 !rplcs, tile f ~~~-=----~"° entry, extra large db.I gar-Lots for S..le 170 HotlMI Unfvm. 0 303 $285. Fireplace, yafd, gar: rruonabJe rent. Ccrnerf..::::.:=------•$pedal IOW'.ldprooJ'in& bl.tins. f9S.1331, 49M746, location. Walle to llhoppfna", Newport S..ch e Deep 2 oolcr shag Quiet Adult Living * CHARM. 2 Br, 2 Ba. ~':~ ~ 1:°)5 at door. 351 * ON THE BEACH carpeta, drapes he CJlt e dr'PI e bltm q;e. bot 80' wide. Aslun&' $39.900. See this today. CALL e 646•1414 ~ Nirar Ntwperr Pe1r Orfle• e BEAUTIFUL 5 br, 4 ba, fam nn home in Dever Shorea. Lge pool & patio garden. $97,500. Call owner 642-3203 VISTA DEL LIOO OCEAN & BAY VIE\VS LuxuriD111 l Br Apartment $39;5(1(1. 613-8800 Or 1144 WATER FRONT. Unusual 3 BR, dock. Income. Le priced & down. By owner, 6f;)..UIOO Real Estate. ....... , )~ Acruga for sale 150 5 AC adj. to Nat'I Forest nr Big Bear, beaut. view prop. Xlnt short lerm Investment $6250 F/P. Only ~ dn. Xtnt terms en bal. Bkr. ~70 Commercial Property 158 ACRE lor C\Jmm'I Stables lease back w/8o/<> net net net. 673-2262 or 673--5723 ' ACRE for Co1nm'I Stables lease back w/8% net net nel. 613--2262 er 613-5723 Condominium• for s•I• 160 We Lov• Your Pets "TIBURON" TOWNHOUSE with private paUo for safe and happy pets + 2 k>ve· ly bednns & 2 balhs for h1.ppy people. Only single story re:sa.le available .. don'l \VQit. ~n Realty, Inc, 546-s.lll Call The Experts! I We specialize in a:eillng con- dominiums, buyers waiting. Double exposure at no eX· tra cost. Call today Jor lree apf>ralsaJ, Larwin Realty, Inc. 21562 Brookhurst, Hntin Bch 546-5411 anytime FORECLOSURE NO SELLING Go-ol 2Wi acre bol'8e ranch ~pos. CASH REQU'JRED $600 to 1--,""'.".=-=""""'"°'"""-Vlew. Pri. beach. $295 c: : $~ UP Modt.rn, newly painted. utll GAS " WATER PAID lkautll'Ul Pool J..,epe, Owner 499-3638. GIANT 1 & 2 BE; 00 1 incl. l ~r ~pts-$145/mo win. Mo. to Mo. From $140. 2 Br. $170 lnd an udl sessed rrom former aero-$2,995. Write for more infor. LARGE 3 BEP 51)8.ce emplayee now avail-·m&tk>n, Diltributorshlp Div. Just Painted, carpets" drap. able at developers coat. 51 'P.0. Box 3lSS Tcrnnct, et, fenced yard, family nn., Me•• Verde R M, tfo<r, $165/mo "''in~r. Sleep-232.1 Elden Ave, CM Adults onb-no peta. . Gorgeous, J>&tk·Uke setting. ing rm & bath $6(1/mo, Call See Mer. Ted Woodhead 241 Avocado St. 6t6-0919 lmmedl1te Occupancy ~osed ~· for max-615-5475 646-0032 3 br, 2 ba, all b1t111. $24(1. ~~~l.sec::t)'·::~t ·m~1-N::EW::..:=2=;-r,-l-ba,--fu-l-ly_crp_t-d, !!'!!'llJI 2 BR, 114 BA. 2 at(ry. Cptl, OpUo~ avail The Doyle Cc. Fullerton A\re (Hatbcr ta lrg llv rm, ~lee. k:lt., sundk. ORLEANS APTS. drps, all blt-inll. ~plam, Caltf. 90!05. GIVE PHONE chlldrtn f< pets OK. l%lD SAVE $&XXl NUMBER. p/rn. "''"'"' 1a•u1 ....... ""'· NEEDED: Walker & lee Evei. l!JS.634l. Bay, then So. until 2 blkll Close to bch It •hops. Yrly Pool. Recreatlc.n r oe m • ded, ranch size spreads. WORKING PARTNER OR Located in the boomln&: PVT INVESTOR_ Substant• South Ccast area near San ial return on mcney lnve1t· Juan Capistrano. Hi gh ed. secured w/coUateral. above the smog, private Fer more info write P .0. road and loc:ked gate guar-Bax 1819. Sant& Ana. antee the natural beauty ct FOR We: Small Shasta C.O. this former Spanish Grant Caf~·Maw & Pa operation sunoonded by beautUul clean &. well equipped, Cleveland National FcresL Business only $1500. $125 per AlJ utilities available, mo ~nt. 1916) 275-353). \Vrl~. c:lassified ad No. 54, PRICED FROM $9,950 DAiiy Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, LO\V OOWN-EASY TERMS Ccsta Mesa, Ca 92626. CircUmstances force the Im· ;;iiiiiii.iiiiiiioiiii.iiiiiiioiiii mediate disposition ol these few c:hoiee pa.reels whose former cwners LOSS a your GAIN!? Cali er write for c:omplete details and c:olor en-site pbctos. Buy direc:t from the developer; TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS Su HOLLAND BUS. SALES "The Broker with Empathy" lTI6 Orange Ave., C.M. Laundry room. EnclcMd FOR sale or k!aae -Lee So. ol Newport Blvd. 64.Z. buts $225 mo. 67~1464. SSlD ADULTS ONLY ga~. $100 lat It la.st plua Realtors 3 br, 2 ba23sblt111. Corner 8690 Mattus, N.B. 2 & 3 BR. Avail, Private pa· ltt'UJ'lty de pa' 1 t, No 7S82 ·Edltla:er house. 557-7 er 673-8096. Unbelievably Betiutlful 1 BR. Pool. Blk lo ocean. 11.. pool -lndlv. laund"" tac. children or pets, Avail May (TI4J 842-4455 er 540-5140 N rt e-h d 1 II 5 '"' •1 ~-""' """4 ewpo P9IC VAL D' ISERE Garden Apts. Single a u t. 35 to S14 (Nr. Orange Cc. Airport; 'I\111--~~·~·"°~"~=-'"'-'·~=~=-I H08,SE RANCH Adults -no pets. Flowers Yrly, 8.13-3535, 6 4 4-0 6 31 tir at 17th St: nr. WestclJ.H). JNDIVmUAL PfuVACY 2 Bedmu in country. Kids/ 100' wate:rtront, dock for ~· ever,ywbe~. Stream & eves. - pets/horses OK, $1«l. boat. 3 br, 2 ba, lif' util rm, Waterfil.11, 45' pool Rec. Rm, 2 BR. l block to ccean. April 1741 Tu!tln, Coe.ta Mesa Lg dlx~u~; ~:.G w/gar ALSO ~ts, drpa:, stave, dw. Lots Sauna, Sgla l-2 Bdrm, Furn-15 to J une XI. Otil pd. Mgr, t.lni. Thompson 642-46{1 & stor. Parlt • like at- 3 BR !Um Mobile home, New. cf parking. Ne pets, Re.ls Unfurn. from SLJ5. SEE IT: $145/mo. 613-0131. req'd. $450/mo, yr tse. DK! Parsons £42...8670 f;~'iji~-;,;i,;'i;;;;;;;;;;t;I ---,-,==,..,---rnospbtte. Fncd patio, CID, pert &acli, $125. Ava.ii. 4/15. 68 Balboa Coves ' DELUXE ne<A•ly decorated 2 Sl30 UP wtr pd. 836-4120 STAR-.iET ni.7330 N.B. 61$-2338 * SUS CASITAS Br pooloid< apt. ''" In G~ *, & 2 BE;ROOM! 667·K Vktorb St. SUS 3 BDRM .. Famlly nn., park FOR lease -3 Br, 2 Ba, 2-L!i nicely furn Bac:helor & luxury. $2-15/mo. 6U--62'74. Gorgeous, park-like setting. SPACIOUS l Bit. crp11, like yard. Ccsta Meu. Kids story home, N e w p o rt 1 Br. Furnished mod~ * 2 Br, erpts, drps. 2 houses Closed garages for max· drp&, Bltns + r e fr l 1 . OK, brk., $200 A mot1th. NO ShQres, c I u b privllef"a. open daily. New rental rates to beac:h. $225/mo, yrly !mum security. Quiet aft'eet. A4ults, no pets, $130. Jn- FEE. MD-ln>. $200/mo. MG-2991. 2110 Newport Blvd, CM lease. 642-3«3 Adults. no pets. 2 O 2 O qnlre 2863 La Salle, apt 1, $140-2 Br. Bltns, new crpts.1 "'--CA;-duril;::ts-",;P;:'r.:efi'e-r-red-.--l-.;:H::;O~L.:l~D~A;:Y~P;L~AL'°'_;A:::._l:N7e=wpo"'-"°rt7-:H-0e:';io::gh"t:-1---Fullerton Ave <Harbor to SfS-3524 drps, gar, yd, Kids/pets. 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths ... $225 DELUXE Spacious l BR CLEAN 1 2 Br Adlts no Bay, then. So. until 2 bll<J ~.~~MES=A~VERD==.~.,.-.-_ I Blue Be•con * 645-0111 REALTOR 54Mi966 tum apt $135. Heated pool. pets. Lg ~rt. SJi.SlSO. Un ~~ Newport Blvd.) deluxe 2 I: 3 Br, 2 .a.. • REAL FINO • 1 Br, xlnt FOR rent_ 2 Br & den, 2 Ba Ample parking. No c:hlldren E, lGth St. NB. 646-l80l I ~~~~~--~~-encl gar, U45 " up. Renl&l klc:ation, Jdda & pets ck. home, Newport Sho r es, • no peta. 1965 Pomona,1..=:.:::;:c::::_=;..:;:.::== Park-Like Surrounding Ofc:: 3095 Mac:e A••, SllQ. S225/mo. ~l991. CM. Apt. Unfurn. 365 QUIET. DELUXE _M_G-~1034=~· =~~-~~i RANCHO CAPISTRANO AI.A Rentals • 645-3900 University P•rk BA YCLIFF MOTEL G1ner1I 1.2 & 3 BR AP'I'S * BEAUTIFUL 1 A 2 BR. 2172 DuPont Drive, Rm S 1\1.ANAGER-Can you manage $90-Quiet 1 Br. good loc, nr I;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;; Also Furn. Bachelor Contemporary Garden Apia. 6454170; 540-0608 anytime Newport Beach. Cal. 92664 a wholesale business! Less ahopa, Mature v.'Oman. ~LOW WEEKLY RATES *I• Prv patio.a * Hid Pools PallO!I, frplcs, pool $1M- 833_3223 than $30 invt>stment for the Blue Beacon* 64~0111 We have UNFURNISHED & tc:ben, TV's, maid service. VENDOME Nr shop'g *Adults anly $165. Call 546-5163 right pt>rson, man or FURNISHED rentals In Heated Pool. MARTINIQUE APTS. CHOICE lot. 100 x 135 R-2 woman. Start part time In e LONG HAIR OK • 3 Br, 2 University Park & Turtle 646-3265 Il\IMACULATE APTS! 2 BR, cpts, drps, bltns, paved 4Uey. 348 E • evenings and grow with Ba, C/0, bltns, kids & pets. RDc:k A would consJder It 4 LARGE 1 Br. centrally ADULT and 1m Santa Ana Ave., CM retrlg, upfttrs, infant ok, Rochester St. CM close ta business. 968-7654 $185. prlvilea:e to help you solve located. Pool, c:arport. FAMTLY Section Mgr. Apt 113 646-5542 Jndry fac. $l<i0. 548-7129, ~~~OOO S~=ping are 8 FASHION DRESS SHOP for AI.A Rentals e 64.>3900 )'CUI' housing needs. Adi ts, no pet1. $135. 560 W. Close to thoppfng, Park CORSICAN 96S-t455· sale, 3555 E. Coast Hwy, • LONG HAIR OK· 2 le Hamiltan. 646-4160 or* Spac:lous 3 BR's, 2 ba LRG l Br. apt. Ga.ta.gt. SAN CLEi\IENTE-00' x 200', CdM. 61~2001 er 968-8968. $125--2 Br. Bltns cpls dps, M>-0700 • * Swim pool, put/green NE:W 1-2-3 Bdrm. All bltns, Lndry. $12S/mo p&rt1y tum. C-1. PROF'.; 40'x80' to 20' Fixtures $3500, inventory gar, sml pet &. (hild1 ok. SPECIAL LDw Rates from * Frpl, Indlv/lndry fac'ls lha.g crpts, drps, closed gar. Woman pre!. Inq: 1922-B drive, Cl. 543-~357, optional. ltusband being Blue Beecon * 645-0111 $25 v.·k. Kit. avall. Maid 1845 An•helm Ave. age1, trplc ln 3 Br.% ml. Walla(t!, 548-6518, 838--003I 54.2-4781 transferred. e LAGUNA BAECH • stv li(lrv, TV & Ph. Sea Lark COSTA MESA 642-2824 E. So. Coast Plaz.a. OH Sun-2 BR. unfurn deluxe towntw:, 50' Residential lot, $6900, $400 BEAUTY SHOP for sale. /ref, CID, kids &to peta ~lolel, 2:111 Npt Blvd, CM. I.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""" flower at Ross. Mgr at t21 pvt pat & pr, newly decor, ~wn. tyin 4~istrano Beach. O'A·ner will sacrifice 2 $135. "SINCE 1946.. &W>-7«5 Juat for Single Adults J .iwii . .iSiit"'i;ii'ii"'ii·ii°'iiS.ii232liiiiiiiiiiiiii I adtts, pet OK. $165 mo. 3009 P ' statio111 l n cl inventory. ALA Rental• • 645-3900 1st Western Bank Blda: QUIET 2 BR duplex, bllns, SOUTH BAY CLUB * BRAND NEW * Coolidge. S40-T2f1 Mobile Home/ SlOOO. 646-3611 Tues, ThW'S, 3 BURM. + tanuly nn., full Unlvenlty Parle ear. patio, E-side. Middle APARTMENTS LG 2 Br, 11..9 Ba atudlo apt. ~-T-•.•-il_•_r_P_•_•_k_• __ 1_1_2 c"'c:..:. . .::&c.:Sa=t cc""':='"::.'":::"::..-~-dlnln& nn., built-ins., brk. Days 833-0101 Ni1ht1 age coople. no pets. 360 16th Newport Beach LA COSTA APrS, l & 2 BR. Ne pets, families cnly. Priv. -WRECKING yard, xlnt loc:a· $390 a mcntb. NO FEE. Pl. &1>4285 or 642-1298 S80 Irvine Ave. Bltns, swimming pool & gar-patio. 726 Joann St. $140 Gr~~:~~~v• lion. Reaaonable. \Viii aeU Newport, 540-1720. 3 BR.. 2 baths ,.._ BEAUTIFUU..Y FURN. {Irvine and 16th) age, All utll pd. Sl.50 to $170 1 Br. Frplc. Beam ceil, all or piU1.. Call ~7185 e BUDGET BOOSTER • 2 •·•••··• ......, 2 Bl'. Htd pcol. Adults, no (714) 64~S50 mo. Adults, no pets. patlol, utll tnc:l'd $148.. The ;~fe:X:S:?!ONT Money to Loan 240 Br, fncxl yd, childrn &: pets. ~ ~~ ~ ~~~~·~·::;: :~~ ok), 2272 Maple 8.alboa Island 354 Avocado, 01· 64.2-97tl8 Yearfy. 1 adull 642-853l ENSENADA :J!·Rnitals e 645-3900 3 BR.ltl Jbath!;.,tumlahed""OO 3 ROOM $80/mo. for per!lOn 2 BR, trpl, baJoony, 3I5 E. WILSON GARDEN APTS. 21:;:--S~~:.~·~,ts~ S40 -$90 per month 1st TD loan '-""~~-'---=-~"--"'-= ava unc ····-· .,.. cf Benn·"• -. 2031 Bay. Winter rate, $175/mo. 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee:. includes all facilities, $180-3 Br. Family home, " "" New cpts/drps, Sp a c:, _ok~·~A_f_t ~S~p_m_, 764_2-_7294 ___ 1 673.1-fo· '"fo. blrn•, c/d, gar, fncd vard. i d h·11 Westminster. C.M. lnq. at Yearly $725/mo. Inq. No. C. nd Adlts ts ''2 BR, Crp drp •I.IC> ... , 6%.'lo 1NTERES1' .;r-re I 240 Slerks, Ct.f. 673-152I or 54S-7TI1 gruu s. ' no pe . t, s, Jmmac. Out of State Prop. 171 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 $140/mo. 2283 F o u n I a In Bltns, Laundry faclJ. Ne 20 d TD Loan • RARE INDEED 2 B,. DELUXE 1 BR & Bach Apts. LEASE 2 BR, 2 Ba, stove, Way E. (Harbor, turn W. pell, $140 & $15n, 54~1882 • • $35 wkly & up. Fw-n. inc:! refrlg, crpts, drp, heat on Wllron) BY OWNER-I acre, lully fncd yd, kids & pets, Only REALTY' utlL lo.Io. rates terms avl. Mature adult. i215. 675-4000 /./BIG BRIGHT 1 BR upr Im P • 0 vo d U--"e,........,•nd Term11 ba!l!d on equity. 11:11 U LRG dlx apts, $140 2 Br. Crpt d bltl i. utilili;s. Ne~ p'h o·:~¥i x. 642-2171 $45.0611 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 niv. Park Center, lrvine 998 t. Camino, ~51 Balboa Penlnsula Jitd pool. Newly dee. Play 5 ' rps, ns, no pe ' Call Anytime 8.tJ.0820 QUIET lttrac studios SUS. $130. 54:)..5210/811-3540. Long terms, law dawn. Serving: Harbor area :U )'Tl, Corona del Mar 1 Br. Sl25. Adlll, no pets. • 2 BDRM. Yearly, Ll~e ~~ilo.cg~:·ok~rps, bltru, ~2'°'B~Rc-ctrlo--p,-lcx-,-,~,4-=Blc-rn'-=R~/0~.1 $35i00. Call l602) 945-5989. S•ttler Mortgage Co. .;.:;;.;.~.;:;.:;.;...:;.::;.;.,,___ Houses Furn. or 2135 Elden. Mgr Apt 6. ne\ .. Mature adults. 419 ~ disposal, $140 rno. 2272 Duplexes/Units aale 4133 N. 62nd St, Scottsdale, 336 E. 11th Street SPARKLING 2 BR. 1 BA, Unfurn. 310 E, Bay. Cllll 675-4172 aft 1998 ?o.faple Ave. 64:u344 Pomona. 636-5640, ~rn 162 1cA.::".::.'::.·-------iii..iiii;iiiiiiiii.iiiioiii;;;iiii Near Beach. Bltn kit., ---------1* iis per week upl-".'.!'p~m':_·~"'.:'.knd"""'-----l ;",.,.,"•Co=llc~g,~A.::"::,·=;;64S-00~:;:;21 * 2 Br. Near K-Mart. Gu Ranches, Forms, c h f t I cpts, drp•, ott •l. porldog + Lido hlo w/kltcheo" 125 per week c d I M HARBOR GREENS DUPLEX Groves 180 as as • priv. pr. w/laundry upApt.s. MOTEL, 548-9755 orona • ar pd. Adults over IS . Aaswne 5%. c;t. Joan on near 1----------facili1in. $225/mc. 4 O 9 FOR RENT OR FOR SALE: I BR. Garden duplex garage GARDEN A: STUDIO APTS S13l/mo. 543-2407 new 2 BR units. Patios, 20 ACRE produc:ing era~ 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds Femleaf, Cd.J.\t 725 Via Lido Nord. Lklo $ll5. Quiet, ma~ adult. Be.eh. l , 2, 3 BR's. from $1.lO. $160. 2 Br, 114 Ba, Jrr, quiet, Bltns, F/A heat, C & D. grove in Riven;ide, at V11.n FREE APPRAISALS CLEAN 2 ity 3 BR. Redeeor. Isle. Call Webster 4-0020 er References 5"4&-8007 7700 Pctenon Way. C.M. GE kit., 2 car pr, S'xJ)' $300 mo inc, yet $22n pays Buren & Cleveland. Geed Cost•· Mese Investment new ..,....t'g, elec: bltns, nr Brighton 0-4541 · ~ .. ; 546-0370 stor mt Adlta. ~ •t f tr! rk b-sa.n11 yfl --r c d I I SPAC. 1 Bt. Crpls, drps, '" 'B FROM all. Asking $3l,500. Bkr, 11 e or r pa er su •n me .shop'e. 531-0534 alt 4:30 on om n ums 320 pool, nr sbops. Util pd. 1884 a.ri• Ort• R. Sl511 f]40-2 br, crpta, 1 or 2 6-16-823i. division nr new Arlington v,.kdys. Unfurn. M nrovl A CM 548-0336 C0l-1PLETELY REDE C. children ok, no pets. Nr l'Tth Income Property 166 High Sehl site, en main ...:..=:H;,O~U~S~E-w·/~P-AT~l~O~-·---------1..:.::'=:.:.::•:..::.