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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-18 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 18, 1971 ' ,, \'OL. M, HO. 111. 4 SECTIOJIS; •tt>A•ES . • --• + , • • Hartelius Benies All --In Grand Jury Charges . u s oos oc •• • • I . . .. .: Newport • • • • • Seal Beach Cools Off High Rise Ban, Repeals 2 Zo11e Laws ' Seal Beach city councilmen r.londay night killed their tv•o controversial offshore zoning laws by identical -4 to 1 1ptit votes. Council nmnbers repealed 'tht laws ~·hich bad 4eclared three m.He~ ol Ule. - rlty's oUshore waters u an "open space recreation zone." The ordinances were adopted all an emergency measure last February at the suggestion of former mayor ~forton A. Baum. They were not only aimed at reserving the wate r as a recrea tional area but also specifically to prevent pollution and drill· ing by oil companles. Council. members took action after )learlng the legal opinion of Deputy City Att-Orney Frederick Keeley that the laws are "invalid and void" and unen- forceable. "I am very disappo"ed. The City Council certainly acted with uncalled for haste." said Councilman Baum, this morn ing . He was the only man to vote against the repea l. . COU!l£.ilman Baum \\•he tr1td lo persua'M! other councilmen to table the item added, "They gave some very lame excuses to repeal it. It does not make sense. They're surrenderin~. They bowed to the pressure of the oil compa nies and the Stale Lands Commission." The two unprecedented laws are now under study by the Attorney General's of· flee which is expected to render a decision on their legality within 30 days, acrording to Baum. Since the ordinances were adopted last February they have been under fire from Councilman Thomas Hogard who has also fXpressed misgivings about their legal ity. "II we have llleg:tl ordinances. I feel they should be replaced. Let us adopt -come new ordinances to replace these-- and make sure they can be enforced," he aaid. The ordinances v.·ere voted into ex· Jstence by the old council majority con- sisting of Baum, Hogard and Cfnway Fuhrman . \Vith the recall of Fuhrman earlier this year and Hogard's change of mind, Baum is the lone councilman to back the ()rdinances. Orange toast Weather UPl"f~. Virgiqia's Brenda l\1iller breaks lor a drink of water during l\·Iiss USA photo session under glaring sun in Miami Beach. Fifty-one contestants are par· ticipating in week-long contest. ~ Hartelius Enters Innocent Plea To 14 Charges c.....£.bbe HOlius oLCorona del Mar today pleaded innocent to 14 felony charges contained in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. Superior ·,iCourt Judge Byron K.. AfcMillan ordered the SO.ye ar-old physi- cian tri al June 30. He set June 4 as the date for a hearing oo a motion protest.. ing the indictment and allowed Hartel!Ull t-0 remain free on $S,OOO bail. Defense attorfley Tom Reilly of Laguna Beach told Judge McMiiian that tnere would be further pretrial mot.ions filed on behalf cf his client with appea11 against any adver!e ruling. Patchy fog and low clouds will greet Wednesday weather watch· ers. with cooler temperatures pre- \'aillng along the coast. High read· Jngs "'fll .'be ' 72 local!Y and ~ 1 Hartelius was Indicted last May 6 on a variety of charges that include bribery, grand theft and the submission cf fraudulent clalms to in1urance companies • That indictment came just one month after a Superior Court jury cleared the gray haired phy1Jcian pf arson and fraud ~ charges., '1'/ ,. , ProsecuUon •1tne11 Jim 'Blevi ns ad- I rurlhu inland. , INSIDE :rop,\l' • V'lin-t't Jo! 'of tivino theater arvund tile Orange Coast arl!a, 01Mi thrtt" Local producUont are reviewed today. See Entertoi11- mt'IU, Pages 19·20. ' ' mitted both 11<'t" ;, c9uit W l<>tified , =•rielll\i.,;lwho'IJO'lf,._ at· <IOI Sl..,. C0ot. llul, , , · • 'Texans May Go ·'W~t" AUSTIN, Ter .. (UPJ) -The.PUblic .sale ci mixed d(inkll-WAI outlawed In Texas more than '\'half century aga. Since then cOcktalls ro.bd only be 'p.l'rchased In priva te clubs. All thaL ma y changl? ~J;-' as residents of 46 Texa1 counties \.'Oled wheO"r to-permit open ·¥loon! In their preclnc111. It wa1 the la st ilep In bringing liquor by the drink to Texa s. I Gets Counc-il Extension · Senat,e Panel OKsR~ilway Strike Curb .· WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senato committee approved legislation today to stop the nationwide rails strike. The resolution would order strlklng signalmen back to work uhlll at least Oct. l, while giving them an interim pay-increase of J7.~ percent. The legislaUOn, Yihich was moved to the Senate fJOor for quck action, went fa r beyond legislation requested by President Nixon who asked only that the strikers be · ortlered back to work unUI July 1 while negotiations resumed. The proposed legislation approved by the Senate Latior Committee was in line with a similar seUlement imposed by Congress in another nationwide rail strike.almost six months ago when four other unions were glf~n pay increase! of 13 percent. The wage increase recommended by the Senate group v.·ould come out to about 67 cents add!Uonally an hour to highest- paid signalmen. The Senate actkll came as the Howe Commerce Committee considered similar legislation, with congressmen making it c~dla1i0r11kt-Ule'idea of being strike breakers. "We're getti.n( fed up with It," Rep. (SM UJLWAY, Pa&e 2) ' Bargain Buyers Force Markets To Climb Again ' NEW YORK (AP) -The 1tock market \Urned iDlhllY upward today u .in- vestors NparenUy 1napped up barga1ns created fn the previoWI aesaion , The 1 p.m. Dow Jone!! ~verage of 30 in- dustrial stocke was up 0.71 at. 922.01 and the New York Stock Exchange Index of some f,300 common slock5 wa1 ahead two ce'l'ltl!I. Detllning Wues on the Big Board, however, were ahead of advance• bY, a considerable martin. 'l'.rtdinl on the New York Stock Ex· chinge was 1ctiive. · .. Monday the Dow average tumbled ; polntl for ltt blgg<tl losa 11llc. laat 23, when the blUe chlp indicator ed II points. alyaf.s contributed the drop to a combination of factors lncfuding the na· tionwlde rail str~e, a recordJirst quarter . tJ ~l\. balance of paymentt deficit: and in- vestor speculaUon about an increase In t~ pr.ime-rate. lbe-lnleresLcharged..bL. b:tnks to their moat creditworthy cor- porate borrowers. ' Neieport Dranaa Councilmen Issue Six Suspects Nabbed K• Month Delay In Te.rror 1dnap By.,i. .. r.~1.E~ .. K.~.r:a : By JOANNE REYNOLDS parently attempted to .!lneak out of an ad- Of "* ~" '11" '"" jacent room in v•hlch two more persons Newport Beach police early today cap- tured two suspects they clahn held nine were held captive. persons captive all night in a local motel, The Newport helicopter crew spotted beat one or more of the victims and slic· two more people hiding about one block ed another across the neck"with a knife. away in the area of the Riverside Drive Before the suspects were apprehended, Post O!fice. officers from Costa ~fesa were called to Jacobs sai d the two have been idenli· aid In surrounding the motel and fied as vJoUius who had also managed to Newport's police helicopter hovered overhead. esca pe and ~11o had apparently been beaten. All lhe alleged victims escaped serious A search ol the rooms turned up the Injury. knife assertedly used en the bleeding Booked on charges of kldnaping are victim. Officers said they found no guns Bruce Dale Moore, Jr., 18, of Baldwin or mcney. Park and hi s alleged companion in the lnvestlgalion in the case was just be- crime spree, Terry Lee Ranson. 23, of ginning this morning as detectives un- South Wh!Uler. raveled the series of events leading to the Newparl delect!ve Sall) Amburgey said arrests. In. addition to the kidnapi~g charg~, he Amburgey said neither suspect had 1v11l seek complaints agannst the pair ad-been shot bul Ranson did have a bari- diUonally cha rging.them with armed rob-dagi>Jd his back. "The-two bery aAd-a8Sllult-wtt.h·a-deadJy·weapon-. --slop J'iC were s wn e. age One JUS~ct al90_ face~ charges o[ and told the suspects had to have some assault against a police orf1cer. Reds (barbiturates) or he wculd die ," he The two were arrested at the motel on sald. Nort h Newport .Boulevard after two .or Santa Ana police did not report an U1elr alleged victims - r e I e a s e d armed robbery In their city Monday reportedly t-0 find drugs for l~ men.-night, but a Tic Toe market was held up flagged down Newport Officer Jim there about lYlO days ago, a check with J~';'Obs at a~t 4:30 a.m. . that department revealed. Newpo rt police They said there were t.,..•o men in the were cheeking with Santa Ana to motel who told them they had just com· determine Jr Moore and Ranson matched milled an anned robbery in Santa Ana the description of the Santa Ana bandits. and one had been shot. Amburgey 11aid the pair allegedly broke "They said there were other people into a dlfferenl motel en North Newport being held capt1ve," Officer Jacobs relat4 at about 3 a.m, They reportedly entered ed this morning. the room occupied by Paul Eric Units from Newport and Costa Me.,a Grimshaw and David Andrew Johnstone quickly surrounded the nwteJ as one of both 18, who were ~Jeeping at the time. ' the · vicUms led Jacobs· 'tp the roon1i · "li•irig , broke n beer bottle and a where the capUves were being held. lSee TERROR Page%) "About that lime. a man came out of ' the window or one of the rooms. He had been beaten -kicked in the side and groin -and was bleeding from a wound on his neck where tbe assailants assertedly held the knife," the officer said. Orders from the police to vacate the roomr broogbt Ranson to I.be door, ap- parently unanned. "They were ttDing him to come out with his hands up, bu! he just stood there. We think now he is a deaf-mute," Jacobs said. While shotgun-armed cfflttrs tried to get Ran,on le Ce.'!J)Oftei to t h e I r orders. Jacob!! crawled around the side of the building and gra bbed the suspect. He oald_l]Je)'.. '°"" three P.i who had been held In the room. Police apprehended ?.1oore as he ·~ 300 Men See k 1 Fire111an Job Call It a sign of the limes or an unusual lnterest in fire fighting. either "Way It was overwhelming said P1acenlla city official!. !\1ore than 300 men have appli~ for one os>enlng in the Placentia Fire Department and will t.ak~ a speth1l lest Friday and SaturdRy. O!flcials said app llc8 nts were rrom all walks or lire Including . -attospace. workers and forrn~r aorvlcemen. • The Newport Beach City Q>uncfl Mori day night extended the city's shorelint high rise building ban s.ix months, insteacj of the anticipated three, when resident.I and developers alike urged more in-depti scrutiny or proposed building amtrols. ; At the same time, the council agreed li resurrect at least parts of several Newport Tomorrow study committees to review proposals advanced by the Lower Newport Bay Civic District study com; mittee. • The extension came afler nearly an hour of public testimony which featured an endorsement or lhe ex tension "for a yea r or two, ir needed," by Richard Stevens. executive vice president of the Balboa Bay Club. Stevens heaped criticism on the civic district plan as it stands , contending it ''tries to be all things to all people." "More dialogue is needed, more allernatives must be round," Stevens said. adding, "l don't care I! lt takes one ear:.orJwo-year.s.!!----------1 Stevens, whose pending expansion of the Bay Club is probably most rtspons..._ ble for triggering the morat-Orlum three months ago, later confided the threat of an iniUative t-0 ban high-rise completely influenced his remarks. ' A citizens' group headed by Beacon Bay resident Alan Beek and Mrs. Jame3 Rosner has been meeting to lay plans fol" substantial citizen input Into the civic district concept The group is ' reportedly Prepare(I to force an initiative election t-0 ban all hlg~ rise unless the civic. district regulations. satisfy Newport Beach residents. ·Councilman Carl Kyrnla, chairman of the Lower Newport Bay Civic District study committee, agreed lo a request by both Stevens and Beek lo schedule " series of nightly meellngs of his group to allow for more cillzen participation . The planning commission \VIII begin fl, review of the pla n at a study session Thursday, although it ill not known ir It -will go ahead with its tentatively schedul- ed public hearing June 3. Originally, only the 90-day extension had been sought to provide a mJnlmum • amount of time for the planning com- mission and council to conduct necessary public hearings Off the civic dl.!ltrict pr. poeals. City Attorl}ey Tully Se)'mour had sug..· gested the longer period t-0 provlde suf .. ticlent llme if any delays were el)o countered , pointing out thaL by 1&1w this ft l~e only extension of the morat-Orium, • adopted on an "emergency ordlnanc~'~--1 basis, thot would bt allojVe<f. APProval or ~he sl1t·mont extenslOtl (See lllGfl RISE, Po.g:e l) 2 DAILY PILOT Sea-Sm11ggle Suspects . . Ai·1·aigned Special to the DAILY PIL<Yf SAN DIEGO -A trio who stt sail from Newport Beach l\\'O months 1go and was later caught ~·ith what lawmen allege wu the largest cargo of sea-smuggled marijuana in U.S. history have been ar· raigned on federal ronspiracy to smuggle charges . · The men were ordered brought back befort. ll.S. Magi1tra~ Harry lt. McCue JW'le 10 for an omnibus hearing on the charges that could put them in federal prison for 20 years. James L. Olson, 36, of Captain Cook. Hawaii, Robert C. Light. 30. of South Seattle. Wash .. and Richard M. King, U, cf San Diego, are among 14 persons ar· rested to date in the case. King is owner of the converted shr_irqp boat Mercy \Yiggin!. which departed Lido Peninsula Yacht Anchorage March 26, along with a second smaller boat, the Andiamo, bound for Mexico. . . Olson skippered the Mercy W1ggms. which federal agents claim carried f~ve tons of marijuana worth $1 .5 million when they seized her two week.a ago off the Golden Gate. A motion by one defense attorney to order the federal government to disclose whether information had been obtained through wiretapping was denied .. Charges or such eavesdropping via electronic equipment have already been made. but U.S. Attorney Harry D. Stewart told the court Monday no illegal methods were U!ed. ·Besides the conspiracy to smuggle .:harge -an older statute -pri~ipals in the alleged smuggling opera~1on are charged with using electron1~ con: munlcations equipment to comm.It mar1· juana offenses. Investigators plan to proJecute on both charges stemming from a year·long probe titled Operation Milkman. since the second Jaw went into effect during that period . ! Authorities 1ay tht alleged rlllg wa smuggling Mexican marijuana un~er the guise' of making documentary movies and charge at least five shipments com· parab~-to that seize<\ May 3 were delivered. Newport Beach Resident Ousted From GOP Post George W. Brokate of Newport Beach was removed Monday night as treasurer CJf the Orange County Republican Central Committee. In a stormy, tb.ree and one·haU hour meeting, the committee voted 18 to S with four abstaining to declare lbe cfflce cf treasurer vacant. Chairman Thomas C. Rogers of Newport Beach would state no charges against Brokate but the twc have been· feuding for month! over an outside audit of the committee's books which Brokate demanded. Last Wednesday the executive com- mittee accepted by unanimous vote an audit performed by a Santa Ana ac· counting firm which Brokate said was not adequate. "I intend to pursue the matter and find cut who is concealing what to the point where such drastic measures had to be taken tonight .. , Brokate said after the meeting . The Corcna del Mar man , a retired Marine. has been a heavy contributor to GOP causes in the last several years. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT N..-,.rt.._. H•.S .. ,.. '-II -...!:!I---'"!!!'" ,.., c......... s..a..... 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Cll•llN Al D•.tfwtN 1.i., .... 4fJo.44Jt °""""""''· lf1l, °".. c-at "llfllhll .... ~II)' .... -,,.,...., lll\lltr•"- 11111*'111 -"· ., .......,l ........ lt """" _.,. lie ,...,..,~ wl"'9ut ..-Cloll ,.,.. ll'llMi.t • conr"ilfll -· $«*W Clttl ....... Jltlll at N...,.., IMdt .... "'" "'-· C.llftnlll. ~rlllilll ~ Cll':':*'f 0 ,21 """'1!11'1'1-n MtW ta.n- -,,..,.., fi\llftl..y ··""'"""'· tt.JJ ,..... ... ,.,.. • Vl'I T•ll,Jlt!t , Reds on/tlove U.S. De_penqenls . Flee Laos Town VIENTIAfo.'E, Laos (UPI) -Wives and children Of Americans and o t h e r , employes of the U.S. government were i1evscualed today from Pakse in southern Laos where a new North Vietnamese of· fensive has carved out~uge new areas, Tile official Lactian m i 11 t a r y spokesman said the situalion "is getting worse." Th~ evacuation of about 100 dependents followed the virtual leveling of the town CJ£ Dong Hene Monday night in a rocket attack by advancing Communist troops. Laotian government spokesmen said about 75 perce'nt of the town's hemes were destroyed by rockets. the govern1nent. They said it cpened the ~·ay for a drive against Senc. a major government aJr base, about 20 miles east of Savannakhet which is 275 miles southeaSt cf Vientiane. 1:r * * Viet Forces , Closing Trap ' In J(ey Valley-, SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamest troops along the summit of mile-high peaks at beth ends of the A Shau Valley: slarted moving down into the valley to- .day in a pinCers mo'lemenl against Communist fcrces on the valley floor. CIRCUS ELEPHANTS MOVE THROUGH LINCOLN TUNNEL TOWARD MANHATTAN For Stranded Ringling Broa., Barnum and Bailey, More Thin One Way to Run a Railroad The big Communist offensive in the south coincided with renewed peace ef· forts by the Communist Palbet Lao and their demands that Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma halt U.S. bombing at. tacks in Laos. B52s have hit Lhe Ho Chi Minh Trail almost daily for months and U.S. planes have supported Laotian ground operations. As they started dowf1 the mulli·bat· talion force encountered only spor~ic contact "'ith the Communists, military sources said. From Pa.ge 1 RAILROADS. • • Viejo ·Girl to View Show Gen. Thongphan Knocksy, lhe defense ministry spokesman, said reports from the balUe areas were "confusing·· but that the situation in southern Laos "is gett ing worse." But heavy fighting was expected in the fi ve·week-0ld operation Lam Son 720. which is aimed at breaking Communist control of the 35·mile long valley. 375 miles north cf Saigon. Samuel Devine (R-Ohio), tcld Labor Secretary James D. H<ldgson during the hearing. Rep. John Moss ID.Cal.), asked Hodgson whether the intervention of CCJngress was net "an impairment of col· Jective bargaining.'' :With New Lease on Sight He said U.S. spotter planes have sighted North Vietnamese Soviet·made PT76 tanks between Saravane and Thateng. on the northern part or the Communist-occupied Bolovens plateau about 25 miles north of Pa k Song. Pak Song fell IQ. advancing Communist troops on Sunday. U.S. forces six miles east of the va lley's northern end, supported by BS% bombardments. began blo wing up a va.st six·mile square Communis t base area so well built it even has running water, fiela Congress gave reluctant priority to the &trike~stopping legislation proposed by Nixcn Monday a few hours after the Signalmen tied up the nation's rail passenger and freight service by setting up picket lines that members of other rail unions refused to cross. Hodgson warned, in testimony before the House committee today, of "drastic effects" on the nation's economy if the strike continued. The vote in the Senate committee was 13 tc I. It took place in closed sessicn and it was not immediately clear wlm cast the Jone vote. A; Republican, Sen. Jacob K. Javit.s (R· N .. Y.l. was one of the sponscrs of the revised poposat tllat cleared the com· mittee to go beyond Nixcin's July 1 date and also to include a pay raise in the plan. Javits said one key reason why he pr<r posed rejecting the administration pr<r posal in favor cf his own to extend negotiatiom until Oct. 1, was that he felt it a "good cbjective'' to have all rail Jabor contracts expire at the same time. He said he believed his plan would be ac- ceptable to the White House. Fire-damaged Water Bed Leaks; Studio Soaked Orange County Eye Bank 1971 Poster Girl Becky Rogers. 4, w:ill have a special outing Saturday, one week after receiving a cornea transplant that should mean normal vision. One more month would . have been too late. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Rogers. of 25842 Jamon Lane, f\1ission Viejo, is coming along fine at Santa Ana CCJmmunity Hospital where the delicate surgery was performed. "She will have to remain quiet for four er Jive days," spokesman said today. extremely a hospital Discharge is scheduled Friday and Becky -an honorary chairman of the CCJt.o de Caz.a Classic Horse Show -will be able to attend the equestrian event briefly on Saturday. The show opens Thursday at the ex· elusive rural club near Trabuco Canyon, with 500 entries in 44 events and proceeds benefiting the new Orange County Eye Bank. From Pa.ge 1 HIGH RISE. •• .' came on a 6 to 1 vote with Councilman Richard D. Croul casting the lone negative ballot. Crou] had voted against the initial ban. Croul was heated in his opposition. Water cascading from a beat-damaged ''It's so scary to me to come up with something like this I can't believe it," he water bed was blamed by Laguna Beach said. firemen fer most of !he damage in a pre· "You're asking people to chop 60 to 70 dawn fire today. percent off the value of their property." The blaze was confined to a bedroom CrouJ wa.!i especially upset with the upstairs cver•the studjo of artist David civic district regulation that would re-quire waterfront devel opers to leave 4~ Rosen at 812 South CCJast Highway, percent of their lots undeveloped , on firemen said, but intense heat caused the sideyards. to provide "view corridors" tc wattr bed to spring a leak \\'i th resulting the bay. water damage tc the downstairs studio. "You are going to take 40 percent An unattended candle which set wall sideyards, a "'a terfront setback or a street setback , then chop the height hangings en fire apparently started the without compensation to a man who has 2:30 a.m. blaze, Fire Chief Jim Latimer been paying property· laxes fer many said. years? The bedroom was rented to tenant "ls what we have today right?" Kymla Philip Dawson. Rcsen. owner of lbe prcr. asked. noting that existing standards were adopted about 1962. perty, occupies a separate building in the "That decisicn made in 1962 is the rear. basis en which many people bought pro- Becky's right eye was gradually being destroyed by corneal clouding and the desperate hunl for a, transplant was reaching the point cf fu tility when one became available. Tammy Jo ~1edley, 7, died Saturday while undergoing heart surgery at Children's Hospital of Orange Caunty. Her parents agreed to donation of the child's corneas, with cne going to Becky and the other being flown Saturday night to an unidentified recipient in Fairbanks. Alaska. Tammy Jo was the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Duane Wendler, of 5211 Marcella Ave ., Cypress. "I'm just glad there was something she cculd do to help someone ," Mrs. Wendler said Monday of Tammy's eye tissue giv· ing two other youngsters a chan ce lo en· joy normal vision. Her eyes were clouded by tears. Pak Song is about 30 miles east of Pakse on the ri.1ekong River border with Thailand. Thcngphan said the govern· ment anticipated the attack on Pak Song, which sits astride Highway 23. He said at least 50 government troops, including several senior officers, were killed in defense cf Pak Song. With the. Communist threat growing , the U.S. Embassy spokesman in Vien· liane said the dependents of Aroerlcans and other nationals working for the U.S. government were "advised" to leave. They were flown inlo Vientiane durii:ig the day aboard Air America C130 transpol'ts. Military sourcrs said the .fall of Dong Hene. on Route 9 abou t 37 miles east of Savanpakhet, was a serious setback for spokesmen said. ._/ U.S. helicopter pilots told UP I cor· respondent Stewart Kellerman they heard Communist artillery, small arms and mortar fine near the notheast end of the valley late today. So far in the A Shau campaign. the Army of the Republic of 1 South ) Viet· nam (ARVN ) has claimed killing nearly 400 CommunisL<> at a loss of about 75 own. But ARVN Brig. Gen. Vau Van Giai, com. mander of the operation. has predicted that heavy fi ghting lies ahead . U.S. 852 Stratofort resse.!i dropped 90 1ons on bombs early today on I.he Com· munist bunker complex. Other Thailand-based B52's put another 90 tons of bombs into the Ho Chi Minh trail complex three miles south of the demilitarized zone and a mile east of the Laos border. B52's also bombarded Communist targets In Cambodia and the main cor. ridor of the Ho Chi Minh trail through Lao.s. NeW at Alden's Carpets You'll never cry over spilt milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Your own dln ing room with all the luxury, beauty and warmth of carpeting ... without ever having to WOrr/ about cvertumed glasses:, dropped gravy dishes Of' choc<r late cake crumbs! Chances'are, you've dreamed of such carpet for years -..airpet that could go from soup to nuts and never show a spill, a stai.n or a spot. And If ycu're a woman >Mica children seem to get more food on the floor than In their mouths, ordinary carpet just couldn't do the job. But nM, you don't have to dream about it any more. We can't wait to see the look on your face when we show you what this amazing carpet can do! Damage to contents of the building was perty," Croul said. · •-.a -• ·~ N\I\ I •200 Kymla a reed that the "s~ulatlve ·----'lt---imau:l.l-4~;V\N.-Pus-. -to---al11---v°"al"ue""·1Tsome property might bi reCTuc· · Jt's Mohawk's STATURE ... car~t pile made with 100% Acri Ian' acrylic ftber! And it resists practically everything but admiring glances! Jts vel,.ety·smocth texture Is plush and elegant, with highl ights usually found only in exper;. sive carpets. Yet it's so easy to care for. Even if a stain goes deep dO'Nn and dries up, it'll st il! come out-leaving STATURE looking good as new! '--~~;e·ve Sot STATURE in manYsuperb de;ignsand ~­ dyed, exciting colors. french Provincial furn iture? We'va worits , 'but estimate of damage to the ed but said the question is "what, not bui\djng structure had net been com-who, is right.'' pleted early today. The fire itself was "Are there any property rights left?" contained in 10 minutes. Latimer said, Croul asked. The debate continued until Councilman but clean-up took two hours. Lindsley Parsons warned . "A referendum on this thing is pcssible and the citizens From Page 1 TERROR ... 1witchblade knife the suspects robbed the two men cf $4 and forced them le accom. pany them to the second mete!," Am. burgey said. At the seccnd mete! -the one where the capture took place -the pair reportedly confronted Geoffrey William Greene, 21, and allegedly forced him into the room where Ranson was finally cap. lured. Because of the preliminary state of the investigation. it was not clear today where the other victims v.·e re located and what their names are. Offlcers said t h e r e appears to be no relaitlon between the victims and suspects, although the victims said they had seen one of the suspects arcund the motel. "toore v.·orlu as a fibcrglasser for a Harbor Area boat manufacturing fii'm . An additional charge of assault on a pclice officer will be sought against Ranson, Amburgey said. lfe afleacdly attacktd Officer Bob Gate· "''ooC! ~·hen tile office r hrougnt htm-brt'ak'· fa st in hi~ cell at the Newport Stich jall . ' . t are liable to be rougher on developers than the council." Earlier Bay Club executive Stevens had sin;iilarly strayed from the top ic of the merits of the extension when he criticized the propcssls of the committee. He predicted as proposed, the controls would lead to economic chaos. "\Ve currtntly have experts preparing a .list of the problems this ordinance would create," he said. "\Ve know it would lead to economic chaos for the city. "This study has been proceeding on the basis that the commercial property o"·ners must be hurt for the public to benefit -that you've got to lake away something to get something. "This thing i~ a political nightmare," he said. "it holds out tc all. it lhro~·s everything to political review." Citing the propcsed height restrictions, set at 35 feet unless a special permit Is obtained, Stevens added, "It gives no assurances to anyone. "lt:s .A ticket to go argue, to swing your politic81 clout. "It's not good planning," he sald. Stevens said ~·hat th city needs is R good master plan . He also suggested that if 'lhe city is go ing to impose sue~ rigid restrictions it might •• ... u boy up •II tnn>ati!rffartt land. • • 1'663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 64"6-ot838 .. got a fren ch Prcwincial pattern. Modern furniture7 We've got 21 modern pattern, too. Just name your decor and we've got the carpet to go with it. •• $1270 for only a square yard (Ask about our easy payment planD Come in today; see all the other Mohawk carpets we're featuring. one for every room ln your home. Or, call us for our conven ient shop-at·home service! ALDEN'S SANTA ANA. OlAN0.1. TUSTIN c.n ..• ALDEN'S RID Hill. CAR,m & DRAl'l'IUES CARPETS-DRAPES -·~ -- • 11;74 ll"l'l11t, T11sti11, Collf. 1ll·lJ44· • • I I "'l I ' .. :· • ., •. • .,, ,, •' ._, '< ·--: •\ ,. • ' • ., " " "1 I I I• ' l ·I ••• ___ ..., _________ ._. ___ ...,_., • 4 ... "" -· .... --·-·""f'l!"!- ' ' ~­ Hun1ing~on Bea~h Fountain Valley EDtTi ON VOL. 64, NO. 118, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES '· OltANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY '18,. '1971' • ' • Today's_ J'J.!!'9l · t, • J • . TEN CENTS Seal Beach -Council Repeals Two Zone Law~ Seal Beach city councilmen Monday night killed their l\\'O controversial offshore zoning laws by identical 4 1'> 1 1plit votes. Council members repealed the laws which had declared thue miles of the: city's offshore waters as an "open &pace recreation zone." The ordinances were adopted as an emergency measure last February at the suggestion ol former mayor ttlorton A. Baum. They were not only aimed at reserving the water as a recreational area but also specilically to prevent pollution and drill· ing by oil companies. Council members look action arter hearing the legal opinion of Deputy City Attorney Frederick Keeley that the la\\'S are "invalid and void" and unen- forceable. "I am very ·disappoinled. The City Council certainly acted wilh uncalled for haste," said Cowlcilman Sawn, this morning. He ,\·as the only man to vote against the repeal. Councilman Baum \\'ho tried to persuade other C1lunci\men to table the item added, "They gave some very lame excuses to repeal it. It does not make sense. They're sW'renderlng. They bowed Teacher Jobs 01( No Layoffs Seen Despite Slashes " By RUDI NIEDZ IELSKI Of tlle DellY ,. ... , l ll tf Despite the possibility of severe budget slashes in the Huntington Beach Union High School District lhis swnmer, not one teacher will be lald orr. That was the prediction today or Dr. William "Jay" Settle, associate superintendent of the district which en- compasses five ca1npuses and a teaching staff of more than 500. "There were no notices sent out May 15 to any teachers advising them that they would not be re·employed next year." said Dr. Settle. Jn ~1arch many teachers had feared for Appeal De11ied their jobs when It became known that possible fiscal losses of $4 million could eli.minate as many as 20 leachers. A lot- tery was held then to determine who goes rirst. Dr. Settle explained ther.e ·would be no layoffs since normal attrition v;ould lake care of the needed culs. He said by the end of lhe summer about 60 teachers y,·ould either have resigned their positions or taken a leave of absence, making the job cuts un- necu:sary. At the same time, Dr. Seltle pointed out that the district will lose about 140 teaching positons next July unless it is successful in winning a 69-cent tax over· ride,. "These positions will remain wifilled because we will not be able to hire new teachers to keep up with our growth fac· tor," Dr. Settle said. Instead, district officials are expecting to increase the class size from an average of 7:1 students per teacher, to 31 students per teacher. be said. The reduction o{ personnel was seen as one means of alleviating a fiscal crisis which is predicted for next year if the district's revenue drops from ils present $1.39 to 85-cents per $100 of assessed valuation. to the pressure of the oil companies and the State Lands Commission." 1be two unprecedented laws a~ now under study by I.ht Attorney General's of· fice which is expected to render 1 decision on their legality within 30 days, according to. Baum. Since the· ordinances were adopted last February they have been under fitt from Councilman Thomas Hogard who has also expreued misgivings about their Jegallty. ''U we h•ve iUq:al ordtn8J'lce., t feel U..y should be r<placed. L<I us ~ some new ordinancu to replace these and•make sure they can be enforced," be llid. The ordlnanct1 wert \IOted Into ex- istence by the old council majority con· sisting: of Baum, Ho&ar( ind-Cbnway Fuhrman. t Wllll IJ>e recall of Fuhrman .-rifer tlllf year and Hogard'• chaqe of mind, Bawa ii Ille lone countj)man to., .back llli ordinances. ·: Al Monday lllgbl'unoellng llle.......U ' -also elected Harold K. Hold,n u it.I mayor and Franklin Sales I! v:lc:t.m8'0r. EdwanfSmith. the remaining member of the five-man counciJ, made the motion to' l'!""'al the controver!lal laws. --J .... .. "Z ' Huntii1gton Council Nixes New Bid f 01· Trailer Par I{ Cou11cilman Makes Gains In Hospital Huntington Belch Councilmah ""Donald Shipley y,•as reported to be "much Jn,.. proved" in Pacifica Hospital in Hun- lington Beach today after being confined in the intensive care ward over the weekend. Wl"T ....... CJRCUS ELEPHANTS MOVE THROl,I«H . LO(COLN TUNNEL TOWARD MANHATTAN • For Strontl••l'.41lfttllnt B..i., iomum 1nd•&ll!ey, Mor• Thon On• Woy to Run 1 ltollrood An appeal for permission lo build another trailer park in •lunlington Beach ~·as turned dO\\'Tl by the city council 1'.forr day night. The appeal was for a zone change from light industrial to a mobile home district ' Beacl1 Planners To Considel' Bolsa Property The pre-zoning or a portion of Hun- tington Beach's vast Bolsa properties \\'ill be the main item under C1lnsideralion tonight by the city's PlaMing C.Om- <1nission. Members o( the seven-man commission have been asked to pre.zone 423 acres of the northeastern portion to single family, multiple family and commercial uses by Signal Properties Inc. Of Los Angeles. The territory encompassed by the pro.- Jett is southwest of the Huntington Beach city boundary from Ellis Ave nu e northwest to Bolsa Chica Street and north or the adopted route of the Pacific Coast Free"·ay. .,., , __ __, lannillg-dcpar:tment-st.aff-mamber& 1aid the pre-zoning is necessary for the co1npany·s plans to annex lhe area to Huntington Beach. It is now in county territory. j I The Signal project calls for 971 single units and 930 multiple unit• to be con- 1tructed on lhe land sometime next year. The total Signal..o~·ned Bolsa properties encompass about 1,940 acres and are valued at about $40 million, aceording to city aides. Nixon Cousins N ot Invited? GRASS VALLEY. Call!. (UPI) - Tricia Nixon's wedding invitation list failed to include the name of at least one or President Nixon's'two cousins li\•lng in rural Nevada County. " • Oliver J\tilhoos, "'ho oper1ted the 700-acrt ,_1llhous boys ranch. said ~tonda,y ht has not received an in- \'ltatlon to the June 12 White House wedding of Nixon 's eldest daughter. "No comment," ~'a!I !he response rrom the other rowln. Phillip Milhous. when asked If he had been invited. He created a na- tionwide !lti r in February when he revealed his famil y was on welfJre. Both cou!'lns were Invited to Nlx· _ ::in't ina.ugur11Uon ·In __I~ Jtut neither atten~d. and a conditional exception to build a 137· space park on 20 acrts on the south or Slater Avenue, east of Gothard Street. The request was denied by lhe planning commission but was appealed by Joe Evans, agent for the owners. J\tr. and f.irs. David Meredith. Councilman Shipley. who was stricken with Infectious hepatitis in ~1arch, wa11 readmitted to the hospital last Thursday ror what was described as a rest and checkup. But Councilman Norma Gibbs E\'ans argued that 1 pea{ condition on told fellow councilmen at Monday night's the land presented a hardship in that it meeting that Dr. Shipley was "quite made it economically unfeasible for the critical'' and was in the intensive care land to be developed for industrial use. ward. Later betwetn the 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 The request was denied ._.1. Only Coun· p.m. sessions o( the council. ~1n. Gibbs cilman Ted Bartlett voted in favor of the \'isited Dr. Shipley and learned that he project. Mayor George llfcCracke.n al>-had been moved back into lhe medicaJ stained after the question of '4<ilelher ~ unit Monday. "''ould be involved in a C1lnflict of interest Dr. Shipley. a biology professor al Cal was raised. State. Long Beach, is understood to be suffering from diabetes in addition\to the During the public hearing. McCracken case of infectious hepatitis. a IJver backed the contention that the peat con· disease, that weakened him. Since mid-- dilion made it difficult for the land to be ~larch '\'hen he was stricken with used industrially, indicating th at he had hepatitis he has attended only one council considered buying the property himself meeting, the May 3.meeLing. A nurse at the hospital this morning several Y,ears ago but decided against it said that Dr . Shipley appreciated the ron- after reading the soil reports. cern of well wishers and was in the ~1ayor McCracken also revealed that hospital for "evaluation of a medical pro· he o\\·ned live acres of property, al so zorr blem ." ed light industrial. within 300 feet of the "He is back ~n the medicfll unit now· 1'.1eredilhs' land. and is resting nicely," she added . "But he Senate Legislation 01\.'d To End Signalman Stril{e WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Senate Rep. John 1'.foss (0.Cal.), asked committee approved legislation today 10 Hodgson whether the intervention of stop the nationwide rails strike. The Congress was not "an impairment of col-lective bargaining." resolution would order striking signalmen ~ngress gave reluctant priority to the back to work until at least Oct. l, v•hile sU'ike-stopping leglslat.lon proposed by giving them an interim pay increase of Nhi:on 1'.fonday a few hours after the 17.S percent. Signalmen tied up the nation's rail passenger and freight service by setting The legislation, which was moved to up picket lines that members of other rail the Senate floor for quick action, \\'ent Car unions refused to cro!ls. beyond legislation requested by President Hodgson warned, in testimony before Nixon \\'ho asked only that the strikers be the flouse committee today, of. "drastic ordered back lo work until July 1 while effects" on the nation's economy if the negotiations resumed. strike continued . The proposed legislation approved by 'T'he vote in the Senate committee was !he senate Labor Committee was in line 13 to I. It took place in closed session and wHh a similar settlement imposed by it was not immediately clear who cast Congress in aoother nationwide rail the lone vote. strike almost six months ago when four A Republican, Sen. Jacob K. Javits fR· other unions were given pay increases of N.Y.), was one of the sponsors of the ll percent. revised proposal that cleared the com· City Allomey Don Bonfa ruled that really does need the rest." McCracken would not be involved in a Or. Shipley is able to recei ve --a:mflict--vf-fnterest ·iranrctiange-in the--i!Mlttif-irom'""Det ol visitors. zoning of the 1'.feredlths' property would The wage lncrease recommended by mlttee to go ~yond Nixon's July ~ date only a the Senate group would come out to about and also to include a pay raise 1n the --57 cen sli0di11onal y an our tOliiifiest.-plan . not affect the value of the mayor's land. ?i.fcCracken said that it would not and Indicated that he had already begun grading y,·ork on the sHe ,for its devel~ merit under industrial use. ~fost councilmen agreed w I t h i tcCracken that there would be no con- flict of interest, but when it came to the vote, the mayor abstained. Douglas Ge ts Tuneu1l WASmNGTON (UPI ) -Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas was reported ln.~xcellent condition al Walter Retd Army Medical ~nter today after undergoing a minor adjustment on his electronic cardiac pacemaker. paid signalmen. The Senate action came as the House Com merce Committee considered similar legislation, with congressmen making it clea r they did not like the idea of being strike breakers. "We 'r.e .getting fed up with it," Jl:ep. Samuel Devine fR-Ohio j, told Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson during I.he hearing. Dumping of Oil to Cease Operators Give Assurance to Huntington Council By ALAN DIRKIN Of fltt D•ll'I l'ltet l ll'lf No more oil mud will be trucked to the Steverson brothen' dump In HunUngton Beach as of June 1. , A commitment to halt dumping of II· quid oil, field wa,tu 1t the 39-acre 1lte was given to the city Monday by JORpb and Carl SteverlOn. City Attorney Don Bonfa Informed councilmen Monday night of 1t letler he had received in Y.'hich the owners pledged to stop dumping operations . The owners said that operations lo clean and skim the oil from the~facllily to make the land "more produclive" would continue. "--Coondlman Jack Green noted that the dump 11t Hamilton Ave nue and Magnolia Street W"I .now fully fenced with an overhang of barbed wire to prevent chl\dren from entering the property. He OOmptimented the owners for their cooperation with the city ln attempting to 10lve the problem of foul odors that have allegedly emanated from the dump. The city council recently found that the dump constituted a pubUc nuisance, but held off any court action to allow the staff and the owners _time to negotiate a solution. 1.-tany homtoY.'llt'ra In the area had bl amed the dump for offensive odors in the neighborhood and the county's Air Ptlllutlon Control District has filed an a~ lion charging that pol!ubnts in the air · .Jan: 12 C'OTI!tltuted a-,,Ub'llc 'l!Uto:nce. Thi! case Is to be heard in \Ve11t Orange County Judicial District Court May IS, ,, . C. William Carlson, the Steversons' at- torney, indicated this morning that any dumping afler June I w'ould be only fill dirt to Improve the land. Joseph Steverson also revealed that a new process of reclaiming lhe land from the oozing mass or oil and mud -bellev· ed BO feel deep Jn parts -was being at. -.tempted. This experiment Involve! using a machine with • vertical leach line that 11clJI like a wick and sucks the mois ture out of the ground. "The machine can Insert a strip of paper, like comigated cardboard, about 40 feet into the ground," he e~lal~. ''The mOTSlure then i'lses ffirough tlle cor· rugated venl~ to the surface where it can (Ste JU~IP, Pace !) Oakland Raider . Football Star Wells Stabbed BEAUMONT, Tex. (AP} -Oakland Raiders wide receiver Warren Wells, 29, was in serious condition today after being stabbed at a Beaumont Club. Police 11ald Wells was 11tabbed by a woman Sunday night -af\er the football player had attended an appreciation din- ner for serveral Beaumont area pro-- fessional football players. A spokesman at Baptist Hospital said doctors were tryln1 to determine If WeUs suffei-ed heart damage in the incident. Police said 'Wells wu teated at .a table at lhe Tahl~ ciub 0 )'ilh bis brother., Russell. and a man ~otfUed as Nathaniel EldrldgL Police sakl a 20-yelJ'-4)1d woman walked to the trio's table and ulr:",. Velis what he would do if abe 1tabb.... ilm. Police ' qooted Wells as saying "nothlna." Th~ woman pulled a dagger from her stocking ·and plunged' It Into Wells" che~t. officers !~Id. lile 11old police lie w0Ulcf11l1~$ charges agaJMt hfs awflant. He sa.ld he had never seen the woman before. Bargain Buyers Force Markets To Climb Again ; • NE\V YORK (AP) -The stoci: market turned slightly upward today as Jn- vestors apparently snapped up bargajaJ created in the previous session. ' The I p.m. Dow Jones average of 30 iri- dustrial stocks was up 0.71 at 922.01 and the New York Stock Exchange Index. f# some 1,300 common stock.t was ahead two cents. Declining issues on lhi Blc Board. however' were ahead or advanci.I by a considerable margin. · Trading on the New York Stock ~ change was active. On Monday t.he Dow average lumble4 14.76 points for its biggest loM since tut June 23, when the blue chip irw;licator plunged 18 points. ~ Analysts contributed lhe drop to t combination of factors including the rta.- tion wide rail strike, a reC1lrd first quartir U.S. balance of payments deficit; and ~ vestor speculation about an increase iii the prime rate, the interest charg~ bf b.anks.JLth.eiLmost_a_edilw.odhY.CJ>¥---J porate borroweni. ~ The decline continued into TuesdaY.,_ session as the Dow average sank moiit, than 7 points within the first hout. ~ Brokers attributed the uptW'n ta iD- vestors taking advantage of barg&P\ prices that developed in the big dectlrie and to prospects of 11ettlement of the raU.., strike. The Senate Labor Committee a'P""· proved a resolution designed to halt tbl strike until Oct. 1.. Oraage Ceut ; .. . ' Weather Patchy fog and low clouds 'Win t , greet Wednesday weather watc.,h-: . ers. with cooler temperatures pre-- vailing along the coast. High read- ings will be 72 'locally and 84 further inland. mSIDE TODAY Thett'I lot of. living th.toter af'lound tht Orange Coast ot«a; a1id th.,.te local productionl Gf't reviewed today. Set Ehltrtah"' mt?tt, Par1e1 19·20. C•llftrltll I C'*klflt u, " Clflllllff tl•H C.lu lJ c,.,........ 11 C.~"! ,..fie•• t '"'-'··· ,.,. ' -'-ewttnltmNM 19;11 Plftl!ICt • lf.11 ... ,,_, u A11n l,1Mo11'1 U ! • • I . I OAIL V PILOT • T11tsd1y, May 18, 1~71 DAILY ,ti.OT Sl•fl P~olo Principal All Wet Chuck Crawford, 11 Oeft), and Kimberly Hahn, 10,'students at LeBard School in Huntington Beach, practice their marksmanship -with wet eponges. The target is. school Principal Ro bert Landi, who has volun· teered to be part of the action Friday when students conduct fun fair at the school from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Everyone is invited to partici· pate in variety of games and physical fitness tests. Money collected will support school activities. South Viet Troops Beg-in Pincer Move Against Reds SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese troops . along lhe summit of mile-~lgh peaks at bOth ends of the A Shau Valley started moving down into the valley to- day in a pincers movement ~ against Ccimmunlat forces on the valley ·noor. M they started down the multi-bat- talion force encountered onJy sporadic contact with the Communist.a, military sources sald. But heavy fighting was expected in the five-week-old operation Lam Son 720, which ia aimed at breaking Communist :ontrol of the 35-mile long valley 375 mile1 Mrth of Saigon. U.S. forces six miles east of the valley's nortbern end, supported by B52 'bombardments, began blowing up a vast IU·mile square Communist base area so !fiell built it even bu running water. field From Pqe J DUMP •.• Ulen be drained off." A Japanese finn , called Kain Works Co. Ltd., is preSenUy conducting tests with the machine at the site. "They tell me that six months after they have started the land will be return- ~d to dry dirt," Joseph Steverson said, "but they have to prove it to me yet." Steverson said they were also con- tinuing to use dried bacteria cultures - 1upplied by Gerald C. Bower. Inc. of Orange -that "eat" all dead organic matter, including oil. He said that "!leveral thousand dollars" hid been spent on this process. Once the land is reclaimed, Steverson aald he had "visions" of homes, a traile.r park, or a park being built on the site. Asked if closure of the dump to the oil companies would pose problems for well operatoi's, Steverson replied that the companies had improved the drilling Oulds they we to the point where they no klnger need to dump the fluids afterward. ''They li ke to recondition it themselves and use it again," he added. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT spokesmen said. U.S. helicopter pilots told UPI cor- respondent Stewart Kellerman they heard Communist artillery, small arms and mortar fine near the notheast end of the valley late today. So far in the A Shau campaign, the Army of the Republic of (South) Viet· nam (ARVN) has claimed killing nearly 400 Communists at a loss of about 75 own. But ARVN Brig. Gen. Vau Van Gisi, com- mander of the operation, has predicted that heavy fighting lies ahead. U.S. B52 Stratofortresses dropped 90 tons on bombs early t.oday on the Com- munist bunker complex. Other Thailand-based B52's put another 90 tons of bombs into the Ho Chi Minh trail complex three miles south of the demilitarlzed zone and a mile east of the Laos border. BS2's also bombarded Communist targets in Cambodia and the msin cor- ridor of the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos. F ountai11 Valley Park Planting Wjll Start Soon The seeds of a park should be planted this week in Fountain Valley 's Juarez Colony. Construction workers ha\·e Jeve!ed a site for the small park which will serve Colony residents and the Fountain Valley School District's pre-school on Calle Independencia. . City officials expect the park, complete. wilh playground equipment, to be in full blossom by June 24. If grass is seeded this week, the park could be ready earlier. Last week the U.S. DeparLment of Housing and Urban Development CHUO) awarded the city $26,80j) in open space funds to help build the park. The city is chipping in $10,000 in water funds to locate a water well at the park site, plus another $21.200 from the general park fund to complete deve!oJ>- ment on the half-acre. OiltAHOI COAIT PUILllM IHO COMPAHY --.011.,rw:-wm PrH'""I t M Pvlllltlltr Viet ,.,..;!:!rk .';:, ~:;r. MllllOtr' ~Cuuncihuan-Cree0-­ Se ts GOP l\i ee t Talk Th'"''' ICtt•lr !tlfor T111111t1 A. M11r,YilRf" MIMllllSI (d!JOt Al111 Otiki11 W•I Ort l'lfC CM!tf ltllw Albtrt W. 11!11 Anod1tt 1!41"" H•llri .. m IH&k Offke 17t75 lt1ch l1t.1ltw1r4 Councilman Jack Green will be the guest speaker at \Vednesday·s 8 p.m. meeting of the Huntington Valley Young Republicans in Topper's restaurant on \Varner Avenue. According to YR officers. Green will discuss his new job as director of the .'.nli-Pollulion Authority in Palm Springs and his future as a Hun llngt oa Beach councilman. The public is invited. Two Seized in Newport J(i4nap r ' I ' f~ Police Officers Charge Night of Terroi in Motel By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 11M ~llY .. Ott Sttff .Newport Beach police early today cap. . tured two suspects they claim held nine persons captive all night in 1 local motel, beat one or more of the victims and slic- ed another across the neck with a knife. Before the suspects were apprehended, officers from Costa Mesa were called to aid in surrounding the motel and Newport's police helicopter hovered overhead. All the alleged victims escaped serious injury. Booked on chil.rges <lf kldnaping are Bruce Dale Moore, Jr., 18, of Baldwin Park and his alleged companion in the crime spree, Terry Let Ranson , 2.1, of South Whittier. Newport detective Sam Amburgey said tn addition to the kidnaping charge, he will seek complaints against the pair ad· ditionally charging tnem with armed rob- bery and assault with a deadly weapon. One suspect also faces charges of assault against a police officer. The t~·o were arrested at the motel on North Newport Boulevard after two of their alleged victims - r e I e a s e d reportedly to find drugs for the men ..... flagged down Newport Oflicer Jim Jacobs at about 4:30 a.m. "They said there were two. men in the motel who told them they had just com· mltted an armed robbery in Santa Ana and one had been shot. • "They said there were other people being held captlve," Officer Jacobs relat· ed this morning. Units from NewpOrt and Costa Mesa quickly surrounded the motel as one of the victims led Jacobs to the rooms where the captives were being held. "About that time, a man came out of the wi11dow of one of the rooms. He had been beaten -kicked in the side and groin ....... and was bleeding from a wound <ln his neck where the assailants assertedly held the knife," the officer aaid. • Orders from the police to vacate the rooms brought Ranson to the door, ap· parently unarmed. ';They were telling him to come out . with his hands up, but he just stood there. We think now he is a deaf.mute," Jacobs said. While shotgun-armed officers tried to get Ranson to respond to-th e i r orders, Jacobs crawled around the side of the building and grabbed the-suspect. He said they found three people who had been held in the room. Police apprehended ?