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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-04-21 - Orange Coast Pilot7 Coast · Election · Jr inals: • ' ~ • -- • • • • • • •• • • • • -.. . r1nc1 a ea-s, • ~ • ~ Sniper Fires Fusillade • At School~s PE Class 'Cut Rate' Barber . ... - ,, • • • . . • .. ---' -· :') ............. ---- . . • • -1 ,o :·.·.m . . .. . . . WEDNESDAY. Al'TER!'o!OON,. APRIC-2 r r a.97 i VOL, '4. NO. ft. 4 SKTIONL N•PAeal Shop ~ ~· :Totc_h~ ·' .. •' , "' ...! t .'. NiXon Seis ·· (:oast Trip .April 30 ~President Nixon will arrlVe In Southel'JI Orange C.ounty April 30 for a gala tfeeting of a returning Marine division at C.mp Pendleton and several days cf mt and work, it was Iearied by tbt 'DAILY PILOT today. 1he President, who paid hi$1ast vb.It to lbe South Coast earlier Utis month, was reportedly planning a stay lasting perhaps a week, reliable sOUr'ttl Jn. dlcated. Mr. Nixon's aides reported earlier thl1 weew that a trip west had been ain- ait\ered, but did not give time! or the ex· pected duration of the stay at La Cua Pacifica. .fanfare has been !emphasized, how· ever, over the arrivat of the 1st Marine DiYision from Vielnam, a troop move- ment expected to begin this weekend u the first Leathernecks report for pro- ceaing at Camp P~ton. . ,,_ :"if1te President's aides bave•hlnted1hat Ntion's fonnal greeting of the Matinu ai' the ba!e would be a public occasion. Nsociated Press dispatches mentioned I.he chance of conferences with govemon during the President's stay in San Clemente. The w\re 1ervlce specaulated that the trip would take the P~sident out of tbe nation's c1pital during 1 period when ptrticularly h e a t e d demonstraUons against the Vlel.nam was we r e being planned. • School Shooting Jails Youth, 13 Flying bullets brought a premature end Tuesday to a La Paln!a junior blih school's athletic program end resulted ~ the booking of a 13-yW'-Olcl boy on ~~ clqn or attempted murder. Offictn ldentl!ied the youngster u the gqiper who fired a ~id of shot.I at • group of girls runnmg on the track at Walker Junk>r High $cho01. One co~ petitor, Darla McKee1 11' wu struck m the tll!gh by • alug. tfhe missile wu remcned • t Westminster Community Hot1pila1 and tM girl 'tffllt home ~Ith her , pareob. HOISpilll offld1lt deteribed the injury ·u •O&wounc!. , om-aald the boy's backyard abuts the 1Cboot playground and he ~ f•e on Ille track peliormetl from ~ a fence. Mang~rs,: ~g~n Beach Winners • , j By RUDI ·l'ilEDZIWU Of .... DMJW' Hit SMff Dennlt H. Mangers, an elementary sdioot princ\J>al, and·Georgt Logan, an attorney, ou~lled '15 other c111dldatee: to become the new trustees of the }hln- tington Be&q: Union High School District. :Olficia1niulta compiled by tbe Orange County Registrar of Voters show the -fOllawinc returns for the top three run- ners : !Dennis H. Maqert:, t,722 Geor1e Loan 3,536 Eclnumcl C. P. Sheehan 3,38' Mangers wu also elected LG fill tbe Court Upholds Abortion Law In Challenge WASIUNGTON CUP!), -The Supreme Coort in the fint of an expected series <>f rullnp on abortioo laws upheld tOOay • '10-yur-old Distcict of Columbia statute which ha_d been challenged 11 too vague. The language in que11.ioo is similar to that in 1 number of other, stat.es. The court carefully atfpulated that today's ruUng dealt only wil;h the issue of whether the law was unconstitutionally vaeue. Tht challepged language aay1 that an abortion ii legally penntNible only if "neceuary for the preservalkm of the mO,tber'• lilt or bealtb," The vote on upholding the language was I -to 2. ~ court divide4, 5 to 4, on whether lt 1hould have assumed direct jurisdiclion, of the case. The reuon for confinina: the ruling within na~w bouodl w.-1 that Federal Judge Geriltrcl A. a ... u ·relied on the .. ......, ratlooale when diamla!lng the lncllctmel11 of Dr. Mt1111 Vultch, a Yugoslav lmriligrant who his been cruaadlnr for more litier1I abortiOn' pollci ... Olalltnges of abortloo 1lltulel In several stat.et are on the court'• docket The majority opinion by Ju1Uce Hugo L. Bbck, reversed ' Ge1tll '1 'l'Ulin& that the law ••• too vague. Black ulcl VU!tch'1 attorney had 11118· gested otl\er reason1 whf G•U'1 actlOn •bould be aff'irmecl -!pr t111tance, thlt the law was an invuim of privacy. But Black llid while there were some referencu to 1udl claims ln Gesell'• opi- nlon, the SUpreme c.ourt vN!wed It 11 !Ilea AJIORTIOH, Pip II UI\erplred term of former . truslff J,..ph Rlbal, tlie cootrovmlal college pn>f""'1' who I06t bJs~siat' last December for eJ:· ceecllng the leave of absence time allow- ed school trustees under Calliornla law. Wbtn last beard from, RlbaJ was in Scan· dinavla doing research on sei: education. Manager, who serves u prhlcipal for the James 0. Harper Elementary School in Fountain Valley, atsoldeleated Logan in that race. The margin was 3,152 to 2,408. Sheehan'Was again third with 1,082. Managers cou1d take hiA: seat at next Tuesday night 's board meeting if the election results are certified by that lime. He will fill Dr. Rlbal's unexpired term through July 1 and then remain seated for a four-year term. Logan ls scheduled to be seated in July, Edmund Sheehan, a CaWornia. peace officer who won the endorsement ol high school board President M at t he w Weyuker, nipped closely at Logan'• heels on both ballots, but was unable to muster enough votea to overtake the lawyer. Logan; wbo is also a trustee on the ~n View (Elementary) School Dislricl board, outpolled ·Sheehan in four of the five elementary districts that make up tt1e high ICbool district 1 n c l u d J D g Sheehan'• bomeground of Westminster. Similarly, Logan was trounced by Mangers i11 every district except Seal Beacb. U>gan won there by 102 votes. Total votes in the 4-year term contest dropped off rather lh.lll"ply past Sheehan. Other candidates and thelr vote totals in- ctµded : Robert E. Dingwall , 2,5t8; Robert M. Gordon, 1.467: Peter Horton , ·1,187 ; Catherine A. Mooring, 942; Joseph A. M.imlhl, 941; John B. Hamilton. 142; Jon K. Lawson a.ti; Bartletta Suter, 804 ; JlorotllY Bray, 721; Donald A. Jones, 63'1; Josepb E. JUba1, C>: Harry E. Hicks, 5911; Edward Gauthltr, 325; Howard M. Warner 290. Manger'• · ·campai(P was based on brinailli '"'°" to the high school district board which bas a history of bitter afiUmenlt bet,.een individual board memben. He also endorsed the district'• propoeed 69-cent tax override wblch aoe• to voters this June. Losan ctalme4 th• •upport of lite.Com· mlttee To , Deteat Joseph Ribal, an organli.aUon dedicated to preventing the veteran, but controversial trustee. from taktng another 4-year term. Rlbll who conducted his c1mpaign ln absent11, polled only enough votea for 1 14th placa amon1 17 cancllclales. • ., DAILY Pllff std ,..,., GETS NEW TERM Incumbent Frahklln ' ... . DAILY· r1LOTl11ta!f1ft11N uN:OPPOSED. lN. Bio Allorney Smallwood Newport .. Mesa. ~rs Return Two k> Seats By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ~ 01ltr rlllt S11ff Newport-Mesa Unified School District v.oter1 . returned twp incumbents to lbe board of educalioo Tue.!day. They alBo elected one new board member wbo ran unopposed. Board President Selim S. "Bud" Frariklin, a Coata Mesa attorney, wu returned for a seconQ term on the Newport-Mesa board, receiving 3,19.1 votes. His opponent., salesman Herb Stricker, got 956. Mirian C. BergetOll, 1 Newport Beach housewife, received 3,801 .\lotes compared with 935 for her opponent. busineS11man Donald T. -Bull. Attorn•Y Donald E. Smollwood,,O, of 1981 Komat Drive, Co!La Meaa. was uoopposed .for the tnlltee area Ooe 1e1t Newport-Mesa School Bond Sales Approved Sate of IU million In Newport·Meaa .Unified School Dbtrlct bond! was •P. proved Tuesday by the Board of supervisors. . United California Bank wa1 the low bidder of four at an interest rate of 4.872 percent. ' \ ' ' ' . vacated•hY"1:ioardtveteran-James .Plyton •. SmaUWood receJved 4',368 votes. Votel" turnout was light In' nearly all ' precincts; an ·esUmated 10 percent·of the di.!lrict'1 50,373 regi~ voten went to the polls. The.newly elected trustees wttt be oealecl Officially In July. ti .... , The campaign raised few tparks. The Incumbents ran on their records, ·The)' urged voters to continue them In office· to provide contln.ulty in d I 1 t r I c t ad- minlatraUon Jn view <l tbe re!lgnatloa of Superintendent William Curininghalh who l"IVU ·tbe cJistrlcl fn June.· . Franklin, 41, of 1928 Santa ·An• Ave .• Costa .Mesa, served two y_esra , on ·the Newport Harbor Union High School District board prior to-unlflc~tloo, and WU efecl<d lo the unified boarcJ four YWI 1(0, He npresenlt trustee ll'U-'llJ Which la made, up o~portlona ot ·both NeWport Belich and Coata Mesa betwtef\ the llack·, Qay and Newport Boulevard 1011thwut of 21st Street and Dover'DriV. toe Pacl!Jc , Coast Highway. · Mrs. Bergeson, '3, of 1721 Trt.dewlnds Lane, N<wport Beach, WU a. member of the Newport elementary board prior to unUication aJtd hu aerved ail: year, oo the unified board. Vall~y,~" . ~ned • . t Over· .. Price , . ' . ....... ..,.;,. Slim\Y·-~·be 1>oclc"'lrith us on ~ witlr allill!IY warmer lelbP,91atu:rul: Jn store.. LOOk for a 'ft f g W bf 13 degi'ees aloog the ooul and. up to n furtbo er .inllJld. -· INSmEToDAY .. . . ....... . • \ I I ' ' . . . .... ,., ... _,_~ ' ' . ....... ·--· .... . . . . . . ., .. .. . . .. . . ... ' ... -. .... ::~'. I DAILY PILOT s . -.. ". -. -Win C~llege Board Posts Incumben) Coo1t' Qommunltj C:Ollep Dllttld 'lril-Donala Cl: Holl, V/llliam Ketller one! Robtcj 4 · Humphreys won usy rte1ection 1n voting Tuesday. Final returns of an 96 precincts showed few~ ~ 2-1 percent of the district's 129,'81 ~Cb:tered votera. cut the.it balloll. • Hoff, tocumbeot roprestllllng mldenu of the Well!ninater Elemeotary dlstrict portion ol the collqe dlalrlct, roce lved U,112 vota. 1111 -~ 1tudenl a.riel °'~°"· Col ,, ... Ketuer, 1llcwnhein rtpresOllllliJI th!! HuntJnston Beach and Foonlalii Valley • • elementary district portions of the col· lege_ district, garnered 10,998 votes, ~ pared with 1,&f.f.'for Barbara Bell and 2,5.!9 for Mn. Enriqueta Ramos. J Oillll.Y ,ILCT P ... M k P",_,kl k,.._.hl Humphreys, incumbent representing residents of Costa Mesi, was r~tumed for a third term. He r~lved 10,900 votes compared with 2,tn for Richard OUver, a •Y•~ms analyst from Coat.a Mua. and 1,627 lor student William Unaer. The campalp wu 1oraJJ1 e<>n· aidered JaCkluster. The incumbent.. ran on their rtt0rds and experience on the board. A DEER ON DARK LAGUNA CANYON ROAD APPARENTLY CAUSED THIS CRASH It Injured Four And Took Offlcl1f1 Appro ximetely 25 Minutes To FrH One Victim Holl, &I, ol 11141 Harper Sl., MldwlJ City, bu HrVld 11 years on the college boinl' lnclud.!Ilg three terma u Its prui· denL Ila Is 1 quality usw-ance llp<lclalbt for·U.-ap1ce dlvialon of North American -U C<xpor1Uon. Kelllu, 41, of 121 Seventh St., Hun-UJllloo Belcb, Is I oaUVe of HunUnpon Beach who wu appointed to tbd college bolrd 'In ll!S. He II ro1tona1 1upervlaor for ISI Salm Corpor1tlon; and lJfe llllW'....,. Company of Callfornl1, Humplirey1, .fl, ls an attorney prac- ticing at 1500 Adanu St., Costa Mesa, and Is mlstant city 1ttorney for Cotta. Mesa. He is a staunch advocate of an open door policy for public colleges due In part to his own success following graduation from Orange Coast College and Cal State Long Beach. Two trusteeJ of the five on the Coast Collqe.boanl were not on the ballot this ye~. . 11iey are: -Art.a one, the Seat Beach and Ocean View Elementary Districts. Worth Keane of Seal Beach, holds this seat. -Atta five, the eity of Ne~rt Beach. Board Pmlilent Georre Rodda Jr. al °"""'I del MJr repreHn!a,tbb ~ The lncumbenb wbo 'were rt.elected Tuesday fonnally begin their new tenns of offJce on JuJy 1. . " ' - Car Smashes Into Deer; Four Injured in Laguna Four persons were tdjured Tuesday Niht, one of them seriowly, in a high speed, be1d-0n collision on Laiuna Can· yon Road after which firemen had tQ pry one of the victims loose from her twisted automobile. The cruft was apparently caused by a deer. 'Ibe trapped woman, Diane Peck, 21, of Hawaii. is in serious condition today at South Coast Community Hospital with ex- tensive head and facial Injuries. A passenger in her auto, William t.1ori, 20, of New York suffered possible Internal injuries and is listed in satisfactory con· dltion. It took about 25 minutes to free tile! Peck woman . The driver of the second car, M1rgie Lighthall, 19, of Santa Ana, received a bi:oken leg and broken jaw in .lhe IO p.m. accident and is listed in satisfactory con- , dition. at the hospJJ,aL Her passenger, Clifford Hanson, 19, of Tustin, was releued from the hospital after beln& treated for several cull and brulse.s. I Police said the mishap occurred on Laguna Canyon Road about one mile east of its intersection with El Toro Road. Investigators said the Peck vehicle was west boWld and may have swerved lnto the path of the oncoming Lighthall auto in order to avoid strUting a deer. The automobiles colli ded on the left fenders and were both spun around from the impact, officers said. The Laguna Beach Fire Department had to be cal!ed to fr ee the Peck woman from her auto . Several past accidents on Laguna Can- yon Road have been attributed by police to drivers swerving to miss deer crossing the winding road. Many such mishaps OC· cur during the dry season or the year when the ani mals venture into the lower elevations of the canyon in search of food. Voss, Hix Post Landslide Huntington Vote Puts l'ncumbents Back in Office Fountain;V alleyTriumphs Fnd W. Vosa and Mary C. HiJ, two candidates who aupPorted the Fountain Valley School District's pbiloeophy of in- novative education, were elected trust.ea by landsllde ml<'glna Tue>day. The fin.a.I vote count wu: Fred W. Yott: t,4" Mary C. Hll: 1,1,1 1 Paul A. Haard, Jr.: 141 t Richard F. PIWll: 4tl 1 Donald Hulett: Pl Vou and Mn. Hix ran strong cam· palgna: In support of distrlcl polidet, while the other three candidates called '°r' an end to federa l programs and "ex· perlmenll." OUM.I COAST DAILY PILOT N..,_._ ,.. __ c....M...' .............. --.. C'1 •• OltAMGI COAST PUIL15"1HO COMINft l.Mrt H. w.~ "·~ ............. J •• k •• c.,,.,., . VQ Pn9.._ Miii ._.. ,..,..... lli•111•• 1<,,.,a ..... lilel'!ll' A.. Mtr,lll11t IMMl"W M llw Clltrlet H. l••• lic\et4 P, Nin Al•l'Mlf MIMtilll ••IWI --°"" Mtu! -W..t ..,. 11\'Wt *"-""' ... tfll .I* ........,. ...,...,NI • '"--1..-i • .._, ,.,_ ~ ltldll! 11ltl ..,. ......,.,. a. C""'*'N; .... Nlf1' II c.t111n Alll • VOS!ii, 1 aenlor management represen- taUve, is a liberal who had the support of many civic leaders and city councllmen in Fountain Valley. Hls motto in the cam· paip wu, "We hive done a good job, but we can always do better." Mn:. Hix, 1 housewife, has been active in ldtoal service and rose to fame last 1e'lt u he1d of the Citizens Against Airpark Plans 1t Mlle Square, which eventually pressured county authorltiet lo rt1le out the Marine helicopter base as a potential airport. Neither incumbent, Dale Stuard or f\1rs. Francis James, sought re-election Tuesday. The most signifiC'ant outcome of the election was the strong support for Foun· tain 'Valley's aggressive, innovative style of education, as voters overwhelmingly favored the candidates who said they \lt'ould continue it. Some parent groups in the district had claimed that most partnts we.re fed-up with ne"'· progralTUI and wanted lo cut back on federal and state projects. But candidates "'·ho took that stantl were swamped. The new trusttu wlll be sworn in at the board 'i July 1 meeting. From Pagf? 1 ABORTION. • • holding simply thal th!! statute was void for vagueness. Joining Black were Chie( Justice War· ren E. Burger and Justices John M. Harlan, Byron R. White and Harry A. Blactmun . Black pointed out In his lllicussion of the vaguene53 issue tha t the District of Columbia statute -'naded In 1901 -did not outlaw all abortions , only thoee not performed under the dlrection of a com- petent. llctnsed physician, and those not llettssary to pretene the motber'1 llfe or health. • Gtgell held tha\ the law placed on 1 defendant doctor the burden of provlna: that he made tlJe rlgh! medl<:•I Juda· ment. • Bl•ck look -he oppo!iltt vlt"'·· He uld the law placed the burden on the pro- secution to "plead and prove th1t an 1borUon was not 'necess•ry for t h e pruerv11tlon of the mother's Life or health'." Voters in the Huntington Beach City f elementary) School District returned both lnc\lmbent trustees Louis A. Daharb and Orville R. Han.son to office Tuesday. Final results of the election are: Lou.11 A. D1Barb: 1,256 Orville R. Hanson: 1.082 H1rcld K. Bed.er : 908 RaJpll G. MarcareW : ~ 769 ~•mu K. ,G11b: 402 O,nald A. Jones: 344 OaHarb, a pilot for United Airlines, aljo 'Won election to the board just sl.J: months ago in a special election. He ran therf and .this Ume on a platrorm calling for CMntes in the. district and expansion of e,ctucaUonal programs wtth federal and state money. Hanson, an employe relations officer wit~ Signal Oii and. Gas Company. is a veteran board member. He was elected to his first trustee term in J~e of 1967. No clear indication of whit voters want done with the district was given by Tuesday's results. DaHarb is a leading proponent for change in district policies and came out the strong man with lhe hesvlest support, but Hanson ~presents the traditional conse rvative element on the board -which essentially mainta ins a 4 to 1 majoRty. 11e also scored high on the ballot. .The neare!l challenger, Becker, was a strong exponent for change, and at one candidate meeting berated Hanson for an ••apathetic attitude as a board member.'' Hall9on '1 campaign wu based primari· ly oo "fiscal responsibllily" in the district. Both winners will be swom In for their new terms of office at the district board meeting JuJy 8, Ruth L. Calkins, Patterson Win In Seal Beach , Veteran Seal Beach school board memben Ruth L. CalkJns and Lloyd Pat- ter90n were returned to the ir seat1 In Tuesday's trustee election. Challenger Geraldine A. West, a Seal Buch bomewife, took third place. 11le rt&Ult!: Roll> L Calklnl l,557 Uoyd J. Pattmon 1,510 Geraldlne A. West 734 Mn. C1lklns has been on the dis trict's board of trustee5 for more then 15 years. Patter5on. manager or an Industrial chemicals plant, bas served on the bo1rd for five years. There are two c1mpuses ln the district with a total enrollment of 1,157 students . R. A. Zinngrahe, Ralph Bauer Win In Ocean Vie'v lncumbenls Ralph ll Bauer and Robert J. Zinngrabc were both returned to their seats on lhe Ocean View School District Board of Trustees Tuesday. Only three candidates came forward to contest the two vacancies. Their vote totals: llalpb H. Bauer 2.447 Robert J. Zinngrabe 2,041 Vaughn Edewards l ,172 Edewards , a management consullanl fronl Huntington Beach, conducted a quiet ca mpaign. lie said he came forward as a candidate to give the voters a choice. Zlnngrabe, a hospital administrator, end Bauer. a chemist, both ran on the basis or the district's accomplishments during their past terms in office. With 23 schools, the Ocean View district Is the largest of the five elemen- tary school distric ts with the Huntington Beach Union High School district. It i~ eludes portions of Huntington Beach, \Vestminsler and Fountain Va Ile y. Roughly 10 percent of Ocean View's 21 ,483 registered voters cast ballots in the election. Queen Turns 45 LONDON (UPJ ) -Queen Elizabeth turned 45 today. quietly observing the oc- casion with her family amidst prepara· tions for a nine-day Canadian visit scheduled to start May 3. GEM TALK TODAY by I J. C. HUMPHllD THE COLORFUL WORLD OF PEARLS Jf ighly pr l zed in the world of gems, pearls are chic, smart, and treasured partiaularly b e c a u s e they so beautifully enhance a wo- man's ensemble no matter what the occasion. T h e y compliment clothing for every affair. Crom a simple sweater to the most glam- orous evening go w n. and do1.. so with a quiet dignity all their ov>n. \Ve usually associate white with the pearl. and many do not know Lhat pearls C:ctme in a variety or ~lowing C'Olors which depend Upon the I o c a I l t y in which they are found . Ftom the Persian Gulf c o me pearls with a creamy sbeeen, and from Australia we receive pearls with a beautiful yellow cast. Much closer to borne, from the Gulls of California and ~·lexico. come the 1i&re a n d exceedingly expensive Black pearls, whose rich melallic appearance make them more valu- able than any others. \Ve carry a v a r i e t y qf these gems, and wlll gladly as$lst you in yours el ectio n o[ pearls to match both your taste and your budget. Come In soon. We're open d11tly from 9:30 to 5:30, Fridays 'lil 8:30. . . .. -- 'ICBM Threat' Laird Tells-New ~uss,ia;n Bui~dup NEW YORK (UPI) -De!enf e Secretary Melvin R. Lllt<f Hid today the Soviet Union had started butlding a new, extensive ICBM system which "must be of major concern" to the United States. In view of this, he said, the United Stales might be forced to take "ad- ditimal off.et~& actions" if t h e Strategic Arms Limitations Ta I ks (SALT) in Vttnna fall to produce an agreement. . la a prepared speech to the 8Sth Annual C.OnventJoo of the Amtrlc.an Newspapers Publishers A.uoclaUoo (ANPA). Laird recalled that one y~ a.to be \old another meeUnc of~~ tbail ~ feared the Uni ted St.ates ml&tlt find 1tself in a se- cond rate strategic position by the mid· 1970s. •· 1 regret to report today that nothing has happened l.D the lnteryening 12 months to lessen that concern," he said. •·Quite the opposite is true." Laird sa id that in December and Janua ry it appeared the Soviet Union was slowing ils rapid deployme.ot of lntercon· tinental Ballistic Miallles (ICBMs) alter installing about 400 more than the 1,0M land based ICBMs that the United St.ates has. He a d d e d that In Febru•ry a n d Marc h, a new type of missile silo had been detected in Russia that raised fears of a new ICBM program. "More recen\ eftdence confimui the - sobering fact that the1Sov1et Union is is- volved in a new -and apparently ex· tensive -ICBM ~tructioo program," Incumbent Oegg Wins f>o st Again In Westminster Incumbent Ada Clegg and newcomer Roderick Cruse won seats on the Westminster School District Board of Educallon Tuesday. The final election results Y.'ere. Ada E. c•eu: 1,282 Roderick B. Cruse : J,150 Frank N. Ea1twood: 1,077 0e.,.·ey LeRoy WUes: 943 Josepb A. Mizrahi: 538 Cruse ousted incumbent Eastwood by a narrow margin. Eastwood has served on the Westminster board since 1949. Mrs. Clegg has been on the board 16 years and was re-elected for her fifth term as trustee. • , _, Rabbi Kahane Jailed Jn Scuffle at U.N. NEW YORK (UPI) -Rabbi Meir Kahane, head or the J~wish Defense League, and eight other per60ns were ar- rested Tuesday night after a scuffle br oke out at a demonstration outside the Iraqi f\.1lssion to the United Nations. Police said Kahane would be charged \\'ith riot in the second degree, a misde. meanor, and given a summons. Jet ~ Laird •aid. "This new ICBM cOOllructson ellori cOuj>led wtth addition.al momentum ht the strategic defensive area -all clearly planned months ago -rnust be of major concern.'' Laird said the Russians allO were '·rapidly clOlln& the aap'' in tubawine ba9ed miasilu, an aru wbert today the United SLatu bis h1d a clear advantage. ··we -ly hope for eoo111ne1oC,,..,. gress ln SALT," Laird aaid. "But falllnC such progress I must tell you today that I.he renewed Soviet ltrate&lc weapoo1 momentµm.1 .may ccllfronL ut •1th the rdd for ~onal ,.,rrsetl!Di u.s. ..,_ tions." ~ . Laird said he believed \he American public might settle for nuclear parity with Russia. ''But under no circum- stances.. in my view, v.·ould the American people be willing to settle for inlerlorty," he declared. Capo ·'V q~rs Oust 3 of 4 Incumbents. In the caPistrano UnJfted ~hool District election, incumbent. were ousted from three oul of four trustee &re.as. On1y mtumbent to re&:aln h1a seat in the district wu ' veterinarian Dr. Robert Beaslef, who ran unopposed in trwitee area 2. Jn tru!lee area 1,, Donald E. Inlay, defeated incumbent Harcourt 8 u 11 • GordOP L. Peterson -,on over inalmbent Sta:oley C. Kelley in rtrustee area 3 and G<orj!• L. White defeated in<umbent Nolle Famularo In trustee· area 5. ln area 4, Robert Dahlberg defeated five other candidates for the two-year unUptred tenn or Tmn ' Wtnget, wbo resigned. lnlay, 31-year-old pastor o( S t , Andn?w 's 1t1ethodl1t Church. received 311 votes in area I, to defeat Bull who won 275. Runnersup in 1rea 1 were William R. Enquist with 169 votes and Rice D. Oliver with 58. Beasley, running unopposed, logged 581 \'Oles. Peterson. 34-year-<>ld attorney. took the area 3 trusteeship wlth 681 votes, com- pared with incUmbent Kdley.'s 328. Rlln- tter-up Campbell had 105 vote.. Area 5 winner WlUte, a 47-year-old retired businessman who became a paraplegic while serving in the Navy in World War ti, logged 614 votes to defeat Nofie Famularo "fltb 201 and Raymond Lee Estrada with 52. Dahlberg, 48, former superintendent ol the Tus tin High School District, was an easy winner of the two-year term in area 4 with 157 votea. Other candJdates for the short term y.·ere Keith L. Jensen with 4 votes; Al fonso F. Jiminez, 29 ; Marvln W. Renfro, 29 ; John P. Setences, It and Orlando S. Tosdal, 11. I I ahead one hour O OM E.GA .• t' .......... In th• momtn11 It l•ke1 you lo •divst}'(flJl·wal~h to baYttldli S1vlng1 Tim•. a1k yourt•ll : Is it lecur1M1Mtyll1ht ... • D1pend1bl1? 11 c1n ba all thtse ... rd 'inor1.,, .1111'1 '" Om1g1. l lka 1hl1 Om•o• Cons\tUalion ctlrOnom111r. ,t.ecural•? Om•o• Chronometers cefrya.,..1.t ObMtv1I01Y e1r1lllc1ta for accuracy awffded onl)'.aftt~ a 15-<S•)' Hrltt f ol gru•llng l1boratory ta1t1. Styllsh?\~a~lht h1nd1C11"1tlf <:r•ltld 1\alnla11 1te11 c•1a,and tll9 ruggf-d bocd look• ot th• matching br1c1111. Dtp1nd1bla? ti'• an 01J1•01, lsni n? Slop In 1od1:t 1nd lit us shew you '11ill, 1t1d others In ovr ' wide 111actlron cl OrMgl w1tches, lr91'J MS to ovtr $1000. !}. C. .JJ.umphrieJ !}eweferJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., .G.OSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IA.NICAMERtCAll.D-MASTER CHAll:6E • 24 jM•s IN SA.Ml LocAncN .~· 141-1401 I I 'I I ' 17 ' Bontingtqn B~aeh Fountain ~Va~ey • fDITION VOL 6<1, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ·CALIFORNIA . ' . :• .• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12r,:197f ' . . ... • .. • T~y;~:n.aiaJ ' ._ 1 ' • :tW.i:; S~b ~ "· •• TEN CENTS ,.,_ .• ' la, " Valley Sailor Describes 5!'day Ord,eal 'it Sea ' . 'l • B~ ALAN DlllKIN Of h Delff' l'llel Stitt A Fountaln Valley gultir player turned aa1lor today described hi!' ordeal at sea in which be liy ill for six days in a small llo1it buffeted by a storm~ "It was like. being in a ketUe drwn pl a fed · by a five-year-old, 0 ' ·Marion Harvey Brlnson, 26, said shortly berore Jeaving Scripps Memorial Hospita1, La Jolla, this morning. •iJt was a heavy experience. I mean, we were in 30-£oot wavea: and tbey were breaking all over us.,. ~ Briqson was in a 26-foot aloop - a former Navy whaleboat ...::. owned · ind skippered by his friend , ,20:-year-<i1d Jeff Feldman of Huntington Hatbour. · The ..pair spent ' •ix Qlontlls \\<lolPPlni tt1e boat for an is-month Cruise in the Pacific and then set sail from San Diego Yacht Cub, April 14. They headed for Cabo San Llicas a't the Up of Baja California on the first leg off a 50-day trip •• • .r1nc1 a to the French Marquesas In the far reaches of the Pacific. The boa~ G~J, ooon ran Into foul weather . and BrJnson, -who admit.I to . always having been prone to seulckneN, was prompUy laid up. . With Brinson sick in the cabin, Feldman batU~ the storm singlehand- edly. - "I was ballast and ~ was doing the .whole trip," Brinsao ·laid, cndlting Feldman'• akil1 and strength with aavln& ' Costs ToW- To · Expand V alleJi Hall By TERRY COVIl.LE Of mt EMlllJ Plltt lt1H It will cost '635,444 to expand Fountain Valley'• city hall, ,POlice headquarter• and corp;:>ration yard, architect William BluroCk lold'tlle~ Count:ll Tueo&· ' ... ~·l!il! ~ . ,flniah.ol:. llio end ol'.ilill -· . . "." . • ,C't" Tlie'Ni'RJOrt lleleh llrdiltect ltVtlW . . -Ulll estlmalj!s flld ~ oMlll 'JllOo the ~; "H1c worked for nve·or .Iii cioy., balllni .. out ·ud« mannlq tl!e ' wtio<J wllboUt: ?UL"· . . . . Alw, the . ~!DI• died dow1l Monday m9~g.~tbe men; then about• mlli;s south • of San Di~IO O'fl' O.~ Island, sent out a· ~stress call and they wore 'loon Jocate4 by a Cout Guard bellcopw. 'J¥8day morning Brinson WIS hoisted aboara tlie7 helicopter and fl9wn to boepilal and a cutter look !be GaJadrlel In tow. Tbe cutter . re liito more ~ weattier today and·1t waa not exptc~ to return wltl! Feldmli> >nd· the Galadriel unW Thur.day. • . ' Brinson, who lives at·8912 Mmtln Ave., Foul\taln Valley, w88 Ul)lble to bold down food or watei once they put to sea - although there were provisions. oo board for 11 months of sailing. · "Nothing passed Diy ruby, retf lips for six days," he Utd_'rueftt)JY,. 1ft~r •belng taken lo Scrlppa Ho!plial In an "ex· ~~'-aonditlon. ~ ... ~ be ... aMloua to .... blrll; .. ,-. .,.., ..... gain, tho,..... m~ --i._!llOllld probably. p bact.1o.~71nc his guitar In beer ban. "I ·wu ltat'!!d; by, , the !<I. and f1'Jnd llckiJJI In~ a:reaa:~" ,wp hil>reply. J!;riMon nid that the first two days of the storm were 'not so bad for Feldman. wboM home la aMW/2 Edgpwaler Lane, Huntlnlton Harbour, ~uae Iha boat .(See WLOll; Pip I) .. . . -' . Mangers~ . . ' \ Log{Ul · W!t;i. ' ., ·-. . .. . . Beach ·Vote ,. a;.·iw.m:~u . ' °' ... o.tlfr' P.Mlt Stnt1 -n;nnj1 11~ _·M~en: aii elementary acboOI )iriilCipal, and George Logan, an alto~. outpolled IS other candidates to ~~Iha J!!'I\'; ~ of' the 4111n-lln&tol!~;Unloli Hlab Sclll>OI Dlotilot. ~~-1 . Jn~ Jw~Orange ·. VoterJ>-llbqw' the ,.,..'"'_._ . . ' ' W!Hs IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY· Hous9wJfe Hix f FOUNTAIN VALLi'f: WINNER Aerospace Execvtl!• Vou ·ll'l'l'!1 • .-IJ'~·:~f Valloy ~ · .w~Priartou..·• ""~···-. . II_..,..• i 1·1 ~·p1ano Clil for construction of a new city cruocll chamber wtth fixed seating, doubling bl Ille police faclllty aize ind construcUon of an 100\lStrlal style warehouse and garage for ctiy eqillpment, Laird Cites Russ ICBM .• a;.~,,. .. ;..,, ' t,1= ~pa . . ~ -... J,5.18 ':..C. ~· ...... ~: •. ~ , 3,384 ..... ' :-~~Ille 1' 'tl1iati6 Joseph -' ' -P·C.Utie prof..,.. . • liltPDecember for ei:· ~ -.lliV of·1bsence time allow· o( llCli6il ~ Ill\~ Caillornla Jaw. .flil.!t:llli MoJil·lioni, Rlbal was In Scan-d}nl:i~, dolN: mearcb on 1e1 eduCation. Voss, HiX Post Landslide ~ ·of the "City bill expansion alone la .,tlmaled if ~.eaa. wblch includes ad· cJini . ofllce . .pa;,. .oo to tl!e eurranl bUildlng0 and -.ctlng a separate council Chamber and council offlcti In Fountain Valley.Triumphs Fred W. Voss and Mart C. Hix, two candidates who supported; the Fountain Valley School District'• ~oSophy of in· novative education, were elected trustees by landslide margins Tuesday. The final vote count was: Fred W. 'Voss: 1,164 Mary C. Hh' 1,141 Paul A. Huard, Jr,: &19 Ric~ard F. Plum: · U3 DonaJd Hulett: Z33 v oss and Mrs. Hix ran strong cam- paigns in eupport of district policies,. College District Incumbents Win Easy Re-election "tncumbe.nt Coast Community College District trustees Donald G. Hoff, William Kettler and Robert L. Humphreys won usy reelection in voting Tuesday. · • Final returns of all 96 precincts showed fewer than 20 percent of the district's 129,469 registered voters cast their ballols. Hoff, incumbent representing residents of the Westminster Elementary district portion of the college: district, received 12,162 votes. His oPJ>Onent, 1 tu dent Charles Dagion, got 3,281. Kettler, incumbent represenUng the Huntington Beach' and Fountain Valley elementary district portions of the col- lege district. garnered 10,998 votes. com- pared with · 11844 for Barbara Bell and 2,539 !or Mrs. Enriqlleta Ramos. Humphreys, incbmbent representing residents of Costa Mesa, was returned for a third tenn. He received l0,900 votes. compared with i.m for Richard Oliver, a aystems analyst from CO$ Mesa1 and li827 tor rt11dent William Un_ger. 1'1le campaign was generally coo- aldered lackluster. "l'he incumbents ran on their records and experience on the t,,oard. Hoff. 5.3. of 1484! Harper St., Mldway City, has served 15 years OD I.be college boa.rd including three terms as its presi· den t. He Is a quality assur~ specialist for the space division of North American Rockwell CorporaUon. 1 Ketuer, 49, of 823 Seventh SL, Hun- tington Beach, Is a native or Huntington (See COAST, Pap I) <I • while the other three candidates calle{:I for an e@'lo ijderal programs and '"e):-'· perim~.'~ - Voss, ;a,.senidr management repre&en· tative, is a liberal who had the support ot many civic leaders and clty councilmen In Fountain Valley, His motto in the cam- paign was, "We have done a good job, but we can always do better." Mrs. Hix, a housewife, has been active ·In school RrVtce and lose to fame last year as head of the Citizem: Against Airpark Plans at Mile Square, which eventually pres.sured county authorities to rule out the Marine helicopter base as a potential airport. Neither incumbent, Dale Stuard or Mrs. Francis James, sought rHleetion Tuesday. The most. significant outcome of the e~ection was the strong support for Foun- tain Valley's aggressive, innovative 1tyle of education, as voters 'Overwhelmingly favored the caf'ldidates who uid they would cOOtinue it. Some parent groups in the district had claimed that most parents were fed-up with new programs· and · wanted to cut back on federal 'and state projects. But candidates who took that stand were swamped. The new trustees will 'be sworn ln at the board's1 July 1 lneeting. -~ The propo1ed council chamber includes fixed 1elli for to .1n the auillence and liaa a total capacity of about 130. It will have improved facilities for audio and visual presentaUons .. · Individual offices for each councilman are planned in the same building 111 the council chamber. Rough plans indicate the police facillt.y will be nearly doubled in·slze to handle a maximum police force ol aboUt '10. 1'1lt building will include a large squad room and exercise area for officers. The corporation yard is the least glamorOUJ, but perhapa most vital part of the expansion plans. The facility ,pro- posed will house the city'• heavy road working equipment and street 1weeper1, as well as provide apace for city mechanics to repair those vehicles. CJty muocilmen have not au~ized e.xpanslon of any of the three facllltiel, but are expected to .do so in the .near future.· · · Tbe expansion plan! will give city ball sufticlent apace to operate when Fountalri Valley reaches it.I maximum population of 60,000 to 70,000 rtsidents. Money for the expanskm has been sav- ed in a special "capital bnpro\'.fn;ients" fund amounting to about $'100,000' and wU.1 not come from addlllonal taxes or bondJ. $2.4 Million Prize Put On Head of Sea Monster LONDON (UPI) -Want to inue 12.4 mlllloo? All . you have to do 11 catch the Loch Ness monster. The CUiiy Sark Scotch Wblaky Company Ud.; Tuesday· dffered. lho prize for the capture of the legendary numter _,with condiUonJ. "Nwie" mun be alive and unbanned·and ftlOl'8 tl!an"20Je<t1oof. She . mu.st not ~ disturbed in any way that would endanger her aurvival. The curator of the Natural History Museum Jn London must,accept her as the genuin e Loch Neu moruiter and not just 1 large flstft-~No ,c."OmpeUtor may U.!le a toxic substance or electric devict to catch her. And the capture has to be made by May 1, 1972. The contest was catled off last month because Uoyd'1.-of London, the insurance company, would not cover tht prizt, But, 1tung by criticism. 1Joyd'1 changed tta mind and gave the okay. · • · ~ U captured, Neale would become tbt property of IJoyd~a. , ·' I , • ' • • I' Buildup, Tltr~at to U.S~ illEW Y~ (UPI) ...V D't'·f•.ilae Januarydl·lppe&red;tbt&w1ettini.011...ia ~l!D'Yl!eJYlll Ji. Lilni Aid i.idaY~llt llOwtngJtan)lld«ltlployment<>f.!llfm:on. &Ov1e1•tfiifm;ll • .t •tirted IND. tlnenlal Balllottc MJilller-OCBMs)'·.ner ex1ena1.,~0$M~em "!lli;,!j '· ~ abo'ul · · e ""'" 'tbeij' di 1111)0l'~"·t.l.~1Ji~, : ' • .. (tdd h'°d"lt'/ttir.,,,,tJi;tn\jt04~; In .vj<w :oLlhl;,. Ji.. .aaJ<f;.W., Urilteil" baa. States -might.. be ,fo!'Ced· ·to take--.>Jad-He ad de d that in February a n·cl1 d1tional offsetting actions" if the March. a .new 'type of.mlsslle .eilo ha"d Strateglt ·Arms-Limltatiot11· ~·T•a,J·Jt 11 been detected in RU11ia· that ralaed:fe&fl' (SALT) in VJenna fell · to . procfuca an ·of a new ICBM.pr.ogram. agreem£..1t. "More recent evJdence confirm& th1 In a.propare<I speech' to.the' 85tb <Aimulil '.iobering fact' that the' liovteruiiJoii.j, JO. Conventlmi•of the· Amtrlcan~NewsJ)apet1 v_olved .in a new -and · app.arenUy• et. Publisben Association . (ANPA), -Laird 'tensive -.ICBM·conatiuction prolram.."' recall~ tliat one·year qo he tol~ a.nother Laird aald. meeting of tditora that he feared the . ''This new ICBM construction-' effott United ·Stef<i nilllht ·fuid llseU In a · 1e-coupled with additional momenium. ·lit cond rate strategic position by the · mid-·the 11trateglc defens!Ve area -all clearly 1970s. , planned months.ago -must be·of major "I regret •to report' today·tttat nothln'g · concern.'.' ., llH · happeiied In the lnlerveni1igJ.1z · ·Laird said .. tl!e l\uulans alao . ...,.. monU..'Jo leelen :tl!a!.cimiern,'"be'•~i~ ·~pldly closing tl!e' !plP'' In tl))ll)iarliio "Quite the opposif< ls;true. ~·. : . ,baaed 11\isiile~ an.Jea ·wb""cfu,i~t·tlio Laird said that In ' Decoihber • ali<f • United Stat.a has bad' a,i;Jear·¥1vantace. Fluoride Voters· Won~t Deciae· . ' On CCntral Park. The central park issue wm not be on the ballot during the June ·I fluoridation election In Fountaln VaQey. · • . The City Council declded'Tuesday Ml to uk vata-a their. fetlings on a c111tral park at'lhl&,,llme. · · . ·. Originally, · tl!ey 111anned to. put an acJ. vl!ofy ·(the WUJt·wnuJd not 'tii blndlnf) measure on tl!o;ballot ukJI& realdentaiil !hay would lit• ,l<!.llave. a 17·acra CODlral Jiark-remallon · compl•• · •a<UacOnt. )ii Fountaln Valley Hieb School;. • ' However, City 'lilenqer JlitrNill, ·ak· .ecJ tl!e C11U11Cll.towaltunW'hll ataff could study ,central pa<k proposall In """" depth. to detmnlnt what Iha ·cit~ netda. He wanted .: tnor.t.i pkifJc--requul M> be pltt to the v6ter1 it a later date. • Tllei:e will still ~ a June 8 efedimJ on _ Ouorldatlon. Voter1 won't be asked tO aay 1 "yei" or •1rio" on fluoride in ciW Water. !llpt~d ,lhey'I be' 1Qed to 1pproye ·or tum 'IJ>i¥• .,. .ordinll>C< wblch would re-~\lb9. •· ~ tltctlon J>efora lluiltJila Coillir 1111 iddod to lbe water. £•we sincertly hope tor convlncinr proi. gre1s in SALT'·~ Laird 11aid. "But failtna sucli progreu 1 must tell you tOday tllai the renewed Soviet 1trategie ,we1PQD1 momentum may coafroilt ut' '9lth• the need for addlilonal offaettln& • U:S • ..,. tlon•." ,_ ·-.' Laird sald ba belleyed' the. American public mlillt aettle .fOr nuclear parllf with Russla. "But under no' circum.- 1tanc:t1, ln my view, would the.~lc'aft people be wtlllng to atl~ for !nf<rlmty,'.' _ he declared. ' Manaler1 Who serves Is principal for (lii~41inei O. l!arper.E!epientary School tit !'oolnlaln VOii", ~ deluted Logan hi , tlii.!,,f!ct. l'l.1i8 margin was 3,UI to z.-.-~'wia ...in· third with 2,oaz. M'iDl&en .~ ·i.te hl8 ieat at next 'l1lel4l1' llfilll'a·'board meeling ii Iha tl..Ucjl realiH&IN ·Cirtlfled by'that time. HI wJlI flll lltJll!bal'• unexpired term .~ ·Jilll\ ~:aifd 1Jien remain seated foli':Toiii'·fur.tellil. Logan 11 lcheduled l6>1Mf lhl<d•ii •l!IY. ~'~n, a CliHfmiia peace olfiter:wlii>'!'li Uii.endoraement of high ,school. boanl,. ~ldent Matt be w . WtYUl!ar; nl~.cio..Jy at Logan's beela on.botb·li8:1Jqti(1Mtrwas unable_ to muster ·enoulJa1vmet UF~e the lawyer. ~in; ',J~~ll al~ .8 ttu.!ltee OD the ·~·V)ew (i;lem,nJary)'Scbool District · l>Oof4.. outpo\htd,Bheoban hi lour of Iha five,, ~omenl1r7: dlStricta · that. make up 1J1e. ~cJj acliool, dlaltict I n c I u d I n g Sbf.itJiaJC• bomeground of Westminster. Silil!liily ;-1'00& ·wu • trounced by Man,...,, la ·~ dlatrict exce(>t Seal B&Ch: Locan wOn there by 102 votes. · -Tolil volts ~ of.year term e<>Df<sl dropJ!td olf .n!liif aliaJl>ly past Sbeeban . ~~lei.an~ illtJr. vQ1e tolala In· cl; ' • .. . Roba'l..E. D!cgwalJ, .. 2;$11; Rober! M. Gordoa, . 1,w ; · Pittr HOrton, 1,187; ~~A. ll9'\il\1g,,942, Joseph 'A. Mma.I. Vii; JOl!D 'B:,Ha1111110n, BU: Jon IC. ·Llwjan ·181r.: Bl!!Je!IA• Suter, IOI; ... '(lee~EtmcftON;.Pap .. Z) -. ' . " ' ' ' . -..... ;,, --..-·, . .,, - • .. • -.,,_, • ·~··-<t;t . '. . ' .. ' -• • • • .I.. .... ' -. ~-- H WtdntsdU, ""11 ll, 11,,. • R·oute :'Vote. ~01{ Set ' • r Senate Approval Seen Early Next Week I /0 (I .,., • .~ f DAK.Y f'll,.01'.tltff'""911f RE.ELECTED IN OCEAN VIEW lndu1tri1t Chemist huer DAU. 'f f'lr.OT lt•ff ,.Mi. RETURNED IN OCEAN VIEW Hospital Admlnl1tr1tor Zlnnirabe By L. P!:TER XlllEG Of .. ...,, , .... lteft SACRAMENTO -The Serlate Rulea Committee this morning unanimou5ly ap- proved the coiltrover11ial Newport Beach freeway charter amendment The meuure will go to the Senate noor early next week. Slate Sen. Dtnnls E. .Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) 111d thl5 morning. Tbe amendment was ratified by the Membly'Tuesday on a 58 to 2 vote. A spokesman for Sen. Carpenter in- dicated there is litUe opposition, U any, expected, when the amendment comes io 1 vote. Where approved. tt will require the Newport City Council to conduct vo\a of tpe people be(ore lt can . 1lgn fUture agreements on the route of any .freeway tbroligh the city. Valley Barber's Cut Rate Shop Torching Probed Arson inv~stigators are "almosl cer· tain" today that a fire which gutted a Fountaln Valley man's Garden Grove barbershop Tuesday was set deliberately. Gasoline containers and empty paint thiMer cans have been roWld in the debris of the Darwin Orrit barbershop on Qiapman Avenue. InvellJgator1 Rid there ii evldenoe tha\ a hole wu cut in .\be roof of \he bu)Jd!ng lo alJotr (UOllnl ...ud towels to lie 1oUM Jn.Ide. · Damage to the premllea ii ntlmated at nearl7 SJ0,000. It ii the leC'Ond tlme lhll a lhOp operated by OrrlJ bu been burned. lnvesttg1tors II.id Orrll, of FOOntain Valley, told tbem he had been Warned to discontinue his cul rate haircuta and bike his price• from their pre1ent level of 11.50. He told officer• that 1!1: non-union 1hops In Orange County have been burned 1n the lut two year1, Ill or them after their operatol'I were warned to atop undercutting wllon prices. Unlon barbers work on a mlnlmum R A Z • ahe halrc\lt price of Sl.91. That rate wu , • • Jnngr ' declared to be unconsutuUonal lut year • , by Supertor Court Judge R on a I d . »·~• ... h B . .. w· ClooUb.lnk. . ~ auuy QU11Jr .lD .. I ' I ! I 1,I •;,.. + ; . In Ocean View Incumbent uegg 1' I < • ·Tl• · Incumbents Ralph H. Bauer·and Robert , Wm" S p t A • · ; J. llldnj,.•1>1 wtio bolh relu!Tiicl to tie1r OS ga.tn . oeata on the Ocean View Scllool D~trict In Westnlin" s' t'er '· · Board of TruJtees Tuelday. Only three candidate• came forward to : · · contest the two vacancle1. Their vote '. totah· i . llalpl; H. Bauer 1,44( ; · Robert J. zmnsrabe ! .2,IHt ~ Vaqba Edeward1 :i 1,171 Edewards, 1 management consultant : . from HunUniton Beach, . conducted a ~ · quiet campaign. He 11id he came forward u a candidate to give the voters ~ a choice. Zinngr1be, a bospllal administrator, : and Bauer, a chem.bl, both ran on tbe bas1J of the district's a~mpllshmenls during their past terma in office. .. .. . .. . ' . ~. With 23 achoola, tfle Oct.an Vlejr district ta the largest ot the nvt elein.en· tary school districts with' the HunllP.gtap Beach Union High School district. It in· eludes portions of Huntington Beach, Wesf.mlruter and Fountain V .a 11 e y • Roughly 10 pe:rcen& oi Ocean View's 21,483 registered voters cast ballots in the elect.Ion. · OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OlMOI COAST PUILtlMIJt9 COMMIC1 1 l•Mrt H. w,"' l'r.NlrW .,.. P'Wllftf' Jeck ... c.,r.y: vu ,,..ldtfll ... ~ ~ n ..... .:....r ....... n,11111 A. Mw,iii1~ M.tMtir. Ulllt Ale11 Dlrl..Mi ., er.,.. ~ ·~""' AIMrt W. l1t11 ....,...,, •• 1,.. ----17171 ... ,i. le11l•,1 r~ M11ltt11 M4re111 P.O. lea 7tO. t2641 .,.....,_ l.llfwiw ...01 m ..,...., '"""""""' CM"' ,...: 131 w.r ••r ,,,_ ....,.,,. '-di: am ~ ... ,..,.,. IM 09IMllll~ -,.. II (.IM .. " .. blift.V f'K.01', -'Ill Wllldt " _...., H ................. ..,,... 4•1ty ~ - ..... "' ........ "'11loM .... ~ IMdl. ......., htdl. '"" ""'"· 11':4ftltlDM ~ ,_...,. \l•!Wf ~ ~' ~-INd~ ........... .... ........... flfftlM.. Ll'f"tr.c"INI """'""" ..... .. .. • Witt ..., '"""" COlll ......... . Tai•,._• t7141 641-4121 Cl.WW ..w .. rttJltt "42·1•7• °"""""" ""· Ottntt C..ll .. lllllltl\lnf ~. ... ""' ....... llhtlltrtt!IM. .."""" """"' .,. _. ... .,.,i.-11 ..., .. " fM't ................ Wllflllvj llM(ltl ,.,. ....... -~I """'· ..... C: ... ,.. .... ll'M el !tit.,,.,.. a.tell .. C:.• ,.,..., (tlltenlle, koblel"f,+llfl ... ~ ilUf ....,tlll)'I ..,. -It ltJ I ..........,, ........., •'""'*-· .,,,J ""°""'"'· I 1/ Incumbent Ada Clea& and aewcomer Roderick <Zuse won seats on th• Westminster School Dl1trlct Board of EducaUon Tuesday. The final elecUon resulls were. Ada E. C'~o '. . J .. Roderick 8. tnile1 · I tlO • Frank N. Elltwood: 1,077 Dewey LeRoy Wiles: 143 Joseph A. Mizrahi: S3I Cruse ousted incumbent Eastwood by a narrow margin. Eutwood bas 1erved ou tbe Westminster board 1lnce 1949. , Mrs. Clegg has been on the board, 11 years and was re-elected for ber flfib term as trustee. · From Pagel 'SAILOR ..• had a self-steering wind vane and they could both rest in the cabin. , But then the waves smashed the vane, radio antenna and other equipment. 1 "We went to sea anchors, but then Jott two and had to tow a line behind ·the boat," Brinson related. They decided to call for help Monday btt.ause of Brinson's condJUon ll'ld because Feldman was too exhausted &o sail the boat back to San Diego. In his final attempt to describe the rough seas they encountered, Brinson reso~ to simple adjeeUves. "It was terrible, ria.sty, rotton, mean/' ·he we.nt on -and on. Aerospace Ecology Address Sclieduled The McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Corp. Manage:ment AuoclaUon will hear an "E~rtb Week" address by Charles Stone on the use of aerospace technology to clean up the environment tonight. Stone, a Huntington Beach resident, is dlalrman of the gras.s roots ecoloty movement known as EOIC"r CF.cology Development and Implementation Com· mitment Team). His lecture begins at 6:30 p.m. at the FA&ewattr Hyatt House, Long Beach. Art Students Display Works at Center The art work.I of tlwi Hantlncton Beach Union · Hish • &hool Dlltrtd'• most talenttd art ~udents ire on display throutb Friday' In the Hunllnstoo Center Mall . The pa.lnllngs, drawings, wAter colors, r.eramfcs, textile work1 and crafts on display were picked by the art lnstructora of the dl1tricr1 five hlgh 1chool1, each of whom w11.• aAkcd to 1ubmlt the three be5'\ work! ol hlJ studenll. \ The dU. of Hunu.,ton Beach and Colla Mal bad -ltd 1'""1( op- pc>SiUon to the measure as It swept through the Assembly Tue9day. The city councils of both communlUes Monday ntgbt adopted resofuuons urging legislaUve rejection of the measure. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) had Introduced the ruolu~, telling the Rules Conunlttee of tbe lower· bouit, "Newport Btach voters have made their point v~ 'loud and clear." The charter amendment w a s overwhelmingly approved in a special Newport Beach elecUon March t . ''They don't want a freeway ruining their community,'' Badham said. '"Ibey are iaylng tliey don't llJ:e wbat the City eoWicil bal done and telllntl tllem don't do It •Pin Wtlho~t i rtfer<ndum.'' DAILY ,ILOT lteft , ..... WINS RE·ELECTION · Co11t Incumbent Hoff . · • , DAILY ,ILOl lll" , .... SENT BACK TO BOARD Coast lncum~ Kettler Ruth L. Calkins, Patterson Win • ·In Seal Beach 'Veteran Seal Beach school board members Ruth L. CaUtins and Lloyd Pat· terson were returned to their seats in Tuesday'1 trustee election. Ol.allenger Geraldine A. West, 1 Seal Beach bousewile, took third place. The results: , Ratll L. Calltlm 1,M7 Uoyd J. PaUerson 1,510 Geraldine A. Weit 734 Mrs. Calkins has been on the diatrlcl's board of trustees for more than 15 years. Paller!Oll. manager or an industrial chemicals plant, has served on the board for five ye ars. There are two campuses in the district with a total enrollment of 1,157 students. • By 1 almllar land.slide vote in that aame elecUoo, ra:ldent.s bad I.old t.be ·council to rescind the existing agreement with the state on the route of the Plclfic Coast Freeway through Corona del Mar. Badham said the eharler amendment, and perhaps even the rescission, may eventually be decided by the courts. "Undoubtedly there are legal questions that will have to be· ground. out in the courU," be said, •·But It isn't the Legi1)1ture's prerogative to determine the con- sUtuUonallty of this charter amend· ment." A legialative counsel had reported to the Assembly committee that tt the 1mendment were tested in court, it likely wou1d be rejected because residents of a munldpollty do not have authority over 1tattwldt mat~•. such Al freeways. DAILY ,ILOT Steff Pllett RETURNED FOR NEW TERM Co11t Incumbent Humphreys Fro1n Page 1 COAST ... Beacb who was appointed to the college boud ln 1965. He is reg\onal supervisor for JSii Salu Corporatkm and LHe Insurance Company of Callfornla .. Humphreys, 44. is an attorney prac- ticing at 1500 Adams St., Costa Mesa. and is assistant city att8rney for Costa Mesa. 'He Is a 1taunclt ad voe a ti of an open door policy for public colleges due In part to his own success following graduation from Orange Coast Collep end Cal State Long Beach. Two truslees of the five on the Coast College board were not on the ballot this year. They are: -Area one, the Seal Beach and Qcean View Elementary Districts. Worth Keane Df Seal Beach, holds thiJ seat -Area five, the city of Newport Beach. Board President George Rodda Jr. of ·Corona del Mar represent.9 this area. GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHllD THE COLORFUL WORLD OF PEARLS Highly pr lz e d in the world or gems, pearls are chic, smart, and treasured particularly be ca u 1 e they so beautifully enhance a wo- man's ensemble no matter what the occasion. Th e y compliment clothing for every affair, from a simple sweater to the most glam· orous evening g o w n, and do so wllb a quiet dignity all their o"''ll . \Ve usually associate white with the pearl. and many do not know that P.earls come in a variety of f!lowing colors which depend upon the I o c a I i t y in which they are found. From the Persian Gulf com e pearls with a creamy sbeeen, and from Australia we receive pearls wilh a beautiful yellow cast. Much closer to borne, from the Gulls of California and Mexico, come the rare a n d exceedingly expensive Black pearls, whose rich metallic apptaranceJnake them more valu· able than any others . \Ve carry a v a r i e t y of these ~em1, and will gladly assist you rn your s e I e c t ion of pearls to match both you r taste and your budget. Come in soon . We 're open dally from 9:30 lo 5:30, Fridays 'tU 8:30 • I I DAILY PILOT Sl•H Ptwi. RETURNED TO OFFICE Huntington TrustH D1H1rb • Huntington Vote Puts lncu1nbents Back in Off ice Voters in the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District retunied both Incumbent trustets Louis A. Daharb and Orville R. Hanson to office Tuesday. Final results of the election are: Louis A. Dallarb: 1.256 OnWe R. Hu1ont 1.082 Harold K. Becller: 908 Ralpb G. M.artareW: 769 Jamet K. Gath: 402 Deuld A. Jones: 344 DaHarb, a pilot for United Airlines, alJo won electloa to tbe board ju.st six months ago in a special eleCUon. He ran then and this time on a plaUorm. calling for changes in the district and expansion of educational programs with federal and 1tate monty. Hamon, an em~loye ~lation1 officer with Slgna1 Oil and Gas Company, is a veteran board member. He was elected to his first trt11tee term In JuDe of 1967. No clear indication of what voters want done with the district was given by 'Nesday's rerultJ. DaHarb ls a leading: proponent for change In dlstrlct policies and came out the strong man with the heaviest .Upport, but Hanson represents the traditional conservative element on the board -whlch esaentlally maintains a 4 to I majority. He allo scored high on th'eballoL I The atlrttl' challenger. Beeler, wu a strong uponent for change, and at one candl,d.ate meeting berated Hanson.Lor an "apatbeUc attitude 11 a board lltlmber." ,Ha.aaon's c~palgn was buedptimari· ly on "fiscal rtspo111ibU1tyv · .in the district. ·Both winners will be sworn In for their new terms of ofrice at the district board meeting July 8. Queen Turns 45 LONDON (UPI) -Queen Elizabeth turned 45 today, quietly obse rving the oc- casion with her family amidst prepara· tiona for a nlnMay Canadian visit scheduled to 1tart May 3. let ~ H~n..tjng!on ..,c ~ •. ~ ' .. r •. Council 01\.s Room House • A couple have been granted permlsston by the city council to operate a boarding home for men in downtown HunUngton Bea<IL . SPecifically, ~ couvcil granted a cen- ditional exception to .allow eight bOn· related persons l.o live at the home in· si.ead of the pe.rmltted nias:lmum of five. The home is run .by William aiid Jo Ann Rader at 1819 Lake SL 'J'be application w·as opposed by neighboring homeowners, 34 of whom signed a peUtlon against the request. Dale .Bl,llb, an aUnrney representing the neighbors, ari_Uf:d that the .Jiaders \~ere operating a busines1 for profit \\'lthout benefit of a license and that the holise violated sections of the buildlng code on wirinl' and fl.re el1ts. ' He said that although tM property wa1 zoned tor apartments It wu surrounded by single family homes. Mrs. Rader told the council that her "guests" were not .wards of the. county. nor were they mentally retarded. They were adult rhales , she said, .lnost of whom had Jost their wives . She said she received payment from public agencies . f.or caring for the men but no license; is issued because they ire not foster children or mentall y retarded. Councilmen Jack Green, Norma Gibbs and Jerry Matney voled in favor of the rondilional ez.ceptioo with Ted BarUett and Mayor G~rge ltfcCracken opposed. The argument cited in favor of the ap- pJication was that the PlaMing depart· ment is preparing an ordinance that will allow eight non-related perlODI to Jlvt in a borne. ~ From Pagel ELECTION ••• : "' Dorothy B'ray, 721 ; Donald A. Jond, 137; Joseph E . Ribal, 620; Harry E. ,Hickl. 599 ; Edward Gauthier, 325; HoWanl M. Warner 290. · • Manger's campaign wa1 based on bringing reason to the high school ~trict board:'I which has a history ot ~bitter arguments between iridlvidual . 1Kiard members. He also endorsed the district's proposed &kent tu override wbk:h 1oes to voters this Jone. 'Logan claimed the support or the' Com· mittee To Defeat Joseph · RiblJ, an orgamtatio•f dedicated to pretentiag tbf vrfa'iln, .. tlit controveriiaJ·~, from taking anOther 4-year term. Ribal who conducted his cam~ In absentia; piled only. enough votei for a 14.th place among 17 candldates. ' . "( : , Daley Charges Out CHICAGO (UPI) -Charges were dropped today against four men arrested in connection with an alleged plot to a$Sassioate Chicago ,Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson. South Felony Caurt Judge John F • Hechinger dismissed charges against Earl Dillard, 37, Howard Harrill, !3, Ter. ry Simmons, 38, and Charles WhltJlde, SS. ahead one hour OOMEGA In Iha mom1ntt h take• you to adjust your watch to D1y1l11hi S1vlng1Time,11k yourself: Is It 1ccur1t1? Styllah? 0.1>1nd1ble? u c1n be an these ••• l{ld mor• ••• II It'• "\ Omeg1. Like lhl1 Omega ContteH11lon Chronomal1r. Accurate? Ornt!lll Chronomet1r1carry1 Swl11 Ob11rv1tory certlrlc1!a tor 1ccur1cy 1w1rd1d only 1ner 1 15-diy Mr11• / ol gru1llng l1bor1tory 1a11s. Styll•h? Look at 11'11 handlOIMft cr1ft1d 11alnla11111el c11e, 1nd th1 rugga~ good looltl of th• m1tc;hlng br1ce!1l Dtpend1bl1? 11'11n Ointga, ltn't 11? Slop In today and tit u1 •how you lhl1, 1rtd otMrt lrt our wide Ml1ctlon ol Om1111 watches, hom $05 lo over $1000. J. C. fi.umphrieJ }ewe£rj 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA I I r H D.llll PILOT 3 Cerf!)s :'IJS .. All ihe· ~i-~11e~ UCJ Friends Told . . ·!' < .,. B)' AR'J'lllJI\ 11.' VINSEL """,DOI )llUlcl\lai.cl by laughter. °' .. Nit. "" '"" The mJn whose last name µ: Just a The Cerf "•1 up Tuelday. four-letter word also predicted fewer of ~In m llle Orqe Coul W.. a the o\1>tt '10d wW be ."!"'! JI( 18' new bod pan Be...! Cerf, beloVid mailer of An\el'lcan lllet9ture slmPb':;,eaa.,. they the American humor, literature and ,lee· aft,'"·iettft1.&: dlrn dull. " , '!' ture. forms, 1poke to the UCI Irvine .. I think tbls wave of p()tlfogr.phy and Frle:Dda of the Library. fllUt ls on the want," he said, and for a He told anecdote11 of famous writers of vert "1nl,ple reason. , • fact and fiction, offering homespun ad· S.x~basztt changed much 1lnct ·our vice W younger li11teners on get.Ung the PrthlsfPric 8*i:e.stor1 ,(':riwtel opt of the most ln. fun and fortune from life. prltneval mudflats, while a ~~ that Cerf ohould know, with IO years of bu changed more In the lul\lt• yean adult fulfillment. lhap the previous S,000 ii n· jaor1 in- "l'm one of~ few people Jett in the ~rtsUng. 1 ~ ; U.S. wbo ls 100 percent happy," be l&ld "Thole four-letter wonb t shocked in one of the few moment.I hil worda us~. Q-iD pript .ve ~ e9nr . . . Board Winners • • Coast Election Results Revealed Here are the resull! of school bnard electi\)11! alorig the Orange Coast: SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY COI,. LEGE Dl.STJlICI: Alyn M. Brannon, l ,M&, I electe<I); John B. Lund, 7,975, (e~ted); Michael T. Collins, 1,371, (electedJ. Others. Lefu!y J . Anderson, 41805; Maraaret F. Roley, 5,279: Thomas W. Crago, 1,282; John William Parker, 3,m . {elected lo two-year term). Othert, Lawrence W. Taylor, 926; Florence Beane, 731 : Margaret Joyce D'Isidoro, 85: Carl Mitchell. 574 ; Stanley lw1u11sat. 483; Roger 0 . Nicholson, 213: Arnold Laderman, 761 : Catherine MacQuarrie, 348; Don Franklin Rlchardson, 295. CAPISTRANO UNIFIED S C H 0 0 L DISTRICT: Robe.rt Dahlberg, 15 7, (elected to two-year term, ma Four); Robert P. Beasley, 582, (elected. Area Two); Gordon L. Peterson, 681, (elected, monplace,'wblc:b ls u ll ~uld be," ~ publisher b<adiJI& !Undom HOUM Inc., e1plained. . "Every little boy 4 years old ~knows those , woro,.. "Every little girl S knows them," he added arcllly. "'Sex is the. same aa lt always was and alter yOu read .about ·what other people do behind closed doors for awhlle it become! a bloody, bore," Cerf added. He said,, ~sbJp isn't the answer, suggesttni if readers Ignore pomoeraphy the se.nsationAI be:adlines aboDt lJ. wlll e&ase -and ,119 wlll lt. Cerf said authOrs. add dirty -...ords to bad boob the way inept cooks add LAGUNA BEACH UNIFIED SCHOOL DIS'l'Rlcr: E. Patricia Gillette, 1,210, (eleded); Gerald D. Linke, 1,086, (elected); William Thomas ID, 1,322, Area Three); Geor1e L. White, 614, .. , <elected, Area Fi,e). Others, Keith L. ~· · * * * County Board Election Results Told By JACK BROBACK ot .., EMllr "*' ...,, . A conservative 1lale including two in· cuDlbents we defeated in Santa Ana and a. »year veteran board member. Ol,JSted tn Garden Grove in bighlighta: of Tuesday'• achool· board electh• in Orange County. The winnen accordin& to unofficial returns: Sanlll Ana Unified 124 out of 1S Pi:ecincts): Charles K. Paskerian, «.~; ll1cbard W. Irons, 8,179; John R. Schill· ing, 5,366; Jesse F. Berry, 4;199 and Cordelia Gutierrez, 3.757. Incumbents Charlea B. Eluding, 3,536 ~nd Robert K. Harr, 3,381 trailed. They .and David L. Brandl, 2,171 ran a!'I a conservative team. Gudea Gro'e Ualfled: Barbara A. slilrley, U14; L. Fraok ·Kellogg, 3,511; Fred Garcia, 1,314. Veteran board prt!i· dinl Elwood Edgar waa defeated wftb enly 2, 411 votes. Aualltlm aty: JoAnn Bamtll, 3,707; Jerry A.. Wood, 3,281. Ana•etm Ualoa:, Edward M. Hartnell (incumbent), 3,397; Herbert Licl.er, 1.127. Brta-Ollnda Uaifltd: Richard G. Blake (incumbent), AO: Ho:1tard D. Frazier, 651; Noel C. Reuland, 606. Baena Park Elementary: Jule! J . ; Sherman (incumbent), 454 ; I.Joyd G. Davis , 483. C)'pre11 Eleme.ntary: William E: Hall 117; Otrlstine P. Swain. 524 (both in: cwnbentl). (Cypress vacancy upirtng in lt73). Dean R. Oennil, 429. J'vUerton Elementary: Nancy J. P'i:r (locumbent), 3,081 ; Lloyd G. Carnahan ~029. • f'allertoo Ualon Bish: Peter Churn (in· eumbent), 4,lff; Laurel R. Hoffman, 2,241. • Lo• Alamitos Elementary: Claude J. Klug (Incumbent), 1,530; Maraaretba, Kenick. 1.500. Ml.poli8 Elementary: w1mam K. Laverty (incumbent), 2,366; Joseph &.- Butterworth, 1,901. . North Orange County CommullJ Coltq:e Dtttrtcl: Melvin O. Hilgenfeld, 28,455; Felix S. LeMirinel, 18,195; Mary Pat Toups. 22,215 (all incumbentl) and Robert G. Hawthorne, 18,166. ·, Or'lqe UalfJtd: 'I'ruslee Area S F ·· Bttt Skilea (Incumbent), 4,211. ' ' ~aeenUa Ualflecl: William A. Y1te1 1,3'2: Fla urine I. Beckius, 1,211; · s.j Zavala. l,lU. Tr•baeo Elementary: Vernon D , Mueller, 47. Yorba Linda Elementary: Gene E. DeGalne, 159: Gerald A. Rost, S38 (both lncumbenb). Abortion Figure Faces Fee Suit Dr. John S. Gwynne, !ht oell...WuRd abortionist who ftces trial on a number ol criminal charsu. today faces an angry Newport Buch couple and an 111,000 kin en an aborttd rtal tstate deal. C&rl M. and Wiima Koster claim In their Orange County Superior Court suit thlt they sold Dr. GwyMt their home al ) 2921 Catalpa St. for '55.000. They state tht physiclA!\ pald $11,000 on deposit and the sum was depo&lltd In the escrow tunds of the ttal ntate. company. Jensen, 4; Alronso F. Jimenez,· 29; " Marvin W. Renfro. 29; John P. Serences, 41: Orlando S. Tosdal, 11: Harcourt G. Bull, 275; William R. Enquist. 169; Rke D. Oliver, 58; Stanley C. Kelley, 328; Ray J. Campbell, 105: Nolle Famularo, 201; Raymond Lee Estrada, 52. TUSTIN UNION HIGH S C H 0 0 L DISTRICT: Robert C. Bartholomew, 3,127, (elected); Dickran Boranlan, S,657, (elected). Others, Sol Bisom, 327; CUf· ford B. Boehmer. 1,545:· Dana A. Carkey, f,108; Howard F. Eaton. 758: stephen Bad f1nou9h John Fabula. 3,377 ; John William Parker, 788; Ronald Edward Weir, 448. U~IT ......... SAN JOAQUIN SCHOOL DISTRICT' Gratian D. Bidart, 1,543; (elected); Den- nis A. Smith, 1,726, (elected); Preston Howell, l,j()I, (electe<I). Olben, Alb<rt J, Blais, 61; Charles H. Boulanier, t ,27t; Layton L. Gardner, 49; Franklin S. liurd, 660; Arthur Lawrence Loughttd, 104; James Henry Pope, 269 ; Rbger G. Ramsbottom, 106; \Yilllam H. Rawlings, 96; Harry Arthur Roach, 176; Margaret R. Rowland, 71 : Michael Shearer, 802; William Wood Wadman JU. J03; Robert S. Bevacqua, 5150; Kenneth D. Cook, 647; Leo G. Konkel, 392; Robert N, Uttman 43. • COAST COMMUNITY C 0 LL E G E DISTl!lCT, Donald G. Ho!r, 12,162, (elected); William E. KetUer, 10,998, (elected); Robert L. Humphreys, 10,900, (elected). Others, Charles F. Dagion, 3,281;· Bllrf>ara A. Bell, 1.144; Enriqueta L. 1'Amos, 2,5.19; ruchar:d L. Oliver, 2,932: William Thomas Unger, 1,627. NEWPORT MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT: Donald E. Sm a I l wood, 4,368, (elected}; Marian C. Bergeson, !",IOI, (elected); Sellin S. Franklin, 3,1&1, (elected). Others, Donald T. Bull, 935; Herbert Hans Stricker, 958. HllN'l:INGTON BEAcH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DIST R l·C T: George Logan 3,536, (elected); Dennis H. Mangers: 4,722, (elected). Others. Dorothy Bray, 721; Robert E. Dingwall, 2,518; Edward V. Gauthier. 325; Robert M. Gordon, J.467; John B. Hamilton, 842; Harry E. Hick&, 599; Peter Horton, 1,187; Donald A. Jones, &.r7; Jon K, Lawson, 93'7; Joseph A. Mizrahi , 881; Catherine A. Mooring, 90; Joseph E. Ribal, 620; Ed· mund C. P. Sheehan, 3.3M ; Bartldta L. Suter, 80f; Howard M. Warner, 290. HIJN11NGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT SPECIAL ELEC- TJON: Dennis H. Manger1, 3,152, (elected); others, Dorothy Bray, 380; Robert E. Dingwall, 1,460; Howard M. \Varner, 197; Jon K. LawllOll, 453; George Logan, %,408; Joseph H. Mluahi , 469; Catherine Mooring. 315; Ed mu .n d Sheehan, 2,082; Bartlett.a Suter, 451. HUN1'1NGTON BEACH CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT: LouLs E. DaHarb, 1,256, {eled.e.d); Orville Hanson, 1,082, (elec- ted); Others, Harold K. Becker, 908; James K. Gath, 402; Donald A. Jones, 314; Ralph G. Marcarelll, 761. · fOUNTAIN VALUtY S C Ii 0 0 L DJSTRJCJ': Mary C, Hl:r, 1,141, (eleo.. te<I); F'°" W. v,.,, t.464. (electe<I). Otben;, Paul A. Huard, Jr., 649: Donald Hulett, 211; Richard F. Plum, 423. OCE.\N VJEW SCHOOL DISTRICT• !Ulph H. Bauer, 2,447, (elected); Robert Jr. Zlnngrabe, 1.041, (elected); Vaughn Edewardl'I, I , In. • ,SEAL BEACH SCHOOL DISTRICT: Ruth L. CaJl;lna. t,!>S7, (elected); Llayd J. Patteraon, 1.~10, (elected); Geraldine Wat. 734. WESTMINSTER SCBOOL DISTRICT' Adi E. Clegg. I~. leiecled); Roderlclt B. awe. 1,150. (elected). Others, Frank N. EHtwood, 1,077; J0<eph A. Mizrahi, 538; Dew•y t..Roy Wile~ H.!. Philadelphia Boy, 9, Slain in Gang War San Diego· whale girl Annette · Eckis, 22, is going to give up . \l.'hale riding. She tried riding Sea World's .vt bale Sbamu Tuesday in a r,ublicity 1tUnt and ended up n the ·hQspltil after the roammal dumped her, then chqmped her leg. Voters Approve College District For Community Voters In Orange and Santa Ana unified school diatricts 'I'Uesday approved the formation of a new community college district that expands the old Santa Anl Junior College district. With i;i of 53 procinda, coun!Oll, -1,6'2 voted to approve the new di!tnct and S,844 voted against tl. ' A college board with 'HVen membul also was approved, clirlch~ uje final step of the election ProceM to fonn a new district. Voters in February• approved financing measures .for the Rtncho San- tiago Community College Dlstricl Three trustees were elected from the Santa Ana Unified district: Pestmuter Hector G. GOOinez, with 4,672 vote1; at· torney RodoUo Montejano, 5,899, and teacher Be,njamin A. Soria, t,781. Monte- jano also is prt!ident of the Sant.a Ana Unified Board of Education. One trustee was tlected to represent portions of both Orange and Santa Ana unified dislricta, probation orftcer Ed s. Taylor. He rectived 2,414 votu. Three other trustees will reprtttnt the Orange Unified district. residenta on the new college board. '"1ey are: cbllege ~ atructor John L. Dowden With 4,544 voe.es. CN'ol L. Enos, 4,474 votes, and John A. White, a bank lawyer who received 4,111 "'"'· Clndidates were elected at large by voter1 in both 5anta Ana and Oran1e distric:ts. There were 17 candidate.a In each of the three-sea( trustee areas and eight for the lone seat repreaent1n1 tbe Joint truatee area . Th< County Regl!trar qi Votera said the Rancho Santiago re1u1ts couJ,d not be finalized due to one Sanla Ana precinct which is yet to report. lllnt.u i.orced postponement nf the count in the lone missing precinct. School Shooting Jails Youth, 13 Flying bulletl brought a pmn1tur1 end Tuesd1y to a La Palma jwilor' high school~ athletic program ind resulted tn the booking of a lS.)'tar~ld boy on susp\. cion of attempted murdtr. Officers ldenlified the )'tlunpter u the sniper who fired a serie1 of shots at a grout> of girls running on the track ai Walker Junior •Ugh School. Ont com- peUtor. DArla McKee, 14, was struck Jn the lblgh by a •i"ll.' The ml.uile was removed at ratslnl to a p00r rice puddlnc,. Jll!I. to iplc9 U><m up. • , lie cited .. •ftms>lit ot 'I!!' 1""'ll toward cleaner, aim'Jlltr tntertaliunent onstaie and In 11\er'-wrt the '1lrf't1ll B"'fdway •m .. h, ill" .play '"No, "9. Ninette," ;11.14 UMi mm ancrnovet> .. tove Story." ., · ' ,. · "It'• Jt11t a cor11)1 lltlle book, ~t 1, ctled over H'... --~-y 4-• stork. o1 wlt ano1-wb1Ji>Jy abotlr"'ch lil<rary lumlnttl,. u Slricl~r."i.iirt1 •• John O'Hara, William' l'aulloiier' ·•nd Truman Capote 'fllltd Ute Floe-~"itll- Jage ~ter: · ' So did tiles of one of Ran®m'Home'• ID<>l'O receul aulborl, wbo lumed to· literature later in llfe: calorfW former Ntw York Yankee1' ~tr Cl.Jey Sttp#J, a master of the nm ~uitur. "We finally translated bil auloblOlfaphy !Jlto EnllJsb," Cerf quip- ped. . The man )"hose twllij:ht years find him sWI golnr 1t.rong 1s a TV personality. wrtter, ayodlt:ated eolumnlst and lecturer told uie ou<llence book publbhin( Is a labor oft .... 11~1Any business todlyll fun If you want to do I~" he •dded. •iJ think too many> people today are doing thin&s they don't really want lo do,'' Cerf continued, before closing to bolrd a helicopter for another talk in PuadtnL Ho °'"'clU<le<I with plllloooplllal advl<t rrom the late American bumorlll WW Rogers, ttdUn1 three polntl for true happtne.. and, addreuin( h1a )'OWll•ll ll(teners, the UCI studentJ. 1 ''There are two thtn1s you can do," he said, paraphrasing Rogers. ''One -work hard at 1omethin,: that ptealts yoii." · "Two -think big -'way up there on tll!i." ' ui'fie tbird-.!.ha'e a dream .•• Hive a .dream. · "l am ont of the few people ltft In America who ia 100 percent blppy.'' be iai\l· . • "You can bf!:' too." . Grand Jury Indicts. 7 5 Others Join Dulaneys in Theft Counts By TOM BARLEY Of h Olttt r11e1 lbff 'lllt. Orange County Grind Jw:Y. today Indicted seven persons on irand theft, conspiracy ind fraud cb•rges stemming: from the QPerition.s of the now defunct World Fin&nCial Trends .investment eom· p1e1 in Laguna Hills and SeaJ Beach. Headlng the 1ist of defendants were corporation pretiidalt Joseph Dulaney, 37, ot Newport Beach, his Wife Marlene, 32, and DulaneY'a "Vice presldent~ln the in· vestment empire, James Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle., Huntington Beach. Sant.a Ana Municipal Court action against the trio was abandoned today. Grand jury action moves exillUng chara:es igainA all three into Superior Court. Joining Ute Dulaney• end Shipley today on a 1wellin(' charge .sheet were Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird, HunUngton Beach. Wendell Warren Austin, 38. of Riverside and Fred Riley, 6, of Norfolk, Va . . InvesUgatorr refused to rele&ae the name of the remaining defendant unUI his arrest. He was described as a central figure in the investment group's securing ()( a $500,000 loan from the st.· Bernadine Hoepita1 in San Bematdbio. All seve.n defendants lllegedly were in- volved ln an investment Nind:Je that may ~· to have' cOlt irlveston: as mucb u "1 million. The World Financial · Tloodl cor· porollotl la now In · lhe -ol BernacUne H9spital. He claimed Austin ud Riley were also Involved in the 1w!ndliog of the Catholic hospital. It Is auerted that the group us· ed Investment letter stock oI questionable value .., collateral iD persuading the hMpltal's ad.ministration to approve the loan. , That loan was In default in November, 1169 and, investigator• 11ald, the hospital's former controller, Robert G. Machan, rtctived a $15,000 loan [rom Shipley after the $500,000 a~vance was granted. Machan personally approved.the ._ and he resigned when Du1aney and b1I wiie left for Germany a month later., · Dulaney was arrested last month tn CUracao, a Dutch colony in the Car- ibbean aft.er a year in Europe. His wife was. arrested In the British colony of Bermuda just two wee kl IJ.ter. , Shipley was arrested In Oranp County stiortly after be testifled IA baflirupteY coort that be knew aolhlng •boll the alleged inve1tment Swindle aid Wt. not pmonally Involved-.j , ~ • President Will Arriv~ April 30,, ·Meet TrO(Jp~ Presklent Nixon will arrive In Southern. Orange County April 30 for a gala greeting of a returhlng Marine division at Camp Pendleton and several4ays of rest and work, it was learned by the DAILY PIUJr today. The President, who paid his last visit to the South Coast earlier this month, was reportedly planning a slay lasting perhap1 a week, reUable JOUrces in- dicated. Mr. Nixon's aides reported urller th la ' ' the first Leathernecks report for pro- cessing at Camp Pe.ndlett'.fn. ""' The President's aide.s hive hlntf:d that Nixon's formal greeting o( the Mlrines at the base would be a public occulon. Associated Pren dispatche1 meuUoned the chance of conference.s with governora during the Pre.side.nt'a stay in San Clemente. I l!oltllrlll1tl: court and ~ffldalf,alr•ad)' &n0W thif its rematnina uset:s . WJll not !Dell five. percent of the cla.ima Gowing weew that a trip west had betn con- in. Moat ;:&,u:' claims are filed by side red, but did not give ti.me! or I.be e1· The wire service specaulated that the trip would take the President out of the naUon'..s capital durinl a period.. when partieularly h t l ti d ~liOftl agaiMl the Vietnam wu we r • beiDI planned. Indications Of a return date by the ~sldent and hi• tntow"ICJ center around May 7 when the ch18f exearttve ii committed to attend a s a i u t e ·to • agriculture dinner, followed by the '"" nual dinner for the White House Presa Corps a day later. 1 !!lde!fy , . of ·nlinmenl com-P<Oled d'fallon ol lht stay, al La (:a,. 1• ~!ft $iaLleach en4,1;1• 11m1. · 'l'aC!1i.a. • . n.poty cHltrl~ attorney· Joe~rson Fanfare ha11 betn emphasized , bow- todaf dtecribed: Hayts .u :tbt pn:>rnolet ever, over the arrival of~ lat Marine who ·ptayrtd ~1lnding rtKe In,.~ lfOUP'• Div1sion from Vietnam, a troop move. obtaining tJw; '5(»,GOO 1oaD .ftlim t.be St. ment e1pected to begin lhil weekend as ' 'DOUBLE KNIT SUITS 100% POLYESTER ne Most Comfortoltle Sult YM IY« Wore Wrf•klo ,.,._u • .,......, .. $115 VALUE $6 DOUILIKNIT lftOlllT COATS ··-· .. ··········-·······-···----·-.. SELECTED GROUP OF 1 oo•f. Wool aod l'olyostor • Wool SUITS REGULAR TO $125 s NOT ALL 11r•1 •49 SPORT COATS $ STORE HOURS: Dally 9:30 • 6 P.M. Mon.·Thur .. Fri.-9:30.9 P.M. CLOTHIERS U1e your credit- l•nkAm1ricerd Ma1t•r Cher9• er Our Own Re¥OIYi'"J Charq• Accc:iunt. The Kosters claim that Gwynne breached the aaree:ment and they want •1he $11,000 deposit They state that the real utate flnn has decllntd to rtlem 'the d<pooll and they aok Superior Court .. erdu the firm .. do .... PHILADELPHIA <UPI) -Raft1el San- tiago, t, was shot In I.he b1ck and killed TUe11day night In 1 street In front or hil home. Pollet said he waa an apparent ln- nocenl victim of teenaged gang warfare . Police said the area was populated by tetnagtd cangs. chief of which were lbe 0 1th and Diamond" and "ZU.lu NaUoh." 1anp. Westminster CommpnltY Hospital and HAllllO• IHOl'PINO CINTIR MALL, COSTA MUA the girl went home with htr pl'lrents. HARIOlll: ILVD. AT WILSON IT. PHONI 546-ISOD Hospital olflciala described tbe Injury u aOesbwou.nd. ll.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;;•:o"";;;:'~'l~y~G<::;nt~ry~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.J 1. . ! I - • • ' ;.;... ..... ·---v. bi ••• :..... • ... f Nll.Y I'll!! w"""'"· .\Jlil n . 1m R~iprocal U.S. Visit D!lTROIT (Al') -111• prqlclont ol lllt u.s. Tabt• Tennis Auoctattoo uy1 eom. munlst CtllneM table ~nnla players hi'8 accep«ed an tcvltaUon lo v!Jit lhe United States "Jn the nu: futurt" and he wlll dlacual tbt Invitation loctay with Pres!· dell~: . Grahlm SteenhoY<n, JlftS)dent of the association and leader or the 15-mtmber U.S. table lonnla i..n> that loured Com- munist Cb1DA last w.ek, disclo.ed Tues- day at a newa conference that the frt. vltatioa was made when h1a group ar- rived ln China. 'Ibe ...Wt was the lint by an American group since 1949. Steenhoven said Song Cllung, acliJ1I p~idt.nl of tht Chinese Table TeMl.I MSociation, acef!pttd the invitation before the Americans left the country last week but gave him the oplion ol when to ,announce tL Steenhoven said ht had received assurance of visa approval from U.S. Embassy officials in Tokyo urlier for the OUneae visit.. but that no dates schedules had been set. Steenhoven said the viait proba Iy would ccme within U months. A •Pokwnan for the U.S. Sta .. ment, who c:oollrmed 1luil the vial! been approved, aaid the C1iDl5e might an1ve next Marcb. Wbi .. Howe Press Secretary Rooald L. Ziegler uld TUesday the Prelidtnt would ask Steenhoven about his lmpresaions of tht Chinese trip and the Otlntle ac- ceptance of the feciprocal invitaUOn. 'Fragging' Rate Jump Reported U .. ITltltlilM .. VIET VETS STAGE MOCK BATTLE ON CAPITOL STEPS Protesters VflW to Dofy Bu,...r Order to Di1porse American Role Hit Russ, Egypt Jjnk Tighter. Following l\'loscow Meet By United Prt'• Intieniationtl The Soviet Union n.id today El)'pl and Jtussia had agreed oo "further joint steps· 1.imed at normalizing the 11tualion and s"irengthening peace and security In the Middle East." The statement distributed 111 Moscow by the Tau news aaency did not elaborate. pilots. The two nation! also have coorW>atod their foreilD polley to ,..i an ltraell withdrawal. Two develo~tl today and Tuesday lndlcatod a further widening of the EIYP- tian and Russian poallions against the U.S. poaiUmi in the Mlddle EuL ~ . . . -. . ' ... .... . ··-..... • War Vets Vowing To .Defy Burger .. WASHINGTON (AP) -Vietnam veteran. demonstrattna qabut the war have vowed to stay at their camp lfOllllda on the Mall deipl,. an order by Oiief Juallce Warren E. Burier baJuUni their use or the Jn>Uncb. Burier issued the or~r without com· menl Tu...SIY aft<r the ballll>dreued veterans staged mock search-and~estroy misa.lons on the Capitol steps, lobbied with congreume.o and placed two • wreatha In Arliniton Natioui Cemetery in memory ol. Vietnam war victims. News of Bura:er's rulinJ: was carritd to tbe 1,000 vellrans at their campsite Tu• day nJ&ht by one of their lawyers, former Atty. Gen. Ral!l!<Y Clorlt. "'We won't p," the veter1ns shouted as Clark cauUoned disobeying t}!e ~IC\11· Uon order would briq arre1L 1'11e Jqitice Department says enforct1Qent of the order will begin lite this afternoon. Burger, in overtumlna: a Federal Court of Appeall decision, barred camJilng on the Mall -the tree-Ufted area between the Capitol and the Lincoln Memorial - . uoW the qutJUon I! colllhlerod by the supreme CoOrt. Allowing Vielnam Veierana Al!alnsl the War to camp oo the Mall or other U.S. park proporly here, the Interior Depart- ment contends, would set • precedent for otber demonitraUons. 1be department noted another anUWar aroup ls at- tetQPtiq to draw 75.(QI for a rally in Wub:tniton not week. SUcb camping, the 1overnment argued, "WOUid CIUBe a suJous pr®lem jn main· tainln& public order and could lead to subltanUal publlc-bealth sud ainltaUon huatda, with inevitable environmental polllftion." The proiellers had boen barred Mon· day from •nierlni Arlinlton NaUonal Cemetery u a croup. Bui John M6taler, cometary superintendent, said Tueaday Ihm had beOn • mlsunder1tacding sud let the veterans enter. '\.... Palricip. Stone of S~ Mau., whole lf.yelMld son wu killed Ill the• war, and veteran Bob Maland of Albu- querque, N.M., placed wreaths under a cherry tree. One wreeth was mirked "allied," the olber, "Indochina." "Tile whole reason we're here in WasbingtOn and doing wbal we'rt doing is so that we don't have te lay aoy more wreaths,'.' said Al Hubbard, an oralllim of the week-lona demonstraUon. The demonstration on the Capitol steps tooj: the form or guerrilla theater in which a 1mall group of veterans &imulated a search-and-destroy mission. Tbe make-believe mi&sions -one near the Old senaie Office Building and another for the benefit of home.goln& workers at a busy intersection near tbe Capitol -were designed to show what the antiwar veterans called inhumane treatment dealt rouUnely to Vietnamese civilians. * * * House Committee . Told of Vietnam War Atrocities . . . . f:--'Jf l Ulere a candltlau, I'd •neak in llDMn M -out of to11Dn!' · Lon Nol Set To Form New Government PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian : chief of state Cheng Hen1 accepted the resignation ol Prime Minister Lon Nol t:e- day but lmmedlaltiy uied him to foml a new governm~t, Radio Cambodia azt. nounced. The brief broadcast allo said the Na- tional Aasembly met thLs momlng and unanimously approved the promotion of Lon Nol to the rank of Marshal of the Cambodian Anniu and a:ave him tbe Utle of nalional hero. The develoPm,nts in the Cambodlan political situation appeared to ~ statements made Tuesday by Loo Nol'• , brother, Col. L<tn Non, who 1aid the rtsignati6n wu lJtUe mon than a formality. w ASHING TON (AP! -The Pentagon 1ays incidenb Of enlisted men tossing fraamentation grenadea: at fellow 011 doubled in 1970. The official statement followed the visit of Mahmoud Riad, the El)'ptlan toreian minister, to Mosoow where he <Xlnferred with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and othe.r Kremlin leaders. R.iad retumtd to Caito Tuesday. At Least 13 Americans W ASHJNGTON (AP! -A con- gressional commtttee has heard for the first time testimony that American soldiers particip1ted iD or witne1sed the torture of prisoners of war in their custody in South Vietnam. Larry Rottmann, a spokesman for Viet· nam Veterans Against the War told the House Foreign Affairs 1ubcommJttet Tuesday he personally knew or skin-slrip- ping, pole-banging and water torture of Vietnamese soldiers captured by American Gls. Lon Nol, who with Chen1 Heng 114 Ibo bloodleu coup that overthrew neutralllt Prince Norodom Sihanouk March 18, 1970, suffered a stroke Feb. I. He 1pent some time in an Amerlclll mWtary hospital In Hawaii, but hu not fully recovered. The Pentagon said Tuesday there were 1119 such incidents, known 11 fragglng:, in VielAam last year compatfld with 91 in 1961. 'Qiere are no ncords for previous yean. 'Ibe fiJtlTtS wert rtleued after Senate Democ ra tic Leader Mike Mansfield told the Senate about the mun!er of a Y1JUlll We.st Point iraduate in hia sleep by an enliated man who f.ou. td a crenade into an offlett'I billet. The statement said the Egyptians and tht RuWans reached "full idenUty of views" in five d1ys or talks, e1p6clally "on lbe question of the lsraell aUftSSion against the Arab stat.a." lt repeat.tel previous dtmands for full lsraeli withdrawal and said the Israeli "e:i· pansionist policy" th re a t e n 1 l..D· terna.Uonal peace ind security. Dead in Bangkok Blnze In the meantime, Deputy Prem.Jtr Sisowatb Sirik Mata.k hu run the ravem- ment. The Pentas<>n u.ld 3f men died last year in franina;s compared with 31 in 1969. Statistics were not available on the numbers wounded or on tbe number r:i convJctJom ol thole cbarled 1n tbe i.a· cident&. The state~nt did not spell out "joint efforts" but tile ~vtet Unlcm h~ heavily armed Egypt 11nce the 1917 war and recently sent in MJG23 jets Uld Ruuian ~Ian Held Slave Drug Addict Imprisoned in Paris PARIS (AP) -Two m•n accused of holding a 22-y•ar-old drug addict a virtual sltve for 2'h yew -forcin1 him to find them money and go on heroin selling missions -were arrtlsted today, police said. A third man was being sought. Police said the victim, Daniel Koch , was forced to furnish "fines" of $900 to $9,000, and that Koch's English girlfriend turned her jewelry over to two men. The affair started in September 1970 in a bar in the Saint· Germain-des-Pres area of the Left Bank, police said, where Koch be· friended three men. But when the men learned Koch was a lonR·time drug user, they turned him to their profit, p(lllce said. - The men would take him to a suburban villa. beat him and leave him chained up for several days, then demand he furnish them money or the treatment would start again. Police did not say how Koch found the money. On two occasions. Koch went to Marseille to buv heroin ror them. Koch told police they also forced him to sell it in the Latin Quarter and give them the money. His reward was several packets of drugs, Koch told police, i.nd an end to the _beatings. . Last week, after another beating, Koch jumped out or their moving car and found safety In a shop. The shopkeeper called police. BANGKOK (AP) -Al lout IS Amtrlca.na wtre among %4 penon.s killed in Ille fire at the Imperial Hole! early Tuesday, officials said today. They In· eluded familiu of three American 5el'Vicemen. Amoo& the dead were tbt> wife Ind three chllctreo of Lt. Col. 8etbett Matsuo of ffonoJuJu -Wanda, 12, Michael, ta, and Lawrence, 9. The colonel was in an Anny hospital at the time of the rll'f:, and anolber son, ll·ytar-old Wayne, eacaped from the hotel and was in 1ood condition at an .Army hospital tod1y, the U.S. Embassy Aid. The embusy said names of the victims In the two other .servict famiUes were Court in Manila Convicts Pope's Knife Attacker MANILA (AP) -A Philippine court turned uide pleas of inlanity and ec- centricity today and found &livian painter Benjamin. Mendoza y Amor guilty of trylnJ to murder Pope Paul VJ last Nov. 27. Mendoza irimaced as be stood in the amall crowded courtr«im and beard Judge Pedro Bautista aentence 'him to prison for a minin\um of two years, four months and one day and a mulmum of four years and two months. Mendoia's lawyer immedi1tely ap- pealed and bail was set at $1 ,300. 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" W1!11fr1tlell " " Wl""'"9 ~ • being withheld until their nett of kin Wert notified. "Incidents like My Lal are not Isolated," he sa.id. "They are the TUUlt of de facto military policy in Indochina." Lon Nol submitted hi!: resignation Moo. 1 day and his cabinet followed sWt the nt1t day. 'Jbai ·police added the names of two more de1d Americans : Gerald Farrow or New Jeraey, and lJoyd James Kagle, oo home address available. The session before the subcommittee amounted to the kind of GI atrocity btar· in& war opponents in and out of Congres! have demanded of formal congressional committees but lad not received. The Prime Minister'• brother uld Tue.!day the rtslgnat.ionll 'wtrt reqairtd under the co~tuuoo bocaUIO Lon Nol had decided lo fire a majority of Ills cabinet. A bsrgain PriCe on a strippeckjowncaris no bargain. But a Buick or Opel at a bargain issomelhing elso again. Because .... ,. not seilO"ll some spociai - down modi!. v;,·,. '911ing B<,;cks and Opels, hsmnegne a.. ..... acldal,... CJDel flOO Sport CoiCI& Wiit'! I t 9 Iller engire 11'111009rillM~ tin ltM-IMd or no-lefld ~ ~41Yt11Ws for ().lief enQil'llOfl(il'.lflOI\ ~ "°"' 0.: bl'4* ll"d 1'0'e. ....~Wilt\~·· .ousivl l'llC1'91·tllated ~ ~ valvtS tor smoolhltr otlftf*'1ot\ on tod9y°I dN"* kJels. (;otriorl.AQ~I "1Sttm and more. --- " '!bur Buick-Opel dealer will give you better reasons · . to buy a new car roN ~ ahybodyelse. ' The business of auto safety: Auto safety Is everyone's concem. But It's our business. And wt think the attention that's being paid 10 aulo aafely now is a good thing. a.cause it wilt result in better driving for everyone. And. frankty, bettar driving ror everyone me&ns better business !or us. We say Buick ls something b berieva In. That's why we're trying to make If easy to be sale by punJng in safety features that work by themselves. You don't have to do anything 10 make them work . Like side guard beams. And the energy absorbing steering column. And the cargo guard between the trunk and back seal. They start ""'°'1cing"" even b1for8 you get k1 the car. But two salety features, two of the moet vitll, are worthiest unless you do soma thing arst Seal al'!d shoulder belts. Unfastened they do nothing. And you've seen enough statistics to know what a dilferenee !hey can make. So use them. But that's not Ill you can do. Because the most If· feeliVe salery feature of a!I can't be addtd to our cars or anybody else's. Thetleature is you. And the way you drive. Which should be defenslvety. And rested . And IOber. We're t!I in this together. And together we can tolYt the auto salety problem once and !or all. And the time ls now. ' I I I ' .,,_. -- OPJ!OSi t l on in Past " White House OKs Bu s Law .. • • WA!HINGTON (AP) 1ation. But at the lllllle time Tnunptd by the Supreme ht opposed maulve involun- Court, the White Houoe has tary bualn( and Aid the 1ov- called on the Am~k:an people ernment would not require lo- te obey' the ruUn1 that mus cal xhool dlttrlctl to trans- bu11.n1 11 a legU1mate means port children beyond '!normal to deaqreaate public schools. geographic school zones" to '"l'he Supreme Court has achieve racial balance. f~raJ lntuvenllon in educa- tion, uld ·the dtclaloaa would aid hlnl U be became a 1172 presidential candidate and suggested Congrtst might act If pu.bllc optruon ii strong enouah against lhe rulln&•· Some o t h e r Southtrners echOed Wallace'• poslUon. Wldotsd1y, Aprll 21, 1'71 Massi ve For eign Aid Changes Asked W ASHINCTON' (UPI) -npervl!td by one coordinator. Interamtrlcan SOdal Develop-American re.ourcti md'9 President NIJoo today pro-OfhM' faceta: of the AID pro-ment Inatltute, two eiiltin& clo.ttlJ into the U.S. foretin. posed a mwtve reorganlta. sram Would be bandied by the aiencltl. . aid program., whlcb over t6e cweraeu private lnvealment One of I.hi abN of tht year• bas been aleadily f'edUc.. tlon Of the U.S. foreign aid corporation and the rtform is to draw private edbyCon1rW. program and asked Coogresa.==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=::::'=:=:=:=:::::=:'.:::==::=;:;:::::;: for $3.1 billion to provide economic and mllltary assis- tance to America's allle.. acted and their deciJlon ii now On Tuesday, 1 peak Ing the law of the land arxf up to through Burger, the coqrt said the people to obey,'" said busing was consUtutlonal and prakle.ntial pre!! secretary the statts could OOC make it il- R.onlld L. Ziegler Tuelday legal; nel1hborhood schooJ!: after consult.Ing with ad-weer fine but they wouldn't do mlnlltraUon JawyeNJ. if the dlstriCC waa pracUcillg Panel OKs Improved He said the changes were nlleelSary to Implement the Nixon doctrine of helpin& other naUona "lncrta8'ngly ~houlder their own responsl· bl\IUes so thal we can reduct o u r d I r e c t involvement abroad." sco Zlealer uJd nolhlng would aegregaUon, and f e d e r a l be served by reviewina: past judges could use racial balan· statements by the President. cing u a guideline far bruk- Hia 1egal views were targelf · Ing up dual systeim. , turned back by the court To Alabama · Gov. Georae whoM W'lallimoua op In i o n s Walla«, the coort.'1 action were written and delivered by sounded "as if it wat written Warren E. Burger, the man in an insane asylum." He 1d- Ni1on n1med chief jwilice. ded inmates ()f an Alabama Elderly Aid Package Nixon's rt0r1laniution plan woold abolW! the U.S. Agency for JnternaUonal Development (AID) and transfer most of Its A year ago, Nixon, a lawyer, asylum could have written a took a hard line again.ff. of-better decision. ficially inspired achoo! segre-Wallace, long-time foe of Thtr•'• pltnty ol good flailing, waitr 1po1ta, and 011tdoot1 lun cemln1 ri9ht I Utr 01yllght S1Yln91 Tlmt. Ira the perfect 1111on to get youratll t n.igged n.tw w1tt1·1e1i1t1nt watch. Uke 11'1!1 1lll·wlndlr1g Omeg1 S11m1111r d1y/dat1 model. And lt1!1 Omega la grtll lor winter aporl1, too. In 141( gold top, 1t1lnl111·1tttl beck caaa, aotd·fllltd br1c111t, s210. &•m• 11'1 1!alnltt1 1te1r, m11clllng 1-raealtt, St76. !oth models 1vallabl1 with 1t1•p. e BankA.mtricard e Ma.ttt1' Ctuirge e Kirk Chargt "The Stores Conffd.tnct Built" MAllOl 11'!0,,IMt CI NTll Ull M•l'tltf l ift, CMfl MeN ...... Open Mon ., Thurs., Fri. 'Ill 9 p.m. ' WASRINGTON (UPI) - 'The House Ways and Means Committee has i.pproved a Sl.5 billion pacbge of im- proved Social Security bentfita but cut back on f re e hospitalization for medicare patients from 59 lo 29 days. 'Ille panel also rejected a Nlxon Administration proposal to have the federal govern- ment pay the full monthly premiums that 20 million peo- ple over U now pay for doc- tors' insurance. That premium, now fS,30, will go to !5.110. The panel did limit future Ex-senator Says He'll Face Nixon NEW HAVEN, conn. (AP) -Former Sen. Cha rle • Goodell of New York said Tuesday night he w i 11 challegge President Nixon in a primary In 1972 if Nlxon'a policies on Vietnam do not change, the New H • v e n Journal.COU.rier said in lta Wednesday morning editions. Goodell was quoted as tell- ing a Yale University audience Tuesday night he would "try to convince him (Niton) to mike a draatlc change in policy, as that seems unlltely, I will ntn." However, an aide to the former senator denied later in New York that Goddell had committed himself to making 1 primary challenge. BOAT THOUGHTS MAY NEED A BOAT LOAN Weant epeclaliala In making dreams come tJUe. It II a nice feeling to know !hat they OM be yotm when you want them. Stop by todaylhd dlacuaa how easllyyour pleasant thooU1a can become a reality. lt'a 8B$'/ wllh-lotiHJank-mle Boat Loans. OllDf 111. II PM DllLT ·6 PM RIDlT functions to a new U.S. increases In the roonthly I n t emationaJ Development prtmium to no more than Corporation' and a U . S . 1 n t ematlonal Development per~taee increases in social Institute, which would be HCUrity benefits. Thwi, a 10,---------- perctnt bene.flt.s boost would mean no mort than a 56-ctnt increase in the mont h ly premium. The committee T u e s d a y took action that would Im- prove monthly cash benefitl for widowa:, provide medicate coverage to the seriously disabled under 65, ralse tht outside earnlnas ctJling for social security retirees, and add a cost-of-living escalator for future btnefit increases. '~ctually, I'm a Communications Consultant specializing in Increasing Customers' Profits Through Maximum Communications Efficiency. But to 1 .:\tt\2.~·i~i~~ most people, · .: .. ; . ' 1~~""' I'm just 'the 1· fella from the phone company'.'' You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing pj:lone bills. Dlscussln~ equipment needs. Lookln& for ways to help our business customers' businesses. He's a General Telephone Communications Consultant. A formal title for a nice, briaht guy who can make day· to-day busi· nesscommunicalions less hectic for you. For example, do clients pass nasty little remarks about your phones always being busy? Do you have to 5eream to page a typist slttln& two feet outside your office? ls it easier to re1ch a customer overseas than someone in your bullding? If these situal ions sound familiar (or remind you of others). you can definitely use our Communlcalions Consu ltant And soon, too. Before you waste more time and money, Or develop an ulcer. (And If you think your office commun ications are pretty good now, we promise that he can make them even better.) There's no charge for his service. And It's vary usy to 111 •. All It takes is a phone call to our business office. We only ask one thing. When you call, please ask for "the Communlc1llons Consultant"-not "the fella from the phone company." Everybody's the fella from the phone comoanydown here. [g i #J GEnERALTELEPHDnE • - -· . • • • ___ .. -_ ........ _ .. ' . . ··~·'""· -'-'-'="'-'-' . . .. -....... -··--····"····· • ' DAD.'\'.'. PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Victory .for A .tsnllicant v I c to r y for the public has been achieved m the lltigoUon over Bolsa Chica Beach. The net result or the case is that the 2~•·mile strand now wlll be owned in lull by tbe stat<. The state ha.s settled with the owners of the rail· road right of way -Bolsa Pacific Corp. and Southern Pacinc -to buy the narrow strip for $3.8 million. The figure of $3.8 million may not sound like a vic- tory unUI the history of the case Is examined. Briefly, the state moved to acquire the property through an emi· nent domain action. Shortly afterward, the state Supreme Court made the landmark Gion and Dietz decision which &et out new public access rights to recreational land. T~e state wa.s prohibited from adding a claim for a public reCreatiooal easement. under the Gion and Dietz decision, to its original action. so state attorneys astutely asked Jluntington Beach to do so. The city council auth· orized this intervention and as a result helped bring aOOut the compromise. The oWTiers' appraiSaJ on the-property, for example, was $5. 7 million, while the outside state appraisal was $5 million. By any reckonlng ·the $3,8 million price tag was a bargain. Though the case seemed on the surface to be a nice show of teamwork by public agencies, it must be acknowl· edged that its conclusion was nearly marred by dispute between the city and state. The city at first balked at withdrawing its easement claim to allo\v the settlement. The reason was undis- guised: the city was hoping to persuade the state to let it operate the beach under a long-term lease or joint powers agreement. the Public cials !rankly admit that although· they bave elaboralf plans for the strand they won't have lhe funds to lmpt .. ment.th'efTI for at least a year. The state is sliackled in beach development because the expenditures have to be approved by the Legislature. lt'a time for the Legislature to consider earmarking revenue ftom parking at recreational sites for recrea· aonal development rather than plowing it back into the general fund. Fountain Valley Is Lucky Are those shouts of joy ringing above the whir of helicopter blades in Fountain Valley? Probably. For several years-since the oopulation boom hit the young_. city-residents have complained about .the noise and dis· turbance from the Marine whirlybirds. But lh.e Marines were unmoveable, as solid in Mile Square as they were at_ Tripoli~ However, President Nixon as commander in chief has now given them march· ing orders. The helicopter facility will have to go to another location and the land turned over for public use as soon as feasible. It's likely the 55 acres of the Marine facility will be added to the 485 acres surrounding it which the coun- ty is developing into Mile Square Regional Park. The move would be logical with the growing urbanization of this area and the pressing need for more open space. _,. .. .. ...... ~~~ But State .Parks and Recreation Commissioner Wit· Jiam Penn Mott did not yield and the city council, real· Wng that to cOntinue the delay was to jeopardize tbe setUementjtself, dropped its claim. No real Objection is made to the state operating and developing Bolsa Chica -if only it will. But state o(fi· The Marines haven't been bad. neighbors, <ind, ex- cept for the noise of their helicopters, have been quite cooperative with city and county officials for use of the land sUrrounding "their base. But few will be 11ad to see them leave sometime in the next five to 10 years. Foun· tain Valley is lucky to have such an area for park de-- velopment and the chanj!'.eover from Marine helicopter base to park land, or \\'hatever, should be a pleasant and welcome one. H • 1 f YOU'LL JUST LIT HIM 6cf ClOSER ~E M16HT STOP 6~0WLIN('1: Why So Many Of Our Cities Are Unsightly One reason that so many European cit.ies are beautifu1, while so many American cities are grim and ugly, bas nothing to do with the supe rior cultural or esthetic quaJltles of the Europeiins. Jt has lo do with the hislorJcal f a c t that European cities were founded long ago, when water was the best mode o ( transportation ; while most Amer- ican cities were built up in the 19th Century. when the railroad was the dominant form of trans- portation. European cities were built on or around rivers. which have a certain inherent charm and beauty. 'Ille life of the city reached down lo the water and took Its tone and color and contour from the riverfront. AMERICAN CJTIQ grew up along a railroad track, in a bleak industrial at- mosphere where all beauty was sacrlfic· ed to shipping and loading and sinoke and oil and warehouses and t e r m J n a 1 buildings. There was no time, or room, or inclination. to put in parks and plazas and malb ind the other topographical amenities that make all the differen~ between a stroll through the heart of Paris and the backside of Cleveland. Now we are rapidly. entering a third era of population growth and density - the new cluster around the nation's urban airports. THE AREA SURROUNDING O'Hare Airport in Chicago, for instance, has Dear Gloomy Gus: I'm tired or all the griping about Cluorid.,tion. Jr it's so dangerous, why do all those eastern and mid· western cities now using it to fight children's tooth decay continue to do so year after year~ -D. L. T. 1"lllt fMiw. ref!Ki'I l'Ufwl' VlftH. .. t -.-ir., tMte ., ,... -·-· """' ~ .. """ "' ...... ., .... DellY ~1 .. 1. grown faster than any other comparable area in the nation; what is happeriing here will happen elsewhere -offices and laboratories, factories and h o u s I n g developments will shift their focw; from the central city to the airport district, for population invariably follows transports· lion. And we are making the same dismal mistake with the airport areas that \\"e made wltb the railroad towns. They have inadequate zoning, virtually no planning, and are allowed to burgeon rommercially as high-priced slums, dominated by gas stations, junkyards, motels, saloon strips, vast supermarkets,_ and strident sign· boards. AS THE INNER CITY decays, y,·e are simply transferring the ugliness lo the airport regions, dragging along all the same problems that have plagued the ci· ty In its cancerous decline. Our conl· mercial insanity condemns us to the highest standards of living with the lowest quality of civlliud life. The railroads raped the c i t i e s , esthetically, and left them mortally wounded. The airplane will do the same if we let it, not because it ls inherently evil, but because that ls the nature of the beast if it is not tamed by considerations of beauty, of easeful living, of planned communities, and a decent RMe of pro- portion between our economic drives and our long-neglected human needs. The Age of Discovery The pre-Elizabethan year 1536 \\·as mighty early for a .. pleasure cru\l':e'' on the great western ocean, although Newfoundland was fairly well known by then. Yet a 1.JJndon leather merchant, one Richard Hore , chartered two ships, Trinity and Wiiliam, for the double purpose of catching Newfoundland codfish and giving certain influential gentlemen a pleasure cruise, first toward the New World . .. It hardly could be classed as a success. Some of the company died of starvation ; others took to cannibalism. Yet the survivors wllo arrived back in Cornwall Jn October of that yea r bad seen "mighty isJands of Ice in the summer season ;" thtir curiosity had been satisfied. TIDS IS TlfE sort of throw -away historical anecdote that livens the spirited yet scholarly work by Samuel EJM>t Morison. '11te -European DtKOvery or ADMrkl: Ttle Nordttn Voy11gtt," which O.lord Unlverslly Pr<u will Introduce this month ($1$). Jt is a fully documenled, Illustrated account . of all known North Atlanlk: voya ges to the Ntw World prJor to 1600 -roughly from the 1emJ.Jegendary 1esthellc ''an"erlng.s of Ireland'• Sl. Brendan lhe Navlgelor, Uuooi)t Frobl•h<T, llaklL-yt and Gllb<rt to the Second Virginia Colony's Clly of Rtlelgh. Tbe aim of lfi~ rrn:iY.11ed hlsto1111n Clf11Mrrl, Oxffln"I and tw'c'! wlnn"r of tbe Pulltttr PrUe ror blolOJY (John Paul Jone1, Columbual, oow in hi! Mth f<M• II to nwrli• ltlllDry 11)11 bl.!torlcal " ,.--. -·· --·-r----···-r The Bookman ' . .. .. _ ... biography In a manner that will be both authenUc and interesting. He succeeds beautifully in I his comprehenidvc work which. he suggests. should replace John Fiske's classic t\l:c> volume "Discovery of Amer I ca'' published some 75 years ago. To replace that. Admiral Morison (a World War JI rankl must produce a stc0nd. volume. on the Southern voyages. The inrlefatigable scholar tells us he is already well into just that. ritORISON'S BUSINESS is fact. But he also bears down on classic myths or exploration, voyages to fiyaway islands, false or "M:Crtt" discoveries . lie notes in passing at least ten so • calltd pre-- Columbian voyages of discovery that never took ph1ce and maps of Islands never seen -presumably the work of c1rtograpl'H!:rs who disliked open space on charti; and marked lhem w It b disappearing and other mythical l1ndJ. This Is nevtr a debunki1'13 book, but this catalogue of fables creates • colorful counterpoint to lhe main current of schol;irlyilntf!rpretallon o( men 11nd ships of those af.?es. ~forlson has mAde !he ~a hli province at lrast slnce "The ~1ari­ time History of Musachusttt.f' in 1921 . WWlam tto1a1 For Both Recreation and Transportation ••• Huntington Beach Needs Bikeways To the Editor: As chairman of the bicycle paths cammiltee of the Huntington Beach High School Ecology Club,,) have presented to the city council a petition signed by 1,271 residents of Huntington Beach who feel that our city needs bikeways and bicycle pathl and routes now, and tbat any future general plan of the city sboWd make provision for bicycles for · both recreatibnal and transportation needs of our citlzens. THE FEASIBILITY and the nttd for bibways and bike trails haa already been studied in depth by the city staff ind two comprehensive reports have been prepAffii on the subject. The first was by the development coordinator on November 12. 1970 and the second was for the public works and police departments in March of this year. Bikeways can be striped onto existing secondary roads and streets for only $7 to $20 per mile. WE JOIN THE CfFY'S staff in recommending and urging that the Exhibit 0 route, which links Central Park with the city beach and northern residential areas, immediately become Huntington Beach's first bikeway project. We also feel that long range bikeway planning In Huntington Beach should be coordinated with the bike trails systems that have already been planned by Newport, Costa J\1esa, Irvine and Orange County for the harbor area . IN CONCLUSION , we think that bicycles are very imporlant. They move people without making smog, and they make riders heaJthier along the way. OUr generation must look to our city's leaders for help in matters of vital environmental concern to us. \Ve sincerely and respectfully hope that they do not fail ns. LISA BENTSON Peace ha Seal Beacla To the Editor: You report that peace returned to the Seal Beach City Council meetings with the Installation of ty,·o f re s h m e n councilmen following a hectic recall election : that. in sharp contrast to most council sessions of late. municipal business was dispatched in an orderly manner. I will tell you the reason for the apparent peace and order. A certain calibre of people using familiar tactics had achieved their ends. I last saw people of this calibre using these tactics at the Huntington Beach Union High School Board of Trustees meeting of April 23, 1969. They achieved their ends at that time also. The agenda at that meeting conlained an Item concerning a proposed class in sex education. DURING THAT BOARD meeting, the board .members were vllified. insulted and per60nally be:rate:ci to the extent that t felt embarrassed to be a .,~rltness to such behavior. Upon !he election or M•yor Morton Baum lhe san1e tactics Y.-ert immeclialely utilized at Seal Beach Cily Council meetings . 1tfayor Baum, like Mr. John Bentley, woo was then chairman of the board of ·---B11 Geor11e ---. Dear G@Orgc: ~13.ny hcuse v.·Jves, a ramous lady columnist "TOie. like to do hcu.scv.ork In lhe nude. I've joined them. My spouse objects. Do you see anything v.Tong \\'Ith thl!? nALPll D!.'ar Rnlph: U'hy dcn't you ask Ann? JI should make her \''hole day. ' Mailbox • ,, Letters from readers are welcome. Normall11 writers should conve11 their tm.s.sages tn 300 word& OT Less. 'The right to condense letters to fit space or elimina~ libel it reserved. AU let- ters mu.st include signature and mad· i'r&Q address, but names may be with· h.eld 01i request ·if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub· li.3hed. trustees, went out of his way to conduct the meetings fairly and with as much dilllity as possible under .very trying circumstances. Yes, there: will be peace and order in Seal Beach noW since the opponents of Mayor Baum and the old council majority have achieved their aims. Peace and order will be maintained aince the supporters of Mayor Baum will work in accord with the traditions of civility to achieve their ends. They know how to act as citizens of a democratic society. GERALDINE WEST Agaln•t Fluorlda~ To the Editor : It appears the citizens of Huntington Beach are destined to fall unwilling victims to lhe introduction of a poisonous halogen, fluoride , to our community "''ater supply. Thfs at a tentative figure of $50.000 for the privilege. Done so in &pile or Its minimal short-term dental benefita for our children; hoy,·ever. its inevitable lethal side--effects are left unmentioned. An abject violation of the coostltutlonal rights of our valued senior community and their right to a freedom of choice. iN THE WORD.S of \Voodrow Wilson: ''The history nf liberty is the history of limitations upon the powers of government." With respect to the deluslonary aspects. Thomas Burke wrote: "People never give up tn~lr · liberties but under some delusion.." -'!'he · same held true 150 years ag~ when the poet Byron wrote, "Till taught by pain. men really know not l'lhal good water's "''orlh." On August 15, 1963 . the department o{ Health arfd \Velfare stated: ". , It would be impossible to state a aare amount for supplementation by an individual without knowl~e of the amount of fluorides already consumed by him from sources such as drinking water and foods grown in soil already contaminated and rich in fluorides." The American Me d-i c a I Association on June 10, 11164 states, "The . AMA has not carried out any research, either. long-term or short-term regarding the pos:¢ility of any siae-effe.cts." Hardly evidence of Comunistic activity! rr: IS APltARENT a concerted educetional program should be initiated to alert our citizens already victimized by arthritis, heart and kidney condifions to the dangers of the daily ingestion of fluorides no matter how carried out! Consider, 'is this a first step to introduce drugs into our water for indiscrinlinate consumer t r e a t m e n l whether they individually stand to bene-- fit or h0t1 Also a report by the Congressional !Delaney) Investigating Committee: "It is safe to say. nuor:ldation Is mass medication without parallel in the history of medicine." ALBERT GOLDMAN Superintendent'• Salar11 To the Editor : . Recently it was brought to my attention that the governor of Nevada receives a salary of $30,000 per year. In comparison, how can anyone justify the same salary for a mere school superintendent? Yet, within the ·boundariet of Huntington Beach, we have not one, but three superintendents receiving that amount, or close to it. It is apparent lhat scltool board trustees that can be "conned" Jnto approving salaries in that category are not serving in the best in~rests of the lixpayers who foot the bill. IN THE HBUllSD, the board not only hired the present superintendent at more than .the. former was paid (without so much as 'I: ... trial period to assure his competence), but they also approved the hiring of an assistant at $28,000. It is interesting to note that in Berkeley, a clty about the size of Huntington Beach, the superintendent. at $20,000 per year, had to like a $4,000 cut because of floancial problems the district The Why of Rate Rises Currenl effort., to discredit tht California Public Utilities Commission - and have it made elective instead Of ap. pointive -because or recent rate I~ creases it has approved unfortunately place political considerations abOve the economics of the public utilities concept..,. A public utility is, of course, a prl~ate industry that bas-been given 50methlng·.of a monopoly status under state govern· ment supervision and regulation because the essential nature of its service to the public does not lend i!Mlf to the open compeUtion which is an important factor in other areas of the economy. AS A TAX PAYING. investor-owned bustneS!. however, a utility must like all businei;ses make sufficie:nl profit lo al· tract the capital necessary for expansion to Oll?tt consumer demand. Jn addition, the utility races the imperative of cx- p:lnding Its ser"icts In ad vance of de-- mnnd, so that the state's gr<>wing popula- tion y,·ill always have lhe supply of po'\'er or transporlatioo or oommunic11tlon or v.he1c\er thnt tt requires. The only wsy a ulllity can mttl its caplt.al llCtds is through appropriate ' • -re· ~ ' . Gue.t Editorial • rates.. CUrrent critics of the utilities point to a recent increase In various rates. foll owing an approximate l~yrar period of few increases, as paralleling the state government's political coloration. While that parallel exists. the significanct ls misread. or misstated. by the critics. AS THE INFLATIONARY spiral hi!S ac:Cl'.!:lerated. utlllUes like all businesses have had to absorb f)sing com of all o!)(!rations. After a long period of low rate increases they now have t.o catch up. If they are to continue to keep pact with consumer needs and remain 1 sound in- vestment for their thousands 0 r 6lockho ldel'3, large alfd 'irn1ill. The alternative, of cOUt.se. would be stole owner:;hip, with taxp11yers 1up- plylng the working furlds. \\t'hlch may "'II explain Ult: curri;.nt camp1Jgn against the PT '" • Calllornl1 f'eaturr Service faced. lt seems that in a city Berkeley'a age, with older buildings and crowding, 1n an area beset with problems of integration (no ne of which we have here), that the job of superintendent of' schools would indeed. be a difficult one. IN COft.IPARISON, how can our board of trustees justify a salary of $30,000 per year for a superintendent of only fiVe (and a half) high schools? .We need, not only . a reassessment of the administrative saliry range , but also a unification plan whereby the sil: school dislricta in the area would be condensed into thrtt K·tbrougti.12 districts to relieve lhe overburdened · taxpayers of e:rcessive administrative costs. PAULINE E. MOEN Secretary Council on Sensible Taxation Rec~'nslder tlie' Riite To the Editor : It is difficult to understand the board of trustees o4 lhe Huntingto!l Beach Union High Schobl Oistrid proj)Osing a third attempt at a 69-cent override on June IS. Naturally, I am interested in the best possible education for my thildren at the elementary, high school and university level. However, let's face facta. The economy in general is down, with many people out of work. The people that arc working are 1 more concerned with their job future than in the past and many small businessmen are faced with a very real struggle for survival. THESE ARE THE fa cts as they exil'it today. Already lhe override election has failed three tlrnes. Other districts faced with a similar situation decided not to ask for an i~ease but just a status quo to at lea.st rJ1alnt.ain their current level. The general public is fed up with any kind 0£ tax increase regardless Of hO\V noble the cause. Parent.s of children in elementary schOols, tbe usual group of property owners with no school·age children and ~ven some parents of children in the 'high school district are voting against this override because they feel it is unnecessarily high for the current times. NOW rr IS proposed that. we increase the tax rate by 69 centg lo the $2.08 rate with the very real pos$ibility of losing and then reverting to an 85-cent rate. We all know that 85 cents will not provide proper educalion for our ch1ldren at the high &ChoOl level. The HunUngton Beach High School bol:rd is playlng Russian Roulette, with the future of our high school students at stake. Jt is a danger:ous game of biackmail. 1 since.rely recoi;nmend that the currrnt board members. as well as !he forthcoming board members, reconsider the rate which will be proposed in the JW'IC 1$ election before it is loo late. . E, W. (BILL) DAVIS --W- IY e d n e sd a y, .April 21. 1971 The tdttortal ppge of tht Doilu Pilot seeks to biform and sUm- ulale readers by presenting thi! newspaper's ophrfons a'lld com- n~niary on. topics of interest and signi/ica11ce, by providing a forum for t11t tzprtnicm of our rtadtN' opiniOns: · ml.d bu prcsenUng tlit dlfftse vfev. points of informett ob!arnr.s and spOke11n1n on 'to~c,.of tht dau. Rob<rt N. Weed. Publisher l Founders Honored Pi Phis Light Candles anniversary of the founding of Pi Beta Phi, oldest national sorority for women, will be Mrs. Eleanor Lehner. national pub I i c relations chairman. whose theme will be Where the Timely Meets t h e lfimeless. One of the luncbeen highlights will be t b e presentation o! corsages to sis; new Golden Arrow Pi Phis who have beeen members for 50 years or more. Mrs. Virginia Bollman is luncheon chairman. · Wallpaper dolls dressed in period costumes representing i2 founders of Pi Beta Phi will center tables during lbe South ~t Alumnae Club's Founders Day luncheon in the Newporter Inn tomorrow. Handcraning the d o 11 s ,ii"i========;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""il cOmplete with j ewe I ry. cameos a n d hand-painted faces, were Mrs. H art Hickman, president of South Coast alums, and her mother. HEALING MISSION WEDNESDAY. Arltll JI, •I I r .M. •t ST. JAMES' CHURCH 3209 VIA LIDO NEWrOJtT IEACH, CALIFOJtNIA 475.0210 • l rl•t Y O\H Skk ••d AffllctM fer ,,.,., with GllTlUDl TIClll Following the 11:30 a.m. 5ociaJ hour and luncheon , a t t a d i tional candlelighting ceremony hono ring the ~gina1 founders will be C9nducted by Mrs. E a r 1 Corkett and her daughter, lttrs. Gary Myers. • Tllb 11 A• llttefde11e1t1IHtleMI M..tl .. fllf" IMrroflo • HHT llblir MftlOllft M 5etl'1 Pro•IMs to H..i Tetl•y Mrs. Ticer i1 • "'od•r" p•r•blo of th• r•1urr•clio~ frorn th o J •• cl. Speaking on the 1 O 4 l h I! ,, -- Announcing-Too Much For Your Money! COME IN AND UNDERSPEND ! JIOUX SHAMPOO ,STYLED AND SET With Rcuc Slu•C)OQ tt.Gt .