•:.:'c:"-=.::·.;.::c.:::::1 ON TEN ACRES CLEAN &: COZV FAMILY & Plactntla. ~1710 ~~·1? ci!rie~~:rtln~ie~ 7 BR, 2 ba, conaeivath-e Huntington Be.ach ~~.10 :Ji~·$;:!~~ f~~i 1 6 2 BR. Furn. & Unturn. UN~~i..Aco:SALOC~ON. ",-B-R-, 1-BA-.-"-,.-.~..,,.--, bl-tos-.' 31°/o RETURN ide *'-hrAlnt couple Ol' single, Lease, 440 3 BR/1"' Ba-Tcwnhouse: Harbor Slvd, 90 of Wilaon Fireplaces I prlv, patk>a. 719 W. w,.1.,0 .,,1~1 sngl gar, 1 child ok. No No. Main St., Rivers ' Oahlla Ave. Adam.ll &: Brookhrust Utillf..:.=.:;::...=.=.===-==-Poola Tennis Contnl'I Bkfst '".,. ~ pets. S145 mo. 546-953'7 5 houses en large lot Costa Calit 92501 • CHARMING 2 br, 2 hlll. paid $205/mc 645--0565 Nice 1 Br. T r.ailer 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 ALL EL EC. G 0 L D ll'°"B°"R-. "u•°'ed.,-,,b"ri-,ck~.,,-k~. -w~,,.-, I 2 ~ ACRE producing orange H F I L.• 300 . . -& up ('!a Arth eo-~ H ) ME.DAU.JON APTS, 2 BR, MeM., & 3 BR. S80J nio. oUMS um snwu tlreplace, patio &: yard, L.anuna Hills •"'1 · " c: Ill' nr ~· wy bltns, beam cell, patio, J.140. gross. Asking $S9.900. Try grove in Riverside, at Van S300/mo, ..,.. lease. 2212 • 133 E, 16Lh St •42. C.r-.t -~· 1%: ba, Crpts, drps, patio I Adlt. Yearly. 642-8520 Buren & Cl~veland. Good 1---------,. * COROLIDO APTS * view. Nr bus & shopping, ==~--~~--ot $10,000 dn. for a 3I% annual ,,.,. fo• tr!• P•"k or sub-Generll Waterfront Dr. 673-34:'i6 NEW dlx, angl sty 3 BR, 2 NEWLY Decor. 2 BR. 1613 1 Adil ENJOY privacy'!' Del• .... l return. ' ' • 1. BA, crpt1, drpa, bllni, pool. Santa Ana Ave. $145/mo. 2 Br. 1tu(ll'ls k ~!reel lcvel9, enc garage, s, no pets, - GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414 division nr new Ar tnglon Cost• Mes• Children OK. 2 c: enc: gar. 543-8572 or 646-4.TIO. $!SS & up. Inhwhr. trpl, dbl S15S. fi.45-3515 Br, bltna, relrlg, cpVdrJI, 149 Riverside Ave., N.B. ~:~~Y Sc:~ si~~·rc:~n r1fe~~~ Rrd & trash pkup lnc: $265. STUNNING 1g 1 Br Garden c:arporl. LARGE Pool. e Newly Decorated gar, bale. 962-4_l80 ____ , CE ~. 1 870 2 Br. fam rm, 1% ha, frplc: &. Bkr. 837-5506. apt. Small dog ok. 1155, 1 673-3378 Quiet l & ~ BR's, Gar & 2 BR, new crpt, no peta. SACRIFI BY Ul'l'ner • \Vrlte Charles Mart n, 1135 m sh 1eav lng town must sell No. Main Sl., Riverside, RENTAL FINDERS Indoor ba.r-b-q. Aval I Townhouse Unfurn. 335 mJ. free.645-5530 FOR lf'ase, delx, all elec:. pool. Ci,lts, drps, Adult.s /rno. a l l mar . ~ Free To Lindlords lmmed en month1y rent.al, 1 / 1 2 BR 1 only, no peta. 6l2-8042 893-4487 for appl. dls duplex below mrkt Calif. ~=.&.""c:.' -----I $~/mo. upper Bay $100 INCL. util, Small apt for ge, new w a v cw • Xlnt line: .. depreciallon &. , Reel Estill 645.0111 country • t m 0 1 p here , Huntington Beach adult man. Nr. l!ilh & BA apl. ~~I bit-ins Incl 1 BR. $125 -2 BR. $140 _E_•_•t_B_lu_ff ____ _ lnc:omt'. Call fiTa-46."J6 9 am Exch•nge 112 645-0682 Newport 642-5583 dishY•shr, . gar. Adlts Pool. Bltns, crpts, dl'P!, no e NEW DELUXE e til noon, 644-6521 aft 6 pm. TWNHS~--t d-• ref ch only. 673-6992 children, no ""is, """ "F" e J BR 1% ba CONDO-~"' .,...., ' FURN Ba • & 1 BR's. ,.,.. -3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. Ind WALK TO BEACH H VE •LAGUNA · Steps to ooean. Frplc:, 2~ar garage, pool. whr, ~i rnre. pool, 2 Br. Especially nlce--$130/up 2 Br, 1 Ba, (rpl, shag cpl, E. lllh Pi., C.M. spac. mute.r aulte, din rm New 6 & 8 units by builder. A Oiild &: pet ok.. $140. Avail May 1. $220/mo. Call $16.S. 405· 6f6.67S2. 1117 Elden Ave., CM drpll, bltna, hu": SZlO. 2 BR. unlurn apt. Stove &: &: dbl garaae, auto door Hla: Bc:h. 847-3957 NE\.V Office Buildine --C'AtA:c.:i;-"'ii:i"i;WC'';;ie~645-0'-:.:3900:;=;:;:-I ,>I0-534~~:'..7~al~te~r:_5:'.__~~ Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Btwn 10-5, 6J0.2062, aft 5· retrig incl'd. Garage. Pool opener avail. Pool 1 Rec. lo \ W/$100 K equity, i \VALK TO BEACH . 1 Br, I & 2 BR's. No pets. 1..::'":.'c.::59&-::...:1.::11::9_____ all utll pd. Adlts cnly, no area. BY owner, 2 on • 1• v. S77K Net Inoom~ 2 BR house in court, Crpts General , ~~'"°=-NEWPO~=~R:.:Tc.B::.c_LVD-'-~ILRG 3 Br, 2 Ba, view. Best peb: ~fgr No 9 383 W \Vilscn, C.M. encl gar, child ok. $125. I drps, Garage, 2 amall ---------•=-' · ' · • $265 e l~~~*=o'"-c....:""=-*-~~ 1 WANT ALA Rental• • 645-3900 chUd~n. ~me. 646-2719 OCEAN view ateps to beac:h HOUSE • 1 BR furn, amall loc: Ocean Blvd. $.125/mo. Wilson St. 865 Amlgoa Way, NB DAILY PILCYJ' tor ac:tion? 64.YFRONT Hoose or loL Dally Pilot Want Ads haft HOUSE In 2 B 1 2 Br. t BA. yrly. 642--3639; yard, en street nr lhop'g·1.'=7>-69ll4::..c.:.:c===-=-* 2 Br, Mesa Verde, new Managed by d !. ""'.,.'" w '11' lh"'"'s11' (213) 35&-7313 No dogs er cats. 543-J'D) • BACHELOR APT decor. Lrg closeta, cabinets. WILLIAM WALTERS co. l:c.::="::":=2-::;""::=::·::Sa=""o::'==:;.;;;=w=.R::.;;;DuBo::::::;::":;:;":::,.=71::'6:::.....;;;barg;;;;;:;;al;;:"';;;:;..-:=:=· ===;; rps, pll l'.l. • •• G ll'L"~ N ·-No. B, CM. 548-2839 C d I .u. l BR. furn. $125/mo. Ne $100 PER MON'111 55o7r ;..,,,, ...,.... ....... , a pe ... oron• I ITillr c:hlldren. C1\ll after 6: 675-2250 -<>'flN Call fiU..56'T8 I: Saw! HSE, 1 Br. ~w cpts, drps, NEW J Br. 2 ba, cplll, drps, * OU! 6&-1&13 + \;;;:;;;::;;:=;::::;::;;:::::::;:;::;::..;::;:::;;:;;:;::;:;::;:====.;';;:;;;::;;;;:;;;;~;;;;:;;;;I S©~~lA-~r.trs· The Punle with the Built-In Chuclle I 1~0r&i°j 11 -~ REBEM I!. I r I I I ' I Who! thl1 co.miry needs Is Lr-'·'--.L--'.-1-. ...J --oddkts. I HAPROH I ~-tJ. 1--,~,~,~1 ~, _,,,_,..,-I O Comor.t. ''" ch"'1<1< •"""" by filling In tN "'lni"V 'll«da • • yau dav11\op from ltirp No. 3 belaiw. 6'. Pl!INT NUMSEJ!EO V lfTT[llS IN SOU.&.~tS ~ llNSCRAM!lf IOI '1 ANSWfl SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 gar, Prtv. Cpl or sngls. Ne gar. $2!15 Mc., leue D.ana Point ~pe:"~· ~n:<o~.~-~1;405~. ~......,~~"~·: 1 ~Corb~~, .. ~M~ut1n~~ru~1n.~~-~7662~1 ________ _ LARGE dean 2 Br ho\lat, SINGLE. TV, pool, pell ck. frplc:, bltns, lrg tncd yard, $25 &: up. wkly. Dana I c"':::.' .;"':::..· ::.$151='·.,,: ........ :.::..:;::__.1 I Ap1r1menls fer Rent l ( v I ~wy~ JM, 34111 Coast Huntington &eech . _ --------••••••••• ** New lge 1 BR apt. 4 BR. 2 ba, aetlvtty nn .... 1 F 360 St!iO/mo, yr lcnse, 1.Jt & ~k 1 •-· -·--4 "'P s. um, last + $50 deposit. 496-4456, ..... , we .,.., I"'"· ~ 22 eo~-$260/rno, wate.r pa Id. Gener el ~46 1uuv& Ave. ~ aft 4 pm or Wknds * CUSJ'OM FURNITURE Huntington Beach CLEAN 4 br/2 ba, newly I;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;=;. d«, shg cpt/drps/bltnl/rd R.El'{I'AL. See ad-c.l.w 810.1 , loc. ""· -bfr ' or ~*-Call __ SU-34~"---I La Quinta Hennosa aft 4. Coron• de1 M•r 9 l BR, 2 ba, rumpua nn, FURN 1 Sr, utlliUea In-Span.lah Counlly Estate Uv· c:rpts, drps, fen c e d . du~. l adult preferred. Ina & Spacious Arts, T11r-. $250/rnc. 963-n46 SIM. 6Th-2440 Broker raced poo.I: aunken KU nBQ 3 BR, 2 ba, lie famil,y rm Costa Mesa Vnbdl~va.blc Llvtnr • Only w/trplc, bltns, lge yard, 2-...,..._,..,..,,.,,,,,....-_ 1 Br unf $150-fum $180 '" pr., !250. !'13-9111 * LARGE 1 BR * 1 Br uni $17S furn $210 * * fOR LEASE: 5 Bdrm, 2 Crpts, drpa, diiposal, patio, AU. tmL INOJJDED sty Pa.cWc Sands homt'. sar. AduJts, no pet1. Sl3o 11. Special Oonus; a allva. 6'1>3254 mo. See ta apprec. 2047 B plated candle snufh!r ls * * 4 SEDROOM HOUSE Ch11.r1e St. MB.603Q, 646-1841. yoora U you brint tbls 4d BHns, crpt,, drps, J2iO •CLEAN l BR w/url Crpta When )'OU vlalt ou.r made,·. VINCO REALTY 6f6..00l1 * Sl2$/mo Adul~· * 4 bll!A S. ol San Dlei;o Fr.vy e CON[)()..' ~e 2 br, l" ba, 532 Center 's1 ~ en Beach, 1 blk w. on Helt -n =--==-'--'",,-'-""--.I to 18Zlt PAt'klld• Lane. Jlrept.ce, pool. • t 'T 5 . The "VeUOw Pr.ges" of (7J4) g,17.Sf(l 4"""" !cl~u~d~O~ed~·~·~·!M2-<o671~~-.l•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~--....! • . I D.IJLY, PILOT T-. '''" lJ, 1971 -Pll I~ :;;I ;;;""'°';;;;;;;""' ~'~~·1 1 louW-l[g] [ ---1~ [ -..--]~ Rooms 400 Industrial Ranta) C50 Par10nala S3fl Lost 5.15 Gerdonl09 Palnth'!I I. •-•. Unlvrn. K!Apt. Unfllnl. 36.5 Apt• .• 1:..,..:!:::..z::::::.;;:, __ ..;.;~~"":------I Fom. or Unfurn. UO Stnf An• S•nt• Ana 1 Coat• Mes• --------1 Papem antlnt e $15 PER _. U{' w/ ktt. * COSTA MESA * YOUNG man dnpen.te for KITJ'Y Iott SUn, April '4, Htc: AL'S GARDENING • $25 WMi ~p Apta. MOTEL $95 Ir $157 Pn tno., .immed educatlruW 1upp:irt In CbntintnW TwnhM-1 No. J, for prdeninc A: 1!lla11 PAJNTDllG/paperlna:, 11 )'fl 5U-er.i5 oocupa.ncy. un.220 power. avtatlonal neld. Vtrre of Otl whltt, lonr-ha l r~d landscapl.Jl& Ht'Yice1, call to Harbor &rN.. Ue • KJTOlEN pnvilq-e-s, Ml.n R. NaUl"eai, A&:t. 642·1485 lo1lne ll!n!lre-lnvestmt>nt. mar!Md li.M Stame1e, Will 50-6198, Servinr Newport. bondtd. Rer1 turn.~­ only, $liO mo. 2161 Miner St, 2SIXI Sq 11 M·I wl -400 8Q' ft bi Willinr to 111wk bard. WUl reward finder. 9C.l674 CdM, O>sla Meaa. I>owr FOR clean It ne1.t paintinr, C.M. ~. 89l-S3'ro offiCl' space. 16th It. do anythlnJ, '° anywbttt. LON~h&ired &reY cat Shore•, Weitclut bittrlor I: exterlcr. CaU FURN room in priv. home, Monrovia, c .r.t $:175/mo. Hold vaJJd driver'• li~ w I flta collar ''Smokty" e LANDSC'APING e Dick. ~ 11====-- "1Dlt*'l- "!Maod-· ,,,_.,_ "lWa ...,_,,,. otl A ... ._cmolfllt ................... __ ,_. ............. -..-tllit---llPll't-- I * * • • El Puerto Moaa Apts * * * • 1 Bed room Apt1. al ,. ~ & prlvale plklt's Hcenaie. l1>1t vie Hurn~dt laland ROTOTlLLING, .2~c sQ FT, INT • •-1er. Painti .... , Costa Mesa; kitch. privll Tri-Co Re I)', 64~ .. 1. Write Claasified M No. 34, Hta: Harbour. Reward: "" ~ ... ,. $130 4 up incl. utilltlt1. Also plus. Nr. CX::C. 5G-1Ml INDUSTRIAL UNITS Daily Pilot, P. 0 , Box 15150, 846-439! or 6t2-SMO SPRINKLERS, SEED &: Lle'd ina. l<Ne est. 30 )Tl '"-Pool •-Ree.reaUon NICE .. _...,..__ Um Jt Pl r A Cott MHl SOD LAWNS. UC'D CONTR expef. Chuck, M.S-OI09 ....... • f'90tn tor ........... .,. man aq • acen ia ve. a LOST Sat pm • All whit• ,~ ~ .. atta. Quiet Environment. w/ or w/o <:OClk'a-privU, $89/mo. S u I her Jan d , * FULLY LICENSED * .,............ * PAPERHANGER * OU slrtl!t pari.1 .. -. No Oill-Etiide, CM, 642--0326 557-7900 a .. 00wned Rindu ~;~u··-"·t looa;hair Cockapoo ma.le vie PROFESSIONAl..-, Pruning, Reuonable. Cf6..3'49 -~ ~.::=:,;;:::::..:::_=:....~=li::;;::;:,o;::::;::;--:;;;; ,.., .._,......,_ Finley k Newport l 1. tree k ·nkl drvl, no peu. G uest Home 415 Rent11l1 W11nted 460 Advice on all matters. Reward. 673 -4333 or . wor ' 1Pf"1; ers, a.era-PAINTING/~perinf:, lS yrs Love, Mania&e, Buamess 675-5934 lion, pests, d1seaae, "."ffd in Harbor a.iea. Lie • .,--;:,.,,.,,-,,.,,,,,.-,,..,,.,,~-/LOCAL exec. l'Wl"ls 2 or J br. Readinp given 7 days a cofttn:il, Clean up JObs. bonded R f' fur 6C2-2l5S * PRIVATE ROOM house with 2 baths in k 10 JO L 0 s T : .am a 11 b I a ck Tmns. Ceorte, 646-5893 · e 1 n. w~ . a.m. to p.m. Pl p -• R I for eldery lady, Brirht Newport or Corol'LI. del Mar 312 N. EI Camino Real, crutru.htu1-type dof; Mesa AL'S Landscaping. Tree ••fer, •f~,, .,a r cheery earden 1urroundlnp, arta. No chl.ldttn, yearly San Clemente Verde area; lie. No, Tlli66. rtmoval. Yard remode.Jirc. * PATCH PLASt'ERING Nutritious meal&. ca 11 leaae. turn i 1 he d or 492-9136, 492-0076 s.tl-3763 AfL 2 PM Trash haultnc. lot cleanup. All Jypes 1'rff eatJmata Be.am ceilin&a. pantlin&, prtv ~-47~. unfurnished. WUl move In al MEXICO LOST: FALCON Repair 1ptinklt-n;. 67.l-1166 Cail Sf,~ cili end of June. PhoM 543-TIS.5 * REWARD* paUOI, rtcr'UUon ta tlu. Rent•l1 to Shire 430 uk for An Va""ht. G ren11da Cov• NEW law_n.-, rott>-rtllq, PLASTER -Patch-Rm . AU Adulr_,, no pet.a. -The only OCEANTR.oNT After 6 pm: ~-4949 * sprinklers 1nstalled, tn!~s & Adda. New wcrk. 7'rM 151961 Maple Ave. Cost& lote.u. BAY MEADOW APTS. * Bachelor Ap• * .FAMILY ol 4 ttt.ka Water. trailer 1,..C'l!s In CRILD GRIEVlNG! 641~~ .. removed. Free est. estimates. 54~ a.ft 5 .... -..Cc 1 ........... tlleMdl&. + :z BR. lrom $165 * J N D E P E N D E NT front furn 3 or 4 BR home ENSEN°ADA JRISH SETI'ER, FE~1ALE. .......,..,,, Pl b l ----~ * l &droom * RE s p 0 N st Bl.}.; young April u lo June 15, Up fO REWARD 646-4372S XP J Garo um ng #_,,11,9 \ lt.llP'LmlJI: bllT~CIJl'rlW I "'w. Bay St. lbtwn Harbor V.'Omall wfu share spacious 1500 mo Call 56-4745 Sta -S90 per monlh E ER. apanese ene~l----'-----,.-1 I~~~ 1 A,..,,_.... "'9 ' • I @ % L N Laguna apt w/ ame. · · · incllldes all facilitie1 MYNA BIRD • Blk w/yellow Complete lawn serv "" LE\V Taku "-Son '• Plum I '..,.. . ........,...ri--.v, I ltt A:-Ne11o'POrtBJvd. m . 497-1228afl7PM&:wknds .• wAN:ED to letse-4 br 67l-1708torinlo. beak.Reward.Lidolal.Ph: land~apillg. 546-0724, bill&' Rept.fr R e plpe 1 \..,........ t.,.~an.t.= •• ·~ocjm..,o!j ... '5-;;;;... of 19th SU. · 1~;:,,~,:.:::_...:.:;:.;:...:=::::..1 home tn EutbluH, the 673-S2'll 5(3..7958 Remodel Free E1timaM I ~..._ -. .,... ...... -CALL 6t6-ro73 COUPLE past 50 to share BluUs or Harbor View Hills k ••• ~·o • --... ho Rel' Call aft 7 • SMALL bl.k greyhound mix, LAWN all'e I: ganlen \\"Or ., ~~;.:,,~'==~=~=-! ·-•EJ1i.o.. "I::. ... 1 .--&....,•t RING BROS.•---·-, me. '· er Call644-5175 l[g] Ll hi •···" 2 Exp 'd ,. --·~·--pm: 642-5283 ,_,. :;;;i.o.;;1;.,;d;·-"-•• :;;;:; ~W~ood~··~C~ov~·~""'~'~· ~"~Cod~y="· i 1111 "'-'n · • PLUMBING REPAIR Sit"''i;'~ .i::= Apt!', Now Available "1Wlll . Rev.·ard. Gl-4226, 494.9075. ~a10r.able. Call 543.-9135. No job too 1fnan ._.... °"""-MEDITERRANEAN SHARE my waterfront home I )~ Gardener. Yard cle~p. • 642-3128 • ILLAGE 1o11/dock. Man, ~ yea.rs. •--·------·- "9$1fSllll'_. V $150/mo. 57• ""l. -·--d 5SO P!sntlng. Sprinklers. e PLUMBING e (1J()9 1..-. ~100 n.u....,. v • 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SWVicil nd,...,_ "F;xp'd . 646-MG Electrical Repa.lt $Shi' ..__,_ • "--~-m d .........., Found (fr"• 1) I I )[5} · 9 ,...._.., .,... .............. ...., Coata Meu. Will. Shatt my charming I I JOHNSON'S GARDENING M2-2Th5 642-1403 .,. Apt. Unfum. •.rl' <n4) 557-8020 bayfront Bal Isle hom~ Announc•m•nt1 500 FEMALE Doxie, Bushard & Yard cl I Apt U~·rn ~ ~ w/2&130-50. 6 pm, 673--0285 Adam•, H.B. 962-3978 . care, ean--ups , pan-R•model & Repair '_._. __ "'_"_· ----~;.:________ 'Ai.\fAZING Ad u I t LlvinJ. ting, sprinklerg. 962-:KIJ5. •· N rt•-h I Offlc• Rent•I 440 WANTED Found l weeks ago. Have B•by1itting CUSTOM remodeli""• altm. •Wpo '"°ac Beaut. l & 2 BR turn or W'I watchfl'd papen cllttfully. -....:--.:....._,.._-,.--G•n•r•I Service• llo ·• ~·"" East Bluff Apt!. Self clean. overu, --,--.,--..,,--..,,.--OVERWEIGHT Please claim (have 31 or COSTA MESA tiona k addl n&. ;':!,"~ MA~INER SQUARE D/W (in 2 Br) di.