<.ioore as he ap- parently attempted to sneak out of an ad· Little Nixon Pal Not l1nproving After Operation There bas been no improvement in the condition of four.year-old Danny Jones. The little San Clemente boy underwent open heart surgery Ma·y 10 at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles and remains in critical condition after more than a week ()f intensive care. At the time of the surgery, doctors gave the youngster a 20 percent chance of survival. The operation was performed to repair three holes in the boy"s heart and to restore normal blood now to his lungs. Danny, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jones of San Clemente, received the warm wishe s of President Nixon prior to his surgery. The visit was arranged by police Chief Clifford Murray. who himself recently underwent such surgery. County Tot Dies 111 Family Pool_~ A 2-year-old Orange girl htonday night was an apparent drowning victim in the family swimming pool. Victoria Guzman of 2308 N. Sacramento St., was found floating fa ce down in the backyard pool, the coroner's o ·f f i c e reported. The child was discovered by her mother. Bonnie. A fire department rescue team gave emergency treatment but the little girl was pronounced dead at Chapman General Hospi tal. An autOfSY, is pending. jacent room in which two more persons were held captive. The Newport helicopter crev1 spotted two more people hiding about one block away in the area of the Riverside -Drive Post Office. Jacobs said the two have been identi· fied a,s victims who hid also managed to escape and 'n'ho had apparently been bea ten. A search or the rooms turned up Ule knife assertedly used on the bleeding victim. Officers said they found no guns or money. lnvestigaticn in the case "'as just be- ginning this morning as detectives un- raveled the series of events leading to the arrests. Reds (barbiturates) or he wouM! die," he said . Santa Ana police did not re.port an armed robbery in their city Monday night, but a Tic Toe market was held up there ai:lout two days ago, a check with Iha'. department revealed. Newport police were checking with Santa Ana to determine if Moore and Ranson matched the description of the Santa Ana bandits. Amburgey said the pair allegedly broke into a different motel on North Newport at about 3 a.m. They reportedly. entered the room occupied by Paul Eric Grimshaw and David Andrew Johnstone, both 18, who ~·ere sleeping at the time. . At the srcond motel -the one where the capture took place -the pair reportedly confronted , Geoffrey William Greene, 21, l)nd allegedly forced him into lhe room ~·here Ranson was finally cap- tured. Because 'of the preliminary state of the investigation, it was not clear today where the other victims were located and what their names are. Officers said the re appears to be no relation between !he victims and suspects, although the victims said they had seen one of the suspects around the mote.I. Moi;ii:--c works as a fiberglasser for a Harbor Area boat manufacturing' firm. An additional charge of assault on a police officer will be sought against Ranson, Amburgey said. He allegedly attacked Officer Bob Gate- " • Amburgey said neither suspect had been shot, but Ranson did have a ban- dage on his back. "The two people who stopped Jacobs were shown the bandage and told the snspecUs had to have some "Using a broken beer bottle and a switchblade knife the suspects robbed the two men of $4 and forced them to accom- pany them to the sec<>nd motel," Am- burgey said. woo.d \\'hen the officer brought him breaK-!';> fast in his 'cell at the Newport Beach jaif. • . Two 1' alley Edtreators Principals • Ill New Posts MOVES TO OKA SCHOOL ..J Princip1I Towry Two Fountain Valley School District principals will be shifted next fall lo lake over new elementary schools. Ted L. Towry, a seven.year veteran with the distriict , will move from Bushard School to the new lsojiro Oka School. scheduled to open around Thanksgiving. The Oka School, 9800 Yorktown Ave., is expected to handle 715 children tn kin· dergarten through eighth grade. Leroy Green, now in his first year with the district, will move from Lamb School to the ne-,y Fred Moiola School w h i c h <lpens Sepl. 13. Moiola School, 9790 Finch Ave .. w i 11 have 824 youngs ters ·when it opens. but 100 of them, along with their teachers, will change to Oka School when il opens, redu cing the Moiola load to 724. A third elementary school. Talbert, will open sometime in the Spring of 1972. District administrators have not an- nounced the new principals for Lamb, Bushard and Talbert schools. Both Terry and Green are experienced administralors. Towry served \Vith the Torrance Unified School District prior to joining Fountain Valley. Green was prin· cipal of an experimental school in the Centralia District last year. TAKES MOIOLA POST Principal Green New at Alden's Carpets YOu'll never cry over spilt milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Your own dining room with au the luxury, beauty 2nd warmth of carpel!ng ... wlthout eNer having to worry about overturned glasses, dropped graV'j dishes or choco- late cake crumbs! 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Ml-1671 Bill to Kill District Approved The Talbert Drainage District, an assessment dlshict formed years ago by farmers In tht Talbert Valley to leach out salt from the soil, is being disbanded. The Assembly Committee on Local Government has approved a measure. sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Burke IR·Huntlnglon Beach). which will result In the dis.solution of the district. B<lth Ernest Gisler, a former mayor o( Huntington Beach and a director of the district, and Rodger HoY:tll. tht district's attorney, testif ied in favor of dissolution. The legi!ilation also hns been el}dorsed by orange~C6Unty Super\'isors eiid the cT- ty councils ol Huntington &•ch and • Fountain Valley . "The bill paves the way for the local cil ies to provide the kinds of services which are presently being providtd by the Talbert district." Burke said. Huntington Beach city engineer Bill Hartge said the district. has outlived its usefulness. "It basica lly provided a sub surface svstem and now that the area Is built up there I~ not such concern for this drainage." Harlge explained. "The cities of Fountain Valley and Huntington Beacll will n1a\ntaln the system. but will be able to absorb Jt into th~ir or&!_nitation• "'lthout any additionol maintenance rn!i!l!I." • 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ALDEN 'S CARPETS.DRAPES , SANTA ANA , ORANGI. TUSTIN C.tl • , • -4 LDIN'S ~co MILL CAl rtn • & OUP!RllS 11174 lr"fh1e. T....._, CeM, 111·))44 'I ' I I . • • _____ ;,,..,__,.,.. # . ' ·-, Tuesd1y, May 18, 1971 H D"1l Y PILOT 1J Tunney Blast·~ Radical Tactics . .. .,. ..... . '-' • Ill UCI Talk I ' DA ILY l"ILOT Sl•ll 1""9!f "EXTENDING DRAFT Will KEEP PRESSURE ON PRESIDENT" Senator Tunney Expl1in1 Stiind During UC Irvine Speech Auto Industry Sl1utdow11 Warned Ove1· Rail St1·il{e From \\'ire Services DETROIT -The Big Three 1utomakers have indicated the industry \vould shut down .. ~:lthin a \\'eek if the walkout by the Brotherhood or Railway Signalmen continued. General Motors Corp. cut \vork time Monday at SC\'.t.D plants. inc1u9ing !\VO in Flint which employ 6,500 workers. Gl\f also slashed work time at other plants in l\iassachusetls, New Jersey, New York, Delav•are and \Vise-0 nsin. A Gio.1 spokesman said most of tht: company's assembl y and manufacturing plants v;ould be in serious trouble for lack of parts by today. By Wednesday morning, "we will have to begin send ing people home from many or the 118 Gr.I plants in the United States." A Ford ~lo\or Co. Sl)()kesman said the firsl 1--ord µlants \VOuld sh ut dO\\'tl \\'edncsday. lie said. hov.·ever . son1e plRnls \\·oUJd be able to operate up to four or five da.vs, "depending on local supply situations.·· hu t first class and ai r 1nail drastically restricted by the nationv.•ldc rail str ike. Otherwise. the sudden stop or most ra il traffic has yet to deal the stale a severe jolt. South ern Pacific and Union Pacific \1·ere both reported at a virtual standstl ll . Santa Fe said its operations v.•tre not as drastica lly affected since pickets had not shO\\'n up at all locations. But. officials said. the company is bracing itself. E\·en \\"ith the commuter trains gone. the in1pac1 except in terms of persona l inconvenience remained obscure. In lht San Franc isco area an estimated 11.500 rail commuters had to dr ive cars or take lhe bus. Yet no fretv.•ay jams \\'ere reported. Extra buses v.•erc put on. Cireytwund said il carried 2.000 t :ictra passengers in the Bay Area on 1\1onda y. 1 , Chrysler Corp. said lt s Tv.·insbu rg, Ohio. stamping 1>lan l. would close today if the strike c:on tinued. The 3.~ workers there \\'ere put on rour-hour shifts 1\1011- da y. About 99 percent of \hr stamping~ from T\\'insburg. \\'hich supp lies the bulk of heavy stam ping parlS to all Chrysler plants. arc shipped by rail. The eff ect on long-distance passenger trains was less certain . though both Union l'aciric and Southern Pncific reported all such trt1ins halted en rou1e. Santa Fe, hoy.·ever. s<1id two of its train~ left Los , Angeles on ~1onday for San Diego and Chicago. All of California's 22 com1nuler 1rain.~ ha\·t been halted and the n1ovcmcnt ol all i\lail service \l'as cul hack . The Los Angeles Post Office said it \1·as accepting second. third and fourth class ma il for dc\i\·ery only \\•ithin 300 mi~es. first class and air mail \vas bei ng acccph'd as usual. the post office said. except for foreign deli very. Thtl l 11·i11 he n1 oved only if il goes through Los Angeles Harbor . Spray Deodorant Tlireat 1 • Alleged by Army Doctor LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -Repeated use underarm aerosol deodorant ," \\'ard's of some commtrcial underarm aeroso l report said . 1 dtodora nts can lc:id lO clinical lung "Subsequent in1·cstii;ations led to the discovery of five addition<il similiar cases disease in certain persons. an Army doc-in pre\'iously healthy young men" the 1or wa rned 1\londay in a reporl lo a report added. medica l conference. The five n1en had lung growths similar Lt. Col. George \\'. \\'ard Jr. of the to those of the l\~O gi rls and "they all had 'Fitzsimmons Army Hospital in Denver. an exposure history of usually daily us~ told the American Thoracic Society that for more lha n 111'0 years to either of 11~1 two brands of deodorant figured in the brands of underarm a e ro s o 1 lie d cases of five men and h,·o v.·omen ~'hose deodorant." None of lhe seven v.·cre lungs-v.-ere arrecled --ifriously-ilL.be.said~ He refused to na1nc the1n because of In animal studies thal fol\o\\'ed , the preliminary na ture of his in· "guinea pigs were exposed daily (fi\'C ,·csligation and the uncertainly of the days per \\'eek/ to fi\·e short sprayr; of the chemicals involved. • same underarm aerosol deodorants for a \\'ard told the wciety, \\'hich Is meeting peri od of seven v.•ecks,'' \Vard sa id, and here as a division of the National given short v.•hiffs 10 inches from their Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease nests in a la rge. \\·ell \'entilaled roon1. Association Conference. that the se\'en Autopsies shov.·ed the sprays could persons 11·ere affected by sarcoidosis -cause lung lesions, \Vard said. format ion of fibrous tissue in the lungs. \\'hat C<1Uses the tung-damagr has not Ile sa id he lreatcd two 11·omen room-been determined , \Vard said, but "it is n'tates fo r the disea se and found no. <:oncluded that repeated exposure to cer- phvsical explanation for their illness. lain c:ommercial underarm a c r o so I :.Oil close questioning. the only com-deodorants can caU!le histologic lung mon facto r 11·as the da ily use for more changes and might, in certain persons, 1han two years of lhe same brand of-lead lo clinical lung disease .'' By GEORGE U::IDAL Of .._ 0.UJ ,lltt Sit/I The actions of Rennit Davia a.nd olhtr n1illtanl pi:,otcsters attempting to disrupt the government in Washington recently were ~rmed "absurd and frustrating" by Sen. John Tunney in a ~peech Monday at UC Irvine. The Democratic St'na tor f r om Californ ia urged students V.'ho want to c:hangt the government's policies on the \I ar and the draft lo avoid such tactici1 a.s \\·ere attempted in \Vashington . ··1f they -the P.·lay Day Tribe-really '\'an t peace. thry should look at tht acts of the large majority of your pet ri who spurn violenct. If they want repression, they havt taken the appropriate actions," Twiney asserted. Speaking in the windsv•ept ca mpus park al tht htart of lhe lrvint cam pm, Tunney·s remarks elected ft w ex- pressions of support from the estimated J50 attending . During the question period that folio\\'· (!d hJs 2\l-mlnute prepared remarks. the junior senator sterned hard pressed to find an S\\'ers that satisfied the academic gathering. - Tunney was asked tQ explain \\'hy he favored extension or the draft, hov.· he \\'Ould vote on the SST project. why, if he ' opposes supersonic transport had he not introduc;ed a bill prohibiting use of any SST in the U.S. and if he belleved the U.S. ¥:as an imperialist nation. Tunney argued that ending the draft \1ould relieve the pressure on the NLl:on administration to end the w a r in Southtast Mia. \Vhcn pressed on the issue by an articulate, long haired stu- dent Tunney charged. "I'm saying you \l'OU!dn 't bt' caring about the Vietnam \V11r if you weren't subject to the draft ." Noting he v.·ould continue ·10 vole agai nst lhe SST. Tunney claimed he did ool misrepresent himself in his cam- paign. "As a member of thr House of Nixon to Keep Whittier College Honorary Degree \VHITI'lER (AJi) -The fa culty of \\'hillier College sidestepped Monday the question of y.·hether Prtsident N\xon·s hono rary law dtgrec should be revoked b\• his alma mater. ·The student sena te in April passed a resol ution 13-0 saying ... Nixon didn't deserve 1he degree because of his Viet· nam 11·ar po licies. The senate sent the matter to lhe faculty for consideration. By lhe time the facuU y took up 1hc matter. a new senate had been elected and ne\\' terms begun. Th e faculty decided not to consider the mn 1ter since the old senate had been dissolved, and the new senate had put the n1atter lo lhe students an yway in a vote. Th-e s1 udents voted by a 3-2 margin last v.'eck to let the President keep the honorary degree. av.•arded in 1959. The 2.100..studen t college was founded by J9Cl l by Qu akers. who are usuall y pacifi~ts. but the institution no longer has an v oUicial connection Y.'ith the Qu<l kerS and has perha ps less than one per cenl t nro\Jment among those of the Qua ker faith, a school spoktsma n said. Nixon "'as graduated from the college, in l flJ~. Bonn Aide Injured _ BO NN (UPI) -\Vest Germ an Foreign ~lin ister \\'alter Sc heeJ and his wife suf- fered n1inor injuries y.•hen the official car thev v.•ere riding in collided wi1h l!I laxi 1\lo.nday. The driver of the taxi dird in the crash and his p1.1ssengc r sulfcred serious injuries. 300 Men Seek --=----~~ 1 Fire1nun Job Call it a sign of the tlmell or an unu sual interest in fire fighting, either way it was oveN1helming said Placentia city officials. i\lore than 300 men have applied for one opening in 1he Placenlia f ire Dcpartinenl and wi ll take a special test Friday and Saturday. Officials said applicants y.·ere from all v.·alks of life including aerospace v.·orkers and former serviccmtn. Press Credibility Backed " NE\V YORK (AP) -Walttr Cronkite said. "they are attacking the qualifica- said today "many of us see a clear in· lions or the press as the si nglt most dicaUon on lht part or this admini stration powerful monitor of the pe rformanct of the people's government." ef a grand conspiracy to destroy the Cronkite. anchorman' of the network 's credibilit ~· 'or the press.'' nigh Uy nev.'s sho"·· prepared his remarks The CBS news1nan said. "No one lor a luncheon of the International Radio doubt ~ 1:-:t• right of anyone to seek to cor-and Television Society al the Waldorf rt ·t d. v :ion. to right untruth& ... but Astoria Hotel. v.•here ht accepted the I .:-p. 1..~nt canlpalan. 5pearheaded by .... !iOC.let)''S .Broadcasters of tJ1e.-Year award. \.cc Presidtnl Spiro T. Agnew and "Short of uncovering docun1enls which Republican National Chnirman Sen. probably do not exist. it is impossible to Robert Dole. goes beyond th<1t knOY.' precii;ely the n1oti ve s of !his con- " Aside fr ont their altcn1pls at in-spiracy," Cronkilc .said. nn11dation thorugh their reminders that "But is 11 too much to suggest that the broadcastini is a licensed industry," he . 1::rand design is to lower the press' ' (redibi lity In an altempt to ra ise their own and thus eve n -or perhaps lilt in their favor -the odds in fulurt electoral battles?'' He said this \\'OUid be a "cynical and dangerous game -dangerous to democracy, to America, and to the pro· spects of progress. "Nor Is tht're a'ny way thnt President Niron can escape responsibility for this campaign," Cronkite said. "lie Is the ullimate leader. He sets the lone :ind the 11ttilude of his ;dfuinlsfraliOM. By Inte r- nal edict and public posture. he could reverse the anlipress policy of hi~ ad.min· lstrailon If thaf ~·ere his desire." Representatives I voted against the• SST three tlmts," he sa id. As for Introducing leeislaUon bannlni use of British or Soviet SSTs, Tunney sa id such lfn1•s aren 't necessary. Ile' said elg nt or the 12 major American air carriers loat nwnty laat year and pro. bahly won 't bit able to afford · buying the SST. CaUln& supersonic tra ns po rt "economically UnteUlble" Tunney noted SS'l'I m "150 percent more ei:pensive to ny than '14'11, What percenta1e or the American people wiU pay 151> percent nlOrt to aet to "Europe two to, three bourr earlier?" be asked. · "" On American lmperlaliam, Tunney - said, "If you mean lmpe.rlallslh like Peter the Great, l'd say America ·Ls not lmptrlalist." He added, however. lbat by lakln& natural resources from dtve loping na- tions and processi ng them to rea p a "middleman profit" America ·'and the other rich nations of the world" might be considered r·economic Jmperiali:;ts." .. That is one reason I have supported foreign aid." Tunney added. One question Tunney ul~, wa1 asked of him for the first time : "Now that lS. · year-olds have the right to vote in federal elections, do you favor a oonstilutional 11nendmtnt that wuuid allow them 10 run for Congress?'' • 0"My Immediate reaction ll thlt · t•m agalll$t it," Tunney repllact "A person ought to have a number ol. years' ex· perience to hold public oUlct.11 Jn J11' remarks, Tunney said the pro- spectS tor ptace in Soutbeaal 4lla wilt diminish if the youn,. take to the streets in diaorder. , : He .urged young people to "°"" for . peace by using the ballot bo~ notil)I tbat wme 11.~ million youlf\1 111 ll and 20 years-old are now ell&ible to vote. They are "an enormous _number capable ol Upping the balance In tbe tm tlection:s," he said UflltC tiudents to . sui>Pm' candidates wbo e1preu views similar to their own. They Can't -Go Home Ag_ain Evicted Capo Family Looks Into Uncertain Future By PAtttELA HALLAN 01 llM Dtlh' l'li.t Steff No te ars stain the cheeks of Teresa Ar- reola . But she has knO\\'n suffering and frustration. And though she doesn't rea lly un· dcrstand v.·hy. in ten da ys she. her hu s- band and their six child ren 1nus1 lea ve their homt. The Arreolas are the la rgest nf several fan1 ilies who lil•e in an ab andoned labor camp off \Vell Site Road in San Juan Gapistrano. All \\'ill be receiving c\•iction notices from the county \Vednesday because thei r tented dv.·ellings have been deemed unfit for human habitation. Holding her arn1s protectively. around her swollen stomach and lhc child that will be born 1in August. ~1 rs. Ar reola talk· ed of her frustration \lhich began in December "'hl'n they \\'Crt told to find another placr to li\'t. "\\'e've looked for a plaCf'." she said. quietly. "":c·\'L' 1ried cvery\\'herr. \Ve've even lied alJ~ut nur children." But their ('hlldren arr a handicap. No one \viH rent to a family uf tight -soon to be nine. Tere:<<• Arreola. 33, looked around tht lln~·. dimly lit living room. her eyes rest ing on her child ren's schoolwork pru11dly displayed on tht bright blue "'ails. "This isn'I such a bad pla ce." she said. "\\'e 'd gladly stay here ii "·e could." She admilt ed "'orrying about the ba re \1·iring and lhe plumb ing that sometimes 01'erf10\\'S into lhe front yard. Bui as a .voung ~irl in f.ttxico she learned to take life as 1t camt -to live each day, one by one. '>''it~l hoping for too mlJCh in the fut urt. • • ~· ~~7· OAIL Y I'll.OT l!tll ,lltl9 Now she thinks a lol about the futu re. \Vhat will happen whe n the hahy comell and she quits her job in a·ceramics fac- tory? She has been ill throughout her preg nancy and her doctor wants her to quit nO\I'. SAN JUAN FAMILIES FACE EVICTION THIS MONTH Mrs. Arreola, Daughters, Leticia (left), Patricia "I can't, of co urse," she said . She's proud of her husband , Rudolpho. \\'ho makes good wages as a gardener in Laguna Niguel (about $500 per month ). But will it be toough to buy a house because that seems the only solution left. Buying the most inexpensive house they, can find. in Leisure \Vorld 's Ne1v \Vorld development in El Toro, y.·j[] takt nea rly half of Arreola's monthly salary, not 10 mention the dov.·n payment. But it's ttlt only alternati ve. Evtry other has been explored. There are no rent subsidies in Orange County. And the Arreolas, fiercely proud , refuse to take wel fare. "The children huvc been doing "'ell In school here." she said. "The boys have , the ir Little League. They don't want lo leave." She !laid they haven't any relativc11 nearby or friends who have room for ci~ht extras. "Besides. many of lhtir landlords check regularly to see th at no one else moves in.'' Hovering di the brilk of. affluent pllt@tlYl , 1'hc Arreolas them selves had lhre• relalives living wi th them in lhtir five· roo m home when the trouble began. But t•ven though it caused family friction , l\1rs. Arreola insisted that the rclalives had to go. And thoui h the pressures have been ahnost unbearable Teresa ArTeola bas endured them with dignity . \Vhcn asked "'hat the famity "·ill do now that the deadti~ Is up she shrugged and said .. , . "Que sera sera." \Vhat will be wil l be. We've got a "great escape" plan for you. J, L. l'alaifouto .. C.LU, A1ency Astoe111te HA RBOR AREA. Tel: 547-5621 What happens when you 're caught between your life style and the "middle-income squeeze" ... you become credit rich and cash poor. That's affluent poverty. Financial elbow room is needed and that's right up our alley. We call it our Financial Planning Service, and you know, it works because each plan is specially mapped for the [ndividual. The cost? For the plan- ning , .. noth ing! For its implemen- • T, Mont9omefy Aaency Associate NEWPORT BEACH Tel: 547·562l \ tat ion? Prol5ably less than you think. One tele- phone call to us and your "great escape" beg ins. , MANUFACTURERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY R. D. St•nt• Agency Associate COSTA ~ilESA lei: 547·6621 I'. S.Gord'" Agency A11ccl1te ORAN GE CO UNTY Tel: 547·5621 Subsidiary : ManEquity Management Company; Alllllate: ManEquily, Inc. ... , • \ • • 1 I i l t l J , ' " ' . ' .. " ,, -" ' . ' " •• l J ,, ., . ~J " ·, .. ' • ' '• . ; • • I ! I I I I ! j I ! I l II • 1 I I l ) I ' I I ' I l • I • .. .. . , ... •. '. " ,. r • I __! I I l • ! l ' l • I •• • ' • ' • ! ' • • t ; r • • • • • • • ; . • ' ! • • l I I l • t ' t f ' ' • ' ' '1'11tWy, M.ay lB, lCJ]l U.S. Troop Strength • '•ATO ' COUllTllH C:O.llUNllT , 11.0C (W:. ____ , • t U.S. Tl OOPS, • UPI TtltPHll UPI NEWSCHART gives a breakdown on U.S. troop strength in Europe. The total strength. includin& the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the l\1editerranean, is ap· proximately 300,000. Two. Republican Senators Oash on Ew·ope Cuthacl{ WASHINGTON <UPI) -Sen. Barry 1'.t Goldwater <R-Ariz.), 11aid today that lhe proposed halv ing of the U.S. military gar- rison in Europe ''would place this nation en a disaster course for World War III." But another Republican, Sen. George D. Aiken or Vermont. l!iaid ll was high time that Congress went on record favor- ing a reduction in forces assigned to NATO. The Goldwater-Aiken exchange ciime on the Senate floor as 1 bipartisan group sought to head off a shov.·down vote late 1\'ednesdi-y on Senate Democratic leader Kosygin Claims Russ Readiness To Pare Troops / . MOSCOW CAPl -Premier Alexei Kosyg in said loday lhe Soviet Union "will do everything possible to r e a c h agreement" on reducing troop levels in Europe ··tf the \Yest displayed readiness really to take practical steps in this direclion," Tass reported. The Soviet news agency said Kosygin told a luncheon for visiting Prime 1-finister Pierre Ellioll Trudea u of Cana- da thal ''on the European continent there is the task of a cardi nal turn towa rd delente and peace. The achi('vemenl of this great goal is quite v.·ithin the limits CJf what is possible." Kosygin called ror preparations for an all European con- fe rence on troop and arms reductions and 1aid the Soviet Union 'vould like to cooperate v.·ith Canada in this field. Trudeau v.·as quoted as saying: "\Ye are equally \•itally concerned with the need to ensure peace and security in Europe as an important stride towards strengthening international peace." Kosygin also sa id the Soviet Union is "deeply alarmed and indignant at the ~ontinued aggressive war in Indochina and the existence of a hotbed of ~·ar in the l>Uddle East" Milte Mansfield 's proposa l to reduce ~y half the 300,000-man U.S. force in Europe. Goldwater said that if by some "disastrous mistake" lhe Senate went along with Mansfleld. "we would move closer to a nuclear confrontation with the Soviet Union than ever before." "It stands to reason ." he said. "that if v.·e cut our conventional forces lo !he bone our only protection against a pos.~i· ble first strike v.·ould have to be nu· clear." This would pl ace the nal1on on a disaster course fnr World War Ill." Goldwater said. Aikin, senior Republican oo the Senate Foreign Relations Com· mittee argued: "f\lore than enough American troops-are in Europe lo Serve our objectives, un less, of coorse, our allies wish to pay ror their continued presence." Noling that U1e United States now has more troops in Europe than it does in Vietnam, Aiken said, "A cynic might ask "'hether \Ve.stern Europe is in more danger of a Communlst takeover than South Vietnam.·· At the White House, Defense Secrelarv i\felvin R. Laird and Undersecretary Ct Stale U. Alexis Johnson !old Republican congressional. leaders that cutting Euri>- pean forces in hair would have disastrous effecl.!i on several diplomatic fronls. In· cludini strategic arms limitalion talks. The GOP leaders indicated Nixon preferred a vote on the i\lansfield pro-- posal. offered as an amendment to a draft extension bill. rather rhan on anv compromise proposal under study b). several senators. Basic Skills •Lacking? SAN FRANC ISCO fUPI l -F'our out nf every 10 high school gradua!es arc in· adequately trained in the "fundamental skills" of reading. v.Tiling and arithme!ic, according to the Pacific Telephone Co . The company·ir; president. Jerome Hull, says 300,000 job applicanls are in- lerviev.·ecf each year and almost half "will no~ meet even our modest basic requirement.·• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Lava Front Etna . . Oozing T oivards Sicily Village • CATA NIA. Sieily !UPI ) The residents of Sant'Alfio turned to .. t heir patron saint today to save their litlle farn1ing village from the river of fire !hat ha s been oozing it s way to their door steps for 45 days. Army and civilian au I ho r it ies, n1eanwhile, plan ned a meeting to ap- praise the situation and, perbaps, start evacuating the village if the la\'a flow from ~tount Etna 's volcano gels too close. Since Elnil began its latest activilv in early April , the river of liquid rock ·has sttrcd its "·ay through dozens of orchards and vineyards .in the neighborhood of Sant'Alfio. Zafferna, F'ornaz1.o, i\lilo and Rinazzo , burning apple and chestnut orchardll and vineyards along its path. Of!icials said more than 4.400 acre s of fertile land have been engulfed by lht! lava. and about a dozen cottages and villas have been dest royed. The town most in danger was Zafferna, where the molten rock has reached 11,·ithin a half- mile. At Sanl'Alfio and F'ornazzo. the Java was a n1ile away. The citizens of SanfAlfio planned today lo carry lhe statue of their patron sainf in a procession lo the front of the lava flow, hoping their pra yers will keep it from savaging their hamlet. Japan Crippled By Train Strike TOKYO !AP ) -One of Japan·s v.·orst ra11~·ay strikes <:rippled the public 1rans- porta1ton system tOOay as wage "egoli· ations broke down. Thousands of comrnuters · in Toky(l, Osaka and other la rge cities went home on bicycles. hired buses or in their ow11 car!!', causing traffic jams on almost all major highways, Thousands of other~ jammed in!o comm uter trains of the i;ta1e owned Japan National Railway - JNR . An estima!ed 30 million commuters were affected by the' 24 hour strike. com- pared tn the 17 mil!ion hit by a similar strike last Friday . Thunderstorms on-Tear- Tornado Alerts Posted in Center of Nation • California '' lHUTID 'ltlSS INTlttNo\l!ONo\I. St MI A"I wt"°' *~<D<lt!I It«>" ~OIJ•~.rn CllllDI""•• lo.I~• fior •~t !Mrd ll••iOht dfv, ~fl"•'"' w1rm I.mot'•· f\j .. \ ~"" <1••• 1• It\, T~ ""'•o>n•I Wo•l~or St ,....<Ct o••· fl•t•td •~At th• mtr(V,.... would droa 1tlon11v •10"' •ht cou• WKinr>dlv. 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Coa•tal t'foO "NfV t.i.M ""''••lt "''"II' "''~! •ncl "'O''l'nt "°'1•1 ll•tolflll'I w•.ifrlv 11 la 10 t n1t1 !~ ,, .. ,,..,,,,.,, rr.o•• 11111 Wtdnt.Mlt•. foflo'I IOd•~ .. ,, "· c. ... 1111 '""""""'''u•t• r1n1t from S1 •o 1' 1"1•'111 1tml't•111>•fl rt"" Ir""" Jf lo U. Wt ltt !e!'l'l1W11rurt .0, S11r1. ~''''~''· Tide• TUl$01oY ~'C9nd hl911 I •I~ roo. • i Stco"<I tow 11 ·s.i ,m IS WICNll:IOlol' ''"'~l•'I JJO •"I. ,, 'I"' io-... I I ·~·"'· 0 4 \"tenCI n1111 • '' ~ "' .s' &Kt "4!Qw l'W•m n 1 •un ••n1 1·"') f ""• &tit 1 •• • "'• ,lo\OOll Ill'" l.J.1 1 rn. Stt1 l ,l&P n1. Te111pernture11 I V UNITED 'ltl'SS INTl"ltNITtONAL 1 ..... .,.,.1 ..... , ·~ P•t<:• .. l1 lion •• ... i .. nour ~~ oroc11,,, 1 1 • 1 .., ' ti!•~ l.tw '"'· Al~~"V " • "'"'"'V(•llV• " ,, ""·~·· " " !\oo.lon " •• !lufl•I" • " cn1not1• " " C~''""" .. " (11vol•Old " " D1ll1• " .. ('lo"""' " ,, .. °"'Mo'"'' " " "' D••r<ill • • "11•1>•"'• " ~ H!'l•h• " " ·" H(lt"l111•u ~ .. lllO•fn~DOh• " ~ )l(~W"V•!lt " • J .......... " " ll1nu• ,,,., " " ~ L•• V•t•1 " " \..ll~..,_lf.I .. " I W "'<IJ141 .. " ,I.lit "'' " " M•t"~~\rr • " Ml11M•..C''' " " ,, t;_. fl•l•tnt .. " . Now Yoo M ~ Ot.lf/'o(ll"flt (o!f .. " .... """~ " " " r11m s~,.~~• -M P~ill(lflPl:I~ " " Pna.n .. " " P!tl•OO.O•t~ " " "111"•"" " " '•~o ~ " ~· I.Oii" .. .. ~·"I.•••,,,., " " " s.~ 0•0100 " • ''" ll••rl••to .. " V .... O!jVf • " " W1 on1no·o~ • " Israeli Envoy Seized T;!!,:rk Police Speed Hunt in Death Fears lSTANBUL (UPI) -The Turkish government arrested scores of di!sident.s. proressor! and politicians today in a race lo find kldnap<!d Israeli consul Ephraim Elrom IM!fore his abductors can execute him as threatened. The leftist extremists ~·ho kidnaped Elrom . 59. from his home f.1onday said they wou.Jd kill hin1 in t .... ·o days if the government did not rel ease "all revolu· tionary guerrillas'' now in jail. Instead there "'ere mass arrest~. Army units and security police halted traffic at h>adblocks throughout Turkey in a search for what government soui-Ces said were more than 300 known lef1 1,1•ings. student extremists.in le 11 ec t ua Ji;, unionists, professors and politicia~ thought to be connected in some way v.·it~ the organization that seized Elrom. Elrom, who helped send Nazi mass murderer Adolf Eichmann to the gallows a dec<!de ago, was captured by men call- ing themselves the Turkish Liberation Army. a Jcftwing organization that claim- f!d responsibility for pre\'ious kidnapings of Americans. J\1any of those arrested \\'ere taken to a security headquarters building that Florence Nightingale once used as a hospital during !he Crimean \Var. Al the top of the ~·anted list v.•ere 49 persons the government said v.·ere •·guilty or inciting innocent yout hs'' to the kidnaping. I In Jerusalem the Israeli cabinet met In emergency session to discuss the kid- naping and the possible involvement of Arab guerrillas. A litate ment issued afterward expre~ed Israel's "disgust" v.·ith the kidnaping. Prime tt1inister Golda f.feir sent a message of encouragement lo the Y1ife of the abducted diplomat.) State Wi11ds Up Case on Seale NEW 1-IAVEN. ConJ11. !UPI) -The st ate rejected claims of police conspi racy today as il began final arguments in the murder conspiracy trial of Black Panther chairman Bobby G. Seale and Mrs. Er- icka }luggins for the torture and death of an alleged inforn1er. "\Ve are not talking about police against Pa nther!'i. \\-'e are AOt talking about Panther ideology. \\"e are talking aboul Panther practices." Slate's Al· torney Arnold J . i\larkle said as he op· ened his final argument to the Superior Court jury of seven whites and five blacks. Elrom, a policeman-turned diplomat, v.·as seized by four or five armed and masked merf when he came home for lunch. He struggled but was subdued with a ;lstOI blow to the head. F'ive hours later a typewritten note delivered to the Turkish News Agency sa id E!rom would be shot unless all "revolutionary guerrillas" now in jail Y<ere released by 5 p.m. Thursday. The note ~·as signed by ''the central committee of the Tur kl sh People '1 Llberalion army." This is a left.wing organizalion v.·hich has c I a I m e d responsibility for earlier abductions CJf foreigners. including tive U.S. airmen in Ankara. Tbe airmen later were released ,,,...unharmed. The Turkish government ignored thf' demands for $400,000 ransom for four of the American airmen k.idnaped in March and it v.'as ignoring this demand as well. Mounting Soviet Jitters. Seen Over Purge in Egypt LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet Union. increasingly perturbed by the purge in Cairo, is seeking firm assurances from President Anwar Sadat of his continued allegiance to T\toscO\\', diplomatic sources said today. • The Kremlin has been "'alching events In Egypt \\'ilh ailxiety and>"'is-...6ho wing grov.·in g nervousness over its future relations with the nation wttich i.~ the key to its foothold in the f>.1iddle East. the sources said. Diploma tic sources said 1'.losco11• is nO\V seek ing assurances Egypt's policy course of close alignm ent v.•ith Russia will re- main unaltered under the ne\V Sadat regime. Cairo v.•as expected lo give the Kreml in this assurance because of its dependence on continued So\'iet supplies of arms and on air defense v.•hich i\1oSCO\V controls completely. According to authoritative diplomatic reports reaching London. Mosco w v.·as completely taken by surprise by recent e\·enlS in Cairo. The Kremlin sho\ved no signs or particular anxiety v.•hen Vice President Ali Sab ry was fired from his post, since Sadat's policy had gained Moscow's con· fidence over the past six months. But the Soviet reaction began to change markedly when Sabry's dismissal turned into an all-out purge that signalled a ma· jor switch. at least of domestic policy. f.1osco w has reportedly now becbme suspicious Jest the domestic changeover herald a corresponding shirt in foreign policy ~·ith a •·trend to the right'' - "·hich in Soviet lerms means a move tov.·ards the: United States. The recent f\f iddle East peace activities of Secretary of State William P, Roger1 and his direct and continuing contact.. with Sadat were said to have bttn follow- ed in the Kremlin with uneasiness that has now turned to anxiety and irritation . I:, ormer ,Egyptian, Official Sabry· Throivn in Jail CAIRO (AP) -Former Viet President Aly Sabry and other former high ranking officials accused of plotting to CJverthrow Preskienl Anwar Sadat v.·ere taken to jail at dawn I.Oday an,d may soon face public trial. informed sources reported. Sabry, six former cabinet ministers and others ousted last week had been under house arrest since Sadat launched his purge on Thursday. The sources said full details of the plot would be made public v.·hen the in· "\'estigation now under wa~ is · completed. But meanv.·hile they ga\'e this preview of the p!Ans Sadat's foes had made : Labib Shukair, the speaker of the Na- tional Assembly, was to be installed a ~ figurehead presidenl . Sabry. considered Moscow's man in the: Egyptian hierarchy and a man of considerable unpopularit y. wa s to boss !he Arab Socialist Union. the country's only political party. Interior i\1inister Shara1,1·i Gomaa, "·hose ministry controls the police. had deployed his men throughout Cairo wilh instructions to use force if necessary 10 keep order once Sadat u·as out of the v.•ay. insurance 10 DOUBLeD Since 1gm1 NOW O\ler $11 BllUOl1 I Dynamic growth built on dedicated service to the public ... a profitable attitude for our agents, for the company and, more importantly, for our po/icyowners. Among the top 20 of 1800 life Insurance companies in the U.S. ~ \ R:IT\ERIC.Rl\. n.RTIOI\.RL Life Insurance REPRESENTATIVES IN THESE LOCALITIES: "'"•"-i"' ......... '""""100d <>111pt Stc>"ltnen!O Son Mlteo Tt 'lt "ll 8e1<...-1l.1jd ll C:...110 U nc.io1tt P1·0 Alto S.l1nu .S.nll ,...,. 1orr•-&oi-t Ettt1ftdlda ~tBtKh f'tt.tdoM SMI Btrnut1lnt1 Sony Cl..-. 1"'"'" 8tvtrly Hilll l<rn!kl Lo. """'" FIHl<l9"1 51,. O.q.o Str !• Manic:'.I "• lt1" llu•b•"• ~ . .,,.,,, ' .... ~ -· S-n f•tn1Nto S."tl ACM V1" Nuvt O!ul• V11t• G1111n.11 ,__t llNc.l'I l'lotl Blu!r !'ilc" ~•tnt"c" s.·~ Votnlurt Concl!lfd .. ~ ... 0.kl•nd Rftld•,_. ~" G11lt11I Sl•l'IMI W-11 Covin, ECl'IO ll•rl\ Hu"""~°"' l"lrl< Oet1nolt11 "'"'"'°' s. ... Joi• StCICl(!O" Wl'l•ll••• j I ' I I' I I 1. I ; I I ~ I' 1 ,I \ ·'. • • . • • Newport Beaeh Today's Flaal N.Y. Steeb • -VOL. 64, NO. 11 8, 4 SECTIONS, 38 P.AGES ORANGE·COUNTY, cALIFO!tNIA TUESDAY, MAY It , '1!71 TEN CENTS Newport H~gh -Rise · Ban Extended Six Month·s: By L. PETER KRIEG Of llte OellJ l'lllt Staff The Newport Beach City Council h1oD- day night extended Lhe city's shoreline high rise building ban six months, instead of the anticipated three, when residents and developers alike urged more in-depth scrutiny of proposed buUding controls. At the same time , the council agreed to resurrect al least parts of several Newport Tomorrow study commiUees to review proposl!liS advanced by \he Lower F·irst Readitag Newport Bay Civic District study com- mittee. The ertenaion came after nearly an hour of public te.sUmony which featured an endorsement of the utenaion•"f« a year or two, if needed," by _Richard Stevens, e1ecuUve vice pre1ident of the Balboa Bay Club. Stevens heaped criticism on the civic district plan-as it stands! contending it "tries to be all things to al people." "More dialogue i! needed, more e Beach Dog Ban Goes to Council Newport Beach t'OWlcilmen ~1onday night introduced an ordinance to ban all four-legg ed animals from ocean beaches during the summer. A bay beach ban already exists. The proposal V.'ill go to second reading flt'Xl P.tonday night and if adopted, will be effective 30 days later. Pledges by dog owners in lhe council 1udlence that they would pick up after their pets failed to sway councilmen. Harteli11s Enters Innocent Plea To 14 Charges Or. Ebbe Hartellu s of Corona fel ar today pleaded innocent lo 14 ( ony charges contained in an Orange nty Grand Jury indlctment. Superior Court Judge Byron K. ?ilcPilillan ordered the SO-year--0ld physi-- cian trial June 30. He .set June 4 as the da te for a hearing on a motK>n protest· ing lhe. indictment and allov•ed Hart.elius to remain free on $5,000 ba il. Defense attorney Tom Reilly of Laguna Beach told Judge ~lcMillan that there v.•ould be further pretrial motions filed on behalf of his client witb appeals against any adverse ruling . ) Hartelius was indicted last May 6 on a variely of charges that jnclude bribery. grand theft and the submission of fraudulent claims to insurance companies . That indictment came just... one month after a Superior Court jury cleared the gray haired physician of arson and fraud charges. Prosecution witness Jim Blevins ad· mittcd bolh acts in court and testified against Hartelius. who no\v lives at 402 '-1agnolia St. in Cos!il Mesa. Neither did ont suggestion to put the animals in diapers. The total ban would extend annually from June 15 to Sepl. 15 although Vice ,.tayor Howard Rogers, who moved for approval of the measure, stipulated the council review ~ effecls of the ban ear. ly in September. Councilmen took the action on the con- lroversial isaue wUhouL • liDgle word ol' comment after listening to more than one hour of almost evenly divided public testimony. The vote was unanimous. Representatives of the newly formed Concerned Dog Owners of Newport Beach urged only a daytime ban, vowing to put together a task force to educate othe r dog owners or to clean up after them if need he. A. H. Jones, a spokesman for the croup, passed around fact-sheels already printed that he said the 75 memben of his organization would distribute all over town. '"The law that covers the speciric pro- blem is not even posted on the beach nov.•," Jones pointed out. Another spokesman, Richard Domber, said Newoprt Beach "already has 19 laws dealing with the care of animals" and doesn 't need another one. He said the daytime ban would serve let keep out-of-town dog owners off the beaches. Ed Sandtrs, who cleans up for the snack stand at the Corona del Mar Stat• Beach, was more graphic in his testimony. "Dog waste is biodegradable," Sanders !laid, "but so is human waste yet we have toilets for human beings." And he added, "human babies are re- quired to wear diapers, maybe dogs iihould." Glen Welsh, 1301 Seashore Drive, sug· gested the cily make an extra f!ffort to license all dogs and this would bring in ePtOUgh revenue "to employ two full·lime -1See-DOGS, Pase ·I ) Senate Legislation OK'd To End Signalman Strike WASHI NGTON fUPI\ -A Senate t'Ommittee approved legislation toda.v lo a;top the nalionwidc rails strike. The rcsolulion v.•ould order striking signalmen back to \York until al least Oct. I. \\'hile giving them an interim pay increase of 17.5 percent. The legislati on, which was moved to the Senate fl oor for quick action, went (ar beyond legislation requested by President Nixon \\'ho asked only that \he strikers be ordered back to work until July I while negotiations resumed. The proposed legi$1ation approved by the Senate Labor Committee ~as in line \\'ith a similar settlement hfiposed by Congress In another naliorfwkle rail atrike almost alx months ago when four other unions were given pay Increases of 13 nercent. The wage lncrease recommended by the Senate group would come oul to about 67 cen ts additionally an hour to highest- paid signalmen. The Senate action came a:i1 the House Commerce Committee considered similar legislaUon, \\'ilh congres.~mcn rnak.ing it clear they did not llke the idea of being strike brtaker:i1. "We're getting fed up with ll,'' Rep. Samuel Devine (R-Ohio). told Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson during the bearing. Rep. John ~1oss (O.Cal.). asked ·Hodgson whether the Intervention of Congresa was not "an impairment of col- lective bargaining." Congress gave reluctant priority 1o the strike-stopping Jeglslation proposed by Nixon ,.1ooday a few houri after the Signalmen tfed up the nation's rail passenger and freight ten-Ice by 1ettlng up picket Tines that member• of other rail uaj_ons refused ~ cf"Oll. Hodgson warned. Jn ie!ltlmony before the House comrnitlet today , of "drastic effects" on the nation 's economy if the strike continued. The vote in the Senate committee was 13 to 1. It took pla~ In closed session and it wa:i1 not Immediately ckar who cast the lone vote. A Republican, Sen. Jacob K. Javil4 (R· N.\'.). was one of the aponsor1 of !he revised proposal that cleared the com· mlttee to go beyond Nixon'• July t date and also to include t pay raise in the plan. alternatives must be found, 11 Stevena said, adding, ''I don't care ii It takes one year or two years." , Stevens. whose pending expansion· of tht Bay Club is probably most respoml- ble for triggering the moratorium three months ago, later confided the threat or an initiati\re to ban high-rise completely, influenced his remarks. A citizens' group headed by Beacon ~resident Alan Beek and Mrs. James Rosner has been meeting to lay plans for substantial cill.re1 input into the .civic dWrlct concept. 'lbt: group b: reportedly prepared to farce an initiative election t,o bu all btgb- rl!e unless the civic dlstri<I' regulaliont 1&tlsly Newport Beach midenq, Councilman Carl Kymla, chaim>an of the Lo-Newport Bay CMc Dlatrlcl study committee, agreed to a request by both Steye.ns and Beek to schedule • setlu or lUghUy meettogs of his group to allow for more citizen participation. · • The plaMin& commission wilt begin lb review of the plan at a study s"Wlon Thursday, although tt b DOt known if it will go ahead with Its tentaUvety sebedul- . od public hearing JW>e 3. · ,Qriglnally, only the 90-day exleruiion had been aought to providf. a mJnimum amQUnl. of tlln• for the p!annlng com· mission · and' councU to conduct.necessary public hearings on the civic district pro-p011al1. · · City AtloJ:ney Tully Seymour had.,IUI!· gested the Tonger period to provide ad· ficient time if any delays Wtrl err countued, pointing out that by ll;w·W. ia the only extension of the mar~ adopted on an "emergency ordlnlnce'! basis, that would be allowed. Approval of the siX-monll\ ntfnaioft came on a 6 to 1 •ote with Councilman Richard D. crou1 casting the lont negative ballot. Croul had voted ap iNt (See WGH RISE; P ... ll 1ve on .........oas --·---........... . • SMOKE POURS FROM CO.RONA DEL· MAR HOM~1)URING l[litl_bi:;,HIS MORN jNG C•ndle Wu TMt WH Too Hot to HoMle-'lle.,.r ,for $6 ll•n . ' Hot Candle Wax Caus es $6,000 Blaze in CdM Helicop Noise .Re~µetion • Report Sought by ·Council A pot of hot candle wax exploded into names !his morning causing an e5ti-Newpo)'t Beach police Monday night were ordered by the city counCil to mated $6,000 damage to a Corona dcl prepare a report detalling the steps being Mar home before firemen extinguished taken to reduce noise of police the flames. hellcoplers. Firemen sa id the fire broke out !lhortl:t The order follov.·ed individuaJ coun· tiefore JO a.m. at the home or Daniel cilmen'1 vows of continuing support for Owen,...34.-of...504~1i'.ernleaf Ave. __ the heli.f.O_pler progra!1J allhQU h a move Wh f. rr·ved the ear f the by COuncilman Carl Kyrilrafa' ed to gain en 1remen a 1 • . r 0 • a vote of formal reaffirmation. houSii w;i., alm06t ~Uy involved in Councilman Lindsley Paraons asked for flames. Inspectors 68.ld the fire damaged the report, citing again what be tns~ ia the den aad an adjoining bedroom, the significant public outcry and reaentment. patio and patio furniture before it was "We must ask the poll~ department lo put out. prepare a program 'for h!gtier flights or Shingles on the house at 506 Femleaf to . quiet the!le lhings down," ParSons ht . but t' . bed satd. also caug fire, were ex 1ngnis ·th rden hose Damage there was Saying he persoally . still 1upport3 lthe w1 . a ga . · helicopters, Parsons reiterated commen~ estimated by firemen at $~. . made at the last council meeting, Owen told firemen he was melting notably. "there is resentment. .. I hate 50me candle wax on a hot plate in the to see this divide the community. den when tbe fire broke out. "There are people wbo are now saying The hOme is owned by Mrs. Elliabeth the Issue should have been put to a vote,'' Buman of Sou.lb Laguna. he said. Kymla urge'd the vote of confidence saying, ''It's time to r.eafflrm our feelings toward the whole program, now, prior to the budget.'' Kymla aaid he reallied there have been complalnta about the noise and llght:s but ~~t ~~pyrtme_pt ia WQrki!Jg on a new muffle!" system. \ "To ayswer public concern," Kym.la 1aid, "to prevent a further split, perhaps the couhcil should reaffirm its positiOn." ~ Parsons 18Jd the reatffriba:\ion tbould come "after we Hnd ott~ what the police department is gofng to uk 1or· (in the next budget) and we evaluate the pro- gram as to lls cost." Viet Mayor Howard Rogers and 'Coun- cilman Richard Croul both voiced perao(la) aupport of the program. '"I'he crime rate Is down," Crout said, 1'Jt'1 going to be tough to convince me to · get rid of them." Roa:ers 1ald he wouldn 't consider it 0 for a minute." 'Hawaii Week' Sanner Approved Tideland Repeal Moving A banner advertising the upcoming citywide "Hawaii Week" promotion will be 1trung aeroSJ the intersection of Balboa Boulev'ard and Main Street. Newport Beach City Councilmen Mon- day night authorized the banner over the objections of the city staff ind Coon· cilman Milan Dostal who noted that the approval broke established policy. The Newport Harbor Chamber of COm· merce, sponsor of the promotion. Wl t told by Acting City fl.1anager Philip F. Betlencouri that its plan to pl&Ct: six mobile trailer!! with signs on them on prlv11~ property at various locations lhroulhout the city is illegal. AllTlOlt wlt.hotlt comment, the Newport Stach City Counoll Moi>day nljht look the fltll 1(ep lo1\'atd repeal of \i!l<i.nda llll: feu a®Pted Just One year aco Jn one of the atoriniest controveraJa ln Nf\!tPOl'l Stich hlslory. ; • The vote wu I lo I lo Introduce the Hearing · Gets Delay A public hearl,ig on a requeet ~Y the Newport Harbor Yacht Club to extend 111 bulkhead 75 reet bayward has bet'n re!ICheduled by tht Newport .Be11ch City Cou ncil to next Moriday night at 7:30 p.m. h1 city hall. ·--. Rpealer ofdlnanct and pua It to atcond r.eading .next Monday nllhL, Ori)y ·eoun. dlman Llnd1!ey f'rsons w" "JIPO<od· · only Cooncihnan Carl , KYJ111' i,,<1 enythlng 1o say. _ • "We·uked the attcniey Jt'ntia.J for M opinion on whether the fee. are m1ndilary," Kymi. Hid; "and~~;aJd 'no.',,...._ Jlymle. who In the put eupported the fees..Monday called .toon "a lildden tax" MJ added, '1tbei-e is no justification, no ju:i1t1ncitlon financially" for them . He said other taxes, Uke the pltr registration tee• which will continue, pay the cost of admlnlaterlng tht city's lidtlands. " Police Nab 2 Suspects . In Newport .· By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI' IM O•ltr P'IWt ttarl . Newport Beach police t arly today OJ> tured two :i1uspects they claim held nine persons captive all night,in a local motel, beat one or more of the vicUJM and ll~ ed another across the ~t with a knife. Before the suspects were apprehended, officers from Costa Mesa were called· to aid in aurroimding the motel &JJd Newport's police helicopter ltovered oYerhead. All the alleged vlctltnJ eicaped teriou1 . lllJw1. Booked on chargea of kidnaPinl are Bruce Dal• Moore, Jr., 18, o1· ~ldwin Park ~d his .alleged compapion in the crime spree. Tury Lee Ransoc, 23, of · South Whittier. Newport detective Sam Amburtey 11id fn addition to the kidnapln(' charge, hi will aeek complaints against the pair ado ditionally charging tnem with armed rob- bery and assault with a deadly wupon. One suspect also faces chargtll ti aMault against a police officer. The two were arrested at the motel on North Newport Boulevard after two <'I their alleged vlctima -r e 1 e a 1 e 4 reportedly to find drugs tor the men - flagged down Newport Officer Jlni Jacobs at about 4:30 a.m. "Tbey aald there were {wo men In tlli mot.el who told them they had just com- mitted an armed robbery In Santa Ana .and one had been shot. • "They aaid there were other peopll being held captiYe," Officer Jacobi rel.a~ ed U~~: 7r~~in~~wport and Coita M..a quickly surrounded the motel aa one of the victims led Jacobs to the roons where the captives were beirig held. "About that lime, a man came out of I.he window Of one of the rooms. He'had been beaten -kicked in the 1lde and groin -and was bleeding from a wound on his neck where . the unilanta assertedly held the knife,'' the efficer 13id. Orders from the police to vacate the ..!!!4Lms_br0:9ght Ransgn tQ._the door. *-parently unarmed. · "'They were telling him to come out with his hands up, but he just 1tood there. We lhlnk now he ia a deaf-mute ," Jacobi aaid. While shotgun·anned officers tried ta get Ranson to respond to t h e t r orders, Jacobs crawled around the aide fA. the building and grabbed lhe suspect. He said they found three people who had (See TERROR, Pait J) We•dter Patchy fog and tOw clouda will greet Wednesday weather watch- ers. with cooler tempe:rature a pre- vailing Along the oouL lfi&h:..nact. lngs will be 12 locally llld 14 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Thtre'r lot of lfolng t~ oround tht Orange Coast ared, and three local productibn.t orr reviewed· 1.0dau:-See l:ftttf£ain-- me71t, Pog_tr llf.20. C•llflr11l1 1 CllKlll"" u, 11 crenlnw n<K C1111Jtt IJ Ct'fftWMI lj .... "' ,,..."" . •• 1 ..... , '•" ' f11Mrl1'-"il 1 .. 1' '"'•M:• 1•11 tt.rlft'l:fft U .&1111 L•llftrt U . ~1 I 't OAILY PILOT N TueJd11-: M11 l8, 1971 'l'ral#ie-Stu411 Conflict Claim ·To Get Airing Newport Beach Traffic Engineer Rt>b- ert Jaffe &lid today allegations that the consultant hired for the city's traffic 1t.udy once did work for the Irvine Com- pany may con1titute a conflict of in- terest. From P qe l HIGH RI SE. •• the lniUal ban. cfuul was heated in hil oppo&iUon. "It's so scary to me to come up with aomething like thla I can't believe It." he aid. "You're asking peoplt to chop llO to 70 percfnl off the value of their property.•· Allegations that the eonlllct .of lnte:rest e1:ists were printed ill a local weekly newspa~r. Jaffe said. The Citizens Advi50ry C:Ommittee on TransportlUon will meet tonight at 7; I~ o'clock in the lifeguard headquarter• building at the Newport Pier to discuss the issue. Jaffe declined to make a personal dee· laration but said "in somebody's mind it might" constitute a conflict of interest. He said the representative of the con- sultant, Alan M. Voorheea Asaoc:lale!, will be at the meeting "lo discuss such things as integrity and ethics. "It may bt no more than a tempest In a teapot," Jaffe said. ' "I hesitate to say it's a big issue. but it could be," he 1aid. ) • Funds Eyed . In Di,spute Ori Free way Strategy in C:OSl.a Mesa's continuing freeway negotiations ahould Include allocation of regular travel expenses to carry the fight to Sacramento, It was proposed Monday. Cily Councilman Jack Hammett sug- gested the Idea at the close of C<luncil deliberations, noUng the I 9 7 I -7 2 preliminary budget b now being worked out. He said Costa Mesa .should be represented in Sacramento whenever thtt issue of the Pacific Coast Freeway and Its effects on the Ne wport Freeway emerge during Legislature or Highwa y Commission sessions. Q-oul was especially upset with the civic· district rqulatlon that would re- quire waterfront developers to leave 40 percent of their Iota undeveloped, on sideyanh, to provide "view corridors" to ''The essence hefe is for the committee • to have falth ln what is produced," J1ffe said. Jaffe said it has been reported that both Voorhees and the conglomerate of which that firm. is a part, Planning Re- search Corporation, have both done stu- dies for the Irvine Company. Harbor High Elects ·costs P.fesa leaders are still ·slinging over Newport Beach aclion to halt con--, struction of a coastal freeway through a Febru·ary referendum election. the bay. . "You are going to take 40 percent 1ideyard!, a waterfront ~back or a street tetback. then chop the height without campen11tlon to a m who has been paytna: property ta1e11 fOr many yeara't '411 what we have today right?" Kymla asked, noting that existing standards were adopted about 1962. "That decision made in 1962 is the basis oo which many pteple bought prD- P'rlY," Croul said. Kym.la agreed th1t the "1pe<:ulative value" of some property ml1ht be reduc- ed but 11.ld the question Is "what, not who, 11 right." • "Are the.re any propert;o rl1ht! left?" Crout 11ked. The debate continued uhlU Councilman Lindsley Parson.1 wamtd, "A referendum on this thing is po!Sible and th! citl:.erui are liable to be rougher on developers than 1he counctl." Earlier Bay Club executive Stevens had 1imllarly strayed from the topic of the merits of the extension when he critidzed the propoaala of the committee. He predicted aa proposed, the controls would lead to econonllc ch1os. "We currtntly have e1:perta: preparing a list of the problems this ordinance would create," he aaid. "We know it would lead to economic chaos for the city. "'lbia: study hu been proceeding on the basis that the commercial property owners must be hurt for the public to benefit -that you've got to take 1way something to tel iOmethlng. "This lhl!ll ii a poliijcaJ nlghtman>," he said, "It holds out lo all, 11 throw• everything to polilic1! review." Cit.in& the propoled height restrictions, tel 1t 35 feet unlw a speci•l permit is obtained, Stevens 1dded, "It 1lve1 no 1S1urancts to 1nyone. "It'• a ticket to go areue, to 1wlng your pollUcaJ clout. "It's not good plaMing," he 1aid. Stevens 1aid what the city needs 11 a good niaster plan. He also suggested that if the city is going to impose such~rlgid restrictions it might as well buy up all the waterfront land. Newport Council OKs Big Cany on Lighting Newport Beach cily oouncilmen Mo~ day night voted unanimoualy to authorize the acceptanct of a public &treet lighting system along the private streets of the Irvine Company's Big Canyon residential develoPment. Public Worka Director Joseph T. Devlin recommended the action, polnting out there is precedent and 1tres1ing the com~ pany will pay fw lnstallaUon of the 1ystem. OIANel COAST DAILY PILOT d"AHGI COAIT PUI LllHIMO COM,AllV 1--... ---••ltwt H. W•M ,, .. 