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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-03 - Orange Coast Pilot7 r .Leekheed Aireraft ' l • Burglary Suspeets &nght .on Coast ReTeals Dra·stie Finaneial Cnthaeks / , With 530!)000 Loot • J / • u erv1sor MONDAY AFTERNOON, ·MAY l, 1971 ' VOL. 44, NO, 111. 4 SfCT10MS, X .. AGt:S ' POW Transfer Nixon Endorses Site in · Sweden Pre.sldint Nixon today issued a stat~ ment from the Western White House in San Clemente urging North Vietnam to join the United States in transferrfng all prisoners of war to neutral it1terment in Sweden. The President's obvious interest in the internment idea was underscored by the fact that he was re!ponding to a Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news agency, Agence France Pressc. To date , .ffaooi has expressed no in- terest In the idea of interning war prisoners on neutral ground. White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler, however. read President Nixon's response during a press conference to. day. ' He said the President "noted with great satiii:faction that according to press reports, the government of Sweden has offered the use of iJs vessels and its ter- ritory to provide internment of prisoners of war (rom the conflict in Vietnam." The. statement added, "The President would hope that Hanoi will move prompUy to negotiate an agreement 011 Utis issue to take advantage of this hurrianitarian offer on the part of -uie Swedish government." Ziegler said there has been no direct eovernment-to-.gcivemment cont.act with Sweden. He 'said the President was reac- ting to press teports that Sweden would accept prisoners of war. The United St.ates, at the Paris negotia- tions , has offered F>!?Utral ,counlry in- ternment of sick and wour.ded prisoners and those held for more than four years by each side. Ziegler said, however, that 01'11Jlge Cout -Weather Cooler temperatures and mostly sunny sides are the mixed bless- ing for Tuuday's weather watc~ ers. High readings will stretch from 63 locally ·to 73 further ifl· 1and. INSIDE TODAY Learn now and poJI later afttr you'rt ed'l'ftina. It'! b11 de· ferret tuition. n new plan in financi11a college education. See Bu.sines!, Page 18. .... "" :M C•~,..,.I• I ClltUlllJ U• 1 ,.......... :!).. ~kl " ,,. .. _. " 0.llfl Nttkn t lflltorlll ,.... ' l"lltwttlll"""' " '"'Met 1•1t -" AllR~ 11 MMl9t 11 N•tltNI Ntw1 4"1 Or-,_"' ' 1'11'1'11 hm-1' 11 '-" 11 ·U Sl9d1 Mellltl 1•1t T11tvl1lell 11 Tlluttn ., W1111!1r t w-·• .....,, 1j.11 WIN'lll ,.,_. t4 ' the United States was prepared lo negotiate an agreement covering all prisoners on both side11 regardless of physical condition or date of capture. The report from Sweden indicated the Swedish government would a c c e p t prisoners only if both Washington and Hanoi .agreed on a plan. "The burdell"'flOw.falls v,ery squarely on the shoulders of the North Vietnamese government." Ziegler said. "The U.S. government feels It ls time for the North Vietnamese government to be responsive in the matter of prisoners of war." Asked if the United · States could vouch for the accuracy of the French report. Ziegler said, "I can't go beyond what I have said.'' The press secrelar y also was asked if American diplomats in Stockholm had been in touc;h with the Swedish govern- ment. Ziegler said there had been no 11uch contact but "'I'm sure that there will be diplomatic discussions with the Swedish government." The South Vietnamese earlier had pro. posed that sick and wounded prisoner11 from both sides and those imprisoned for fottr years or longer be interned Jn a neulral country. The United States con- curred in that move. initiated at the Paris talks, and several times went out of (See PRISONERS, P"l" li F ounwin Y alley Police 4pprehend Suspects, Loot Fountain Valley police recovered mo~ than $30,000 in stolen shlrts, panll, ties and other clothing this morning before an Encino shop owner knew his racks were ba re. Two men driving a van stuffed wllh the alleged slolen property were arnsted and charged with receiving stolen property, burglary, and auto theft. Police are withholding names of the men arrested pending further In- vestigation possibly linking them with a theft ring. One man is 33 years old and the other is 39. Both are from the Los Angeles atea. Fountain Valley police said the clothing is apparently 'rrom Newcastle, Ltd., a store in Encino. The police tally showed a value of at least $32,661 ud IOme Jtems weren't marked. The 1tore owner reported a loss of about 468,000. "We found the store from the suit labels." said Jerry Ritschel , the. arresting officer. "When we phoned the owner he said,' 'na, It couldn't be my store. I've got new burglar alarms.' " "We told him to look anyway." RlUchel stopped the van at 2 1.m., (S.. BURGLAR, PoJe I) -- OS Ki1ig S'Jnyer' s Escape F oil:ed PETROO:~ 1UPl1 -Jamea Earl Ray, serving 99 ytan for the assassinaUoil of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was foiled early today in an attempt to esca~ from Brushy' Mountain State Prison. Tennessee Correction Com- missioner Mark Luttrell said Ray broke out or his cell by sawing through · its bars, leaving behind 1 dummy in his bunk to fool guards . The guards found the broken Oars, however, and .a quick ch~k of inmates showed Ray to be miss- ing. Luttrell said Rey was caught before he could scale the walls sur-· rounding the maximum secur.lty prison. Ray was sentenced to 99 years on a guilty plea to the A-prll f, 1968, sniper slaying of King at a Memphis motel. He was transfer- red 4.o Brushy Mountain in 1970 after serv,ing almost a year at the main state prison in Nashville. Lockheed Bares Drastic Slashes; County Site Sold Draslic Lockheed Aircraft Corporation financial cutbacks including h u g e management salary slashes, including prior dJspesal of Orange County Airport area property now destined for a f200 million development were announced to- day . Sale of the 19S-acre parcel to Emkay Development Company -subject of con- troversial Newport Beach zoning hear· ings -was already public knowledge. The aircraft company's newest an- nouncement from its Burbank head- quarters said the cutbacks are due to the firm 's worsening financial crisis. Uncertainty over the Rolls-Royce Ltd. jet engine conlract for its TriStar alrbu11 In addition to U.S. defense cutbacks are the primary cause, officials said. Property Involved Is on MacArtb.ur Boulevard across from Collins Radio Company. bounded by Jamboree and Palisades Roads and Birch Street. The land, now held by Emkay Develop- ment Company, will be the site of its designated Newport Project, £or major oUice buildings, a 400-uiit hotel and large car dealership, Cost of the sale has never ber:n reveal- ed. Lockheed Aircraft CorporaUon is cur· rently in debt to various banks for a total of '400 million , with government aid currently under consideration. Secretary of thr: Treasury John 8. Con- nally told a Senate appropriations sub- committee last wcelf that It muat guarantee $250 million ef the loans to assure Lockheed's corporate survival. The company announced that 150 key e1.ecuUvea will soon feel the monetary (See LOCKHEED, Pace li /. ' Hustlell .Off. . / ' !J~I T""""' OffiCers Break Up Attempt to Block 14th Street Bridge POLICE HUSTLE TWO D.C. DEMONSTRATORS OFF TO JAIL 6,000 War l!ickets Seized WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The antiwar movement'• march advertiaed effort to paralyze the govr:rnment by hamslring- h1g Washlngton'a morning rush hour traf· fie was th)'arted today by police and fed- eral troops, and more than S,000 dem· onstratora were arrested. The protesters were dis1>erled and driven Into dilorganlud · groops by volley• ol tear 1u and mass armta Which went on In view of thousands of government employes commuting to -k. The federal workers were hindered but not halted by hit.and-run tactics of the demonstrators on four main bridges crossing the Potomac from Virginia and at traffic botUeneck points at several lites within the city ltseU. ·-- By noon, the 1Lreels carried a normal load of traff.ic and In the doWntown. area the ~ene was that of a usiial Washington lunch hrur. There were 1UU a few flare- ups of minor trouble in some spota removed from the center of the city. The mass ltr!Sll clogged the District of Columbia's jalJ lacilltlea, and severely Wed the -processing procedure, The Juatice Department 11Umrn'oned mr· rectionat Sp!Ciallsta from BeVeral -pointl in the east to help co-pe w:lth the a.ltuii.lion. More of the same type of dlaruptlve tactics had been threatened ~or Tuetdly by the militants and Jn gplte of the mw arrests or their followers, their -Juders (S.. CAPITAL, P11e II .Sa~dleback D. . lSCUSSlOB . :Set TuesdaY. -J1J J}Clf; llllDBACL _ ., ..... """ ... ,, Fifth District Supervlaor Ron a Id Caspers of Newport Beach returned to. day from turope and said, ;•t cannot understand why, the planning commisllon didn't approve the . Saddleback Com- munity Hospital pennlt lu:t Thursday." Caspers saJd hil appointee on the com. mission, Arnold Forde, wbo wu with him on the 17.day trip, had ae.nt word to the other planning commissioners that he (Forde) believed the Saddleback facility should be approved. "That shows bow much inOuence he has over those other two (Woodrow But- terfield and Fi:ed Jeffergon) who voted against the hospital Thursday," Ca.sper1 noted. The Fifth District supervbor added, "I'm for bospit.ah but I can't tell Forde or anyone else on the.·commiMion how to vote." Caspers said he bell~Ved "politics'' Is Involved and blamed the controversy on Ross Cortese, d,vek>,per of Laguna Hills Lebon! World 1fhei:e the S.ddleback facility is to be built. He admitted that be.. and c:ortese did not see eye to eye on many things and, "investigation by SQYoffice shows he was involved in hi.I fight." Forde will not be back for Tuesday'• crucial planning commls.sion meeting when the Saddleback use· permit will be co~.ldeffif again. C•spers said he ls not expected to retum·unm Friday. The bospitaJ controversy 11urroondi~ two rival facilities In the Mbaion Viejo'' Laguna Hilll area surfaced early last week when It wu reported that Forde had a financial interest in the Mission ·Community Hospital In Miulon Viejo whk:h .ia now under conatructlon,, ft was · illeged thlt Forde had been responsible for delaying approval of the Saddleback hospl\a\ uoe permit. It now appears Forde won't be pre11e11t when Orange ONnty planoers conve9e again Tuuday to,conalder the fate of ~ 'S.ddleback Hospital permit. Forde's absence when Saddleback'a conditional uae permit came before coun .. ty planners last :tiwrtd1y apparenUy was a COl'ltributinl factor to a ltries el six 1 to 2 tie votes and eventual departure from the sesaioo of two commlaaloners durJna recess. County approval of tbe permit Js easen· Ual before l\lay II In order for Sad- (See llolPttAL, Pap I) . . U.S.· Force Trimmed SAIGON (AP ) -The U.S. Comman4 said today t b • t American mllitary strenCU> ID ·Vietnam cltoppeoi by 1,llllll troops Jut week, t11e RCOtld largeat w.-Jcly cut lltla year. The weekly 1U111mary «Vortflg April 13-l! ·laid there ,..,. 273,400' U.S. tNJopo in Vietnam on April It comPl!ff wllt 181,IOO Ille pnvtous Thllrldly. ' ' • I • , ..... ,, . I 2 DAILY Pll<ll s E'rort1 .Pllfle l HOSPITALS. •• dleback Hospital to qu.aUry ror ... $1.6 million ledtraJ grant. 1be Lutheran Hospital Society bas ~ ~heduleci groundbreaking this spring for the 150-bed first phase construction' on a aite at Calle de la Louisa and Via Estrada in Laguna lliUs. Plans call for eventual expansion lo 500 beds. At tut Thursday's session of county planners, the four commissioners preaent debated for three hours while goJng through the long series of tie votes on lhe use permit. Finally, Ibey called a receu. When it was over, Cornm.l.$sion Ch al rm an Woodrow Butterfield and Commissioner Fred Jefferson had vanished. It then became unclear whether or not the con1mission had a quorum with only two m e m b e r s remaining. Saddleback Hospital attorney Michael Collins and Qeputy County Counsel Tom Conroy hud- dled \\'ith the legal point remain1ng unclear. Finally, at Collin! 'request, remaining commissioners Howard K. Smith of Hun· tington ~ach and Dan Foley voted to deny the permit, 2 t4 O. This maneu\·er was an eUort to get the whole issue before the Board· Qf Supervisors via appeal. But it wa:.S for naught. Friday. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that no quorum was present. 1 Therefore there was.rtally no action at all on the hospital questioa. So the planners will try again Tuesday. Meanwhile Tuesday, Orange Countf Grand Jury Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beacn ts e1pected to bring the whole affair before the jury for discussion. Jt Is unknown il the Grand Jury will investigate. Controversy betan to surround Sad- dleback Hospital's use permit request earlier when it was disclosed that County Planning CoQUtl.issioner Forde -the missing fifth vote -holds a major finan- cial interest in rival Mission Community Hospital now being built in Mission Viejo. Jt was Fofde's "nagging doubtJ" that< caused a delay in decision when Sad· dleback Hospital's use perm.it request came before county planners last March 16. Following last Thursday's abbrtive ac- tion on the permit, Saddleback Hospital President Frank J. Schaeffer said be wu "shocked and dismayed'' at the bizarre proceedings. "The apparent total disregard for public opinion and the abandonment of their entrusted responsibilities to the public on the part of commissioners Butterfield and Jefferson can only be viewed as an unprecedented action in Orange County government," Schaeffer declared. Schaeffer sai""he doesn't believe that the actions by the majority of county planners is truly reflective of Orange Cowity governmental attitudes. Divers to Take Ecology Dri ve To Ocean Floor The ecology fight goes underwater Tuesday when 200 divers are expected tG converge on the ocean floor, Their goal, to clean up the ocean bottom off Santa :atalina Island. Ed Maueo, a 20-year-old. UC Irvine tunior and president of UCJs Dive Club, 1aid, "We are going to pick up everything rre find that doesn't belong there.' Mazzeo and 21 others from UCI will board the Estrina at Norm's Landing. at 7 a.m. Tuesday. They plan to dive for about three hours ln coves off the east side of the island. fhe Underwater Ecology Day event is a eompetition. Mazzeo said. Divers hauling ln the most trash from the sea floor v»ill win awards. Mazzeo did not say what the divers plan to do with the trash they collect lrom the ocean floor. OU.M•I COAST DAILY PILOT --~....., c-- H ............. -·-S..Cl11:1• ou.N1;1 COAST ,UllllHIMG Co,...,ANY ••~•tf N. W•M ,, .. ldtrrt .... hblllhlf' J•tk k. C11rl•1 , Vk• ''"Id'"' W Oerlwal ~ llie111•• ICe..,11 ...... lh•111•• A. ·M11r11Jti11• MtMllllf llllW Ch•rl•• H. Lee1 •1th114 P. Hell A1tlt"~I Mtn1111rof l!~lttl'\ Mono.ty, Ma:y 3, 1971 UPI T111PIMl1 Missed Protests President Back I In Washington President Nixon left the Casa Pacifica ln San Clemente at noon today to fly home to a troubled Waahington after a four-day visit to the Western White Jlouse. He Is expected lo arrive Jn the €apital af~r $rk, missinJ today'~1schedulcd an- ti-war demonstrations. In Palm Springs Sunday, the President taped a J~minutt radio address spelling out a $400 million program to help the na· lion's farmers, including a plan to boost fann exports to $10 billion a year. Noting tbat exports had increased under his administration, , to reach an estimated $7.4 billion this year, Nixon said efforts Will be increased to achieve the $10 billion goal net:l year .. upturn, but that any change in the op. timistic trend would be handled with ap- propriate tax action by the ad- mlnl1tration. In other action during the brief visit, the President proclaimed this week as Clean \Yater for America Week, callin& upon Americans to act quickly and ef· fectively to protect the nation's wa~rs Irom further" deterioration. There was a brief flurry in Lagwur Eeach Little League ci rcles when a rumor spread that Nixon might appear at tlie opening game on Saturday. . Instead the League received a telegram ' of greeting from astronaut James Lovell, the President's advisor OR youth. _ . ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATORS. CONFRONT MACE-CARRYING POLICEMAN IN CAPITAL. He also pledged an increase in fann credits to boost farm operating loans, which wou1d make up $349 million of the total farm a.ssiSt.ance program. During his visit , Nixon \Vas kept ahreast of "''ar p)-otest developments i.n Washington "'ith continuing reports from staff members. At 23rd Strfft 1nd Constlt~tl~n Avenue Th 11 Morning, Chemic.ti Spray C•rried the D.ty On Friday the President will welcome some 60 farm leaders in a "Salute to Agriculture" at the White House. Mesa Wea pons Firm Loses Thai Contract A Costa MeSa weapons manufacturing firm which deals with Asian countries where rice shortages exist has been forc- ed to cancel a contract for an unlimited surplus supply from Thailand. Top management figures of Annatite lnc., 118 E. 16th St.. were in Japan.today, so full details of the situation were not available. ''That's really all I know:" said a com- pany spokesman when read. an Associated Press account datelined ffom Bangkok on Sunday. Bad publicity about the Hklay-0\d rice purchase contract between Annallte and a Thai treading company was cited as one specific cause of the cancellation. "I've seen a couple of 'I'hai newspapers: and it ma'de the front page," the local Armalite representative said. He could not specify the nature of the so-called bad publicity -whether or not it was pollUcally motivated. -but said the deal's announcement was premature. Wire service Stories said the can- cellation said it was e1ecuted by Armalite Presiden t Richard E. Klostztey and company chairman Charles H. Dorchester. The annoupcement was released in Bangkok by Gen. Krit Punnakunt, chairman of the Bangkok Economic Af- fairs Company. He met with Klostzley and ·norche1ter in the 'Dlai capital Sunday. The two Costa• Mesa armament ex· ecullves said many difficulties were en- countered 1n negotiating the contract for what they termed an unlimited supply of Thailand 's surplua rice. Cancellation was done by mutual agreement, according to Armalite and BEAC officials, after discussing the pro- blems involved. The weapons: manufacturing company said in a letter to Thai Preotier Thanom Kittikachom it entered the agreement with BEAC with compleLely honorable In- tentions. Despite lack <1f details, this would in· dicate some agency or individual In a position of power questioned the deal. The Armalite letter to the Thai premier also said it .was done for the sole purpose of being of some assistance to Thailand. No financial figures relative to the rice purchase agreement were revealed. The Jetter further said Armallte regrets any embarrassment the agree- ment may have caused the Thai govern- ment and extends apologies. Armalite is probably best known for manufacture of the M-16 semi-automatic rifle, which i!l the primary weapon of the American military infantry and also that of other nations. Huntingto1i Ma n Shot in Love· Triangle Case A young stock clerk was in •~guarded" condition this morning with a gunshot wound in the stomm:h following a triangle shooting in Huntington Beach. The clerk. Charlie G. Locke.-21. who is In the intensive care v.·ard of Huntington lntercom munity Hospital, was shot in a struggle with his wife's boy friend. at-- cording to police. The shooting took place at 1:17 a.m. Sunday in the apartment of the boy friend, Lawrence R. Browman, 24, of 17421 Jacqueline Lane. Huntington Beach, police ·reported. Brownman, who was shot ln the foot during the flght. was booked by police on charges of assault with iritent 10 commit murder. Detective Sergeant Monty 1.1cKennon uid that Locke's wife, Rebecca. ap- parently left her husband, who lives at 7051 Cerritos Ave., Stanton. to move in '14'ilh BrowmAn, Detectives were told that she and Browman went to the movies In Costa Mesa Saturday night but ~·hen they returnrd to the •apartment they notiet'!'d a screen had bern pushed off one window and a picture rell)()vcd from the wall. Browman and Mrs. 1.ot'.'ke told police thtlt outside tile aparment they met a neiahbor, David E . .1-iaoson, who said that he had hel:rd a nolst and had a gun with him. • F rom Page 1 The President's addre3s was taped Sun- day morning during a 24-110ur visit to the ·desert estate of Walter Annenberg, Philadelphia-publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. School Trustee Ch ie f Scliedules Press Ses sion CAPITAL PROTESTS • • • vowed this afternoon to go through with Lhe plan. The protesters claimed mass traffic disruptions but government official! said traffiic was virtually normal by the usual rush hour. The police moved in swiftly to drive off the demonstrators and to keep traffic moving. By 9 a.m. EST. a high percen· lage of workers were at their desks as usual About 4,000 combat-clad Army troops had a hand in actions at several key points -and a contingent elf marines and 6.000 other soldiers were on hand in the city if needed -as demonstrators were dispersCd in splintered, disorganiz· ed group's in cordoned off areas. More than 5,000 were under arrest on a variety of charges by 10:40 a.m. and traf· fie movement was reported virtually normal except ln a few scattered spots. Some of the unarrested remnants of tbe * * * Viet Vets Toss Manure on Steps Of Penta gon WASHINGTON (UPI) -A group Of an.-ti'Wtr veterans tossed bags of cow manure on the steps of lhe Pentagon to- day. Police turned down their c;iffer to clean up the mess in return for a chance to talk to one of the assistant secretaries of ' defense. They arrested them and hauled tbem off in squad ears. The protesters -about 20 of them - said they were members of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, which staged a week of antiwar demonslralions two weeks ago. The veterans were led by Alfred H. Hubbard, 35, of New York, who admitted last week that he had been posing as a former Air Force pilot in Vietnam in order to get an "image" in the antiwar movement. The· group ran to the mall entrance of the Pentagon about 7 a.m. EDT and du_m- ped plastic bags. Federal protec11ve service polict herded them to one corner of the Pentagon's parking lot where they sat on the pavement, surrounded by helmeted officers holding billy clubs. "We are prisoners of war," Hubbard said. "We will go where you want us to go. No trouble, man, no trouble." The veterans placed their hands in a prisoner of war pose behind their heads while police frisked them and took them away. . The veterans said they wanted to speak to an assistant secretary because Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird Is Jn the hospital recuperating from a d6uble hernia operation. Deputy Secretary David Packard is running the Pentagon in his absence. Hubbard was a staff sergeant and flight engineer in the Air Force and serv~ eel between 1952 and 1966. He has no record of service in Vietnam, according to the Air Force. F rot11 Page 1 BURGLARS . •• near Talbert Avenue and Be a ch Boulevard in Huntington Beach. He was in an unmarked detective car on extra patrol to help cut down the high number <1f residential burglaries in Fountain Valley. "I saw them on Santa Cristobal Street. Vans are always suspicious because they're easy to load and easy to hide goods in," Ritschel said. He said lh13 van stopped for a·while at a house on Santa Cristobal, then moved on. Rltschel watched the van a )>lock away through a pair of binoculars. "When I finally stopped them, the driver had no ldenUOcaUon and no driver's license or car reglstratlon. I looked In the van and there were all these clothes packed from noor to celling." Ritschel !laid neither man gave him any trouble when litopped, 'l'he driver told him the stop on Santa Cristobal \\'all to see his ex.wife, who wasn't home. 'I'he Fountain Valley officer also said Another car had been following the van, but whtn st.opptd, nolhlng ~·as found ln II. militant war opponents -operating as the May Day Tribe -turned to sporadic street vandalism such as the slashing <1f tires of autos parked or stopped al traffic lights. One· of the-Victims of ~ punctu~ed tire was Sen. Pau. J . Fannin (R·Ar12. I \\'ho had been stopped by a group seeking to dissuade him from going to work. A threat of troubt'e at Georgetown University dissolved when leaders o( a group of about l,000 conferred with en· circling police and both agreed to "cool it." Jn the main shopping area of Georgetown -both a fashionable residential section and a hippie hangout -the situation was .calmed by the presence of federal troops lining both sides cf the street. They stood 10 feel apart with rifles slung over their shoulders. Some of the troopers chatted amiably with passing long-haired street people and a few even flashed the ''V" sign of the peace movement occasionally. But most of the soldiers \Vere tlght·lipped . Wisps of tear gas hung in the air at rome areas where ·major confrontations took place during the early hours of the morning. But by 10 a.m., Att-0rney General John N. Mitchell issued a statement from the Justice Department declaring : "The city is open. The traffic is flov,,ing. The government is functioning:' Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson predicted In advance that the traffic tie-up effort "'ould be defeated. In a message on the police radio, he told his men : "The desire of the President is that this city be open for business this week." Many of the disorganized protesters ·moved toward the Georget<rnn sector at the city where many of them had taken refuge Sunday when police evicted them from their "Peace City" at West Potomac Park A convoy of 50 to 60 jeeps bearing military police went to the area at mid· morning, apparently for a roundup of protesters. All \\'ere equipped with gas masks and some were Wearing them. Other troops holding r:ifles were sta· tioned on f\1 Street N.\V. for several blocks hr. the Georgetov.·n area which ha!l become a l\ippie hangout in recent years. Six helicopter loads of battle-garbed Marines were landed at the Washington Monument grounds. ready for acUon if needed. Tear gas fumes hung over the. bridges across the Potomac, above some of the citY's famed monuments and permeated the streets and grassy flowered park areas. Garbage cans. trash, abandoned cars . and other obstacles Uttered some main arteries. SPECIALS PEARLS Give Mother Something Beautiful for Mother's Day PEARL $995 RINGS lo $99'5 During the visit, Nixon played golf on the private links of the Annenberg estate with his friends industrialist Robert H. Abplanalp, banker "Bebe" R~bozo_ a._nd Reader's Digest present Hobart Lewi~ ... The president arrived in California at noon on Friday, going directly to Camp Pendleton to welcome the First Marine Divi.sion home from Vietnam. On Saturda,y afternoon he held a news conference on the lawn of the. Western White House during which he said the n~· tion is in the midst of a strong economic From Page 1 PRISONERS . • • its way to publicize the idea. . . Hanoi negotiators made no pos1l1\'e response to the idea. . Ziegler said that on the basis of a Swedish foreign ministry. statem~nl , reported by AFP. he could summarize the situation in these words: "It comes down to this basic point: Hanoi must respond ." Ziegler went on to suggest that North Vi etna m should give a positive response "i[ they are in any degree sincere,' about humane treatment of prisoners and if they have "any conscience at all.''~ The chief executive himself has in- dicated that the prisoner of war issue is a major obslacle to complete American withdrawal from South Vietnam. E'rot11 Page 1 LOCKHEED. . ·- bite by 12 percent salary reductions, Board Chairman Daniel Haughton will have his own $150,000 annua\v salary cut by 25 percent and the firm's annual five percent pay raise for 131,000 employes in 17 states is postponed. Besides the Harbor Area land sale. Lockheed has sold a Pale Alto site and deactivated a nuclear laboratory in Georgia, plus reducing research and development spending. ~ P risoners Escape SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Police said today they are pressing the search for three men who escaped from county jail Saturda}"by overpowering a guard. 'I'he three climbed down a fire hose and knotted strips of bedding from a fourth floor window. ·Two other inmates we.re captured on the window ledge before they e>uld descend. REMEMIH, A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INYISTMENT The President of the Santa Ana Unified School District Board of Trustees called • press conference late today to discuss what he described as "abuse of freedom ~f the press" by the Santa Ana Registu. At issue, said Rodolfo Monteja1l4'.' ii the Register's coverage of ~he Aprii rt board meeting and the "~er1~1s ~ which followed that meeting. Late last week. Montejano wrote a let- ter to Register publisher Clarence Hoiles charging the newspaper's editors with "fals!fying·• a fCJrrter's aceo~ ef the meeting. The Regisler ran an account cf the Tuesday meeting in its Thursday edition! last week. It was a page one, bylined story by lr1rs. Jane Gorman. In that article, Mrs. Gorman said she had been threatened by an angry mob of . parents demanding that she reveal the sources of two stories she had written. One dealt with alleged sex activities ef a group of Lathrop Junior High School students on an outing to Idyllwild. The other revealed the firing of a Sad- dleback High swim coach who had allegedly allowed a pornographic film to be stlov.·n to the swim team. 'Hi t-run' Rain Fore cas t To day On Orange Coast fog and low _slouds that hugged the Orange Coast this morning may return to drop some rain tonight and then vanish. Tuesdav ~·HI be su1my and a little v.•armer 'along the Orange Coast with highs ranging from 63 to 73 degrees, the National Weather Serv ice predicts. · For tonight, however. it will remain partly cloudy with temperatures dipping to 53 along the coast and 45 inland. There·s a 30 percent chance the cloud1 ~·il~ring rain. Orange County Harbor Depa~eported .. trace rain'' thill morning and noted the low clouds and "a little fog" did nothing to dampen the spirits of boatsmen and beachgoers over the \\'eekend. Orange County Airport To"'er said the low clouds did not hamper flights today. \Vinds from the \vest to northwest with gusts from JO to 2Q mile~ an hour are ex· pected along the coast tonight and Tues- day. Mountain areas may get their rain in the form of thundershowers. The et• pected gradual clearing will bring gu!lty .. winds lo 11?.e mountains and deserts. ONLY IF YOU IUY IT RIGHT • DOM RACITI · MOT HERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIO NS *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK PHrl Neclloces • Comeo" Pins DIAMOND GUARANTEE • Coc~tail Rings • Oiamo'nd Rings When you buy a diamond from us we and Many .Oe~utiful J ewelry Items will gu•rantee that dlemond to appr.t is• to ,),. -at 40% MO~E than you ).tld for it or SAYE UP 600/o HERE .~.:.:, yovr m-y \ack. Con yov do H wall •ls11wh•r1? COMPARE 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FI R~ COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, I UY, SfLl., TRAD E ' COM E IN AND IROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-774 1. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA ---H-r. 1<-oy .( r I J 17 I I 17 ... ' Hunting_!on_ Bea~h Fountain Valley . VOL. 64, NO. ·10s, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNT¥, CALIFORNIA -• • N.Y. Stoeks • TEN CENTS Seal Beach MayOr Lauds Police, Protesters \ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ... 0.llY l'i.t ll•ff Seal Beach Mayor Morton A. Baum t~ day praised both demonstrators and police officers (or "keeping their cool" during Saturday's antiwar rally which • brought 1,000 persons to the Naval Weapons Station. the largest ammunition dump op the West Coast. "We had all the inJredients for an in· cident that coul d have been really tragic apd really disastrous," said the mayor. -.. Right here in Seal Beach, Orange County, we have proven .Ylat peaceful protest and respon5ible law,nforcement can occur without death, without public ClUtcry and witbeut problems." ' $32,000 in Loot Altboogb intelligence souroes had esUmated that up to ~.000 demonstrators were ei:pected to attend the rally, •nly 1,000 persons showed up, be added .. The rally, organized by the People's Coalillon for Peace and Justice. began at 11 a.m. at Eisenhower Park next to the municipal pier, Members or the group beard various speakers including avowed Communist Dorothy Healey and thelmarChed two miles ct.own Main Street and Pacific (:oast Highway to the weapons station. They carried placards d e m a n d l n g withdrawal from Vietnam·. The procession was kept erder\y by police .cifficers and parade monitors, .. Valley Nets Duo In Big Burglary Fountain Valley police recovered more than $30,000 in stolen sbirts, pants, lies and other clothing this mornini befort an Encino shop owner knew hi.a racka were bare. , . Two men driving a van stuffed with the alleged stolen property were arrested and Huntington Man Shot in Love Triangl~ Case A young stock clerk was. in "guarded" condition thjs morning with a gunshot wound in the stomach following a triangle 1hooting in Huntington Beach. ~ clerk, Charlie G. Locke, 21 . who is in the intensive care ward of Hu,ntington Intercommunity Hospital, was shot in a 1truggle with his wife 's boy friend , ac- cording to police. The shooting took place at 1:17 a.m. Sunday in the apartment of the boy friend, Lawrence R. Browman, 24. of 17421 Jacqueline Lane, Huntington Beach, police reported. Brownman, who was shot in the foot during the fight. was booked by police on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. Detective Sergeant Monty McKennon said that Locke's wife, Rebecca, ap- parently .Jeft her husband, who lives ~t 7051 Cerritos Ave., Stanton, to move m with Browman. Detectives were told that she and Browman went to the' movies in Cosla Mesa Saturday night but wben they returoed to the apartment they noticed a screen bad been pushed off one window and a picture removed from the wall. Browman and Mrs. Locke told police that outside the aparment they mri a n·eighbor, David E. Hanson, who said that he bad heard a noise 1U1d had a gun wit.h him. charged with receiving &tolen property, burglary, and auto theft. Police are withholding o.am~ of the men arreaied peDdina; Cwther IQ· vestigabon possibly linking them will a theft ring. One man ia 33 year& old and the other is 39. Both are froni the Loi Angeles area. Fountain Valley police said the clothing iJ apparently from Newcastle, Ltd., a aOOre in Encino. The police t.aUy ahowed a. value of at least $32,Gel and &Orne items weren't marked. The sOOre owner reported a loss of about '68,000. "We found the store from the suit labels," said Jerry RltJchel. the arresting officer. "When we phoned the owner be said, 'no, it couldn't· be my st.or~. I've 1ot new burglar alamu.' " "We told him to look anyway." Ritscbel stopped the van at 2 a.m., near Talbert Avenue and Be a c b Boulevard in Huntington Beach. He was in an unmarked detective car on extra patrol to help cut down the high number of fesidential burglaries in Fountain Valley . "f saw them on Santa Cristobal Street. Vans are always suspicious because they're easy to load and easy to hide goods in," Ritschel said. He said th'! van stopped for awhile at i house on Santa Cristobal, then,_moved on. Ritschel watched the van a b1ock away through a pair of binoculars. "When I finally stopped them, the driver had no Identification and no driver's license or car registration. I looked in the van and there were all these clothes paclied rrom noor to celling." Ritschel said neither man gave him any trouble when stopped. The driver told \i_m the stop on Santa Cristobal was to set his ez.wife, who wasn't home. The Fountain Valley officer also uid another car had been following the v1n, but when atopped, nolhina wa& found in il recognizable by red armhaeds. An attempt by a delegatkm of pro- testers to deliver a "People To ~le Treaty Of Peace" to Naval authorilies caused a minor uproar when the statiol\ commander refUsed to send a delegate to tilt gate to accept the document. Police Chief Lee Case and the 1roUp negotiated for two hours after that .• when .!2~-18-DJ!ID~!r-At~fl~ lbrta~i.!~~-1.U-~ tb'e gate. tbe peace treaty, drafted by the Peace and Freedom Party, was finally delivered by Mary Bricknell, 26, ol !Ang Beach, who attached it to the secuMty guard ohack. l Protest activiUe:s ceased at :45 p.ni. after an order to disperse· bad betn given by Chief Case. Mayor Bal,lffi said Ctse and his lawmen, as well as protest organll:era deserved prabe for the way the march was handled. "Everyone came out of this With the~klnd of 11ura that democracy wa& all about," he said. "If democracy is going to work7 1\.will nttd the ingredients that were present in Seal Bea.ch Saturday." A group af marchers, wearing the uniform of the American Nazi Party, participated as counter-demonstrators. Baum said the group of 18 'fight-wing marchers was "another ingredient that IJ • • 1111predictable and it b tinged with violence." The combined forces of about 100 lawmen and firemen from Seal Beach were on hand, often acting a a peacemaftts between the Nazis and the protestors. PoUcemen from other age~ cies were on standby. AmOng the antiwar protesters wen; a few youtha with a Viet Cong flag and a large poster af Che Guevara. "Jt la unfortunate that very few people can bring along some flags and posters and giVe the wrong impression," aaid Mel Meeb. an observer from lhe American Civil LiberUOI Union (ACLU). UPI ftltPMte ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATORS CONFRONT MACE.CARRYING PO~ICEMAN IN .CAPITAL. At 23rd StrHt and Conatitution Avanue Thia Mornln9, Chemlcal Spr1y C1rrl1d tM Day . . . :· I Prelate . Supports Mercy Killing ABERDEEN, Scotland (UPI) -The Archbishop of Canterbury said Sunday night be did not think doctors were duty bound to prolong tfle lives of patients whose cases were hopeless, At an infonnal question·and-aftSll'.er session at Marischal College in Aberd&n, Dr. Michael Ramsey was asked how he felt about transplant surgery of hearts and other vital organs and about eulhanasia. The primate of the Church of England said he had not formed much of a vlew on transplant surgery but on euthanasls he said ' . "I would only aay that where the pa· Uent is lingering on in great distress, withO!.Jt any pogsibility of continuing life or happiness or purpose, it ls not necessary for the doctor to continue keeping him alive." POW lnternme.n't Pinn Get,s S~pport of Nixon President Nlzon today Issued a stat~ San Clemente urging North Vietnam ,to join the United States in transferring all prisoners of war to neutral 1'1terment in Sweden. The President'& obvious interest in the Internment idea wa1 underscored by the fact that he was responding to a Stockholm dispatch that was &ent around the world by ,only one news agency, ment from the Western White House in Agence · France Presse. To date, Hanoi has expressed no in· tertat in the idea of interning war pri&0nen on neutral ground. White: House Press Seerttary Ronald Ziegler, however, read Presldent.Niloo's raponse. during a press conference to- day. He ~aid the President "noted with great satisfaction that according to press reports, the government of Sweden hSI. · offered the use of its vessels and its ter· rltory to provide Internment of pri3oners of war from the conflict in Vietnam." The &tat.E;ment added, "The President would bope . 'that Hanoi will . move promptly to negotiate an agretrnent 01 this issue to take advantage of this humanitarian offer on Uie part o( the Swedish government." King Slayer's Es~ape :&>fled Strict Beach Curfew Set ' Ziegler sald there has been no direct government-to-government • contact with Sweden . He said the President was reac· ting to press reports that Sweden would accept prisoners of war. The United States, at the Paris negotia· tions. has offered n<!ulrsl country iD- temment of aick and wour,ded prisoners and tho1e held for more Ulan four yeara by each side. Ziegler &aid, however , that the United States was prepared to negotiate an agreement covering all prisoners on both sides regardless of physical condiUon or date of ·capture. PETROS, Tenn. (UPfJ -James Earl Ray. RMng 99 y~ars for the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King .Jr .. was foiledttarly today in an aUempt to e.6C8pe from Bru.shf Mountain State Prison. Tennesstt Correction Com missioner Mark Luttrell aaid Ray broke out of hll cell by sawing through its bars, leaving behind 1 dummy in his bunk to fool guards. 'Mle guards found the broken oars. however. and a quick check of in11U1tes &bowed Ray to be mis• ing. Luttrell said Rey was caught before ht! could scale the walls aur. rounding the maximum security prhwn. Ray was sentenced to It years on a guilty plea to the April •. 1968, sniper sh1.ylng of King at a Memphis mo~l. He wu transfer- red to Brushy Mountain in 1970 ._ after ~rvn1g almost • ye11r al tht main state priaon In Nashville. Huntington Sands to Close to Teens Aft.er 10 p.m. A strict curfew for teenagers will be imposed on all 81h miles of beacbfront in the Huntington Beach city Jim.ill this summer to curb violence and drug abuse. State' Parks and Recreation Director William Penn Motl, Jr. announced today that, beginning May 15. both Bolsa Chica •nd Huntington State Park will be closed to minora every night from 10 p.m. le I a.m. Tbt actiOl'I. crdered with the backing ef the Huntington Beach police, will brine tht: state bea ches in lint: with the curfew on the municipal beach and the Hun- tington Pacific beach. Police Capt. Arland Ussher agreed this morning that the •~rage per30n might find II difficult t1 understand the need lor the curfew. "·But it sot to tbt point llsl summer where • guy who 1'anted to g& fishing limply wouldn't 11 down t1 the beach beta.UN tf tht! ravine bands tf un- desirables," he 11ld. • "We took representatives from both the District Attorney's Office and the County , Probatioo Departmedt dowii last &ummer and they were amazed at the 1ltuatlon.,. Capt. Ussher said the problem• w11 twofold : the underst.affing of the stlte park rangers and tbe 111e of the beaches by youths from beyond ~county .• "Those poor rangers find themselves confronted with a situation for which they have not betn trained," be added. · The officer claimed lbat two deaths resulted from incidents: on the state beaches lasl year, one in which a young nian was kJlled in a 1ang fight and an~r in which 1 you1h was k.Jlled by a car while allqedly chasing a family man actnsS Pacific Coat Highway. Capt. Ussber n:P0rted that more than to percent of the lrrests made en the beaches l1&t )'tar involved n6n-c:ounty ruide.nl4. "They came ~ all owr and let lbejr balr down bere• •-they lb1nk they have tot.al anonymity," Capt. Ussber ez· plained. Last ye'ar the Huntington Beach police formed ill Special Enforcement Detail (~ED), a croup of specially trained of· fM:ers, to curb beach crimes. • "The only way to convince these people that the beach is not a place to raise hell 11 to enforce the l1w strictly. We did last )'ear ind wt'R do it 1giin-tJiii yeir," Capt. Uuher Vowed. State Ranger Sam Bitting supported the curie , explaining that the st.ate had only s~ regular and 1i1 seaaonal 0Ulcu1 to patrol five miles of beach in two shifts. "The problem is greatest 1t Bolsa Chica wh're we had . miny cases of minors with dru1s and alcohol," he &aid. 11le beaches will be cJoaed to 1U membera o( the public at midnight. Alter 'May I&, • tbe .. ?' "'!10"' Ullder II permitted tn , the 1andi mllll tie either marrJe.Cs er lccompanied by 1 pmnt. ' • ' The report from Sweden Indicated the Swedish aovernment would a c c e p t prisoners only if both Washington Mid Hanoi agreed on 1 plan. ''The burden now falls \lery squarely on the shoulder& or lhe North Vletnamese government," 7.iegler uid. "The U.S. gottmment feels It ii time for the North Vletnamea:e government to be rt.!pODSi\le ln the ma~r of prlsont:rs of war." Asked if 'the United States-could vouch for the accurJCy of the Frellch report, Ziegler 1ald, "J can't 10 beyond what I have said," 1be pr!u secretar 'i also was as-ed if American· diplomats: In Stockholm had been ln touch with the SwedJ.Sh govern. menl Ziegler aald thert ha.it beto no auch contact but "I'm iure lhlt there wtll be dlplomaUc d!JcuMionl with the Swedisb government." ( Janet Jolley, uiotber ACLU oboerver, said members ol that organlution were there. "to delW the rlgbta of anybody as ,loog as they were nort-Violent." MW Jolley allo praised Chief Case and the protestors hJr the.Ir cooperaUon but rapped .ewspapers for their "biaud coverage" of the march. . She said ·the demomtraUon wu not Communist·inlpired and was a 11therln& of _peaceful demonstratMs r•tber than a peace offensive. "And the fact that the maniton wore red armbands does mt mean they were ~mber_s_OfTammuDtat~ lrOlfp~ .. ~Mist Jolley .,.Med. "Red ii a.imply an tU)' col· or to observe." e Bid Foiled To Paralyze Washington WASHINGTON !UPI) -The anUwar movement'• march advertlsed effort to paralyze ~ govmiment by hamstring. tag Washington's morning rush hour traf· fie was thwarted today by poUce and f~ era1 troops, ll'ld more than 6,000 dem· onskltor& nre arruted. .· The proteilen ...re dilper!led 1nd driven tnto disorganized groups by Volleys of t.ar. gu and mus arrests which went OD in view of thousands of covemment. . 11mploye1 commutint to -11. . i'He federal worken were hindered but not baited by ·bl~and-run tacUca of the demonstraton on toor main brldget cro11ing 'the Po,tomac ·from Vtr1lnla and .at-traffic bottleneck points at several 1ite1 within the ctty lllelf. By noon, the street. carried a normal toad of traffic and in the downtown. area the 3Cent was that ·of a u&ual Wa&hington lunch hour. There were lllll a few Clare- ups of minor trouble tn llOlne apota removed from the cent.er of the city. 11le mus arrests clogged the District · of Columbia'• jail fadlities, and sevt!rely tai:ed the prooessin& procedure. n. Justice. Depart:inent 1Wnmoned eof.. redional apeciau.sts frolJI. averal point.I in the wit to he1"' cope with the situation. More of the ume type of disrupttva tactics had been threatened for Tue~ by the militanta and in 1Pllt. of the mw arrests of their foilO'l!'en.. lheir leaders . vowed thiJ afternoon to 10 through wlth the plan. • The protesters claimed mus traffic disruptions but covtmmem offlclala uid traffic was virtually normal by the usual ru1h hour. The police moved in awlfUy. to. dri~ off ·the· demonstrator& ind to keep traffic moving: By t I.Jn. EST, a hlgh perceoo tage of worktn were at their desks a1 usual. About. 1,000 combat-clad ilrrnY troops had a hand in actions at several key points -Ind 1 contingent of marines and 6,000 athtr' 10ldien were on hand il:t the city if needed -u demonstrator& wen diapened in 1Piil!terod. diaorga .... e.d groups in cordoned off areas. Mon than 5,000 wert under anest on 1 variety of charges by tO :fO a.m. and traf· fie movement wu reported vlrtuall1, (!lee CAPITAL, Pap I) 0r..,. Weatker Cooler temperatures and · mo1tly sunny ak1tt are the miJ:ed ble .. ing for Tue3df,y'1 weaU.er wat,ch. ers. High readinp will stretch from 63 locally to. 71 further in. land. INSIDE TODAY Ltam rtOto and J'Ofl • later after tto»'re Nrfting. lt'a brt de· ferred tuition, 4 MID plan 1n ·financtng coUeg1 1ducation. St:e BU1intu, Peg~ ia. ~· ··' • 2 DAILY PILOT H llood.,, M01 3, 1971 Nixon ieaves ·Coast ·for ·Troubled W ashingto~ PrtsldenL Nixon Ifft the Casa Paclrica In Sal\ ctemmte ar noon today to fly home to a troubled W1shin&toa aftu a ' rour-day visit to the Westtm White House. He is expected to arrive in the Capital . a.fter dark, missing today 's schedu.led an- ti-war demonstrations. In PAim Springs Sunday, the President taped a JS-minute radio address spelling out a '400 million program to help the na- • tion '1 rarmen, includina: a plan to l;ioolt farm exports to flO bWlon a year. Noting that exports had incrtued Wider his adnilnbtrallon, to nacb an estimated f7 .4 billion thiJ year, Nixon said efforts will be increued to achieve the $10 billion goal next year . He also pledged an increase in fann credit.s to bo06t farm operati11g loans, which would make up $349 million of the total farm assistai].cc program. On Frlllay the Prelldtnl wW wtlcome • IOM"t 80 farm leadm in a "S&Jute to Aarfcullu{I" ti the White Hou... Tiie l'ruldenl'a adilrau w., taped Sun- day morning during a ff.ltoqr visit to the desert estate · of Wllter Anntnbert. Philadelphia publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. During the ~isit, Ni.Ion played goU on Lhe private links cf the Aru1enberg estate with hi!: friends indUlltrlalist Robert H. Abplanalp, banker "'Bebe'' Rebozo and Reader'• Di&ea.t iw1tnt Hobart LewJ1. The president anivtd ln Calllomla at J>OOD on Friday, going dlreelly lo Camp Pendleton to welcome the First Marine Dlvlalon· home from Vleblam. · On Saturday afternoon he held a news conference on the lawn of the Western While House Our.Ing which be said· the na· lion is in the midst of a strong economic upturn, but tha~ any change in the op· , tlmlsllc trend would be bandied wUb ap- propriate tax aeUon • by the ad· ministration. In other action during the brief visit. the President proclatmed this week as Clean Water for America Week, calling upon Americans to act quickly and ef. fectlvely to protect the nation's waters Crom further deterioration. There was a brief flurry in Laguna Be1;ch Little League circles when a rumor spread that Nixon might appear 16 U,e opening a:ame on Slturday. Instead, the League • received a tel,gram of grttting from astroniut James Lovell, the. President's advisor on youth. • During his visit, Nixon was kept abreast of war protest development.I in Washington with continuing reports from staff members. Caspers Favors Hospital Tina K ysella Fund Raising Vinner Set Supervisor Says Saddleback Furor 'Political' By JACK BROBACK . Ot tti. 0•11¥ Pltet ll•ff Fifth District i:iupervi.9or R on a I d Caspers cf Newport Beach returned to. day ..from Europe and said, "I cannot understand why the planning commission didn't approve I.he Saddleback Com· • munity Hosp it.ii pennit last Thursday.'' Caspers Si.id hls appointee on the com· mission, Arnold Forde, who was with him on the 17-day trip, had sent word to the other ·planning commissioners that he JForde) believed lhe Saddleback facility ~ould be approved. , , "That shows how mu ch influence be has over those other· two (WoOdrow But· .terfield and Fred Jefferson) who voted 8gaill5t the hospital Thursday," Caspers iioted. . 'Ibe Filth District supervisor added, ''I'm for hospitals but I can't tell Forde .Or anyone else ·on the commisston how to yote." -Caspers said he believed "politics" is lnvolved and blamed the controversy on Ross Cortese, developer of Laguna Hills Leisure World where the Saddlebaci ·facility Is to be bulli He admitted that he and Cortese did ·not see eye to eye on many things and, "investigation by my office shows he was invt11ved in hll fight;" Forde wU1 not be back for Tuesday's fhicial pJanning commission ·meeting when the Saddlebaek use permit will be considered again. Caspera said he U not 'expected to return until Friday. The hospital controversy suiroundiog two rival facilities in the Mission Viejo. .Laguna HillS area surfaced early last we~k when it was reported that Forde had a fl{lancial interest in the Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo which iJ now under construction. It was alleged that Forde had been responsible for delaying approval of the Saddlebaci hospita1 use pennit. It now appears Forde won 't be present when Orange County planners convene again Tuesday to consider the fate of the Saddleback Hospital permit. Forde's absence when Saddleback·s conditional use permit came before coun· ty planners last Thursday apparently was a contriblitlng factor to a series of 1lx 2 to 2 tie votes and eventual departu~ from the session or two commissioners during recess. County approval of the JK:rmit is essen· tial before .May 16 in order for Sad- dleback Hospital to qualily for a $1.6 million federal erant. Tbe Lutheran Hospital Society has scheduled groundbreaking this sprl.ng for the 150·bed first phase construction on a site at Calle de la Louisa and Via Estrada in Laguna Hills. Plans call for eventual expansion to 500 beds. At last Thursday's &ession cf county planners, the four commissioners present !Cinco .de .Mayo Dinner Slawd at Valley High A·Muican dlnner prepared by mothers from the Juarez Colony will top off Cinco ·de Mayo celebrations in Founlain Valley Wednesday night al Fountain Valley Hl&h School. t1 Dinner wiU be aerved from 6 p.m to I ,f,.m. in lbe high school cafeteria. Tickets ere $1 for adults and 50 cents for children ,under 12. · ··-catlos Munoz and his "Lalin Group" ' . - Concert Quiet ' At Mile Square , A rock eoncert put on Sunday at Mile :~uare Regional Park by The Mother Leve band drew up to S,000 young listeners. Deputies from the Orange County Sherill's Department aaid there were no incidents Wide the park. The concert stretched from 11 a.m. to about 7 p.m. A permit for the concert had been ob- tained from the county by The Mother Love. outside the park, Founlain Valley Police arrested eight people on various charges ofpossesslon of dangerous drugs or being under the influence, and one person for carrying a dagger. OIANH COAST DAILY PILOT dlAHOI CO.UT ltUll.,ISHING t'CIMPAN't R1Mli N. W1M ,,. .......... """'"""" J•tk L C111..t.T' Viet ,.,..... ... .._., Ml!lllll' n.,.. •• r •• v1r ·-. Tiio••• A. Mw,Jif1f Ml .......... ,,.,. Alo1t Dlrlti1t WRI ar.ngo CMll'f h lltr Alb1rt W. l1to1 ...._i.t. llfl!W >tnri ...... •omc. I 1t 71 t.1dl l eul1•114 M1lll111 .Yirt111 P.O. 1111 7f0, ,,,(1 °""'°'""' """""' 1'9dl: 222 ,_, ·-C.M Mli!4: DI W..1 • .., ,,,_ ....,,..,, a.di: Im ,,."""""" ~·"" "" "'"'*"': as ...,._ " c."'n hll will entertain diMer J!Ut•ll. Tlilid, fourth, fifth and sixth graders from Tamura School will also twirl through several popular Mexican folk dances. Stucfents at Tamura School wUI 1pend the day studying tbe history of Cinco de Mayo, a national holiday in Mexico. Cinco de Mayo -May 5th -marks the fir1t'battle victory won by the Mexicans IA their batUe to throw out the French._ the last forilgn powtr to domillate Mix· ico. The dinner and related activities are sponsored by the Juarez Colony and tilt Federal Projects Advisory Board of the Fountain Valley School District. The district has two federal projects, one at Tamura, and a pr~school in the Juarez Colony, which deal dlrectfy with the problema of the Mei:ican-American comm.un ity. Money earned from the dinner will be used for scholarships for Mexican- American atudents at Fountain Valley High. At Los Amigos High School in Fountain Va!lev there wil l be displays, folk dances , a ma.J"liachi band , pinata partiea and a Mexican dinner from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Fireworks Sliow, Parade Planned On 5th of July A shorter, but more spectacular fire· wnrks display will be featured in con- junction with . the July 5 Huntington :Beach lndepend!11ce Day parade this year, according to the sponsoring Jay· cees. Fireworks are scheduled to ·begin at dusk. just off the municipal pier. The display will last between 3o and 45 mil· utes. Entries for the parade conti .. ue lo JlOU r in : accordini: to Jaycee stcretary Joyce Musgrave. She rep!'.lrts a total of 50 entrle3 ro date, including five floa!J, and six bands. This year's Fourth of July celcbratlon will be held on July 5 because the fourth fa\h: on Sunday. Starting time is 11 a.m. at Lake Park a11d Main Street. Valley Facility Goes to Council Fountain Valley's propo1ed cJvlc ctnter expansion goes to the city council for ap. proval Tuesday. . CoUncilmen will be asked to approve a contr11ct with Newport Btach architect William Blurock for additions to the city h•ll and police headquarters and con- struction of a warehouse at the cor· porallon yard. Total cost or the thrte projects hill been estim,.ted 8t $635,444, including Blurock's fee. The expansion has been planned for several ytara and Is expttted to bf! cnm· pl<ted by lhe-•nd of this y•ar. City halt l'l'ld police ht1dquarttr1 will be built to I.heir maximum slte. debated for three hours while going through the long series of tie votes on the use pennit. Finally, tbey called a recess. When it v.·as over, Commission Ch a i r m a n Woodrow Butterfield and CommissicmeF Fred Jefferson had vanished. It lhen became unclear whether or not the commission had a quorum with only' two members remaining. Saddleback Hospital attorney Michael Collins and Deputy County Counsel Tom Conroy bud· died with the legal point remaining unclear. Finally . at Collins 'request, remaining commissioners JJoward K. Smith of Hun· tington Beach and Dan Foley voted ta deny the permit, 2 to 0. This Dianeuver was an effort to get the whole Jssue before the Board of Supervisors via appeal. But it wu for naught. Friday, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that no quorum was present. Therefore there was really no action at all on lhe hospital quesllion. So the planners will try again Tuesday. MeanWhile Tuesday, Orange C.OUOty Grarid Jury Foreman Doreen Mar1hall of Newport Beam Js ei:pected to bring the 'whole affair beCore the jury for discussion. It Is unknown if the Grand Jury will investigate, Con.troversy betan to surround Sad· dleback Hospital's use permit request earlier when it was disclosed that County Planning Commissioner Forde -the rnUsing fifth vote -bolds a major finan· cial inter~st in rival Mission Community Hospital now being built in Mission Viejo. It was Forde's "naggirig doubts" that caused a delay in decision when Sad- dleback Hospital's use permit request came before county planners last March I!. Following last Thursday's abortive ac· lion on the permit, Saddleback Hospital President n-ant J. Schaeffer iald he was "shocked and dismayed" at the biz.arre proceedi ngs. · "The apparent tola1 disregard for public !)pinion and the abandonment of their entru1ted · responsibilities to the pubUc on the part of commissioners Butterfield and Jefferson can only be viewed as an unprecedented action in Or:ange _Cmmty government,!'.-.Schaelfer declared. Schaeffer said he doesn't believe that the actions by the majority of county planners is truly reflective of Orange County gove.rnmental attitudes. , * * * Butterfield Says Panel Unswayed By Pressures ' Orange County Pli.nnlng C.Ommission Chairman Woodrow Butterfield, who vanished at mid-argument last Thursday during a debate on Sadd!eback Hospital's use permit, said today he wouldn't hazard a guess on how the commission \viii vote Tuesday. '1We're not gning to be pressured i .. to making a decislon one way (If the <1th er'" the commission Chairman declared. Butterfield and Commissioner Fred Jefferson left · the Saddleback Hospital debate after three hours lut Thursday, resulting in a "no decision" on the permit. • .. Planning commission members have been subjected to tremendous pre"ur'~ rrom many sources over this h06pltat matter ... Butterfield asserted. Butterfield offered no explanation for bolting last Thursday's meeting other than to say he was tired. He had been on a recent trip to Washington, 0 .C. "Nobody has m'ntioned that Com· missioner How~rd K. Smith left a meeting a couple of y:eeks ago,'' But· terfield asserted . In relation to the Saddlebaclc Hospilal question. Butterfield also disclosed that' the commission is COllducllng a thorough i;tudy or Laguna Hills Leisure World's planned community. "It was the first of its kind in Orange County,'' the planning chief said, "ind It has been N:vised eight times. "Wt just want to S'-e ·just what shape It is in at present,'' he concluded. Tidal Alert Lifted After Alaska Quake ANCHORAGE (UPI) -No damage has been reported from an earthqu1ke r~rded in the Aleutian Islands late Saturd11y, the Alaska state palrol reported today. The earthquake, centered about 50 m!\es south ct( Adak Island, measured 1.1 on the Richier Scale. Jt triggered i brief coastal alen Issued by the National Defense OfUce but !Mi was 'cancelled when scf'entlsts dtltrmlned the quake "'ould not create tidal wavr:s. Officers Bre1k Up Attempt to Block 14th Street Bridge POLICE HUSTLE TWO D.C. DEMONSTRATORS OFF TO JAIL • From Pagel CAPITAL PROTESTS ... -.. normal except in a few scattered spots. Some of tht unarTested remnants of the militant war. .opponents -operating as the May Day Tribe -turned to sporadic strl!!et vandalism 'such as the slashlng of tires of autos parked or stopped at traffic lights. One of the victims of a punctured Ure was Sen. Pau. J . Fannin (R·Ariz.) who had been stopped by a group seeking to dissuade him from going to work. A threat of trouble at Georgetown University dissolved when leaders of a group of about 1,000 conferred wilh en- circling police and bolh agreed to •·cool ii." In the main shopping area of Georgetown -both a fashionable residential section and a hippie hangout -the situation was calmed by the presence of federal troops lining both sides or the streeL They stood 10 feet apart with, rifles tlung over ·• their shoulders. Some ,of the trooper!· chatted amiably with passing long-balred street people and a few ev'n rta&hed the "V" sign of the peace movemeltt occasionally. But most of the soldiers were tighl·lipped. \Visps of tear gas hung in the air at some areas where major confrontations took place during the early hours of the morning. But by 10 a.m., Attorney General John JM SPECIALS N. Mitchell issued a 1tatement from the Justice Department declaring: "The city is open. The traffic is flowlng . The government is functioning." Police Chier Jerry V. Wilson predicted in advance that the traffic tie-up effort v.·ould b~ defeated. In a message on the pOlice radio, he told his men : "The desire of the Presid~ot is that this city be open for business this week." Many of the disorganized protesters moved toward the Georgetown sector of the city where many of them had taken refuge Sunday whe n police evicted them from their "Peace City" at West Potomac Park A convoy of ~ to 60 jel!!ps bearing military police went to the arfti at mid· morning, apparently for a Ifundup of protesters. All were equipped with gas masks and some were wearing them . .Other troops holding nnes were sta- tioned on J.f Street N.W. for several bl~ks ill the Georgetown area which has beC<Jme a hippie hangout in recent years. .Sli:. helicopter lnads of battle·garbtd Marines were landed at the Washington Monument groµnds , ready for action if needed. Tear gas fumes hung ewer the bridges across the Potomac, above .!Orne of the city's famed monwnents and permeated the streets and grassy Cowered park areas. Sii DOM tli\Cm FOR DIAMONDS. HMEMIEll, A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INVISTMENT A benefit dinner to aid the medic.1.1 l!!X~ pense fund for a 12·year-old Fountain Valley girl crlticaJIY ill for more than a n:ionth has.beep set for May 7 at Golden West College The dinner, featuring an Oriental menu. v.•ill be sponsored by the Golden \Vest International Relations Club in the College Center from 6 p.m. to 10. PrOl'eeds \llil! go to the fund set up for Tina Kysella. Friends and nei ghbors rallied to the side (Jf the Kysella family lo help with the burgeoning medical expenses when the 'tgirl was first stricken and in a coma March 18. Her illness has since been diagnosed as a hemorrhage near the br11in stem. She remains under intensive care at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Newport Beach. Monday from the dinner wil l be transferred Into the Tina Kysella Fund established at Lhe Fountain Valley branch of the Bank of America by the Tamura School PTO. Tickels for the dinn~r will be $2.7S adults. $2.50 high sChool and college students and $1.75 elementary school children . They are on sale at the college bookstore, or may be f.'lbtained from clu b president. Miss Roberta Huff (893·5689) or fund raising chainnan, Robert Mulgrew, Jr. (847-7501 ). Campus Carnival Slated Saturday At V al.ley Field A Renal~ance Fair -with an up-to. date campus carnival -will cover the Fountain Valley High School football lield all day Saturday. There will be a dunking booth. food, games, a dog show and continuous en. tertainment, all under the spell of the golden renaissan~. From 10 a.m. to dusk the enUre community is invited to join the students at the fair. ~dmission )s 25 cents for modern-day fair goers, but those who come dressed in Renaissance attire will be Jet in free. Tv.•enty-five campus clubs are sponsor. ing booths or activities. - One club, Project Vietnam, is asking any parents with sons in the service to lnan a picture for display at the fair. Project Vietnam is a club composed of 100 girls who write letters and sen( cookies or books to serviceJDen in Vjet. nam. They plan to display pictures in honor of men now in the service and for veterans. Any family wanting a serviceman·s picture displayed can send it to the club advisor, Mrs. Elenor DeRnis, c/o Foun. tain Valley High School, 17816 Bushard St.. Fountain Valle)'. After the fair, hip school students will have a dance in, tht gymnasium from I p.m. to midnight with muslc by the Sweet and Sour Bluet Band.· PEARLS Give Mother Something Beautiful for Mother's Day ONLY IF TOU IUT IT au;HT PEARL $9'5 RINGS ·--..... ... ---DO"! u.cm *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS PHrl ~ic~laces • C.meo Pi.,. • CocltaU Rings • Diamond Rings and Many Baautiful J awelry Items SAYE UP TO &a°/o HERE ~; MO•• DIAMOND GUARANTIE Wheft you buy a diamond from .. - will guarantee that diamond to appraiq at W'/e MORE than you ,.w for ft or vour money beck. Can you do as w.11 olaawhoro? COMPARE. 1002 ·mMs TO CHOOSE FROM • AND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUT, SIU. TUDI COMI IN AND HOWSI AROUND 1838 NEW~ORT· l~Yp. Pl:fONE 646.7741 DOWNfOWN COSTA M~-hlW--& .. Wloap • I 'I I l \I 'I ~ .. • , . ---J - " Monday, M1J l , 1CJ71 H DAIL V PILOT ' 3 Lockheed .Dulaney Gro~p on Bail . Cut bac ks Bond of $50,000 Post.ed for Lag una Stock Official Disclosed Drastic Lockheed Aircraft Corporation financial cutback!: including h' u g e management salary slishes, including prior disposal of Orange County Airport a~a property now destined for a $200 million de.\·elopment were aonouncelt to- day. Sale of the 19S.acre parcel to Emkay Development Company -subject of con- troversial Newport Beach zoning hear· ings -Y.'&li already public knoy,·Jedge. The aircraft company's oewest a~ nouncemenl lrom its Burbank bead· quarters said lhe cutbacks are due to lhe firm 's worsening fF.ncial crisis. • Uncertai11ty over the Rolls-Royce Ltd. jtt engine contract for it.s TriStar airbus in addition to U.S. defense cutbacks are the primary cause. officials said. Property involved is on MacArthur Boulevard across from Collins Radio Company, bounded by Jamboree and Palisades Roa& and Birch Street The land, now held by Emkay Develop-. men t Company, will be the site of its de.signaled Newport Project. for major office buildings, a 400-unit hotel and large car deale rship. Cost of the sale has never been reveal· ed. Lockheed Aircraft Corporation is cur· rently' in debt to various banks for a total f)f $400 million, with government aid currently under consideration .. Secretary of the Treasury John 8. Con· nally told ~ Senate approprialioos sub- committee last week that it must guarantee $250 million of the loans to assure Lockheed's corporate lil,lf'Vival. The company announced that 150 key executives will soon feel the monetary bite by 12 percent ga.]ary reductions. Board Chairman Daniel Haughton will have bis own $150,000 annualv salary cut by 2S percent and the •firm's annual five percent pay raise tor 131,000 employes in 17 1tate11 is paslponed. Besides the Harbor Area land sale. Lockheed has sold a Palo Alto site and deactivated \a nuclea r laboratory in Georgia, plus reduc'ing research and development spen~ing. Stab Suspect 'Keeping, Quiet' She's Alillt; . catherine \Vebb, bureau man- ange'r in Phnom Penh, Cam- bodia, for United Press Inter- national, is s~fe afJer being held captive by Gommunist troo.ps. See story, Page 4. Quake . Jolts Coast Areas Of Co~nty . An earthquake ·felt by Orange Coast. residents from San Juan Capistrano ~ Long Beach, went unnoticed at Cal Tech today. The tmpblor. estiroat.ed by. USC seiSmologist5 to be about 2.5 on lhe RicAter ficale, was aot. recorded .by Cal T~, a spakesi;nan. said.' Howe\;er, Dr. Richter's labs reported calls .from .ttie San Gabriel Valley short.ly liter thtr8:57 a.m·. quake. ' · Dr. Thomas . Henyey, a USC All seven. de{ti,danis iQdicted b)' lbe Orange Coonly Grand Jury on fraud charges stemmlng rrom operations of lhe now-defunct World Financial Trends in- vestment operation in Laguna Hills haVe now posted bail or .are fret on their own recognizance. Former Newport Beach stocl!.broker Joseph Dulaney. who J>Qlice allege was the ring leader in an investment !Cherne that may have C06l participants a total 'of $3 million. h~ now Jl4?Sted the $50,000 bail that he rejected.'183l ~·eelc as "lmposslble for a man \\'ithout ~ P'MY in hi11 potket." He is today' Workihg with· df:fense al· tomey Robert Law on preparatton of his iiefense to charges' of grand theft, forgery and conspiracy. He and bis six c:odefen- d1nb are 1cheduled to face a pretriP! hearing May 13 and a Superior CoWi trial une It. Dulaney, 38, is reunited with his wift, Marlene. 32, after a separation that began while both eluded the long search mounted by local investigators and FBI agenta. The hunt for Mri1 Dulaney en,ded IW month with her Ri'rest in the British Colony of Bermuda.. Dulaney was ar· rested a (ew days earlier in the Dutch Caribbean colony of CUracoa. t.frs Dulaney is free on her own recognizance. Answers Sought The eouple were returned to Orange County after a !&.month absence that began In December, 1969 when they new with their three children lo West Gennany as tomplalnts about the World f'ln.ancial Trends operation began to now· i1 to the District Attorney's Office. : ~fendanll lree. on $50,000 bond and scheduled lo face ·trial on tht same date are James ·shipley. 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington Beach. Daniel Hayes, 40. of 8211 Snowbird, Huntington Beach. and Wendell Warren Austin, '38, of Riverside. Leslie Bacon Jury Probe Divers Take ' . lncludesBa11kBombPlot E~ology Dive ·To Sett Floor SEATILE, Wash. .(UPI) -The governmenl today asked a federal court The ecology fight goe5 underwater 1o compel Leslie Bacon, 19. to answer 1'µe&day "'hen 200 divers are expected to certain Federal Grand Jury quf'~tions converge on the ocean noor. Theft' goal, "concern1ng her participation in plans to to cltan up the ocean bottom off Santa bomb The First National City Bank" in \ Catalina .Island. New Yorlt. Ed Mazzeo. a 20-year-old UC Irvine The Justice Department also revealed junior and president ol UCls Dive Club. the sweeping nature of the grand jury said,·"We are going lo pick up everythin& probe into anti-war activity. listings.even we find that doesn't belong there.' possible violations of federal law. MaueO and 21 others from UC! \fill Mi:is Bacon was arrested last Tuesday, &oiird the Estrina at.Norm's Landing at and il wair first believed the Grand Jury 'i a.m. Tuesday. probe was looking primarily into lhe They plan to dive for about three: hours b' b' f the u s Ca · 1 E r in coves off the east side of the ·island. im mg 0 · • pilo · ar ier story. Page 4. The Underwater Eco1ogy Day event is • However, the violations listed by the competitiOn, Ma:aeo said. Divers hauling government loda y referred to: in the most trash from the sea floor will 1 · win awards. "Interstate trave to organlZe, promot\ and encourage a riot. -. r.1aueo did not say what the divers 'l le tale tr r1a1· f 1 · 1 d 'th .~ t h th 11 t ' n rs snspo ion o exp os1ve p an to o w1 ~~ ras ey co ~ deyices. from the ocean floor. ~ ''Destruciion or government property. "Possession or unregist•red devices. "Tlltga l possession and use of ex- plosives. ''Interstate transportation or ellplosivtS" by a person under indictment" and "conspiracy." Apparently the bomb plot againsl Ule Ney,· York bank at 9lst and Madison never materialized. The government said Miss Bacon ad- milted her participation in the plot on May I before the Federal Grand Jury, but "refused to answer additional que s· tions on grounds lhat the answers might lend. to incriminate her.·: The m6tion asked the federal court lo force her to testify on the bomb plot before the Grand Jury Tuesday. Attorneys for the anti-war activist earlier filed a writ seeking her release from federal custody. Ulbriclit 'Resigns l n East Ger,1na1t y S~preme Court Upholds • geophysicist, ~;d l~ lrtmor w~ record~ ed on USC's Baldwin Hills scifimic network . He estimated the small quake's epicenter to be 30 miles south of that recording station or a!>oul t\\'O miles BERLIN (AP) -'\Valter Ulbricht haii: offshore of Long Beach. SOIJth of the resigned as first secretary or lhl' East U.S. Por1l0graph y Power German Communist party Central Com. BERKELEY I UPI I -A young man Palos Verdes PenWula in Long Beach mittee.. thl' official East German ne\\'S accu!.ed of stabbin~ lo death an Air Bay. agt'ncy AON reported Monday night. WASHINGTON !AP) -The Suprem"' Both rlccisions were delivered by Force recru iting sergeant is "not telling Hl'nyey noted there is a possibility the Ulbright. 77, liad headed the German Cour\ upheld today the go\'emml'nt'!li Justice Byron R. Whi~ who recognized a us a thing," police said today. quake ":ould be rated larger • wh!'n Communist part~ ror yea!'ll and sel up power to prosecute people· \\'ho send "developing 5'ntiment that adults should Christopher Brian Cowaar. 21 , was the Essl German• re~me in 1Easl Berlin porno1r1phy through the mails as weU 11 have compLe~ freedom" in th ia fie la. But scheduled to be arraigned this afternoon repor ts from other station s were HI d. He ;it Ute end of World War 11 as its presi-'to seize obscene material brought into the he said the ta~k of restructuring obsceni- on charges o( murder in the deatll of Sgt.. said it ~·ou\d be· unusual for 1 Quake of dent. country for commercial sales. ly \aw11 lies wiih lcglslelures and not with Roger1: P.\obley, 32, of Novat o.. 2·5 on the Richter scale to be rii!ll more The bearded veteran CoMmusUst wa11 In two decisions the court came down the Su preme Court. Cowsar was arrested at the Berkeley than IO rh,ilJ!S frQm the ef>lceciter .. : Rlv.·ays the soviet Union's man in East Gil the side of suppression end against the F'inst. by a vote of 7 lo 2, the court recuriting Office last Friday morning There were reports that the .temblor Germany. argument that adull<i, at least, have a upheld th e feder1d. law that prollibits the :.fter Mobley wa11 attacked and repeated-shook hillside homes ift _ South Orange AON said" Ulbricht submltfed hbi right to freely circulate any printed niat· knowing use of the mails for delivery of ly stabbed. The sergeant ~den route to County this ~domhingBa. Id Tesignalion to the 16th plenary session of ter. · obscene matter. Although citizens have a a: hospital. , Henyey sa1 I e win Hills station the Central Committee, giving as a right' to read any obscene book In their Only the two men were in lhe small operated by USC is in ·an area that reaSfln his advanced age. Harold Wilsons End own houses, White uid, there is no com· room at the time of the stabbing. Wit· usually gets feeble m:ordinp of quakes He will contdnue to hold the post of parable right to distribule or sell' obsCene nesses from other parts of the bµilding J<>eated on the Newport-Inglewood fault-chainnan of the State Council, ADN said. Vi"si"t al LBJ Ranch materials through the mail. Free on their own rflCOill)unce ll'e Robert G. Machan, 40, of San Bernardino and Fred Riley, 4S, of Norfolk , Va . All seven are alleged by police to bt i,.. volved in the defrauding of Investors In a complex that was ruled by Dulaney from his "Taj Mahal " building in Laguna Hills anQ a less imposing offict·ln Seal Beach. lt is also alieged . that lhe group defrauded the St. Bcrqardine Hospital of San Bernardino of ~.ooo and that a similar sum was obtained u n d e r circumstances· that are still btiing in· vestlgated from the Chemical Sank or New York. Clouds Might Let Rain Out Along Coast Fog and low clouds that hugged the Orange Coa'st this morning may return to drop so me rain tonight and then vanish. Tuesday will be sunny and a little warmer along the Orange COa!it with highs ranging rrom 63 to 73 degrees, the National Weather Service predicts. For tonight, bow ever, it will remain partly cloudy wilh temperaturf:.!I dipping to 5.1 along the eoaJt and 4S inland. There's a 30 percent chance the ck>uds will bring rain. Orange County Harbor Department 11ported "trace rain" this morning and noted the low clouds and ... little fog" did nothing to dampen the spirits of boatsmen and beachgoers over the weekend. Orange County Airport Tower said the low clouds did not hamper nights today. \Vinds from the west to nofthwest with gusts-from , 10 to 20 miles an hour are u~ petted aloof the coast tonight and TUe(. day. , Mountain areas may gel their rain in the form of thundershowers. The ex- pected gradual clearing will bring ausly winch to lhe moilntains aod deserli. Tidal Wave Alert A F alsc Alarm Orange Coast communities were under a 24-hour tidal wav' alert lhis weekend - a warning about a deluge whicb nevtr came. The alert, whir:h went Into 'Hett through the county's Control One com· municalionS" network, "temmed from a 7.t magnitude quak~ near Adak, Alas~ Control Ont issued the alert· It 12;04 a.m. Jialurda,y. '"' The announceme11t remained in ,ffect until shortly after midnight Sunday momtn·g. It was lifted afler report& of only minor wave disturbances in Northern California. who nisbed to the scene quoted Cowsar the active fault that is believed to have d th. · • h k Justices Hugo L. Black and William O. as shouting that the sergeant "is going to cause ts mornings s a e. C H • l" d die -•e·s sending people to Vietnam." Heny•y speculated that Cal Tech's 3 . Prisoners Escape STONEWALL, Te<. (AP) - F 0 rm er Dquglas. who rot more than three app osp1ta iie Police uld that since his arrest CowsaT Palomar recOrding station would nave Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Great rieeade11 on the court have supported has refused to talk about the incident or been too far awaY from the epicenter to SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Poliee Britain and his wife were to leave the freedom of expression, dissented alon~. llARRISON, Ark. {AP) -Cartoonist his motives. · have detected th is morning's tremor. said today they are pressing the search LBJ Ranch near here today for Austin Second, the court ruled I to 3 that Al Capp has bten hospitalized here aft.er On Sunday the suspect's father and The ~uake came on the heels of a night for three men who escaped from county where he wa~ sched uled to address a customs agenl'I could seize obscene collapsing from exhaustion while on a brother visited him. They live in Long of "micro earlhquake1" that shook jai_I Saturday by overpowering a guard. joint session of the Texas Legis\ljlure. photographs, books and advertisemenl3 lecture tour. • Beach and indicated Christopher left Southern California including ooe about The three climbed down a fiTe hose and The Wilsons have been visiting former coming into the country from abroad so Capp, !i2. was resting comfortably tn home t\\·o years ago and has nof kept in 6:30 a.ro. in the San Fernando Valley knolled strips of bedding from a fourth Presidenl Lyndon B. Johnson and Mrs. long as the traveler has an opportunity to Boone Count y hospital, 1 spokesman u.itt tnuch ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~•:'ed:::.:•:•~•:bo:u:l~l=~~•:n~the::_:R:ic:ht:'~':sc:•:''=·~~=lloo::::.'_w::.:;in:d:ow:·:._~~~~~~~~~=J:•h=n='°:"~'='~'-"'~''_n_ch~''-"•_e_Fr~id_•~Y-·~~~-les~t-the~•-"-·'u_r~e-'~""~d-il~y-m~cou~rts~.~~~~·~~er"'-C=a~p~p~w:._••:._•d:m~1~'tle::.:d~S=u=nd:•~Y:·~ ...... El Rancho has the hottest price in town! . Flank Steak .. ~ ..... s1~9 Lean bee(· .• U·.S.D.A. Choice •• with Mn.. CobbW>nl1 f&mOO!I dl"tlMinr! · OYen-ready Meat loaf ... _ ............ _ .... : .......... Jr. )fad• with .. lected fr<Sh groond meat. al)d fr<M whole esn! lean Cubes of Beef for Stew ............... ,, ........ 9r ComJ>Al'< ..• and )'.(1<1'11 choose El Rancho for the le•nm itew bee! ever! Alex's Beef Tamales ........................ : ............. :.33' Celebrate "Cinco de Mayo"' wit.h a special menu! •• 8 oance packa,p. I ·S1X PACK . 12 OZ. CANS I I . , I ..... ,...., ........................... Light and tingly ••• ·fl,.... TOO....,. thought yuu'd find at thi• pria! More ..-ideooo that the difference at EI Rancho ;,, ••Jue . JOO aet qualicy and NIWa<t.ion ••• iii&,.;, for your money ••. at El Rancho! Sav• on El Ranclw Beer, lhio week, It enjoy thedif!emic:,l . - PJ'i<ttU. <tle<!t M.._, r ..... Wed,. Mou S, 4. S No ll4lu lo denl- Pineapple ... f~. ~~~ . .-19~ Rushed hen from Hawaii by air to preserve that precious fresh !l.uor1 Patio M~xican Dinners .................................... .,,- O:w>oee YOO!' favorite from any of the !our aathentic varieties! Frozen. Rosarita Refried Beans ............. : ............. : ....... 25• SJ>OOn out bir eervinp, and make the menu complete! No. 2~ can. Saff ola Margarine ............................................ 33• All the flavor TOU'd upoc! •• , with the advantages of &&fflower oil f Lii.' ARCADIA : 1""''' '"~ ~"''' "P'"" n1 ; ii:: PASAD ENA : ;1 ~U SOUTH PASA,OENA : i'/1 1111 • HUNTINGTON BEACH : ;1:i'J NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Ne.w1 a1"' "'" fl Ranchri Cen\er, 1.l.1 'W e.I Cll,fl1 ~110 811!1 · fr•inon1 J11~ H11n.1npton C1 W.1rr1er ,111~ Algonq111n 80J:dw.1lk Cenlt>1 .. 2~~5 [.1slbl11 P Or ·[asfbluff Vill<iV,e Center .. ·' r ' ( I , • { OAl~V "LOT ,_ __ Cambodians Can't Forni Government PHNOM PENH (UPI) -An att.mpt to form a new Cambodian lovtrNnent col· Iapeed today when the Natlonal Atsembly Prtsldent, Gen. In Tam, refused to become premier. ~f.loing P T·i me Mtnilter Lon Nol offtred a compromise sal'1Uori tbat would permit himself to ttay, in of1Jce1 but dtltgate authority. 't The formula proposed to settle I.he lS. day-old crisis was this: Lon Nol would re- main as ·premier but delegate power to Gen. Sisowath Sirik Matak, his deputy premier. Sirtk Matak hu been running the aovernment since Lon Nol suffered a 1troke Feb. 8. In Tam told journalists Um Not himself had proposed the t0lutlon in a meeting today with chief of st1te Cheng Hena. Previously Lon Nol, who has never fully recovered from the stroke despite treat· ment at an American medical hospital in 'Hawaii, had insisted on resigning despite ~est.I that he slay on. Lon Nol And Chen& Heng led the March 1&, 19?<1, coup that ouated neutralist Prince Ndrodom Sikanouk. -·· Monl11, Mi11 S, 191! EGYPT PRESIDENT SADAT SUMMARILY FIRES TOP OFFICIAL Vic•Pr1sld1nt S.bry Out in Internal Power Stru99l1 /(ate Webb Has Chuckl,e On News of Her Death MeM.abm. offering congratuJat!ons on behalf of the Aultralian government and 'lntenuiJ Affair' Top Egypt Aide Ousted by Sadat ~ CAil\O (UPI) -Pmident Anwar Sfldat's dl1ml11al of Viet President Ali • Sabry was a purely iDttmal, affair and bad nothlne to do with C&iro'1 policy toward the SovJet Union. or the United States, au~itative pollilcal sources ua.id today. • · The sources said the fact that the ouster of pro-Soviet Sabry, announced Sunday rupt, came lesa than two days befort the Caire visit of U.S. Skretary of State William P. Rogers was a mt:e coincidence. They explained that Sabry' was ousted becauie he opposed the idea of Egypt's joining a federation with Libya and Syria at the present stage. (Arab political sources in Beirut predicted the Sabry ciuster would touch off a power struggle in Cairo between bis followera and thole of Sadat. Israeli , sources saw the move u taken to please Rogers on the eve of bis visit). member of the EIYPilan dfile11tion whicb negotiated t.be·-federaUon agree. ment in Bengjlul; but be (Sabry) dld not voice bia opposition unUI he returned tG C&iro and addres.sed the Qntral Com· mil tee. 1be sources expressed confidence th1t Sabry'1 ouster will not lead to any, poliUCAJ upheaval or power struule in IM COWltry, They point.d out tliat the government and the vast majority of the ASU were solidly behind Sadat wbo bas been &lining in popularity steadily since he took ever after the death last Sep. tember of PresideDt Gamal Abdel Nasser. They a1so noted that Sabry, partly because of his known pr~viet Jeanins:s and bis personal lack cf charm, com· manded no following ainong the masses or the military. Sabry, 53, is ooe of the few remaining officers associated with the 1952 rtvolt that overthrew King Farouk and brought Nasser to power. He served as priltle minister, political adviser to the preai· dent and secretary of tbe Arab Socialist Union under Nasser. lt'leb ' 'I 1ee it. I 1ee it. ' Don't r1U1h me!' Seattle Link In Capitol Bomb Probed SEA1TLE, Wash. (AP) -Le!U. Baoon returns for a fourth day <1f quesUoning to- day be.fore a federal grand jury ap- parently investigating the possibility that the March 1 bombing of the U.S. capitol was planned in Seattle.. ,r,f· Uni!er lht formula proposed by Lon Nol, Sirlk Matak wouJd be "prem.ter desienate." The government also would have three vice-pJlmien.' each running a group of ministries and rUJ>OMible PHNOM PENH UPI) -Catherine M. ''Kate" Webb rested in front of the swim· ming pool at the Hotel Roya~ today anct chuckled <lYer a .shear of her obituaries. "It's weird reacting t.hese.~s. really weird," e said. people on her release. , Still fatigued even after two nighU: of solid 1leep, she talked in a aomeUmes tremulous, Jow-pitched voice of life with the C:OJOfflunists in the jungle. It was Sabry'1 epposition to the fed.era· lion that clelayed its approval by the 150- member Central Committee of the Arab Socialist Union (ASU) for more than a week, the aources said. 'Evtn after amendments were made in tbt federation proclamation and the basic rul~s to meet some of the objections rais- ed by Sabry, be nevertheless voted against jt at last Thursday's committee meeting which approved the union by an overwhelming majority, the ~ttrces said. He is known to have a heart condition and suffered a cardiac failure d u r in g Nasser's funtra1, but Sunday's an· nouncement did not mention ill health as a reason for the dismissal. Government attorneys have refused to indicate why the investigation is being carried on here, but they said after an unusi.lal granct jury session Sunday they, we·re content with the case. j ' I ' J I 1 ~ j I ' I I f ., I I ,! ·I • \ ! I I f • I I I I dirtdly to Sirik Matak. Jn Tam gave no reuon for turning down the premiership, but a 1ovenunenl IOutee said it was because he was offend only "half ,.a government -he would have had no military power." Miss·Weti 28, New Zealand-born cbie£· of the Uhited ess International bureau in Phnom Penh, as released by the Viet Cong aboUt 4'l miles southwest of the Cambodian capital before dawn Saturday after 23 days in Communist captivity. "They called me the English girl," she said of her Vietnamese captors, "and they told me to check My health as soon as I got back to Phnom Penh because they thought I was very weak." They aaid what made Sadat particular· ly angry was that Sabry had been a • * * * H.elicopter Tour Miss Bacon's attorneys, Jeffrey Stein· born of SeaUle and Michael Fayad ct Washington, D.C., have maintained con· sistently that Miss Bacon knows nothing of the bombing and knows no one con- nected with it: Lon Nol has been named commander in chief and is held of the general staff, while Sirik Malak serves· u his deputy 'in that position -even if they do not re- main u premier and vice premier. She had been believed dead for about 10 day1 prior to her release b~ause two Cambodian officera had reported finding, identifying and cremating her body along the his:hway near the point where atie disappeared during the rout of a Cam· bod.fan paratroop-battalion April 7. l{ent ·State Students Hold Takt:n by Rogers ~ . . . On Jordan Visit They said Miss Bacon had been living in a commune in Washington and has OD· ly been in Seattle once before, a half hour visit while hitchhiking through town. Miss Bacon, 19, of Athvton, has been held since last week on $100,000 bond as a material witness in the case. She was brought here last Thursday under a 1ub- poena issued by U.S. Di!itrict COurt 1D Seattle. Tbt aource said "even if Jn Tam bad kept the defense ministry-for himself he would have had no power except to pro. vicle llW and ammunition for tile army." MW Webb smiled al a clipping from a New York newspaper htadlined "Body ot Girl Reported Found in Cambodia," propped her sore feet on a deck chair and remarked, "I don't want to do any more walking for a long, long time." Memorial for Slain IGds AMMAN (UPI) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers took a helicopter tour of Jordan today, including a close look at aome Israeli-held territory. 3 Former Nazis Facing Trial REGENSBUJ\G, Germany (AP ) - Three Nut police official! went on trial today for tl'le Babi Var masucre of 33,771 Jews in UM.1 in the Ukraine. 1be defendants are fonner Maj. Martin Be8aer, 79, commander of the 45th Police )attalion; former Maj. Enge I be rt Kreuzer, 57, a company commander. and 5Jt. Fritz Forberg, 85. The commander of their regiment, Rene. RoR:nbauer, 12, hu been declared physically unfit tO stand lrial, and KrtUl.tr has been declared fit for trial ody on tondition that daily bearings do net lut too Joni . The three men are charged with llrganizlng the executions of the Jews in the Xiev aru and with personally killinl aome of the victims. "Right now. I'm tired," she said. "I want to sit aroond here for a couple of days ·and then go see my family in Sydney." Miss Webb's feet were badly blistered by two nights of s!,eady walking. Shod on· ly in a pair of rubber shower clogs, she trudged along jungle trails from a deten- tion camp in which she and five other · correspondents and their drivers and m. terpreteri. were held to the point where she wa1 turned loose. Released with her were Tosbiichl Suzuki, correspondent ot the Japanese Nihon Denpa news agency, and four Cambodians -her own driver-in· -terpreter, Chhim Sarath, photoeraphers Tea Kim Heang and Ing Cbaroen, and Suzuki's driver, Kong Vorn. As she sit at the pool a meise111er delivered to her a telea:ram from Au!itralian Prime Minilter W 111 i am Classy Chassis Costly Old Cars Put Up for Sah RADNO!t, Pa. (UPI) -Al C.pone'! limousine went up for auction Saturday but the auctioneer couldn't get the price be wanted. The 1940 Cadillac later was sold in a private deal for $14,000, plus a trade in. M. H. Gold of Trucksville, Pa. tried to sell Capone's maroon and .fawn colored limouSine for $15,000 but bids stopped at ,.412,500 and he refused to give it up. Gold "did not disclose the name of the buyer with whom he made a private deal . Auto dealer Kirk F. White blamed hard times for the sluggish bidding at the auc- tion. Billed as the li11e1t e1pensive car &ale in the nation, el&bty-seven classy cars were offered, but only the lower priced ones sold. A 1910 Hispano Sui.ta sedan built for Queen Isabel of Sp.sin also failed to sell. Bidi stopped at $12,000. The owner and value of the vehicle were not disclosed. Bidding on a 1931 Dusenberg Lebaron barrel Side Phaeton, also owned by Gold, slopped at $66,000. Gold refused to accept less than $70,000. E. C. Screes of Indianapolis Ind. pald the highest price in the auction, $20.,.ooo. It bough him a 1932 v.12 Auburn R~d­ ster which he planned to drive back to Indiana. ' KENT, Ohio (UPI) -A year ago Tues· day, four Kent State University studenl5 were shot to death by National Guard troops. A memoria l weekend designed to reduce tension included frisbee tossing and bubble gum .blowing. About 4,000 penons heard Julian Bond, the b I a c It Georgia legislator, urge students lo eschew violent protest in favor or political action. Bond's speech Sllllday night capped the first two days of the four-day memorial program and was the 0:nly event to draw a big crowd. Two rock concerts, a "Grt« tragedy .. on the Vietnam War and a program of .. tension reducing games" -frilbee toss. in& and bubble gum blowing -drew crowds ranging from 60 to 600. Several times the 400 journa1ists covering the memorial programs outnumbered the participants. Campus officials said an unusually large number of :students had left cam· pus, some fearing violence and others to attend demonstrationi in Washington . ''l am more optimistic now than 1 previoualy planned to allow myself to be," said Or. David A. Ambler, Kent State vice preaident for student affairs. Pakistani Artillery Hits Indian Station NEW DELHJ (UP!) -Artillery lire from East Paki!tan dama1ed a railroad station at the Indian border town of Radhikapur Sunday and forced its evacUation, official Indian aources said today in calcutta. '? 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Student 1ources 1aid some campus militants planned to return from antiwar rallies in Washington today to organiu a 1it-in Tuesday at the library, which houses the ROTC headquarters. But the sit.in-meant to be peaceful, the sources said. The program today included antiwar workshop•, speeches by black comedian Dick Gregory and fo rmer New Haven, Corm., )Xllict ·chief James Ahearn, and a candlelight vigil at the 1cene of the fatal confrontation· between the N •ti on a l Guard troops ed the a 11 ti w a r demonstrators. Ro&ers' trhJ included a look at west bank of the Jordan and the Syrian Golan Heights -both held by Israel since the 1967 war. It followed an unescorted tour with King Hussein Sunday night through parts of Amman that only weeks ago were strongholds of Palestinian guer· rillas. Driving in the king's auto and followed by another car carrying Crown Prince Hassan and U.S. Undersecretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Joseph J. Sisco, they toured a number of areas that had been cleared of guerrillas. Today's helicopter trip grew out of a conversaUon between Rogers and Hussein at an official dinner Swlday night. The 1ectttary of state said he w()U]d like to see more of the country, so Hussein arranged the helicopter tour. Fayad and Steinborn said after Sun· day's session that the government had ,. established for the first time a "clear connection" between the bombing and the grand jury probe here. bat they said the connection seemed to be based on misin· formation. "The goveminent got today lo what they told us was the meat of the case," Fayad told newsmen. "We saw some meat, but it seems to be misin· formation." He 1aid the Seattle connection a~ parently was ":something dealiflg with meetings of plans here.,. He said the government spent some Ume uking questions concerning the bombing. The March 1 explosion took place in a men'• room near the Senate chambers. Damage was extensive but there were no Injuries. frie11ds of your best have a new address. Glendale Federal Savings has moved to Harbor Center: Lock, stock and safe. People too • We're now right on the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Wilson, so if you're looking for Glendale's famous friendly serv- ice, e::c.rows, Umpleen Ways To Save or great nrm low roles on ' home loans, look no further: Glendale Fecleral/Cosla Mesa is just as nice as it ever was. And lo~ more convenient. Mon.-Thur: 941 Fri. 9-6. C'nlle Federal Saulnss·Coda Mesa (aiwdlll'.••• .. sat1a ... 11~011zt•C•21, i • " I I .. Com • , ' It will be a trip "round the world"-not ·ln 80 days but in· one· gala evening, Saturday,·M•Y 15. . To benefit the ~hildren's Home-Society, the Tiara de Nirios Auxiliary is planniqg to circle the globe in., sP,irit, beginl)ing with an actual cruise aboard the Pa· villon Qu~en -departing tl.ine and "bon voyage'' 15et for 7,30 p.m:. . . Following the· cocktail hour _tour of Newport Har· h:Jr, guests will return for dinner in the T~le ot the \Vhale, where tables will be centered with miniature Victorian.style bot air. balloons soaring above tiny gon· doll baskets filled with spring flowers. Planners of the event, in keeping with the benefit tnerpe of Around the ·world \Vith Tiara de Ninos. have Issued lime ·and periwink:Je blue plaid invitations in the shape of balloons to 500 members and friends. Airs. Paul Lower and Airs. Don Ellison are co-chair· men in charge of arrangements for the philanthropic fund-raiser, which "ill feature a buffet-style gourmet dinner' followed by dancing to the music of the Varia· tions. . Heading other committees handling invitations and programs, decorations and public;ity are the Mmes. Wal· lace Torkells, Donald Rowe and Alger Clark. . A highlight of the evening will be the awarding of the grand prize -a $500· Dream Trip of the winner's choice -by Mrs. Richard Olson , president of Tiara de Ninos. All proceeds from the event wilJ aid Children's , I-tome Society, which provides free confidential aid and care for unwed mothers, foster homes and medical care for babies and services for adoptive parents: Tiara de Ninos is one of 19 auxiliarjes in Orange County \vhich provide funds for the Society, the largest private adoption agency in California. In 1970, the total amount raised by tpese auxiliar· ies \vas more than $57,500. · BEA ANDERSON, Editor ""'"'"' MtY a. un "" '''' 11 I . . .. ,._ Reaches Roun ·-the World . . . - GLOBE CIRCLER$ -Creating, colorful Victorian 'ballopn table centerpieces for the Tiara de Ninos Around the World r.!ajor fund- raising·gala on Saturday, May 15, are (lelt to right) the ?tfmes. War· .. ren Peterkin, Marvin Johnson . deco~ations committee for the evenirig. Renais$ance Blossoming • d·Rowe, chair.man.of the + . . .. Teens Learn iullaby-land Just a Story A w.ay Four sessions will provide instructions In the care, handling and feeding of infants as well as suggestions for the entertaining of older youngsters. Participating will be a public health nurse and members of tbe Huntington Beach police department and fire A flower-decked swing recalling May Day in Olde Engl~nd attracts Mrs. Joseph Walulik o! Holy Eucharist Institute 220, Westminster, joined by Mrs .. Bill Mar- tin who ts chairman of the group's annual fashion show and luncheon on Sat· urday, May 8, entitled Renaissance in May. The Royal :coach Inn will'lumish the setting for the event, with cocktails to be served. at 11 a.m. and luncheon at noon. LitUe Angel Hermes, 15 months, bas expert teenager& Oeft to right) • Cheryl Gera and Wendy Hermes _to tuek her in. The gi~ls are among students at Gisler. I~termed1ate School who a~e taking ad· vantage of baby-sitting clinics sponsored by the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club, with Mrs. Cody Evans servin& as chairman. department. ,., • Taxi . Service Ends When Route ·Leads · to Destruction DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am a 16- year..old girl who is• in a terrible spot and 1 don't Dow what to do. fl.1y mother is having an affair with a fri end of my father's Who Is also maffied. This has been goinJ on for seven months. I found out about it when I came home from 1ehool early with a bad headache.. He was !her._ Mother goes out to meet this man two fllghtJ a week. She tells Dad she is going to a card club one night and to a book rtv~w club lhe other night. Twil weeks ago Mom asked me to drive her to her lover's oUice where they rendeivous. He cannot pick her up at home for obvious reasons and she 00esn·t ''ant to p1rk her car in his office lot because it might be recognized. J have ANN LANDERS . ' driven her down there·four timts but T <Jtl''t want to do it anymore. I leel dishonest and unclean. Mom says l'm really doing it for Dad -that it is a kindness to him, because if he found out he would be terribly hurt. I'd give anything if 1 didn't ·know about it. Please tell me what to do. -MIDDLE OF A MESS DEAR MIDDLE: TeTI your motber yoa can DO klngtr be a party to whatever le Is •be'• up to, and that •he cannot CO\Dl oa you for traasportatttl ta U1t future. If 11 boU. 1bocklnt and palbeUc that a motJter would enU.t th lteJp ef her child ta 1oclt lboddy bustaes1. Sbe soultd1 like a 1ertou1ly dlsrurbed woman. ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am very upstt over your recent column. I don't care whether or not you print th is but I want you to know what you've done. In you r ~nswcr to a medical writer or the Houston Chroni~~oo aald you checked with' Dr. 0e·n~gley and discovered t~it you had made a ml.stake. You ck>sed Wi~ two words -"mea culpa." Do you realize what you said?: "Mea clilpa" means you ate Sd" remorsetu~ and heartbroken over a traruigression that you are reduced to nothing. It mea.is you are begging forgiveness tor a grfnous fault -beating your breast and crying, "Mea Culpa!" A person doesn't do this over a mlstake In the newspaper. I realize you are Jewish, which is your business. so why don't you close with "EU, Eli" -or is that just u bad ? - • SARATOGA READER DEAR SARA : !\fy editor is a Catholic lfd be dJd eot flad fault ~Ith "mef '- culpa ." He 1ay1 U 11 Latia for "my fault." If U offended you I'm sorry. WUI you settle for "'OI gevaJd?" DEAR ANN LANDERS' Wben our lint 6a6y waS born, my sl.Ster·tn·law gave me a beauUfuJ crib. I u3ed that crib for three childfen. Two years ago the last baby outgrew the crib so I put 1n in the attic. Last month I decided to clean out the at- tic and get rid of all the junk. I ran an ad Jn th1!1 newspaper and sold a surprising number of odda and ends -including the crib. When my sister·ln·law heard about It Bhe was furious. She said I had no right to sell her &irl, that 1 should have return- ed It to her or given it to charity. J feel awful . Please tell me lf I was wronr. - BETIY 'S SISTER·IN·LAW NETIJE -DEAR NET' A &lit la a &llt, aad '" bcl no ol>li1•1io11 10 cbeck wltll ,.., ,.,........._,, wMD disposal time c:am... fltlse write to me II a few weeks _. let me .Dew U yoa are preput. la•arlably wben a womaa ltD1 the "lut" bab;'• crlb, ft Uppeas. ' '1The Brlde.'1 Gulde," Ann Landcrl' booklet, answers some of the moet ff9o quently asked questions about weddi• To receive your copy of this com- prehensive guide, write-to AM Landen. in care of the OaUy Pilot, enclosing 1 ton1. telf·addressed, stamped enveloP,I and 35 cents In coin. ~ • )4 DAILY PILOT Mond.J1, Ma)' S, 1'71 Horoscope , I , ' ' Gemini: Pursue Goal TUESDAY MAY 4 By SYDNEY OMARR ~ (March 2l·Aprll ll): Mesiagea may be garbled. Take Ume lo analyze reports. Bue aCtions on facts, not 1pecul1Uon. Best to delay joumey, if pracUcal. You need 'additional tnfonnation. TAURUS (April l<).May 2'1): boomtran& 1n your favor. requires specJal attenllon. Be Don't give up; pursue coal. undentanding. Accent ls on 1 e c u r l t y , VIJtGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): domestic harmony. , Make Co.optrate with CUoer-born lndJvk!uaL s~ practlc.11 ap. minor cqncessSon to mile ma-proach. A Utile extra effort Jor 1ain. You will undenstand. can spell auccess. Know this CANCER (June Zl.July ZI): and atve your all. Your goal ls You are glven cbo!ce of closer than might be lm- superflcial act.ivity v er 1 u 1 a,med. meaningful work. Be grate.tu! UJRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22): that choice b your own. One Avold tendency towtrd self· born under Vlr10 can act as a deception. See situaUon in reliable guide. Proceed ac-reali!tlc light. Accent on cordlngly. ~els that are revealed. Keep some facts to yourself. velvet glo"l!• but be finn . An Ll!O ,(July 23-Aug. 22): • SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21): Aquarhu: inchv1dual figures Study Taurus musage. Spend Not wise to mix business with PrOmintntly. Be aware of ' tor quality. Bbt avoid get-~ch-pleasure. Accomplish basic subUe nuances. quick schemes. Be analytical. tasks. Concentration Is . a One· who has captured your af· f~on may set a lllgh. price. Refuse to be threatened. Use GEMINI (May 21.June 20): You can now put together necessity; carelosness now What appears a aetback ca.a puule plecea. Yowig pmou· would be <:91Jly. A friend ~ tides delicate problem. Double Accolades SAGmAlllUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): What comes in also seems to go Out: be willing to conaerve energy, funds . Key is to finish task. Templatlon b to walk away from challenge. .. -~~~,....~~~~~-'. J . i.Members Singled Out CAl>RICOftN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19); Make new conlaCt.s. 1£ ~ Two members of Ille Soulh r Coast Junior Woman's Club ) have been slnglod out for , .. parate honon. •I Mrs. Lany Moeller rocelved ~ the Citizen -of -the -year Utle i and Mrs. Frank Fleck wu ! n 4 m e d Clubwom.an-of-Lhe- YW'· committees. yoU aak questk>ns now , She helped in the March of answer! can be obtained. One Dimes drive and bas been who makes claims m a y bulletin and h o 1 p i ta I i t y. surprlae you by backing them , chairman for her club th.is AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. past year. · 18): Tum or1 charm. You get , Serving as first Vice pl-esi-what you need through friend· dent, dean of chairmen and ly persuasion. Realize thift and program direct.er this past accept helping hand. ' . ' • . Books Opened By Volunteers Training leaderi for junior or adult diacUiSlon groups ls avaJlable to teachers and p&rent volutttee'rs in t h e Newport-M'5a School District. A four-session OOtll'ft begins at 9:30 a.m. Thw:sday, May 6. Adults will be trained to lead in-9ePth discus!lions on great books for youngsters in grades 3-lZ. The discus.1lon gioups, conducted In the "shared in- quiry" methOO and led by twti volunteers, will meet every Great Books Foundation of Chicago which provides tuitioo free leader training classes in cooperation with schools and Jlbraries. l~ will be conducted by Howard Will of San Fr1D6 cisco. western administrator. A $10 registration fee is re- quired to cover the cost of the materials used in the course. Preregistration is necessary. Mrs. Heather or Dr. Hilda McCartney will a n s w e r further questions. two weeks for an hour or hour··---------- and a half, according to Mrs.I r::o<::-A' Loren Heather, volunteer jwflor great books chairman for the district. The junior program was developed by, the nonprofit I Nurs~S J Installing Officers of the Orange Coun- ty Association of lnduslrial ·t Nurses will be installed after a ·~ sbcialhourat6:30p.m. ,Wednesday, May 5, in the Holiday Inn, Fullerton. • Mrs. Moeller. mother of two J daughttt1, hu been an ictive ) assistant Brownie I e a d er , ; member of PT A whfre she •IJ48 Jerved as program cbatnnan and on numerous: year has been Mn. Fleck who PISCES (Feb. 19-Mareh 20) :·· aliO lists as b er ac-Some in positions of authority oompllsbments serving on act in uncertain manner. You J3 committees and holding could _ get opportunity to _seven chairmanships. She is demonstrate 11peclal skills. the mother of three children. ConauJt fOT legal procedure. Path Strawberry-lined Miss ·"'Jackie" Lynn ~ylor, child star, will deliver I Found America Through Our Gang Comedies, during the 7:30 p.m. dinner. She appeared in 75 motion pictures by the age of 15. • ' a double treat ,for MOTHER'S DAY CURLER SET Frigidaire! Flowing Heat Dryer With Fabrics Selector •. · Flbrfct Selector automatf .. cally provides right heat for drying any f1brlc. Ttkt9 gueuworlt out of aettlng the timer. Hug• 240 aq. In. door opening la 19 inches oll the ttoor-easltr to load and unload. FRIGICWRE • Dri11 up to 18 lbs •••• Only 27" wide I Biggest capacity! 27" dryer you can buy I $)79 I-year. Nlll:lon-'Wld a Pro tection Plan 1-year Warranty for repelr ol any defect In the entire product. plut e .,_ yea r Prottcllon Plan (parts only) for furnish· Ing replacement tor delect'lve Drive Motor and Pulle)'I. OTHER ELECTRIC DRYERS AS LOW AS $159 lnte9rlt11 and DependabUlt11 Since 1947 COSTA MESA 411 L $WOll-tlo SITfff 646-1614 Dally ,.,, Sot, , .. l.at•oo Hll~ ,_ (Next te Sew~") n1.1no Daily 10-6, ,,,,.., Fri. 10.t Newly arrived from Germany, Mrs. George Vogel receives._international direc· tions to the Balboa Bay Club where the Women's Fellowsli1p, Plymouth Con· gregational Church will stage a Straw ))erry Brunch. Providing traveler's aid to the 11 a.m. Wednesday, May 5,--al{Jir are Mrs. William Roller (center) and Mrs. Richard Herman. Card·playing'will follow. Fraction Fractures Scheme Bogs Down · By ERMA DOMBECK I saw our youngest, Brucie, digging in the shrubbery the other day with a soup spoon and said to , my husband, .. Brucie needs a little sandbox. I saw one in the toy depart· ment at Croo ks for $12.88 With a little seat in each corner, a red .'ind whlte fringed awning over it and k sand pail and a shovel." pounds of white sand at 6S cents per hundred pounds. Since the sand wasn't deep enough to write your name in, we returned the next night for another 300 pounds at $1.65 per hundred pOunds. The tire was still without AT WIT'S END shade, so we invested in a my husband's face since the large beach umbrella ($5.95) Christmas Eve he assembled and threw in a shovel and pail the tricycle and I asked him ror $1.25. why had a c ha I • and three Friday was a big night for wing nuts left -0ver. Serving as installing officer will be Mrs. Oleta Valeri, president, Western Association of Industrial Nurses when Mrs. Blake Martin accepts presidential duties from Mrs. Betty Colucci. Otl)er officers to be installed include the Mmes. Lois Tait. vice president and Wayne Hulf, corresponding secretary. Women's League The Orange Coast League of Women Voters meets In various locatioAS throughout the year. For information regarding the next meeting date and time telephone Mrs. Henry Cord Meyer at 6#-0838, The Stitchery Nook CllWEL f. Nt:liOLEll'OINT Kitt & Juppllff • 11'1r1..., e •vdll• e ••m•I • U1191r e Celvmbl1-Mln1n1 e OMC YI•"' 271 a . 171~, Cff!I MMI '42•1'74 HILLGREH SQUAil• SE FREE •• , OF FACIAL. HAIR FOREVER. LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO REMOVE EXCESS H.\J.R WITH MODERN ELECTROLYSIS• MEDICALLY APPROVEP••• SAFE , FAST 1 GENTLE. CONSULT WITH OUR LICENSED TECHNIC JAN IN OUR BEAUTY SALON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT My husband smiled a cheap Jittle smile and said, "Surely, you're making mock. I can whip him up a ~andbox for a fraction of that price." us. The sandbox was finisbed. 1 ,...:..:::..:......:.......:...:.....:_ __ _,,,,,,=========· Right after dinner, we took ,....---------------------------~ our coffee into the yard to see The first night we drove 20 mJles across town to a dump in search of a semitruck tire. It cost us $3. The second night, we drove to the lumber yard for $5 worth of scraps to construct a plaUonn to keep th e semilruck tire from killing the grass. The third night after dinner was spent painting the plat· fcrm and semi-truck tire with j>aJnt oosllng $3.SO. · The next evening, we backed up the station wagon covered with $1.$0 of wall-to-wall plastic and loaded up 300 -bow Brucie was enjoying bis Sandbox Hilton .. We tilted the umbrella and peeked into the semispare tire. A cat had Uttered in it. We found Brucie sitting in the dirt digging in the shrubbery with a soup spoon. Now, there are times when a wife knows she should keep her mouUl shut and other times when it's WOTth the cost or a lawyer to open it. "uit's·see," I said, "$3 plus $5, plus $3,SO, $9.00, $1.SO. $5.95 and $1.25'" comes to $30.10. What fraction is that of $1~.88?" I haven't seen that look on Couple Exchange Vows In Candlelight Rites . A candlelight ceremony in the First Presbyterian Chun::h of Encino was . the setilng in ·which Wendy Leigh Harrison ilnd Michael A. H i n o j o s exchanged their weddi'ng vows and rings. Officiating during t h e nuptials was the Rev. Dr. Scott Brewer .. The bride, daughter of ~tr. and Mrs. Douglas Harrison of Tanana, was given i n marriage by her ·father . Attending her were Miss Suzanne Renard, maid -Of honor, and Miss Kathy Jenkins, Mrs. Lee Hostetler and Miss Amy Spick3J'.d, bridesmaids. • The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Betty Hinojos of Costa Mesa and Evert'tt Hinojos o f Angelus Oaks, asked Paul Lenichek to serve as best man. Guests v.•ere seated by Victor Hinojos, Everett H. Hinojos, Robert Zermeno, Don Bennett and Jeff Harrison. • Artists View African Craft The bride, a graduate of Reseda High School, is a junior at San Fernando Valley State College v.'here she Is majoring in English. Her husband was graduated from Cal Poly, Pomona. BEAUTY SALON SPECIAL: African art and history will be discussed by Mr. and Mrs. Jo_ Dendel. owners of Denwar Ceramics in Costa Mesa. for members of the Mission Viejo,fi"-~~~----iiiiJ A.,oclaUon of ArUsts and DOES MAMA Craftsmen at 7:30 p.m. on WEAR Thursday, May 13. The Dendels have lived Jn HOT PANTS? Liberia where Mr. Dendel managed a rubber plantalionl and Mrs. Dendel was a teacher, writ.er and collector: tribal haildicralts. i CLOSEOUTS PAINTINGS fro.., DlCOlATOll lXHllln THINK MOTtfll'S DAT 11tJ ,,,. """ C.111 M ... ""'9,.S11 .. 1, I.ft'! ... I '·'"· ' Think Mother'1 Ot y JEaJn lnhA W•tclltf Pt.--'42·2444 N...,,.l'Nf 1,,.. STROKES OF LIGHTENING WITH ROUX SHEER D.ELIGHT FROSTING SPECIAL PRICE 19.90 , REG. 3.0.00 VALUE A SUNSHOWER oF·smEAKS. TIPS OR ALL'OVER FROSTING MAKES YOU LOOK RADIAN'r FOR nfE FUN SEASON AHEAD. ROUX SHEER DELIGHT.C,.EME HAIR LIGHTENER COND ITIONS AS IT LIGHTENS. HAVE A FROSTED WITH OUR STAFF OF EXPERT COLORISTS. BEAUTY SALON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 • 17 ~ ... • .. • "> • -· ' • • I ' Ne rt Beaeh EDI TION N.Y •. St.oeb * ,* VOL. 64, NO. 105, 4 SECTIO NS, 38 PAGifs • . I ORANGE COUNTY, CA~tF6RNIA ~ MOND',4Y. MAY 3,·197 f JEN CENTS Enf orce.d; Teacher·s Will . TaI·k. ' Harbor lmpass~ By GEORGE LEJDAL SBlt to the board Friday which said 11wt ot ,.... 0 111r .. 1 ... 11111 stand ;-eady morning, noon and night to Newport-Mesa c;ducation Associatmn-----me-er-and confer." leadership today (aid the conditions of an The letter, Thurman sallfi. "did not impasse will be enforced, although the withdraw the legally imposed Impasse; teachers' representati...l!i will continue to rather, it offered an opportunity to the . meet and confer with the board's t;ioard to get off dead center. To argue representative on their pay and program whether an impasse exists or not is proposals. useless. It ~ts," Thurman said . "It Stalemcnts by Brid Thurman, N-YEA-W OUI06e6efter-l0 negOffate our ffif. president and Bill Lawhorn chairman of ferences ." the Negotiating Council, clarified a letter "The N·MfA bu tried to demonstrate its good faith by authorizing the Negotiating Council to continue to meet · with the board of education whenever the~ bave written responses to our con- tract proposals Uiat were submitted over 90 days ago," he said. N-MEA submitted 38 proposals to the board on Feb. I and to date they've received written responses to 1 I , Thurman note<!. - Impasse-proceedings are 1pelled out in the Wint.on Act, the state law governing . teoeher«hool board negotlationa. , Bart Hake, executWe aecrttary fJf the N-ME!t, bad IDld the· DAILY P!L<Yr last week, the ne1o11at1om woWd resume. to- day be '4ld teatben"would me<! m1·- fer "le receive written responses to our proposal~ ll the board r"JIOllM doesh't' lead to a writt.en mutUal agreement, Uien an lmJ>!M!st sWl-ex.l.sta becawe there IWI Js Persl!Ient dl!acreeD.ieDf.•T Hake. tJ:· plained. I Tbwi, the. teachers liave· _....i_ ". desire ·to cOaUnue to rtctiw written ,.._, but are cootlnuing the lm- P,Ule··'lbe teacher rtpresent.atives to the NeiotJating Council -art authorized by 1 vote of the· N·MEA RepresentaUve Coun- cil. to ll»d their -member of a three- penon flctllndllig ·panel. That vote IJ> ltltuted the Im-. th,... weeks ~&<>· · . •jwe wU1 uk the b(>ard to appoint U:elr "!Dember at Tuead1y•a· board· meeting," 7l!Ue' llld. The tWo appointed by the dbtr1<t llld the teacben appoint' the thlid member, / ' The. paoel's JOb~la to-. take a Jodi: at ·the causes~of disagreement It may or may Qot be empowred t.o make rccom- rn,endatiol\8 tor. ~Ueinent.; and its fin- dings ate..not blnctinaron either party. • Tbe ·btlpa&lt",Wll·CaUed April 12 after 72 days had paued .. wil.hout written i:e5p0nae -Jr.t>m• tbe.~board. to. tbe teachers' proposals. Th, Winton Ac( 1ays~ both (See ·TEACJIEIVl, Pip I) POW Plan Bacl{ed Nixon Supports lnwrnment Idea President Nixon today issued a state- ment from the Western White House ia San Clemente urging North Vietnam to 'join the United States in transferring all prisoners of war to neutral i.Jterment in Sweden. •'l'he President's obvious interest in the In ternment idea was underscored by the fact that he was responding to a Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news agency. ment from the Western White House in Agence France Presse. To date, Hanoi has expressed no in- terest in the idea of interning war prisoners on neutral ground . White House Press Se<:reta,.Y Ronald Ziegler, however, read President Nixon's response during a press conference to- day. He said the President "noted with great satisfaction that according to press reports, the government of Sweden has offered the use. of its vessels and its ter- ritory to provide internment of prisoners of war from the conflict in Vietnam." The statE:ment added, "The President would hope· that Hanoi will move promptly to negotiale an agreement o• this issue to t.ake advantage or thi1 humanitarian offer on the part of the Swedish government." Ziegler said there has been no direct Branded •Political' Saddleback' s H ospitnl Favored by Supervisor By JACK BROBACK 01 .... 011/r ,li.t lllff Fifth District Supervisor R on a I d Caspers of Newport ~h returned to- day from Europe and said, "I cannot understand why the plaMing commission didn't approve the Saddleback Com- munity Hospital pennit last Thursday." caspers said Ii.is appointee on the com· mission. Arnold Forde, who was with him on the 17-day trip, had sent word to the other planning commissioners that .. be (Foide) believed the Saddleback facility i;hould be approved. "That shows ho~· uch influence he has over those ot wo (Woodrow But- terfield and Fred Je ferson) who voted againsl tOt hospital Thursday," Caspers noted. The Fifth District supervisor addtd, •·t'm for hospitals but I can't tell Forde ()T anyone else on the commission how to vote ." Caspe rs said he believed "politics" is Involved and blamed the controversy on Ross Cortese, developer of Laguna Hill.! 1..elsure World where the Saddleback facility is to be built. He admitted that he and Cortese did not see eye to eyf: on many things and, ''investigation by' my office shows he wu involved.oin his fight." Forde will not be back for Tuesday'• crucial planning commisSion meeting when the Saddleback use permit will be considered again. Caspers said be is not expected to return until Friday. The hospital controversy surrounding tv;o rival faCillties in the Mission Viejc)- Laguna HUls 1rea surfaced early last• week. when It was reported that F.orde'. • Oruge Coast ll'eatber JI!'' Cooler lemperatures and mostly sunny skies are the mixed ble!.\o Ing for Tuesday's weather watch- 1:rs. High readings will stretch from 6.1 locally to 73 further in- land. INSIDE TODAY Learn now and pau later nft t.r/ou're earning. It's bu de· Jerrt. tuition. a ?1ew plan in JiMncing collt.gt education. See Bu.siness, Poge 18. ... ,"" J4 tlH ..... 11 I C"--lftt UI 1 Cl1nllllll U.• C11111k' II c,....... " DHl!I Mlli<t• I l•rtt•lll ~... ' lnttr!llllmtflt 11 fl'lnltl(I la.It ff-MCH II Allll L.1M1r1 II -.. MlllllNI 1MW1 ~I Oflftl• c.un1Y ' IJl¥11 ...,,... 11 ._,.. !l·ll llKt! MIWl!.t ll·lt T ... ¥IMlfl 11 n..11wn 11 WH!lltr 4 ·-·· ...... 1.11 WW .. Nftt' ._, had a financial interest in the Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo which is nofi under construction. It was alleged that Forde had been responsible for delaying approval of the- Saddleback hospi.PJ use permit. It now appears Forde won't be present when Orange County planners convene again Tuesday to consider the fate of the Saddlebaclc Hospital pennit. P'orde's absence when Saddleback's conditional use permit came before coon- ty planners last Thursday apparently was a contri bi..iing factor to a serie! of six 2 to 2 tie votes and eventual departure from the session of two commissioners during recess. County approval of the ptrmit is essen· tial before May 15 in order for Sad- dleback Hospital to qualify for a $1.5 million federal grant. The Luthe ran Hospital Society has scheduled groundbreaking this spting for the 150-bed first phase construction on a site at Calle de la Louis!! and Via (See HOSPITAL, Page !) Butterfield Says P a nel Unswayed By Pressures Orange Coonty Planning Commission Chairman Woodrow Bu~rfield, who vanished at mid-argument last Thursday during a debate on Saddleback Hospital's use permit, said today he wouldn 't hazard a gue!! on how the commission will vote Tuesday. •·we·re not going to be pressured ,l11to making a decision one way or the other," the commission chairman declared . Butterfield and Commissioner Fred Jefferson left the Saddleba'ck Hospital debate after thrtt hours last Thursday, resulting in a "no decision" on the permit.. "Planning commission membel'1 have been subjected to tremendous pressures from many sources over this hospital matter," Butterfield asserted. ·Butterfield offered no explanation for bolting last Thursday'• meeting other than t.o say he was tired. He had been on a recent trip to Washington, D.C. "Nobody has mentioned that Com- missioner Howard K. Sm.Ith left a meeting a couple or weeks ago," But· terfield asserted. 1n relation to the Saddleback Hospital question, Buttttfleld also disclosed that lbe commission it conducting a thorough study of Laguna Hills Lei.sure World's planned community. "It was the fil'1l cf ilJ kind In Orange County," the planning chief Wd, "and it has heel! revlted eight ti mes. "We just want tn aee Just what shape it la in at prete.01," be concluded. goverMlent-to-government mntact wilb · Sweden. He said the President was reac- ting to press reports that Sweden would accept prisoners of war. The United States, at the Paris negoUa· tions, has offered nc?ulral country in- tei;nment of sick and wour.ded prisoners and those held for more than four years by each side. Ziegler said, however, that the United States was prepared to negotiate an agreement covering all prisoners on both sides regardless or physical condition or date of capture. The report from Sweden indicated the s~·edish government would a c c e p t P.risoners only if both Washington and (See PRISO~ERS, P11e Z) Upper Bay's , Future Look To Be Shown • !' "' ,., _i; .. '.~ • • • • •. •:.£1 "T' :1 . "t.. ANTIWAR DIMONST,RAT'pllS ·CON,ROHT MAC~-CARRYlNG POLICEMAN IN , CAPITAL. At Ur~ Stroot•"" CMalltvtleft-A-ua Th l1 fllamlnt,-Chomleal Spray Carried tho Doy ' By L. PF.TER KRIEG Of tflt Dtllr P'li.t 11111 Two proposals for the future of Upecr Newport Bay-and a-promise that mon will be forthcomin& in July will be beard Tuesday by the joint policy committee named to formulate the destiny of the estuary. 6,000 Held DC · Prote·st· • ·1n Police Foil Plans:k> Block Traffic, Government A staff report released tod ay ~om· WASl:llNGTON {tiPI) -The ant.lwa? mends that portions oC the bay be left for movement'• march. advtttised effort to a wildlife preserve and urges the creation paralyze the i9Vt.nll'Mnt by bamttring· of a ~estrian-bicycle promenade en-iag Wishington'1 morning n,asb hour .traf· circling lhe entire bay. fie was thwarted today by police and fed. The interim report was prepared for eral troops, and more than 1,000 dem. the Upper Newport Bay Cooperative onstraton were arrested. Planning Project policy comthittee, con· ·The protesters were dispersed and si.sling of Supervisor Ronald E. C1sper1, driven into disorganized groups by Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth and volleys of tear gas and mus arreata William R. Mason. Irvine Company preal· which went on in view of lhousatids of -. "' Tuesday'• meeting is scheduled for 5 government tmploye~ com!puting , work. • p.m. at Mariners Library in Newport ,Beach. It is open to the public. The federal workel'I were hindered but Created one year ago, the quasi-official not halted by hit-and·run tactics -of the · UNBCCP is desikned to allow the three demonstrators ori foor ma~ . ~idgu enlities concerned with bay development crossing the Potomac from Vu1m1a and to form • mutually-acceptabl~ land use • _ ~ traffic bottleneck points at several and development plan. ' sites within the city it.self. . Supervisor Caspers, however, has By noon, the atreets carried a norm1l virtually ignored the existence of the load of traffic and in the downtown ar.u committee and itJ studies. He has urged the scene was that of a usual Washington conversion of the entire Upper Bay ino a lunch boor. There were still a few fiare- preserve. ups of minor trouble in , some spots There bu been no meeting of the removed from tht center of the city. policy group since Caspers' appointment The mass arTesta clogged the District to the panel, succeeding Supervisor Alton of Coli.lmbia's jail facil ities, and severely Allen, the man he defeated for the Fifth taxed the procesaing procedure. The distrid aupervisorial seat, aix mOllth.! Justice Department summoned C9I"'" ago. rectional ipeclallsta from 1everal ,pointl However. staff studies have continued. in the east to hcJp: cope with the situation. The interin.. progr.esa report prepared More of the same type or disruptive for Tuesday's meeting wa s drafted by tact.Its had ~n threatened for Tuesday (See UPPER BAY, Page ZI by the militants and in spite of ·the ·mi.sa arresUI of their foDowera, their leaders Kin g Slaye r's Escape F oi'led PETROS, Tenn. <UPl l -James Earl Ray , serving 99 years for the assassination of Or . Martin Luther King Jr .. was foiled early today in an attempt to escape from Brushy Mountain State Prison. Tennessee C o r r e c t t o 11 Com· missioner Mark Luttrell said Ray broke out of bis , cell by sawing through its bars, leaving behind a dummy in his bunk to fool guards. The guard! founa !be broken bars, however, and a quick check of Inmates showed Ray to be mist- ing. Luttrell said Rey was caught before he cooJd scale the walls 1ur- rounding the maximum teCUrity prison. Ray was sentenced to t9 )'tars on 1 ,gu!Uy plea to the April 4, 1161, sniper slaying of King at a Memphis mottl. He was transfer. rtd to Brushy Mountain In 197\t 1fter Rl'Ving almOlt a year at lhe main atatt prilon ln Nubville. • vowed this afternoon to go tbrOugh with the plan. The protester! claimed mass traffic disruptions but government nfficiala said traffic wa! virtually normal by the usual rush hour. The police moved in swiftly to drive off the demonstrator• and to keep traffic moving. By t a.m.·EST, a high perct.,.. tage of workers were at their. desks u usual. About 4,000 •combat-clad Army troop!'! had a hand in act.ions at several key pointa -and a contlrigent of marina and e.ooo other 10lditr1 were on band in the city H needed -·as dcmonstraton were dupersed in opllntered, dirorganls- ed groups In cordoned oa aieas. More than 5,000 were under arrest on. a variety of charges by tO:to a.m..and traf; lie . movement was reported virtually normal ctoept ill a few.scattered 1pota. Some of the unarretted remnanta: of the militant war opponents -opti'atlng u the May Day Tribe -turned 1fl sporadic 1trtet vahdalism iuch a• the tlasbin& of tires of aulol parked or stopped at traUic ll&hta. One of lht vlct.i.m.s of a pwicturtd Ure was Sen. Pau. J. FaMin (R·Arlz..) whn had been 1t.oppcd by a VWP •kin& to dlnuade him lt~m Coln& to. work. A tbre•~ of trouble 1t Georcetown POLICE H~STll TWO D.C. DEMONSTRAT.O_Rf_OF, TO J~L Offlcon llrook Up AltemPf'to Block 14th SltMt llrldgo l . . Unlvmlly diaolvod wlien lt•den of a J 1ncr1 few-·~ tlle "'V" "8n of lfOUP of about 1,000 conferrtd ·with en· ·the 1peace 1JIO~niertt occ1skln11ly. Bui circling 'police and both •l!'eed ·to "cool most ofthe.iOldiln were t!aJtl111pped. , 'It." · 'Wisps of tear gaa ~ in the air at In the main ahdpping area of 10me areas .,~re 'major' col\frvafat.iqna Georgetqwn -'both • • fashk!n•ble tq<>k. placo' dlll'.lnl the. early h<lilrs ol Iba residt:nUal section and a hippie •haJliout morhing. . . -!be 1ltuatlon was calmed by the But by 10 a.m. AUoroey Generll Joho preoence · of federal troops lining both N. Mitchell bsued 1 atotement from the aides of tbe atreeL They stood 10 f"t JusUca Department declaring: ••The cltf' apart wtth rifles slung over their ts t)pen, The traffic Is flowinc. The shOOldera. 1ovemment Is functloOOlg ," S.m• of the tn>opero chaUed llJl\llbly · Police Chief Jtrry V. Wlhon pndlcted· 1'1th p111ln1 · long-!Wr<d •!\"<I people !See. c.ll'rf.U., Pap, I) ' ,I • L Erom Pqe l HOSPITALS. •• Estrada in Laguna HWs. Plan.I call for eventual expinalon to 50CI beds. At lasl Thursday's session of county plmoen, the faur cammtmoners ptt.1tnt debited for tJu<e hOlll'I whlle 1oln1 1lhrougb lbe long series of Ue votes on the -Use permit. Finally, they called a recess. When it w11 over, Commission Ch airman Woodrow ButterUeld and Commissioner Yrt<l Jefferson had vanished. ll then became unclear whether or not ·the commission had a quorum with only two m e m b e rs rtmaining. Saddle.back ·Jtospital 1ttomey Michael Colllns and l>eputy County Counsel Tom Conroy bud· died . witb the legal point remaining unclear. Finally, at Collins' request, remaining oommlssloners flowa:rd K. Smith of Hun· tington Beach and Dan Foley voted t.o deny the permit. 2 to o. This mancuvtr waJ an effort to get the whole issUe before the Board of Su~rvison via appul. But It was for naught Friday, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that no WJOMlffi w11 present. Therefore there was rea,lly no action at all on the hospital quesdon. So the plannen will try again Tuesday. Meanwhile Tuesday, Orange County Grand Jury Foreman Dorttn Mir1hall of Newport Bea~ Is expected to brlng the whole affair before the jury for discussion. It ll unknown 1f the Grand Jury wlll investigate. Granddaughter Fi1aalists For the first Ume in five years, grandmothers have reached the finals of Hoag Memorial Hospital's Mother of the Year Essay Contest. Bunni Rogers (left) a fourth grader at Cost3 Mesa's Victoria School, and Vicky Sutherland, a fifth grader at Newport School, nominated their grandmothers for Harbor Area tiUe. Patrick Bartholomy re- views contest entries. Winner will be announced later this month. Controversy bet.an to rurround Sad- d.leback Hospital's use permit request earlier when It wu dl.sclosed that County Plunlng OlmmlS!ioner Forde -the -missing fifth vote -holds a major finan- cla1. interut in rival Mission C.Ommunity )!ospltal now being built In Mission Viejo. . It wu Forde'• "nagging doubta" that (&used a delay In decblon when Sad- dlehack Hospltl]'1 uoe permit .._., • c;ame be.fort c:Wnty planner• lut March 16. Execution · Days"i:o he Set For Death Row Prisoners . Following last Thursday'• abortive ac- tion on the penntt, Saddleback Hospital President Frank J . Schaeffer uJd be wu ~·shocked and di.smayed" at the blz.arre proceeding~ From Page I PRISONERS. • • • Hanoi agreed on a plan. '"Ibe burdtn now falls Vf!rY squarely on the shoulders of the North Vletnam<M government," Ziegler utd. "The U.S. coveroment feels It ls time for the North Vietnamese 1overnment Jo be rt.9p0nslve ~ tbe matter of prlaonen of war." ' ft!ked ll the United Slate1 could voucb for the accuracy or the French !'!port, Ziegler said, "1 can't 10 beyond whit 1 have said." " · The press secretaJ y alao ws.s asked U Amer!~ dlplo01111 in Stockhol!Q had been lJI loucll wlt'1 lhe SwediBh aovam· ..!'lent. Ziegler said there had been no auch Contact but "I'm sure lhlt tber:e will be diplotnaUc discussions with the Swedlsb • government.'' The South Vletname11e earlier had-pr0o 'flosed that sick and wounded prlsoIJers from both sides and tboae impr!Joned for four years or longer be lnterced in a neutral:country. The United States con- curred in that move, lnltlated at the Parts talks, a.nd 11everal tlme1 went out of 1~ way to publicize the idea. · Hanoi negot.lator1 made ·no positive response to the idea. ~ Ziegler said that on the buls of a Sfr"edish foreign mlniltry 1tat.ement i;eported by AFP, ht could IUllll1Wile the situation in these words : :'It comes down to thil basic point: lfS:noi must respond." Ziegler went on to suggest that North Vietnam should give a positive response ''if they are in any degree sincere" about J1umane treatment of prlsonen and U they have "any conscience at all." The chief executive himseU has in- dicated thlt the prOOner of war Issue la a major obstacle to complete American Withdrawal from South Vietnam. DAILY PILOT dllANH COAST ~IUIMIMO (OMr.utl' ' R•ktf N. w .... '"'*"' ... ......,. J••~ R. C'1rf•v \ncJr" ,,....., ... ~ #IWllftf Ti•M•t k'H.tr -n.,..., 1io. ,..,jh1111 #MMI~ ••1,., L p,,,, krf•t .. ........, .... (.lly ,.,,., ·--..-lJJ) N•wp•ft 1•111,.,,1'4 M'•tll111 M 41111: P.O. ltx 1171, t266J ..__ c.ila "'-11 D W..1 MY ....... &...-l •dll z:tl ,_, "-~""' ._,.1 u•n Mell ....,.,. .... '*"91N: • """' ll'C:-. It.Ill DAILY P IUJT, .tll'I .... \di II CM.._, thf ................ """"ltl'Mol fflfy •cwt ._ ... , Ill ....... llllti.tl '"" ~ hiKlll. N~ ~a. .. MIN.....,,..,.._ ...... ......... V11Wr, 1111 ~ c.ea""" ........ ~ ... - -.......... lllttlM. ,rlroc ... 1 '""""" ....., • at m w.i .. ., .,,..._ C.• MIM, r T:l11t1M f7!4l 641-4111 Clwzll'W ...,,...,,., M&.WJI ~ "''· ~ C".fflt '"""111111111 """""'· .. ...... .,....... ,...,.,,,.,.,,,, lllltwlll -""'" -........,...,,_.. ........ _, .. ,.,. .. -w+IW .... , ,.,.. fl'llMi. "' Clft'rWW ..... . __ ,__ ...... -·- .... c..i. M8', CA~ ~lltol .., Cltf'l'llr ti.II _...,, w """ •.n ,,...,...,, ~-,~-.~· SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Execution dates will be set for between 15 and 20 in· mate8 on San Quentin Prison's Death Row u a result of the U.S .. Supreme Court'• rejecUon of challenges to the .de~th penalty, Associate Warden James Park said today • Park aald he was sure many or the 93 me.non the nation's most populous Death Row "will be disappointed" by the high court ruling. In all, ff persons in California are under 1entence of death. These include four women and two men held elaewhere. Atnoug those now eligible for the set- .ting of an execution date is Dennis C. MacGaulha, one of lY.'O men whose ap- peal to the high court was rejected. Earlier story Page 5. Attorney8 for McGaulha, convicted or klllln& a grocer, argued that juries should ~ stripped Of "absolute discretion" to decide on the death penalt)'. In capital -cases. McGautha's attorney, Herman Selvin, said alter the decision that he still hopes to keep his client out of the gas chamber. "Assuming that :.be decision doesn't cut the ground out completely lrom under us, I Intend to file an appeal for post con· vlction relief," he said in Beverly Hill•. Park u..id after the official ruling Is reeelved, the original tmal court that sentenced the man to death will then aet bis ei:ecutlon date. • Park said 24 men on Death Row are now under the stays of execution. "About IS or 20 will now be ellgible for the 11etting or an ei:ecution date" because they were atayed pending the hlgb court ruling. "A few were stayed on other ap. peal causes," he aald. In Sacramento, a spokesman for Gov. Reagan aald he did nol anticipate "a ·flood" of ei:ecution.s. California's last e1- ~tion was April 12, 1967, when Aaron Mifdlell died in the gas chamber fQr the murder of a Sacramento policeman dur- ing a robbery. Reigan'1 press secretary, Paul Beck, said only 1 feW of the inmates on Death Row have ahausted all appeals. U cases TV Reporters Meet in Newport Sis NBC TV rt!port.tra will l!lerve on a panel discussing world atfain at a dinner ~g tonight of the World Affairs CoWlcil of Orange County. The meeting is ach,tduled for 7:30 p.m. at the Balboa Bay Club. Robert Abernathy will serve as moderator of the panel which wlll Include John Rich, Kenley Jones, Richard Valeria•!, Douglas Kiker and Wilson Hall. "World Closeup -the View from the News Media," wiU be the th.eme of the discussion. Work Sc heduled On Inte rchange Construction i1 to beain lhl1 summer on a $2.7 million Newport Freeway ln- ttrdlange at Costa Mesa's northerlY dly lim it. Tbt inttrch11nge eventually will lie together the Newport and Corona del Mar f'reeways near what is now the ln- terstcUon of Newport Bo u I t v a rd 1 Pali~dts Road and Bristol SlretL The state Department of Publi c Works has assigned the job to the Kruse Construction Company of Montrose. lowest of eiQht hlddm. C.Omplt1Uon or the proj~ Is expected In about one yrar. are appealet!I to Reagan for clemency, he said, 11each case will be deeided on its merits. But as You know, he (Reagan) is in favor of the death penalty." Park sak:I the men learned of the decision on the radio in their cells, which measure 4'hi feet wide, 7Yi feet high and ll feet deep . "Overall," be said, "1 don't think any of them are going to rejoice in the fin- ding. It's made really no modification, no change at all . "It hasn't made things any worse but it hasn't made things any better as far as their Situation is concerntd." he said. The 6 to 3 high court ruling said leaving to the jury's discretion the choice betwee n life and death is not a violation of IM Constitution. Erom Pagel TEACHERS. • • parties must meet and confer in good faith to reach a written agreement. Teachers contend that without written board responses they can ''meet and con- fer" but they can hardly negotiate unless the board bas taken a finn stand evldenced in writing. The district bas maintained there la n• Impasse, and m.iggests teachers wouki have to take them to court to enforce ene. Observer9 speculate that tak..ing the matter to court wouJd delay negotiationa and thu.s postpone a settlement. · Lawhorn noted the Winton Act ~lew1 either party to call an impasse if "there has been consistent disagreemeht for over 30 days on any matter under negotiations." "The board of education may not agree vdth It. but legally they niust accept ii. Otherwise. they continue to show their recalcitrance in dealing with the staff. represented by the Councll, in a dialogue to resolve our differences," Lawhorn said. At issue."is a salary and fringe benefit package that the district estimates wlll cost $8 million and require a $2 per $100 rif assessed valuation tax: increase. The board bas not responded formally to 1he salary package and bu provided \vriUen responses to less than a third of the rither items such as working con- ditions. educational program, grievance procedures. district per!Onnel Policies contained in the teactiers' contract pro- posal. The district maintains It has shown "good faith " by meeting wilh the Certificated Employr.'s Council -the body N-~1EA ca 1 Is the Negotl1tlng Council -14 times· for a total t1f 50 hours. "Meeti ngs alone don't make succes.•dul negotiations : time alone mea ns nothing," Hake said . "lt's Y.'hat happens within that time that results come about in erder te do what the Winton Act charges them with the responsibility le accomplish. 11 * * * Trustees Slate Three Meetin gs The Newp::irl·M1!11l Unified School Distrlrt Board of Trusttts has called th ree ei:K'Ullvt se.!lions this week to discuss pertonnel matters. One meeting will be on salary negotiations and two will relate to the selection ol a new superintendent. "The board will meet in executive se5slon at 7:30 o·ctock trtnight, 3 p.m. •ruesday and 8:30 p.m. Wtdne.sday. All s'sslons wlll be ln dl8trlct offices. The regular public meetln& of the br111rd l3 Jtl for 7 p.m. Tuesday In the Lyceum of Costa Meaa High School, 2651> Fairview Road. • Nixon Leaves C .o~nty President Heads for Troubled Washington President Nilon Jeft the Casa Pa"-ifica lo San Clemente at noon today to fly home to a troubled Washington after a four-day vlsit to the Western WhJte House. He is eipeded to arrive in the Capital after dark, missing today'9 scheduled an- tJ..war demonstrations. . In Palm Springs Sunday, the President taped a IS.minute radio address spelling out a $400 million program to he.Ip the na- tloo's farmers, including a plan to boost farm exports to $10 billion a year. Noting ·that exports had increased Wlder his administration, to reach an estimated $7.4 billion thi5 year, Nii:on said efforts will be.increased to achieve I.be $10 billion goal nei:t year. He also pledged an increase in farm credits to boost farm operatiAg Joans. which would make up $34:9 million of ·the total farm assistance program. Erom Page l UPPER BAY • • • On Friday the President wUI welcome some 60 farm leaden In a ''Salute to Agriculture" at lhe White H~. The President's address wu taped Sun- day morning during a 24-hour vlslt to the desert estate of Walter Annenberg, Ph.lladeJphia publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. During the visit, Nixon played golf on the priv8te links of the Anilenberg estate with his friends industrialist Robert H. Abplanalp, banker ''Bebe" Reboto and Reader's Digest present Jlobart Lewis, 'hie president arrived in California al nOOn on Friday, going directly to Camp Pendleton to welcome the First Marine Divis.ion home from Vietnam. On Saturday afternoon he held a news coriri!reilce on the l awn ' of the Western Whlte House during which be said the na· tion, is in the midst of a strong economic upturn, but that any change in the op. timistic treRd would bt handled with ip. proprlale tax: actlon by I.he ad- ministration. ,Jn other action during the brief viait, the President proclaimed this week as Clean Water for America Week, calling upon Americans to act quickly and el· fectively to protect the nation'• waters from further dcterioralion. There was a brier flurry in Laguna Beach Little League cireles when a rtunor spread that Nixon mlght appear at t!ie opening game on Saturday. Instead, the League received a telegram or greeting from astronaut James Lovell, the President's advisor on youth. C1urilig his visit, Nixon was kept abreast or war protest de"velopmenls in 'Vashington with continuing reports lrom staff members. Seal ~each Mayor Baum George Dawes, Newport Beach harbor , and tidelands administrator. Lauds Police, Marchers The report says studies are also un· der 'lfay to determine what recreationa l uses could be ~rmitted that would be cGmpatlble with a wildllte preser.ve and existing residential de\;elopment on the bluffs overlooking the waterway. Jt urges that an economic coosullanl be hired for input lnte the planning process, noting that economics will have to play a major part in any decisions. Citing the statewide significance of the bay u a natural resource, the report also stresses that future uses "that most ef· fectlvely previde public access" should hl'glven primary consideration. • It also atresses the need for "multiple. use plaMing conrepts" to guide develop. .ment. "As an example," the report says, "the Department of Fish and Game reports that, since the migratory season of the birds is in the winter, such seemingly·in- compatible summer uses such as water skiing might be possible." • The report also cites the future demand for recreational facilities in the Newport Beach area, and points out, "A larger. younger and more :itffiue•t population with greater mobility will have direct effeet.s upon the Newport Beach area as a major coa11.al recreation area." 1'ht report deals with a variety of other consideration! and makes several other preliminary rtt0mme.ndations, including: -Pos8lble links between the clear rone under Orange County Airport flight path and the San Joaquin marsh. -Excavation el archeological site8 with selected cententt re1erved for a possible museum featuring the Upper Bay area. -Comprehensive studies in four areas -water quality, the effect rif proposed upland developments, me11n! of enhan· cing the environment for marine 11nd wildfowl Ufe and the et0logical impact of ene or more mid-bay vehicular croSsings. -That each alternative course of .ac· lion be evaluated in terms or en· vironmentaJ impact. Kennedy Sa ys Draft Won't Swa y Him BOSTON (UPI) -S.n. Edward M. Kennedy said Sunday not even a draft y,·ou\d convince him to run for President nut ye:ar. KeMedy, In 1 copyrighted interview in the Boston Sunday Advertiser. was asked to comme:nt on his polJtlcal plans in the 'vake of reports that l!lbow the support for Sen. Edmund S. Musk.le waning and the lack of a strong candidate for the nomination. "I've answered the question about my candidacy many t i m e a , ' ' the Massachusetts Democrat said. "~ly posi· tion hasn't changed." SPECIALS .PEARLS Give Mother Something Beautiful.for Mother's Day PEARL '9" RINGS 'tt" ~ ' By RUDI NIEDZJEl.'iKf Of 1111 DlllY r1111 St1H Seal Biach Mayor 1'-1orton A. Baum te· day praised both demonstrators and police officers for .. keeping thf'ir cool '' during Saturday's antiwar rally which brought 1,000 persons te the Naval Weapons Station, the largest ammunition . dump on. the West Coast. "We bad all the ingredients for an in- cident :that could have been really tragic and really disastrous," said the mayor. "Rig~t here in Seal Beach, Orange County, we have proven that peaceful protest and responsible law enforcement can occur without death, without public outcry and without problems." Although intelligence sources had estimated that up to 5,000 demonstrators \Vere expected to attend the rally, en1y 1.000 persons showed up, he added. The rally, organized by the People's Coalition for Peace 11nd Ju.slice, began .at 11 a.m. at Eisenhower Park next to the munici)1a.I pier. Members of the grOup heard various £peakers including avoy,·ed Communist Dorothy Healey and the• marched (y,·o miles down Main Street and Pacific <.:oast High way to the weapons station. They carried placa rds demanding withdrawal from Vie tnam. The proce.!sh>n was kept erdtrly by police officers and parade monitors, recognizable by red armbands. An attempt by a d~legalion of pr~ testers to dellvlir a "People To People Treaty .(}f Peace" to Naval authorities caused a minor uproar when UW: station commander refused to send a delegate to the gate to accept the document. Police Chief Lee Ca!e and the group negotiated for two hours after that. when some demonstrators threatent'd to rush the gate. The peace treaty, drafted by !he Peace and Freedom Party, was finally dellvered Tustin Trustees To Study Budget The Tusti n Union High School District Board or Education wlll dl!cu.ss the 1971- 72 budget in a special meeling called for 7:30 p.m. today in jhe. boafd room, 1171 Laguna Road, TWitln. An executive session to discuss person- nel matters aJ!O. hQ: been set to follow the public portion of the meeting. Supt. William Zogg said, the closed seJr:liOn will Include board consideration Y"! the district's teacher salary negotia- tions stand. The 1971-72 budget £or the Tustin dlstrict totals $9 million, up nearly $1 million from this year's expendltum. ,ot DIAMONDS. UMIMIQ. A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INYISTMINT by Mary Bricknell. 26, of Long Beach, who attached it to the .!ecurity guard shark. Protesl activities ceased al 3:45 p.m. after an order to disperse. had bffn given by Chief Case. Mayor -Bawn said Case and his Jay,_•men, as \\'ell as protest organizers deserved praise for the way the march was handled. ''Everyone came out of this With lhe kind of aura thal democracy was all about." he said. "If democracy is going lo work, it will need the ingredients that wer:e present in Seal Beach Saturday." A group of marchers, wearing tbe uniform or the American Nazi Party, partlcipated as counter-demonstrators. Baum said the group of 18 right·\vin& marchers was •·another ingredient that is unpredictable and :t is tinged with violence." The combined forces of about 100 lawmen and firemen frOfl'l Seal Beach y,·ere on hand. often actlng a 1 peacemakers between the Na1is and the p~otestors. Policemen from other agen-- c1es y,·ere on standby. Among the antiwar protesters were a few youths with a Viet Cong flag 4nd 1 large poster of Che Guevara. ·•it is unfortunate that very few people can bririg along some flags and . poster• and give the wrong impression," said Mel Meeks; 4n observer from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU!. Janet Jolley, another ACLU observer, sa id members of that organization were there ''to defend the-rights m anybody .as Jong as they were non-violent." F rom Page I CAPITAL ... In advance that the trafnc Ue-up effort would be defeated. In a message on the police radio, he told his men: "The de~lre of lhe President is that this city bi open for business this week." Many of the disorganized protesters moved toward the Georgetown sector of the city where many of them had taken refuge Sunday when police evlcted them from their "Peace City"' at Wut Potomac Park A convoy of 50 to 60 jeeps bearing military police went to the area at mid· morning, apparintly for a roundup of prot,sters. All were equipped with au masks and some were wearing them. Other troops holding rJne, were sl.a- tioned on M Street N.W. for several blocks 111 the Georgetown area which h11 become a hippie hangout in recent yean. ONL 1' II' YOU IUY IT llGHT ............ .......... ~'" -DOM u.cm MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS PHrl. Necllecos • C.meo Pins I . *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BAC~ DIAMOND GUARUTEE • Coclct•~ Rings • Diemond Rings •nd Meny BH utilul Jewelry Items SAYE UP TO &a°/o HERE E!. When you buy • dl1mond f rom us we will gu1r1nfff th•t dM!moncl to appr1IM 1t 40% MOJtE thin you .,._lei fo r It Of" your money back. Can you do 11 well eltewhere? COMPARE. ·1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HER.E FIRST COSTA MESA JE.WELRY and LOAN I LOAN, IU1'. SIU, Tu.DI COMI IN AND llOWSE AI OUND 1831 NEWPORT ILVD. · PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN O~TA MESA -hfwoao H-& .....,_, \ , . . ..... • ... I • • i; ; . . .. • • • ~men • BEA ANOE RSON, Editor MM .. r, MtY I. 1t11 .. ' , ... ,~ Applause Exten~ded • ,. A concert in the H8rbor Area by a young and gift· ed classical guitarist is a special event, and what better way to underscore the occasion than with a special re· ception to follow ? ~lembers of the Harbor Area Community Concert Association· are encircling the date of Saturday,· May 8, for dual reasons on their calendar. -On that evening, Christopher Parkeniiig-youngest pupil of Andre$ Segovia-will appear in concert in the Newport H.,r High School auditorium. of tha\ special group ' of my disciples so proud" by the great ~egovia, Park· ening resent a varied program to demonstrate hi$ virtuos techniques on the guitar. A reception to honor the soloist, acclaimed by re- viewers "an altogether amazing guitarist," is planned following the concert's conclusion. -~ ·--• \ .. ' • •• ' ' ' ·-~1embers of the Community Concert Association's board and their guests have received post.Concert invi· tiltions from Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bartholomew, who are opening their Coron a del Mar home to provide an op· portunity for· personal introduction -and congratula· tions -to-t\e. noted young musician. Mrs. Larry Bacon is chairman in charge of receptiqn arrangements. -........ ANDALUSIAN ATMOSPHERE -Mrs. Edward Car· roll plucks guitar strings in an appropriately Span· ish setting as she and ether' members of the Harbor Area Community Concert Associ~tior. (l eft to right), Mrs. Simeon E. Belknap and Mrs. Raymond J. Palm- er anticipate an evening of guitar music performed by Christopher Parkening on Saturday, May 8, in Newport Harbor High School auditorium. A re- ception will follow. Cinderella Travels 'A La Cart' for Tournament It's not the stroke of midnight that is alerting Mrs. Robert Mason Jr. and Mrs. George \Voodford of the Cinderella Guild of Newport Beach but the 9 a.m. gun which will signal the start on Monday, May i'o. or the first annual Glass Slipper Golf Tournament plan- ned to benefit Children's Hospital of Orange County. About to pull the trigger is Mrs. John Sigrist, chairman of the Best Ball of Part- ners event which Will take place at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Mrs. Woodford is chairman, with the Mmes. Mason, George M. Holstein II, ·Hugh H. Bowie, Sam Gurley and ~bert Lucas headil)g committees. Early Worm Gets the Book -- Getting an early start with their bookworm friend in tracking down vol~es they've always wanted,,art Oe!t to right) John Benjal)lin, Philip Dobbs' and Scott Benjamin who 'inticipale the 1 2th annual Book Sale sponsored by· New ... port Beach Friends of the Library. The sale for the first•Ume ·will apan two days, May 7 and 8, with the hours from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In Island House, Fashion Islan4. Mrs. l'eter Dob~ is chairman. Taxi Service Ends When Route Leads t6 Destruction DEAR ANN LANDERS' I am a !&- year-old girl •ho is·in a terrible spot a~ I don't kaow what to do. My mother IS having an affair with • friend of my father'• who ls also married. This has been going on for seven mooUts. I found out about it when l cam~ home from school early with a bad headaeht. He was there1 Mother gots out to meet this man two flights a week. She tells Dad she is going tO a card club one night and to a book review club the olher night. Two weeks ago Mom asked me to drive tier to her lover's orfice where they rendavoos. He cannot pick her up at home for obvious reasons and she doesn't \4'1nl to· park her car In his of fl ct lot because It might be recognized. J have " ANN LANDERS ~ drivefl her down there four tbnei but I don 't want to do It anymore. I feel dishonest and unclean. Mom says I'm really doing It for Dad -that ii is a kindness to him, because if he found out he would be terribly hurt. I'd give anything if I didn't know about it. PJease tell me what to do. -MIDDLE OF A MESS . DEA:·R MIDDLE: Tell your mother you can no lon1er be I p1rt)' le whatever it 11 1he'1 up to, aDd that 1be c1nnot count oa yea ftr trta1portaUoa fl Ute future. Ir 11 both, 1taockla1 ud padtetlc thal a mothtr woUd e.U1t .ctie M:lp GI ber child la aucll 1boddy bu1lne11. Sbe aound1 Uke 1 1erio111ly d.isharbed wom11. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am vecy upset over your recenl column. I dofi 'l care whethtr or not ybu print this but I want you .to know what ·you've done. ln your ·answer to 1 medical writtr of the Houslo• Chronicle you aaid you checked ·' . with Dr. Denton Cogley and discovered that you had matte a mistake. You ck>sed with two words -"mea culpa." 00 ycu realize what you said? "Mea culpa" r. '!&115 you are so remorsefuJ, and heartbrok, 1 over a transgression that you are redJced to nothing. It means you are begging forglveneu tor a grievous fault -beating your breast and crying. "Mea Culpa !" A person doe3n't do thJ~. over a mistake In the newspaper. I realize you att Jewish, which is ybur business, so why don 't you close wllh "Eli , Eli" -or is that just II bad? - SARATOGA READER DEAR SARA : ~fy editor Is a Catholic and bt did aot flad fr .. lt with "mea culpa. '1 lft ~YI IJ Is Lltl1 for "my fault." If it offended you I'm sorry. WllJ you settle for "Ot pv1ld?'~ DEAR ANN LANDERS' Wben oor fJnt baby was born, my 1isttr·in·law give me a beautiful crib. 1 used that crib for three children. Two yean ago the last baby outgrew lhe crib llO J pu~ in in the attic. Last month I decided to clean out the ti· Uc and get rid of all the junk. l ran an ad In this newspaper and sold a 1urprisln& number of odds and end.. -including the crib. . When my 1l1ter·lrt-law heard about il she was furious. She aald T had no right to sell 'her gift, that I should have return- ed it to her or given it IO charity. I feel awful. Please tell me U J wu wron1 .... BETl'Y'S SIS'l'ER·IN·LAW NEITIE DEM\ NET, A. pll h a llft, ud yoo bad "' obtlpdoo lo ..... ""' ,_ 1lster.-1Haw win disposal Ume came. Pleate write le me II a few weds ... let me know If )'OI are Pf111r11 Invariably wffn a wemu Miii U. ..._.. baby'1 crib, It llappuL . "The Bride's Gulde," Ann Landen'- bookfet, answers some of the moat rre.·- quently asked questions about weddings. To receive your copy of tbls com- prehensive, guide, wrtte to AM Landers, in care Qf the Daily Pilot, ·tnck>elng a long, self·addre&ftd, 1tamped enVeJope and 35 cents in coin. · .. • , • , . J4 DAllV PllOT Monday, May J, 1971 Horoscope ·Gemini: Pursue Goal TUESDAY MAY 4 By l!Yl)NEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·AprU Ii): Messa1es may be garbled. Take time to anaJyie reportl. Base actions on Cacti, not specuhtlion. Best to delay journey, if pracUcal. You need addillonaJ infonnaUon. boomer1n1 in your favor. Don' al•• Ill': pursue goal. Acoe:nt ii on 1ecurl ty , domestic harmony. M a k e minor conct.uJon to -mate ma- jor gain. You will under1tand. CANCER (June II-July II): require• apeclal attenUon. Be underslandb)1. VIRGO (AUJ. 23&pt. 11): C.O..Operate with ~ tndJvldual. Slresl practical ap- proach. A lltUe atra effort CID spell IUcctJI. Know this and give your all. Your goal Is clow 1han might be Jm. agined. LIJIRA (Sept. Z3-0ct. II): Books Opened By Volunteers ' Training leaders (or junior or adult dl!ltUSsion groups ls ' available to t.ea~s and parent volunteers in t b e Newport·Mesa School District. Greal Books Foundation of Chicago which protddes tuition free leader training classes In cooperation with schools and libraries. It will be conducted by Howard Will of San Fran. cisco, western administrator. TAURUS (Aprll 26May IO): . One who has captured your af~ (ection may set a high price. Refuse to be threatened. Ute velvet glove, but be finn. An Aquarius Individual figures prominently. Be aware of aubUe nuances. Yoo art gjven choice of superficial acUvJty v er 1 u 1 meaningful work. Be grateful that choice b. )'our own. One born under Vireo can act as a reliable pjde. ~ • .,. coroingly. Avoid tendency toward .eU- decepUoo. See situation in C:::'Ol.•"l""' realiaUc light. Accent on A four«saiori course begins at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 6. Adults will be trained to lead ln-depth disawions on great book! for youngsters in grades 3-IZ. Thi! discus,,ion groups, conducted tn the "shared in- quiry" method and led by two volunteers, will meet every A $10 registration fee is fe- quired lo cover the cost of the materials used in the course. Preregistration is necessary. Mrs. Heather or Dr. Hilda McCartney will a n s w e r further quest1ins. GEMINI (May 214une 20): What appears a aetbact CID LEO (July 23-A ): Study T11m11 mesuge. nd for quality. But avojd get..rich- quick scbtmes. Be analytical. You can now put togelhtr puzzle piec<s. Young penon tecreta that are revealed. Keep somt facts to youraeU. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Not wise to mix bus.ir>ess with pleasure. Aetomplish basic tasks. Coocentrstion ii a neces.slty: cartlwnl!SS now would be cOlt.ly. A rrleod con- fides delicate problem. Double Accolades . SAGnTARIUS (Nov. D- Dec. 21): What comea In also aeems to 10 out; be wilting to conserve energy, funds. Key Is to finish taak. Temptallon II to walk away from challenge. ;Members Singled Out CAPRICORN (Dec. II-Jan. 19): Make new .contacts. If you ask questions now , answers can be obtained. 0n, who mates claims m a y surprise you by backtnr them. . . Two members of the South ~Coast Junior Woman'• Club : 'have been singled out for ::separate honors. :; Mrs. Larry Moeller received . :·the Citizen. of· the ·Year title ; and Mrs. Frank Fleet wu _.fl a m e d ClubwonwM>f·tbe- : )'ear. -:, Mrs. Moeller, mother of two daughlers, bas been an actlve ;J,Smtant Brownie. I ea de r, !~ember of PTA where she :.bas served as prorram •Cha.innan and on numerous " oommlttees. SIM helped In the March of Dimes drive and bu been bulletin and bospltality chairman for her club this pa1t year. Serving u lint Vice pre.I· dent, dean of chairmen and program director thi1 put year bas been Mn. Fleet who aJso 11.sts aa b e r ac. compllshments aervtng on 13 co..-illees and holding seven cbatrmanships. She is the mother of three children. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q.Feb . 18): Turn on chann. You get what you llffd through friend· ly persuaaion. Realize this and accept helping hand. PISCE8 (Feb. l~Ma~h 20): Some in positions of authority act in uncertain manne r. You could 1et apportunity to demonstrate special skill!. Cor11ult ror legal procedure. a double treat for MOTHER'S DAY \)\' 10 CURLER SET MA" "'' MIRROR ~~,f9~:.. plaft,.. ................... .,. I wf1tl S.1.cM.Utel SM dldrllll )OUrlllf In the 11aht llght befor9 )'O:U oo; 111crc the switch ~ "o.ytlGl'lt. .. "'&enlno" or "omc." en.ct == . ..,..,,~ 'FllEEOFnll-llll!IAwlth-...-olpirllclpeUng lltand new electric dryw, AprU 11thfoulhMir11, 1971. Frigidaire! Flowing Heat Dryer with Fabrics Selector. Dries up to F•brfcs S.l•ctor automttf· 18 lbs. ••• cally provides right heat lor Only 27" wide I drying •ny fabric. T•kes GUes1wcrtc out of aettlng the Biggest capacity! timer. Hug• 240 1q. In. door opening I• 19 lnche1 off th• 27'' dryer you floor-easier to load and unload. can bvy I • $179 " •r.r Natkl~ wl • Prol•ctfon Pl•n 1·year Warran, fO r ,e np•lr ol any del•ct n ll'lt entire ~roduct. plus a 4· year rotectlon Plan (riarts only) !or fumlsl'I· ng replacement for def•cflve Drive FRIGICWRE Motor and Pull•ys. OTHER ELECTRIC DRYIRS AS LOW AS $159 COSTA MESA 411 IL s....1-111 S"•et " 646-UM Dally f.f, Sat., t ·6 EL TORO L09uoa Hilla 1'1aaa (Next t• l •v...n) tl7·3830 Dally 10-6, Thur., "''· 10.; • Path Strawberry-lined two weeks for an hour or hour---------- and a half, according to Mrs. IC)::;::(;i;;: Loren Heather, v o I u n t e e r 'j~~?:;~~l junior great books chairman !or the district. The junior program was develo~ by the nonprofit Nurses Installing Officers of the Orange Coun· • . Nurses will be Installed after a l ty Association of Industrial 1·ocia l hour at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 5, in the I Holiday Inn, Fullerton. ,• \>"• Miu "Jackie" Lynn Taylor, child star, _will deliver I Found America Through Our Gang Comedies. during the 7:30 p.m. dinner. She appeared in I It><-:'/ Newly arrived from .. Germany, Mrs. George Vogel receives international direc· tions to the Balboa Bay Club where the Women's Fellowship, Plymouth Con· gregational Church will stage a Straw berry Brunch. Providing traveler's aid to the 11 a.m. Wednesday, May 5, affair are Mrs. William Roller (center) and Mrs. Richard He~an. Card·playing will follow. 75 motion pictures by the age or 15. Serving as lnstalling officer will be Mrs. Oleta Valeri, president, Western Association of Industrial Nurses when ~frs. Blake Martin accepts Fraction Fractures Scheme Bogs By ERMA BOMBECK pourids of white sand at 65 cents per hundred pounds. Since the sand w~&.n't deep enough to write your name in, we returned the next night for another 300 pounds at $1 .65 per hundred pounds. The tire was stlll without Down AT WIT'S END presidential duties from Mrs. ~Uy Colucci. Other officers to be installed include the Mmes. Lois Tait, vice president and Wayne Huff; corresponding secretary. Women's League The Orange Coast League of Women Voters meets t n various locations throughout the year. For information regarding the next meeting date and time telephone Mrs. Henry Cord Meyer at 6#-0838. BE FREE ••• OF FACIAL HA IR FOREVER . LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT JS 70 REMOVE EXCESS HAIR WITH MODERN ELECTROLYSIS, MEDICALLY APPROVED••• SAFE 1 FAST 1 GENTLE. CQNsul T WITH OUR LICENSED TECHNICIAN IN OUR BEAUTY SAL.ON. t saw our youngest, Brucie, digging in the shrubbery the other day with a soup spoon and sajd to my husband, ''Brucie needs a little sandbox. ·1 aaw one in the toy depart. ment at Crooks for $12.88 with a litUe seat in each comer. a red -'nd white fringed awning over it and "' sand pail and a above!." shade, so we Invested in a my hUlband's face since tbe large beach umbrella ($5.95) Christmas Eve he assembled and threw in a shovel and pall the ~tricycle and I ask~ him !or $1.25. why had a c ha i • and three Friday was a big night for Wing nuta left over. The Stitchery: Nook ClllWIL & NllDl..ll"OINT Klh & 1111'1'11" • P1r1flll e lllCllM e ••nll'I • u ...... (e¥f!lllMli--t• e DMC y•r'All 171 L 17ftl. C.111 M-6Cl·7'7t NILLGlllN JOUAJll ROBINSON'S NEWPORT My husband smiled a cheap little smile and said, "Sunly, you're making mock. I can whip him up a san<lbox for a fraction of that price." us. The sandbox was finished .. ,-=~::::.::::::.:.:::: ___ .:========== The fin:t night we drove 20 mUes across town to a dump tn search of a semitruck tire. It cost us $3. The second nlght, we drove to the ~ lumber yard for $5 worth of scraps to construct a platfonn to keep th e semltruct Ure !rom tilling the grass. The third night after diMer was spent painting the plat~ form and semi-truck tire with paint costing 1.1.50. The next evening, we backed up the station wagoo covered with $1.50 or wall-to.wall plastic and loaded up 300 Right art.er dinner, we toot our coffee Jr.ito the yard to see how Brucie was enjoying hJs Sandbox Hilton. We tilted the umbrella and peeked Into lbe aemlspare lire. A cal had littered ln It. We found Brucie sitUng in the dirt digging in the shrubbery with a soup spoon. Now, there are times when a wife knows she 5.hould keep her mouth ·shut and other times when It's worth the cost of a lawyer to open it. "Let's see," I said, ''$3 plus 13, plU313.50. 19.90. IJ.50, IU! and $1.25 comes to $30.10. What fraction is that or $12.88?" I haven't seen that look on Couple Exchange Vows In Candlelight Rites A candlelight ceremony in the First Prtsbyterian Church· of Encino was the setting Jn which Wendy Leigh Harrison and Michael A. Hinojos exchanged their wedding vowa and rings. Officiating during t h e nuptials was the Rev. Dr. Scott Brewer. The bride. daughter of JI.tr. and Mrs. Douglas Harrison of Tanana, w11! given in Artists View African Croft m1rrla1e by her f a t b e r . Altending htr were Miss Suzanne Renard, mald of honor, and Miss Kathy Jenkins, Mrs. Lee Koate.Uer and Miss Amy Spickard, bridesmaids. The bridegroom, son "flf Mrs. Betty Hinojos ol Costa Mesa and Everett Hinojos o f Angelus Oaks, asked Paul Lenichek to serve as belt man. Guests were seated by Victor Hinojos, Everett H. Hinojos, Robert Zermeno, Don Bennelt and Jeff HarTison. The bride, a graduate of Reseda High School, is a junior at San Fernando Valle}' African art and history will State College where '1le ls be discussed by Mr. and Mrs. majoring In English. Her Jo Denclel, owners of Denwar husband was graduated from Ceramics in Costa ~1esa. for,,.ciiaiil iiPiioliiy.iiPiioiimiioiinaii.iiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,f members of tht Jl.1ission Vlejol~ AssociaUon of Artisls and DOES MAMA Craltsme.n at 7:30 p.m. on WEAR Thursday, ~1ay 13. Tbe Dend•ls have Hved In HOT PANTS 1 Liberia where Mr. Den<lel managed a rubber plantation/ Ind Mrs. Dendel was a teacher, writer and b>llector1 of tribal handicrafts. CLOSEOUTS PAINTINGS frOf"I DlCO•ATO•s UHlllT1 THINI MOTHll'S DAT tllll P'lrll Awe., C:..11 Ml .. 1 T-.-511.·lf 1.111. M I ""'' . Think Motl1er's D•y JED.In tnhQ WftttllH rt.r• -642•2444 H.,,,.mt flt'! • BEAUT'f SALON SPECIAL: STROKES OF LIGHTENING WITH ROUX SHEER DELIGHT FROSTING SPECIAL PRICE 19.90, REG. 30.00 VALUE A SUNSHOWER Of" "STREAKS, TIPS OR ALLOVER FROSTING MAKES YOU LOOK RADIANT FOR THE Fl.JN SEASON AHEAO, ROUX SHEER DELIGHT CREME HAIR LIGHTENER CONDITIONS AS IT LIGHTENS. KAVE A FROSTED WITH OUR STAFf" OF ILXPERT COLoRISTS. BEAUTY SALON, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • 'FASHION ISLA ND • 644·2 800 • J I I I ! 111 • I \ ! ' J ( I I •7 . . . . . . . . • . f;osia ·Mesa EOIII ON ·vo L 64, NO. 105, 4 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, C~UFORN ~A Harbor Impa~se Enf.orced; Teachers Will Talk~· By GEORGE LEIDAL Of fM ~llr Plr.t Sl•ff Newport-Mesa Education Association leadership today said the conditiona of an impasse will be enlorced, although the teachers' representatives will continue to .meet . and confer with ~1 boanfs representative on their pay ancf program proposals. Statements by Brad Thurman, N-MEA president and Bill Lawhorn chairman of the Negotiating Cowtcil, clarified a letter sent to the board Friday which said "we stand ready morning, noon and night to meet and conlet." The Jetter, Thurman said "did not withdraw the legally imPosed impasse; rather, it · offemt an opportunity-to the board to get oil dead center. To argue whe1her an impasse uists or not la useless. lt exists," Thtuman said. "It would be better to negotiate · our · dif- ferences ." "The N·MEA bu tried to demonstrate lt.s good faith by aulhorizlng lhe Negoµating Council to continue to meet with the board ol educaUon whenever Utey have written responses to 'our COD· tract proposals that were .submitted over 90 days ago," he said. N·MEA submitted 38 proposal• to lhe board on Feb. 1 and to ~ate they've received written responses to 11 , Thurman noted. Impasse proceedings are spelled out Jn the Winton Act, the state law. governing teacher-school board negoUatiON. Bart Hake, ex~tive secretary of the N·MEA, had told the DAILY PILOT lut week , the negot.lations wt1u1d resume. To. day he said teachers would.meet and con.- fer "to receive written respomes to our proposals. If the board response doesn't lead to a 'Written mutual agreement, then· an impasse still exists because there still is persistent dlsagreemenl, '' Hate u:- piained. Thus, the teacher• have upresad a desire 1o continue t.o rtceive written respon~s. bµt are continuinc the Im· ~ 'l1Je teacher representatives to the Nel(>tiating Council are authorit.ed by a Vote of tbe N-M!:A Representative Coun- cil to ·telect theJr membel" of a three- pe~ factflndtna panel. That vote in· 1Ututed the ~. three week! ago. ••we .will ask the board to appoint t::eir member· at Tuuday's board meeting," Hake aald. The' two appoinled by the district and tlwtu<bm·appoint Uie-tbl!d member.· : - . Tbe panel's job is to:tlke a look at the causes of c;i15'.&rffmtnt. It·may er rnaY not be empawered to make 'recont- mendatlona for seftlemeat. anc1· Ill fin. dings are not bin4fug on either party. · The lmpaase.1wa1 called ,April 12 after 72 days had, passed without writ.ten response from the~ '°·tbe-teacbert' proposals. 1be: Winton Act uy1 both (S.. mCRER11,·Pllt ll .POW Plan Backed·. Nixon Supports Internment ~dea UltlTe~ . ' ANTIW/\R DEMONSTRATORS. ~ON fl!ONT MA~l-cARRY!NG POLICEMAN IN CAPITAL. At 23rd StrHI ind Constitution· Avenue Th 11 Mornln" Chemlc1f Spray Curled tho Dly 6,000 Held • ID DC Protest Police Foil Plans to Block Traffic, Government WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The antiwar movement's march ·advertised effort to paralyze the goverrvnent by hamstring· bi.g Washington's morning rush hour traf- fic was thwarted today by police and fed· eral troops, and more than 6,000 dem- onstrators were arrested. The protesters were dispersed and driven into disorgapized groups by volleys of tear gas. and mass arrests which went on in vieW of thousands of government employes commuting to work. The federal worke!'I were hindered but not halted by bit-an~-run ta~tics of the demonstrators on fOur main bridges crossing the Potomac from Virginia and at traJfic bottleneck points at several site! within the city itseli. By noon, the streets carried a normal load of traffic and ln the downtown area the scene wu that of a usual Washington lunch hour. There were st.ill a few flare- ups of minor trouble in some spots removed from the center of the city. The mass arre.sta clogged the District of Columbia's jail facilities ; and s~verely tued the processing procedure. Tbe High . Court to Consider Anti smog Device Lawsuit WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sup ... me Court a~today to consider a suft by 17 stales Charging.the major auto manu- facturers with COll.splracy to delay the development of antlsmog device!. The court will hear the dispute next term. The states were free to bring the same kind of suit in a federal di.strict court, but they saJd a' decision might take 10 ye1rs In view of the appeals that would almost certainly follow. The suit charged General trfotors, Ford, Chrysler and American Motora with con- spiracy to delay the development and in- troduction of anlismog ·devices. The ·states wanted the Supreme Cfourl ·to con- sider these claims and if persuaded that there was a violation of .the Sherman an- titrust law to !Slue an injunction. The injunction .J!OUld require the four manufactuTers to• install effe<:tive an- tipollution devices on all cars built by them since 195.1 and stilf on-the road. This is an estimakd 85 to 100 million autos. Justice Department summoned cor- rectional specialista from several p:>lnts in the east to http cope with the situation. ·More of the same type of disruptive tactic• ·had been threatened for Tuesday by the militants and in apite of the mass arrests of their followers , their leaders vowed Ibis afternoon to go through with the plan. The protesters claimed mass traffic disruptions ~government officials said traffic was virtµally normal by the usual rush hour. The police moved in swifUy to drive off the demonstrators and to keep traffic moving. By 9 a.m. EST, a high percen· tage of workers were at their de.iik.s as usual. About 4,000 combat-clad Army troops had a hand in actions at several key points -and a contingent of marines and 6,000 other soldiers were on hand in the city U needed -as demonstrator• were dispersed .in splintered, disorganiz- ed groups in cordoned off area'f More than 5,000 were under aJTest on a variety of charges by 10 :40 a.m. and traf· fie movement was reported virtually normal-ei:cept in a· few scattered spots. Some of the wiartea:ted remnants of the militant war oppanenta -operating as the May Day 'Tribe .... turned to sporadic street vandalism such as the alaahing of tires of autos par)ed or stopped at traffic lights. One of the victilns of ·a punCtured tire was Sen. Paul J. Fannin (R-Arlz.) (See .CAPITAL, Pace I) Petition 1'urn-in President Nixon today issued a _IUlte- ment from the Western White House ill San Clemente urging North Vietnam to join the United States in transferring all • prisoners of war to nesutral internment in Sweden. The President's obvious interest in the internment idea was underscored by the fact that he was responding to a Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news agency, Agence France Presse. To date, Hanoi ha! expressed no in- terest in the ide~ of interning war prisoners on neutral cround . Council Sets Zone llearing For New Tower PessuDistic promoter& of a new ts million senior citiuns' niurement tower today predicted plans for it will be top. pied by · the Costa Mesa City Council, despite posiUve action at a higher level. The zone and helghi e:r:ception perm.Jt hearing for 18·story Costa Mesa Towera was continued until to11ight's 7:~ o'clock meeting after lengthy and heated debate. two weeks ago. City officials want written confirmation from the U.S. Department of Rousing· and Urban Development (HUD) and Federal Housing Administration that city service costs will be paid. Organiud by t h e Anaheim-based Western Association of Baptists, the federally subsidized senior citizens struc- ture would be exempt from paying county property taxes . · Bethel Towers, the e:r:i11Lir1g tower 1t 666 w. 19th St., is exempt from all service and tax COl!lls under a similar but still different HUD financing program . The nonprofit WAB organiiaUon head· ed by Rev. Harley Murray, of La Habra, maintains it can pay a city.required yearly service contract of $21 ,310 -sub- ject to innationary increase -for police, fire, sanitation and other costly services. County property taxes would be out, as In the Bethel Towers case. but city of- ficials agreed during the last hearing these are prfmarily £or schools, while Towers resident3 have no school-age children Still, the clty service financing remains a critical Issue. Evaluating the chance for approval tonight, Rev. Murray sa id he has been verbally assured by FHA officials that (See TOWER P•a• I) King Slaye r's Es ca pe Fo iled PETROS. Tenn. (UPI ) -James Earl Ray, serving 99 years for the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was foiled early today ln an attempt to escape from Brushy Mountain State Prison. Las\ year the govern.ment 'dropped it! own antitrust suit. A consent decree restrained the car makers and the fiftl1 named defendant, tne A u to m o b i 1 e Manufacturers Association, from any future conspir.acy. Bike Issue Set • Ill Tennessee CorrectJon Com· missioner Mark Luttrell said Ray broke out of his cell by sawing throogh its bars, leaving behind 1 dummy in his bunk to fool guards. The cuards found the broken r,ars. however. and a quick c~k • of inmates showed Ray to be miss- ing. Luttrell said Rey was caught before he rould scale the wall! sur. rounding the maximum RCUrlly prison. . Ray was i1entenced to 99 years on a guilty plea to the April 4, 1968, sniper slaying of King at a MemPt\i! mote.I. He •u lr\nsfer- red to Brushy MounLl.in lo 197& after ~rvtng almmit a year a.t lht maJn st.Ate prison In Nashville. Meanwhile, parties ranging from the atate11 of New York and Minnesota to an apricot farmer in California have brought 17 damage suits In courts across the country again.st the car makers. The 17 states did not seek damages in their suit They are Washington, Illinois, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii. Iowa, Kansas, Maine. Massachusetts., M I n n e 1 o t a , Mi.s90url, Ohio, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia , North Dakota and Wat Vlrglnl>. Queen Starts Trip LONDON (AP) -Queen Elizabeth f[, Jookinc recovered from her naggin& cough and cold alter several days of mt. Jett today on a tO day, 4,500 mile tour of Brllilll ColumbiL · ' A heavy .turnout of supporters Is e:r:- pected tonight when the Costa Mesa Cit.y CouncU forma11y receive• 2,700-plus peti· tion signatures urging a network of bl· cycle trails through iown. No immediate action, bowev~r, Is an· ticipated. "I am &oing to apPoint a committee on this because I think there should be a great deal of study, .. Mayor Robert M. Wilson announced. The panel will.include rtpresenlaUvea of ·the city planning and traffic saJ~ty departments, plus· ~anae. Coast College stu~ent ltaders who promoted the petl· tion campaign. ' Costa Mesa has initiated such 1tudie11 In the past, but nothing concrete haa emerged in more than 1 year. whlle Newport Beteh and other commun!Uet ara i;reatina 1lmilat rwtea. Mayor Wilson sakt today -lo a positive.way -that he wonders if bicycle trails really need to be design .. i.ed. The mayor referred to a European visit Jn which be observed Ute widespread use of bicycles as routine transportation in addition to pleasant exercise, also en- couraging the c0:ncePt IQCallf, 1 "We could certainly benefit by cutUfll tbe number of cars on tpeal slr~ts in half, although It would hurt lbe service 1tation, tire and garage people," be ti• plained. Bicycle safety in heiv)' traffic is a by factor, Mayor Wilson conceded. ''Bqt Amsterdam, Holland, h11 500,000 bicycles and no speclllc trails and they drive crazier over theri! than we do," be continoed. . "Thty're ·tverywhert and' ju1t con- &ldered a.net~ t:1n1port.at.lon vehicle." White Ho"" P~ Secr$ry Ronald Ziegler, however, read President Ni:r:on'a rt.Sponse during a press conference to- day. He Did the President "noted with great satisractlon that according to press repor'ts, the government of Sweden ha.s offered the use of its vessels and its ter- ritory to provide internment of prisoners of war ffOlll the conflict ~ Vietnam." The statE;ment added, "The President would hope that Hanoi will move prompUy to negoUate an agreement oa this is.sue to take advantage of this humanitarian offer on the part of the Swedish government." Ziegler aaid there bas been no direct goverllDl.ent.~ovmunent , contact wit.Ii Swedeo. He Aid the Pruldent WU rea<> ting to preaa reports that Sweden -a accept prisonen: of war. The United Sta,.., at the Paris ~oil> lions, has olfefed iwutral coun.~ W temment of aick eDd WOU11ded prljOntrJ and those beld for more than fOW" years by each side. Ziegler uld, however, thi• the United States was prepared to negotiate an agreement covering an prisoners on both aides regardless of physical condition or date of capture. The report, from Sweden indicated.the Swedish govmunent would a cc e p t prisoners only ii both Washiniton and (See l'RISONERIJ, Pap I) Branded 'Polltleal' Saddleback's Hosp ·itnl Favored by Supervisor By JACI BllO!IACI'. Of tlle 0-llY il'li.t lflfl Fifth District Supervisor R on a I d CA.sper1 of Newport Beach returned to- d1y from Europe ·and said, "I cannot understand why the planning commission didn't approve the Sadd1eback Com· munity Hospital permit last Thursday." * * * Butterfield Says Panel Unswayed By Pressures Orange County Planning Coihmiulon Chairman Woodrow Butterfield, who vanished at mid-argument last ThW'&day during a debate on Saddleback Hospital's use permit, said today he wouldn't hazard a guess on how the commission will vote Tuesday. "We 're not going to be Pressured htto making a decision one way or the other," the comnUs.sion chairman declared. Butterfield and · Commissioner Fred Jefferson left the Saddleback HOspital debate lfter three hours last Thursday, re.su!Ung in a "no decision" on t.he permit. "Planning commission rnemben have been aubjected to tremendous pressures from many sources over this hospital matter," But~rfleld aPerted. · Butterfield offered no explanation for bolting last Thursday's meeting other than to uy he was tired. He had been Oft a recent trip to Waahington, D.C. Mesa ' Mayor Wilson uld he would favor a complete bicycle ban on certain major thoroughfares to prevent traffic · ac- cidents, rider injury and deathst "There sre BOme where we should just 1111y: No. Like Newport Boulevard -that would be murder. And maybe Harbor Bqulevard, •• be conUnued. Thick rolls of dames supporting the bicycle tralL <onc<p\ -a total of 2, 761, mosUy 1tuden.ts -wa11 bi nded to the t]layor ~ntlY at 0r•nge Coist COiiege ~ampua Ea'rth ·nay cerembnJes. A COQtlngent of bicycliets with a police escort rede from the Estaocia High School campus to OCC activities cilrryina: tbe pelllions. · ' ctty Otrk Eileen PbJnney aald It Is wJthout a doubl the largest nuinber of 1!,n1turn ever ralhert<:I to promota .1 Jo- cal!1u111..J111liUc1l tr ,ttberwi.tt.. •, ca~ aald'llJl•6jlpoinfAO on·tlle cnm· mi&ston, Arnold Forde, wbo wu-wltb him on the 17-day trtp, had a nt wont ,to tlie other plannine commiMIOnen that hi (Forde) believed lhe ~dleback lacillt)'. should be approved. ''That shows bow much influence. he has over those other two (WOodrow But· te rfield and Fred Jefferaon) Who voted again.st the hospital Thursday," Caspers noted. The Filth Diatrict 1uj>.rvilor added, ''I'm for hoapitall but I can't tell Forde or anyone else oa the commiaslon bow to vote." Cupen Aid:be believed "politics" ii Involved and blamed the controyeny OD no.. Cortese, devel~~ of. Lag\IJla. ilin8 Lei>ure Wotld where lhe Saddlebacl< facility is to be built He admitted that be and Corle!e did not ~ eye to eye on many things and. "investigation by my office 1how1 he wu involved in hi.a fight:" ' -, Forde will not be back for Ttiesd111'.1 crucial plaMing commission meeting when the Saddleback use permit wW bl considered again. Caspers uld be la no& expected to ret~·untJI Friday. The hospital controversy surroundina two rival faclli.Ues in the· Mission Vieji» Laguna Hille:, area "IGlfaoed early last week when it':WU·reported that Forde had a financlal iriterest in the Mission Community Hospital tn Mission Viejo 'Which is now·under comtruction. 1 rt was alle1ed• that Fotdo bad bee1· res:pone:ible ~r .delaying approval of tht Sadilleback ·hospital ,,.. ,permit. • It now appear• F,t'l"dt won:t be present. when Orange County. planners convene (See HOSPITAL, Pace I) • 0r .. ,. Wutlter Cooler ttmperatures and mostly sunny s:kiea are the m.lxed blest- ing for Tuesday's weather watkh- ers. High readings wW atretCb from 63 localJy to 73 further in-land. • INSmE ,..,DAY Ltar11 now and ?ltl .l4£tr af~r uo~'re torning. lt'I b41-.U: !erred lid ti~. a ·MW P lett in. Jtnoncing colltoe cdUCGtion. ·See .Bu.stneu,. Page 18~ . ........ 17 --.. Of:JftM;:'' t .,.... ,. tHrtt n~s Sflft Mtt11tt It.ft T .... v..... 11 "nlMM 11 ........ . ............ ,.,. --.. ,, \ • ' l .. :! DAIL V PILO T c l'ro1la Pqe 1 HOSPITALS. • • qain Tuesday to comlder the fate of the Saddleback Hospital permit . Forde'• absence when Saddleback's oondlUonal UM permlt came before CfJW!" t¥ planners last 'llluraday apparenUy wu a.contributing factor to a series ot sl1 l to 2 Ue voteS and eventual departure rrom the session ol two commissioners dUrlna recess. County approval of the ptrmit is essen- tial before, A1ay 16 in order for Sad- dleback Hospilal lo qualify for a $1.t million federal graot. .The Lutheran Ho!ipital Society has scheduled groundbreaking this &pring for the 150-bed first phase construction on a site at Calle de la Louisa and Via Estrada in Laguna Hills. Plans call for eventual expansion to 500 beds. At last Thursday's aession ot counly planners, the lour commissioners present debated for thrtt: hours while aoinl through the long series of tie votes on the use permit. Finally, they called 1 recess. When it was over, Commission C h 1 i r m •.i_ ..... Woodrow Butterfield and Commissioner"""" Fred Jefferson had vanished. It then became unclear· whether or not the commission had a quorum with only tWo m e m h e r s remaining. Saddleback »ospita1 attorney Michael Collins and Deputy County Coun!el Tom ConfY bud· d1ed with the legal point remainina unclear. · _ Finally at Collins' request , remaining commissiOners Froward K. Smith of Hun· tlngton Beach and Dan Foley voted to deny the permit, 2 to 0. This maneuver wa1 an effort to get the whole issUe • before the Board of Supervisors via appeal. But ii wu tor naught. Friday, ColD'lty Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that no quorum •U present. 'Iberefore thtn wu really no actkln at all on the hospital question. . So the planners will try again Tuesday. • • MONiq, Mq S., 1971 Granddaughter Finalists For the first time in five ye~s, grandmothers have reached the final s of Hoag Memorial 1-Iospital's Mother of the Year Essay Contest. Bunni Rogers (left) a fourth grad~r at Costa 1r1esa's Victoria School. and Vicky Sutherland, a fifth grader at Newport School , nominated their grandmothers for Harbor Area title. Patrick Bartholomy re- views contest entries. \Vinner will be announced later this month. Mesa Weapons Company Loses Thai Rice Pact A Costa Mesa weapons manufacturing firm which deals with Asian countries Meanwbile Tuesday, Orange County Grand Jury Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Bead! lS expected to bring the whole . affair before: the jury for discussion. It is unknown U the Grand Jury will investlgate. Controversy betan to surround Sad- d1eback Hospital's use permit request earlier when it was disclosed that County flanning Commissioner Forde -the hrissing fifth vote -hoidl a major fin~ cial interest in rival Mission Community Hospital now being built in h1.ission Vie;o. · where rice shortages exist has been fore. ed to cancel a contract for an unlimited surplus supply from Thailand . ce\lation said it \\'as executed by Armalile Presi<Vnt Richard E. Klostzley and company C'hairman Charles H. Dorchester. 1'he anoouncement was released in Bangkok by Gen. Krit Punnakunt, • chairman of the Bangkok Economic Af· fairs Company.-i, It was Forde's "nagging doubts" that caused a delay In decision when Sad· dleback Hospital's use permit request came before county planners last March . \6. Following lut Thursday'• abortive ac- tion on the permit, Saddleback Hospital President Frank J _ Schaeffer said ht v.·as ~·shocked and dismayed" at the bizarre proceedinp. . • "Ibe apparent tol.al dilregard for publio oplnlori and the abandonment of their entl'tllted responslbWties to the ~blio on the part or commLsaiontts Butterfield and Jeffmon can only be )'iewed as an unprecedented action In Orange County goverrunent," Schaeffer decland. Trustees Slate Three Meetings ~ The Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board ()f Trustees has called three: e1eculive sessions this week to discuss persortnel matters. One meeUng will be on salary negotiations and two will relate to the selectkln ol a new superintendent. The board will meet in executive: session al 7:30 o'clock tonight, 3 p.m. Tuesday and 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. All sessions will be in district offices. The regular public meeting of the board is set for 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Lyceum of Costa Mesa High School. 265(1 Fairv iew Road., OI ANll COAST DAILY PILOT OR.ANGE COAir f'UILIPllNG-COMfl!AHY -1b1•t N. W11d l'ffslclenl •nd P\llllllMt J1dt It Cvrl •Y Ilk• f'~lld'"-I I/If Ci_.ll MIMo-f' lho,.,•• K11¥il l!dll« lho,.,11 A. M111phi111 /IAlnlllftl ldllOI' Ch.1l1l M. loot Rich1rd P. Nill A11111111: M1f110in(i Edllon. C",. M"• Offk• JJO Wt1! l1y Str11t M1ili~9 A~dr•u: ,,0. l1r 1560, •16?6 Otfwt Offk .. INfWCIOrl l!.11111: ~ H1""'"'1 lovl..,••• \.61•11al l!.11()\; 11': l'&IH1 A~f"U( Mll'lllflOIC• e11(ll: 1111!• IHt ll Moul1~1td kn (lfm•r11: »S Nortll £1 ''"'""° II.NI t•11••11• (1141 MJ-4JJ1 . Clntlne4 A,,_., ... 642·1611 C•Y~llftt, tt71 , O••l'lff C.111 ,.,\f11lll"f C1111Dtl'l1, HG 11t .. 1 11t•lt•. ll1U11t1!1t~~· ~nor111 rn11~• « 1d~n1.......,11 Mr-'" f'llf DD ~II«· •I-I t•.C1-l I*• ll'llUilrl •I c:#r"llft: 1wn1r, 5«1·.G t-,.."" ,.w 11 ,.,_, ••tfll 11111 · c..11 M.111, C1lll<)11111. 5•er110en "' cttrllf' n.• -'"''¥' ., .... u u ll -'111¥1 f1'1Hlt1tY dtllll'll!~ a;i_H r11e111111y, Top management figures of Armalite lnc., 118 E. 16th St., wen in Japan today, so full details of the sltuatlon were ni>t available. .. "That's really all l know," said a com- pany spokesman when read a n Associat~ Press at'COunt datelined from Bangkok on Sunday. Bad publlclty about the JG-day-old rice purchase cdntract between Arn.allte and a Thal treading company was cited as one specific cause of lhe can~llalion. ''I've seen e couple of Thai newspapers and it made the front page," tbe local Armalite representallve said . Ht could not specify lht nature of the 10-calltd bad publicity -whether or not it was pollUcally motivated -but said · 1be deal's announcement was premature. Wire servlce stories said the can- From Page 1 TEACHERS . •• parties must meet and confer in good faith to reach a written agreement. Teachen contend that without written board responses they can "meet and con· fer" but they can hardly negotiate unless the board bas taken a firm sland evidenced in writ ing. The dislrict has maintai ned there is oo impasse, and suggests teachers would have to take them ltt court to enforce one. Observers speculate that lak'lng the matter to court would delay negotiatloM and thus postpone a settlement. Lawhorn noted the Winton Act allows either party to call an ·Impasse if "there has been consistent disagreement for over 30 days on any matter under negotiations." "The board of education may not agree t\'ilh ii. but legally they must accept it. Ot~rwise, they continue to show their recalcitr11nte in dealing with the staff, represented by the Council, in a dialogue to resolve our differenc~,·· Lawhorn said. At issue, is a sala"?Y and rringe benefit package that the district e:!Umates will cost S8 million and require a $2 per $100 or assessed valuation tu increase. Tht board has not responded formally to the sala,ry package and has provided written responses to less than a third of the olher items such u working con· ditlons. educational program, grievance procedures. district personnel policies contained in the teachers' :contract pro- posal. Prelate Supports Mercy Killing ABERDEEN, ScotlRnd (\JPI) -The Archbishop of Canterbury said_ Sunday nlghl be did not tblnk doctors were duty bound to prolong the Jives of patient.! whose cases were hopeless. Al Ul informal questlon-1nd-an1Wer session 1t ~tarischal College In Aberdeen, l)r. Michael Ramsey was asked how he felt about trtnsplant surgery of heartr and other vital organs and about euthanasia. The primate of the Church of England said he had not formtd much or a view on transplant surgery but on euthanuis he said: "I would only ,uy thnt where the pa. titnt 1$ lingering on" In 1re•t distress, , without any possibility of continuing life or happineu or purpo1e, it Is nol nectSl8r)' for the doctor t.o c:ontim.la keeping him au,·e." ' He met with Klostzley and Dorchester in the Thai capital Sunday. The two Costa ?o.te~a armament ex- ecutives said many difficulties were en- countered in negotiating the contract for \\'hat the y termed an unlimited supply of Thailand 's surplus rice. CancellaUon ~·as done by mutual _agreement. according to Armalite and BEAC officials. after discussing the pro- blems involved. The weapons manufacturing company said In a letter to Thai Premier Thanom Kittikachorn It entered the agreement with BEAC with completely honorable ill· tentlons. Despite Jack or details. this would in· dicate some agency or ind ividua l in a position or po1,1.·er questioned the deal. The Armalite letter to the Thai premier also said it was done for the sole purpose of being of some assislance to Thailand. No financial figures relative to the rice purchase agreement were revealed. The letter further said Armalite regrets any embarrassment the agrtt· ment may have caused the Thai go\'ern- ment and extend! apologies. Armalite .is probably best known for manulacture of the ?o.1-16 semi-automatic rine. which is the primary v•eapon of the American military infantry and also that of other nations. Fro1n Page 1 CA PITAL ... \\'ho had been stopped by a group seeking to di~suade him from going to work. A threat ()f trouble at Georgetown University disso lved when leaders of a group of about 1.000 conferred with en - circling police and both agreed to "cool it." Jn the main shopping area of Georgetov•n -both a fashionable residential section and a hippie hangout -the situation was calmed by the presence or federal troops 'lining both sides of the street. They stood 10 feet apart with rifles slung over their shoulders. Some or the troopers chatted amiably with passing long-haired strttt people and a few even flashed the "V" sign of the peace movement occasionally. But most of lhe soldiers \\'ere tight-lipped. \\'isps of tear gas hung In the air at some areas v.·here major conlronl11tioos took place during the early hours of the morning. Bul by 10 a.m .. Attorney General John N. Mitchell issued a statement from. the Justice Department declaring: ''The city is open. The traffic is flowing. The government is functioning." .J?olice Chief Jerry V. Wil90n predk:ted in a,dvance lhat the tr11fnc tie-up effort would be defeated. In a message on the police radio, he told his men : "The desire or the President is thal this city be open for busintss this wet-k." 1i1any or the disorganlied protesters moved toward the Georgetown stctor of the city v.·htre m11ny of them had taken refuge Sunday when police tvided them from their •·rc:lce City" at Wut Potomac Park A convoy or so to 60 jeeps bearinJ? military police went to the are1 1t mid- morning, appardhtly for a rou'ndup of pr~'ilcrs. All were equipped wilh au n'Uisks: and some were wearing them. Other troops holding rUles were 111· tloncd on M Slreet N.W. for several blocks h1 the Georgetown area whlch has become a hippie hangout In rteent years. Nixon Leaves County President Heads f_or Troubled W as.hing ton •Prtlident N!xon left the Casa PaCUJca in sen 1Clemtnle at noon today to fly home .to 1; troubled Wuhinatoo alter a four-day ' vlllt to tbe Western White House. J1e 'is expected to arrive in the Capital after dark, missing today's scheduled an- ti-war demonstrations. In Palm.Springs Sunday, the President •!!r: ~~~~ ~~:C:U:d~rb~p ss:;u:a~ lion's farmers, including .a plan to boost farm exports to $10 billion a year. Noting that exports had increased under his administration, to reach an estimated fl.f billion thi5 year, Nixon said efforts will be increased to achieve the $10 billion goal next year. He also pledged an increase ln farm credits to boost farm operati11g loans, which would make up $349 million ()f the total fann asslst~e program. F rom Page 1 TOWER ... the .$21,000-plus annual payment c~ be made. "Their comment to me was 'naturally we'll pay it, if that's a city requirement.' but not \be property tax ," 'Rev. Murray explained. City Manager Fred Sorsabal was also to contact FHA ()fficial!, but was unavailable for any information this morning. CondU1ling a hearing 4Pril 12, the Costa Mesa Planning Commission recom- mended approval or the tower al 650 W. 19th St.. adjacent Ul Bethel Towers, but onlv with dozem of conditions. The Baptist layman's nonprofit ror· porat.ion formed to finance Costa Mesa Towers has agreed to all .of them;subject to higher-level appl"P\.'al. ''FrankJy, I think it will be turned dov.'Tl tonight," Rev. Murray predicts. "I hope I'm wrong, but I ha ve a very pessimistic outlook." · One problem in oblaining federal ap- proval of the service contract clause - which the city demands first before ap- proving the: Towers' permit -is purely bureaucratic. The city won't approve it without federal action , while the F.HA won't ap- prove the package without city approval relative to Jocatton, wning and other fac- tors. "In their minds. there is no Costa Mesa Towers pro}ect, not until proper forms are submitted ," said Rev. Murray. Bethel To\ver" was built by an Assembly of God coalition. beginning in 1966 v.-ith HUD-supervised funds from the U.S. Treasury, \\'hlie the Baptist- sponsored ·Costa Mesa Towers would be bullt with Home Savings and Loan money on a 40-year loan. Only the loan interest itse\F v.·ould be federally · subsidized. . Primary objections to another 18-story lower in prior hearings involve tilt" com- plicated tax structure situation, plus en- vironmental issues such as \\'ind, shadow, earthquakes and esthetics. Ma yor Robert M. Wilson said today he has been approached by others urging council rejection of the Costa Afesa Towers project, one it supoprts in the principle of low-cost housing for the elderly on limited incomes. "Some that I never dreamed would ob- ject -and for reasonfl other than the HUD financing and lax situation," he said. Social and perso1al fa ctors have been mentioned. such as a need lo mingle senior citizens \•lilhin the rest or the com- munity and not lump them all together in a skyscraper, he said. Informed of this Idea. Rev. Murray ~aid today the WAB budget planning for Costa ~1esa Towers includes a salary for a full-lime recreation and activitie" director. He said he could see a point to the segregation-by-age argument. but doubts it \\'OUld apply in this case. ~~~~~~~~ SPECIALS PEARJL§ Give l\lother Something Bealltiflll for Mother's Day - PEARL $995 RINGS $9·9,s On Friday the Pre1l00lt will welcome some llO farm leaders in a "Salute to Agricultur~1 • at the 'Wblte House. The President's addreM was ti.peel Sun- day morning during a 2f-hour vi.sit to the desert estate of Walt~r Annenberg, Phlladelphia publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. During the villit, Ni.Ion played goU on the private links of the Antienberg estate with his frlendtl industrialist Robert H. Abplanalp, banker "Bebe'' Rebo.zo and Reader 's Digest presenl Hobart Lewis. The president arrived in California at noon on Friday, going d~tly to Camp Pendleton to welcome tne First Marine Division home from Vietnam. On ~turday afternoon he held a news conferen~ on the lawn ()f the Western White House during.which ht said the na· lion is in the midJt of a strong econoniic upturn, but. that any .change ln the op- Umistic trend would 'be handled with •P- propriate tax acUon by the ad· ministration. In other action during the brief visit, the President proclaimed this week u Clean Water for America Week, calling upon Americans lo act qulckly~nd ef· fectively lo protect the nation's water• from further deterioration. There was a brief flurry in Laguna Peach Little League circles when a rumor spread that Nixon might appear at tJ,e opening game on Saturday. Instead, the League received a telegram ot greeting from astronaut James Lovell, the President's advisor on youth. During his visit, Nixon was kept abreast of war protest development. in Washington with continuing reports frmn stafi members. Seal BetJch Mayor Baum Lauds Police, Marchers By R\Jpl NIEDZIELSKI ot ,,. 