-pla, shaa: PrestiCJe Office will give away. PRE-SCHOOL * LABOR UN1.Th1.JTED * Stewart-Builder. 673-...-. NEWPORT dBEfCH APARTMENTS cp!A, '""'· l•cuui ~ "'"" "ON THE BAY" LADIES =rE=MAL7"'~E~G>~rm""an-csi..=-ph<~ro' 1J.8th A Monrovia, II day+ I '".;~!.H.;.AN~D~YMAN~~~~liR::Eoof:E]i;;ng;;;;;;-c;;:'i;;;;i;;;"'dl VIiie Gr11ne • pta. Announoet: the availability ot baths. Huge pool.. At Lido Yacht .Anchotaze for weight reducing: Proa-ram pup. Black v.·/ brown fttt. full day seaslona, Planned I ~\'tldlng -Carpentry 673-1922 el Four bedrooms with b&lc:on. 2 Ir 3 BR units for adUlf.I Merrimac Woods 3 Room SU!te to establish statistie1 for Wearing nea collar &: program, bot lunches. A&e• Hu.a~n<f Bmy? Call M~se i:iiE :.~e~, ~~~e ~:= dulrina: to Uve amidJt beau. 425 Merrimac Way, C.M. Ground flour-688 aq ft rapid permanent weia:ht med a 1. M, ~a N 0 rt b U, bn 6:30 AM.6:00 P?-1. 545-0820 after 6-~pa1r ther-mo roof coatinp white ._. ty by the sea 1n the pres-BACHELORS. J &: 2 BR's; Air cond Cpta:, Drps lor;s, conducted by qualified Shopping Cntr. 549-4173 $18 wk.COMPARE! 6C-4050 Build-SeN Moi;t Thing! I: color. Lie/bonded' alnce. for family with 12hlldnon. · W -"u ol $lll5 ' physical cuJh·'"'-•-. M"~ ho or ••• •-7 Near O>rona. del Mar Hl&:h ti.:1ous ea:t~ uu. furn. or untum. up. E-Z Parlrina:, Uli.l paid ,..,~..., .... , GREEN parakeet found ~ • Heuling '47. &12--72'12 Nev.-pon Beach. Pool. Laundry nn. Adult.a, KIO p<r month a minimum of 20 pounds t ~·LO ho SchooL Fireplace, 1''1!! bu I-f ROM $130 no pets. 897 Center St. Apt 011erwelgbt, have transpor-?i.londay momiElng v c · ...nil '""'4 !n my! Hme. TRASH k Gana:@ clem-up, WENED~ Rootlnr. Aulhoriz. built.in ldtl"he.n applianoes. For tntormation phone Mr. -';·~-=-~718=1-~-~--717 A~~b~~Y D~~E talion and not currently un-Newport l~gts ementary nlant lo yrs o d, a11e 1 days. SlO a load. fut I'd Applicator loi:_ Sno-Hidt S35 AMIGOS WAY 6'4.2991 • A ....... 1~ School. 646-2160 3 yr old dauahttt. Fenced .... A-···-·· "'"5031 ·-· S""tl!ml. 64J-le'91 •·•-~ M Bu-'·' M•""" H I...._ e -• N~·-,~ -it=> derdoctors care. Jl i,""' .... ·l =';:.;."'°..c_---.c,-----~ •·-ho Call • ..,......, .. ~ n.uu J~ Cold'wdl Banker It Co. •~•' . CJUf!Y, --· unt "•'""' • e•t;rt ~ .. ,,,,.,. ' °"' '"" "''.r ...,.... BLACK Labrador p u pp y y .... u, ....... , me. / ,.'.':::,~~~..:'.::.:::;:.--/;;;-;o::::;~::;;;;;:;-n;;;;-;;;;:;;;-1 Ma.nqirw A,ent StlSZ21 er, at cn4l 645-025.2 or "Nrite ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~ ies completely confidential. found at 3151 St. beach. SJD..4370, hrs 7:30 to 6:00. YARD, Gal'8.ge, clea.nups. T. Guy Roofin&", Deal Dired. to Tbr Oftice ot t i.-Man-' PRESTIGE OFFICE Ask for Mias Powell El Toro, Mission Vie;o area. ~move trees , dirt, I do my own v.wk. 66-27IO, TOWNHOUSE deb: 2 B .. ,. ON BEACH Newport Bch. Identity, Ask 548-9590 e r, aa-er, Mariner Squ&h! Apts, • N<!xt to Real Ea:tatf! Jirm. 537·5410 for Pegay, 646-™5 LIC'O CHILO CARE akip!oadrr backhoe. 962-8745 · !: :.: ~:: ~~tio, lli4 Irvine Ave, NB, Cal. :a>3 Carpetr, drps, util pa.id.1o=ISP=LA~Y~,..,,,-,-,-,-,-..... ...,.~,,...or I cF=O~U=N=D~;~G=rco=y~w=/=b=lk-,tr~;,.-s I Harbor & Baker, CM. 5 yrs. MOVING, Garage clean • up Stwing/Alt1retlon1 92664, 2 BR Unturn •••• From S SlOO per mo. Excellent for Lt. Calley with a chrome ma.le cat, very a!fectionate. exp. Refs. 545-2943 & Ute tJ.a:uling. Re~sonablr. EUROPEAN Dreaamsldns Huntington Beach J _.'!"~!!!~!!!'!'~'!"!!!!I Furn 2 BR Apt Ava.II. insurance, !AX acc't, archi-license plate frame Also rhort-hairl'd wht cat. BABYSITIING Eves & Free esUmates. Ma-1602 Expertly Cus!orr. FJtted. 1------ud-----A New Wey To Live F'urn.iture Available tect. 1860 B. Newport Blvd. "Americans • rally for 847_7588 wknds. My home. 67 5- 1283 H 1 ·Iii: r._ m..••M • 4 Br. St io Apt in Newport Beach Carpet.a-drapes-dJ.ahwuher c .r.-f. Calley"; in red, white & •• ~u1ec eani1"-Accur.-n.ear. .1.o'"' in .. ple>.:. 3 Bath.a. lmmac. OAKWOOD GARDEN healed pooJ.saunu-teMis W. E. L1ch•nmyar blue lettering. Only $2.75 ea, FOUND tame rabbit, sandy days, Elle.-. 548--04l7. Bay & Beach Janitorial AJteratlon1 -642-5145 Pri "· -< "-• vi "' · o~ tod c olored male . V ic: e 'Id 1 ~ v pa .... , ~·rs, "''" • APARTMENTS rec room-ocean ew1 1860 New""" Blvd .. C.M. or., per pair. ouer 11.y. UI er Crp,., v.•irxlows. floor& etc. Nea• accun.te, ""'ytan el'P. bl I cul-d kin ""'"' · 9445 H iJ California School. 546-996S .,.,,._.,,..,....._,----,,.-,.,.. ' llu, P .•Y area, e-sac On 16th Street htwn patlo.--arnple par r Call 646-3928 Ev~: 673-4577 Porter Industries. e ' -:-Re!. &: Comm"l. &l&.1401 Tile st Ci.ildren welcome. No Irvine and Dover Dr, Security ruard1. Fountain Valley 9~7 PUPPY • A-falf', red. found NO Job Too Small! Brick, ~t&. 17871 Bell Clrclt. (714) 642..alJO HUNTINGTON SUPEJt.DELUXE QUALITY C11rd of Th11nk1/in Sun. A.~!., Springdale & block, concrete, carpentry, ea:~\~::::. ~:::tc. CER.Ai\1lC tile new & 142-3'1'7 1 ~-~~'-~----J.2-J room, up to 3,000 aq. Memorium 505 r ~"~'=;'~·~"=·B=·~""""°':.::~·.:::·~--add a rm, house le11el!ng, Rtsid. &Commc'I. :,48-4111 rtmodel, Free eat. Small BEACHBLUFF Apta ~Clemente PACIFIC ft. office 1ulte1. lmmed. 00-1---------G. Shep male. tan about I yr_ gar. door ttpairs. Ftte est.1 ..:::.:::::.:.i;;'iiY':..::.;:....:::..:..jJio~b~·~·~·•~k~om•!:·..0"'"~"~"~·-.1 New 3 Br, 2 Ba, d!.bwhr, BRAND NEW tux. 2 Br. 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. cupancy. Orana:e County. TIIE family of Raymond Vic Newport Center Woody, 962-6945. By Day. Tre Service ,.,,.,:. cn4> 5J6..141J7 J.lrport Irvine Conunerc-Morp.n EUiott acknowledg-837-2742 Cernaf Servic• Own Transportation. e pool, patio. 8231 EUii. 2 Ba, 1100 sq. ft. ""..uo:t . ,.. ..-_,,, 842-MTI ct 547.3957 cul-de-a:ac. Panoramic vl.ew Otc open 10 a.m.fi pm Dally Complex, adj. Airporter es with de:ep appreci1tion GRAY female cat 2 eolian 0 . -" C 1 Cl . ~ TREES, Hedge•, Top, Trim, .~TTRA=;:;:cr~M:;,,;::...;:::.,..=n=t-~l~b~,.· 1 of ocean. Adults oa.ly Sl*l. WilLlAM WALTERS CO. Hotel '= Restaurant, banks, 1he many kindnesses ol Vk. l\li.ssion Viejo iam:•Kl !zarpe ~a~ DEDICATED CLEANfNG cut, nmoved. hauW. Ina. hshly painted • cleaned., ~·~!12-:..::""1=·-------~!!!!!!~ ...... '!"!!!!!!!~<I San Dle,ro Ir N'pt Fwy!. friend& expressed at this 837--442:> vg s e room \\o'e do everylhlng. Free 642-4030 Bia; John I N ,.5 •--2 & J BR. $150 up. Patio. ,UNCROWDED PARKING time. Raymond l\l. EU iott Rrpalring & installa tions estimate. Call 673-4072 Weldinn Air mnd, trplc, b tns, r ante ""™" Pool. Chil"-n. MO"' KAI LOWEST RATES f I FOUND: Vic Brookhunt & Free Est. 645-1 317 ... - ' hoots&: park, Kid \;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "'"' """ ami y. lncom• Tex ----------1 ,, IC s Apts. 18881 ?.1ora Ka i Ln. 1 , l}irmer/miJ'. 2172 DuPont Dr. I~~~~~~~~~~~ Adams, blk dog, smrt b.lir, CARPET l.i!..yer has quality ----------[WELDING, portable arc r u, ..»t. DO pets. ~l~ CAN'T BE BEAT blk E. of Beach at Garfield. Rm , 8, Nnrport Beacb female. 968--1651 shags & HJ-Lo at d!.-counl S 'I T S · brazing, bumlna:. Hn:. n.te1 1 BR, refrjz, bllnl, crpta, 714: 962-89!H SlJ.3223 Courtesy ID BrokttS I I~ Lost SSS prices from $2.50 a yd. Free ml ey ax erv1ce or fiat, no )>b too lmal.I driis. $135 mo incl utll. SINGLE SJO"RY / ,CL.:;a::.gu~n=ac::;llN:"--,:-h----1 DESK space available SSO Parso1Uls -Es-t. Mr. Ed (714) Bn-9958 53tHi782 Adultl only. Tradewinds mo. Will provide fumih1~1; •••••• ;;~~~ ----------C e llth YEAR LOCALLY e l,.:::.;:;_:::_ ______ , RJ'-' MT-IM.1; Eve 1 ; South Se.a Atmosphue ---------1 •c .... . fu\JALL 4 !b Jong-haired •rpenter Qualified • Reasonable Upholstery 'T 2 BR,• 2 BA.nl SWEEPING VIEW at.., mo. Anawc.i,na: servu:e while do&: lost Easter Sun. --'-------- Sl&-7661. Cupets '= drps OCEAN AND HILLS available. 222 Forest Ave, Per1on•l1 530 nr \\'est<'liff Shop'g Center, CARPENTRY \V. A. SMILEY Nr Huntington H•rbour Air C.ondllioned l~'"'~"'~"~B<~•~c=h~. ~•94-;,:""~'.....,;o;;l.<ii\U:.'.~C\!iiiOt;iW~i) C . J\l . 1NewP 0 r 1 area, MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Certified Public Account'! LIC Upholstrttr • Quallty Triplex • quiet &l'I':&. Lra: 1 Priva te P.a.b Deooralor Jurnished 1 bed· DESK ~pace available S50 SINGLE? WIDOWED? Liberal rev.·ard. Very much Too Small, Cabinet In a:ar· 642-27Zl anyUme 646-9666 work. Anthony'• U p h . Br • SlfO, J BR • SUD. Pi ts HEATED POOL room apt., twin beds, new mo. Will provide furniture * Divorced Over 21 * kive<:I, please return . q-es & o t h er c11.blnets. Central Bu1lness Services Service. 64.2-M:l N.B. olc. (714) 8f6.0071. Plenty of lawn paint, carpet, drape.a. Walk at S.'i mo. Answerlna: service Oldest & largest. For a. self 645-5616 545-8175 U no answer leave •THE TAX ADVISORS to beach k town, Mature ·1 bl ••• E 1 1 ':-==---;----co z BR, clean £: atb'activ<?, Ca.l'])O!'t &-Ston:p ava1a e . .:.v;i No. expanatory mes$8.a:e 24 hrs 1 LO ST : pak eo c ct rnsg. at 646-2372. 1-1. 0. Perm. olfice-Reu Rates L--------'l[IJ ) bltns alt cond patio Nr HIDDEN vn.t.AGE aduJts, S22S mo. 1 year Camino Real, San 11. day. 5'11·9991 LO ST o packet of Anderson. 328 No. Nev.-port Blvd. EtnplO)"lnM\t B--'•·ay ahop·., .._:_,,,, c•n......... ......... least. 49( • .l&J9 aft f pm. Clemente 492-44.ri i =~~===~-=-~-1 •uau ........ , ~.c.1~ ""·~· • ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Photographs at "T'' St. CAR p ENT Ry Cm p 11 Oppo!ite Hoag Hospital Kids ok, no pet.-. 830-1543 2-m South Salta Newport Beech BEAUTrFUL J room oUice Phone 542-7217 or 11-Tite to Beach. San CI em en te, Remoldeling. Many Yrs ol _;F~o~•~A~P~PI~. ;c:aJ~l~64~5--0400~~-1•• .. •• .. lll• .. ~~I ./ OIEZ ORO API'S Santa Ana l.l 546-1525 .sulle w I kltcheDl!tte. Ideal P.O. Box 1223, Coeta Mesa. 49fr.3045 exp. Small jobs Welcome TAX SERVICE $4 UP Job Wentad, femil• 702 8234 Atlanta. l-2 BR. Pool. VISTA DEL MESA for archlteet, l n' u ran c ej;iii;lii;ii;i;ii;jijji;jiiii;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Reas. Hrly Rate. App't ava ilable days,· Private Garap. Washer. Apartments •gent, realtor, etc. On * * * * * * \Valt Stevens: 64~259 eve.-. wlrnd.oi. M!-C688, d 536-8038 536-2721 Apta., l. l BR. Fu-•-Un!. Dish-Monrovia St. In N . B . CARPENTRY 0 _ ,_ AU l N CM CPN, Experienord, nttd1 '. ryers. ' F U f 370 '" • $350/$300 per mo. 64S-Q770 ~ n.cpe..... --''='~':_;,';'~"""c=rt=•c.==---1 position in Medka.1 OOict ln 2 BR un' ........ ta, drpl, blW. urn • .,. n urn. washer . Sto11e and Retrig . phases, Home &-apt, Lile ~ T ~1 M 0 'D 0 '-• S'· DESK •P avail bl• "''='"' .. 1· 5 41 6266 Income •x June.••-.: er .. , .. , or l small child ok. $140. El n&.g crpt'g.Lrg Rec center. ace a -., ht.wing. Ev-e : -· Pediatrician. Wil l consider Enil•nd SL, ILB. """""' Gtntral RE,.,. St&ru $1'5 mo. Will pro,,;de fum;h,,.. Trader's Parad1"se D>yo 537-1860 SKOUSEN TAX SE~V. all ;n1erv;•w•. Conllcl Zl2 or 968-JOSS Tustin & Mes• Drive at $5 mo. AnsY:erlng service OD G •-. available. 17875 Beach Bl \·d. REM EUN &: f\J<"pair Reu. Your Home. 54Q..3S94 Oceam;ide Blvd Net. 1, 2 Br a.pt-w/w, drps, bltns, PALM MESA APJS. * 545-4855 * Huntington Beieh. G42-C2l Speciall81. Comm'!. ttsidtn-Jinitorial Oceanrid<?, Cal or call alt•t disposal, laundry space. No Santi Anl , • lial. Paneling. cab i n et s , 7 Pt.f a t 722.-4093 Collttl tor pell". 962-8578 for lnfl), NICE OFFICE Avail. $60. Ines marlite, fonniea. M4-7598 SPARKLE Janllorial. \Vin-interview. R -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Roomy, ad loc. 2435 E. •---------~-.. 1 BR. beaut deeor.1 blk l B unfuro ······•• S13S.DO • c~~t Hv.'Y No. 1', Cd.\f. Cement, Concre:e dows, floorg, crpts « const;rNURSE, COMPANION . tmm octan. S13S. Avail l BR. furn ........... Sl4S.50 VILLA MARSl!ILLES GTJ-:.'000 t ,·mes cleanup. A complete comm I R.eliable, have car. 4/lj. Ph. ~2070 Bac~lora Furnbbl!<'! BRANO NEW ---==•==""==~~11 CEM!:NT \\'ORK. no job too ~f'rv. f"or Free est call, 645-l8n trom Sl3S * NE\\'t'ORT BEArn Clvlc small, ?'l!A."JOnable. Free \~"~'.:'""'~'~'-------ll"'1m'iN'G"'iNM'YiiO:iiE:-\ 2 BR w/<ar· SUO. Yard. SllACIOUS c 1 N Bl d 3lO E · H s uJll k 54• ~s TYPING IN ?otY H0~tE. 2 SR aptg $175 mo. en er on Pl v . gq, d 11 stim. . 1 c , """""' . M Water pakl. 2 710 -C mo.Imo. OK l &. 2 Bdrm. Apta. ft 67j..1601 or fl) 286-7144. 0 ars QUALITY cement i1TJrk, let I --'~'-o_n_ry_______ 60 \VOROS PER 1.1INUTE. Delallo-'att Ave. 63G-4l20 e POOL Adult Living 16?0 SANTA ANA AVE, cr-.1 George <lo it. L J c 'd., Masonry of •II T ypes 1--,....;;•:..::.M=~.=:=..:•:_ __ , 2 BR duplex, clou to bch & •SAUNA Furn. & Unfurn. From 300 Aq/lt. 3.lc sq ft. l'-------------------1 Bondrd. 64:>-1695 • &12-5&98 e AIDES For convale1ee~, dntown, crpt1, drp11 & stow. e JACUZZI Ol5hwuher. color c:oordlnat. * 67>2464 or 541-5032 =-,.--------[ elderly care or family~. No pets. Sl40. ~7 lS61 Meaa Dr. S&nta Ana ed appliance~ • pl u•h ahq 3700 NEWPORT Bl.VD NB LA~ T.AP.O_E recreat1onal Havl! 4 BR. 2 ba, 31h block~ P9~~!·w ~~~: ~~~~~: Moving Homemakers, 547-6681 Mtse V•rcl• C&f'Pl!t • choiet ol l color *ON THE BAY*, lot with all 1mprovemen1s. trom Cd:\1 be1eh.J uly and/ remow.5411-866Sforest, 2 Ambitious collea:e student1 HtlpW11nted,M&F710 Cost• Mesa 1t:heme.-• 2 batha • 1tall Eil:').2-4&4 or 5-ll-5032 Trade for boat or TD. or Aug, furn rental. \VANT •• CONCRETE. Floors. ha.ve truck, dn haullnr mnv-, ----------I 2 BR.. New crpt1, drps, Showers • rnlrrored Ward· ARNOLD k f'REUD 3M E late model car or ~ t E rl d Ca.JI lor1" cloud a:ar. nr •ho P ·a . 2 BR Sl25 unfurn: $14$ tum. robe donl"S • Indirect JIJl\t. lu1ine11 Rental 445 l 7rh, 0 1. 646-77.J.~ • · pa1io.11, drives, ~ldv.·alks, 1\3'.. xp. epen · *Acceunt11nt .. te $900 Adul•·. no "''· 11"'/mo. F•m"'-• wel-m•. BIG I Jd-• b aid t * 57·3·41~4 * ~la b~. Reu. Don 642-8:514 f~f' est. 833-6673 EDPba.ckrroundw/la'IO'W'J61 ... ...., .....,. ~.. Ill In t=en • re as Ide·• ab·•nt••. °' .. ,, tax ti II I · p · I I. 645-3515 SUR APTS, 2043-2049 b h · t f e«1 PRIME LOCATIONS ""' ""' y ·ave go rourse airn·ay Contr11ctor e1nt ng sl•ndard &: job costinc/dt· Wallace St. Phone 5'""430l u • uge pnvi • en sh•lter profitable oran1e lots, Golden HUis C.C., Tr-Paperhanging gree not Mceu. Newpert Be1ch pa_tto • oJmh ,landscaplnz -E, 17th St., Costa.Mesa rrove 17 acrt.11 @ 4000 lor hachapi. Trd t-'t for bch f----------Service Center Emp ~l'll:Y 2 BR house unturn '"-2 br apt bnck .Sar-B.Q • • larce beat-llal _Sq. ft. C?rnmtrc1&1 bldf. clear home, unils, yi chts. house, oldPr aprs, diamond, MY Way, qUA!ity home * EXTERJOR.fNTERJOR * 500 Newport Cenrer Dt-N.B PJJU\ NE\.l.'PORT • cue furn in lll!v.