-a ricJt UW'N ~- FASHION STYLED HAIRCUT ~ QI • CREME on.: I VlllY PlllM•NfMt W•~l !.OJ•P•Mf{IO OM W llPfON(, ~~.!_VE •. ....... ~ ..,,W hoT cut,....,_ ... d M~ 0.. .... ~ irirtnH. I 'JlNTlD Oil •LU.CHIO tu.Ill. -_t.11 ROUX nic:e clumqe Cob''" 10 ~ wt"'°'1t pctOlllide ond klilb tot'" -u without nb--<lff. Notun::il col4 ors of omy Cl dufl hair. Go..- ~for b'eoched. Jncludn Sryle ond 5«. ROUX .. Fanclfull RINSE Colors lii&iiediolWly! ~ groy comple ... ly! 1' o ., o s bt .. och•d hoir! ~ bW:oched hoir to""" gtVWth. 1 l •¢tlirlG colon -N'lle '"' -sh:lmpl;Q cut -no fading. ROUX .. fcmd-lon•" CREME HAlll TllfT Touch Up l.w;ludn it-..-od ""·bl.-"lard-1~ ~ Holt' TW 9lvft .Oft«', -~-­,,_ ~.~ T.-.. "lit -4 ,,,,... Wtdnffd.17,. April 21, 1971 DAILY PILOT 3J • > spring~ Special Hours Opening Day at Bullocks Santa Ana THURSDAY, APRIL 22 • 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. EXCEPTIONA·L SAV:INGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE I FASHION I BLOUSES PLUS ~ovses, """''"'dressy . . . . . . . .. • redt!cld 1 /3 CALIFORNIENNE DRESSES Slemiess PGl"81er drosses, •sst sfyles, sizes g. Children's I Juniors BABY & TODDLER SHOP famous·Makerf're.foldedstretchdillflers ......• !.II Training Pants, sizes 1·2·J.4 ...•....... , . . 2/.99 BOY'S-GIRLS 3-6X DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Decorative & Ser<i111 accessories & wall decor ...................... , • , r.-..111 Mi•i pictlJres for ITWPings • .. • • • • .. .. 2.5113.11 FLOOR COVERINGS Area Rues, asst sizes, mostlr one of a kind • .. .. .. . . . .. . . . . . .. .. • reduc1j 41·A'-' Many of oor beaoliful Orieo~l rugs . . . . . IDW rlduc1d 18 ................................ 15.99 COUNTRY STORE l.41 FURNITURE 3.lt $5 Boys pofyeslef ond cottoo ~end slacks ..... . $9 to $12 Spring Dresses ................ . V~llfer S!ll'~tes • .. .. • . . . . . . . . . . "4uced 1/l FASHION BOUTIQUE lmlt setectioa of dresses, "its, coats .. • fldUCU 1 /2 FASHION GALLERY ~esig"' Dresse!, daytime, cocktail, & "'"ing .. .. .. .... . .. • .. .. red1ced 1/2 Orig. $100 to $265 F1Jr.Trimmed Pantsrrit.s 141.00 $80 to $90 Coats .. • .. .. .. • .. • .. .. 55.90 FUR SALON Dyed Broadtail processed Lamb Strollers with natural Mink.collar and coifs .... very specially priced . . . 350.80 Hd 451.11 LADY BULLOCK famous-Make< custom size dresS<s reduced 1/3 to 1/2 MISS BULLOCK Yoong Designer °'""' • .. • . • • 11fftlj 1/3 ti 1/2 SHERWYN CASUALS Ours alone, rayon, li11e11 and polyester dress- es by Fred Ro~scilild .•• white collar bim on moss 11eeo, Nae~ bone, red, cam~ 1nd navv 23.11 Timely Cawal dresses . • . . . . • • reduced 1/3101/2 Evertast cotton print Pant Suits ••••• , . • . . • . 17.99 SHERWYN COATS & SUITS Thre,,.Piece Weekender, washa~edOl~e knil 21.99 SHERWYN DRESSES famous-Mam Polyeslef Dr!SS • .. .. . . . . . . . . 21 .It SHERWYN SPORTSWEAR Orig. $40 to $46 P1ntsaits • • . • • • .. • • • .. .. • 21.91 Town and Travel Active Sportswear Polyest .. Pantsrrits, three slyles in Spring colors • 35.H Orig. $18 Evan Picone s!Jl>ed lirllcie M~ polo top, sizesS.\f-l .......................... 11.1! BOYS SHOP S5 Sport SllW!s • • • .. • • • • • .. .. • • . 2.99 or l/5.51 $6.50 Flare Pan~ .. • • . • .. .. .. • .. .. . .. .. . UI GIRLS7-14SHOP $8to$21Dresses ................ 11duc1d1/l $6.50 to $2hssorted Spomwear , • .. • reduced 1/2 . - PRE-TEEN SHOP Assooment oflops, many colors •.. s-m-1 • .. .. • • 1.41 Trenchcoats, assorted colors. , .sizts 6· 14 ..• , . . 1.99 YOUNG SHOES Chil~"s Sandal~ op ta~" 3 .. .. . . . . . . . .. . 3.99 Childrens and Worn"!'• Sneaker>. 3.51 Surfeis , • 4.11 I ACCESSORIES I HOSIERY ArcherstoctiofsCfosot .......... Reduced 1/2 FASHION ACCESSORIES Orig. $6 to $12 Famo1rS-Maker Suede Btlls reduced 1/2 FASHION JEWELRY Gold-filled jew~ry • .. .. • .. • .. .. .. • reduced 1/l HANDBAGS & SMALL LEATHER GOODS Asst Leatfler& Vin~ llaodba&s •• lldac1d 1/!ta V2 P-Haodbl(~ asst styl" .. • • • • • .. .. .. • . 7 .II MILLINERY & WIGS Orig.$35lenlmeAIWlll«Wigs •........•• ll.SI WOMEN'S GLOVES O!ig. $4 to $6 Llltf1'r-lool, Sil~Skin Gloves . . . . l.SI WOMEN'S SHOES faslliOI sfloes .. • . • . . .. .. • .. .. .. • rnMCH 1/2 Upholstered Aoor Clear- ance in New Spring Fab· rM:s. Occasional, decor• tive, aa41011nge c•airs, tigllt bac~llld loose pillow back sofas • .. .. . .. • 11ducld 31% tu 51% Orig. $129 Velvet occasional chairs •• , • .. • • • 41.11 Orig. $139 48" Round Game TaNe • • • • • • • • • • • n.11 Orig. $499 ~pc. game sets • .. .. .. • .. .. .. 111.11 DESIGN STUDIO ' Cuslom Upholstery Sam~es •.•.. r ;duced 25 % LAMPS Orir. $50 Ginger Jar Limps lt.11 HOUSEWARES !!!""Cookware ........... , rllllCM 1/! Or~. $9.50 I Y, qi. saucepan .... , • • .. • 4.15 Ori!. $10.50 21'2 qt -'91• .. .. . . . . . 5.25 Orig. $t2.ll5 8" skillet ... : .. • • • • • • • • 1.47 Drir.117.50 10" skillet . . . . . . . . .. • .. 1.15 Orig. $13.95 West Bend toa keltles, asst colois • . I.II Orig. $29.99 Sunbeam toastei .. • .. . .. • • • • . 11.99 MUSIC & HOME APPLIANCES Orig. $59.95 Porta~e AIWA-Comb. Cassette.Jape 1econfer witll AM·FM Radio • . .. . . .. .. .. .. • 31.95 Orig. $648.50 famous-Make 23" (Diag. Meawr• menU Coloil.V, Remote Control . . . . . . . . .. . 521.81 SLEEP SHOP Simmons qu,...sill sl"!I sels with bormbedlrame&sflephenl castm. 151.0110241.IS SUN SHOP Orig. $280 Wnxrght Iron Reel ta~e witll 6 c/rairs 111.H Or~. $220 Wrought Iron 42" Roond taNe wi~ 4 chairs • .. . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . • .. .. .. • • • 111.11 Orig. SI ta $125 Assorted mugs . .. .. .. • .. .. • SI' TOWN & TRAVEL DRESSES All Paotsuits .. .. .. .. . . . . . . .. . • . • reduced 1/3 TOWN & TRAVEL KNITS .._I _M_EN'_S S_TOR_E _I .__I _M_ISC_ELL_AN_EO_US__,I Famous.Ma-er Knit Suits, Pantsuits, amt Dresses .. . reductd 1/3111/2 Orig. $66 to $76 \'/asha~e Suils & f'llnt>uifJ • . • . . .. . . . . . . . • .. now 31.10 to 41.IO TOWN & TRAVEL SEPARATES Groops of Coordinates, Pantsuits, & s ... ters ................. redtfcM 1/3to1/! TOWN & TRAVEL SUITS & COATS Wot-!Dok Pint Coat .. • • .. .. . .. .. . • • .. • • 24.11 I INTIMATE APPAREL I DAYTIME LINGERIE Orig. 3.99 Chemise ~ip~ lllok!ft sim . . . . . . . . . I.SI FOUNDATIONS f-s-11.1w Brassiere~ Ginlles, & l'lntygirdles • • .. • 11ducu 1/2 NIGHTIIME LINGERIE Better sl"ll""" llloken sizes . . • rd aced l/l Ill 112 FORERUNNER SHOP Orig. $ID to $12 Rand pants • • .. .. • . . .. .. • 1.11 MEN'S CLOTHING $115 Saville Row Suit, all woof, wid• lapel II.OD $70 ta $85 Dacron Ind wool Sport Coot, belt- ed back ........................ 41.91 Imported fabric Suit, w~e ~pel and belted back . 1 GS.VD MEN'S SPORTSWEAR For Golfers and leisure wear, machi11e wash and dry Knit Sport Shirts. cool and comfortlblt I.II Stlort sleeve Sport Stlirt~ pattems and sol~s . . . . 4.19 MEN'S FURNISHINGS $11 to Sl8F-sMakerfll!SsStlirts 7.21 or l/14.01 WYNBRIER SHOP .,Orig.$9bJ$131Dl!g-~eeve dressslllrts •• 3.19 I Orig. $7 to $9 Walk Shorts .. .. .. .. .. • .. . • . . 4.11 ROBES & NEGLIGEES I I ,..Orig-.$3_5~-bur-gny-lonqu-ilt-robe_s ._ •.. _ •.. _ ... _21..,.1! HOME STORE l.___-_c_O .... Ys ... E .... G_IEN_N_E __ I ~,!T~!~!~~H·~·~..... raducej 1/l Discontinued Fte1dcrestru1 .. .. • .. .. . reduced 1/2 t.:OLLEGIENNE COATS & SUITS Orig. $88 to $115 Imported Suede CGa1s ...... On g. $56 to $130 p.,fJCIJ 11 Ant Styles 44.SI BEDROOM ACCESSORIES !fabrics .. • . .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. . . redKld 1/! COLLEGIENNE DRESSES Orig. $22 Anltf Js)IJ Slllrldrwes io 1sst. prints 11.11 COLLEGIENNE LINGERIE Nylon Briefs( Biijnis, mt. colOll. sizes 4-8 • . 1/3.I! COLLEGIENNE SPORTSWEAR famoos-Maw Polo Shift In 1 Ran11 of Colors. Sizes S-M-L .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . . . . .. . • . . 13.19 Cotton Knit M11I Shift, Solids & P1ttem~ Sizes S.M-l 1.99 COLLEGIENNE SHOES Orig . $16 to $45 After-Ski ond F11hion Boots ............ , ........... , rMUCld 1/2 Orig. $6.50-$7 .50 Mis-&-Maltb Nylon Stleets. twi• er dorlNe • • .. • .. .. • .. .. .. . . . . l.11 Orig. $9 .50-$13.50 Mix-l-M1tck NylDR Sbeels, qoeen or ki111 .. • .. .. .. .. . . . . !.II DINING ACCESSORIES 32-pc. set ;,,ry dimerwm • .. . .. .. . . . . . . .. 4.11 Asst. silver;>lated Holloware . . . . . . . . . re~uc1j 1/1 DRAPERIES & CURTAINS Custom returned draperies 'reduced II much 11 ID% Orig. ID $5~5 Odds& Ends .. • .. • • • .. • • .. .. 1.GD Or~. $4.00 llmw pillows • • • .. • • • • .. . . . . .. 1.99 Hudboanls .... , • • .. • • • • • • .. .. • • riduc1d 1/2 CANDY & GOURMET SHOP Orig. $1.89 Cllocof.lte lfoose frosted prettds 1.55 COSMETICS Bath and Boudoir Accessories, .. tching series • • . • • • • • . . . • reduced 1/3 to 1/2 Orig. 4.50& 7.50 Pure Boor Bristle Hair Brushes • .. .. • .. .. .. .. • .. .. . • .. • 2.ll l 3.11 FABRICS& YARNS Silk prints .. . . . .. .. • .. • .. .. . .. .. Flfl1C1d 1/2 Orig. $18j)(J W~dflower "Oaisy" Afghan • . • . . . 15.11 LUGGAGE Orig. $27.50 to $77.50 Slyway1u11age, Meo's& Womeo's • . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 11.11II51.41 NOTIONS Orig. SID to $24 W'<i<!r Sewifll Basleis 5.11to11.H Orig. 4.00 Asst Sewing Scissors, lfoeo Edga . . . . 1.11 STATIONERY Orig. $5 Wall Swinger scratcli pad, 11'1511'' . • . . 2.41 Orig, $4.50 Hand-painted pm! cups wi~ colored . pencils ............................ :. !.21 TOYS 4 S..ter Sand Box wi~ ad~sta~eawning . . .. . 11.tl Bicyoles. one of a kind . .. .. . . . . ll.191114 3t.15 .. ' . • I I I l -.. ••• -· . ........ ..-... -.... ·--· . •• ' p DAILY PILOT Weidntsday, Al)f'll 21, 1971 C.lassrooms Polis~'ed for ·P·areAts' Approval Arevalo• PTO Mn. Jack Ubldl.nsky Pr<sldenl REPORTS: Open house and eJect.ioft d. Gfftctn took place ll!t ·Wednesday. New officers art the Mmes. Thomas H 111 1 president; Davkl Forman, firtt vJde president; George Rennie, &ecrtllU'y; Fred Genijle, his to rl an, and Jack Libidinsky, parliamentarian. other are Dr. Robert Lindstrom, second v l c e ptesl\\ODI; <b<>m" P~, treasurer, and Yo rm 1 n. auditor. 151 was raised for the ~ Kyoella Fund. • Assisting Mrs. R o n al d Fe.rtee with the rectnl Easter .eu bunt were the Mma:. Hill, Rennie and Peel. Cre1t View PFO Archle Miller President REPORTS: Sprln1 camlval took place last Saturday featuring games, prizes and Stepping Into the Fas hi on Picture Members of J-larbour View PTO are staging a luncheon fashion show titled Hi Jinks beginning al 11:45 a.m. on Wednesday, April 28, in the' Huntington Har- bour Beach Club. Heading the parade of fashions from the Red Balloon Ltd. are youngsters Carla Fields and Chris Twining, assisted by Mrs. Kenneth Koster (left to right). Tickets, at $4.50, are available from all board members. WINGS OF FREEDOM -Checking flight plans east in anticipation of tonight's honors banquet for winners of 1970 Freedoms Foundation Awards in the Air· porter Inn are (left to right) the Mmes. Henry .C. Cole, J. Robert Meserve and ~1ell Barton. News Told At Party Mrs. Solange M or and announced the engagement of her daughler;C hr i st i an e Caasuto to James R. Savage Jr. during a dinner party in her Irvine home. Amon1 aueits were Dr. and Mrs. James R. Savage of Sao Bernardino, parents of the buedid • elect, and the Meur•. and Mmes. Robert A. Cusuto, Ed Harrit and Jim Jo111!11"11. MlU Cassut.o. al!O l h e dau;bter of Henry V. Cas.slito of Plrla, 1r1dualtd from C..11 M... HI&!> SChool and attended Oranae C o a s t eon.,.. Her flanoe ll an alumnus of Sin B<mardlno High School and Iha UnlversUy ol Atl.zon.t. They wlll uchange weddlnr pledges June 12 In the Community Church Congre11t1on1l, Corona del Mar. I Dinner Lauds Medal Winners Area recipients of 1970 foundatlon, will pre.sent the Freedoms Foundation awards awards which range from cash will be honored tonight in the grantl!I up to $5000. lo George Airporter . Inn ~or the i. r Washington Honor Medals ''outstanding achievement m ~-. ' bringing aboul a belle r plaques, teachers medals, and understanding of the Ameri-student-teacher pilgrimages to can way or life." Valley Forge and other Hosting the fourth annual historical sites. A~·ards Banquet at 7 p.m. will Amont those rec e iv Ing be the Orange Co Q n t y awards will be Santa Ana W o m e n ' s C b a p t e r o f College. former recipient of 10 Freedoms Foundation a l or more George Washington Valley Foret.. Honor medals, which will be Proceedll and contributions presented a Distinguished will add to the chapter's Service Award. scholarship fund ~·hlch sends deserving Orange C o u n t y teachers east to s u m m e r graduate.credit seminars on the f' re e d o m s Foundation camJ>Ul!I, according to Mrs, Loois L. Curtis, c h 11 p t e r president. Ar.my Gen lret.) Harold K. Johnson, president ol the Denim Suited Some of the smartest suits ror spring are tailored in denim in shades that include tan, be I g e , white, gray , aubergine as well as lhe oriainal blues. dime-a<llp buffet dinner. Carnival .Polter c on t e 1 t winners w~ Kim Wlffier, Debbie Wright. Gall Reis, Joan Grandizio, K a r e n Buder, Chris Fox, Randy Vega, DI an a Constable, Rhonda Adams and Jerry Harvey. Runners-up were Chris Nace, Jenny Dohm, Mark Foster, Beth Duddy, Chock Virgil, Patty Blllllll', Derek Bradley, Br la n Morton and Chris Harvey. Winners received carnival tieketa aa prizes. Eader PTA Mn. Charles Reevea President COMmG UP: Fourth and !Ulh grade students wlll participate in P b y a I c a I Fitness Playday at I p.m. Friday, Arpil 23. Events will include basketball throw, standing broad ;ump, 50 yard dash, side step, pull- upa, distance run and relfiy race. Each student may compete In two conteats. Also featured will be a posture contest for a 11 participants. Unit will awardi ribbons to the winnen and assist in cfficiall!lg. . .Optn house will take p I a c e Thursday, April 29. . Members will attend the Angels baseball g a m e Friday, April 30. REPORTS : Unit has purchased a new mimeograph machine. In charge of the purchase were Donald Pate, principal and Mrs. J. L. Cranker, newsette chairman. Fulton PTO Mrs. Robert Welch President COMING UP: Fathers and their sons from fifth through eighth grades will attend family life programs at 7:30 p.m. in Tamura School tomorrow and Tuesday, April 27. Dr. Jan Jenniches will lecture tomorrow night, and Alden Esping will speak at t~ second meeting on Social Emotional Factors. Mothers and their daughters from filth through eighth grades will hear Esping's lecture at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 29, In Tamura School. .. Members will tour classrooms during open house Thursday, April 29. Unit will conduct a bake sale, and hcspltality committee will serve rerreshments. Donations cf baked goods are needed, according to Mrs. Roy CUnningham ... All ~mbers are invited to Olympic Day al 12:45 p.m. Friday, April XI. on the school grounds. Students from fifth through eighth grad e's w·i 11 participate. REPORTS : Members attended the f a c u I t y basketball game .•. Q.arrent leaders in the P T 0 • sponsored youth bowling league are Pam Seymour and Bob Woody, high game, and Rebecca Vasquez and Robin Craft, high series. Pigmys are first In team standings followed by the Pin-poppers. Harper PTA fl.frs. Roger Bel1en President COMING UP; Educational WorkahOps ls theme of P"'lflll\ al unit meeijng Monday, April IS, al 7:» p.m. to achoo!. · Reading, math and the ntw social studies program ·will be dlscuased, and slides will be shown of parent volunteera working with students. Special feature will be slides ol lhe elghlh graden' trip to Sacramentc including their vi.tit· to the state assembly and r.enate, their meetiJlg with Assemblyman R. H. Burke a n d their visit to Sutter's Fort. REPORTS: Pini 'n Things was theme of mother and daughter fashion • s h o w presented by past president& of the unit. Mothers and dau..sh ters made and modeled tbe fashions and prepared and s e r v e d refreShments. Niebla• PTO Mn. Kennetb Wood.I President COMING UP : Officers will be elected at general meeting . tomorrow night.· REPORTS: Ei:eeutlve board met in the · home of Mr•. .Pall! Napoli .•. Serving on the nominating committee are the Mmes. Charles Farrell, Gene IanslU, Chris Berg, Allan Kenny and Miss April Smith. • · .Unit sold school tee shirts will provide f.aint shirts for lower grade evel students and will purchase National Geographic publications for the middle learning center ..• Urtit -will..award · · to students who qualified for membenhlp in the Effort Club and haa paid these students' entrance fees for a trip to Lion Country Safari ..• Members are researching a block parent program for the area ... Mothers wishing to assist with teacher aids may cont.act Mrs. lansiti at 839-0088 or Mrs. Joseph Stauffer at 839-1688. . . Current bowling I e a g u e leaders are Mrs. Malcolm Castle, high series, and Mrs. KenneUi Hall, high game. Schroeder PT A Mn. Terry Wilson President COMING UP: Executive board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 26, in the teachers' lounge. Outgoing and incoming b o a r d members are invited. REPORTS : Officers elected at unit meeting are the Mmes. Terry Wilson, president; Warren McGinley. Richard Keyes and Bruce Flood. vice presidents: Neal Durrett and Buz Solis, secretaries; David Simpson, treasurer, and W i 11 i a m Marquardt, historian. Richard Arras will serve as aud1tor. Seventeenth Street PTA Mn. William Yocky President COMING UP: Open house will take place Tuesday, April 27, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Parents will have the oppor- tunity to view their child· ren's work. Refreshments will be served. REPORTS: At unit meeting last night, Dr. Baynard Brattstrom, professor at California State College at Fullerton. spoke on Ecology -Population -Pollution. 'Patterns' on Stage For Benefit Funds Two worthy causes will benefit from the performance or "Paltems" on Thursday, April 22 at 7:45 p.m. in Long Beach Community Playhouse, sponsored by the Woman's Aux1liary to lhe American July Day Selected A July 2 wedding date has been selected by c h e r y I Swinehart and Benjamin D. Larvie 11. News was revealed by the bride-to-he's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Swinehart Jr. of Founta in Va 11 e y, MW Swinehart is a graduate of f ounta in Valley High School. Her fiance. son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin 0. Larvle of Hunti ngton Beach, attended Marina High School prior to entering the Army. He has served in Vietnam and has been awardOO two Bronie Stars for valor snd a Purple Hea rt. Presently he Is 11talloncd in Kentucky. Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers. The original TV drama by Rod Serllng. adapted for the stage by James Reach, will be directed by Tom Titus. Proceeds from the performance, with t l c k e t s available for $2.50, will go to the W A A 1 M E Scholarship Loan Fund and the Engineers for Tomorrow program which aids young men and women obtain a technical education in a professional field. The theatrical eerformance is the year's major fund· raising project for t h e auxiliary. New officers for the group include the Mmes. Thomas G. Pe Ir u I a s , chairman: Donald Sewell, first vlce-chi.irman; C 1 r l fl.1. Canfield, second vice chalnnan; Edward ....... L. Chapman . recording secrelary ; Darrell R. Bolliger, corresponding secretary, and Robert H. Shanley, treasurer. Area committee chalnnen include Mrs. Chester L. Love, membership, from Huntington Beach and Mrs. Carl M. Canfield, publicity, from Westlnlnster. J • • ·. Puppets Pop Up for Spring Fling Jaunty puppets have no trouble capturing the attention of Alicia Gafcia and~ Alan S}limko, as Mrs. Charles Taylor, Pleasant View School's PTO presiden't gives a preview of the school's Spring Fling carnival on Saturday, April 24 .. ' Games, a multitude of booths and foods also will be available for the day's fes-• tivities. · Diaper Set in Capable Hands Babies will be well cared for by members of Mesa View School's sixth. seventh and eighth graders who attend a baby·s itting clinic at the school from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, April 24. Shown bru shing up on their baby-sitting techniques are Jani~ Biank, offering 2lh-year-old Rod Schley bis bottle, and Brian Latina folding diapers. Astrology Crusade Scientific View Urged NEW YORK (UPI) -Alex: andra Mark wanls to separate astrology from witchcraft and hocus pocus. The crusade cf the pretty Boston matron and mother or four has as its goal the emergence cf utrology u a strictly aclentlfic 111bjed. Mn. Mark, wife of the diredcX' of neUJ'OIW'gery at Boston Cly Hoopllal, ouUlned her plan al the Aatro1o1ers Guild of Amerlc1 mteUng In New York. She called for 1 reev1luallon of the subr-ct to raise it to Its rightful place In this sclen· tlllc era. Mrs. Mark's theories about the "Dew astrology" are based on eight years of delv· lng into I.he subject, lncludln11 a two year course from the faculty ot utrolo1lcal 1tudles in London. She makes the case for a more scientific approach to the subject in her book "Astrology for the Aquarian Age". Mrs. Mark told members of the guild that the whole body of knowledge about utroiao needs to be aclen- tlflcally tested to get lhrcugb the c~IJds of mysUcism. '1Without the help of the scientific community," she aakl in an interview, "astrology will go nowhere. Either aitrology must see to it that reforms are instituttd and begin to h!!ad In scienlific directions or it wlU break in two. ''One half will re m a I n hopeleuly enmeshed wilh an- tique notions, simplistic ncnsense and dream predic- tion. The other half will "PiOneer the new science, a 1cience validated by controlled statistical studies." Mrs. Mark said she con- siders popular astrologlc.111 forecasts of disaster for public figures scandalous. "Ethically, such forecasts an: as bad as a doctor predic· Ung a patient will die withOut ever having e1amlned the person," she said. She defines the n e w astrology as bio-chronoloSY She said that means "th~ science o( time cf patterns and rhylhmk:ity of hum1n behavior, taking Into con-- sideratlon the correlation ci the astronomical clock In the he1vens and one's biologica~ rhythms." · By usln1 utrologlcal tee~!· ques, she said she has been: able to help sdme .peraoDai to i clearer view of thelri problenu. ' ' ,, 11 \ , 117 I I • .. - rt-Beaeh voi:. 64, NO. 95, 5 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES Irvine By I. PE'tER Kl\lEG Of .. OMlf 'llM•Statt 'fbe.nac1c Bay 1s go1ng 1>oct c1o court. Irvine Company lawyers' today filed a complaint (or declaratory rtlief agabu1t the cpunty board oC su~rvi.sors 1o;_.their dec)$iop to cancel u,e;contro-v,. .. al Newport· tipper &ly> land ex· cha.age~ · They we also asklog damages that cotnpan)' lawyers say will "~run into the mflll6n.s:.•" . Vows wmtam R. Mam, Irvine-CompenyJ pruiden~ ald the '<ODIJ>lllY prefemd to negotJate cancellation . of the ex· chinge but said. tba11upervison' unlla· teral actloo leJl.llWe choice. "There are,IMlly Issues totbe feUJed • be{on.tbe' agreement can be)mutually terminated," Mason said. "~ Issues can ,be settled elther-acroas the confer- encectable or in the-courtroom. ' "We p,-efer the conference ·table;'' be aatd. "Wt aupervilors do not:.'."So we are . - . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOltNIA . forced .to go ·Io coori." .The (ive-y,ear-old lancf.11wap •of Irvine islands for county tidelands was l't5Cin- ded by the Sljpervisars J.,., 21 pending a !l(klay ooti.fication . clause. 1be super· visors lut w~ confirmed-thf;1r eaz:ller ueaniroous vote to kill . the .trade· eight days before thp.t period~'!~·up. , 0Mason:said,the cotnP80Y·"~pts the fact !bat the ..;sting 8(ree!"<nt .Is Poll· · ti<allY Ullllca.ptable·to Iha· new board ol -~Jsors. . on "We undont.llld tbe -al members of the county• board to c:enctl the - ment. UMt atart all oYu. We do not with to force the .eontract down anyme'1 ttroat.•t Hltw!.wr be ·~· ''the iaue lllvolved in ·"""'1ntUGo ,of Ille COllinct Including queatloas of equlty ·are. limi>IY . not otttled'1mlllli UDllateral .conceD• Uon." 1bey are avoided." · Muon ... 1d ·ei. -Y .nolJllcatinn period"" &slfined lo·allilw JlelDllatinns but be cbarpd · thal coal-. ' • "' ' WEQt-IESDAY, APRii: 2 f, ·197 I' ' • . . T...,,•·l'•eel N .. Y. Steeb . ' JEN CENTS ' Upper Bay with eounty boord membera during lllat period "have proved Milt." Maaow. ~d. "'lbe agreement ls a slined contract II ahould be honored by biith partieJ « termlnated 'by both J>llf' llel in ·lhe ·lllme IOod fal:h Wider - il was •concelved and efftictuatf(d, ·Muqn lald 6!e company:ln Its court actioti is seeking Utle to the .450 acres al. upiandl, lslanda and patent lands Jt bad• deeded io the county ia ~ance witll l . Jl!ll llD"""1t<nt to the ....... meoL . "If the county Is to relurn the,. tands,'' he uJd. ••they must be clear ol tax liens ~: ~ encumbrances ud retumtd in tbe 11me fl'\!6 and clear ca- dltion ·In w111cb tllOl' were glv.n, · "U"the1titlf1la clOUdld;" Maaoa said, lndi<&llng that.It may .now be, "lllen 'l think it 1'00ld be obvtous that the com- (lloo m\'INE, Pap I) • . ·: lncuiiihents Ret.ur ned 'Franklin , ·Bergeson , Smallwood ·winners ' CAil Y l"llOT Sii,, l'tlole· DAILY ,ILOT Stiff ,...._ OAIL Y ,ILOT Stiff ,Nl9 By GIOOllGE LEIDAL Oil ..... .,. Plllil IMfl ' Newport.Me.. Unified School. Dlllricl vetm · returned ~ ... · Uiamlbenll to' the biionl .ol education Tuoada,, illey allo elected Oft MW board member who ran unoppooed. Bolrd . Prtsi!ient Stlim S. "Bud" Franklin, a Cost& Mesi. attorney, was returned for a aecond · term on the Four-leggers Facing Ban RETURNED av voTERs GETS NEW TERM . uNoPPOsEo IN a10 lo Newpo· :.d !nc~mbent Bergeaon Incumbent f ranklin Attor!'9Y Sm1llwood · 11r-'t- ' ----'-----'--,-.---.. --'---., .-.~--:::., . ~;r-: Bay.BOtJi ch&rges rfo · ~ontest ~::~lty'·-, . ,,,. "'!!""lai,WI. "" u,' ,_,,,. Fails in -~'Qty fJliL · 1· ..-.~-Tf'lii>. ·mt1ir .. ~l;.:!!l!.!I .... """' .:1;·;1it~e · JU....,1nf:le#Ui:J w \i ,,... . ' . . By. 2 to. 2 V rte ·. ' ·. .. . 0n•-·by eo~, .::.~::n;!~r~d>'~-:.=~~Zr OCC Board Positions ~£$~~the 1251 a inonlli for 43 boat sllpa at Swales commJW011; ~ Uked tl!Jt,flle ban.ISe Anchorage In Newport Hamor failed to lnslltut>a. , . ', .. • . win approval by the Coupty Board al Incumbent . Coast .Cqrpmunlty College .ffoff, 53,. ol 14842 Harper Sl., MMway Ai) -i.aWI tgreed lhe ~It ~u=-~ra Tu,esday because of a sPlit 2-District t.nutees Donald G. Hoff, William City, has served 15 years on the ullq:t njor{ of j plOple. PrQblem thaif a.dtt #o- Board Clairmari Robert Battin ob-Ketner and Rol>ert L. · Huinphre'ys wnn board including thtte terms as 1Lli~4 blem. ~ jected to a cl8Ule 1n tbe agreement which eas~ re-election in voUng Tuesday. dent. He-ls a·qualltyassurance Jpec1all!t "You lhould'bana out a· ~ef,and11 reserved nine boat &Ups for tenants of the Final returns of all 96 precincts showed for the space division oL North Amtrlcan &i.ndbUck'.et "{th. tverY· dog·U~e/• 11&4 Anchorage Apartments which abut the fewer than 20 percent of the district's Rockwell Corporation. gesttd· one I;Uer writer=· · · · · · boat docking facilities located just IOlllh ,_, ... · re·g"lstered voters cut their Kettle" G, or1 •'>'I Seventh st.J Him-·Qdvin stfwlrt, PBR · Opened · of the Upper Bay Bridg• on Bayshore --~ -IM bearlnr ·· be · ,tOin&-ballol!I lington Beach, is a native of Hw1Ungton ....... ,... ~ ... ..1.-..J..-i..w DrM!. I ' • B cb ho ·~ ~u., Uon -le lOWIO -•'ol<U'-~-lfoU, ~ representing resldenls: ea w was appointed to ~ QI e ban. supervisor Ralph Clerk sided will> Bal-.. . , tin \n the contention that boat slips 00 of the Westminster Elementary district board in ·1965, He i.! regional 1Up!nlaor "I hope we can CQmt-1 up .ttb county tidelands stx>uld be open to all on portion of the college district, received for JSI Sales C:Orporation and 1Jfe somethlns beatdel a ·total ban,• be uld, a "first come-first served" basis. 12,162 votes-.. His opponent, s tu d e n t Insurance Company of CalUorniL "rompine and running ii healthy for The problem was referred to the COUn-Cltarles DaR:ion, got 3,281. Humphreys, «. Js an attorney prac-dogi. ty Counsel's Office for mediation .and a Kettler, incwnbent representing the liclng at 1500 Adams st., Costa Mesa, and 0 But their owner1 have been forewarn- report back in three weeks. B cb d F 1 1 1 f ed and unless we. c;,.n find a meuure to 1be Swale& Anchorage and the Reuben Huntington ea an ounlaln _ Va ley sass stant city att.orney or Co.sla Mesa. eliminate the dropping problem, we1I E. Lee floating rest.aura at nearby are the elementary district portions of the col· He ls a &launch advocate ·or an· OP,en door have to elinilnate the d.ogs." laslttwo commercial operations on coun!y· Jege.-distrlct, garnered 10,998 votes. com-policy for public colleges due In part to Nobody had anything bad to aay-aboot tidelands which have not signed renfal pared with l ,B« for Barbara Bell and his own success following graduation the dogs, themselves. agreements with the county. ' f .,_ E . from Orange Coast College and Cal State 2,539 or l'""· nr1queta Ramos. Lo B h "I'm not a do'g ha'·r," Gerard The agreement.a call for six cents per ng eac . ii;: square foot rent for areas on county Humphreys, incumbent representing Two trustees of the five on the Coast Woodert , 1106 W. Ocean Front, told the tidef.ands. The Reuben E. Lee has been residents: of Costa Mesa, was returned College board were not on the ballot this commlasion, "but I've got two teenage aa!lessed $4&6.67 1 month for the part of for a thlrd term. He received 10,900 votes year. sons and they, and their friendl-spend the f.he.. riverboat restaurant whidl en· compared with 2,932 for Richard Oliver, a They are: weekend walking the beaeh. croache1 on the tidelands. systems analyst from C.Osta Mesa, and -Area one, the Seal Beach and Ocean "Come Sunday night,'.' he aald, "th• Far West Services, which owns the 1,627 for student William Unger. View Elementary·Distric:ta. Worth•Keane carpeting smelil IO bad it bu to be restaurant, has paid the assessed rental The e:r'1ruJ!. wa.s generally con-of Seal Bea.ct\, holds this aeal cleaned.,. tbroUgh the month of April, but la con-sldered I , '!'be Incumbenla ran -A-fi.ve, Ille dty of Newport Beach. Qiartes Brand, l09 31th, Street, told.of t1nulng negotiaUons with the county'• on their ,iecord.s and experience on\ tht Board President-George Rodd;i Jro -of his problems watching hir tlMl&Ofttb-old _ Real Property Services Department. board. Corona-Gel· Mar. repreaent.s th1a ~rea. tot lrt the sand and noted that re11denta ct .. • '1.(11 .. Y lln.:tf_jtitr ,...... llllTURNEO FOR NEW tERM C:!f•I Incumbent Humphrey> DAILY ,ILOT lltft,.... SENT'·I ACK TO IOARD Co.st Incumbent Kettl1r DAILY ,ILof lilfHttitte WINS RE·E~E9 10N' Ca1st lncum'i'' Hgff Newport &land bad to clean•droppinp from the part there befn they ·COUid have their annual Easter egg bunt. Siding with the canine community wu James Osborne of Balboa, wbo W'Ced in- stead tougher enforcement and tougbr.r penalties for eJ.iating aanltaUon 11w1. . "l hate to see dol;s become the scapegoat for people wbG for&et," be 1aid. A. H. Jones, 1411 Seashore Drtve, Newport Beach, •1ked the commllflOn "not to penalize reapon1iblt' people' fOr the Irresponsible people." · . Ho thld ol b\f dally cleanup efforts.and ol. people wbo 1tvo him a bad'time ,wben he aw them face-!Mace to plclt up after their pets, .. t become Irate," ht uid. -'• J 1U)o dentand the problem. ·But It,,.. ban doiJ, I can't hive one. becaUR tbl beach ii my back1>rd." . The comrnlulan't recc>mmendation will be fonyardtd to tbe ci!J COWICJI Mooda.Y nlibt wlien an «lflnanca !Iii! llUlf be.II> lroduced and ld>tduled for public beaf'o ,Ing May 17. OOmmlUion. ,.,.._, .ot1ng1 fcr·IJ!t tough ordlnance wtte. WDUam. ·Patrick, l!oUy · Pulaakl, Holl Sta1y, and Ttnslar. Olalrman Jtrnu llubel, <:Iaudla, 6ftn and A; c. cameron. w!'•' oppoatd. al!Mulh -oUered ·-1terhtfiit.....,. 1e1Uons. Newport.Mesa board, receiving 3;'193 was elected to lbe unlfled board lour votes. His opponent, ulesmau Herb yeara ·•i*- 511'1cker; got 118. . J:le ,.pre .. nls --area '"' whfdl It Marlin C. 1!etfUO•. a Newport Beach J!lad!> up of partlops of both 1jewport housewife, ret!etved 3,IOl vot .. compartd l!ucb and Costa M .. a bet.....-lbe.llact with 11.1.1 for her opponent, bualneaaman Bay and N~'Boulevmt IOlla.-t Cf Donald T. Bull. 21st Slreel arid DoVer Drive to Pacific Attorney Donald E. Smallwood, u, Cf Coast Highway, • 19111 Komat Drive, Costa Me!a, was · Mra.' Berge.on. a, of 1721 Tradewlnds unopposed for the trustee area one seat I:.ane, Newport Beach, was a 11\eD)ber of vacated by board veteran James Peyt<in. the Newport • elementary board prior to Smallwood received 4,368 votes. Unification ud f'laa Berved 1b' years an the unified board. · · Voter turnout· was light ln nearly all precinct&; an estimated 10 percent of the -Ml'I. Bergeaon represents trustee area dlJll'lct's 50,373 registered voters ,...1 to three, Including portions ·of both cities ... pol'-__ between the Dacie Bay and Newport ,~ ~. "~ newly elected trustees will-Bouleyard ncrth and ••Ill of 21111 Street be aeat.ed officlaDy ln July. and Dover Drive. The campaign raised few 1parka. The · SmaJlwood was elected to represent inaunbentl ran on. their records •. They, resldentS . d. tnnliee area ooe 1Vhicb urae<I vote:ra to continue them ln office to coven northwest Coa~ Mesa. JlfDYlde continuity 1n distrfet ad-Fodraeat.8.0nthi.~-memberboard nillllllrajlon In vtew al .~ ~!loo· a1· """ nol on. Ille' ballot lh!I year, 'llley ~r wu:n ,.:m~ .... 11o ..,, 'r·· t .. , iw,: _ly K. Lll1plan of Colla M .. :. -r-, 'l'!iomU c. •~ of 1911 -Aoa Aft.; Casey ot C.... de! Mar; area five, Coala Mw, umd t..O.~tm on Ibo. DooaldA.str,...ofNewport1!each,and N~ Harbor Unlo!I HI1k School ma ..... lloderfcl: H. MacMllllao al Dlftrlcl board prior to ~ tnd Cott&.JUaL t!}1 ;. r • ' . .-' ' ........ -11ar,e" t iJiimiU;o kays N~port;s Freloo~y :Law State .Lawmakers ' Seek local Word On Har!>or Setup SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Orange CoUJJ. t,y Supervisors dlacussed mal.tera of local ' interest today .at a breakfast meetilg with leg.ialator1 from tM area. State lawmakers urged the 1apervisor1 to tate a pasltion on the Orange C.OUdty Harbor Dlstl1cl. Anemblyman Ken Cr1ry (!).Garden Grove) bu Introduced a bill to expand tta authority, while Assemblyman Jobn V. Briggs (II. Fullerkll l, ia 1ponsorlng a measure can. ~g for an elect.Ion to dissolve the district or expand lb authority. ·Those present at the breakfast included aupervi!JOrs' Chairman Robert Batttn; Supervlaors David Baker. Bill Pbllltps and Ralph Clark, and County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. l.egiSlator1 · who attended Included ~ry, Briggs. Assemblymen &bert Badham (II.Newport Beach) and Robert H. ·Burl<e (11.Hunllnglon Beach) and S.... Dennl1 Carputet (R·NewPOrl Btacb) and Jamu Wbelmore (J\.La !labia). .llatlln-told ... ,..men he fell the· 111p. enlllOl'I oppooed Gov, Ronald &~·· Jll:opoeed, iiiedl...J and wellare rovlalon plant. N~rt.Mesa School Boitd Sales Approvi:d 511" ol jl.s million In Nowport·M"a UJrifled School • Dlslrlcl. booda WN ·IP' ~~11 b)' the . Board Of Ualted •Calliornlo Bank was the low blddtr al foor al an lnterul rate or U7J percenl. • Allembly Tl8laY nn a.ill to 2 vole. A ~'!or Seli. Carpenter tn. dieated Ibero 11"11Wo oPPostUot\, If any, exptetecl. when Cbe-amend!i::ient come1 to a vote. · ~ a~ 11...m ,requlro the N~.a17~,t<>cond.uct votu of Ifie people .bitOnf. II -alp f,,_ agre(!menta Off the rout6 of any freewar. throqb the clt)i. . The cities . al l!unllngton Beach and Coola M ... 'bad p'"""1tod strong op- posiY"Qn &o the ~easure u it •wept thrqcgli the Alieml>ly Tueaday. · ille 'cijy """1Cill of both communities Monday "mgbt adoPled re.o1utlons urging JegislaUVe reJeclicXa of the measure. .. AalemblyptlJI 'llobert E. Badham (II. Ne\1!port l!ucb) bad Introduced tha resolution, tedtni'tJie:Rutes Committee of the Jo~er house, "Newport ~ach voters have made their point very loud and clear.'" 'l1)e ~ .am~ent w a• omwbelmli!gty llJIProv.d In a apecial Newport Beacb·elOctton March 9. "They doil't want a fi'ttway ruining their commtm.Uy/• Badham said. "They ""' saying thoy ·don't like what the City Cou!\cil baa dono and lelllqg them don't do U again wllhoal a·re!er<ndum." Orut•• Weather Sunny aides •Will ~ be back with us cm 'l'burilday . With 1llgbtl~ wanner tem~aturel 1n store. LOOk' for a ff f g h' of 6.1 degreet along the coast and up to 72 furth· er· Inland. 1Nsm1: TODAY That lalll botllcm against en- croaching• lnfkmo1J-tlte nicl<el . Pie~ 01 gum.-llar faUen br tllc ioo:t11Mk1 Rtp0rter 1 Georoe Lti· do! coml'!'lfTltf in 1UI PUoi tog. ~k.,POQ• 9 •. ........ lt , ... ,.,,. 11 ~~::-: ..... ' ~.i ~ °'. 1 c~ '4t<k ·-" ~:: ~ 'II ... ,.,... ,... " .. """"" "" ...,, ·-.... -.. ............. -' , j • I ... •. . -· --.. . . . . . . _ ........................... .. 't IWU PILQI " Wtdnlldfr, A'"l 21, lffi Aero nave$ .. Bidad an~. S{llith Joaqllin Winners · Gets Route ~Ith It Cll1dld1tfl vylnl for thrtt the board u the dlltrlcl Incnutd In"'" T 0 'OntJJ'rio . Birch~r, P.:r.incjp11l ~S~~re:_. .Bartholo1new, Boranian El.ected ·to Tustin Board '. ... ~ Jojln Bl{dt Soc!Oly mtmbei-Robert ~ ovtrcime 1trong opposition to Ntaln hll 1'lrUn Union High School Dlatr1ct trustee aeat. Voters, however. filled the teat vacated by a conservaUve with moderate Dickran Boranlan. Rib M the boord of lrusttts of the San 1,000 percant. .1 ""'" Eltmtn• .. -· Sch 1 n· tr" t Smith, father of four cblldren 1Uending ~otqua1 , ... ' 00 11 ic • dlstrlct schools, emphulzed the need for voters returned Incumbent Gratian D. a quality educaUIXl program and quality Bidorl and elected rchool ltachtr Dtnnls teaching. A. Smith to fOW'-ytar terms. . Howell , father of ab: children qed t to Preston Howtll, rnldlstet and teacl'ler, 24 years, a 1ongtlrne teacher before wu e1eded &o aerve out the uoeipired entering the miniMry, 1 t r e 1 a e d term of l'flllnlnl lrultee Edwlfd Berry. clllwlalilp IDd moral values. Smith, 31-yeu~d Laguna H1lls res!-Vote COUD!f for defeated candidatf:1 in dent who tUchea elementll'y school in the four-yu,r race were 11.1 foltoWI~ Huntlngtoo Beach, led the field of win-Albert J. Blais, u : Charlea H. nus with 1,726 votes. BouJanger, 1.274; Layton J. Gardner, 49: Bldart, 41, an El Toro rancher who has Franklin S. Hurd, fi60 ; Arthur Lawrence aerve4 oa the board fer even yeara and ~ 104 ; Jame.s Henry Pope, 21St; cumnUy ls . board pttSident, g~ Roger G. Ramsbottom , 108; William H. 1,MS votea. , . Rawlings, 96; Hanf .Arthur Roach, 178: Ho...U, 41, 1 Mission VitJo nsldent IDd Margoret R. Rowbnd, 71; ")'chit! mllibttr of the Ml.uioo Viejo Flrot·Bap. 'Sbtarer, 802; Wllllam Wood W1dmin W, Urt Omrch, roctlvtd l,401 votfl to win 1113. the two.year term. Runner•up In the two-yur race were Bldarl, who bu Une children in Robert S. Bev1cqua with I06 votel; Ken· llCbool, buecl hll campoJgn on the tr· 11<th D. Coot, 147: Leo G. Konkal, m: ptrilnoa be bu (llntd while rervlns oo IDd'Robert N. Littman, 0. :Upper Bay Development .Issue Gets Board DeUiy A potentially explOllve action relative to dev•l-oal ol llndJ surr<lUlldlll( tht Upper Newport Bay was postponed Tues- day for three weeb by the Orange Coun- ty Board of S&lperrilon. . The action Is rtlated to I COWllY: Horbor CommWlon nquut that all srldlnl •od development In tht .,.. drllnJni Into the Upper a., be-balled if It Is contrlbutlq ·to tht llltlq of the harbor. "Protection of the estuarine en-- .vironment" 1 the commlssloners called it. Carried to its ulUmate, Jf the Harbor Commll.don'• ·su&1e1Uoo 11 adopted, all constructlon Of homes, apartments and ·= 11 UC! could thtonUcally be •• Of c:oune, developers (Irvine Com· · Jl&llY) Ind bullden could poalbly lib · remedial action such 11 b u 11 d I n 1 bultbelldl llOllod Ill conslru<IJoD to pre. .. ,ont lllJI clebrio from drllnln& Into the • \)pper Bay buln. 4111 Supenri.rt T\luday ?loted to notify all .iuu. ~ 111!1 to 11tbei: evidence :lor pciulble lepl adloi>. • '!bl actloll lollowld 1 report by Comity o'CouneeL Adrian Kuyper on the Harbor Commlaloo edict. ' ljRqhert Lei~ptQ~ ~'.Rites Conducted r Funeral services for Fairview State IHoapltol nunln& superv!Jor Robtrt F. !t.111bton, wbo died Aprtl.J.O, havo. '*" : btld In hb home 1llte olMusachil..tb. • He was 38 and had served at the Costa !ldtsa !1cility lot the mentllly ntarded ,ei&bt yean, aft.tr work at Acntw Stlte ~ ~Ital Ind at medle>l oenltn In i-.tta. ( Mr. Leighton, who Uvtd 1t 251~ Colli iMtu St., Coall MtU, b survived by hb ,molher, Mn. Ellubeth IAilb!On, IDd I i11Jt<r, Mn. J lllloa Le!Ch. both of ~licltuatt:, Mau. · . :Queen Turns · 45 . LONDON (UPI) -QutM 'EliJlbeth ~med 45 todly, quietly obsen:h1a: the oc- culon with btr lllllliy amldlt prtporl· iloni Irr 1 nlnt<llf Cu1dlao vlllt :.cbtdUltd to 1llrt May 3. . • OUM .. COAST DAILY PILOT flMttl CQQT PUIUUllNe t:llM~Nft ' l•ktt N. W.H ........... .,."""' ... J•1k L c-.., '1191° ""*"" .... o-.1 ,..,,..... n ••• , .:,,,ir ..... n ... ,, A. M"''"'R• MeMt ..... , ... L.. ,,,,, I(,;,, M""""1 a.Qi Oty 1"1W ... ....,,.. .... Offk. JJJI N .. , .... hid'''"' Jl•tfl11t "''ftN: •. 0, Ill (171, 91,,J ...... _ c..i• ...... W..t .., ,.,.. """"" '*<f!I; • , .. ·-"-'" ••• ; t-cf;l ,,.,. ...... .......,.,.. -~ ...... ll"c.t"'"" It .. He said I.hat lhrte factors enter into the sltuatkll: l 11le city o! Newport Beach hu the police power eicluslvely in much of the ' attt'and·Wue11ll.pmnits and IMtl all lands. .. . 2. Under the Federal RefUM Act such drainage into the Upper Bay could be halted but only by 1ctlon of the U.S. At· ~y. 1 ' !. The county could seek Injunctive relief to rHtrai• alleged threatened in· jury to Udelands btld In trust by the county for the atate. Kuyper sugaested that the county enlbt the aupport of Newport Beach IDd the U.S. Attorney. "Are you uylnj: to beat arQUnd the bush?" queried Supervllor Robert Blttin. Supervlaor Baka-cautioned a1linlt hurried action and 111Uested the noUftca· tioo of au parties ~ed with the Im· pllcotloa that iomtthlng mllbt bo worked out to avokl le&al aCUon. "'ms ·· Oka .... lee$ I' y .f Modification Oi ~oµndarie~ ~m\>en ol the Ntwporl·f.\"' Board o1. EClucation •PPf'O.Ved a 1erJM of ICbool attendance boundar}' modifications TueJ.. day. Roy 0, Andersen, direct.or of facll l\y !>lannllfl, e~ th1t the Cbllllfl ""' flecea&ary 11) order to mett cban&liiil IChool needs. Under the new boundaries alrth erade students from the Harbor View at· tendanc:t area wlll attend Harbor VJ1w School. E11tblulf wlll rellln lb lbth graden except f<>r thole llvlq: in th• Bren tract between Ford Road and Port Seabourne Way. They will attend Lincoln School. • Jn the second chan1e, all alrtb and . aeven!h-grade atudenta from I.be pcrUoni • at' the-Klllybrooke and Bear Street at· te.ndance areas north of the San Diego Freeway will allend TeWlnkle School. A third chan1e la actually the con- tlnuaUon of a ·policy established by the board last year. Ninth 1rade 1ludents from the west aide of tht bay who wv1 formerly sent to Corona del Mar High School will be sent to Newport Harbor High Scbool. Andersen Aid thb policy will continue 90 that eventually there will be oo reaidents of \he w11t aide oI the boy 1tttndlni Corono dtl Mor HIP, Saddleback . Vote • Has Incumbents • Back in Saddle In tbt Saddlebacl: Community College board election, Jncumbenta Alyn M. Brannon. John B. Lund and Michael T. Collins won comfortable vlctortu in thtlr respecUv1 truatee areu. Final re turns 1•ve Colllna t,171 wot.ea in trustee area &, for an 111y win over h1I challen1er1 John WUl!m Parker with 3,348 votes and Tbomu W. Cr110 with 1,282. Tht con1er1atlve »year-old attorM)'. a charter member of' the board, 1trftd two term• u board prt1tdlnt, one of the youn1e1t Jn the country. In truJtff arta I, Brannon, alto a charter member of the boa.rd, dtfealtd LtRay J . .\J>clerlOn, tU1n1 1,141 vot11 agalnlt AnderlOll'I 4,805. Winner Jn tl'Ultet: area S t1Pa1 John B. Lund who was appointed t.o the board latt year to replact Louta F. 1Jtnlk and was runnillj for elecUOo lo b1I own rl&ht lor the fint Umtt • Lund, with 1,m \lotes, de.luted Mra. M1r1ant Rol<y, with S,119. The Soddl<baclc tlt<:!lon <OVend ftVI South Coun\7 1cho91 dtlt:icil with I tollJ or 10,m 111lrttred votm. Tht candidtta •Pr.•rtd on ballot& In the Capistrano Uni td, La,una Buch Unified, San Joaquin El1mentary, Tualln Unio n Hlah School and Trabuco Elemen- tary achool dJstrleU with tht lncwnbtntl wlnnina: ln each district. -·- Aeronavea de Melico, the aouth-of-the- border airline that wanttd to terve Orange County Airport, wlll lnlttad be granted roule authority from Tijuana to Onllrio, U.S. Rtp. John Schmitz (JI. Tustin) oonfi!mtd today. Aeronave1 bad origtnally secured an in- terriational A,rtement to fly dally from the county airfield, but disclo1ure of the pact brought swift and furious protests from 1 dozen IOW'«I. An 11de to Pruldent Nilon ~ two weeta q1:1 the White Houae bad in· formed AtroDllVU that aerviet to Orange County Airport would be unacceptlble and ordered the Stlte Department-to f1nd another llndlng altt. Ontario WU &elected, a !pOkffmln in Schmitt' office aaid th1a rpornlllJ', btcaulo It b Ille Gilly air lleld, balcle• Loa Angeles Intem&Uonal Airport, that his C1lllOm.I l•cllltlta. Aeronavea and a second Mexlean air carrier, Mexicana. already service !,.AX, th& 1pokesm1n said. From Pagel IRVINE ... pony bu been aevtrtly 4om11td." Muon .llld other conslcler1tlon oJ equJ. ty lnclud"e pluntng, eogtneerinJ, consult- ing and legal upenses jncurred by the compay <furin& its yean of cooperation with tile county Oll tbe ucban1e project. In thtlr declar1tory "1lel IUIJlg, com· J>IDY llwytn uplalntCI they ott -I "• decll!'ltkm from the court that the -ls in tllec:t. Ind bllxlini, IDd uy lcilon by euporvbon purportlnc to cancel It unilaterally is simply not ef. fectivt." Company 1ttomeyr sold, "if the a>urt flnd.! the county board cannot unUatera1· 1y canctl the contract and if ruperv'ltora !;Ull insilt on unilateral cancellation, then the lrvlne Company 11 entitled to damages. "Tiit damqea will ..,,b1bly be Cllcu· 1aled to be substanu.af; running into the millions." Moaoo said tlial thriiull>out Iha up. coming legal procttdlnp, the eompony "wlll always be willing to dbcw• and negotiate the issues with the 1trlous in- ltnl of ftodln( oolutkw le1dlng to I mutual rescission . "'lbt COIDJllll)'," )!! sail! "1"11 ab<> wllllnllr c!ill<Ud pibill ,;;;i,..;~ _. i>a.,Y 'o.miid llndl ~~h!J& et ll>e tdJ•'ol the bay, usumlnt !lie ebli!ity I• atill lntertmd In 1oqulrlnf the "'""'111 f?' pY~ porks IDd bttcbts1" I \J I I j I I I j •I .I N.ewport r~ulh Found Hanging Outsi.de Trailer Finl! tallltl o1 ill-63 preclneta In tha Tustin district rhowed Borrutlan Ieadlni nlnt candidates with 3,8$7 vote s • Bartholomew received 3,627 \lotes. Both men. ran 1trqly ln precincts throughout the dlltrlcl A third candidate who ran on a liberal platform, Stephen Fabula of 1\utln plac- ed third in the race for Jhe two board seals. He got 3,377 votes throughout the district and s urprisingl y , led Bartholomew by 200 or more votes in the TUatin Elementary portion of the hicb school Dtltrlcl Both Boranlan and Fibula campaigned agalnat Bartholomew. Ttie incUmblmt took 1tands favorip1 a hard line Ori drug 1buse aod strict enforcement of the dlstrlct'1 controversial dress code. Bartholomew and Boranlan .both live in Santa Ana, indicating voters of the dlatrlet which aerves UnlveraJty Paik and Mls1ion Viejo coaUnue to garner mod diatrlct support. Mi.salon Viejo candidates C 11 r f o rd Boehmer and Dana Carkey ran fourth and fifth, respectively. Boehmer reoeived 1,545 votes and Clrkey, l,108. Ofher candJdate1 and the votes they received 1tt: attorney John Parker, 711; school adrntnlatr&k>r Howard Eaton, 758; eng!M« Ronald W. Weir, 448, and in- DAILY f'ILOT Staff Pll9 .. TUSTIN BOARD'S NEW FACE School Prlnclp1I Bor1nian 1urance man Sol Bisom, 327. Boranian, 43, is a principal In the Garden Grove Unified Di.strict. He received much pre-e:Iecllon support from 'DA1LT'"P!l0T,Sftlf PIN .. WINS RE-ELECTION Tu1tin 801rd11 81rtholom1w residents or both Mission Viejo and University Park, includinf 300 student campaigners wbo also worked for Fabula. Fred McMaster Private Funeral Will Be Held Newport-Mesa Teacher Group Head Speaks Out Private funeral aervicta will be held !or Nf:WJ>!ll1 Beach civic leader Fred A. Brad 'Iburman, penident of the New- McMuter, who dJed TUesday followfnl' 1 port.Mua Education Association t o I d sdlool board members his group would heart attack. He ""u 89. seek public su pport during a tirade at Mr. McMuter owned an lnlurance their meeting Tuesday, agt.ney in Newport 0Beacb and wu .active 0 We're cutting the umbilicai cort;I.'.' 1n community affalrs. · Thurman angrily declared. He 1erved on the board of d1rectors of Hls atatementa were made in reference Hoag Memorial Hotpltal and \be board of to an adminlstr'at:ion proposal to dJscon. dlrecton of the Ora.nae County YMCA. tinue the poUcy of granUng one period or For the past e.lgbt yean, be was released time wtlh pay per day for the chairman of the board of Goodwill presidents ot the teachers' as.90eiations. Jndustrle1 of Southt.rn California. District Superintenden1. William Cun-- In Newport Buch, Air. Mc~ter WI.! ningham saJd the decision to disctlntinue a.n Elder at st. Andrew1 Presbyterian the policy wu hued on the fact that Orureh and a member of the local Sbrint, presidents of other district empJoye as- MalOn.ic Lodie and Kiwanla Club. soclaticm are not given the same treat. not going to 1).ide behind • county coun- sel , we're golng·to fight,'' 'Iburman Aid. Reminding board members that the.re has been no written eOunter prapoaal to the teat-hers' contract propOaals Ill)).. mitted 11 days ago, Thurman declared : "We're going to try to get the public'1 support. Nobody is going to leave (thil district). We're going to stay and we're going to fight." College to ·Hold E~rt~, Day, ;Rally M(. Mc~aster abo w,_, an active t. · member ot the rfeWport Harbor Chamber ~e also noted tha( It was the admlrils-A rally featuring a series Of spe:Ueni or Commerce and in 1966 was stlected as tration's opinion that it was an improper will hJgb.Uiht the· secimd aMual 'Earth tile cham ber 's Man of the Year. He serv· use of public funds to give releasetl Day Tbursday at the Orange Col.it e<t as ht.ad o[ the group's membership ti"" to th«.offictrr.C any association . .,, 'C.Ollege campus tn Costa Mtsa, com- commlttoe In lr!O and bid betD ,a ,Jn •IUlOWlclnl thllll-MEA actlD11'blfore billit\)! tlfottt .;IUYColffr Day. ' ' member of tbeJ board o1 .1~• t;>r the board cwld tlleslts fadfon to di!-Chma'tini( the '"GIMsetvance win ~ l>t a thret years. : • " · <'onlinue the poficy, 'I'hut1nan..1arsc:tend! bicycle t>rottssion 'from Estancia High He leave• his widow, Carolyn, of the teacher at Corona del Mar-HI~ School, School to the OCC carhpLls -\'fltb poll~ family home, 1710 Kinp Road; two told the trustees that the N-MEA felt escort ·-and · presentation of f)elltl!>rll daugblen, Mrs. Marllyn M. Seals and board members we.re not ·interested in calling for a network of bike trails. Mrs. Mary M. Fuola; 1 brother, Dr. promoting 1ood relations with their em-Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson Paul E. MeMuter; two slaters. Mrs. ployes. &J'.ld Park! Director Joe Jones Will Mary McFadden and Mrs. Ruth Faurot, He reminded them of the work teachers r~lve. lhe bundrtds of aiglilturea. ind eight lfaDdchlldren. did on the recent bond elections and the Speakers wlll be present frOm 1 to l :30 Quolltopbtr Harvey Alliaon, 20, wu . 'Ibe family bu 1uga:ested memorial !llpport eJven 1ome or them during elec. p.m. on ·the grass between the OCC found hanged from a tree thiJ mornlnl ',::ontrlbuUonl to . Goodwill Industries ol tlms. library and student center, with pub1lc out.aide hia Newport Beach trailer home. 1~-~;;:"';;;CllJ_f_om_ll_. -------;;;;';'Thi~·;•;b;;•;•;l•;p;.Jn;;tht;;l;ace;;;a;n;;d;"';;'re;;;;;•ddrt;;;;";;;'Y;;';;tt;;m;•;i•;:;"';;';· ;;;;;;;;;;;;I PoHet are llstlna: the dtatb u • ""*"-••• suicide. The if'lsly find -WIS made nrly today·· by • 11t!Pbcr WOBlln .. 110 ..... tu1n, her dof lot I Wilk through. tho trff.rtn1td . trailer< port 1t 2911 W. Cout Hli!>w1y. Detective Sam Ambur1ey uJ.il Allison'• frlenidl indicated he wu an LSD user and had bttn lllfferlng from roolmlia. trlpo for tht paat month. ·op I few occa3lons, the friends told Polipe Uley dlacovered the youth be1Un1 hll htad against the •id• of hla trailer to ~t himself out ao ·"he could have IOmt peace," Ambur1ey ta id. At other Umea, he would be In 1 eilltDruc ltupor, they reported. '10ne of his friends told mt AllllOll had """t.d to be !Attn to the hospital but tho flliend talked him out ot It bec1111e he would only be bualtd by the police," the detective added. He had ~~ arruted by Ntwport pqllct In Februory ond plt1dtd guilty to · J)OllW.lon of marijuana and buhlab. H1 was on probation. ' An, 1utopry h11 been schtdultd to · diittnnlna the \iJn. :and CaUN of dtath. Ambur1e1 n id Ute youth 11'11 last eeen · by hlr roommaW1bout 11.m . ''Ht 1pparenU, tied the rope to a tret, put the DOOH around tu neck and just stepped off a bot.'' the invtstJsator 11ld. Newport Builder, Bank Skirmish A Newport Beach builder and Illa bank are havin1 a run around over a 1971 Cldlllac 1Dd the bank lntendl, by tho tool< of JLI Oranct County Superior Cow1 Jawault, to climb Into the driver'• pat. '!be Nawport N1tlonll Bank alltl" In tbt complaint· that Frank CorteH of Cortese-Bailey Builders, 1817 Wettclltf DrlYO, "wronlfully took poaMaloa of" h~ Ill! Eldor1do 111! Mmh J. '"1ey vllue Iha C.dlll1c 1t "·"' IDd tl\ty claim lhlt Corltlt hu rtluNd to aurrtndtr tbt vehicle. 'nley 1lto ut Ult ccwrt to award them as a day .. eJNt COrteoe from lut Aprll I. Murder Defense Ends GEM TALK TODAY by THE COLORFUL WORLD O~ PEARLS Hl&blY p r I z • d in the world o! gems, pearl• are chic, amart, and treasured particularly b e c a u a • they ao blauutully tnhance • w~ man'• ensemble no matter what tile ~aslon. Th e y compliment clothing for every affair, from a simple sweater to the most glam· oroua evtnlnl 1 o w n, and do 10 with a qolet dignity all their own. We usually associate wblte with the pearl, and many do not know lhat pearl• come in a variety or glowing colors which depend upon the I ocal I ty In which they are found. From the Persian Gull c o m • ptarl1 with 1 cr11111y 1b11t11, and from Au1tralla we receive pearls with a buulllUI yellow cast. Much clostr to homo, lrom th• GullJ o! California and Mulco, come tho ran a n d ucetclin1~ expensive Bl1Ck peorll, whose ncb motalllc appearance matt Qe.m. more valu~ able than any othar1. We carry 1 vorloty o! tbtll 11.,., and wUl 1ladly a11lst you fn your 11l1ctlon of pearls to match both your lllte and your bud11t. Come In 1oon. We're open dallY from 9:IO to &:IO, FrldA)'I 'UI l :IO. let ~ch ahead one hour OOMEGA In tM motnenl• 11 t1li:tt VoU lo ad/u11 your w1lch to D1yllgh~ llvlnOI Tlmt, aak your••ll: Is It teeurllt7 Slytl1h? Depenfeblt? II ean bt 111 these .. , tnd mor1 , •. If It'• '" OrMOt. llkt th11 Omtg1 Constell1tlon Chtonomtttr: Actur1tt? Omtg& Chro!\Omtl•r• e1rry • Swlt1 Otiurvatory certlflt•I• for accur•cy 1wtrdtd on1y 1ntr 115-d1y urlt1 1 of on.rt I~ ltboratory t1111, Styll1h7 Look 11 tht h1ndaomtiv c:r1fted 1taln1Ht •lnl e11t, and th• rug gad QOOd looks of th• m1tchlnt brtct ltl D•pendtbl•? h'• tn Omsgt, ltn't It? atop Jn lod•Y Ind It! u111'\o~ you 11111, •Ml othtra In our wldt ttltcllon ot Orntga watchtt, from $45 to°""'' 11000. J. C. .J.lum.phrie~ JeweferJ I 823 NEWPORT Bl VO., COSTA MESA CONVtNllN1' TIAMS IANkAMIAICAAD-MA.STIA CHARGE 14 YEARS IN'$AMI lOCATION PHONl 141·l4GI SAN DIEGO (AP) -'l1lo clefonoe re1ted ltr c111 tod1y In tht trlal of Carl RilP· acculld of murderln1 a police of· flctr outaldt a 1010 bar, 1fter callln, on-1.-~-----------~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-ly four witne!$el, • .. I I I I I OpPosltlon lia Put White House OKs Bus Law W ASHJNGTON (AP) Tnunped by th• Supreme Court, the Wblte Houae has called on the Amerlc~ people t6 obe1 the ruUn1 that mus busln1 J1 1 leglU?TlJltt roWll to deaegreaate public ICbooll. . , gaUon. BUt at the ume Ume he oPPoStd mautve involun- tary bulin& ud Aid Ute 1ov-ernment woukl not require lo- cal X!bool: diltrlctl to tranJ- Wt c.h.ildren beyond "normal geograpbJc school zones" &o achieve racial balance. federal Intervention In educ.- Uon , .. Id the declaloos would aid biJn u he becamt a 1m prdidentlal candidate and auggested Conirw miiht act il fl'lbllc opinion Is 11tron1 '"°\lih a1a1n11 the ru11np. Some o t h e r Southemus echoed Wallitee's posJUon. DAILY llJLOJ § Massive Foreign Aid Changes Asked WASHINMON (UPI) -aupervked by one<O<>nlinolor. lntnm<rlcan Soclll Deve!Op-American r-. ...., President Nizo• loday p~ Oilier fa<tt& GI the AID pro-ment lnallwk, two •mtllli cll)ft)y Into !ht U.S. lorflln gram would be handled by the •14!ncJts. a1a Pfoeram., wblcb over tbt posed 1 mus!ve uorganlza. overaeaa private investment One of the aims or the years hu been ateldll7 reduco tlon of. the U.S. fortl&n aid co r p o r a t t o n and the rtfonn is to draw private ed by Conareu. pl'Olram and uked C<oirtu_========;::::=================== for IU bWJoo lo provide economlc and mlUtary aais- tanoe to America'• alliea. 0 The Supreme Court has actfd and their deci1ion is now the !aw of the land and up to the peo1J1e to obey," said presklentlal press aecrttary Ronald L. Ziegler Tueaday after consulting with Id· mlnle:tration lawyers. On Tuesday, speaking through Burger, the oourt said busing wu eonsUtutlonal and the sta~ could not make it il- le&al; neighborhood schools weer fine but they wruldn't do u the d.lstrict WU pracUclog segreg•tkm, aod f e d e r a I judges could' use racial balan· cing u a g'uldellne for break· ing up duaf sylltml. Panel OKs Improved He 1a1d the changes were n~ary to Implement the Nixon doctrine of ht!lpin1 other naUons "increuingly 1ho.llder thtlr own responsl· blllties ao that '" can redUce out d Ire cl invol.vement abroad" Ziea:ler uld nothing would be 1erved by reviewlag past 1tatement1 by the President. His Je111t vlew1 were tar1ely t u r n e d back by the court whole unanimous o p I n I o n s were wr:ltten and delivered by Warren E. Burger, the man NlJon named chief justice. To Alabama Gov. Gtora:e Wallace, the court's acUon llOUnded "as if it WIS written in an insane asylum." He ad- ded inmates of an Alabama asylum could have written a better decision. Elderly Aid Package Nixon's reorganizltion plan would abolW> the U.S. Agoncy for lntemaUonal Development (AID) and transfer most of Its functions to a 1lew US. I n t emaUonaJ Deve1opme.nt Corporation and a U . S . I n t emaUonal Developmeht lnsiltute, wblc.h woo1d bt A year ago, Nixon, a laWyer, took a hard line against of- ficially inspired achoo! zegre- There01 pl1nty ol good fllhlng, w1t1r 1port1, ind outdoor• lun coming rlghl 1t11r 01yl1ght Saving• Time. lf1 lhe per1KI 1111on 10 o•t yourt1U 1 rogged nlw w1t•r·rl1i1t1nt witch. Llk1 this 1slf·wlndlng Omeg• Se1m11t1r d1yfd1l1 modi!. And th is Om1g1 ls g111\ lor w!n11r 1~ort1, too. ln 14K gold IOI), 111lnl111·1l"I b1ck Clll, go!d·IUled br1oel1t, 1210. S.m• In 111lnt11111111, m1tchtng ~r1c1l1!. 1175. Both mod1l1 •~•ll1bl1 with 1trap. e BankAmtrl~ard e Mruttr Charge e Kirk Chargie Wallace, lang-tbne foe of "Tht Storts Confidence Built" MAllCI SWCl'l'IMa CIMTll Ull HI,..,. I MI. ("'I Mttl ....... Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 p.m. . Ex-senator Says He'll Face Nixon , NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP) -Former Sen. Charles Goodell or New York said Tuesday night he w i 11 challenge President Nixon in a primary in 1972 if Ni.Ion's policies on Vietnam do not change, the New Haven Joumal.COUrier said in its Wednesday morning editions. Goodell was quoted as t.ell- lng a Yale University audience Tuesday night be would "try to convince blm (Nixon}. to make a drasUc change in pollcy, as that seems unllke1y, l will run." However, an aide to the former 1e11ator denied later in New York that Goddell had committed himself to making ~a primary dlallenge. BOAT THOUGHTS MAY NEED A BOAT LOAN We""' apeclallala In mal<ing dreams come true. It le a nice feeling to know that they Clll be YDUn when you want them. Stop by todayalld dlaeun how easllyyourpleasant tldlgltll can become a reality. ll'a easy with~~ Boat Loans. ailll 111. a PM D.mT ·6 PM nlDAT '~ctuall~ I'm a ' Communications Consultant specializing in Increasing Customers' Profits Through Maximum Communications Efficiency. But to most people, I'm just 'the fella from the phone company'.'' You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing phone bills. Discussing equipment needs. Locking for ways to help our business customers' businesses. He's a General Telephone Communications Consultant. A formal title for a nice, bright guy who can make day-to-d1y busi- ness communications less hectic for you. For example, do clients pass nasty little remarks about your phones always being busy? Do you have to scream to page a typist slttine two feet outs~de your office? Is it easier to reach a customer overseas than someone in your bu ltding? If these situations sound famlliar (or remind you of others), you ein definitely use our Communieitlons Consultant. And socn, too. Before you waste more time and money. Or dmlop an ulcer. (And if you think your office communications are pretty aood now, we promise that he can make them even better.) There's no charee for his serv ice. And lrs very e1sy to 1•t. All it takes ls a phone cafl to our business office. We only ask one thing. When you call, please ask for "the Communications Consultant"-nol "tho fella from the phone company." Everybody's the fella from the phooe company down here. (iji#I GEnERALTELEPHOnE • ., ' • • • • l . . ...... . . . . -T' .,, 1 DART PO.OT EDITORIAL PA.GE Our ,Young Achievers Tb• DAILY PILOT bu !>ten partlcularly pleased In recent weeks to report a number of accompllshmenl.!I by Orange Coast area youth. Their achievements have, on a state and national scale, broueht crodit not solely to them, but to the communities they represent. We've gathered up a few of the more outstanding accompllJjlmentJ and list them here in an attempt to add I specla) pol OD the back to the students and their advisors. . , For example, the UC lrvitle swim team captured Ibo National Collegiate Athletic Association college di· vision championship fO't the third straight year. Mike Mart.In. of UC!, has earned five gold medals in e1ch of the past three NCAA competitions and a total of 16 medals in four years. 1 UCl's water polo team took the NCAA combined colle«e and university dJvlsion crown this year. The· Anteater tennis team members were NCAA college division champions in 1970, and stand a good chance of laking that title again this year, in June. Orange Coan College Oarsmen are amon~ the best junior varsity ·crew teams in the nation and will in Juhe return to Syracuse for the International Rowing Assoc· lalion ~gaUa. The Oran~e Coast College Spe~h Team placed sec- ond in the nation this month at St I.Dull, and are cham· pions of both the Western States and Southern California forensics competitions. Edison High School in Huntington Beach won the California Interscholastic Federation AAA crown in foot· ball last !all. Newport Harbor High School's water polo team is this year's champion in CIF competi\ion. Corona del Mar High. School sent its Madrigal Sing· ers to a national conference of music teachers. Their selection for the event was honor enough, but the well· versed critics deemed ·their performance outstanding enough to warrant a staiiding ovation.' Costa Mesa High School Orchestra will this year for the second time compete ii1 the state music festival. Why So Many Of Our Cities Are Unsightly One reason that so many European cltiea are beautiful, while IO many American cities are grim and ugly, has nothina to do with the superior cultural or estbetic qualities of the Europeans. It has to do wtth the historical f a c t that European cities were founded Jong ago, when wale!' was the best mode of Lransporlatlon ; while most Amer· lean cities were buill up in the 19th Century, when th• railroad was the dominant form ol traM-- portatlon. ' European cities were built on or around rivers. which have a certain inherent charm and beauty. 'Ibe Ille of the city reached down to the water and took Its tone and color and contour from the riverfront. AMERICAN CmES grew up along 1 railroad track, in a bleak industrial at- mosphete where all beauty was sacrific· ed to shipping and loading and smoke and 011 and warehouses and le rm In a I buildings. Then was no timt, or room, or inclination, to put ·m parks and plazas and malls and the other topographical amenities that make all the difference belween a stroll lhrough the heart of Paris and the bacbide of Cleveland. Now we are rapidly entering a thlrd era of population growth and density - the ne:w cluster around the nation's urban airports. THE AREA SURROUNDING O'Hare Airport in Chica10, for Instance, has Dear Gloomy Gus: Since all our chUd.ren io Newport Beach and Costa iresa are in one unified school district, it seems most unfair that the ciUuns of the two cltlea can't come up with enough money to have one ade· quate pool for all of these wat.er- orieoted kidJ ! -J.B.~!. Tlllt !M ivr. l"lf!Mh ...... ,., •lfln. ""' _.,_..,w tfltw ltf ,.... ... _.,.,._ lt"4 Ytllt "I ,....,. M OIM!ftt Ou .. Ol llY Pllet. grown· faster than any other comparable area in the nation ; what is happening here will happen elsewhere -9fOcu and labOratories, factories and .h o·u 1 inc developments will shift their focus from the central city to the airport district, for population invariably follows transporta- tion. Aod we are making the same dismal mistake with the airport areas that we made with the rallroad towns. They have . Inadequate zoning, virtually no planning, and are allowed to burgeon commercially as"blgh-prlced slums, dominated by gas stations, junkyards, motels, saloon atrips, vu!. supennarkeb, 111d strident sign· boards. AS THE INNER CITY decays, we are simply transferring the ugliness to the airport regions, dragglng along all the same problems that have plagued the ci· ty Jn its cancerous decline. Our com· mercial insanity condemns us to the highest standards of living with the lowest quality of civilized life. The railroads raped the c i t i e s. esthetically, and left them mortally wounded. The airplane will do the same if we let it, not because It la inherently evil, but because that is the nature of the beast if it is not tamed by considerations of beauty, of easefuJ living, of plaMed communities, and a decent serw of p~ portion between our economic drives end our loog·neglected human needs. ' The Age of Discover y The pre·Eliubethan year 1536 was mighty early for a ''pleasure cruL~·· on lhe great western ocean. although Nev.·foundland was fairl y well kno"''n by then. Yet a Loodon leather merchant. one Richard Hore. chartered two ships, Trinity and Willlam. for the double purpose of catching Newfoundland codfish and giving certain influential gentlemen a pleasure cruise, first toward the New World. It hardly could be classed as a success. Some of the company died of starvation: others topk to cannibal ism. Yet the survivors who arrived back in Cornwall in October o( that year. had seen "miahtY islands ol 'tce In the summer sea.son:" thtir curioslL.)' hid be~n satisfied. ' THIS IS THE aort of throw· away historical . anecdote th8t livens the spiriled ytl 1ebolarly work by Samuel Eliot ~for!Jon. "llae Europtan Obcove.ry of Amtrlu: The Northtm Voyacn." which Oxford Unlvenlty Pr!Sll wlll Introduce thls month ($1~). It is a fully documtntl'd, illustrated account of au known North Atlantic voy8gt5 to the New World prklr to llOO -roughly from tht teml·legendnry aesthetic wanderings or Jrt:land'1 St. Brtndan the Navigator, through Frobisher, Hnkluyt and Glllll'rt to tM Second Virginie COiony's City of n.1e1ch. The aim of llUI mt0"'ned hlstorh1n 1ffa rverd, Oxford ) and t .... ic:-wlnn r of the PuJitzu Prize for blolog)' (John Paul Jone&, Columbu,l, now In hi$ 84th )Uf, it to rewrJM hielOry 1JKI biltoricaJ ..,.,. • >' ' f . • .., ' . ~e Booknl an' ~J~ ' biography tn a manner that will bt both authentic and interesting. He succeeds beautifully in t h l s comprehensive work which, he suggests, should replace John Fiske's classic two- volume "Discovery of A m e r i c a ' ' published some 75 years ago. To replace that, Admiral Mori.son (a World War Jl rank) must product a second volume, on lbe southern voyages. The indefatigable scholar tells us he is already well into just that. !\10RJSON'S BUSINESS is fact. But ht also bears down on ctaSllic myths of explol"ltion. voyagea 10 nyaway ialands, false or "secrtt" discoveries. He notes in passing at least ten 50 • called pre. Columbian ,·oyagts of discovery lhat never took place and maps of islands never seen -presumably !he work of cartographers -.·ho disliked open 11pact on charts 11nd marked lhe:m w I t b disappearing and other mylh!cal 1Ands. This ls never 1 debunking book, bul thl11 calalogut of fablet creales a colorful counltf?l>lnt to the main current of scholarly interprc1 ~11on of me.n and ahlps of those 11:ges. Mo:-;~01' ha.!1 made the sea his province 11:t least since ''The f\farJ. lime History of ?lta!.sachusetts'• In 1921. Willi•AI lfo1a• Estancia High School Band plans a statewide tour this spring, taking samplings or the musicianship that earned them superior festival ratings to communiUes throughout Calilornia. The above are merely a sampling of the outsland· Ing efforts or scores ot student and youth organizations along the Orange Coast, but they represent the hiJ!h standards young people continue to pursue. Their efforts deserve hearty applause.. Low-income Housing Irvine Company plans for the first of many hous- ing projects for low·income families has won quick ap· proval from the Orange County Planning Commission. Board of Supervisors' clearance for a zone change from agriculture to multi·family -and money from the FHA -now are the last hurdles for the landmark proj· ect. Proposed are 325 apartmenl units on a 17·acre site south of the San Diego Freeway. midway between Uni· versiby Park and. the Irvine Industrial Complex. County planners gave their favorable recominenda· tion to the project after. surprisingly, hearing only a single protest. To the credit of those who conceivably could have.- claimed to be most affected. the residents of the future city of Irvine, there was not a single citizen complaint. The sole opposition came from a totally unexpected front. the San Joaquin Elementary .School District. Officials said the low-income housing would over· whelm classrooms in neighboMng schools. The contention likelv is true. But the solution would seem to be for the schoO! district to seek help in provid· ing for this burden and others it says are plaguing that area. rather than trying to shift it. ..,..... l"\l\Aou~ The low-income project is the first of man.v the com· pany has promised to help make the new ci ty a truly balanced community and to add a badly needed housing balance to the entire county. N ~If YOU'LL JUST LET HIM GET CLOSER HE M16HT STOP 6ROWLIN6.• A11011y111ous Mail Fro1ta Lunatic Fringe A Clumsy Harassment of Teachers To the Editor: A large number of teachers In the Newport-Mesa District received a clumsy piece of jun]j: mail from an almost anonymous outfit using the cryptic initials L E S: "Let's End Stupidity." This is precisely the variety of stupidity we must all act to ~nd. The school system , its staff and ib student body do not need the lunatic· fringe harassment which is so clearly exemplified in the incoherent ranUna:s of this particu1ar (and l might add "costly") attempt to influence policy. ANY SCHOOL system, however, ~·ould welcome an open and honest suggestion or criticism, but what is so completely snide and cheap in th\s part.lcular attempt lies in the nearly fraudulent use of a mailing list to intrude into the private lives and residences of people who do nol wish an unwelcomed viewpoint. Whoever they are. hiding behind a post office box, assumed that their L E S acronym was doubly clever in the way it cast aspersions on a school district administrator and, at the same time , appeared to call for action to end stupidity. lt wall, unfortunately, only in the worst of bad tase. fDDDEN IN m rancor was a major objection to behavioral ob j e c t i v e s , performance assessments, measurable goals, and trainin~ for awareness. Any· one may object -this is a free country (though it would not long be a free country with such people in control) - but in the name of good sense, let v.'hoever '"'ishes to voice an objection, stand up, out in the open, identifiably and honestly. DAVID CURTIS 1l C/1a11ce t o D e lp To the Editor: On Friday. Feb. 26, an accident took the lives or two teenage pupils of Estancia High School-Claire Arbuckle and Ed Hernandei. It placed Paul Arbuckle in critical c<>ndition and Paul Baldwin in satisfactory condition at the Hoag Memorial Hospital. We, the students of Estancia High, '"'ish to establish ..a fund to help the families involved in this tragedy, ro assist them 1n their medical and funeral expenE.es . SO!\IE OF US are really aware of how costly this can be. Donations posted for Mrs. Arbu ckle, Mr. and ~1rs. Hemandei. and Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin will indeed be appreciated. \Ve at Estancia feel that even the .smallest donations can add up . Would any of the DAILY PILOT'S readers wish to help out? DENISE LYT'l'ON RUTHANN SWING DEBBIE L Y'M'ON EZIO PETRELLA 'Ou tright Alu urdlly' To the Editor : Jf the people fighting against the preservation of Upper Newport Bay could get !Mtr facts straight. they v.'OUld realizt the fall1cy !hey art defending. Every Lime a critic of his esluary B11 George --~ Dear George: Many housewh•e.s, a f:imous lady columnist wrote. like lo d o housework Jn the 11udc. I've joined them. My spouse ohjccts. Do you see anything \\'?'Ong \\•Jth !his? RALPH D('l'lr Ralph: "'hy don't you ask Ann ? H !hnu ld make her v.·holc dtiy. I Mailbox I Letters from readers are wetcome. Normally writers should conve y their messages in 300 words or less. The righ.t to condense letters to fit space or elintinate libel is re served. AU leL· ters mw:t include signature and mail· tno addrea:s, but names may be with· held on teqiu:st if sufficient reason. is apparent. Poetrv wilt not be µlib· Ii.shed, speaks out, he (or she) almost always ends up wilh the argument that man ls supreme. and everything that docs nol directly and completelv serve him must be made to do so or be destroyed. The Upper Bay conflict is a classic example of this. tr the plans encouraged by these critics were to go through, the bay would end up as a polluted, concrete-lined channel devoid of the wildlife that makes it unique . WlLLlAJ.1 P. BOLAND JR., io his letter of July 1. 1970, accused us "misguided birdwatchers" of holding up development of the area in the name of "a ftlv mudhens" and blasted the DAILY PILOT for its concern over the ecological impact of proposed developmenL Jim Bolding, in his April 6 letter, has also blasted the bay's preservation , for reasons knov.'Tl only to himself. {In the same letter he also stated his negative view or the practice of keeping open space in its natural state.) 1 pick these two letters as examples because or their outright absurdity. THE ORANGE COUNT'' ~upervisors 11hould be congratulated in their efforts to preserve this area for future generations and the wildlife living there. If those people wishing Orange County to become the overdeveloped megalopolis it is rapidly beooming v.·ere capable of ~ appreciating \\'hat they hsve now. I'm sure they would join the fight to save the bay and the other unique areas in Orange County. Otherv;ise, I wish they would move to an area that su its their taste - like downtown Los Angeles. · DAVID G. POR'!ER lllo11stro11s l11 e qultle& To the Editor: If the debacle in fndochina serves no other useful purpo.st. either in the public or the national interest, it at least has made manifest the monstrous and unendurable inequities of our sy stem. A quadruple amputee back from the mine fietd of Indochina. for example, is begrudgingly awarded "100 percent stTVice connected disability." Hi a government ,pays him $t50 per month. Those with less serious injuries, such as the loss of an eye, impaired hearing, or only single or double amputation, are compensa~d according to a scale which graduates downward from the $4::.0 per month maximum. SINCE EVEN J4f>O per month is scarcely enough to sustain life in the inflated economy, the disabled veteran must attempt to enter the labor market. And look at the labor market! In Orange County, about 7 percent of the workers are already unemployed-and they are mo st I y college-tralned people with no disabilities (ask your friendly insurance company about hiring Ole disabled). In one breath the government tells the veteran that hard work is good for the body, soul, and mind; and in the next breath it gives the order to throw all those squeaking. creaking levers in the Federal Reserve System to create unemployment J\.1EANWKJLE, WHAT else has been going on in the . country? Defense contractors who have been so prudent as to employ retired generals and admirals have often been able to make a rate of return on equity investment of over 50 percent. The money lenders have never had it so good (Louis Lundborg, retired i;hairrnan of the Banlt of America, may claim that his corporation has no-interest In the American presence in Indochina ; but how many,of the stockholders appear at..anti·War ·rauies?). No, there has been a ready, steady market for money, jet fuel, and PX booze. The U.S. Senate was virtually unanimous In its vote to pass the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution . Six years later, sitting atop 50,000 dead American boys, the senators saw what had happened, said ob The Why of Rate Rises Current effort'! to discredit the California Public Utilities CommiS!iOn - and have it made elective instead of ap- pointive -because of recent rate. in- creases It has approved unfortunately place . political considerations ab<rfe the economics of the public utilities conctpt. A public utility is, of course, a i>rivttc tndUitry that has betn given something or a monopoly slatu.s under state govern- ment supervision and regulation because the essential nature of its service to the pUblic dOClJ not lend itself to the open co1npelilion which is an impOrtant factor in other areas of the economy. AS A TAX PAYING. lnvestor-owntd business. however, a ulility must like all businesses make !'iUfficlent profit to al· tract the capital necessary for txpansion to mtet consumer demand . In addition, thci utlllly faces lhe imperalive of eX"· pandlng its services in advance of de- n1and. !'iO that the stale's growing popuJa . llon v.·ll J alway11 have the supply of pow11:r or lran5p(lr1Alion or communication or v.·h;itcver that It requirl's. The only \vay a ulillty C8n mc:ct il5 capital needs is lhrou"h appropriate -I • • • G~eat ,F...ditoljal ••• rates. Currtnt critics of lhe utilities point to a reetnt ln'Ctta.se Jn various ratea, follo,vlng an approximate to.year period of few increases. as paralleling the state go,·crnment's political coloration. While that parallel exists, the significance is misread, or misstattd. by the critics. AS THE INFLATIONARY spiral has ae<:elerated. utilities like all busines3es have had to ab,e:irb rlalng costs of all operatJons. After a long period of low rate lnc:rea11e1 they now heve to catch up, if they ire to 'continue lo keep pace with consumer netds and remain a sound in- vestment for their thouaand.s o £ stockholder11. Jaret and small. '1'he altematlve, or course, would be sWte ownership, with taxpa yers SUJ'>-' pl ying the working funds. Which may \\'ell cxpl:iln the current campaign agnlnsl the Pl Jr'. Callfornla feature Strvict dash it all. and repealed the resolution. THE CONGR~ would never vote today to declare war in Indochina. ·Yet, the war continues despite t h e constitutional provision which gives the Congress the sole power to take the nation to war. And now the professional gook zappers hope to dump everything on a five-feet. four-inch tall first lieutenant. · There is a big accounting yet to be made in this COlmtry. CLARE BILLINGSHAM 111011 va. Dog Lllte r To the Editor: On behalf of the mute dog population or Ne.,./port Beach I am v.Titing to urge O\vners of dogs to express themselves to their councilmen in regard .to the imminent proposals which possibly might ellminale our dogs from the beaches. I spend quite a lot of time on the beaches with my dogs and I have observed very little filth created by man's best friend . On the other hand the litter created by man is wtreal. AS THIS CITY gets larger and larger. there is little room left for children and animals and for all of us to be free and lo exercise and to run and play. Our beautiful beaches I think should be for all of us and our pets. Many of us keep pets for pleasure and also for protection. These animals must have room to run somewhere ... where are they going to go? BEE LONGLEY Suppor t for lfelh1g To-lbe Editor : We , the parents of Lindbergh Elemenlary School, ~wld like to extend our sincere thanks for your cooperation in printing the article, "Parents Rally to Side of Mesa Principal ." CQ\.'ering the meeting of the board of education. We feel lhe article was an excellent evaluation of the fetlings of the parenll and teachers involved. Jn a time when so many people criticize lhe accuracy of the press we feel your paper and the repOrter covering the meeting deserve the highest plaudii_, possible. THE ARTICLE proved to be most Instrumental in making our recenl rally a complete. wcceu. In less than two hours we obtained 583 signatures supporting our desire to retain John E. Weling as principal of Lindbergh School. This wa.!I largely due to the people being aware of the situation through reading the DAILY PILCYI' . MRS. TED MARINO.~ MRS. HAP GARNER MRS. JACK DAVIDSON MRS. SAM CORDEIRO ----- Wednesday, April 21. 1971 The editoriol page o/ the Dail y Pilot &eeks to inform and stim- ulate readers by presenting thi.s newspaper's opinions and com. tn«ntorv o" topic1 of interest and significance, by providino a forum for the e%'pression of orir rea4t:r1 ' o-phlfoni. and bv presenting tht diverse vieur points of inform.tel ob.terwrs and .tpc>kcamen on topics of th1 doy. Robtrt N. Weed. Publisher - •• 3 PILOT ·ADVERTISER Births soun. COAIT COMMUN ITY HOl,ITAl Marriage Licenses ...... N CltAOOOCKS-ltiCKS -Hutti W., ~ of ns Utl(a, Huntlnt!On ll••el'I 1nc1 fll lm:I Ar'llOnl Sired, Wei!mlnt!tr Or1ntt. SIMAR·PIE1tOn1 -P11rlclr G., 2t of 1611t StybrODlc, Hunllntlon lleecto Incl S.Mr1 J,, 1' of 15'.(11 P11Mlt,,_ A11t., Tu•ln. AGUILEltA·NELroN -Robilrl, 1l of "11 1111100 ""'" Wntmln11tr l>'!JI K1rl1 o., lt ot 4lO:I N1v110, W"tmlnlltr. llUl"f:·ALLEN -Mrrvln L •• JO of SIC Xlrn-. Loftt t1-.:11 tlld Sylvia J., !I ell 6162 Wtr..,, HunUntlon lltKll. Hl!llNANDEZ-GAllCIA -Phllllp P., lt, et 11'21 ArllOllt Sire!, Wtmnlnttw' 1M 111mw c .• 11 ot 1111 w,,_1 .. Str•f. Wtstml1111.,. A YALA-GAltCIA -Kt"""lh II., 20 of 1'411 lltr$1Ao MldW1Y CllY Ind Dtlorft M., •.of 1'012 llYI« Clrdf, H11n•-leld'I. I'····-·. Mam 11 Ol•AllO·\llCKEllY -Artl!llr A., 'Sal nn 11:111111, S11n1 .. and Lllllt1• J .. » ol 2.04 we.t hi s1~. hnl1 Anl. Al'UllON-GAllTNER -Jo.1Ph A •• 11 cf 21'1 0.1 No# AYI. Co;lll Miu lllCI 10.'8•nl ..... tt ~ COltl Mnt. . ltYN.liL·IMO•Y -Dtrlk E., ~· JlJf Wffl •1lbol Ave.. N leedl 1114 Cllr!1lloe A., 11 al Clo*"" Clrt:~, Hewiiort lt¥fl. • • • McOLAOE·S!DANO -LID 11 .. a • ISl2 H"""' Att., S1cr1ment1 1nd Clf'tlYn "'-~I of Nd. 17 Tru~ 11111)11. L1..in1 letcll. • OUNN-GIVOT. -TIWOdo•• O .. )f inn w1trwt A,,. .. T111Tln •"" s.r.1""' A.. u ol 11121 Sin R11tlno. INlnt. tl!LJON.GAllDHl!A,·-AndrlW J., 21 d J014 VI II ·~ttn, Co.II Miii llnd llollln "\.,, ,, e( .,.,,.., Dlil!MNI· /4.VI . ••lt>O• hl1nd. ' • OOOOWIN·Pl!Tl!ltS -G'1ry A .. It Ul5S 1'111 S"-'• Sun1t 1111t;11 lnct Jtnl~O .. 1S 'di: Sll!\lll IHdl. MUltltAY·VAN O'l'K! -Rott1nd F .• 3" flf l2'0 Norlh SJ'ternote. lntlWlin 11\d Slltron c .. 1t o1 1fl51 Silmon LIM· HUftllMIOn ~R I Glllli<OfF·\l/f.DGE -Liii· "2 °''10.: Vtlllll ClrClt . Ca1l1 Mtll 1 l(ellllftn M .. :U of S1n!1 Alli. of IWAN-IALov.'IN -Mlcll1itl O .• 22 .0 Ollr. Ptr\ AVI., Uklll'I. M1~~ 11111 Pll't'1111 R., U c srookfl\lnl, HIM!ll,,.,.. ... d'l. DID11.-AUST&RMAN -Aydin R., n tf 20U ,.111..,... SI ... !, C•!I MtN •ftll Jvll• ..... 20 .. cr'~es:· " °' IOW.t.llD$-D.AVIS \,.,.1: 1J'ld C;"'..,.,,. 1•1.t Plnt , 'wtttm OOOO ... I SI~ 1 ., 11 o1 inn. · Wnlf!'ll"'ltr. -o1 111t CAN.POI-ARCE -F,...Cltu .... l t tf ''"' Str•I, SlnU .t.n1 tnd 1"'"1 ' 21 ol 11 ,11 S•nl• 11os1l!1, 51..,ton. ·• · ,..,,n t OAVIS·TYll.Oti -WI Yn41 ,t.., '1 ol SP C."91111! Avt., LOM llllcft ind ll'ltflY G . 20 ot 24" 51nll Ant ,t.vt .. Cos!I MfH . HAYES.DEFAULT -Eow..-d A., 21 of 21242 Eirl'l1,I. L11un1 Hl!l1 Ind lt•btcCI J .. ,, of L11ur.1 Hlll1. Cl.t.UNl·SIGll.l~T -T1,ry R .. 11 Ill $1t ll MQdllll AY1! .. Newl>O'I !1e1th ind St ndr' L .. :JD ol 1111 A"U9u1 W1y, N-rl 111<11. YAHN Kl.CAWTHON • -ltcblr1, 11 el \Sl'1 Wlllllfl'I• Tu1t!n tnd K1tl'>lr!nt J,, 2A·of 1022t Y1n1 Ori"'· St1nten. Mttrltt« llotntel w•te luued to t11t NllO'lollll 11 cf Apr. I. lLMLUNO.CARLSON -C1,I F .. Ii. t110 ,..,,,._ W1y, COlll Hint, I ncl l""'ltt ..... •t. U,1....,. 11".t.U)IHG-l!DWAll.OS -wnn1 ...... ' U , ,..., Vittltl RICI C11'11lr100 "'"'' 11'1d Vlttln!I H .. JI, Arttdl1. ICHNllOT FRl•D -Wl~ll"' H., •• 161U' P1rQkle ln.., Hunu""'°" .. .ell. 111cl 1.1"rl1 II., 20, Llk..wod. WALTEllS·!UOS -Dollllcl F .. O, L-htdl· tl'ld """ c .. 21, llliO 11.fd lvd Clrclt, l'ouM11ft V1llff. SCH11*10Pl!lf·IAl.l!R. -Gunhr A .. 41, An.llltl!n, 1J'ld c11lre L, a mi CJ'lf'IS._ Hul'l'll ... I ... lletc~. IRICKSON·K.ENT -w1m1m s .. 21, 17111 lolw Chic• lld .. Ind Ju.-A., !I, jltd SltJllf\ Or., llcllll el Hunllftllfen lleldl. JOHANfrUEN·IDGGS -Ktnntltl :IO. 11.lcllf'lclo keen, Ind Klttilfffl I!., 11, ll't P11rl Att .. N1wPOrl l11cll. llll•ltA\JB -J1rr" Y . JI, 1114 ll~ LIM, NewPOl'I B11c~ ll'ld K1t11i.tn A, 2'. Anll>elm. llOSS·.t.HOEl.SOH -llorrY G .. !I, atll Slrkll Dr., Hllftllntla<i Bt1dl, tnd 11..~1 s .. 21, Lo. Alaml!o1. IARGf:ll.OTTi -Wlllltin P., 2t d f t1t1 SI., tftlnllntlon llBr1th, Incl Canft11 5., .. L11t.wood. PLIWl·•OOKl!lt -Willer A .. 60, $-ll2 ... ~11 Or., Hunlllltl!llft ... di, ll<!d A-/lll., SJ, LO!!I ll1tU\. M(MAHAN-HUGHES -Johll II. .. t7, Sl'f fl'tower SI. (01!1 MHI. ll'ld Clltr\1111 E., n, N01 El RtJ .t.v1 .. ,....,nllln V1H.,.. NAUGAllTH-K.llt•Y -Du111t It,. lf, an "t1111111d, """t111t1ton etltll. •llll Nt ncY J., :H, LC1f19 lltlKll. LU(EllO-OOMINGUEZ -WIUllll'. ~. 1#71 ""'91od'f l.11 .. Hu11llnlflfl hlKfl, 11'111 (afll'I"' P., 11. l.ot Mttlll. WINGl!lt·"ERNC.t.SS -l ...... I .. fl, MJ, lltlclJ, 1nd P1trk11. 11 , S3' /Nf"nlrlt Cyn. CM-cltl Mir. ,OSTlll·R.ICO -Dell T .. tt, Hl*tllt n G1rOll'lt. ...., AMI.. II.., 11, IJJU SI ...... l.11 .. ltufdlllffoft BHCll. SCNNITl(t:ll-lllVlLA -TtrrY L .. 13, Ltflt a.ten. '"" llrlkl, '" ti• C11'1rlllllr Allt .. Cill1 Mttl. f'IAVA-MOWIRI -,flirlttl,¥, t7, V-nkl tflllll ijtlell A .. '1, f11ZI e1nf!'11~..,, Cir,. Hllntlntten hKll. OILLIPll-01111 -AMr•* s~ n. ~ 1M ~IM1 L., I'll, N<ll WtNI Cir .. HUnll••t.n ltecll, M l<NllTCHILL -Vil M., M, Mii Jllfl"' A .. 17, llolll .i l'llS 1ltl S1., Hvntll'rtoton 1r1cn. SAMl"SON·lAUlll -llotMft ,t.., ll, •t4 WtrW ... .,.., +ll1n!ln1fln ·~· ,,... ""*"' "" ,., u... eH<tl. GRUMOIKl-'A~lill -l'MolMo'I l .. U. 4:14 WtrMr. Ind .t.llct 0 .• :H, 11'7 \IWl..Wt bolll o1 HUllllnf!on lttdl. COIAliOl+WAONla -.. .,, S,. lf, Wedrlt$day, Aprll 21, 1971 1111 '"'~ St. CMl9 MHa. -r en L... M. W!lfttltr. ' w .. ,....,, ""' 21, 1971 N DAILY PILOT J$ t' ' , •O OZ. LIQUID 1• oz. i1z1 17 OZ. SIZl •• oz. llZl Glo-Coat f~OORWAX "BON BON" Lounge Ciolli .;~ slid I-IOI ...,, - viJl)'I for comfort. Adjusts lo 36 positions wilt! f1aaerti, NEW fljU«tljll ! 'Clear Eyes' , DICONGllTANT EYE DROPS ror heall!ly, comfortable eyer. Rapidly removes •'!~~ 119 lk' • AU PUIPOSI SOLU110N '" Co111act LllSeS ··~ 1.51 Ike "Supp-hose" PANTY HOSE K1rs1r·l1tll-CGmfortin&. soothin"g S11pport la1 rour lep .•• firmln1 oantY girdle action and ttit bl£ kiln bik of parity bose all in one prment. Proportlaned sizes r.. on lloi"'1 "" .,;gMs. 4 9B ln••• lmJllJ Ln rrlc• 5.tt • .. 11corm "When I Was A Kid" "191LLCOllT 11 h 1k llll lall ,,,""""' it its best ••• dedicated by Bill C.Osby "to all • ijds.. Recorded li"te. SIH1'1 EflrJU, 3 69 . l11 l'r111 I.II • CLAIROL "Lemon Go Lightly" ltptar 1r Pin. Srm.ott liglltener for the iun-splaslled, sW--li11rttntd look. Rich =~"=' s:.ri::..: 1 7B • lft PfiCI -,... I JJippitg-ilQ HAIR smlNOOIL For m i• lld ~ i.tma n>lltr sets. Adds .klft. Rlful• BB tr Em Hald.: SIHl'I C lnl)loylnPltcl 1.11 llL SHULTON Summer Special "'1 i.wi1ltioo 10 lmll~ "' ilelt dollli>IM 1!1,.-1U "'""" ID U., "' cool I I.,., . • Dtstrt flmr • fritlfS•lp Rar•• <i • lsc1,111t • Early a..r1e11 • 01~ s,1c1 <:''&If Colope Mist Dist. Powder , iot. 1JI 1 09 IOI' 1.11 B7C l._ • ZtL • 4tL """'l °""' hom - lifll """' ""'' ' , • fr.I' illbrs er oatMrS. ••i.11.11 10.BB Patio Chair r Olding a!uminDlll chair wit~ 513•3" webbilig. Assorted cokrs witb wtiite. ;~ 3 39 #74 • Ice Chest 18 gal .. Ill!. -· able, rus4'ftiaf. Hith im- ~~e~:e~~~ft~ 11 49 shell. Rq. lt.91 #Tl31 • NISTLFs "Streak 'n' Tip" Instant lttnp:irary spray.on hair color. For glamorous ac· mts and touch.ups, 1 09 blends ii gray. As1t'd """" "'· . cu11TY Baby Needs Gauze Diapers U1n -"" ..... ing, fast drying. 21J40" Si1'. 3 49 111-u11rs • Diaper Liners Redvces diaper SGilin1. Helps pre¥enl diaper rash. Dispos· '"" 79& lot. lie Hi's Training Pants 0 2-Way stretcll, 4 layer cen- 1.er panel fo1 extra alt&orb· eocy. llf. 5tc 2il.OO Crib Sheet fltt1f J •• C~eed ID Iii aft!!' BBC WISNq. 'Mtite anty. It&. t.tt fl) 11Desert Flower" 01n sn 1 95 Ctl1aN lifllt 2 I~ Dntlll( ..... 4 I L lq. Z.25 1 @H&ue After SllaYe•111t 1"'1.111.39 AIHSOL CelOfllOllL Deodorant :i 1.59 ~i BBC 'Aiax' Lysol Lysol TOILR IOWL CLIANIR latin, Tull & Til• CIHn•r GRfAT Place To Shop! ly BIG IDY -W/hood, motor & spit. ~Jvln[ grill. swing away &rill & ~ tioe 11pit fort.s. Brll· 1 0 BB l1ant red. Rta.12.41 #2444 • c•••co .. Briquets "~Ifs D11t&M" ••• 100~ 0.1 "" Hitlary, ht. lk 10 llL BBC Fastest charcoal 'ookef • : • sinal~ 10•10~7" 4 69 Sil!. ~ ldJISf· ablcgn11. 1 14-US • . 24" , P011UU Bar-B-Q 11 11c 101 "Ni·LI" ••• Blifillfldy red bowl, chrome pllted re· :;;~n~~~ $llap 6 BB 1.,.u111121 , 1 B" Gas Bar-B-Q -. -plltol pi~ -cast icoa b1r11~orcel1il1· :~si;.1~:.1B 49 10(, 21.11 #11" .• LP. Gas Ta l Rqolator ~·21:ea I • 11" Skntrs , . • lf' IJ.IJ.Q flit • 11•11111r • T111s • l11tl1r "''' 1ue1BBc 2•0Z. SIZI 'Glory' HEALTH0 RITE : Nutritional Products 'YitaminE I i200 ·1.u. Nahlral 4 49 capsults ~ ••a.4.91111'1 • .Protein Powder a 1!i l'!n.A"llt· 3 98 -ell ... l'Oteil. ~ UI ll 1i.' • SAY-ON BRA!m LIQUOR SPECIA~ Folding Syringe Count Vasya MacKinnon's VODKA SCOTCH PllFIC110N Idell fl)( VICatiGD 1114 trMI· int ••• cornple1e wit• tittinas . , ' " ' ,\ " ,, '( ,J ' .. " ,. ., , ,,, '" ", ,. ' II ",,.,, lea. 3.11 fittl 2, 69 ::ri~ AfD 3, 69 · Davenport Canadian Reserve :~~"'~ Gm•· 1 29 $IHl'lln!JUY lnlltctl.71 • ':~==~;~;:::::::::;;~~~ ,. r '" Household Gloves GIN WHISKY II Pnol 2 69 II Pml 3 79 j lot.111 fittl o lot.1.11 Af~ e ·Foster Creek 1111Tuarsn•11Hr BOURBON WHllKY 3 15 IS Prt1f, I Yr111 ti• flftt • LIBBEY11 Citation" Barware • 1 IL Ctrlltl • 4 1r. C1ctbil •I~ 1r. Jill Wl11 ··~ 11.lnlllli•• •IV. 1r. Stir, • I tr. Parf1lt •I~ 11. S'1rt1t • 11 IL 5t•ltt ::K41.59 "Heavy-Base" Glassware • I ll, l"U • 11\\ IL lotllol Ml 1111 •lei.lmnp ~ • 11' tr. DI• Fn•ltnC • lll'r IL Z111•i• 4 59c • ll11 1L lmnp YOUR CHOICE l DRUGSTORES Place To Shopl Newport Beach 1010 lrriM, W...uff.... OPEN t AM Huntington Be1ch te 1 O PM ... ._,........,, 7DAn If SCllCll -lltut "'°°' Ina IN ••• lmtl d ill *1in1 lor tM ,.... lllftrll •~tiff Kiok. Stilmlltl$ setf 11'111 htlr. PllFICTllM -illllnl nil- be< ·-willl l>qil -&:\;,·.::?;,-SU<• -~bffyjoy LnPrict4k "G I "I" e DSI 1•11ns For acid COlb'OI it ref'lff af ~~ indigntior\, ldtbcn Ind~ tM's ·~~- selOomach. 1 69 S1M1'1 btl)fof ~ Ln rr1c11Jt • "Groom & Clean" lllll Sl'IAY fer - Sott 1!1~ """ l>ol -'1?: ~=='·~109 .... t~ 711. • "Sok·O" Paddle Ball ~ ,,. " " " " " ... ,. '" .. : ; •,' , ·' 1.: ' , " " '" " " ,, "' .(• 1, ~ ., 15.BB Huntington BHth A Wiil l~."1UI =::a:• .. -l 141 .... ·:s;::::::ll=::a::::J I II ·' ' • I Jt OAILV PILOT PAllfll.Y'CfllCVS Transmitter · On Okinawa Under-Fire TOKYO (UPI) -Every night the Voice of America's ene million-watt transmitter on Okinawa goes on the air, b e 1 m i n g American~dited news and American music toward the 750 million people of Communist China. Whether that voice will be silt11ced -or fort'ed to speak more softly -is one or today's thorny issues between Japan and the United States. The two countries are negotiating the return of Okinawa to Japan, expected to take place sometime in 1971. Japan says American pro- paganda broadcasts to third countries from its soil would violate Japanese sovereignty. The United States. which has no good alternative t o Okinawa as a site for the transmitter. Insists the broad- casts must continue. Voice of America (VOA) ac- tually has five big transmit. ters on Okinawa. They also broadcast In Korean Cor Com- munl1t North Korea, and in Russian for Soviet Siberia. There are programs i n English, t h e international language of Asia. All of these are sidt issues, however, dompared to the broadcasts to Com mun I at Oiina, the main job er the million watt transmitter. Broadcasts in the medium frequency rang~slgned fl}I' China's broadcast band-lose litUe of their power in transit across the open sea. VOA of- ficials believe programs of this sort may be audible as far 1 IS 2,500 miles inland. Both the Ollnese and the Soviets have used transmitters of their own \o try lo jam VOA '• broadcasts at least in large population centers. The issue arose Mareh 17 when the Japanese Postal MiniJiry issued a ruling that a foreign controlled radio station would be a violation or Japanese law. For tbe UnJted States, an tKlt of VOA from Okinawa 1 might mean retreat with the ~ transmitters lo Guam or some 1 ether m.id-PaclfJc island. 'Jbe l expense would be heavy, and the Voice of America would lost a lot of decibels in China u a result. 1l\C VOA issue In Japan has been caught up in the coun- try's China politics. Japan's four opposition parties, which won 46.9 percent of the vote at the last general election, all are commilted in varyi ng degrees to normalizing rela- tion.!! with Communist China. St. Joseph's Accredited For 2 Years A two-year accreditation has been received by St. Joseph Hospital from the board of Commissioners of the Joint C.Ommission on Accreditation of Hospitals, according to an 1nnounctment from t h e hospital. St. Joseph Is located in Orange and has h e 1 d accreditation s I n c e its founding In 1929. The accrtditation program for bospitall w1s started in 1111 by the American C.Ollege of Sllrgeona u a voluntary self reCU)atory p r o I r·1 m to maintain a high atandard of health c1re. The progr1m now lncludet representatlvts of the Ameri can Conege of Pbyalcl1ns, Amtrlcan Hospital AaoclaUon and the Amerlc3n M'ecDcal AuoclaUon. FAIR Fe1t, f•lr, f•clutl. The1e tltr•• ••''' '""' up f•cto,. 111 •,..r.-ti•• •• t~• DAILY' ,ILOl .Jiteri•I IJ•I• '""'ti • .,. ----·· ....... • Wtdntsda1, April 21, 1971 'Death Row' for Women Bejng. B~t VJR61NL\.'S SNIP 'N STITctl SHOPPE Jll4 e .. 1 Cout Hwy. e ~.., •. Joi l.(or Phono 673-1050 SACRAMENTO !UPI) - Clllfomla's fi.nt "Death Row" for women ls belng built to accommodate Ute three young glrb condernne<l wlth Cilarles Manson, and its Isolation presents "a grim prospect." son wU1 be de!1yed wbile they spend "quit. a few years appear ln ot"tr trials stem-there." the unit aDd. eating, ming from crlmet by lhe A fourth woman will be on Manson "family," "Death Row." She already Ls The St.alt De~ent of wider sentence for death. in Co r T e e U o n~a , aald the tbe1 'alayine. rl ~n. ~ly' remodeling neotaury· for the womaa In.,•. Los Angeles new "death row '' would coet robbery. She b 'Jean Carver. The tour wome11 wtll have access to law book1 and be able to take part in academ.Jc: progr.,.. from 1helr cells., S•LE , TAX "BLAHS" GOT YOU! ' MAKE NEW FUN CLOTHES! about $1,000. Th~ department' '!pakeiman Sovt Dolan At Our After Tax Celebratlan 20o/o OFF oN Au PA111cs The six-cell unit iS under rorulruclion at the reception center at !he California lnslitul.ion for Women near Frontera in the Oat, dairy country or San Bernardino County. For Susan Atkins, l2, Leslie Van Houten, 21, and Patrtcla Krenwinkel, 22, It could be home for .several years wbij_e they appeal their convictions in the Tate-LaBJanca killings. n will Jnvol?, htlablenllJg .. ' said ·Ille four wtll be in virtual WD"f: fetet around \be area, Isolation unUt 1~ ~ how· erecting • ... ~ coricret~ "'" they react· to one' another -and around a Uny outdoor staff and.whethef"they can gel recrealion arta, lsolaUng the alon1 with one another." six<ell unit from the rest of The unit will be stalled by the building and reinlo~ five wome1 and one man as the cells themselves. ~rity officers. The state Each cell will be 't.by.f'f-eet will spend between $00,000 and with a bed, sink, tollet,locker, $35,000 a year for theft table and chalr, Theft will be aala.i:ies. DIAMONDS AND •lSTAT~ JE"¥'£llY tURCHASED April 22nd Through 28th ~ S•• You Soonl VIRGINIA • P.S. Sotrv, l:n1f orily 11% off 011 B of A tad M•ttor Ch•rt•' 11111. The three women have been formally sentenced to San Quentin's gaa chamber. How~ ever, their tran.rler to the pri- a·lone shower In the unit. Altd. The department spokesman when it ii uaed, there will be • said the situation would~ be female guard watching. evaluated to d e t e r m in e A department official saJd it recre11Uonal programs and would be a grim prospect ·to such routine duties as cleaning South Co1tt 111111 Jrt•tol ot tfto So11 01090 Fwy. Cotto .M.111 540.906• • IANIUMlllCAID e MAIHI CMAl•I ·~ HUNDRIDS OF ITIMS ON IALll 'sr PICK UP YOUR FRll SALi aooK AT YOUR ITORI TEA KETTLE JAMBOREE 810 l\'t MALIBU POOL PACKAGE 127-01 13501C A famous Revere Ware ':...------------... teakettle. The most YA.LUI wonted ond best selling 6 Cup Whistler 6.00 teokettle lnAmerica. The 2 Qt, Whistler 6.SD IA.LI 3.99 4.49 2 Qt. Stainle11 most populorsizes are stffl 11•00 7 .49 offered. :S Qt. Whistler &SD· 4.99 S.iPIECE WRENCH SET BONANZA YOURCHOICI •IOULAR -Mlmllc 5 piece open end wrench set or 5 piece open tnd and box wrench .combination set. 199 sn LEMON LIME HAND SOAP Here's a new lemon-lime wateriest hand soap with lanolin. Greaffor the ladies, leaves hands soft. Also oil· purpose cleaner around the home or office. ~ . , ... ...:;;:,._~ ,,.,. .. ~A . OAf. WITH LANOLIN ~ 1• or. iONt ~ COAT AND HAT HOOK BRAIS OR CHROMI YOURCHOICI Easy to Install. Just screw into wall and your coot or hot ore ready 10 hong. 5~ r-........ ...:'Jlt PATIO LIGHTS 12• x 36" Completely shockproof and waterproof. Costa 4 ••• less than 3 cents per night ta operate. Easy to install. No permits needed. • :s LIGHT sn-LV200:S •• 3"- 6 llGHT sn-With limer 58. LIQUID PLUMfR • Keeps dralnsopenl Safe, no hatmful chemicals used. SAVE28' . . . .. • • • • • SAVE50' • • •• CANVAS WORK GLOVES Just I" time for spring gardening or pointing chores. These ore U.S. mode cotton gloves made ...._ .:>--") with the thumb positioned ...... ~~:.---"''"] forwearoneitherhand. · Doubles t~e life of each pair. MEN'S OR LADIU' Includes Filter. Deluxe splasher pool 59'' with 1op and bottom rails and vertical supports complete with cartridge filter. 12' POOL COVIR,,, 4.99 "·.'.• LEISURE CHAISE LOUNGE ForYourOutcloor ' Living Room ••• 1299 1·GALLON PLANTS ~~AGAPANTHUS DWARF LILY OF NILE · !!I This outstanding spring· blooming plant will give you· an outstanding burst of blue. flowers. PYRACANTHA Clusters of white flowers in spring end lu1h red berries for Christmas. YOURCHOICI 88! DELUXE HEDGE SHEARS MANUFACTURIR CLOSE-OUT Heavy steel cutting heod, tubular steel hand and rubber grips for easy handling. Ideal for trimming shrubs and around the flower beds. 149 19 INCH TUITlll '"' 11 "" .... IL T 24312 1---------"'":..:V.::'":..:'e!":::'V:..:O=.·--~ TMllllTIR WESTMINSTER AVE. •UlllA-"ARK VAllEYVIEWST. ORO AOCKFIELD ORAllGI «AT~~:.:~vE. LA HA•RA LAH!~.~wstvo. FULLIRTOll CHA~~·AvE. COITA MllA ,,,;::sr. • BAKERSFIELD • CHATSWORTH •COVINA • lSCONDIDO •GOLETA •. G!'ANAPA HILU e LA CRESCENT A e LADERA HEIGHTS • LANl:=.U,TEfl • E.LOS ANGELES • RESEDA • RIVERSIDE •SAN BERNARDINO •SAUGUS • SIMI • SPRING VALLEY • TA.Ru.NA e THOUSAHDOAltS • UfLAND e VAM NUVS • VICTORYILLI • HACIDmA HEIQKTS I I I • f;osia. Mes,a • . EDIJION • • • • ·--• voi: 114, ~o. 9$, 5 SECT·IONS, 62 ,AGES OUN&L CO\J~, CA(IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2 r, 'f97·f TEN CENTS J . . ~ ~ ' . D.t.tt. Y PILOT SMtf 'llMI RETURN&D BY VOTERS Jf\cumblnt Bergeson Llird Cites New Russian JCBM Peril NEW YORK (UPI) -Defense Stcret;arr ?i{elvin R. Laird said today the Soviet Ufl/.on bad 1tarted building a new, tJlenslve JCBM. system which "must be of major concern" to tbe United States. In"i view of um, he said, the United States might be forced to take "ad- dltli:rtal OffselUng actions" if t h • Strategic .Arms Limitations T a I k. s (SALT) fn Vi<Ma fail lo produce• an etinenl. . . 't a.pre~ljl<ecbil>u..-¥ ~iJ;~~tio':'~ recalle4 that one year 110 be told another meetjng Of editon thal 1Jf ·!wed lho United State1 might find ~.in a 1e. cood ,r ... llrate&ll; ll91,11Ji,;, •·~Iba iDla. jfios. --. . .. ,,,-,.,., . "I -el io report today that notlllng his bapp<ned fn tho Intervening· 11 ~-to·lesaen that· concern;" be aald. 1'(Mte the opposite is· true." Laird 18id that , in December and Jtituary it ~~ared the Soviet. Union was sfowing \ts rapid deploYment-of lntercon· tlnental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs>· after !JJIWlk>g abotlt IOO more than the 1,051 !ind based ICBMs that ·the United Stalel Iii•. U. added that In February and March, a new type: of miaile lilo bad been detected in RUMla that raised fears d a new ICBM program. ""Mere recent evidence conttrms the .Oberinl fact that the Soviet·IJblan Is Jo. Yotvtd ln a new / and a~)' Q; .. "'111v• -ICBM <:amlnlctioo program," tOird Aid. "This 11.ew ICBM construction. effort ciiiupl.ed with addiUonal momentum In the strategic defensive area -all clearly planned months .ago -must be of mafor concern.'' Laird 1ald the Russians also were .. rapidly closing the gap" in submarine based missiles, in area where today the (See LAIRD, P•ce %) Newport Youth Found Hanging Outsid~ Trailer Christopher Harvey Allbon, t 20, wu found banged from a-tree this •mominl outs ide his Newport Beach trailer home. .Police are listing tbe death u a .aliclde. r The grisly find was made early today by a neighbor woman w.ho wu taking her dol for a walk through tbe tree-ringed trailer p1rk at 2919 W. Coast.,High'w8y. Detective Sam Amburgey.said .Alli$on'1 fl-iends indicated he was an LSD user and fiad bee:n suffering Irom recurrin,g,:trips, for the past month. . . • , On a few· occulons, the friends-told Police-they dl1COverid . the yoilth .beau.ii his htad against Ille side of1lia tr1Uer to )l:nock hbnletfl out --.o "be. cWld have -po""'/' >'mburlet said.· Al otber ~; ·1ie woulcl'be .Jn a e1tetonlc 1tupclr, llley reparlocL "One ol his frio>cls'told me Allison bad wantod to be teken to the hospital but lho trleod lalked him oot of It because he would pnly be hassled by the poliCe," the detective added. He bad been 1msted by Newporl police In Fobrull')' and pleaded guilty to pomu!Oll of marijuana and bashlab/He w11 on probaUon. An autopsy baJ· been ocheduled to -&tmnine the tin>* and cause: of death. AmburttY aaJd •tba youth wu 1 lat aeen by hte rooounalo!,bout l a.m. "Ho· applre1)11y tied tbe rope.to•a ·tr .. , pul the -lln>Und Its nOdc .. d Just ateppod oil.I bol, "·tbl.Jnveatlptor aald. , D.UtY PILOT Jllff ,.Mii 'GETS NEW TERM Incumbent Fr•nklin No CoDtest DAILY l"ILOT Stiff Plitt. UNOPPOSED IN lllD Attorney Smallwood Three Incumbents Win OCC Board P·ositions Incumbent Coast Community College Distrk"t trustees Donald G. Hoff, William Keuler and Robert L. Humphreys won easy re-election in voting Tuesday. Final returns of all 96 precincts showed fewer than 21) · percent of the district'• 129,469 registered voters cut their ballot.S. Roff~ l~bellt · representina--ruident.I • " . "'""1bJi:•-.o! ·Ibo. Nelrport.Meaa ·Board ol EducaUon:approved ii. aeries of· school attend.anCe boundary .~lcatlonl Tuea- day.. · J\oy -o. Andersen: dfie'ctor of facility planning, erplained that tbe 1change1 are ., . neceuary lh order to •meet c~angina: W>ootu~-~the • 11ou • ·'-' UUC& aew ndar'ies atAUJ crade student.a from the Harbor View at .. teOdanct area -will attend Harbor View Schoo~ Euthhd! will relaln its sixth graden .except for those livina In the Bren tract between Ford Road,and Port SubourDe-Way. They will attend Lincoln School. In lhe second change, an sixth aod seventh grade students from the portion.s Of the Killybrooke and Bear Street at~ tendance areas north of the San Diego Freeway will attend Te Winkle School. A third ~bange Is actually the con· tinuaUon Of a policy established by the board last year. Ninth grade students from the ·w~l side of the bay who were formei:ly aent to Corona del Mar Hiib School ·will be sent to Newport Harbor High ·Scbool. Andersen 1ald Ibis policy will e<111llnue.., that eventuallytbero will be ·no r61dente or t!ie ..... t side of •the bay •tteoefing Corooa del'Mar ~· ' oi1LY P~OJ~eff,f'._.. RITt:lllNID •fOR NIW,TERM C••lt Incumbent· Mumphr~ • of lhe Westminster Elementary district portion of the college district, received 12,162 votes. His opponent, 1 tu dent Charles Dagion, got 3,281. Kettler, incumbent represenUng the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley elementary .district portions of the col· tege district, garnered 10,998 votes, co~ partd with 1,811 for Barbara Bell ud .1,111,r.r~ Er\r.lq~)limoa. ' - ·Humphreys, ~t repr'il&llU,,. reJldente of Coste M.S.. waa re~ fO!' a third" term. H\ received 10,900 YOtes -~·~ ,..,,, lltlllcl>ard ouv..' 1yatenw ~ !rodi, Colla Meai ~ l ,!27 lot ltlidetll Wllltem Unger. The cimpajgo ·was · generally con- 1ld~red 1lacklwlter. The incumbents· ran on ·thelr-recordi and uperlenee on the boar(I., . Hoff, 53, .of ·JOU Harper St., MldWay City,. has ,.ervtd 15 years -on the college board including three terms as 118.pm:I .. dent!& ii &-'.quality assurance specialist for th SpaCe divl!ion of North American Rocl<W<ll 'Co'J10'ltion, KetlJer. 49, of ·623 · Seventh Sf, HW>- tington Beach) 11 •a native of Huntington Beach who was appointed to the colle,t board in. 1965. He is regional aupervl10r for JS[ Sales CorporaUon and Life ln!urance Company of cal!fomia, Humphreys, 44, is an attorney prac· ticlng at 1500 Adams St., Costa Mesa, and is assistant city attorney for Costa Mesa. He is a staunch advocate of an open door policy for public colleges due Jn part to his own success following graduallon from Orange Coast College and Cal Slate Long Beach. Two trustees of the five on the Coast College board were noL on the ballot this year. They are: -Area one, the Sea1 ,Beach and Ocean Vlew.,Elementary Districts. Worth Keane ofSc!et,J!each, holds this seat. '-M!a'five, the city.of Newport·Beach. Board President George Rodda 'Jr. of. Corona' del ·Mar-represents tlli.s·atea. OAl\.Y ·l~T ltlfl' .... SJiNT', BACK TO llOARD Coost Incumbent .Kettler • Incumbents Back '\ Voters .Re"!ekct Franklin, Berg~on By GEORGE' LEIDAL . • Of ... 1161,. ,~ llalt . ' Newpor~Mua Unlijed School. District. votera retuhled ll'.f' ·lllcumbeJ\te 'to •the board o-0f edt¥:atipb. Tuesday~ They, also elected on~ neW-·)K>ard ·member 1who"ran unopposed; , . Board "Pre.S:ldeat Selim s. "Bud'' Franklin~ ·a'~-£osi.a .Meia'.attorney, was returned for· a • sec:Ond term. on the Newport.Mesa tioar.~1 receiv_ing 3,793 vot".: Jiis ,opponent-salesman Herb Stricker, got 956. Irvine Files Upper Bay Complaint By L PETER KRIEG Of t1141 DlllY Plllt S .. ff The Back Bay is going back to courl lrvlne Company lawyers today filed a complaint for declaratory relief against the county board of supervisors for their decision to cancel the contr<>- verslal Newport Upper Bay land ex- change. They are also asking damages that company lawyers say will "run into the millions." William R. ·Mason, Irvine Company president, said the company preferred to negotiate cancellation of the et:· change but said the aupervlsors' unila· teral action left little choice. "'Ii!ere are many Issues to be settled before the agreement can be mutually terminated," Muon said, "these iuuu C1J1 be ..ulld ellher a<:r01f llle cooler· ~~i:..~~~.;.i ht nJd. ".btJt supervl.Jors do not.·lo WI are lor<ed to ... to <Ollll" The il~d land swap of•Jrvint =t#~'.r..~~ i6-day 'notlflCitloli (lause, ~ vllOfl . Jul W«k .confirmed · thilr ~11!1' unanlmoos vote to kill lho ti'acJe . f!Jht (See IRVINE, Pa1e I) Mexican Airline Gets New Route To Ontario · Port . Aeronaves de Mexico, the souttH>f·tbe- border airline that wanted to tuV8 Orange Counly Airporl, will ~ be granted· routo authority from Tijuana to Ontario, U.S. Rep. John Schmitz (Jt.. Tustin) conlinned today. Aeronaves had originally secured an in- ternational agreement to fly daily from the county airfield, but disclosure of the pact brou1ht swift and furious protests from a dozen aources. An aide to President Nixon announced two weeks ago the White House had in· formed Aeronaves that service to Orange County Airport Would be unacceptable and ordered the State Department to find another landing site. Ontario was selected, a spokesman In SchmiU' office said this morning, because it is the onJy air field, besides Los Angeles tnternationat Airport, that has cwitoms facilities. Aeronaves and a second Mexican ait carrier, MWcana, already service LAX, the spokesman said. • . OAIL'I' 'llOT'ltefl__,.. WINS RI-ELECTION ·co1111 lncumbent'Hoff Marian C. Bera:~. a Newport Beach housewife, received 3,801 votes compared with 935 for her opponent, buslnesaman Donald T. Bull. Attorney Donald E. Smallwood,-42, of 1981 Komat Drive, Costa Mesa, was unop~ for the trustee area OJ1e seat vacated by board veteran James Peyton. Smallwood received 4,368 vol.el. Voter turnout was Ught in nearly all precincts ; an estimated 10 percent' of the district's 50,373 registered voter1 went to the polls. The newly elected trustees will be oea~·o!flclally In July. The ·campa1&n ralsed f_ew sparkl. The incumbentl ran ,on their records. They urged· voters ·to eontblue them ln office to provJde continuity in d l s tr I ct ad· rni'nistraUon In view of the resignation of Superlntenilint Wlllllln Cunnlniham wbo leave• thi dJatrlct in June. Frlinklln, ·11, of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Cos,ta Mesa, aerved two years on the Newporl Harbor Union High School District bo~ prior to unlflcatlon, and (Set ELECTED, Pail• II Seoote Committee Okays Newport's Freeway Law SACRAMENTO -1be Senate Rlllel Committee this morning unanhnouily •P. proved the controversial Newport Beach freeway charter amendment. 1be mea!llre will go to Ufe Senate floor early ne1t week, State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R.-Newport Beach) said this morning. The amendment was ratUied by the Court Upholds Abortion Law In Challenge WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Tba SUpreme \:Ollrt la Ibo fkot of Ill ~ oWOI of ...... ~-loo lt-n il!lhold ....., • 'fO.yuH!d Diltrlct o! O>lumbta statute which bad been cbalJenied"°' ton vague. The language In questlon Ii almDar to lbtl la a. Dumber of otbol''l\ates. Tb e '°" CllOflJ]Jy 1tipd!IW 'dial IOill'i nl1llll lde,lt only with the i.. Of wbetW Ute law wa1 UDCONUtuUonall1 va;ui. Tbt cballenged language 1ayo·tllat an ibort!On f1 legally permflllble only If "nee~ for the preservation of the molilflr''• life or hea1th ... The vote on uphold.lng the language was I to 2. The court divided, 5 to I, on whether it 11hould have assumed direct jurisdiction of the case. The reason for confining the ruling within narrow bounds was that Federal Judge Gerhard A. Gesell rf!Ued on the vagueness raUonale when dismissing the indictment of Dr. Milan Vuitcb1 a Yuaollav immigrant who bas been crusading for more liberal abortion policies. Challenges of aborUon statutes ta aeveral stale.!1 are on the court's docket. The majority opinion by Just.ice Hugo L. Black, reversed Gesell's ruling that the law was too vague, Black said Vultch'1 attorney had 1UI• gested other reasons why Gesell's action should be affirmed -for instance, that the law was an invasion of privacy, But Black said while there were some references to such claims in Geselt's opi· nion, the Supreme C.Owt viewed It as holding 1imply that the 1tatute was void for vagueness. Joining Black were Chief Justice War- ren E. Burger and Justices John M. Harlan, Byron R. White and Harry A. Blackmun. Black pointed out in bis dlscussion of the vagueness issue that the Diltrtct of Columbia 11tatute -enacted In 1901 -did not ouUaw all abortions, only those not performed under the dlrecUon of a com- petent. licensed physician, and those not necessary to preserve the mother's life or health. Gesell held th at the law placed on a (See ABORTION, P11e I) Courts Lease Another, Trailer Another trailer will be leued by the county for use of the Harbor Judicial District courts until the. new courta building can be constructed In tbe Newporl Civic Center In Irvine Canter. Orange County Supervisors Tuesday •pproved the lease of a.trailer to house communications equipment and offices at a rental of $1,830 for two years. Alto to fie uUllzed Is 400 square fett of space !or storage In the Amerkan Ltglon building next to the coum--on West 18Ui Street In Costa Mesa. The county OWN the building. Tht temporary 1pace moves were made neceuary by the npirallon on Jl.IJlt, 15 or a 11.111 of. 1pace 1n the nearby Mes• Park llulldl111. • .1 Aas<mbly Tuesday on a 16 lo' vote. A apokesmfn for S.I). C&rpenter Jn. dk:ated_ there 11; UttJe apposltlon .. U any, expected, when UM! amendment comes to a vote. Where approved, it will require the Newport City Cooncll to COllduct votes or the people before It can algn future agreementa on the route of any freeway through the city. The ciUes of Hunllngton, Beach and Cost.a Mesa bad preaenied strong op- position to the measure u tt swept through the Aasembly Tuesday. 1be·.ctty councils of both communlt! .. Monday night _adopted reaoluUons urging IeglslaUve rejection· of the measure. Aaembl)'l!IOJI Rober! E. Badham (JI,. NeWJll!I'\ Beoch> "'~ Introduced the rew)#ci, telQlc the..._ Commltlee of the lower houlel II~ Beach votert haft !lllde -polnl very 1ood and dear." • Ttiil charter , .ammdmmt w a 1 ~ ilJl!!t'<Hlil fn a l(Jeclal ~'BeaCll t)kt.\611 lfuch 1 • ~, don't -I a tr .... ay ruining tl>elr · munll>',~ 9'!fbaln oald. '"Ibey th.,. doa'.I like whal the City a dont and telling them don't do It aia!n wltbou~ a referendum." Bf •• almillr landallde vote ht that oame electlc!i, residents bad told the council to ~Ind the existing agreement with the state on the route of the Pacific Cout Freeway throuAh C.Orona del Mar. Badham aa.id the Charter amendment, and perhaps evtn the rescl.uion, may evenlually be decided by the coortl. "tindoubtedlj ~ are legal quesUons that will have to be ln>uod oot In the courts," he aJd. "Buf It isn't the Leal•lature's prerogative to detennlne the ton· .UtuUonality of tlUs charter amend· meot." A lef]alallvo COUMel bad reported to the Assembly commlttee that if the amendment were t8ted in C!OUJ't, It likely would be rejected because re1ident.s cf a municipality do not have authority over 1tatewlde matter1, aucb u freeways • Newport-Mesa School Bond Sales Approved Sale of $4.5 million in Newport·Meu Unified School Diltrlct bonds was ap- proved Tuesday by the Board of Sopervlsofs. United California Bank was the low bidder d four st In intemt rate of 4.an ~rcent. Oru1e Weatller Sunny aides wUL be back with us on Thuniday with 1llghtly warmer temperatures In store. Look for a h 11 h of 63 degree1 along the co11t llld up to 72 furth- er Inland. INSmE' TODAY That last b<ution aoainst en- crooollfng mffatlo,.....h< nickel pac~. of gum.