111.,.. ..... ~"""""" J.,k .. c .. ,.:.., Vlc4i' 'rulftflf Miiii 0...1 ~ T~."''' K'ee yff Ill,., Tl.1111 1t A. M11,phl11• ....... 119 ..... 1:.11 ... L '•t1r Kri•t Mf:Wlllr? lttdl CHt llllltv 11e-..,.,. ..... Offk9 ]]Jl N1w,1rt l1ul1Y11• M'1\U11t Atltlr111: ,,0 .••• 1e11, •166J Offltto Offk• to.11 Mt1t: U:1 W.! 11'1" S!rett L'9-eudl: m ~Dlftt Av1nue M111111,..10_, 8toteh: 1"11 ... ch loull'Ylrlll $111 C!Mwftte: .. Htf1!1 II Clntlllll 11111 , •• ., ••• 11141 64J-4JJ1 ct ....... A'"'9khlt '41•1671 Qlrrrllf'll, lf11 , Ot111t1 QMI ~"""" ~. Jrfl lllWI '*°•· H1wt,,..1-.. •1111'111 "''"" • • • .,.,,.""""''' ~ Mlt .. ,...lie.. wlll'loln .,..:Ill ,,.,.. ...... " °'""""'' ......... ..... dHI ....... ,.11111 11 MtW'11911 a99dl .... cata .#ttlt, C..llt9t9ll1. lul«rJ,flM W 't1"1tr A.JS -lflltl "' """ tt.'1 "*"""'YI l'l'llllMry M tMt1r.., tt.U -llllf, I I Gilbert W, Ferguson. vice president for corporate communications of the Irvine Comoany denied the allegations. "The city's traffic co11sultant haa oot. to our knowledge, directly worked for us Jn the past," he said. "He is not working for us now," he said. "We do not care who is the city's traf- fic consultant." Fer~son said. "and we did not recommend directly or Indirectly that the city hire the present consultant. "We have "° views on it now. Traffic is the city's problem to solve. Wt will help if asked, and only if we are alked, as would anv oth;er conctrned citize11 of thf! community." Ferruson said another subsidiary of Pl11-nnlnir Research Corp.. a company called Economic Research Aasoclate11, has done work for us In the past 11 the~ have for m1nv other land development comoanies and nubile agencies throu1h- out ~thmi California. "WI'! have used lhf! 11ervlces of many consultants. outside firms, as well," he said. "in fact, we in Orane~ Countv 11lont do business with some 2.000 flrm1." Economic Research A.98(1Ciates has done m11rket.lnc 1b•dle1 far Irvine Com- pany. "I don't belleve It Is nt1w doinR anv trork for the company," Ferguson sairl. "We are ctrtainlv surprised by these lntimatlCCl.!I," be said . Also before the commit~ toni,1Eht will be a discussion of a list of resource ln- formallori compiled to date. a report of the design develooment pro.rress of the ~tudy. ilo:elf, and rtl1CUssion of tM Oranire Countr Transit District reouest. to th" Mate for ma11 tranlft pravislnns °" all future freeways In Orange County. From Pqe l TERROR ... been held tn' the room. Police apprehended Moore 11 he ap- parently attempted to sneak out of an ad- jacent room in which two more per10111 were held captive. The Newport helicopt« crew 1potted two more people hiding about one block away in the area of the Riverside Drive Post Office. Jacobs said the two have been Identi- fied as victims who had al.so managed to escape and who had apparently been beat!D. A search of the rooms turned up the knife assertedly used on the bleeding victim. Officers said they found no gurui: or money_ Investigation in the case was just be- ginning thia morning a.ii detectives un- raveled the series of events leading to the arrests. Amburgey said neither suspect had been shot, but Ranson did have a ban· dage on his back. "The lwo people who stopped Jacobs were shown the bandage and told the suspects had to have aome Reds (barbituro.tes) or he would die," he said. Santa Ana police did not repcrt an armed---robbery~ in their-city Monday ni&ht, but a Tic Toe m•rket was held up there about two days ago. a check with Iha• department revealed. Newport police v.•ere checking with Santa Ana to determine If Moort and Ranson matched the descriplion of the Santa Ana bandits. Amburgey said the pair allegedly broke into a dirferent motel on North Newport at about 3 a.m. They reportedly entered the room occupied by Paul Eric Grimshaw and David Andrew Johnstone, both 18. who were sleeping at the time . "Using a broken beer bottle and 1 swi tchblade knife the suspects robbed the l\\'O men of $4 and forced them to accom· pany them to the second motel." Am- burgey said. At the second motel -the one wher@ the capture took place -the pai r reportedly confronted Gl'Offrey, William Grttne, 21, and aUegedly forced him into the room where Ran5:0n was finally cap.. lured. Because of the preliminary stale of the lovesligatlon. it was not clear today \\'here the other victims were located and whlit their names are. Officers saKI t h t r t apPfars to be no relation between the victims and suspttts. 1lthough the victi ms said they had seen one of the suspect1 around the motel. ~foore works as a (ibergl•sstt for a Harbor Area boat mariufacturina: firm . An additional charce of assault on a police offjcer w!ll be &Ought a&alnst RJnson, Amburgey said. He allegtdly lltackcd Officer Bob Gate· Wood when the offirtr brought him break- fast in his cell at the Newport Re11:ch )Ail. ' .. Students moved into the gymnasium at Newport Harbor High School today to elect 1971·72 student body officer.&. The day·lo ng election process has the flavor oC a national political convention. The method offers students experience in the workin_gs of national politics and gets the election over 1n one day. Large sums of money were spenl in studies and other preliminary work before the Newport Freeway route 1 through Costa Mesa was realigned - presumably agreeably -to beach city leaders. Coron a del Mar Girl Hit chhiker Abducted, -Free d A Corona de! Mar girl joined a long list of vlctiml when she was abducled and moleated after hitchhiking a ride on Coa.sl Hl.J_hway Monday night. according to NewporllJeacb police. The 19-year~ld student told police she wu hltchhlklng from Laguna Beach to Coron!l del Mar at about 8 p.m. when she was ;!eked up by I.ht driver of a Ught yellow ininibus. He drove her to her destination at Marguerite Avenue and East Coast Highway, but she told police the man refused to let her out of the car. According to the victim , the man - d.scribed as being about 25 years old, five feet, nine inches tall and welghlng 180 pounds -drove her around Corona de! Mar. She told police the suspect parked the car several times at which times he would forcibly fondle he·r. After about one hour, the student was released by her abductor near her home where she went to notify police. From Pqe l DOGS ... people lo 10 up and down the bea'ch to pick up after the dogs." Mrs. Judy Wilson, . representing the Peninsula Point A&sociation, said "the problem isn't seasonal, it's perennial." She invited anyone who cared to go on 1 tour of the Penlnsula to view "the de1picable, filthy mess" which she said Is only partially caused by dogs . "I'll take you on a personal tour to show you trash piled high and the filth on the beach -and in yard s. on the streets and even on front porches,'' she sa id. Mrt. Wilson sa id her association urges that fines be stiffened &harply, up to $250 after one or two offenses. She also said a disease called toxicara caused by worm larvae in dog feces is resulting in deaths all over the counlrv . Mrs. Lois Irwin, founder of the dog owners' association, stressed the need to educate the public. But she added "J would rather step i.n a dog dropping that I can wash off than a bottle broken by a beach cleaner." Thomas Houston, president of the Balboa Island Improvement As.!iociation. urged "something stringent be done" abou the_ p10..ble111 .-~~ He pointed out "there didn't used to be flies in Newport Beach. now there are plenty of them." He said dogs sre at least partially responsible. Thomu Hines, representing the Cen· tral Newport Beach Homeowners As.!iOciation, said his group endorses the 1tand or the Peninsula Point people in calling for a ban and stiffer fines. Bi g Hash Raid In New]>ort Nets Four, $500 Haul Three men are free on $625 bail and a fourth re ma ins in custody today in Newport Beach follov.·ing their arrests Sunday night in which police allege near· ly SSOO worth of hashish was confiscated. Arrested on charges of posse53ion 'of marijuana were Eben Carlton Sprague It, 2.1, of 67 Beacon Bay, Newport Beach; Ronald Charles Gibbs, 22, or 141S W. Bay St .. Nev.1>0rl Beach, and James William Williams, JS. of 2400 Elden St, Costa Mesa. A fourth companion, Donald Bruet Lar- rabee. 27, of Florida remains in the Newport Beech jaiil on charges of possession of marijuana for sale, The four were arrested in a car parked In front of Sprague·s home after 1 Beacon Bay resident notified police of what was termed as suspiciou.s 11ctlvit1. officers 11ald. I Committee Seeks Lo wer "I am concerned over the fact we have spen t more than SJ00.000 on studies and staff lime expended," declared C:Oun· rilman Hammett . a militant on this topic. Graduation Requirem ents He proposes sending himself, Vice 1'1ayor Willard 'f. Jordan, acting as the council's freeway committee, or City Manager Fred Sorsabal. to act as watchdogs and advocates of ~ta Mesa·s interests. A second draft recommendation from the Newwrt-Mesa district high school graduation requirements committee will be presented at the 7 o'clock meeting or the board of education tonig1it 1n Costa Mesa High School Lyceum. If approved by the board, the re- quirements would set minimum levels of accomplishment expected of students re- ceiving a diploma . Since the U:gislature two years ago lowered the stale mandated minimums, district~ throughout California have been empowered lo enact their own re- quirements. Under the proposal, all graduates would at some point after eighth grade be e1pected lo show eighth grade ability in reading. writing and math. Students fail- ing to meet this standard in either area would be txpecled to enroll in a remedial course for al least one semester. The Newport-Mesa graduation re- quirements proposal also sets forth some state mandated requirements, including completion of a one-semester course alter grade six. in each of the following subject Areas : Engl ish. Amer J·c an history , American gove rn ment , mathematics and science. Additionall y. the stair requires 400 minutes of physical cluca!ion instruction for each IO school da ys. 'fhe only state req uirement for pro- viding a student a diploma is completion of 200 units of course work artcr grade eight , a11d eighth grade competency in math and reading. The dis trict committee adrled pro- ficiency in v,·riting and speech to the eighth grade proficiency rule. .. As some of our neighboring cities · have,'' he remarked without mentioning Newport Beach by name. Councilman Alvin· L. Pinkley respondect by noting the City Council contlngency fund was developed for this type of ac- tivity and is rarely utilized. Hammett also revived the idea of suing eith~r the state or the city of Newport Beach to retrieve the $100,000-plus spent in good faith on revising the Newport Freeway route. He was told City Attorney Roy June ls still investigating how to go about such an action, most likely through initiation of a taxpayers' suit without direct council involvement. City officials are concerned over Im- pact on the adopted Newport Freeway route through west Costa Mesa and down Superior A venue to Pacific Coast Highway. plus its effect on croutown traffic and construction timetable•. New at Alden's Carpets \Ou'll never cry over spilt milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Your own dining room with al1 the luxury, beauty and warmth of carpeting .•. 'Hlthout rm h8vlng to worry about OYerturned gtasses, dropped fr8/'I dishes Cf thoco- late cake crumbs! Chances are, you've dreamed of such carpet for years -carpet that r.ould go from soup to nuts and never show a spill, a stain er a sp-Jt. 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The combined efforl by the Costa Mesa County Waler Di.!ltrict and Costa 1i1esa fire Department could drop total annual Insurance to!ts to commercial and manufacturing concerns $100.000 by this year's end. Homeowners who ~·on a general rate reduction Me year ago In a Paci fic Fire Rating BUttBu Survey ruulting in a new 38 classification few firefightin~ stan· dank v.·oo'l benefit immediately. Specialists· in the field , hc"'ever, predict current improvement! will drop Co.sta Mesa'~ rating to 3A by 1972, allow· Ing a campaign to achieve a 2 rating, lowest given by th( insurance industry's rate-setting agency. This wwld give Co!ta Mesa fire in-surance rat.es as low as aey enjoyed .by e ----------~ -----. " . DOHOH.t -· =-SOUTHCKtNA S t A . .=--...:;.:: ---~--............. ---··-·---·-. ' •OUANOTll . --------.. ---------. ---- Mil ES ~-----------~:::::::-:::::::::=:::; . ---· -· ------- • *>IAN" S.VIETNAM ·--- MAP SHOWS WHERE THE ACTION IS IN VIETNAM Down From the Hills Into the A Shau Valley S. ~ iet Troops Begin Pincer Move in Valley SA1GON (UPI) -South Vietnamese troops along the summil of mile-high peaks at both ends of the A Shau Valley started moving down into the valley to- day in a pincers movement against Communist forces on the valley noor . As lhey started do wn the multi-bat- talion force encountered only sporadic U. S. D~pendents coo.tact with the Communists, military aources said. But heavy fighting was expected in the five-week-old operation Lam Son 720, v.'hich is aimed at breaking Communist control of the ~mile Iona valley 375 miles north of Saigon. U.S. forces sill: miles east of !he valley's northern end, :oiupported by B52 bombardments, began blowing up a va st si x-mile square Communist base area so v.·ell built it even has running waler, field spokesmen said. U.S. helicopter pilots told UPI cor· respondent Stewart Kellerman they heard Communist artillery. small erms and mortar fine near the notheast end of the valley late today. So far in the A Shau campaign, the Army of the Republic of {South) Viel- VIENTIA NE. Laos <UPI) -Wives and nam IARVN) has claimed killing nearly h"ld -of A erk ans and --O·l-h-e.-r-400 Commun!sLs al a loss of. abou~ 75 own. c 1 ren m_ BUIARVN Br g. ceilVau an 11.1, com- Evacuate South Laotian Area employes of the J.S. government were mander of the operation, has predicted evacuated today from Pakse in souther n that heavy fighting lies ahead. · Laos where 1 new North Vietnamese of-U.S. B52 Stratofortresses dropped 90 fensive has carved out huge new areas. tons· on bombs early today on the Com. The orficl•I Laotian nii lit a r y munist bunker compleJC. 1pokesman said the situation "i& getting Other Thailand-based W2's put another v.·orse." 90 tons of bombs into the Ho Chi Minh The evacuillion or about 100 dependents trail complex three miles south of the follo~·ed the vlrtual leveling of the town demilitarized zone and a mile east of the or Dong Hene Monday nlght in a rocket Laos border. attack by advancing Communist troops. 85211 also bombarded Communist Laotian government spokesmen ·said targets in Cambodia and the main cor- about 75 percent of lbe town's homes ridor of the Ho Chi Minh trail through v.•cre destroyed by rocket.'!. Laos. ~ -• comparable communiUes around the ~·estern states, if not the entirt: natton. The dual approach being preued. by OICWD C(eneral Manager Ray Wallace and Cosla Mesa Fire Chief Jobn1ttarahall involves increased waler service er. liclency and a better alarm system. A tOlal of more thin 40 deficltncy points on whtch • t~ city was marked - down during_a recent sw.vey can be CQr· reeled by p r op o 1 e d improvements, . ., _. .. , . -:, predomlnanlly Ill th< _,..::ed Old Town • 1yst.m wtilch will pinpoint Jew «-Other ma. . criael eledroolc,.lly throu&hotrt tbe miles A ·larger tr1n'11\isslon ip1iql hp been and mllM. el w1ter U.1 .1t:rvina tbe city inatalled"on•Santa Ana Avenue1 whi~b will wUl'be.iiplned lnloar weeks. proYlde grealer ·fir< Dow via • dllolrib\I· "\ biiu.;. iill ol tbo3< ind"u.O ptOpOSed UM line Ill be lnltalled aJon& 11th -1. hnl'flWemenlt will be coqipltled... by ''We m co~letint a.new well in the Janv.ary_,.Jm'1nd ahoUJd'haY...O-.drtct northeat porUon of the city,:!.,Wallace on~ rNW"Vey," Wallace-explalll..Sh a expfalna, •ddlni tt will Jio';!de ,.... flow· Jeller Ill Chief MorlhaU. · , " plwi Mninl 11 additiOnal . emerpney Here are the now-completed or ... pro- wat.r atora1e. jlOled il!lproyt:ment1 '~-1ru ,nd ~. Blda. for a new CMCWD ldemeterin( lbll ihoUld qualliy Colla MIA for 1'Clr0p ·-• . to 31\ classl(ication and...open _the "l'f for achieving the lowest fire insurance cost raling: -Installation of 1.500 feet of ntw 1~ inch mains on 17tH Street from Sarita Ana to Otange av~ues, plu.s five new hydranl! at a fl1,llllO cost wllh October ccSmpletlon . • · ; -Installattoo or 900 feet of new -eight· inch lines on Sparks Strff witl\ four tu'.drants. at a $5,ooo· ccu1t and with com. 1Ste FIRE RATES, Pqe I) • . -- Ive .on ..........oas Senate Panel OKs Railway Strike Curb WASHINGTON (UPI) -A S~att co'mmiltee approved legislation today lo f.top the nationwide rails strike. The resolution would order rtriking signalmen back to work until at least Oct. 1, while giving them an interim pay inc:reast or 17.5 percent. The legislation, which waa moved lo the Senate floor for quick action, went far beyond legislation reques~d by President Nixon who asked only that the striken be ordered back to work until July 1 while negotiations risumed. 'Ille propoH<l'legblirtlon app-·'1 lhe Senate Labor Committee wu in li.ne ~~~1 a '1mllar fettlement impoeed by .,,.,.11e;s In· l&ibu naUon"'91......U strike almast six monlhs ago when tour other unions were given pay increases or 13 percent. The wage increase recomme nded by the Senate group would come out to about 17 cents additionally an hour to highest- paid signalmen. The Senate action came as the House Commerce Commiltee comidered· similar legislation, with ·congrwmen mak.lng it clear they did not like the idea or be.inc strike breakers. '"We 're getting fed up with it," Rep. Samuel Devine (R-Ohio), told Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson durin1 the hearing. Rep. John hfoss (D-Cal.). asked Hodgson whether the intervention of Congress was not "an impainnenl of col- lective bargaining." . Congreu gave reluctant priority to the strike-stopping legislation proposed by Nixon Monday a few hour11 after the Signalmen tied up the nallon's rail passenger and freight service by setting up picket lines that members of other rail unions refused to cross. Hodgson warned, in testimony before the House committee toda y, of "drastic effects" on the nation's economy if the strike continued . The vote in the Senate committee was 13 to I. It took place in closed session and it was not immediately clear who cast the tone vote. A Rep.iblican , Sen. Jacob K. Javits 1 R- :-Y:T,-was-one-ot thrsponson of the _ revised proposal that cleared the com- mittee lo go beyond Nill:on '1 July I date and al90 lo include a pay raise in lhe plan. Douglas Gets Tuneup WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas was reported in excellent condition al Walter Reed Anny Medical Center today after undergoing· a minor adjustment on his electronic cardiac pacemaker. ' .· 'Qui~k n11...i1e, ·i1.e Pfidd~ 1 .. ,., PboU>gnpher'a long-~ns.makeJ It •Pl"'•r hul!<l'lfrelgbter, Oriental Artow. is about to ru": -down this ~p~l1can cl&Sf"C!tatr <in •Oa~and's estµary.. Howev.er, the little 12-!ooter, cleared') wtth room. lo. 'IPate - and a collective sigh of ·re1i~Om jts.:.dougbty crew. • • Hartelius Denies Guilt On 14 Felony Charges Dr. Ebbe Harteliln of Corona ·del'Mar today pleaded Innocent to 14 felony charges contained in an Oranee County Grand Jury indJctment. Superior Court Judie Byron K. ~1c~fillan ordered the 50-year-o!-! J>h¥&- clan trial June 30. •le set Juni."4 as the date for a h~aring on a motion prote.st- ing the Indictment and allowed Hartelius to rematn frtt on '5,000 bail. Defense aUomey Tom ReiUy of Laguna Beach told Judge McMillan that there would he further pretrial .motions filed on behalf of his cllent with appeals agalm:t any a verse fUling. Hartellus was ilidlded'last May 6 on a variety of charges that Jf\Clude bribery, grand theft and the submission· of fraudu le!1l.c13.lms to insuranct comptnles . That'indlclmtnl dml Jllsl o\lt miintb after a Superior cOurt jury, <lmed the gray haired physician of arson and fraud charges. Prolecutlon witness Jira Blevins a<J. milted both acts in court and tidlfJed against Hartellus. who liow Uves at 402 Magriolla SL In Costa Mesa. 4 Police Nab 2 Susp~~ts In Newport By JOANNE R'EY,NOLIJll ot Ille OeUr Pllef Jleff . ,, NtlYport Beach pollce earlf t.oday Ca~ tured l"'O suspects they ~!aim Jtt:ld nlnt persons captive all night In a local rootel, beat one or more of the victims and slic- ed anolher across the neck with a..knl!t • Before the suspects were apprehended. officers from Costa Pttesa were called to aid in surrounding the motel and Newport's police helicopter Hovered overhead. All lhe •ll•&ed vlcllm& "'~ auiollt Injury. . Booked Ofl chargea of kldnapln& art !lru<e Dai. MO<!fe, Jr., 18, of BlldWin J>ari and bla all•aed compalilon Jn ll10 crime spree, Terry Lee Ranson, 2.1, of South Whittler. Newport detective Sam Ambura:ey aaid In addition. to the kldnaplng charge, ht will seek complaint.a againlt the pair ad- ditionally charging tnem wlth armed rob- bery and assault with a deadly -~~pon. ' One sll.!peet also races chlrtu ol. aM&ult against a police officer. ., • The two were arrested at the maW m North Newport Boulevard after t..0 ti their alleged vlcUms -re I t a 1 e-• reportedly to find drugs ror the men - flagged down Newport Olllcer Jim Jacobs at about 4:30 a.m. "They said there were two men 1n tht motel who told lhem they had just com- mitted an· armed robbery in Santa Ana and one had been shot. ''They said lhere were other -people being held captive," Officer Jacobi relit. ed this morning. Units from Newport and Costa Meta quickly Surrounded the motel u 9ne of the victims Jed Jacobs to the FOOflll where the captives-were being held. ..About that time, a man came out of the wbtdow of one of the rooms. tie had been beaten -kicked in .the side and groin -and WM bleeding from a wound on his neek where the assailanll assertedly' held. the knife," the ofncer said. Orders from the police to vadte thl rooms brought Ranson to the door, a~ parenUy unarmed. . · "They were terringlifm .to come with his hands up, but he just stood there. We think now he i& a deaf-mute.," Jacobs 11id. - While shotgun-armed olflcer1 lrted to get Ranson to respond lo t h e lr orders, Jacobs crawled around the side~ the building and grabbed the l;lllPtcl. He said they found three ptaple WM bad (See TERROR, Pa1t 2) Oraage The big Co1n1nunist offensi ve in the south coin cided with renewed peace ef- forts by the Comm Wlist Pathet Lao and their den1ands that Premier Prince Souvafina Phouma halt U.S. bombing at- tacks in Laos. B52s have hit the Ho Chi 111inh Trail almost dally for months and. U.S. planes have supported Laolilll) Bahamas Flig ht Reveale d. Mrs. Schenck Senices Held 1".eather Patchy fog and low cloud! will greet Wedn65d"iy 'Weather watch- ers. with coOler tem~raturts pre- vailing along tpe tt>aal High 'read- ings will be 72 locally · and .14 further inlaod. ground operations. · Gen. Thongphan Knocksy. the defense ministry apokesman, said reports from the battle artas were '"confusing" bUt that the situation in _southern Laos "ii get.Ung worse ... He said U.S. spotter plane& have sighted North Vietnamese Soviet-made P1'76 tanks between Saravane and Thateng. on the norlhe:m part o:f the Communist-OCCUpled Bfmrvffts plateau about 25 miles north of Pak Song. Pak Sbng fell to advanc ing Communist lroops on Sunday. Pak Song Is aboul .10 miles east of Pakse on thti ~1ekong River border \vith Thailand. 11l0ngphan said !he govem· (Ste LAOS WAR, Pa1< II Howard Hughes May Have Planned Trip for a Year NEW YORK {UPI) -Millionaire Howard Hughes tor nt•rly 1 year had a yice presi~nt of Lockheed Aircraft Corp. ready to fly -him 8CCrttly from Las Vegas. Nev .. to the Bahamas before the plan was actually carried out, Look Magazlne reported Monday. The ~trip was f In a 11 y taken -with ltughes boarding the plane und er a blanket on a stretcher -only after the vice president "blew his sla ck" about lhe dela y, Look said in its current edition. The magazine also published 1 sketch of Hughes, a recluse who has not been seen for year1, ahowine him wearli:ig long White hair anda bemt.ll oaid lfuih<t has worn the beard since JM and jokes about it by saying, "they're catch.Ing up with mt. I started the style.'' The skttch was drawn by Cynthia Blythe who said &he based it on "Im- peccable infonnaUon." The pl an. Look reported, began Nov. I. 1969 'whtn Hughes requested transportation from Jack Garrett Real , a close friend for 16 years. For ntarly a year. Real was on alert every minute. On Nov. 22, 1970, after repc1ted . • . . _p01lpo8'mehl!. and chani«.-bLplans,..,.l HUSl"'·alde called Re¥1 1" sa~ hO n\lihl lesve di.iring . the week. Real told a. "handpicked" Je:Uitar crew al L<>ckbltd's Marietta, Ga .. plant to stock• Jetstar for a long Jrlp and Include sand~s and cold milk in prov1slona. Real wu In W•shlngton on ' NOv. ZS giving Atmy Secretlf)' Robert l.. Johnson a progress r, e p o r t on Lockheed's Cheyenne armed helicopter when he got an urgent call ftOfll, Uugbea' a1de saying there wa~ "~•Y!t hf:alllncy" (See HUGHES, P•p II Funer4l aervlCtl have been lleld in River1lde for former Cotta Mesa resident Gtrtrude E .. scbencil, •II, """ died May 11. • . • . . . Mn. Schenqc wl:N! haLJIYed In It ver for Ute p1l1. nve yean, had resided for 26 yea rs Jn CO.ta MW. Durtn1 her sLl,y in Costa Mfrli,~lt>t wu 1 charte-member Of the Mua Verde Rtpublictn Women's dub Federated, • member of the Flrst Bapt'lst Church of Coeta ltfesa ana the Womtn'1' OU'btian Temperance Unkln. She ltave1 ~er son Frederick L-~henck, of Tustin; daughters, Mr1. Evelyn Fl"«Se and Mn. EJ..lne Nissley, both or Costa Mesa : 12 ;randchlldren and 16 irealifandchlkJren. J '· INSIDE TOD-' Y T tre't lO~ ofli'vlf111 1hta(er around tht Orange Cboa' Meo, and th.rte local productlo111 are rtvi~ed todoy. Ste Entertain· mtttt. Poat• 19·20. • . . ' f OAIL Y PILOT Tut5day, MIY 18, 1971 Funds Eyed In Di-s pute 'OnFreeiVay Str.ate11 ln Costa Mesafs. con.tlnulnt frttway ne10Uation1 sOOuld include 11locaUon of re(Ular travel expensu to carry the fight ~ Sacramento. it was proposed Monday. City Councilman Jack H1mmett sug· geated the idea at the clo.se of council deUberatlona, oot1111 th• 1 9 7 1 -7 2 preUmlnary bud1et b: now being worked out. He said Costa P..iesa should be represented in Sacramento whenever the 1Ssue of the Pacific Co11t Freeway and tta effect.a on the Newport Freeway emerge during Legislature or H!&hway Comm!ssion ae11lons. Co1t1 Mesa le1dtr1 art aUll stinging CM:r Ne~'J)Ort. Beach action to hilt con- ltnlct.lon of a coastal freeway through a February referendum elecUon. DAILY PILOT Jl1ff l"lltll Sea Smuggle Su spects . Ar raigned c:,.· Special to the DAILY PILOT SAN DlEGO -A trio who set sail from Newport Beach two months ago and wa.9 later caught wilh what lawmen allege was the largest cargo of sea-smuggled marijuana In U.S. history have been ar- raigned on federal cqnspiracy to smuggle charges. The men were ordered brought back before U.S. Magistrate Harry R. McCue June 10 for an omnibus hearing on the chargl!s that could put them in federal prison for 20 year.9. James L. Olson. 36, of Captain Cook. Hawaii, Robert C. Light, 30, of South Seattle. Wash., and Richard M. Kmg, 42, of San Diego, are among 14 persons ar· 1 CAILY PILOT Iliff Pllltt GE TS MESA ASSIGN MENT Princ:lpal Achzl9er , Large sums of money were 1pent in atudiea and other preliminary work before the Newport Freeway route through Co.!lta Meaa was realigned - Harbor High Elects rested to date in the case. " King i.9 owner of the converted shrimp boat Mercy Wiggins. which departed Lido Peninsula Yacht Anchorage A1arch 26, along with a second smaller boat, the Andiamo, bound for Mex ico. Don Achziger · New Principal At Mesa Higl1 f.resumably agreeably -to beach city eaders. "I am concerned over the fact we have iplllt more than $100,000 on studies and staff time expended/' declared Coun4 dlmaa Hammett, a militant on this topic. He propoees 1tndin& bhnseU, Vice Mayor -'Wiilard T. · J~an. •ctina as the council'• freeway committee, or City Manager Fred Soraabal, to act as watchdogs and advocates of Costa Mesa's interests. "As some o! our nelgbborlng citie.! have," he rem1rked without mtntionin1 Newport Beach by name. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley re.!ponded by noting the City Council contingency fund was developed for this type of ac- tivity and ts rarely utilized. HainmeU also revived the idea of auing either the atate or the city of Newport Beach to retrieve the $100,000..plus spent in good faith on reviling the Newport Freeway route. He wu told City Att<rney Roy June is glill JnvesUgatlng how to go about such an action, most likely through Initiation • of a taipayers' 1Wt without direct council involvement. City officials are concerned over im- pact on the adopted Newport Freeway route through west Costa Mua and down Superior Avenue to , Pacific Coast Highway, plwi Its e!!ect on crosstown traffic and comtrucUoo timetables. Shalimar Drive Resident Has 'Blue Monday' One rtsldent of Costa Mesa'1 Shalimar Drive had the kind of Blue Monday that makes one wish he 'd stayed In bed. First police were di.9patched to keep the peace while a gentleman from the Bank of America repowssed his car. During the process, Officer George Webster wa.! asked to obtain the regialrl· tion froni the glove compartment, but 1aid he found only a jar containing nurnerou.! marijuana seeds. The man behind in his car payments wu prompUy arrested and suddenly fac- ed addltional bail bond C0.9t3 and at· torney's fees, bul his woes weren 't ocer. Patrolman Webster said the suspect suddenly became irrational and threw a convincing COMiptlon fit , finally flopping to the jail noor. apparently unconscious. He was ruched to 0 r a n ( e County Medical Center. where unsympatheUc doctor• declared he was only faking it and dispatched him upstairs for a 72-hour stay ln the p.9fchialric ward. Today he still has the marijuana charge to face, and of course the bank has his car. OllANCll COAST DAllY PILOT OllA"IGI! COAST P'UILISHING COMPANY R•b••I N. W11J ,.,...;dtnl 1r>d l"u0ll1""" Jeck R. Cu1l1v l/lcr ,.,,,14,"' ••d G-•tl M1n1tw lllom11 Kt1¥il Edllor Thom11 A. Murplli"' Mlllllll"\I l!GllOr Students moved into the gymnasium at Newport Harbor High School today to elect 1971-72 student body officers. The day-long election process has the flavor of a nationaJ political convention. The method offers students experience in the workin~s of national politics and gets the election over in one day. From Page 1 TERROR ... been held in the room. Police apprehended Moore as he a~ parently attempted to Sl'leak out of an ad· jacent room in which two more person1 were held captive. The Newport helicopter crew spatted two more people hlding about one block away in the area of the Riverside Drive Post Office . Jacobs 11aid tbe two have been ldentl· lied as victims who had also managed to escape and who had apparently been beaten. A search of the rooms turned up the knife assertedly used on the bleeding victim. Officers said they found no guna or money. Investigation in the case was just be- ginning this moming 11 detective.! un· raveled the series of events leading to the arrests. Amburgey said neither suspect had been ahot, but Ranson dld have a ban· dage on hiJ back. "The two people ~bo •topped Jacobs were shown the bandage and told the suspects hac.1 to have some Reds (barbiturates) r:8 he would die," he said. Santa Ana police did not report an armed robbery in their city Monday night, but a Tic Toe market was held up there about two day1 ago, a check1 with tba~ tltpartment revetted. Newport pollce were checkin·g with Santa Ana to determine if Moore and Ranson matched the description of the Santa Ana bandits. Amburgey said the pair allegedly broke into a different motel on North Newport at about 3 a.m. They reportedly enlered the room occupied by Paul Erie Grimshaw and David Andrew John stone, both 18, who were sleeping at the time. "Using a broke n beer bottle and a switchblade knife the suspects robbed the two men of $4 and forced tbem to accom- pany them to the second motel," Am· burgey said. ~ At the second motel -the one where the capture took place -the pair reportedly confronted Geoffrey William Greene. 21, and allegedly forced him into the room where Ranson was finally cap- tured. Because of the preliminary state of the investigation, it wa.9 not clear today where the other victims were located and wha t their names are. Officers said the re appears 1() be no relation bet>Neen the victims and suspects, although the victims said they had see n one of the suspects around the motel. t1oore works as a fiherglasser for a Harbor Area boat manufacturing firm . An additional charge of ass ault on a police officer i,i,·ill be sought against Ran son. Amburgey said. He allegedly attacked Officer Bob Gate· wood when the officer broughl him break· fast in-his ceU at the Newport Beach jail. From P age 1 FIRE RATES • • • Viejo Gi r l to Vi ew Show With New Lease on Sight Olson skippered the Mercy Wiggin s. which federal agents claim carried five tons of marijuana worth $1.5 million when they seized her two week.9 ago off the Golden Gate. A motion by one defense attorney to order the federal government lo disclose whether information had been obtained through wiretapping was denied . Costa Mesa tligh School's acting prin. cipal has been made principal. effective July J. Don. Achziger, 39, of 10275 Slater St., Fountain Valley, was appointed acting principal of Costa ~1esa High la.9t August and last "'eek was offi cially named to the principalshi p by Newport-Mesa -school ; tros tees. Orallie County Eye Bank 1971 Poster Girl Becky Rogers. 4, wau have a special outing Saturday, one week after receiving a cornea transplant that .9hould mean normal vision. One more month would have been too la te. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Rogers. of 25842 Jamon Lane. Mistjon Viejo, is coming along fine at Sant.a Ana. Community Hospital where the delicate surgery was performed. "She will have to remain extremely quiet for four or five days," a hospital spokesman said today. Discharge is scheduled Friday and Becky -an honorary chairman of the Coto de Caza Classic Horse Show -will be able to attend the equestrian event briefIY on Saturday. The ahow open.9 Thursday at the ex- clusive rural club near Trabuco Canyon, with 500 entries in « events and proceeds benefiting the new Orange County Eye Bank. Becky's ri&ht eye wa.9 gradually being destroyed by corneal clouding and the From Page 1 LAOS WAR ... ment anticipated the attack on Pak Song, which sits astride Highway 23. He said at least SO government troops, including several senior officer.9, were killed In defen11e or Pak Song. With the Communist threat growing, the · U.S. Embassy spokesman in Vien· liane said the dependents of Amer icans and other nationals working for the U.S. government were "ad vised" to leave. They were nown into Vientiane during the day aboard Air America CJJO transports. Military sources said the fall of Don~ Hene, on Route 9 about 37 miles east of Savannakhet, was a serious setback for the government. They said it opened the way for a dri ve against Seno, a majol' government aJr base. about 20 miles east or Savannakhet which is 275 miles southeast of Vientiane . ' Youth Efforts Sought on Park A special emphasis on youth partloipa· Uon was announced today by civ ic leader .J im Wood, 'A'ho will address the Mesa Verde HomMwners Association Thursday night in Costa ~fesa. desperate hunt for a transplant wa1 reaching the point of futility when one became available . Circus Prepares For Mesa. Shows Achziger had been assistant principal for two year., prior to being named acl· ing prindpal. Tammy Jo Medley, 7, died Saturday while undergoing heart surgery al Children '" Hospital of Orange County. Her .parents agreed to donation of the child's corneas, wtth one going to Becky and the other being flown Saturday night to an unidentified recipient in Fairbanks, Alaska . Roustabouts were erecting the lent to- day for two performances of the Kay Brothers Circus at the Orange County Fairground.9. Sponsored by the Costa Mesa Norlh Kiwanis Club, the 4 p.m. matinee will be followed by an 8 o'clock show at $1.SO for adults and SO cents for children. He came to the district in 19611 from Terra Linda High School in San Rafael • where he was \'ice principal. Prior to that experience, he taught industrial arts and ph ysical educ8tion in the Orang e Unified Schoo! District. Tammy Jo was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Duane Wendler, of 5211 Marcella Ave., Cyp re ss . "I'm just elad there was something she cou ld do to help someone," Mrs. Wendler said Monday of Tammy's eye tissue giv- ing two other youngster.9 a chance to en· joy normal vision. Her eyes were clouded by tears. ' The 1971 collection of clowns. animals and aerialists includes the Flying Souls, only black trapeze act in existence, Miss Lani and her High School Horse, the Orwyn Risley Acroba t.9 plus Princes! White Buffalo and many other stars. The show runs two hours and includes a variety of entertain ment from America and Europe as ~·ell. Achziger received ·a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in industrial art1 fr om Cal State Long Beach. He has doM grad uate work at Cal Slate Long Beach and Chapma11 College. A native Qf Colorado, Achziger 11erved rour years with the Navy during the Korean War. New at Alden's Carpets You'll . never cry over spilt milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Your own dining room with all the luxury, beauty and warmth of carpeting ... without ever havi ng to worry about overturned glasses, dropped gravy dishes or choco- late cake crumbs! a spill, a stain or a spot. And if you're a woman whose children seem to get more food on the floor than In thei r mouths, ordin ary carpet just couldn't do the Job. But rm1, you don't have to dream about it any more. We can't wa it to see the look on your face when we show you what this amazing carpet can do! Chances are, you 've dreamed of such carpet for years -carpet that could go from soup to nuts and never sho.v It's Mohav1k's STATURE ... carpct pile made with 100% Acri Ian' acrylic fiber! And it resists practically everything but admiring glances! Its velve ty-smooth texture Is plusl1 11nd elegant, with highlights usually found only in expen- s:ve carpets. Yet it's so easy to care for. Even if a stain goes deep down and dr ies up, it'll still come out-leavin g STATURE look)ng good as new! We've goLSTATURE.in many-superb designs and deep. dyed, exciting co lors. French Provincial furn iture? We've got 11 French Provincial pattern. Modern furn iture! We've got a modern pattern, too. Just name yoor decor and we've go! the carpet to go with it •.• ,, ., ' I ( I , • " ~ ., •• • • I f r •• l ' • I I - I I t I f Ch ... r •• H. l111 Rkh1rd '· Ni ll • Aul111": Mt tltllrili ldl!er, pletion by November. -Strengthening of a 30-inch arterial main with new di stribution and cross· feeder lines on soulherly Pomona Avenue, plus an eastside inter·lie con· nection al Superior Avenue and 17th Street, a SJ,000 project to be finished next month. He said the 7:30 p.m. s'ession al the Mesa Verde Country Club 'Ai li cover a proposa l rapidly gaining support to create a JOO.acre wilderness park on stale lands adjacent to the subdivision . \_ { C11t• Mei• Offlle )JO W11 t &t r Streit M1Uin9 Adir111: l'.O. Bo~ 1560. •1616 OtMr 0,,111:11 Ntwll0r1 ltlc~: ~ Ntw~ort lou'r v1<"d l tfUtll l11cfl: 7r. 1"01111 A.,.nuc Munll"tl01 Irie~: 1111: Ill<~ k ull vl rd Sin cie"''""' .JOl Nerti! fl c1 ... r.-e lltJI CA!LY "'!LOT, wl!ll wlll<ll It <:Orfl•l•ff '"' NlfWI·"''"' ~ itullllll'lt<J llily t•<tll! Sun· dl 'I' lio Hlltfl lt ldlllo'lt lw l.qll!U ltJC~. Ntw'°'; let(~. COiii Mftl , Myn!ln1t°" 81100, "ounlclft Vl !lt 'I' St " Cltmt•lltl C111lttr1 ... l td StHlt•1di, ·~ Wltll -••Jlollli tdl!...,, l"rlftcl•JI IN'ltltl,.. 1111111 II ., MO wu t •• .,. ,, •••.• Ch•t Mt1•. T...,..• f714J Mlo4l11 Cltidf,_111 .AIHt-tltlltt '41·S• 11 C....•111110 ltll, O.•-Coot ,...,lloHJlll"' c-J11y, No ntWl ,,..,i.,, l!h11tr1t11M. ldl!Orllil "'•lltr ., i1wnl1t"''"'' 11tr•M 11\t'I' " fl,,odllCM Wlf ....... tPIClel ,..... "'"'"" .. copyl'lfll, ·-·· ....,_,, tlttl •llte ,ell 1t Ht "'""' lt1cll ,,,. c .. 1t M•••· c111W>111. •..,e.cr11t1111 llo'f (ftrltr Jf.U "°"'irl'IF'I'! b'I' 11'1111 lt.IS -lfl/yj 11•11111,.Y •11tlllll ..... L'_JJ """'~''' -Completion of a n1etcred connection between lhe C~1C\YD and !he Santa Ana Heights Water Company, backing it up i,i,•ith 50 acre-feet of water in the San Joa· quin Reservoir. A critical drop in the old pr ivate company 's pressure w o u 1 d automatically lap lhis source. Completion is set for July and work is now in pro- gress. -Strengthening of internal firefightin1 • capabililies at major sized industrial plants or institution s. 11uch as Fairvie"'· State Hospital, and Orange Coast College following surveys of wha:t needs to de done. -Assignment of 8 C~1CWD employe to respond to all major fires and maintain surveillance of immediate water systems lnvolvtd to provide maximum service and efficiency. lolanager Wallace·~ memo reply to Chief Marshall Indicates tht! latter pro- pasal would involve only overtime pay cost to the assigned personnel, probably a very small outlay. Wood, president of ~iesa Verde Really and a former association leader said he will also discuss the communilv as it has cVolvcd over lhe years since he. joined it. He specifically invites young people, many ilctively campaigning for the park projod. Frona Pnge 1 HUGHES ... on Hughes' part about flying th.al weekend. "Real blew his slack." Look said. "The aide was told Hughes s h o u I d go that ni8ht. \Y i n d s were favorable. the crew had been on alert for four days !.·----------.., 11nd a weather front moving in made a nonstop weekend trip proble~·u1tjcal. Real insisted that the tr ip be made fast." The m11u1zfne sa id Hughes finally agreed and took off from Nellis Air Force Base. 13 miles northeast of downtown Las Vegas, for Nassau 111 9:25 the s1me night. ,_ 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 Al.1DEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES SANTA ANA, OlAN•t. TUSTIN Celt •.• ALDIN 'S lllD HILL CAll,m I DllAPllllS llJ74 lnl111, T111tl1, e.llf. IJl0 JJ44 I • .. • l I I I •. 1' ,, ' ,; ,. ' •• J r .(1 11 .. ~ • q ' ( I ' ' . ' I I ·r , r • 1· ,t • L 11 ' I ,,, I t- ,,I> • Saddlebaek -. . ' ED,ITION VOt:. M. NO. 118, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • Cle1taente High Police to Give Campus Tickets? Parking problems at San Clemente l~igh ·School have reached epidemic prcr portions. That's the <lpinion <lf Principal Darrell Tayl<lr who asked the Board of Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Monday to allow police to come on cam- pus to issue parking tickets. The board approved the reQuest until the end of school, but made their ap- proval contingent on school officials and students joining to make a study of the problem. Similar approval was given in 1968. But San Clemente City Councilman Stan Northrup, \vhose S<ln "'as issued a park· ing ticket. argued tha t the school was not adequately. posted. He took hi s case to court and v•on. A spokesman ror the San Clemente Police Department said this problem has been corrected and there are now an ade- quate number of signs posted "'here parking is prohibited. "Cars are blocking access roads, fire roads as well as parking in No Parking zones," said Taylor • He said the parking problem will in· I.. crease next year and right now the only solutions w<luld be parking on Pico or Presidio. Trustee Robert Dahlberg suggested tha t the studen t government be involved in the study. "This is the kind of problem Cleniente Slates Special Hearing On Business Fees The San Clemente City Council \vill hold a public hearing \Vednesday at 7:30 p.m. on proposed business ordinance re\'isions which would increase almost all business license fees in the city. The revisions. drawn by the city staff, ,\·ould mark the first increase or ad- justn1 ent in the fees in the past 16 years. The council several months ago directed that the revisions be prepared. The proposed ordinance change would revise and amend almost all sections of the current business la\\'S. The changes would provide. v.'ith few exceptions. for increases in business fees. Increases W<luld range from a few dollars to several hundred dollars. depending on the type and volume of business done by the individual merchant. that student leadership can be involved in," he s~id. "This mighi be a more positive solution than calling in an outside force vlhich -might be resented." Superintendent :rruman Benedict said student government has been involved in trying to solve the problem and btcii.use of them five times as many students are now riding bicycles to school. Poster Girl Doing Well After Surgery Orange County Eye Bank 1971 Poster Girl Becky Rogers, 4, wJIL have a special ouUng Saturday, one week after receiving a cornea transplant that should mean normal vision.' One more month would have been too late . The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Rogers, of 25842 Janlon Lane. Mission Viejo, ii CQIJl1nl a~g ,(lne at Santa Apt Community Hospital where the de1ical1 surgery waa' performtd. "She Will "liave to remain· u:tmnett quiet for four or five .days,'' a hospital spokesman said today. Discharge is scheduled Friday and Becky -an honorary chairman of the Coto de Caxa Oasslc Horse Show -V.'ill be ab le to attend the equestrian event brlefly on Saturday. The show opens Thundav at the ex· elusive rural club near Trabuco Canyon, with SOD entries in 44 events and procttds benefiting the new Orange County Eye Bank. Becky's right eye wa s gradually being destroyed by romeal clouding and the desperate hunt for a transplant was reaching· the point of futility when one became available. Tammy Jo Medley, 1, died Saturday while undergoing heart surgery at Children's Hospital of Orange County. Her parents agreed to donation of the child's c<1meas, v.·ith one going to Becky· and the other being flown .Saturday night to an unidentified recipient in Fairbanki, Alaska. · Tammy Jo was the daughter or 1'.fr. and f\.1ra. Duane Wendler, of 5211 Mar~lla Ave., Cypress. .. I'm just glad there was something she rould do to help someone," Mrs. Wendler said Monday of Tammy's eye tissue giv· .. . . , -Today's Fiiiai · • , • .. ~ . -ORANGE q<)UNTY, CAtlFORNIA T.UESDAY; MA~ 18, '1971' TEN CENTS .. , on . -· . ----· tive _..oas ·~ --.. • •. . DAil Y Pll.!OT Sllff '"°19 Police Nab 2 Suspects In Newport By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t Ille Oii~ ,, ... Steff Newport Beach police: early today cap. tured two suspects they claim held nine persons captive all night in a local mot.el; beat one or more of the victlrrul and slic-o ed another across the neck with a knife., Before the suspe'.cts were apprthended, officers from Costa Mesa were called to aid in surrounding the motel and Newport's police hellropter hovered overhead. All the alleged victims escaped serious' injury. Booked on charges of kidnaping are Bruce Dale Moore, Jr., 18, of Baldwin Park and his alleged rompanion in the crime spree, Terry Lee Ranson, 23, ot South Whittier. Newport detective Sam Amburgey said In addition to the kidnaping charge, he will seek come.!_aints agannst the___palr ad· ditionally chi rgillg them W!Th arme(f roQ;" bery and as.!lault with a deadly weapon. One suspect also faces charges of assault aga inst a police: officer. The two were arrested at the motel on North Newport Boulevard after two of their alleged victims -re 1 east d repo:rtedly to. find drugs for the men - flagged down Newport • Officer Jbn Jacobs at about 4:30 a.m. '"I')Jey said there were two men tn tht motel who told them they bad just com· milled an armed robbery in Santa Ahl and one had been shot. . . . . : ' ' ' . .. ' "They said there were other people being held captive," OCflcer Jacobs relato- ed this morning. WHERE TO START; SAN· CLEMEN.TE PQLIC.E SORT LOOT ·RECOVERED NEAR NEWHALL Detectives Leoni rd Good~ln, Ardie · S.un ders Inspect 'Lo(al lttms Worth Thous1nd1 Units from Newport and Costa Mesa quickly surrounded the motel as one of the victims led Jacobs to the room.s Huge T h.eft · Ha u l Seize d where the captives. were being held. "About that time, a man came out of the window Of one of the rooms. He had been beaten -kicked in the side and groin -and wa.!I bl eeding rrom a wound on his neck where the assailants assertedly held the kni!e," the officer .!laid. . . San Cle1nente Police Have Loot, Seeking Ow1iers Orders from the police to vacate the rooms brought Ranson to the door, 11p. parently unarmed. By PATRICK BOYLE Of lllt Dl:ll, "lltl Its/I San Clemente police today be·gan the' lltborious iask ¢ dete~miniog the owners ·of a car' ·and'. tr~iter· full of valuable me'rdlandise allegedly stolen during the past .moil_th tiy a~' recently dischar ged marine. Even the car and trailer were taken from San Clemente residents, po I i c e claim. Other items or loot confiscated in· eluded two television sets, a bag full of camera equipment, several tool boxes, four bicycles. many power tools, a stack of military sea bags, numerous boxes of food, a few stereo tape ,dec!(s and • can ft.ill of nails. The load! of evidence cS:me into Police hands Fr~day when the California ~lighway Patrol 'Slopped a vehicle towiQg a small trailer near Newhall for not hav- ing a mirror on its passenger side. A record check by-the CHP revealed lhe auto, driven by Eugene H. Schmitt, 23, was reported stolen May 4 in San Clemenle. The driver was arrested. San Cle)llenle deteclives drove to -Ney,·hall and took Schmitt into custody, along with the load of merchandise he was transporting. The 1964 ·vehlcte· Sctirriitt was allegedly "They were telling him to come out driving was reported missing May 4 by with his hands up, but he just stood there. Joan Riley, of llYl PlaCentla . Police claim We think now he ls a deal-mute," Jacobs ~ trailer was taken April 21 from said. Richard Hazard, of 318 Ave. Sierra. While shotgun.armed offictrs tried to Authorities said the owners of some of get Ranson to respond to th e 1 r the other items are Stephen Ca laway, of orders, Jacobs crawled around the side ot 4M S. Ola Vi~ta. one tape deck ; Nicholas the building and grabbed the suspect. He Werve, of 230 Ave. Cabrillo, $449 worth of said th~y found three people who bad camera equipment and Frank Ii n been held in the room. \1ermalin, 159 Ave. Rosa, $450 worth ol Police apprehended Moore as he ap- 1.ools. parenlly attempted to sneak out of an ad· Police say they have also located the jacent room In which two more Person.t original owners of four ten speed bicycles were held captive . allegedly in Schmitt's possession, The Newpol1 belicopt« crew spotted Authorities are . conlident that the two more people hiding about one block Due to the controversial nature of the proposals. the council is expected to delay adoption of the new ordinance pen- ding several months of careful study. ing tWo other ·youngstert a chance to en-Ch mhe S ki joy normal vision. a r ee ng £lem_ ente Ma1ine Hir eyes were clouded by lean. After checking the CQntents of the car and trailer, authorities said that most of it had been stolen ·from San Cle mente homes during the past month. owners of most of the jtems will be found away in the area ot the Riverside Drive and the items returned. However, the Post Office. owner of a small wooden sign may never Jacobs said the two have been identi~ ----·--------ioo-NewMembers Gets 2nd Medal Recreation Book Schmitt who until recent! Jived t verii a Rosa, was dis charged from the Marine Corps Thursday . Police allege Schmitt was responsible for a series or burglaiies c<1mmitted in San Cle mente during the past month. t1arine Corps Capt. James D. Grosshans. a San Clemente resident, has been av•arded a gold star in lieu <lf a se· cond bronze star medal for his action in Vietnam. Capt. Grosshans, who lives at 304 Avenida Presidio, was cited f or "meritorious service" while se rving as an advisor to South Vietnamese troops from December 1969 to November 1970. He is currenlly serving as company com1nander of "G" com pany, 2nd bat- talion. Seventh f\.1arints at Camp Pendleton. In the ceremony at the bai::e ~18y 6. Capt. Grosshans was also a\vard- ed an Air ti1cdal for combat action during the same period. Lapidary Society Sets Mineral Talk ' A recent trip to Central America in starch Of gems and minerals will be the topic of duseussion at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the meeting of the Tri-cities Lapidary Society, The meenng, lo be held In the Little 'Theater of San 'Clementc High School. is open to the public. The Central America rock homtdtng tr!)) lncltlded--vl51ts--to the mountains of Honduras, S a I v a do r, Pana ma tind the Yucatan pe ninsula. •• Ready in June The San Clemente Parks and Recrea· lion department bar announced the 1971 edition of the city recreation booklet will be available e;ometime in JW'lt. The new guide will serve as a directory to the city's recreation facllttles and will list the program1 available for both children and adults. !I'tle booklet will replace the 17-page 11188 ediUon and will be available to residents and tourists at no charge. TV C9verage Slated Of LBJ Library Fete A campaign which chamber of com:- mei-ce officials term a "blitz" to add 100 ne·w members began with a pep metting rettnu'y for 60 members and directors. The volunteers will call on all non- member businesses in San Clemente dur· ing.the next two weeks to seek new mem• bets. lf the goal Is reached, the chamber's roll will show 500 businesses and in· dividuals. Ralph K1aason will be the director of the drive. · In addition, .aulhorilles claim the military equipment -including a base telephOne -was taken from Camp Pendleton and several of the other Items were taken from homes in Newport Beach and "Oceanside. The total value or the recovered items has been c<1nservatlvely estimated by police to be at least $2,500. Schmitt was to be arraigned today at South County Mu niclpa l Courl on charges . of grand theft auto, grand theft. burglary and ))(!tty thefL Girls Wanted • . JI . AUSTIN, Ter. (All) - A c:<r<m<111y ~ Contiest Entries· ~ought ·in Capo dedlcaUng. the L~don 8. Johnson Library will be carried live on naUonal lelevision Saturday. Llbrary·o!fkials uid Monday thcit Na· tional_ eroadcaiung Co. and Colu.rnb.la BrotdcasUng System will telecast the program from 11:30 a.m. to noon Ce.nlral Standard Time through an arrangement with WF AA TV in Danas. Johnson and Mrs. Johnson will conduct Presldent,and M(S. Riehard M~ Nixon on ·a one hour private tour of the library before the ceremony, in ~:hlcli Nixon I! the main speaker. • • The San J"'!" C1pillr1no Chamber of Commerce tr steklng contest'1\ls for the Miu San Juan ~test. .Appll~ants must bit entering-their senior year in high school or be under 2l years o( age, unmarried, and residenla: o( the city. The winner wili°be selected by a panel of five judges ' during an interview on June 5. Th~ winner will be judged on the baiis of poise and charm. Coronation· of the winner -will be Oft • ' - June 13, during . a ch·ampa111e recepilOn sponsQttd 6y the Chamber1 She Wlll 1uc- ceed Miss Bo,bbl Stone wbo has terved as offldll'hoste1s for the" c1ty'thl! tear. Prizes wlll include a $100 savings bond and girt certificates from a re a merchants. Applications may be obtained from contest chairman, Mrs. Shirley Keim at the Va uero clothing slore or from Cu run Siming at Ooodfe~uUqUe, both In Ille El Adobe Pia ... • be located detectives s culated. fied as victims who had also managed to u o e, w ~w:;.efir;'e'lif.e'wwiiorMis.