·er w.11 kept tri· ed pools & I.anal. 'llllth parkina:. S.100 Mo. Rus5 {\.1cCJ'ea (2\JJ 846~!E or stock. &12-9505 l'l!pa.ir. Walls, ce:il!na:, floors \Von't be underbid! Custom Suir 535 / ~ ' trPe l1 lk he plrx. Privacy. 768 Scott Pl. 3101 So. Brlltol St. <?le. No job too small. \\'Ork, fi~st p1 lnts. fn-P f--':::.:~•..:;;:..:....=.;..;:;:.: __ , .. 1 V17 over 1 t s;~~ i-16-2333. ('ii A-fL N, of So. Cout Plpa) Broadny, l.afu'la Beach VJ~V-to-OCEAN R-I LOT Swap errulty IO or "21J acrt& 547-0J.16, 24 hr ans-. ttrv. !'st/color ronsultlng. Rl'ls, Ba':.'] o:'2n~~-ct.:i., 2 '1ty I ~1250~.,.-MJ-f~<~l~,~2'°"'9~,-. ~l~\1--=Ba,,... Santi Ana ll:IO &!-fl. slore With parkina-adJacent ~e\"f'rly Hl111, for hl'Aut. secluded Rancho C11l. WAT£RPRF v1nyl de c k lie. bondt'd. Full financing Adm. Sal!':! Ta11.•nhouses. Elec. kit. pr. utl rm for ~·h/dr, -patio, PHONE: 5S7.a200 Nr. Coa1t Hwy. S:AXI r.10. homf!, unit~. boat. vac11.nl ifornia, !or &Tock, older a11all. M2·1524 YOUNG MEN &. ~., ... -·· nealonomic• Bkr. 675.6700 lJ_.000 .clear. :itcCn!R 1200 apls, beach house. etc. C'Ol.ll np, 11.ll type~. U.-r WOMEN pat or bal wbt:rn park& ftp! PT. cp!/dp. •• · ~ n11 •• l':~ldp •36:2 Burbank. 6il2·95D:i Roofin.1: Co., C~I . 6-tl-7222 No W"a.11MT1tt ~d orr·r~~~~ndrp;d Ju:: Apts., AptL, OFC. & W~REHOUSE Ha ve 4-~lex-~I & rec \\'ill ttade '67 t.t u11ana sir, tree est. * WALLPAllER * o VE LOOKINCt.AND Jambortt &: San Jo.1quin _F_"~'~"~·.•-•~U.;...n_fu~m-·_;3~7~0-....:.F~o~r~n-. ~o~r~U~n~f~u~r-"~·~3~70-1629 l\Tonrovia 11 W. 16th room. Pride of Ownenbip pb, ps, Rulo. or '6..l Chev + ROOM Additions/Remodel. WMn )'OU cAll "Mac" FAl~OUS FINAl'iC'IAL AN~ Hiiis Rd M4-19XI for Huntlntton Beach Huntln,ton "Btech C.~t. 2500 lq. ft. to sublel ln Tustin. Want Free l J&'.)' lra\'e/ lrlr all !n xJnr ing. Fret' planning s&rv. 548-lUf ~lnl ALYST, CALIFORNIA R.E. Jea1lft&; into. •t lie Ptr sq. fL Z.O~d M·l . Clear houSt" coM!hon. ror truck &. Kennedy & H1uu, 633.6J7D COLLEGE studPnt, no BROKER, IS NOW ORGA.l'I· F1'lr furltwr lnform&tlC)JI call Ca!! 613.JtOI A1t <'altl ""r. Call 54S-3T97. days/.l.18--634!1 eve~. drlnk!n,. 11ll Cla1s ex!. * EXCEPTIONAL Bf.yside 642·9470, Jea.n Jurich, --'~'----'--'-'--I !ZING nt:REE NEW or. U vini;-2 Br. 2 Ba . BOSTON fem1Jt AKC, Chi· l~ ~" c S ROO:'IT Addirions. L · T · pa in!lng, Low ra~a. Sieve , VlSJONS FOR INVEST· R I hln SUJTF.S AvaUahll!; 17612 huah fe 1 Al'C 1 . .,.,., vvu.1:e uston1 ports-Con~h'Uf'tlon. Slnglesloryor 548-4::i49 Furniture 11va 1/. EI e II • e res c u& ma I'S , or l~ '"""'~===-=--,.~c;-[ A-fENT COUNSELING. Bl!ach Blvd, H.R. Parkin1: · . nian "" 1'1111 Cllm~r. 2. E~tim., pl11.ns-& layout PAPERHANGER, nock, fl)il, sub-terranean prklne. From • • • Air -nd·. 11 ,. a 11 "< .. bunk beda, che•t,1, c111mp1n.i:: Pflui pped. \\'ill trade for 8,7_1 •• 11 HIS NEtDS ARE FOR •m .. S<2 ~"' -='c.c~·;;.,. __ ~-~-vinyl, '"'Ir., ealimalf'~, The -·E FUTURE SO >IE'" *"''"· Carpetlna:: Jantror ia.I s,.rv. grar ~tc · nr ·· "'"°*""• r;un~ .~ '" , ~ NEWPORT TOWERS ~2-2202 Po"·likt beach living for a dulls Mike funk ' ""~ •• L1r'd Conlr Rl!mndf'lin, lf Jl n i m ll n . 547.~46 PREPARING f" 0 R PRO-'" Inquire Sul!e I or call 1·0=;.;..;~~·...,,....,-~-,,..,....,644 Ad"•"on.·. Pia-•. '··-Lil .,.._ hw·~• S "'Cl!FF "·-r Ap•-2 ~. " " !" k " ~ " .._.,.u :;:·~c;::·;'.-~'=~7."--,.-/ JE'CTED EXPANSIONS 8Y ~ , .. .,.., ...,. Sf0...51... Trawr l .),] f"ord pie ·UP H I C.l CJ Karl E. Kendall 543-1537 ~ Br. cpl•, dr"J>s, bit.ns, pool, (iQSQ del Sol I sY'I. truck r~al clasiJC for ski 11 ~·e .o:m 01. it 1y, PAINTI NG : Hone1t . OfTERJNG A COMPLl:Tf: priv patio, •Ndio 'YJW. 1'~ .. ...,R Leu. 20x54, avill ' ' value S3500. Trade for lo-Addition~ * ~modellrw iU&11Ullttd Wl)rk. l.1c'd TRAINlNG AND DEVEL-. Ba.. Infant ok. ~2612 J~ f.lay l. 33l E. 17lh SL, C.M. boat. c1J houst-to $30,000. Gt>N 1ck •Son.a, Lie. l..oc:~ ref'•· Call 675-57«1 OP~fEN"I' Pl.:RIOD Pl.a~ntl&. A&lc abo 1.11 our 9/1 0 of • lfl11• •rom th• b•ach l• $230. ~24&1 5-l~~I Tht Doyle Compa.ny 67J...60.ll * 54~2170 Alt 5. NO EXPERIENCE OR diseou.nt. ""9ettation Cty" With 2 1wlrnmlng SHOWJlOOM, mfl{. k otfice:I---~::..:::;:.;____ Evt>t: ~l Gird t nlng P1tOITSSIONAJ., 30 yr 1 DEGREE JS NECESSA.''tY, m.nt.oNT. 1 Or Ip! peol1.PVtUn11ort•l'l,i;ym,voll1yb1J1 1p&Ce. Parlonf. Cole-in La. Hav<! Sl4.j()IJ ~UlfY. !I'• ~ha-lnplex, 2 BR. el. f'-"tP, pa~rhanrina "pain-J UST A,\fBmous. HON. ~ court, 1aun1, b11U1rd roorn, etub· cun•. SSS-SJ95 Mo. t!M-4653 Fl!A loan ln btaut Collete '" 1 -f F. land 968-7461 &'>I' PEOPLE WOK.INC Crpu., drpt.. UrU pait'l. MUN. Ona of r..,. bldrCH1ms, fvr-r k ho~ T d r 1 t TD Costa Mesa. Exchange fnr CLEAN Up Spf!clalllt, haul· iria-. rom .ng · $•-/mo, ·~y. 67'--'-' o~ STOJ\E b\d., JJllJ Npt Blvd. . ra " or 5 ftxo-,p-, un 1r~. , , me I -"d · • f PAINTI"G. prol••s'"nitl. •IJ f'OR THE OiA..\'CE TO ......, T•• .J"""V;}{N • ,,i1h1d '"d Ul'lfurnlahad, prlv•t• .., oll. · or 11ro.11. C1'111·cn llrla'hls •· '" ni:. oa ,..,,.,, nt 1" enee "' "' '' START A PRo~•·sJO'", ~ patio, flr•pl1c• in two baelroOl'I, 0002 Arra 1-'0RTlN CO. & ~pa tr. Fteaa. ~')5 v.• fl r k I u a r n . C(I \or r c...' n"'"' ale111tora, dilhweahari . u 1p1t1 m.tMJl f)r fl l 286-n« llttA ~6· l'VI''. REAL TORS £42..SOOO 1pectall.~t. 646-7081: ~7-1 441 CAREER IN THE L'iVEST. DELUXJ: 2 Bit., 2 8A. crptJ, 21, A. 1Qua.11 ~tntn l " EXPf:R J ap&.1'11',._Ame1'1clll\ fl.IENT f1ELD. drpa;, blh, DW, nr Hoa1 antlM~.nal••••.Wultlanty,an QUICK CASH 11.1'!!. Ot~!.....-. ruita nr f"ft f:E " clear lat Bi1 Rear, gardener, complrite J:Arden-PROFESSIONAL Pfi lnlina & POT~NTIAJ, • 1 R IT ff I m I I U.S ma ullllt1a1 axcept llgh11 paid, pat1 vr-" · • ci h · .,.. n.r .c. r osp. ~ · ~ 9CCfl'"'4 ff'Olft i1~ !!'ffwa,.v 1hv.)' ~I. Trtt Sl~ or TD 's or oilier !l"f'e & 1112 "ervice "' ea.nup. p11per Anl(lnf. ,,.., yn ,.x,._. YT.AR. EARNINGS ARE 1112-4381 I H UG A eq tor d11.'Tlpymn1 on f'\upl•.\, l"ll'u land lor l)' inboard, 893--0150 Ref"~. f"rtt f'St. 54(1..1943 $25,000 Pl.US . START JM. otLUxt ~ deara~'2 ] '-T RO H 1'c:."::..:•.:.r.:.'-'.:." ... /~"3""'·'.:.!61.c;_. -OB. P.O. Box 2452, R1wr-CO~IPLl.JE 1-,,.."ll le tuden-'!.'ou Supply ,,..,. P•lnt . ME DIATEl.Y r u L L &-llOOI•* apt. • ln .._ 21~~';:'1:~~~ DAILY PILOT J1ave lncomt prol)tr1y in ~idfo, Calli. 92506. in,-.!iel"'\'k"f', Room.~ p.in!eri $10 e1. Call fRINCE BEN£FTTS I~ UlO/mo. ~2'iC. (71 4) 111.e&.U Cotta ~lea1, SJS.000 PCJUlly. Whal do you hlv. 10 trade? I ~~-J:;•.:.m:..:,,.._;;.:.=-~-f . .:."<>-...:.,,7111:.;:' .c'~· ~==~--I f lt.EE TRAJNING • COM· HOAG Heap Are.a. 2 BR., 2 A•k.., \\'U\ trade: for home 1" Or· List II her. _ ln ~ JAPANESE G ard I'. n I n I * PA INTING * PAl~Y CAR Pl..A.N, BA. crptl, cf.rp&. NW.. pr. ~ Rdtfn9 WANT AD anp County. The Fax Co-Cou.oty'1 larat~t read tracJ. StrvlC"r. Nr1f •wk. Cleanup Hi Qu•Uly. Rtu, Pr!Cfl, ~ 4'49 ffll.tri.a. Rtallors, 673·~'.15. lnt poat.6-U."1'1 y!l, n111 \n!, 968-230'.\ Free f'!ll 6f8.0864 e CAIJ, NO \V e 1\lrn those Wbjte i'lfilbll'tts -"" 642-5678 EX"PER. ll111o·aJlan Gardtnrr SfWNG )'ot.U boat! "U st"I 547-6771 lnt.o cuh DIN • Dallr PUoC ' -* * * * * * CompJtt• Gard,nln1 S.r-•1th Ull .• 11ell lt tut. DI.Uy ASK F'Olt MA.. DEHVQ. DlmH-lbw .-dJ1 ' 'rte.>, K11malanl, 6tS-4CTfi J>tlnt ci .. ~ttled. S4).6f11 ·--------- ----- -~ ----------• , ~chools and Instructions DAILY 1'1LOT T11el&Y. AprTI 13, 1971 This variety of fi~ne~sc~h-;;o~otts~--~~-~-~-~-~_~!J[i~•~jl'-~. could introduce ~ .......,_, _ ~ you to a new tomorrow. For further inform•tion r•9•rdin9 the D•ily Pilot Schools •nd Instruction Directory CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325 Help W•nted, M & '71D , • • ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ENGINEERING AID!; ·ll- $T1l0$92l: H.S. req'd .. 2 )Tl toll, de1; 2 yr1 aub-profeu. eng'r. exp.. excep1 aome ~:,:,:;:,:,::,::,::,::_::,::;,;::.::,.;::.::.:~:.:;,I coll. "~rk m~y 1ubat!tule. AIRLINE AND TRAVEL CAREERS FOR MEN ANO WOMEN e Travtl Agent e Ticket Sele1 e Communic•tions • Reservations •Air Freight Cargo • Op&r ations Agent "DAY A.ND NIGHT CLASSES" ACCltEDITID: N•ti"n•I Aucc+•t•e" lr•d• I l •ch11i - c•I Schc.,11 • APP•"~•d fe r V•!•••n1. Eli9ibl• in1lil11· lien undt• !h • f'•d•t•ll y ln1ur•d St11dtnl l"1n Pr"'f'4m, Airline Schools Pacific 610 Eost 17th St., Santo Ano 714·543·6596 ANNOUNCING . . . . . . . . ANOTHER PRE-SCHOOL NOW OPEN IN NEWPORT BEACH· COSTA MESA AREA This Pre-School Program Has Been De- veloped By Mrs . Eleanor \Vynne Over The Past 3 Years At U. C. I. Irvine. Stressing Total Development Of Your Child * Intellectually * Emotionally * Physicall y * Socially LITTLE STEPS LEARNING CENTERS 541 Center St. Costa Mesa 645.5577 SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS ood LINGERIE All Brands Stretch Patterns Vogut & Butt•rick Patterns WE HAVE TME FINEST SELECTION 01" KNIT FAIRICS ON THE ORANGI COAST. 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COST A MESA 540-3268 S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW (T.M.) CLASSES 8 2 hr. Lnsor1s Morning -Aft•rnoon •nd Evening I • Children discover great things at our school. Themselves. Our school. Early Achievement Center. Unllke most pre--schools, we do more than keep little hands busy. We keep little minds busy. With science. Math. Language. Art. Social Studies. 'fhings like t'1at. lmprEissed? Don't be. It's not what we teach that's so specie!. It's the special way. we teach. We encourage children to dis cuss things. Touch things. Act out things. So they wlll better know their capabilities. And themselves. (Which is just about the greatest lesson of ell.) Ok, like to discover more about us? Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by our Sunflower school. We're open year 'round. So parents can come in anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. Sunflower Early Achievement Center 251 5 West Sunflower Avenue Santa Ana, Callforn1a 92704 714/540-4750 ----------------~ Anna's Pre • School -2nd Grode ANNOUNCES A Fun P r09ram For Summer e SWIMMING e ROLLER SKATING e READING M•ny More Fun Fiiied Activitie1 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Mtsa Ph: 646-1444 Newport Air Associates Flight School & flying Club LEARN TO FLY $500. * FAA APPROVED * Court• lnch•dts: 35 Houri fli~ht t ime in Ces1n1 I so·, with 20 houri duel in1truc:tion. Club member1hip . 3 Month's free du•'· Individual instruction, tailered to YOUR •bility. 10 AIRCRAFT AYA.ILAILE AT LOWEST RA TES IN ORA.N«E COUNTY Le1rn to fly now - -and have fun I * Fly Mexico & Canad• * Special Rates for Commercial or lnstrum•nf Students. For Complet• Details Call NOW 673-0313 • File app by Wed. Apr. 21th., 5 p.m. Peraonne1 Dept. Rm • 511. • a CITY OFC0STA1.1ESA e : r~~ ~;:;~!~ COITA "'llA. C:A~!P. ...... 211 ,~ The S•cr•t Of Yo91 -Yoga means oneness. It is a scient ifi c n1ethod for rene\ving life energy -ph ysica lly & inen tal\y. 'i'oga is a philosophy, not a religion. designed to en· rich you r life & your vic\1•points. Bharati (left) & Kalidas teach at the Yoga Center, 445 E 17th St., Costa l\1esa. Free Dtmon1tratlon Tuesday night April 20th at 8 P .f\I. r-.1ornin.iz & night cla~ses start Tuesday .. .o\pril 27th. Phone 646-8281 . Real Estate School PREPARE FOR STA.TE EXAM IN 4 WEEKS Licensmg Preparalion for: • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Building Contractors e Insurance • Day & Evening Classes California Departinent ot Education Approved-Master Charge and BankAn1ericard Accepted. For lnformltion-Brochure- FREE GUEST LECTURE Phone 646-3229 ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF NEWPORT BEA.CH 325 North Newport Blvd. Ne,vport Bea ch e 646-3229 Edmond F. Jackson HOPE HAVEN 1621 Monrovia Avenue Costa Mesa 642-4769 EDUCATIONAL CENTER FOR THE MENTALLY RETARD ED, MUL Tl HANDICAPPED CHILD ••• "If u•e undrr.~tr111rl tl1r lt11rn inr1 strengths aurl weaknesses of each c/11/d 011rl prepurP. f1 meaningful. sequential presr1Jlalln1i nf mater1- 11I (Jf'rUnent. to hts /1fe siUta!ion, he wztl lear11 . , . hP cannot br 1Pl1at he is not, but nuist be all that J1r 1.~." OPEN YEAR A.ROUND 7 :JOAM 'Iii 5:30PM CALL FOR SESSIONS AVAILABLE. li:nc...o'~·~''~o~,~--~'n'-'"'"~8.1~5330 ' -i En9ln••r to 16K ~ S1iht &: plot pta.nnln&", work- ing with architects. able to i re:J0c111p Call Mrs. Schn1ldt, ~ \Yf's lcllff Per&onnel Aaency. • 20C \\'Nlclllt Or , N.B. ~ 6-l;)..2770 ESCROW OFFICER Plf'ILSt' cl.ll Shirley \\o'Ward al TARBELL 142-5571 * E.\'EC. SECRETARY Ne\v oUicea • Airport Loe:, Good opportun!)y for alrrt .ecretary to work In fast pa. c e d • N.B. advertb1ng r..,..-cncy. All 1kill1 including shorthand requl l"!"d. * DUREL ADVERTISING 2112 Dupont Or.IS111te 4 Nr\\'port Br11.ch, Calif. *Escrow Ofc. , . , $700 E.'Cpl'r 1v1iand deve\ or Es· rro1v l-O. *S•c'y/Pres •.... $600 RNf.~ frnt ofc polle & top ~kills. Xln'1 co. *S•c'y/Rec•pt ... $5 Good t}·pist wlaome SH phbh 1urround1ngs. *Bkkper ......... Sll~ Koo11 ·1 of N'Ht~!r bu~1npss or rr!atfll. Abil11y to T.B. .$Prv1cr Cent~r Emp AiP/'ll")' 500 Ne1vpcrt Center Dr .. N.8. ~uite 535 I 644-4981 FACTORY HELP WANTE Appl y 32912 C111le Pt'rfecto, San Juan Capistrano· FASHION SHOW Oirecton - <'llrn $5 to SS hour. No investment. Beehne Fuh- Jtin~. Car nrc. 633-9574 or[, 53!1-:i-1.'1:1. • FILE CLERK (Electronics) f\nn\\·ledi;e ol elf'ctronio ! par1~ llnd component color ; C<'.Mir.~ de1irable. Ab1h1y to maintain f!li:>s of part hil · torir~ and g~n·l rtcord~. Po~ll!On rt.qUU"eS OCC8510 1yp1ni. !00-fi050 Anaheim. FILE CLERK For Insurance Agency ... :HS.-1185 .. FURNITURE -SA.L!S - For local dtpt. 1tor11 a TOP CO~IISSION' e CO. BENEFITS QuaJuy line to sell Apply in person to Mr~. Thomp~on W. T. GRANT CO, Prriionnel Off ice !1811 Adams Ave., Gr'lnt PlaU Brookhurst &. Ada.rru, Htg. Beach Equal opportunity employer GARDENER. Set: H e ad I ' Gardener. r.tr. Elli~ at Ne11lXlrttr Inn. Apply tn 'person. No phone call~. · GEr\'ERAL OFC. r-.lodem ofc 1n profes~ional c ~ n t er . BJ"<11nt1 new grow l nr financial ortin\zation. Good typine rt'q'd. $400. Call Ml'lt'n llayt~. 540-fJ05S COASTAL AGENCY 2700 Harbor Bl at Adams G•n•r1I Office Coor!. typing, excellent co. Cal! Loraine. \Veslc!itt P.r- ~flnnrl Agr.nry. 21).43 \Vnt. 1 cliff Dr .. N.B. &ts-2no GrRLS 17 k over. part ti or full Hme. sfudentt prrfemd. &t own houn. program IU June. Summer tr11vrl 1111 as~11t111rit roun!!.!'l~r 1v/g1rls 12 to 13 ye:ao o!rl, Europr 6 wks or 8 1.1•k11. Ex· prnsrs paid + $3()().$400 ~alary. ror interview a.ppt, \Vrlle P.O. Box 271, Corona del l\111r. GOOD JOB Ideal fer Relirtt. -. I Clean-up & H maintenance irm ~1 ;; .. ;~; ... ;;"";~;';' ;~~~ E"1!i0Yrwt trnploym.nt Employmarrt E~oymtnt 1rrr ~' ~~-~~·~,..,.,,~·~~1~1 1~J~1:u~~~~':~.:~~::,,~"'~::·:~~:~~":;~,~~~,·~,~~~1 . i:.