-llC1! f6Utn bu the wa111idC'. Rcportlr Gtora• U £. dal com,...te in hu Pilot Log· book, p~, 9. • • . I ' r • I I ',. DolJl Y Pl~OT ....... _.....-4 --• ._. ----- c a Told --.. From Page 1 Il}YINE ... .-. . , Valley Man Relates Battle for Survival dayll before that period was up. Mason sald the company "aceepts th e !act !bat tba Hiatina qreemenl b poll· Ucaily WUl<e<ptabie lo the new board of S\lpe:tVlsOl"ll. 117 ALAPI DJIWN or tilt Otl~ 'I"' lllJf'I A Fountain Valley guitar player tumed Allor today dttc!rlbed his ordeal at sea in •bldi he lay lU for ah days In s small bolt boffeted by • storm. '1lt WU Ute belnl Jn I ketUe drum pteyed by a five-year-old," Marion lfarvey Brtruoo, 26, said ahorUy before leav.lng Scripps Memorial Hospltal, La Jollo, th1a D\l)nliog. "Jt .wu 1 hNVf experience. I mtan, wt ft.re In 30-toot waves and they were breatlha all over us." Brinm wu in a 26-foot sloop -a former Navy whaleboat -owned and skippettd by his friend, 10-year-old Jeff Feldman Of Huntlngtoo Harbour. The pair ape.nt ax months equipping the boat for an l&-month cruise in the Paclllc and then ael all from SN OM Yocht Cub, April H. Tboy beldod lir. Cobo Sin Lucas II lhe Up ol Blj1 California on the ftrst leg off 1 51).day trip to the French Marquesu in the far reaches of the Pacific. The boat, Galadrlel, soon ran lnto foul weather and Brinson, who admJta to always havlng been prone to seasickness, was prompUy laid up. With Brinson sick tn the cabin. Feldman bottled the atorm alnglelwid· edly, .. I was ballast and he was doing the whole lrip," Brinson said, crediting Feldman's skill and strength with saving the pair. "He worked for fi ve or sl1 days, balling out and manning the wheel without rest " After the storm died down Monday New por t-Mesa T ea che r Group Head Spea ks Out Brad 'Iburman, pruident of the ~. port-Mua Education Aaaoclatlon t o l d school board members his group would seek public support during a litade al lhtlr meoUng Tu"day. "We're cutting the umbilical ~.11 • 1burman angrily declartd. His statements were made in reference to an administration p-oposal lo di!con-- Unue the polky of granUng one perlod o1 releued Ume with pay per day for the presidents of the teachers' a5!0Ciations. Disbict Superintendent William Cun- nlnglwn 1111<1 the deciJlon to discollUnu• the policy was bued on the fact. that preatdtnts of other dlatrid employe as- sociations are not given the aame treat.. ment. He also noted that It was the adminis. tration's· oPt.nloo that Jt wall an improper we of public funds to give released time to the officers of any assoclaUon. In armouncing the N·MEA action before !ht board could take ita action to di>- New Boys' Club ·Growth Drawing . PBR Gn1mhles 'Ibo -Euthlulf Boys' Club lite • . _...., lo lie ~ · llld the Newport Bet.ch Parks, Beaches and RecreatiOn ·Comnliuion J.so'l espeoiaily happy about ff. . 1'!l! oommilsion Tuel~y nigi>\ eolted • 'lhe ,l'J..,nin& ~ to ftoil\on• action OD.' a request to ruone a Portion '.' ol Eutblull Plrk for tl)e duh, pending further PBR llWdy. "Original plans called for the new j branch o( the Boyt' Club of the Harbor. l Area to be on one atre in the ~.., j comer of the nark," Calvin SteWart, PBR t ~ . , dlredor, told his com~ioo. . : ~ "Now they've moved it back 100 feet • · fr"'1 the rood, loaleld of 20, added a ; '. parking lot and 1uddenly It covers about • two acres." : · st.Wirt Qfd lhe entire park la slightly · Jarter than 17 aau. 'Mle unanmious vote to request plan- ning comm.I.salon delay Will based on Stewart's recommend1Uon that alternate ll"'lnd sit., be 11"died by both lhe PBR : panel and the plaMer& , . . Murder Defense Ends SAN DIEGO (AP) -The defense : ' rested its case today in the trial of Carl Riga, accused of murderJna: a po~lc:e of· fl~er outalde a 10-a:o bar, after callmg on~ ly foor wttnessea. OIANel COAIT DAILY PILOT CIAANGl COAST 'P'Vl\.!SMINO C0M'AHY l:e\,1rt N. ·We1i ,,..ldll'lf •nd ....... " ..... Jecl I:, Curl1y Vlol ,,.1 .. ..,1 Hell G-1 MaNfll' lhom•t K,,.,;1 E"I" Tho"''' A. M11r,liin• Mf,..11"'8 E••lll" Chtrl1• 1-4. Looi lltich1rd I', Nill AHl1!1n: Mll\lllnU Edl!Df' c ... Mn• OHie• llO Wett 111 Sft"ttt M•ilint A4''''': r.o. ''" 1560, 9Z626 OtNt 0 1"41• N_,.... •"tll~ lW NfWS>l<'I aewl"''~ l.iotllllt •11dl1 ?r. 1'1rn1 A....,IK M""'""'~ ''''"' 1'11~ •ncn 1ou11.,1.-S.n Cltmtl'Jle; Jin Nl!'"lll El Cimino ••• , Olin.v l"ILOT, "'1111 wtllcfl " (flmbl""' .... M ...... ll'Ttif, .. lllUlllllM• •i lly t•t tPf ..... 1111r 111 ,.._.,.,. .. 111ott1 ,... L''""' l •nll. Ml .... : Wcl'I, (Ml• Mn1, H.int"'91tll &lkl\, ~1¥1'111111 \lfliW, $1~ (11.....,,ltf Cafi'!Or-1rd S1dalt.llo1ct. '"'" •Uft -fftllelwil allllM. t"rll'.Klnl p<l•U!r41 ~ltlll II •I JllO Wltl NJ' St,...;, Co11• Mt'•· . . . . • . -.. . . . . < continue the policy, Thunnan, a 1cience teacher at Corona del Mar High School, told 'the trustees that the N-MEA felt board nlembers were not interest@d in promoting good relaLions with theJr em· ployes. He reminded them or the work teachers did on the recent bond elections and the support given some or them during elec- t.ions. "Thia ls a slap In the face and we're not a:oing to hide behind a COdnty COW\o i;ef, we're going to fight," Thurman said. Reminding board member3 that there has been no written counter proposal to the teachers' contract proposals aub- mltted 77 days ago, Thurman declared: "We're toinf to try to get the public'• support Nobody is a:oing to leave (lhi! di.strict). We're going to stay and we're going to fight." F rom Page 1 ELECTED ... was elected to ~ unified board four years ago. He represent.I trulllee area sit which is Jnade up of portlom of both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa between the Back Bay and Newport Boulevard southwt1t of 2lsC: Street and Dover Drive to PacUk po&st Highway, Mrs. BtrgellOll, 43, of 1721 Tradewlhd1 L"W, Newpcrt Buch, waa a niembtr of the Newport elementary board prior to unification and hai served sit year1 on the unified board. Mrs. Ber~el!Oll repreaenll trultee area thrff, lncJudina mons I Of, b9th Cl tie I between the 'Back Bay and Newport Boulevard north and eaat Of ~11t Slrtet and Dover Drive. · Smallwood wa1 elected to reprUent residents. ol trustee area Olle whlcb cover~ 'l\Orthwtst Cost.a Mesa. Four Stall on the seven-member board. were not on ~ 'ballot this year. 'lbty are: Arta two, Mrs. Beverly K. Lanpton of Costa Mesa; area four, Thomu C. Casey of Corona del Mar; area five, Donald A. Strauas of Newport Be1ch, and are• severi, Roderick H. MacMlllian of Costa MeJa. Robert Leigh ton Rites Conducted Funeral services; for Fairview State Hospital nursing supervisor Robert F. Leighton, who dled April 10, have been held in his home state of Ma.uachusetll. Ht was 38 and had served at the Coata· Mesa facility ror the mentally retarded eight years, after work at Agnew State Hoapital and at medJcal centers in Massachtllletts. Mt. Leighton, who llvtd at 2S8~ Costa Mesa St.. Coat& Mella, ill survived by h!Jil mothtr, Mrs. Elilabelh Le18hton, and a sister, Mrs. Janice Lerscb. both of Scituate, Mass. Molotov 'Dud' Found in Mesa A molotov cocktail was hurled Into a Costa Mesa boat buildin1 company overnight but caused no dam11e, poll ce and firemen slid tod1y. The explosive.filled devi ce discovered after daylight at MacGregor Yacht.s , 1631 Placentia Ave .. failed to \gnilt, according to Police Lt. John ~1oquln. •·They're still out there •I the r;cene looking around . ., ht said, addin1 be had no additional detail1. F rom Page 1 LAI RD ... United States has hid a clear 11dvantac1. "We Sincerely hope for CODVlndn& pro- &ress in SALT," Laird a1ld. "But laWnc iuch progreu I must lell you today that the reoewed Soviet str1ttglc wetponll momentum m1y COrlfront m "ith tht need for 11dditiorial offaettin1 U.S. ac- tions." Laird said ht belitved the American pubUc migh t .ettle for nuclear parity with Rwsil. "But under no cireum- stancts. in my vJew, would I.he American people be willing lo setUe for lnflrlorty," he declared. ... momlof, lhe men, tllltt 1beul IOll mllu llOUtb GI Sin DielO cw GUldlluJ>o Island, sent out a distred call and they were soon located by a Coast Guaid belkopter. Tuesday morning Brinson was hoiated a.board the helicopter and flown to hospital and a cutter look the Gal1drlel in tow . The cutter ran into more b•d "eat.her today and It was not trpe<:ted to ntum wJth Feldman and the Galadrlel Wltil 'Thursday. Brinson, who lives at 8912 Martin Ave., Fountain Valley , was un3ble to hold down food or water once they put to sea - allhougb there were provisions on board for 18 months of sailing. "Nothing passed. my ruby red lips for si1 days," he said ruefully, after being taken ta Scripps Hospital in an "et- trtmely dehydrated" condition. Asked whether he was anxious to em- bark on such a voyage agaln, the young musician confellsed be would probably go back to playtna his guitar in beer bars. "I waa tested 'by the zu and found Jacking in certain areaa,'' was his rtply. U,IT ......... "We understand the desire of memberll of the county board to cancel the agree- n\ent and start all over. We do not wish to force the contract down anyohe.'1 throat." However he added, ••tbe iss:ut involved in termination of the contract including queatbu of equity are .simply not setUed through unilateral cancella· tlon. 'Ibey are avoided ." Mason said the 90-day notification period was designed to allow negoUaUons but he charged that communicatioM with cciunty board meinben durtng that period "have proved futile." Ma90n said. "The agree ment Is a signed contract. It should be honored by both parties or terminated by both par. ties in the same good faith under whlcb it was <'OOce.ived and effectuated. Mason said the company in its court action is seeking tJtlt to. the 450 acres of uplands, islandJ Mld pa~t lands it had deeded to the county ia accordance with a 1968 amendment to the agree- ment. Brin!lon Hid that the first two days ot the storm were not so bad for Feldman, whose home ls at 16872 Edgewater Lane, Huntington Harbour, because the boat had • self-steering wind vane and they could both rest in the cabin. 'I WAS TESTED BY SEA AND F_OUND LACKING' Fount•ln V•lley_'1 Brinson Talks. Abqut Ordeal , . . "If the county is to return -these lands,'' he said, "they n:iust be ~!ear o( tax. liens and other encumbrances aad returned in the same free and clear con- dition in which they were given. But then the waves smashed the vane, radio antenna and other equlpm~nt. .. We went to sea anchors, but then lost two and had to tow a line behind the boat,'' Brimon rela ted. They decided to call for heJp 1'ionday because of Brinaon's condllion and because Feldman wu too •Wmted lo sail the boat back to San Diego. Upper Bay Development Issue Gets Board Dela y ''If the title is clouded," Masoa aald, indicating that it may iiow be, •tthen. I thlnk it would be obvious that the com- pany has been severely damaged.'' Mason said other consideraUon of equi- ty jnclude pla11ning. engineering. con.wl!~ ing and legal e1penses incurred by the compay during its yean of cooperation with the county on the etcha'nge project. In bis final attempt to describe the rough seas they encountered, Brinllon resorted to simple adjectives. A potentially explosive action relative to development of lands surrounding the Upper Newport Bay was postponed Tues- day for three weeks by the Orange Coun· ty Board of Supervisors. "It was terrible, nuty, rotten, mean," he went on -ana on. I ce Rink Plans For Costa Mesa Under go Change A change In plans for a it million Teere&Uona! faclllty dea!gn<d to bring the largat ke skating rink in California to Costa Mesa bas been announced. Outer Space Ice Palace, scheduled for ground breaking at f66 W. Baier St, about July l still will be allrl-modern. Devtloper George B111tey nld Tuetday !be orijlnal cqncept, of a bublli..-.i. llaucer shaped facillty will not be as radical as firtt envWoned. Baney presinted an archi.tect'll rtn-- dertnr abowl.n1 the lee rln\ to tbe Coata MffJ rlllllllril ConOnlatiol! lO'doYI 110, .l®klnl u~ Ii has JUat l~jijd (Ill a trip from outer IJ)let!. ' He ~id not apeclff what rnOre con· ventlal dfmen3ions It will liave. Baney and his aalloe:lates currently operate the successful and popular Glacier Falls Ice Rink in Anaheim. "Wbat we'rt trying to accomplish here b the largest ice rink in Calif«nla," Baney said. Baney said the structure on B.05 acru of land being rezoned from multiple residential to commercial we will house a coffee zhop, mack bar and sporting goods shop. Tb• rink j~ will be. 91 by 225 feet, With "~Ung f9r 1,000 to l,iod pmont and wUI lnciud< figure ••d !Pffd 1btlD1 c!Ubl "1th regular Jnstrudion. Baney iald amateur hockey · ls also under consideration at this Nge 1or the ice iink, etpected to be ' in operation by the first of next yur. State La wmakers Seek Local Word On Harbor Setup SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Oronre Coun· ty Sueervl!on dilcussed matters of IGCal interest today at a breakfaat mettinJ "Ith Jegbtator1 from the area. State lawmaken ur1ed the supervisors to take a posiUon on the Oran1e County Hllrbor Dislrict. Assemblyman Ken Cory to-Garden Grove) has introduced a bill lo expand its authority, while Assemblyman John V. Brtgas (R· Fullerioa), is sponsoring a measure c•ll· inf for an election to disso.lv1 the diltrlct or e1pand ilt authority. Tho• present at &he breakfast included supervisori' Chairman Robert Battln ; Supervltora David Biker, Bill Phillips aod Ralpb. Clark, and ~ty Counsel Adr:lan Kuyper. Ltglllaton who attended included Cory, Briggs, Asaemblymen Rohen Bacih1m (R·Newport Beach ) and Robert H. Burke (R·Huntlnflon Beach) and Seftl. Dennis Cat])tJlter (R·Newport Beach) and Juno Whetmor. (!\-La Hsbr•). ~ttlll told neWJmen ht felt the SUp· ervbor1 opposed Gov. Ronald Rt1.11n'1 propoeed mtdl-c:al and wel!are revlllon pllu. Daley Charges Out CHICAG-0 (UPl) -Charau wtrt dropptd today •1alnst four men arrellled ln connection with an alle1ed plot lo alJ1aa1ln1 t.e Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and civil ri&htl leader Rev. Jesse Jackson . The action Is relaled lo a .county Harbor Commission request> that all grading and development in the area draining into the Upper Bhy , be haf.ted if it is contributing to the silting (If the harbor. "Protection of the estuarine en- vironment", the commissioners called it. Carried to itll ultimate. if the Harbor Comml!Slon's suggestion is adopted, all construction of homell. apartments and buildings at l/CI could theoretically be stopped. • Of course, developers (Irvine Com- pany) and builders could possibly take remedial aclkm such as b u i I d i n g bulkheads around all construction to pre- vent any debris from draining into the Upper Boy basin. Supervisors ~sy voled lo notify all parties; concerned and to gather evidence for possible legal action. The action followed a report by County CoWltel Adrian Kuyper on the Harbor ConpnJfilcn ed.i<I. , ') \ I , He !ald that'thte! factors enter Into the situation: 1. Tlie city of Newport Beach has the police power exclusively in much of the area and issues all permits and zones all Jand.s. 2. Under the Federal Refuse Act such drainage into the Upper Bay could be Halted but only by action or the U.S. At- torney. 3. The county could seek injunctiv e -- GEM TALK TODAY by J.. C. HUMPHllU THE COL ORFUL WORL D OF PEARLS Highly p r I z e d in the world of gems, pearls are chic, smart, and treasured particularly be c a u s e they so beautifully enhance a wo- man's ensemble no matter what the occasion. T h e y compliment clothing for every affair. from a simple sweater to the most glam- orous evening go w n. and do so with a quiet dignity all their own. \Ve usually associate white with the pearl and many do not know that pea;ls come in a variety or glowing colors which depend upon the locality in which they are found. From the Persian Gull c o rn e pearl1 with a creamy sheeen, and tram Australia we receive pearls with a beauliful yellow cast. Much closer to home, from the Gulfs ol California and Mexico, come the rare a n d exceedingly expensive Black pearls. whose rich metallic appearance make them more valu· able than any others. We carry a v a r le t y or these g'mr, and will gladly assist )·ou In your selection of pearls to match both your taste and your budget. Corne in soon. \Ve're open daily from 9:30 lo 5:30, Fridays 'til 8:30. relief to restrain alleged threatened in- jury to tidelands held in trust by the county for the state. . ,_ Kuyper suggested that the county enlist the support of Newport Beach and the U.S. Attorney. "Are you saying to beat around the bush?'' queried Supervisor Robert Battin. Supervisor Baker cautioned against hurried action and suggested the notifica- tion of all parties concerned with the im· pllcaUon that wmething might be work ed out to avoid legal action. Fron• Page 1 ABORTION . • • defendant doe:tor the burden of proving that he made the right medicaJ judg- ment. Black look lhe opposile view. He said lhe law placed the burden on !he pro· seculion to "plead and prove tha\ an abortion was not .. necessary for t h e preser\'ation of the mother's life or health'.'' ''Placing such a burden of Pl'O<!f ~ a doctor w o u Id be peculiarly lnconsjstent with society's n«Jms tif the responsibJ.Ji- ties of the medical prole!llion /' lllack's opinion said. 1 lt was also argued that ''health" "''as imprecise, since the law did not indicate whether it Included varying degrees of mental a3 well all physical health. Black said other lower courts had con· strued the law to permit abortions . "for mental hea'.lth reasons whether or not the patients had a previous history or mental defttts." " In their dttlaratory relief filhlg, com· pany lawyers e1plained they are aetkinl •·a dttlaration from the court thit the agreeme:nt is ih effect and binding, and a11y aclion by supervisors purportin1 lo cancel it unilaterally is slmply not el4 fective." Com pany attorneys said, "if the cow1i finds the county board cannot un!lateral4 Jv cancel the conllact and if supervi9Clrs Sun insist OR unilateral C:ancellalion. then the Irvine Company Is entitled to damages. ··rhe damages . will probabl y be calcu- lated to be zubstantial , running Into the millions.'' Mason said that throughout tbe up. coming legal proe:eedings, the . company "will alwayll be wllling to di!IC1.J!s ·and negotiate the issues with the serious in· tent of finding solutiOru: leading to a mutual rescissioo. "The corripan"y," he said, ·~11 also willingly diSCUM public purchase of com. pany owned la nds below the bluffs at the edl!e of the bay. assuming ttie county ill stln inte~sted in acquiring the property for public parks and beaches. v ' Burglar Ge ts Office }<;quipw'~nt at OCC Someone who jimmie.d a lock during lbe night school hour,! 11tole $4:80 in office equipment from a room at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa police wer, told Tuesday. Cheryl A. Cannon, of Huntington Beach. told investigators the loot in- cluded an electric typewriter belongin1 lo the school, plus items belonging to benelf and another employe. let ~.,\ i.uOtch ~ ahead one hour O OMEGA In !ht momtnlt It I•~•• you to adjusl your watch to 01yltgh • S.vlng1 Time, e1k yourae!f: Is ii 1ccurate? Styllah? Dtptndabla? It can bt ell these ••• and mor1 ••• If ll'a an Omtga. Llka thl1 Omega Conateltat!on Chronomtt•r. Accur1t1? Om1g1 Chrol"IOmet1rs carry a SwJ1s Observatory ctrtlflcat• tor accur•cy 1ward1d only altar• 15-<lay urlat f or grueling 1tboratory f•111. SlyJish? Look ti !ht h1nd1om1!y crtntd t!tlnl•u llHI ca1e, 1nd 11'11 l'uggtd good Joo kt ol the matching br1ca~. Dependable? If s in Omaga. l1n'l it? .Stop In lodey 1nd ltl u1 show you lhla, tnd Olhtrs In cur wide Hltcllon ol 0'71eg1 w•lche1, rrom $85 to ovtr S1000. J. C. ..Jlumph rieil Jeweleri1 182l NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TElMS IANICAMEAICARD-MASTER CHARGE 24 \'URS IN SAMl LOCATION •HONI: '41·1401 I 7 lOpp0dtlota in Pqt ,__. .... ~~~'---'---~;.....;;;..;;:;::.=.. , White House OKs Bus Law ' 1• WASHINGTON (AP) - ped by the Supreme , the Wblte House has r:led on the American people obey tbe rulinl t111t mus sing la a leaJUmate meant desegregate public schools. a:atlon. But at the wne t1mt he OPPoHd rnuaive lnvolu~ tary lwinl llld Wd the IDV• e.rnment would Dot rtquire lo- cal achoo! d.lslrictl to trant- PW't children beyond "normal 1eoKraphlc 'school zones" to achieve racial balance. lederol Intervention In educa- tion, aid tbe clecllk>lll would old b!m u be become a 1m presldenUat candidate and aug&ested Con1rt111 might act U publlc oplnlon II llr<mJ enough qllnll the rul""1. Some o t h e r Southemar1 echoed Wallace 's posiUon. WM.....,., A#•I 21, lffi Massive · Foreign 1f id Changes Asked I WASHINGTON (UPI) -oupervilod by ... ~lot. lntetomer!can SOdll Develop-Amlticaft ,..,,... • """" President Nmoo l<>dly pro-Other I•-o1 • AID pro-mt11t IntlltulA!, two existing clllldy Into the U.S. 1°"* ~-,...., would be bllldled by tbe 11onc1... old progrom, w!llch .... tio posed 1 m:&is.l.ve ~gan.-.-oveneaa priva~ invettmtnt One of the alft\s of the year• ha been atddll.1 ~ Uon of the U.S. foreign aid corporation and the reform II te haw prtvate edbyCMlftu. ""'""" .... asked ~.===========·=============·=='t: lo• $l.I b!llloo to provide economic Md military usis- tallOI to America'• allies. I 1"I11e Supreme Court bu t.cttd and U>eir decision b now \he law of the land and up to lhe people to obey," aaid l>residentlal press secretai'y Ronald L. Ziegler Tuesday after conS\lltlng with ad-- minl!tratlon lawyen. On Tuesday, speaking throµgb Burger, the court !aid busing was consUluUonal and the states could not make it il- ltaal; neifbborbood schools weer fine but they woulda't do U the cli.rtrict WU pnicUclnl 1egregaUon, and f e d e r a l judges could use racial hi.lan- cing as a guideline for brut- ing up dual systems. Panel OKs Improved He 's•ld the chanlt'S weft riec:essary In Implement Ille Nixon doctrlne of helpinl other naUons .,lncrea!lnJ]y ahoulder the.Ir own responsi· bllltles so that we can reduct o u r d I r e c t involvement abroad." Ziegler 1ald nothing would be aerved by reviewlng pa1t 111.ttmenU: by the President. His legal views were largely t u r n e d back by the court whose unanimoua o p I n I o n s y,·ere written and delivered by Warrtn E. Burger. the man N!J:on named chief jwtice. To Alabama Gov. Geqr&• WaUace, • the court's 1c:Uon sounded "as if It wa1 written in an insane asylu,m.." He ad- ded inmates of an Alabama asylum could have written a better decision. Elthrly Aid Package Nlx:oo'a reorganization plan would aboli sh the U.S. Agency for Intematkr..;l Dtvelilpment (AID) Rnd transfer most of its functiorui lo a new U.S. I n t ern1Uonal Development Corporation and a U . S . I n t e,rn1Uon1l Development Institute, which would be A year ago, N!Ion, a lawyer, took a hard line against of- ficially inspired school segre.. Wallace, long-time foe of r----........ J OOMEGA . ' ' Ther•'• pl1nty ol Doocl n1hin;. w1ter sporte, ind ouldoort fun coming rlt hl 1ft1r 01yllght S1vlnS1I Tim•. 11'1 th• ptrfKI •••eon to o•t )'Ourt•ll • rugged n•W w1t1r·rt1i111nt witch. l lkt 11'1!1 .. 1f.wlndln11 Omega S11m11tar d1y/d1t• mod•I. And thl1 Omega 11 Sitt•! !or · wlnt.r 1por11, loo. In 1~K ;old top, 1t11nlltl·llH1 back c:UI, gold·flll•d brac•l•t, 1210. Sim• ln 1t1ln!111 1\lill, m1tcl'llng "'•c•!•I. S175. Both mod1l1 1v1ll1bl1 with 1tr1p. e Bank A. mericard e Ma.tttr Charge e Kirk Ch.arQt "Tht Storts Conffdtnct Built" MA•tOlt tNe,,tN• c•NT•• t• Mt,.., SMI. CNt1M ... ....... Open Mon.1 Thur1.1 Fri. 'tit 9 p.m. WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) - 'I'he. House W1y1 and Means · Committee ha.a approved a $1.5 billion package of Im- proved Social Security btneftts but cut back on fr e e hospitalization for medicare patienta from 59 to 29 days. The panel also rejected a Nlx:ori Admlni!trstlon proposal to have the federal govern- ment pay the full monthly premiums that 20 million peo.- ple over SS now pay for doc- tors' insurance . That premium, now $5.30, will go to $5.80. The panel did limit future Ex-senator Says He'll Face Nixon NEW HAVEN. Conn. CAP) -Former Sen. C harles Goodell of New York !aid Tuesday night he w 11 l challenge President Nixon in a primary in 1972 if Nixon's policies on Vietnam do not change. the New H a v e n Journal-Courier said In its Wednesday morning editions. Goodell wu quoted u tell- ing a Yale University audience Tuesday night he would "try to convince him (Nil.on) to make a drastic change in policy. as that seem unlikely, I will run." However, an aide to the former 1e:11ator denied later in New York that Goddell had committed himself to making Aj!<lmary challenge. BOAT THOUGHTS MAY NEED A BOAT LOAN we .. 91*falifls In making dreams come lnlL It Is a nice feeling lo know that lh9)' Cll1 be}Wl8 when yau want them. Stop by !Ddl!Jlfld dlacuss how eaaTiy)'OUrplaaaant tNllOt* Cllll l>eco!ne • reality. lt'a 8161 wiGJ OS ll! I llank"81e Boll Loans. ClllllCl D. I PM 111111.T ·6 1'111 RllDAT increase! In the monthly premium to no more than "pffcenta1e incrtases in SOC!al atcurity benefita. Tbw:, a 10 percent benefits boost would mean no more than a 56-cent increase in the m o n t h 1 y premium. The comm1ttee T u e s d a y took action that would Im- prove monthly cash benefits for widows. provide medicare coverage to the 1erlously disabled under 85, raise the outside earnings ceiling for social 5eCUl'ity retirets. and add a cost-of-living escalator fer future benefit lncrease!. '~ctually, I'm a Communications Consultant specializing in Increasing Customers' Profits Through Maximum Communications Efficiency. But to 1 most people, r I I'm just 'the I fella from the phone company'.'' - You'll find him In offices, plants and stores, Analyzing phone you can definitely use our C4mmunlcatlons C4nsultant And bills. Discussing equipment needs. Looking for ways to help soon, too. Before you wute more time and money. Dr dl'ltlop our business customers' businesses. an ulcer. He's a General Telephone Communlcatlons Consultant. A (And if you think xour office communications are pretty~ formal title for a nice, bright guy who can make day.to-day busi-now, we promise that he can make them even better.) nesscommunlcations less hectic for you. There's no charae for his service. And It's very easy to 11t. For example, do clients pass nasty little remarks about your All It takes isa phone cafl to our business office. phones always being busy? Do you have to scream to page a We on ly ask one thing. When you c~ll . please ask for "tha typist sittlna two feet outside your office? Is it easier to reach 1 Communications COnsultJnt"-not "the fella frorn tht phone customer overseas than someone in your buildinc? company." If these situations sound fam iliar (or remind you of others), Everybody's the fella from the phone company down here. (Cj i:# GEnERALTELEPHDnE • i , • ' ' l • ' ' •, ' l I ' ,• ' • . --·------- DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Our Young Achievers ' Tho DAILY PILOT has hoen "jiarl!cularly pleased In recent weeks to report a number of accomplI'shmenU by Orange Coast area youth. Their 1chlovements have, on a atate and national scale, brough~ credil p(jt· solely to them, but to the communities they represent. We've gathereil up a few of the more oiltolaodillt ac.compli&bments and list f them here in ·an attempt to _ add a s~cial pal on the back lo the ~udento and th~lr advisors. · • , • • For example, the UC lrvtne ·swWt team captured tho Nallooal Collefiate Athletic Afo~lion colle1e di· vision clfampionsh[p for the third s\r11ghl year. Mlke Martin, of UC!, has earned five gold medals in 'each' of the past three NCAA competitions and a totaJ of 16 medals in four years. - UCl's waur polo team took Q1e NCAA combined college and university divislon crow.ti this'year. The Anteater tennis· team members \\'ere NCAA college ,division champions in 1970. and stand a good chance of taking that title again tljis year. in June. Orange Coast College oarsmen are am,ong the best junior ·~tty crew teams in the 'DatJon and Will in June return tO 'Syracuse for the International Rowing Assoc· lallon Regatta. ~ , The Orange Coa.st College Speech Team placed sec- ond in the nation this mooUJ at St. Louis. and are ch~m· pions of both the Western States ilbd Southern California forensics competitions. Edison High School in Huntington Beach won the California Interscholastic Federation AAA crown lD fool· ball last fall. · Newport Harbor High School's water polo team-Is this year's champion in CIF competition. Corona del Mar High School sent its Madrigal Sing· en to a national coii:ference of music teachers. Their se1ect{on for the event was honor enough, but the weU,. versed critics deemed -their performance outstanding Estancia High School Band plans a statewide tour this sprin1. taklns sampljngs of the muslcianshlp ~I tamed lhein superior festival ratings to coinmµnfties· throughout California, . The above are merely. a sampling or the .outstaod· log effort> of scores of student and youth orgaQl1811ona , ~ ,along tbe Orange Coast. but they represent th hlCh ·•lalldards -yoiµis: people contin,ue to puraue. Thdlr efforts deserve hearty applause. · Low-income Housing frvine Company plans for .the first or many hous- ing projects for low·income families has won quick ap- proval from the Orange County Planning Commission . Board of Supervisors' clearance for a zone change from agriculture to multi-family -and money from th'e FHA -now are the last hurdles for the landmark proj· ect. Propose~ are 325 apartment units on a 17-ac.re site sou~ of the San Diego Freeway, midway between Uni· vemty Park and .the Irvine Industrial Complex. . County planners gave their favorable recommenda· ti.on to the project after, surprisingly, hearing only a single protest. . To the credit of those who conceivably could have cla1roed to be most affected, the residents of the future city of Irvine, there was not a single citizen complaint. The sole opposition came from a totally unexpected front. the San Joaquin Elementary School District. Officials said the low-income housing would over· whelm classrooms in neighboring schools. The contention likely is true. But the solution would ~eem to ~ for the school district to seek help in provid· ing for this burden and others it says are plaguing that area. father than trying to shift it. . • CS •"~~~ enou.Rb to waru.ntJ. stans!ing ovation. _ Costa ~1esa High School Orchestra will this year for the second time compete in the state music festival. The low-in~ome project is the, first of many the com· pany has prom1se.d to help make the new city a truly balanced community and to add a badly needed housing balance to the entire county. c •1 f YOU'LL JUST LET HIM ~ET ClO~ER HE M16Hf STOP 6ROWLI~· Why So Many Of Our Cities Are Unsightly ~' . one reason Uial so many EurOpean cities are beautiful, while . ao many American citiet art grim and ugly, has nothing to do with the superior cultural or eathetic qualities of the Europeam.. ll bas to do with · !he historical' fact that European cities '\"ere founded long ago, when water was the best mode n f transportation: v.·hile most Amer- ic.an cities were built up in the ltth Century, wt;>en the • · railroad was the domJnant fonn ·of trans. portation. ' - European cities were bullt on or around rivers, which have a certain tnlit~t charm and beaulY:-'Ibe Jife of the cit)' reached down to iht water and took tta tone and cOlor •nd contour from the riverfront. AMERICAN CITIES grew up aloog a railroad track, In a bleak Industrial at· mosphert where all beauty was sacrific· ed to shipping and loading and smoke and oil and warebousea and l e r m i n a I buildings. Tilere wu no time. or room, or inclination. to put in parks and plazas and mal\1 and tile other topographical .amenities that make all the difference between a stroll through the heart or Paris and the backside of Cleveland. Now we are rapidly entering a third era of populatton growth and density - the new chl$ler aroWld the nation's urban airport!. THE AREA SURROUNDING O'Hare Airport in Chicago, for Instance, has Dear Gloomy Gus: Since all our children in NeY1port Beacb and Costa Mesa are in one unified school district, It seems most unfair that the cllizena of the two cities can't come up with eoougb money to have One ade-- quate pool for all of these water· oriented kids! -J.B.M. Tllh ,.. ... ,. f'ttlKh ............ ....,..,, .. _....,..., fMM .. ,.. .....,..... ... -,,. ,.. ....... ,_, .... DMO" '""· • grown faster than ariy other oomparable arl!a in the nation~ what ia happening here wlll happen elsewhere -offices and labora1.0ries, laclorJes ~Dd b-o u 1 i,n g developments wW.1hift their fOOJs fn'lm the central city to lhe airport district, f1>r population invariably follows transporta- tion. ~net Vfe are m~ina; I.be same dismal miatlke ,'ff1th the alrport areas that we made .Uh the· rlllroacJ towm. They have !MClequite IOTl\lli, >J.'luilly "'!.planning, and are aJJowed'JO ..,_.eon commercially •• high-prlcod alilml, dominated by gas stations, junkyardsomotels, saloon strips, vast -5\lpennarket.s, and strident sign· boanh. AS THE INNER CITY decays, we are simply transferring the ugliness to the airport regions. draggina: along an the same problems that have plagued the cl· ty in its Cancerous decline. Our com- mercial insanity condemns us to the highest standards of living with the lowest· quality of civilized life . 11le railroads raped lhe c i t i e 1 , esthetically, and left them mortally wounded. The airplane will do the same if we let it, not because it is inherently evil, but becQle that Is tJie nature af the beast if i'fis not tamed by omsideraUons 'of· beauty, of easeflll living. ·of planned communittea, and a deceJlt tense ~ pro- porti9n_between· our economic drives and our long-neglected human oetda .• The Age of Discovery The pre-Eliiabethan year 1536 v.·as mighty early for a "pleasure cruise·· on the great wtstern ocean. although Nev.·foundland was fairly well known by t11en. Yet a London leather merchant. ooe Richard Hore, chartered tv.·o ships, Trinity and William, for the double purpose of catching Newfoundland codfish and gi,•ing certain influential gentlemen a pleasure cruise. first toward the New World . II hardly could be classed as a sucti!.sS. Some of the company died of starvation; others took lo cannibalism. Ytl the survivors ·who arrived bac~ In Cornwall 1n Oclober of that year had seen "mighty islands of Ice In Lhe summer season :" their curiosity had been sallsfied. TIUS lS TllE sort of throw -away historlcal anecdote that livens th<: 11pirittd )'et scholarly work by Samuel Eliot Morison. "l\e Europeaa Discovery of ,4mtrlca: Tbe Nort.ber1 \'oya1et." which OJ.ford UnJve:n:ity Pru.a: will introduce th\& month (SI~). It is a fully doalmenttd. illustrated account of all known North AU•ntlc voyages to the Ntw World pr~r to 1800 -roughly from the ~J.Jfgtndary aesthetic wanderinas of lrtltnd'• St. Brendan the Navigator. through Frobisher, Hakluyt and Gilnert 10 Ille Second Vlrglnla Colony's City or Raleigh. 1be 1lm of this rrnowned historian <lt1rvard. Oxford) and twice wlnn".'r of the Pulltter Prize f()r biology (John l '.~ul Jones. Columbus). 'no1~ In hi~ 841h car, fa to rewrite hl.slory and historical ,,,__-.._-... --+p• • '' ':"''""· ' . ~ . . . 'l.'he Boo~man ·-;. ' I. "-• .. ..... . biography in a manner that will be both authentic and interesting. He succeeds beautifully in t h i s comprehensive work which, he suggests. should replace John Fiske's classic two- vo\ume "Discovery af Amer I ca '' published some 75 years ago. To replact: that, Admiral r.1orison (a World War II rankl rhust produce a setond volume , on the Southern voyages. TM Indefatigable scholar tells us he is already well into just that. l\fORISON'S BUSINESS Is fact. But he also biars down on class1c myths of exploration, voyages to (lyaway islands, false or "secret'' distoverlts. He notes In passing at least ten JO • called pre- Columbian voyages or dlscovtry that nevtr took place ind maps of Islands never seen -presumably tht "'ork of cartographers who disliked open lpil<:i on charts and marktd them w It b disappearing and otM:r mythical ltnds. Th is ~ never a debunk.ina book, but this catalOgue ol fables creales 1 co)orful counterpoint to tht mRln current of scholarly Interpretation or men and ~hips l'Jf thor.e age!'. Mf\f'ICO hAll mllde the !>CB his province at le:\st !ince "The 1'1an· Ume History ol r-.1assachUJelts" In 1 ~1. Willlam HCJP• A1wnyttwus Mail Froni Lunatic Fringe A Clumsy Harassment of Teachers To the' Editor: A large number or .. chers in the Newpart·Mesa District received a clumsy piece of junk mail from an almost anonymOUJ outfit using the crypLic initials L E S: "Let's End Stupidity." Thia Is precisely the variety of stupidity we must all act to end. Tbt: 1Chool ayatem, its staff and Ill studeqt body do not need tbe. hmalic· fringe harassment which is ao clearly eUmplified in the inCoh.erent ran&p of lhli particular (and I might add "costly") altempt to influence policy. ANY ~OOL system, however, would wdcome: an open and bonest suggestion or criticism, but what is so completely anide ~nd cheap in this particular attempt lies in the ne.irly fraudulent use of a mailing list to intrude , into the1 private lives and residences of pe<:!ple who do not wish an unwelcorit'ed viewpoint. Whoever they are, hiding behind a post office Im:, a~med that their L E S acronym w13 doubly clever In the way It cast aspersions on a school d\slrlct admlnistratar and, at the same time. appeared to call for actloo to end stupidity. ft was, unfortunately, only in the WOl'fl Of bad ta.st . HIDDEN IN ITS rancor was-a ma jor objection to behavioral object Ives, perforn:iance assessments. measurable goals, and training for awari;ness. Any· one may object -tbis is a tree country 1 though tt would not long be a free country with such people in control) - but in the name of good sense, Jet whoever wishes to voice an objection, stand up, out in the open, Identifiably and honestly. DAVID CURTIS A Chan« to .Delp To the Editor: On Friday, Feb. 26, an aceident took the live! , of two teenage pupils of Estancia High Sc:hool-<i:laire Arbuckle and Ed Hernandez. lt placed Paul Arbuckle in critical condition and Paul Baldwin in satisfactory condition al the Hoag ~1emorial Hospital . We. tbe students of Estancia High, wish to establish a fund to help the families inwlved in this tragedy, to assist them Jn their medical and f\Uleral expenses. SOl\IE OF US are really aware of how c<ntly this can be. Donations posted ror Mrs. Arbuckle. Mr. and Mrs. Hernandez, and Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin will indeed be appreciated. We ar Estancia feel that even lhe smallest donations can add up. Would any of the DAILY PILOT's readers wish to help oul? DENISE LYTION RUTHANN SWING DEBBIE LYTI'ON EZ!O PETRELLA 'Outrl9ht Absurdit11' To the Editor: u the peorl• fighting 1gainat 111e pruervaUon o Upper Newport Bay could ·---Bii George --.., Dear George: Many housewives, a famous lady columntst ~Tote, like to do housework iD lht nude. I've joined tham. My 1p6USe objects. Do )'<JU ate anythin& wrong with this? RALPH Dear Ralph : \Vhy don't you ask Ann? It should make htr whole day. . .::-,. .. . · Mailbox ""'·-- Letters from readers art welcome. NornuJlly writers .should convey their me.tsagti in 300 words or lea&. The right to condense letters to fit space or t liminal.t' llbet is reserved. All let- ters mu.s t include signature and mail· ifl{l address, but names may be with- held on request if auff iciext reason. is apparent. Poetry will not be plib- lished. iel their facts straight, they would realize the falJJcy they are defending. Every tinie a critic of his estuary speaks wt. he (or she ) almost always end3 up with the argument that man is supreme, and everylhing that does not directly and completely serve him must be made to do .so or be destroyed. The Upper Bay conflict is a classic exampk! of this. If the plans encouraged bt these critics were lo go through, the bly would end up as a polluted. concrete-lined channel devoid of the wildlife that makes it unique. WWJAM P. BOLAND JR., in bi1 lette:r of July I. 19i0. accused us "misguided birdwatchers" of holding up development of the area in the name of "a few mudhens" and blasted the DAILY PILOT for its concern over the ecological impact or proposed develop1nent. Jim Bolding, in his April 6 letter. has also blasted the bay's preservation for reasons knowu only to himself. (In the same letter he also stated his negative vle\v or the practice of keeping open space in its natural state.) I pick these two letters as examples because of their outright ab,,urdlty. THE ORANGE COUNTY superVisors should be congratulated in their efforU to preserve this area for ruture generations and the wildlife living there. If tho!e people wishing Orange County lo become the overdeveloped megalopoll!" it is rapidly becoming were capable l1f apprec iating wbat they have now, I'm sure they would join the fight to sa\rt ta bay and the olher unique areas in Ckange County. Otherwise, I wish they would move to an area that suits their taste - like downtown Los Angeles. DAVID G. PORTER -7 The U.S. Senate was v I rt u a 11 y ''Unanimous in its vote to pass the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Six years later, sitting atop 50,000 dead American boys, tha senators saw what had happened. said oh dash it all, and repealed the resolutioo. Mo111trous l11eq11itle• To the Editor: If the debacle in Indochina serves no other aseful purpose, either in the public or. the n~al interest, it at least bu made · manifest the monstrous and ~nendurable i nequities of our system. A quadruple amputee back from the mine field of Indochina. for example, is begrudgingly ay,·arded "100 percent service connected disability." His government pays him $450 per month . Those with less serious injuries, such as the !o.s.s of an eye, impaired hearing, or only ~ingle or double amputation, are compensated according to a scale which gradu.atea downward from the $450 per month maximum. SINCE EVEN $450 per month is scarcely' enough to su!tain life in the inflated economy, the disabled veteran mo.st attempt to enter the labor market. And look at the labor market! Jn Orange County, about 7 percent Of the workers are alr~eady unemployed-and they are mo st I y college-trained people with no disabilities Cask your friendly insurance company about hiring the disabled). ln one breath the govemmmt tells the veteran that hard work is good for the body, soul, and mind; and in the next breath it gives the order to throw all those squeaking, creaking levers in the Federal Reserve System to create unemployment. MEANWHILE, WHAT else has been going on in the country? Defense a>ntractors who have been &o prudent as to employ retired generals and admirals have often been able to make a nte oI • return on ·equity investment of over 50 pettel\t. l1'e money lenders have never blld ll ii>·lood (Louis Lundborg, retired chairman of.Jbe Bank of America, may claim that hll corporation has no interest.-. In the American pruence in Jndochina: · but how mw of the stockholders appear at anti-war ralUes?). No, there bu been a ready, 1teady market far money, jet fuel, and PX booze. THE CONGR~ would never volt: today to declare war in Indochina. Yet, the war cootinues despiLe th e coostituUonal provision which gives tht Qlogress the sole power to take the nation to. war. And now the professional gook tappers hope to dump everything on a five.feet four-inch tall first lieutenant. There is a big accounting yet to be made in this country. CLARE B!LLINGSHAM Implied Dedieatlott To the Editor: l am intrigued by the overwhelming support recently displayed by our state legislators for Assemblyman Leroy Greene's proposal to legalir.e prostitution. Under the 1st and 9th Amendment& of the BUI of Rights, the llcensinr or any law prohibiting prostitution ts in viol1Uon of a ladf's freedom of expression. Sex is a human emotion and cannot be controlled by the state. Or perhaps this has better appeal: The doctrine of implied dedication , whereby the unlicensed public· use of private property over a period or five ycan CQnstltutes an impli!!d dcdicall<.tn tor public USC in perpetuity. SPERO JANIS!:. Support flU' •l'elh19 To the Editor ; We, the parents of Lindbergh Elementary School, would like to extend our ·ainctre thanks ror your cooperation in printing the article, "Parents Rally to Side '. or Mesa Principal." covering the meetinf of the board of education. We feel the article was an excellent evaluation of the feelings of the parents anJ teachers involved. In . •a tiflle when so many people criticize. the accuracy of the. press we feel nd the reporter covering the e the highest plaudits poosb The Why of Rate Rises THE AllTICLJt' proved to be most tnstrumental in making our recent rally a complete success, In less lhan two hours ~·e obtaintd 5a3 signatures supporting our ~~ to r~n John E. Weling as principal of Lindbergh School. This wa! largely due to the people being aware of the situation through reading the DAILY PILOT. Current efforts · to discredit the California Public Utilities Commturcm - and have it made elective Instead of •Po pointive -because of recent rite in-- crease~ it has approved unfortunately place political considerations aboVe the · ecooomiC3 of the public utilities concept. A public utility is. of course. a private Industry that has been given something' of a monopoly status under state govern- ment suwvWon and regulation because the esuntlal nalw'e or its service to the public does not lend itself to t.he open competlUon whk:h is an Important factor in olhcr are:as of lbe economy. AS A TAX PAVING. investor-owned bu:iiness, ~er, a utility m~t like all buslne55e• make sufficient profit to at· tract the etpltal ncctS!lry for expansion lo meet consumer demand. Jn addition., the utility facei the Imperative of ex· ptindlng Its services In advance of de- mand, 10 that the state's growing popult1· tlon will 11lway1 have: the supply of power or transportnllon or communication or \\h~tcver lh11t It rt"quires. The only \\'BY a utility can meet its opllal nttd.s ls lhrou&h appropriate • .,'iQ!et ~itoriaJ I ' rates. CUrrent critics of the utilities point to a recent increase In vattoas ratts. _following an approximate JO.year period of few increases, as paralleling the state government's political colorat.Jon. While !hat parallel exlN. the significance ls misread , or misstated, by the critics. AS THE JNFLATIONAAV spiral hu accelerated , utilities Jiff all busintsses have had to absorb rising costs Of all <lperaliool. After a Jq pe-iod ()f lq_w rate IDO"eues tbty now have lo catch up. If tlley l1'! to conUnue to koep pace with CODSUmtr nttds and ttmairl a 80UDd Jn- vestmenl for • lhe~ thou .. nds • r stockholdtt•, larc• and milt. .. The alternative, of course,· would-be state ownenhip, with taJpayen sup- plying th< wwkln( .funds; Which may wen e~l11in the eurrent campaign against the Prfr. i California fealure Servlct MRS. TED MARINOS MRS. HAP GARNER MRS, JACK DAVIDSON MRS. SAM CORDEIRO ---iW- Wedncsday, April 21. 1971 Tht editorial pnpc of th1: Dallu Pilot s1ek.s to inform and .stun- ulutt readtn by presenting this ntwapaper't opiniom ond c:om- mttUo:r)I 011 topics of (ntt re1£ and fioniftconce, bu prooidino o forum for &ht t:rprtittorl of our readers' opiniom, and bit prt.ttnting (he divtrse view- politt.s of irtformcd observers otJd 1poke11'lltn on topiu oJ tht cloy. Robert N. Weed . Publisher ' I 7 . . Saddlehaek VOL. 6'4, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 56 P.AGES . . ' · PRANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA WEONESDAY,.APRll ir, j,7,( Desert Traveler Trackiiig DOwn BJg FOOter By JOHN VALTERZA 01 t11t 0.11'1' l"llet Slit! ' Hurd bu organized 1 one-man outfit known as UnidenUfied Primates wilb ~ Joel Hurd of s.an Clemente crossed the resolute goal of finding a living member baking waat.ea of Oealb Valley last sum· of the Bi& Foot legend which hu mer, towing • makeshift miniature persisted in the Pacific Nor\bw•t for covered wagon behind him-all in the in-centuries. terest of the environment. The Death Valley voyager bi deadly Now the bewhiskered Jover of man's serious about his latest goal, having com· . . . ....-piled every availJible scrap of in-relation to nature Is. w1lhng to trade that formation about the beast which reports wagon for the pur.su1t of a new dream. SIJY weighs hundreds of pounda ar\d' walks A bizarre one linked to the legend of like a man. The data is substanUa1. Sasquatch for Big Foot) -the man-beast Dozens of persons twcar· they have which 50me aay roams parts of I.he seen a Sasquatch, Hurd said. weslern wilderness. In fact the Klamath River county of Northern Califomla ·has b e co m e somewhlt of a tou.nst attraction beca'131! of the legends and reported ai&htings of the beasts. Hurd bas copies of pictures reputed to show the .animal.· Men have made plaster casb: of footprints found in lbe Northwest-also reputed to be the tracks of Big Foot feet. Hurd's reuons for finding the monster stem from the .same basic philosophy which-drove him across Death Valley. "1t all boils down to the fascination with the dream of man living in harmony with bis environment," he explained. Big Foot, Hurd added, i.s an example. of a m ... llke creature. llvlnf In harmony wt1h nature for tbou!ahda of years. Hurd never usea the words "if" In hil ualoua eonversationl ·about the being. '"(hey ~ ,ulst; too many people·ha.e . proven It 'far any doobt.. lo stay in my mind." Hurd's project, be said , is a mixture of sifting and gathering facts about the Big Foot phenomenon, and plannin1 a trip-- possibly w~b.one of' 1everaJ other "SQ. quateh Hunters -to actually find an a• ample of the giant, proving once and for all that they exist. Hi.s quest.1be aald, has even taken hlm to San Diego ·County where an affluent All Four Bond Issues Lose • Ill San Clemente • Nixon Sets Coast Trip April 3~. Prtaia.at llilqo will ·am .. 1n Southem OrJlll• COunty Aprll 30 for a 1ala ., .. ung of a rt~nlnf Marlnt dlvl!lon at Camp Pendleton and severi.1 dly1 of rest and work, Jt Was teamed by the DAILY PILOT today. 'Ille President, who paid his last visit to the South C.Oast earlier thl5 month, wa1 reportedly planning a stay lasting perhaps a week, reliable aources in• dicated. Mr. Nixon's aides reported ·earlier this w~ that a trip west bi.d been con- sidered, but did not giv' times or the ei:• peeled duration of the stay at La Casa PacUica. Fanfare has been emphasized, how- ever, over the arrival of tbe 1st Marine Divi8ion from Vietnam. a troop move- ment e:s:pected to begin this weekend as the -first Lealhernec'k! report for pr~ cessing at Camp Pendleton. The President's aides have hinted that Nixon's formal greeting of the Marines at the base would be a public occasion. Associated Press dispatches mentioned the chance of conferences with governors during the President's slay ln San Clemente. The wire service specaulated that the trip would take the President -0ut of the nation's capital during a period when particula rly h eated demonstrations against the Vietnam was w e r e b.eing planned. Indications of a return date by the President and his enlourage ctnter around May 7 when the chief executive ls committed to attend a sa lute-to· 1grtcullure dinner, followed b~ the an· nual dinner for the Whlte House Press Corps a day later. Aleutians Shake PALMER, Alaska (AP) -A strong earthquake measuring 8.3 on the Ri chter ACale was recorded 120 miles south of Cold Bay in the Aleutian Islands Tuesday night, the National Oceans Observatory reported. Inru111hents Fall Ca po Voters Oust T hree of· Fo ur In the Capistrano Urlilied School District election, incumben~Were ousted from three out of four tnjltee lflSBS. Only • i.Dcwnbent to n!tlh}l ftl. Jeat iii the district wn •etiJliiarlari! Dr. JIDbert Beuley, who ran llJIOPllOMd Jo truat.e .,.. :. In trustee area I, Doqald E. Inlay defeated_,., Incumbent ~ B u II , Gordo!} v. Peter90ll WOQ incumbent s~ C. Kelley In trus area 3 and George L. White detea incUmbent Kofie Fimularo in trustee ea 5. In area 4, Robert Dahtr.rg defeated five other candidates for lht!t two-year unexpired term of Tom Winget, who resigned. • Inlay, 31-year-old ~tor of St . Andrew's Methodist Churdl, received 318 votes in area I, to defeaf Bull who won 27S. Runnersup in area l were William R. Enqlliat with 169 votes and Rice D. Oliver wuh sa. .Beatley, f11lll1inl unopposed, loqed 182 votes. Peler .. ~--old..,...,,, ~Ille areas~ wlllt"tCl;~oler, ....,., pared with Incumbent~· S2I. -ner-up Campbell hajl lDli vota. Area 5 winner White, a 47-year-old re<jl'ed• biai-11"1' who became a pirapleg!C iib1le iet'ilhg In the No~ In World War·tt, 191ged 614 votes to defeat Nolie Famularo With 201 and Raymond Lee .Estrada ·wi~ 52. · Dahlberg, 48, .for~ superintendent of the TusUn High SCbool District, was an easy winner of the two-year term In area 4 with 157 votes. Other candidates for· the short term were Ke.ith L. Jensen with 4 votes; Alfonso F. Jiminez, 29; Marvin W. Renfro, 29; John P. Serent:es, 14 and Orlando S. Tosdal, 1~ J,aird Cite s Rus s ICBM Buildup, Threat to U.S. NEW YORK (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the Soviet Union had 1tarted building a new, extensive ICBM system which "must be of major concern" to the United States. In view of this, he said, the United States might be forced to take "ad· ditioilal offsetting actions" If the Strategic Arms Limitations T a I k s (SALT) in Vienna fail to produce an agreement. In a prepared speech to lbe 85lh Annual ConvenUon of the American Newspapers Publishers Aasociation CANPA), Laird recalled that one year ago be told· another meeting° of editori that be feared the United state! might find il$elf lh a se- cond rate strategic poa!Uon by the mld- 1970s. "I regret to report today that nothing has happened in the intervening 12 montM to lessen that concern," he said. "Qu ite lhe opposite iJ true." Laird said that in December and January it appeared the Soviet Union was slowing its rapid dejlloyment of lntercon· tinenW BalllsUc Missiles (ICBMs) after Installing about 400 more than the 1,064 land based JCBMa: that the United Stat.el has. He added that in February and March, a new type of missile silo had been detected in Russia that raised !ears of a new ICBM program. "More recent evidence confirms the sobering fact that the Soviet Union Is b- volved in a new -and apparently ex• tensive -ICBM construction program," Laird said. "This new ICBM construction effort coupled with additional momentum I• the strategic defensive area -all •clearly plal\Md months ago -must be of major concern." . Laird said the Russians also were "rapidly dosing the gap" 1n submarine based missiles, an area where today the Unjted St.ates has had a clear advantage. "We sincerely hope for convincing pro- grt;a In SALT," Laird said. "But falling such progress I must ten you today that the renewed Soviet strategic weapons momentum may confront us with the need for additional offsetting .u.s. ac· tlon.I." Opposes Fund Grant Battin Hits 'Police Snoop~ Supervisors' Chairman Robert W. Bat· tin objected Tuesday to a federal-klcal grant of $164 ,000 to finance an Orange County law enforcement intelligence unit because be said he had been wbjected to police snooping tactics. "I have been subjected to some of this myllf':lf," he aaid. "My place of residence was lnvesti~ed when t ran for office in 1968 and so eone took movie• of some polttlcal mce nge I attended." DlaL All)'. c.cll Hicks •rr<ed Iba< Ba<- tin's place of residence was checked out in 1!168 because. a citizen had comp11ined that he did not have legal residence in the first supervi90rlal diatrlct in which he was running for office. "We were bound lo run down the com· plaint to see Jf It had mer1t." Hicks ex- plained. "All for the movies, I know nothing about them." The law enforcement intelligence grant will be used to fina nce • central office for Intelligence units in lhe county. The coun· ty's and cities' abare of Ute $164,000 tolal 1 I! 142,461. 1be inteWgeoce uruts grant was one of two approved by the board Tuesday under the federal government'• Crime and sate Streeta laws. 'Ibe oWer was a request for tij.5,000 in federal and local funds fo nnaw:!e riot control training Ind• equipment under a mutual aid. agreement between the coun· &y and 22 of the 25 cities. . • The caunly participation w11 made rontlngent upon the cities paylnlt tbelr •hare of the local $.10,000 allotment. ' ' ... Oubhouse Project OK Seen llQ"~~~~· tt falllllC .......... ~·WllKW .. arry ~.Clio· mf!UoHollat .._ lisue. BJ\ rtllit ·• IM lietls ol ihl~'~ tile four f>l'O~.ellt CIJllllCllnlill,ioiiraf,i are expeclid lo go abeacl anyway oa !be moat popular proJecl ot the foor.-. · Mayor Walter Evans aald today be CJ· pect.s a oootract to be signed with tbe lowest bidder on the comm u n l·t1)' clubhouse ttplacement project. The llOO,ooo bond Uem """ring the clubhouse received a majqrlty of aye votea, but not.enouab ·to grant:tbe booCI 11ale. Evans said he expected the councll to approve a buUdtng ctQtract with"planntng: commi!.!ioner-Ray McCaalin. a locll builder, then "negotiate to bring the c:ostl down." The clubhouse project bid wu in the range of $230,000 for the building lea1 furnishings. AU but one of the seven combioed precincts in the· city have reported their vote. The lone precinct which has not yet reported "has no chance of substantially altering the figures," said one member of the ci ty clerk's staff. The reporting precincts give this unof- ficial tally : -Proposition A, the clubhouse is.rue, logged 1 1~28 yes and 1-;102 no. -Propo!lition B, a measure for a youth r6creatlon center, drew 1,166 ·aye votes and 1,469 against. -Proposition C. neighborhood park.! development, 1,161 ayes and 1,375 against. -1>ropogjtion D. Improvement of beach facilities and acce~ relistered 1,359 yes votes and 1,218 against An estimate of the voter turnout in the recreation electlon combined with trustee elections was set at about ..S percent of the 7,100 eligible regiatere<I voters. Clerk's aides said the Jone precinct which has not yet reported, Number 71· 002, is expected to complete tallying later this afternoon. Moat of the l'Omblned preclnctl: reported tough times during the tallying lale T\lesday night and early today. Some of <he total! did not reaCh the ci- ty clerk's of!.ice until after dawn today. The excessive number of pages in tble elecUon data was blimed for Uie counUng delaya. Pendleton Hospital Bid Awarded to Firm A Beverly Hiiis contracting 'firm has won-the contract to build camp Pendleton's new IOO-bed Nayal Hoapital a< a f>l'OJected cos< ol llU'milllon. Montgomery, Roes and ,. Fisbe_r. lnc,, received tWe contract. for 'tbt ~ ol the new facllfty, wbfch·wlJl be '9adf !or occupancy In about Din< illoalbo, Marine apokesmeh aald. /rhe, nlllM\ory hoopil•f ~·Will t<place tba-l'reaeill.N•dl Holpftaf.al llll llu&e baac. . ., i professlonol man, lllOl1edl!' bu proof that aomethlng man·llke and" b"i' reamo around hll wilderneu ranch. "But ~ man,·~ Hurd·eQlNnecl.i'~ I* ,everyUUng, U he ,beioq; to .talk,~· inl)y about. wliat he bu ~ ·P!ojlle· woold Uilnk •be·ls crar/." OoUns of other eumplet uiat o'f persons who have seen the Bi&' F~ phenomenon and ~~ f.frafd of rl~ U ,hey, spoke of the lnddents. · ·••People are.iawfull;y'-re!Uctant' to talk about It," Hurd said. To skeptia, Hurd •buses' he la . no drinker. In fact he l!•a bealtb food advocate. llli • Wile! .Ard .you can't mike .i1iw1," <01·. lecUng empt~ olumlnunl'beer canat Students at San Juan Jmemetttaryl School' lit San Juan Cap!J<raoo .)ll'OYea ihe. !dea . wronr. recently with' tlie . n.1.. of. 'llWl.25. Wo'c<h of the ifghl'l'~,cebao · . Thia weel.-tbey a.,_ced.,.., '°"'!llif ttie ·fUndJ have' bought 20 ·1u!Ool~ and 10 eu!:alyptus'trees which' wilt lio,~~ by ln.divldl,lll· ·cl•"'• Friday' oa the- pla111'o1¥ ,nen to Uio .Sii> Dliilo, freeway,, '!'be younptm' r"llOl1!lblllly -Ior-tbo· trees wUJ ·not-end there. · Supreme Court ·Upholds Old DC Ab·ortion Statute ' . WASHINGTON· (UPI) -The SUprema Court In the first of an expected aerlee of ' ruJings on abortion laws upheld to:i'y a 70.year-old District , of Columbia 1tatUte which had been challenged aa too vagut. The language ln qu estion is similar to. that in a number· of other states.-T h • court carefully 1Upulated that today's ruJing dealt. only wiUt the issue ef whether tbe law was UDCOMtituUonally vague. The· challenged, language. lll)'I lbot Ill aborUon 11 legally permissible only U "necessary for the preservation of the m~·s life or· health." 'lbe vote on upholding the language waa· s to 2. The court divided. 5 to 4, on, whether It should· have auumed direct jUrJsdJctfon •Of the cm. The reaeon for confinlng the ruling witliln narrow bounds wu <hat Federal Judge Gerlwd A. Guell relied on tbe vlgutnesa ra''t.ionale 1when1d1mnlsitng tbe Indldment of. Dr. Mllan Vuli<;b. a• Yll¥oslav Immigrant w1»• ·hes been """'dlnl for more Uberol abortion policies, O>allengea. of abortton. 1fatutes· In 11tveral slate! are on the eoutfs·dQckeL. · '!'be majoflty opinion by Juatlca Hugo L. Block. reverted Guell'• l'lllloJ-ihAI the law Wll too V&gl!I . . • .Qlack uld .Vuttcb'~,.atlbtney. ~lllC·· 1,....i1o1Jio« rialorio-wlll'oGeoell'• l!lllt>~ .lboUfd4>< alllnntil ~ !ai! 1nlltonce,,tllot1 uM 1aw-3fd an ~·AC1~ · tlut Black aal~ whDe UfOre ~ some' re~enCfS .,. 1ucti cfaiml In oae1r1 opl-' n Ibo SuJll'!'me Oo\lrl viewed. It 11 bold n1•11mply 'thaMhe 1falole•wa( void' fnr va,uenea. Jolnfnl Blacl: ·wero -Clllef .J\latiwWll' l r<n· E; Burl..-· and ·.Tusaces John M. Rotlan, .. Byron R. While and Harry A. BficlanWI. ~lack . polnlod ·air l!Wlll ·dllcuaslon of Che vagueneu laaue that the Dislricl of Colurobla llalllle -enacted In IOOt -did not oullaw all , aborUQna:, only thoae not perf'"111ed wider tl)e. direction of a com- pel<n~ Dcenseq fihyslciao, and tboae not '*"tarY lo.prwrv.,ibe mother'• We or beallh. ' • . • ' . ·. " I I I ) -~-.. -... . \ I DAIL. PILOl SC Wtdnudl1. AJ<JI u, 19n Easter Seal Route :.Vote ., 01( · Set Drive Aided ByTeeners Sen~te A.ppr.oval ·Seen Early Next Week "" Orange COunty's fint Junior RUild for yoonpten 14 to 11 to support the Easter Seal Society bas been formed In El Toro. Susan Bayliff, 15, of El Toro and a student at Mission Viejo High School i!I president of the group which i.S open lo teens µittrested in voluntee.ring time and t!!ori lo aJd physically \>aodlcapped dtlklren and adult.I. Eight young people have joined the Et Toro Seal! unit which plans as its first activity a tundraising carwa.sh. Proceeds will benefit the Easter S ea l Rehabilitation Center in Or~ge. Members will wDrk with handicapped chU~ provide clerical help and work in special programs in arts, crafts and recreation. A cake-<:Utting marked the approval of the lf'OUP by the Easter Seal Society (lf Orange CoWlty. Sodety.presi,dent John. Jl MaWhlnney presented tbe Seals with a charter plaque. Officers of the charter unit are Tim Link, 15, vice pres.ident; Laurie Brown, 14, secrttary, and Tori Murphy, 15, treasurer. All are stqdents at Mission Viejo High School. Anyone aged 14 to 18 interested in joining may call Miss Bayliff at 830-4al2. The group meeta twice each month. Swimm ing Meet In La guna Beach Slated Saturday Tba i1111ull LaJUll& Beach llw.im Meet, UJUally. lleJd In the midst of winter, bu been shifted to a new date thls year and will be held at I a.m. Saturday at the hlih tcbool pool. The event, sponsored by the Recreation Deparbnent, ls open to compeUtJop by students in tour d.ivL!Jons: high IChool,, junior high school, fifth Ind mth V•den and younpters up to the fourth grade. An •olzy foe ol fl allow1 each partlc~ pant to el11.er up to lour etents, whiCh Jn.. elude breu:t.Btroke, backstroke, freestyle and lod!vidual medley. Only rtudenb Uv~ Ing within the Laguna Beach Unilied 5cbool Dl>trlct are eliiibie lo enter. Entry forma: may be obtained, from the department at 175 N. Coaat IUgbway and must ht returned not J1ter than 5 p.m. on Thursday. Further informaUon may be oblained by callillg the department al 494-1JH al. 45, I 111 I. PETER KRIEG Dt ... oallr Pli.t Ill" SACRAMENTO -The senate Rules CommiU.. thJi morning unanin>OuJly •P- proved the cantrover:al1l Newport Beach lrteway charter amendment. 'l1le measure will go to t.'le Senate noor early next week, State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) said this mornln1. The amendment was ratified by the Aswnbly Tuelday on a se to 2 vote. A ipokerman for Sen. Carpenter tn- dJcated there is little opposition, if any, e1ptc~. w~ the amendment comes to 1 vote. CAKE ·CUTT ING MARKS FIRST EASTER SEALS JUNIOR UNIT Sus1n Baytlff of El Toro 1nd John M.whtnn9y Shire Sw .. t St1rt Where approved, It will requin the Newport City Council to conduct votes of the people before it can sign fature agreements on the route of any Jreewt,y through the clty. The cltiea of Huntington Beach and ea.ta Mesa had presented strong op. poiJilion to the measure as it ~wept through the Asiiembly Tuesday. 1 Thr eat ~ U.S~ Copwrs The city COWlcill of both communllies Monday night adopted resolutiom urging Jeglslalive rejectlon of the measure. A.uemblyman Robert E. Badhlm (R- Newport Beach) had introduced the resolution, telling the Rulea Committee of the lower hou!e. "Newport Beach voters have made their point very loud and t:lear." Told in Ghost Operation SAIGON (UPI) -Brig. Cen. Vu Van Ciai, commaDdlng general of an embryo operation folo the A Shau Valley, warned today lhat the Communist.! have brought in 37 and 23 mm anUaJrcrah guns which would po.se a bJgb level of danger for U.S. Laguna Cit,es Glass Recycling Success Story A Laguna Beach civic leader and tlass fndUltry executJve declared today -on the eve of the aecond Earth Day ecology obaervance -that glaa recycling 11 a ~smashing auccesr. · Paul Griem d 2107 Ocean Way made flis entbuslartic commenta from Anchor- Rocldng CorporaUoo headquartm In Los Angeles. The Soothern California Class Reclam. alion Program i! also celebrating its firsl birthday oa Earth Day. Oldest and most SUCCts!ful In the in- dustry-wide reclamation project, the Loi Ang!Jet Ptogra.mbfgan di an ~rlment to see bow the public would rupand. helicopter pilots there. , . ho.. Ciai said American and South viet.· nameu troops were mounUna the opera. tJon to drive the ccmnwn.iJt.s out o! South Vietnam'! two nortbernmo.st provinres. But all indications were that the opera- tion was not yet under way, although President Nguyen Van Thieu announced on Saturday it had started. U.S. military apokeamen Wd no U.S. "combat troops" were in operatlon Jn the valley which atretchei from lbe Hue area westward to the border of Lio.. U.S. military sources said American recon- naissance units had been moving in and out of the valley in battalion alrength (800 men) to feel out Communist defenses. Ciai and allied mllitary spokesmen aaid there had been J>O D'lljor contact Jn· the more than one-week-old ghost operatloo. Military sources said ~ recoM,alssance team.1. 1ncludlng AmerJcaa,s and com. pany.siled Saigon troops. bad run lnto the first heavy fighting in the valley. Tht chart.tr ·amendment w a s overwhelmingly approved in a sptt:iat Newport Bu.ch election Marcb 9. ''They don't want a freeway ruining the.tr community," Badham said. "They are saying they don't like what the City C.Ouncil has done and telling them don't do it again without a referendum." By a similar landslide vote in that same election. residents had told the council to rescind the exisUng agreement with the state on the route of the Pacific Coa.at Fretway through Corona drl Mar. Badham u.ld the charter amendment, end perhaps even the rescission, may eventually be decided by the courts. School Buses. All Rolling Out For Safety Week Gial did appear certain of the dai]gers to American helicopltn expected to sup- port the operation along with U.S. fighter-"OJr byword ls always safety," says bombers and B52! reported already in Laguna Beach school bus foreman Dick operation against tuJpected Communist Jones, "for we do carry the mOl!lt troop concentrations. precious cargo of all -your children:• "The A Shau will be • dangerous But to remind residents and motorists miuion for helicopter aupport," be,aa.id. of the safety precautions taken, this is The bulk of the support •work. b tx· NaUonaJ School Bus Safety Week. During pect.ed to be carried out by pilot.. from the week, acbooJ buses 1'111 drive with ''Undoubtedly there are legal quesUon.s that will have to be ground out in the courts," he said. "But it ian't the Legislature's preroaative to deltrmine I.he con- stitutionality of this charter amend- ment." A legislative COWllel had reported to the Assembly committee that if the amel!dmen& were terted in court, it likely would be rejected because residents of a munlcipaUty do not have authority om statewide matte.rs, such as lreewJya. Serrice Station . Hear~g Slated Tonight in Uigun a A public hearfug on 11 Cm1troversial proposal to build a new aervice atation at the northern entry to Laguna Beach will head the agenda at the City Council's 7,30 meeting tonlghl. Resident Fred C. Kibbey has ftled ·an appeal of the action of the t:lty Pl&Ming c.ommW1on Jn granUng the Standard Oil Company a condJtlonal use pennlt for the structure ai 1251 N. coast Highway. The permit was granted after the oil company had been required by the com. mission to submit a new design more in keeping with the character of Laguna Beach. However, the Citizens' Town Planning AMoclatiOi\ ahd a number of other gropps and individuals have voiced oppo.fltion to the rtation, many mentioning possible damage to the famou.s Star Pine at the site. The council al!o will reeeive reports on tlosure of lower Park: Avenue to create a pedestrian mall adjatent to the new library. Closure. has been requested by the Friendl of the Li.brary with support of the civic League1 The Downtown Buslneu A!'°'lation ~s the closure and reports from city departments also will be received. The report nf the Main Beach com. mittee will be fonnally received by the touncll, which .. bear11 the tnatertal in study &eS.!lion lait week, and it is ex· peeled that two ~uncil represe~tallves will be appointed to work with the Festival of Art.I oo re-negotiation of the IesUval lease. Also on the agenda are revised monthly reports from the police, fire and building departmenls, a proposal for a new bicy. cling program by Cycolngy Workshops and a resolution aulhoriziJig reconstruc- tion of f1ood-d&maged retaining walls on High Drive aM. .Poplar Street. The evening's agenda does not schedule setting of a hearing date on the CR (commtrcial-ttsidentlal) zone for • beachftont hotel development~ The coundl originally war ruppoged to fix the hearing date tonight, bhl Mayor Rlchard Goldber' indicated earlier this week that he woUJd prefer to delay any hearing until the fate of the initiative againat high rise ~ been determined. Thomas to File > ( Campaign Cost .Tab Im mediately Ti-uiteHlect \YU!iam TboJ?u tl the Laguna Beach Unified School D11trict said today he will file an account ~f his campaign expenditures with tbe ~ounty elections office immediately in order to take his new post at the next regular board meeting. Thomas was elected by a wide margfa Tuesday to the une1plred lwo ye&Q of a term vacated by the formal resiQ.aUon Monday of Trustee Willlam WDCoxen. Wilcoxen had announced far in advance of his inlenlion to resign so that ~teat could.be tilled at the regulaP.tcbool bNrd eleCtion rather than at a speclal election. Thomas may not t.ak.e his plac:e i:m the five-member boird until ·be hu dellmed an itemized aecounl of his Campaign ex- penditures to Orange County elections of- ficials. If he files by Thursday, he may be seated at the April 'l1 metliDg of the board. Narcotics Oass 1be response wa1 Impressive. To date, Soulhlanders have ronttibuted more than M'. million used glass bottles and Jan · -ehi>u1h to> OU a µ,ne of •garblige -trucb eight mllil long-Griem said. Rob ert Leighton Rites ·f:onducted ' the U.S. lOlst Airborne Dlvlalon. PUota their headligbts on to remind motori3ts of Funeral services for Fairview State already have reported tak,lp1 fire from the special oblervan<;-e. Phil d J hi B 9 mountaintop position! .. they flew n .. r Jn 1ddltlon a bu! will be on displ•y at a e p a oy, , Hospital nursing supervisor Robert F. , . Slated Tonight tht .valley floor, the IUlll llrinc doh at Albtrtaon'• Mlrket parkln& lot, 700 S. . Leighton, who dled April· 10, haYe been them. Coast Rlghw1y, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Slain in. Gang w ar beld in his home slate or Mwachulettr. Clal, deputy comm'ander of the South for the e11min1tlon ol residents through He was 38 and had servtd at the Costa Vietnamese l.!t Infantry Division, aald Friday. PHILADELPHJA (UPI) -Rafael San-Mesa facility for the mentally retarded the A Shau was 1 'not •n t1c.lusiv1 Jn Laguna Beach 1,571 students are tlago, 9, was shot in the back and kill~ eight years, afltr work at Agnew State target." carried dally to and from school and all Tuesday night in a street in frnnt of his Hospital and at medical centers ii 1be second session of a· minl'<OW'5e on narcotics and dangerous drugs will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. ln the lecture hall at Mjssion Viejo High Scbool. The course, being 1ponsored by 1.0e Tustin Union High School District, ttlis ' week will feature Dick Schml«, a phannaclat, apeaklng on the pbysiologi<:al effects of drugs. Griem Is chairman of the Wutern Public Affairs Committee of the Glass Conlsioer Manufacturers ln!t.itute, '' well as being a loilgtlme director of the. Laguna .Beach 1Festlval of Art.I. "The tremendotU 1upport we have , received frcm Southern c a 11 f 0 r n I a · residents in our flrat year indicates the . public strongly endorses the concept of recycling of waste mateiall," he said. "In this operation, we will go anywhere drivers attend safety meeting once a home. Police said he was an apparent in. Massachusetts. fi"om the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) on month to remind them of their nocent victim nf teenaged gang warfare. Mr. Leighton; who lived at 258'Ai Coela dowD to.the· A Shiu," he 1ald. The area reapon&iblllty. Before becoming a bus Police said. lbe area was populated by Mesa St., Costa Me!la. is survived by his Gia I mentioned tW! in a '15-mlle strip driver, a person must undergo 40 hours of teenaged gangs, chief of which 11•ere the mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Leighton, and a a.long the Laotian border. tralnl.Da: in addition to other qualifica· "&th and Diamond'' and "Zu1u Nation" sister, Mrs. Janice Lersch, botb of Gia! said the Idea nf the operation wu tioni. gang!. Scituate. Mass." to force elements nf three North Viet-j-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-The !~week cli.u meets e a c b Wednesday evening from 7:30 o'clock to 9:30 and ia open to all Interested res:identa of the Saddleback Valley. A different speaker Is featured each week in an effort by the school district to infonn the community of the various aspeci.. of the drug ~ and whal. can be done about Jt. Murder Defense Ends SAN DJEG-0 (AP) -The delense rested lta case today in the trial of Carl Riggs, accused of murdering a police of· ficer oul!lde a go-so bar, alter calling on. ly four wllneS!Je8. OJIANGI COAST DAILY PllOT OltAMG;! cOAST PVll.li.H1NO COMPAl'I'( a.Hr+ N. w.,d ,,...Jdto'lf ... l'WlltlNr J1cli JI. Cwrlt'f' Vkt Ptea....,1 9NI ......, .. MtlltW ll1011111 Ktevil t:•Uw 111011111 A • .lrolurpli!111 1<11nqlng EdllW' C~trftr H. t .. , Aicll1rd I'. Nill Aul1!1~: M_,lrit f:111IOl'l "''" ..... Offlc• 222 for11f AY111~1 M1ili119 1dd11n1 •.O. lox 666, 92652 S.. CIMe•l'f Office 105 North El C1111lno lt11l, 92672 °""' °'""' CO.ti Mn•~ m "":~ Srrllft " "''-' 19":~: )~ N hi'-'"• .....,,,1,.10t1 "9<11: 1ms lftdl "°"""',., Success oJ the Loa Angeles project Jed the national indu.rtry institute to eJttnd it across America, with 100 plant.a in Z states recycling more than a quarter billion containers. -i namese divislom and four independent MY1rt11~ re1iments out of South Vielnam'a lndividuala: and nonprofit organ.izalion1 are paid a peMy per pound for used glau containers. .., Tbe eight centers in the Southland have paid out $250,000 in this period, which means 25 million pounds of glass normally processed as garbage and en- ding up as landfil} or litter i!I recycled. Thousands of community ecology groups have assisted by setting up localized glass reclamation points. The Southern C8lifomia C I 1 l'I Reclamation Program'• closest depOllt point for Orange County resident.I is Kerr Glass Mfg. Corporation, 1221 E. SL Andrew's Place, Santa Ana. Planners Okay Art -A-Fair Bid For Use Permit Laguna Beach's annual Arl-A·Fair, a predominantly traditional summer art exhibition received the blwing or the Laguna Planning Commission Monday night. Commissioners found everything ln order for the show and readily approved the tempor•ry use p!!rm!l request from the Laguna Beach Fine Arts Auoclatio1t. The show will run July 16 through Auguat 29, along with the Festival of Arts and Sawdust Festival. Art-A·Fair will again be held al 3M N. Coast Jl ighway in the Art Colony's famed ''Gallery Row." In other 1ction, the commis!lion: --continued v a r I an c e proceedings lniUated by Roger t.tcErland, ._ Holl)' St., to con!ltruct an addllion to hi1 11lng\e f1mily dwelling. Noting: that the 1ddltion woold not allow auUJclent s.lde yards, planners lsted McEr'l•ne to come back at a later date with revised plans wh.lcb would J.IJow for the side )'arda. -Decided that a temporary use pennlt applklUon by Barwick Import• to UM: a Jot at 1185 Clenneyere St., for automobile 11torage, would ~st be handled through a variance prr.cedure, 11nd Instructed tht 1111rt to notice the propc.~ed uso wlth nearby property owners be.fort It comes 11p at the next rcgul~r meeting. northern province!, Quang Tri and 1bua Th.ien. ' "Tho operallon " ct..IP<l lo clear out everything from the DMZ to Hal Van Pass,". Glai gaid. Hal Van is a coastal tilouritain paSJ eight mHes north of Da Nang. An allied air observer reported seeing a bl.ttaUon-liztd U.S. unit ln the valley, a Communist stroniho1d for more than 20 years. Military S()Ut'ttl said more than one battalion.sized Amtr1c1n unit wu operating tn the ••reconnaissance in force" mission ln the valley. Joaquin Board Discuss Music., Vandals Tonight . To,Pica ranging from vandaliam to ino 1trwnental music will contront San Jo. quin Elemeotary School District trualeu at tonight'• 1 o'clock meeting in the Diltr Jct Anna, I f600 Sand Canyon Road, E·ast Irvine. The resulla •or a que!tionnail'e to determJne ii p&re.nla want an ln· strumental music program in tht elementary schools wW be presented. The questlonnaire was clrculaled district.wide by membera of the Mlulon Viejo High School Muaic Boo4ttrt Club. The group supparta I.be rein.!tate.ment of a musJc program in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades which wu taken out ol the instructional program u an «000my measure. Also on the agenda will be a first rtading of a policy on vandalism, a measare .iJ dealgned to protect the district The board also will approve courses to be taught In aummer tcbool and will hear 1 report on the progress of the unJflc1tion study being conducted joinUy by San Joa- q\IJn, Twit.in Elementary, Tr ab u co Elementary and Tustin High School District!. Queeu Turns 45 LONDON (UPI) -Queen Ellzabolh turned 45 today, quietly ob&ervlng the oc- ctsion with her family amidst prep1ra- tlons for 11 nine-day Canadian visit 1eheduted to start 1'1ay 3. GEM TALK TODAY by .L C. HUMPHllD TH E COLORFUL WORLD OF PE ARL S Highly p r I z • d in the world ol gems pe:arls are chic, smart, and treasllred particularly b e c a u 1 e they 10 beautifully enhance a wo- man 'a enJemble no matter what the occasion. They compliment clothing for every affair, from a simple sweater to the most glam- orous evening go w n, and do 10 wlth a qulet dignity all their own. We usually associate white with the pearl, and many d9 not know that pearls come in a variety ot glowing.colou which depeQd upon the l o c a I i t y in whJch tilty are found. From tile Persian Gulf co n1 e pearls with a creamy sheeen, and from Australia we receive pearls with a beautiful y!llow cast. Much closer to home from the Gulfs of California and' Mexico, come the rare a a d exceedingly expensive Black pearls, whose rich metalllc appearance make them more valu~ a~fe than any others. We carry a v a r J e t y of these gems, and 'will &ladly assist you fn your aelection of pearls lo match both your ta.st• and your budget. Come in soon. We're open dally. from 9:30 lo 5:30, Fridays 'Ill 8:30. let. ~· Wotch ahead one hour OOM.EGA . ' . IR lht momtl'll1 II !1ktsyou to 1dj11at yourw11c:h 10D1Yllofii Savino• Tim•, a1k yo11r111ll : la It acc1111l•? Styilah? / Dt1>1ndabl•7 It c1n b1 1U lh111. ,, ~n(f ~· ••• It )fl Ill ' Omeg1. Like this Omag1 Con111D.atloft Chronomtttr. Accuralt7 Omaga Cl'lronome1er1 carrt •·8wfn-ot>1erwtory cerilllctt• for 1ccur1cy awarded on.ry after a 15-day serlt1 1 ol grueNng laboratory tes1s. StyUsh'l look 11 the han<hom•ly craf'l-4 1talnl1u •lffl cue, and lhti ruoo•d good looka or 1h• ma I chino brac1!1t. Depend1ble? 1r1 •n Of'MO&. lln't II? Stop In toc:lsy and l•l 111 11'1ow you this, tfld 01h1rs In our wld• 1election or Om1g1 walch•a, FrGm $t:i to over $1000. J. C fiumphrieJ JewelerJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVtNllNT TIRMS IANICAMll!ICAID-MAS'llll CHAl!Gl 24 YEARS IN SAMI LOCATION fHONI 141·140 1 I I Lag111t~ Beaeh EDITION * Vot;. 64, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 56• PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CAOFORNI~ TEN CENTS Seven Indicted By TOM BARLEY or "" P.nr l"lltt t1ttf The Orange County Grand Jury today indicted seven persons_ on grand theft, COMpiracy ar!U fraud charges stemming from the operatipns of the now defUJ1ct World Fina{!Cial Tr~ds investment com- plei: in Laguna HUis clncl~ea] Beac;h. Headlnt the USt of defendants were corporation president J osepb Dulaney, 37, of Newport Beach, bis ... wlfe Marlene. 32, · and Dulaney's vice president ln the in- vestp>e:Dt _emp~ Jamea Shipley, 38, of " Landlords Support Height BUl By BARBARA KREIBICH ot .... Dailr P1191 II.it The board of directors of the ~guna Beach Hotel, Motel and Apartment Own- ers Association would support City Coun. cit acceplance of the proposed initiative me.oJID'e establishing a 30-foot height limit for buildings in Laguna Beach. presfdall I.oraiJ!allehoald Tllesday. A_statement io that effecL, 1igned by an board members, will be preaented to the councll toolgh~ Haneline aald. Pet!UOll! reqllOstfng Ibo height limit and bearing 4,083 sl~ret: were pre- gented to the city clerk lut week and now are being verified against county voter records. Ir ts percent or the city's voters sup. port the initiative, the council must either adopt the pro~ height limit ordinance or place it before the electorate. MaYor Richard Goldberg said Monday that he is confiderit far more than the needed number of signatures will be veri- fied and -Mil recommend that the council adopt the ordinance or call an election on it before proceeding with further ac- tion on a hOtel zone. Haneline indicated Tuesday that the large number of signatures on the peti- tions, representin.g 51 percent of Ule electorate, had influenced the Hotel- Motel group's action in offering to sup.. fun~t. council acceptance of the height In a statement addressed lo the coun- cil. the directon said, "It is apparent that the concept of some additional height in exchange for greater open areas ha5 few visible supporters, al- though city planners, including tho&e or the Civic League, supported this •.• only a short time ago. "From the standpoint of our tourist ~ dustry and the growth of facilities, the 36-foot limit represents some height in- crease for most areas considered suit- able (fer hotelll) ·and a decr'ease only for that part of one block now i.oned C2." The statement suggests th.at if in future some major hotel development exceed- ing the height limit should be proposed for the Hotel Laguna block. the plan9 could be submitted to the public for ap- proval by referendum. "nns, said Haneline, would avotd drawn-out arguments in the community such as those surrounding the construc- tion of the Surf and Sand. Principal problem faced by the hotel fndu5try Is spl.it %Oiling, not heigflt. ac- conting to the ~~~~~ and the aS50Cia- tion has In fact oppo!5eQ the exchange of 11ideyard space for height as unmJitable for narrow front.agei and tending to create wind tuMels. Signtng tne stateme,it for the hotel troUD were HaneliN> of V1calion Village and Jim Aimew, Hotd' LAgulla Coro.: .ru~ Brttdshaw, Sevl!l SPas: Men"ilt .J~on. Surf an<t i::a.,~Betty Rohin!tOn, Laguna ~res : Bill ma s. RMt Can- yon AMrtm~ts; and arry Wil\als, La- gtml. Riviera: Rahhi Kahane .T" iled In Scuffle at U.N"""- NEW YORK' (UPI) -Rabbi m1r Kabane, head of the Jewish Defense League, and eight other persons wef'f; 1r- rested Tuesday night after 11 scuffle bmke out at a demonstration outside the lrllql Mi111lon It> the United NatioM. Police 111id Kahane would be charged with riot In the aecond degree-, a mlsde- meanor, 11nd given 1 summons. ' I • • • 16951 Lowell Circle. Huntington,Beacb. Santa AnJ ' Mmdclpal Court acllon against the trio was abandoned today, Grand jury action moves existing charges against" all 1Uu'ee inio :Supei-io'r Court. · - _Joining the ,Dulaney1; and ·Shipley' today oQ. a S'lfeijing eharae . ~t.. -were, D,aniel Hayes, 40, or 8211 Snowbird, Huntington Beacb, Wendell Wairen Ailstin, ~. of Riverside and Fred Riley, 4S, of Norfolk, Va. . ·e ., DAl&.Y 'II.OT lt•ff '!Mote 2ND WOMAH·E~ECTED llOuMWlfe'T-htr .Giiiett. DAILY 1'1LDT SIMI '1Mft WINS FOUR-YEAR TERM Retired Navy Man Linko GETS TWO.YEAR TERM Merch1nt Thomas · • • Ill W·orld . Tren.ds Co.nspiracy Investigators-nfused to rtleue the name of the rtmal.nini defeDdant until hill arrest. He was dncrlbed as a central figure in the investment group's securing cl a $500,000 loan from tbe St. Bernadine Hospital in San Bernardl•o. AJI seven defendanb..allegedly were lD-- volved in an lnveatm.ent swindle that may prove to have cost investOrs as much as '3 million. ·The World Financial Trends cor- poration ls now in the binds of Board Head L. Taylor Defeated By BARBARA KREIBICll Of tilt °"" l'llfl '"" Favoring the ronservaUves in a field of 12 candidates, Laguna Beacb voters Tuesday elected housewife and substitute teacher Mrs. Patricia Gillette and retired Navy captain Gerald D. Linke to four· year terms on the school board. Businessman William 'lbomu m d<;f .. tecl three .Oll>!r ~elates In; ll't ""' 'lat 'lhi' ... ~. two ~. ilf resigning inuteo Willlam Wlkoian'a ' term. OuJtecl in tbe contest WU tbe ooly in- tnn\beal\ "*' Jftlidlol La..,_ w. Ttylor who bu served a total of 11 year1 aa a trustee in the Laguna ~acb di!trict. The victorious fow-year candidates will be seated July I. Thomas Is upected to lake his plact on the board at nut Tuesday's meeting. replacing . Wllcti1en whose resignation was effecUve Monday. Thoolas was top vote-getter in the race with a count of 1,322. Mrs. Glllete rettiVed 1~10 .-1114 Link• l,O!ll. Taylor lost his bid for re-election w!len he received only 926 vote!. other eon.. testants for the four-year terma wer• Florence Beane with 731 votel;'Margaret Joyce D'Isldoro. 85; Carl Mitchell, !74; Stanley Munsat, 483; and Roger D. Nicholson, 213. Runners-up in the two-year race were Arnold Laderman, 761 votes ; Catherine MacQuarrie, 346 and Don Franklin Richardson, 295. -Mrs. Gillette, «. of 124 La Brea St., Is a aix-year Laguna Beach ~ident. wife of Lewis Gillette aod mother of a 14-year old !IOn who attends Harbor Day School in Corona de! Mar. In her campaign !he urged mort OOard control over claSl!r'OOm!I, 1 tr o n g e r guidelines from the board to teacher• and 1trong academic proarams. Linke, 73, of 437 Shadow U.ne, was 1 192n graduate of the U.S. Naval.Academy and served the Navy until hil retirement tn 1950. An ordnance engineer, he holds a master's degrtt from Carnegie ,lnltitute of Technology. After moving to the Laguna area, Linke taught at Santa Ana and Orlflle Coast Colleges and San CJemente High School. Durina: bis campaign ht urced more emphasis on mathematics, history and English, with speelel emphasis on U.S. history taught froi;n true te,1', and con- dernMd a new social ltudies aeries as "trash." He al!JO opposed the acceptance ef federal school grants. Thomas, 49, ol 31551 First Ave., South Laguna, has lived In the area for 2S y!ar1 and 11 the owner of Bill Thomas Cameras. Both his children were graduated from Laguna schools and he bas been very ac.. live in support ,of the , American FieJd Service program, Thomu sal~ ~ 1 .. 1 •. tbe,~lnas ~m­ m111JllY lhou\~ 11,e dlrectly .~pr~nlecl l>n . tbe sch9ol l>oord,: Jif ,bas ~l!>ed 1 ... no+a!M tducallonol ~·· "'!lesutilul 'In ~ btil noi ' jtt 10 In practice'" ind accuaed _ of letting tht , Thurston program drain money away from. other schools. He said dWin& his campaign th1t be feel s traditkln31 educaUon Civu better stability anl!_ ~1vatlon. "'!"'"' .. • ' ba!!kruptey court ·and omcills already !mow that Ila ,.lllllinin& &S!dl· will not meet. five percent' of the claims Oowing in,-M""oot of ~ clai!Ds ... Wed by elderly re1ldents of teUrement com· mun!Ues In Seal Beach and Lqupa,llllls. Deputy district attorney Joe Dlctenon today described 'Hayes as the· promoter Who played a leading role in the group's obtaining the !500,000 loan from tbe SI. Bernadin< Hospital. He claimed Amlin ud Riley·w.,. also ' Elderly Woman . . ' Dead. 12 Days Found in Hotel The clothed · body of an 86-year~ld woman who apparentl y died 12 days ago or natural cauae1' was discovered this morning 1n bet room at a Laauria Beach, hotel. Detective Gene Brooks .or the Laguna Beach Police department said .the woman was last seen alive on April 9 by a ma id at the Hacienda : Hole~, ·1~ S, Coast Highway. The dead woman's Identity 11 being withheld pending notification of ne1l of kin. · Brook.!! said the. woman' bad Ilved at the hOtel for the pest -tllftl years 1n her 1mall, ground noor ·room. The maid went tc> cl'ean the woman'rroom on April 10. She found the door bolted from·the in.side, Brooks said. The manager of the hotel told Brooks the woman had been planning a trip to San Francisco and when she was nOt seen •l the hotel after April f , Jt was assumed 1he had tell. town. However, hotel officials bee a me· 1usplclous today when the woman did not "return" from her trip and called police 1 to report her mlssiag. Detettlves opened · the louvers of one of the windows and saw the woman 's body lying in bed . Brooks swinlsed the eid~y ~oman had gone In bed on April I and bad died In her sleep. However, the cause of death w)U not be known until an autopsy can be conducted 6y coroner's officlala. the . detecUve aald. ·Involved !IJ th• swlndlln1fof'tbe C.lhollc hospjtal. fl ii a...ned tbel tbe lll1lOP .,.. ed investment lette-1toct ot q~bl~ value as collateral in· persuading tbe hOij>ital'a adminlltralion IO approve ~ .I~. .. 'lbat·loan was in default rn Novem'ber, IS69 and, lnyestlgajors said, tha boepjtal'a former controller, Robert G. Machan, r~ved a $1S,OOO loan from Shipley after the JS00 ,000 advance was ~­ M'aclin penonally apprvveci•tbe I~ mi -· e " • he.roilgned When Dulaney and bis wife lefr for GtnD.nr a month later. · Do1'.er was _amoted Jut month In Curtfto, · a.-~ colony tn the Car· ibbe•n1 after a· year in Europe. His wile wu arrested· tn tbe Br'i.Uah colony of Be~a just two weekl later. ~~ey was anuted in•Orange County •boitly alter' be-letilned In bankruptcy court \b•I be ,la!<w nothing about the allea<d lnvatmellt nlndle and was not pmocally~ ' . ~ . . ' . ---........ ,. ' . . Cars Avoid.Dimr, Crmh; Four lnjured ~in,.Laguna . Four persons ·were Injured 'Tuesday · JUgbt, ane of t.bem seriously, ii a high 1peed, bead-on collision.on Laguna-.ean.. yOO: Road afteJ\ which fire.men had to pry one or the vlctimJ· loose from her twisted· automobile. The crash was apparently.caused by· a · deer, fendEln•and ·were .both spun around·from !ht Impact. ol(M:<rs aald. The Laguna Beach Fin ~t bad IO be called to free .the Pect.-woiJ?an rrom her auto. Several past accidents-on Lapna Can- yon ~ have-been attributed by poli ca to driven aWerVlng to-mils deer crossing the windln1 road. Man)' such mishaps oc· cur during h ·dry KaSOn of the year wtien the anlmalS"f!!:llture into the lowero el~vaUons ot1 tbe -canyon in search of 10!/d. ' h trap~ woman, Dlan:e P.eck. 21, ~r Hawaii. ii in aerious condition today at SoJtb,Q)ast Community Hosjiltal with n. teibive head and facial . injuries. A.. p0.s,.nger In her auto, William Mori, 20" . .------------, ot .New York mffered possible Jntemal- fnjurles and Is listed In satisfactory con. dftiofi. It took about 25 minutes to free tht Peck woman. 'The driver or the aecold car, Marlie Ughthall. 19, of Santa Ana, received a brqken leg and brc:>ken jaw in the .10 p.m. · a~ident and ll'llsted in satlsfactory·eon. dltion at the hospital. Her paS!eriger, CJifford Hanson, 19, of Tustlu, ytas released from the hospital after being treated far several cuts and bruises. ·Police said the mishap occurred on Laguna Canyon Road about one mile eut of Its Intersection with El Toro Road. Jnvestlgatorl' said the Peck vehicle was , west bound and may have swerved Into the pa'th of the onc9mtng Lighthall auto m order to avoid 1trlklng. deer. . ,Tb< au10mobil01-colUded nn the left. Oru•• ,School' Shooting JaUs .You~; 13 ·Flying· bulleil bl'Ollllht I ~e l<icf Tuesday tO 'a La Palma· lfllor blibi a<:hool's a~leilc procram and 'itlUlled ln 11\e booking of I IJ.)'13Mlld b9)o •• ,...pl- ciqn of 1ttampled mW<ltr, Pfoan.Jdentifted tbe JOWl(Sltt U the sniper, who fired 1."aertu .of .lhotl at a sri>uP ol liril l'WI~ 9'1• the •lrack al , .... f I ' , Walk.er.Junior lltaJt Scl!oQL. One <on1- pedtor, Darla llclC .... II, -1truct' In thO thllh by • •We. • ' 1't missile · was .rll'l'Kr'(ld a t Wesim1natu Comuwnily llospila! 1nd the &frl went home wl\b her parenil. Hospital ofllclala c!estrlbed ·tbl lnJIA'Y u a flesh wound. • ' • J - f llAJLY PILOT SC ·Easter.Seal Drive Aided ByTeeners ... Orange County's first junior guild for youngsters 14 to 18 to support the Easter Seal Society has been formed in El Toro. Susan. Bayliff. IS. of El Toro and a studenl at 1'1ission Viejo lUgh School Is president or the groui> which is open to teens interested In volwtletrlng time and effort to aid physically handicapped children and adults. Eight young people have joined the El Toro Seah; unit which plan1 as its first activity a fundrai sing carwasn. Proceeds will benefit the Easter S e a I Rehabilitation Center In Orange. Members wW wotk wltb .handicapped children, provide clerical help and work in special programs in arts, craits and recreation. A cake-cutting marked the approval of the group by the Easter ~al Society of Orange County. Society-p~ldent John R. MawhiMey presented the Seals with a charter plaque. Officers of the charter unit are Tim Link, 15, vice president; Laurie Brown, 14, secretary, and iori Murphy, 15, treasurer. All are students at tdission \'iejo High School. Anyone aged 14 lo lB interested in joining may call Mis! BaylUf at 830-4812. The group meets twjce each month. Swimming Meet In Laguna Beach Slated Saturday The aMUal Laguna Belch Swim ·Meet, usually held in the midst of winter, hq been shirted to a new date thll yea.r and will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday at tht high school pool. The event, sponsored by the Recreation Department, ls open' to competition by students in four dlvl.S!ons : hJgb 8Cboo1, junior high school, fifth and ahi:th graders and youngsters up to tl'C: fourtb grade. An entry r.e of $1 11Jow1 each partlcl· pant ta enter up to tour events, which in· elude bruststroke, backstroke, freestyle and individual medley. Only students liv- ing within the Laguna Beach Unified Schocd District are ellg!bJe to enter. F.atry forms may be obtained from the department at 175 N. Coast Highway and must be returned not later Otan 5 p.m. on Thursday. Further tnfonnaUon may be obtained by call1ng tbe department at 414-llU at. 41. • •• Narcotics Class ~lated Tollight '. The second session or a m.inl-coorse on J)a.rcotics and dangerous drugs will be liiield al 7:30 p.m. Wedne3day in the tture ball at Mission Viejo High School. The course, being SponJOred by' tbe stin Union High. School District, this feek will reatw-e Dick· Schmlft~ a jtiannacist, speaiina on the physio}ogical tffect.s of drugs. ! The lG-weei. class meell e a ch ~tdnesday evening from 7:30 o'clock to di30 and is open to all interested. r• ident.J of the Saddltback Valley. A ferent speaker is featured each. week an effort by the school district to iiform the community of th.e various a&pects of I.he drug problem ·and what ~ be done about It. :1'turder Defense Ends · :· SAN OJEGO (AP) -The defense tested Jls case today in the trial of Carl Riggs, accused of murdering a po~ice of· beer outside a go-go bar, after caHrng on· !Y four witnesses. OIANel CO.A.IT DAILY PILOT Cl~HCi:! COAST PUILISHIN~ COMl'A>IY Jtob.rt N. Wo•• "'""*°" 11111 py11l,lln' J1tk •• C11tl1'f Vic9 Pr"lollnll .... 04...,.11 Mtfll"' Thtfl'IOI l<tlYil ElllOI' . · l !lo"''' A. Mu•1'hit1• Mon1e1"9 Ed•ftlr C!l11111 H. L~o1 Ric~1•I I'. Nill AUlllfft, ,,._,~ Elllon Lq11111 .._. Offlc• 2ll For11t Anl'IW• M1ilin9 odd1•u: P.O. lo•.,,, '2652 s .. ·a.-1e Offke 305 Horth El Cunln• ll11I, '2672 _o...,. C.11 ~•: »o Wftl ltt Slrttt ~ N_.r tllKtli lW H-1 •owi.t1..., t!Vl'llll'IOIOll IN<~: 11'1i •udl .... ~,., ..... _,_ --.~-- ' -~ - Senate Approval Seen Early Next Week B7 L PETER KRIEG Of tlrr9 Otillr 'lltl Sith SACRAMENTO -The Senate Rules Commit.tee this morning unanimously ap- proved the controversial Newport Beach freeway charter amendment. The Jni!asure will go lD the Senate fioor early nei:t week. State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenlt:r (R-Newport Beach) 1aid this morning. Tbe amendment v.·as rautied by the Auembly Tuesday on a 56 to 2 vote. A spokeaman for Sen. Carpenter in· dicated there Cl little opposition, if any, ei:pected, when the amendment comes to 1 volt:. "Undoubtedly there are legal questions tnat will have to be ground out in the courts," he said. "But it isn't the Legis lature's prerogative 10 determine the con- stituUonallty of this charter amend· meot." A legislative. cqunsel had reported to ' U1e Assembly committee that if tbe amendment were tested ln court, it likely would be re}ected because residents of • municipality do not have authority over stat ewide matters, such as freeways. Service Station Hearing Slated Tonigl1t in Thguna ' . . The council originalJy was supposed to CAKE CUTTING MARKS FIRST EASTER S~LS JUNIOR 'UNIT Suwn Bayliff cf El Toro and John Mawhinney Sh•re Swett St•rt Where approved, it will require ~ Newport City Councll to conduct votes of the people before It can sign future agreements on the route o,f any freeway through the clty. The cities of Huntington Beach and C:O.ta Mesa had prtRnted strong op- paallion to the meQUre as jt swept through the Assembly Tuesday. A public hearing on a conlroversial proposal to build a new service .station at the northern entry to Laguna Beach will head the agenda at the City Council's 7:30 meeting tonight. fi x the hearing date tonight, but Mayor Richard Goldberg Indicated earlier t,his week that he would prefer to delay any hearing. until the fate of the lnltiaUvt agairuit'htkh rise has been determined. Threat to U.S~ Copters The city councils of both communities Monday nleht adopted resolutions urging legislative rejection of the measure. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) had introduced the resolution, telling the Rules Committee or the lower house, "Newport Beach voters have made their point very loud and clear." Resident Fred C. Kibbey has tiled an appeal of the action of the city Planning C-Ornmission in granting the Standard Oil Company a conditional use pennit for the structure at 1251 N. Coast Highway. Thomas to. File I Told in Ghost Operation The permit was granted after the oil company had been required by the com- mission to submit a new design more in keeping with the character of Laguna Beach. Campaign · Cost ]'ah Immediately: SAIGON (UPI) -Brig. Gen. Vu Van Gisi, commanding general of an el'nbryo operation into the A Sh.au Valley, warned today that the Communisls have brough.t in 37 and 23 mm antiaircraft guns which wt>uld pase a high. level of danger for U.S. Laguna Cites Glass Recycling Success1 Story . . A Laguna Beach civic leader and 1Jau Industry execuUve declared today -on the eve of the second Earth Day ecology observance -tbat &lus recycling ll a •mashing succes!. Paul Grlem ol 2107 Ocean Way made his ent.busiutic comments from Anchor4 Hoc:klng CorporaUon headquarters 1n l..DI Angelea. The Soutbm c.lifornla Glau Rttlam- atJon Program is also celebr1Un1 it.I llNt birthday on Earth Day. Oldest and mot:t ruccessfu1 in the in- dustry-wide reclamaUon project, tbt 1"o Ailli;eles pfo«tlO!tbqaa u an -bnmt to ... how !lit public would "'pood. The resporuie was lmprealtve. To date, Soutblanden have contrlbuled. more than fO iil&ion Uled c:: l>otqtl and jars -en0ugb to n a line !!! garl>age t:ueu eight mllea I -Griem aald. Griem Is chairman of the Western Public Allain Committee o! tbe Gius Container Manufacturers Institute, 11 we.ll as being 1 lofllUme director of the Laguna Beach Festtyal of Arts. "The tremendous support. we .have received from "SouUiern Califor nia residents In our first year lndlc:atea lbe public strongly endorses the concept of recycling of wute mateiaL!," be uid. Success of the Los Angeles project led. the national industry institute to extend it acrou America, with 100 plant.! in 25 states recycling more than a quarter billion containers. Individuals and nonprofit organizations are p8.id 8 penny per pound for used glau contalners. The eight centers in the Sooth.land h.ave paid out $250.000 In this period, which means 25 milli on pounds of glass normally processed as garbage and en· ding up as landfill or litter ls recycled. Thousands of community ecology groups have assisted by setting up localized glass reclamation point.!. The Southern California G 1 ass Reclamation Program's cloaest depol!lit point for Orange County residents Is Kerr Glass Mfg. Corporation, l22t E. St. Andrew's Place, Santa Ana. Planners Okay Art-A-Fair Bid For Use Perm.it Laguna Beach's annual Art·A·Fair, a predominantl y traditional summer art exhibition received the blessing of .the Laguna Planning Commission Monday night. ·eomnUJsloners found everything in order for t.he show and readily approved the temporary use permit request from the Laguna Beach Fine A,ls Assocl1Uo11. The show will run July 16 through August 29, aJong with the Festival of Art! and Sawdust Festival. · Art·A·F'air wiU again be held 1t 346 N. Coast Hl.ghw1y ln the Art Colony's famed "GalJery .Row.'' Jn other action, the commission: -CooUnued v 1 r t 1 n c e proceedings ln.iti•ted by Rorer lifcErland, 446 Jlolly St., to con struct an Addition to his slnile famil y dweUing. Noting that the addJUon would not allow suUJclent aide. yants. planners asked McErlane to 0>me ~k at a later d1te wllh revised plans which would. allow for lhe side yards. -OC<:lded th•l a ttmporary use permit applJcatlon by Barwick Tmports to use a Jot at 96S Glenneyere St,, for automobile 11t.orage. would best be handled lhrough a variance procedure, and Jnstructtd the fit.arr to notice the -proposed use with n'arby prope_rt1 owners before It cornea up at the next regu lar meeting . beUcopter pilotf there. Giai said American and South Viet· namese troops were mounting the opera- tion to drive the communi!'ts out of South Vietnam's two nortbemmost prov1nct1. But aU-tndications were that the open· tioo was not yet under way, .although President Nguyen Van;'I'hl.eu announced on Saturday It had starjed. U.S. m!Utary spotesm~ said no U.S. "combat troops" were .ln operation in the valley which stretches from the Hue area we1tward to tbt border of Laoi. U.S. military sources uJd Am.ericai;i recon- nal.Jaance units bad been moving In and out of the vaDey in battalion ltren,th (800 men) to feel out CommunM defensea. Glal and Ill!~ military spoktJmen 11ld there had been no major contact Jn the moll'l than one-week~ld ghost operation. Military eourtes aa.ld the reconnaissance teama, .lncladln1 AmerlcUJ and com- pany-•lud Saigon troops, had run Into tbe flnt heavy fighting in the valley. The charter amendment w a s overwhelmlngly fpproved in a special Newport 'Beach election March 9. "They don 't want a freeway ruining their community," Badbam .said. "They are saying they don't lihe wh.at the City Council has done and tilling them don 't do it again without a referendum." By a similar land~lide vote In that same election. residents had told the council to rescind the existing agreement with. the state on the route of the Pacific Coast Freeway through Corona de! Mar. Badham sald the charter amendment, and perha ps even the rescission, may eventuaUy be decided by the courts. School Buses All Rolling Out For Safety Week Glal did appear certain of the dangers to American hellcopt.en ei:pected to sup- p>rt the operation along with U.S. fighter-"Our byword is always safety," says bOmbers and BS2.s nported already in Laguna Beach school bus foreman Dick operition against suspected Communist Jones, "for we do carry the most troop eoncentratlons. precious cargo of all -your children." "The A Shau will be a dangerous But to remind rtsldents and motorists mlllkln for btllcopter support," be aald. ol the 1afety precautions taken, this is -bull! o1 tM ~Port wodt ll·t•• N1tl<>nal S.:hool Bus Safety w .. k. During pected to bt carrted out by pilot.I from the week, school buses wlll drive with However. the Citizens' Town Planning Association and a number of other groups and individuals have voiced opposition to the station, many mentioning possible damage to the famous Star Pine at the 'ite. The council a1ao will receive reports on closure of k>wer Park Avenue to create a pedestrian mall adjacent to the new library. Clolure bas been requested by the Friends of the Library with support of the Civic League. The Downtown Buslne11s Asaociation opposes the closure and reporlll from city departments also will be received. "lbe report of the Main Beach com- mlttee will be fonna11y received by the council, whlcb heard the matertaJ ill study sesllon Jut week, and It is ex· pecttd that two council representaUves will be appointed to work with the Festival of Arts on rt-negotiation ef th.e resUval lease. Abo on the agenda are revised monthly ~ports from the police. fire and building departments, a propotal for a new bicy- cling program by Cycology Workahops and a resoluUon authoriziJig reconstruc- tion of flood~amaged retaining walls on High Drive and Poplar Street. The evening's agenda does not schedule setting of a hearing date on the CR ( oo<Vlllerdoi;eaidep~al>tt._ .z 9 ~ e lo r Wac!ifronf h6W devtl&i:ment. Trustee-elect WUliam trhQmas of 1he Laguna Beach Unified 'School Dis~t said today he will file an account tif hls campaign expenditures with the county ele'ctions office immediately in order lo take his new post al the nea:t regular board meeting. Thomas was elected by a wide tnargin Tuesday to the unexpired two yeafs of a tenn vacated by the formal resignii\ion Monday of Trustee William Wllcoi:en. Wilcoxen had announced far in a4Vapee of bis intention to resign so that bis 'Hat could be filled at the .i:egular School boar.d election rath.er than ~t a ij:>echal elect!on. Thomas may not take ~ place-QD tbe five-member board until bi bas deDiered an itemized account of h.is campaign ex- penditures to Orange Coun~y elecUons of· ficials. tr he [iles by Tbur&day, he may be seated at th.e April 27 meeting of the board. Robert Leighton ' Rites Conducted the U.S_ 101.ll Airborne Dlvl1lon. Pllota their headlighlll on to remind motorists Of Funeral services for Fairview State alrudy have reported taking .fire from the speclal observance. Phil d } hi B 9 mbunUlntop po.s!Uona M tbey 'ttew near In addition a bus wili be on display at a e P a OJ, , Hospital nursing supervltor Robert F. the vaUex ft001'1 1}le .,O. f1rtn1 dowu 1t Albertson'• Market parking lot, 900 S. Leighton, who died April ' 10, have beell them. . Coast Highway, from JO a.rn. to 2 p.m. Slain in Gang war held Jn his home lllate or Massachusetts. Glal, deputy commander of the South for the ei:amlnatlon or residents through. He was 38 and had served at the Costa Vietnamese lit Infantry Division, 1atd Friday. PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Rafael San. l\.fesa facility !or t.he mentally retarded the A Shau was "not ID exclu!lve In Laguna Beach 1,578 students are t!ago, 9, was shot in the back and killed eight years, after ""ork at Agnew Stall target." carried dally to and from school and all Tuesday night in a street in front of hi! Hospital and at medical centers ia "In this operation, we will go anywhere drivers attend safety meeting once a home. Pollce said he was an apparent in· Massachusetts. ftom the Demilitarized Zone {DMZ) on morilh to remind them of their nocent victim of tetnaged gang warfare. Mr. Leighton, who lived at 258% Costa down to tbe' A Shau," he 1ald. '?be lrtt responsibility. Before becoming a bus Poll~ said the area was populated by ri1esa St .. Costa Mesa, is survived by hla Glat. menUooed takes in a 7S.mlle 1trlp driver, a person must undergo 40 hours of teenaged gangs, chief of which were the mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Leighton, and a along the Laotian border. training In addition to other qualifica4 "8th and Dlamond" and "Zulu Nation" sister, Mrs. Janice Lerscb, bOlh of Glal aald the 1dea of the operat!on was; tions . gangs. Scituate, Mass. to force elements of th?'ff North Viet· j-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-----------i;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; namese divisions and four independent M'otf11•.-.i reg~ettls . out of Sout!J Vietnam"s Mrthem provinces, Quang Tri and Thua 'llllea. ~'The operatlon 1J designed to clear out everything from the DMZ t.o Hal Van Pus," Giai said. Hai Van is a coutal mountain pass eight mJla north of Da Nang . An allied air observer reported seeln& • baltalion-112ed U.S. unlt in the valley, a Communist stronghold for mare th.an 2.1> years. Mllitai-y source! said more than one battalion-sized American unlt wu operating in the "reconnaisllance in fQrce " mission iil the valley, Joaquin Board Discuss Music, Vandals Tonight Topics ranging from vandalism to ln- i;trumental muaie will confront San JOI· quin Elementary School District trustees at tonight'• 7 o'clock meeting in the Dlstrk:t Anuet, lf«JO Sand Canyon Road, Eaat Irvine. The results of a questionnaire to determine if parenta want an ifi.. strumental mwlc program in the elementary schools will be presented. 'Mle que.stlonnaire was circulated district.wide by members of the Mlnlon Viejo High School Music;: Boosters Club. 'Mle group supports the relnstattment of 1 music program In the fourth, flftb and sixth grades which wu tall.en out of the Instructional program u an economy measure. AllO on I.he agenda will bl a flr1t readin;: of a Policy on vand1Usm, a measure js de1lgned to protect the di.strict The boud abo will approve eourm to be taught in summer scbool and w!U hear 11 report on the progress of the un1nc1t1on study being conducted .loinlly by San Joa- quin, 'I\l!tin Elementary, Tr ab u co Elelllenluy and Tustin Hlgb School Jli1trlcts. Queen Turns 45 i,ONDON (UPI) -Queen El111beih turned 45 today,, quietly obu:rvlng the oc- c1slon with her family amidst prepar1- llons for 1 nine-day C1n1dlan vlllt scheduled to 1t.lrt May 3: - GEM TALK TODAY by .LC. HUMPHllD THE COLORFUL WORLD OF PEARLS Highly p r I z e d In the world of gems, pearls are chic, 1mart, and treasured particularly b e c a u • e they ao beautifully enhance a W<>- man's ensemble no matter wbat the occasipn. T h e y compliment clothing for every affair, from a simple sweater to the most glam- orous evening g o w n, an~ do so with a quiet dignity all thm own. We usually assi>date white with the pearl, and many do not know that pearls come in a variety of glowing colors which depend. upon the I n c a I It y In which they are found. From the Persian Gull c o m • pearls with a creamy sbeeen, and from Australia we receive pearls with a beautlful yellow cast. Much closer to home, from tbe Gulla: of California and Mexico, come the rare a n d exceedingly expensive Black pearlt, who>e rich metallic apr.arance make them more vatu~. ab e than any otbera. We carry a v a r I et y of th,re gems, and will gladly a11llt you fii your 1 e I e c t I o n of pearls Lo match both your taate and your budget. Come in soon. We're open dally, from 9:!IO to 5:!!0, Fridays 'til 8:!IO. • let ~ ahead. one hour .OOMEG)\ tn the rnomtnh ttt1knyou lo 1dJu11 yourw1leh to DtYlloh'a Stvlng1 Tlmt, ••k YQUtttll; 11It1ccurate? St}'1t1h? .. ;· Dtptndabl1? II can be 1ll lh•lt .•• 1nd more ••• ii It'• &l'l 'J OmtQt. Llkt thl• Omt;• Const1llatlon ChroMm111r. , • Ac:cur•tt? Omega Chronomtters-carry • Swlas Ob .. rvstort certlfle1lt tor •c:cur1cy awarded only 1ntr 115-d1y 1trlt1 f cf gruel rig l1bor1tory 11111. Stylist!? Look at tht handsomttt cratttd 111rn1t1111 .. 1ct1t,1nd !Ht rugged good lookt of th• m1tcP'llng bitc•ltl Dtptndtbl•? II'• •n Omegs, Isn't It? Slop In tod•Y i nd ltl ut 1how you I hit, •nd olhtrl In our wide MIKUon ol Omega w1tehts, from MS .too't'llr $1000. J. C. JlumphrieJ Jewefel'.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST .II MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANl<AMllllCAllD-MASffll CHAIUSE 7' Yf.AlS IN SAMI ~OCATION rHOkl 14t·J401 I I , San Clemenie Capisirano EDITI ON . .. ,. VOL M, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. y.'EDNESDAY, APRI~ 21', 1971' . ' . • ' • + • ·- ... ' . Desert Traveler Tracl{ing .Down Big· FoQter By JORN VALTERZA Of tfll 0.1" 1'1111 Stiff Joel Hurd of San Clemenle crossed tbe baking wastea of Death Valley last sum· mer, lowing 1 makeshift miniature covered wagon behind him-all In the in- terest of the environment. Now the bewhiskered lover of man's relation to nature is willing to trade that wagon for the puriuit of a new dream . A bizarre one linked to the legend ·or Sll!quatch (oi; Big Foot) -the man-bea~t which some say roam! parts of the western wilderness. Hurd bu organir.ed a one-man ouUit known as Unidenuiied Primates with the resolute goal ot finding a living member of the Big Foot lea:end which has persisted in the Pacific Northwest for centuries. The Death Valley voyager ls deadly serioqs about his latest goal, having com· piled every available !Crap of In· fOrmation about the beast which reports say weighs hundreds of pounds and walk.5 like a man. Tbe data is substantial, Dozens of persons swear they have seen a Sasquat.ch, Hurd said. In fact the Klamatb River county o( ' Northern California bu b e c o m e somewhat of a tourist alt(action.beeause of the legends and reported sightings of the beast.. Hurd has copies of pictures reputed to show th~ anlrnaL Men have made plaster casts of footprints found. in the Northwest-also reputed to be the tracks of Big Foot feet .Hurd1s rea.90ns tor findina: the monster stem from the same baste philosophy which drove him across Death Valley. "It aH boilS .down to the fascination with the dream of man living in harmony with his environment," be explained. Big Foot, Hurd added, is an example of a man-like creature living in harmony wt1b nahn for lbo\Lsands of yean. Hurd never uses the words "if'' in bis zealous COlfVetAU0111 about the being. '"J't!ey .do e.1ist; too many people have proven It for any doubls to stay in my mind." Hurd's project, he said, ls a mixture of sifting and gathering facts about the Big Foot phenomenon, and plaMing -a trip-- pos&lbly with one of several other "Sas-- quat.ch Hunters -to actually find an ex· ample cf the giant, proving once and for all that they exist. His quest. be said, has even taken him to Sao Diego County where · an affiuent All Four Bond Issues • Lose Ill -San Clemente Nixon Sets Coast Trip April 30 Pnaldeot Nlioo-Wlll orr!fe tn loutliinl Oruge CoW>ty AJlrll Jll for a &ala ~of a retamlnl lladie ~vllloo et Camp 'hndl<too end aeverlf days of rest and ,..rt, It "" lwntd b)o the DAILY PILOT today. 