~-O~ape-and-wh bad-apparentty-bee·~---1 "Hard things 1 can.do, impossible things beaten. take time, miracles by appointment on. A search of the rooms turned up the ly." knife assertedly used on the bleedingi- viclim. Office.rs said they found no gwm Civil Service Test Scheduled A state clvll service examination in typing will be offered as a public service May 25 at 'Saddleback College. The hour-long tert will start at 2 p.m. and will be supervised by an official o( the -California Department of Human Resources Development. All interested persons are welc<1me to take the test. Electric typewriters will be made available. Morelnlormation ~s avaUa~Je-by·talUng tht business scie11ce--diVls1ltn Of tbe C1>I· . leg• ii 49fHll(i(I. Texans May Go 'Wet' AUSTIN, Te .. (UPI) -The public saie of mixed drinks was outlawed in·Texas more than a half century ago. ShlCe then cocktails could only be purc~ased in private clubs. All that may change today . as residents of 46 Texas counties voted w)!ftheJ to perfnlt o~ uloons in their preclncll,,l was Uf€1iif step iilbrinlirrr- llquor by the drlni to Texas. • • • • or money. . Investigation in the case was just be- ginning this morning as detectives un· raveled the series or events leading to the arrests. Weather Patchy fog and low clouds will greel Wednesday weather watch- ers, with cooler temperatures pre- vailing along the coast. High read· in gs will be 12 locally ·and 84 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Thert's lot of Uving tl•eattr aro1ind the Orauge Coa.Tt area, and thret locat productio1ia art reviewed today. Se1 Entcirtain- mtnt, Pages .19·20~ --- C1!11tntl1 1 C~tclllll U11 11 Cl1ttll... 21·:1& ' CllllllCI 11 (rtHwtf'Cil lJ 0.alfl Nttlc•• f •1111er111 ''" 1 •11ttr1••-1 , .. ,. '111111<1 1•11 Mlvltl ·1,.Jt Mwtltl """* 11 N1Uetllf KfWI +l Or1111 .. <WMY t '""' , .. ,. Sltct Mll'ltth 1•11 Ttll•Ollll It TMMtrt ,,.,. W11111ff I " ""'""''' """ U··'l•-Mii "'"'" 1• Wtrlf """"' ... I • Requested For Schools By PAMELA HALLAN Of .. 0111, •lltt $1111 ,._.o 1wimmtng pools -one at San Clementt High School and the other at the new Dana Hills High School -have been propoud for construction. 1be recommendation was made Mon- day to Trustees of the Caplltrano UnHied school Obtrlct by Erle Johneon, 1pecill consultant tor the State Department of Education. Jahn.son has been studying the district's recreation n@eds for the past nine months. The Capistrano district was one of two diltrlcts 1n the Jtate .el~ for a community recreation sldy. ''The 'most immediate need within the ~1chool district is for swimming pools,·• aaid Johnson. ln hit report to the school board. "It is recommended that a special county service district be established on a school district basis for the purpose of <1btalnln1 $4$0,000 for th~ construction of two 50 meter 1wlmmlng pools." The report sua:ge11ts that financing for the project could be obtained by forming a county 1peclal aervlce area along the boundaries o! the school dlstrict. The special servlct area couJd then levy a tax of 10 cents per •100 aueued valuation for the duration of three year1. Dr. Robert Beasley, school board thalnnan, asked if the achoo! board should iniUate the formation of the 1uvice area. "J thtnt It would be appropriate if the board did thll throu1b It.a recreation commiltte," uld Johnson. The consultant suggested that the district either make their temporary recreation committee permanent or select a new one. Serving on the committee have been Jack Snipes and George Be 11 e w, Capistrano Beach Parks and Recreation Dl1trlct; Al Arps and Don Jelsy, San Juan Capistr1no Parks and Recreation; Gordon Sutorius, Dana Point Yacht Club; Vince Wlnnlnghoff and Stan Weintraub, La.gun• Nlauel; Phil Charlton, Mission Viejo Qlmpany tad Elllt Mear. San Clemente P1rks and Recreation . Johnaon auggisted that the Capistrano Unified School Dlatrlct should move to establilh recreation services as a cooperaUVe v~nture between It ind ex- lltinl: recreation qencles. He further atated that the CUSO should bire a recr,.Uon director to head the communltywlde recreation committee and that tbe committee sbould meet with the county and with other agencies lo develop .long range plans for community recreation instead or merely responding to specific requesta. Financ:in1 the program could be done by continuing to levy a 10 cent tax through the education code's civic cente r and recreation pro1ram, The program alao could uae extra com· munity !ervlce runds, monies collected from Itel for recreation services and various forms of 1tate aid, and poaslbly future special service dislrlct t1xe1. County Tot Dies In Family Pool A 2·ye1r-old Oranae girl Monday night was 1n apparent drownin1 victim in the family swlmming pool. Victoria Gui.man of 2309 N. Sacramento St.. was found floating face down in the backyard pool, the coroner's o f f I c e reported . The child was dillcovered by her mother. Bonnie. A fire department re~ue team gave emergency treatment but the little girl waa pronounced dead at Chipman General Ho1pltal. An autopsy is pending. OIAN•l C.OAIT DAllY PllOT ) Tuescs.7, MJJ 18, 1971 300 Men Seek ' 1 Fireman Job Call it • slan of the limes or an UD"5Ual lnl<real In fire flghlJni, eltbet way it wa1 overwbelmln& uld Plaeentla clly offlclall. More lhan 300 lmen have applltd for one ope.nine in tbe Placentia Fire Dep1rtment and wlll take a special test Friday and Saturday. Officials said applicant.! were from all walks of life Including aerospace workers and former servicemen. Joaquin Board Considering Two Sessions Trultees of the San Joaquin Elementary School Di!lricl will again wrealle with the question or double sessions al Wed- nesday's 7 p.m. meeting in the AdministratJve Anne1, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave .• East Irvine. But the quesUon won't be whether or not to have two sessions -only where. Two plans have emerged as the only fe&aible soluUons to the problems <>f overcrow~ In the intermediate schools. One is to place Irvine School elemen- tary children on double sesl.ioru while re- taining a regular seulon for the seventh and eighth graders who also attend school on the Eut Irvine campus. The other ls to send all the in- termediate school children to the La Paz campus in Mission Viejo for double tesaions which will occur regardless of whether or not the Irvine students come. In the event of the latter, the elemen- tary classea at Irvine would retain a 1ingle se.saion. Parents attending a workahop last week favored the first solution. They said they would prefer having the elementary grades on double sessions at Irvine School to avoid busing their older children all the way lo Mission Viejo. Trustees have.asked the admlnlatratlon to prepare cost estimates for both plans. They agreed-with parents who didn't want 1rvine children to be spread between the morning and afternoon sessions in Mission Viejo, but will now look to ~ which of the plans ls the least expensive. Two new inlermed:iate schools will be completed by the end of neat year. One will house all the intermediate student.I from Irvine and the other will be for children in the El Toro area. The 1dminlstralion has planned to opeG these schools u aoon as they are com- pleted, even 1f only a few montha <>f &ehool remain. They also plan to staff the intermediate schools on the basis of June 1972 enroll· ment estimates, Instead of September estimates, so that the ratio between students and teachers is in balance. Flood District Speaker Slated An official wltb the Orange County Flood COntrol District will be the featured speaker al 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the regular meeting of the Capistrano Beach Community Association. Herb Nakasone, director of projecta for the district, will discuss the current pro- jecui In the area and will outline possible plans for the future . The meeting wiU be held at 26941 Camlco de Estrella , and the public Is In· vlted to attend. Funeral Rites Held For Burt Beverstock ORANG~ COA.IT l'Ull.11H1MO COM,AM'I' Private funeral services hae been held for San Clemente resident Burt H. •·~··• N. w •• d, ___ _, ,,..1e ... 1 ,.,.. l'U1tt11rwr --severs Ji:, a retfr cemenl company Jiclr A. Cv•l•v executive who died Sunday at the 1ge of Vkt l'retlrl""I l l'IOI Ot-•1 Mtl'ltltf BQ. Tho••11• K••vil 1\lr. Beverstock, of 109 Paseo de la edlMI' Seranata. had lived in the co1nmunily for l~•"'•1 A. Mv.,hi~• M1ft111"" 1•1111. , the past 16 years. He is aurvlved by his Chirl11 M. L•o• ~lch1r4 '· Ntll v.·ife, Glady!!; a son. Robert of Ohio; Ill ,."''''"· ......... ,...., E•11"~ daughter, Mary Johnson of Florida and _. Let•M ...U. Offke 11? Forti! A••~u• M•llint 14clrtn • ,,0. l tl' ••6, 91611: five grandchildren. • • •• • FIJI to-Sflttcnaento ----tawOkayed To E11d Laguna Officials ·Nixon Cousins Not Invited? • Protesting· Tax GRASS VALi.EV, Calif. (UPI) - Tricia Nixon'• ,weddln1 Invitation Ust failed to Include the ntme or at least one of Presiden t Nixon's two cousins living in rural Nevada County. Rail Stril{e Two Laguna Beach school officials Dew to Sacramento today in an aUempt to head off a statewide property tax pro- posal that would ~t the Laguna tax rate by Sl.42 per $100 of assessed valua- tion. School board president Larry Taylor and Superintendent William Ullom were scheduled to appear before the Assembly committee on eaucation this .afternoon and t.)le Senate committee on education tomorrow morning. Taylor is one of four spokesmen for school districts throughout the state in- vited to speak before the two legislative committees. The two Lagunana had trekked to the capital in March to confer with State School Superintendent Wilson Riles on the controve{lllal measure which would im- pose a statewide property tu of $3.75 per. $100 of assessed valuation, supplanting local school tn:es. The money thus raised would be distributed throughout the state on a per student basis. While an estimated 90 percent of the state's school districta would benefit financially from the plan, the remaining 10 percent, including Laguna Beach, ind Capistrano Beach, representing so-<:alled "wealthy" districts, would f I n d themselves with insufficient funds. Laguna would have to Increase Its tax rate by $1.42 while the Capistrano rate would need an additional 20-cent levy. In his presentations in Sacramento, Taylor will reiterate his. argument that the proposed legislation would product only one-fifth of the revenue needed by the state'1 school districts, or $100 million. The remaining $400 million, would have to come from increased state Income and sales tax. "Are you, are elected representatives, prepared to in- crease tu:es to meet the commJtmentl of th.ls bill," be will ask the legislators. Citing the cases of Utah, Florida and Texas, Taylor maintains that statewide taxes·h1ve not provided quality education but are "a means of taking away local control and entering the property tax arena wheer the local taxpayer would not have an oppartunity to vote." The bill also would open the door to st.ate entry into regulatory porcedure i11- volvlng curriculum, class size, textbooks and other educational p o 1 J c I e 1 · Little Nixon Pal Not Improving After Operation Thtre bas been no lmprovement in the condition of four-year-old Danny Jones. The little San Clemente boy underwent open heart surgery May 10 at Children's Hospital In Los Angeles and remains in critical condition after more than a week of intensive care. At the time of the surgery, doctors gave the youngster a 20 percent chance of survival. The operation was performed lo repair three holes in the boy's heart and to restore normal blood flow to hia: lungs. Danny, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Jones of San Clemente, received the warm wishes of President Nixon prior to hls surgery. The visit was arranged by Police Chief Clifford Murray, who himse.lf re~ntly underwent such surgery. Krishnas Waive Trial by Jury Two Laguna Beach member• or the International Society or Kr 1 sh n a Consciousness have waived a jury trial in favor of presenting their case before a judge In South County Municipal Court June 4. The robed Hare Krishna chantera, cited in Laguna Be2ch March 13-for alleged1f blocking a sidewalk, appeared before Judge Richard Hamilton last week lo drop their original reque.st for a jury hearing. . liamilton set a new trial date of June 4 for Charles Christia11 Hansel Ill and Leroy Christopher Richards. A third member of the sect, cited with them, has left the state and a $40 bench warrant has been issued for his arrut. trad1tlonaUy the property of local judgment," according to the boafd presi· dent. People choose communiliea such as Laguna Bt:ach and Santa Monica because ol the communlty services give11, saya Taylor, and retired and modest income people could be forced lo sell and move from such communities if the new pro~ erty tax bill should pass. • "We cannot be insensitive," he will tell the legislators, "to the fact that California now ranks 24th in the nation, spending UO below the national average ef $839 per pupil. The property tax proposal. h i s statement for the legislative committees concludes, ts "an emotionally motivated 'Robin Hood' proposal thrown out to the public In the guise of 111 attractive bone at 1 time when re1l ind lasting solutions are sorely needed." "' Beat Rat Race In Comfy Cell RIVERSIDE (AP) -Sheriff's Sgt. Bob Matheny said he refused lo Jock up Michael Radoszynski when the 25 year old wiemployed cook came to County Jail and sur- rendered "because It's too tough on the outside." For one thing , the sergeant e:i· plained, Radoseynslti couldn't sui· rf:nder or gb to jail unless he had done something wrong. "Suppose J hit you,'' the out of work cook asked. "That,'' replied the 5ergeant. •1woold only create trouble for you." Whereupon, the sergeant says, the man struck him a glancing b\ow on the chin. The sergeant said he wri!stled the man to the floor and then took him up on his original offer. He b o o k e d Radoszynskl Monday f o r in· ve1tl1aUon or battery on a potice t>fflcer. Ball was set at 12.500. The sergeant said the man thanked him for ''doin& your duty." Oliver Miihous, who operated the 700.acre ~filhous boys ranch, 11aid • Monday he has not received an ln- vilatlon to the June 12 White J{ouse wedding of Nixon's eldest daughter. "No comment," was the response rrom lhe other cousin, Phillip Milhous. when asked if he h a d been invited. He created a na- tionwide stir in February when he revealed his famil y was on welfare.'---- Both cousins were Invited to Nix· :>n's inauguration in 1969 but neither attended. Corona del Mar Girl Hitchhiker Abducted, Freed A Corona de! Mar girl joined a long lls t of victims when she was abducteG and molested after hitchhiking a ride on Coast Highwa y Monday night, according to Newport Beach police. The l~year-old student told police she was hitchhiking from Laguna Beach to Corona del Mar at about 8 p.m. when she was picked up by the driver of a light yellow minibus. He drove her to her destination at r-.1arguerite Avenue and East Coast Highway, but she told police the man refused lo let her out of lhe car. According lo the victim , the man - described as being about 25 years old, five feet. nine inches tall and weighing 180 pounds -drove her around Corona del Mar. She told police Uie suspect parked the car several times at which times he would forcibly fondle her. After about one hour, the student was released by her abductor near her home where she went to notify police. Bonn Aide Injured BONN (UPI) -West German Foreign r-.1inister Walter Scheel and his wife suf- fered minor injuries when the official car they were riding in collided with a taxi Monday. The driver of the taxi died in the crash and his passenger suffered serious injuries. WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate eommittee approved legislation today lo stop the nationwide rails strike. The re:solution WQ.Uld order st riking signalmen back to work until at least Oct. 1, wh ile giving them an interim pay increase of 17.5 percent. The legislation, which was moved to the Senate noor for quick action, went far beyond legislation requested by President Nixon v.·ho asked only that the strikers be ordered back to work un!iJ July t while negoliations resumed. The proposed legislation approved by the Senate Labor Committee was in line v.·ith a similar settlement imposed by Congress in another nationwide rail · strike almost six months ago when four other unions were given pay increases or J3 percent. • The wage increase recommended by • the Senat e group would come <>ut to aboul ; 67 cents additionally an hour to highest· paid signalmen. The Senate action came as the House Commerce Committee considered similar ~ legislation, with congressmen making it clear they did not like the idea of being ~ strike breakers. .0 ;'We're getting fed up with U," Rep .. : Samuel Devine IR-Ohio), told Labor 1· Secretary James D. Hodgson during the e hearing. Rep. John Moss tD-Cal.), asked Hodgson whether the intervention or Congress was not "an impairment of col-1 lective bargaining." •( Congress gave reluctant priority to I.he q strike·stopping legislation proposed by I Nixon A1onday a few hours after the ·' Signalmen tied up the nation's rail passenger and freight service by selling up picket lines that members of other rail unions refused to cross. r Hodgson warned, in testimony before the House committee today, of "dqistlc effects" on the nation's economy If the q strike continued. :.. The vote in the Senate committee was 13 lo J. It took place in closed session and lt was not immediately clear who cast the lone vote. A Republica n, Sen . Jacob K. Javits (R· N.Y.). was one of the sponsors of the revised proposa l that clea red the com- mittee to go beyond Nixon·s July l da te and also to include a pay raise In the plan. New at Alden's Carpets \Ou'll never cry over spilt · milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! • ' • • • -. "' " lm1glne! Your CMn dining rccm wilh all the luxury, beauty &nd warmth of carpetlng ... wtthout ever having to worry •bout overturned glasse.s, dropped f.rav'f dishes or choco-- late cake crumbs! Chances are, you've dreamed of such carpet fOf years -carpet that CCIUld go from $0Up to nuts and never shCVf a spill, a stain or a spot. And If JOU're 1 wmn V.:. chlldren seem to get more food on the 1ioor than In thMr mouths, ordinary carpet just couldn't do the )ob. But now, you don't haw to dream about it any more. We ctn't walt to see the look on your face when we shcM' )U1 what tltfs amazing carpet can do! lt's Mohawk's STATURE •.. carpet pile made with 100% Acrllan• acryl ic ffbtr! And It resists practlea11y evet)'thlnl but !dmlrlng glances! Its velvety-smooth texture ls plush and elegant, wllh highlights usually found only In expen- sive carpets. Yet It's so ea sy to care for. Even )f 1 stain goes deep down and dries up, it'll still come out-leaving STATURE looking good as new l We·~ got STATURE.in many superb-designs aod-deep- dyed, exciting colors. French Provincial furniture? We'vt got a French Provincial pattern. Modem fumiture? We've lilOl a modern pattern, too. Just name your der.IJ and we've got the carpet to go with It ... $1270 for only a square yard ' Se11 Clo1111•11 .. Offk• )05 Norlli El C1Mi110 Atlf, 92671 OttrieT Offlc" Uil• MtOI ' SlO WtU l ov llrHI l<ltWfl&N ltocll: UJJ NIWPllrl t &u: .... trd Mu~11no10o't •11(11: 11t11 l11cft a ou11v1N Senio1· Class Gift 01\.'d: (Ask sbOut our .. sy payment planQ Come ln todar, see an theothlr MOhawk carpets 'IW!'re feetur1nr- (l!'le forevery room in)'OUrhomt. Or, call us for our convenient shop.at-home service! 1)411..'V P IJ.OT, ""'~ ..... IV> lo UIMlllH .... N1W1·•rn1. 11 ...,..1111•• •111, '"'''' ,_ •1y lri lt~l'l1t •t•~ '" l..ll'UM ltl(ll. Hl•W• ... (fl. ( .. 11 MtU, MIWll!ftt!Wft e.,1111, Jtu11!1\ll Volley, II~ ("-It / (1"'11"-1r• 11 ... lltKt, l le't wlf!o - retle'lt ! ldll ..... l'tillCl"I "'""' .... 'llOf ll t i Jolt W•I lty llrtt,, C..11 Mell. 1.i.,1tt .. 111~1 641-4111 C~fft4 A'-"tatlllf '4J0J 67a ... ClefNtlfe An o.,.,_"I t.~ ..... •9J-441a L..t••• leMti AH D.......,.1 l•~,.HM 4f4·f466 eo,l'l'ltl\I, 1fll, Ort,... (OUI Pu"loll•~"" (i.lrltl11,, No .... I '"'"'' lll ... tt1tl911>. H itWlel lfltllW' Ot 1•Y..,,IMlflt~t1 _,..,~~ 11'111 Mt re9"'fW• WI"""" -Ill ,.,. mi.1:'11 • C#'/'l'lf!ll -• ._.... et.11 "'MH tt:.tl •I H._,, l•K~ t l'IOI c:..11 M•t, c111•...,11, •'*'·'!"'°" .., c11111f' tl.U _.,..,111 .... ""'!I U,11 "*'*i.-l ll\IUIOJY •111!1Mli«!J, ii ti -"'IT_. • Painting of School Sign Plans for the senior class gift to Sin Clemtnt.e H I g h School hive b e e n una.nimously approved by trustee• of the Cspistrano Unified School District. The gift. outlined r-.fonday by senior class president John Russell. will be a painting of the school emblem and the v.·ords of the alma m•ter. The paintirli will-be...done. on lhe we.st side of the gymnasium on the ln11lde so that it will be vlllble p1rUcularly during lndoor athltt.:lc competitions. Lttttra form ing the words of the 1\ma mater wlll be 10 feet high 11nd will com· prise 10 lines. Above It wlU J>e the school tmbltm palnttd I& feet ac_roll_and 20 fett high. • "The last class left a pta ce Jymbo1 because that Is what \\'IS Important to them." said Russell. "OUr class would like to le•ve what we feel is impcrtant - school pride and spirit." The CO!l of the project will be SSQO. Half will be bomt by the senior cl1ss and the other half by lbt Girls' Le1gue. ,. A commtrclal alan painter h11 been hired 10 do the work which ~ esUmated 1663 l'lacentla Ave. AL D EN' s ""'• •••. au••• to take approximately t"'o weekJ. TU$TIN c.n .•• "\\1e'd llke to be1in IO we can aee It COSTA MESA 4lDEN'S JllD HILL C4•nn before we leave,'' said Ruuell. 646-4IJS a. DR.arr•11s The "nlor cl•ss was compllmenled by CARPETS • DRAPES "'" •~''" '""L c.n1. tl:le. bQ1rd of trustees for their choice of 1 111.1144 gift 1-------=-----'------,.-, ---~~~~~~~~ ' I I I . . • : . ' ' ' ·' • • ,, .• ; ' ! • 1 ~I I ' . ·-..... ..:~ .. ., . ~"":"''~."f" .... ·~l!!l"'.1:"' j' • • , . ' ,. • • . ' . , • , . Laguna Beae1-.-, Today's F lnaJ·. I N.Y. Stocks I EDI T.ION ·~ VOL M, NO. 118, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·. • TUESOAY,'·~><!( ll,"19.71" TE N CENTS Laguna By PATRICK BOYLE Of t1M D•llr fl'llet SlfH The grim piclure of little Johnny walk- ing five miles throuch the snow to school each day may almost become a reafity in Laguna Beach next year. The snow won 't be there but, following ~!onday evening's budget study session by the school board, it became evident that the buses might not be there either. The $3.6 nlillion expenditures being CQllSidered by the men1be.r board is to be balanced with the projected income -at • 'j· ,· • ,_ • ' • Eye Busing ~JJudget Slash the present tax rat~ on1y $3.1 milli~ school election ·.ad fID )p,~e ~be .~ School board president Larry Ta~~/ June 30, added "l!m ~) ¥.'oq t have .to pointing out this difference indicated the make the decision of *here. to. make the· possibility o( a .fO.c:ent property ta:i cuts." incre,ase per $100 of as~ssed valuation The two neWly etectel. board' members lo balance the lopsided budi•L who will have lo help mob deeillom, Taylor noted that pupil transportation Patricia Gillette and Gerald Lb)ke, were costs the district about •120,000 jler year not present-1t U;te •~Y ••· .OUI)' and said thi.! was one expenditure which one citizen, teKber ftprtst1'f.aYve --~ cauld be slash~ in favor <I malntainin1 Myszalt, attended· t~,~tinl: : _ existing educatiol)ll.l programs. ~e. •b9 Accordina: ~to ~rit,s He11, diJtrlet suggested the athletic program as a po.so-bl.lsiness superintendent, the majQr sible candidate fort~ bUd1et cutting ax. reasons for the proposed increases in .ez- Taylor, who was defeattd i'n the recent ptndltures are teacher ·incNmeat: PIY r:aJ,Jef, the adopted staffing ratio, a M,w bUI &nd the.purchase of property at ·Top cif the World. Hess said teachers' rtgular pay raises caqse ·•· bullt.-ln Jncrea.se of about $85,000 each year. 'Ibis is usually offttt, t»e noted,, by an annual three percent ~ ~ruae,ln ~ valuat.io~ of property witblB the district. The new assessed value of the district is JIOt yet known. i The 11a19ng raUo adopted by the 15Chool tioard in' the •fall or 1970 wU1 cost an act. _""dttlonal M0,000 lo the tleme[ltary .schools. ht noted. • The pupll/llaff.ralio •t the elementary trot ovenpendlng by the schools becat11t scboola .wu lowertd from 25.4 to J4 staff thert would be no extra money. members for each 1tudent. He said that from now on, any The purt.hase of land at Top Or the purchase order from a school department World will 'COit about '75,000, he said, and which runs over its budgeted account will tile new bul.Ji _..~. . he rejecled. Heu-po1nted.out~th1t' for ·the pa.st few 'The school board wnl meet several ye&rJ. lhe di.strict~ atw11•1 had. tunm-in more times during the next few month• reltfW, to fall bact on 1f needed, but to discuss the budget. A tentaUve list Ol those fUl}ds hive been· depleted. expenditures and income must be submit In·~·not havln1 the · reserve funds · ted to the county schools office by July t anymore, Hess said, . the school ad-and the board mWJt adopt the fina1 mlnlstraUon would ~ better able to eon-budget by Aug. 10. ~ • ·e IVe on L agut1ayrh 1s ly Phll .lntorlandl Poster ·Girl Okay After 'F;:ran~plant . . Oranfe C.U.ty Eje Bok 1171 P«tier Gltl Becky Rogers, 4, 1'ill bave.a•tpeelaf outing S~turday, oM Week; after receivtnc a c:Omta tr~Jarit.' ~at sbauid m~an normal vision. -• • 1~ .. Ont;pio ...U.;11 ~d·llJ,.,l1a•lll u late. • .... . . ~~lr;.:'t.~Li I. V_iejo, la Coii\li>i oJOni ftlle 1t !t Albl , (:omp\unl1y HoOP.illl where llle·deltcate IW'IUY was. performed: "She wru ba•e to remain e~tremely . quiet for lour ,or . ftve ctays,". a holpJtaJ: spokesman said today. " _, Newport Police . Nab · 2 Suspects By JOAN'Nl!: REYNOLDS get Ranson to respond to t h t Ir Of .... .,...,.. '"" ..... • .., -;o --orders, Jacobs crawled around the side or ·Newport 8'•~.P911Ce.e.arly ~Y cap. 'the building and grabbed·the suspect. Ife tured two 1ua~ they .~lalm btkl nine said they 'f0und three people who had pel'IOnl eaptive all nliht·IO a k>cal motel, been held. in the room. beat one or more of the vlCtlmi and attc.. Police apprehended ?>.foore .as he ap.- ed another acrop the' neck with a knlle. parently attempted to sneak out or an ~ , .~fore ~ auspec:.ts wtr~ 'pprehended, jacent room In whicb ·two mort ptnOQI Officeri from Cotta Mt1a' ~ called to ,,~,-"",.~_,:/Jin: ;Jlq ~. l!lil w,.. held capUvo, • i'P!'I!'-.~ ~ "Iba Newport h<tlcopi.ir c:mr spotW ., ' I " • ~ ' ' · Jlfo more people hidina .about CM block ~'. .. .I!'~~ ~ away Jn the area of the Rlvenide Driv1 ' • " .. :. .... ...i. p-0111 id )Ill c11ar,.S"Ot olOGnai>in• or\ ' -· co. Bruce Dale M'oort; Jf., 11. of Bl'ldwin Jacobs said the two have been identf· Part and hii alleged companion ..fn tht fied as victims who had also managed to crime ~. · Teri'y' Lff RansOn,· 23, 'of escape and who had apparently been South WhUUer. · ' · beaten . Newport deteCtlve Sam Amburgey said A search or the rooms turned up tile in addltlon 'to lh8 1kldnaplite aha'rge , he knife assertedly used on the bleedinl will seek 01T1plalnt1•11alnst the pair ad· vlcUm. Ofrletr1 aa id they found no: guns ditionally charging tnem with armed rob. "You and That View. I Wish You'd Look at Me l ike That Once :in Aw hil e!" Discharge Is• ·scheduled Friday and Beckj'-: an bonorifY. chalnnan· or the Colo de Ciza Classlc Hor,;, Show -will be able to ·attend the equestrian event brieOy on Sotunlay. , Geor.ge 'Jenel, the "toastmas- ter:•, .4eneral or the Unite.d Sta~e&,' will appe,ar (or. a l~c­ twe at .Saddleback College Tb und.ay arternoon. See story' 'P•i• 19. bery ancj 1uault ~I~ a deadly weapon. or money. One aupeet aJIO · 1atts. charsts of Investigation In the ca·se was just ~ It -1 &Inning thla morning u detectives u.,. 1ssau ag1lnllt a t"'11ce officer. raveled the series of events leading to Ibo New Lagm1a City Attorney To Give Higl1 ~se OpiI1io11 The show ·opens Thursday at the a· clUAi'Ve rvral club· nur·Trabuco Canyon. with 500.entriet In 44 events and proceeds benefiting ·the MW Orange County Ey• Bank. Becky's ri&hl •1/-WU gr1du11ly being destroJed by corileal clouding and the desperate hunt for a transplant WU reaching the ·polnl of• !utility -n one became available. By BARBARA KREIBlCH Of tM 0111,. 1"1191 '''" t..aguna·s new city attorney Tully ;evmour will find himself juggling a hot xiiato \Vedncsda.v night. even before he lfficially takes office. RetirinJ! city attorney J ack Rimel said \1onday thal he asked Seymour to make 1 recommendation to the city council on the controversial high r ise initiative and :o al1end the \Vedncsday meeting, since he \\'ill be inherllin~ the problem when he takes ofrice after Rime\'s t-.1ay 31 retire- m t:--- First item on lhc evening agenda qs preseqtation of the city clerk's certificate or sufficien<".y of signatures on the in· !tiati\'C petitions. City clerk Dorothy Musfell will formally advise the council that at least ta percent of the city's registered voters 6igned petitiohs seeking passage of an ordinance that would limit building height to 36 feet or three stories. ActuaUy the verified s I g n al u re s number 3.049, or 44 percent of the registered voter9, but 15 percent is deem- ed sufficient to requi re council action on lhc proposed legislation. Under the initiAlive procedure, lhe council now should either adopt the pr<r posed ordinance or call a special election on the matter in not less than 74 nor more than 89 days. to adopting the ordinance or calling an election, the council could, by minute m~ tion. either table the matter or postpone furthe r diacussion indefinitely. Tanpny Jo Medley. 11 died Saturday "'bile W)dergoing heart surgery at Children 's Jfospitat _or Orange County. Her parents agreed to donation of the child's COrr)eaS, ~th qne going to Btcky and the other being flown Saturday night to an unidentified recipient in Fairbank!, Alaska. Asked to inlerprete these alternatives, Rimel sAid Monday, ''They are from Tully <Seymour). Since he will be hand l· ing this particular matter, I will refer it Tammy Jo was the daughter of Atr. to him \Vednesday night." and Mn. Duane Wendler, of 5211 fo.fll'Cella Ave., Cypress. The longtime Laguna attorney added, "I'm just glad there w.as somtthl"' she "Incidentally, he's a very' good man, I'm ,, gfad he'll be working for the city." co~ld do to help aomtOne, Mn. Wend~er . . said Monday of 'hmmy'1 eye tluut 11v-lf adopted either by the-elly-.cl~=w,.~ 1 ~ 14 ,.. In the process of an election, the height joy normal vi&loa limitation ordinance cmlld oot be amend-' ed or rtpealed except by a majority vote Her eyea were clouded by teara. of the electorate. Presumably, If the council failed t.o take action on the inltiaUve, Its pro- ponents would be obliged to take the City to court to setlle the matter. Opinion on the .council at this point seems divided, with some councilmen refusing to commit themselves in ad- vanct of the Wednesday session, al least one leaning toward immediate adoption of the ordinance and another strongly favoring calling a special election. . Plantaers Meet Texans May Go 'Wet' of~~:~~ <:;>~1!'J'~fu!! moro than 1 ball century qo. Since ·the• cocktalla cOllld only be purt:hased in prl\'ate dubs. All that mai chanse today a1 resident.a of 41 Tuai dounUes voted whether to pennit open QJoou Jn their preclnct.s •. It was the last step in· brinrina liquor by Ille drlnio lo Mu. IDgl1 Rise Ban In Newport Gets Exteruii()n The t~·o were arrested at the motel on North Newport BouleYml. after two of ~ests. thetr alleged vldfnu. -r e I e a s e d Amburgey said neither IUlped. ha.ti reportedly to find drufs for the men _ been ahot, but Ranson did have a ban: flaged down Newport .Offloer Jim dage on hla back. "The two people who Jacobs a1 about 4:30 a.m. · · stopped Jaeobs were shown the bandaie and·told the suspects haa to have some "They aald thett .w:•re·two rnen in the &:1¥ (barbiturates) or he would die," bi motel who ,!old them llley .had jllll c:om• d mftled' .. mned robbery In saiill Ana •al · and ont: )lad been' shot. Santa Ana police dkl not ?'!Port e ·~-Id ·~ · oth I armed robbery in their clty Monday · • ucy 11 wn::re wue er peop e night, but a Tic '.l'oc: market was held up The Newport Beach City Codncil :P..ton-being held captive/' Officer Jacobs relat-, there about two days ago, a check with dav. night extended the city's shoreline ed this mornlll1. th •de rim t I d N ll " Units· from Newport. and Colla ittsll a11 pa en revea e · ewport po ce high rise building .ban six months, Instead ,,.,_ ,_1 r were checking with Santa Ana to of the anticlpa"ted three, when rw;..;enls quickly s'UrrOW1ded UIOI: moic as one 0 deteimine if Moore and Ranson ·matched . and developers allke urged more in-depth t~e vlctlmi led Jacobs to the rooms the description of the Santa Ana bandits. \ scrutiny or proposed building controls. where the captives were being held. A bu 'd '1•~ Ir II di •~• "About that Ume, a man came out of · m rgey 1181 an:: pa a ege t ~~• At the same Ume, the council agreed to the window ol ..., of ,.0 rooms. Ho had Into a different motel on North Ne~ resurrect at least par't.a · or several ui at about 3 a m They reporledly I •" been beaten -kicked In the side and · · en er 1.1 Newp0rt Tomorrow study committees to . d the room occupied by Paul Eric .. review proposals advanced by the Ulwer groin -and was blftdlng from a woun Grimshaw and David Andrew Johnstone N.wport Bay Civic Dl.stri·c1 stu"'· -m-on his neck where the a.ssailants both 18 ho 1 1 • u.r -.v assertedJv held the knife " the otlioer . , w were s eep ng at the time. mlttee. . . "' ' "Using a broken beer bottle and a • The extension came after ~arly an said. 1witchblade knife the suspects robbed tJ:1e hour of public tesUmony'whicb· featured Or.ders from the pol~ to vacate the lwo men of $4 and forced them t accom~ an endorsement of . the-extenskHJ-'.!.for a-room11_braught J!:aOM0 lo -the door,·~ -pany:1hem to'"'tht-smn<1-moJ..... ~ yea r or two, If needed," by Richard parently unarmed. burgey said. ' Sleytn1, executtve vice' prefident ol the "They were telling hlm to come out At the second motet _ the one where Ba\bba Bay Clu~.. ~ . with .tits ha~ UP'ir h\Jl he..J11st,atood-tbere. the capture took place -the pair · Stevefll .~ criticism op the civic We think now he 11 a deaf-mute," Jacobs reportedly confronted Ge0ffrey William district plan as It stands, contending it said. Greene 21 and allegedly rorc:ed hlm into "lrlel to be all things to all people." While shotglln·anhed offlttta tried to the ~ •e Ramon was flnllly cap- "More dialogue ls needed, mor.e tured. alternatives must ~ found ," Stevens Because o! the preliminary state of tM sakf, adding, "I don't care if It takes OJ1e Fi'.re-damag~ Investigation, it was not clear today year or two years." . where the other victims were located and Sle\lens, whose pending expansion of what their names are. the Bay Club 'Is probably most responsl-W Bed Le ks ble for triggering the moratorium three ater a ; months ago, lat.er confided the threat,, of an Initiative to ban high-rise e<>mplelely, S•'u·d·1•0· Sna· · ked Influenced his remarks. ~ v "'e•iher Sample resoluUons for both procedures are included dn the agenda. Also included Is the cily 1J13na&er's rccommendllliori step-by-step action : ac- Cl'('ll the clerk's verification; obtain legal council by cll y ilttorney: entutaln public discussion, submit to council debate; entertain motions for aclion. Gr-oup The~apy-Bi_d ~~i.x~~ Water castadtn1 from 1 beat-damaged water bed was b!amtd by, Laauna .Beach rirem~n,for .mqst ef ~ daniqe In 1 pre- dawn fir< todf!1. The bl11:e1 was conllnec). to 1 bedroom upstaltl over the studio of artist David R--al.-l lJ" -&t111 111Ch1tay, rq-.men aid. iiJ1 ,~ beal clillld. tli• waler bed IO ••l'rint.a ltak llittli mulllnC water dlmCi to tbe.do1'nst.1lr1 studio. Patthy fog and low clouds wm greet Wednesday weather watch- ers. with cooler tempe.rature1 pre- vailing· along'the coan. Hlfti ttail- lngs will ht n locafly aM 14 fu/lhtr Inland. Anolher attachment to the agenda l1cm . identified as recommendations by the city attorney, notes that. in addition Douglas Gets Tuneup WASHINGTON <UPI) -Supreme Court JUBlice Wlll h\m 0. Douglas was reported ln excellent condition at Walter Reed Arm)· Medical Center loday afttr undergoing 1 minor adjus1mcnt on his electronic cardlac p~cemaker. ls a tea party Jeu otftmlvt than 1n en. cwnter sroup? ~ As far as L1pna Beach plannln1 com- missioners 1tt concerned it ls. Commissionefl Monday night approved a variance for a borne china palnt!ng seS.'llon and denied 1 home occupation use for encounter aessions. Airs. Bemeae Lloyd of 1$55 Skyline Drive won a year extension to hold one thina palnUng clas1 per w'eek In 1 residential zone, s\ibject t• annu.11 review. On the 1d•let ef Pl1nnlng Director Wayne Moody, planners turned down a I • bid by Dr. Ronafcf Levy;. prore-of psycbolos>', lo <OllCjllct --•PY ---In 'nf&ltts • -•t hll ttsldeoct al 1210. C0rtoz. "We bavt been dlligenrlll flc\"<reaUon of trtfllc Jn · .D!oldeotlll dbtrlcls," deCl•l'td ·dJmn-' <\llltm•n W~lllm Lambolll'llt,' "ud 1 ·re.i Uils request llretCbel it Out •of P.pt.. N ' Com.missioner Jam'9 Scbmlll added proO~makJng ~lpY ~Ions are 1et- tlnt 1way froO. Ille purpose or home ... cupatlon pe.rmtts. · "I think 11111 b.1 bus\Jlell and 1hould·be conducted Jn a commtlc1aJ 100t/' he .. 1ah!. ~· 'SptafMc In defense ol llM! ~ppllcollon. Georc• QUlM .uid therapy sessions are quieter tban the .average pal'!] t are bel4 1\ J11Pt Jn , o' -rtmot. . section ot , Ardl • ~~ IJel&hls. Irie! Ulm are nev;er "'°"! lbdn tbl'.:et or four cal"J per seu:fon~ · Qulnn.N~lbeil tncciuntor 1loups " a nttd<d lunctlon for peopU Uiroagb "technlqoe and ~lsc:usslbn" to better under1tand one another. · · FoOowlnr 1 motion by' planner Carl Johnson that Intensity of use. w0uld be areater than that or china painting, com- mluloneta lllrntd down tb< roqutsL ' Ali. unattended tandle '4rblch Mj Wiii hlnglop oo lire apparently lllrt<d llle 2,30 1.m.· blne, Fino OUd Jim Latlm<r uld. ·• ·-_ . The bedroom "" "1'led to -mian1 Philip ~on. R ..... ~-of UM pro- ~ oc<uptn 1f1'11&r•lt,but!dlnt1D UM rear. • • Damage lo COQW)flb of1the bUlldlng was estimated ' at $4,~. plus ftOO to art works, but ' eltlmate ef,dam1;t to the bulldlng 1lhlcture hod not been e<>m- pleted early today. The Ore Utelf w11 contained Jn 10 mlnutt1, LaUme.r tald, but Ci<lllHlp took two IM>ilrl, . . ' INSIDE TODAY Thnt'1 lot of living theater around the Orange Coaic arcq. and three local productions art retnewed todafl. Sit Bntcrtain- mei1t, Paat1 10.20. I' • ' I v ~ . I DAILY fllLOT Swim Pools Reque sted For Schools By PAMELA HALLAN OI fflt Dtllr "llM lt•ll Two 1w1mmlng pools -one at .:;an Clemente High School and the other at the new Dana Hills High School -have been P.N>postd for conatruction. 1be 'recommendatJon wa& made Mon- day to Truatets of the Captstrano Unified School Plltrlct by Erle Johnson, special consultant for the State ~partment of Education. Johnsorl his been studying the district's recreaUoa needs for the past nine months. ~ Capi!trano district was one of t~10 diJtrlcta In the st.ate selected for 1 Community J'KJ"91lion stdy. •·The most immediate need within the ochool dlairlct la for swimming pools," aald JohnaOn, ln his report to the school board. "It is recommended that a special county service district be established" on a school district basis for the purpose of obtaJnlng $450,000 for th~ construction of two 50 meter swimming pools." The report suggests that financing for the project could be obtained by forming a county special service area along the bouodarla of the school district.. The aspeclal aervice area could then levy a tax ol 10 cents per $100 aueued valuation for the duraUon of three years. Dr. Robert Beasley, school board chairman, asked if the school board should initiate the formation of the service area. "I think it would be appropriate if the board did thla lhrouah ita recreation committee," said Johmon. The consultant suggested that the district either make their temporary recreation committee permanent or 11elect a new one. ~erving on th! committee have been Jack Snipes and George Be 11 e w , Capistrano Be1ch Parks and Recreation Dlstrict; Al Arps and Don Jeisy, San Juan Capistrano Parks and Recreation: Gordon SutorJWJ, Dana Point Yacht Club; Vinet Winnlnghoff and Stan Weintraub, Laguna Niguel: Phil Qlarlton, Mission Viejo Company and Ellie Mear, San Clemente Parks and Recreation. • Johnson suggested that the Capistrano Unified School District should move to establish re.creation services as a cooperative v.nture between it and ex· bting ttere1tlon agencies. He furthe r atated that the CUSD should blro a; rter,.Uoo dltt<:tor to h .. d the oommunit)'1tide recreatlon commilt.et and th1l the committee ahould meet witlr the c~ and w\tb other qenc\u to develop Jong· r1nge plans for community recreation instead of merely responding to specific requests~ Financing the program could be done by continuing to levy a 10 cenl tax through the educalion code's civic ctn I er and recreation program. The program also could use extra com· munlty service funds, monies collected from feea for recreation services and various fonns of atate aid, and possibly fu ture special service district taxes. County Tot Dies In Family Pool A 2-year-old Orange girl M0nday Dight was an apparenl drowning victim in the family swimming pool. Victoria Guzman of 2308 N. Sacramento St., was found noatlng face down in the backyard pool, the coroner's o f f i c e reported. The child was discovered by her mother, Bonnie. A fire department rescue team gave emergency treatment but the little girl was pronounced dead at Chapman General Hospital. An autopsy is pending. ' OIANOI C:OAIT DAILY PILOT OllANG'Q'. CO.UT' PUllll~l!lC. C0M'AN'I" lt•D•rt N. w •• d Prn ll:ltllt tl'>ll 'lllllL\11tr J1ck It. Cwrltv Vk• 'rnlottoll .... ~ti MtntW l\o•m t l l<tt~il IEfl!OI' Tho"''' A. Mu•p~iftt Ml"tfl"' IEll,.. Clr.trltt M. Loci• .. ich 1rd '· Nill "UitlOl" MIMDlrtf f.•lt .. 1 L.,w11• It.ell Oflk 1 222 fci11JI A•t ftU t M~ili~g tdllren; P.O. l ot 666, '16~1 S111 Cl1"'nt1 Offk 1 l D1 Nodh (I Ctmi~o lt11!, t2672 Otlllf Offlc11 (.°''' M•U· :U0 WMI la'i S+r"'I NcwP0-1 111t~· UlJ Nt"'~' 1 ... :1v1rd 11111111,.tO!l 1111(~: 11111 aNo;ll aovi.vlfd Tuesdl7, M17 l8, llj71 - • 300 Men Seek 1 Fire1na1i Job CIU It a sign of the time• or 1n unusual Interest in !~• flghtln&, either way It w11 oVerwbeJmln& uld PllctnUa city offlclab. More thaa 300 men have applied for one openlna ln lhe PlacenUa Fire Department and will take a special test Friday and Saturday. Offici als said applicants were from all walks of life in cluding aerospace workers and former servic:emen. Joaquin Board Considering Two Sessions Truslees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District will again wrestle with the question of double sessions at Wed· nesday's 7 p.m. meeting in the Administrative AMex, 14600 S11nd Canyon Ave., East Irvine. But the question won't be whether or nol to have two sessions -only where. Two plans have emerged as the only f~aslble solutions to the problems of overcrowding in the Intermediate schools. Ckle is to place Irvine School elemen-' tary children on double sessions while re- taining a regular session for the seventh and eighth graders who al.so attend school on the East Irvine campus. The other Is to send all the in- termediate school children to the La Paz campua in Mission Viejo for double sessions which will occur regardless or v.1hether or not the Irvine students come. In the event of the latter, the elemen- lary classes at Irvine would retain a single session. Parents attending a workshop last week favored the first solution. They said they would prefer having the elementary grades on double sessions at Irvine School to avoid busing their older children Ill the way to Mission Viejo. Trustees have asked the administration to prepare cost estimates for both plans. They agreed with parents who didn 't want Irvine children to be spread betwl!!en the morning and afternoon sessions in Missiori Viejo. but will now look lo see which of the plans is the least expensive. Two new intermediate schools will be compleled by the ·end of next yea.r. Ont • will house all the ·inl.etmedlate studenll from Irvine and the other will be for children in the El Toro area. The admlni1tration has planned lo epeu these schoob as soon as they are com- pleted. even if only a few months of school remain. They also plan lo staff the intermediate schools on the basis of June 1972 enroll· ment estimates, instead of September eatimates, so that the ratio between students and teachers is In balance. Flood District Speaker Slated An official with the Orange County Flood Control District will be the featured speaker at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the regular meeting of the Capistrano Beach Community Association. Herb Nakasone, dJrector of projects for the district, will discuss the current pro- jects in the area and will outline possible plans for the future . -1 The meeting will be held at 26941 Camlno de Estrella, and the public is in- vited to attend. Funeral Rite-s Held For Burt Beverstoek Privat& funeral services hae been held for San Clemente rEsident Burt H. Beverstock, a retired cement company executive who died Sunday aL the age of 80. Mr. Beverstock, oC 109 Paseo de la Seranata, had lived In the communily for the past 16 years. He is survived by his wife, Gladys; a son, Robert of Ohio; a daughter. Mary Johnson of Florida and five grandchildren. .. ~ to Sacramento Nixon Cousins Not Invited? Law Okayed · Laguna Offjcials . To End Pr.otesting Tax C~ V ,U.LEY, Calif. 1 llP!l - Tricia Nixon's wedding lnvitatJon list failed to lnclude the name of at\ least one of Presldtnt Nixon's two rouslns • living In rural Nevada County. Rail Strike Two Lagun a Beach school officials Dew to Sacramento today In an attempt to head off a statewide property tax pro- posal that would boost the Laguna tax rate by $1.42 per $100 of assessed valua· tlon. School board president Larry Taylor and Superintendent William Ullom were acheduled to appear before the Assembly committee .on education this afternoon and the Senale committee on education tomorrow morning. Taylor is one of four spokesmen for school districts throughout the atate in- vitt.d to speak before. the two legislative committees. The ty,·o Lagunans bad trekked to the capital in March to confer with Slate School Superintendent Wilson Riles on the controversial measure wbich would Im· pose a statewide property tax of $3.75 per $100 of assessed valuation, supplanting local school taxes. Tbe money thus raised would be distributed throughout the state on a per student basis. While an estimated 90 percent of the state's school districts would benefit financially from the plan, the remaining 10 percent, including Laguna Beach, and Capistrano Beach, representing so-called "wealthy" di stricts, would find themselves with insuf!icient funds. Laguna would have to increase its lax rate by $1.42 while the Capistrano rate would need an additional 20-cent levy. In his presentations in Sacramento, Taylor will reiterate his argument that the proposed legislation would produce only one-fifth of the revenue needed by the state's school districts, or $100 million. The remaining $400 million, would have to come from increased state income and sales tax. "Are you, are elected representatives, prepared to in- crease taxes to meet the comrnitmenu or this bill,'' he will ask the legislators. Cit~ng the cases of Utah, Florida and Texas, Taylor maintains that statewide tazes have not provided quality education but are "a means of taking fWay local control and entering the prt>perty tax: arena wheer the local taxpayer would not have an opportunity to vote." The bill also would open the door to state entry into regulatory porcedure i11· valving curriculum, class size, textbooks and other educational p o 11 c l es Little Nixon Pal Not Improving After Operation There bas been no improvement in the condition of four-year-old Danny Jones. The little San Clemente boy underwent open heart surgery May 10 at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles and remains in critical condition after more than a week of intensive care. At the time of the surgery, doctors gave the youngster a 20 percent chance of surv ival. The operation was performed to repair three holes in the boy's heart and to restore normal blood flow to bis lungs. Danny, the son of P.1r. and Mrs. Dennis Jones of San Clemente, received the warm Wishes of President Nixon prior to his surgery. The visit was arranged by police Chief Clifford Murray. who himself recently underwent such surgery. Krishnas Waive Trial by Jury Two Laguna Beach members of the International Society of K r I s h n a ConsciousneSl!i have waived a jury trial in favor of presenting their case before a judge in South County Municipal Courl June 4. The robed Hare Krishna chanters. cited Jn Laguna Beach March 13 for allegedly blocking a sidewalk. appeared before Judge Richard Hamilton last week to drop their original request for a jury hearing. Hamilton set a new trial'dale of June 4 for Charles Chri.stia11 Hansel Ill and Leroy Christopher Richards. A third member of the sect. cited with them. has le fl the stale and a $40 ~bench ~·arrant has been issued for his arrest. traditionally the property ol. local Judgment," accordina to the board presi· dent ' People choose commwiltle&i such as Laguna Beach and Santa Monica beeause ol the community services give1, aays Taylor, and retired and modest income people cwld be forced to sell and move from such rommunilies if the new prop- erly lax bill should pass. "We cannot be insensllive," he will tell the legislators, ''to the fact that CaJlfomia now ranks 24th in the nation, spending UO below the national average ef $839 per pupil . The property tax proposal. h i ll statement for the legislative committees concludes, ls "an emotionally motivateG 'Robin Hood' proposal thrown out to the public in the guise of lfl attractive bone at a time when real and lasting solutions are sorely needed." Ollver Milhous, who operated the 700.acre Milhous boys ranch, said Monday he hes not received an in- vitation to the June 12 \Vhite House wedding of Nixon's eldest daughter. "No comment," was the response from the other cousin. Phillip Milhous, when asked if he had been invited. He created a na- tionwide stir in February when he revealed his family was on welfarl'. Both cousins were invited to Nix· on's jnauguralion in 1969 but neither attended. Corona del Mar Girl Hitchhiker • Abducted, Freed \VASHINGTON (U PI) -A Senate committee approved legislation today to stop the nationwide rails strike. The resolution would order striking signalmen back to ..,.,.or k until at leasl Oct. I. while giving them an interim pay Increase of 17.5 percent. The legislation, which was moved t.o the Senatr. noor for quick action, v.