-----~~~:1 ~--;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ ~-;;·---;;;;~~ l!!J Fhopp1n1: Center. H.B. c.&ll l't•lp Want!d, Mi F 718 _H_•_1P_W_•_••_ed_, M_&_F_7_io H•lp WantH, M & F 710 Help Wanted, MI F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, MI. F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 lielp Wanted, M & F 710 G:~n:.·RIDAY-$2. pt'r hr. """""""' ADVERTISING Ar t 1 s I ' Produr11on 1't11n11i:~r for ho! l"ewporl BcAch ~gen r y. i\tu~t have zoo(.! btiard ~kill.~. !\now pnntlng. pro· ductlon and schPrlullng. Xln! onpor1un11y OUREL AD· VERTISIXG. 2li2 Dupon! Dr .. N R. 1133-1670. ..............------A.DMIN~S57S \\ ork 11· Tht i\1051 T11 len1rri H11ndMmf', (';roriv). Lt111n:: Arc-h\lf'l"L [n Thfo II 01 Id Good ~k11lc Liz R•ind•rs P•rsonnel Al!ency 1'(1(1 C1mpu11 nr . '° R CiiU F'or Arprun1n1l'nl ~116-2118 ---=--ADVlRTIStNG-Sun·"y p I 11mr. t111! time "I< 11111.11 C ;xi tit $4 .. iO hr No ,,..1Jir1t: ln1oll rt1 mu~! hi' ft"~1rfrnT Pl f1/ or SA 323-!J!m THl: Fa1!f'1I rinnv in lhf' \\l',(t 11. 011 1ly P ilol Cl;r~~lfll'd Ad 6-12-!lii~ ASSIST A NT ---------I iii!li!iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiij P I ea s 11 n I I e ! , p h ti n fl APT. lea~lng s:irls for h1rge AUTO p11rt 1 coun-Bookkl'ePf'r Bookkeeper P /Timt COUNSELOR 1·1 MA T E co Offen sal. 11.nd terman. E>:perienced only. CREDIT CLEIK Irvine Area fn.\urance Agen-Xln't posir1on for qualif1e(I ~lull.o:. a/:llliry 10 think. IN ENANC Electron I.cs "'""'"', Y. '"""" 'YP'"' ENGINEER 1nrrn11vP Pref'hly yn~. & P11\d hosp jtAJ1zation 11.nd F'OR LOCAL DEPT. STORE c:y. Hrs flexible. Muat be person , fun b P\Clllnr tor r11n1tliar wi ll][ pha!l's of ~1nglr Call for In 1 v . vacalion. Apply in per8on, f''{l)l'f. C111l r.tiJS La t1ra. one ~·no f"n joya working 1\1/ Assemblers gf'neraJ otftce akill11. 5 days, Exprri£-nce reqt11rt"d. 111r l''lnd111on1ng_ n>fnger11- rion, ele'"rt1ca1 and plumb1ni;. \pply In pt'rM>n AprtJ 121h. 11f1!"r 10 a.m. ~o pOOne calls Salary optn. THE AIRPORTER ·INN HOTEL- 1~1m '!Arr\rthur Rlvrt \r"f10r1 Be11ch, Cal•I fi.12-134j Uni\'l'J'Si!y Olrl.~mobile, 2850 Experience P"'fl'rrtd but 5..'17-6122, Ahigall Abbot Per. pt.'Op]e, Xln't earnlng polen-ma'<. 40 hr. Busy office. AS.c;;E:.1BLF.R H11.rtxrr Blvd .. Costa Mesa nor neceas11ry, wl/1 train. !onnrl Agency, 230 W. War-tlal. Can Lou1.11e, 5.i7-6122. C;;i!l ;>l!)...37:i6 for lnt•r'Vl,w. TrtArNEES BF:AUTICIAN w/cliente!t, 5 day '-''!'Ck, co. benefits. 11rr •. C:ultp 711. S.A. • D!SHWASHl:RS-Apply In Experienced In pre· • GIRLS 1.1·anlerf. I i t e Immediate QpPnini5 f'ull or part-time. \Ve c11n ('ball~n.aing """ii Ion • op-B US BOYS NEEDED. bl I llSl'lembly. lnterv1ew1 A ..... 11 Good Pay Call Now! •-•"•• a ,00 .. t ..... -.1 •• ., .... k .~~ per~n. l\fu~t bl-clean ,_ c ision as•em y o ,. '' '' ' .. u,.,. .... ~ portunlty for advance· P11.rkhu~t Htitel, 9925 Lii 13th, JPM to ~P~1. 1n per80n, I nA.\l-9Pi\1, Sal 9<\:.l ~P~1 in • progtts11ve community. Alameda, fount11in Vall1>y neat, ovrr 71. NO phorlf' d •Ii cat• irt-RAKER HYDRO 1••c . 17"' O.C Employment Ai!'.'ncy ~14.12 or Eve~: SJl--2089 mi:>nr, raJlg, SUrf &. S!rloin 5930 \V struments, sm•ll ,. ...,. 1~1 Bl'Ofld\""Y Co~t11 \ll'.'11\ ---COOKfh~kpr or ht>u~"ma.n CM.ti Hwy, N.9. t k Arm:Hrong Ave. Sanl4 Ana &!.>-3111 &45-311.l &J.i-3113 BEAUTICIAN for MondAys. APJ7LY IN PERSON' "·i1h IQl"lll "'rs. Exp·d. (lnJy. ---~-----componen wor !Nr. McArthur It /'llcGaul Tuesrf11)• k \\'ed~sday1 TO ,\JR~ TIJO;\tPSON !'11u1t ririvt Under S.S. 2 * DRIVERS * soldering, co Io r GIRL FRIDAY- Cali 642--084~ WT G C 11dlr• L1\'(' 1n N.B. " Palm No E•perlenc:e codes and blueprint Arrr.' •CTivr. I -~ 1 ront 0 • • I S Vl"5 !ll'c:rtrarh11 exp -·d. .... , • ¥1r · 111VUt e BLUE DOLPHIN e • • • ~'""'' "--,~-\\' r 1'" reading. NAS~ so· "" ·~·· b • I • • "· IP I Off '""' N I :-.tu;.! WY'.lrk ~·ell ~· min ol lkLnll k in11;Prlfo, ·•11",,'"1 \Vait.tt!iff'!!: ...... Fry Cook l 9' f"r!IOnllf' inot Clas1ufil'1\ ad No 1·11, Dally , 9CaSsary. dering c•rtiflc•te 11 "'!'.'e fl1me tXt !'.' .1, ._, ~~~' V Ldo NB IJ 1\dsmt 1\ve .. Gr11nr Pl 0 0 _ ,~,. C •Ufl('rvuuon. BookkHP1J11 nf1r pay BOOKh""EEPER l.Al'Jt' l~.aaJ Hunfinaton Beach :.tea. C~1f 92626. ini record. Not undpr 75. THE LUHRS CO. srncHy pn\ale. no exp. !tr-.lllp "· ~..,.,,, 1A 1 . ' · · 1 Plaza 11 Brookhuf"C.t It Adami 1 ot, P. "'1'= ·IOU, o~ta \lusl hav,. dea.n C&Jll. rlr!v. dasir•ble. kn<)\\ lr>dge tw-1plul. (\\rue Cliss1fifll Ad No.~ ofc. nt!lr airport, Plush jCOOK/lnstitution.al. 1v11h YELLOW CAB CO. Pl••se send lett•t 540.34-40 --. I Daily P\lol p o Box l!:i6CI prol"t~10Ml surrn11nrhnas.' Equlll opporllsniiy emrloyi:>r hack.around 1n home11; for lht' 186 E. 16t>i Sr., C.:'if. outlinln9 job ,_*_*_G-IR-L FR:l~D~•~y~·~ A.~JST,\ 'T m a n 1 i: t r Cmt11 :vies.a, Calif. 92626 Somt machlN! 1cno~·JM11:e I.: I 11.gtd, 1hl{' ro work wktnds. • oo YOU \VANT A background end "' 1 r ~ 1 n" e -\\' i l 1 1r 11 1 n ---A/P & AIR exp req'd, BOOK f\ EE PER • .acer.~ Koo\\lf'dat of 5peclal dtet~. STEAD'J' PAR.T T 1 :i.t E skJlls to: Oppor!uniry !or ettJcei fhln-aag1"~~i1 .-)ouni n111n lor AUTO LEASE SALES Start '425 )'l&,>able: It. inv. control. Fl ~lacy open. 9925 Li JOB'" lnlt'rt'atin.I:' tln"~Y ee w plr11Mnt Ph manntr, f11..•! foori hu•1nr~~ Cflll \Ir An open1na In cur u.le.\ 1t111!. Call Sally Hart. 54G-fi055 tint. SJ hr 00 ,1 Gd futu"' Alflmtda, f .V. t.'i'J>e job trom /:lome NO Cla~slflrd ad • 1,2 nrat appc-Arancp. IOOd ate 1)-Jrkrn h111n 1 & 4 pm , :\lot opportunity for aood COASTAL AGE1"CY "'''"•p>rily -w•"i -Ph·. +++COOK +++ S'LLING "'I b (I typlsl 1·2 m 1'11.prr requlr .. , ... v ,, •v , r:. • n r If' rh~ y to D11ty Pilo1. P.O. Box 1560, •d P•~I mis. '''''· H. o··•ey I' 61~1~ producer. Exper1,,ncl' pre-2790 ll11rbor 81 at A<l11m1 Krn, 642-92(;2. 4 D11y T!rt1 (.~nl'!l CJ1.l11IJlt>rl ad Nri 145 T~ Co•!a /\fl'JI, Cali(. 92G26 ' "'' Sf.LLIN'G 'l'0\1r bollt'' "Lis!" fflrn>d , but not nrct.~&ary, IT'S A br-etze .. stll yo11r !'lof"1'1 Hq. 1600 W. Cat Hwy C.dJ 6-42-3"iOS 0al1y P1k'lt. 3.'\0 \V. flay, ~f..3844. •I \1 ith u~ .~{'11 it fi:1~t 011.1ly 7131--0807, a.'lk !or H11r!1n . Item~ \''Ith 1'&.~e. 11~ Oaily N.B. I----'-'--'---'-'----CO!.lfl J\.ir~•. C1J)I. 92625, f:qriMI l'IJ'IOl"!rrun!ty rmployer rhe "Yellow P11~J1'' of l r 11n• r1 ,~<1firrl li~2-'.li7JI rflr ~!.I rr~ul~~f8 Pilol Cla sul1ed. 64Z-5fi7g For be~t f!'suha~ t1U-56n I DAILY PILOT terr action' 1;1vln~ pl'w:llM" n11mhrr I jiiiglJiliiiiiiigji!·l!!lii!!iii!.ii~_:.c1~,'::~~;1111~1"'~--'-~6-l~Z-56~7'!__ CAllY PILOT futSdlf, Apr/I u. l971 11 L. _ ...... _ ..... __,J!IIl I lrtl1 L-1 _-_-__,l!IIJ L-1 _ ...... _ ..... __,l[Il] I J~I:;;[ _, ... _ .. v .. ~Jfl~l:.-1 _______ ... __ . ~]~~l~l-r---"" ;;;;;J[i]=I HelpWontocl, Ma F nt 'f•lp Wanted, Ma F 710 Help W•nlod, Ma F 7H H•IP w •• , .... M .. 1'710 _Afll'l ... ,__'-.....; ____ 1112..;.; Mft?ll.,,_,,,' Ill LOVABLE, c••tl• ma!• Boe!t/Marllle _,~·;,;Acb;;;;,0:;;•;.-...;......;... __ ,_»;.I . ~uatroli&n • G. Shopbtl'd, 1 Equip. ~·· IRt. Frldly, intttesdnr itn J. W. Robinson's e PRODUCTION • SECRETARY • K&NMOA.E auto wutJtr $6S, ltotpoint au dl')'fr $$.\ Both xlnt rond, par A deliftftd . -n. B1Hll5 ANTIQUE Diamond clWitt:r Yt, blk· & whl, blue eyee,1-;;.:::;;;:;.;... ____ _;..;.;1 Perfect for ~· Total ~ ~ 3 Jove children. nefds &bod MA.RINE e q u I p rn en t : • .otc dutle1, It iypq, 7am~l e NEWPORT BEAOI e SUPERVISORS e eants. IN. ~ $llO. home toed yard. 8:J6...t493 or Memiry propa. wtndshleld•, Vacation · ,.,,. -· All three shifts. Xlnt future ,ptn. V1_,, Asklll&' S650 or belt offer. (1) 524--8491 4/12 control Cl.bits, single lever Immaculate 10x45 2 btdroom Pm~ betw~ 10 AM & 6 MOVING have Lo & i v e cOntroJa, instruments, t!tc, ~ltttv.t>od -~lke new $2995. HOUSEKEEPER lfa.s imn1«Jiate 1'1r effect!~ leaden to joln open~ tor a the Harbor Area's !as tes t Atlantic Research ls look- inz for the rla:ht person to asautnc an lntr:resttn& position in our PubUc Re- lations atta. Good Jee- retariaJ sk1ll~. An inter. est in public relatM>11.1 work WOUld be desirable. KENMORE wuher, $35, txctllent: AJ~ \Va.sher il Dryer set. ~1005 ·ve • In, j)l'Cfe.rabJe qt growi!li company. :arounct 50, salary open. e PART TIME e MllCGff.EGOR YACHT CORP. PM 6t2--l230 Scutt.le a good home. 4 mo 549-0530 1nclude11 turruture and •'l'fn. M1tcellantoti1 Terri-poo, blk, fem a I e, SIGNET knot metq-, ~. illp. 1 Must be 1ri,'00d plain cook. MAINTENANCE 1631 Placentia, c.M. Able to drive car for iihop. Furniture 110 W•nted '20 •bol!I. Needa children. l!Z. Ritchie-~lkhead com· BAY HARBOR ping. Write Q.us.ilMtd Ad MECHANIC PROFESSIONAL phone •Ul, Daily PUot. P.O. Box solicitor • Dana Point, San WHY BUY FURNITURE? HOSPIT~ bed. e le ctric motored. lleUMVlble, &<>:1633 ms ...,, new l60. 64G""103 MOBILE HOMES READY for Mothu's Day u ~t, Power to6 1425 Baker St. J~ oft H&tbot 00, Costa r..n.-ro.. 92626 XLNT CO. BENEFITS Clemente, Capistrano area. ..... _ """"' Work In your own bon1e. cau &U-1715 eaUco & tortoise sheU Blvd., Cosla Mesa JdffeN; wlmdlufn IOlli: tur. M.,Jlne•r J8! NE\V "In Park Setupg", 1SKPR$ Emplyr Jil'YS fee. Apply in penon lO.S pm Be~t deal In area. Phone George Allen Byland A.gen--Personnel Dept. 835-1465 between 9:00 a.m. -APPLY IN PERSON - 3333 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MF.sA. CALIF. CASH for :tunlJtuft, ap- pllanct11, • CDoll, rnllc items. P1 ck yours e a r 1 y . Resales. Factory Dittct. 6H-®l 4/ti Beautiful Bea.ch Ho m • • Neat-New Condition Available Now. ey l~B E. 16th, S.A. •l F "·-Isl. NB and noon. M7~395 IUUJVU • • • I..:.:'.::::'.'.-------I Equal opportunity employer Qualified secretary needed a. Flexlblel Open 9 to 5. m-1015 Rent mo. to mo. wtth Mu ii cal Instruments iii J..OV ABLE puppies. Bayshor- )tOUSEKEEPER-5 d a Y 5 for Real Esta .. office and ' k 9 1U 2 MANAGEMENT trainee , "ff . am pm. P"blic 6teno""'aph" work. ATLANTIC 100"J. Purcha&e Option ea, fantastic w/child. Blk. Ind. item ~ectloo L U D W I G d r u m •et, Pl poodle. aU Am~ric._ 6 $47,50() Or Trade f-Or older boat, United Mnbile Homes 1767 "A" Npt Bl, C.l\1. * &ts.-3140 * • f "·'I ·~ •••3 Servit't' Sl•tion. Exper, lie "' ... ;T i...,,e erenon. ~ ..._.U'!I Guaranteed sala"" + unllnl-. 24 Hr. Dely. Complete. Floor tom, 2 Wks. reacty, med sii. 548-8232 1970 24x60' Ponderosa-compl set up. Skirts, crptd porch. lnds1:pd, rorner lot. Shown anytime. 557-2175 or Ml G-1428. rrso Whittler, Sp. 19 mech knowledge. Tune brk& ·;T }IOSPITALn'Y HOSTESS etc. Neat in appearance. lied potential. R·ESEARCH CUSTOM Zil~n eymb.:ls. All xlnt 4/15 Da.y~: 774-GlU> M.rs. Brown :SERVJCE. has openings in AppJy wkdays 2590 Newport Set>: Robert Nattress Rltr. Irvine area for mature Blvd. C.M. Costa Mesa 642-14S5 :.w om e n I o o k I n g f Pr ,;~C:::!'.!:'------1 .iiiiii ... iii ... iiiiiiii .......... interesting, part time ~rk. Marketing RECEPTIONIST Furniture Rental cond. Extras. 6'2-:i676 "u~R~G~E~N'F=LY~_.-~,-ood~ho~m"e 1 Eves: 673-9191 Mr. James 517 W. 19th..c..M. S48-U8l Office Furnltu,../ for 2 yr old female Equal opporUmlty •mplo.,..,. A'\ahelm 774-2(k)O -~E;;q;:,u:,l::;P.;.• ----~•;,;2:.,;4 housecaL Daughter allergic. '69 LUHRS 33·: Flybridge, ;T.... LaHabra ~08 \'Viii pay vet fee for TW /S, ga.s, F\V cooled, .~v•komi""' newcomers to * ASS'T stS MGR TO 14M , 1 ' ~·.. d Hvy phones. fyp ng 50 up, ;your area.. Sales ex P • An engr'g deg. req' for filing diversification. Secretaries . PAYMASTER Check alteration. 546-6326 4-15 trim tabs, SIS, swim step, Resales in Costa Mesa e SHERATON BEAOI INN' LEAVING Ca11f Thur, Must protector, almost new flS; DESPERATELY need home bait tank, cstm crpts, pres Newpor1, Huntington 1:desirable. M\18.1 ba,ve.car. rapidly growing Org. Cry MISS EXEC AGENCY CALl..: Sf7-3095 producer of electt'O-mech'l N ·d 1-ctt' sell: Console TV, 3--pc n--:-'-~ el•o -wn·I·•. 1 , •. ,, · h United Mobile Homes ee s a .. a ve, young bonal 2146 Q)lleg A ~""'''"""'.....,' vr-" for 2 yr, female~~ poodle ,, wa er, 1 er, pwr y,•1nc 1767 "A" Npl Bl, C.M. secretary sec • e ve, xlnt $3)); Victor adding chihuahua. Shots and Ile. + More. Sacrifice $18.500. * "~lt•• * FOR INTERVIEW _c:::M:::_. -------m.aehine $100. Call anytime, ··~·::"~'"'."'~·_,~~~""---,.:'!!'~13ll~P~h~' ;"~--~tJ~7~4~;::;--:::::;;;:;;;;IMi0t;;;;i~~~-;;;~:::.::_-,~1 instruments for the 410 W, Coast Hwy., NB pet ro-chem'L industries. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!64"'3939..,..,..,.., .. MUsr have customer SEE JAMES PILLO APT of furn. Incl. Riviera 1 -="~'-::.::""=-------j very lovable dogs, Loves BOAT & Ne", ·port mCJ?ring. Motor Hom•s MO 21112 Pacific Coest Hwy, ~~.!'_. 96":1n beds. tables, DRAJ'TING furn., legal tiles, kids 3 mo. to 6 mo. all Lg,e, fast 17 f~rgls 11sh & •68 CONtioR 26 1, Motor service background dealing • RECEPTIONJS'f fo r thru reps. Early potential beauty salon. Attractive. -Huntington Beach -'°''1"'.n" -9568 ......,..., maoh, IBM 1y-wn·1··. ski boat 100 hp 0/B ' --,., .-. ~ kinds, partially housebroken : • Home. Completely iielf ton-SEC'Y TRAINEE *-:'>-piece double bedroom steno desk. 64.>-1335 or 548-0813: 836-4493 4/13 bunks, bait tank, trlr, convt tai d SI 8 Chass" d for Nat'I. Sales Mgmt. Tues lhru Sat. 642-6857 To $450, Just out of school set ;40. 1 "4~.....,,.:...:==----~= top. $1850. 833-3388. ne · eeps · 111 an FREE-FEE J OBS ALSO e R.N.'s e J. R. PIERCE ASSOCIATES OK Lo I N.B "l * 545-3772 * FREE to gd home. fncd yrd, 2, power by Ford. Auto. · ve Y · Ou cei. 1----=-.::.::.::c.:._:_ ___ J Planos/Orgons 426 solid blk Weimeraner mix, 1967 3 . Chris Corin.. trans., PY.T. steer., .air : IRVINE PERSONNEL ,:SER.VICES•AGENCY 'f8a E. 17th (at IMlineJ c.~t. • 642-1470 J. W. ROBINSON'S "• NEWPORT BEACH e l-Ia.t immediate opening for .a -OUTSIDE- CUSTOM DRAPERY • SALESMAN e FULL TIME e XI.NT. BENEFITS ·Apply in person 1()...5 p.m. PtrsonneJ Dept. ' • 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. Equal opportunity employer J. W. Robin10n'1 ·• NEWPORT BEACll e Haa immediate openings for -:Wig J-Sa les-Sty Ii' t e FULL TTME e XL.NT BENEFITS Apply in person 10.5 pm Personnel Dept. ' •2 Fashion Isl.. N.B. i:qual opportunity employer e KEYPUNCH OPERATOR ~ to wod in IBM Dept. Jleq: HS grad, either 2 yn ~"Orldng experience in like position or training in school ·t-J yr work eXJ)E'rience. Please call for interview .ppt. 492-1153, Mrs. :Gonzalez (Employment) AGENCY INC. 1885 NeY.'JlOrt C.M. 642-6720, ~~5830 MT·ST Operator. Ch:'.I· Jenging position. Must have MT-SI' exper. and be able to assume responsibility with litUe supervision, Neat, attractive, pleasant person· al!ly and able to work y,·ell v.