'l\ie President, who ·paid lJls last visit lo the South ea.st earlier thb month, was reportedl y planning a atay lasting perhaps a week, reliable-aources in· dicated. Mr. NiJ:on's aides reported earlier this weew that. a trip west had been con- 1idered, but did not gjve times or ~ tx· petted duration of the stay at La Casa Pacifica. Fanfare has been empbafued how· ever, over the arrival of the lst Marine Division from Vietnam, a troop move- ment expected to begin this weekend as the first Leatherneck! report for pro- cessing at camp Pendleton. The President's aide3 have hinted that Nixon's formal &reeling of the Marines at the base would be a public occasion. Woclated Press dispatches mentioned th.e-lchance of conferences with governors during the President's stay in San Clemente. 'nie wire service specaulated that lhe trip would take the President out of the naUon's capital during a period when particularly h e a t e d demonstrations agWl lhe Vietnam was w e r e being planned. Iiadications of a return date by the PrMident and his entourage center around May 7 when the chief executive it committed to attend a a a I u t e • t o • agriculture diMer, followed by the an· null diMer for the White House Press: Cmpa a day later. Aleutians Shake PALMER, Alaska CAP) - A strong earthquake measuring 6.3 on the Richter acale was recorded 120 miles llOUth of Cold Bay in the Aleutian lslan&I Tuesday night, the National Oceans Observatory reported. In~umhents Fall Capo Voters Oust Three of Four In the Capistrano Unified School Di.strict election, incumbenta: "Were ousted from three out of four trustee areas. Only incumbent to retain· bis a.at in the district was. yetertnpian. ~-. 'Robert Bplley, who-rn ~ bi ,.,.,. area 2. In~ .,.. I, ~B~ jnl&f defeated· Incumbent Hmodit Bu 11 • Gordon L. Peterson woo,tfer incumbent Stanley C. Kelley In tnfalff erea I and George L. White di!reattd Jncumbent Nofie "Famularo io·trustee trei 5. In area 4, Robert Dahlberg defeated five other candidates lot the two-year unexpired--term of Toni Winget, who resi~. Inlily, 31-year-old pastor of St. Andrew's Methodist Church, ~ived 318 votes ln ana 1, ta defeat Bull who won 275. Runnersup in att:a 1 were William R. Enquist with 169 votes and Rice D, Olivet with 58. Beasley, running unopposed, logged 582 votes. Peterson, 34-year-old atlomef, tooi Q!e llU I -hip 'lljth -1 VO~ !'l!l'., pmd -~·· :di.'l\111'• ner-up Campbell had 1111-voi ... Area 5 winner 'fll!lte, lt <f.,_<g retired buaiDHSatan who became a ~~~'~ set.mg In tile. Navy In World Warµ; )Of8ed 8t4 votes to defe~t Nooe Famularo. with 201 and Jla)'lllond Lee Estrada wit,h 52. Dahlberg, 48, former superintendent of the Tustin High ScJwol District, was an easy winoer of the two-year term in area 4 with 157 votes. other candidates for the short term were Kei\h L. Jensen with 4 votes: Alfonso F. Jiminez, 29; Marvin W. Renfro. 29 ; John P. Serences, 14 and Orlando S. TosdalJ 11. I.aird Cites Russ ICBM Buildup, Threat to U.S. NEW YORK (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said today the Soviet Union had 1tarted building a new. extensive ICBM system which "must be of major concern" to the United States. In view of this, he sald, the United States might be forced to take "ad- ditional offsetting acUons" if the Strat.egic Arms Limitations Ta I ks (SALT) in Vienna fail to produce an agreement Jn a prepared speech to the 85th Annual Convention of the Am erican Newspapers Publishera Aslociation (ANPAJ, Laird recaUed that one year ago he told another meeUng of tdltors that he feared the United States might find Itself Jn a se- cond rate strategic poaiUon by the mid· 1970s. ''I l'fil"el to report today -that nothing has happened in the intervening 12 months to Jessen that coocem," he said. "Quite the opposite ii true." Laird said that In December and January it appeared the Soviet Union was slowing its rapid deployment of Intercon· tinental BalllsUc Ml3slles (!CBMJ) alter installlng about 400 more than the 1,054 land based ICBMs that the United States has. He a d de d tflat in February a n d March, a new type of missile silo had been detected In Russia that raised fears of a new ICBM program. "More recent evidence confirm.s the 11>bering fact that the Soviet umon ls is- volved in a new -and apparenUy ex· tensive -ICBM construction program," Laird said. "~ new ICBM constniction effort coupled with additional momentum hi. the strategic defensive area -all clearly planned months ago -must bf! of major concern.'' Laird said the Rll!!ians also were "rl!pid.ly closing the gap" in submarlne based missiles. an area where today the United States has had a clear advantage. .. We sincerely hope for convµidng pro- gresa in SALT," Laird said. "But falling such progress I muat tell you today that the renewed Soviet strategic weapons momentum may confront us with the need for additionaJ offsetting U.S. ac· lions.''· Clubhouse Project OK Seen &an Oemen~s voters ~ all four. -~ ~ ~· •If/ parl "' lilo11'lllllloo<IOu. ~ laue. 'lltll Tiii* oa the heels of IM lalhri ti tile folll' projtcll.·dly ..... c11men lotillht are expected to go ahead anyway on the · most popular project of the four, Mayor Walter Evans said today 'be er· pecb a cmtr.act to be signed with the lowest bid~r on the community clubhouse replacement project..· · ~- The $400,000 bond item covtrfng the clubhouse received a majority of aye votes, but not enough to arant tbe band pie. · Evans 1aid "he expected the council to approve a building contract with ·planning commissioner Ray McCaslin, a local buiil!er, then "negotiate to bring the coils down." The clubhouse project. bid was in th• range of $230,000 for tbe building less furnishings. All but one of the seven combined precincts in the city have reported their vote. The lone pre<:inct which has not yet reported "has no chance of substantially altering the figW"es," said one member of the city clerk's staff, The reporting precincts give this unof· licial tally: -Proposition A, the clubhouse ls:!:ue, logged l ,528 yes and 1,102 no. -Proposition B, a measure for a youth recreation center, drew 1,166 aye votes and 1,469 against. -Proposition C. neighborhood parks: deve1opment, 1,181 ayes and 1,375 against. -Proposition D, improvement of beach facilltle.s and acceis, registered 1,359 yea: votes and 1,218 against. An estimate of the voter turnout in the ncnaUon election combined. with trustee elections was set at about 45 percent of the 7,100 eligible registered voters. Clerk's aides 1.aid the lone precinct which has not yet reported, Number 71· 002, is expected to complete tallfing later this afternoon. Most Of the combined precincts reported tough times during the tallying late Tuesday night and early today. Opposes Fund Grant Some of the totals did not reach the cJ. ty clerk's office until after dawn today. The exceuivt number of paget in tlltt elecUon data wu blamed for the counUng del•YB· Battin Hits 'Police Snoop~ Pendleton Hospital Bid Awarded to Firm SUperviaors' Chairman Robert W. Bal· Un objected Tuuday to 1 federal-local 11"1.ftl of $164,000 to finance an Orange County la• enforcement intelligence unit 1teceuse he pld he had been subjected to police snooplng tactics. "I have been subjected to some of this myself," boaaid ... My plact of resldence na JnvesUaated when l ran fat offire in 1968 ind someooe took mov~ of aome pollUcal mtellngs 1 atl~nded." Dist. Atty. c.cJI Jlicil •aroed thal Ba~ Un's place of residence wu checked out is $42,'89. in 1968 because a citiun had oompl1ihed The intelligence units: grant. WIS one of A Beverly Hills conttacting firm h;;s thal ht: did not have lea:al residence in the two approved by the board Tuuday won the contract to build camp first supervilorl•l dllfrict in which he under the federal ' 1crvernment'1 C.rime .P~eWn'1 new 60!>-bt!! .Na.~al. Hospital WU running fO< office. and Sale Streeta laWI. . . ;at"r cOll of ltU nulllon. ' . "We were bound to run down the com-The other was a request ror fl55,000-ln !l"!"tClc~~Rosa and Filher, lric., plaint to see If It had merit.." Hiclu ex. federal and local funds te .f\nance. rlor:-. it ihlil.~ i1~act for the. ~atrurj,lqn plained. "'\' for t11e.010v1toi ,l-~' -...qtrol l!!'inllll and equ;pineot,IJ!1der • fl tlle'M'I ~. "'1!ch wtll be-,...ay nothing ":abo'Jt lhem." • mu'tua1 1¥1 aueemenL betWffA.)tbe eoun-1tOr ·~Jn about nine months, 'J'ht Jaw enforcement inlelllgence grant \y add 22 or tbe-25 cfUe1. • ' Mafine es~ said. · will be used t.o finances. central office for The county particlpaUon wal m~e The n ~~~pita!' .complex will intelligence units In the county. The coun-contingent upon the cities ~Ing tbelr ~ep1"8 the.prT Naval Hospll.al atrtbe t,y•1 and c!Ues' eharo of lhe 1114,000 total 1har1 of lhe local !30,000 allolmeoL hu1e fb.,. • ' . p<oftl!iooal man aasertedly bu proof thtt something man·llke and bUge roams around his wlldemesa ranch. "But the 11\ln," Hurd ezplalned, flcouJd lop everythipg If lie be_gan to talk will· lngly •bout whal he hq ... n. PeoPI• would think he is crazy." _ Dozens ·ot other enmpies-exist .of persons who have seen : the Big Foot p}\enomenon and wert afraid of rkUcule If \he~ spoke. o/ the lncldl!lt.. , .''People .,. awfully roluctanl to talk about It," Hurd 11ld. To skeptics, Hurd stresses he 11 no· drinker. In fact lie IJ • bealth food advocate. HJi • • ' 4 ' . . . . t ' ' J DAU:Y.:,...0,. Stiff ..... WAGON ,FOR SALE AND;NEW'HOltllONS 1'0·CONQUER .... Hurd .With 'l•lllc Call ·Dfl I .It' Pilot'.• Poiot or~_~C'a.n8 "' . ,,. . ' ·:);:Capo Co~rs-~llp w!lo aaJd you canl make .nioiicy 0 Col• ~·~Ille ... l_ald lhe·boya Jectlni empty' aluminum beer .cam? -• 1wlll •nur&ufl' the trees Student. et San Juan Elemeniarr' tl>l:wtl> tltO 1•••"·to·mue 1Ute:they Uva SChoo11ir1 San Juan.Caplstr~ pro~ the . ~-~ . l .•.• 1· ,: • Idea .wrong recently, with the ·sale c:>f 11attPllnUnr61f ·llao1~'ft'Wk 1he: 116&.25 worth of the llgtil~lght,Cfft!, _ llarl j,l•oiiotJier' <b'lvOi lor "'°'" ""ap Thia w .. t they announced that eomt1'f alllll)lnluni , the fiinds ha""· bought 20 '1Uk-bak and 10 · .~wllli(lg~fi>,,doolt..1<t•P• ol lhe euca!JPIU• tr.., which wlli bt ,planted by metal Diay brJnc the'dpoetlool ta Ibo i.Qdlvidual ·classes Friday on t be-xhool1betMeen ii am: ,M noon. playground next to the San Diego 'l'be, ellllr•• ~ and tree-pf anting Freow1y. <!ri .. 1bu<-~by Iba .Parent :Th• ,.ung•~·· responsibillty for ·th.. ~ I.eei\le o1.ui.ac11oo1. It ii led by trees will not end there. ~ APJrre, Supreme Court Upholds Old DC Abortion Statute WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court in the first of an expected series of rulings on abortion laws upheld today a . 70-year'1hf Dlslilct of C.Olumbla 1tatute . which had been challenged as too vague. ren E. "Burger · en.! 'Jus11¢ts ·Jotm M. Harlan, Byron It.-White ·and HMry A. Blacimun. The language in question is similar to . that ini• number of ·other states. Tb"• court carefully stipuJated that fDCl.ay'1 ruling de~t only with the issue of whether the J.aw wai unconstltutioaallt. vague. Blacl• polnlel("111t In 'bis dllculslon of the .va-l!'!'f ~!'!he. D!Jtrlct of Colwnbla· otatute.--'<d In !SOI-did not outlaw au .•bcrUOnl, only ~ not performed Wldef Ille' dlrtdloo· or • com- ~ Hcenled. phyilden;' and thole not neCeaaaey~to.;pret«ve1tM,IDOU14!t!• 1.i.f1 or bealtb. The challenged Ianguage-1ay1 thal~an abortion ii legally permissible only if· "nec:essary for tbe preservation-of tbe- mother't life or health." The vote on upholding the language was -· ' .~ . ·C.m 5 to 2. The court divided, 5 to 4, on -~~ • whether It 1hould· have uaumed dllect · SUMr-·aklfe. "!fll 'be' beet .wfth jurladlcUon ol lhe caae. :us on Thllfllll1> .with olilhUy The reaJOn for confining the 1;1Ur1g war:mfr· · tempen~ ·m · store. within namlw bounds was that Federal , Look for .. a .JiJ r-•i'ot' 81· degret.8 Judge Gerhard A. a...u reUed on the •lonr-Uie,coul'incl up·wn fUrtl> vagueoess ·r1Uonale whtn dismissing the · crJnlanct ,.. • ~ · · Indictment of Dr. Milan · Vulich, a · HJGm"J TOD",· ay Yugoalav JmmJgrant who has been &11'",-_.. n. crusading for more liberal ebortlm , ThdJ.: .Ut~ .~d(>!b ~rut .,,_ pollclt1. croochfftg . mtfo«o,._t,.. flkkll Cballenge1 of abort!On llatuta in pcu:k of g•""°'hu tol!n b~ fh• ae.verll 1tates are Oft the court's docket. · WCWddl1 Rtportf.r George z.n,., '1'be majorlly opinion by JuoHce Hugo <f<ll. c6til"""le' ii> hil' Pil<>I tog. L. Blad!, reverltd GeseU'1 ruling . thit ' book, Poge 9, ' · · · "· 6 law waa too vague. · ' , W~ 19'rtllit 11 -r=. Blacktllld Yuitclt't a~·had,... , :==.. . "•; -,. -,',' geated other'~ wl):y <t0ell11 actlOir . ~ c-,t ... ....,.. ,..,, 1hotitd be affirroed--fariinltlnCe, that. r, =,;-• ~ :,•:=, ~ the·iaw~wu!8f1r,mvail:a~otir.t~.,, •· <f ~-~ 1·e j .. ..._...., ,, !IP\ Blitk 11141''ohiW11>ere-it/iie ' '~·' ii • !:!i. "· If_;:. rd~ to luch cl•ll1\1 In Gdell1i opL;. ~ r• Dr."'L....,_ 1i nlOn, lhe su,..,.. Court viewed cll 111 • ' ~-:-:" .. ~ ~""'.""' "'ll holding 1lmpJy~thlt the statute wu void ; • , ~: · ~· ,..,: ror v1guene11. ' '""""' • ~ ..... tt-41 JolnlnJ Bl1Ct wert-Olferauouce.Wor-·· """""" • · -.. • ' ' ,. ~· ! f jt DAIL< PllOT SC Drive Aided By Teeners ' ... Oranae CoU11ly'1 rlrst Junior guild for youngsters 14 to 111 to support the Easter Sea1 Society has been fonned in El Toro. Susan lJayliff, 15, of El Toro and a student al Mission Viejo High School is prtsident of the grOup which is open to teena intua:ted in v.ol.unleering time tnd effort te lld phy1lc11l1 hlndlcapped children ud edulta, Eight young people have joined the El Toro Seals unit which plans as iU first activity a fundraising carwash. Proceeds will benefit the East.er Se a I Re.habililllion Center in Or•n1e. Memben· will work lflth handicapped children, provide cltrlCll help and work ln apeclal prqr1m1 in artl, cr1fll and recreation. A cake-cutting muked the approval of the group by the Ea1ter Seal Society of Orqe County. Society pre•ldent John R. MawhiMey presented the Seals with a charter pleque. Officers ot the charter unll are Tim Link. 15, vice president ; Laurie Brown, 14, secretary, and Tori Murphy, 15, t.realUJ'er. All art 1ludenll at Million Viejo Hl1h School. Anyone aged J4 to Ill interested In joining may call Mlss Bayliff at 830-4812. The croup rneeta twice each month. Swimming Meet In Laguna Beach Slated Saturday Tht aMull Laruna Be•ch Swim llletl, usulll.Y held UI the mldlt of winter, ha1 been ahlfted to a new d1te thtl year and wW be held at I a.m. Soturd'1 It lhe high ichool pool The event, apoltlOred by the RecnaUon Department, ii open te compeUUon by •tudenil In four dlvillon1 : hlJh IChool, junior hlah ochool, flfth and sllth 11'•der1 and younpifll'I up te the fourth lf•de. An entry feo of II allow• Heh porUcl- pant to enter up io tow-event., wblch JD.. elude brtutatroke, bacbtroke, freeatyle and lndlvidUll medley. OnJy studenta lJv~ Ing wllhln lhe Lquna Beach Unified School Diltrkt ore ellllbla te enter. Entry fon111 may be obtained from the department at 171 N. Coortl Hl""'•Y ond must be returned not later than S p.m. on Thursday. Fw1her information may be obtained by calling lhe department at iM--lW ell. 45. Narcotics Class Slated Tonight The 1econd 1e111lon of 1 mlnkourae on '. nareotlca and dan1erou!I drugs will be · held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in tht : let:ture hall at Mission Viejo High School. : 'Ille course, being 1po"8ored by tHe j Tu1Un Union High School Diltrlct, tbll' :: week will feature Dick Schmidt, 1 :: ph1rmaclrt. apeatJn& on the phy11iolo&ka1 : effects of drugs. : The JO.week clau meets t a c h ; ::e:y ;,ve~i;:n fro: ~~~ ~~~~te~ : ruldentl of the Sadd.leback Valley. A : different speaker is featured each wttk : in an effort by the school district to ; inform the community of the various : aspects of the drug prOblem and what ; can be done about It. ; Murder Defense Ends SAN DIEGO (Al') -Tht de!ense ; rested Its case today In the trial of Carl : Riggs , accused of murdering a poliet of- ' fleer outalde a a:o-ao bar, aJler cal\in1 on· ~ four wltne1ses. OIAN61 COAST ' DAllY PllOT OU.MO~ c,o.t.IT fUSl.ltMIHQ COM,AN't ••"•rt H. 'W1•<i Pr•lftnt •"" 'tlt!llMI' J ... ~ l . c.,,,., \'let ,,.IP'I, ~ o-.i #INttf' Tho111•t ICet'l'il a.ittt - 'f1i•"''' A. Mur,\i~• "" ........ £di .... Cl"rl11 H. leo1 Jl it1'1rd P. N1TI AHl<llfl, MtMt\!of £<1\ttn L .. , ....... Offk•. 2i2 F1r1Jt ,A.'1'1~111 M1ilir19 1tltlr1111 P.O •••••• ,, t2is2 IH Cl.-.. Offk• JOI N'1ttli ll C1111!~• 1111. tl671 OtMf Otflt" C..tt MH-t: >,» Wftl ••'I .It~ .... N.....-1 ·-~' UU H.-t ~-­H.-tlll9*' l~I 11'11 flKll·Nult'l'tt'll - • . - ' Route Vo.te 01( Set • Senate Approval Seen E~rly Next Week I}' L. Pll:TBR KRIEG Of .. Dttlr , ... , "'•" SACRAlllENTO -The Senate l\ules Committee lhll mornfns &lianimoully ap- i>roved the controvenlal Newport Beach tl'eeway charter amendment. The measure will go to the Senate fioor early next week, State Sen. Dennis E. Corpeni.r (R-Newport Beach) said lhi3 morning. Tho amendment WU rttilied by the Aaembly TUtlld1y on a 5e to 2 vote. A 1POkllmln for Sen. Carpenter In- dicated there ia llttle oppos.ltion, if any, expected, whe.n the amendment comes to • vote. '1Undoubtedly there are legal questions that will have to be ground out Jn the courl.a," he said. "But it isn't tbe Legislature'• preroa:atlve to determine the con· stituUonallty o( this , charter amend· ment." A legislative couuel bad reported lo the Assembly committee that if the amendment were tested in ~ it !Ur.dy would be rejected becauae resident.a: of a municipality do not have aut.borlty over statewide matters, such as freeways, Semce Station Hearing Slated Tonight in Thguna Where approved, It Will require the Newport Clty Council te conduct voteo ol the peoplt bf:fore It can llgn future aireements on the route of any treewalt A pubUc htartna on 11 controvenlal CAKE CUTTINO MARKS '1RST EASTIR SIALS JUNiOR UNIT Sunn 81yt iff of El Toro 1nlll John Mlwhlriney Share Sweet Start throua:h the city. proposal to buitd a new ae.rvlce 1tation at ' · The· c:ltJu of Huntington Beach and the northern entry to Laguna Beach wUt Coltl Meu had pruented strong o~ head the 1geoda at the City Council'• The counc11 ot1ifn111Y 11u auppooed te fix lhe hearing date !<>night;-bul l\layor Richard Goldbert indicated earlier this week: that he would prefer to di.lay any hearing until the fate of lhe inlliatlve agolnat high rise hll been determined. poaltJon to the mea1ure u It 1wept 7:30 meeti. ... torua .. t. through the .U..mbly Tueodoy. -.. ... Threat~ U.S~ Copwrs Told in Ghost Operation Tiie city counclll of bolh commun!Ues Reoldent Fred C. Klbbey hll 'Died on Mondly night adopted ruoluUona W'&inl appeal of Pie action of the city Plannlng leglsl1Uve rejectJon ol the mwure. Commllslon in 1ranllng the Standard 011 Auemblyman Robert E. Badham (J't. Company a conditional u~ permit for tho Newport Beach) bid· inl:roductd the structure at,1261 N. ~ut ffiihway. reaoiuUon, tenm, the Rulea C.Ommittee or The pennlt wu a:ranted aft,'r the oll the lower houff, ''Newport Beach voter• company had been required by the com· have made their point very loud and minion to submit a new destgri more In clear." keeping with the character of Laguna Thomas tQ File Campaign Cost Tab Immediately, SAIGON (UPI) -Brlr. Gen. Vu Von Gia!, comm1ndin1 1eneral of an embryo operation into the A Shiu V1llty, warned today that the Communh:ta hive brou1ht b1 37 and 23 mm antJalrcralt ;wia which would pose a bl(b level of dln(er for U.S. Laguna Cites Glass Recycling Success Story A LlgUlll Beach civic leader ~ .alua fnduatry e1ecutJve declared today -on the eve of the secood Earth Day ecolo1Y ob1ervance -that 1tau recycliq: ill a 111111hlnr IUCCell: Paul Griem "ol 2107 Ocean W11 made hiJ enthusluUc commenta from Anchor· HocldnJ Corpor1Uon beodquorten In Loa An1elu. · The Soothera California Gla51 Reclam- aUon Program 1' alto celebraUng it1 lint birthday OD Eortb Illy. Oldest and most 1Uc.cessrul tn the ln· dustry-wide rttlamation project, the Los Anaelea program beaan as 1n uperlment to ott how the public would ro1pond. The response wu lmpruslve. To date, Soulhlander1 have contributed more that' SO million used alaa.s bottles Ind jora -tnoulh te 'DU a line of garbage trucks eight mllea ton1 -Griem said. Griem ii chairman of the Western Public Affalra Commltlet of lht Glua Container Manufacturers lnstltute, 11 well u beinB 1 Jona:tlme director of the· Lagwla .Beach Festival of Arta. i "The tremendous 1Upport we have rKeived from Southern C a I I f o r n I a residenta in our. first year lndlcates tht public: ltrongly endorae1 the c:oncept of recyclina of waste matelall," he u.ld. Suceess of the Los Angele1 prt1jed led the national industry irutitute to attnd Jt across America, with 100 planll in 25 states recycling mort than a quart.er billion containers. Individuals and nonprofit organiutions are paid a penny per pound for used lillau contalners. The eight eenter1 in the S<llthland have paid out $250.000 in this -perlod, whieh means 25 million pounds of glass normally processed ill garbage and en· ding up as landfill or litter is recycled. Thouaands or commu.nlty ecology groups have asslsted by aetUng up localized glass reclamation points. The Southern California G 11 1 I Reclamation Program'• clo1eat depo11t point for Orange County res.ldenta 11 Kerr Glass Mfa. Corporation, 1221 E. St. Andrew's Place, Santa Ana. Planners Okay Art·A·Fair Bid For Use Permit Laguna Beach'• annual Art·A·Falr, a predominantly traditional summer art ethibilion received the ble1sln1 of the Laguna Plannlna: Comml11lon Monday night. Comtnlsalonen round everythlna ln order tor the .11how and readily approved the temporary uae permit requeat from tilt Wruna Beach Fine Art1 Anocl1Uo11. The 1how will run July ti throu1h AulUlt 29, aloni wllh the FuUvl.I of Artl and Sawduat Featlval, Art-A-Fair will again be held at S4' N. Cout. Hiahway in the Art Colony'a ftmed "Glllery !\ow." Jn other actJon, the cornm.luion : -ConUnutd var I an c • proceed In!' initJ1ted by Roaer McSJ'land, 44' Hol y St., to conitruct an add1Uon to his linal• fsmlty dwtlllnr. Notillr lhot lhl addlllon would nol a.now sufficient lidt yards, -pltMerl irtld McErlant· to come back at a later date with reviled plw which would allow for the sldt yll'd1. -Decided that 1 temporary uae perm it application by Barwick Importe to use a Joi. at MS Glenneyert St., for· automobile 1U1r1ae. would best be l\andltd throu1h 1 variance proctdurt, and inatructed th• 1taff to notice the proposed UH wllh llll!arby proptirtf owner1 befort It tom•• up al lhe next regular meellng. The charter amendment w a s Beach. helicopter pilots there. . ·-overwhelmingly approved in a apecial However, the Citizens' Town Planning Gia! said American and SouUl 'Vilt· Newport Beach elttlion March 9. AuoclaUon and a number of other11roups name1e troops were mounun;'tbi op1ra. '1They don't want a freew1y ruining and incUvktuals have voiced ~poa1tion to tlon to drive the communiltl out ol Soiith their community,'' Badham said. "They the staUon, many mentionlhg posllble Vietnam 'a two northtrnrno!t provi.nces. are aaylng they don't like what the Clly damage to the famous Star Pine· at 'the But all indicatiorui wen that the opera. Council has done and telling them don't 5ite. lion ·-•·-1w.,,,, ... i. do it again wllhout a referendum." The council also will receive reports on Presh~~ N;uff~ ~Thi~?·~ By a similar landBUde vote in that closure of klwer Park: Avenue to create a 04 Saturdly it bad •tarted. same election. resident.a: had told the pedestrian mall Adjacent to the new U.S. znU.itary •Pokllmm Aid no U.S. council to rescind the ei:Lsting 1greement libre.ry. Clo1ure haa been requested by "'combat troops" were ill operatk>O in.the with the ltlle on the route or the Pacific the Friends of the Ubrary with support valley which atretchel from the Hut &rel CoaJt Freeway through C.Orona de1 Mar. of the Civic League, The Downtown Westward to tht border of Laos. U.S. Badbam Pid the charter amendment, Bulnes• AuociaUOn opposes the closure military sources flaid American recon-and perhaps even the rescission, may and reports from city deparimenls also naissance units had betn moving in and eventually be decided by the courts. will be received. out of the valley in bat~liop itrength (BOO The report of the 11ain Beach com- men) to feel out Communlat defenaei. miltee will be formally received by the Glai and allied mtUtary rpokNDlen ••id School Buses council, vohich heard the material in there hid beerl no mijor contact tn the study session last week, and Jt is el· mort than one-week-old ghost operation. pected that two council representaU~es Miiitary sources said the recoMaissance All Rolling Out will bt appointed to work with the teams, includina AmericUJ and com· Fesllval of Artl on rt·nea:oUaUon of the -e festival lease. pany-sittd Saigon troops, htd run into the first heavy fighlinl ln the valley. F S £ t W k Also on the agenda are revised monthly Giai did appear cert•in of the dangers Of 8 e y ee reports from !..be police, fire and bullding to American helicopters expected to sup-department., a proposal for a new blcy. port the operation along wttb U.S. ftihter. ''Our by~·ord is always safety,'' says cling pr'ogram by Cycology Workshops bombers and BS21 reported already tn t.a1una Beach school bus foreman Dick and 1 resolution aulhoriii11g reconstruc- .Truate&-elect William Tbomar tl tbe Laguna Beach Unified School lltllrlct aald lodly be will file an account tf hlr canwaign expeuditures with the COWllY elections office immediately In order to take his new post at the ne1L regular board meeting. · .Tbomas wu elect.ed by a wide mar&fn Tuesday to the uneqlred two year• of a term vacated by the formal rtsllnation Mcinday of Trustee William Wilcoxen. Wilcoxen had announced far in advance of Pis intention to resign so that his se at i:ouJd-be filled at pie regular school board election ra~her than at a apeCial electiM. Ttwmas ,may uot take his plact on tbe t;vO.member l>oard un!U be ~u delivered an itemized aceount or bis campalgb ex· penditures to Orange County elections ot• ficials . Jf he rnea by Thursday, he may be seated at the April 27 meettna of the boi1rd. operation agllnlt 11.11pected Omununllt Jones, ''for we do carry the mOlt lion of flood~maged retaining walls on troop concentrations. precious cargo of all -your children." High Drive aDd Poplar Street. R hert T -• ht "The A Shau will be a dangerous But to remind residents and motoritls Tht eveJtlni't agenda does not schedule 0 J...Je}g 0fi ml.Ilion for helicopter aupport," he l&ld. of the 1afety precautions taken, thil ii setting or • hearing date on the CR U I •-•-i f k. Durln (commercial·resldentlal) ion e Io r ~ C The bulk of tbe Wpport -· II ex· Na ona ~~ BUJ Sa ety Wee g )>eacblronl l>otet development. tes _.ond UCted peetod to be earrted out by pllolo from tilt week, ocbool buses will drive wilh , j 1 ; r , , 1 the U.S. lOllt Alrbome Dlvl1lon. Pilot.a their headllghta on to remind motorJsta ot already have nport.ed t.lklna fire from the 1pecial obaenance. Phil d } h" B ~eral services for Fatrview St.alt mountaintop poslliom U they flew nHt In oddlllon a bus will be on display 1! a e P Ia oy, 9, Hoopltal nursing supervloor l\obert F. th• v4l!ey floo,, the IUN firinl down at Albert1on'1 Market p1rkln1 lot, 700 S. ~ight.on. who died AprU 10, bav1 been them. . Coo1t Hllhw•y, from 10 a.m. te 2 p:m. Slain in Gang war held In his home •late of lll&1Hchuaetll. Glal, deputy corrimander of the South for tht uamlnaUon of residents through He was 38 and had served at the COit. Vlei.names• lit Infantry DlvlJ:lon, ••Id Friday. PHILADELPHIA (UP1} -Rafael San· ?i.iesa facility for the mentally retarded the A Shau waa .. not an elcluaivt In Laguna Beach 1,578 11.µdenls are ti h 1 lh b k d • 11 torret." 1 ago, 9, was 1 ot n e ac an 11.i ed eight years, after work at Agnew stat. carr ed dally to and from achool and all Tuesday night In a street In front of hil Hospital and al medical center1 I.I "In this operation, we will 10 anywhere drlver1 aUend safety meetlng once a home. Police aald he was an apparent in· Massachusetl.!. fl'om_ the Demlllt.ariud Zone (DMZ) on mmtb to remind them of their nocent victim of teenaged gang warfare. Mr. Lei&hton, who lived 1t 258,,, Colt.a dG~wln te theU ~;, S~..'~.::1 lobe •'!,~ Thllte •trlre• responalbllity. Before bt:comlng a bus Police aald the area wa1 populated by Mesa St.. C.Osta Mesa. is survived by hLs 11 men on~ ~ I ,~m • P drlvtr, 1 n.l'aon m11•t """··•o ••hours of •-d g hi f f bl h lh lh Mr Ell •-lh Le' h ilon1111 lbe Laotian border. tr ••••• '1n-dd!U-~~lh· w all!! l.C'Cnage ang1, c e o w c were e mo er, s. u~ 1g ton. ind a Gi:i Aid the Idea of tbt operation wu e....... a on w o er qu ta• "8th and Diamond'' ind ~'Zulu Nation" sister, Mn. Janice LertclJ, both of to force element.a ot thrM North Viet· ~Uo~ru;;!. ;;;;::===--~--=-i;;g;an;g;'';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Sc;;;ltua;;;te.;;;lll;a;";;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ n11nete divlslona: and four independent I ~'""""' regimMla out of South Vietnam'• northern provlncel, Quanc Tri and Thua Thlen. "Tht optt1Uon II cletliDed te cleor oul eVerythlng-from the DMZ to Hal Van Paq," Gjai u ld. Hai Van b 1 coutaJ mountolo P'" dlbl mllto north of Da Nana. .An allied air observer reported IMinl a batt&llorwlzed U.S. unlt ln thfi valley, a Communist M"lhold for moro than 20 years. Military sources 1ald more than one battallon-1lnd American unit wu opeiatlng In the "nconnaJaance in force" minion in the valley. Joaquin Board Discuss Music, Vandals Tonight Topics ran1ing from vandllllm to ~ 1tNrnental music will confront San JM- q\lln Eltmentary School lltlbict irUJleel at tonlaht'1 7 o'clock mettin1 In the Dlltrlct Annex, 14600 Sand Canyon Road. East Irvine. Tb1 results of a qUe,UoMatre to delermine if pventa w-.nL an tn- 11trument1J music -program 1n the elemmt.ary schools will be pruented. The questionnaire was clrcullted dlstrlct.-wlde by rnembera of the Ml11lon Viejo Hllh School Mualc Booaten Club. The lf'OUP 1upparta tbt relnltatement or 1 mualc program ln the fourth, fifth •nd 1l1:th 1fade1 which waa taken out of the ln1trucUonal proaram u an economy measure. Also on the agenda "'ill be a fJrat reading of a policy on vandali1m, a measure LI dulgned to protect tbt district. The board alao will 1pprove cour1ea to be tauaht ln summer achoo! and will Mar • report on the proereu of the unification rttudy beinr conducted JolnUy by Son Joo- quln, TulUn Elementary, TI I bu c 0 Elementary ond Tu1un Htrh School Districts. Queen Turns 45 LONDON (UPI) -Queen Eli11bttb turned 4i tod•y, quietly obarvln1 the oc- ca&lon with her family amldtt prepara· tlons for I nlne-day ClnadJan VIJlt acheduled to start May S. GEM TALK TODAY by "-C. HUM,HlllS THE COLOR,UL WORLD 0' PIARLS Highly p r I z • d In Ibo world ol gems, pearls are chic, smart, and treasured particularly b • c a u 1 e they 10 beautifully enhance a wo- man'• eJUembJe no matter what the occasion. Th e y compliment clothing for every affair, from a slmplt 1we1ter to the most glam· orous evening g o w n, and do 10 wllh a quiet dl(nily all !heir own. We uaually aHociata white wllh the pearl. and many do not tnow that pearls come in a variety of glowing colors wblch depend ,upon !he I o c a l i t y In which Ibey 'are found. From the Persian Gulf c o m e pearls with a creamy sheeen, and frons Australia we receive pearls wllh a beautiful yellow cast. Much closer to home, from the Gulls of California and Mexico, come the rare a n d exceedingly expensive Black pearls, whose rich metallic appearance make them more valu· able lhan any otbero. We carry a v a r I et y ol lh111 eems, and will gladly 111i1t you tn your 1el1ctton of pearls to match both your taste 111d 'yollr 1'ud11t. Come in soon. We're open dolly from l :SO to G:30, Friday• 'tll 8:30. ' • Jet . ~· Wotch ahead one hour 00.MtGA In ll'lt mom•nl1 It ttlret you 10 •diu1t yo11rw11ch to DIYflOfli S.vlngt 'Tim•, atk yourtelf: Is it •Ccur•I•? tty11th? ./ Dtpend•blt ? It C•n b• 111 lh••• •• ..iind ('!Ort ••• If It'•'"' Omeg1. Llk• thlt Omeg1 Con•ltl!ltlorl Chronomtt1r. . ' Accur1tt? Omeg1 Chronom1t1rt carry 1·.$wiaa Ob11r>11tof)' ctrt1no111 !or accur1cy 1w11d1d orif)' erftr 115-dty Mr1•• , ot gru1llng ltbor11ory t•a11. Styll11'1? l.ook 1l 11'1e handlomt1~ cr•fttd •l1lnl11s tiff/ cu•, and "" rugged g~ look• or 1ht matching bt•c•l•t. Dtpend1bl1'l lt'1 tn Omtg1, l1n't II? Slop In today •nd let ua thOw you thit, and other• il'I our W10t 111ec11on or Ome9e w11ch11.:tram-tea to qwr $1000. J. C. fiumphrie6 'Jeweler1t 1821 NEWPORT BLVD., COSlA MESA CONYlNllMT TlllMS IANKAMl-IC .. llD-MASTlll CHAkGE -· " t4 YEAR.$ rN SAMI LOCATION ,RONE l41-J4DI • 1 ' 1 V•lednesday, Aprll 21, irr11 East's: Kennedy Trophy Again Eludes USC Crew PLAGUED BY GREMLINS -Trojan sailors exude confidence before the start of the J. F. Kennedy Memorial Regatta at Annapolis, ~id. last weekend, but the confidence failed to forestall the bad luck that has befallen the use team in six years of com- CAMPBELL & GREMLINS -Argyle Campbell, skipper of the USC boat in the Kennedy Cup regat- ta Jooks aloft from the cockpit of his Annapolis- 44 yawl. Searching for gremlins? 571 Ya~hts Set Ensenada R ace No Record The 24th annual Ne"'"rport to Ensenada yacht race failed in its bid for a new record of en- tri~. Closest count after the Saturday deadline was 571 hopefuls ror the r.Jay 6 start of Ute classic. The figure com- pares with 578 in 1968, the highest namber to sign up. But as in all. previous years, the original count is not in· Trophy R ace Scl1ed uled On May 1 dicative of the number of starters in the world 's largest internationa1 yacht race. Newport Ocean S a i 11 n g Association officials h a v e learned to expect that a percentage of skippers will change their minds before the 12 noon start of the classic on May 6. Even more will drop out enroute because of ad· verse weather conditions, gear failures or other reasons. Last year there were 539 ac· tual Starters and more than 500 made it across the finish line off the Ensenada breakwater. T AKE THE NEWS QUIZ W e Dare You •.• Eve ry Saturday petition for the coveted cup. From Jeft are Norman Reynolds, Andy MacDonald, Guy Doran, Doug Ras· tello, Brent Mathews, Rocky Springstead, Tom Pur· cell, Taylor Grant. Kneeling are Skipper i\rgyle Campbell and Coach Carter Ford. Four Sailboat Races Se t This W eek end A blanket or dacron will be spread over the catalina ChaMel from Los Angeles Harbor to Newport Saturday and Sunday as four sailboat final leg of the course. The Little Whitney bunch v.·ill sail from Los Angeles Harbor around Ship Rock off the Isthmus of Catalina before races get under way almost heading for ~ finish line at .simul.t.aneoosly. Newport. The 100.rnile San Clemente Jn the VYC Catalina lsland lsland race will actually be race the PHRF yachts will two · reces in one as Los leave tbe island to JXlrl and Angeles Yacht Club and finish at Newport. Newport Harbor Yacht Club The giant race is tradi~ share the responsibifity wlth tionally handled by the three an overlap of the Whitney and yacht clubs. Originally the San Ahm anson Series. Clemente Island race was a For yachts rated under the VYC affair, but in later years lntemational Ocean Ru 1 e both LAYC and NH Y C flOR) the race will be the adopted it for their respective fifth or LA YC's r 8 m e d SS.es because of the challenge to crews and yachts. Whitney Serns. F 1 .. ch•· In It will be the ftn1 rp;ce of or many o i.ue ya '"' the 1971 AhmaD.9m Series wilh all frur races, the weekend NHYC !tarting Its neet under wilJ serve as a tuneup for the the Cruising Ctub of America May 6 start of the Newport to (CCA) measurement rule. Ensenacla yacht race. It Is First off, slarting at 11 a.m. also a convenient method of will be the five classes of IOR getting boats from the Los boats starting at five-minute Angeles Harbor area to Intervals. Then will follow five Newport well In ad~ance of classes of CCA boats, also at -=lh~e~En~se~n~a~d=a ='='"'~·=· ===; five-minute intervals. r TCTI minutes after the last Who Cares? cl:i.si In the Ahmanson Series No otl11r n•w•p•p•r In th• is under way, LAYC will world c1r11 1boul your co111mu· signal the start of the Los nity Ii•• your community d1ily Angeles to Newport race, the new1p1p1r do.-. It'• the DAILY Series for yachts raled under -.-- By AJJ.1\tON LOCKABEY -·-What Is It about the John F. KeMedy ' Memorial Trophy at Annapolis, Md., that always seems to elude the USC sailors? • Could It be, as suggested by Len Fowle, e:iec utlve aecretary of the Intercollegl.ate Yacht Racing Association of North America, that gremlln.!I are always riding In the cockpit Of t b e Trojan boat? Whatever It ls, the Trojans came b o m e empty-banded again this year after shipping the best crew it bas had aboard the Annapolis.ff yawls 1n s~veral years. Or maybe this year's defeat could be attributed to too many chiefs and oot enough Indians. Led by All-America Argyle Campbell. every member of the use team this year was an ace skipper of big and little boats in his own right. The crew had sailed together in comparable boats for several months prior to the Start of the Kennedy Cup. Two-time winner John Dane III of Tulane, on the other hand, had a crew of relatively inexperienced sailors. He says they were aboard to do ex- actly as be told them. Dane himself was apparently his own tactician, navigator, et al. According to USC sailing coach carter Ford of Newport Beach, the Trojan team got off to a bad start even before the actual competition began. Just before the mandatory practice race. Campbell and his crew were warned: "Watch out for these «s, they will broach." In a 20-30 knot northerly the Trojans found that the advice was not small talk. The race was hardly under way when the big boat, with spinnaker up , was knocked Oat by a particularly strong g u s t • Enough to shake anyone. Although Andy Ro.5e and his Stanford team wound up the regatta two places ahead of USC, both western crews Large l\fexican Bloc Tallied SAN FRANClSCO (AP) Calffornla's Mexican- American population is the largest ethnic or r a c J a 1 minority in any state. says a Mexican-Arilerlcan group. Th e Mexican -American Population Commission o f California said Tuesday a p r I v a t e census shows California has 2.9 million Mex- ican-Americans. compared to 2.1 million blacks in New York State, the state with the largest Negro population. frAmd It hard to cope with the Now the gremlins were back erratic weather patterns -30 ln the Trojan cockpit. Another dcgr<o shills a n d changing big wlndshlft foond USC on the velocities. wrona: side of the course, and Campbell and crew started that's all she wrote. The Tro- jans finished ninUt. out with the right Idea -Dane And th.at is how regattas are of Tulane was the boat to won and Jost. beat. So in the first race they USC is: losing four of Its top got off to a good start and sailors this: year by gradua- tion. Campbell, Macdonald, religiously covered Dane on Guy Doran and Taylor Grant the weather leg. But in doing are all seniors. so they let Yale (wilh OU'ls Coach J'ord says be ls pin· Seaver of Newport Beach) and nlng his hopes for nei:t year on be enrolling from Orat'ie sophomore Doug Rastello and Coast College and Harbor fdah the University of Rhode Island several young sailors that may schools, sail a helter course '° the [jjiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiirn<.'N.>;;-;;iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij mark. USC was third around the weather mark but had trouble at the leeward mark and let Tulane get away. Meanwhile Rose and his Jn. dians came out of nowhere and nipped the TrojaM at the finish. This dropped USC to fifth. STOClt NOW IN! LOOK! BACK PACKING & TECHNICAL MOUNTAINEERING ECj)UIPMENT e f'IOFmtONA.L A.DYICI e TOUU ~ e INSTIUCTION IN CLASSlS e l l NTALS e SLIDI SHOWS In the second ra~ Camnh..11 """ s K I M A R T -w. COAST .. ..,.,. \ appeared Lo be getting away N•W..O•T •••CM .1 to a good start until the wind 642-8335· :'. shi!ted ~ degrees just before!:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"~· ~ the gun, burying him al the bottom of the fleet. Tulane and Navy read the windshift and got off to good starts and went on to Unish 1·2. Rhode Island hung In for third, with Stanford again beating USC for fourth. Yale dropped to sixth. It was in hte third race that the Trojans blew all chances of winning the series with a disqualification when they got involved with three or four boats at the weather mark. The SC boat was involved In a collision with Vale and eoi. nell. The entire hassle wru: brought about by a misctle by Seaver of Yale. In the ensuing protest, Yale was protested out by SC and Cornell won Its protest over USC, Tulane stayed clear of the mess and went on to win, but at the end of thne races was leading Rtiode Isla nd by only three points and Stanford b,v five . The Trojans wound up the day with 22 points. In the fourth ra~ on Sunday USC and Tulane again p:ot the start, with Stanford and Rhode Island being recatled for bein1t: early. This wa1 a case of where Dane outsailed Campbell to win. The Trojans wound up with a second - their best nee so far -while Navy squeezed in for a third. URI was si:ith and Stanford ninth . 8 x 10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT FAMILY GROUPS Just 95¢ for alij Frl.·S•t. April 23-24 Hours -10:00 to 5:00 ONE SPECIAL TO A FAMILY SOc HANDLING CHARGE PAY LESS SHOES .. .,.-,; •• -· " -"' In the final rllce the start was again beset with windshifts, but Campbel\ read them errecu.e1y this time and 2221 HARBOR COSTA MESA got away to a clean port tack 1L,,""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ start, five boat lengths ahead l~ of his nearest rival. 'T'hen came the gremlins - th ls time In the person of the race committee. The start was recalled because of the wlde windshift. On the restart USC and Stanford got off about even but were bempered by a spectator boet that tossed a huge wake trying to get out of the wey. fifth in the Little Whitney l~P~ll~O~T=. :::~;iiiii;iii;iiiiiii the Midget Ocean Racing Rule. Al 12 noon Voyagers Yacht Club will start yachts entered In its Catalina Island race, marking the 1971 inaugura1 of the Massey Series for Padftc Handicap R a c i n g Fleet yachts . 1·e11e1it of ti sellout! All of the races will st.art oft LAYC a'nd will finish someUme Sunday at the en- trance to Newport Harbor. The San Clemente Island race ha'> bern shortened this year to eliminate the east end of San Clemente Island. tn previous years the fleet had an option of going around either the west end or east end of Catalina Island, but had to circle San Clemente Island. On the new course. the west e.nd or Catalina is mandatory, but the next mark of the course will be a stake boat off Wi!son 's Cove on the north side of the west end or San Cl'!mente. This lops some 50 miles off the previous coorse. and eliminates the Jee at the east end of Catalina on the THUR!OAY THRU SUNDAY ONl Y "British Lancers" 611 tipper Boot 16.99 ~n.lwrn ®U® $24.99 value • , • from England • , , black or brown sort calfskin leather ••• gently tQU3red toe, pitched heel and full 1lde zipper ••• maslercralted with ex· pensive features -leather Insole, fully leather Uned shaft and leather 101e , •• alzes 6~ lo 13, med. \.._. T •; R Price 110 18 '6 ~ "-..__/-Sean Price ~ 17 SS 3 Big Events SUNDAY TICKETS GOOD FOR1 J. Frid.,.-Qn•lifying forttutiag pmllit1e .Z.S1rurd•1-Qoalifyin1 for •t.rtiDJ p09;. 1ioa •nd ReJion•l Ch•mpio111blp1 Spor111 c ... Racina S. Sand.,-ho 100 mile Nc:ell llt lpt!edl in e:ii:c• of 180 rnila pa hour TYPE OF IUCE1 Formula 5000/A opm.wheel. dnsfNCC nc- en•itb Slicer mnirnnm ezwi•di.placcmem.. LAM Contineual 5000 ~W. nee oll9711e•!IOn <X>UBSEt l.itimide'a U4 mile, alae fm'lll lhort c:oane The Mayor's Trophy Race, fourth feature of Ca\i.fornia Yacht Club 's OverWn Series will bring a host of yachts pouring across the finish line at Newport Harbor May 2. Besides serving rui a chat. tenging race in the Overton Series, the race serves to bring yachls to Newport which will be competing in the Newport to Ensenada race Ute following Thurs.day, May 6. APRIL SERVICE SPECIALS Soft Elk, Non-Skid Deck Shoes CARSt ()pfti wheel. ai1!ilfe«s nc:en Tith up to flw Dt1er am:i- mum itftfioe ditplaccme:ut. l!aaiDn ue 30} cubi< Jncbes Amen. on Foni, Onfolet .ad Plymoa.r.h. lmmlfknltt. Sophi.iicued cha1ia built br Surtees. Mc:lMm. Bnblwn. McKtt. AU Amerio c.n ~.ad others. Cltl wJgb .minimum o(l,lOS pouadt witll low Tlftl ~ IDd lane IOp speed aplhilities of more th.a lBO miles pa boat. DBJVERS1 1970 Gwineaa.I c:hnpioe Jolm Cannoo from Canad .. forroer Contiomtal <bampions Gus H11.tthitoa aid io. Sell, focmtt oarional Formal• A cbampi<NI Jton Gnhk ~ Jnd iaoapolis and Trms-Am dritt:r. ~Follmer; pl;. maor' The i;ace will start off Marina de! Rey, Saturday, May t, leav@ Catalina Island to port and finish at Newport sometime Sunday. Distance ol the race Is 78 miles. The race is open t o members of Southern California Yachting Associa· lion-affiliated clubs and skip. pe.rs. whether or nol they have aailed in previous Overton Series races . ) ll<'vo!u1•01>n•y n('w OP<''Of1onol mctl>od1 ml'on Oronqc County'1 No. l Lincoln M<'rtu•v dcoll'r no .. offc" focrory ourhorirl.'d scr · vice ol pn<c• comparable t r th ~,., cho•q<'d by 1crv1(<' !lotion' and olhl'r non·•P<'t•olt:ut •ePo!r tl'nll'll S<'rYl(l' by uppolftl· mcnt "1YC" you fu 1thc1 l•m<' and money R09.'$3.50 Brake Special IM.l,Ji11t i111ptcl1•11 I fu/1 •'· l11tlfllt11t. ;.,, 99' You Save $2.51 Rog. $1.lO Wh eel Bearing & Br•k• Combo. lftcl. cl•en, lubrlc1t1 l 1dj1nt whHI be1rln91. Cotflplei• br1k• i"1p1cl. I edi111I. Jwd s4so You Si1ve $4.00 14.99 They tell fOf' $24.95 el1ewhere ••• gre111 at sea or on shore , .. llnaly cralled In the U.S.A. ol glove aoft Ian colored elk leather .. , Spectally groowd rubber sol@• end t'leat1 provide non-skid 1afety on wet decks and 1llppery wallet •.. •ll•• 6-12, c.o.c. DAILY 9:30 TO 9-SUHDAY 10 TO 5 ti.riolll.I fonnuladwnpW.., ' PUBS Et •lj.000 pl• 9Cll'.ftlOrie1. RACE FOllMATt 1Wo 100 mile tie. rac's, will be run with point1 earned j• nth gi'riQg so Oftt..U wUlntt aod order o( finish. TIH£, Fint too au1e nee-sea under ...., • t p.m, suoc1.,, April 2). A1 die eoodw.ioa. of cbe fmt nce, 1here ll'iU bea~ hour"PIUIC cottfuelmd repjd b amod 100 mllK. RACE RISTORY1 TM fu1t' FomMlla A pro race• thmJde· tbree pean-.> ~e;:!.7 Joh" CAnaon, thetl oJ,......., a <:.:inoa luc re-_ rq: hll •iaixy Mid wroc ea eo wia dMt ar1e1 champ~ c.anooo nttd wire to •ire ia both Pf'O" Tioal ~ wllidi were dim jm1 ooe nee of JOO mllu ia ~ RECORDS1 hz morel .peed; 1lt.o4 mllet per hoar·C.. noa. H~ Chn-r, 1970. Qut.1iF,in1 recotd: 116.oa' m1tn ritt bf 1:1s.n c.-.o.., LN k9r• IMh .. n • CIM llltrl .. _ -~· "f 'ICt 'I I"• • SANTA A NA L~KC:OQ.N 11.,ERCUftV 333 E. 17TH ST., COSTA MESA 464 S. MAIN ST., ORANGE J-iopo..5tm CIH,, 1P7Q. ' I sears] •i..•··~ttJt-. ... , ... NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE 11 ,00 ""' tliil " .... ,..,. 1301 NO. TUSTIN AVE., SANTA ANA,547·0843 "WE Al'PRECI ATI TOU R IUSINESS" - -----..... ~ .................. , •... ...,._o...,.ci-•'.a.'-""--• . -·--.... ------- U DAllY ~ILOT Crocker Reflects OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New Yori{ Stock List Success I I • • • ' ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' " ' " " M " ' " I~ ' " • " M " "' M " " • ' M ~ • M M ' ' N ' I l t l Wtdnnday April 21 1971 SC Wednesda)·'s Closing Prices-Complcle New York 'Stock Exchange List - .... ... , ........................................................ '/ tlln.I "ltll """ a.I Ole. '" lf1 ,,,.. lN -"" lt l,,..,.,..,._"' .. ,.,._,,.. 'fif 5§ h: ~:;h H 11 Hiit lfl(o ftt.-1-4 I T d lli 5ii ;t:! !lE ~~ n eavy ra e Market Lower &rr~-~~ n ,,,.. 114 'Iii -\\ EW YORK (UPI P cl d I I th u!•co '\°:it N ) rices ose o'ver or e uo1 c. 1 ,. ~ ~~:~ u~ ;.~::~ '"--Dd consecutive session on the Nc1v York Stock ~MC , ... Aln ~ ln• 1•111 u~ -1-. -~.. ~~~· 22; ~ ~ttl b~ = ~ exchange Wednesday Turnover was fairly heavy u. 1 1 Cl\• •i \. o -t i1 The setback \\as largely attributed to an ex 1,,1~°"• -· SI lln ll • lll:o Q,...1111 I '" ""' •1:o " • "" tension of Tuesday's profit ta k I n g which inter v11 ei.c: 121 l ti t i t i +1 U~l!.i pu s., • ~"" :w \ ?j:-"-" rupted a two-week upswing However also unset 8~ &I :'Ji: it U14 ~!t w~ + 1! tling investors WIS a Co1nmerce De~artment report UllOllC•I li!O 1110 u._ u"' u•; -,. u~• 'crt .,., ~ ;r.: jhl ;f~ =\· of a decline ln Marth durable goo s orders and a ~:1or1~.:i,', 1t\ ~;. t.t" t~"" _11 statement by Defense-Secretary Melvtn R LaU"d un Pio(" .a:i ~ 1~ .. 1~ 1U,,.. =1~ that the Soviet Union had started budding a new li:i-1~-~· ~,.~ 110 :W.1-1 3H• ::w.i..-h Ball ist M I S •· h h l be un •ov 1 11 11 1• extensive 1cs 1ss1 e ys"'m w 1c mus un nw• ,, • u n·~ 13 23 -"' "t h U t d S l Un~ A ~ u , w141 15,,, -t'• or maJor concern o t ~ n1 e ta es un11 Ar 1 «1 11' -''"' UI• + i, u11:•:":t1: ,, "~ ""' nu 1,..,._,. ______ .,.. __ n_,... ____ ..,.,.,I' , Ill 1? 2il.li 161• -•ii" UnhC• 59 ~ l< Uni' Fin Cl! 11 11w ~ t:t.. + !MCI -'l.!f, J lts us Jtt -l TMrnJW io. H ~ ,5!.,_ .$0 ~ +-.... Vn I G11 .IO ,! Ji: ~l:; ~; _, 1·:i::vic-r ... s1: ~~ '°~ ~ -1v. t11r1g~ /~ lJ ,,.. • .• ~ • -v. u8:': :::ci ,,'°'!. 11 JI~ 311'1 311•o -'-JS It 2.Jllt lJ 'o 15Vt + lldtw1IM SO )0 ~ ff~ ii'• -l'I ""e•1lkl 5S n. S'• j• 1enneao1n 1n2'\la21 1 n-.-Tlmet11tl'9 I ' I li'1 lo6'111+1 nl1MM1 1'1 1S , 1''"-1 eMIC wt A lll ~ 10,_,. 10l't +-14 Ttrnt'IMlt $0 If ' -tS\1 ,,... -.. Un Muck' \Of ' .fO oil)"' -~ T'""''" ll'ISJO )I IOI\ 1011.lo lOI -I{ Tlfnke11 1 ICI '° .... ,,., 311 .... +1"' un11 Pk M';J: }} l!\. >?W '' -Tt•l to I.'° UlJ ltt1 ll\t ll 1 + l'o T/11\lttfv 'tlO ,1 5,_ 2Sl4 l5't + * UI FIGO , !.I , SI :SI -11 T•-E"l'!f.11 151 711 '6\>f 0 4 -'4 Todd Sii t,70 ! $ ?J 75 I} F nl e x Trfl.o 1·~ 1.s:u. .. * l::~·..01~2 1 l'~ i~~ ~ ~ -, l...i11:".~ 1 ;:1 1U ~it rs~ ~1. -"81';:~,''~ --TtxGS11t'° 0 23 ,71'1 '1 .. -14oTootltiM-I n 11 17 -U G-.. .. '"l 1"I £1 ., ., • IJ • .._ •• T•XIS '"" 1b ll 17\~ »• 311•-'' T••M (o t(I ' '° sn1 ,.. -... u GYO pt1 ICI Oj l" l' t Jj 1 -O(i T1Xl ll .. lt 10 '' 102 JCIO't 101 ... -"'Ttllll \j 1 10 •~ 4Jl, •• , IJ .; UI '""~SI /.(I :101 ''• 31, l•• -') T1xOllG11 '' <IMlo llV. ltV.-1 • Tr1,.1 W Aj ..... ffl 2•"-I'' '4-• U Lff.J'l .11 :U 1 .. ~ 16'\ 11 , _ T1~PLd SOii 11 :10\<o 70 1fl -• TrnWAt, D H l >o l''-l\o ~ P YU .. , 41 7$-1~ ts, 1! 4 -TtJ Ull! I '1 ,::: ~f..: ~~~ n:, °t" ~ l~~=~. 4Ts ,g rr..: 1!t; lN> -~ U!J>~rt: ~ ~!~ r:\'• ~t-~\o l::~°"pi,'&i 11 JI JI.I• 11 ... !,T•lllUPll lG ,,l l2J',J?l\~ ~~~=2~U 5'"tl!l S .~ 0 i o 3~ -\;, l f111' r1 4~ 27 11 • ll 71 11'1 1r111&{0tl l'O I'" If I• 'o -1-USirn., pl! !O Ul ,. l h , ~ +2~ T~lclllft .40 ff 11 -. 11 ~ 1 -o fl f\1Cll Inv ., 0 tt!. t \1 '~ -1Jo US !t"I J.AO n j,',, »", >j -~ T-Btl IO' Ii '5 4"11 o Tr1v•lr1 to 190 >I • llll..o ~ 1 USTOO-c 1 70 115 )Ol 3 ""-" Tl\ol'l'I '"" '° ,, m . 1!~ "·-I Tt1velfl"' 2 ' '""' 'lh 4. -\ u .. 11 Ulll '1 DAILY '1LOT f3 Finance Briefs UNION Bishop lndustrles, Inc Utt cosmeUcs manufacturer said a maJorlty of creditors now haive r&U!1ed N J JUI plan of arrangement 1ubmittcd to the rederal court. under chapter It of the Bankruptcy Act Note holders would be paid 4 perctnt of the11 claims 1n cash and 11 percent in Interest f r e e installments over three years-. General creditors also would get 2.0 cents on I.he dollar '1 cents 1n cash and 13 percent In lnterc1t free 1nslallment.. ...,er 33 months EATONTOWN N.J -Arl<n Shoppln1 Centers Inc , has !tarted bu1ld1ng a new E j, Korvette shopping center on • 25-acre tract near the huge Monmouth Shopping Center oa state HJgbway SS Park1ni space will accommodate 1 350 car> WORCESTER MaM Riley Stoker Corp h a 1 obtained a •ts S million order for a steam generator to drive a •~megawatt t u r b I n t generator f o r Jacksonville Electric Authority el Jacksonv1lle FJa lt w1D bt oil fired HOLLYWOOD -Columbia Pictures Co and an affiliate of Playboy ft1agazlne or ChtCli!:!o have fonned a venture t4I prodtice four feature films. The first will be Roman Polanski s producUoh o f S h a kespeare s "Macbtth •• sta.rrlng Jon Finch a n d Francesca Annis Localloo shooting alrtady his been completed In England and Wales ·- ·--... ·--·-·--.. ---- J.f D-'ILY PILOT WttdntMiilY, Aprll 21, 1971 U'L AINBt . ,. TUMBLEWEEDS wcmR: CAN '{OIJ st.Gem .50M~1lt!NG I COOclJ 1lO Wr1lt MY ltA tR 1V tta:P IM!'ROVJ' It{ UXJKS? ~...;..;··· .. MUTT AND JEFF CICERO, WHICt\ ONE DO \oOU WANT, 'THE &oND OR. BRUNETTE? f. MlJTT, I "TOLD 'IOU JEfF WOULD SE A BAD INFLUENCEONOUR.SoN, CICERO! I JLJSTCMR- HEARDHIM /!(;!(.CICERO IF !IE WAITTED "THE BLOND OR BRUNETTE! By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smltli By Harold ~ DoUll JOt-INNV, SOON, FAV •• euT I'VE TOlP WMEN WILL YOO, I GOT TO GET OFF I SEE YOO? nus PWONE •• 50 USTEM •• SOCALLE~ ill ei::cuz HE. IS~ "0-1 THE MAN HIS PAPPY WAS- SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS r PLAIN JANE By Frank Baglinld ANIMAL CRACKERS . ® ® on PERKINS By John Miles I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R A POWER I ACROSS I Snatch Slake --; Rrst up: 2 words 'I Srlecltd 1 4 Vtx 15 Abnormal respiratory sound lb Expectant pr1sori 17 Entrancr 18 A5ct11d l'I --Canada: Now Ontario 21) T!mr prriod: Abbr. 21 Orbllal motions about a point "23 Definite 25 Devices lat catchlllQ fish 20 Many limes· POf'tiC 27 P1onoun 29 Somewhat: Suffix 32 Stroll J5 Convrrse 3b Portico 37 Game of Orirntal olig in JS Push 41 Common Vtlth 42 Muddll!' with liquor 43 lon11 period or timt 44 Ftalh~s 45 Molttule· Abbr. 4b At\01 Jolm ----- 48 Oecri~1ng 52 St!f- 9o~err11ng Sb Not elthe1 57 Rent under co11\rac l SB Piggy sourid 5' An\•dotr bO Language of old bl Frtsh·w ~t ~r fish &2 Drivt fOfward LJ D1sb111• • b4 Wr av t1'·, rtrd bS Att DOWN I C: lutch 2 Equrstriio 3 -·Marble: Tennis grrat 4 Gambit 5 Stop JCi Disordrrly 11ccumul11tion 40 Usr a swiz· z!r slick b A1tless 1 Brs1des 8 Strip aw ~y 9 Walerfalls ~ l J • • 7 " " 17 " 10 11 2J ,, " e-u ~ " " .. " ., .. -.. ' >I _. ~ "' ' -,_ " .. ~ • 10 "011 v ~ wayi": 2 words 11 Pr1soos Of Ytr y dlffrrrn\ natures 12 Obsrrvet' 13 Makes a mistake 21 Widrsprrad 22 Comt togtlhff 24 Pigmr nl 27 Rost bush leaturr 28 Own JO lllrdlocr r 31 Havt": Nchaic 32 Building recess 33 Mavemtnl Music 34 K rnd al soc Jal tr191g emrnt: 2 words MISS PEACH By Mell 4/21/71 ·rr~~~;;;ITTC;-r:::=:::-:-TiT~~~~~ 35 Mouthful of tobacco · I UNDe:RSTAND ARTHUR WANT'5 .,0 IT WOUL.D -eVERY NIGHI 8E51Df5 Slang E MA>l WHeN HE' FIL.l. MY NEEPS, AT II O'Ct.Oo<. wi-1 1,H , Jb A sens~ Bi: A. TV W9ATH R. 6ROW5 UP.I 'NMV, AC0M61NATJON YOU'~&" YOU6ET JB Harritt AftT .. U..I~? OF FOl'(Gl\l&N PA ID Be Kher F0~61YeNES.S FOR YESTERDAY:S evEP.Y AND MISTAKES... wEeK 42 Kick 44 Be assured 4~ Marmoset 47 Jm;irrdient ol lacquer s 48 Bairifl' 49 Accustom 50 Nation or Eurap r 51 Avaiic e 52 Sicknesses 53 Tide al !hr 1owrsl rang e 54 Gestisrs of the h rad 55 Trlrp hoor part 511 Tobacco quid MONeY.-RAIN OR S HlNli ... STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Over9ard . -ff. 10 " " " I'l l. HAV'rA SAV VOU SURPRISED M!:, PEGGY.' STICK!tJ' IT Ol.IT ALL DAV, Al=TER: Tlo\AT COMK OM lHE ~EAO/ ,~· " " " It- 7 " " ~ " " •• " PEANUTS By Charles M. Schub " ,, •• .. lO " -' I ,. ,-, >9 • I ! •• ---· " I I ;;,- -- ::t erOfi rr. Mil.MUM ly Charles · lanci!'I .. ~~ ~'? ~"\""'~ By Ferd Johns11ii.:c. otf, YOO SILLY WILLIE--' l<rTTY Hl<;<;INS LoFT.'. HSRS TO ,/\MUSS Mf{ By Ro9et" Bo~if' , ',, . . .... - we CAN HIF(E A '"0 ' Sl<IJ WRl"l"ER f ' . ·J ' : l .• 1 .. -, .... '.~ .. " I ' <;:?'. -- 11 DENNIS THE MENACE I f 1 WATCHES ; l ... ~ .. { ·'· ·, ,, ':. ,--. ) •' .. ·" j ' J ' 1 ' '• ' ' . " " 1 . • . " \ ' I ' ' • I • ...t., •• DAILY PILOT 3 s WtdntSd,.Y1 April 21, 1971 • C~ri~s Up All the Ti1ne~ UE,~, ·~riends Told ' . . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ~ "" Dell¥ ..... "'" The Ctrf WIS Up 'l'ueaday, Dropping In on the Orange Co&lt like a bad pun Bea11el Cerf, beloved master of the American humor, literature and lee· ture .forms, spoke to the UCI Irvine Friends of the Library. He told anecdotes of famou s writers <lf fact and fiction , offering homespun ad· vice 1o, )tounger listeners on getling the most in Jun and fortune from life. c.erf Shoold know, with so years . or adult .fulfillment. '1l'm ooe of those few ~le left in the U.S. who ls 100 pert'ent happ)•," he said in one of the few momentJ his words wtre not punctuated by laughter. The. man 'tol'ho.se last name Is just a four-letter word also predicted fewer of the other kind will be seen ln the oew American literature, simply became-they are getting dam dull. "I think this wave of pornography and filth Is on the wane," he said, and for a very simple reason. Sex hasn't changed much since our prehistoric ancestors crawled out of the primeval mudflats, while a worJd that has changed more In the last 10 years than the previous 3.000 is k>t.s more in· teresting. "Those four-letter words that shocked us so 1n print are becoming com- monptace, Which ls' 11 H shoulo 1.ie,'' the publisher ~adhag Random Houae lnc., e1plained. _ "Every little boy 4 yean old knows I.hose words. "Elvery little girl 3 knows them," he added archly. ''Sex is the same as It always was and after you read. about whit other people do behind closed dool'! for a..while it becomes . a bloody t>ore," Cerf added. He said censor&hlp lJn'.t the aMWer, suggestlng if readers ignore pornography the sensational headlines about it will cease -and so will ii. Cerf said author! add dirty v.'Ol'ds to bad books the way inept cooks add Bircher, Principal Score Bartliolo1new, Boranian Elected to Tustin Board OAIL Y "tLOT Sti ff ,._ TUSTIN BOARD'S NEW FACE School Principal Boranien OAILY •ILOT 11111 ,. ... 19 WINS RE·ELECTION Tustin Board's B1rtholom1w Sru1 Clemente Cha1nher's Work Prog1·an1Supported 1 1'le World (lf Wor'k program sponsored by the San Clemente Chamber of com- merce has been endorsed by trustees of the Capistrano UniOed School District. The board has voted unanimously to allow San Clemente High School to participate ln the program which will bring students in to businessea for first· Jail Terms Set For. 3 Burglars Three men who admitted laking jewelry and electronic equipment from a Laguna Beach home have r,eoeived jail terms in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. fl.1cMillan ordered nine· month sentences in Orange County Jail for Marine Clarence De.lv\nne Ro\fsmeyer, 20, of Camp Pendleton, Joseph Scott Dews, 19, and William John Wilkie, 19, both of Paramount. All three pleaded guilty to burglary charges and admitted breaking into the 1 home of Darryl Joseph Deayn, ~ Park Ave .. March 5. • , Officers said the trio took jewelry. a sterea set, a tape recorder and othet electroni c accessories while Dea~n waa absent from lhe home. 1 iul":Jxperience 1n tht world o( work. · I ' l · Holmes presen e'd the program to tbe board Monday night. Ht 5aid that although only San Clemente will be participating in the program at this time, Ult chamber hopes to expand the pro- gram to other communities soon. "We want aa many business people in San Clemente as possible to know about it and support it," said Holmes. "We're sending out 600 lettera to tell them about it." The proposal will ask businessmen and professional men to do one or all of four thinga. 'First we're asking them to make a presentat..ion at the. high school, ex- plaining their type of v.·ork ," aaid Holmes. "Next \¥e're asking lhem ln bring students into their business to e>:plain it to them first-hand . The third step would bring a student into the business for two hours a·day for six weeks to give him an opportunity to learn the business in detail. "Fourth, we're asking that a student be hired in a permanent or part time posi· lion ." Holmes.. said San Clemente High School principal Darrel Taylor and board chairman Dr. Robert Beasley were both acUve oo the world of work committee. John Birch Society member Robert Bartholomew overcame strong opposition to retain his, Tustin Unlon High School Distrjct trustee seat. VOtera •. however, filled the seat vacated by a conservative with moderate Dickran Boranlan. final tallies of all ~ precincts In the Twtin district showed Boranlan leading nine candidat.es with 3.657 v o t e s • Bartholomew received 3,627 vote.s. Both men ran strongly in precincta throughout the district. A third randidale who ran on a liberal platform, Stephen Fabula of Tustin plac- ed third in the race for the tV1·0 board seats. He got 3.371 voles throughout the district and surprisingly. led Bartholomew by 200 or more votes In the Tustin Elementary portion of the higll school Distrid. Both Boranian and Fabula campaigned against Bartholome,Y. The lncumbbnt took stands favoring a hard iine on drug abuse and strict enforcement o( the district's controversial dress code. Bartholomew and Boranian both live in Santa Ana. indicating voters of the districl which serves University Park and Mission Viejo roRtinue to garner most district support. Mission Viejo candidates C I i f f o r d Boehmer and Dana Carkey ran fourth and fiflh, reS))eCtively. Boehmer received 1,545 votes an..1 Carkey. 1,108. Other candioates and the voles they received are: attorney Joho Parker, 788; school administrator Howard Eaton, 758; engineer Ronald W. Weir, 448, and in- surance man Sol Bisom, 372. Boranian. 43, is a principal in the Garden Grove Unified District. He received much pre-election support from residents of both Mission Viejo and University Park. \ncluding 300 student campaigners who also worked for Fabula. Dana Point CofC Sets Laguna Visit Members of th& Dana Point Chamber of Commerce will visit Laguna Beach Thursday lo study the ways in which lhe city has beautified the Heisler Park area. The 22-member group, headed by South Laguna resident Les Remmers, U in- terested in the development of un· derground utilities in the park 11rea a1 well as activities available ror residents at the park. The Chamber is presently woriting on landscaping of Paciric Coast Highway in the Dana Point area and is in search of ideas. Their tour Thursday will also in· elude visits to parks in Huntington Beach and Newport Beach. Calley Dance Fails SIOUX CITY, Iowa (UPI) - A benelft dance held for Lt. William L. Calley, Jr., attracted less than 100 people Tuesday night and left the promoter with a $600 loss. Saddleback Trustees Win Brannon, Lund, Collins Enjoy Coniforroble Margins WINS IN DISTRICT 5 S1ddl1back Incumbent Coll ins Tn the Saddle.back Community College board election, incumbents Alyn M. Brannon, John B. Lund .and Michael T. Colline won romfortable vlct.oriea in their respecUve trustee areas. Final retuma gave Colllns 8,371 voles in trustee area 5, for an easy win over his challengers John William Parker with 3,346 votes Md Thomas W. Crago with J;.82. Thi ronservatlve 30-year-o\d attorney. a charter member of the board, served tW1> terms u board president, one of the youngest In the country. Jn trust.et area t, Brannon, also a charter member of the: board, defeated LeRay J. Anderson. taking 8,S46 votes against Ande.rson 'a 4,805. Winner in trustee area 3 was John 8. Lund who was appointed to the. board last year lo replace Louis F. Zitnik and was ruMing for election in hill own right for the first time. l.AJnd, With 7 ,975 votes, defeattd ~tr11. Margaret Roley, with 5,279. Tbe Saddleback election cnvered five South County school dlstrtcta with a total of 70.322 registered voters. The candidates appeared on ballots in the Capistr&no Unified, Laguna Beach Unified, San Joaquin Elementary, Tuatln Union High School and Trabuco Elcmen. lary school dl~trlcls wllh the Incumbents winntn1 in each diatrlCL VICTOR IN DISTRICT 1 Saddl1bick Incumbent Brannon rallinl to a -rl<e pu4<1hic, just• to splce them up. , He clled u uamplts ~ 1the ltl@il toward cleaner,' aJmpltr cnterta.lrul"1t onstage and lo literature tbe curreht Broadway-amaah hit play "No, No. Nanette," plua lbt tUin and novtl"'Love Story.I' "It's jusl a <ll'llY llllle book, but !'cried over it." Stories of wll a,.i whlmly oboUt ..Ch Uterary lumlnaries 11 Sincll.lr Lewls, John O'Hara, Wllliam Faulkner and Truman C.pote lilied the Fine Alla VII· lage Theater. So did tales of one or Random House'• more recent 1uthor1, wbo turned to OAIL Y •II.OT llltt ,._,. RETURNED BY VOTERS Sin Joaquin's Bld1rt Kidnap Suspect To Face Trial An Elsinore man accused of kidnaping and raping two hitchhiking Laguna Beach girls has bten ordered to face trial May 17 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered Roger Hohenberger, 2:8, to return lo court on thal date and he set May 11 as the date for the dtfenda11l's pretria1 hearln&. Hohenberger is held without bail. He was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury last Feb. 11 on charges of r~aping and auault with a deadly weapon . He wu amsted In Lagun1 B<IC!lr\by an officer who rte0gnlzed him from description.5 circulated by investigators. literature lattt In l~t: eolcrfll! fonnft" New Ybrt Yankees' m1n1gtt C&sey St.enael,a maater ol lhl non eequltur. "We finally lt1n1lal&d.,""hls autobiography Into Enellsh," Cerf qa!p. pod. The man· whoae twlUgbt year1 find him 1WJ &OIJ'Ja: 1ttong II I TV peraonallty. writer, syndicated columnist and lecturer told the audience book publ!Jhll\ll I! a Jabor of tove. "Arly buslnea1 today Is fun If you want to do j~" he added. "I think too many people today are doing things they don't TUiiy wa11t to do," Cerf conUnuod. befor< cloolng to boaro a bellcopter for another talk in Puadena. He con<luded with pbllOIOpllJCll ldvlce from the late American humorlat Will Rogm, reelt.iog three points tot tnle h.applntss and 1ddreS1l.ng h1I younaed listeners, the UCl students. "Thett are two t.blngs you can do," ht 1aid, paraphraslng Rogen. "One -work hard at IOltlethin& that plea:ses you." "Two -lhtnlt big -'way up there on top." "The third-have a dream ••• Have a dream. "I am one of the few people left in America who itl 100 percent happy," be aald. "You can be too." Bidart and Smith _Joaquin Winners .. With 19 candidate• vyln& for three seats oo the board of trustees of the San Joaquin Ele mentary School District, voters returned Jncumbenl Gratian D. Bidart and elected school teacher Dennis A. Smith to four-year terms. Preston Howell, minister and teacher, was elected t.o serve out the unexpired term of resigning trualff Edward Berry. Smith, ~year-old Laguna Hillii resi· dent w!fo teaches elementary school in Huntington Beach, led the fi~ld of win- ners with 1,726 votes. Bidart. 41 , an El Toro rancher y,·ho bas served on the board for seven years and currently Is board president, garntred J,543 votes. HoweU, 41!, a Mission Vtejo resident and ministu of the Mission Viejo First Bap- tist Church, rece.lved 1,401 votes to win U1e two-year term. 81dart. who bas three children in school. based his campaign on the ex· perlence be has gained while aervin& on the board as the district lncreued In Ille .J,000 percent. . Smith, father of four children attindlni di.strict ac:hools, emphasized the need for a quality educatioo program and quality teaching. Howell, father of siz children qed I to 24 years, a longtime teacher before entering the ministry, 1 l r e 1 s 1 .d ciliwuhip and moral values. Vote counts for defeated candidatel ln the four.year race were as folk>ws : Albert J. Blab, 69; Cbarlei R. Boulanger. 1.774; Layton J. Gardner. 41; Franklin S. Hurd, 6&0; Arthur Lawrence Lougheed, UM ; James Henry Pope, 269; Roger G. R&Mbottom, 106; William H. Rawlings, 96; Harry Arthur Roach, 176; Margaret R. Rowland, 71 ; Michael Shearer, 802; William Wood Wadman W, JIJ,'l. Runners-up in the two-year race were Robert S. Bevacqua with O vQlea; Ktn· neth D. Cook, M7 ; Leo G. Korihl, 392 ; and Robert N. Litt.man, 43. L.aguna to Host Visitor A young government worker from a small Japanese city, studying local governments In C1lifomia, wW be: the guest of Laguna Beach city officials Thursday. Ken Tashiro, 1 government counselor from a province of Yokohama, ii on a four-month tour of the United Slates and England learning about the relationships a( 1mall, local government.I lo cen- tralized aovernmental agencies. While In Laguna Beach, Taablro will at· tend City Manager Larry Rost'• mominl ataff meeting and wUI be. taken on a tour of the city. He will be accompanied by fire chief Jim Latimer and Harry Lawrence., world traveler and owner II Warrtn Imports. The tour will conclude at 11 a.m. at Thurston Intermediate School;--where Tashiro will viait the iltnov1ti• facility. Tashiro will apend the afternoon with Lawrence seeing the playhouH and various art galleries1 whl~b. "ake the Art Colony famom, Rose sald. Wbllt hit visite to other Southern California cities ?lave been educaUonat, Jtoee ukt Tashiro'• day tn Laguna Beach Is meant · to. bi for .retaratlon' and tnjo}'ment. DOUBL.E KNIT SUITS STORE HOURS: Dtlly 9:30 • 6 P.M. 100% POLYESTER The Most Comfortable Sutt YOM lfff WOife Wrinkle ,...,._U.unHble $115 VALUE 569 DOUILIKNIT lp01T COATS -·-......................... .. . . 149 SELECTED GROUP OF 100'/• Wool end Pofy111ter a Wool SUITS REGULAR TO $125 $ MOT ·AU. Sll•I SPORT COATS Mon.-Thur.·Frl.-9:30-~ P.M. $·1 - CLOTHIERS HAalOR IHOPPINO Cl!NTIR MALL. COSTA MISA HA.1101 ILVD. AT WILSON IT. PHONI Mf..1500 l"orm!'rly G!.ntry's • Us• your credlt- BankAmerieard Me1t•r Char9• er Our Own Revoholn9 Charg• Account • • j lolll.V.1'11.0T Wechttsday, Aprit 21, 19n • China Sets ~~ciprocal u.s.-visit lltTllOIT (AP) -Th; prtlldenl of tho U.S. Table Tennb ~ltloo llYI Com- mllllllt OtinUe t.ble tennlt pbyers hava aceeptod an lnvlt.Uoo to vlalt U.. United Stites "ln the near future" and ht will -Ult lllvlt.Uon todl,y with Prtll· d6at NlaiL GraUm S-en. Jresident of tho UIOClatlon and leader the l._membtt U.S. t.ble tennb team lbat toored Corn- m1111111 C2llna lut ~ dllclosed Tues- doy al a "'111 cool""1Cl lbal the ln- vlt.Uoo wia. made when blJ group ar- rived In Clilna. 'Ille vlalt wu lhe first by an --p lllnee IHI. Si.tllhoven uld Song Chung. acting pruident of the OillleR Table 'tennis Asloclatlon, accepted the lllvlt.tlon bef.,. tho Americana left the C01111try Jut ~k bo!I gave him tbo opu.n of when w announce tt · Steenbcweo sa.Jd be had received assurance of visa approval from U.S~ Embuly officlala in Tokyo earlier fot thti Chinese vialt, but that no dates or 1ehedulea bad been let. Steenhoven uld the visit probably would C)?lll• wllhlll ll months. A 1polttlm>ji)or Ibo U.S. Stata Deput- mant, ~ canfirmed. that Ult visit had boon ~ uld lht Chlneu team ml&ltt-attivt nm March. Wb!IO. lliluie Press s.crei.ry Ronald L. Zlqiu.aakl 1\ltJday. lhe President would ulc SIMnbowo about his imprwlona of thi aitrle:lrtrlp and the Chinese ao- aptanol of the r<clprocal lnvit.Uon. 'Fragging' Rate Jump Reported Ul"IT ........ VleT VETS STAGE MOCK BATTLE ON CAPITOL STE'S Prot11ten V1w to Defy Burgtr Ordtr to Dla,,...M American Kof.e Bit Russ, Egypt Link Tighter. Following Moscow Meet iy United Prt11 Iatern1doaal pilots. The two nations alao have cootdlna\ed their fortlsn policy to aeek an llraell wlthdrawaJ. Two developmenb today and Tuesday lndicatld a further widening of the Egyp- tian and Russian positions against the U.S. position In U.. Middle Eul Told to Move War Vets Vowing To .Defy Burger ~ WA8111NGTON (AP) -Vletn.m veterans demonstrathfi· a&t1nst the war have vowed to 1laY 1t their camp grounds on the Mall deaptte an order by Cblef Jua:Uct Warren E. Burger barulin& lhelr .,. of U.. l"JUDdl. Burier issued the order without com· ment Tuelday after tht batU&-dressed veteran& staged mock se1rcb-and..ciestroy mWions on the Capitol steps, lobbied with congressmen and placed two wreaths in Arlington NaliontJ Cemetery in memory of Vietnam wir victims. News of Bur1er'1 ruling was carried to the 1,000 veterans at their campsite Tues-- 'day night by one of their lawyers, former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark. "We won't go," the veterans shouted 11 Clark cautloned disobeying the evacua· lion order would bring arrest. The Justice Department says enforcement of the ()rder will begin late th.ls afternoon. Burger. In overturning a Federal Court nr Appeals decision, barred camping ,()n the Mall .,..... the tree-lined area between the Capitol and the Lincoln Memorial - until the question ls conaldered by the Supreme Court. Allowina Vietnam Veterans Against the War to camp on the Mall ar other U.S. park property here, the. Interior Depart· ment contends, would 1et a precedent for other demonstrations. The deplrtment noted another antiwar group la at. templln& ta draw 7~.000 for a rally in Washington nei:t week. such campln1. the government argued, "would cawie a serious problem in main- taining public order and could lead to aubstantlal public-health and sarlltation hazards, with inevitable environmental pollution ." The protesters bad been barred Mon· day ' from enterin1 Ar1lncton N1Uonal Cemetery IS I croup. But John Melller, cemetery suptrlntendent. &a.Id Tuuday thtre bad been • mlaunderst104iDI a.Dd let tb.e veterans enter. Patricia Stone of Brookline, Mua., whose 19-year~ld IOD WU killed In the war, and vett.ran Bob Maland ot Albu- quertiue, N.M., placed wrutbs under a cherry tree. One wreath wu marked "allied," the other, "Indochina." "Tbe whole rtUQD we're btre ln Wubln,iton and doing what we're doing Is so that we don't have to Jay any more wreaths," said Al Hubbard , an organizer of lhe week-long demonstration. The demonstraUon on the Capitol steps took the form of auerrilll theater in which a 1mall group of veterans simulated a search-and-destroy mission. Tbe make-belleve mlulons -one near tile Old Senate Office BulldlnC and another for the benefit of home-1oln1 workera at a busy intersection near the Capitol -were desf&Jled to show what the antiwar veterans called lnhumJne treatment dealt rouUrlely to Vietnamese civilians. * * * House Committee Told of Vietnam War Atrocities J ._ __ _.,,;IP 1-- 'Jf I -re a mndidate,' Pd 1n.eak in t1>hen he wcu out of town!' · Lon Nol Set To Form New Government PHNOM PENH !UPI) -Cambodian chief of state Chen& Hen1 accepted the reelgnatlon of Prlrne Mlnlster Lon Nol to- day but immediately uked him to form a new 1ovenunent, Radio ' Clmbodla an. oowiced. The brief broadC11t a!oo aa!d the Na- tional Allembly met thiJ mominJ: and-- unanimously approved the promotlon of Lon Nol to the rank of Manihll of the Cambodian Armlea and gave him the title of naUonal hero. 'Ibe deve1Qpmenta In the Cambodian polltlcal allulllon appeared to confirm statements made Tuesday by LOn Nol'a brother, Col. Lon Non, who uld tl11 res14'taUOn wu little more than a formality. WASHINGTON (AP) -The P•nta1on 11)'1 Incident. of enll•ttd men tolling fragmentation 1ren1dea at ftllow Ota doubled in 1970. The Soviet Union 11ld today EiYpt and Jtuuia bad 1greed on "further joint 1ttp& aimed at normalizing the situ•ilon and atrtngthening peace and aeeurlty in the Middle Eut." Tile at.tament dlattlbuted in Moscow by the Tiu news 11ency did not elaborate. The offlclal 1tatement followed the visit of Mahmoud Rild, the El)'ptlan fortllft mlnl!ter, to Moscow where he conferred with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and other Kremlin leaders. JUad retwned to Cairo Tuudoy. At ·Least 13 Americans WASHINGTON (AP) -A con- gresalonal committee has beard for the first time taatlmony that American soldiers participated ln or wltnwtd I.be torture of prlloner'I of war in their cu1tody in South VJetnam. Larry RotlmaM, a spokesman for Viet- nam Veterans Against the War told the House Foreign Affair• 1Ubcom.mHtee Tuesday he personally knew of skin-strip- ping, pole·hllllinl and water torture of Vietnamese aoldlers captured by American Gia. Lon Nol, who wlth Cheng Heng led tbe bloodleu coup that overthrew neutralist Prtn<:e Noroctom Sihanouk Much 18, 1970, tuffered a stroke Feb. 8. He 1pent some time ln an American milll.lry holpltal in Hawali, but hu not fully recovered. The Pentagon said Tuesday there we.re 209 auch incidents, known u fragging, in Vietnam Jut year compared with 91 in 1969. 'Dtere are no reoordl for prevloua years. · The figures were released after SeAte Demo cratic Leal1er Mike Mansfield told the Senate 1bout the murder of a young West :Point cradu.ite in bis aletp by 1n enlisted man ~ho W.. ed a ~ade into an officer's billet. Th< statament uid tile Em>tlaml and the Russians reached "full identity of views" ln nve day1 of talka, e1peclally "on the quutlon of the lsraell awesaion against tile Arab atates. •• It repeated prevtoua demands !or full J1raell wlthdrawaJ and 11id the l1raelJ "el· pan1lonilt polJcy" t h r e a t e n 1 in- ternaUoaal peace and security. Dead in Bangkok Blaze In the meantime, Deputy Premier SiJowath Sirlk Malak has run the govem- menL Tht Pentlgon aald 34 mflD dled last yur In fr•Ulnl• oompared wltb 39 In ltn. Statlltict were not available on tht nurn~n wounded or on the number cl convidklll of lhote charpd ·In the In· cl~enta. The atatement did not spell out "joint efforts" but the SC\l'let Union hu heavily anned Egypt 1Jnce Ult 1917 war and receatly sent 1n MIGZ3 jetl and Ruulan Man · Held Slave Drug Addict Imprisoned in Paris PARIS (AP) -Two men accused of holding a 22·year·old drug addict a virtual alave for 2M& yeua -forciDR him to find them money and ~o on heroin sellin& missions -were arrested today, police said. A third man wu being sougbl Police !aid the victim, Daniel Koch. was forced to furnish "lines" ol $900 to $9.000, and tllat Koch's English girlfriend turned her jewelry over to two men. The affair started in September 1970 in a bar in the Saint4 Germain-des-Pres arta of the Left Bank, police said, where Koch t>e. friended three men. But when the men learned Koch was a lon.e;-time drug user, they turned him lo their profit, pollC<! said. The men would take him to a suburban villa, beat him and leave him chained up fbr several diys, then demand he furnish them money or the treatment would start a1ain. Police did not aay ho'v Koch found the money. On two occasions, Koch went to Marseille to buy heroin for them. Koch told police they also forced blm to sell it in the Latin Quarter and give them the money. His rewird Wes aeveral packets of dru~s. Koch told police, and an end lo Ille beating!. Last week:, after another beatin1, Koch jumped out of their moving car and foubd safety iJ1 a shop. The shopkeeper called police. I BANGKOK !AP) -At leul 13 Americans were unong 24 persons killed in the fire at the Imperial Hotel early Tuesday, officials said today. 'Ibey in- cluded families of three American servicemen. Among the dtad were the wife and thret children of Lt. Col. Herbert Matsuo of Honolulu -Wanda, 12, Michael, 13, and Lawrence, 9. The colonel waa in an Army hospital at the time of the fire, and Mother son, ll·yt1r<1ld Wayne, maped from the hotel and was ln good condlUon at an Army hospltal today, the U.S. Embassy said. The embassy said names of the victims 1n the two olher service families were Court in Manila Convicts Pope's Knife Attacker MANILA (AP) -A Philippine court turned aside pleu of Insanity and ec- centricity today and found Bolivian painter Benjamin Mendoia y Amor guilty of trying ta murder Pope Pau1 VI last Nov. 27. Mendou grimaced as he atood in the amall crowded courtroom And heard Judge Pedro Bautista sentence him ta prison for a minimum of two years, four month• and one day and a maximum of four years and two months. Mendo1i1's lawyer immediately ap- pealed and ball was set at •t,300. A court official noted, however. that nen if Men· dou. posta: bond he may not go free ; his vlfa has e1plred, and immigration authorities could arrest him. Rains Dampen U.S. Spirit Mucli of Nation Wet; Last Winter Vestiges Appear PllYllWOf MO.U Nai~LWlaTMEllll't1Clf11 l :llA.M, C.ST '4 •l\·11 lllTTl!'• COLO--ll' c ... , •• ,.w ....... ........, Wlfl4I .}I. v.,11-... whwlt l'lltllt •lie INf'lllM Mo.IN lleamlM wttl ......... , ,. M IS kl'ttt M ~ tM9Y Mil T,_,....,, itltll .... !' .. It 1'. c-•• "'""""'"' '~ """" P .. 4 llllMll """'*"IWM rtM'I lrMI • ti ... Wtltr ~,_ $t. St1ft, Moon. Tllfe1 WIDNIS6AY $«MIC!"'"-" ,,,,,.,,. '' TKlllllDAY l'lfll Mt h J U 1 ""'· 11 f'!M ltW •••.•.••.•• U ,011.101, I.I St<toN fifth • ~' ...... • 1 • ...,., ..., ,, 11 ...... <t.1 ~ llfMt S:16 1.'11. Stll t rt 1 "'· ~ ..... t:l1 ,,,.,. "" l ·JJ 1 111. , 1, (/ .•. s .......... ,,, •r UMITll , .... IMTa•"'-'TIOMAL '#II Wffthlr "'"' lllf'lllil'Y ettt1ifit.1 ....... !tit MV!llwtll fTI ........ lfl9 (irMI ,.,..... •1141 ll'ltt N "*"1191'1 •"4 'N:lfk C••t r•\elll lilt 'flloMdiJI IHI"'"' ..... ............. .,.,,.,_ ._., -IM 111 "'''"' Mtlltl\I ti IN Offol•t M- f•VM ti N ''""' 19 llf't\IWll u- to«ll '""" ctlf r•tn 1111 atltll "'"'11' MllCh. • A l&rl\lda w•r111111 ,,..,. !uu..i 111 Wt r,.,. Co\lf!IY, '""'' A •tt•ll•trttur, "°"tflltft Ind lllhl wlllll !rt"" PQI. !ul1111• Clolt It ll'lt •ro.il\C It! Chi· ,_ flUllM I ~tlY ll'fMI. I/NII fl'fltlllllt ti '''" ttu1tc1 lht 10vlt1t""' 1t11t.. A 191",..dll "'''"!"" w11 1111\0UllCH In llY.,'tl ArU'IMI f:Ol/fl"'' Te,11perat11res Ttm~••turt1 1nd •r•d•li•tl"" '°' ti. 2•llo\lr P'lrica 1nlllr>0 ., • A M, H1911 L-1"111C. Jo~v.rau. .. " All'"" u .. Aflth«l 9il " " ""'~ • il euffa•n .. " C~l(.11& " " Clnclt1ouill • " Cltve!1fld " " OlllH .. " ·" 011'1~•· " " .~ OH MOIMI p ., ·" Otlroll n • '•lrb•'*-., " -·· " .. .ff IMllMllOlll " " JKk$011Ylllt • ff ,_ .. " •• Klnwl CllY " " ... l11 Yn11 " • l""•svlt'9 " " M11n,.,,11 a " Ml1mi " .. Mllw11Aet .. " 1.iu-1oot11 " •• N..., Ori.1~1 ~ " NOIW YoR n " Okl•tw:im. en~ " " .... ~ " " Plllft korlt1 .. " " P~!l~!lll\11 " • """" " " Pl!!~'""' n d POl'lllM, Ort. ~ " ·-.. " J11t11moru:I, v •. n .. $!, L111,1l1 .. " $111 Ll~f CllY " ~ ~" l'll11tt1 " u S1t1 Fr1nc!-" ., Sfl"lt " • ..... M .. " W1tl>l"9tel'I " .. WIM'-t• ~ • beic1 withheld unW their nei:t of kin were notified. "Incidents like My Lal are not Isolated," he said. "They are the result of de facto military policy in Jndocbina." Lon Nol submitted his resignation Mon· day and his cabinet followed suit the nen day. Thal police added the names of two more dead AmericlIIJ: Gerald Farrow of New Jersey, and Lloyd James Kagle, no home addreas av1U1ble. The ses!lon before the subcommittee amounted to the kind of GI atroctty hear- ing war opponenlll in and out of Con1ress have demanded of formal conlfessional committees but had not received. The Prime MJl)ister'a brother said Tuesday the reslgnatlorui wen required under the constitution because Lon Nol had decided to fire a majority of hill cabinet. ~ARE1 HERE A barg!ln priceonastrjpped-downmrisno bmgSn. But a Buick or Opel at a bsrgsin is something else again. Because .... ,. not .. ~ng """"Sl)6Cial ~ down.-o:loL Were selhng Buick• ondOpels, tl'esamegrem an ..... SIX! al , ..... Q.i 1IOO..,... Clrqle. 'IV!l1'! • 1 0 ~ q ,ne Iha! ~1t.s ~tv or> °"'·lead or ro-INd galOll!'l(!6. t.,dr.U.C .,...... lllWs lor Ol"8I .,,gi"" OOl!lrMIO'I. oower ttorot O«. O'lllM lf'd.MOrl.. The business of auto safety: Aulo safety Is everyone's conoern. But rrs our business. And we think the attention that's being paid 10 auto safely now is a OOOd tl'llng . Becau~ 11 w1U resun In better driving for everyone, And , !rankly, bitter driving !or everyone means better business lor us. ' "'!• "¥ Buiek Is ~mething to believe In. That's why WI re trying to make it easy to be safe by putting In sale rt felfllres that work by themselvls. You don't have to do anytl'llng to mike them work Ukt side guard beams. Anet the energy absorbing steering COiumn. And the e1 rgo guard between the lrunk and back ... L They &tart "wo<ldng" _, - )'OU get in the Cir. But two s11fely features, two of the most vi11I, ere worth less unless you do something first. Seat and sf)oulqer belts. Unfastened lhefdo nothing, Arrd yOu'vt seen enough statistics to know what a difftrtnoe they can make. So uselhtm. · But thars not an you con do. Btcauso the moot tf. ftctlve ~fety fG1ture 01 all can 't be ~ded k> our oa'9 or anybody else's. Thtl I .. tu rt ls you. And the wt( you drivo. Which should be delanlivaly. And ,,.,rod. And IObtr We're arr In this togeth•r. And toQtther we can aoNi tt11 •uto sef6ty l)roblem once and fOt' all. And lh& time ls now. · ' Oppoiition In Pa•t = -~ .. ··~ I White ll.ouse'OKs Bus Law .. WASHINGTON (AP) gaUon. But tt the same Ume Trumped by the Supreme Re opposed ma.ulve lnvolun- Court. the White House h11 tary busing aad DJctthe gov. called on the Amtrlcan people ernment would not require ~ to obty the ruling that mass cal ~hool dlatritt.s to trans. bu1lng 11 a te1lUmate mean.! port children beyond "normal to dete1re1ate public schools. geoaraphic school zonts" to "The Supreme Court has achieve racial ba!Ulce. federal lnterYenUon ln edllCI· lion, Jlid the decillorui wculd aid him U he became a 1972 -presidential candidate and suggested congress mitbt act If public opinion ii strong enough 1galn1t the ntllflll. Some o l h e r Southerners echoed Wi.llace 's position. W.tttnetdU, AMI 21, 1971 OAJL Y I'll.fr Ir Massive Foreign Aid Changes Asked ' W ASIUNGTON (UPI) -oupervllld by one coordln1tor. Jllltrainerlcan Sqt!•l O..•top. Amerlcon ,.~.,..., ..,.. Prelldtnt Nixon l<ldly pro-Other f1ceta of U.. AID pro-menl 1..Utui., lwo •llJtinr clooely Into the U.S. !<nip gram would be handled by the 11endes. 1\d prosram, wJUch cw1r U\t poeed • m.asilve tt<rganiu-overse11 private inveslmenl One of the alma of the years hu been 1tt1dily re4uc- Uon of the U.S. foreign a I d co r p o r a t I o n and the reform ls lo dr•w private ed by Congreu. procr1111 ~ allied CoogrtM ======================== lor '13 bilHM to prnvide economic IDd military ••ll- tance to America's 1lUe1. acted and their decision Is now On Tuesday, 1 peak I n g the Jaw of the land and up tO ·. through Burger, the court said the ptople to obey," said busing was conaU\iltional and presidential press secretary the states could not make it iJ. Rona.ld L. Ziegler Tuesday le~al; ne.ighborbood school1 after consulting with ad-weer fine but they wouldn't do mlnbtralion lawyers. i.fJ the district wu pracUclna Panel OKs Improved He 11ld the dlanaea were n~ry to implement the NlxM doctrine of helplni other naUons "incrtaSnaly shftulder their own responal- bil!Ues 10 that we can reduct o u r d I r e c t involvement abroad.11 Ziegler 11ld nothing would ~gregaUon, and f ~ d e r a 1 be served by reviewing past Jud&es COU\d. UR racial ba1an- statements by the President. ~ing as a guideline for bruk- His legal views-were--largely • lfti up dual systems. turned back by the coort To Alabama Gov. Georae whose unanimous op In i 0 n s Wallace, ~e court's action were written and delivered by sounded "a& ii it wu written Warren E. Burger, the man In an insane asylum." He ad- Nlxon named chief justice. ded inmates of an Alabama Elderly Aid Package Nti:on's rtor11itlutlon pl:an would abollsh the U.S. Agency for 1ntemationa1 Development (it.10) and tr1n1fer most of its functions to a new U.S. l n t ernatlona1 Development Corporation and a U . S . I n t erT1atlon1l Developmen1 lMlltute, which would be A year ago, Nixon, a lawyer, asylum could· have written a took a hard line agalruit of-better decision, ficlally inspired school segre-Wallace, long-time foe of TMr•'• pl•nty ol good Jl1hlng , w1t1r 1port1, i nd ouldoor1 fun c:omlng right 1!11r 01yllght 81Ylng1 Timi. Ir• th• ptrl•c:I 1111en lo get yourself 1 rugged n1w w1ter-r11l1t1nt w1tc:h. Llk1 11'111 1•ll·wlndlng Om1g1 S11m11t1r d1y/d1t1 mod1I. And thl• Om•o• 11 g111t !or wlnllr 1po111.100. In 1•K gold IOP, 1t1lnl111-1t11I btc:k c:11e, go!d·IUl•d br1c:el1t, •21 0. Sam• In 1t1lnle11 •l••I, malthlng t>r1c1!1t, S17S. floth model• 1v1l11blt wl!h 1tr1p. e Ba-nkAmtricard e i\fasttr Charge e Kirk Charge "Tht Storts Confidence Built" HAllOI • HUHTIHOTOH UM HI"" •M. . •t1<ll a 11......- CMlt Mtt1 W, . A_ ' ' H•ntlllt'lll a .. c11 ....,., m ~ ttl·Ufl .,,.,., 01Mn Mon., Thura., Fri. 'til 9 p.m. Ex-senator S'ays He'll Face Nixon NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP ) -Former Sen . Ch 1rle1 Goodell of New York said Tuesday night he w i I I challenge President Nixon in a prim1ry in 1972 if Nlxon'a policies oo Vietnam do not change, the New Haven Journal-Courier said in ill Wtdnesd1y morning editions. Goodell v.•as quoted as tell- ing a Yale University 1udienee Tuesday night he would ''try to convince him (NiJ:on) to make a drastic c~Ji~ in policy, IS that letml ly, l will run." However, an aide Lo the former senator denied liter in New York that Goddell had committed himself to making a primary challenge. BOAT THOUGHTS MAY NEED A BOAT LOAN W101especlallsts In making dreams come llUo. It la a nice reeling to know that they con be yours when you want them. Stop by toaayeild t'liscuss how easily your pleasant thoUghls can become a reality. It's easy ' with our low·bank·rate Boot Loans, -------·-- '~ctually, I'm a Communications·Consultant specializing in Increasing Customers' Profits Through Maximum Communications Efficiency. But to most people,, I'm just 'the fella from the phone company'.'' You'll find him in Offices, plants and stores. An.!iyzina phone blils. OiscuHing equipment needs. Looking for ways to he!~ our business customers' businesses. He's a General Telephone Communic1tions Consultant. A formal title for a nice. bri11ht guy who cen make d&y·tO<lay buli· ne$S communi:atlons less hectic for you. For example, do cl ients pass nasty little remarks about your phones 1lw1ys being busy? Do you have to scream to page a typist sitting two feet outside your office? Is It easier to reach a customer overseas thin someone in your building? if these situations sound famiiler (or remind you of others), you an definitely use our Communications Consultant And soon, t60. Before you waste mor~ time and money. Or develop an ulcer. (And if you think your office communications ere pretty &ood now, we promise that he can make them even better.} There's no cMrae for hi$ service . And It's very easy ID &•t Ail It takes is a phone call ID our business oNIC<!. We only ask one thing. When you call, please ask for "the Communications Consuitant"-not "the fella from the phone comr.iany." Everybody's the fell a from the phone company down here. lCi ifJ &EnERALTELEPHOnE \ • l • ' •' ' ! .. ·- •• DAD.~ PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' Laguna Is The Main Beach Committee and tho directon of lhe FesUval of Arts deserve the thanb of all l-agunans for a unique manifutation of undwtandinJ, foresight and generosity that promises to benefit the community for generations to come ... After probing the long history of the city'& ellorts to acquire and dovelop the Main Beach, and all Ill• many plans that have been considered Over 'the years, tbe•eom· mltlee came to understand that what Laguna truly want• e<I ,... to keep the beach ., an open public park, un· cluttered by any corpmercill development. This wu the dream. But no one had ever been able to devise a way to make it economically feasible . The idoa of enlisting the help-of the aow·a!Ouent FeotlYll wH a stroke·of genius. The FesUval's wllllngnesa to cooperate in such a magnal}lmous ventur,e was ad· mirable. Jn an era wben so many cultural efforts need gov· ernmenl subsldiei to keep aOoa~ Laguna 13 indeed for• tunate to have this remarkabl.e volunteer endeav.or that can tum the tables and help the city, for the l\IUtual , • good of residents and,visitors alike. Recreational Bonanza An unprecedented number of public recreation proj· . ect. are nearing completion alone the Soulh -Oragge, Coast this spring. At least fi ve massive projects are nearly complete. or are in the planning stages for an area stretching from South Laguna downcoast to San Onofre-:-~yond the county line, but still close enough for .major Jmpact on 0/an&e County communities. In order of their coastal oriehtation, these pii>jeets ire: Fortunate complete with its own 45-acre lll<e makill& we. of r .. claimed waler. . -• , -Salt Creek Beach, once the object of an lnlelue furore over Jost public access to tidelands, now open to swimmers and sunbathets. -San Onofre Bluffs State Park, plus an upcoa1t stretch of smooth beach and 3,400.•cre.San Malo<! Cai>· yon, the object of a landmark declaion recenUy by ·Preli· dent Nixon, ..who deJCfibed the area · IS 'jone Of the DI· tion'a last great swimming beaches." ·Any one of the five would be regarded as a recre- aUonll bonanza. 'Mini Mall' Opportunity Construction of Laguna's new branch library will necessitate the closing of half the Park Avenue block between Glenneyre Street and Coast Highway. The city i.s being asked to consider closing the other half so It may be ;Joined with tho library u a pedestrian walkway and "mirii mall." Some downtown merchants have complained that loss of the half block would rob them of eight valuable on·stre~t parking spaces. · True, the eight spaces would be lost. But the move also would eliminate the very hazardous traffic situa· Uon at the Coast Highway intersection. And there will be 34 new spaces on the adjacent library property, easily acce!sible to area shoppers via the proposed mall . , It should not take too much imagination to visual- ize 1he impact on the downtown area of the combined llbrilry 1and :·landscaped mall with its sweeping vista of the '®•·to-lie-open Main Beach. Th~ planruhg commiasion wis persuaded to bJck off the pull propoSJI pending completion of the TOPICS traffic otudy. ... ~ ... ~~ -Ali!o Beach , and flshing.,pier, to be..rudy this month in South Laguna. -A new county regional park in Laguna Niguel, It...is:-hoped the city council will recoinize this op· portunity to create a pleasing and useful Laguna land· mark. s ~If YOU'LL JUST LET HIM GET CLOSER HE M16Hf STOP 6f.OWU~." Why So Many Of Our Cities Are Unsightly One reason that so many European cities are beautiful, while so many American cities are grim and ugly, has nothing to do with the superior cultural or eathetic qualities of the Europeans. It has to dO wtth the historical f a c t that European cities were founded Ion& ago, when water M'U the best mode of transportation; M'hlle most Amer· ican cities were built up in the 19th Century. when the railroad was the dominant form of tran&> portation. European cities were built on or around rivers, which have a certain inherent charm and beauty. The life of the city reached down to the water and took its torw: and color and contour from the riverfront. AJ\.tERICAN Cl'J'IF3 grew up along a railroad track, in a bleak lndU!lrial at- mosphere where all beauty was ucrific. ed to shipping and loading and smoke and oil and warehouses and t e r m t n a I buildings. Theft was no time, or room, or inclination, to put In parkJ and plalas and malls and the olher . topograpbicel amenities that make all the difference between a stroll J)lrough the heart of Paris and the backllde of Cleveland. Now we are' rapidly entering a third era of popul1Uon growth tnd density - the new clw:ter around the nation'• urban airports. THE AREA SURROUNDING O'Hare Airport in Chlcaao, for instance, bu Dear Gloomy Gus: Police invasion of Laguna'1 Wood· land Ave. last July 4 has produced a $600,000 lawsuit againal the.city. If the plaintiff• wb:I, the taxpayers· wW have to pick up the tab for lawlessness and abuse of power by iU elected and appointed offklals. -J.D.E. '1111 fMtwe rtt!Ktt ,....... rilwl. ... _..l'ltt llleM If tlte 111•"'-· SM ,_ M """ ti ai.my e ... Oelrr P'Ni9t. grown faster than an:p other comparable area in the nation; what is happening here ~ill happen elsewher' -offica: and 1aboratoriel, factories and ho u 1 l ·n & developmenll will shift their focua from the central city to the airport district, for population invariably follows transporta- tion. And we are making the same dismal mistake with the airport areu thal we made with the railroad towns. They have inadequate zoning, virtually no planning, and are allowed to burgeon· commercially u hlgh·prlced slums, dominated by gas stations, junkyard!, mot.els, saloon strips, vut supennarkets, and slr1dent sign· boards. AS THE INNER CITY de<:ays, we are simply transferring the ugllnes.s to the airport rtgloru, dragging alon1 all the 1ame proble~ that have plagued the c1- ty in its cancerous decline. Our com· merclal imantty condemns us to the highest standards of living with the lowest quality of clvlllz.ed life, The railroad! raped the c i t I e s , e1thetically, and left them mortally wounded. The airplane will do the same If we let It, not because it Is inherently evil, but because that ii the n~lure of the beast if it is not tamed by conslderallons of beauty, of easeful Jiving, of plaMed communiUes, and a decent. sense of pro- portion belwetn our economic drives and our long.neglected human needs. The Age of Disc()'l{ery The pre-Elizabethan year 1536 was mighty early for a "pleasure cruise., on the great western ocean, although NewfoWldland was fairly well knov.'ll by then. Yet a London leather merchant, one Richard Hore. chartered t'A·o ships, Trinity and William, for the double purpose of catching New foundla nd codfish and giving certain influential '!'.entlemen a pleasure cruise, first toward ;he New World, It hardly could be classed as a success. Some of the company died of starvation; others look to cannibalism. Yet the survivors W'ha arrived back in Cornwall Jn October of that year had 1een ''mighty islands of ice in the summer sea.son;·• their curiosity had been sati1fled. TJllS IS THE !Ott or U'lrow. away hl1tork:ll anecdote lhat livens the iPlriled yet scholarly work by Samuel E..1iot Morison. '1be Eurapeaa Discovery ff Ame.rial: TM Nordler1 Voy1ge1," 'whlcil Osford University Presa v;i\I Jntroduct lhls month l$1$}. It Is a fully documenLed, illustrated account ol all knoWn North Atlantic voyages to the Nrw World prior to 1600 -roughly from the stml-ltJendary aesthetic wanderings of lr!1Md 1 St. Brendan the NavlgRtor, lhrou.i:h Frobisher, •takluyt and Gilbert to the Second Virelnla Colcny'a City of Ral•lgh, 'Mle aim of t11is renowned hia;lori.on <•lar,•1rd. O:xfbrdl and t\vlcc w;nnr.'r of lhe Pulitzer Prize fJr bJology (John Ptul Jone•. Columbu!I, nov.· In his 84lh )W1 ii to rewrite hi.story and bist.o.rical biop1phy in a manner that will be both authentic and interesting. He succeeds beautifully in this comprehensive work which, he sugaests, should replace John Flsi:e's clwlc l'il'O- volume "Discovery of Amer I ca•• published some 75 years ago. To replace that, Admiral Moriaon ,(a World War II rank ) must produce, a second volume, on the Sou them voyates. 'l'ht.. Indefatigable scholar tells us he is atrtad'y well lnto just t.hal. ~fORlSON'S BUSINESS 11 fact But he "lso heirs down on clwlc myths of exploration, voyage1 to flyany islands. fal~ or "secret'' dlaroveries. He note1 in passing at least ten so • called pre- Columbian voyages of discovery that nt\'tr took place and m1pi o{ Islands ne ver seen -presumJbl,y the work of cart'ogr11phers who dlsll](ed ope,n sptce on charts and n1arkcd them w l l b disappearing Md othtr mythical lands. This is ne'''r 11 deb11nkln1 book, but lhls catalogue of fabltt cl'!ate1 a colorful co1111terpoinl to tht me!n current of scholarly tnttri>relatlon of men tnd ship.• of those ;:ges. r-.tor!son has made the S{'tl his pro\'lnce 11t least sltt :t "The "tarl- time History of l\l11ssachusetl1" In 1921. WOiiam Uo1u Should Be Restricted to Law Entoreenaent • Ill Against Police Youth Recreation To Uie Editor: Laguna's Police Chief Huck and City Manager RoSe have collaborated in persuading the city council to a~opt a police cadet~ program to provide 1 reservoir o f professionally-oriented officers qualified to u n d e r t a k e responslb1' law enforcement. , However, because Chief Hurk alto stated that this training provides a reservoir of professionally-oriented police otocen capable o[ e3tabllsb.in, better police-youth relation&, the thought Is recaDed th•t Rose and Hock have already established police beachhead.! thfOUJhout the Laguna Beach educational system: on campus; in the school roomJ; lh¢nf lunch with lmpresatooable ;rade- achool-age children: Chief Huck hu also proposed infiltrating tbe Boys' Club; the YMCA; churches and the recreation department through the pretense of pollce-or:lented, youth re<:reation and counaeltng. IN THE REPORT of the American Association of Health, Physical Education and Recreation concerning 1i1 priorities to confront youth problems in great cities, police-youth re<:reaUon a n d education is not even r e mot e I y considered. The California Yo u th Authority stated "so few juvenilts are being committtd these days. two new $11 minion facilities are standing vacant." Statistics released by Huck's own department state that in 1970 juvenile arrests barely i n c r e as e d with misdemeanor arresu or youngsters actually dropping. Preening themselves as the civic. educational and social arbiters of Laguna, the city councilmen and the OOard of education have abdicated their responsibility to provide youth education, physlcel education and recreation to the police chief whose authority should be strictly limited to the title of hls profession. WREN THE POUCE chief and city manager of Laguna Beach impose upon the prerogatives of Laguna's youth educational, recreational and counseling resources with the encouragement or the city council and the board of education , with the advice and consent of the rtatltlon department, the YMCA. the Boys' Club and the churches, tht parents and resident<ilitens of Laguna Beach should become aware of the need to vlgbt'OU!ly remonstrate and demand wtthout compromise that the city council B" George --- Dear George : ~ M1ny hoosewive1, a. famous lady colt.unnlat wrote, like to d o housework 1n the nude. I've joined them. My sp>u1e objects. Do you see anything wrong with this? RALPH Dear Ralph : . Wby don't you ask AM~ It should make her whole day. , J>eaT Georgt: My wife has gone absolutely nuls ovtr wigs. She's got 11 do:r.en or more. I don't really mind, but my girl friend is furious -11he thlnks I'm running around with strange women. What c..,, I dri? DISTURBED Dellr Disturbed: lfave you considered buylng yourself tome wigs? <Problr1ns not soh·ed "'llh!n 93 <!ays '.1'111 1x'ron1!" the property ol the o\\nt"r. \i'ork oot that tcnl~O<.'t ind your first lrsson In Sldtl\·eys Thinking is com plttc.) ~ "' !" • .. 11,."!,, ... 'fl • . ·"!' ' . ' .M !JU'!. '"' ~. 8UQVX'11" t Letter1 from reader1 are welcome. NormalLJI writer& should convey their me11age1 i'n 300 word& or le.s:s. The right to condenie letter.t to fie IJ)OCe or eliminatt libel i.t Te1erved. AU let- ters murt include 1ig11ature and mail· i'ng cddres1, but name1 may be wiOv hel.d on reque1t if sufficient rea.ton. ii oppa.rcnt. Poetry will not b~ pub· lished. and the bpa.rd .of edUcatioo restrict the police to acUvlties solely within the purview of taw enforcement. BRUCE S. HOPPING Zero VblbUlty To the Editor: In regard to your edltorill, "More 'Fender Benders' JApril 2, I could not agree with you more. Driving in Laguna is dangerous. However , you dido'-t qu.lt.e tell It like it is; or, at least, you left out some rather pertinent informa tion concernin& accidents at r e s i d e n t 1 a l . intersections. Sidewalk.!! are something of a rarity in the art colony. Houses are built quite close to the curbs, if not, there is usually hip:h shrubbery at the edget of the lots. When a camper or plckup track - or a convertible wtth its rear wind&w darkened parks in any of the five spaces back from a corner, your vision of the entlre block is "zero." Consequently, you have to edge far enough out lnto the Intersection beyond the parked cars in order to see if there is any on.coming traffic. They all seem to drive as when they first learned, and lhe laws were far less strict 'then. You have lo watch for senior citizeru in cars in Laguna as you'd look for snipers' bullets In Vietnam. T. A. RICHMON Jllonstroua lnequltle• To the Editor: If the debacle in Indochitla serves no other useful purpose, either in the public ~ the naUonal intuut, it at least hat made manifeat the monstrous and unendurable inequities of our system. A quadruple amputee back from the mine field of Indochina, for example, la begrudgingly awarded 11UlO percent service COMecled disability." Hit govenunent paya him $(50 per month. Those with less serious injuries, such as the IOh of an eye, impaired hearing, or only single or double amputation, are compensated according to a scale which gradu1tes downward from the $450 per month maximum. SINCE EVEN M50 per month is ~ly enoua;h to 1ustain life in the inflated economy, the di.sabled veteran mllll attempt to enter the labor market. And look at the labor market! In Orange County, about 7 percent of the workers are already unemployed-and they are mo st l y college-trained people with no disabilities {ask your friendly insurance company about Wring the disabled). In one brtath the. government tells the veteran lhat hard work is good for the body, aoul, and mind; and in the next breath it gives the order to throw all those squeaking, creaking levers in the Federal Reserve System to create unemployment. TWS, MORE TRAN darting across lht.. MEANWIDLE, WHAT else has been Intersection, ls what I would say is the going on in the country? Defense basic cause of these accidents. It, in contracton who have bteri so prudent as effect, is "'Ml causes the darting. . to employ relind generals and admirals It might be of interest to your readers have otten been able to make a rate of to note the number of people over f4 retum on equlty investment of over 50 years of age that are involved in ' percent. The money lenders have never accidents in Laguna. I can't give you a '~bad it so good (Louia Lundborg reUred percentage, but I do recall readine' of chllinnan of the Bank of Ameri~ may three actldents some Ume ago that claim lhlt hi• corporation has no interest happened In one day. Two oot of thrff· of in the American preSt.RCe in Indocbin1: these accidents involved seruor citlicnl.-but bow many of the stockholders appear The Why of Rate Rises CUrrent efforts to discredit tht California Public Utilities Commission - and ~ave it made ele<:tive instead qi ap- pointive -beeause of recent rate in. creases It has approved unfortwiitely place political conslderalloM abovJ Uit economics or the public utillUes c:onctpt. A public utility is, of course. a private Industry that hill been given 90mething o( a monopoly stattu under state govern- ment supervision and regulation because the tsaentlal nature of its service to the public dou not lend itself to the open competl.Uon which is an important factor in other 1rw of the economy. AS A TAX PAYING. investor<iwncd bus In&, however, a utility mlL'\t like all buslnes:stl make 1urficient profit to al· tract the capital necessary for expsinsion to meet consumer demand. In addition, the utllity fa ces: the lmptratlve of ex· pending it! servicts In adv:ina of de- mand, so lhat lhc state's grO\\'ing popula· llon will ahvays have lhe supl!~Y (Ir power or tr11nsp:.rl;1tinn or co1n1nunic11tlon or \\'l1 "tevcr thnl It rrriuirf's. The. only \\'8Y a utlllly can n1~c1 its cspltal nttds is through appropriate . ' . ratea. Ollmnt critics ol lhe lllllltles point to ,a recent , lncreue. in vark>ua rates, following an approzimate IO.year period of few lncrea.se1, u paralltling the state government's poUUcal coloration. While that parallel eiists. the aignitlcanct ii misread, or misstated, by tbt" crlUcs. AS THE JNFLAnONARV spir•I has accelerated, utilities like all businesses have had lo absorb rising cosU of all oper1Uons. After a tong period of IO\V rate lncruses they now have to catch up, If lhey are to continue to keep pace with coruumer needl and rtmaln a sound lo. )'tstment for Uie1r thousands o f stotkholdtn, large •nd am1ll. The tatlernatlve, of course. ,,·ould be 11' '!.c c\·:nerFhlf), with taxpay~r~ sup· pl y:11e; the '~orklng funds. \\'hich may \I C I c.:01::1111 lha current cBmpaign a;,a:n::.t ti1c P1"" Callfomia feature Stt\'let \ at anti·war rallies?). No, there bas been a ready, steady market for money, jet fuel, and PX booze. The U.S. Senate was virtuall y una~imous in iU vote to pass the Gulf or Tonkin Resolution. Si1 years liter, sitting atop 50,000 dead American boys, the senators saw what had happened, said ob dash it all , and repealed the resolution. THE CONGRESS would never volt today to decl~ war in Indochina. Yet, the war continues despite t h e constitutional provision which gives th!: Congress the sole power to take the nation to war. And now the professional gook :r.apperl'i hope to dump everythl11g on 1 five-feet four·inch tall first lieutenant. There is a big accounting yet to be made in thi! country. CLARE BILLlNGSHAM l1nplled Dedication To the Editor : l am intr:lgued by the overwhelming support recently displayed by .our 1tate legislators for Asstmblyman Leroy Greene 's proposal kl legall:r.e prostitution. Under the 1st and 9th Arnendmenu of the Bill of Right!, the licensing or any Jaw prohibiting prostitution is In violation of a lad)r's freedom of expression. Sei: is a human emotion and cannot be controlled by the state. Or perhaps Uris has better appeal: The doctrine of implied dedication, whertby the unlicensed public use of private property over a period of rive yean t."1>nstlUJ:tes an implied aedicatlon tor public use in perpetuity. SPERO JANIS~ Battle Royal J ' Ptess Comments BIVIDI, m., Maaoa County Democrat1 "Most of the employed people in tbil l'OUntry are enga1ed in an economic battle royal Each group lries to get a bigger increase in wages or ularie1 than the others, and see1 itself as in a C?Dtest onJy with Its employer. In reality , boMver, each group ia in conflict with all the others. The stniggle u becoming more intense each year, the combatants are demanding greater and gre:ater increase,. and more and more group.1 ~ joining tl;lt fray. As tong as this 1und of economic civil war con- tinue& unabated, tPe government!a eflorts to control inflation through moa~t.ary and rJStal mft1'l3 ·'wDl have ntUe Chance •f rut success." ----- WednesdlJ, April 21, 1971 The editori(ll page of tht Daf!v Pilot seeka to inform and 1tim- ulaU rtodtrs by prt1entlno thia ntwfJ)(Jptr'1 opinions and cOfl\.o mentary O"n topic1 of inttre1& and 1io1~ijlamcc, by provMiing a forom for the txprcnion ~ our readers' opinion1, crnd bfi pre1r.nti11g tht dlvtrse vlew- polnt.t of i11/0TT11ed ObltTVtTI 1:n1d spokesml!'1t on topics o/ th.1 day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher l i I I ~ . ,\ ,·. ~. . . . : ; iTeat BU:star. I ' , i ~$es H~f.~ep.b~~r ' . ~ \ . .' ~'. L. M. BOYD • ~ mon knDwla!f•. r;ess widoly 0$• LOVE .lND 'WAI\~ lmow1r1"1llt 'lac:tyou can alao MAN 11Yti the fellew W"'-eOn. ~ put .• tull-powi\,.r alliptor to . . .qu '\1 !leep fh1t w1y1 P:~r.lacWI ltd"' ltiml!ll a 100<! cook II , ' 1JJOrt.1men tlk'e Ii aolonlall th< {llrtlc~r!J, hArd lo ple11e In 1t¥tlookers wltb tbal lriclt, I'm ,.a~p'.ny. Should be piatch· ~iotd. " 14 ·~ with • 1irl ..ru. relar~ 111' YOU nuNK ;avocado het1elJ aa 1 gCIQd driver . . • make.a 1 iocxl 1111f, try l& '°" -~ "ROW MANY TOWNS named ~ .. wt. Mind up will\ <1'.aaJll after modern fi-ctional 11nd 1ugar. Dellcial.W.;Tbat1a charaQ&ers can you call to how lt'aidoTOne, ~·~)II llpplnuUm ' 11r •.• • 14-.cc.i I <ma e, ·mind?'' Inquires a client. Can clnn't raise your '!'IOfce," ad· only think of two. Tarzana, vised Dr. Morlla f.lahbeln . C&J!f., ~ Tarzan , Tex . Muat ''By 1peak:lnt ln a ~m tone, be'.~re ••• YOU STARTED ynu'll avoid 1trela, ont of the principal cau1e1 Qf a"" , 1 • OUT with fbout twice a1 IN AUSTRIA, too, the un~at. many ribs 11 you have now, teched ladles outnumber the reallu that? Up to four dozen eligible gentlemen by U \0 4'1. ill the btglnnlna. The extra It'~ generally under1toocl that rtbl dlaappeart.d before you few Amerii:ao M1ldiera Yfho wue born. vl,it Vienna Her want to . ' Juve. THE GREAT BUSTA~ wel1h1 about 30 pound&. That's •CUSTOMER. 8ERVIC1!:1 Q. a bird, youna fellow. It Jiles. ''Wbere's the l\Jah.Ut ~ U1ina 1Ufflcient hor1epower to racina purse ln the world?" A. 1up~rt it. welghl. Now it has How about the AU..Amll'lcan been proved an ordinary Quarter · Horae .R.act at healthy man. who weighs six Ru1do10, N.M. It went $700,000 tilnea as much as a great la~ year .. That's more than bustard. can turn out six times the combined purses of the as much horsepower, too . So . Kintucky Derby, Belmont and 1uch a man could fly If he had tne Preakneu put together, is win1s. Likewise a 'cat with ii nflt? win1s. And a dog with wings. But 1 winged ~orse. lacking Uie horsepower ~lo sµpport its weiaht, could not. At least not for long. It would crash. A Lendon acientist named Dr . D. R. Wilkie figured I.hit oul in •· an extensive study of great YOUR HAIR can get aun· burntd. too. Just like your sltln.1 Doeslf'~ hurt, ctirlalnly. But 11unburned It get.a. Men who don't wear hats complain about it in midsummer lo their barbers. The haircut is nev('r right, they say. C.Omb won't work, they say. That's anolh!r rea.son wby mo.st barbt s 10 on vacation in Augu . ,. • bustards. F ACT YOU CAN put a cr~b to sleep by rubbin1 It 1ently on its underside, I.hat's com- LOCAL EDITORIALS The DAILY PILOT Qµite Qften ' ' Fights Cify Hall RAPID REPLY: Yes, air, when lht sky ls ovt.rca1t at the Altarctic. the ic~ melts fast.er . Tisat ~loud cover aC'tS like a gr!enhou.ae. Your r,~atioru trnd com- m.tnt.t: art weleomtd and will bt 141ed in CHECKING UP whtr;tver po11ible. Ad- drts& letter~ tp L. M. Bol/d. P. 0 . ~oJ: lB75, Newport Bea.ch, ralif., ~26BO. Penneys ~sHappy Mother's Day in110K gold. 1S95. Open-wort< ring ol 1 OK whlto or ye I tow gold. llelwtlh two' synthetic- I ' Diamond shaped ring ol 1 OK white ory1Uov: gold. Sat with -·aynthollcatonea. Uoe Penneys lime payment plan at-olbl.C • CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FULLERTON FASHION VA LLEY-SAN DIEGO LAKEWOOD HUNT~(ITON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPOR BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" RIV£RSICE V TURA Shop$unday,too, 121o~P.M. > DAILY PILOT l If ·there ·is .af.--better ·:value , than the Penney sheet, it's . .. . ' . the Penney sheet on .. sale. -J Sale pm. etf..UV. llllOU!lh laturday. Penn Prest• mualln Poly•lt•r/ '. cotton prlnta, 1trlpe1 or dec'orator •olld colora. . Twin 1111 or Elut•·ftt bo11o111. Reg. 2M, Now • 2.47 Fun na1 or Elala-ltt bottom. . Reg. 3.99 ............ _ ........... ,,... , • Now 1.47 Outen 1111 or E1ut1.flt boUom. Reg. e.49, ........................................ , ... .NOw 1.17 Klfta nat or Eloota-llt Rag . 8."8, ___ Now 1.11 8landlld plllow cases. Rag. V2.49, Now 112.11 • ~"Olllow-. Rag. m .119, .. Now llU? klllO pUloW .-Rag. 213.19, N"' 2/U1 'PerM111I Touoh' bad pillows In medium, aolt or flrm·danslty Dacron• polyMtar fltltd wllh '°""' core. S alzn. 618ndard. $11 0-n, II l(Jng. $10 ' l'ltl9d polyM19r filled mlltr-p1d1. Sanforlnd• aklrt tllld covering, tlUUc edge for enuo flt Real Penney valuel Twin, 4.99 Fut~ 5.99 Ouean. 1.99 King. 10,99 Speclall Tierlvllance , .,-..,. ••ts In kllol!en prints, floral P!lnla· novelty •IYla,a ·lfld deci>rator solldo. ~ and 38" lengths. 60" wide to the pair. with I~~~::; SC x 10"' valance. "~,... ~,,. 'Tulip Gordan' prinlad floral towel ensemble. cotton terr:y aa pretty as 1 spring garden In gold, green, pink or blue combinations. Bath towel, 1.44 (f Hand towel, Wuh cloth. 84c 44c Value. It still means something at Penneys. ' CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STOREl - ) I _J Wodnosdlt, April 21, Im ii! ' Oakland Slate Panther SlayiQg Revealed·· Mother Excuses B4by's Crucifiers ~--,' ) ..... , ·-: Loses at P ol"ls OAICLAND (UPI) -!Jlcun>. boot clly couoellmen slaved off ID .-challenge Tues- day from a racially-mixed coalltloo wl!lch had hoped to repeat ll>e victory woo by radical challenger• in nel&bborinC Berkeley. .. We can make change here loo" ~aid coalition 111pporter1 after a radical slate captured three <r four seats on the clly council In nelghborln1 Berkeley two Weeks ago. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - 'l1>e ltilllng of a Black Panther leader .and the findinl of bis charred boo• lragments tllree months ago near a cabtn bomb factory in the Santi Cruz Moonlalns ha3 been cllsclosed by stale invuUgaton. 