•ent far beyond legislation requested by President Nixon who asked only that the strikers be: ordered back to work until July I while negotiations resumed. The proposed legislation approVed by the Senate Labor Committee was in line With a similar settlement imposed by Congress in another nationwide rail strike almost six months ago when four other unions were given pay increases of 13 percent. Beat Rat Race In Comfy Cell A Corona de! Mar girl joined a long list of victims when she was abducted and molested after hitchhiking a ride on Coast Highway Monday night, according to Newport Beach police. The wage increase recommended by 1 the Senate group would come out to 1:1bnut ;; 67 cents additionally an hour to hlghest- paid signa lmen. RIVERSIDE (AP) -Sheriff's Sgt. Bob Matheny said he. refused to lock up Michael Radoszynski when the 25 year old unemployed cook came to County Jail and sur· rendered "because it's too tough on the outside." For one thing, the sergeant ex- plained, Radoszynsk.i couldn't sur· render or go to jail unless he h.ad done !Omething wrong. "S uppose I hit you," lhe out of work cook asked. "That," replied the sergeant, "would only create trouble for you ." Whereupon. the sergeant says, the man struck him a glancing blow on the chin. The sergeant said he wre!l.led the man to the floor and then took him up on his original offer. He b o o k e d Radoszynski Monday f o r in- vestigation or battery on a police officer. Bail was seL at $2,500. The sergeant said the man thanked him for ''doing your duty ." The IS-year-old student told police she was hitchhilting from Laguna Beach to Corona del ~1ar al about a p.m. when she was picked up by the driver of a light yellow minibus. He drove her to her destination at Marguerite Avenue and East Coast Highwa y, but she told police the man refused to Jet her out of the car. Aro:irding to the victim, lhe man - described as being about 25 years old, five feet , nine inches tall and weighing 180 pounds -drove her around Corona de! Mar. She told police the suspect parked the car several limes a~wblch times he would forcibly fon~le r. After about one ho , the student was released by her abduc or near her home where she went to notify police. Bonn Aide Injured BONN (UPI) -West German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and his wife suf- fered minor injuries when the official car they were riding in collided with a t.axi Monday. The driver of the taxi died in the crash and his passenger suffered serious injuries. The Senate action came as the House Commerce Committee coni;idered ~imilar legislation, with congressmen making Jt clear they did not like the idea of being strike breakers. "\Ve're gelling red up with it," Rep. Samuel Devine IR-Ohio), told Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson during the hearing. Rep. John A1oss (0-Cal.), asked Hodgson whether the Intervention o( Congress was not "an Impairment of col- lective bargaining." Congress gave reluctant priority to the strike-stopping legislation proposed by Nixon Monday a few hours after the Signalmen tied up the nation's rail passenger and freight service by setting up picket lines that members of other rail unions refused to cross. . Hodgson warned, in tcslimony before the House committee today, of "drastic effects" on the nation's economy If the strike continued. The vote in the Senate committee wa s 13 to I. It took place in closed session and it was not immediately clear who cast the Jone vote. A Republica n, Sen. Jacob K. Javits fR· N.Y.J, was one of the sponsors of the revised proposal that cleared the com· miltee to go beyond Nixon's July 1 date and also to include a pay raise In the plan. New at Alden's Carpets You'll never . cry over spilt milk when you buy this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Your own dining ro:itn with an the l1JXUry, beauty ind WJrmth of carpeting ••• wtthout ever having to worry about overturned glasses, dropped graV'j dishes or choco- late cake crumbs! Chances are, you've dreamed of such carpel for }'ear'$ -carpet that could go from 50up to nuts and never show a spill, a ttain or a spot And if you're a woman 'Wt1osl children seem to get mote food on the floor than In their mouths, ordinary carpet just couldn't do the }ob. Butncw, )'OU don't have to dream about it any more. We can't wait to see the look on your face when we~ you what this amazing carpet can do! It's Mohawk's STATURE ... carpet pife made with 100% AcrHan• acrylic ffber! And it resists practically everythina but admiring glances! Its velve.ty-smooth texture is plush and elegant, wi1h highlights usually found only Jn ell'J)en- sive carpels. Yet It's so easy to care for. E'ven if 1 staln goes deep down and dries up, It'll still come out-leaving STATURE looking good as new! We've got STATURE in many superb designs and deep- dyed, exciting colOfS. French Provincial furnlture? We',.. a:ot a French Provincial pattern. Modem fumitur11? We've got a modern pattem, too. Just name 'f\AJI decor and we've got the carpet to go with It ... $1270 for only a square yard :; • . • I • • ' •, I\ Senior Class Gift Ol('d: (Ask about our easy payment plan~ Come in today; see al I the other Mohawk carpe ts we're featurlnt- one for every room Jn your home. or.ca ll~ for our convenient •hop-at-home servk:el Painting of School Sig11 Plans for the senior chtss gift to San Clemtnle H i g h School have b e e n unanimously approved by trustees of the Capl~trano Unified School District. The gift . outlined P.tonday by senior clau president John Russell. wlll bf: a painliflg of the school emb lem and the ""·ords of the alma mater. The painting will be done on lhe west &Ide of the gymnasium on the ln!tde ao that It wllt be visible partlculai:ly during indoo r athletic competitions. Lettl':rl fomi ing lht words of ~ alma mater wtll be 10 fttt high and will com- prise 10 lines. Above it v.'IU be the school ., emblem painted Ill feet acros.s and 20 feet high. I "The last class teft a peRc:e symbol because that ls what was important to 1hem." said Rus.<iell . ··0ur clti!is would like to leave whtit we feel is Import.ant - school pride and spirit." 1'he c:ost of the project will be $500. Half will be borne: by tht senior class and th! other half by the Girls' League. A commercial·' 1Jgn paintt.r has bttn h~ed to do tile work which is .. umated 1663 Placentia Ave. ALT.\ EN' s """ •••· ou••~ to takt approxlmatrly two weeks. COST LJ TUSTIN Coll .•• "We'd like to begin so we can see It A MESA AlDlN'S ..-10 HILL CAlm'S before we leave.'' said Russell . 64& Ill & DIAr111n • The senior claS& wu compllmenttd by -4 CARPETS • DRAPES '"" •~1 ... '•"' c..,. . the board of tnJ.stees for their choice of a I __ _:=========-------------------~:::::::::~"~':·'~'~"~~~~~ glfl. . • I .• ,. J -t I I I \ j I ! J l i • San (;Je111enie •. Today's Final : f;apisirano EDITION N .. Y. Stoeks voe. M , NO. 118, .. SECTIONS,;3 8 PAGES e. 'Cle11ie1ate High Police to Give • Caml?us Tickets? Parking problems at San Clemente High School haYe re.ached epidedlic pro. portions. That's the opinion of Principal Darrell Taylor \\'ho asked the Board of Trustees cf the Capistrano Unified School District ~1onday to allow police to come on cam- pus to issue parking tickets. The board approved the request until the end or school, but made their ap- proval contingent on school officials and students joining to make a study of the problem. Similar approval was given in 1968. But San Clemente City Councilman Stan Northrup, whose son was issued a park- ing ticket, argued that the school was not adequately posted. He took his case to court and v.·on. A spokesman for the San Clemente Police Department said this problem has been corrected and there are now an ade- quate number of signs posted where parking is prohibited .. "Cars are blocking access roads, fire roads as well as parking in No Parking zones ," said Taylor. He said the parking problem will in- crease next year and right now the only solutions would be parking on Pico or Presidio. Trustee Robert Dahlberg suggested. that the student government be involved in the stody. •"'flris i1 the-kind of problem Cle1nente Slates Special Hearing On Busi1iess Fees The San Clemente City Council will hold a public hearing Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. on proposed business ordinance re\'isions which v.•ould increase almost all business licens~ fees in the city. The revisions. drawn by the city staff, v•ould mark the first increase or ad- justment In the fees in the past 16 years. The council several months ago directed that the revisions be prepared. 'The proposed ordinance change . would revise and amend almost all sections of the current business lav.·s. The changes would provide. with few exceptions. for increases in business fees. Increases v.•ould range from a few dollars to several hundred dollars, depending on the type and volume of business done by the ~ndividual merchant. Due to the controversial nature of the proposals. the cow1cll is expected to delay adoption of the new ordinance pen· ding several months of careful study. Clemente -M.arine Gets 2nd .Medal f\1arine Corps Capt. James D. Grosshans. a San Clemente resident, has been av.·arded a gold star in lieu of a se- cond bronze star medal for his action in Vietnam. Capt. Grosshans , v.·ho lives at 304 Avenida Presidio, v.·as cited for •·meritorious service" v.·hile serving as an advisor to South Vietnamese troops from December 1969 to November 197Q. He is currently serving as company commander or "G" company, 2nd bat- talion. Seventh Martines at Camp Pendlet on. In lhe ceremony at the base f\lay 6. Capt. Grosshans was also award· ed an Air "-1edal for combat action during the same period. Lapidary Society Sets Mineral Talk A recent trip to Central Aroerica in 5earch of gems and minerals will be tbt topic of duscussion at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the meetlng of lhe Tri-cities Lapidary Society. The meeting, to be held in ihe Little Theater of San Clemente High School. is open to the public. The Central America rock hounding trip included visits to the mountains or Honduras, S a I v a do r , Panama and the Yucatan peninsula. 1 that student leadership can be involved in," he said. "This might be a more positive soluth>n than calling in an outside force which might be ttsented." Superintendent Truman Benedict said student government bas been involved in trying to solve the problem and because of them five times as many students are now riding bicycles to school. Poster Girl Doi11g Well After Surgery Orange County Eye Bank 1971 Poster Girl Becky Rogers, 4, wjll have a special outing Saturday, one week after receiving a comea transplant that ·should mean normal vision. One more mo'nth wouJd have been too late. The daug)lter of A-tr. and f\.trs. 'Vllliam Rogers. of 25842 Jamon Lane, Mission Viejo, is coming atona: fine at Santa An~ C.Ommun1tY Hospital where. the ddleate surgery was performed. "She will have to remBln e1tremel, quitl for four or five daya," a hospilal spokesman said today. Discharge Is scheduled Friday end Becky -an honorary chairman or . the Coto de Caza Classic Horse Show -will be able to attend the equestrian event ~· briefly on Saturday. The show opens Thursday at the e1.• elusive rural club near Trabuco Canyon, ~·Ith 500 entries in 44 events and proceeds benefiting the new Orange County Eyt Bank. Becky's right eye was gradually being destroyed by corneal clouding and the desperate hWlt for a tran!plant was reaching the point of futility "''hen one became available. Tammy Jo f\1edley , 7, died Saturday v.•hile undergoing heart surgery at Children's Hospital of Orange County. Her parents agreed to donation of tbt child's come3!1, with one going to Becky and the other betng flown Saturday night to an unidentUied recipient in Fairbanks, Alaska. Tammy Jo was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Wendler, of 5211 ~1arcella Ave ., Cypress. "I'm just glad there was something she could do to help someone ," Mrs. Wendler said f\.1onday of Tammy's eye tissue giv· ing two other youngsters 1 chance to en- joy normal vision. Her eyes were clouded by tears. Recreation Book Ready in June The San ·Clemente Parks and Recrea· tion department has announced the 1911 editk>n of the city recreation booklet will be available sometime in June. The: new guide will serve as a directory to the clty'~eaUon facilities and will list the pro ams a~ailable for both children and ults. The booklet will replace the 17-page 1969 edition and will be available to residents and tourists at no charge. TV Coverage Slated Of LBJ Library Fete AUSTIN, Tex. CAP) -~ e<rtmoay dedicaUng the Lyndon B. John!on Library will be carried Jive on national television Saturday. Ubrary officials said Monday thal Na• tlonal Broadcasting Co. and Columbia Broadcasting System will telecast the program from 11:30 a.m. to noon Central Standard Time through In arrangement with WFAA TV In Dallas. Johnson and Mr;oi. Johnson will conduct President and Mrs. Richard M. Nixon on 1 one hour private tour of the library before the ceremony, in which Nixon Is the main speaker. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY0 MAY 18, 1971 TEN CENTS a tive on DAILY PILOT II_,, Pa.19 WHERE TO START; SAN CLEMENTE POLICE SORT LOOT RECOVERED NEAR NEWHALL Detectivn Leonard Goodwin, Ardie Saunders Inspect Loc1I Items Worth Thouunds Huge Theft Haul Seized ,' Polire Nali 2 Suspects In Newport By JOANNE REVNOLD8 Of .... DitlY f'llet ., ... Newport Beach ipolice early today cap. tured two suspects they claim held ninl persons captive all nJght in a local motel. beat one or more of the victims and slio- ed another across the ileck with a knife. Before the suspects were apprehended, officen from Costa Mesa were called to aid in surrounding the motel and Newport's police helicopter bovpl!d. overhead. All the alleged victims escaped serioui lnJury. Booked on charges of kidnaping are Bruce Dale Moore, Jr., 18, of Baldwin Park and his alleged companion in the crime spree, Terry Lee RanSon, 23, of South Whittler. Newport detective Sam Amburgey sald In addition to the kldnaplng charge, ht will r;eek complaints agannst the pair ad. dttionally charging them with armed ro-0.. bery and assault with a deadly weapon. One suspect also ·faces charges <lf assault againsl a police officer. The two were arrested at the motel on North Newport Boulevard after two _of their alleged victims -r&le:a1·1d reportedly to find ·drugs for the men - flagged down Newport Ofllc:u JU. Jacobs at about 4:30 a.m. ..Tbe.y said there were two-men Jn thf motel who told them they had just com.. mitled an armed robbery in Santa Ana and one bad been shot. ' "They said there were other ·people being held captive," Officer Jacobs re lat· ed this morning. Units from Newport and Coata Mesa quickly surrounded the motel as one of the victims led Jacobs to the rooma where the captives were being held. "About that time, a man came out of the window of one of the rooms. He had been be.aten -kicked In the side and groin -and was bleeding from a wound on his neck where the assallants assertedly held the knife," the officer San Cle1nente Police fl ave Loot, Seekinu Owner; ··~,.from the police to vacate the 1' rooms brought Ranson to lhe door, •Po . By PATRICK BOYLE Of lfl9 DI/If "lltl Sl•ll San Clemente police today began the laborious. Lask of determining the oY:ners of a car and trailer full of valuable merchafldtse-·atbegtdly .stolen during the past month by a recently discharged marine. Even the car and trailer ·were taken from San Clemente residenls, p o I i c e claim. other items of loot conriscated in· eluded two television sets, a bag full of camera equipment, several tooi boxes, four bicycles, many power tools, a stack of military sea bags, numerous boxes or food. a few sl.Creo tape decks and a can full of nails. The load of evidence came into police hands Friday when the California Hlghv.·ay Palrol stopped a vehicle towing a small trailer near Newhall for not hav· ing a mirror on ils passenger side. A record t'heck by the CHP revealed lhe auto, driven by Eugene H. Schmitt, 23, was reported stolen Ma y 4 in San Clemente. The d'river \Vas arrested. San Clemente detectives drove to Newhall and took Schmitt inlo custod y, along with the load of mcrc!':audise he v.·as transporting. ·" parenUy unarmed. 'I'he 1964 vehicle Schmitt w~ allegedly ,,,,.. "They .were telling him to come out driving. was reported. ml~lnl May 4 .by with his hands up, but he just stood there. Joan Riley, of 107 Placentia. Pulice cl&Jm We think now he Is a deal-mute" Jacobi the lrailer was taken April 21 from said. ' Richard llazard, oC 311 Ave. Sierra. While shotgun-armed officers tried to Authorities said the ownen of some of get Ranson to respond to th e i r the other items are Stephen Calaway, of . orders. Jacobs crawled around the side of. 404 S. Ola Vista. one tape. deck; Nicholas the building and grabbed the !uspect. He Werve, of 230 Ave. Cabrillo, $449 worth of said they found lhree people who bad camera equlpmenl and. Fr a n k 1 in been held in the room. Vermalin, 159 Ave. Rosa, $450 worth of Police apprehended Moore as he ap- tools. parently attempted to sneak out of an ado Police say they have also locaterJ. the original owners of four ten speed bl~clcs allegedly in Schmitt'i ,possession. jacent room In which two more persons were he ld captive. . 'llle Newport helicopter crew spotted two more pecple hiding about one block away in the area of lhe Riverside Olive Post Office. Chamber Seeking IOU New Members After checking the cont.cnts of the car and trailer. authorities said that most of it had been stolen from San Clemente homes during the past month. Schmitt. who until recently live1:1 at 223 Avenlda llosa, was dischargeGrrom the M:lrine Corps Thursday. Police allege Schmitt wa s responsible for a series or burgh1ries commilled in Sari Clemente during the past month. Authorities are confident that the owners or most of the Items will be found and the items returned. However, the o...mer of a small wooden sign may never be localed. detective.a speculated. Burned Into the wood were-the -word!, "Hard things I can1io, impossible things take time, mlraclel by appointment on- ly." Jacobs said the two have been identj.. fied as victims wbo had also managed to escape-ond --who had...appar...Uy-been - beaten. A campaign which chamber of t'Om- merce offtcials term a "blitz" to add 100 new members began with a pep meeting recently f<lr 80 members and directors. The volunteers will call on all non· member businesses irt San Clemente dur- ing Ult next two weeks to seek new mem- b<rs. Jf lhe goal is reached, the chamber's roll will show 500 businesses and in· dlviduala. Ralph Klaason will be the director of lhe drive. In addition. authorities claim the military equipmenl -including a base telephone -was taken from Camp Pendleton and several of the other items were taken from homes in Newport Beach and Octanside. The total value of the recovered items has been conservative!~ estimated by police to be at least $2,500. Schmitt was to be arraigned today at South County Municipal Court on charge5 of grand theft auto, grand theft, burglary and petly theft. Girls Wa11ted Contest Entries -Sou'glit ·in Capo The San Juan Cllpistrano Chamber of Commerce is seeking contestants for the li!lsa San Juan contest. Applicant.a must. be entering tbelr senior year in high school or be under 21 yean of age, unmarried, and residents of the City. The winner will be selected by a panel of Ove judges during an inl'er\liew. on June S, 'I'he winner will be judgtd on the basis of poise and charm. Coronation of lhe winner will be on • June ll durin'g a thampagne ·reception. 1ponsored ·by·the Ghambes • .She will •guc- ceed Mi SJ Bobbi Stone: who has served ·as official hostess for the city this veer. Prizes will include a $100 saVtngs bond and gift certificates from .. a re-.a - merchanl8. Applic ations may be obtained rrom coolest chalrn1an, Mrs. Shirley Kelm at 1i,c Vaquero clothing store or from Gudrun S!.erlln~ et Goodie's Boutique, . both In the El Adobe Plaz.a. ,, ,I Civil Ser;vice Test Schedult;d A state clvll service examination irt typing will be offered as a public service May Z5 at Saddleback College. The hour-long test will start at 2 p.m. and will be supervised by an official or the California Department of Humart Resources Development. All intere;ted persons are welcome to take the test. Eleetric typewriters will be made available. . More information is Qail1ble by calllpg the bu1lnela science divUiOR of tM.-col· lege .at 495-4960. • I Texans Mar · Go 'Wet' AUSTiii, Te~. (\JPl)-C.. ThepUblic site of mixed drinks waa outlawed in Texas more than a hllf century ago. Since then cocktail1 could only be purchase(( in private clubs. All that may change today a1 residents of 46 Texas counties voted whether to permit open saloons In thtlr preclnci.s. ll was the last step Jn bringing liquor by the drink to Texas. A search of the rooms turned up th• knife assertedly used on Lhe bleedlnl victim. Officers said they found no gUJ'll or money. Investigation in !he case was just be. ginning this ll)oming aa detectives up. raveled the series of events leading to tht arrests. Oro•• . WeaCber Patchy fog and low clouds will greet Wednesday weather watch· ers, wilh cooler temperatures pre- vailing along the coaaL High read- ings will be 72 locally and 14 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Thtrt'.r tot of living theaUr around the Orange COCJt area, and thrte local prod""'tioru arc rtvitwtd today. Ste Ent1rtai1" ~e-rit, Poge1 19·20. C1!11ttfl.. 7 Clltdlklt u, 11 CtM.M!I.. t1•1' c.tn-1<1 IS CnH"4'f U Dl~ll'I Ntllc•I t lldtlttlel •••• • ll11Nf11J11111t111 , .. ,. ,ll'lll!CI 1 .. 11 "-''"'" " Allll l,IMHI H '· I • •• • • ..,, SC Swim Pools Requested For Schools By PAMELA HALLAN ot ffMI O.H11 l'ilff 1"11 Two 1wtmmlng pools -one at 5-n Clemente Hllh School and the other al the new Dina Hills High School -have been propoted for construction . 1be recommendation waa; made Mon· day io Tnistees of tht Capistrano UnUied Sehoo1 Dlltrlcl by Erle Johnson, 1peci1l cocuultant for the State Department of EducaUon. Johnson has been studying the district's recreaUoo needs for the past nine montha. The C.pLstrano diatrlct was one of two diltrlc:t.s tn the st.ate aelecled ror a community recreation stdy. "The mo!L Immediate ri'eed within tbe. school district ta for swimming pools." i;ald Johnson, in hia nport to the school board. "It ls recommended that a special county se~Jce district be established on a 1chool djatrlct batia for the purpose. of obtainln; $4S0,008 for tb 3 construction of lwo 50 meter swimming pools." The report suu:esta that financ ing for the project could be obtained by forming a coun ty special servk:e area along the boundaries of the school district. The special service area could then levy a tax cf 10 cent.a per $100 auessed valuation for the duration of three years. Or. Robert Bea1ley. achoo\ board chairman, a1ked if the 1chool board should initiate the fcrrn.aUon of the tttVice area. "l think It would be appropr iate if the botird did · lhil through its recreation committee.'' said Johnson. The consultant 1ugge1ted that the district either make thelr temporary recreation commlttee permanent or select a ne" one. Serving on the committee have been J ack Saipts and George Be 11 e w, Capistrano Beach Park• and Recreation District: Al Arps and Don Jel1y, San Juan Cap\1tr1no P1rks 1nd Recreation; Gordon SUtorlus, Dana Point Yacht Club; Vince WIMln1hoff and Stan Weintraub, Laguna Niguel ; Phil Otarlton, MlSllon Viejo Company and Ellie Mear, San Clemente Parka and Recreation. • Johnson suggested that the Capistrano Unified School District should move to establish recreat.lon services as a cooperaUw venture between it and ex- iltlftl~ •1eocies. 1le -ataled that the CUSD •hould blrt a· ncre.Mk>n director to htad the obmmunltywlde recreation commJttee and that the committee should meet wilh the county and with other agencies to develop long range plans for community recreation instead of merely responding to specllic requests. Flnancine the program could be done by contlnuin1 to levy a 10 cent tax through lhe education code'1 civic center and recrtation program. The program also could use extra com- munity service funds, monies collected from feea for reereatlon services and various forms of state aid, and possibly tutu.re special service district tJ.xes. County Tot Dies In Family Pool A 2-year-old Or1nge girl Monday night was an apparent drovro.i.ng vic tim in the family swimming pool. Victoria Gutman of 2308 N. Sacramenlo St., was found noating face down in the 91ckyard pool , the coroner's o l f i c e ___.-teported. Tht child was diacovered by her mother. Bonnie. A fire department rescue team gave emergency treatment ·but the little jirl was pronounced dead at Chapmsn General HospllJ.l. An autopsy is pendlng. DAILY PILOT ot.t.Nc.:!: Co.uT r u11.1iH1No cOM1>ANY ... be•+ N. W••' Prn lf"'! •NI 1"~!11>tf J•tk JI. Cv•l•'I Vk.t P1t.lol1MI •"41 Ci-•I M•MIV Th•"'"' ICtt•il 1id1ltlf' T!.t,.,t1 A. Mvr phl11t ........ ,, ... ltill!• Clri•1lt1 H. l.t•• .. ;,~ •• cl P. N•ll ~nl•lf!'• M•n•tltlt i:.111r• UtYll• h.clri Offlt• 2J? Forti! Aw•ftVt Mtili11' •llld•tn ; ,.O. I•"'''· t265l I•• C .. •et1te Offk• <i0$ N•rlli ll Ct"'l11e .,,,\, t2672 O,.,_r Offlctl (Olll JMtt• ») Wff! It~ '""'' fftw ..... I •tttl>I ~ NtW'6>• 8&U1l"'l 'cl HvnllrQ!lll lt•tlll \"JJ ... (ft l o.iltv1rd • TUHdiy, Mar 18, 1911 3QO Men Seek 1 Fireman, Job Call It a 1l1n or the times or an unusual interest in fire fl&hUn1, ettbtr w1y It was overwhelm.inc said Placentil city oftlclalt. More Ulan 300 men have applied for one openlne in tht PJacenill Fire Department and will take a special test Friday and Saturday. Officia ls said appllcanu were from all walks of life lncluding aerospace workers and former servicemen. - Joaquin Board Considering Two Sessions Trustees of the Sa n Joaquin Elementary School District will again wrestle with the question of double sessions at Wed- nesday 's 7 p.m. meeting In the Administrative Annex, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Eut Irvine. But the question won't be whether or not to have two sessions -only where. Two plans have emerged as the only feaaible solutions to the problems of overcrowding in the Intermediate schools. One ii to place Irvine School elemen- tary children on double st.S&ions while re- taining° a regular session for the seventh and eighth graders who al.so attend school on the East Irvine campus. The other is to send all the in- termediate school children to the I.A. Pu campus in M!Mion Vie}o for double sessioM wtuch will occur regardless of whether or not the Irvine atudents come. In the event of the latter, the elemen- tary classes at Irvine would retain a single session. Parents attending a work.shop last week favored the flr1t solution. They said they would prefer having the elementary grades on double sessions at Irvine School to avoid busing their older children all the way to Mission Viejo. Trustees have asked the administration to prepare cost estimates for both plans. They agreed with parentl who didn't want Irvine children to be spread between the morning and afternoon sessions in Mission Viejo. but will now look to see which of the plans is the least expensive. Two new Intermediate l!IChools will be completed by the end of next year. One will house all the intermediate student.I from Irvine and the other will be for children ln the El Toro area. The administration has plaMecl to opea these schools as soon ll!I they are co~ pleted , even if only a few months of school remain. They also plan to staff the intermediate schools on the"basls of June 1972 enroll- ment estimates, instead of September estimates, so that the ratio between students and teachers is in balance. Flood District Speaker Slated An official witb the Orange County Flood Control District will be the featured speaker at 7:30 p.m. Wednesda y at the regular meeting of the Capistran& Beach Commun ity Association . Herb Nakasone, director of projects for the district, will discuss th!: current pro- jects in the area and will outline possible plans for the future . The meeting will be held at 26941 Camino de Estrella. and the public 11!1 In- vited to attend. Funeral Rites Held For Burt Beverstock Private funeral services hae been held fot San Clemente resident Burl H. Beverstock, a retired cemmt company executive who died Sunday at the age of 80. ri.1r. Beverslock. of 109 Paseo de' la Serana1a. had lived in the community for the past 16 years. He Is survived by his wife, Gla dys ; a son. Robert of Ohio ; a daughter. Mary Johnson of Florida and five grandchildren. -., !!11 to Sacrcnaento Nixon Cousins Not I 11vited? Law Okayed Laguna Officials To End --... --GRASS VALLEY. Calif. CUP!) - T'rlcil Nixon's weddlng Invitation llJ\ failed to Include the name o( at least one of President Nixon's two cousins living ln rural Nevada County. Protesting Tax Rail Strilce Two Laguna Beacb school officials new to Sacramento today in an attempt to head off a statewide property tax pro- posal that would boo!t the Laguna tax rate by $1.42 per $100 of assessed valua· tlon . School board president l.arry Tayl or •nd Superintendent William Ullom were &eheduled to appear before the Assembly committee on ~ducation this afternoon and lhe Senate commlttee on education tomorrow morning. Taylor is one of four spokesmen for school districts throughout the state in-- \lited to speak befOre the two legislative committees. The two Lagunans had trekked te the capital in March to confer with St.ate School Superintendent Wilson Riles on the controversial measure which would Im· pose a statewide property tax of $3. 75 per $100 of assessed valuation, supplanting local school taxes. The money thus raised would be distributed throughout the state on a per student basis. · While an estimated 90 pen:ent of the state's school districL!I would benefit financially from the plan, the re maining 10 percent, including Laguna Be1ch, and Capistrano Beach, representing s<H:alled "wealthy" districts, would fi nd themselves with insufficient funds. Laguna would have to increase its tax rale by $1.U while the Capistrano rate would need an additional 20-cent levy. In bis presentations in Sacramento, Taylor will reiterate his argument that the proposed legislation would produce only one-fifth of the revenue needed by the state's school districts, or $100 million. The remaining $400 million, would have to come from increased-st.ate income and sales tax. "Are you, are elected representatives, prepared to in- crease taxes to meet the commitments of thls bill,'' he will ask the legislators. Citing the cases of Utah, Florida and Texas. Taylor maintains that statewide taxes have not provided quality education but are "a means of taking away local control and entering the property tax arena wheer the locaJ taxpayer would not have an opportunity to vote." The bill also would open the door to state entry into regulatory porcedure in- volving curricul um, class size, textbooks and other educational p o I i c I es Little Nixon Pal Not Improving After Operation There bas been no Improvement in the condition of four-year-old Danny Jones. The little San Clemente boy underwent open heart surgery May 10 at Children 's Hospital in Los Angeles and remains in critical condition afte r more than a week of intensi ve care. At the time of the surgery, doctors gave the youngster a 20 percent chance or survival. The operation was performed to repair three holes in the boy's heart and to restor!: normal blood flow to his lungs. Danny, the son of f\.lr. and Mrs. Dennis Jones of San Clemente. rece ived the warm wishes of President Nixon pr ior to his surgery. The visi t was arranged by police Chief Clifford ?>i1urray. who him.self recently underwent such surgery. Krishnas Waive Trial by Jury Two Laguna Beach members of the International Society of K r i a h n a Consciousness have waived a jury trial in favor of presenting their case before a judge in South County Municipal Court June 4. the robed Hare Krishna chanters. cited. in ~guna Beach March 13 for allegedly blocking a sidewalk, appeared before Judge Rich&rd Hamilton last week to drop their original request for a jury hearing. Hamilton set a new trial date or June 4 for Charles Christla11 Hansel Ill and Leroy Christopher Richards. A thlrd member of the sect, cited with lhem, has left the state a.nd a $40 bench warrant has been issued for his arrest. lradltionally the property of local judgment," acCflrdlng to the board presi- dent. People choose comm unities !luch as Laguna Beach.and Santa Monica because of lhe community services given , say1 Taylor, and retired and modest income people could be forced to 1tll and move from such communJties if the new prop- erty tax bill should pass. '"We cannot be insensitive," he will tell th!: legislators. "to the fact that California now rank! 24th in the nation, spendlng $40 below the national average of $839 per pupil. The property tax proposal, h i s statement for the legislative committees concludes, is "an emotionally mot ivated 'Robin Hood' proposal thrown out to the public Jn the guise of an attractive bone at a time when real and lasting solutions are sorely needed." Beat Rat Race --I 11, Comfy Cell RIVERSIDE <AP) -Sheriff'11 Sgt. Bob Matheny said he refused to lock up Michae l Radoszynski whe n the 25 year old unemployed cook came to County Jail and sur- rendered "because ifs too toug'h on the ouUide." For one thing, the sergeant ex- plained, Radoszynski couldn't sur· render or go to jail unless he had done somellailg wrong. "Suppose I hit you," the out of work cook asked. ''That," replied the .sergeant, "would only create trouble for you." Whereupon, the sergeant says, the man struck him a glancing bl.ow on the chin. The sergeant said he wrestled the man to the floor and then took him up on his original offer. He b o o k e d Radoszynslti Monday f o r in- ve1t.igation of battery on a police. officer. Bail was set at $2,500. The sergeant said the man thanked him for "doing your duty." Oliver Milhous, who oi:>erated the 700-acre Milhous boys ranch, said Monday he has not received an in- vitation lo the June 12 White l·lou.se wedding of Nixon's eldest daughter. "No commenl," was the response from the other cousin , Phillip Milhous, when asked if he h ad been invited. He created a na- tionwide stir in February v.·hen he revealed his family was on we.Uare . _ Both cousins we re invited to Nix- ::>n's inauguration in 1969 but neither attended. Corona del Mar Girl Hitchhiker ' Abducted, Freed A Corona del Mar girl joined a long list of victims when she vt'as abducted and molested afler hitchhiking a ride on Coast Highway Monday night, according I.a Newport Beach police. The 19-year-old studenl lold police she was hitchhiking from Laguna Beach to Corona del Mar at about 8 p.m. when she was picked up by the driver of a light yellow minibus. He drove her to her destination al f\1argueritc Avenue and East Coast Highway, but she told police the man refused to let her out of the car . According to the victim, the man - described as being about 25 years old. five feel, nine inches lal\ and weighing 180 pounds -drove her around Corona de l Mar. She told police lhe suspect parked the car several ti mes at which times he would forcibly fondle her. After about one hour, the student was released by her abductor near her home where she went to notify police. Bonn Aide Injured BONN (UPI) -West German Foreign f\1inisler Walter Scheel and hi! wife suf· fered minor injuries when the official car they were riding in collided with a taxi ~onday. The driver of the taxi died in the crash and his passenger suffered • serious injuries. WASHINGTON CUPI) -A Senale committee approved legislation today to stop the nationwide rails strike. The resolution would order striking signaln1en back to work un til at least Oct. J, while giving them an interim pay Increase o( 17.5 percent. The legislation. which was moved to the Senate floor for quick action, went far beyond Jegislallon requested by President Nixon who asked only that the strikers be ordered back to work until July 1 while: negotiations resumed. The proposed lei.;islation approved by the Senale Labor Committee was in line with a similar settlement imposed by Congress in another nationwide rail strike almost six months ago when four other unions were given pay increases or 13 percent. The wage increase recommended by the Senate group weuld come out to about 67 cents addil.ionally an hour to highest- paid signalmen. The Senate action came as lhe House Commerce Committee considered si milar legislation, with congressmen making it clear they did not like the idea of being slrike breakers. "We're getting fed up with it,'' Rep. Samuel Devine (R-Ohio ), told Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson during the hearing. Rep. John Moss (D-Cal.J, asked Hodgson whelher tht intervention 0£ Congress was not "an impairment of col- lective bargaining.'' Congress gave reluctant priority to the strike·stopping · lcgitlation proposed by Nixon Monday a few hours after the Signalmen ti ed up the nation's rail passenger and freight service by setting up picket lines that members of other rail unions refused to cross. Hodgson warned, Jn testimony before the 11ouse committee today, of "drastic effects" on the nati on's economy if the strike continued . The vote in the Senate committee was 13 to I. II took place in closed session and 1l was not immediately clear who cast the lone vote. A Republican. Sen. Jacob K_ Javits (R· N.Y.). was one of the sponsors of the revised proposal that cleared the com- mittee to go beyond Nixon's JuJy 1 dale and also to include a pay raise in the plan. New at Alden's Carpets You'll never cry over spilt milk when you buy · this easy-care Mohawk carpet! Imagine! Yrur own dining room with all the luxury, bea uty Ind warmth of carpeting ... wlthout t!<ler having to worry about CM:rtumed gfasses, dropped graV)' dishes or ~ late cake crumbs! Chances are, you've dreamed of soch carpet for years -carpet that could go from 30IJP to nuts and never show a spill, a stain ot a spot And If 'Pfrt a 1llClrTlllt wtlo9I children seem to get more food on the floor than In thelr mouths, ordinary carpet just couldn't do the }ob. But now, you don't ha~ to dream about lt any more. We can't wait to see. the look on your face when we snow you what this amazing carpet can do! trs Mohawk's STATURE •.. carpet pile made with 100% Acrilan• acryl!c Hber! And it resists practically everythlrt1 but admiring glances! Its ve!vety-smooth texture Is plush and elegant, with highlights usuaHy found only ln expen- sive carpets. Yet irs so easy lo care for. Even 1f a .sblln goes deep down and dries up, lt'U still come out-leaving STATURE looking good as new! wa:ve eot STATURE-.in many,.,superb designs and deep. dyed, exciti ng colors. French Provinc ial furniture? We'vt got 1 French Provincial pattern. Modern furniture? We'vt got a mode rn pattern, too. Just name )O.M'° decor and we've got the carpet to go with It ... $1210 for only a square yard Senio1· Class Gift 01\.'d: (Ask ab<iut our easy payment plan 0 Come in today; see all thtother Mohawk e1rpets we're featuring-. one for ever; room Jn your home. or, call us foroor convenient shop-at·home service! Painting of Scl1ool Sig11 Plans for the senior clas.s glfl to San Clemente H I g h School hive b e e n unanimously approved by truslees of the Cll pistrano Unified School District The gift, outlined f\1ond,<1y by l!lenior class president John Russell . will be. a painting of the school emblem and tht words of !he 1lma mater. The painting will be done on the west side of the gymnasium on the inskle 50 that It will be visible particularly during Indoor athletic competitions. 1...etttrs form ing the words of the aim~ mater <A·l\I bt 10 feet high and will com· prise 10 lines. Above It wJU be the 1ehool emt)lem painted 16 feet acrms and 20 f~t high. ' '"The last class left 1 peace symbol because lhat is v.•hat was impor111nl to them." sald Russell. "Our class: would like to leave what we feel is important - school pride .and spirit." The cost of the project will be '500. Half will be borne by the senior clas:i and the other half by the Girls' t.eaaue. A ~mmercial sign painter has been hlr<d " do lhe work which Is "timated 1663 Placentia 'Ave. AL D EN' s SANT• •••· ou••t 10 take approximattly two weeks. CO TUSTIN C•ft • , • "Wt'd like to begln so we can see It ST A MESA Al.DIN'S ••O Hill CAIPm before we Je1ve,'' said Russell. 646 ' OlAl'llllS The senior clas• was compllment<d by -4838 CARPETS • DRAPES "'" •~•·~ '"'''· c.llf. the board of trustees for their cholct of 1 tJl,:Jl4• gift. !------=====--------------~~~~~~~~~ ' ' , ) • • • . . I I • J 0 DAI LY PILOT SC West Batiks lnco1ne Sets Record in 1970 \\1estem banks' net income re.ached a record Jugh 1n 1970, but the growth pace slowed conuder- ably over the course or lbe year, accordln2 to the current Moolhly Rev1C\Y of the FederaJ Reser\'e Bank or San FrmCJSOO. Net pre-tax operalin"' lnco1ne of Tu•el fth D1s- tr1ct n1ember banks reacCed $724 million -only fractionally above the 1969 fig ure. Net 1nrome (after adJusting /01 taxes. security losses, an d extra· ord1naJy cba.rgci) meanwhile rose rive percent to S480 million A shar 1> ri se 1n interest rates on a burgeoning volu1ne or time deposits \\1as the 1nam depressant on. banks' net tnootne during 1970. ln add1lion. Ull· usually hi~h extraordwary charges J>MUY offset the favorable effect of a decline m capital losses on secu riti es '"'cstern banks posted a seven percent gam 1n loa n revenue because of increases both in loa.n volu1ne an d 1n the rate of return on loans They also r ecorded a 16 percent wcrease 1n secunty revenue, thi s reflected a rtse UJ rates (at last on secW"1ties ecc1u1red early 1n the ye ar) and a massive expan- sion 111 banks' securit y holdings. Sears Meets in West; Reports lnco111e Rise ALHA:-.iBRA (8\\' I Sean. Rpeb uck and Com- pany s ncl 1nt.'1lme for the Small Firm1' Get Help Of Lockheed S1naH busin ess fu ms ref e1v- cd $22 m1Jhon 1n subcontraets from the Lockheed Caltfornia <.:ompany durmg the first quarter of 1971,· the company reports "The most s1gntf1cant pomt Is that sn1all t'Onccrns rettl\'· cd 3$ pe1ccnl of all dollars subcontracted by us," said "'arren K Dcen1, l.ockbeed s :;mall business adm1n1strator • 'Ilus represents a 50 percent increase 1n the small bus1nes:; share of Lockheed-California purchasing comm1lments over the first quarter of l.asl vea1 ' \\i h1le the dullar \•alue <,[ "mall business awards 1s do11u from last year s first qu.arler total of ~ m1lhon small businesses recet\.MI 6J l)l!rcene of all the compan1 s purch:ist' 01 dcrs, Dtcn1 st"l('d . . . ~ 1st Flight By 1'ristar PAl.\fDALE (G \\ I -The f1rsl Lockheed UIJ I Tr1star m I he markings of Eastern A1rhnes, which has ordered 50 u1 lhe wide bodied lr'1Jels made 11~ maiden flight f\1on- da1 Arter complellng 11.S first flight the blue and 1vh1te titr1ped Eastern a11craft 1,1;as scheduled lo )()In t11.o o1her test aircraft lhat have logged n1ore than 160 hou rs 1n the L- JOIJ fltght test progran1 Monday's f11ghl ma rked the first tune a Trtst:.lr has Uo11.11 11 Ith passenger seating in- stalled Although flight test JIJ- struments occupy lhe lon~ard t:ab1n, typical Eastern airlines seating and decor are in- corporated 1n UlC rema1n1ng aircraft sttlloos YOURS TODAY! ------~ Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ord•r For Yourself or • Friend M~• IH ll<fll "" rrwt\O~ •• rtrvrn ~ -""" .,,,, ,._V •• Mk:M I t•U°" l~IHll '-t ,,.....,,,,. ,..,_.1 html •~c" A• _.,, •~<oflh l>"Gol"-et l..•Mt~ "><~ ., al~•~ ,~11 "'•¥ r.r u,<11 TO' ..,.,.1.,. MIMc t•._.. - ''"" AN ... N I\ •<1 ....,rel! W<lll llJ'll"" V0961t ln>o! .,_ r ~• 11.,.i.,, ..i.i+• ovmmN ,,.._. -----------------------, r ,,n '" "'" ( ... Pl>H <hi •ft4 ..... 1 ...... 11 • ... I I P.r.t .......... L•M'I o .. p 0 .A. 1111 I (t\11 Mtl• ("of t11)1 I I I I I I I I L ____ PIL~!-~~!~!!!1'.'~ ____ J • FREE IONUS With •Yel'Y ord•r of l•h.ll w• will lnclud" free 1el of OVER THE COVNTER ·~ ...... 111 ........ lff ~ M •PIN't•~ t A..M .... •AN. l't'kft ..... 111(...,._ -.1AM W -· _....,. M U-m • I Complete-New York Stock List " • \• .. .. I , ' I . • • • I l i t L f ; l '" I DAILY PILOt 9 ------· .. -r-._,.,..,...,,."""' ..... " Al lJCJ For the Record Medical Medical Di1·ecto1· Cites Need LET'S BE FRIENDLY Births M. -Students Fo1~ 'Pre-siclo1e ss' lnsu1·ance II )'OU hav<' ~11• n('l!;hborS or know or 1nyoM mo11lng lo our area, 11h!IJ!.(' tell us M"l1n 1l'IOrl'lll. lll~llt Mtr!lnns Ind Mltfll!I Corn..to, 1-'tWn ,.,.,.,., Incl Ll!'Oftff!I Nlcol1• Praised . By JACK 81\0SACK Of IM D1H1 1'1111 S"lf ORANGE -Science is corn- ing to the uid or !he ml'dical patient. the doc·tor and the nurse and we will see many "dr'ast1c" changes in health care in the next few years ~ "No more hospital beds v.•ill direct palient needs. These bt needed because average steps are necessary or we will 11robtems \\'ill be taken care or be in serious trouble in the before the patient becomes neMt d~.» .... , ~o that \\'(' 1nay P;oi;tcnd A fric<ndly v.·elcome and htlp the1n tn become ICf!Uai"tt'd In their nf'I\' iculTI)undlnv. l'.:!lllQf'r, llrut• AlUlndtr l ftd Vick! )tlMlr. 1no11n, J1dl. "'llen i nd Allfl M•• Mor1nr, ll•1trlct 11\d Norlltrl J. 11111~1. V.,I F, Ind M•rlh1 l C1•y, Vlr<1!.,!1 IC , Ind Norm~n C. C1rr!ll<>. 5onc1r1 L 1nll A,lt• K Elli, L••rv Victor ind Svlvl1 Ell1111elil Wlloon. J11lly El1lnt 1»11 Mlcl)1el seriously ill," he eMplalns. Dr. Rannels points out that "'Eventually niost people will California. like most other go into intensive care units. slates, is behind · in health not acute beds as now '' n1anpower training v.•ith seven So. Coast Visitor 494-057! 494-'361 Harbor Visitor Marriage Licetises Erneit OICltco, Sr., L11clll1 J<HI JOl'ln Ml9gln1. JOl'ln llenn1U I ncl Mu~"* Elaine L1u•en1: B1r111r1 Ell1n •nd "'I-•• '" IRVI NE -Thirty student11 of the CatHoi·nia College of f\.ledicine at UC Irvine have been honored for acade1nlc fl:· cellence. Claire Targoff, a jun ior medical student from Pacific Palisades. received a $1.000 scholarship from the Pfizer Laboratorie s. She \\'as So say~ Dr·. Hennan Han· nels. n1edical director or lhc Orange Cuunty l\I e d i ca I Center. He believes that there has been an incorrect en1- phasis in the area of pre-paid health care. The • emphasis should be • on physical ex- aminations rather than cor- "Group therapy v.•ill be pr<r 1nedical schools training only vided for. the worried 1\'ell. I ·~a ~s~m~a~lf~po=r~J=;o~n~o=f~l~h~e~n=e~ed=e=d~~~~~-~~0~1~7~4~~~~ especially the elderly \Vho physicians. think they ha\•e 111 a n y ailtnen!s." VlfM, Sh1r0t1 Ind L1wr1nct ""'' 11~ GAllONIEll WAT~ON -Jtfft ll W., l' DI i~l ltll•Hn ,llCf, Et 'Df"D '""' J111lc1 M .. 7' ol Ulf S!lflord, Hu ... l ll'HllOl'I ••r-. 0 Cllf'llrtt. Floren<;:e M, Intl JennJnt• "· Ol1n11er, M1rl1 TertJI Ind J, F•ld 1'"119' M11 U WINS SCHOLAR·SHIP All hospitals .should be p!an·1 ... --------------------.. ning lo cul down on the lAM,t-SHIJlfY -Wllll1m I. .. 1J DI • 7'I ?hi Slrffl. CD111 N.fil Ind S1n-dr1 J .• 1J Ill Ull P1lmvr•, Or•"9t. HINOIEl·HIENCEll:SON -Gfrr' C .. 7• Ill 20J1J L........ C1nY0<1 floed, ~-le•th •nO K•l1!in l ., 11 of 40 ll•OICIWtY. LI.Uni 8t1Cll. Al.£GO-L1~Jl.lE -Don.ti<! E .. 7J or 1111'~ Wtll 1•1-IOUllYlfd Ind OOMI L. '°· Ill 11,!<> Corl!, &tlba• IJland. WILHITl!·EAlll -Jae-If 11 .. " Ill llJlll Court SlrHI. Stir.Ion lnll JoAM It. of Slln!On. HA.NLEY·NOJIMAN -Paul W. JJ of "" Wtll•ct .t.~t .. CO:S!• Miu 1nd J""' L., 7j Ill CDll• Mts1. WANNEl-MOTSCHM.lN -Kt""""1 M., 2l of U Lindt Lent, New ltbYl&fl, N.Y. INI Ltlllr L. 7'. ol ltl)I Glowc:nltr Lint, Huntlnt!Dn ...... MUU.CCOMUMOlO -G•no L., ?! et 1111 Weit l1r .lwt'., N•w!>fll'I lt1Cll Ind ll051l~n T~ 2' of l514 Etll 111 SI., LOrt11 llt•ch. (LEWETT-HO,PE -Oou1l1t W., 17 ol 1'906 Tu11fn E111. Tu1ll~ and Kartn E.. Jf ol 2Jlll6 G1n1dor, Mlulon Vlfle. IHELEY·kOSTEll -S!ev•n C,, 2J DI ..U1 Hell, Huntlntlon l••Cll Ind Valelrt I , JJ ol Hun!lntlon Bt1Cfl. • WELCH·lltACKf:EN -E<twtrd G .. 7J ot •571 Mtcfl1e1n. Weltmlrulrr •ncl criarlon<I L.. II nu E11r Mot!rot, or • .,... . MtlOVt•, Tnom11 1n0 P1mel1 P1!1loun"'' JOl'ln L. 1nd M1r111rf'I V MOO<t, OtlOl'tl M1rl1,.. 11"1 A-rt '" !n.ac~eHord, Eva incl llober1 J.,.ton lroom•. P"'~v ~u• •"" ~1ntord T110M1• Llf'demHff, Paul (O<lr~ • ...., JDYCt C1rDIYfl "\IC~., .lnn Mttfnip 1NI l1rry K•llll ANlt•I""· Rober! L.-. 1f'ld Judy L•e ~wanson, l!'lty Lou '"" Terry Lv•• 0111. M1r t1rtl Cl1" 1<1cl WllllUf H1•ll"tl M'flrl. 00<'\nl l , ;ond L1aYd II. Sniikl•v. Ju1nll1 F1vt 111<1 Donald L-t Jollnllo". l rtNI• G. •llCI Jtue W Toma-Ins. 01nle! Nel!Ol"I 1nd Vlrtlnl• '"" l1t1lt, Gl.,,.11 v. •lld Jtm~J Junior s11n1111irr. Linda J. 1nd Phl111P e Xhwtntttl, l!lll .. 1 MIV and 1110.lrd ltDlfl>d Perrll•r. P1me11 Ann •"Cl JOl\n Edward Urrutia, Anita ;ond Frank II MtdDlt. Evelvn M. and J1ck !. Anderson. GIMll Jive Ind Ptu! Geo•1e Tr~pp, Slleron H. Incl JD/In L1ndl1 Rvan. Fr1nteJ C. and Ron1I-P. lllH1m1n, 011tat11v 0. 1no "'"" L-V1ltntl1. Joe G. aNI G"'1v1nn1 Ocv111s, lvn .. tne Oou1111 '"" "'' C.rllo.. l(rur.Ml11l1kv, Gtr11di11t Ellen and Walter LD<km1n, S.f'ldrl k1Y •ncl Cn1rtet Rlchtrd Owen, R!ct.1rd Wlltlem Ind V1rn1 Je1n Vander-i, ll1vmonct A. 1"11 lonn•• "' Ke lfll, Wlllam Alb<tr1 Jr. 1nd C1rolv11 Em!!t declared t he outstanding: junior student based o n academic and clinical eK · cellence. A $300 a\1•ard in memory of the son of Laguna Beach Dr. Vincent P. Carroll \\·as made lo another junior student, Natalit Flod, 25. of Long Beach. ll ll'as granted for l'X- cellence in research. ~enior Robert Black11·eJder or rresno was presented a pla- que and a $2.iO ~cholarship "for tlXCeJlence in clinical scholar!iihip.·· Sophon1ore Tom Gante of San Diego received a gold v.·atch and scroll "'for outstan- ding acadernlc excellence.·· Two av;ards went to ~eni•H" Dtnnis .Johnson of Fortuna. tlOO l!ach for •·excellencr ;n pediatrics" and for a medical UCl's Claire Targoff history essay. rective cart!, he says. Students honored Dr. James "'~lost palienls don ·t go 1o i\lahnke. 2836 Alla V i st l the doctor until thcv are rcallv Drive, Newport Beach, a~sis· ill.·· the doctor expiains. "\\lilh rant professor of surgery. \'."ilh the proper pre-paid health in· the c:olclen Apple av.·ard , nani-surance the near sick, and the Ing hint the "outsta ndin~ 11•td l i\'ill go lo the physician." faculty 1nember." i\lany say this will overload Others winning cash a\\'ards the average doc·tor etnd that 1.~ number of beds not add more. but mosl are not. the medicaq director says. "\\'e are not ovcrbedded in Orang(' County ! yet bul we i;oon could bt·. ·· .. The great hope is to n1ake diagnostic services che;1per. ·· he says ··An intern can lake care of an outpost clinic ." .. Cll'rks in a clinic \1·111 be lr<1ined as health agenls." h" explained. ..Someone other than a physicians is needetl 1o for spcciali1.ed study 11ere : !rue, Dr. R<innefs agrees. His Junior Steve Alt . ~IOI.I for ;.inswer is wh;il he calls .---~~ c=------===- ra<liology: junior John Cutl11r. .. multl-phasic screening." $100 for radiolog~·. juiiior '"~·lulti-phas1Cscreening \~ill Steve Lazarus, $\!)(! f O r require a doctor Jor only 10 radiology: junior John Hen11er, niinutes. Nurses and other $7;'1 for radiology: senior Lynn aids can do ttlc routine lloc. 1100 for pcd;ot,;cs: 1c.<1;ng . .• UNCLE LEN senior David Taylor , $100 for This has led to a new line of surger}'. and·1~en1or Fretl. H thinking among medical JX'0-1 :~chburg, $.;i and a n1ed1cal \-pie. Dr. Rannels says. - KIDS ' LIKE ' SELLING A HOME ... FHA·VA? Compare the low rale.s and especially the low loan lees available at Home Savin~s. Call the iuding II.oder See why Home makes more loans than any otherassocia- lion in the nation. You are given all the facts, a nd on qualified credit and property you are given an actual loan commitment. Phone any office. of Hom• S••in9• America's Largest !IX lf7' HVOSON·HAIRIS -Wlrultr I ., 111 no C•kt" ll•ttt .. L"u"' l••cft '"" YvonM L . n of lffS llierlntton '" Ntwporf llKft. Dissolut·io••s Of Marriage RYmtr, l•rbora •NI Ol~ld $. l endl•eft. Yll'Oflne G~r1lcll"' Ind Llo\'d ,_, How1rd. C1rcl J••n and Lonfli• Aho:n P1UOf\, l(etr1 0. Ind Thom1• L . (;.Ddl>D!Jt, MlrCfl A!tx1nder Ind Ene1 Louht rtkt. Vlr1inl1 Y. and RDCll"' T V1•iw•1. JDl'ln Allr"""' Ind l unny Le• Mtnlfd. Jr .• 011.,. end Elm• J1mM Hobbyist Fou11d Su11e , 111 Celebrated Case IT'S FRIGIDAIRE WEEK l'ltN MIT 11 OW1tnt. CtrolYn I . 1P>d Wl!!l1m J. Alllll't5. Jr .. Eva H. '""' Vl1lll!r C. Sh.-rd, P1!rlcl1 aftll le1!1r 01v. Jo A. '"" 0w ... F Durh1m. O•vld J. aNI Elle"' Ena J-an, Jt1n I'. Ind J111tp11 S. Mow•"· Ju1>1 Wirt and l urk1 Rollh\l&fl MtNeJU, Otnna LH encl l lmomv Oun. "" .lvll••· Sli1r0ft S. tnd Merlo P. Ga.tdll•ld, MllclrM Evelyn '"" H~rm1" "ott. l'r1nc11 Incl Ja,,.,11 VtrN>n Murllt!v. Jo191>h tnd P11rlcl1 M . Arclnl191. l'lumbtrlo •nO ~ydl1 lrlll..,,•r-lt. Mtrlha Jtennt Ind ll:ob· .,.t FraM Albor!, Mtrn< E.1nd Cn1rlB E. NortOl'I, Julll A. Ind Thome• J. Death Notlres 1'11r1k:a,11e. RONold J1,,.,t1 1 n -11oi..,., • .., Lee SANTA A~A -A cuin cot-psychialrisls who e1.:amlncd Ame1, C1rttl011 H. end OorDllW M1v d f d f II · H1rcour1. F!Mence G. 1rw1 FrK Jam" leclOr v.·ho gave his na1ne lo a the e en ant o ov:1ng a aouc111r. An1t1 s~. 1n0 G•rv Je1tD11 landmark U.S. Supreme Court 1hree-month incarceration in Swln•. J1cooell11t II. •nd Ron1ld H. Arnold. JD....,. Thomts 1...i Fr1nce1 deci.sion was round i\·londay tn Atascadero State Hospital. I "111"" be s•ne and able to face a Rt\V Chimel \ras arrested on the M1flln11, IMl S.ldOl'l1 1nd E1lher 111moo OFange County Superior Court current charges shortl y aHer 1 lonv. W1"Cl1 Pearl and Fredric~ Le• b I n-15 1969 McL11n. 1111v Gtne and Lindt Jein trial. the urg ary on lft'.C. • . Murr1v. titrold M<>11rae Ind J1nt1 Judae Byron K. J\ilci\lillan or a Santa Ana home and ac-Mi;;~·.11-::·· leth•nv AuJ!ln '"" Cere, ordcr:d Ted Steven Chime[. cused or selling $1$.000 v.•orth I Vlot, 0111 J. •nd AnTDlntne "· 47. Santa Ann. to relurn to of coins and stamps taken in Dymond. K1mleen Merle 1nd O<lrWlkt M1r1ln court :O.Iay 28 for trial on the breakin to a Costa 1\·Jcsa 1 Tuflact. Afllltlo Ca<mtn •~ll M•rlanM f n>an. our1n. M1rY R. '"" Henrv G. charges, o reeeivlng stolen McClure . .0:11111een M. •"" M•rney Lee properly. Me set !he date alter It v.-as the second such ar· Stew•1t. N1ncv l. •nd C1r!D• II:. G\ern1r1. 11rb1r1 R. '"° HPnrv c. reading reports file d by rest /o r Chin1cl. The first. four tlandltY, l1wr1tnce J. Ind M1rv"McGill 1· f J f [" S s1v11tsroc1< Art....,1• M•de1;,... 1n<1 cn••ln L"""''" \Cars ear 1er. t'( o R .. lur1 H. 1ev1r11ock. '°' P••~ dt 11 w11k1•. Zt1111 E .• ,.., Jae~ Rt• p 1•11" AW"l'll e•I Supren1e Court ruling thal i5 '-'-· s. .. c1em..,1e. O••e of 11111~. Oe ~1nt11. Kttlltrlne £t1e11 •nll 1th;711fd <::1 u , MaY "· 3urw1Ved lly Wiit. GlMYI E. NIU.Oil• \\ idcly cited today in many B .... ..-1toct; •Ol\o 11:-r1 F .. 01 c11vet•"4. Ga11""· S111ro.. Lv~ ... '"" Al1n SANTA ANA Four cit.c;:es involving seart"h and Oi'llo; d1ut~l1tr. Marv E J""""""· Flor· Wtlllct · f b 1· 1d1; 11v1 •••nc1cn11c1 ...... Grivtikle •e•v· K•rk•~llu•h, Tere11 and O•rW L. Orange Ol;:isl residents tu1ve seizure o properly y po lt:f'. lc11. lod•Y. Tu•141v. ' ,M. P1ciflc view tiu!lllt1. Jolln Aiton '"" Sand•• · d !