·ith people. Salary $526- $641. Xlnt. working cond. & fringe benefits. Send resume to: San Joaquin School Dis. trict -Penonnel Services, 14660 Sand Cany-0n Ave., East Irvine, Calif. e MTST / SC operator, ex· perienced. Call 646--0164, ask tor JoAnne. e e NEEDED Two Office Girls ?o.1'~t be 25 and able lo drive -APPLY - 186 E. 16th St., C.M. NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING DEPT. TRAINEE Penna.nent part-time po~i· tion, could possibly work in· to full time. Must type. Hours from lOAM-2 PM .. Monday through Friday, Call the DAILY PIWf for 1.1'1 appointment. 642-4321 and ask for Mrs. Greenman. OPERA TORS -sports\\.·ear - mfg. exp only, gd pay. steady. 642-3472. OPPORTUNITY For 4 licensed Real Estate !ales people. Private desk & phone. Business is real good! Call for interview. W. E. Lachenmyer 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. CaU 646-3928 Eves: 673.4577 PRACTICAL Nurse, hskpr, KITCHEN HELPER, cook. Jive in. Call aft 7PM. 1mmed. opening, morning 646-7316 !iihift. Xlnt benef its BEVERLY '1ANOR PRESTIGE SEC'Y. CONVALESCENT H 0 SP. $400 +. Fast raises. \\'ork 35410 Camino Capistrano, w/PhDs. friendly group. ul· Cap. &h. 496-5786. jra plush. Train for ov.·ner's LEGAL TRAINEE ,.,·y. H.B. \Vork at Newport Center, Grant Associa!es A!i[cy start $425 nio: Requires ll('C· 18002 Irvine Blvd, Tustin retarial exper. Type 60 832-7000 WPM, Lifo S.H. AIOorn•y at iiiii!iiPROiiii!iiiiDUi!i!!!i!iiC:tiOTl~N La"'·· Roland S. Barcume, &l,l.0023. Loan S.rv. Clrk .. $800 S.c'y.Autamative . $500 Sec'y Can1tr, •.... $500 Sec'y-Mktng ...... S500 Sec'y Escrow .... $500 G. 0 . Soc'y ...... $450 Warehouseman • , . $433 NEWPORT Personnel Agency 133 Dovtr Dr., N.8 . 642-3870 LOAN PAlXAGE TRAIN· EE FHA • VA. Ability to Y."Ork w I figure~. h a n d 1 e public, capable of assuming responsible position. Send resume to J. Steliman. Boise Cascade Re~idenlil!l Communities Group, 2082 Michelson Dr, Newport Beach 92660 LVN Supervi!IOr, 3-11:30 ~h\fl relief. PARK LIDO Con- valescent Center. Ph : 642-80-l·I *** 1'1AID *"'* LAGUNA REEF r.IOTEL 30806 S. Cout Hv.y. LAguna S..acb "99-200.l *MAID LAUNDRESS* 548-5585 r.fAID part time. Apply in peMIOll: Udo Shores Hotel. 617 Udo Prk Dr. NB Immediate openings for the following: MACHINISTS ~tust know De·Vliei:' Jli' · miU. Minimum five years in manufacturing precJ!· ion parts. Background in prototype, tooling, use of rola.ry table; make own x & y calculations and layouLs. PRECISION ASSEMBLERS Perform assembly ¥.'Ork on cl~ tolerance assern• bly structutti; in !he ail'· craft . missile field. SHEET METAL MECHANICS E~pcrienct In layou1, lofling. f11brication and as~n1bly of sheet m('tal p.ar!s. Wi:! use shears, 1)()w('r brakes. ~trippit fabr1c11!()ts, squeezer.i and otht'r related ma- ?o.CAN to agstat man11.gt>r 1n chines. local appliance lla!es. r.1ui;1 bt Mat appearina. Prt'ftr ~r 2i C.IJ Mr. SObruo at .,...,.. MASSEUSE Attral'IJw , Prt. xlnt p:$. aoocl boll" wiU train, '42~50 lO am to l.J mk11:1.l1e P lease tend letter nutlinlng job b.ackground and •kills to: Clas~1f1M ad a 141 Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Co•tt. Me»., Calif. 92626 MECHANIC qt.ncy exp. w/dlaal A 'Uc. Tom Reilly Equ11.1 oppot111ni1y r.mplo)'f'r CttMld &:rvlcc, RkhfltJtl -----saa&n, cw. l9ttl It IT'S A bTft2.t . .ar:D )'l)llr Ne"Nport o.i. Men. ltemt with f'aM!, use Daily -' Pilot Clatu1ihed. 6'.2-5678 Wt'U help )'OU etU! 60-lli1I 0.11s.s.Uitd .11it, • • Pleasant boss. Call Miss BARSTOOLS 30", arms & I;..:.:;;;,:;.:;,.;;.;;:;;;;::. __ .;;.::~ I female pup, 4 mo, has shots. lhia.n-tw1n scN"1v, f u 11 Y concl., stereo system, etc. Intensive care/cardia(' care. Connie, 557..612Z. Abigail Ab-back-fully upholstered, olive Factory Authorized 835-'142j 4112 equipped, ready to ro. Reconditioned throuihout. 1-"'ull lime 11 lo 7:30 am. bot Personnel Agency, 230 green. 846-2005 Distributor for 2 Adorable bUc & wht c:ocker-54g..2434 Orig. sold new by us. Pric· e HUNriNGTON INTER· \V. Warner, Sulle 211, S.A. OLIVE green n a u g ah yd e y~~ * * r::::::::il teni.er mix PUPs. 8 v.·ks. nds 21' . Chris Ct·alt. express ed to sell fa.st at $9,950. COMMUNITY HOSPITAL • Secretarial-chair with ottoman. loving home fncd yard. cnuser, ~Y equipped, (ZYA253) Personnel Dept. 1Tm Beach SECY.-Corporate, legal. ex· $511 * 642-~ Kohler & Campbell 53S-3726, 836-4493 4.15 $1595 * 64&-0000 THEODORE ROBINS Blvd.. Huntington Beach, ecutive exper. Laguna Hills. Garage Sale 112 Fabulous selection of new & OUR owners ...... mo,;ng 6 Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 FORD or Call 847-7807. Call_ 837-202() Ext 247 fort~.:..:;:.;;..:.;;,:.; ___ ~ used grands, spinets, c:on-... ., RESTAURANT • Assistant l~'~p~p~t.~-------I GARAGE SALE: Apt size &Oles & Orga.rt.! only at w:eks. Hu~ky and G. Shep 32' Twinscrew Chris, fully 2060 Harbor Blvd. mafi""er & -· cook, full reirig. Furn & Misc. 2165 COAST MUSIC mix puppies and 3 adult eqUip'd. Fishing or Cruis-Costa Mesa 642--0010 ...,. .u;:r SER VICE ST AT I 0 N Raf · h St CM NEWPORT & HARBOR dogs. 64Z.4319 4/12 Ing. Al•• ·59 T.,,;.,r,, .... wl')i;;;;iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil time & part time for fast MECHANIC wanted. Hours eig ., ·' · "" ........... " 11 food service. Quick pro-g to 6. Ex per 1ence 1 ~~~~*__:646-00=,.:=35~*=--Costa Mesa * 642-2851 LOVABLE puppies, half Mal-Owens. Xlnt cond. 54&-2434 * Kings Coach * motions for right man or ne('essacy. Burt's ARCO GARAGE Sale -100'.l's of HAMMOND, S lei n way, amute, half Labrador,_& Y.'ks, Boats Sail 909 M H woman in our e.l(pancling Service, 18025 Magnolia, items. Must sell. Starting Yamaha. New &: used free to good home. 499·ll45 ' otor ome Agency operations. Call 642--0590 F'.V. Sun. 2755 Bristol, C.M. pianos ot most makes. Best 4/14 FA.~ILY ~t; AColu.mbia 22 11 Supe:rior * Landau RESTAURANT HELP buy1inSo.Calit.atSchmidt 9 mo old black male & good .s ip ... Sails, a 604 N. Harbor, Sanla Ana SHARP girls looking for full SPRING Cleaning: Books, M I c ·~1 N M · ries & n rl new Full TIME us c o., ...,,., · am, Cockapoo. Good family pet accesso , ea .Y Open daily 9 to 9 839-9030 or part time positions in mag, C'lothes. dishes, misc. Santa Ana. _ loves children . motor. Reas. Call 548-12ti3:1ji!!!!)ii!~!i!~!!!!!!!iiJ!I Sandwiches & Deli sales, Ov· sales with one of Orange 10-3. 2006 Court Ave, NB ft 5 I' er 21. Apply in person only, County's finest boutiques. • 300 Pianos & Organs *1053 4/15 a · • WANTED: Late model De.Ii • Sbef, 10039 Adams Experienced glr!s only. Cail Machinery 116 NEW-USED. Going out for FREE to good home, brm a 12: SNOW~RD ~choc.k motor ho~e, 17'-22', ~Y Ave. at Brookhurst. 1-IB. for appt. THE LOOK COMPRESSOR on trailer business. Rentals $10 a mo. wht fem. Chihuahua pup. 4 fiberglass incl trailer $lj() se.II-conta1ned w/root air, 644-2400 v.'/paint pot & spray gun. Steinway, Baldwin & Kawai mos, needs loving: home fncd {213) 2:z5..8145 days/ wkends Will pay cash. 540-0603 Eng. Sales CADILLAC & HAWAIIAN VACATION, AND WE PAY FOR IT. SERVICE Sta. Salesman full Complete. ;425. 673--1947 Chickering, Yamaha, etc, yard. 83&-2025 4-lj & eves (213) 447-7401 Trailer5, Travel 945 FIELD'S PIANO CO. DO 1in1e. Must be neat in Miscellaneou5 811 Costa Mesa Garden Grove ADORABLE brown shaggy CORONA 25. See to ap. 1970 KOUNTRY Ai 23 ft appearance. Apply 2j90 puppy, 5 1vks old, loves prec. Tmmac. Top cond. . ~ . · · NeY.'PClrt Blvd. C.NI. ----------(714) 645-3250 (714) 638-mo l~'~h~ild~"'::.:'."·:...":83"-~J6~'7'--_:'·~w~l~l~G~99S'.:'.:,. ;Pv::_t ~p~ly~.~646-8.10'.'.:::~~J·:._cl Travel. Trailer. Self~ntau;i· E5'TATE ITEJ\tS. Sears best \VANTED: small COflllO!e or ed, hke new, Cahforrna • SERVICE ST AT I 0 N Jaw~ SY.'ing,. antique c~ina spinet piano: full keyboard. Calioo Killen 4 months with CAL 28 .racer, loaded, s~s Coded. $5100. Tel~ 968-229?. Salesman-part time, exp'd, cabinet, Louis XV upright Prefer Baldwin consider shots and spayed. 673-8487 :rad., dinghy, $9')X). Slip .6 S'f , . . ovt>r 18, Chevron Station, piano, small spinet Ham· others, l\fust ~ in good 4/14 avail. Npt Bch. 494--0451 9 SHA A 13 -Fits in a OUR FEELJNG JS, TO Adams & Magnolia, H.B. --' I __, I e LIDO !4 N "'7 & garage. Stove, rer. 11ink. mouu t tt CO•u Ofian. cu cond.; reasonable. 642-3589 6 week old female puppy pt . • ' o. """". Like new, $6j(). 67:t.3186 INCRE~ PRODUCTION STENO SEC'Y glas!, depression g I ass, Eves, wkends. shaggy and pt terri('r. trailer. Xlnt cond. Must .sell. • •. FOR OUR COMPANY. WE Must be ad•ptable Dese:-t Rose dinnerware, . n...... 64&-73J:z. 4112 646-8411 Trailers, Ut1hty 947 ARE PUTIING TREYIEN· Rngers Bros flatware, old FARFISA Electronic ..... 6 .. n OOUS INCENTIVES \VITH· Exper. desireable in con· silver service. Sat & all next $4*50 or Best O•""• TO good home -DeU,ihtful 18' Uni~rn C~t. Fastest 14' Tandtm Trailtr IN YOUR REAC1I. .struction &/or advt!rtising. 1,,.eek. Htg Harbour. 3272 548-4218 female cat. Have to leave made, h~e: ne'!v inc trlr. cost With 4 wheels. All st~! weld. )."OUR FREE. COM· Hvy work load. Contact P.O. Easter Circle. 213/592-2546 7 Ft Hardman grand piano, country. 847-3492 4/12 ov $2000 sac $1T~ 673.fi663 ed construction. %" Steel '. PLE.TE TRAINING \VILL Box 855, Costa t.1esa. Old Furniutra & professional qUality. FREE top dirt. You hauJ. e 1970 ijOBIE CAT deck plating. Will sell or MAl<E JT ALL POSSIBLE, TEACHERS & HOUSEWIVES * ANTIQUES * $1200 494-1733 8 3 9-7 2 9 7 F o u n lain iv/trailer.. Real Sharp. Call trade for plclrup. 3166 Sicily, BESIDES THE FACT OF Field Enterprises S 11-Good 830 Valley· 4112 67~1340or675-8l19 (?ifesa Verde) C.M. Round oak table, 42··. Sever-po 1ng I MAKING BIG MONEY. Educational Corp., seeks to al chest of drawers. 4 Pc 2 Kittens -ont' Tiger striped CAPE COO CAT BOAT \l.'E HAVE EMPL()YED t>mploy teacher:. & Old Oak Bdnn set. U Pc I SPECIAL! 2 Man plastic &: one black &: white. 18', fbtbls. (21J) 834-3883. l )~ MEN LIKE FORMER AS· hon1emakers in Orange tube tents Sl. Far West 540-3763 alter 7 P.M. 4/15 Boats, Sllps(Dock• 910 Auto,for~le r:i. Count" to y:ork this white & gold bdrm set. Plus Mountaineering, 444-F ·li~;;;;;;~-:;~1 SOCIATE DEAN 01'' UCLA, ;T TO ~ ho Sp'"-Summer demonstrating & Spanish La1np!, Decorator Ncv.'POrl Blvd, NB 644-ll02. a """" me 1.'6,r . . DON GOTTESMAN. FORM. selling The World Book items. Many other pi,eres. {Open 3-6 Daily) Spaniel puppies avail aft NEWP~RT ,Boat s1.1p..Po\~l'r ER S'TOCK BROKER STU Encyclopedia, Juli or part 1\ft1st Sell 646-7333. _M::::•Y;_.:7~53::::1_:·;~920::_ __ _:4~11~21 °1.'...,'1', .. ",,·. 40 12.1 50° 50 ...:,,c00 1"1'. Antiques/Cla1sics 953 FOX. FINANCIAL INVEST· . . .c..:.=.:...:::.::...=="'---BUY, Kii. trade guns. 1968 F E . ,_ ..,.,_ u .. - tin1e available. Training at * AUCTION * Dodge Van Cam""r. equi-1 ~,~~~,E~ 007~1'U.~P~P~'"~·~7~~·~··,'~1~~,~;I ~64~~'>-4~12fl;, _M~r:. ~D;il~fo~n~~:;; '"7. T-Bi-, ",000 •otual r.fENT ANA.LYSf, C,\IJ. our f'Xpense. F'or interview .. ~ ,. ,,......,,., ~ " <u "" FORNIA R.E. BROKER call 8.19-2921. 2.5 P~t. Fine Furniture ped, Trade lor i u n s · 26' alip, $6.')Jmo. Private nues, see to appreciate. DAVE LOOKlNGLAND TO 1..::::::..=c::::::::..:..::..:..::::..._ & Appliance 968+7&14 bath. No. 2 Balboa Coves, 644-4131/Aft 6; 644-2360 HELP TRAIN AND TEACH TELEPHONE SOLICITOR • Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. BLACK racing roller skates. I ll~l N.B. Call 67:>4331 Dune Bugniu 956 YOU HOW TO START A \lie need a professional Dexter wheels. $ 3 0 . 0 0 hts and Supptiea • CAREER IN INVESTMENT person w I charm, poise Windy's Auction 81rn 6$.jl61 alt 4pm. . Boats, Speed & Ski 911 CLASSIC VW drive buggy. COUNSELING. & perr.onality to set up 2075~1. Newport, C~f 646-8686 cKN:;::E~lSS:::L.::::B~l,~o~S~lan:.__.-,-,.,,~c1 I ••••••••••I• 14 · PacMar-fiberg!ass T-top & windshield, 14'' J\.IEN & \VOi\fEN ~NO appointn1ents for copy Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'). sear.on $45. Lang lltd, 10~~ D""'S 854 iv/flotation -10 hp mag v.·heels. 714/889-993{ EXPERIENCE OR DE-machine demonstratio11& in OLYMP-Pen F 35mm 1Ai $35. 675--0144 ----·--------• motor-ski or f ish-$ 4 7 a. ext 239: after 5, 883-2943 GREE NECESSARY. Orange Co. Draw+ com-frame & Yashika 1.4 \\'. ~~~~~~~~~~~ISILKYmale; 2toypoodles, 1 962-3jl3 H.B. **CUSTOM metal Datsun n1ission. SOOrt hours, big -~--black l silver both males START 1~1MEDlATELY, nioney. Male or female. call coupled x•meters; Tripod; AU AKC! 64~142 333 E: Boats# Starace 912 dune bu.ggy 962 ._l650 561 ·,. * FULL FRINGE BENEFITS, 7 24 60.' & 42·· desks; golf clubs 11 S PLUSH OF'FlCES. c2~1~31_:.::4'-:_:.~l~l-----& bag; <klrawer fil e; tape fret. to You 17th St. CM. FENCED storage area, oil S R TELEPHONE advertising recorder; 4 gal so i 1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ Silky Terrier Stud surfaced; Costa Mesa. Call ports, ace, Rods 959 e CALL NOW e from our plea!allt Nev.•port fum igant: fish poles; patio I Availfordates.AKCChamp. 64G--028lor962-7813 1946 Datsun Fair Lady. 547-6771 oUices. Hrly wag e!. table: misc. 5'15'-al7;'J LOVABLE gentle G. Shep, ton background. Proven potential classic "LitUe rtd ASK f'OR J\.IR. ALLYN l\<lorning or eve. shifts. B&\'V Motorola TV stereo & male, L ikes kids. stud. 64&-733:i 1 II.Ifill hvo-seater''· complete 64~::030 3.1. MR. MADRID. rad lo combo. goo:i cone!, 642-727~ 4/13 lramport.ltion w /Ion n ea u <'Over & ~ f 1150 DACHSHUND pup AK C' remov•ble h'"dOop. N•w T\\'O 11umen over ";:; to except or paint, . cost LOVELY klttt>n s. f~e to · · .... ru & 1 al•''-------~ - Sales , m1n1a. "' e em 'l.••••••••••f tires & engi"• bl-k lh•"o 1n1roducc a new service in $795 new. Size 18 clothes & good homt>. short hair & soots. \Vire or smooth coat.ii '"' "'" v J, W. ROBINSON O!'ange Co. 5-hrs daily. 5 misc. 64:>-2761 longhair. f>.14-9421 4/15 63l-40l8 receip!s). Asking S 9 2 S. NE\VPORT BEACH d 1"3 12 ·-·-t f -=..::::::.... ___ ~~-' C•rnper•, Sale/ Rtnt 920 646---0223 or 646-4363 ays. ,,.. • · '" ..., s ar · WHEELCHAIR & walker by BLACK female c:ockapoo. 5 2 ST Be d AKC l has immediate opening for No selling. \Vrite, Classified Everest & Jennings. New mos, housebroken, child Mal · 5 rnar sl r ] 31 -------~-• '70 GTO • ad No. 1·13· Daily Pilot, P.O. cond, Cost $137, sell $75. aJlergic. 