0111'1 f'llff '"" ·Seal Beach Mayor Morton A. Baum to- day praised both demonstrators and police officen for "keeping their cool" during Saturday's antiwar rally · which brought 1,000 persons le the Naval Weapons Station, the largest ammunition dump en the West Coast. by Mary Bricknell, 2G, of Long Beach, -who attached it ' to the security guard shack. "We had all the ingredients for an in· cident that could have been really tragic and really disastrous," said the mayor. "Right here In Se.al Beach, Orange County. we have proven that peaceful protest and responsible law enforcement can occur without death, without public outcry ind without problems." Although intelligence sources had estimated that up to 5.000 demonstrators v.·ere expected to' attend the rally, only 1,000 persons showed up, he added. The rally, organized by the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice, began at 11 a.m. al Eisenhower Park next lo the municipal pier. Members el the group heard various speakers including avowed Communist Dorothy Healef and the11 marched two miles down Main Street and Pacific CoaSt Highway to the v.·eapons station. They carried placards d em a n d in g withdrawal from Vietnam. The procession was kept erderly by polJce officers and parade monitors recognizable by red armbands. ' An attempt by a delegalion or pro- testers to deliver a "People To People ·rn;aty Of Peace '' to Naval authorities caused a minor uproar when the slation commander refused te send a delegate to the gate to accept the document. Police Chief Lee Case and the gro!Jl} negotiated for two hours ;i.fter that, when some demonstrators threatened to rush the gate. The peace treaty. drafted by the Peace and Freedom Party, was finally delivered Work Sc heduled Protest activities ceased at 3:45 p.m. after an order to disperse bad been given tiy Chief Case. Mayor Baum said Case and hls lawmen, as well as protest organi:er1 deserved praise for the way the march was handled. · "Everyone came out of this with the kind of aura that democracy wu all about," he said. ''If democracy is going to v.·ork , it will need the Ingredients that were present in Seal Beach Saturday." A group or marchers, wearing the uniform of the American Nazi Party, participated as counter-demoruitrators. Baum said the group of 18 righl-\vint marchers was •·another ingredient that is unpredictable and :t is tinged VJith vi~ence." ·~ The combined forces or about 100 lawmen and firemen from Seal Beach Y>'ere on hand, often acting a s peacemakers between the Nazis and the proteslors. Policemen from other agen- cies were on standby . Among the antiwar protesters were a few youths with a Vjet Cong flag and a large poster of Che Guevara. "It is unfertunate that very few people can bring along some flags and posters 'nd give the wrong imprwlon," sakl Mel Meeks, an observer from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Janet Jolley, another ACLU observer, said members ()f that organization \Vere there "to defend the rights of anybody as long as tbey were non-violent." From Page 1 PRISONERS . •• 0 I 1 Hanoi agreed on a plan. n nte rc iange "The burden now rails very squarely on the shoWders of the North Vietname5e Construction Is to begin this summer on · government," Ziegler said. ''The U.S. a $2.7 million Newport Freeway in-gO\'emment feels ii is time for the North terchange at Costa Mesa's northerly city Vietnamese government to be responsive limit. in the matter of prisoners o[ war." , The intercha111e eventually \\'ill tie Asked if the United States could vouch together the Newport;1nd Corona del ~1.ar for the accuracy of the French report, Freeways near what ls now the in-Ziegler said, "l can't go beyond what I tersection of Newport Bo u I e var d have said.'' Palisades Road and Bristol Street. ' The press secreta1 y also was asked it The state Depart?ttnt of Public Works American diplomats in Stockholm had has assigned the job to the Kruse been in touch witll the Swedi$ govern- Construction Company of .Montrose. ment. Ziegler said there had been no such lowest ~of eight bidders . contact but "I'm sure that •lhere v:ill be Completion of ll'le pro!ect is ea:pected in diplomatic' discussions with the Swedish about one year. , government." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·sn DOM RACITI FO~ DIAMONDS. l1Mlti41U, A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INYESTMINT ONLY IF YOU IUY IT RIG HT e Peno11•1ilff S9"k• •1114 9 ••\tty Mer1M•4hD _ ... ..._, DOM ltACm MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS Paul Neckloces • Cameo Pins *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE • Cocktail Rings • Diamond Rings and Many Beautilul Jowolry Items SAYE UP TO 500/o HERE Jl'f. Whtn you buy 1 diamond from us we wUI 9u1 r1ntt t that diamond to appraiq e t 409/. MORE than you paid for It or your money back. Can you do 11 well t f1t wh1rt? COMPARE. 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST • COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, I UY, SRL, TRADE COME IN AND I ROWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT JLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -...__ H-• lroadwG'f ' j I ..'_ 1 I " I I I f \ I I I ' v • I 7 .. ,. I '/ ' Saddlehaek EDITION VOL. 64, N0.' 105, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • IXOD • I Supervisor Baek C~spers Favors Hospital Permit .. By JACK BROBACK He admitted that he and Cortese did 01 1M ~llY "1111 $!alt thin Fifth District Supervisor Ron a J d not see eye to eye on many. P and, Caspers of Newport Beach returned tir "investigation by lny office shows he was understand why the planning commission Forde will ncit be ba 'for-:J'u~day's day from Europe and said, "I cannot involved in his fight. "i didn't approve the Saddleback Com-. crucial planning co ission meeting munity Hospital permit last Thursday." Caspers said his appointee on the com-when the Saddleback use permit will be mission, Arnold Forde, who was wlth him considered again. Caspers said he is not on the 17-day trip, had sent worrl to the expected to return until Friday. other planning commissioners that he The hospital controversy surrounding ·{Forde) believed the Saddleback facility two rival facilities in the Mission Viej0: ghould be 3pi)roved. . Laguna Hills area surfaced early last "That shows how much innuence he week when it was reported that Forde has over those other tWo (Woodrow But· hM! a financia l. intewit in the Mission terficld and f'red Jefferson) who voted /'"tOmmunity Hospital in Mission Viejo against lhe hosp_ital Thursday," Casperll which is now under construction. noted. 1 • It was alleged that Forde had been The Fifth District supervisor adde_d, · responsible for delaying approva1 of the "I'm for hospitals but I ca~'t .teU Forde Saddleback hospitalUSe permit. or anyone e1se on the comnussion how to It now appears Forde won't be present vote." he Or Co ty I C ·'" h bel. d .. i·r .. . w n ange un p anners convene aspers s""" e 1eve po I 1cs is again Tuesday to consider the fate of the involved and blamed the e-0ntroversy .on Saddleback Hospjtal permit. Ross Cortese, developer of Laguna Hills , , Leisure World where the Saddleback F.o~~e s absence . when Saddle back s f.acility is to be built. con41t1onal use permit came before coun- ty planners last Thursday apparently was Schools Offer Job Program For Adults AduJts will soon have the opportunity to learn job ,entry level skills through a . special program o!fered joi~~ly by the Capistrana.. and Laguna Un1f1ed School Dis!ricts. The Regional Oceupational Program, which this year offered instructi'on to high school students iri. health aide and quantity foods preparation, is being open. ed. to a limited number of adulll this fall. Courses will agan be offered in nursing and food preparation and added to the lisl will be insb'ucllion in o r n a m e n t a I horticulture, construction technology. auto mechanics (on the job training), motorcycle mechanics and cosmetology. "This is an excellent opQOrtunily for adults who want to learn new job skills ()r retrain in another area," said Mark Jones, director of the pr()gram. "The pr()gram has been very successful on the student level. It will be even lll()(e so when parents wh() still want their childr€n t.o go to college become aware of the value ()f having job skills." Enrollment for fall is now being taken. Classes will begin in September. The maj()rity will meet f()r two hours daily except for motorcycle mechanics which will meet ()n Monday and Wed- nesday evenings fron;i 6 to 9 p.m and the class In cosmetology, which will meet· ever afternoon and all day Saturday for 1 total of 20 hours a week. Detailed information on all of the classes can be obtained by calling Jones, director, at 49&-1215 by May 7. Each course will be offered only If enough adults sign up for it. a contributing factor to a series af siI 2 to 2 tie votes and eventual departure • from the session of two commissioners during recess. County appnwaJ or the J>E:rnlit is usen- tial before May 16 in order for Sad- dleback Hospital to qualify for a fl.t million federal granl The Lutheran· Hospital Society bas scheduled groundbreaking thi! spring for the 150-bed ftrst phase construction an a site at Calle de la LGuila and Via Estrada in Laguna Hills. Plans call for eventual expansion to 500 beds. Man Locks Cuffs, Loses the Key A fascination for4andcuffs Proved em- barrassing f()r a San Clemente man this weekend, leading to a predicament finally solved by an expert. David Puterbaugh of 429 Via Arlena phoned police Sunday afternoon to ask for an expert's help in removing a set of cuffs from his leg. He sald he had lost the keY. A watch commander on duty arrived rnornent.'l later and finally found the key to the manacles. Gal,' s Golfing Gear Grabbed Thieves spoiled the goU game of a San Clemente woman over the weekend. Mrs. Helen Hackett of 301 Via Montego told police aomeone stole her golf clubs and other accessories from her garage sometime last week. She reported tbe theft of the golf items worth $197 last Saturday. Transplanted Palni Trees Still Holding Their Own 'T'he stand of 4().year-old palm trees whose chances of survlval stirred con- troversy In San Clemente earlier this year !JO far have lived 1through a transplant along Camino de C:.,trella. Arlie Waterman, San Clemente Parks and Recreation superintendent, said it was still too 500n to tell if the stately date palms would stay alive , however. The palms created a delay earlier ~is yeBr in the Bward of a contract for the major street widening ptoject· along the roadway in the Palisades' area, when Councilman Thomas,... O'Keefe sought a change in plan!I to stave oU a transplant. But county road department offioials 11nd County Supervisors rtlltd against O'Keefe's request to dlange road design , requirements. The 1r .... ,the councllman llJ'IU<d, might die from being moved 14 feet from their original place. The coat for moving the trees was borne by the city-$200 apiece. "They still are in their dormant sl.3ge," Waterman said this week, "so it'1 too early to tell whether they wiU make it. They look fine, though." Waterman said city maintenance crews planned to trim the date palms later in the summer and bq:ln a reguJar maintenance schedule. The road widening la nearly cornplete- well enough in time for the scheduled opening of the new Grant's Plaza Shoi>" ping Center nearby. The shopping comp I es., the area's first major commercial development, i 1 ICheduled 1o open lhil Junt. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALiFO.RNIA '' MONDAY, W,.Y ll 197f s or --- • J \;;', • I ' •' OAILY'.,..,UIT "9ff ,._... . ·RAMBLING 'ROUGEs· REALLY RAM8Leo1 ouRJN!l 'c1flco 'D'l '.MAvo· ctLEBRATION " Tho Community Get·TOfOlhor In M ulon Vlojo Sunday Had Lorgo Turnout · Down the Mission Trail Joaquin Schools Get Irvine Fund EAST IRVINE -A total of 1104,000 has been given to the San Joaquin Zlementary School District by the Irvine Company. The gifts are to be used for projects at Turtle Rock .Elementary and Irvine in- termediate school. rw-tle Rock will receive $15,000 for library , and audiirvisual equipment and $.15,000 for landscaping and playground improvements. The Irvine intermediate school site, wbicb has not yet beert constructed will receive $15,000 for library and audio visual equipment and $39,000 f o r landscaping and p I a y gr o u n·d irn· provements. e Dog Slgnup_ Slated ~IISSION VIEJO -ReglstraUon is being taken for a dog obedience class wbich will begin on Monday, May 10. The session ii ten weeks and will be held at the Montanoso Recreation Center from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Mondays. John Martin Will instruct the class. Cost h1 $20 per dog. e Homeo1cner Elected SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Bart Spendlove, president of the Aegean Hills Horneowt1Crs Association, bas be.en elected president of the Saddleback ·Valley Coordinating Council. Other officers include Mike Franco, first vice president; Glenn Wineman. se- cond vice president; Leon Pemberlo11, corresponding secretary, and J, e n Geesen, treasurer. · 1'he coimdl will meet Wednesday, May 19 .at 7:30 p.m. in Roy-.I Savings and \ Loan. U.S. Force Trimmed · SAIGON (AP) -The U.$. Comm30d said today t h a t American military 1 strength in Vietnam dropped by 8,000 troops last Week, the IMIC'Ond largest weekly cut this year. ~ weekly summary covering April 23-29 said there were 273,400 U.S. troopt 1· in Vietnam on April 29 a.mpartct-:.wJtb '281,400 tht previous Th~~ ' t ) ' ' Cinco de Mayo Fiesta Draws Throng to Viejo ' By PAMELA HALL-A.N 01 t1't DlllY l"n.t Stiff . Saddlehack Valley resident! set a record at Sunday's colorful Cinco de Mayo Fiesta In Mission Viejo. Thousands turned out amid suMy skies for the annual event that featuri:s booths. food, a bicycle parade, square daOCing exhibitions and a queen co111test. More than 1,000 votes were cast for he Cinco de Mayo Queen selected by anyone wishing to vote at a special booth. This year'1 winner was pretty TI n a Richardson, 15, a sophomore at Mission Viejo High School. Tina is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Richardson, 24062 Olivera St., Mission Viejo. Other contestant! were Carol Baker, Cindy Gabriel. Kathy Smith and Tina Whitlock. Nbt...only\..!s there a queen's booth, but there also were booths featuring games or all types and typical carnival food, beverages and a special Mexican dinner Proceeds from the booths will be used by each booth sponsor -a civic grou~ or a service organization in the Saddleback Valley -to continue their "'ork in the community. Booths also vied in a decorating con- test. Winner of the grand prize award was the Ramblin' Rogues Square Dance Club for their giant sombrero made from Dana Point CofC Seeking Beauty Tbe Dana Point Chamber of,Com"lerce rs IOOkingror a ·COmeJy7fi\w.to represent them .in Jhe .3~th ann,ual . Mias, Sc>uthem Calif'!'1i• Conl<ot. . Con!el\all\' m.;t'be ~n•I! ~8 ~. single, ind legal 'Tt!identa of SOUt.hem Califo"1~· , The conteat•rwill be ,held JUne 20 in Oceanside: Tht· .Dana • .Point ., represen- tative will be accompanied to..·and 1.rom the, pageaht by a partnt or Bdult female chaperone. , Contestants Will be ju~ect on beauty, personality. poise and charnf. Anyone "1Jhlng to be.consi_,, by the chamber m~y !'<Ill tl)e chamber offkt •t .416-1!a-orwrfta!m<.n, Dana·Polnt. \ ~ r a pink ·parachute. Honorable mention went :1p the Saddleback Valley Young :Republicans and the Mission Viejo AssntiatiOn . or Ar lists and Craftsmen. A highlight of the afternoon was the hi cycle parade. Sweepstakes · winners in the combination category· were Lisa, 8, ~· . . and Steve Schuyler, 5, whose bicycles depicted a parrot chasing a · box of crackers. Individual sweepstakes was wt>n by Colleen Devine, 10, whose bike fonned ;the skirt of her Spanish gown. Other winners were Mark ·Keane, Michelle Keane , Jill Brady and Diana KilpatriCk. most colorful : Sean Devine, most colorful and youngest; Ward Tener, best Mexican theme ; Richard Legrande, most original ; Don and Brett Farrell. most effort put out, and Lisa and SteV'e Schuyler, who also won for most humorous . The entire fiesta was sponsored by the Parent-Teacher Organization of •Mission Viejo Higb School. Post Office Hit Ouring Weekend Orange CoWlty-sheriff's officers· today continued their investigation or the burglary during the weekend of a tern· porary post office in the Mission Viejo area. · Intruders broke open the door ·of the converted trailer at Porta Real and Crown Valley Parkway and left the con- te.Jlts of the premises strewn over the noor before they turned thelt attention' to the safe, Officers iaid. Several attempts to force the metal safe proved unsucsessful, investigators said. They1 said very little of value was taken in the Saturday ~nlght break in. 'San Clemente Area . ' Reco11ds :First · Fire S.n :Clement.e's brUsb and grass firt season.got off' to an ·tarlY itart1W'l.th Ufe first blaze of the-year l'tported over lhe weekend: Bonita ·Canyon, <me er the 'City'• grass fire trouble; ·spots, was the ~ne of a small bl1tte f!arted •by.a young ho~ SatUJ'.. day aftemOon, Firemen "ciWdJ'7 1 'ex· tingul.sbed-lbe blBpt W~cb •lrilptecf lne&r tl1e cit¥· porlrln tl1e c~n)'Oll. ) I N.Y. ·Stoeks JEN CENTS. ea Ask@ Hanoi For Switch In Sweden President NiJ:on today Issued a state- ment from the Western White House in San Clemente urging ~orth Vietnam to join the United States In transferring all prisoners of war to neutral iaterment in Sweden. The President's obvious interest in the intemment idea was underscor¢ by the fact that he waa responding to a Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news agency, Agence France Presse. To date, Hami has expressed no fn.. terest in the idea of Interning war prisoners on neutral ground. White House Prtss sicretary Ronald Ziegler, however, read President Nixon's response during a press conference to.. day. He said , the President "noted with great satisfaction that according to press reporta, the .government of Sweden haa offered tbe use of its vessels and Its ter· ritory to provide .internment of prisoner• of war from the conflict In Vietn<Jm." The stattment added, "The President would hope that Hanoi will move promptly to -negotiate an agreement 01 thi• isaue to take advantage of thlt humanitarian· offer· on the part of the Swedish government." Ziegler said Qie!e 11¥ been no dired government-to..,ovemment contact with Sweden, He aald the President was reac- ting to pre11 reports that Sweden WJlllld accept prtloner• of war. \ The United StateJ, at tbe Paris negotia· tiont, bu off!!red naitraJ country in- ternment•of aid: ,and wour1ded prisoners and thole held for more than !Our years by each side. Ziegler said, however; that the United States was prepared to· negoiiate an agreement covering all prisoners on both sides regardless of physical corutitima or date of capture. The report from' Sweden· indicated the Swedish government would a c c e p t priJon81 only U both Washington and Hanoi agreed on a pl&n. ''The burden now falll very squarely on the ahoulders of the North Vietnamese government," .Ziegler said •. "The U.S • government feela: it is time for tbe North VJetnamese government to be responsive in the matter. of prisonera of war.'' Asked H the United States could vouch for the accuracy of tbe French report, Ziegler . said, "I ·can't go beyond what I have 1aid." ' Tavern Patron In $350 ·Brawl A weekend cwtoiner in a San. Clemente bar rang up more than the cost of his drinks in a melee which left a bartender bruised and mlrron 1battered. The total erpenae of the rampage ran up to about '350 before the "customer'' Bed the buslneu .at 1622 N. El Camino Real. The bartender, who ~as not im- mediately identified, was not severely hurt in the scuffle. Police said they had a good description of the man who entered the business at 6:24 p.m. Sunday and ~gan throwina glasses and ash trays. · 0r .. ,. Coast Weather ·Cooler temperatures and mostly sUMy skies are the mtx.ed bless- ing for Tuesday's weather watch- ere. High reading~ will stretch from 63 locally to 73 further in· land. INSWE TODA\' Liam now and pay later ajkr ,uou're .tarnfng. It's bU" !Jt1~ ftrre.d 'tuition, a.: ·new PJt\R, 'ih fimJncing collt(lt education. ' Stt-Business, Page 18. • - b , ' ! l>All Y PHiOT ~!_ndq, MlJ '• 1971 ' Ni x on Leaves Coast for ,Troubled Washington . J Pruident Nlxon left the Casa Pacifica In SID. Clement< al !100" today to fly bomt to I troubled WNhloaton Iller I four-day vblt tO the Western White House. . He is expected totarrive in the Capital art.er dark, miuing today 's scheduled an· ti-war demonstrations. Jn Palm Springs Sooday, the President t.aptd 1 15-minute radio address spelllng out a f400 million program t.o help the oa· Laguna Man Arrested In Assault A 27-year~Jd Laguna Beach man with a prior police record was arrested Su~ day evening after be allegedly assaulted an art gallery owner using a stick with &everal sbarp ntJils protruding from it. Police identified the suspect as.Stephen Richard Neederman, 'l:l, of 1854 S, Coast Highway and said he has a record or prior convictions of assault. 'lhe victim of the alleged attack, Van- nice Yallow-akis, of 445 Bent St., was only slightly injured and did not require llospltal treatment. Officers s a id Yallourakis suffered minor cuts on bis right arm. Investigators said the incident occurred at about 6 p.m. Sunday when Yallourakl!: was aitting on the porch of bis art gallery at 1848.S. Coast Highway. Police claim that, !or no apparent reason, Neederman approached Yallourakis with the stick and said. "I'm going to hit you, too." Neederman then allegedly 1wung the stick at the art gallery owner and the nails raked the up- per part of Yallourakis' arm. Neederrna~, lice said, then fled back to hi! re.sld e, located in a nearby motel, whe;.~ was arrtsted by police. YalJOur~ld today he ha 1 "absolutely no 17" why the man at-tacked him and t he did not know .Neederman. Mission Viejo, Tustin Schools Both Accredited M!Uion vl•Jo High School today rec.lv- ed a fu U five-year accreditation from the Western Association of Colleges and Univer1ltle1. T\1stin High School Di.!trlct Superin· t.endenl Willi(lm Zogg said he had receiv- ed word today that both Mis1ion Viejo and Tustin campuses had been fully ac- credited. The di!trict's other two campuses will not begin formal accreditation pro- cedures, he said, ·until they have graduated their firlt, four-year class. Accreditation for Tustin and Mi.!sion Viejo released today runa: through June, 1976 and results from a rtudy team's analYfllS of the schools' program1. For graduates of the two high achoola:, accreditation eases their admlsllion to college. It means the credit! they have eai'ned in high school are equivalent to those offered in other accredited schools. 3 Prisoner s Escape . SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Police said today they are pressing the search for three men who escaped from county jail Saturday by ovtrpowerlng a guard. The three climbed down a fire hose and knotted 1trlps of bedding from a fourth Ooor windoW. OU.Ne.I COAST DAILY PILOT OAAHG~ COAlT, PUBL"MIHG COMPAA't' ••lJ•rt N, w.,d Prftldtf\t .,,. Pllbll""' J.tc.k It. Curl•Y Viet Prnlclllll .... G-•I MMttlf 1he111•• kte.,11 Etltl ... lho111•1 /4.. Mur11hitt M•...01111 fd11&r Ch1rl1t H. leoi. lti,h.trd P. N•ll .... , .. ,_ lollMCllnt ldlleno 1.et•M ..... k Oflk• 112 Fer••* A••~~· M•1lin9 etildrtu! P.O. f•• •••. '26S2 S-C'-"""9 <>me. JOS North El C1111i110 ltt•I, '2672 °"'' Offk .. c.11 Mtt•: m w..1 ••r ''"""' ......,,.,., ... (ti, :uu ,.,_,, aeui...1rd Hll!lllf'lllltll fMdll 11111 9...:11 9911,..._,. Uon'1 f1nner1, lncludm, a plan W boott fa.rm erporta to flO bWlon 1 year. Notjng that O:mortl bad lllcnued under hit admlnllb-,o.n, to foacb ao •lliml!ed 17.f bUUon . thll year, .Nlxoo llid efforts will be loettutd to achltve the $10 billion goal nut year. He also pledged an increase in farm credit!; to boo.st farm operating Joans. which would make up $349 million of the total farm assistance program. Drought Crisis • On Friday the Prealdtnt will welcome IOmt eo rarm leaden in a "SaJute .to Aarl,~" ·~ 1he ll'Jlllt Hooat. 'rhe Prtlident'i addtta wu ttptd Sun· day morning during 1 21-hour visit to 1he , dtMrl .,tale of Wallet t.nnenberg, Philade1phia publisher and ambassador to Greal Britain. During ttJe visit, Nil:on played golf on the private links of the Annenberg estate with his friends industrialist Robert H. • Abplaoalp, baolw "Bebe" Rebozo IOd Reader'IDlgest preeent Hobart Lewis. 'll>t'l>rt•\dtnl urlv.d in CaJUomla at ._on.Friday, goin( directly to Camp Peqd1e.ton ,Jo welconl(!: the First Marine Division home from Vietnam. On Saturday afteC'llOOQ he betd a news conference on the lawn of the Western White House during which he said the na.. tion is in the midst' of a strong economic upturn, but that 11.!lY change in lbe op- timlstj< U.od would be bandJed wllb •P- proprl•te tax acUoo by Ille ad- ministration. In other action during the brief visit, the President proclalm·ed this week as Clean Water for America Week, calling upon Americans lo act quickly and ef· fectively to protect the· nation's watm from further deterioration. There was a brief flurry in Laguna Beach Little League circles when a rumor spread that Nixon might appear at tLe openin1 game oo Salunlay, Instead, th~ League Tee!ived a telegram of greeting from astronaut James Lovell , the President's advisor on youth. During his visit, Nixon was kept abreast of war protest developments in Washington with continuing reports from staff members. Defendants Out on Bail ,,. World Tre nds Fra ud Suspects_.Ji'ace May 13 Hea ring All seven defendants indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on fraud charges stemming from operations of the now-defunct World Financial Trends in- vestment operation in Laguna Hills have now posted ball or are free on their own recognizance. • Former Newport Beach stockbroker Joseph Dulaney, who police allege was the ring leader in an investment scheme that may have cost participants a total of $3 miUion, has now posted tbe $50,000 bail that he rejected last week as "impossible for a man without a penny in his pocket." He is today working with defense at- torney Robert Law on preparation of his defense to charges of grand theft, forgery and conspiracy. He and ~ six codefen- dants are scheduled to face a pretrial hearing May 13 and a Superior Court trial une 14. Dulaney, 38, is reunited with his wife, Alarlene, 32, after a separation lhiit began w.hile both eluded the Jong search mounted by local investlgators and FBI agents. The hunt for Mrs. Dulaney ~ last month with her arrest in the British Colony of Bermuda.. Dulaney was ar· rested a few days earlier in the Dutch Caribbean colony of' Curacoa. Mrs Dulaney is free on her O\VU recognizance. The couple were returned to Orange County after a IS.month absence that began in December, 1969 when they new with their lhrtt childrtn to West Gennany as complaints about the World Cal Tech Fails to Record Financial Trends operation began to flow ia to t.be District Attorney's Office. Codefendants free on $50,000 bond and scheduled to face trial on the SJlme date are James Shipley, 38, of 16951 LOwell Circle, H1:1ntington Beach, Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird, Huntington Beach, and Wendell \Varren Austin, 38, or Riverside. free on their o"'n recognizance are Robert G. Ma chan, 40. of San Bernardino and Fred Riley, 45, of Norfolk, Va. All seven are alleged by poUce to be in. volved in the defrauding of investors in a complex that was ruled by Dulaney from his "Taj Mahal" building in Laguna Hills and a less imposing orfice in Seal Beach. It is also alleged that the group defrauded the St. Bemardine Hospital of San Bernardino of $500.000 and that a similar sum was obtained u n d e r circumstances that are still being in- vistigated from the Olemical Banlc or New York. A lone turtle "huddles in his shell in the middle of a parched creek bed in the Everglades. Fires have burned more than 40,000 acres. the area continues to be gripped by a drought which is considered the worst in known history of the .Florida Everglades. Earthquake in Coa st Area 23 Children An earthquake fell by Orange Coast residents from San Juan Capistrano to Long Beach, went unnoticed at Cal Tech today. located on the Newport-Inglewood fault - the active fault that is believed to hav~ caused this morning's shake. To Attend 6,000 War Pickets Seized The tremblor, estimated by USC seismologists to be about 2.5 on the Henyey speculated that Cal Tech's Palorhar recording station would have been too far away from the epicenter to have detected this morning's tremor. Parents' Vows ONAGA, Kan. (UPI) -Jan Ebert, 18 months old, will be the flower girl tonigh t at her mother's wedding. Tim Hund, 6- feet·ll, will be the usher when his'father weds Patricia Ebert. Richter scale, was 11ot recorded by Cal In Washington Protests Tech. a spokesman said. However, Dr. Richter's labs reported cans ftom the San Gabriel Valley shortly after lhe 8:57 a.m. quake. The quake came on the heels of a night of "micro earthquakes" that 1hook Southern California including one about 6:30 a.m. in the San Fernando Valley rated at about 2.0 on the Richter scale. In fact all 23 children of Mrs. Ebert and David Hund will take some part in the ceremony. WASHINGTON (t/Pt) -The anUwar movement's march advertised effort to paralyze the government by ham string- ing Washington's morning rush hour traf. fie was thwarted today by police and fed- eral troops. and more than 6,000 dem· onstrators were arrelted. The protesters were dispersed and driven into disorganized groups by volleys of tear gas and mass arrests whl:ch went on in view of thousands of government tmployes commuting to work. The federal workers \\1ere hindered but not hailed by hit.and-run tactics or the demonstrators on frur main bridges crossing the Potomac from Virginia and at traffic bottleneck points at several sites within the city itself. By noon, the st.reel! carried a normal load of traffic and in the downtown area the scene was that of a usual Washington lunch hour. There were still a few flare- ups Qf minor ti-ouble in some spots removed from the center of the city. The mass arrests clogged the District of Columbia"1 jail facilities, and severely taxed the processing procedure. The Justice Department summoned cor- rectional specialists from several points in the east to help cope with ·the situation. More of the same type of disruptive tactics had been threatened !or Tuesday by the militants and in spite of the m~ss Fire--Alarm Hits Unopened Center The new Grant's Plata shopping center scheduled to open in June in San Clemente had its first fire call over the ·weekend -an alarm caused by burning leaves in a ventilator grate. Orange County sheriff's deputies called San Clemente and Doheny volunteers to report the sighting 0£ smoke Saturday afternoon at the center at Csmino de Estrella. Firemen quickly doused the smoulder- ing leaves. No damage was reported. Dr. Thomas Henyey, a USC a1Testa: of· their rollowen:, their leaders geophysicist, sa:d the tremor was record· vowed this afternoon-to go through with ed on USC's Baldwin Hills seismic the plan. network. He estimated the small quake's The protesters claimed mass traffic epicenter to be 30 miles south of that recording station 1Qr about two miles dis~ptions b~l government olhc1als said offshore of Long Beach, south of the traffic was virtually fll)rmal by the usual Palos Verdes Peninsula in Long Beach rush bou~. . . . Ba y. The pohce moved 1n swiftly to drive o.u_:: Henyey noted there is a possibility the 2 New Planners Seated Tonight In Lag una Beach the .demonslrators and to ~ep traffic quake would be rated larger when movmg. By 9 a.m. EST, a h_tgh percen-reports from other stations were filed. He T\VO newly appointed ·Laguna Beach tage ·of workers were at their desks u said it would be unusual for a quake of planning commissioners will take therr usual. About 4,000. com~at.clad Army 2.5 on the Richter scale to be fell more seats at the commission·s regular troops had a band 1n actions at several than 10 miles from the epicenter. key points -and a ~ntingent of mari~s There were reports that the temblor meeting tonight at 7:30 in city ball coun- and 6.000 other sold iers were on hand 1n shook hillside homes in South Orange cil chambers. the cit~ if nee~ed -: as dem~nstrato.rs county this morning. · John E. l\fcDowell, business manage- were d1spe.rsed in splintered. d1sorgan~ Henyey said the Baldy,•in Hills station ment consultant, and Michael May, ed groups m cordoned off areas. operated by USC is in an area that manager of Warren Interiors will join usually gets feeble recordlngs of quakes Carl Johnson, James Schmitz and Buck Ou tlives Counte rparts WASHINGTON (AP) -The American dollar bill outlives it.s foreign counterparts, gets around more and can take more punish- ment. That informatio• was made public today by the House Appro- priations Committee. which heard it from James A. Conlon. director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The quality of paper curre11cy in the U.S. is vastly 11uperior to that of any other country, Conlon said in discussing his agency's budget. For example : It takes about 8,000 folds to wear out a U.S. dollar bill while Eur1> pean paper money wears out alter about 2,000 stuffi111gs into a billfold or oocket. The "life expectancy" of a U.S. paper dollar is eslimated at 18 months. Lar~er denominations last longer. probably because they aren't spent as often.' __.s:h airman William Lambourne on the P ill Overdose Cited,......-reorganized commission, filling seats vacated by . the resignations of Jack [n Death in Laguna Eschbach aod Robert Hastings. A public hearing on an amendment to the zonina: ordinance that would transfer resfionsibility for hearing variance re- quests from the Planning Commission to the Board of 7Aning Adjustment heads the brief agenda. The cause of death ef a Long Beach woman whose body was found April 14 in an auto behind a Laguna Beach motel has been determined to be a massive qverdose ef barbiturates. A spokesman for the county coroner's office said Donna Clemen, 24, apparently took her O'A'n Ille shortly after she le.ft her Long Btach home on hlarch 9. The blanket.covered body. badly decomposed after more than a month in an auto behind a motel at 696 S. Coast Highway, \vas discovered en the rear seat of the auto. SPECIALS Also up for consi'deration is review of the site plan for the Phillips Buick automobile storage lot at 113 Canyon Acres Drive The facility was the target or a neighborhood controveny and a city stop work order recently when it was paved wif.!!out req~ed pennits. SU DOM RACITI FOi DIAMONDS. UMIMIO, A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INYISTMENT After the wedding, the 20 youngest children of the couple will live with them on Hund 's dairy farm at nearby Paxico. Mrs. Eberl, a widow, has 12 children and Hund, a widower, has 11. Everyone in the small town is aware of the wedding, possibly the biggest in its history. Only 200 will attend tbe ceremony because the church only half seating capacity for that number. But most residents will be at the reception afterward. "It was hard to try to select so few, but we just had to because there wasn't room for everybody." Mrs. Ebert said. "The reception, In the church basement, will be open to the public.·· Rev. Thomas Kearns of Paxico, Hund'• pastor, was the Cupid in the romance , in. troducing the couple several months ago. "It's a wonderful thing," Kearns said. "Now David can be a father to all the children and Pat a mother to all instead of ea~h carrying a dual role. Mrs. Ebert was busy Sunday. "The girls have beauty appointment.a: and there are things to be picked up at I.ht cleaners," she said. Her youngest son, Gregg, is suffering from tonsllitis. "I think he"s going to be okay, bu t when one gets something, it can spread through the whole family," she said. The honeymoon appeared to be the least of her problems. "We plan a honeymoon but it won't be longer than a week," she said. "I haven't asked where we will go. That's up to the groom.'' New Capistrano Trustee. ·To Be Sworn Into Office PEARLS Give Mother Somethµlg Beautiful !or Mother's··oay PEARL $995 RING.S $H's ONLT IP JOU IUT IT l l&HT Robert Dahlberg, successful candidate for election To the Capistran& Unified SChool District Board of Trustees. will be sworn in al tonight's 8 o'clock meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. Dahlberg, a former superintl'ndent of schools In the Tustin High School Oislrict, will be filling the seat vacated by Torn Winget who resigned from his 'J)OSt. Dahlberg will be represenling art• fcur, tbe Dan• Point region. Also on the agenda v.·111 be a con. sideration of attendance areas for the 1971·721cllool year. The admtniSlratlon is recommending 1everal changes. The board wiU be asked to con.c;ider aendln& fifth graders to CapiStrant Schoal In Saa Juan Capialrano from nearby San Juan Elementary. Palisades School in Capistrano Beach had been sen· ding fiftli graders to Capistrano School , which would end If the new policy is adopted. Palisades School would keep ils flflh gr11ders and will send two of its educa- tionall)" handicapped classes to Vll'jo School. Las Palmas School will send Its fifth and ~ixtb graders to Concordia and fourth gradtrs to Ole l~anSGn. Very little room wlll'be available at Las Palmas when the pre-Fil'ld act structurts art torn down thi~ sun1mer. Viejo School wltl have all i'ducaUonally handicapped classes becaust II hlll Lhe most racillties avalh1:ble. Crown Valley School tn Laauna Niguel will retain Jts slldh araderi lntead of sendln& them tt Viejo as they did th is year. MOTH.ERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS -· Pearl Necklace' • Cameo Pins • Cocltall Riogs • Diamond Ring> end Many Beeuliful Jewelry Items SAYE UP TO 50'>/o HERE ~:; .... DOM u.cm *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK OIAJMJND· .GUARANTEE WMn you buy • di•mond from u1 _.. w111 guar•nfff thet dl•mond to appr•IM •! 40% MORE than you fN ld for it or your mOMy back. Can you do as well elsewhere? COMPARE • 1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA . MESA JEWELRY and . LOAN LOAN, IUT, SELL, TU.DE COMI IN AND llOWSE .t.ROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -..... _ "°""" • ._ .. , . 7 " --• • -• Lagi•:•ia ·Beaeh EDITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks . .vot:. 64, NO. I 05, 4 SECTIONS, 38! PAGES ·.ORANGE COUNT'<, .CAL1FORNIA MONDAY,· MAY ·l , 1971. JEN CENTS OS Nixon Asks Red s to 01( POW Move President Nixon today issued <!I state- ment from the Western White Hoose in San Clemente urging North Vietnam to join the United States in traruiferring all prisoners of war to neutral i•ttrment in Sweden . ... The President's obvious interest in the Internment idea was underscored by the fact that he was responding to 1 Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news agency, Agence France Presse. To dale, Hanoi has -expressed no in- terest in the idea of interning war prisoners on neutral ground. While House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler, howeVer, read President Nixon's response during a press conference to- day. He said the President "noted with areal satisfaction that according to pres,, reports, the government of Sweden has offered the use of its vessels and its l.er· ritory to provide internment or prisoners of war {rom the conflk:t in Vietnam.." The stat£mutt added, "The Pmident would hope that Hanoi will move prompUy to negotiate an 1greement oa this issue to take advantage of thit tiumanitarian oiler OQ. the part of the Swedish government." Ziegler said there hu been no direct government-to-government contact with Sweden. He said the President was reac· ling to press reports that s·weden would accept prisoners of war. The United States, at the Paris negotia· lions has offered neutral country io-tem~ent of sick and wouLded prisonera and those helcf.for more than four years by each side. Ziegler said, however, that the United States was prepared to negotiate. an agreement covering all prisoners on both sides regardless · of physical condition or dale of capture. The report from Sweden indicated the Swedish government would a cc e p t prisoners only if both Washington and Hanoi agreed on a plan. "The burd en now falls very squarely on the shoulders of the North Vietnamese government," Ziegler said. "The U.S. government feels it is ti{!le for the North Vietnamese government to be responsive in.the matter of prisoners of war." Asked if the United States could vouch for the accuracy of the French report, Ziegler 11aid, "l can't go beyond ·what 1 have said." . '[lie press secretar 'i also was asked if Am"\rican diplomats in Stockholm had been In touch witli the Swedish govern· ment. Ziegler said there had been no such contact but "I'm sure that there will be diplomatic dlSCU&!ion! with the Swed.i.Sb g<ivernment." ' OPENING D~ Y ~ Mrs. ,!;.my ,Noi;worth lead6 'l!>e ~owd.1in 9pe!tl11t day Ll!tle Le1gu.e ceremony al t;;pfwilh!Dick' Nnnls.'lelt, ·and Mayor'GoidhirJ. Jle. .. Astronaut Sends T.elegra1n Little ~eaguers By PATRICK BOYLE Of 11111 0.llJ ...... lt•lf Both the tradiUonat and the unexpected marked the opening day of Laguna Beach Little League .baseball as even the White Hoose sent a telegram of belt wishes to the yt1Ungsters for a su<:cellsful season. Jn ceremonies at Riddle Field attencfd by hundred!: of beaming parents, former mayor Jesse Riddle. 89, threw out the fi~ ball to Mayor Richard Goldberg and the 19th season of Little Le:ague iii the Art Colony began. The season wis dedicated lo Mrs. Amy Norwc."th. widow of Jack Norworth who wrote the longest hit in baseball, the song ''Take Me Out to the Ball Game." A! bas been done for the past 19 yean, Mrs. Norworth Jed the enthusiastic crowd In singing her late h1Jsbanc1's "'800i prior to the first game and paaed out boxe.s of Crackerjack to each of the players. President Nixon, vacationing at the Western Whitt House In San Clemente, had been Invited to pitch the first ball out at the game, but a busy echedole forced him to decline. lnst.ead, the President's advisor on yQUth, former astronaut Jame! Lovell. sent a telegram to tht " players on behalf of the country's number one baseball fan . "Tht President jbirui me In .extending grteUngs to the players, sponsors a_nd fans," lhe telegram read . "oCmpetitive Pacific Telephone Talks Continuing Jn~ns a!Li!:!_vitecl kl join city employe11 Wednesday in a presen- tation designed to step up "phone poJ er." A half-hour lect.urt-demonstrallon titled "See Yourself Al. Olhtrs Hear You" ~ be presented at 1:30 a.m. and again at 9: 15 a.m. In city hall coWlCil chambers. Mrs. Lillian Meyers, a General Telephone Company employe 1lnce 1956, will conduct the. program wtiich is de11ig~ ed to help pai-tk:lpants eValuale their present phone ttthnique1 and view ways of handling various types of phone calls. S.epresentatfyes of the achoo\ district 11 well as memben of the general public are invited to Join members of the clt1 11talf for one or othtr of the proirams. ' ath1etiarprovide our young people an op- p()rtunity kl . develop those qua.lltie11 of teamwork ·and fair play which we cheriah in a free society and they' are deserving of community support." Another unexpected feature (If Ol)ening day came when two teams which were 1970 champions were soundly deleated in their fll'st games. Rotary, reigning city c~amplon, WM trounced 7-3 by Laguna Federal, which exploded for five nt111 in the first inning of play. _ Kiwanis, the 1970 American League c;hampion, wu beaten 11-8 by Sport.I World in the opening game of the day. Mike' Kirt.sen'. of Sports World hit the season's. fint .home run. when he con· neded with bases loaded. In the other two opening day garats, VFW narroltly·de!eated Uotl! by a score of ~I and Beach Construction Complll)' bombed the Pottery Shack .. 1. The UtUe 1.eague season, with over 200 boys between the ages of 8 and 12 i parUcipaUng, will continue until July a. Two games will be played each week games wiJI also take place on Salurdly night al 1:30 p.m. and 7:30 ·p.m. 'illd a«.emoons. • . " . ' ' • • o 1 .1ca· ' .• ,. UiS. Force Triitnn'ed SAl~N IAl'l ,--11ie U.S.' c.immand said today that Americ;an . military Slr!lngth in Vielna!Jl . dr9P.Ped. h)'. S;IXX> troops last week, the ~<f largest° weekly cut this year. ' · Tbe weekly sum~, covering April ~29 said thert> wtre 273)40o~u.s. troops in Vietn·am on April 29 compait<:I. With 281,400 the previous Thursday. King S.Zayer' s· Esoope F otled PETROS, Tenn. (UPI) -Jame! Earl Ray, seMng 99 years for the assassination o.f Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was foiled early t.oday1 in an attempt to eScape from Brushy Mountain State Prison. Tennessee , C o r ,r e c l i o.,n Co~ mls!ioner Mark Luttrell siid Ray broke out of hla-cell 'by iawing through ill! ban, leavlhg behind a dummy io hb bun~ to lw! .111ards. . 1 The illards loun<I the broken barf~ however,· and a quick check of Inmates showed Ray to be triis. Ing. 1:.uttrell 51id Rey .was •cabght bef<re he could tea.le tbe walls sur· rounding the maximum ffeurit)' t prl90f\. ~ • Ray .was 11entenced to 99 years on ii guilt y plea to the April 4, 1988. an!~ &laying .. of King at !.. . Memphla motet He wa11 transfef. -1 to 'Brual!J• lolouotain io 1970 allet ,.mnt·ililloit 'a Y"r at•the ' ·main atalt prioon·ln NalilvUI<. • Caspers Blam·es Fi·ght on By JACK BROBACIC Of "" ~·,., , .... ,, Fifth Dl!trld SLlpervisor R on a I d ea.pen of Newport. Beach returned to- day from . Eur.ppe and aai4, "l cannot unde:nland why· the planning commission .._didn't approve the Saddleback Com· munity Hoapltal permlt laaM'hunday." CISpen II.id hil appointee on the com· mission, Arnold P'orde, who was with him * * * Commissioner • > Won't H81,8rd Hospital Quiz Orange County Planning Commis!ion Chairman Woodrow Butterfield, wbo vanisbed at mid-argument last 'l'huraday during a debate on Saddleback Hospital's use permit, said today he wouldn't hazard a guess on how the commission Will vote 'IUesday. "We're not going to be pressUred iakl malting a decision one way or lhe other," the commission chairman declared. . ~ield .and ~issloner Fred Jell,_. WI\ ·lh< ~ Ho!J>llal debate after tllr.. hoilrs last 'l'hurldBy, ,.suiun1 In 1 "no dec~90" on the pumlL . "Planning commilsloa members bavt been 1t1bjected to tremendous preasurea from many soUrce! over Uiia hospl~l ma{ter," Butterfield aa,,erted .. Btll.terfield offered no exp).anatldn for bolting ' la11t . Thursday'! · metitlng other than Jo aay he was tired. He had been on a ·recent trip to' Washington, D.C. "Nobody has mentioned that Com- missioner Howard K. Smith left ·a meeting a couple of week! ago,'" But- terfield a!!erted. In relation tc the Saddleback Hospital question, Butterfield al!o disc!~ I.hat the commi&slon Is conducting a thorough atudy of Laguna Hiiis Leisure World'! planned community. "lt was the first of Its kind h1 Orange County," the. plaMlng chief said, "and It has been revised eight times. ' "We just want to see jmt what shape it Is in at present," he concluded. Speakers Slated At Laguna Beach Drug Work.shop A UC Ifvlne medical 11chool profess« and a pioneer In organizing drug misuse education programs will be the '1.wo featured speakers Wednesday at the opening session of a drug misuse training workshop in Laguna Beach. Dr. MJ!ton · Bornstein, a pediatric neurologist at UCJ, Is chairman of the drug . abuse committee of the Ot'ange County Medical Assoclati<m. Dr. Herbert Bray,r, who organized such a training workshop ror teachers il1 Arizona, is cur· renUy drug abuse program coordinator for Orange County. Both men will speak on "Drug Purpose: Use and Misuse" at the traiJJipg se:1ston, achtduled for 7:30 p.m. in lhe Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast llighway. The &eS!iOn, free and open to the public, ls being held to train parents and youngsters kl recognize and prevent misuse of an fonn! of dangerous drugs . Last Rites Set For Paul Culp Funeral aervices will· be held at 2, p.m. Tue.sday in IA.guna Hiiis for re:;¥tent Paul M'. Culp, a reµred Anny Air Force officer who died Friday at St Mary's Hospital In Long Beach. He was 75. Pallor Vernon• Kotter of ·the Lutheran Church or the Cron will conduct the services at the church'. Burial will be at Springfield, Ohio, Mr. Culp's former res idence. Mr. Culp, who lived at 8950 Avenlda Sevilla, Is !UrVlved b! hi5 widow. Kathryn; a daughter, Mrs. Irwin ff. Klabunde of Ohio; a brother. Minor of Kentucky; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Worley of Ohio and Mrs. ~fary Lowery of San Diego: two lll'•ndchDdren and lour nlccu. Bu·ilder on the 17-day trip, had sent word to the other plannina commiaalonen: that he (Forde) believed the Saddleback lacilily should be approved. "That shows how much lnOuence he has over those other two (Woodrow Bul· terfield~ and Fred Jeffer10n) who voterl against the hospital Thuraday," Caspers noted. The Fifth District 1upervlsor added, "I'm for hospitals but I can't tell Forde or anyone el11e on the commission how to vote." Caspers said he believed ''poJitics" is involved and blamed tbe. controversy On Ross Corte!e, developer of Laguna lijlls Leiaur.e World where the Saddleblck laclqty b to be bu!ll. He . admitted that he and Corte.se did not see eye to eye on many thlnga and, "investigation by my office lhows be was involved in his fight." Forde will not be back for Tuesday's · crucial plaMiitg conUniasion meeting when the Saddleba.ck· uee permit will be considered again . Ca11pen said he is not expected to return until Friday. The hbspit:al controvusy surrounding two rival facilities in the Mlsskln Viejo. Laguna HllJs area 1urfaced early laSt week when it was reported that Forde had a financial Interest In the· Mi!slon Community Hospital In Mis!lon Viejo which is now under construction. It W'i! alleged tbal Forde bad be<n respo11S1ble for delayina: approval of the Saddleback boapital use pennit. It now appean: Forde won't be present when Orange· County pllliners convene again Tuesday to.conaldet the fate of the Saddleback UoaplW pefllllL Forde's absenct when Saddleback'a • conditional use penn.11 came before coun- ty planners last Thursday apparently was a contributing factor to a series of six 2 to • 2 tie votes and eventual departure from . the session of two commissioners during receu. County approval of the ptrJ11lt Is essen· liat before May J6 in order for Sad. dleback Hospital to qualify for a $1.6 million federal grant. The Lutheran Hospi~ Society has scheduled groundbreaking this spring for the 150-bed firlt plia~ construction on a site at Calle de la Lolilsa and 'Via Estrada In Laguna Hills. Plans call for eventual expansion to 500 beds. At ' last Thuraday's session of county planners, the four comml11sloners present debated for three hours while going through the lone series of tie votes on the use permit. Finally, they called a recess. When tt was over, Commission C h a i r m an Woodrow Butterfield and Commis.sioner Fred Jefferaon had vanial1ed. It then became qnclear whether or not the commission had a quorum wilh.,only two m em b er 11 remaining. SaddJeback Hospital atklrney. Michael Collins and Deputy County Counsel Tom Conroy hud· died with the legal · point remaining unclear. - Finally. at Collina 'requeat, remaining commissionera Howard K. Smith of Hun- tington Beach and Dan· Foley voted to deny the permit, J 1o O. This maneuver wa1 an effort to gel the whole issue before the Board of. Supervi.sors via i.pPe.aJ. But it was for naught. Friday, County Couniel Adrian Kuyper ruled that no quorum was prHenL Therefore there was really no action at all on the ~Ital question. Oruge Weatller Cooler temperatures aild mostly sunny skies are the mixed bles. Ing for Tuesdai's weather watch- ers. High readings will 1tretch from 6.1 locally to 73 further io- lw!. INSIDE TODAY · Warn now o:rtd PGU tour aft.fr 11ou'rt earning. It'• bu dt· /erred tuition. a 11t w plan in. financing coUepe education. S~t' B11.1int!!, Page J 8. -N C•llfitnlle I CIMc•lflf U,. r ClfulftiMI U.• (Mlle• " c,.._.. " °""' IM!lett t .dllwlfll '"' • •11ttrtiln-1 17 "lrllM• ,.,, ..__,. ,, """ &......,.. h• .... ,.. " KttMMI Ntwi 4"1 °'.,,.. C-!Y • .,.... ...,_ " I-ti ll•H SIKll ·Marltt U•lf , ...... ,,,... . ,, ""'•""' ,, W11tt1tr • WIMtll't --IJ..lt ..... """' ... • I I 2 UAll Y PILOl !>f.. Mft'd11. MQ '· 1'971 N-ixon Leaves CJast for Tr-oubled Washington President Nixon left the C1'sa 'Pacifica in Sin Cltmf'nte 1t noon todlY to fly 'home to a troubled Wuhlnaton after a four-day visit to the Western Whlte House. He is expected to arrive in the Capital after dirk, missing today's scheduled an- tJ·war demonstrations. In Palm Springs Sunday, the President taped a IS-minut.e radio address spelling out a $400 million program to help the na· Laguna Marl Arrested In Assault A 27-year~ld Laguna Beach. man wllh a prior police record was arrested Sun- day evening after he allegedly assaulted an art gallery owner using a stick with several sharp nails protruding from it. Police identHied the suspect aa Stephen Richard Neederman, Tl , of 1854 S. Coast Highway and said he has a record of pl'ior convictions of assault. . 'lbe victlm of the alleged attack, Van- nice Yallouralcis, of 445 Bent St., was only slightly injured and did not require hospital treatment. Officers s a Id Yallourakis suffered minor cuts on hi.s right arm. ' Investigators said tbe incident occurred at about 6 p.m. Sunday when Yallourakis was Sitting on the porch of his art gallery at IMS S. Coast. Highway. Police· claim that, for no app.,ent reason, Neederman a p p r o a c h e d YalloUrakis with the stick and aaid, "I'm j:oirig to hit you, too." Neederman then allegedly awung the atlck st the art gallery owner and the nails raked the up- per part of Yallourakia' arm. Neederman, police said, then fled back to his residence, , located in a nearby motel, when! he' was arrested by police. Vallourakis &aid today he ha 1 14absolutely no idea" 'why the man at- tacked him and that be did not know Neederman. Mission Viejo, Tustin Schools Both Accredited Miasioq vlejo Hlgh 'School today receiv· ed. a full fiv~year accreditaOon from th& Western Association of Colleges and UniverslUes. Tustin lllgh Sehool District Superin-- tendent William Zogg aaid he had receiv· ed word today that both Mission Viejo and Tustin campuses had been fully ac4 credited. The district's other two campuses will not begin formal accreditation pro- cedures, he said, until they have graduated their first., four-year class. Accreditation for Tustin and Mission Viejo released today runs through June, 1976 and resu1t.s from a study team's analysi.s of the schools' progranu. For graduates of the two high schools, accreditation eases their admllsion to college. It meana the credits they have earned in high school are equivalent to lbose offered in other accredited schools. 3 Prisoners Escape SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Police 1 !aid today they are pressing the search for three men who escaped from county jail Saturday by overpowering a guard. The three climbed down a fire hoae and knotted strips of bedding from a fourth floor window. OIA .... COAST , DAILY PILOT OAAHG~ CQAtT ,.UILIS•UHO COMl'AN't' K•lt-'* N. WeH ,.reld«lt '"" ,.ulllltfltf' Jeck R. Curlt y Vlc:t .. re~t -4 .,._•I M•"'IO't Thom•• t't••ll . ., ... i ho11111 A. fll••,hi~• "'-Olnt lO!IDI" Ch11l11 M. loot Ric~1rd r, Nill Hslll•M M111to l"'9 Edl!Ora ............ Offk• 112 For1d A>'tftUt M ~ili119 1ddr1u: P.O. l e~ 444, 126S2 s-c1 .... ,. Oftk• Jl)!i No1th El C1111ino k11I, f2471 OtM' Offlcd C.11 Ml-!o•: U> w": ltf S!tlil't ,._, ... (Iii »» ,.,_, .,,.,,1 ........ .. wlltlt'-' leldl: i111s IMC;I ...,In••• Uon'• f•nners, including a plan to boost farm eaports to $10 billion a year. Noting !hit txPortl hlld IJ\crwed :C:ai~ ;~~~u~ ~e.r:,ac:ix~: aald efforts will be increued to achieve the $10 billion goal next year: He also pledgP.d an increase in farm credits to boost farm operating loa.ns, which would make up $349 million of the total farm assi.5tance program. Drought Crisis On Friday the Pmldenl wllJ wdtome tome eo fenn Jeadtrs in a "Salute to "'1'!C\ll~" ,t_jbe Wlllt. H-. Tl>! Prtloldmt"a .:ilclmi wil taped &Jn. day momJna during a it-hour ,viait ta the desert estate of Walter Annen.berg, Philadelphia publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. During the viait, Nixon played golf on the private links of the An;1enberg estate with his friends industrialist Robert A. -' A lone turtle huddles in his shell in the middle of a parched Creek be~ in the Everglades. Fires have burned more than 40,000 acres. the area continues to be gripped by a drought which is considered the worst in known history of the Florida Everglades. 6,000 War Pickets Seized In Washington Protests WASHINGTON {UPI ) -The antiwar movement's march advertised effort to paralyze the government by hamstring- ing Washington 's morning rush hour traf- fic was thwarted today by police and fed- eral troops, and more· than fi,000 dem- onstrato;s were arrested. The protesters were dispersed and driven into disorganized groups by volleys of tear gas and mass arrests which went on In view or thousands of government employes commuting to work. The federal workers were hindered but not halted by bit.-and-run tactics of the demonstrators on four maln bridges crossing the Potomac from Virginia and at traffic bottleneck points al several sites within the city itself. By noon, the street.s <'arried a nonnal load of traffic and in the downtown area the scene was that of a usual Washington lunch hrur. There were still a few flare- ups of minor trouble in some spots removed fi:om the center of the city. The mass arrests clogged the District of Columbia's jail facilities, and severely taxed the processing procedure. The Justice Department sununoned cor• rectiona1 11-peclalists from several points in the east to help cope with the situation. More of the same type of di!l'uptive tactics had been threatened for Tuesday by the militants and in spite of the mass Fire Alarm Hits Unopened Center The new Grant's Plaza shopping center• scheduled to open in June in San Clemente had its first fire call over the weekend -an alann caused by burning leaves in a ventilator grate. Orange County sheriff's deputies called San Clemente and Doheny volunteers to report the sighting or smoke Saturday afternoon at the center at Camino de Estrella. Firemen quickly dou.std the smoulder· ing leaves. No damage was reported. arrests of their followers. their leaders vowed this arternooo to go through with the plan. The proteslers claimed mass traffic disruplion! but government officials said trafflic was virtually normal by the usual rush hour. The police moved in swiftly to drive oil the demonstrators and to keep traffic moving. By 9 a.m. EST. a higb percen- tage of workers were at their desks as usual. About 4,000 combat-clad Army troops had a hand in actions at several key points -and a contingent of marines and 6,000 other soldiers were on hand in the city if needed -as demonstrators \Vere dispersed in splintered, disorganiz. ed groups in cordoned off areas. Buck Outlives Counterparts WASHINGTON (AP) -The American dollar bill ouUives its foreign counterparts:, gets around more and can take more punish- ment. That informatiOll was made public today by the House Appro- priaUons Committee •• which heard it from James A. Conlon. director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The quality of paper curretJcy in tlie U.S. is vastly iouperior to that of any other country, Conlon said in discussing his agency's budget. For example: It takes about 8,000 folds to wear oul a U.S. dollar bill while Euro- pean paper money wears out after 3boul 2,000 stuffings into a billfold or oocket. The "life expectancy" or a U.S. paper doliar is esUmsted at 18 n1onths. Ll\rger denominations last longer, probably because they aren't spent as often. New Capistrano Trustee To Be Sworn Into Office Robert Dahlberg, successful candidate for election to the Capistrano Unified School District Board of Trustees, will be swern in at tonight's' 8 o 'cloc'k mce.tint: in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. Dahlberg, a former superintendent of · schools in the Tustin High School Olslrlct, will be filling the seat vacated by Tom Winget Who resigned from his post. Dahlberg wlll be representing area four, the Dana Point region. Also on the agenda will be a con.- sideration of attendance arttt• ror the 1971-72 school ytar. The administration i.s recommending several changes. The board will bef asked to consider sending fifth graders to Caelstran• Schqol In San Jul'ln C~pislrano from nearby San Juan Elementary. Palisades • School In Capistrane Beach had been sen· ding fifth graders to Capistrano School. which would end if the new policy Is adopted. Palisades School would keep ils fifth graders and wll! send twl) of ils tduca· tlonally handicapped classes to Viejo School. Las Palm11s School wlll send its fifth and sixth graders te Concordia and foiirth graden to Ole Hanson. Very lltlle room will be available at Las Palmas when the pre-F'ield net structures are iDrn down this summer. Viejo School will have l!IJ educationally handlcapptd classes because it has the most facilities available. Crown Valli!)' School in Lll&Ufll Niguel wilt rttain Its sixth grade.rs inte•d' of st:ndlng lhem tt VltJo as they did this year. Abplanalp, banker '"Bebe" Reb<"' and . Reader'• Dliut pre,..t Hobart Lewis. The pr<Jldenl artlv<d ID Callfomla at ooon: on Frlday, going directly to Camp PendlCtoo to welcome the First Marine Dlvl11lon home from Vietnam. Oo Slltur~aY. a(~oon h~ hej d a news conference oo the . Jawn -of the Western White House during which he said .the na· tion is in the midst of a strong economic upturn, but that any change in the op- tlmlttic trend would be hlldled \\'ilh ap- propriate tu action by the lld- mlnistraUon. Jn other action dW'lng the brief visit, the President proclaimed this \veek as Clean Water ror America. Week, calling upan Americans to act quickly and ef· feclivdy to prot.ect the nation's waters fi:om Jurther deterioration. There was . a brief flurry in Laguna Beach Little League circles when a rumor spread that Nixon mla;ht appear at /the opening game on Saturday. tnstead, the League received a telegram of greeUrig from astronaut James Lovell, the President's advisor on youth. During his visU. Nixon was kept abreast of war protest developments in Washington with 1;ontlnuing reports from star! members. Defendants Out on Bail WorW Trends Fraud Suspects Face May 13 Hearing All seven defendants indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury ·on fraud charges stemming from ope-rations of the now-defunct World Financial Trends in· vestment operation in Laguna Hills have now posted bail or are free on their own reeogniunce. Former Newport Beach stockbroker Joseph Dulaney, who police allege was the ring leader in an investment scheme that may have cost participants a total of $3 million, has now posted the $50,000 bail that he rejected last week as "impossible for a man without a penny in his pocket." He is today working with delense al· torney Robert Law on preparation or his defense to charges of grand theft, forgffy1 and conspirifcy. He and his SI codefen- dants are scheduled to · race a pretrial hearing May 13 and a Superior Court trial une 14. Dulaney, 38, is reunited with his wile, Marlene, 32, after a separation that. began while both eluded the long search mounted by local investigators and FBI agents. The hunt for Mrs. Dulaney ended last month with her arrest in the British Colony of Bermuda.. DuJaney was ar- rested a few days earlier in the Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacoa. Mrs Dulaney is free on her own recognizance. The coople were returned to Orange County after a 16-month absence that began in December, 1969 when they flew with their three children to West Germany as complaints about the World Financial Trends operation began to now i11 to the District Attorney's Office. Codefendants .free on $50,000 bond and scheduled to face trial on the same date are James Shipley, 38. of 16951 Lowell Circle, Hun tington Beach, Daniel Hayeg. 40, of 8211 Snowbird, Huntington Beach, and Wendell Warren Austin, 38, of Riverside. Free on their own recognizance. are Robert G. Machan, 40. of.San Bernardino and Fred Riley, 45, of Norfolk, Va. All seven are alleged by police-to be in-. volved in the defrau.ding of investors in a complex that was ruled by Dulaney from his "Taj Mahal" building in Laguna Hilts and a Jess imposing office in Seal Beach. Cal Tech Fails to Record It is also alleged ihat the group defraqded the St. Bernardine Hospital of San Bernardino of $500.000 and that a similar sum was obtained u n d er circumstances that are still being in~ vestigated from the Chemical Bank of New York. Earthquake in Coast Area 23 Children An earthquakf felt by Orange Coast re1idents from San Juan Capistrano to Long Beach, went unnoticed at Cal Tech today. The trembler I estimated by use seiltnologists to be about 2.5 on the Richter scale, was Jlot recorded by Cal Tech, a spokesman said. However, Dr. Richter's labs reported calls from the San Gabriel Valley shortly after the 8:57 a.m. quake. Dr. Thomas ~lenyey, a USC geophysicist, sa;d the tremor was record· ed on USC's Baldwin Hills .seismic network. He estimated the small quake's epicenter to be 30 miles south of that recording station or about two miles offshore o( Long Beach, south of the PalO! Verdes Peninsula in Long Beach Bay. Henyey noted there is a possibility the quake would be rated larger when reports from other stations were filed . He said it would be unusual for a quake of 2.5 on the Richter scale to be felt more than 10 miles from the epicenter. There were reparts that the temblor shook hillside homes in South Orange County this morning. Henyey said the Baldwin Hills station operated by USC is in an area that usual1y gets feeble recordings of quakes Pill Overdose Cited In Death in Laguna The cause of dealb ef a Long Beach woman whose body was found April 14 in an auto behind a, Laguna Beach motel has been determined to be a massive overdose ef barbiturates. A spokesman for the county coroner's office said Donna Clemen, 24, apparently took her own life shortly afler she left her L-Ong Beach home on March 9. The blanket-covered body, badly decomposed after more than a month in an auto behind a motel at 696 S. Coast Highway, was discovered en the rear seat of the auto. SPECIAls PEARJL§ Give ~fother Something Beautiful for Mother's Day PEARL $9's RINGS located on the Newport·lnglewood fault- the active fault that is believed to have caused this morning's shake. Henyey speculated thlit Cal Tecb's Palomar record\ng station wou1d . have been too far away from the epicenter to have detected thia morning's tremor. The quake came on the heels of a ni&ht or "micro earthquake•" that shook Southern California including one about fi :30 a.m. in the San ·Fernando Valley rated at about 2.0 on the Richter scale. To Attend Parents' Vows ONAGA , Kan. <UPI) -Jan Ebert, 18 months old. will be the flower girl tonight at her mother's wedding. Tim Hund, 6- feet.-11, will be the usher when his father weds Patricia Ebert. In fact all 23 children of Mrs. Ebert and David Hund will take some part in 2 N Pl the ceremony. eW anners Alter the wedding, the 20 youngest children of the couple will live with them T h on Hund 's dairy farm at nearby Paxico. Seated onig t Mrs. Ebert, a widow, bas 12 children and Hund, a widower, has II. · L B h Everyone in the small town is aware of In aguna eac the wedding_ JlOS~bly the biggest in u.. history. Only 200 will attend the Two newly appointed Laguna Beach ceremoay because the church only ha5 • seating capacity for that number. But planning commissioners will take thei'r most residents will· be at the reception seats at the commission's regular afterward. meeting tonight at 7:30 in city hall coun· "II was hard to try to select so few, but cil chambers. we just had to because there wasn't room John E. McDowell, business manage-for everybody," Mrs. Ebert said. "The reception. in the church basement, will ment consultant, and Michael May, be open to the public." manager of Warren Interiors will join Rev. Thomas Kearns o! Paxico, Hund'• Carl Johnson, James Schmitz and pastor. was the Cupid in the romance, in- chalrman William Lambourne on the troducing the couple several months ago, reorganized commission, filling seats "!l's a wonderful thing ," Kearns 1aid. "Now David can be a father to all the vacated by -th~ resignations or Jack children and Pat a mother to all instead Eschbach and Robert Hastings. or ea·Ch carrying a dual role. • A public hearing on an amendment to Mrs. Ebert was busy Suntjay. "Thti the zoning ordinance that would transfer girls have beauty appointmenL'I and there responsibility for hearing variance re-are things lo be picked up at the cleaners:• she said. quests from the Planning Commission to Her youngest son, Gregg, is suffering the Board of Zoning Adjustment heads from tonsilitis. "I think he 's going to be the brief agenda. okay. but when one gets something, it can Also up for consideration is review of spread through the whole family," she tlle site plan for the Phillips Bujck' said. . The honeymoon appeared to be the automobile storage lot at 113 Canyon feast of her problems. Acres Drive The faciµty was the target ••\Ve plan a honeymoon but it won't be or a neighborhood rontroversy and a city longer than a week." she 11ald. "I haven't stop work order recently when it was asked where we will go. That's·up to the paved without required permits. groom." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sa DOM ucm FOR DIAMONDS. RIMIMm. A DIAMOND IS A GOOD INVESTMENT 0Nl Y IF YOU IUY IT RllOHT ' DOM ucm MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK Pearl Nec~l1c:es • Cameo Pins • Cocktail Rings • Diamond Rings and Many Beautiful Jawelry Item• SAYE UP TO &a°/o HERE ~ -· ' DIAMOND GUARANTEE When you buy • dl•mond from w ww wlll guarantee that di•mond to apprllM •t 40% MORE than you pajd for it or your money b1c:k. Can you do es w.11 oltowhore? t;OMPARE. 1002 ITEMS , TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, SILL, TRADI COME IN AND HOWSE AROUND 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA ----& ........ , r ' • " I \ San Clemente Capistrano EDITI O N VOL. 64, NO. 105, ~ SECTIONS, 38 PAGES •• IXOll Supervis or Back • Caspers , Favors Hospit~l Permit By JACK BROBACK Of tM 0.111 1'11Dt 5Uoff Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d Caspers of Newport Beach returned to- day from Europe and said, •·1 cannot understand why the planning commission didn't approve the Saddleback Com- munity Hospital permit last Thursday." Caspers said his appointee on the com- mission, Arnold Forde, who was wilh him on the 17-;day trip, had sent word to the other planning commissioners that he (Forde) believed the Saddleback facility should ht? approved. "That shows how much influence he has over those other two (Woodrow But- terfield and Fred Jefferson) who voted against the hospital Thursday,'' Caspers noted. The Fifth District supervisor added, "I'm for hospitals but I can't tell Forde or anyone else on the commission how to vote." Caspers said he believed "politics'' is Involved and blamed the controversy 'on Ross Cortese, developer of Laguna Hills Leisure World where the Saddleback fa cility is to be built. He admitted that he and C.Ortese did not see eye to eye on many things and, "investigation by my office shows he was involved in his fight." Forde will not be back for Tuesday's crucial planning commission meeting when the Saddleback use permit will be considered again. Caspers said he is not expected to return unt.il Friday. The hospital controversy surrounding two riva1 facilities in the Mission Viejo-- Laguna Hills area surfaced early last week when it Was reported that Forde had a financial interest in the Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo which is now under construction. It was alleged that Forde had been responsible for delaying approval of the Saddleback hospital use permit. It now appears Forde won't be present when Orange Cou nty planners convene again Tuesday to consider the fate of the Saddleback Hospital pennit. · Forde's absence when Saddleback's co~itional use permit came before c<1un· ty 'pllnners last Thursday apparently was a contributing factor to a. series cf six 2 to 2 tie v'<1tes and eventual departure from the session of two commissioners durin& rtce1s. Schools Offer Job Program For Adults ( County approval of the ptrmlt is esaen· Ual befcre May Jfi in order for Sa~ dleback Hospital to qualify for a $1.8 million federal grant. Tile Lutheran Hospital Society has scheduled groundbreaking this spring for the 150-bed first phase construction on 1 site at Calle de la Louisa and Via Estrada in J.,agun,a Hil_ls. Plans call for eventual expansion tit 500 beds. Adults will soon have the opportunity to team job entry level skills through a special program offered jointly by the Capistrano and Laguna Unified School Districts. The Regional Occupational Program, which this year offered instruction to high school students in health aide and I quantity foods preparation, is being. open· ed to a limited number of adults this fall. /Ma n Locks Cuffs, Loses the Key C.Ourses will ag8n be offered in nursing and food preparation and added to the list will be Instruction in o r n a m e n t a I horticul ture. construction technology, auto mechanics (on the job training), motorcycle mechanics and cosmetology. "This is an exce\1ent opportunity for adults who want to learn new job skiUs or retrain in another area," said Mark Jones, director of the program. "The program has been very successful on the student level. It ·will be even more lio when parents who still want their children to go to Ct'.lllege become aware of the value of having job skills." Enrollment for fall is now being taken. Classes will begin in September. The majority will meet for two hours daily except for motorcycle mechanics which will meet on Monday and Wed· nesday evenings from 6 to 9 p.m and the class in cosmetology, which will m~et ever afternoon and all day Saturday for a total of 20 hours a week. Detailed information on all of the classes can be obtained by calling Jones, director, at 496-1215 by May 7. Each course will be offered only if enough aduJts sign up for it. A fascination for handcufflf proved em· barrassing for a San Clemente man this weekend, leading to a predicament finally solved by an expert. David Puterbaugh of 429 Via Arlena phoned police Sunday afternoon to ask for an expert's help in removing a set of cuffs from his leg. He said he had Jost the key. A watc h commander on duty arrived moments later and finally found the key to the manacles. Gal's Go l fing Gear Grabbed Thieves spoiled lb& goll 1ame of a San Clemente woman over the weekend. Mrs. Helen Hackett of 301 Via Montego told police someone stole her golf clubs and other accessories from her garage sometimt: last week. She reported the theft cf the golf items wortb $197 last Saturday. Transplanted Palm Trees Still Holding Their Q-wn The st.and of 40.year-0ld palni trees whose chances ()f survival stirred con. troversy Jn San Clemente earlier thi& year so far have lived t}lrougb a transplant along Camino de Estrella. Arlie Waterman, San Clemente Parks and Recreation superintendent, said it • waa still too soon to tell if the stately date palms would staY. alive-;·however. · The palms c~ated a delay earlier· this year in the award of a contract. for the major street widening project along the roadway in the Pallsadj!S area, wheri' Councilman Thomas O'Keefe sought a change In plans to stave oU 1 transplant. But county road department Officials and County SuperviSOl'I ruled against O'Keefe's request to ~e road dec!Jn, requirements. The trees, the eouncilman arCUfd, • might die from being moved 14 feet from their original place. The cost for moving the trees was borne by the city-$200 apiece. "They still are Jn their donnant st.age,'' Waterman said this week1 "so lt'1 too early to tell whether they will make it. They look fineJ though .'' Waterman said city malntcnance ~rew1 planned to tr:ltn the date palms la\er in the summer and begin a regu1ar maintenance schedule. The road widening is nearly complet.e- well enough in time for the scheduled opening ()f the new Gr'lnt's Plaza Shop- ping Center nearby. The shopplng comple1. the area's first major commercial development, I 1 ocheduled to open thf1 June. , ' GRAN&E ·COUNTY,• CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY ·3, 0(97 r . ' ' s o·r • ?··r \ .... • .. '; t ' t1.' ,.,·~:-1.·r \' .•• ' . OAl'V~·~·'f'' ·RAMBLING Rouo•s iir..:ttV '~IL~t'outtiNG c1Nl:o ce '.MAvo 'c1lea~t10N · . ' Tho Community Got-T•I-..,~,,.. ..... Vlo(•S<mdoy Htd LtrlO Tu•llO\lt ' Down the M •• . ISSIOn Trail Joaquin ·Schools Get Irvine Fund EAST ffiVJNE - A total of 1104,000 ·has been given .to the San Joaquin Elementary School District by the Irvine C.Ompany. The gifts are to be used for projects at Turtle Rock Elementary and Irvine in· termediate school. Turtle Rock will receive $15,000 for library and audio-visual equipment and $35,000 for landscaping and playground improvements. Tbe Irvin e intermediate school site, which has not yet been constructed wW receive $15,000 for library and audio visual equipment aod $39,000 f o r landscaping and p I a y gr 'o u n d im· provements. e Dog Slgnup Slated MISSION VIEJO -Registration i!J being taken for a dog <1bedience class which will begin on Monday, May 10. The session is ten weeks and will be held at the Montanoso Recreation Center from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Monday's. John Martin ·will instruct the class. Cost Is $20 per dog. e Home ow ner Eleeted SADDLEBACK VALLEY. '-Bart Spendlove, president <1f the Aegean Hills Homeowners Association, has b t e n elected president or the Saddleback ·Valley Coordinating Council. Other officers include Mike Franco, fir&t vice president; GleM Wineman, se- ctmd vice president ; Leon Pemberton, corresponding secretary, and Len Geesen, treasurer. • The council will meet Wednesday, May 19· 1t 7:30 p.m. ln Royal Savings and Loan. U.S. Force Trimmed SAIGON (Al'l -The U.S. Comma nd aald today t.h a t American military strength In Vietnam droPl'ed by 8,000 troops last week, the iecond largest weekly cut Chis year. nit weekf1 summary covering April 23-29 said there were 213,400 U.S. trOQPI in Vietnam on: April 2t compattd --wtth 281,400 the prtv!OUI Thund1y. ,.I.:. Cinco de Ma yo Fiesta Draws Throng . to Viejo By PAMELA HALLAN Of tM O•IPJ ~Ii.I ''•ff Saddleback Valley residenta aet a record at Sunday's colorful. Cinco de Mayo Fiesta in Mis!ilori Viejo. Thousands turned out airtid sunny skies for the annual event that features booths, food , a bicycle parade, square dancing exhibitions and a queen contest, More than 1.000 votes were cast for he Cinco de Mayo QUeen selected by anyone wishing to vote at a special booth. This year's winner was pretty T i n a Richardson, 15, a sophomore at Mission Viejo High School. Tina is the daughter of Mr. and Mr1. Joseph Richardson, 24062 Olivera St., Mission· Viejo. Other conte!tants w.ere Carol Baker, Cindy Gabriel, Kathy Smith and Tina Whitlock. t Not only was there a queen 's booth, but there also were booths featuring games of all types and typical carnival food, beverages and a special Mexican dlMer Proceeds from the booths will be used by each boQth sponsor -a civic group or a service orgaiiizalion in the "Saddleback Valley -to cootinue their work in the community. Booths also vied in a decorating con- test. Winner or the grand prize award was the Ramblin' Rcgues Squire Dance Club for their giant somtnro made from Dana Point CofC Seeking· Beauty The Dani Point Ch,amber cf Commtrtt I.! looking for a·c0mely-D'il11·to represent .them· in ... the-36lb -aMual Mils Southern caurornla contest. Contestants must be betwi!en 16 and 25, single, and legal resident. of soot.hem Callfomfa. -.. The contest will be held June 20 In Oceanside. The Dana P<1lnt represen· taUve will be alX'OmpanJed to and from 1lhe pageant by a partnt or adult female Cb3perope. Contestanla will ' be judged on beauty. personallcy, poise and c!l~- Anyone whll\g to be considered by the chambe< may call the chlmber 'office at 496-1~ or write Box 12, Dana Potnt. a pink parachute. Hortor1ble mention went to the Saddleback Valley Youn& Republicans and the Mission Viejo Associ ation of Artists and Craftsmen. , A highlight <1f the afternoon was the bicycle parade. Sweepstakes: winners in the combination category were Uaa, I, and Steve Schuyler, 5, whose bicyclea depicted a parrot chasing a bo! of crackers. I{fdividual sweepstakes was won by C.OITeen Devine, 10. wbo8e bike fonned the skirt of her Spanish gown. Other winners were Mark Keane, Michelle Keane. Jill Brady and Diana Kilpatrick, most colorful; Sean Devine, most colorful and youngest; Ward T!ner, best Mexican theme ; Richard Legrande, most original: Don and Brett Farrell, most effort put out, and Li&a and Stevt Schuyler. who a1so won for DlOllt humorous. The entire fiesta was sponsored· ~y the Parent-Teacher Organitaliion r' Miislon Viejo High Schoot Post Office Hit During Weekend , Orange County sheriff's •officers today continued their investigation of pie burglary during the weekend <1( a tem· porary post office in tbe Minkin Viejo area. Intruders broke open the;, door of the C(lnverted trailer at Porta. Real and Crown Valley Parkway and left the con- tents of lhe premises strtwn over .the floor before they turned' their attention to the safe, officers sa1a. Several attempts to force the metal sa!e. Pf<!V~ unsuccessful, . inv~gatora said. They said vefy. littla <1f vilueiwas taken ·in 1be Saturday night break ·in. . San . Cle1itente : Area Records First Fire ~n .Clemente's brush arid. grass fire season got off to an early 1tart with the first blaze of the year riporttd over lhe weekend. BonJi. ·canyon. one of U\e city's IT_. fl.rt trouble spots, w11. lhe one of a small blue lllrted by a youll( boy Satur- day afternoon. Flitmen quickly ex· tinguished the blaze whlcb erupted near lhe c,lty park in the canyon. _'\ ..... . _.. . . -. TEN CENTS Asks Hanoi . For .Switch In Sweden President Nilon•today issued a atate- men't from thl: Western • White House in 5an Clemente· urging North Vietnam to join the United siai.. In transferring all priloners of war to neutral iAtirment ill Sweden .. The President's obvious interest ln the internment idea was underscored by the fact that he was responding to a Stockholm dispatch that was sent around the world by only one news aa:ency, Agence France Presse. To date,'""Rinoi bas expressed no in· terest in the idea ' of interning war priJorlj:n on neWral .ground. White . House · Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler; however, read Pres.ide.nt NlXOfl'I responae during a ·press conference to- day. He uid the Pre&idenl. "noted wilb great satisfacUon that according to press reports, the eovernment of Sweden hal offered the use of its vessels and ill ter· rlt.ory to provide internment of prisoners <1( war from the corifllct tn Vietnam." The statement addeCI:, "Tue President would bope · that Hanoi will move promptly to negoU1te an agreement a. th.ia luue to ' like adVantage of this humantlaria.n offer· on the part of the Swed.lflh government." Ziegl!r Aid. there b¥ tietn no direct eovel'llJllenl-tooJ~errlment contact with ,,..,. 8' "19' tj\e f"'sld<•• -... .,. ting to ....... that $~ would accept pr!-. of war. _ • ~ uiltfed ~ i t 'tbe;Pirls n.gOtf .. tlont, I bl.a.. offered r\l!atral country in- .. -cil lick ,ud wow.ded priloners Md 1&oie: held' tar more U..n four years by Miilelde. Zlfil!!r llald, however, that tlt6 United States was prepared to neaouate an qreement covering: all priloJ\elJ on both sides l'Qiii.rdl.ess of physical condition or date of capture. 1be report from Swede.n indicated the Swedilh government would a cc e p t prisoners only if both Washington and Hanoi agreed on. a plan. "The burden noW falls vtty squarely en the sbbu1den of the North Vietnamese govennnent;" Ziegler said. 1'The U.S. government feels it is time .for the North Vietnamese government to be responsiv• in the maUer of prisonen of war." Asked ll the 1Jnited Sllltes could vouch for the accur•cY <1f the French report. Ziegler said, "I can't go beyond what I have 1aJd." Tavern .Patron In $350 Brawl A weekend customer in a San Cleinente- bar rang up more than il)e cO!t of hia drinks in a melee which left a bartender bruised and mlrrors shattered. The total·e~ of ~ rampage ran up to about ~·befqre the "customer" fled the busln.., at 1622 N. El Cimino Real. • J The bartender, who was not im- mediately identified, was not severely· 1 hurt In the l!Clitne. Police said they had a good description of the man who entered the business a.t 6:24. p.m. Sunday and began throwin& gla.ws and aab ~ays. Ceut. Weather Cooler temperatures and mogUy sunny skies are the mixed blegs.. ing for Tuesday's weather watch-- er&. High .readings wlll stretch from 63 localb' to 73 further in· llnd. . INSWE TODA:Y . . . '-'Ltarn now and paJI later qfttr uou1rc taming, lt'a by dt· ftrrtd tuition, a mw plan in fit14ncing cotlcge education. See BU1im1r, Pagr. 18. . . .. I ' .... II II ' I " , .. ,, .. " Mtvltt ,, ... tit.WI """ ... o, ..... C-1'1' t lrh'lt f'•rtw II '"'" 2141 ltMll Mtl'lltl !&.It Ttlt•lllM lr TIIM*' 17 WMlllW t ~ .. ,._ ,,.., WWII,.._ .. ' I • • f _DAILY PILOT M°""ll, Mii ,, 1171 Nixon Leaves Coast for Troubled Washington . . ~ . President Nixon left the Casa Pacifica In lln Cleqiente 1t noon ioo.y tG fly llOall lo a llO<lbled Waah1nt1on 1l1or 1 louNlay vhllt to the Wffl•m White Hou•. He is expected to arrive in the Capital aft.er dark, missing today's scheduled an- ti·Wlr demoMtratloru. In Palm Sprina:1 Sunday, the President taped a 1~minute radio address spelling out a UOO million program to help the na· • Laguna Man At·rested In Assault A 27-year-old Laguna Beach man wilh a prior police record was arrested Sun- day evening after be allegedly assaulted an art gallery owner using a stick with ,Rveral sharp nails protruding from it. PoliCe identified the suspeet as Stephen ,Richard Neederman, Tl. of-18$4 S. Coast Highway .and said he has a record of prior convictions of assault 'lb~ vlcUm of the alleaed attack. Yan· nice Y1Uourak1s, of 445 Bent .St., wu only slightly injured and did not require hospital treatment. Officers s a i d Yallourakjs suffered minor cuts on his Tight ~rm. Inve1t11ators said the Incident occurred at about ti p.m. Sunday when Yallourakls wu slttlng on the parch of hia art gallery tt 1848 S. Coast HJli:hway. · Poli<::e claim .that, for no apparent reason, Neederman a pp r o a c h e d Yallouralds with the stick and aald, "I'm a:oing to hit you, too." Needennan then allegedly AWi.in& the s~ck at the art gallery owner Snd tht nails raked the u~ per part of Yallouraltl.!1' arm. Neederman, police said, then fled back to his resldenct, located In a nearby motel , where he waa arrested by police. Yallouraltls said today he ha 1 1'1b5olutely no Idea " why the man ai· tocked him and lhal he did not know Needennan. Mission Viejo, Tustin Schools Both Accredited Mlaslon vlejo High SChool today recelv· ed • run ftve-yea.r accredtt.IUon fi'om the WeatlfD. AuoctaUoo of CG!le1u and Unlvtr&l.tleL '1\uUn lllJb School District Superin- tendent WOilam Zogg ••kl he had recelv· ed word today lhtt both Ml!sion VteJo and 1\lattn campuses bad been fully ac- credited. The dLltrlet'1 other two campu.!les will not begln formal accredilatJon pro- cedures, he 1ald, until they have graduated their fint, four-year clasa. Accredltatlon for Tustin and Mlaslon Viejo released today rurui through June, 1976 and resultl from a 1tudy team '• analysll of the 1choOl1' proiram1. For craduate.!I of the two hl&h tchools, accreditation eases the.Ir admiuion to colleae. It meana the crediUl the)I have earned in hqb achool are equivalent to those offered In other aceredlted schools. 3 Prisoners Escape SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Police said today they are pressing the search for thne men wh<> escaptd from county jail Saturday by overpowering a guard. The three climbed down a fire hose and knotted alrlp& of bedding from a fourth Ooor w1ndo". DIAHll COAIT DAllY PILOT Ol.ANG:1 COAST POIUSMlNG 'OM,.AN't '-•"•rt N. Wtt4 ,,. ....... ..,. ,_llW J•tk I . Cyol.., Vitt ""'ld"'r llftf G ...... I MINffl' n.0111•• 1(,,,11 ••m ... 1'110"'11 A. ~"''Ill~• MfMtir<S ···-Ch11lt1 H. toe1 kid11ril P. Nill ,..,1111n1 M-t1"9 l "WI l-•tll•• .... Offk• 21? hr11I Aw1ftul M•ilin9 1dd11t11 P.O. l o• 06,. •26Sl s.. c ....... Offlc• JOi tolortli (I C1"'i~• lt•1. •2672 Otkf Offk .. C.NI Moo: Ml) Wftl l l f Str•I ,......,.., 8MC!I! Ull 14 .......... I 11111 .. 1~ twill,._ lfikftl 11f)'J 19'Clt ...,,..._r4 tlon't f1rm1r1. lncludlnt: a plan to boolt farm nporta to 110 b11llon a yaar. • NoUna llial uporta •had IRCAlltd undtt li11 admlnlatrallon,, to -" an uUmaltd fl.I bllllco lbla yur, Nlion aaJ4 oftw wW bt lncreutd to ochlevt the $10 billion goal next year. He also pledged an increase in farm credits to boost farm operalin& Joans, which would make up $349 million of tbe total farm assistance pro11:am. o .. ought Crisis On "ricl.; lhe Pttaldenl will wtlcome ' aome eo fll'JI\ Judtr1 ln 1 11Sl!ut1 to Alrlculture" at lbt whlto H-.• 'nit l'itaJdllll't llffNI WU loped S.... dlY morlllnl dutlnl a ™'®I' v~lt to tht -11· talolt or Walltr Annlnbtrs, P:hiladelphii publisher and ambassador to Great Britain. Duri{lc the visit, Nixon played golf on the private links of the Anileaberg estate with his friends industrialist Robert H. A lone turUe huddles In his shell in the middle of a parched creek bed ·ln the Everglades. Fires have burned more than 401000 acres. the area continues lo be gripped by a drought which is considered the worsl In known history o! the Florida Everglades. 6,000 War Pickets Seized In Washington Protests W ASlllNGTON (UPI I -The antiwar movement'• march adverUstd effort tO paralyte the 1ovemment by hamstrlna· h1g Wa1hin1ton '1 mornina rush hour traf- fic was thwarted today by police and fed· era! troops. and more than e,ooo dem· onstrators were arreated. The · prot.esfers were dilipersed and driven into disorganized groups by volleys of tiear gas and man arrests which went on in view of thousandi of government employes commuµng to WGrk. The federal workers were hindered but not halted by hit..and-run tacliCs of the demonstrators on foor main bridges crossihg the Potomac from_ Vlr&inia and .at traffic bottleneck poinUl at several sites within the city itself. By noon, the 11.teets carried a normal load of traffic and in the downtown area the scene was that of a usual Washington lunch hrur. There were sUIJ a few nare- up1 of minor trdle in 1ome apot.t removed from the center of lhe city. The mass arrea11 clogged the District of Columbia'• jail facilities, and severely taxed the prGCes!lng procedure. The Justice Department aummOhed cor- rectional 1pecla1l1ta: from several pOlnta in tile east to help cope With lhe situation. More of the same type of di!ruptlve tactict had been threatened for Tueaday by the militan_!s and in spite. or the mass Fire Alarm Hits Unopened Center The new Grant'• Plaza shoppifli center acheduled to open In June In San Clemente had its first firt call over the weekend ..... an alarm caused by burning leaves in a ''enlilator grate. Orange C:Ounty sheriff's dep\jties called San Clemente and Doheny volunteers to report the sighting of smoke Saturday afternoon at the center al camino de · Estrella. Firemen quickly doused the smoulder- in& leavea. No dam•i• was reported. arrests of their followers , their loaders vowed this afternoon to go throuab with ijle plan. The protesters claimed mass traffic disruptions but government olficiab said traffic was virtually normal by tht usual rush hour. The police mGved in swiftly to drive off the demonstrators and to keep traff ic moving. By 9 a.m. EST. a high percen- tage of worken were at their d~ks u usual. About 4,000 combat-clad Army troops had a hand in actions at several key points -and a e<>nlingent of mari~s and 6,000 other soldiers were on hand in the city If needed -as demonstrators were dispersed in splintered, disorganit- ed grGups in cordoned of£ areas. Buck Outlives Counterparts WASHINGTON I AP I -The American dollar bill outlives Jt1 foreign counterparts, gel! around more and can lt1ke more punish· men!. That lnformatio11 was made public today by the }icuse Apprt). prlations Committee, which heard it from James A. Conlon. dlreclor of the Bureau Gi Engravina and Printing. The qualJty of paper currericy in the U.S. is vastly 11uper!or to that of any other country, Conlon sald In discussing his eg,ncy't budget. F'or example : It takes about 8,000 folds to wear out a U.S. dollar blll while Eur(). pean paP!f' money wears out 1llter &bout 2,000 Stufttngs lnto a blllfOld or pocket. The "life expectancy" of a U.S. paper dollar is estimated 111 18 months. Larger denomlnaUon11 lllst longer, probably because t h e y aren't .!lpent 1s often. New Capistrano Trustee To Be Sworn Into Office ' Robert Dahlbera. succeaaful candidate for elecUon to the Capistrano Unified School District Board of Trusteet, will be s"·orn in.-tJonlght's 8 e'clock meeting in ' Serra School. Capistrano Beach. Dahlberg, a former superintendent of school• in the Tustin High School Dlitrlcl, will be filling the seat vacated by Tom Wln!et who resigned from t\is . post. Dah ber1 wlli be rtpresentinil: art a four, the Dana Point region. Also on tht agtnda w\11 be a con- aideratlGn of allendance a"'a~ for tht 1971-'n achoo\ yNr. The administration is recommending atveral chance s. The bc>ard will be asked to conilder 1tndln1 U!th araders to Capl1tr1nt School In San Juan Cap\1ttano trom nearby San Juan Ele-mcntarf, Palisades School In Capistrano Beach had been sen· din& fifth aradeta to Capistrano School. which would end ii the new policy is adopted. P11!11ades School would keep Its fifth graders ·aDd will send two of Ill educa· Uonally handJcapped cla11ts to Vlejo Scllool. Las Palmas School will send its fl!th and sixth gradera to Concordia and fourth aradera to Ole Hanson. Very little room will be available at Las Palmaa when the pre-Field ac1 structures are torn down this summ<!r. . Viejo School will have all educaUonally handica pped classes becaus' It has the most,. facilities avallablt. Crown Valley School ID Laauna Niguel will rttaln ita - &11th a:raders tntead of atndJna them te Viejo •s they did this Y'•r. Abplanalp, banter "ll<bt" Rebozo and Raatltr't~J>llatt ,,_,,1 Hobart Ltwll. '!be prilldon\ atrlvod In Ctllfornlt 11 .... co Friday; 1olnc dlrtclly 1o camp Ptndleton to wtJcome the First Marine Dlvllton home from Vietnam. On Saturday afternoon he held a news confereftC!e on t.bl llwn or the We.stern White House 'during which be said the na- tion is in the midst or a itrong economtc upturn, but that any change in the op- timlstic trend would be handled Wjth ap. proprllto In acllon by Ille ad· mlnlllraUon. ~ Tn other action during the brlet vislt1 the President pn>cllimed this week as· Clean Water for America We~k. calling upon Americans to act quickly and e£. fectively to protect tbe natlon'1 waters from further deterioration. Tbere was a brlef flurry In Laguna ~ach LitUe League clrcles when a run1or apread that Nixon mleht appear aL Uie OptnlnC 1am1 on Saturday. ln1t11d, the Le1gue rectlved 1 teJegran1 of greetina from astronaut James Lovell, the Pr11ldent 'a advisor on youth. ))µring hls visit. Nixon was kept abreast of war 'protest developments in W1sblngton with continuing reports from stalf members . Defendants Out on Bail , World Trends Fraud Suspects Face May 13 Hearing All seven defendants indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on fraud chargea stemming from operatlon.s o! the now-defunct W.orld Financial Trenda in- vestment operaUon in Laguna Hilla have now po.!lted bail or art free on their own reeognlwlce. Former Newport Beach stockbroker Joseph Dulaney, who police allege was the ring leader in an tnvutment scheme that may have cost partlelpanll a total of '3 mffilon, hu oow posted the $50,000 bail that he rejected last week as .. Impossible for a man without a penny in hl.!I pocket." He is today workinc with dtfenae at· tomey Robert Law on preparation of his defense to chargea of grand theft, fora:ery and conaplrlcy. He and hu 111 codefen· danb are acheduled to face a pretrial hearing May 13 and a Superior Court trial une 14. Dulaney, 38, is reunited with his wife. Marlene, 32, after a separation tbal began while both eluded the long search mounted by local investigators and FBI agenl.s. The hunt for Mrs. Dulaney etided last month with her arrest in the British Colony of Bermuda.. Dulaney was ar· rested a few days earlier in !he Dutch Caribbean colony of Curacoa. Mrs Dulaney ia (ree Oil her O\VJ1 ree<>jltizance. The couple were retumed to Orange County after a l&-month absence that began in December, 1969 when they flew with their three children to West Gennany as complainta about the World F'inJ1-ncial Trends operation began to flo\Y ia t'o the District Attorney's Office. Codefendanls frff on $50,000 bond and scheduled to face trial on the same date are James Shipley, 38. of 16951 Lowell Circle. Huntington Beach, Daniel Hayes, 40. of 8211 Snowbird. Huntington Beach, and Wendell \Varren Austin, 38, of Riverside. Free on their own recognizance are RGbert G. Machan, 40. of San Bernardino and Fred Riley, 45, of Norfolk, Va. AU seven are alleged by police to be in- volved In the defrauding of Investors in a complex that was ruled by Dulaney from his "Taj Mahal" building in Laguna Hills and a less imposing office in Seal Beach. Cal Tech Fails to Record lt is el.!JO alleged that the group defrauded the St. Bernardine Hospital of San Bernardino of '500,000 and that a similar sum \Vas obtained u n de r circumstances that are still being" in- vestigated from the Chemical Bank or New York. Earthquake, in Coast Area 23 Children An earthquake felt by Orange Coa8t re1Jdenb from San Juan Capistrano to Long Buch, went unnoticed at Cil Tech today. The tremblor, estimated by USC aelsmologlsta to be about 2.5 on the Richter scal e. was lot recorded by Cal Tech, a spokeaman .!laid. However, Dr. Richter's laba reported calls from the San Gabriel Valley shortly after the 8:57 a.m. quake. Dr. Thoma• Henyey, a USC aeophysiclat, n!d the tremor was record- ed on USC'• Baldwin HllJJ seismic netWork. He e.!IUmated the small quake's epicenter to be 30 miles .!JOUth of that recording station or about two miles offshore of Lon& Beach, south rif the· Palos Verdes Peninsula In Long Beach Bay. Henyey not~ thert l! a posalblllty the quake would be rated larger when repcirt5 from other stations were file~. He said it would be unuaual for a quake of 2.5 on the Richter .!lcale to be felt more than IO miles from the epicenter. There were reports that the temblor shook hili!ide htunu in south Orange County this morning. Henyey said the Baldwin Hills station operated by USC is in an area that \lsually ge4 feeble recordinp of quake! Pill Overdose Cited In Death in Laguna The cau11e of death e( a Long Beach wGman whose body wu found Aprll 14 in an auto behind a Laguna Beach motel has been determined to be a massive overdose of barbiturates. A apokesman for the county coroner's office said Donna Clemen, 24. apparently took htr own life shortly after lhe left her Lona Beach home on M1rch 9. The blanket-covered body, badly decomposed after more than 1 month in an auto behind a motel at 696 S. Coast Highway, was discovered an the rear seat of the aute. SPECIAi$ JP EARLS Give Mother SQmethinc Beauutul for Mother's Day PEARL '9" RINGS 'tt" located on the Newport-Inglewood fault - the active fault that l.!1 believed to have caused this morning's shake. Henyey speculated that Cal Tech's Palomar recording station would have betn too far away from the epicenter to have detected this morning's tremor. The quake came on the heels of a nl&ht of "micrG earthquakes" that shook Southern California including one about 6:30 a.m. in the San Fernando Valley rated at abGul 3.0 on the Richter scale. 