(). · · ·rhe high cou•·J o'erfucned w11wer. ltvtrlv Louht ,,.., .J•m•• J•v rtte1ve year service ptn!'i M11mD•1•1 Part:. Ptcinc vit .. M&rlut•Y. M1c11111, Ur>ut• M. 1nc1 C•rt ~-in recognition of service to his eonviction on burglaru' Olrec!ll". Mlkth. landra J°"lf'll& and J&fl "J •L1v1N 0out1a• On1nge Counl~·. charge~ v.·hen 11 ruled that Mro. Am1 111vtn Cl\.li>el •trvke• Ind Elli•. C1rol LH •nd E1rl Clllttt>Ct Th s I ,. k police seizurr of $25.000 \l"O•"lh "''••m.ent. w~M'ldlY. n ,,._,, "'"''· Con•wiy, Piul ,,.,,, "'°'""'• "'· ey art arnue "r;in ·. m1n111• Mtm0ri1r P•.._ MD•tu•rv •rod wor1 .... K111'11een o .• ,.., 11onn1t L. Costa i\lesa : Joan B .• Johnson, or coins allegedly taken by Cem•t•r•. 11•vN>ld1. N""' L. •fld H..,..,.,, M. 1, · J '1 c·h mcl rrom a o · tllUTON 1<11-. Jin1 ... 1111 1,..i Ewrei1 E••I \ estmmster: erry "atney, J n r<1ngr coin !'uo,...i• s. llru•""· t011 lermuda Orl\o•, P~·~•e•. w11111m H. 111c1 M••ltn~ Huntington Beach. and Arthur shop on Dec. l~. 196.i was il· tiun""''°" leech, Surylv!d bY llu1band, Row•. Oontld E. 8nd Sheron M legal. Edwin, rwo d1u11111 .... Ll"CI• .crnc11 "'" , __ ..,_,_._"_·_•_~_"_"-'-'-'-'-~_M_"-'-"-'-'-· ___ c;_._1_v_eb_a_._ff_u_n_li_ncc1_o_n_B_ea_c_I_> ______________ 1 cnrl1!1n1 Ed'w1rd1; tll•et ions, G1rv , 1 Cherlron aricl Ectw!n Jr.i malhtr, two brothtr1; thrtt 1l1ttr1, 1nl1 ••vfn trericl· thltdrltl. Servi""' Tnursdlv. 7 PM, PH~ Ftm Uv Colonl1I FUM•ll Homt. OUl'l'Y llt•nchf M. Ou!lv, 1S'• CDlumbl1 Crlv1, (D•l1 ,...Ill, Cllt Df dff1h, ll'llY ! •• 5.,,. rived br lwo •h!tri. M•1 . J ultl P. Scllutnotl. loul1w1ll1. kMfucky; Mr1. J. It. Turner. l<>111 lfftll. F~ner•I .. ,....k11. W ... ntKltY. I PM, 111111 (D•ll M1>1 CltaP91, wllh lttv. lllen.trd' J . Dun11~ 0Hlcl1t!n1. lnft •menl. l'o•t•I L1,,.n Gltn· dllt. ""'"tllw 11ro1n11 !!lost wllhl~ 10 mtkt mem<>rltt conlrllllltle111, olt•H cot!· ldllut• la !"9 Amtrlc1n C111ct• Socl•IY. ll1tlt CD1t1 Mtlll MDr1u1ry, Olrtcton. HIGSl:I H111! 0. Hlvb«•. Ate 76. el Jll l'1\rf1~ Orive .c ... 11 MH•. Otl• Ill dHth. M1v 11. Survlv~ fly lrltnd. Mrs. G1Drl1 J. Glol•· Co1t1 Mt u 11..,ullM Miii, W'<t· netd1v. t AM. s•. Jotclllm• C1tna.tk ONCE-A-YEAR Morein Less Frigidaire · 15.2 cu.ft.Refrigerator Only 30''wide More room in less space. Because Frigidaire uses a s upe r insulation! So efficient it creates a slim wall lhat means more room Inside, less bulk outside. ---- u 5! • BIG CAPACITY FROST -PROOF REFRIGERATOR $ "' (./lu•th. tn11nn1,.1. Good 51\to~trd Ctm· ettrv. Rtv. Tl'lom11 Ntv i" olfitllllnt. l tll lrOIClw11 Mcrtutrv. Olretlarl. llou can't avoid your Death. But you can save .. It's big~ 15.2 c.u. ft. overall with a 10.43 cu. ft. refrigerator section cJnd a 4 .75 cu. ft. freezer to store up to 166 lbs. Here's the extra spa ce ycu want. It 's Frost-proof. You'll never defrost again! It's adaptable! Reversd-doors may be hinged for right or left-handed openings, if you move or re- model. No need to cal: cJ serv icemdn. The switch can ea s i I y be made by the man of the house. Imagine! You get all this space and the refrigera- tor is only 30" wide! Fits most anywhere~ M!Ll'll Murrtll Mllltr t1' S11Yl~ S• .. LtOUf\I lt1cn. O•I• al dtllll. Mtv 17, su .... 1v..i bv 111111>1nd, C111r1t1 C Millt•> wn, O•wld, Ill S1nT1 Ana: brti1~•r. Ol!rwooll V1lll4u1t11; 1l11tr, Net!I v111loutn,. bQ1n et TDledo. on10; •ncl "''tf ••1....,rnl1ar1n. Str~ice• wilt tie lltld Thur1d1v, Mar 70. ' PM. P1<illc Vltw Cn1011. wit!\ llov. flrvc1 Kutfle Dlllcl1tlno. Enlo,,.,bm•~!. P1c11;c view Mtmofl•I P1r~. P1c111c Vltw Mortu1rv, Ol•ecio.,. lllNNAllOT Li!oull H, l.tlnll••ll• Jr. 7S<I vm1 Nevt. Coi!a Mt11. Ot!t of dt1t~. Mir ii. Sur- YIYf'd by wll!. M•rVI lor'll. F•!d. ol 'wJ-11 .. , R.lc.h1rll, of Hou•ton: a1u0Mtr. MMY Louli t ltt~. of Lt•un• Nl1u11; bf'fllh!rt. Fr.cl A. DI 011 CllY, P111n1vlv•nl11 Jan~ "'· lltlnn1rdt, ol Tt,,; n P••ndchlldrtn. S1rvlC1•. Wtdntsdtv. MIV 1', 11 Neon. P~c11;c VI-Cll1otl. ln11rment, Paclllc VIN M.,.,or\11 P1 .... Patoflc Vltw "'111<· Ntt'Y, Olrect1n TllGMPSGN your survivors a lot of unnecessary anguish. And we can help. . ......_ ~' _, l.1ymond ThatnOfCll' . .lot .o. Ill 1HI 0-----M'"I "Df'Nt . ~1-,,.IH. DI~ D' tlellft. At Pacific View we work with couples every day who have wisely decided to_sl_ele!.._mine_tM!!:~xa,s:t flwe1ctl. a rLange.mcto.fLQocl.co..$!S..JJ..h.ea.d of_ti.me. They sa ve money, time, worry •.. and much anguish. ,.,, Ml~ 11. Strv!ce1 ""6il'HI 11 8'11 ll•Old· w1r Morhllf'Y. ARBUCKLE & SON WE8TCLIFF Pt10RTUARV U7 E. 17th St, Costa rtlesa '4Mll8 • BALTZ MOR TUARIES O:irona dt l ~1ar G7:1·9450 Costa Mesa . . . . . . 6-16-%U4 . ' BELL Bf\OADWAV ~JORTUARV 110 Broadway, Costa Ptftsa LI S.34:13 • t.feCORJ\.11CK LAGUNA BEACH ft10RTUAR\' 1715 Lqun1 Canyon Rd. 4""'415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemtte:ry ~tortuary Cll1ptl 3500 Ptclflc View Drive Newport Btaclt, Ctllfornil lf4.n• • PEEK FMULV OOLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1801 Bol11 Ave. Wtstmlaattr an-.ssu • SMITH'S MORTUARY R7 Main St. -BuntlnJ'O• Beac' By law, some things must be done with the decea sed . Everything else, though, is usually decided by someone in a highly emotional state, least prepared at the time to make such decisions. May we help you make this most sensible arrangement? A phone call to Pacific View will bring an experienced counselor to the privacy of your home or office if y ou wish. But here or t here, the savings be ignored. in money and heortoche ore too great to PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK €i MORTUARY 3500 l"ACIFIC VIEW DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92663 • IAREA 71 4) 64A·2700 /----------------, I PACIFtC: VIEW MEMORIAL P4RI:. (i MOii.TUAi':'( \ r 3~ ,AC1r1t Yltw Ol l'l'l. lltw'°"T ICACll, CAI.Ir. 11663 1 I ,1,•u M!HI fllt, w1fllout obU1ttlon rour ~•1111111 l'Ofllollo. I .. ,.11n!fl1 Ylllf EU1lt ·~ Ofcltf." "1 lllldtrlllfld IN• will IMlllllt Ml•I'-al 1"I JWI· ... , llllltlll, ltltftrt ... lllC tfl0 I Ct!lltlt? lfflllltll'lt~ll. I I •• I I -· I \ I ' (ITT ,, .. [ 111' I , _______________ / FRIGIDAIRE 'Bf. ~ HURRY! •EG. Sl.SO VALUE WHILE QUANTITIES LA ~T! • Double-e~sy desian! ) • Press down 11and1e-tray sl ides out • lift lever. cubes are free! •No tuggin g or pull ing-no messy sink·.iplashing! FRIGIDAIRE DISHMOBILE H.as Su11.er·Sur9e Washing Action For Cleaner Dishes e E1•y !01d in9 roll.out ••~~I • Fri9id•i•e IUitt••1u•91 "'''~'"9 •elion l111e9ri111 •nd n e p e 11dnbill111 •i11er 1947 • COSTA MESA 411 646-1684 E. S•vtnteenth 0 11ily '. 9; St. S11t. 9 • 6 I EL TORO Laguna Hills Pl11a In••' te SeY•011l 837..J830-011ily 10 · 6; Thur., Fri. 10 . 9 -, -, • -r I J ' DAILY PILOT J J Tutsdu "'' 18 1~71 SC --"'=-"'--'-''-'-'--'----- Tuesda y ·s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • O~k E "'' 01k e Pd (}(dP• " " nee """ " • Occ dP 1111 Ml Occ<IPP l l Og!len Co p O<>!len 1> ti O~nEO\ \' O~E!ID •\6 flkl• GE 1• 0 0. •NG' I• 0 nCOP II o ...... ,, • ., On• dtl /11 OH k• ·~ iffi .,. .:: "' .. llO .... 1 #'"' n i:\"f .. ". ~ lO!o ISi a:: 1~: /] 11 , ... JJ ~. 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"' '~ + .. • •l ....... e" -14 " . . -. l• t -• ' + • ... 10 -\lo "'' -1 " ]I • .; \It 10 0 -"' • 'i '1 i A "~ -.. n~ -I,\ " t l -\lo 6 • + .... 1' -• I '1 I '- J ~ -"" ~ ... A•• -"' 11 11 .. .; ~ .. ' I 1\'o .; • ,,.,, ... '- 0 ~ .. .; u; 1•\lt I.... 1 .. -• t •• -\lo U> I I" I" ~·,•+!.to ,,. l'l4 -• 1!.. J • -I. 4... 6'4 -.. ,.,,,.,, 1t I • -J • ' .;. ,,. ,, 11 f 0 I -' " ,, -"" 1' • ~ -.. 311 • t ~ _, ' ... + • h •o 16 .. -Vo LA Policc111an Pleads Guilty ~g:41g: 1l ,;~ ~'.,,, BERKELEY (U PI ) -The ~ : 1: , new members of the Berkeley i J ~ J , ) City Council have voted to • • • d s... Pf s ~ 1scontlnue fhe Pledge of 1n ;'111 7:1.; g" _, Allegiance al lhe1r meetings ' l • ' The d 1•' " ' d th ...,_,t"ii ''""'--t .,.~ --'-1.1 e.c illo.'--'o rop e •• -'• '" Fl11g pledge came on a c3 t I• 1\o It. -+ .r s. s • n'" • vot e Tuesday nighl w 1 t h 1 1 111. MW '' • , ,..., , , _ ayor arren Widener an d 1~ '~ ... :1 ,:~:.., the four new councilmen in 1! •1 , ': •• ~ ... _ , eluding lhree member!! nf a • )1 JJ , J1 . -, radical A pr 1 l Coalition • ,,,,,,.~, ... ,,.. i 10~ ~ 10" voting a11:a1nst ope n I n g 1; ;~· ;!: ;~ :_ meellngs with the Flag salute 0 t lo 11, n o 1 11 U' IJl;o lJ\o JI S o In• U 70 u.. • ~ '"' ... ''"" .. ··-l J )0 .. .JO,.._ )0 -1 ., J,,, ... )!.\I 1 •\O ... •to I) J' Jlo \'4 1 • Oo !O ... 10'>-'I JJ ••• ,. 1•1< -.. • ,, l6 'l )~ 11 Ullo J?,~ JJ \ II I.I\ I •-I 1 , ' 1 ' l, '~'. '~ ':. -... n''"''•'~· J l 'I J lt tl~ IJ 1l • • • 1• ., , .. ,, .. ,, s• 1'! l., l.: 10•~~1 ·. 1~~g ·!~ .. · ",s 6•'' • 6ll!o I I I 7• • 1• • ,, • 1•1 "~I .. ,, ...... -TZ- • II I 11\o !11t -Lo .r ,,,., .. ,?.. ~ 'l 11'"" 11 ' 1l,. -1• 1 1 • ~ 1•1'1 to 11 1 -l~ 11 1i~ ,;" , " 'l ., ... to\o • , .. SOh\.it'l.-\.t lt• I• ltt ILo - 1 • ' • »• 1/lo I -'- lOJ )10. '. )O~~ \l. 71 )'! )O\o , ., ' ·1 , 6 ~ • -'• ; 't 11 'l .. - ' 1J I) I 1\,· • " l'-.,,, -~?~?!\lo ... 11: n, ~, is -I 701 ) •1 , •• ' 1 7 ,, !• ~ I \ I • l1 16"' u ... ""' LA Requc~t~ Quake Funcls LOS ANGELES WP!) More lhan $93 mi llion ha s been requested by the city or Loll Angeles from the re<1er11l ~overnment to pay for !!Orne of the dam.ige done by the destructive Ftb 9 earthque.ke Pr otc~l Sb ow Crowd ])1 aws SAN DIEGO (AP) -Anti wa r celfbr1lles such a~ Donald Sutherland Jane Fonda and Dick Gregory held their owa version or Armed Forces Oar here o\er the w«kend before rap11c1ty crov.Cl! of s.111lors til'id ~fannes Skits poking fun at the arm cd force s pol111c11ilns 11nd other :ireas or American life were ~1ven Saturday and Sunday at Rus~ Auditorium • r ' • ) ' ' '. • • ) • ) i /, ' • I l ' I I ' I l ' I 1 • I l ' I ' ' ' • • • ' . • • ' • • • • '' \. • •"'I' .. J ! DAILY PILOT Ju tsday, May 18, 1971 • Good .News • • • Bad News CHECKING •UP .• Castro Breaks Silence-~and How! D1·ive1·s-W atcl1 MIAMI. (UPO -Cuban Premier Fidel Caslto, nev~ known for stingines.s with words, has been particularly generous with his oratory late- hou slng 5hortage u s i n g support ' o r revolutiona'ry workers' spare-time labor. move1nents throughout Latin The other "'as devoted to America and s.tlid "millions 0£ praising the progress made in Cubans" would' volunteer to education under his regime, tight in Chile if ''imperialist comptired-to "lht! hOtTible aggression" threatens Morxi Sl Five Castro speeches were practices of the past." President Salvador Allende. Y ou1· Cl1i1npanzees broadcast by Radio Havana Following are some <lf the -A1ay 1: In a post-midnight and monitored in Miami dur-key points made in the three speech closing a national con· Ing a tW1>week pe riod at the more important addresses: fereuce on education and end of April and beginning or -April 19: On the 10th an-culture, Castro lashed out at By L. At. BOYD ANll\IAL WORU>: EVERY beast th at hiints by night is color blind ... A NE\~'BORN GIRAFFE oftentimes is just about as tall and hea vy as. say. Dennis \Veaver ... TllE BLUE WHALE'S tongue can "'eigh as much as a pregnant elephant. . . A V E R A G E LA YL~G Jj EN these days only produces eggs for 11 monlh~ or her a.itomalic life. .AND RElilE,IBER, 1he plural of tow is kine, yes ii is. "ENG INEERS, please notr. Do you lake in $26,675 a year? Nevermind, it's none or n1y buf!~ess. But that's "'hat an engineer with the federal governnient now makes \\'hen he gets near the top or the stack. llis counterpart in private indu stry ean1s $25,393. Time when the federal govern- ment paid Jess than private in- dustry is past. that's clear. May. niversary or his government's dissident intellectuals in Cuba, dietician. 0C Austin, Tex.as: \Vhat did Castro have to say victory during the U.S.·backed calling them "two or three lost Dr. Biler. a dentist. or in this verbal flow alter Bay of Pigs invasion. Castro sheep . . . sowing poison, Newman. calif.: ~trs. Bird, several months of silence? rejected any improvement In treachery and intrigue inside owner of an egg ranch. -----------He berated dissident In-relations "·ith the United the revolution." whose books CUSTOMER SER\'lCE: Q. 1ellectuals inside Cuba and his Slates or the OA's. never should have been · ch I old foe Richard Nixon in Referring to a rec en l published. "How long does a pea ree F ee Clim'c II' h' t H 1 ·-· t t k b N' . d' ,. Th1's took the l1'd orr a s1'1n-live?" A. Only about eight 1• as ing on. e as11C1,1. ou a remar Y ixon in ica ing a mer1'ng contro"ersy over 11 a familiar target by calling change in Cuba's attitude • years, average. lncidenta y, the Organization of American could lead to a review of 11eberto Padilla. a 39-vear-old "'hen one of those peach trees Gets $500 States (QAS) "a filthy sump-American policy toward him . Cuban who won the National I gets sick. it runs a tern· ""' hole." He zeroed in on a new Castro said: Poetry Prize in 1968 "'ilh a perature. Sometimes up to 20 one by dubbing a group of "\Ve shall ne ver break book of poems that included degrees F. over normal. Don't A check in lhe amount of European leftist intellectuals solidarity with the revolu-pointed criticism of th e1 know how the tree su rgecins $500 has been granted to llun· II I f 1 I ed treat th.I. Doubtlessly 001 . Be h' F CIA agents and inte ectua tionary peoples o the word to regime. Padi la was arrest tinglon ac s new ree rats. seek better relations "'ith ~1r. in Havana in ~1arch and "'ith aspirin. In fact. 1 don 't Health Clinic by the Jfun· Pep-talks to the island Nixon and his government or released lasl month alter con. even kno\V where they stick lington Beach Jaycees. I · · 1 · d 'd " ress1·ng to "counter-rc,olu-1 the thennometcr. Will check ed b popu at1on on 1mprovemen s 1n agg ressors an ge noc1 es. The money, rais Y a education and housing were In th e wake of moves by the tionary" writing and contacts further and report. Jaycee ca rnival la st month. followed by the announcement lertist governments in Chile \vilh "CIA agents." A GOOD DR IVER stay s at has been used to pay the first that the vital sugar crop will and Bolivia to discuss lifting A courteously-phrased letter least four chimpanzees behind two month~ rent for the clin ic. fall short of the already-reduc. OAS sanctions against Cuba, protes ting Padi lla's arrest was the ear in front. He watches located at 5th Street and Olive ed goal set this yea r. Castro called the OAS "a signed by a distinguished that car's rear bumper. When Avenue. in !he do"•ntown por-Tu·o of the speeches ap-filthy, di sgustinR. discredited group of intellectuals including it passes a telephone pole, tion of the city. peared to be largely exercises sump-hole ... that is bound French writer J e an · Pa u I Sp<inish intellectual J u a n th~t are sinking in lhe stonny Coylisolo. tl1ost of the signer! • seas of history.·• have been outspoken admirers ...:.~1ay 2: Winding up a of the Cuban premier. three-hour-plus speech at the Without mentioning names, traditional h1ay Day rally. Caslro directed some of his again past 1nidnight, Castro sharpest crilicism at them - announced thal the sugar 1 "ClA a~ents ... shan1eless harvest was three "'eeks pseudo-leftist bourgeois living behind schedule. ·011 their laurel in ~aris, Lon· He reduced the harvest goal don. Ron1e . . mtellectual from 7 million metric tons o( rats ... cre\\men on ships refined sugar to 6.65 million. I See by Today's Want Ads e Ladies!! YOGA!! Benelits the 1st day. fo'rl'!' de~ stra!ion \\'ed. Bring a trie~, morning or nigh! clas.ws. e Here's a joli for 1 couple or a man!! Early A7't newspaJX!r delivery in Jr. vine area, cx<.'ellcnr route! e NPed a hunting dog'!'! 8 wreks old, has shota, and only $25. • Here is a 1970 llusquvarna. 360 Spo1·tsnwn Jn good condition. Only tn> or bes! o!fer takes. TH AT SO:\IE ex pee tan t mothers crave odd f'dible~ is not extraordinary. \Vhar s ex- traord inary. I think. i~ some expectant mothers eat coiil. Bv the handfuls. Wh y?. .IT \\'AS NONE other than old Ed Durling "'ho claimed a truly attractive lady coOld b e described with just f o u r words : Serenily. sinceri ty, sympathy and simplicity ... light post or road sign. he Founded by ~-!rs. Hanna in domestic public relations to disappear" and added. "\Ve Sartre and his \vife. Sln1one starts to count : one chim· Alekoumbides and Dr. R. l\1. that could be compared to reel better outside the OAS De Beauvoir. Italian noveli st panzee. t "' 0 chi mpanzees. Sher, the clinic averaged 30 President Nixon's r ec en I than in it ... the imperialists Alberto Mora via. French thref? chimoanzees. four chim· pa lienls during its first week series of interviews "'ith \Viii ha ve to leave the OAS novelist ~1arguerite Duras. panzees. His 0,vn fr ont of operation and <15 patients ne"·smen in the United States, before we consider joining ii ~1exican \\Titer Ca r I o s bumper should pass the per day for th.: past months. ft In one. Castro spoke at length again." Fuentes, Argentina expatriate marker right after the fourth _:•::a'.'.s~o~pe'.".'.''"~d~t~as".'.l~A~Pf'.'.'.'.'.":._· ___ ."''.'.bou""..'_t.:_a'._!'.p~ro~g:'ra'.'.m".._'.t'.'_o~e:'a:'se'_"th~e'__..'.:H'.'.'e..!p'.'.le:'.d~g::ed'._'.'co"'n".ti".'n~ued'.'.'._C'.:'.u".'b'.'.a".'n_•:_·r'.'it'.'.e:'_r__.::J:..u'.'.lio"___:C:".or'.'t'.'.az'.'.a'.'.r_'a".'n'.'.d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!!! chimpan7.ee. Remember that.1- STATISTI CALLY, if a man is to kill his wife. he is most apt to do so in the bedroom. But if a woman is to kill her hus- band, she is 1nost apt lo do sn in the kitchen. ALSO, t\.IUST AU D these " nominees to that list of can- didates for membership in the Proper Job Club : Of Fort Hood. Texas, SP4 Beagle, at- tendant in the veterinary clinic. Of Palm Sp r i n gs . Calif.: ~1iss Hu'nger. a hospital young fel101v, next time you're tailR:iled. Jean out the \Vindo1v and holler at the old boy. Tell him he's a chimpanzee or l \\'O too close. ONCE REPORTED all Sl bills carrv the date tn6. "Horse fefithers !" \\'tiles an irate client. All ri2hl. Still say all $1 bills carry the date 1776. ho\\•ever ... EIGHT YEARS AG O. one nut of every 18 in· corne tax returns 111:is audited. Last year. one out of 44 \Vas audited. \\lhat \\'i th the new computers and all. you kno\1'. Your questions a11cl cont· 111e11 ls are 1•1e/co1ned rJnd will be used in Cf/ECK· ING UP w/leret:e r possible. Plea~ address your let· ters 10 L. fl1 . Boyd., P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Beach 92660. • ' • ··········--····························---. • • UI D flew car locw (Compare our lower rates) o Boat • • (We're spec1alisls in Marine Banking SeMCes) ·-~mobile 11omu andotfier Recreatio.w Vefiiclel (Check our loan ra1es) ~Check us out. You 'll !ind full ser"Yice Cenlinela Bank has a lot ot interest ln you ' ' ' ' ' ' ' -and for-you. Like the"'highesr ratr o-n --••--- insured 0 Savi ngs Accounts. And check us for Free Checking Accoun ts, CJ per- sonal and 0 business. Or services like O Escrows, lJ Mortgage or rent collec- lions; Trust Services through California Bankers Trust-D Personal and O Cor- poration, O Wills and Estate Planning, O Pension and Profit Sharing. For your banking convenience, we slay open extr1 hours: 8:30·5 PM , Monday. Thursday, until 6 PM Fridays. Or you can D Bank-by-Mail wllh free po slage both ways. Ch eck us out -ii pays! Pl ease mail or bri ng this lo your nearest Cenllnela Bank office: .. (iJ Ceamr-.da Bank . Inglewood / 524 E. Nulwooel / 674·4660 South a.y / 1103Aviation. Hermosa Beach/ 372-2102 Pl1y1 Del Rey / 8117 W. Manchesler / 823-9281 Newport B11ch / 3333 W. Coast Hwy. / 646· 7121 ACCOUNT S INSUR[O BY • rOEflAl 0[PQSIT INSUl1ANCr con?O~Al 1(,1, ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' I I ' ' ' ' ' I ···········-···················-············ • • When you buy a round-trip ticket to Atlanta on one of Eastem's four daily nonstop flights : we'll fly you to and back to Los Angeles. If you put business ahead of pleas- ure~ you'll fly Eastern to Atlanta; then Mexico City free. _,0 .....,.@. l'L You can take ~~ "· !~~(.'.~) $ to Mexico City. ----------·/' And then you'll come ,.,.:~~ ,. back to Los Angeles ~via '~ 1/&{_t1a.nin, Western Airlines. care of your busi-~ ness in Atlanta, then ~~"-:. spend a couple of days\., in Mexico City for ·\~ pleasure. ~ And if you want to put \\ pleasure ahead of your business, we can arrange that too. We'll put you on a Western Airlines flight from Los Angeles straight to Mexico City . Then you'll fly Eastern to Atlanta // The Eastern Airlines free trip ,\ )!. to Mexico. , en you s=art=-=p=-=a-=ic~=g=yo=urc:=. - // bag s for a business trip : pack youi __ /t;;{t.mc ti'J swimming trunks, sunglasses and camera. Who said you couldn't ,mix i..busi- ness with pleasure? For mor~ infonnation, call'your travel agent or Eastern Airlines at 380-2070 in LO s Angeles. • - E AS I EFIN The Wmgs of Man. I l ' • . I ( I t . l I !' l { , .. ' . ' ,. s DAILY PILOT :J Tunney Blast·s· Rad·cal Tactics • Ill UCI Tall{ By GEORGE LEIOAL -OI "'-01111-1"11'1 Ifill The actions of Hennie Davis an d oUicr militant protesters atteniptlni to disrupt lhe iOVernment in \Vashington recently \\·ere termed .. absurd and frustrating" by Sen. John Tunney in a speech ~1onday at UC Irvine. The Dcm0cratic Senator r r om Californ ia urged students "'ho wnnt to t:hange the govemment's p::ilicies on the \\'Br and the draft to avoid suth tactics as y.·ere attempted in \Vashinglon. ··u they ....:. the rilay Day Tribe-really \\"ant peace. they should look at the aetJ . of the lari;:e majorily of your peers who spurn violence. If they_ want repression, !hey have taken the appropriate actions,·• Tunney a~erted. Speaking in the ll'inds~pt campus park at the heart of the Irvine campus, Tunney·s remarks elected f e w ex- pressions of support (ro1n the estimated 150 attending. During the question period that follow- ed his 20-n1inute prepared remarks, the junior senator seemed hard pressed to rind ans\.\·ers that satisfied t~e academic gathering. Tunney \.\'as asked to expl'iin v.·hY. he favored extension of the draft, how he \.\·ould vote on the SST project, vrhy, if he -· opposes super1011ic tra port had he not introduced-a-blll-proh Ung use of any SST Jn the U.S. and he believed the U.S. was an imperial' t nation. Tunney argued t ending the draft v.·ould relleve the reu~ on the Nilon ad1ninistratlon end the w a r In Southeast Alia. When pressed on the issue by an a ate, long hatred stu· dent Tunney cha ed, "I'm saying you \\·ouldn 't be cari g about the Vietnam \\·ar l f)'Ou weren' aubjecl to the draft." Noting h~ continue to vote against the. SST, Tunney claimed he did not mlartprueot himself in hia cam- paign. "AJ a member of the Ho\111! of FAMILY FINDS A 37·FDOT HOME AT NEW DANA COVE MARINA, DANA HARBOR Paul and Anna Hemmer~. Son John, Two Cats Awaiting Connectien of Their Homo BEAUTI FICATION JUDGE John Scott Trotter Becu1.ti ficC1.tio 1t Atvurds Cere11101t y SlC1.teJ i1t Luguua Ships Come 111 First Vessels Enter Dana Harbor A 3i-fool boat 011·ncd by a fornler San J ua11 Capistrano family was the fi rst to sail into the soon-lo--bc opened Uana Cove 1'.1;irina in Dana Point Harbor. Paul and Anna ll cn1 n1Prs. their 6-yc:.ir- old son and 111·0 cats plan to live aboard the "Amethyst" 1\'hen dockside \1·ater. eletlrical and telephone connections are coinpleted to thei r boat home. Hemmers is a landscape maintenance specialist. The "Amelhysr' tied up Friday cf· tcrnoon at a 1'.larina dock to await com· pl etion or their permanent slip berth. ~1eanwh1Je. a Dana Point sailor claim· ed his Columbia 22. the "Tita nic" was the first boat to sail into a slip al the $4.3 million marina development. Bob Saxbv, 4JO N. Estrella. Dana Point. t?nded a siX and a ha lf•hour voyage from QC'eanside to tie up In Dana Cove Alarlna. Official opening of the 1'.farlna u•\11 be June 3, according lo Robert Dahlberg, president or ~farine Ca pital Inc .. partners in development or the Marina portion or the Harbo r. i\1ore th an 300 slips have been built at !he west end of the east basin and will be occupied by June 1. Sll)l! for boats up to tiO feet are being constructed at the other side of the marina. Dana Cove Marina is on the land side of the harbor and Dana Island Marina surrounds a man-made island in the harbor. \\'hen all slios are completed in ~larch 1972 there \\"ill be seaside parking for 1.426 boats in the east basin, Dahlberg iiid. Adjoining property i! btlng developed and landscaped and v.i ll include an inn, shopping area and t~·o restaurants. The Dana Point Chamber of Commerte plans an official dedication of the Dan a Point Harbor al 2 p.m. July 31. according to .4.rt Humberg, chamber pre.!.ident. • PuhlicAsl\:e(l to 'Dogpatcl1' .l\n in vitation to visit Oogpatch. USA has betn issued to the Saddleback Valley Yokum and Kevin Coan will be Pappy "Yokum. . comn1unity by studenls a~ Mistion Viejo Lagunons 11•ho he ve made oulst.and1ng u; .. h <'nl-u-..n ,,.,ft .... iin "Lil Other actors v.·iU be Scott Hersch, Mar- !l'..!_n..._§_am· Ton Brandt ,_ Earthgua~ 1'.IcGoon: and Bruce Le Claire, General Bullmoose. -contributron~lo·communily·beaulifteetkm_._...., -'"lu.M' u.w.....are. PteS.\...!ml.Jg - during the pas! ycor ""ill be honored Abner" on ~l oy 19 and 20. 'Fhursday night at the ~ll'rrna1ds· l1flh The production, a successful Broad1\•ay Beautification 1\11ards Ficsla. n1usical. >,1•i1\ be !':!aged at 8 p.m. in lhe Bonnie Arquilla is directing the show assisted by Lori Sims, choreographer. Both are students. Faculty advisors are f..1iss Barbara Stout and Atrs. Ruth lo.fader. \Vinners 111 residential and commercia l multipurpose room at the high school. di\'isloos of the annual contest v.'111 Sel"eral high school departments have receive their il"'ards, includini: a special s11·eepstakcs a11·ard plaque donated by joi~ to n1ake the production I success Laguna F'cder<il Savingli and Loan including lhe art, home economics, Association. business education, graphic ar t ll • Tickets for the. Norman Panama a n d l\felvln Frank musical comedy which Is based on Al Capp's comic atrlp characters, \\"ill be $1.25 for adults and 73 centa for children under 12. Tickel, will be sold al the door. The 8 p.1n. cclt'bration \\'ill get unllcr \\·ood:shop. n1usic and dran1a dtpart- \\·ay in the Fcslil"n l F'orum the:ller 11·ith mcnls. screening of slidt·s lak rn h~· Robert Starri ng a-; Lil Abner \Vil\ be Bob Turner of alt the pro perties nominated llutcli,·nson ca-lvn Vance ... 1·11 portra . •V , R y for recognition ni l9il. Oaisy J\lae. Sid Nutter \Viii be Mammy Judf,!'.c~ who selected t hi.~ ycnr"s 11·in· ners then 11·111 be in1 roduccd. Thcv include .Jnhn Scott Troller. Virginia P. Cain, \VinHrccl Harn1. Bill G1vinn. f\·leredilh Craves Foreman and Col. \\'illiam Ro ley. Jmtnedia1el.v foll owlng the program. a rl.'Ccplion hnnoring the \\'inners v.·111 be held on 1he fcsti\"al grounds In the restaurant are;1, catered Uy ttlcrmaid De;1 Cris1 . Ticlicls for lhc Beauty A"A·arcts Fiesta ::11 Sl.50 prr 1wr11on 11re available at the Chambl'r of Con1mertt. 205 N. Coast lligh\11ay. ~lissiuu Viejo Yuulh tud in USC Coutcsl A T\-lission \'it•jo High School student placed srt'U''d In tilt USC Journalism 51.:horl I ·, school and junior college n• ' il1ng d~y conies\. !J cnrncd a Sl5 second pri1e In 1:ie 11t1'"'~ "'rlllng category in rOn\· t c1t1lon bel\~een 500 student journalists. t\immo's assignrncnl wits 10 1nttrvlE"w Lot Angclr:i; City CourK'llnntn Arll1ur ,,-Snyder lo \\rite his entry In the cunLCSL Cl1a11ge Okayed Capo Backs Ewction Reva1np A resolulk>n calling for a change In the eleclion proctdure of Saddleback <'A:>llege trustees has been passed unanimously by Capistrano Unified School District trustees. The board voled J\fodnay to request the Saddleback tru stees to initiate the necessary legal steps, as provided in lhe Edocation Code, that would lead to the election of the college's trustees by voltrs who rtllde ht etch trustee area. The college lruslets are cufflnU}' electtd at large by-all voter1 in the dlto trict even though Jhey are serving various trust.et 1reu. Some btlleve this has gh·en lhe Tustin area an upper hand In lrustee selection. In their resoluUon the Capistrano Board' suggests that this method ()f eltttlng tnistees makes it difficult for residentJ of 1 JllTtlcular trustee area to f:'rrcct local selections. It furttier Stal.es thol residents or tht C~plstrano districl lwould like to t.,1,.~ ;i more di rect voice in the elccllon o( trustees "M .\iU reprtstnl them local!). The re~lulion urges lhe governln1 board!!: ()f th e Laguna !each Unllltd nnd Tusttn Jllgb School District to ronslder making 1imilar request&. ~ . '. ' • • Reprtsentallves t voted a1ainat the SST aaidli "It' you mea n Imperialism like three limes," he said.. Peter tM Great, I'd say America is not As for introduclng: legislaUon banning imperialist." use of British or Soviet SSTs, Tunney He added, hov,.ever, that by taking "f\-fy lm1nedlate reaction Is that T'm against it." 'T'uMey ~plled .... "A person -----+ ought to have a number or years' ex· said such law1 aren't necessary. natural resources from developing na- He said eiiht GI~ 12 major An1e rican lions end processing then1 to reap a air carriers loat money Jut ytar and pro-"middleman profit" An1erica "and the bably won't be tblt to afford buying the other rich nations of the world" might be SST. considered •·econo1nic imperialists." Calllnl aupenonlc tr 1 n spor t ''That is one reason I have supported "economically unreutble" Tunney noted foreign aid," Tunney added. SSTI are 0 180 ~t more e1~ve.Jo One qu estion Tunney salrt, was a~ked of fl y thaa 7f71. ~t pereen~ fl ....... '1m for th e firs t time: "Now that 18· Am~ ~WW pay UO pereent, Ytar-olds have the right lo vote in federal more lo pt to l"Aarope two to tbree bours· · e~t.Jons, do you favor a constitutional earllertu bl ull:ilCL .. ~ndment that would allow them In run On Amerlcu r imperiallam1 .'funitcy fdr Coniress?'' I perience to hold publlc oUice." Jn his remarks, Tunney said the pro- spects for peace In Southeast Asia wi ll diminish if the young take to the streets in disorder. He urged young people to wor k for pe~ce by using the ballot box, noting that some 11.5 million youths 18, 19 and 20 years old are now eligible to vote. They are "an enormous number capable of tlppin& .the balance in the 1972 elections," he said ur1ing students In support ca ndidates who exprt.M views similar to their own. Th~y ·Can't Go Home Again ... Evicted Capo Family Looks Into Uncertain Future By PAMELA HALLAN •1 ttt. Dall1 ,Ii.I tt•ff -No tea.rs 1tain the cheeks of Teresa Ar. r~la. But she has known auffering and frustration. And though she doesn't really un· deratand why. in ten days sht. her hus- band and their six chlldren .mUst lea ve their home. The Arreolas are the largest of several families who live in an abandoned labor camp off \Vell Site Road in San Juan Capistrano. All will be receiving eviction not ices from the county \V.edne.sday because their tented dwellings ha\'e been deemed unfit for human habitation. Holding her arms protectivety around her swollen stomach and the child that vo'ill be born in Augvst, 1'.1rs. Arreola ta lk· ed or her frustration v.•hich began in December v.•hen they v.·ere told to find another place to live . "\\re•ve looked for a place ." she said, quietly. "\Ve 've tried everywhere. We've even lied about our childrtn. '' But their children are a handicap. No one v.il ll rent to a famil y of eight -soon to be nine. Teresa Arrtola, 33, looked around the tiny. dimly lit living room, her eyes rest1n1 on her chlldre11.'s school work proudly displayed on the bright blue \ValJl!i. "This isn ·1 such a bad place," she said. "\Ve·d gladly stay here if we ct1uld." She admitted v.•orrying about the bare ~·iring and the plumbing that somelimes overflows Into the front yard. But as a Yount: girl ln ~texico she learned to take life as It came -lo live each da y, one by one, without hoping for too much In the future. Now she thinks a lol about the ruture. \\'hat will happen \\'hen the baby comt>s and she quil.s her job in a ceramics fac· tory! She has been ill throughout her pregnancy and her doctor wants her to SAN JUAN FAMILIES FACE EVICTION THIS MONTH Mrs. Arreola, Oaught•rs, Leticia (left), Patlicia quit nO\V. "l can't, of course,'• :iihe said . Sbe·s proud of her husband, Rudolpho. v.•ho makes good wages as a gardener in Laguna Niguel (about •~ per month ). But will it be enough to buy a house because that seems the onl y solution left. Buying the most ine:w:pensive house they can find. in Leisure World's New World development in El Toro. will ta ke nearly half of Arreola's monthly salary, not to mention the down payment. But it's the only alternative. Evtry other hos be<!n exfllorcd. There are no rent subsidies in Ornnge Coun ty. And 1hl' Arreolas, fiercely proud, refuse to t;1ke "'elfare. "The children have been doing v.•ell in school here." she said. '"The boys ha ve their Little League. They don't want lo leave ." She said they haven·1 on y relatives nearby or friends v.•ho have room for eight extras. "Beside·s, many of their landlord~ check regularly to see that no one else moves in." Hoverilgm lhebri1kof alfk1e11,t povtrljl Thr Arreolas lhcm.~clvc~ had three rrla li vci;: living with lhcm in their five- roo m home when the trouble bc1::an. But C'Vcn th ough it caused family friction. Mrs. Arrwl;i in5istcd thot the relatives had to go. And' though the pressures have been alrnos t unbearable Teresa Arreola has endured them with dignity. \Vhen asked wha1 the family will dn now that the deadline ls up she shrugged and said ... '"Que sera sera.'' \\'hat wilt be will be. ~. L. Pel.tovt••· C.L.U. We've got a "great escape" plan for you. Whal happens when you're caught / between your life style and the "middle-income squeeze" •.. you · become credit rich and cash poor. That's affluent poverty. Financial elbow room is needed and that's right up our alley. We call it our Financial Planning Service, and you know, it works because each plan is specially mapped for the individual. The cost? For the plan- nin g ... nothing I For its implemen- A;ertey .l.S$0Ci1te HARBOR .A.HE.A. Tel: 547·562l . .... ..... " ' . T. Montgom.rv Agency Associate NEWPORT BEACH Tel: 547-5621 tation? Probably less than you think. One tele- phone call to us and your "great escape" begins. MANUFACTURERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Subaidit ry: M1nEqulty M1n1gement Company : Allillate: ManEqul ty, Inc. • R. D. Stenge Arency Assoc•ale COS TA. ME.SA. lei: 547-5!!21 P. s. Gordo" Agency .Assoe11le ORANG£ COUNT'( T11: 547·5621 r • • ' I I • ' ' i I I • • l I J ' • I I I , I I ! - • ·- I I I • . • • • • • • • • .f OAILV PILOT T11tSday, Mar 18, 1971 U.S. Troop Streng~h • llilTO COllllltlll COMMUlllP MOC,.... ........... ,,.,, • UPI NEWSCHART gives a breakdown on U.S. troop strength iri Europe. The total strength, including the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the f\Iedilerranean, is ap- proximately 300,000. Two Repuhlicaif Se11ators Oash 011 Europe Cutbacl\: WASHINGTON {UPI) -Sen. Barry tvt. Goldwater (R·Ariz:.). said today that the proposed halving of the U.S. military gar- rison in Europe "would place this nat ion Ofl a disaster <.'Ourse for World War JIJ. ,. But another Republican, Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont said it was high lime that CongreS! \\"enl on record favor- ing a. reduction in forces assigned to NATO. The Goldwater-Aiken exchange came on the Senate floor as a bipartisan group M>ught to head off a showdo.,~tn vote late Wednesday on Senate Democratic leader Kosygin Claims Russ Readiness To Pare Troops MOSCOW I AP) -Premier Alexei Kosygin :oiaid today the Soviet Union "will do everything possible to r e a c h l'lgreement" on reducing troop levels in 1-:urope "ir the West displayed readiness really lo take practical steps in thi.! direction," Tass reported. The Soviet news agency said Kosygin 1.old a luncheon for visiting Prime ~tinister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Cana· :la that •·on the European continent there is the task of a cardinal tum toward detente and peal't'. The achievement of this great goal is quite Y.'ithin the limits of "'hat is possible.'' Kosygin called for preparations for an all European con· ference on troop and arms reductions and said the Soviet Union would like to 'ooperate y,•ith Canada in this field. Trudeau was quoted as saying: "\Ve &re equally vitally concerned y,•ith the need to ensure peace and security in Europe as an important stride towards. strengthening international peace ." Kosygin also sa id the Soviet Un ion is "deeply alarmed and indignant at the conlinued aggressive v.•ar in Indochina and the existcnct (If a hntbed (Ir "'ar in the i11ddle East." t..1ike h-tansfield's proposal to reduce by half the 300.000·man U.S. force in Europe, Goldwater said !hat ir by some "disastr(IUS mistake" the Senate went along with Mansfield. ""'e would move closer to a nuclear confrontation with lhc Soviet Union than ever before." "It stands to reason," he said, "that if \\'e cul our conventiona l forces to the bone our only protection against a possi· ble first strike "'ou\d ha\.'e to be nu· clear." · This would place the nallon on a disaster course for World War Ill." Goldwater said. Aiken, senior Republ ican en the Senate Foreign Relations Com· mitlee argued: "~lore than enough American troops are in Europe to serve our objectives, unless. of coo rse, our allie!ii wish to pay for their continued presence.'' Noting lhat the United Slales now has more troops in Europe than ii does in Vietnam. Aiken said. "A cynic might a'ik whether Western Europe is in more danger of a Communist takeover than South Vietnam." At the White House, Defense Secretarv 1'1elvin R. Laird and Undersecretary .;, Stale U. Alexis Johnson told Republican congressional leaders that cutting Euro-- pean forces in half would have di!iiastrous effects on !1.fveral diplomatic fronts. in· cludini;? strategic arms limitation talks. The GOP leaders indicated -Nixon pr~ferred a vole on the tiiansfield pro- posal, offered as an amendment to 1 draft extension bill. rather than on anv compromise proposal under study bY several senators. Basic Skill s Lacki ug'? SAN FRANCISCO fUPll -Four out of every 10 high school graduates are In- adequately trained in the .. fundamental skills"' of readlng, wriling and arithmetic, according to the Pacific Telephone Co. The company"s president , Jeron1e Hull, says 300,000 job applio::ants are in- terviewed each year and almost half ··will not meel even our modest basic requirement.'' -~~~~~~~~~- 'J;,ava Fro111 Etna Oo zin{{ T oiv ards Sicily . Village CATANIA. Sicily t UPI) The residents of Sant 'Allio turned Loth e i r patron saint today to sa ve their Jillie farn1ing village from the river of fire that has been oozing its way to their doorsteps for 45 days. Anny and civilian a~ tho r ili es mean"·hi!e, planned a rlleeting to a~ praise the situation and, perhaps, start evacuating the village if the lava {low frorn r.1ount Etna's volcano gets too close. · Since Et na began its latest activity in early April, the river of liquid rock has 1'ecred its \Vay through dozens or orchards and vineya rci.o; in" the neighborhood of SanfAl tio. Zafferna. Fornazzo, f\1ilo and ltinazzo, burning apple and chestnut orchards and vineyards along its path. Officials said more than 4.400 acres of fertile land have been engulfed by th£ lava. and about a dozen cottagc!I and villas have been destroyed. The town n1osl in danger was Zafferna. where the molten rock has reached within a half. n1ile. At Sant'Alfio 3nd Fornazzo. the lava w;is a mile away. T'he citizens of Sanl"Alfio planned today ~o carry the . st.atue nf their patron saint 1n a procession to the front of the lav<1 now. hoping their prayers will keep il from savaging their hamlet • Japan Crippled By 1'rain Strike !OKYO fAPl -One of Japan·!! "'Or!it railwa_y strikes crippled the public 1rans- portat1on sys1em today as y,·age 11esoti· alions broke rlo\1•n. 11l0Usands of commuters in Tok)'O, Osaka and other large cities went home on bicycles. hired buses or in their ow111 cars. causing traffic jams on almost all major highways. Thousands of othe~ll jammed into commuter trains or the state owned Japan National Railway - JNR. An estimated JO million commuters \\'ere affected by thr 24 hour strike. con1. pared ro thr 17 mil lion hit by a similar slrike last Friday: Thunderstorms on Tear Torna do Alerts Pos tecl in Ce nter of Nntio n Cnlltor 11ln , IT UNITED ~lltEll tNTl!ftN ... TION"L 5•"'" ""' wl..OS wnlppfd 1c•o•• !ou!n~tn C1l1!11<ni• locl1v ~r !nt !l!lr<I '''''""' clfv, brlno1n• """'"" !tm""'"" tu•ts •"II c!t•• 1~111. 1n., N1llonol Wo1!hff St,....k t ti••· cllClttf 1n11 l~t ,.,.,,.u•v would "'°" 1!itMly •IOl'Q tnt co•1• Wf'<Vlh<ll"I • TIM OUllOOll. !llroutl! .\1•u•01~ w11 to• ''"' U:le1 •nO •tluiv•lv mild !tf'fl• 1>1•1!~••1, ~"''' w••t ••P""<:tl'd to ••not ln!o •nt 90• ""''" c<>11••I 1re11 In mt HI• '"" mount1ln1 In int 11111. tn ~O\ 1n111t1 loG•v. "" "'"'u'"" c••m""' to 1 pr"Cllctl'(I "'"" Qt 1t •n• ....... I\ MCl'ldt V. L~ ~nlvh! will l>I ~ • Tiit•• ... I lr1llt •Vt 1 .. 11.1..,. trorn .,nov In !h• LO'\ .o~otlu ln•n Al lflt bttct'>tl, /\If/II wtlfP flf t r 11(1 ""II/\ !~t wtlfr J.1 MO<Jnllln reiOfl ll"t•lmu..,1 rtno..i bttw"n }S l nCI U COnlfT)Un•tlt1 lfl u-r "'urt ••"C•I 1\1<1 11!1/\I t bout IO wlll'I ~tr v1lll•' In !lit JOt. ~ "'"'I M-IY tntl l f "Ol{!•<t t.i111t ""'' "'<'""' LIMlt l rK/\ 1s i~. k'llt MOfll<t tt-tO. htt>ot,,. H•ll. Ml Wo!Ml!I 11,.,, J>11mu1r 11.11. 111 .. ,,.,.,.. ''"''' _.,,"' iOl'lnfl '°'"' 81~r .. t•tlcl S1att1tn n r y I ' UNITID 'ltl~i 1'1Tf1Ut4TIONAL )tYf'rt 1~11..0.••!trrm• ••l..i 1,,. (fn IU ttf 1"-... !loft t t/IW HMllW •I • """" •• ,, .... \jtlttd ··-'". ~ ..... , Mfl.~111.,.i VtH•• lo •!'le -t"-•" , •• 1 .... , to.rn9d11 "''111\ll \<>rrt l">•l.O lo• '°''lonl crt O~l1~om1, IC111111. M1t• 1c.,id, NtCf.fl-1 .fl\O I~•· A '"'"'°" J ' cool " s11 llltt!ICI \_MILO •• w•\ $•t~lf'd on I~• •tO<J"!! n••• Gld• ton, ltfn. '"" • •unnt1 t lOUd .fll4 w•• Tn1 N•li0111I Wt•'"" SftVl(I IH utd t•VPf• tl'!<lll(lf tllOr"l. ,.lt!lln•1 for l)O't10J'lt pl 1(111t11, Ntb••l~t 11111 IC.WI Po+ltt 1~ llttt .. (t , N•C N ia ~ •• , 111 ro -·<1'1<~ In d fmtttr tl'°"1• ptnJft) IJl~ 1t0t,_,lt l ... WP\• ""I I ~"!ltt !11tfol Cl l•O"lt I • t Ol(I 1it JJltfltl l•OM l~I ~tCohC I; m!o!U•f o• •••n l"O '"°''" +tll '" t•C"" 0••~11 11111 Mn~••n• 11111 w11 H\bVll>t to .. 1•1 '"°' <•M•ll lto.tOI .. Iii' 1 \11r•1~ C>•t tl'!t tl(l•11'1-.tn P1"ll( ,,. I Hf~ lli~lnl\ "'"' Pfl\l"d r..- "''ll el ~o•!~ Ot,CTI IOt ton•rnl. Con.ia l Ftlr ~I• Li9M Yl rl•bl• w!nC11 "''"' •"II m«nono n.,.,,, Dttomln• •t1•1t!1 ID to )0 ~llGll Ill •U••-• leti•f l fld Wodn'"'''· HI ... 11>61• ti '' n, Co11111 ltfTIHft•ll'f'•I ,,,.., lt9m ~ TO /fl. tnll l'Ut l•f'flfMl••·~·n fl1'Qt ''°""' Jt ro IJ. W•l•r !tmH•tlUtt .0, S11r1. 1'1t•r~ •. Tid e• TUl~O"Y ifUlflCI /\OQI! I ... II"' I. $oo1ond lo,. 111.W 1>.m 1 I WfONftOAT ,1,,1 n1111 SJO •l"I )t ~ltll !O# l i d~ .... 0• '''OM ~··~ • I• • m t I ••co11~ low ll '''·"' Ot \1111 Jl ittl ~ ).1 1.rn. Stt1 J,o•.m. MllOI! fl l1al,IJ 1 ,.,, lflil,.111>.m. 1'e111perait1re~ llY UlrllTEI> "ltf11 INTl!JIJUIT10N ... l l1m11e••lu•P• """ 1>tl'Cl1>l!1rlon IO• l~t 1•·M11r ~·loo 1111C!lno •t • 1.m Hit/\ l tw '"'· ,t.1l)on1 " ~ Alb\l~~tt~wl ,. " l!lenr~ " " l\r«nn .. •• llwll•ln " .. (~•rlo1t1 .. ,. C•l~•o~ .. • (1t.,•t•nct " .. O~I\•• " .. O••.,•r " " " Ou Me•n1• .. " ... 0•1.,,11 • " r ... ,,.,,.,, .. ~ ~tltn• d ,. ~JI Mo"fll~1u ~ .. ln~ltfllMrh• •• .. J•t~i.onvollo " • J~"'"" • " t..1n\1t (•l'f .. " .~ Lii Vt<HI " " tooi ..... ltt " " l 0ulov1Hr " • Ml1ml " " MllHIU~'t• " ~ MlllllC.i!0-1•\ .. ~ .u i.irw 0,1,...,. OJ " New '°O"' .. ~ O• t1"°"1'1 C•I¥ " .. . ~ °"'m " • ,. ~•'"' So•I"~' • ~ r /\ll•citl"" 1 " " ,,_ .. , .. " ,_,., " " l'<)!"lll nft " " Ftnc • " ~I lt11tl1 .. M $t i! ~·•t (,t• " " " "'" 01,..a " • \111 ~••n(ll('1 " 11 Vlll(Ov>v" .. ,, W.01~!nr''"' " " ' • - Israeli Envoy Seized Turk Pol ice Speed llunt • i n Death Fears ISTANBUL (UP I) -The Turkish government arrested scores of dissidents, profe!lsors and politicians today in a race lo rind kldnaped Israeli consul Ephraim Elrom before his abductors can execute him as threatened. The leftist extrem!St.s who kidnaped Elrom. 59, from his home f.fonday said they would kill him in tv.·o days if the government did not release "all revolu- tionary guerrillas'' now in jail. Instead there "''ere mass arrests. Army unilS and security police halted -traffic at roadblocks througho ut Turkey in a search for whit government sources said were more than 300 known lefty,·ings. student extremists, i n t e I I e c t u a I s , unionist.s. professors and politicians thought to be connected in some way with lhe organization that seized Elrom. Elrom. who helped send· Nazi mass murderer Adolf Eich.mann to th.e gallo"'s a decade ago, was captured by men call· ing themselve! the Turkish. Liberation Army, a leftwing orgaoi:r.ation that claim- ed responsibility for previous kidnapings of Ame ricans. Many of those arrested \\'ere t.aken lo a security headquarters building that rlorence Nightingale once used as a hospital during the Crimean War. At the top of the wanted list were '49 persons the government said v;e:e •·g uilty of inciting innocent youths" to the kidnaping. ! In Jerusalem the Israeli cabinet met In emergency session to discuss the kid· naping and the possible involvement of Arab guerrillas. A statement issued afterward expressed Israel's "disgust" y,•ith the kidnaping. Prime ~1inister Golda Meir sent a message of encouragement to the wife of the abducted diplomat.) State Winds Up Case 011 Seale NEW HAVEN, Con11. <UPI) -The state rejected claims of police conspiracy today as it began fina l arguments in the murder conspiracy trial of Black Panther chairman Bobby G. Seale a11d ?\.1rs. Er- icka Huggins for the torture and death of an alleged informer. "\Ve are not talking aboUl police against Panlhers. \Ve are riot talking aboul Panther ideology. We are talking a~ut Panther practices," State's Al· tomey Arnold J. !\1ark!e said as he op- ened his final argument to the Superior Cou rt jury of seven whit.es and fj\•e blacks. ' Elrom, a policeman.turned diplomat. was seized by four or five. armed and masked men "'hen he. came home for lunch. He struggled hut was subdued with a pistol blow to the head. F'ive hours later 11 type'A'rilten note . delivered to the Turkish Ney,·s Agency said Elrom \\'ould be shot unless all "revolutionary guerrillas" now in jail y,•ere released by 5 p.m. Thursday. The note y,·as signed by "the central committee of the -Turk.ish People's Llberallon army." This is a left-wing organization y,•bicb has c I a Im e d responsibility for earlier abductions or foreighers. including five U.S. airmen in Ankara . The airmen later wert ttleased unharmed. The Turkish government ignored the demands for $400,000 ranS(lm for four of the American airmen kidnaped in March and it Y.'a5 igooring this demand as well. MountiI1g So"iet_ Jitters See11 Over Pu1·ge iI1 Egypt LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet Union. Increasingly perturbed by the purge in Cairo. is seeking firm assurances from President Anwar Sadat of his continued allegiance to Mosco\'.', diplomatic sources said today. The Kremlin has been \\'alching events in Egypt v.ith anxiety and is showing groY.'ing nervousness over its future relations with the nation "'hich ls the ke y to its foothold in the 1'Uddle East, tbe sou rces said. Diplomatic sources said A1oscow is now seeking assurances Egypt's policy course of close alignment with Russia "'ill re.· m11in unaltered under the new Sadat regime. Cairo was e::cpected 1.o give the Kremlin this assLitance because of its depend~nct: on continued Soviet supplies of arms and on air defense which Moscow controls rompletely. According to authorit.ative diplomatic reports reaching London. Moscow was completely taken by surprise by recent event.s in Cairo. The Kremlin shO\\'Cd no signs of particular an::ciety when Vice President Ali Sabry was fired from his post, since Sadat's policy had gained Moscow's con- fidence over the past six months. But the Soviet reaction began to change markedly when Sabry"s dismissal turned in to an all-out purge that signalled a ma· jor switch, at least of domestic policy. Moscow has reportedly noy,· become suspicious lest the domestic changeover herald a corresponding sbifl in foreign policy \l'ilh a ''trend to the righ.t" - "'hich in So\'iet terms means a move to"·ards the United States. The recent ri1iddle. East peace aclivities or Secretary of .State \Vjlliam P. Roger• and his direct and· continuing contactJ with Sadat y,·ere said to have been follow- ed in the Kremlin with uneasiness that has now turned to anxiety and irritation. F orrner Egy ptian. Official Sabry Thro wn in Jail CAIRO (AP) -Former Vice President Aly Sabry and other former high ranking officials accused of plotting to overthrow President Anwar Sadat were taken to jail at dav"n today and may soon face public trial. informed sources reported. Sabry. six former cabinet ministers and othe rs ousted last 'o''eek had been under house arrest since Sadat launched his purge on Thursday. Th,e sources said full details of the plot "'ould be made public "'hen the in· vestigation now under way is completed. But meanv.•hile they gave this preview of the plans Sadat's foes had made : Labib Shukair, the speaker of the Na· tional Assembly, y,•as to be installed as figurehead president. Sabry, considered tifosco1v's man in the Egyptian· hierarchy and a man of considerable unpopularity, ,.,.as to boss the Arab Socialist Union, the country"s only political party. Interior ~iinisler Shara\.\'i Gomaa, ,\·hose ministry C(lnlrols the police, had deployed his men throughout Cairo y,·ith instructions to use force if necessary to keep order once Sadat y,•as out of the "·ay. 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Sin !.'.lt.o S.nu AM S.n11 Cltr• S.n11 Monoet S."tt Rou ,.._ StlfltClrl SuxklOl'I • Tlft tn• To•r•nct To,.lon V111111t Vi n Nuvt V""l\IN Wtn Ccrvln11 W~onltr • t t f ' i • 3rd Loss Predicted . ;:i,.,-:~i---For SST CHANGE 'ROLES -Civilian brother WesJey Storer (top, sho'¥l'n in \'ie tn am and bottom right) pulled switch \Yith his soldier brother Glenn, 21 (bottom, left ) and 'vent to Vietnam in his stead. One Brother Goes To War for Other YARI\IOUTH, !\1aine !UP!l -\Vesley Storer, 22, '"'as never in the Army and he had no combat training. But \\'hen his younger brother Glenn came ho me from Vietnam disilhwioned with the war. \Vesley decided to take his place. on the front line. "\\'e're not sure what happened or ho1v if happened," the boy ·s· father, Carlton R. Storer. a Yarmoulh contract· or, said Monday. "But \Vesley decided that since he was not likely to be drafted, he ought to share Glenn's service." So \Vesley put on his brother's unifor.m and \vent to Vietnam in April in his place. The hoax \vas discovered when someone In his battalion reported a civilian in their midst. WASHINGTON (UP!) - The o n c e • d e a d Supersonic Transport (SST ), revived in the Hou&e last week, see-ms doomed. to sink a third time at the han ds or a stlll·b&.stile U.S. Senate .• A UP I check fl.tonday show· ed SST foes in the Stnate should have an eight or nlne- vole margin when the vote comes late , We~sday on whether to joi n the House in rescuing the controversial pro- ject. The Senate rejected the SST by I l votes in Dec:•mber, but was forced to give in lo the House and approve continued de veloPment of the jetliner un· W spring. Jn March, however, the ·House narrowly approved sc rapping the project. and the Sena~ concurred, 51-48. But the House _ reversed itself again last weU, con-. verllng a $15.3 million item in a supplemental appropriations: bill for SST contract termJna· lion costs into a n ap· propriation to continue the program. The Senate Ap- propriations Committff quick· ly concurred. Sometime Wednesday nl&ht, Sen. William Proxmire (O- Wis.), leader of the anti.SST forces , will move to strip the money from the bill. Barrl.nr last-minute switches er heavy absen teeism, the tally should be 54 to 45 in his favor. -"! don't see how Proxmire can lose," said a Senate ltadtr v.•ho is an SST backer. "It will have to be fought over again in la Hou se-Senate) con- ference like it was in December.·· Presbyterians Choose Woman • DAILY PILOT S Marijuana Surge Minority Sheriff ·On Carpet Salinger Predicts Smugg"lers Gain I ~ixon to B~ Tough . At Record Clip JIN!VE;IlSl1Y fA{U(, , Pa. (UPI) -President Nlxon will be "a lot harder'' to defeat in CON to Peking in any. capacltY, even as a tourist. -Achieves a partli.1 tol.utlon to the Mideast crisis. OPELIKA, Ala . ( U P I ) -1972 than "many Dfmocrats in S"allnj:er aiid he believed WASHINGTON (UP!) - U.S. Cwitoma COmrnl11loner Myles J, Ambrott 1ald today marijuana and h1Jhish con- tlaue to be smu&Jled into the United States at an un. precedenttd rite, de1plte in· ttnsifled surveillance. 1 Customs •sen.ts are employ.: Jng dogs, compcnlte profiles or · potential smugaler• and the- l1te1t electron.le de v le e 1 1 Ambrose told the National', Marijuana Pros, Cons Disputed WASHINGTON (AP ) -A National C.Ornmlulon on Mari· juana and Dan1erous Drugs was told today marijuana p~ bably is da.naerous but 1hould be Ie1a1J2ed. The: testimony follotr.'td tht claims Monday ol two doetora that tht druf prOduced dilto~ tion of pe:rcepUon •nd reality in test subjttts and the opl· Government witnesses their euphoria Currently Sen. Gtor1e McGovern (0. Comm.Inion on Marijuana and testified ~1 on day that h!lleve," Pierre Salinger l&ld S.0.), waa the best candidate Dru& Abuse, but ••we rttlize ·Ataban\a's' first black sheriff ~tonday night. ror the DemocraUc presiden-- the rt la n1 simple solution aince Reconstruction and his Salinger, pre1s secretary to . Ual. non;tln1tlon. He s a Id t!)e ~I bl of • Pre1ident John F. Kennedy, McGovern hu the "courage of to . ex ~ro em .. chief deputy beat an unarmed said Nixon would be especially his convJctlons and bas spoken m1rj~ I hashi ah.abuse. and unrtsisting Negro difficult to defeat U he ac· oot with candor." For one nr. be said. more . f th • l Ill rt hi II ,. people th~e eritire' popu1a-pr1so_ner at the 1'1acon County compl!she• any one o e ' w 8UJ>PO m a i.ue tlon of tbi United Stat ea _ Jad tn August. following during his -current way," ht said. , term ol office : Salinger was the f In a 1 225.S mW -pa.1sed through U.S. Attorney lra Dement -Substantially re~ u c e 1 speake.r in a . W • e kl on g customs o the country last .charg~ Sheriff Lucius American forces in Vietnam .. "Ren&l!sance Festival" at year al andt~'each one",ot-~sOn of Tuskegee with -Tunl.