1~,F~~ISCO (AP.)~ Jlril¢oll \~ald It wu the be apotted two yaung ~. Mowry, be said, .,.i..uec1. Tears ••trUitllnt down ~r "'yoMfer if thll two brothen band in hand with a toddle.rJ "'Do you know whue the f1ce, the 11-year-old mother of who led poUce to the site. Tht two bOys 11'enl to pamis art: for tll1I boy!'" an infant boy who wu Ufd to ~~W~~ay.miuin1 linee"·;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ~ <Mil' and .kicked to death --...,. Ii slid Gt t,he two y o u n 1 Drixollllid the boy made a l>rotben, "J ' cao' blame ,_ out of the search, dlrtc- them.·~ · ' tJrig the oftlcer, first to a roof, Police SIY the brothen, •S· then to • bloc:k-loog alley and ed 7 ap,d. 10, have cmfeased to a baatmeot door. I the• 8Ml)'ma: of Noah Alba, ~ u 'Try bJ there,' " Driscoll 1 DlfJllM. i . qtklte4 the boy u saying. HUNTINGTON BEACH lllLE CWS ):lrtSenU I "SIGNPOSTS ALOFT" The Moocly Science · Film tells th• thrillin9 story of i111trument flight. TONl•NT -y.',EDNnDAY, APRIL 21, 1:Jo P.M. M .... View School Four flt live officeholders -rMlecUoo and the mth led ao •Muge field ol elgh~ bqt facea a runoff May 11 qalnst tbe only survivor from the •'Oakland ColliUon." The vljorous campaign by the coal!Uon al minority and civic group candidate. pro- duced the biggest turnout for an Oakland municipal elecUon In two decodes. Their candidate& -three blacks, a Qtl0e3e, a lhwallan and a Caucaaian -insisted they weren't radlcah. They advocated changes In t h e city's "status quo" and charg· ed the incumbents with being unresponsive to the black co nun unity, which makes up 40 percent or the population. The winners campaigned on their records of "orderly gains" in housing. redevelop- ment and emplpyment in this industrial and port city of 386,000 across the Bay from San Francisco. Dave Foster of the stata Bureau of Cl'tinfii·a,l Investigation said the vJctlm • was Jdentified from two keys and a wedding ring found in the ashes. Huge Land Firm Hires Jess Vnruh "It waa haje aiKI reaentm"'t Shortly be found the bocly that caused them to do thil." Ub:ier a pile of old waUpapr.r. Melanie Alba. 1ald after view-Police say the cue was ing the batttred body of her broken by John Mowry, 23, a son Tuesday at the morgue. printer, who said he wu "They were punishing eaUng lunch in the the~lves," Mn. Alba said. neighborhood lut week when "I know some little kids who don't get any love, so they destroy things . . • children have an inherent sense of right. Ir they feel the'y're not treated right they seem to -blame, ijlemselves. .-: 17601 A•ll• L•ne, HuntlnttM SMch (Nee.r GoJ.denwtst ~ .SlaWJ No Admiasion-i'l"l'e Refreshments after Film Actress Held In 50c Hassle Councilman Fred Maggiora, a 2l~yen ~tttan. led the vic- tors wtth a '2-1 margin over his coallllon Qpponent. tncum- i>opti Frank Og1wa and Ray· LOS ANGELl!S (AP) -' mOnd L. Eng abo woo euDy, FoUowing a dispute over a 50-'w.hlle . Felix E. Chialvo edged cent parting fee, police --Mn. Belly Ann Bruno of the ed actress Gia Scalaf and a coaliUon by 7,.200 votes out of male companion · f 0 r in-· 88,000 cast. . vutlpUon of 1>1u,.y. In the a~large race, !JI. The complJinJ.nC witness. bunbent Hat'ey Binns ran up !ho ~de a c~a arrest a,i.1 margin over John Sutter, ,,_,.,, wu the parting Jot,-•'""""""'•tlonlst and the ooly atteDdint-Serbad Naderi. wtnt.e member of the c:oalltion. Foster saJd he was Amon Frederick Bennell, 30, a Panther captain and an ec- culonal flll ·ln speaker for the party or>-founder, Bobby Seale. Flhdlng of the . It o n e fraa:ments followed bt a few days 1 mid-January rald on two mountain cabins by .date agents and Santa Crui County sherllrs deputies. Stlcka of dynamite, fuses and caps and nitrogl}rctrln were seized in the raid, Fosler u!d. Later-a warrant charging fl. legal pouession of. exploetvn was ilsued for Junes Eaward Johnson. Johnson. rr.~ts now sought nauOnally and t n Canida on' a fugiUvt warrant, Fosttt aald. ~gnificent ~ @mstrong · floor deslt111S ... one to suit your t•e and budget ' ' ..... ,.. .. ......... . ...... , ..... . 'Castlllan' c:usliOo'led Vinyl in 13 handoome P811ema and 39 exciting colon. A luxurious lock fer . ,.;..,.... ..,._....., anyroom. ~ "n Pr-9Excelcln9Tle.Of~ asbestos thal'•18"11dherlng.Juatpeel off bacldn9- plllcetlle...and l)l'llllS. No-nofues. Adheres to new sunacae.ore#Wctllocrl. Do tt)'Olllllelfanclsaw, '· Now 299 12"XU"We Do a 9' X 12'110or tOr °"" f32. ----- ~RRetfl 2f9 IQ.yd, A1._.rx1r . ... 111 e '•II. I ¢1lll•fTI, 4. 50 . IQ. )'It.· A-rxtt' l'OOln II 111111 Ai -~ :. COMpl1t 1._("' -. sso IQ.yd. aw,...rX1l' '°°"' • 1111• &I. CC'414tat1, ftU. • SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Jess Unruh, who unsµc- ceasfully Cim'paignf!(I. r o r a:overnor as a conservatiob1!t; has been hired as a ·consultant by a major land devek>pet o( rural recreation1.l$Ub. divisions. N. K. Mendlesohn, president of North American Towns. Jnc., and former developer of controversial California Cily in the Mojave Desert, said Tuesday Unruh would work as a part.time economic and en- vironmental consultant. He did not disclose the salary ar· rangement. Unruh, Democratic speaker or the Assembly for seven years, was defeated last November in his bid to unseat Gov. Ronald Reagan. His campaign wu partly based on protecting the natural en· vironment. Mendlesohn, who plans to develop 25,000 acres of land in southern Shasta County. said Unruh will work on "problems of the environment a n d economic feulbitity." ''to. kida, what'i the dif fer~ce between a P'i~ ot .br:iaklnl a toy? · · · • "1 ~·t blame them ••• 1 Just Can't find it within myself ""lo blame them." Policfl were unable to establish any motive for the tot's killing. A citywide aearch for them ended Monday af- ternoon· when police were led to a dingy basement bene~lb .• Perine Place house. '· • : There they found the child's beat.n body, bound by n>pt and wtre to a makeshift eros;, lying atop a mattrm. An autopsy found a rup~ed spleen and intemaJ bleeding as cause of the death. Police Detective ~ a n ,. Lead Ban Bill OK'd He said his latest enterprise .SA.CllAMENTO (AP) - ••will concentra~ on creating Legislation to ban lead com- the recreational environment powlds from 95 percent of the that many thousands of people gasoline !old ln C&lifornia ha! want," which he said means been approved 57·7 by the creating a "rich" project Assembly. "without creating thousands The bill by Aaemblyman and thousands of unused lots." ·Peter Scbabarum (Jl..Covlna ), "Thi!, J think, ls what was a former San Francisco 49er of interest to Jess," he said. pro football player, is similar "California City" was pr&-to a controversial meuure moted J.11 the "boom town of whidl passed the Assembly the future,'-' ,.but actually turn· last year but was killed in a ed. into a.chunk of near~ess Senate committee. deiert with 't'iriuiHy no resale Schabartlm's 19"10 propo11l potential,' some: l}U~ com· -the result · qf Califo~'s plained. • ·' '· ·: smog summit c<inferenoe with ·• ! Mend!es~ aJd 411'· _oeW 1 the nation's top oil and auto ... Wake-up your windows with colorful shades. 2~ .... 1'oldlw:ln' Wnidow shades in new, diatinctive dec:crator colors. Heavyweight transluCent- k>ok 'linyl has embossed cord design. Hmgs bellutifultY, wiU not harden or dtf'y ouL Heat sealed hems. A 7' II.,.. 4.<4t tenne'll :: : :::: ';:; . .·' AYAILABLE·IN.MOST PENNff STORES , !li\'elo-t, co1 I t.iaJ:~~) .. ecuuv., . )• aeclited with ,; I tleCrttk Part'.., wm ae\ a!tdl ~ring m05l lllljor 011 com- at least JS;OOO< aciU · tor a panies to intrilduce low-lead or 'Is:::;=::::::::::::=:;::::::::::::::::=:=:::::=:=:=:=:=:~ "l>rge,pe~I--~ad-free 1"1011.a•~. pi area for'.n!i:rll'lk>hl~. ~:,,California. 1 1 . -., ' . { . La•dmlil'.ft:Declslon .. . s~haol Busing Foe . . Plkd;ges New Bill. '·SACRUIENTO . (UPI) 'The author of Calllomia's an-liblUlnJ act pledged today to press forward with a new blll to "sa.xe the neighbothoc;KI Bchool," despite the Supreme Court's desegregatlo• · diclslori . 0 It's time ·we settle dawn and get aome of these kids educated Instead of fooling around wtth this other kind of business," !Bid Assemblyman Floyd L. Wakefield (R-South Gate). Meanwhile, Ll Gov. Ed R e I n e c k e expressed disap- pcintment ln the Supreme Court's ruling, contending that mandatory crosstown busing violates a citizen's rights. But Wilson C. Riles, state SUp!rintendent of public in- struction and the first black to hold statewide office I n Callfornlm, said he agreed .. wholeheartedly" with the decision aid "1 hope wt now can have some pe:ace mtd tranquillity in education." The Supreme Court ruled Monday as part of a landmark decision that busing can be re- quired in a desegregation~ gram. -• Tht 1970 Leflslatuni.,,..ued and Gov. RonaJd Reagan enthuslasticaJJy signed a Wakefield bill prohibiting a child from being buRd to school without the parent's permls.!ion. The State Supreme Court partially overtumect the Id in January, declaring, a dlitrict can assign 1 ·student to a specific school but caJmOt force him to be transported there by bu4. Reagan and no immediate comment on Tuesday's ruling by the U.S. SUpreme Court, which apparently Invalidated the Wakefield Act . -PUBLIC tfOTIC,Es-.- '' lti• w4er of Mn. L. L: 'wriltahr """ Art"1' y., • Sterat• we hne bffl c0tnmlt&IH-4 te Mii funl ... fnts. ort, lewolry, prl,.ltlYOS. chloow•• • 1ots of Mite. App. 240 pcs. ESTATE AND ANTICjlUE AUCTION THURSDAY NITI 7 P.M. APRIL ll, lt71 losp1<tloo Al Day Wod. & 11nn. C.rvM PnMh C-..ch, Urtt Jr...ch AnMlre. Prtftch Ch•lr & Ott .. C1rttll Dlftlnt llf': Rell T., D.k. Ira .. a.I, Tepemy C-..cht a.... lut, Vlcttel .. Sc ..... Cleek. Hill Tre., CarwMll ChlMM Ch.Ir, 2 Detk1, .... ,...... let. Dl11mettft & J..,,.lry wlll IN MW .. IOMPTLY AT t :JO, M-"'' 2 K•nit Dl•mlMMI 11,,,, Laity's Dl•Men4 W•kh. Lffy'e DlaMerMll DhtMr .,,, .. M111'1 H•Mllhlft ltectrk Wa~h. Man's Om ... W•tth phtt ethers. Mflc.. 0MM. Art P}ec-. JI,. lcr""'-Plturl..-. C.n'le Stieb. TM Cert, Chllrs, le• hL • I. ID a g 0'.I n lll'fll!!!li:lm~~llEDI So Wlllt's 1 slush mug? It's ~making melt-i~our·mouth 61ush. ' The Micret? Storv the slush m1p In the freezer. Then pour in 1~coid soft drink. Minutes later, scoop put spoonfuls of tho fr thy taste treat. ~td, blue, yellow, oranel or avotado. Set of two 6.00. 1 • Chikfren's Shop ' I ·1 get with o.ur knit hits 16.00\ • Ana It this super-cl~ PJict, yot11 Dst this one ~d !hit one •nd ••• I So m1ny nytes. We can't begin to show tfllm all. Cotton stripe•. jacquaros, color 11ter ootor. By Huckilbony. 5 to 13 petltt sizes. Miu Magnin Jr. • \ ' I l " ' \ ( • . • •• I .. .. C.-in or phone: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Booch (1>44-231 lh HUNTINGTOfil"CENTER, Huntington BHch (892-7771). Buy it on Pennoys Time Payment Pion. Terms of this sale i1 <'ash. , fo.fdst. hu bffn mov~ to All mdse. must· be arttlPd Bob's Watthou1e, 204 W. tor nit# ot ule. Mcht. mwt Chapman. C1ran1t for con- bf ~moved In 2 days. venle~ ot uh!, t 2 FASHION SQ\IAR[ • SAHIA Alt.I ' 1.1agn1n. · - ,/ ' \ ' I ) " ' I ' ( ' ' . -. -----.. . . • I • ' . Gum Price Boost . '. . ... Hard to· Swallow By IJE01\GE: uiro.U. Of 1919 D1llr PAtt Sl•lf I ONLY YESFERDAY I man:hell np lo the~. and j plutic vendlnr1Mchlne, tnaerted aildcktl, made.myakic> tion from no leas than three brands of gum and pulled. I out e~e the flv~'stick paCkalt. 1be same pacta,ge that 191"· as long u l can reme~ I has COfl just a nickel. I distincUy recall I marveling that ~ nickel pacbge )ol gum is 90lllewhat of an anachrmisti\. I when v.ended candy goocb in neighbor· ing slots of the same machine are ~ 1 ing for 15-cenl!. "They don't look any ' bigger than the nickel candy1 bars I I bought when I was a kid," I mused. Today l made th~ ~me short sauo. I ter to the vending machine where 'I , was handed the shock of a lifeUme. Where on'3 yester- 1 day had been the nickel package of gUtn, today was lodgtd an eight-stick pack, And the price? Ten cen~. I I Qu1cKLY calcut!tedl a' 33 percent increase in the I cost o( packaged gum from a cent a• 1tick to 1.3.1 cents. What yesterday cost 10 mills each now cost 13.3 mills each. t Put .another way, yesterday two nickels would by me 10 sticks of gum. Today the same two nickels buy only I eight slicks. Gum companies have in ,One day deflated the value of the Great American Nickel. · , On another scale, i mused, thait, like going into a men's s4Jre. on J..1ondy and looking at $50 sport .Jackets I aod coming back on Tuesday lo find lhem marked up lo ,. . . SOMEHOW THE cigarette industry, which I'll admit , h~ captured the greater sb~re of my oral ~bit expen- 1 d1tures over the yt;ars, has mcrea!e4 the cost of cigar- ettes with nary a W~himper from mi A smoker, off and on I ror the past 14 years, I've groWn accustomed to hikes in the cost of cigarettes frqm 25 cents a pack 'to 50 cents. That's a 100 peref/nt lnerea!e in 14 years in the daily cost of a habit. Somehow I let the cigarette barous nickel and-,dime me to death, not to mention. what the.IP product. bu done to my lungs1 over a 14 year period. But''the thought of a 33 Percent price hike on a nickel pack.of gum palls on tl!~like the plague. RATIONALIZATION, that convenient psychological crutch salves the W09Jlded spirit momentarily with the recognition that stable'. price of gum hQ 1:iieri a Sduice ·of comfort in an inflatj.on-mad society. ·· v ; Reality returns. You shrug your sho\ifders · and you reca1t the Jtlce of )>re8d u~ed to bother ydur D'ad. Wfii 'al- ways said he remembered when a loaf could be had for a nickel . "Whatever happened to the nickel cigar?" he used to say. ! ! · Somehow, you can't believe that "Mta:iever. Jiappened· to the nic~l pack of gum?" will ever catch on. At that moment the. full cop.tp~~te tragecfY bf yoir!rriomeiit·at tbe : vending maChTue Ja completely bared. • --· Pfbo-tares? , • .. _ . --··-- , -· - long and short of the muu muu Cool, colorfJI ind very comfort•bl.-our r19 l•n ,1.,ved, yoked dreis~l w ... h .. bl•. H1 ~1ii1n-influenced cotton print• in v1rious colors '•nd p•tt9rns. ;... Short 1tylo i" bri4ht flo••ll. 2for$11 I. Lo"IJ 1t,1• ift 1oft-loftod b11ttorfl..,.floroh . 2 for $13 :'.n -• s,.clol 11'" JI t. IJ COf!st Plaza, Costa Metra ltlt" 91' S.. Di.t• ,,_ • ., ' t1!0fJ _., 11'9ft1. t i• fl,fl'I,/ S."'"'IY It tit 11•"'·1 -.n11 (. South I ... ---.----·------. W1' 1'v. AIWl,21, 1971 DAILY •ILOT , . . • -~J I _ .,f' ... \1 When .it ~;a.mes t_o .. value, .~enneys ~ ·.aoesn~t .. : · $.eparate the men from the .boys. ' SpeclJI buy! Boys' co.mbed cotton crewneck,styte,pclos. 99i~j-6-16. ' ' . . ' .. BoYs' Penn -~ llll'o log dre§oup jeans. Polyester/ (:otton with center crease. AssOrted solids In sizes · 6-18 rog., 11-16 slim. 299 ' . .. ' Tire .so19 sandalo toolUllnll- some hardW&re 1rim on HllP - leather UPll"'"· ~·· .,cl ""'9' -· 599 . . . ' Special buy. Meft .. ,fllte pants. in .1tripos or aolid colors. Potyester/ootton and polyeot.r/rayon blends. ~ Prelt •Men's tfzes. 399 Va1ue. It still meallS ·~omething at Penneys. CHARGE THESE YALU.ES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STOREl ' ' ' • ':~ " • • ·! I ,.. JO DAILY •ILDT '-For The Record I '-:. ... Marriage' Licenses LICaNS•I lllU•O •Y OllAHO• COUlfTY Death l\'otlcu MILWIG ()ttvf Htl .. lt . 1111 Mlram1r Orl\'f, 81!. bN. O•lt f1f OMltl, AP<it 1•. S11rvlv~ !IV ton, llllefMrd J . tt.i ... 11. l1lbol1 11111t)llt!' t.14rlorlt 1111, l ont 11"("' ,,1~u,,.11r, H111Cy T1'1om11011: 1fld two ,,,,, .. ,,...,-.. .......... te11lt'lll. Wedneldtv. I """· 11-.1.-n Miii Tllun-cr..,, t AM, boltl ti Our LNIV of M t. Ctrmel Cll,,.llc Crwrch, wlll\ l"tlhtl' ktllV of!lclallnt1. t1111rmenl. Tllur•v. t l'M, Ptlm 5prl"'1 Ceont11rv. Wn!• iclltt Cllapeot MortlHlrv, 6'1"41f, DlrK· "''· McMA1Tlll Frid A. McMll!tr. &11Gvftl h111Wod of Mf'll . C1ro1vn c . McM111..-; fl"'ar el Ml'l. Mtrllv" M. 1 .. 11 t nd Mro, Mtrv M, F•Mtlt ; bn1ll\t'r .,, Dr . "'"' ! Mc· Mtl tfr , Mtl Mtrv Mti<..icltfl tnd Mro. 1111111 Ftu•o•. AIWI w ,..,lved bv t ltkl 1•1<111d1lldr.,.. 5..-vltl, 1rlv1!f FtlftllV lllltl9"11 11\o., wl"'I"' le mal!t .,.... "'Otlt l conlrlbltllont. 1l1ew t""trlbu!f It 1"9 ~Ill llMl111!rlu el SllU!ht!'• Ct~ lter"l1. 11 ... ••ti1Mt1, Tl•I,., lrwl Gelo .... MortuarY, Ol•Kllfl. MILANO ~1rold W. Mll1M. Alt '11, tol 1JMI Svu · "''"'' N-1111. Gilt to1 dll!I\, V rM It. 111,....lvH 1W wl ... IM..,1 -·· I'. II , /illl1no, t4uflll119! ... ltllfH 11!~ Mll1M , N...., v-1 w1m,,.. Mii•-11n11 ,.,.., .. 1191\ffi, "'"· l lllldul Ft rrlllle, 9' Mo....,11•1 tltllfl, ollln. Mt,.. Miit<!/ M<1. Gll4t '-"et!" #,rl. ll ou Sa+v~I .Mrt. ll!!olt VIII, ell tol H-Vor\: .,. 1r1ncklllk1<9"' -1r .. l·l ttndClllli1•1tft, lll•1rv, !et0i11>1, W ........ ,. I Plil, Ctl•i>ll ol M-111, H-•"· 11....,1..., M,t11. TllurldeY· l;lj AM. SI. Joh" fl/ GOd (1lf'IGll(: c ..... rcll. N_ll,, CMHI (If lotl'fT'D•lH MaorllJlrv, H-•1-, Olr..:100'1. •llllALL /_,6r,11n1 A. ••"ti, 111• ,....,berto Cir. '~· Munti...i.n l t•cll. Oslt o! dNlll, . A0:.11 lt. lurvl'l'N W 1111.-,tlllll, lltl .... W. "•!tll. Sr : Mn, lilt! .... W, lt'.I ltvtMtr. it.vi• llh1n1 .,...,..,,, A•l, Mtlctl"' "fll im!I M l<(UI lltlltrf ~lhl tblt<lo 1111 Lur>d, l'vtt\ln kl'Utlf1 Myrtle 1..,.,161'1, lltrnltt "'' • .., Ind 1,,. Lu<ld1 ..,.,~.,, Tint ~rllul!r; '""' '''""c~lldrtn It•"· k t ! Thlln&t•, l l'M, I'-I'" 1..,11, Col· ..,111 ,untrtl ..,...,... tMITM Y,el-I S"'ltll 1'1 lflll ", N-oorl lltlCll CH•t ol .. '"'· A•rll ~. Suntiyl!tf bv wlte. ,..,1..,, -· J oel . &• Co111 Mew : 111>11 Smlih, lt..-MI,.., ''"'· Ct ll· ll'nlt l 11111!•. M1r11rll F•t ...,tr. lnt lf. wDfMI ; 11~ t r•r>0dll!d•1n Strvltn . Fr~ l!tY. 11 AM, Poclnc vi... Chtoel 1-.. '''"'""'· Pt clll< V•" M-lt l Ptrt.. l'ttlhc View Mor11H1nt, Dl•t<i<lrl ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF J\IORTUARY 427 E. 11th St .. Costa Mesa ""'™ • BALTZ l\10RTUARIES CGrcnw llel M•r lii3-l.f~ C"1ta Me1a 6'45"t•t4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 lre11dw1y, <Asta P..1tsa LI a.3.33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA IEACH MORTUARY lttS Uipna C1nyoo Rd. •M-1415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL P AIU( Cemetery fl1ortUll1' Chapel 1111 P1clflc View Drive Nnptll't Reich. Callfornl1 .,...not • Pi EK t'AMll, Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME tUI Bel11 Avt. WeMlntltr 113-UU • IM?Tll'S MORTVARY ffl MllB IL -Ranttn1MNt Beac• Assessor Wins 13oard Approves Freeway Agreements State Board Suit present left hand turns le 1et on the frttway. ln addition, a curve in the freeway it.sell wtll be eliminated, McCo.nville said. Hflllln\ lhorw i!14"1beel !hi ..... "' ~.~ .... btcaUM el th1 ..... Btc:1ust of lhl• maet of tl\t eo1t will be finartetd throuab the FederaJ Safej.y Program. Supervisors ~Thaw' 27 Positions Judge Rules Holdup Man An Addict SAN'l'A AN A A Westminster min whtl pleaded &uilty UI the 1rmed robbery of a Huntlnrton Beach liquor st.on h1I been ruJed ta bt addicted to 111reoUc1 and comiTilt~ le the. C.liJoml1 RehabllltaUon Center . a t Norco. Orange County Superior Coort Jud1• ~l'rotl II . McMiiian pronoonctd that sentence on Calvin Richards, 24, of &122 Bannock Rold, 1ffer 1tudyin1 the report compiled by Noret1 offlcl1\1 who examined the defendant. Richards will rejoln at Norco the man whn participated with him l1at Nov. 29 in the armed robbery of the Mall liquor at.ore 1t Bolsa Olica Road and Hell Avenue . Michael Henry Crowder. 23. of . I 6 7 11 Roosevelt S l . , HunUnaton Beach, drew his Norco Committment last April I . Both men were arrested l!lfte.r a police pu1'8Uil In which a major role wu: played by the hovering Huntln1ton Beach police helicopter. They admitted t.aking $240 from the ilore clerk at gunpoint. Stockbroker Heads Group For Blind ANAHEIM -Stockbroker George \I.'. Weedon of Corona de! Mar has beeTl named chairman cf the n-ewly formed advisory committee lor tha Orange County ~adquarten of the Braille Inttllute of America Inc. Also named to the 1dvllory ~roup were f\.1 arstiall Duffield of Newport Beactl, John S. Fluor of Santa Ant, Judie Ro bert Gardnl'r of Coron• del r-.1ar. Georl{e f . O'Brien, alao of Oirona del r-.far ind Brl1nt ... H. Well~ J r. of Dani Point. The institute dedlc1t.ed lt1 Orange C.ounty headqu1rten al 5~7 Dale SL. here. In Januarv. It is currently urv· ing mOre than 250 sighUess pe rsons in Orange County . New Judge Plea Eyed SANTA A~A -A request fl'lr an 11dditional jud~e in th e Cenl!al Judicial Di~tricl Courl ha~ been rtferre d by the Orangt County Roard of Supervisors I" i~ legish1tive commi!tee. Munici pa l .lud11,t. Ph1hp E. Schwab ba~f(I hi~ reque•t nn lhe lncre11in1 worklftld of lhe courla . Ht s•ld 1 ninth jud&t' would be "'-'d"'d by Nnvembf!r of I.his yt"ar and a 10\.h Judi" by .July 1972. He noted that the freew1y ' ' -< •• Improve your lot. We've !.2~~r!~dey!~e hig·h c~st of spring. ' " Sale 99 99 Sale 64 99 • 1119, 119.99. Penncraftll "'-llllum '~HP. 21" alumlnum rotary tnowtr. 21" die cast aluminum deck, recoil starter, fully baffled shroud, adjustable handle, EZ height-ot~i. controls on handle. 79ss MoLanell 2 HP trl1R'n ed11r, the easy to control edger. Finger tip control, safety clutch, positive spring lock on blade adjusting control. 3 HP Mcwoll 1rfrn'n edger. 104.15 One gallon gas can. Great value! 99c !leg, 7"-"· l'enncraltll ~ HP, 21" rotlry mower. Steel deck. EZ htight-of~ut adjustment, en~lno ahroud. recoil starter; lully bllfled, no edjust carbu....,r. 17495 Mol.or>eil 2G" 2 HP front -,..., mow•rl Clutch, blade and throttle controls on handle for easy control. Metal grass catcher included. 3 HP Mclane power mower. 20C.95 Then relax and go fishing. 699 Daiwa 17300 medium lreah llld llgM salt water spinn ing reel. Features sealed stainless steel ball bearing movement 1399 Daiwa 71/2' spinning rod. 2 pc:. rod features chrome-plated, double lock· ing brass reel seat. 999 Daiwa #751.YJ medium freeh end llQht salt water spinning reel. Features ultra fine spring loaded drag system. 399 Daiwa #1011 5 ft. fresh water spinning rod. Features deluxe 1ta inless steel guides. Dalw1 -2045 popular IJy rod that tt•tur11 a apecie cork grip, etrlklng mahogany epoxy finish. 999 Zebco #600 model reel. light, comfortable and easy to cast. Super-smooth drag conquers big fish. Mitchell •320 spinning -, .. 1. 399 ForolT\Dlt• fly rte!, Llghtw1lghl bl1tk anod ized 1lumrhum tramt for better balance. All black perforated spool. 399 Daiwa 51/1 ft. fresh water spin~ c.aating rod. Features ch rome-- plated stainless steer gu ides. 1099 Features chromed line guide and one--piece bail, big line capacity. 599 Foremost• 7 ft. spinning rod features 6'' cork htndle, rixtd reel sett and last t1per. . ' '" Sale ,99 99 ..... 111 .... "''l""'lft•C•ll~ 2\11 "'' 11" IM( ...... r.,&·blad9 cut 18" wide, pc)wer proS)tlJtd, belt tightener, clu\ch, remote control on h•ndle, lnttaftt height-of-cut, orw c:otchtr hlCllldld, 1599 01lw117700 heavy duty ,.It water apinnlng reel. Hu pcwtr· lul dM gear ayotom. 1399 Daiwa 9 ft. 1alt watar spinning rod. Haa IPOXY finish, extra large ·apecle cock Qrips, anodized aluminum r11f 1eats. Mitchell #300 spinning ~I. 1 sftQ Two spool• of dlfftrent • lint capacities glYe the 300 th• versatility ot two reel• In one. · 6·99 GarcJ1 5~ It. •Pinn ing rod. Light action with four hard· · c!romed guides and tlt>-toP. Use Ponn•v• time payment plan at theae atores: FASHION ISLAND, Nweport Center, HUNTING TON CENTER, Huntington Be'ach. Shop Sunday, too, 12 to 5 PJ.1. • • I .•· • " " • ... bl . al - QUllNJE ' "Scram:-! don't wa,nt to .11pset the toolOgy!" ' Coffee Brake .• Too Much Caffein Can Cause Human Fatigue By PETER J. SfEINCROHN1 ~f.D. Dear Dr. Steincrohn: So help me, I don't understand how ahe gets any work dofie. There's a Ctlffet machine in our oCfice. :Pity friend takes at least a dozen coffee .breaks a day. No wonder she's nervous. Isn't there a limit to how much Ct1Uee onecan·drlnk? - MiS! L. COMl\IENT: I can un· derstand the reasonableness of DOCTOR IN .THE HOUSE laking a coffee break in mid- anemoon lo break up the ac- cumul~ted tensions ol the day. Bllt seeing coffee, doughnuts and Danish pastry dbpensed on •·cart as earlt u 10 a.m. whit!'! visiting .a book publisher in Rockefeller Center, New Yor~ threw me off balance. Tb.ink of the nervousness coffee breaks engender -in· stead of relaxation.The caffein stimulates lbe pituitary gland, wh.icb. in turn . stimulates the . pancreas, which puts out more jnsulib. Result? Many chronic coffee-l>reat addicts have a sharp fall . in blood sugar. Unttct>gnii.ed bypoglyoonia (low blood sugar) causes neryoUsness , fatigue and lack of efficiency. I agree with you, P.iiss L. How about a brake on Coffee breaks? (Meanwhile, I hope you'll excuse me while I retire into my bomb-proof shelter. I'll need protection from Ctlf· fee · fanciers who'll soon be looking for me as target. 1.ly wife, included.) MEDICALE1TES ~ (Replies to Readers) For ~r. S.: Sorry, but I'm rushtnf to the defense of your mother.in-law. Blaming }'our headaches on her since she camel to v!Stt you is handing in a verhict of guilty without con- \i'!.1orsday, Aorll 21, 1971 OAJl Y PILOT J J ( .San Angelo Takes Brunt · of Cru.el Jok e SAN ANGELO, Tex. (AP) - Mother Nature has p21yed some cruel jokes on this West Texas city. It is only perversely funny to some when a dry lakebed burns, the city runs a pipeline to a dry reservoir, and • gallon of good water 'costs more thaq a gallon of gisoline. There were few chuckles liere when the T e x a s Leaislature, in · a I i a: h t e r moment, toyed With legislation autborW.ng the city to build a pipeline 10 the moon. And' only a handtal ol people stampeded out to · puz:chase bumper stieken proclalming the city of M,000 the "Pipeline 1 CapilaJ of Texas." The community pays $73,000 aMUally for 3,000 acre-feet of wat.er it isn't getting from one i-eservoit, and $240,000 yearly for a pipeline it isn't using . ACcordlng to·u no ff i c ii I estimates, the city p 1 y s between N75,000 and. $800,000 annually In water supply reti.re~t debta on four lakt11. OnlY the smallest ol the four, Lake' Nasworthy. cootains an app11eciable amount of moisture. Citlzeoa distressed with the quality of water have turned. in vast numbers , to bottled "''ater for drinkin& 1 n d cooki;1g. l\fystic-0.!:arka reports that bottled water sales have Increase u~percent 111.oct last Octobtr. At $1.90 a five-gallon container, ttµt's 31 cents a gallon. "Our city rate Ls about that for 1,000 gallons," Asst. City 1.1anagtr Stephen B r o w o noted. For comparison, 1 local gasoline war recently dropped gasoline prices as low as 22.9 cents a gallon. SI.nee last October, le~s than half an Inch of rain has fallen. This, coupled with absence of heavy rains in recent years. dr'ed up one lake and depleted the water supply in others. The dry lake bed burned. To circumvent this drought an~ potential future dry spell!I, the city has contracted for underground sources. It Intends to spend S8 million to $10 million to acquire and funnel ground water SS miles to San Angelo. Mort than 3,000 wells havt ,been dug within lbe city tlnce January 1970. ~ Olber residents !lave turned to ini,auon wells outside the city, wing l,(JOO.gallon tank truc~s to cart iii water and selllnf It for yard watering and other purposes 1or about 110. Townspeople may use city water for trees. s b r u b s , Oowers. and gardens only twt hours or twq days .a week. •• l Later, I CD\lldll\ undertland wtiy,. I also teaChed /or dooghnuts . and <Wee 'o( that early hour -just after having a ' breakfast of grapefruJl, toast, bacon and e g f ' • marmalade and coffee at my hotel at 9 a.m. ~. ..reasonable doubt." Pe tbt tension is due to at the office. Or, to y . • • •• " Since then I have been especially sensitive to the quest1ob: are coffee breaks overdone? Are tt;ey a valid ex- cuse to drop (or not begin) work in hand? Ot, are ' they really necessary oases for refreshing body and spirit? Do they guarantee increased working efficiency? My own feeling is that employers unn~essarlly lbse many million5 ~ many (and l\'Oman) hours o( labor yearly. Tran.slate that Into money lost. and you'd find .it's large enough to nibble away at the national debt. Frankly, I can't understand why employers ap· peir to accept this open-faced embezzlement so placidly. But forgetting a b o u t employers, how about the employes? They get off less easily than lhey think. Many an overweight problem ii due to several "coffee ands-" during the day. Just as there are ulcer-get· ters as well a ulcer-given, there are headache-getters as well a s headache-givers. Mother-in-law jokes d o n ' t always ring true in real life. Take an aspirin or two and quietly weigh your problem. She may be innocent. Dea~ Dr. Slelncrohn' My husband iJ 47 and goes in for weight-fining, gym exercises, water-siding, pushups a n d sttups. In other words, he's an exercise nut. In spite of il all he weighs al least 25 pounds too much, because h e ·overeats. What do you think? -1.1r1. 0. COi\B-tENT: A little golt. A litlle teMis. A liltle bowling or gardening. ,..1oderate walks. Fine. I'm in agreement with moderate exertions for those who Hke exercise. But as for the other stuff. I still believe lhal overexertion in a man past 40 is a waste of God-givt:n energy and dangerous (rather than beneficial) to hearth. WEIGHT ~ WATCHERS. Proudly Presents GLORIA MILLER LECTURER Opening April 27, 9:3 0 a.m . Boys Club Logune Cn. Rood Mf'. Mill•r i1 el' 1ttr•c+l~• he utewlfe •he he• l•t+ •ltt101t ioo 11•111"41 tine• jeinin t 1 W•ltht Wetclltt cl•t1. Mrs. MTH•r ~new1 Weltht Wet1hen will werk t• hel, vo• 101• ,.111141. Sh• i1 th e liwl111 ,roof. Wliy •on't ye111 ,1.,. te C:Olftf to the •P•llirtt ef tlle 11cert4-cl•n in l1111n• l11ch Ap61 27 •'"' l1•t11 for yo11r11lf hoW Weltht W•lch!" c111 hit, you lei• w•itht •"three 4•111io111 iftoel1 • 4·,., ,,.4 tt11ci1 beM411. FREE WEIGHT WATCHERS KIT Introductory Open MHting For Inform atio n C.11 835.5505 !~ ., • .... 1-l' ' ' ' . ·1t .;; • "'.:: FASHION ISLAND -NEWPORT CENTER THURSDAY THRU SATU.RDAY (April 22-24) Sail ()r power man -skipper or deckhand-you should make Fashion I sland your port of call t his weekend. See what's new afloat-in fhe heart of all t hat's .nautical -Newpor t Beach. Free on tile mall at Fashion Island . ' "Excu_ing to Visit-Delightful to Shop" Over 60 Fine Stores and Services lncludlng Robln1on'1, Buffum1', Broadway and Penney'• • Open Friday and Monday Nlghli FASHION ·ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER Pacific Coa1t Hlghway-BetwHn Jamboree and "MacArthur t..fert P•rtkl,nlq: A't••·Cet ef CellfWI ....... City, C-.S•lrl 1Mts. H•r._, IHt He•., lon a.11t c..tet. M .. ,. M•1IHt, k .. IHtl, k..u 1Htt. Wn• AHlillllM ertMrt W,.wt Cftfe"' h9'i, T .. llh. loy• hi_., W•t _. M ... Ifft C..-. • ' ... ,, . ...... ., .. I I ' ' I I • ! JJ DAILY PILOT r 12 Mexicans Murdered -By Soldiers EL REAUTO, Mesi.co (APJ -Twelve civilians were shot te death hert i n 1 cenfi'ontation witb ~n army patrol said to be searching for marl,luana. and nine days Jatr:r no ene in the to"'" seems able to e:iplain it. Most of the people in this mountainow r e g i e n in northwest.em Me:1lco a r e peasants who raise tomatoes and gather rtsin from poppies. 'J'My came to1ether to witneu the baptism of th1ft children. JI WIS Maundy Thursday. The town's single dirt road bad been wattrtd for a dance. Tbt:n came the sound ot gunfire. ln Jeu than two minutes, the mothers ef the baptiied children, a prtgnant woman, a 12-year-old boy and seven et.hen Jay dead. "No one realized what was going Gn-1 heard the first shots and I felt a burn in my hand, then J ran," said 17· year-old Maria Trinidad Paez . "It waa later that I found eut that my brother Angel bad been shot also." Mireya Urlba, 20, was 1ettinc up to dance with her boy friend when she fell with her jaw tom by a bullet. Her friend Lidia Baez. 20, wu standing ot1t to her and wu lhot in the hand. Stven of tbe weun d e d reached the hospital i n Cullaca.n, 80 miles to tbt' southeast, en foot. A hosp!W doctor w b o re.fused to be identified be.cause ''there are tot many problems'• said Angel P•e:i may not recover hl.s normaJ spee<.'h and that Miss Uriba will be deformed. "After the shooting the soldiers would not let anyone leave or enter the town," Miss Paez said. "Maybe some of those who died could hive been saved If they had been taken to 1 clinic immediately." One of tbt village elders who asked not to be identified said: "Those re.JidenU still in the town refuse to talk about the Incident. The town is quiet, re1igned. What can \\'e do agalwt the sokliers?" The commanding general for the region says that when 10 soldie.rs and a se.rgeant approached the town someone yelled, "Here come. t be gauchos," a derogatory name for troops, and then !IOmeone fired and killed a soldier. "The soldiers returned the fire,'' said Gen. Rosendo Flores. "There were 12 dead and we do not know how many wounded. ''The truth is that in El Rea\ito the narcotics dealers fired on the soldiers," he said. "That innocent persons died. esptcia\ly women, I do not deny, but the rt Y.'as no alternative.·• Flores said \hat in El Realito "all they do is cultivate poppies. which they ust to product illegal drugs. They claim lo be peaceful people but there is nothing lhere but marijuana growers who never hesitate lo kill a soldier. Last year they kilted two of my mtn in tha1 area ." Muifler Bill Introduce d Assemblyman Robert Badham JR-Newport Beach) has introduced .a bill which would require motorcycles operated on private property to be equlpl)td wilh murflerw. In the bill introductd April 2, Badham is asking the Lqtslatu~ to approve lhe same mufner requirement for motorcycles operated on ,private prOJ)trty a~ 1 s eurre.ntly rtqulred for all s 1 ree t ·o pt r 1 tt d n101or vehlclea. The bill, which hi 11n amendment to lht motor vehJc>e c:ode, h11 bttn 1tnt to tht AsH:mbly Tral\!portltlon CommJttet. Joh Counseling Based on 'Clues' I See by Today's Want Ads B1 JOYCE LAIN KENNEDY Dto:u Joyce: I'll be O'•daltq from hl&b scllool HOD and doe't bow vrbat kind el 1 job to ftL I wut to work Olltdoon, If l cu. -M. W., Olllalloma City Career counseling is similar to detective work in the Sense that both require deducllons and solution! based o n "clues." This week we '11 !!X· amllle 3 frequent counseling mysteries -the young begin- ner, the ine1perienced older applicant. and the worker who musl make an occupationa l change -from the view of boW all can get lree help in career planning and placement Where ? Try the local officf: of your State employment service. These uamples are drawn from 1 new FederaJ Labor OPEN DAILY 9-9 SATURDAY 9 'Ill 6 SUNDAY 10 'Ill 5 Dep.art1nent publlcallon for <'OUnselors, "Relating General Education11I Development to Career Planning ." First, the YOUNG BEGINNER , James P. graduated from high school in the lower half of bis class. He never intended to at- tend college and took a general studies cirriculum. James had intended to enlist in the Navy, but was classified 4.f because of a trick knee. His math ability was nil, but he got A"s and B's in language. He had no ex- tracurricular activities or hob- bles -e•cept pop mu1ic. sports maguines, and sports events. ills only work ex- perience was :u a vendor at a local sports stadium, a job he had taken primarily to see sports evenU free ; he bad no Career Corner 111E FIRST POSSIBILITY was Ule area caUed "business relatio111." But, although the job1 In this field Jgreed with James' interest Jn working with people most were in an office environment, which he did not want. Also, James lacked numerical and clerical ability. great interest in, or ability for, selling. Through interviewing and The areas of "counseling, guldanct and social work," occupaUonal p reference and "education and training" testi ng , James' co u nae lo r included jobs-which sounded found that he would enjoy intere11ting to James, but working with people, and generally, they required a would_ lik_e outdoor wor~. higher level of education than especially 1f he could re.late 11 James had. Some of these jobs to some sort of athletic ac· . could be consideri!d as long· tivity. :'-fter evaluating James' range career goals, but for the educational development, the time being, they were not open counstlor turned to a to Jl!mes rtfere.oce book (Dictionary of · OccupaUooal Tlll'5) lo find THE OTHER OBVIOUSLY the broad, general work areas people-orle.nttd area of work which aeemed suitable. "personal service" -~ BE SURE TO VISIT THE GRANT BOYS New Enlarged Lev rs FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! loo"'" ••• 1971 Mo4al1l NEW! 12'x9' "HOLIDAY" REG . $79.95 TENT $s7aa '•ri•ct dt1ltn •11d comfort for 2 1d1,1lt• •nd l cir 4 thildr•11. S11f.1u,portillf eut•ld• fra1111 •Ith 7' ride• Drite1 top r1duc11 htal, •inyt cotltd nylon floor. Orange Ceullfy'1 Official COUMAN Repair Station! 3•BURNIR STOYll $22 88 REGULARLY $21.95 CAMPll'S COMIO ttmt• com,1111 with 11,000 ITU '"''· l111tern, p11,1111 bcittl1, '''" tlld r19ul1lor. STOYI & IOTTLI $49.95 TOP QUALITY full slit bag with H1nnel llning .•• full zipper ••. 1Jr mattrtss pocktts ... zip two t09athar for • doubl• bag. 4-lB. DACRON BB ind 76, Jumbo Siza ... $19.95 IU. INSUL 200, Mo4tl n 2D, Ro9. $29.18 $22.11 NOW ONLT $6995 IM 3-SDOO oru ADJUST Alli CATALYTIC HEATERS $2195 REGULARLY $27.95 cludtd meny jobs requiring less educallon than James hid, and wue likely to result in underemployment. The counselor r e t u r n e d listing in the 'reference book , again to the areas of work and noted "medicine and health" as a possible area for exploration. A process of ellminatifll. led to the job of occupational therapy aide. The counselor read the definition: "Assists occ up at Iona I therapist i n adminlsterin.,c medically o r i e n t e d oc- cupational program to a.s!ist in rehabilitating patients in hospitals and similar in- sti.t.ulions • . _ Instructs pa- tienU in manual and creative arts, games, crafts, and other otcUvitJtl!I .•. Prepares and lays out work materials and suppJies, ar>d as.slsls i n maintenance of equ..ipment." e 10·20-40-60 /\t:~I p&t'«'l& & up. 3500 ft alll1ude, 20 nlinUl<'s lo Tall Pinet, Near Big Bear. Groovy motorC"ycte acreaae or an out-01-slghl lnvt"Stn1e.n1 . Ck class 150 lor prices & other info. e DIAAtONDS. OIA1\10NDS _ .. WJIO'S GOT TH E DIAMONDS!"' He "s not quite Tiffany's of Nrw York .•. but lor a pr:i~te collection. , .l !ell ya! Not too bad! Diamond dome cockcau rln&". naw- less • diamond pierced earrings Diamond IOll· talre w~ding RI. , .Ck clUB 318. , .TODAY! Oh! Hie prle« are much - much lower than Tillanys, · USE YOUR CREDIT at GRANT'S * BANUMEllCARD "The Windking" BY PACIFIC TRAIL NOW! •11 HIRI THEY ARll-Those rugged, wind· proof, luxury j1tkets by Puific Troil. Fe1turing tht newest "outdoor Jook'' in 12 dyn1mic colors'. Sires 34 to 46. * YELLOW * BEIGE * LITE BLUE * NA VY *AVOCADO *BROWN *AQUA *TAN *GOLD *OLIVE Over 60 Styles of Jackets at Grant's! llAitlNGroN CHllllO SH01 100 tis Now .·. . . $2200 SH01GUll PR!MfRS Pflf J 00o •EG. S1s.10 . '.. s900 SH01GUN W'Aos Pfl J 000 ""· i'"''· $6zs 1"11 & PISYOl PRfMfRS 'E• I 000 "•· "·"· s500 THI NfW - " ' DAILY PILOT .(f :Senator Jackson 1 Wants to Be President .. , :~ 'Scoop' ·~"\! ' WASH.INGTON CUPl) -ii con1ldered, a liberal on of 5ecrttlry of Defense to limited hope ot making 11. He months Jn various parts o( lbe ln his San Francisco sptech, Vietnam War Wu distracting unfortunattly. alao have v .;~ Sen.HenryM.'1 S c oop " '·• J ·'··tookha I f ll ~ • many dol!l41tlc i 11ue 1, Democrat Jac..un. Jacklon refuses to 1pecul1te on the country. lnv\taUons to speak al,.'.Aaol,ln s rp uue with &om• o h11 Senate co ea1ue1 to QI\ key partl of our dt ... ~ ::::: of50:ash0~tonp'o:8;' including civil rights and politely turned lt down. pQSSibility of setUlna for the arrive •lmost dally in his fellow Democrats who want fT1>m the "real dat11er ln the bu~et," he uld. ~· f 'Norwegian i mm 1grant 1 , socl ll. welfare legi&lation, and More than aaythlnc else, It tisecockentdm· spo11~ the Democratic mail. all U.S. troops withdrawn 1970'1." Whoever lhe Democr be bas powerfill union support. was J··•···•a ---'"lm•'ng ~,.. Whlle the ''hawk" label bas from · Vietnam by the end of The danger , he sald, was nogtlnee m1y be Jn 1 ' cheerlully admits he'd like to ~· "'" ••m the oear th --•·--•· be President of the United In the Senate, he has a 34 pen:ent .margtn of victory "I'm just &oinl to continue helped attract attention to / · that e Soviet Union might J~, can ui:: expected, States. reputation u a hard-driving, in winnin& rH lecUon to a speaking out on tmie. that I JackJon, It has begun to Irk "Setting I public deadline ls UH Its growina military power prtll for a 1tron1 def effective senator who seldom fourth Senate term Jut fall feel deeply about, on laauea of him. He <.llslikes "simplistic not a responsible polky for to take areater risks and to plank in the party platfor ru. ~t "I don't know of anyone in Josea a fight. An excepUon was that brous!'tt his emergence as importanet, flrlt to my classification of people as achieving an end t o the try to "blackmail" the United 11Jf the Democratic. p1rt~ the Senate who would not want his battle 'to keep alive the 1 darkbone candidate for country. and aecond to my hawks and doves, llJ though conflict," he said. "It 11 an States and lls allies -with goes to the country wit}' to be Pn!sident," ha •aid Superaonlc TransJ>O(t (SST) President. A native of the party," be 11ld Jn 1 n some are partisans of peace esc ape from reality," lhe risk of miscalculation and anytbtng short or 1 pn.ldfh' recently. "They can speak for that was to be buUt by the small city of Everett, Wash., interview:' and ;;ime are not." Jack3on expressed concern nuclear war. and responsible foreign an~ themselves, of course -but Boeing company ol Seattle. Juat north of Seittle, Jackson Jactaon haa spelled out "It's absurd," he 5 1 i d dur ing the Interview thal "So many who hive changed defense policy, we will lose ... :: I'd like lo be President." Jn 1950 J1obon w a 1 has never lost an elecUon. He some of hil tore!Jn policy during~ the i::terview. He said _1_ro_w_ln_1_0!>P0' __ 111_0• __ t_o _1_h• __ lhe_t_r -'pos'-i-llo_n_s _o_n_V_iet_na_m_._he_d_ec_l•_recf_. ----'-"-~' M a loyal Democrat who prominently meoUoned 11 a won bls flrst 1t the 11e-of 26 vlew1 ln 1 1peecb before the be bad r.ons1slentl}' opposed· has picked up a "'hawk '' label possible .unnlng mate for when he was e I e ct e d Commonwealth Cl ub of widening lhe war and had for aenerally I u PP or l Ing John F. Kennedy . A t prosecuUna: attorney of Callfornt1 in SID Fr1nclsco, opposed use of U.S. ground President Nilon's Vietnam KeMedy's request, be served SflohomiJb County. Two years his domestic positions at a troops in GarQbodia, Laos and A' RT SHOW policies, Jackson is attracting as c bat rm 1 0 of the later he wa1 elected to lbe Je!fereon-Jacbon d1y diMer Thailantl. increasil!I attention within his 0 em o c rat 1 c Nat lonal Concreu. aervbil aiJ terms in in Rldlmond, Va., and his "I'm neither a hawk nor a COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE APRIL 22, 23, 24 South Coast '1111 1" cost• Moso party 81 1 poulble alternative Committee inlte1d durin1 the the house btfore hill election views· on nit.lanai security in dove -I jwt v.·ant to make "1 to a long line of "doves" KeMedy-Nixon e J t ct t o n to the Senate in 1961 Senate ipeecbea and numerous cure my count.·y does not eyeing the Demo c ral•·c · N b •··"tn'·-·i campaign. ine years later, In "-•tlst.lc1Uy" we• .. a.ing rol"""41'>•· u:a .-ewa. become a p;geon." he said, Presidential nomination. Richard N' h •-..,. 1100 was t e hls presidential c h a n c e s , He bu at le15t 40 apeeches using a pet phrase he has tried __ A_t_lh_•_•_•_m_e_Um_e..:, _Ja_ckso_:_• __ Prts=l..:d•..:•:::l•..:and=..::off.::•.::recf..:..:the:::.:jo::;b;_.::Ja.::cklon=::..::'P'.!P:="""U~y~""~'...:'~nl~y'...,..:ICh~ed~ul~ed~ov~er'...the~~ne~1~t ~lhrff~_'W~l~th~s~ucc~ess~on'..:a~ud~l~en~c_:es::_. _L__~~!!!!!! OPEN DAILY 9-9 SATURDAY 9 'Ill 6 CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY! WE'VE GOT lverything! *EVERY SIZE! *EVERY STYLE! *EVERY COLOll • PRE3/NnNG. • • • NOW YOU OALI l!.Y• • .,...._... el yew ..,,. ••-k•tl .,,_., efttl ... .., fnM "'9 MIO• et14 IHtcitle et "'9 Melft "- el tM 0.-.ftt l•J'I· <•--tt--th9re'• • rwel ,...... lft ,...,. hr yMI .. , ( ,;. I l /,, I r, Hove You S••n th• H•w ••• Socrat~~~:~~~~~. $1295 fltdies' iwcsterrt Styles * Many Style•I *SI••• for .11111 SCULLYF::!T~.:... s22so l t lh by , ........ 111 ""' .. ltlt1 by ltchtlll fro111 $1 lt1th1r P'urM• 1r-$1f.fS Frt 1ffm 111 PUrMI ,10.16 Our Newest Addition ••• Designed for You Gals! • JOIN US FOR COFFEE and COOKIES! • LEVI'S® Levi's® for Cials "A Fanla1llc Co//ed/onf" SUEVELESS TERRY CLOTH All ,otttn of lff.Whlt•llVt, l rawtt- Whlt•Y•llow ................... , ..... . •a RUSTIC CLOTH FIESTA SHIRT 100% 'often lfll colors of blut ch1mb.r1y ind unllln,htd mu1lln. Sl1t1 a.16 ....... , .......... , •... , .. •10 CUDDU TOP VELOUR TOPS Long 1l11v11, ''"P neck, •II ''tton, S-M-l. In Gr1tt1, GtW, lur1uMy, H,,y .......................... .. •13 PIPILINE IANDOM STRIPES 50 % Decron '•ly11ter, 50% 'otton, 11111 S to 16. Colors of OrMtl, Nevy, Whit•, Rutt, Pewttr, N1vy •. , ..... . IANDANA GRANDE •12 :~~ ;;:~ .~. ·~~M·I· ·~·. • • • •1 0 LOW·CUT DENIM fLAUS S•nfertrtd, In ,,oportltnM 11111 S-15, In Short, Medium, Till. •9 FAMOUS BRANDS AT llG SAVINGS ! * LEVI'S• FOR GALS * RING-ALEE·VEEO * EUROPECRAn * NAMA * CHARLIE GIRLS HANG-TENS * CITY PANTS WORKS * MISS H.l .S. PANTS *TERRY JUE* PEllLE IEACH * SCULLY BOOTS * SOCRATIS SANDALS * PACIFIC TRAIL 'JACKETS & COATS * DELIGHTFUL CHAMOIS THE GRANT GIRLS HAVE THEIR OWN 7:1oNwG' l.S l'OU r11 11,.,4 1 •h Ml fht •14-• "lftp.(1,,,::.! fttw 'frOrld ,,'~t'''~' rov'lf • . , IJ'rd , trt1lmt1tt It opp1111. Th1 ,,,,,., ,,.::r 11,r.,., ,,. Ht•. '''"., "'"'" •• 10111 1 •• ,., •• ,,,,, .... ,., . • .... , •• , .. ,..,l ,,,.,,, • .., r .. of,.,., ...... ,,., s..,,,,, NIW STYus •nd STUFF• RING.A • 100% LEE. Vlfo I 6 . ''-":!~••ttr, ,.,,. '''·"··~DY SH11rs .,h,,. ".::: .~~'·.~· .. ~.... s13ts HANG. fEN "" :t"•ft .,,, ''•1tts, ~~OUR 'ANJS •11 S· 11 II Cfff911. $ ~,,, : ~: ··~~~ ~·~ 16 00 r,,-H-o_r_p_ JUSr ARlllYfDf --- " '"'"', 'ANTS11 I ~'°""'"'· • .,, .. ,.. from 6 •y, r111t11i...., lfr ' 1,_ I S.11• • • Cl1Y p•ur PfASA .... s Wo•rs •l'O . """' ,,,.Nr l'YPr rop •r FOl'S • lo11W Wlif '•• Ind 111cf{I/ lt•4', .•. '.''. Grt11t, lity e'Z",,s;::·t. ltJti, ftf. sao LACING ...... ········· ... "'~ .1.'."•"''•r, 0 '"°" ,1,., "tONr ILO · .... Or1111t, ••dt4 'ttlln, S·M·I. U$f •AMr Wmf u.,.,, .. , '"'Ht 'rtl/ .. , Viffiftt s9 ""'• ........ ':· ' DO ........• ,, ... USI YOUI CllDIT II HAIT'SI " .- 1. I I - J4 DAILY PILOT • Wtdntsday, April 21. 1971 ~ - ~leri in Service ' Navy Seaman Steven R. Lou, brother of Miss De.borah " K. Love of Ml8'16 Collins Ave., Balboa ldand, b scheduled I<> return to hi! bomeport of Long Beach on April 3 after a seven .fuonth deployment in the Western Pacific. Navy Lieutenant ( j u n i o r grade) Rona.Id F. Kirby, son or Mr. and Mn. Joseph F. Kirby of 970 Victoria St.. Costa ~1esa, U scheduled to return to his home.port of Long Beach on April 3 after a seven month deployment in I.he Western Pacific. tactical air strikes from the norlh coastal installation to support the allied ground forces . Airman Gary L. Carlston. son of Mrs. Betty J. Carlston of 16981 Canyon L n , , Huntington B each , has compleled basic traini ng at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex., for training in accou11ting and finance. Airman Steven B, Coffman , son of Mrs. Shirley M. C-Off· man, 3651 Wisteria St., SeaJ Beach, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to ~ .................. _... .. ,.,.)19 ., ...... . Choose One of the ]tf any " , " Coast & Southern.Federal Offices to Serve You: • MAIN OFFICE: 9th a H111, LOI AngetU. e2S-13St •WILSHIRE et GRAMEFICY Pl.ACE:39" Wllehl1'9 Blvd., 1..A. • 388-12fJ5 L .. CIVIC CENTER: 2nd & Broadway• &28-1102 •HUNTINGTON BEACH: 91 Hlifll1n91ori Cenltr • (7 14) 897-1 047 SANTA ANA LOAN SEAVIC[ AGENCY: 1905 N. Main St.• (71 4) 547-9217 *SANTA MONICA: 718 Wllshlre Blvd.• 39S.07C$ 1' SAN PEDRO: 10th & Pacific • 831·2341 * W:ESTCOVINA: EasUand Shopping Ctr.• 331·2201 *PANORAMA CITY: 861e Var) Nuya Btvd:. 892·1171 * TARZANA: 18751 Ven1uta Boulevard • 346-8614 "* LONO BEACH: 3rd·& Loc:u1t • 431·7481 "* Open Saturdlys-9 1m to l pm ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION With a S2,500 balance ln:·your 1avln~ " account, you iare ellglbl9to btOome a metnber.·Sub8tanU1l aavlng1 ire av11Jabl1 when purchJalng many Items li'lcludlng automobilea, furniture, apr)Uance., fewelry . .Plua nlll1Y tre• 1ervioe1-money ord_,~ \ aafe depaalt bolee. etc. CO~st & Soµthern Federal Off!Jrs Ypu These · Highest Prevailing Rate.s: COIP'OUNllD DAILY AHD PAID QUMITIJU.Y.• ' .. 5.000f•-5.13"1o Pllliiook: No Minimum. S.250/o.5;3g0/o Th,.. Month Certltlcote; No Minimum. 5.750/0.5;92•1 • One-YurCertlflcate; $1 ,000 Minimum. . e.09•1.7e.180J .. • •· i:w.>-'Ynr C.itiflcate; SS,000 Minimum. • Ett.c~ Annual Eamlnga • INSURANCE TO $20,000 ., ... . , Navy. Seaman Appn!ntice Sheppard AFB, Tex., for Richard P. Fredette, son of training in lhe transportation ~1r. and Mrs. Richard P. _ _21'_'.iel"'.d;... -------=~=~::==:~=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=E:=:=:::!=:":=S=::==~n:::=:::::=±=c:::::=:±!=::;:===:C:::r::==~===========:L-Fredette Sr. of 667? Jardines Drive. Huntington Beach; "'as graduated from recrui t training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Fredette is a 1970 graduate nf Huntington Beach High School. Airman Kim 8. Boike, S-On <lf Mr. and Mrs. Duane B. Boike, 13001 Siskiyou St .. Westminster, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex .• for training. in the civil engineering structural and pa vemen ts field. U. S. Air Force Captain Jay A. Rovinstiue., Jr., son of Mr. and Pifrs. Jay A. Rovenstine of 535 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. has completed 100 combat missions over Vietnam. Captain Rovenstine. 8 8-52 Stratofortress heavy bnmber na\·igator, is assigned to the .107th Strategic \Ving. a unit of the Strategic Air Command. Navy Airman Apprentice Ke\•ln N. Cox. son of il1r. and Mrs. R. D. Cox of 7731 Sugar Drive, Huntington B~ach. was graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Cox is a 1969 graduate 01 Fountain Valley High School. Fountain Valley. Airman CbPl.stopbtr R . ~llller, son or 1'1r. and r.1rs. Robert C. Miller of 9322 1.taiahine Drive. Huntington Beach, has graduated at Keesler AFB. Miss., from the U.S. Air Force personnel specialist course. The airman, nov.· proficient tn the preparation of personnel records and reports, is being assigned to Keesler AFB. ,_1iss., for duty with a unit of the Air Training Command. Air Force Captain Don E. Aakbus, son of 1-fr. and r.lrs. Donovan G. Aakhus, 18135 Denberry Way, Newport Beach. is on duty at Cam Ranh Bay AB. Vietnam. Captai n Aakhus. a C-7 Caribou tactical airli(l aircraft pilot in a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. previously served at Norton AFB. Airman !Hikel L. Allbrook. son of Mr. and 1'1rs. Waller B. Allbrook of 6431 Cavan Circle, Huntington Be a ch , ha s completed basic training al Lackland AFB. Tex. He has been assigned to Lowry AFB. Colo.. for training in lhe supply field. Airman Allbrook is a 1970 graduate of t.1arinci High School and attended Golden \Vest Junior College. Donald C. ~tinder. son nf 111r. and Mrs. Ho\vard C. 1.1inder. 432 E. 18th St., Costa J\lesa, has been promoted to Specialist Four . He ; ~ stationed al Fort Wainw right in Fairbanks. Alaska with the 171st Supporting Btn. Spec. 1'1inder is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School. Earl A. Goodrum, son of 111rs. Earl Goodrum of 272 A 16th Place. Costa 1-iesa. has been commi!tsioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Trainine School IOTSl at Lackland AFB. Tex. Lieutenant Goodrum 9.'as selected for OTS through competitive examination. Sergeant Michael J. Johnsnn of Huntington Beach. has been supporti n g the South Vietnamese Laotian operation to cut the Ho Oli h-1inh trail. Sergeant Johnson, so n t1f Mr, and Mrs. Samuel E. Johnson, 6062 Sydney Drlve, HunUngton Beach, is a corrosion control specialist at Da NI.Di AB. Vietnam a forward operating bast for U.S. Air Foret operaliOJl!i 1idin1 t.bt South Vietnamese In their campaign to disrupt e11emy tupply Uoe1. The aergeaot provide • tsSMtial ,ervJce primarily for F -4 Phantom operations of the 366tb Tactical Fighter Wing. Unll flglller-bomber crews fly 100%·DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP. RICH, DURABLE SHAG BEAUTIFUL' NEW THREE COLOR OESIGNS. LOW FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE PRICE COMPARABLE RETAIL ................ $6.99 st.YO. SAYI .... M£Vf KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED ••• MULTI- MILLION DOLLAR CARPET INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD ••• THOUSANDS OF ROLLS ON DISPLAY ••• NAME BRANDS •.. FINEST QUALITY BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR COLORS ••• KODEL •.. POLYESTER 100% KODEL POLYESTER PILE, RIClf. DEEP. LUX· URIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI.STYLE DECO- RATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT FROM. R[- SIST DIRT ANO SOIL STAINS. LOW FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE PRICE COMPARABLE RETAIL ............. : •• $1.99 99 SQ. TD. SAYI .... M£1H CLIANEll!' .lmlEL TRI-COLOR SHAG . lNI TISTID UMi: .. PllllS 100% FORTREL POLYESTER. lUSH, 'DEEP LONG· WEARING AND HARD TO SOIL STAYS BEAUTIFUL WITH A MINIMUM OF CARE. VERY · RESIUANT. BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG, LOW 99 ••• DUPONT 501 •.• CAPROLAN ••• ACRILAN . IOOO's OF REMNANTS FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS . SALE COMPARABLE RITAIL ~ ..... $8.99 ,PRICE C•lo11_.f honr..t it t tttdt_,. tf fib..-l11du1tri ... Inc. ~~ DUPORT NYLON SI. YD. SAYl $1.00 ~~f ;ss. 60 % J~;;~s 80 % LIVING ROOM, DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEDROOMS CARS. ETC. :-J 100% Continuous Filame nt Ny- lon Pile Certified with DuPont 501 BILI< "'N" label. 2?? .... S2.N CARPET TILIS·SAYE ·$ DO·IT·YOUISELF-NOW SAU PRICED SAVI 59c FHll liki Hlflt-HlwHTS oiler 29. "IPll-111y II illllll c • IHHr·D1t•Hr • 11-Yr. We•r lHtt• ' .,r:r-ir'lllNG YOUI ROOM MIASUl!MINTS . }• INDOOR·OUTDOOR CARPET FINEST QUALITY NAME BRANDS ldeol for fomily rooms. ploy rooms, dens. COMPARABLE RETAIL .................. $4.99 BRAIDED RUG I !! SAYE SUI 6 X 9 co~ri~~BLE S 1495 '35.00 KOBEL POLYESTER 100% KODEL"' POLYESTER PILE. lHREE PILE HEIGHT PATTERN IN GRACEFUL DESIGN. RUGG ED DURABILITY. BEAUTIFUL COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED AT ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPARABLE RETAIL ............... $4.99 KODIL PLUSH 100% Kadel Palyesler Pile. Rich, 599. deep luxuriousty thlc:k pile. New . so. TD. decorator colors. lt: COMPARABLI RETAIL ............. $8.99 DACRON SHAG DIEP PILE l 00% Dacron Polyester Pile -4" BeautifUI ntW deep shag with -a full deep pile. Many new dee-51 to orator colors to choose from. si.Y1' NOW SAU PRICED AT suo COMPARABLE RETAIL ........... .$7.99 • Stail 111ist11t · EA. • I hc1nt« Ctl1r1 • 1MX ltJln Pile 12"x12" Cl.ELANESE0 .RTREL CARVED Jrte tested noll'le •'1 fibers 5" i 00% Fort rel Polyester Pile. Popular two ·level pattern. Combines beouty se. ,._ ond durability. Distinctive but subtle SA'lt tweed colorotioo. . 11 .. COMPAR~ILE RETAIL $1.99 DACRON SHAG~~~ 3V2" 100% Docron Polyester Pile-'" Beoutiful new deep shog with a full 3Y2" pile. Many new decoro- tor tri-colors to choose from. 5f;.Jf· NOW SALE PRICED AT '"°' COMPARABLE RETAIL ........... $13.99 Sl YI. SAVI $3.00 fcATURING FIBERGLASS CUSTOM Dov\PERIES. EXQUISITE TEXTURES & COLORS. COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••.•••••••.•.••.•••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• $7.99 ' • • . • ... ~.\ J. '.-·21'8'.2.i ........ TS 111 llllHlST • CllMlll(lll CIOiT.UllS 1111 IAlll TElllS lYWIU • w fft fl(( ... r.-sem • YISll Iii CllSTOll IWUT IEPI • . llOITH HOU JWOOD WIST LOS AllGRES AllAllllM M011n11ilo LOllGIUCN PASADENA 7007le•rtl<••Y•• 11141 Wll .. lrt llM. Mtll. Eocli4St. 715 W;WklttiorllM. 3101 lltllflowor llM. 26601.c111,.4o lld. OPEN SUNDAYS 11 .... -H2·2200 477-SSH 635-7674 72Ml67 42T.at34 -577·1900 ~'('Wl)Od frttw01 10 Sllttrhllfl ~ OotqO "'"'°\' to W~slwt 1 blcK.~. Morlh of Sol'llO Mt frfol. (or'*' of Monttbtlo Sell Dilto fr~ to ..._, I l olotodo 81-.rd ot 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. we, lo\! 10 tourtl (on)'(ll'I Blvd '""f'I otf, 4 blot•\ .,..,,, • w~. wot Ofl tuc.lid. Atro11 frOl'I (eM, end wtli1fttl' M . llvd. llolNI oH ,.,,,.. Oii ..,...,. SIMI Gobuel 91...d '"" ... ... . CANOGA PAii . TORRANCE WIST (OVlllA NOUYWOOD VlllTUIA SAN FRANCISCO COSTA MESA 210ll Slit,,..o Woy 2S26 I. Wtrli-• Aff. 11u11.v ... 111A•o. 2501 LMoleSt. MILLBRAE 423' Alltslo II•~• 1714 Newport Blvd. l47·2U4 fU-4471 .... 74SS 641-5'41 320 El ca .. 1001111 S42·6'9' Soil ltfllOn:lwllf Jrwy to (1ffl11 i 111«•1 Mortll of Moll"tWOQd . ltilot~'Wntof 645-3020 St 1bloc••l'O Ofl(itrvstoWoR· llvd ti! Vtrmollt fm '°"''' Oii MIM 692-2555 ·Newpon Blvd. at I 71h St. -· • \ ' :J PILOT·AOVERTISE• s WtdntsdU, April 21, 1971 \\ledn1sday, April 21, 19n s DAILY PILOT J(!i -• -· . ---• • --l.. Vital Sta-i1st1es for the Orange Coast Areai Births toln'M COAST COMMUMITT MOIPITAL ..... , Mr. 11111 Mrl. L..-rY Adami. JU Mll-'11 Orlut, L1•un1 l!leacl!, 1lr! Mt 11wl Mn. JowP!'I M. Arct , 11111 Vllll Del,,,.,, C11>IS!ruia ll11Ch boY o\lrlt I Mr. Ind Mr .. l"tt ... llDuUilld, Joli» U l'U. I, Da .... f"illf!I, PiOY Mr. 11111 M,._ P.ul A, fl llllfl. 106 C__.111, Tu11111, t frl ...,11 f Mr. 1f'ld' Mn. Wll!11m Giii. 1"11l1acl1, ''" '""""""'· ,, .. , Mr. 111111 Mf'. Jof\11 • M.lh11, 2ff31 VII ·C"'9111, l.ffUl'l4 1"111 .... I, 1lrl, Mr. 11111 i"'' Mid.rt' l . Cll1ncH1r, 12" Strr11 f. I_, i.n Cltr011nt1, bff., \._ M,. llW rt. llUbttl S1r1c"-'· 16111 ~ 0111, n ''-r;?i''ittl•I, Mr. tlld~rt. lllllll9rt If'. lntOld, r:. T-lde IM, ,.,_ doll Mir/ t! , Mr. Ind rl. JltMI I . '°""'"' ,.trlc.ll Dr., Mlstlon Vlt lo, !Jo<I.', A""ll II Mr. -'Id Mrs. Norrn1n l er111., 22115 LDltllnOlll Or., IE! Tona. t lrl. Mr. 11'111 Mr1, l1'"r.!1 Pll'IOll. UJ "''•· S•rt (lnnertll, • r . . t Atrl 1! Mr. 9fld Mr1. Fred H•tHlrotll, 211U W"lrr Orlwt . No. 2, Soutll U111M. ""· Mr. ~ Mr1, Rlcll1rd J, S(hultl. tit Gr•~ A'A., Apl, C, S1n C~l1, '"' A,..11 11 Mr. tnd Mrs. Johnny c 1 J1ck...,,, 106 00.lll'OOd Ro1d, Oce1n1 ae. girt, M•. r,11111 Mrt. J1mH A. V1nd1weer, 243 Pt 11'0. No. J, Si n Clen·11nlf, bow . .... u " M[,, ..W Mri. sr-n c . Nel.,.., IS?·• w . Mari-, S~n CletnMl1, •lrl. Mr. •M Mrs. Rol1nd E. Wlel!1"'0, 2$001 s.be11Jen L•111. Mlulon vi.10. t lrl. Marriage Licenses M1rdl » ' CR•DDOCKS·AICKS -H119'I W., :16 4 ns Vlk1. HU>tflnllon llffdl •nd of 1Jf'l2 Arlt-Sir"'· wn1mlt11tw Or1noe. llMAR·PIEAOT1'1 -P•lrltk G .. " of 16112 S1ybroek, Hunt1n1!°" •••di I nd ''"'?-;J., n al 1m1 P11.a.n1 Aw• .• Tull , AGVIL AA·N!LSON -Robt!r!, U of "11 Sulton ........ Wet1m!n11er 1nd ki ri• 0 ., ,, ol UD2 NIY•IO. W1st""ln1ter, II UPE.jl,LLEN -Mrl"lln L. 30 \I JOO X I-.~ llea.;11 Ind SVIYll J., 2~ DI 1742 W••-~ Huntlrt9'0fl !111d!. Hl!RN ..... Ol!l-GARC!A -P'hll llp P .. lt of 13"2 Arlron1 $!ref, Wutf¥1ln1ltr •nd l•llll•• C.. ll at 1611 Wnmt111 SlrM!, WlllrTil,..l•r. · AYALA-GARCIA -Kenr>tlh A., 20 ef lloill Sl.,ll•. Mlaw•v C!ly and 0.loPH M., .. ., ID2 llWlllr Cln:l9, Hullllnt!Dll ltldl. ........ GIRA~VICICERY -ArThur A.," ol 7271 11:11111-. Slfnton Ind LIMftll J .. »or 2CU Wtll ,., SI•"'· Slnte AM. Al'UR.ON-GARTNER -J1111'P11 A.. 11 Oii 211 Ct! M.tr Awe .. C11t1 lrMM 11'1111 EllllNrd A. 12 If C•1 r;;· \ . IR'l'MAl.-EMOllY -Dmlk , II OI . 1DI Wu! ••t• A..... t.lftllOM affdl f.NI CIW'kllne A .. 11 of 2l~ Gllklell c;:1re1t, NIW-' 11uc11. • McGLAOE·5UIAtil0 -L.o Ill,, 4f '91 1n2 H~e Aw .• Sa<•...,.,.to lll'ill Cor1ly1t A .• (1 al ND. 21. Tr•• ..... 1,11r14, L••u,,. 11..cti. , DUNN.OIVOT -TheciOort 0 .. ')t ol 112n W•l,...I AYt., Tu•lln I nd Sll•roa A., U Oii !NI.I S111 llullno. Irvine. NELSOfrt-OAllDNE~-Andrn J .. J1 DI 3014 Vtn au , ("II MRI .-.d llellt11' L .• l4 of ~ Ci.rn0M Awe., ••lbtl lltlnd.. • GOODWIN·PETlllS -G1ry A., 1' ol llil.H Jtlll s1rw, SUN! ll11dl •NI J1111• o .. 2J of sunwt lltKh. MURllAY·VAN DV'ICE -llotltnd If., J.4 of 120 N0tlll l fttmore, AMllelm incl 5"1ron c ., 2' ot lt!ll Silmon L•"'· H11nt1n.ni.n le~. '-llf'll I • f GIUIKOf'f'-WEDGI -LM, » .. lOID v 1t1.i. Cite.It, C1tt1 M--.. tnd Ki tti'"" M., :IS of Sent i Ant. S'&o::M-fll.LOWIN -Mlcl>t tl 0 .• t2 of C)6k P1rt; Aft .. Uklth. Mtncloll,,. 1 ' l'llYllll R., 11 o! 21"1 •• r11, loi1111tL111ton a1.ui. Gl!OIUUSTEIRMAN -Awdln It., ,. ot JOSI f11U"'1on Strti!I, C01t1 Mtw and J11t11 A., to tf Co.It M .... EOWAltOS-l)AVIS -J-ll .• It DI Ull\I Pl,,., Wtstrnln•i.t ..... C•1tof'f'fll' I!., 11 oi 1'292 u11r.i. '''"'' Wt1!1'1ln1!tr. CAMl'Ol .... ltCE -f'ltf'ICtlCd; lf DI 1111 E11f lllh Slr-1, 1111!1 ... n• •nd !Mt (., 12 ol 11 7'1 S1n!1 llO.t llL Sllfl\'Ofl. .... u t DAVll·TYtltON -Wt,nt A .. 71 DI :li!pf C•fltllltl ..... ,,, Lo,,. t111cri •net t11v1rlw o ., 10 el 1'il S•nl1 AM Aw1 .. (Giii M•~I HA'l'IM:IEFAUL T -Edw1rd A .. 21 ol tJ11t 1!1rll•rt. L•111n1 Hiii• •ncl lltHC'CI J., 1' of lo111nt Hlll1. OAUM•ltGRIST -Tf"Y ll., 11 ti 5'16 El Mtc:ttnl Ave., Ne.,llOl'I lltldl •nd l•ndV L., to ti U!I Antlqu• WIY, NtW"'1 IUC:h. 'I' AHNKf·CAWTHON -R~rl, .fl of 15111 WHll1m., Tv1t1n 11\11.! X11Mrln1 J .. 24 ot 1022.I 'l'•n• Orlw•, l11nton. M1rrlMI llc ... H'I WUI l11uM to "" folknftlll't 11 DI...,.., I. ELMLUHO-CAJl.LS.OH -C1rl f',. 6t. VIit "-11rton W1y, CCHtl Mtlt, t nO Eut1lat A., 11, Vfll nd. SPALOIM~OWAllDI -Wllll-111 A., u, i.MI Vll~ll• 111,1 C1•l1lr•no a1.ct1, 1!'111 Vlrtlllll H ... Arwc!IL SCHMIOT ,tltEEO -Wllllflfl H., a. 161'1 1'1rk1lcllo L11.. Mu111!111t9ll lllld!, 1nd Llurlt R .. )Cl, l.Akf'fl'Ood, WALTlitS-ICJOS ~ 0-10 f'., 41, L- lffdi. 1!'111 A"' C., 17, 111IO ltecl l ud Clrclt. f'wnl1ln V•llty. SCHINNOP'IN·IJtiXlll: -Gll!l!Mr A., .U. ...,,....Im, 1nd ~•!rl L., C2 7'21 CYHtu. Huntir..lon BHCll. l;'ltlCICl()N-XENT -Wltll1m $ .• JI, inn 911111 Ch~ Rd .• 1..cl Je1n.,. A .. 11. »O Sllwl1rk or.. botl'I ol Hl/fltl~ Bt1dl. JOHANNSEN-flOGCS -K111neth to, R~ et.ch, 1<111 K•llll"" If., 11, 1tt l'ffrl AYL. N-llOl'I lltidl. ltELL"ltAUll -Jlt'rl' Y .. 11. 111~ I-L1.,., NIW..orl It.Cl! I nd Xtllllttn A. '9. An11>e!m. 11.0SS·AMOERSON -ll1rrw 5 ., 11, $f11 5!r1111 Or., Hunlhwtci•• 611Cll, ·""' tltbt«I S , 7:1, LM ,t,l1m!101. llA.ROlll-OfTS -Wllll1n• P., "l d1 t!ll It.. HuntlnPn Bf.ltltll, Md C1 ..... 11 S .. 2t, L1knoood. PLIWl·90011.EJI: -W11!tr A .. 10,fo'll ..,,.nu Or .. Hunll"'°""' 1111t11. tnd ,t,n,.,. M., Jl , Loni lltKll-McM.llMAN·HUGHES -Johll R: .. t7, 11'1 ,..,,,.,. St, Co1l1 M'-'·"· Ind °"'""" £., 22, NOi El AIY Aw1 • Fwlltt1n Vllll't-Hll.VOAA'TH-XlR:.aY -DJ•nt tit,, !ii, a u ,,,.. .. ,,., Hll!lttnt'len .. Kii. olfttl """~' !1, Lont '''°"'· LVCIR:. INGUEZ -W1t1l1m, 111, 16'11 ¥ Ln .. HllnllfltlOll •1ttfl, •11111 C."""11 f'., 11, LN A-IH. WIENGllR•f'lllNCASt: -l...,,,..11 I .. 11, NI. a11G,, Ind 1'11rk 1•, '1, lll -'!"· eor-1111 M.r. FOSTIWI O -Olli T., It. ~1n1J1 O•r .... 11'1d AllMll R... I' Jllll 11 ..... L11,, Hllllll"'Mfl t~ SCl4NITICIR-IJl.'1'1.LA -TWr't l.M S1, Llfle tflldl, .,.. l!rlU. M. 11• OIWatl., A ..... Cellll iw.... NAV"'-"tCWIR:S -Ar!llvr. ll, V..m:t .Ml *'"' A .. i1, 1111:1 a 1M111mtt0n Cir .. twflllMlllll .. Id!. Glll.IU'll-Gla81 -Andf'ftf S., 21. ,.,...,_,. 1nd Jl"'°I L.. to, "'41 11\111111 Wttlt Cir., Hlllll1MNlll a1.c:Jt, MILlllU•MITCH(LL -V•I M.. 'It, d Jlldtlh A .. n, """ fl tu NII St .. ···:e """ $AM' ·•AUl!ll -ltobtrl A,, 11 , 1,d M111t A'tf., H1111llrwll!I aMdl. '"'Jitu A .. JO. Llfle IHdl. (lRU Kl·t"Al.MI• -~ ... u.11 W1r...,, •nd Atlff o .. n , ltd w1r , !»II> ot l411nt11111on t•ntt. C:Ol-'U0M•WAGNE:1' -a1rrr a., 2~• Ill C•ntet St, CM!t Miii, flllll Ctr.I L .. )Oi. Whlttlar, NEW ann:• 'Clear Eyes' DICONeUTANT EYE DROPS. for tealthr, comfortabft eyes. Rapidly remov11 ~':13. 119 lkC I "L . " ensme by •u••!!• AU PUIPOSI SOlUTlOM '" Colllacl Lenses \ Its. US· .... "Supp-hose"PANTY HOSE ~tr·lltt-Conlortlo~ soo~iq su..,.-t for yow 5e1s ••• finniftl PlliY 1irdle action and t111 lone, lean look of jllfity hos• an in one girment. Proportioned sll• lor all htlllts ood .,;g111s, 4 98 ln-11'1 [myflJ . • ln' Prk:1 IJ$ • .. 11co .. "When I Was A Kid" ~ ..,11u.co1n • 01tit1111111111 ." c..odj at ib best ••• l!llbttd by •:.~~11~369 SIHl'S E"""1 . LnPric1"t.ft • CLAIWOL "Lemon Go Lightly" •ei•I• " Pl11. s,ty.ow na:tiuner far the St11t-spils!led. Stmlf*'-li&J!tlled IGok. Rich ~s!i·n"°nry1~ 1 78 ln'JrlH 1.11 • l5i w JJippiVf<J.Q HAii llTTINGGIL I« .. ltr IOI btetr lalilll ~lltr 1111. MOl lody. Rtpltr BBC or El1rl Hold. • Sn41'1 hlrJUJln-1.11 I IL • SHULTON Summer Special Ill -II IMIM! "' lbose delljhl1~ fnir-t 1n -to hli '°' "'11 flSil. thurt nmr • Fri•••~'' 111'•• •, r.1,•-• • "'If ... ric11 • tNi s,1c1 Cologne Mist Dasi. Powder ioc.u11 89 IN. • l 1m1"'*-w-.. M-...i urn] Jo~ ,..,., Sle,.,.ll\/1 L • .,_.. Jer111 ~ Todd, Fr1ntll M.. lfMI J11n A. AllM'll. Getdon OM1'111 •1111 J-11 Mir!• · 40 OZ. l,IQUID · U OZ. SIZI 17 0%. SIZI 'Aiax' Lysol IATHIOOM Tissue Lysol TOILIT IOWL CLIANll la1ln, Tub & Tiie Cleaner fo1din1 1l11mln1111 chair wit" 51313" webbing. Assorted colors with lri!itt. :~ 3 39 11• • 18 gallon size. lllltnai· able, rust;nql. 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Ctr•llr • 4 IL Ceclt•ll • I~ IL Till Wl11 • I\;' tr. 11111 Win ::K, 1.59 1 10 II, l1~ltl 11Heavy-Base" Glassware Styling Dryer "Groom ~ Clean" MAii IPllAT I• MtM Solt lnl,..., loo;; -'"'' duo, oot dlft " llicly. fo< 1 09 lit """"-s1yl1. •es. lJI 7 tL • lteltt cars •.. tlley'rt btatli· ' ' ' ' ' ' I .. , .. 'I ... ,. •.: .: ·' ·' '. .. ;.~ ,., 1,\ " ... ·~· ., . ' ,, ,, ,'• ,., ··' ,, •/ ,. ' '· . " ,, '·' ., 0: Stereo Multiplex •ylUlTOMI 113 "Desert Fl " ower ••n HT 1 95 C.l1p1Mil1lU.,ltstl11-hL ltc.IJI • for Ml .. 1u1, rinllle. c""''"' m11111k: &&c1i. .. Cll'S housed in ..... plllti< Doi. • Silly Putty ltc.11.71 11171 Place To Shop! N•wport h1ch 1flt 1mH, Wfltdlff rt.. OPIN t AM H11ntlngton Bt1ch tolOPM 11 ICllCI -Cnot ,,..... "' ..... btusl wlilt .., •• for tlle new nitwal IM!ltr IOQl. S!imulates ""p llftd Mir. 15.88 .._ • ...._._,. 7DAYS Huntington l11ch A WllK· ·~II.ti L::::::a:: ....... I• ' Ml-'z::::::::EC::iii:=!J I II strata it lite t.tuy -ht-u.\ 11 ~u • &&c "1t11il er bolmee it. "l'lle '~JI stlld 1~1· "Sok-a" Paddle Ball ~ I I I I JI DAILY PILOT P.4Jtlf.l' CllWf/S I 'Death R-ow' for W amen Being, Built • • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -llOll will be delayed wlille they spend "quit. a few yean tbe unit """ eating. Callfornla's first "Death Row'' appear ln ot"tr triaJs sliem. there." The four womell will have for women ls be.Ing built to Mm~ .. ~ .... fr~mf·-:"i:.~ by t.he A fourth woman will be an access to law books and be od •· th •t. ... ......,, .. ,u / ''Death &w." She already b able to take part 1n academic accomm a..., e 11c1rte yauna: --s•·•· Department of ·•· ~ Is •· ltlr ~--1 1 -... .c u.,.....r sentence for death r in programa from their ~la. "'' COOU1rntned w "'"'" ts Co r r e c U on a said the . the slaying of an , eldel;'ly .=,;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;~iiii;iiii;iiiiii:ii;i Manson, and It.a -.Olatton rtmodeUni nect&Sary for the woma1 in 1 Lo5 Angeles11 presents "a grim prospect" new "death row11 would eoe:t robbery, She is Jean Carver. The six.cell unit LI u.tder 'about $8,000. The department spokesman construction at the rectpUon It wlll involve helghtenlng a said the four win be in vlrtOal center at the Ca I i·f.o r n i a wire felCe around the area,. laolalion until ''we .see how lnstitution for Women near erectina a concnte wall they react to one another al)d F'rontera in the flat, dairy around a tiny outdoor staff and whether they can get country of San Bernardino recreaUon area, IJOlatlng the along with ooe another." Cou11ty . , six-cell wrlt from the rest ,of The unit will be staffed by For Susan Atkin!, 22,.Lealle .the building and reinforcing five wome1111 and one man as Van Houten, 21, and Patricia the cells them.selves, . security officers. The state Kttnwlnkcl, ZZ, it could be . Each cell will be .. by·7 feet will spend between U),000 and home for several years while with a bed,.alnk, toilet. locker, $35,000 a year for their they appeal their convlctiOmi table and chair. There will be salaries. DIAMONDS AND> ESTATE JEWELRY IURCHASED in the Tate-LaBianca killJngs. a lone shower ln the unit. ~ The department spokesman he ·1 i .. ~ lb ·u be s.11tll Coin ~1•1• The three women hav• been w n 1 s """"'• ere wt I said tbe 1t•···uon would be ' f aJ rd I hi wa lrl1tol •t tlie $111 Di190 Fwy, _ \'IB.GINJA.'S SN IP 'N STITCH SHOPPE ll34 Et1t Co••t Hwy. e Carone 4'11 M•,. Phone 673·8050 SALE TAX "BLAHS" GOT YOU! MAKE NEW FUN CLOTHES! Save Dolla" At Our After Tair Celebration 20°/o OFF ON ALL FABRICS April 22nd Thr!)u9h 28th ' See You Soonl VIRGINIA P.S. Sorry, .. 11t 011lv Ill. off 011 I of A ind M~1f1r Ch1rge t ··'··· formally sentenced to San em e gua wa c ng. evaluated to d eter m In e Co1to Mt••· $.40·9066 e IANIAMlllCA.lD e MASTll CHAI•• "M d l 'ik~k~.'.!~~?~"'._ ____ ~Qu~e~n~ti~n·~s~g~as~ch~a~m~bei~··~H~o~w~-~!A~de~pa~rtme~!n~t~o:ffl~·c~ia~t;w~·d~U_;nc;;re~a~u~·on~al~~pro~gr~a~m~·~~an~d~§§§§§§~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ onvny, owe ~ e itty-cots ever, their transfer to the prJ-,Would be a grim prospect to such rouUne duties as cleaning Transmitter On Okinawa Under Fire TOKYO (UPI) -Every night the Voitt of America'.!! one million-watt transmitter on Okin1wa goes on the air. b • a m i n I American~dited new1 and Americ1n music toward the '150 million people .t Communist China. Whether th1t voice will be silenced -or forced lo speak more softly -is one of today's thorny Issues between Japan ind the United Stales. The I wo couo'tnes 1 r e negotiating the retum o( OkJnawa to Japan, ei:pected ·lO take place sometime in 1972. J1pan :ia,ys American pr~ paganda broadcasts lo third countries from ii.! soil would \'iol1te Japane!I!: sovereignty. The United States. which has ne 1eod alternative t o Okinawa u a site fo r the tr1nsmltter, in!l.sb the broad- casts must continue. Ve let of America l VOA) ac- tually ha! five big transmit- ters on Okinawa. They also broadcast in Korean for Q:im- munlst Nort.b Korea, and in Russian for Soviet Siberia. Tbert •~ programs i n En&Jish, the inle.mational \lnsuage ef Asi1. , All of these ire side Issues . however. e<1mpared to the broadcasts lo C ommun I st Cbin1, the main job or the mllllen watt transmitter. Broadcasts in the medium frequency range-designed for Ollna's broadcast band-lose little ol their power in transit across the open sea. VOA of- ficials believe program! of th.It sort may be audible as far ' 'Is 1,500 m~ inland. Both the Chinese and the Soviet.! have used lransmitlers ol their own to try to jam VOA 's broadca!l! at least in l1r1e population centers . 'ft>e lswe arose March 17 when the J11panese Postal Ministry i!Sued a ruling that a f&re.Jgn controlled radio station would bt-a violation of /•pa~ law. 1 For thr United Stales. an ;__txit of VOA from Okinawa j mitht mean ~treat with the ; trlDSmitlers to Guam or some ~ •ther mid-Pacifk: island. The • expense would be heavy, and }-tht Voice of America would .. .,bt a lot of de<:ibels in China ~ a result. 'lbe VOA IJSue in Japan has been caught up in the coun- try'a Oilna poHHcs. Japan 's four opposition parti~. ·whiC'h won 43.9 percent of t~ vote at the laal gener1l election. all •~ committed in varying dtgn:es le normalizing rela- tions with Communist Ollna. St. Joseph's Accredited For 2 Years A two-year aC"Creditalion has been received by St. Joseph Hospital from the board of Commissioners of the Joint Commission oa Accreditation or Hospit•ls, •ttordlng to an announctment from I h f bospit•I. St. Joseph i! located in Orange t.nd has h , J d accredit1tlon a I n c ' its fOundlng In Int. Tbe .ccreclltation Pl"lllram f« holpitals was at1rted in 1911 by the American College of SUratOM 11 a voluntary sell reiulatory p r t g r a m to maintain a hl&h 1l1ndard or health care. The program now lndUdet rtpl'QtDtatk-a ol tht Am trlcan CoZltlt or ~ians, Amttic-a n Hospil1l AleoclatJon and lbt American M<dlcal Auoclation. FAIR Mt. 1.w. foch•t. n, .. ...... _..t. ,..,. ., f1c+ora 111 .,_, • .; ........ DAllY 11l01 .-;~., ,. .... ...,., ~ . .,.. • ~ •u•n•• o• 1Tuu o• sau1 J sr· ••cK u• Youa -•••• ••u ,ooK Ar Youa sTon KITTi'-JAMBORll •10 "'••1t PA=L:r:HTS P00~2~~!'5'1GE ' 12701 !350lC A famous Revere Wore /-----------... teakettle. The most wonted and best selling teokettlt in America. The most popular sizes Ofl VALUI 6 Cup Whistler 6.00 2 Qt, Whl1tler 6.50 2Qt.5tainle11 LUI 3.99 4.49 •••• 1 11.00 7.49 offered. 3 Qt. Whistler a.so -C.99 5·PIECE WRENCH SET BONANZA Y-CNOICI •••uuut .. MOiiie 5 piece open end wrench set or 5 piece open end and box wrench .combination set. 199 sn LEMON LIME HAND SOAP Here'a a new lemon.time woterless hond soap with lanoliO. Great for the ladies, leaves hands soft.Also on .. purpose cleaner oround the home or office. 1ol.B.CAll 37c COAT AND HAT HOOK BRAH OR CHROME YOUR CHOICE Easy to install. J ust screw Into wall and your coot or hot or• ready to hang. 5~ Completely shockproof and waterproof. Costs 4 a·· Jess than 3 cents per night to operate. Ea1y to instaJL, No pemiits needed. 3 LIGHT sn-LV2DD3 •• r. LIGHT sn-With Timer 58.8 LIQUID PLUM'R Keeps drains open I Sofe, no harmful chemicals used. SAVE28' o/a''x4'x8' == .~~.A·.: .. _<.:. s~~~~,!rt~i~ , • old wa lls. Point or paper • • over. Makes a perfect: • base to apply thin . . . ,• • • .. • • • • • • • •• • • . : . . . . • • • •••• paneling. • SAVE 50' CANVAS WORKGLOYES Just in time for spring gardening or pointing chores. These ore U.S. mode cotton gloves mode wilh the thumb positioned -.,~~---~) for wear on either hand. ' DoublH the life of eoch pair. 29~ MIN'S OR lADIU' Includes Filter. Deluxe splasher pool 59'' wi th top and bottom rails and vertical supports complete with cartridge filter. 12' POOL COVIR, •• 4.99 .... LEISURE CHAISE LOUNGE For Your Outdoor ' Living Room ••• 12'' 1·GALLON PLANTS AGAPANTHUS DWARF LILYOF NILi· This outstanding spring blooming plant will giVe you' on outstanding burst of blue. flowers.. PYRACANTHA Clusters of wh ite flowers in spring and lush red berries for Christmas. TOUR CHOICE 88! DELUXE HEDGE SHEARS MANUfACTUllR CL051.0UT Heavy steel cuttin g head, tubular steel hand ond rubber grips for easy handling. ldeol for trimming shrubs and round the flower beds. 149 191NCH TUIT• 1212 IRYINf ILYD. •n••m• .,., WllTMINSTEft &YE. •-A·PUIC -VALlEYvtEWST. IL TOIO 24312 ROCKFlflD . ...... KAnlLA &YL -··· mtw. LA HABRA 8lYD. LA llAaRA fULURTO. 2't5L CHAPMANAVL COITA llllA 281 r. 17th ST. • IAKlftSflllD • CHATIWOftnt •COVINA • UCON~DO e GOl£TA •. GflJAN4PA HILLS •LA O.ESa:WTA • LADllU HltGH'B • LAHCASTlft • E.LOSANGlllS • RfSEDA • RIVlRSIDE •SAN IEANAADINO .......... • ... • .... VA.LUY• TARllNA • THOU&MmOAU •\ft.Am •YMMIWS•YIC'TOAVILLI. • HAalllDAHlJGHTS ' Baltimore, Bucks Op en Title Set. !\11LWAUKEE (AP) -A gritty band of ailing and aching Baltimore Bullels, a "team of destiny," against. the awesome, high-powered Miiwaukee Bucks .•• that's the way the Natkmal Basketball Associa- tion cha mpionship playoff series opens tonight. The Bucks. led by 1,.ew !lcindor and Oscar Robertson, are heavy favorites to l\'in lhe nationally televised first contest tonight and the best-of-seven game aeries. But the Bu11et.5, their confidence soar- ing after eliminating the 1970 champkm New York Knick.s Monday night despite On TV Tonight Channe l 7 •t 6 jnjuries to three regulars, think thi s is Baltimore's ~ar. Af~ aurviV'i.ng the gruelling road they have had to travel to these" final!:, the 1•118-starved Bulleta !eel rudy to follow In tbe footsteps of baseball's World Champion Orioles and football's Super.1 Bowl champion Colts, Baltimore's other )najor league teams. ' "l've been with this club eighl years )nd r know the way the guys are think- ing," said Kevin Loughery, ~ Of ~ waHting wounded. "We feel this is our year .. , we're ,supposed to win. Ju.st look at all the ~ .,. lurles we've had and still come through. /We're a team of destiny." • Loughery needed pain-killing shots for ,1o injured root to play part time aga~ •the Knicks, and the Bullets had two other 11tarters out, or nearly oot, for the New 'York series. Eddie Miles, another guard with ,Loughery, hasn't played since tearing an 1Achilles tendon in mid-season. All-star (or ward Gus Johnson, . team's top rebounder and 18 point scorer. ; needed shots in both knees to play part time in the final two games against New t..Vork and in the seventh game against Philadelphia In the quarter-finals. ~ This is what the Bullets are taking against a team that beat them four times ~tn ·flve tries during the regular season: a '1team that boasts the 7·tool·2 dominating 1"Alcindor. the NBA's Most Valuable , Player, and Oscar Robertson, called the I greatest guard in history: a team that 1 breezed past San Francisco and lAJs I .Angeles in earlier rounds. 1lle Bucks also are the best shooting in i Je!gue history, the first club to hit more than 50 percent or their shots during the Meason, 50.9, and wm 66 games during -~ regu1ar season .• ~' 'And the Bucks, a lowly expansion team three years ago before Alcindor \umed everything around, are • hungry, like llaltimore, for their firflt NBA title. ~ In fact , neither team has ever gone this ·fal' previously. A Baltimore team that later folded won the title in 1948, but the present Bullets are a 1961 expansion club that moved from Chicago in 1963. "People expect us to get blown out of the arena against Milwaukee," Loughery said. "but that's not going to happen. We 're too good a ballclub. '' · The Knicks, who ~Id a..4-l edge over Milwaukee during the season and were expected to play the Bucks in the final, also gave the Bullets a good chance. Slmnping UCI Sees Playoff Chances Fad e The University of San Diego unloaded a bon1b on the UC lrvbie baseball field Tuesday afternoon and before the fragments had settled, the Border City nine had moved to a J.O advantage and went on to post a 4-3 win ove r the falter· ing Anteater.s. The decision may be a vital one when NCAA officials tab teams for the college divisMln playoffs at season's end unless the Anteaters can 1Weep a twinbill in the Border City a week from Saturday. Both teams art currtnlly in contention for a berth as leading indepeodents but UCl has Jost eight of i1' last 13 outings and appears headed for the brink of disaster unless the ship is slraightened on ill homeward courae. UCI is now 21·13-l and has lost one more game than during the entire 1970 campaign. In Tuesday's outing, sophomore right· Under Tom Dodd was unprepared for &be opening salvo by the border bats. A single , double ind triple brought t\\'O n.ins o.cross and. a sacrifice fly for ttie {Jrst out made it 3.0 in favor of the visitors. The same quartet of batters put together three singles and a sacrifice Wnt in the fifth to score what proved to be the winning run with leadoff hitter •Dtve Gonulet banging out three hits cllrill8 the d'IJ'- For Irvine. Dodd settled down in five of the seven innings Ile worked lo allow only ftro hils but the damage was done in the opening sneak attack. SI• 0-.. 14) .. 'It .... Ooft11i.1. .. • 1 J • ~11.cf A11f Mltrldl. II l I I 1 .l[!MrMll, t 1 • I f ,.,..,lb •• ,. #lli"l11t. Ill • • • • .. ner. rl • I I 0 ......... Jb •••• ~hit!, 111 J I I I MW*'lo 1 i I I O UC tni11t UI 11t r ltrW . ' . . ' . . ' . ' ' . ' ' . ' ' . . ' ' . ' ' .. ' I'••·•·· It Sl'lOO'I, P'I L.,....1, Jll Cr.+t. cl Sll'l'ICt. "9 51D.1, rt HIJllljl. $1 • COO'-, Jb J ""''"'· ( ' Dodo,, , M1•1no11. "" 1 O'C-, fl 0 Tf'fttte, ... I • • • . ' . J7 • I • T11111 n • • • ••• ' . ' ac-.., 111111111 .. rU.Ofh~Olf!90 '.Yl!I01ft(l(ICI -~ U( .,...,,. llOO 101 flt -J • • • • ' I Wodntsd<I, April 21, 1971 PAILV PILOT J 7 Can't Win Without Hits, Moalls Lefty DAILY P'tLOf P'Mll ltr llktl•"' KMlllw JIM FREGOSI NAl ~S REGGIE JAC KSON THEN THROWS TO FIRST TO COMPLETE DOUBLE PLAY Dowitlng Rate s NL Tougher; ,Dodgers Romp • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Al Downing says the hitters look tougher so far in the Na· tional League than they did in the American. From his pitching 60 far, you 'd never know it. The veteran left-hander, acquired in a little-noticed off-season deal with the Milwaukee Brewers, pitched his second straight complete game victory as a Na· ... PTll fl Al>ril 1l Al>o'll 2~ Dodger S late AH Glmtt 111 Kl'I f'4tl Dod9'•1 11 S11n Oleqa Dodge,.., 11 Cl11d n111tl Dcdg,pr1 11 Cl11Cln1111! 11! "rt!. ! P.m. lt :)~ 11.m. tional Leaguer Tuesday night as the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the San Diego Padres, 6-2. Downing was ~13 with the Brewers and Oak.land A's last year and already has matched his 1970 total nf complete games. But the 29-year-<1ld pitcher, once a big winner as a firebal\er for the New York Yankes, insisted it's harder to pitch in the senior circuit. "The hitters are mol'f aggressive," he said. "And there are more good hitters on each team." Dov.•ning. who now relies more on breaking pitches and finesse, held the Padres to five hits as San Diego lost its sevenlh straight game. The teams wind up a three-game series tonight. with the Dodgers' Bill Singer, Q-.4, opposing lefty Danny Combs. 1-1. The Dodgers sent Ste· .. e Arlin. 0-2, to the showers with their biggest inning of the season. a six-run third. Richie Allen drove in the first two runs with a single, Tom Haller had a run-scor· ing hi t, and two men scored on a roller by Bill Russell .that traveled less than 60 fetl. Padres Manager Preston Gomer. was at a loss to explain his team's hilling slump. The Padres have gone two games without an exlra-base hit and have wasted some good pitching in their losing streak, one short of their worst skein of last year. "There is no ~·ay to explain it," Gomez said. "When we do not hil, we're in trouble." Gomez praised Downing bul added, "We hit lhe lwo hardest balls in the gamt and Willie Davis caught both of them .'' The Dodgers centerfielder grabbed a liner by Ollie Brown with two on and two crt in the first inning. In the fifth, Da vis was in the right place for a line-dr ive sacrifice fly by Clarence Gaston. LDS ANGILIS SAN Dll:GD ·-~-rtol ···~rtor w;11,, .. s 1 1 o ... ''"'"°~'· " J o o 1 W.01¥11. cl S I I O C1mlll>ell, lit l 0 t I W P1r-tr, lb l 1 0 0 G11IOlft, (f l 0 1 I llAllen,,11 ll 77Ctlborl,lb lOOO H1!>tr, ( I I I I Ollrown, •I l 0 I I GttlM,...'wu1.lll l I 0 I Fe-rr111, II l 0 0 0 fhK~f!f•. rl ' I t I hlerlol, 3" • 0 I ft llVUtll, tb J ft J p lllr!on, < < I I t Do""'lllf• fl J 0 I 0 ,llrlln, P I 0 0 0 **~I, P I I 0 0 Murrtll, pl! I I ! 0 D.Ktilllf, 11 I I 0 I 0 ,ll'*lnton. 1111 I 0 0 0 ""'"' " • 0 0 0 c. ..... 1u1ro. p11 l o o I lo• ' ll I I I Tot11\ )) J J 1 LDI A(191'1<1 IN OCIO IKlti -I ~'fl l:l1'9" Dt"O 0111 aOI -l t -C~lkr1, Hr•11111•1hr flit -Lii• Anorl.., I, :.8n Dlf'IO I LOii -LDI All'l'flll S, I~~ ~ I Sii -(all'ljll>elr l -Oownl"I. S" -G1110n \po H II Ill II SO 00""'11111 !W,14) t i 1 1 $ J A•l!fl t L.0'11 ).J/l S S ' 1 I !..onio<ln+ 1.t/l 1 I 1 1 O D lltl~r t 1 0 0 & j Looking to Future New Mesa G1·id Coach Says H_e' s a Realist By JOHN CASS Df tlll 0111, 111i.1 Stiff For a man just elevated lo varsity foot. ba!l coach, his mannerism' almost diSguised the satisfaction of garnering a Jong-awaited desire. Poise, matter of fact confidence and a realistic attitude were all on display as John Sweazy talked lo the DAILY PJLOT in regard to his appointment as a SUC• Cl'Ssor to Max ~filler at Cost.a Mesa High Schoo l, ~1iller resigned last \Veek in order to accept a coaching (football and bueball) and athletic director post at El Camino tSacramentol High. Sweazy makes no rash promises, nor docs he set a specific goal tfor the lfll edition of football at Mesa. "The only goal that I'll set is th a t everr individual play his besl. "I someone were to ask me to run 10 flat I'd say I just plain couldn't do ii, because I'm not !hat fast. I'm a rea!Jst, and have no predictions. "But we've got some good people here. Depth, of course, is a problem. "I don't figure to outfox anybody but t do lhink we 've got a very tough brand of kid at Costa Mesa. "Football's not that hard a game men- tally. there arc no big secrets. Tt's just a Jot of hard work. The winners are the ones lha! play four quarters of football." ... That's how Sweazy sums up the situa- tion at Mesa where the Mustangs will be tryin g for their first-ever winning season in lhe fall after an overall U»-69-3 mark lhrough the first l l years of football -a span that includes compctilion in the Orange, Sunset, Freeway and lrvine leagues . "One of the primary reasons for hi~ selection as our coach was hi.s excelJent rapport with the kids," said athletic director Bob Hunter. · The 34-year-old Sweazy, a one·lime pro- fessional baseball player in the Boston Red Sox chain, says his team·s offense will shift somewhat to the slot and power I-formation with a sprint out type quarterback. ''Mistakes can kill a high school team, most people heal themselves. We'll try to eliminate lhat." The balance of his starr will be made up from last year's group, but Sweazy says Doug Brown is his only definite assistant at the n1oment as a line coach . J-le'JJ continue as wrestlfng coach in the winter. Halos Try. to Reg ain 1st .'.. • After Three-hit Shutout Dy ROGER CAJ\[.';ON , OI tlll 0.llf 1'1191 Slfft The continuing batting slump of the California Angels as a unit and a one· man wrecking crew by the name of Sal Bando were the primary reasons for the Angels' hasty exit from first place . in the American League West Tuesday night at Anaheim Stadium before 11,088. The A's. behind a pair of home ruru by Bando and the three-hit pitching of Jim Aa19el S late All 111'14'1 IOI KM~ ff11l .r.Prll 11 -Allttll ¥1. Ol-!IM Apr!I :U -... llltll ¥1. 0.~llnd April :u -..,119911 ~•. ll1t1lrnort 1:Sl P.m . /:IJ fl.m. J:ll P.m. ''Catfish'' Hunter, dropped Harold "Lef- ty" Phillips and hi! band of Angels a game behind the streaking A's, who have won eight o{ their last nine road engagementa. Oakland won it, (.(I. Tonight lhe Halos counter with Rudy May (1.0) against Oakland's Roland Fingers (1-1). It starts at 8. The Halos can regain the lead with a 1''in tonight. "It's tough to win without hits and run s,'' was Phillips' initial reaction to the lackluster perrorman<:e at the plate by bis Angels. The three-hit job applied by Hunter drops the Angels' team batting average to an anemic .201 but the Halo skipper foresees no drastic change in the starting lineup. "We may go with Roger Repoz fct' Spencer (tonight) at first base, but on1y because J im's been bothered by a toucb or the nu. "I just hope we Cln break loose pretty quick, I'm waiting for ~ woodw·ork to come around . "Ir you could put your finger on it (the reason for the batting slump) you'd be worth a Wt of money. "These aren't rookies that you have to shake up, I know they can hit,'' says tbe Angels boss. Unfortun:llely for the Angels, Band o solved his hitting woes Sunday and he responded with three homers, a do?ble~ a single and walk in his last SlX ap- pearances at the plate. A pair of those four-baggers v.·ere belted Tuesday, prompting A's manager Dick Williams to quip. "We gave him a day orf to go up to Oakland yesterday and he must have been doing something right." Bando, however, credited hiB turq;ibo!IL from what was a 1-!or-17 slu"'mp to coacli Irv Noren. "I noticed he wasn'l keeping the bal up and I suggested that he keep more weight on his back fool. "I don't try lo get too suggestive with any or our players unless they're really starting to slump," said Noren, back in baseball after an eight-year layo£f. Bando's first homer followed a double REHABILITATIO N BEGI NS FOR WEST LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jerry We!l, his right knee unencumbered by a cait, has begun a rehabilitation program aim- ed at readying him for the start of tm next National Basketball AMOCiaUon season. . The Los Angeles Lakers' superstar guard had the cast removed Tuesday. He lCT'e a knee ligament in a late.season game agairut Buffalo, underv.·ent surgery March 3, and missed the rest of the season. Doctors say the surgery appeared to be successful but that it is too early to te~ If West will be at full effectiveness next season. by Reggie Jac.kson and Don Mlncher's triple In the fourth. His second ctime tn the eighth and his three hits were hall ot the A's total. Califomia·s major attack came Jn tbe form of free passes (5} issued ·by Hunter. In all \he Halos stranded: eight runners. The loss snapped a seven-game winning streak chalked up by the Angels on their recent road trip through Chicago, Kansas City and ?t.finnesota. DAXLAl'ID CALl,OlllllA IOrltrM HrltrM C11t1P!Mrl1, u • o o o 1.IDmlr. 2b .i 0 o 11..0I, H 4 O I I SiMl"Cff', 111 .& I o Jl.Jicbon, <I 3 I 1 o ... Jc>lllllOfl. 11 J 1 O :.~~·Jt>1D ; ; ~·~ i~=:l•:· rl ~ : : Moo\d.ey. Cf ' I Q I M~Ulllll, Jb ' I 0 t>uncin, c ' I o o Mot•, c 3 I t a.Gr-. ni a o o eerry, ct l o o HIH!torr, p 0 0 0 T.Murplly, p I I • 11u11. p11 l 1 o w..io....,, ' ' 0 0 "-'· pf\ 0 • 0 E.Fllt\tr. fl 0 I 0 To11l1 :M 4 ' ' l0!1!' lD I O 01kl1rl(I ooa m 010 -• c1111or.ii. ooa ooo ooo -o E -T. Mvrpllf, l'r1g111. MtMUl!tfl. 01" - C1H1«11i. l . LOI -Olkllnd .S. C1lllor11l1 J. 18 -JI, J1ck1Gn. 1'reQ0&!. 1B -Ml11<hw, Hit - Sando 2 (•l. SB -A. JohnlCHI,• MOftd.ty. II' H II Ill 11 SD Huntw iw.1.n ' J o o s ' T.Murp!ly IL.I·!) J J J J I ! M•lorw1 100011 E.F lt~r ) I I I I l Tl<'nt -1:1•. Al!..-.dtnc:t -...... Ex-Yank Boss McCarthy 84; Harter Hired BUFFALO (AP) Marse Joe Mccarthy, manager of tile great New York Yankees teams of the 1930s and '40s, turned a sprightly 84 years old b day. The Baseball Hall qC Farner, whose black hair is streaked by only a few strands of gray, has been a gentleman farmer on hi s 61-acre "Yankee Farm'' in nearby East Arnhersl, N.Y. since retirlng in 1950. Now ~fcCarthy 's main "managing" tasks are supervising nur~ and housekeepers who care [or his wile Elitabelh, an Invalid for 64 years. In a concession to hi.s age. he permits others to tend his flower becis and crops. • EUGENE, Ore. -The University of Oregon announced Tuesday that Dick Harter, of lhe University of Pennsylvania, has been named head basketball coach at Oregon. The 40-year-old Harter replaces Steve Belko, who resigned earller in the day arter 15 years as the Webfoots' he a d basketball coach. , Belko will become assistant athletic director at the university. • HOUSTON -Upsets struck U1e fi rst round or the 37lh annual River O a k s Invitational tennis toumameo l Tuesday with several favorites, including fourth seeded ~1ark Cox of Great Britain, faMng to survive. , Milan Holechek, of Czechoah>vakia defeated Cox 7-5, 6-J to eliminate the only seeded player. First-seeded and defending champion Clark Gracbner of New York advanced with a 6-4. 7·6, victory ove r Pet.er Van Llngen of Oral Roberts University, as the tie-brea.lting method was used to speed up matches. Second seeded Cliff Richey of San Angelo, Tex., lhe 1968 cha mpion. defeated St.eve Turner of Mlami, Fla., 6-J ,,6-2 and third seeded Zeljko Franulovic of Yugoslavia , the 1969 winner, was ex- tended to three sets in defeating Steve Faulk or New Orleans, 6-1 , 3-6, 6-3. • SAL 1' LAKE CITY -Leading by 1s much as 36 point. in the second hall the Utah Stars cm.shed India na 126-99 Tues- day night, giving Utah a 3-1 advantage i11 the American Basketball Association'.s Western DivJ&ioo playoffs. • SAN FRANCISCO -Outfielder Bobby &nds of the Sa n Francisco Glanls suf- fered a severely sprained right ankle in Tuesday nigh t's game against St. Louis and was taken to a hospital for X rays. Bonds singled, in the third inning and wu hurt getting back lo Urst base when pilcher lleggle Cleve.lahd attempted to pick him off. • MONTREAL Jaoquer Lemaire •cored three goals within eight minutes of lhe second period Tuesday night to lead lhe Montreal Canad/en_, to a 7.3 vic- ory over the Minnesota North Stan in the open ing game of their besl~f-seven Stanley Cup semifinal seriea.. • CHlCAGO -Two goals by Dennis Hull and another by Cliff Koroll becked 1 h e great goaltending of 'Tony Eapoa:lto to give the Chicago Black HawQ a S-0 v1c· tory over the]'lew York Rangers Tuesday and tied their Nal\onal llockey League best~f-seven semifina l series at one game' each. • II.on 11•111 Tl"" -:.'9. A!ttndf11C11-4,l2J. COSTA MESA ATHLETIC DIRECTOR BOB HUNTER !LEFTI CHECKS GEAR ~!TH JOHN SWEAZY SPRI NGFIELD, Mass. -former pro greats Bob Cousr and Bob Pettit along with the late founder oJ the Harlem Globetrotters, Abe Saperstein. will be In- ducted Into the Nalamlth Basketball Hal1 of r~ame toniihL • Artist Nine San Clemente Ni x es Title Gift Vikes I(eep In 5-2 Loss To Sonora II)' HOWARO L. HANDY Of .. oan, l'lltl 11•11 Gre& Keaaler is a yowig man who lmow1 fdll well the value of an extra base hlL 'lbe young Loguna B<ach Hl;h pltclltr- autfieldtr whole batUng average ii over the .400 mark thls season, lost a 5-2 Orange League decl5ion to the visiting &>nora Hlgb Raiders Tuesday alternoon Cll Utt Laguna Beach diamond. Keuler gave up five hits during Ult lt\1tD Inning game , four for extra baaes and three of them doubles in the final frame. For six innln&s, he was superb with the exception of one pitch to HCOnd bueman Jack Field ing in the first lnnlna. Fielding jumped on a letter-high fast ball and drilled It over ctnter fielder Bob Flie's bead Uke a ahot. then circled the bues for a home run while Fee was Wgglng tbe ball to the Laguna gym. Only other hit off the slants o{ Kessler prior to the fatal sevehlh, came in the llxtb. The same thorn in Kessler's side, Fielding, also had the second 11afety, a clean single to left. Llguna, trallin11 rrom the first, finally knotted the count at 2-2 In the bottom of tbe ai.lth when Kessler drilled a hit to cent.er that went through the outfielder's legs on much the same path as Fleldlnl!'s home run. Kessler was given a 1in11le and added three bases on the error for the first nm. Ron McEthany then singled sharply fLI left and Nick Gillespie slnaled to deep short oU relief hurler Tim Hart. Mari. Diercks bunted them to second and third and pinch hitter Mark Harris lofted a fly to right to score McElhany. With the acore at 2-2 1oln11 into the seventh, Keasler appeared to Ure . Terry Hart opened with a double, then the Laguna rlghthander retired the next two batten before a walk and a dwble 1cortd a run. An error and a third double ended the scoring. Laguna had aever11 chance• to take the lead but fine de£enslve play by Sonora clOlld the door each Ume. t.;om Murphlne drilled a drive to the rtP.t (leld fence with Mike Moorman abliatd In lhe 11e<Ond but Orta Blair pull- ed ~ In hl;h against lhe wall. ,._.. tll LattM UI "' t11rlltlll Mr111 tllll!Mt1, c 2 1 • ' ~~l~I 2b : I 1 : "&.I' I ! t , •'"'"· • • • • • Ktt1· 11• • , I Mc•1~1ny, lb s 1 , , M)t .. 3 : & • 8!~~i..lfrt I I 1 z • 0 • ~'hi~".;. ] • • !li:'1.f.rt. cl j' I I t H1rPf1, • 0 I f 1 1't • IOI 1"-~•11. u10 I 0 :11, ~ 'l'lM"',,..,"'·c2oeo T ... lt 2' ! Tolt I U 2 6 l • kwt ..... -~ ............. 100 801 ...... ' ,_, ,_, • • . ' o I la1eee Baseball BJ ROGER CARUION ot .. °""' .... _,.,. Foothill HJCh School'• Cr e 1 l v I e w Leque champions remaJD lhe i.am tavorita to oop lbe Clf v1rs.Jty swim tJtlt following a mild scare Tuesd1y afternoon regarding a posat~i. loop violation. Coach Tam De!.ong'1 Foo t b 111 powtrbouse awept to the An1helm Jnvlta· tlonal crown Saturday, but In to dolna:, apparently violated a Crestview clrcult standard forbidding any of Ill teams to compete In dual or Invitational met:ts following the league final!. By breaking tbe league rule Foothlll wu subject co such severe punlahment u Irvine Baseball forfeltin& ill circuit crown. But a cbeck with San Cleinente -the Creltview nmnerup and heir-apparent to the UUe II a forfell w e re ordered - reve1ll that the Tritom are not ln- ttruted In bacldn1 Ill to a cbam- plcoablp. Say1 Triton coach Ben Cum- mings: "l wouldn't w1nt ttie: clwnplonah1p under tboee condJUona. And neither would my klda. Nobody's golnr to loo! anybody, they (Foothill) are t.he very be1l. They belt ua good. bul they brought out lhe best in us," aays Cummings. San Clemente athletic director Stan DiMaak> was in accord with Cw:nmtnga, Ea gles Share Loop Lead; FV Ups ets Los Alamitos Estancia's Eagles moved Into a share of the Irvine League baseball lead Thurs- da y With a 3-0 win over visiUna Edison w h l le the Fountain Valley Barons creeped to within a half-game of the top with a 1.0 verdict over host Los Alamlloll, the sole pacesetter unUI Tutsday. Estancia (4-if) is now deadlocked wlth Los Alamitos and Santa Ana Valley, both 5-3. atop the a:tandina:s with the Barons (4-.!-1) and ldagnolla (4-S·l) within short ahouting distance behind. MagnOUa 1ot where it lJ by taklng a 1· o, 11-inning thriller from the Invading Costa Mesa Mustangs while Santa Ana Valley derailed coach Tom Trager'• Corona del Mar Sea Kings, 3-0, on the Falcon diamond. Coach Ken Millard '• Eaglea dumped the Bill Morris-eoacbed Edison Chargers via the wbitewuh route for the second Ume this seaaon. Cal Shorts (four iMlngs) and Jim Watson ·(there iMlngs) combined to fend the Charger• off· on five hill while Edison •a mound trio of Cr alg Reniah, Ed Winn and Dive. Oldfield limited the Eagles to but four safetie1. Estancia pushed ac:rotl two of lb runs In the third lMlng, when Dive Ronquillo led oU and advanctd to second on a wild pll<h. Chuck Slhilllng 11ot on aafely Ofl a drop- ped fly ball and both he and Ronquillo ad- vanced one bue each on anoUler wild pit· ch. Jim Schultz's walk loaded the bates and Ronquillo scored the first run on a sacrlflce ny by Chuck Boegel. -Sihilling ICQred momentl lat.er on the third wild pit.ch of the Crime. Paul Van Dom, pinchrunning for ltOI). qulllo In the fifth , tallied Estancla's ~ suranc• run on an Edison error. Coach John Cole's Fountain Valley crew rode the five-hit hurling job of lltUe lefthander Steve Fox, who whiffed eight GrUflns. The wiMers (who are the wlMtnge!l team in Orange County with their lU-1 overall mark) got the run they needed In the second lnnlng. With one out in that stanza, Baron sophomore Ray Eckles hit a ball back to the Griffin pitcher who threw it away at first with Eckles advancing all the way to third. After Dave Lynch'• walk and another out, Joe Mertins singled to left field to drive Eckles acros.s with the decisive tally. The Mua Muatan11s of coach Jim Hasey were able to gather only one htt - MIU Caldwell's eighth-Inning single -In their marathon with Magnolia. 'lbe Senllnels scored the game's only run with the bases loaded in the eleventh. A Magnolia batter struck out on an at- tempted squee:te play but the rWl was waved In on an interference ruling against the Mesa catcher. At Santa Ana Valley. the Falcons' Pat Kelly personally wrecked Corona with a fourtb·iMing double whicti knocked in two runs and then scored himself after a sixth·iMing three-bagger. Corona'a John Palmer wen t the distance and fanned seven Falcont while walking four. Ct~NI Ml Miit {0 ) lb t II rtll P1rlr.1r, 11 • 0 1 ti Stl'IUlll. 11 l' •, ' I l. p, ....... . , P1l"'9r. ll 3 0 I 0 R. Jot1n1on. d 1 o O O E•lc~IOll. c t 0 I I IC1rt, 2fl J 0 0 ltktr.rf 2000 Oeone•.rf 1000 M, J,,,lllOll, u 2 O O O SA V1l1ty Ul 10 , ft rtll Gl• .. lt . lb s o I f M1rt111, u J 0 I O '""""'°"· en o o I GlPlllll'I. l'l·lb l 1 0 lold""" ,..,. 2 o o ttl1t••.Pr 0100 11mer. rt-1'1 ! ti O O etly,c 1111 Orft'ntn, 1b 1 o O D !••din, oh \ o o o VP9tl1. P-lf 0 0 G i11tY, II I D 0 0 2St40 Tot111 'Jll' k•re l:IY 11111111•• Ru stlers Triumph, 8-7; Coron1 otl M •• LI. V1ll1y Co1!1 Mii.i CO> ' ' 0000000-0' 000201x -l J Mt tl'ltli. 111 • ' • AO .. r •. 11 1111 P r httll Sthtrom, :Ml 4 o o 0 H11n!,d 2 000 S1111•r. ct S 0 l 0 s 1mon.c lo I o ICrll/lltnd, Ill 5 I ' 0 IC11btllr.1, c S 0 0 0 Saddleback Falls, 10-5 s1mptot1, lb J o o e Emtirr, tt. J O o o All1n,lf 2000 Artl!ur.H 100 0 Ooldtn, 111 • 0 0 0 C1liw1t1, rf l o 1 o ••nMr, rt 5 o l o Ktn"'· 11 s ti I o 5!-1ri, P.fD l 0 0 0 P.i11raon, • l ti o O ,., .. """'"· 115 0 J 0 Ptrlllh, 1b $ o 1 o Ptlltr"°"" ill ' 0 I 0 Golden Wesl Colleae held off a nlnth-ln- nlng rally by Cypreaa to hand the Chargers an 1-7 lo&s Tuesday in Southern California Ct>nrerence baaeball acUon at La Palma Park. In another JC Ul~ host Saddlebtck IU(· fertd a 10.5 lou to Mission circult leader SouUiweatem. Coach Fred Hoover'• Golden West Ruetlen held an 8-3 lead going Into lhe home half of the ninth, but the Chargers poured across four runa on live walkl and 1 coaUy error to cut the Unal margin to .... Rustler pitcher Ortg Htnry finally 11ot tbt tut oul (with the bases loaded) on a grouild out to flrtt base. Mark Cruse, Pat Curran and Bud Bull· In& led the Rustler hitting attack. 0-es&e had a two-run homer ln the third and a nID-scorlng 1lngle 1n the first. 'lbe Rustler catcher mo had a round- ttlpper. taken away [tom him in the leVtnth when Cyprtsa' center fielder Dan Parma leaned into the stands to catch Cre:sse's drive. OONtll Wtsl UI .. r Iii 1111 JT111Hot..,,d• 1 O I ltitt.r, "'"' 1 1 1 I (111'T111.rf 1211 ...... rf 1 0 0 • 1<.1111.,.,11 ,,,. c ....... c •11 1 Nt'-i,c 1000 Kt1i.r, lb ( I 1 I ~ Hoo1n, Jb.M (010 ...... 1191.,.,, Jb I o 0 0 litori>mll· •• .,.. ••• 100 0 l(lUftl.._ ....... ""'·"' ltrlcltl' •• J 0 0 0 l 0 0 • 0 ••• • 0 0 0 Crl'l'th 17) .. , Iii,.. flk''-'• Jb $ I 1 t l'tll,.,,.,. If J 1 ' l Html!fo0rl,UJ210 l'trmt.c.l 1000 ""-Ill, rf 1 o a o N\lfffll, • t 0 0 0 o.~.lllfl eto1 CltYt1•1>d. fl 1 I 1 I S1'1,fl/> 0000 1C11c ... 1c1>, 11:1 2 0 0 0 Kt'"'"'"'· lb 2 o 0 I Gellrt1. Jb • o o o ,.,, .. ,..¥.e •110 '•no:Nl. ••I J O a 1 H_.,, • T•ltl1 » I U I T.t11t S-t Irr l!!Mllft ' . ~Wnl c ...... , '-"'-''" (It) ICI) 100 oect-t U 001 011 00•-7 ' llHl ... rt Ill • ' • 11 r ~ tM JKll;-.n. I 0 1 t Cll•lll'llli'tl, .. J 1 l 0 (11'1 .. 1!, :lb I O 7 l illdllf ... 11 I 1 I I ~ ..... llOl,rfH>bell •• ·-· ,,__' C.'"'"· lb ·-· '""' 11 -·· -·· -..... .. , .. 1111 I 1 2 0 ' I , • ' I I I I I I 0 • ' 1 J J l • ' 4 •• 0 ' • l 1 1 ••• J ••• Mltltfl, If I I I 0 Smll!I. c I t I I lfri., 11 • I 1 I llG¥1n , ,1 s e 1 , "''"'.. • 1 ' • 0 ...... • • • 0 t H11tl\. I I 0 0 0 Slit I• T•htl M SU I "*"' Irr '•"'"' ' . MC 011 Ul -10 1 200 100 111 -s ,, • ' • More Sport• Page 20 t /, Curran, now hltUng at .500 ln confer- enre play, pounded oul a run-scoring triple ln the nnt. and u lo hit a single. Bulling drove In three l'Wlll with a pair of doubles. Golden West 1tarted off in smarl fashion with a trio of runs in the first and third frames and two more In the fourth for an 8-1 advantage. Wayne Kiefer. Craig Keller and John Hogan allo hit safely twice for the Rustlers. At Saddleback, Southwf!tern broke a 4- 4 tie with six runs in the last three In· nings to win going away. Eric Christensen, Jim Campbell. Bob Bjacklidge and Bruce Boyle led the Sad· dleback hittinl! assault with two each. Blacklidge drilled a first inning solo home run while Chrllltenaen, Steve Smith and Terry Boyles had doublea for the Gauchos. The loss was Saddleback's 21st against a trio of wln1. Thursday Night 011luN!tlrrv, 11 I ti o o M.r!IML rt"J" I 0 0 0 Cl'lri.tm.,,, Pf I ti 0 0 To!1l1 Sct•t bY l1111lnt1 '11110 ' ' Codt MMI 000 000 000 00 -0 I • ' ' Mlllltl111 tlCltl 000 000 01 -I 11 liltH ltl l1l111ela II) "rlilr1tl 10r~rt11 g"~ l 0 I 0 .5ci'luHf• 1 .. 1b l o ' O tl ct 2goo •-.)b 001 tn UI. 11 ! e 0 ZtJl<lort. 21-cl 1 0 0 o 11.wfl, c g o o w11t0n, 1>-11 1 I o o l"tr~trl rl 1 o S!'tor11, cf·it ) I O r--0~1 11 JOIO (Ol'lni.on.c 2011 IM,. l 0 0 0 Oll<loll. rf 1 O O MCl'ft ' 2D J 0 I 0 Cl\vl!t "" I • • • lllJlll, lf l ti I 0 R-u~Ho. 111 I I o ICIPH f, .... 0 0 ti Vtn corHi lrtl I 0 G llOll~~, 1 I 0 0 I 51~1111.,., ii 2 I O o . MCH•Y, el-ttt TO!llt Ttl1l1 1 0 0 0 U 0 J 0 Tat111 It 3 I 2 le•,.. br l1>t1!~11 ' ' . 000 000 o-o J , 002 010•-J 4 v1111, 1n 11r~tlll J 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 l 0 J 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 J 0 1 1 J 0 1 0 LOI Atlm!I" (11 tD r ~ rtll C1me•on, d J o o o Sltu1on. II .3 o I o Fcn<;,p 0000 SIUP~,( 3010 J, All•n P·lb ] 0 l 0 H1mll!on. u J o 1 o cnnl!Qf>htr· !Ol'I. lb Htl~r. 1b Ctri>e1>· "'· ll>rf ' .. ••• ,. iu~• i, .... ~r:::1 l 0 , 0 ,, 0 s 0 l'out1ltl11 V1lltf t.M A11mlfo. ' 010 000 0-I 0000000-0 ' • • ' • I Saint, Tar Spikers Duel Prep track and field action under the liBhll will take place In the Orange Coast area Thursday night ln the form of a Sunset Leasue dual me.el pitting peren· nlal Utllat Santa Ana agalnlt up-and-down Newport Harbor at Newport's Davldlon Field. A• us\lal, coach Earl Engman'• ln- vacling Salnb have already wreaked havoc among most of the other Sunset contenders, with only Newport and formidable t.o.ra (neit Thursday) stand· Ing In the way of another loop du1J meet crown for Santa Ana. List year, lhe Tart of coach Bob Hailey were the cloee.st challenien to Enaman's powerhouH. However. when the champion 1nd tM pretender locked horns In thelr annual du&] al santa Ana, lhe Salnl& 1wooped down to crush the Sailors, 72-46. ln fact. the list Ume a Newport. ouUlt de!eattd the Salntl w11 10 year1 a(o. w?ieo the BIO Straw.coaclled S1llor1 edg· td Santa Ana tn all three divisions. ""lblt'• tbl only Ume ont of my learn• ~I been beaten In tht same meet In tll thret dlvlalons t.oor." admit.I Enaman.. Whatever h1ppens Thw-sday night. H1Uey's splkcrs will have to perform a superhuman feet to knock off the high· Clyinl! Saints. Engman is dropping 9:14 Junior twt:r mUer Marc Genet down to the mile. where he'll square off with 'Tar junior John Holtomb, holder of a 4:25.9 beat. Genet's top lour-lap clockln11 ls 4: 21.3. The hurdles will be sl~lers wilh NewpGrt'1 Matt Hogsett (15.3. 19.6) trying to fend off such Saint swiftiell as Louie Perez. Walter Mead, Kirk Byer• and Dan Lindsey. The latter b&1 flown to 1 19.5 mark in the 180 lows. Willowy junior John Harrell (22.0, 48.11) wUI be represenUna Santa Ana In the 220 and 4~ while abo anchorln& 1 3:24.2 mile relay quartet against Ncv:port's 3:26.2. Hot and heavy high Jump competition ls ei:pect.ed from 'Tar John Kaimer (6-41 and Sllnll Bob Kllngenbtr& and Ray Flores, both &-21Ai leapers. Newport should hav1 lt1 way tn tht •hot put '1o'lth ?.fark Sttvtns (81·101Ai l and T.,ry Albrllton (!11-1) for •heod ol llob Re)'ea:, Sant.a Ana'li t.op bull at 12.a. saylnc, "Thll la a bad rule , there will be no complain! forlhcomlo& lr<ln San Clerqente." A check with the ClF of nee revealed oo vlolallon In r<garjf to CIF compeUUOo in lhe Jftllms or flnlls. ClF rules state that a maximum of lZ meeta are allowed ttama at In)' Ume between Feb. l1and the CIF prellms. The Crestview loo'p president's offioe term.1 the lnctdent u an opportunity to update the loop's constitution. Vice principal Dwllbt McCracken of 'Ml&slon Viejo 1aya "the 11tuallon will be dlscuaaed al our May 12 meeUng. lt'1 a caae of not upclatlni and keeplna with the MARSHALL ADAIR San Clemente Coach Sailors' Smith constant change of the awim schodulea "AJ for any da!Jier to Foothill lollng Ill crown, weU, flrat It happened after lhe lugu< champlonabJp WU delfrmined. "8<condly thelO WU no YIOl1tloo of I CIF rule, rd impttt th1l there will be a recommendation that we lab aome type of ac1loo r<aardlnr the vlol•tloo ol the bylaw, however. "The rule w11 inserted la our con- ttltuUon basically for baeball and buketball and really doean'l have m\lch to do with swimming flt all. "The league championship doesn't aeem t.o be involved, ln my 'Yta.'' Hid McCracktn. ' King Sparks Triton Nine To 5-1 Victory By PHIL ROS8 Of "'9 D .. l'P l"u.t hill The hunt-and·peck mttbod l 1 n ' l normally recommended ln 10mething like typewriting. And hunllng·and.pecklnt Is even ltsll c:onduclve when It comes to the subject of b ... ban. In spite of thla, San Clement.e's Trltons usually wto !he bulk of their rames by uUllzina the above method. However, although they did insert aome bunting-and-pecking Into lheir anUcs again, coach M1rahall Adair's Tritons us- ed some &enulne httUng to good ad-- vantage Tuesday 1n capturing a S.l Crutview League declllon from host Villa Park's SpartaDJ. The victory keeps the defendln& UUlJtl In a deadlock for secaid with Oranae, one game behind paceaetting TUsUn. The Trltona and Panthers are both 8-2. Tosses 2-hitter At Oilers, 5-0 Hero of the day for the victors was rt-7, ~ ]SQ.pound junior scrapper Mark King. Newport Harbor High, sparked by the pitching of Rick Smith, turned back visiting Huntington Beach, 5.o, Tue.!day in Sunset League baseball action. The victory ran Newport's loop mark to 3-3-1. Huntington ls now 2-5. Smith, a righthander, was in complete control throughout the contest, allowing just two hits, striking out eight and walk~ Ing two. Both HunUngton hits, back-to-back singles by Paul Fulham and Bill Shubin, came in the fourth inning. '·He (Smith) really did a great job," ssid Newport coach Andy Smith. ''His curve was really working good." Newport blew the game open early, getting four run.s on three singles and a trio of •tuntlngton errors in the first inn· ing. John Bowman, SLU \Veedn and Dan Schindler conftibuted the hits with Schindler's blow driving in a pair or tallles. The Sailors added their final run in the sixth Inning when Phil Metzger got aboard on an error and scored when Smith grounded out. Fulham pitched well in defe1t, allowing just five Newport hits. Newport has a biggie scheduled Friday, feeing SWISet leader ·Anaheim on the ColonlsLs' diamond. lfuntlngton hosts U:iara·. H~ll!lftfl .. ·-~ 0 1 N...,.,, H1rtlor lSI Vt1> Amtr1• lor1. II FuJ~m. p ~l>ul)ln, JI Ot~i.,, c "'"''''· Jb 1. A1Mord. f1 5roolu, lb ;11le cl rro•1I, 111 Tot111 allr~•ll 10r~1bl 1 0 0 0 J 0 I 0 l 0 ' 0 1 o a o ' •• ! ' ' . ' •• ! l •• . ' . E1111'rll.,.. 1« o t I llowm11>, 1b .3 1 1 lton•rG, rt l I 0 0 A • ...,,n •. rt 1 o o e W..cl1>, lb J I 0 0 .r•1-M,~;;_ d l , 0 0 (·plo 101 0 ~(~!ftdlfr, lb J O 1 J l(llO•. II 1 0 o' ,• lmlll>, 11 J o 2J01G Tol t llt7 .SS · S(tr1 b~ lnnln11 Hunllftg!Ofl BN ch NtWllOrT H1roor ' coo otlO ti -0 IOO OCI •-S • ' • • • ' The husUln1 third baseman collected three hlta in four trips to the pl1te, In· cludln11 a pair of triples, and accounted for three runs batted in. King·s offt:nsive fireworks proved to be enoogh to support right.hander Terry Nielsen, who improved his 1971 slate to 1· 0 with a complete same hill performance. . Nielsen exhibited excellent conlrtll by not waltlng a batter and scattering five safe.ties with only one for ei:tra bate!. He struck out three. San Clemente's big spurt came in the top of the seventh with the second of King'.! three-ba1gers being the big blow of the frame . With one out in the seventh, Nit.lsen 1ot aboard on a free P8" and moved to se - cond on the ensuing pitch when Craig Anderson was waved to first after being bopped in the rlbs by reliever Bob Yollllg's inlUal offering. 'The leit-handed·hltUng King then pulled a liner into the right field corner to score both of his mates and acooted safely to third standing up. San Clemente earlier had picked up aln11le runs In the fourth and fifth Inning!!. Mlke Kleman's double plated Triton mate Scott Johannes in the fourth after the latter had aingled and stolen second. The Tritons' flflh·lnnlng tally was pro- duced on a solid single through the mid- dle by Nielsen and King's first triple, whJch ssiled well over the head of the Spartan rightfielder. lt11 Cltrn.., .. UI VIiii l't111 111 Andt,.11M, 11 I(! .... . J~ ........ ttl Wrl ..... rt Jltict>tn. c l(l1r111n, t1 ltlltri, If OouoltH. Ill llitllt-n, ~ TDffll •• r Iii tM J I I 0 • 1 J J 1 I I 0 4 0 • • I 0 0 0 I O 1 I ' 0 1 0 3 e o o 2 1 I • .. , ll rtt Ht1ter. 11 t e • o l"tPP.11 lOOD Corn1u, tf J I o o i\\l(H•!t, 11 J O O O lt111'111!l1, 3' J I I D COl'l:ly, Ill J o I O ottrot1•. ,, l • e • Cr11m11r. Jll J I 1 O l111n1.,.,c 2011 S1111tti, p 2 o I O Yoo.mt .fl G OD O H S ti Tol1l1 2JIJ 1 Sur• ,., l11nl1191 • ~'" Cltmtnrt Ville Pt•• 000 110 000 OID • ,_, ·-' ' • • • ' Bas eball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis Montrtal Pittsburgh New York Philadelphia Oiicago E•llt Division W L 8 6 ' 4 7 6 5 s ' 7 ' 9 West Division San Francisco 12 3 Atlanta 8 • Houston 8 7 Los Angeles 7 8 Clncinnat.I 4 7 San Dle(o 3 10 Tu1lll1''t lltWlr& ~hlltOt!~!>!1 1. M~trt1I O C~lctH l , HO\l•fo1> I Altt"1t 1. Pl!ltburtft G Clnclt11>t U J, Ht'* YOO'l 1 Los Ao>0t lt1 '· Stn 01tiro t St. loYll 2, lllft il'lllltllC'O 1 WM11111tll'r'1 Oll!IM Pct .571 .556 .538 .500 .364 .3.17 .800 .M? .538 .16'7 .3114 .231 GB II I 21\ 3 2'\ • 5 6 8 "MltdfTP!>!e !lunnlnt, 1·1) " MtlfllrM! (MG!'· '"'· 1.n. nl111t All111tt INl1~. l.01 11 Plll'tbll .. ft (!11!1, l•l>o t1l1M H'°"llflfl !Oltt~t•. 1.0} 11 (Ill-a !Hl...:11. 1 II Wt'* Yotlc (Sltv.r, ,.0) 11 C\tltlt1,..!I (l'to!llll. 0. 0). "If~! t.M A11ttl11 (VIII«. 1.(1) 11 $1ft OlffO ((00'!'1>1 l •l), "!Diii II. Lou11 !Gl'lllofl, 1·11 11 $11> l'rt~lic. (l'tr,.,, ,., T"fU;t,.....,'t O- Al1•1>!t ti l'ltt1tou .. h, tllf lll HO\llltlfl ti (~!C•90 P'~lldl'9fll1 11 11. t.ou11. nltl'rt Ol'll• ••-• IChtdulld. AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore Washington Boston Cleveland New York Delnllt Oakland Clllfoml1 Milwaukee MlnntSOlft Kan&a.! City Chics go E11t Olvlllon W L 8 ' 7 • 6 6 5 • ' 7 ' 7 West Dtvl1k)n 10 s I s 8 • • a • • ! • T1111~1tr'1 •twin Mlt1-ll S. Kll\HI (lty • Cl!lc"6 7, Mf!*fllktt l W11hlntlM 7, New Yori! t SOJltlfl t, Cltv1l111d l C1kltlltl t, C:t l1fll'nl1 o o.tntll 7. ltl!IMtre l Wli"'*''t •• .,." Pct. .77:1 .5l8 .500 .155 .417 .417 .16'7 .Ill .IOO .429 .400 .3.17 GB 2 21> 3 31\ 31\ I 21\ 31\ ' 411 Otklltl'ICI f't"''"'· l·l l ti c:.01orn11 (M1' 1.01. flllhl K1"111 (!IV (lt .. IO, t-11 It MlftfltMlt (llvi. Vtn, J•ll C~l(I" tl11of1t,, l·ll 11 Mll'w1uktt {l'tntn, f·I} 11111me,. 40otltol\, I.OJ 11 011 ... 11 !Lollci'I. l·J), tilt~! Wtlhl"fllll !lotmt-n. 1·11 11 N-Ylrlc. (Stqjl· ,.,,.,,., , .. , (lt"'!t"' (Hl!'etl\, 0.11 I t ao.ltlfl !Cull. J.O) T~11 .... l\"t o- OU:!t1'11 11 (1!1'9"'11 t1lt~I Otoi'r ttmt Kl'lldwlM. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA Service and Parts fer All Imported Cara Mod ern Body Shop for All Caro 646-9303 Orange County's Lirg°"t and !dos t ldodem Toyota and Volvo Dealer ORIS.US DILIVllY IPICIALllTI Title Hopes Alive, 5-2 By RON EVANS 01 ""' Olll'I' l'llot 11111 Marlna High'• varsity baseball team continued its winning ways in Sunsel League acUon Tuesday aCternoon with a S-2 verdict over visiting Westm inster. Coach Ray Allen's opportuni!Uc Vlk· in.gs took advantage of three singles and a crucial Westmin.ster error to score all of their nw in the first inning. And that's all pitcher Ton1 Cresci needed as the senior rigbtbaITT!er. who tolll at third for the Vikes when not hurl· Ing, limited the Lions to five hits in going the distance. Victory keeps Marina in solid con· tentioa for tbe loop UUe and a CIF AAAA playoff bid. The Vlkes' 4-2-1 mark is I ~ games of£ lbe pace of loop-leading Anaheim. 5econd baseman Rod Brown delivered the key blow for Allen's crew In the first when he COMected off Doug Milne for a bases loaded single. His one-bagger accounted for Cresci and Brock Pemberton at lhe plate and when the ball got away al third ballf: plnchrunner Scott WJlderman and Brown came aroond to make it a four-run play. Dave Campbell had started things off for the Vikings in the first with a Jingle and Cresci (free pass) and Pemberton (single} loaded the sacks. Bob Witt's sacrifice Oy to center field accounted for the first run and then Scott Wheeler was hit by a pitch. Cresci, meanwhile, turned in 1 solid performance on the mound, dtspite glv· ing up a pair of triples to the Lions. Gary Rungo spanked one to right field 1n the first inning but was left stranded. Mike Dodd led off with a triple In the fourth and came around to score on Ran· dy Tug11le's intleld hit. Coadl Frank Munoz 's Invaders aeored a11atn in the sixth when Rungo and Dodd Jed off with lntield hits. Rungo eventually scored from third on a play at second base. After the live-run outburst in the first . relief pitcher Jesus Sanchez limited the wlMers to a pair of hits (singles by Campbell and Cresci ) in a strong six-ln· ning stint. Mtrlnt (f) w111111111111r en IOr~"I l 0 0 0 NoClltlld, II II, ""-rtlMJ .. lb , ~ •Ill ..... ~-. lb 3 0 0 0 C1111Pbtll. H l 1 2 0 IOOOCrtKl.o 1 111 llunto. rl J12t1P~Dt•· ""'· ' l llkf)ty, ttl Slltl'Mn.1, ft TU!ltlt. Jb Trt1t1t1, 111 St. Martll'MIJ, ' l 2 0 ton, ID 20 00Wil!,( lOOO W-tr,U l 0 I I Wiide•· J 1 1 0 2 0 0 01 l 0 0 0 d . Ttllllf', ct J. Sl'IChlI, ) 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 o o lb-P lOOO H1rr11, 11 1 o o o I(, MUn1, lb 2 O 0 O C. Mllnt. II-ti J 0 0 0 mtn. Pf Tl'Jo,,fl'll, If fl rown. lti C•I~. cl flttl!lt, Ph Wtllt, rl Tofil• U J ' 1 Tor.h Saitt ., t~nil\11 ' DOC 101 0 -1 . ' ' . ' ' , ' • • ' . " ' WMtml~!1r M ttll\1 ~ 000 •-l • ' • • • •• ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' Comets Fall, 7 .5 Co.!ta P.1esa Comets .ere back ii\ business 21t the same home stand (TeWinkle Park ) and Sunday afternoon the home nine dropped a 7-5 decision to Westminster to get the new season started. Tht Comets will play games every Sunday at TeWinkle beginning at 1:30. 