2 New Planners Seated Tonight In Laguna Beach Two newly appointed La1una Btach planning cOmntl&sionera will take thell" seats at the commls11ion'1 regular meeting tonight at 7:30 In city hall coun-. cil chambers. • John E. McDowell, business manage- ment consultant, and Michael May, manager of Warren lnterlGNJ will join Carl Johnson, James Schmitz and chairman William Lambourne on the reorganized commission, filling seats vacated by the resignations Of Jack E1chbach and Robert Haatlng1. A public hearing on an amendment to the zoning ordinance that WGuld lransfer responsibility for hearing variance re- quests from the PlaMing Commission to the Board of Zoning Adjustment beads the brief agenda. Also up for COtUlderalion is review of the site plan for the Phillips Buick automobile storage !Gt at 113 Canyon .Acres Drive The facility was the target of a neiahborhood conlroveray and a city atop work order recently when it was paved without required permits. sa DOM llACm l'OI DIAMONDS. llMIMlll.A DIAMOND II A GOOD To Attend Parents' Vows ONAGA, Kan. (UPI) -Jan Ebert, 18 nionths old. will be the flower girl tonight •I her mother's wedding. Tim Hund, 6- f ee~ll, will be the usher when his father weds Patricia Ebert. ln fact all 23 children of Mrs. Ebert and David Hund will take some part In the ceremony. After the wedding. the 20 youngest children of the couple will live with them on Hund'a dairy fa rm at nearby Pazlt:o. Mrs. Ebert, a widow, has 12 children and Hund. a widower, has 11. Everyone in the small town is aware flf the wedding, possibly the biggest in its history. Only 200• will attend the ceremony because the church only has seating capqcity for that number. But mGst residehts wlll be at the reception afterward. "It was harµ to try to select so few, but we just had to because there wa511't room for everybody," Mrs. Ebert saJd. "'The reception, in the church basement, wllt be open to the public." Rev. Thomas Kearns o! Paxico, Hund'a pastor, was the Cupid in the romance, In· troducing the couple several months ago. "It's a wonderful thing," Kearn1 said. "Now David can be a father to all the children and Pat a mother to all instead of each carrying a dual role. Mrs. Eberl was busy Sunday. "The girls have beauty appointment! and there are things to be picked up at the cleaners;· she sald, Her youngest son. Gregg, i! iuffertng from tonsil\lls. ''I think he'! going to be okay, but when one gets something , It can spread through the: whole family," she said. The honeymoon appeared to be the least of her problems. "We plan a honeymoon but It won't be longer than a week," abe .!laid. "J haven't asked where we wtll go. That's up to the groom." ONLY IP YOU IUY IT ll•KT • .,~ -·--Merell .... DOM llACm MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK Purl NacHec" • C.moo Pins • CocHan Rin91 • Diamond Ri"91 end Many Baautilul Jewelry Items SAYE UP TO 500/o HERE El. DIAMOND GUARANTEE When you bvy • dl•mond from us .. wlll gu•r•n'" that·diamond to appraise •f 40•~ MORE than you peid for It or your money i..clc. C•n you do •• well olttwhor<? COMPARE. 1002 n'EMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN LOAN, IUY, mt.. TllADI COMI JN AND llOWSI AIOUND 1831 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWlfrowN COiTA M~ -hlw-llllllor l _, • ( I 'I ' I . ' IALIOa~~~~ =""-'~"-·-M~"-'~·-1_9_7 t~~~~~~~~~DMc:.::.LV'-'-Pl~l~DT'-'..J~7!... Dos Passos' 'USA' Monumental TV Show 7'fl.lah ~;,-404· ~ao . ..._ .... , ..... By RICI(, Dll BROW this year followed up wl°' ly ezuberant and plea.sure-fi ll-adaptation was by Dos Pa!sos nothtng but the routtne P3P to Farenlino (recently 1een asl.'---,=,_,.=,_;::;; HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) "Poet Game," 1'Mont.serrat, '' ed dramatic revue that traces and Paul Sbyre. And the dlrec· test them. For example, the the pruldtnUal press aide in :-::::_ "=.;,. ~ ~:::;: Noll-COmmerclal v Ide o' 5 "Big FUh, lJtUe Fish," a the life style of Americans, !or was George Schaefer, boyish singer John Davidson la N BC• a "Vanished''). A·n d "Hollywood Te I e v J s Ion rerun of "The Andersonville great and small, in the first longtime creaUve force behind one of tbe llalf doien members Michele Lee, who Is married Sophi• Loren Theater" closes out iU: first Trial" -and now "USA." The three decades of the century, NBC's ''Hallmark Hall of of the cast, which assumes to Farenlino in real lite. And Marc•lla ~1trolannl full sea90n Tuesday night with intention of quality and honest using sketches, m u s i c , Fame." AB. usual, lhe ex-numerous parts. And he is Peter &nerz. All o( them give IN a t~·o.and·a·half·hour adap-creative tlfort bus b e e n doc umentary photos, hi!tor ical ecutive producer for the :splendld. among Olber roles, performances they will long ''THE PRIESfS tation of the late John dos achieved with alriklng con-happenlngs and fictionalized ''Hollywood Te I ev is 1 on u the central running fictional treasure. 1llE WIFE" Passos' monumental literary sistency. typical tales. Theater" was Lewis Freed-character -a fellow who And then thue ls 'the re-~ trilogy, "USA.'' The most ad m I r ab f e Thls kind of production _ man, the chief figure la put· 1 wanted to be a songwriter, but mal!ting member or th , • -AUO- And, for the .. Hollywood hallmark of the !I er I e s , this sort of mixed-media ting this series together. follows the American dream t.roupe. Miss Joa,n Ha ckett. If ·~::t s~:t:~;'i= Televison Theater," those pro-however, has been that, rather vaudeville _ can be positively And then there is the cast ._ as a big public relations man. one w1911:o save the best for IN ductions are-seen on the coast-than being one of those disastrous ln the wrong hands. and what a cast it' Is. First of Edward G. Roginson rends last, f.1iss Hackett would wind 2B •Ol.CJ 'JOi!.fll.!ASJC ''KELLY'S HEROES" to-coast public broadcast earnest, stuffy non.com But "USA" is very much the all, it is surprising, because the prologue and it is a small ui:i every critical review she is service network , it is a filling mercial entries, it has sparked product of the night hands, some Of the performers are job nicely dole. Then there are~~· m~e~n~U~on~e~d~i~n·:~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ finale for a season of success with showmanship that which ts why there Is not only people y'ou have seen often on the other main performers rare in any vid eo year. For delivers to audiences the sheer sµmulation but also great commercial television _ but along with Davidson : Shirley lllter making its debut in 1970 enjoyment of theatergo-delight and fun in the pro-whose talents never seemed "Knight, excellent In her range with ''The Andersonville Ing. And that is particularly ceed.ings. For example, the this good because there was 'of parts too. And James Trial,'' which gained na· the case of Tuesday nlght's·1;==;:;;,;=-~..;;:;;;;~~;;;;:~~~;;~:;;:::;:;:~~~;;;;\-;;;;;-;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;:-;-;;;;;; ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·'r"l~~;;··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-11 ~· w~···~~ I tion wide acclnim, the series "USA," which ls an eoormou.. NMIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ~~~ "WOMEN IN LOVE" COLOR Academy Award • .... Monday Evening MAY 3 1:00 8 Bia N1ws Jerry Dunphy. CJ) ABC News Rusoner, Smith. • 0 KHBC Newaervlte Torn Snycltr. O Tht 'Allen Sf'low 0 GIDGET GROWS UP! * Karen Valentine-Color! 0 Sir O'Clodl Movie: (C) (90) "'Gldttt Grows Up" (comtd)') '68- K1rtn V1ltntln1. Edw1~ Mu1h1re, Paul P1te1un, Bob Cummlnp, Pttrl l)'llcle. Fr1nc:es l1w rtne1, 1li1s Gld· Jtt, comes b1ck from two yt11s of coU11e In Europr, end her f1th11 11rees to ltl lier livt Iii Ntw Yort i nd try hef luck with the United Nations. 0 Diet Van Dyke m n. Flinhtanu aJ Star T1U £Il) Aft Studlo/CIM11i111 h4 Em fl11Mr fa11lly Mdclin1 reelO'tloll. tnd thtn he ,.. !urns unlX,pld.tdty. ONT>D o rn m1111c ... m Dlwld Frllf Slltw kltllo!U Quinn Is ltlnl1llt's only 1uest m°"""' Em httm for lhl111 El) Mlptlltt Y1i.z Sllt!f t:OO 0 M•yblrTJ I.I .D. (R) Goober lllO¥U Into • mtn&lon, complttt with Hmou&lrit. Alt11ou1h ht la on!) • hou.suitter lookln1 •l'ttr tht prop· trly, it 101S to his held. D ®I m """ ,,,_ """' (C) 12111) "TH -...nan-(R) '6~ -Jose Ferrer. L1sll1 Nlt!Mn, Ricardi: Mo11talb1n. The ltOf)' of the OPll'I· lion of Deep lib, 1 nudyr.powtfed, Mlf·ct1rrt1intd scientific ullit loclttd 500 fttl undtrw1ter on lllt contl· nent1I shelf. 0 ! IPIC!;\C!De W-1111• H4 HI Cl!••"" Oocumtnl1ry llldlllahtin1 tti1 UQ.J Bruins 1970·71 ba*ltblll t11uon. ACAOEMY AWARO SHOW Winner 8 Academy of Awards INCLUDING BEST PICTURE~BEST ACTOR GEORGE C. SCOTT PATJ'ON ALSO -IUT SCRltNrLA Y WM111d•y1 -PATTOll • 7:11 MAIH • 111• •SOOTH COAST PlAZA hchnl•e E!MJotelMllt 1'Making lt11 ~· ., John & Marv'' Wltl:S·H ~IVnliY P.r111-J:IH:U .. m. M.1._.:~H:U p.m. ..... PtlfOll-2: IJ..l:Jt """ M1-l1:JM:lf.lt:U "" PARQ«; Acedemy Aw11r4 Wh1- "Tora. Tora. Tora" .............. G) Notldtro 34 m o.1tt1 v.d., D•)'t; 0 (IJ(i) al AIC -_, (C) (Zllr) ....... Nlpt, 11 Jtridtt" (R) (wnt•m) '67 -Dun M1rtl11, I __ ..:.:;;;;;;!!~~: ___ :::::2~:;::=:::. Gtor1• PtPP•rd, Jun Simmona. u. la lawman turned town boss 1Tllttl his tou1hut opponent In • woman own· If of • lllCKOKh lln1 who tofttl him Into • stiowdoWn. a;) L1 Hori famllfar un Con1111lo a) Nnrs Jim Hawthotnt, l :!O (J)Nm em Huddy. 00 T1utll If Consequencn (j) CIS N~"* Walter Cronkllt. 0 C.ndld Camera @I NllC Nm D1Yid Brinkley. m Tll1 f1Jln1 Nun fID Hod1tp0dp lodft (IDS.lected fll111t/Muliul1 m The Dtltrt RIPO't l!D TBA ffiNnrs J;t'O 0 CBS Nm Willer Cronkitt. 0 EI;) NBC News Drtld Brin~lty, John Cll1r.c1!!or, frank McGtt. (]) T1 Ttll tht Trvtll O Whit's Mr lint? ~ Dick Yin Dyt1 m I Low Lucy m (j) Dr1111tt ED The World Wt live h1 "Ant1rtl· c1: Because It's Tlle1e.~ £1!) airts1 tilt Uvln1 Word ml An1elltos Ne1ros ([)Al l.ut m'"""""' G1 ! lflCIALI Hwfrw '11, tilt Prtlidtlt. tilt Pma 1nd Ill hbllc Wllilt Ko1111 dirtdor of communlca· lions, H•rb Klein, di1CuP11 tht pub- lic mood tin Ylttnam with MW1IOOCl tdltors fro11 ciU• ICIO&t !ht ... tion. t :30 O Cl) Doris DIJ (II) Doris 11 called on to model • new 11111 tor • frtnth c.outourier (Jollnny Harmer), but Myrna bltomes 1n unwlttln1 1c. comptic1 In 1 plot to arbotlp hl1 bid for lalhion wprtmKY. m Qtllt for Adwnturt El) Mlllictlt/,...1 hit m Lt Cm di M1rftl Cma: 10:00 1J Cl) C.rol lurllllt (R) Ed)1t Gorm1 •nd Join Rlwri iuest it" ' Im) SJmpltmtnlt M1r11 Cl) Movie li1111t 7:30 f) (I) Gun11110-1 (RI Mtlt Diiion i nd Doc ~rt troubl ed by 1 mid· dle~m• worn1n (Jo1nne linviUe) arn:I the thre1t ol Mi1clitrJ wh1n tlley escort a recaptund convltl (Todd Afmstronr) b•tk to Doc111. O Cb1nlltl 5 Nns !(win Slndan. I~;;;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ 0 lutH Wtrd "IWI I m ""' Putn1m/fllhm.1n, (!J M1ntr.P M Himel hosts. IOln.~ 0 ®J €0 ,ro111 I Blrd's-Ef' YllW . "Httt-ln." M1u!e 1nd Mlllit qutrrtl Gil) Hit dtrl .. ..._ Mr t b0Jfrl1nd, and lhe 1rru11H1nl Involves Ille pl1n1's p1u1n1111. 10:)1) 0 MIN: (lir 4511) "lf70IMI lilorJ" (d111111) •q -Al1n lldd, O Yirclal1 lir1h1111 Skow Guests: Donnt Rt1d. Wiii Point C.d•t lt•lldi Army Archerd, J1n1 Russell, Ceur 1 · 1 for his put Jn Wo11d W11 JI Romero, Mervyn Leroy 111d Mu1rlce "' 1,,,. J1rre. c1mP1 •"· CI! Movlt: (C) (90) "Tiit L.ldJ IUQ· t11," Alec Gu inness, Palu Stl!ell. OJ 8111 h hrt1 KfWI 0 (J) fID lll'1 Mak1 I t>t1I Monty 11:00 0 (I) el Ntw1 Hall hosll. O Mil!lon $ Movie: (C) (211r) "Auntie Mam1" (comedy) '58 - Ros11lnd Ruutll, fo111st Tueller, Roser Smi!h. m Truth or Conseq11encn t!J It T.1ku t Till1t ED Cltyw1tchtr1 Art Seldenb1um, Charles Cllamphn. fl!) Clntm1 JO 1IJ Do·Ri·MI 7:55 m Cllutiot1 d1 S.runclo1 o ~m• ... Cl) Det1' YalllJ 0.,. o mai•- oai•- 0 Mov!1: "Wtr H11nt" (dr1t1111) '62 -.lohn Saxon, Robert l!:ldford. m ~•: (t) "Wild North" (td· venturt) '52 -Sttw1rt G111n1tr. . Q) But lllll Clod: GD Cltytntdws (R) Art Stid•~ b1um, Ch.1rtas Ch1mp!ln. l:OO O ~€DL•111ll·l11 (R) Orion ll:JOIJ (J)Mtn' Sirff'fi• Wtllu l lJHIS. D 0 m .hlmny en.. o rn m N••!Jwff ,, .. , o rn Cil m EMd: CMCt Show 1 m Tt T1H tl!1 T1vtll ED World f'Teu IIl) Miii ol VlilHI €Ji) Yt11nl1 1:05 tm) Aqul Trn '•tlne1 l :JO 0 (jJ H1r1'1 Luer CR) Durlf\I H1rry's .1bunce, Locy dnnatti t111, l!ouH, without hi• Ptrm!ukln, IOf 1 Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES t :OO 0 "TM M11t11'1 011 Ht!M'" lro· m1nt1) '36-4ienry fand1, M1r11r11 $ulllv1n. "M11 Abovt '""'" (com, tdy) '39-Jitk BtnnJ. m "Abbott tnd Coll1lle Mttt tllt M11mlllf' (comedy) '5~ud Abbott, ~OU CoM~llO, Mari• WllldJOt. J:lOO !CJ "Th1Rtoll11 Huv11" Con. auslan c1aventure) ·sa -Onon Well•'· Jullett1 Greto. will orialn•lt Imm London. m Mftll: '"Tll1 M111 I Mlnltl" (dr1m1) '40 -Jotn hnnttt, IJoyd NCflan. 12:1s u 0n. steJ '"°"d 1:001J Movtt : (C) "Womt11 11 1111 rr. lllitorlc 1'11rtll" (tcl·lf) '65-Mtrf)' Anderi. W1nd1ll Corey. CD DOCIJO Ntw• D (C) ..,... Wldf ... S11l11 11 thl Ar.,,-(c.om1dy) '61 -Jtd l.1111- mon. Ric:ky NtllOll. 10:00 (J) "lil'Ut ..... Uprilht' ('HSI:· em) 'Sl -.ltff Cllllldltr, F•IUI Domtr1ue. • 1:00 m ...... " ....... (drlrnt) '$Q -Jo•n Font1l11e. R•rt Ry111. %:00 G (C) "'f'lttPtnlfltf" (corntdy) '6' --01\'ld Ntvtn, Ptlt1 Stll1fl. 1:00 Cl) .,,t1111rl111 Ct111Mlfld'" (drtm1) '51-WIUiam Hold1n. Ntncy OltOll. 4:JO IO (C) "'Tiie A11t rlt1nt'" (•ltYtn· tu11) ·s~1t11n Ford, Ut1ul1 Thlua. f]) Stme u IOAM MO'lll. • EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ·-· ---··· THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE! 'DISNEY'S GREAT PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASON 'S HIT REVIVAL!" N••••"' "AN INCREDIBl Y REVOLUTIONARY FILM ••. THE MINO CAI\ RUN RIOT!" Tht NYU '""' "FAR AHEAD OF ITS TIME ... BEST AUOID-VISUAl EXPERIENCE IN !OWNI" Wilnam Wolf, Cuo ''B~ST FAMILY F 1LM!'' Jo•ephCelmis, Ne'll'ld1y "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN Sl~HT, SOUND AND COLOR .,. MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" Bob S.1lm1a11, Group W N1two11C STARTS WEDNESDAY MAYS STARTS WED, MAYS WINNER BEST ® ACTRESS GlendQ Jackson 2ND TOP ACADEMY AW ARD SHOW 20th""""'.'"',,...,.., JAMES EARL· JONES "!Iii e JANE ALEXANDER , ... l!IB "The Great ~ · eoior White Hope" WALT DISNEY'S * THE aSla ULTOMATE EXPERIEHC( TllCllNIOJtDR" h e-,, .. _. 11Jl'l"l'ON GEORGE C. SCOTI' o .... a.-... c.. .... $.1'- l!m KARL KALIJlllf M NA TED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS JNCLVDINc; BEST PICTURE IN MAll:IOfl SHO""NQ CEKT'tlt (71\'1• ........ f Y-~.~!~ .. ,, ..4s:j COltONA Oii. MAit Exclusive Showing :7he BESTRmerican Rim of the "tfJar!' -Rf"X RECD,~1·-f -ICHIO'COHNO#l.lr I -8fl>NAAO Dl!fW NY D"l)IN-•5)'-·ol• w .. St Jo:lul....i c:;........1N-1S.. .. c• Meel Henry & Henrietta... the laugh riot of the yeaL BARBR~ STREISAND & & JACK NICHOi.SON IN "A neC1J Leaf" IGJ CoOO' by MOVIELAB "Il"+ A PalarllOU\l Picture St1rrl.. -Jott Walter Matthou -Eloine Moy Weston "On A Clear Day ;:~ ... , I ,, ..,,_ 1 .i l ~~. "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" CRC GIC 't'OIJNG CLOltlS l[AOIMAN COLOR ~°' ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST "FDR Ill IE nor SONG 11 The Spy Who Came Out Oflhe Kitchen. 1 WEEI llMllED ENGIGEMEJT ·"VS • '"lOYllS A• tTlttl Sfl.UIMG9 Ah ;;,· -A FREOC:fllD( BRISSON PnOOVCTION oc;i ~ cOtoR b'fDolUll:e"' UrrhlllArllm I -ALSO PU.YINO- PIM ye11 to tfie ff9e ef your Mllhl "SUOOEN TERROR" . richard benjamin ,_-"-'carrie snodgress Ali Mac&raw \M ~~~~an~~Mw \~~~ M1rl11 Thorri.11 -Al.1" Alcl.1 -''JINNY" Jl"'=oxr:uuauDUD:r:mn......,......,=ca:iEXCLU S IVE ENGAGEMENT lllll:q; The picture N~ 130 minutes! ... The story t:Ol>'en ge; OI the mos1 c.trrlca/ houtS 1'! nun's Jr9$/ory! ... The--'#1llul rhrovgh YOU' lil6'itN! h1Offlc.eo,_.11t 7:11 P.M. ''AND•OMIDA STU.IN" 11t I ..d 10:Jj) '""'"LINCOLN DRIVE -IN ON 11NrOlN AVE 3 M INUT E~ WEST Of BEACH BIVO 1Ad1o'"'"q •h<> 8UfNA PARK OIUl/l lN1 C.H!l0R£N UNOIR 11 FRff' PHONE 714 •Sl7 l,2J •••••••••••••••• SHOWING NOW!! ''FASCINATING! ... THE PUREST SCIENCE FICTION THRILLER TO COME TO THE SCREEN IN YEARS!· -JV(l/I~ Ct Isl, NBC t v, N~'fll l"c.-~ "'·~·· , ROBERT~ PtlOO\JCT~ =ANDROJ.EDA SlRAIN WUR Hli · ll4Vll a-: .-S lllSON · KAJE REil -......... ~.. , ___ .,. °""""' .. BORIS LMN ·NELSON GIDOING · MICHAEL CRICHTON · ROBERT WISE 1--=----1 ~ l(~=i:.:. ,, "AHDIOMUM S'IUl!r'V..W,, o.iy .t.r 1.IO I. 10.m .,._,,Sol. s..i. 1100. ,,. * 7,:11). 1o.oa OftANOl °""'a.. ..... ...... , ... ~­... ..._ I • J 8 DAILY PILOT S MondtJ, May J, 11171 Yo11r ~louey's lfortfa Colleges Try Plan . ' ' Of Def erred Tuition \ By SVL VIA PORTER \Yhen my brother was going to medical school in the depression years of the 1930s, there was -0n\y one v.•ay he ('(IUJd finance it; through high. interest education loans CG- signed by the n1ost finanicatly respectable friends we had. and renewed . . renewed and rene\red . renev.•ed . rnany years later. \.\'hen he had graduated from med school, returned from World \Var iI .and \\'as earning money as a physician. he v.·as able to repay the debt out of his current incon1e. IT WAS A c l um sy. monstrously expensive Y:ay to meet the costs of his educa- tion, but it was the best we could do. .. John got his education. became a physician an d surgeon : his loans, although stretched out over a long period, \\'ere finally a n d honorably repaid. Both goals were a·chieved and that's all an.v of us cared about . Now, in the 1970s. the newest idea for financing a college or graduate school education l& sweep the conu education to sweep the coun- try is a revolutionarily refined version of John 's makeshifl plan. The idea has various names: "The Yale Plan," "Deferred Tuition," "Pay as You Earn," or "Pl!,YE." 8 U T FUNOAMENTLLY, the student does in Lhe 1970s \vhut John did in the 1930s: postpones paying for at least part of his tuition until he graduates. is earning money and can manage ii out of his No Con1pe titio11 ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UP I) -Eastman Kodak Co. said there is no prospect within a year at least that it will engage in direct competition with Polaroid in the instant camera film field . HAWAII TWO ACRlS $4,900 Trff.-Orchld1-Fern1 l Parcels by Owner Terms Available 12111 432-884' LocAl ... ANd you'll loVE: i1l You ;ire ;icting in your own and your community's bc~t intcre~ts when y6u SdVC4'1j borrow al your LOCALLY OWNED -lOCAlLY lOANlD LAGUNA rmrnAL BtST TIMt TO SAVE AT LFS-whcre10C!ft of the savings f1om our Orange County account holders is plowed ba ck for the hcnef1t of our Or;ingc County friends :ind neighbors. At lJguna fcdcr;il you c.1rn a t11gh r:,0/o on passbook accounts, \vilh ! !.<lie r rat~ sfiU available on special gu.ir· .1r1lecd income i..lVing crrtificatcs. BtST TIME TO BORRO\V AT trS-\vhcrc Orange Coun1y home owncl'5 arc given f1r~I con~ideralion. Now is the best time in more than two years to con~ull our loan counselors .ibout the new, lov,.. intere\I r at~ on home loan fin ancing to hel1> you buy, build or refina nce your home, AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Ormge Count. 3 ,Moni1ch Boty Plui t .1sun01 Nlgu1..~ 49'J-1&40. 496-1201 ·est, first and Slrongest independent Ftderal ::''iO OccJn 1'V('nue t-01 !\C1dh tl C..mino 1!.e.I 111 Bc~ch, C.1!11ornia ~"" CINT'leote <494-7541 492-1 l')J By Carl C~rstensen 0111, Plto! Auto"''""' Editor Roy Carver. Harbor area auto man for nearly 20 years and until now the exclusive Roll s Hoyce dealer for bolh Orange and San Diego coun- ties. has accepted a franchi.~(' for the Popular Bi\-1\\' Gcrm<1n lmporl. Carver, wtio h;1s been a Rolls Royce de<ilcr for !hr past ll years continually rank s at the top of the hst in sales for the cxpcnsiv(' British in1port. HI S LATEST move con- tinues to dramatize \ hr strength and vi1ality of lhe higher priced car n1arkl'I. particularly the in1porls, and the need for lup-notch scrvrcl' The !1av<.1ri<.1n ,\lotor \\'ork~. ~Hhough the s m ;1 I ! ('~I autnn1obilc n1anufa tl'u rcr in Gcnnany. bu ilds autoinobilc~ that arr considered cxen1pl:iry in l<'chnology :ind funtlinn . They 're not mass produced. bu! 1;11lor-m:idr ;ind tuned 10 the driver. ri·lost popul 11r of lhe U~l\\1's in1pClrted lo lhis ruun1ry are !he 2002 Sports sedan. the rx- pcnsive 2800 CS coupe and the • • • ne\\' Bl\'IW Bavaria sedan. The Bavaria fulfills t\\'O different demands as sporty drivers will find it a comfortable touring car and comfort conscious drivers will be fascinated with true sporty performance. "B:\1\V PltODUCTS have set a standard far beyond their native borders." Carver said, and "the BNJ\V se11I is tnore th<1n jus! a mark of qrigin. 11 ml':ins quality and an obliga- \Jl{_TI " Carver added that he is '·d'ellghtcd to be associated v.•ith B/\I\\' as lhe dealer for al! Southern Orange County." NEW FRANCHISE -Roy .arvcr. long-time fl3rbor area 3utb man has becornc ne\\' B~l\V dl'nlf'r for Orange \oasl. lie !;tnnll !> beside B'.\l \V 2800 CS coupe. Popular Gcrn1an 'in1port is ne\v addition to Rolls Royce line c;i rr1ed by Carver. Coinplete-N~lV York Stoel{ List • ..• .... (lldl-) Hllfl L•W Clfft CllL l!<o 1Sl'I l-·~ ~-. '" -.. '"ii '''• 10'• ., -'• 11'• .•. l!'• 111, 'T 31 -I 11Gl. 1141,, + ,, • .!Jt. S• 60 •P o ~ l'o 411'• fll.-'1 •6 •1 ~ '• C !o 4J\~ -•• t J IJ'• _, •• ;~·· :16•• -1 '• S}'o if' -•1 16\t • -" ft,-\ 11',--::.:: " ll ... ir·: 55'· -, .. ,,., t1:Z ~ 'rf ,. ~ ~ ~~ _::: ll'o !I•, -'• !S'l J.S•, ' ' "'••1»-'t "'• jl'o " )1•1 •to ! •, '''• ~ . '''• 1; + ,\ •• it '• 60'. _,.' 11'• " '· IT', U" -, • ~Olld"~" J,,_ :.;19:.;n:.._ ___ sc DAILY l'ILOT JI) Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ) ' • .... .."" .............................................. ... UllW -..... °"' ~ .... .., n• ,... MJ .......... C.. Qf. H VDOW /"'-'! AVl•A•ll _ .._, "lfll .._ 0.. (:¥. T~ Wk!A llllno 0.W-J-1 , • ., .... ! lt !"""' ,M , If:. Ill: llZt -• o Q .... ,_,, t "" " ~.U."'~ ~ ; + • .. =.a ~ $5 i: ·, .. ·.r.-,~;s~w fft~n m~ ~1~~=·1·:ham.~ : 1 : ~~~ • • T., Mk Jlt. J1iN M" J11:U-.H,.,~"". .. 'k -'-- -_ .. ~ -·-~ltnl II llOCb II 111 ·-·~: WI H 'It q • 1-· ........................ ~···ii'·~·.. ~·· -· F D ' L Till ''1 ·.., -·~~-~-Vt 'ti: ........ .. ..... m WI Mu,, l't \'I ~1: rom ay s 'OWS i:lt1.~r·, 1tt .3 r~ ~~~~~'l•t ' .... :: .......... :: ...... i,ooi:r s:~ rile. ' \' '4 1 ;r, __ ,.. T-••. IO 11 '"' ,ll","' -v. Wl l'?l.CO H f'" • r.-+ ~.-14 T~Y C«fl .. 11"-\lo -t'o S.1'11 101 Wt•"< 1fi. ! " -"' T•~· •• 11 )4;\ 14\1 >illi ..... '""'"' ...... u. c.... C111.h~''C'" \·"' ..... I:. u. -w = " NEW YORK (UPI) Prolil ···1n \ th Ttc~tr ..,, 11 ' ,,.,, Jk -.. • 1 .. 1•1.tm ' •• ,, n ~ im --_ ~ -wa I sen e ~:,,..c.: c •• !l !;v. !l~ N~ ='~ v .. ,, .. u.• 11l0 '11'1 ,, 12 _ .,.,i;:.."'Zr'' ,1. :u '"' .. _ _: ~ + ,... ltock ~&rket into a tailspin Monday but, IS trad-1.......... Qr m ll"" 11 11 ... -"" Ull Ill .i ' 1211 11 lS u W1'11 SI . .Na •• :n u-fl L '1'11.0 1>1J.J. ) Ut lU 19" ~ U1111 t>IJ..11 111 )I )I )1 -"l""•aPIWI' 1.)1. ll l 0' _ ,, •_··~ in• neared the final •on~, mar.et averages bad re--T•••• 'r .u ""' :IO'lll "" 1w.*'¥,"'M • .... • • , -y~11c.11 I " 't! c~ !t\l !Ill -" H '1! \" ~ •" --~ • ~ covered from the day's OWS. Turnover WIS fairly T=o 1'.\~ ~ ~ Jr' !!... :!:. )l ~·f P! .it 2r jt tr° ID; -\\ :z:: t111· -~ -+ • b TMMC wtli 171 10\M!> • ~--.. u:i:ac:l'~lltl 1J1 M $.11.li UV. -~ W'1111 PIAl.U •'• 'im 1 V. !~ ... :,:: :.:''4 e1vv. T-••s~ u11t~ i._1 ~-~~"'"• ... ~ti\\ ...., ,,,.._..,..,.,~~ '" ~ -.,. 1'This Is a con-Uon that has been looked for, "'~ 1·11 ""' 11' ,..., -tt 111°""" 11 29"' .-.. " -11o ~· ,.• "' 1-~ ~'° Tt• TM l.Jt JtU' 41 4"" ~ ... " lllrtr•\ " • rn "" ~lil '4 ,.I!., xll tf ~ -~ but It ii likely to be short.lived," Fred Allscbell • ..,,. llT l.)2 ,, Jm ff ·····~1ror• .t . •1r· -~•!!£+' :Z'i;1.••,..:. ~~ n~ '"' 0 1"' ii;; d ~:~ •• ~ i': ~ lJt: t?' .!. ~ ~1f'rr ,:: ai 1," • ::,;: w:K 1.ril .u I "' + vt analyst for Sbeanon, Ha.mmlll & Co .. 5ai • t11,_~,...1 .. 1~ Ujl'i 11 ""n ~ + \lo ,,.,,.. ·• 15, ,. , 1 _ ""~J~ ':i f,. ,1.: ..,, , t; ~ ~ ~ _tf ... Anschell altribUtf:d the Setback lO internal Tl:¥~~!? 1 ~' = a~:~~:,~ :a:J: m a~ a. .• {I._ +1111 W~==r 1~ ~ n-U~ 't :..;·(i '"'f i" m··•et facto-rath•• than ••y s~ciflc news Item •• u111 1 u ... i.r. -~ u111ic• .2~ .. •h .., ,._ i'.ii ,. .,. SJ\; ,,0 ~ \l .... ~.. -~ ,.... . ·-'''" I Jl"i ,,.., + h UllJI F111 Col ., 10\(o 10\lo la""-,,.,:=.:~ l·'O , 1' Hlo 11 +,. 11After &D tllended rise, YOU don't need an eXCUS8 1•Klf ...... a ff .... 37\l !l -Y, UNI GI' .Ml 1 l'" ]1 j -"W I P , 10 t~ 1'..., tV. · ••Ir riiil.... I \Iii ~ ii"~ -.._ Unit 111C1~20 I Ii. 11.\ 11' -°" w~tJ~1o11 ~ olCI ,,, i)\;, •I~ 13"" -•\ to come down," be added. , •~" 1 • '•~ -l! v1111 111 ·" 1 1" 7\.11 ,~ -·~ w11 un ~r•"t0 '102"" 'B 101i., _.,,, lloM•.i .o. !~ ... -"'Unj"'''. 1 ! lS\lo u u -"w l<IEI , .•• ~) ., .,, ., 1 " Hia optimism about the long term rerlecled ti:: lll'lll •• r !~ J:11o 2f• -:: unu MM I » I .,. H"" JG» -·~ ..... :·, E 11U010 1100 M it ' the steady flow of evidence that the economy ls r~,,r~ -~ !. Jn: ~ ih .. .! ~ ~~u Nt<"M111 21* 'Jv. l'" 1~·· -\lo w.:ivc• 1.0s u, 24"' »'-'3''--~~ ~ awitchlng into forward gear. i.i ..... IM . ' It ~ fi -\1 u F nl .OSe Jjj 11'• ....... •Ho -+ ,, =!{~'"' ri.'1s 16 11) I 111 -l, ii ... ~ \Ii ~.l~'.:\"r ':U ~ mt -~ +1',Vi ~ ",.'f!ii1-f'A 11.l' mlt n,,. #v. = ~~ w·-... r,.,,r.,,r ".s!,t 79 lt'h I 'lo ,,"' ! " Jot Prelident Nixon's top economic adviser said imr.ii' 1.ao ti H4 ,. ,. _ , v Gv1»1n 1 !' , '• I' "' _.. -1120 ,. s. ,.•·· '•.1 a • the adminlstrat1'on's new pol1'cy to expand the r1s111t1"' .e11 'I ..., ,,"" I ,. -'" u ... 11 ofl .• , • i u11o -"'whff1P111 M:>I uo. •"" 4t -., 1 • ~ Tt01!1,d All t lt f -~ U '""'"' .jO 4l'O i-. s 7' _ o:, Wfll•I Cp 1.40 ··10 .. _.. M•\ ~ + 1• ~ b uld ed h · • bal ( T-st. 1.it u j.111 n• !Ii.. +1 u 1.. .. i,q .1'1 1~ N tt>t 11,,.. -lll wl't1,1cn _., '" ''I.Ii tJU tJJ\ -"' ' ,. economdo s o r uce t e naUon s ance o p•Y· r.ioc1&c 1.• ,.,. .., -" u Pr ... cn ... 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Market Recovers • Mll.V PILOT Big City In China Examined Julian Scbaman, an America• 1lvin1 and working ill Cblna, coyered the rtctnt visit of lbe U.S. table tennis tum and alterwartlt wrote tbl1 dilpatcll from Canton, CKwangcbow). By JULIAN SCHUMAN KWANGCHOW, China (UPI) -The old church serves as a school today. Socialist consulates occupy the mid-Victorian resldenccs where foreign businessmen once lived. The 10.story people's depart· menl store on ·Ren Min Lu (People's Street) is cutting its prices th.is year and sells everything lrom S w i s s watches t o Chinese-made vitamin 'pills. Kwangchow, known Io foreigners as Canton. is south China's largest cily. a port of 3 million population which .serves as tlle gateway for foreigners entering China to- day. This correspondent flew to Kwangehow from Shanghai the second week of April with tht U.S. table tennis team and then remained in the port city after the Americans left to i-eooh for UPI on Chinese ac- tiYities berore returning to Peking. 1 rode a taxi through the ci- ty. and strolled across a bridge to Shameen, a small islaod where British t.aipam ruled in the 1920s. In those days, Chinese needed a pass to enter lhe foreign concession. Palms and many other trees line row after row of mid-Vic· torian buildings, which once housed foreign consulales and residences of. r o r e i g n businessmen. Now the s e British-built buildings house commercial ofrices of North Vietna01 and North Kore.a. the Albanian shipping company, the Polish consulate, the f o r e i g n sea men's club and Chinese organizations and residences. One building. "·hich ob- viously served as a foreign church in tbt old days, now houses a primary school. I wilked acroi!I another bridge from Shameen Island back to Canton proper and down Ren P.tin Lu to the 10- story south China building. the city's tallest building. The first three floors of the building were burned during Japan's World \\'ar IJ oc- cupation. I was told that the building later was the head- quarters for hoodlums \\'ho kidnaped able-bodied men cind sold them as conscripts into Ule Chiang Kai-shek army. This building now houses a d epartment sto re, a restaurant and various offices. The department store is staffed by about 1 . O O O employes "·ith an average wage of about $23 a month. This p3.y average is can- sidered relatively high for south China, and abput 80 per- cenl or the workers have bee n employed by thel st.ere for 10 yeara or more. Ouyang Chan . a , revoJu. tionary committee member assigned to. the s t o r e ' s management, told me that he was an assi!ltant manager belore the cultural revolution st.arted in 1966. During the cultural rc,•ulu- tion, store employcs critici:ed Ouyang for putting profits first. He said he and his feJIO\\' cadres al first replied that they were carrying out lhe policies of their superiors. Bl!t later they a ccepted respoOJibility £or "'rong lhmk- lng, he said. puyang then spent one year and four months in self-' crltkism, during which he received a salary, and then was returned to good grace. Ouyang said the dcpartmenl st.ore haa been able to rtduce prices in recent m o o t h t bec11j8e of increased pro- duct.ion and the planned economy. • ' ............ 1971 • ' ' ' • Sears ' , ' Tire·end ~ulo Center' • . Prices Ef~ctive 'Sund•y; M.a~ 2 . Jhru T'l~':t?o!._~Y-~· Ask About Sean Co11ve11ient Credit Pla11$ ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee G•-nltt.d .Ap.1l1 A1l 1irw: failu~ Crom noroW rmd t-d1 oc dd"ec11 i9 material ()r"M)tlcm1n1b 1p. l 0orJlow Lo•1: Fvr tbe Jirrof1bt 01 i1' io1l 1rr&J. What Sr•" Will l)o: lo r1cban11e fvr , 1hr urr, rrplac:o: 11, lh~ritn.& ooly fur rhe proportion of <Urrrnt sr lltn11 pr iLt plus Feder~ Ein~ Tu 11111 rcprr-srnrs 11ead u5C'J. Rep1ir 0~11 ;-unccurrs ~c nu ··h1r.111r, f;uaranle•d Aaain11: TrraJ wc~r-o.1ut. }"or u-Lon11 Tl>c numbtr of mond1t s~ifird. 'W».11 S.-an -..u1 Do~ In cJ&ChMi!(C for . 1ht &ire, ttpl11:ir it. • h;u.111in11 1bt curreoc .:11init price plus fcJC'ta.I F.1chc l 'u k>t 1 ltc fol low1OR1.l lowitlltt, lloalh• 4;t1•r-1eed A1l...,•11cc IS 10 :.!1 JU'\;, 27 10 39 :::n•., 4U :!)"i. Crusader FUJ.J,4-PLYNYLON '·""" 1 Q95 'f11bt'le111 e1.,.1.: .. ·1U Phn Sl.76 f .E.T. .\nd Old Tiu ..- •New concour, broad shoulder for greater safecy · •New. tread design for all-weather traction • New 6/10th-inch white sidewall to match the width of the white sidewall of many new cars YOUR CHOICE SIZE }".E.T. Tuhele11 8l1ek"'11l• 6.95x 14 1.9·1 16?A~U 7.:!5,14 2.01 7.75x14 2.1 8.:?5xl4 2.3 PJu11-·.E.T. Each 7.'i5xt5 2.1 And Old Tirt! Wbi1ew.U. Only $3 M.,. Per tire SEAR!'i ALl~"-TA1'E HADIA1. rA!"!'it;,,4;EK 'nKt: 4.l 'ARAi\l•:t: l -Tn~;,11 Ll .. t:Tl."t; 1,1 \K.\\Tt'.t; f:••rai.fl'rd A1•i.11~1: All 1ore h olure• Imm dcin<t in 11\0lt'/!ll Of •«km•o- •h•!' ,.,,,. 11 .... 1,.. ... , The l1f1t '" !ht <Mlllkll&l ,..., .. t "'«"h•I :ow ... ~ill IJat "I'~· 1 h•ll.':•' fur • n.w ti~, • ~.1.1111n1t (inlJ fnr '""° ~ f'\'l">l.MI o( '"'"" 11.1ed. 2-TREAll '«'t:AHOLIT A.I'll RUAJI llAZ-'Kll f:UARA!'liTt;i:; r:111r1a1 .. r.t Att•i••ti T...,aJ •·e-out and 11r1t !•du.rt frnm mild hnanh. t"or llo• Lo•r1 40,000 m•!ct. • hal !'.an 11'111 0..: .-\t :-•• ,. u1ruon tJo.ht~ '' l"t • .,.. ... Urt: 01 Jl:il'f l'l\U I r<!uoJ <!1;1<~10.i: on ruhrr I ••t' <Inly Int 1ht I'""""" ''"".:ii 1M: """~"''' ~ •••~•J. ll.rl'oir n .. J J"llll• lutr••rnQth.f~. ,I.OJI !"1'11'1;: n. .. ~.,. l'••'C.llittr Tore <i\1-•rt ... .11 1 .... ~ al ""' ~(' ....... .., ... 1 Ot~••!ng llu<ir '" •ht C.S.A. The pnc• ultd " rht: ti.,;, ol lld1.,... l-" rhe o.irl't'l:lt KUuw • f'flfc. •• i.i.1,..,. orp1Ja1>1c FMTol F~,~ Ta 1ho1 11 ~ " ............. .., *51...t n>t.'!'11 ;~ ma..k. n.;1 ~""' IQlli< M rl't'ocllftd II DIDI: (l{odju""'""· Low Low Priced For_a Belted Tire 6~J3/C18.11 Tu~k.Bl1ekwlll Plu1DP.E.T. AmtOldTin : •Belted Construction (niyon carcass plus 2 r&J'Oll belts) for greater stability, perfonnauce, safer handling ' • Features the sofc ride of rayon cord with reinforc· ed tread area ro reduce squirm • More road contact for safer stops '3.fld superior handling SIZE Trade-la J.'.&T;~ Prire WBELESS BLACKWALL 6.so.J 3/C'llJ.13 15.95 2.00 7.35tl4/E78.14 19.95 2.37 7.75d4(F78.14 21.95 2.54 . 8.2Sxl4/G78.14 24.95 2.69 TUBELESS WHITEWALL 6.50x13/C7S.J3 18.95 :?.00~ 7.35x14/E7S.14 22.95 2.37 7.75x l4/F7S.14 24.95 2.54- B.25x14/G7S.14 27.95 2.69 8.55x14/H7S.1' 30,95 2.95 8.25x.15/G7S.15 30.95 2.M 8.55x15/H7S.15 33.95 3.01 Whitewall Dynaglass Sealant Guaranteed 40 ~ionths Nation,vide 25% OFF Regular Trade-In Prices R11111lar44.9.S T"de.-lo 2 Fiberglaos Belts Prin 3 3 PLUS 4 plies of Smoolh Polyellcr Cord 7 l '1.35xl'f['8-16 Tobei-Whilewal Phnl %.ta F.£.T. A.ad Old Tir• •Rugged 4·ply po)ycster body plus 2 fiberglass belts Provides maximum foad carrying ability with big margin of safety . • A new sealant with chopped fiber- glass giyes puncture proof protection shoulaer to shoulder -• Sporty triple-striped whitewall pro- tected from curb scuffing •Wider and deeper tread than non· belted new tires iasures long mileage and sure uaccion SIZE 7.35x l4/E7S.14 7.75x 14/F'lS.14 8.25xl"1G7S.14 8.5Sxl4/H7S.14 8.25/8.1 5:t 15/(; 78-1 .) 8.j5/8.45x 15/H7S.I 5 8.85:.:15/J78-15 9.00/9.15xl5/L7S. 1:; aEGt;lAR TltADt:.11'1 l'ltlCS 44.95 46.9.~ 49.95 52.95 ~>0.9:i 53.9:i 56.95 59.95 ~'t:.11 "''°' F.F...T: 33.71 2.72 35.21 2.57 37.46 2.77 39.71 ·2.94 38.2l 2.83 4().46 3.02 42.71 3 .... 44.96 3.23 f ~~~.~iC~•111,>~a~~I.s, ~amp~~s 1 1 ~ ~'~ .,,.;,x ! -~v.'• ·E '' Mi' I -:· · ! 111::··;· . · xpre11i! : ~age! $36 "'·" Tnffl1!11 Whitewall PhnS'l.9'\Jo'.E.T. And Old Tire •Tread lifetime plus 40,000 mile tread wear-0ut guaran- tee TUBELESS WHITEWALi. IZE ........ ·~· F.E.T •. 17>13 Sl6 1.9' 18.~14 Sii 2-" 195-14 ... %.4 5-14 ... 2.7 1S.J4 S54 2.93 J.95..15 S47 .... • p 15 $;.I 215-15 S58 225-IS $64.50 ·· -. ·~ · · ~·.:x.1: W Nylon I Truck Tires , I ·27T~~~ ·1 • _ n.w:nT.;j 6-ply rated nylon cord construction for strength and long mileage. Wrap around tread enables better cor• ne.aing and more stability. JH.n: r1t1a r:LT. TUBE.TYPE 6.i~IS 21.93 %.'2 7.00.IS 37.93 !.81 6.50xl6 :!'11"5 2..61 7.CIOJ.lli 37.95 ·1.01 nJBELE!'.S 7.00:.14 %7.95 1.-45. 6.7Cb.l5 29.95 1.lil No Tnde-ln Reqtiired IUfHA •All( TA 1-4400, Stl .. S~O tt Motffl .. J•11t11 °lOlolCI ltAOfMI 1·1121 ..CO WI Mtl1: ,..,..Nte ....... , ......... ""''" TOH.utct MJ•tl11 C.1,MOOA i>AllC ~4l•OMI IUHIAU at l•llM. ct 1~111 OtTauote a tolO AN Miit • . COMP1'0N NI .._tlll, "1 t-1111 ttOU'tWOOO MO t-SMt OIAHGI .,14IOI ltAIS.•OlllUCKA..,..OCO. (O'llHA ...... ,, IHGllWOO• 04t 1-1$11 "•l•MHA ... 14tlt, Ul ... 111 "OMQNA NA f •J111 Jh•ll' s ... 4., It ..... •• I P.M., .... 11i1 ... 1et.01:aC1 A.M .•• .,:ao P.M. ............ o.,, ..... ". P.M.1•••· Tlurr1. 5111, • IA"'A AMA Kt 7..:ant SANTA n ININOIM4•IOl1 .... , .. #OMCA •• ....,., 1 JOU'fN COAlf N.IA '40-Jl)J UfU"9 ••S·l'111 VAWf flO ll·M•t, ... ,,. VllMONf Pl •·1fll ' I I Fourtl1 Bus I Checked Out In Laguna By PATRICK BOYLE Of .._ O.Hr ,lllt ll1H Not even very many Laguna Beach pedestrians stopped to gawk last week ..,-ning as a handful or city officials v•ent for a spin in the fourth bus lo be considered for Art Colony rapid transit use. The two-tone blue vehicle, with a capacity of 23 passengers. was fully carpeted, had air conditioning, a stereo 1ape deck with four overhead speakers and an AM-FM radio. It also had. according to those taking the demonstration ride, too much glass ~"It will be bot as an oven in the swn· mertime"), scratchy upholstery, no place to mount a coin box for fare collectior'I. and an almost inaccessible engine com· partmenl The cost of the vehicle, according tit salesman Cedric V. Wtuthorne. is $12,000 -without any of the above options. Whithome did note, however, that the scratchy seat covers were not standard equipment. but \\'ere only put in a few of the denionstration models. He said a higher quality material was used in those buses sold by his firm the Flxible Com· pany, a division of San Diego based Rhor Corporation., Prior lo the ride, Fire Chief James Latimer noted that the windows would not open as they should for emergency exit from the vehicle. After hitting one of the windows several times ·with the nat or his hand. the fire chief pronounced the windows unsatisfactory for safety purposes. Washington Clasli DAILY PILOT 3 lM l»a% School Students Unfurl . Patriotism Week Students at La Paz lntennediate School In Mission Viejo will be demonstrating the.Ir pride in Uteir country and their con- cern for enyirorunental problems this .week. Today marks the beglnning of the third annual Pa\riolism on Parade week which has as its sub theme Pollution Our Problen1. . Events will include a parade of noats built by students, lhe construction of ex· Top General Is sues Call For Respect LJTILE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -Army Chief ·of Staff Gen. William C. Westmoreland said this weekend the American public must respect both its police force and its army if the nation is to survive. .. If the American people expect quality law enforcement then those who are in· vested with this duty must be accorded the respect, the confidence and the trust or the people whom they serve.'' Westmoreland said Saturday in a Law Day address. hibits for public display and contests In art speech, essay, design, craftsmanship, poetry ' and {nusic. Today was Red. White and Blue Day. Studenl.'I and faculty members dressed in these colors and members of the com- munity displayed the American Dag. Floats were paraded on the !Choo! cam· pus and exhibits set up in the library. A flag pageant was presented by the Marine Corps Recruit Depot of San Diego Tuesday will be EC(llogy Day and will feature a general campus clean up cam· paign supervised by the student POP v.·eek committee. ~!embers of the Mission Viejo Kiwanis Club will have breakfast on campus and their District Governor Vic Aleman and San Joaquin Elementary School District Superintendent Ralph Gates will be special guests. - Winners of the various school ~ts will present the program. \ Wednesday will be the observance o[ Law Day. Lawyefs in the community will be visiting various clsses and speaking to the students on the importance and func- tion or law in our society. Awards Day will be Thursday. Participants earning ·awards for their POP week activities will receive them along with Students earning their Presi- dent's Physica l Fitness Awards. A program on ecology will be presented by the One-Extra Club. Salesman Whithoi::ne said the problem rnuld easily be eliminated by loosening lh~ v.·indows at the factory. Although the chassis and power plant of the vehicle are manufactured by Ford Motors, Fix· ible makes the body of the bus. Band of anli\var demonstrators, in a series of hit- and·run strikes, tried to halt incoming Washington government traffi~. Here, a po.liceman confronts a demonstrator during a tear gas \Vashington Monument grounds. attack near U1e • We!!tmoreland said jl1$l. as police are needed to maintain internal order, "arm- ed forces are needed so long as free societies are thfeatened from without. "And just as we cannot expect a quali- ty police force without public respect, neither can we expect quality armed forces without public confidence and sup- port." he said. "Both are essential if our nation is to remain the land of the free and the home of the brave. Fr:iday will be I'm Proud To Be An American Day. The Sing Out Amigo.1 · "Ocal group will ..,. be presentiilg an assembly for students at 12:30 p.m. 'Cult' Figure Gets Jail Term The vehicle viewed Wednesday has a gasoline powered engine. but Whilhorne said it could easily be converted t• natural gall with no loss of power.· New School Given Trees "We must reaffirm our beliel in the rule of law. We must also demonstrate The city has previously examined three other buses for possible purchase. One of them was electric powered, oiie natural gas and the · third vehicle operated on either gasoline or natural gas, as does the Flxible bus. El Toro Co111111unit y Groups Unite • Ul Landscaping ... through our actions that our law of the land is the ordered middle ground between the chaos of anarchy and the repression of tolalitarianism.'' A young drifter. once accused of in- volvement in the ''devil cult'' killing of teacher Florence Nancy Brown and the hatchet slaying of service station at· lendant Jerry Wayne Carlin has been convicted of narcotics charges and sent lo !Slate prison . The city recen!ly received approval of an application for $53.000 in federal money to purchilse the buses. M a y o r Richard Goldberg said he hoped to have the public transporlation system in operation by summer with the purchase of three such vehicles. Each of the buses viewed so far. with tht excepti9n of the electric vehicle, demonstrated it.s vigor by climbing Park Avenue to Top of the \Vorld. The Flxible bus, however. was the first to climb the 30 percelit grade of Third Street. · One disadvantage of the Flxible bus. noted by street department head Ralph l\.1elin, was the location of the engine. The powr:r plant is in the front of the vehicle, but is accessible only by removing an ' engine cover in the passenger com- partment. ~1elin pointed out the location of the oil dip stick and said a maintenance man u·ould burn his hand in trying to check the oil. Salesman Whilhorne , however. said the engine in the demonstration vehicle was being phased out by Ford and the newer power plant would not "have as many bugs in it." Community groups are donatin~ trees to help landscape Park.lane Residenlial School, a non-profit school for educable . mentally retarded soon' to open in El Toro. Aliso Elementary School 1' a re Cl t • Teacher Association of Lake Forest s011SOred an ecology drive Saturday lo raise funds for a fifteen gallon tree with a, sprinkler system for the IO-acre campus of the school. The gfoup coll~led bottles for glass reclamation ~d alumlnum cans .LoF · metal reclamation. Mis. Glenll Saylcss served as· chairman. Contributing lo the trash collection were seventh ~rade ilUdents from the mentally girted program at La Paz Intermediate School in J(.!ission Viejo, "'ho ended their ecology drive by plan- ting a tree at Parklane donated by the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Com- merce Women's Division. The La Paz clas:; partic ipation \~as coordinated by Connie Keevil. Ronny Shaver. and Kat y Blais. Individuals also have donate<! tree:; to the landscaping program, the latest being Jude Poynter of Beverly Hills who gave other individuals or groups wishing to donate a tree may call the sch"ool at 830- 7770 or voritc to Parklane Residential Bank, Couple In Fencing Duel A San ,fuan capistrano savings and loan company'S claim that they're being fenctd in by their neighbors will be debated fl1ay 5 in Orange Conoly Superior Court. Judge Robert Banyard \Vill be asked l'lJI !hat date by the American Saving:; and Loan Association. 32921 Barque Way, to issue an in junction again:;t the con· :;!ruction aclivitic:; of Thomas and Patricia Lavin, 2534 1 \Ve stborne Drive. A fence built by !he Lavins encroache~ on its property. lhl' firm asserts. ll rlaims that construction activitie.s on the lol have destroyed !>cvcral lrrcs and shrubs and v>'ill destroy more if they are not stopped. The rence and encroachments, the company claims. are in violation of a lease agreement between the two parties. School of Orange County, 23442 El TorG Road, El Toro. The school-now u n d e r con- ~\ ruction-will be a facility for am- bulatory mentally retarded children from the agfs of four through adulthood. Programs wJll help the students develop vocational skills which Will allow them to function in a traditional society rather than be instilution.i\ized The "'planl a tree program" ,is being coordinated by W. W. Conover. who has designated 500 trees ·at the school's goal. three . palm trees. lla rold Wil sons End Visit a l LBJ Ra nch ~1l)NF;WALL, Te.'t. (AP) -Form e r Prime ~finister Harold Wil!>on of Great Britain· and his -wife werf' to leave the LBJ Rl'lnch near here today for Austi n \\'here he 1vas scheduled to address a joint session of the Texas Legislature. The Wilsons have been visiting former President Lyndon B. Johnson and Mrs. JohnsoJJ at the ranch since Friday. About 40 young persons walked out of • the courlroom during , Westmoreland'~ speech and 12 of them picketed the front of the building. "He was talking in circles," iaid demonstrator John Rogers. a high school student. "He just didn't seem W bt mak· ing any sen st." Laguna Driver Sideswipes Pole A Laguna Beach motorist on his way home from a Jong day's work Saturday night sideswiped a telephone pole and careened into a tree after apparently fall· ing asleep at the wheel . 1 Police said the man, ~1ike S. Abbey, 20, of 479 Ocean Ave., received minor in· juries in the midnight accident. but did not require hospitalization. He suffered a cul over his eye and a cul llp, officers said. The mishap occurred in the 1400 block of North Coast Highway and Abbey's auto sustained major damage. Orange County Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered " a one-to-three-year lerm for Timothy David Montag, 20, after accepting the .~ltaggy haired defen· dant's plea of guilty lo charges o[ possession of dangerous drugs. Montag testified at the trial of killer Arthur "Moose " Hulse and related for the prosecution evenls that led to Hulse'! murder of Catlin June 1. He also aided the proSecution in its investigaUon of the murder the following day of Mrs. Brown, 31. of El Toro. a P.1isslon Viejo teacher. Narcotics charges were filed against Montag after it wa.~ established that he was no't actively involved.Jn either killing. Capp llospitalizecl HARRISON, Ark. (AP) -Cartooni!>'tl Al Capp has been hospitalized here after collapsing from exhaustion while on a lecture tour. Capp, li2, was resting comfortably In Boone C.Ounty hospital, a spokesman said after Capp was admitted Sunday. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Flank Steak .. ~ .... $1t9 Lean bee! •• U.S.D.A. Cbotee •• with Mrs. Cubbi6on's famous dressing! Ov~ready Meat loaf ..... . . . . . . ............. 79~ . . Ma.de with selected fresh ground meats and fresh "'hole eggs '. lean Cubes of Beef f0r Stew ......................... 99i Compare ... and yoo11 chooee El Rancho for the leanest stew beef ever.! Alex's Beef Tamales ....................................... 33¢ c.iebra~ "Cinco de Maro" wiUt a special menu I •. 8 ounce pockage. SR PACK 12 OZ. CANS ., I I ., I ~ ,....., • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Light and tingly .•• flavor you never thought you'd find at th.is prire! More evidence ·th&t the difference at EL Rancho is value .• , YoU &:cl -quality and sat.islaclion, •.•• more for your monq .•• aL El Rancho! Save on El Rancho Beer, this week. & enjoY, th.e...dif.fereoce! Prices in. effcet afon., Tuc.s .. Wcd.,·Mav ''• 4. 5 No 3'1V~ to· dcahr!f. Pineapple ... f~. ~~ .. 19~ Rushed here from llawaii by air to preserve that precious tresh flavorf Patio Mexican Dinners .................................... 49• °'oose your favorite from any of the four authentic varieties ! Frozen. Rosarita Refried Beans ................................... 25 • Spoon out big servings, and make the menu complete! No. 21/t can.. Saffola Margarine ......................... ~ .................. 33• All the flavor you'd expect .•. with the Rdva.nt.azeg of Mfflowcr oil! Lb. ARCADIA : sunse• "d Huut.ug-o. or i1/ii/. PASADENA : ii/i';r. SOUTH PASADENA : i1ii'1/; HUNTINGTON BEACH : :i/ii/. NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newport 01.d and t i Rancho Cefll'r 320 We't Colorado Bl~rl "' Fremont an d Huntington Or ''·'· Warner and Algonq •1•n 'Boardwalk Center .,, 2~55 Ea stbluff Dr 1[a stblull Village Center 1 , • f 1).IJLY PILOT Camhodiai1s Can't Form Gov ernment PHN,OM PENH IUPJ) -An alltmpl to form a new Cambodian covernment col· la~ today whtn thf: National Asaembly Pl"tlident. Gen. In Tam, refused to become premier. Outgoing Pr i m e Minister Lon Nol offertd a compromise solution that would permit blmstU to stay in office, but delegate authority. Moad11, M~ 3, 19i 1 IJJ'IT...,._. The furmula proposed to settle the 1S- day•1d erilis wu this : Lon Nol would re- main as premier but delegate power to Gtn. Si.sowath Sirik Matak, his deputy prtmler. Slrik Malik ilu been running the government since Lon Nol 1u!fered a ilroke Feb. a. EGYPT PRESIDENT SADAT SUMMARILY FIRES TOP OFFICIAL Vic•President Sabry Out In Internal Power Strunl• 1n Tam told journalists Lon Nol himself had proposed the solution in a meeting today with chief of state Chene Heng. Previously Lon Nol, who has never fully recovered from the stroke despite treal· ment at an American medical hospitll in Hawa~, had insisted on resigning despite l(ate Webb Has Chuckle reque that he stay on. Lon 1 and Cheng Heng led the M1rch On News of Her Death .\ ' 11, 1970, coup that ousted neutralist PHNOM PENH UPI) -Catherine M. Prince Norodom Sikaoouk. •;Kate" Webb rested in front of the swim· Under the formula propoled by Lon ming pool at the Hot.el Royal today and Nol , Sirik Malak would be ''Premier chuckled over a sheaf of her obituaries. desi&nate.'' The government also would "It's weird reading lhest things, really have three vice.premiers, each running a weird," sht said. group of ministries and rt!Pom:ible MW Webb. 28, New Zealand-born chief dlttctly to Sirik Milak. Jn Tam gave no reuon for turning of the United Prus International bureau down the premiership, but a covernment in Phnom Penh, was released by the Viet source said it was because he was offered Cong about 40 miles southwest of the only "half 1. government _ he wuuld Clmbodian capital before dawn Saturday have had no military power.•• after 23 days in Communist captivity. Lon Nol has been named commander in Sbt had been believed dead f« about 10 McMablXI, offtring congratulations on behalf of the Australian eovernment and people on her ttlease. Still fatigued even after two nighll of solid sleep, she talked in a sometimta tremulous, low.pitched voice of We wltb UJe Communists in the jungle. "They called me the Engli.sh girl," ahe said of her Vietnamese captors, "and they told me to cbttk my health •• aoon as J got back to Phnom Penh bec1uae they thought I was very weak." 'Internal Affair' Top -Egypt Ai~e Ou~,ted by Sadat ~ CAmO (UPI) -l'r<sldtnl Anwar Sadat's dl1milaa1 ot Vice President All Sabry wu a purely intemal affair and had notbin& to do with Cairo"• policy tow11d the Soviet Union, or tbe United Slate.s, authoritative political aources uaid todly, 1be aourca uid the fact that the ouster of pro-Soviet Sabry, announced Sunday night, came less than two days be.fore the Cairo visit of U.S. Secretary of State Wllliam P. Rogen was a mere coincidence:. They explained that Sabry was ousted because he oppoaed the idea of Egypt's Joininl a federation w~th Libya and Syria •t the pruent staae. • (Arab politlcJ.1 sources in Beirut predicted the Sabry ewter would touch off a power 1trugale in Cairo between his followers and thole of Sadlt. Israeli • aourcea NW the move as taken to pleaso Ro1er1 on the eve of his visit). It was Sabry'1 opposition to the fed.era· Uon that delayed ila approval by the 156- member Cenll'al Committee of tbe Arab Socialist Union (ASU) for more than • wfft, the aourcts said. Even after amendme'ntJ were made in ~ the federation proclamation and the basic rule.s to meet some of the objections rais- ed by Slbry, he nevertheless voted a11inat it at l11t Tburaday's committee meetinc wbicb appro~ed the union by an owrwbelming majority, the sources 1aid. They u..id wbat madt Sadat particular· ly angry was that Sabry had been a member or the ECYPUtn delegation wblcb negoUated the federation agree.. menl In Benghul, bul he (6obry) c!Jd nol voice blJ opposition until be returned to Cairo and addreased tbe Central Com· mittee. The sources e.xpr,ssed confkfei;>ce that Sabry's OUJter will not lead to any political upheaval or power struggle in the country. They pointed out that tpe government and the vut. majority or the ASU were aolidly behind Sadat who has been 1ainizlg·in popularity steadily since be took over after the death la.rt Sep- tember of Prtsidenl GamaI Abdel Na.saer. They tho not«l lhat Sabry, partly because of hl.s known pre>Soviet leaninJs and his personal lack of charm, com· minded no following among the masses or the military. Sabry, 53, is one of the few remaining officers associated with the 1952 revolt that overthrew King Farouk and brought Nasser to power. He served as prime minister, political adviser to the presi· dent and secretary of tbt Arab Socialist Union under Nasser. He is: known to have a heart condition and .suffered a cardiac fl.llure d u r i n g· Nawr's funeral , but SUnday's an· nouncement did not mention ill health as a reason for the dismissal. * * * Helicopter Tour Wlelca / 'I see it, I •ee it. Don't rwh me!' Se,attle Link In Capitol Bomb Probed SEA~, Wash. (AP) -Leslie Bacon returns for a fourth day of questioning to- day before a federal grand jury ap- parently investigating the possibility that the March l bombing of the U.S. capitol was planned in Seattle. Government attorneys have refused to indicate why the investigation is being carried on here. but they said after an unwual grand jury session Sunday they were content with the case. Miss Bacon's attorneys. Jeflrey Stein- born of Seattle and Michael Fayad of Washington, D.C., have maintained con· sistently that Miss Bacon knows nothing of the bombing and knows no one con.- nected with il chief and Is head of the general staff. d1ys prior to her release because two while Slrik Malak serves as his deputy In Cambodian oflicers had reported finding, that position -even if they do not re-identifying and cremating her body alon_g I(ent State Students Hold Taken by Rogers 01i Jordan · Visit They said Miss Bacon had been living in a commune in Washington and bas on- ly been in Seattle once before. a half hour visit while hitchhiking through town. main as premier and vict premier. --$~ hi&hway near the Point where sl'le The sourCe said "even If In Tam had disappeared during the rout of a Cam· kept the defense ministry for himself he bodian paratroop batlaUon April 7. would have had no power except to pro-Miss Webb smiled at a clipping from a vide guns and ammunition for the army." New York newspaper headlined "Body of Memorial for Slain l{ids AMMAN (UPI ) -Sec retary of Slate William P. Rogers took a helicopter tour of Jordan today, including a close look at some Israeli-held territory. • Miss Bacon, 19. of Atherton, has been held since last week on $100,000 bond as a material witneSll in the case. She was br®ght here last Thursday under a aul> poena issued by U.S. District Court in Seattle. · Girl Reported FoUnd in Cambodia," propped her sore feet on a deck chair and rem1rked, "I don 't want to do any more walking for a long, long time." 3 Former Nazis Facing Trial REGENSBU11G, Gennany (AP) - Three Nazi police offi cials went on trial today fO:r the Babi Var musacre of 33,711 Jews in 194.1 in the Ukraine. The defendants are former Maj. Martin &saer, 79, commander of the 45th Police Battalion: former Maj. -Enge I be rt Kreuzer, 57, a company CGmmander, and Sgt. Frill Forberg, 65. The commander of their rtgiment, Rene Rolenbauer, 82, hu been declared physically unfit ta-stand trial, and l\reuz.er has been declaffil fit for trial only on condition that daily hearings do not lut too long. The three men are charged with organizing the execution11 of the Jews in the Kiev area and wlt.b peraonally killing 10me of the victims. .. Right now, l'm tired," she said. "I want to sit am.ind here for a couple o( days and then go see my family in Sydney.'' Min Webb's feet were badly blistered by iwo nightJ of steady walkJng. Shod on· ly in a pair of rubber shower clogs, she trudged along jungle trails from a deten. tion camp in which she and five other corttSpondentJ and their drivers and in- terpreters were held to the point where she was turned loose. Released with her were Toshiichi Suzuki , C1>rTespondent al the Japanese Nihon Oenpa news agency, and four Cambodians -tier awn driver·in· terpreter, Chhim Sara th. photographers Tea Kim Heang and Ing Charoen, and Suzuki's driver, Kong Vorn. M she aat at the pool a meuenger delivered to her a telegram from AustraUan Prime Minister W 111 i a m Classy Chassis Costl y Old Cars Put Vp for Sale RADNOR, P1. (UPI) -Al Capone's limousine went up for auction Saturday but the auctioneer couldn't get the price he wanted. The 194-0 Cadilla c later was sold in a priv ate deal for $14,000, plus a trade in. M. H. Gold or 1'rucksville, Pa. tried to &di Capone's maroon and fawn colored limousine for $15.000 but bids stopped at $12,500 and he refused to give it up . Gold did not di!!close the name of lhe buyer wil.h whom he made a private deal. Auto dealer Kirk F. White blamed hard times for the sluggish bidding at the auc· lion. Billed a1 the largest expensive car liille in the nation, ellhf.y-seven clauy cars wtre offered, but only the lower priced ones gold. A 1910 Hispano Suiza sedan built for Queen Jsabel of Spain also failed to sell . Bids stopped at $12,000. The owner and value of the vehicle were not disclosed. Bidding on a 1931 Dusenberg ~baron barrel Side Phaeton , also owned by Geld, stopped at $66,000. Gold refused to accept les~ than $70,000. E. C. Screes of .Indianapolis Ind. paid the highest price in the auction. $20,000. It bough "him a 1932 V-12 Auburn Road- ster .which he plaMed to dri ve back to Indiana. KE NT, Ohio (UPI) -A year ago Tue5- day, four Kent State University students were shot to death by National Guard troops. A memorial weekend desisned to reduce ten.sion included frisbee toasing and bubble gum blowing. About 4,000 persons heard Julian Bond, the b I a c k Georgia legislator , urge students to eschew violent protest in favor of political action. Bond's speech Sunday night capped the first two days of tile four-day memorial program •nd wu the only event to draw a big crowd. Two rock coricerts, a ''Grttk tragedy" on the Vietnam War and a progr1m of "tension reducing games" -fri.sbet tou- ing and bubble gum blowing -drew crowds ranging from 60 to 600. Several time.s the 400 journalists covering: the memorial programs outnumbered the participants. Campus officials said an unusually large numbet or students had left cam· pus, some fearing violence and othen to attend demonstrations in Washington. "J am more optimistic now than I previously planned to allow myself to be," said Dr. David A. Ambler. Kent Slate vice president for student affairs. Paki~tani Artillery Hits Indian Station NEW DELHI (UPI) -Artillery fire from East Paki.!tan damaged a railroad station at the lnclian tiorder town of Radh ikapur Sunday and forced its evacuation, official Indian gource.s said today In Calcutta. 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Dl!rolJ 1'11r...-.1 Moftelulu IMitN"tlt KtnuaCllY l•• v"'' l to11¥111• -· ""'"'"' M llwtllll" ,Ml_.,..,, N.-wOr11tt11 """" Yorti 0ti. ..... c 111 °"'•"• Ptl'" Hr...,_t Pll1ltl11l~1 "-"'" Pllt>llllrt l! Porll1t1d ··~ lt '<~rnclld &•er1mt nl9 $t, ~°"'' Sill Lt~f Cl!V •St n Dt"o S.11 "'l llCIK t St1nl1 , ........ W11lll11t!011 .... ..... , f'cl. .. ~ .. " . ,,, " .... " . 12 ,, .. " .. " ll 41 11 JS " ,,, " . " .. " " •• 72 .. . " " .. " " . ·" .u .. 71 •• .II " .. •S J2 ... • • u .. ..... " . .. " .... ., .. ... ~ " " ~ ·'' " . M ., .IJ " .. II ~ .11 .... .. " .. " ...... " . ~ ~ .tit "Our faculty starr and 5tudent.s h a v e demonstrated again their ability to maln· tain a sense of equilibrium." Student sources said some campus militant& planned to return from antiwar rallies In Washington today to organir.e a sil-ln Tuesday at the library, which houses the ROTC headquarters. But the sit-in. meant to be peaceful, the sources said. The program today included antiwar workshops, speeches by black come<lian Dick Gregory and former New Haven, Conn., pclice chief James Ahearn , and a candlelight vigil at the scene of the fatal confroptatlc11 between the N at I o n a 1 Guard troop1 and the a 11 t i w a r demonstrators. Rogers' trip included a look at wes t bank of the Jordan and the Syrian Golan Height.s -bo th held by Israel since the 1967 war. 1t jollowcd an unescorted tour with King Hussein Sunday night through parts of Amman that only weeks ago were strongholds of Palestinian guer· rillas. Driving in the !ting's auto and followed by another car carry ing Crown Prince Hassan and U.S. Undersecretary of State for Near Ea.stern Affairs Joseph J. Sisco, they toured a number of areas that had been cleared of guerrillas. Today's helicopter trip grew out of a conversati on between Rogers a n d Hussein at an official dinner Sunday night. The secretary of state said he would like to see more of the country, so Hussein arranged tbe helicopter tour. Fayad and Steinborn said after Sun· day's session that the government had established for the first time a •'clear connection" between the bombing and the grand jury probe here. but they said the connection seemed to be based on misin· formation. "The government got today to what they told us was the meat of the case," Fayad told newsmen. ''We saw some meat, but it seems to be misiJ1.. fo nnation." He said the Seattle connection ap- parently v.·as "something dealing with meetings of plans here." He said the government spent some time asking question.s concerning the bombing. The f\.tarch I explosion took place in a men'1 room near the Senate chambers. Damage was extensive but there were no_lnjuries. of your best have a new address. Glenda le Federal Savings has moved to Harbor Center. Lock, stock and safe. People too. We're now right on the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Save or great new low rates on home loans, look no further. Glendale Federal/Costa Wiesa is just as nice as it ever wa5.And lo~ more convenient. Mon.-Thur. 94; Wilso n, so if you're looking for !GFS] Glendale's famous friendl y serv- ice, 6!fl:IOWS, Umpteen Ways To Fri. 9-0. c•me.1111 Fcclall Sau•111·Costa Mesa C.-lfll&l•ll~ wdlft1n.(1111WC.•) I U,I T•l••Mtt JOANN KAYSER JOINS 25-M!LE HIKE FOR HOPE 30,000 Teens May Earn $425,000 for Charity Walk • Senate Unit Plight of Youths In Jail Revealed WASHINGTON (UPI) - Juveniles are sometlmes jail· ed illegally, occasionally on the mere: whim tf a parent, and left at the mercy of sometilnes sadistic 11uards with ne attempt at rehabilil a· lion, a Senate subcommittte was told today. .. We have found that in· competents, near illiterates and even sadists have been placed in charge of handling young offenders," Sen. Birch Bayh (0.lnd.), said as he opened three days of hearings into the aituatiO• by his j u v e n l I e delinquency sub- committee. "Every major study and in· veslijalion by t h i s sulr , committee has pointed up the utter Inadequacy o f cor· rcctional personnel training, qualifications and standards," Bayh said in r e marks prepared for the hearing. Much er the prepared open· ing day tes ti mony centered on juvenile detention in the El Paso. Tex .. area. Bill Payne, an El Paso Times newsman who has in· vestigated the situation in El Paso County. told of a 16-year· old girl who was locked up for more than a month recently at her mother 's request. ing the girl's con fineme nt by obliging juvenUe author.illea, the mother actually went en a two.week. vacation wllh be.r paramour." Payne said. "When the mother ntumed lo town , the little alrl was released. never having seen a lawyer, never hav ing betn formally charged, neve r hav· ing been produced forthwith before the judge as miuirtd by Texas law and certainly never having betn convicted ef anything." he added. He said that in the nearly 10- year history er the El Paso County J u v e n i I e Detention Home. "there has probably never bt>en a legal arrest of a child, there has probably never been a legal detention of a child and there, has probably never been a le~al C<lm· milment of a child from that count y t e a sta te reformatory." Ul'I Tt!NMNI Rap• Violence Chairman J. \Villiam Fulbright of the Sen· ate Foreign Relations Con1mittee said Sun· day he would support fell ow Arkansas Demo- crat \Vil bur Mills for the Presidency. He al· so said he feared that violent war protests could only hurt the growing antiwar senti· ments in Congress. 9 Killed on Sunday Ride As Train Runs Into Car COVINGTON, Ga . (AP ) -Georgia C<lmmunlly of 10,300. Mondu, M11 J, 1471 DAILY PI LOT $ Both Guilt, Ptinithtnent Single Murder Trials Upheld tTcm Wirt Strvlces 1!167 robbtry·murder or Ben· ing on the ccnstttutional rlghtJ The Supreme Court ruled to-Jamin Smetana, a Los Angeles of women to end preiinanciu . day that in death penalty storekeeper. -Ruled that physicians' t'!.&el a jury may con-Justice John P.1. Harlan written statement may be us- stitutfonally decide both guilt spoke for the courL. The pro-ed by the government to and punishment at a single alt-decures challenged, he said, dispute the claims of persons ting. "are those by which mos t seeking Social Se c u r I t 'I Of 41 &late! which •have ca pita l trials in this country benefits In Injury cases. capital pun ishment, sis have are conducted. and by which -Asreed to decide whether separate trials for guilt and all were conducted until a few newsmen have 1 constitutional p u n i s h m e n t , They ire years ago." ri1ht to refuse to appear California. Pennsylvania, Con-Jn other actions today, the be.fore grand juries and to necticut, New York, Tuas and court : identify confidential new 1 Georgia. -Set hearings on Texas and sources. The court's 6--3 decision Georgia abortion Jaws. It thus The capital punishment rul· came on an appeal of James moved toward a possible rul· ing had long been awaited. Edward Crampto n. convictedl ,lrn~;;;~;;;~;~;;~;;;::::~~ in 1967 of murder in the death[ r of his wife \Vilma in Toledo, D M l T h Fl ~-4 Ohio. e ur OS 01~1.S At the same time the ju.stic., refused also by ! to 3. 2431 Newport Boulevard, Costa Mo .. to establl5h guidelines for ~ n. M~rt r .. 11 -"' ... ••6-441t juries wh ich must decide\_~~>=::=;::::ii:;:c:'O:'M='PL:'E:'TE:="::o:='::'::'::'::'::"::'c='==~;=;::~~ whether a convicted person is t o get a priso n sen\enct or whether he is to be haiiged, electrocuted or put to death in a gas chamber, States have various types of capital punishment but none has been carried out since J une 2, 1967. About 6.24 in· mates or Death Row have been awaiting today's opi· nions. The cour t ~·as asked in the Ohio case and in another one from California to fashion .standards f o r determining when the death sentence is ap- plicable. su ch as an in· dividual's susceptibility to refJrm and the harm done to the victim. ~molherloV'ts ~'no ll'IUlltrwhat. 5•"d h•t o !l;Hua beuquet right "ow• ontl mot• Melh•r's Doy l•1t lo11Q•r. Call ior 1top In, olld W•'ll ~ It from th•r .. D•Uv•rM 0!111011 crllYWk•r• h• th.1 country. A l!*lal glh. At a aptdol .. prke.foro~­ moth•r. Yeun.1 • [(ids Hike for Hope; Could Ear11 $425,000 ''Th(' molher si mply said the girl was incorrigible, and dur· The California case was ap- pealed by Dennis C. lt1cGautha, convicted or the Ten youn,esters piled into Dan· Newton Qi unty S herif f ny Henderson 's "new" car for Henry Odum said the car was a Sunday ride. Nine of them hil broadside by the lead died a short time later when a diesel of a 65 car Georgia freight train slammed into the Rallroad freight train travel· compact auto and dragged it ing at about 4fl miles an hor. almost a ITtile. 1;:=========;1;:=========.I ROCHESTER. N.Y. /UPI) -An estin1a led 34.000 young persons walked three qua rters ()f a millio n miles Sunday for charity. Jn what y,·as termed the ADA Seeks Impeaching , Of Nixon Jimmy Norwood and his sister Almethin were among the victims. So wert Peggy Ann Fuller and her sister Susie Ann . The 10 r anged in aee from 12 to 16, The only one 1pared was Shaion Belcher, 16. She was take n to an AU1nta hospital in critical condition. \\'ASHI NGTON (UPI) The accident at an elevated VALLEY OF FLOWERS Flowen For All Occ11io"1 17179 BROOKHURST FOUNTAIN VALLEY HUNTINGTON BEACH FLOWER MARKET 17731 BEACH BLVD. 847-9614 S.ncl her the FTD BigHug bouquet earl)' Flowers by Morri 80 fa1h iol'I illal'lfi n•wl'ort b•ech U4-4060 448 •· s•v•nteenth •t. cost• mes• 548-3414 s,vamp· Fire Flares Up In Florida largest youlh·sponsored chari- ty drive in the w or Id, participan ts -most or them high school age ..'... v.•alked 25 miles each in a hi ke for hope. Organizers of the wal kathon said an estimated S425.000 was pledged by adult sponsors, \\'ho paid the wal kers for eac h mile cowpleted. Americans for Democratic Ac-country road crossin1 was less lion again has called for the than three miles we~t of th<'ir impeachment of President _ _llh"'.om~es~in'.'....:t~h~i•'.._llno"'.r~th'_'c".:e~nt::ra'.'.'1~=="='=·'='="=0='='="=·="='='=:::!'.'.=:=========,,!!:===================== Nixon for Vietnam ''war !\lost of the proceeds y,·ere earmarked for Project Hope, \\'hich operates the hospital ship Hope and a number of an· tipoverty and hea lth pro-- grams. The remainder goes to local chariti es. crimes'' over protests from some member s that it should locus on ending the war and ~·orking for Nixon's defeat at the polls in 1972. The call for Congress to "institute impeachment pro- lt·llAl\11 (UPI) -A stubborn Jo Ann Kayser, a paraplegic ceedings aga inst Richard M. grass lire, smoldering in peat· y,·ho gained national at tention Nixon on the grounds of high li ke m<1terial bene ath the as a swimmer in the crimes" was approved In a surface of parched Everglades y,•hee.lchai1 olympics. com· resolution Sunday al the bottom land. flared anew Sun· p!eted the full 25 miles. conclusion of th e ADA 's 24th day despite y,·ctkend ra ins "The on ly reason J kept annual convention. that dampe ned d r o u gh t • pushing \Vas because I kepl The ADA con\•ention last litric ken South Florida. th inking abou t a s ec o nd year asked that Nixon be im· Fores t Service Supcr\"isor hospital ship.'' sa id Jo Ann, peached because of the U.S. Ray Austi n said a Ore that one or 18 .,.,, h e e 1 c h a i r invasion of Cambodia, blackened 21,500 acres of partici pants. 1;::=========:;;:;1 brushland and spread a cloud" A police officer directi ng of s1noke over lt1iami l;ist tra ffic at an intersection said. y,·rek v:as rekindled along one "bov. this is beautiful. I'm edge Sunday afternoon by sub· goirig to remembe r lhese kids surface sparks the rain railed the next time I get lo feeling Broadway Flower Shop, Inc. to kill. do"·n on youth.'' Co•l•Ge. -(11! FlllWl'I l rc-p1c1! u >ll lllOOnllno '""'-The lire. 20 mile~ y,·est of ---- FEIN MILLIR-54•·1214 2750 HQl'bef" l•~lnor4 11 A~l'"J lfl CtU"' Cl!Oltr Miami. was expected to b"rn SAN CLEMENTE about 600 acres of brush dur- ing the night before f1refi_1th!C'rs could mo\·e in to attack it by daylight, but y,•as not threatening any populated area. Sears I Sears I U •U..ont...0•-C.O. MALINS ORANGE COUNTY FLORIST 143 Avenue Del Mar 492-5702 e Cotto Mirsa We cleli~•r th• H11b .. r "••• 111d Hu11li11i;iton 111'~ YOU WORK LESS Keeps Utings cleaner without effort, eli.ini· natcs bath tub ringsp YOU SAVE MONEY Soap and clothing lasl Jooger. "" 1:.. ... 11 Mi..c,..l Bt.ildop i• PiJ""ll GeeUe l• Baby'1 Ski.II Sm"ttw:r, F.a1;icr 5Mve1 ,. ...... - Ask Aboat Sean Coavenleot er..tlt Plus Complete lul&llation Available! Jase AU! Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Pb. 8111-4400 So. Coast Plata 3333 Bristol St. Pb. 5411-3333 Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb. 547-3371 Your mother loves you, no matter what. Send a FTD BigHug Bouquet early So, why not sfort Mother's Doy early ond make it last a little longer? Just one Mother's Doy doesn't seem right. Call or visit on FTD florist and order o BlgHug Bouquet to orrive a few days early. She'll onioy her beautiful bouquet of fresh flowers right through Mother's Doy. And whether they:re going across town or across the country, your FTO norist will toke core of everything. Rel iably. Beautifully~ The BigHug Bouquet is a very special arrangement from FTD. For a very special mother. Yours. Send it tho FTD way, • • D.AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE D~eper Into the Mire Orange County government seems to be slnking deeper and deeper into lhe hands of manipulative forces and unsavory shenanigans. We're getting political cons;lderation ~ubslituted for professional management. An d i t's begJnn1ng to give off a bad .odor. Latest evidence comes from the Orange County Planning Commission, an appointive body that wields vast Influence over county development. What we have is a moral, if not technically illegal, conflict of interest in· valving Fifth District Commissioner Arno!d Forde, an appointee of Newport Beach Supervisor Ronald Caspers. The Lutheran Jiospital Society, seeking to build a 151-bed non-pro.fit hospitJ.! (Sad dleback Community H.os· pital) at Laguna Hills Leisure \Vorld, sought planning comnlission approval. The society must meet a ?t1ay 18 deadline to qualUy for matching federal funds. Al the same time. A1isslon Community Hospital, a proprietary (for profit) venture on26 beds, is under construction five miles away. Planning Commissioner Forde ts one· of the two partners in the "Viejo Capital Co." buyers of the hospital site two years ago. His com· paliy is also a partner in Mission Viejo Medical Co., a group formed to build the hospital. Expressing what he called 11n-agging doubts" about the Saddleback hospital five miles away, Forde contri· buted to critical delays in jeopardizing the Lutheran hospital's federal grant. He made no mention of his per· 5onal interest in the 1'1ission hospital. Then he took off for a tour of Europe and Russia with Supervisor Caspers and thus supposedly removed himself from the issue. But Forde left behind two· cohorts -Commission Chairman Woodrow Butterfield, 3ppointed by Santa Ana Supervisor Robert Battin, and Fred Jefferson. ap- po!nled by freshman Supervisor Ralph Clark or Ana· hellTI. ,, They did the job. In a bizarre performance, Butter-- field and Jefferson did everything they could to stall J.he Saddleback application again and eventually, in an unheard-of maneuver, simply disappeared from the meeting. That jammed the application but good. But fortu· nalely lhe Lutheran society behind Saddl eback Hospi· tal has a parallel application on file. It comes before lha commission tomorrow and, needless to say, Butterfield and Jefferson will be interesting to watch. The chain of relationships in lhis cliapter of county government is intriguing. Take Dr. Louis Cella, who has identified himself as a managing partner of and investor in t.Ussion Viejo ltled- ical Co., the organization in which Co mmissioner Forde also is a partner and which will operate Mission Com- rnunlty 11ospital. Dr. Cella is (l l acknowledged mentor and fund-raiser for Supervisot Battin and (2) a close as- sociate or Richard O'Neill. cblirman of tlie Democratic Central Committee. O'Neill's family created the exten· sive holdings of the 1'1ission Viejo development. And Frank J. Gelinas, a longtime Orange County public relations and political figure who has worked 'vith and for O'Neill. Gelinas is "development coordinator" for Mission Community Hospital. And Paul \Vhite, recently appointed field repre· sentative for -Supervisor Caspers. J.le has long held - ·and continues to ·hold -strong influence on the semi- official bodies that recommend on sites and sizes fclr hospitals in Orahge County. The involvements are broader and the cast is larger. But the star of the moment Is Arnold Forde, the plan· ning commissioner .,.,..ho takes credit for mastermindin~ Caspers' election and \Vho is kno"m to be his closest ad· viser. Small won der the Orange County Grand Jury i~ interested in all this manipulation. So is the rest of Orange County. - • - • • .<~ ·1. .. ~,1,.,, ~~ A Foolish Dear Gloomy Gus: Not tlae Slightest Visible Effect 011 Ptablic Policy, b11t ••• So.ciological Experiment r'' ., . '· n a-yakawa ' . Many of my best friends are JOciologlsts. But sometimes I think that 10Ciologists are s\Uier than anybody. What leads me lo this exasperated remark is an article in "Trans/action" tFeb .. 1971 ) on "Bumper Stickers and the ~."by F. K. Heusliienstamm, associate professor ol sociology at Caliromia State College in Los Angeles, who reports restarch to prove that peo~le v.1'.o drive Los Angeles freeways with B 1 ac k Panther bumper stickers are likely to be har· assed by the police. Professor Heussen- lilamm tells the gen- esis or her study: "A se ries of vio- lent, bloody encoun· ters betv.·een police and Black Panther party members punctuated lhe ear· ly summer days of 1969," she v.•rltes. •·Soon after, a group or black students 1 teach. who were members of the Black Panther pany, bega11: to complain of con- tinuous harrassment by law enforcement officers. During one discussion, we reaJ. lzed that all of them drove automobiles v.·ith Black Panther party signs glued to I.heir bumpers." SO SllE UNDERTOOK a :study to find out if in these complaints of bar· assment "'we were hearing the voi« of paranoia or reality:· The author selected 1;. students to take part in the research, "five black, five "'hile. fit·c of f\1exican descent,'" both males and fl!:ma\es, va ried in dress and appearance from hippie to square. All dro,·e dally 10 lo 18 miles to school or v.·ork. All Md good drl\'ing records. For the experimenL all displayed lurid Black l'anlher bumper stickers on their cars. A $500 fund was raised to pay traffic fines. There wa1 a time when Ralph Nader would not have been called a consumer advocate bul a muck· raker. -C. L. 8. fJllJ 1 .. r~re rl'llt<ll r1Htr1" vlnn, •I llKIUllllY fMM •I lllt !lfWwaHr. 'IM r111r '" '"" r. Glwmr °"" O•ltr , .... -----------' ficers might have been Influenced, and we hypothesize that they were. by the: re- cent deaths of police in collision with Black Panther party members." says the author, with due scientific caution. The trouble with academic training, as it affects some people, is that it destroys what common sense Lhey were born with. By the fall of 1969 several policemen had been wounded or killed In encounters with the Panthers. The author "hypo,th- esizes'' that policemen "migbt have bee• influenced" by this fact. The spring of that same year the "Black Panther Coloring Book" had been brought t.o public attention -22 pages of appalling hate liLerature. Picture after picture depicts uniformed "pigs" being STTia~hed in the face, knifed. axed and shot by handsome black people. A little boy is de~cted shooting a "pig" to de- fend his mother. "The only good pig is a dead pig,'' says a caption under a picture showing a uniformed "pig" with blood spurting from his back where a black man is st.abbing ttim. NEWSPAPER AND ma Raz in e reproduclions of the "Coloring Book" were studied probably by every off icer, black and white, in every metropolitan pol.ice department in the country. "But "'hatever the provoca tion ," the author CQncludes. "unwarranted traffic citations are a clear violation of the civil rights of citizens, and cannot be tolerated.'' Of ct>urse the harassi11g of people with Black Panther stickers Is unfa ir. It is certainly not equal treatment before the la\\'. Demonstrations Have Cost Millions WASHINGTON •' -Demonstrations, riols and disorder have cost taxpayers and property owners of the Dislrict of Columbia millions of dollars without the slightest visjbJe effect on public policy. Life in the capital in the spring and fall is one demonstration after another, vast· ly exceeded howev· er by !he annual tourist migration v.·elcomed by local hotel and motel keepers and busi· nessmen if not by beseiged congress- men. Official Washington has devel oped a protective immwiity to demonstrations much in the same way it has devel oped an indifference to the tourist influx. Neither phenomenon leaves <1ny lasting Impression. Since the era of demonstra- tion bega n, in fact, techniques and at· titudes of local police authorities and local residenls have been adapted to the acceptance of brief periods of in- convenience. The main effort has been to minimize damage mu ch in the same way as the branches of banks board up their plate glass ·windOw fronls in advance. OF THE TWO ANO three quarters m.iUion who live in the metropolitan area ' -· Ri~h .. aNJ . Wilson . . - only a small percentage would of lheir own free will wander into the parks and malls where the unv.·elcomed visitors lo Washington have been on occasion permitted lo encamp. \Vhen seen' al all. the Washington Monumenl, the Lincoln ~temorial and the Capitol. which arc the accepted backdrop for demonstraLioRs. are viewed from .a distance . ~lore realistically. they are merely part of the unseen background of the average resi· dent of the Washington metropolitan area who might occasionally drive past these monuments but would not consider stop- ping because there is no place to park. One hundred thousand, two hundred thousand, three hundred thousand people can come to \Vashington on a weekend without 1naking their presence personally known to the vast majority of the residents or tJ1e capital area except as thei r likeness is seen in the newspapers or on TV. One might as well be in Chicago. The immunity of official \Vashington to deinonstrations must mean something. f\1en are not elected to office, they do not hold appoinli"..•e office, nor do the myriads of minor officials. clerks and stenographers in U1e bureaucracy keep their jobs without a general awareness of \/OX popuJi. So it might fairly be concluded that the many hundreds of thousands o f den1onstralors who have descended upon the capital in recent years are not recognized by official Washington as the voice or face of the people. They have not improved race relations:W They have not shortened the Vietnam \\'ar. They have not created a new humanism. \Vhat then has affected public policy? A spontaneous if irrational outpouring of suppOrt for Lieutenant Cilley has directly affected public policy. A wave of reaction without demonstrations against crime and disorder has created the new law and order policy represented by the measures in the crime bill which are now going into effect. TllE GENERAL realization, without the help of demonstration and protest but in spite of them, that the war in Vietnam had to be terminated has created public policy. The process of termination was put in motion before demonstration and protest began. It can also be argued that demonstra· tions and protest have slov.·ed the im· provement of relallons between the race~ and lvidened the gap between old In( young. A counter argument might be madf that the demonstrations, some peaceable have illustrated that official W·ashington'1 protective immunity is merely collectivt stupidity. Officialdom is too stupid ti ·realize that the people are speaking. Bu that has not been proved on the onlJ testing ground of public opinion that ca1 be regarde!:I as undeniably al!thoritativc. THIS TESTING GROUND is lhe bien nia l election of federal officials. The ad ministration in power made substantl\'• gains irl'the federal elections less than si1 months ago. Why would it respond now b limited mass expressions, at least half o whose parliclpants are in high school all! college? Such demonstrations have not passei any laws. They have not altered an: policies in the desired direction. The: have frightened only a rew congressmen They have !eh the decisions of ti• Supreme Court unaffected and the PresJ dent or the United States unintirnidated. But they certainly have cost the taJ payers of the District of Columbia a prel ty penny for extra police, property repai and cleanup. Maybe that ought to be biU ed to the TV networks as a produclio' cost for the nightly news shows. Nixon Reports Recession Is Over WASHINGTON -The recession Is over. This was lhe substance of President Nixon 's report last v.·eek to Republican congressional leaders. "The news is good! The eCQnomy is up !'. he told them jubilantly at their se- cret, biweekly White House strategy scs· sion. As evidence. he no· led. "The stock mar· ket sho\\'S it. T h t y know something." ( Jack And er son lhc economy is impro\'ing, but by how n1uch:' THE NLXON A0,,11NISTRATION, as one argument for postal reform. said it would take partisanship out of the mai l service. But it looks as ii they·re !'Jtilt playing politics with the postage stamps. When Postma ster General Winton Blount came to tov.'n. he found the she· cent stamp adorned with a portrait of the most popular Democrajic President of the century, Franklin A.oose velt. Blount quietly replaced FDR with Dwight Eisenhower, the most popular Republican President of the century. N0\\1 OLD BLOUNT has got desig_Rs 011 the portrait of John Jo~. Kennedy on U1e 13- cent a!f letter sheet. He is Lrying to raise postage rates, but in nearly all ca~. the new, more expensive stamps will bave the same faces as their cheapti predecessors. Not so with the lkent aerogramme ai letter sheet v.'hich Blount \vants lo bOOl to 15 cents. Instead of featuring JFK' portr3il, it will be decorated with a fl oe of birds. At least Blount didn't try I make it a berd of elephants. The reader can readily imagine what happened . All drivers. regardless of sex er race or appearance. :started getting cita'lions for "follov.·ing too closely." •·falling to yield right of \\'ay." "failure to make proper signal" and the like. In Callfomia lour cila Lions "''ithin 12 months mean pcmible less of one's dri ver"s license. Follr students received three citations each \\'lthin the first v.·eck of the i;tudy and dropped out of the experiment . Thirty-three citations v.·ere received ¥dj.lUn 17 days and fund3 for traffic fines were exhausted, Cars v.'ere searched in lhe case of each arrest. Hov.·ever, there are JOIJl.e things that Professor Heussenstamm fails t o observe. Every driver occasionally •·fol\o\\'S too closely" or •·fails to yield right of way'' when he should. But a Black Pather slicker. which the Pa~hers themselves ha\'e defined as a sym6ol o[ defiance of the law. calls special at- tention to every slight error of judgment. The economic indi· ,. cator.s, he said. point upv.·ard. lfe cited rising sales and profits. The gross national product. he addf9. in- creased $28.5 billion during the first quarltr of lhe year -$6.5 billion more than the pessimists had predicted. Hypo cris y R u ins Cli ild SUEZ ATTACK? -Intelligence rel>eJrl warn ominously lhat Arab leaders ha~ asked the Kremlin to back an Egyptia1 Lybian-Sudanese attack across the Sui Canal. The Arabs reportedly have urge an immediate strike before the hot su11 mer makes desert operations dif£!cult fi fuel-burning planes and t.ank.s. ApparenU the Arabs seek a limited offensive to gil Arab morale a boost and to brir pressure on Israel to accept Egypt 1a peace terms. "THE REACTIONS of the traffic of· .---B11 George ---- Dear George: Ia it true you can't tell WTio your real friends are until you're broke and try to borrow money? I can't Stt.J1l to sv.·ing a loan anywhert. DESP~RATE Otar De1J>t!rate ; Actually, l\•e found you can't tell who your real friends are until THEY.RE broke. That's v.·hra they come around to tell Yt'IU what close buddies they've Jlv.•ays betn. CONFIDENTIAL 'T'O HOWARD JIUGHES: Yeah. you can come out now. Evtrybody's gone. <Send )'our most presslng prn- ble:ms lo George -two shirts Jroned for ihe: price. of one - thlo w~k only.I t"URTRERMORE, the slicker is, again by U'le Panthers' own definition, a symbol of Intent to kill the police. If you v.·ere a pcllceman. \Yould you not seek any pretext to stop a car "'ilh Panther 11tickers in order to search for CQnctaled weapons? I would. Professor 1·1eussenstamm's 11 r l l c I e lcao;cs me wlth some depressinit con· cluslon•: 1. She says that no one displays Panther bumper sUckers any more. It certainly took some people a lon g time lo learn U1al It doesn 't pay lo advertise one's Panther sympaOtles, especially on a wl!:ll-patrolled f~way. But did tlley ha\'e to learn lhe hard v.·ay? Couldn't they hal'C predicted ho"'' the police ~wld . rea(1? 2. Some students llrt certainly morn docile or mort stupid than I ever im· aglned they could ~ nov.adays. Imagine. being 11skcd by a professor to do sdmething as foolish a.nd provocatl\·e as putting Panther sticker~ on your car lo drl\'e around Los Angeles -and imagine saying yes to such a prormal ! 3. Perh&pg some sociologists art Indeed sillier than anybody. By S. I. lh1y11k1"·• PrC'skltnl San t'rariclsro Slate. Collrge 11E PROAUSEO l hat u11e1nploymenl would also start to decline. "There is always a lag in the reduction of unemploymeni. '' said the President. "but the projection O\'er a period of time h11s to be dO\\'n. •• 11e called upon his bud~ct manager, GC1lrge' Shultz. to tick off the happy statistics. Referring to a fact sheet prepared by \Vhlle House aide Charles Colson. Shultz reported retail salc.!S "'cro t.5 percent higher in March than a year ago, automobile salts \\'ere 32 percent above a year ago and housing increast.'<.I from 1.100,000 new homes In January to 1.918.000 In Marth at annual rales. "A nC'w house." he commented. "'needs new rugs aod other 3ccessories." Broke In the President. smiling. "'The ccon0mists no _longer argue O\ler whether Quotes R!lbcrt 11. Finch. Co1111selor to Prr~. Nix-on. In Co1nmonweallb Club of calif., addresi; -"Ours is a tinle of change and funda1nt>.nlal rcallgnmenl : the great challenge nf such an era being to preserve change within order and order \\'ithin change." Though!~ at' Large: Children are not so much ruined hy either extreme of discipline or pen111ssivcness as by hyprocrisy v.·hich is far more ran1panl than either , for a child can leurn to cope with rigidity or f\a"' cldily -v.·ht1t he: cnnnot hnndle is the parental abyss be- tv.·cen preachment and practice, bc- t11 een form e n d substa.1ce, bel\\"C'C'n the conscious rccti· tude and the un· conscious gralifica· lion of selfish needs. v.·hich he sees so clearly, • • • \\'hen v.·e persuade people before v.·e in- struct them, v.·e merely produce fanalic.!S -wm bl!tray our cau~. more than disci· pies who ::>d\'ance H. ' . . The unrorgiving men assumes a JUclS· ment that not even the theologians h.'!\'l' ;:i\'en to God. ' • • Poor play<'r~ blame' their results on 1he cards; but the good pla ye r doei:n'f ;el heller cards. or ev('n necessarily play lhen1 any bcltC'r; \1·ha1 he is best at 15 "alting. • • • TIPSY AIDE -President Nixo11'1 !"! cent statement about preventing ala holism apparently made no Impression c M' \\7hite House aide Roy Francis Tun1~ • lie drove his Cadillac the other day Into • -1 parked Arlington . Va., ta'iicab. He \11 A n1an who free ly and Crankly admits a 1 charged 11•ith reckless dr,iving 111 mish1ke grows in our ~stimat_ion·: but a i drunkenness. The arresting offi cer, 1) governn1enl never adnuls a mistake, and · \\'ilson. said Turner was so drunk that I falsel y im3gines that t.'Ollcealing or was jailed for hiS O\\ll proleclion. Tl ~11slabeling an error preserves its public presidential aide fMfelted $1S.25 on IJ unage. when even a child can delect the drunk charge. d1screpaooy belween stalemenl and (act. ~------------,. . . "' The mindlcs! n1ob~ who stone police slations are compo~d of the satne people \vho would be ' outraged by a mindless n1ob stom1ing a police.station in order to lynch a prisoner held there . • /II ... To l>clitllc oneself Is rnorc often a for111 of 1nvcrst a1Tog<nlt'C lhnn of modesty: a!'l Einstein once remarked of a se ll~ffacing colleapie· "Me h:is no right to be so modest -he is not all 1hat area~:· • • l) • SL0tir1.>s of "rehgiou f' people write 10 n1c. urging lhat I rtad this or that pa~sage in the Bible. to becomt C'On· vin<:Cd of lhe truth : what such iealot.s fail to rcaHze Is that nobody believes be<:ausc he reads tht Bible, bul he reads tht Bible because he bellcvcs land if he doesn"t know how to believe. his reading 'i11 more ~i kcly to litunl him than expand hlm). ·Monday, May 3. 1971 Tl1e tditorlal pooe oJ lht Dailu Pilot seeks to inform and 1tim- ulote readers bu pre.senting this ntw.spaper'.s opinion.s arid com- 1/U'ntaru on topic.s oJ tntue.st and slg11ifica11ce. bu proi.idlng • forum for tilt e.z;preuion of our readers' opinion.s. o-nd. bJ prtsent.11111 tlu~ d!oer.se tnew- points of inforrntd obttrver• and spokesmen on topics of the dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher Mond<r. Moy J, 1971 DAILY PILOT 1 CHECKING Yes.ter.day's War Hero Today ~s P1·otester? •UP• Mo st of Models SACRAMENTO (AP) -Joe E. Grins. tbe leathery-faced fortsl ranger ln command of Gov. Rtagan's new California Ecology Cbrpa ! o r con- 1iCientious objectors. fought his way through Europe as a master sergearit in the Army combat engineers. Are l{11ockk11eed But he voices doubts about ""'hether he would be a soldier or an objector U the choice confronted him toda.y . By L. M. BOYD HOW LONG have you had your .kitchen stove? Estimated life of a new one now Is 16 years in 1lhe cily, 13 years io lhe country. Those rural gtrls really romp on their ranges, that's und,erstood ..• TEA IS for thinkers, ccUee is for athletes. None other than the United Nations in it& bulletin on narcotics stated u much . . . IF YOU UXE, you can buy broiled baby sparrows, packed five to the can. To ht: ske\1'ered with toothpick s. And served bel"".een drinks. May I leave the room? AMONG Protestant ministers who decide to aban· don their calling. "low pay" is cited as tht No. I reason. Among Catholic priests who choose to leave the church, so- called "stubborn leadership" is cited as the No. I reason. Or so survey-takers, both Protes· tant and Catholic, recently disclosed. ANOTHER WAY to quiet a lone whimpering puppy is put a mirror in its bo1. ••• IT'S 3 Science Students Get Honors. Three Costa Mesa students have received top honors in the first annual science fair at St. John the Baptist School. The contest was <>pen to seventh and eighth graders at the private Ce.thoUc School in C<lsta Mesa and was held April Z2~25. Sweepstakes winner \Vas ?-.1ichael Friese <>f 1132 El Camin<> Drive. His proj ect, "What Is the Effect of Detergent on Plants?" won top hooors for demonstrating the effects of biodegradable detergents <>n bean plants. Top biology project "'as done by Alm a Aquilar ol 980 Springfield St.. who build an incubator and hatched three eggs. . Seventh grade student Susan Schelstrate of 1849 Kentucky Place, won in the general physical science category for her project, "What's Hap· pening to Our Ocean?'' in which she showed the residues left by some detergents and their effects on ocean life. Prizes for the science lair v1ere donated by the school's Auxiliary Mothers. F ear Takes Higl1 Toll In Ireland LONDON (AP\ -Violence In Northern Ireland i$ taking an increasing toll in mental disorders, a psychiatrist reports. People caught in the months o f con flict between Protestants and R o m a n Catholics are afraid of sudden noise. or leaving their homes. of listening kl nev.·s broad· casts. Symptoms inc I u d e palpitations of the heart. s"·eating, diuiness, nausea and an inability to sleep, all leading to acute anxiety and emotional stress. Dr. Alex Lyons wrote in the magazine World ?-.Iedicine. Lyons studied 217 new cases ef psychiatric disorders. that arose during a recent six Week period of heavy rioting in Bel fas t. "\Vhen I interviewed the pa· lients. I found that the coin· monest stress faclor was shooting in the street -145 had experienced this," he reported. "Eighty seven patients had been burned out or had seen il happen to their Immedia te neighbors. and 61 had been forced to move frocn their homes." Three quarters of the new cases admitted to Belfast psychiatric hospitals \Yer e y,-omen. SAID more newspaper reportert claim experience on the New York Post than on any other newspaper ... ANO BEAR in mind, the male reindeer lives about six years longer than the f e m a I e l'tindeer. Al\1 ASKED WHY fashion models always pose with' one leg slightly in front of the other. Because they 're knock- kneed. Or most are. Rare is the girl whose legs look their best when she stands straight with her feet together. Could name you a dozen currtntly famous beautiful y <> u n g women who are so knockkneed they almost clatter when they walk. But that would be un- couth and lowdown. CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. "Every time I wash the dishes my hands turn white, wrinkle up. and get puffy. Does your Household H i n l s speci;ilist know what to do about that ?" A. Rub them with wet salt afterwards. he says ... Q. "How much money has tile in- ventor or the Aerosol can earned off that thing?" A. Can ooly tell you that if all such cans .sold in the last 12 months 'A' ere divided equally, every household in the country would get 40. "I QUIT the job,·' writes a butcher of lengthy experience. '·because my boss wouldn't put down s8wdust. Can't work all day without a sa"·dust floor. It's not just the hard concrete. The care you have t.o take to keep from slipping on the fallen fat exhausts you." . . . WHEN A BABY BOY is born in Glendale, Oh io. the chimes of the Episcopal Church there play ''Little Boy Blue." When it's a girl, they play "~1ary Had a Little Lamb." Now that's kind of all right. A bit thweet maybe. But all right. THE BIG BANKS hire spies. They go lo night clubs:. gambl- ing spots, houses of ill fame. They check on who's winning, who's losing, who's buying too much liquor, who's with a new ladyfriend . They keep painstaking records. And these go into the banks' secret files. As part of the credit rating system. No, that's nt done t>:reabouts. It happens in Hong Kong. Your questiom and com· me11ts art-welcomed a11d wilt be wed in CHECKING UP whtrever possible. Ad- dress letters to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Boz 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. ''In World War It I thought It wa:i great," said Griggs of his service in France and Germany with the 1st and 9th U.S. Armies. "But in this thing here rm not so sure I'd be a con- Truck s Hit As Worst For Noise WASHINGTON (UPI) - No community should have to put up with the noise pollution it gets from trucks. according lo Paul ~. Veneklasen. Veneklaaen is a Sant a Mon ica scientist, who says trucks are the worst offenders among all the noise makers lhat plague Us -worse lhan jet aircraft because they in- flict distres!. on a broader scale ahd assail the eardrums o( many more people. But for 15 years, Veneklasen said at a meeting here of the Acoustical Sociely <>f America, mufflers have existed which would cut trock noise 75 per- cent. They aren't being used. The theme of the Acoustical Society's meeting was "noise pollution and noise control." Several speakers described in techriical detail how ii is possi- ble to erect relatively quiet and ' ''serene" dwellings or high-rise hotels or office buildings in noisy areas, even on top of railroad freight yards. How do you build grand centers f<>r comfortable living or working in the noisiest parts o( town? You do it. ac· cording to W. E. Blazier Jr., a San Francisco acoustic a I engineer, by erecting buildings that ''float llll rubber-." You in- sert thousands of two-inch rubber pads l:ktween the base of columns and the foun. dalions to insulate against noise. Kenward S. Oliphant, a San Francisco acoustician, described the myriad ways us· ed to make inhabitable an of· fice building erected lSO feet from the northern edge of the main runway of San Franctsco International Airport. The result was that 92 percent of the jet uproar just out.side never penetrated to the inside. The same and other tech- niques can be. used to protect community dwellers from the shattering t:lfect of truck noise. The need to do this gravels Veneklasen. Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Spring perk up. Try a Helene Curtis "Springtime" perm 1000 Includes shampoo, cut and style set • ' "Possibly the mort active role adopted by the men - man11ing the barricade! or ac· Ung as vigi lan1es -had a pro-l}----------------------11 tectlve effect... Lyons ex· plained. "For the 11•omen, sit· !Ing at home and walling was a situation guaranleed to prl)- duce anxiety." 11\1\\.l~TOH O·~~n•l1+r C..,tr• ~ llOOr. 111·.UQ MUHTIH•TOlt al!ACH WIWl'OtlT a lACM k""l1"41ton Ctn19' ~•tlllen 11111\111 hf fiDor, m .1n1 :tM ,,_, '442211 OltAffGI "1119 City" O<Hrt sclentious. ob}ector or not. f'ran)Jy, at this point In time. I'm just not sure what my decisioo "'ould \Je if I "'ere 19 again." \Vhat U cleiar to Griggs. 47. a »-year-veteran of the St4lle Division of F<>restry, is that the ecology corps· can su~ed. "I don't think there will be any real problems w i t h motivating them . This group of people is intensely In· terviewed in ecology," says Griggs of the CO pool of 4,000 chiefly college-educated. mid- dle-class young men who \\'ill be eligible to volunteer for 24 months in the corps as a J,ga l alternati\'e to military service. "It's not going lo be an ea~y alternative lo accepting In· ductlon," says James Steams, dlreclor of the State Depart· menl o( Con.servalioo, the man Gov. Reagan credits with pro- posing the Vietnam.era up.:late of the depression's Civilian Conservation Corps. "But neither will it be punishment." "The ecok:lgy corps will pro- vide constructive solutions to both our environmental pro- ble ms and 'to some of our social problems," :;u1ns up Stearns. Griggs has worked i n California 's forests. job corp plants and conservation camps since 1941. He now lJ ad. minbtratof of the state's fire fighting academy at lone i.11 the Sierra foothUls east of Stocluon. He says the drafl object<>rs ·wru be treated exactly the same as all other emplQyes," and must obey the rulu in- cluding those on hair length. For safety reasons related to n,..., fighting. Griggs says, the COs will not be allo,Yed to have beards or hair longer than the collar. "This is safety , not harass· ment," say.S Ste arn s. Sideburns are permitted no longer than the ear and we'll find that 1l the end or mustacheJ oo \Ylder than the lhC: first two years we'll flnd a mouth or the weartr. he adds. lot of men will want to mike a Stearns points out t b e career of forestry work." slate's forestry divisiOfl basl----------- considerable experie.noe wor~­ ing with young persons. "We employ some l,80ll young men, 17 and older, each sununer as seasonal firelighters." And Griggs adds he expects llttle frlcUon between COs and their immediate b o s s e s beca use most of them are very young: men also. Griggs saya he expect! cos to perform well at a hard job. Beyond that he says "1 think Penneys guide to MQther's Day. - Dresa lenoth robet to make h•r at·home time • treat. Airy polyester/cotton voiles lined with nylon tricot ••• or pclya· ter knit t1ilored style. Delightful colors, sizes 10-18. Smart P.V.C. rattan bags in natural or white to go with all her summer clothes. Rich cowhide trim, attrac- tive sh1.pes to please her. / Bulky acrylic cardigan sweaters. attractive cable designs. yummy colors that Mother loves. Sizes S·M·L. - Sewing baskell in lots of s hapes and colors. Help Mom get organized. 0 " 0 ··~ ( ' • .... •?'-· 1799 Cordless electric scisSors to make her sewing projects a breeze. flecharl)eeble. -\ .. ' • . .;· , • •• '" '+ • ~ ennelfJ ' 9so Cantrec .. ArNlll.flun• pant i..tiose. Sheer, smooth fitting, fong wearing. Fu mon-shades. S·A-l-XL. Musical jewel boxes with Italian finish. P1dcted tops are reproductions of famous paintings. QWlGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! I . I ' I I OAJL\' PILDl .Smte GOP Group : Slaps McOoskey Reagan's. Poverty Chief Faces Quiz ' FRESNO (UPI) • -The ·united Republicans of Calllomia (UROC). one or the · it1tt's lar1e5t v ol un 1 ee r Republican groups, has ur1ed ;Rep. Paul N. McCloskty Jr. to resign from the party and hll ~ 3eat In Congress. · Delegates to the ninth an- nual UROC convention ''Oled 158 lO 129 Sunday on a ~solu-­ tion Iha\ char&ed f.fcCloskey with ''creating trf:ll intemll conrtict" ~·!thin lhe party wilh his call for a ''dialogue CM-- cerning the impeachment of President Nixon. Another resolution to Fanied LA Dorneliner Ends Era LOS ANG ELES (UPI) The City of Los Angeles was I '.l'O hours late for il! own funeral Sunday. Being phased out f0Uowin1 the takeover by the N1llonal Railroad Passenger Corp. of Passenger Traffic in the Uniled States. the domeliner Arrived at Union StaUon from Chicago. Lincy Hamilton. a red cap v.·ho had serviced the run for 35 years here, said : "fliy friends say, Llney. v.•hy don't you go out to the airport and be a skycap," he said. "And I say for what? I've been with the ro1d since 193&. Sure. jets are nice but you mis1 IO much. ''I've been all over the United States with the road. Every city. Denver, Sall Lake, Cheyenne. Chicas:o. you name It. Sometimes, back In the days when I was a Pullman porter. I'd be gone for a month. So for us oldtlmers, v.•ell . it's juat time passing by nov.·." A crowd of about 50 persons gathered to eee the nna1 stop or the City of Los Angeles, which carried 279 passenegrs on the final run. Several dozen p e r son 1 boarded in Riverside, Pomon1 and east Los Angeles for the final few milea of the 2,100.. mile joumey. War Foes Cl1allenged By Chavez LOS ANGELES (AP) Several hundred persons at- tending a memorial .!ervice for Indochina 'il'ar dead., were challenged by farm labor leader Cesar Chavez to aban· don their jobs or schooling and •·come to work for the peace movement 24 hourt a day.'' "Nobody will starve. \Vhen you work for humanity and justice. people won't let you starve," said Chavez, the keynote speaker at the peaceful gathering Sunday sponsored by the People"s Coalition for Peace and Justice in ronjunctlon with an- tiwar activities across the na- tion this v.·eek. Cr o w d esti mates ranged from llOO to 2,600 people. A Marine veteran paralyzed from the chest down, actor Donald Sutherl a~actres.s Jane Fonda also spoke briefly. Nixon Case Trial Due SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Almost 1 yef/I and ont-haH ago, Black Panther leader David Hiiiiard alle1edly told J00,000 persons at 1n antiwar rally al Golden Gate Park "We will kill Richard Nixon." Today Hilliard. 28, the Panther chief ol 111rr. was to stand trial for threatening lhe life ef the Pre1idenl. The feder1J grind jury that in- dicted Hilliard said h e "wilfully a n d knowingly" 1Jtre1tened Nixon. There WIS no IUtran\et the tri al v.'ould start as schtduled. The case Is assigned to U.S. Dllltrict Judie William P. Gray or Los Angeles who has six other cases ass igned him. 111 schtduled to st1rt today. Yoga Tonite at 8! ,.,..'l.09tMMttetlelill , .. , • ., ... lrl lt1lltl•• ..... ,." "TIN kitMt M Vlt1llly & 5trMlty" Th• Yot• Center ._ I , 0'111 -Cffll MHI -""'41VI censure the Nlton Admlnislratlon for ils "no win pollcy in Vietnam, deficit spendinf aid cuarant.eed an- nual income plan'' w1s tabled. This, in effect, ldlled the rMOIUtion. McCloakty conceded durin& the weekend that many Gf his constituents object to his feud with the Preskient ovtr Vlet- um. ·-niere's no question large numbers of Republicans in my constituency would rather go with the Preaident," he said In Berkeley wt)tn u-td about a GOP move or11niud 111inat him lut week in his own San Mateo County. He estimated, howtver. that his views have the backing of more than half the Republicans in his district. There is "• siptlflcant 1plit" among Republicans on Nixon's war policy, McCloskey said, and therefort lhtre was no re- quirement of "party loyalty " on the iuue. Rock Music Fans Riot LONG/' BEACH (UPI) Police arrtsttd 25 persons here Sunday night after part of a fl'OOP of about 400 yoUJ1g ptt'IOIU went On a window- smashing spree when lhey were denied entrance to a window-am.ashing spree when they were denied entrance lo a rock music festival at the Long Beach arena. Poll« said the youlhs went on their rampage when all the tickets to the performance of "Ten Years Arter" were sold out. Approximately I 5, 0 0 0 persons had jammed the arena to listen to the group. SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Reapn'a embattled Of. fict of Economic Opportunity -1ctused of UJlng 11n- tipovtrty funds lo inlltnldate groups designed to help the pOOr -today factd a trlal before some of its severest critics. San Fra1cl1co As- semblyman Jo h n Burton has ordered Reagan's an- tipoverty chief, Lewis K. Uhler, to appear b e f o r e Burton's budget subeommltttt to tell why the legislature should not cut the state OEO office from the budget. 8 u rlon·s Democralic-coo- trolltd subcommittee h a s direct sway over only fl0,000 of the state OEO bud1et o( $989,00J. But any cutting in that $'10,000 in state funds v.·ould force Republican Rea.,::an to submit a new ap- plication to the f t d e r a I government for the $919,000 federal OEO grant. "It's a federal report that documen111 the misuse of this dough in the fir~t place," Burton said. "I thlnk sub- ·sa yard: ? ! ' ' ~ Elegant over and under draperies. llOlh tor -lolr prti;e. !I Cl'4X>ll8 floni beautiful lnliQue S3tlM with "'8lclllng ahffrs: all tor-• -would expect to pay lor lhe over draperies alone. One price,al'9a llOU value plus. Regular low Penney prices on our f1neat labrtc8tion. . Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service. 0-,.te now. u .. Penn•JI time payment plan. mittin& a new application to the feds would be a good ex- perience tor the governor." Burlon said his sut>-I committee wUI ask Uhler to answer chargea in a secre! federal report that the sta '1• OEO has used it.! federal ar lipoverty grant to hire a tean· of Investigators to harass and spy on antipoverty agencies in CaHforn,ia.. Slight Shake Jiggles Basin LOS ANGEL ES (U PI ) -A sli1ht earthquake measuring 2.0 and 2.S on the Richter! scale jiggled windows in west Los Angeles Sunday but there were no reports of damage. 2 TURKEY DINNERS FOR e Roa•t Young Tom Turkey • e Turkey Dreuing e Cranberry Sauce • Vegetable e Ma•hed Potato es e Roll & Butter Bri.ng a friend ... or maybe your mother-ln-l&w7 They m•y lj~e you even better &fter being tre1ted to a delicious dinner. And look •t the price! Brin g the whole f&milyl Th e family who eats to •+h•r, 1t1ys together! Com• on ever. /. EVERY TUESDAY s 29 01Mn Dally Mon. thru Sot. t :30 1.m. tot p.m. 5undoy 10 •.m. to • p.m. ) Residents in the Sa n Fernando Valley also reported fee ling the quake. an apparent outgrowth or the Feb. 9 temblor that registered 6.6 on ! the Richter scale. GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST & ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH •Bring your IOOl'l PTPIIM'I•l Z •Pad end arpet lnata11allon avallable. Spectacular carpet bonanza Hurry • • • whlle quantities last! Save at, these low, low prices! Choose from 4000 sq. yd1. of top quaUty ~roadloom In: •Shags • Random shears • Level loops •Tip shears • Several solid colors arid tvt198ds Now 'Galaxy• acrylic tip shear, 'lndlan Summer' acrylic shag, 'Mirage' acryl ic tip sheared loop pile, 'Pleasent Vallay' acrylic tip sheared loop pile, 'Allcante' Herculon@ olefin pile, SO. YD. Now $5 sq. yd. Now $5 sq. yd. Now $5 sq. yd. Now $5 sq. yd. Now $5 sq. yd. Available at the lonowin9 storu: FASHION ISLAND. Newport Center (644·2313): HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin9ton B .. ch (892·7771). Use Penneys Time Payment Plan . .. . • For The Record Dissolutions Of Marriage "1191 ,.,,11 u DIM.r, 01r"l'll 1nd Miidrid 11!. W1rrvm, l u•111 5. •"'9 HICll1 ''"""' a1rt11r1 Ju11 11'0 l ll!Y J1mtt """""'*'''' J-lllYll .... Mllllr Jtmll 111'1'1,_ SU•ll\ I(. llMI Otnftlt M. ""''""'""· Jllllltll """ ..... "°"'' J. Htvelft, Mfc:llMI G-M Ind Llfldt 111111r J.Uf"'-ltkl\tfil S.,rio and cw.-i. M. Dlttv ..... .,... M, IM l'ttok111 J, .. l l'tOl!t,, Ml'orl'-tl1 I . Ind ;hllll It, Allm111. l[jjlty L1111 I ncl Ll ... 11 LIYlrM WlltlalYlt. A11M .ind O.vkl A, LYtf\. lttMol -L1lllld M. Drltflk, MlrY "•lrkll tnd CO.r1i. l"lllltt. Tr111b,. HIMY l . I ncl l-... ll'r .. lly, Ju111lt1 M. Ind GtOrtt Mldl11I L11'11111, lllM JNll Ind C.1rl Ml'""' M1lll, AnlOllle T. 1111111 IMrY A. Lont, a.-.. A, I nd ltllY J1ne v ... DurM. "lh'kll LY"" lflll IUdllrd "" Cr•I-. Dttlr1 K. 1nd Gt.n11 M. Jawtll, 0...... A. IM JuMlll M. Arroro. .t.tl*lo LNIJI and l.OreNO 0111, 1"1111t11 """ 1111 llllbMI Jor•111 DldltlHtf, 0-.. W, Ind M ii Do.dlOn. JI -H, Jr. I nd llM Mor-. ,..,.rlll'll S. Incl Jludo!pr. V. F1rr1lr1, JltMt M. 111d 111111 U. l ll'ldtfl, 5'la Thom"'°" Ind C111rll1 I . Ml rtl11. Wtnd1 Gt Ylt I nd Dile ,lltf AHH 2' Dll'hoff, Dixie L. I nd lt°"'ld H. M.,ntlld1i, l!tl1111tt11 l . 11'11 !1111 W.v11ck, l tt.., Jet n tlld Mt rrlll 1Uch1rd AH!llll, Mll1rv J. 11\d Oontld It. M1rrM, DoNI t . llld 1t1btctl M"'"' Oonnt Mt ., 1...:1 Oort.kl Frldrl'k Crt ll, llldtl,,11 O. 111d Arntltl M. ll\ll, W!ltl1m Tl'lomt l Ind fvl mt Y-M Lint, Llurltl1 ttc. 111d AM l!trt M11L A"'lfla J. 111d LMl'lt LOlllM J-1. Jon:t tlld Holltlld G- llM!llelt , l!rnm1 LH 1...:1 Jouon t . M1rc11m, Gtr1ldf11t ll. t lld ~rlln L. J!IM. Jtrt "-· tlld Mt ry o\.. TurMr. 11111 F. t nd Vlrt lnlt _ Hortt rko, Chrl1!1M "-· '"" Eclwtrc! S. Jtrn4tlo !Itri.. .. o\.. Ind JtHf WllOdrull. Wlllltm 0 . 1nd Oorothw o. P1rkt •. lto1111d o\.lll n '"" , • .,. ... IHT•llLOCVTOllY Dl!Clll!!S l!11l1rff A1rll ti THll1, Frtnk W. '"" Oorotnv 11. llllbllOll. Frtflk M. t nd Mt rle L. Lovt. "-'"''" ill. tnd l 1l1 G. Yovt11w, Robtrl Colltrntn tr.cl J.lor.,11 "-11•11 Murolw"f, o\.rthur II. t nd M1rlorlt I". FIKl'ltr. Jl>dv c. '"" Jo1epti H. Dunne. Irene M. ~nd Jtmt1 Hu.ii Glt>bo111. o\.nnt Cl'lrllllnt t nd Ptlrltk Fr1Ml1 SwttMY, AltMrt Jo11pti tnd o\.nn Evt lyn Spt ll(:tr, C~rltl Le1!lt l lld l llldt Mtrlt M1rlf1>, Edtt r J. t »d EloulH Mt•lnf! Sull1v1m, 001> L. tnd er1n111 Smith, Lt lttt E. tr.cl Ntll 11. "T1vo!tr1, Jl>dv tr.cl J1r11d l!rnt$f Wright, Burtin• •"411 WIH!tm V. Let, M!chi tl t!tflhtn 11111 Kt•tn E. H11111!11. J. L. Ind l!Ytlvn Kt Y 1 ur1,,..,,, Kt!hlttn JN n tlld Wltllt m Turtnf!k l 1n1rt 11!1, Loul1 "-"'"°"" tnd 5.11.,rv Jtnt Death l\'otlces •II"-" '"-• II .... II ..... IJ, ol "1 Ptumer, A.i. A, C:O,lt Mt lll. 0 111 of """'· MtY f . ~rvlvl'd bY ,.119, C1tudl11 ''"" 001", Alber!, el wn111i.r1 Jot. ol Color1<1a; tnd ltobtrl INn, o\.r/10111; c!t u•hl••· MF1. llellrkt rou1, Color16o1 brothtr. Wiii 1•111. ffX tl1 11 1rt nclthlldr1n1 s 1ru l- 'Jrt<'Wk1'1Uc!rt11. Strvl(U , T-..v, l PM, l t U l rOlldWt Y Clwopel, wUft 1nt .. m t nl •I P1 d lk v1-M...-111 Ptrk. lltU llrotdo w1v Mortu1rv, Olrec:tor1. CUL .. Ptvl M. Cul1>. o\.1t 7J, of 6t JO "-vt 111d.1 Stvlllt , Lttu"' Hiii•. Survlytd bJ wilt. ICtttltYn/ dtUthltr, Mfl. Irwin H. Kl .. bundl, ol Ludl-Ftlt1. Olllcll broll\tr, MJllOr Cult , Loul1vll!1, Kenlud<y; TWO 1l1ter1, Mr1. 1!1"-1 Wo..iev, S1>rl1>0llt ld, Ohio: Mfl. Mttlt C. LitWrY, of Sin OltOo; twa 1r11>dchlldr11>; tour 11IKlt... Fu,.trtl llrvlt••· Tue1c11v. t PM, Tht l uthtrl n Cl'lurcl! ol "'-Cro11, L11un1 Hiiis, wllh P11tor V.,llOll ft. Kotter olll· c l11ln1. lnl•rmtnl, Ftrnt lltl Ct,.,tltM'. Sat!nolleld, Ofllo, McCormick L1tun1 lo11;h M«tu•rv, OlrKIOtl. Ho\.MM•S Mini-park Created In Tustin TUSTIN -There's a new mini-park in an unused~ection cf the Newport and Sallta Ana freeway interchange. The park was developed under two recently enacted laws which provide t h a t rights-of-way not being used by the state may be lea~ to local agencies for recreational purposes. The Tustin project i!!I the first one in the state. The small park. developed on L3 acres &f the 2.1 avaiiable, l'Urrently se noes about 100 persons a week. The park Is mainLained by the City of Tustin. The project was a joint ven-- lure between tbe city, the state Division of Highways and the developer of an ad· joining apartment con1plex. Of the total oost ef $13.200, Tustin contributed $ 2 , 2 o O worth of play equipment. The developer paid $5.500 and the city $~500 for grading, ir· rigation and landscaping, in· eluding automa tic sprinklers. The land was leased by the state for $100 a year. en a 10. year lease. The remaining .8 acre is being developed into a n overnight camping area for youth groups. $1 Million Sought By Bar Owner Mary Caruso of Newport Beach wants more tha n $1 mOlion • from the pre vious operators of her B a ! b o a Boulevard beer bar and she make it clear in her Orange County Superior Court action th at she wishes she'd never seen "'The Place." She claims in her lawsuit that she faces the loss of her use permit for the prem ises at 2000 W. Balboa Blvd. because she can't provide parking for her patrons. And she alleges that she could do so if she had possession of all the land she claims was invo!Yed in the lease aITangement of Oct. 27, 1969. Named as defendanls In the action are George L. Rager, Wayne B. and Jud y D. Ireland, Carol Oglesby, J()hn Doe Ackerman and the Santa Ana Financial Co. Mrs. Caruso signed the lease with Rager but he and Ackerman. she states, now claim they hold ti· tie to halt of the property. She accuses Rager of not revealing to her that the city of Newport Beach would insist on the provision of off street ..::"~"'""-'"'~· _.2.,_i~·~1_''-'~·~~~~~~~0_•_1L_v_•_1_L•~~'-~o~ . • • .-~~~~~~~- By JACK BROBACK 01 tM 011tr l'liltl S!t ll and flood control as a trial le for consolidation ef a 11 services, en1ineerin1 support ess In which the three ad- determine the fea sibility ef eng \neerln& and public works and buildin& and 1afely. mlnlstrators would be n1med SANTA ANA _ Reacting to consolidating all engineering into one program, Weinberg The third runcthmal aroup and the depart men l s d l iled cf l lh l aid public works funct ions. said the proposed pl•n would would be a support operation rearouped. • e a an eng Y repor Asked by Supervisor Ralph split Lhe e1istlng programs in-including administration. com· He did suggest, bow ever, as they •rdered in January, Cl ark if the county ad· le three functions, each head· munications. vehicles, epera· a first step, a hard look at Orange. County Supervisors ministralive officer ~Roberl ed by an administrator. lion and D)aintenaoce and "the present hQdgepodge in have asked all county depa rt· Thomas) should not be One would deal with harbors <'ustodial work. surveying and mapping." ment heads and out s id e coordinating such activities at and parks. The second would Weinberg said the proposal Weinberg said the full ef· engineering societies to report the present time, We inberg be the major trouping of did not recommend any Im· fect.s of the suggested pro to tbem by June 2 on a possi· said that I.he supervisors had departments which are now mediate ctla01eover if the gram might not be felt for fiv e b\e consolid11llon of county never directed the CAO's ef· principally engineering. consolidation is finally ap· or 10 years, but that an im· functfons. lions. would be flood c on t r o I , Instead he outlined a rather lesser~ need for personnel 'Tht11•·locl' Cel~ TOILIT TANK IALL . ........ ........,,.., n...-.io~•W-MetlO• l~-•ly ...... ltt1 ~ tf ,._, o!ltr -h '""'"'•· 7.Sf AT HAltDWAll STOllS ~ngineering and public works rice to carry out such func· Grouped under a single Mad proved by county supervisors. provemenl in efficiency and al The ..report was by Urban In the USJ recommendations t ran s pert atlon, general complicated •·growing " proc· time. Systems Institute (US!). a ~.'.'.'..'."''..-"~~".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.::'.:::::'.'.'.'.'.'.'.''.......'..'.~~!'..'~~"".'.:_~~:.:'..-'~~~""'-~':'.~_I'.'..".::_~~::._---------============ group t1f former aerospace engineers. tec hnicia ns and analysts operating under a federal retraining gra nt. The study was suggt:sted by Supervisor David L. Baker who ask ed origi nally that retiring Road Co mmissioner and County Surveyor Al S. Koch make such a report ()n consolidation of engineeri ng fun ctions. Later it was decided to have the full scale study. Milton Weinberg. ch i e f analyst of US!. said the sug- gested changes n1ight save betwee n $180,000 and $600,000 a year. He said lhat the engineeri ng and public works functions in- volved now cost $12 mi llion a year and lnv olve l.200 people. The analyst ad mitted that the present department align- ment had many good features including the facl that jobs move fast, emergency action is good. and department head autonomy may encourage in· novation and cost saving. On the other side of the coin, Weinberg said, arc ov erlap- ping functions. no un iformity in implementation of policy, some lack of corrdinated plan· ning between' departments and different priorities. J He said alternati ves to the present setup include no change : co nsolidate all engineering and public works fun ctions: co mbine roa ds and flood control departments. or consolidate all similar func· tlons. Weinberg sai d LISI certainly did not recommend the status quo or a general consollda tion of similar functions. He sug· gested lhat the supervi sors might 'A'ant le combine roads Ecology Talk Set SANTA ANA F. A. McCrackin, will speak on "Edison and the Environ- mental Crisis" at Tuesday's mceling of the Orange County Ch8pter of the Sierra Club . The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of Smedley Junior High Schoo!. 2120 W. Edinger Ave., Sanla Ana. Mother's Day gifts . for the best cook in the world. From someone who knows. 899 Silton d11uxe bun wanner keeps rolls just right, warm, buttery, not hard, not soggy. Plastic cover with ve nts to control humidity. • 1195 Sitton Ellt• hot tr•Y· Food stays hot and. flavorful, without drying, ready to be seNed at preparatiorr ;._ peak-hours after preparation. Thermoatatically controlled at 200• Gourmet modo~·17.t5 parking patrons ol ''The•I ;::=======:..::==' Place." Eu1tnt W. Htrnll'lll. o\.tt !II, el 4'31 l runswlck Of"., Hullll11110n l ttch. O.lt GI dt•tl'I, o\.arll Jll. S..•~IYICI by Ptrtnti. N!cllol11 1...i Luclnt H1mt11t1; ..-.1iw.r>. loul.I. L.o, llllty, Fr1..c:11. Joh""'' °"""" ~"" tlld R1ymol>d Ht rnlMlt 1l1!1rs. Mr., LucUlt Stroud. Mr•. Vlrt111l1 Ltw!1, Mri. Lo•rt lnt l uck. tr.cl MFI. DCllll'U [Kf'I. •t i>. Ro11rv, IMlt M, "'°"""' I l'M, PH-Ft"'llV COIMl lt l 1'"1111trfl Hll<T\t . 1'eou1~ MtH, Tutl':I•""· 10 o\.M, l !t1ud ;;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:=;II SKr~ll'•ll• Ct ltlollc c .... rcl'I. Pttk Fl/Tl• llv Colonl1I Funtrt! Home, Olrtc:.10,.. Yoga Tonite at 8! MALM11!1'G Rnal Stocks fn All Home Editions Frff ~111tretlot1 lNIUrlllt Sri Ktllol•I & l ht ••" ''Tll• Stiff<• If VllllllJ & S.rM!llV" The Yoga Center 4U a. 11111 -C•lt• Mt•• -'4Mll1 M••lorl1 H. Mt lmbtr•. o\.gt fl, of tl-11 "T t hlH Clrclt, Huntln91Dn I et ch. Otlt Df d~tlh. o\.otll JD. Survl~l'd by hu~M. Clt rtnct l c11u1ht1r, Mr•. R.otrl {St ndrt l McCrltC~tn; 10!>, E•lth 0 Mt l,.,tl•!f9J ,....., 1rt!>ddtu1hll1'. S1rvlc11, $1turd1v. :::'.:===========::'.''============~'I 3 PM. PHlc F1mllY Co!Olllt l Fu ... rt l Hatnt. M•YIR! t n:1bt1h Mt Yl •I. l'6t lltu wood. Ni!'W· "°'' l !t ch. S1,.,.lc11 <>1ndln1 ti lltl! l ro1dw1y Mor1u1 .... MIHHll Wt l!t r S. Mlnn!1. "-•• U, ol l11 L11>col" SI.. Hun!lngllff' lltttl>. 0 111 Df de.all>, MtV 1. Survived by brotl>tr, Homer T. Mlt1nl11 '"" two t1lttt1. Service will bt l>tld Tu11d1v, 2 PM, $mill>• C~1P1I. Tir. 1tr,.,ent, Good ~1>11d Cirrntttrv. Sml!ft• Mortu1rv, Olrtclart. Po\.YH• Gereld 5. Ptvnt . "-•• J!, of 10ll Htc:.1-.,,dt Or,, H11nlln1ton BHCl'I. Ot!t ol c111111, o\.o•ll Jll. Survlvtd bv wlft, M&llHI J tne: '°"' Gtrtld s. 1'1vn1 II; dt111hter. 111\o""t Su1tn1>t P•v"': 1>1rtnh, Mr. t lld M11 . .iol'tn P!torct 1 1-1lt11r1, MttY l tlll•I Ind "'"" o\.lt•Alldt ri bro11>.,-, Jonn Ptvne. !1rvlt•I. t..otv, M.,.,.J, l JtM, Pttk Ftm!tY Co!Olllt1 Fu ... rt l Ho<T"~. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCL!FF MORTUARY U7 E. 17tb St .. Co1ta Mesa llM!IO • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar . . 171-MH Costa Mesa . . . . . . . 146-tlli • B,ELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 8-3433 • McCOR!\11CK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494·941$ • PACIFIC VIEW ME~fORlAL PARK Cemetery Mortu1ry Chapel 3$00 PacUic View Dri•t Newport Beach, Callfonlil 114.11111 • PEEK FAMILY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. We1tmln1ter 193-3$25 • SMITH'S MORTUARY IZ'J M1ln St. 53MS3t llunllngton Beac• • ... 4NAPA~ -- 'I)" You'd1ik~loknowwh1t'swr0fi(\ -with your u r-11\d whit It 11ktt · ~ to lir it, rilf'll? Thin, 10 to one of th1 u rvlce/rtpalr '1lllJIS olftrin1 this NAPA bookltt-"CAll llfPAlllS •.. raets You Should Kno'#''. They'll check yo ur car, and ust lht "Fae ts" boo•ltt lo Show )'OU wfl•t nt1t15 1e~lr- 1nd why. No auessWOlk. Na mrs11ndeisllndln1t . Just 11111 s1rvic1l Pr•••nted ''a pub/Ir: ••tvir:• by; COSTA MalA AUTO l'AllTI, 1nc. 'l4J Hlrbor •t\ld , t Mtl MtM ,....,,.,. _ 14 -JUJ • ).il·J• .. CAM o\.UTO l'o\.ltf\, tM. 1i u 1 MIOllOlll ~!. w .. •ml•""'· C~ltl ,. Pllor\1 -!llO ld ·HOI Gtt toW "'CU ltll'Allt 1ACTI " lff.ti.l ttMt lfl•M 1•1Ykl/r1p1/r 1110,1:. 999 ' Corning W1r1•Du1t Set is a terrific cooking gift v111ue: includes a 2~qt. covered saucepan and a 10" covered skillet. Pieces sold separately total 18.41. Woodbury canister set'ln parsley, curry or hot pepper. 4.99 Red apple cookie jar 4.99 8·PC. kttchen tool set, 9.49 Penncrest• ele.ctric B·speed blander in parsley. white or curry. 18.99 Enamel steel 1-qt. tea kettle. 3.91 39ee I-pc. cookw1re ••l of 3·ply stainless steel with porcelainized enamel fi nish. Set Includes: 1..qt., 2·ctt., 3·qt. covered saucepans. 6-ql. covered Dutch oven, and a fO" open frypan . Available in curry or parsley colors. Penncrest• electric steam iron in wh ite, avocado or harvest, 11.ff Penncrest• 3·speed hand mixer in paralry, white or curry. 13.ff Penncreat• 'Kitchen Companions' Includes: 1!1ctrlc knife and ponable hand mixer. counter or wall mount. Parsley or curry. A .ff Char9e it •t these Penney storas: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Conl•r:" HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin9ton Beach. Shop Sund1y. too, 12 to 5 P.M • ., ( I • • JO DAltV PILOT Camp Holloway 'Head Shed' Aids Army Smack Freaks PL~IKU Vletn•m (AP ) - On niosl Army poslS the "head shed'" ;., the unit head- quarters. At Camp Hollaway the Head Shed is a ooffee house-crash pad in a bright yellow quon set hut on the helicopter (light line. 11 's neutral territory Where the smack ~freaks get a"·ay fron1 the liters-and the dope. "Some guys just co me in In play pool." said Spec. • Thomas "Moose" DeVault, 19, Bills piling · up? use our money! We say "yes" to 2,302 loans every week-for bill consolidation, travel, m8.jor appliances, or any good reason. A bill consolidation loan from Morris Plan may end your worries and consolidate your debts to a single, affordable monthly payment. on approval, you can borrow $100 to $5,000 or more and get our Money-Back Guarantee {if you find you can do better. return the money within 5 days at no cost to you). Call your nearby Morris Plan office to find out how much your loan will cost. Morris Plan 673 -3 700 N1wport Beach-3700 Newport Boulevard of Prescott. Ariz. '·We don't force ourselves on anybody. If they want to talk, we talk . The ones with problems will start rapping. "'They usually come in because they've gotten sick of .smack heroin. and they \Vaill lo gel off but don't know how. \Ve're here to help them find Otll. ., l\1ouse, the only name he i$ knO\Vll by at the Head .Sh~, livrs in the hut almost totally divorced fro1n the Army. \\!earing longish hair and civilian clothes, he often siL~ up all night rapping with trou bled Gls, then sleeps until noon. Pfc. Roy ·'R. G." Bailey. 20. of Fruita. Colo. who helped plan the coffee house last Frbruary after being buSted o~ rank on a heroin charge , helps Mouse run the place when he can gel away frfom his job as a clerk in his com· pany"s office. Huntington Jaycees Get New Cl1ief Lawrence J. "Sal" Sallman i.~ the new president of the Hunti ngton Beach Jaycees. He and other new officers will be installed ·at a banquet in the Airporter Inn. May 15. Other ofricers are: Jim Shepard. internal vice presi· dent : Gary Lee.k. external vice president ; Tom Bo w ma n . stale director: Bob Kolbly, secretary ; Henry Duke . treasurer, and Dave Robiruion, director-at. J arge. Any Huntington Beach man aged 21 th.rough 35 can join the J aycees. For r u rt her in- formation write lo the Jaycees. P. 0. Box 29. Hun- lingt~n Beach. THE BEST ll••d•rahip polls prov• "'••· n11h'' i1 o"' of tho world't moif pop11l1r comic t lrip1. Rood if cl1 ily iR th1 DAILY PILOT. NOW AMTRAK TRAINS SPEED YOU TO HOUSTON NEW ORLEANS KANSAS CITY CHICAGO SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO OAKLAND SEATTLE 'Vilh lntcrmcd1J lc Slops On }.\,1v I .. An11rJk, Am('1ic:i', fir~t n~rion\\'ide rail passrnger SY"· 1 ~nl , 1 n;:iui;:ut~! C'd H:-JH~\\' tra in 'er vice . In (1\·r r 100 cities, convc-n icn r train~ :-pccll )Oii tn rn1dto\vn in ::ill ki11J..; of 'l'•c.athc.r. And you nC:\.Cr get ":it~\kcd up" 11v1·r 1hc r:~ih\ ay :-ta t1nn. f, ir r<',cf\'<Hion" ;i,nd inf orni:i1 ifln For t-lnu,tC'ln, }.;c\V Orleans, Sa n f-r<1nci~o/Oak !,1nd and !:>ca1tlc ~·all 6~0.1.ll!O I-or San 01C'l;O. Kan~a:, Cit\' ;inJ ChiLat::1J~·11!I 6~4·0 1 i I Spec. 5 Robin C. Unfried. 23 , table, st"verid t hairs. a usually arrived at after con- or Twoson, Md .. is a clf.111-cul refrigerator full ol sort drinks, siderable time and w111er- drafltt from the ~nd Combat and so1ne magazl~s. ing-Mouse 1:1.nd the others en- Aviation Battallon's awards Olf that room. thr~ a courage him to enter H1ghland and deeoralion office "'ho double layer or Army b-rw;·kets House, Camp Holloway'a drug works in the Htad Shed that shut out the light. is the amnesty program. IG-room bungalow with part-heroin or heroin substitutes. time assistance from an Army Scrlbbltd on the wall ln medic and the moral su'pport several tiny bedrooms are of .the battalion surgeon who na1nes and dates. In bolder letters painted on the wall or credll5 the house with a rort the Highland House lounge is a rate of o~r 50 percent. long list of names nezt to the "It's really about 9 9 aMouocement: because it offers Gls a chance crash pad. Lit dimly by ul-Bailey ob!erves : "The drug for affection and com· traviolet lan1ps, the drawings, amnesty program may be panionship that they can 't fincl po.ste rs and graffiti jump out good and everything. but in the Vietnam of "lifers and in a three.dimensional glow. ever:y'500y 's scared Lo death of hoot ch maids." Two big stereo speakers fill it. Amnesty Is Anny, and they percent," Btlford said, "but "We're steppln' out into a The coffee house is unusual the roo1n with folk-rock and don't trust anything in the we can't count all the ones--::w::o::rl::d::u::n::hoo=k::ed::.::"=== woo go home and we lose in the .-'i.rmy and perhaps uni-blues. Army." que in Vietnam. II is an ex-Blankct-t.'Overed beds line A major prob lem is that ad- ample of how much regular-one wall end-lo-end for visitors diets don 't want their names ca re er so Id i er s-the to sit on and rap. recorded. liferS-are willing to bend in "Today is the fir st day of '·You're supposed to have the.ir wrfstling malCh ~·ith the the rest or your life ," say the everything confidential in the pervasi\•e drug problem. walls. "Pgt is nature's way of amnesty program," 1'1ouse Lt. Col. Frank 0 . Miller of say 'hi.' " said, "but before you know it, Orlando Fla ., was the 52nd "s "\Ye are the people our everyone on post knows who com m a n de r for eight partnls warned us about." you are and what you're weeks-until M was relieved "•3,000 lives: \Yhy?" doing." on grounds thal he had The head Shed also has a ~1ouse explained tPat the discussed matters oul of this cluttered bedroom w he r e Highland House staff calls a field of competence in calling Mouse lives and plays guitar man's commanding officer to the Laos invasion a failure. '••·rith his friends and a one· say the man can't be given 'The Head Shed w a s room paperback library with any duty for five to seven operating when ~1iller came se veral hundred book s days. The commander relays here, and he let the ex· sc rounged from troops all over the word to his first sergeant periment continue. declaring: the base. and the word filters down. "But if I ever find one person Anyone can rome to the Once in Highland House, the. smoking marijuana in therP. Head Shed anylin1e day or ··smack freak" i$ cared for by or one empty heroin vial, I'll night but house rules prohibit Pfc. David BelfOrd, 22, af shut the place down." bringing or using drugs In the Brentwood. N.J .. a dropoUt On the surfacr. few places hut and lirers aren 't from the infantry who got off at Camp Holloway are more \Velcomed, Bailey said, heroin through the amnesty hospitable to that sort of When a heroin addict comes program and stayed to help track of." Behind the "OU Llmils" iiign outside Highland Hoose, the addicts spend a week away from the Army lighting the · pains of withdrawal. Belford can give them lran· quilizers but the treatment is strictly • ·co 1 d turkey"-no DOES PAPA LOVE MAMA? Think Mother's D•y Wntcliff Piel• -•4Z·Z444 thing. in and decides he wants to others do the same. -_'_The'.:::.~m~•:in:.'.roo:::'.::m:.'.h:•:s ~1'.._".poo::'.'..l___:b:r~ea~k:_:the'.:::._h~a~b:it~-:•:....'.d:ee~i:si~on'.'.____:B~e~lf:nr~d~li:·v:e~s~in'.'...:'nd::._~ru~n~s~th~e~~~~·~··~P~•~"~u~I•~•~~~====================== • If there's a better value than the Penncresf range, it's the\ Penncresf range on sale. Sale prices effective through Saturday only! Sale $239 Reg. 269.95, sa\fe 30.95. Penncreste lmperl•I 30" 9•• r•nge with sett-deaning oven panel1. EverKleen• oven panels clean themselves during regular oven use. Full black glass oven door, programmed oven control, fluorescent light. White, coppertone. avocado or harvest gokt ••• color costs no more at Penneys. JC Penney service Sale $199 Reg. 229..15, 1•ft 30.15. P9nncr"'9 CllllOm 30" gM range wtth utf-c:le•ning oven paneU.. EwerKleene oven panels clean themselves. during regular oven use. Fluorescent light, see--thfu oven door, lilt-up cook top tor easy cleaning. White, coppertone or awooado ••. cotor costs ftO more at Penneys. It's all part of the value • atPenneys. CALL ••. rn•1IZ3-lo4t1 Value. It still means ·something at Penneys . • . Av•ilabl• at the se stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Btach, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntinqton Beech. Ust Penneys Time Peyment Pla n. - In • • • Mond•Y· M•r '· 1971 DAILY P"OT Ji IAi J1tt LEGAL NOTICE l.EGAL Nor!CE Dange r Cited NOflC• Ofl TllUSTll'S SALi T.I. Nt. Kl-'1 011 Mn 11, 1'11, 11 11 :00 AM-T. D SElt\llCE COM .. AN'I', A Ull'Hrllleft. 11 Oul"t' 1""91/11.. Ttlltl" u""tr 111111 pun111m to OHll .i T,,.11 1111.0 ~..nber :t. U", t~HUlffl bl' CAllL II CLEARY & JIAN CLEARY, llUllNrld ,,.,. ..iN1, incl recorllld O.tmbtor' s. 1"''· •• l111•r. No. 11.it I~ II«* t15' .,,. 374 o! su,•11:1011 COUltT OIF TMI STATI OP CALll'OltNIA POii TH• COU .. T'I' Of' OllA.Mll ........ ,Ml NOTICI Of' AOMINISTltlTltlJt' U.LI Of' RIAL ,ltO .. •ltTY AT ,llVAT• U.t.• FDA Checking Marlin for Mercury Otffdtl 11-01 In -olllc1 of lhto Etltl~ ol DONALD Fll:EOEll.ICIC '°""'.,. 1tecor0tr o1 °''"'' cou .. h , STEVENS, 1twi kllOWn '' OON '· By JOANNE REYNOLDS #mateur erologlsl bad un- c1111or1111. WILL SELL AT PUILIC AUC· STl!\IENS. ON:Nled, .. Of l'IM a.in, ...... lt•tt l!ON TO HIGH!ST ILDOElt FOrt CIJH NOTICE IS HEllEIV 01\IEN "'-•• covered evidence that eight of 4 ~111111 II limo of Ille In llwllll _, IAlt8AltA DtANNE STEVENS, 11 ad• A k f (h us • o1 ,,.. u"u..t S•••••I 11 111• 1ou1t1 \lttt1t1 m1n111r11r1• .,, ,.,. "1111 o1 DONALD spo esman or e . • nine samples of the fislt enlrl"C' lo 11 .. County Cou~H 200 FltEOElil:ICI( STEVENS. 4tc: .. wcl. will Food and Drug Administration aioo. w111 s1n11 Alll eivc1 .. S•nt• • il"•· wu 11 .,..1v1tt Ht., la th• 111wi111 •nd caught oU Baja California ex. c1111orn11 .11 rl1M, 11111 •nd in1ere11 c-m1 llklel<!r, undet tt.e '''"'' •nd con-says the federal agency ls ceeded the ',ederal l1'm1't for vevld la Ind -htkl bY II Yndlt N ici Olllonl 11"'lnt!ler menlklned, •ncl IYll!KI th I d la II j O.•ll 01 Tr1,1it !n 1,... 0.._1v •lluiltd In to con11rm111on by 1111 S1,11te•lor court. on ga er ng a on mar n n inercury -t•nl. ' -.. $ M1v It. 1'11, 11 11\t llou• o! nl"' o'doct; the beli'ef th ( th M fl h -~· 11111 oun,, I !1!1 lltK•lbtCI II : (t;OO) A.M., Ol !lle .. e!ttr within ll\t Time 8 e SJ>O S S "'11 111•1 "'11 •-IY 1ot1•1111 In the 111owld bv 11w 11 ,.,. 0,,1, o1 may be contaminated by The FDA limit is 0.5 parts of 11111 al C1lllornl1. County ot °''""· HARWOOD, soofN .. ADKINSo:. •I· Cl!' ~ c~11 ·M"'· a...:rlbecl •• 1or....,.1 1or 111 • ..tmin111111,1 •• ,, "° mercury. mercury per million parts of tollow1. Loi JO ., lrtt1 <16117, •• per NtWl>Grl CH11tr<Orlvt, l!illt 4~ NeWl>Grl 1· ""P tlKOrcled In IOOll no, p11m 31 •nd flttCft, ciiuornl" ,11 111. ,1~1• 1111,, In-Milton Eason, acting c.~ie£ of fish. Scientists be 1eve toO = ,~, ~~~::!~!.~':'!i"~ Nie afllce ~"11IO:ndii."',. 01~d« .. Hd,11111 .i1 the Lo.! Angeles FDA office, much mercury In the human -""'' ·~" k_,. .,, DJ M1C111on 1i! '.,1~1e :=,-1~N·:t0•11C1F::'~~11:~~ said today their official in· body can cause brain damage, ,11,,!1~-· Cotl• Miii, C1llfor11l1. (II I STEVENS, <Mnl>ICI, hll -l•ld "" •wfu~E1'LlllM c .. ~f~ f<'.~Ltal'IJ.16· ,.,..., ac1c1r111 or common on11n11""" 11 _,.111o11 of 1,.., or altlerwlw 111_ 111 ··HE Q.loRE'S/.. vestigation has ~en limited to "The only thing we can say fllown ·-•·no w .. r•n1v •• 01•.,." 10 or lfl ac1c1111on 10. 1t111 of 111c1 'llt<.•••ld •:; black marlin caught in Japan about the local fish is that "'<Ofl'!Plet•nna of Ctr•ICTMll), IM 1lm1 of hll °""' '" end lo I ll tt. ,, --------------! S11~ u11 w1t1 " rn1<1• • ..,, "'""°"' cer111n r111 pr0ot,... i11u111 111 ''" c11, :rr and sold commercially in there is some evidence o{ con-. c1ytn111I 0( w1rr1n1y, t~IWHI « lm!lllecl, Colli Miu, Counlf o! Or11199,. still of LEGAL l'\OTJCE H ·· r1~flll1111 1111e, -lff•lon. ... .,.. c1u1or1111, comrnoni.. known 11 u;: Eiu ay,·au. tamination. We're trying lo ,.,....,.cu, M P•V ""' ,...,,1111ne "In· nl\d s1rm, more ""1w11r1, du1;rlbecl 1--------------l But he noted lhal !here Is alert local sports fishing clubs UNI wm ol "" nolt MCVrld ~V u lcl 11 tol-•· Oetd M Tr1,111. w1t11 1111 .. u1 11 In w111 llle sOu111e11ie.it recctintul• 50 1 , NOl•CE o" MAltlH,..L'S U.L~ also some evidence of con. about the problems so they noi. orovkHtl, I0¥1r1Cll, If •n,, 11f14K Ille al Uol l elf T r ti lrl.Count¥ PllS!kt, 111C~ Ple!nllfl, Vl. f """"of Mid o.. or 1n111, ""'"' "'''"' rM;J '"· Soum S1n11 "'n. Hirota 1. o.waon. K1!hleen o . o.w1on, tamination in the Pacific won't give the fish away or er'CI l•Plll&ll d tM Ttllilee Ind of !ht ~Wlvltlon No. 2. In ~ (Ill' or C1>1l1 De-int, No, l4tfS. h • W '''""' <•••tld bY 111c1 o...i elf lr.11•t. ,..,':·,t•;e,:i1m•ri rta1r~ 111 book 11, av v1r1v1 o1 .,, ••ec:ut!Ofl lillltd on striped mar 111 wh.ich ls uman consumption. e are .,.. btM!kl1ry .,.,..,. 111c1 a.Id of or wld 0 1,... ~ -1 •0., •Kor11• Febru1rv 1. i.11 bv '"' superior c""''· caught off the SQuthern Cali-trying to explain to them their Truit. bl' ''""°" or 1 b!'M cll .,, dofl11,1~ In 1111 tenn~ tncl :=,';';ions 1 1 Stn a1rn1rcllno. C-.tv of Sin &ern1'· I d I I tne o1111111l°"' wcurtd 1111, 1 b •, C••h In l•wtul _,.elf lhe Sn1~ e,,!~e: dln11, 11111 o1 C11Uorn11. uto0n 1 1uoo'"'n1 fornia coast. mo r a an e g a h1rt1ofor1 1•.wt111 1nc1 c1111 .... rld to tt11 of Amerlc• 1111 perctflt 00.,.1 ot m1 '"11r.ci 111 ftvor or l•!·Counll' Pl1•tk1, "We have not started any responsibilitles if arf official under111ff\M 1 -111111 Oecllr1tlotl of 1..-nl blcl ·la l«'llmjl..,V 1~t o!ler and l11C. ti llld-t <rtdHor '"" 11111111 ofl · · · '-~"id 0ti.u11 end o.mencf tor s.ei., ind •f'ltttn "" b.itnce 10 111 01111 1111 tan!l•mitlon al M1rokt 1 . 01woon, Ktllllffn o. o.w....,, icial inv,. ation C!..il. the lnves ligahon !luvu uncover notl(.e ot brrldl 1nc1 d t1K1lon lo <•uw wile t>'t ""'court. Eacrow dl•roe• .,. 10 Lvl• "'· °'"''°" 11 ludom1n1 c110tot1, JoC'al situa , " lie said. evidence of contamination," IM Undlrllt Md 1a Mil y lo P•-•IV la llf' divided ~ ...... 11. -... n bUVfl '"" llhowlno • nll !>4>l1nc;1 (If 111,561.10 IC· wtl'llv 11ld ob!!•1Hon1. fnd llltrttntr. 011 1entr; e•ceo1 the! 111, wlltr w111 a•v tor 1u111v ou• on 1110 lU1Jome11t °" '"' o.i• ot "Those fish a ' e not caught o r he explained. J1nulr¥ 21, 1t11, '"' ....., .... 1."'11 c1ullcl •1111 da<~mtn!1rv 1!1m1>1 Ind !ht pajlcy ,,,. l11u1rn:t o! 11ld ••1PCullon, I hlVI sold commerc1'ally, so ,,, don't 0 f h . . I ts 111d no•k:• 01 b••.P. '"" o1 11ec11an 10 bl levltO uaon au '"' •lthl, 1111~ 1nc1 1nto••11 ne o t e pr1nc1pa por r•ocordtd In ~ U2t N91 1"' of wld 01 !Ill• ln11.Jft11Ct; lhil ""'''will P•Y th1 of 11lcl lvd1mtn! OtblO'I In '"' a•-•lv h I · ·~..i ' •r Otflcler A«ordi. coll 01 recordlno ltlt defll. 11xt1. In. II\ !ht cou~iv of 0,1""' 51111 °' ave any rea JUrl::ouiCllon. \Vhere marli11 are weighed is 0.11: Aa•ll.J.!1. int 11.Jrtnct, •nd r•nh, 11 tnv, are to be Pro-c1111orn11 described el ro11oW1 · But Eason did acknowledge Newport Harbor al the Balboa av T o IE.VICE <OM•AN" r1tfcl lo clo1t of escrow , 1 · . legal to sell the fish. they are sports fish also removes it polnt that It start& killing off given away to famllil'S who rrom their realm of influence. the fish, we won1t step in eat them. Bill Craig, a b lologl!t for either. A spokesman for the tilub Fish 8.nd Game ei:plalned that j,Because of their close said they have a list o f tOO In· lhe limit on marlin was family relatlon!hlp apd their eluding a sea scout group and recently lowered from two fish similarity in size and eating some area churche!I who take per pe.rsoo per day to half habib, I would expect &lmil1r the fish for distribution to the that. levels of mercury con. poor. "The state food and drug taminatlon in marlin and The San Deigo Marlin Club, ~pie really have their hands swordfish. another major marlin port, full trying lo check fish c aught "And through meetings with has a list ol 124 who receive in California waters that are u s, state food and drug and the free fish. sold commercially. so r don't federal foot! and drug people. Eason said beeause 11 Is ii imaRine they would be getting members of sports.fishing involved willt a fish that's not I b II lo"• ou l sport fish and prohibited from c u s a a ... r coas are being sold, the marlin is a commercial product. aware of the. situation. I don't outside his office's jurilldic· "And as far as we're con. imagine they'll be giving tlle tion. cemed, unles:s lhe mercury fish away this sununer.n he '"It really is the problem of,_:'°.:."c:t.:.am_in_a_ti_on_:.g•_i. __ to __ the _ _:satc...:d.:.. -------- state and local governments," he said. Spokesmen for the State Department of Fish and Game and the State fo~ood and Drug lnspecllon seC'llon of the Department of Public llealth said no s tate aci ion is an· ticipated on lhe fish. They explained that the classification o{ marlin as a Tormenting Recta1 ltCh · Of Hemorrhoidal Tissuesl Promptly Relieved • • · -• All bid• • ..., olltrs ~"'' be 111 w•lllno "-01 '· lracl nn, 11 lhown by mao lltat a ft'sherman who ,., an A 1· g Cl b Al"-··gh ll is 1'1 15 ltla Tru1IH Incl W\11 be rectlVfcl •I ,.,. offl~•· ol rKo•dtd I~ loo~ 11 , PllH' 11, ng 1n u • UIVU • Wlldo Jt H1u9, HARWOOD. SODEN ~ ADKINSON, 11. Ml1ctll1111ot11 m101 rec:0tllfcl In Or1n•t ---,;;.-.-•• ~~;;;~;;;-;o,:;-;-;~~;;;~~-~;-;;---;:=============.I Vlt•P••tldlfll lornov• for Hid tdmlnlstrll I I JSO Counl,, C1llfolrn!1. l!ftR ADVERTISING IN THE In many caae1 Preparation H givee prompt, temporary relief from 1uch pain and itching and actually helps ahrink swelling of hemorrhoidal tia- suea cawied by inflammation. a T•t. by doctort on bun- -,..,.,.. dredt of patimta lhowed t!dl to bl true in many Olle9. Ia fact, many doctor•, them.I 98lvei, use Preparation ,,. oC recommend it for their tam.! iUes. Preparation H ointment _or 1uppositori•:)I_ l"\lbllll>ld Ort~M (°'II OlllV .. llol, N9Woorf Ct nt.r OrlVt S.Ulll ,~•· N:WPOrl 2001 Clllf Orlvt, N1JWOOrl 8nch, Ctr. r'!V M•• 1• JO, U, 1171 l02l·71 flt1cn, C1llfornl1, 11 '•nv time' f!!tr the ltornl1. Yoga Tonite at 8! ,llrst O\lbllctl!Ofl ol !hit no!ltl • ..., blrlort NOTICE 15 HeREBV GIVEN 1h1t on th• mtklng Of ltlcl sale. M~v 75, nil, ti 10·00 o'tlo<~ AM. at W E E K E N D E R LIGAL NOT"ICll For lur!htr lnform1!ion 1ncl bid torm1 Htrbar J~<1lcl1I OiJ!rlct Court, 561 Wts! LEGAL NOTICE , F,._ o.-1nt1•tlo1 l•llllfl"I Sri K1lldlt & IMtlll "T~• Sti•Mt " v111mv & s1r1111tJ"' NEW,Oltl-MISA fQJ>IV ti thf oltlct ol lllt tU"'~YI /or lht ll!h S!reet, C•ly GI (0>11 Me11, Counr1 of UNll'llO SCNOOL DISTltlCT tdmlnl1tr1trl•. 0<1ng1, $tell 01 C1iltor"la, I will .. 11 1t Nolk:t ln•i111tf •101 T~ right i• rfH"'fcl lo rtlPC! •"Y 1nd oubll' 1vc1lo.n !o In• "'~""' 111-r, lor PHONE 642 A]21 NOTICE 15 HEREllV GIVEN th1! !ht Ill bl01. ''Sh;,. l•Wlvl MOM¥ ol 111~ Unl!fll Slttt•. ... The Yoga Center U.S Ii. Ultl -C11t1,M .. 1 -UUJ:ll Bo.t•d or E<lut11lot! al 1n1 Newl>Gr1·Mlll OATEO: A.,...11 79, \1)1 111 II><! rit M, ll!le f nd l"!~r•>I of 11\a U~lllfll SUIOOI Ool!rl<I al Ortnt• County, IARBARA ~ANNE STEVENS, Jud11m•nt cltblor1 in 11\f •bavt <leKrltleclJ---------------------------!~:=============-'....--------------------------- C1i<lornl1, will ••<tlvt 1eell'd llkll 11P lo •l Admlnl11r1!•i• ot !h1 E11111 al PrOPtrty. or to m<Kh thtrro! •• m•t bt H ;DCI A.M. Oii Int lltn dlY gf M••· 1'71, Oon11d Fredtrf(~ si .... .., •• OK'CI. nKUlltY 1a ••11111 u ld flllCVHOll. wlln et lh1 olllc1 or 1elcl 5Choa! Oi1!rl<1. HARWOOD, SODEN I ADKIJISON ltcrufll l11ttr•S! '"° cOl!I. , loc11fll 11 ll.!I PllCtflllt A"'nv•, Colli Atl..-MVI ti Ltw Ol!ftl 11 (01!1 M111, C11Uornl1, April Mow, C1llfornl1, 11 wMth lime Nici bld1 5't NIW"'1 C11tlff DriV1•Sllil1 Q4 "' ltll lo.Ill bl! oubtlt1Y 0111nl'd '"° rud tor: 1'1$1 Ottkt le1 1H1 0 . 0 . WILKIASON, Mtrli'!jjl REl.OCAllON OF aUILD1NG$ l'll'#IOr'I •11Ch, C1Kfofnt1 t2'U M11n.clp1I (a-fl, Qr1noe Countt All bld1 1rt to bf In ''"or01nce •Ith T•ltPll-(n4J W-UU H1r110r J UCll<lt l Oll!rlcl C°""lllllfll, l111truc1lon1. Incl SPt<lllc1!lan1 Ir Thtmt• A, ,.,.,....., BY R. H. Gaodt. 0.oulY ....,,lcll '" ,_ on l!!t In 1n1 of!lct al Thi AllOrMYI fir ... ~mllll1tr1trl11 Mlcl\111 It. <11111111 Pu•<lllll119 "'Qtn! ol 11ld School ObtrlCt, ,ubl!lohtd Ortnoe (1M11I Otllr Pll<ot, JU Nlrlh ltcend Ave .. Sv!lt I' II.SI Plit intll Aven.,.., Ca111 Miii, NllY 1, J, 1, lfll lGtf.11 U•llMI, Cttlltf'11(t c1111.,. .. 11• ""1r1111•1 Allorn•Y E•cl'> 11101111 mv1t 1ubmll 1 blcl (1"'°'11 LEG P\ibll111t<1 Or1nq1 (Dll! Otli' Piiot, '" thf form of 1 ctr!llltO Of c11hl•r'1 AL NOTICE M•Y J, 10, 11, 1911 101>•11 ~ck or • blcl bond t<IV•I 10 !Iv• P41rcentj-------------- 11-..1 ~f !ht 1mounl ot lht llld, mlclt CEltT11'1CATE 01< (Oltl"OltATION l--------------I 1>1v1bl1 to rn1 "'d" of tne N-oon-Me11 oorNG IUSll'IES$ UHDllt LEGAL NOTICE l;ftl!ltd khool Ol1trlct. A Ptr!orm1Mt PICTITIOUS NAME 8ond m1v be rl'QV~td fl tht cll1cr1tlon ot THE UNOERSIGNEO (OllPOl!.AllON .. lht Ohtrltl. I" ll!t tvenl ot ltllur• !O <loll l\1r1by ctrtlfV l'll1! It 11 c-ut!lllt I NOllCE OF ,UILIC HEAltltlG •"'•' lnlo IVCll tont•ICI. lllt procHG• or Cl<'1CM'r t•l•S b111in1u ,, JOU North !ht thttk will bl lor!fl1td, or In CIM oft •hrbor Bo!.lltvira Sin!i Ant Ctlltornte flEFOllE THE l'L ... NN!NO COMMISllON bond. !Ill lull 111m '"'""' w!l1 IK ........ lh flt;lll,.;.. I! l I EM' OF THI! ctTV 01' lorltilfcl 10 11111 Sc./IOOI OlllrlU of Ort"tl PIRE ~PER SAL~';' :~e i:,, _,~ NO>lC<l'OUNTEAlEN VALLEEY Covnlv 15 H R BY GIV N !ht! on No b.ld<ltr miy wlll>O•tw 1111 bid lot 1 "'~ ~ .,1111 <crl>Oftt!on Incl lit prlll(lfNI Wfllnr1111v. M•• ll, 1911 &t 1:1G p.m. 111 lod of ! I II (.&SI cl !t "1 Plitt "' I ~U 11 ti tollawo: lh1 C~ntl! C111mber (l!v Hall llnllO P•• or V· Vt IY& 1 tr t Allttlut Anodllts Corpart!loin, 1013 S!itt r ,...,.1nut. Fwnt;in Ville•, ' ftlt ltl for 1111 Gotnlnt 1hlrto!. Norlll H1rbl!r loultY1rd, Stn!t An1, ZONE CHANGE U• CONDlltOl'IAL USE fl\1 Bc.,d o! E<luttllOl'I ot lh• NtwPorl· C1lltornl1. ' thest Unllll<I Schoo! Ol11rlcl r111rv11 Ille Dtltd• Merd! :J, lt1l .. l:lt'!'-IT 71, llNT. lllACT HU -AP· ' •1 ' l 1 11 blO nd !IOI · · pllu11cn llltd bY Prr1ltY Otvtklom•n• , '" 0 •• K .... er • I. • AnlelUI "'"°'ltlH Coroor1!1cn rar • Chlll9t cf IDnt r 111:1·1 IO RI· ntcnwrlly ''CtPI 11\t lownt bid, lnO !o flv John Clifford Vlllffn rom w11ve 1nY lnlormtlttv or lrrtou11rn1 In Prt•kl•nl ' PO 6900 IOC1!tc1 on !ht e1sl ti..., of l "f bid rK•lvld. STATE OF CAL IFOltl'llA I Newland ~lwttn Elll1 1nd Gertlela Ol!tcl "'crlt 2!. lt71. COUNlY OF LOS ANGELES ) 11. ConclltlOMI UM Permll 7S I"° 11.ft_ NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIE D On 111!1 ;lrd ll1v of March, A.O. lt)l, Tr...::I l.'!ct lllld In canlY11Cllon Wiii! !ht SCHOOL DISTlll:l(l betort rnt. 1 Noltrv PYl:l!k In end tor 10lll Chin .. Tr1<I »ct conltln1 3'.lll of Or1no1 (01Jnly, C1tllornl1 u Jd Co-nlY 1nd stet~. otrtonally 1p. •er•• tncl In loll, lOlll! Chlnt• 1m1nd1 8y OorolnY M1rv1Y FllM• Htr.c! Jdin C!lttorcl VIOHn known to me S.CllOl'ltl Dlttrlcl Mto »·S.11. PurCl\111119 A8tn! 11> bt the Pre1lclfnl ol lh• co•llDrlllon tto1t ltEV. PltlCIS• .. LAl'I 1'7 l 'ltECISE tlS.1100 t•KYlll<I !he Wll~ln lnt!rUmtnl on bthtK .. LAN 117) -... OPllCetlon IUbml!IM bY Publllhl'd Ortnoe Co&1t Dally Pllol, of Ille COfllDrlllOl'I lhtrt ln ntrnfcl, 1nd New RfPllbllc Cor-1tlon to <011Jlt11CI ""P'l1 76 tncl Mey J, 1tll tea.11 tdlnowltOteCI lo me !hit SllC!1 cor-· 101nm,n1 unlh 1! • cltn•ll• ol tP. "--"'"-'"'"'""""'"===c--~-l.11on tJCtcU!fcl ll>e 11m,, aro•lmlltlv 1•'1• "'"tlllmi un1T1 IM'f ltrt LEGAL NOTICE tOFFICIAL SEAL) on "'' It •<••• bollncltO ,.,,.,,11y by -----~c:=------1 Oonllld ( Kim.Mt Wtr"''' St• llruno. l1 H1el..,d1, S.n ,.,.1m NGttrv PVbllc<elltornl• Mtlto. L• ill1mlll1 end • lino •P CEltTll'ICAT• 01' aUltNEll Prlll(lllll Oltlct In P•o•lm1ltlY 460 II, t11fertv ol ~ l'ICTlllOUS P'UlM NAMI Lot Anllel-s COl.lnlY c1n!1r11.._ of lll'VOtnur1t, Th!1 t>r-rl'y THE UNDERSIGNED do boll! hertll1 M1 CornmlJllon E•alrei I• l'v•lht• CltKrtbM II Loll 4, 5 tn<I I. ftr!llV lht l tht• Wiii be conductl119 I Ftll t lf7• Tr1c1 IUS '"° 11 toned It• Mwltlpkl· m1rlM t ltclrOl'lk:t rt~lrch b>l1lnu1 II DONALD C. °KtM•••• A.It'!'. F1mlly RHl""°"tlel. Thll lltm 11 1111119 lllO SI. AID1n1 Or.. LOI Altmlloo, I.It $11111111 1"11!1 pr1Kt11ed 11 I er-MCI rtvl1lon of C11Uornl1. uncltr !hf lldllkKI• firm n1m1 L.tl A-lff. Ctllf, t•l4 Prec:lq Pltn 1~7. PON!eroo• Hom11 tnc. o! PACIFIC MAltlNE RES EA It CH IOM-<>C ti the P•oblDlt bullcllr of lllt P•OIKI. ... sSOCIATE.S Ind ""' uld !Inn II .. 11bll111td Ort!\91 (Olll D1llv .. llol, Tiit.. m1tlttl ••• btlno Or<Ku•w (Gml>Oltd of !hi lollowln• PCl'\.O"I' whcM Mii• ). JO. 11, ll lt11 1Cl.1l·11 aur1u1nl IO !ht P!1n11l111 LIWI of lh• n1mt1 111 lull '"" pl1tt1 ol re•lckntl 1rt ' Sitt~ ol Celflornlt (GoV'I. Coelt 6S,OOO l!1 11 lollow•, to-wU; nq,I Incl !ht Founleln V1ll17 M\lftlclatl (l) J1c-P. Slov1k, '>DH E. F1lrw1y LEGAL NOTICE Coll•, Titlt "· Tht 1o"lno C!MH. Jonl119 Driv1, No, ), Or&11f1, C1lllornl1l----~------~~-l m1c1, artcl11 pt1n1 Ind plot p!1n1 •••IHI (Orenvt COl.lnlv) tilt In !ht Pltnnlnt O•c••tmtnl tncl 111 Rlchircl C. 81!tood. 300 SI. CEltllPltAlE OF COltP'OllATIOH 1v11!1blt lor aubllc l~IOICllDn tnd tl· "'IDeni Orlvt, lOI AltmltOI, Ctlllotn!i 001NG IUIJIUEIS UNDllt emlntllon. IOrtnoe Coun!YI IFICTlllOUI NAMI! TlloH oe1lrlnq la lntity ln 11vor Of 111 WllNE5S our hl~cll this Sth cliv If THE UNOElilSlGNEO CORPOR ... l 10N -Ilion to th••• r1<1utll1 1no prapo1111 APrll, 1,11. d0t1 Mrelrt ctrllfY !ht! II It CClllducllnt I will bl t lvtn 111 CPPC:,.!unll'I ta clo 10. II Jtck "· Slowik b\J11MH 11 «iOO Wnl ChlPmen Av1nu1. lur!ller ln!orme!l!lfl 11 "91lrea you m11 Rk~ird c . fllltoOd Orange, C1U~rn11, Unllfl' 111t llcllllou• con11ct Tht Plt nnlng 0101rlmenl 11 toU· ~TATE OF C ... L!FOR N!A l!f'fn n1m1 Of SMUGGLER'S INN end 11'111 l'2• end rtflf Ill mt tbovt llt ml. COU NTY 01' LOS ANGELES SS. "'•.Nrnt ol Mid corcor1tlon Incl 111 prln-PL.ANlllNG COMMISSION OF ON THIS S!h cltY of A ... 11. A.D .. lt11, (lpal Pl•C• ot bu1lnn1 II 11 follows: THE CITV OF bo!orl mt, GltnnYJ E, Fl!J.t•rl l• I ... UOClettd l'kllh of CllKOfnlt, llK • FOUNTAIN \IALLE'f No!t ry Pllllllc 111 •nd for '"' u \11 Cwnll' "'1 Wlltfl!rt fl!vcl., ae••tlY" Hllli, Ct. Ctll!IO'I Sherrod, '"" 5!111, rnlOI"• IMrt111, a" Iv t07H SKrttl,.., IO '"' t ommlu lONd '"" 1worn, pertonallY D.a!lcl: "'1111 l}, 1'11 Pl1nnl119 Comm!Hlon •<>Pta'ld Jt<IC "· 51ov.i< incl ltkh1rll C. Auocltl~ Ho9!1 ol PubllMllCI OrtnH Co11I 01i!1 P\1o1. lllllOOd known 10 mt 10 lie lM MrKlfll Ci1llarn\e, In<;. Mer l. 1m 1on .71 wh<>ll n1mu er• 1ubtcrlbld It lllt w!lhln llY Ntllltn Wlnlt fl .. ' 5«Tlltn' l"1trum1nt, '"° 1tknowl..,..... lo me STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) '"~N ··.;.r1:'l!~;· '.!~11:EoF. , "•"" couNlY OF Los ANGELl!s , u . LEGAL NoncE htreunlo ltl mY htncl incl llll:rtd mY On ttlll U!ll dlY of April, A.O. 1'71.:J--------------·l cllltl1I 1111 thl <l•v ind 1•1r In thl1 bt!ort me, • NCll•l"'I Pltbllc In Ind 16' Cerlilkllt tlr1t lbovl writ!..,, llkl Sl1!t, ptnonlllY IPPllred N"'lHl>N tOlllcltl Seti! WINTERS known lo mt lo bl "'' G!en"'' f , FlllHrll<f Se<reltrv of !ht corPOr.ilon ll'ltl nta1t~ Noterv Publl' • C•llfOm\I t!lt within ln11n1..,...t Oii behtll of 1111 t>r!ll(lpel Ofllct j,. coraorll!Oll !Mrtln ntmt<I, • n cl Loo A1'1111ti Counl'I' ldcl>D'Olllcltld kl me Th1t IUUI (Of'POl'lllon • ' t•ICll!td the 11me. •MY Comm!11lon :IP r•• WITNESS mv htllll ........ 1. ... prll I, ltH Publlt~l'd Oftl'llll (Otll Dtl!Y Piiot Jdin M. ROte'I AorH U, 1t, 11. MIV J, 1911 '"·11 Nol1rv Publlc In i ncl tor Hid 5!1!1 GEND•L, AAIKOFI'. SHA,tltO ANO QUITTNllR, "'''"'· ----------j1111 Wll.,,!r1 llY', S111t1 Uot l.ff AnMlu. Ce. '61411 LEGAL NOTICE NOTIC• INVlllHG 1101 AUrntY Nohtt 11 h1r1bv glvt n lh•I !ht Boar'll ol l r11•lefl (If !ht COIJI (ommunllv ColleO• IOt?·OC O'strlc! o! Or1nt1t Coun!v, Ct!llor11icl. will Publl1Md 011nt1t CHO O•llV t>llo!, ••c•ivt i.etltd bldt UP lo 11 :00 t .m .. MIV J, 10, 11, 2,, 1tl1 1(0{>.11 Tu11<11v. M1v 11. 1•n. 11 ll'll Purcn11!nt IFICllllOUS 1u1111•1s NAMll STAll'MENT Ttte lolktwlr 1 HrlOn I• clo!"ll blnl ..... .,, HOOD ANO ASSOCIATES. USOl lrvlnt; 9oultv1rd, 1~11\", C•Utorn!1 ""' flevi.n, Inc., • C1llfQrnT1 (orparallon, 11M11 lrvlnt llvd., lu1lln, C1lllor"1' ., .•. JondOI. '"'" 1 C11U.,.nl1 Corpcirtlfc", 11~1 l•)'IN lllvcl .. TYtH11, Celllornla 91'1!) • I l~l1 bv1lntU It tOllducl•cl by 1 to- ~••lntrJhlo. fllvlfn, In(. av Ltcn1rd M. HOOCI -oc Publl1htd O••~v• (HJI OtllY Pilot. MIV J, 10. 11. 2,, !ti! ICl.11·11 OpP!. of 111<1 1Cftool dl1lrlcl llKl!td • LEGAL N0'11CE IJ/0 Adami Avtnvt, COl11 MIJI , 1-----.:..:::..:._.:.:_:.:._ ___ l----:c:c,,-,,-_,-C-,,----- Ctll!or"ll, 11 whlth time 111d bid• will be P--41M LEGAL N'OTICE 1>o1bllclv aHMd t nd r•td for : OS< I' LOSCOPES ... NO WA V E I' O R M Cllil:TIPIC ... TI 01' IUllN•ll '" l'ICTlllOUI NAME t~ONllORS. lht undenltnld do certify lhfV '" All blcll ,,, lo bf 111 ICCOl"cllnCf wlth ConGllCUnt • bu1ln1n .. 100$ llltl S! .. lh• •n1truct1on1 1nc1 c....,,nloni •ncl Coit•. Mnt . C1lllornl1, unffr lht ~cec:\flc1Uon1 whld> '" now Oii Iii. encl llctltloul firm nlfM of CUSTOM SOUND m1y bl ..,;yrt<I In llM attic• elf 1~1 • HECTltONICS "'' .. lh I Id Pu•th11l"9 A1ent cl ••ld ltl'>ool dl1lflcl. "'·' 1 1 11 E • '''' muit WOmlt with l\!I 11111 1 firm It comPOllcl of 11'11 to!lawlnt Plf"IOftt, ''" tr Who.. n1mt1 in f\IM tnd al1c11 of <11hlrr'1 CllK•. Ctrllllllll thec.k, or bkl· rllldlntt t rt 11 tallow•· d•"• DO"" fT'telt NY•blt to thl orcllr ot Jl!'rv Sltpl\elll, 1t1J V!1l1 C•IXl•I, t~e Coe•! CommunllY ColleM Ol1!rld Newcorl lltach C.111 801111 ol Trv11"1 111 '" 1mounl ""' 1"' Frtnk Krolr~r J," ~ W. ("II llllln liv1 atrc111! IJ'IO) of !ht 1um bid 11 """'" HtWpOrl 8~ Ce11t. 1 1u1r1n1" 11111 11'11 blclOlr will t nler Into Otted "'"H t, 1t11 lh• a•aOot~ Conlr1CI II lllt ..,,,. 11 Jury $1tphtM • 1 .. 1•dtd lo hlm. In 1111 1vff1t of ltllurt to Frink Krottff Jr. '"!fr !n!o IUCll contrect, IM Pr<Ktc!cl'I of STAlE OF CALll'ORNIA., '"' cl>tck will be forltl!ld, or In 11'11 Ull OltANGl! COUNTY: ol 1 bond. •~• lull 1111'> lhtr.of will be! On AP•lf t, 1t11, blrle•t ,.,,, 1 Not••Y l"'1f ltfcl IO ••IO sth<la! al1lrlCI. ,Ubl!( In '"" tor llld l!t 1t, PUIOlll!IV Na blctd~r mtv withdraw hi! bi<I lo• t IDH1•tll Jtrrt S1toh•n• Incl F••NI Mrlod al !a•IY·llve (d) dlYJ (IDmttlmn KrG11tr Jr,, kn-" 10 mt to bl Ille JOI 1ner lllt clt!t $t1 lor l~e 0Ptnln1 PtrlOl'll Wholl n1m11 1rt 1ubKrli.t<I lo Jtotrecl. lr>f within ln1trvm1~! 1n<1 1cknowll'dteel l~• f10trd of Trv•!!'tl ro1t•vt1 I~• 11111 txtcu!ld !ht l1m1, n•Tvlltif of ••lec:tln• ~"' IM ~II Didi o• (Offltlll So81) ID w1lvt '"' Jrrttul1rltl11 or 1n· Mtrv fltltl Mc1!cn '"'"'•lilltl In 1nv bid 01 In lht blcl(llnt. No11rv l'vbllt. C.1lllor,.11 OHn: M•v JI, 1911-11 :00 1.m Prll'ICfcat Oltlu I"' Sl9n~: Or11111 County Nofm1n E Wthon AP•ll f/ IJIS Stdv. llolrd cl Tr~lllfl Publltht<I Ortll9t Co&1! 01117 l'!lol Publllllf<I 0f•nv• Cotll O•llY Pllol ..... 11 1), 1', , .. M.IY J. 191 1 tQ0.11 NOllCE OF ,ltO,OSIO lo\l'llt M•ltOElt Notice 11 h••lb1 111ven 1n1! 1ppli,1ll011 h•1 bttn ,,,.de !G tht Comottoll•r ot 1111 CUrrH1ev, W8thlnolon, O.C: 10'1'1ll lcr n11 ccn11nt to 1 metoer of Newl>Grl N1!<0nal I•'*· Nt,.to•I lttcn, C1lllo•nl1. wlln •ncl l~lo SOIJ!hern C1lllor"l1 Flru N•· 11..,11 lllnll, S1n Dil'9a. C1Hlo•nl1, I! 11 conl-l1ttd th.II •II alfktl ot ll'll 1D0¥1 n1m11<1 Dlnk1 w!ll coinflnye IO bt _,.,..,_ ' lh11 ""'k• ll auDll,,.td PUr1u1n1 to Secl\on 11 (t) of 1111 l'tdtrfl OIOOlll l111ur1nt1 Act, NtwPOtl N.ilo"ll ll1nk Newaorl 8e1c~. Ct1Uornl1 Soutt.t•n Ct lllo•"I• Flrit N1!1on~I lll"k Sin Ditto, C1\l!ornl1 t>ubll1n111 Or1no1 Coe•! D1l!v ,.1101, M•Y l . 10, 17, 7• 1na Jun1 J, !tll 101!-n LEGAL NOTICE ., .. ,ltllTIOUt IUltNltl NAM• ITAllM•NT Ao•H 1, ln<I MIV J, 1')1 tJ6.)I LEGAL NOTICE ,,":°' tollowln1 "'-11 ao1,.. t1v11neu LEGAL Nilorl'!':~CE~:_--1--wn ... a<.wort0.~-.--1 Oult l Clnll()ll, :ulol~ Grttn L1ntfrn ------SU,1'111011: COUltl 01' TNll: Otnl ,o\nl, C1!llornl1 .... 1sn 5TATI OP CALll'O•IUA l'Olt ltl!lTAUltANT AOVENlURl!"S INC,. CEltTll'lCATE 01' IUSINll$ lHI COUNTY OP QllA.NO• 1520 LDnt '"'n l lv• .. i.1, L- PICTlllOUS HAME NI, A4tu4 INdl, tllllornlt . Tht vnd1•1lont0 Clo.ti Ct•llly "" It <Ol'I• NOTICE OP HEAlllNO 01' P•T1TION Thli butl,,.11 11 bll ... tOf\lkleltO " ... ~uctln1 t bu~lftlll 1t 11U COl'l!lntnlt l, FOii l'ltOllAlE OP WILL AND IFO• (Orl'Oft llon. (0'"11 M•••· C•lf"'rnt1. l/ncllf" "'' lk· LlllEltS TESTAMl!NfAltY sivntc1· 01\1\d '•lrln t 11oou1 ll•m nfmt g! 80 11'5 HAN~YMAll Ellf11 of O!XIE N!.LL L@ICMlFUIS, Pftl .. rAINT ING SERVICE t ncl lhll tlicl llrm t!w k-•• OIXIE N. LEICHTFUSS. Pvblllhfd Or1ntt (C111I OlllY .. lie! b compO'ltd or !hi IDl-1119 --· l llO known II OIXIE LEICHlF1JS$ tNI ""'" 12, It, » 111d Mt ¥ J, nn .,...,. w1101• ,,~..,.. In IYll t ncl Plt 't of ffllclenc9 11 NELL LEICl<TFU~$, DIC11 .... b I' toll_,; NOTICE 1$ l<ERl!l'f GtVIN Thetl--------------1 lilot>trt E. Gr1nt. JlH Conu~ 1).1•1 "''"''' A, Llld'lllu" h•• lllfd ..... ,1 .. 1 LEGAL NorlCE COl!I M .... C1!1tGrnlt ot!ll\on tor orob•I• (If .... 11 •NI for Otltd APto\ XI. 1'1! l11UIMf ot LtUet1 lt1t1ment1rt to Pttl·J--------------1 R~tl E Grfnt !lor!ff, relf<lllCI to which 11 mtcll !or S!tlt of Cf11ror11l1, 0•11191 COIJ~tv; h.lrlher P1tllc1,1\1t1, tncl th.i lM llm• t nd On Aorll JO, lt /I, belort mt . I lffl1ry pll(I cl ll••rlllll '"' ... ,, ..... bttll HI Publlc 111 Incl lor itlG 51111. ff,.,,,,.11v tor M111 )II, lt71, 11 t:» 1.m., In !hf I PHlrH lto»frl E. G••nt k-n to mt (Olff!rooll'I ol DIPtrlmtnl No. l ol 11111 lh• lo bl '"' ptrlCltl -n1"" lt IUbKtlb· CGUfl, 11 700 (!vie c ... 1 ... O•I•• ""•1•. 1n td lo 1111 wl"'\" ln\l•~m•nl t ncl 1!11 (Uy of ~tnt~ Ant, C:1llfor111t. FH, 1+1. F 11• IFICTITIOU$ IUStN•SS Ho\M• ITo\Tl'MENl tol10wtrotl "'WI 11 dol"9 butll!t\1 ti: CAltVAN RENlAL~. lSOS Etll 11'11 s1rr1!, S1nl• An1, c1mor"l1 REC·ltllNTS, !NC , 1 Ctllt0<~!1 Cot-•!lon, 1'°6 •11r11vo, 1•11 G1rclln1, C1tlfornl1. •••-lldgll<I r1e r~t(.111llCI !h~ 11mc, Ottll<I ....,.!! l'I. 1'11 \OFFICIAL SEALI W. E. ST JOt'IN, Jootflh E 01vl1 Cou~tv Cltrl. Not••• Pvb!k Ct llf9'ftll "UltWllL HUltWITZ IM ltlMllt. llr!ntlc1• OT!L(f I~ OO·UM Sl<ttl, or1119• C< ~'" N1w11trt •••c.11, c1ui.r1111 ftUll ,,,., c:omm,u•on C~a1r11 Ttl: 1110 17,.Ml't Ju~• )I, \9'4 Allll'MYI rer ,1111 .. l!tf "~bll1h1cl 0•1"9• C:otll Dt llY Pllo!. Pub!ll~ Otl"fe CCIII 01111 t>!lot, MtY l, 10, 11, 71, !"! lDll·ll Ml¥ 1, J, L lt11 1&1t·11 • T1>l1 bu1lnt11 11 Dtl~• conclutttd b1 • Cor110rtl!Ot1. w11111m 1 •Y lof ton.cc= "1.obtll/!1'4 0•1M t (Gtll M11 l, 10. 11. 1,, ltll 1>11!1 ,Hot+, TOll-11 alifornia landmark 27 OFFICES STATEWIDE JmPERIAL lllMnGB OF NEWPORT·PASAOENA [Jecutive Offlc1: 3366 Via Udo. Ne.,,,,orl Beach Ul4l 673-JJ JO Main Olfice: 61 South Lake A'ftl\lfe, Pasadena (213179"441 Corona de! Mar Office: 550 Newport Center Drive. Newport Beatl1 Ul-06"-1461 3870 East Foothill Boolmrd, Pasadena l21Jl 795-0447 134 North Glendor1 Annue, Glendora (213) 335.4043 Woodland HUis Offic~ 19900 Ventura Blvd., Wo0dl1nd Hills, Calif, l213l 34&.J920 llTINmAL llllUlll08 OF THE SOUTH Maln Offiet: 8311 u Mm Blvd., La Mos•, c.nr. UJ414634441 Extcutive Office-: 2320 Fifth Ave. Sm Diep, Calif, m~ m1151 Chula Vi5la Office: 398 "H" Street, Chu!t Vista, Calif. (714}42(}.~ El Cajon Oflicl!: 234 Magnolia Ave_, North, a Cajon, Calif, 1714l442.t1811 lemon Grove Office: 7770 Broadway, Ltmon Crove, Calif. (714l 46J.3871 National City Office: 305 l Blh St, National City, Calif. Vl4J 4n.a111 San Diqo Office: 5508 8alboa Avenue, Sln Diego, Calif. 17141278-4060 Escondido Ofliee: 1500 L Valter Pkwy., Escondido, Calif. 17141 746·8990 la Jolla Office~ 7877 Ivanhoe Ave., ti Jof111 C11Jf. 1714) 459-4275 Paciric Beach Ofllce: 1001 Gamet st,. San Oiero, Calif. U14l 48&-JOJ1 ll1IPlllHIL lllMllClll OF SANTA BARBARA Main Office: 3868 State Street, Santi BWra, talif. 1805) 687-1311 Ojai OHice: J 10 South Vtnlura St. Ojai, Calif. 18051 64f>.552l Monlecito OHK:ti 1482 t Valley Rd,. Slllla Birb1ra, Calir, (8051969-3207 lmPERIRL llAllll'JOS OF THE NORTH Main Office: 9CI Santa Rosa Art.Santa ROSI, C1llf, t707) 546·054 4 San!a Rosa Branch Ofllct1 115 H1hmann D1ive, Santi Rou1 Calif. uon 5'&-05'• A~le Blouom Olflctt 119 ff. Main st .. SthasUllDt tattf'. UD7l 823·741 l Napa Dffict: 3300 Jefftrson Streit, "apa, talif. t707) 255-3310 Petaluma Office: 127 Horth McDowell Bl'lld.. Petllama, tali!. von16>W1 ll11PBIM..,... BrawltY Offk:t: 122·Maln 'Street. Brnlet, Clfif. OJ~ 344-1510 Calexico Offict: 32S lmpe1ial A~enue-1 C.!exico, Calif. 17141357-112& £1 Centro Office: 5th & s1111 Strtets. a cmro. Calif. llt-0 352-7210 WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARIES OF $L5 BILLION IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA 011!!1 .,. . ' ,) 11~1~o=~~L~v~·~1L~o':__~~~~~~-M=•=M=•~1.=Mr~'-",'=1~•'..:...1 1 _Q_UEEN_re ___ 8_rP_h11_1n1_.,r_a"d-.' Baltimore Railroad Era ·comes io a11 End ''My wife went to one of those spas to get shaped and contoured, but the only thing that got shaped and contoured waa my wallet." Upper Class Babies Get Ju1np on Others LONDON (UPI) -Babies born in more prosperous hom~s of th e higher social classes seem to gel a belter start in life as regards health and intelligence. according to two British scicntisls. Dr. Colin Hindley told the British Psychologlclal Associa- tion that the children of wealthy parents begin to move ahead in the intelligence stakes as early as the sixth month of life. They start standing, crawl- ing and sitting and making noises earlier, he said, and by the third year they are well in advance in abilitv over the children of the Working and lower middle class. ('hild of prosperous parents. He based this on study of the biith records of 11,000 children borr. in Aberdeen in Scotland between 1950 and 1955 arid their J3ter in- telligence results. These show- ed virtually no relationship between l.Q. and birth weight in upper-class babies while in the lower classes there was a gradual but steady fall in I.Q. from a birth wejght of nine and onMalr pounds down. Workers at the units are developing a theory that in lhe upper classes birth weight is not associated with social in· fluences while in lower classes birth weight may indicate poor standards or nu trition and r BALTIMORE. Md . (UPI ) -Washington to Chica.go, lhe l t.was the B&o lhat first us· Washington and Baltimore the run rrom Washlnston to B&O engineer from 1912 to With the ·grace and style th;it Capitol Limited was part of td "Tom Thurilb," a steam pcrhap! for lhe last time Cumberland, said neither he 1960 wasn't assigned to the her htst riders eJ.ptcttd, the the B&O tradlUon of belng . powered con,lrapUon that dur-Saturday. nor the nearly dozen other run, but "I had to make it.'' Capitor Limited ls bringing to crew members on this run He spent the afternoon prior an end almost a century and a first on U1e rails. Ing iUI first run lotit a race to A pilot who said, "I guess were sure of what the to departure time at the B&O half of railroading history. In 1830 the B&O began the a horse drawn cart. I'm htU'e bt!c:rse I've always government-subsidized r a i 1 transportation museum bu ying .. It feels like you'~e riding fi rst regularlly sch e d u I e d So the railroad boUs•wcnl to liked trains.' watched the travel would do to their dlshware that had been used your own funeral train," said passenger service in the the station Thursday, not Maryland countryside roll by futures. on train runs. ''l got the last one passenger as he boarded United States with three trains knowing whether lbe train from his seat in one or' the Rny L. Mace of Lodi. Ohio. a batch," he said. Thursday for a com-a day between Ballimore and would be kept on by a court dome cars added especlallyll•-.;_-----~,--iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, rnemorative round trip to Ellicott's Mills, Md ., a stretch suit .against Amtrak. They for this trip. Chicago that raised memories:ilof~l3,m~i~le~s~.~~~-~-~wieir~e-d~uie~ilo~~ar~r~ivie-ii~n--Mieil~viiniLe-aim~oini,~einigi~nieier~·on of the days when the Cap was the way to travel in the east. I The Bplt1more & O hi o Railroad in 1830 "" the lirol ~ • '• HEN' . RY'S AEROPUERTO railroad to run a passenger ! ~~ train in America. Under the ·:60 new national pa sse nger •Y•l•m. il w•• ,, 1ose au its , Ci'nco De Mayo Fi'es.ta passenger service except for r4 ~ short commuter runs. cJ:f/ . , ''I'm just going as far as M · 3 4 5 6 t 12 p M Cumbe rland," said an elderly a y " " "" 0 • • lady. "But l had to be here . I usually ride an airplane when l want to travel :some;.iyhere, but I had lo be here ." The first all·Pullman train from Bal fi more and Who Cares? No other newspaper ln the world cares about your com- munity like your community daily newspaper does. It's the DAILY Pnm. Sal ad SPECIAL DINNER Beverage HENRY'S COMBO ........................................ $3.0p .................. TWO FOR $5.00 El GENERAL ...... $l.75 TWO FOR $7.011--CREPA S ...... $3.00 TWO FOR $5.00 TWO TACOS OR TWO ENCHILADAS AND BEANS ............................... $1.50 Gla11 of Wint Wit" Dinner SPECIAL: ENTERTAINMENT BALLOONS RESERVATIONS PLEASE 2122 PALISADES ROAD, Near Orange County Airport Carner of Birch 545.5579 Most¥automobile imakers ·would ,like -.you to visitithe ishowroom. ' I See by Today's Want Ads Cl That an Owner JI.lust Sell a. beautiful 2 story Condo, It's a 2 BR with Ji,1 Ba.. Has a fireplace, bit-ins, w/w cpts and drps. Has a private patio. Better hur. ry for this one! • U you arc unemployed at the present. you might checli our Help Wanted Classiflca!ion. Plenty o( great opportunities listed. • Someone is offering com- plete photographic equip. ment (or amateur, En. larger, tanks, trays, tri· pods. Check classification "'"· Mercedes·B~nz would rather·you visit .the factory. • Pror. Raymond Ilsley, direc· tor of the medical sociology tJnit at Aberdeen University, lillid low birth weight may mean mental subnorma!ity for the baby in the poorer. lower class famil y but not ror the m a t e r i a I deprivations af· ,. fCC'ting the child. The report in Medical News.Tribune went on : New Stars Discovered WASHI NGTON I AP )~ Discover\' of an apparfntJy· new claSs of s!ellar objects within lhc ~lilky \Vay galaxy -consis1ing so far of al least three oddball "pulsating X ray :stars"' -has been achieved by the civilian space agency's recently launched orbiting X ra.v observatory. They might even be the nrst :samples or the long theorized '"black holes" or the heavens-very old, collapsed stars so dense their gravita· tional fields prevent visible. light or matter from esc;iping from them. "\\'hile severe subnormality was evenly distributed across social classes a massive clustering or children with mild subnormallty was found in the lower social classes. Mental subnormality of all degrees wa~ ten times as fre. quent as in the non-manual seclion of the population. "In families with several adverse environmental fa ctors it was 30 times as frequent."' One of the experim£nls being conducted by !he unit seeks to determine t h c "verbal interaction" between mothers and children in the top and bottom social groups. Twenty-five children, all the first born of their families and three to fou r years old, have beer. fitted with jackets equip- ped with microphones and radio transmitters whi c h record on !ape every word spoken by mother and child. ~ree TRAVELERS CHECKS DURING MAY ONLY No service charge on all the First National City Travelers Checks you want ... up to $5,000 worth • Almost any automobile can be made to look good in the showroom. Sloppy \VOrkman shil' and product ion shortcuts are easily glossed over amid a barrage of adjectives and the glitter of neon lights. But you can't hide any1hing in the factory. It's as revealing as inspecting the kitchen of a restaurant. That's why, at Mercedes-Benz, we wish everyone could vlsJt ourifactory be- fore. 1 hey visit our showroom. He re are some of the things you'd discover. Some quaint notions The work areas are clean and bright. The atmosphere orderly and unhurried. More like an Old World Guild Shop than a typical automobile factory. While some Drag abouc asscn1bly lines I hat build 100 9'!'1f$ an hour, we boast of building 30. We t:ik• six 11•teks to crart our 600 model. And we have some refre5hing· ly quaint notions aboUt h01v automobiles shoul d be built. In our upholstery shop, I over JOO former dressmakers cut, stitch and tailor each in· terior with the care that goes into a designer's original. A lu xury to some µklc~ ..... ~· makers. A necessity 'g to Merccdcs·Bcnz. 1. Five layers of . J.-matecial .. an.inch of rubberized pad- ding and 16 man-hours Over 100 former drr ~sn1oktrs now go into every live iu Sindtl/ingtn, Wtsl Gtrmony. converlible top. They work iii our 1'pholsltry s/iop. That's longer than it takes most manufacturers to as- :scmble an ~ntirc convertible. E1'pcnsive? Of cou rse. But the top of a Mertcdcs·Benz convcrlih\c will ne\lcr billow or nuttcr. And it muffics road noise better than most hardtops. Cabinetmakers, not chemists We have still another old-fashioned idea. It concerns the \Vood trim that gocs into our automobiles. We;. think it should come from a tree. Not a plastic mold. So instead of chemi sts we ha\'e cabinetmakers. They take hours to select and malch grains: highlight and accent the \vood's charac· tcr with artist's brushes and slain, protect it11 beauty with five coats of \'arnish; thrn polish it '''i th oil and pumice. When time per· •. mit:s they use their cabinetmaking 'skills to build furniture forourexecutive offices. Minutes, not seconds Even the assembly lines rcncct ·this· "pace. Cars crawl along while workers spend minutes, not seconds, on their spe-J cialty. You'd find craftsmen filling, grind·"' ing, and smoothing a single roof seam for_J f 15 minutes or more.Solidif yingthe body into a single rattle-\ lh\varting unit wit h _j 8,000 to 10,000 welds. \ And patiently filling doors, hoods and trunk lids to a lolerance that cannot vary more than 1 onl! inilliirlt!ter. A blow to lime and motion experts, 'But a boon to some appreciative owner. If it might rust, paint it You can't fully appre· ciate the 44 pounds of rust protection we apply to 'every car until you've exposed your Mercedes-Benz to the slush and :;a lt or several winters. But in our factory you could begin to understand 1vliy it will [an inspector.\ Inspectors check vital welds by ·pounding away at them with a hammer •and chisel. A skill :so demanding lhey're sent back to school twice each year.· ' · Inspcctors withwhitegauze without his approval, which he sjgnifies· 'by affixing a signature to the windshield.1 The t raditional signature of Gottlieb / Daimler. Only then is it ready for your at>• proval in the showroom. m ittens painstakingly feel ev- le ry inch of the unfin ished body. Because the hand is better 1han , the eye in de~ecting minuter, burrs and ripples. ·~ And after inspectors .. subject rear axles to 55 mechanicalandclcctronic 1 '\ checks. :some to toleran· ;.. ccs as fine as 8/10,000 of) an inch, one in ten is re· jccted by an amazing do-' vice called the human car. ''A small basket for waste" Tht mark of final approval is the same os it was in 1886. • Tht sigrra111rt of Gottlieb Daimftr. $5,000 and up. Adhering to an engineering ideal, not But in checking disc a price objective, has put our automobilea brakes, our distrust goes , among the world's most costly. largely unrewarded. The least expensive Mercedes-Benz, The machines 1hat pro-· 1 d th d" d " t d our220Sedan,costsSS,445. ufcc c is~~re_a JUS ~ But to the man who buys an auto- a 1 tcr ev~ry. pieces. n mobile to keep, not to trade every few e ectroni_c .1nspc:c1or i:nca·, ......years, this seems no extravagance at all. surcsfivecnt1cald1mens1ons ( A h · · ed 't fR--' '· d. h k A s 1 e engineering 1 or o vaa o.r onodcvcr~ isc 1 cy. ma ·c. Track magazine noted in a recent article pr 11uctionl '"kP'~h.,odr.man-, on his own Mercedes-Benz, "The most sat. resist the ravages of corrosion. Gau~e 1nitfenJ pro1 cc1 in5pte· You'd see workers swab-ll'l•l' lrorrdJ ua y re-c ze.c s t c 1men· · fy' h' bo h · · · fif 1 A d 1s 1ng t 1ng a ut t e car is 1ts great sions1.0 n every II 11 one. n precision of operation ·and quality of aqua 1tycontro er must per-f 1 . manu ac ure • ~onal ly"1ake--e~ry·d1scfrom -"At Js;ocxrrnites ... the-car ts more--bing·zinc oxide"paint on-ihe 1rnrrrcal/1rsrs-....__. ' back side of body panels be-//uu 1ni~lrr i1npair fore they are welded airtight. 1/te1r 1111cau•1y /ouch. the end of the line: . . impressive than when new." · Yet after all 1h1s, only one lf ou arc: plannin to visit Europe Spraying the underside with a resil- ient armor that actually "heals" itself when struck \vit h a stone. · ' Hand painting the front of the car \Vilh an extra coat of specially [ormulated enamel designed to shrug off gravel. Even the insides of thr bumpers get • protcc1ivc coat of pain!. The ear rejects I in 10 Wending your way through the fac- lory, you'd notice a curious mix in our labor force. One of every ltrt workers is disc in a tfioi,sand fails to m_eet our ex-this yelr, plan to visit o!r factory. To see, acting standards. As ar\ cxpcnt'nccd con· f If h n the·lowlt'cst Mer· II Id . . "W h 1 or yoursc , w y eve tro er once to a visitor, ~ ave on Y cedes-Benz is worth over SS,()(X). a very small ba.s kCt for wasic. To make arrangements, just check One man decides the coupon. Our man in chargC of tour:s, But after passing thousands of qual- ity control checks, it all comes down to one man. A sort of "ultimate inspector.". He spends at least 20 minutes \vith each car as the world's fussiesl cr'it ic. Feeling, checking and testing a nything he :suspc<:ts: No car can leave the factory Otte ~.xamplt of our 11.>ork. Thi! Mtrctdts·Bt11l l&1SE, a fucf·iriitcltd performa.rrct sedan for about Jl,800. Peter Grassl, will send detail:s. And if you'd like to see the rest of ' Europe in your own Mercedes-Benz, sim· ply check the box ior our Guide to Eur~ pc.an Delivery. tW...1 Co&!t port or cn!ry. ac-l111iff tJftnnsportllbl, wfll.t. wall• f>hown),0tMrop!lont. tlalc lltld local l.l>:U. H o.ay. Cop)Tish< IJIJl, Men:tdn·knz ol Nonll Ammo:., Inc. r-0-----==~::::,~::~~~~~----1 120 W. Wor11er Aftltll• Sonto A1t11, Collfer1tl11 92707 \ O Please .send me the details of your factory tour,--,- 0 Please include the Mcrcedcs·Btnz Guide to Euro- pean Delivery. Cityr--------~"•le.---- Zip Tclq:ihon1<...---~----L------------------~-----I Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. i20W.WarnerAvenue,S•r.ta.Ana,Californ ia927o7Phane:114-546-4114 -. • to ast . ' ' I . I ' BARBARA DUARTE, 494·9466 ' , ... 1i Artful Drive Makes Music A drive to put a "Carnegie Hall" in every town will focus sights on area residents as the Laguna Beach Community Concert Associa· tion opens a one-week membership drive today. The weeklong campaign opens today and ends Saturday, 11ay 8, according to association president George M. Cunningham. Residents of Laguna, San Clemente, Dana Point an·d Capistran() Valley may enroll for the four-program series, at a cost of $10 for adults and $5 for students, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Laguna 1'-1oulton" Playhouse headquarters or through li1rs. 1'1iriam Carlson o! Laguna Beach. lifembership, which entities holders to free admission to more than 150 other-Community concert programs throughout Southern Calirornia on a space available basis, is limited to the 540 seats in Laguna Beach liigh School auditorium. lt1embership co-chairmen Mrs. \Villiam Bruggere and li.trs. George Thomp$>n remind those interested that tickets are not sold on an individual basis. The 2~th season will include a fully staged presentation of Rossini 's "The Barber of Seville" sung in English by the John Arnold Fcird Comic Opera Theater. Other bookings to date include Longstreth and Escosa, an un· usual combination of two men at two harps, who have played to stand· ing ovations in New York's Town Hall and Carnegie Hall. Kyung Wha Chun g, an award-winning violinist and daughter of one of Korea's leading musical families, also 'viii appear. Final soloist 'viii be Jerry Jennings, American lyric tenor and soloist with the I-Jam· burg Opera. WORKING IN TUNE -Mrs. William Bruggere, membership chair· man of the current Community Concert Association drive, sur· veys upcomii:ig programs as volunteer lttrs. Jack Kreftirig pins a. membership badge on new members Mrs. Dick Washburne (also knowri as actress Madge Gleveland). Campaigners will accept memberships on a first-come basis until Saturday, May 8. • Shopper's Utopia Barrel of Bargains Awaits Early Birds Anything and everything goes during El Camino Real JuntO!' \Von1an's Club annual rummage sale under the new leadership of the club's recently installed slate. Combing the area for the past week in search of unusual, ap-o pealing and useful items. members promise a bargain hunter's utopia from Thursday, May 6.-through Saturday, :r .. tay 8, in the Dana Point home of Mr •. and Mrs. David Paxton, 33302 Bremerton St. After generously donating space for the event, the Paxtons now are trying to find a new place for cars, bikes, tools and all other world· ly garage goods to make space for antiques, clothes, furniture, toys, pottery, bird baths and some surprise items. Browsers are invited to test homemade treats from a bake table as well as freshly brewed coffee. Proceeds will go towar d community improvement. During the past club year, money was raised for nursery school scholarships to Serra Preschool, a $25 bond for a San Clemente High School student, l\vo $25 bonds for an outstanding boy and girl at Forster Junior High. School. sports equipment and a party for the Rancho Petrerro Boys Home and a snack kitchen for Parklane School. / Persons with items they wiSh to contribute to the sale may con• tact El Camino members for information. New officers for the 1971-72 club year were feted recently in the home of Mrs. Ronald Hamilton. l\-1rs. Hugh Scallon was elected to serve as president with the assistance of the Mmes. Leslie \Villiams, Patrick Hayes and Don O'•learn, vice presidents; Gary Johnson and David Paxton, secretaries, and Thomas Bloom, treasurer . • .· • - ANYTHING GOES -Members o( El Camino Junior Woman's Club Oeft to right), the Mmes. David .Paxton •. secretary, Mason Fries, youth chairman, ·non O'Hearn, vice president, and Hugh Scallon, . . ' ' , president, haul in a barrelful of treasures. The club will add them to its annual rummage sale for community betterment in Dana Point beginning Thursday, May 6. Completing the board are the Mmes. Ronald Hamilton , auditor: Charles Hayden , federation development, and MiC:h.ael Mogan pre~ and communications. · · ' Taxi Service Ends When Route Leads to Destruction DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a JS. year-old girl who is in a terrible spot a~d J don't k111ow what to do. ~fy mother 11 having an affair with a !riend ~( my father's who is also married. Tius has been going on for seven months. I found out about It when l came home from school early wllh a bad headache. He was then!. Mother goes out to meet this man two nighlll a week. She tells Dad she is going to a card club one night and to a book review club the other night.. Two vteeks ago Mom asked me to drive her to her lover's office where they rendezvous. lie cannot pick her up at home for obvious reasons and she doesn 't want to park her car in his office lot because it might be recognized. I have ANN LANDERS driven her doWll there four times but I don't want to do It anymore. I feel dishonest and unclean. Mom says I'm really doing It for Dad -that It Is a kindness to him , because If he found out he would be terr ibly hurt, I'd gi ve anything if I didn 't know about it. Please tell me what to do. -1\-IIDDLE OF A MESS DEAR MIDDLE: Tell your mother you ean no longer be • party lo ~hatever IC i1 5be'• up to, and that she cannot count on you for ln.n1portalion In tbe fulurt.. Ir 11 botll sbtckJng: and padletlc that 1 mother would enlist tbe hell! of her cblld in sucll shoddy business. She 1ound1 !Ille a seriously dl1turbed woman. DEAR ANN LANDERS: J am very upset over your recent column. I,. don 't care whether or not you print this but 1 want you to know what you've done. In your answer to a medical writer of the HoustoR Chronicle you said you checked ' with Dr. Denton Cogley and discovered that you had made a mistake. You closed with two words -"mea culpa." Do you real ize what you said? "~1ea culpa" means you are so remorserul, and heartbroken over a transgression that you are reduced to nothing, It means you are begging forgiveness for a grievous fault -beating your breast and crying, ''Mea Culpa !" A person dnesn 't do this over a mlslake in the newspaper. I realize you are Jewish, which is your business, so why don 't you close with '·EH, Ell'' -or is that just as bad? - SARA TOGA READER OEAR SARA: 1\-ty editor Is a Cathollc and he did not find fault with "mea culpa." I-le 1ay1 U 11 IA tin for "my fault." Ir It offendtd yo11 I'm 1orry. Will you aellle for .. 01 gevald?" DEAR ANN LANDERS: When our first baby was born, my slster-in·law gave me a beautiful crib. I used that crib for three children. Two years ago the last baby outgrew the crib so I put In Jn the attic. Last month I decided to clean out \he at· lie and get rid of all the junk. 1 ran an ad In this newspaper and sold a surprising number of odds and ends -including lhe crib. When my sister-in-law heard about it r;he was furious. She said I had no right to sell her girt, that f should have retun,- ed it to her or Riven it to charity. J feel awful. Please tell me if l was wrong. - BE'M'Y'S SISTER-IN-LAW NETIIE DEAR NET: A flit Is a glU, aid 1" llad DO obll&•tloa to check wl .. yov sbteNHa:w when dl1posal time came.. Plea&e write to me ll' a few wttkl ... let me bow lf y&a are pregnut. hvarlably wllen a woman setll tlte "luf.'' baby'1 crib, It llappeu. ' "The Bride'a: Gulde," Ann landetl' booklet, answer! some of the most fr. quently asked questiona: about weddlng11 To receive your .COPY of this como prehens.ive guide, write to Ann Landera. in care of the Dally Pilot, encloslng a tong, self-addressed, slamped envelope and 35 cents in coin. I J4 DAILY PILOT Ho roscope Gemini: Pursue Goal TUESDAY MAY 4 boOmerang in your favor. Don't give up; pursue goal. Accent Is on security, domestic hannony. ~fa k I!! requires spttlal attention. Be l Books Opened By Volunteers understanding. j11o 4 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22); ~ •"' Training leaders for junior Great Books F'oundatlon ol or adult discussion groups is Chicago which provides tuition By SYDNEY OMARR ARl!S (M1rch 21-April 19): Me1sages may be garbli!!d. Take Ume to analyie repons. Bue actions on facts, not speculatlon. Bi!!st to delay journey, If practical. You need additional information . TAURUS (April 2G-May 20): On! who has captured your af- fec lion may set a hlgh price. Refuu to be threatened. Use velvet glove, but be finn. An Aquarius individual figures prornlntntly. Be aware of subtle nuance's. GElttlNI (May 21.June 20): Coo-Ope.rate with CaDCtr-born Individual. Stress practical ap- mlnor concession to make ma· proach. A lltlle extra effort jor gain. You will undersland. can spell success. Know th.is CANCER (June 21.July 22): and give your' all. Your goal is You are given cholce of closer than might be im- superfic:lal activity v er s u 5 aained. meaningful work. Be grateful UBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. '22): that choice Ji. your nwn. One Avoid tendency toward self· born under Vlrao can act as a deception. See sltuaUon in reliable guide. Proceed ac· realistic light. Accent on cordingty. s~rets that are revealed. Keep some facls to yourself. LEO (Ju.ly 23-Aug. 22): SCORPIO (Oct. 2S·Nov. 21): Study Taurqs message. Spend Not wise to mix business with for quality. But avoid get-rich-pleasure. Accomplish basic qulck schemc.s. Be analytical. ta.sks. Concentration is a You can now put together necessity ; carelessness now free leader training classes in available to teachers and cooperation with schools and parent volunteers In the libraries. Jl will be conducted Newport-Mesa School District. by Howard Will of San Fran- A four-session course begins ci.sco. western adminis trat<Jr. at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 6. A $10 registration fee Is re- Adu!ts will be trained to lead quired to cover the cos t of the in-depth discussions on great malerials used in the course. book! for youngsters in grades Preregistration is necessary. 3-12. The discussion groups, Mrs. Heather or Dr. ~lilda conducted in the "shared in-fitt'Carlney will a n s we r quiry" method and led by two further questions. volunteers, will meet every -----------two weeks for an hour or hour and a half, according t<J Mrs. ,..,.,---;;:::-=fy,~~:;:=:;il Loren Heather. vo I u n leer E:! puule pieces. Young person would be costly. A friend con-~~~~~~illi --·tides delicate problem. SAGITI'ARJUS (Nov. 22-Double Accolades Dec. 21), Whal comes in also What appears a setback can junior great books chz.irman for the district. The junior program was developed by the nonprofit seems to go out; be will ina-to Members Singled Out conserve energy, funds. Key is to finish task. Temptation is to walk away from challenge. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Make new contacts. If you ask questions n o w , Two members of the South Coast Junior Woman 's Club have been singled out for 1eparate honors. Mrs. Larry MoeUer received the Citizen . of -the • year Utle and Mrs. Frank Fleck was n.a m e d Clubwoman.{)f·the- yi!!ar. Mrs. Moeller, mother of two daughters, ha! been an active wia:tant Brownle I e a d e r , member of PT A where she bu HrVed as progr1m chairman and on numerous C(lmrnittees. She helped in the March of Dimes drive and has been bulletin and ho s pital ity chairman for her club this past year. Serving as first vice presi- dent. dean of chairmen and program director this past year has been Mrs. Fleck who also lists as · h er ac- complishmen-ls serving on 13 committees and holding seven chairman~hips. She is the mother -0! thre! children. answers can be obtained. One who makE:s claims m a y surprise you by ba cking them . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Turn on chann. You get what you need through frie nd- ly persuasion. Realla:e this and accept helping hand. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some in positions of authority act in uncertain manner. You ::ould get opportunity to demonstrate special skills. Consult for legal procedure. a double treat for MOTHER'S DAY *YOUR CHOICE FREE• Brush Into any atyle and It stay• that way! Has bulll·in body and because 1t'1 one of the new 11mP~ CURLER SET Style 1nd cut like you want! MAKE-UP MIRROR Plan )'OUr make-up In edvaneft with Se!ect·A-lltel See youraeff In the right light before )'QU go; flick the switch lor "Daylight." "Evening" or "Olflce" elfecl •FREE OFFER from th• EIAwllh your puroh•M or partlclpallng brand new el.cttlcdryar, Aprll 1, throughMay31, 11171. Frigidaire! Flowing Heat Dryer with Fabrics Selector. . . Fabrics Selector automatr-cany provides right heel for dryin g any fabric. Takas guesawcrk out of selling the timer. Huge 240 gq, in. door opening Is 19 Inches olf the floo r-easier la load and unload. FRIGIDAIRE Dries up to 18 lbs .••• Only 27" wldt I Biggest capacity! 27" dryer you can buy I 5-yaar Netlon- wl da Prot1ctlo" Plen 1-year Warranty !or repair ol any defect Jn the enUre product, plus 11. -i· year Protection Pla n (parts only) for lumlsh· Ing re placement !or delect l ~e D1lve Meler and Pulley1. OTHER ELECTRIC DRYERS AS LOW AS $159 • l 11tegrl111 a11d De p e11dablll111 Sin ce 1941 COSTA MESA 411 L S""""'""' Street '46-1614 0a11r •·•· s.1., ,., EL TORO Laouna Hlll1 Plaa (H••t to S11Y-cin) 8l7°l8lO Dallr 10-6, Thur., Fri. I .. 10·9 , •• - Path Strawberry-lined • Newly arrived from Germany, 1t1rs. George Vogel receives international direc· lions to the BaJboa Bay Club where the \Vomen's Fellowship, Plymouth Con· gregational Church will stage a Straw berry Brunch. Providing traveler's aid to the 11 a.m. \Vednesday, May 5, affair are Mrs. William Roller (center) and 1t1rs. Richard Herman. Card-playing will follow. Fract ion Frac tures Scheme Bogs By ERi\lA BOt\tBECK pounds of white sand at 65 cents per hur.dred pounds. Down AT WIT'S END Nurses Installing Officers of the Orange C<lun- ty Association of Industrial Nurses will be installed after a social hou r at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, fl.lay 5. in the Holiday lnn, Fullerton. l\1iss "Jackie" Lynn Taylor, child star. will deliver I Found America Through Our Gang Qimedies, during the 7:30 p.m. dinner. She appeared in 75 motion pictures by the age of 15. Serving as installing officer will be 1h·s. Oleta Valeri, president, Western Association of Industrial Nurses when Mrs. Blake Martin accepts presidential duties from Mrs. Setty Colucci. Other officers to be installed inc:lude the Mmes. Lois Tait, vice president and Wayne Huff, corresponding sec:retary. Women's Leag ue The Oran ge Coast League -0f '\'omen Voters meets In various locations throughout the year. For infonnation regarding the next meeting date and time telephone Mrs. Henry Cord Meyer at 644-0838. r saw our youngest , Brucie. digging in the shrubbery the other day with a soup spoon and said lo my husband, "Brucie needs a litlle sandbox. I saw one in the toy depart- men t at Crooks for $12.88 with a little seat ir: each corner. a red 1nd white fringed awning over it and <t sand pail and a shovel.'' Since the salld wasn't deep enough to write your name in, we returned the next night for anothe r 300 pounds at $1.65 per hundred pounds. The tire was still without The St itchery Nook shade. so we invested in a c11:iw~~11&1.N:11~1~!'"01NT my husband's race since the ,..,., large beach umbrella ($5.95) Christmas Eve he assembled • P•raw ... • iw.m• • ...... , and threw in a shovel and pail • un .. r0•0~•,"•,,"!!~ln•rv• the tricycle and I asked him ... ,,_ for $1.25. why had a ch a i 1 and three vt 1. 111~. C••I• Mn• '42·1'1' • BE FREE ... OF FACIAL HAIR FOREVER, LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO REMOVE EXCESS HA IR WITH MODERN ELECTROLYSIS , MEDICALLY APPROVED••• SAFE, FAST, GENTLE. CONSULT W ITH OUR LICENSED TECHNIC IAN IN OUR BEAUTY SALON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT My husbancl smiled a cheap little smile and said, "Surely, you're making mock. I can whip him up a sandbox for a fra ction of that pri ce." Friday was a big night for _:W'.'.ing~.'.'.n'.'.:uts~l::•f:'..t :'.o.::v•:':_· ---~=="::"::'::"::'::"::,.="="='===', us. The sandbox was finished. 1 - Rlght after dinner, we took .---------------------.... ----------1 our coffee Into the yard to see The first night we drove 20 miles across t<Jwn to a dump in search of a semitruck tire. It cost us $3. The second night, we drove lo the lumber yard for $5 worth of scraps to construct a platfonn to keep t h e semitruck tire from killing the grass. The third night after dinner was spent painting the plat- fonn and semi-tru ck tire with paint costing $3.50. The next evening, "·e backed up the station wagon covered with $1.50 or wall-to-wall ptaslic and loaded up 300 how Brucie was enjoying his Sandbox Hilton. We tilted the umbrella and peeked into the semispare tire. A cat had littered in it. \\'e found Brucie sitting in the dirt digging in the shrubbery with a soup .!ipocin. Now. there are limes when a wife knows she should keep her mouth shut and other times when it 's worth the cost of a lawyer to open it. "Let's see,'' J said, "$3 plus $5, plus SJ.SO, $9.90, $1.50, $5.95 and $1.25 comes to $30.10. What fradion is that of $12.88~" I haven't seen that look -0n Couple Exchange Vows In Candlelight · Rites A candlelight ceremony In the First Presbyterian Church of Encino y,•as the setting in v•hich \Vendy Leigh Harrison and l\.1 ichael A. 1-1 i no j 6 s exchanged their wedding voy,·s and rings. Officiating during the nuptials '>''as the Rev. Dr. Scott Brewf'r. The bride. daughter of fitr. and l\lrs. Douglas Harrison of Tarzana , \\"as gh·en in Artists View African Crof t marriage by her f a t h e r . Attending her were Miss Suzanne Renard. maid of honor, and l\1iss Ka I h y Jenkins. l\1rs. Lee Hostetler and l\flss Amy Spickard, bridesma ids. The bridegroom, son of l\1rs. Betty Hinojos of Costa Mesa and Everett Hinojos o f Angelus Oaks, as ked Paul J,enichek to serve es best man. Guesls were seated by Victor Hinojos. Everett H. l~inojos, Robert Zermeno, Don Bennett and Jeff Harrison. The bride, a graduate of Rcseda High School. is a junior at San Fernando Valley Slate College where she is majoring in English. Her husband was gra duated from Cal Poly, Pon1ona. African art and history will be discussed by fifr. and Mrs. Jo Dendel, C\\'nl'rS of Denwar Ceramics in Costa r.1~a, for! members of tm fil1ss1on Virjoli'";;;;;;;;;;;;_..;;-.-.-.-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill Association of Art.isl.o; and DOES MAMA Craftsmen at 7:30 p.;n. on WEAR Thursday , r.tay 13. I The Dendcls have lived In HOT PANTS 1 Liber ia v.here r.1r. Demiel n1anaged a rubber plantalion and Alts. Dendcl "'as a teacl1cr. \~Titer and C<Jllcc:lor of tribal handic rafts. PAINTINGS f•on DICOUTORS IXHlllTS THINIC MOTHIA0S DAY IHI l'•rk A~• .. Co1t1 ~''' nru .·'" 10 1 ,111 " ' '·"'· Think Mothar'1 Oty J~tnlJ Wettcllff Plara -442·2-ioi4 N1wpomt h11 BEAUTY SALON SPECIAL : STROKES OF LIGHTENING WITH ROUX SHEER DELIGHT FROSTING SPECIAL PRICE 19.90, REG. 30.00 VALUE A SUNSHOWER OF"STREAKS, T IPS OR ALLOVER FROSTING MAKES YOU l.DOK RAOIANT FOR THE FUN SEASON AHEAD, ROUX SHEER DELIGHT CREME HAIR LIGHTENER CONDITIONS AS IT LIGHTENS, HAVE A FROSTED WITH OUR STAFF OF EXPERT COLOR IS TS . BEAU TV SALON. ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 ' St. Joachim's Setting For Nuptial Ceremony St. Joachim's Catho lic Church, Costa Mesa was the se tting for the double ring ceremony linking Deborah Ann Trotter and Gregory Dale Lamb. ,!!i:-nd~y. May 3. 1971 __________ o_AI_L_V_P_IL_O_T--""JG Fall Rife In Offing A ran wedding Is being plan· ned by L1ura Lee ~1cGowan and Anthony Robert Mat- thews. The news was revealed by Miss McGowan 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee V. r.1cGov:an of Couple Marks Golden Years More than 60 friends and relatives gal.hered t.o honor Mr. aod Mrs. William Karl Sr. of lluntington Beach upon U1e couple's golden anniversary. home of their daughter and son·in-Jaw. Mr. and Mrs. Edward 0. Hanlon. The Rev. Thomas J. Nevin directed the vow exchange for the dau~hter of Mr, and Mrs. J . R. Trotter of C0sta Mesa and the son of Pi.lrs. Peggy Lamb of Tustin and Lawrance Lamb, Stateline. Nev. ·~ Costa Mesa. The futw·e bride is a graduate of Estancia Hlgh School. Costa Mesa and no'v is attending Orange Coas t College. A champagne buffet was hosted by the couple's five children in the Newport Beach The couple's children and spouses Include Mr. and Mrs. George S. Karl of Newport Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Karl Jr. of Huntington Beach, Mr. and Mrs. James P. Karl of Pasadena and Mr. and Mrs. James R. Thomas of Porlland, Ore. Given in marriage by her father. the bride was attended by Pi.1rs. Steven Layten, the br idegroom's s i ster. Bridesmaids were ri1 i s s Kolleen Lamb, another sister: r..Irs. Larry Lan1b, a sister-in- Jaw: Miss Julie Trotter, the ~ bride's sister, and Mrs. Leer Ah'arez. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Pi.1rs. Robert \V. Matthe"'s of Anahe i1n, attended school in England "'here he former ly resided. Vall ey TOPS Lettuce-B-TOPS convene at 7:30 p,m. carh Tuesday for progra1ns in Fountain Valley Elen1entary School. Music in Air Music will fi ll the :iir in \\1ard 13, Fairview State Hospital thanks to the Gree• Valley Women's Club and George M. Holsteins and Sons. The club raised fund s for the set of speak'ers kl match the system donated by the Hol· stein Company. They 'also have 14 grandchildren and four great• grandchi1'1ren. . . Married In Phlladelphta, the Karls have been California residents for 35 years. 'fhey resided in Pasadena for 25 years before moving to Hun· Lington Beach upon retire- ment. Servin~ as best man was Larry Lamb .. v.