$ the economy Pe:nnaylvania, State University. these · Pl ~ 1 potential "ta.king (he Jaw into his own around. ' Thi& 101l 6r the fesUval wu to •m.;!f.e:r i&lers employ the hWs~ that's all there is to It" -Achieves a 60luUon ,in afd ~ .... Jtholarshjp fund for la 1 ,, In-But , Alabama Attorney d is armament negotiaUons undetPJ'ivtlfied Jtudents in ~at te noloa aval al>.e, General William J. Baxley, with th e. Soviet Un.ion. the state. clt.ldinl tr a·s..h am&ahera" aidli'lg Amerson·s b I a ck -;;;;:;'J,'-i~i/.ifiJ'I..UMfi'iJfj~f:irfjij;fj==;-meant oompactln& g11bage d,efonse attorney, acoused De-JX/J/IJ'/ J/JJ/l/ 11//// 'fJ. "1ti\lch uaa:t~ m ustric to men t of mislea ding the all-maryuana a n d H .d .d tiu into 25 Etd.30 P,Ound "''hite jury. e sat ev1 ence blocks; lie also said hashish. a '''Ould sho\V the prisoner was orm or marijuana, has "a dangerous man -l think a d • ·;1 sick man -maybe a crazy d presse and bakt'f" man." Baitley j o In e d aoil "lpped commercially U Amerson's defense because he dllh · said· the ca se could set a ; · precedent dt.l_i;.imental to all ~adiation Peril Seen From SST Alabama law enforcement Of· ficers. , Dewey Eugene .OuBoise. a white former policeman , said Wilbert Dean Harris waS ''meek as a lamb'' when he surrendered afte r firing shots at Amerson and his deputies through a window at the jail. Cheese Of The W1ek1; .. , . MONT. ST. 81NOl1'·~·' ORUYIRI nlon of another doctor that &!:RXELEY (UPI) -E~~ alcohol produ«s s -i m I I a r hiuJt gas from supersonic results. tranaport (SST) jet3 could John Kaplan, a law pro-break up the ozone shield sur· fessor at Stenford UniveraJ.ty, rounding the earth and !el in told the commission today in "blinding and even lethal'' prepared test i mo n Y he •ultraviole t radiation from the believes marij uana to be sun, a University of California dangerous but added research 1clenti1t said Monday. Tuskeget Officer Fred Reed and former officer Joseph Merriweather Jr. said they also \j,"ere among city polictmen present and sub. !>laintiated the-s t o r y or DuBoise . Reed aod Mer- ri"'eather are black. 20· ·$179 Off : . :iinet llK h11 yet to ahow how A layer or zone molecules Hot Race Seen dangerous t:hfi drug may be. surrounds the earth, pro· "If the mArijuana Jaws ttcting it from dangerous PHILADELPHl A (AP\ - Meanwhile. Glen n turned himself in April as absent v.•ithout \eave. He was sent to Ft. Deven.'I. J\.1ass .. and kept in a maximum se<:urity cell. He was told he would be sent back to Vietnam. worked," he SI.Id, ''I would be radiation from the sun . Dr. Frank Rizzo, the self styled strongly in favor of them but Harold S. Johnston, a former '·tough cop'•~ running !or they, like Prohibition, do not dean of the University of mayor wi lh the backing of work, They divide tlle yout1g C a I J for n i a Co 11 e g e of Democratic party regulars. from the old and are pro-· cheml1try, said 111 released meets U.S. Rep. William J. pellin&: ua to a naUonal cri&i1 by exhauat.s of high.fl ying Green, a ~lhful liberal back. of confidence of m a j or SSTs would apetd up the reac. ed by reform elements, today ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -dimension&. Therefore they lions that de stroy the zone In a primary clostr than For the first time, United must ao." molecules. originally expected. "It was a brotherly gesture." the boy's mother said. "Wesley told me he was willing. to give his life .for his brother and v.·as 'villirig to come hon1e with a leg blo\vn off for his brother.·· Presbyterians ha ve elected a1p••ill••••••&-•lii""'iii""'li00iiiiiiiiliiiii..:;iliiiii•iliii0i.,iiiiiiiii"" woman, Lois H. Stair of ------=--~-·--- Spec. 4 GleM Sl.Orer, 21. came home early last month after five months' service for a twe>v.·eek furloug h. "He v.·as a wreck when he came home but he straight· ened out after a while," his father said. "I guess Glenn summed it up best. He said they're playing g~mes with his lift. over there." · The brothers · left April 18, saying they were going to Connecticut, where Glenn was to return to Vietnatn and Wesley, v.·ho was unable to join the Army because he broke his knet skiing. was to take a cruise to Bermuda . Waukesha , Wis., as moderator, the church'• top presiding officer. Sbe is the second woman within a week to be elected to the highest office of a U.S. denomination. Mrs. Stair, a w arml y vivacious church worker and businesswoman, d e f e 1 t t d three male candid!tts near midnight Monday at the open· ing session of the denomina· tion's l83rd General Assembly. Seagram's 7. Crown. It fits right into your world. • s5i' . .. '5 Qt, - SomehoY.·. '7 CrOW'n al Wl)'tl i;eemJ rirht. &!cau&e of iU. clean. comfortable tute. Becau&e it'a made bySearram. . And bttause it fits. in ita place, with the other food things of lift. \Vhy else do more people mak~ it a -~part o! th!ir_wodd thanAl\Y-Ot.bu..whiakey! 1-llcbato/Amlrico. s..,s....,,.. .... 1cs.... • Play The Advertising Game To Win With This Rule: Check Y our Hat NOW Yo11 see 1r. .. Now You DON'T But.pay 11 though you did? W• don~ bell8'19 advertisers should have to play guessing games with circulation flgure1. ihe fac!s are too Important to the effectiveness of their sales messages and the cost of advertl1Jng apace. To ellmlnate the element of chance, our facts and figures are audited and verified by the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Through an audit report, ABC tells U$0and our advertisers. exactly how much circulation we have, where lt ls distributed, what readers pAy, and the answers to many other questions about our circulation audience. Don't gu-k to 1ee a copy of ciur I alesl audll"reporl. Be ABC-sure! DAILY PILOT M a rnemr of tht Aud it Bureau of Clrt:ulallont, our clrc:u11!1on r1cord1 1nd pr1ctlc;11 1r• tt.tbjtet to lhe ICRl\11\)' of NgUlat ljtlef tudltl and tht dl1Clpllnt Of ABC-de11rmlntd 1t1ndard1. • , • ' • . I J l t • ' . ' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Good-or Two bllls are presently being considered by the Cal· lfomia Legislature that wouJd attempt to equalize pub- lic school finance by means or a $3.75 per $100 statewide property tax. The identical bills appear t.o be moving rapidly to- ward passage. The idea has been supported ~y state Superintendent of J;>'ublic Instructio.n _\Vilson Rd~s. t~e state Board of Education and assoc1at1ons of California school boards and teachers. The Idea that fostered the statewide property tax l!i an appealing one-namely, to provide a basic minimum level of education for every child in the state. Under the plan, school districts would all receive an e q u a I amount of money for each student enrolled. The so- called .. block grants" would replace finances derived from locally determined property taxes. Th.us, ·regardless or a district's wealth (tax base per 5ludenl) all districts would enjoy a minimum level of educational program support. . The effect of such a proposal on districts along the Orange Coast is varied. Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified Districts have opposed the plan. Laguna Beach taxpayers would have to cough up another Sl.43 per $100 and Capis· trano's tax rate would climb 20 cents for those districts to maint'ain the same level of proefram. Both also \vou ld pay an additional' 6 cents to Saddle back College. Newport-Mesa Unified District trustees have been officia1ly silent on the pr-:>po~al. While they'd have to raise taxes 8 cents to maintain current programs, the Coast Community College District tax rate would drop 17 cents. Therefore, to oppose the plan would in effect be to oppose a possible net tax increase for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa district property owners of some 9 cents. Huntington Beach Union High School district would Mislearli!!g? receive Sl million in money for program improvement while the district \Vould·enjoy a 14 cent reduction from lhe $1 .63 tax rate in effect when the proposal was deve.I· oped. Seal Beach, on the .other hand, would get whacked tor an additional $1.16. (tl'he reduced Coast Co llege tax rate would apply in both areas). Among the 20 Orange County districts to receive more money with lower tixes are the Tustin Union liigh and San Joaquin. Ocean View, Huntington Beach and Los Alamitos elementary school districts. Despite the vociferous support Jent the proposal by some organizations. the bill 1s hardly a panacea. It is an oversimplification to argue it will reduce property taxes. There is no requirement in the bi!J for districts to reduce their individual taxes. The bills do not provide for anything approaching the desirable 50.50 sharing of education costs between lhe state and the local property taxpayer. The state's contribution, as well as the amount of future statei.11ide proeerty tax levies are left to the whim of each year·s Legislature . . And. lastly. the $3 .75 fiJure bandied about as a ''total school tax" for all California di stricts is only a • minimum. Overrides are provided within the legislation for districts to raise additional funds. The state's experiment at equalizing elementary and secondary education through use of a statewide property tax may turn out to be helpful. But unless the state will put up considerably more money to share the burden \vith property taxpayers. all that has changed is the method of collection and distri· bution of school support monies. No new school monies will have been produced. To guarantee lowered property taxes for schools and sound school financing. citizens should push the legislators hard to have the state increase its share of r;chool financing, to something closer to a 50·50 ratio. ../ ·o-.r ' • Habitually Supports De11aocrat Liberals Common Cause Left Wing? CanYouLook Women's Lib and WASHINGTON -Polit ic al em· barrassmenl!I keep plaguing John W, Gardner as he disc reelly disclaims presidential ambitions and proudly pro- fesses the nonpartisan slalus of his new Common Cause organization. Now It develops that Common Cause has had to apologlu for an aide who J>05- ed as a White House functionary in soliciting informaHon for Gardner's "people"s lobby." It is a bit of un· derhanded amateurism which will not help the Cause or its noble image. l\1ore0ver -alas and alack -it is Colorado's Republican national com· mitteewoman who blew the whistle on ColT'.mon Cause·s "White House" aide. J.1rs. Jo Anne Gray of Denver says she has had a written apology for the in- cident. LAST !'t10NTH f.1rs. Gray received a telephone call from a Charles Cobb who said he was ca lling from lhe White House to determine the status of the 18.year-0ld vole in the Colorado Legislature. She gave the caller her best ort h~nd reading of the &i111ation. The following da y P.trs. Gray made a detailed check and then tried to supply additional information lo the White House. It was then that she learned that Cobb was no \Vhite House staffer but an aide with Common Cause. "Why the dceeit~" asked ~1rs. Gray 1n 1 tart note which sht sent to Cobb. ''I woul.d have told you or any otber group what I knov.· of the situation. "Incidentally. lt Isn't just the Democra ts and Common Cause v.'ho sup- < Allen-Goldsmith port the 18-year-old vole. Presidont Nixon does and .so does o u r Republ.Jcan legislative leadership here in Colorado," ·she added. BY WAY OF' REPLY. ~1rs. Gr::iy says she reeeived an apologetic phone call and then a letter from fan r-.lacGowan. head of the 18~year-old vole project for Com· mon Cause, \Oo'ho advised that Cobb is no longer v.·ith that organiz.ation. She says she was told that Cobb had made similar ''\Yhite House" calls in other states. f\.1rs . Gray tells us that the non-partisan nature of the Cause was already suspect In Colorado. since the statt' chairman. Craig Barnes, ran unsuccessfull y for Congress as a Democrat In her le! ter lo Cobb she complained that Common Cause habitually supports "''hat she calls "!he Democratic p a. r t y ' s lefl wing philosophy." "Non·part.isan?'' asked GOP Com· mitteev.·oman Gray. "'Yhen are yow going lo start calling a spade a spade? l'd sug- gest you begin by properly identifying yourself and by telling the truth about ~'ourself and your group." E\'EN IN ITS shedding of the \\rhite House mantle. Common Cause h;:is an• noyed Colorado Republicans. Al one point in the controversy Rep. r.·1ike lvlcKevitl, R-Colo .. v.·as advised that ~lrs. Gray's genlleman caller had come to Common Cause as • former employe of the Republican National Committee, The GOP national committee has checked its records here and has advised that Cobb was ne\ler employed. It founrf that Cobh Occasionally did volunleer work for the District of Columbia GOP com· mittce bul that he was never employed by the D. C. Republicans either. Jn her letter. Mrs. Gray also recalled Gardner's last political flap by asserting that Common Cause "even al\ov.·ed the Democratic National CommiUee to use part of your membership list to raise funds." The Republican national chairman , Sen . Bob Dole. R·Kans .. had questioned the use by the Democrats ol the Common Cause membership lisl.5 for partisan fund-raising. Gardner told Dole th::it :i partial list \Oo'8S supplied the Democrats on an exchange basis, ~n return for an equal number of names. GARDNER. WHO HAS come under pressure from Republican conlributors lo Common Cause. told Dole by leller that the exchange of name5 with a political party "had not been wise." He said the execulive committee had decided not lo do it again. However. Gardner explained that the "dirt>ct mail consultants·• 10 . Common Cause had advised. before !he trade v.·it h the Democrats. that the GOP list v.•nuh1 not be available on any basis . He told Dole lhal he v.·ould be v.·illing lo recom· mend a similar exchange with the GOP. B~· Rohert S. Allr.n and John A. Goldsmith Earth's Oceans Imperiled Like the sea its elf, the sltore fas cilt.· ates us who rrturn to Lt, the place oJ 01,r dirn ancestral beginnings. In the rec11rre11t rhyt/u11s of tides and surf ond 1he varied li,fe of the tide lints there 1s !he ob t:ioiu attraction of I Edi torial Research I movement imd ch.angt and beattttf. ----------- -Rochel Corson. The Edgr of thr Sea (1955) , Jusl 16 years ago, Rachel Carson could v.•r11e about ''Lhe enduring sea" v.·ith nearly absolute coof1dence that it was beyond ma.n·s ability to change and to despoil. By 1960. in a preface 10 an edi· tion of "'The Sea Around t:s:· l\hss Carson was u:arning of the danger she foresaw from the use of the ocean as a dumping ground for radioactive "'astes . But even this eminently thoughtful scientist failed tO envision th!.': pollution threat that now is imptriling wide stretches of our seaboard. The clumping of sludge within sight of resort sl1ores Is • Tuesday. Ma y 18 . 1971 The editorial pagt oJ the Doily Pilot sttlc& to infQrm and s11m.- ulatt readers by prtitnung this Mw1paper1.1 opinio71J and com· mentar11 on. topics of interest and ''gni/icc"ce, bu providing a forum for the e.rpre,.sion Of our readers' opinforu, and by prtstntino tht divtrse vft~ pofnt1 of h1/ormcd ob.~trvtr1 and. ,pokt.smtn 011 topk1 iJf ·the day. . Robert N. Wee<!, Publisher turning parlS of the ocean into a cr.sspool fil neither for the plants and animals about v.·hi ch Miss Carson wrote nor for man himself. .!CST HOW FAST !he. ocean en· vironment is deteriorating was disclosed Jn recent hearings held by a Senate air and waler pollution subcom mittee in Rehoboth Beach. Del. The subcommittee v.·as told that the "'aters off the New Jersey, Delaware and 1\iaryl and coasts are getting murkier. Part of the blame was assigned to !he dun1ping of sc,vage sludge in A 120-square-mile area near Cape May. N. J. Ocean5 maitaz!ne eslima1es lhat 48 million tons or solid "'aste. including up to 5,000 tons of mercury. were dumped along the U.S. shoreline 1n J!l70. It adds : "At a rate nf increase of about 5 ptr«nt 8 year, (man) 15 pollutin!t the OCl'ans w11h an appalhng variety of (f('br13, from sev.·age to 011 ... tp nerve Ras.'' Because of pollution. lht' area ~·h lch lies about 7.5 rniles off Rcho001h and ~ 5 miles off Cspe r-.lay \Oo'as declared off. limits to she'llfishlng about 10 months ago. r·1shermen also complain th;it 1ht muck has decreased their har,·ests drastically. SEVERAL ANTIDU~IPING bills are before Congress. TI1e lrgl~lation calls for a permit system to control dumping no1i.• and. e\'entually. a ph:asln~-out or All such h11rmful w;iste dispo!isl. But An outright ban on sludge dumping 15 con!ildcred Im· rractlcat by some expert&. The sludge has to ~o 50mewhcre. Even without dumping. it Is ques. IJonable how Ieng the sea can continue to absorb the effluent pouring into ti. One naturalisl noted that, •·Every second of the 2• hours about two million gallons ot sewage and other fluid waste pour into lhe nation!tl waterwa~s . .!!.-ln~time,mucll or this reaches the ocean. Attention has been called to the Mediterranean. a receptacle r or r1verborne pollution. "From the point of view of Italy." says one Italian waler ex- pert. "our coastal v.·aters are ,already dead as a source or rood and as an amenity. Nobody with any seose would eat shellfish in Italy. and 70 percent of our beaches are a health hazard ." A ''closed" St'a llke !he ~1cdilerrancan Is, or course. more susct'ptible to pollu· lion than is the vasl Atlantic. But n'any experts belie"e thal it is only a matter of time -and nol much time -before a 51milar epltaph is 1\'ri1ten for !ilretches of America's once beautiful and unspoiled shores. Dea r Gloomy Gus: It's Very upsetting to pl:tet 11 long· distance call to some of our loc11I !healers rrom-outstde thPir callrnj?: "rtas. only to have ltl spend the first C"Ouple of minutes !i!ilening to their recorded advertising -J. K. t~ll ffll\lf't fflle(l't ..... ,.,. ..1, • ., ""' ~ttUl••ll'r ,,.... ti +~t ~•w .. •••• lf'lt •t~t '-' .. , .. , 14' Otllll'I'' Out. 0•1" 1'!111. Back and Reniember? r Hal Boyle ' , !\othing reconciles people to the price of life more than memory. Sometimes a too recent memory can burn llke a fire or wound like a jagged piete of barbed wire. But as a memory g""'·s older and mellower it usu ally loses 11~ Searing quality. the pain ebbs, and we become adjusted to the l11~e5 and hurt- ful episod~ of Jiv· ing 11 is through the men)or~ or our ex· penenr.es that v.•e di· i:cst and assi milate lhe meanin~ of our e.ll1Slenee. And your O\\'n priv:ite worlrl is i .-? l'5' • I I ( ., , ~' \·~ ·./ 1/ prell y cxlensil'C if ~·oo can look back and remember "'hen- t:VERY S~TALL BOY wearing a i:-kullcap with a plastic propeller on it had !he "'ild hope th11t ii be held his arms out and ran down the sidewalk fast enough, he could t;:ikl.' off and fly. Ir "'as fan1e enough to last a 11fe1ime if ::i farmer had ~rO\Oo'n a pumpkin big enough to be exhibited in the window of thP. local ne\Oo'f'pape r in 1912. \\"Oen a man had a tno!hache. he didn"t jusl lell you about ii-he opened his mouth "1de 11nd pointed his ringer at thr (lrfendinJt tnolar, just to be sure you <hdn 't blame !he v.·rong one . On a good day a fellow might get to see haU a dnzen achint:: teeth during a short \Oo'alk through the center of to\Oo·n. IN A Sr-.:IALL TO\\'N half the people over 80 had already written their o\\"·n obituary nolices so that at least after death lhey'rl ~ct a fair dr.;il , A congressman knew tha t his favorable mail from bark hon1e would increase v.·hen hi~ rnnstitucnts wrote him for free sei!dS for !heir gardens ·Half lhe housewive5 1n America woke ..up e.vcry morning _wi he.. featlul knowltdge that before nii:htfal\ she miJ?,ht ha\'e to remove a dead mouse or rat from a kitchen 1r11p. A V.'hote !!.enerat1on of Americans grew up thinking that 48 stars were just aboul the right number for !he flag. and that there probably ne\·er "ould be any morr in it. THE Si\IALLEST kid in a J!.ang of boys was usually called ··run1." and someho w he n1anaged to grow up without being permanently scarred psychologically. The choicest morsels of IO\.\'n gossip \Oo'Crl' usually exchanged by '"omen "'hile coolin,!: themselves "'ith ~rdboard fans at a church social. The f;ins had been £1V('n (o them ''free gratis." as lhc ~aying v.'cnt, by the local grocery i;tore or funeral parl{lr. • Spcakin,i: of j:li\•caway~. the calendar i;i\'Cn away by lhe bank at !he start of 1he yea r alv.'ayy; had thr most dignified picture on lhe cover : tht' one given by the garage had the naughtiest. looking girl. EVEN IF HE couldn'1 hold a ~1c11dy joh. R lrllo"' could avoid lhe repu1a11on o[ bt!in~ shiftless as Jong as Ile t'Ould con· \ 1nce pcoplt ht ,,.·as taking a cor. responc!e_nce. school t'Ourse to prepare himself for somelh1ng heller. One of lhe trouble~ u:ith Roing on a Sunday dnve in the early days of mntor· 1ng 1\·a~ that you had to gtop and put up the isi nglass curtains \Oo'hcn il rained A JllTI 11sua!1~· made her own high !$Choo! gradu11tion dre~s 11nd got a gold· p!11ted "'ri~t"'atch for l1 pre~t'nt, <1 ·1d "'hen 5hc took her tliploma t.Vtry member of the family i;hed a tear rhose were the da)'S-rc1ncmbcr~ • The Birth Rate 1 frankly don ·t understand the men who are worried about lhe ·•population ex· plosion" and yet at the same time ridicule or shrug off lhe ··women's Liberation•· movement. Because it seems clear to me that the latter o!fers the best hope of averting the former .. We won 't gel our population growth down to ~·here it should be unfit all "·omen are encouraged to be more lhan mere breeders of chit· dren. It Is signiflc11nt that, all over the v.•orld, the bir1h rate ls the highest pre-- cisely where the social status of 1vomen is lowest. In poor. primitive, \Oo'ho\l y male. domi,nated .societies. the wom3n has nothing to look forward to but taking care of the house and havin11: babies. AS NATIONS become rnore affluent and more technicited , the opportunities Jor women expand, lhe liberties increase, and the birth-rate falls correspondingly. \\'herever women are gi\•en free options, many of them choose careers over child· bearing, or at least balance the two. And, a.~ ch·ilization becomes more technical and less physical. the biological differences het~·ecn the sexes begin to make less difference. ~fen's SlZe and st rength no longer rount for verr much in keeping the society going; 1l is their brains that ma lier. r-.:o ONE BUT A rank misogynist would deny th.al women's ,brains are just as ~· ( ~~' ........ ,!. ~'JI .. 1 -:sy~_el' -1: ~ good as men. The genders may have dif· ferenl lemperainental abilities I even this is not cerlain , for what we lhink is ''in- bom" in women may be only a cultural modification ), but lhe best intelligence tests we can devise show no significant gap between lhe sexes. It is not the dissemination or · widespread birth-cootrol methods that will reduce population: women musl be motivated lo want them and to use them. And the most effective motivation is a social order that freely permits women to achieve the same status as men, that provides equal opportunities and equaJ rewards. . A PEASA1''T WOrtlAN in Chilla or India has little future but in her children: a trained and educated woman will com· monly marry later and have far fewer children. if her life is filled with broader goals. And she will be a more intelligen t and interesting mother tr she un · derstands how her society work5 and co!l- tributes lo its development by he'r in· dividual skills. \\1e can no longer afford lo keep our beliefs in air·tlght compartments: tG deplore the population explosion in one breath, and in the next to maintain lit absurdly old·fashioned notion about ''woman's place.'' \Voman's place is at man's side. not under his root : and e\'en her sexuality. I am convinced, will nourish when she gains this parity. Gunk From Outboards \\'ASHrNGTON -With the warming of the ~·eather, the nalion's seven million outboard motor11 have started to pump a stasonal stream or gunk into America's once sparkling waters. This is the scientific, if upsetting, con· cluAfon or an u·npu&: -- l1shed Environment- al PrntectiQn Agency slurly, The st udyfound th al a single out- board motor coughs, sputters and spits as mu ch organic carbon pollution Into r h e water In 24 hours as the sewerage from a neighborhood Qf 400 persons. Up to 30 perct'nl or the ruel used in out- boards, according to the study. actually Is spewed into the water. Multiplying this by the total consumption or outboard molors in this country gives the J1tag-~ gcring dimensions or the pol!ulion prob-~ lem : more than JOO n1illion gallons of oll and gas pourtd Into our strrams ar'ld lakes and along our cna$l llneii, ~1ANY BODl&'i or walrr .i:imply don't contain enough bacteria to consume lbe gush of oil 11nd ga s. The residue fouls the shorelines. kills fish. pollutes drinking water and greases the skini1 of sv.·im- mer.s. The study has been conducted quietly -U that is the word for an outboard motor test -by Dr. \\'illiam Shuster, head of tht Bio-E nvironmrntal Engtnttr· tng Division or famed RenSS411aer Polytechnic Institute, Hr ran hi~ lt'Sls with lwo rnglnes. one 3.1 horstpowcr, lht otht'r 5 horscpowt:r. His n?searth team oscd an JS.foot, .,foot· t1ttp swlmmina poonl 111nd took samples of rhc watt.r for measurement. AS A J>OU8LE Clff.CK. they also put • ~---­' ., Jack Aadeqon ' . conlilnefi on tlie fuel vents or the eni:ines tn colleci the waste. The lowest amount of dumpage came from the high horsepower motor when it was tuned and speeding. Then only 4 per- cent of the fuel leaked into the water. But a~ low speed. the motor threw ofr 27 per· cent of its fue~. This increased to :Kl per· cent when the motor was untuned. footnote : Tbe federal govrrnmenl has n.ow give~ the Boating Ind ustry Assoc.la-, llon, lt00.000 contract to study the effect of outboard motors on the nation·s water. The , association includei1 the manufac· + turets whose motors are t.ausing lht pollution. Thus, the contract is A little like asking a tubercular cook whether ht might inftc:t hi5 customer!i. Eigbt years ago. lncldenlally. the outboard motor m1kers were offered dt:signs which would • have largely prevented pollution. • By Geor11e ---· Dear GMrge: P.1y doclor ~ays I h11ve lf'I reduce. ~!y \.\•ife says I'm too finicky about my diet now. ~ly boss sAy1 If 1106t weight I'll be too light for my job. What should l do? Never mind - my v.•l(t just left me. I'm bein~ sued tor my doctor's bill and my boss fired m~ N. N. Dear N. N.: See ho\\' thlng5 work out when you think them through? • 1\Vr ite in Georgr v.•ith hatelorn problcm!i Tht papers are. full of lovt'lorn expert!!. • • • • • 1 • • • • • ' ' ' ----------· . r . ' Youth With 55 IQ A M lisical Genius LOS ANGELES 1UPil -When Rickey Ponce De. Leon .sa.t down to pla y. the audience hushfd then listened in a>A·e at the impressive organ rendilion he pounded out ·with fingers ol a musical genius. The teenager is mentally rflarded with an JQ or SS. ''et f\.1onday night the Filipino youth was the featured sol(). ist at lhe 25th Anniversary Banquet ol the Exceptional Children's Foundation here. Considered a musical genius and composer. De Leon can play about 1.000 songs from memory and is a~ept 'A'ilb seven instruments -yft displays a rftardale's poor muscle coordination whefl he's away from bis music. Robert D. Shushan. local director or foundation. intro- duced the youth as a "gifted. retarded indi\'idual " 'A'ho was an "exceptional example" showing that mental retardates can be gifted. •· ... When he seats himself at thr console of an eltt· Ironic o"rgan a miracle happens." said Shushan . Poor co- ordination disappears, replaced by ex:cellent independence in the use of all four limbs. playing keyboards and pedal board. '1 He is in the U.S. on a brief tour. 'Mystery Witness' OK In Second Manson Trial LOS ANGELES !UPI) -- The prosecution In the second Olarles ~1anson murder trial Berkeley's Council Has 1st Deadlock has won the t ight to keep secrrt the identity of a •·mystery witness'' to protect the person from Manson's followers. Superior Court Judge Ray- mond Choate made the ruling h1onday after l\1anson, con· demmed to die for the Tate- Lr1Bianca murders. was ki ck· ed out of court after one of his by now predlclable tantrun1s. ' ' ' • Majbr Property Tax Relief Moving SACRAME~'l'Cr <UPI) !.-A .. \\·ith a helprul "asslsl'' ror S2 billion program U> reduce disclosing he owed no state ln· each bomeowner·s property come lax fot 1970. tax by $400 and assure that "I'd gay Iha! was a prel!\I most weaJlhy people pay al good break for me and will least a minimum income tax help gel this pa.sied. ·• said has cleared its first legislative A 5 5 em b I y m a n Joe A. committee. Gonsalves !D-1..a Mir ad a ) , The Democratic author citing the new clamor for cffiiiLs Gov. Ronald Reagan slate tax reform. Gonsalves esllmated th i s would loWer taxes by about $400 on every owner-occupied home in ihe state. Humphrey Stumping Around California The program, which is the 1971 legislalive session's chfe( property tax relief package, was sent on a roice vote Mon· day from the Revenue and Taxation Comnfl'l tee "'hlch Gonsalves chairs to l he Assemtly \\'ays and f..1eans Another feature amended in- to the legislation ~1onday woul rl impose a minimum tax oi 5 percent on all so-called preferential income o v e r $30.000. Preferential incon1e includes capital gains. oil depletion, depreciation and e:t· cess intfresl. Gonsal\"e!I said he did not know "'"he1her Reagan would have owed a stale income tax for last year had his proposal been 1n effect. But he noted his measure would require 1nost wealthy pe<>ple now e:ir;- ernot from state taxes to pay al leasl some levy. SACRAMENTO \API Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey stumped California today with the fervo r of a presidentia l candidate -as he was in 1968 and says he miaht be in 11172. The Minnesota Democrat arranged to touch bases with nearly eve[yone who is anyone in the various factions of the ·California Democralic Party and schedule<l lln addre~s to a joint session of the slate legislature. His prepared address to the.I legi~lature proposed ap- pointment of regional domestic \Vhite House am· bassadors lo create · a belier liaison between Washington and the states. He also called for a greater local and state role in the federal budget making process and planning. The President should meet regtJ!arty "'ith state and local official s, Humphrey added. "not for !he pu rpose of federal that the people don't believe him." And Humphrey sald it will be late this year or early 1972 belore he decides whether lo run for president again. His jammed two-day !lchedule was much liJ.:e that of other Democratic senators who have trooped through Calilomia in reCfnt months, Including potential presidential candidates and one declared candidate -Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota. SPIRAL SLICED WHOLE: OR HALF Committee. P<.!agan. whose salary as governor wa s $44,100, did not '1\.\'e a stale income tax because of Investment losses . !ls major feature amended into the program ~ionday is a provision lo eliminate pro- perty taxes on owner-occup ied homes valued al up lo $16.000. Higher priced home.!I also \l'Ould ha\'e their taxes sha rply reduced on a proportionately declining scale as lhe market ,-----------,JI value increased. Under !he proposal, the rirsl $4,000 of an owner-occupied horne's assessed value generall y pegged at 25 percent of market value would be ex- empt from property taxation . Solly Ban•nas Really Is .•• 'll a nan~s, That Is HAMS " • • . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our ~•m1 ••I "'' 11.,111 f6r,..l..:I lftw• pClr~I" -Ovr 11Dw d,., c.,..!<lv mt"!llod. rt•I Wl.conun ~ic~ory •M .i111t1..,,..,i ,,_1n9 '"" )l).l>Our OYffl ~li.J"1jl "°""Y •n •plct gl•lt ••t un~ In 111 lttt world. $o lltlic.loln '""' fl>Pl!l ilmQ -. j111! -.ilcln't Ii.now l>Ow ltl IMl>fOVt lh!• p•odlJCr _ ..... i>efft ,,..~1.., "'' 34 yffrl. Solrtl 1!icacl ~. trom IOCJ ID bOUom Ml th'I e•d• dole~lllllt U<llklrm illct ctn 1>11 removl!CI tfl<:lrlle11!y, (~p~l1ly b.lli.N •nd rt .Oy to "'"''· Ot· .... )'Oii>" 1-lon1y 8•~td Hi m IOO•Y •• " 9dVWlllltt In 111.n-JfYl"f'l'll yo..•11 nevtr Mrgf!. domination but to foster aE"TJ.JL STO•ts I DAILY PILOT f , " . • • . •• --' . BELL RINGERS FOR HIS 25TH ANNIVERSARY (You don't have to wail for the 25th one I) Put some sparkle into this anniversary with one of these handsome men's diamond ring-a·ding rings. From the top: Oval cut, $595. Five dia mond cluster ring. $495. Solitaire, $495. Cluster, $325. It SeVen diamond cluster, $595. Cit•,.._ Att-tt l"rit"". A-k•ft •• ,, .... .... ~Aintrk•nl •M M•1lt r CJ!• .... , ""'· SLAVICK'S Jev.elcrs Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -b44·1jl0 BERKE LEY {UPI) -The Berkeley city c o u n c i I deadlocked 4-4 f.ionday night on a proposal to fill a vacant seat on the normally nine· member panel by seating the runner-up in the April 6 elec· lion . '"The truth is the gas chamber, don'L you know," Mansor: shouted mom e n I s ix'fore he was removed. '"Ifs just so ridiculoLU I can 't reslrain myself." The ruling came during pre· trial motions in the slayi ng s of musician Gary Hinman and ranch hand Donalr1 "Shortv" Shea . ~fanson and ''famil)·" n1~mbcr Bruce Davis are ac- cused of killin.e bolh Hinman and Shea v;·hile Susan Atkins . cooperation." J700 t. Cent Hltllw11y, Ce••• chi Mer -47l·f000 In Sa ~ Francisco 1'1onday ,\l=~~~~~~~==:~~=~==~U~l~Z~S~. ~··~·~··~·~··~·~· ~·~··~"~'~·~=~'~"~·~"~'~'==!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Humphrey told a meeting or 50 No r lhern ..c._a I if or n i a Democrats he consider.<1 Presi- dent Nixon. who defeated him in 1968, a one-term president. i>eying ··his real weakness is Open Mo n. •nd Fri., 10 •.m. to 9:30 p.m. The vacancy was created ll'hen Councilman W a r r e n Widener was elected mayor in !he voting which also sa w three radical candid a le s elected lo !he councii. Widener. 32, Berkeley's rirst black rna~'or. voted with !he three radicals Monday night in favo r of a proposal to seat Rick Brown. the f·o u rt h member of the radical April Coalition, who fini shed fifth in the four-man race by Jess than 30 votes. Rowers Near LA Harbor? -also condemned to. die for 1he Tale slay1ngs -is accused of partici pat ing in the Hinman murder. Another cull member. Stephen Grogan , also is charged wit h the dea th or Shea. The judge ruled thal the prosecution coold keep secret lhe identity or I.he key witness until 72 hours before the witness rakei> the stanq. After lwo da ys of testimony on the issue, Choate said there 'A'ere grounds lo believe !hat one or i\1anson's follo'A'C'rs gave a witness at 1-fanson"!ii first trial an overdose of LSD LOS ANGELES (AP ) -to slop bcr from lesti fyi ng. Stri cken Man Taken Off Ship SEATILE !U PI) -A sailor v.•ho \vas reportedly bleeding in1ernally from a suspected perforated ulcer was rescued from a Liberian vessel. the World Pride. late Mo nday by a Coast Guard helicopter crew. The Coast Guard's rescue coordination center he re reporled that Loui r,i. ~. Hong Kong, ll'as flown to a hospi!al at Asloria. Ore .. >A·hfre hls condition was listed as poor . B r i tis h adventurer John 1- Fairfali: and a female com- panion. last sighted on Friday, are believed still rowing to- wards Los Angeles for radio repai rs, the Coast Guard says. Protect Your Home NOW! A Coast Guard spokesman said Monday no Sf'arch is under·way for tht couple. He said they were sighted Friday bv a pri vate pilot :ibout 2Q niiles southwcs_t of Santa Rosa Island near Port Hueneme . IURGULAR AND F.tRE ALARM SYSTEMS RETAIL INDUSTRIAL PROTECTION FREE ESTIMATES-NO Ol~IGA TION fairfa•, 33, and Syl'~ TIGER Cook. 31. left San Francisco April 26 V.'ilh the idea of rn>A'-ALARM RAY BECK 492-1412 . ing to Australi;i in their illlVING ALL OllANO• COUNTV bright red .<1upcr·rowboat, the SYSTEM llll :.~LC~~:~:~1llAL • :'!ft.foot Brit~a~n'.'.ni"'.a_'t.'.:t.~----"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I FABULOUS FABRIC BUY_S POLYllTIR DOUBLI KNITI DACION POLYESTER AND COTTON PRINTS ALL SALES J<'JNAL! SALE STARTS WED., MAY 19th GIVEAWAYS fo~tcu!le t 1l1ctio" ol quality m1,.chftndi1t p•lr:l'd 10 very 1- 1~01 t>O O<lf CO ft r1011! the tempto· "°"' IO < omt i.. o~d o•oc k '-"'· T RUl:tllNGS 3001 75a1 DRAPERY DISPLAYS :\'OTIO:\'S /O• /0 UNCLAIMED DRAPERIES PATfERNS Off TRAVIRSERODS ':~~~:~~1::,~ ••::::~:·• EVEflYTH1NG GOEst Everything Must Go! Lock, Stock And Barrel! _ CLOSING THE DOORS FOREVER AND EVER! HOURl1 9:30 A.M. • 9 P .M. SAT. Til 6 CLOSED SUN. • ROYAL CREST FABRICS 1212 So. Bristol, Sonto Ana 540-9122 We'll help you take a great • if you'll take us along. ' We won't Jolee up mtJc h room. A Security Pacific Bonk combined Check and Charge cord isn 't very big, but it co ul d be as ha ndy as having a little bank in your pocket. It gives you rhe convenience of Mosler Ch a rge, guarantees your personal checks up le 100 dolla rs each and has a Ready ReservAccounl featu re that lets you write checks for more than you have in your o cco un t. • It's the kind of cord that's made fo r vocations. Soy you'd like to fly to PtJerlo Rico but your checkbook tells you ·, a ,,.11-i!ls IA ~so• · (). PiUsburgh'i the limit. Ready ReservAccount can cover the difference. A d if ference you can pay bock in eaq instalments. Then there's the room of the hotef, the renta l car you'll need to poke a roun d town ond al leost two or th ree wild Jhirta to bring bock to Uncle Wilford . You shouldn't carry cash around for things like thot. Not when you can write o personal check. How do you get ll cord that will let you do all tho1e things? Approved credit is all you need. Better come in and see us about it. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK I ' . ffi\~ ~f ,.,.~ ' .,.. .... • . ······ --~~· .. .,._~~ • . . f ' •• • • . . . ~ ~ .... S OAllV PILOT (t ' l l ~ ·-- --' • ; : : 1 • I ' ' I \ l I .-. ' l . ' ! I l I ! I I I I I I l l ' ' I ' ~ ' .. ' ' ' ' i .. .. • ' l l I !. • N~ver a Dull MoJDent on ' ; 8)' ROBERT HOLDEN midnight to a a.m. $1\ut in UM: Seventh lnc:1 Eighth. avenUes 1• policeffien wer't w ~ ~ n d • d type, aot ablolut.&ly lnturiated AUK111., ""-'' wr11., Time.! Square are1 , their belt now a flash sideshow botstin1 btfore kiUin& I would-bt and rtfUHd to believe mt h'EW YORK '(AP I -Thr: for the past.l'\brtt years and a dozen movie theaters, 10 holdup man. when J told b1m the alrt that drunk •lashed wildly with a their first permanent asalcn· bookstores with pornography Neither Fehllnc nor Mlll!r pk:ktd hlm up waa a f•male knife at customers ip Grant's ment after attending the clty·s pttpshows at the back, t\\'O has betn shot, but both l\a:vt Bar and Grill on West 42nd police academy together. blood banks "hepa titis shop1,'' been "stabbtd and bitten I lmpttSOOator,'' Mllltr said. Street . -In lho:se three years. Fehl· S'J'S ~1lller. and at least or.e <.'OUple of tlmu." "If we try to ltffr 1 drunk \Vord spread quickly to the ing and Miller -both sons <If body palnUng studio for finger Prostitutes, who bite when lb the subway," tt.hlint aald, street: ''Somebody's gonna former policemen -say !hty painUng ent.hualast.s:. An they "just cet tired of bllnt "he uaually brulheJ U! off. cut:' A crowd gathered. have made more than 2.000 ar· estimated one mlllion persons hauled in all the time:,'' liJure Two houra later, the aamt fUY Patrolmen James Fehling rests. Most have been along pass alon; Olet block daily. in many of the bb.1rre Times LS: propped Atalnst .a buUdln' and \\'arren .. Pa~.. Miiier 42nd Street btt\\·etn Sevenlh 1!he cto\\•ds drawn lo the Square incldenll, Miller aald. with his pants PoCkets tom heard the commotion and and Eighth avenues, the block street create "the mo s t Llkt the time, he uld, 1vhen off." pushed inside. "'tst of tht Times Square apex volatile situation going." said one woman 1topped traffic for "The loltetera at 1 a.m. are They \\'tre able lo wrest a formed by 42nd. Seventh and ~tiller, a 6 foot l inch ~ blocks when ahe fled from th.t mugatr1 1t 4 or 5 a.m. retr actable knife rrom the Broadway. pound outgoing Irish.man who patrolmen by ninnlni down when the bars clost," Fehling struga:ling. cursing man before •·This s~el attracts 111 the is the pt:rlect Joli to t.be more 'lht middle of 42nd Strett until 1aid. anyone was injured. \Vithin strange people," s&Jd F~ing. conservative Fehling, wh o ~slacks dropptd around her Many are youths wufin& fi\'e minutes, the drun~ was "You name the situation and towers 6 feet 4 inches and lips ankles. 1neak1rs," ht said, ltioktnf fOr handcuffed and a patrol car \\'e've made an arrest for It," the scale at 240 pounds. The iourlsta and drunks t.bt fut buck they can steal headed for the nearby sta-Once the centtr of the city's Slnct Jan. 1. nine po!lctman often don't know tOOllah and ~nd eaaily aet away with on Uonhouse. social life \\ittl such at. have: bffn shot by a:unmen in are vicUmiud, u1d the two 42nd Strttt. Fehling, 29, and ~1iller. r., tractions as lhe Ziegfeld the Times Square area. 11' a patrolmen. For instance; "When ycu uk for an JD, "''ere 20 minutes into another FoUies, 42nd Street between recent .sh oo t o u l . ·five "Tb.ls soldier, • Midwestem you always find 1kllitt,1\111 or . ,.._ .. . . -·~ ~ -----· .. _.. . . NY~s 42nd ·st. --· alznlliated 11111. like 1 lenatb of pipe,'' Miller llid. Tbe characters and the Uabt antcdoteJ are 111 t h t patrolmen said they take home from work. ''I don't tell my wife t.oo much about the dan1erous part/' 11ld Miller, who was a 4 ytar old daughter. "I tell her the good things and make her llua;h.'' Neither h1iller's wife, Jen- nie, nor Ji'thllng's wife. Joan. who is e.zpecting the couple's first child, seu tht uniforms that hive bffn bloodied "dotens of times.'' "They go to the cleaners fir.!Lt ," 1aid Millar. Both Miller, who live• in Port Jefferson 1n neia:hboring Nawu C.ounty, and Fehllna, I' ot Wanta.ah. Long Island, •·moon111ht" as painters and carpentus to auppltment tht:ir $11 ,300 a }'tar salaries. Fehllnl'• father died or I heart attack on the job in his 33rd year on the force. Mlller'1 father rttl.red in mid· March after-20 years. The: sons. "'ho hope to become detectives, did not im- mediately foUow in their father s' footst.epa, bo\\·ever. Fehling stud ied to be an urooatutie! technician but btc1me atlf~mployed as .a palnttr and carpenter. ?<.fllltr, an Air Foret veteran u·ilh Vietnam service, i n i L i a 11 y worked in an automobile body rtpalr lhop. Fehling has recei ved four meritorious duty cit.lions and two for exceptional police du- ty, rtUl/er has one for meritorloua duty and two fyr exceptionaJ police duty. They said they h.ave rtcei11· ed many ltttera of tha nk• from the people I h e y ha ve helped . The lettus include: a petition from SO a:rateful persoru 1<1'ho were asleep \\'hen Fehlln& and Miller caught three: mtl'I trylni to sel fire lo their bulldin&. Concluded Miller : ·•I fetl a real tensing up in my stomach as I'm driving to \.\'Ork. I wonder what it'll be like lt.lnight -what'll happen. There .are:n'l many people in this world that can feel tha t kind of e.tcitemtnt for ~heir job." Snail'• Pace mt QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi 011 tlte ltlove Old red barn rests on trailer a\vaiting move from Laguna Niguel site to UC Irvine . Barn, used by \Vil· li1n1 L. Pereira during design \vork on North An1er· ican Rockwell ziggu rat in Laguna Niguel, was do· DAILY l'ILCT Stiff l'llt .. nated to UC I by the architect. Students are pa ying S25.000 to move it to campus where it will be con- verted to a soc»al center near UCI'i Social Stienct Farm. Pol~nd Regime Woos Gals \YARSAW tAP) -Pohsh ne"·spaper re aders w e r e surprised recen tly lo see .a front page photo .or the nc111 Com munist party chief kissing a woman worker·s hand. \!lomen·~ hands get kissed all 1he ti1ne in Poland , as a tradit ional courte:sy. But Com- munist leaders are not usually sho'r''n doing lhe honors, as Edward Gie rek was. The publicized photo was seen as evidence that his regime is wooing fema le sup- porl. Jn onP of his fir st speeches :ifter taking over. C.ierek promised lo do more for \romtn plagued by shoddy and high priced consumer goods. shortages ol appliances like refrigerators. low pa y and poor housing. In cont rast, lhe prev ious regime -ousted after food price riots -used to call for consumer sacrifi ces in the name of Communist ideology. A quip from one woman of- fice v.•orker reflects the lack of interest in such ideology She noted that Polish cur- ANIMALogil' rency has portraits n r ordinary workers on il while the British pound has the (lueen. Asked whether she'd rather have a queen or a worker on her money. she replied : "I'd rather have more money.·• The new regime has given raises to the lowest paid workers. Store clerks. mo.'lt or them . women, now get about t ,000 zlotys a month instea d of 850 -$42 a month instead of 136. A strike by \\'Omen lrxtLlc \\'orkers forced the n e w government to rescind fnod prin1e increases. but com- plaints continue that prices are too high. "1 make 1,300 zlotys a month."' says a waitress in the southern town of {)pole. "A blouse costs 600 -almost two \\'eeks ' eay." A housewife in Krakow com· plains : "Clothes a r e ex- pensive. and not very good. Look at this .'' She is wearin1 a dra b blue coat. r.1any Polish women have relatives abroad. e!pecially in America. and 1iometimes gel good \Vestern clothes from them . Some of the best dressed _w.arsaw--l\·omen art the pro- stitutes who hang around hotels ,(or foreigners. ''.The.if' cuslonjers send them tbe l.atesl fashions from the West y,·hen they 1el home,' one \1·oman says. Some y,·omen simply boycott Polish shops and make better clothes themselves, a;ulded by lhe Western fashion magazines the regime allows lo be sold here. Such "bourge ois" magazines are banned in Russia. A teacher in Wroclaw says most Poli sh women "have berome so used to hav in; both a iob and a family that they 11·ould \vork even if thr.y didn't have lo." She observes: "When I was an ex.change student i n America, girls 1 met said 'I 'll get a job or get married.' But a Polish girl would say: ·ru get a job and get married.' ·'\Vomen ·s lib doesn't in- terest us. becaui;e v.·e: already have so much lndeptndence." A man in Gdansk says this indepe ndence helps explain the increa&e in divorces; they 1nort than doubltd' over the past 10 years. "Since women hive no trou· ble felting jobs," he says, "they don ·1 need to stay with 1 man just for support." Jan Gut. \clp_ec.onomic plan- ner for the city t1f Wrocl1w, a.lse blames housini problems for 10Cial tensicru that lead to divorce. "We have built many apartments. but sUll Ire n6t back to the prewar averaae of one ptrson per room," he said. "Crowdtd housing .also CGn· tributea to the declinin1 birth rate." The rate for 1969. the latest year reported, was 8.2 babies bom ~r 1,000 population, down sharply from 15 In 1980. Some sociologists say a baby boom shortly after the "'ar was .a psychological reaction to lossea suffered under tbe Nati.!L, when more than one fifth the population was killed. "Women now use more birth control , even thou1h thi.!L is a C.atholic country." says ene husband. "On matters like this and divorce, the Church has little effect." Contraceptlve3 are sold in street kiosks. The Planner in Wroclaw says workin1 houaewlves are hard hit by a chronic meat shortaae. btca1.1ae "meat i5 the quickest meal f6r a woman to prepare when ahe ct1mts home from work." A poor harvest lut year, the second in a row, meant leas fodder for livestock and thus another meat lht1rt11e. To conse.tve the supply ahops 1tll no meat .., Mondays. ' I·mpatience Rules Geneva Sessions By PllJL NEWIOM U~I ............. Mt,,., Jn Gtne:va, the ~nation di sarmament conference: aoon wUI wind up another t1l the sessions that have been goin1 tn for mt1re than 10 ytars with nearly half the membtrahip openly impatient with the anall'a pace aet. by the super powen and suspicioul of their motives. Both Uieir 1uapicions and their imP1U•nce have found NfWI ANAL YllS . ban er 1erJ1l warfare witbut includin1 a similar ban en chemical warfare, and the tacit understanding between Qle United States and the Soviet Union that they are un.able to asree t1n 1 ban on underground nuc lear tests. Gi ving strongest voice to the dissatisfaction already ex- preased by Sweden and Yugo- slavia ind Me:ricc. Jorie Castenda, the tttex-. lean delegate, implied the l\\'O super powers had drt1pped the question or a ban on chemical warfare we:apons be c a u s e neither was willing to give them up. "I uked for one number, not a concert!". voice elsewhere, in t h e American CMgres! a n d amonr world scientists. The Swedes su11ested the --------------------- same rtasonina: held for the The .'lcienti!lS fear 1hat mmeone Mil pull the nuclear triuer be.fore: the United States and the Soviet Union can find the s afegua rds ntctssary lo o«set thtir swpi- cions of e.ach other. In Congress war weariness as result Gf Vietnam has made the P en t a I ~ n incrtasingly suspect, 1 sentiment which has lipread .from the war to in~ elude impatience with what some legislaters regard as the Defense Department's ·super- caution in rtaching accord with the Soviet Union. Within t h e disarmament cenference membershlp, six .are CM!idered aligned with West , seven with the Com· munlst E.asl .and 12 non- .al irned. Thr non-al iened are in- creasincly rtstntfUI o fa bil· po"'·er decision I• considu .a Band Group Leaders Set The tJniversity High School ·band support organiza tion - lhe Trojan Band·Aides -has formed and tlecttd ofricers. Gordon L'Heureux is presi- dent. Other offictrs are Betty Lehrer. vice pres.Iden!, .'-tary Day, secretary. Patr ici a >.torgan, trta.surer and Millie Dt>.tercurio. hl!lOrian. Anyone interested in joinina the band support er1aniz1tion may call t.lrs. Pat Williams_a.t 83&-l!Si. that oth felt they needed underground nuclear tests. lhtl both felt they needed them. A ceneral view was th at the partial ban en nuclear testing •ireed upon in 1963 had ntither slowed the te1tin1 nor the developmtnt of n e w weapons and there.lore was .a failure . The United States is going ahead unilaterall y w it h destruction of its g e. r m warfare stocks. It has been suggested 1 ban on chemical 1varfare should bt held up to make certain any such agreement does not in- advertently ban beneficial in- dustrial developments. Adult Training Eyed The Huntington Beach Union or workshop should contact High School District is con-the district's special education sidering making its facilitie5 service deptrtment at 536- available for training adult 9331 , said Roper. retarded persons, Dist. Supt. The district is already Jack S. Roper has announctd. training mentally retarded "If the need is there, we are high school students at its prepared to fulfill it. This is in \\'inlersburg campm. line v.·lth the policy of the'liO ___ o;i; __ ;;. __ _, district to serve the educa- tional need,, of the entire com· munity," he said. All persons who know ofj other• who could benefit (rom such a program and are not l currently enrolled in a school If Y•• •re 11ot ••1111 .C111worl11t So-rwl10. Yo~ •re 11•t t•t1ln9 •II of yo•r colla. TILl,HOHE AN•WlllNGt IUALtU 835-7777 Do Something for Dad! Give a LA-z-aovf) RECLINA-ROCKER• Specially Priced jor ... FATHER'S DAY JUNE 20 Tito: 60 Years of Turmoil 'or 1 limllld limt. YoU tin aiv. dtd lhe "do tcmlttlinl"' la·l ·torfi R1dln1·R0tk1,. •t unblllenbll u vinp l Tlie sty I• tllCIWJI here wt re unttd wilfl llim in ml11d! lfacli111. 1tock1r.Z is !ht best lhinr fhtl tvtr hlPPtlllld 10 dtdl tt hn ~ i!'l1lltrd but nm r 1~u1ll1d lor lb smooth, ttforl· less rld1n1n11ct101L. Tht Rtcl11Lf·Rock1r~ will respond I• his tttry r1lu!n1 mood ••• rad•n£ louniinr TY vltwinei t1t111pplft.1, 1w111 full btd recflnina. Ht'H 1ov1' lh1 Cfln'lfort. tbll di1f1r1nct of U-Z-Boy's •~tlusivt Ccmfort Stltctot• which providn !11e riaht 1t1 rat comfort ror perfld'reltu: lion, wilh er without th• rectintnr ad Ion of Ute chair He'l l I0¥9.lh1 Ch,tlr thtt wn "!1ilor-m1d1'' Jurt for hini, end fl*i,INy prictd. So, c.omt"' todtr ind .Mlvt! •C>• -·-·~~ ..... ··oit·.t; A f f.El<lCll PoOOLE WME1'1 ME'lli' Cl.IPPEP ! " LEGAL N01'1CE ,.,010 ,ICTITIOUI IUi!HliS H .. M. I TAT.MIEHT l~• 1a11.,..,,n, Pf•wn ,. dO•n• flv•"'~' .. 11 "°E T Al lllCOYEll '<'. 1.-0 ~UPt"0' Av•, (;all• Mt.a. C'll•e•n•• \/o•I• B01I••. 1'16 P""'ll"• 1'.~t (&>!• M rtA, (•htO<~O· lft11 llu1l"r.11 ;, M l"' t-u(!...:I D• '" .... 11.,0 ... 1 V••I• 1101••• "'uDhl'lf'd O••"'r (.~\! D••'• P.lni Ml• \I, !I, U 1"'1 JuM I, \111 l\Ot •11 LEGAL ~OTICE , Jt11 '!CftTIOUI I UllNtll NAMI lfAflM•Nt fll• fOl lQWI.... IMl't.Ofll ftf l\ctl"9 11vo1 ... ,. "' TOM Cll l\S IN,UllAN(.E 'Ell Y'(E, i 15 w It•~ "''"1 1 .. 11, o. Cott• M-11 (•fl!ttM• "~tJ M••~ T-1· C,!11, tl! P1tt tit •111 )f. (cot• 11-t ••· C•Hfflr,.I• t?~ll O•" •1m1~r". )00' C..r!on •01~. (Mii Mt1•. (•!llOr~I• f'l6'1 'f"ll llut lftfU It tlflflt Ul,.,,UC!foll 0< I ~•rlfltllftl• 0~1• ltt..,HY"f Mil~ f~llrn•f c,1,1 P ... UMM 01t"'' C~ll 01ol r ••~t. N1r 11, 11, U t M J~~• I, n11 \!CT'\ By \\'ILLIA,\I L. RYAN On :-Olay 25 Jos1p Broz Tito \\'ill be 79 years old. The president for life of Yugoslavia is the world's oldest sur.viving Communist ruler. For more than 60 years he has been involved in \\'ar. revolution. intrigue and nation building. Unlike othrr rulers in Com- munist nations, Tito can sland up pubh,c\y before 11n audience 01 his countr ymen end say lrenkl~" ··the.,...'\ilu11tion in ()Uf country . . is not good.'' In his ~lay Day speech hr was not explicit about JU St .\\hat it y,·as that \\'IS not good. In com parison with other Communist ruled counlrie:s, Yugo~lavia is a howling suc- cess ecenomit:ally ind politically . But Tito·1 worrle~ nlay h11.ve lnvoh•ed diflcultJt~ "'\thin the League of Com· munlsts. \\'hich Iii the ruling pa rty organltatlon. There h;i\•f' bet>n lroublt! in lht party be! ween !host "ho lean tow3rd old Stalinist ideas and thost. "''ho want to con· RED REBEL 79 Yu90Jl•vi1'1 1·110 tlnue llberallzafion. T h e r t h~vr bttn worrlts about a po~~1blc ~tru11Je for po.,1·er alter Tito There htivt ~en v.nrrles. too, about difftrences bttwren various nationality 11nd l!thnic 1roups in the COUl'I· try. becau.'lt Juch difficulties could bt used i s polltltll tools. With regard to the suc- cession, Tito has spoken and now can only hope that hi~ wi1hes art carritd out. He ha~ said that tt is lbout time ftr him to leave the stage . Th.ere will be no single: man as a suc- cessor. though it had on ce ap- peared likely that Tito·s SO year old faithful lleutenint, Edvard Klrdelj, would be the choice. Tile appeared to want to avoid the risk or appcinUng any one man. probably mind- f\J I of tl)e pov.·er struga:le ti- periences of other Communist nations, includ ing the Soviet Union. Th.erefort, accordlnc to his wishes, aft'r Tiit there .,.