'The season runs through October with league play beginning in June. Manager John Saint hes added several newcomers to the roster including left handed pitcher Norm Blandcl. a Vletnan1 war veteran. Also, Jerry Williams, an out.standing defensive first baseman. DEAN LEWIS m:o!YIQI TI!) APRIL SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 .. ICIAL $1871 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $3093 141 $14111. R•4io, H11ltr, <I 1p1•4, •7l60 ~ USID C.Al UICIAL $1295 fflf TOYOTA COlOHA _H.T~l ~4 ~.d~Y~O_!ll _ ~------ Sears Hurry Only4 BIG DAYS Prices Effeetive Wednesday, April 21 tbru Saturday, April 24 1'ire anC"J Attlo Center SA VE $5! High Voltage 42 Month Guaranteed SEARS BATl'io:RY GUARANl'Et: Free 11:placemen1 with- in 90 days of pure hue if battery proves defective. Afr.er 90 days, we re- pl.:e the biutery, if de- feccitt and charge you oolr for the period of o1'1'~nhip, bticd on the regular price l1:"S1 trao:le· 1n st the time of return, pro-rated over nu.r:nbet: of montht of guanuu.·e. If muffitr fails clue 10 dtfecu 1n m;uerials or workm21Uh1p or blow- 001, 111s1-()ut or Wl!'ar· Ollt '"bile ori1:inal pur· chaser owns the Qlr, i( will be rrplaced uJ>On rciurn, free of charJte. Jf •he dcfeaivc mufilcr -1nnaUC'<l by Scars. we will 11utall the uc:w mufnc:r with DO charge: for labor. SAVE Sl! O.E. R. • Shock• Regular '4 .. •Original &r1ipment R~l•f"tmc:nl SAVE85! Ribbed Vinyl SeatCover1 R•gul"'2999 '3499 Fits 90o/o Of All American-Made Cars RegularS23.99 Trade.jn Price }~ree Sean Battery lnstallation 99 WithTnde-1• NOL 4.114., 43M. 4lll,4l9b Heavy Duty l\lufflers Lifetime Guaranteed for as Long as You Own Your Car 20o/o OFF Sean Regular Low Prices! • Lar1e, fuU-lt>nglh tU.h- in,; chamber for be1rer 11onnd-eUenein&' • 22 11a. outer shell galt'a.n.iud on bo1h 11ide1 for lonl'er wear • 26-ca. 1t.e:el oval muf- fler inner shell ••• 30% 1hieker than l shell mallcn • li'ih m011l American can Expert Installation Available 11111 SPEClllUM ....... ..,. ... o 140ToR DIL ... ---·-IE--=--, -· :·:::- SAVE 33%! Sear s Besl Spectrum Oil Regular ';5c Balle ry Booster Cal>le Luw Pri~ed'. SAVE $3! Fire Extinguisher fi,.gul•r tln.99 799 For home. car, truck a.nJ boats. I.C.C.. UL and Coast Guard Approved. Rubber Front floor Car Mat Reiiular $f.99 Newest colors. Original equipment qua1ity. tUfN.I ,AIM' 7A 1_.400, 121-tJJO CANOGA 'AIK J40·0661 U. MONTI GI J.291) GLINOAU tH .S·10CW, Cl 4..U11 ~IA'ks, I O£BUCK ANOC::O. COM,TON NI 6·2$11, NI '·S761 COVINA f66·06l l HOLLYWOOD HO 9•1941 INOUWOOO O• 1·2S21 1Mpl•a4-., IJ NNa tel ,,M., Mon. thr• 111. 91.10A.M.11 t1~0 P.M.,, ,f••t• A1•0•ly,1,_ .. , I r .M., 111••·• lhvri., i.,1. • 30 Month Guaranteed GUARDSMAN Full 4-Ply Rayons Smoothest •• , No Thump!· No Bump! Silent, Safe All Road Driving. COMPACT Car Owners SAVE Fits Many Camaros, Bnick Specials, Mustang•, Chevy 11'1, Javelins, Com· elll, Conrain, Falcoo11, Dodg"e Darte. R...,1. S.loo Tndo-i• Trod.,.i11 $ SIZE r,., .,.,.., Poi• Pri,,. F.E.1". Uch Whitewall a Only$4More Per Tire $49.90 $41.90 $1.9.l. $5.1.90 $45.90 $2.0I • Patented Contotired Safety ShouJden for easy steering. sure cornering MEDIUM Car Owners •Tread Deeigned to grip the road in a!I weather. under lll "'"' conditiOOJ Fits lllany Ford•, Pfymouths, Che"tTOJeu, Dodges, Mercury/'(, Old.mobile Cutlass. $ SIZE Y.E.T. ..... Gu..rdnmn Tnbele11 Blaelon.U Whitewi.111 Only$4More Per Tire 7.75xl4. $57.90 $J7.90 $2.14 8.25tl4 $63.90 $53.90 $2.32 7.75x15 159.90 $49.90 $2.16 Limited Quantities LARGE Car Owners Fits Many Chryslers, Dodge•, l'lfercurys, Old•· mobileo, Pontiacs, Buick. and Station Wagons. Guardnnan Tube.Itta Blackwall 8.55JJ4 $69.90 S.'i7.90 S2.50 8.15 25xl5 $65.90 $.';3.9'1 S2.37 8.45/8.S5x1 5 $71.90 $59.90 S2.48 $ Pair WIUTEW ALLS ONLY •4 MORE PER TIRE ALLSTATE Pasoenger Tire Guarantee lONO NAOf HI J.01:tt OlYMl'K & IOTO Atl ... 1211 OlANGI ~7·2100 PAIADINA 6tt.ittf, 311-4211 ltOMONA NA f ·lll1 G••nntl!ed Ac•ln1U Tre.d ~IMMlt. •"or u-Lon11r'Thc 1Ninbefuf mo1uhltpWfieJ. '*'h•t s-... •1u Do1 l11 rnh1nj1e for 1h~ ulT. 1~· plKC h cMrJint lM airronr KUil'll! p11ce pin• hdeRl &cl• Ta It.ti lhc followi113 llllownrt Morl!l!f c:.,..m1 Bio l 1110" ., PICO WI 1-4212 IAN1A ANA k1 1.-3271 IANTA n IPllNGI M4·I011 lANTA MONICA IX 4·671t lDU"fH COAlf nAI.\ f40·2llt fHOUSANO OAkl 497 ... JM TOllANCJ S41·1Sl1 U"-AND 915·1927 VALllT PO .1·1461, tl4·1t10 YllMONT Pl f..1911 ( OAILY P!L.OT .. < ·' ~ ... ' ,·,.,, ,. ' - ··JC, Prep '.Baseball tan dings Tu1tln S.n ClllM'flft &1nll9 El ModfM Mln l1111 Vltle K1lttl1 VIiia Put f'ootlllll ,.....,..... 'Cllf'ff $an C ..... entt S, Villa P•k I Or1n94' 2, Minion Vltlo 0 IC1ltlll f, FoetttlM 0 T1,1rfl11 J, El ~ 4 Wodnt>dfr, A>ril 21, 1!71 Two Beeords Set LACC Zips Past Rustler Spikers Golden West College zipped to some of ltl beat marks of the "-· but vialtiq !.-Os Angeles City C.Uege lhowed just too much strength in the sprints In banding the Rustlert a 73-58 track ml field defeat Tuesday. 'Mle victory earned the Cubs ( 6-0) tbe Southern California C.Onfereoce dual meet title. Coach Tom Noon's RUJUers finl!hed wttll a 5-1 mark. Two school records and 1 handful of season bests were. established by Golden West. 1be Rusilen' Terry McKeoo set a mark in the three-mile, clocking 14:2.8.4 while the 440 relay ieam of Dave Keys, Bill Kamp, Dennis Maas and Dave Johnson clicked off a time of il.f, two.tenths faster than the school record set last Friday. Jack McQuown and Mel Hobbs established half-mile life-time bests with identical 1:55.0 clockings. McQuowo won it. In the featured mile race, LACC's James Baxter nipped the RusUers Terry McKean at the tape. Both were given the same time (4 :16.l) Golden West also bad its best mark of the season in the mil• relay (l:lU), a aecond olf the ICbool -The fouraome lnctuded W a 11 Ankerman (llU), Rell Dlckaon (<9.8), Brian Stn>ugb (50.1) and Dennis Mau (U.t). The 220 featured a blanket finish With two LACC runnm finl!hlng ahead •f Mau. Kamp and J•hnJ<m. All bad clocklnp ol Zl.7 with the ez. e<pUOD of Johozon (II.I), ...... W.rl (JI) (11) LACC 1110 -l. Do\ltllenl (L), l. MYll'I Ill, l. Henry IL). Tlmtt t.I. 210 -1, ~ Ill, l. Gka.MI tLI, 1 M••• /GI. 11rnt: 21.7. UO -I. llvlM (l), t. Ml• (G ). l. Al'okWfn'" IGI. TTl'nt: 4U. ll0 -1. Mc~ {GJ,t, ~ tG ), 3. Ltwi. IL), Tlrn1: 1:5$.G, Miii -I. llllltl' 11.), 1, Mel(_, {GI, J. Funt( fGl. Tlmt: 4:16.1, :J.mllt -I, MclCIOl'I (GI. 2. f'~'* (G), 3. Smith IL). Tlmtt l•:H.1. 120 111 .. 1 -1. E. WllhlflPlll l\.J, 1, Loullhr!Qe Cl), 2. O\n!llP !G). 1llflt: ''·'· UC lnl. -1, 0 . W1P,l119lon (l ). ). $trOll!lh tG), l . WOOdl (l ). Timi: .M.7. U0 rtllV -I. Gokllll Wtll (l(tv .. kamp, M111 •1'111 JohntOnl. Tlmt: Al.t. Mil• relty -I. GolOt" Wnt f,t.flkemr1r.. Oltksot\, SlrelOJlll 11111 M&1sl. Tlmt: l :H.2. H!lll lump -1. E. W ..... 1.wlon (l ), 2. 111111111 !G), l. P ltlt tGJ. H419'11: ._ ''" LoM tumP - 1. Moro111lll.1 . .I-. (Ll, l . Henn (L). Dlfttna: 22-7, l rlP .. lump -1. J-(l), t. l oullt>rldt"e Il l. 1 OUOl'll (l !. 0 1$11...Ct ~. Pol• vtull -1. NCl'llutl IG), 2. Wllll1 (\.}, l . 0.Yld$0tl (G). Hllfl'll: 134. Snot "11 -1, ,l.llf.n CLI, 2. E,,.lt (Gl, J. N"'me" <GI. Dl1tanc:1: 41. OIKlll -I, Eflllt (0), 2. ,1.lltl'I IL), l. Nlnnu (l). Dlt1enc.: 1ll-2. For Coast Area University Now 6-11 After Loss HOii Unlvenlt)' dropped ILi sel!ODal recor<I le 8-11 TU ... clay by letttnc a &<> dec!Jlon out of the wlndow against the SanUago cavallen. Coach Ken Tratar'• free lance Troiana. who hOll Pa- cltica Frid&y, simply couldn't aet Wltracted against Santi.. ago. The Trojans were only able to get hlta: out of Phil Han-. cock, Mike Igoe and Rick Peregud with the latter'• dou- ble being,Univenity's lone ex· tra base blow or the contest. Santiago got it& runs mo1Uy on University miscues while collecttnc but six JiiLs of ill own. Jeff Styers went the distanct on the mound for the Trojans and absorbed the loss. He struck out four and walked three. MG«11nt1, lb $dllltl. 2() Fomi .... c: Olli. Jilt ll:Mol"' c:I H0t'll'I, rl Fl.,,.,, If L111t. p Hulu , p 1olllt a11t, SI H1~,lt Calt, cf 111111111 (I) UnlY1t1llY (11 llbrftrtll A 0 t 0 s 2 l ' 3 0 1 0 I f 1 0 0 l 0 l 3 0 0 1 1 0 ' 0 I O o O ) 0 ' 0 1S ~ 6 3 .. ' ' ..... •• 0 0 ' 0 . . ' . ' . • 0 0 • ' 0 • ' 0 • 0 0 Rustlers Seek Team Crown In SoCal Swimming, Meet Pour ftnal events a re scheduled ThUnday when the 8Jll'IUJI Soulhem Callfomla JC 1wim champlonships get under way at Cypress College. Golden West College figures to battle for i..m honors while Orange Coas& baa some tap Individual entries. Finab in the 50 .free, 200 {n. do. liOO free and tOO medley relay are acheduled fer 'lbun- day. Thi! meet begins at 2. Friday aod Saturaay·'J: prelims start at 9 a,m. with finals set for 3. the 200 fly In both annual events. • OCX:: also bas a fine diving delegation, under the direction of coech Bob Wilson. Balley Abbott, John Reeg, Bill Durkin and Jim Oberg 8l'e the Pirate divers. TI111rlillQ OolOtn Wttt: SO frl'I -Kt!!ll 0-ldlOll, Cr1lt (OUOll, M • r k M.1nslltld1 200 llldo -Oorl Ll~I, H•r,..,. N~. Rov 11\ftll, 1>on,11d111111 illD trtt -Poul 11.0QJ, Pela Eld!! 400 mldlt~ rtl•V (Gr• l'e1ntlef'9, llclPOld'I, Ron Mcll'llV~ 1Md Cllr<s So\1911111'0· 0tan111 C0111I: SO trff -P1ul lb-bo\$Oll, B!U DeHUff ; SCIO Ir" -$1t'Yt kllwft', '-\1(1"' flllV IOtHull, Jim 5tOlll!ll1n. 01111 Gornmoti 11111 111- ""'"" fl"MI., Golden Wn t: :tOO 111 -Joudn. Coach Tom Hermstad's Golden West RuaUi!rs, recent winners of the SoCa1 Con- fererice title, will enter ·a strong team delegation -led by Don Lippold4 R o s s - Mcintyre and K·ettb Dooaldson. Dominguez Capitalius Lippoldt will swim in the 200 indo, 200 free and 200 back - plus the tOO medley and l!lO 1tte rela)". He finlsbed filth In the SoCal 200 indo last year, second in the 400 indo and se- cond m the 200 back. Mcintyre is entered ia the 100 and 200 breaststrokes, the 400 indo and the 400 medley relay. Donaldson will be one of the favorites in the SO free with a season best of 22.3. He's also entered in the 200 in· do (also Thursday), 100 free and the 800 and 400 free relays. On So Cal Errors, 6-2 Dick Sivertaen'ran into trou-CIO-ffl""' tU .. • ble In the middle three mning$ Tll!Pl. 2to • 0 and the Southern California Cfflltl-. ID' • ' D. MtMtltm .. It J ' College Vanguards dropped a P. MIMtlllftf, rf • ' 6-2 baseball decision to vlsit· 8roolt1, • ' ' ,,_.," ' ' ing Cal State (Domingue>) HUl\(fV, II ' 0 Monday afternoon at TeWillJe COl'OICO. cf • ' T"'yl!', < ' • Park in Cost.a Mesa. Af'(:-lllf, I ' 0 Sivertsen, ace of th' Olrnlf.-d, "' ' • Morlln. p ' 0 Vanguard pitctµng staff a year Tot11s " • ago, saw his teammates com· "'" , ...... (J) mit fi ve errors behind him to Bothle, If • 0 give Dominguez five unearned HlttlM, lb • • H1rw. lb • • runs and the ball game. Andenon. 11 • 0 It was the ftrSt complete $1Wo1111ft, I ' ' Ollulld. c: • ' game of the year for the ThM\11, rf • ' young rightbander who had 10 Pldil ... '°" ' 0 Coll, d • 0 strikeouts and four walks. He Trtnton, ~ s • Tot111 " • IClml Irr llllllft• • 0 ' ' ' ' 0 0 • • 0 • • ' • ' ' ' • ' • • ' • ' ... 0 • ' ' 0 ' • • 0 0 0 0 ' • • 0 0 • • • • ' • ' .,,....,...o_ MllllOll Vlt lo II El Modftll Or•-11 sin c1....-ni. VIiia Parll 11 F-""111 Net Summaries l'•r .. 11111. 'lb Pt""'°"' rf Wtlktf, c: ,_,2b M111rkl11tr. lb ~!Yfft. P lrolllfr .. pl\ TC111l1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' n • 0 0 0 0 • • ' 0 Orange Coast's Chris Cam- mon figures to score big in the butterfly events. He won the SoCal and State 100 fly last year and finished second in contributed to the Vanguard demise, however, with several • • • T1111fn 11<K•l1•ll1 laVIN• LIAOUI: Liil Al1mllol 5 J 0 U\rtlltl'I U!Henl~"° T-<....,,.,. S1nt1 AM Ville'( $ 3 o (olt 1tf.: ....... CCI CEd) t-4, i.t lo~\:' (Edi W. ~~i. ! ~ ~ h ._,...... fl!Wlld ;;;;;;/~ VtllW I , 1 'h Of'9 ... ten~~~) or...-nt ~ Ml /Mf J J I 1 ll:Meffl \01 WO!'I U. 6-2 ... .... :s J t 2 Caro 10 -6-1, '"2 c • c·-Ao-.. m {0) -••. M Edi-2 ' t J e;,Y,..(Ol _, t-7, 11.f t....iart SC9t*I $cfwrtlmtr !0) loll, :M, M , t•ll Fourlteln Ytli.t 1, Los AltmltOI 0 Wlflt.n fOJ -M , 5-7, ... E$tll'C'll S. l!.dl'°" 0 0.1119 "'"""""' I, C•lt M-t 111 Ill-ROIOtHI Ind Cunnlrlel!tm (OJ -H. 1111::~.,..,. l. <mwwi ... Mtr • 6-Juc ,,.... ... 01 fl) ,..,.._,.MllH ,,...,., ··-"'" ... edlMn 11 Cor<N oe1 Mir Ch.fppell < n WOf\ 6-S, ""-C•t• MeH 11 Etttno:lt Crl111 (I) Wtlf'I M , '-J Fount1ln Vtlin 11 .o.\fi!IN>lll J~!kl Cll won 1-1, U . 6·1. LOI i\laml!OI " s ..... ""'" V•lllv N...t>routll ll '"'"" 6-<I, "''· IUNSET LIAOUl NKM"" (ll -~ ,.), M . W L T oa Otl• (I) "°" ~:-.:. ...... htlm 6 1 f l \IJ Cft•o!lell 1f'ld CrlPI 0) '"'°" 6·l. &.l. Mlrlnt A 2 I J1btonV:.I Ind NKtltod (I) wot! &.l. .. Lwrl l f 2 I. Wntwrl ( l 0 ? NfWbrelOJ!lh 11111 PIVlll (I) WOii U , .. N•POt'I l l 1 2'~ ), M . Hun11fllf!:lll 2 S 0 Gltld111 Wffl fl) tll UC.C Wnton1M1tr 2 5 0 A Slntltl $11'1N1 Ar11 1 • 2 • Klrlt Orll\Ollll (G) loo! M, l-6. Tll""Y'I $cenl Cr-{G) LoSI 1-'. 1"6. Anlhelm l, W•ltrn I Orr (GI Iott 4.4. 1"6. Lolorl t, S.Ma AIM 0 IC1!tli Orahood IG) lol.I t'4 , ... N-..ort 5. Hu11llftflC111 a.tell t Pk!Mr (G) loll ""'' M . ~,,,.. J. W1t1!mlftfltl' 2 BtbrYdl (0) _, l·f, 1-t. ...0. ,,,_.,,, ....... O.Ub ... lf-1 H11'tl0r 11 AMMlm 11:1111 Or-..-1.-i Ort IOI \Ott 2.f, A-• LIM•• et 11unllt!eton and! Crtw u111 Keith OrlhOOd tGJ lost U, --""""' ,, w.,.,.., 1 .... """'' ,l.11111 •• Wntmlntt.r Pll!Mr "'° £hl'M1'1 IG) '°'' ...... ) ... ,.llWAY Ll.1.0UI Vlrslt'f -: ,1. •• • ......,.. "'ii Wt1 ......... ,.,. 6 1 uti... I"/ '°'' to Otll cto w. IOd 4 S 2 lo Sm.Ill IN 1 .... (lef. J~Oll (NI 6-7, c J lost le CCl\ell fHO M J C-.11 Ot) •f '° 091e lNI N; lotl ~ l ! 1-Sm-It !NI I .... d.t Ucobton 00 1-3, s io.r lo Cohen 110 l-7 2 l 4 WMI JH) IClll lo Diiie CNl H. 1,.i lo > S • 1.1:" IN) 1"'-lost to J<KOIMOll INI 24 'T....,.. s-.. fO c.oNn IN) M •.. -p .. • -Hiiia t i.n1cirl 041 lotll t1 091e CNI 04 losl ¥~-., to lll'lall IN) N. ,_,. IO JK!IRon (HI l_.I S. LI Hll>rl ) ,...._ loll i. Cllflt!> (Nl•M ~ Ful~ \0, TrO'I'' ~ "-vf-J, Klft'*'Y 0 111\tY Ind Kldl {H) lot! lo It.. r """"" ~""n I nd O'ltttllY 1H) ......... 1 loot to F« ' K 11\d Dllrl•n !NJ U. fled 7·7 • """"" H lit •I INle<tY BOlld!t1' •l'ld' Wtlllc• 1H1 loft IO ~oful!~ 1t LI Klbr1 JtOJner efld 0'1il1l11Y On 1.4, 1'4 t 1Mt lo lO'Wtll 11 lf'O'll' Forbn Mid Dlll'91n INll-',M • OllANI• LIAOVI V1,,,ltY ~tdo 1 l ' Yt ( .... MtA ~~~!" MHMll• k=~~(.h } 1 i ~ ~ft (Cl _.. 6-1, •1, M , M . v,·,!~r;-,' l 0 j,., l!NhlfY (()-' ... •t, M , 6-4. ~ 1 .-. C1rter !Cl 1oSt W t won 6'1, ,1, l-0. I El DOl'l~~-iit,.:fri" Ornv ICI lol~i..!:' M i won 1-1. .\"::''1l' J:.w.~ 2 Slldlllm llld B11dl (C) IOll M , 041 ~ lo", ... w. ·\!alllllll ... di a El Dorfdo Cttrlco 11111 Kt9111n (C) io.t IM, Ml f'tlcltY'• «hmn lot! 1)-6. u . ~I II Sldd~ Vlrsll'Y "'l!rii:'lil~ ·~·OVE LEAG~\ oa IJJ•Mill Cl~~·~) ir•~ G•r..,, Gt9Y I 1 f Millott IE/"/ a.ti. ltlu !Edi 6i, dtf. . i l•I Gr•nclt • ' ,,,., Md(l ..... V ( d '11 lkf, &ol•rd (l:d) .. ~ 2• J:~.!.'Vt~r> ~~. t.lc. cEd\ 1-i. <kl". : : II i ' Md(lnntv fEdl 1-1,i. 11)1! lo 8oe1rd (Ed) '• f :' At•mUOJ } • tVi 14, dtl. Fr!tllt r l1:d/ •» 'Ult Atnl 7 I Wll• IE1t! def, R c1 1Edl .,.., !led I ' ~· Storti McKinney t d) 7.7, IGS! to BO!llfd (Edi t P11:11\ao (, LI lnl1 O J.I, Ml. Frftrler l d) 1·2. ; '-'.•GI'*" G""" ••ndlo ,1.ltrnllot 1 Wtdt 1Es1) IDfl to Rici 1Ed1 U , IDtt • &oi.a Gr1na. .. LOii Am~) to McKlnn1v tEdl l-'-1091 to IOI•"' ! "' ' I :l.Jniversity Spike Team I ~~~~~!Im~ ~~3: ~;"ti;~~t~~~~~ Jans finished out their first-Pcr11110 !Ll. 0111.nce: 20-1. ever track and field campaign "" -l. M1•l1n1r !LI 2. Ftlktl' !Ll S. Hurt (Ll. Htlt M: HM . Tuesday with a 113-14 dua1 SP -1. Muro111 1u 1 1. Chlnditr Il l t lb ck t th h d Of J, Ono (Ul. Dlil•l'ICt; U-S. mee se a a e an s 01-· 1. Mor••" tti 1. Murllllv 1u1 host Los Amigos. ). Chlrllller Ill, Dlllfll('.I! 1»~. The Trojan V&rSity Of CO&Ch Ulllv ... lty Car;!) U1 ""''"' B?tan Quinn finished wltb a 4.f 100 -l. RI-. IUI 1. °"'"' (U) J, •• Olvl• CUI. Time: 10.1, niark. no -l, e. O•vh lUl 2. D•~·· tUI s. M hll ... U · 't ROllert1on lVl. Tlmt: 15.,. eanw e, tJR; n1vers1 Y uo _ 1. Gr1,1er <Ul 2. AdOIPl'I 1u1 J. Bees dealt Los Amigos Its first F1rH1111 !LI. Time: 1:3'.1. 10 .. Of ··-campalgn In that 1310 -1. Hiii (I.II '· AcloU!tl tUl 1. •• u111:: G11vtn (\)), Tlmt: Jll'-1. divhion to a 63-41 tune. 120 HH -1, h lltr (U) '· OllRlo Ill a. GrlYtl !U). Tlfrllt: lt,J. In the Cees, the hosts posted 1:it tH -1. o.1J11:1o ILl 1. or.,,.. 8 ss-42 yjrl....u, tU ) J, Jt1•111t1 (U l. Tlm1: U.S. .,,,_' llO 1t111v - 1. Un1wnlly. T1m1: University's Bees closed out 1.0 .t. ' wi'th a It r. -...-d while the HJ -1. C11Sll'IV (VI J, l(OJ>f IU ) l. GtYllOI' trld ~l1n!011. CEii) Iott .to l"rlt• •1111 Oranoocl ll!dl +i. M ; IGll lo Ht .... lllon Ind A.nde"°" ffdl 44, M MQrrllOll fl'lli ltuUIH (lilt) loet 1t Prltl 11111 Ottl'lood !Ed) 14, IM; laorl 1- Html!ton 1fld "'"°"""" fEdl 24. J.7. s~1,~':"t'rit 1-':~1 Frtnc:l• ~VI :r'~flO ISl '°'! ... Mlr._nlflO 15 &.J; lit'\ to Um'"'9 SJ l· I ; iiit' fo lctn..-IS U , tfl .j~l _.. Wi Iott M; -H ; ~etlOtl (VJ won .. ,, &.21 '811 M, O. llfld !VI lost l.._ U.< -...,_ 6. 0.Ufii;lll """"'W".1-Mtr1!!1!1 IVI dtl Itel!. 51Qt~ (:;) '-l. '"41 loll lo Ma4dolr:· Cowl na !SJ S.7. 1'4. C:t11n•Fo1t (V) lot.I o-6, W 1 111111 U. ... •• V,t.ltllTY L.1111111 a .. ct. 11\\1 t2!J~I s-1 ""''" °'"'' fl) lot! ..... 2 .... 1'4, ).i, l•vlot (LI 1oa1 ""'· u , 1"6, IM, l•rlllllll Ill 1o11 U. u, u , -.. lrolll1rto11 (LI loll 6-6. U. U , 0-6, DOllblDI SI-ind 814911 Ill -,.._Iott 2'4, u. 1'4. . RIOWlll 11111 MCCt,llf (lJ loll M, 1· •• S-7, 1'4. VAltSITY or1n• C..,,,I IMJ MIM5tll Viltl ...... G. H1bltl !Ml loll 2-'• M , U . K D. Httlell (Ml toll 14. 24. -W, • •• Hlebtc:ktr (Ml loll !>'-WOii ._., loll .... 2 .... C11! (Ml loll 4·6, U , ""'' M. -8rown end Knlti {Ml won » lost S. 7, "'°" 1-4. ""· Tutrle 11111 ll:ukllllfl (M) IOll 24, M. 2'4, ...... V1nl1Y f'111ntll• Vlllty tl1Vo) (11¥1) LM ,t.llmltll Slfttlls Ttndal !Fl loll :M; WOfl .. l, .. !. tied 1·1. K,.wcTt'k If ) IDll K H ; tied 7·11 wonl-0. V•l•n.iu,11 IF) lo.I CM, NJ -'-1, ••• "lltn IFJ lost $-1; !It! 1·11 Mn f.l, ·~ ...... Mlllll' Ind ,_, (Fl -.. ,, '"61 _.....,, .... Mlkeloon •nd Como (Fl lost u. , .. , -'"'· 1·5. •• """' ""-... Mtr Im (I) SA Vt""' ...... Oyer (()tied 1·11 wet1 M, •l, 1-1, .. lltutMll (C J -""' .. 1, "'°' ... Kllllltr IC) wan •t, H, M , H. G~Uck !Cl loll '-""'l -60, 61, M . ...... Nt!Ut~ 11'111 Vtrmul'll fCl -U , .. o. 1-0, 6·1. lewl1 and 51tom11ktr !Cl lo.I l"-I- '' :Mi _, 6"(1, VAltllTY W11lmln11 ... (l() (14) Mllrlflll ·-CllOI (W) loSt IO P•rktt (M ) 1 .. , Iott to lllurm !M) 1"-lost lo l•lb tM J 2·6. tos1 !o Wolfe (Ml 2·•. B••Ofl CWl loll to P1rktt !Ml u .,10 Tllurm (M) u. lilt. ltlb (M ) ... dtl. Wol!t (Ml •• ,, Sdlroll (WJ loll lo Ptrlctr CM) CM, 10 l !wtm (M) 1-6, def. Ltlb {Ml 6-1. dtl. Wolll M ) 1-1. Waltll (Wl lot! lo P••~tr (M) 1).1, lo Yh\lrfl't (M) W , lo ll!ll CM) S.1, dl'I. W~ll IM) 1-2. ...... GrlUbluoll Ind Smitlt (W) tJ>Ul with Mt0-11 llld T"I• (Ml 7-$, ~ .. I dff. ROiiin enl H1mllllrl !Ml 1-1. .... Kronr 11'111 Jor.11ton tW J 1<11!11 wUll M(Dowlll Ind lttll (M) 6-3, 2·61 dtl. ltotlllf. tlld H1mbu111 (Ml 6'1 , H , Soccer Title To Rangers The C-Oast Rangers have won another soccer cham- pionship, their s1xth lP the club's 8-year history. t -'"""' 1111 ft\lrcl. HtlOlll; S-•. t Trojan Cets.ended up at 3-7. u -1. DYkfl 1u1 1. 011R1o 11.1 1., i Junior welnhtman 8 i ll O•vlt 1u1 ttdlool rtter91. 011t111«: They aMexed the Pacific League crown Sunday by slamming Fullerton, 7-t, at Newport Beach's Mariner¥ Park. And , Ranger restrVes nailed a11 U verdict. 'fi 1 '.ti. I Murphy -.. ""6 only in· PV -'· Tll ~ lt1t11IH CUI "' wo;: Ind Kool l, No tl'llrtl. H41tl'lll M , dlvldual varsity winner for sP -1. oi.'""''' 1L1 '· ,,,,,,111 Unlvers'·ty ~·-·•ay as he <LJ i. 1t:obt<"1'°" (u 1. 01111nd: ..o.2v.. J.U'l.lMI DIKYI -I, Fl•Mtltl (l) f, f'!COl"dcd 8 44-5 Shot put Ol<ll'lurt (l l ). ll:ohrlaOl'I CUI. Ito trtumph. di•""''· '" V&l$1T'f' \M Allll ... (1111 (I() UlllY1'11t't 1• -t, "°'11116 (l l I, 1'•111111 (ll ).. D'-'"" I\.), T11'Mt 10,S. tit -I, l'••tH"f Ill 1. Portillo IL) 1 G.r<la CL). Tllnt! 21,1. ... -f, siow.n Il l t. Ptn1 Ill 3. •fllert (LI. TlrM1 M.I. .. -1 .... 11.l 1. 11:1¥111 11.J J. #I"""*' (VI. 'nrMl t ill.I. Miii -1. $tllCMJ l\.J '· Cl'M'1U11t1tt~ U.I J. A.~· tUJ. Tlmf : •:41, ~t.Mlll -I. ,l.tuhTI fl } ~. lvr•nd ) ), Wtl ... I IL). 'Tfmel lt :'2.1 I 121 HH -1, PtM Il l 2, ,l.11.11"1 tll t. O.LIPll IU). Tlfnt: 1•.I. 1 .. U4 -1. PUlh ti.I 1. G1rtll Cl I • J. Oft.11111' IUl. Tlrnt: 10..1, ut lltln' -\, Let ,t.l'lltot. T""'; .. '".1$t Mii. lltll'I' -1. Un!W•llt't. Tl!Nl ):1U. tu -l. Olotd (LI l. H""lll~ II.I • i \.n ,t.mltll UJl tCU Ulf_.lty 100 -t , B. Dtv11 CUI I. C1Uloultt {l l S. H"""' fUJ, Timi; 10.t . 110 -1. Cflf ... Uf (l) 1. HI.tel¥ (U) '· C1lllG1Jfll Cl), Ttrne 1t,., -.0 -1. R6Kfl Il l J, IC1~1m1 ILl S. 0Yk•t !Ul. T111111 l::M.O • Im -1. ff\111111 CLI t. Mu"'~ IUI J. Ctl!IClOJttt IUI. fl!llll J1G.I . 11' LM -I. Oflltw CU 1. 'T. 01¥11 IU! J Otrtll Il l. Tllnf1 U.t . ~ •111v -1. l 1t1 ,t.m1111o Tlmt: .n.o. HJ -1. DtllllO Il l !, W1l'ltfl' !LI ). Murr•y !U). "-'lllhh H . LJ -I. a. Devit tUI l, "'""" IUI). 0..1..., tl l. 01,i...u: ir-t. PV -!, Lt~ (U) 1. Horlwt(l'll (ll J. ¥1ttUCll tl.-l. 11dll!ll t4 !P -1. kllvtton (U) l. ltt<'OA IL) t. R. H!tllJ ru1 Dltt~~(t: ,. .. Ol -1 \(l!ull1111 lUl !. R~~•t (I,) J Krv1t'lt Il l. Dllltrttt: M·lO~ Coach Brian ~tcCaughey11 Utllsts 8COred four Umts in the first 22 m1nutes, held a 5'-0 halftime lead aod were able to breeze to victory. Jorulny Haynes 500red a hat trick for the Rangers while mates Jackie Ogilvie and Chris McCarthy pumped In two soois apiece. Henry Mapak•I WU the big gun {Of' the sub&. connecting five Umes. Campbell Tai t had two and McCaughey ~d once. The season 11 wrapped up - unless the Rangers make up a Q&me. wtib Dinubia. Im• '1' tllllfnn 110 001 ~ ......... . ' ' . ., . ·--. 36"! __,.= PllllTNU .. 1UCK trllllO ~ .w.,.._ S4'Ii._, HANoGltTfMO IPIAll'Ilt;:I, •• .. 6*a BUENA PARK ...... ..... L.ftwtiiler 1101 ...... . lll·l041 wild pitches in key situations. Cs ODml ... u• ooo ni OOll-6 s o Soc.ti Col'"9 01000001•-1 7 s U0.13 • 1->· .... '1397 s1e91 .1697 1997 1797 2097 1987 2297 21 97 2497 2297 2597 E7f.W(7.361 WHITEWALl 259' 27" BUEIA PARI U...el1 "' ....... 'f'l.w 5815 U.et. ""'" 12 .. s100 2097 -- COSTA MESA Hertler lf'f'd.. • WTIM• 2200 M1tJbor lf"4. 541·2012 , 1.7G· 1.92 221 2.38 2.42, 2.56 2.64 2.74 2.80 20" 23" -26'7 2 .... 30" 31'7 SAllTA AllA ...,.,.,.,.. ...... , , .... ....... '4'-"7tll Panthers Blank MV On 3 Hits Mission Vielo was limited t• just tbtee singles in dropping a 2-0 Crestview L e a g u e baseb8U g;;ime to bost Orange Tuesday. Scott Tolbert paced coach Harry Hllke's Mission Viejo Diablos at bat with a pair of singles, getting the first in the second frame. Bob Tilton bad the other one-base blow. Ori1Jlge pitche r l~obin Hall struck out five and walked two in going the distance. A hit. sacrifice, single and an error got the first Panther run home in the second and a double and a pair of one.base blows ran the score to 2.{J in the sixth. The loss ran Mission Viejo's loop record to 3-5. MIUltft Viti• (ti .. • Price, (! ' • Ou!lctl, ,, , ' Tifton, 3b ' • Cllro, M ' • J1111e,, 211 ' 0 'Tolblrl, " ' • ,l.lt\trtlt, " ' 0 Wind, pl! • • Grl1'flet, c: • 0 Mt!IO!I,"" ' • Gll!tnwllfff , 1111 • 0 ....... ,,,._,, p ' • Ftr111"°"' pti • Cfllll!Olm. 1111 • Or•n•• U I .. • N...,man, lto ' • Griffith, 2b ' 0 S~reoe.., \t ' • $molt n1kl, d ' ' kobll1Clrke, lb ' 0 Sandford, c ' • 81rtlltt, rl ' 0 I lk", u ' 0 Hall, p ' • •u1111n9, llh • • Tol1l1 " ' Store ~t lnnint1 • MliiOI' Vlalo .. .. .... Ora'l111 ... 00) ,_, ·FISK CUSTOM l!4m11r 14~~ '" WESTMINSTER IMdilh .. •M~ 11440 IM&tlll .... lf2·!otl • "' • • 0 • ' • 0 • 0 • ' • • • • • • • • 0 0 • • • 0 • • • • "' 0 • ' • • 0 ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • ' ' " 0 • • ' • • ' ' • 0 1 ' \ Wrdnesday, A!)rll 21, 19/l DAILY PILOT East's Kennedy Trophy Again Eludes USC Crew By AIMON LOCKABEY ... ,... l!flttl' found It hard to cope wtlh the erratic v.-eaU1er patterns -30 What Is It about the John F. degree shllts and chans!ng K~edy MWl<lrial Trophy at velocities. Annapolis, Md., that always Campbell and crew started seems to elude the USC out with the right idea -Dane saJlors? of Tulane waa the boat to Could Jt be, as suggested by beat. So Jn the first race they Len Fowle, e 1. e c u t I v e got off to a good start and s e c r e t a r y o f the religiously covered Dane on Intercollegiate Yacht Racing the weather leg. But In doing Association of North America. so they let Yale (with Olris that gremlins are always Sea"er or Newport Beach) and riding in the cockpit of t h e the University of Rhode Island Trojan boat? sail a better course to the Whatever It Is, the Trojans mark. came h o m e empty-handed USC was third around the again thi.s year after shipping weather mart but had trouble the best crew it ha.s bad at the leeward mark and let Tulane get away. aboard the Annapolls-44 yawls Meanwhile Rose and hl.s Jn. in several years. dians came out of nowhere Now the gremllna were back In the Trojan cockpit. Another big wlndshllt fOWld IJSC oo the wrong side ot the course, and that's all she wrote. Tbe Tro- jans flnlllled ninth. And that ill how regatta1 are won and lost. USC ls losing four of Its top sailors thi.s year by gradua- tion. Campbell, Macdonald, Guy Doran and Ta ylor Grant are all seniors. Coach Ford says he ls pin- ning hil hopes for net:t year on _be enrollin& from Ora,nge sophomore Doug Rastello and Coast College and Harbor blah several young sailor!!I that may 1choob. STOCK MOW IM 1 LOOK! BACK PACKING & TECHNICAL MOUNTAINEERING E9UIPMENT e PIOHSSIONAL ADVICI e TOUll e INSTIUCTION IN CU.$51S e IENTALS e SUDI SHOWI Or maybe this year's defeat and nipped the Trojans at the could be .attributed to too fmish. Thi.s dropped use to many chlef.s and not enough fifth. Jndi Led b All A ·ca In the second ra~e Campbell 5 K 1 M A , T ... w. COAST MW"I'. ans. Y · meri appeared to be getting away MIWl"011T •••c" Argyle Campbell. ever Y to a good start unlll the wind 642·8335, year was an ace skipper of big the gun, burying him at the member of the USC team this sbifted 30 degrees just before!:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and little boats in bis own bottom of the fleet. Tulane ri~t. The crew had sailed and Navy read the windshlft together in eomparable boats and got off to good starts and for several months prior to the went on to finish 1-2. Rhode start of the Kennedy Cup. Island hung in for third, with PLAGUED BY GREMLINS -Trojan sailors exude confidence before the start of the J. F. Kennedy Memorial Regatta at Annapolis, Md. last weekend, but the confidence failed to forestall the bad luck that has befallen the use team in six years of com- petition for the coveted cup. From left are Norman Reynolds, Andy MacDonald, Guy Doran, Doug Ras- tello, Brent Mathews, Rocky Springstead, Tom Pur- cell, Taylor Grant. Kneeling are Skipper Argyle Campbell and Coach Carter Ford. Four Sailboat Races Set This Weekend Two-time winner John Dane Stanford again beating USC 111 of Tulane, on the other for fourth. Yale dropped to hand, had a crew or relatively sixth. It was in bte !bird race that inexperienced sailors. He says the Trojans blew all chances they were aboard to do ex· rl "th aclly as he told them . Dane of winning the se es w1 a himself was apparently h.is disqualification when they got involved with three or four own tactician, navigator, et al. boats at the weather mark. According to USC sailing The SC boat was involved In a coach Carter Ford or Newport collision with Yale and Co,r .. Beach, the Trojan team got nell. The entlre hassle was off to a bad start even before brought about by a miscue by A blanket of dacron will be final leg of the course. the 11ctual competition began. Seaver of Yale. In the ensuing spread over the Catalina The Little Whitney bunch Just before the mandatory protest, Yale was protested Practice race, Campbell and t b sc and c ell 1•-0.annel from Los Angeles will sail from Los Angeles ou Y orn won L.ll hl.s crew were warned : protest over USC. Tulane Harbor to Newport Saturday Harbor around Ship Rock off "Watch out for these 44s, they stayed clear or the mess and and Sunday as four sailboat the Isthmus of Catalina he!ore will broach." went on to win, but at the end races get under way almost beading for the fil'lish line at In a 20-30 knot northerly the of three races wa.s · leading simultaneously. Newport. Trojans found that the advice Rhode Island by only thrtt was not small talk. The race · t d St nford by five The 100-mile San Clemente In the VYC Catalina Island potn s an a · was hardly under way when The Trojans wound up the da y Jsland race will actually be race the PHRF yachta will the big boat, wilh spinnaker with 22 points. two races in one as Los leave the island to port and up, was knocked flat by a In the fourth race on Sunday Angeles Yacht Club and finish at Newport . particularly strong gust. l lSC and Tulane again 1tot the Newport Harbor Yacht Club The giant race is tradi· Enough to shake anyone. start, with Stanford and Rhode share the responsibility with tiooally handle<! by the three Although Andy Rose and his Island being recalled for being an overlap of the Whitney and yacht clubs. Originally the San Stanford team wound up the early. This wa.s a case of Ahmanson Series. Clemente Island race was • re11atta two places ahead of where Dane o u ts a i 1 e d For yachls rated under the VYC affair. but in later years USC, 'both western crews Campbell to win. The Trojans International Ocean Rule both LA YC and NH Y C wound up with a second - {!QR) the race will be the adopted it for their respective their best race so far -while fifth of LAYC's I am e d series because of the challenge Large Mexican Navy squeezed in for a third. Whitney Sc~. to-crews and yachts. URI was sixth and Stanford It will be the first race of _,.. For many or the yachts in BJ TaJJi d ninth. the 1971 Ahmanson Series with all four races, the weekend OC C Jn the tinal raee the starl n d will serve as a tuneup for the was a g a t n beset w I th 8 x 10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT FAMILY GROUPS Just 95¢ for a!ij Frl.-S1t. April 23-24 Hours -10:00 to 5:00 ONE SPECIAL TO A FAMILY 50c HANDLING CHARGE PAY LESS SHOES . "· • .. ... Tu • ·. NHYC starting its eet un er May 6 start o( Uie Newport to SAN FRANCISCO (AP) windshift.s, but Campbetl read the eru;sing Club of America Ensenada yacht race. ll I• Ca Ii lorn i a'• M.rocan-them effectively thl• time and 2221 HARBOR COSTA MESA {CCA) measurement rule. also a convenient method or American population iS the got away to a clean port tack !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CAMPBELL & GREMLINS Argyle Campbell, skipper of the USC boat in the Kennedy Cup regal· ta looks aloft from the cockpit of bis Annapolis· 44 yawl. Searching for gremlins? 571 Ya~l1ts Set Ensenada Race No Record The 24th annual Newport to Ensenada yacht race failed in its bid for a new record of en- tries. Closest count aft er the Saturday deadline was 571 hopefuls for the J\fay 6 start of the classic. The figure com· pares with 578 in 1968, the highest number to sign up. But as in all previous years, the or iginal count is not in- Tropl1y Race Scheduled On May I dicaUve of the number of starters in the world's largest international yacht race. Newport Ocean S a i I i n g Association officials have learned to expe ct that a percentage of skippers will change their minds before the 12 noon start of the classic on May 6. Even more will drop out enroute because of ad- verse weather conditions, gear failures or other reasons. Lasl year lhere were 539 ac- tual starters and more tban 500 made it across the finish line off the Ensenada breakwater. TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ First off, starting at 11 a.m. getting boats from the Los largest ethnic or r a c I a I start, five boat lengths ahead !~ will be the five classes or IOR Angeles Harbor area 10 minorily in any state, says a of his nearest rival. boats starting at five-minute Newport well in advance of Mexican·American group. Then came the gremlins - Intervals. Then will follow five The Mexican • American thi." time 1·n the person of the A boa I the Ensenada ra~. ., classes of CC ts, a so at-===========; Population Commission of race committee. The start wa!!I five-minute intervals. ;.. California said Tuesday a rttalled because of the wide Ten minutes after the last Who Cares? p rivate census shows windshirt. On the restart USC class in the Ahmanson Series No olh•r n•w•P•P•r h1 tti. Cali fornia has 2.9 milllon Mex-and Stanford got oil about is under way, LAYC will world c:•r•• 1bo11t yo11r commu·J jean-Americans. compared to even but were hampered by a signal the start of the Los nity Ii~• your c:ommunily c1.;1., 2.J million blacks in New York spectator boat that tossed a Ang~les to Newport rati!, the niwtp•p•r do••· 11'• th• DAILY State, the state with the huge wake trying to get out of fifth in the Little Whitneyl:P~IL~O~T=. :::iiii;; largest Negro popula tion. the way. Series for yachts rated under --ii;;iiii.:;.~.-Oiii-i;-.-,i-.;,iiii-.-;;;.iiiiiiiiiiii-..,;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii the Midget Ocean Racing Ru1: ti noon Voyagers Yacht f"C/JCtJt of a sellout! Club will start yachts entered in Its Catalina Island race, THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY ONLY marking the 1971 inaugural of the Massey Series for Pacific Handicap R a c i n g Fleet yachts . All of tOe races wiU start off LAYC and will finish sometime Sund.:iy at the en- trance to Newport Harbor. The San Clemente Island race has been shortened this year to eliminate the east ef\d of San Clemente Island. In previous years the fleet h a d an option of going around either the west end or east end of Catalina Island, but had to circle S:ln Clemente Island. On the new course. the west end of Catalina is mandatory, but the next mark of the course will be a stake boat off Wilson's C<ive on the north ~~wrn~u® "British Lancers" 611 Zipper Boot 16.99 $24.99 value .•. from £-noland ••• bleclt or brown soil calfskin leether, •. gently aquared toe, pllched heel and full 1lda zipper •. , mastercralted with ex· penslw features -lealher lnto!e, fully leather lined sh•lt and le•lher tole ••• sizes 61;; to 13, med. The ~1ayor's TrOIJhY Race, side or the west end of San fourth feature of California We Dare YOU • • • Cl-emenle. This lops some 50 S . E S d miles off the previou!!I course, Yacht Club's Overt.on eries very atur ay and eliminates the lee at tbe will bring a host of yachts east end of Catalina on the pouring across the finish line,jii~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiii;i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;il at Newport Harbor ~1ay 2. Besidi:s serving as a chal- lenging race in the Overton Series. the race serves lo bring yachts to Newport which · will be competing in the Newport lo Enscnada race the following Thursday, May 6. The race will start off ~iarina de! Rey, Saturday.I May I , leave Catalina Island to port and finish at Newport sometime Sunday. Distanti! of ) the race is 78 miles. The race is open t o members of S outhern Californfa Yacht ing Ai;socia- lion·affiliated clubs nnd ski~ pe~. whether or not they hl'lve sailed in previous Overton Series race!. GOLF v;tt§ Low k9re l~c•Mft 1 GIOOI 511111 GllN' -fO••r .,,, r 1 !'I • . NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE s1.oo' wJ~ tllll •d ..... , • .,. APRIL SERVICE SPECIALS 11.e volullnnory new operal1anat metkad• "'t'Oll Orongv Counly's No 1 Lincoln Mvrcury dt'Ol<'f now offc" foctory outkor1rvd se•· W•c:c-ot pncv1 tomparablc In 1~0\11 chrnqcd hy \('•v•CC' ttollon• and olhe1 11011 1p11clolo:rd 1epol1 ct"ntcn Serw1t11 by oppotht· mcnt i0¥t'. yo~ hu•l11:r !•me ond """"l'Y R119. $3.50 Brake Special l11ti11d int i~1p1,li11Ht .& f11ll .d. ju1hn111t, J11tl 99' You Save $2.S 1 Rag. $8.50 Wh11I Bearing & Brake Combo. l11d. c:l••n, lubrle•I• I •df11•f wh••I b••ri"'lll. Coinpl•I• br1~• intptcl. I •di111I. Jud $450 You Save $4.00 SANTA ANA t~~C:Oll.N l.'!iEftCMRY 13~1 NO. TUSTIN AVE., SANTA ANA 547-060 "WE APPRECIATE YOUR I USINESS" .. ~~wrn ~u® Soft Elk, Non-Skid Deck Shoes 14.99 They sen Jor $24.95 els•where . , • great et sea or on shore .•. flnety crafted In the U S . .A.ol glove •oft ten colored elk leather ... Speclally grooved rubber aole1 and heels pro~ide non·!lkld aarety on wet decks end slippery walks .•• 11:i:ea s.12. C-0-E. DAILY 9:30·TO 9 -SUNDAY l 0 TO S 333 E. lnH ST., COSTA MESA 464 S. MAIN ST., ORANGE RIVERSIDE INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY ()()miles eaetof Lot Angefet Junctiollll of Higbwaya 60 and 395 /'""'"."°"c;.,,_ DISCOUNT TICKETS ; #° _ ~ A...U1bla Onl7 •I s.,,,.. Tieketro• It ()fP ,,, '~/4 \ r;~~~~G~~~-.. ~,~~;i~~;~,~~ .. ~· ...... s:~ ... t-~·-~ ... ~·i~=-§~~~: S..•n Prictt 19 17 15 ""-'"----'-'-~;;;._..i 3 Big Events SVNVA YTICKETS COOD FOR1 1. Frid.r-Qa•li(7ing for tt•rtinc poehioe 2.S1tunl•1-Qu1Uf7lng for lt•rtinc p..;.. lion and Regional Ch•mpJoD•hllt• Sport. C.r R•clng 3. Sund•7-Two 100 mile ncea Ill speeds in UCUI o( 180 milet per bonr TYPE OF RACE1 Formula '50001A opre&-wheeJ. tla,Je-tm llC- en with '5 lir.u maimum engine dispbcemenr. LAM Comine!!UI '5000 Champiooship-fimnc.eofl971 KPOn COURSE1 l.iftbide't 2.34 mile, lliDe muahortc:oune ~' ()pea wheel, 1i~ ncm with ap"' fiwe littt aiai-mum eftflne displacemenL En&inet are 30.S tubic incha Amen. nn Ford, Chevrolet atld PlftQOUth nunuf..rure. Sophiu:Kmed <husf1 bullc by Sutttts, Md.aten, Brsbt.m, McKtt. All Amerio a.n ~m Ind othcn. Cm weip fllinim1U11 dl,10) powldrwidl low w:u1g COflCePt ud bne top speed upabilitla o( i:nae thaa 180 mileJ pet bout. DRJVERSa 1970 Corxioetnal cbampioo John Cannon (mm <:mad, forma-Contiocotal champions Gus Hutchi,.,., and to. Sell, former mrional Formula A ch1.1npion Ron Gr.ble •c«:tan1 lnd.i1aapoli1 ll'ld Ttms;-Am dtinr. Geor.se Pollmer, pl;. ml1IJ' nat1ooal: fonnaU dwnpJOQS. PVRSE113,,000p!us M'.l'mOries. RACE FORMAT1 Two 100 mile be. nicn, will be run wirh poi.nu atoed hi eech &i'ing an ~t·.U wion.:r Md order o( fl nit IL '11ME1 fine 100 mile fact' &eu urickr WIJ • 1 p~ Sundllf, April 25. At tM cooclusioo of the fint nee, •re will be•~ hourpmte to td'uel llGd tqtid for k'CODd 100 .miler. RACE lllSTORY1 The f1t1t Formula A pro nee• lhatl&t thrtt "''" ., WU woo by-John C.OtlOn, Wa of Pas.den., Md Gatloon lau yev npeuff bit 'iclOl'J' 1111'1 weol <NII to wia the ~ies chtntpio~hip. Cannon. need wire ro wir. 1111 both pre., •tallleveottwh1di ~then 1ust oncnceoflOOaillcaio ~ RECORDS1 lace~ 1pced; 114.04 mile$ pct bom-C.. nofl.. Hopo.Swr a.e-.,., 1970. Qualif7i"' record: 116.08, mile! pet hour, 1:1&71 c...., HOl*ft&..-r Cbl:ry, 1970. )Sears I ........ --.... °"' ........ ~ ........... ,. .... -........ , ...................... . ..... -~a.-..... ._,..... ... \ ( U D.IJLY PILOT s w.,.,...i.,, ..,., 21, nn Crocker Complete-New York Stock List l • • ·-·-- •~ru . 1971 GA!Ll !'!LOT • Finance Briefs Bank Splits Into Three Small Units Reor11nlzation of Crocker· Cltizen1 National Bank'• 114- olflce Southern Region lnl4 three amall unStl w a 11 announc.ed r e c e n t 1 y by Emmett G Solomon, boa.Tel chairman and chlel executive officer. Solomon said tbe action "lit ••accompll.th more effective administraUon of oqr branche~ Jn Southern Callfomla and m11lmJae Orocker 't opportunlUes to partldpate In the continuing growth ol that area of the atate." Dlvlaion of \he r'l!gion will hi effective May 1. A Loi Anfel" Meln>poUlan Realon, consisting or 4 3 offices, wlll be admlnlaltrtd by Richard W. Heldricfae, a senior vice pres.ldent and current manager of th• NGl'lbem Region hetdquUW.. ed In Sacramento. Harold C. lttpp, ""'°' Y1a1 president and manager ti. Ute· present Southern Region, wlll manage a new Southern Coontles Region which 'fFlll corulst of U of fleet. with . he:adquarten In N e w p • rt F1111nclal Center. Ntwport 8Qcb. \ - i, • ~· DAILY PILOT DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS 1'0ClOR' Cl\tl 'IOU st.OOEST SQMi;1ltlNG I COOL~ llO \llrtlt MV t1A1\11t> ltf.Lll IM!'ROVJ' W ~OOKS? MUn AND JEFF CICERO, w.-llCM Ol'JEOOYoUW~ 'THE 'BLOND OR BRUNETTE? Wttdntsday, Aprll 21, 1971 • MUTT, I "!'OLD ~U JEFF WOULD BE A BAO INFLUENCE ON OUR SON, CICERO! 1/-ll •1:111:&~ ly Tom K. Ryan By Harold Le Don JOMM WY, SOON, Fi\'t •• 15C1T r'YE TOlP PLAIN JANE !DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Snatt:h 5 Tak t ••• -- Rt st up: 2 words 41 Stltcttd 14 VtJ 15 Ab11ormal rrspiratory sound lb Eitprttant prrson 17 Entranct 18 Asctnd l<j ··-Canada· Now Onta rio 21} Tlmt ptrlod : Abbr. 21 Orbital motion s about a point 23 Otlin11t 25 Dtvlcts 101 ca1chlng fish 2& Many l1mts Poet ic 27 Pronoun 29 Somrwhal Sulf1x 32 Stroll 35 Con vtr~t 3b Portico 17 Game of Or irnta r origin '8 Push 39 Disordt1ly accumula\!on 40 Usr a ~wu· ilt stick 1 l .. " ~ 13 1• 16 I " )) " • .. " .. " " " - " 41 Common Ytstl't'day's Puzzl t Solvtd: Yl'tch ~2 Muddlt with liiiuor 4) long ~riod of ti mt 44 Frathrrs 4 ~ Moletulr: Abbr . 41> Actor John -···· 48 Dtct1v mg 52 Stlf· I A V E iovrrning • v t ~ A Iii E ( R " 5b ot f!!htr ~ ( R S . ' . 57 Rtnl 1111der corll!Jt l 4/21/71 SB Piggy lJ '"011 i~ 35 Mouthful sound way1" or tobacco: 5' A nlldo!~ 2words Slang bO l anguage ll Persor1s Jb A se11st ot old of vrry JS Harr itt bl frpsh.w,1trr d1fftrtr1t BtKlltr fish 11Jlurrs &2 Orivt 12 Obsrrved 42 Kick forward 13 Matts a 44 Br assured hl Oisbur ~r mista~e 45 Ma1mos rl &4 Wrave1'~ 21 Widtsprtad 47 ln9rfdi t nl lffd U Co"" togetlw!r or lacqur1s bS Act 24 P19mrnl 48 Barr itr 27 Rost bush 49 A.ccus\0111 DOWtt frature 50 Nation 28 Own of Europt l Cl ulch 30 t.ltdiOCll' 51 Avarkt 2 Equestrian ll Havr · Nchaic 52 Sic~nessts 3 ·--· M~rtllt: 32 B11lldin9 53 Tid ' ol lhr Ttnnis grr~l ffCl'SS lowrst rang' • Gambit 33 Movrmrnt. 5• Gtsl!l"t s of 5 Stop Music lht hfad b Art!es s J.l Kind of 55 T t!tphone 7 Brsldts soc ia1 part a Strip away tnga gement · 59 Tobacco 9 W~tedal ls l words Quid ' ., " II 11 " " ' . " " " " 11 ,, ~) . 27 11 " " " " ,. " l9 " " .. •• ' -•• •• " " ~ .. I " " -..-I I 1" ____ ..., __ ' .. ' ' '61 f ;6~ WMEN WILL 't'OI, I GOT TO GET OFF I SEE YOU? THIS PMOME • .SO USTEN .• @ ® 00 PERKINS MISS PEACH : I ' f I • STEVE ROPER PEANUTS ly FTanli laglnsld ( Ll'I. AINEI $0CALLEI>. e eECUZ. HE. IS ~TH™!: MA>l HIS PAWVW.OS- SAUY BANANAS • ANIMAL CRACKERS IT VJOL.U .. 0 F11..L MY Ne1!"5, A COM&JNATION OF FOR61WNE5S AND MONl'Y.- -SOI.IE WA</ 11.E COOU> COIJVE<J A ~"e-roA p J.Of OF PEOf'l..e • .. \ By John Miles By Mell • e.VERY NIGHT ·Be"SIE'l!!S AT II 0 1'1.0CJ< WHIC.H, YOU'R&" YOU 6ET FOR:Gl\IEN P.A fD FOR YESTERDAY~ EVEfl...Y Wf!EK RAIN OF': .SHIN&< ••• By Saunders and Overgard :t e"1Tj rr. MR.MUM u II I ,. I • • By Charles Barsott,i .. ' ' . •• By Gus Arrlaltil By Ferd Johnson· o~, YO!J Si>LY Wl"IE •• KITTY HIGGINS LEFT tr HoF1E TO/IMUSE' ME~ By Roger Bollen \OE CAIJ HIRE A I Sl<Q WRITE.Ii: • " . ' ' . • .. ' ~d) f).1-, DENNIS THE MENACE - Golden West Honor Roll -· hlsts 520 - &adham wads State . Committee Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach) has-been appointed chairman of ~ Joint Committee on 1 Atonµc Development a n d Spact, according to a n announcement released by hls -0ffice. ~e committee, which ls .f1>1?P ri sed o[ three '.Assemblymen and th r e e Senators has State Sen. Ralph C. Dills (0-San Pedro) as a viCf: cbairman. Badham said "if we are to ' progi:tss toward more goods , lani;i•"' services with a better 4r<ure for our citizens, and at · the same time control and reduce pollution, we can only hope to do so through the further technological ,4evelopmenl of beg i nn ing cpscoveries made in the fields of the atom and spa ti!." ' . ~wsletter 'Named Best ' ' ' ' Iii State I ' ',The newsletter produced by l6e 'Newport-Mesa Education iation, "The Forum", hps been named Lhe top such p~b iCation In the state by the Oa lfornla Tea chers ASsooation. '~itor Chuck Stegmeir was pA:aented the Arthur F. Corey ".C JrT:p t e r Communication ~~d at the semi-anbual · ting of CTA's state councll :Ft§~ ~ at Pacific Grove, near ~rey. •1J\e., "Forum" was pra19ed x:;:...,.CTA President Mrs . ~1aret L. Lemmer "f o r ~ff e·-c ti v e communJcalions ~ques that contribute lO ~ional progress f o r lieachers." f N-MEA represenls 7 5 0 teachers In the Newport0Mesa liJnlfled School District. -··· Thi DAILY PILOT- Tho Ono Tho! Caro1 ' . Wednesday, April 21, 1971 * DAILY PILOT 2G ' I • -. HAVE YOU VISITED OlJR NEW STORE AT : 5881 Warner at Springd ale in Huntington Beach . lli:'.! Reg. s13•9 Padded Chaise Lo,nge Terry Jump Suits r 99' Women's c.lsual Slippers . 513' Gold Veined Mirror Squares • No Glue, ScreWI, Nails! Plastic Trash Can • • 32 Gallon With lid! Weatherproof, won't • Loll Y ov Sit Up or Lio Flat I Big ond comfortobl1 • • • $99' broced for strength. 1 !' . aluminum tubl"Q ft01M with thldr: floral printld box pod, Choo&e from Two New Styln Two now •tyl• •' • Jowol s4· 98 n.clt., ~ sl~ belted style orslffveless tGnk top with •l°'tlc 1..,.cipenlng Jn terry knltl. , w_.,r Thom· Indoors or O..tl N""' Jtyles Sn foldino vinyl· lpoo~ In, fjisl>ion 66 colorso•Suck.le, Bow (r (. · O...e~y Trims. Sius to flt "'°'t ! Gott 'iO'!H'• "''l'I styles '~." d c:o!Oc$ ~ 1 Polisl>od r; ''°""" 68 .:fl.IONS. For home or C oflke. To ckonge or. move, remov1 core· •I· fuUy & r1u•. Com· . • pl111 wltfl tor,-, rtody , In If 12 $1.11 ,,m "''""k und<• "°'-$288 mol uH. Metol locking handln pre~nt spilloge by Oflfmal1. 10 Lb. Bag Aloha Charcoal Briquets ••Aloho"bums hot· fer,. clearitr, long- er! Leova no m- id1.11 l Stock Up! 63' Reg. s1" 50 Ft. Gardea Hose ·MMsonto orr '<ffo., ther with 1h" diam. Bross coupllngs'I Top quality per· for1110nCt .tested! $147 . ~·'&] Men's & Women's s:ro Sunglasses Nationally odv•r· "'"" b .. nd '""''"-$149 m: now at ..., thon IJ1 price ••• only or Thrifty! Poly Picnic Jug Big 1lze, IOIY grip $109 hondl1, Lightweight, brown colo r that won't show sell. $29" v.1 .. 1 lolarold Color Pactc 11 Col0< P•lol• s24t1 111 o rnlnUte, block & whit• '" s•condtl £asy foodlng, built.in flaihgunl 88c. Value! 8 Volt '.. . Transistor latftl'J Fits mott pocket ond 3ftC Pl)rttibl1 rodlot I 7 • C•JIMI • •lhn ll $1.JI M llttetftr .•. Cati If• ... lie Women's Stripe Skirts With 6 Foot Sa1h Machine \lllOShoble tri· cot In 90% Ac9tote & SJ84 10% nylon with oll oround elastic: waist· bond, 72." sash. Sizes 8 to 1.t. : . Women's Nylon · Sleepwear .... , .... $278 • liklll OtMI ' Nylon tric:ot wltt, over. toy, lace . or sofin floral embttilo.rta ~~ pllquct trims. s ... M·i.. Summer ' No Iron Shifts ~h:~ •• $349 1 Shlftl f;t Pant Shifts In No·lron blends. Novelty styln ond cofon, slzn 8.J 8 .. Sov• now ot o Thrifty priCI I <Women's HJ Heel Crinkle Sandals New fO< Sum. 99t mer, crlnkl1 ll.w ... 1nyl Jn ouort· ~Ii_ •d colors, CompaN to others at $1 .65 Lady wilshlre · Cantrece II Nylons ....,. •• , DtlcMt , .. "' 3~:1:$249 Sizes 1M·'.2M.JM In Rhopt.Ody or Sunsplc1 l Flt• !Ike your skin! •J 1• Norelco to lmtoll, 12 ' size. Conditioner I-ounce 66' Sale ol SI Nursery Toys 1211 ea. Valuel 2 Pc. · Toddler's PJ.'s •r 1111•r Yowr Choice : Butter· Sumrner·Wtlg_ht, '2 • s3 fl'fi"ldll, Jingle Jim pre·shrunk, Goy· ~ ~ Crfb b:en:fwr,·Mutl .. P'ints sizft 1-.t. col Roi Pol rntn! IAllll 59!.Enfamil a' Pampers · ~. · Li9uld I "" Diapers ~ 2 :·,,... 'll°"""i1ht 12'1 =,....,.. . ~ c . . . . 79c -.-........ _ . ' 92' SJ 0·~·· 'Jofutson's laby ·Oil . • °""~ ...... sps,...,, Mennen BabJ. f!\ogic s.....11 ... ,~11 .. 951 Johasotl~s, Balay P~ de; s1 '' Reversible Woven Rugs 21144 Inch Sl'.s1! Att•oct i" <f'rl< ond l~ht $122 pott•ms In J"Vtr:sibl1 brold- ed ltlrow Ndi with fringed ends. Gr~t 'nap mots' for kindergortenen, Mo. chim wo!lhoble! eg. s1" to s1tt Baking Pans ... , 99' Chli<• •"9l'ltbttt PIU •CHM•,_. • •rti:;t.:..•• • s,,i Ctll• ·-· Sl.49 Valuel 10" Chef's Sklllef Cook1 like a 96' prof11:11lonol, stolnla1 • , • with wood handle. Full slze for gourmet cooking! 141 Parquet Pattern Tr1y Tabla ..... 21•15" $12' •oodtOfle finish 1 .. btes with non· tomish bross finished legs! Use indoors or out! i7t s,M H ... r·A:r".r s 11 • . ~ Energ1ne ... ••• ., •• , .... Qtllrt 634 Uquld Plumr ... ·-w........ s11• . •1° Kit Wax ... 271 Penetray Light Bulbs 19' Fruit of the Loom '2"' led Pillows . ,.,, .... ,,;,." s·11 Non .. 01Jero1nic, •. odorless. Fluffy ot1d soft! 2M6". s3n Roomate G.E. Alarm Clock Antique whrt1 with .. ,y .. .... d~lf $297 • $1.51 Spri.Qf Wl11d Al1r11 ........ $1.11 Hi Intensity Lamps s333 ..... ---- 991 Yilull Hi· Tyme Canned Cocktails • WMllKIY IOUI •MARTINI • DAIQUll.I • Kll'W'Dlll't'll YOUI CHOICI 49c O.kl-................... , Dominion R1rt Canadian Whisky Flftt. Gllllfl • .... -'""" s311 thon our everyday OiKO\lnt Price of $4.19. I • I H DAIL y PILOT Wtdnescil1, Al)rll 21, 1971 3 SCR Veterans Teamed for 'Luv' Murray Schlsgal's satlricaJ -comedy "Luv" will be the next i>rodueUoo at South Coasl 'Repertory. bringing a trio of SCR old timers together on '.the Costa Mesa stage. Don Tuche and Martha McFarland, two "ch art er .members" of the group who helped organize the company in 1965, have been cast as Milt a•d Ellen M1nvllle. Completing tbe cast as Harry Berlin ls Art Koustik, another veteran of SCR's first season. Michael Fuller, who Wednesday Evening A'9tll 21 t:tll IJl lfl M• Jtrry Dunphy. CJ),.... R11soner, Smith. D lllllC ,.._ Tom Snydf1. On. Alltl st.e. Guests: Mickey lloonl'J, Jll2 AlbtrtSOll, EmhJ Colt· 111A. All•• S111n111n. a SilC O'a.d: .....w. tci (tO) ""' ~ Tnltlr" P1rt I (dflml) '12-'lll'illiltn Holdt!I, Lii h lmtr, Nurb ~ A Ml:urtlbM SWtde 111111 tomer U.S. titlnn ii prenurcd Ifill btc:ID111in1 111 Allied 111n1 durln1 World Wk II. I CJDkt YH"" mn.~ ! IP'! Mii' Trll m•-cm .... ft•if m t:ltidOl't " m n.. .,..., ..,. Ill!) U Herl f .. Hi11 cet Ctn'"ll aJ ,._ Jim HIWlhor111. 1:111DAr1._. U0 Cl) ... l itl Mu~. (I) Tllltl 11 ~9llKll 11) ..._ W1h1r Ctonki11. e ..... -. lll ._. Dlwtd lrin).111. .. ..,... .. ............. \.Mtl 1!1 WtcW R•/lllMiult m,.._....., ll!Jloo- IDAIC- JM 8 CIS .... Willer C1ankllt. DD•- lil T• t• IM lid D _, lly "°'I 9 M• (C) "ltMJQt" (dr11M) '~oblrl Mildtum. m1LML11CJ mro - recently staged the original/ drama ''Soowman in the Empty Closet," will direct the Schisgal comedy, which opens May 7 at the Third Step Theater, 182'1 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa . "Luv" will run for twe week:eods before moving inte the repertory slot with the company's 60tb production In six years, J. P. Donleavy's "The Ginger Man," scheduled for a May 21 opening. Reservations far both shows may be obtained by calling tbe SCR box office at 646-136.1. AlillDn's trtistit ttltnl ttc plll to !Ill , ... QllYPO O (])(j)O)Ttl• Smith r1m11y '111• Grtltfltr Puturu." Allu he II ln/1.11ed wvln1 • w1rr1nt, Cll1d Smith is ltmPled to accept a ute }ob u 1 prtv1t1 dettclivt. B1rb111 Nicholl Ind Bert Frted 111tst. m Dllid frnl SM Gwsts: Ctl1f· iflll V•t•nte: lormtr Press Stetetaiy to Prni!Ulnt Jollnson, Bill More11 wt.a is 1athor of "Ust1nin1 to Amtrkl"; •nd LA l'ollce O.tedive Joseph W1mb1uah, alllhor ol '1M lttw Cellturions." m Qo..a r. a.tv1t11111• fD 118(!41 Trill '1ht City ind IAlrntJ of Dtmlf n. Llu11n R. Wal· son." All txlmitlltioa ot !hi U.S. fudicUJ lfllem vi• • cletliltd Pl•· sent1\ion of the trill Ill • Blad P1nlhtt cll1r1ed with mlstinr ••· 1est, "Stltetlon of th• Jur(' ii ti!• tifll allowin1 of f1111r ae1ITll!nls. a "'"'"' '" LMn1 t :OO I) (I) Mllllkll C.nffr (R) Gut~· 1111 St1Y1 Forrest pl1y1 • b1lllltnt M1rl10n who coma b1ck lrom "'r uMct with 1 drinkln1 problem but 11fusea lo 1dmil it !1 1ffedin1 hil · -B 91 m I l•l<!A I DIVi• c.p. ptrfilld (R) Robin Phillips p\1ya, lh1 titlt 1011 in Charles Oict1n1· d1S1ic. tale •bout 1 boy's 1rowth to 1111t11rity in the 19111 century. Thi 1llrrln1 tut includtt Sir L1u111nc• ot~iet. Sir 1111~ Rich1rdson. Wtn· dy Hiller. Sil Mid'l1tl R"li1r1ve, D1m1 Edith Enns, Rkmrd Al\tn· boru!llh, £111lyn Wini1m1 and Ro~ . ...,_ 0 TN flllitiff 0 (})@ aJ loW!ftJ Calfl Gu11!1: Buri lvts, Mt ltnit, Bobby Sht1111111. con. 1mdtri G!)JO llli11rtu m tt•tlcM t:JO CJ t.nlllld tflfltU It\') Musit1l1/Plltof'1 DtU Im U Cru tilt MtriM Cl11cn fD flrillf u. ·111111~ P1nth11s· lD:OO II (I) ltlwail riff.Q (R) McG11· llllJtf-Clllt!IS G1rry. ntt h•s IZ llour1 to find 1 lut tI:) Qrlll 11111 Uwl•& Wwlll lubt filltd "ith !ht dt1dl1 .,Q Ill~ 1'lpl Str1in," wtllch 1 tcience 1tnius his wcteled. Cd Fl1ndert 1u1sts ln con- tlusian of two.put story. Ill--7:JO 8 MM It Llw (R) J11nn Sl1cy ........ U I hlr•·tllf COflstr\lc· !iotl '""'" ..... loMS hi• Job lo •1 Jninority woft• •nd tlltn b di1r1td witti I dntntdiw tl~ It the builllina 1ilt. D m Th Illa f,.. Sil~ <•l "Witt! LM, Bulltb Ind V11fn. t•nn." Art Clrl!JX. Tom E111tll, Dtborlll W11Wy 111d Jacll Albwtson 0 Clllflllfl S Nft'l Krrin S111dt1i, Barney M0<ris. O (])(})Q)lllt Yt•n1 LIWJ'•• (R) "Thi Alit111lion 11.itk." M11i1nn• Hewitt. 16, ••nb Ult Neiahborllood Ltw Olflet1 to otit1ln let•! prolltlioll from lltt ~rtnta. GUtsl·slartin1 1r1 1Um Hunltf ind Miry l1ynt. 0 lut• W1rd NINI m It"' Puln1m/flil!m1n 1111ll:·silr ifl COIMdJ lbout t tr1in m M111t11p Al H1m1I hosts. robbil)' 11111. m AIHlla c.nt• All Costa Mesa Playhouse 'Man Who CametoDinner' High Quality Production DAH.Y PIL.OT Stefl PMM TRIANGLE :--Beth .Titus Oeft) cozies up to Ron McCall to the dismay of Helene Briggs 1n this scene from "The Man Who Came to Dinner" at the Cost.a Mesa Civic Playhouse. OCC Concert Haydn Mass Beyond Chorale Hy 1'0~1 BARLEY Of ""' 0.11'1' Plltl 11•11 There has been a marked improvement in the quality of the Orange Coast Community Chorale and this welcome new standard was very evident Sunday with the g r o u p ' s performance of two major works in the Orange Coast College auditorium . But it has to be frankly stated, a new depth and spirit notwithstanding , that the (.'horale is not ready for the likes of Haydn 's Mass in C Major. the formidable ' · M a r i azellermesse '' ·that comprised the major portion af a demanding program. It had its moments or beauty and no individuals assuredus cf them more I.ban Lyric Opera To Present 'Music Man' The Lyric Opera Association of Orange County will mark its 10th anniversary by presenting Pi.1eredlth Willson's popular musical "The Music A-Ian" in September. tenor Alvin Brightbill ind soprano Cathy Ranney but the overall delivery was below the standard one loob for from any organization prepared to tackle this majestic and moving work, There seemed to be a lack of inspiration in some key passages and a distinct lack of wtlty in some of the l!arlier choruses, particularly the "Et Vitam Venturi" and a woefully delivered "Gloria in Excelsls Deo." Bach's Cantata No. 4 -the very impressive "Chrilt lag in Todesbanden" -fared much helter in comparison and again Brightbill and Miss Ranney deserve s p e c i a I plaudits for their noteworthy contributions. • Again, however, l here seemed lo be a lack af the iruplraUon that sbould be inherent to the delivery of any work of this nature. Conductor Richard Raub worked very bard on his ensemble without ever convincing us that the message cf the Bach and Haydn works was very close to the hearta el t h e performers. The finaJ chorale. "Wir essen und wir leben wohl" and the earlier "Es war ein wunderllcher Krieg" were the closest the chorale came to the kind of delivery we look for at this level. Nonetheless, it was prtfer1ble to a Haydn that i! going to need a lot af work before it can again be offered to a concert audience. Beat"les' Tour Halt Blamed for Breakup NEW YORK (UPI) -Paul PttcCartney b 1 a m e s lbe Beatles' halt in personal appearance toun in 1966 for the beginning of tbe pop group's troubles. And we'd just tum up in a van and people would arrive and we'd be there. l thought that was great. John (Lennon) said, ''You're daft," McCartney aaid. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ._ Ofl~ PMIJ Sfttt Fana or Americana circa 1931 have a real treat in !lore for themselves if Ibey take in the Costa Mesa C l v I c Playhouse's production o f "The Man Who Came to Dinner.'' The clwic comedy by Mou Hart and George S. Kaufman is literally awash with the bits and pieces of nostalgia that have become so fashionable lately. Director Pati Tambelllni notes in h e r ..,.HIE MAN WHO C.t.Mll TO DINNa&" A ~ bv Mos. H.9rt •rid 0.-1• S. K•Vfrn-11. dfrecttid lw P•ll T•mbelltnJ, tedlnk•I dlr.00. lldword Anclerun, ''"• rn."•;er LDl1 Wiison, P•••mlM bv tflt C.I• MeM Clwlc Plol~N Frld•v1 •lld S.!111"111 1 throutlt v 1 •I mt CommunlTv 2'1t11hlr •udltor um, Or•noe Coun!'I' F1lr1rwlld., Co.ii MIU. THI! CAST Sl«<laan ~llt•!llti ...... H•J G1'11111m M•1111!1 Cit I ........... , , H•-Bd"• B.rt J.tltr'°'1 ....•••.• , ... Ron MtC"I L&rrelllt' SMldon ••• ,. .... . Betit Tll in IE•Mll ~ltnll\I .•..••..••• !loll ll•nnlck Mrs. $!1nlty ........ ., •. Sltlr11\f Diiion H1rrlet Sltnll'f ....... .I.nit• Gt~lllTlln June $flln1cy ..••.•..•• l1rb9r• G•r11clt Rlcn.rd $11~1..,. .... , •• , .•... Jim Stoltrl B•Wdy C•r ton ........... R1y Scot! B1nlo ., .. ,, ...... , .. , .Jttk M.!lll'•Y S1r11t ..... P1t! T1mbo1Uln!•IHll'I' IEY•n1 Or. llr•dltY . . . . . . . . . . Jonn llrlKt MIM PrHn , ........... J .. NM Wolalll ~S.-.............. Ron Gibb Mr1. ~dtr ............... K•Y Pec1ut Mn. McCutchtot! •.•.••... Lob Wiison W~la>IT ••••..••••.•. _ J1rrv Tl!orn.i Offlctn •.•••....•... 09flllll ll1dlltrom program that they h a v e chosen to present the play without updating it "for all those referred to are most certain1y a part of oor history as well.'' It is lo their credit that they chose to do so. To view the Costa Mesa production is to return to an era when the rad!o was the communication; "'hen no respectable household was complete withoUJ.; a cook; when the mode of travel was by train and boat. Hap Graham as t h e t nco mp a r 1 b I e Sheridan \\'hiteslde is great. H i IS portrayal of the egomanica\ man of letters is so complete that one almost expects him to tum on the audience and berate them for being a bunch of addle-braiped n i t w i t s . Without Graham the play would unquestionably fail lo McQueen Role HOLL YWOOO !UPI) Steve McQueen will play the title role in the film version of Henri Charrlere's French prison story "Papillon," for filmlcg in mid•l972. Cris Timmons, who directed and choreographed the 1970 produclion of "Oliver'' for the Lyric Opera group and the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. will handle the same duties for "~1usic !\1an." McCartney said in a n interview published in Life magazine "The Beatles are really finished, avl!r with, a:nd it's just each of us alone now, living our lives the way we choose." He traced the troubles to 1966 when the Beatles stopped touring. "When we started off, we were all aiming for pretty much the same l.hlng," he said. j~f:i~;:::=~-=-,;:;~;;r~i;I McCartney said Ringo Starr, \The show will be staged Sept. 10, 11, 17 and 18 in Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowl on the Festival of Arts grounds. Auditions for Equity and non·Equity actors. singers and dancers will be held in !\1av. "'ith the exact date, lime arid place lo be announced in the near future . Tickets are now available by mail from the Lyric Opera, Bo1 514, Laguna Beach 92652. McCartney said that he decided in 1969 be missed playing for audiences and thought thal was the problem the Beatles were having that led to arguments in record.int sessions. "So I came into the idea of going to village halls which hold a couple or hundred people. Have someone book the hall and put up poslel'll saying, maybe, 'Ricky and Redstreaks Saturday night.• who walked out during the making or "White Album,"LI""'"' was the first to complain. He rttumed to the group in two days. "By the time we made 'Abbey Road,' John and I were openly critical of each other's music and I felt John wasn't much interested in per.forming anything he hadn't written himself," McCartney said. be as high 1 quallty production as it is . In a cast the size of Costa Mesa's, it's hard to know whet"t to start banding out the the end, their detractions 0 limited and the total effect of the production is r e a 11 y delightfu l . I bigbly recommend it. accolades. Ron McCall as Bert "The Man Who Came ID Jefferson, Anita Grossman as Dinner" will be staged for two Harriet Stanley, J o a n n e more wt:ekends at t h e Walcott as Miss Preen and Cmnmunity Center auditorium Helene Briggs as Maggie on lhe Orange C o u_ fl 1 j Culter were all outstanding. Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa, Each displayed a good deal of'l---=-------- acting ability which added to the enjoyment ol the play as a whole .• ~·-The actors occupy the stage consistently throughout the play, bulnotlceshouldalso be '"""" SHOWlfli taken of three that turned in •••••••••• NOW. equally good perionnances in 101orFict: oP!Nll 1:10 ,.... 1 SHOW s·TAftll Al OUllrl smaller parts. G Beth Titus as the ma& killing aclress Lorr a in, RAltD BUT MAY BE Sheldon, Ray Scott u tie.-~ TDD INTENSE so m e t I m e s-!eading man • £DR YDUN&ER CHILDREN( Beverly Carlton and Jack ~ ~ Murray as I.be movie actor =AmMI..;;:;;'°" .· · Banjo all fit in this category. ~ ~NDROf.E The perfonnance marled the .. -,,. first . time this reviewer had ~ SlRAIN ~~ the privilege of seeing Miss 1i1 auiuYlMf'Cli. nOND.Ct'lllMllD. Titus perform in a comedy oo1 and she ably demonstrated her 1 ·,i........., "'"'"' • ..,... J l-..,,ti.. .... 1•,,u,.-. ability to hand.le this tighter .. ,. .... "'" .. u. "u • 11•• ,. .. va:~a;f ~~· .P 0 sit i v e I y I J;ti I~ tl11;1' :e r:B explosive tn his entrance as ~ ~ ~ the Santa Claus-suited Banjo aod bis brief sojourn an stage was probably the highlight of the production. Credit is also due stage manager Lois Wilson and technical director R i ch a r d Andersen for their work on presenting a play unmarred by the annoying technical. set a n d costuming dif{iculties which tend W· h a u n t community theater. Granted there are some minar flaws in the production-not all al the cast members display the skills af those mentioned above . But in ''THl ANDROMEDA STRAIN" "• • ._..." S..tt O.ltj 9f 1:M & H Mll'-IH S•t. & '-· IJ·2:M & ' au Olftcl O- U N-• t PM. 0..llt Sllllwllma Miii fhN ThUA. ·' P.M. l'rt • l•t. • 1::11 P.M. MlllRMto '"·. •un .• 2 P.M. ... ,,.,..., Sell~ .... _.,..,. .. ...::...!W)· M1·14•1 .-, • ..,,i)l•A•..k"'' Aw-Joi ,, ...•. ( ,...~ "•.tTTOMwt~•I ., .......... , .... !ll u ...... 17 Mtt1f •• lllltli ....... M-.,./. I ...... ,""'"" ~J1 .121 1 ·-· ........ .......... -,,_ u• 111t ''""'""'·4~,..,, ........ .......... i...··-''W~t• 1• 1ovr ... , o"11oo 1...i WMto..,.... 1''1 U-4K I 7 M•1I It Wi!ll P••t•I 1 ........ . ._ .. ··--· '>41 loOl 1 • > 0 Y•li•ill lrtlll• li11tsts: Tolli1 I Btr111-C.111pbt11. Dnit 1 Htrritl Itel· m 111•11.rrpitet T-11111 '1ht SllO!ls NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ton, ltllph M1dtf. 01 l'uynlon." l'------------------------11 George Harmon walked out In another 1rgument, but returned several days later. The Beatles finally broke up, McCartney said, when Lennon announced, "I'm leaving the group. I want a divorce." .ES SA' ·-.. _., " ..... a CJ) (j) m CMtttii!I" £Hie'• m llitMtl1ndi1 ftU. (It) ''The Buslnns Trip," Ed· . ., . .. die II auJPlcloua whtn his tether lt.30 0 ~1Y11:, IZlllJ. Holld•J In~ CMl't oomt to his c1•• pliy. (m~iul) ·~-Bina Crwby, r11d 1 Ast11rt. Mu101i1 R~ynolds. Soll&· CJ) n. SMii S... j •nd·danct min lurns 1 firm into 1 D MllliM $ Ml* llllr) "On ttrt ·~a1id1y inn.' llldl" (d111111) 'S!-Gfll'CllY P•ct Q) lilt JohM Hews m Tr.UI Ir CHleqllfftH I m t.den• .. An111st. Q) It T .. 1 Tkilll ' 111:00 IJ rn m It••• lf!lei.-JO IEW.Wa M lea1 1 :S5 m> ca.tit• .. S.111Nt a..10 a rn Cl) m ._ m tit> "'0111, 1 lta11.· Udlflf Rott Lipton Wlft· lll•ri Inti Wilt WNtrrun Ni(h on p11. •Ills' HJ ind llirtlltns to ~ICOlllt ,, 1 fixture. fftollll Slw1111 111tsts. m T1 T .. ._""', di WtrW , ..... S..C.t A111111ni• n. S111in. a ilj m 1t1u D Morie: -i'll• To11naat Spy" (•d· wenture) '63-Kol)'I 8url1in. m hit: ''l"litvtJ HiPnf' (drt- m1J '49-Rich11d C(intt. (D Ml'fie: "Stt••J1' en tile ''"'r (dr1m1) ·~P1ul Muni fE) s.ldien Wiit St11th I Ol111nt fl Th fNMll CW ''Wotkln1 Wilh ll:lO B C1J ~ Criflln Chocel"-." J111i1 Child llo1t1. B ®) m lthnn1 C•rJOn llD"' ....... 0 (I)@ m Did C.vtll IJll l ... llw1 •• m n.... • ..,.,.., U18([)T1 .... Witll LM (It) "*"' "'1itt'• \'ltlriMry aa:m •lldl Thursday MmME MOVIES 12:l0 0 One si., hyond l:DO 0 Merit: (C) "n11 V1n:;•.1ll11' (dr•m•) 'SJ-John Pl)"ne. l]JOO(f)d§Now• l ACADEMY AWARD SHOW Winner 8 Academy of Awards IHCLUOINC. BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR GEORG& c. scon PATJ'ON .AUO -IUT SCREINPU.Y Wl:l\S·H StlYnf•Y P•ltM -Till I I'·"'· MIMI -12:4J & l:M-11 Sllftd11 1'11f911 -t:U & J:a M•llt-U tll41It-Ill11 Valdez Is . Coming OPIN 1:45 P.M. -SAT & SUH. -1 :41 ,,M. @• Dick V•n Ovkt "COLD TURKEY• (GP) Plu1 "THI McKENZIE IR:IAK'" CWlll-'"""''"' ,, .... m. "EXPRESSION" "Ul'lllSION" It •II _., tM __, ,...,., ... rfl .. .c-.. 20 ., t'-Wet'ld'1 f9p IU~ ptfl9f It Howtll lor • •1tlq11e "IX· l'RUSION SISSION" t•I .. an •ltt, dofnt ttielr htdlvSch1ol .. lltf. •df•1UMd 1tN11tl If Yff .,. .. .. rflllf et .11. Hlh h ltl r Complete Shows l L 7:30 and 9:30 _ EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ~S·JllJ A//t.<>ior t~''''"~ f),.,,../,. '""""! ,,,,.1 ......... " "flYI IAST 'llCts• (I) "'"' • "I flnor ,.,,. '"' "rf fill.or" !I') U14or 17 M•tl It Wit~ ••rNI ---·· .. .. ~-. 141-Jltl ,tM <--'•• I "1.,.,, 001 ... ·I• S'--•*1.' ..... ~-•t•-'t~ ... -.. , .... ,,, You• WAIOM" , ... , .,,, • •• s""t ••• "lf't .t 111•4, MH, MM, fll-4 W...WH fll) •• NOW PLAYING! " • "INl.llMltMI ICIEICE FICTION DllAllAP' _........_L&.illllll 'Spider's Web' ~ l Jaguna Mystery Promising By TOM TITVS Of rtlt 0.lfr f'llW l ttft the whole thing from brecam· iJ1i altogether dreary. And The 1naredlents for an tn-there are some attractJw M~U111 and diverting even-performances to overcome en Jgt;.A( lheater ll't nearly all · I nt in "Spider's Web.'' the occasK>na ploddln& of the script. production at t h e And while one is forced to L:oj\Dla Moulton Playhoulle. stifle a yawn or two during lhe ~9".e ls an I n t r i g u I n g cou rse of a rather extended ~11!J!i Christle plot f o r evening, II also must be ad· ~~y bufft, wllh just the mltted that "Spider's Web" ts ~ ttt, duh or comedy to keep~ good deal more entertaining .. Eve. Show Starts 6:30 Weekdays 6:30 •nd 9:30 Sundtiy, Cont. from 3:00 ~,!'10DEL & CRAFTS SHOW "' APRIL 24th and 25th ~ ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ,, (.l.c,..11 1 ... ,,. DltMylaM) YJ.r 200 Exhibitors with continuous Displays and f~onstr1tlon1 of the l1test product1 in Radio ·-rol, St1tlc Models, Crafts, and Railroading. • • Wll" T~~ •tt ~·1-i ouRs • NII M.U Ir 50c off Tft• CrC1fh .1.cl~IU It••. 11.'" SATUllDAY .. Model Conm t. 25c off ~--.. '"' SUNDAY • .l11ctto. Jw11i.,.. " ....... 11 ... 15< 11 lo 6 FREE • r r11 .. Undw 11 WUll ,..,..,,, Co1tti111101," Sltow Set. a1td 51111, from 2 p.111. BARGAIN MATINEE OSCAR t•n ' "DARLING LILI" AC.l.OIMY .l.W.l.lt D WtttHf:lt- , . Rock • ·~. -·r:litt:t•t1 ... W"NOW SHOWING e ~cadamy Nominee .• .::Carri• Snodgress -Best Actre•• ON THE PENINSUlA 67MG41 OPEN 6:45 .IC.IDIMY AWA.RD WINNER I EST SONG "Fer .Ill W1 know" I,,;," 6REAT MOVIE MAKING!" -N.r. r1M!S _".Actress on her way ~ to an Oscar!" , -LOii A#CM"UI lt(IU.UJ.l~r"t~ ' ·111arir or a mad "housewife • '!!. :~ a frank peny him•·~ • richard benjamin lrank langella carne snodgress IOVllU non. S I iiAHGlllS 1 ml'I• ., .. , .. f V-~.~~-~ Academy Award Winner Best Actress GLENDA JACKSON ~ C""'"IJ H• ••l ... ~:...;;;;;;;;;;;;... .. _,,.-.--. ..... LJi~~~ mvrn " IAARll'I ~,.-·' ) ALAN BATES OLIVER REED GLENDA JACKSON JENNIE LINDEN . D. H. l AWREHCE'S "WOMEN IH LOVE " • LAR.RYKRAMER KEN RUSSELL ......... ()_,, ROY BAIRD MARTIN ROSEN COLOR by Deluxe' IRl-_,,;:r_ .. llf1llld Arlrlll -ALSO PLAY ING - The Grea t W l1 i ~e Hope I Slarring James Earl Jones, Jane A/exanaer. Pr~uced by Lawrence Turman OJre::led by f1fartin Ritt Scr•nplay by Moward Szckie-r based on hrs play Prod~ on !ht N""' ~ ..... !.l•i• !Jr Heom•n l 1~•n l'AN•VISIONl'Colilr!!vOE lUX('t ~ • .. that lt might have beerit etven UJt hecuc clrcumstahCn at· tendln11 its crt1tlon. The play •&s mounted In a hurry, 1nd abowa ll on many an occasion, yet It also holds a aood deal of pr11mi1e fo r futur e perform~s once it is pr~ 1 perly lightened and polished. Director Gwen Yarnell ex· hibits 1 fertile imagination in staging and assignment of characteritallon in m o s t areas, and ample tec hnica l aS!istance is rendered by W. R. Curley whose starkly con- traiitlng black and while se t and eerie lighting effects embellish the s h o w im- n1ensely. What remains now is for the cast as a unit to develop that cohesion which comes only with familiarization. This was sadly lacking on opening night. but the prospect for im- provtiment is high. ''Spider's Web '' is es~n­ tlally an overly talky play. rescued all too infrequently by creepy effects such as a body tumbllng out of the bookcase. Bec1111e of this, additional stress muiit be given to clarity of character, a quality ex- hib ited in widely varying degrees by the Laguna cast Most Impressive in this regard l! Nan Prince in the Like Father HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Heather MacRae, daughter or Gordoo Mac Rae, will follow the footsteps of s i s t e r Mertdilh by becoming an actress in her first movie feature, "To Find a Man." 11.1.,1'1.4 9TJ1[1$ANO "ON A CllAI DAY YOU CAN SIUD~lVlR" WHO DONE IT? - David and Betsy Paul are caught in a tense moment from the Laguna Moulton Play- house mystery comedy "The Spider's \Veb." keystone role or the mistress of the house in whictl her husba nd 's ex-wife's, currenl mate breathes his last. M i s a Prince at the outset presents a strang:cly affected speech pat· tern -as if she had been tak- ing Sandy Dennis lessons - but in the later scenes, lhis hesitant de l iberation of dialogue works hal'Mbomety in her favor as she attempts to fab ricate several versioils or the rrime for a dubious in· Spector. David Paul as her elderly ward gives a performance of steady, solid understatement which relies more on reaction to circumstances than on Lhe devel opment of his o w n character. Moree l f e ct l v e physically is the flustered Englishman of Joe Wilson, which is closer to caricature and. henceforth, to comic ap. peal. Character development is also absent in the a;rnooth-talk- ing young fortune hunter of Niles J am I e so n . who capitalizes on physical man· ne rism to convey his intent. Robert G. Reines affects an offi cious monotone as the relenUess inspector, credible so long as he ma intains his Umi.ng, which slips all too often. Young Dei! Dee Chal lis turns in a fine perforJT>!lnct as a little girl with her own ideas about how to get rid or an unwanted guest. And Beatrice Wood is immensely funny as the deep-voice~ lady gardener who manages to steal every ~ne she is in . Rounding out the c1st are SOIW! capable performances from Ben McLane as the diplomat husband who misses all the intrigue, Betlly Paul in a gem of a cameo as the kooky cook . George Donica upstaging his boss as the Cockney constable and John Schwartz as the meanie who 's dispatched early on to the bookcase. "Spider's Web" continues for tiiree weeks of Tuesday- tlnugh -Saturday perfor. mances at the playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Bel<:h. IATlD "I" OVAN C,._NNON • RICHlllDCR!NNA •GIN! HAClM.l.N aac~1·aFis· WIVES Meal Henry & Hertriella ... the laugh riot ol 1he year. "A neco Leaf" IG! Color by MOVll.:LAB "Itt~ A P8rart"IOUnl P1c1uro Stor,i11t •Jock · Wolttr Motthou -Elaine May Weston ACADEMY AWARD NOMINU . BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR · Chia! Dan DUSTIN HOl'ftl.\N "lmt.f 816 M.\N" ~·Tachnii:cmr• !QIJ• CHIEF DAN GEORGE-FAY! DUNAWAY , °COiD TURKEY'' ~ DICK VAN DYKE BOB NE'MWrr ~ PIPPA scon -~--- LEGAL N<>TICE 1111• DAJl Y >!LOI Jf • l#IO,OOt.Ot u:a.ao:a Uft;MJi t a ,ut.t».M llJMJJ!Ji ••• 1,1 11. LEGAL NO'l1CB t .,fltAI ~ •llOI. 1"11~llifltd Or•-CIMlll 0.l!y l'lh1'1, AIM"I! It, •• 21, H, t), 1t11 IU.ll t21 ·11 ----------------------- • -.•--i•-1 .......... ~ .. , ..... -.. ~'"·•· ........ ,. ·,,, • ft DAILY PILOT Wtd.,..dAt. A"'I 21, 1971 ~ -. _..._"' I ._ .,. '" ' ' . . 1971 .. ' . . . ' ' TORINO- -.. 2 DOOR HARDTOP lo•ded l••t• ~•r. !IAlOFI 17291 l ' FULL PRICE . . ·~3095 ·· ' ., ·1971 - BRONCO . . '. , fUISfllC4119f.) . f.ULL 'RICE ' ;$3197 ' ' . ' . ' ·s r• ' ' . ' ' . I ~ 197.1 PINTO REPOSSESSED 111.1ox11•211 SAVE $11 ·95 1971 T,BIRD 2 DOOR LANDAU Loodecl-IJl4Nllll6l SAVE $1500 FUL L PRICE 1971 MAVERICK 2 DOOR SEDAN FUL L"0PRICE ~1995 1970 FORD LTD 2 DOOR HARDTOP lo1d1d Do,,.0111hator. f'OJ 62Yl511l l ) FULL PRICE. $3695 1971 PICKUP F-100 I FIOARIC042001 FULL PRICE $259 ·5 SIX-PAC CAMPER CABOVER Stritl No. 2167 FULL PRICE $795 pin tu It lluAM • 1971 · . FORD L.T.D.~ . 2 DOOR HARDTOP ~ • (IJ62H101525l "'~ FULL PRICE ·;. " . $) 9 . ' - , 1970 . !z MAVERICK ;i~· GRABBER Jl 2 Or. Spt. Sid. lllC9l l 1llD991 SAVE . $450 .' eff wJ.-.w tficq, price ~ 1 . 12 ' PER . MONTH 41 MONTHS .$)90 ' DOWN PAYMENT ~ f I , r. ~ N Wttdn&lJ', A!M'U 21, 1971 ST R¥BOOK HOUSE 6DIBLE I , ( • ' .. ' ... 'dnbi~1~days' Call For S~rprises ,T~.o "" ' ' r ... · lt't loOct.' practice to .1,ach small members of the family 11b0ut dinner ii.tty 'mahners. ~ to do it in a subUe aod delightful lflf, Mom can combine It with a birthday party -complete with a charming l:tarybook cookie cottage , a decorative ct.inner party menu 'ant{ take-home cand.ies gracefully suspeided in1 a (ondola. Children are thrilled to pirticipate 'in a lit.down party meal -it's so grown up. · To start with the storybook cottage, a great surprise even for unbirthdays, you'll find 'it'S nOt' u hard · o make as it looks. I . SWEDISH COOKIE! HOUSE 1 pound box con!ectionf'J'S su1ar 2-4 tablespoons water (eoough to make a 91>rtadable frostin1 ( . Meringue pogens Walnut pogens Sprits pogens Ring pogen.s Ginger snap pogens Candled clterries ~ \I pound almonds, roested 4 11\lrt cardboards ot. 1mall boi:, 7 inches squa!'f, p!r 2 I h i t t cardboards Mix water slowly into :;ugar. Frosting lhooJd be stiff to hold caokies in place. For the house : fold cardboard in thirds, turning up for house sides, place Oat on table . For the A-frame rJr, fold another cardboard in half, place ,top sides. Trace front and back portion and cut out of remaJning cardboard. (If using bo1, trace loft section and fi~ in.) Frosting will heIP sec\lre joints. Frost and place meringues on roof , ring pogens with a cherry In the center for the windows, sprits pogenS for the door frame , and walnut pogens for the door. Dealrate ginger snap pogen animals (they come in man}' sh.apes besides elephant ). outlining them with frosting in pastry tube. Add alfonds wherever desired. 1· For the dinner menu, Mom can begin with a take-off on adu lt favqriles. First course , naturaU y, ii JOUp because children love it. Serve an appetizer soup, perhaps a combination of condensed Chicken noodle and tlto, in appealing bo~s or •mugs and you· have a starting P>fnt· to-proper table be avtor. ~ Hamburger Briand and it!: decorative aceompaniment.s att .11.Jfe lo please our Y9Ql11 diners. FLANKED HAMBUJIGER CHATEAUBltiANJl 1 pound ground beef 2 slices bacon l tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon chopped parsley 2 cups seasoned masl\ed potat.ou l cup hot cooked. cut sree.n bwu: l cup bot cooked diced carrot! P8tlley for color Shape meat Into one ·large pattle, ()fl wooden plank. Wrap bacon around sides <l meat; fasten with toothpicks. Broil to des.Ired doneriess. Remove toothpicks. Mix batter and parsley::.spread on top of meat; sprinkle with •alt. Pipe a border of potatoes around meat; rtlurn to broiler to lightly brown pOtatoes. Spoon vegetables around potatoes. Garnish plank with parsley. Makes four servings. To top off the dinner parfy, here's the old favorite -Ice cream. SWEDISH APPLE ICE CREAM l quart vanilla ice crea m 16 meringue pogens 2 teaspoons cinnamon 3 small red apples, grated with peel Soften ice cream and qulCkly fold in rest of ingredlenLs . Turn int.G one quart mold and freeze. Serve with walnut trimming. Serves six. While attention is being ~irecled to making full use of all available resources, a restricted food budget need not mean sacrifice of foods that are high in flavor and strong in appeal. Today's homemaker finds herself moN! receptive to new ideas, particularly in her daily meal planning. Interesting dishes are born that make greatf'r use of fa vorilt recipe ingredients such as the California walnut which has foond distinction beyond popular uses in baking. In following the trend and capitalizing on walnut's affinity with a variety of foods, home economists have come up with a new idea that transforms a leftover roast into a different and ap- petizing "cocktail." Walnu ts give heartiness to turkey. chicken or ham, fresh apple and s1uffed green olives tossed in a creamy sauce pointed with wine. chili sauce, onioo powder. horse-radish and Tabasco. 'J'he result is a delicious dish with versatility that offers a new approach to company dinner. This ls a great way to use the extra walnuts leftover from previous recipe preparations. If shelled walnuts have been properly stored in an airlight container in the refrigerator. they will have retained their clean taste and crisp tei:IJ.lre. A fresh kernel will snap when broken and the insides wiU be white, clear and clean In appearance. • For added appeal in the cocktail, we bave sea.s<lned. and loasttd walnut halves and large pieces until golden . This not only addl: matt crund1 ID the cocktail but helps the meaty kernels keep their natural crisp when tumbled with the ' . aauce. AJ an appetizer or coclct.ail-s:alad. thi3 Idea would make an· .extra welcome introduction lo i. si~owtl' dinner. Or with. soup and bread or pretzel sticks, a satisfying luncheon or light supper entree. Enhance the attractive red-green- , .. " \ ,~- (, ' .... ,, . SCANDINAVIAN COOKIE HOUSE DELIGHTS YOUNG SET gold colors and lnleresting te1tures by serving tQe cocktail in a glass dish set on a plate of a contrasling color. WALNUT TURKEY COCKTAIL ¥, cup California walnuts 2 teaspoons butter * teaspoon sweet basil or diU I teaspoon seasoned salt ~ cup mayoonaise v, cup white dinner wine 1 tab lespoon chili sauce I teaspoon onion powder l i,t teaspoons prepared horse-radish 2 drops Taba SC1l l red apple l 'h cups diced cooked turkey, or, chicken or ham 3 tablespoons sliced pimiento-stuffed green olives Small parsley springs for garnish Chop walnuts coarsely, reserving a few large pieces or halves for garnish. Melt butter in skillet with herb and ~ teaspoon seasoned salt. Add all the walnuts. Stir over moderate heat until crisp and lightly toasted. about five minut.es ; cool. Combine m.ayonnalse, wine, rtmltnir\I '' teaapoon seasoned sail a.a' seasoniqs: chlll . , Wbea ready to serve, core app!t Ind cut I oi 10 thin slices for garnbh. Dice remainder of apple ind toss w~ the chop Red toasted walnuls, turkey, or chicken or ham, and olives. Spoon Into serving glasses and top with creamy cocktail sauce. Garnish each serving wlth two apple slices and reserved lar1e walnut pieces. Top with parsley sprig. Makes four to live servings. .. Personal Touch Adds Savor Dlnn.r mann•rs c1n bt p1lred with p1rty-pl•aMr1 such •s • ptrlOl"l1ll1ed soup platter brl1nd and 90ndol1 t•k•home treat (at left), or ptrh1p1 a deHghtfuf, w1lnut·1tudded turkey cocktail with bih of applas and ollvts. .. .• , . BEA ANDIRSON, Editor ,. w ...... ,. """ .. ,,,, ,_. Home News .' Cleaning Methods Du.sted Off By OORarHY WENCK Onl-C-h' "'-Af'lrltw Art yoo J collector of 1ntiqu i rumiture? Or 'do your taates run to the new and modern? Whatever kind ot w~ furniture you preler, good maintenance J~ a must to preserve lls beauty. Basic kinds of maintenance for wool furniture would include; dusting, wuing or poUshing and washing. . Dusting can be done with the aott brus~ attachment of your Vacuum cltaner Of with a soft, lintles.s cloth or it commercially trtated cloth that _picks up and bold! dwt. Fundamental to efficient dUsting is a clean ck>th . If your fumlturl!: becomes clouded and streaked when dusted, a dirty cloth may be your problem. How ofteri sh0016 yell dU1l? 'lbere'a no tuJe f.:w lhia other tban 11 oflen, u you think It needs it. Some people dust evrr, day. At our howe we dust once 1 week. Standards for ~tJng vary, obv,klusly. Frequent dusting can wear ,tou out but It Isn't going &o be a problem to )'OW" furniture. Too frequent waxlni or polishing, on the other hand , can cause prob le.ms. When you're over-ea1er with the wu or polish. you just make more work ror yourself because these producta build up on your furniture and cause the finlah lo become dull and even sticky . Then you've 1ot to remove them ~ waahlng the fumlture and sometimes: ..... If the built-up layen are estensive -you may even have to use a cle.anser· Conditioner or turpentine. Washing the furnJture'? M an 'J btlmemaken balk at UU. idea becaUM . Uiey figure l'•ter will damap the WOo<I flnlah. Too much wat.er£11\ be damaD"i&. especltlly II Jt'1 pt.,..t r .... a i..lluie. But • · breful ocepblll walll.lnrJ. tt (oOd for nmovlng residue dJrl and ttctSS wa'.I or pollth • 1rom wOod furniture. "ClrefUI" Wishing m wing a cloth or sponge wrung out ln mild sudsy solution (detergent you for hand dlshwashlng is fine). W11b fu a small aru at a time, rinse wiUI another ck>lh wrung out ol clean water then immediately dry with an old towd .:w soft cloth. Be especially careful not to let wate.11 seep into joints 1s glued parll ma)1 k>osen. More than one waahlng may bi needed If the accumulJtJort of WU and dirt is buvy. It la possible to keep wood tinlahet'IJJ 1ood condition without wu or• polish. However, you may want to we one ol these producta once In a great while to help protect the finish and milvl tht 11ou. Some basic rules for using l'umltur• wax or polish include : (I) Match the product ID Ill< type ol wood finbh . If you have a sealed finl3b (lacquer, vamiah, shellac, pla.Ue ruin, paint, enamel. sealer ) you can UJe any type of wax o r poU1h unlea the manufacturer of your f u r n I t u r 1 recommends otherwise. If you have an unsealed, oil finish, do not use thy wu. Use only polish, cream , or llnleed oil preparations. (2) Do not use waz and JM>lish Interchangeably. Polishes and creams are oil·bau producb: and the oil tendl·to aoften wax. If you Interchange wu and polish, the wood surface may become dUU . and sticky. (3) Use all types o( wax and -potbh sparingly to avoid the dull-rllm build-tip. Since carved parll seldom receive the use that 1mooth surfacea r~l'1e, they probably need little or no wu or JIOllah. (4) Apply wa1 or pollah with the grain Ot the wood, working on just a small uU at a time and following the directions On the container. Buff with the iraip of tbe wood also. QUEmONS WE ARE ASKED Q. I9ave a frielld wllla •te1 tilt ~ ~lquld pollshla& wu tlt1t 1be pits oa hr noor1 •• htr t.lible '°"· c..hbl't ... damaie tM: wood fhll1ll'? . A. Solvent·base polisbln' wa~fthat t. IOld for wood noor1 ill a fine product to use on your finlabed wood furniture . The JC>lvent 1Jvm e.xce.llent cJeantq acti6n and the w11 glvu 1 fairly bJjb kKter aftd 1ooc1 prol"!'llon when poll1lled. You would not"" this oa uraaltd oll- finlsMllmlture. And yoo -ia,,...,. 0. wood furniture the "seU Pouabmc" wa1 or plastic product• formulated for Ult ~ vinyl. llooleum, etc. 'l1it Mii 'pollshln1 waxes contain waler 'tthich wOaid damage your wood fumJture. Q. I'm tl'J\•I to rtVIYe Miiie ... flndllrti dti& h a I lltrlcale anW putls. Ho·• cu 1 ckaa all ._ envku II the c1rvln11T ' A. to clean crevices and carvino:, ua1·11i pointed 1tlck wr1pped with cotton "' .. n cloth that bu betn dampened with mild 1ud1 or mineral 1plrlt1. Wipe off and dry ooe-atatlmt. ' ' I 1 ... ,.,.,,111.11 •• I 'l >.\ \.•. \' o ' ' . 38 DAILY PILOT WedntSdat, April 21, 1971 llT OF BRITAl/j-Majestic Roll s Royce transports guests to the Corona del Mar setting for the Daught- er& of the British Empire's afternoon tea on Thurs- day, April 22. Mrs. Martin C. Natland dons the hat USS Pueblo Crewman To Relate Experience A former USS Puebl o ttewman Bob Cllicca will be fu turtd as speaker for the 19th annual membeTshlp mettlng and luncheon of the Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian a t 11:45 a.m..·on FJlday, Aprll 23. Mrs. William Durkin. vice prukl.ent of the group in charge of programll. will preaenl the young marine who wu recommended for a Sliver Star by the Pueblo 's commander. Clllcca, a Korean linguist, was one of the most seriously wounded when the ship was attacked. He will relate hLll e1periences as a ciptive of the North Koreans. when the Americans were subjected to sadistic treatment in their prison they called • ·The Barn .'' The forn1er cre\vman also will rtdate of his fellow captives' co u r a g e: and resourcefulness in maintaining morale and guiding the rest of the men through lhe grirn experience. Mrs. Durkin is accepting reservations at the hospital. Gue.!ls are \4'elromi to attend. Spring Fabrics St retc h .. . ... • 1•-. ~·,.~ , .. Germ Warfare· Bugs Office DEAR ANN LANDERS: Pleue say something about people who art so proud of lhemselves because they come to work when they are sick as dogs. In our office the desb are very closely spaced. The woman who sits at the desk ne.it to mine , has had a hideous cough and a cold for · over a week. She 90unds as if she belongs lo a TB sanitartun1. The way her chest rattles ·I wouldn't be surprised if she bas pnewnonia. I caughl her cold yesterday and I'm aure I'll be home sick tomorrow. The aame thing happeneq .Jast year. This woman infected the whole darned office. Three people missed two days of work because of her. I figured out she was the caUJe fur 48 hours of absenteeism. Please print my letter. Typhoid Mary never misses your oolumn. J ust to make aure, I promise to pin it up oo the office buUJeUn board. -WHERE ARE YOU LINUS PAULING, NOW THAT I NEED YOU ? DEAR WHERE : Here 's your letter and 1 eaa prombe you th.at it will go vp oa ANN LANDERS ~ . -:· office bulltUa boards all ever t1tt country. Thb la a 111.tvenal problem and I'm happy for the opportunity &o cet the me1sa1e before &be public. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm writing about my mother-In-law, but, please don't toss this letter ulde yet. I love my molher·ln-l1w -even more lhan I loved my own mother. 1 want to Mlp her. The poor woman baa been 11uffering with the menopaUJe for three yeani. It bu made her nervoua and depressed. She is really a aici. perlOn. My husband says menopause ii natural and there lJ no reuon for a woman to get aici. from it. According to him, it's ali In her head. He ridicules her when she a:et.s a hot flash, whlcb, of courae, makes her feel worse . . . t am in my l•te 30i. In a few Ytltl t ' will be gaing through the change. lt frightens me to think that one d1y 1 may need my ll.l8bJnd's undentandlng and not get It. Can you set him alralght? I <fn't get tllrough to hill). -SHAKY DEAR SlliAKY: The menopause doet not affect 1111 11•o'mt• bl the same way. Some 1all throup Ii wit.II nary a 1ymptom. Otben blve a mlaerable time. It'• not "all la tbelr bud.a." TM menopause productt den.d.11.e Wmkal """''" whlcb -... only tM body bot sometime• tlM!. penoaaIUy. Medical 1ciu.ce hu made creat 1trkk1 ln tbh Otld tlltJe put ,.veral ytltt. Some bJ&blY effective dt:IJ• have bee• developed to help women tllroop the m.eaopame. I ,,pe yoor mothtr-l!Maw ll uader a pb)'lllclan'• care. ' Ho roscope DAILY •llOT ..... , • .., llld!Uf ~­ Of an English 'Bobby' to point out the unfortunately adjacent fireplug to (left to right) Mrs. Alan Herbert and Mrs. Peter Dixbn. Cancer: Be Flexible THURSDAY APRIL 22 fine e:xample. F'riends, hopes and wlshes are highlighted. P.arents To Meet Tahitian Night• will be the theme when Fountain Valley Little League A u x I 11 a r y sponllOrs ilS get-acquainted dance. Castle Chapter Britain's Daughters Inviting Tea Guests Dainty tea sandwiches reminiscent of Britain are being assemble:d by me:mbe:rs of the Carisbrooke: Casile Chapter, Daughters o[ the British Empire, for t h e afte rnoon ol Thursday, April 22 . F'rom l p.m. until 3 on that dale, f.1rs. Elmer W. Schrumpf will open her Newport Be:ach hon1e to welcome members and guests for the chapter's fiflh annual Englis h tea. Also planned for the occasion is a tempting tell menu designed to tranaport guests to the British lsle:s - Included will be an array t>f sausage rolls, shortbread and tea cakes. Mrs. John Morris is tea chairman and those inte re sted in attending the afternoon event, which is to benefit the British Home for the Aged 1n Sierra Madre. may call her or Mrs. Schrumpf for further information. The Daughters of the British Empire is a philanthropic organization supporting a total or four homes for the aged in America. Founded in the United States in 1909 and reorganized into a national society in 1920, it a I s o promotes closer relaUonships ....bEtwee:n English ape al in g peoples. · Mrs. Allan W. Love of Corona de! Mar, rege nt. extends an Invitation to all \vomen of British birth to visit the chapter. She will furn ish further details of meetings. BARBARA SMITH Betrothed Wedding Planned Mrs. Elbert Clayton Smith of Corona de! r-.lar has an- nounced the engagement of her daughter, Barbara Helen Smith to llarry Howard Ten- ney of Santa f.1onica. St. M a r k Pi;esbyterian Church in Corona de\ Mar will be the setting for the June: 6 wedding ceremony. The fu ture bride w a s graduated from Longwood High School, Middle Island, N.Y., and attended Cazenovia College in Ne:w York and Oc- cidental College in L o s Angeles. Her fiance. who is the: son of Mrs. Howard Lyman Ten- ney of Visalia. is a graduate of Redwood High School and attended the College of the Sequoias in Visalia. By SYDNEY OJ\.IARR ARIF.S (Mareh 21-Aprll 19): Lunar cycle is h i g h ; circwnstances favor you r unique efforts. TAURUS (April 2G.May 20): You can break through and communicate with one who previously was out of reach. GEMU..'1 "(May 11..Juoe 20): lnventive:nt:M is your great ally. Taurus individual can set CANCER (June 21.Ju1y 22): You find more than one way of achieving goal. Be flexible. Try various methods; open line:s oC communication. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Good lunar aspect coincides with journey, writing, gain from special mt3Slge. VIRGO (Aug. %3-Sept. 22)' Inveatlgate: -find reasons why events bave b e e n occurring. Probe deep for answeD. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0d. 22!: Accent on marriage. legal contracls, speclal associatioos. Strive to be diplomat ic. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Some situations are frankly puz.zllng. When you don't know what to do, wait. Recycling Headlines Gathering SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Creative efforts \V h a t e x a c l I y d o e s .\i-Ucceed. Romance blossoms. •·recycling" involve? Activity is inte:nsified. Nothing If you are interested in occurs halfway. Give your all. learning about a recycling CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. program for the Harbor Area 19): Acceot on home, its p r o b I e m s and property, steps to take for advantages -you may wish added sec u r it y. Older to attend a special meeting oo Individual plays prominent Thursday, April 22, at 7:45 role. You are able to round out p.m. efforts. You sight ultimate Ecology·minded citizens are goal. This is constructive. invited to the Newport Riviera AQUARIUS (Jan. ro.Feb. Town House lounge to a joint 111): Yoo get started on specilll meeting spolllOl'ed by the ml&sion. Pace of activity is League of Women Voters and heightened. T h e r e are the American Association of journeys, unllSUal reports. Get University Women. thoughts on paper. Organize Ci~"Ual dress wlll be the costume for &Mual event taking place from 8 p.m. lo I p.m. Friday, Aprll 23, In the Carpenters' Hall, Huntinrton Beach. Dancing will be to the music of the Ronnie Brown Band. Tick.ets are $2.50 each and information may be obtained by contactln& ~trs. Battn Nelson « Mrs. St.tin Wilkin- son. Computers Analyzed Getting the most from your computer burea u will be discussed when Art Lacerte or the Data Processing Bureau of California, Inc., speaks to members of the American Soc i ety of Women Accounta11tJ. The Orange County chapter will meet for dinner at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the: Joll y RQliter Inn, Anaheim. New offictrs will be elected at the busine:as m e e 11 n g following. The problem of the swift Ideas . Avoid e1tra vagance. Reg istered Re pub It ea n Dishes Savored filling of canyons with garbage PISCES (Fe:b. 19-March 20): \vomen are invited to brlrig wlll be discussed as well as Money galn indicated. Hunch their husba nds !lnd other the hope for du p 11 cat in g paya dividends . Unorthodox guests to tonight's meeting. of successful pick-up centers for approach Is most likely to Costa Mesa R e p u b 11 c a n recycling now operating in succeed. Look to future . Stop Women F'ederated in the: Mesa Silver Sends some Southern Call!ornia worrying about past. You get Verde ,home of J\1rs."Virliaja cities. boost from fallhful friends. _ \Veick1 The first Tuesdays of each'lr===================""---'=:;;:;:..:_ ___ ...==== month at 8 p.m. me:mbers of Silver Sand9i 286, N a t i v e Daughters of the Golden West gather for me:tlings. Lake MexlcaB food and i t s Park Clubhouse in Huntington preparation wiU put Happy Beach Is the meeting place. Homemakers In a Cinco de \p;i0iii0iii0iii0ii _ _,;ii,i_,_,"lll f.fayo mood when they gather at 10 a.m. Friday, April 23, in the Fo u ntain Valley Community Center. The program, a repe:at of one presented last year, is being given by special request. Following the demonstr.ation of the most popular Mexican dishes, they will be served for lunch. Color portrait of your child, 1.49. FOR MOTHER'S DAY Truly professional portraits . Select from several poses . • Large 5 x 7" size photo ... 1 -49 eac~ Previewing selection of stretch n' sew fabrics to be featured In their fashion show on Thursday, April 22 in Peek's Family Co lonial Terrace Room. West-. mirister are Oeft to right) ~·lrs. Jack Birt and Mrs. David Twiss of Delta Om i- cron Chapter. Phi Beta Psi Sorority. Proceeds from the event. which will fea- ture models presenting their own crea lions will benefit the Cancer Detection Clinic in Los Angeles and nationwide cancer research. Tickets at $1 .50 for adults and $1 for students may be obtained from Mrs. Donald Bristol. Sam Rodriuez again wi ll provide the commentary and answer any questions from the audience. New officers will bt elected during the business portion of the mee:ting and reservations may be made by contacting the Mme:s. Robert Cardinal. Chris Schnelder or Pat Rlcker • Set of 4 wallet size .•..•• 1 -49 set Two cblldNn pbot119rapbid togolbor ••• 2.H. Official To Speak Georges Ducas of New York, secretary general of the Federation of Allla nces Francalses in the United Slates, will be gueJJt speaker for the A11lance F'rancaise of the California Riviera F'riday, April 2ll. 'IJ)e I p.m. gathering wilt take place in the Harbor Vfew Elementary School, Corona del Mar. Winner of the Alliance's annual study and t r a v e I ac:bolanhlp in Paris will be announced durlng the evening. cllmnlilC • '1'rwlch speaking conlelt for COU11tJ ht;h ochool Ud ooll ... lludenls. ., FtllaWtQci the me el i D 1. guests will be served a buffet dinner by lhe Mmea . Christiane Maitland. Phyllis Baker. Alfreda Dockery . Robert Ray. Constanl RoberU und J\liss Janet Morris and Miss Me mory Ribodeau. Pa rents Club ,. Orange Coast Chapter, Parents Without Part n e r s sponsol'I a pancake breakfast the last Sunday of each month in Costa Mesa City Park from 9 a.n1. to 12:30 p.m: Wall y Richards, chairman. w 111 answer questions regarding the public. "rain or shine" event at M2.a700 or S42·'6GS. PANTSUITS \)~~~~~ 120 TU1tln Avo. Newport BH<h 548-5656 1A &Ioele North of Coast Highway Open Tuuday thru SattJrday -10 e.m. · 5 p.m. e ...Ull*klftl e M111t.r Cha"'• man. m /}/). , THE N-E-W allieJ LQQK for a , .• NEW YOU ! Add Wispy Tendril ~anlajia HOT CURLS To Every SPRING HAIR-STYLE Ju1t pin 011 • f1w d11ic:at1 , tumbli119 curl1, and add th1 soft f1m ini11 ity that's right for today'• new he ir fa1hlons. Silky 1tre11d1 of perm1nently curled mod- ac:rylit fiber h1 ir ar1 securely attach ed to a bobby pin. SET OF 2 .................... $LOO 250 E. 17th STREET DAILY TILL 5,30 THURS. & FRI . TILL 8:00 WIG & BEAU TY SA LON COSTA MESA 548 -3466 \ Be y ourself; With II little secret from Go Into •11 the now l11hlon1 with confldtnct ln V1111r• ett1 • 'HER SECRET'' p1dd1d br1. H11 mold•d flb1rrlll p1ds ind low-cut tront In tu1clou1 Cr1pelon• nylon. Sheer lycf11 1p1nd1x powtr·n•t body. St)'lt 1605. M•ny color•, A.8 32-36. $1.11 ...... __ ;;,.-:.;;;1.0Ll1 •••• 2111 f. .Co11t Mwv. Cortn~ d•1 M1t-rh. 671 ·1•50 e l1llllA"'rlc1 ... e MllllM' Clll"' II YHtt lfl 111111 Ltulll11 A P1n n1y UCIUllY•I Full color por1t11l1 In 1 olze 1ullab l1 tor fram ing ..• porfocl tor 91111. All portr1I~ dlllYINd OU 11 duralore y Pl\'MY 1~11111. '--------------.....J Ago ll mll: 12 ,.,,., ' l\nnelfl I COSTA MISA STOR I ONLY e AT HARIQR C~NTER \ I Tveod1y, Aprll 20 thru Sllvrd1y April 24, 9:30 • 1:00 & 2:00 • 5:00 Doi I I ' ' . , . ..... • ·:· :--. ..:.· .. .. I ' BY GONE ERAS RECAPTURED-Mrs. Hart Hickman, president (left) and Mrs. John Applegate, recording secretary of the South Coast Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi display the hand-fashioned dolls which wiU ce nter tables during a . Founders Day luncheon . Founders Honored Pi Phis Light Candles Wallpaper dolls dressed in anniversary of the founding of One of the I u n ch e en ,period costumes representing Pi Beta Phi, oldest national highlights will be the 12 founders of Pi Beta Phi will sorority for women, will be presentation of corsages to six Mrs. Eleanor Lehner, national new Golden Arrow Pi Phis -cenler tables during the South pub 1 i c relations chairman, who have beeen members for Coast Alumnae CI u b 's whose theme will be Where 50 years or more. Founders Day luncheon in the the Timely Meets the Mrs. Virginia Bollman is Newporter Inn lo111orrow. , __ T.;,;im;;;el;;;es;;;s;;;. ======•lu;;;nc;;;heo=n•ch;;;a;;;~;;;m;;;an;;;. --Oiil Handcrafting the d o 11 s . Ir complete with j ewe I r y , cameos a n d hand-painted faces. were r-.1rs. H a r l Hickman, president of South Coast alums. and her mother. Following the 11 :30 a.m . '90Cial hour and luncheon, a 1 r ad i tional candlelighting ~remony honoring the original founders will be conducted by Mrs. E a r I Corkett and her daughter, Mrs. Gary Myers. Speaking on the 1 O 4th HEALING MISSION WEDNESDAY, A,.RIL 21, ot I P.M. et ST. JAMES' CHURCH 3209 VIA LIDO NEWPORT IEACH . CALIFORNIA 67S·0210 • lrl1t9 Y•11r Jk~ olld Afflicted ffl Proyer "filh G-IRTRUDI' 1'1CElt • This I• All l11tffd•••ml1t1tlo•1I Mfffh•t '°' l'NryOA• • Hear llbl• MftMM)ft •• ~H'• Promilft to H"I Tod.., Mr1. Ticer ;, a m~dern perabl. of the re1urreclion from the dead. • . 1um SALONS . ,, The Friendliest Slllons In Town! Announcing-Too Much For Your Money! COME IN AND UNDERSPEND! ROUX SHAMPOO .STYLED AND SET Wit~ Roux Shampoo that 9't!ro ncli er~ .shornpoo. :Fl\SffiON STYLED HAIRCUT ~ QI G l ~l llT Pf RMA,..IMT WAY! !> .._llA"lllO 11'<1 Wlllf! .. G ' . ROUX Dice chanqe Cok:w ;,.. 10 mi~ withovt !>f:rD•1de. ond lo$~ for .... tu "'''hout rub-off. Naturol Cl)!. ors of gn:ry or dJI koir. Go&- !>Of"4'1' for bleoched. Int.Jude~ Style ond S.t. ROUX "Fancifull RINS& Colors Lrownedoat~y! eo..e.-s groy con-.pletely! T o n e s b I ".a c. h • d ho1t! Motc.h.s bleocned kaor to nno-growth. 1 l excit•ng c:~ -nf'l1-C ;" --sho"'PQO out -no ' lod•no. ROUX "fand-lone' CREME HAIR TUiT Touch Up j~~· ""'°'-on.I ...... (lu"ll "fonc>-1-·• Ct-How Tint o .... , ..,,...,., ..... -'vrO(, ..... t•out. hOlr. Mon , T.-.. Wrtd. .,,,, ... p.m. Wedllflday, April ll, 1971 DAILY PILOT IJJ .> spr1n·g ......... Special Hours Opening Day at Bullocks Santa Ana THURSDAY, APRIL 22 • 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P .M. EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE I FASHION I BLOUSES PLUS Blouses,casualndd"SS) .......... Mlcllll 1/3 CALIFORNIENNE DRESSES Sl"'eless Po}yoster dr1sses, '"t sl)tes; sizls g. 18 ................................ 15.19 COUNTRY STORE V~lager Separates • .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. rtdlcad 1n FASHION BOUTIQUE lmld. selectioo "dr ...... suits, COit!.. • rnuCtd 1/2 FASHION GALLERY ~esigner Dresses, daytim~ -ii, , ""'i"' ................. M1cH 1n Orig. $100 ID $265 for-Trimmed Pllllsuits 141.11 $80 to S90 Coats • • • .. • • .. • • • .. .. • 55.11 FUR SALON Dyed Broadtail processe d lamb Stroller. wil11 nabJral Min~c~lar and cuff• .. ""' spo:~lly priced . . • 351.IG IQ 451JI LADY BULLOCK famoos-Maker custom size dresses reduced 1 /3 to 1/2 MISS BULLOCK Yoong°"~"' Dres115 ....... SHERWYN CASUALS rdnd 1/3 to l/2 Oars alooe, rayoo, I""' ""'polyesllr dress- es by Fr..i Rolhschi~ •. white collm' trim " ' moss ~. bloc~ bont, r..i, cm llld -2111 r...iy Casu~ dresses .. .. .. • • rlll11cd 1/Ue 1/2 EvertastcottonprintPantS/Jits ............ 11.H SHERWYN COATS & SUITS lhree·Piece Weeleoder, washaWe dou~e knit .. • 21.11 SHERWYN DRESSES famovs-MakerP~yesterOms •.•.......... SHERWYN SPORTSWEAR Orig. $40 to $4S Pantsuits ............... . 21.19 29.9! Children's I Juniors BABY & TODDLER SHOP fa...,..Mat« Pie-folded str'11:b diapefs , . , . , • • 3.11 Trainiftg Pants, sim 1-2-:1-4 ... , •• , • . . . . . . l/.11 BOY'S-GIRLS 3-6X $5 Boys }IO/yoster and cotton ~Old slacks .. .. .. l.41 S9to$12SpringDrosses ................. 3.29 BOYS SHOP $5 Sport Sliirts .......... ,'.. .. .. l.11 DI l/5.51 $6.50 flare p.,Js • • .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 3.11 GIRLS 7-14 SHOP $8 lo $21 Dresses • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • reduced 112 $6.50 to $11 assorted Sportsww .. .. . reduced 1/2 PRE-TEEN SHOP AM«tment of Tops, many col0<~ • .l-m-1 ..... ,, T rencllcoats, assorted col0<~ • .sizoc 6-14 .... .. YOUNG SHOES Cbil,..,,,, Sandal~ up to sill! 3 ............ .. Child!ens a1ld Worneft'! Saalers. 3JI .Sorin ' . I ACCESSORIES HOSIERY 141 I.II 3.11 4.11 I ~her S1oclings c~ .... t . . . . . . . . . . Red1clf in FASHION ACOSSORIES Orie. $6 ID $1Z fMnoas.lllllr s..de Bells ltflCff l/2 FASHION JEWELRY Goli!-filled jewdry • ,. .. .. • • .. .. .. • ltflCtf In HANDBAGS & SMALL LEATHER GOODS Asst leather & Vinyt Hallllbqs .. rlllucllf 1/3 le l/2 Patmt Hllllibop, 1sst st}tos . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1.11 MILLINERY & WIGS Orig.$35 _JerooneNeullllerWigs ........... 12.91 Town and Travel Active Sportswe.ir WOMEN'S GLOVES P~yester PanlS1Jits, ttw" styles in Spril\I colors • 35.SI OriJ. $4 to $6 leather·loG~ ~lk-Slin Gloves .. . . 2.11 Orig. $18 Evan Picone str~ed loacle kilit polo to,, WOMEN'S SHOES sizes S-M-l .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11 .99 Fash;,,, slloes .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • rnu 1/2 · DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Decorative & Serving accessories & wall dec0< .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . rllf1ced 1/2 Mini pkbJres lo< groopings •.. , • • • . . . . 2.!t I J.71 FLOOR COVERINGS ~"' llDgs, asst sizes, rroslly one 011 kind .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. redacu 4'-U% Mmy of our beautiful Oriental rugs . . . . . now rd1ud FURNITURE lJt>llolstered Aoor Clear- ance in New Spring fab- rics. Occasional, decora- tive, aid lounge chairs, tight back and loose pillow ba<ksofas .. . . . . . . . rllfuced 31% la 51% Orig. $129 Velvet occasional chairs . • • • • • • • • 41.11 Orig. $139 48" Round Game Ta~e •• , • • • • • • • • D.11 Orig. $499 5-pc. game sets .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Ill.It DESIGN STUDIO C•stnm Upholstery Sam~os •.... ieduc ad 2l % LAMPS Ori&. $50 Gil\ler Jar umo s . . . . .. . ll.91 HOUSEW Al!.ES Re'lefeCoolware .. .. .. .. . .. • raduui 1/l Ori(. $9.501 17 qt. """9" .. .. .. .. .. 4.75 Or~. $10.50 217 qt. saucepa• .. .. .. . .. 5.25 tlig. $12.95 8" sijllet . .. • .. .. .. .. .. J.41 Orie. $17.50 JO" sollet .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1.75 tlig. $13.95 West 8'nd tea kettles, 2sst. tolOI> .. I.II Orig. $29.99S/Jnbeam1Das1'f .. .. .. .. . • .. • 1UI MUSIC & HOME APPLIANCES Ong. $59.95 Port!~e AJWA-Comb. Custtte-Tape !lecooler •i~ AM-flt Radio . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 39.95 Orig. $648.50 famoo~Make 23" (Diag. Measure- ment) Colorl.V., Remote Con~ol . . . . . . . . . . . 529.11 SLEEP SHOP Simmons qu~size sleep sets w1lh ""''bed flame& s/lepli<rd casters . 151.Dlla 241.15 SUN SHOP Orig. $2ll0 Wrooglrt Iron Ro:l b~• wi~ 6 chairs ISi.Gi Ori&. $120 Wrought Iron 42" Roond IJ~e wi~ 4 cl1airs • • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 111.11 Orig.$1to$1.2SAssortedmugs ............. 51' TOWN & TRAVEL DRESSES I I All P>11'a~s .................... rmced 1/3 I MEN'S STORE I .___...;;.;M.;;.;,,,,,;ISC~RLA;;;;.;;;;N.;,;;,,;;.EO.;;,,,,;;.US__. TOWN&TRAVELKNITS _ • -- famous-Maker knit S1its, Pan1'aits, and Dresses .. • 11i1Clll 1/3 Ill 1/2 Orig. $66 to$76 Washable S/Jits & '"tsuits .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . now 31.!D to 41.!I TOWN & TRAVEL SEPARATES Groops of Coonlinates, Panlsuits. & Sw.,ters ................ , reilclll 1/3 la 1/2 TOWN & TRAVEL SUITS & COATS Wet-look Pant Coat .. .. .. • • .. .. .. .. • .. • 2UI I INTIMATE APPARR I DAYTIME LINGERIE Ong. 3.99 Chemise SJ~~ broleft sizes . . . . . . . . . I.II FOUNDATIONS f.,..,s-Maker Brassiere~ Gildle~& P>1IY1i!Oles . . • • . redtJcu 1/2 NIGHTIIME LINGERIE Beller sleepwear, llroleo sizes • . . redactd 1/3111/2 FORERUNNER SHOP Orig. $10 to $12 Aared pants • .. .. .. .. .. . 1.11 MEN'S CLOTHING $115 Saville Row S/Jil. all wool, wide lap~ II.DI $70 to $85 Dacron and wool Sport Coa~ belt- ed ba<k ........................ 41.91 lmjllrted Fabric S/Ji~ wide lapel and belted bad . Ill.al MEN'S SPORTSWEAR For Golfers ar\d Leisure wear, machine wash and dry llntt Sport Shirts, cool and comlorta~e I.II Short <lee" Sport Shirts, patterns Olld sol~S (.II MEN'S FURNISHINGS Sll toSl8f-s MakerDressSl>irts 7.29 or 2114.lt WYNBRIER SHOP I Ong. $9 to $13 IDng-Sleeve ilress shirts • • 3.11 I Orif. $1 to $9 W~k Shorts .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. UI ROBES & NEGLIGEES I I ,_Ong_. $3-5 s.i_11ir_g ny-lon qu-ill-robes_._ ... _ ... _ ... _2 ..... 1.11 HOME STORE ... I __ C_O_Ll_E_G_IEN_NE _ __.I ~~Ti!!~~!ETs.~.~.~ ..... 11nc•du2 .:OLLEGIENNE COATS & SUITS Jrig. $88 ta $115 lrni«tld S/Jede Coots .. • .. • «.II lrig. $56 ID $130 PonlS1Ji1s in Asst S~lts ; fallri:s .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . rllfacld 1/2 COLLEGIENNE DRESSES Jri1. $12 Arni Jerny Slilrtllresses in 1!!1. prints 1UI COLLEGIENNE LINGERIE Nylon Briefs& Bi~n~. osst colOB. sizes 4-1 .. J/3.11 COLLEGIENNE SPORTSWEAR f-s-Maker Poto Sliilt in 1 Rana• of Co!OB, $m S.M·L ..................... , .. .. • .. • 13.11 Cotton llntt Maxi St1ift, Sot~s& Pltlenls, Sizos S.M·l I.II COLLEGIENNE SHOES Orig. $16 to $45 After-Ski and Fasbfllft eooa • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • . . • • • • rMuc1d 1/2 Discofttimled Fieldcrostru1 .......... rductd l/l BEDROOM ACCESSORIES Ori&. $6.~$7.50 Mi•-&-MalJ:l ll)loll Shtets, twin or dol~e ................... , l.19 Orig. $9 .50·$13.50 Mi•-&-Malcb NylOI Slleots. II'"' " king .. .. .. .. • .. .. .. 3.11 DINING ACCESSORIES 32-!IC. set i¥Ory di"""'"' • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 4.H Asst sivtr-9/•tecl Hollown • . . . • . • • • re~ucd 1/3 DRAPERIES &CURTAINS Custom retumod draperies redlctl IS 11uch IS H% 0<i1.1o $5.95 Oddi& Ends • .. . • .. .. .. • .. .. 1.n Orig. $4.00 Throw pillows .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. 1.11 Headboards , • • • • .. .. .. .. .. .. • • • • rllluctl l/l . I CANDY & GOURMET SHOP t1-i1. $1.89 Chocolate Hoose frosted prtbds 1.55 COSMETICS Bath and Boudoir Accesso ries, matching series . . . . . . . . . . . . reduced 1/3 ta I/! Orig. (.50 & 7 .50 Pure Boar Bri stle Hair Brushes .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . l.29 I 3.91 FABRICS & YARNS Silk prints .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. rllfac1i I/! Orig. $18.00 Wildflower "Daisy" Afghan . . . . . . II.IS LUGGAGE Orig. $17.50 to $77.50 Skyway lu11age, Meo's & Women's . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 11.11lo51.49 NOTIONS Orig, $10 to $24 Wicker Sewing Baskets 5.0I to 11.11 Orig. 4.00 Asst Sewing Scissors, Keen Edge .. .. 1.11 STATIONERY Orif. $5 Wall Swmger scratch pad, llx15W' .. .. 2.41 Orig. $4.50 Hand-painted pencil cups wit11 e>lored pencils . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . .. .. . . .. . l.21 TOYS 4 Sealer Sand Bonitl1 ad~sla~eowning .. .. . II.SI Bicycles. oneol 2 kind .. .. .. .. . 29.ltand 39.15 ' I 7 I ' ' ' ' • 31 DAILY PILOT Wtd~ay, April 21, 1971 " s Parents --Get Scoop Du.ri ng · ice Cream Sbcials California PTA Mrs. Earl Hubbs President COMING UP: Annual open bOUH •nd unit meetln1 11 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 28. REPORTS : Officers lO serve for the 1m.721 year are fhe M,..a. Boyd McCullough. president ; Robert McGuiness, Gene ShuJtice. William Clapet and Thelma Greer, vice presidents; Ronald Davies and John Russi, sec:relaries; Larry Bersch, treasurer, and Joel Vall, historian, McCullough will serve as auditor. • Honorary life memberships were presented to Mrs. Joe Meng, Mrs. Gates Griffith and Harold Swinney at a recent association meeting, CdM High PTA MN. Lowell Smltb President OOMJNG UP : Association and faculty will present open house from 7 lo 9 p.m. Thursday, April 29. The Elysl1ns. girls' s er v ice organlz.atlon will s e r v e refr eshments in the cafeteria. .Luncheon for old and new board members at noon Thursday. May 8. In the bayfront home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kelso, Balboa Island, Spec I al J{llCJts will inc lud e Mrs. Betty Townaend, girls vice principal; Joe. D o m o n I c·, director ()f s t u d e n t activities, and G e r a I d McCJellend, principal who will install the 1'11-72 board members. Mn. Lowe 11 Smith, outcolnt president will present the gavel lo Mrs. John Durkee, pretldent~lect. Mrs. Guy Reily will bost the event, REPORTS: Board membora approved and presented a check for $50 to Mark Sandusky, coach for crewing to help defray the cost of a new abell. Davis PTA MN. Gene PatterlDD President COMING UP: Book f1lr from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m, A1onday, April 26, through Friday, April 30 ••. Ope."1 bou.se with We decorating cont.est and ice cream 1oclal from 7 to t p.m. Tuesday, AprU 27. , Mn. Gene Patterson , chairman of the social studies fair that wiU take place from 6:30 to 8:30 tonight. announcea that the judges will be the Mmes. William Keister, Y a I e Burnett. William E. · Bouch Jr .. Julian Cimbaluk, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Raynsford and Gene Patterson. Ribbons will be pre.seated to winners In the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. REPORTS: Officers elected to serve in the lflt.n year are the Mmes. James Morrow, pres i dent ; Richard Schlesinger, Walt Hempstead and Pa u I Dumain, vice presidents; Richard Riley, treasurer: Alfred Claveau and Smith, secretaries; Paul Belou1, historian. and A n g u s Athearn, parliamentarian. Eastbluff PFO Col. Hap EUker President COMING UP: Ice cream Only a Few Laps to Go social at 6:30 p.m. ln lbe mu!Upurpose room w i 11 precede open house from 1 to 9 p.m. Wednesday . April 28. Mrs. William Burke, w1y1 and mearui chalnnan announces that mothers are needed to contribute pies and cakes for the event. Also offered will be soft drinks, coffee and i c e cream. Prleet will ranee from 15 to 50 cenls. Loat and found articles will b e displayed and parent.s are encouraged lo I o c a t e missing garment.I u they w:lll be disposed of 1t the end of the term. REPORTS: Hap E l ike r, president , announced that the year's program is being de\·eloped 1t present with , plans to submit the budg~ at the May mec.ttng . Commlttet..5 are formed and functioning but m o r e workers are needed. Volunteers may contact the school otfice at ~. Est ancia High PTA Mrs. Ralph Boegel President COMING UP : Annual Spanish dinner from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 29, in the forum will take place before and during open house. Menu will Include lw>el and chee~ enchiladas, refried beans, rice and beverap:e for $1.25. Also available is salad at 15 cenl<i and one enchilad a at ~ cents. Dessert will be available until 9:30 p.m. at 25 cents. Gates PTO Dr, Leo !\1•rtln President COM ING UP : School carnival from 10 s.m. to 4 pm .. Saturday, April 2-4, on the Every dog has hi s da y and lleidi, the amiable St. Bernard, hi obviously looking forward to the Adams School Ice Cream Social Open House from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. tomorrow. llurrying to eat their cones before Heidi does are (left to right) Scott l\1 c~1anigal, Cindy Sandeen and Greg Jason. Parents "'ill have a chance to visit their children's rooms from 7 to 9 p.m. and cake, coffee and punch a.lao will be served. " WINGS 0, r~llDOM -Chtcklng lli ght plans east in anticipation of tonitih t'a honors banquet for wl.nners of 1970 Freedon1~ Foundation Awards in the Air· fiorter Inn are Oeft It> right) the Mmes. Henry C. Cole, .J. Robert Meserve ind Mell Barton. ! -' acbool mundl. Food boolha teaturea are bamburcen. hot dog11 plu.a, snow CODH, cotton candy, pop<m>, loll drinks and bake ult alone with coffee. Gamet to be futured are darts, bean bag throw, fish pond, goldfish throw, soft ball p I t ch·, basketball free t h row , candle in hayatack, tee pee block atack and rtnc tou. Game ch&lrman it 141'1. Leu Borowy. White •ltphanta will be sold to please all aces. Entertainment will cooalat ol Road Rumler cartoons, S l • c e y the Ventrlloqufst, Bombo th< Clown and his merry.go. round, moon walk and Tom McGee the clown. A varlet)' o1 bou~ paper n ...... wW be for sale. Fl)'tn will be Settt to 1tuden1JJ !JI n<lghboril!jJ achoola with one 10 cent free ticket redeemable at the main ticket booth. Harbour View PTO Mrs. Dick Nerio President COMING up, Hl ·Jl nka Fashion Show will b e presented Wednesday, April 28, in Huntington Harbour Beach Club. Social hour will begin at ll:il a.m. followed by luncheon and the fash!OPJ 1how at 12:30 p.m. Featured will be ch.ildren's fashions from Ted Balloon Ltd. and women 's fashions and accessories from Ne i I 's Apparel, West End Boutique and by Designer Jewelry Irie. Door prl:r.es will be awarded as well as a grand prize of round-trip tickets for two to San Francisco. Luncheon tickell are priced at $4.50 and may be obtained from board members or by cont&ctlng Mrs. William Osgood at 846-- 4652. Lindbergh PT A Mrs. Jack DavtdlOa President COMING UP: Annual Good Grooming Tea for girls 111 fifth and sixth grades and their mothers will take place at 2 p.m. Friday, April 23. in the multipurpose room. Mrs. James Iverson, chairman announces that Sear! will present the pro,-ram. • .Open house with clusroom visitation at 1 p . m . Wednesday. AprU %8, wilt be preceded by a a:eneral meetin g, Mothers of students In third grade will serve as hostesses. • .Hay Day in May ia the theme of the annual carnival that will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May I. Mariners PFO Bob Murrell President Refreshments w I I 1 be provided by mothers of atudel!U In lh1rd lllcl fourth c r a d e 1 . cttJJtnHt-tbe month m Lola MuntmillU, a t t e moon klnderprteo; Roger Latdie, first grade; Charles Vematter, second grade; Kim Fllshie, third grade; Vicki Stucker and Pe&lie MacDonald, fourth cridl. REPORTS: Prollt of 131 was tt:allud from the student council grab bac s a I e • Monlet will bo uaed to pun:bue boob for the library. , .Mother-daughter fashion sha" and tea waa attended by 2.10 person-. according to Mrs. James Moor, general chairman. FashJon,, were coordinated by Mia Barbara Stacey of Sears. Models were IS girll from kindergarten to flftb grade. Ei1hteen girts from the fifth grade served u --· Newport Hts. PT A Mra. Ralph Stevens President COMING UP : Ice cream social and open house at 7 p'.m. Wednesday, April 28. Home made pie, aped.al Ice cream treats, coffee and punch will be 10ld at the Sweet Shoppe, S c h o o 1 sweat.lhlrtl, let shirts and book baga will be sold. Paper back book stort will be open for parents and 1tudent.1. . .Board meeting will take place at 10 a.m. that day at school. REPORTS: Completing the PTI counea were Mrs. Sam Palmer and Mrs. A. Lee Adair. Member• attending the honorary aervlce awards lul'Jcheon In the Airporter Inn were the Mmes. Ralph Stevena, Harry Me 11 or, Kenneth L o g a n , Max Harthcock, Palmer, Oscar Taylor, David Ch av i s, Richard England, G en e Kawamura, Hank Kronenberg , Fred Bockmlller and Louis Walsh along with Joh1 R. Clarke and Walah. Paularino PTA Mn. Fred Palmer President COMING UP: Gordon Imler, principal announces that the firat in a aeries of three p1rent education meetings on Children the Challenge will take place from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. tomorrow Jn the multipurpose room . Baby. alttl ng will be available. Field day with 10 events plus a relay will take place from I to 2:30 p.m. Friday, April 2.1, for studenta In fifth grades. .Ribbons will be awarded to the winners. REPORTS : Field day events with relay races took place today for atudenta in fourth grades. .Plans and recommendationa for the new school year w e r e Carousel Awhirl for Student Display Busy with paints and palette are students from Mariners School as they pre- pare for their annual art show, this year themed Carousel in COl()r, to be pre- sented at open house on Wednesday evening, April 28. Putting finis h i n g touches on carousel pony and canopy are Oeft to right) Jill Kingsley, Jonathan Vaccaro and Beth Murrel. discussed at the board meeting last week attended by members of the old and new boards. Mrs. Fred Palmer relinquished I. h e duties of her office to Nick Hanson, incoming president. Pomona PTA Mn. C. Darryl Bradley President COMING UP : Open house and 1eneral meet i ng Is acheduled before claasroom Vlaitation Wednesday, April 28. Refreshments will be served. • .Aluminum can drive ends Friday, April 30. All entries f()r the carnival poster contest must be returned to s c h o o I by Tuesday, April 'Zl .