·hile ushers were Layten. William and Scott Trotter. the bride's brothers. and Crai~ Corder. Flower girl was Karrie Jo Lavten and ring bearer was Robert Trotter. MRS. G. 0 . LAMB Sant• Ana Home ,- Golden ·Years Recalled . Mr. and Mrs. John A. Pfischner of Cost a ~fesa celebrated their golden \vedding anniversary with.friends and relatives during a party given in the Ne\vport Beach home of their son and daughter-in-raw, Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanley Pfisch- ner. The honored couple, who were married in Los Angeles in 1921 , have three granddaughters. Kimberly. Leslie and Daryl Pfischner. Coffee . Brewing .Fashions 'Fla iring' Gathering for coffee and a look at the latest fashions \rill be 1nembers and guests o( the llarbor 1\rea Chi Omega Alumnae ·dur· ing a combined coffee-fashion show at 10;30 a.m. 'fhursday, .l\lay 6. I-lope Haven School \Vill benefit from the affair to be staged in the Ne\vport Beach hom e of t>.1rs. John Betso n. ft'laking the arrangements are the l\'lmes. Betson. decorations; Eugene Barnes and Stanley Bell. refreshments. and Gordon White, modeling. Open to the public. tickets are available by calling l\1rs. Steve Coch ran. Secrets Explored The new genetics and DNA "'ill be explained in layman 's terms \\'hen Dr.· lr1·1ng S Bengelsdorf prese nts Unravel- ing the Secrets of Life !or the Woman's Auxilia ry, Orange County Medical Association. Cinco de J\fayo v.·Hl be the motif when the members gather at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Disneyland Hotel. A noon luncheon 1~·ith a f.1~xican menu will follow the busi ness meeting. Club Year 'Renewed Beginning a new club year when it meets at 8 p.m. \Vednesday, J\ofay 5, will be On1lcron Upsilon (:hap I c r, Beta Sigma Phi . Mrs. J\1ary Jo \\'a de "'ill open her Anaheim home for the meeting when f\1rs. Dennis Renk and A1rs. Nita Fyfe present a program, Substance for the J\rt of Life. During \Vest Grove CoWlcil Founders Day ceremonies, the chapter received publicity, first place : scrapbook, se- cond ; achievement, second and ci vil defen se. honorable inention. SHARI BROWN June Bride Home Rite Planned Bengelsdorf. director of sci- ence communicalion <it the Californ ia ! n st it u Le of 'Technology and on the sta ff at the University of Southern California and UCLA, is a 1 science columnist and con- tributing editor. He 11·as a col-- umnist for the Los Angeles 'Times for seven years. i\1r. and !\\rs. Grant \V. Brown's Costa Mesa home v.·ill be the setting for the June 18 nuptials I i n k in g their dnughter. Shari Bro\1·n and Reid Preppernau of Ellensburg. \Vash. Or. Warren Bostick. dean of the UCI Medical School. v.•ill be on hand to acce pt a $6900 donation fron1 the auxiliary. ra ised through a Christn1as card sale. i'l1rs. Fred GraiC'r and Mrs. Clifford Jordan are luncheon co-chai rmen. j Harborites Plan to Wed Follo\ving a San Frnncisco l1oneymoon, the ne"·lyweds Tustin Ceremony will reside in Santa Ana. Both \ are gr~duates of Mater Dei I High School. Santa Ana. She 1 attended Orange Coast College . and he studied at Santa Ana College. Wedding Vows Recited Kenneth Cowden of Hun- tington Beach claimed Mary Keadle as his bride during ceremonies performed in the Tustin Presbyterian Church. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Keadle of Garden Grove, ,.,.as given in marriage by her father. Her maid of honor v.•as Miss Diane Diamo nd : bridesmaid. Pi.-liss Cecelia Burke, and nower girl, Stephanie C o "' d e n , the bridegroom's niece. The bridegroom. son or Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Co"·den of Huntington Beach, asked Tom Keadle, the bride's brother. to be his best man. Ushers were Doui;:las and Scott Keadle. brothers of the bride. and ring bearer \\'as Jerry Robinson. The bride is a graduate or Edison High School . ~lun­ tlnglon Beach and her hus- band is a Huntington Beach MRS. COWDEN May Bride High School graduate. They will reside in Huntington Beach . i\1iss Bro\vn is a gradu,ite of Costa Mesa Hi~h School, attended Orange Coast College the University of 11esbjerg, Denmark and the University of \Vashington and now is studyl·ng at Central \V ashington State College. Her fiance. son of fl·!r. and r.1r s. !\;lortcy S. Preppcrnau of Shelton. \Va sh .• is a graduate of C\VSC and ,presently is teaching in Ellensburg. St. Andrew·s_ Prscbyteri.1n Ch urch. Newport Beach will be the setting for the June 16 nuptials lin king Dianne Lynne Oei\1ille and Tate Stanley Casey. GHEDINI IS HERE Rummage Sale Fills Fbncy Sporting goods, hou~cho\d i\e1ns, clothing -anything to fit a fancy n1ay be found dur- ing St. J arnes E P i ~ cop a 1 Church·s ~ n nu a I three-day rummage sale "'hich bP.gins \Ve<lnesdav. r.1ay 5. The saJC will take place each d<1y through Friday. ~1ay 7, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. unde r tb, direction of Mrs. John C. (;r::1ero. Yoga Tonite at 8! Parents of the betrothed couple arc r.fr. and Mrs. Lesl ie B. DeMillc of Ncv.·port Beach and r.fr. and i'llrs . Thomas C. Casey of Corona del J\1ar. r.Uss Dei\1ill e is a gradu<1te of Corona del Mar High School and \Vhltt ier College where she majored in mathematics she now is "'Orking on her masters in educalion . Her fiance, who served with the Arrtly, is working for hi.~ FIA in psychology at \Vhittif'r . D'rEP.Y $MOE S 1'011 ta I . UI~ ••• Ct1t1 Mii• . Jtl.1111 • HE MAKES WIGS WITH YOUR MAN IN MIND . LIKE HIS TENDERLY, A LU XURI OUS S HAG THAT ENCOURAGES A GENTLE TOUCH. DYNEL" MODAC R YLIC IN ALL SHADES. 30.00. MEET GHEDINI. DESIGNER FOR NORTH AMERICAN • FASHIONS, ON WEDNESDAY. MAY 5 IN NEWPORT. HAIR HAT BAR: ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • . 644 -2 800 gifts for e CHECKS e STRI PES ePLAIDS e SOLIDS for t he western look me,hin• we,h cotton 10"/39" wide c.0111par. \'011195 at 98¢ .,d, '. BUTCHER WEAVES machine wash crease re,istanf wide color ranqe r1yon & 1ilk 44"/4S" wide ca111par1 val11n ot Sl.19 yd. @@ FLAXTONE PRINTS for the great new linen look mod designs on neu t ral grounds, ideal for dress or sportswear. COMPARE VALUES AT $1.98 YD. cotto1t, rcryOfl, ftar 111ochl110 wot.ti 44"/45" wide YD. FABULOUS FABRIC BUYS fortrol polyestor/ovdl royo11 ° CAMPUS SPORtSWEAR PRINTS 9 01. l OO'h cottolt • TERRY CLOTH PRINTS 100% cottH 0 WHITE BULLSEYE PIQUE 100 '"/a ac:•tcrto ° FLOCKED LYNEnE PRINTS 100% ac•t~ • ACETATE SURRAH PRINTS polrest1tt/cotto11 SHE ER "SUGARCAN E" PRINTS SA VE 40e TO 99e ·YARD R-.. Yol11t1 from Sl.39 To SI.ti Yd. l6"/4S" Wide G11ar. Wo~oblo 0 0 ~'3=~ mom on her day MACHINE WASH 0 NO IRON gre5f r5nge of sprin g a nd sum mer colors on fine quality knits. a fisket a tasket a pretty SEWING 11ASKET some are elegant some are abstract ELECTRIC SCISSORS 2 SPEED e UNBREAKABLE CAIE e GUIDE LIGHT Comparo Yol11n ., St.ft tremendous va lues, these were specially purchased for this event. compare values at $4.98 ya.rd never wrinkles 58" to 62'' wide MORE DOUBLE KNITS textured cross stitch heavy qua lity knits that never lose shape. easy to sew, requires no lining outsff!nding color selections compare values at $5.98 yard machine wsahable 56"/58" wide HOUSE OF F•BRICS Sollfh Cocut Plcno-Brittol •I S.11 Oitgo Fwy. Co1to Mno-S45·1516 t_rong•fair Moll-01•1191thvpe e11d H•rbo1 F1111er,o....,_526·2 JJ1 Honor Pim-17th el 8ri1tol San'a An..:-S4l·SSS1 l11ffto Pett c.ntor-l• P1l111• •I St•nto~ l110110 P•tlt-t28·632l • \ / • I • JC D~LY PILOr DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS NINE'S ONE O'M'( FAVOR'T tl.IMeORS! MUTI AND JEFF MUTT, "TlllS IS A R01'\"EN WORLD! JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE 5-3 t~onday, May S, 1971 SOMEBODY HAD 'THE NERVE TO SLIP ME A BAO. NO GOOD TEN DOLLAR BILL! SAA\ Will &E l-IEltE lO n:Y 'l'OOR'. W8E- C.UEI' lt!BS AFTER All, J'OMNNY ! I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by '-• POWE~ l ACROSS 4b Animattd 1ht 11ind or l Afr,c•n ~8 Platts in nat•~t 1 grave- 5 Cors on SO Put •nto I •tigh\ servitr rtduc1nq 51 Sterr Dl'Otjllilfll a•a1 in a 10 Htat to Ult ntJ! "'ay pc11t of 5~ l:t hoc~ty ~!lttlilt1171 p<dytr''> }4 (a9tr nt~•lY lS Goddrss SS Ce 111 o! 11tace 11 e9a1 lb Polynesian enl1ants chestnut into tile US A 17 Va luable 59 Shurn1'nlJ metal tnt company 18 (ltct1ie1t1 of others 111easur1ng bl No one device b2 Allot ?O Certa in bJ KttCIJe'l ]ol! t lub~ acctssory words &4 [~pand 22 Sweethra1\s bS ~reds 2) No one usrd is a D11I. vt9etable 24 P1 11n1\!~e bb Put on 2S D1sasucus tlolhes 28 ~rlir1 ~1 TranS?"Sts 32 llr.,, or hsh1n 9 gtar into tyDt 33 Approachrs DOWN 35 Comm1t1rd la1crny l (1~1 c' 3b In tl'le sai'le pil"' t·e~ p1acr """ 2 S\ra•1ord J8 Correct\ ort --- 40 lndtlin1te 3 Vt \ ~uanti!y .: Au9 -rntin9 41 Gunpo11;der S -,.O"la~ 1n91edirnt n•sun1ted 43 Pulpits lro111 hrr 45 Man's t1'6ban~ n!Ckriitll'e b Sarcas111 I ' ' l • ' • ' • " " " ' 0 " ,,, 26 " 11 ., _, " " - • ., ._, .. . ., " " " ~ " ... - M ,_ N ~ Sihrday's Puzzle Solvrd: l l.IO U "l A I (~ LO PN ESlE (~IC • f~ S P I • 7 Trleost fish 8 Explosive · Abbr. , Close tiglltly : 2 JI OfdS 10 Hfuders ll P1opan ion 12 Roman road lJ God of •ar 19 Particu !M 111annets 21 Sho wet 2~ Becomes lt'TIDOranl y "..~ii I ~S S1n9 'r ·----Lopez 2fi N. A11".e11c&n songbird 27 [ntranc's 2a Fr,ed lro11 mo1slut' 2'1 "lorn• --" JO Pl~ywright ---·--Rice 31 Acts )4 Anne•ed • • ' " .. J • ' " n • " " .. w •• • •• .. ., • 513/71 37 Petsons rmpowtr'd to acl 101 others J9 All berr and -··---: Pure pl~a~ure -42 A scrnd~ 44 Allet!ed persoo 47 Vemlrd aga in 4'1 Sha1p, vibrating sounds ~l Aquatic carniYOfOUS mammals 52 Coar\t hominy 53 Animal l·oinl 54 '·--·boy'" 55 Broa d 5b Nucl rus 57 Bond 58 WOl'ks as ' sram~tress 60 Vehicle " " " " JO ' " • " - n.115 ts A. PROFESSIONtL GN>GeT ! CAP<RIMP!RS ANO F=USE<.UT'TE'Q'S ARE NOT EVERVOAV KITCMEN TOOLS. . -.. ~-­--·- By Tom K. Ryan l.ATER ... 11'1.l INC • G'I~ ME SOMETHING' 10 UJOK FORWARD 10! ""'' ----O'llllolre:UMh MEDICIHI<: M,lt,1' ~ By Al Smitli ARE YOU SURE IT's BAD? LET ME SEE .IT! I CAN'T--- I SOUGHT TtllS NEW SPRING ~AT WITH IT! PERKINS By Harold Le Doux I l(MQW VOii'~ VEiY FONt:' Of MIAA! I SENSEP YOU WERE UPSET WMEH ME SA.IP ME M1'0 1D GO TO ... MEETING ~ •• vou PIPW'T BELIEVE ~UA, VIP YOU, ~&EV? ~--- By Frank Baginski - MISS PEACH Ll'l ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO ,--- MOON MUWNS NonllN<O l.IKI< /I SPRING J>AY, E~, GIF!l.">? ANIMAL CRACKERS By John Miles By Mel By Al Capp By Charles Barsotti By Gus_ Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger BoOen C> 6 ! 1 ~­ § 0 ~· ,..~~~~~~~!!!!!::::=:::~:::::::::::::;-& THI sruNGI WOllD .. MR.MUM .--~~--,~~~~~-r~~-=-==-~~~~ THE" ruru>ZE 'l'ELEPl-<ONE 5Ull:ELV.. f uTUP.E i TEL-E PHONE'. I OPE~A'l'OIS of AME"ll.IC A ,M(f"I" Hf'-'· STEVE ROPER DO t HAVE TO M;.KE IT EV!:t-1 MORE EXPLICIT, MIKEt'-I WAMTTO BE YOUll GllZL I PEANUTS OPE!<:ATO!<:S WILi. NOW ONE MARCIA, WOUl.OYOU PLfASE READ T}IE MINUTES? CO\IE TO ORCE!<:. MOMENT," F~NCJNE, WOUl.D WU PLEASE •• , ASK MARCIA 1V ~EAD THE MINUTES? ~I] ~~ SOME COUPLES MARRY #TEil K~OVJING EACH OTHER' MO LON6E~ THAN THAT/ By Saunders and Overgard YEA>\ BUT-WHAT· l MEAM IS·~T1'!E.QE'. AJl.E THIJ..IGS 1'VE NEVER TAI.KEO A80UT TO Xll/ By Charles M. Schulz WH'! CANT OE JVST 5TAV 1N ~OCX., AAfJ MIN[) OUR 0~ 8USINE5S? DENNIS THE MENACE 'Mv 11'0 fCUPS UIS SilllS 'II llMWa1S 'N ousas 'H ~I~ IOCm> IN nlEllE. ! GUESS UE'5 mND a 61/RISl-AllS.' .~ --....... ,. I • ' ~ • . ... ' A • DAil V PILOT J 7 Dos Passos' 'USA' Monumental TV Show BALIOA 673-4041 -•:41 lido By RICK OU BROW thl.s year followed up wllfl ly ta:uberant and pleasuro-fill-adaptation was by Dos Passos l{QLLY\YOOD (UPI) ··roet Game," 1'Montserrat," ed Qramatlc revue U1at traces and Paul Shyre. And the dlrec- Non-<.'Ommerci1i.I v Ide 0 • s: .. Big Fish, UtUe Fish," a the Ille style of Americans, tor was George Schaefer, .. ltollywood Te 1e v ta I 0 n rtrun of "The Andersonville a:rea\ and small, in the fi rst longtime creative force behind 'fheater'' closes out it!: first Trial" -and now "USA." The three decades of the century, NBC's "Hallmark Hall of fuU season 'fuesday night "'ith intention of quallty and honest using sketches. m u a I c . Fame." M wual, the ex- a tw<rand·a·half-hour ada ~ creative effort has been documentary photos, historical ecutive producer (or the tation of the late John dos achieved with striking con-happenings and flcllonalized "Hollywood Te I e v i s Ion Passos' monumental Jlterary sistency. typical tales. Theater" was Lewis Freed- trilogy, "USA.'' The most admirable This kind of production -man, the chief figure in put- A d r th this --~ of · d di ting this series together. n . or e ''Hollywood hallmark of the a er I e 1, .w.1 • mtxe -me a "'I. ...... 8alil>Nl'ftl ..... 'felevison Theater.'' those pro-however, has been that, raUter vaudeville -can be positively And then'there is the ca·at - duc tions are seen on the coast-than being one of those disastrous Jn the wrong hands. and what a cast it is. First of lt>-coast public br oad c a s t earnest, stuffy no~om But "USA" Is very much the all , it is surprising, because service network, ll Is a fitting mercial entries, it has sparked product of the night hands, some of the performers are fina le for a season of success with showmanship t h a t wblch ls why there ls not only people you have seen bften on rare in any video year. For delivers to audiences the sheer stimulation but also great commercial television -but after making its debut in 1970 enjoyment of theatergo-delight and fun In the pro-whose talents never seemed \11ith ' ' T he Andersonville ing. And that is particularly ceedings. For example, the Utis good. because there was l:'f'r~l;al;,':' ;.w;hl~ch~=ga=ine~d;na~· :=lhe:c~ase~~ol:Tuesda;:y~nlg~hll'siill::~~;;~~~iiiiii~iiiiiiii;;i~ii~~;;;~~~:.1\,-~;;;;;;;;;;;-;_,;;;c;,.;;;,j=;,;-;,~,,.;. ;-;,..;. tionwide acclaim, the series "USA," which is an enormoua-NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES .......... ~.,._~,..-....-.,.....,..~~~-: TV -'D'l 'IL· ACADEMY AWARD SHOW "WOMEN IM LOVE" COLOR Academy Award WINNER BEST [!!J . ACTRESS Glendo Jackson I WllKOllLYI ~ EDWARDS 3 2ND TOP ACADEMY AW ARD SHOW 20th c.n1...,.r.,, ,.,.,..., JAMES EARL JONES,. , 1~ Winner 8 Academy l ~ of Awards Monday Evening MAY 3 l :llO t) 111 Nt11n Jt117 Dunphy. (J)AIC Nm Rt•10ntr, Smith. 0 MIC Ntnmice Tom Snyder. U The Allin Shtw 0 GIDGET GROWS UP! * Karen Valentine-Color! 0 Sil O'Cftc:t Movie: (C) (10) "'Ciiidpt Crows Up" (co/Wly) '68- K•rrn Valentine, [dwud Mulll1n, Paul Petersen, Bob C11mminp, P1ul lymlt. Franctr l1wrence, 11i1s Gid· .Rtt, comes b1ck lt0m two Jtlrs ol colltre In Europe, and her l~lhtr •lrtts to It! her llve in N1w Y~ i nd try her luclt wilh tht United Nations. 0 Did Yan DJt;t m Tht flllltJtorMs (E) Star Trtk al Ar1 Studio/Ch1rli1'1 Pad ill) fishu Family wtddln1 r~. 1n4 tlltft Ill 11- turna 1.1nexptCttdlJ. BlllPD D Cil lll ... •-m 01114 '"" ... AnUtolly Quin• b tonl1ht's only 1utst ID-m htttn "' LM..-m Mlpellt. Y.WU Skilr t:OO IJ M"'*'7 U:.D. (R) COcber mom Into 1 m1ntion, complett with limousln.. Nthouth llt h only 1 houatslttw loo&ln1 1rttr the prop. 1rty, it 1oes to Ills lhlad. O l!OJ l?lWo1d-- (C) (2111) "fM ....,. ... (It) '6'i -.lose f•rrlf, Llsll1 ltJll1t11, Ricudl Mont1lb111, Thi story of the opttl· tion of Deep Lib, 1 nudur.powtrtd, self·conl1ined s:ientilic unit located 500 !eel unclerw•IH on tile contl· nent1I shelf. 0 I SJICii' I 'Bl wi... DI stll Ch1mpiln DocumenllfJ hllttli1hlinJ the UClA Bruins 1970·71 b1sll.etb1U season. INCLUDING ' BEST PICTURE-BEST ACTOR GEORGE C. SCOTT PATTON ALSO -IEST SCREENPLAY w-••r• -PATTON • 1:11 MAIH • ll:tt ~SOUTH COASTPlAZA lxt:lilll•• litt!"f•llMttt "Making It" ... "John & MarY" Wl:A:S·H S1turd•Y P1"0_,:<U .. :U '·"'· Mi~:~f.1 1:., •. rn. SllNllW "•""-J:lS-1:» •·"'· M1~!2:lf.S:l .. lt:U FRII ....... Acodemy A word WI'""'" "Tora. Tora. Tora" .............. Ui) Notiduo 34 m Drath Ytll17 DIJS 0 (I) IIl Ill Al< ....., ""'" (C) (2111) "Rtua' ltlpt 111 Jtrlchl'" (R) (western) '67 -Dte11 M1rtln,1. __ _::;;;;;;;;;;:;..,;_ ____ .:::;;;;;;;:;::::,_ Cl!Oflt Ptppard, Jeen Simmons. Ex-Ii: 11wm1n turned towft bo• IMeb his touahest opponent In 1 womsn own· tr ol 1 st11KOlth llrtt who lorct1 him into 1 ahowdown. al) Lt Hora F1mlli1r ton Con1111lo G) NIWS Jim H1wlllornr. l :30 {])Ntw1 Bill Huddy. @Truth tr Conwqllfl'lcn (jJ cas """ w11111 Cronki1e. 0 Clndid Camer1 ~HBC News 01vid Brinkley. m Tht F!Jinr Nun FD Hod1epodc-Lod11 EID Selected fll•s/MllM(llt m ni. 0uert 1ttPOrt G!lTU al Ntwt f :OO IJ CIS Nm W1lter Cn>nkite. 0 ffi HBC Hnrs D1vid Brinkley, .klhn Ch1ncrtlor, f1Jnk McCet. (!)To T1H th1 T1utll fJ What's MJ Unt? i1m Dick Vin DP• m I love lUCJ (!)(i)Dnipet ID The World W1 Uni In "An\1rtl· cJ: Bec1use lf 1 There." €I!1 Cl11ist lht Uvin1 WOfd €E An1rlil1ts Ne1101 tZEl Simpl1mente M11i1 CE Movit GarM @ At 1 ... IEJfellll)'Slillllll EID I s,Jc 14 I KHMftlll: ?1, lt!t f'rnidllll. Die !'rm Ind O!t f'abllc White House direclot of commuRita· tions. Htr1> Klein, dixusas the pub· lie mood on Vietn1111 witll lllWSfOOlll edltori I~ titi• 1CtOt1 1111 M· tion. lll)lOMiR'lt•" &I So~ri111 Gil™ t :30 iJ (j) DorlJ Dir (R) Dori111 called on to model 1 new li111 fof 1 fr1nch coutlMlritr (.lohnny Haymtf), but Myrnl becomes 1n unwlttlnt IC· compllct in 1 plot lo Mboh l• hl1 bid lot fashion supt1m1CJ. ID Quat fir AMl!tllJI €I!I Maie11t/P1stll"s Diil (I) Lii Cruz dt Mlriw Clue.a 10:00 U Ci) Clrol Burnett (R) [dyic Gorme Ind .loin Riftr1 (lltsl IOWS." 7:30 f)@ Gunsmolt (R) Matt Dillan 1nd Ooc are troubled bJ 1 med· dlesome wom1n (Joanne Linvillt) ind the thre1t of hilac.lte1s when they esco/1 1 rrc1pt11rtd convict (Todd Atmsl1ong) back to Dodge. Q @J €?:) fro111 I lllllf1·[JI Yltw '"Htl•ln." Ma11•r i nd Milhr quarrtl ai) Hit dtl Mt1111nll c1m~ia:n. over 1 boyfriend, and l/\t arsumtnt _ _ _ ., lnvalvtt the pl1nt's pau eniers. lO:lO 0 MIMI: (U;r 45111) lf7111• . . ClorJ" (dr1m1) '48 -Al1n L1dd, 0 Vir11n1a Gr1h1111 ShctW Guesh: Donni Reed. West Point tadtt 1t1ndl Army Atcherd. Jane Russell, Ce~r trlil !or his pirt In World W1r II Romero, Mervyn Leror ind M1unce Jerra. I!) tin JOIUlt-trlm Cl) Movie; (C) (90) ''Thr tidy Klll-. m," Alec Guinnen, Peter Sell ft rs. ml Clclen1 0e An1ust111 0 Cl) CI) Leri M•K 1 Dt•I Mont)' 11;00 8 (1) llJ Ntws Hall nosh. fJ Milllon S Movi1; (C) (Zhr) "A11nti1 Mamr" (comedy) '53 - Roi1lind Russel!, Fo11est Tucker, Roa:er Smilh. W T1uth Of C4nMq111nu1 ID II T1W I Tlllll fD Cltywltch1r1 Art Seiden b1um, Cl\Jrlet Ch1mpl1n. EID Clnt1111 »:;r €[1 Do-Rt·Mi 7:55 ai) Cutttiol d• Sft•l'Ml•s O l!ji?JN.., {.i) Dut11 v111., °'"' o rn m- om"'" (:J MOTir: "W11 H11nt" (dr1m1) '&2 -.lohn Saxon, Robert Redford. m Movie: (C} "Wiid Nertll" (ad· venture) '52 -Stew111 Cr1n1e1, ID Int LIM a.ct ID CffJntdllrl (R) Aft Stld1n· b1um, Chtr1n Chsmplin. :'\..... 11:30 iJ Cil Mirr Criffi11 l:OO O ®J a:il1111ll-t11 (R) Orsan Wellrs 1uest.s. 0 @J EI;) Jtllnny Clrw• o rn m M1wfywcd '•m• o moo m Dic11 tnttt will oria:in1te 11om London. '""' m To Till t~1 Tiutll ffi World rrtP EE) Mtn ti Vllion I g)Y1senl1 l :OS Cl1) Aqul Ties Palints 1:30 0 Cl) HtN'• llK)' (R) Durlna H1rr,-1 1bs1nct. lucy Oon1t1s his hoosr, without his pumiu ion, IOI" 1 Tuesday D~YTIME MOVIES !:00 0 "TIM JllMn'I 011" Hetl1" (!O· m1nc-t) '3&-H1nry Fond•. M1r11rct Sul11¥1n. "M111 Abolt TIWll" (com· edJJ '39--J1ek Blnn r. m "~tt 1nd Co1tlllt MMI Ott Mu1111W(' (comtdyJ '55-Bud Abbott. I.Av CMl.e11o, M1r!1 Wlndw .' J:lO 0 (C) '1'111 ltooll 11 H1nt11" Con· chnlon (1dvttntur1) '31 -OrlO!I w,11e~. Joliette Grcea. tD Movie: "111 Mai I Mtniff" {drtm•) '40 -.loin 81nnttt, Lloyd Nolan. 12:15 0 0/11 Step Beyond 1:00 fJ MIWit: (C) "WOIMR If !tit rr.. lllstork '11ntf" (Kl·li) '65-Mtriy Anders, Wtndell Corey. rn oom®J •ow• 0 (C) -TM WldJlll SM, 11 till ,.,..,.. (COll'll~ 11 -Jad l1111· mon. Ricky NtllOll. 10:00 (1) "S.-.lt Sita Uplhln(' (""'31· tm) '53 -Jtft Cll1ncllt1, F1lt11 DomtrJUf, 1:00 m "IM"I " .. ,.,. (dnirru> ·so -.loin f0fl!1lnt. Robert Ry111. 2:00 0 (C) "PUik P•Rtlllf" (comtdJ) '64 -David Hlwtn, Ptltt S.lln. J:OO Cf) "S11t111rt11t c.11 .. ld' (drtm1) '51-WiUlun Hold1n, Nt"cy Ols11n. 4:JO f) (C) "nit Allltrlct111" (1dvtn· turt) '55-Gttnn Ford, Unul• ThltA ())Samt. u lOAM Mari1. "'MAKING IT' ISTHE MOST -M!ANtNCfi\il .. , "-)9~ FILM ABOUT ' GROWING UP.SINCE 'THE GRAD\#Af<I'.", (oil Ttitotrt' ·~ ~wlomti -W11lla!!I Won. CtieM....,. , •' I" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ·-· ---... - THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE! "DISNEY'S GREAT PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASoN·s HIT REVIVAL!" "·~-· "AN INCREDIBLY REVOLUTIONARY FILM ... THE MINO CAN RUN RIOT!" Th< NYU '""' "FAR AHEAD OF ITS TIML .BEST AUOIO ·VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN I" William wolf, c" ''BEST FAMILY FILM!'' JosephGe1mis,N1wsd1y "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND AND COLOR .•. MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" Bob Salmlili, Group W Networ!it STARTS WEDNESDAY MAYS Excl usiv• Showing For Everyone! The Spy Who Came 0ut Of The Kitchen. A fREOCRI()( BfllSSON PHOOUC!10N I [gJ «QB COLOR byOclv•1• .. llnllldArfllts -ALSO PLAYING-- PIM ye• t• Hie -49• of yow.r 1'9t1I "SUDDEN TERROR" ~<fil&'D "•·---.COl!a..tl.__ •••110 ... ---·-... ,_ .. __ ... -JANE ALEXANDER !!ill ''The Great ·-·~ .. -· coior White HopeH * THE STARTS WED. MAY 5 WALT DISNEY'S Sia ULTIMATE E.XPERIENCC !ICllNKXlUll" MINA TED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS INCWDtN" BEST PICTURE l!OWARDS HARBORcmAl HMllOfl ll'IO. AT W!lSOll ST. COSTA 11111A '41·0571 l MIUS s.ovTH $M1 OIUH> fWY, •NOW AT BOTH CINEMAS • •The BESTRmerican Film of the "tear!" -RtK RfI O.Clllc• T~ /-IOtlNO"COHNQltJt .• , -lil(llNM!O Ol'CW. N Y.Ollly-.S,.,...._ Wll#St.IOut• "-~S.·cw _ ~~~ j'ACl<'N!Ci.io'Lso'N- )t; :· ~~~ RVf IRS!/ PlllB -J ' \ f~ • 1 '~ C0.0-~ .. ~PLUS ;CADEMY A~ARD NOMINEE-MELVYN UUU<>LA:>i In Ml NMR SANG FOR MY FATHER" (GP BARBRA STREISAND & & JACK· NICHOlSON IN "On A Clear Day ;~"' Meet Henry & Henrietta... the laugh riot ol the year. "A neC1J Leaf" IQJ (',olor by MOVlElAB ~ A Paramount Pich • ..lfe St1rrhtf • Joc1c Wolter Motrhou • Eloine Moy Weston !!F: "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" CAC ACADEMY AWARD WINNER j IL. I WEEK LIMITID EIGIGEMOO CU1111s Lr~ COLOR ~ .. am "FOR All WE HOI" SOllG II • ru.11 . '"l.OYllS AMI tfMtl tTIAMllr "diary of a mad housewife . richard beniemin l carrie snodgress -~ F°'========EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT The picture rtJO! 130 mlfltlfH ' •.• The story covtrs 96 ol tne '"'"' ~111/Ca/ floors /ti m;111°s fHsf0tr • .. . The~ will last lhlooph roor li/6'.me' SHOWING NOW!! ''FASCINATING! .. .THE PUREST SCIENCE FICTION THRILLER TO COME TO THE SCREEN IN YEARS!· ... Offic• ~WCIP M, -Judilh Crist, NBC·1V. NI'# l'vrt Al•a~ ••.• • J II DAIL y PILOT s Mond~y. May S, 1971 Yo11r ltloney's Worth Colleges Try Plan Of Def erred Tuition 8T S\1.\lA PORTER W'bt.m Ill~' bralhe.r 111·as going tl' mtd1t.al ~ in the ~SJOCI years of lhe 1930s, r lhtl"t' •.a.s onJ~ one v>ay be rould financ"f' n: through high-l 1ntettSI t'ducahon loans co- !'1glli.'d b~ lht most futanicaJly I rtspt'('tabko fntnds v.·t bad, t and rene\\·td . _ rene"'ed . and rene'\1ed rent1red n1an1 1·eors laler. 1rhen he had· g·raduated from med :-choot. returned from \\'orld I \\"ar ii and v.·as earning 1none~· as a physician. he was able to repay the debt out of his current income. o~·n current income. months. Here. though, are the three key features of all the plans: 111 THE COLLEGE or university borro"'S the funds needed ror student tuition from private financial t~ slitutions, such as banks. .Because of the borrower·s • 1 calibre ,and the size of the one • blc Joan, the interest charges are comparatively fa vorable -ctrtainly much lower than any sllldenl would be ::harged for an education loan al the same institution. • I Starting Upward IT \\'AS A clun1sy . monstrously expensive \.1'3Y l& 1neet the costs of his educa· l ion. but it 11o•as the best v.·e could do. Varous version s ot this deferred tuition Cilncept are being tried -or are being 1,1·orked out -at Cillleges and universities across the nation. Yale, for instance. is bor· rowing funds its students \\'ill need and request for fall semester rrom a giant New York City bank at r.1ignlly above the prime rate of 51 i Construction activity at J>aciJic 11utual's new opera· percent. tions center building in Newport Beach's Newport John gol his education, became a physician an d iturgeon: his Joans. although stretched out 01•er a Jong period. wert' finally and honorably repaid. 8-0th goals .,.,ere achieved and that's all any of us cared about. 1%) THE STU OEN T Center business, finan cial and medical complex DEFERS tuition by getting a (skyline in background) sends a surveyor (fore· Yale is in the forefront of the experiment, is offering an extensive plan for this fall ; Duke also is offering a nar· rower versiOn to "good risk" students for fall of ·71. "credit" against this fund. and groundJ over to guard his transit. The building is after graduation he repays the scheduled for completion in the summer of 1972 tuition he has defferred over a \Vhen the life insurance fim's 800 sales support and period which may be as long administrative staff personnel \Viii n1ove in . as35years. ~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~ 13J THE REPA~f.ENTS Now. in the 1970s. the newest idea for £inancing a ro\lege or graduate school education to s"'eep t~ conu C'ducation lo s1,1•eep the coun- try Is a revolulionarily refined version or John 's makeshift plan. The idea has various names : "The Yale Plan," ''Deferred Tuition." "Pay as )'ou Earn,'' or ··PAYE." State governments a r e seriously weighing ways they can adapt the concept to state college and univer sity systems: here. Ohio Gov. John are geared lo the graduate's r----------------------, B UT FUNDAME/\TLLY, the student does in the 19705 1,1·hat John did in the 1930s : postpones paying for at least part or hi s tuition until he graduates. is earning money and can manage it out of his . No Co111pelition ROCHESTER, N.Y. !UPI) -Eastman Kodak Co. s."lid there is no prospect within a year at least that ii 1,1•ill t!ngage in direct competition with Polaroid in the instant camera lilm field. HAWAII TWO ACRES ~.900 J . Gilligan has taken the lead. lF THE STATES succeed in an adaptation, st udents in the slate education systems wi ll repay out of their earnings in later working years part of the subsidies they receive "'hile they are studyinc al state in- stitutions. A national tuition postpone- ment option plan, patterned after Yale's experiment, is very much a possibility, if not a probability in roming years. This would unquestioaably help to save our higher educa. lion system and improve it.s quality. while extending op- portunities for the higher education lo all \\'ho can benefi t. income -and this is the revolutionary rerinement of the plan. Some students will pay back more than they postponed in tuition because their income is high . Some students will pay back less than they postponed plus in· terest because their earnings are low. It is, in essence. a poten· lially magnificent solution to the financial problems of our nation's schooJs. private ;:ind public. as well as America's students. in all income brackets. A la,kr column will tell you, the s'tilltent, how it would work for you. A1·den-Mayfair I nco1ne Li sted LOS ANGELES -Arden- Mayfair Inc. reported net in- come of $381.000 or 8 cents per common share on sales of $157,000,000 for the 13-week period ended April 3. Public Offering Set On Avco Debentures A public offering of $50 million AVCO Finan· eial Services Inc. 8~s percent senior debentures due April 15, 1977, is being made by a nationv.•ide · investment banking group 1nanaged by Lehman Bros. Inc. A Vco Financial Serv1cc.s Inc .. a "'holly o\vned subsidiary of AVCO ('orp., was formerly Seaboard Finance Co. The company conducts its lending op- erations in t\\'O n1ajor areas of the finance busi· ness -consu1ner loans and sales finance . Through subsidiaries the company also con· ducts an insurance business. in part related dir· ectly to its finance activities. Executive offices of ACO Financial Services are in Newport Beach . The debentures are priced at 99.43 percent. plus accrued interest. to yiel d 9 percent to matur- ity. f\'e t proceeds fron1 the sate of the debentures v.iill be added to the general funds of the company and \\·ill be applied to the reduction of short-term borro\ving.s. TrNt-Orchld-F1rn1 l P11rc11,J b'f 0Wntt' T1rm1 Av11ll11bl1 121ll 02-184' or ('0Ufse. as or this day, deferred tuition is still in the experimental slage, precise details on the amounts of tui- tion which can be deferred . the percenlages of repayment, the periods of repayment , etc .. etc.. differ from school to school. and the results of stu· dent responses to the first of. fers \VOn't be known for This compares with net in· ~----------------------" come ef $330,000. or 6 cents per common share on sales of $153.000,000 for the like period a year ago. locAl ... ANd you'll lOVE rrl You arc ;JCling in your O\\'rt and you r communi!y's be•I interest"> when you "><Jvc or borrow al your LOCALLY OWNED-LOCALLY LOAN[D LAGUNA l[OlRAL B[STTIM( TO SAVC AT LFS-whcre100°/a of the ~vings from our Orange County . 1ccount holders is plowed back for the UcnC'fit of our Orange County friend~ .1nd ncishbors.. At laguna Frdcr.al )'OU earn a high 5°/o on pa<>sbook accounts, wi1h higher rates still avail.ible oo special lJ:Uar· an teed income saving certificates. BtST TIM[ TO BORROW AT lFS-\vher1· Orange Cou nly home owncl'5 arc given first con$idcr.1 lion. Now is the best time in more than two yt"ars to consul tour loan <.ounsclors about 1he nC\v, low interest rates on home loan financing lo help yo1J buy, build or refinance your home. A.J'b ioAN ASSOCIATION Orm8e County'1 l1rgesl. First ;iind Slronge5t independent Feder.ti! J MoNrch ~ Pl.iu 260 Ocean A~ue 601 NOfth El Camino t::t'•l Uguna Nlgucl Laguna B~ch, Ulifomia San Clemente 49'J.1640. 496-1201 "94-7541 492· 1195 Roy Carver Now New > Harbor BMW Dealer By Carl Carstensen 01111 Pikll A,UIOlftG!fY• fdifo~ Roy Carver. Ji arbor are<i auto man for nearly 20 years and until now the exclusive Rolls Royce dealer for both Orange and San Diego coun· ties. has accepted a franchi se for the JKlpular B:0.1\V German import. Carver. who has been ii Rolls Royce dealer for the past I I years eont1nually ranks al the top of the l1s! in sales for the expensi\'e British import. HIS LATEST n1ovr ron . linues to dra n1a!izc th f' st rength and vitality of tht• higher priced rar rnarkct. particu larly the 1n1porls. find the need for top -nntch .~crv ict'. The Bavarian 1\lo!or \Vork:-.. although the ~ 111 :i I I c ~ t aulon1obile manufat l'urcr in Germany. builds <1ut11n1ob1l t'S that arc considered e~en1plary in technology and 1unrl1on They 're not mass produrt•lf but ta1lor·mar1e and tuned to the driver ~lost popular of 1hc B:0.1\\1 " 11nported to th 1~ rountrv are lhe 2002 Sport.~ ~di.In. the ex· pens1vr 2800 CS COUJ>t' and !hr new BM\V Bava ria sedan. The Bavaria fulfills '"'O different demands as sporty drivers will find ii a comfortable touring l'ar an d comfort conscious drivers will be fa scinated "'ith true sporty performance. "B~1\'t' PRODUCTS ha\'C set a standa rd far beyond their nat ive borders.·· Carver said. and ··the 8~1\V seal is more than just a mark of origin. It n1eans quality and an obliga - tion." Carver added Iha! he is "delighted to De associated w11h B:0.1\V as the dealer for <ill Southern Orange County." \\E\V "1AZAOA DEALERS FOil UHAl'\GE COAST Thr firs! Orange Coast dc;ilcr.~ to h;1ndlc the l\·1azda, a new unporl "'hich features n1odcls 1vith lhc revolutionary rotary cnJ:iinc, have been nam- ed by ~lazda ~lotors of A111erica general manager. C. B Bro1vn. Open ing on !\1ay 14 "'ill be the 1'.liracle ~lazda in Costa ~lesa operated by Ha rold C.Orecnc. Si d \Vasserman·s Huntingto n Beach l\lazda "'ill open later in the summer "·ith c·nmpfction of a new facility . NEW FRANCHISE -l{oy Carver. long-t i1ne ~tnrbor area auto ll'tan has bccon1c nc11• B~l\V dealer for Orange Coast. 11 ~ :i:t!lnds bcs1d1~ B~l\V 2800 CS coupe. Popular (ierrna11 inlport is new addition to Rolls Hoyc:c lin e C'arr1erl by C'arvcr Interest Rate Dip Envisioned NEW YORK IAP) -Will censumer interest rates come down even more? l.f a n y bankers are inclined to believe that the trend is over and that rates will remain stabilized until later this year. That may be a broadly he:ld opinion, but there is some reason to suspect that some minor reductions still might be wrung from the trend before it runs .ul ef energy completely. The reason? Borrowing is decidely belolf' the rates desired by banks. Consumers remain retuctant, d e s p i t e much easier terms and rates since last fall . Apathy may be too extreme a term to use in lableling the situation, but the fact is that the nation's rebound from recent recession is lacking in energy and enthusiasm, like a body after a hard and de- pressing winter. The bait is hanging there on a thin string, enticingly low, but borrowers aren 't reaching for it. Bankers feel that they won't arouse borrowers even by dropping the bait right under their noses. T h e borrowing animal, they say, needs lo dev elop some energy on its own .. Among consume: pollsters, the feeling exists that the worst of the malaise may have been reached and that spirits may begin to climb during the rest of the year. But the same studies indicate the climb may be slow. High tax rates are one of the reasons. Big income gains have propelled some families into hiiher Lax categories. ca using them to pay more in taxes on income that they really didn't get to use---an illusion of inflation. The University of Michigan study shows that ronsumer sentiment reached 78.2 in February , or a few points above the low of 75.4 recorded in the fourth quarter of 1970. The base of 100 occurred in February 1966. Job prospects contribute to the low level. Unemploymenl has rebounded to 6 percent of the civilian labor for('./! from 5.8 percent. And the help- wanted advertising index is dropping again. This index may not be the most sc ientif ical l y const ructed. but it does have a good forecast record. The Conference Board. w h i ch maintains it by studying c lassified ads in 52 ne\vspapers. claim.t:, "It is extremely sensitive to changes in general business conditions. At the end of a recession a gain in the index often precedes a decline in the unemployment rate. Declines in the index have generally been f0Jlo1,1'ed by increases in the unemployment rate." In February. the index slipped lo 77 from 78 in January and 108 in February 1970. The figures are based on [ the 1967 rate or help-"·anted ads equalling 100. One marked cxcetpion lo the lathargy that has gripped much of the economy is the stock 1narket. Prices have been pumped back to \\'here they were rive yea rs ago, and arc 40 percent above 1970 lo\vs. There is a partial explanation for this, and it lies in emotional excesses. Just as en1otional factors produced the 995.15 high in the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1966. emotional selling forced it down to 631.16 in.1970. Emotional buying a n d selling'..' Isn't all buying and selling done with a degree cf emotion? Of course. but a large element of b I i n d e n l h u s i a s m and panic accompanies these unrealistic extremes in prices. TilC recovery has not alto- gether been the resu lt or more realistic and less emotional appraisals of merit. hO\\'ever. Some investors are looking beyond the depressions and seeing sun shining on yonde r hills. Corporate profits. they feel . are due to rebound from their dismal sho"·ing or 1970. when lhey suffered lhe sharpest declind in more than a decade. And profits are the major element in stock prices. Is the market rebound near Its heiglJ.t? That 's 11); e forecasting a horse race. but there is still another index that bears ""atching. It's the inl'Pslor ronfidence i n d e x , nlaintained by Sindlinger and ·co. a month ago ii "'as 84 .1. No"' its 81 .8. THE BEST R11d1rthip potlt prov1 "P1.1• nuh" it 0111 of lht world'1 111e1t popul•• te111i1 t*rip1. Jt1•d II d•ilt In th1 DAILY PILOT. • ., Wbo Listens To Landers? • • • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN ·AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does Tllat 's Wllo You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers Daily in The I DAILY PILOT i . • ~· • • • • . . . • • • • . " ·' • !• :: • AMONG THE GREAT Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is · dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it 's news from around the w or Id or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you . And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories in it you can 't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news rack, it's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news ). ' ' . . . • ONES CE ORSERVF.'R N ' y \ • ' . I ·-·~·-i • DAILY PILOT \ I I \ H .DAILY PU.OT 6ig City In China Exantin ed Julian Scbuma11, an American living and workillg In China, covered the recent visit of lbf' U.S. table tellOls team and afterwards "Tote th.is dispatch from Canion, (Kwangchow l. By JULIAN SCHUMAN KWANG CHOW, China (UPI) -The old church serves as a school today. Socialist consulates oecupy the mid-Victorian res i dence s \Vhere foreign businessmen ance lived . The tO.story people's depart- ment store on Ren Min Lu (People'$ Street) is cutting its prices this year. and ~Us everything from S w 1 s s watches l o Chinese-made vitamin pills. Kwangchow. known to foreigners as Canton, )s south China's largesl city, a port of 3 million population v.•hich serves as the gateway for foreigners entering China to- day. Thi! correspondent flew to Kwangchow from Shanghai the second week of April with the U.S. table tennis team and then remained in the port city aft.tr the Americans left to reoort for UPl on Chinese ac- tiVitieS before returning to Peking. I rode a taxi through the ci- ty and strolled across a bridge to Shameen, a small i.sland v.•hert: British taipans ruled in the 19205. In those days, Chinese needed a pass to enter the foreign concession. Palms and many other trees line row after row of mid· Vic- torian buildings. which once housed foreign consulates and residences of f o r e i g n businessmen. Now I he s c British-built buildings house commercial offices of North Vietnam and North Korea. the Albanian shipping company, the Polish consulate, the f o r e i g n seamen·s club and Chinese organiz.alions and residences. One bu ilding, which ol>- vioosly served as a foreign church in the old days, now houses a primary school. I walked across another bridge from Shameen Island back to Canton proper and dow n Ren t.1in Lu to the JG. story south China building, the city's tallest building. The first three floors of the building '"'ere burned during Japan's World \Var II oc- cupation. 1 was told tha\. the building later wa5 the head· quarters for hoodlums '"'hO kidnaped able·bodied men llnd sold them as conscript.! into the Chiang Kai-shek arm y. This building now houses a department store. a restaurant and various offices. t The department store i~ staffed by about 1 , O O O employes v•ilh an average wage of about $2.3 a month. This pa y average is cJn- sidered relatively "high •for south China. and about 80 per- cent of the '"·orkers have been employed by the store for JO years or more. Ouyang Chan, a rcvolu· lionary committee member assigned lo the s t o r f! · s managemenL.•tOld me that he was an a.'l.!iistant manager before the cultural revolution started in 1966. During the cultural revulu- tion, store employes crilic1~ed Ouyang for pulling profits first He said he and his fellow cadres at first rtplied that they were carrying out the policiet of their superiors. But later they accepted resporulbility for wrong think· Ing. he said. Ouyang then spent one year and (out months in self- criUciam, during which he rtteived a aalary , and then was returned to good grace. Quyang said the department atore has been able to rtduce l)rlcu in recent m o a l n s because .,, Increased pro- ductiOn and the p I a n n c e economy. ·r .. "'-::~:"'.iiiii;;:-·-... ~~';"~~~~···~~"\j'~'[,'j~~~~~iti·~·~·~·~-... ·~~ ..... ..,,r--:-::--:~::::::::::---:·~~~~~~~~~·····:·:-::::-:~~~-:--~~~~~~··-1• The All NEW Super tred Tire has Sears '.f'iN: and Au10 Center Price• Effective Sunday, May 2 thru Tueo., May4. Ask About .Sears Con'Venient Credit Plans · ALJ,STATE l'••senger Tire Guarantee (;u•rJ1Dlt'.-tl Aa•in•t: AH 11rc f•ilW"<.'11 from ourm1l ro.id hll7.1nb or Ueli-<:u 1• rnalt'ria.I OT" workm1n!h1 p. For u-Loni: fur the:: lift c.f tht OliJ- inal uc1J. What S.aN "1'ill Do: Jn CJ1chani:c for rhe u re, rcplxe Jf, d1u)(in,11: only jur rhe prupuruon of lLJrrtn! .\.t'll1nR price plo1 ftdenl £1c1.\.t' T ~ 1h11 rcprticn1~ nead u~d. Rep1i1 n•il punuure1 ~r 11<1 •h•r)(c. Cu11r1nlr<!d A1111in~t: TreaJ ""l"U-<JUl.. }'nr Hn ... l.on1: Thi: num~r o! n10111l1t spcc1fitJ, Wh•I Srart Will Uo: Jn t:JCh;IJ\,l(e fur 1+w, rirr, rrplact it. rh111)till,ll: 1hr turrornr Jellin~ rrict plu~ t'tdert.l tJ.dw Ta. N 1h.c lollowif18alto••1ncc. :Moath• Gu1rant«>d I~ 10 ! 1 27 10 39 "" AUu .. 111.,c 101·,, 2111;, ;:5'(. Crusader FULL4-llLYNYL01\ • New contour, broad shoulder fur greater safety • New tread design for all-weather tr'9.c t1on •New 6/\0th-inch "vhitc sidc\"all 10 n1atch th e wiJc h of 1he 'vb itc sidewall of many new car s YOUR CHOICE \ SIZE F.E.T. Tuhclr~1 lll1rl. .. ·all~ h.9~1-.:14-I.I).\ 16?A~ll ; .3.'i'( 14 :? .111 7.7.'ixl4 2.1 8.25114 2.3 Plu• f' .F .. T. t:11"h 7.75Jtl5 !!. I And Old 'J'i,.,. WhiltwaUa Only $3 ~1ore fJcr 1·1rt r:::c:u !'t \11.-. '1.1.-.~rA·rt: r·ir 11 .,111 ''· Ii P\'"'I "\1 .l-,ll "l'IRt: I:] 1.1\ll\"\l"lt. ~: J.1111 .\\l llltll\lt: ,.. 1,1 '"'"'" }' l .n~r~"''""'I \s••11•1: I.II 1: , _ 1.< l•t•• h"m ·kk<" m ••tn•I "' .. utl1m•n-·,.' " ' ' I '" 11 ..... 1 uhs: Tlor bft •' Ilic ""f"l;I) ur;i,1. '"'••l .:...rs ~ill Ue>: ~~­ '·""'"I• I lltW torr, • ""'~~""if l"I !hr J'IU> I ··'·"'"·~ .... ..i ""'! :.: 111r \II~ r \1111\ ·r A \II no 11111~1 \IU) 1.1 lll\\1~~. 1.., ••.• .,1,.~•I ltloin•t• ~·! 1· •. •I ~~.:<.»•! 111,I ••rot ~~I I 11 •tr Th•lll •0~11 hU'.,,I,, ,~ I "" llow '"'""' •IU,UIK.I I ' :1 \\h•l~~.,,.~ill lln• J.r ,.j ~'''• 1>r•onn ''"h""'r or I;.; I '~" l•'<'n1w•t•·,.Q • I ~,j •li"~<tlf. oh ••<i>f>t '~ < < ,,~·~ l11t rluo f'h•J"•I• •.J I 1 •·! orr 111olr11r , .. I I \, fl, r••f h&Jl plll'IC'· l;:j 1 ..... ,, ... ,C<" •J }I.OJI "'1 1\L, Tiu• Sr•ro l ''"~' T"e t 111•t;ui1re ~~ ... I 1.... ...._ ....... •< ""' 1;.t ·"•·•f'•<'l.o·lor.,111l"t;"•"ot ~ '" 1hr 1 ~A. Tl"I ru~• ;;! ,,,...I~• rile hooi~ of ..i,..,.. \1l""M 1• 1ht • ~rrtm .,1.1,~1 ~~ 1••1<t, ind.,.\,,,,. "l'f'l«.oh~ r· l a.>h•l l n"rT•'•Mnu1 •'.'\ ~11 .... r •' ,,,,,~,w·~..lr.111. ~J "'"'" " IN.If" Thi\ <•rd l ;n n1~·•,bt l'""'Cll~J M. Ull)(" n!":> ~''""··••·I•~"'"~''' .,...,.. ~E ''7S'' Se:ri~s Tread and Distinctiye Style • • • \ •• . • • f ''. ~up~rtre~ '-'78'~:: Guarante~d ~36 M~nth~-~ ~-.. -............. ~ .:.;.. ---·--· -.. " Low Low Priced For a Belted Tire 6.50x131C78.-11 Tubel-BJ~kwaD Pl•llf.F ... T. AndOldTin •Belted Construction (rayon carcass plus 2 rayon belts) for greater stability, performance, safer handling • Features the soft ride of rayon cord with reinforc· ed tread area to reduce squirm •More road contact for safer stops and superior handling SIZE Tndr·ln f.E.T, Prirf' TUBELESS BLACKWALL 6.f>Oxl3/C7S..13 J5.IJ.J 2.0fl 7.35tl4/E78-14 19.95 2.37 7.75x.l4/F78-14 21.93 2.54 8.25xl4/G711-14 24..95 2.69 TUBELESS WBITEWALI, 6.50xl3/C78-13 l8.95 2.00 7.35x14/E78-14 22.95 2.37 7.75xl4[F78-14 24.95 :?.54 8.25x14/G78-14 27.9:i 2.69 8.5:lx: 14(El78-l4 :J0.95 2.95 ? 8.25x15/G7S..15 30.95 2.80 a.55xl5{H7S.15 33.95 3.01 ' Whitewall Dynaglass Sealant . Guaranteed 40 i\'10~1 s Nationwide 25% OFF Regular r ade-ln Prices Rl¥ .W.95 T,..de-lo 2 Fiberidass Bell s Pri" 3 3 PLUS 4 plies of Smooth Polyester 7 l 1.J5r.l4/E~S.lt • T ohil1-Wbit""11 Ploa:!..7ZF.E.T, AndOldTir• Cord •Rugged '1-ply polyester body plus 2 fiberglass beJ[s provides maximum load carrying abiliry wltb b ig margin of safety •A new seal ant with chopped fiber· glS5s gives puncture proof protection shoulder co shoulder • Sporty triple-srripeJ whitewall pro- tected from curb scuffing •Wider and deeper tread than non- belted new t ire s insu res long mileage and sure traction SIZE 7.35x l4/E78-14 7.i:lxl4 F78-14 8.25x l4 f;i8-14 8.55xl4 H78-I~ s.2S/s.15,.1s1r.1B-1:l 8.55/B.4.S.15/H 78-1 5 8.ll5x 15/J78-1 :i 9.00f9.15x l::>/l.78· I;; llt'.l..l..1,\1\ 11.-.1.t'. 111\0t'..L"I Tl\Al)f;.I] r1111.E Pl\lct; F.F-T. 44.95 33.71 2.72 46.9?l 3.).21 2.Si 49.'):) 37.46 'J..17 5:!.9:; 39.71 ·2.94 50.'1.I 38.21 2.83 5J. 9:i 40.4{; 3.02 56.lJ~ 42.71 3.""' 59.9.i 44.96 3.28 "~~r-~i~k-up~,_P~n~ls, Camper~l ~ ..... · ·-1 • Exprt-ss Milea)j~ l •Tread lifctimeplus 40,000 mile tread wear-0ut guaran· tee TUBELESS WHITEWALL ~IZE T ... i..11 ,.,,., }'.E.T. :!IS.I:; .l. :!:!5-l:J J.24 ~ .".:.-. , XLWNylonl 1 Truck Tiret1 t 2(~{,._J 6-ply rated nylon cord consrruction for stre ngth and lon g mileage. Wrap&rQund cread enables bener cor· neriog aod more stability. ~1u. raio; 1>.LT. _TUBE-T\"PE O.iib;IS :!7.11.i :.4% 7.tllbl::'i 37.95 %.37 6..5'ltl6 29.9S 2.61 7.Dlb:l6 37.95 l.01 TUBELF...'iS 7.00..14 !7.9S %.G f'l.intlS ~.95 l.68 St· a rs •UIN" P"ll( lA 1-4400, J21o4)l 0 ll llPIOl\lfl GI J -Jlll l ONG 11ACM Mr 1..01,1 Pl<O WI to41tJ SANfA ANA •I J'4J7t 11tOtUAMI O .. t•tJA .... 11'-1111 'l'OUAJtCf J41-,J1t CAl'40G" ,_..I( J40·0l•I GUlfOAU CM J•I004. Ct 4 ... 411 OlTMPIC • JOTO AM W11t COMPTON NI ••t tll, NI J.J,41 NQUYWQOO MO 1-S ... t OllltO( N7•1100 ~1 ~115,l!OllUC ... A.o"'ltlC.O. COVIN • 1•4•041 1 INGUWOOD 011: 1·1lJ1 PAJADINA 6414 111, ISt .. 211 POMOfliA NA t •Jl •I '"'•' •••nf•r 12 NMft t• s "·"'--~ ... ,.,,. &•t. t r:io A.Iii\. 11 t 1:io P.M. ••• ''"" At1•0ttly, ,/.,., • r ,M. T11••· Tt11,.,,. s.1. ''"'" .. .,. ............ ,, tANfA llllOMKA l'l •4lll JOUtlf COAtT f'UIA 140·.lJJl WAu.n' t'O ~·Mtt, •M•J'HO W'llMOHI' ... •·ltll iake Your 'First 1Date ••• .... to '!fun in the Sun in '71" on the mall at South Coast Pla- za. Since First Mate's Day is this Sunday, May 9, you can browse among lots of boats and other recreation equipment. There will be exhibits and right before your very eyes see the actual construction of a cementboat by personnel ·from McClatchie Marine. Bring Mo_ther.· Show lasts thr.u May 8. South CCM11t Pl111 Supplement ta The DAILY PILOT, Mon., Mly 3, 1971 loath Coast ?tua "Tiil flAllDIST MAU Of AU• IAJSTCX.ATSANDllGOJUD'AY,COl'TA WISA OYD " nw1 noau AllD 11nica. • .A i. c..i • .,...,, 1111"' •AINI'•• a-....._, & i.. ·-·''"" ''""" • ..,..,_., ..., ..., •c.1. •••or• 111• '' A•orlco • 11rr1c111 <111111 • ltttor ..... ,. .• , ... , •• a•-··-·--•CINl'11Q1"'"""""-•Goolm'1• <••IV. OlcAccHHrl11"•<•••··, ........ CllH'•ltotlHory. Crocbr Cltl110&llt1-11oo• • """''"' .......... . lllc-Uoo•Pot .llcll'a ClflM .... •Plol .. i-•P ... 'aP ... loolaotl .. aePlrlt·W11tww .... •Po1 ..... CMclPlo11'11eitN 1ftohl .... llfll&c.Mln1 -·· •llOtry~ ...... Mo1111 • hWoo lloMlt • ""'"'' o ,..,,.1oniott-. • ... u...,.11ot1ao1r1 • -· & ,,_.•UL•...,,., .... Clfllalo • ... ...., _ • 111&1 tf ''"'" ...... 1111 .. • 1u11 of Tollorloe • 1 .... '' '"" • ...... • --• Jewtl1.,.....,. • ..... M11• • W,C. lltM 1,..•JMr'•• W.I•• 111•111 .. l1•1ll'tlt•l1flW1 hllut11 .. 1 lnt•r••lilll Wll • l•H•t Jewelen •1111 lrflll • le htft • Lt 111,111 l11t11N1t ....... , ..... 0Ullllo'1 ol.W ... llloltltloo •Mori••.,.,.... •Mot Cl. o MIN -I• 0.,.. II'""' o .... llttor e Plllflc lnlota & '"'9 o, Plokwlc• .... , .. , • Th Pro, lh' o 111 0111•11 o lol lolorHll•HI • ll1loro l11toor1ot o lOl•rt lffoty Wort• • IHI•'• l•H°'" o So .. IH •Soon• S ... or • Sootli CH ti Dro91 o loooot·""°M o n...i McAo1 o Tit toe•• TIN tr ha• TOT <•tor o U•oW1 Hoooo Poroh•I°'' o U.S. llo tloHI .... o Wolllc•·•-Cltr•WolrlleW1,.•1l1r1•1'11oWothll•Wlld11,.1C•••"'•Z, .................... ,.., ..... ,.lltv•lalll'• · • I ' . . . . ...---...~. -• ·-· ••• j . . . 2-South Coast Pi n• Supplement lo Tho DAILY PILOT, Mon., M•V 3, 1971 • th e. Sun' South Coast Plaza Show "Pushes 'Fun 1n 'Anch ored' At Plaza Boats, Campers, Gear On Display All Week The week-long "Fun in the the show include: . Sun in '71 " show, kicked ciff Transcon Salls, The Boat last Friday al South Coast Store. Pat's Inboards, .Clipper Plata and is scheduled to run Marine, Offenhauser Marine. through Saturday. Sunset Sail, Ho Im e 1 It features elh.ibits of power Fiberglass Co., Schock Boats, and ' sailboats, campers and Un.iflite Yacht Sales, Interna- scuba diving, as well as a tional Harvester, Sea Lander number of recreation and out.· Houseboats, Aqua Cat, Crown door displays set UP' by May Crall Marine, N e w po rt Co., Sears, F. w. Woolworth, Pacific, Four Winds Camper, Western Outdoor News and Duncan Mcintosh Columbia dealer. the Penn Phillips Co. Boats to be displayed In· , One of the highlights of the elude the Lido, Hobie Cat·, show is the ferro-eement boat Cape Dory, Mini Sail, Balboa, under construction 911 the SK flatbottom, Clipper MK 21, Prem. f South C t Columbia, 470 and 420, Bellboy ises o oas c Cab · Plaza. Jt is located at the utty in, S i I v e r I in e Camero, Thunderbird Tri Hull, western entrance to t h e International 505, Fireball, Carousel Court. Boat buUder Contender. Voyager, Bobbin, S11bmerged At Plaza Frank McCJatchie bas plunked Dranscombe Lugger, Boston down 8 3-foot wooden bull Whaler, Sabot, a 23• tunnel The underwater show at South Coast Plaza this week features Pacific Divers there which he will completely boat, Uniflite, Sea Lander Supply personnel in some fun-to-look-at, but serious demonstrations of under· encase in steel and wire mesh H 0 u 8 e b 0 a t , Aqua Cat, I th bo water techniques and safety. Scuba diving demonstrations are featured in tank n preparation for e at's Marauder, Skipja•k a nd t 1s·d th B · t I SI t t t C I C t t th h · t ki M Cl t h . .... se up ou 1 e e rts o ree en ranee o arouse our a e s oppmg cemen s n. c a c 1 e Formula.. t A Columbia 26 like the one shown here beating downwind in open seas is on displ ay now as part of big "Fun in the Sun for '71" Show at South-Coast Plaia. Duncan ~1clntosh is displaying the yacht which, he says, has 10 percent more interior space than comparable boats of same size. Marine personnel will work on'lr••••••••••••ciieiiniieiirii. iiiiiiiiiiiimmmmmmmiiii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:Ommiiii.iiiimmmmiiiiiiiij the boat during the entire II week. · ' O t her d e aler s and distributors participating in ~Tunnel Hull ~Pleasure boaters ·no\\' get the be nefit of a hull de- ~ sign that has proved it can plane a bove the "bumps" : in the water and make a boat turn like it's riding ~ rails. Tunnel hull has mad e it in competition for years. Now Holmea Fiberglass of Costa Mesa offers it in a new Horizon Boats design. You can see it at South Coast Plaza this week. l·cood Life ' IB Cheaper on Boat •• :(Ed i tor's nott : The ~amers at Samson i\-larzne sign Enttrprises. Ltd., ricouver. B.C.. Canada. ~ put together the fol· zpwing thoughts on wha t ~ely -at some time or OCiher -must be pracucal- l~ t'VtTYOnt 's dream ... f.!1 /iw aboard £HI ocean· oCJing sailboat and foUow th tirn. The mood of the t0ry fit$ ihe "Fun in the ~n'' show theme being octrried out on these pages mid at the So uth Coast Plaza thiJ week.) each year toward the equator as winter approaches. This means that wherever they are , many local fruits a n d vegetables will be in season. The economic fact of the norma l food ma rketing system is that every business man who handles a product must resell it for a higher prire. Living on a boat, sailing from harbor to harbor, lhe sailor is in effect living in the country. butcher wbo has bought and must be put aside in a sort of butchered the animal hims.If. reserve fund to pay for Here prices range from 30 to replacement of worn equlp- possibly 50 perctnt less than ment, such as sails, ruMing city supermarket prices. rigging and engine parts. This The opportunity to hunt amount al.so depends on the wildlife wllile cruising scarce-type of boat and equipment ly populated coastlines is used. Most people ashore find seldom missed. A rifle and that their family car with its shotgun are usually standard annual depreciation c o s ts equipmenl along with fishing them more than the total cost gear in the modern sea home. of keep ing a sea home. Opportunities to buy larger Marinas are avoided as amounts of food cheaply are much as possible otherwise also taken . A small kerosene the cost of living skyrockets. or propane-fueled r r e e z e r Apart from the cost, which in along with a pressure cooker some places is more than $2 a d tll foot per month, living in a an canning equipment w marina is too much like trailer look a f l e r what the refrigerator won't hold. court living for the ~verage • • • is for a • • • MUSICAL MOTHER'S-DAY! GIVE MOTHER THE LASTING ' Gin OF MUSIC ON THE fLOOR NOW! FOR 'IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! 12 GRAND PIANOS STEINWAY e GEORIH S:rECK e FfURICH lmado lo !O"'"""yl e STORY & CLARK e LYON & HEALY e KNAIE e STEINWAY I made In Europe I e BALDWIN e SOHMIR e AND MANY OTHERS. 10 YEAR WARRANTY EXCEPTIONAL VALUE!! Famous Farflu. orpn. Five model.I to choose-from. Brand new, from .. _ s19700 WE FEATURE THE MIGHTY WURLITZER AND MAGNIFICENT HAMMOND ORGANS PRICES. START AT Yo• COii fffr11 t• ploy. lent with optlo11 to bur pl••· "-leuoM. FrH tu11l1HJ- Usff plo11n Md •tt•111 wltll worrorrry ,, .... 1499.00 C.tN 111 •IHI IH this three k..,bocmt .,.. Wi.rlltMt- 40J7 Otto11 with Orbit Ill sy11ttttsifff 011cl auto• 111.ttc rhytt.111 a11cl M11ltl Motlc htcuufo11. SOUTH COAST PLAZA CENTER 540°3165 Nites 'Ill 10 540·2830 Sun. 11 lo 6 :,In a sea home. the price of rooo. home maintenance . rent. i.,xes. entertainment a n d dothing &re often a fraction of wbat they are ashore. Food costs, of course . vary "'idely because of personal tastes. Luxury foods are a]y, ays expensive. But to the ttverage couple or famil~· y,·ho limit their luxuries. a loW food bt11 is simply another benefit they have come to expect from their y,·ay of life .afloat. In-season local fru its and vegetables are usually bought from local stores who have in turn bought the m di rectly from the farm er. The store prices are. as a reSult, at least half or Jess than what is charged for the sa me thing in a city supermarket. '\\'here the opportunity to buy from the farmer presents itself. the prices are even lo\lo·er. In the tr op ics . particularly in underdeveloped counlries. fruit and vegetables appear to be almost frte to any former supermarket shop. per. An~ seafoods are, of course, literally free. Where fresh milk is ex-sea home dweller. He will pensive, powdered skim milk (Continued on Opposite Page) with a little artificial coftee1...:::::::::::::'...:'.'...::'.!'.!'.:'.::..'...:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cream substitute mixed in makes a palata ble and in· ex pensive substitute. The fi rst thing to reme mber ls tha t they keep their boats in perpetual summer, movi ng ~1eat and poultry are also less expensive. Here again. shopping is donE with a Commercially canned foods are used. but in practi ce little more than they are used ashore -except during the occasional month·long ocean crossing. (Ce111ent Yard ) Olfers Build-i't-yourseif Boat Allowing fo r the area of the world the boat is in and in· dividual tastes, the average food budge t of a person who uses a reasonable amount or enterprise is seldom more than 15. U.S. dollars a monlh per person. Home maintenance is the next item. The cost of kee ping in good condition is relatively maintenance-free boat such as fiberglass or ferro-cement is about $3 a foot per overall length for each year. It can be even less in some cases. A conventionally-built woode n boat can cost double this amount. and in the cases of really old boalS. much more. Also about $5 a foot a year They'U whistle at your mother in Thom McAn sandals. Mother's Day is May 9th. f ra.ni: ~icClatchie, Presi- dt>r,: of MC'Clatchte Marine. ha~ announ ced the opening of a u n J q u e "[)c).lt·Yourself" boat}ard al 1533 i\fonro\'ia A\e 1n '.\'ey,·port Beach. The company will specialize in ferro-ceme.nt boat con- struction. under an exclusive dealership agreement with Samson fltanne D e s i g n En terprises. Ltd. of Van· couver, B.C .. Canada 1' he dealershi p includes all of Orange County and the Long Beach area. Ferro-cement b o a t et1n· struction is over 120 years old, having been pioneered by Joseph LouiJ Lambot o f Franct in J848. In 1943 Dr. Pier Lu igi Nervi of Italy developed the basic modern construction technique that i5 used Loday. It features a rigid 11kelet.on made of re-inforcing rod and steel mesh. r.om· plelely Impregnated Y.1ilh a • special \\·aterproof mortar. The result -an immensely strong and sea.,,,,·orth y hull with great savings in material cost an d building lime due to its simpl icity. Sam son Marine De s ig n Enterprises has over 40 stock plans available t h r o u gh ~1t'Clatchie. The ' ' Do -I t • ''ourself" aspect of lhe vard provideii boatyard space Bt a minimal lease cost for the eager boat build er. r-.1aterials can be provided by the builder r-.t cC lat c hi f'. Ex per t Technological assistance is free. McClatchie said "\\'f. are prepared to build An enf.ire boat, parti al con:oitructlon or BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS .BOOKS just provide space • n d -----------1 assistance -you take your p" '1"c~'x"w""'1'c'~x' Nf· " choice". He also pointed out, ·· "an example. an onthu,iastic BOOKSHOPS , 1 ~afa,rer cnn build l'I 45-foot erro-Cement hull nnrl dr.tk b~!~~~r~ 111 41 6),.1,00 for less than $2,000 in nlAleriAI ~OUTH COAST 'LAil .1. o ••• cust. '"'"' ""'"" · 111 •1 s-0.21'1 r ••• ,.,, Why not give your mother something to whistle about? SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA white leather, $7 .99 white leather, S7.99 , I I ' Boa t Life ... !Continued from Opposite Page I • anchor out as much as possi· ble for privacy. fllarinas are a product of cities, and a\vay from the cities mooring costs are generally nominal or free. J\lany countries in the ·world have free mooring plates pro.. vi de d by tHe local governments for p I ea s u r e boats which do not require shore servict!S sucti as elec- tricity and running water. Taxes are generally of little concern to the sea horne owner. He must pay his in- come tax to his home country. Otherwise a proper l y documented pleasure boat can travel internationally f!'ee of all taxes. NOW 579&~s Fashion Mate" sewing machine by Singer. ltsewszig-zag. Mends. Darns. Makes buttonholes.And has its own carrying case. Come in and save! Entertainmenl Is a matler of personal ta ste. Usually the boat is 1he center of en- terlainn1..:nt, whether it con· sists of inviting shore-bound friends for a day or weekend cruise or simply explorine: slrangc waterways. Tbe longer one Jives an out4 door life on board a sea borne, the less one is atlracted by theaters. professional sports, night clubs and other spec- tator entertainments. In prac. lice. budgeting r 0 r en.- terlainment in a sea home consists largely of budgeting (or food and drink for guests. The Singer1to 36'Credit Plan helps you have thesevalueS now-wi!IW1 ™budget. SINGER For address of the Singer Sewing Center nearest you, :see While Pages under SINGER COMPANY. · .. ~ATr~l.:ol THl:SINGE..R.COMPANY COSTA MESA-lri11GI & Sun!lowtr, Sourti Coal! Pl1u. l<O·HlJ COSTA MESA-1>00 Narbo• llvd., H•rbGr Ctnltr, Kt •·11H HUNTINGTON IE•CH-Elll1>9fr ill BellCll, Hunting!""' ltfCll Cenlet,lf1·1~1 OllANGE-21 s111nnon E•1t. "The City" Ctn!••. jt2·lt4S GAllOEN GllOVE-nJl Ch•pm1n. Orangt Counlv Plaza. IJ0.40lf SCULPTURES IN LIGHT A dramatic, conver~ation provokin9 new idea in kinetic li 9hting. These twinkli ng spidery li ght bursts create your own rnini-fire works display 'captured by the miracle of fiber optics. Graceful sprays of soft brilliance th at daixle the • . _. \·· ' ,•.. i I ·. ' $15.00 Th~ Gctlaxy :o-1 os $29.95 $25.00 IS different models from which fo chooie ••• a de -LIGHT-ful gilt id ea ..• • ' -South Co1st Pl111 Supplement to The DAILY PILOT, Mon., M1y 3, 1971-l See's Candies at SCP Announcement was 1nade by Hugh F'ry, General Manager or See's. remodeling ol the ca ndy store which formerly occupied the space. &-e·s Candy Shops, Inc. have signed a long-term lease with South Coast Pla:r.a for a t,200-square-foot store to be located on the first level of the Carousel Court adjacent to the carousel. See's, long rerognized as one ;;:=========:; of the finest quality candy stores In the world , will open June l after extensive SOUTH COAST PLAZA l lll Bristol, Coit• Mesa 545-0724 HARBOR CENTER 2300 N. H•rbor, Costa Mesa " 3t XiS$ 'Yo r' Rd:lw-t· ~~ The DAILY PILOT- The One That Cares MAY CO. MEN ASSUME LEADERSHIP ROLES AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA Richard Ting (Left) And Kffs van Miltenburg Win New Titles Two May Company Executives Making News at Coast Pla za 'Jl.osa.tt rt<i.-ro m.?.itiic,,woo! Ct'Odtet slnl<111 w·1tlt eke. p -rr; 9e, an.~ h.a~cl di;1t'1l s -lo Two T\1ay Co. executives previously unfilled post of made news this week at South chairman. J\1iltenburg, whose Coast Plaza shopping ctnter. term as president was for the Kees van Ml 11 en burg, 1970-71 fiscal year, takes on general manager or May Co. ·s the new post for fiscal 1971-72. Costa ,\1esa store. became the Elected to serve as i;reri- llrst person ever to carry the dent of lhe Association w:1s title of chairman of the board John Schinnerer. owner and of the South Coast Plaza manager of the Pace Setler Merchants Association, store. Richard Ting. of Costa tvlesa. Other newly elected offictrs w as appointed operaLions include: manager of the South Coast Joe Hartstein, o w :1 er - Plaza slore. manager, Jewels by Joseph, • Ting has resided in Costa vice president : Joe ~1etcalf, Mesa for nine years and has Sears manager. Secretary: been associated with the Ma y and Mr! Stolte, U.S. Nali0nal Co. for five years. He has Bank manager, treasurer. served as operations manager They join two newly elected of both the South Bay store members to the board. BQb and May Co.'s big \Vilshire Aguilera. manager. (;ent ry, store on the Miracle ~1ile. Ltd .. and Schinnerer. Other directors i n c J u d r: : 11.lav Co. Costa ~1 c ·;a Cene~al ,\1anager van !\filtcn-Gene A. Hobcns, ,11;c:1eral burg becomes the firsl per:ron manager of South C n a ., t ever to hold the chairman of Plaza : Doug Ph e IP iii· the board position "'ith the \Vcisfie\d's Jewelers: U ob South Coast Plaza Merchants Rubenstein. owner-manager, Field's Shoes: and Bi 11 Association. The association rt::prcsc:its Thompson. manager. llick:ory Farms. both merchants and pro-;===========.I fessional people in South Coast Plaza and its <rcross-the-street neighbor. Town Center. Association members votl·d to elevate Miltenburg from the post of president to the STARS Sydnty Omt rr is ont of the world'1 grttt a1holo9tn. Hi1 column it one of tht DAILY PILOT'S grt at f•~""''· Jim Clarkr. Managf'r. f . \V. \Voolworth and Abe Kaplan, owner-manager of Kaplan's, y,·ere retirf'd from the board after having :-:ervcd a two-ye~r term. .\I i 1 tcnburg, unanimoucly chosen by his fellow OOard n1ernbers and merchants to remain as an active board n1ember .. becauiiC' nf his , outstanding effort during the past year.'' has been v.•ith the ,\lay Co. nn~aniiation since 1962. He y,•as assigned general manager of the South C'iast Plaza store in f'ebruary 1969 and has made it th,e most suc - <:cssfut store in the entire May Co. chain. we.u· w1tlt. ;i 1ia n 1 ~h -fl e.i .. on. mll.ri~ occi.s io•:f~ /0~ ~f;; 4W>& Yo"-' Lon~ lleor,\i., Hu.niin~n. Sob.ch., ~~rbor Cen.ti?r 4rtd Sou!h Cu.st P1<11.1. in. c:o~~Mi!.61:>.;Whittitr <M-d, Slonewood c..it!e.r-~~,Monlck>ir · F>ldr~, li le.r-Mall·RivU'5ide., !Akt-tDOOd <Mit'111' ,BILe,nA &k Gw\er Blue Tower or Pink Tower Design: Five-piece place setting (Dinner Plate, Salad Plate, Bread & Butter Plate. Cup & Saucer), Reg. $12.95, now $10.36; tour li~e-piece settings, reg. $51.80, llOW S41 .44. Ser¥ mg pieces also on SJ)ecial. SALE ON WoRLoAccLAIM ED SPODE IMPERIAL EARTHENWARE -· RE PEATED BY PO PULAR D EMAN D IN T IME FOR MOTH ER'S DAY SAV E 20% ON EVERY ITEM ,. We are again pleased to of!er IG our old and new customers the unprecendented O!IPOr1unity to buy beautiful SP00[ Imperial Earthenware at substan. t1al savings off regular open sloe~ prices. Select the place settings or pieces you want for yoorself or ror gifting. Buy a complete new service or add lo your present Spade dinnerware. Gainsborough, Buttercup and Chelsea Wicker design on special in addition to thGse shown. Choose from these eight time.honored patterns and save 20'~ during this special limited time event. Sale ends May 8 . .. Billingsley Rose: five-piece place set- ting, reg. $15.95. now $12.76; four five-piece place settings, reg. $63.80, $51 .04. Blue Bird: jive-piece place setting, reg. $18.95. now $15.16; four five- piece place settings, reg. $75.80, now $60.6.4. ' Jewel embossed: five-piece place setting, reg. $8.95, now S7.T6: foor live-piece pla<:e settings. reg. $35.80. now $28.64 loutla Coast ?Ina Mt1lt•·Ch~r9t llt,,kAf!'leric1 rd $25.00 CHINA • CRYSTAL • SILVER • GIFTS The San Diego Freeway, Co1ta Mes• l ower M•ll level 540-7777 SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA • CALL 540-2627 " • .. . ......... "". -· . f--South CoHI Plou Supplemont lo The DAILY "LOT, Mon., Mty 3, 1'71 · S. Viet Election Climate Warms • • ~ • ~ • . • . • , , .- ' • r ' , r ;. t • ~ I· f I :· i t ~ ~ ... f r • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I ' • • • ' ' • ,~/ weisfie/dj " I ' I ' ., ' Mothers' Rings With 4 stones With 1 stone 30.00 With 'l s1ones --·- Don't for get Mother ... May 9th ElS'ENBERG JCE F1mily Circle Pin A gilt for proud rncl~s ... tdgtd wilh l1'J lo 12 birthslonrs. 11 , 99 SAJGON (UPl) -,The South assembly race is expected to presidential slates and Thieu elhoic and re 11 g lo u a observed editorially tast week Vietnamese presidential eltc-be Tran Van Don, a well was elected with on1y 32 per· minor I Ii es . Minh bas "from now unUJ election diy, non still is .six .months away, known and respected op. cent or tbe vote. He has lukewarm Buddhist support. there could be s t ran II e but the most likely contenders po1ltlon figure in Vietnam and smarted from it ever since. but the Buddhists have frac· development! that n o b o d y already are lrylnghoto provide 1 1 former senator. T h e Thieu" says he will welcome lionallzed so badly in recent could predict." choice, not an ec · nd I I h h U eed liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill prtsidential ca ldates a so ou t side Polit cal observers years t at e wi n a No one has announced his must decide on running mates from "frlendly nations to broader base .. He sUU enjoys a candidacy fonnally . But it Is before the . campalan filing watch our free and honest national hero's J ma ge , expected that Pres 1 d e,n t deadline in July. elections," Similar U.S. con· however . Nguyen V~n Thieu will seek United Slates Involvement in gressional teams visited Viel· Ky's power base is largely reelection ot a second foor-the election w!U 9e unofficially nam in 1967. within the armed forces and year lerm. His most likely op.. oblique ind officially silent As for the issues. Thieu pro-among ve~erans . ponents will be his namboya ht However, U.S. officials are bably is most vulnerable on The Communist role, at this vice president, Nguyan Cao watching the probable lineup the war, plus corruption and point, is unknown. ln 1967, the Ky. and Gen. Duong Van (Big) closely and are known to arr-the stringent econ om i c Comm unist s did not Minh, hero of the 1913 coup h h k K 1 th 1 u whlch overthrew the:lal( Nio prove the prqent contenders. measures e as ta en. y part cipate in e e ec ons. Dinh Diem. · • • As one Ametican official put already is hammering on the Their terTorist activities tt, "we ~·ere more worried corruption in government, but in11 local elections ln 1970 were 8 Outstanding Spot! vliff •ur wtrt-111, 1111mr.llf1H e1t1r ......... II'• your 11111r•11C• ., 1fo .. , '"'""11111"1 11•*1111 ...,....,., SOUTH COAST PLUA. COSTA MESA The issues, as might bf.' e1-that they would have tOo few Thieu has approved the recent light , but by next fall the U.S. pected. are how to end the candidates. rather than too arresu of assemblymen in-military presence will ha~ Nearly Everyone Indochina war, and the many. If several people don't volved in smuggling. diminished slgnilicantly. Sol/th Coiit "'••• neces!ity for domestic reform. gel into the race, it will look Tbieu is working fo r support As the opposition Viet· C•••• M••• 540.to•• But the approaches differ. rigged." among the military, civil namese--Janguage newspaper lri•t•I ••th• S111 Dl•90 Fwy. Listens to landers. Thieu and Ky. Pa r 11 y _ _2'.1n~~l96~7._:i~he~r".e__:w~e:'.re~~l_'.1 ~..,~.v~an~ts~,~n~o~rt~h~em~~r~e~fu~g~ee~s':_, ~Co~ng~Lu~an~~(P~u~b~li:_c~Op~. ~i~nio~n)~~;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;~~---:'.::::~::::_:::_::====:.::.:_ __ _ because of the recent Laotlan1 . campaign and partly because of genuine disagrtemcnt, have done 911 degree turn s in recent weeks on handling the war. Essentlally. Thieu at present is advocating a military vic· tory. Ky prefers a political solution. Minh wants peaceful coexistence, although not a coalition, wit h t h e Com- munists. Presideot Thieu, concerned about the questionable succes!I of the Laotian operation ani:I the need to show muscle dur· ing the U.S. troop \Vithdrawal, has grown inc r ca si ngl y hawkish in his attitude. He repeatedly hes said that his rountry's army has the capability to invade North Vietnam even v.•ithout U.S. support. He pledged that his troops will retain the initiative in Indochina "until the day the Communist aggressors from the outside will have to end aggression, and tile Com- munists inside -guerrillas and agents -will b e destroyed completely." Ky, long an advocate of in· vading North Vietnam, said in Saigon April 18, "there is only one way (t o end the war ); a political solution or an agree- ment. Both par1s of Vietnam must stop the v.•ar. rebuild the counllJ:. We are not going to fight and kill each other forever. The question is how to reach an agr~ement lo sto p the \Yar." "Usi ng !ht .army lo Invade North Vietnam to topple their government and unify the country is not impos sible. lt is not possibte because our forces and the intern ational situation do not pennit thai," Ky sa id. T h e b e h i n d-the-flcenes maneuvering at this point Is considerable. Slates are being discussed for the national assembly election to be held in August. The outcome of the lower house election could'well influence votes in the Oct. 3 president i a 1 election, particularly among the im· portant Buddhist and Catholic blocs. 1'.1ost notable entry In the Graffiti is ... .¥,,. --. _1111i11M~11trJ1i11,141111r11 Minute-Quick 18 Roller ELECTRIC HAIRSETIER NOW FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY JUST •5.99 Instant-Heating Rollers give you a Salon·Set in just 10 minutes! NO llOlfSl.UPIMG ON CURLERS!vourportab!1bu111J shoJ (Ill I MOC! vln)'I U5e) htal112 rollers 1t onoe ... to siw 417 hair th• ,uic~11t a!l·d1y wt you tvtr dr11tr11d of. Just ,iu1·i11 this UL·li1ted Hair Setttr ... put up your lltit wittl llt1t1d rol!tri .•. comb ovt IO minut11 later. ~with I u tr• rollers kl create any sQ-11. Wotb with· ed 1pnys or water. ldtal lor wlp and !all,. A onct-ln-1· tilttiml hwinp 09port\lnity. Ofdt'r )'Ollrt today •I this BRIOHT J BAUBLES, / j\ bangle• and beads range from peace symbols to horte~ shoes, cameos or nowerbur111. TAKE YOUR CHOICE! Or let Mom lot1ow her own whims in selecting from this marvelous jew.lry assort• mentl At this gr11at ••Vino• you can afford to treat her royally! • SOUTH COAST PLAZA .:coSTA MESA PHONE 540.1111 .. A Joke .•. Really ..... 1 ..... um;t2... ........ s51 wmu: HAii SETTEt NOW ONLY I M!Sl'!RY FWIE BAlllSHES ODORS! Tlis 1xotle t1ndl• fr11h1n1 th• •Ir wit!li • br11th o f 1prl111I A unlqut alr-c:nn. dltlo111n1 In· 1r1dl1nt 111 thlSI lptClll e1ndl11 i• rt· ~'-=--===========-'==============='! :;- ' .. .. '• •. ., .. . .. .. • . .. .. ; , , < , • , , ' ; . • ~ , • , • , . ~ • : , , • • • • • • • . : • • • • • • . r • • • • • . • ? ~ • • • 3 DAY SPECIAL MISS QUALICRAFT pre-teen sandal and tennis shoe regular 2.99 each 2 $5 sin.gle pa ir any prs. 2.69 A 11ng-u1mmed brown sandal or an arch-cushioned 1enn1s shoe 1n whue and colors. Boy two sandals . two tennis shoes or one of each for this spec11I price. Sandal. sizes 9 10 3; tennis shoe 8 % to 3 lrf1tol St. •' San Ditto Frwy., Cost1 M111 111111 llAIIUP ·-CHEST! The brifhl plttt to slort ceslnltla, lillSlicb, btlr pins, f1!w t'ftl•stm. or • collec- tioll of mini trm•tts or eccmorits. M1k11.1p minor on the ti4 foi.t. lltt wtltn llOt: 111 utt. Two pull-out drawtrs hold whlt·J'DU·wl11. NI mdt 11p 11'1 a aunny comblMtion or en.,. and J'tllOW. Comp.djy' perftct for homt. omC9 • •""' .... or stunty llbwt>o•rd, 3• hlch x l!/i • wld1, ·-Cllllf llEG. $1.00 PDOOlf GUARDS TllHmI This ador1bl1 flOodlt- llufftd wllh lur- slb Oii • minit turt hat bot to pn1ltd pins, •lnillll. II tlnr tr11sur1s • Pl'lttJ Wt of fri\IOI· ltJ fer •r1s1l111 .. t1r.J1 •r eo1nt11! Wh it• c.1r1 mlc llOMlt tn pink cc• 111nlc hit bot trill'! til'l)1 .IMl1,s•bJP . POC*l lllml IO• REG.$1.29 NOW OllLY 58C Clptivate Mom with• whlmsieal, yt:t hurt·w1rmln1, 11tt she'll ttu111r11 for:n-irs. Thi1 adorable little mother fil\lre eher11hff her lovin1 cup for "'Wor1d'1 Best Mother''. Smell statue (•bout 1~ tlll) l1 ln1eribed on bl1e; lerae statu• {•boot 11 ~ bll) hn mesAp on cup. Sh•'ll low •lthert: n•srAruE sr:~E 2 DO 5.99 • f!lbilBll!Mll1hlM1lllljjf1ilN &et 2 PAIRS of • First Quality PANTY HOSE FOR THE USUAL PRICE OF ONE PAIR I • Sheer Comfort • Snag Resistan t • Super-Stretch Nylon • One Size fits All • No Sags or Droops • 2 Fashion Shades HURRY IN! SUPPL IES LIMITED! • •••• , •h•• the candlt It lit to b1nlth d11rtttt •mob ind olhtr unpltlllftt ..._ 1ltt 1lrpnt ptbl c.1ndl1holdtrof trostld tlm rests inn 1vaudo intn ll'llttl blSI, 4• In dl1met1r, l undlll flt. ctudtd. g Clndlll In tht ""II Pldl. An 111Ct11nUn1 Wllf" dil!lll kltdlttt, bathroom, Ind slciuvam odors! REG. $1.49 REG. 791 ·-"' I <MW IUIWI '""' 39 11111 ONLY C llOll ONLY C i GIVE HER A GIFT FROM I I SUNSET HOUSE -·---------- CONTINENTAL FONDUE SETI ,,..,.,., _,, .. "' brunches, coUtails, or late WPPtfl YClllr runts w111 ... liatit in th• notic s!Jle ol 4unklnr cm, dlunks af b,... Into chtese fondue or dippin1 cubtd btll il'lto hot tll IN n1wr1n1 with )'OUI f1 vorit1 tasty condimllrtl. Fondue SC il'ldudts 2 quilt. or1n1e·•Mm11td 1luml111.111t pot .,. lid 'lritll Wllnot·fiftbh handle and MM-plut M lfu!M- nu111 drip pltlt, rund, and burner ror akiol!o( ., *"""-._,..., 9 9 I REG. SID.9~ N1i11 OM.Y e " • ....... , ..... ' ' ... ~ •, . • ~ South Co11t Pl1ra Su,.,.lomontlo Tho DAILY ~.LOT, Mon., Ml 3, 1971 "' ··.------------------------------------..... 111.ISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA louthfoast 'Plaza Only Knit a row a second ... even if you've never knitted before wilh the miraculous btOttlef ~ Automatic HANO KNITTING MACHINES ' l!'v.n If you'v• '!"!v•r knltled • stitch ~;-.,,,, y~ c1n m.1· '"" Kci;r•cr 111 pr11l8$5k>Mls. ' Tlle1• marvrlou1 machine• will PIY for thtmselve1 ovtr and over llg•ln. Knit with -!, nylon, l>Ovelt, wcr1led, CDt!on. linen, or eny othtr ' 'yarn, Knit ~. 1 .... ~1tr1, d~t$, baby UCQlllS •• • ~ylhlfl9 11nyon1 can do wltlt the old l••hloned two-nffdl• m11hod, \'Oll'll do IJe.tter • , • 911IV t111er 1,,,:I f\IVI mor• .... TIME, WORK SAVING RECORD ALBUM IJ<ICLUDEO This tree insTru,HDn tc.-cord ptu1 1h<' n1anual Is l•ke ~.,~mg a proltt1•onal le<i,her In your home. In no !•me ~I •II ~QU Woll dUloma1icalty h~MI ~nil Ii~!! I pr~le11iOn~I. Kitchen Appliances Fiull size, Magnus electric '. • • SJ79 Rog. $1.49-$1.99 2-sli'' toaster, avocado ~ h•n~ mix•r, can opener 1rl )wh ite, avocado, 9old, or 1te1m-dry iron. UL list- ed. CHORD ORGAN s599s Fun, eosy to ploy! 12 chord buttons, 37 treble keys, volume control, music light, more. Walnut fin ish. FREE .music book. COMPLETE WITH BENCH . Model '"· 550 Deluxe Moded Shown Here [j l l(H.551 what . IS a .. ' $9999 . REG.-... ... $129.96 • -\ ' It's a new dress, that cost s you less. A smart blou5e, or, drapes for the hou se A skirt for town, or, a pl';ty gown. A Brother creates the new mod look. Fashion curtains for the breakfast nook. '9999 f•lufll far t.tufll. ptlce for ,,nc;1, """"<an comp,ortwith lhl1 H nutlon1I brolhtf Ylluel 11"1 llOI tvefYlhlnC • • • • 61!ectrk r1pe11 c•tracte11 h-•• , I , .,l) • Time uvln11ultm1tk flPc!ll 1•1cer kt,. • l1bul1tor ••• •1rltbl1 line s•tter. • 2 Colar ribbon ~Hrt\OR· Sllfttll s~l1clor. • MaplflceRI new '11Nr" itJ1iAJ. IETTER SHOPDRLY • ., DON'T MISS OUT <IN THIS OHAT VALUE I HOOVER SPECIAL! 10 CURLER • HOOVER VACUUM NOW • • s59~A~ ' $16.00 REG. $69.95 eA Hoover • the world 's finest cltener. e Extra lerge throw· •W•Y big • holds ·more dirt - ch1n9• leis often! e Vinyl out. er j1ek•t • never e dusty odor. W ipe cleen with a damp cloth. e '4 -position rug ad justment .• Indoor-outdoor floor covtrin91 to deep sh19 ru91 : e Two speed motor -SO •1. more 1uction wit h cltanlnt tools .. euto- maticellyl e Cl eaner rollt on wheels .. gets 111 the dirt, you just guide it. ... ; . .. o ·. • O • . •• • • . : " . . . . . .·. . .. . . • .... . •' . . . . . . .. • Do minion Hairsette r e 3 SIZE ROLLERS e 10 CURLERS e -,o;LC-·.i!OLLERS HEAT SIMULTANEOUSLY $9.99 VALUE s4as ILLUMINATED MAKE-UP MIRROR' VANITY STOOLS SEWING MACHINE? ·-,:;;;....--~..-•,.;Model #181 ._ as shown deluxe built in cam zfg.zag SALE PRICED It makes e buttonhole with ease. A Broth er does anything you please. Yes, sometimes it 1 work, but when ell's said and done, most of ell, a Brother is fun . A Brother is all the things you want it to bet Feat~rin? the fantastic models at fantastic sale pnces. MICKEY MOUSE ~MOD WATCH THE LATEST FASHION ••• COLORFUL WATCH WITH BLACK VINYL BAND LIMITED SUPPLY! See Our Complete Selection Of Timex Watches VANITY fashion right PETITE TIMEX s999 Unbreakal:Jle m1insprln91 stainless steel back watch. Shoe~ resistant. Nylon cord band. shoulder strap styl11 NEW SWINGER VINYL BAGS s399 Vinyls with the look of leathers! T arrific collec• tion with convertible han· dies. Lots of new colors . STOOLS VANITY s1399 STOOLS Reg. $16.'9 . 512 88 Plush.Covered Rod A Gold Rog. $14.'9 Pl us h 1eat with m•t•I legs. Aveil eble in Red, Gold, Green. ,+, SATISFACTION GUARANT ED-REPLACEMENT OR MONEY REFUNDED SH0~~~~,~.~~1:.;:~ ... h " .. .. ,,. .,.;-. . . . ' .. . . . • ~. I . . . t---$ovlh c .. st Pin• Supploment to The DAILY PILOT, Mon., Moy 3, 1971 Americans' Life Rough .in T-µrkey ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -slightly larger group ol ln- For Americans in Turke> the tellectuals, newspaper col· order. of the day is "low pro-umnists, university teachers rue," and that's not easy. and the Marxist Turklsh t Labor party who want Turkey "It's a little like trying 0 to pull out of NATO and sever hide a hippo In a henhouse," close ties with the United says one American. The coon· States. There seems Utile try has about 17,000 U.S. doubt the silent majority of servicemen and dependents, li · .. veral thousand civilian of· Turks, most of whom ve in rural areas, are not anU· tlcials and their families, and America. But many otherwise such American bu s ine ss tl t establishments as 1tf 0 b 11 , pro-west Turks are res ve a Goodyear, General Electric, dependence on A m e r i c a n military and economic aid. Pfirer and Singer. The bsic reason for the "low But there's little indication f · that Turkey will make any profile" Ls an outburst.o anti· drastic shifts in Foreign Americanism. The city has 1 -"-dences of the ef!ects. policy. Foreign MI n st er ~·· Osman Olcay came to his job Turkish workmen are caging from the post of deputy the white stone U.S. Embassy secretary general oC NATO. tru:ide a lZ..foot iron picket Premier Erim is a French-~ fence topped with sharp spikes. t:ducated lawyer and frequent Near the embassy there was guest at the U.S. and British 1n Air Force movie theater embassies. where American fa mi 11 e s;l-;====~§§§§~I gathered each night to see the li latest in U.S. films. The theater v.·as recenUy moved out of town to the basement of a military ofice building. On Ankara's main square the U.S. Infonnation Service used to be proud of its centrallL====------JI location. Two case! containing pictures of astron~~ts. North Vietnamese atrooties a n d other ·propaganda displays were popular with passersby. Now a busload of riot police is parked by the office. The display cases are bricked over. A few hundred yards away ls the Turkish Foreign Trade Bank . Until last month it was the American-Turkish Foreign Trade Bank. Large picture "1indows are now protected by a heavy iron grill. Turkey is allied with the United States in two defense packs, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization -NATO -and the Central Treaty Organization -CENTO. The new government of Premier Nihat Erim, installed after the i nned forces tpppled the con- servalive administration of Suleyman Demirel , says : "We have close and allied relations with the United States based on mutual respect and un- clerslanding. ·· But a diamond-hard handfu! of leftist activists ha ve made U.S. !acililies and persoonel ste~y target of bombings, bullets. roc ks and kidnapings. They are tacitly backed by a MAY'S BIRTHSTONE 1ke fm.etd.[J Gem cf Spring, the Emerald is & birthstone a~rounded by legends. It waa said to cOmpcR the first Mohammedan Heaven, the fourth foundation cf the New Jerusalem, to !oater pre- 11i1ion, strengthen memory, eloquence, and even meuure a lc>ver'1 fervor. Al the favored atone cf Venna:, the Emerald atanda !or .JC>Ye and aueceaa. W e-ar JJOlLr birtlutrmt for I ; /a1Jr.1ox, 011.d good fortKM ;. .. • South Co•1I Pl•1• l riliol •*th• St1t Di•t• Fwy. Co1tt M•1• 5'40-9066 A CHARMING ?JI!; . l'Oll A CHARMING JUICHEN SPICE RACKS . .....,._, ..... .__. ............ ......,.,.. ..,.... .... .....,...,_. ... ..... ...... ""'9" _ __,.,. .... ,. ~ ,..._ .... ~ ,,. ,_ _,,._. _-"""'" --...... -.... .w .... ---., _ ...... oww· • .,, ... _,..__.._ • .,. 111,!ll _ _. ___ ...,,...,.. Mom Rates Something Special .•. A Gift Pak Of Tasty Foods From flitlcclr7 t.nas .. ,,,_. FAMILY FA VOltlTll $7.98 fliCkdrJ tel!!''· South Coast ?tlu1 roomy crochet straw handbags, ours alone A collection of straw handbags. The shapes are now, the styling 1oday. Delicate yet sturdy, they're great for dressy or casual wear. Choose from a wide variety of slitch patterns. Snow- flakes to weaves to crosshatchings. a. double handle swagger with center frame, natural, white, black, 11.00 b. drawstring tote, natural, white, black, fashion colors, 9.00 handbags26 group of pin and ear- ring sets by Trifari Prettier than any flowers in her Moth- er's Day bouquet ... Blossoms of pearls. Buds and delicate leaves in gold-tone metal. Jewelry to be worn in sets or alone. They make such beautiful gifts for Mother's Day. c. Sea Fem, pin 7.50 earrings 6.00 d. Danube, pin 4.00 earrings 4.00 fashion ;ew.lry 22 ' moy co south coat~' san dielO fwy .at bristol, calla meu; 546-9321 ~y thni 1.1turday 10""' to 9:30 pm, IU!lday-'til 5 p.m. sun time is fun time in a dress with shorty pants Summer's almost here. Time for grea1-looking, extra comfortable clothes. Like this crisp sleeveless dress with shorty pants. Dress it up or down for city or beach. It has a grea t pattern ... white dots on red or green. Of washable cotton, it's just the thing to get you through the hot days ahead. Mother is sure to love it In sizes 10-18. By Teddi of California 14.00 blouses 31 MAVCO Arab Paper Thrives Cairo's Al Ahra1n Reflects Insight By EUAS ANT AR that and we don't think they eds from foreign companies CAIRO (AP) _ Mohammed are likely to," he adds with a which do not sell products in grin. Egypt. Foreign advertisers Hassanein Heikal's newspaper The paper ts a part of .an are sought because they pay in Al Ahram is read in the Arab organization which also owns hard currency, needed to world like a crystal ball. Its a job-printing plant, a book repay foreign bank loans in· Insight into official thinking in publishing section, an ad-curred to finance construction vertising agency and a market of the new premises. Cairo has made 11 the largest research institute. Heikal is Adverti.!er.s are invited to paper ln the Middle East. chairman of the organization. pay their accounts half in hard Heikal, the e4itor in chief, was Al Ahram puts out three to currency and half in goods. for years a frien d and con-five ec!itions a day, running The goods are sold by the fidant of Garrtal Abdel Nasser. between IO and 16 pages. A · paper to the so-called "free Heikal's readers knew where copy costs the equivalent of shops" in Cairo, government- 3.ih: cents. run stores where Egyptians go he was getting hi s in· "\Ve print 650,000 copies a to buy luxury goods for hard formation. Nasser u se d day," said Attallah. "When currency. Heikal's editorials and Al Mr. Heikal's editorial comes ··we get our advertising, the Ahram's pages to air ideas out on Friday, we print 850,000 government gets luxury goods issues." Some 40,000 copies ' for wbJch it pays us in Egyp- and views without giving them are flown to other Arab coun-tian pounds Instead of buying his oijjC:iil st~p. tries. them abroad for ddllars, apd When NaSser 4j.ed last 11A11 Ohr mfchinery an d the advertiser b 8.§'1<;' 11 September there was st>tcaia..: ~iP.~nt M: ~the West," readymade mar~et f€!F «kl~ ik l says Attal!a"b. ''We only get goods," explained an .a"d-. tion He a wpgld ~ tor~~ some of \our newsprint frorn vertising executive. by his pplitic§l ellfpt~s. ibe Soviet Unto!)~" But the agile edilor fuiilri' This · newspr!nl j,j n !l!lwtAA tains a comfortable rela-and is usually resen ed for m- tionshlp with President Anwar side pages. The out.side of the Sadat, Nasser's successor, paper is printed on whi though no one at Al Ahram ne;rlnt from Italy ·or claims that he speaks for the rm iliilf. . new president. ft ~'lv~rtiSI~ pram,jc~s The author J jg ·~ fir! ~·· n'tlM t.. ii flfisl readership built up l11 ~ll ;,, '11v~~~~e.fd .. uorJ Ahram have c o n t i n 'u e d • than ee pages ·a day are Editors say there has been no filled with personal ads. drop in circulation or ad· "We are financially \Jn- vertising since Nassft's ~th. 4f~1Jaeqt1" said~Attallah. ''If •· n .. I I ,,IP ' ,.--e'l ,e1flmRAil· "Uifi• pl~9N~' b fr llC• 1tr\. vi flfl, ~tit hi' 1rP11 • dliillttri!ng J ~•m from •"l•mcinds. J" by o pj'I now bts I ler~ II II~ of I mu-1•1..:I df1~ In Ill IPl:tpef 11\C 1lies, klil•!1ff!C! mo111111d 1'1 141( ~Id rlnp. Pikf4 et US.00 1 c.ret. , ~ . . . ' ~ The Al AhF~!P hi!tlil41i Pi jlpn't ~ i . 911~ "' Cairo is IuXilii6t.iS. bUtSI<lefs fb1 go ~qWq '&rfii Oi:1ASu Will · ·~ S:o, Coast Pr:1;- who have visited it say it com-not b.all us out." ' Cotta Maia s•0·9066 pares favorably with the most One \ypfcally ingenious Bti1tol at th• s~n Dl.190 Fwy. South Coast Plaza Supplement to The DAILY PILOT, Mon., May 3, 1971-7 Shag Carpeting SAVE 15! Sears Cordless AM/FM Radio . lleghlp 16:99 Sq. 'flf. . ' . . . Unique oven·settlng process imparts luxurious }o(>kt' ~~~ellept cdV&rage and yarq seUing reten· lign, 1-DIY Jllfl!! f9i' lasting texture. Virtually J nVisi618 i:eatns. Padding availal>le ff needed. ~ Low, low priced! FloOrcovering D!Pt. 5~ Installed R egula• '39.95 Itmounts inminuteswilh· 3·4 88. out screws or boll!. Auto- matic frequ,.ency controL Front firing spe3kers, 1llde-rule dial. Built-in a ntenna. #2031. ·. ' I ' • modern plants in Japan, the ;;;a~d~v~ert~ls~ln~g~co~up~w~as~o~bt~ai~a~in~g~§§~§E::::::~~I United States or Britain. The Ii .,. __ .._ ---.r. .. _ $10..million building com'pleted three years ago, is clean and efflcienUy run. T~ ~·f1es the lack of maintenani;e evi4ent in many EgypUan organjJ{1Uons. 'The 13-story toWer or con- crete, marble ailq gl~N com- mands a view of Al ~briim's namesake and ma,thead emblem -the three Pyfainids ()f Giza. ¥ Hallways ~nt;l cprri@rs' flTe decorated with 9!1 D~iq!/ngs. Sound is rtiuffle(J by hick carpets. Equally noise.free is µie 120- foot-long newsroom. Because of the intricacies of the Arabic alphabet. editors write their copy by hand instead o( uslflg typewriters. Telephone calls are signaled by blinking lights instead of bells. The building incllldes a handsome reference library, microfilmed rl!cords, superbly equipped studio to monitor radio broadcasts from any country in the world, a movie room, a lecture hall with an instantaneous translation sec- tion, a resident doctor and a prayer hall. Al Abram has 2,800 employes. The paper's particular pride Is a computer which runs the Arabic typesetting machines -the only such installation in the Middle East. Al Ahram was founded in 1875 by Selim and Bishara Takla, immigrant brothers from Lebanon. Heikal was ap- pointed editor in chief in 1956, when the paper had a daily circulation a tenth of the cur· rent figure and operated out of I a tumbledown plant. I All Egyptian papers were I taken over in 1960 by the Na- tional Union, as the state par- ty was then called. The licenses were retained by the party when it became the Arab Socialist Union. ~ The ASU holds our license to publish and can, in theory, any given day, says Mahmoud order us not to come out, says the director of Heika!'s give our best to mother REG. Sf.ft The new look for now! Patchwork print tunic with elasticized neck and sleeve5 over pullon pants. Double knit acetate jersey in mainiy rOyai/iight ' ~ blue or red /green. SpuJal sf1e1 141/:a to 21 V1 ORDl!lt TODAY. PHONE 540·7717 IVIU!_bl• tnrv If jj I , offiC:e. "But they have never done South Coast l'laza, Costa Mesa Bristol at l1tn Dluo Freeway Shop ••«v 11lthtto t :JO P·•·f imrif"y 10 to 6 _p.,.,; 540·7717 WHO KNOWS ••• ·;: : ·. .· ... , ... . . \ . . .. · " " the " ·.· . ' . Whlit is the total number of stltc~es lft this knit and crochet9d ~•rment.7 ''WIN .b .. ··~ FREE'' BROTHER KNITIING MACHINE '#583 VALUE $149.50 VALUE CONTEST BEGINS MAY 3rd to JUNE 30th, '71 . Fill out official entry blanks today. You need not be present to win .• , Winner will be nofi· fie d by mail or phone on or before July I 0th, 1971. RULES: I.. : a - KNIT WIT SO. COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA PH : 545·2812 • • • 11 1 11111 .111 I. 'I ~ : ' I , . !·I :1 ··I' •11 1.• . ii . ;. "' ~ ; "' "i' ' ! ff • ~ !·1 . 'u ~·;I , ... ,, • "1' I' j•I J 'J' '·j ~ ., : '!I •• "·· l'i ·"1 .,. ·: i' h1 ,'c,•j . ~]1' :• STARTS SUNDAY! J;'rice1 J<:ll'ectlve Sunday, May 2 tltru ·Tuesday, May 4th !10111~ Qu~11tities Are Limited! .SAVE 131! Frostless 17.I f.n . Ft. Refrigerator-Freezer Regular:$349.95 $ Completely frostless. Tightly sea1e d 318 hum1drawer compartment keeps food . fto11h and 1110(1~ Adjuolib)•·alumJnum 1h1lves, bli •rl•i!or. #817il0 · • I Sears I II •Ii, OOtOOJO;• •><II(<), M"tr Appllonca bepL IUIN.I P.l•K U.l"H>9 PAIK COM~N COVIN.I , h. MOfUf llUNOAU MOUTWOOO INOltWOO. \ONO llACN Ol TMPK & IOJO OflAHOI PAIADfN,l Model #7112 SAVE $21! 8 ,000 Coldspcit Air Conditioner Regular $179.95 Kenisan filter keeps out d ust a nd pollen. Uses reg- ular 115 volt outlet. Beige cabinet and other metal parts are zinc- coated. $158 Dryer with Permanent ' ' I I I l ! • t l • • ' • Press. Cycle : Regular $139.95 I Special cool·down dries •i 18 I permanent press fabrics to · : prevent wrinkles. I Regular setting dries other fabrics, .. Air Only" fluffs blankets. •80210 MIJot Appliance Dept. J l.INfA n IPllNGt Tt10UJAH9 o.tlCI .,. POMONA IAH'f.f. ANA IAHfA .MONICA tOllAN(I l®Tlf com PUIA 'f'AUl'I' VllMONt Shep S11nid•y 11 N••• te J P.M., M•n. thrv J•t. 91aD A.M. to 91.JO P.~ ••• 1••1• Aaa On.11, Cl1111 6 P.M. Tv11., Thvr1., l•t. • .. ...... -.... -----········~·- l--$outh Co11t Pl1i1 Supplement_!! Tht DAILY PILOT, Mon., May 3, 1971 Viets Off er Most Help to Combat Press SAIGON -(AP) -America System television cn!w wangl-officer, Col. Robert W. .,Sorry fellows, my orders their "area ol competence." cornspondenls covering the eel a ride to ooe fire base with . Leonard went to· Lava.ng to i~ are that no correspondent fiies 11lled drive in and around the a friendly piJot but was de-vestigaLe. for Da Nang. prerogaUve of a local com-"No•" A Shau Valley found they were tained and ordered not to film While Leonard was con-"Sorry fellows, my crders mander to require that an Col. Leonard , said , 1 p y .,,.., f'Oll MOTH••s Leonard also said Jt was the "Can I visit any fire base opened· for Lam Son 720?" welcomed b y traditionally anything. An officer explained ferring wilh officers in Gen. are that no correspondent flies offl ' · AND • ..,.DMOTN1"1ts · •-·th v · th t n b d escort cer a cc om pa n.y restricUons that . may have Twt-1ve .,,,•-·-•net 1rd1 ~r ,,_ caubous .-JtAI 1etnamese a re ase comman ers Smith's headqua~s. ~two on any lOlst Division aircraft h.b ....... .. ""' commanders and open I y had been threatened with Associated Press men were without an .esrort officer, newsmen ~I.siting area. been imposed.' on , 'new~men ~~"'ttiwJ.. .. ~~~'i~~-'":.:4'.: BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS • hindered by U.S. commanders. coort martial IC they allowed ordered off a helicopter leav-whether he's coming 0 r Majr Sm1lh told.a, newsman · •·~re at th.e J>rerogative of ~'1::~ ~¢'!."' ... ~~b~.ldA !:~:1~ Brig. Gen. Vu Van Gial, newsmen on their bases. ing Lavang. The 'craft, already going;'" said the lieutenant. he would gladly _provide an •the Held commanctef" as is HIKJ..., or; OtrM.111111 •'-•v•llRI• BOOKS COmmander of Saigon's forces· When the crew tried to flhn airborne, was ordered to. Tbe,newsmen finally hllched escort officer and "take you customary. ' '""-'· ·• anywhere you t·to g " · I 1u~1 ... 1it 1 ... 11(;( 116c( .ntl·c1patlng in operation Lam Gen. Smith's command post at return and "get rid of those a ride on a helicopter not wan °· No restrictkins were ofderec' · · PICKWICK "F' j I'd ilk t · ·1· S0Mfh -Co11t Pl111 Son 72tl, v~lunteered a com· LaVang,,a ·mllltary policeman ne·Nsmen." belonging to the IO Is t 1ne ma or, e o VL!ll by Cen:CrelghtOn W.'Abram!' co.i. "'••• s•o.vob & plete briefing. rie also invited put his hand over the lens, It was explained to the Airborne. Fire base Birmingham/' said' headQuarters and "lhere has l•i•t•I 1t th• 5111 Di.,o F-wy, BOOKSHOPS newsmen to ride with · him in saying: "This is a classUied lieut.enant c on t r o 11 l n g ,.jLeo~~nar~d~ass~erted~~h~el~lc~o~pt~erLith~e~ne~w~s[m~a:n·~~~~~~-bee~~n~n~o~c~hfan~g~e~"~lnEU~.S~.:Co~m~·~~~~~~~~~~~J"~'~'~"~' ~~· ~~~~~l his personal heliC"Opter when installation." helicopter lralflc that the pitOts were never forbidden to ''I'm sorry, you can't go mand ' policy toward cor~ o..,.... (71'>-"'·noo he visited troops in the field . When CBS complained to the newsmen were only trying to talk to the press, but were re-there. It's a classified in-respondents' movement In the · sou1" co.1.s1 ,u.u He apologized that he C"Ould U.S. Command in Saigon the go to Phy Bai to catch a flight quired to limit statements to stallation." field, Leonard sail:I. Coor. Meg ' f7l 4J ''°"21'1 only take two extra command's chie£ information for Da Nang. passengers "because I onlyl-----=:-~~~~~~~~~;;:~---1 have one helicopter: thel Americans arc the ones with all the choppers." Most of the help In enabling U.S. correspondents to getl around came from the Viet- namese. Gial was amaz.ed when told that newsmen were having difficulty getting on American helicopters. He was even more amazed that Brig. Gen P. E. Smith, co mm ander or American forces participating in Lam Son 720, was refusing to brief the press. , "I do not understand," he ex c I al med . "You are Americans. Gen. Smith is an American. It should be easier for you to talk to him than for me. Why doesn't he want to tell you anything?" Smith's command post was at Lavang, next to Giai's. ~1ilitary policemen said they had orders to keep newsmen away because "the general freaks out every time he sees a C"Orrespondent." Newsmen who caught Smith in the open after \\'ailing a morning In the sun were told : ··J have nothing to say to the press." Giai said Lam Son 720 was a combined operation and that the Americans \\'Cre "con- ducting some separate ac· tions." Smith denied this, saying, "We're only supporting the South Vietnamese." He refer- red all queries to the 10Istl Airborne Division information office at Phu Bai. W!'oen the operation was in Its ninth day it was C"Ommon knowledge that ~.000 American troops had · been committed. However the !Olst Airborne's ch ief information officer, Maj. Ed Smith, insisted that the U.S. role was limited lo heliC"Opter and tactical air sup-I port. An hour later he cen. I ceded that "ground C'lements. are C"Onductinit reconnn.issance 1 In conjunction with La m So 720." Helicopter pilots of lhe tnl sl Airborne said they \\"ere ordered not lo talk I o newsmen or give them ri<les to fire bases opeiied Sr"IPCificallv for the operalion. They said /' they were told 1he order came from Gen. Smith. j A Columbia Broadcasting DE SERVES THE VEllY DEST! GIVE HER THE GIFT OF ROYALTY. 'PRINCESS GARDNER ", @Lt edaQQiOri ACCESSORIES A smash ing combination-the exquisite beauty of Ostrich Grain. Cowhide acc"'ntetl with a golden meda1t1on. Simply elegant! In Bl~t~ ""O while. A. .,Continental" Clutch .....• , ....... $7.50 B • .,Tri·Part1te'' French Purse ... , . , , .. SS.00 C. Mini-Purse ..........•••••• , •.. , , S4,00 D. 100 MM Cigarette Case ••• , , •••.•.. $4.50 E. Cigarette l ighter •...•.. , •• , •••• , .. $3.00 F. Eyeglass Gase ....... , , , .....•.... $3.50 ROOTEN'S LUGGAGE • SOUTH COAST PLAZA San Diego Frwy . .,t Bristol, Costa Mtua 540-3110 Mon thru Fri. 10 A.M. -9:30 P.M., Sat. 10 A.M .• 6 P.M. GIFTS FOR MOTHER CANISTER _ SET 1~.333 SET Of 4 Reg. 4.95 & S.95 HALLMARK CARDS A VERY SPECIAL WAY T.O TELL MOM . ' -1'anmrs !>i\Y ~ ,_ ' ' . ~ :!NEST QUALITY GLASS • ROM WESTMORELAND MllKGLASS~ OR ic~~~~:J• SOFT MIST ·i BOXED STATIONERY . ~~~1 ALWAYS THE /···· PERFECT ~ . , .. ". . . " . ' "·' .. -~ . )· . . ,. YO UR CHOI CE ! ' .· ... . · .. ·, .'· . " ..... ·.~ . . . · . ' ~.~.