968-3fH9 4115 e, mos.; enia c GREAT camper V\V-1,000 ml 455 • Ram Air • 4 spd. Box ljf,(I, Costa :\lesa, Calif. mos. Moved to apt. must on rebll eng. New treAds 1...._ Call Sat a!ler 7 prn or WHITE Jon<> haired lemale sell $150 Each 968-0l5J 20 ~· ;.o:r.;i 92626. M 64 .. · new carpet. mpg. .,,.,.,. 6.t6·466.i AIT 4 &: WKNOS Sun A1, ~7 cat to good home . e CUTE PUPPIES e j~8~"~:?~70~o~r~4~92~-7~1JS0~---11f;~',;;.C..::...:._:_=-::..::~:;.1 \\'aitresses ,, "~·· ,,,.. T k N.B. Tennis Oub playing 71.......,.,,.... ~/13 lj & ur rue 1 962 • SHERATON BEACH JNN Cycles Blk•• FULL TIME: SHOE SALESMEN Apply in person 10·5 pm Personnel D<>pr. a 2 1''ashlon Isl.. N .B. Equal Oppor1unity Employer Sales Full Time membership •201-$'500. OV.'TI• ORANGE chair. &!2-481& * 534-388.) ' ' Needs attractive, Young er pays trans fee. 494-82·18 548-3850 Scooters: 9251 '59 FORD \.1 TON l\':tltrcss, over 21 full time, Tiny toy poodles, AKC evenings. fur interview sec 1..::•~1•c_c7:~30:_:w~k:_::d•~Y~•~· ---4/13 6 v.·ks, Very reasonable James Pillo. DECORATOR'S mirror. i110VING have to give "Scuf. 642.-4818 * 53<1·388:; ............. '>J\12 p ·1· c II dint>tle set, ollice desk $150 fi<", ~ hom• 4 mo. old --=;_:,,;_:c=c-c..::.:.::,:c:.,,.~I • - - - -• 1 Pickup. Radio. stick. Good ~ ac1 tc oast wy. """" '· •PUREBRED BLACK LAB HQTHNINKDA condi!ltln,$fF&3'988 4 . 9 ) -Huntington Beach. & Misc. 17676 A. Cameron, Terri-Poo. B!k &1;..2633 4112 puppies. 7 \\•ks old. HB. 842-6121 • " """'-\VAITRESSl-:S & Busboys ..:.:.:::_::,::;_:c::.:__~-~-t FREE puppy. female. 3 mos * <>l~ * Apply Hu ntington Seaclil! SEE BURG Juke box old. Cockapoo lo good home. YR old shaggy female dog. IU LADIES Couney Club, 3000 Palm d"ign<d !or homo u... 0\2-""4 4-13 Good w /oh ii d "n . "fRlfDLANDfR,. CONNELL CHEVROLET Ave .. H.B. After 5 pm. Plays 4j rpm·s. $:;o(l lncls FD1ALE cat 6 v.-eeks hsbrk. Hou9ebroken. 536-704j 4113 READY.TO-WEAR , __ !e:>:..'~'c.~·c.~·c.·•~-100 old "goodl""· &l>-5016 • h . d _ 1• ' ""' gray 1~· t st r 1 PP e SCHNAUZER Pups. a l s o 1mt llACN fHWY. -• '2828 It ARBOR BLVD. * \VAITRESSES * Exp"d. e BRUNSWICK POOL '968-3113 aff 2 4/l:i rare blacks. l\laJt at stud. 537..o&24 e 893-1;,66 COSTA MESA StS-120.l Apply in person only. Mesa TABLE, slate bottom. Good COCKER-pro puppies blk Grooming. Tenns 846-0&39 NEW·USEO.SERV. 1967 Che\/' % Ton Piok U•. :! Lanes 1703 Su-rior, C.M. cond, w/cues. balls & and I 9 k 2 I • . ~ k l300'" "~I cury, "'' s. maes. e AKC AUSTRALIAN ... - -... -P/b, r/h, CU!!lom cab.,~ Exptrienced DESMOND'S 6'1&..19!1l rac · ~ 56-59'18 •115 SILKIES. • ......... ..., 1 23,000 ml + 11' cab-over ~ •3 FASHION ISLAND \VANTED-v."Omrtn M>lic\tor, IRVINE COAST COUNTRY BLK 8 n1o old cat Anlber Xlnl quality. 6T':r2465 '7'1 Savage 250-gyt kit, big campc-r. $2650 or best oUer. '• NEWPORT BEACI{ • ~me sales ex Perie n c e. CLUB membenhlp for sale:. eye!. affect. to qual. home. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii'f sprocket, magura lt"vers. 5.'>7-8191. ~! 2;.50 Y'"" old, saJan1 a--' Pvt pty. 673-0960 ... '"~ 968-23-4/15 1--Oha· 500 n>I 'la•" SALES ·~ "" .Ns.-0.,...,; "' • ~ """' " · " •v ~fUST Sell '70 Chevy ~ fon co m m I s & I o n . \V r i I~ I \VATERLlLIES in f u 11 3 Mo old Cocker-poo female. I """ ""' I ., :Ji extras. $600. Eves 54&-2329 Suburban Carry-all. 5.000 , A fa.!I! ~wing" fleld. Leads Cln.Mllied Ad No. 150, Daily bloom, $3 each. ..-in.Equipment 1' BULT CO • d 2=-· 9 • furnished. Some Mies e11.11. Pilol P. o . Box 1560, Costa Call 54~1484 Very cute. 673-9687 work or A nlala or .Nl:t': mi. · pas~. All Xtra~. 3.)0 · M••a. c-•,·1. 92626 642-72'74 .f./lj 1969. Newly luned. 17000 ~V;8~. ~N;•;•=l;/~71:_::644-:::71~06'__ I ., "·ill help you make $15.000. l c'~·~;:::ruc;;,:::::::c_,..-~ BICYCLES s l d · I ·1 $635 " n:~"1: ... C • t ngrayl', use · SPRINGER Spani•I ve'"" I 900 ongina mt e~ · 5'1'7"UJVU '61 CH8VY 2 ton. 16' closed •; o. wtll IJ'8ln & guarantee YOUNG college glrls -Try All types. good oond_ Misc. •;T Ge!'lera D al $Tl00. O>lt' lor high promotion Sllles l ~b~·k~·~··~~..i~··-~=·~·:::,:-:_ __ lovable l yr. old male. "69 YAl\TAJIA 125 st 1 ,.,, 300 et 1 w 1000 n .... ~7 7 \\'hce-]s, 6 cyl. , _u,. 54" "21.:i 4/t·o scrambler. Super cond. . . ~ -1 63. :,,· Cail Sally I-fart. a4().0055 job, Startlng $alary o-o CAPTAIN c COASTAL AGENCY 00 k Call f I t I 2 DERAILLEUR bikes. Puch LL .. ~ I II • .::·::·l~l .::55:::7_:-"83=~· -----tAuto L ••• ,...... AL• •,' S1 /w . or n erv cw •":. Bianchi 140·. 206" >th A .. ,,..,., compete ch d's LicPnsed • Radar. Loran, 301 · . ··• ~ 7190 Harbor Bl. at Adtms on ?.1on, \Ved or Fri, S;:' H.B. ~ ~~~~17S<'t, cost overs;,~;; years experience sail or :p·~~~~~ --------1 ,, SALES GIRL.') for Koscot 714164&-9647, ask for Steve. f if.iooil'if<;;;;;;k'.c;;:;;;c-;r~;> II~~~'-----~~ f power. Professional Sporl LEASE BR \VN m\nk jacket. Bite 12. e MU5'T SELL e Cosme1ics. age 18 lo -'! Like new. Call 642-4749 a.ti 6 ALL wood swing s" t Fishing Guide Mexican & * 54S-7890 * A NE\V 1S7l Earn $300 ro $500 n10. in II~· 1-•co'kd~y~'=· --~~--~ complete. Cos1 new over Central American '"'aten.t----''-"-"'-----1 PINTO your !'pare llmr. Compitny Mlrdllrdla =: $100. 642-2917 4/1~ Also Jicens<'d mulU-cngine '71 Honda 3.)() Scrambler· $50 00 !r11,ining. For appt call Cathy ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:;;~ Nr:;mti!;;~;. ~;~~e fa;,~~ 8~,.!J~~! slip covered .90fa. Commerclal Piklt land & Lo1v ml. $700. Call 545-1257 C~ mo.)mo. or Jim HarTl~n 4!M-!f>M. ...,,,,...,..,.,., 4/1.l !ea. Admlnistrali~e UJX'fi· days: 6J5..4256 e-vcs. 642'4843. n. OfX'n end SALESMAN, Service Sla. Antiques 100 l\IAL.E and female klHcns en~. &K&t ol references:. '68 BSA !\lark IV Spilfin>, RENT tRVTNE COAST COUNTRY "'" """7 "°'50 fl F. I P11rt time. Neat in 1----------Blk. 893-2867 4115 V"\I"""' .-or o er. .xi;epl. c ran. P""&nuict A ply 2590 CLUB MEMBERSHIP. Low miles. Call 6T3--0i70 A Nt:\V 1971 a '"" · P · ANtJQUE 1ab\('s; fu'tle 67;)...JOiS CUTE kittens HB atf'a SCRAM LETS 1..:::.::..:::::::::..::=.:.:::.::.c.::._1 PINTO Nev.·JX>rl Blvd. C.M. 1~1,...100 table & ~irnl 536--0136 4/15 • '65 \'amah11 9Ck;c k '69 llonda $4 DAY .. ,. BED oomer group. ROOll SL 350. SAIL seam.stress ~~. Ex· I le~ t1bles, Louie XTV cood. GE mobile made prtbl LG gny and "'bl altered <'Ill, ANSWERS Cnll !)i9-~29 ANO pier pref d• Full I 1 me • I p<'rlod. Beautlful cond. lkst di~h~·asher. 646-8506 male 893-2867 4/1 5 Ulln1an Sails. 644-8107 otter. S48-4655 btwn 3 & 5 • BALBOA Bay Club reg. MAPLE couch & bra.ided 197(1 Bulla'-'O Putsa.ng, xJnl 4~ MILE SARAll C0'1en''"" needs 0 I' I02 Homing -Goose -Ember cond, $700. PUT A Ll'rn.F. ~J • App 11nce1 membership. $1400. Inc 1 ruir. 646-8493 4113 • or pt time htlp, No ln• ;,.;:;.:_...;._______ -Orphlln -MORE HOPE + Call !'>.l7~l9L * l\JCK iN YOUR veatment. WUI train, min KENMORE auio ~·a.Wr 145. I ..:":::';"="c.::''='·~!ltiZ--0=.::::'="~· ---SPAYED ftm1tle Cockapoo. \~at Ibis country nr.ecls is ·69 cz 25(lre. Very J:Ml.I LIFE! qe 20. SJ0..1to'7 ,\ 543-!0iS. Whirlpool eJ9C dl')'P.t $4?1. METRIC llOCkc~ 13-pc set Good watchdog. M!-34614/12 MORE llOPE adrlil'ts. cooditkln, $6.'iO. THEODORE Both xlnt cond, auar & 3/8'' dtiv~. $.5. 33' rnlls 5 MO old male Chihuahua. 10' GLASSPAR, refinished, !162-4356 After 5 Pil1 ROBINS FORD 'Vhy ~tore It In tM attic when you on hml It Into mont>y thrcua;h a DAILY PILOT \Vant Ad. dellwttd. 54tHl612. S4T-811S cP~1="~1~'°~"2'"0..::2tlo;;,•~·~·~M~S-J:..::C75tl:::::l_:64:5-00'.::'.:~77:_:•~h~4:_ __ _:4112~ Lik~ New. 14' NelV boal Thf ta11le!l dr;1w in tht> 'i\'~l 2060 llARBOR BLVD., Hou11r. llunlll!Jt? Walrh ~ * PATIO COVER * 4, ..... ~'!!"'· halt Schnaut('r, ln\llt>r, spare lire k v.tieel. .. a Daily Pilot Classilied COSTA 1'1ESA OPEN llOUSE C'lOlumn. $7.l or otltr '* 5-~-84$4 ...,.,.._,., 4 '15 6r.tt197.. ·..::A:::d.~64:,::.2-"'l6n"'"------· ___ _,.:&::1::2-0tl::::IO:._ __ • -· • ·. ) ) ~ ....... 1§1~ -...... I~ I -.... l~I ....... I~ r~;;;;;;;~,1 ;;;;;~· ~ Auto S.Vlct, P•rt1 966 Autos, Imported ! • SACRIFICEll FIAT Ll.ke new • Enalne Piluten. 1 ________ _ := ... ~~ ,;,'!:~~~i ""'"""""''69 vw· . """"''"· both $300 or will "THINK" -.i:aeu separarely. Etlelbrock J:ll·ri~e litanilold fc11 i\iloj)llr §JDl!fl ""' 155. Mioodoo oil plekop ' •• • '~tern fo1· wedge or hem i. SALE moper engine1 $50. Ex. COltd. See · :i:~'"> .... ,'""' "'·""" "FRIEDLANDBt" Autos Wanted 961 13710 IU.CH II.YD. I Hwy. Jtl WE PASY TOP NE~:~:o-";.t:. 25 '69 vw BUGS ' CA H i ~ ON SALE!! """"" '"'. """"· ju.ot JAGUAR All 10001 G t d I I ,.,, .. '°' '"" """'"'· 10 uaran ee .• GROTH CHEYROLU '67 Jaguar XKE 30 D1y1 or 1000 Mll11 ... '°'Sal .. M .... " Parts & labor 182ll Beach Blvd. :! +2. Automatic, radio, heal· Huntinaton Beach er, chrome wire \\'heels, EXAMPLE: _.7 0081 Kl 9-333.I primrost' \\'ith black leather '69 vw BUG . WE PAY CASH '"'"'°'· IZQD3'4) $3195 $13'99 FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Collta ?.1e!a 546-~ TOP DOLLAR '"' CLEAN USED CARS Set Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2)6() Harbor Blvd. Costa l\1e1a 642-0010 wt PAY TOP DOLLAR FQR TOP USED CARS U )'Olll' car ls extra dean, BAUER BUICK 23.i E. 17th St zuc 708 Costa l\lesa 548-7765 Kelly Blue Book S1y1 Average Retail $1720 JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS TI1e only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the entire Harbor Area. C.Omplete SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK JN COSTA MESA OVER 110 USED VW's FROM $399 CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR COSTA MESA 549-3031 Ext. 67 or 61 44.5 E. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 67:l-0900 DAil Y I'll.OT 1§1 ~I ---.. .:..~l§J;1~1,~--;;;"';;; .... ~l§J~I Autos, lmportod 970 Autos, UMil· 990· Auto1, Used '90 Autw, UM<I-'90 Autoo, Jt: §JI _.... 11~1 [ A-b!M 990 l-,.,VO'.:'.'"LK~SW~A""'G""EN,,... CADILLAC CHEVROLET --;:M;;,U;c;ST;;;All:!f;;;.G;:-·~;;;;;i;;;===o.i --'69 VW SEDAN L••srst :.Oioc1ion '70 NOYA ''!,, :'~~~~~~! · OF UXURIOUS & paint. Xtnt tond. l 011o"ner, Radio, Henttr. (Z8K61T) V3, automatic, power steftlo CADILLACS ! pri~'f. '95(1. 613-5016 aft $1299 ""'·di,. Lo•do<I. ICVE3691 '''°pm. Full pdCe ~M ~." ·~11 .. 1 o-0.:.:.,0,-'==~~~­ Harbour V.,W. 18TI1 BEACll Bl.. S-12-4435 HUNTJNGfuN BEACH Lal'CJ• Salectlon Of VW Campers, Vans, Koml:ls, Buses, New & Used lmmecll•te Dellvery CHICK IVERSON vw 5G-30ll Ext, 68 OT' 61 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA lirESA '68 YW BUG- ........,_ '-CW 'In--'68 MUSTANG 2+2, p/!r, in Orange County '6' Cheve lle Malibu SS 2-dr, pfb, alMond. $lfi00. Ca.U e V8, auto, fully equipped, All 540.2585. 19 Cpe DeVilles . 18 Sed. l)e. original & abo\le' llvtrl&e. ~MUSTANG 6 cyl stick, Villes, 6 El Dor ados -5 Con. $950. Day1 838-2121: Eves new I.Ires, I n s Pe c t t 0 n vertibles. 16 ot.her select ;i64&-i'-~1533i"c~:;;;;~;rr--;;;;;;;;: !-'~'':~'::..!:-~;·~,. -..:~'.:...~ st c er. •·-· "U'to-v.J • U'ade-lns. '69 El Can1ioo-.F'ull po11.'er, 19'3 thru 1970's 111any C(i:trali. Ul75. ~ -~~=~ Fstbck! 6 cyl 3 ib ;d. "al""'";,.'.:."'""'m=-~~--can 615-lMS Gl\Ta1 e.IQ) '65 °""' Impala 2 "'· "'"' -o==.==.,=sM~O::;B;,ILE~-11 ·~CAOIUAC eng, body, l tires, S60l'.l ,._ AUTI10AtUD DU.Wt 893-4!M3 all 5 PM _..,. .:::....::.::.::::..:..:_:::. ___ I •57 Toi Jo..1 owner tac-1 2000 HARBOR Bl-, '68 Chevcllc Stn v.•a.ron. All tory air, full pcnwr,' vinyl COSTA J\.tESA new tires, Xtra clean, nsoo. An 000 ml XI nd "" 9 D °'°21 '1 top, ...,, . nt co . ..,..,. 100 pen Suoda,y 1..:-,::,,::,c' ----~-Below Blue Book. $2375. Alt • '5T CHEV : Au!o. Run. Cood . 6 pm or wknds, ~2399 '69 Cadillac Coupe de Villt>, Orig. rond. 536--0286, >1 '.66'-"'0"1.:d,'-' . ..,==,'-"',....::...:=~P/~s'I 24.00 mi's, Pvt owner. FUii ~•c.".:.'·-$350=· ------poii. ex <.'Ol'ld. S109S Offer "°"" • ''' + "11 F" CHRYSLER "' 6 968--0365 "" ''""°· vinyl "'''· '"""' inter., tilt whttl, power •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj,;iiiiiiijj~ '66 Cutlas.s convt-MH. air, power, bl& eng. Penlnsula , d di R d' 1 door locks, Perfecl cond. Pol"t f-TCA, S73-l9lG .. spee . r. a Kl, viny 64!>-2182. '69 Ch I W ..:c:::::..:"=-:..:.:::..:=---11 lop, , .... , .. tVST3ll1\ \Viii ==----1 rys er agon PLYMOUTH trade or finance prlvale p&r· • .,.. ""' "'·"" 0' '"'·"JI. CAD. '67 EL DORADO WANTED Town & Countzy. F'ull pqwer. iiiiii!iiiiiii-iiijjjiiijjjjiiiijji \I factory 11.lr, roof rack, gpJil FACTORY I'll pay top dollar for ~'OUI' AIR CONDITIONING VOLKSWAGEN today, can FULL LEATHER INTERIOR and ask for Ron Plnchot, F'uU power. padded lop, door 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673--0900, Jocks, AM-FM radio & 1 '69 V\\'-~1ag rims, tape deck, host of other deluxe extras. """'h ""· "'· w"''"'Y '69 Roadrunner available, .IZDY840) $3595 new y, irlf' oval tltts. Xlnt {VUH352) cond. $1:-oJ. i4Z-24lEi $3111 ''6 VIV "'"'· good "'"· engine runs good, Original owoe,. l800 ....... 31 ~· ibe· A, VOLKSWAGEN 1968 • very 9a't good shape, $1275. Call CADILLAC 646-5405 AUTHORIZED OC.t.l.E'I BAUER BUICK 234 E, 17th SI, Costa Mesa 54i-7~ 1970 L\f.PERIAL l...d!an>n: Full power, FM Stereo, new Urea. Xlnt cond. Ca 11 ~6--8824. 673--6053 COMET z Dr, H.T. VB, auto., radio, heater, Polllt'r steering & brakes, low mile•, factory warranty available. Beaut.I· ful coDditk>n. IYPT372) $1995 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. Chila Mesa 548·7165 e SACRirICE 1969 VW 2600 HARBOR BL., Squareback, Air oond, Xlnl ('OSTA MESA '69 Sport Suburban rond, $lT7j, 495-5352 ;).1()..9100 Open Sunday '61 STAT~ON '11gn, ~uto, rood 9-pa$s wgn, A/C, PIS, P/B, 0 . - 0 ' K '66 CHM CLUB COUPE Ntw p•l11t a •••• CIYart. ~le•. ITFV7741 '70 DUNE ~UGGY R1dl•, h••f•r, 111w tir11, Chrorn• wh1•l1, t-up, 1it:le c11rtel1111 (41tAVll ~ aee ~~k BIB CI< 234 E. 17th Strt'el 548-1765 I iiiiiiiii!ii Auto1,.Jmported 970 Autos, lmporttcl --------- • tires, X1nt runnrnr cond, New titts, H1 mi's but im· 1963 V\\' Bus-New eng & 1 ---------cl::25<l:::. . .:"c:>-<c.::03'=-----· I .mac cond, $2095 firm. 970 brakn. Mak• 0""· '"' • CONTINENTAL m-7689 Pol~¥"''· """'· "3-5556 Cad. '69 Convertible -=.~,s~e"'•=n~n.~cu=o~A-, =on~.-11 '70 Jaguar Rdstr. 234 E. 17th SL Costa Mei;a 548-7765 IMPO~TS WANTED Only 10.000 miles, 4 speed Orange Counlie1 transr..-ssion, radio. healer, TOP $ BUYER \vire wheels, factory lvar- BllL l\lAXEY TOYOTA ranty available. t933BSY> ll88J. Beach Blvd. $4995 !I. Beach. Ph. 841.s;;:i PRIVATE party ,,·ill buy .. a1 equity in '11 model BAUER BUICK Datsun or Vega . 234E.17thSt. l··~n-...,....,~~-"-~~-=• 1 Costa Mesa 548-77N Autos, Imported 970 CORTINA KARMANN GHIA .e '68 KARMANN '68 Cortina sta '''gn, 4-dr, air GHIA-Like new $129'5. cond, tape: dttk. Runs good, 673-2271 or 546-4120 .e..i 0'"'· 831·""' 1 "'""M"'E"'R""C"'E~D"'E"'S~B=E"'NZ"" DATSUN MERCEDES BENZ --------m-4 door '60. Excellent condition. Original owner. $9:JO. Dodds, Xl20 Cliff Dr .. NB 646--1067 MG ~ t.iftl THINK m .. ~ .. "FRIEDLANDER" IDY al:AC" OIW't'. 