•• Tlckell 1'ill be awarded to 20 wtnn<n. Victoria PTA Mn. Doa1Ia1 Bowler Preaident COMING UP: Open b<lua< and general meeting will take place at 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 28. Ice cream social wlll follow classroom vLsitation. REPORTS: Chairmen ratified at the board meetin~ were the 'Mmes . Albert Crivellone, telephone; Tom Lutcavish, social: J o h n Simmons, h e a I t h and welfare; Lynn Van Akan, publlclty: James Ke 11 er, room mother representaUve: Robert Potter, new1ette 81td mlmeo ; Fred Jones, safety; Howard Bishop Ill. c ur r i culurn laboratory; Jacob Neufeld, noon duty coordinator, and Ron Groce , equipment. Viejo PTO Mrt. Gu1t Toth President COMING UP: Open house from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Monday, April 26, will include displaya of student works and a film of the whale trlp taken In January. Students· have spliced, narrated ati4: syncronlzed music io rillii: strip. Mrs . David Davin chd· Mrs. Herman Brigs, wa).f and means chainnen are i'.q charge of the Ice er~ social that al.so will • featured . • REPORTS: Sweatshirt fuid raising event brought l:; more than 120 ()rders. ~ will J>< uaed fee Jntraml\!\(j tropldes. ··:.!: ! -··· . •. Wilson PTA Mn:. Jay Hlmmelheber President REPORTS: Officers for the 1971·72 year are the Mmes. Robert Sankey, president; William Stevenson, William Karlan and John Keael, vice presidents; Robert Weat. secretary and hlstorian; William Arndt, treaaurer, and Vern Mollan, parliamenlarian. Also aerv. ing will be Ray Grey, audJ· tor. COMING UP: Open hou" from 7 to 9 p.m. Wedntlday, April 28, wlll future a student art show enUtled Carousel of Color. Mra. S. E. Vaccaro and Mr1. Charle& E. Lilly are chairmen. Parents and friends are invited to view cl aurooms. Achievements of t h e i r children will be displayed. 'Patterns' on Stage For Benefit Funds Peering Around Monte Vi at a PT A rtfrs. Fred Betta President COMING UP : Genera I meeting and open hou!e 7 p.m. WedneJday, April 23. All members are urged to attend the last meeting of this •chool y ear . Two worthy c1uae1 will benefit from the perform ance of "Patterns" on Thursday. April 22 at 7:45 p.m. in Long Beach Community Playhouse, aponsored by the Woman's Auxiliary tc the American In1tltute ol Mining, Dinner Lauds Medal Winners • Area recipientl of 1970 Freedoms Foundation award1 will be honored tonight In Lhe Airporter Inn · for th e I r "ou tatandlng achievement in bringing about a b e t t e r understanding of the Ameri- can way of life." Hosting the fourth: annual Awards Banquet 1t 7 p.m. will be the Orange Co unty Women '• Chapter of Frtedoms Foundation a t Valley Forge. Procttds and contrlbutlon1 will add to the chapter'• lcholarship fund which aendl deaerving Orange CG u n t 'I teachers east to s u. m m 1 r graduate-credlt ae.minlra on the F r e e d o m s Foundation campus, according to Mn. l.oult: L. CUrtls, c h a p t e r pre!:ldent. Army Gen. (ret.) Harold K. Johnson, pruident of the foundation. wlll pre1ent the awards which range from cash 1ra.nt1 up to '6000. to George Wuhlnitoft Honor Medals, pl1que1, te1cher1' medals , and atudent·teacher pllgrlma&6S to Valley Forp and o t be r h!ltorlcll alt.,. Amont thole receiving aw1rdl wtU ~ Santa Ana COlleae. fonntt rtclp1ent of 10 or more Gtlorp W uhlngton Honor medals, wblcb will be pl'< .. nt.d I DlatlnlUiShecf Service A ward. Sale Aids A wide auortment o f merchtndlae his bffn donated by '"ldenta or Lellurt World and t.aauna Hills far 1 flea market aalt to btneflt the Eaperansa Cbapttr, Clly Of Hope. Servtne as co-chalrme:n or the event takini p I a c e Metallurglcal and Petroleum Enilneers. The orlglnal TV drama by Rod Serllnf, adapted for the mge by Jamea Reach, will be dlrected by Tom 1itus. Proceeds from the performance, with t I c k e t a avlilible for $2.50, wUl go to the W A A I M E Scholarship Loan Fund and the Engineers for Tomorrow program which aids young men and women obtain a technical education in a professional field.' The theatrical performance is the year's major fund· ralaing project for the auxiliary. New officers for the group include the Mmes. Thomas G. P.etrul11s , chairman; Dona ld 5ewell, flrsl vice-chairman; Car I M. Canfield, second vice chairman; Ed w a rd L. Chapman , recording 9ecrtlary; Darrell R. Bolliger, ct>mtpondlng secretary, 1 nd Robert H. Shanley, treaaurer. Area committee chairmen tnclqde Mra, O>elttr L. Love, me.mbtnhlp, from Huntlnl:ton lloach and Mn. Carl M. Canfield, (lllblk:fly, f r o m Wutmlnatar. Hospital Saturday. April 2~. between 10 a.m. and 4:JO p.m. at Torro Center are the Mmea. Leslie Marki. Mlk• Sh<rrerd, Adolph Wertbelmer and Uher Wolf. AU proce<dl bejl<flt the frte, nonaectartan City of Hope In Ill conttnutna battle a11ln1t catastrophic diseases. RETURNING to vacation at htr favorite ranch was Mrs. Robert Krone of Newport Beach with her daughter, Keri Krone, and a vl1ltcr, Lena Jacobaaon o( Arboga, Sweden. The trio rode the trails of the Flying E Ranch near Wickenburg, Ariz. Miss Jacobsson ill a Youth for Underalanding e:rcbange student who Is spendin1 a year with the Krones. News Told At Party Mrs. Solange M o r an d announced the engagement of her daUJbter, Chrl1tlane Caaiuto to James R. savage Jr. durln1 a dinner party in h1r Irvine home. Among iuests were Dr. and Mra. Jlflle.! R Savaae oI San Btrnardloo, parents of the benedlct • elect, and the Meura. and Mmea. Robert A. CUSUto, F..d HarriJ and Jim Jotinaton. Ml1s Cauuto, also the daughter of Henry V. Cassuto of Paris, graduated from Col,. Meas High School and 1ttended Oraft.ie C o a 1 t Coll•••· Her (lance 11 an atumnus of San Btmardlno Hlt1h SChool and the University of Arizona. They will exchange wedding pledges June 12 In the Community Church Ccn1tt1at1onal, Corona de! Mar. I RENEE GARFIELD, Hun- tington Beach High School senior, was named a n honorable mention winner in the 1971 Belly Crocke r Homemakt!r of Tomorrow con· test in California. A total of 55,669 girls were entered in the scholarship con· test, with the winner, Nancy Ellen Good of Glendale Hi1h School scheduled to enter the national finals. OFF 'rO THE BA V area for four or five days relaxing with relatives and friends are the Jack Lyons of South Laguna. The couple plans to relax, see the sights and enjoy some of San Francisco's famous dining apots . July Day Selected A July 2 weddtn1 date hu bm selected by Cher1 l Swinehart and Benjamin D. Larvle JI. Newa waa revealed by OM! brld1HO-be'1 parent&, Mr. and l-1rs. Glenn A. Swinehart Jr, of Fountain V a 11 e y . Miu Swinehart ls a gradu1tt of Fountain Valley High SchOoL Her flan ce., aon of Mr. aod Mra. Benjamin D. Larvle ot Huntington Beach, att.endea Marina High School prior to ~nterina the Army. He baa servtd in Vle1n1m and baa bfte.n 1w1rded lW<I Bronze Stars for valor and a Purple Heart. 'Presently he IE 1tat1oned tn Ke ntucky. I' I' 1 I Colorful Season Borrowing from th:! bright spring landscape, !he spring dinner party, is a kaleidoscope Of color and flavor. Ifs the perfect · time to entertain guests in an elegant dining room setting or on a patio rinuned with fresh .i;prlng flowers. A dinner party centered around a favorite wine -rose' iJ suggested. A light, pink Wine, ro.!e' blends beautifully With the main course -Rock Cornish Hens. In this course, the 1o1•ine adds color and Davor to the tangy cherry sauce which is served over wine-buUc:r basted hens, stuffed wilh a spicy cherry- bread mixture. At the beginning of the fre sh fruit season, a fruit nan is ~· perfect dessert choice. The creamy filling on a crisp pastry crust is topped wilh a whirly-gig of fresh fruits $lazed with a sweet wine mix· ~· ROCK CORNISH HENS \VJTH CHERRY STUFFING 4 Rock Cornish heos. washed Stuffing (below) 1 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons rose' wine Cherry Rose Sauce (below) Arter washing hens. d1·y with a cloth. Fill cavities loosely with stuffing. Truss and place in a roasting pan. Melt butter and wine together. Brush on hens. Place in a 450-degree oven for 3 O minutes. Lower heat to 350 and roast. basting often, for another' 20 minutes. Remove from oven transfer to a plalter and serve to four with Cherr y. Rose' Sauce. qfu:RRY STUFFING -' cups dry, seasoned bread cubes 1 cup ca nned sour red cher- ries, drained 3 tablespoons melted butter 1,~ cup warm water Toss all ingredient s together. Rose-Cherry S11,1ee (lo.ounce) Jar whole cher· ry preserves 1 , cup rose' wine l teaspoon 1.:inna1non '·: teaspoon nutmeg Heat together until preserves and cinnamon are n1elted. Serve warm. Fruit Flan with Rose' Glau Pastry for a 9-inch pie shell l/i cup sugar Dash sail 2 t<1blespoons cornstarch 2 cups light cream 6 egg yolks, beaten I teaspoon vanilla 2 tablespoons rose' wine I pint strawberries, hulled and halved I large banana, sliced thinly l large pear, sliced inlhin wedges I orange, peeled, sliced and quartered ~l cup fresh blueberries, washed Len1on juice 't cup cher ry preserves 2 tablespoons rose' wine ~1ake pastry and fil Int() a 9-inch tart pan. Trim edges. Complemented Chill well. Then bake ln a ~75-degree oven for 10 to 12 minules, or unUI go I d e n brown. CbiJl again. In a heavy saucepan com· bine sugar, salt, and corn- starch. Gradually add cream, stirring until smooth. Cook over medium heal stirring iw. ""' •. constantly unUI mixture is thick and begins M> boll. Bo!I 1 minute Remove from heat and stir a little of the hot mil:ture into Ille beaten egg yolks: Pour back into the rest of the hot mixture. Return lo boiling and boil I minute, stir- ring. Turn into mixing bowl and add vanilla and first 2 tablespoons wine. Chi 1.1 , covered. One hour before S:!rving, spread the custard mixture in the nan shell. The shell may be removed from the pan, ir desired. Arrange: fruil on top or the custard in a circular pauem. (Be sure to dip pear and banana slices in lemon juiCe or they will darken.) Wredl!fsday Apr(I 21 1 ~71 OAIL V PILOT 33 by Settings l Heat together the che rry preserves and the remaining 2 tablespoons of wine until preserves have meli.e'd. Stain through a sieve. Brush fruit with the glaze. Refrigerate un- til serving. Serves eight to ten. SPICY SA UCE COMPL IMENTS WINE-BASTED HENS 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~ ---·-~-~~~~~- COLORFUL FINALE, LUSCIOUS FRESH FRUIT TART Simplified System Code 'Meats' Approval A simplified tour-digit code approach i.n order to estabhsh the need for p r fl p t r for daling con s umer and maintain a standard cod· refrigeration." ,packaged. manufactured n1eat ing system in place of the DeGralf pointed out an prod u cl s has been present multiplicity of codes. inherent v.cakne ss of any recommended by the Under the AiVII plan . dating systcrnis thatitdeals American Meat Institute for individual companies may find only with "tin1e," and time is immediate adoption by the it helpful lo indicate on the not the only. or even the most nation's meat processing package whether the open 1n1portant. factor determining industry. nun1erical date is the date of product quality to I he Under the new code . packing or the qua Ii t Y consun1cr, Temperature, for approved by the Ar..11 Board of assurance dale. example. is much more Directors representing a large "For example," DeGraff imoortant than lime. he said. ·majority of the nation's meat explained. "some processors "We strongly believe." De processors. firms will date will undoubledl.f' use date or Graff said. "that there must theirproductswithfourdigits. manufacture . Other be proper lnvenlory the firsl two indicating the processors, having different ma nag em en t . rap i d month and the last two distribution methods, may use distribution and appropriate indicating the day. Thus. the some forward date to handling of all products, digits 0101 would indicate represent a quality assurance especially with respect ta January 1. 0315 would indicate date lo the consumer. temperature. When all is said. f\larch 15, and 1130 would "The processor, at his own we are extremely dependent indicate November 30. discretion. may i n c I u d c on good ha n d l i n g by This new code replaces the qualifying words lo indicate distributors and consumers "AMI Meat Code '' adopted in 1 __ w_h_al_lh_e_d_a_1e_r_e~pr_e_se_n_1_s_o_r __ 1h_e_m_s_e_lv_.,_ .. _____ _ 1961. The old oode also used four diS:Hs, but its meaning was . little understood b y consumers because the first and last digits added together indk:ated the month and the two middle digits represented the day. · Herrell D<-Grarr. A ~1 I president, pointed out that the new opeo dating code has been adopted to help sim plify re- tailer control af products and to enable consumers readily to identify dates on packages of meal products. The A~11 recommended that open dating apply to all products ~·ilh the e~ception of private label ilems. canned meats and bone. in hams. The Institute urged packagers and proce..'i~rs ta adopt the new open dalin~ LOCAL Nt1 etll•r 11ew1pep•• f9/l1 yo~ "''''' •w•rY 41v. 1bout wh1f1 9ol11t Oft l1t tJ\1 Gr11ler 0111t1• C•••I th111 th1 DAILY' PILOT. R.cipe from th• MW bautlfu/ly illurtr1tld, f"'1 color hon11y cookbook, .. GEMS OF GOLD", QUICKIE HONEY BARS 2 cupt cru1ht1d g111h1m cr1ck1rr 1 pkg. (6<iz.I choco/1t11 putcu t 12 cup w1lnuts. choppt1d 2 tt!6lP(JOn' gr1rttf or1nge pnf 1 Clll (f5 01.} S_,/tlflll'd cond1~mrllr 2 11blHPoot11 honrt Combine craclcer crumb'. ""ill'! chocola1 e p iece:;, nuts ard peel Add milk. end hooey . ~l•f to bl•nd. Sorei!d ,,, cr!'.a!Ad a~Bl2·inch p1n. Bake 30 IC J~ f'llflutes 10 350 deg1ee oven j.,..OOl!ra1a) Cool 15 m;nu1es, 1tien mark into bars. F1rus11 ~~~!:,:~~~~~ cooti~. Mal(es 20 re 25 ba'1. Yo11 un "'"" 1111 new honh' cool(l>ool( for only 35 e1nt& uc"1 (po'/llfltl fMtdJ or 3 for lt,00, Send 35 ctnU ;,, CO•n for IM:ll cookbool( to: -------------------CALIFORNIA HONEV A.OYISOAV BOA.RD P.0 .8 01 32 -Wt!lu i1r. Ctllfornlt 90608 t\<llf\e __________ ---------------- Adr:Jre•--·-----------------C11y ___________ _5tate _________ Z(p ____ _ • • -• f t' • i I f ' • Buy this trial size and discover new Max-Prut The great tasting coffee in a throw-away filter. We've made this special 25¢* trial·size can of Max·P~ to introduce you to the real ground coffee that comes in its own filter. The Max-Pax filter traps oils and sediment that can make coffee bitter. So you always get delicious, great tasting colfec. Cup after cup. And Max-Pax is so convenient. No measuring. No spilling. No messy grounds. A~erwards, justrhrowthefilter away. Today, buy either the 25¢* trial-size can ef Max·P.ax coffee filter rings, or rhe 1().. or 20.ring sU:e. Then enjoy grcn.t tasting coffee in a throw~away filter. '"5-t-l l-.11 l'rior. ~ § • • • ' .\ i• 1 ' .. ' : 'I' ! I ',• ' ' ' I I, . ~ ... . . ' . .. ' Wiiat's so special about ground meat? •. Plenty .• when it's El Rancho 's El Rancho has earned an envied reputation for guperior meats ••. beef, lamb. pork ... geafood, too. But one ()f the mosL severe tests o( any but.cl1er shop is the quallty of rround meats. We're ready to put ours to the teat any time ••• how about . acoeptinr the challenire this week \\"bPn prices al'e so low! Taste the difference. You 'll be back ! Meat Loaf ................ 0~~~ .. ~~~~~~ ................. 79ri. }~i n,,at ~round meat& ••• seasoned, blended ••• made '\\'ith fresh \\'hole ei'gsl Ham Loaf .................. ~~.~ .. ~~~~ ................. 89~ IPBund B1Bf Dua/ltif .. !~~l .. 51 For economy ••• use lt 10 many '"ays ••• and be so -pleased "'ilh. the aavinrs! Bulk or Palliea! IPBund Chuck Dualnu..~~s.".'.GD! El Rancho'a own ham ••• fresh pork, con1flake crumbs and fresh eiil ! Chili Grind .............. ~-~~~~~-~~~~: ................. 69ti. Chwika of hearty beef •• , for a pot o( chili that wlll serve .. ti•faction ! Looklna; !or \'alue?., , Try this !or flavor and Jean tcndernOi•I Ground Chuck Patties, too, at lhi1 price l Qnll'nJ/lll'nrJ llllt~i";11 -,n" Italian Style Sausage ...................... 89~ a;-4 ··~ Ill ·~ r• 11-.. ~~E.S.H}. I a:. Acombina\iono( !re•h irroundmeata,seaooningo and El Rancho know-how l So lean and tasty ••• and you know it's always fresh at EI Rancho! Bulk or Patties ••• yourchoice: Country Style Sausage ................... 59~ I d 111/a 711 Oua//111 FRESH! 88! ,,, .. ~ .... "'" .......... ·:·;u ··· ......... _., ~ 'l'BUI ~ I B· . . . . . . . 1u. Ground Lamb Patties ...................... 49 Frcah rround .,. from lean lamb , , , mild flavor you'll appreclat. ! So ,·cry Jean, you'll ha\'e to \\'onder ho\V it can be tiO flavorful! Chop~d Sirloin Steak , •• 89<: lb. Red Salmon ....................... ~1.09 lb. Salmon Steaks ................... ~1.49 1&. Aluluin Sodce)'e , , firm, flavorful, whole or half: Centc1· cut •• , from Alaskan Red Sockeyc ! ~ . . , .rit'·?t')~ . ; ,,_ ' ~ ., . ' 1 I 1f • : ' '"\ .• \ )~~-.~· .~ .' r Blrlaln Raad ·~·( 1·.~ '.' . • • ' , .. ,, ·rhe llcnrlor the sirloin ••• U.S.D.A. Choice Beef ,., hearty 1oodnesa in a boneless roasl , •• rolled and tied !or convenience ! ~~J.~~~8~~t~~~i~ff . $1 ~? Game Hens Armour Star ••• 110 much goodness on these, 'caulie they'1·0 24 ounces bii! Tender treat! Super Grocery Specials ! & ri9 lb. 79~ /ltJGDtJJ Ch/JIB . '.'.~!l~!-'.''. ... 41 Why settle !or a name you don't know, when El Rancho offers Scudder quallly at th i1 low price? ,,,,,,Buns. ~EK~: .. ~.0~~~ ·'· •• ' 88° Looking :for the difference? ••• l~'a in the quality behind the name! Brands you kno\V aL J::l Dancho ! . Cucumber Pickles ..... ~ll~E~. ~~~ ••••• 4 9c Big 22 ounce jar ••• crisp and lasty picklea ••• \\'ith an old fashioned 1oodness you'IJ \\·cfco r11 c; Ice Cream ......... "f~~·~~L.L~~ .c.A~!~~ ........ 6 9c Springfield, all flavors. Serve it \\"itlt fresh berries, scoop it into cantaloupe 11al\·es •• , top a pie ! Heinz Relishes ...................... 29¢ Swccl, India, Hamburger, 1-tot Dog .~. 1 l oz . Yuban Coffee . (1 or.1ns1on1. •• 129) .. 85 :.. 'l.'v.·o lb. cnn ••• 1.69. Three lb. can ••• ~.If) Tomato Juice ................... 3 for '1 Glorielta ••• red ripe goodness •• , 46 oz. cans; Barbecue Sauce .............. 3 for '1 Chrl& & Pitts ,,. H oz.,., 3 kinds : Fruit Drinks .... 3 for $1 Hi C,,. all llavors, •• 46 oz. Imperial Margarine ............. 39' Flavor-lhat affords a regal feeling! 1 lb. ctn. Petite Peas ....... 4 for '1 C\V ••• tiny sweet . , , frozen 10 oz. Taco Casserole ....... 53 ¢ ?itain course pleasure ••• Schilling's, French fries ...... 4 for '1 Ore.Ida ••• 16 oz.1>k(..,. E"rozcn~ Ta male Pie .............. 63¢ Schllllna:'a mnkca it easy for you t 0 J • 5 6 Or. $1 range u1ce .. . eans Treeaweet, l'loridn ! 12 oL C.n ... 39< Hunt's Catsup ......... 29 ' Big 20 ounce bottle iroes far! Juice Bars ................ 49¢ Froun treat from Sunki1t •• , Pkir. Oven Cleaner ......... 99' E••Y off ••• 16 oz .• ,. u'e on IlBQ Accent ..................... 89' :Makes flavors really sing-. 4 ~ ~ oz. Cl MIRICLE WHITE '1.29 eaner ................ .. lialf·Jallon , . makea bii jobs eitsy ! Fillet of White Bass .............. 89~ }"1·om Alaskan ,\·ate rs for finer !favor! Sliced Bacon .......................... 59~ El Rancho'• thicker ranch atyle alicea ! Super Fresh Produce ! IPBp""1Ji .. R~~o~. ·/04rf :r·rom the fertile orchards of Texas ••. gweet and juicy ••• aerv• hal\•es for breakfast ••• litainents in galads ••. broil 'em, enjoy 'em. Lettuce .................................... 19¢ !:.:J~i<I ~::.:-:t,is •• cris p fresh lea.vea •• prden !reah ! Avocados .......................... 3 for '1 Smooth. Fuertes, '\\'ith butte1··y i·ich sroodness! Brown Onions ................. 3 ~~ 29' Red Radishes ................... 2 for 19¢ Add color •.• and zest ••• lo ,your relish. tray ? ":\ew crop! Crisp slices belonsr on 'bura:ers ! Green Onions ................... 2 for 19¢ Broccoli .................................. 251. )I ilff ••• ft·esh ncss 1n:1~c!': the differrnce in !la.vor! Garden fresh! •• 11er\·e it au il'&tin or hollandaise! Delicatessen Specials ! Mild Cb1ddar. .. ~!.~~ !!f!! ... ID! Cl'camy, flavorful ••• use il for cooking, !or sand,\·ithc~. fot· snac.:king ~ ••• packaged !or El Rancho! Swiss Cheese .......................... 35' I'icture perfect. slices from Cache Valle)·! •• 6 ot. Sliced American ............ 35* ;'Ir ('1\s to p('rf~ction for cheese bura-ers: l;inghani 6 oz, Polish Pickles ................ 49¢ l'ulaski, •• rygularor ~ticks ••• 32 oi. jar. Bonbel French Cheese .......... 79' . l. our choice ••. 8 ounce i·ound or 7 ounce wedge. Gourmandise French Cheese 79' rherry or nut flavor •• , great apreari tor 1nacb l ·4 oz. packa1e. Blue Cheese Dressing ........... 45- .r·1sherman·· \Vharf ••• 8 ounc.e Jloqu1fort ••• sx. Super Liquor Specials ! 8al/1&1n1k IBBP ... ~'~.P}f~ ••• f'' larton o! JDC 12 oz. cans ••• lislit and tinflY •• ·.flavor you'd expect frorn Ball&nt.inc! Ancient Age ........ '11.39 Sh·aight Whiskey, bit hal!-r al. •ize. Gin or Vodka .......... '8.88 EI Rancho'• own , , , ha!(.gol. bottles. El Rancho Scotch ~.'5.79 Bottled in Scotland I Q....t • , , 'n Spanish Wine ... ~~~~ ... 99¢ Lope de Vc~a •.. Burgundy, Cfan!t. Rose, Chablis or Sa.uterne ! imported: Health and Beauty Aids ! Contac ......... 1:2!. ~'~ •••••.•• 89' Those tiny little time cap1ulcs tha t work ao well '. pkll'. of JO. Salad Supreme ....... 49• Aurora Tissue .... 4 '" •1 Unique seasoning from Schilling-s '. Two roll packa .•. \\'bile or colors: •.. 2¥.. oz. /'1 :rr,<:: in rffcrt Tl1111xrlo.y thrf'Jn{lh ,'\111ulny • \}11 ll ..!~'. ..!,,'. ! ; , ,!.) •. \" () .~(1/1 ,~ fol fl1 t1/, I\•', Oprn dn 1/ !J 9 lo f) •• , .'•;,,,,,,,, .•1 '' : .. •n /ri i :oo Shave Cream ... .1;'!.~'~ .. 97' Noxcma ... '-Itnthol, Lime or Regular ... 11 ounce si ze. A I : sunset and Huntington or 'P.1111,: PASADENA : ,f/N~i SOUTH PASADENA: HWR1 "HUNTINGTON BEACH · 1111 'E N . ·11 Ranc ho Center/ '"""'' 310 Wes! Colorado Blvd. ,111"'" fretnonl and Hunlmgton Di . 1fimfl Warnei 3 d Al 18 d. lk C 1·1111' EWPORT BEACH. 1111 N"•11t111 Rl wli ""1 s n ~onqu111 uar •• enleli '""" _1555 faslhlull Dr 1£as1blufl Village Ceulci) ·-I • • Old-time Favorite Dumplings: A1t old-lime favorite ! PEACH DUMPLINGS 6 well-Ora1ned canned cling peach halves Peach Sauce, see below it is in s1nall pieces. 2 cups unsifted flour, stir to aerate before measur- ing In a medium mixing bowl stir together the flour . salt ~ and orqe rind . With a pastry blender cut in shortening until I teaspoon sail I teaspoon grated orant. rind Vi'ith a fork mi1 in orange jui~. a tablespoon at a time, using just enough to make pastry hold together; shape into a small rectangle. On a floured pastry cloth ~ cup shortening 4 tablespoons (abwl) orange juice Flavorful Cookies P-nuttiest Try these delicious, chewy cookies made with peanut butter. Peanut Butter Dreams are bar cookies with a choc-OlatH.'OCOOut t o p p 1 n g , \11hlle ND-Bake Fudge Nuggets we oatmeal. PEANUT BUTTER DREAJ\.IS 1,2 cup peanut butter '~ cup butter '' cup brown sugar l cup sifted flour 2 eg9, well beaten I \2 cups brown sugar 11, cup nour liJ teaspoon baiting po~·der ~' cup flaked coconut I cup semisw~t chocolate pieces 1 teaspoon vanilla I ~Prtngfiel~ ~COFFEE . . .. ' . . ·~- SPRINGFIELD COFFEE 1 LB. CAN SPRINGFIELD YELLOW CLING PEACHES HALVES OR SLICEO LARGE •2V2 CANS SPRINlolllllD with a floured stockinet· covered rolling pin, roll out pastry Into an 18 by 12 inch rectangle. Cut into six IJ...inch squares. Place "a peach, cut side down, in each square. Brush Blend peanut butter and butter together. Gradually bea t in !ugar. Work in flour: pat into bottom -0f greased 8- jnch square pan. Bake in 350 degree oven 15 minutes. TOMATOES lorte :-2111 Ca111 4/$1 49'' SPRINGFIELD MAYONAISE QUART JAR --SPRINGFIELD 3'9' ALL PURPOSE U.UNDRT GIANT DETERGENT Sill IOX ' DAI LY PILOT 35 a Peachy Finale for Menu • pastry edges with milk. Pinch together edges of each square Lo enclose peach. Wit h a wide metal spatula, place each dumpling, well a p a r t , on a cookie sheet. Brush With milk. Bake in a preheated 42.'). degree oven for 23 minutes. Serve hot (or reheat ) with Peace Sauce and, if yoo like, vanilla ice cream. Makes 6 servings. Peace Sauce : in a small saucepan stir together 113 cup finnly packed light brown sugar and 1 1~ tableapoons cornstarch. Gradually sUr in until smooth 1 '4 cups peach syrup (from canned peachea l. Cook over mode rate heat, SAVE ON SPRINGFIELD SPRINGFIELD SODA POP e COLA e ORANGE e ROOT BEER e LEMON-LIME 12 0%. CANl SPRINGFIELD e PEAS e APRICOT HALV~S e CUT GREEN BEANS e WHOLE KERNEL CORN e CREAM STYLE CORN •303 CANS SPRINGFIELD APPLE SAUCE •303 CANS stirring constanlly, until toil· lng and clear. Stir in 1 tea· spoon grated orqe rind, II& cup orange julce anQ t table- spoon butter. Rtheat, if necessary, before s e r v i n g , Makes about I ~1: cups. Meaowhlle, beal eggs with brown sugar until crean1y . Blend in flou r and baking powder. Fold in remaining Ing r e d ien t s. Pour over prebaked rr.ixture. Bake 30 minutes more; cool thoroughly in pan. Cut ln .squares. Yields 1~20 bars. SPRINGFIELD • GRAPE DRINK ORANGE DRINK • FRUIT PUNCH "'oz. CANS 4/$1 SPRINGFllLD 4 OL FREIZE·DRllD INSTANT COFFEE , .. SPRINGFllLD 15 1/1 01. 79¢ SPRINGFIELD r JOl 4/'1 PU.I HA.LYES C.M 4/'1 SPRINGFIELD 1 Lb. 49¢ CHILI WITH llANS Tall Co111 PU.NUT IUTTER , .. • NO.BAKE FUDGE NUGGETS W. ~ j{•}3 ~:. i•I•] •1• ;i 2cups granulated sugar - -·----• - - - - - ~., cup cocoa ~ ~.i:;:•;alt SPRINGFIELD 5 9~ EASTERN GRAIN FED BONELESS ROLLED HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS SPRINliFllLD PLUS PLATINUM DOUILE IDGE RAZOR BLADES 59' ~ :~ :~i:k oatmeal ICE CREAM 112 GAL. ~'i cup crunchy peanut ~ v.i:·~oopped peanui. SPRINGFIELD J teaspoons vanilla Combine first five ingre- dients and boll 1 minute. Stir in peanut butter, nuts, catmeal and vanilla. Drop by teaspoonfuls on ,.axed paper. Let stand one to t w o hou r s a t r oom temperature. Y i e d s 36 cookies. Super Swift e PEAS -10 OZ. e CORN • 10 OZ. e CHOPPED BROCDll • 10 OZ. e FORDHOOK LIMAS • 10 OZ. e CUT GREEN BEANS· 9 OZ. SPRINGFIELD ORANGE JUICE 6 oz. CANS SPRINGFIELD FtSH STICKS BIG p;, LB. PACKAGE 1r--1 a :1 u: • :J :t·l .11r31 Zip up and travel straight thru summer with a SWlFTY skimmer with the side dart shaping thal's so fig u re nattering. For blends, cotton . Printed Pattern 9 3 6 3 : Women's Siz.es 34. 36. 38. 40, 42, 44, 48, 48. Siz.e 38 !bust 381 lakes 3~4 yards 35-inch f11bric . SEVENTY -F1VE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for each patt.e.rn for Air ftiail •nd SpeclaJ Handlin&: otherwise thlrd-clasa dt.Uvery will t1ke lhrH week!! or more. Stnd to M•rian M•rlin. DAILY PILOT. 442 PJltem OepL, 232 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. STRAWBERRIES RED RIPE LOCAL 4 BASKETS $1 CELERY 2~ 29~ ORANGES 5 ~. $1 ONIONS NEW CROP3 ~ 25~ BERMUDA s. APPLES EXTRA FANCY OELICIOUS 6 ~. TOOTHPASTE FAMtLY StZE 6'/• OZ. TUBE W~+to tl!l1 coupo11, 110 111i11l111um purc:ll111 r11111ir1d. limit I f11b1 p•• coupon -0111 co11po1t ptr cu1lom1r. Vold 1ft1r S11nd t 'f, Aplil 25, PORK ROAST LADING GRADE "A" HINDQUARTERS DISPENSER OF 10 II.A.DIS DIAL ANTl·PlflSPlflANT DEODORANT COMPARE AT SJ.It 69' ---------------PRO TOOTH BRUSHES 4/99' REGULAR 6ff IA.CH ~--.:; R19, 19( Pro Doubl1·D11ty Tooth l r11 1h11 • , "Ill .29 EASTERN GRAIN FED FRESH PORK YOUNG·N·TENDER FRESH SLICED BEEF LIVER 5 9~ S.PARERIBS 39 • BAR M WESTERN STYLE n. ALL MEAT WIENERS '.':0 USOA GRADE "A"-3 LEGGED FRYING CHICKEN --- 39 • BAR M BULK n. POLISH SAUSAGE COUNTRY STYLE PORK SAUSAGE --CORAL QUEEN BREADED SHRIMP $129 BAR M SLICED tb. COTTO SALAMI ------BAR M WESTERN STYLE BACON '41CICOllV SMOltfO 69• BAR M CHUNK STYLE n. FRESH LIVER SAUSAGE 59~ 79~ 79~ 59~ Prices Effedlve: Thuriday thru Sat. April 22, 23, 24, 25 Prlcu 1ubject to 1tock on haltd. WE GLADLY ACCEl'T U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS ...._ ______________ _ USDA CHOICE CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAK SPRINGFIELD SLICED PINEAPPLE •I FLAT CANS WE GIVE ILUE CHIP STAMPS WE GIVE ILUf CH" STAMPS COSTA MESA LB. PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 710 W. Chapman DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS II WITH THIS COUPON ONE ORDER. ONLY-ANY AMOUNl YOU CHOOSE TO IUY VOID AFTU SUNDAY. APRIL 15 W ,if, o+.11 to11po11 , 110 ..,;" "'11"' 1111rcll111 r1~11i11d. Li111it I 0 11111 p1r coupoft -0111 covpo11 ptr cwilot•llr. Vold 1ftir $11114,.,, II NO MINI MUM 'URCHASE -NO MAX IMUM 'UACHASE April 2•. Print NAME, AD Dl\ESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. 000 D ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASllT llOOD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IASln :===========~~~~....-'.:~~==========:::..==-=~ • ' I 'I 1 I Jl_G Di.IL v PJLO _r _____ w_ ..... _,,_sd--'a''---' ._c,,_11 _21'--, 1_•11 ' EASTERN GRAIN FED .GROUND EEF FRESH• LEAN DELICIOUS c LB. -SUCl0 •~-01. 49' •••""' HAM COOKED ·· · , 11 .. lllfAMOIUfAMDBlAM l 59 BURRITOS .... 1 7 9' I~Pf llfAHO JUST MEAT 6o lAf CORN DOGS .. LI 1 ltOYAL BR.AND• 1°POUND PACKAGE 9 BEEF FRANKS .......................... La. 5 c 1-STTHRUS-THRIBS ... l8.99t 79 RIB OAST &·TH & l·TH KIBS . . .... LB . ' c IA.STERN GRAIN FED TENDER SHOULDER 69 ' PORK STEAKS ......... .. Le. ' IUUC-OUR OWN COUNTRY STYLE-PURE 3 9 ' PORK SAUSAGE ............... LB. c ST .ATtR BROS . SllCED COTTO SALAMI .......... 12.oz . 59' ANGEL FOOD 0 CAKE MIX DUHCAHNINU o UG 4nc PKG ..,- LB. B 000S0ioi'iiiTT LB. 59' Wtdnr1day, April 21 . 1q71 5 PILOT-AOVERTISE R ~ ~=='.:..:.::...:..:.:c_c_..::___---=~ SMOKED HAMS MORRRL PRIDE OR FARMER JOHN-SHANK PORTION 43~. WeRedHm USDA Food S1emps In our Los Angrlrs. Or.,,gr & RNrrslde County Storrs VISIT YOUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS APRIL 26·30 nlllltSCMOOlWlll PllUHOf: •WISDOM • STIENGTH • IEJUT' CHUCK SLICED ROAST BACON U.S.D.A. CHOICEORSTATfR BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF ··~ TABUIRAND 1-POUND PACKAGE 39~ All MIAT 1 l-01. PK(;. 49' SI.ICED BA CON MOlflflU"S YOlfKSHllff. U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR ST.ATER IROS. CERTIFIED IEEF 9 3 RIB STEAKS ............................... LB . c BONtltSSROUNDSTt.AKLB ... Sl.Ol 93' ROUND STEAK BONE-IN ...... LB . U.5.D.A. CHOICE OR STATER BROS. CERTIFIED IEEF $14' I-BONE STEAK ... LB. l)o'ii0lliii"o'uii'~,EAK LB. 5 I 4 5 U.S.O.A.CHOICEORSTATERBROS.CERTIFIEDlfEF s 173 TOP SIRLOINstEAK ........ LB. ~* ~- CALGON BOUQUET 16 oz 63' ARMOUR TREET ... .. .......... .. ,, oz 59< VIENNA SAUSAGE ARMOUR 5 oz 29< SPAGHETII ~~t~A,%0GRA I N "" oz 39< WILD RICE-A-RONI g~~fJ' 5 71• oz 59< ( GLAD SANDWICH BAGS 150 CT 55' JIF PEANUT BUTTER 12 oz 47' CARNATION SPREADABLEs ,~.oz 67' PRICES PLUS.BLUE CMIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PL:US BLUE CMIP STAMP * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CMIP STAMPS * LOW· LOW PRICES PLlilS BL:UE: CMI TOOTHPASTIE C!!i~ 77' SIZE I I atUN ICING 43.oz. DINNERS '~: .. -s 101 """ MUSl«OO M EACH ' \ CHUN KING FRIED RICE "" CHOW MEIN NOODLES c"'" "'o DIAMOND-A SLICED BEETS "'"'o DIAMOND ·A WHOLE BEETS '""'" r 1 J "i OZ 43c I "'00 So lrookh11rt.' Ave., WHh!ll~t•r !>oz 3;c101 w .. t Nh1ef"ntti st~ttt, C•sto M.so •B•Z ldi111&r Avr1111•, H1111ll!MJti.'"' koch JOJ 27( 2603 W"'t S.•r11tff11th Str.ct, So11to Ano ' !Ill Chopmo1t A•o11110, Gordon Gtovo 303 3lc2l•O North l 115ti11 A~l\Uo, So11to Ano PRICES EFFEC. THURS . thru WED. APRIL 22-28 1 sno Ea~t Colli111 """"•· On11•t• 8522 W~t,..l111tw llvd., Wfttl!'ll11fr.t ~4JO W11't Ll11colt1 A•c-1111e, Anoholrn 2•l O Edl11q., Avo11110, So11to Al'lo 1 ZJO Mcf.odd•l'I A•~"*• Sa1ira A"a • • ' • 25•4 Wflt l rood ... ay, Alla~lr" 2110 N ..... port 11.-d., Co s'• Mc10 1175 loieer Stfttt, Cotto Mna 14171 RM Hill A"•llw•, T~ol11 14212 Ml""' A•c"ur, Wfllnlo, ' . . . . ..... ··-· ·---.. ,...-... Wtd11tiday Apn1 21. 1971 DAILY PILOT 37 -r --• Onlv. Care Labels Grandmother never had to y,·onder aboul how to get the family's rlothlng clean. In those day:i bef ore ••miracle" fibers, clothes .,.,ere simply of cotton. wool, linen or silk. And permanent press meant a housewife standing over a hot iron for what seem- ed an eternity. r1qx-rt ln trxhle technology or rhemislry to be completely sure of how best to cle11n clot- hes. In fact, you CIUl ftlf;I . buy And wear an artlcte of clothing w!thout the slightest Idea of how to t.Rke care of It. af1er lhe purchase. \Vhen the time comes to wash or clean the clothes . . h'mm . .,.,·hat did th11.t little tag :say? Rut the winds of ch11nge arc blowing the consumer's way. Textile and apparel industry people and federal govern· ment officials are now begin· nlng to talk about this problem or housewives. would be attached to a gar· ment and slAy pul ror as Joni: a!I lhP garment is normally worn and cleaned, One pro- po.~al alonf{ these lines Is for "Cllccptlon" lnbels, w hi c h would be lln1ltrd qnly to clothing requiring other than "obvious" care molh!Kls. has announced lhat startin1; now on the clothing for rail. ~rmancnt <:are labels with eas y· lo· understand 1n· struclions will bf' StY.n into or otherwise Imprinted. Thr typr labrl used depe.nds on the con:.truct1on. fiber ron· trnt :.ind d}e fA.stn~'i pro- prrt1rs of the npparf.'l fabric, The d1r('('llon:-. t~msclves 11re spcc1fu.: and lo I.he 1>0l nt. For exaniptc. 1hc hJbel Io r Pcrman1•nt l'rP!ll·N!!vcr Needll Ironin~ rrarts. "Avoid chlorine blt:tu..•h. l'ao he machine wash· eel nnd \urnhle dried llemo Ye from dryer 1mn1edlalf.'!y at end of cyl•!c. \\la11h reds and dark colors sepa rattly." The company has come up Permanent? Today. with the confusing variety or terhnlcal terms and trade name:i for the fiber con· tent and finishes of fabrics, a woman almost has to be an Many c 1 o th inc manufac· turers. realizing our plight, put care instructions on hang tags which are attached to garments y,•hen you b::,y them. However more often than not. the t.ags get discarded or lost The Idea being discussed Is for some kind of permanenl c11re label; that \a a label giv· Ing care Instructions that At le1111t one major apparel manufac1urer is doing more thAn just talking about this problem. The maker of male and female "wr angler" ind "Maverick'1 brand apparel, · with directions for four basJc methods or cleaning C'are to cover various categorirs nf apparel. The11e include : (IJ Permanent Prt:ss-Ne\·er Necdl'l Poultry, Rice Mix Turkey may be used instead of the chicken . CHICKEN AND RICE CASSEROLE l/3 cup margarine 11 cup flnt:ly chopped on!rin 1l cup finely grated carrot i,., cup finely diced celery 2 tablespoons mi n c e d parsley J/3 cup flour J 14 teaspoons salt ~' teaspoon \Vhite pepper 1 tt:aspoon dry mustard 1 can ~about 14 ounces) chick'!!n hroth ~ cup heavy cream ~ cups diced rooked chicken 1 h cups cooked rice ~~ cup fine dry bread crumbs ¥.t cup chopped blanched almonds 1 tablespoon margarine , aoftt:ned tn a 2-quart saucepan ove.r modera tely lo"' heat melt the 113 cup margarine; add onion. carrot, cel~ry and parsley . Cook, stirring se veral times. untll vegetables are tender - abrut S minutes. Remove fron1 heat. blend in flour. salt. pepper a n d mu stard. c;radually stir in chicken broth and crea111, kt:eping smooth. Cook o v e r 111cdium-h.Jgh heat !tirring constantly, un1il mixture comes to 11 boil. Stir in chick'en Rnd rice; turn intl'.l' an ungreased 111 quart cas- serole. With a fork mi:ii: together un- til crumbly lhe c r u m b s , almonds and 1 tab1e$p00n softened marRarine : sprinkl~ over top of cas5erole. Bake in a prehea.ted 350..degree oven until edges are bubbly and topping Is browned -about 3S minutes. Makes 6 servings. Versatile TEN great fashion lonk!I - all your! in one ren1nrkab\e pattern! From quirk !lkimmer to :shirtrlres:s In he\1rd lnnk~. rlui; :iihnrl Rnd lnng l<ICkC'l.<; Prin1cd Pat\r>rn 91Pl : NEW ~Uiises' Size~ 8, 10. 12. 14, lfi and Half Sii:c!I 121i. 14 ~. 11\ll. J8ll, 20l.i . 22¥1. SF.VENTY·Fl\IE CENTS for tach p111tem -add 25 cent~ for each p1111crn for Air Mail and Spec1:tl H a n d I i n i;: : othPrwl~' third<IR sii delivrry wt!l take three wcek!I nr mnre. Send lo r-.1ar1Rn "1artin , Daily P1\ot. 442 Patlcrn Dtpt .. 2:l2 west lllth St , New York. N.V. 10011. Prlnl NA,\1F., ADORES~ '<''I th ZIP. SIZE and STYLE NIJMBER. Swing into Sprtng' NPw New Pattern C11talo11 hRs s I! 1' 11 r a t ts , j u mp:uuls. !lhmmlnJZ shl!>"!l. free pat ttrn eoupon. !ill cents • FLOWERS.::..!'.::.-':. 98' USDA DIOICE voNs FROZEN FOOD BUYS! ~illi110__l Sove with Vons Everyday Slim Prices :!e~~Nm~~~!!!~ .............. 23c Chicken or l..t Mta! Pitt 2.i.or. PIO. ...................... 69c 0 1. Sou!h obblef1 e\.ACll!Uf Ol l't.\Cll, 2-lU. ............. . C&.W Chin•~ Pta Poch 7-ot. •ro ............................. 45c C&W Chlne1e P,a PodJ 'WIVIUnNn. 7-0L PKO ..... , ... ;,: 4Jc C&W Petirt PeaJ lO.OL no .................................... :i.sc Minute Mcid Grcipe Juice '"°L CAM ......... : ................ ::Zlc Mi nu!• Maid Lt!monode uG. 01 PIM~. "ou .............. , ::Z/2tc Mfoutt Moid Orci11ge Juic• u.ou. 1i.-«1zs. ................ 27c Monon 3.Coune Dinner ,, ,,a ..................... , 65c ~~!·o~~~~~ur.~u?i~~~~!f ~KL! .. ~.1.~~ ........ , .... 59; Carnation fl1h Stlc\ii 20.~. ,,o 11.n-u.Otl................. c Mr1. frlclay llreoded Shrimp 1V.-LI. PKG.·.,, ............. ,, .$2.!I' Mn. Friday Peeled Shr1,,,p 7-0L r•G .... ,, ................ $1.0S Garton's Scallop CrbJ'I 7.o?. HO,. ........................ 11,09 Gorton'i f11h&.Chlp1 IMIL p~ n.-J.U. ~ •• , ........ $1.29 -"'-f11he1mon f11h Sflc~r ti.on. llM-1'-0II. .......an. ..... , !le l ~---·-.. Hea lth & Beouly Aids Q·TIPS COTTOM SWABS •« ............. 111 GILLETTE ILADES ~lt~'t=~~ ..... 1•'• 'I.II UGO LIQUID DIET "'".,..,..,,..."" 221 - AllT'D. !MIL GIP ..... ". • ... ll1cult1 =::..~ :::::.. 9' Mouarella ,~~"':.49' Ricotta Cheese ~ ':::'." 65' Sliced Cooked Ham .:-.. 67' llO't $UCID M!ATt 1m 1111aRll rullKn ..... -. ... 35, -.. .......... ... ___ ,__,_,.., I JltJ: ' lll:l IU:NDED 86 PR. SAVE 40' ROYAL VELVET RUM =-.:~ $3'' ::-savtSOc FIFTH IOYAL VELVET GIN :i: ""· $349 =Savt40c Ironing ; (2) A-1 a ch In e Wa sha b le : (31 Hand Wa1hable. and (4) Ory Clean l@DOUBLE LUE CHIP STAMPS l;!!~..!21111•1111 klNGSIZE 6 PK 12..oz.11ns. • I •CE CREAM 59c I w,,,,.,... ,.,.,_Helf Gtl. Mlllirolly Jalriillf '"" flM!lt li .. ..iy-1 jlln~ -I wiih th.~ t. rwhl °'°""• T"""""-!lo .. 11 11.,. perctl#ll tlliM, ollwi•1 Y"'I h Molilt <1wliHn of ho...tor _,. pl111 tti. ... 1~.., ,._ IUU!lq' • Mffllol·llin pot<ol•·n, rt•, P .. od..,ty, lH'-'ti AoM 01 S1/1 TJ/1 WHk/ ........ _;;;..;..,.,:::'':_ ______ _ DESSERT 39c ~::::.~::.'.~.~:·:~,".'.~: .............. ..... DISH ·-1D1111 ... ,,..i w .. 1,,, .. ,.,w..ir ... .,1M - •1QM •llitl!Ttc MW..i., ...... w.H.,.,,llollW ... Wllr Earll••__,____.,_ IA. •CuP ........ , •• ,.M w~ ...... •• -.•.•• , .. ..,. .. 1 ffr--1 •IN.lle9 ••••• , • .,.,,., ... °" .... I .. \f ..... ,.,I,., W..\ -K•INO'I "'en'",..,,.. ___ ,"! •:•LISTEN TO THE AN6ELS PRE-6AME AND POST.6AME SHOWS BROU6HT TO YOU BY VONS ON KMPC / 710 I W1 Art P11111/ 11 Au1,1 U.l.D.A. FOOD STAMP CDl/PCIHS INSTANT S~WINr; BOOK 10111 .!'e111 tlld<1y. W('.llr tnml'lrrn11 Sl I Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beac· 17950 Magnolia, fountain Valle TN$TANT FASHION BOOK -1 J4081 Hundred.~ of fashion fa('ts. $\ ) I, • 38 DAJLY PILOT Wedflttday, April 21, 1971 Wed111sd.,y, AJ>rll 21, 1971 PILOT-ADVERTlSER 6 1 (FORMERLY FOOD GIANT) FOOD • DISCOUNT SUPER DISCOUNT MARKETS FOR BIGGER SAVINGS COME SEE US ••• 2300 HARBOR BLY[~. 7 DAY SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. THRU WED., APRIL 22 THRU 28, 1971 COSTA MESA CLAIROL .=-:?.! CREME FORMULA HAIR COLOR BATH -sOl.D tOI. ":'";.""1ous~, 9 7c · . , .. - LADY LORA HAIR ROLLERS •MEDIUM• LARGE • JUMBO VINYL SWINGER PURSES MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS •IN DIVIDUAL s119 . OOUSlE FLEECEOs177·. COMPARTMENT S • RIB COllAR & •SPRING FASHION CU FFS COLORS • ASST. COLORS ~----=----~~~~-+.:- PLAYTEX sac LT N \;'~ $115 ~!.!!~.!,,~~~_!ES ~~,,~~:~.~C~ ""' '1 .1s 32 GALLON HEAVY DUTY $ TRASH JUMBO PLASTIC ICE CUBE TRAYS ASSOllTED COLORS CAN TWIN CARRY HANDLES PERFUMED · DECORATED ROOM 1 oc COFFEE DEODORANT ~1~~•~• cot0RS liiALFl l§M.J A BLEND CLUB SILICTID KENTUCKY BOURBON IMPORTID FROM SPAIN SANGRIA WINE FIFTEt IMPORTID PROM NORWAY 6 s11 FRYDENLUND BEER PAK FRESH BEEF LIVER BY THE PIECE FARMER JOHN CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS FRESH PORK FAMllYPAK •ac 1 r 1i.. · SPECIAL BUYS LUER EYERGOOD BACON lEGS & THIGHS CAUf. GROWN FRYER PARTS FOOO KJNG SELECT llEEF. lEAM ROUND STEAK c '"u"llD 0 ao '"ucll 1-lb. ''"'· PKG . 591b. 891b. CHlJCK ar lllUSK!T, fOOO KING SELECT IE Ef 891b. [ l NELESS ROASTS FOOO KiNG SELECT.IEEf-BONflESS 981b. Shoulder Clod ROAST EVERY DAY LOW PRICE TURKEY DRUMSTICKS MEATY29' lb. MEDIUM 'AA' EGGS 37~01. SPECIAL BUYS -~ \ . ,' ) . I, A""p"p"'LONE-SGA°'u""c'EELICIOUS !!,.o.z: 1 ac MAGIC CHEf ,, oz 43c TO.Y.ATO 23 ' l " -SALAD DRESSING ,~. LIBBY'S CATCHUP ;~~~< c I: P1RUNE JUICE 'i~'·39c siio'lil'.tiitG ~;~ 65c llPE''PiliEno'L°1v"Es 33c ii' VEGETABLE0co'cKTAIL33c CORNED BEEF •;,o~ 59c wllliE 0VtNEGAR o:, 59c :; GREEN BEANS "~•~"19c BABY .. FOOD ··~;~' 9c clili'.i°~iill'BEANS ·;~~· 29c :: MAGIC CHEF SYRUP ,~;~L SUNSHINE c HIHO CRACKERS 16·0Z. PKG. ,_,,._.__!SUPER DISCOUNl» lfu1aaL .... SUPER i SUNDAES All FLAVO RS 1oc 12-0Z. 1·, PLASTIC CUP @BANQUET CREAM PIES FL::!Rs19c Ir •14·0Z. SIZI 2300 HARBOR BLVD., CO STA MESA • STORI MONDAY• FRIDI HOURS • 10 a.m. to 9 p , I ( J ' ·- . . . -. . . . . . • • • 1 PILOT·AOVERTi?£R '· , LOOK FOR OUR "SPECIAL BUYS" -THIS EXTRA BONUS MARKER MEANS WE SAYED MONEY ON THE PURCHASE AND YOU GET THE EXTRA BONUS SAYINGS! NO STAMPS • NO GIMMICKS • JUST BIGGER SAVINGS s~~:E MONDAY· I 0 9 SATURDAY·I 0 7. HOURS FRIDAY a.m.• p.m. SUNDAY a.m. p.m.' U.S.D.A. CHOICE LAMB lb. TAil! &RAND SLICED BACON lEGS or llEASTS-C.4.llf. GltOWM FRYER QUARTERS ,AllME•JOHN or lUEll: LINK SAUSAGE c EVERY DAY LOW PRICE SPECIAi. BUYS EVERYDAY LOW PRICE c i;lu1°i'llitli<s ·~~~ 26c i'.i&il'T-clluiiK TUNA 33 c s'PiiiiEn1 ·~~~· 1 ac c i!o'Y.AL GELATIN :~~-· ac Ll0VERWURSTNSPREAD 2ac (:'li:awHOMINY "~•~" 19c c 1£.:.ULAl!orl(INC $320 DOGfOOD 49c CASf·SWAY~E NOJOJ 14c 1:1GARETTES """ crN. GAINES BURGERS '~;~ SLICED POTATOES "N c I UP£R lOOMM $330 MEATorCHtCKEM STEW,tlVf~ IACOMWfVEG. 2 7c DEllCIOUS M0.303 19c ·:IGARETIES ... ,., CTN. RECIPE DOG FOOD ~:~ FRESH KIST PEAS CAN UN l; FROZEN FOODS! "'"•• MORTON '"" MACARONI & CHEESE II. 20.oz.3 PKG. • . . W~n,sday, Aprll 21 , 1971 ~All Y PILOT 39 NOW .FOOD KING SAVES . YOU MORE MONEY! OUR EVERYDAY LOW, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES COVER EVERY ITEM ON EVERY SHELF IN EVERY AISLE ••• CELLO BAG L B s EA. lYEIYD1Y IPIQAL .LOW <,_ru:LAimiCAi~~·:IJ•-:-::====:-:-. PRICI !CENTRAL AMIRICAN 'HONEYDEW BANANAS MELONS . GOLDEN 1 OC SWllT 39.C RIPE lb. M~~~:w ea. IVIRYDAT LOW PRICIS FRISH BROWN STEAK 39c MUSHROOMS v ...... CALIFORNIA NAVEL 8 -lb. 89.C ORANGES ~!;. · ~ •. itoT'Aioi·s•UM RUSSET BAKING 10~ iiiii ONiONS •UNCH 9: .. NORTHERN ORCHARDS .. ;~'ANJOU PEARS SWEET JUICY I SUPER DISCOUNT DELICATESSEN I MAGIC CHEF WISCONSIN OL' VIRGINIA MONTEREY TENDER & JUICY JACK CHEESE FRANKS c c lb. I 12·0%. PKG. FOOD KING '- 40 Olll Y "LOT USDA G11de 'l' Whole Body 2 ID 3-lb, ll(. WI. BONELESS ROAST USDA Choice aoof 89C Rolled I. Tlod Chuck lb. GOLDEN CORN Blanst1lk Wl\ole ll·•L C fl J~kand~o 20 Kimi! or Cre1med 111 BLACK PEPPER fl l~der Hom A·"·29c Ou•lity Pure Ground Pipper ... . F And P VEGETABLE COCKTAIL BLENDED VEGETABLE &-Can Pack c • WHITE MAGIC BLEACH GALLON JUG c Wednt sd1y, Apl'll ll, 1971 U.S. Golf. l11p1cl1d USDA Choice c Beaf-.fmh r. Leu Beef-Full In 3-lb. Chub Pack Center Cuts . .... l·I•, Pock lb. USDA ,, $177 lb. CHOICE R d Steaks Ruma Roast r:"· 98c Bone!~~ tenter Cut Bt1f lb. s1 0 9 USOA C!oiu \,.J---Ovtn·Reedy fb, Swiss Steaks 99c Beef Liver~11!:~""1' 69c Thick Arm Shoulder CutHJSOA C!oict II!-. Amrful ~·Tender Bloiled or Fried. lb. Sirloin Tins :::r0 " 1b. SJ29 Sirloin Tip Roast SJ29 Tender And FllYorfuJ-U~A Cho lee ~ef USDA Choice Beef~en-Rudy fL ~:~!~e.~1!~~~Tri~!· $J 49 ~!~~c.o~~!~1~o rli~ 55c Pork Sausage a1:.;;i~:;;.5ll 1.~~· 79c Farmer John Bacon l llHI 55c l·I~. Ptr. SAFEWAY PRE-GROUND COFFEE . • 1-Pound Bag c ROYALi BATHROOM TISSUE ASSORTED COLORS -lb. Plto c ~·<~ ,-~~~~~~-... PHOSPHATE-FREE PAR 49. c oz: • Box GRANULATED SUGAR EMPRESS BRAND c ·lb. bag HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS HAIR SPRAY , ... 1, '"' ... a 49c Re111tar or Hard· Jill To-Hold rormul1 11 C •11, en !.~!~,~,AS!~.. 73c tivltit1 ror Cl11n1t TiH 1nd lr!chttr Tttlfl Aqua Net H1ir Spr1y •:;'.'· 591 Pllfinum Plus ,,~,,~~:,. .,,•, .. 831 Hour A"er Hour . ,,,., '"'· "' '"851 Antiper1 lfffllt•ll> 111 . .. 1!1: I~ ~ 1-r:;1iiT~~11:. s1 25 Bag · L11ce~M1kes 3 Times As Muehl Artichokes 4 1., $) Shady Line Butter ~'$ iit 82' Lari• eonoact ~obe• Soft M1rg1rine ,..,";~;::... \·!~ 391 ~!~~n,~ .... 99• Corn Torti111s \::~:;:.:; :.•i; 181 ~~!!~~!~·· .... 79' FRESH BAKERY BUYS! Su phlle of Ammonia 20 ~ 19' Gardin H.le Srtt tr111 ... ~"r!ill' ,6., as. ..... ,... ::I!: 11 .. " 31• ... Ny1911 h 1•I01t16 M, H1111yalaw1 o.roatt 'Te:=:~"""' .. 194 Gorden Hose s.1~~'~1·.~~·4 ... '6" · 8 FrtlOh lru• .,, ... lHt. 311 ···~ ••• ClOofftt D1b "'"· Wiler· 41• Drfed Apricots =.'t. :."~ 39' Safeway Gorden HoH ~·: •. , , .. ,,._ ltftttlft n1,.., t~" WM,, A1rll II ft a,tt111 It l1hw11 llMttll llllfl• Ill ,.,. F11u Doatdl ... T. .. •• ....... .. ... \ I I PILOT -ADVEJtTlS[Jt Wetdntsd1y, Aprll 21, 1'71 •Dubuque c Ml11lowa Oat Frtlll N11ty l11ttr11 '•rk1r1, D11b11,111 Tllek , ... 98I Sliced ,.,. lb. Fryer Legs .,,::11.k• 59c Or Thitll>-Cut fron fre1h Frye~ lb. Fryer Breasts AU White Meat-from Fresh Fryers. Fryer Wings An Econcmlul i!<Jj-f relh f rym. lb.69° lb. 39c ~~~~!..~re~F~•~ks lb.1 gc Pork Roast Corned Beef HUNT'S TOMATO KETCHUP RICH AND THICK 14-oz. c btl. . • SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS 8 Dry Cat Food 'I:~.:~'·;~: ':;:~ 22' 9 Detergent Wh/:::.~'' •:;~·· 99' 8Stewed Tomatoes ':~r,~":;:·· 221 a Fresh Snaps '"'''''"-""'"·,.,,. 491 lill on, V1n1ll1, Cho<;. 2·1'- fi Onion Soup uJ1:1:;·;0fM~~p11 '~::;· 34- 8Peanut Butter :.:. ·~;:• 791 ORANGE JUICE Natural or 11• tl Bel·oir Concenlrale I· 19( Sweetened ain C11brC1ll~ fr1111 M11tr & T11d1r E.astlra 'r1l1.f1d Yeuni PtrUrt. Ln Priced! r resh [lstern Picnic sey1e lb. 8onel15$ Brisket Met#/ or Safewav ~Ill Cut lb. '1" J ':!:' 99c Ill. \ CREAM O' THE CROP LARGE EGGS Grade "AA" 1 ·DOill 01rt11 •••11111 s111 •••• 'c~ ''• 39c E.rtr1 L1r11 •••• '~ 41• WHISKEY c411o1 •-" $399 ll1nl--I0°Pr11f Qt. (HYE IOt) BOURBON ·.~ S'Jtt lnrllea; lrNl-86 Proof Ith 'fit T 1rt1n loyal Scotch ,:, ,,, 1411 C1n1di1n Hill ~:' ,,. 1411 St. Elmo Ram ~ '1.!l"' ... 1311 Fidelis Brandy r~i::f:d ,,, 1311 STRAWBERRIES tl Bel·air~ieed IG·u 25( Just Thaw ptr ' ar.d Serve! ' 9Bel-air Waffles ;;~~~: IMeat Pies IT.V. Dinners IFruit Pies Ml"'' Htu11 Chicken, Beef, Turkey, or Tun• IWlflllR Assorted Varieties l1f01lr All f!1w1r1 Utept Blueberry u .... 55c ;kc. l ·I•. 35c " pin 8 Orange Plus ,~!:.~::. •;::· 451 8 Lim1 Beans ~'1~:di~1 ':;::· 22 1 Juice Drinks ,,~;';r,,,, ~::· 101 .I French Fries,~~:;·.,:•t;, ~·:;: 151 Baked Potatoes •;,:,!.' ';;:~ 361 ·.> 8 Chopped Onions ~~ ';;:~ 20' Broccoli ,~:~ ;~~ ','t;.'· 41 ; 8 Bel-air Pizza ~.~::~ ':;::· 751 . Fillet of Sole '''J;,;~'" "~~'.'· 51' Bel-air Pizza '"d'E~:~~" 6 ~~ ... ~ 791 8 Mixed Veget1bles ~~· 1:;~· 201 8 Cob Corn ,.';'~;·~·:;., ::•; 451 · Pie Crust Shells ~:· :;~; 391 Melt PP..... .......... ..... 25' tie Auorttcl V1rltrJt1 ,,,, ' ' • Wedntsda.y, Aprll 21, 1971 N PILOT·AOVERTISER 9 ... ••ocu ••I Pl1COUNtlO flt t •l ..... ••.<l)I DI (i.a<J. CONtllOt.LIO 11111'$ TOT AL DISCOUNT PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS On All Meat Deportment And Produce Purchases AT TOTAL DISCOUNT THRIFTIMART MEAT DIPARTMINT MIAT DIPARTMINT • Wodnolday, April 21, 1971 DAILY PILOT 4J PRODUCI :DIPARTMINT Ea.stern Grain-Fed .PORK SALE ~""""-U.S.D.i\. Graded Cholee·Beef Everyday Low Dhcount Pr.ices MELLOW, TASTE TEMPTING PORK PORK BANANAS ROASTS· CHOPS Ria END 6-'rt!a LOIN RIB END PORK ROAST CHOPS 49,1,_· 55,1,_ LARGE LOIN CHOPS PICNIC SHOULDER ROAST 75,1,_ U !i.O.A. "'CllOKl" $ T·Bone· Steaks... 1~! U l.DA "'CllOKr $ 47 Porterhouse. . . • • l 1•. J:B~~;ci~;st ... 691t, R;;;;rBone Roast .•• 791t. 1;u°';isi;ak .... 97,~. lib~R~;;;·:· ...... 951l.. U1D .... "CtlO!Cl"l-Ot<f\IU $ 09 Family Steak.... 1 ,._ 5·~9-;.7~·~0 Steaks •.. $1 ~~ u 1't .... ~I" l,()Nfll» $177 Top Sirloin Steaks... "· U $DA. "'CltOICt" -1-llollH & 1114i 98 Clod Roast. • . • . . 1l.. -~~)(;;;;iHbs .• 591l.. l~~ls'i.ortrlbs .•• 391l.. c LB. 381b . Sl'!CMJ\011 IUIT 48 < ROAST ..................... 11o. Cl"'llllOl"'••lll 85 < PORK CHOPS................ lb, U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' DISCOUN'f SE1\FOOD '1ENDER·LEE" FRE SH FROZEN 1 "n""'un 89• I QUALITY ROASTING i :=:.;;·········· 89: I Corned Beef o<u••lll<N ..... "I ROUNDS t_ASY PEEL NAVEL 15 C FROM THE TROPICS 45 C vRANGES.... lb. MANGOS.... ea. 101,.fNI) JIU . 58' ROAST •..••......... ~:'?."!. lio. "l•l!O !HIN 95 < CHOPS ....................... 11o. COUNTRY STYlE 65 ( CHICKENS I •l!SlllOIL1•1-11•1~ 79• I J IOCICCOD .......... "-I CftY·O-VAC WRAPPED U.> NO • .J.UOWN 3 ·"· 23< ONluNS... .., IPUIAC .. , MUSTARI lltllJfl, llll• HIOfn-MlllOlll. au U91sns, ML uuo-ue PORK SPARERIBS............. lb. 49.c : ~~~;:·;:;,.,, ...... '1',~ I 98C CANNY SCOT APRICOTS, I OZ ............. 4tc Your IO• 3 s 1 .. Oll, .. u,. ...... n c I l Las. TMISnl rlUNIS, Lt. She, 2-l lt. 8og ••.••• 6tc Choice ••· REO, RIPE, SWEET L~S I M•llkt lllAICS .,. 98111.I AVG. • . llt 1 100\l(•l,IOHl ~·ll'll •1 :i• I WT llt • IALMtNllU.ICI... .. ' • FRESH SHOUlDER 59 ( PORK STEAKS ...... :........... lb. STRAWBERRIES l>OL 3 .3c • • • • • • t ••••••••BASKET Sunny Valley ll.S.D.A. Grode 'AA' ir~~~;~s'~,., 41c® ~:::.:EGGS BACON....... La. . Dubuqut li:11ygl l ulf•I, Hoffmon'• lttt•r,.,.,;d, Horm•l'o li:ed lobe I or LUEl'S OUAllTY SLICED 59.C BACON... La. Rnth lllot~ Ho"'1, Swill~'""''~'" or c siicli'"'' 69.c BACON....... La. 49!. OSCAR MAYER LITILE FRYERS FRESHLY MADE -BULK ~;;. 79c PORK SAUSAGE EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICE ON FROZEN FOOD .. 1 .. un ...... o l'!CUWUllOU.ulto< 10 •I••· 101()110 c Grape Juice .... •· 23' Peas & Carrots ...... 20:. Oh Boy Plzza ...... u ••. 94 "'"'U1l•••ID(l101 79<! IC'OIOllSI CiOHON"Sl\11.79<)" $ Limeade ................. 14' Sirloin Tips .............. 45' Fish & Chips ............... P' .,C1SW(lt•l•1•" 00'"N"1'1"11 (•~N•rlON lll•OlD!,01 •e.I Cut Corn....... .. .. 20 :, Fronch Toast ······'"' 45' Fish Sticks ·····"·· 78' JflSfYMAIO fitfSH 79c ®Grade 'AA' Butter ...... KNUDSEN RE4.L 81 C Orange Juice ........................ . JAHf 4.NDEISOH WHITE'>< WHfAl 25< Sllced Bread ....................... 11b. ... COffff 85• Hills Bros.................. ··· ······' "· @MAZOLA 42< ·· Margarine ....................... , .. . lASlft'S CHOICf s109 ~Instant Coffee ... . ... HlSTEA 87< Instant Tea .............. ···'"· All flAVOIS 9 • ®Royal Gelatin ......... ,... .. . @llElrYCWCUltASSOltTfD 37c Cake Mixes ................. 11v.... .. . DUNCAN HINES .USOltllD 3 7• ~Cake Mixe5 ................ 11v... .. . HO~EL 25< Spam Spread......... . . ... ., ... SAUCt 69< Heinz '5 7' ................................ 1ov. •• CHICICfH Of THE SEA 4 9C Solld White Tuna . . ..... •v. POMPEIAN aa· ®olive Oil .. . . ..... ······""· f::;:=~~~3'~~DEl ,1Ci\TESSEN DEl•J\UT~IENT-----~---, @o"'"'"AY c rr a111C1r llQIJQJlb,,;nn · Cranapple Juice .....• .,, 44 ~ al'~~ .rLU.•.:J' ftll.~ U PINEAPPL[-GRAPEfltUIT lfGULAI 01 PINK 32 C · ALL MEAT oR ALL BEEF Dole Drink................................... ... WI EN ERS <i!!i>tii"'iio Crackers 11b. 41 • LANGENDOR~ WHITE, WHEAT"' ll:YE 3oc --===--Wafer Toast ........... -.. ..... .. .. . !Ir.!' NAllSCO STA.CIC PA.CIC 4oc OSCAR MAYER -""-'~cl!'~~ l·LB. PKG. C Ritz Crackers ..................... ,, .. OF 10 CHOCOLATE, STltAWIEllY "' VANIUA Burry Scoot•r Pies ..... ,.,. 43~. LUNCH MEATS -OSCAR MAYER----------, [~_!»O_K_E_!»_ H~~.::!·~~:!l_!'J LEO'S SLICED MEATS . 59c :ri::", ., ........... 67c BEEF, DARK TURKEY, 3 OZ ....... 36c HAM, PASTRAMI , 3 02 ........... A.Sc OSCAR M.A.YE.R ALL MEAT, .A.Ll BEFF OR THICK SLICED CHICIC\_N , WHITE TURKEY, :l OZ. 4.5c CORNED BEEF, J OZ ....••••••••. 4Sc BOLOGNA J<co-;;o~'C;;-u·;;;---1 VIENNA p"'"""'oDuos-12 oz. 12.oz. 69< I SWISS 89, I KNOCKS FRANKS SALAMI PKG. ... 1 cH11s1 1b. 1 as · as· 93• 011fe(,(Nl 82' Jo1 Liquid .............. 0-1 C01<U .... 1 .. o •~w, .. •!H 99c ... ,,.oownf-0 .. l t 53' DftUCil"'1 $2'' Ol!leG.IN• 88' Imperial Detorgent101b. Wlndox Aero1ol .... u... Dri'lo ............ 1.~.1. 1... O•ydol .. ., ............... c.1.,.1 ~ LIC!l·on U E PART ~IEN'r l .. ',.\l! .. 1 KARASOV SUNDERLAND ~tHN 1 VODKA or DRY GIN :-ii\ Half Gallons s 99 EA. SCOTS MIST $378 SCOTCH ...... FIFTH IAIRGROUNOS $299 BOURBON .. FIFTH DON PACO $398 TEQUILA ..... llFTH RON OHEON llGHT 0 , $348 RUM ..... DARK FIFTH ... @HEINZ {Wid• Mou11!, 1101., 25<) 25• · Tomato Ketchup ..... ,. ... QUAil C ~Applesauce ............. ,,,,15 /..!@:\QUAIL YfllOW-SllCED or HALVES 28• "'5'Cling Peaches ..... .,,., ... -OUAtl ~Kidney Beans ............. ,., 15c QUAIL CIEM\ Sffif or 1 .,. Whole Kernel Corn ........ ,,,, ... .~ DOW PLASTIC :'IA~ 29< ~ Hand1 Wrap. ................. ,, .. . NO BUGS M' lADY 59c Shelf Paper............... . . . ,. .. .,,. ~PELLETS or 7. ·. ·Snarol Meal ............... 2v,1b 6 .~. kfN·l-RATION-lttGULAI 01 l f'lflt Dog Food ..................... . .. uv. ... 17!. f'llN[.LfVES-All VARlfllES 14 C Cat Food ......................... ··'"'"· "· ICtNOAll FIVES KlllLED $ 25 ~Dog Food ................... lib 1 llEi\l,TH i\ND REi\UTl' i\IDS ANALGfSIC-36'1 ( -) 59 Bufferin ............... CH;:· ' f01tSIM~lENERVOUSTl:NSION -12't ( '°"') C 0 (l<•lll' omp • . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . t in AltlHltHIS ( '°"' ) Pain Formula . . . . . . . ':t:• 92• 83• aa· 1oO """ \G~lt11l $3~!0• REGULAR OR KING SIZE CIGARETTES ~ s313 CARTON IA. -TREESWEET FROZEN ""'0' ORANGE JUICE flOlE~ JU\tt 'C5' C ~l'Plt ~ 22 ~1·''C 60Z. CHICKEN OF THE SEA FROZEN GOURMET • .... """' BREADED SHRIMP fltOtlM Jt.ll °'J.t.•lflltS 'C51 ASS£1lOl£ ~ •149 ie,c 160Z. 12-4.,. •. "· l!SS\JE ROll £000111£ REG\Jl.>.R 98c fie ORCHIDS ATHROOM TISSUE BROLL 65C PACK BANQUET FROZEN ""'"' 0 "" BUFFET SUPPERS vtGETABLlS • '" autTtR TURKEY WITH GRAVY, 9gc SAUCl SAllSaURY STE.A.IC, .2 .... c CHICKEN & DUMPLINGS ·~ttri't' V.a BEEF STEW 2 LBS. IA 100:. ALL FLAVORS -WESTWOOD ICE CREAM ~ssc l/2 GAL IA. 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 B~Cl>OKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO I <' ' --· ,,.,_~~· •• -· I I •• •• t "'' :'Ir ... ,, •• \Or • • I ' • 4% DAILY PILOT Homemade Syrups Fruitful for /Morning Fare DEAR NAN: t would like • I try to do a refresher through a 1907 cookbook I was the behavior of pie meringues shells of the two <rph&ns were I set the pan aside for ts way we used to do?" The Bil boiled eep are apt la crack bl1k recipe for mekio& fruit course oo tll1ll about once a amused lo find that e1act can be affected, at times. by somewhat mottled, looking a mlnutt1. (At your altitude, Boll Is supposed to t.ougbtn bad1y, spill their content1. flavored l)'l'llPI for u1e on year. So many have problems. advise. Sometimes that the feed the hen is given. We little "thin" in plaei!s, althouglt with water havlng a lower whites, &Ive yolka t bat Even those not cracked can pancaka ud wamn. I hive E the 1,.., d need I e· pricking works. art always advised 11tat too-tills is supposed to make no boiling point, you will have to unattractive green ring. have yolks way off center. tn mind btrrie1 and cherries ven I4J .. J • aPJ • egg 1 t A I I 1· d I h ·11 I II I d·11 Wb ked th make sure the water ;. I t.. · ted bigwigs can only sugaest that somet mes no . t t mes 1n res eggs w1 not pee we . 1 erence. en coo , ose .., may ~ excommuruca Nan Wiley reareta that she ill particular. you prick the large end of the the eggs peel better from the doubt that most of us bave the were the two that wouldn 't definitely scalding.) by every foOd 1roup in the cannot provide per a on a I It teem• lo me 1ucb 1yrups uncooked eu witb a heavy smaller end. Don 't anyone privilege of snatching the egg peel well at all. '11len I run cold water over country for 1aylhg so but there a~wers to your cooking "Woul• be a treat improvement needle but they 4 0 n • t bother to tell me to add salt or from under the hen these J ltave best luck minding my the eggs, cracking them as l are times I've forgotten the questions, but questions of over artiflclaJly f I av ore d guarantee success. vinegar to the water. days. cooking technique. Cover the go·. With water still running eggs, they had bolled merrlly general interest will be 1yna~ a.od mlPt evu be I have used a strong safely I ha ven't found that su re· I hard cooked a dozen eg&s. eggs with water an inch over full tilt, I atart shelling. for goodness knows how long. answered in her column. <'heaper. MRS. W. E. B., pin. When cooked, ~ from fire ellher. It is my <lpinion JO from a full carton. two left their tops. Cover pan, cook on Mostly all ls well. A reader I couldn't see that the white Address your que!Uons to Nan COFFEYVIILE, KAN. that end. It is where the egg's that some eggs go completely from another. They were medium beat. When eggs have once asked "What's so wrong were any tou&her, there were Wiley in care of lbe DAILY 1 don)rliooW that they would air sac is located. Leafing contrary at times. I know that bought at different places. The come to a good boil, no more, with really bolling egp the no grteit rina:s. I do find over-PILOT. be cheaper but if 1 had a berry'l-:_..:_:.:_c:_:.:::::::.:.:...c:.:::::::::::._.:.::::.:::::.:..:::._:::::::=-:..=:_:::::.:...c.:::~===:::.:c:::.::c:...:.::.:...c __ ;__::_ __ _:_ __ _:_ ___ _.:_ _ _::_.::. __ ..c._:_..c...c..::c..:...c.:.c.=..::::_:_=.::_ _____ _ LETS ASK THE COOK by Nin Wiley patch nothing could keep me from taking a flyer at syrup!. The flavor is bound to be superior and it does give cne sucb a nice glow to know ''I did it myself, Mother!" Whatever fruit you use !hould be firm, fully ripe but with no blemis hes. Wash, hull and crush. For every gallon of crushed berries add l pint boiling water. strain thrcugh four thicknesses cbeestcloth. Let stand a couple of hours, strain again if you want an absolutely clear syrup. • <-r .(t) uff°DA· For each gallon of strawberry or red raspberry juice add 8 cups sugar and ~ cup lemon juice. Other berries c.lon't need the lemo.11. Simmer until sugar Is well dissolved. Pour into hot st.erilized jars and seal. If you use cherries and they are very tart you may need an extra cup or so of sugar but you can taste. adjust before pm.iring and sealing. ~; HOFFMAN SMOKED PICNICS BEEF SHORT RIBS BONELESS BEEF 1 $IEAI~; ., 1 ' • FRESH GROUND .~ CHUCK i~ DEAR NAN: I'm an enlisted ma n 1tatloned wl1 b USASTRATCOM Slpal Corp• in Japan in the capacity of Information 1peclali1l J write new1 artfclt1, take pboto1, also do aome ndio work. My wife Is Japanese. So why . am I writing this letter? I love to cook and eat as w~ll. Too, we will be returning to California and college in tbe fall. The Jap anese have many wonderful taste treats too. Here is one that Is easy to make, easy en the pocketbook. This Is a prime concern with us right now since funds are always limited to a college 1tuden1. This <Jne is called Cha·Han (fried rice). You'll need 1 large onion, 2 medinm sized carrots, 2 stalks of celery, ~ pound cooked ham, 4 cups cooked rice and 2 eggs. beaten. In a large skillet put in just enough oJJ to cover bottom of the pan lightly. Heat until pretty bot, add the vegetables and ham . All that must be dlced very fine. Toss and fry a little. Add tbe Cooked rice and beaten eggs, conUnue to toss and fry . Cover and cook on moderate heal for 1 O • 1 5 minutes. Also, don't forget to add a bit of garlic salt and pepper. Serve hot! lf soy sauce Is available you might sprinkle a bit on this dis lt if you like lhe Oavor. Cha·Han is a great meat stretcher but feel free to uu: shrimp or crabmeat in place of the ham. or dream up )'our own invention. l 've read your column several limes now and each time my mouth waters. Idaho must have some damed good cooks. How about sending some ~cipes my way? My wife would ~ally appreciate them. l'm ~pecially inter~ted in dill pickles. 1 agrtt tha t fro- ten foods are a rorry excuse for-any cook. Tom says vou'll answer this letter so I'll ~ waitln(. LOUIS R. NOBLE· MAN DEAR NAN: Do you know a IW'e way to <"OOk bard bolled e11s IO tbe whites won't tear wbea peeled? I b1ve lrird everytblog suc1ested with no lu ck. I'd like 1bem nice for deviled e1as. ~1RS. A. A. LUQIT, CAPSER, WY. Spice Adds To Toast Quick to prepare! CINNAMON JELLY TOAST 2 tablespoons butter, soft 3 tablespoons sugar ~ teaspoon cinnamon 3 tablespoons currant jelly ti slices bread Cream together the butter , sugar and clnriamon; tborouahly mix In the jelly. U1btly toast bread; spread • Jelly mixture on one side of each bre~ 1Uce; broil several lnche1 from 1ource of he•t until jelly bubbles -2 minute11 or ..,, I c lb. SLICED&. TIED ·-···---·-•.49' HICKEN PARTS FRYER LEGSwH6LI --·--·-.. -· ... 59c FRYER DRUMSTICKS __ .59' FRYER THIGHS _... . ....... -........ 59' LEG & THIGHS PINWHEll PAOC -I>, 59' BAB Y FOOD GEllU'S STRAINED flUITS Ir. VEGfT AILIS ~R~~~~~~ir.~~,~~ .... --45' ~Qf JJ~,~'G" . .. $1 29 M,A,R~!l.~ .. ~~-~ .. , ....... ______ ]C)< EXTRA LEAN WELL TRIMMED c lb. BACON WILSON CRISPRITE 1 ·lb. PKG. • NORTHERN TOILET TISSUE ILUI ll•ON STiii lllF CBUCXerFAMILYSIUllS ·-- 4 ROll PACK --"----·"··•""H' STRAWBERRY PRESERVES KERN'S 200l. ---·········-·•-H•••-· SALAD DRE) SING GREEN GIANT VALUES NIB LETS 5:0::~5 st llANS, AtENQi JOJ SrYll GRllH UIS •ANS _10· PITUNA CAT FOOD •l MlY.uif~-·-·• DR. ao11 DOG FOOD · 61' I UO.t...U\'.....mll-- • GROUND FRESH HOURLY ' EXTRA LEAN lb .· • All EVEN SLICES U.S. NO. 1 STEER LIVER ·: MAYFAIR FROZEN FOODS : tMYFRESHSALT :,:,.~.~-•o• 10' . r.ANNEO MILK ~~~.: 6111 . ~~ MAYFAIR FARM FRESH FRUITS&. VEGETABLES LARGE LOCAL _ :.; " " '· r ASPARAGUS I I • STRAWBERRIES 120Z. $ BSKTS. SPANISH ONIONS ;; .. 10' DELICIOUS· APPLES ~~;v _4-.s I GRAPEFRUIT ~~~'"---8.:79• ' I ·=· ... ' .. " . :· .. . ; . ·-.; • . . ... . :.; ... . " Tricke ry A Treat A Taffy Cow Is mllk, 1 big glau. or il, w}th ene or 1~·0 generoua tablespoons el rnolasaa 1Urred in. Workl equally well with whole or nonfat dry milk to &ive YOU I de!JC IOUI nourishing pick·up. Or tr Y B Taffy Banana Cow. Com· baw in an electrJt blender J npe banana. cut in pieces. I lablcspoon n1ola sses and a._ cup milk. Cover and blend until smooth. Makes one aerv· inf,. Oriental Flair Comes ' From 'Using Noodle' Sampan 51lad bu a dlltinc\IVI Oriental f!llr and navor. To retain crilpness in the noodles, plan lo combine the i11gredients shortly before serving. SAMPAN SALAD 1 can (17 ounce3) clinC peach al\ces 2 CUI" ooolcod diced lurkey or chlckan 1 c11n (3 ounca) chow me.in noodle• '2 cup eoenely diced celery Sampan Druatng Sampan Dr111la& ~ cup m1yonna1H 14 cup minced p&rtley 1 tableapoon lemon juice ~ teupoon 1(1'/ 11uce v. teupoon alt Draln chilled peach 11ic01. Place ln ltrae bowl wi th turkey, noodle• and celery. OenUy toaa peach mix.lure with Sampan Dresstna. To nuke drelalng, combine all Uicredlent.s. Make• 4 lo t MrVln&•· GUAIAIITTED MOl$T" TINDlll MAYFRESH SELF-BASTING TURKEYS FIOM 0111 MAYJftSH F_AMILY OF PIOUD llDS 6 c ... a .. Sift lb. l -lb. ROLL -··---·-· """·' 1.5 5 u.s.o.A. 040ICI 01 MA \'FAIR'S IWE RtllON QIUCIC_...cur.r.-.• SllOUUlllQDD c llo. . ~~-·-~~~-••_s_ .. s 129 U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR'S BlUl RIBBON f.,,q!,~~~~-~~.!J!~-~J'EAKS • s 12• !!!~!!~_!!!_STEAKS * ·-• s 1 '' ~~!~.!!°E~~S _:. s 1 '' !9,!(LE~ R~~ .~OAS TS • s 11• !!r.;.~!!'.LOIN ST~!'L -. s 1 '' !!!!.~'~!k~J!W BEEF __ .. 98' BONUS BtUI CHIP llAMPS usn11n .............. _1oosTAMPS HAPPY UGS ·--100 STAMPS FUA COLLARS =:'ti:_ 100 STAMPS WO•IFOAMCUH .~-SOSTAMPS DUPOllT 5POlfilS ,. .. _so STAMPS •AM~AN SAILS WITH PLAVOll AIOARD • ' . -- Cherry Cover Cheery A tpankina-new recipe for marucJW».cherry fans. POLYNESIAN CHERRY SAUCE I Jor Cl ""'1Cetl red maruchlM chem" \I cup (about) 11111W1<etanod plneapple juice i tablespoon& 11.1••r I tablespoon Ctlmst«Z'Ch 1 can (8~2 ounces) cNabed pineapple '4 cup finely chopped drain· ed preaervld kumquat.I 1 •; leaspoona each butter and lemon julct V• t.eNPOOn van.1111 Chopped macadam!• nutl or n1kod coconul. u d•lrad. Draln cherries, reMfVing syrup. Sliver cherrtu. Add enough pineapple Julee lD cherry syrup to mtuUrt ¥• cup. Jn • small 11UC1pan blend su1ar and conut.arch; 1Ur Jn •)'NP rnixture. Cook, sUrrtnc constantly, until 1auce boUa 'i mlnut.a or II thickened and cleor. Add cherrlet. undrained pineapple, kwnquats. butter, ltmon juice and vanilla. - Sllr over low heat until butter melt.s. Serve wann or cold over ice cream. If used, tprlnlde with ma cad a m i a nu ta . Best Buy Delight Dad and IOI! doubly with warm . mat.china: v1:st1. INSTANT CROCHET with or without sleeves. U 1 e kn!Ull\I .. ontod. blf book. Open lhtll stitch pattern is very, vtry e11y. Patt.ara 7185: mtn'• alnl H-U. chlld'a 4-14 incl. FIJl'TY CENTS for eJch pattem -add 25 ctnts for each pattern for Alr Mall and Speclal Handllnil ; otherwise thlnl-cl111 delivery will lake three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brook• lhe DAILY PIUYI", UIS N,odlecrlllt Dept., Sox 163, Old Cl>elsu 8111!00, New York 1 N\Y. 10011 . Print Name, Addm11 Zip, P1Uem Number. NEW 1111 Ntedl1e r1 rt. Cttllo• -more I n 1 t. a n t falhlont, kn I LI, c r o ch • t. • , qulllt, embroidery. &lft.. 3 fret patttiw. IO centl. NEW Co1stplete lntt&Dt GUt Boole: -over 100 glttl for a11 occuion1, qn. Crochet, tie dye, paint, d~pact, knit, ..,., quUt -mor• •t. Complete A11ba• Book - luhlOl'll, pUlow1, Jlfl3, mortl 11. "'II JUiy llu&1'" Book. IO centa. Book ol IJ Prbo Al&buo. IO centa. Muat wn Quilt l..ok t - patter111 for IJ unique quUta. 50 cents . .. . . . . l ' ... ·44 DAILY ~ICOT I I Alpha Beta's Man in Blue ,, .s~ys: ,, .... -DICK FIRMAN STORE MANAGER BALDWIN PARK fOJ.~L DISCOUNTS EVl flY DAY SOM( AL'1IA ltl• STOits OISCOUftT CHMQC Hie£ I-OUNCE BOTTti:s •WITH BODY• W1TH LIMON ru'{°CR1EME RUISE w 99 1 7..0tJNC'f: BOTn.t .£-YITALIS \!!:::;:/HAIR TONIC U3' 921 MS 71 1 aoiil FiiiuliK'M;oo 1.as 1°• llft.()'L !IOTTIJ: VASELINE Hair Tonic :We 63 1 6-0UNCE AIROSOL ~DIAL '!!:::::I Anlf·Persplrant krn 771 "' .. =.=.?I © il'l'NS£· rwi'Y' '""~ 111 I:; 8·0UNCE • HAND LOT!Otf ~JERGENS \l!:::::JI FOR MEii m891 TUNGSTEN 74 "DOUBLE EDGE• S'I ~PERSOllllA -591 \l!:::::JI BLADES J9f • ::!4-0'Z. • APPU: OR PLACH PET·RllZ FROZEM PIES ~SPANISH:• 13-dz. CAN" \l!:::::JI PLANTER'S PEANUTS t::i:::\ StJNSKIITT: • 16-0Z. J0X ~ Hl.ffO CRACKERS IHPKR BETR • 9'0Z. BAG ABBA ZABBAS a: VAI.ut SMALL • M£D( • WIG£ BLUETTES ' ons .a35; .&SC 56; '9E 41; 45; 1'filll ~ PULVl"X • CAT OR DOG • ~ 91J \!!:::;:/<SUPER fl£A COLLAR ...,. .49C 411¢ Okla s.r. Fr-b • 11~ bd. ~ 4Gc ©~r;1I1fIGlui'8f"ESl1W~ 3a1 AUNT JEMIMA @ 2-LB. PACY.AGt COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX¥0 62~ @ ~tNH~'E"'s9iiJ~.c" ~ 61~ ~ BCTrY CROCKER•22!b.:9Z PKG 46¢ :•••••••••••••••••APARTOFALPHABETAACME, INC. ~FUDGE BROWNIE Mil )it • GALAXYWORU>TRAVR SERV ICE . ,.-.~.* ! : 1060 S. BfOOk.hvrst, Fullerton, Calif. • • Phone: (71-41 870-0351 or • : (2131691-0987ext,321 ............ ....,. __ .~ : • • : J WllKS IN ISRAll ,t,)ID IUROPE • $99S : • lnc:Judls round-trip tn:iriipOlor jet to Tel A'liv, ! : vier London, Rome, and Paris • Deluxe and First Clo~~ • • Hotels with privote both• Escorts.• Tron5feTS • MO!ot • • Meats • .SPace ljmlted. ! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• - 8E5i: IO·LB. SAC • CAT UTT'ER · JDNllV JOllllY CAT r.AT ~ ~.He 551 YOUR ALPHA BETA NEIGHBORHOOD BUTCHER ARMOUR SPARERIBS BUT"c Hi i's••OrDliiDE MEATS MIA TS YOU'LL IE PROUD '110 SERVE • Oisc:ounr Priced • Quality & Sotisfoction Guotanteed FROZEN FOODS QUICK-MEAL ITEMS CAMP'S 12..0Z. PACKAGE BUTCHER'S PRIDE BUTIERED FRESH BEEF 75~ MEAT 65~. STEAKS LOAF IN OVlN-REAOY FOIL PAN CARNATION ~; BREADED STUFFED FISH 139 CABBAGE 79; PORTIONS .... ROLLS •• Al..l'HA. ll"tA IUTCHER'S PR10E BEEF A.T IEV£R.YMY 1.r:/W 01!.COUNr !"RICES Fresh Filet T-BONE STEAK CHUCK STEAK BLAOECllT BONELESS 7·BONE ROAST BONELESS CLOD STEAK SHORT RIBS EXTRA LEAN • 148 OCEAN • PERCH 98~ 63!. DUBUQUE @ SMOKED 98' POLISH &a• "· SAUSAGE Ill. 1.19111. Tt-1ESE MEAT PRICES IN EFFECT THURSDAY thl'\I 69C WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22-28 •• I TOT AL DISCOU NTS EVl RY DAY SOlotf. ~HA 1£TA STOJl£S OISCOIJNT CHAllCC rt ICE CAT rooo • 6~.0Z.. CAN c'8r&l"if'iRiATs ~.131 ~ !l&GUUR • 6YrQZ.. CAN l9i: Ile ~ Cl,ANT • Dt:SIGNER Oll !IOUTJQUE 331 ~ lleenex Towels 39t @ 200-COUNT • FACIAL WKlTI: OR ASSORTf.D lleenex Tissue lG-O'l. JAR • CRABAPPU: Smucker's Jelly lO..OZ. JAR • Bl.ACrBEAA'i :21'.l-OZ. JAR • CRAPE. @'.1°P'pl~Pi~2Fti1l~g DUBUQUE'S ROYAL BUFFET BACON mST QU.CO'V I ·LB. PACKAQ DUBUQUE'S .JU 261 m 391 55' ; ,, IOWA MAID BACON •!~~. PKG. i ' GOLDEN RIPE• aNTRAL AMERICAN BANANAS \.l.S. I RUSSET 10 LB. BAG 140. WE WllCOMI FllCID ST&IPllOPIUS "' "" ... ~ ,,,...,,.. Cl: au. CCKICIY ILllll ltll I POTATOES GARDEN FRESH• LARGE CRISP CELERY STRAWBERRIES. K 100 ASPARAGUS 391 .. PAPAYAS ·:.~1:~ ;19!.:SALAD/SLAW ~ft 10f ... .. MANGOES 39~ RADISHES ... 1 Ot. CANTALOUPE 39'~. GREEN ONIONS 1 Ot. WATERMELON 10~. TURNIPS/BEETS 10l. Freak Cut MARGUERITE g"""°'a; DAISIES FRfE UMON LEM wrnt THE PUROIASE Of A4-CUT flOWEAS ANGEL CITY • 21J.i.--Lll. 10X • SWISS CHARD • SPINACH IUHCH • COllAkD • MUS"T A.RO • l(Al( VEGETABLES 101 .. ORANGES 6 I 1 00 FLORIOA WHIT£ GRAPEFRUIT 6 i 100 SNAIL PELLETS 58f THESE PROOIJCE PRICES EffECTIVl •a. THURS.-WEO., APRIL 22-28 . TO TAl DISCOUNTS EVERY OAY !>OMl Al.l'HA 1£14 SJOlt£S OISCotJlfT CIWICE n it( ~· l·LB. CAN • Rt:GUlJJl ~ I • !:U:CTRA-Pl:Rlr:: ~ MAXWEU HOUSE JBI COFFEE .Ht 3-LB. CAN • R!:GUlAJI OR EU:CTRA. PER( wfi 2.ts f.t'.j~i{('fiou~~"jij~TANT H1 11 a 10..0UNC& JAR "119 I.SI QUALITY BAKERY AT DISCOUNT PRICE5 . -Da·-AlPtlA BflA • 1..ul. LOAF 33~ '<..:= RAISIN BREAD 4Sc VAL. HOT OOG OR HAMBURGER • a.Pt'.. 331 ALPHA BETA BUNS 4lc VAWE ~i~:T~WE DEmRt'CuW' 25; "'l!RKHOt.M'S • •-PAct DANISH WAFFLES lllPHll BtTA • f~PACI: BRAN MUFFINS 4.lc VALUE VAN CAMP"S •IS.OZ. CAN SPANllH RICE ~ COlDEN rLUfTO ~ J.LB. SHORTENING HE INZ • ll-O!J~C< CAl>I" CHICKEH NOODLE SOUP 1 OUNCC 8011'1.l: TRAPPEY MElU·PEP ;.!EJN'Z • JI.oz. JAR HAMBURGER REUSN (ifilKYBO&;.J~~IY O'S OR GENERAL MILLS CEREALS COCOA PUFFS • 12..0Z.. BOX CORN" ICTX • 9-0Z. BOX !.UCKY CHARMS • U·Ol. BOX TRIX • 6-0UNC£ BOX TRIX • 12-0tJNct llOX 10 ?Aef S.O.S. SCOURING PADS !~·OZ. CONTA.lNER • MACIJIONl .ffi 23; ,9.1(.,. ml&; .m111 a29' l!c3& QR HEALTH SALAO 371 RLPHR BETA SALAD "'v.w£ lllPHll BOA • l.l!!UI VALUJ: 1°' JAL\PENO PEPPER CHEESE ,._ ~H~\~0E~!~o1R' c'ffasE"'1it 391 ,.oz PKG • IMPORTED sucm HAM OR SANDWICH !ll:r.r •lli'r ..-::: 63' DANOLI SANDWICH M"'' .- ~IMPORTED • DANISH • 1 1h,.LB~ 111 ~ Oll CANNtll II.Ill ...,. 1? G AU.ON '.l'le VAW6. 37; RLPHR BETA IMITAl!ON MILK ©t-LJI. l'ACKAOr FLEISCHMANN'$ MARGARINE ~ ,.,.,rswm ·•o= ~ 6JI \!!:::;:/ORANGE JUICE J9f COSTA MllA -241 I. 17tl St. TOTAL OISCOUNTS EVERY OAY SOM£ Al.J'llA llJA :<.TO!lfS DISCOUNT CHAllG.£ P••cc I @1ii1'Nf'l57• Sauce 1fc 641 ©TOMATO SOUP .ac 11 c !4¥i:OZ-CANS • Bl!AN I. HAM . CHIU Btrr •CHICKEN Rlct: VI/MUSHROOM~ • SPLIT P!:A. W/HAM • CRl:AM OF MUSHROC~' • VECtiABU: & Bttr BllOTH • VJ:G. BE:U' HEINZ GREAT AMERICAN SOUP .2fc 25f Hl,1,-0Z. CAN • CH:IClr::tt./ ~ NOODU: W/DUMPL!NGS .-: U.. ~ SOLIDWHITE"'"'" ""c 451 'iiiOil TUllA .Mc ciR'llilo'il''ruli w 67f ©&uiJ'iilENlli'L.ts MC 751 ....... -m @ Y~git~rl'a~'ieans l3f 171 ~ ViENsiioUNCCCAn ~SAUSAGE .lft 241 @a'EEFSTEW0"c"' kl'.! 981 © ii'~}~i 'c10;;.rcc;1;"99t 821 © ccic1:co'L'A'"'"".aat 69' 8-PACr . 1s.oz tlO O!:F'tr.>lt ITt.. I.•• 11.2' llOll "°""''' MON • ..,,. Piil , l tAM-t f'M j AT ... , SUlll.1t AM .. 7 l"M HUNTINO.TON l lACH -t041 All._ HUNTINISTOH llACH -11,lf N. Meli St. FOUNTAIN 'IALLIT -IJtO W•r.w LAGUNA HILLS -2Ji 41 Colle lie I• L•IMI llYINI -11040 c.1-. U11¥enltr , ..... SOUTH LAGUNA -JotJJ S. c..._, Hlthw*f .:· ( l ' ., '• .. , .. ... " ., . '• "' " " •v " "' ' ' ,-· I 1 ' ' 9 PJLOT-AOVERTISER S Wttdll!sd11, Aprll 21, l'J1\. DAILY JllLOT 411 Mother's Bis-caits--Can'-t· Be Beat ' • By JOHNA BUNN mlllng' bowl. Aikf lllorteolnl. melted margarine minuks. Makes about 1 doitn blend, but not to thicken. NEW YORK_ :·1 love fOl)C(, egg and mitt; blend well. ' SI ft tog' the r dry biscuita. Serve with country For Ult potatoe layer: Pour into, buttered l~lnch . Ingredients. Mix in abortentng, ham or floor gravy . 6 cups sliced potatoes I lhink when you're re1Uy skilled (or t-lnch square pan). uslnfl fork; add mJl.t. Blend I cup finely chopped onion hungry, thero Just ISn't DOthln' BaM In pttheated 40 o ligh!ly unUI mlxllut la SC~ O~~ES 4 piec" lean bacon, cut In Jlkt food." • dtarte , F. oven about 20 moistened. For tbe Sauce: hall "Love that cornbread!" said mlnules (or unW brown). Tum out on ftoured board 2 cups Wheaties •· 6 2 tablespoons butter 1. t affable Good Old Boy Buck ~rve1 . (or wax parwr); knead t•""Uy. sa .. , pepper to aste ,.-'q'" l4 cup flour G 2 art b k. .. •• Owem. "Many times, as a BAKING' POWDER mscurrs Roll out to about~ inch thfct. 3 cups milk rease qu a me~" boy. it wa1 our main fare ALA BtJCK OWENS cut rounda with floured bllclllt J,I teaspooq 1alt Season each Jayer llghUy wifh 'cause we lived on a farm or tt Pl 11 hll salt, pepptr . ' my dad worked in a dairy so 2 CUJ>!: all purpose flour eu er. aee 00 I Y pepper 10 taste Spoon sauce over layers. we had plenty of mUlt. And 21h tspg bakln& powder greued baking pan. Brush Melt butter, slow!¥ stir in Top with bacon. Bake un. many times for supper we had I ieatpOOo aa.lt tops llgbUy with m e 1 t e d flour, cook <1ver low heat to covered in preheated 350 bot cornbread and cold milk. '~ Cilp all veg et ab 1 e marpriDe. f<nn a smooth thick paste. degree F. oven about l '>i II t t d sho."teni.ng Balte tn preheated fSO Add milk gradually, stirring hours (or until Potatoes are bc,~1::~:d ~~I~ o~f~P ~d _;_,_c_up_m_ilk ____ --,._d_egree:___F_._ov_e_n_a_bou_1_u __ un_1_ll_smoo..-'-'_lh_. _H_e_nt~on::..Iy:__to~::.."::..nd::.."'::..>:.:.·:::lie::..rv:::":::..:':::· ______ ::._MA.:_::MA:::_:_:O:;W:..::EN:.:::.S'_C.:.0.:.R:::N:::_:B:;R.::E:.:A..::D:..:.IS:..:.M_:O:;U:_T:.:H.:_:W_:A.:.:T:.:l::R_:l:.:N:.:G:..::GOO.:.:.:D_· ----- delicious inside" (Buck was ' born the aon of a sharecropper in Sherman, Texu, but now lives in Bakenlleld In a house that can only be described as ''a showplace.'') Buck favors his mother's eooklng. "Sbe'I five foot tall and weighs' 190 poundis. Ever since I can remember, lhe'a been on a continoua diet, but 1be never wants anyone to know that. She just can't stay away from food. She's cooking all the time." His mother bakes great baking powder biscuits, but ~t the beaten variety. "She just kinda doughs 'em up and squeezes out a liltle with her hands and they are really j'.ood.'' Buck's memory of the early years are vivid. "After the :depression there was so much 1adness. My parents farmed on the halves (5ilares) and ,when the reconstruction days came that Mr. Roocevelt (FDR) brought with him in order to make .something worth something, they came in and plowed up every third ·row of cotton. They paid the farmer to let the land lay out. but we weren't paid anything. . ..So there were some very :sad and hungry times. Even ·the music then-the twllJ1ilng of guitars and banjcr-had a sad lament to it, just as now the same guitars and banjos have a happy sound. There are more people eating !!!leak today ·and not so many potatoes. The one thlnc I remember about mama in those hard times though, :aomehow there was always plenty to eat." . -. 7 What is a discount •, No prices are lower prices than • pnces . ' WE GUARANTEE ... , to meet any prlte by any other aupermarkel it ii ii 1 reruJar evaeydoy price on Identical brand1 or identical prodgct qulity. EVERYDAY Wlf' PRICES! Cilllll'lll Grawn-Gl'lllle A FRYING 1 D~h~~!SH! 29· CHICKENS 2 •• 2i.1:·~ Mat Maslll' BBBf TOPSIRLOIN 1 89 STEAKS lb .• EVERl'DAY LOW PRICES Meat Master Beef· Celtt9fhuod EVERYDAY LOlf' P.RICBSI flltam·Graln Fed Pork RIB BESTCENTIRCUTS! 79 PORK CHOPS lb .• Meat MIStaP Beef ROUND STW FULL CENTER CUTS lb .• 98 EVERYDAY WW PRICES CalHornla Grown Fryers btru "ull"lp-3 tb1. & Up EVERYDAY LOlf' PRODUCE PRICES Ffn••tOuollty lb . .10 · PoiA1oii~38 ~ .. BANANAS Florido Ind ion River Ruby R•d 5.~'1 GRAPEFRUIT faney Wo1hln9tCN1 Golden Deliciou1 41 .. 81 EXlrBFllY APPLES 4tw~1 -' Collfoml• N•wfw'" Plppi" 4,.~ Wo1hlngton APPLES Red O.llcl•11• New Crop Coliforl\la Valp.cla ,..17 APPLES ORANGES Delicatessen Department Rolph• All M'.ot 58 FRANKS 1.n..o« •. , Pilltbury 09 BISCUITS ,.,L"". Hollywood 38 MARGARINE 1-1b.o1<1., RALPHS OWN BAKERY lvtttrmllk RALPHS .35 · BREAD 1-11>.e .... 1 •• 1 Ralph• frult Top-tAPpl•I 55 DANISH "•-of• I . . Potatoes still have a place .on Buck's menu, but he likes to fry his own. "I like 'em cooktd where they're not an top of one another because otherwise they kind of sweat or tteam up. I like them kind ol half raw so I just cook enough • to cover the bottom of the pan. BONELESS STEAKS lb. 1.09 lb. 1.39 lb. 2.39 KING SIZE FRYERS lb .• 33 lb •• 35 lb .• 59 01cor Moyer All Meat or All IMf 73 A1 NGEL,FOOD LOAF .45 . ' "I just put a little bit of vegetable oil In the pan and le.ave 'em and never tum 'em and just let 'em brown~ They're aboUt half cooked and get nice !nd crisp. Hill wife Phyllis is from Oklahoma. "It seems like lately-the la1t few years- lhe'll been on a food kick. She used to put up apricots and peaches when we lived on thf ranch. The best thing she rnakes is scalloped potatoes, baked in a pan with bacon across the tqp. She alway1 eook.s too mucti and puts the leftovers in the ice box. And everyone comes along -the kids even have p o t at o 1andwiches-so by the next day it's all gone. ~Buck's manager claims someone 's at the Owens' stove from 6 a.m. to midnight-"almost 18 hours a day someone's eating , getting ready to eat or just finishing," he said ). A sampling ot recipls from Buck's mother and w i f e follow : MOTHER OWENS' C 0 R N BREAD I cup whlte corn meal 11? cup flour 1 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 cup milk 1 tablespoon sugar 2 tablespoons all vegetable shortening, melted t egg Mix dry ingredients. in Aging Aids Mixture This roburt m!J.ture lm· rove9 on standing. BLUE CHEESE SPREAD 1 larae wed1e (I ounces) blue cheese 1 package (8 ounce9) cream cheeae 2 tablespoons cognac Unwrap both kinds o( cheese turn into small bowl of ectric mixer; let stand until ~ry 110ft. Be.at thoroughly un- 1moothly bttnded: add nae.and beat to blend. Pack into a 1 jar oc jar• , com tlgllUy: ro!ri1er1te ~t J week before u1lna: allolt' nivors to blei1d. akea +.Qoot I cup1. Ke.ep •;rilld tertover In' tile frlgera\'Of, Pon fry SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS 1 D•y Fre1hl CUT UP FRYERS '"''""'•rleift FILET MIGNON fryer Port1 LEGS or THIGHS lb .89 .. ,..i. •• 1 .. f BRAISING STRIPS FRYiNG CHICKENS lb .• 49 JIMMY DEAN 1 lb. Roll SAUSAGE HOFFMAN """' 0..1,.,. 53 sL1cm BACON, ,b ..... O•c•rMoy•r-12-o~ plcg. SMOKIE LINKS w'A'Ff1frtii.N11 BACON .88 O.corMcryer-l·llt. Pict. UTILE FRIERS SARA~f BACON .73 WEINERS I-lb ..... I Morie'•-Roquefart DRESSINGS Morie'1-ll•11 Ch•••• DRESSINGS' Mo ri•'•-I 000 l1lood DRESSINGS XLNT BEEF TAMALES XlNT-(1 6·01. plig. 79c) BRICK CHILI Rolph• -(Ai1t. f favon) YOGURT 1.S~Jor .84 ''"'"I•• ,74 MoCHA1 TORTE CAKE .89 ErERYDAY Wlf'.PRICES ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Ralph• Exclu1lff S.nd,... 3 Bl VODKA 00uaof I Rolph• Elcl111Jv• Lokffhlre a· BB GIN °""" , ..,.rt Gold '""" 0'900" BB .79 .79 .88 BROWN'YN SERVE LINKS .67 s'MoKED PORK CHOPS lbl,09 Former Joh!\-I-lb. Pkg. SLICED BACON .55 lb. 1.19 Rolph1 Real 1 Sl'J,.o1. jar .54 l.oi,plig •• 29 ••r.pkg .• 45 l•t.cvp .21 ORANGE JUICE ll-101. .73 BEER ,,1.12 .......... JCerih1cky Squire Strolght-16 p,..f 6 n· . .: BOURBON s ..... o. Fiith 11~ · UNI/PLUS BUYS are marna• facturer• 1pecl1I ellowancu with the aavtn11 p111ed on to you.. Thue reduced pric111 n- 111aln In etrect a1 long a11pedal allowenCfl are 1vall1ble. frozen Food lei•"'" Mook•~ DINNERS "' .45 ••••rite ••• , TACOS ,, •• , ••.• 45 .... HAWAIIAN PUNCH ,, •• " •• 37 WG•eflol4 IC.1111 CRABMEAT .... "" 1.45 c ... 1 frw11>-u,s. c ... 11. A SCALLOPS , .... ,,, 1.85 0.-yflo~• R..,nll l~tt-11~ WAFFLES ,, •• ,,, .38 So .. \eeCi-- COFFEE CAKE ,,,.,,, .n S....llol ORANGE JUICE ,,~ .... 43 Fmh fillet• DOVER SOLE Ralphs ........ Goltlell Pl'lllllum .,.,. Ice Cream!'!;::~· • 79 Pantry Fillers O•.••"-{All Fl""""' DOG FOOD lJ.e.LN• .18 /( SHORTENING ... ,.,; .82 oiiir-iievERAGe 1 ........... e5 j~'°;j~nt BREAKFAST ,,~,.., .49 Cllef .. , "' 0.. .... 3 RAVIOLI ,...._., •• 5 Al-411: ... CANDY AM-n SPLIT PEA SOUP ... ~. APPLESAUCE '"" .79 . ,...__ .25 lS..r.jot .21 .32 Ralph• -1h·plnt WHIPPING CREAM 3 7/8-oz . pkg. J/JJ,.... Golden Grain ~ Mac. & Cheese .15 Health & Beauty Aids S'HAMP06 °"'01 ' 1-beffl• .98 c'REM0E'ki1NsE'"'" .......... 89 's:'l"!A'"M' POO )H ''••·""'• .99 li!JsfANTS1 HAVE ,,« .. •• .47 '"''J3-lpl••"" LOTION o-"'aa .. ~ HAIRSPRAY O.o~I• -T .. H OINTMENT 5,.,. -Ki"t HAIR CREME ,« ..... 1.88 ;_.;. 1.07 .81 FRENCH1WiN'E .... ~:~: ·1.89' 14-01. can ~15 Household Needs Sof!kl~• .81 BATH OIL BEADS 17-. ..... Whi .. Ki•t ,,_,,.., .48 WATER SOFTENER Ste rlo 20...-.H FABRIC FINISH "' 2S-.,... .73 PRE SOAK o-•• , ' SJ«...,,.. ,75 FABRIC SOFTENER Fiiv''P'ANs·""'·"""1 .... 2.88 w .... ffftf•flonC..tM ... (Alllt.~) .• -.2.88 SAUCEPANS PloO!i< UTILITY PAILS ....,.88 No everyday supermarket prices are lower prices than ({qtAM» fto1en leoJ Pol'ttry fillen ...... 45 ·-·......... 09 COCKTAIL TACOS ,_,.., • BAIYfOOD •-loo • -· 79 G ....... ,_ s• SAUSAGl PIZZA '''""· ,.., • IAIY fOOD •-'°' • a -··~• .... c ......... ,""'°" 26 ~.~... 09 MIAT PIES -·"'-· • BAIY JUICE -"" • f'R~T P11s •• .35 CATFOoo ,_.,..._,_,, 22 ......... , ....... TINY PlAS ......... • POTATO CHIPS 1-·• 55 !U 10tJIN] TVCHICICINOINNEl 11-,.., • CA NDYIAllS f (A fURC. Of I HE WEEK Shtffitld Htirloom Quality China • • fl"•' DESSERT 4'{}¢ ,., •• ~· DISH ~ead1 Y11M IVllY fl l'UllCHAH ·--.17 1-...... 59 _.07 CLOS~~.~~.~~~.CIALS BEDPILLOWS -· .91 c....... 18 '"~"-·-18 DETERGENT ,.., ,., , P!NS "'""' _., -~ 99 Vlf>yl(O.olo't."fl"'I 21 THROW PI LLOWS -•, TOTE BAGS'"""' -•. I t Ponfty 11/len Household N••rl• ~-20 •c-, ...... -.66 t'!!. ,,__ • llQUIDClfANER 42 -li .... -.......... 14 12!;!.D WHITE TUNA '·•-• IA SOAP .,. __ ._.,.. -s.11 ELIERTA HACHlS ,,...__ .31 llACH TOWELS ...... -( ..... •! -~ 1.88 HILLS 1.ii. -.84 llACH TOWELS ~ .. --, ...... ,. ..... 77 COFFEE ,...,, .. 1.67 PANTYHOSE ............. ~ -·64 t 11 .. -2 .48 Pl.AYIALLS ... Hou1eltolcl HHcl• HN~ & leouty Ahl• -..... 69 iitrgr'o'trtl'O,'> ..... 72 CHARCOAL LIGHTER ,_ _ .... 18 -· .. 11 IARSOAP SHAMPOO -.-• 7 ,_ 11--.28 -·--s.;p CL14NSUt CREME fOIMUU. .... _ .... 07 -----IS BAil SOAP BAIYlOTION ..... ._ ..... 18 -........ ts IARSOAI' SKIN lltACEll ~ •kUOAK ........ W.ollt.W-.17 i'Hl'MN>O FOlMULA ._s.11 CONTADINA TOMATO PASTE "'.•!t 21 ..... 2. 12.-oz.Con COUPON WORTH IJt .1'5 More than just low prices . COUPON GOOD A'llL 22fflrv APRIL 2t, 1971 LIMIT.I -ONLY QNI COUPON Pll CUSTOMllt r.<1A1nH8J:tV~~·M·(U· · · · · ~~:.e:!):e:!.!l.,!:l!.! ... :%.~.J!.~;J!.~ .. ~!ft ;; I . ' . I , . ·.' .• .: '• • • I, ,_ n- Id Uo w ,, .. •• • I I • . t • ~I ' O.llLV "LOT SECRETARIES WEEK EARTH WEEK Good Earth! Secretaries! We love you bo!h. Lawrence Welk danced ~ polka with his secretary last Saturday night and all his girls sang, "I'm going to sit right down and write myself a letter." Did you bear about the tai... est Lib? Men's lib. They're invading the secretaries field. The good earth ... Trees are green and beautiful. Newspapers come f r o m trees. When y o u bring your yesterday 's 11ewspapers and stack 'em by our Bull Pen, think you·re saving a tree. Our ecology drive was so successfu1, w e ' r e co'ntinuing it indefinitely. When you've brought us enough papers to fill the recycling truck, we give them a call. They pay us money for a filled truck which we in turn donate to the j:affers to build the Olympic swimming pool at Harbor High: Tie th e newsp·ape.r.s please or put the m in shopping bags. Know you're doing your thlllg for trees, students and Clampionship swimming, STbP THINKING "MEN" WITH THE YMCA Orarige Co a s t YMCA ls a Fam i I y Affair. with men, women's and children's activity and body building things to do ••• Mom's ••• baby sitters are provided, even, for 25 cents an hour. Why not take in a class in Color and Line, yoga, flower arranging, or Macrame •.. Phone number 642-9990. NOW LET'S EAT EXCITEDLY Chef Alexander's frozen Butter Cream Ca k e s elegantly answer yes to the light tenderness 'of delicate sponge, slithered in three layers, held together and iced all over with heavenly butter cream .•. Flavors to dream about • . . island Pineapple , Alpine Chocolate, Brazilian Banana •.. And who·s Chef Alexander anyway . . • In the circles of culinary arts, he's a real top dog. A naUonally·known p a s t r y consultant, winner of 2.8 gold awards wilh over 40 years experience. His own tender moist formula goes into his cakes. They will reman moist 7 days in your refrigerator after they thaw or 3 days at room tempe rature. This makes them great for picnics, beach or boats. Fresh Asparagus. t h e king .•• A few new flips for the tips .• ~ Chop It up raw in salads ••• Long loverly raw spears make wondrous dunkers in lemon flavored cream cheese dip ••• Sprinkle a tinge of saffron on toast before you put creamed asparagus on top. The fresh season is on, enjoy it. Cookies from Japan ..• Kltanihon cheese flavored Rice Crunchies ... Tohato Raisin Pies and Sesame cookies. given a gold medal in 1970 at the International World selectior. for cereals and by-products held in Rotterdam ... lf you're a nibbler from the crisp, crunch, munch a bunch society, reach for a Tohato to dunk in your tea. Wagoer 's Sahib Tea bags would be delighted to entice with a compatible India flavor. The Swiss Claim Cheese Fondue as their national dish • • Here's instant gou.rmef for your fondue pot ..• Packages to mix with one cup of water and merely bring to a boil. Svenda Fondues , . , Clas ale Swiu or Swiss made tang;y with horse radish and peppers .•• or Onion. .R.lcbard'1, the P e o p I e StDre, Newpart Beach ... Hive you seen the artist's renderlna of the n~w Har· bof"(V]eW Shopping center In our ;lobby where there wW bt Rlcb8rd'1 No. 2? ----~ Wffi!"ffdly, .1,.11 21, 1971 I . I . "PHONE47\6360 FOR HQME oatV~:t' •' IN 0 R DELIVERY AREA ~- P.RICES EFffCTIV.E APIUL'-22,,,13,.24 . ' :'f, SERVE 1T~WllN"SAt:.&:DS, QR ·IOILED,OR SAUTEED. \.ifAlTHFU(, GREEN Cl·a·a·•-aiE · ~ · • ..... II FRESH AND c·RiSP LI. ~ . ~ ' " LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLW. ATIHE ENTRANCE-lO·llDO ISlE , ~ ' l ~ Dfl.IGHyRIL IN1 COLE,S);ol.W.., Llt~H FOR.,PiSSERT, ROYAlt • HAWAllAN "·P·INEAPPLE . I '• • 49¢ IACH .. FOR RATATOUILL~ R.vor combination of xucehini, eggplant, tomato•s. ' ' Organ Serenades for your pleasure b{ Beriitca :f•),'. FRESH ZUCCHINI 29¢ LB. FOR PIES, CAKES, FRIITERS, STUFFINGS, APPLE RINGS ETC .. ETC. Newton Pippin APPLES • lBreaK ast; at JOIN US AT RICHARD'S FOR THE 16TH ANNUAL Jiom~ •• ,:;ORANGE JUICE / YNlCA "BREA~Sr' HOT CAKES, SAUS ... GE, ALL THE TRIMMINGS ALL YOU CAN EAT-ENTERTAINMENT, TOO. SATURDAY, APRIL 24 -7:30 to 11 $) DONATION All proee•ds 90 to 1icl the programs of the Orang• Coast Y.M.C.A. ·-- .r:::·l. .'6'> •. :..y-/ • r, • .. , ....... . EGGS ,:;APPLE ,:;PANCAKES I U1e fresh appl•i •nd I mix) ''- ,:;SYRUP ,:;SAUSAGE ,:;COFFEE ·* ,:;STARRED FO!)DS ARE ALL FEATURED IN TODAY'S ADI RICHARD'S MEATS ARE EXTR~OOD, BECAUSE THEY'RE CHOSEN WITH .EXTRA CARE WHAT'S FOR DINNER-SPAGHETTI, TACOS, HAMBURGERS, MEAT LOAH MAKE THEM ALL WITH OUR I . LEAN GROUND BEEF GoodEIUngk<auMlt'sLHn•r 59¢LI. FROM SCOTLAND, GENUINE GREAT FOR HOR D'OEUVRES OR BARBECUE Finnan Haddie Ocean Garden Shrimps La. 7.491A. . BOX FULLY COOKED, BAR-M RICHARD'S 100'/.' PURE PORK HAM BONE.JN, SHORT SHANK SAUSAGE MILDL y SEASONED 69¢ GJl01\; FREEZER, §AL~ OUR BEEF IS FROM THE FINEST, FORMULA; FED, FEEDER LC!>T CATTLE Y2 Choice STEER 300 LB. AVG. 79¢L•· SPRING . lJMB WHOLE BODY HINDQUARTER uo.11s LB. AVG. 89¢L,. Lamb Saddles FOREQUARTER 1so LB. AVG. 69¢La. Ea.stern Pork Loins STEAK ONLY SECTION! TRIMMED FRESH BEEF LOINS 1.39LI. LEGS OF PORK PRIME RIB AND SPENCER STEAK SECTION THESE ARE llG ONES I 22 OZ. CORNISH 79¢LI. 98¢LB. 79"LB. 69¢LI. Whole BEEF RIBS GAME HENS BOX OF 12 9.49 BOX All free1er orders are c.ut, doubl• wrapped ancf qu ick frozen. Delivered Fra• in th• Harbor Ar••· WITH ALMOND AND PARSLEY DRESSING-ZACKY FARMS BAKE ·I HR. AND 40 MIN. AT 325' STUFFED ROASTING CHICKEN 59cu. STUFFED PORK CHOPS 1,19 LL WITH A SPECIAL RYE BREAD DRESSING-UNUSUAL SWEET FLAVOR, NOT SALTY! OLD FASHIONED STUFFED ROUND STEAK 1.19 "· C·HIPPED BEEF ,.. ·-,_,,.. 2.39 "· BAR-M ALL MEAT WIENERS 1 LB. PKG. KRAFT NATURAL Mozzarella Chunks 12 oz. NEAR EAST Rice or Wheat Pilaf 6 oz. REESE Fantastic Foursome 2 oz . LEMON PEPPER MARINADE SECRET SEASONING' CHEESONING STEAK SALT U.S.D.A. ,RIME BEEF. TOO. 3 FOR •1 'LEMON TROLLEY BUNS ONION BUNS ...... ,... - I 00°/o Who1e Wheat BREAD APPLE SPICE CUP CAKES HAHN'S IVY REG. 1.69 6 for 41¢ 6 for 31¢ 39¢ 6 for 59¢ THIS IS A GREAT PLANT FOR PATIOS, TERRACES AND ENTRIES. LUSH, GREEN IVY IN 4 INCH POTS. THE BEST THERE IS ••• MINUTE MAID 6 ORANGE JUICE oz. 4 FOR . 99¢ MINUTE MAID ORANGE JUICE 1J eL 49¢ MINUTE MAID ORANGE JUICE " ... 59¢ SHANGHAI WON TON SOUP 14 ... 49¢ SHANGHAI CHICKEN ALMOND 14 eL 79¢ CHECKERBOARD FARMS CHIC~EN FLORENTINE IS"' 1149 CHECKERBOARD FARMS CHICKEN· NEPTUNE 14 ... 1,49 GREEN GIANT CASSERoWS 3,to,t,t 12 oz. DEVILED SPINACH wHh CHEDDAR CHEESE SWISS CORN w;th PEPPERS Hd SWISS CHEESE BROCCOLI encl NOODLES with Sour Cr91m Sauc.1 BRUSSELS SPROUTS AU GRA TIN HUNGARIAN CAULIFLOWER w;th SOUR CREAM SAUCE ...... GLORIEnA WHOLE PEELED i · APRICOrs·JOOZ. ·39¢ ' . GLORIEnA SLICED ELBERTA PEACHES GLORIETTA TOMA TO JUICE " ... .... YUBAN COFFEE 1 LB. YUBAN COFFEE , •~ NABISCO PREMIUM SALTINE CRACKERS Sunmaicl RAISINS DUNCAN HINES Blueberry Muffin Mix AUNT JEMIMA COMPLETE 1.69 , u. 2.49 PANCAKE MIX AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP 1 LI. .... 11 eL 32 oz. 24 oz. 37¢ 4 for $1 39¢ ARDEN AA BUTTER 1 11. 83¢ ALL FLAVORS, HEINZ. 14 'h OZ. GREAT AMERICAN SOUP 4 for $1 STAR KIST CHUNK LIGHT TUNA ••n ... LIPTON .ME.AL .. PMBNERS CHICKEN SUPREME s ''' n . 59¢ CHICKEN STROGANOFF • ... 59¢ BEEF STROGANOFF •v• •L 59¢ HAM CHEDDARTON s 111 •L 59¢ AURORA 2 PK. BATHROOM TISSUE 4 FOR$) BETTER HOMES Hd GARDENS BLENDER COOKBOOK BLENDER TIPS AND GREAT RECIPES FOR EVERY COURSE! 1. 95 AT INFORMATION ' . . '£:,,..;~MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP Ol'WI! #JLY 9-7, SUN. 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9.6 LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FlOWER SHOP CLEANERS ' DAILY 9.5:30, SAT. 9-1 OPEN DAILY 9.6 DAILY l :J0.6, SAT. 1:10·5 OPEN DAILY, 9·6 ,. \~ ~ f • ~ • " • ' ·, -.. . ":. . ' ~ 14 -PiloT-ADVER usfR . • •· -. Wtdlltsdi!, April 21., 1911 • • . 'f DAILY PllDT NO ONl OFFERS MORE~ ' • TATIER·S . , No 1 h• S.Vlc.--1.tor•.,. 1tter tht Ml .. 4f. trtl_,1 • .. 1..,..,.. ht S .ttlct1 tw fotlow thrv-• • ~ ~ I • No 1 111 M\'llrtltln~ploh cow.,.... ef tho HM• . ... ....... ,.,,.,. . • =--. .J." " ~ No. 1 In 111 .. In ""' H•,.,., ArN-PrMf ,.;.1t'"r-!' Thk II ....... "Tho Action Is." •' • Freshly painted two story on cul-de-sac-Exeel- lent nel!Ulborbqod. 3 bedroom, 2 bath family room and livln1 room with brick firepla~ Land- liCaplng, 3 oar garage. ~meJhlng to see. $4..IJiOO. 6$?171 --~ : • ··~ ~ ·: i • '.~ .. ~-~- 11 .. . ·- MESA . DEL MAR . . 2 slory eleg1U1cc Fl-lA-V.A 5• bedrooms. 3 Ila.ills, ran1Uy. room,. Jar"C living room, walk to: .All . . . schools, the park, shop.ping: It's sharp -·sharp.· :?riced $38.S&l. Call 546-2313 .. • Jtandsome corner horn!"! In immaculate condition. Lari{e. living room 1nd sr.parite 'dinln·g ·room: .. NO DOWN TO vmRANS 4 nice bedrooms. 21'iath!! and•a .faml~ room. J\!st ~le~ _to golf COUCl!I:', alley entrance for boat -0r fraill'ir. Come ice-come save $36,95(\, Phone •S4~2.'SS5. . ' . ' . FALli IN LOVE. "ith this nnc family ho'!!e in Mesa Verde. -4 bil l;>i'drooms plus a den. Quality shag r~s. throug~ ouf, Attractive landscaping. !Ail<; of extras. En- joy many "nice d11.ys'' in a f,jcc house in a nice neighborhood. Priced ri~ht $39,950. 546-2313 OCEANFRONT Wh~re else can :vou find 6 Jn i t s on the beach? Two 2 bedroom, one 1 bedroom and 3 bachelor units. Gross income $9,960 - Net operati~ in&me $7 ,640. Give us a call. $85,000 646-7171 . ~RAB ME! ,. 'fl.1y owner has been transferred! Come see me to discover all my convenient feature~ iricluding an "in-la\v" suite. You ~rill like 'my i!'JJDR ~(t FR all for $21,000 ·intlud· ing nOthing down terms. Hurry! I won't last! Phone 546-2313 . $27,000 546-2313 ..... i .:.._'_. TO:-.SELL YOUR HOME? We've doubled our site end wo need ·your home to sell. So, if you've been thinking of selling -let's telk 1bc>Vt It. We gu•r· •nfff, you'll rttelve courteollS ettentton 1nd"Profe11ion1I gul~ ance. We offfr complete cover· age of t~ entire Beach Ar•• • , . Mor• offices here -expos- ure whir• it· helps yo-._. We're worthy of xoUf coflfid1nc1 - 11k any of.~i forn\tir clieflll or m1k1 us prove it to you. • • ! I A PHONE CALL · . WILL BRING US • TO YOUR DOOR Ultra modern kitchen with ee.tirlg area adjoining a wonderful large family room wil.h fireplace. Beautiful back yard \\'~th wrought il;on enclosed, C'Omplctc safety pooT. Hov.· could any home be finer? See It right "'\'By-only $47.950. 546-2313. -NEWPORT POOL HOME' . ' '- I , . '. BEAUTIFUL REPUBLIC H()ME • ' i Split level -4 bN:lrooms -3 baths -3 car Rnragc. Large family room and for.mel dif}fng room. 2200 sq. fl. hcime ix'Butlfully sltuatedi !n one or Mesa Verde's mo~ prt'stlglous neigh~ hoods. If you like Spanish design you must se(' this charming horn.!. for full partiCi1-1lal'$. and appc_iintment to · iru;pt"cl call . now? 546-2313. $46,M<l. Don't wall on this lovely pool home in' Newport 11eighl6. Every convenience for iamily livm'g. Ft>ur sunnyr MdrOo~s, -2 t·~ ba~hs with outs\de entry from pool. Large covered patio, carefree landscaping. Bet- ter hurry-Call today to see. $45:950 • 546-2313 NOT A "FIXER-UPPER" If you're looking [or an immaculate 4 bed· room, familf room and 2 bath. ready to live· in and enioy home, this is it. Adult- occupied, tastefully decorated. latgfi yar-d, C9DCrete patio, large concrete driveway. Excellent loeation .gn cul·de·sac, near schools, shopping and beaches. Assumable 5,"'%·VA Loan, $33,950 · "546-2313 ONE OF A KIND Feistidiously clean throughout. l .. arge R-2 · NewpQrt Heights corner lot with lots of toom to build. A pleasantly landscaped large covered patio plus an 8xl4 work- shop, den or 3rd bedroom. Walk to stbi>Ols- and park. 10•;. Down '46-7171 . ON THI! WATERfRONT . Just listed~ 4 Bedrooms 3 baths, den PLUS a spacious paneled bonus room. All the I. amenities oi gracious living at th~-beach. BEACH·· TRJ.PLEX Compll:'tt"ly re•ode~ ~bout.-. a·~ tiqusc in front inft dut>fu fh,<tbe.Je:tir. ttoman bath1i, shag d;rpi-tlng, \\.-ood i;iantllnC' -very plush. Nl'\\' roof' and-rmh•y ~ihtid f.xterlOr. 1'(.·o blo;•k.1 to .t,he hf'11.eh. one btoclr to atotts. A ryaJ beauty. $76,950. Phone 646-7171. ' ' ' $49 .soo ~73-1550 TIRED OF CRAMP'ED ·9UARTERS7 ' Wal~ through this tpacious home with 5 , bedrooms, 3 Paths, huge living room with fireplace, dinil:ig area, family room off patio. Garage 1has 'Wall of storage -gre-at for hobbies. Hurry and see this $40,500 646-7171 ' DUPLEX & 1.AND Two 2 f>deroom units with S'inglt!" garages. Room for four more units. Alley access. $34.508 646-7171 '" • . CATHOLIC CHURCH &;SCHOOL i Close to St. Johns. You'll find this neat as a pin 4 BDR,..2 beth home._/J.l rooms a~ lar~ includ- ing extra la.rr:e fan:ill1 \'OOftl.1 This is i.M'ldca1 lo- cation for all schools ahd 'shopping. All ltrm1' 11.vailablt. No down VA I:-f"'HA. Owner tran.~­ fer~d to Florida and bomf' Is vi.cant and ready tO'move In. $34,000. 546·~~·, HUNTINGTON, ~CH .LOVELY 0....-ner is leaving are& and-m'W1t Heil 'this PICl.'rly tlC\V -4 Bedroom J Bath beauty on cul de Pt: with c.'tra large yard with gate for boat or trailer $4~000. Phone 842-2535. SALESMEN, NEEDED . -.. ... ;,; ~ nRN MOREi Ll#;RN MOREi l;.et us show you how • · • You c&n e1rn.up to 80~0~ .· '· • Profit Sharlnc Pt.n • Personalized Training Proiram • ?i.fore Sales Help-New Traininr Pqrarn in Progreu Can laRdy McCordl1 ~6·231' for lnterylew · PRIVATE ESTAnS BEAUTY Beautiful home In the '"Private Estates" near t!)e upper bay. Featur~ nrw quality v.'1.11 to v.·aJI carpets .._nd drepc11 Lh1'0ughout t~110 separate fie. places. This prcstigf' area home has 4 berooms plull family room. 2~ bftth end a good 2000 sq. rt. $57,500. You ow n the land. PhQne 646-7171 NEWPORT HEIGHTS ARE~ r.Iom v.1~1 lik.e the_ separnle master 11ul!c ,In thl! delightfully appointl"d 3 bedroom, 2 bnth bfoauty. Room tor boot or trailer on thl~ 75 root front Jot. Just $33,500. ti'16-7171 COST A MESA TRIPLEX The ~losE;st you can come to living for rree after An Initial inve~tment or only 20~0 do\vn (approx. $83001 is this \vetl located westside triplex. Three roomy 2 Bedroom units ..vith separate garages, hardwood Ooors.aud private patio areas excellent for the owner occupant. $41,500 673-1550 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX 2 · 2 Bedroom house~ in one or our best south -of -the • high\\·ay locations. Excel- lent incon1e, and can be seen almost any- time. $45,950 CALL 673·8550 BALBOA ISLE Delightfully· different 3 bedroom, 3 bath. Con1pletely remodeled and enl arged just 16 steps from ·th.c Peach. ~JI so rts of stor- age and big 2 car garage. Plus extra park· itlg area. $82,500 673-8550 MAN'S LIBERATION Gardening slaves, relax and put a\vay your tools. Enjoy life, be free of all mainten- ance including exterior painting. This re· markabl e 4 bedroom 2 bath condominium includes sauna bath, jacuzzi, pool & tennis. All this and only 1 mile to a beautiful fine bi:ach. $;2,500 842-2535 NO DOWN PAYMENT · A1onthy payments less than rent to quali- fied veterans. F'or a deluxe pool home \vith 4 bedroOins, 2 baths. I need a little work but I can prove my worth. $27,950 142·2535 SUPER SHARP An extra nice 4 bedroom and family room Sol Vista home in "7estminster. PrOfeSsion· ally decorated and landscaped and on a quiet cul ·de-sac street. \Vhat more could you . ~rant for only $37,950. $37,950· 842-2535 •• 673·8550 CORONA DEL MAR LOVELY Bright, cheery, contemporary 2 Bedroom, great for newlyweds or retired couple • Very attractive yard-R·2 lot with room to build garage apartment. $33,900 673·8550 CONDOMINIUM "TRINA" MODEL Just listed a sought after "Trina" plan in the Bluffs. 3 Bedrooms, 2V~ baths and a park & playground at your doorstep. ONLY $44,500 CALL 673-1550 GLEN MAR BEAUTY If yoo want a big home with small yard work- Sf'I' this 3 bedroom wlth extra big Iamlly room homo,. Tqp· shape and locatlon. Let· us~lhow you this home today. $34,850. 842-2535. 1 .. • SPECTACULAR VIEW I-JOME Beautiful custom buill hom" with rantruitlc pe.n· oramic view of ocean And coastline, plt.111 moµn· ta.ins and canyon. 3 bedrooms, 3 bat)!$, dlnlni: 1hd family. rooms or party entertainment room witlt builtln bar. Custom draPes ahd carpeting, lllf'nY more ~pecial features. Pticed right a t Ju.&t $69,9$0. A must see! 546-2313. $23,500.-.:.TREE-LINED STREET Just listed. The best buy, the sl}e.rpcllt 2 bedroOro. 1•harmr on i.he eMt side. Hartlv.·ood floor.'I, .pa .. cioUA be.ck yard with fruit ttf'f'.'S and chain lfnk fence. Vf'r)' unique. No dQWn to Vets ur f't!A. Only $2J,500. Phone todl'Y· 6IJl"j-7J7J. LEASE· OPTION ' ,. :. • The 1ar2~t home for lhc money In C~la.t}lfil . ' ' 5 bedrc>Of!L'I, a big ramlly roon1 and kltchc~~ 3 large betlu;, ,complete litndSCll"P}ng with ' ' ol patio. Al!l!iume a bi& 6% VA Loan. 646- EASTSIDE DUPLEX . ' Exceptil?nally 'ahArp -on larrc 60x135 Built~ sbake root. Scparefe 8'l'al'Cl1 J 1lep td at1 1hopptni • .JO""' Down.. $34.900. &48, • . ... THB .REAL ,ESTATERS NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Bl~d. 646-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Harbor.) Blvd . 546-231J HUNTINGTON BEACH 17931 Bef.ch Blvd. 842-~535 CORONA DEL MAR 332 ,rtarguerite 673-8550 INVESTMENTS 2784 Harbor Blvd ., Suite 201: f ' Coste Mesa 546-231~ I ' I I '· I DAil. y P!tOT W'6_,a,, .... 21, ltU Wtdnadoy, Al>11 21, 1971 PILOT -ADV~RTISER J !; DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con Sell II, Find It, Tredo It Wi th e We nt Ad Cffneral ,·I==== · YA REPO $1000 DOWN autifu.1 E-aide 3 Bt borne. Burned ceUina:a UlnlOUt. 2 car Pl'lrlf'. brick fireplace, aepante dining arta ' :1~ • Latat cowttd patio. Real 'country living w/ownittd 'yard. Evecyone qualifie1- VA ell1ibility not ~.uary. '"' Tola.1 payments irw:luding taxes J: insurance only $179 per mo. Call 546-5880 (open ' 'eves.) TURTLE ROCK ~ Ownu'1 pllfll chan,g:l!d. Mual Rll one month old home, below cost. Absolutely i...~"­ tif'Ul 3 BR, atrium, dinlnc rm, vaulted celling lam. 1" •• 1, ·drps, crpts, C\ls!. ldacplng. Priced ti.!ktw replacement •1 $42,850, Call 540-llSl Open Evenings ~:I Y ~.:~1 • ---- The Newport HarbOr·Costa Mna Board of Realtors salutes THE ORANGE COUNTY FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL ANO FAIR HOUSING WEEK APRIL 19 ·APRIL 25 REALTORS EVERY\VHERE are cognizant that equal rightS in land acquisition .and use is fundamental to American freedom and the opportunity for life, liberty and the pur- sui.t of happiness. Public policy and the Civil Rights Laws demand and dictate equal opportunity in housing. This Board of Realtors, the Cali- fornia Real Estate Association, and the Na- tional Association of Real Estate Boards be- lieve housing should be offered equally to all without regard to race or color or na- tional origin. To implement this belief, this organiza- iton has adopted the Realtor's Code of Prac- tice into our By-Laws, pledging ourselves as individuals and as a group to serve .ALL on an EQUAL and NON-DISCRIMINATORY basis. General 4)12cs~1·6c ::Rcaftr~ RNEST LISTINGS IMMACULATE 4 Bdrm. 2·story Republic Home. Adult QCCU· pied all its life. Beaut. groupds, quiet tree Uned street. Lge. living rm. that can accom· modate grand piano. Asking $43,950. EXCLUSIVE Pacesetter 3 bdrm., much-in-demand location, ranch style sgle. story on a 75x100 fl · lot. Spotless cond., but needs carpets, so seller will inc!Y.de $1,000·credit on carpet of buyers choice. Exclusive listing at $38,950. GOLF COURSE EST ATE 4500 Sq. ft., incredible view, secluded pool. hillside location with conversation area that "fiangs" over the 18th green. Finest of the fine ! "mesn\icr6e~eafty,., 2850 Mesa V•rd• Dr.• Coda Mew • Phone 546-S990 General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. LINDA ISLE -$250,000 * A truly beaullful 5 BR & !amily rm home with formal DR. Abundant marble, rich wool carpeting & expensive drapes. Air-condition- ing, pier/slip & 3-car garage. "Our 26th Y ear'i WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2\11 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General General • efinJa J!J/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 58 Linda Isl• Drive BeauWully decor. 4 BR. & den, 4\i ba. home on lagoon. Waterfront liv. rm. &: fam. rm., !ormal din. rm. W /dock ......... $189,500 For complete Information on all homes & lot1, pt.aM call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642--1620 General General ===;;;;;;-:;;;.. ;-~==--General Further, our Eq,ual Rights Committee was formed several years ago for the dist1nct purpose of aiding those who feel discriminat- ed against, and to disseminate information to our members and to the general public as to their responsibilities under the· Jaw. 1-===========•I Newport Heights NO SMOG! ...; NO CROWD! cu.~~·~~,;,cw~y ~Tm Macnab-IMne ... IOHl.\I E Ol~O\ . .. .,, li E Al TOR S 6PEN 7 DAYS A WEEK For a speaker on the subject of Equal Rights in Housing, or for copies of synopses of the laws relative to discrimination by rea- son of race, color or national origin, please Come to Morro Bay to beat the So. Calif. blahs! ''Boondock Living" With c6nveniences LOOK AT THESE Castle on .mountain -view $48,950 call or write the " .~ :-MlSA VERDE I NEWPORT HARBOR-COSTA MESA ?~nr~t!!I's~~.il~ %· ;~ sq. It. ~~:: , DARliAIN BOARD OF REAL TORS Crow's nest vacation, view $18.000 ,.. 401 North Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach Shack to fix up, terms $ 8,950 ,,i: j M1t A Polftt lrvsh 646-1671 Minugh Realty (IOS) 1n.7193 ·~. Wow! Just ll5led below l\!!'-""!!'9_'"",__'!"'!'! ... -"!"""'""_"" __ 1F,::':~1'"'""""'"""""""'l~~~-"""""""" .. market Some elbow a can or two ot General Gene ral Gen•ral Gen•ral nt and she'll look 11;;;;;;;;;:;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I :~~::co;;;;;:;;;;.-;--\;;;;;;:;;;;~~==;:;~;;;; ---------• new. Span~h til• GOLF ANYONE? Ma.1"estic Spanish rm. with firepl., plus fam- ily &. den with firepl 3 lrg BR. 2~ Ba, Jots or storage ~p;1cL' and closets. All elect bltln kllch. Dbl. garage, pool sittd yard with &-B-Q- * Westcliff Realty Company FAMILY ENJOYMENT CENTER Fine Dover Shores View, quiet street. Huge FR w/ wet bar. room for pme & billiard tables, 4 BR, for· ma.I LR lr. DR, breakfast nook. 3-car gar. $89,500 leasehold ·or $106,890 r e e simple. Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 67S-3210 Gen•ral NEW LISTING Spacious Wn.Uy borne in popular Un.IWl"llly Park % Block lo Community pool and play area 3 ~ms. lncludln& muter au!te with 1!tt111g 1"00tl\ on second story sunny brealdut room Larae living room $39,9!0 • 10% Down REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 COLLEGE PARK 4 BR, 2 Ba, w/electrlc bltin. kllcit. Lovely yard with COY· ered patlo & waterfall. Price reduced $1500. to a real bar- gain $30,500 Newport al Fairvi•w 646-1811 (anytimt) SPLASH! • SPLASH! In your own 40 foot heat~ pool -this 2700 aq. ft. home is ideal for home entertain- lng. Choice Baycrest loc .. on quiet street All new shag W /W cpl&., bit-in kit., 2 frplcs. First Ume of1er!d at S79,9SO. ~ General Pending Foreclosure Owner Wl&hle to maintain paymanta -MUJt sell lm· medlatdy. Excellent resi- dential area • doea need some tender lovin& care. 3 bedroom. 2 batb, larp yard and ready to aacrillce al S:olS,000 -VA terms available. Call SiS-8424. ~·@!a!tiiii * 6 UNITS* On Balboa Blvd. Good cond. Great rental area, stepa to oce&n. You own the Janet. 4 Unlta with 2 BR., 2 ba.; 2 unit& with 1-BR. Parking for 12 cars. Call rocay Jor apP't. Call: 67l-3663 &U-2253 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 1025 W BQlboo 67l·J66l Pool Hom• I 3 Bedroom, 2 Ba, hrdwd; Doors. carpets, drapes. tam. lly rm w/frplc. Pool 20x40, 9%' deep. No, E. Costa Mesa. $30,500 terms. Roy McCardl•, Realtor 1810 Newport Bh•d., C.M. 548-7729 $22,500 SWIM POOL Sharp &: clean. bfove In con- dition. Natural bride tire· I place built-ins, 32 ft. pool : & decking. 540-1720. · TARBELL 29Sl Harbor REPOSSESSIONS ' Sparltllng dean bomes, IOJlle ,.try. Ankl• d"• •h•• $26,950 ...... "'"' 13 "°'' "'"""""" PAMPERED ~LL ,.;:(~tkcET ~ with modom clU ....... '"' PERFECTION Splendor Adult OC'Cllpied. Walk to 1hop. pi~ & schools. Spolless 3 BR. 2 BA home. Extra lge llv rm & family, ctble frplce. Ktng ~ize kitctien. Plush C?T.tg & drps. PaUo. Dble gaJ"ll.ge. shake roof. $42,500. • =====I Coldwell.Banker B/B ~•COMM~ nl!Wly painted lr. carpeted. 2.1 ?, 4 4 5 bdrms. Some with pools. FHA-VA conv. ten:ns,' from $20,000 to $40,000. · large bedrooms PLUS FHA OR VA restaw-3i1t only a few fe<!t "' brary. Formal dinlna; away. Lot. T w o story, Can be found \n this gorgfflu.& J\>om. Unbelievable low Th bath Authentically styled ff'om the an:h<'d courtyard entry to adobe red tiled roof. 4 queen- !iitt'd bedrooms. 2\1 baths. \Yalk·ln closet and vaulted (_"eilings. • Musive family room with crackHng fire· pl.ace. Green turl landscap. in&, Covered pe.tio. 3-car gtlr8.i{e only 1 }ti years old. Ready for this? Only $28.lm. A rrrust to see!? Investigate. call (TI4l 96Ui585. Newport Heights Near Harbor High 22YEA:RSOF ~ Colllnt A: Watts Inc, 8843 Adllm!I Ave. 9fl2..5523 .... •price. Vets move in for e a->·· 24 FAMILY ROOJ\f FOUR BDRM. ree Mesa Venie home Including '. as little u $1,000. HUIT)' e 3 'ROOM, ~ BATH Home with stepdown Living tempt'rafure and humidity l Bed.rm. 1% bath. 5late en· try, nlee size living rm w/ ftreJl!ace. Good C1llls & drps. Service porch. Lovely landscapin.-t. Lge back yard, Cons ider VA or F'HA. REAL ESTATE SERVICE 133-0700 644-2430 IN THE HARBOR AREA I ,, ............... .,.. ...... BEST TWO " :· • it's a barga!n. Dial • t .'LACE R.m. Dining Rm. B/l El«L controllt'd &: filtel'f.'d air- 64M30l e HARD\YOOD FLOORS Kit~n. breakfast area and conditioning. t-.lany xrra1 in- HOLD ONTO YOUR HAT! No 9 .. Ufvln9 At 6 ¥4-~• • OVERSIZED LOT large Fam. Rm. New CPts. cludln11: \.\'ater softener col- & Drps • elegant thru-oUt. or TV an!enna, Ju8cious COATS Block wall fenced. Three landscapin(:: and dbl patios. &. • car garage, ExCf'llent land-Add S large bedrooms & l WALLACE scaping. One ynr n~w -baflts and you'll agree notb- REALTORS ONLY $42,950 WITH, LfNJ Ing·, been overlooked. A Lochenmyer WESTCLIFF I· BA VCRESf BUYS -~-• 4 BR, din nn t: lg fam rm, Vacant. Move-in cond. 3 BR. 2 Ba. New carp. & drapea. Olympic size pool w/recrta· tion area. <:orner Joe. Block wall fenced for privacy . PriC'f! only $48,500. 675-3000 LJ 93' wide lot -beaut. main· URGENT I tained $68,SOO. • • 4 BR, din •m & kit '" Illness forces Sale • VIEW brlrtst area, 2~ Ba. $56,000. home in Corona del Mar· P•t• Barr•tt Realty POOL. 2 bedrooms with &ep. 642-5200 rnA/VA TE'tf.MS. ~m at $18,500. ·."·· Your chance-to l8ke ad-Open Evenings vantage. Owner just up e 962-44S4 e >·· and movr.d away. Gor· l,I~~~~~~~~~ JCa,,._ co:Ts Realtor 1860 Newport Blvd., CM CALL &~:ms Eves: 646-:i649 f]jll.\\' ,\ llL\fll' lllo.\1:1'\' I ~f. arate E'Jest hoo.se. Carefree 1 ""'*"°"'M"'E"S'A.-.V'°E°'R"'O=E-*~ Jiving at its best . Below Lovely, lmmac. borne. lst tn&rket at $54,500! Call OUerlng. Beaut. groun~. " aeous SPANISH STYLE ;!' home. Newer. Bright cheeT)' Uvlng room. :17; CRACKLIN G AD 0 BE ·,t' ARCHED nREPL.ACE. Thick lwh carpets. Fam- ily room. 50 ft. of kitch- en counter. Extra large Dack yard -all fenced. Take over 61,4 annual % .,rate loan, no quallfylnl[. ·™}.1EDIA TE POSSES- ION. Dial 641.0lOl TAKE YOUR PICK ·~WALLACE REALTORS -S4'-4141-FOHISI' E OL'O~ ••• -~----~-------~~-PICK up your tree T.V. fST 1 ~·10 6?~ 10'', schedules al your friendly Slaten t.1kts. 2'lnd "-New-LAZY LIVING condominium 1913 Brookhurst Ave. port Bl. lr. 19th & Po-st;yle. Luxury appointment S>t.tXXI' BR .. lC, Ba. 2'11-02 220 E.17tli 646-0555 (Open Evenin9s) 111.500, BR .• , ea. Goodio [ B••inings coJ• ""'"" -Repossession 1?.CAl..TORS Jluntington Beach mona ·and see your home in this 2 BR. 1% Ba. <.'ltll!. ELIMINATE THE on T.V. with the Pa!Mnos, $17,m<>tullprice.$100dn.on Limies &· Frenchmen at ntA·221, or no dn. G.I . CHAUFFEUR Quintard Realty . 18TI-Har-TEACHER'S OiOICE-$21,!(() IJ0,500 4 BR .. 2 ea Pool NO DOWN TO VETS $ '°"' Down tooth'"· '"'' 3 21,450 IJ0.500 4 BR .• 2 Ba. Slttper bcdrm "'/hrdwd fin, bltns, Great 3 bedroom easlsldt' I().. :?Ox.20 nlf'!WU!I rm. blck V.'al! $32,0Cll 4 BR .• 1 Ba. BeAuty encl rear )'1tl'd. VA appra\a. 1'1om gets a brt"ak with this bor, C.l\1. full prl.ce. Vacant 3 BR, 2 lovely location for Harbor 113 Acre-Ocean view Ba. ?.lontkello townhou5e. COLLINS & WATTS 963-ll23 11----~~~~-For Lease 4 Bedrooms · 3 Bat1ts 2800 sq. II . or luxury In this 18 mo. old sandJ>Oint 2 story home. Owt'll'rs hBVt' bttn lransft'rrt.'d north. lt'a\'ing it vacan! and read.,y to be lived in. $3?5.00 mo. $46-8640 2629 Harbor, C.M. e TRIPLEX. Costa MeM, V .A. No do11.·n or Fl-IA TER.~S cd 111 ..... $24,600 cation on quir1 tree-lined cul-dc·sac', Government re- JlOSScsslnn is open to a l l bliyers. Take 11 minute and see this bc.~t buy for lhe bar· &aln huntrr. Call 54;._8424, -!mi lllgh School. ZlOO Sq. Ft. liluff-3 bdrm-Price $24.995. Super tlnancing avail -no t~our Bdrms. w i t h nigh Terms. points _ no penalties. beam ceiling and v.•hite mar-five 20's or one 100 fl boat Larwin R•alty, Inc. hie fireplace. Just rcdccor-can be docked al this 50000 546-5411 anytim• ated. open and s))6cious. sq. ft. hon1e on water, well planned central kltc!M-n $275,000 $23,950 \vith all the extr1t:t. Detach· Orlve by 31J1 Coolidge. C.M. 3 Bdrm. + D•n cd garage with outside ahov;. 11 mon. old 2 bdrm &. din. No down terma. Entry hall. er for the &Urfer in the lam· rm 11200 dwn & movo in · · · spedoua llvi~ room. Nat. ily. Call us now for an np-today * 5-BR -VACANT * * * * * * * pointment. c. Qu~tard Reai{(r &12.-2991 ura1 wood kitchen cabinets, Beaut. Harbor Vlew tlon1es HOME & INCOME l;r3!!1 .. ~l!ll!l!!'!l!!!!lt, ·-~-... -~~-... -~ .. -~-~-~-~-~~-~-.,,~-~! built-ins. extra eating area, -dL'\hwasher. !r10-1720. rt'S. w/v.·et bar, lovely Enjoy the ron1for1s of this 40 FT. POOL TARBELL 2955 Harbor carp.; .selr-cleaning overui, vrry n1er 3 bedroom 2 bath I'"-"'" $27,950 incl. quick po!Sest, Owner home and let lhe 3 rental anxiou.s. $59,500 incl. the unit& ht>!p you riay for 1M 4 Bdrm.-Family Rm. land. property. Only $.j9.,'j()(). D•n-3 Ba ths CORBIN-Arnold & Freud BeautifUI ramlly home. En-2-3-4 BR .. garage, p11.Uo, try hall, large room1 pool, bltm. CAfll., dre.pes. MARTIN 388 E. 17~;75im;la ~ie53 Evening11 Call S.lS-3265 throughout, centrlll Ooor Priced to rell I * * * * * * REPOS, 2-5 BR, All Inns plM. no down rerrns. Bkr, $11 .lnJ And up TOWNHOUSES FORTIN CO. """""' REAL TORS 644-7662 We'll help you sell! &U-5678 Scentc Properties ~726 TARBELL 2955 Harbor 962-5523 I c.&11 Pat \\'ood 545-2300 open ·111 9. 540-1720. COLLINS & WATIS 1 -~~-----~ Oen.rel G•neral General G.Mral G•n•ral G•neral 6'75-4!W. Cov. patio. 3 BR. le ta.mily rm .. 2 baths. S37,500 G.or9e Wiiiiamson REALTOR ~1564 Eves. $600 DN. $21,950 Und•r Construction 1· 4 Bdrm. + D•n To be completed thia sum· Hug• Famlly Room mer. 5 b@drm, 5 ba.. home ' Prime location. Largt rooms In the grand manner. Mag· 1 throughout. Entry hall, nat· nilicent Back Bay view! J ura.1 wood cabinet.I. Natural ROY J. WARD RL TR •. bride fireplace in the living 1033 Ma.riners, Dover Shores I rm. S4G-l720. 