~ . . AA<t>IY. MAY 8 GIFT ·-· -• I LOVE YOU JUST FOR MOM 1.91 TO S.9S BEAUTIFUL UNBREAKABLE STAJUE·ETIS HUNTINGTON IEACH HUNTINGTON CENTER 193· 1712 B~G-EYES -~ SOMETHING •• NEW AND VERY . UNUSUAL e.!S TO ID.95 A CONVERSATION e1ECE -I N- COSTA MESA SOUTHCOAST PLAZA 545-6313 ,. Ca hi net Model • Sews family clothing, home, gift ideas! • Does mending, darning jobs easily. quickly • Hinged pressure fool sews over pins, seams • With sewing cabinet, •• model 1104/9100 .. Zfg1gg Portable • Zig.zag or straight stitching lets Mom sew fashion clothing. make buttonholes. sew on buttons,, monogram or applique • Handy portable case.,. model 1204/9710 • . ' ' . ' ' . "·'••·'···-·-··· .. . .. ~. . . ... .. . • '. .. ' . ' . . . . . . • Mond1J, M'ay J, 1971 DAILY PILOT 1 J Angels Begin Road Trip After 4-3 Victory ' e .J .Capo Driver ·_·Places I 0th At Monterey MONTEREY -Ronnie Bucknum of Capistrano Beach, driving a Lola- Chevrolet. finished in 10th place In the $35.000 L&.M Continental 500 at Laguna $ecl!I Raceway Sunday as English driver David Hobbs swept bath heab for the •ViCtOI)'. Sam Posey of San Juan Ca pistrano had mechanical difficulties and didn't finish the first heal, then spent considerable time in the pits in the second. He finished third overall al Riverside a week ago, Hobbs, 32, started from the pole in his ·McLaren MIOB-Cbev. and Jed through both 76-mile heats over the l.9-mlle, nlne- furn road course. · Frank Matich of Australia. dTiving a i1cLaren-Repco. and Breu l.Alnger Of 'Wilmington. Del., in a Lola-Olev, were second and third In both heats. e Neaccflttabe Wins DALLAS -John Newcombe, a first· round loser last year. disposed of Arthur Ashe 7-6, 6-4 in 68 minutes Sunday to \Wn the singles title of the Rawlings Tennis Classic. Tom Okker and Marty Riessen com.. bined for a stra ight set 6-3, M decis1on over Bob Lutz and Charles Pasarell in the doubles championship. Newcombe's victory ea r"ned h i m $.10,000. It was his lhird tournament vic- tory on the World Championship of Ten- nis tour in just five events. e fticlre11 Trh1111ph5 KA NSAS CITY -Cliff Richey of Stn Ange lo, Tex., the No. I-ranked playe r in the nation. downed ageless Alex Olmedo 7-5, 5-7, &-2 to take the $3,500 first prize in the Glenwood Manor Invitational Tennis Tournament Sunday. Richey, 24, amazed the gallery of about 1.400 repeatedly withi<his catlike agility in aerealing Ol medo. a teaching professional lrom Beverly HiUs. e C11ge Coacla Na111ed NEW BRUNSWICK. N.J. -Dick Lloyd, the ehier assistant basketball C<>ach at Rutgers University , was named head basketball coach today. Lloyd, 30, succeeds 'aill Foster w h o resigned last month to become head basketball coach at lhe University of Utah. e Trade Dbc11ssed CLEVELAND -Cleveland Jodians manager Alvin Dark said Sunday tha t he ts opposed to trading southpaw pltc.her Sam McDowell to the Oakland Athletics. The AthleUcs offered over the weekend to give the Indians their choice of siX o( 12 players they listed in return for McDowell . Oakland manager Dick Williams said the list includes three starting pitchers. a catcher, a choice of two outfielders. a choice of four infielders and a choice of two relief pitchers. Will iams said lhal pitcher Chuck Dobson was among those offered . He said seven or the 12 pla yers on the list were on the Athle t.ics' roster. Tired Hawk s Face Montreal In . Cup Finals CHICAGO (AP) -"We're not old men," Tony Espo11ito said. "We 're young ~n and we recover quickly ." Nevertheless, like his Chicago team- mates, the Black Hawks' goalie was quiet in the dressing room following Sunday's 4-2 victory over the New York Ranger3 that catapulted t~e Hawks into the Na· t,ionat llocke y League Stanley Cup finals against Montreal. There was erl\i\aration -but none or the usual hollering and clowning around, the celebrallng tflat accompanie5 such triumphs. The Hawks were simply too tired. The Rangers had taken Chicago through the full seven games in their semifinals. And in three of them the ac· tion went •nto sudden-death ave rtime - once going into the third extra period before a winner could be found. "Here were two evenly matched teams and it all came down lo one fin al period and nne~hot." said Jlawks' coach Billy Reay as he Accepted congratuations from ~iv1I coach Emile Francis. "It's a shame the" two of us can't play Montreal.'' 'T'he Canadiens 'and Hawks open the best-of-se ven series Tue sday night in ChiCaJ:O "Good luck. Billy." Francis replied. llWe ga\'e It all we had . It was a great ..• tremendous series and it all boiled down to one shot ." That one was executed by Bobby Hull 1t 4:25 of the third period to break a 2-2 tie. Chico Maki c\inched the game when . Ile st'Ored oo 11n opc'l net with 28 seco nds to play as the never-say-die Rangerli were still battliu:; In gain a tie and perhaps send lhe contcsl into yet another ov~rllme. • UPI Tt ....... i. ANGELS' SYD O'BRIEN IS CUT DOWN AT SECOND BY DETROIT'S DICK MCAULIFFE. HALOS WON, 4·3. Triple Crown Not Out of Line For Canonero LptnSYIJ..LE, Ky. (AP ) -The Pimlico genei:aJ manager -,J.hollghl he was being kidded when a tele~ call.et said he wanted to ml!lkt a Preakness nominatiOn for a horse rac;ing In Venezuela. lt was not a joke and neither is the horse - Canonero II , winner of the Kentucky Derby. "I thought I was being kidded: J never heard of the horse," Chick Lang said Saturday night. an hour after Canonero lI made himselfknown to the world. Jn changin( ~-his status fro m an unknown mem~r-of the Derby mutuel field to. a 11tar · attraction fo r the Preakness, CAn.onerO'll soundly whipped 19 other 3-year-old11. Bu t the Kentucky-bred, Vcnezuelan- raced colt, dwhed by Edgar Caibelt of Garaca!, ~on:t lack competition in the May JS. Preaktless. "I expect 14","' Lang said . One of those expected to test Canonero 11 is Frank J. Caldwell's Jim French, the DerbY runnerup. Trainer John Campo said Jim French came out of the Derby wilh culs on three legs but that the son of Graustark would be ready for the second race of the Triple Crown series in Bal timore. However. it appeared today that another Campo-trained 3-year-old will miss the $150,000-added Preakness as he did the Derby -Neil Hellman's Good Behaving, the winner of three straight stakes including the Wood Memorial. Hellman said by telephone Sunday from Albany, N.Y., that he would speak to Campo about putting Good Behaving in the Preakness INt added : "! think we're going to keep our schedule and run in the Withers at Aqueduct (Saturday). t wouldn't go in the Preakness with 14 starters." Two other Derby starters pointed ror the I 3116-mile Preakness are Wllllam A. Levin 's Bold Reason, the Uilt'd-place Derby finisher and Callimet Farm·1 Eastem Fleet. who got home foUrlh. Non-Derby starters . expected for lhe Preakness inclu~ P.eter.F. KW!iell's Ex~ ecutioner. the flamingo, winner. and Greentree Stable's .[fynastict aecond in the Flami~go and third in the•iyue Gra~s Stakes. '· UP'IT ....... OODGERS' WILLIE DAVIS LOS ES HELMET, TRY f.OR STOLEN BASE. Atl1n t1'1 Felix Millin Fli p1 Bi ll to Flr1t fo r OU t. 8ri ve1 won 4-1 . Sutton Can~t Explain 0-3 ' ATLANTA (AP J -Orlando Cepeda ha s changed uniforms several times SO· it's possible the Los Ange"les Dodgers ' have forgotten page one of the book on him : don 't try to fool him with a changeup. "l don't gel over three of four changeups a year," Cepeda said Sunday after his tremendous home run off a Don Sutton letup started the Bra~ lo a 4-1 viclo}y over the Dodgers. 1'he defeat jfi'opped the Dodgers to third p\1ce, a haU game behind the Braves and 6Yi behind the San Francisco Giants, for whom Cepeda used to chase low curves and pUlverize offspeed ~tches. His fourth·Vinlng blast, with Hank Aaron aboard, gave Sutton an o-3 record he can 't explai:i. "I've hRd belier sluff this year than I've ever had," said the righthandcr, A 1r,..game .winner las1 year. "'My fast ball is alive and my curve is breaking." The Dodgers take today off and start a home stand Tuesday night against Cin- cinnati, with Al Downing. 2-1, facing the Reds' Jim McGlolhlin, 1-1. • Former pro basketballer Ron Reed ""'' . .... ' M1y • Mn 0 Dodge r Slate AH G-ti K"I l'*l Dodtt .. vs. Ch•dnMtl Do!l9eu V•. Clnr.iNlth Oedttf• n . Cllldnn1n Oodtt!.-. "· Pltts.tturt~ 7·U '"'· 1:JJ t ,m. I:» pm. l:U nm stifled the Dodgers On five hits, one or l}lcm a sixth-inning homer by Maury Wills that left Reed disiusted. "When a home run hitter hil.S one you can't say much but when one of those slap hitten hits one it hurt.I the ego." said Reed , who improved his record tel 3- 2. The homer was Wills' first 11lnce 11169 and the 18th of his 12-ycar career. The Braves' sweep. of. the three-game series put l!I crimp in ,what had been a spectacular i;:.oad trip for the Dodgers. But manager Walter Alston wasn't com· pla ining. "l'il take 8-S on the road if we can play as well al home," aaid •Alston, who during the trip .rurpassed Wilbert Robinson 's record for ·Jongevijy as a Dodger manager. .. Los Angeles, wlthia 4-6 home record, ha1 star~ where ·it left ort last season, when it finished 3M2 at Dodger Stadium. Dodger relief pitching, a strong point all season, got rou&h treatment in Allan· ta. Jim Brewer was 1COred on for the 1econd straight ~y when Aaroo belted his third homer ~ the aerie! and 603rd of his career In the eiahth inning. Richie Allen 1larted 1\1 three g1mes and wa11 fe.,ll troubled by his 11wollen toe th;in by lhe fa ct he wasn't getting many good pitches to swing at. "I'm bein& pitched around," 1aid the Deadly Putter, Confidence Aid Beard Victory NEW ORLEANS (AP ) -"1 never really doubted that I was going to win." Frank Beard said after pulling down the $2.'i,000 fi rst pri7.e In the Greater New Orleans Open golf tournament. "I know that's what Jack Nick laus said at the Ma!lters ," the quiet man with the deadly putter continued. "But it's true. Even when I was five strokes down, l ju.st knew 1 was going to win . "It's like that on · some courses for some players. "And this course -and New Orleans -have been very, very good to me: This is the one tournament I'll always play. In the la st few years J"ve won twice. fin ish- ed second once, I think third once and n1aybe fourth ." "G6od things seem to happen to me hr.re. I gol married here," he said, then grinned, "That's the one bad thing ... " Beard. playing one day after his 32nd birthday, fired a fina l·round 68 Sunday on the sunny, 7,080-yard , par-72 Lakewood Cou ntry Club course to overta ke strug· gling rookie Hube rt Green, his playing partner and the third-round leader. Beard finished al 276 and Green , who had I final 71, was at 271. Lee Elder and George Johnson tied for third at 2711. Elder had-a 71 and Johnson a 68. Master!! champion Charles Coody followed at 280. Defending champio11 Miller Barber wa!I tied at 281 with Dave Hill, John Lotz and Jack Ewing. L....,1"9 m!lt'ieY wlnntr• In tll• 1111.000 G'tat•r Ntw Orl .. n• croll tourn1m.,.t: F'•nk Bt1rd, 175,111)(1 Hut>trt Gr...,, IU .)00 L~t Eldtt. 17,)JO GI0'1lt John.on, 17,:»0 cn1r~ Coody. 15. 11$ O.vt Hill, ll.ttO J•c~ Ewlnv , ll.HO Mllltr Bt•-· l J,'911 Jolu1 Lotr, IJ..tM !'IOI> Wynn, IJ.DOll !loll Murplly, 13,000 Jt<k Jt w" 17,•ll 8011 P'•Y'''" 12,0 7 W•vnt Go!!l'ntr, IJ,111 DwiVf!I "•vii, 11...., 1-itrll Hooper, tl-'111 LioMI ... t>trl, 11Mt LIIV Grt hl m, 11,611 Ed Snl'9d, 11MI Oewllt WH¥tr, 11,611 Ctrlyt. $Mtd, 11M1 L1rry l ltQl1r, 11 ... l'IOI> Dickson, I"' !lobby Colt . HN II. H. ,;i.n , '"' 6 -Lll!lt r, HM !lob (htrln, UN ICumll Ztri.v, HN 71)./1-61-U-)'6 .... , .. ,.11-111 '1·/Ml-71 -111 ... 11.114--371 70·IMl·1G--»0 11-1).71).-11-2111 7l-ll-61·1G--211 11Hl-73·73-711 10-6t·7t.n-,.. 1t.n .10.11 -211 lt·ll-... 11-717 11·11-10.7t-211J J).61./).11-113 ,,.., ..... , ..... ,., ,, ..... , .... -11-1 tt-1).11./1-1'• ,,.,..,,.,,_ .. l).7J.7l-11-21• 1'-10-1).11-11• M-1).10-71-~ ... IS.10-1>-11• ...,.,.n.J>-21' 10-11-6f.7S--2l! 10-11.Jl-l)-nJ 17·11-7Ul-2l! 11.1s.n.n-m 71-J).6f·n--1U 11.11.n .1s--2t1 Bero rd !lugger, whose: 214 career home run I make it underst:ndabte. Allen was equally fruslrated with his .224 batting 1verage. "I haven't con- tributed a damn lhing -yet," he said. LOS AHOILll •TLAHTA .. ' ... ti> r II rl>I Wiiii. .. • ' , ' S.Jtc-son, <1 • ' ' • Gr•IMrlr'wllr,tto • • • • G ... r, " , • ' ' W,Dtvl1, d • ' ' ' H.AttDn, " • , ' ' R.Atltn, • • ' • c.-•. " ' ' ' WP•rlrt•, " • • • • MUltn. ~ • ' ' • limo, ' ' • ' • c .......... ,. • • • • G'"'''' >D ' • • • G•r•kto, u • • • • Ruuen, rt ' • • • Dllllt•. ' ' ' ' ' Sunon, • ' • • • ..... • ' ' • • C••wtord, pl! ' • ' • ·-· • • • • • T,,._I• » ' ' ' Ttt11t • • ' ' '~ ........ .. ~· .. _, A!lt~lt ... '" t1• -• D" -Atltnlt I, LOI! -LOI l\ngtln .a, At· ...... •. IS -H. AttOll, Ml11fn, s1 .... 38 -'· J•<--. H• -c._, Ill, w111, Pl. H ......... 011. SI' -Gt rr. Su!IOn (L,11-lt !Ir•-• llel'd tW.J.JI IP'NRl•lllO ' • J J ' J 1 I I I t t t S I I J I Halo Reserve Shines in Win Over Detroit . (_ Syd O'Brien looked _.JCrOM t ~'t California Angels clubhouse at Jirn Fregosi and called out, loud enough for Fregosi to hear, "Did someone around here menlioo something about Wally Pipp?" Fregosi laughed . Pipp was replaced at fi rst bast ane day by the legendary Lou Gehrig , who went on to play 2,130 ~ secutive games. • O'Brien, who sparked the Angels to a C. ----------DAI LY PILOT '2-for-1' D1y See Coupon Pi g• 24 3 victory 'over Detroit Sunday will try to make it as hard as possible ror the ailing Fregosi to regain his shortstop job. O'Brien singled in the lying run and Sandy Alomar's seventh-inning hit drove home the winner. The Angels got tight relief pitching by Eddie Fisher, 4-1. and 21).year-old Lloyd Allen after Clyd~ Wright was knocked out i11 the sixlh . The Angels, 6-7 on the home sla nd. travel today to Baltimore, where they open a three-game series Tuesday night. Tom Murphy. 1-2, is slated to oppose the Orioles' .Jim Palmer. 4-0. The Tigers return home to begin a two-game set with Oakland Tuesday night, with th e probables Joe Niekro. 1-3, and the A's Rollie Fingers. 1-3. O'Brien went into the week hitting .077 but his average is now up to .280, with a 2-for-3 performance Sunday. Sitting on the bench makes him restless sa id O'Brien. who pla yed the same utility role for the Red Sox and White Sot. '"The first thiilg J do when I arrive at the ballpark is to look at the lineup card and hope I see my name," he said. ''I do it even when I know there's no chance." Manager Lefty Phillips said O'Brien figures in his plans at three infield spots. "He has done a fantastic job ·for us," Phillips said. "No manager could possibly ask for more. He's going to be playing a lot more for us." O'Brien doubled in the second Inning and rode home on Jerry Moses' third homer of the year to give the Angels 2·1 lead. After Willie Horton~s third inning home run and a run-scoring double by Eddie Brinkman gave the Tigers a 3-2 ad· va ntage. O'Brien lined a two-out single in the sixth lo score Tony Conigliaro with the tying run. Alomar singled up the middle orr loser Bill Zepp, G-1 to sc;ore Ken Berry with the winning run. It was Alomar's fourth game-winning hit of lhe season, all in the seventh inning or later. DET•OIT C ... LIP'O•Nl.11 s11n!er, cl "o'111•uo. lb ICftllnt. rf W.HO<IOn, If Frft/11n, c Price, c A.ltodr~llU.lll McAulllle. 1t> BrlnO.man, n D.JonH. pl\ Lollcft, p l e11t1, 11 k"4!rman, o G.Brow~. pl\ tl>r~rl>I ll>r~rM JOll "'ln,...r,1t> lilt J O J O Spene••· lb • O O O l 0 0 0 l ,Jl>hr!son, If I 0 1 0 l I 1 I T Con'911~ro,rfJ I It J o o o lh1x11. rl o o o o 1 O O O McMullen, :IO • O o O JOOOO'Brl .... lt l!71 4 7JOMO•t"c J l 77 J011 Ru•l.or 0000 I O O 0 Siopll..,son, c 0 0 0 0 7 0 t 0 Berfy. cf J I I 0 OOO OWrloh!,O iooo OOOOEFl\htr.O 0 000 1 O 1 O Gon1ftlfl, II" 1 O O 0 L • .&11 .... 0 0 0 0 0 Tot•l• lJ l 11 J Tor.I• Jt 4 I ' Detra II 011 OC1 000 -l C•tlk>r~i• 020 OCl 10• -4 OP -Detra!! 1, C1ll"'r~I• l 1..011 -Dolllra!I •. Ctlltor~ll • Ill -O'!lrl.,,, Horr~rup, !ltrry, Srlnl<'""" Hl -Mo ... U \, w ~''°"' IJI -sa -"°'''"llP· " " • .. .. .. LOii<~ ' ' ' ' , ' "~ IL.O.H \.J l ' ' • • • k ......... " l·llJ • ' ' • • WrlOM S·J/l • ' ' ' • E.Fitllff" 1w ... 11 .. ,,, ' ' • • ' l.Alierl • ' ' • ' • S•~e -' .-.11 .... Pll -Motft . Tll'nt -J:lt. Al1end•Mt -11,l lS. Ex-LACC Stars Sizzle for Troy In Spil{ef est While 11wiflies Willie Deckard and t.ance Babb aren't terrorizing junior col- lege opposition in their Los Angeles City College thinclads an ymore, the jet-quick duo is carving quite a niche at USC. Jn Corvallis, Ore. on Saturday, Deckard sped to a 9.3 100 yerd dash clocking while Babb sv.·ept to a double hurdle win in 13.7 (120 highs) and 53.0 (440 intermediates) as the unbeaten Trojans tuned up for their titanic meeting next Saturd ay against crosstown rival UCLA by burying host Oregon Stale, 92-62. Deckard also clocked. a 20.7 22G and anchored the winning 440 relay combo to a 40.2 mark. UCLA, meanwhile, had lo hustle al Berkeley to nip crippled defending NCAA titlist Calif«nia by a 78-76 margin. Bruin Rub en Chappins wa11 the big hero as his 14:26 O three-mile victory pushed the Uclans from a precarious 73-71 edge to a safer 78-71 lead in the second to last race or the day. Babb wasn't the only hurdler who shone on the national scene a!I Brigham Young 's Ralph Mann. current world rectJrd holder in lhe «{] intermediates, captured his spe<:ialty in 50.2 after having won the 120 highs ( 13.91 at the Beehive Invitational in Logan, Utah. Another impressive double was record- ed by Texa$ A & M's Rocky Woods, wbo was victorious In the· highs (13.8) before returning on ly minutes later to lip to a 9.5 century tr iumph in the Southwest Conference Championships tit Coller• Station, Tex. ln spite of Woods' lndlv\dual heroics. however, the Texas Aggie~ were nosed out ol I.he conference title by Rlce, tlO\i· 60. • • . . I! DAIL v PILOT Mond.a.)', Mar 3, 1~71 GWC Third • Ill Swimfest Lippoldt, Feinberg, Ga1nmon Shine CUPERTINO -Goldel\ West College's most successful rwimming !ie&son came to a close Saturdav with coach Ton1 l~ermslad's Rustlers· bringing ho1ne the third place trophy in the state JC sv.·iI11- 1nlng and diving championships al De Anza College. Golden \Vest finished \Yith 179 points, 11 behind runnerup Long Beach. Pasadena (228) <:aptured the slate crown. Top Individual performances in Saturday's final events came from Rustlers Don Lippoldt. Greg Feinberg and Ross Mcintyre and Orange Coast's Chris Gan1mon. Lippoldt rinished second in the 200 back in 2:0'.!.J v.•hile Feinberg clocked 2:04.9 in the same event in placing fourth, Fullerton's Byron R(idenbaugb y,·on it in 2:00.9. ri1clntyre was tJ1e No. 5 finisher in the 200 breast 12:20.1 I. Gammon put togtther ttis best 100 fly performa.nce of the seaaon ln placing ae- cood in 52.S. 1be wiMtr wu P1s1den1's Geofftry Ferreira In a n1tional n:cord li111t of 51.5. The old mark was 51.7. But the best area effort came fron1 the Hustltr 400 free relay foursome of Lip- poldt. Craig Collon. Keith Donaldson and relnberg. They were beaten by Long Be1ch City as both eclipsed the national reeoni of 3:14.1. LBCC was given an of· ficial lime of 3:13.98 "'hile Golden weSt had a clocking of 3:14.0. Other top perfonnances included a si xth place fini!h by OCC's 400 free relay foursonte, an 11th place finish by Donaldson in the 100 free (49.1) and an 11th by the Rustlers' Chris Soughtrs in the 100 fly (55.li, Area divers also fared v.'ell In Saturday's three • meter com~tJtion, Golden West's Joel Penne finished in a Anteaters, USD Split Grand Slam Honie Run May Haunt UCI Nine SAN DlEGO -Six game! remain on the UC Irvine baseball schedule but it may be one swing of the bat that will haunt them throughout the days of the NCAA playoffs. Saturday afternoon. the Anteaters were coasting along with an apparent S.3 vic- tory over the University of San Diego when it happened. Plnchhitter Steve Bajo was at the plate In the seventh and final inning with one away and the bases load~ by virtue of a Bucs Nip Foe In 18 Innings The 1971 baseball season ca111e to an !nd for Orange Coast CoUege Saturday, but it took nearly eight hours to do it. Coach Barry Wallace's Pirates and San Diego Mesa battled 18 innings (five hours ind five minutes) before OCC won it, 4-3 Nilh the Border Cily crew winning the .even jnning n.ightcilp. 6-0. A single by Jay Love, a fielder's choice •nd an error scored the winning run for ~1e Bucs in the first gan1e. Steve Schoettler picked up the victory with a yeoman relitf job, pitching the la.rt 11 innings and striking out 10. Orange Coast finished with an S-10 South Coast Conference record and a 13- UI season mark. P'llllT GAME S111 D""' Meu (ll Or11111 C111t UI 111r11..-1 1•r11..-1 Mtf'l'ltrlon, II ' I ' 0 Piii, ct 5 0 l 0 C11llgt. II ) 0 1 0 C!tr~. "' 6 0 I 0 Wlllllm., H I 1 l 0 HtWlf, 11> I I l 0 ftt11, 11 I 0 • 1 Leavy. •1 I 0 0 0 M..,,-., :lb I O 1 l Lov•. rt I J l I Flll'ltr, t t 0 J 0 HlntilV, 3b 6 0 0 1 H1Wk1.d 7 00DK1nq,!I I OJO RIClovlc~. lb ' t 1 o Snvd•r, c 1 o l 1 Devl1, tb I t O O Oul1..,t>l!rry, p ? O 0 O Ptrclv11. 1 5 I ? o ll•ll•v, 1111 I o o o • .,....,.,, p 1 o o o SthOl!tler, p J o 1 o 'To!tl1 tt l 1' J To!1!1 60 • 11 J k•,. ,, 1111111111 • • • SM Dlt9D M~ 001 000 100 000 000 000-l 11 4 o,._ coeu ooo 100 t20 ooo ooo 001-1 16 J SICOND GAME Sift oi..., Mtu U) Or•"t• CUii !fl 1•rt1..i •~r11..i W!lll•m1, ii s .. 1nl1m, U Ofll, rt Mtl'dn, 3b -... ~ •• lb Olv!1, ;tb ... w11.1, cf Ptrlttr, t lllt ck,...11, p •tOOP!ll.cl JOJO l 0 0 1 81H1r. (f l t 0 0 • o I 0 Clfrlt. 1b • I J o JOOOH•W.t,lb JOJO J IOOLovt,rl JO TO 1 ) 1 0 Hln.tl~, lll ? 0 0 0 171LN~~.n JOJO Jl7DK!nt,!1 Jll lO JICO WllkeM<Ofl.( JOOO Purl, p I 0 C O Slrnofll, pl'I 1 o o O t~l•D,P 10 0 0 25''' TD'"' 11010 Sc••• •r tnnlnt' Son Do~o l>lf•• Ortnv• Co••I 'I • ooo 0•1 o -• • 1 000 000 o -o 1 1 double, 1 hit batter and a w1lk . Tom O'Connor. on the mound for UCI, worked the. count carefully to J.2 belore Bajo unloaded a grand slam homer to win tbe game for the Toreros, 7-5. The &lugging UCI nine came roaring back in the nine inning nightcap with a I 15-hlt attack to post an 11-8 win with Den· ni! Nicholson going all the way on the mound. UCI raised its team batting average to a husky .307 mark with 28 safeties in the two games. The team won-lost record is currently at a respectable 26-14--1 mark . Whether the Anteaters can be counted out of the NCAA regionals or not is a question uppermost in the minds of coach Gary Adams and his players. Under rules of the playoffs. only one team is eligible from a confererrce and San Fernando Valley State appears head- ed for the CCAA cro1.1.·n. A second entry \Y il/ be from the Far West Cooferenct: with t""·o open berths. UCI and the University of San Diego boast outstandiag independent records. Ho"·ever, the norlh"·est is also a factor in the four-team selections and the ultimate choi~s for the tournament will not be kno"•n for another 10 days. Tom Spence, a native or San Diego, had a field day at the expense of the Torero pitchers. He had a pair of doubles in the first game and three singles in the nightcap giving him 5-for-7 for lhe day. lie is hilting al a .Ul average for the year. 'lltlT GAMA UC INIM is) u .. 5111 01 .... 11) ... "" 1•r1tr\I F1rr1r, " • • ' • Gonult1, .. ' ' • • S1'ko11, .11> ' • ' • Olnttn, cl ' ' • Cr1IQ, (f ' ' ' • Arntrlcti. II • • ' • Spence, " ' ' ' ' l<ln11Nn, c ' ' ' ' s...-., " ' ' ' ' P1vo1. " ' ' ' • Coronado, " ' ' ' ' Arcl\tmbl11!1,rl ' ' ' • Gro.,.wtv. u ' • ' ' 1110. .. ' ' ' • Sn•lln1, t ' • ' ' Norm1n, " ' • ' ' ...... • • ' • C"lmpt°", " ' • ' • O'Conr>O•, ' ' • ' ' Myr0t0, P ' ' ' ' R~ptrt, • • • • • 'Tomc1oll, ' • • ' • lo!ll~ " ' " • 'Tot11, " ' ' • Sc1r1 11'1' 10111,..1 ' ' . uc l•vlnt oJO 00? I -5 n 1 U Of Sin Oit11D 100 100 4 -1 } I SECOJHI GAMA UC LrYIH 01) U .. Sin Clift.I /I) f.1rr1r, H Sv~or1, JI> C••ig, cl $pt<K1, lb su.11.1, 11 H1n1111, Si (DtO<lldo, Jb sn1lln•. c Nic~OltOn, /;l TOlll~ al r l'lr•I ••rll l'M jflOGG<lllltl,U 511? IJ I Dl"""'c! J OIO 112Arntrk l'l,lt •OOO • 0 J ~ McNal'N•I, pl'I 1 0 0 a ' O O O ll•lo, r! • I J o 5 I 1 I Kln1m1n, c 1 I I I 5J?ONorm1n,Jb 111 1 ?JOGar .. 1r,JD 1 000 ? I J P'V1>f, Ill • 0 I l Crompl...,, l'b I O O 1 C1lloulrl, l'b J ' • O 01v11.1 1 0 10 Ru/;ltrl, p 7 O I 1omc1•k, p I o O •1 11 Ti 11 l e11l1 )I 6 11 6 lttrt 11 lnnl11ti • • • UC 1rvlnt 001 •JO :lOll -1! 16 1 U O! Sin Dlf90 000 «11 000 -I U l Ba.seball Standings NATTONAL LEAGUE Al\tERICAI LEAGUE E11l Dh•lskln East Dl\•lslon Pirates Second In Mile Relay; Title to MSAC WALNUT - A second place finish by the Orange Coast College mile relay team highlighted the Pirate entries in Saturday night's South Coast Conference track and field cllampionships at ~fl. San Antoruo College. The Pirate foursome clocked a season best of 3: 19.7 while Fullerton was tin1ed in 3: 19.l in winning the event. ~fl. San Antonio ran away with the team title while OCC finished last. Other point-getters for Orange Coast incl~ded Kevia Buller. sixth in the 4-40 - 50.3; Tim Ovleiu, fifth in the 880 - 1 :56.0: George Barnett, sixth in the triple juntp -44-31.~: and the 440 relay team, fourth in 43.0. The top individua l performances in the meet came from Mt. San Antonio's Mike Hill and Santa Ana's Tom Lipski. Hill won the 440 intermediates in a record time of 52.7. captured both the long jump (2a-1~~) and the triple jump ( 45-8~2) and was second in the 120 high.!! (14 .6). Lipski set conference marks in the mile (4:08.1) and the three-mile (14.06.4), nip- ping l\fl. SAC's John Gregorio at the tape in the 12-lap event. Swltl Cu1I Clllf".-CI "°'"' ll)O -1. 8teodt ll !SD M.Ul, t.J1 ffOlllll CM-t~renc;• rKOrcl. Mllt J, Mt. Sit~ lmll~. so. 1"4 lltllCIClt U In prtllm1!; L Smiln \'"'• t.•; J. OtnLMfl (Sfnr• An.I; •· Miia (M!. S..t, f , l S. O.vt IM!, ~•<), t.t; 1. fl'IOfll !Mt. Sl'lc lt.O. 2XI -I. 8red<llll !MIUJ. 11_.; 2. Mii• (Mt. St e!, 11.n J s~•·• 1L 1, :n 1. '· sm1111 tSD!. :n.11 i. l110r11 IM! Sic), :n.I; I. M•llY ~Ml. s..ci. :n.1. uo -I. Sk•la (Cl, ... t; 1. MuklOOrl tSAl. '9.1; l. Ml1•1 !Ml. S1cl. lY.1; 4. Msr•r !SA) ..... I; J, srrobth" iMI. »<), "9.t; •· Bulltr COr•no-C111111, ~iici -1. MMklo• 1M1. Stcl. l :S..O (COlllll'tN;• rtcord. old m1rk. l:MJ , ~a!IUk. Fwltt rlon, ltlill; 1. Li mtt \SA), 1:J4.!; l. Orll1 \Ml. Sac). 1:1S.J1 oL. Nl ll<lll U.l. l:M.O; J. OW.11'11 tOCC), l:M.O; I . Cowl· iltlll (FJCI, 1:51.1. I O Miii -1. L•111•I {5A), l :Ol,1 (t...,!lrl<Kt fKOI' , ~Id mirk, •:U.I. M•r!lntl, SO """'· 1t70li 1. <;revorlo (Ml. S•cJ, •:at.I; 3. Ltm~ (SAJ, 1:11.•: 1. MfdOo• <ff~· SI•?~ 6!11.7; '· Mertlfl•U !Mell), l :U.51 6· :;1~:1 _),I.I: Lo~•I ($"\, ll:Gt.I (t;0nl1rtnc1 re.:ord, old ,,,.rk U:Jl.2, GrfllOrlo ln pr11Jm1!: 1. G•f!IOl'IO IMI. Sic), 11:06.1; J. M1rl11>0• /Mn•), 1':19.•; '· Hwll {~). 16:15.IJ '· lwr"' MIN), 1•:5!.11 6, S1mrnon1 V.>. 11:"·'· \)0 hlohl -1. P•not (Mt. S1c), 11.S; 1. Hiii (Ml. Ste). u .1; J. D•vll CSAJ. lS.I; '· "'°"' tFJC J, U.I/ I fodd (Ml. Sic), LJ.4; 6. Llngt911 (Cl. u .2. '4ol(I lnl, -1. Holl !Ml. S1el, U.7 (cont1r1nt 1 record, old m1rk Sl '-P1t1n. Ml. ~•c, 1'111); 2. '""n iMI. Sic), SJ.2; J, 'TOdd (Ml. Sac!, il.J; 4. Hull CFJC!. SJ.I; !. 11.oo•lllOll 1M-), lol.J; 6. 'T11"1me icho ~iti.r -1. Mt. San Anllll'lte. 4.0 \1JQ11a11 .-t01e<ic1 rtcotd, ML S..n Anltf\ID, 1f1t); 2. 51., Dlfll<>, 12.•1 J. Cerrlto1, 42.J; .._ Or~ntt c11111, o .o; ). F'il.'~~'~'!'1.~·~ , Fwllll'lllfi, J:lt.1; 2. Or1nge COl\I, l:".I; J. Ml. s.o,j, An!Ollll, l :19.I; 4. CfrrUoo, J:t i.•1 >. S•n DlfllO, l :2•.1; 6. 51nt1 AM, J:!1.6. HIOh l11mp -I . J,.,.., (50), ... llQlllll "'"' record, Jon.1, 1•701; 2. J a,..... CC.I, ... 1. J. l'P•t'r \SOI. t-•,· I. H•ll IM!. :O.CJ, 1-l; S. Hirt V.), 1-2; t . frJ~tr ( JCJ, ~. ~ iwmp -1. Hill {Ml. S.!CJ1.25-l\1i; J. 'Todd (NII. Sic), 2).~1~· J. Aller (SD). 1....,..; I, King \SDI. D- OI'; 5. 51rel (C), JJ•I\•/" •,.Kiiburn !Mffll, tl•I. Trlo!t j11mo -1. Hll (Ml. k(), O.S-11.<1; 2. F1rrt!I ICJ. U-1 '-; l Porltr 150), •+-I; ~. ""'" ($DI; •• 11'1:; s. AUi 1FJC1 • .U-5~~· ........ 11 1occ1. ,,.J . "•I• v111lt -I. S1ml)IOll lFJC), 1w~: 2. (C- ltrerw;t record, old m••k 1u, held av """ 01111rsJ1 1. Anclerlt'n 1SA), 15-01~; J, Storm CC!. 15-0\11; •· lrtnl!tV !SAIS 11-0; 5. 8••mltll1 CMI. Sic!. 1+-0; '-1\'~11 p(:•·_ '1'.J.y1:!..itr !Mt11), 50-t; 1. Murr11 (~JCl. if·l'>; 3. Montp<tm1ry (C l. 4 l . • wee~• IC>, .,_;>,; 5. "notlo tMI. $tC), 15-1; '· Ht rrl"O•"" 1~01, .... , .. Dls°(us -1. Ment11Dmtr• !Cl. lSO-ll; 1. Ofl!oBn l'J 'I· llt·lQ'>l J. Murrt r \FJC), !J4.0. •. l u<-F C , 1l5-t'1; S. Br.c!llV 150, lJJ.0'~. Flnll ''"Ing -Ml. )I~ Antonio 16\, ''~" "n• "· Fulltrton .frld Ctrrl!CK J', San Dlego 67. $.In Oieto Mfll O, Or11'1C11 Ca11I ·,1, DEAN LEWIS IT!OIY!OIT!AI W L Prt. .61!1 . 5a1 .56;J _560 .435 .333 GB w L Pct. GB APRIL SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 New York Pittsburgh '-lontreal St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia ll 8 14 10 ' 7 14 11 10 13 7 14 Weit DlvilklD San Francisco 19 6 Atl anta 12 11 Dodgers 13 13 Houston 12 1:1 Cincinnati !I 1~ San Diego 5 18 $1l11rf1v•1 l!t,WI!' Pll!ll<lf l...,!1 7, Chltlto I .760 .522 .S'IO . 480 . 41'!1 .217 , . , \I~ I • 6 6 i;1: 7 111 ~ " l'ltl1buntl'I 5. 51" Dl••o 1, 11 lnnl ... ~ Cl11cl11ntU l . Sin '••nrhco t HOV1111'n J, M•w Yotlt l ,r.111,,11 1. o.l"rs ! Menlrtfl 1, SI LOUii '· t lf!l'lll'l•I• "''" S11May•1 ltMllltl ~· LOI.I ll 7, MOntr•al 0 New v.,~ '· H0111IOO'I s. 10 1"11\n11 CnlCIOO 1. Phlll dt!""'!t l ,r.1111111 "-Ollllffl 1 Boston H • Baltimore 13 • \Vash lngton " 12 l\ew York IO II Detroit IQ 12 Cleveland 8 15 West Division Oakland 18 IO Angels H 11 Kansas City 12 12 Chicago 10 " \\finnesota 10 " \IU\\'aukef' ' 13 S1lwr4!1V'1 ltt1111!1 Mll\OI Uk•e 1, N•w v .. ~ 0 M1nno111 1. llo"'" J K1 n11' C!tv s. l1!tirnore 1 C1tvt11ncl J, Otkllncl l Cl'llClll 5. W11~\ ... !Df! J •11t111 t. O.!ntll 1 ..... .591 .500 .476 .455 .'38 .6.\3 .560 21~ .500 • S•ECIAL $1871 ·"'' 51 ~ .417 6 .409 6 VOLVO f'ln1burt1~ t. St n DI"" 1 s ... ,..rtll(lKO I. Clll(lfllll l! !, 1) lrwtlnl1. MllMfl l''• ··- Swlltll''' lltlYltl 81!1!more 5, Kan .. 1 Cit• f Cltv•ltf\11 1·1, 01-!and J.f. 71111 '"'" It lnln11ti •11ttll I, 0.trPl1 l Cltl(-,.,...._ ~I •I Joi-y,.n (C';tl'llN l ·ll, 111tttl SI Loul1 !la"'"'N 0.0l ii PMl~!lllt l t tldl 1-11. 111tttl ... 0n1v ,,,.,.. ~outed. Chit-l . W1t111...,11111 1 llot,_n I t, Mllll'ltll!I M "'""' Yortl J.s. Mllw...,.,W I·• 1Mf141 ...... •a-· Mo 11""!-1 1tfltCl11lfd. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Service ind 1'1rt1 for All Imported C•ra Modern Body Shop for All Cara 646-9303 Orang• County's Larg••t llld Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dtaler onasus DILIVllT SPICIAl.IS:Tt 1971 DEMO $3093 14.( S14111. R14io, H11t11. 4 '"'''· r?J•O ~ USID CAa S,ICIAL $1295 1f•t TOYOTA CORONA H.T. ll;IH . .( 1p11d. IYCM017l ~ -• • • SAVE Sears Tire aod Auto Centtr Prices Effccti,·c Sun .. J\Jay Z, tbru Tues., i\lay 4 Guaranteed For As Lonµ; •\,.;You Own \'our Car Heavy-Duty Shocl\: ,. A b sorber,~ Regular $7.99 Each Longer wear, smoolbcr ride. Rugged si ntered iron piston thromc plated rod . Fits American rnade cars. l)uh1un, 'J'uyotu and .. SAVE ·f4 0! Auto Air Conditioner Regular $219.95 •Chrome front with woodgrain inserts • 3 Adjustable louvers •250 C.F.M. • 3-Speed switch •Adjustable thermostat SAVE $5Q! Sears 3 1/2-HP Mini-Bike Regular $169.95 119 95 Rugged 4·cycle engine. I-inch tubular steel frame. fork and handlebars. TY.·ist grip throttle, foot operated rear wheel brake. Re.ar end shocks. . ..:.1111-;'/(J .' 'l"in1ing Ligl.1 <llE '.1! Regular $18.99 159 9 R•gular 1999 $?9.'9 ti or 12 volt uw. Pi1lol Wpc Tnper switch allO'On tube to !lash as nttdf'd . .12115. l'hargrs mos\ aotoor manne balleril'J. Show! erac:l nit of cha rte. Maintains poll'er t ll:rg,. ti or 12 \'Olt. fit$, -1111 ........ Ol-~• ... (Q. ' 1111,.1 , •• I( CINOll IAll( t0M'f0N (0Vll'I .. I~ "'ONlf OUNDIU 11ourwoo1 IN(lllWOOI ~ ~f 12 "-"Sr.a. ..... *• S.t. ~ A.M. It t.>t P .... ,, *" ""' Oft!y, • 179 95 Expert Installation Available 1 NSOi04 l\1ini-8 S tereo 'fape Plaver Black leather-grain fi nish and featuring slide con- trol s. Thi s stereophonic ca rtridgetape player hides safely in your glove co mpartment. 3988 '"'' Ask About Sears Convenient C:rP.dit Plans. IOMO II ~(It OlTJ,.'1( CtlllNOI '"'l•tlNl f'OMON.I. ''""'' ... '"'· 1.-i •1. lot! • P•(O ,.,.,~ " ""'""" IArO .. l"ONl(I fO~tH (01)1 r11r1 O•OYllNO 01 .. l fOllON(I ll•LU+• VAlllr v~•.¥0Nr ..,, Exponent Systen1 Eli1ninated Deletion of the exponent system in football and a major four-point proposal for sum· mer league aclivily in football were the focal points of Saturday's ClF Southern Sec· lion executive council meeting al Villa Park High. The ClF approved a long debaled issue to go to the freshman and sophomore system as opposed to the Cee and Bee exponent style which takes into consideration the athlete 's age. height and weight. An OK stamp of approval ,,·as put on night football scrimmages (no multi-sc rim· mages) this year and the ban regarding noise makers in the CJF basketball and football playoffs was extended to CQVer the entire regular season . The four-point foot b a 11 measure proposed and placed under study is ba sically as folJO\\'S: I. To allow athletes with re· mainfng e I i g i bi J i t y to participate In summer league touch rootball under their own coach's guidance 2. To allow weight training in the summer to be conducted by anyone, including that school's football coach , at any location. 3. For summer physical education classes to include football \\'ith the use of foot- ball shoes. No pads, liv e 1ackl· ing, sleds or dummies to be in· eluded. 4. Pern1ission for foot ball roaches to teach football 1n coaching sessions during the period from the close of school in June until September. (No pads. etc .) • 'C ' ~ ' ' . . .. For Coast Area Teams Prep Tennis Summaries Vl rll!Y IC11tH1 IHI CtJ M111i.11 Vlel1 Sl"'lff ' G. Hebell CM! loll M , l·l, o,1, 1-.d C.il !Ml IOSI 1·6, 2-6. 0.6. 1 ... ~ll>ttkfr (Ml lot! 1 ... !-6. 1.6; O·l . 11:u1ut1lll• !Ml IO•! ,.,., 2·t. t ...... Deu~le1 D. Hetle!t •I'd W1lk1r !Ml IOI! M. 0.. 6, IM. 1)-6 8row/\ •flll Knill (Ml loat 1·6. '"'' ! ... 1·6. Vatoltv lrUwl'Or! UJJ U! Mtron• Slntlt' 0111• (NI ae! McDowall !M) t·?. del P1r~tr (Ml toll. oe•. Tl!urm IM) 6·2, Ot 1. Lelli (Mf toll O'Rellly (NI !o•! to MtDcw•ll lMI 1- '· lost to P1rk1r !Ml 0-6. dtl. l llu•m IM) 6-.... Oel. Leib !Ml '""· A:o5Mr 1NI lie/. McDowt!I IMI 6oll, losl !o P'1rker !M) 2-6, Oel, Tllurm IMl U, dtl. Leib CM) i·O. Smt ll (N) oet ~Oow~!I IMI • l. Josi IO P••-e• (M) t ... Jocst to TPwJ•m Baseball Standings SOUTH COAST CON,.-l!ltE"CI! 11111111 W L GI Fulltrlon !4 • Cerrllo• ll S I Ml. S•" •nrOl'IO 10 I ' S111 Ol"9<1 Mow ' t S Or1n1lf Col'! I !O ' Sin Olew 6 1) • S•n!i Ana ' J u !1 S1lur01Y'• ScOftl Or1nat CO•tl ,.g. Sin 01e11a M 111 J.,\ (!i"I 111me 11 i11n;ng1) Stn Oi0110 1·2, Mt. Si n Anlonlo Q.O FREEWAY LEAGUE W L GI l'ull•''"" t I S1•1nn1 6 Sunn• Hill> • Trov 6 8ue111 Park .I Lowfl! l ltennt"<l• I ll >-11br1 S1t••••1'1 Sew• Fullerton J. S•v1n111 1 Tueff11'• Gittl'lfl 8uo11t llft1< 11 L• H1Dr1 FulltrlOfl "' K-edY Lowell 11 ~...,..ny H11/1 SIVIMI 1! l•O>' ANGELUS LEAGUE W l GI "'"""" il.tn•t 10 1 Mator De• 1 l ? St. •~tl'lorlY 1 .. ' Se•••'• St. <>1u1 Piu• )( ' 6'7 I I 111 Sttur<111'1 St•••• 9;,l'!oo Amal ), !i• P1tj! o M••tr 0.-i J, St • .l.ntl>Ony ? Servile 6, Piu• X .I !I lnn•n~i\ WHnndlY'I Gt mtt 8i1P>oo Amt! 11 SI, •11tll<1<1Y Maler Oei 11 S~rv1I• Pius X ti SI. P"ul \11r1ih" Wt,l111ln1t.,. IHI Ul A111"'9!ri1 Slntl•• JOl\n.011 (WI wo" .. 1, •·I. 1.0, 6oll Chol IWI toll, .. , -n 6·2, ... ,, t·1 S!ucktY (WI lo.I 6·i: WO!' 6-0. ,.J. 1·0 Wll_,, !WI lo.I ).1: won t.O, 6--0. 6·1 Olubltt G•tUIMn191! l f'd l1be!I CW) won .. 1. 6· l1 WOfl6·•· 6·1 K•over tnd BtrO!"I rWI won i·'· 6-0: won 6-0. 6-0 va,.ilY ,..OIMlllLll v11i.,. lttl (I) Ctt"-M•w Slnlltl Kr1wc1v• (Fl lot! lo And•l!!V !Cl 1-6. Oet. Spelt !Cl 6-1, <!fl. Mldohtm ((l &.O. llef C1rrlco IC! 6-1 le,,,,1! !F l lo•I lo Endl~Y !Cl ? 6. l"'I to Speir IC) .... def. Slldl!1m 4(! t-t. Otl. (1rrlca (Cl •·' Sl!aW t Fl Ml. ENl1lev IC! I I. a,4 !ioeir (Cl J...I, <let Stl41wim ((I ...0. <1"· C1rrlto (C) 6-0 · VlletllUflt 0'1 lo•I lo Encl!l~y !Cl I. i. Otf. S11elr !Cl '"'· oer ~r.011em IC! ,.,, oel. C•,.lco ~C! 6·1 OtuDlt' Miiier 1nd l-n (Fl net lt••~d" ~"" C.re1111 IC! •. o, e·O: aet. P. M.,.~ Ind S. M~erl [CI 6-0. 6.0 .'lllt n 1nd Sc~lldf',.vtr (F\ ael I( .. ~"·" i/\d C.t"118 (() .. 0. 6.~;· <If!. M~en 1..0 l>-IY••i !Cl 6·?, 6oll V1r1I" C~M IU\il rn.i M•t~Olll $1111111 D•~' IC) ?on 6·1, t ·I, 6·1. 6.0 Vfrmun<I !Cl won 6.0: 1a11 •·•• won &.1. &.1 Guile~ !Cl won •·D, 6·a. 6-0. 1-0 0 1lr CC I wot> 1·6, 6-J. 6·l. 6oll Otllllln ltllltltr 111<1 Httrl• ((!won J.J, 1·6, WO!' 6·1· 6·1 l•Wll Ind ~·-•• ((I w>ll! l ... I '' won 6.(1, .. l ......... , s. .. ci..m11111 IU cu ~ lu1t1n Sl11111f!1 LlmM•ll 1$1 ,,,., , .. ; _ ..... ). ~·' ,., 1(11>9 ($1 loll , ....... ) .. , .... MIM l"11 (S) 1@6! ()-6, H . I).,, 1·6 lt1ric1kl CS> '"'' 0-6. 1·6, 2-6. U 0tu111o1 ll:tl!I '"° !it'HIV (!i) lm;I l.,\. 1~. )-t, ,., Mulaock• 1no Oowh"" IS> to•• .... i. 6, wo~ t·J, I·~ V1r•llY E1l1n<l1 ll'OI (II SA V1llov 511111•• W•lk (E l 1051 J.I . won 1.1. &-1. ,.o Ruuell (E ~ lo•I •..!; WOt1 6·0: lo\! ).I; _ .. Wede fE\ WDn l·S, 1·1. l·l .. , 11.,,,.,11te10 CE\ won 6·1, 6·1. I·.\,'"' 0tu11111 G•Yn!!• t nd Sti nton IE1 io•I ?•6. 3-1; -1·7. ,.2 . M11i.ori Ind Mort1i.on !El loll M . 1· 6.-...... 6 V1r1llY '"'"'' a.111 Ctt\oJ Ul~I "vnt1111t.~ $l1111e1 l11ln1 O·O 111$1 J•6, 1.1. WOt1 1.1, 6-1 l(ocll (Hl Wl1 0.... 0·1. ~·O. l .. 81•l•v 0-11 lo ll 1 .. , 1 ... 7-6, 1-4 BOl.ICl'M!< (H I lo.I S.I, o .. , 1·•, won ,., O!M!Oltl Miller ind SolOMlfl HH 1011 2 ... ~i. !led J·J, -/\ ,., W•ll•ce •n<I S!tnlon 1>-11 lo!I ,,,, 1·i. 1 .•. 3·• J~/\lor V1rt1!1 "'"•Port Ull !JI M1rin1 Sl ntlu COl'>t n det s .. 11n (M) 1.t. Oel MDnM)fl (Ml 6-1 Brown (NI del. Weil \Mt 6oll, ,,.. l•<~ jMl 6·0. Moor• <NJ Ml w~11 !Ml l•l. Ott. ZKJ. IMJ l•J. MJKltr (Nl oet Z•ck IM) 6.0, VIII HOUIO/\ !N) WOii 1·0. 6·'· liucn111111 INI de!. Wfil !Ml 6<J ...... FOfbe• •"" ~NIU!lhlOI' \Nl Clll. 1{1w1~M;m1 .,,,, S!Kker CM) 6.l; dtl. l f'rrY 11'111 ltu~ 4Ml 6·1. Oon.aio'°" •fld M••" (N) lo\! "' K1w1"'1 im1 '"" S•K~tt !Ml :J.t. Oel. r,.,y 1nc1 lrut" \Ml 6-J Bruins Beat UCI Cre'v Th<' UC Irv ine varsity, junior v<irsity and freshman crews dropped decisions lo hos t UCLA Saturday on the Ballona Creek O I y m p i c courSt'. In the varsity competition. lhe Bruins v.on with a time or fi :56.8 co mpared to 6:06.6 for lhe Anteaters. The UCLA JV squad v.·on in 6 :0~.0 co1npared to 6:3fl.3 for UCI while the freshman race found the Bruins v.·inning in 6: 14.9 lo UCI"s 6:22.8. ~1eanwhile at Ne w po r t Saturday. USC's crew failed to bri ng its junior varsity to meet Orange Coast. thus the Pirate freshmen handed SC 8 defeRt. \\"in ning with a time or 6:~i .6. Thr Trojans clocked i :03.0 A USC four-man s h c 11 ! 7: 29.31 defeated four Bue rowers 17:46.51 Jn a t.'ilm· panion feature. \\\\\· Monarchs WinGmne, Protests Mater DeCa hOtil Monarebs got a reprieve from the Angelus League on Friday and then provided themselves with a recovery of their own Satur· day with a 3"-2 baseball win over the St. Anthony Saints. Friday , coach Bo b Wigmore's Monarchs wete notified that the losses which they had protested against Servite and Bishop Amat had been reversed by the loop's executive committee. Consequently, instead o I being in third place with a 7-S slate the Mo!"larchs bavr gain. ed sole possession or the rulf· nerup spot behiod pacesetting Amat with a 7·3 mark. And they will make ~v lhe pair of protests and an earlier rained-0ut affair against SI. Anthony immediatety upon ronclusion or the regular league hostilities. Saturday's contest was knot· led al 2·2 going into the bot- tom or the seventh inning. However. Bobby Haupert, aboard on a fielde r's choice, srored the winning run from rirsl base when a single by Tom Cottage eluded the Saint center fie lder. Cottagr singled in Ray Salazar for the winners' first tally in the initial inning while Mike Kemmesat p I ate d HauPf'rt with a third·inning base hit. M1t.,. Otl IU .. • • ... St l11•r. II ' • • Heuperl, cl ' ' • Co1te9e, c • • ' ' Simoi.on. rl ' • • • Ktmm•w t. ?b ' • ' ' $/\tl(.On. lb ' • • • L1"ner!, .. If ' • • • A<l<llcowJk•. "" ' • • • jl,d1m1. lb ' • ' • McElw1l11. o ' • ' • Frl•1. pl\ ' • • 0 l ot1I• " ' ' ' Score It• l"11lnt 1 • • • !i1 .'ln!i,.,nv 2000000-? • ' M4t!er O.I 101 0001-J ' I ~ "'""'i~T~HIS COUPON]6"orflo6ollolfofff~,S '""""" '"' 0 '"" "'" '"'"'" " ..... '""· ~ t,\ ~? BRAKE ~ ;-, C DELCO Pleasudzer BUY 3 AT THE ~/~s '" :: ADJUSTMENT ~ -..S HOCK SALE ~~~"~~L~:~".v~~~ ~Jf t~, ~""""' ~~~:y~;;;, 5Gc ~;,;:"'" ~-~· ABSORBER ... ~~~ ~c ~ ~ All CA~S-INCLUDES INSTA LLATIO N lJ ·~=.,,::,":;'";,s7,co~u•~0H~~;·n~GJ"o·i~~-3---Pl_E_C_E_W_l_N_D_'N_ff_A_l _N_S_U_l_T_---:-_ JATO SUPER 100 -; GO\.f 8Al.l.S ~ $133 ~ l t-'' ,.CK ~ lll1llT 1 pA,C.l ~ •Slacks $156 ' W'"d ood "'"prool • High v111b11ity hea~y duty plasl1C SET ANNIVERSARY PRICE ONLY .•. •Hood • Jacket rta c.IJS'TO~ll ~ ti;;":~$--~~=:-;:'· 19.tQ]~iQ.ljJJ 7 .. Charge it at General Tire ... 'W;li,;! Priced•• 1ho wn •I Gener•I Tlre sto••• Compet1tiv1ly priced •t inde· p1nd1nl d••l1 r1 di1p11ying th• GENERAL TIRE DON SWEDLUND COAST GENERAL TIRE 58S W. 19th, Costa Mesa 5411-571 0 646-5033 Gener•l 1ign. AVERY fi~~~~~~ul•!•~~~un!~~!.1.~hE U7-llll0 ~=========:-:=GENERAL TIRE ... GOES A LONG WAY TO MAKE FRIENDS ------------' Monday, May l, 1971 OAI L Y PJLOT i:s Open Daily 10 to 10, Sunday 10 to 1 .'!'1-._tl !!'-:'.. __ ,. c:~:-.:r:i~~c::o.r- FISK CUSTOM 36 24 MONTH GUARANTEE ' ~A/I'll 4 • Pl Y NYLON CORD it ' WHITEWALL Tub1l11s Bl1ckw1tl Wh1t1w1ll Plus Fed, T11t Pdce Price Ex. T11t Silt Each Eich Eich 6.50-13 1288 1388 1.76 7.00-13 .1588 1688 1.95 7.35-14 1788 1888 2.01 7.75·14 1888 1988 2.14 7.75.15 2.16 8.25·14 1988 2oss 2.32 8.15·15(8.15) 2.37 8,55·14 2.50 .............. ·-~·-.. 2osa 21ss 8.55· 15(8.45) 2.54 1.'.'.::'.'.:.'..~::.:'.'...L..::.::..._...1._:::.:..._...1._:::::::..._1 ~ ,, ................ ~· '" , ... . ~ ·MO" ................ -. AU prices plus FMteral ExdM Ta• ~d tred.-in 1ir• off Your , ...... .,, , .. ¥, •••.• , .. ,. ~·-FREE MOUNTING ROTATION WITH TIRE PURCHASE • Anv 1dditian.t p1111 or Mrvic• nMded. but not lined 1bovt, will carry 1 1uppl1· menttl charge. --- OIL CAN POUR SPOUT ••. , , . 38C: ----YOUR CHOICE! T~~~"SQUEEK·NO·MORE . TURTLE INSTANT GREASE I 40Z. I 66C "" 'TURTLE HIGtf..GlOSS CREAM WAX . I OZ. 994: CHAOME. POLISH ..•... 8 OZ ..•... 44¢ ------- ..... ,., •'-'~-· ,, ...... ···-· HEAVY·OUTY MUFFLER (Fin mo1t Fords. P!vmoulht tnd ChfV•Ol,u) • l llum1n~c,.d r han nf'I ~,.IPClor RRUM • D usl proor cartr1di;:e door Cffwtl1 Slink . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . • . 88¢ WEDGE-TYPE STEREO Sf'EAKERS W355 • • . . • • . ..••... P1ir . 6.88 ------ - RU BB EA OR VINYL .FLOOR MATS· .ri. $3!~ '//~· j' f ull !•on• 0< lull •ed•, • ~, , Twin t•ont, ' ----- CHARGE IT! PREMIUM• PLUS BATTERY 2200 HARBOR BLVD. 17~.~ ,1\/1 42 MON TH GU ARANTEE "'W>UO'I COSTA MESA I f l I I \ J <f DAIL V PILOT 115 Boats , Prep £or Ensenada Bahia Corl.nlh\1n Y1chl Club 1taged a colorful preview of the upcoming Ensenada race start Saturday when I l 5 Pacific Handicap yachts took off on the annual Ensenada Tune.U p Rice lo Dana Poin!. The race was a feature or BCVC's Angelm an Series. Eight to 12-knot breezes a~ the: yachts on the 18-mile dash down the roast. First lo fin ish was Tony Duchi's PCC sloop Ranso m from Sou th Shore Sailing Clu b in lwo hours and 20 minutes. The Class C rleet took overall handicap honors with Larry Fogg·s Voya ger leading the pack. Final results: OV ERALL -(I) Voy ager, Larry Fogg. BCYC: ( 2 ) Juanita, Steve Br ad f o r d, BCYC: (3) Laniru, Griffes and Harvey. BYC. CLASS A -(I ) Laissez Faire. Rod Schapel, BCYC; (2 ) Malahini, Jack Bostwick. BCYC: 13) Andi am o, Bob Sodaro. BVC. MGnd.ly, MIJ :!, 1971 --- . ~ .· ·. ·• l'M,. '' Neel IK~nu U.S. AND MEXICO LfD0.14 SAi LDR S COMPETE AT NEWPORT G1red Smilh (left), Enri que El guero Hoi't Nati on al Ensigns Defeats Mexicans( U.S. Wins Sombrero Cup Ya Turko Leads Way A ntarr Yac ht Takes Ma y or's Trophy George Antarr's Columbia· SO-yawl Va Turko led a fleet of Marina del Rey yachts to Newport Sunday to w i n California Yacht Club 's annual Mayor's Trophy Race. the fourth feature of the Overton Series. North Leads Cl ean Sweep In Slater The 78-mil~ race started Saturday al 11 a.m. from Marina de! Rey; leaving Catalina Island to port before finishing al Newport. The race is a traditional way of getting yachts rrom Marina del Rey to Newport in advance ef the Ensenada race. Ya Turko crossed the finish line al 12:20 a.m. Sunday ror an elapsed time of 13 hours and 20 minutes, easily saving her handicap time for everall handicap and Class A honors. Final re.suits: OVERALL -(I) Va Turko; L<iv.·ell North of San Diego (2) Su ndancer (Ca\-43) Ed ~tORfo' -(I) Jennifor, Bill Grant, KHYC (pendi ng pre>- lesl); (2) Orange Blossom, ,._Uke Kinney, PMYC: (3) Gone With 1be. Wind, Frank Myers. CYC. PHRF -fl) Briosa, Ed Wheelock, CYC ; (2) Nepenthe, Blll Pomerantz. WYC: (3) De51derata, Sheldon Schreiber, SCCYC. ---- Yacht Club Sunday led a group of San Diego sailors in a Sundberg, CYC: 13) Blue Maxi.-~~~~!~~~~~ clean sweep or L<is Angeles (Ericson-39) Bill Lewis, WYC. Yacht Club 's Slater Memorial CLASS A -(I) Ya Turko: Trophy regatta for the Soling 12) Sundancer : (3) Aquavit Class. ' (Morgan-42 ) Ch r is Hansen, Fifteen of the speedy Olym- pic type boats turned out for CYC. the regatta which was sailed CLASS B - (I) Illusion both inside and outside Los (Newporl-41 ) Ed McDowell, ~ngeles Harbor in moderate KHYC: j2) Diabetical Ill, breezes.· (Cal-37 ) Marcia Campbell, The Slater f\.1emori1:1l is one of the oldest kudos in ABYC. southland yacht racing. For CLASS C -(I) Sigame ~ SAFECO INSURANCE CLASS B -(1) Aloha II, Glenn Reed. SSSC: ( 2 ) Goldilock! II. Ed Arnold. BCYC: (3) Star Shine, Bill von KleinSm id, NHYC. Ten crack Lid<rl 4 skippers from J\i exico City pitted their talent against a like number of American sailors in the annual U. S. -Mexico International Team Race Saturday and Sun- day -and lost. many years is v.·as s ail.ed (Cal-36) Sid Renkow, DRVC; moderate on Saturday and Burke Cochran, Paul Huhay, in six-meter yachts. Final 12) Donna J. !Cal-36) John •FIRE •AUTO •BOAT •HOME light and variable on Sunday. Dick Van Duze.r. Dudley results: Roberts. CYC; .(3) Pericus • BUS IN ESS Mexican skippers v.•ere Tony Johnson. Tom Schock. Dean (11 ?ifoby Duck, lAwell I Ericson-41) W. V. Wright, Arnal. Enrique E 1 g u er 0 . HoJ)e. Gared Smith, Herb North. SDYC; 12) Fi I et • HHYC. B b p I & A • I - Fernando Orti• Monestc'rio. Al Riley and Bill McCord. Martin Gleich. SOYC ; (31 ,,1, CLASS 0 -(1) Blue Max; 0 a ey SSOCHI es Denniston, Ivor Vt' e s I J e y, Troph_v presentation fol\ov.'-de Fleur, Don 81.'var. SWYC; 121 Adventure (Morgan-33) Ernesto Traulson. Luis Poro. <'d a gala farewell dinner for 14~ All Out. Bob Burns. CYC: Jim Foyer, CYC: 13) The Odd 474 E. 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA 175 Yachts In Harbor The Mexican le.arn was the defender of the Sombrero Trophy, the coveted award that is sailed for alternately in .the U.S. and on Lake Valle de Bravo near ~texico City. Carlos Diener . Bob Colliard the ~lexicans at Balboa Yacht !Sl Green Flash, Ben ?iiitchell, Couple IEricson-35) Ron Lee. 642-6500 546-3205 end Jose l\.1orales. A n 1 __c:c~lu~b~S~u~n~da~y~in~g~b~l.-----~C~Y~C~. _________ _::o~R2Y~c:_. ________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cup Regatta The American team won by a score of 1181.i:! points to 162 for the visitors. Reverse scor- altcrnale skipper v.·as Barbara Denniston . 'fhP American team was composed of Bob Perpall, GOLF TIPS l'no s ~~-' Lt.., ic•r• 111ckodts • GM<! ihtr1 One hundred and seventy-" wa, u."f:U. G•m• -~·•c•lc• u ·~• ·five boats in 17 classes turned The th ree races were sailed NEWPORTER INN nut Saturday and Sunday for from Lido Isle Yacht Club 3 PAR GOLF COU RSE Newport Harbor Yacht Club's with the teams split into two d · · Sl .DO with thl1 od wMk doys annual Spring Gold C u P, =~' ;v~;;s~1~o~n~s~.~~W~in;ds~=w;e~r~ed:;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:1 Regatta. Final Resulls: Ir PC j 5)-(I ) Belisarius. Lar- ry Pinching, VYC. P..CAT (18)-(1) No Way, Tom Omohundro, BCYC: f2) Aquariwi, Norm Marchment, MYC: (3) Turtle, Bob Baker, CBYC: (4) Banshee. Ken Bartlett, ABYC; 15) Turkish Delight, Alex Tschaikowsky, MYC. FLYING JR (6)-(ll Half- Meler, Tom uilson, ABYC. FI NN (5)-(1) Flutte rby, Allen Heller. BCYC. · RHOOF.S-33 111 )-(11 SST. Bill Taylor. BVC: (2) Folly 11, Blair Barnette. BYC: (3) Madness, Skip Elli ott, NHYC. SOLING (7)-11) Fal Boy, Ray Booth. BYC: !2l Gold Digger. Roger Wel sh, NHYC. L U 0 E R S-16 ( I 2 ) -~I) Haiku. Rick Gantner, NHYC; <2) Kildee, Ben Hromadka . LYC; (3) Pre-Empt, Leroy Sutherland. NHYC. THISTLE (7)-jl) No. 1347, Skip Kempff. eve . 11\'1'. 14 !9)-( I I Fox. Tim Murison. VVC ; <2) Pursuit, Charles Starke. PVSA. KI TE A 110)-tl l Aqua Lung. Hu~o Schmidt. NHYC: 121 No. 159. Bob Ba rry. LIYC: (3 ) Pip. Phil .R amming , NHYC. KITE B 18)-j\) Green Bomb. Page Camlin. NHYC: f2l Grimey Ill. Chris Coffin. NHYC: i3l Perigrene. Bill Rice. NHYC. SH IELDS 1131-t I\ Alleen. Guv Doran, LA YC ; ( 2 ) Torina. Howard W right . NHYC : 13) Jean , Cari Re inh a r I . NHYC : l4) Josephine. l\1ary Hyde, SVC LID0-14 A t22l-!I\ \Vood Wind, Harrv Wood . ABYC; '-r _ l Upset. Al ·Perez. BYC: !3) Wild Wind. Dale Berkihiscr. ABYC : I 4 I All 's \\'ell. Dennis Parker. t\HYC : 151 Snoopy. Dirk L1nebergcr. ABX!;. LIDQ.14B t71-i t l Spider \\leb, Don ~'ebb. BVC: t21 Karat. F.d r.o!d. VYC: Clf Tenacious. B ~ I l v Brooks, eve. · SABOT A-(11 1-1 1) Racing f\.iachine. Mark r. a u d i o , NHYC; 12\ Ocean Toad. ,._1arc Hinshaw, LTYC: 131 Bug. Bet- tina Bents. NHYC. SABOT B ffll -1J1 Pooph. Susanne Auber!. NHYC SABOT C ( 19)-fl l Noony. Brad Blaes. SSSC: (2) Sunkist. John Lord. BYC: (31 No. 3740. Wendy Aen!s. NHYC : I 4) Fidget IL Mike A rrigo, NHYC; (5\ Da phne. f'rank Bruder. NHYC. Pilot Pete Sez : BETTER HURRY Set Your Cap for a Bargain DAILY PILOT 2-for-1 Day At Angel Stadium Sunday, May 16 at 1 p.m. T!.e OAllY PllOT wil( 9'•• vou on1 f,,, 11~! for •••rv 1d i•c1"I 111f vou ''''"' lo It • +!.1 C11ilorni1 An91 l1 pl1y ;~. Milw1vk11 8rewera . 2 TICKETS FOR $3.50 or $2.50 You t•~ '''''"' two •••h o• l~t whol 1 bill perk . .Si,.,plv g•t your partv lo9tlh11 new ind '"Iii t~1 order bl1nli below wit~ chi de er montv order l"o ca1h, pl1111) i nd hvrry . 011 dl i~e 101 Bring a Busload ... 2-for-1 offer good for groups, too • Little League teams • Sunday School classes • The office gang • Your neighborhood BUT YOU MUST ACT NOW ,---------1 Clip ond '"oll. with th.ck or '"•n•y erder, to: I z • fer • 1 A.119el Doy I Oro119e CCHlit Dolly l'llot '\ I C/0 l'Mbllt S~rv/ce 0.pt, lJO W. low Str .. 1, Costo Mno, Calif. f26 27 I M••• thecks ,ownblt to tho DAILY l"ILOT ll'LEASE f'R INT) I !··-................................. ; ....... , do~~=~~~: s~fpeipfn~1~a~ 1 1 :-.,"' :::::::::::~:::~::::::::::::~~~~·:%1:::::::::::: I tional Regatta at King Harbor 1 •• "·, · ~·;0·,~; -~,· ~.· '4'. ·;.· ~: ·1·0· ·,'d1~,·,·,· ,;, .. ,, :;~· ~~~~ J · Vichi Club Saturda y and SW\· ~li ss iou Ba y Takes Regalia day, laking lhe rirst thret of 11rier0 '· · · · · · · " yo• ••11t '"or•I ro"'"" ... ..,., ell Meted the top five places in lhe: 18· t°'4tltet-, ot tlll' Mor 16 A.114111 n . Mllwo11kM torM e1 A11•· I boat rleet. F'lna l resulU: 11tel111 Stodl•111, For •oc:h tlcllot pMrcho1e4. I wlll m tl¥t •11 -'""' (I) Easy Rider, J f' r f l«tfll .... fieo fro'" '"• DAILY 'ILOT. I WOftt SJ.!IG /Sl.50 I Lenhart, 1'-18VC: (2) Morgan) 1 I Circle 01101 tickeh, lncloMd h S ........ 111 poy1M11t for ~LeFeye, Dave Pe t e r 1 IJ n , llelf ttt. "''""' •f tkk•t1 I 11...,. ,..4, .. tod. 1 undorit•ttd I MBYC: 131 No namr., Tom i tltk•11 will II•''"' to'"' br '"•It. 1 1111•,.1•11d ,.,.,.tell be Nute; MBYC: (4) Bird, Jim· j .. •itflOIHJe II I l•t•r doclde to 11urcfl-111101• tl~••h. Boldl, KHYC; (51 The Golden ------------Duck, Doug De SollZa, sovc.._ . ._ ___________________ ,, Tire sale! Wide profile 4 ply polyester cord. Ye~. you cen 1! I f'en"lr> h••VJ duty 1110C• 11.tt .n .. 1 ... 1•n.-1·on t>y • Peft"'\'S Aulo Ce1111r. due to <M'et1w• ,.,,1.,,111 or ,.or~'lltft· lhlp Ol wflfO~! .. ftj(e tnt ono•nll 1>u•cll111r o ..... 11h1 cu. tu.it «in· •Moot Cir& t•<t us •nd • P•~n•rt 101c"ot iol1 .. m ••Pl•<• Foremost* heavy duty ~":0d:~"!';-~":·z.~~~ shock absorbers. B ring c~....;•~·-· -----'1 back that new car feel· ing, extra control. Shock lnstallatlon special, 991-••· Fletta s eat cover1 in various colors, sizes fo r a new .. car look. 24ss · 95 plus 1.76tod. taxll1Clold.,. 650--13 blackwall tubelea Aeg.19.95 Sale prices effective thru S1turd1y. Foremost® GP 4-78 with 33 months guarantee. Bl1ckw1ll tubeless Size Fed. tax Reg. Sale 700·13 ••••••• 1.95 ••••••• 22.50 ••••••• 19.50 C78·1 4 ••••••• 2.07 , •••••• 22.50 ••••••• 19.50 560-1 5 ••••••• 1.74 ••••••• 22.50 ••••••• 19.50 E78-14 ••.•••• 2.21 ••••.•• 24.50 •••••• , 21.50 F78· 14 , ••••• , 2.38 ••••••• 26.50 • , : •••• 23.50 F78--15 ••••••• 2.42 ••••••• 26.50 ••••••• 23.50 G78--14 • , ••••• 2.55 •••••• , 28.50 ••• , • , • 25.50 H78--14 • , , , ••• 2.74 ••••••• 30.50 . •••••• 27.50 G78·15 , •••••• 2.64 ••••••• 28.50 ••••••• 25.50 J 78·14 ••••••• 2.91 ••••••• 32.50 ••••••• 29.50 H78--15 ••••••• 2 .80 ••••.•• 30.50. •••••• 27.50 Whitewalls only $3 more. Plus fed. tax and old tire l l MON"THS C UAfilANTl:C WITH 10 MON"THS IO°"'Al.1.0WANCI: Fortrno1t l>roltf;tlon Gu1 r1nttt. Yo1ir fortmoll llro P!'OIK· lion 9\ltrtntee covers 111 Foremo1l p1nente• tlre1 (t•toPI Ollr 1oocl1! 1PP!lc1tlon trre1 tn 1eo1 r1t1 9v1r1nt101) 191!n1t 111 ro1a 111z1rd or defect 11Hu 1. Yov .,, protected IOI' tntonll•• 1t1t1d montns ol 91111111 e. II your ti•• ft llJ d111lng trie 9u1•~ntee pe•lod, r11urn it u1 1no -wll!, 11 oc.ir OPtlon l rt Pl Ir yovr tire, or mtkl 1n llowt"t• b111d on tno orl9ln1 pur,n11e Price, 1>c(lvaln9 appllc1Dle ftdtrfl Excise T••• tow1ra th• purchaw of 1 "ew U••. WI wlU lllOW JOO'llo ol tl'le orl9ln11 ovrch11-1 prlct, '"~1uo1n9 1ppl/c1b!1 f1d1r11 Excl1• T1•, dv•l11g 11'1' 100% lllOWll\CI peJlod. Tnere11!••· •• Wiii allow !IO'lo o• 2~'11, of tr.1 otl9>1lill purcn1l'I pn,e, exe1uo1n4 11>Pl\ctble Ftdl•ll E~cl1t Tit•, tow"O the pvrcr.1 .. ol 1 n1w t1r•. (See cn1rt below), feoe111 Ext!1e Tix 1d)v1tment 1!1ow1nc1 wlll 1>1 m1de on tne b1111 ol th• pereent ot tn. orl9!n11 t•••d remaining. FO AEMOST PROTECTION CUA RANTEE CHART HERE'S HOW YOUR CUAAANiEE WORKS: Entlr• 9u1r1fltlt p1rto d •. , •• , .... , . • • •• .. • ..••. ll month I 100%1llow1ne1 Jt rlod , , •,, .•• ••• •••• , • ••• .... 1·10 manl hl SO'llo 1llo w1n1;1 ptrlod • , •. , ............. ••• •• 11·11 "'on tl'll 2S'11, 1llow1n1;1 period •... , • , , -, • , ........... 20•3J menll'lt Tr11d L.11• ProttcUon. We tiv!la Into every foremo1t Uri 1•!• tr1c1 lan 1ndlc1IO•l. ir.ey 1!9011 when yovr tlr• 1llould b-. 1e pl1c1d. II your II•• .. -11r1 out ft~c•ot IOI' lntor~k l 1119nmenl) -will m1~t 1n 111ow1nt1 bu .. 11 on th• orl91n1f ourcll111 price, e•c!vaing 1oollc1b1t Ftd1r11 Excl1• Tix, 1ow1rd th• pvrc111ie ol 1 new \lr1. Wt wln 111ow 1/l Clurln9111e first 11111 or 111. dvrln9 tlle '1•tona n.il ot th• n11u1 month1o r gv1r1n1ee. f1d1r1r Licise T1• 1C1 junmtnt 111ow1no:o 1Jrill b9 mall• on !ho bl$11 ol tl'll P•rc1nt ol 11'1• origl,._, trt.14 rtmtonlng. l"nis 9u1r1"t11 ~ not tr1ns11r1ri11. II b Ol'll)' fOf P'Tl tl p11HOget ... n or P.&1io.rl9er st1tlon WI~ Penneys Service Only 588* For our 1·2·3 lube service 3 doy1 only! (Mon. Tue .. Wed.) Here's what we do: change oil (up to 5 qts. of Foremoet" hertvy duty moloroil). ins!all new oil filter, complete with a chassis lube. •Mott AMet1c:1n ~,. sho p 12 to\ Su nda ys, too. at an y of these Penney Auto .Centers:FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach, HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt;nglon Beach. Use Penney• nma Payment Pla n. ' . • ' • ' • . • • • • • • • • • • Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! I 1. Stovt 29. Bicycle 57. Electric Train 2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter 51. Kitten 3. Beby Crib 31. Bar Stools 59. Cl111ic Auto "'· Electrlc Saw 32. Encyclopedi1 60. Coffee Table S. Camera 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61 . Motorc:ycle 6. Washer 34. Tropic1I Fish 62. Accordion 7. Outbo1rd Motor 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Skit I. Stereo Set 36. Fiie Cabinet 64. TV Set 9. Couch 37. Goll Clubt 65. Workbench 10. Clarinet 38. Sterling Sliver 66. Dlemond Watch 11. Refrigerator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart 12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68. Ironer 13. Sewing Machine 41. Slide Profector 69. Camping Tr1il1r 14. Surfboard "42. lawn Mower 70. Antiqu• Furniturt 15. Machine Tools 43. Pool Table 71 . Tape R.corder 16. Dishwasher «. T ire• 72. Sailboat 17. Puppy 45. P iano 73. Sports Cir 18. Cabin CruiHr 46. Fur Coat 74. Mattress Box Spg1 ,· '1£• I'; t' 19. Golf Cart 47. Drapes 75. Inboard Speedllott 20. Barometer 48. linens 76. Shotgun 21 . Stamp Collection 49. Horse n. Saddle 22. Dinette Set 50. Airplan• 78. Dart Geme 23. Pity Pen 51. Organ 79. Punching leg ' 24. Bowling Bell 52. Exercycl• 80. Biby C1rri1ge 25. Water Skis 53. R•r• Books 81 . Drums 26. FrM11r 54. Ski Boot1 82. Rifle 27. Suitcast 55. High Chair 83. D11k 21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA Gttr can ba turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT. WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! , DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 These or any other exms things around th• houM i • ' "\ ' . Monday, M1y J, 19n OAll V PILOT fS ~--~~~--.----- . • .&.I. 1 ~--•L':'t .. ·,~.-·-\ ~...-.. ~' .,.... .... I ,;' DAILY PILOT WANT ADS The Blgge•t Sl1t11le llfitrketplaee on The Ol'ange Co•ut •Phou" 842-5878 General Gtn•r•I Gtner•I General General =======...: olJnJa J~fe PR ESTI GE WATERFRONT HOMES ''DREAMS" DO l'OME TRUE. Owner wlll carry the loan on this cha rming two bedroom hide. awa.y. This dream home has a large bright kitchen with * '* * * * TAYLOR CO. * 12 Linda Isl• Driv• Elegant new 5 BR. 4l.t3 ba. home w/formal din. rm ., fa m. rm., \llet bar. Impressive en· try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500. For Complete lnform1tion on all homes & lots, please ,,11 : BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 133 Dovtr Dr., Suile 3, N.B. 642-4620 built ins, comfortable rear SPRIN(i SONGL living room, Sf'Cluded patio, Flowers, green la\vns & eool breezes! Imma· garage, work.shop and dark culate 3 BR condominium in 'J'he Bluffs. room. All this on COSTA Popular "Linda '' rnod el. By ~ppt. $43,500 1'1ESA'S EASI'SlDE for only "Our 16th Year'' $25,ooo. R I l,31 .... •-~I WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., t!Gtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro1d NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General ~~-·---·--l ·G_•_n_tr_,.•,...1 _____ =---=--;;;; OWNERS LOSS - PAY TAXES?? Ptndlnn 646·0555 COLLEGE PARK YOUR GAIN RENTING?? ~ -BEAUTIES-Seller muist sacrifice $7,000 Now·1 the lime to invf'st In Foreclosure Evenings Cllt M2~7438 -or extras in his lovely tv.'o a home to save on taxes SUBMIT OFFERS Under VA r (Ii_ 2".,66 Colgate ... BR + story, Four Bdrm. Tlu'ee next year. Approx. $30,00 Notice of default has bl'en bath home \Vith sunken liv· per mo. savings on thi£ 3 hied on this big. beautHul Appraisal ~~m ily rrn., ~shag carptg, ing Rm., Din. Rm., Elect. bedroom beauty. G.J.'s no split level home in ~1esa $]] 750 aterfa]J$30"' s'ooar yard. 8/1 Ki t., Bk!!!!, Rm. and money needed with total Vl"rde. Perfect for large 1 • lal'ge Fam. Rm. Beautilully payment of approx. $161.00 family with 5 bedrooms. 3 Clo~e to SL Joh~s you'll lind i2.\ l38 \\'est brook -3 BR w/ draped and carpete d per month includl's all. baths, huge family room this neat as a pin 4 bedroom, pool, larj!:r rorner 101. throughout. Three car gar~ li(m'le ha s &II that you need \\'ith fireplace. Loaded with 2 bath home: All roonis. are $32,500 age-professionally \andscap. and more. FULL PRICE ls thousands of dollars in im-largt> Including extra large (3.) 725 Tulane -4 BR cus-l>d. ASSUME EXISTING $22,950. You ctuft &Hord to proven1ents and t>xtra fea-~inn ily 1~111• This is the-tomized hon1r . 2200 sq. ft. r .H.A. loan or rt!finance to I luN'~. including co1nplt'!f' icleal locat1~n for al! school~ of ll1xury Jiving. See the your choice. Priced for a rent any anger. CALL. fuund11tion for 2·story addi-and shopp111g. All IC'rms \'C'ry b(>s1. quick sale at only $39,950. Walker & Lee tion. Priced below mP.rktt ava\lable. No down VA·FHA. Realtors 1190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 54$-9491 Open 'Iii 9 Pl\1 value at $47 ,900, but submit O\\·ner transle~red to f'lori- all offt'rs! Phone ~6-2313 da and home is vacant and for information. n>11dy lo move in. Call 546-2313. Newport •• Fairview 1 300 ROBINWOOD LN. Isn't !hat a nloe sounding 11d- dress'!'! You should set' thr 1o ·THEREAL \'.'., ESTATERS •, . ., SALE OR LEASE 641>-1111 I (anyllmt)' 220 E.17tli 1..:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~1~-i::~~~~~~Z~~~! Evenings Call 644·7003 'O ' THE REl\L I'.'., ESTATERS "-' , l'L '•,• beautiful home that g()('~ ' . . v.·ith it. 5 bedrooms formal Almost 1mm~. possession on dining, fam ily roo~. huge th is spacious .l bedroom, 2 Realty Company master bf'droom suitP, alt bath. home. Co:.cy fireplace, FOR , • , ; Macnab·lrvine S-Orts of bathroomR and tons ~amily rm., all bit-ins., and THE DISCRIMINATE! of storage. A lovely·home on JUS1 around the comer ti:om L<lvely 2.story Spanish stylt'd . a sharp eastside tree lined thf'11tre. shops & market1?g. home \\'/4 BR 's beanied Bcauhfully red~ratrd 3 MOVE IN FOR SUMMER !REDUCED $2,000.I lanP.. S250/mo or $31.950 -which .1. FR ·, 1 . hedn:iom & fan1ily room COME . C 11 ce1 1ngs • • sw mming h 1 !AR OR lnGH , TAKE A LOOK f'ver comes l1r.;t. a pool . view • ou!door BBQ • omr near B ·u OPEN SAT & SUN !-:> 545-84 24 l C & ~• SCHOOL. Quiet cul-de-sac V.A. RESALE J que<;>n·sized bt'llrooms. .Great exlra large cul-de·sac lot. Anyone can take over subject to VA loan with a litlle dab of cash and pay· ments of $164 per month • includes all. CO r-.tAN GO! Walker & lee OR CALL 673-8550 ~r ga~age an unusu .... , strret. .N E\VLY CARPETED e quiunt w1nr cellar. S95,000. & DRAPED J . od 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams .' '-0 THE REAL '"-ESTATERS I • • ' ' . ust repaint 1llJl1W lfilil 100! ! .. 1rs truly in move-in I --'"~'-"'-""-''-' _o.:,""'=·~1.i_I '-9'-PM~'- ..-.... cond11Jon. Call lo see now. e NO DOWN e -:=zzzzzz~~ 642-8135 675·32:10 $34,950. on V,\ Jol:ln OC small dn. \Vilh -~-Iii fHA Darling, spotless 3 BR LJ Reduced $4,000 2 STOR-Y @ ~COATS 2 BA, ""''· '" bl1 '"" TRIPLEX BeauL 3 BR, 2 BA, plus w·x . STEAL , . W & Creal area. Just reduced 30, bonus rin. Cust. drps, nu~ lan1ast~c ha~a1n of ALLACE $1;!00. Owner muat sell. j Newpon Heights, Located on ihake rool, park like yards. only S26.950 includes 4 huKe REALTORS JEAN SMITH RLTR ... a tree-lined streel in a quiet 2200 sq. fl. of tamily living; bedroon1s, 15 x. ~O fam ily -546-4141-400 E. 17th St., C.M. &16-3255 area close to beaches boat-in per! cond. Owner desper-room. fonnal d1n1ng room. (Open Evenings) int, i;ebool & shoppina. 3 ate •. all terms _ iiubmit 3 baths, carpets and drapes !~~~..,~~~""'~ two bedroom unit& & enclos-YOUR offer Priced only thruout PLUS over 2000 sq.1;:1A D , W ., ed garagea on a ftt simple $28,950. Cal] .J.46·5&80. Open ft. No mistake or misprint. On t anter large loL NEW COPPER eves. ACT NOW. Trade yours! FHA·YA Terms p Lu MB ING. Recently Wa Iker & Lee Here is lhe cheapest 5 bed· painted in & out. Generously ~ ~~RIT8A1•Gfn roont home In ~1e11a Verde priced al only $'51,950. Be!-~ ~-7682 Edinger and 01vncr says to bring of· !er be quick, call NOW for (714) 842-445.l or 540-5140 fer~. It 's a 5 bedroom or 4 appointment lo inspect -bedroom and drn v.'ith 3 675-4930. I VIEW * * * * * * bathi; and abour XlOO !'Q. ft. &CO.I OF OCEAN & BAY HOME & INCOME """'" ., • '"'" "'"'' S would you enjoy vit'\\' of wa-BnJOy ~he comforts of lh1s and exce!lenl for a large l liiiiiOiiOiiOiiOii._iiO,ii•ii·•iiuii• iii ter or sparkling lights while very nice 3 bedroom 2 bath family. If you want value BALBOA ISLAND Spacious 3 Bedroom ApartmeTJI in the Rear of full size R..2 Jot with Room 10. build Home or 2nd Rent&I $53.000 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 LIDO ISLE REDUCED! B3l1ront home w/pier & slip -immaculate, w/custon1 de- cor thruout. 4 Bdrms., fam. rm., din. rm. Own.er can't use &. says "sell." Jus1 re- duced to $198,500. --Coldwell.Banker ~ dininJ,?, entertaining or just borne and let the 3 rental J'llus location. FHA or VA relaxing. See this spacious 3 units help you pay for the terms'! Owner asking $38. hedroom, 3 bath homf' with property. Only $59,500. • 950. call 546·2313. view lrom family, livini;: & Might lrnde for 3 bedroom fonnal dining & breakfasl condominium. \oTHEREAL \"-ESTATERS roo1ns. Call 646-7171 for ap-Amold & Freud "-" I I ', 1 •i 11 ' I rt polntment. 388 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa MISSION _ 646-7755 IMPOSSIBLE I * 5 BR • VACANT * To [ind a buyer who brlieves -=======:=='!Beaut. Harbor View Homes he can still ll:C'I a sharp. 1 POOL TIME res, iv/wet bar, lovely year young, 3 bedroom bar. \.oTHEREAL \"-ESTATERS ' ' ' '. I " " ' 1•r~ $24.95CI. 3 BR 2 BA, l8'x36' htd & fl trd pool, 3' x 10' deep v.·/div brd. Ell'cl bit in range &t oven, d8hwshr, eating bar, fam area. form \iv rm, upgraded crpts & drps, comp'! ff'ncd I; Ind· scpd, oversized dbl gar. $2,;...oo dn. carp.: self-cleaning ovens, gain wlth thick shag car· incl. quick possess. Owner pets, patio. built-ins, d!sh- anxious. $59,500 Jnclud!ng washer, and jog lo the the l!!nd. beach. WOW-$23.500! Should CORBIN• yoc ae<>ept this mission ! MARTIN Walk~~,o~ Lee 7682 Edinger REAL TORS 644-7661 !71-1! 824-445.'l or 540-5141) l l * MESA VERDEjt MESA VERDE l.ov<ly, Imm". horn•. IOI Hl-4471 ( ::::) 54'·11DJ Olloriog. s .. 01. groood•. GOLF COURSE BE HAPPY' Cov. patjo. 3 Bn. & fa.m Uy A lop golf course location • rm., 2 baths. $.~7.500 wilh a breathtaking vitw. 5 Temp1 atlon beckons whi"n George Wllll•mson bedrooms or 4 bedrooms & you Sl'i" lhi~ 2 BR Dream REALTOR df'n, 3 baths, fonnal dining House. Quir.t and cozy, t:om-673--4350 645-1564 Evei; and breakfast room. It is p~etely fenced for your hap· HILLTOP l BR · al<;a lhe most inexpensive ptness. $2·1.900. golf coune home in Me.~a Jn Corona di"I Mar. Priv, Vf'rrle by far at $48,500. Call Vlnco RealtY hf'ach access. Lge. & lovely 646-717j. $49,500 833.0700 644-2430 2029 Harbor, CM &15-0033 Home Show Realtors "Armchair Househuntlng'" 3!>35 E. Coast Hwy., CdM II!!!!!"'""'""""'"'""'"""'"" B/B 22 YEARS OF REAL ESTATE SERVICE IN TifE HARBOR AREA Delightful Westcliff Recently redecor. & carpet- ed; 3 bdrms., 2 bath~. with lee. paneled den &. spacious rooms. $49,500. 675-3000 m II," ~ llE \C'll' ' llEAU'\' I NC 1£•,t 111q t 1\J~no 1 REPOSSESIONS Spatkllng ele&n ~me1, some. newly painted &. carpe!ed. 2 3,4 k 5 bdrm&. Some. with pools. FHA-VA conv. !erms, from $20,000 to $40,000. Collins &. Watts Inc. 184.l Adams Ave. 982-552.1 * SACRIFICE * 3 1-"A}.f. rm., 2 b11 ., 2 car 1ar, Assume VA loan of $26,250: $1500 Tota.I down C&ll: P11.t Wood 54>2300 Scenic Prtiperti11 675-5726 N.B. Open daily 1·5 44U RIVER AVE, -VACANT Near ocearf,' 3 RR, 2%. Ba, new crpts & redecorat'!d. f'irepl in thf! master bdrm, lrg. liv. rm w/firep!, bltins, dbl gar. Good financing av1til. Ov.·ner will trade for ·ro·s or subm lt. Lac henmyer Realtor CALL 1146-39'!8 Eves: 838·9068 675-7225 BAYFRONT DUPLEX HARBOR HIGHLANDS Pier &. float : 011 bii;:-bay: IMMACUL.ATE 3 bedroom, 2.2 Bdrm. units one 1v/2 1% bath~. fireplace, wall to baths. Sl07,000. • Call Jor wall carpeting and covered app't. patio. Excellent landscap-Call: 673-3663 968·7015 Eves Ing, double garaae and fenc- ed yard. $34,500, Pet• Barrett Realty 642·5200 associated BA:OKEA:S-REAL TOA:S .2025 W Bolboo 611·)66) MOVE HIGH UP $24,950 WITH A LOW DOWN FHA/V/!. Undtr Construction rabu!oulf 2 stories. 4 & 5 Outstanding 3 bedroom, 2 To be con1pleted this sum• bf'droom s starting at $16,000. h.11th, new carpelin.i.:. large !1'rr. 5 bedrm, 5 ba. home $2!!,oo:>, $.11.~iOO. $3J.9j(), covered p~tio. ehi ldrens play 1n !he'ir•nd manner. !<.tag· $39 950 f'l r AU. TERMS house. Ri'.AD'i t'OR YOU, nif1cen1 B11ck 011y view! ' ' . · '. HARRY A. BOGGS ROY J. WARD Rl TR. Walker & Lee REALTY 968-.'l5£5 10.i.1 ~!11.riners, Dovl'lr Shor_,, 20-43 Wt-stelirt Drive Gl&-7'1't l Open '!ii 9 PM OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1·5 * CANAL FRONT * MG·la.'J(l Open Dally 3 BR. ]%, ba. A-Frame 2 REPOS, 2-5 BR, 1111 trms llty. Sandy beach, hos.Ung WANTED & fish.Ing at your door! 3 1'0 '1 Bdrn1 .. 2 halh plus $37.~l()O. fa mily rm,; 2,001 + sq. rr., CAYWOOD REALTY w/JlOOl nr a.re:"· Approx. 5 16532 Los Verdtl 6306 w. Cos.st Hwy., NB .Y~. or .Youni;:~r. S60-$70.000. A 4 heclroom home whh 541-ll90 Hope Gerr ie Re1lty eathedr11l cell!nr~ In th!'! &15-4400 64>.1.120 Me1dowl1.rk Counll'y Club Repo1, 2.s BR, All tr1n~. The fastest draw in the Wesl area. $38,000, call ~1\-2313/ CAll Pit \Vood Ma-2.100 .• a Daily PUot Clauitied LIVE IN ONE, let 2 apts. pay the bill. Buy a triplex. V .A. TERM3. 4 BR. 2 ba. home, xtnt Joe. SEE LEE BKR. Repos, 2-5 BR, all trms. Call Pat Wood 54~230I Scenic Propertie:c 6~57:l6 Trader's Paradise column is for you! 5 Lines, 5 Days for $5. Call today .•• &12-5673.. General IORISI E 01.SO~ '" Nl.A L l <JR ., OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MESA VERDE BARGAIN Iring A Point lrusll \Vow? Ju9t listed below rnarket. Some elbow gi•C'a.se a can or tv.'o of vaint and she'll look like nev.·. Spllnlsh tlle entry. Ankle deep 1hai:· CfUTICIS. \VALL T 0 WALL FIREPLACE. 4 large bedrooms PLUS library. Formal dining 1·oom. Unbelievable low price. Vets move in far as little as $1.000. Hurry it's a bargain. Dial 645-0303 HOLD ONTO YOUR HAT! No lj)ualllylog At 61/• 0/• Your chance to take ad· vantage. Owner just up and 1noved away. Gor- grous SP ANIS ti STYLE home. Nev.·er. Bright cheery living room. CRACKLING ADOBE ARCHED FIREPLACE. Thick lush carpell. J'am· lly room. SO ft. of kitch- en counter. Extra. large back yard -all fenced. Take over 6% annual % rat(] loan, no' qualifying. IMMEDIATE POSSES- SION. Dial 645·0JOJ YOUR NOT TDO LATE If you \Vant to live nellr the beach. But we'll btt the prices, give you 2nd thoughts! See thla one. Owner must sell. Cute M a bugs ear. Sp«cious ~droo1n1. Ct.ndleU1ht dlnlns:: l'l'>Om. Bright cheery kitchen. Year around patio. Only 2 yel'lt'$ old. Won't Jut. Hurry dial 643-0303. ' IORISI L fll \O\ H .l' A I ' fJ ~ ' 2299 Harbor. Cbala MM ;.. _____________________________________ ,We'll help you 1tll! &42-!'i!Tt 842·2535. Sctonic Prnperllf'I 675-5726 Ad, 64.2-5678 ,! • ·1 ( ... ' . . ,· •. . .•. . ' .. PAil y PllOT . ... ' ' ' --·--. . . . . .. . . •• ;.tj • ' . . , . Everyone Hu Something The l Som eone Else Wonh DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Fin d It, Trade It With e Wa nt Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ' - I I~!~ .... I~ I • --_ ..... l~I _,,, .. I~ 1:-I -;;;;;;;;;;;l"'*;;;;;;l~;;1[~---... _ .. ~'~~ I _ .... I~ .__I -~-·:: ... __,! ~ . __ ._._.1_._ .. _''_' _ _, r.il _ General ~ ~'t12cs~r64? Jicaf ty,.. NEW LISTING -Beautiful 5 bedroom Repul>- J1c homes, sp.J it Ieial, with largf!.game room and formal Jiving room , both with stone fire· places. This is a popular fioor plan, much in demand and this home bas ·some view. Just listed at $48,950. HIDDEN 1 STORY -Popular Pacesetter in the. heart of Atesa Verde has been enlarged to include 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room, formal dining and lovely living roorn. Every- th~g \Vas done well. Large .trees, mature n~1ghborhood and location close to park and school. Owner askilig $49,500. GOLF COURSE -Super clean famil y hotne \vlt~ 4 bedrooms, large family room and low maintenance yard, near the entrance to Mesa Verde C.C. In like ne\v condition. Offered at ;59,500. "lu£sf\ier6e3?ea(~ 21SQ Mes• Ver de Dr. • Co1t1 Mesa • Phone S46-5990 Geher•I G eneral * * * * * Attention Realtors * SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE Js pleased to announce the opening of their second office at 1500 Adams Blvd.. Costa Mesa. This of/ice is located on the ground floor adjaceQt to the main entry of the multi· story professional building. \\'e are presently seeking 3 experienced and professional 1nen or women (brokers or as- sociates) to complement this exceptiona l lo- cati.on. Should you be contemplating a change please contact Al Black at 545-3424. * BONUS PLAN TO 84 % * * * * * !Hore Real E•tat.e on Preredlng Page General Newport Shorn Mini-Palace Charming master bedroom . sittina; room suite with fire- place plos guest bedroom 1 and exciting po\\·der room. Lovely. low maintenance lt:r cation 1vith appealirw patio. Lu."ury living at the modest pri~ o. $29.500. Don 't mi1s seelng this one. Call 641).nn. 10THEREAL \'"'\., ESTATERS ' ·. . . BUILDERS CLOSE-OUT \\'r have 8 triplcxr!\ fol' $a8,JOO <'ach. 0\\'nCJ'!I unH G.r1er1I --------NO DOWN TO VETS JO'U Down to othl!rs, la11::e 3 bedrm w/hrdvtd fln, bltns. rox20 nimpus rm, blck ¥:all encl rear yard. VA apPrais- ed at •••.. $24,600 S BR t. FAMILY Spacious Contemporary i\1esa Ven:Je home on large cor· ner lot. Dlvorct Sale. Su~ m11 oUen. VA appraised has 3 bed1wms. '.! bath.~. 1ittpTace. Jnconil" ts $.).)0.00 1 On The Canal General BEACH PAIJ.$140 MO. ' POOL -$17 ,900 Wo11"! Just listed I: its great. Relax I: enjoy lite, No u~ keqi WOtTies. 2 Jg. BR. suite. Gourmet all elec. kit· ehen incl. dryer I: refrig. Private 20· patio. 2-car ga- rage. ommunity clubhouse, tMniS COW15 & pool!. Very 1011• down 1vith payments much c~aper than rent. Uu1n • 1v°Oll'tlast. Call 171'41 9&2-0.>85. fll/!l.\T L 01.\0,~ , .. PE 'f lfO ~S 1913 Brook.hunt Ave. JfunLington Beach FHA·YA $29,950 Thcrr'& not many homes in l\lesa Verde U1al v.•111 sell under government !inane. ing Here's One: * 3 Bedrooms • 2 Baths * Large Living Room - • Nice size Family Room * Enclosed aluminum pa tio '!t Room for boat or trailer caII to inspect lh1s J.hatp home. ~2313 10THEREAL \'"'\., ESTATI:RS " I • ' BY OWNER ASSU.\tABLE ~~~-~ VA LOAN Sl.&o mo. includes all 3 BR. 1~2 BA. Hdwd Ooorti. 11•/11• cpts in /i\'lllf: rm, hallway & J BR, rusiom 1 drps 111 livin:: l'ni, dining area, master BR a.nd l other BR. BJt.jn range &. oven. Nr new disb\.\·asher. flag. JtlOne p8li0, bll·in BBQ. fied.,rood fenced y a r d. Across fron1 new itchool, K·8th grade. Bus to nearby Jr-High &c high school. 2 bl.ks lo shopping &. SD free- \vity. Asking $24,900. \\'ill oonsider all "TERl\1S". S.17-7181, no sat. calls please. DUPLEX Qu iet cul-de-sac. \Valk lo shopping. Prime residential Joe, Xtra, xtra sharp 2 bed· rooms each, t..1anlcurtd yards. Best hWT)', at Sl),000. Call 5>4~8424 9.fil!,1hiil 4 BEDROOM Nrar E.ttancia High SC:hool. Full prlee S25.9j(), Crpts, rli-Ps. lari:e cncloS«I pallO, terms ot cour11e for a low do"·n payn11. Best 4 BR buy oI the year. Call :;.l(}.11:>1 Open eves. Corona del Mar 320 IRIS CORONA DEL ~tAR OPEN ?llON, ntURS & f'RID:\Y 1-4 Charming v.·ell decorated 2 Bt-droom 2 bath home sou1h of thi-Coast highway ANO E11t Bluff Huntington Beadt e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e SALES • I.EASES HUNTIN&TON BEACH {;st J1,1st listed, th!1 south Glen , l\la.r 4 bedroom, 2 b" a t h home has ne\\·er s c.u- pel!, 'l'.'Ood kitchen ~Well, 4 BR $29,900 Just ~-Newport Heli:htl arta ol Costa l\1eaa, • bdrms, 2 b!lths oo qull!t atreet. l&rie R·2 lot w/aJJey, Great home; for irnprov&o runt &: value. Anxious, h!ll'- cy \\'ilh offer. Condominium• for 111• ''° CAREFREE LIVING Spacious ?. story Condo. 2 BR, 1~~ BA. Fireplace, All mt-ins, WIW cpll, drpg. Private patio. }luge pool, ncrTation room. Laundl')' f.&ellltlea. OWNER MUSI' SEU.I 349-0674 Lots for S•I• 171 CHOICE lot. 100 x 135 R-2 pav!d a!le)I. 348 E. Rochester St, 01 clo5e to 1 Tth St aboppin; a r • a '"""" 67$-9509 ' Mount•in, Desert, Resort 11•. SACRIFICE Golf course lot, Apple Valley Baysk!e Drive. TDe leul ex-2-114 Vl1ta Del Oro pensive home of ANY kind Newport Beach 644-1133 Jn this location. At only 2 BR, 1% Ba, trpl, pt..tio, S.U.900. Come take a look or pool. Adults. in;; mo. n 1 2 car garage, built-ills &: a. rear patio area. Price jW1t S28.!l00. Cali 842-2535 for ~ pointment, CA.LL e 646·1•1• "••'lie. Jncom• Property 16' Sl3,000. Owner must M!U. Glnny Morrison, a. I en t $6SS PER MO. INCOME M<>-2286 call j13-8530. 644·U62, 834·34ro work. Fount•in Valley '10 THE REAL, ··.'"'\.. ESTATERS• r.J:ALTY N••r N••J•rl •••I Offle• W1.fhnln1t1r 10 THE REAL \'"'\., ESTATERS Huntington H•rbour MOST FOR THE SUPER SHARP Hua:e bedrooms. 2 baths ee.ch. ··I ·20,:.CA-CRES==-n-, °'l"'nt'",.-:c,,.-:-.,:-;-10;;-.I t.laplftcent fireplace a. n .d Ora nae County. $300. pl'r &f. built-In kltcllen irace this SOOD do"'n $60 mo. To 1~ "4 Pl.EX' near rel~ble pariy. Owner <1lll So. Coast Plua. Nil vacan-l45-J030 cy. Impressive units worthy ;=c:;:=-,-,-----1 Of your excellent investment. Real Estate '-" . . . MONEY I WATERFRONT 3 BR, 2 ba On e.'rtta nice 4 bedroom ind Submit your terms. owner Exchange W .. xlba"1k· '°e-r & lee ...,.HA"'""'vc:-E ..;;........ __ 607 CARNATION FANTASTIC! w/garden sundeck &: boat family room Sol Vista home Neat as a pln _quick poises. ONLY $30,5001 d_ock. $81,000 or leue/o~ in \Vestminater, Profession· 112 Spac. kitch. w/blln. nook. VACANTI 4 BR, 1 BA lion. 644-fl32, 644-4221 ally decorated a nd land- f'ormal dining rm. 2 Lovely Paneled d t' n, sprinklers * \VATERFRONT • 3 BR, 3 scaped aod on a quiet cul- Bdrms. $39,950. Call for ap-block wall. VA/FltA tenns1' BA, wet bar. 40' dock. de.sac .11treeL \Vhat nwre NE\V Office Buildin& \\'/SlOO K equity. S27K Net Income p'!. HAFFDAL REAL TY S83.000. Owner 846-145'1 could you want tor only Realtors MORGAN REAL TY 142-4405 Irvine $37,9SO 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams WANT 673-6642 67~6459 Eves: ~J-2446 142-1535 or 673-1550 ~ Open til 9:00 P~I VOGEL VALUE Garden Grove 4 BR & PLAYROOM SHARP WESTSIDE BAYFRO:'\'T House or Loi. Ne1vly painted small home Are offered with this 1700 i;q, TRIPLEX \V.R. DuBois: :H5-n66 plus iaragc apartment. Al· GARDEN Pk. Jmm~c 3 B~1; fl. townhouse, on choice 3 nifty 2 Bedroom units all Real Estat e Wanted 1M frllctive private patio. Close BA. lam rm. Assume .,,, ,reenbelt loc. Playground with hani\\'ood t'.loors, forc- ln location S4Zi,500. Vogel Co. loan. $29,990. Ownr. 897-2744 equipm't., pools &: bicycle ed air heat and either .se~ $4500 DOWN 2667 East Coast Hu'Y, Cdt.1. Huntinnton Beech paths clbse by. Children do I.al arate patios or sun deck \Vant 3 Br or 2 on lot CdM. • ·• fte•I Est•l•, 673-2020. not need to cross streets to GerMr•I suitable for an owner occu-\\'ill pay $200 mo, 7% inter. BROADMOOR VIE\Y home, fHA-221 02 PROGRAM reach \Mm! '.Th' We ~a pant. Need Possession June lat 4 BR, 21t ba. community for your children you ve Only $41,500 1971. P. 0 , Box 1287, AJ. ~.~zmi~;:,;~ viow Dr. 4 BR.-CHOICE Of 4 i "ringe &don1yhl34•l·""1.1. Acr••a•"for 1.1, 1so ca11 673~ ~·:;~: b~ ~=rch Bay 4 2 0 (1) pl W H ' or j Bdrm home. (Zl!) BR hous_e. ocean side, By Are there 5 in your family? ne U! acre, · un · 283-5210, (213) 681-8837 01vner, S4J,000. Yoo can probably qualify. Bch. Ideal site for units or 1 :~~~~~~~~~' * 673-1961 alt 5pm * Verv lo\v dn. 4 full bed· rest home. Chvner will car-1 -=*~~172~U°"'N~IT"'s==*~- Costa Mei• rooms. Built·in kitchens. Call Anytime 833•0820 freeway lnflals price. Xlnt tax i;helter; next to Financial • ·~ Univ. Park Center. Irvine ry 1st T.D. Buy now belore I~ Carpets & drapes. 'l baths.I""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• L•r w in Realty, Inc. Oceanside High School. Ten-. UNUSUAL house &: lot. £..Z Yo~ choice o! horn~ & lt:r Lagun• Beach ~51 I ~ytime ant waiting list. Sl39,000. I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;; maint. " BR, lrg ilid1ng cation. Call for details. 1n-1_,..... _ _,~.,...."°"""C--I:::::::;::::=.::=::::::~;:=::===::~ I $30,COO Down will handle. I 1 aJass fam rm, for den. ihop, vestigate then invest? They FAMtLY SIZE LAND INVESTMENT Delancy Real Estate Business Opportunity or combo, hv im, dbl gar. 2 won't last! Dial 1TI4) 4 "·drooms, 2 be'"-& lam· "· II Ile>'. 2828 E, Coast Hwy., Cd.\ol BA. Convenient quiet Joe. nr .,.., u~ .c..-:cr ent terms, ,11 ) from 72 h 0 962·5585. ,·1y room. -an view home, 40-~ area, pric-.1 from '-==='*,,.,.,.7.,'==,,.-all SC Is. U! of smog, 10 ...... ~ .,,.,.., "" I min from beach-2 min to San Built-in kitchen; dining SlQ to s;,oo pr acre. J"l, INDUSTRIAL INCO:O.fE Dir go or Nf'wpt rrwy, 30 Jif. room, lireplace. Larae, Calif. and S. Calil Some lil0% rented 5 5hop industrial terent types of azal('a.~ in a. level, v.·ell landscaped yard. acreage In Oregon wllh bldg. Returns over 12% on garden extremy easy to \Valklng dilltance to school. trees.BogisRealty968-3503. equity. Located in beach . I . N I $46.9::.0, Call • HAWAI! -2 ACRES an!a. S69,SOO. main atn, o awn to mo1v. .,, --"L Shelter Industries, lno. Outdoor outlets. outdoor ..,131 B1V1J1U1urst Ave. $4,900 (TI4J 645-2820 lighli;. Christmas lights bit· Huntington Beach .JL ~ Trees-Fems-Orchids. BI g in. Citrus tree~. magDOlias, TAX REFUND ..,./TOi-aH,, Island 16 mt to Hilo. Call or STORE, Office, 2 BR house, Jaca.rnnda and Norkfolk COMING?? REAL ESTATE \Vrite owner today. \Vrite roomtoadd,C-lzooed,!'Dx pines. Sprinkler system front Invest wisely in another Ousiti~ ad No. 15.3, Daily 180 corner, ;42,500. 19th St. I: rear. New water htr, new home as a spare. We have 1190 Glenneyre SL Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, <.osta near Harbot, CM. Will 491 9173 "'" •316 Mo••, ~26 0.. trade. Broker 494-9659 diswshr, ne\v disposal. 2,098 a very lovely hon1e on East-• .,........, -;;i~ ' sq. ft plus 460 sq. h in car-1ide or Costa ~fesa that OCEANFRONT Lagu n • i ~-=-"-'-'-''-'-"-'-=-Lots for Sale 170 age. $3.j,65() for sale by \\'Ouid be ideal, GI loan of Royale, condom. aptfi; 1 10 ACRES Riverside County FORECLOSURE O\\'ncr. :>16·3660 $23.COO v.·ith 1%% annual BR, 2 BR I: l BR pen-nr Interstate 10 frwy J.29;;() • .21n acre hoke ranch re""S· ::=======:::;::::;:;I percentage nte 1vith total thouse:. Security bldg. On flp. Low do'ol'll, easy tenns ser1Rd from former a~~ OPEN SUN. 1-5, 1198 Bollie n~vment of S210.00 lei! tax beaC'h, pool. 49'}.3715 to ~liablr party, Owner ,....,... (213) 245-3050 spa~ employee now avail· \\'ay (N. of Baker • E:. of ,aving11 of approx. $60.00 La guno Nt"g .. •I b -I ~=~-~~-~~-1 a. !e at developel'll cost. f"airvlew1 C.l\f. It's vacan1 per mo. This hon1e 1hows1 -------------GOVT Land S5 ac. \Vrite .C: will be redecorated for like a doll house. Call. LOVELY " br, 2 ba, fam rm, Land Packair, 1185 1\r· SAVE $3000 buyer. 3 Lrg. BR. 2 Ba, en w I k & l w of \'alley, close to sbop-ro w he ad Ave , s a n on these faoulous, oak stud· a er ee · "'5 ooo 492 1u.... ded, ranch size spreads. deadend cul-de-sac, Askinr ping, .,.. • · ....,.._ Bernardino, Ca. Loci1t~ In the boo:nlne S29.950. Name your terms. L"d Isl 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 1 O • Commercial South Coast area near San La rwih Rea lty, Inc. ~65 Open ·w 9 P?tf 1---------Property 151 Juan Capistrano. Hi g b 5'6-5411 onylime WILL LEASE &bovo "" ...... • ..... " 21562 Brookhurst, Hunt. Bch. ~ECORATOR'S $800 Per month with tinn ACRE for Comm'l Stables road and locked gate guar· U·o -Bd 3 .. ,... lease back iv/83 net net DR ,., JUST $24 SOO op n :J rms. "'" antee the natural beauty ol SALE or Trade. 3 BR, 21~ ""'" -• • S93,750 net. 673-2262 or 673-5723 BA. Jo'rench Quarter ec~ Close to clly pk.. & oce~n -LIDO REAL TY INC this former Spanish Grant do/pri\•ate back yard end 3 BR, 2 Ba. freshly pa111ted . . • Condominiums slllTOllnded by beaulltul ·1 2 AU 'El in & out Hko new crpts & lln Via Lido 673-7300 for s •lt 160 Cleveland National Forest. uni car ,a.r. cc. · s145' month total pym't. custom drps. lirepl. bllln Mes• del Mar All utilities aVllilable. S24.000 or trade for equity in range & oven. GI or FHA -, • e JACUZZI POOL e PRICED FROM S9,930 3 BR 2 BA house 5-l5-430l tenns. Call 847-1221. Outstanding Location Great recreational facilities LO\V 00\VN-EASY TERP.1S Owne~ · SEYMOUR REAL TY 4 br, 2 ba, l&e kitrhen/din'i near the beach. 2 BR, 2 Ottumslances force the im- * SALE OR TRADE* 17141 Beach Blvd., Hti:n Bch area, lrp\c, brick patio, Ba. super sharp, crpts, drp~. mediate disposition of these Open 'til 9 p~f trees, corner house \\•/side S25,990. Best buy in Villa fe\v choice parcels wbOse ~NDER $30,000. yard tor boat or trailer. 2 Pacific. former owners LOSS Is your Charmin~ 3 BR 2 BA, com?. BY owner, reduced $18,750. 2 minutes to major shop'g e MOVE RIGHT IN e GAIN!! Call or \vrite for ctpt~ lirepl, lam. rm, ~1n BR, 2 ba condo. Bltns, Cvts. center, lrttways, schools, Vacant now . 4 BR, 2,, Ba complete details and color rni, • car gar, 2 lrg. pallOS. Drps Dshu·sr Pool Cov'd 50 acre park. $31,500. VIiia Pacific 101vnhouse. on-lite photos. Buy direcr Low down ~mt. Rltr. ti ' ~•1•""' · 546-3086. from the developeco 200 AAA CANDY ANO SNACK SUPPLY WE ESTABLISH ALL ROUTES (No selling involved) CASH REQUIRED Plan one ........•••• S97.l.llO Plan hvo .......... $1Q2:>.oo Plan three .•.. , • . • $3250.00 Excellent income for .a lev.• houn \\'ttkly 11'0rk. (Days & Evenings). Refilling at1CI COi• leellng money from C()in ~ erated dil;pensers within a qualified a r c a. (Handle• nan1e brand candy a n d snacks). For personal inter- view send narne, address a.ncl phone number 10 MultJ. Stale Distribulln:, lnc., 1611 \\'est Broad\vay. Anaheim, Ca. 92892 <114 ) 778-5060. NEEDED: \VORKING PARTNER OR PVT Th'VESTOR. Substant- ial return on money invest- ed, .secured w/coUateraL For more info write P.O. Box 1819 Santa Ana. ' ' HOUSEWIVES • Good way for house1\·ives to make xtn SSS ESPECIALLY GREAT for V.'Omen who hoSt party plaru, ~ldse direct from factory. For full into call 833-2364 TO BUY OR G-12-8400. P8 o. =<>-uv I ~---~----New on market. Al! terms VACANT 3 BR 2 BA II LOVELY J Br pool home, Newport Beach avail. RANCllO CAPISTRANO bi t" 1 t~t Co 4,d frpl, I~ back yd. cpt, drps, ---------e Tl BURON 2172 DuPont Drive, Rm g SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES 'The Broker with Empathy" 1716 Orange Ave., C.11. SJ.5.4170: 540-0608 anftime pE'r n'IOnth. ~u Trr,ms avail· Newport Shores $24 950 ablt. 1ncl~dtn::; ~o Down I Lovely and large. A former ' C .l.1 or f .H.A. Call. n'IO(lel home. 4 bcdroon1s, 4 BO +FAMILY RM pa:~: .. ('~s~me FHA, vno $30,9j0, 011tner 714: 892-l&M 4 a.R.. Baycres~ TOWNHOUSE • Ne1vport Beach, Cal. 92664 quallfying. $3.600 dn. S2.l,OOO Fresh hst1n;. Owner go1n:;: "Newporter" model \\'/lop 833-32:23 full price. ,John Irwin & $34,000 e<isl, n1ust sell Baycreas1 quality xtra, including air- Assoc. 636-4470 4 BR & FAM RM a re~ 4 bdrms, family rm, cond. FHA · appraisal is R.2 LOT zoned for 1 to 10 I units, 60x30.:>'. Nr country \\°e need sale5 people LAUNDRA:'ltAT BY OWNER Walker & lee den (or o[ficel. 3 bath~ P.lus I Spac~s ho m'. L a1·g'e a neat bonus room for ping I rooms lhroughout. Huge ~~ 11 "'-Bl JXlng at1CI pool. I 'l t I b . k ~•;;111 a1 uur vd. at Adams Onl S49 500 amt y rm., na ura ric 5'1~46:> Open 'til 9 P~f Y ' lirepla« 4 t1vin slud bed· ~A~ ~'OU rel to fct>d the ' rooms, fine· quality built. COUNTRY LIVING -IN THE CITY ~~JN . T Se 673-8;);)0 ins. entry hall. "Paradise" O'A! o e in landscaping. Brk. Open 1 THE REAL 1R 1:sTATERS ~ '' 1111 9 Pa1 . 540-1720. . TARBELL 29SS Horbor I Corona del Mar Lol•ely ho1nr In the back bay area priced at just S23.950. This homr has lhree bcd- roomB and a beautiful yard to go \\1th it. con1ple1r v.·ith Pool Home NEAT a stl>ne B.B.Q. under the I I AS A PIN trees. Roon1 for a pool. Hui·· J Bedroom. 2 Ba. hnhrd ry ()n this onr. 546-2313 Ooon, eat1)('t.s, drps. Ir;. A nifty Corona del i\tar du· :oTHEREAL \'"'\.,£STATERS kltch. huge wp. family rm. plex in an ~xCt'Uent ''walk plus prol. N.E. Costa l\1esa. 10 everything" location. S29,aoo. Best of terms. lde.11 for U1e owner occu· ' ' I•, CORONA DEL MAR -v;,w, 1 Back Bay Area ~ltn. i;etting \\"ith bii trers. 4 Bedroom. lit 8:1, fam ily CUJlom Provincial homf'. Pr i vacy, s tclu11 i on. rm, dining rm. 2 fircpl'a. R .... _,, n1ode1:i Jdtch. All thi11 knd ~11.uuu, ~i;ed brick. Yhakr A VIE\V TOO f ..,n .,.50 roof. Musive frplc , BBQ. or-·' • pei:ged Oa.k n1is., :: BR. 1 R (matr. ls 24'), 2 Batb~ PLUS oy M cC1rdle Re•ltor lif!p. 1tudio. Room for pool 1810 Ne"'po11 Bl\'<! .. C.l\t. You O'l'.'11 the land. S67.JOO. 541-7729 673-~10 CAREFREE LIVING Spaclo111 2 it()ry C.ondo. 2 Br., 111 BA. FlrtplaC4!', All Bl!·lna, \\'/\V cp[&. drp.s. Priv•~ palio. Huge pool. recrea!lon room. Laundry tacilitirs. OWNER MUSf SELL1 5'1~7<1 The r.utest draw in lhe \Vesl , ~ a Dally Pilot Cluaiti~ Ad. 642"-:i673 ot thar old rurnUuft! BEAUTIFUL CLIFF DRIVE Qu1.lhy cueiom <-0mtruclion! S1rc5.Sf!d for 2nd story \\i lh plans l\'a\lahle! &lier th11n new rondltlon1 Truly mini· mum ca1'e yard: Newport Jltl1hts! 3 largt bedrooms. J tu.II baths, huge famU,.. room! All at ju11 $47,600! ~t u• •how you !hi• \dry 1pc. cl.> home today, ctll 616· 71n. pant. Call us about this sharpie. Only $42,500. l"or lnformallon call 613-8550. \0 THE REAL ''.'\.. ESTATERS NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT J :\[ ?11 Ac u LATE 2 bdrm + POOL dining nn, 2 bath.~. 2 ffl)lcs, $33,000. Fut Possession. Toirnhouse. Llkr new, ri1any Exec. home w/"key .s~ped" tile entry, lar,;er dbl garage. Preview showing. club. C.r.f. Realtor, 1213) \Vest Ne11.•port. Ne\v wash· 374-1418 collect ers, Eslbl. tradf!. S29,950, 837-&117 er 642-3863 extras, Dbl. a-ar. attached. pool + beaut refr:g d "''el Lot 80' l\'\de. Asking S39,900. \VE ilAVE .\1 ANY Laguna Bch. lot Sl.500 Close to all conveniences bar, cnlgd fam rm iv/hi-CALL e 6<1 6•24 14 down & S75. per month. 0\VN your own business - •-• •-h. $Zl,g~. ,,. "~ 0, beam ceil, firepl, w/v1 ""'ii 9 •• 01HER TO\VNHO:-.fES. Cal' C h '"' ""' oN ~ -,. ONE JUST RGI Call ~1097 1!, o. 8!! opening for '."•9~"" & custom dr ... , formal din ·• ... 4¥ 1 I iT di 'bu h h ....r ......, .. ~ ,.__......., s0'1 tors lps in t is &ru. • ltlESA VERDE -Spacious area. Cul-de-sac st. VA/ ll EALTY FOR YOU. e !{ +Acre, vie1v lot • Good income. Invest. Sf!C\Ulo , b 1. , /I 1 1 }1-iA term11. Ntar Nt wperl P•tl O flict Larwln Realty, Inc. Corona del l\lar rd. 497.1379 for appt. ·• r. ivg nn iv rpc, am SEYMOUR REALTY "' "11 t• e 673-2010e nn all elec kitchen crpts * OCEANFRONT * ~lil"'.rt any 1me drii'.s. 2 ~ llos. $34 fHJ'. 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Sch * DUPLEX * 21~ Brookhurst, Hunt. Sch. BUSIEST marke:olace in USED car lot · office-lightz. 5.:i7 7142 ~ ' Open 'til 9 Pl'd u 2 cm· l =::'::========::::::::I tcwr.. The DAIL\.' PILOT 7j' x 160' near Harbor ' -· 2. P • down. ner an."· \\'r'll help you sell! G-12-0018 Cluslfied secUon. Save Bay SL Sec :M36 Harbor, COLLEGE PARK B S ~EC ious • mu&t sell today. Try For that item under $50 money, time &: eUort by C~1 AREA l ::"; ba •:il~wood ::!' ~.OOO. try the Penny Pincher ' armchair. DAILY PILOT for actlon! ShArp 3 lg Br. home 2 Ba. tun; crptJ indoor • eutctoo,'. BURR WHITE J :;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;=.;~;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;===..::::;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;; &: fam rm. shag carpet. comm·1 crPt dln'g rm. kltch-REAL TOR S33.000 546-5180; 546-5797. en both bathrooms. J:"/A. mt Ncwpart 81\'d. N.6, EARL y AMERICAN heal. sprinklers, 6 blks to 675-4630 673-0859 Eves. Charming 3 BR 2 BA, fam. beach. CJ05e to 1>chool~. DOVER SHORES AREA rm. $31.900. O\\•n. 546-2803, Newpc111 West. tract. t.lust You o1\·n the land 3 Br + den. 1%. ba Condo. se~ to appreciate. Mume Lo\·ety & elegant 3 BR home. Near ne1v, Pool. Nr VCC. ~;c VA loan, an~ne quaJ. 2.650 sq It. Din rm, ram rn1, dies. !H32 l\1oklhana Dr, breakfast area. Beaut. yard. By O\\'l!Cr. S46-4760 days: ll.8. 962-2115, Bus-548-9990. See ro appreciate. S72,500. ~ eves. Owner 642-5583 BEAUTIFUL house -By DIRT BOMB O\\'ntr. 3 BR, l'~ BA, v.•("' Sl7,500. 3 BR + fam. rm., LUXURY BAYF RONT crpt, drps, encl patio. close to ocean. Fix up and 1 BR-apt. $39.500. Sell, Lease 646-30S2 sa.ve SS.$ 2 Ba w/w crpts 01· p1n1 trade. Owntr: REPOSSESSIONS l drps,. bltlnt' -wlutt a ~ 673-8800. Lido Shores Hotel. Gov'! I.:. others. Anyone c11n bUy. Submit Call 817-1221 BEAUTIFUL S br, 4 ba, tam buy, Jo1v do\\·n. S22)1 to SEYMOUR REAL TY rm home in Dover Shores. S40~1. '\'lllti ltlly ~780.) 17141 Beach Blvd., lltgn Bch Lg pool &: patio garde!\, MESA VERDE Hl&hlands, J Open 'Iii 9 P?.1 S96,000 Call <11\•ner 642-3203. BR, 2 BA, f11mlly room on BALBOA Cove& bay front. 3 "''"" ..... '· $32,C.OO. »7-<529 BY OWNER BR, 2 BA. ""'" """Y ~ BR, 2 BA, cor~r lot. CONOO. 4 BR, 21;; Ba. }..1nt. beach, 5llp, vie\\•, $78,.:.00. Partly fenced By el!.<ner. ~.1 C .. d 11 I _P_c_in_. -'"'~Y·_6_7_3-_18_28 __ ~ . ro..... rp . !'PS. rep., .,... Firm $23,000. 543-.)730 tltti. kif. \\'lk to beach. 3 BR. 2 BA, ram rm, 2 - A1£8A. Del t.lar s BR, 3 BA. Al•ail June 2lth. Rraltor. fl~pl's, Crpts, Drps. Pool. ~11uiy extras. By (}\'Iller. 8·17-8.507. Eves. ~-1178. \\·«!Slcllfl. ~r 642-1067 516-1101 4 BR, 3 b11. Condo 1v/bltns. Newport Height• O\VNER • 2 BR, fam . 111 S2t500. 11122 Dt_t't=lield Dr, NE\V HO;\fE • 3 Br, 2 Ba, BA, cor lot, "Int nbl'tld. H.B. 213/823.-6483. built for Indoor/outdoor liv- S26.000. 2l.2 Sierk11. 548-0.t>i IT'S A breeze, .tell your Ing. L&ndscapcd. C!ose to $©\lJtllA-~"E~S" The Punfe with the Buiff.fn ChucHe I -e UNSCRAM!lf LETIERS 10 1 Gf'T ANSW£t U'1 rW.11 00{ tha_t hard tu rtp!act. JUJLI Wl.tc:h the fllm.lture I: mbotlla.neo'.m eolumn11 tn the C &dWed SeHlon. O THE REAL '"'-F:STATERS WANT AD 642-5678 Sell the ()Id aturr 11~ms with ease. use Dally schls & 11tore1. Reduced to SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 Bey rhe new a tu rt Pilot Ouslfled. &4.2--6618 $37 .000. Ownrt • 646·'08o ' ' MO!ldly, ~J ), 1971 ,~1 ;;"";;"""~l[i]~l--r.-;ii;lol ~l[i]~ I _,,._ l~ I _,.._ I~ I -'""""'"-lltl I Apw•-•"'R"' '~ I A"''"""'''"" .. ,~ I -1""""'""'"' '~I Apo".-""'"".,. I~ 1 _Ho_u ____ u _ni_._,,.. ___ 30_~ HOUMt Unl~rn. 305 ~··· Fum. 36D Ajit. Unlufn. 3'S Apt. Uni.,,.. :16$ \pt. Unhim. KS Apt. unlllm. J6S ILLNESS FORCES SALE OF LITE MANUFACTURING BUSINESS ldeal ..c»portunlty for aggressive man or l\'O- man to talce over wh9lesale1 arts &: crafts accessory business. All original design mdse -some lovely imported things lh•t sell In tho best stores. Facility located Nwprt Bcb. All set up l!with complete inventory, equip., beautfiul o ices & showrooms. Great mail order business potential . Present owner in ill health but wl.11 assist in teaching the business. Total investment $14,500. Part cash, balance on terms to responsible people. Everything available to work with. Must seU now. Please write tor appt: MANUFACTURING, P.O. Box 1996, Newport Beach, Calif. 92663. Co1i• Mtta S.n Clemente · Costa Me.111 General Costa M11a Costa Mtu N.wporl &each 3 BR. <A'tan Vlrw. w/formal ---------1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;1---;iiiiit.iu:il---'""°""".,..,.,..,,--,.....,...,I;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;~! l Bed...,m, 1 O.ib "'""'" "" rm. paneled lam rm, 3 CASA de ORO FAIRWAY SHARP O.cholor unit, """ MARINER SOUARI Refrlg:., bltns., rangt, 11 -•k '"'-• bit VENDOME to OCC ' UCI. SI?A>. mo MENTS dls~l. dishwaaher, pa OI, suuu ..... .,o ns, CASUAL Callt lJvlna In a ~·· refrl&. AvaU May L APART drtpes, Very nl~ with 2 frplc, fncd yd, Wattr & warm Medltt!rrancan atmo.-IMMACULATE APTSI VILLA APJS. 545-0718, m Valencia, Apt Announces 'the avaU.abJlJtr ol adult 1 wlmmlng pools .1.nd trulJ paJd. $XlO a mo le.ue. phete. SJ)f.Clous color eo-ADULT and No. 2, '1f no answtr 335-f421 2 A 3 BR. unU1 tor adults •92-0960. ,~1,1a1-• ••Is d •~ • , ·~·•·-to"•---"·t beau ii Chlldrens swlmmlll.i !XK>la. ~__.:.=------•u l;\I ,,... -es...,_ • FAMILY Section 2 & 3 BR'a QUIET •·'•• ,_ d'-2 b' _..... uvv .., ...... ,. S•n Juan C•plstrano turnl.shed tor· IU'le a: com. Clos I -•-'-p k ...,.. · -... u; '· 'by 0.1.e. ln;the pm. Also large fenced yard. £.)(. tort e Healtd JIOOI e KJtcb-e O .. ""l"r'"'W' ar Private pa&. -pool • JndlY f/a ht, pr, ttnt reduced to t:t' .. &...... W tclU:t &Na of cellent locatkin, near 4 BDRM le fam rm, bl-and en wl lndlttct 11....,ll._ • * Spacious S BR's, t ba laundry tac.' ' mature rup. cpl. to~ N 1VW9 : dJ. schools. 6hoppina, 2 free· new TROY home . BHins, ...,, ... '*'Swim pool, pi);V&f"etn Near Oranp Co. Allport A bldg. ~ ewport a way1. House hlu 2 car Ill!· dshw11r, cpl&, pat Io, Deluxe RIO. Adlllti. No pels. * Friil. Indiv/.lndry fac'lt UCI. Adults only. E•tt Bluff .,...., lnfoF~ .. ~-n$UOp~--Mr, .. '· ""lio & u-ta.ir' baJ. .:nr\-'·'er•. ~, o-•y 1275 -r 1 BR . .$l7S tum. 1••5 Anohelm A · .. , .. _uu .-111:1 r-,.., ..., 11A.1 ..-" "' ,.-Bac'"-'or • 1145 '" ve. ,20122 Santa Ana Ave. .. .... 1_, M cony, $22:5 mo. 54S.2625. mo. Call 943--1936 or uci COSJ'A MESA "2-2824 u-..,._ J hJm Robert M. B......._,,., &nalt· 2 BR • Sl95 -· -~ .. ?:;,,. ' Apl :t.A NEWPORT BEACH I 17111 ... --wnto CUTE, MESA VERDE 49l-.3G4l UTILITlES INCLUDED .....,......1.,1 er, a _,,_ - 3 BEDROOM -• BR • family rm. """" "' w. WU.On "2-1971 Ju1t for Single Adutt1 ORLEANS APTS. vm. Gr•nad• Apt•. .. Tllo om .. o! tbe """"' AVAIL. SAT. new Troy home. Bltlns, chll-SOUTH BAY CLUB FWr ~with bl.Icon. acer, Mutner Squan Apt&, ,Newly paint«!. huge cowred "-'Shr. c-pt.s. patio, 1prlnk1ers, * SUNNY * APARTMENTS in above 1: ~. Crac~ ~ l:rvtnt Ave, NB. c.at. patio. Lots of·trtts. Kids ok. J.'or only $275. per mo. Call * ACRES * Newport Bli•ch ADULTS ONLY llvlna: & quiet Siln'Ollndinl,1'!!!!!!!'"!,"!''!!!!!!~!"'"Bll~ $235, Stan Meyer, Realtor. 493-1936 or 493-3041. * Mot1\.Apt1. * 880 11'\'ine Avt. 3 Ir S BR. Al>all. Prlvate Pl· for family with .ibU(trton.liPARK NEWPORT • care Investment Opportunity INVESTMENT CONSULTING ~16-5880 or 549-1366. University Perk Studio le 1 Bedrooms Clrvlne and 16th) ( ttu, pool . indlv. lau.ndry tac. Nea.r Corona del Mar HI.ah frM liv& OYerlkg the wat~. ~ VERY CLEAN le VACANT. LO\V RATES 1714) 64S.0550 Nr. Orani::e Co. Airport; Tua-School. Fin~ wet bar I T ....,.,. 1 le ii ctl $150 000 1 .-with 3 , ..................... m, & $25 \V~k-$100 Mo. ..,..,. 'l'UsnN 2 ti.rt at 17th St; nr. Westclllf). built-In kitchen 1°pp1Ia.nce1 .,.......... nn ' ttouMlforRlfll 11CJ ... .,,,. ucu........ We have UNFURNISHED &: Daily Rates Avail. ...,...3 Ave, upper 835 AMIGOS WAY 644.2!191 Bach. l or 2 Br. Al80 2 aty ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;:;;; fan1ily room. Ju.st ttduced f1.JRNISHED renta11 1n •Color TV, Air-Cond BR duplex w/lrg iundeck, l'ltl Tu!tin, Colt.a Mesa • CohiweU, BAnker A Co. Townhol.llU. Dec. kit., pr. to $270 per mo. Families on. University Park & Turtle close 5,::ar. & lndry hookupa, M-Mn. Tho 6C2-4641 a.t--~-' ,..... ..A • .,_ pe.t or abl Mtrn pertcg opt ON HOURLY BASIS \Vil! undertake with you deep & probing analysis of all pending Investment decis- ions. Richard Nelson, P.O. Box 4£13, Corona ~I l\.tar. 300 ly. Call agent, 546-4l41 • Pool, Poot Table $17S. 646-4380 ••· mpaon .._....,.,na: "6 .... t ~i .. _ J Houses Furnished Rock & would consider it a e Sound5 --maid ser, cptl, ... .,... UJt _ 2 BR. Crpl'd, garage, water prlvilege w help yoo 801ve 2376 N~rt m\·d. Balbo. Penln1ur1 * $lll UP * • N 2 EW DELUXE ~-• N. of ruhbi JQ at Jatq· Newport Beach & trash pd. Ref Req'd. YoUt housitij: needs. M8.975.,; GIANT l Ii 2 BEDROOM! 3 ~ BA Apt tor leue. UlGI boree &: San Joaquin llilll $150/mo + S50 dep. No NEW OWNER-under BRAt'/D ne:W DELUXE 3 Br, Go ..... eous, """k-like setli,,.. spac. muter auUe, din rm Rd. 644-1000 for leuint in· WEEK or weekend In pets. 2274 'Place ntia No, A. NEW MANAGEto.IENT 2 Ba apbl. 1600 bklck E. ci,~ a~ for max-& dbl pr•· auk! door fo. Nc"'port. flDUM on the 646-5637. * fl~ UP * Balboa Blvd; close to ocean tmum iecurlty. Quiet street. ~~~er ava.U, Pool le Rec.t ·s~.-.-c-·-----~-----beach by Newport jettyLAR ~=c=E~=, ~B~R~~650~--,=, ......., ..... _ ~n•• t A il 30 •• 'll SI • sq. · GIANT 1 &: 2 BEDROOi\f! or bay. 1 yr lease. Incl Adult.I no pets. 2020 --·-------·I rom pr u• · eeps family rm. dining rm, lge D/\V, d......,, '-1 & ,....., Fllllerion Ave (HarbOr to • S2W • BRAN'!!I NEW lux. J Br, 2 7. 962-9810. Gorgeoua, park-like setting. ·..-"'1' ~·r" 86;; -'--1.-. w for.'B 1 TD l kilchen, l~i BA, super Clo.sed garagea lor max-644-4161 days, 673-0253 eves Bay;thtn So. -ant:U l: blkl ..... ..__ ay, Ba. llO sq, tt, Quiet st oan Housel Unfurn. 305 patio, nice yard, S21S mo. "SINCE !946" !mum security. Quiet lilreel. for •Ppt. So. ot NeW119M Blvd.) Managed by cul-de-sac. Panoramic ~w General ~Santa Isabel, C.M. lst \Vestern Bank Didi Adults, no _pe'U. 2020 OCEANFRONT-Just bul.lt 3 642-8690 \VILLIAM WALTERS CO. ot ocean. Adultl only. 1180. Money to Loan 240 6~~% INTEREsr QUIET cul-de·sac 3'BR, fncd Universily Park Fullerton Ave (Harbor to ~ty-fantastic bay view. 2 Parlf-Ll5ce Surrounding • TOWNHOUSE l-=-m._,2259-,.-------1 20 d TD Loan L•ndlord1--0wners yd, 2 car gar, childtt>n /pets Days 833-0101 Nights Bay, then So. until 2 blks Br, 2 ea, tarn rm. 11un nn, QUIET • DELUXE Deluxe 2 Br. 21n Ba, bltns, S•nta Ana \Ye will refer tenan11 to you ~l~O/mo. 6 4 6-7 711, So. of Newport Blvd. IH2· paUo, lllndeck, d ah.,, b r ' 1-2 & 3 BR APTS frplc, patio, enc gar. Quiet. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 TermJ based on equity. I FREE of charae .. , ~tany ---------86:M) bltns, drps,_crpts. Adults, no Also Furn. Bachelor 1-''--"';,,SOlJ='--~----1 CAN'T BE BEAT 642-21n 54S..Q611 desirable tenant:s on our 4 BR, F'rplc, 2 ba, Lge back 4 BR. "'ith family room ,,. Unbelievably Be•utlful pets. SSOO/mo. lse. 675-5034 Pr.o patios * Hid Pools Luxury Eartbluff Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. wa!Ung !isl. yard, Pets & children 01\. TurUe Rock .......... $375 VAL O' lSERE Carden Aptl. Coron• del Mir Nr .sbop'g * Adults only 2 Br, ]~ Ba. trplc. patio, Sattler Mortgage Co. ALA Rentals • &-l.N900 ~\\.::·. it:sa "v:~;· 2905 ! :~: ~ = :::::::::: :; A•vd•orywlts .. -_,"', ""st~.:..amFlowers• JiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ Martinique Apts. ..,""°'1·162Adult;,;. ~!!f .. -~· 336 E. 17th Strttt FREE Rent.al Book Drop In -":OC=::..c=C-'.