1'1 893-7566 • 537..6824 NEW-USEP.SERV. ~ '69 2000 ROADSTER MERCEDES ~65 DIESEL 1 -"0-.-.""-~-=-B.-hl,-. ,-,,.. Delu.xe l!IOD. Beautiful t-r· rack, yellow w/blk top. mine ""h.ite 11.·/rich black Great cond. Sl650. 673-0617. leather interior. Auto. trans., '68 MGB-GT. 0 v er d r Ive radio, heater, wsw tire11, In Good cone!. S1750. Call exceptional condition. Must 4~2522 or 400.2837 TOYOTA '68 VW Bus, A·l condition. '64 Black 4 Dr., full pwr, llhr XLNT COND. • ~ or ---------1 $2000. Call •ftfr 6 PM. JUSI' lJ,6S7 LOCAL MILES a~at1, good shape. $695 -B~ OFFER 64G--0796 TOYOTA NEW '71 Owoor. 64'"'5l9 FACTO y l.!!!Mus~IO_!•~·"':.,· ---=55~, ... ~oo~l;;m"i5~iif;ii;;;;;;m::.:;;;;;;1l •54 FORD E n NO DOWN '68 VW, Nu brakes, dlrome AIR CONDIT~ONINC • '63 CONTINENTAL -New '!~da~. m~~m·o:~~~ cono IDB "4leel5, 36M miles $1185. Beautiful chalice gold fire· lirrs. Pvt/pty. $700. Call Extra low ml. 545-148' PAYMENT $69.01 MONTH• 36 mos. Def. pay price . S2484.36 or cuh p r i c e ~-55, incl. Tax 4 Uc: A.P.R. 14.M~. Serial No. 1343-17. •on approved credit BiU Maxey Toyota 1B881 BEA.Qt BL. 847-&5.55 HUNTINGTON BEACH $1871 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA 2 DR. FA<:roRY EQUIPPED #9878 CHOICE OF 5 ..1Jea1t Lewi& W TOYOTA e 67~ • · t•-· h I .... 646-4!Ml. n11st 1111s w C01uovan top 1----------1 e '65 BARRACUDA _ 6 cyl, CAMPER VOLVO nn.ru'U'l THINK ~~o~o· "FRIEOlANOER" ' Ul'M ••ACI! l llW't'. JJI 8SJ.-7566 • ~ .Q!24 NEW-USEP.SERV. ~ $3093 1971 VOLVO DEMO 7360 We Spec:lalize In Oversea. Delivery & matching fu[J leather in· CORYETIE 35.~ ml. S"f.A) or best offer A11tom•t!e, rad;., f11a t1r, ter. F'u.ll pcl\\'t'r, lilt & te]e. 548-4611. bubbl• iop, ••If eonl•in•t:I. scopic steering, doot' locks, 1968 CORVETTE ENG 377, .:.:::..::::'=-:=....,-=--llM11.t •••· lS1009.9l sentinel, etr., e!r. &. 15) clutch, Bell Housm, Muncie PONTIAC brand new titt's. Absolutrly 4 1pd. Complete. Perteet looks It runs like the day It condition $400. 645-4681 DAVE ROSS left the sho11.·roon1 noor. PONTIAC lXHH9J6) CORVETTE '67 Sl Iver . Fulback. Hpd, 3Z1 /350 Com pie~ Sales & Service ib ~ hp. Air, AM/F~t. pwr 2480 Harbor Blvd. e~ window~. Xlnt cond. Pvt at Fair Dr. ''J fllllAll 1+2 CPL CADILLAC pt,y. S2JOO, ITI4l 8-1&-3293 Costa Mtsa 546-8017 4 ipd. Ow1rcil1lwa, ltcil fi1t> i1h, IWID5731 AUTHORIZ£0 OEAUR '62 Corvette 327-4 Ip. nu Open 1 days a wetk 2!iOO HARBOR BL., Urea, tspe. Sharp J\tuit Hll 1:30 AM to 9:00 PM $3595 COSTA MESA $795 beat offer Trade torl -.-;&."o'"''w"""';«;;--ll ---.,.,..,.-----.:,.to.9100 Open Sunday STATI N AGON ••1 Pbl.D W.UON • van 6-144393 11fl 5 P~f. '70 LeMans w/wood trlm, l#94 J5l 1--------FORD twl '"'· •~. '"•· "'· XI,., $595 • cond. $3400/oUer. Call <n4J CAD. '65 SEO. DE VILLE '6l Co"'"" Sq"U. ""11'"1 ..:."':.c·'-=Zl":.:c·~=--·11 condition 390 CID eng. only e '70 OTO e FACTORY 51.000 ml. PS/PB auto 4.55 * -4 spd, .,, CHIYY w.t.aoN 9 p•11,1191r fJJV7701 $595 AIR.CONDITIONING tran1 m ln ion, elr $2895 Full power incl. elecltic \Yin. conditioning, wide tires, 646-46GS aft 4. & wknd! ''4 fORD PICICUP $1800 !157-3Ul ~.o;c....:.:.:....:"'°'::....::...C.="-·11 VI, lon9 b•d. •1110.m•llc, • !! 5 spd. d!r. 01vned by little old achool teacher trom La- 'guna Beach. Full price $1799 :(ZNS 159) Take older trade .or small dO\\'n. WIU finance .pvt. ply. Aft 10 an1 540-3100 or 49-1. 7:'JOO. be seen & driven. (PBW033J 1-=-=:..::0,..::P;.Ec.L=--- SALE PRICED 1910 Opel CT·7,000 n1i. ?.lust sell. No reasonable oiler refused. 842-3183 1966 Harbor, C.J\f. 64'&·9303 BESI' BARGAJNS COME SEE OUR SELECI10N OF ..T>eo1t Lewi& W VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 dow1 & electric St'at. Signal ..::=.=:..:::=------'68 Po ti F . o· d xJ t RIK fl . 1966 Jo'ord Bronco roll-bar, n ac ire 1r , n • "•.,.. p•inl, . 259961 1 seeking radio. See lo UP· Sacrlflce &low Wholesale. $1296 preciate. ITBY306} tow-bar, new top, great ,.._,1 ••• _ ''""""" IJOXJ. ti' m. ,~~..:-"-'""=-~--~~II ' ~~8 DATSUN PICKUP ~~~~ TOYOTAS Jim Sl•mon1 Imports 1--------- $1222 K42-5132 '&1 Pontiac Tempest Sed. V· ''' IAMILla WAM>N j GOLD 1968 Bronco All 8, auto, Good tltts I. Cl 1ul~. F~ll po wer Ii •Ir, Autos, Used .( speed. Jus! painted. dlr. 4 new tirts. '\\'PP7G2) ?.lusl _µ.c. ! \Vil! take car In trade or 11.•ill finanre private par. ty. Call 49-1-6811, 546-8736. AUTHORIZED DEAi.CA 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA ~IESA 5'M).9100 Open Sunday • '70 Opel GT • $2500 Cal.I ~7·1983 eJter 6 PORSCHE 140 W. Warner Santa An• Open Eves. & Sun. 540-4125 '69 COROLLA H.J. nnl nd $295 '""" .,,,.u !SJRl91 I A·REAL·GARAGE ib ,.xtras. 20,000 actual ml. ru ng co · · u-u-•111n. SALE ~ CA, 1=. "'"''" ""· e '70 Lemam. FUily equlp'J; $995 1960 ~ Ton VS 1tick with •ii) JEEPS Lo mi's*, ~ ~~ * CADILLAC u<J-¥;1.6.l ''4 CHM l,li4P'ALA camper. 1957 1327) cherry AUT~RIZfO DEAUPI ---------~=,....;,..:.;;..:::::0..::...--.11 4 Or. F11lt power a, •Ir. Veite .• 1964 0tevy II Wa&· 2600 HARBOR BL., ''8 JEEP Stn w.,on, 283 PONTIAC '81 GTO, lirdtp, IHXIJ Oll on VS, p--!ilttr., 1969 ~Ka-COSTA MESA reblt Chevy ena-. new paint, 4-ipd., PIS, dl&c brake1, $595 wasakl S1de\\·inder. Phone 540-9100 •Open Sunday 1 .::16::9=5,_, .:":.:3-!lc::.:195=":..· ----_l:.;l:::IOO,:c·c,.Pvc,,,:t_,pC:tyC,:'..:"""=..l:.;n.::o:__11 ----..,.---.,,--- DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 11l835 Bea .. h Blvd. Huntin&"IOD Beach 342-7781 or~ Oran9e County's L.1 rgcst Selection Nl'w & U sed Mercedes Bent '63 Porsche Super Cpe, Bahama yellow With blk interior, AMIFJ\t, chro1ne v.'heel.s, recent e n i l n e PXW982 $2399 CHICK IVERSON vw Loaded. Automatic, factory _1_"..:'-'-"cc·-'-"-·"_22_·'-----~~='~---1 LINCOLN STUDEBAKER ''2 YW IU• •" ''""'· 0 ··"'d by litU• old BUICK CHECKER --------flJV20ll I lady from Laguna, CZDT-,l-·~~ijjij~-----------I ·57 4 dr Llnco!n Cont'I. Xln't v 1941 STUOEBAKE'R $495 1021 Full price S1599. Take 'Sil Checki>r Sta Wag 327.n cond. Orig. owner. $2475. COM~fANOOR. 4-dr, 6 stick. ? Jim Slemons Imps. 11170 DATSUN 1600. Very clean. Best otfer, mus1 sac. 644-52J9, 8.17-8-148. Warner & Main St. Sant.:i Anu 546-4114 5'19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD . small dov.·n. WU! finance '69 Skylark pWr. New tiret. ~Iust sell. 644--648-1 Stored 18 Years. 15.000 orig 'M CPI. DI YILLI ·• f di Cal! 540 3100 ..:.;.:...:,::.;.______ I L'"-N full pow•r. Cl••11l ICPP. I P•f. p y. r. · $1595 831<752 MERCURY m '"· ~ •• In & o"'. <O !l ·.I or 494.7J06 aft 10 am. $6SI or Trade.. 6454687 -----'-"':.:....::::;:. __ Convcrliblc>, V8, auto., R&H, CHEVROLET $1095 BIIL MAXEY pow" '"'''"•· ,.,,,,., ·"· ·53 M'""" Com•! eo ... 6 T ·BIRD . NOW'S THE TIME FOR . QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 220 S. 4 Door Sedan. KFC 419 $875 Harbor American 646·0161 1•69 HARBOR COSTA MESA COSTA ME~A 1966 PORSCHE 911: Bahama Yellow. J ~pd, 42,000 n1i, Am/F'n1, blaupunkt ntdio, J owner. Complete Servict' Log 646-2486 dys, 548--8180 ITIOIYJ()ITlirJ ~=~~~7z~$~2:-f"7'9' •._ty. lmmacu--F-~-.-.. -•• ,-,~-P-,-,-.-~-m,-s•&l-~-8-~~·b~~=~~ru~;,tt;;~':; '·~"',"~""1-.u-'.1:'",-•-;;;,,-,"'."'-;.,,-,--.,,.-~-:·ll • ~=-=-~ :-. . plate, Rebullt engine and 968•3060 ,11 S·. 30 VERY CLEAN * $GOO 11811 BEACH BLVD. * S46-l880 * 1rnns. $400. 549-1690 Hunt. Booch 147-&!lS BAUER BUICK '67 Cou"or XR7 VALIANT F'OR Sale 1965 Chevrolet • evell. Ind M. of Out Rwy, on Bdl 234 E. conv. Good cond. Clean. SJ:!l·8~~af~ '61 Valiant-New premium DON'T give II away. eet -P~O-R~SCl~IE~,~.1-1.~5.-1,-1-,-1~96~9 'ii Corolla. Take over pymt11. Costa J\1£'sa 613--4292 or ~7878 MUST ANG tires, Air cond. Best offer. quick ca.sh for II with a fac. air, F:'\f radio, all Call, 548..(il)Jl, 3:30 to 4:30 '62 Chevy Impala 4-dr hrdtp, ---------0"""=-=538='~-~---·ll DAILY PILOT Classified 1 p rt -" p · PM Xlnt mechanical cond, Auto, '66 MUSTANG $750 Fut re11ults are i·ust a pbo"' ex ras. £' . C01111. r1. ' BUICK '68 LeSabre 4 Dr. cau 642-5678 &: chute ll. party, $7450. iTI41 623-3962 TRIUMPH hdtop. "Cream Pull". Air, i..:1::.215:.::... ::.6'6-4::....::.:""c_____ Good cond * 644--4678 call away· 642-5678 ''I T·lllD fwll pow•• l •Ir, IOYL• 707) $895 '14 T·lllD F11lt Pow•r & Alt, -$595 'It .1.t.au.t.• 4 Or. Ri d. A11to111 1lic. IJBY2701 , . . I =I l I Trucks 962 Trucks 962 LATE '69 911-S. sunrool, All pwr .. etc, Way Below book! 990. Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UHd $795 l I ' TRUCK €ENTER OVER 50 TRUCKS IN STOCK. WE RENT CAMPER TRUCKS & MOTORHOMES TOO! G.M.C. TRUCK SPECIALS! I! '71 GMC $2895 1/2-TON Short wheel b•1•, 4 cylinder, 1tick 1hift ven. on .... 9 r••n with beiq• interior. (13231 '70 equip, 15.000 mi's. $7300. ----------833-2087 or 675-3000 ...... "" '71 SPITFIRES 1!168 """• "''"'" "' w•"· '66 Porsche 9 11 ·Baham a NOW ON DISPLAY Alr . Xlnt oond. &1z.~·.i9 alt yelloY.', 1 owner. Xlnt cond. Come 1n for a test drive! 6 v.kday1 1---''------$3600 Pvt pty 644-#U FRITZ WARREN'S * "68 RIVIERA-Air A: stereo, 'M PORSOI':: c Coupe. SPORT CAR CENTER 35,IXXI n1 i. Xlnt cond. $2500. no E. lit St, S.A. 547-0764 Sm9 * * * 673-4389 Call 548-2858 •fl 6 Open dally S.9; closed Sunday '70 Grand Sport lmmac. '66 Ponche 912. 5-s pd . , 'fiO TRJliMPH TR.-4. Wire i\lust ~II now. Pvt ply, RadiaU, Xlnt rond. l\take "·heel.I, new top, new 835--0146, 831-4800 uk for offer or trnde. 673-ml brake•. Runs j:ood, Dark Ev. '63 Po~he S. Xlnt cond, green. $!M5, 54~530 ...--.-. T~ -• AM/FM. Midi. ttre1, AU TRIUMPH, TR...JB 1962 +59.J.L b__IW.. orl(lllftl "'" ottor 642-9011 -152>. 8 re SKODA * 546-2$.1 Att<r 6 P'1 * ' VOLKSWAGEN-C"'tom '°""'· VB. aUlo .• 1U< If, power 1tt'f'ring It brakes, • . .,-V\-V--A-,-to-m_•_ti_<.-.,-,-..,,-,_1 faciory air, vinyl root (~ 69 SKODA CONVERT. MAKE OFFER ·~· 7 1 KING AJ\1JFM. Pvt ply mmt sell. APRl S1550 or offer. 644--0027 71 LIL '71 GMC TOYOTA ,L, SUBURBAN '64 VW Yar>-New pa int, $3195 of ROAD KING IO n 'w" -<~•-· '69 LANO CRUISER oxoha...., ""'""· Good BAUER BUICK C.I> -5IO'ff, ... -VI. P.S ' " • • mnd. ms. 5J&-fi662 234 E 7 1111e 11111...,,., tllttltll .• l•lt , ,.11.t ..__ ,,~ ,~,, s • '1r 1m. '6 vw V XI , . l lh St. ,.,... "11 _ r •ltt11 •hi -t.o Of'l 1..:to•r 11r lllMdy " ' an-nt cond, _New Com Mesa :,.J&. 7i65 _... ., , "l!w 1 "'• ~· l'M'I v• ~lck· oull t1111 1r11r.r .,,,. 4 wtl('('I drive, wqon. ISMR· paint. !\lutt seU. ~ or OMC 11111 1111 • _, VP w/.tllM P 5 PI ~ 0 02•l F~r 490• dlr Will •·"-''' m t! ~ •~• 11111K i.nt , VI w1111 '"' tioa. g~~· w.O: 1111 1>tlu wra s.... · ,._ o er. -u•............,. tt.o '"'""'a.-"""· df!lfl9" -lj>ped. 11000 f!tll -n. trade or flnance prtvatf' I '68 VW Cemper Pop-top, CADILLAC ,,,., nun SAVE party, CaU ~. 494-6811. tent. xtru, Xln1 cqnd, $23!!0.1--------- $3995 $4995 $1000 '70 TOYOTA CORONA 61">41>1. '62 CAD. _, .. VUI• foll '63 VW Bu1--Sundial camper. JXMl'I'. $500. Even 1n1 : 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. Im· Cle&n. $2500. C.U 64444071..:.•""::...:":::1;.l _____ _ 850 H b Bl d maculate! (2J6 AQX J WW ,o.,-•~-=~'=~~==I '69 Coupe OttVille 2 ar Or V • 11:;;';; ... ;;•;;tn;;.:;d;;.•·:.,Cal!;=::-'::";;,·:..17:;•;:'-::: "·sco',.NVWD. BUS: GO MECH Full ~r. good cond. ''WtED ti & n-ap" .. cleen. i=....;"'.::3-226..:::=2-°'::_m..:.;:,;.5723=~ out the tn!asutt• A truh • ----*------'66 Coupe de Ville • full turn lnto cash lhru • Dally Dally Pilot \VAnl Ads Mn po11o·er. vinyl 1011. Mi:~t ~ll 546-6750 BRAND NEW ,._. T·l l'O Co11"•rtlbl1, f11ll pow1t. IORKJ54) $795 ' ' I 1'70 ROAD RUNNER ''7 YW IU• lXT~221 > :I 30 To Choose From 2 OOOlt HAR D· TO P', l tJ Vt, •u· t•m•tlc, t1nt•cf t l•••• r1 lly• In· ''"""''"' p1n1I, h••¥V cil utv tu1p111· •i111, h••"V cf11ty br1 H1, r•dlo, F70 $795 067 TllUMPH •Tl Cowp•. (YGN096) $1395 '14 CAD JllnWOOD 4 door, full power. IGAZ ~ J57) $249 •1 4 ,.;,n whit• f,u,r tir••· wlr, ''I MUSTANGS wh••' cowan. 1 '1 to Cho••• """· co111'••• (SRM2)NQf. ctll"trtibl•'-•111•., l $2695 1 srnr SAVE! SAVE! MARCUS MOT-ORS i COSTA MESA Pilot Claul!ll'd ad. Ml-5678 ~rplns p.lorf!. lmn1f'd . Pvt pty. &Tl-411M ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,. 2100 HARBOR, C.M. 645·0466 I • • • I • • '~· • • • . -• • H DAILY OILOT Twesdlt, AP!)I 13, 1971 iscounl . . \ OUR NAME MEANS OISCOUN'fS , EVERYDAY! '/NE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. . All PllCis m1mY1 WED. TlllU !UIS. Al'llt. 14-20, 1971 , .. . . ~ 4STAll ~···lltlSCOUNTS . USDA CHOICE FAD SELLS ONLY USDA CHOICE BEEF NOWI USE YGUR MASTER CHARGE . USDA CHOICE ARE EXTRA DISCOUNTS MADE 1 , POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL PURCHASES FROM TttE ~UFACTURER WITH "THE SAVINGS PASSED ON TO YOUI ,_1....,.1 PURCHASEFREEZERBEEF ~ • ORBANKAMERICARDTO • GUARANl'EEDTENDERANDFULL ~ OFFLAVOR,CUTANDWRAPPED .J FREEi ••• PORK FRESHRIOZEN ~~MSIZE . , MAYER SPARERIBS CHUCK STEAK RRST-OJT STANDING ~ RIB ROAST WGEEYE GROUND BEEF:.:~ CORNISH ~:~~:ZEN ~GAMEHENS BONELESS EXTRA~ CHUCK ROAST ; ~:VRINGFIELD SPRINGFIELD : ·CORN ~:=n ~~~:TOMATOES ' ';;!o23cRES 1 ac ~~~Er:r~RES 27c '-""""" CHARGE 3 lc COKE :.·:: I PACK NO RETURN 160Z. 129 SOME STORES CHARGE 1.~9 ·~--------' ------- ' • not11ouH111A11.t ... afotPM.SAf.&SUl.10AMT07PM COACHELLA~ VALLEY .~ c GRAPEFRUIT LOCAL GROWN STRAWBERRIES FRESH GREEN ASPARAGUS RADISHES&= BANANAS CELERY UHUTILIS I 9t. ARTICHOKES 1 tc .. RUSSETS lO~~LO-39c PINEAPPLES 4tc .. AVOCADOS 4;s1oo PAPAYAS 3tc ... VAllITT TOMATO & BRL GREENS ===c:::::10~ PEPPER PLANTS 3tc ... SOME FAD STOIES OIKCMllJ CMAIGt l'llCI @ fiauEY BnF smvu• st= @ CAMmLLS0 SOuP 3f• 36c ® i'OY'AiiTis'silE'Ct.'W 24c @ i"imE1 DOG FOOD-· 25c @ o'NioNACSOUP ~· 34c ®5uiisiiiNEWAm}f:'43c @ 5PA6ilml"Mii is· 20c @ tu°Ncil°MEATS" 43'' 35c ® O'RAi.GE".iuiCE ' 85' 7'1 REGUl.AfOftSWEnMnk•IOZ. TUBE PIWBURY BISCUITS J-f • 9c 70Z.CAN REDDl·WIP TOPPING &(' 58c ® ' """' .... STORES --CIWIGI NICI @ WiE"Nis ... ~ J6• Ste @ Cii0ii'Nii 00Nt0Ns JJ• 21• AltlMDDC1•SAUSM.if/P6'fGCNI JR. PIZZA j!• 64c ~ DOWN'tflAK!•50LPKG. WAFFLES Jf• 14c ~ FAO SPt.ITT0 Pe1-1f2 Ll.lOAF WHITE BREAD ~ 3$c ~ si! lf-MD • I fNCH PfE -, Lemon Meringue J5'• 7 5c @ POLl's°HHMOVER ;(• 2CJC ® iWiCiA'sNIC'i'OL J-d 9ac @ WcKCREME 10 L : RINSE J!' 6CJC ASSORTtOCOl.°'5& SIZES ORLON WOMEN'S BOOTIES 2/100 """"'° IRONWEVE ''TUBE" SOCKS 6CJC GE HAIR SITTER ·' s799 ' .. · 5 LB. BAG IT'S SMART TO SHOP AND SAVE AT ft\D SANTA ANA 2120SO. IRISTOI. AT WARNEI COSTA MIU 2200 HARIOR BL VD. AT WILSON LA !A~ 10 3.WAll<ER AT LA PALMA 1 • ' • •