646-1550 Open Daily TARBELL 29Sl Harbor TRANSFERRED VACANT 3 + Fam. nn., "lixer", tn Nr. 0. C. College. 3 BR, 2 Mesa Verde. Owner will Ba., fam. rm .• bltins, cul· heLp finance. $25,9"'.:iO de-&ac lot. $29.!r:iO. Gl or Call: Pat Wood MG-2300 FHA -OK. Scenic Properties 6M'Tl6 Larwln R•alty, Inc. SPECTACULAR S46-S411 anytime BEACH HOME 121562 Brookhurst, Hunt. Bch. A-Frame, stepg :o ocean 3 cozy and CUTE BR, , ho. Only IJJ.900. CAYWOOD REALTY Cie:an 2 BR house. Beaut. 6306 W. Coast Hwy., NB completely fenced y a rd. ~ 1290 Ideal for young couple or 1 ~~~~-~-~--t '-d f '"· ,,. 900 2 BR 1 ~ BA. Condo. relu.: o ...... .....,, · Washer--dryer. Dl.shwuher. Vinco Rt•hY c,b. d ..... c""'"" patlo. -Pool, $19,500. 968-nl&, own- JJ29 Harbor, CM M&-0033 er. Buy the new 1tutr "D"AIL=Y,--,P'°n.or='°"'1"or,__odlonl..,,,""° I St.ll the old stuff C&ll 642-5678 & Save! G•n•r•I Oen.r•I ;.~ INCOME TAX SAVINGS -OWNING COST LESS THAN RENTING!! _, c For mo~ lnro on abow home nr prcffllUlonal oounMI nogardlnc the 14J1a:nt ~ull'., call the Walk« • ln otfk:t: ncl.l'tll )'OU. , Honriottoo -Of!IH "°"ntelo Volley Office 842-4455 7'8Z Minter Op .. EH• 540-5140 0 1iposti.. lluntiniton Ct:nltr ..... ,. Brookh11ri1t 11.rr1>U from lJnbrook ll!trd1v1U°f' '68-ll71 Opon Ill 9:00 GET OUT FROM UNDElt ! ! ! Th• following sample tax computation Is band on 1 two chlldran ind adjusted income of $8500. HOMIOWNIER SS.500 Adjusted Incon1t• s '"' 550 127 16 48 100 1,600 .. 74 20 32 $2.1!6!1 ~.f\35 2,400 I trmlzcd DrouctloM Contributions REAL ESTATE TAXES Gat10line Tax State Income. Tai.: Auto Registration illisc. Loan Internt MORTGAGE Illi'TEREST l"nion Ours $11)1(' Dis:ability lns:11rt1.n{'{' lncoml' Tll..x Pl'l'Jlftr~tlon Saft'l)' equlp., work clotht's Tot11l Ot'd11ction~ Nrt Ta:irablc Jneome J.A"'I;~ Personal Ext'rnptlnn~ fllu~l>llnd, \Vlft. 2 C:hlldrr.nl m1rri•d coupl• with It ENTER SS.500 s 120 NONE 127 16 48 190 NONE "' 74 "' 32 16"0 7,6"0 2.400 J.?:!~ TAx11blr ln('(lml'.' 5.150 400 Frrirn1l fn('.f)Tllt' Ttl'I 839 ! Slltthari;e ~L ~ ·UI~ Ttillll ,..i"d,.MI lnmmt' T11x SS00 ACTUAl TAX SAYINGS-$365 or $30 per. month! '"111 location won't last, convenient to schools, church, shopping and trttv.-..ys, on quiet cul-de+ sac. new ws.11 to wall shag cu. All tenns are available . ror morl' lnfo on atNmi ' home or profeulonal oounsd iuardl"I the adjacent acbtdW~. ea1J the Walke.r 6 Lf.c omet' nearest you. C-M-Office Nowpott loodt Offfu 54S-t4'1 -545-040 646-7711 2790 Harbor lt.d. ZD4J W•ldlff Dr. at lnolnt Open ev11ninp til 9 PM Open Evenings .... _ T.,RE 15 A WAL~E, & LEE OFFICE Al NEAR AS YOUR PHONE ~~ 16 PILOT-AOVUTJSER • Wtdnr!day, AJtrtl 21. Im DAILY I'll.CIT 49 ~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~w~"~-~·· A"'1 n .1m I _, .... I~! -* ... I~ I -.... 1~1 _ ..... I~ .._I _":.!::l'_·_,J~I -J~ I -·-I~ I -·-1 ;;;;;;;;;;;.;;:1;;;;;;~ Eost Bluff EHi Bluff to11 tor s.1• · 111 e u11nosa :;Ho:...,:=::.:ll!:i~':;"""'::.:::.......:*= 1 :-~-~Unfum.~::-::---30-s ""''· """'" FORECLOSURE Oppommlty 1tll o .... rol Un.lvonlty Po,,. Cotto MoH 211 ._ bono rtncb ,...,. Dlsttlbuton NMdod ....,_,.,,,.,"'°,,...,..,..,..~i,-1 ,._, ..,. lormet ..,.. N•tlonal M-tfnr Cam-• BUDGET SAVE!t-l Br, We hav. UNFURNISllED l BA YCLIFF MOTE 1pace employee now •vall· pany. NEEDS NOW. Re-epta, drpe", .tv/nt, dlild. FURNISHED rentala 1n * LOW WEEKLY RA~)lt MATCH AND BUY QUESTION ANSWER able at developt'fa COIL •pontlbt. man and wom.u ~ ltent&l.i • 64~ Univeratty Park A Turtle K1tchtn, TV'i, maid aervb. Location? $42.900 TOP SALES FOR MARCH SAVE $SOOO to aervlce high. wl.wne new Rock A ..-ould conalder it a Heated Pool. on these 1abuloiu;, oak stud· product routes. ''Hunt Snack $165-3 Br. 2 Ba. bltnl, crpta. prlvU~ to help YoU IOlve 6'IJ.Jl65 View? The Bluffs ded, n.ndl "1e spnada. Pack". A new mulU mUUon dttM. kkt& ok. )'OUr bo~ netdt .. Prited Right? Clean & Fresh Located in tho boo\ldna: dollar adwrtised productt. Blue a.aeon* ~0111 SPEClAL Low Rates 1t'dm Size? Loaded! South Cou S&n $25 wk, Kit. avail. Maid t area oear Part or lull time. Company • ROOMY-l Br, cptl, drp1, serv, TV & Ph. Sea t..rk Condition ? 3 Bdrms. 21h Baths With total sales of $298,000 J= ~a= ~~=~ tecU.red ~tiona. commer--b I t n 1, t n c 1 1 a r, Motel, 2301 Npt Blvd, CM. El<lras? Bay & Greenbell • e -· .,.., c.laJ. &nd i..ctory. kld.s/pell, $1SI. 646-7445 WHERE TO BUY? road and )Ocbd 1ate SUU-NO SEU.ING ALA Rent&la e eG-m antee lbt natu1'J beauty of CASH REQUIRED $600 to 9)..2 B BEAtrl'lFULLY FURN. No Question About That -SEE thla farmer Sp&n1ih Grant $2.99S. Write tot more Wor-$1 r 'nf. pool. pr, "SINCE lMG" 2 Br. Htd pool. Adulfl, no slll'T'Ol.lnded by beautlfU.l mation, Diltributorshlp Div. yard, E-aide. Nlot. pets. Sl55. 2271 Ml"1e or FAMILY PRIDE Beautifully kepi, lge, 3 BR., Z~ii bath Lusk home. Family rm. & living rm. have big fli>lcs. + formal dining rm. Kitch. a sheer delight -big eating att'a. ln.~idc lawldry. Carp., drapes. sprinklers .ti more ... gardens arc beauti- ful! Call now - Hope Gerrie Realty M5-1400 &1>3.320 HORSE PROPERTY- Charming Early American modern 2 BR, lam rm + grff'n house + de1. rumpus rm. CA1. Zoned R-4. S3S.<m. JEAN SMITH, RL TR iWJ0 E. 11th St .. C~f 6'16-325.l 2414 Vista Del Oro NEWPORT BEACH ~1133 Fountain Valley • Member of Huntington Beach -Fountain Valley Boan' or Realtors. We're sold out of listings or all types. Need income property, 3 & 4 bdrms, all areas. BRASHEAR REAL TY (23 years experience) 17931 BHch Blvd., Sulto D 847-3507 Eves: 961 .. 377 or 961-1171 Cl.evela.t'ld NaUonal l'ore•L 51 P.O. Box....,,.,. TotTa-, Blue Beacon* 645-0111 1It Wntern Bank Blda 6'2-!m:I. ~....., ...... Uniwnlty Park AU utllitiea available. Calif. 9'l'iCi. GIVE PHONE e OOZY CO'ITAGE 2 Br, Daya QJ..OlOl Nights AVAIL No-w-2 Br, l~ IM, PRICED FROM $9.9~ NUMBER tncd yd, cbildren olc. $135. compl turn. freshly painted. IJJW DOWN·EASY TERMS WRECKIN~ yatd, xlnt Joca. ALA Rentals e MS-3900 New drps. Pool 646-CifnO C1l'C\nruta.ncea force the Im-Hon. R.euonable WW tell $115-3 Br, 2 Ba home, hltns. 4 BR. with famD,y room DELUXE 1 BR A: Bach Apt.. mediate dl.lpolition of these all or part. Call 6?s..ms ci'Pta, dl'PI lddll, pets, Turdt Rock •••••••••• $375 J.15 wkly A up. Furn. incl few choice parce_ta whole Blue Beacon * 645-1111 l BR. 2 be.°'8 • ••••••• •. $325 util. Mo. ntes tetTM a'fl. tonnu owners LOSS b your Monty te Loan 241 Co-o ,_1 ••-r ' BR. 2 baths .......... $300 9911 E. Camino, 5f&-Ol5J GAIN n Call or wrlr., for • -· -""' 3 'BR. 2 batha · furni!hcd «>mplete detalla and color 1·s"t TD Loan . SPAC. well rum 2 Br apt. LOWEST PRICED Laguoa Boach 4 bedroom with healed and filtered pool In Fotmtam OCEANFRONT Valley. 3 bath, electric builc. Privale steps to sandy beach. .in range and oven, dish-Completely private comer washer, fo r m a 1 dining home, surrounded by high room. living room y,·ith fenct'.' & towering trees. wall I wall brick lireptace, Lushly landscaped entry upgrad{'d carpets, drapes, rour1 with ftS11 pond. Wood $32,95() listed a~ appraisal. t'xterior. 3 Bedrooms, 3 on-stte photol. Buy dlrect 3~r 2 :"· ::: 'i:: , .... an. AUgred. 1st ····h···· s..KIOll ~~7i~ ::L~ peta. 168 from the developer: '" r. lNTERESl' ExcluaM CdM. Ye a r l y • e~~~: :e':u:i ~~ RANCHO CAPISTRANO 2nd TD Loan $S001mo leue. cai1 6#-7695 I ~uw. $~tracw~: :.!: vu, $33,750. t!n-:!585 2112 DuPon t Drlve, Rm I e CHARMING 2 Br, 2 Ba, 21.3.) Elden, M&r Apt 6 • Newp<rt Beach, Cal. $21664 Term' baled on equity. tlftplace, patio It yard, REALTY snJNNING la: 1 Bf G~n ~sity Park 533.3211 '42-2171 ~11 $300/mo, yr leue. 2212 Univ. Park Center, Irvine 21 Waterfront Or. 673-3451 apt $155. CHARMING house-2 1ge br 2\.li AC. Cabin 1ltt, Apple Seiving: Harbor area )TL C&U An,ytin1e 833..olQ> 645-$30 le den, \\~t bar, 2-ear Valley; min. to 4 MW Sattler Mortgate Co. 3 Br, 2 ba, 1 blk north of I ~!"""""!!'""""""""""" "•-~S~I>--.,-,-'--'-w-.,-.--.-.1 garage. Swimming pools, recrtat'I Jakes. $ 6, 2 50 . 336 E. 17th Street Coe.st Hwy. 2 children ok. HouH• Furn. or wlkitcheM. S25 per "-'Mk ttnnis courta. many extras. submit term 1. Bltr. $250/mo. 6'TJ.-00tl Unfurn. 310 up Apts. '-fOTEL 548-9755 I' XI•• """· 132·""· .... mo , ="=' ~"='°...,· _,...,~_.....,,"°""",...,1 Cash Fas·t. '· • Bdrm, ' eath, """· Lido 1.1. 1 BR FURN APT Westminster 1 CHOICE Jot. 100 " 135 R..-2 ;I '380/mo, Call !I am to noon, ::;;~;.;;;:______ 810 ~nter St. ~ boths & family room. 2 Fireplaces. $139.500. Call -11lage Real Esta le 962.-4471 (::;:J~l10J ..AO l BR, 3 ba., cove?t'd patio, paved alley. 348 E-1st&2ndTrvstDHda 675-4656:aft6,6"-652'1 FORRENTORFORSALE:l ~--'~---'--'.:...;c'-1 MOST FOR THE 0 ~ "'7 #'I 1ge fenetd Rocbe•ttt St, CM close to FREE APPRA.ISA13 Cotta Meaa 72S Via lJdo Nord. Lido Dana Point MONEY! &-W11/ m-um yard. $33,500. 11th st aboppin.r a r •a Costa Me .. Investment ---------lsle. can Webster .f..-09Xl or "•"'•-."°'N,..,.-.,,.-,....,1,-.,s"R,_o_p_t.I FANTASTIC I REAL ESTATE 121.000 <n-9509 541-7111 onytlmo IMMACULATE -AU .. w ~-==""':::..;....,.:...::::.'---llitO/mo. yr 1,.,., h t • ONLY $30,500! 1190 Glel\l"l(")'?T St. I [i] M lot zoned for 6 unlf!,J .. !!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!~• paint., 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, Newport Beach Wt + $50 deposU. 496-44$, 49'1-9-l13 s.t9-031G RNlfltlte, I above Huntington Hll.l'bot, Money Wanted 250 bltna, dshwahr, crpf!, drps. .,..,,...:=e---.,..,,--24622 Cordova Ave. VACANT! 4 BR, 2 BA GMwat . $12,CKX> • pm down. 1a:e patio, k>vely fenced CHANNELcomer,3Br,den,l:o==-=oo-,-,7°°"-,.-,cl Panek'<! den. sprinklers, CHOICE WOOD'S 1 :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i:iiiii Coastline 5J6...3777, 5J6..1366 NEED $5000 ht TD at ! , . Nr major IMP'i, all 3 Baths, boat liip, ava.U SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok, * BAYCREST * block wail. VA/FHA terms~ COVE OWNER Meda help. ~na due ln s yean on 1.agUna 9Chools. $235/mo be. Call VIS. Yearly leUe, $400. S25 &: up wkly. De..ba Maria HAFFOAL REAL TY < BR 2, BA nJ 2 bloc'·-Acreage for sale 150 ·"-.. lot. ~ to .,11 11 Beach Ult. Pb. 968-11)137 54~1183 aft 4 pm or wknds. 673-4383 , ~'"-"'.o.:.3ill1=:...oCoo"_:,:llf'--"H"wy!..'--I 4 BR. 3 ba, Formal dining, • 11 • o Y ..., IJ"~--~~~,.~~=~::~1~~~~~~~~~ ' Baycrest family, util. rms. Swim 842-4405 to beach, Beamed ceilings, 10-20-40-60 AC. Parcels & S5000. 0.1\.l.C, financing:. 3 Br. 2 Ba, fam nn, 3 pal\otl, Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Huntintf'an BNdl pool + y;hirlpool, Ju~t inl· ___ E_v_'.:_"-".c,.c'·c."46=--I firepla(.'e, separate dining up. 3500 ft. altitude, 20 min. 96S-1097 1~ bl.tns. Quiet area. $250 mo. ·G-----1------ maculate! A best buy at Huntington Beach room, private enclosed to Tall Pines, nr Big Beat. R-2 LOT In prime area, I ~for"a.t 11§ Refa ftq'd. New paint I: -'-"°-'"------la Quinta ff•l'llVll•e · $7S.JOO, -=-------I courtyard plll3 brick barbq Xlnt motorcycle acrge or ~C..;ta~~·~··~·~·~· ~P~l'"'[_'.'°':1:;;iiijiiij~;;~~·~~ crpts. No ptf!. M&-4767, $00-nlce 1 Br. Bungalow, VIHRNll R . h 1 · 1 VILLA PACIFIC .,,,. s~ 950 Lin"" Re~1 invsbnent. From $490 -r .... ,,,.avail .••• ~69 54S-560~--='-====-1c rw1n Rea tor "'·ta·,,. • · .. ~ ..... r-uu '7IO'""V• ~ stove It refria:., near 1hop-Spaniah Country E•tate Liv- ,,..., r.ncn .&.a !~~ .!!, to 12'7il dn. Bkr. Mobllo Homo/ F I L-..1 .-VA.CANT l REPAINTED ,_ . * '".>-""""' * CONDO 3 Br, lovely cpLs, * * * 499-ll97 * ** .,........,,v HouMI um 1.--"' Pill&'· ing le Spacioua ,Apia. Ttr- c d M d h L Trailer Parka 172 1---------this sharp 3 BR home ne11.r ~B!i!luo!!!i!B!i!o!i!•!i!con!i!!!!!!*!!Ms.4~~1~1~1 1 rtoedpool·, -.. ,..BBQ orona el ar . rps t ruout. g fir 10 ceil· * $59 500 * 10 AC. ovrlook'g Dar t --""'.=~~,---I Gonorol J · A -~-1·•-F 1ng pantry, e)ec kit Beau! • -rvlllt' ve., e.., .. ...,, am-Unbelievable Livlna; • ()nJy PERFECT • • ll'ldscpd patio. Show~ like a \Voods C.Ov~ area. Lovely ~n:;::e• ~r~oarci MEXICO 1---------Illes only at $285 per month. I lrtl 1 Br unf $150-fui-ri $110 Beach home. super s.harp, model. Anytime. Best loc & Olde) Engh.!lh style home. commun i ty, Im me d Gran•da Cove Call .Agent 546-4141• ""'1trntntafor"9nt " 2 Br unf $175 tyrrl$fiO super clean; bright 2 bdnn. price, \Valk to bch 841-850'1; Xlnt grounds with lots of resale/profit potential. Bkr. The only OCEANFRONT FOR rent or lse 2 BR, 2 ba, . AU. U'Tll; IN'CLUD!:It le den, One of Cdl\1's finest Eveli: 968-1178 · 5hrubs & trees. 6#-4670 trailer specet In RENTAL FINDERS rondo w/bllnl, dshwsr, wet Special. &nus; a stlvet· Joe., I blk. to stairv.·ay lo · ~ RLACE REALTY 4M-9704 l,';::CO:::'--,,-,--,~~ ENSENADA FrH Te Unc1lord1 bar, 2-car a:ar., P\'.lols, $210. 360 plated candle anuffer :u beach. s;;.i.900. m : I 'I.·.' Q91',9 So. Coa~I Hwy, LB 10 A.e's, nr Palm Sprinfs, ;41) -$90 .. r month 645-0111 &ID-3961 Apt1. Furn. ,.. .... II you bri' .... th.ii "'d 0 L R I E • r411 ' suit'bl for trlr. pk, Will ae· ... ,.. e ancy •a $fate I ~ 'fN 1 F'AMILY HOME on 3 Jots. cept SlOOO. Jor $250CI eqty. includes all ta.cilitles. • 2 Br house, pvt yard, General "'"hen you visit our mode'•" 2828 E. C.Oast Hwy., Cdllt .....!.. '• -:;..,. • IUl.n Superb ocean view, 3 536-Ull __ _'613~-~17111~!'_!•~,_!;~nlo~. --!!~~~""':;;-=;-:;:::-;:I A\'ail ~lay 18th. $100/mo. _,---~--,.--4 b1ks S. ol San Dleeo F1'fY &14-7770 1 Bedroom 1:: den, terra~ ,.;;7.'c""='°"==-~-= Mountain, 0..ert, e BACHELOR PaHteps to _CaI_l_S0>-_'"65______ :Rent Beautif\ll Furniture on Beach, 1 blk W. on &it t~!i~E~;c~~~~!us ~I $35,900 E~~~LJZ~m~~E~~E 1£is.E :. M cl~TN~= _R_•_•_•~rt~·-::::::::::::--1-7_4 1-~~an.~ii,~t!l".'.•tab~pd~, •".Sl..:~=·~~-13 !~12 !'·~r:r ta;~· b?:~ ONE aMtONTH 1 .. " .... ,.=.,t.,n,,•,.»,.:"""',.11,..5441,..'!!!!l!!tji.·\ BR .. 3 ba .. lamily rm. Carp. 1~ Mi. 1rom Beach. " story 318 ThaJia 494-8093 968--0()(7 SACRIFICE LAGUNA-$130. Utll pd, Nice BBQ, $225/mo. 548-6405. k drapes. Nu!one kitch. 3 br, 2~~ ba, huge family rm Lido Isle GoU ~ kit, Apple Valley 1 BR. 2 blka to heh. l BR. patio, be1m1, frpl, t complete with $135-LGE, modern 1 Br '.nr Ocean vi1•w! w/frpJc, On lrg cnmt'r Jot Business Property 154 Sl:l,OOO. ~r must sell. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 aml child. Yearly. $148. your 100-/. ~an; crptll, drpl:, etc. ~ MORGAN REAL TY w11ep boat storage yd, As· Pri'me Lido Nord LEASE June tst. 2828 E. Ginny ?.tomaon, a a: en ti-----~----1 Avail May lat. 64)-8320 Purchoso "-lion Calif. 536-i26l, 847-5169 : 673-6642 67• u59 b "~ V 5 BR. 6 "·. w/<l•v•1or. 52 540-2286 e BUDGET BOOSI'ER _:::.:.::.:=:c..:::;,:::.=~-1 ""' L •--~ • ~ suma le. ;J"/4 1° A loa11. "" ... Coa.st Hwy Cd~f anistic Jlandy to beach. Utll pd. ~ Huntington Be•ch Intl. Item te1ectlon. aguna ......... ' DELUXE 2 BR & DEN° Dick Molzahn Rltr ft. lot. Pier& float. $275,000. buUding:,with adjoining Real Est•t• ALA Re tat e 64;,.3900 24 H DI 't 1714) 531-162'1 Tip of Lido Isle parking kit. owner C213l Exchange 112 n s EXECUI'IVE Llv\l'!l"-2700 1q. our e Y· Downtown Apartment. PLUS Sep l br rt'ntal, 6(1' ---=~~---&aut. 4 BR., 5 Ba. home 2 326-60!9 ----'"-----$80--UTIL PD. Bach a1 bch, ft. $390. 4 BR + fam ily nn CUSTOM 1 BR, ocean view, 1 blockolo comer lol, priv pario, good $21 ,750 frplcs. S6 ft. water irontage.1 -0:::..0=-~----HAYE yttrly. ~. HIJlT)'! + oWcelden, 2 lrlpca, 3 he. Fumlture Rental beach decorator IUnrlJ.tJd 1enns. Bill Peters Bkr, 213/ 4 BR+ 2 BA Room for large boat &lips. Commerci•I NEW Ottiee Buddln& Blue Beacon* 645-4111 Spantih·ityle Inner 517 W. 19th, C.M. 543-3481 new Carpef3, drapes, paih1: 583-<l529. CLOSE TO OCEAN p Property 151 courtyard paUo. 1 blk trom Anaheim 714-._.... Adults, lease. •""" rice $500,000. W/$100 K equit,y e VACATION yr round-cozy _,,, _., HARBOR Vil'w Lusk -4 Br, 1500 S<: fl hon1e, huge cul-de-Bill Grundy, Rltr. ACRE tor O>mm'l Stables $27K Net Incom~ 1 Br. childlpet ok, $140. park Ii IChla. Near beach. LaHabra 694-3708 I :c'=""~3839=-'-'-' -'c,•~m-·~=J.-,I 21,J Ba w/~a11 y]e\V. 974 sac lot. Crpts/drps, fonnal 833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620 l-'1.::. ... ::..,:.::bc;•="'=-""'-':;%;..::."':.:'=--"'-'1 WANT ALA Rental• • 645-8900 Avail lmmed. Call n4: HOLIDAY PLAZA BEAUT. OC'e&ll front BRf_~ Sandcastle. Owner 641-292!1 din., elec bltn.s, 11ict'ly Janel-net. 673-226% or 673-5723 Belboa Penlnsul• 67~913 or TI4:544-6306 DELUXE Spacious I BR BA, opp. Victor Huat)'1, J64 2 BR house, ocean i;ide, By scpd. lrg covet't'd patio. 3 BR., family mi, 3~ balhs Condominiums .• BAYFRONT House or Ult. 4 BR, 2 ba, actlvlt,y rm, furn apl $135. Heat~ pool. Cliff [Jr, 494-645.1 • oivner, $45,!XXJ. S21.150. SubmiL Call 847-1221 4jxR8 Lot. $93.500 for Ille 160 W.R. DuBola: 545-n66 SUP.tMER 3 br, 2 ba, lge Jdt frplc, wet bar, nice yard. Ample parking. No ctilldren Nawport Buch * 673-1967 aft ;,p1n * SEYMOUR REAL TY -4 BR. 4 ba. 90x88 Sl42,500 I -~:....:.:;.;~---.:.:.;; 1 ~~~~~~~~=1 wlencl patio. $ 2 2 SI wk. $260/mo, water Pa Id· • no pets. 1965 Pomona, -:::::::::'.;;::--"'.'"~-'t-I Costa Mesa lTI4.:. Beach Bivd., Htgn Bch S BR, 5 ba. baytront Sl49,000 Call The Ex~-rtal I Wkdy1 714/St8--0671, ex 394; 846-5912 aft 4 pm or wknda CM. BACHEWR • t ud Io Open 'til 9 P~t LIDO REALTY INC. We specia1iz.e in Riling con-F1nancilf I • Wknd1 213/645-2963 collect. * LEASE/OPTION * lalboa Island watmrnt w/fl.oat for UNUSUAL housP & lot. F..-Z ABANDON~D & near 3377 Via Lido 673-7lll dOrniniums, buyerg waitina;. . Corona del Mar 4 Bedrm house, 1%. BA, pwr boat, U00 mo on l4Jy maint. 4 Br, lrg shding foreclosure Lovely 2-story, M V d Double l!Xpoi!i\ltt at no ex-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.jjjj ----------Hunt. Bhc. $250 E?-fPLOYED BACHELOR lse. Util pald, no peJJ. glass la m rm for de11. shop 3 br. Sl!IOO total cash & take esa er e tra cosL Call today for tree CHARMING little 2 Br tuie, VINCO RE.ALTY 646-0033 $85. W/utU. No pets, ~ 673-2662 , or combo. Li\'. rm, dbl gar. over loans. Pnicpls only 4 BR, 1 lge 12x 24 game nn, appraisal. Business furn. by decorator. Incl 4 BR, 3 bl. Condo w/bltna. cooking:. 1n4J 675--0:>l2 alt 6 1 BR yearly. Util pd . 2 ha. C.Onvenient quiet loc 842-&l.34 l'!, ba, Bltn kitchen, Rugs l larwin Realty, Inc. Opportunity 200 RCA co4or TV, open beam $220/mo, a122 ·I>etirfield Dr, pm Garag:e Cloae kt mtkt ,I near all ii:chls. Ou0t of smOJ; d 133 900 ,,7 ''"' ~~ B-kh·•-t, Ho•-Bch ceil., 5hag crpts, avocado H'-Bch 213/.,..,....; I~=--------bch Adults no p • h 10 l\1ins lrom bch, 2 mins to Attention GI buyers-rps, · ·"" -=i ~....,.,.. '"" ..... '6" bltns, •ml patlo-prden. <& • • Balbo. Peninsula 67>-2930 aft U r · f:an Diego Or N°Y.'PI F'n\'y. 5250 mo1·es you in. 2 br, 2 ha Newport Beach 546-5411 anytime BUYING Oce.an aide or hwy&: walk to >H~unt~l~ng!!!lon~.!;H~o~r!boo~u~r'....J -;;;;--;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;-noon ... 2 BR " A BUSINESS? -.t'-1""' Avail i.mmed ;.. S35 WK-OCEANFRONT BEACH duplex, 1 BR, 4 · • 30 Different types Azaleas 1n tY.nh!:('. Aft. 6:30, 714/I---------, l:n BA Deluxe eve.,......... ' $500 BEAUTIFUL water!rnt ~~~r;!~~-ex~~m~l~ :a~y 1:: :-l~~'. Btwn 12 & 3, 4 BR. BA YCREST ~::~~~~n;,.:. i!( !~~ A~u rt!!..m: ~;;f~: t:;1 c;;:~:::;"=,::..~~"i.o",'-'';°'-'-·-6_73-0513_..c.·-1 i!~ ~ ba « w~~::k~ ~~~ se~~~ ~~u~ R · ~= ~e:iil ~ ~ inoy,·. Outdoor o u 1 I e t s. B\' O·•~, 4 "' J" h Ne11· listing, 0'411er going BY OWNER. 5'~4 . k r. I I ~!!:L12!:,,_644-4221~~~~---1 (';;;;;-:ri,;;A'--:..:...--"'"" . D<.Jmt., ." a. II I B ~~-~~~-'---ris . uo:l max mum ever· 3 BDRM, '"'•'•"· c•-ta. C M CLEAN 1 Bdnn lu outdoor lights. Chn~tmas Wl\V Cplg .. dra""s. f""'lc .. east, must SC n ce ~Y· Duplex11/Unlt1 Sa -.... 01t1 eta · rn. lights blt11. Citrus rrccs, bit-ins. Close 10"~~1~ & crest ~me. 4 bdrms, family sale 162 :_:hp~~U~;.tecUon. ve on $2'25. mo. No pels. ~975 _F_oun_t_•_ln_V_•_l_loy..;___ Near 1tore1 and pier. :1 i\fngnolia, Jacaranda & shopping. $29,000. rm, dining rm. z baths, 2 ---,,.....-----INVESTIGATE evening• FOR Lse. Jmrnac. 3 Bl', 1% CASA d ORO adult $13.5/mo. Ph. Norfolk pine. Spr\nklini,: 897-092() 83.lS348 frplcs, tile entry, larger dbl SAN Clemen~. unde r BEFORE YOU Newport Beach ha, new •ha& ~11 &: drp1, e WATERFRONT: $195 a system frnl & rear. New garage. tot 80' wide. Ask· COllltii.Jcllon, 2 adjoining Jrplc, bltn,. s 2 2 5 J m 0 • CASUAL Calli, Living In a Lease. 1 Br., boat 11' at~ r he a 1 er. 11" 11 2 STORY 3 br/21.J ba, fam ing $39,900, 4-plexes, els to heh I mkts. INVEST WATERFRONT HOME 968-9543 or 2131241-1581 warm Aledtte!Ta.neen atmo.s-private patio. 61';,-6467 ,. h "-1· I nn w/h'Plr, <1ll elec kil. Pv · ., 25 YEARS Experience Ac he s •-·· 1 -'.;;;;;;;n"'O:;-::;;::-'<-c:=:fH 111~ "''aSn•:r, nc11• 1 •~posa. rr , ,, 1. CALL ~ 646·24 14 t patios, ure, burg., . . · • 2 BR + BR. on low@r !eve! .• _..10 Vo·•o P re. pac ..... a eo or co-Sl'UDIO apt, yrly, l pe 2.098 Sr; It -+ ilfiO ~<I fl in in!? rni. C\'l'v Pa 1 0 · 91'=! ~ intercom., vac 1 y stem s . q_u1s1tionJ1, me~l'I, .oper~· Beeul. bay v)ew, Pvt. park """ rw ordinated apt1 • deilgned Ir. Ret's reqd, S90 mo lncJ \i ~.~· $3.~~:1~,,!or Sale By ,".~·R900. ·3 0tba7-«C33o-' w/blt-•. "9HCIC. Frplc'z, elec rates &: gar u,1orui I: l ",~~~n1istralion 1n w / nowen 1 !tees. TillU 1 •4-Bdrm--hooae--w-/lrp-k-.-1-1"1" fumlshed for 1tyle A com-646-MOO uwner . .nv--¥\NV. •IUU ,,,, R t:AL TY doors. By bldr, 10% dn, verseAXnJO~Su l'N'·c . Augusl 15th. yard. $200/per mo. 1-t .l last Jort e Heated flOOI e Kitch- 3 Br, 2 bu, sh11ke roof, nr S2~,j()(). 8122 Dc-ertield Dr, N,•r N1wpor1 P••t Offle• $66,500. 642-:\490 24 hrs. 714/541 9992 Wesley N. Teylor Co. + dep. See aft' pm. 2905 ~I w/ it"glttc~l!g:hUng • D:L~.:wl~P~~'111' .2 S.A. F"''Y· O.C.C. & S.C. _l_L_B._2l_Jl_B23-& __ ls;_··---PERFECTIONIST DUPLEX-NO OWN 9-'" AM • 1 , PM REALTORS , '-'Red=""""=:c• =CM:::.,. ----"'"1 BR }11'5 luts. No peta. luxury. ~245/mo. 642-Q'I' Plaza. Cul-de-sac lot. xlnl llQOL + 4 br, S5290 cash & , , . \\'ill love this neatezl, to veta or a.uume 5%. % loan. u -. 2] U San J011.quln Hillt Rd. 1 • ·-i' m. mnd. Vacant soon S2S.500 take o\'er Gr Joan. $2141mo clcanf'!';t 3 BR. 2 ba. Lusk W/w crpt, f /A heat, Patiol, NE\VPORT CENTER~ FOR •ale or lean -14e UTILITIES INCLUDED Newport Heightl by owner~ all a:30 total. Prncpls only 842-M34 blt. charmer w/a. lipac.. Bltna. Only $31.500, Brok· TO BUY OR 3 br, 2 ba, bltnt. Corner 365 W, Wil&on 6'2-1971 CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlt.I, COLLEGE PARK-Huntington Harbour fu!iy fenced yd. A "must er~. SELL A BUSINESS :S.:n:_.::C:;:l•:;m:;:•:nt::•:._ ___ J -,;'"°""::;;;;·;:";,1-07238~;."';-6'-'~'-"=-· Unbelievably Beautiful peta. Lr kit Sl~. o AREA S('e" house at Slj.500, "ln-.-...,.-~p"ropo--rty---1-66-5" 2 BR, utll paid, 1valk to Newport leach VAL D' !SERE Garden Apta. E. 16th St. NB. 546--1801'· Sharp '.I lg Br. home 2 Ba. \~T,;~:nR~:a!kBR.i 2tx!~ Home Show Realtors PRIVATE PARTY ~~LB~~D wiBUthSEm. SAP Lt~~ achooJ1-w' ~!-""•kn• •.. !~~· iae. I ·N-EW--B-1 .. -u-,-~---by-~-.--A •• ~~ .. --no Pf!.,~.:_ Flowe~ IAp.-::t'".'U°'nfv:L'::m,'.c..:..::..:=-.11:1 & fam rm. !il\8~ cerpct. "Armchair Uouschunt\ng·• .. ,.., ..... er a 'Y .., • " ... ,po5a, w........ u nu...... u ....... r. •""""'1e1". .,..,.,am • S33.000 54&5i80: 546-~791. ~e~~o~oori~8 ~4°4°_0413 ;: 3535 E. coagi llwy., O::lr.1 I ha1ve tree A cleucproperty ~:O ~· -~ Hou ... Unfurn. 305 ~ ~~ ~ ~l'Pfl· ~:.~~5~:00~~m, General VACANT, ney,·ty painted 3 &14-4211 67S-7225 w good income in .M. Val· •-"'!:!!. !!'!!'!!'!!'!!'_~_.,._m• Goneral 714: m.1GS1. Unfur1i. from. $135. sEE {; ;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;j:t;; BR. 2 BA, coY'd patio. a.JI Irvin• * VIEW DUPLEX * ~f~~ik!''! ~~-:::~ NEEDID: Adults Pr•ferred ml Panora, 6U470 VENDOME bilins. NCI 'l u a I i I Yin i?. \Vellt Bay Ave. Nr. public -'-· WORKING PARTNER ORl---------A.'l~1tmr FHA Joan. S218 beach. 2 up, 2 dn . S72,500 approx $D>,OOO p ... ,"' unlta LARGE 3 bed, Jllllt palnttd, 2 Bedroom1, 2 baths •••• sm GIANT *1 ~~ i;rr,;ROOM'. IMMACm.ATE APTSI total mo pymlll. OwnrlAgt. OWNER HAS ,,. *TWO FOR ONE* 'c.'u ~::_.rc.ial P!'Operty· PVT INVESTOR. Subatant-CIJ'Pt'll le drape1 len~ REALTOR s.13-6966 ~--·""'"·· tt1 ADULT and ,,:) 7 ............,, 1al retw-n on money 111ve1t· yard, family nn.,, chlldren 2 Br vv..,eoUI, ,....,.. . .._ R ng. FA.i\ULY Section ...... 636-44 O purcha~ another hOmr, 2 Homes on one lot in West -=~F:;O;.;:U:;R;;P""L"E=x,----1 ed, 1ecured w/cotlalt'i\l. ~ ptts OK. Ulo p/m. BLUrFS Condo: 12 be, Closed 1araa:es tot max-_, • ~1ESA VERDE -Sp11ciou' must sell his 4 BR. town-Newport, $49,500 For moriP Info write P .O. w lk & L den, pool&, Nr Eletn 1 HI imum aecurlty. Quiet 1tteet. Clot• to shpppfng, Pa 4 hr, liv'g rm W!frplc, farn house in a hurry! l~is losli-BURR WHITE FHA Box ltl9. Santa .Ane. a er ee schls. $3001mo. 644-1395 Adults no peta. 2020 * Spacloue 3 BR'1, 2 ba U I'' kl''"-1 AU 2 hr, 1 ba, -i.. c:I""• -, t •--H 1..1.1 -... ~ 'o• Avt (Harbor to * Swim-•, ..,,V.,_n m1, a e n•:n, rrp ~. your gain. This is an ideal REALTOR 675-4630 ~-.. .,..., FASHION DRE.SS SHOP for •n a _.. • V'' • ........ en ........, .,.. .. •·~~ ilrp~. 2 patlos. 334.550. family home locafed near ~I Ne..,..., ... Bl··""., N.B. bllns, 1aragn. laundry rm, aale, 355.i E. C.Oast """'• Reeltoi:s Bay, tbtn So. until 2 blks * Frpl, lhdlvllndry flc' 557_7142. 11 . _, 1 . "'""' -·~·· vu & ea&t •Ide Costa Meu. X1nt -~ 7682 EdiJl&e Horu proJ>frty -Birch St. So. of Newport mvd. 642-1145 Anaheim Av•. s recreation.... ac1litie1 & • BEAUTIFUL S br, 4 ba, • rol'ld & only $48.000 w/low CdM 6'f'5..2fi0t or 96U969 r 3 br OOJY, cute &: cleen. 8690 COSTA MESA 64 GOV'T tl"pos. An)'Ollt' cn.n scbools. Only $33,900. P.S. tam nn home in Dover monthly paymenta. Broker FixtUres $3500, lnventoey f714l IU-4456 or 5"4()..5140 On t aCft wllh detal'hed buy. No !nan charg-e! Ul.500 Dad can play golf just Shores, 1 "e. ......i • P'Uo 64u 177. optlonaJ, H~band bllna: RENT OR heated •tudkt or hobby nn NEW LRG DELUXE API'S B jL--p I I to S32.00'.l. In Costa Meaa across the str('(!t' -. """' tranafe~ LEASE OPTION B•ch-furn . · · .• $139.50 a -•n niu 1 ~;;~ \~ti~n,~l:e~~y!,~;~3 ired. h1·11 Pv~::·~,: •:: NP~~;:~;~ ~·.~~aco,: ~: •• SH~:''...:!,.~; l~~.'v"::.i,~:~ S=J~:·:c:~.=· ~ BUNB:;;, A:V::Al:.LAB· :~4L7:E:: BBa,RANl~~·BJ:;·.~;.~: txlnn, my m'I, ""· patK>, ho 2 -'d ,_ 1 _, aale. Na~. phone no., carpel Oose to Park 4 BR le famUy rm. Brand "'vn.i-. ....... Y<I ........,. .., ~ d ·1 1'9 o•A m -3. m,•·,,.,"', B~R.' 2'~'.. ·.~", •"·lt•r, --'-"'-. .,,._,._ _..... "'"'UL 0 v1><=n 111 Y ·"'"· ............,,J 1 "" ,.. ;{. only~d.;:'6ca.u00:" 5.......,w\11 FREE. Leavina S300 mo. 546-§21 All. new Troy home, Bltina, dab. ~ TS NLY, NO PETS er bay. J yr ltaae. Dover Shores Univ. Park Center, lrvrnc kitchc'n, dJrfg mi, trplc, state. M6-35M e ON ntE" BEAOJ..tmmac. •'lhr, ept1, patio, llJlrlnklma, 1760 Pomona '42·1015 D/W, ar,., b'pl l Cali Aoytimo -owo tand. $42,950. 644-4218 21 UNITS OWN "°"' owo btul..,., -t Br, oncl fat, Child ok. For only S2l5. "" mo. ~ * 5 .. ·d'-" •pt. $115 ~app61Ldaya, IT.W25I INGLEWOOD. 9 DelUXe 2 l 1 br. ~ to lbopplnf. Calif. Co. baa opmlnr for $150. '93-1936 or 493-30Cl. 1• ru"' IUJ" ont~. prime an!tl. $141,000 WATER FRONT. Unusual 3 AU H e-· *' B d $130 Laguna Beach BR. dock. Inrome. Lo tented. la !,;.U, $410,00) d:latrlbutonhiPI In thl• area. ALA R.fntal• e 6'5-3SOI) S"'"set Beach e room OCEANFRONT-Stat built Ul.nford * v1•·:w HOM'-" * ~~.'""1900' down. By oWMt, 147-3957 Good Income. Invest. ll'CW'-3 BDRM., Fam.Uy nn .. pan ---------1 MAPLE ST. NEAR 1t'm aty-rantutic bay vn. i;. ~ .,,,,.... groRE, Office. 2 BR houN, ed. 497·1l7'9 tor appt. Jlke yard. Cotta. Meta. Kida OCEANFRONT, Ip modern .U.M Br, 2 Ba. tam nn, tun RIAL TY LAGUNA BEAOI ?otARTNEnS 'VEST'CUFF' roorn to add, C·l zoned, 50 x WJNOOW tlntlna bu• mach OK, bric. S* a ZZKmtb. NO home, IOf' family. SMJOlmo * SUS CASITAS patio. tundeck, d I b wb Sine• 1m 4 Bdrm, t. lam. rm., f'xc. 4 br. 3 ba, 5%'if.i loan. 180 comer, $42,500. 19th St. tint, th.Inner, clf~~r l FEE. MO-tm. ~1~iii; a •e' Ref 1 · bl.tnl, drpa, crpts. Actulta, O.Wnrown Cotta Mn. OCT'a.n view, flrepb«, w/w $.39,950. Owner 64&-2003 near Harbor, CM. WW rnot't', Colt $100011ell $XIO. e OLD WORLD OfAR..'1-I.rs nicely turn Bacbtk>r I. J>elA. S5001mo. IR. 6 1171 642 2991 1 ""'·· bli·io ktldt i•d re-S Cl I '"d•. Bl'Ok<r '~"" 645-4687 beam""· !rpt, hU"' <los<U, NOW'S THE 1 Br. J'umlahod moilm I Br. 2 Ba. 2 d•t:ka. d HARIOR -lrl~. I yr. lit. S3."1o mn: an •m•n • WALK TO BEACH F'ood Itand, Nwprt Bch cpta, drps, utll pd. flSO.. TIME FOR ope11 datl,y. New nnt41 r11tes atove. ~trig, apt&. drJ)e. Lt~t ~·II.Ii C.Q. Guy from C.(',. 3 Bdrm. 2 lialh horn", r xt-. GI, $195. total move In cost•. New 6 It I unlta by builder. A&'enl Dick Kuper AL.A Rentah • 645--3900 2UO Ntwp0rt Blvd, CM blk occen ' tie.y. PIO 1~----oct>nn vlt"w, W1w carp, & Q\VNt::R 1vlll pay Ill« rr1t. 3 "'-;;".:.•,,:"='•:::·,.:84c;7'-'.3'1J:::.07-;-,-=I ~=~*-"'°";::.~11-*::_,,.-.,,IS BURM. + lamlly nn., fl1ll QUICK CASH SMALL f\Jmlahed Bochelor IM!. Muli., no pet#. 6 Fountain Valley drnpe!> thruout. Neal ~~ a bdrm, 2 bll, b!Uns, cpt1 Ir: BY <M'tlt.r, 2 on a kit, w. BEAUTY Shop, 9 1wtk>ns 15 dlnlne nn., bul.lt-lrll., bt'k. THROUGH A •Pt. no pets, no chlldrtn. 35 e 2 BDRM. Ye~ly, 1'~R Sele by qwrH'l'-.1 br, 11~ pin~ $.100 mo. rlrpll, dhle g•r. I~ yd. Top \Vil.son, C.~I. drytrs. Rent $I 7 2. 50. J390 a month. NO FEE. yrs or OYtr. $8$ mo. $25 M tun dultl ba C.OndO. lpw down, nice ~nSSION REAL TY ~91--0731 coOO.. all for $ 2 4 ,DS 0. ==~•-•>1-2!183:.....:=-*---I S.crlb, ownr 962-5151. Newport, 540-1720. DAILY PILOT RC11rity deposit. 646-MM ~\'B,,y,1 CaD •m.-cin 11roa. 8J9.-IO!l2 3 unil!, \'U, nr bch & shop•. 492-112'1. Aft 2 pm. BUSJESJ' marketplat'll ln GOOD bey tie111uty 1hop, e MOVE Jn tod&y-2 Br, kkll WANT AD IM?.!AC l BR. quiet. no 6 pm, wknda Oa.U:r Pilot \\'111n: Ad& ha\'t' ~!ios. very n ~ce. i 49,500, Sell ldlfl lh:ms MW! Call town. 'nMI DAD..Y PD.OT '46--3671 Tue., Thur., Fri. 4 I pets 1'-'dcome. $120, .._.2•56'1• rhUdrtn or pets. f12S, 2585 lro.or:;;--,tha;:;-t "'1U.tt;:m~und~=.,:'7. ban{a.ins galore.. 10';"~ dr'I 4!14-4~2.j 6t2-SG73 NO'l'I J .Cc_•_u_1_tled __ "'..c."°":..:...-· --· '--'Sa::CL::...cm°'om=lno:Pc:_____ AU Jtftlal1 e &U-3903 ..., .., .:B:..Onna<:.:.::::::..•.:.'.:·•:._· """:::::' .:™:.:::.'-1;• . .:"':!..::th<::...'.P~•::MY~P:;lnr:::ho::r:.._~ DAILY 1'L.0T WtdntsdlJ, A_1rll 21, 1971 - •• ,a.~! ON TEN ACRES L A 2 Bfl 1\lrn 6 Untum. ftrepla~ / Priv. patio.. Pools TtMil Contnt'l Bldll ,illt Se-a Lant, CdM 6'+26JJ !!MacArthur nr Cout llWy) * Spanish Elegance • Sets The-Mood For Quiet Adult Living Shag cpl • drps • blllls Beautitul Pool 2 Br. $170 incl all uW Adlllts only-no pelJI. Ill A VOCI.do St 646--0979 ORLEANS APTS. FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. . . - ' Wtdrttsdl1, A,r!I 21, 1971 l~I -' PILOT·ADVUTISER )7 J[j] I 5'I Lott SM. lhort hair q, blk w/t:ft11 head A feel Vic: Wllmn I-Placentia. Reward. 6t6--7(fj7 ------·--- 575 AIRLINES A natun1 b '°""' -who want exd.tmnent p!11.1! Ticket Agent! Air Fmsht! Station a r e n tT Reserva.. nam? It.amp or trawl agent.! We'll tnin yoo b theSe and morP, di.)' ar dite. We include placement .... .......... Est. %J YTS. Ap-far Vetffa.ns, Eligible inatltution under the federally lmand 1tudent lo.m pl"Oll'1Jn. ··----------- 1-~-ll5l ----- * * * * * Trader's Paradise lines times dollars UP to 40 aetts w/Geother.- mal potential In Imperial Valley tor boa.a, income prop or ? of equal value. ritJ. Kwan, (n4) 544-8073 Have: 4 $3000 ht TD'1 &: 2 vacant loll, total eq $20,000. \VANT: Hae, dup.la, tri· plex, car, motor homt or ?? ? ?tfyer1 ~75fi. Have goU coune fairway 101.1, Golden HW. C.C., Te. hachapi. Trd eq for bch house, older apta, dl&mond, or 1tock. 64l-951Xi Ha\'e Rolex watch, 18 karat. gold, day~te w / rold bra~let llke new. Worth sma. Trade for c a r boat. Pvt pty, 675-2124. $90IXl eq in 5 lev &cm E9' condldo w/water. Value $-GOO per ac. Trade for 0,C, propt"rly or 2nd TD's. tTI4) 531-162'1 Bkr. za· BUS, '60 Cad vs. reblt hydro. P/B, 90% seU-con- tained. Trade for: Smaller travel van or ?! Z1051 Cy .. Pf"!ss. S.A. His. Big ~r cabin S BR, 2 b&, located in Lake Willlamt Esta1es. S30,000 e q u It y, Trade FOR apts or rentall. Ask for Cluck, 557-46U. Have Sl4,500 equity, 5!4 FllA lokn In beaut Collqe Pk home. Trade for lat TD or proj, Cowt:n Hel&htl areL 5f6-09l)IJ eves. 19 PJLOT·AOV!RllSER Wtdneld01, Ap"I 21, 1971 • Wl<f-1. AP'll 21.1911 ~ I -Old-I~ L---1~ I -Old-I~ I "'"°''-l[ll] I r..-..-l[DJ I '"""' ·, 111J I "''''"... I~ I .,,..,,_ l[ll]I ~I G.rll..,1,,, • T,... Service ~olp Wontocl, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M £ J' 710 Help Wont..r, M & I' 711 Help W-. M & I' 710 Help Wontod, M & fl 710 ~~ Wint..r, M & a COSTA MESA JOHNSON 'S CAJUlENING TREES, H ..... , Top, Trim, BAf\MA!DS.lloy or niaht. EXPEllJE)ICED in all•" Mark-, SUPERVISORS ~jt PRE-SCHOOL Yatd ""'· cieal><JJs, pi.u> cu~ ,.moved. bluled. IM. Ni"'t Newport Beach G ... at opporlunltv lo~ J . W. ROBINSON'S ...,.!ant to SlfM SALESMEN Cal,_ limo. wm 'lll<i'- illtJ:: It Monl'ovl&. % d'1 + tine. ·~ -~ 60-4030 Bl& John Tavt:rn. See New owner at c:ommlukm salesmtn (mu • NEWPORT BEAQI • N•t'I s.1 •• Mgr 491'·131'9 3--6 pm. I btl1 doy -· PIMned LAWN """L Hlullng.,.,,, (.,.. ldariner's) 2911 ,. • .,..nl. Tbll ia a Anenar'r<lta . ...,'dtorrap: SALESMEN •TYPISTS '®J!I .,._.,, hot iuocbea, Aa>t l&w,,., ct.an-up, -· 1 JI IJI Newport B!Yd. Btw• 7 " 9 prol•ulonal opportunity Hu lmm<diale icUy erowlno Or&. Cty ...,. MOYE UP TO . U. bn 8:30 AY-4i:OO PM. Free est. Call 5t6-T319 • __ "_-__ ''*-'-~ pm. Wed. or'l'bun. offering a lltetlm e openlna fot dueer or t'iectro-mecb'l m. '\ e KEYPUNCH OP~: $U wt-COMPARE! &e.4050 COMPLETE Ja:n, a-_ . preattslou.a wcaUon. atrwnents lor the pci:ro.. SAW l2 Yrs upu) or im=. gvdening ..,.ice. ·-------BOOKKEEPER F/C. Hore Complotc training pro.,.am, SECURITY chom1. ""'""""'· MUSf MANAGEMENT ,..._ ct\l'O tn my home. Jim~ lsyour¢bancetoadvancein stock bonus. atock option WOMAN haveeu.-tomer.ervioeb&ck· WORK WHDI It Iata.nt f;O 4 yrs old. l4ve Gentral Services Job "4{anted, ~I• 700 a triple .\ co. Should have prograrna, paid bOliPitaJlia· ground dealln& ttlnl ttpa. onltVHERE•m,_;:o~S:,,~nll a )Told da11&hter. Fenced tome machine bckgmd on tton. We exPect our &ale• Early potential for Nat'I LlcM"•R/Un-Llc'd ... VOLT '7' ~~ T~o S~ w:~~~a~: SCRAM-LETS A6,!ii. ~ ~. S1G-6055 :: ! :. °:re:: • ~~~ SalesJT,·Plerc. WE ARE LOOKING FOR Instant Personnel 1 El Toro, Mluton Viejo area J>89l'Ol1. Will pldt up A de1.. ' COASTAL AGENCY Call (n4) 832-77'90 for a AS!OCiates Atency, Inc. MEN WHO FEEL THEY 3848 Campua Dr., SWte il,jj;;· LIC'D CHILD CARE Telephone, stn--'ltm; A·NSWERS 2'r.io Harbor Bl at Adams conftdentlaJ ln.ttniew. Apply in penon 10.S p.m. 1885 Ntwp0rt. CM ~ WOULD BE QUALIFIED Newport Beach 5f&4fh Harbor & Baker, CM. 5 yn. HANDYMAN: p a inter• # 2 Fashk>n Isl., N.B. MECllANIC w/eood exp. to IN DEVELOPING TH E Equal opportwllty ~ exp, Reis. 54.>29-U plwnber, etc. Quality work, Gloomy -Waltz -Haven-·-~~m.Payall bl1"'' WFAOCTORKERSRY Equal opportunity employer madap terYice •tat ion. POIN~JALLANDOF ~!!~ l!!I . 24 hr . Enrage -GO GET •ER ·~v....,.et. pa,)TU • ite . MUJI furn. Kood tt-f'a. Good •.ni:. ~ WAITERS: Pvt COW'IO'y du BROOKtlURSr & Atlanta-. !lef'VlCt, 6f3..a250 A hippie was accused of typing. $475 to $500. Costa lnunedUlle Openings JEWELRY •tore sales/sect'y, pay A: world~ cone!. See B U S INES S. WE ARE in San Diego C.O. req't ; Fenced yard, friends. toys, * LABOR UNLIMJTED * laziness. He prote1ted, say-Mea GoU & C.Ountry Club, Good Pay Call Now exp'd Pw'chaalng, rlecorat· Mr. Beatty, 393 E. 17th St. BUILDING THE ~ exp'd wallets. $2.25 hrFa•+ lunches, Refs, 968-61119 HANDYMAN lng ''I'm a real go-getter. 541)..7500 Mr. Porter. 9AM-9PM, Sat 9AM1PM Ing, etc. Fine ibop. Udo. LAND COMPANY IN THE tips + rm &: boud. Buikters Welding -Carpentry 673-1922 My wife works 14 hours 8 CARPET clearier, responsl-O.C. Employmei:it Agency Must type, 613-9J34 MED. TRANSCRIBER WEBT. AFI'ER A lJMITED appt phone Mt. ~ NO Job Too Sntall! Brick, b&ock, concri,!:tc, carpentry, add a rm, house leveling, pr. door repain:, Free est. Woody' 96>-6945. Husband Busy! Call M0088 day. Then I 00 GET 'ER." ble man w/experience in 124 Broadway C.osta Mesa Fine local hosp. Gttat M>rk-ORIENTATION PROGRAM, --~====~==~' MS-0820 after &-Repair Job W•nt~ Female 702 carpet cleaning, window &t>llll 645-3112 645-3l13 Jr. Acct. to $800 l.ng conda. Fine spot for gl.rl BECOME A PART OF THIS * WAITRESS:-EXP'I). Build-Serv Most 'I'blng$ was~ & Door Waxjng. Sal. Pft'ft!r degree + 2 yrs ex-w/aon~ exp. Fut raises. C 0 MP ANY 'S MGM'T Not under :n. NO PHONE: AIDES For convalescence', ary open. 549-2-125 FATHER le U year old son per. Xln't &1'9wth oppor, ~ ;:f· u .... ~ TEAM, CALLS.' Apply tn peuioa, Haultng e'lderly care or ramHy ca.re. CHILD eare,.:room &-board. neec1 live-in bouse!reeper NEWPORT coAS.fAf.AGENCY Surt 4 Sirloin, 5930 w. 0iiut TR.ASH & Garage cl•an--up, Homemakers, 547-6681 irl beach home lor care ol 2 w Io w n tr an sportaton. P•rsonnel •-~c~ -u-~-B * Cadiilac car plan immed. Hwy., N.B. C•rpet S•rvice F 710 tinder 40, \!!ell-educated, ..._ .... ;iv ~ ...... "'"" I at Adams * Pl~ otnces -:-~~====~==-7 days. $10 a k>ad. Free Help W•nted, M &. chil~n. ages 5 &: 7. active to share a 12 .,.. old 133 Dowr Dr., N. • * Full fringe benefits * WA I T R ESS-OW11~~ D1Amond Carpet Cleaninr: est. Anytime. 548-5031 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 67r>&l9. boy's-~d. "'ll"" .,. '42-3170 MERCHANDISING le: HOUSE. Exp'd-food and Avg size room $8 1,.0""',-''-:----""--• ~ "'"' "' Sales-Exp'd man W/'tt.h. * Incentive program, cocktails. 5 day wk. SUI~ YARD, Ga.rage, cleanups. A Better Temponey """"'""'"""""""""""""""!!!!I ~ ti •-•-• 1 * Top com-•tion "" Jtepairin& & installations Removt trees' dirt, Position DENTAL As.ST. Fanwtie FT BERG LASS KITCHEN man~ Over 21, pt ..,...,a ve, career mu.u=. n * Free A .... ~t; trainina SEAFOOD, 162'18 PaclCc Free Est. 6(5..1317 skiploader backhoe. 962-8?45 U 1 d ad WO~No ~~nee tim knd S t d t exciting new shoe lhop. WA¥ ·--o Hwy., fiunt Bch. MOVING, Garage clean • up &: lite hauling. Reasonable. F1'ee estimates. 64~1602 bou o ers rap . needed $175-$3 50 ho e, w •· u e.n Write Cla.salfled Ad No. lU, MEDICAL "'an"m•nt. Som• exper. d nding. • • ~-ur ............ MU>t be wlllmg Dall Pilot, p 0 Box 1560 LANDHOLDERS, WAJTR£SS Exper. SPM 'Ill RANSCRIBER d · bl s~~ $350 epe on eXpe.a:nce, to "'Of'k:. Golden Bear, Y • • • 9PM, not under 21.. No SUn. TAPE T e111ra e. ....,,, . Apply at 837 W. 18th St, 53&-9102 aft 2 p.m. Wed or Costa MetLS, Ca. 92628 Kramers Colonial Kitchen, CARPENTRY MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Small. Cabinet 1n gar-Hou1ecl••ning age1 & p t be r cabinets. -:o--o':O"_,....,..-.,,...,...., StS-8115 If no SWJWer leave Bay & Beach Janitorial m11g. st 646-237'2. H. O. Crpts, windows, floors ete. Anderson. Res. &: Comm'l. 646-1401 Cement, Concrete Work when &:. where YoU want! Interim Personnel Service na w. 20th ee CONCRETE. Floon, patios, drives, sidwa.lks, (W. on 19th St, to Placentia, •labs. Reas. Don 642-8514 DOMESTIC work wanted, right on Placentia to 20th CEMENT WORK, ro job ~ ~;~· !~.&~rss· a day. •St::;, :::';:gh;;t;::on;::;>l;:::;th;;I;:::;;;;;~ small, reasonable. F re e ---~~----; Estim. H. Stufiiek, 548-8615. Own ~n~3:~tatlon. ~ QUAIJTY cement work, let 836-0648 Work wi the nicest guy in Call a5.:;!"'~~ C.M. Thurs. ?o.1.0RTGAGE TRAINEE. INC. 19th&: Harbor. 2790 Harbor Bl st Adams F1BERGLASS Molde~xp'd. PIUlh modern ofc. Full ol WARM &oving mother ~=~~~-~--1 Sailboat Mfgr, Costa Mesa. LABORERS )'OUl'ti people. Fanta1tlc * PLEASE CALL * iubstltute fDl' career mother DENTAL secy./Recept. Applylnpo""n '"'" will tra!n "" who 547-6771 Experience nee. Ca 11 COASTAL RECREATION. (Uns\dlled-Dependable) types well. Benefits $350. w/3 yr old boy. Lovely 546-5613 bet 9-5 PM 940 w. 17th St, CM. Must be well a:roomed. Call Helen u··-s. 54IM05S Ask for Mr. Yud•I home lat right woman.·,; • .....,~ Day wk. $200 mo. ~ • DESIGNER • $70+$899;F~~l grad Work wbelt' & ~tt ~~~ S:~t~~ ~Lper !!:~d~~ ti~, · 833-7636, nites 673-.()685 • .. you wanll r·~ YACHT SALESMAN . E:lg>1d reqd. Fil~ applleatii:.n by NEED inject mold machine UUman Salls. MM107 in new I: used boats, poWw Friday May 71ti, 5PM. 1-..r.-operators. ?i-1.ail ..... u ..... tion ..... ..,. .... M 1 CM XI t Personnel Dept, Room 5ll. n......-un P. o. Box 417, si~t~;~ Ca. ~ gr. or . . n & 118.tl SUbmit resume tD e City of Costa Me!llll • n p el Se • 90680 oppty for hi earnings. Fuller P.O. Box -4314, Irvine Fair Dr. (n4) 834·53SO. 81'SOftft rYIC9 Bruth, 546-5745. work. NEWSPAPER auto route, SE AM STRESS for y~:G t!,~· ~a:a':'dtil.i-FREE room &. board, pvt 771 W. 20th Early AM delivery (approx alterations, mu1t be .,. George do it. Lic'd ·•I-:====--=== Bonded. 645--1695 DEOJCATED CLEANING bath,. Dut1H w J 'o c I a 1 (W. on 19th st. to Placentia. 4-6.AM} 7 d~1 a week. experienced. Full or part rec. New 4 day, 40 hl' wtr,. security lady. Btwn ViSta right on Pl&eentla to 20th Want responaibl• man, time. Ciill ~1381 or $2.10 hr to start. 160:J W. town. · • shops & Hoag, 646-51116 preferably over 30 yrs, old. Alton, S.A. 5'5-711Jl Liz Reinders GElrCOATERS ox~en-'. St, right on ~h) Excellent part-time lbcomt. 646-8346 =:==-I Progressive Orange Coun· ty manufacturer has an immediate opening for a designer, experienCi?d in the design and building of special purpose mtg./ assembly equipment and medical instruments. 1~==---~---1 We do everything. Free PATIOS, ~·alks, drives, in-estimate. Call 673-4072 stall new lawns, aaw, break, 1--------- remove. ~ lor est. J•nltorial Personnel Agency Applicant must be able J"'<'l' ... ~ ----ii 4500 Campus Dr., NA to \\'Ork as part of a team Apply 83:> W. 16th SL Mac-* LAB ASSISTANT * ~ .-. _ _ Sec'y $515-$550 I I~ Can For Appointmen with engineers and tool· Cregot"Yaebt C.Orp, to work in Rubber Develop-~ Type 60, SH 80. W~rlc !or .......& SPARKLE Janitorial. Wino 5m-2U8 ing people. to ea.rcy a HAIR STYLIST -Rent 1paee ment Laboratory. Req: 2 yn mgmt servlces d.irecior. •-=--;::::-~-;::::-~-;:;;-~-~-~~-~-~~-~"";; design th r u working in unique 'CdM salon. Call of college (incl math). Xlnt RN RELIEF Good appearance, great eo. l-~C~U~ST~O~M~CO""'N~CRETE===-I PATIO.DRIVES-ETC. Free est 531·7968, 6'55516 Child Coro :e:~~~~:=-iii drawingt to completed Jim Scott, 644-1321 opportunity "With growing 7 am-3:30 pm Shift NEWPORT I Antlques . _ .... _ .. _ IOOJ A complete comm'! serv. ADM. SALES operating units. 1-IOUSEKEEPER 4 da)'I' a firm.. For interview appt. Personnel Agency I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil F Free t call 962-0672 A minimum of lliree wk. Exper. pret'~. Park call 49l-1.153, Mrs. Gonialez. LYN RELIEF 133 Dover Dr., N.B. New Shipment PROVIDE ad ivers i f\..ed or es· ' · NO COLLEGE Lillo Convalescent Center, -I..ayout & Paste Up 3 pm:ll pm Shift 642-3170 Fino Euro-ol\ enriching summer for your Painting & yelU'! experience in the 642-8044. Employment avail. Colta N ..-- children. Unique op. Paperh•nglng NECESSARY Pd:gntuso!.n:~~:i. ap. HOUSEKEEPER, live-In, Mesa Pennysavtr Huntln•ton •-och e SECRETARY, part time. JA TAIQUl~~I portunity. ScriPPs senior Q vt NB OJmYVU:ln .. Dept. Pltasant • u-.-,..__. typing •· 1ho-'"---' Ult rr Y-"-tl No Wasting young, p room, . . area. r--.... C I nt H ~ ~ ••~N m.,... recen y returned from * WALLPAPER * AS A TRAINEE JN OUR 1 child, 2 dogs;. Ref'• req'd. surroundings. Sat work onv1 tsce 01p. lkilll. Front cince ap-Completf selection cl flnt 9mos. in Europe ca.n teach .\vbeii EXECUTIVE SALES DEPT. Excellent growth oppor-6#-8691 involved. Call lor interwv 18111 Florld1 Ave pearance. Bookkeeping turn., eollector'1 ttema It French, Gernu.n ~. you call "Mac" YOU WILL LEARN HOW ~~.I)' and trlnge bene-appt., 6«2--0811. H.B. 147.3515 helptul. Posalble lull time acces!Ol'ies from Austria, French cooking, sewing, 548-J#f. 646-1nl TO REPRESENT OUR HSKPRS 'Em.Pl.Yr pays tee. Larwin Realty, Inc. ~ future. Send rel\Ulle to SCIO Engl&nd&France.(De~ occasional excursions in her ACCOUSTIC CEILING roMPANY, WHIOI WILL Geo'f00-AllenE Byland ~en-New res•le office OFFICE CLEANING Newport Center Dr, Suite weteome) car. Look-lo~ regular or S~lallit. AllO other GIVE .YOU THE START Mell resume ;Ith back-~7-0395 B · 16th. .A. Z1S62 Brookburst St. $2/hr, Mon A: Frt ev~. Htg .tro, Newport Beach. ANDREAS ANTIQUES half d~y positJOn $3.50/hr + interior._:paintlng. OF A SECURE, REWARD-ground, quall ication1, 1~=====~-~-1 Huntington Beach Bch area on!y. Call 9-U SEC'Y (c.clMJ You nr 2380 Newport mvd .. C.Jr4. materials. 833-0'JTI alter 6 * •• 7 ... 128 * ING FUTURE experience and •al•ry HOUSEKEEPERS day 1hift. ,_.,,. 962-4m * ~0 * pm. -' h AIDES &: ORDERLIES. Openings for two experienc· • ........., • environmental finn sttka PAPERHANGER, flock, foil, iitory to • ed, full time, generat Real OFFER lady room • boa.rd bright attractive young Open Tue lhr\I Sat tOaml!pm Contractor lnyl . The • lmmed. Limited Openings 646-;7764 Estate Salespeople who are In exchange for Ute duliea, aec'y under 30. 1 rirl oUice sun noon di 5-ctosed Mon vH , guar.., estima.te54'7' ""A"' • Plush Offices 0&1Sltied Ad #146, Daily H 0 Us EKE E PER lor loo,, ...... for advancemem...... 642.-9862/54~2562. w /varied -1~•ibUJUes. Appllonce1 -WATERPRF vinyl declr: angma,n. ".JO"IU e Full Fringe Benefits Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa motherle11 home, No anall '"'-"'6 vr ... rv·-- coatings, all types. Lee Schwartz I M "-'" m26 bll•-Wri'' d'-~'~ ad porillnlties, OPERATORS wanted for S&lary $37»400 mo. For , • , . j;\ ft-fin Co CM "" -===~~~---· I • Free Day Nite Training esa, ~. · c w..,n. '"' ....,.lU""' • Inter--. tract leads overioek A: b 11 n d -he m appt call Mr. T••'--Mr. co LDSPOT• _,_,_ • • ........, g ., • ..,....._,'"" PAINTING interior & ex· Co c Plan No. 44 Dally Pilot, PO Box ...,.., -..."" .,. •~•e-- free est. terior, guaranteed s&tislac-• mpany ar Equal opportunity employer l560, Costa Mesa. C.allf. • FREE rriaJor med. ln1. maehlntt. Call 962-2397 Price at 673-8761 Ken mo r • s t g v e • fl ROOM Additiol'l!. L. T . tion, low rates. free YOUR COMPENSA1YON -92626 e Annual bonus & incentlw1 OPERATORS -sportswear -Secretarial-dllhwashers, alightly frelaht Construction. Slngle story or estimates. ~280 MA y BE $20,000 • $100,000 DISHWASHER I NVESTMENT SALES ACTION ACTION ACTION mfg. exp on1y, 1d pay, SECY.-Corpora.lf, legal, ex-damaged. Fully gUIU'an. 2. Eslim., plans & layout. PROFESSIONAJ., 30 y•• PER YEAR ••ANASSOC-Mwt be healthy, dependable ,.. .. n..,..,... p I p L U S iteady 642-3472 ecutiveex ........ Ll!...,,n,.Hllls. Reductions up to $1~. • ~ & want steady job, Pay1 ~un. rorre11 ve '30% i ..... & 35~ -~•· , .. ~. e--Pho 962-7781. Se art 847-lSll . exp, paperhanging & pain-JATE OF COMMUNITY investment llnn ls seeking ..... . 0 --= comm. PART lime CASHIER -call • &37·2l20 Ext 24.7 lot' ne, MY W al "' $2.25/hr for" eveni!ig shift. 1 ,_,,. 1 . Call tor mtv., Shirley Arm· '°me typi"" -·-•·•. •-•y appt. Roebuck il Co, 9>59 Adam. ay, qu 1ty me ting, from England. 968-7461 LEADER, PROFESSIONAL WOODY'S WHARF nu:u1gent, amb tiou1 men. . .. •>Ct:\Jnl "t'J" He • repair. Walls, ceiling. floors *PAINTING* SALESMAN. DAVID e. 111 sales representatives. II itrong, Mir. 546-5fll, eve-11, alt 6, PORT SERVICE Sta. Attendant. c=c:· =·==~--~~ii etc. No job too small. LOOKINCLAND, FAMOUS 2318 W, N=:ivd .. N.B. )'QU quali.ly, we furnish LEGAL TRAINEE THEATRE, CdM. Exp'd, Salary plus comm. WHIRLPOOL auto washer & 547-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. Ffli Quality, Reas. Prices. REAL ESTATE BROKER. ~=~-~-~=~-I complete training. Work at NeWpOrt Center, PARTS MAN 990 E. Coast Hwy. N.B. elec dryer, both :xJnt cond, ROOM ADDITION ree est. 646.0864 *Display Man $2.25 hr M.P. KRUSE Ir: CO, INC •tart.$425 mo. Require1 sec· r--~ .. ~-......... s VICE s . Sal $35 Paeh. Guar &: delivered. PAINTING f · na! AJ! I I I d M •-~ p ·• C t ... .,.... ~ _.... • ER taUOn esmen ~72, 847-8115 OUR SPECIALTY ' pro ess10 . * PLEASE CALL * Work on Pot Pans shaul em...,r v• aC1:ue o a II retarial exper. Type 60 ail"eab1e but any auto part• n be k StepbeM Const. Co. 613-fi62'l work g u a rn. Co I or have some know'! of archi· S1ock Exchange, Phone: WPM, Ute S.H. Attorney at •-· ·a.............,ble, Phone ~~ Mrae :e~ ... ~idd)« KENMORE wuher, J 35, SJ>('Cialisl 962.&43. 547·1441 547-6771 I I & ab'i'ty t d 54'/"-SM.1 La Ro'--d s D·-·--r~· """i'--t;TIA. • ust 'f-..ified,. acellent: Also waBM. ••• Lic'd Contl'. Remodeling Additiollll , Plans, Layout Karl E. Kendall 54~1537 Additions * Remodeling Gerwick & Son, Lie. ~l * 549-2170 Electrical EL E CTRIClAN, licensed, bonded. Small jobs, maintenance ii: repa i r•. 548-5»3 ;:urnitur• ec ure 11 o rea · .,A.w;.,,..., ....,, . U&<\.wue, Tom, &!6-9303. A pl ~ Boyd -~ PAINTING/papering, lB yrs Ask for Mr. Ingram blueprints. HOME MANAGER .,..........£,> P Y in ,.....-n, 1 Dryer aet. ~l<m in Harbor area. IJc & !!!!~~~!!!!!"""!!!!!'!""""" *Cabinet Worker $2.50 Mature, competent woman to LITE ~Ing, payroll, P•rt time Maids ~ Station. 490 E. lltb, NEW bltn ~ top • used bonded.R.efsturn.642-2356. ADVERTISING ARTIST hr llve·in & manage Orange typing, Femalt, uper. &16-7445. Seal.ark Matel. own w/new control writ, ~ t!o M •-hot SERVICE STA. driveway FOR clean a: neat painting, .-....... uc n anager wr Exper./Do custom work In County home 1or 2 adu!U. 546-5490 Make offer. 642-6263 Newport Beach agency. PAYOUT & PA.Sl'E UP l&leaman with rnech't.1~~=~=~=~=~' interior & exterior, Call shop, $500-$600. To arrange inter-MACHINIST Empkiyment avail. Costa ability. 1-Full time, 1·Part LARGE REFRJGERATOR: Dick, 96S-4065 Must have good b 0 a rd Service Center Emp Agency view appointment call (213) ,.1 e 5 a pen n 'i 1 av t r time, Apply 1101 Bayside $45, Xlnt Cond. ' ~ 1 PA IN TING/papering. 18 :~~ctio~-:J r~:e!i~~:g: 500 Ne~·port Center Dr., N.B. 867·5361 aft 5:30 pm. !HYDRO.TEL) Composin( Dept. Pleasant Dr. N.B. Ph: 615-2°'15 * 646-183> * • Yrs. in He.rbor area. Lie & SUite 5351644--1981 surroundlnl:1. Sat work 1970 PHILCO frost ri bonded. Ref's turn. 642-2356. Xlnt opportunity. DUREL * DRIVERS * . involved. can for k\tervw SERVICE itatlon attendants. croutop freezer re frl I • ADVERTISING, 2172 ;;YriMachineShopExper. Exp'd,9Plitshift/nlte1hilt. SJ50~· QUALITY WORK. Ree90ll> Dupoot Dr N B ...... 1670 N E • appl, 642-<ml. H & H ~-n, l9•" • ~'. White, immac ...'. •• • ' Oi>o7' • 0 xpenenc:e w/at least 1 Yl'S exper. on .,..., w <JC ...... - able. Lics'd. Local refs. AIDES. E:11per. req 'd. ~' Hydro-Tel tracer ma.chining e PRODUCTION centia, C.M, COLDSPCYr self • dt~i Free est. 548-m9, 645-5350 Baptist Conval~cenl llosp, Necessary! ~ , -o1 ciole tolerance parts w/ SUPERVISORS • SHAMPOO girl wanted, pert retrlg, washer & dryvl Furniture Stripping PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs 1-661'==,c;C.;.'°,;.'°.c'~S"l".,~C=·""-· ~-Must have clean Calif. driv. le without tooling. Req'1 abil· AU three •hilts. Xlnt future timto. Call aft 6, 545-QJ'l or Good c:ond, $40 ea. 64>-26l41 Special kitchen cab. doo~ in 1-Iarbor aiea. Lie & ASST ?t1ANAGER. Learn Ing record. Not under 25. ity to make own set-ups tor effective lea.den to ;joln 6~9108 CARRIER Air Cond. 8,~ s!I'ipped $3 ea. Avg chairs bonded, Ref's furn, 642-2356 drug business w/local firm. YELlOW CAB CO. • including templates, the Harbor Atea'1 fastest SHOE SALESMAN BTU's 4 yrs old, $175 or l!ii' $5 ea. Gluing. &12·3445. INT & Exter. Painting. Some retail exper. helpful. I ~="~'~E~·~'~'th=S~t.~, ~C._M_.~1 JR.VINE PERSONNEL growing company, or Saleswoman • Exp'd in 1.,:ofrc::.:.. . .;.644-"-"5465"'----"'·!!h~I Gardening Lic'd, ins. Free est. 30 yrs :sundays$500._Greatoppor, to DRAPERY /\IFG. lmmed. SERYJCES•AGENCY -APPLY lN PERSON-Ma cGREGOR YAOIT high-grade family ihoes.l iAiuctiiloniiiiiiiliiiilOC~.1 exper. Chuck, 645-0809 e over, . open, for trnes & exp. 3333 HARBOR BLVD. CORP. Hefnphill Shoes 54 Fashion AL'S GARDENING * PAPERHANGER* Calco! JASTeanALBrownAG'E>INCY0-6055 Beach Drapery Serv. 900 W. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 1631 Placentia, C.M. Isla.nd, 644-4223.' PUBLIC .. , 11j I--M•ning " •mal l .. bl ,., ""9 17th St., C.M. ln1uronco Girl ..... ........ neasona e. .,...,..~ ATLANTIC PROFESSIONAL "'""' .... Sl'ITER for 2 yr old, my " I I landscaping service!, call ">jOii;o,.:-Piat;Ch.R'OD.ili" I ,~mo~~H~1r~oo~r~B~l'._'•<:1~A~d~am"'s~ DRUGSTORE saleslady lor Exper. w/co. or ag'"""". •• No ..,. .... ..... .,0 ~~ ~·--N---Plaster, Patch, Repair ~J. oollcl-• Dana Point, San home. Could live-In. Nwpt NOTICE ' · ~ . ...,..,.,'Iii ., .. ...,.,, ATIRACTIVE girl, model K-Mac Pbarmacy, 18fH tile, T)plng &. !ast notes. ..,.. u~'-.,A,. """" ' CdM ~ta M•sa. Dover blldni & u · 3 4 h Clemente, Caplatrano area. -·,::,-~·~,,,.~~~~-~~--~I -' . """' * PATCH PLASTERING 1 ngene, or r Newport Blvd, CM. Apply Growth opJ~r. RESEARCH ~ Al Shores, Westclltt. AU typeJ!. Free e!'<timat~s a week (time nexiblel. aft lPM.. Work in your own Mme. STIJDENT 1>17 yn old. Est•t• Auctlon t'.~'!; 1 ·~ Call 54.' -s·~ Uy rt t 1..;::;..::_;:;.:_~~---I •--Be~t deal in area. Phone P/time work --s & •-•-. LYHOFESSIONAL, Prunuig; ~ u•C P va e, no t.'Xp, E •-c ..,_retary "' -~ Mod •--~ •·-•-=~=~~-~--,I I ·11 ng ~ 835-1465 between 9:00 a.m. .,"wk. 83" -•· • •PM. em • auuque , .... ,lKW"C', tree work, IJlrinklers, aera· PLASTER -Patch-Rm. em c pay. .' • Pleuant phone penonalll,y. and noon. __, -.r.t'IO..-v Sat, April 24 & SUn. •~I Uon, pests, disease, weed Adds. New work. Free Write ClassinM Ari f>'o, 89 S/H 90, typing 60, eng. exp., Work well wi the public EquaJ~pportunlty rmployer1..:=-==------St•t Clerk Typist 25. "m''"' control. Oean up jobs. estimates. 545-4588 alt 5 Daily Pilot p .0 . I?.ox 1360 required. Call Loraine, • MATURE * REC E PT I 0 N I ST to age 25 19 35. Familiar w/ 7"" Chapman at W_.:::: ·, T ,.._....., 646-5893 Costa Mesa., Calif. 92626 Westclln ~nonnel Agency, I Off' •-1 ns.n..... ... -• "'"" .....,,, ... enns. un.i.,....., Plumbing ASSEl\IBLERS for camper 2043 West.cliff Dr N 8. Gener• 1.ce HOSl'ESSES :::= .,.. ~""'"' i ii'".... al1 phues office worlc. Ap· Garden Grov• ~; ONE stop Japanese garden-facto"". Apply M .. >nrway, 645-2770 •• ' Will Ira.Jn mature girl w/gd NTOEW~!D~ experie~. Te:;...!.!.,:;.; ~71'1pmPla'.:~~a3 •. ~~ep, ~M. 892.9&ll , , tng le minor landscaping, LEW TA.kas & Son'• Plum-•er '""" -figure aptitude, No typinJI. """"~ ·~~•'3 ,...,_,, '"'"'" uu.. "" .... I Free est. 839-3917. Harbor bing Repair Repipe 1~"":::.~w=.,,'80,t,:h,;,C:;.·,;.M,;.. __ ~-1 ESCROW -Part ti~ -months. STENO SEC'Y "' Remod l ~-CAR ,.~yp~·-m:R NEC. RAUB, BEIN. rnosr View, &Turtle Rock e &"'" .Estimates APARTMENT managers for Warehou1•m•n • • '"'""' M t ,_ d 1 bl Comoros & ·~1 «• ""0 ~ .. -· bldg M t Coll 5•7 -5 and Auoclates. UI -• ap • • • t AL'S Landseaping. Tree 1 _~-.:===;-,==,,--I w"'".'t ~"1 1 • "~: Shlpplng A receiving. P, Up -~~:.:;..,::,:.•;.-.=.:..::.' __ I 136 Rochfiter St, CM. Exper, de11irable in con. Equipment remova.I. Yard 'tt.modeling, PLUMBING REPAIR n e ex Per enc f "' & dellv, Lite record ktep-MAINTENANCE Cb Meda 1 --.:...'-----.,;;;~I N job all _,,...,_, to Cl--'I"-• ad OFFICER · , ---=C&ll=..:543-c::..1123"'°;:.' __ 1tructlon &./qr adwrllslng. SACRJFI•• CE • ..,.5, 1 · t»:tr' Trash hauling, lot cleanup. o too am ... ....... "'-=""" ing. Heavy loading & un-asst to manage janltortaJr· Hvyworkl03d.ContactP.O. a •·..-1-41q Repair 1prlnklers. 673-llOO • 642-3128 • No. 115· Daily Pilot, P.O. 1oadlni bus .. Exp Only. Ref1 Rt:x:EPIIONlST. Attract. Box 855, Costa M.eaa. Fotron camera, llkft~ Roofi &ix 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. · d 546-~2 o .,::;::;~;,,:~~=;:=-,.,--$150. Incl cue Ir eou, · • EXPER Japanese-American 1ng 92626 require' outgoing 1a.I tor local COl·'TEL EPHONE advertialna t ga.rde~r. compl~te ganlen-I :c=~.,,.-,.-.,,..---1-~A.,P~T,...,C~L°'E"°A°"N=I N=G~-1 Pleau, call Shlrtey Willard at 488 'E. lt7h (at Irvine) C.M. ?o.fAN needs cheerful attrac lege. Do )'Ol.I like people • from our pleuant Ne.......-M&-3)44 .~. Ing service Ii cleanup. ~E ~~ Rrollngl of TARBELL' 842·5571 642-1470 woman to team up as couple the phone? Lite typtna:. offices. Hrly w a;;-;: 1..i 893-015() Yt"-"· er, repa rs, New apts: Lite clean-up. for apt. managt'r or llU't Stllf't $350. Morning hU Furniture N ther-mo rool coating!!, white Must be neat &: last. CaU * EXEC, SECRETARY IS MONEY or eve. • bl. --------·~· .,,,...,. 11 G~ener. Yard cleaft.-\lp. A-color., Llc/boodfd since, alt 6 pm. 5$7-6'180 New <>Hice• • Airport Loe. YOUR PROBLEM mar lor lhc lady, It. Call Sally Ha.rt. 5f0..6055 64s-3030 33. MR. MADRID. MUST sell black nauialQ'fe Planting, Sprlnklera. •47. 642-7222 I ............. ,..,..,..,.... Good opportunity for altrt , maintenance lor man. COASI'AL AGENCY 'J!Ofo. & Jowseat, '175; • I ~=~Ex~p-~d·,,;-~~=o:::IT.°iiu;ROOiii;;;;:tie.irn.· :;;c;: AUDIO VISUAL !lecre•~-·. to 1M.'lrk In fast Here• the answer Write Cbwifled Ad No. 130 7790 Harbor Bl al Adams * TYPISTS * J>e.aut Medlt aof& le: Joveeea4 I: T. Guy Roof g, Deal D1reeL ..... ;r Become an AVON p ity Pi! t p o Bo 1560 · ' EXPER. Hawailan Gardener 1 do my own work. &45-2l80 Corp, communications dept. paced N.B. advert i 1 Ing '!, __ ,M M0,·.,,· ,;tit ,,!...i., e R.N.'1 e ln olive velvet. coffee A: f&f Complete Gardenin1 Ser--SCS-9500. ' agency. All skills Including RepresenLative • earn good ....n... ....,. · 11~ Regltter for tables, 2 hJ • back vt!WC vice. Karrta.lani, 646-4676 Type 40. Learn operation of ihorthand ~·d, 833-1610. money In ~r spate Ume I I /card.la a lt!mporary job eh a Ir•· Everything h:Ji L~WN ··-•--Men--~. Sewlng/Alter•tlons audio Vlsu11.I equip. Stock • DUREL ADVERTISING nen.r hOtne. CAU. NOW MARRIED! Too many bills? ntens ~·care r:: catt. today than 2 mo old. 557-U83 .CM. "-_. .. • g.<U" ..,... room. Pl'e'f"r young ma.n. nn Dupont Dr./Sulle 4 546-5341 or 540-7041 Pennanont pa rt-time Full tune, 11 to 7 :30 &m. lnlervwt: t-U Ji:' Light hauling. Exp ' d. ALTERATIONS. "-"lt)'lini:;. MISS EXEC AGENCY N rt Beach Calil J C PENNEY t'O 1 nt See M e HUNTINGTON' INTER-F.quat Oppor. Employer GOLD wlvet eota. Rc."'nable. Call MS-9735. f:......... litter. T""' -•·,. h• \V C it NB twpo ' . • • • • emp oyme ' llnt\itl', CCMM'~-HOSPITAL e ,,,_ TV Patio !•-' "VC'' "'' '"'' ....., • oa.~t wy., * Fat1hion bland '* Mon thru Thur aft 7 pm, no ..,,,,.... Male It Ftmale ~ .... ., • -·-. · • CLEAN Up SpeclaJlst, haut. N.B. llh!-a. &16-210C. Cftll MU-39.19 Exec. to $600 Drive-Jn Theater, 3051 Per90MCl Dept. 17772 Beaeh W•stern Girl Inc. Misc. Pvt PIY. .. In;, odd jc>bs, new knee llUth CAii Xln't s1dll$ for YotJnJt con1tt. -REQUIRES -Newport Blvd, C.M. =~ ~~:.ton Beach, 4061 MacArthur Blvd, Clndlewood, H.B. & repalr. Reu. ~ EtJROPEAN Ottumaklng BABYSJ'M'ER part time, at V.P. Be11.utitul ofcs &-Id Newport Beaefl l'OMPLETE housefUl qualitt * Harbor Lawn ~h1.inL * Elrpertty CU1ton Fiiied. beach. Thun. 8-3: Fri. 9-5. benefit•. COFFEE SHOP «;OOK * ?-.fASSEUR to work al SAIL MAKER· Exp'd la)iout ~ furniture lncl pll!n-.A ~n1<1enr, land8caplna. f'rt't Aecur. Re&11. 673-1849 Thn.t Ju~: own I.rans. NEWPORT •ncl WAITRESS Orange Col.At YMCA, N.B. • bench work. Taylor Made I.:=....,.-;,;,:.:;,;,:,=== I brand new reh1&. Murt9fft. ul. 61'>-6145 ~A~lto_rc..ol~lon....:;..o -~64=2"".5&1=5-I ~642-,..,,,.,"=="=-~-Pononnol Agency 64:µ,JgOO Sall~ 811 W llth No. ll. USED CAR SALESMAN Reas. !148:5981 Mornlngw. 1 I 1..:::.::...::;CU;.t..:,.;;;;Ed,..ge::-.La-:::wn=---I Neat. accura1e, 20 years exp, BABYSITTC ER. myhruhO~e 831 Dover Dr., N.B. Xlnt. workinr cond!Uons, Sa 1-'c_.M,_.~~-----APT Of tum.. Incl RI•• Matntf'na~. Llc'd, Jnsu"red Tile i.,;~~::~i;,;=,Y.:;~;;-m;:;'.'..:~~··::;~~'..;';.,__~t:;;;.,".,'··l •!!!!""""64"""W8""""7D!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!il oullt&ndina: beneflt.t. ,; ru! :acb· ,!'':; Sale1m1n s::1fotscl~b:'::nF eouch. lwln beds. ~ 1..:.;SU-<808::....::;,;.,,°"'"-'·=--..,.-:-' 1 pboftlt Ir can DallJo PiJoc Insurance, top compt.ny, eall ehaln. 963-9568 JAPANESE Gardenlnr CERAMIC tile ne.w • e BLUE DOLPHIN e EXP. Servtoe Sta help,* APPLY JN PERSON * Ou&Uled MJ..M'rl aiup Mrw.SCl'lmldt,WfftdltlPfr-••• 1111~.. *SOFA BED* Service. Nftt work. Cleanup remodel. Ftff f!l Small W11.11re.~. exp'd, ovr 25 f/Urn". Ap(ty tn pttll()n, 24 Fa!hk>n Island N.8. your ad .. f:odaltl tonne! A.pncy, 2>43 Weat· "Iii GOOD CONO Jd, m•fnt. 968-2303 jobs """-lro121e 536-21~:_ _ App]y 3355 Via Ll5o, N.B. 2096 Httr\'lnr, C.,,f. (;4.J.55R8 Equal opportunity tmploytr ---------· cliff Or., N.B. 6t5-277'0. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 64S·IH66 ro * M!Mlai 1tft t 't ' i I " I '' I I ; ' I I . . t.\ILY r!LOT WldnHdor, Ap<tl ll, 197! llLOT ·ADVE!TIS ER /0 ...... -.~1 ••••· :J~·I ..... _ I~ I -~· ltt I r.._g, .. lliJ I -·-1§11 .,,..~ ... !§JI ~ .. -... 1§11 .. ,..-u. l§J 1• .. •.,,.iiiiiltviiiii,.iiiiiiiiii•-:;: MIKlllllllOUI ... Dot• 154 ...... Sllp1/Dock1 tlO Tr1ll1n, Utility M7 ,;Au~l9·.~w~.·.~'"~iiii~~/i~;;;;;;;;;;~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~-~--~~~ 1"RrrE Mllfl. • chair, '""" --."""c"A"'RP""'ET~~.--NEED IOOd homu: Lovabl.• SI.JPS availablic. ·Ftnet:t ln 14• lf•ndtm Tr111... \VANr ID bl.I,)' • 5 ·-. s. c.Mir, ~ &ablt, Tr poodl• le a-dachlhwid. Wewport, be1t ' (f.cillUe1, Wllh 4 wbttla. AU ii«I weld. Mercedes Beu nlS ln tood n comer cMU le SPl)"td rtmate1. 961-4681 fr•• Pf.ridfll', $2.2$ I It. ed conatructlon. ~" Ste.. -. "::JI 6T5-.202 '"4NMr cheat Vt'Q reu. Sprint Shq Special ARISTOCRATIC Mt n I a , Phone 67WTll tll JO pm. deck plaUna. Will tell or A"tol, Imported m.5411 t\UfSTANDING llallan G-hounds, .AKC. g PRIVATE SIDE TIE' Mu tracr. Jor olclcup. 3116SlcUy,1--.._.._ ___ _ Y ••1 u.• ..iM./ (Mesa Vtrde) c.M ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY J\El)flCORAT!NG! The VAWESI """· oholl, champ. 64>-.z763 -··-mo. . . ROW.ROYCE D~'"" •. 1.-.._ ..... sr:>&tSl alt 5 """"'""~ ... m., ..... pa • access. ~,,.. ST. Bernard....cilant, AKC now hat Ill•· Buplno. NMM2 OVER 40 COLORS ..... Shot& .... ,,,, .... 1'100 llolt1, Spood & Ski 'II I ...... s. II i;,; BMW ~UT. Depa! Wall<cr to ch-lromf •up. (113) ~ INBOARD HYDRO . . ~:rm.....a:trw m . Cl.11 For 2 PUREBRED GERMAN ltfUJt MU, net4 mont.)'. Boat, I~;;;;;;;;; It, • FREE E.WIMATES SHEPHERDS. I weeks old, mot0rAtru:1225. RUNvf!rYllD II t" * 2 'IV't, OYentutltd chair female, i2S etch. g.u..736S 1trong. \Vilt conalder ml for UM ugglet -book in )'OUt home : c&lt. . FEM. tpade Utoood min\ motorcycl11. See at 738 \V. '63 ?ilEYERS Manx. 1600 VW 17,;;v•.,c.Jl-.!SU-='-,'°'=*:.::;: 842·9143 wht Poodle, 10 mo'•· l!lh, C.M. 6'2-Sl'5 or '""""· Xlnt. eond. ll30<l or 1'111 OYAL bl.,. Danl1h l--------"-Rea.onable. M&-411! MS-2510. ofr. 83,1.1691 RO\' CARVER. lNC. 2925 Harbol-Blvd.• Colla ~1t•a 546-4444 ALFA ROMEO '67 oumo I ,,., • bed r. xJnt-. ""· r WOODEN ..,...r """· MALE AKC AVSTllAlJAN i ...c;;.....:..;1~4~' ~B~O~AT~--1·s='po:.:..;;r1"1,..;R:::1:...co_,_R_od_•_"=n ·636-G55 aft 6 pAnll'lled, wlndow1, vtnt. SILKY. XI.NT !i1ARKING8. l ANTJQUED drater, drtl&lnr $30. AllO five lt" J1ml A: S21JO 675-2465 196' Dallun Fair Lady, ImmacWate! l owne,r, J;ac-~ table, mirror. 14$. \Yalnut tlrt1 W/MW 11 f •I ua rd " BOXER PUPPIES ARC r;iillud~ ~e~ ~~~~ potential clauic ''Little red tory. hardtop. (ZXU981) Full table ts. au.am N.fety tubt1, $50 or ri1 lO Wkl, Mlle, BriDdle A: two-felltr'', com P I 1 t e price $239l. Small down. 'IT-;-==;:-,==-,-= tn.dt tor 1980 Qw:vy or IJ9..29f ftnance private puty, Call w /Ion n ea u t'OY'er l WW Hnance pvt ply, dir. ' • 2 Spullb can'ed table1, neWtt 10 0 d powerallde, Favm. 9 !S46-fT38 or 494-8811, removable hardtop, New . Call att lD am 540..3100 or I 0nnp plaid couch It Mlle. ~&ft 15 p.m. "Y:ORKSHJJµ; TelT'ier pups lll~' SKI or Filhlns boat. tire• &: ena:ine block (have '49'·T506 : '""'8U ANTIQUE """°"' booth • AKC Champ Sir.d. M·F. wl<IJ bp More o"lboanl. ,....;p•>... ·!-.!"'.~. 112 S . --c=o"'R=n=N"'A-:--- 1 Glf• .. S.le 112 Perfect operaUna; c:ind, $100 TERMS!! * 53l·l'm Cmplt)' eqpt w/elet 1tart, 846-0223 - per da.y lnoome .i l'OOd YR old lhaaY fem&le dof. runninr lichtll, 1kil etc. LOOK at &.bit I! e6 Ram Air, Jocatlon.Tradetorcar,bol.t Good w/chlldreo. Jf7S.6'S-7TU 4 Jpd. 'TO CTO. All or will leue SU.0010 01 Houaebro~n. 538-1045 4/13 'Boati, Storige 912 performance e q u Ip p e d: '88 Cortina 2 Dr. GT. Rad\t.l lli't1. 4 'Pd. im. CaU alt ~ pm, 646-1154 · ' I' LIGHT Bola> eurwd oota, ' $15 Ol' bit otr. 2 Twin bed• $10 ea. matt l coU IPfTl&I 11.!0. 61J.<l7M. ' APT of turn. lncl. Ri v1era ' couch, twin bed.I, table•, chain,~ 494-4977 IRISH Setter pupple1, AKC ---------! $21W, "6-M5 After 4 il nr, Cbamplon 1tnd. FENCED ,_. area, ott wtmdl. DATSUN NIGUEL Art Aun Rumm.p Salt. Apr 22: & 23, 10--4. 2963.2 Vilt& Plua. La&'· Ntr. H.,, .. • 96MS2! * as6 =~~~-Call'=r~ruc-u----,=u "•6"'9..,.2"'o~oo"'""'RO"""'Ao""s""T""ER,,.. WATER bed ex?" nevtr tued, lap seam, 50 )'tar V.'llml11ty, 145 . ........,,, 'r.8 :rord Ranche~Air cond, rta:lltered Muttanp, Gentle [ ~itloll .... s:;oo. 6'75-2834 M 0 VIN G ~M u 1 t 1e11 lfiJ rlh.. 1'.1utl 1ee \o appttclate. mart, aood lihow bent; ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;; .. ;;i'TO FOC'd Rancher 500, only , GARAGE SALE: Apt size NEED A RlJBBER STAMP? Pinto filly, 3 )Tl, anen 5,000 mi's. Like new. All • "frlr, 1'l1m I: Mlle. 21M Call 638-.a3M. Low, low broke. Beat otter. 5'S-1357 xtru + c1.11t. tool boxe1. Raletab st., C.M. "i""..-"'-·,,------=Ro=bb=I ==~~-~ C1mpon, S1le/R1nt 920 ,,.._ * M&.0035 * MIKllllnHUI EXPEIUENCED rider "'11 1941 Joternatlooal Bu• >;4 TON GMC YER piam; •hotmnltb Wanted l20 enn:lae or train your horte Camper. 28 ft Joni. C&tm tbl. 11.w, Lota of Nm ~ W"~ 22 or pony, Ors. c.o. area, $5 a body, kit, bath, 2 rms, 11lpt Cam:r ~~I~~ 3 •Pffd , mlN. 2ln Azure Sl.nta Ai. "",'LU: cal Rua:er wttk. Carol MalOn, 146.9574 4, wtr, elec. generator' au ma c, •-.J p. power .; J' .. 5liT-1939 plJtol, 5 or 6" bm'tl propane, fully paneled Ir. diJc brakes, H.O, tell' ~-":'i-:O;C.::r.-::=,,--,· i w/replaceabl~ mar nu m HORSE Corn.!, barn A: feed 1 613-17.. 1pr;"•• dlx cab 1auae1 '~ARA.GE Sale! ao•~1--6 · crp. -.. • · • -• .. ..,,. eyllndtt. AllO camp l n r Iha.ck. S30 a mo. Call tool box, m x 16.5 ""ide -•--lie-· -1 W 18th St I ~·0 ""~" MONARCH I' 1 let p" • CM"-"• ..... '' ' • equ pment. !67....8901 H.B. ~. baae tlte11 ready to haul a camper, plywood r 1 o or, CUii for f'umlture ap. REGISTERED running w/w "'''· clothe~ closet, 10~' e&mper. Mlchfnory 116 pn.-a, too11 -··-· qurterhorle Chu tnot ""'° "'" • hool rack. $3295 Gil . !)RIVEN OOMPRES--Open I to 5· 83,:7015 mare. m.ctT2 mcJ. M&-909' &ft 6 P:\f. Wt'U aet Y9U a new campl!r 5 1pd. dlr. ~·ned by little old 1chool titacber from La· run& Beach. Full prlcit $1799 CZNS 159) .Take older trade or 1mall down. Will finance P"'I. pl)'. Alt 10 am M0-3100 or 4!M-'iJ08. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS ID 8-.br Blvd. Hlll'ltincton Beach 142-7111 or~ '69 DATSUN W~GON SOR on trailer w/i-fnt pot NEED Jere trwW: Steamer Cyct.1, llke1, any make Ir finance 11 on !,_~7 sun.eomP1et1.$C25. ~or~C&b~'"r""'~m~· ~ •m~~~~i !~~~~;;~.J~l'(;J Scoot.rt 925 tone • 1 onG•M'"c"". "~.radio. 01r. tieater . .. ,"'.....,, -a.ti 1f141 IYWI' 917} htu1t HU. \Viii Maiiw f111ritiment take trade or finance private I MIK•ll•-· Ill Mu1lc1l ln1trvm1nt1m . nn.IVV'I TRUCK CENTER pany, CaU ...... u or '1-.--A-U_C_T_l_O_N __ *_ DARK faced !endor dlx amp THINI """ Harbor Bt...i. 546-8736. ""· Old cnft.11-.... box General 900 Costa Mesa 546-6750 -,,_, 1---------HQ.._.......,-.. 1969 DATSUN Sporn. Q>upt • PRIDAY 7:00 P.M. EUltu .. , .... ""· Glb>o" CAPTAIN ...... _ '64 FORD PICKUP ,.. '"''" II"". Call APRIL 2Jrcl Fittbird lllple pick-up Unlimitedlkt-rat-af\)'IT'Oll • M4-4641aft'fpm R1po'• & 1125. '49 E. """' C.M. •• y . ''fRIEDUUllBr ·~ t tonl, <J<J eua experience nll Loni. Bed, vo, automa1 lc, '65 DATS\JN, ~.f.~ete-ess l1nkrvptcle1 TENOR Saxaphooe, good gaJl I: power. Pro!ealonal radkl. heater, new· paint. body MAKE 0 R.. 132 1 Cotored TV't, 1tereo 1, condition. Call after$ PM , sportfiAhtnagUlde; Mexican ~~--: ~i~ Bcautitul sha~. (l.2jg96l \V, Wll8on, 1p. 43, CM. 'l'homao ..,.,, Che1to, But-W-2231. • C•"tnJ Amorloa & p.,.. NIW·USIO.SIRV. $1295 1910 DATSVN 1800. Very ~lt. Dtn'1 tableti, China WURLITZER. e I' ct ro n I c le Cot.st waltrs • lrulnle-clet.n. Beil otter, muat sac. oabtneu, Savine carte. Ce· piano, $190. Gib&Otl ntan tion Jn boat h&nd.Unr ~· - -.. ... Ill "'iU. -..., ~. 837-M4&. 1 dar chutl, Delk., Dlvant. ampllt1er, $1.50. 644-1528 manahlp, DR A: cefe1lial • .. - - - ' ~e"'4 I~ I Ma-• Stovea, Re· Office Pumlture/ navlptloo. PICK VP • Crown V1ll1y Suzuki :noo H.-Blvd. &<S-"'6 FERRARI I frtr'' .Wuben, llr)oen and lqulp. 12A DELIVE!t'! ANYMIERE' * * FRl!:I * * .,. O>evy ,; too pick""' l -62---.-2-2~C- muoh """'' captain A .... avail& ... tor llelm•t " M•tric Tool Set w/..,.U ....... 12100 lo , Ferran + pe. WINDY'S AUCTION PAYM AST ER C ht ck e¥t•ndN cruillna. Exlen-\Vlth Purchate of New Bike. rood lhape, 2947 ~,endoz.., ( . protector, almott new $15. live admlnl1trative experi· 17601 Forbc1 Road Apt D C..M. 546-4598 ' RitmUwton eiff typewrtttr ence, 646-srr Lq:una NilueJ 831·1621.i,.,==-'-' -,,.=-=--,,-,--I J OOME BROWSE AROUND $2'.ZS. OllVt!tU calculator, CONSERVE CASH NcrtDn, A.JS Rlckmu too. MUST 1d1 '70 Chevy ~ ton I ~ Ne~ Blvd. model :U D!.vWuma, xlnt ' Suburb4n Careyo.All. S,000 Behind TollT• Sdi Mat'll P'.JO, Victcr addtna; machine ol: have your bot.t now! 1968 Bultaco (Matador) 250 mt, 9--pa11. All extra•. 350 1 a.ta MH& * 6*.as $100. Call anytime MJ..7562 Leue the boat you want, cc atrtel or dirt. Good va. New l/ll. Mf..n06 OPEN DAILY t to 4 new or wed, if over $25,000 condlUon. Recent tune up.1,,=--='-.-"7C-=-=,---c-= Pl1no1/0r11n1 126 up to 10 yr· termi. See yot.lJ' $495 cuh. ·)'Inn Pbone .57 Ford 'iii T. Pane.I. '61 DIAMOND Dome cocktail 'broker/dealer or call (2Ul $t9-..o530 ' Eblir» Cablnetl. Good rlnf, 4 ctl, TW. fl&011 Factory AuthortJed '40--0194 o' '61 "·k coqd. ~-4*'00 perfect, certified &PPflilal Dlatributor tor . H NI>A ' new CUii. ...... ' OIEVY '62 Van camper. $41MI _ sell ca.ah $1450. Yamaha * Kimball MERCURY prop&, •teerlnr paint, knobi1, 419. Chrome E tn.nl Ure brand Diamond -piltl'Ol!d eurlnp, Conn * 1bomu cable~. 1lnel• lever controls, fenders, xtra partl I: tires. M na:l sell 6~ new. atudl, $150. Diamond Kobler le Campbell lnatrwntnb. wlndthleldr, Murt""' $400. Gary Ftttu1--UJ""'=''=='""'~~- IOlltalre wedding set $115. Fabulou, a.elecdon ot new I: etc. Phone, ~ man 644-1212, pt. No, '3. '51 DODGE P.U. rm Eltata Sale! 6TJ..3600. Ulld crand&, aplnett, con-13%' Runabout or filhtnr '69 Yamaha 125-Set up lor . 'llea~~·~n.'~· ANTIQUE Diamond clu&ter IOle• • Ofl~1 only at boat & trlr. Fbrala hull dirt, Many extru. Very1~~~~~c..-~~ rln&:· Total wtlaht appx. 3 COAST MUSIC \\'/tX1ntrol1 A '71 lie, $~ clean. 67>-4423 '61 Ford ~~ Ton Panel. Good carat1. Ina. appralaal $850. NEWPORT A HARBOR &12--0584 e HONDA 90 TRAIL BIKE. cond. Rltbul.lt '61 ".na. S29l5. Alkins S&SO or bt1t otter. Colta Me1& * 60-3851 ""u""·-,.-w-,hoo-t"', "'d"'W"&..,-bi<,..-, -,..,,-,,·I Only Z'IOO 1t:reott rnlle1. $225.1~C_,al,..1 .,646"'-'888:1""' ___ ~= Phone between 10 AM A 6 • 300 Pianoe It Orp.111 need1 p & l n t, t.30. Ph: 675-2834 Auto L•••lng 964 PM 142-3230 Nn-USED. Goin&' O\lt for 675-2286 • HODAKA ACE 100. '68. - PROFESSIONAL p.rcHntna: butlneu. Rentall $10 a mo. ~,-.. -,-,-, "'M~t~l-nl-./~---I Lott of extras. $250. Desert $25 equip. Statlltt 3 bp 21" Ste!Dwa,y, Baldwin ' Kawai Service 902 rachl(. 962-3513 Reurw1 your Camper Ttudr true cu t Jront throw Chlckerins, Yamaha. etc. YAMAHA '68 dirt bike no or Motorhome for your va· ~'el', $12:i. McLane trim nELD'S PIANO CO. EXP'D boat maintenance llcenu, 2jO CC, $3Ta, 'can c1tion. C11l now 24 hour , -"-2 h •u. 5CM798 Co1ta Mel& Garden Grove R.etlnllhlnc, mech. etc. '°'~ •717 -phone 546-6150 for Fi"f't Llt· n ._...,,, p, ~. (n4J MS-32!!0 cn4) 638-2710 Free e1timate, 6«-2199 V'to-0 TELEVISION that llve1 in a HAMMOND, Stilnway, Boatt, Power 906 1970TRIU1\1Pl1 ~ port ab 1 e ndkl. The Yamaha. New 6 wed Good CondlUon GMC TRUCK CENTER -panaaonic pandora. F 0 r planoa of moet make1. Be1t '68 OWENS 28' cabin cruiler. 6T>1171 e\'I!!. quick II.le SW. Call aft 6PM, '"'"-11'1 So, "·1U. at Schmid t 11yl"< brl.1-e. 11""'e acrt\V '70 Y ha 230 I ·· 1.)0() ~ Harbor Bl\"d. M&--2174 ..,~. ...... ....., • ..,.. •ma ' o m1 s, Costa Meaa ~-6750 ' Mualc Co., 1907 N. M.a1n. 225 interceptor engine. UO or Wte over pyrnnu.I,.,==---~~,..-~ WASHERIDRYER. nlaht Santa Ana. hours. Jn flnt clui ihape, ~S-Ja.fl LE.ASE a new '71 Pinto $50 stand, chow table, couch, -A°'N-T""°I Q~U"'E,..-"'P~I-.-,-,--_, ~l8500~~P_ho_ne~~---'-°'-'~~-'TO TRIU1\IPH TR..fiR, 650cc. mo. <36 mo.) open end. patio chain, pine JIOl1I'. table JtlJ1d can-td, white • roJd, '46• Chrtl double cabin flying Xlnt r.ond. SlCUI. Ca 11 RENT a new •n P!nOO S4 Ir llCCfll'I, lamp. Call &ft upright rrand. unbelie..,.ble brldp, twtn Chryller, radio 538-0422. dl,Y and .4c milf'. Put a S, ~ __ .. ..,_... , .. ~ 0 v it r little kick In your lilc. 'IM"IUIUUI• nu~u• ltl~hont. auto pilot, )..1nt e 'TO Norton Rd1ll' THEODORE MINK coal. full lt"flh. l\1u•I $12001 $600. ~ live atlll.rd, SU,500. 833---0220 Xtras * $109,; ROBINS FOR .. u $800 or bt•t otter. Nf"'N o R GAN Thom a 1 a1k f~ l\1r. Allen. * aft 6: 67MMO * D CCIII $3500. Call anytime, Pa--"'' h. r •• I h •• "1"00"1,..-~ .. "-. -'-,C~h-,",c.,-.,eo-,.,. .• --·~~C,.,'--""'--'""-~ 2060 HARBOR BLVD. MS-6981 ............ ,,,., ..... Mobile Hom•• 935 COSTA 1.tESA ~2-0010 spinet, deluxe, nearly new. thian.--t"·Jn scttw, f u I J y VW l96S -Special wheeiJ. Mrr2119 equipped, ready to ;o. tlrt• 1r 1teerina "''httL fin 1-"'w"W'-,,u"",,.-,-::s,"1'",..,.1"'•"1a-.. -5'&-243< ~ of1u. $ 10 7 pm, J.Jke New! 29' SPORTSFISHER, flyinr $500. M.:i-10&5 bridce, dual oontrol1, 1/s SHAMPOO A-Stb on S I Good •-rad\o, twin bait tank.I. Xlnt INSTANT HOUSING WHY WAIT? Aute Service, Perts '66 CHEVY ena: Bored il 1troked lo 388 cu In. Be~t equip used. SOii hp. S1200 in,·csted, 2100 ttatbor ,Blvd, FIAT ............, "THINK" 1101411 ... "FRIEDi.ANDER" 11111 HACH ILVD •• ....... ,,, 393-1566 • 537.QU NEW-USEO.SIRV. UVU'U'l.I FUN CARI '61 CONY. S225. 645-SlSl JAGUAR '69 JAG. XKE Cpe. 11,000 mi, radio, Ml/FM/S\V, Radials. 54&-821~ KARMANN GHIA 1960 GHIA Loll ol mile1 of tranaporta· tJon lett. Sl)l!c!alJy priced for quick 1&le. QDr325 LOOK • $499.0Q CHICK IVERSON vw ~9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1910 HARBOR. BLVD. COSTA MESA Mondlya., Tue&da,y1 1.1...;po_rt_n1..__.,.',......,...--.,. lhape. S2500. Pb: M.2-too.4 Wtdltrlldl)t $~.50 by Lori. SCUBA Equl-p. n c.1, tank, 32' CLASSIC CtuiMr. Sound 100 W. Cout Hwy. H2-0844 Scub& pro rtf, carrltr, wt hull, idnt ena. Maey XlrU. CARPET Layer hu quality suit, held rear, gloves, $4500-WUI trade1 For info afia11 A: Hi--t...o at dltcount muk flnt. $1.JIO/lll. Gary ph: .54'-3012 an 6::J> wkdyl The all new Vlllqe Houu by 1,,..,.i!t ~Toblle Systems \\'irti slopin&" shake roof _can be )VUf1 now! Model1 on display at. .. ,.c l500 " bHt 011"' " LAMIORGHINI trade. ~ Mier 3 pm ,.. * i'.A"Mi01!6H1RI :;(' pcicft from $2.!50 a yd. ~ Fetterman &U-1112, pe, No. u . Mr. Ed (n4l 871-9953 43. 16' PLEASURE boat, 40hp Hl "I Evinnldt>. Elec. shirt, l'On'\I. Pool tableH>late: TV, Radio, ,. , top w/trlr. $9:i0. 962-04-IT. 4x8 eomplett $325 Sterff l:M e 13• Bolton Whaler e AllO CUltorn It antique.a j"HP'-Jo•·----hn, trlr ~• -U I GOOD TV, 17" $1.5. LIJcl new -'" 111W111- j mt -· to pm ,. .. Motorola ia Radloe $3 , -='-'~'""-· ,..m .. •_>.,.490-S _ _,isa~-,, O R J J: NT A L l'lll·AnttqUe J"ICICll'dtr $.\. M5-482J 1 lJ, Kayat Pontoon 00.t, 40 &aouk, S.aut cok7t I cond. - Ml. '*-7151 HP motor, tn.Un, mo. ri:1 2131m-1m :"" ... ~' hdc:'ii'5· I '"" .. -I~ 21' Chrla Twin '" &45-*10 Oil' 145--1511 · 1 owner. $1'2;i0, 8311-3791 • BALBOA Bay Cl"b na. as• lloet1, Ronl/Chert'r 90I V BUS seatit for '68 later, Best offer. .. • 963-1210 * • BAY HARBOR MOBILE HOMES 1'25 Baker St C.O.ta ~1eu. * POJ\.SCHE PARTS Ju11s.ors.o.Fw:v11Harbo~ REASONABLE D a y 714!5f0..9470 776·0444, tve/wknda 8(JG.2419 e TifE MEADOWS e ~uto1 W1nted ffl f lne1t adult community In So. Calif. • SJ00,000 Rec. re n t • r Swirnmlna pool e La\\'n bowllna • Much ?.fort. On Jettny Rd Betv.ftn S.A. I: San Dlt"KO 1''1), (1,S rru So. of S.A. Fwy} • TI4/~-. WI PAY TOP CASH tor """ can A lrtlcks, lull can ue tor frte t stlmalcs, .. mbtnbtp, $1400. t n c I C•t• " t _,, -------= .... ~ 31 Twin.acnw Cbril, fully Coit• M11• Jewel IJanl. "· · SEALPOINT l<ITTINS ..,,lp'd. Flahlor or Crul• w~- GROTH CHEVROLET • I OIL -i .. t-1..... ._ --• '""'' YoU .. e ii Ask tor "'-'es 'l'"'"Cr _..,...,,., u"m ....., $21 1'r .. ,_.166 tng. .Al.i '!59 Twlnacrew .,... " ---What YoU ett. l32ll Beach Blvd 10 _,, C&ll S40-..\lOI Dot• 154 O\\·en1. Xlnt cond. 5'8-2434 100;> aq ft of living ares. $~ Hunttnrton Beach Bo.ti, S.11 tot mo SJl&eit rent, S3T50 I u 11 847-8081 Kl ~ , BtCYClZS, all typc1. Stlnl· I ·A-K-C--.,~-••• -.~M-alc--A-1<-m-.. price_ WUJ flnanct. MM:U1 WE p•y TOP DO" •• I •-, J Sp, 10 Sp, J\.t.u. ,_,..... FAMILY Boat: Columbia 22 ~ ......-n. I iU"o.i Mar, CM M2·tm wtit w/blk muU. ChllrnP 1: aooct lllp. 4 Salli, •It ae-Tr1ller1, Tr1vel '45 FOR TOP USED CARS 14 CUT fl "MJ, lata moc1eL •lOck. llltlniu~n. R' • 1 · ct11 ,1,; nearbi new motor. ,,,...,. _______ 1rt )'Ollf cir ti extra clean. Apt •bi ttoYI """-cit.an. &f6.7668. &t1! ofrt ~U63 kft 5. ·10 Star Muter I aleeptr. set u.. first. JO''"' u itoYe. M.mo3 PifAJ..TESE. Thimble si« SABO! l&llboat, uHd 10 hardtp ttnl trlr. l.1tt up 8AU!:I\ BUlO\ •"°=,,;,.~==-==="I Yor1de1 • ToY Poodlca, ••-....._ U nt nd 1ll.ley. All C0t1venlenct1. 234 E. 17th SL 10\VJNE t'OAST COUNTRY ~nte. ~ct 1 co . t 1215 AKC. o. ..... A Grown. AJIO ....... 1ru -*** Loll o 1tor1.gt. S . Cotta liltl& $U-TT6~ a.uB inemblrtblp tor t&l«. Stud~. 213: 78l..f180 I =~·=·~·~-,,-=··~,,-~· I !48-M66. DfPORTS WANTED ~ '=~ ITMll«J' llko new BOXER, AKC, (I'm. 6 Mo'1. O~il-;?;:~ ~~-~~n ~j FJELD £ ~treem 16', liki! Oranae CoW1tiei -Brlnd. M/gac, i~ ot kt cond. $1.XJO. 2'1.m~ I'll-hardly uNd, SSIO. :314 TOP $ BUYER Wed1twood 1tove S?.l ofr. ~lu1t ro thlt wk , \\'1t1tmi.nltt r Avt. C?.I . BILL lo.jAXf;Y TOYOTA -· Ill). 51M<IM 892-31l16119z..ti11 "' 210 ...... lllpt/Dockt '10 ...... .,. 18881 Btaeh 81...i. JX>LORED TV, XLN T AKC SUI<)', mall!, J mot A WANTED: Slip "ntal Jor 31' Ht' t'!•ld A Strt1m. Cd. cond H.. Beach. Ph, M7..&W COND, lltS. P'Dodlt• Mt-<11'2. J3i E. boat. 1 ~ or lonltr. Call S.'iOO. 6-li.oem aft (l)M er ••k Fot that item under pi, • ~1525 • 17"' It., C.M. tm) to-f1lJ ..... try tM ~"1'\Y Plnc-:Mr ~~-~---~--""'-------~--- '<I() GT .2+2. Re<!.0Blk int. Purcl\aled. New. June '68 . 8,obo mi. lmmac. $&500. Pvt Pty, Hnts Hrbr !213} 5"'-1062. MERCEDES IENZ (..•1 11 1 ~1'" ( (•to"''f'\ L ,,,1l'·,r ..,,.1. 111on N,.,~ 1'I. u~r·d • .. \,..,,, .l·'". A""' Jim 51emon ' Imps. \'< ti II•' ~ /,, iHl 'll. '.,.H1 !.1 l\n.1 'i·l6 ·111 4 'BS 2ZSE P/1, p/dilc brb. 1unroot, radial tires, 1tick •hilt. $ll50 Urm. a3S-f,1Q MG ........... &!MJ~ "'FRIEDUNDER" lltM ll&CM llnf'I'. W) ......... '11_ NEW·USEO.SERV. ~ S.ll !di• Hew mwl MJ.5mNnw1 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 10R THE GREAT LITTUNEW'll CRICKET s1 6 ftoncmy ond Pirrformonce ot o fantaslit Low Price. BRAND NEW 1971 DUSTER The Compoct lu•ur1 Cor with th• Ecol'IOMy Pritt T09. Serio! I Vl29Blf120577 159 USED CAR SAVINGS '67 Pl YMOUTH PUIY Ill 2 Dr. M.T. YI, 1ulo1111lic, ••dio, h11!1r, powtr tl11ri119, pow1r b•1•11. ITAH4J11 '66 MUSTANG VI. •11IO!ft•lic, ••clio. littltt, PS, .. hilt w1ll1, t lr co11d. !TEYllOl '66 CHRYSLER JOO 4 D•e' H•rll T11t VI , •11!1rn1tic, rtdio, h11t1r, pow11 1'11•i11g I ~"'~''· ~in¥1 top, t l• c111d!tlo11i119. !TRJOJSI '67 MERCURY MAIOUll H.T. c.-. .VI. 111tom1tlc. pow1• dttri119. b r1\11, lttll. wlittltwi, 11r, vi11vl 11of. I 106ASH '.II FORD LTD HAID10P VI, tvl1n11t1,, 11,io, .... , •• , ,, .... , ,,.,.i .. , I b••••i. ,;,, .. :,.,.,1 top. t)(0J•16 1 '68 PLYMOUTH YALIAN1 • cyll"'f••, r1411, h11t1r, f1ct1ry ,;,, IW~S·l •i l 51195 51975 '67 DODGE DA.IT Awlom•llc, VI, ·~Glo. h1•l•r, pow•· 1l••r:01q, 1i•. IUJV04!>) '67 CHRYSLER NIWPOlT 4 °'" s1295 1111!1•. i:oowc• 1l1t1i~9 l VI . 1wlom1lic, radio, b1•~11 , 1ir. !UJC-i"iBl '68 CHRYSLER NIWPORT s2095 VI, 111+0,,.tlic, r1dl1, ............ ''"'''•· 11r, vl11yl !(Ip. IWG l'l 16 ) '69 CHEVROLE T CAMAIO SUPll S", s2295 VI , •11lom1tic •1d;o, ' h•tltr, power 1lc"trl119, bwc•11 '''"· tonto1t, vi11yl lop. !>CSIC761 I '61 CHRYSLER NIW'°ll' CUSTOM 52495 I c ..... "· ,,,, ... ,,, ,,4;,, h11t1r, pow~• •l•trln' I "''\,,, f1rl11ry tir, .. 1,..,1 11111. tYDMllO l ; l'ILOT·ADVUTISU Autos, New 9IOAutn,Now HOAutoo,Ntw 980Auto1, Now 9IOAutoo, Now 910Autoo.Ntw 9IOAutoa, Ntw 910 Autoo, Now 9IO Alllol, Now TRUCK LOADS ARRIVING DAILY ·- -· ORANGE COUNn DISCOUNT DEALER OYER BRAND NEW 423 CHEVY NONE HELD BACK 11 CARS & TRUCKS IN STOCKI VEGAS IMPALAS CAPRICE NOVAS CHEVELLS MONTE CARLOS vmu 112 & l/4 TON PICKUPS BRAND NEW FACTORY FRESH CHEVYS MUST BE SOLD THIS THURSDAY· FRIDAY· SATURDAY· SUNDAY --.u ......... Y T~~.......,~':....._:S 0 ....... " ALL FULLY FACTORY AND DIALER SflYICID. OUI NIW CAR GET llADY ncHNICIANS ON DUTY DURING THIS SALL ALL FULLY FACTORY GUARANTEED TRADE INS Ourln1 thl• ••I• your prHlflt ce~" trade _,.14 for or net •(w• will !MY off your prHent Nlanct) mu1t k •flpr•IHd hl1h •novgh ftr you te •ct at enct, CREDIT IMMEDIATE Dt!lwory • c,e<llt App<oMI' Ntw Low Interest lote Scrllrttl Passed On To You Some With 50,000 Miit WamHtty Brand New 1971 Impala v.1. t11rl.1h"ttlr1m1tic, 1uto, tr111t., p/1t11ri11t. 11111, fii1lt"1 .. ,.1, t/11111, full w/cov1r1, p111hbuHon r111tio, l111ury cloth i11t1rl1r, IUV· ilt 11,qi.rer 1xt1rlor, .:)17flll•04. BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVELLE MALIBU SPORT CPE. V.I, t..1rboh.,.r1111t!Jc, 1111•1 tr1111., t/9l•11, p/1lt1ri""ll• 1JU1hb11Ho" r1div, lu1111ry cloth inltrlor, .,crvllc l1cq~•r 1xltrivr. l 961 -I Jlll4. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1971 NOVA COUPE Soft r1y l/9lt11, orloor 1d91 9utrch, !7tJt4 whit1 1hip1 ,;,,,, full w/to"'"· hl11~ alath l11t, 61-61 S1PKl1lwood. ID "'3 626·67910 161.01 MONTHLY-$110 DOWN Dow" -paymHh to low tttty '""' lwt-- ,...ibl-ly poulbl• "'"' ,,. ... .,,_ .o1 ..... ...,.,_ •• flt ,_ ~ ... 1971 FLEETSIDE PICKUP WIDE LONG BOX LIST Patel $4212.25-DISCOUNt SJU.41 LIST r1111c1 SJ!I00.41-DISC'OUNT SS00.41 ·~5 238688 H••vv ,,,, 1prl11t , 1111J111t1r, 111 +.111,. t •u1•a. Cl14Ut4JJ6. U1t 5348462 5297899 SALE PRICE SALE PRICE FULL PRICE For l11tl al ""*· 1111 ,...,.,_,.vtd cr•lt, P\ltl c111! ,.,.ICI tUIT Ir.ti. fl• I t~ ,..,.., Dlf.,.rMI pymt .... ~ P416.• lrKL fl1M11t1 clllrw•. Arvlwl "''"'"" ,,, .. "'i2'5~,,,, ''" u . ..,., 1971 $1799 VEGA ~LL P~CE . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PLUS TAY I llC. ;124096 Full Foc.tl'l' !quip. 1111111,01 S1•! l1!h , Sh1111lll1r H1r1111i S. H•I• •...ti All D•lc• + T1J1 " llctftJI. An """'It!• sublKI llCI Jl'lo• 1111. $1le ands !illndty, Ap1H l.!lt'I, 10 ONLY 4481 MILES • 50,000 MILE WARRANTY '"'· MGB 1)1GB '67, Lo mi's, Xlnt ro~. Price be:low rnark~t. R.8.dlO, &-track tape deck. 644-1161 aft 5pm. OPEL ..,...~=:::-~-'70 OPEL G.T. 102 H.P., auto trans., radio i.: heatt"r only 10,000 miles. 'M!BQ!f. $2795 OAVE ROSS PORSCHI ·TOYOTA 1'6.1 PORSCHE S.C, TOYOTA NEW ,71 ID55VW. Smlll wlodow. oew 1970 TOYOTA 1968 VW '69 BUICK R.acln1 a:reen with alectrlc brake•: headen It paJnt. COROLLA Diamond blue wtth bl&ck In· G 5 ~ A W tJ •Unroof. Clean and r1cent· NO DOWN Nice interior, runs ;ood, ,.,,.,. . h 1000 1 G 1 h terior, M111 wheel• and ra-ran port_, • u n'\lb kc, ly overhauled. Pria!'d to 1ell, Delperalion SAie $ l S 0 . ......,,,. wu ' m · rt)' w 1 dial tlrct. XSP314 !teal buy. power •tee'"'"'· power r• • ycc,)2j 833-6268 tit. 5PM 1porty red Interior. Tnily ONLY $l 099,00 r~. radio 1tnd "'•ter. •198· ONLY $2 79t PAYMENT priced tor quick ule. 156-419, CHICK IVERSON '69 V.W. Sunroof BQFAT $1599.00 CHICKVWIVERSON $1777 $69.01 MONTH• C si>Hd. A~111"M radio, heat· vw "' -· Daf. "" pr\<:<. ·(~16;1 mil .. , ... •w•"· CHICK IVERSON "4•J031 E.'1 ... or" COURTESY .>t9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 $UM.3B or caah pr Jc e DODGE 1970 HARBOit Bl.VD. Slll\J3.55 '"'I. Tu & Lie $1795 vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 2838 """"' Bl"'1. COSTA MESA A.P.R, '14.54%. Serill No. DAVE ROSS 5·1!1-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 COSTA Mfo:SA Coata t.ft•• ~7-9220 SALi PRICr SERVICE · PARTS LD\~IT llaYICI .... , . ....... lo1N I Op1t1 Sat. I AM • NHtt MON. 7 A.M. to 9 PM. MS. thni FRI. 7 A.M. TO 5 P.M. w ...................... .. AT THE 17TH STltlrT TURN O''· SANTA ANA 'ltllWAY IUICK . BUJCK '68 Hdtop. Beaut., w/ air, Altl/FM, PS/PB, wire wheels, tilt wheel. sia. l.lJ..J)h1 or 675-3000 CADILLAC Largest Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS '" Orang• County I '63 th'" 1'70'. CADILLAC '69 El DORADO 1 OWNIR Lu• 'Tll•• 15,000 Miio• Still I• W•rr••ly Flrtmltt oolof. l'ull liaatblr '"tenor. AM/TM 1terto, n , PB, PW, P, ••all, &ir cond., tilt wheel, landau top, autr> matte trunk • door loclll. ( •l>l.llll PriCld lo Mil. PONTIAC 2480 Hnrbor Blvd. at 1-·an· Dr. Costa Me111 .'>46-8017 '71 Opel Ralloy '65 PORSCHE C "'!4J; •••'"""' ,,.,;, PONTIAC 1910~~.!'°.\'~zvo. VOLVO '69 BUICK "~"·with re<! int•Mor Ex-~~!:~err.. Toz:: 2180H.,.borBJ,d.at>"a!dl• '68 vw STATION WGN n.rvLll.I"\ A""':"':';:~ . .' .~;.,1.~T'a 1 ,, GN"a'b.e.,.·di. cellent condition. <TZP 808> HUNTINGTON BEACH c06ta Me1a $.16-8017 . ~ THINI P .S., P.B., rt.dio, heater, ... ,~ ~ ~1NK... 2100 Harbor Blvd. ~ '64 CAD Convertilili Full price $2595. or lake I fXEV 417) 'VO~VO' w/1/w, N$o2. i 6 oo9u 5 """'°"""' """" trade. Call 494·11'4. $1871 Large Select On $l 599 2600 HARBOR 8L., Pull ..,.,.,., Alr. fq\l'!SIJ) ·66 Po,...., m,., re<11b1k. 1911 TOYOTA COROLLA Of VW Campers, COSTA MESA $995 4 1peed. R&H, vinyl root. Low milt"qe. fM3 CPG I $2195 Harbor American 646·02b1 ~.•w'.;',;:,:,'° .,E""~! i DR. FA~~~8EQUIPPED Vans, Kombl1, "FRIEDLANDER" OPONTiA0c55 :'::~ •• con~"::; :;:::,~ ~9TIO Don Johnaon. OIOICE OP' 5 Buses, New & Used 1:.i~::S::'~ 0;7~ Nice cond. Pvt pty. $700 1#.cte.w ..... '65 POR.SC11E 36.>-C, whlt1, 1 fl l • Immediate Delivery 18711 BEACH BL. 84:J..4~35 NEW·USED-SERV, 2480 Harbor Blvd. at f air Dr. ·"E'°',.'°'.,"': ,..'M-,,...,964_3_. ~=-~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. 84S.Ot1e 1969 HARBOR COSTA MfSA owner, 48,000 mi, A?i!/FM eu. ew CHICK IVERSON l~UNTINGTON BEACJI Collta Mc•• S.16-8017 '62 CAO. Sedan de VIiie Full '69 El Dorado, lull pwr, t.ir, Blaupunkt radio PERFECT TOYOTA VW 1960 V.W. Conv. -oo~"T JUST WISH for tiOWirr, $500. !:vtnln1~ mrta, J'M, ti.Pt, nu dn1. PORSCHE thrU-out. 673-4051. '"-\·••·-t hom MB--2311 -ooo ml'1 9 ·'·-of ~J Ocean blue lla rcd finders $3093 '" "''"16;> or your 1• I;;-;;:::--=:-;;-;:-::-= <N, • -·.... ....a. L------,,.....-1'62 PORSCHE S.C. 54~J031 Ext, 6f! .,. <T • C · fl •d -at b•-lo 0"1••'• Why 11 ... It Ito ~-otUe WI,.,..,.., 10!0, may !Ndo. I"' ma; wheel1. .rcat sun1· ... ~ ..,. """ .. ,... ,63 Ponche Super Bahama ye11,,w .. DeU11 d&o 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-!l.'..03 1970 HARBOR BLVD. mer:1 fun. Jt.Z407 J97I VOLVO Cla11\Ued Adi. whe" you Call turn u Into Want 912 P=tcM or $1000 l!crlptkm, Thia one e~tJ. B&S'T BARGAINS COSTA MESA PRICED 5599 OO DEi\10 7360 Turn unused lt11m11 lr110 quick money through a DAILY car wt.rt b' tQ'. a-.cm Cpl!. Bahama yellow IVith blk lent thru out. PX\V-~ CO!'ilE SEE oun '69 vw SEDAN • \\'{' Specialize In cash, call M2-5tl7! PtLOT Want M.. We'll hllp )'OU teU! ™ interior, Aid/FM, -·"' LOOK • $2,3" SELECTION or CHICK IVERSON o'"'"' Dell"'"' Autos, Jil-,w---~,ao= "'A-.~,.-,,""'N~,··w---~,=ao lutoo. Now NO """'1'· ,..,."' '" • 1 n' CHICK IVERSON TOYOTAS VW PXWNI VW J im Slemons Imports Like new. Radio. Dir. Heal· $2399 140 W, W•rner er, 4 spt!ed, !VNU 99!11 \Vill :W9·3031-Cxt. fi6767 CHICK IVERSON 5~9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Santa An• take car I" trade or wlll 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ~eMLeoo 9 VOLVO BRAND NEW . 1970 1!170 HARBOR BLVD. O E lo $ finance priva!e party. COSTA J\.IESA vw COSTA MESA pen v••· un. 546-8738 01' 'IM.Qllt. !M>JO!I ,,,, .. 66 ... 67 '6' Ponche, am I '"'· NW 540-4125 ~o vw •• m ... map, ndlal•, WANTED '~s1"'v'""oL'·vco."'s· E061A~N0l03 1970 HARBOR BLVD. tires 5 :1pd, Astral cuitom . TRIUMPH tape, wood' whttl, &Mlf, l 'U pay top dollar for !'llllr ROAD RUNNER COSTA I\IESA paint'. Car in lmm&c. oond. Immac1 $1850. ~7 VOLKSWAGEN today, Call '67 PORSCIIE !112, Xlra.s . Low or\!:. mi's. GTS..2043 '71 SPnFIRES 'i7 VW Sq1.11teback, xlnl and ask for R.on Plnchot, 2 Door. Dir. 4 speed, radio, 20 To Choose Xlnt Cond. l Ownrr S3«X1 PoRSCHE 911-S, late IM NOW ON DISPLAY cond. w/radlo I: lunar• 5t9.!03l Ext. M.l'J. llTS-0900. ·heatar. Muat 11!ll! ILXZT31) l'rom nrm. 540-'2"7 tac. air. FM radio, all e•· Come tn tore test drlwl rack. Low mUeagii. S!'l'-MTO '69 V\V, 23.IXKJ m I'•, Will take tnide or finance. * '67 PORSCHE !'112, ~ tras. Pttf cond. Prl. party, l'RITZ WARREN'S Red -Wht. '66 VW Bui ~1M,.1!·ro.,1.,~~'1a.01,' m"•k•0""'01r ~-ms or~•~-=l_l.~~,11 speed, top shape. fl1llllt M!:IL S7GJ. (714l m.-3962 SPORT CAR CENTER $UOO. * 644-1564 ~:-ia ........ ' VOLVO '86, l:n-5, 4 dr. 4 ™"· .....,., " 613-33!1 -"-~s~U~N=B=E""A""M-=--no E. lot St. !.A. !MT~l\11 • 'SJ vw flus .-. -•pd, Pln\11 ""'· nu bl'lt•. ~doll• e.l·, cl°"d a..-... 'ti6 VW Van: Nr.w pllnt. Xlnt Xlnl cond, $1 100, lcMvlna '65 "C" coupe, .lo rnl 's, Fae _,...,...,.--...,,..,..---.,...., ' Q ...... _. SllO. Call: 673.50'29 cond. lSOO ccm en.i::. Mu11t rountry mual 11ell -l!J6..J!l76 air. AL\f/F?it , Mual Hll, ,.. r .. -.... am Alp\,.., ron1 TRi'ffi.fpff 19&3 TR t Wire * "' BUS * JI 1RG· or ofter Ncw,.rt ·-·m -~11"" ..... __ , .. _..... -• le _.,..,,, • '64 Volvo P-1800. Very --' $2650 or otter. goo...... 'iood. $575 or brst otler. wun "• nt11f .,.-_..,, new SXIOO ftrm, 968.JOlj Union Sttv\cc !939 W. Cout mnd, 11700 or belt ofr, \.v\u ''4 Por1che C Coupe fU..6114 top. Good condition. Sell or e '66 VW BUG • Hwy, NB trd f n r '49 Plumouth Xl"t --•. "'!-2!5fl aft I TOYOTA "'111 S89<i. PhOne -" VW p T C I , . .... no '" '750 * fi4S.S7S2 'l!(I op or .amper w f1!.1-2el'.XJ. ·51 ~-h tl"'I t ~ VOLKSWAGEN • ~~="-~-~,,--I tent A 1iii""tl lire~. Xlnt ~~' ~"" 00·~· •;ee vw B"' reb<tllt •••· --•. •-· m·'i111. '" -1. Auro1, U11d 990 Many •xtru. r.tu1t s.n. '69 TOYOTA ""'Ill .....,.... ,,_.,,v L\1ake ntfer. ~725 • VW '81 BUG Chrome rim•. S13.$0 '68 VW au!O. ilk A.\f JM xln! BUICK • 1-PO•.ru• 91...,a:;;t COupe. 4 •Pied, radio. heal• SUNROOF *' tw0 , --~*~!J4S-05.11--~*--1 rood. Mutt •II S 11 7 5 ., ·--------II ••v ~ ~r. Buck11t 1tatt, vinyl Inter-* •1384 * '. bl 2 2 ! 6 ,. co~. s:mi. (ZXCl89) =:-7.=-=.....,=---,I·~. V\ll Sunrocr-New n! 1 64 -143 •1 '65 lulck Wlldc•t Cpe Cell ~ klr. eeonomy car. 1970 VW Bq. Tak• ovt:r eng.. new . pl\nt. re 8 r V\11 Bu1 1900 8u11l!ne top. Nu MUST SELL! $898 Pfl)'m('nts {$66.tl) or C!aah. opening \\'irldow.o. Pu .o. h · Sa rltioe 1'1M 6'Ml)'J8 · TIME FOR _ mllco. ~ult b 1 d1o 67f>-4.i2:> t1rr1. c """· , Polar whit(' e:ic ttotlor with COURTESY ~ v......,... u ton ra · ' 613-8174. Sold interior, Auto trnn1., QUICK CASH VW ·a lmmac. M"'l' ""''· ll'IO VW 8111, wnrool. Muoi 1967 VW oq. bk. Topa dcok. "dlo, "'""· pawor •~<r· THROUGH A OOOGE $1SSO. DI lClh St ., Hunt. atll, M1t oiler. A.tier ~ AM/FM Ndlo, radial tirt•· ins, powrr br1ke1, &if cond ., 2181 •rvtior Blvd. Bch. M&-2121 • wkd~yll, ~m Reil oUer, mUJt 1e11 . pie. Very cl1an. OSUIOS. DAILY PILOT Colla Mtaa :llT-9710 H01J9!! Hunting? Waleh the • vw 12lll, '8'7 body, xlnt 8~ $973. Johnson • Son, me Sell Idle Items rm>I ltrYkil Olttc!01'7. O.Ck at machanlcll, new p&.lnt, $500. SeU UMi old 1tu U lfarbor Bl., COit& Meu. IL_!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~ WANT AD Calt 143-6111 Nowt for the 1e.i\tlCf! you nttrd. Stl-2016 Buy the new 1tuJr M0-5630. t -' ' • . . . • r ooo• eou,. JIJ VI, tut.111•tftt pew1r •f•ltlllf, •111tltll ,,.,., rill" l111truM111t p•111I, h1ny 411'¥ ••• ,1 ... 11911, hlt'J 4tty "'•k11, tt41e, 1170 •14 r1l"4 white 1 .... , t1r111 ''"'"'' 1•14 wh111, 1a11111.NOI 111711) ' • IWl.V Pll.OT WedntsdaJ, April 21, 1971 Wedotsday, April 21, 1971 PILOT·AOVERTISER 22 _,,,_ 1§1 I ~........ l§l I ..... ,,,.. I~ I · .,......... l§l I ..... ,,,.. I~ I ., ... ,,,... l§J I .,......... l§l I ........ SM I§] I ,........ l§J Auto., Used . 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Ulld • i;....-C~A-D~IL-LA--:-C--l --C~A~D~l~L~~A~C,....... CHEVROLET '66 CADIUAC 1M6 CADILLAC '55 °"""· '69 396, -'69 CHEVROLET Coupe Do VIiie SED DEVILLE h>'dro. 411 "°'~ !lb.mood, Cl>evelle Malibu 2 Dr. H.T, Th1A gorgeous luxury car has PRICED FOR QUICK SALE Amer. mags, new paint, int VS. automatic, power steer- almoet all of Cadillac' a Jam. BeautiM ebony black finish & chrome. Leavtrw Must lng, radio, buter, wheel wUh bit.de landau root .t: see $900. Gary Fetlennan coven. landau top, low mlle-ow power features and iJ blade I e a I her interior. &«-1212 43 jUBtreactyl<lgo. tVDVlf.fJ Equipped with all the Jux.1---~· ~Pf~·-N_•_. -· --ap, (YPS9'l!I) $1288 m)' featur.s. Full ..... ,, • '63 Chevy Impala $1555 Fae air, P/b, PIS. VS COURTESY radio, h<ater, fa<IOry '" VERY CLEAN '* ""'° COURTESY col'ld., etc. <SBD 156) $1675. * 646-1880 * DODGE Joru..... • Son, lE26 llarl>or I ~~~,,...-~~--DODGE 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fa!r Dr. DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd. Bl., Costa Mesa.. 541).563(1 1965 Malibu SS, 1 owner. 2888 Harbor Blvd. Colt& Mesa 546-«llT Costa Mesa 557-9'220 CHEVROLET Immaculate cond. Must Costa Mesa 557-9'220 • '68 Olev Imp a I a WI! Asking wholesa.111 Blue ··---n11 P/b •-t t69 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, Book or best offer. S46-9562 '56 Chevy 292, HI g h .. 116 ... ,.... ' ' ... c ory 21188 ltartq. Blvd. Olista Mesa 557-9220 24 000 ml'• Pvt ow-Full --------pe-.L._,,.n,... ___ .. , ml-air. Xlnt cond. S 18 9 5, am. ~ & 'air + 'AidtFM VAC. in oomfort tn air oond 1969 MALIBU Chevelle 2-dr, ~~t°~rk':Best 0tI;~ t-"-'--"'_"1______ --------I ---------II lltereo, vinyl roof. lea!Mr '70 Concourse Sta. wag. Wpd trana, air, vinYl seats 646-4l27 CONTINENTAL '63 Corvair Conv. Needa '63 MONZA, 4-spd, Very •· 1 tilt .. ~1 r New tltts, xtru. $2800. & top. Orie' owner. $2475. ~~~-==--~~ tune-ilp. s:m. dean, Xlnt run'g cond, Must '"er., -·~ • poi~•e "'"' """A Call ~0 "lOI '"" lmpal -•air ,.._,. ~ ...... ,._ ~ -•t 5 door loeU, Perfect 0>00. ~ .......,..., a, ~·. power.,. · 1,..-=---------'""'-" la"'-'""" -· Al : CORY AIR 645-2182 '64 IMPALA Spl Cpe. VB, 1957 Chev. Gd bod.Y. runs,, ~~r9&:z_2678 • 1968 Lif'iCOLN . _l~'6l~Con>alr~~~Spyde--,-.---ll-54l-~-'-'------ 'We'll help )'OU aell! 6U-S678 auto. PIS, runs good, $350. nttds mtchanlcal work. $00. ~--""--~=:.;.;~ lmm&culate. AD extru & condition, ol spd, Mlbt &ell! Daily Pilot Want Adi have , MS-4967 fi46...564.l aft Spm. For best results! 60-5678 _,pow;..,.-"-'-· "'5'15-JSeO.-'=--~= 1 ,,Eves:;c,:;;·..;":.;U832;..:.:;;:..,;__~= 1 buplna ploro.==--~~ll Autos, New 980 1 "'A-u""tos-, "'N,...,.---~9=ao Autos, New 980 Autoa, New 980 Autos,. New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 I 1 BUSINESS IS GOOD AT THEODORE ROBINS FORD ! THE REASON IS SIMPLE ••• WE SELL FOR LESS) TIME l:J THIS WEEKEND , PRE·SE4SON -ONLY-CAMPER SALE BRAND NEW EVERY NEW 1970 CAMPER IN STOCK SLASHED TO $75 THEODORE ROllNS SL Time M99as:IM Quality OHier ......... ,., 1971 THEODORE ltOllNS JR. 1971 TORINOS 4 Doors, Hardtops, Fastbacks OVER FACTORY INVOICE INJOY CAAIFlll 11',MMll DllYIN'fl OYER 20 OYER T01 Nc~{i~sE$7 5 ~~~~?ll OUR $100,000 DIAGNOSTIC CENTER . llG SILECTION-NO AD~ID DU.Lii CHAlGD Glve1 your car over 130 vlt•I tesh for reliability, performance ind ,.,,ety, in iust .30 minutes. Full written report Is Included .$9~.~. FROM plu1 t•• ' lic•n•• w. Are n. o~ c...,. Show c.'... ~,... E 0.roff C.111pen NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD ONS -NO ORDERS- RENT A CAMPER RIMfft Todor for Auered Dotn NU!l '71 T·BIRD NEW 2 DR. LANDAU SAVE Power 111n roof, l ro11gh•m, P.W .. $152500 P. S•1t., •ufo,, 1ir, 1t1r.o tip•, tilt whl., P-cli1c1 .• vi11yl top, P·•11te11111, .. ~ ~651 11000111 W.Sftr. 17439 0... Price $•114 NEW 2 DR. HDTP. SAVE Air, Full po•••· tilt wh1~ A/T. $120150 lrou9h1m int .. W/W, r1dio, 429· Vt. l'llt. t 1064151 W-ltllr $6111.10 Oer Prke $1157 NEW 2 DR. HDTP BROUGH. SAVE Full pwr,. "inyl roof, 1ir, A/T, tilt $130100 whl .. pwr. wind., 1t11r. 1rid br1k11, ritdio, 429-VI. #]9911'11517) W·Stlr. S661J.71 011r Prka SIJIZ.71 NEW 2 DR. LANDAU SAVE 429.VI, F11ll pwr., A/T, AM .FM. $151100 l rou9h1m irtf, T-gl111, tilt whl., A111to. Temp., Air, 429-VI, .1:651 (1000141 W-srkr. S7J71 O• Prka SU67 NEW '71 RANCHER() NEW RANCHERO (7114 tif91, AM r1d io. 11191)1). w..-SJJ96.IZ 01r Prka $2712.94 .NEW RANCHERO 500 SAVE 151 VI, cr11i1om 1tic, vii, group, $8886] .P~S., power dj1c br1k1J, tint. 91111, 'H.D. 1v1p. I I 15641 I. ·W.ftr '4214.06 01r Prk• Sll91.4J FULL NEW'71 FORD NEW LTD 4 DR. BROUG. H.T. '429 VI, vinyl roof, crui10., WSW, vii. 9rp .• P.S., clllf .1tr. whl., P-1h .. P-dr. lock1, tlr, tulo fttnp • co11trtl, AM-FM, P.W. etc. 1121· SAVE $1100 7011. #455 W-Stkr. 56041 Ow Mee $4941 NEW LTD SQUIRE ' SAVE 6 p1u. w19oll. 429 Vt, Cr11l10 .. $110100 WSW, vii. 9rp., P.S. di •• r1clc, 1ir cond., AM·FM, H.O, 1111p.. cit•. whl. C0¥1r1. ( 14214) #t62, W-stkr. S571S 011r Price 54614 NEW LTD 4 DR. HDTP. SAVE Vi11yl RF, A/T, pwr. 1t1•r, br1.11, $97200 incl windows. 1ir. ,J,c. cl1fro11, AM-FM, Vii, 9rp. W/W, Tint. t l111, whf. cvr1, I 1000171 #660 W·1fb. 55267 O•r Prke S4295 NEW GALAXIE 500 SAVE 2 Dr. Hd. Tp. 400 V-1, Vinyl rf., $92300 A/T, Pwr. Sir, 11ncl br1k11, 11ir, r1· clio, wht. C¥", tirit. 91111, •11c. d1· fo991r, 10001 51 =661 Wo1ftr. $49ZZ 011r Prke Sl999 NEW '71 BRONCO NEW BRONCO WAGON Va, Spt. Pkg .. CO""· 9rp., H.0. R1di1tor, 1u•. fv1I t1nk. Stk, :0764 170012) w .. ttir. S45ZZ.44 01r Prke SJISl.Zl NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VI, bucket 1h., tr1ctio11 lock R.. $70676 ••11, ltd. 1lip.front 1111. Spt. pl.9 .• 1ux. fue l link, r11dio, fr11 r11nniri9 hub1. Stk. #T200 (1014) w-atllr. $4610.22 01r Price SJ97l.46 ~~MUSTANG NEW MACH I SAVE '429 VI, A/T, Sporl1 il1ttr., conv•n· $90100 l•n<• 91p., pwr, 1t1•r., br•k• .. window1, air c;ond., tilt whl., Spf. cl•cli:, •lee .dtfro1t., AM.FM, con. 1011, tint. 9lt1J. f 1000591 #65) W-ttb. SISSt 011' Price $4611 NEW 2 DR. SPTS. ROOF SAVE JS t v.1, hi bkt., bit llrff, A.T, $57651 P-1t••r., P-cli11:1, r1dio, d•c. grp., T-gl•n, whl cvfs. •le.. llllt69 ) #175 W-ttkr. SJ911.21 O• Prlce SJJJ4.74 NEW 2 DOOR CONVERT. SAVE JSI VI, P-t•,, '·•ff"., P-cll1c1, hi $7501' bkt1., bit tir•t, tilt,,,,,., A·T, AM· FM, cofno1•, P-wincfow1, 1pt. whl. CVrt., T-91•11 .tc. 11024)0) SJ/ w.tftr. S4714.ll o ... Pike S4tJ4.19 NEW MACH I SAVE lil-4V. 1111to/ft11111,. r11d .. pwr. 1tr.. $70100 & di1c br•• .. 1ph. inter,. wW1 O'l'll1 I more. ( 1000601' #665 W.ftr. 14449.M o., Pricie 'SJ741..H NEW'71 F100 PICKUP NEW F-100 STYLESIDE SAVE P.U. 240·6 cyl. 1119,. 11'41. r1dio, $64397 ti11I. 911111. H.D. R11r Sp., ig111t11, ci9, lighter St .. #T6J !26111 . w.sttr. SJJJl.97 O•r Prke $2691.DO NEW F-100 CUSTOM Styl11id1. VI 1119., R1n9•r pk9., xlnt, imp I oil '11•1i1t••· tool box, cr11hom1tic, opt. '1'1cvvm b101t1r, SAVE 5953" AM-M 1T•r10, P.S .. 671xlS tir••· etc. 106511 W..rlr '4150.JO O• Price SJl96.J1 NEW 1971 $1919 'ully ~ulpperd with 1600 C.C. engine, fully 1ynr:hNnlzed 4 .,.... trentmlulon. hHter & def,..t•, hJ..M'ffl ''cUNCtalr" wntll•tlon •YI""'-wln41hleld walhen, hl.-Ck Nfety bucket INts, ... , belts, ... -front & rMr, padded wllff & dallh. locklnt atMr, colum,.. hc:ku, lights. Ordet" Today. A LITILE BIGGER ••• • • • FOR A LmLE MOH MA.YE RICK 2 DR5-DRS.-GRAllERS-Y·IS NEW'71f250 PICKUP NEW 1971 FORD F·250 C1mp1r 1p1ci1I, Sport cu1tom c1b, Crvi11·o·m1lic tr1111mi11ion, power 1t111rin9, power di1c br••••· "360" VI, r1,lio, •rlr1 911 t11nk. '*1 6, mo· SAVE 5965 11 to• #2151. Retail S41JJ.01 -Sale SJU7.71 NEW F-250 CUSTOM SAVE 01 •. 2 •on•, 1•0 v1. ''"9'' pt.9. ,091 00 cmp•. 1p1c., crui10, P-Dl1c1, 1ir, AM-FM 1t1r10, P.S., 25 911. t•n•, 1p1•1 tire. 110951 L Stt.. #TIS. W-sl'b 15411.97 o ... Prk9 S4JJA.97 a. .... koarl .-.................. 1y .. e ......................... __ _,, ....... '-""' ... ...... --ffDAYS0·~·:.:4::,H:::O:_;lll~ll~.ll:;::.S:._ _________ _ ~~~: NEW CAR TRADE·INS lr-----------iiooiii.-.....;;;;;,;;;;.,;;;; MUSTA•G SALi 15 to choo11 frofr'I. '65 thru '70 mod1h. Coup11, h•rdlop1, co11v1rtlbl1 encl 2+2 f11ib1ck1. Some with 4 1p11d1, 11111 1ir co11ditioni119 incl 1vtom1tic mod1la. 1967 MUSTANG H.T. &ood mi111, r1dio, h1•t1r, f11ctory 1quipp1d. ITWA7 151 Sp1· ci1I wh11l1. OUR PRICE $1096 1970 MUSTANG H.T. l,o.ded. va. 111to., P.S., RIH. f1ct. 1ir, w1rr. 1v1il1bl1. low f'lll11. 1621AVPI $2696 -~,6~7~PL YMOUTH $pt. f11ry 2 dr, H.T. VI, 111!0. R&H, P.S., vi"yl roo f, 9ood Mll11o IWCRl901 $1096 1969 MUSTANG H.T. VI, 1uto, P.S., RIH, 1ir cond., w11rr111ty 1v1il1bl1. f O:Cl76) $2196 '69 FALCON SED. 6 cy1., 1vto., RIH, 9ood mil11. IXSVJ971 $1496 '66 BUICK $996 1 FORD-LTD-&AWll-TOllNO-WAGOllSAU ......... .._ ...... .,. ...................... & .... ...... '63 MERC. COMET 2 DR. H.T. VI, 1uto., RIH, pow1r 1f1•ri "t· jQSY925J CHEVY IMPALA 2 Dr. H.T. VB, 1uto., RIH. IJHN946) '62 $596 $596 ~-----------------'66 V.W. BUG Good mil11. R1tl with whil1 i~t1rior. 125201 '65 MUSTANG H.T. F•~lorv equipped, 11dio, l!t1l1r, 9ood mil11. '69 FORD LTD 2 'DR. H.T. VI, 11uto., R&H, P.5., P.B., feel. 1ir, vinyl roof. (XSRl9JI $ 896 $996 $2396 ......... _ ....... ,, ....... ....... EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD SEDAN VI, 1uto .. RIH, power 1!11rin9 l disc br•k•1, 2 ton1, chrome trim, good mi111, 11051241 OUR PRICE $1696 '69 FORD COBRA Spt. roof, 11vto., RIH, P.S, IZDV7071 $1796 '61 PONT. LE MANS H.T. Auto., P.S., RIH, f1clory 1i1, vinyl roof, goo.I mil11. IWTE517) $1896 '67 MERC. WAGON '61 DODGE CHARGER RT Fully 1qvipp.d. VI, 111to., P.S., RIH, 11ir cond. fVIY IOll $1896 '69 COUGAR Auto., R&H, pwr. st11rl119, 1lr, good mil11, IXURl961 $2196 '69 CHEVY MALIBU HT -,,.,.66~FAIRLAN'"E.-..SOO~ 2 cir. H.T. RIH. power 1!11r• l1t9. 1ir cond. 9ood mil11. 1626· ASHI . l1 S1br1 2 dr. H.J. VI, 11110,, 16' 4 R&H, pow1r 1t11rl"9· 1121ASPI 1 $996 FALCON l DR. 6 cyli11d1r, r1dio 1~d h11l•r. lOSV61ll $696 s.1, P1lc11 Goo.I for 72 Hovri. C1" Subj1ct to Prio r Sil•. VI, 11110., P.S.. RIH, Good mil11. I 26JCQTI $1196 VI, 1uto., RIH, P.S., 1ir co"d. I 1078SI) $2296 SALIS DEPT. H~IS J IAMT•ff'MMON.fll I AM Te 6 PM IAt tt AM Te 6 PM SUM I PARTS-SERVICE HOURS etJ ------· --~ Costa Mesa ® 642-0010 7 AM To t PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM 1'Ul.fll I I PARTS DEPT. ONLY '1 AM 19 I PM SATURDAYS ( • BIG DEALERS HAVE BIG STOCKS BETTER SELECTIQN GREATER BARGAINS '70 OLDS CUTLASS "S" 2 Dr. H.T. 12,000 caretuI onr O'A'Tlet miles. Vln)'l roof, radi<I, P.S., P.B .. air cond. Nuty nice. l985BEKJ '66 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Custom 4 Dr. All the goodle1. Nice u you will ever find. Air ls super. BeauUful beige interJor. TblJ ls.a dandy. CRPR616) 70 PLYMOUTH WACiON Suburban 6 pag. Power steering, automatic, radio, air copdi~lonlng, warranty. Nice. (371ADHJ '66 IUICK WACiON Skylark 6 pass. Auto .. radio, power •leering, air. Stea.I thU one, <=Tl '68 IMPALA WACiON 6 pau. Power steering, automatic transmiu.lon, radio. (\YXE343) '6f TOWNSMAN WAGON Chev. big car. 6 pe.u. NICE. P.S., radio, with or without luggage rack. Right. miles. Right deal«. Happy vacation. {P2363) '70 MALllU 4 DR. SEDAN $2999 Radio, JX>"'-'er steering, automatic, air cond., kinda cheap for such a nice car. <781AAN) '64 CHEVY 1 TON 1Z7" WB. Dual rear cab and chaula will take up to 14 ft. bed. f •peed, VB. A lot of truck. (P'l358A) '61 CHEVY 2 TON YAN 168 van body truck. Right miles. Nice truck. Ready for work. E~llent fur· nl ture van or produce or whatever . (40487EJ '61 MUSTANG z+z 2 Dr. H.T. VS, auto., P.S .. e.J:r cond. Near new premlum tires. (XDZ966) '67 MUSTANG VI 2 Dr. H.T. Power steering, automatJc, radio. {VCJ70ol} '66 MUSTANG YI 2 pr. H.T. Radio, power ste-ering. Nice. Low miles. (RHW966) '65 MUSTANG 2 DR. H.T. Stick shift, 6 cylinder engint" (JKW210) • '66 FORD WAGON 6 passe!lger Fa.lrlant>. Radio, automatic transmission. (SJZ545J 51199 '67 CONTINENTAL $ 4 Dr. Sedan. New vinyl roor nt'W 2599 starlile lrrldescent green coior new ~bbec. Low mil.,, afr, ,,..,_ "~" & windows. Want to buy a ~ puff" (TRB228) · '70 PONTIAC TRANS AM 2 Dr. Firebird. Radio, P.S., 4 sJ)t'ed, 3,720 one owner mlles. Uk• brand Ile\\'. (717CEKI '65 GRAND PRIX Alr,cond., elec. 1ealll, windows. Surt a nice car. Bnnd new color the works. (PJ<G660J ' '6l Y.W. IUCO Radio. stick 1hl!t, 52,000 mi'les. Lookln1r tor. a clean one. Come &ff, (10X524) '67 VISTA CRUISER Olds 10 Pau. wagon. Air cond .. powtt steering, new color nice. (P236.S) I CON.NELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1203 " • ' 5:1: PILOT-ADVERTISER Wedn!Sday, AprH 21, 1971 ~[ \ ( 1§1 [ WtdntSda1. Aprll 21. t9n DAIL y PILOT GS l§J I Aut....... I~ I -. ..... ~~~ ~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ f-""'.C:::'.O::::R::.:V-:-:A:"::lll-:---I~~ • .;;FO~R"'"D_.;.;.;. UNCOLN MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH PONTIAC PONTIAC 990 A~. UMll 990 , ' RAMBLER 1~--~~--~ :::-::-::-0,.,,-,,,,-"""~......,,... ----~~-~ ~~---~~ ::::-.:.,,,.-.,,-..,...,,....-·~1---~---...... ~ I.es MONZA +door,,..,.... '64 'FORD '10 MARK Ill, brown /Wbll• '65 MUSTANG SUPER SACRIFICE 1962 Plymouth •latlon wagon. '67 FIREBIRD '69 Pontiac Grand Prix '63 Rambler m cu. In. 3 . . speed atlck. One OWJllU, low W • top, aaddle interior, 5CQJ 6 '63 Olds Station wgn, RJH, New tires & brakes. $295. Co b k MUST SELL! 9pd./ovt:rdrivt. FM radio • milts. F .... , xlnt. ~Arw:. Futura.•3 speed, radio, heat-m11 ... -_13 cyl., auto. trar11 .• radio, ,,_ ...... -.. ,Int .... •--._~ .. & 64tHi9T.I nsole, radio, beater, uc -8 111 ... Baba bl e with t•-deck. 4:11 rear -·~1 -~ -er !JAE"'! ••~ hoatu, wbltew-" tir AJ.1 . .....,,.., """"-• llYU3 • --~~=~~--et seats, deluxe wlleel cov-eau .... ma ue m • ..._ 0 •.,....,.., • .....,. "" es. en" in good ·'•po. U<1.ving' PONTIAC tall! wltb -•••-lnte"· & em. Wide ovals with maga . '' " $588 MERCURY (ZKZ582) • .., .,, ers. wide oval tire$, (TY\V-c .. ,.,.,. uur CORYmE' 'f -country, must sell, $325. 98-1) landau root. Equipped with $6()J or Bat otter. 54"8359 DAVE ROSS e 1970 MONTEGO v.'SJ:\')n. $888 ,P~hl'.:'.t~lip~54~>-;m>;~==--l'-;'.<.ii;;;;wnu;-·j 5888 auto. trans., radio, heater, 1_aJ_t~S~PMo==~==--I i1ll68 CORVE.TIE ENG 327, i. PONTIAC Take "" payimnts. Call DAVE ROSS -PLYMOUTH '68 PONTIAC . powe.,teerlng, powor bnU!-STUDEBAKER I <Mch, Bell How<ing rd"""' •ft 5, 551-'996 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 Dr. H.T. COURTESY es, powor window•, new 1--------1 I. ~ ~--•·t 1:>.....1 tires, Rellect1 excellent i~• STUDEBAKER ·~· ~m~ e. ·~•tel 2!80HarborBJvd. at Fair Dr. MUSTANG '70 BARRACUDA Auto. traM., !actocy air, DODGE >' -: condition UOO. M.5-f6l7 Coata. Mesa m.8J17 2480 Harbor Blvd. al Fair Dr. .,....,_ low mlle"e ''CllDA" P.S., P.B., P. \Vindow!, ra-2888 u.~. Bl d '.,"'n ~ YTSo ESl~;.,. $297SH~~~oB!hn-COMMANDOR, 4-dr, 6 1Uck. • EORVETTE '67 S 11 v er lll68 ~-~-.. n-0 _.,_ 9 OJsta ·Mesa 5116-8017 ••I.Ill dio I heater. IVZU560J n&l-..... r v · a n, ~ ""'""'" ·• Stored 1J Years. 15,000 orig : back. -•w• ~-., ~-=· '67 MUSTANG has blr 383 englne, wide $2195 Co!ta M•'4 557.9220 CO.ta Mua, 540-5630. miles. Ltk. New In & ouL ' Fast AJr -• 3?11350 passenger. Loaded, PS, PB, '66 Mustang G.T. Cpe. oval tires, bucket seali, l·.oc10"r:.."7M~..,-.'=Full~y-,-qUlp'7-c,,d.,...Lo $650 or Trade,~ h~. • .AM/f'Mt P eltof:• wirldowS & aeat, ,rrey, V-8, auto. X1nt cond. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE road wheels, console. radio DAVE ROSS 167 TEMPEST ml' Pv l~==~:::;:c_:c=-c"-'..-1 windowt,. 1'1nt O()n(I_ .~t Mi-FM Stereo, er u I a e Bert ctfer. 675-8162 Popular Bermuda blUe tinllh &: heater. (OllAUK) Bal. 5 PONTIAC 6 cyl., auto., fully eqWp- 1 ' *t ~ * T •BIRD 1 pty. $DI0.@4! 840-3293 • control, lupage tack, etc. witti black lntel10r. Equip..· Yr/50,00J rnlle fa,,;tury war-ped, 1uum0-11 COUGAR S23is. Call (Tll)lm-1900 1967 MUSTANG futbaok ranru, ' RAMBLER l._""".,.-,,..--"'.".,..,.,,...-1 ·68 BRONCO, Flotation tires, , 1969 Cougar 2DMT near new: $800 & take over •PRICED FOR QUICK SALE payts. $65.97 or trade eq. 1or 1Atlractive Jk!rmuda. &'!"en pick-up, car Cir dune bua;y : metallic !Sp~h with 'black •or eq, v~. 646-5637 Vinyl top, "'1><1, AM/FM, podlthwithauto. traM.h, radlo ., $1998 ""'Hart>o,Blvd.atFa~°'· $988 . air. 1 owner, xlnt cond. w stereo tape, eater, DAVE ROSS '64 T-Blrd convt-Red leather Int. Jmmaculatti. Rum like ~ •-· ,....... OJsta Mesa 546-8017 OaY' 532-4483' '"' 613-861G ~w" ·~, .... pow" ·~-COURTESY ... afr rond. See and .,,,. '69 GRAN PR-IX-PONTIAC ''5 MUSTANG -Stkk lhi!t, '64 RAMBLER new. $8"l. ~ '55 T.:smo, reblt enr. Body · 1'tllttftd. New orlg. interior. • Immlc. 839-8984 : 'l6 ~ B/RD hrdtp. xlnt oord. : xlnt 0o'"'. tao· tban 44,000 l<>daY· JOOq9!, 11215• John-DOD, GE -~-.a :.• 9'.lll & SIXI, ai26 Harbor &. ml. $800,~er. 675-3556 ,.._ 2888 Harbor Blvd. TlO Cla.tslc. Auto. tr&n.a. ra- 2480 Harbor BJvd. at Fatr Dr, dlo, beatft.,. whitewall tks. "-"'l:lla Mesa. 540-5630. '68 MUSTt\ljG"' 2·+2, • p/11, -~=~~==~ Costa. Mesa 567·9220 c JEEP Co5ta Mesa 546-8017· (6029B) STATION WAGON $588 , ~interior. laudau top, imma~ : ulate throlJ,gbour. F.qutppei;f ~with auto irans, RadiO Heater, Power steer.IN:; '63 Inte:rnaUonaJ !ICOU-t · Power b~ . .Factory Air 4 x • sale or !fade ~~· 11000. ~ QLD~~OllLE .69 Roadnmner 3&1; ...:. ... =--",,;,"""==,..-,...--.-:"'· Xtras, 19,800 mi's. Xlnt •&.5 MtJ*1°ANG 2.39. LoW '70 CutIA&s i.at-, Many xtru, cond·, 536.a462 • Full power. dlr. Air condl· 1t1Qn.\ng. 26,000 i.ctual mµes . (ZMS SM) Will take trade 0t,1inance. Call 491-"(144. L 1910 .GTO, 45$ e&},. ih., 4 spd. All pezfonnance equipped. $2795. For mo c.e info call &tG-4665' after 4 & wknds. '70 Le?t1ans w/woocl trim. DAVE ROSS CoQectior prel'd. ca 11 • ,( 673--038.1. • '. 'l'be ~t draw in the West : • • a Da11y PUot ClusWed : -2.fBO Harbor Blvd. at Fai r l)r.1 ,.,•,,•·...,~ii'--IT,,78'--=~--I Ml pwr, air, ,,,.., rk, Xln'I PONTIAC mile., Xlnt cql)d. $800 Or $302.5. bfst otter:-961-QlD * &46-9740 aft 5:30 pm DAILY F!ILm' for action! Cond., 4 dew tit;EJ; etc. * ,546-.rl63 ·•~ · ' . ' ., cond.' $3400/offer. 96Z-n92. (YPT831) ,$2375. Johnfio'ri A Da.ily PilPt 'Want .Am have : Son. 2626 Harbor Blvd., bargains galore'. 'Goat& Mesa. 540-5630 Autos, New For best results! 642-5678 Call &U-.5678' k Save! Call 642-5611"& Savt! 1963 lEMANS V-8 Xlnt cQnd, $350 Call 644-4541 OJsta Mesa "' 546-8011 .. Sell idle·ttelli now? i {:: DODGE ! f '68 'DODGE DART GTS i Dr. H.T. V8, power 1teer- ing, power disc brakes, vinyl roof, bucket seats. , (X0Bl15) I , $999 i :COURTESY \ ~ DOQGE 2888 Harbor Blvd. C:OSta Mesa 557..9220 ·. '68 DART-. ' . 2 DOOR H.T. :V-s; auto trans .• factory air, !''Jl.c\io & heater, vinyl rooL (X0WS44) < $1895 i DAVE ROSS . PONTIAC Q-480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr, Costa Mesa , 546-8017 '68 Dodge Dart 2 Dr. HT rRICED FOR QUICK SALE! r: 'ttractive gold miat flnich "4tt!· black interior. Equip.. _pedf with auto ,trans., radio, ~heater, power .J>leerlng. air t cond. 4 near new Michelin !radial tires. Very clean. WPE341. $1475. Johnson &: S(i.n:-'t628 &rt>or m., Co&ta }Mesa. '4lJ.66JO .'69 DODGE . roneL Fully factory equip. !. ~: ( • Al55293'1 r • $988 ~COURTESY DODGE .2888 Harbor Blvd. P,st.8. Mesa 557-922tl fAN, '66 New brakes, Slant 6 ?Jigh· torque, ~me rim! .r.& panelled, Shq crpt, tape d9Ck, $1450. Aft 5: 645--0317 DODGE Dart 1966, 2 dr. 6 ·:CYI. Yellow with black int. 'Ex. condition. $895. 673-1453 or S48-8Z53. FORD '66 FORD Gale.x!e 500 XL 2 Dr. H.T. VB, auto., factory air, pow: .er steering, radk>. heater, }:lower disc brakes center · con!Ole, buclret sea~. fSKM. 34') $.666 COURTESY DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd. Co!ta Mesa 557.9220 Ford '70 l TD 4 Dr, Sod. E.xcell~t local trade. Beau- •tiful dark ivy metallic fin- ish with matching landau •rOOf. Ivy gold Interior. E1TUipped with auto. trans., radio heater, power steer., powef. brakes, factory air, etc. Showa excellent care. (3'1!iCQS). Priced tn sell. $3375. JohJ\liOn Ir Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., c.osta Mesa. SIQ-$30 '66 FORD Ranch Wagon V-8 lo'!i' mUeaa:e. PIS. factory air'cond .. radJo, xlnt eoftl1. sm. 545-257< 'ft 9 Pas&. Statton Wagon. •utp trnns, JlOQd cond, '1•·~r1 f Ice $725/0FFER. 1l63,p29ll '67 fuRD Fairlane convt- Sh&t'Jt. V8, P/s, S.spd, new ~rakes &: clutch, good en,g. ~~2.000 mi. $850. 846--llfi5. 1fi Galaxie 500, aulo, JIOW1!r, toad air, new ~ng A: tre.M. Musl stll lmmtd. 613-3962 ;after 6pm. 'if] Pinto-Conj.est car, onl)' ~ ml. 1600 cc q, RAH. :..1w. $1850. Gt4--T195 '55 Ford • Good transport•· tion. $150 or belt offer. call $49-0062 eYtl. lH Ford Galaxie, auto trans, 11m. PIS. A-1 cond. Mde ~fier. 540-1321 'li6 GALAXIE 4--<!t, 1 owner:. ,l>s/Pb, 11uto, air. Call after 1~. 557~ ~ii E(ll"(), xln't tranap. car. llllO. wt Call 645-l65I 'II help you sell! 642-5671 r 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New BAUER BUICI{ IN COSTA MESA ''SPECIALIZING IN UALITY'' ONLY 3 REMAINING· I ' ' BRAND NEW .. 1970 RALLYE'S .. ~ ... PRICED BELOW ORIGINAL FACT. INVOICE BUICK ESTATE WACiONS! ! ! ! ! FINALLY WE HAVE NEW 1971 6 and 9 P-ASSENGER -ALL FULLY EQUIPPED AND ALL ARE AIR CONDITIONED. ALL COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. PRESTIGE CAR SPECIALS Cowpt DeYllle R•d with white roof end leether interior. Full pow· er and factory air condi- tioning, AM-FM radio, tilt-tele1copfc wheel. Rt1- meinin9 factory warranty on over 25,000 mile1. IZCP4l21 Custom 2 Dr. H.T. Automatic, radio, heaftir, power steering end brakes, factory air, vinyl roof, O..er 25,000 rriile1 of fac- tory werranty left. B•tu- tiful car. ( 665APR I THUNDERBIRD conditioning, landau roof. Very, very low mileege. You'll be a believer once you drive it. IXSR8621 XKE 2+ 2 Primro1e yellow with bleck leather interior. Factory air conditlonin9, 4 •peed trensmi11ion, AM-FM ra- dio, chrome wire whe·els. One owner car wit?! very low miluii•· IZ0Bl44 I Custom 4 Dr. H.T. Full power, factory air con- ditioning, AM-FM 1tt1reo redio, power window1 end 111t1, tilt wheel, one own- er car originally 1old nf!W by· u1. Many miles on re· mainin9 fec:tory warranty. IYCL2571 U-1AUll! BUICK.IN COSTA MESA BVICK·OPEL·IAGVAR 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa "Sl'ECIALIZIN~ IN QUAUTY" 5 4 8-7 7 6 5 WE LEASE CARS SPORT WAC50N This car has never bean r19ist1r1d, Was driven by Buick zone service repra· sentative. A truly great buy with free tr1n1ferra- ble werranty. (H1212601 • .. I • • ... . I • I •• 58 OAJLY PILOT• • 1'1LDT-AD\IE"11S£R Jt_ t, . i •, []~g!~Mul@!ija@i~(@r!f1ij~~@tPfg!qmKJ .. · : . . NEW 1971 ~ 011FYOUP111R1ou1usYnRMS NEW 197.1 OR IF YOU PREFER, EASY TERMS FULL PRICE $65 TOI Al $65 IOTA! DOWN MONTHLY PJ\vr.·,ENT PflYMENT Jf-. MONTHS $ FULL PRICE . -*lo"'-,......_...,.._....,s..!iolheMIOl-thlr,...,_ (1K91U1809 3) 561111 _____ _..11 .._ _ _....,_......__ IM:L .., .. '71 lln<IN....., ol ....... d•o,..1.., -.-..I <rtlld~ for l6 4 '71 k --.. -.... •'-v .. .., __....,..... lot a.-.""-"' . ,,.., ..... o.t-.,.,.,,.,.,. pri<• • 11olOS i..cl., filwtMe <~ -... __ ..,...i.5u1 • .........., .. -.... •• .__,_..,.,1~ ... ..,...- IMMlllATI DflMlf AT MUOI FOIO 71 ·-otlf,...~ ,,_,_,, coah, lvlc..tlplt<• .... 2C151.9S !Id. '-•"1< ..... W .... ,. •• 11....,.t Jl .... 'I0_~-.-71 1<...... 1 -~' 7~°";~:~::::; un ,._ .. ,. IMMEDiATEDEUVERY AT WllSON FORD ...... r11<11r••11•n10."" ::~~0 '71 MU TAN BRANDtNEW 1.971 NEW 1971 F·IOO PICKUP '~$2 c!~P~~!~!g.!:q~i~!.~Y!~n~.~~~~«. $2488 queen size bed'& much more. J:llo. 01227. & 3/4 TON FORD PICK·UP ·. . 8 . FULL PRICE IMMEDIATlDnMIY • llAND '71 NEW ' '68 FOl\D F250 Big engine, air condition, heavy duty tires FULL PRICE ORDf!I YQllRS--L~.-.... -JI""[,.. ........ --..... &wheels,sti'o~u:'~~~::~PACKAGE NEW 1971 ECONOL~IY...,_ fULL'lll•ICI · FULL PRICE SPECIAL CAMPER FINANCING 60 MONTH FINANCING PLA'N AVAILABLE ON TRUCI( & CAMPER UNITS. '66 CHEV. MALIBU $J88 '62 .c.H ... E ... v,.N_~ •. v .. A S.S • .... , ....................... ..-11.1.. ~ (fSJl.172) lriMttr, (f,1150) $3. u · ,,. ' ~~.~~~.~.~!.~ !~~~.~ .. ; .. $·1· · 2·· ·aa·· tltniMt.ZMA-111 . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . '66 ~T~!.~.· •. ~~~!.!!.~''w""""'"'·'" $788 '62 ~~~!.'~!~~~'~''• 1 "•lu& .,.. $388 •ri1HMl, (llK-S40} •uc9111tort, (IMM04J) ·'6' 5 ~~.~~~~.-" .. ""·""'··-· $58·8 (MDAIJt) ' $988 '69 r~::.~~~~~-... ; ........ ~ 1 aaa ' . . .. . s999 '67. DATSUN WAGON $888 , ....... '1141t' ................. It.... ' . ...... ...... <llM71) '