~,'--3 BR. 2 baths; furnished '"' . ~-co 1m Santa Ana Ave., CM • or ...,............., ~"· SINGLE STORY Sttuth Seo Abnoepboro 2 BR.. 2 BAnl Cash Fast! lit & 2nd Trust Deeds FREE APPRAISALS Costa Mesa Investment ~nl 1 a!"ytime and Bro\\'Se We have a book 3 BR -fr_ Near OCC cpl&-Waterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, H ti I n. h full. drps, cov patio, ele biRO avail. Aug. ls! · · · · · · • • $400 Sauna., Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, Furn-...Y Mgr, Apt ll3 646-5542 un ng on 1.nJilC \VALKER & LEE. Realtors 1600 &q ft $235. 635-67.50 i". ·, red h·.11 Unlum. fro m $l35. SEE IT: f:l.c:;:;,i_ -~ Chi'idren Welcome I 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 2 BR house -~larr!ed 2000 Par&0ns, 64U670 {"-/"I!!!!.!. * BRAND NEW * Move ln now. 2 BR's, &II U· 1151).00" "OUSE 1 ~-h coUples only, 1 child ok. FURN bact.elor, beam ceil'g, ON TEN ACRES LA COSTA APTS, l It 2 BR.. tru. Pool, pvt patloa, Pet1 ........ , & .,.,..c · frplc, tub/shower, dopohi, Bl · ml I Sml -t ok Bi•-n Crpts & drrui. Call 642-3918 J le 2 BR. Furn •-Unfum. tns, swun ng poo ' gar--ok. From $139. Nr 1chool1 .... • UQ, !:: REALTY cpts. compl flJrn except . -All lil pd s·~ Sl70 7 Bl •-*64'0111 e 3 BR ~PLC CRPTS Fittplaces I prlv, ,,..tios. q-e. u • i.iu to &: shopping. 1431 "B" or ue Deacon .r • 'r ·~ • • u · p k c I · Ii-"', Jmma". R-•p. adll ~ d"' I~ 'IO n1v, ar enter l'VllM '"''... '" '" Pooi. Te"'-'-,, __ ,_l'I B...,.. mo. A wl,s, no pets. "D" Keelaon Ln 968-7310 ea,,... " ""'" A~ C•ndllloned Private Patios HEATED POOL Plenty of lawn ea,,...." s-RIDDEN VILLAGE • CARE'"REE 2 B bl! ~.., " · · Cal ' 833° o~ •"''' I" & last mo's + ~-.11 •ulllJ \..Ullw 1U111.o ~=~ • ' • r, ns, "·'" .,.,7• .,. 281.. J Anylime '1Kl~" ~ """ ~-, Lane CdM •"·26ll ~ Al'OCl.do, O f. 64Z.9'11m 847-4856 or 842-71'10. BUSINESS venture, ad-encl a:ar, Jg yd, kids/pets. ~~~~~~,-'.,,,~~~~~-'--I ~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I refundable clean'g de P. (;'a~At1hur ~ c.out }Jwytl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! dl!lonal capitol? All re-1 $175. Huntington Beach Houses Furn. or S125• avail ~lay l. 5-18-4093 HOLIDAY PLAZA *FRESH AIR GARDEN APrs. 2500 South Sllta Santa Ana ~ 5f6.152S quests ronsidered. Call !o.fon ALA Rentals • 64a-3900 --------__ u_nf_u_m_. _______ J_IO * SUS CASR AS DELUXE SpacioUs 1 bdrm Walk 3 blka to Beach! & Tues. ~5 f714J 492-4048 $225-MINI RANCH 2 Br wl Sl!l!l/mo. Clean 3 br, 2 ba, * COROLIDO APT$* unfurn. apt. $120. Stove, re· Beaut. bir 3 BR apt. wlw Apt1., !~~~~~~· ~~~~! rrplc, huge yd ror kids & 2--car garage, crpt!!i, drps, ,Lc,id::.o;..;l;.•I.::•------Lri. nicely furn Bachelor & 2 Br. studios & street levels, frig. Hid pool. Ample paric. upts, drps, bltna except . Fum. or Unfum. '70 J: pets_ bltn1, fncd yard. 2 kids o~.1 FOR RENT OR FOR SALE: 1 Br. Furnished modeis $185 & up, Dshwhr. trpf, dbl Ing. No children. No pets. refrig. $22S. No pets. 536-lnl .. ____ _ I Howes for Rent II~) Blue Beacon * 645-0111 York Io w n • ~1agnoha '125 Via Lido Nord. Lido or;l~Od~~~~~ B~v~~C~tes carport. LARGE Pool 1965 Pomona, CM. '1 BR, refrlg, bltns, crpt11, Geoner1I -. . e INVITING • 2 Br, 968-4249 Islt-, Call Webster 4-0920 or 673-3318 • 2 BR atudio apt, 1~~ ba. drps. $135 mo incl utu.I;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;::.;;;;;; cpl/drps, stv/ref, kids & 4 -SR, 2 BA, bltin oven & Brighton 0-454'1 S~F:~ -Ki~ a~:fs ~r:~ 2 &, l Ba, trpl, shai cpt, End of cuJ-Of:.sac. Pvt Adulll only. Tradewinds PALM M£SA APJS. HouH• Furni1hMI 300 pets. $150. range, crpts, drps. Clean. Condominiums ser.o, TV & ph. Sea Lark drps, bltns, hurry $210. fenced patio. $lT:.i, util Incl. Rlty &17-8511: E \-e •; Al.A Rentals • 64~ Fenced yd. $23.l. mo. Unfurn. 320 Btwr. J0-5, 63().2062; alt 5, 339 Cabrl!Jo. 548-UJJ or 53&-'1fi61. 1 BP. ...... General RENTAL FINDERS Fru To L1ndlords 645.(1111 4J'IW.1tttr..CMt• M .. $150-00LLHOUSE al beach .. Sml pet ok. Bltns. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 e BACHJ:.."'LOR BUDGET BOOSI'ER • N.B. UU pd. 185, ALA Rentals • 64~3900 $l2a-Laguna. Bach 1~·1 pool, Avai l Yrly. Stud~nt welc. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 Ganer al $175-Newport Hghts 2 +Oen. f!.12-2708 ---------~~;~·452301 Npt Blvd .. CM ... 213: 596-1719 8'1&-3648 BEACHBLUFF Apt1 1 BR~"'-~.:::::::: :::: Frplc, Bltns. Nice yrd, 4 BR, 3 ba Condo \v/bltns. L1gun1 Hills e FURN. INCL U ti I • ..l BR, 2~1 BA Deluxe apt. So. 2 BR apt. ('rpts, drpa, New 2 Bdrm, dsh\vhr, pool, Bacbelon Furn1abei1 Blue Beacon * 645-0111 S2'l0/mo. 8122 ~rfie!d Dr. _.;... _______ 2 DELUXE ~,•-!or & 1 br of Hwy. See 1-far. 32'l-~ balcony view. Color an ten· p•tk>. 8231 Ellia. from 1135 lltg Bch. 213/823-M83 NE\Y dlx. sngl sty 3 BR, lH1 '"" ~1 II h 6'1~ 7171 -• RURAL! - 3 Br. stv, BA, crpts, drps, bltns, pool. Apts. SJ5 v.·eekly &: up. ti.to. ' arguer e or P · ~ · na.s. Nr. 1illopp1ng & bus, 842-347'1 or 847-3957 2 BR apts $175 mo. cpl/drps, kids & HORSES, CLEAN 3 br I 2 ba, w I w Child ren OK. 2 C enc gar. rates. Tt>rms Avail. 998 El PVT. pallo 2nd floor 1-2 Encl gar. Adults, no pets. Nr Huntington H1rbour mo.Imo. OK $22.i. shag, drp1, bltn.s. Great Joe. grd & trash pkup inc $265.1..:C::•::.m:::;"':::.· :.'""'"::...:.::':.:l.c___ BR, AutO garage 'door. Si». 64!)..3515. Triplex • quiet area. Lrg J. • POOL ALA Rental:s e 64>3900 Lse $2'23, Rent $235. 173-12 Bkr. 831-5506. l BR. $!3.5. Crptldrps. Adults, No pell. 644--8'.ll!I BEAUTIFUL 2 br, 1•,~ ti11 Br. $140, 3 BR. S240. Pets •SAUNA $130-Util pd, Nice l Br. bltns, Chapparal Ln. 968-34~ alt Newport Beech Sw}m'g pool. Close In. 145 Coata Met• 1tud\o. New crpts & paint. ok. (7ltJ 846-0011. • ~JACUZZI crpts, drps, good loc. 6 pm or bef. 10 am. -.-CU-SJ'O--M-TO-WN-'H_O_U_S __ E_ E,:.'18th St, C~t ~7-6682 alt ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I D11""001'mo~HNn:· ,;taa.r:oc'hi~d· SPACIOUS new i BR \n 4-1,00!!!!!!!!oaa!!!!!ODr!O.!!!!P.!Sll!to!!!O!!!Anl!O!I Blue Beacon* 645-0111 CLEAN 3 br. family rm, pm . r-plex Crpll drps bltins I' trplc, bltns. Fenttd. $220. 3 BR. 2 Baths. $385 Month, 1 B 11 S , h El ok. 998 El Camino. 54&4151. . ' 1 ~ ' park' Costa Meg 31i~~~-~~M':.°. ~ 9624119 lease. Call: a4&-70S2 1JR~ ;!1~carpo;i. ~~:~ ~ * p301S eganC~ * REGENCY * t8~·~~1 ' ar ·1;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;.1 OK, brk., $200 a munth. NO Huntington Harbour 9upl1xea Unfurn. 350 pets. Sl35. 560 W. Hamilton. Seta The \1ood For 2 Br, 1 Ba, crptgldrps, &elf $225. Sharp ttnynhou.se-2 br. * * * • FEE. ~1720. -646-4160 ur 54:>--0i60 clean gas oven, encl aar, pa-l•,J ba. bltn&, crpta, drps, El Puerto Mesa Apta $530 BEAUTIFUL \\'a\erfrnt Costa Mesa · r:•s.•= 377 \" WU * * * * SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA. bltns, 3 BR, 2 ha u·/sundeck & 2 BR, partly furn apt, htar· Quiet Adult Living tios . .,. """5, ... son auto garage, pool. Nr beach. D\V, crpts, drps. $23.l mo. dock, lease or 0 P1 i 0 n. NEW 1 Br. brick gas frpl, ried couple only. Inlant OK. Shai CPL • drps • bl.tns * LC 1 & 2 BR Patio Yd c71~3=/~433-'-=-'9893~~~-~-I 1 Bedroom Aptt. Call Ray Gault ~1151 644-4132, ~221 beams, patio, wl w, bllns. I $150 ~o. Nr Fairgrounds. BeautiluJ Pool Pan~lling, 1as ;,_ wtr pd, in'.. NEW 2 br, 1 ba, unfurn. $130 &: up Ind utilltie1 A1ao e AT THE BEACH. Bltns, Laguna Biach ~a~d~lt~. ~y~,l~y.~l~J.16~, 64~2-85~·20~~ 1 i'~,,~..,F-~~Ad.:iJ!j'"f~ I 2 Br $170 incl &II util rant OK, 12192 Edinger -nr Patio, frplc, % blk to beach. turl" Pool & RecftaUon cpt, drps, kids, utll pd. $130. -=---=....:.='°"c--1 Bf\ .1pac. Adu lts. $12;) & Ad~lts only-no pel.!. Harbor 1' '..S duplex. SJ.95/roo, AdWll. area. Quiet Environment. ALA Rentals • 64.>-3900 • VIEW liOMES • I $130. Pool. Ideal f o r 241 Avocado SI. 646.0979 NICE & Spaclooa 1 Jlr. crpll, 53&-4227 ·eves. ·' OU street par1c1n1, No CbiJ. LAGUNA BEACH ~f'11'Mlfll bachelors. 1993 Church St. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I drp•, bltns + refrlg. Ad.ltli. 2 BR. 1 be. t-Plex Xlnt Joca • .,_ .. no -··. 3 BL>R...'1. + !a.mlly rm., fuU _ 'MS-9633 .... ~., ..,... .. • RAR&Beach pad! Clean dlnina: ms., built-Ins., bric. 4 Bdrm. & lam. rm .. exc. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:6~~,rF.;~·~i'28RduiPl"<:hiin< Cl-IARr.llNG 2 BR, Beams, m pets. Inq. 2868 LaSalle, lion, north HI& Bch. $155. & quiet, ull pd. Yl'iy SlW. $390 a month, NO FEE, ocean view, fircpla~. wl w I *QUIET 2 BR duplex, bltns. Frplc, Dilpoul, Bltn ato\'t Apt 1, Ci\-1. 54~. :CaJ~l;.;64'7>"'66~,:.--.,--,-,-~1961 Map!~ Aw. ALA Rentals • 64~3900 Newport, 54~1'120. carp .. bit-in ldtch. ind. re-Aptl. Furn. 360 gar. patio. E-side. Adults, &: rebig. Cpts/drps, End 2 BR 11~ BA iharp Crpti NEW 1 ~R. crptli, drps, ea.ta Mesa $250-N.B, 2 Br wlfrplc on °ec-oM"o=v=E""'U~P-J ~,-B~R=.-,~.~A. frig, 1 YT· lease $350 mo. no pets. 360 16th Pl. 645-4285 patios, Secluded &-quiCt. drps; 12oo sq'. fl. A~llabl~ w/garage. Near ocean, $145'1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!""!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• ocean. Singles ok. cpl/drps, bltns, klds/pelS. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home. exc. Gener1I or 642-1298. Re!ponslble adlt only, No oow, $163 mo. 545--0118 9'13 Incl a:as ~water. 968-4544 BAY MEADOW APTS. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 $165. ocean view. \Vlw carp. & Rent Beautilul Furniture SPAC. well furn 2 br apt in dogs, $!?5, lst & last Valencia, Apt No. 2, U no 2 BEDR00~1. near shop'g. Al.A Rentals e 64~3000 drapes thruout. Neat as a · I n..; niont?&· $50 r ef I.Ind ab 1 e an11wer. SJS..442'1 Nowly d--t-'. Sl30/Mo Beam -lllnr•. ·-~•ng, prlv Coit• Mes• 2 BR attract furn home. C& D, Frplc, Beam ceiling. washer, dryer. xtra lge yard, fruit trees. $22J. Responsible married cpl. .. ...,,. Huntington Beech 2 BR, furnished house, adults only. $17j/mo 2317 England, lIB. 536--3509. Laguna Be•ch 2 BR, partly furn. 2 [rplcs, nr Christian Science Church. Sl9:> lse. Adults. Refs. \Vrite 2·100 Strand. l\1anhatlan Beach or ph 213: 545-4948. Lido Isle !or as little a., newer trip ex. ,. .. vacy. clean g dep. AvaU May 20. ~--~ "" _....... . S BR, 3 BA, 2 lrplc home, pin $300 mo. ONE MONTH Adlts, no pebi, 768 Scott Pl. 54s-w93 * BEAUTIFUL 1 &. 2 BR. Realonomtcs Corp. 6'15--6700 patios, recreation ta.cllltiea. beaut cond. gar. yd. $400. Dix. 3 BR. 2 ba .. l'\orth <'nd 646-2323 Contemporary Garden Apts. 2 BR $I 40 842-8365 All adult1, no pell, Blue Beacon* 645-0111 loc., xlnt ocean vie1V. All CHARi'11NG I BR. Patio. RIAN~~BNROS.AAni:io, obnlces Patios, rrplc11, pool. • • *Bachelor apt* bltn k!t lrpl open beam complete with p.... ow vai s e $15G-$165. ca:ll 54&-516.1 Loguno Beoch * 2 BR from n 65 * e BRIGHT & A IR y - . ., .. your 1-', Qulet, No children or pets. MEDITERRANEAN ceil's. S375 mo. vv •c SlZS 64~ 1848 •Deluxe 1-2-3 BR. * 1 Bedrocfm * ~~~.drps, stv/re!, fncd yd. l\11SSION REALTY 49+{)731 Purchase Option D . ; I t VILLAGE All bltn!. CrplS, drps. Gar. ~:s;UN~1~w, modern 2 * 1 Br. den, wet bar. 2 Ba ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Newport Beach Jnd. ilem selection. en• 0 n 2400 Harbor Blvd. Nr. S. Coast Plaza. · BA, ns, deck, 1 blk 381 \V. Bay St (btwn Harbor 24 Hour D.ly. SINGLE TV I I k Costa ,,,_, 54;;..2321. bch • ahops. Adulla, No "-Newport Blvd, W. ml. N. $1SS.REDECOR 3 B 2 B • · poo' pe s o ' .... ......, '1220 494-3034 · r. a, LRG. 2 br, 2 ba, crprs. drps, CUSTOM $25 & up wkly. Dana ~1arina 1714) 557-8020 2 BR, cpts, dtp11, bltnl, ,.,.. 1' · of 19thCSf). RIO, children welcome, bltn bbq, clec_ gar. pool, Furniture Rental Inn, 34-lll Coast Hwy. WILSON GARDEN APTS. re!r!;:, up!trr, Infant ok, 2 BR. Quiel. close in. Adults. AU. 646-00'13 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 choice BlufL!. Joe. S350 mo. 517 \V. 19th, C.l\I. 533481 Huntington Beac:fl 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee. lndry fac. $140. 548-7729, Leue. $165. 215 C~ss Dr. AMAZING Adult Liv In&:· • r 1 AdM.ILY \V 1 ANTED 11 1 60 2 Br, ~~~16~aint. Rel!. re q -Anaheim 174.28(}(1 ;;;;;,,;;.;;,,.;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;=I New cpts/drps. Sp a c 968-1455. 4~d I Beaut. 1 .l 2 BR furn or unt cp, rps, enc gar, · LaHabra 694.3703 grounds. Adlts, no pets. e MESA VERDE area • Li O 11 e Apts. Self clean.. <1ve:ns, ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Newport Beach CHATEAU E La Quinta Hermosa Sl40/mo. 2283 Fountain deluxe 2 1e 3 Br, 2 ea. D/WUn2BrJdispls,shlle Corona del Mar LAPOINT \Vay E. !Harbor, turn W. encl ear, $145 & up. Renlal LOVELY qutet 2 br, I'A ba, cpta:, drps, jactllll A sauna ----------O\VNER ·Bluff homt!, 4 BR, LOVELY 2 BR apts. Furn & Spanish Country Estat Llv on Wilron) Ofc· 309• h1ace A b!lns, refrlg, lrplc., baths. fluge pool. e CHARMING 2 br, 2 ba, 3 BA, fly crptd. drpd, fµ-epJ. Unfurn. Shl'.g crpl'g, hld e • ----'------' . J ve' crpt/drps, 2 car gar. $2!15. fireplace, patio &. yard, '\'rly lse s 3 8 5 mo. pool Carpons. Adul!s, no ing & Spacious A~l1. Ter· 2 BR. FROM $1 55 ~1034. SMwn by appt. 544-2045. Merrimac Woods S300/mo, yr lease. 2212 714/892-1684 peti:. From Sl40. raced pool; sunken gu BBQ COi\1PLETELY RE 0 EC, 2 BR Crtps drps Con-ai lt1m1mac Way, C.M. Waterfront Dr. 673-3456 =B7L,'v=r=•·s~1:»"'00o~,~,~.~R~/2~B~A. 19'11 Pomona Ave, CM, Unbelievable Living • Only CULETANS C&ONCOZY FAMILY venle~t location, N.(, shop. j Newport Beach 1 BR. unlum/furn. $1JO up. 3 Br, 2 ba, 1 blk north of den. pools. Nr Elem & Hi -""":,.;,,:_;,=c;:,:.:;,;;c.::...i I Br unf $1SO.furn $l 7S NJ · · V. LOCATION. ping center"-schools. $135.1 A New Way To ·Llve Pool. Laundry nn. 897 "BEAUTIFULLY furnished. achl&. $300/mo. S44-lJS:> HOLIDAY PLAZA 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 VILLI. MESA APTS 673-8145 I f"" rt B h Center St, No. 2. Cdl extra lg. 2 BR .. 2 balh. 2 ~~~:.~~ildren ok. 3 BR 2 BA i,; block To DELUXE Spacious 1 BR ALL UTIL INCLUDED 119 W. Wilson 646-1251 2 BR, cpUdrp, hltns, closed 0:Kw0'6o GA~·~EN 642-218L patio home. l\1od. elec. kl!., 1 ~'--~=_:.:.;;.____ furn apt $135. Healed pool. Special Bonus; a silver. SPAC 2 Br apt 1 from gar + prk'g, Adu 11 s. ·APARTMENTS Hu-n°'t"lng-,t"on.,-.,Be;:--o-ch-:---1 D\V, ,,·asher & dryer. Dbl Costa Me11 Ocean. s.~.,_m.,01·,. • Ample parking. No children plated candle 11nuHer lll $140. Htd pool. Play yd. $135/mo. 22W Rutgers Dr. ,...,, 1.., .. Sir b gar. $400 i\lo yr lease" 3 BDRtlf home with "' .,.. • no pets. 1965 Pomona, yours If you bring this ad Crpts, drps, bltns, patio. 646--6919 v•• 0111 eet twn R"'"' cM:~na,:;·,Irvlneti15·3ZlO f 1r eP 1 a ce. $HIO. 2030 Call today -Sell ton10tTOw! CM . when you visit our models, Newly decorated. Kkis ok, , 2 & 3 BR sha1i ar-C 1rrt17""14ond) 64,?':er Dr. ON BEACH I Fa11t remits with a Daily 4 blks s. of San Diego Frwy 1998 Maple No. 1 642.6:144 on m rpta, .....,.170 e Fast re&Ults are just a phone l\lonmvia Ave., Co!la ~tesa Pilot Classified Ad .. Dial Balboa Peninsula on Beach, l blk \V. on Holt 22lt College No 2 646--0627 d~1. bltns. $1 35-$1 50. SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2 a.II 642-56i8 Sell the old ituU direct 64Z.-.567S _ NO\V! . Chlld~n ok. Call 557~94.1 B drps NEW 2 BR, APrS l ;:';:;;;:;;'w:;;•;::Y;:·~=::'===J.;;;;;;:::.:;:::;:;;;:;::====::.:.====~==;;:;;;;;:-! $35 \\'K-OCEANFRONT lo ... 16211 Parkside Lane. NEW 1 BR apt, $150, AU util aft t p.m. r, cpll, , bltns, pool, From $230 Lovely Bachelon, 1-BR . 1n4) 817-5441 Included, Crpts, drps. All NEW priv patio, atudio type, 11,So l\.lald gervlce. Pool, Util. !!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! bltns le: d&h\\·sr Pool 1 1 Br, frplc, beams, Ba. Infant ok. 548-2682 1525 l'Urnltu:ra Available e 675-8T40 e Nice 'l\Jiet 1 bdrm apt chllcl OK. 307 A~ado, 'No. patio, w/w, blt!UI. l adult. Pl•cenlia. A.15k about our Carpets.drapel-dilhwubtt BACHELOR-sm .. apt for $llO per mo. D. 645--0984. ~~~ $136. Avl May l . I ;"dil',;."°c:'"':C"';;.·,,-=-.,.,,-,-f be~ted r!:1.::::- m4". Fom. UHi pd. Pvl , __ ._ea_n_64_&._"8_7_• __ LH"A"R"•"O"R.-;G..:;;;R"E;;E;;.,:;;s;;lc~~~-----11 BR.,,, llv'g rm, blln ""· -11oo.om~--~-bch. •0::.1mo. 67l--6i90 L P SHARP 2 BR $140 din·• an!a. t'\o..,,n1-on 1 .. e -.,.. _.,..... _, aguna Beach v,.... '"5 .. Securtt;y l1l&fdl BALBOA ISLAND houM" GARDEN & 511JDJO APTS Htd Pool. Adults, no pet&. pvt patio, Spa, swimming · ' bd d I PENTHOUSE, pvt aleps to Bnch.. 1. 2, 3 BR's. from SllO. Eas!Jlde • 642-"520 pool, ten n I 1 crb, Park HUNTINGTON rmi;, en, yr. east!. 27 2l3, ~781 brach, I BR, t i,., BA, far, 00 Peterson Way, C.M. SPACIOUS Bachelor 11 111 Newport. Sub-lease 6 mo. PACIFIC Corona del Mar \\'ash/dryer. Adlt1. 6 mo. 546-0310 paid. Refrg & stove, i1z $T.!O. 644--0993. ---------1 ~1'cc'c.:"cc·_;l.:.275c..o"'°"'-· ..c4!14-,_l.:.ll68c.__ I SPACIOUS 2 BR duplex. mo, Adult. 9'95 VaJencia, No. * EXCEPTIONAL Bayalde 7ll OCEAN AVE., R.B. By • 2 bd N rt • -h erp1 drp bltn .. A l ' io.1 .. __ 2 Br ' B <n4> 536-1'87 ocean &t'OiTI, rm, ewpo ueec s, 5, s, ""am Fllm-··~1._ ava11' EI e va · ore open 10 am-6 pm D.ny patio, frpl c. lndry, $220. ceilings, 1arage, laundry, I: LG 2 Br l~ Ba studio apt •w• · . WlUJAM WALTERS 00 Lease. adults. 642-lrni 2 BR furn apll, Pool No view. Adults. $150 mo. 169 No -ts: families only. Prlv: aub-tettJMan prktna. From ' chlldre:n or pets. 2'I05~ Meu. Dr 646--1166 .-S375 BEAUTIFUL !paclou11 I BR · patlo. 726 Joann st. $140 · 161h St. N.8. 84&-46&1 NEWPORT TO•-• ••2-Parklike Btach Llvln1 furni~hcd. Adu tis, no pets. DELUXE I BR, 900 sq. It., 3 BR, 2 ba newly decorated ""'......,"" ·uu..o tor Adultt $17:> lt>ase 673-Ti98 OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, bftns, crpl!l, ~· relr1g, New crPts, drps, bltns: SUBLEASE to Nov. 111. Ex· C D I Sol Coste Mesa $250 mo. ti1 6/15. Adult!l on-gar, bale, like new. patio. Sl6S/mo. 66--464'1. ec. 3 Br Parlt Newport asa e ly, no pets. 6'73-QS 962-4180. . Apia. Magnificent ba¥ view l &: 2 8R.-fUni/Wl:f. Pvt pa. QUIET attrac 11tudloa: 1115. \VESTCLJFF Drive • 2 Br. HUCE 3 BR 3 ba new crpl ~E 2 br, UP1tatra. Crpll. $600 per mo. 5t&-4701 befort: !lo, trplc In 2 BR dew.ton 1 Br. $125. Adlls. no pets. Ne"·\y decor. Bllll arr drp11 & paint, ~ntral htg'. pe1:· $~nge~7~7?°rt No 5. 539-0684 wkend11. dshwshn, erpt,, 0 drpa. ~b: 2l3.'i F.lden. Mgr Apt 6. pllances. Pool. e 642--62'14 Blf·lns. 1600 sq. ft. $JXI, mo. . . • OCEAN VIEW. Roomy 3 Br, a~led. ·From U45. BACHELOR apl. $1 3 O. 1 BED., block to ocean, JY.>OI, A'll.ll 5/17 645--1496. $170, -~ Br .. · 2 t'l>Ba. 'Stud:s 2 Bl, 11undeck, ref' a . 21661 Brookhunt St. KB. month, u111 , 1 n c I u de d-single adlllts, $135. 833--3535. 2 BR deluxe Townhouse. ~c:· 54~f.l • pr, $285/mo yearly. ~7452 * <n4) 962-66S3 '* 54fl.-S601 & 5.JIJ.·3913 644-<J63T eves. Prlv patio, encl gar, unall VlITT°A DEL Lido, on the 2 I 3 BR. $~ ap, Patio. * 2 BR Trnilt>r $120 + e WINTER RENTALS e ptl ok. XJ09 Cool\dt't, CM LRG. 3 BR, 2 BA, new ahag Baytront. Lee. l·BR. $350 Pool.. Children. MORA KAI utlh1 les. M111111+, persons Rr.nt NOW for Sept.! 34G-nt7. crpts, Sl69 mo, newly dee. Leue. Realtor 673-4350 Apll, 1!881 Mora Kal Ln. Wt only. * 64&-l~ ABB~Y R£ALTY 642-3850 2 BR, l~i BA, FA hl, w/w Nr OCC. Carport 557.f!Ul WESTCLIFF Drive • 2 BR. blk E. ol Btach at Garfield. AT TR Act 1 y E 2 br MAY.June al !he btitch! Lge crpts, drp!. bHlN. 1145 mo. 2 Bfl 1% Ba. Pool. Nr •hops, Newly decOr. Bltn a~1~71c.I_: .:.96249!M"'-'"'-'~---~I 1tu11io.111: b11, crpts Ir. dl'f>I. 3 br, 2 bl duplt1' ava.11 now. Bkr. 642.-4422 Adlts, m pelll. $162.SO Utll plianca. Pool. • 6421274 l or 2 BR. turn or uni. tn~I 1a~ ST iO. 6-12--5297 $245/mo. 549--0844 &SIDE 2 BR, blllns, CID, pd. ISM ~tonrovit. 5-IS-4336. 2 BR nr rnan. cptl. drp8 Cpt/drp, pool, nt lhope:, all turn unu~ ii" ·-,-Into quick Sell lhl old rtutt gar, laund. fac. No 1>9ta. F11.11t retulta are just a phone St.S5 yriy, Jst & lan + d~p p!. 1884 aonnma. 5484l3S <'a1h, call 642..SJlS 8uy the new 1tutt Child ok. SJ~. 646-1104. ct,;I 11.way • 64)..$78 311 361h St. 213: 24-ttm for be11t r.1uJt11 6Q.66'7I I I I • • " f • ..... --· . -f + • ' • • ••• , •l ':: t ~ •• ":;" .•• :·~· "\1 ••• . ...... ·~· . . ---' . ' ' .... .... ,. .......... ,,,. .. . . . • z• Q_AILY PILOT MMda,J, M• J, 1971 l A»·~m.o.M Jltl I a.,..-I~ I '°''*-1A:~P;'';·;• ;;;;;;;;~~l~B;us;l;n•;s;s;R;;on;l;•~I ;;;;;44.1~ Found (fr M edit Furn. o r Unfurn. 370 1--------- When You Want it done right ••• J!IlJ1 ~l _.__-~l!IlJ~iJ, 1~1 ;;;..,...,;;;_ ;;;l[l}]~I H•lp W•nted, MI. F 710 H•lp W•nled, MI. F 710 H•lp W•nl•d, MI F 711 I 1---------956 \VEST 16th SI.. Newport FNO: Qt, l':llb fi; Pomona, Newport Be•ch BPa.ch. 2·1 BR aptJ. "-1·2 Fem. blk Dox ie le AJDES For convalesce~. elderly ea.re or tllmlly cart. llon1emakers, 5117-6681 COUPL.E to -manage ~ unitl----=.,.-:"'.'":"'-·I apl bldf, ?.fature. Mu1t ha\.'e HOUSEKEEPER 3-4 dayt • exper & refs. Ca.ll 645-1260 wff:k. Good wage~. Releren- VISTA DE L MESA Apartments 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unt. Dish· \\'asher • St<1\1e and Refr'i&: - Sha, C'l'pt'g-Lrg ~c C"enttt. P.E;\"T Sttrts $155 Tustin & M114 D riv• * 54s..&ll * S.nt1 Ana BR hoUM: on 11.-J vie-w acres. Chihuahua mlK, brn &: wht a\...U with fix up ror i.'Om. feet, an.xiow for owner. binatian business &. llvln1 1 ~"'-2--7:.096"", -'54&-'-'.,9682"-" ____ 1 quarters or ownu will build ~1ALE Irish Sttter about l to suit tenant. Tri.Co Realty yr. Br collar with la brUI 64&061! stttds,. Vic Mesa Hith Sch. 557-9679 SHO\VROOM, mfZ. &: otfl~ 1----------1 space. Parlci~ Clou-in La.-Sr.IALL blk and wht cat "'1th &Una. $85-$395 Mo. 494-'653 ttcent 1 u r i er y. Vic. Rentals Wanted 460 Hamilton & BrookhW"lt. HB ..... ill Call one of the experts listed belo w!! ASSEMBLY. Would yoo Ukt to build boots? A tun job. Attend boat slxlws w/great boss. $1.10 hr. Call Helen Hayirs, 54().60.)5 COASTAL AGENCY 279(1 Harbor Bl a t Ada.ms BAKERY Thrill Stlire r 1rl 11·anted. Apply in perscn at CREDIT TIME PLAN LOAN COLLECTOR ces req. 873-8715 Alt. 3 HOr.IE\\'ORKERS to •tutt f'nvelopes Slt per l!XKI min. &nd self-add r esaed stamped rnvelopt, Donna \Vest, P. 0 . Box 564, Whit· lier, Cali!. 9060l INSPECTRESS Hotel exper. pttt'd * 646-1956 .. VILLA MARSEIL LES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS ~e~~ ne;t•.;.~113 b~ ~~~~-bicycle in CM call lo 1· s.nibland ~plita I~ ( Serllcet andR•Jllir• I~ I Newport or Corona del Ma.r 548-8490 l Gjf=l ! ~24 Placentia. Costa r.reu, ServicQ and ReP1!rt . ~ 548-9002 E.0.E. Betty Bruce lmmediat• Open ing & 2 Bdrm. Aph. Adult l iving Furn. & Unfurn. Dlshv.·asher • color coordinat- ed appliances • plush shag carpet • choice ot 2 color schemes • 2 baths • staU shov.·ers , mirrottd ward- robe donrs • indireCt light. ini;: in kitchen . breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush Jan~scaping • brick Bar·B·Q's • lll.rp beat. ed pools I:. !anal. 3101 So. Bristol St. (~'Mi. N. of So. Coast Pl.au) Santa Ana PHONE' ll7.8200 al't'a. No <"hildrtn, yearly I f I ..... 1',0UND rnale cat, grey & A • ease. urns,~ or un· white stri-a 1 o hi ha Ir ccount1ng fUrni5hed. Will move in at "" l"'o,.-,-....,,.------end of June. Will care for w/coUar. 54~133 RELIABLE acctg & bkkpg like it was Clur O\\'n home. FOUND sm female dor in 5 Jtrvice lhru P /L & ba.I M&-5476 Point1 area. 847-9497 sheet, all taxes, my home RESIDENTS Clf L ido, Lost --555 your ofc, pick up &. de!. re9pon11ible., mature aiuple l oc-::----------l:~ ..... -;--3Ll-;:-::------- "'0uld Hke to rent & ca.re for CAT, mostly while with rrtY Babysitting apt or home & pets fut sum-& black stripes & spots.1----------m~r or pa.rt. Call mornings Short halttd, alt male. TEENAGER wishes to before 9 or alter S pm, Clear plutlc collar. Vic. babysit on v.'eekends in 67~1892. San Mateo Pt., S.C. 492-9492 CClllee:e Park area ONLY. LARGE, exclusive home !Cit LOST: Parakeet, 1 re en 546-7817, evenings. \\'k~nd, v.·e~k or mo. Need w/yellow head, lost sat. BABYSJTTlNG in my home, privacy, flnt seclusion. Vic: Corona H I g h) and a, any age \l.~lcome. Rel:s. 5-i7.0036. John Brooks. Please call 673-1198 &trr3432 FURN rm w/kit. priv. YORKSHIRE Terrier. ~tale. L IC'D CHILD CARE employed male. Walking· Flea CC1llar. Nr. Adam!l & Harbor & Baker, C.\L 5 yrs. rlist. 3500 Newport 613-8131 Brookhw-st 4/28. 962-6417 exp. Rets. 545-2943 HEARING aid, Qu&litone, Builders Pers0Nil1 I~ Rooms 400 Personals 530 over the ear. Lost early1---------- April. 962-0197 NO Job Too Small! Brick, LOSI"-Apr 26-Min silver?» block. concrete. carpentry. dle (lamb Cl.JI) URGENT· add a rm, hour.e leveling, neetll all shots. 96S-4688, gar. door repain. Free est. Woody, ~945. SLPG. R."1. for steady work'g older man. no cook'g, by mo. only. $40. 1543 Orange, C)!. FURriISHED Room for rent $18 per v.·eek & up. No ~tudents. 998 El Camino. 51&4l51. Guest Home GET MARRIED Wsr big whet>I, vicinity St. C t S w HAWAIIAN STYLE Andrews Church. Pleue lrpe •rv1ce \Vestclitt Plaza ia Sff.f'Clting caU 64.2-0046 Diamond ~t Cleanlnj:: for .a couple who would like MAN'S prescr. bifocaJ 1Jus-A\'I' We room SS to get married at their cen-es in blk case Thurs. in Repairine; & installations ter. Thu.rsday May 21, 7 PM. downtwn Laguna. 494.5432 Free Est. ~1317 Background, dress, music, Small, brown puppy, about Ci11 rpenter gilts. Honeymoon in Hav,taii 1--"':0':'::-'::'~""""'"°"-provided at no obligation 6 v.·k.s old, Male Short hair. CARPENTRY I.her than the ceremony. 646-1361 r.n:NOR REPAIRS. No Job Contact Dick Vernon's, Jean ----------1 Too Sm.all. C&binet in gar. *PRIVATE ROOM Dahl, Halliday's Cir The ages & C1 ther cabinets. !or elderly lady. Bright • Storekeeper in Wes tclilt I ll i-) 545-8175 U no answer leave cl>eery garden surround· Pl Instruction t «< -n H. o -· ~·-. ;,gs. Nutritious meals, Call I :~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii.;l~t/'~~~~-R,:;;;;;---,; 548·~753. * FULLY LICENSED * erson. 1----------1Reoov.'lled Hindu Spiritualist PROBLEMS? Repair & PP.IV. room in lic'd guest Advice on aU matters. Schools & remodeling service. Master home, bo&rd &. nursing Love, Mal'Tiage, Business In structions 575 Carpenter. "Anythi!J& in care. Ambulatory ma 11 • Readlnas given 7 days a Wood" 968-5220 H.B. 968-8225.. v.·~k. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. VIU.A San f\Jateo Care 312 N. El Camino Real, Center has vacancies for San Oerne.nte men. women or Muples. 492-9136, 4~6 893-H97 YOGA CENTER Summ er Rentals 420 D iscover a Gr••t New Career W ith The AIRLINES Cement, Concrete ARTISflC Concrete Cir Brick \Vork by ?.fax. Licensed Contractor. 644--0687 Gardening J APANESE Gardening Service. Neat v.·ork. Cleanup yd. maint. 96&-2303 JOHNSON 'S GARDENL1'/G Yard care, clean·ups, plan- ting, sprinklers. 962-~35. l.A\VN care & garden v.·ork. Light hauling. Ex i. 'd . Reasonable. Call 543-973:1. LA\VN SERVICE Yard or Garage Clean-up • 540-2079 • e JAPANESE GARDENER• ?rlaintenance, cleanup HB FV Cilf area * 842-8442 COMPLETE• la1vn & gardening semce. Jim !>iS--040 ... LA \\'N Main!. Hauling, new lav.-ns, clean-up, prurung. Frff est. Call 546-7379 General Servicet Husband Busy? Call ii-loose 545--0SXI alter 6-Repalr Build·Serv r.tost Things * LABOR UNLIMITED * HANDYMAN Weld ing -Carpentty 673.-1922 Hauling YARD, Garaq;e, cleanups. Remove trees. dirt, sJ.iploader backhoe. 962-8745 MOVING, Garage clean -up & lite hauling. Reasonable. Free estimate!. ·&IS:.1602 TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7 days. SlO a load. Free est. Anytime. 548-5034 P lum bin g LE\V Takas & SCln's Plum· bing Repa11' Repipe RemCldel Free Estimates 646-8340 Roofing LEE Roofing OJ. Roo!1na: of all types. Recover, repain. ther-mo roof roat1ngs, .,.,•bite & color. Lie/bonded since. '47, 642-1222 T. Guy Rooting, Deal Direct. I do my Clv.'n work. 64~2780, 548-9590 Sewing/ Alteraiions EUROPEAN Dressmaking. ExperUy Custom Fllted, Accur. Reas. 673-18-19 A ltera tions -642-5845 Neat, aectJrate, 20 years exp, Ti le CE.RA.\llC tile ne\V & ' remOOe!. F1·ee e~t. Small jobs \11elcome. 536-Z426. Tree Ser vrce TREES. Hedges, Top. Trim, cut, removed, hauled. Ins. &12-W31l Blg John GENERAL i:ree serv., cleanup. All around dyman. Reas. 646-5848 yard han· J[Il] Houseclea n ing JAPANESE \voman f 0 r I Job Wanted, Fem ale 702 bouse\•:ork. Need trarupor-HOUSECLEANING, days. tation, O\\·n trans., Exper. Refs 1[ :H0-13.JZ needed. 968-6402 Bay & Beach Janitorial Help Wanted, M & F 710 Gxec Chief Accountant Gd exper Supv abllll!<'s Sec 'y Legal 2 \'rs. CaJ1f. Law Corp & Probate Sec'y l nsuranc• Fire, marlne or casualty Cash Recept p/tim• 10 Key adder, 2o hrs wk Polic y Typ ist 60 \V.P.:\L Med. Back Office l Yrs exper. ~ days v.•k File Clerk Clerk T yp ist 60 W.P.:'11. Acctng. Trainee Good Typist. \Viii train on keypunch, fl lust be exper. in eollfC· tiCJns. This 111 an xln't oppor. w/a iood tututt & advan~· ment poS!ibUll!es for t h e rlght person. Good atartin&: salary & xln't company bcn. e!its. PLEASE APPLY Mr. Lou Mujica BANK OF AMERICA 548 W. 19th SI. Cost• Me s• EquaJ Oppor. E1nployer .-..D~E~L~IV~E~R~Y!!'!!!!S~A~l~E~S~I t.le.n if you're very neat AP· IR.VINE PERSONNEL SER.VICES.-AGENCY Researth Sec1~ta.r)' Billing Clerk Jnsurance Girl Typist, fiO w.p.m. Secretary Land ~v Gen'I Office Phones Credit &. Collections Claims Adjuster Traintt f~grre) Underwriter Trainee. tdee;reet $500 $425 lo $600 $3'l5 to $600 $315 $150 to $'100 488 E. I71h fat ll'vine) C.M. 642·1470 pearing 19-25, single & v.•ould l.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ... ~'!'~!!!!!!j like ro v.·ork for a nat'l con. Keypunch $400-$450 cern delivering advertising ~fin. t Yr. exp. on 029. Penn. gifts to girls 18-25 with xln't day ihift, Gd benetita. Near earnings to start. Apply in Org. Co. Airport. person, tilon thru Thurs. 10 J, R. Pier ce A~I t(I 12 noon, 1540 E . Ed-AS!OCiates Agency, Inc, Inger, Suite l'.1, S.A. 1885 Ne\vport, Cl\I 642-6720 DENTAi:-E.x_e~. Sec'y Ole. KJTCHEN.help. dishwuher r<f<i:· D1ve_rs11ied d u t 1 es. &. waitresses, exper. Apply secy skills, bk k P n g . in person 9am-12pm, Open mature. Good personality & Sesame 2436 W. Coast judgment req'd. To 45. Top Hwy. N.B. salary. 5-16-3000 . 410 W Coast Hwy . . , KITCHEN Helper k Ja.n1tor ' · 1 DENTAL Receptionist Secy, needed l\1ust be over 30 Newport Beach exper. Pediatric dentistry. Apply ·Baptist CClnvalescenf By Appt. 646.-3939 !>1~5615 9AM·5P'.M. for a.pp!. Hosp, 661 Center St, C.r.t. B OAT CARPENTER c. * Drafts man 1:~~~0~~ Dl~~rtpref.J.e:; or cabinet n1aker. Perm. job. ~m ~ Constr. _background ply Plai.a Cleaners, 557 w. Fringe benefits. Lake-Ar· involving shopping centers ISth sr. c.~l. rowhcad r.tarlna, <714) &/or other large bldg con-1...:;,;c..:c~~-~---· I 337-2501. i>truc!Jons. Submit resume & Legel Secr•tary BOOKKE EPER F /C salary ttQuirement. Heavy comm'!, probate & SERVJCE CENTER ""porate. l\tin. startinr $500. Relocate to Palm Springs. Live away lrum smog. Fine EMPLOYMENT AGENCY + group ins. ~ N•" t Ce"le O NB Grant Associatf!s Agcy constr. ro. pays fee on this ~ ..... ·por " r r, Crpts, V.'indov.•is, tloors etc, Res. & Comm'!. 64&.l.Wl Su,·1 ~.,~ "'A 4081 18002 Irvine Blvd, Tustin ACCOt.;riTS PAYABLE. gn>al 1"ob. Star! $550. e ......, .,..... VIE\V-2 bdrm -sleeps 4-adults only. Beautifully furnished. Available f\1ay 15 lhnl Sep!. AU or part, Call now fi7a-4930 AGT. LWITES YOU! To a demon- stration (no charge) Mon. at 10 A.\.I & 8 PM. Exercises for body & mind. 445 E. 17th St., C.r.T. 646-8281. SINGLE? WIDOWED? *Divorced Over 21* Oldest & lar&est. For a self explanatory meS$3.a:e 24 hrs a day. 541-9991 ee CONCRETE. Floors, A natural for younr; pe<>ple patios, drives. sldwalks, I !-.·Iesa Cleaning Service v.·ho .,.,·ant excitemenl plus! slabs.· Rea!. Don 642-8514 Carpets, \Vlndows, Floors elc. T icket Agent? Air Fttil'h1?' CEMENT WORK, no job loo 1 Re!lid. & Commc"J. 5-IS.-.1111 Station agen t?' Reserva-small reasonable. Free EX p ER. L 11 d y, o v.· n tions? Ramp or travel Estiffl. H. 'stunick, 548-8615. transportation. By day. aient! \Ve'U train you for CL"'STOM CONCRETE 5-lS..7801 aft 6 P:-01 '"'"'l'!!!!!~~~~,.,.~~l.~~~;"~';·'~000!!'!..-~-I T1!1'd of dull routine? 'l'l'y Cal! Helen Hayes, 540-6055 1- lhis out vr the or(i1nary Job. OthPr Ice jobs avail * DRIVERS * LEGAL SEC'Y, super sharp \.N>at 1>cnrl1 ts. Start $4CXI. COASTAL AGENCY N E • wlsome Sh, slenorette, Call ]Jcl~n Jlayf"~, ~ll)..60Cil 2190 J·larbor B! at Adams 0 Xper1ence IBM exec. & bkkpnirnper. COASTAL AGJ~NCY BOOKKEEPER Necessary! Newport Center Otc . 2790 Ha1·bor Bl at Ada ms F /C thru T.B. Constr & tract i\fu.s! have clean ca.Ii!. driv. G44-MOO. . . Renta ls t o Sha re 430 ~ YR old girl looking !or female ~mate lo share ex- penses of apt. 557-4082. I or 2 roomates needed 10 ~hare rent in Laguna Beach house. 494-2819 FEMALE roommate to share 4 bedroom OOme .t: ex- penses. 968-2640 Garages for R•nt 435 GARAGE 9x22, Clean, Dry, ne"· bldg, storage only, nr Fairgrounds. 646-&22G ** STORAGE Gara.ges $2j/per month 642-6391 until 6 pm. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Ph.one 5'12-7217 Cit l\Tite P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. Social Clubs 535 NEW PRIVATE CLUB "Ltl'J Have A Parly"-\Veek end cruises-dances & gour. met parties. Singles .t: mar- ried, jom the tun group now. Phone, Bill Bell. 547.()036 tlw.ie and more, day or nite. PATI~DRIVES.ETC. PROFESSIONAL \Ve include placement as.-Frtt est. 531•7968, 675-5516 HOUSE\\'ORK $3.5() hr. ACCT. CLE RK I cxprr. t.lust typr, Sa.J.aty ing rtcord. Not under 25. LICENSED Psychiatric tech. J v, rs. exp. and call Lor· Of)l'n. Call 642-3432, NB. YELLOW CAB CO, v.•/at. least 2 yrs exii:er. tc sistance. • 5t8·2-l.l4 • PATIOS, 9.'alks, drive·, in- 186 E lGth St C.M W(lrk \\'/retarded children. raine .at \\'cstcl11/ Personnel CAR bops or \\'ailresses. Al· · " • Do not apply unless you E st. 21 yn, Approved for stall new lav.•ns, saw. break, Vere.rans. Eligible instltutiCJn remove. 548-8668 for est. under the federally insured Contr•ctor student loan program. 1----------\VATER.PRF vinyl deck A irline School1 Pacific coatings, all types. Lee 610 E. 17th, Sent• Ana Rooting: Co., 0.1. 642-7222 543.6596 tree est ---------·!ROOM Additions. L .T. LIKE To b'ade! o ur Cons~ction, Sincle story or Ttad , P di col 2. Esum., plaru k layout. By Day. O>MTI Transportation. 836.0648 1\~<>ncy, :?0~3 \\'estch!f Dr.. 1 r active 'v I bubbling Learn a fascinating new have 2 )"TS exper , (213) !\B. 6-l:rZTiO. personality, p /lime. The skill. Pleasant chee rf ul Si0-8351 or 391..0451. 12121 A CCOUNT ANT $2SK Zoo Rest. (Coast Hwy at \\'orktng con<!~. Lile \\'Ork, \V. Washington Blvd, L.A. Top le\·eJ _j()b Call ~!rs .. l'llcArrhurl quick raises. Start Sl.70. LIVE i n Cook .I:: DEDICATED CLEA!\JNG Schmidt ar \\'e~tcliff Person· f c .. o~,-,,-,'1-,.-,-'1"-,-.-w-/~licgw=.,cs Call Sally Hart, 540.fi05S Housekeeper. Congenial, \Ve do ewrything. free COASTAL AGENCY . C 11 67, ,072 nrl Agency, 21).13 \.\'estcllfl b11ckgrouncl, organized v.·ork 2790 H ho Bl 1 Ad non-smoker. Refs. 642-9862. .estimate. a _,..... ar r 11 ams "·'" ,,~.,2 Dr, N.B. &15-:?TIO habus. able to composr> let· ....v-=<;1 Janitorial 1 AGCOL:Z.:Tl:--lG b ck g r n J': lers & ~rcept respon.~ihi..lity. EXPE~ENCED H" 1 Per· MA.i'l to assist mana,a:et in SPARKLE JanHoria.I. \Vin-1 gen"I ofc. 3 Hrl'. 5 days a Dlrol (,eer. 614-1]60. Gardening & Landscape. JocaJ appliance sale1. ~!ust dows, Doors, crpts & constr v.·k. $3 hr. 642-3472 Newport & Harbor area. be neat appearing. Prefer CHECK HERE 5-18-7958 ovl!r 2J. Call Mr. Sobrito at cleanup. Carpet shampooing. The "Yellow Pages'" classWed ..• 642-5678 OPEN HOUSE column. e,· s .ara se umn U 847-1511 of for you.! 5 Lines, S Days 1or 1,,~,,~-w=-.-Y.--q-,.~,~ily--m~m-• $5. Cali today .•. 642-5678. repair. Walb., ceUing, floors A complete comm'! !(>I'V. Adm . S a les WITH THE EXP'D all-around mechanic. 534-0984, 8Ar.1-10:30AM. For Free est. call, 962-0672. Own tools. Plenry o! work. MAN to learn picture tram- Elec t rical IMMEDIATE JOB KINGS!! li4i Anaheim Ave. C.M. ing &. sales. r.tust be neat, --. --. -------.--FIBERGLASS able to work w/hands. 190 Office Rental etc. No job too small. 547--0036. 24 hr ans. urv. '40* I==== * * * * * Addition& * Remodelina: ------------------.... ! Gerwick &: Son, Lie. ELECTRICIAN, licensed, I POSITIONS TO BE FEMALE Gt>l-coaters, touclHJp. Exper S. Coast Hwy, Laiuna bond_ed. Sma~l job~; ma~nt & FILLED WITH NO Only. Apply. l\lanu·PlMticg, AIANAGEMENT Ir a in e e , repaU"s. 548-::r203, ,">IS-9561 J943 Bldg B, Placentia, Service Station. Exper, Ite Prestige Office "ON' THE BAY" At Udo Yacht Anchorage 3 Room Suite Ground flovr·688 sq 11 Air cond, Cpts. Drps E-Z Parking, Util paid $-ll(J per month Available r<lay 1st TI7 LIDO PARK DRIVE Ne\\·port Beach 673-1060 DESK space available $50 mo. Will provide furniture al $5 mo. An~·ering service available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach. 642-4321 DESK space available $50 mo. \Viii provide furniture at SS mo. AnS\\·ering service available, 3Qj f\o, EI Camino Real, San Clemente, 492-4420 DESK space a\'ailable $50 1no. \VUI provide furniture at S5 mo. Ans1,1,·ering sen"ice a\'a~lable. 222 Forest A\'e, Laguna Beach. 494-~66 SUITES Available : l 7 61 Z Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking; air cond; he a I in i:: car· petina:: janitorial serv. Jn. riuire Suile 8 or caJl :W0-5i24 DELUXE off ice in Corona <lei ~lar near Post ofllce, Snack Shop, Ptiv. parkint:;. Sl OO mo. Bkr. 61>-6i00 NE\V ot!lce, grnd fir. ,\1r. rond .• onl.y $60. 15:iZ-A New· port Blvd, CM 642·2821, eves 64~·~106. INDIVIDUAL OFFICES New Irvine 1ndust Mmpl~x. top loc. 833-3443 anytime NEWPORT BEACH $108 to $185 * 675-1601 * 1360 S FT • Olbce or sto!"e'. Rea.sonable. Costa Meu.. Mr. Pope 645-2m Painting & DEGREE G irl F rid ay C.711. mech knowled1e. Tune brks Pape rha nging OR EXPERIENCE SloO a wk. FrRf\f located Jn Irvine in· etc. Neat in appearance. , 673--6041 * 549-2170 Trader's Paradise lines times dollars Lic'd Contr. Remode.ling Additions, PL!.ns, Layout Karl E. Kendall S4S-1537 Fu rniture Furniture: Stripping Special kitchen ca.b. doors 1tripped $3 ea. Av1 chairs $.S ea. Gluing. 642·3445. Gardening * LANDSCAP ING * No \Vasnng * WALLPAPER * When you call "Mac" 54S.J44.f 646-1711 PAPERHANGER, flock, foil. vinyl , guar., estima\PS. The Han a: man . 547-584fi Schv.·artz '-------------------.J N~w lawns, tree removal, sprinlders, drains, arbors, PAINTii'-'G, profe~s10nal. All work ~uarn . Color specialist. 962-6143. 5'17-1.i..ll PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs in Ha.rbor area. Lie & bonded. Rel's furn. 642-2356. Up to 40 acres w/Geother· 1n11.I potential in Imperial Valley !or boats, income prop or:' ol equal value, :'<Ir. K1,1,•an, !7141 5-H-8073. N"'Pt. Sch. Tenn.is & ~·im Clul> Fa.mily r.tmbersbip worth S450. will trade for lumitutt, car. motorcycle, etc. 646-00C» aft 5 or 542-8028 HAVE 2 stliry bldi', 2600 sq. I!.. C.ilJ .• choice ('Orner. S4S,OOO eq, For house. nu. plex, The fox Co. Real- tors. 6i3-9495. \Vi]] trade $23.000 1nve!ol· menr ln land limited part· ~rshlp at substantial di!o· munt for income prop or 7 !? 644-4j97 Ha\'e 4·P!ex • pool & rec room. Pride of 011·nersh1 p in Tusrln. \V<&nt F~e &: Cle~r hou$e, Call 673<H01 Aa:t \Vanr '68 or la!er 4 dr hi., or ? • Hav, ~G acre~ lSO more ll\'llill N. Cal lk .\N1'. $4j()() Pct ea. P"pd int OJ\ or $168 rln t'-Teyer 546-5880/549-1.lGG Ha\'e eut-s1d,. downto11.n 2 hr home. FHA financed, 19000 Equ1ly. \\'ant incom,., :OSta :'1-!'e!ol. :-.·latcharn Real- ly, 616.48.17 * 28' SLOOP. Rhodes degjzn. patios, fences. Llc'd contr. <'ti d11y sailor. Good corn!. Use M~ter Charae. 13 yn A'king $1900. 1'rade for Joe. exp. 536-1225. auto. Call 66-3376 or PROFESSIONAL. PA IN TING/papering. 18 Yrs. in Harbor area. Lie & bonded. Ref's !urn. &12-2356. _&_12_·5_2_JS_a_"Y~l-im_•_. ____ 1 tree v.'Clrk, sprinkle~!i;.:: S9500 eqty new 4 br, 2 ha, Uon, pests. diseue. \11ttd PAlNTlf\G/paper1ng. 18 yrs air cond. comm acre. control. Clean up jobs. in Harbor a.ea. Lie & Ri\'etside. Want late model Terms. G«irre, 646-5893 bonded. Ref's furn. 642.2356 auto TD's small income AL'S GARDENING IN1' & Extcr. Paintini;. OC.. 496-fW5 eve1. for 1a.rdenl.na: It 1mall L\c'd, lns. Free C'SL 30 y1·s ~\V B ...... 11 la.ndscapin# lft'Vic:es, call exptr. Chuck, 64j.-08(Y.J ug. c..ACe ent 54~5198 Serving Newport condition. Tfade for 2 trans-Cdilf, O:.ta r.tesa, Dove; PAINTING: ~?nes1. guara,n. portal.ion car11. or ? ! ]969 Shotts Westclitt. 1 leed \\'Ork. Lied. L-Ocal rel s. Dodge Camp!i'r lrade. for ONE ' J -~ I Call 675·57"0 a.fl ;',. 1 l ~., -196-214~ slop apa.nese g .... ue n· o or · · · a. inr & minor landscaping. PROFESSIONAL pa.tn!tni; . r.1otorhome • loaded w/ex-Free est. &,19-.J..ql7. Harbor inier1exter. Hone§f \1·ork. tras, 27' of luxury, Also sm View, & Turlle Rock I Lie'. & in~. ~11·27.19, 6.J.l.S.150, Spanish . home, d wntv.-n AL'S La.ndscaplng. Tree *PAPERHANG E R * Palm Spnnc~. Trd for coast 1"t'moval. Yard remodelirig. Superior Crarrsmnn. Reas. real esta!e. 536-3652 Truh hauling, Jot <:lea.nup. Rates. C. Rebko, 646·2449. \Vil! trade 1~ Y'V camper. R('pa.!r &prlnklers. 673-1166 Plestor, P a tch, Repair- '.'u·cel\ent.~richt~C16~.!:'_.r ~ EXPER. Japanese-American PLASTER-Pa!ch-R,'.n Adrl~ 1 nn1ng '" Or J r uf'llCn". 111.rder>er complete tarden-· -Ca.Ii \Villie 548-0411 after . · . 1 Accous. te1hngi;, s l u cc n • · 1n1 ~t'f'Vlt:e & c eanup. 1't'lin. ftte <" ji; 1 1 m 11: I e ~ 4 p.m. 893-01.JO 6~· 1'91 • 1~ ·~~o II • °"".,.. ;) . ,)' .r"f•"'<' ll ;). 10 · 2 8~ ~nl!s C.r.r. $m.'d. CLEAN Up Sptcialisl. haul· * PATCH. PLASTERl~G ~~ $..)5. I a.uunuible ~t Ina: odd jobs, new ~ence & A.U IYP''· Free ('~liniates 6.6 "· Trd fo1· cir hm. This !"e'palr. Ilea~. M~~ Call Ml}.681j 11.!"e'A 12't·S30~t le ownr will Gardtner. Yard tlean-tJp. C'a.rry 2nd. Art !W9-0'll8 Plutina. Sprtnklera. P lumbing is· &~ton \Vhalar tYPt Exp'd. 64&-5469 _B_&_M_H_o_t_W-.-,.-,-s·.,-.-. hoAt, ne"·· & trailer. TrA{fe EXPER. Hav.•a\lan Ga.rdtner for n1o!orcycle. 823 Tov.-he Complete Ga.rdenlna Ser- St.. C .• \J. -vice, Kamalanl, GJ6.4616 Call S46·12S7 * Harbor IAv.11 ?-lairu. *" 'Trade $~.500 tqulty, btaut. Sprinklers. land~plnf. F'rtt M' cabin crui,•r. F /B: for ta!. 675-6'4j 1>qu11y In oet11n view 2 or 31-~-Cu:--,t~A~Ed=r~•-L&""wn=--­ BR + f.11m rm hom(' er du-r.talntena.nce Llc'd lnaured plex. 6l2·!190, 540-1492. MM808 Aft '•. ' Tank & labor ln~rl'ilJPrl 30 ~al f.lO e 50 gAI Sl20. -10 gal $100. e Ph· j.'l7-2'JjJ PLIDIBl~G REPAIR No Job IM small • &12·3128 • SS HOUR Plumbini:/electr1cal rtpair £.12..21~ 642-1~03 --------. duslrial complex nc eds Apply v.•kdays 2590 Newport NECESSARY ... F /C Bookkeeper \\'Oman !or invoice typing,l_B_I",..',.· c~·.,"-·...,----- Blr!<?; :'llaler1a1 Exper. phone & t:;eneral office. MARRIED! Too many hills'!' 'rJIE LESS f:XPERl- E:~CE YOU ~AVE. TIIE EASlER IT \\"ILL :'llA!°'F: JT ron u.;; ro n :,,cH YOV nun \\'AY OF' DO ING Titll'\GS. AfTE'P. C0)1PLETING Ol 'I! TR A I N I :\ G PP-0· GP.A:'ll \'OL:R. ~ir:THODS OF' o'o I NG 6US!NE~s \\.ILL BE OF THE ~lO~T l'r ·ro DA·rE T!::CH· ~t QL:Cs. I YOU!t N"E\V KNOV.'L· EDGE \\'ILL BE THE I STA P.T Of A NE\V PRO· FE&l!Ol'.\L & EXCITl"'G CAR EE rt_ AS AN ASSOCIATE llF' OA\'E LOOl°'I:-:CLA~D, IN· VEST.\IF:Nl' ANALYST. R. E BP.OKER YOUR NE\V CAREER \\ILL ENABLE YOU TO REACl l TI~E HEIGHTS 01', PRESTfGE &· SECURITY. APPl.ICATJONS Bf.l'.'l'G TAKF::'\ ;-;Q\\I TO F'lLL PO- SITlONS !:'11)1EDIATELY. • ~111r1 ln1mrrliately • P!u~h OU1res • c.,mpany Car Plan • fringe Benel1t~ (".\LL J\'O \\' TO BEGIN YOt."R C1\REEft il-IAKING BIG ~t01''EY. 547.5771 Ask for Mr. Ca mron fron1 $500 a mo. Hours: 8-4:30 Afon/F'r i. Permanent part-time Sales Sec'y To $12j a n10 Recept/Sec'y S-100 a n;o Factory T rainees r·rom $1 6:i an hr .MALE Welders Heliarc & arc Yrom $3.50 an hr Au to P arts Man fron1 S~ hr Electronic Tech. F'ront S!i:-,0 a mo T ruck Driver l\11011 L.A. ,t Or1:. Co Sl.ZtO hr Lathe Opr Lathe & ilH!Hng )Jarh1ne Opt>1•1tor s~.2.j an h1· Brake Al ign. Man r1...,111 S.:.00 a n10 APEX Employm•nt Agency 1873 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 548-3426 ~16-6180 employment. S.e 1'1anager. FURNITURE \\·oodworkl!r, Mon thru Thur a.ft 1 pm, no production. Experienced on· i-hone calls please. Paulo ly. 2013 Plactnt)a, C.ilf. Drive-In Theater, 3 051 i Gal F riday $515 N!!wport Blvd, C.M. No SI-I. relaxf'd friendly at-AlATURE !"e'sident m &: r mosphere. Xln't Mach. city \\'anted for pre1tige 30 unit co. Top benefils. Call i\liss adult apls. C.M, Reply Laura, 557·6122. Abigail Ab· stating exptr. aie. family bot Personnel Agf'ncy, 230 status, present situation to \V. \Varner. Sui1e 211, S.A. Class11ied ad no. r-.t J7, Dai· : GARDENER & r.tArN· ly Pilot, P. 0 . Box .G60, I TEN AN CE l\IAN-Exp'd, Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Lge apt complex, Newport MATURE "·nman !or u.7 Crntcr Perman!nL 511 day. am shirt. Sawyer Home, Pleasant \\·orktng con d . fi.IB-6TI.6 2619 Orana;e Ave Paid vaClltion & insurance. C.~I. ' ' ~pe-ci ty agl", l".'q>t'rience &: ;-rm. references. \\'rite Classilied t.lature 'l aV'""~ant house· art No. 117, Dally Pilot. P. ~eept~, • ~ ;i days. morn. 0 . Box 1560, Costa i'<!esa , ~ngs. 548-73l:i. Ca. 92626 J\IENS \\'Car shop need~ HAIRSTYL IST ~ung man. Good oppor. to v.·ith son1e cllentele Salary advancf'. See :'l~r. Nation, or / comm., va.c. pay. 1912 Harbor Blvd, c.:it. f\[ALLIE'S \\1ig &. Beauly ~.IOTEL ~!aids, t:;<ip'd. Apply Salon. 548-3446 tn person, Costa il!tsa Inn, HELP C.ill. I 1n1 in a fasl gro\\'int business and need belp, II you have learlershlp ability ,,,. & \\'Ou!d lik~ fo earn mot'f "'i" money, phone me !or in1er- vle\\'. :'lliss R ich ards . 645-0S".>S llOUSECLEANrNG v.·anled, $2 per hour for 1 Br home in Cd~1. 2 hl's da.ily ~Ton thru F'tl ror 11·orking 1\•ifl!, rt.fa COOK/1-fSKPR. lor r.ouple. req'd 673-3790 11.ft 6. Wt a re now accepting l.1\·r tn or nut . 1400. mo. 1-IOUSEKEEPER 1l'hO dClei applications for - * BUSBOYS St:i.r" 11~!' qualifications .t. practical r.u rslng to live-in. l~rf'~ \\'rite Classified ad ~1u1t be honest, dtpendable, N\l. ::G. O;illy Pilot, P.O. ittady, goott coo k . 8'>x IJ(i(), Costa illesa, Calif. Reftrrnccs 548-56.~2. i\DVF:RT~INC'; •ART t ~ T !l2£26 HSJ..:PRS Emplyr pays fet Apply in Person Produrrlon ~lan11,gf'r !or hot COOi'. Exper. ft llme & pt/ George Allen Byland Aren-1o. 2 Daily I to .; Nr11por1 B~ach a;:enry J rimr. P:irk Lidn Conv•les-cy 1(16.B ·E. ]6th, S.A. "~ rira!!Arthur Bl\'d. r.111.~t have ~ bo~rd N'n! Crnll'r s.2•8044 -, M7~39.j (Aero:\~ from O.C. Atrporll !\kill~. 1\:1'1()\V prtnlfnl?;. pl'()-' . 1.H~o=us=-E=K~OE=E=P=E=R~~,,--. -,11 Nt"'J)(l1i 8'-at'h d11rtlon .111nri ~tlir<l11hng. Xlnt COL:NT~:R ~ll't for dry $chi hUd Pvt ve-in. b oppfl•tunlt)', DUREL cleancn:, expt 1•. pref 'd . ~boa:;c1..,·C 11 ~~34a /IDVF.RTl!'ING, 1Ii2 Du· Plaia rlf'aner!\, ~7 "'· 19th !:~'~~· ~~·~·~~~~l!'_!'.\l':~~~!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!<I f'IO!'ll or .. 1\.8 . S.U..tliiO s1. C :'II. for be~I rerulls! G.fl-5673 Sell Idle. Items now: ___ , -• Monday, Mar 3, 1971 DAILY PILOT 29 l[Il]I .___ .-.._ .. _l~.I.__ _""~-1~ I -l~I J[§J I "" ~ ~p.... I~ I ...::-~ l~ He lp Wanted, M & F 710 l Help W.tnted, M & F 710 Help Want~. M & F 710 I Reuben's \ F A tho_, _.. 1-5' Boston Whaktr typa boat. DON'T GET a.ctory u ''1~"' PART Slame&e klllcn11 1s1 \~B· .. •t•,•. ;P;o;w;er;;~;m'°'~i 116 Cats Antiques IOO Antlque1 too M lscelllfttoUI newport . personnei _agency ~!3 LJ.)\'t·r JJr,\• Ne1\pot't lk.i.l·l1 bl~-J.'jill Exec. Sec'y l o $650 1''11gr Co1njl11lrt· hai.·kc:n>ut\il Lega l Sec'y $600 2 \'1·F GI'. 1·.~p1·r. Bookkeepe r 5520 'f)Pe :l.l 1-!"oJ1.I IUIUt< T raffic Cferk SSOO T,1111' :Ill, !ti k1'} .i.Jdvr I Receptionist $450 Good t) pini.; Tra ve l Agcy Clrk $450 ~ \'1•:1r ... Exper11•nt·• Asst. Bklcpr to $450 l !Ju I uff!rr- Cashier, 30 hrs $260 lnelud1n~ S1H & Sun Accountant $750 linl\Vlh lljlJl()1iun1ly Store Mgr. $700 + ~por1111i.: i.;d~ Ovl'rndr Wa rehouseman $43:! LAGUNA HILLS WAITRESSES '.'\uw inlc1•vil'l\'ing 71 Yrs or 11101"i' HOSTESSES Pull Tlsnc BUS BOYS I Costa Me!iCI FULL TIME I DAY-BUSBOYS ' J Days • l\.lon, thru Jo'rL * ,\p11ly * 3 to 5 pn1 for intv'. llij \V ~ Adains Costa :Olesa ANDREA'S ANTIQUES JUST RECEIVED NEW SHIPMENT! BEAUTIFUL AUSTRIAN , ENG LI SH & FRENCH PIECES. GREAT SELECTI ON. ALSO CLEARI NG OUT ODDS & ENDS TO MA KE ROO M FOR ANOTHER EUROPl:;A N SHI PMENT ON THE WAY. BEST PRICES TO DEALE RS! , ANDREA'S ANTIQUES 23MI Ntwpo<I Blvd., C.M. ~s-4870 Open Dally 10 •.m. to 5 p .m . * Sun. Noon tll 5 DI '"but 1 New. $350 or trade for me> MARRIED IN 1..-. or ar 7 11oeekt. old ~.00 each JUNE I 1·1nu.h.IL * Klmb&ll I==~· ~*="~l>l~"~'-·-*-·--t<>rcycll' Boat or trailer for Conn * ThOmu . 16' boa1, '150. 823 Towne St, :\Jake lt ThW":sday, r-.ta.y 7l'th Kohler &: Ca.tnpbell 11~'.""IDSQ:\I!-. BI u e Po 1 n I C.~1. 64fi.125T. at \\'estellU Pla'Ul 1-l1w1iil•n S1amr11C-Purebred 8 wks =~c-C,===...,--:-,,--rabulous selection of new & old. S~. Call 67:>-bz;.. 18' TUOMPSON A: Trailer. 11(.fl'"-Dress, music, 1ifta. used gra.nd1, 1pinet1, cou-·l~;::,=.:~:;;:c:::::,.:::;::.__ ROhp Evlnrude. Many xtru. iloneyn\OOn In· Ha11,•aii pro. &Oles & or&:&lll only al BE.:AUTIFUL tnale Siamese $1650. 673-2164. \'idt'd. Contact Dit'k Vern-COAST MUSIC klHC'n, 7 '''eeks old. $20. "'~~-=...,----,--;;::::=I on's, Jean Dahl, llalllday·s NE\VPORT &: HAR.SOR 833-2355 ·~~ak~~v:=e7ita.Owens, or The Stort'ktt(l('r, at \Vest-Costa a.1eaa * &12-2851 SlAr-.lESI': kittens, 8 \Vks, • 548--24311 * cliJI Plaza. S rtin Goods 830 11urebrc1l,, 1nales & fl'n\alcs, .67 32. Twlnscrew Chris DWtOND, new wedding Sl't po SI Sl5. Call 540-7493 Corinthian, low down. Xlnt Gunr. perfect, f I a V.' I es s. SURl"BOARD, 6'8" Chuck Oogi 854 cond. $12,500. 548-2434 Have .?.39 cu. total Guar. Dent, Good cond. only i 1_...;;. ________ 1,0'-~'--'=~-c""'c--=-I appraisal, ~3.575. Sell Sll75 ding. Fin box, $65 or olr. BEAUT. Springer Spaniel blk '60 30' Chris Crll Cbn Appliances I02 Diamond v.1de weddina: ?>lark 842-0023 & wht, need.'i gd h01nc & Cruistr, sips 6 ,T.S .• A.P., Ll·S i;h1f1 .\lon·l"n. .\Jiply ln ,.,~·1~n 21001 A1·1• D<' L1earlota La~uua HllJ;; I 111 l l ring, 2 cts total, cost Sl750, 7'2" SU"FBOARD lovini;: cnre. 20 mo·s, spa.ytd R.D f". \v/u.U'g •a bot . ·~-I · --• ~ f O"·d· · • .1 $6000. 71~/635-1614, 77G-72l2 ~ ........ , REFRIGERATOR, Gib$<.ln. &l'll .s)j(). D amond pier .. "'"" 96S-l8GI after 6 m cm. uc 1ence tram_~ .... 1 SALES runs v.·cU, could use pain-rarrings cost $1150, sell • p AKC reg. :O.lon('y not tm· 19;,ij 26" CHRIS C.Onnle, twin Busuwss & i!'ldustrlal mk1 11·/ tins:: $35. Lg refrigerator $3j0. Perfect blue-"•hile. KN"EB BOARD porlanl. 548-71J6 !Crew. Xlnl coM, Sl250. 1,\1 lht> El Toro oft ramp S.D. freeway! I ' k H I W rod M & F 710 '7"111. brl. ........ in, f'lcx, $45. 673-::SOJ. no..,. ::.A7 "A""· EVl!s 673-7257 tlo. procluc.I. Cil r !uni .. 111 ·e • p an , \rith "'•!lout shelvts & hot-.,... ·•-&\SSET HouM puppics · 9 ~J • '" • ....,,,.,, r-136 Topaz"'"'·· Bal Ii.I. T · '" SIS.000 n yr. Con1n1 & draw ton1 freeU"r, runs \'cry 1vell * AUCTION * 11ks, /\KC. shots. Tr I 28' Chris Win - $7200. SERVICE Station auendan!s J50. Apl. size n"[rig. v."/ TV, R•dlo, HIFi, femalC's. Red nuU<'S. S75 up. 1 owner. $7250. 838-3791 Clll llclcn Hayes._ 5~0.!i°:U 1 v./exp. full time days. Also. rross lop ft'f'ezer, runs 11·ell, Fine Furniture Sterff 8J6 4!H-IT12 Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 COASTAL AGENC\'. t'Xp. I/Lime lube n\an. Ask look.ii niC'e $65. 839-4431 & A~plianc7• BRAND T\e\ll Ze.n!th 2l" ,.,..10, BASSET Hound, 1M-rolor RECEPTIONIST. For the 7790 tla~-, Bl at Ad•m• 10, Tom, Rlohf>'<ld 19th • LADY Aucllon.!i Friday, :00 p.m. ~.... t ---•-t ~ & t ,,. T ,· .. ~,....,w Ch"· !u~tly i,:a l 1.1·ho ('njoys public n'la--..,.:==·~ ~~~=~,,--Kenmore 11u10 d 8 port TV. lull reniote cont. ma e, "''"~ ge yaiu ov-.µ.. v.· '"'L''" '"'• SHOE SALESMAN Ne"'port, C:0-1 ivasher, xlnt oorxl $65. l<\en-W in y's Auction arn \\/sell !or '~. ,.l-'ll;I alt 1ng care. Eves or v.•im:ls equip'd. rishlng or Cruis-1 uons. Grt>al ('hi'lnce to 1nee.t f"'N "" ,,., Mo• · Xlnf cond st3--:U34 or Salcs"'Om11.n -l'xp'd In I SERVICE Sta1ion 1\Uen.d. niore auto v.·ulH!r, ~ 2015\~ Newport, Cl\·! 646-8686 5 <>"l't-VJl>'t ing. · · , p1'0ple. Starl $400. li""" • 909 Cat Jean Bro"ii, ~0-Glll.I tugh -~ade lamlly shof's. I )lature. Graveyard shirt. I cone!. S35. }\enmo're elec Behlrid Tony's Bldg, lo.fat'!. 2 ALTl:C Voice 01 Thcalcr LOVABLE lcn1alc fa v.· n Boats, S•il i COASTAL AGENCY llen1ph\ll Sh0t>s. 51 fashion Apply Arco, 3636 E. Coas\ dryer $.iO. Guar & delh't'red. 1 26 .. BIKES 517. 20 .. bike $l0. speakers. $37~ for both. Call Chihauhua, 9 mos. 7 lbs, nds 2790 llarlx>r Bl a1 Adanis • lslt1nd , &M-12'!3. • Jl\\'Y:ijl t. ~6-8672, S4i-Sll5 Gal range $25. Ping pong 557-21 1~ Jovu1g honie !nrd ya.rd. DJ:~;:,RGa~~~~ &ou~.ngl~;) • ORTHODONTIC ass't, over W. Exrwr prer11 -1101 ncr. 1 \V1!1 lrain. ~t1S-Ji:!7 feeu.ben ~ 1 SERVftE Sta. Salesman full GIBSON v.·ith cross-to p lable $8. Pov.·er mower $20. l/7?S-OG77. 5J9-ilSl '1124 Shelter Pl. Yachting Svs .• ' Sales I time. l\tusl be neat in ap-fr<'C'zer. Appmximalely JJ Couch $25. Elec. bit-in oven 3 l'tlALE ~lal!ese Pups, 6 San Pedro, 213 832-8391. WANT A pearanee. Apply 2 590 year~ old. Good condition $20. AM-Ft.i l spd console I ill V.'eek.s old. AKC. Xlnt l~!97.'~L~f~G7.f!TN=7.1N~G=---w~/~tra""'t1<-,,I: Newport Blvd. C.i\1. S50. 847_7187 S20. Lots 1110~. U 7 E. 18lh f,..e to v'ou papers. $250. Alter 6 pm. I SJ-tEETivll"""TAL , . St CM 67j....400j Necrl~ work & paint, i l250. ' I 1971 CADILLAC TRAINEES USCD 1"''" ""'"Y I ' . &1>-5llt6. lnlml:'diate Openings Culligan \\'alcr ;x>ft(.'ner. CARVE l':::IJ drat ~nJ ~n ABANDONED 111 di t ch AK~ :~~!.Do~~7e;ale. FIBERGLASS saUboat 8 & BEST PAY , C 11 N ,. I fllakr olfcr. 5'10.-~IO or wrdon)'X ~1>sta ..,.,. a e lovable hlk Jlu!fy pup, !I ,, ... 1•63 trlr. 13',j', good 1aU1. $275. I Good Pay. a . 0\\. 61,·19•0 kl 1•1· Id "'"" • ""'"'' * ~~~ • 3 kl Al I 9 P'f •-9 A'I o p'' 1 -. ''" nt'r aet'. "'\ go -.... v.•ks , small hl'1'cd. Needs .. _ TI4/~jl as or an 9 A.\ -· ...... l "v 1 -• 1 Carved horse out of 'llone · · ST. fkrnards-G1ant. AKC I Orange Coasi !\1A\TAG gas dryer SW. S[11'<·1al honk". Jov1ng cat'<'. .,1 1 & . _, $IOO ~"TEAL m;.r HOBY CAT! fo~, ' ' , . . . ~ $50. 10.5 carat Auslralta.n Good I f . h pups. ,, 11) s v.onno:u. ~oon EmrJoyment A~t'IK'Y NOl.!.'f! au1o v.ashe1 $6 .. J. Bolh _ ~ P aY1:'1alr 01 ot (>r & up. 12131 3:J2-JG24 """"' 1?4 Broadway Cos.tR ?>lesa xlnt rond, Guar & delivered. I opal S50. 673-5089 doi:. Sl.7-74j(}, 542-7096 5/4 e 67l-5t99e I W;.3111 ~3u2 &t>-:n13 ~72.s.17-8115 ~IOVIJ'l:G out of state ·NEED loving care forLONG-llAl!lE J? r-.lalc JIOBIE Cat 14, aU la.1es1 OUR CO:\IP.\NY I ~ Camerai & 1nisei!llaneous itertll for sale •,rounded seagull. llavc too Dachshund AKC sr;. niod"s. Race e q u Ip p e d· BUILT ON TRE:'>lf.NDOUS TELLER. Career oppor. in E -t S08 • dishes, pictures, lamps, n1any young childl"<'ll & 962-2989 aft l P?d reallOnable. 67>8988. PRODUCTION Sccon1J Sh1H 0;>1'11111.::s SHEET METAL 'A' Costa Me!ia PART TIME EVES. HOSTESS Over 21 IN TOWN? * Apply fl PRESTIGE, HO:-.JOR • & plush surroundings. Great quipmen beds, hide-a-bed couch -tur· animals to pl'operly care for IRISH Scllt·r puppies, AKC I =sN~·a=ws=7.ra=o~1'""°' -w~/~tt~tr~. ~Good""' r..~pi.·r. in layout &· r:.llr1..:3• Before II /\..\1 or 3-5 P:O.l QUALITY. \rHEN YOU pcople to v.-ork for. rapid CO:O.fPLETE Photographic quolse, tables, and ac· It. 5-1::.-2719 5/3 rt'g. Champioii 5.W"d. Show l.O learn saillng io. SlOO. I Hon of clos<' !olrranr1· .~hN'I 1555 W , Adams Hl-:PRESl-:NT OUR COYI-advancement. To $-100. equipment for amateur • cumulated ~ric·a-brac. Call LOVABLE youni; w h It c & Pf'l. i\j.;.;:,:; on{y • ~927 * 847-TI58 * rnC'lal Jlflr!<; 1s rcqu11·l'd. \ Costa Mesa PAN\', \\'E \YAN'r YOU TO I Call Jean Bro"·n, 540-60C>:i enlarger . t<inks, trays, trl-I to see any tune. 6464063 female cat tiger patches, 8 AKC St. Bernard Puppies, I --~--~~~-trail~. -:• .\tu~1 kr1011 i.r1-ha1'ks .r:. tJoCnd I KEEP UP THl': li\1AGE \\'f; COASTAL AGENCY pods. 423 r~uUe.rton, N.B. TAXES lorce sale. Antique mo's, med. long hair. L\k('s ten1ale. Born i\tarch 17, '71. LIDO 14 No. 2663• w/ ~· allr1"ancc.~ . .I. 1lf' ablr lo REAL ESTATE HAVE BUILT, SO \\"E 7790 Harbor Bl at Adams 5'11!-8372. 2;; ston~ dian1ond cluster don. Neeas Good home. Call 642--4a86 eves/v.·knd§. Sl095. Less trailer, -. 1 · l"ves. 644-2601. oprratc all r1·la tcd n1ac 1111-, 2 Exp. sa!f'sincn nt'edcd for \\'ILL GIVE YOU L\t:\IED-1 Telephone Solicitors KODAK R.ETlNA Re!lex 111 1 ring. Appx. 3 carats. Value 539-7181 5/·I p u Rt: BR t: o Ger 111 11. n <'S. olrl o.·~1ab!1shrd office. IATELY THE CJl,\~CE TO Local1on: Laguna Beach. J 1.9 manual, eveready cue, $8j(j plus. Asking $600 or 1 YR old nart Noiv•cG1an Sht'phcrd 9 v.·eeks old. $35. 21 F'T' Venture. Sleeps 4· NE\v l<l"t c \D Good "-t tf P"-f ·~· Trailer. molor. All set !or PRECISION SHEET METAL ASSEMBLERS ''C'' THOMAS 11,\VE A · • ,. -Con1p11ny v.·w train. xlnt cond, $99. 492--0-1&1 or =~ o er. ,,.,ne or ap-Elkhound dog, med . sizf', Call ~2-736.'l. ILLAC. salary+ bonuses. Can work 673--0734. po1nlme.nt betv.·een 10 & 6 crt'an1 rolore<l very good CUT" G h 1 r·acing. :i.Jl-OBJI or 557-2334 l Realtor :!21 \I'. Coa~t 1111.1. ~~'.\\'POf~T BEACH ~.'l-.i~27 "-" "'' ""3230 · "' ernian Sl\C'p err --B t S --• & Ski 911 1 Ironi home or office, ........... Furniture llO I ' · .... ...-\1'/chlldN'n. 892-1573 5/3 Husky puppies. 6 weeks old . o• 1, p..u • Y 0 U R C 0 ~I p A N y \.'Ollect 8:l7-."l800. SWI~li\'l!NG LESSONS Jo'EMALE Cock-a-Poo 7 $.10 ca. &l~i-4962 14' Gavrlln with trailer 70! i·it,\fNJNG \~'ILi. BE Tl-II-: I TRAINE~ J\.1?VING~ By owl'll'r. 6 pi~ce I \\'i!~ teach In your home nios. old, hlk, all shols. • 3 blk lrmalc Lab h.p. l\'terc. Mark 78, akil n E. SALES: \\'e ~pel'. in in· ~\'iii pcrlvrni ;isM'1nbl) 1'.ork !!)Ille prop. Sml, agg1•es~hl' I 11f l11t;hly ~killed 11;.1urr un t'V .• nee!l1' IOfl man to JOin l'X[>t'runr111;1I S.: prvl0·1Ylk uur ~ales 1ean1. Lrg. ad sh('< t 1nel11l •'•1n11x111c1ll~ i budi::r.1. Re I rr r al s & clo~e 1t1!rr.1n1·(• ssS1·rnhly I ~/IC'c111l1Led ll'tiining. :\Ir. slruc1Ull'l', 111.s1.·h11tJJ rdU('J-l'.:111ng. FOL'!{ s TAR lion required + j Yr:; cxpt.>r. REALTY. 8:1j......Hl2 REAL ESTATE sales peoptr n<'t'ded. Fines! Io c a I i o n . Cd:0-1. Bill Hal'en ReaHor ST,\RT OF" J\ l\'E\\1 PRO· Nation wide romp•"Y ncedii King-Pcc11n BR suUe \1'11h 1 rhild1"tn 6 mo. & up. Needs hOme w/childrl'n' •~ AKC I ''l"'P· 1·.,. 1~. &"' n •n~ I ·~10" IL c. It "" R ' R bl l "'"19~ ' reuievcrs. J"C'J;: s. ... " IJU ,,,..""'"" ff-.;:-..., ,~, " r. r. · 4 ha I'll l~r armolrc clK'sl. Alw r11_sona e ra es .... .,... "" 64&-69Sl 5/~ * 492_13 •.• * ~~~~~~~~~~!' . CO"Pf"'SA'l'IO" I" s rp men to i mana~C'· ~~l!_'..,";;~:...--~---lfc~~:e.o;;;:;;;<;;;:-J;;;~ .~ 'i OUR ... ..~ .~ .~ l · ·· i\1 1 Qu een 6 pier<' BR i\l~d. I at 1 pm. cO,\l:O.llSSI O~s ,i:, SEHV!CE ml'fll nunee pos~t?n· i u~ suitl'. Custon1-builL s· M>111 SELLING our -Ne1.1· once LOVABLI::, obedient. house I SILKY TJ:..ttllll::lt STUD I jjrli r··. >'Ef' .. < ,1'1AV I::XC t: E fl hal"e c~ &: am~hon. Call · dog looking lor a kfud AVAii AKC PROVEN lnnsporlatlon Mr Akins on~; 2' '"'"'" J . lo1·escat. sculptured velvrl. 11'0rn clothing. !\iany nice 0,..1,,, f'ni .,,1 Dox'• & •· : • • 1 S.·.o.•• YOl.!J: r IR s T ' . ' .....,, j .. """"" OI ti ood ..... .... ' • 64&-i 33:i * _______ , appt. 2 matching chairs. A " ~weater~. kni!s, <lrl'Sses. 1 v.·eigh und<'r 20 lbs, Calll.,.,="'°"cc-':.:.:.-'.:c::..C----o J Pecan 1..'0ffel' \able •'-r~·n1-11k only. Cali Pam at "Snoopy", 96S-4688 5/3 AKC Silky, 1nale, 3 mos & •••••••••• TRUCK DRIVERS modC'. Also oak st"t. Black 64:-r-<til'l Poodles 646-0l47, 333 E. 1 C•m.,.rs, Sale/ Rent 920 ' 'OUR :'olOTJVATIO.'J & Trans Continental. E:icper.1 8 ... 1 2 mat ·h·ng · AKC femalt' Beagle spaye>d, 17'" St c •f •-naug. "".a. c 1 GRASS RUG. 12'xl7' •~"'. I d I w ., ·". DRl\.E \\'ILL BE CHAN-Z..tacGregor Yacht Corp. L I _, x nt ll'atch og for fami y '67 Ol"VY 29l u· k • t \"E.\Jt. -APPLV 1:0: PERSO:X - '.',.1.13 H.\RBOR RL\ID. CO!:.J,\ :-.II::S.\. c,\Llr. ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systems Divisions A !)11 lsiu11 ol susquch11nn11 C1.1nio.a·;i11un PT & 11 tin1c C'n111 Sul · comm. (.:d. 1:1dvancrn1rnl possihk• Toin Sharp t:nion, 2'.201 }';. Co:isl lh\y .. Corona del )Jar, OR 3·3..120 .~-~ PR 0 FE S SJONAL pl wnr rohcitor · Dana Point, San Clemcn1<'. Capistrar.o area \Vork In your o"'" home. Be. t rle11l In area Phorl{' Rl'l-146.'l bct\1·ecn 9:00 a.n1 and nnon . REU BEN 'S LAGUNA H ILLS lnt1>rv1c111no: ~·.1r COOKS ,\ppl_1' ln Per~n 2·IOOI ~\1., \J(' l.ararlo1a L:11::una Mllls (At thl' El Tnro oU ratnp S J1 frr1•11a~I • 673-3211 or :HJ...Q}t::: REPRO TYPIST THIS IS A TEMPOR· ARY P /TIME POSl-1 TION. I ll.arrel chairs. o ". e Y Bclt vibrator •~". lij cu. fl. ·"/oltl'' ch'tld ,, -·pie. SCllNAUZEH. PUPS. ~lrJe .c. 5 c ~ on NELED TO\VARD BIG 1631 Place.nlia. C.:\1. hl I I) ......, ... ....,... 18' bo mper New ,,10:-.:EY BY ~IEN LIKE TYPIST · rt'ceptionist. RO male ns::, am"',·, inettt't l"'lti_i:: v.•/iCt"maker SIOO. 8.1!}..til:JG 513 al stud. Gmoni. ~~d 1~:e1:::. ~mac .&. ex· set. m 1TOl'1i. p c ures, a 551-Glll-. . 846-0SJ!I DAVE LOOKINGW\ND, Fl-\VP~l IB:O.l Exec. T)•pewT11er. has 10 IM' solri. 832-6874 I · l T\\'0 hllle ~lw.ylul baby kit . tra sharp. 33,000 mL Extras.' :"A:<ICJ,\L ANALYST, R. E. Dictaphone • typing n1an· ! . . Bt:AUTIFUL Peau de Soie, lens, darhn~ laC£'s, long YR old shaggy tri:iale dog. SZJOO. 67:>-1709. BROKER. uals. diagrams, filing, ete. BUNK bl'ds, Danish v.al'.1ut, lace & pearl trimmed \\"Cd· hair. Blk /,, v.·~11 . Some list'r, Good \\'I c~~.,1 ~,(J.ld .,r '.,",3· 'TI PACE Arrow Motor Sal11.ry ~per mo. Send re-oon1plcte $75. Holly11ood 1 ding gO\\'n, size S.10. VPry 6~'11 wks: ()Id. 546-5212 ~14 Housebroke11. .,,,.,... .. • Sf,\RT 1:0.IMEOIA'TE-sume to 1lerman Smith As-;win bed SJS. 962-2l46 before TI"a.wnable. 61~1892 before BF"..AUT 9 mos o Id '~ Horses 856 ~::;:~. Sli:m~e:elfd ~~n~-~ LY. INCENTIVE PW\NS, 1 :soc., J.;J9 San i\tiguel Dr., ' 9 or arter 5. Coyote-•,; German She.p, . avail. 832-78-10. PLUSH OITICES, F RINGE 1 Suite 202, Newport Bch. * • Big be.autilul Danish GOLF CART $50. NSU dune gC'nl!r. smart & loveable. agx stall~ for rent F ~t CA~fPER 8. b BENEI-"ITS. Calif. 92660. NO PHONE i\1odcrn dining lable. bu~ $75. 823 To\11\e St., 548-478J 513 Gran~ R ounlhyl "'t w;;,,c~s 1750 c a ov•r CALLS &12-5353 . , • . . rounus. ealiOna. e ratcs, I'"" , • . .> , · C.rtl. 646-1Zi7 CUTI:: male puppy, Col_he & ca!! arter 8 p.m. 532-2374 or * 642-1775 .. e CALL !'\O\\' & li~ f * WAITRESS-EXP'O LOVELY 8' sofa, nr ne"' POLLY Parrot in cage ;75 2 German Short ha 1 red 646-l950 ~-,--=7.·c------! P.l::ADY FOR YOUR NEiV Not under 21 NO PHONE $135. l..ol'e M'll l $!G. HI-back niini couches $30 Dual ~d Pointer. 8 \\'ks old. 636-2.10~ I Cycles, Bikes, I Publication typing re-19TI CADILLAC. CALLS. Appiy In person, chair SG.J. ~')..1955 cmnpl-$50, ~5-pc. stt -Chi~ or t7L4J 6lJ-J:J(J:1 513 1 _S_c_oo_•_•_", _____ 925_ ,' quiring 60 w .p.m . ~urf & Sirloin, 5930 \V, Coast SELIG Danish 1.1·alnu1 reclin-$10. 540-5.196 LABRADOR mixC'd pup. 5 eo.11 and . [• ,e J Work from hand writ-547-6771 H\\'y., N.B. lnechairandortoman, nub-CARPET Layer has quality mo. old, partially hnusc MwkleEquipment le.. I THINI te n copy, understand Water Meter Maid by bC'igc. SJfl. 495-5696 alter sMg. s & Hi-Lo at discount ~ .. ~ ~.~93e"' r r 1 end 1.Y1,1 ' HONDA A k I M U t 5 v.·eekdays. f 12 ~· " edit marks & line jus-s or r. p on Rapidly grov.·ing water di~-pnce11 rom .50 a yd. i;rce · General 900 tification . 1.3 yrs re-"'""'""'""""!!!!!!""""""!""I trict nct"ds nictE'r maid. 8' PARCHi\1ENT beii!e cur.•-Est. f.lr. Ed tTI4) 871-9958 TI~REE beautiful klltC'ns, 2'1 •--,,-,.,,..,.----- .. , d SALESl\.iAN, Se.n·1ce Sta \Vork outdoors, all "'ea1hcr. ed .M>[a w/fitted_ plastic 11<\''D LOO.>! """ mapl• bta.ck & wh ile & 1 oraogC' & CAPTAIN Pro exper. require . · " ...., L' w ~ & "··· e-P11.rt time. Neat in ap-?.lust iype 60 v.·pm & have l'01·ers. S45. 673--0753. I l)oor model 8 harness 10 wiute. • e11 n~ .. , , ..... isc· Unlimited Jicrnse . any gross 117• ·~ nrwT • ., , "FRIEDIANDER"' Position requires 1 pl'11.ranC'E'. i\prly 2590 good office skills. Apply FURN fui· sale, you name IN'adlc, many access., S22j. broken. J'l8-l6:>.0 514 tons. 30 Year11 experience ..... ,=,. e 8"·=~ 20 hrs per wk or more N ·port Bl\"d c l\.1 2 .).J "V<U"I .).J<•-' ei1 · ·· · R:30 to l. #3 l\fonarch Bay thr price!' it"s yours. 714167>JW AK~ Grrrnan shorl hair sai' &. ~wrr. _Proff'SSi?nal I ~=~===~-=~= as needed during peak SALES l\.1gr. for C :0-1 . Xlnl J>!aza. Suite J02, Laguna * .>I0-4617 * f OLD·UP beds, d r a Pe 5. pointer, femalt', 11.ll shot~. 2 sport l1sb.lng b'lltde; t\lexicnn 19.71 TRIU:\IPH TR 6 R •; work periods. • oppty for hi earrungs. t~uller Nigurl. FORCED 10 sell; nr nci\' Good condition 0 1 ht' r yr~ old, loves kids, rnusl & C'cntral An1er1ca & Pacif-hrensed, three v.-eekl old.! -APPL\' 1:-: PERSO~ -I Bn1~h. :i4~1~5. \VO:\lA;./ to \\"Ork in donut avocado ve]l'I!! !!Ora &: !\Ii~ c "1 1ane ~u5 Hems. have fncd yard. S0-1-!16J.ll 51·1 le Coast \\"&tr.rs -lnstruc-f'"i_na nclal hardship, 3 601 1 SAJ-tAfl C.011entry nee<.ls a. or shop. No phone calls please. lovf'seat. Call now. 67J.-.6926 I 642-KJ68 sr. Bernard 11 mo~. olcl frpc tloo in boat handling, sea· I 1m111,<'9~· ncv1•1.r dro,ppod.11"1','d :'.:133 HAP.BOR BLVD. 1· h I N ,. \\'' h U' Do I Sho ~·1 I 11 I d I n1anship DR & -tc•tial .~ J se tng or .. a., CO:'T,\ :\![SA. c,\Llf. pt imr e P· 0 o· inc e 5 · nu p, ~~ DIAMOXD pierced earr111gs. BALBOA Bay Oub ~lern· to qua e \Orne. . ' PIC"' ''ur & 494-~08 Laguna Beach I \'est1nent. \Viii train, min Harbor Blvd. C.:-01. p I R I I t= Alt bcrship Traosfer z, tax 613-8289 !114 navigation, "' ' . • ATLANTIC RESEARCH Systems Division '20 540--0014 er·· av. C>ss. "II. arc · . _ . I' DELIVERY ANY\Vlll'.:RE: '69 V\\I 2.C\I, perrecl cond.I n~e · · \\'0:0.1AN 1orhousev.-orl<,8hrs rww.6TJ..il \ll lncl.$1200.548-5:).'il VERY.very tiny iS!ameM'. 1 & -r ·iu t All c~tras" st-r vlc e SEA:0.1STRESS -Upholstery f'\'C'ry 2 \\'k.s. Ov.·o transp, I BICYCI ES lO pd ~A· 1 ki!lt'ns !CP ~ x c e p I lo n 11. l i.:apta n WI e 11vai a le or F.xp"rl only _ apply 837 \r $2 hr. Ref's. G"rrr5-IS2 alt 5 Garage Sale 812 _ , · s s, ... :i 0 ho 536--04r· 513 exlerx:led c.ruising. Ex!en· rc:cords. Dr. Scott 544-5262 18th St. Co.~ta !\lesn. SS;i: 3 spris. $2j to $30. ine~. ' b. si\·e administrative experi-or 19.'>-4343. YOUNG college 11:irls. Tl)' GARAGE &tle: OU painting. Stingray.~ S18 & up. 642-1272 YR old lrmale cat, ncl.~ cnce. &16-2'Ji7 ·.7--0-N-D_A_C_L3511 __ 600---. SECHETi\llY f'lUt lot· high promotion sales antiquc teC'd chui·ch organ, 4000 BTU Rooni air home. very Jo:"<'n!lr, l!:ood j 1 11 · mi, :\('w 0H1ces e ,\irport Lex, ,ioli. St;i.rting s a 111 r y 10' pram hoar 11n<I mol<ir, d'f Si-'i\"/chlldren .~ dogs. :Yls--0813 \VANTED: Diesel fishing-Immaculate. 2 he I ni 1! 11 • l;ood oppor!unlty !or alerl SIOO/wk. Cal! for inll'l\li<'W ·:i.-1 Studellukcr, Zigzag sf'W-co." ~I~~ ~· LHASA APSO/TcrT(er fiiip:. boat \l'!rlyiog l1r1dgC'-l:OOd ~~~~:3C' t a(•k. 1 7 0 0 ' S('Crt'1at·y, to work in lasl I oo :\Ion, \Ved or Frl, In.(: mac h In r . misc. . . , , py. Adorable niale, 3 n1os CQnd. 3J,(XX) !(I ·JIJ.IX.0. \\'.Jll · ' Jln"rrl N.B. ll fl v er 1 i ~in J: 7l·l/f..IG-9G-17, ask for Stt'\'C'. furnlttir<' .~ hou~chold. 2984 1,i,;ArER BED - 6 x1 . Nevf'r 962-0012 1rade v11cant laod 1 n '7n SUZUKI Ac·50 mornrcy· agency All Jok1l\s includ1 ni; 1 Rrrli\·ood, C'.'11. ;>19-1974 usrd. 50-yt'llr guarantee. IJuslncss af<!a or lluntin~ton r:lc, :>spd, Very cle11n, undC'r . . Sii rcq"d. 83'.\.-IGiO. ---~------. Sacrifice $45. 548-4j32, ONE pet Hhodc Isl red Beach or equal v a J u e \1·arranty, $175. 548-9880. S Ah 01v1s1Co11 nr ti DU REL AOVERTJSIN~-I "---"--"•'" ll~l G::r;:,c,:,r., .• ~~en'JO .. l~,o,.,?, •. '. rEWPORT BCH TENNIS roosler, t ina~c •. ~o~I~· lr~m. V.'ri1c; Box 648 Kula. :O.Iaui~ '69 BULTACO P.u r •a n S . . usqut' anna orpora on 2172 D"po"' 0 ,/Suhe 4 1 .....,."'1M1U .,,,.,, ""' .. -.. Durch bunny .,.,,.....,.,.,.l ,,13 H ·· 9670, " '·-------tools, paints. radios. Some CLUB membership for salc. · · ' awau .).J Cht'rry cond. Never raced. Equal Opportunny EmployC'r S NC'iiro/~ Beach.$Cla~~ i1cn1~ I~. Start Sun. 2755 Rca~na~I!'! 673-~. K~~~~'i ~u~~.:l~l lgca~~~ i\1ERCUft_Y props, steering S"5=75~.7&1=&-73='8=8,..,=-..,,.-.iitiit!!ilij!!ititiittitiiittit!l!illli!!!! 1 er-'Y P time · r A , IOO Bri~tol. CM. MANS diamond r ing, 40 pis. !!62-lOOO • 513 ~ables, s1ngl'! lever controls, 1969 KAWASAKI,~ cc, dirt 01,\Ldlreci &12:::.678-:-Ch-,,.-o I A~Y Di.y is-the gt:sr day to Lovt•ly N.8. ufcs. Xln"t op-ntiques :\tOVll'\(; Sali> _ !Jfl yr~ ar-S200 c11~h. Olher .!E'-welry • , , 1 n struments, w1rxlsh1elds, equipped. Like ntw w/800 Yo""'"· then ~lt bark and run an ad! Don' 1 pur, for brigJn brg1n11er. ltC'fnS 6'16--2664 l'REl: kitt96en~~,,!f! etc. Phone. j.1!~l10 mi 's. 642-7536 -T 1•umul&lion. f:vrrything you I--------~ iisten to u~ phone n n(! delay .. call today. 612-5678 RaJ11d advanct"rnenL op SCRAM LETS NE\V 1' s k · 3 l.\f' 1 C 11 :\I Co \\all!. 2320 N". Oltvr Ln, ~n. M i1cellaneou1 5/3 po rlyil. dinghy, Mobile Homes 9 S Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Help Wanted M & F 710 •If' iis. a · iss nru<'. • !a Ana. :'\lay :: & 4. all rlay. Wanted 820 oao;, anchor, 11-a hp Johnson 1- , a=-17-612'2, Abii.::ail Abl101 P<'r· . NEED go<xl ~n1es lor small motor. $229. Sce ar 117:)9 INSTANT HOUSING ~nncl Ai;:.,,.cy. 23(1 \\'. \\':u·. ANSWERS GA RA.GE RALE: Apt ~1z~' \~'ANTED: 12' chi Id . s kiuen~ &. yng aduJt cals. 'Eihngcr. 1-·111 Vly :i:ll-:.ffi.l. Look! Look! Look! KELP WANTED Office, Mechanics, ' Get Ready, Parts, New .& Used Salesmen "llel11 f,01111rh A . \'prr Arul ExrlllH!/ ~Hfttt1r11 ' Era'' Exc•lle nt Location, Working Conditions, Pay Pl1n, Health Insurance, Etc. APPLY MR. HAL GREENE MIRACLE MAZDA 2150 HARBOR AT VICTORIA COSTA MESA, CALIF. ' - ner, Sul!e 111, ~.A. i.. l"f'fria:. rum & ti.Use.. 2165 . :>.18--0!!13 5/4 , • S . Raleigh S! . c.~1. playgrourxl sh~e. . ." f'JBt:nr.LAss Dinghy & 3 hp WHY WAIT? SECRETARY part-llme Ai\l Author -hiny -Uepol -* S.Hi-OOJ5 * * 67~2592 * BLK long hair male kitten, Evinrude outbrd. $1 7 5. only, Some booli.k<'<'p1ni.:: ex· Locale -CLOTIIES Musical Instruments 121 hsbktn. 673-81~ 514 673-9686 or £1~. p('t'. 557-824~ 8:JOam -10 am Sign in a laundramat: GARAGE Sale! Clothing "-2 !'EMALE Kittens 6 v.·eek~ Mon or Tue. only. I "\Vhen Finished \\'ashing, misc. Items. 778 \Y. 18th SL, DARK faced tender dlx amp old. 846-!l686 513 SABOT SAILBOAT Please Remove All Y o u r C~I $60. Old crall!man box , i7:i. , S2, VICE CE, NTER CLOTHE.<;_;," APT of fum. lncl. Riviera l{Uitar w/case S40. Gibson FEMALE Ar~hnn to .-:;ood 7.""'"°'""""s-4-='0~i:i'..,.,==~ courh, t"ln beds. tables, r irebird ~!ignt, pick-up home. 642~3237 !l/4 36' MOTOR LAUNCH Em loyment Agency FILL in pie£'e<;, l!avilnnd Limogcs, narrow rmld edg-chalMI. 962-9568 $.123. 2·19 E. 20\h, C.M. 2 PLA YrtJL blark kitten.•. 8 C'll! 008-257·1 •" ---~ "'ks old . 54:J..6J:i'J 5/4 * Extc. Sec'y $650 ini:. rl111es, saucers. plnHer. Household Goods 814 Office Furniture/ Boat1, Maint./ !'II 9il·I001l)'lllng 7fl &14-4979 Equip. 124 ri PLAYfUL klUf'ns IO gl"l(llf Service 902 · ----------SAT thru nion, 10-:J. An-_ho~m~e~.~6~7~3-~09~2~:, ___ ~0~/3~1 --::'-.....;":o-:---c.;.,;;:. lhorou~h iri work h11h1t1 A.JVnQUES h.v \Vand1t Huff- The all new Vlll&&e House by J evil! l\1obile Systema with sloping s:hake roof can be ynftn now! Moctela on dlsplny at. .. BAY HARBOR MOBILE HOMES 1•125 BakE'r St., Cost" r-.Jeaa J ut! S. of S.D. Fwy a l Harbor 71•1/!;;10°9-170 • J d tiques, s· moss green 50fa, CAL.CU.LA. TOR. mechanical; 4 Btk • ... h, .,,,,,., ... ,.11,,, 7 Expen Cr,aftsma.nship u ~111.enl:ii, 1 m.~.. 11181 Bot<•. l\.1idv.·<1y 2 ° " E I I R Id ti I G f F Bkk $SOD " ('l)ffce tahles. lamps, 11ic-1 dig1l, tape, re en II wk•. 67,,,.73 013 by la!ld or sea xc us ve es en • * a r1. pr Ci!y 892-3622. Spec. in drp .,...,, " P k N t B h ' • 1 p R tur('s, rllshca. Portable hlt.t, nicmory $150. 6~ 6 wk! 6 1,,, .,.11.,, lonr hal• Free estimate. Call Bill •r , ewpor e•c rnt oc ... t'Xpt'r I Rlass. 1 bl < 0·21 ·1 l2 ~ "--I /k \/I "'===----~--,.-40" marb c top ta e, Pianos/Organi 816 and rtite r>48-85!l6 513 Low guar rates~4·2199 .,.x tra1 C'r, XQ caut111a gd!)~~t now·ior , t ANTJQUE pumpOrgan,xlnl l blk/wht , RCA, TV, B /M 1 custon1 bll, 12x30 patio, & Ari · , I ,:ondltion. Best offe1· ovcr ~ h f I loots e ,_ Pl & o 3 i\oflXED breed puppies. o ats . er"' Fenced Bricked Boat ti * R I S •sso pnunograp , rp c, . .,.,,, anos rgans ooA <>071 , 5/3 Equip. 904 . . ' pg, ecep · •c Y " ~~~. Call aft6 pm, 49-1--1510 Q t . I NEW USED Go ' •-.,.,.,......., 1 P I "' h R "·'I ..,.,., BB w/C' ('ct. spit, p11t o -• 1ng out ..,, I r v, ac . ttre. , .... , Sii !IO·OO typlnit (jjfiood . -..., .,.,,... b •--R al l fO b'll' d n. -Appl'.nc.. 802 Jurn. Sa n !'lemente, 4.,......,,,..,., USu1<:S8. ent s a mo. RADARS, new KAAR, LNj5, I lllt rm. 1\t:nt of;JJ mo. know'! of l!gur1·s. £ I Steinway, BaklwJn & Kawai 1~ dra11·s onl) 11 ~.\ <>n I~ 1. $65Q}. 71·1; 673-1094 . * Secret•ry S500 • REBLT ~·shrs-gas dryr~ RUG 12 x 15• Kllra.~tan Chic kering, Yamaha, etc, Ptt• Ind luppliei ~ Conun. quaht.\. Only S9:;o. BUILTi\-JORE, w/aluminum Sale.$ enlj:rng dtopl buF.y $.iO Guar-Oelv. r.Jstr Chg. yf'llOw _Mhag. Used . 3 1?05· FIELD'S PIANO CO. r. + lnlltll.11 1 )r "AIT. \J~ed J I fun job/rPQ"s s11. 1yp1n.: ~'a yr a g re p a i rman · \ ~1:1 ;;ce $4\0. i\sking sm. Costa ?.1esa Garden Grove HENU IX. .'IR~i. $.1 ::00 + ~n~r~~fnc 0 -"~0,~· ~ ~ef r'7;: &llirinphorlf'xk11J~. 71t!i3l-S6.r;. · 1 (714)66-.W'!O (7l4J 638-2'n0 lnst11ll . DECCA 21:?, 32 v ri rapes, wall to wa l l * Shipping Clerk $433 \\!EST ING 11 o us f: auto '1 M1chinery 816 HA...\t:\l OND, ,Ste In w • y, Pets, Gener•I ISO l~r . lg<" vr~~t'I, SI 2 0 0, c;:nrpetin~. Adlllt park. No Sfin1e kno10o 'I ol i;h1pp1n2 "'asher & elec dryer, S80. Nf.\V ttar mount angle Yamaha. New & usM BANTA~1 clucks 8 • Sl tB . Nt'~port ~lartne-Eng1nctr· pets. 548-2418 rrr. funrllons l11·l1iful/ ~ln! cond. ~ar ~ dellvered .:~drr hlalle for whttl trac-pianos of most makes. Best Baby duck~ 7. S2 ea Baby ~g.~~· ~1UST 1<!11 lmmed ~1 II ~f'()V."lh OJlj)()r. job. a-16-8672. 841-8\l.l I !Or Sil.~. 546--3147. buy8 In So. Calil. at Schmid! ~C&e 6. $3.50 ea. 2612 S.f;. t:NSENADA SPECIAL Fleetwood. 2 br. Adlt pk. ~ N, t•po" "·nt•r Dr., ''B TOP 1$ Paid lor N'frlg,' Ml , 11 111 r-.tuslc Co., 1907 N. hfaln, Mtsa Dr. 30' 12' oz Spinnaker Awning&: lklrtina;. 531~7976 """ • • ........ '' sto\·cs, v.·11sher k drye~. see anequs Santa Ana. ' 211· ' oz Splnnakcr Saol1t Ana Sulle 5J5 / 6+l-49SI 64:>-4930, Eves 5.16!4041 MAPLE bu nk beds, never ALl4EN ORGANS e:iccluslve\y Cita 852 11 PRICE * * &l~!O Motor Home• 940 "~1AKE Room Jo'or O!'d· dy'' ... cle1n out the earap;e .. your tr111h ts CASH with 11 Daily Pill:rt Classified ''· LARGE REF"RIGERATORS ust:'d, comple!e sel, SlCIO. Also CONN &.: \VURLfT7.f.R e BUR:0.1F;SE k1ttrn1 • 13 10 HP Evinn1cfc. $l6.l. 18 llP ----------1 S3.'J S45 $5:) OOS-m2. Gnuld Music: Co. t1inct 1911 1,1.•ceks, CJo~A. paper~. box .Johnson $175. ·Run perfect. S & fi •l~per moior home for Guarant~ed ..t &lS-~S~ NICE sola, 8' nlOd., S:\.':i: 2().15 N. fl.lain SA, ()47--06Sl trained, .001.1. !IS:i-1~80 =><~.S.-.-~'~~'~'·~~---~~ ttnt. S200 ~r V.'ttk + .OOc. Turn unused Hem• into qultk S!lnimiy hlkC't. l!'lrlA, $20, FAii rtsulta art just a phone For lhat Item under $50, St•ll ldl" ltem1 now! Call f)('r ml!~. flJ+.8892, tl62499t ri~ll, t:flll 642-.5618 hr'· \!~ lt~J-~487 e1ll A'll.'ay • 642--5678 try the Penny P!ncht>r 61:Z..:i678 Now! C11llr~12~:.1;78 N<11\·! ---- ' j • • "'' I ff IAILY "LOT MO AutooWan!M QUADS 18', 1eH oont&lntd. Slnp1 4, new tlrtt. Must 'be Mtn. la:l $4000 Wct.s! Phone ......,, WE PAY TOP 'CASH . . -. ....-.. ' JAGUAR . . ". ~ .. '70 Autos, u...i CADILLAC "° A ...... U.C CORVAIR 990 LATE '61 JAGUAR '63 Porsche Super TOYOTA NEW 71 VOLVO • XK£ tl. Xlm ¢0od. Low Cpe. &Wm> yell<>• with b1k NO DOWN DEMO SALE CAO. '69 EL DORADO e '6.1 CORV AIR BUS, New tins, Clean, t:xtru, S400. Aft 4 pm. 835-3870 Auto .. UMll 990 MUSTANG -m_l~-"'-"''-·,,~,,3>'.ll=."6"1'"6226"" ---I lnlerlor, AM/FM, chfo,ne • 144 Autom atic' Alt' UNBEUEVABLF. for used e&n: & truclta, ju1t I 2 TRU" JENSEN w~I•, rectnt en a in e • 14 Automatic BUT ""! """' 1" """""'' .. ~ pxw982 PAYMENT • "'• 5"" Only 7,470 Miles Traliers, T :-1vel 945 CORVmE '65 MUSTANG CLUB CPE. '70 11ELD f: Stream 15' •lp1 1, elec brks, dnt. cond. Sll50 . .,..2318 GROTH CHEVROLET JENSEN $2399 • !64 Autom.iie Sold ... & ""'"'' by "' AUnlORIZEO CHICK IVERSON ~9.01 MONTH* w, Spttialize '" FACTORY 1968 CORVETrE ENG 371. 6 cyl. Aulomatlc. radk>, heat- er. Rtady In iO· jSQrOO~J . $895 '64 ii· Terry trlr, selfcon- . tained. all kitchen ulil. Slpg •. Xlnt cona. 645.()629 Ask for Sa.lea 1'fana&er SALES :. SERVICE 36 mo.. Def. pas price. 0.,._rseaa DeliVi!ry AIR CONDITIONING clutch, Bell Housin&" Muncie 18211 Beach Blvd. YW "'''.'" ,, <Uh P, 1 c, " L , Ex tin 4 1pd. Complete. Perl~t _...,..""' quls.ite lime green ish Huntington Beach S49-303l Ext. 66 01 61 $2003.SS, Incl. Tax 6: Lie '41t e.utiA w/whlle vlnyl lop & plush <.'Ondition $400. S4s.-t6B7 947 84T.fi087 Kl 9-3331 1970 HARBOR BLVO. 134 A.P 3 . 4 R 7 .. 14.54~. SU'-! No. . VOLVO green lull leather lntl'rior, CORVETTE '67 Si Iver 2100 Harbor Blvd. 6'45--0466 Trallers, Utlllty ~~ ------- 1 --l?ifPORTS WANTED COSTA MES,\ f011J1 power Incl. door loc:·k.s, Faatback. -4-spd, 377/3j0 1 =::..,...==,..:_~=~o--I 14' T•m.f•m Trai er On.nge C.OUntlet *On approvtd ·credit cruise control. llght sentinel hp , Alr, AM/FM, pwr OLDSMOBILE With• wheels. All •lttl ~<eJd. TOPS Bl!YER 3100 \\'. Coast Hwy. '65 PORSCHE C Bill Maxey TOyota ' 1966 Harbor, C.M, &tG-9303 steno, rear window delog: >A'indows. Xlnt cond. Pvt 1-----_.._,.,,,.,.- ed oons~tion. ~" Steel BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Newpon Beach 18881 BEACH BL. 1147-8555 1HINI ger, tJ'Unk opener, elc., etc. pty. S2300. (U4) ~3 '67 DELTA '88' ~~! :::~kup~~~66 ~~ci:. 188&1 Beach Blvd. KARMANN GHIA 1 White with red . interior. Ex-HUNTINGTON BEACH ~ 'VOLVO' Absolutely f]awlea:s & stlll '62 C.Orvel~ 377-375 hp, 4 spd ff, Beach. Ph. 847-8555 cellent condi!lon (TZP 808) 1 :.::=..::..:..:~~~;,==.:.::::c I has the showroom newneu. tran&. Very dean. Brst of-Full J'IO"'er. Alr Conditioning. (Meta. Verde) C.?.1, \VE PAY TOP 001..I..AR I 1960 GHIA I Full priCe sz-1$ or take TOYOTA ID \ZLV095) let, 645.5960 d!r. TRF087. Must sell. Will Auto Service, Part1 949 FOR TOP USED CARS trade, Call -494-7744. DEMO SALE ''fR1£DLAND£R'' ih '57 Corvette Clauic 283, Dual ta~ 1rade or finance. C&lJ vw BUS 6eals for .68 or U )IOlll' car Is extra clean, Lors of miles 01 1rans~rta· 1963 PORSCHE S.C $1777 GN"AI eit, 4 barrels. 115 HP. Body ~94-7744. later. Best offer. ~ liS tint lion left. Specially priced Babama yell"'w . Defies 'de-1971 TOYOTA •:;..;:&~fi;!~ .L~CAOILL.AC partly restored. 968-2935. -.,.::_.:.O_LD:.,.::S_Cu_U_,-,.-.,~,-.-.,.-, • ** 968-UlO ** BA UER BUICK for (fll~~~·s:.~ scrlption, This one excel-Demo #9206. Low mlle1.1 ----===~--AUTl-40A!ZED DEALER ·66 alRVLTI"E Fast Back, a:ports coupe, clean and ln CHEV. 283 V-3 & Powergl'itle 234 E. 17th SI. ,_HICK IVERSON lent lhru oui. PXW-982 Ju.II factory equ'ipped. $3295 2600 HARBOR BL., A/C, AJT. P/Y.', MH. Best top ninn.ing condition. power tram. Trans ls good,engitlc ICoiita Mesa 548-7765 \.. LOOK. $2,399 8 CYn-IER DEMOS ON SALE 1969 Volvo 164 Sed. ·R. H., COSTA MESA oiler, 547"5811. sleering air, bucket geals, needs work S75. 836-5672 \YA/1/TED for parts: '62 VW CHICK IYERSON fie.rut Le.oo' '",,.,tom~tiha'c, Fa~:ory .A.I r .>W-9100 •Open Sunday ' ---'-~CO~U-G~A-R~-,b',',,"', ,'._"30'ter,'•mr .. $675. 49>-5696 Fakon 4-<lr station wi:::n, 170 .,.9.m1 E><i. 66 "' 67 YW Co . ~ r,>. Y"R343 JUDSON SUpercharJer for iPI """ DE N vw 1'00 '"""' $50. c~ '"'" Std"""'·.,,_,.,, mo HARBOR BLVD. TOYOTA A LEWIS '69 EL DORADO 1969 COUGAR 1967 F-s;. V"Y " ""'· &45--4908 Autos, Imported 970 COSTA MESA 5-19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 IMPORTS R H New valves, wtr pump, 1970 HARBOR BLVD, 646-9303 2 D • .T . allernator, paint .l tires. 1970 Karmann Ghia, auto -~_,,:CO:::;S'.'.T~A_:MES'.'.:::'.'.A:._ __ 1 .1_966_H_•_•_ho;;'.;,· ,,c,,.M.,. 0 64_6-_9303-'-IS46 Harbor rlvd., Bronze with vinyl top. Full PRICED Jo'OR QUICK SALE $850. S33-2144 '60 Renault Daurhtne parU. S0~1E NEW 839-7167 alt 5 ~' '_""'_'"··~]§] General 950 1967 RED Ford Station \Va.gon. Original o~·nu · air conditioning. Call 847-6394 after 4:00 weekday1 and all day \\'eek-ends. USED car lo! • ollice-lights. ~· x 160' near Harbor & Ba,y St. See al36 Harbor, CM. Antiques/Classics 953 ALFA ROMEO '67 oumo Immaculate~ 5 11pd, dlr. 1 owner, factory hardtop. <ZXU988) Full price Sl99S. trans, 11,000 ml'a:. r.1lnt $ 5 power, AU the goodle1 + Attractive Bermuda Green I o'~-c"-'=~-=-~..,.,-, cc;ind, Pvt pty, make offe r. '58 SPEEDSTER. i·ebuilt 279 Costa Mesa new 1irea. •943.i Metallic finish with black '60 Old11 88. Ps/Pb, air, ~ 673-7489 eves, or 642-6500 engln_e, good cond. 673--3180 1970 Toyota ?.1k II St. Wq. '61 VOLVO SEDAN $4995 In I er io r. Immacu late tires. Best offer over $200. c':::''.cY'~·,...,,--~.,,--==--I or 67;>...4719 eves. R., H., Automalir, Jo'aclOry throughout. Equipped with Call 549-155-1 '63 Karm-Ghla $695 1965 PORSCHE S.C. Air Cond . 233BQC 2 Door, -4 speed. radio, hear. ~ ~ auto lrans, Radio, heater, PLYMOUTH 5901•J Seashore Or. NB Racing green with electric DEAN LEWIS er. (LXZ731) S-199. full price, 2100 Harbor Blvd &45-0466 powrr sieering, power britk· 1---------* aft. 5 P.t\-1 . • sunroof, Clean and recent· IMPORTS Barwick Imports, 998 So. , · _ es, factory air cond. ele. 4 1962 Plymouth station wagon. Small down. WW finance pvt '69 Karmann Ghia . Xlnt cond. pty. Cali alt 1ll am S4b-3100 I $18j(). Cali or '494-7506. * 67~5612 * ly overhauled. Priced to sell. 646-9303 Coast Hwy,. Laguna Beach. 62 CAO. ~an de Ville Full new tires, front line ready. New tires & brakes, $295. YCC525 1946 Harbor Blvd. 546--405l 0 -494-9771 power, $500. Even in II ; YPT831. $2350.00. Johnson & 646-6972 ON~ Y $2,799 Costa Mesa r ' 1_.,_>-_23_1_8______ Son.5, 262.6 Harbor Blvd., '6j Barracuda, 2 dr, rebuilt CHICK IVERSON '69 TOYOTA Autos, UMd 990 CAMARO _;c="='•;..Mcc•c:'":::-·.;.;.::.I0·.:::5630:::_ __ '"gi"" 14"1. 1967 Alla Rom" OUEITO I LOTUS · Conv. $1495. * Ph. 67J..694.3 * '61 Alla Romeo Roadster. Good Condition. $400. 546-9568 AUSTIN HEALEY '61 BUG EYE SPRITE LOTU~ AUTHORIZED SALES &: SERVICE J1rluport · 3hnports VW (2) eoo,,. • ·70 C.ro"' s.-TTRADE INS * DODGE • 6<&-0796 * dan. Both automatic, radio, SALE AT WHOLESALE 1968 CAMARO, 1 owner, low· I PONTIAC 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 heater, elc. ZA0841l .66 Lincoln C'.o 1 $1495 Bluebook. Must sell. 6 cyl. 1968 DODGE van V-8, auto, ---------- 1970 HARBOR BLVD. SAVE " · R/H t 67-~.. & 1· "'--·' -• '66 Olds Torona.do S1495 , power, au o. ::>-.-n. carpet pane ing. """'-""'· '69 PONTIAC COSTA MESA Mac Howard Leasing '67 Pontiac Cat.a.Una SI395 CHEVROLET Sl950. Fi.rm. 540-2971 GRAND PRIX ·59 Por. Cpe, Reblt e-ng & !Corner lA! & Harbor) I Mac Howard Leasing 1960 DODGE 9 pass Wag. MUST SELL trllf\li.. Radials, AM I FM, 839-9600 531-0607 Santa Ana fComer 4t & Harbor) '62 CHEVY WAGON Good cond. Sl:50. Call Steve Attractive Lime frost rmlsh Chrome "-'his, I a c q u er. TRIUMPH 839-9600 531.()607 Santa Ana blW11 9-5, work ph. 548-2288 wilh black intrrior. Equip- 684-7118 BUICK FALCON "" wtth •"'• '""'-. "''~. 912 9 Passenger. Aulomatic, ra-healer, pow. a1c:er., pow. 1969 • Original owner. '71 SPITFIRES ---------1 d~. "-•I••. <PLW0~11 ,._ 833-"" , ... -•7 '" ~ .64 o I s · 1 V • brakes, pow, window.s, a ~::· ~ 0 ~ NOW ON DISPLAY '69 BUICK $269 ~:n~;oof~~;o .., beautiful ca r thmughouL 1940 FORD P.U. V-8 Dathead recently overhauled. Needs 1 'uU . ,,00 IJT ,.31 3UIO W. Coast Hwy. paint _ body work ~50. I 1' P.r1ce ..,.,,;;. A ""' · 1 Newport Beach .,. """ •"'" ••""" B"'"'k tmpon... 998 s.. MERCEDES BENZ Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach. I Come In for 11 test drive! 23,000 actual miles, full pow-e 646--4329 e Shaws good care. YCR897. pORSCHE '70 911-S, silver FRITZ WARREN'S er, factory air, lilt away _,., __ --·-~ .... __ _ $297.'l. Johnson & Son, 2626 Sports, Race, Rods 959 ;HG-4051 or 494-9771. ---...,_ ....... ...,...,.--~!bl~ !nte~, am/fm, driv-SPORT CAR CENTER wheel, almost factory f'tesh '""'"'*' '~ FORD Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, '33 CHEVY PICKUP J unty's '6' HEALEY 3000. Looks, • 1ng lites. 557-9159 aft 5PM 710 E. lst St. S.A. S4l-07&4 & factory warranty 10 r 2100 Harbor Blvd 64:>-().166 540-56.'\0 • Cadillac engine, hydro. Must be .. ecn. ZlOO Harbor Blvd. LOOK at Ibis!! -&SS Run Air, -4 a:pd. '70 GTO. A 11 perlonnan...--e e q u i p p e d . $11'i5. ~ Alter -4 --&: wknds. 1965 MUSTANG 2+2. Built 289. Extru. Stick shllt. Pvt pty. $650 Evea: 213/592-2145. Trucks 962 '66 FORD ECONOLINE Super Van Iona: wheel base. 1•!1-W) $1495 runs good. Recent engine "'1lrk, 1 ~ant newer car. \Vi!J sell this for $800. 546-20."io BMW Automotive Excellence & ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Coata Mesa 546-4444 Bfl.I\V's NEW & USED, all models. parts arid service. Overseas De.livery. C. BOB AUTREY ?.10TORS 1860 Long Beach Blvd, 213-591-STll ·70 BMW 2002 sedan, radio, A/C, S3300. * 540-2363 * stereo 1Nc-..~ '"" ""ho' B''" 64,.." DATSUN . ,, ~}~Y.~~~ *1,,,; 1 '70 DATSUN PICKUP Largest Sele{!ion New & Used Mercedes Br-nz Jim Slemon s Imps. W;;rner & Mai11 SL '69 PORSCHE 9UE, immac. Open daib-9-9; closed Sunday 27.ooo more miles. ,\1ust-see 1969 CHEV KI~ 11 s wood 1970 FORD LTD 1969 PONTIAC GTO Ex.tru, inc! le~ther. $j9()(), VO_U<_ SWAGEN to apprttiaJe. ZAE618 10-pass 1talion wgn. Gold in 4 DR. SON. PRICED AT WHOLESALE Pr1. party 962--156.1 $3195 • color. w/blk inl. Fully lo•d-EXCELLENT B · II M H d L raut1 ful Limf' fros• meta ic '7"911-T TARGA IC owar •as1ng ed. Luooage rack. Pis, ONE OWNER TRADE ~ La C-1 ,. ("• I H ho "'" finish with harmonizin& Lan-AU ·extras, 645-5134 rge ~ K IOn ...... rner st & ar :r) P/b air radio w / rear Beautiful dark ivy meta.Ilic Of VW C 839-9600 5.11-0607 Santa Ana spier', Jrd seat, auto trans, liniih marching Landau roof. dau & interior. Auto tra.na., RENAULT amp•n ratlio, heat.. pow, steu .• -1 '67 Riviera, Minl cond. Whl!e 350 eng, ~ barrel carb + Ivy gold interior, equipped '69 MERCEDES 2iG V K b' I h pow. brakes, air cone!., etc . . '!(Ira fine. AulomaUc trans. '59 RENAULT 4 DOOR ans, om IS, w/black leather interl(Jf, many extras. Must see 10 wt auto trans., radio, Excellent condition through- Santa ~n.1 546.4114 ..... , ''"n••. AlM / FM·. 1 Buses, New & Used bucket Rall!, console 1h!ft. believe. S2695. Pvt pty. Ph healer. power steering, for out. Stt & drive today. XTG-·~ I Air. tinted glass, full power, 540-111.:>4 or 549-0773 quick sale. {YCN 380). Sl'i.50 YCDU3 lmmecfl•t. DeUvery 5 nrw tires, J cwner car, ,69 show11 excellent care 37~ 923· $2!75· John!IOn ' Son. $3595 S1'<k.$13U9GR5 11111 CHICKVWIVERSON 12295. M'"' 67>-l<lO, "' CHEV. IMPALA CQS, 1337; ''"""" i. So,, ,.,. "''"'' <lh'<i. """ Mac Howard Leasing 6pm: 548--5158 Coupe Auiomauc,. JIO""'er 2626 Har~r Blvd, Costa 1 _M_'-'~"~"'°"~~5630~~~· __ 1 (Corner ls! It. Jfarborl ~ ll'}U ... ~--.. , steenng, power br&Ms, fac· Mesa 540-5630 ' '69 PONTIAC 839-96()0 Santa Ana '"'°'°"" SolS-3031 Ext, 66 ar ff 70 S1'N wgn, ~ new, All tory air, low mileage one 1 ---=~=~---GRAND PRIX ;;,c7.==-.,.--=,..,:~::_:.::::: 1 xtras, cost $51Dl. prict O"'Jler. Sale priced. Will I '61 FORD '60 Mel"C1!des 220 SE fuel in-1 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645--0466 19711 HARBOR BLVD. S39'75. temu. 642-5291 finance or tradt ZDV.201 STATION WAGON Fu,,.1 1 1.,..po, wA"M· /!fa:t,°"',,,~ co~-- jected, 4 spd, Xlnt, AM/FM O COSTA MESA M.t H d L F to "' " ........ 11900 or trade S48--02S3 T YOTA '69 BUICK Riviera, all c ow•r easing actory air, au mauc trans, I dio p.;..dded 1 L::lts r f 1968 VW power, Stereo, Mag wheels, <C.Orner 1st "-Harbor! ! power ateenng, power brak-ror). warnntop'xrn.A 0NI~ MG MG AUTI.JORIZEO SALES &: SERVICE 'J1rtuport · . '.:Jl111 ohs 3100 \\f, C.Oast H"'Y· '71 MARK II SEDAN Diamond blue with black ln-Beautiful, $3400. 646-1087 839-9600 531-0607 Santa. Ana es. Good jf;5 393BND W1u finance YYOU675 lerior. Mag wheel.a: and ra-CADILLAC '69 Chev, Station Wgn, M H $ d • Mac Howard Leasing 4 Door. Automatic. dlr. Ra- dio, healer. Loaded. { • 197- 237) Take older car in trade or small down. Under 7.000 ml!cs. \Vill finance pvt. ply. Call 540-3100 or 494-7506. dial tires. XSP31_. Real buy, 1---------Hard to find 9 . passenger •c owar Leasing (Comer lat I: Harbnr) ONLY $1099 .00 '69 EL DORADO Kl"''"""· Tw-ho hydrom•-831!'~"",:;1'.::.0~ ~~':'~.,. 839-9600 '11-ll6117 S•"'• Ao. CHICK IYERSON l.ic, power !leering & brak-'69 2-dr HT LcMana. Higher I OWNER e:.. Factory air. Exctllent 1970 FORD LTD mileage, beaut cond, loaded VW L Th 15 000M'I condiUon, ZSS309 4 DR. SEO. w/everythlng . S11!95.t ess •n ' I es $2795 REf'LECTS a.'i7-4686 day1: 6 4 4 -0 7 l 41 549-30.11 Exl . 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Still In W•rranty Mac Howard Le•sing EXCELLENT CARE eves . Firemiat color. FuU lealhtr <"-,.,, ,_1 • H,~,, 1 Beautiful one owner trade In. =~=------ ! I Afl.1/FM PS ...., " a •"" 1966 GTO, mags & new tires.• '68 Chev % Ion PU SJr.Jj '69 Chev 1 ion stake S2695 witr camPf'r that sleeps 6 Ne.,,,-pon Beact. people. Don't miss !his one, __ c_:_:_::::.:.:..=:.:.:. __ BEST BARGAINS COME SEE OUR SELECTION OF TOYOTAS 1960 V.W. Conv. PB PW P · od """"""" '"' -vuu• ~ .... Bl'sr nfler. Before 5, , . . seats, Alt co ., with matching landau root n er1or, ' srereo, , oon.~ .:.." 1 -•• ,._ A"• Dark Ivy J\1elallic finish I till ':"'heel, landau top, aulo-SALE 0, R TRADE Ivy gold interior. Auto. 645-4274 alt, 5, 646-0'lCWl. Mk '69 Dod&-e Van ~ ton S2295 '70 Ford 1 ton stal:e with lift gate $3495 Mac Howard Leasing (Corner lst & Harbor) 839-,9600 531-0607 Santa Ana '64 FORD PICKUP VS, 3 spetd, radio. ,.e_a1er, new paint, (L2599i! $1195 l'Ull price S2199. C651AVB) 8,ar\\.·irk Imports 998 So. Coast Hwy., LaguTia Beach, ~6-4().il or 494-9TII. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND _-SUNDAYS l&m Bea .... h Blvd. Huntington Be11rh 842-7781 or 5-'G-Oi.cf ~ ~ '68 DATSUN SEDAN ~THINK m ,,~~·· "FRIEDLANDER" IJ7J• llACll flfWT. :tfl 893-7566 • 537-68:!4 MGA J im Slemons Imports 140 W. Warner Santa Ana Open Eves. & Sun. 541)...!125 '69 TOYOTA WAGON Ocean blue, Oared finders, mauc trunk & door loc:kJ. 1961 Chev. dr. Impala 28J tran!!', Radio heater pow-1 ,,'=·'~Sh,,:Y~·~~---- mag wheels. Great sum-f #9'35) Priced to Rll. eng., Au10 • Power • R&H • er stUring ~we.r brakes 1970 GTO, 455 cu. in., 4 5pd, mers fun. JLZ407 -s&I. Fair rubb • New batt. $200. Factory al~. etc. See and .'\JJ performance equipped. PRICED $599 .00 I 'ISA.fe#I ~ or trade for !'IU tn.Jck, pink drive 10 appreciate. 37:,CQS. S2795. For more info call CHICK IVERSON klr pink. 64a-2142 alt 6 PM, •~275. Johnsor1 &; Son. ~ 64&-4665 alter 4 & wknda, 2100 Harbor Blvd. &15-0466 Sa ..., VW 01 t & Sun. Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. '69 Firebird, overhead cam 6 largest Selection • ,63 Chevy Impala. M0-5630 3 spd, RIH, new rlres, xlnt OF LUXURIOUS Fae air, Pfb, PIS, VI '69 Ford Torino GT. A-1 con· cond. $1900. Owner 646--5346 ~,.19-3031-Ext. f£767 4 \1·heC'l rlrive. lZi\ffi4901 Full 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CADILLACS VERY CLEAN • S600 dition, 351 cu in., auto trans. '64 BONNEVILLE Sta Wgn. * ~1880 * air, pis, p/b, radio. Best ) Very cleRn , SS9~1. price $2799. Barwick Im-1 __ __;CO.:..:.ST'-A~"~ES""=A __ in Orange County '69 CAPRICE Z-dr hrdtp, c ffcr over Sl!IOO. 638--5lJ8 or , * 493-3314 * 1963 thru 1970'1 >·uu po"·er. Air. Tape, 879-4651 '63 PONTIAC Tempest ronvt-1 Clean. 36,000 mi's, S25i5 '67 Ford Squire, Original 4 cyl, stick shill, new tires. portll, 9')il So. Coast 11\\·y.. WANTED '5.9 ~!GA Ro:;id<;tcr'-N('w pAn1t Laguna Brach. 5'16-4051 or l&i!verl, top lblaC'k), stals 4!1-1-9771. l'I! pay top dollar for !'l)UJ' (blkl. steer"g "'hl & nC'\\' lie. I ,71 CORONA VOLKSWAGEN today_ CaJl 6N'J111JC~ ~·.P. 644-4670 or 64~2182 Olo\'ner, Xlnt ...ond. $160. 511&-1126. 2100 Harbor Bl\·d. 54;-,.(H66 --"--'-'--'---'-• $350 or best orr. 536--8l62 and ask for Ron Pinchot, 4 Door. 4 speed, radio, heal-MGB 2 Dr, Hardtop, Loaded, 4 549.3031 Ext. 66·67. 673-0900. er, air cond. Like new. Sl399 . j spd. dlr. Full price $238.1. 6 VW BUG full price. (UQD312l Bar-------X-1-.,,--100',f linancing. Low pay. ' 8 .a.~CADIL~ 1967 Chevelle Malibu a:ta ' * 646-fi006 * PONTIAC Tempe~! ·51. 4 cyl.1 NJlliORIZfD OEAL.UI wgn--New brakes, lugg rack. 67 F'ORD Mustang 390 with 4 Sta. Wag. Looks k ruru;I 2600 HARBOR BL. P"'r rear wndw. $1200 I apeed Custom chrome whls. fine. Pvt. Owner. 54~ I COSTA MESA ' , 846-6369 . Sl.350 or bea:t offer. 962--1730 PONTIAC 1.964 Grand Prix I 540.9100 Open Sunday 67 Chevy . Ca~r1ce 2-dr '64 FALCON coupe, 6 cyl, Air, R&lf, 11uto, vinyl top'.I wick Imports, 998 So. Coast I MGB GT '67 New rond. ments on approved crNlit. H , •• B h Meehan A·l iirr~. M 11' iVSTJ87l C I \\'Y.. ~una ea c . · · n . k 1 Plus T&L. ( •OOl:iotlJ Call ust sc . A I HI. RF-CREATION CENTER 546-4051 or -494-9771. pai~I. clutch. "'lu1c sa e ~0-3100 aft. lo am Barwick lmpor!s. 998 So. $1650. 673-SOOS. , · . Coast Hwy, Laguna Reach hnilp, tac alr, vinyl roof. lo RIH. Good rnr1 $675. S49i Private. 644-·1777. '66 CADILLAC mi'!!~ I owner. S l695 . 6~3853aft4pm. ' ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa M~a 546-4441 ·n Chevy Van. slide door. v. 8, auto. O"·ner after 6 pm, '71 t DATSUN. R/H. Heavy duty bumper. Need equily S.iQO. & take o\·er payml'n!s. $60.18 per month. 642-&5:) a.ft 5 642-4364 1969 DATSUN ronv1-\Yhite '59 EL Camino-New eng, wfblk top. Good cond. trans, 3-speed Hunt. r.lusl Sl-400. 644--4641 aft 6 pm. ""'· •r>-5934. FERRARI '6'5 FORD P.U. v-a. r&h, • --------- 1pd trans. Good oond. FERRARI $l200/be11t otr. 64~163 AtrrnORIZED '68 DODGE Sports van, Big SALES It SERVICE 6, full \Ooindow11, :dnt mech oond, $13l>. 4~1001. 9-6 '58 GMC % T. -4 ~pd transmission. 1st legit. offer takel 642-2098 Auto leasing 964 -I-' LEASE 24 mo·s w/purchaie option '70 ti.laverick, $59 mo. '69 Cad El Dorad .. , S179 mi>. '63 Cad Cpe deVllie, $89 mo. '67 Frd Galaxy f:al, S89 mo. '67 Cad El Dorado, Slli mo. AND OTH£RS All can w/AlR bu1 M•verick SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING J1rtuport 31111por1 ~, 3100 W. Coa11 Rwy, Newport Bea.ch FIAT llBtiJB n1 .. s.. "FRIIDLANOER" 11711 ll.t.CH ILYD. (Hwy. Jt1 m.r.;i.6 • 537.f.82.C 300 w. Cs1 H•>. NB 64S-2182 JAGUAR l.EASE a new '71 Pinto SSO I ---------~~ ,:;' '71""'.:n:'t I '71 JAGUAR Y12 day ind Ac mlle. Put • UtUt kkk In YotJr ltt1. I Autom1.1ic, air cond,. w1w, THEODORE TG. Pwr. St. dlr. Muat 1ell. ROBINS FORD Under factory wunnty, 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Ta.kt older trade. WUI fin- COSTA MESA &U.0010 ·~ pvt pty, Call 540·3100 For lhat Item qnder S50. j--•c:.IS:.7c_-0627::;:_;_· -----b'J ttlt PtAfl1 Pincher Sell ~ t:i!d 1fUU Coupe De Viii• G44-Jro9 I JA YELIN This gorgeous luxury car has ·66 CHEV CapriC"e WllfOn, TI1E "Yellow Pages" ol 1 7o TOYOTA, blue, radi~, 546-4051 or '494.9n1. ' Cl."lf.,-, D•"•ly pl l • i heR1er. Xlnl. roncl. $1425.1 -'-""""'~""'-;7~=- STUDEBAKER • <:\I •• " ' " 4"' ~1 "·I 1. V\V SEM I-CA:\fPER Sernce 01rec!ory. Chel':k it .,.....,,,~ uc ore 4 • _ almost all of Cadillae's him-fully equ1p'd. Wholesale or =--,.-_ -=---- cus power featUf't's and is mllke offer. 642--1432 . 19'.0 Javelin SST, 360 cu. In, just ready to go. <VDVl~) '66 IMPALA 2-<fr hrdlp, Air, ~~~·0~·~1~~ radials. " 1948 STUDEBAKER ' CO~tMANOOR, 4-dr, 6 stick . Stored 18 Years. 15,000 orig miles. Like New tn .l out.I S650 or Trade. 645-4687 for the service you nef"d . We'll help you sell! &l:Z.-567S Clran. Smoo~h. 6 7 3-.l6 7 2 __ _ Gf'Org1\ 61>2372 Pat, Autos, Imported 970 f Autos, Imported 970 67~lb ~c $1288 Good ":"6.,1'~. I LINCOLN Look! Look! Look! MIRACLE ''ROTARY'' MAZDA • • Coming May 14th At MIRACLE MAZDA 2150 HARIOR ILVD. AT VICTORIA COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 645. 5700 Look! Look! Look! • '66 VW, new rebl! eng. A?\f/F~1. htr, sunroof, 1 o""ner. Xlnt cond. $975. ,,,..,., COURTESY . ., VAN V-8, "''· St• ... .,...--=------T BIRD tape, panelled, oow tires.! '65 CONTINENTAL 4 cir., .. 1 DODGE 1967 V.W. 5Q. bk. Tape deck, 2888 Harbor BJvd. SZ19.i 642--6441 AIC, all extru, new tires. '61 T-BIRD ~~~9 condilion. S 1 O5 O ' Factory air conditlonJnc. Me.I =~=~~~--~ 1 chanicaUy excellent Llc. A~t/Fto-1 r11dio. n1dia.I tires. 1 ~ta 1'.1esa $57-9220 CHRYSLER Best plfcr, mua:t 'e 11 . --""'-'"''7~--1---------&lfkiOSS CADILLAC '69 Chrya:ler 300. 2-<tr h1'dtp, 1966 VW t:IOO, privalr 0-SEDAN DE VILLE lull power, f11c a.ir. vinyl clean. $800. ra1h. Call TWO TO CHOOSE roof, A:\-1/FM, S 24 9 5 . 962-250.1 Afler 6 p.m. '69 I '7(t-8olh have lull pow· 6#-52'.>9 er &: lactory air. light sen--C~------- '70 MARK III, bro"'" /white 1 IGN 137 lop, Middle interior. 5000 $395 miles. 673-6813 '68 Lincoln, 4 door. All xtras. Perfect condition, Harbor American 1>41>·0?61 196'1 HARBOR COSTA MESA '66 VW 1600 ena. FM & tape . tinal, door locks, tilt & tele-ONTINENTAL S75CI. a:cope, AM/FM stereo, leath-1-----·----'60 HARDTOP. ·'I ~·-. * Call 675--4228 • er Interior, landau top, lac-?970 ~RK I'll "" ,._.._,.,.., 6ra-3590 MERCURY " "'000 m> 5 w•-o"IY S395. or trade for •m•U -. ' V\V-Sunroof, i"ll.dio, 6.000 tory warranty. Priced !or ;~. · yr ..... • .. ,,.. on new engine. Grod cond. quick sale, Elegant blur, white Broug· 'li2 MERCURY Me1eor. New car. xln! cond. 492-79U, 1--4 SSOO. 67l-2l96. Mac Howard L•asing ham top, blue le•ther inter-tJre1, 11[r, gOOd eond. $300, nr 492--3755 11ft 5. '69 VW 23 OOJ mt • g (Corner 111 & Harbor) lor. Every delwte extra, M2--7191. ·55 T-BIRO, rcb'lci-,-,,-.-BOO~cyl AM/FM.' Mag~ A ether ex: S.19-9600 fl31.fl607 Santll Ana incl strroo ~adlo "-tape MUSTAN_G __ re11tonod. New 11r1g, interior. tras. S15.'i0 or make ofr. I ,69 CADI d_e{'k, Michelin steel-bel!t'd ~c. R39--89S4 968-6558 LLAC hre1. For sale by owner. =~-- .;.cc.;;:;::_ _____ 1 c.u,,. o. vu1 •• ruu ..... ,, '"~"9 '67 MUSTANG ... GOOD BUY 199:) KARMANN Ghla convt . raetory air aulom•tic door I--~~=~=--;l;) T·B1rd, Need~ some body Grear cood. Must sell. 30 IoCkii, elc. 'Gold w1!h bl11ck CORYAIR VS, r .s., T/wheel air cond., j wortc. I owncor fii5-~T •~25 6#-6316 •lf'l'f!O, v/top olive-color, • mpg. ~ . I ''"'"· Ol\lAGC 1--------'"" """ s1i1s. (IITS67ll I TORONADO •55 VW, ''"' "'°'· ""'-~. $4395 '65 CORYAIR Buwick lmpon'. 998 So. very clean. S800. (II (2131 M•c Howard L•asing Co.lit Hwy., Lt.Jruna Bcac:h. 1966 TORONAOO 592-2272 aft ~PM. (C(lrner lit k Harbor! 1ur.r ~I !)46-40.jj or 494-9711. PRICED FO!t QUICK SALE 1967 VW BuJ, excellenl cond. &39-9600 SanlA A~~ $395 .,. R/H PIS -• pd 6"aulifu! ....... ,,.,,,, m•talllc I . -..... ' . ~"· ""' ' '-''l'l' w ne""' engine. '69 CadilJac Coupe de Ville. fl«ds minor body work ,. fln1~h with cu~1om inrrrior • 642-i;,36 • 24,000 mi's,~ owner. Full ~ ~ ptiint. $5(1 + take pay, ~ auto trAru , racllu, heiler'. '65 VW , cherry tond. New powrr Ir Alf + AM/fi\t mo, 11 Jrft. Tina 644-7ro'I' pow. slecr. llO'lo . hr;ikf'J, pow. enJ. clutch A; bntkeJ. M•ny 5l~reo. vinyl roof. Jealhrr 2100 llarbor Blvd. &tS--0466 11nytime windowa. 1''aclory 11 1r. RVK. xtras It. lo mi's. 67).3354 •fl Inter., till Wheel, powf'r '63 Corvalr Spyder • rood c,=1u°"ST~-,.~11~'69~M7u-,-,.,,.-~c~T 4-16. $1245. Johnson & Son 5. door locks, Perlttl cood. condition • 1pd Mu1t 1tlll Lime (Old Fstbk. 3 5 l • 2626 l-l11 rbor Blvd., ~t~ '60 VW, 'M enatne. rape, xlnt I &&5-2182 Eves. &t~2 ' 4V/1111tt1/P1fPb d 11 es, MeM. 540-56.10 cond. $.W'I. Dally PUot Want Adi have Sl'll idle Items now! 1 a m/fm 11er. M~ wlmd Dally Pilot \\ . .,-,~l-A~d~s-"'1-,... * 646-4i7!11 * ... barpin& ratore. c.IJ 642-5678 Now! !'.'Ir •I' A bara11n1 11d,,re . •