·ill be a st•~ presidency made up of 14 equ1l mtmbers from the various republics. This v.111 be written into con- stitutional amendment5. On ~fay D11y Tltc w11med that th'. party "must insure that it wll l behe\'e c6rreclly IO\\'l rd th O.!Le amendments." There was re11;son It worry about the su c ce 1 s lo n. Yu1oslav i.a is made up ef Bosnla. Herzegt1vina, ~1on­ ttnegro, Croatia. ~iacedonia. Strbla and Slevenia. Tito himself is a Cr6at. The nation he rules embracts creeds. 11utlt10ks and races which, in I.ht blood spattertd history ef the Balkans. often w ft e violently hostil e. Tito emerged from the World War II partisan fighting aga inst the r\azi invaders as the .'lingle stron ae s l lead er in S .. L. PltC•D '"· n•.ff SJ 6910 Thesa chiirs 1v1nabl1 ill 1 widt stlKtion ti UNIROYAL Na~~ Yugoslavia. but it has betn something of a pol i ti c a l miracle tbat he held the federation together for m6re than a quarter ef a century. ALL RECLINERS Reduced $35 to $75 I • For • limited time , • , Lay·•· way for Father'a Day Now It was all .the more rem.ark1ble in the face of htavy Soviet pressure betv.·een,1 ~---- 1941 and 19!5, aimed at tt1p- pllng Tllo from po \\•er because he had te!listed Stalin's dic- tation in Vugt1s\11\•hf~ intem11J 1ff11 !rs. The StW!et ltadera ex- communica ted Tito. tht old 11nd f11ithful Co mm un I s I 1ntern1lional a1ent, an d !hereafter breutht all maMer er economlc and pollt.ical prtJ!\.lrt 111lnst him. .. ( • • On The Spot Budget Terms • 5 Wa'fl Ta Buy (1 ) C•sh (2) Revolving Acct. (3) lankAmerlcard (4) lank of Am1ric1 Contracts (5) Mester Charge 1165 HARBOR Bl VD. DOWNTOWN COST A MESA PHONE 548-5131 r I ., y ~~ n ir • h 1 . , n. In ,, ir " on ;. y ed its I I • ,. ' , ' . I • TutMi.~y. Mo\y 18, lll7l DAILY PILOT 9 .. At UC'I For the Record Medical Medical Dit·ecto1· Cite s N eecl ' • LIT'S BE FRIENDl Y " ' Marriat1e Lice1ises M1y 71ft G.Al!DNEll·W•TSON -Je,,e•t W, :)t of ''6'11 8elfr~n Pl•ce. El Toro 1nll J•nlce M .. 1' at /)j\f S!•lloro. Hun· lln•lon Ptr~. lAMPl·Si-i!REY -Wlllllrl'I I! .. 75 ot l'll 7hl Stre~!, C1111a M•5.> 1rol San • d•• J., » ol !?!l Pall'f'IY••· Or1n'l't. HINOEL·HENDERSON -G~rry 0 ., '' or 20327 ltl!Un& (11nyon lload, L1tun1 8e1c~ a<'<I Krl~lln t,.., l' of A&ll Br<>adw1v, l•Runt Beach. AIU:GO-l1PORTE -Oon1ld E .. 71 ol !119'~ Wt >t B11oc.1 BoulwarO 1rld Domw l . 70, ol 1141~ Corel, IMlb111 l~l1nC1. WILHITE-E ... RL -Jat~I• art-1'/ of 113'0 Covrt S!rtel, Shnron •no JoAm• 11, ol Stanton. • MANLEY-NORMAN -Paul w .. 15 "' ~~ W1ll1ct Avf., Co,!1 Mt•1 1<14 J11dY l ., 1' ol Co•l• Mt11. WA.JoiNER·MOTSCHl,\illN -Ktnnp!h M.. ?3 ol 1l Llt>Ot La.,.,, N•w Bsllvlotl, H.Y. i nd L••llt t. 21, ol 19731 G!Olitliftf Lint. Hunt!nlJllln Btttl'I. MUSACCO·MUMOLO -G11•v l., )I of 1111 Wt ilt fl•Y Ave., Ntwl>llrl Btlt" llnd R!!i•IYf! T~ 2~ of J.SU Eut hi $1., Lont1 8eaoi. CLEWETT-HOPPE -Oougl11s W., 31 ol 1~ T111trn E111, Tustin end Klrtn E., 3' 11! 23136 Gena<lor. MiHIOll Vl•lll. 'HELEY·KOSTE R -Steven t., ?3 <>I -4341 Hell, Hunrln1non B•eth 1nd V•lt lre l , ll of HunHnt!on Be1ch. - WELCH-llRACKEEN -Edw1rd G., lJ COi tJn M11dl110n, Wti!mln•!e• and Ch1rlco1!t I..., 11 12J1 E111t Mc-ntoe, O••nee. HUOSON-HARRIS -Wlnsler R., of 220 (1Jon Strttl .. LHVnt B~ch and Yv011nt1 L .. ::n of 1965 Shfrln11ton P,, NtWPOI'.' Bt l th. Dissol11tiotJs Of Marriage l'Ut<I May It OWtns, Ct rolYn ti. and Willl11m J. Adllms, Jr .. EYt H. tnd W•l~r C. Shtol'lerd, l'elrlcla and Lester Oay, J11 "'· and Ow•n F. Ourt.1m. OaYld J. tnd Elloen Ent Jordon, Jean F. 1nd JO\~h S. Mowat!. J une Ward tr.cl Bur~t RDC!ln$0tl McNelll, Otnnt l~ t nd Tlmo!/'IY Dun- "" Aviltf, Sht•c-n $, ~ M1rio P. Gold!lel.,, Mll.,r«I Ev~lvn 11"<1 Herm1n l'otl. Frencn and Jame• Ve•Mn Murphy, Jostl>h aQll P11tr lc11 M. "'ecln(..,11, HumO.•lo tn!I Lydia Bro1...,.rkle, Ma•lh1 Jt.1nne •"II ltob· err Frt l\I< A!l)forl. Merrv E.1n11 Cn1rl~s £. Nor!011, Juli• A. t ni;I Tnoma• J. Death J\'otiees IEVERSTOCK llurt H. l!ever,,ock_ lot Past<> de 11 SereNot1, Stn CiemeMt. D1tt or death, Mav 16. Survlv«I IW wite. Gild•• E. !lever1rock; •on. Roller!"·· ol C•evelin<t, Ohle; a1ugl!le" Marv E. Jnlln"'"• FIO•· ld1; five 9r1ndchlldrtt1. G•t•esid" •••v- lcfl, tociav. TuHdlv. ' PM. P1cllic View M....orl•I 1'1rk. P1clllc View Mo•tu1ry, Diroc!llf't. I LlVl:N Mr., ... my Bliven, Chlpo! ••rvic~ •n<f !ntermtn!, Wt<1ne1day, 17 Noon, We•l- mln•te• Memo~l•I Park Mo1!u1ry and CtmtltrY. 9 1fVTON Eu!O:eni1 s. l!ruton. f(.191 l!ermu<11 Drlvf, HuntlnttOfl Beith. SU•VIYfd bv "ulblnd, Edwin; l-,110 dauGMttf, Linda Kfndl tnd rnrl•tlnt Edwl•d" thrte !Ons. C.arv. Ch1t•lton and Edwin Jr.; mo!her, !wo brothtr11 thrtt 1i1ter1, tnd •even 9r•nd· chlldrffi. Se•vlcts. Thurtd.IV, f PM. Peek Family Colen.al Funer•I Home. OVl'l'Y Blan(l\f M. Ovflv. ?5ll Columbia Oriv•. (o'1• Me11, Oate of dealt!. May 16. Sur- v;v«I bV two '"'"" M". Jules P. srnuengeT. Laullvllle. K"'tuc~y; Mrl. J, R, Turner, long flo1ch Ftmtral st rvitt t, Weones<l•Y. I PM, 1!•111 (o\tl Mn• (l\l~ltl. will! lltY. Rltnard J. Dunl•P 01tlrl1llno. 1"1t rm•nl, Forf1! lawn G!en- "•le. Fsmlly 1uogttl1 ll\c1t wl1n1n1 to mike mt,,...11rl1I contrlbu!lons. o!e111 con- l rib-ult to tl\t Amtricen C1nctr Soc:lt1v. B1lll Costa Me1a Mortu1rv, Olrtclors. MUlllEE lif1el o . Hit~•. l\~t 76, of J7S F1Jrla~ Orlve ,Costa Mesi. Oalt ol dea!I>, MIY 17. ~urvlved bV lrltnd, Mrs. Glori• J . Glo»a, Coria Mtu. Reciulem Man, Wt<I· l\esday. t AM, St. Jo11thim1 Ca1no1lc Chu•"1. Interment, GClld Sh•oher.s (.,.,. ~ttrY. Rtv. Tnomt• N1y;n ofHtl1!lr\W. l t 11 llrOtdw•v Mor!ullfv, Oirectcri. Mlll.IEtt Murrell Mll\t r. 61' ~tllvltw+ ~t., Lt~un~ Stttn. Catt cf de1tn, M~Y 11. Survived by l\u1!111"<1. (l\arlt• t. Mlllt•: son. 01vld, of Slln1• An•; broltitr. ourw.:.o<I Vtllicuert" sister, Ntfl• Vtlti<luertt, bO!ll el lolf'!lo, Ohio; tnd ll>rff 9rar.dcnildren. St•vlc11 will iw held Tl\ursd1v, MllV XI, 7 PM, P1d!lc View C~•P•I. with l!ev. J!ruce kurrlt <1fllcl1!1nt. E'ntom~moM. Patl!lc View Memorial P1rk, P1t1llt Vlew MorlYarv. Olr~(!ors. ltEINH,.ltOT LCIJll H. ltflnlla•dt Jr. 2Sl VIiia NIJ'/ll, (ostt Mell. Oa!e of de~!h, M•Y 1i. S..r- "lve-d b'( wlft, Marv; '""'· Fr«I, of T111- 1in1 Rlct11 rd, ol H""tton; dougMef, M&..., L""i•• Rr1, cl L1gun1 Nl9utl; ero!htr•. Fr«I "'· c! Oii Clf'I', Ptnn>vlv1nl~; Jonn A. Rrlnll1rdt, qi Tilt; 11 or1ndcl>ild"n. Strvlcr1, Wedne1d1v. Mt• 19, 11 Noon, Pacific View C~Prl. ln1trmrnl, P1tlflc Vlew Mtmorisl Park. Patlllt Vi.w Mor· ap , Okeclllrs. -Tl4'0M~S01'1 fhvmond Tl'IOmPlll"· A9e ¥J, tr! 1$61 Mui Ot lvf, Co•!• Mts•. 011~ cl deatn. MIY 17. StrYlt~ ptndlM 1! 8tll Bn>td- wtY Mortutrv. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th St .. Costa l\1esa '4M888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar 673-9450 Coslll l\1tsa . . . . . . . . 646-24%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa 1\ltsa LI 8-3433 • l\1cCORl\flCK LAG UNA BEACH 1'110RTUARY 1795 Laguaa Canyon Rd. fM-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctmti.ery l\fortuary Chapel · 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Btacb. California . 64.f..1700 • PEEK FA~m,v COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7SOL Bolsa Ave. Westtnln&tr:r 193-352$ • SMITH'S MORTUARY 127 !\fa in St. -· IJunt1n1toa Bead! • Cook••..., .. Junetle Mtl!tn ~' -· t11om11, ltbWlle M11l1/IM ""' Mit/ltel W!tll1111 Corfltlo, Meltrl Mtrv 1...i LHntrd Nltol11 (C(!oA" Bruce Aleatflll•r 1nd Vicki Jn1>t!tt Ki""''· Jae~ All•n and Ann Mae M11ra~r. B~111rlce 1!\CI Norbert J. l!alt•s. v~r! F. tl'ld M1rt1>1 L Cerv. Vlrglnlt K. tnd N~rm1n (. Carrillo. Sondra L. 1nd At•• K Ell1, Lerrv Victor Ind S~IY!t fllllbelh Wilson, JudY Eltlne 1r11:t Mlt~ttl Ernf!s! OIClcco, Sr .. Lu<ills 1nd Jolln Mlggln1, John llennt!I t nd M•rlrnt El•i"" L•i:~nl, !l•rlJtrll Ellllf'I I nd T""°"Off Vigne, ~n•ron and Lowrence Och•ltrtt, F!o<rf>Ce M. 1nd Jtnnln;• ~­ Ol•nder, M•rh1 Tert~t1nd J. Fr!lll ,11'11 MtJ 11 Mttover, Tnom1s •nd Pam•I• P•l•founlas. John L. an<I Mar11r'1 v Moo••, Delcre5 M••ltnt •nd ROberl '" ~twc~tllo•d. Eva and R-rl JoH<>~ &•oome, Peggy Sur tr.cl Stn!cnt · Tllom•1 Llnd.,..,rv'" Paul Cc-nr•d and Jovct C•rolvn Ruck. Ann Mrl•nle •nd L1rrv l(~llh Andersen, R-rl ltti an<I Juov Let Swan•cn. Br!!v Lev •n" '"""' Lvl• Oal!, M1t•tart1 Cl11r1 11"11 Wiibur H8$lin~· St1ide11ts Praised JRVINE -Thirt.v students or the Ga lifornia tnllege of f\;tedicin~ .at UC: Irvine have bern honored for acadc1nic ex·· ce!lencc. Claire Targolr. a junior medical student iro1n Pacific Palisades, received a $1.000 !'cholarship fl'on1 the Pfize r Laboratorie s. She "'as llcclared the outstanding junior studenl based o 11 acadeniic and clinical ex· cellence. WINS SCHO(ARSHIP UCl 's Cl ai re Targoff history essay. ""No n1ort hospit<il beds \\'Ill du·eci. p~lieot needs. These be needed because av~ragr steps arc necessary or we vdU ORANG!=: -&iencc 1s coui-µroblems 1vi\l be taken care of bf in serious trouble in the ing to the aid of the inedical before the patient becomes next decade." si•riously ill." tie explains. Dr. Rannels points out that By JACK Ull 06ACK 01 t~t Diiiy 1"1!111 Start patient. the doctor and the E II 1 1 111 .. ventua Y mos peop c w Cali fornia, like most other nurse and we will sre n1any go into inlensive care unit$, ... 1atC's, is behind in hefllth "drastic" changes in hf'allh not acute beds as no\11," n)anpower \t'aining \\'ilh seven care in the next Jew year:;. "Group thcra1>Y will Ix• prtr medical schools training only It )'Oii hBVP rwv.• noh::hbor!I or know of anyon" 1novlni;: to ·0111·, area, 11lt>a~ tr ll Utt i,;o that v.'" m•y rxh·nd a friendly v.·elcomr 1.nd hf'I!• then1 to btx:ome acquainted in lhl'lr _rl('w i:urroundlngs. So. Coast Visitor 494-0S79 494-9361 Harbor Visitor 644-0174 So 0 II l:i vide<I for lhc \l'Orricd well, a srnall portion of the needed • ~ays 1·. errnar «lll· l·i~~~~=------=---==~=~~~~~~~~~~~ neJs. · mc:itl icu l dirC'ctor elf the rspl'cially the eldcrl,v \\'ho µhysicians. Oran'gc County f\I e <Ii c ;i 1 think they have n1 a n y Ccntrr. \Ip believes th:ll thrrc ailrncnts." has bt·en <•n tncorrect en1-All hospitals should be plan-1,.-------------------------. phasis in the arc<i of pl'C'-paid ning lo rut <:town on the health care. Thf' eniphasis nun1ber or beds not add more, should ~ O['I , physi('U[ l'X· b111 ino~t are no!. the medi tal aminations mt.her than t'Ot'· director says. "We art' not rective <:.arc. he says. ov('rbedded in Or·an~e County "i\1osl patients don·t go 10 yet but \\'l' soon cuuld be .'' the doctor un til lhry ar~· reatlv "Tht• great hope is to rnake ilL ., the doctor ex1llain~. "\Vith diagnostic st•rvices che ape r." lhe proper pre-pai d hc111th in· hl' sa.vs. "An intern CHn take l surance the ne;ir sick. and the care of an outpost t'1inic." SELUNG A HOME ... FBA·VA? Compare the low rates and especially the low loan fees available at Home Savings. Call the ladinglmer Mver" Denni l tnd lloVO R:. -~hOCkley, JLJ•nH• F1tYt •nd Don~I" l•• JO'!nston. B<rl'ld11 G. an" J eUI! w. lcmoklnt, 011nit1 Nelw.n Mid Virtlnla '"" llartlt, C.10r11 v. and Jim•• Junlcr A $300 av.·ard in 1nemory or the son of Laguna Beach Dr. Vincent P. Ca rroll \\'as m ade to another junior student, Natali£' Flod. 2fl. of Long B each. It was granted for ex- cellence in research. Sen ior Robert B!ack\\'Clder of Fresno \\las presented a µla· que and a $250 schol;irship "for excellence in clinical scholarship.'" welt will go to th<' phy~itif!n." "Clerks in a clinic \1·il l bl' i\lany say thi~ will overload !rained as health agcnls." he Oth('N 1vinninR c:i:;h award:< lhc average doctor and !hat is explained. ··so111eon£' other 1 fur spt·t·i alizC'd stud.1· 11f're rruc. Dr. Rannels a!!recs. ll is than a physici;1ns is needed to [ Students honored Dr. James ~lahnke. 2R3G Alla \I is t 'l Drive. Nrwpo!'1 Beach. :1ssis- tant professor ()I surger~·. \':ith ttre Golden Apple invard. 11t1n1- ing hin1 the "outst0nd u1f, fa cul1y n1cmbcr.'' See why Home makes more loans than any other a aaocia- lion in the nation. You are given all the facts, and on quaU1ied credit and property you are given an actual Joan commitment. Stenlf'l>tl', Lindt J . 1nd Phillip E. S"1wen9e1. Lllllen MIY 1nd Ricn.ird R1111nd Percna1. P1mel1 An'I and John Edwerd Urr,,,!1, Anl11 llnd Ftan~ R M..icrr, Evtlvn M. """ J~c~ I Ande•son. Glori• Jave •nd P1u1 Gto•te lra~~. snaron H, 111"' Jclln L•ndl1 i;tyen. France• C. and Rena Id P _ Riedman, Ooro!hy 0. and F<'<I L V1lencl11. Jee C.. 1nd Geot9yann• Oou91•5, l~nne!•e Oou9111 Ind tt11y Carl1c-n KruShtlniskv, Geraldl,,. Elltn ancl Waller Soµhomore Tont liarile of San Diego received a gold \1'atch and scroll "for outstan· ding academic excellence ... Junior S1l'Vt' 1\ll, $HN for un~\\·~r 1s 11h,1! he tails .----CO 1'arliolag,1·: junior, ,John Cutlcr. ·· rnulti-phasic screening." SlOO for radiolog,v: Junior --~1ulti·phas11: scree ning "'ill Stevt~ La'larus. S15\J I 0 r rcqui1·e a doctor for uni v 10 radiology: junior John Hrnncr. 111inutes. Nurses and Orhcr $75 for radiology: senior Lynn llids can do the routine Hoc. $100 frir pcdiarrits: !estiuc." senior !)avid Ta y_lnr. $100 for This has Jed to ;i new line of KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN Phon• 1ny ofliOll oI Ho•• S&•inv• America'• Largest Lockman. S11nar1 Kev and (h•rlts Richard Owen, Ridla•d Wllll~m '"" vnna Je"n Vander11<H>I. ltavm'"1d "'· and Bonnie "' Two a1\'ards went to senioT" Dennis ,Johnson of Fortun1:1, $100 each for "excellence 'll pediatrics" and for a n1edi<:al surgt·r~·. <1nd se nior Fred . H. thinking among mcdtl'a! pco- ll1ri;chborg, $25 and l\ n1cd1ca l 1 _Jp~le~,~D~r.;,R~a.~m~e~ls~"~l~'S;;,..-.. ~~~~~~~~~~~~----------------------iij bonk . :i --~ + _. Ke1111, Wllltm "'lbert Jr. 1nd Cerolvn Emile Rvmrr. 6a•bt•I •nd Oavid $. ~ !l•n.,lx•n. Yvonne C.rraldlnt Incl LIOv!I veael Mowarcl. (••ol Jeen an!I Lonni• All•n Pellon, Keir• O. 1"11 Tl\llmll L Gcd11111>t, Mlrttl "'ltxa,,.,er 1nd Elle~ Lou<.e F i~t. V!r11inl1 Y, 1na ROC!oer I Vt,~u•~. Joh1' "'b•11nam and !lunnv l tt Men~ro. J• .• Diane tnd Elm• Jamt• Ma•dctllle, Roo1ld J 1mes 1 n • Ros.rmarv Let A!no's, Carleton H. t nd Oorclhv MtY H11rcour1, Florene~ G. 1nd Ftea Jame• 8C1Jther. Anll• Sue '"" G•fY Jost~/1 Swing, Jacgutilnt R. •nd Ronald H. Arnold. JO$ep/\ Th""'ll' an.t Frar1<e1 El•lnt Mllrlln•I, Intl S.ldOnl •nd ES!h•r Ramo' lont. Wl"llJ l'l!trl and Frt<lrfck Let MtLa!n, Blllv Grne Ind LimJa J•an Murray, Harold Monroe and J1net M•er. Jr., &e!nenv Avil•n '"° Co••v Marlin Viol. Oale J. and An!olnene R Dvmond, Ka!nltffl M•tlt and O<!notd Mart;n luri1ce, Angelo Carmen ond Mer.1nnt Ovr~n. Marv R. •"" Mtnrv G l<'cClu•e, Ka'lll~n M 1nd M•rntv let Slewor1, Nancy t. •n<I Carlo~ R Glt•herl. BarlJlra R. ano 1-tenrv C. Mandltv, lawrtnt• J. and Marv MtG•i\. A•e!'ldl, Madelinf 1nd Cn1rl•s Lecnar.i W•lker, lei"• E. 1nd Jae~ R•• o~ Santi>. K11neri"' Ell~n tn<I R lt~•'" Nichclts Ga•ton. Sharon Lvnne 1"11 Alan Watl11Ct ke<~tnb<i•fl, Tere•• amJ D•rle L. Hu9hti, John Allon and ~ond•1 Wltw~r. ervorlv LOlllst """ J•me• Jay Mlt~"'· Ursula M. aQ<I Carl M /,llkrl1, ~•nd•t Jol>ttne 1nd JOl'I 0011111•-• £.!Us, C11rol Ltt 11nd Earl Cla•ente Con•wav. Paul and Norma A. WcrleY. K11111!een O. and Ronnie L, Reynol!11. Nutl L. tnd Hu•berl M Kiidow, J•nirn! Rae and E'vtrtll Ea•I P~rmtn!er. William H anct Mar"ne Rowe, Oi:ln1ld E. and Stiaron M Holme•. &cnnlt Let •nd Mith•tl 5. ----------~- Hobbyist Four1cl Su11e 111 Celebrated Cci se SANTA i\NA -A coin col- lector who gave his na111e lo a landmark U.S. Supren1e Coul't decision \\las found i\1onday to be sane and able to lace a new Orange Count y Superior Court trial. .Judge Byron K. i\lci\lillan orderf'd Ted Steven Chime.I . 47. Santa Ana. lo return to court i\·lay 28 for tri1:1I on charges of receivi ng stolen property. lie set the rfatc af1rr reading reports filed by Pius A warded SANT A ANA F o u r Orange Coast residents have received 1 0-~•ear service pin<; in rerognilion of service to Orange Count.v. They are Sa n1uf'I frank. Costa J\1csa : Joan 8. Johnson, \\lestminster: .Jen·~· J\falne\'. HunlinJ!lon Beach. and Arlhur G. \\/eb b. Hun!ington Beach. psychiatrists . \\'ho l''\i<ITiined! the defendant !ollov.•ln,it a' three-n1onlh incarcera!\nn ln Ata~cadero Stale Hospit<tl. I Chi111el was arrested on lhe current charges shortly afler1 the burglary on Dec, 15. 196?. of a Santa Ana borne and ac· cused of selling 5151000 \vnrth of coins and st1ul1ps,..h1ken in the brcakin to~ Costa fl;lcsa 1 111(111 It 11:is \ht' :<(•cund su1·h ar-1 rest fo1· C:hi1ncL The rirsl. four yt'ars earl·it•t« lrrl' In a U.S .. Supreine Court n1ling lhal is \\·idcly C'ilcd tod11y in niany cases involvini:: s1•;.u·<:h and sei1.urr o! properly by police.' 1 The high cour! overturned his c'Onvicl ion on burglury ' charges v.'hcn it rLJcd 1hnl polk·r seizure or S25.000 \\'Orlh l ul coins allegedly .tpkcn by J Chin1('J from ao Orangr roin · ~hop on Dec. 14. 1965 '1·as il- leRal. Bou can't avoid your Death. But you can save • your survivors a lot of unnecessary anguish. And we can help. At.Pacific Vi!.w ~work with so~ples~very_dSJ1'._who hovl! wisely decided __ to determine their exact fu nera l orrongemenls and co~ts ahead of time. They save money, time, worry .. , and much anguish, By low, some th in gs must be done with the decea~ed. Everything else, though, is usually decided by someone in o highl}t emttfonal state, least prepared of 1~e time to make $UCh decisions. Mo y we help you moke this most se nsi ble arrangement? A phone coll to Pacific View will bring on experienced c'ounselor to the privacy of your home or office if you wish. .I But here or there, the saving s in be ignored. mo ney ond heortoche ore too great to PACIFIC: VIEW MEMORIAL PARK £i MORTUARY 3500 ,ACIFIC VIEW DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH, CAt,.,ORNtA 92663 • !AREA 71A\6••·2700 ,-~--------------, I I . \ r ~~1:~1,Y~e:lWM:.~:i~~~~~~!M,~~~r~l~~~ 1 I I '"''e trfld 111t, wtl!lolll ebMt•llo., 10111' ~•!Pful oortlo!lo I • .,~tlll'I& lOllf (ll•ll I• Otder.'' I ll'llllrllltltl l~IJ •Ill l"cr.te deltlit ol yowr Pft"'ttd f\rlt11t, ulldtrltKlnc ·~~ I 1 Ct{!'ltltrJ arrlft1~ments. ,. I ., I 1 I ADOR£1S I \ I ' Ct TT &TATE Ji, I ~---------------/ IT'S FRIGIDAIRE WEEK ONCE-A-YEAR ALUES! MoreinLess Frigidaire 15.2 cu.ft.Refrigerator Only 30''wide More room in less space. Because Frigidaire uses a super insulation! So efl icienl it creates a slim wall that means more room inside, less bulk outs ide. FRIGIDAIRE rDC NJ{Cl(f/.o~. JCiffiAYI HURRY! WHILE QU.t.NTITll!S l.t.ST! • Double-easy desi gn! • Press down handle -tray slides out. • lift lever, cubes are free! • No tugging or pulling-no messy s1nk-sp!asn1ng! IHtegrll11 COSTA MESA 411 E. 64 6"1 684 Seventttnth Daily 9 -9: ' St , Sat. 9 · 6 I • I BIG CAPACITY FROST· PRO·OF REFRIGERATOR $ It's big ! 15.2 cu. ft. overall with a I O.~l cu. It. refrig erdtor section and d 4.7 5 cu. ft. freezer to store up to 166 lbs. Here's the extra space you wa nt. It 's Frost·proof. You'll never defrost again! It's ada ptable! Reversa-doors may be hing ed for righ t or left -handed openings, if you mo ve or re- mod el. No need to cal: a servi cemtin, The switch can e a s i I y be made by the man of the house. Imagine! Y~u g e t all this space and the refrigera- tor is only 30" wide! Fits most anywhere ! FRIGIDAIRE DISHMOBILE Has Super·Surqe Washing Action For Cleaner Dishes e l-•ty lo•d;nq tGll.out r~c~• • F<i9id.,;,, l~l""'ur,, wt11'r.n9 t cticn •iHCf' J947 EL TORO . Laguna Hills Plata IM•I t• Se•-0111 837-3830-Dilly 10 • 6; Thur., Fri. 10 '' .10 DAILY PILOT s West Banks lnco1ne Sets -Record in 1970 \Ves tern OOn~s' net income rea ched a record high in 1970. but the growth pace slo\ved consider· ably over the course of the year. accord1ng to the current ~Ionthly Review of the Federal Reserve Bank or San F'ranc1sro Net pre·tax operating income of Twelfth Dis- trict 1nember banks reached $724 mill ion -only fractionally above the I 9tl9 fi gure. Net income latter adjusting for taxes. security losses. and extra- ordinary charges) mcanv,;hi\e rose ft\le percent to $480 m1lliou. A shal'R rise 1n interest rates on a burgeonrng volurne of time deposits \vas the main depressant on banks' net income durin g 1970. Jn addition. un· us ually .high extraordinary charges partly offset the favorable effect of a decline 1n capital losses on securities. \Vestern banks posted a seven percen t gain In loan revenue because of increases both in loan volume and tn the ra te of return on loans They also record~d a 16 percent increase 1n security revenue; this reOected a rise in rates (at last on securities ecquired early 1n the year) and a massive expan· s1on 1n banks' securi ty holdings 1\LHA\IBRA -l B\\'l - Sears. ll.ocouck :i.nd Con1· pan)''s net 1ncp1ne for tht Sn1all Fi1ms Get Help Of Lockheed .Small business lirn1~ receiv· ed $22 m1lhon 111 subcontracts fron1 lhe Lockheed..Cahforn1a Co1npany during lhe llrst quarter or 1971, tht• comp~ny reports. ·The 1nost slgnlf1c<1nl point Is that small <-onccrns recel\'· ed 35 pt'rc:cnt of nl! doll;irs subcontracted by us." s<1ld \Yarrl'n K. Det'n1. 1....otkheed s small business admhustrator "Tins represents 11 50 percent locf't'ase 1n l~ small busine~5 share of Lockheed-Cahforn1a purchasing commitments O\'er lhe first quarter of las! year " \Yhilc the dollar \•alue uf small business a" 11rds 1s do11 n front last ~ear's hrs! quarllr total of S55 mill\on sin,111 busrnesscs received ti~ percent of all the rompany·s purcha~e orders. Dcen1 shctcd 1st Flight By Trislar TODAY! ----~ Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Your1.elf or ~ f riend M•v ~· I''"" "" 1n~•IO-•• '"'"'" f ffrtn !•!:>ti! 4 11• ~rrt n•""Y •• IOC •II••<••.,~ !~bell ,., .......... Pfr\fft•I ....... l~<n •• -\. ·~'""· llf'Oll'n tit l •IHI• 1•oci. O"' .IU\ 1'1f -~ bC' \t•«I !O< "'"'-'1111 -«Oftn(d !O<:cl •''"" All l•IK" •It l>'ln!<d "'''" 1•v•l1h YOlllW lf!lt .... ••~• ..., • .,,, ,.n,,. •ull'\"'€<1 IM-. -----------------------, r J oll •• "'" ctuPo• d•• ................ "" N ' I I l'•lft ,,1n1"'• 1.•~•I o .. , • D I •• U•I I (••'• "'"'• CaM 'l•)• I I : I I I I I I I I I I l PILOT PRINTING 1 L-----------------------J • FREE BONUS • 1 ~· - OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New Y 01~ Stock List I • • N80XO ll'O f t~O(" IO N~cpfl( 61\ N••i'l110C11 4 N•IA In Dp N•I Avl1 9" No C1n o N• C&•l'IA n Not (l\~rn JO N1IC h•l tO No 11 PS 1 JJ NoNG01 '60 No NG pf5J.0 NnS!~Pv 1 7(1 N~ Pw ofl 60 tio hll ~ 1s, No l'I or N~ i'\p p , .. Nw Bftnc ,, •• • N~w nd Nwnrlpll.S N .. rd pC~ NW\" P•)O Nw1~w 110 Ne on }" t S Men Nr ~Pl60 NV~ Co • • • ''-. _M_,.•1 __ 1_,_11 __________ 0_•_1L_v_P1_c_or_ Frida)··s Closing Prices-Complete New York S 1 tock Exchange List lllel Ntl Clllll.I Miii! 1.IW ci..-C111 -OR- '" ' ri6 .,~ . ••• 19 ... 1• D » .. •• "' " .. 19(1 ,.. • • u .. ,.ll~•11o-+1.. J Ulo. 15_. &SIL~ ,. JI~ lS\o N • + : i\"' f1 ~J: .. '-,,. TM 111, UV, -I ' ., ..... 4t1' -\1 11 Ol. 10"" 10,., ~ \'& •J w.o. Jl" ""' ~ t', •Sh IS\.\ ., .. -.\o ,l.C 0 tQ .Ml I f' ~ ~~,~W:.M =~ "11 · u. 2510 -.. • to Sitt Jllo + I ••• •1'-" ., J~ H l l tt 1•1 -1 Sf ,. • " 11'1i ',, .. , ·~l -"11 1101!>15 IS 'lo IJ4J.f)4 t I 2XIV> 2 / .... 1 l"il -1~> )t 3' Jllio 311 •-. J1 Jlo J'\i J._+ I ' ~ 1 ' " jlto JI~ Jlt'o _. o UO lh )II-"' ll\1-'i'l o l ll6)1l •• lll "" 11\'r -, -T- ,, IOI\ 10 .0 -0.. ,,,,,,~,~-1'1 l1l1 .. l -'4 11>.i.~1-. .. k J 11 11\ 21\o - ' Marli.:et Lowe1· In Active Trade NE \V YORK {UPI) -Normal pre weekend evening up pressures an d concern over lhe world rnoneta1 y s1tuallofl sent the stock market lower 1n fairly active trading r r1dtiy A ~e11se or un eas1nc::;s over the 1nte rnat1onal monetary picture may be a rcstra1n1ng fa ctor at this point one analyst rema1 ked but bas1cally traders are doing a lot of sideline s1t t1ng as the market continues to co nsohdate past gains 1~ ~~~. ~~~ ~~~:; Also resulting 1n some hesitancy amon g invest u~ ~,: ~ ~"' ors \\as an announcement by Egyptian President u ... L 1 ... ,:J. :e #i: ;:..: = An"ar Sadat that he had foiled what amoun ted u:~c"C:.., o • 120 11, 11t'1 -1 to a coup by h1s political opponents 8~c f.!t '111 J 16.lt I' 1, -1 Ull• co «> JU ,,.._ ••• •~ -:i.a unl1.-11 • t n ,n. 11"" 2su Shortly before the fina l j?ong the Dow Jones u" Nv .Ja. ,," 1:~· 'I,' ':V: = ~ Jnd us tr1al Avera"e 'vas off O 98 at 935 36 Stand ard 8~ ~:bf11° 1 ' lO•l• 104 10• -1 b Un E tt I 71 Y• JI , ,,..., 311'1 + "' & Poor s 500 stock index showed a loss o( 0 47 at un E a 1 ao 101 .. v. •11.1. d " -\\ 2 '"I' ,.,, so » Jt l •. Jt'• 102 2 Declines led advances 820 to 543 among un 01 , )/j '° 19111 , .... -h I 654 ,. u..o IC• .0 1 i.1-o i. .. l•"' -t e issu es crossi ng the tape uoc.1 .. , so u11 .. 1u1o 1 s ... +11 UnPacC1>2 j )t~ 31 ... lt\o -fo Un...,P•c !) • '" 1• .. lfY, .. .1·~"""'Q IE'~~ ......... .., •• , ....... ,.--... --., ... ,,,....,,.,,.._.I Ull P•< pf ..0 "7 SI SI ' 51 ... -~ Un on~,,.... 1'1 J o lO.. XI.. 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' I , '> 1 \4, i\11•-111 Ray Wilson Firms Sold Unit Tabs 1 "' 1" 1/ 11,.., 11 7"' l A chain of contemporary l • 1 ' '•-I th l h 1 u • u, '''-''!'"'----"'r mens 1 o ng &lores 11s an ,rl t~ , nounrcd acquisition of tfirce- 10 c11 (H• .,... -Ray Wiison shops two of them 111•~6· 1 ll JJ111 :u Jn Orange Cou nty , •• 14 ' 1'' Th So 10 10 , 10 • o.. c ulh Coast Plaza, ,~ :': :~ : ! -Cosla t.1csa The City Center • 10 1• :: ... t ~ Orange> and the third or the 1i f'• : ' • • -Ray Wilson shops 1n R1vers1de • •\o • • .. t 1 Jt" J1 ~ t ~ -v.111 become part of the Lord ;J ~ ~ ~ • ~' Hebel lnduat rles chain H~ ~.~; ~~~ ;, -+-, No amount was disclosed for I~ r l~ !!"' -.. lh(' transaction but Pre~tdent I ,, 1 ' I~ M BI d d ,i 1•, , ~ , 11ur1ce a son pre 1ctc ac , 1: ~ '~"' '!i... -qu1s1t1on wlll bring an ad n 1! ':~ 1~ +-ditlonal $1 m1lllon per year lo s J , 1 J 1 tht company ll)l o 17 •llo • ~ •lo "• H• +-The purcha i;e makes 13 IJ lit. ll~ 'M•-~ I hi I It 1s , , 6 ~ 1 • i; ores 1n s c uu n opera ng ,' ir" 7 i ,: ; "~ The Rebel Shop~ House Qf ,:n J 6~ • ,;.: -~ I ord~ and Hip Pocket ~· ,, ,. 1•9 ,, 1 • ,.,_l, -TZ- • N.Y •. Wi11t1e1·s ortd Loset•s ,J j '" " l· 11 I ... .. l" .. ' ' " ,, " .. Jf I~~ • • • " ,, J( ii" 11 ~ 4 Kid s Tr.1111 JI 11 ~ Car .. ,! J • .. ~ ' • .,, • " " • ' :j ' " ~ 'l ' ... • i " ' '" .. • ' . .. " "' .,. '" " I" " .. ' ,. .. .. '" .. 'f" .. ,;~ ' ,,. • , ' ft~ ~.: 'l" .. •• •• ' .. ,.,, ' . !,'" " '. 'l .. • ... .. -•I• • l>\'I -• ' '" ,, .. - ' 77.! ~ , I , 1 •• 1 • -ii .. n: ' .. 41t. •lo ' . ' '°. ~~ 1' I'~ ',.: " "" .. • ,, >I " ' ' ' ' " ' ' " • • 'I , .. " " ' • "" • l . ' >I " • .. "" '" .. I• " • • " • " . " ' •• " ' . "' " '" ' ' " " '" ' .. 'l I . '" •• " " .. ... " .. r, • • • ' . '" ' " " ,, ' . '" '" ' '. " '" .... • •• ,, 11 .. ' " . " ... " • " • .. •• \ " • ' s \C/ J OSE fU PI) -four children wt:re killed 1 hursda) n1J:hl w~n freigh t train .slammed into their frimlly s s\11l1on wagon at a ra1Jrqad cro!!lng Kllled were Oavld \Veyer Jr 3 his brother Stephen, r)\ e months Suzelle s and Ti'lmr 8 There wert lht ch1lflrcn or Mr ~nd Mrs llav1d WC'\Cr or Sa.n J o~el 1 heir molhrr Jo11n Z6 th .. drlvtr a n d stven Vf'&r-old ii:1s!t'r lon1/yn !turvtvcd but lh~1r condl!lon was nol Jni mediately known ·' ' • • • • • ~ 't j •• I I I l • . i----· ' - ' . . ' . . . 7 I l • ' . . ' / J 2 DAILY PILOT Tutsday, May 18, 11J7l Good News ••• Bad News -CHECKING · . • .uP.-· Castro .Breaks Sil.ence-~and How! Drive1·s-Watch ' MIAtttI (UP!) -CUbao housing shortage using support for revoluUonary Spanish intellectual ,Juan that are sinking in lhe stormy PrenUert Fidel Castro, never workers' spare-time labor. movements throughout Latin Goytisolo. Most of the signers seas o( history." known for stlnglnHs with The other was devoted to America and said "millions of have been outspoken a"dmirers -May 2: Winding up 3 words. has been particularly praising the progress made in Cubans" would volunteer to of the Cuban premier. three-hour-plus speech at the generous with his oratory late-educaUon under hit regime, fight in Chile if "imperialist \Vithout mentioning names. traditional '-1ay Day rally, ly. compared to "the horrible aggression" threatens Marxist Castro directed so1ne of his again past midnight. Castro Five Castro spteches were prficlices of the past." President Salvador Allende. sharpest criticism ~t them -announced that the sugar broadcast by Radio Havana Following are some or the -May I: In a post.midnight ·~CIA agrnts ... shan1cless harvest was three weeks and monitored in Miami dur-key points made in the three speech closing a national con· pseud<rleftist bourgeois living behind schedule. Ing a two-week period at the more important addresses: rerence on education and on their laurel in Paris. Lon· He reduced the harvest goal end of April and beginning of -April 19: On the 10th an-culture, Castro lashed out at don, Ron1e . . intellectual from 7 million metric tons ot Your Cl1impanzees By l. f\I. BOYD ANl~IAL WORLD: EVERY beast that hunts by night is color blind. . .A N:EWBORN GIRAFFE ohenl.irnes is just about as lall and heavy as. xay. Dennis Weaver.· •. THE BLUE \\'llALE'S longue can "'eigh as much as a pregnant elephant. .AVERAGE LA YING 1-IEN these days only produces eggs for 11 months of her automatic life ... AND RE.\1E~IBER, the plural of cow is kine, yes it is. ENGINEERS. please note. Do you lake in $26,675 a· year? Nevermind, it 's none of my business. But that's \\•hat an engineer \l'ith the federal go\·en1n1enl no"' makes \vhcn he gets near the top of the stack. His counterpart in private industry t'arns $25.393. Time "'·hen the federal govern- ment paid less than private in· dustry is past. that's clear. THAT SO~fE expe c t an I mothers cra''' odd edibles is not extraordinary. \Vhat's ex· traordinary. I think, is some expectant mothers eat co;i l. B\' the handfuls. \\'hy? .. .IT \\'AS NONE other than old Ed Durlin~ who claimed a trul y attractive lady et>uld b e • May. nlversary of his government's dissident intellectuals in Cuba, rats ... cre\\'IJ\en on ships refined sugar to 6.65 million. dietician. Of AU!tin. Texas: What did Ca31tro have to say victory during the U.S.·backed calling them "two or three lost.,.,_,_ _______ io.oiiiioiiii;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DNr. Biter,C 1 •f dMentist.8• Odf in this verbal flow after Bay of Pigs Invasion, Castro sheep . . . sowing poison, 11 ewman, a 1 .; rs. If' • several month1 or silence? rejected any Improvement in treachery and intrigue inside owner or an egg ranch. -----------lie berated dissident in-relations with the United the revolution ," whose books CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. tellectuals inside Cuba and his States or the OAS. never should have bee "How Jong does a peach tree F CJi • old foe Richard Nixon in Relerring to a re c en t published. live?" A. Only about eight ree me Washington. 'He lashed out at remark by Nixon indicating a This took the lid off a sirn- years. average. Incidentally, a familiar target by calling change In Cuba's attitude mering controversy over \\'hen one oI~t~ peach trees G $5 00 the Organization or American could lead to a review or Heberto Padilla, a 39-year-old gets sick, it runs a tem· ets States {OAS) "a filthy sump-American policy toward him. Cuban who won the National perature. Sometimes up to 20 hole." He zeroed in on a new Castro said: Poetry Prize in 1968 with a degree~ F. over normal. Don't A check in the amount of one by dubbing a group or "\Ve sha ll never break book of poems that included know how the tree surgeon.'i isoo has1>een granted to HUn· European leftist intellectuals solidarity with the revoJu. pointed criticism of t h e treat that. Doubtlessly not lington Beach's new Free CIA age nts and intellectual tionary peoples of' the world to regime. Padilla was arrested with aspirin. In fact , I don't Health Clinie by the Hun· rats. seek better relations with ~tr. in Havana in March and even know where 1hey stick tington Beach Jaycees. Pep-t~lk.s lo the island Nixon and his government of released last month after con- the thermometer. Wiii check The money, raised by a edpopulati~1onondimphrovementsln aggressors and genocides." · fessing ·to "counter-revolu-further and report. J · 1 1 th uca on an ousing were In the wake or moves by the tionary" writing and contacts aycee carniva ast mon • followed by the announcement leftist governments in Chile with "CIA agents." A, GOOD DRIVER slays at has been used to pay the first that the vita l sugar crop will and Bolivia to discuss lifting A courteously-phrased letter least four chimpanzees behind two months rent for the clinic, fall short of the already-n!duc. OAS sanctions against Cuba, protestinll: Padilla's arrest was the car in front . l:le watches located at 5th Street and Olive ed goal set this year. Castro called the OAS "a signed by a distinguished that car's rear bumper. When Avenue, In the downtown por· Two of the speeches ap. filthy, disgusting. discredited group of intellectuals Including it passes a telephone pole, tion of the city. peared to be largely exercise• sump.hole ... that is bound French writer J ea n ·P a u I I See by Today's Want Ads ---e Ladies!! YOGA !! Bepefits ~1::.1.;j/":::;'.) the-1st day. free demo~ s1ration \\led. Brini: a lriend, morning or night cla""'. , • Here's a job for a couple or a man!! Early Ar--! 11ev.spaper delivery in Ir- vine ai'Ca, excellent route! e Need a huntirlg dog?! 8 ·weeks old, bas shobl, and only $15. • Here is a 19'70 Husquvarna 360 Sportsma n In good condition. Only BIO or besr oUtt takes. light post or road sign. he Founded by Mrs. Hanna in domestic public relations to disappear" and 4dded, "\Ve Sartre and his wife, Simone starts to count: one chiril· Alekoumbldes and Dr. R. M. that cou ld be compared to feel better outside the OAS De Beauvoir, Italian novelist panzee. t w 0 • chimpanzees, Sher, the clinic averaged 30 President Nixon'• rec en t than in it ... the imperialist.s Alberto Moravia, F r ench three chirnoanzees, lour chim-patients during its first week series of interviews with will leave to leave the OAS novelist Marguerite Duras. panzees. His own f r o n t of operation and 45 patients newsmen in the United States, before we consider joining it Mexican writer C a r 1 o s bumper should pass th e per day for tht: past months. It In one, Castro spoke at length again." Fuentes, Argentina expatriate marker right after the fourth _'w'.''"''-'o'l'pe'."ned""'.'~l.'.'.:as'.'.t~A~p'.'."'.'.·1:... -.,,--~ab~ou""'_l_'•'._!'P".'°~gr:'.a~m~t".o~e~a~se~the~-~H~e.!p~led~g~ed~COD~U~n~ued~Cu~b~a~n_'wr~it~e':.' _:'.J~ul~io'.._Cort~~a~z:aco:._~a'."nd~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ chimpanzee. Remember that.1-' young fellow . next time you're tailga ted. lean out the windo\v and holler al the o1d boy. Tell him he·s a chi1npanzee or two too clnse. . described \lo"ilh jusl r 0 u r words : Serenity, sincerity, sympathy and simplicity ... ONCE REPORTED all $1 bills carry the date 1776 . "Horse feathers!" writes aa irate client. All riJlhl. Still say all $1 bills carry the date 1776. however ... EJG llT YEARS AGO, one out of every 18 in· come tax returns was audited. Last yea r. one out of 44 was audited. \Vhat with the ne\v CQmputers and all . you know·. STATISTICALLY, if a man is lo kill his wife. he is most apt to do so in the bedroom. But if a \\'Oman is to kill her hus· band. she is most a]ll to do so in the kitchen . ALSO. !\IUST ADO these norninees to that l i~t of can- didates for membership in the Proper Job Club: or F'ort llood. Tex as, SP4 Beagle, at- tendant in t~ veterinary clinic. Of Pal m Spring s. Calil.: '.\liss Hunger. a hospital Yotsr questions and com.- 111euts are 1velco n1ed and. 1.oi /l be "'1tSed in CI-JECK· ING UP wherever possible. Please address your let· ters to L. /IL Boyd., P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Beach 92660. ·------------------···---------·--·--···----' • • • • • f l ' UI D flew CNlocw {Compare our rower rates) o noat • ~ lllobile llomw andolfkr Reaealio."K\I Vefiiclw (Check our loan rates) t1 Check us out. You'll find full service Centlnela Bank has-aiot ofinteresril'ffi)u- -and for you. Like the highesl rate on insured D Savings Accounts. And check us for Free Checking Accounts, O per· sonal and r business. Or services Ilk• ·J Escrows, r Mortgage or rent collec· lions; Trusl Services through Calilorni1 Bankers Trust-0 Personal and O Cor- poration, o Wills and Estate Planning, O Pension and Profit Sharing. For your banking convenience, we stay open extra hours: 8:30·5 PM , Monday. Thursday, until 6 PM Fridays. Or you can o Bank·by·Mail wllh frff postage both w1y1. Check us oul -11 pays! Please mall or bring lhls lo your nearest Centinela Bank ollice : ·-~\!: <~'~'"'------ (I) Cu11ir.da Bank fnvlo-/ 524 E. NutWOOd I 674-4600 SouthlaY / 1103Avia1ion. Hermosa Beech/ Jn-2102 Pl1y1 Del Rey I 8117W. Manchester/ 823-9281 Newport BelCh / 3333 W. Coast Hwy./ 6'16-7121 ACCOUNTS INSURtO BY ~-·J.l OE POSIT IN'_;U!lA\ICf: CO' l'C· •J.1,c•. • I ·······-···································-· ' \ j When you buy a round-trip ticket to Atlanta on one of Eastern's .four daily nonstop flights, we'll fly you to Mexico City free. ~ • • • and back to Los Angeles. Myou put business ahead of pleas- ure: you'll fly Eastern to Atlanta; then to Mexico City. You can take · · -~·-· >--.. --And_then you'll .com~ Jtt / back to Los Angeles l via ~ ,/of/tan1(// Western Airlines. ,:,:'Th~ Eas.tern Airlines free trip care of your busi-, ness in Atlanta, then~-~::,."­ spend a couple of days',\ -in-Mexico-Cicy_for ·~ pleasure. · And if you want to put \ pleasure ahead of your business, we can arrange that too. We'll put you on a Westen1 Airlines flight from Los Angeles straight to Mexico City. . Then you'll fly Eastern to Atlanta ' ~f to Mexico._ ,'f-i? When you' start packing your // bags for a business trip:pack·y~ -.~;Uco6:; swimming trunks ; sunglasses · and camera. Who said you could.n't .mix tbusi- ness with ple~ure? For more information, call'your travel agent or Eastern Airlirtes"at 380-2070 in Los Angeles. e E AS I ERN The Wings of Man. I ' ' ' . ' . STYLES ·DRUMMED' UP • Known as Afrika, Nancy Small (above) 'we ars an African caba while Janis Wal ker or Akiba goes exotic in a two-piece wrap. DAILY ,PILOT Photo s by Jackie Combs 'My blackness is the beauty of the land, my blackness, tender and strong, wounded and wise, my blackness' -Lance Jeffers Amisa waves as Yaa Adante, Christine Walker strikes a re- gal pose in an off. shouli:l•f top end wrep skirt (left). Sukari, Miriam Di99s is magnificent in crepe loungewear. • Dancing rhythmically to tbe beat of native drums, th e girls move quickly \\'ilh power, strength and grace. What better way to illustrate lhe ·ease ol movement inherent in original African fashions adapted from tribal dress of Ghana, Weir Africa? The Afro fashion show was part or the UCI's Black Cultural Conference. a six- day program of s~eches by Black leaders, danct and theater performances and other events featuring Black culture. Provided by Fashion Tropicana of Los Angele!, the outfits were designed by Herman Collins of California and TwumaMl of Africa. AlthOugh some prints are Los An geles-made, most are original African imports adapted from the traditional tribal designs. "If it Is a true African print. it is dif· ficult to tell the right side." explained Collins. ''Besides African music, we con· sider authentic dress and dance one of the few means of identification." Comfortable and colorful styles range for every occasion. The pata pata is a native dress with full , angel sleeves v:om by everyone. The striking ashi. a short wrap dress was a crowd-pleaser while eyes turned to the ~·iid prints of the long . caftan-like balakaris. A favorite for horne cnlcrlaining mig ht be a joromi, a sleeveless delightful go\vn at any length or the caba. a hvo-piece design \Vilh long skirt and a wide-sleeved ,loose top. And be..c-ides moving with grace and tase, the African fashions allow an easy· care exlstenee for they're completely washable. Moving fre.ely in her mini: skirt, Pam Davis, called Amisa, dances in the wind. The one-piece cotton dress, lined in black, is com- pletely washable. Penchant for Peace Moppet Image Lost By ~IARIAJ\! CHRISTY NEW YORK -~la r gar e t O'Brien, now :SO and prone to ea tinK binges, \~·as recently in th e powerful hands of a 200-pound llolly11.'ood physical therapist and ma sseuse -Louise Long -w~ Y•as whacking off the ex-weight. !\1argaret, who generally speaks in that deiicalc "Journey for Margaret'' whisper and hasn 't changed except in size. was screa1ning oh-ouch-oh. Louise was kneading the excess nesh th at had settled on Margaret's derricre and cooing: ··Come on no1v, dearie, tell little Louise why you"ve been eati ng so much"." There are some awfully good rea!lons. t.fargaret. who was married at II to her high school sweetheart, Robert Allen , recently got a divorce. The frustration: "\Ye end· ed up having a nice friendly rela- tionship -like brother and sister.'' She also spent two years in Peru. enjoying Jove and rom ance without stringent legal ties. "But I became adept at Peruvian cooking and end- ed up eating potatoes at every meal." HIGH PROTEIN DIET Today, under doctor's orders, shc·R on a hi gh-protein diet. The orde':f are <.'Ompounded by the 11lipulation that liquids are to be avoided because her sys tem retains water. Meanwhile. there"s a -William llolden movie -in the im- mediate offing and Cheeseborough· Ponda has hired her to tell women- at-large how lo use Q-Tips in a~ plying eye makeup. · Both roles call for the prototype fashionable -th in. "1hilc in Peru she went on count I e s s archaeological ex- peditions in a pre-Inca city , !'wfa chu Pichu, and has a formidable col· Jectlon or pre-Colombian arl. BIG GIRL. NOW Margaret O'Brien Margaret has everything from 1 6,000-year-old pecloral feather cape with a cnl's face on it to ancient dolls found in children·s graves. About her fascinalion with history : ''I've alw ay!!! needed to have lhings thal have survived the ravages of lin1e ." Last month Margaret was in Madrid and her old high-school pal Natalie \Yood introduced her to Spain 's leading fashion designer, !\1itzou. \Vithln a few hours !\1argaret had ordered a sle\v or leathers and suedes in Gibson-girl styles -mostly 1nidis topped by sleek shirtWaisls. - f\1argarel 's penchant for anything old doesn't quil. From Spain she went to a Twentieth Century -Fox auction and competed nose-l~nose with Debbie Reynolds' buyer for old World War I circus posters. When he offered $200 apiece, she stopped bidding. "But then I oor- nered him and said, how about it, \et'B'e:cchange posters. I know I've got some you want.'' \Yhen the subject of \.\'Otnen's liberation crops u1>. she sayR 11.on1en ca n handle their own mofK'y llQW and nobody I.I •topping them fro1n smoking, so what more do they want? She's not the kind of woman 11.·ho pierces through the surrace to penetrate the question of male- female equality. She's all ror kec~ ing the peace. MEDIATOR When you bring up issues, they Just zero in on the divisions between people and she·s tired of polarization. When the question o( whether or not her countryman, Bernadette Devlin , is a saint or troublemaker comes up, she bats out her answer : •·1 do not belie ve women should be in politics in the ir.sL-place·~"~-- Margaret's mother, a canny woman who masterm inded her career, was a Spanish namenco dancer and her aunt, Marisa, danc- ed professionally with Xavier Cugat and his band. O'Brien Is only half the herita ge. The actress wants to emphasize that she's half-Spanish and if there's anything you'd like to know about Spanish history - anything -she'd be happy to oblige. She says she's ·'unin- fonned" on Irish history. Margaret is a fashion plate, hi~ pie style. She is investigating the idea of exporting ponchos from Peru and opening an accessory boutique under her own name. She has Nolan Miller of Los Angele! make her clothe.~ but she speci fied the styles. picks the fabric and, Ir it doe sn't look right, she makes hi m do It over two or three times. She buys hal.!I six at a time . and wears them regularly to divert public at- kn_lion t.Q. the neck l!P_.__ _ And so, t.targaret O'Brien, chihf movie star, joins the Oood of 11names" that is switching from show business to some phase of fashion. There's Loretta Young buying bridal go~'M in Europe. There's Arlene Dahl advising Sears on beauty. And there"s Cary Grant on Faberge"s board or director~. Margaret says : "If you don·t ha\'e a cause, it's •~'fully boring being between pictures." , I I --' .. " 14 DA!LV PILOT ' ' . ''· -. . ' . ' ' . . . " rNimble ~ing~s Brighten Days B1 JO OLSON Let's Talk Girl Talk ANN LANDERS Ebell Club ' Gives Gift • I OI Ille lltllr Pll•I Stiff ! Just by looking at her, you'd I think AMa Day was a typical : grandmother, knitting warm I things and telling tales of f yesteryear. I The Costa tttesa resident, I who now mnkes her home in ~an area convalescent hospita l, nits beautiful afghans of any hues bu: wllh one slight handicap: she's blind and relies on her fingers to be her .. ~yex. Mrs. Day. a tiny, !iVeJy 87- year~ld, lost her eyesight last August through glaucoma. and became despondent with so many empty hours to fill. She had been expert at fancywork of all sorts and Javed to read, so stafl lnembers encouraged her to 1ry knitting. A lifel-0ng friend, Mrs. Jim Kerr, brings her Yam in all the colors of the 'rajnbow and from these Mrs. 4Day figures out her pattern and marks the colors wilh holes in the wrappers. ~Using four rows of each color. she knits bright blanktts or friends and those who have -fdone things for her. al Anna knits also to keep her rthrilic hands limber and to · ke her mind away from the pain of her arthritic feet and knees. • kA native of Maine, she spent ost ol her life in Lawrence, ~ass .. and from there nl()Ved Alhambra. At the urging of rs. Kerr. she came to Costa esa and found a little ' aparlment on Church Street v.·hlch was her hpme until "fir$\ one thing and then other wen l wrong." With no family around cept one sister who is in he r convalescent home, rs. Day relies for company ' I 1' MRS. W . E. CURRY · ~ Recites Pledges ~Wedding Pledges Exchanged Annette ~tar1e SI u b b i n s ~came the bride of William E. Curn• during dnubl<' rin~ cercmon.i<'s in 0Lir Lady Qf 1\1ount Canncl Cat ho Ii c Church. Ncv.•rort Beach. Parents of \hf' bridal couple ere J\lr. and Mr s. Vance A. Stubbins or Huntinj'.!tnn Acach and r-.fr. and i\l r.~. C. E. Curry nl Nev.•por1 Beach . Attending her s1s!e~ as matron of honor was ;..1rs. Donald H c i kc s . v.•hilc brid~a1d1! were -M i !i s Trcssia l\ecn and r-.ti~s [l('lia Garnica Tracy Hei kes was th e flov. er girl. Scr\'1ng a~ bc<;t m11n v.·as Rob Currv: ushers Wl'rc Joscp A. Stubbins .. Jin1 Curr~· and Rarry Beauman!. anrl ring bearer was Jl'flrcy Sl'rl'nl'. The bride is a gra1tuat<' or Huntington Brach High School and attendl'1l Orange t:oast Collc~e . lier husban1t is a 'Newporl Harbor High School ··~rnduate. He also altendl'd -OCC an<i ha.~ JUSI returned 1J rom a lour or duly U'l Vicl- J;iiam v"ith the Scabccs. Emblem Club The Elks LOOge is !ht 11etting for rncetin~s of tlv..' •Emblem Club 201 or Ulguna Beach. ~fern~rs gather the first ~nd third Tuesdays al 8 p.m. -' "-----,,, ____ _ A five gallon tree has been planted at Parklane Residen· lial School through th~ efforts of Gi rl Scout<. Troop 1277 which gathered'\ bottles for reclamalion to fund the prir JeCl. Through the leadership or Mr:!!. lfarry Cowan and r-.1rs. Larry Velie of El Toro, the gi rls have concentrated on other en v i r on men t im- provements i ,n c I u d i n g col· Jecling litter during a bicycle ride. Members of the troop in· elude Brenda Bru~r, Donna Durham. Joann Fl a en c k i , Robin Fradkoff, Joann Horl- ings. Kelly Kilion, Donna Kira- ly, Gayle Lock and Marilyn McCaffery. Other troop mem~rs are Teresa Milherser, Elizabeth Payker, Valerie Po r le r , Olristine Roberbacker. Lauri Schroeder, Norma S o t o , Pamela Velie, Ch r ls l i n e Veasey, Michelle Ve a s e Y-, Mary Waite and Denise Web- beL Grandma Finos Y <puth Uncouth DEAR ANN LANDERS: r m a youngish grandmother, just as you are, Ann. In fact, we are the same age . I work in a large office of a well known firm and I get a Ion g beaulirully with the you nger gals although I do not approve of the life style of some. Sud- denly, 1 find myself unable to . adjust to a certain situation In this office and it is upsetting me terribly. Mi!:s X is 27 years old and very pregnant. Her lover skip- ped town and left no forwarding address. The gal has announced she ' is keeping her baby and will work as long as she can ,because she needs the money. In the meantime she is big as a house and f would not be surprised if she gave birth at the water cooler. I rind her presence . an em- barrassn1ent. I 'feel that In a subtle way she is telling all decent people to go to hell . What rankles me most is that the men in this office (both married and single) treat her with specia l respect and con- sideration . One u n us u a 11 y hardboiled type said, "I ad- mire the girl's guts." Jn short, this pregnant-out· of-wedlock dame winds up with more,-. attention. con- sideration a n d admiration than ' most women get from their husbands. What do you think of it, Ann Landers? ~ WASH ., D.C. DEAR WASH: I think 11'1 beaulUul -especially the guys. Ooe day \\'hen I'm In your city I'd like to Cflme by your office and meet them. Parklane Residential School of El Toro will receive a $150 check from the Ebell Club or Laguna Hills Leisure World for the scholarshi p program and plant·a-tree project. The school, on a JG-acre 11ite, is designed .to give mentally retarded persons from ~he age of four an opportunity to become a productive citizen through education and voca· Lional skills. Freel Lang, an Orange Coun- ty landscape architect, will be responsible for plan ting 500 trees~'tl'.ilh assistance from Hal Kemper who is providing top soil for the interior mall. Individual& wish.ing to sup. port the tree program may do- nate SIO for a live-gallon tree or $30 for a 15-ga llon tree. Stitchery Art ShoWn· Redondo Beach Home Of Ne~lywed Randalls - I do not agree that tbe girl 11 tellln1 au decent people to "go to hell.'' I believe she Is dealing with an unusually dif· flcult crlsl1 In the way · she feels 11 best -for her. You need to rttool you r thinking, Dearle. A skilled artist an~· craftsman who is renowned for her tapestries and stitch· eries will address the Creative Living Sectio11 of the Riviera Club at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, May 26. Mrs. Helen Richards. who will entertain the group In htr Laguna Beach studio. has won 30 awards and had 20 ex- clusive shows. on the many friends sh! has made in her new home and a portable radio which keeps her up on all the news. ("Mos\ or it 's not so good," she laments.) If r..1rs. Day could ba ve one Horoscope GIFT OF WARMTH Anna D1y at Work wish fu lfilled. it would be to just see a little. •·rm lucky to be able to do what I can do," she cheerfully addl'd . Happiest just sitting 1n her chair knitting, sh~ begins another afghan just as soon as she finishes the current one . Fourteen afghans have coml? off her needle s. and 14 ~enple have recf'ivC!d a very precious gift from Mrs. Day . And. their pleasure is he r pleasure. Libra: Know Direction WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 By SYDNEY O~IAR R The president of t h e American Federation o f Aslrologers Is a prartlcin~ physician and surgeon. He Is Dr. Fred Pounds, v.·ho res ides in Ari?.ona. ~1any medi<'al men, not so open about !heir de ep interest in the subjecl, are kr.:iwl edgeable a ~ o u l aslrolugy, AR IES fM.arch 2l·Aprl! J9 )· Be quiet within: answers v.•ill be forthcoming. Ce r I A i n amount of seclusion no1v is necessary. Avnid individuals v.·ho are raucous. ?l-1caningful discussion V.'ilh special person brings benefits. TAURUS I April 20-i\iay 201 · A friend "'ho appe11red in- different is nov.· likely to make amends. Don 't bring up past ~rievances. Excellent for so- cial activity. You learn and make fine <'Ontacts GEi\11NI 1 :\otay 21-Junc 201 You fini sh one phase of ac· t1v1ty and initiate ann!hC"r-do so with confidence. Some con· ccpls now arc outmoded. Streamline procedures. Talk rnatters nvcr with Aries In- dividual. You will gain CANCER tJunc 21-July 22 ): Good lunar aspect nnw coin- cide9 with journeys, chance to broaden horizons. You gain added knn\\'ledgc. Benefits in- dicated lhrou~h w r i I i n A , pubtishinj'.!: and advertising . Spread the \\'Ord. Lt:O /July 2J-Aug. 22\: Your ln1uitive intellect pr o v id c s answ1~r regardin~ dilcn1ma fac<>d by male. parlncr. Dn what feeling~ dictate. Dnn'l try to change ott1crs. r-.iutual respect is essential. VIRGO c Aug. 23-Scpt. 22 1: Accent on public relations. Sec point of view held by other5. ShO\Y that you can be flexible . non·t ins1sl on ha ving ;ill thinj'.!s your \\'ay. f'ril'ndly ~csture now can 1vork v.·on- dcrs. LlBRA 1 Scp1. 2.1-0cL T.!l: (iive attention to basic chore~. Gel down to business where necessities a r c concerned. Musical Sounds Echo Combine the pr<1c!ical and creati1'f asf)('Cls nf a0ny proJ- l'CI Koo"' 11·hcre you are goin g. SCOR PIO !Oct. 2.1-Nnv. 21): Fortunale for love, rom.'rrc, creallve endeavors. Change is featured-also lravel and a variety of t'XJ>ericnces. You find construc!ive oullc~s for energy. Hel<itions improve v.•Hh child. SAGl11'AHIUS !)ct. 21 1: Obtain Sco rpio n1cssage. I N1>v. 22- hint from F'ind out ho111 you \an best improve condilions in domrs!ic <orra. ChC'C'k values v.•here homes, real <'Slate enter pic1ure. r-..1ake 1·onciliatnry ~estur1•_ CA PHI CORN tl'>cc. !!-Jan. 19 1 Accent on rel:l111·es. shor1 Journeys, ideas whu.:h n<'Cd added dimension. r>on't ru~h. T<1kc tirne lo be surr. Pi ~cr.s ind11·1dual l'an pro1•1cle <'n- couragl'nl<'nt Look beynr"I I he 1mmcd1;i1e AQUARIUS Lian ~ll-FC'b. 18 1: Ernpha!'1S 1s on money. 11 hat .vou J>llS~f'S!i and how In increase 1ncon1c. \"nu ~el ha<'kin~ frnn1 surprise '''lUITf' Ti1nC' to go all ouc -don'i pull ynur punches. You hill'C 1,!t'nly on your s1dl'. rrscr-~!'.i· 1 Feb. 19-r-il~irch :!O 1: On Irvine Terrace Lunar cycle is at peak, take initiA1ivr. Bf'gin j'rr·ni't' 1· t !'I . t;CI student s Judy Edgerley Birdie ,'' "\Vest Sidr ~t ory"' Lead lht• \\il}'. Excrcisr in- and Bil! r-.1iller will present R and "Camelot." dept'ndcncc nf thought. oicl ion. \Vclco rne eonlal'L~. challcnRCS. n1usical program follov.·inri the II h d lh I 1 · " · e a e eac 1 n You arc due now to 1>ain a1rlt•d finaL--lunchcon tn"'-C1ing of the. e Irvine Terrace Philharmonic "Cabaret"~ anCI curr('nlly ls rC'Cngnilion. Foilowing a honeymoon in Mexico. Redondo Beach will be the home of Richard Ran- dall and his bride, the former Patricia Maguire of Newport Beach. They exchanged vows and rings before the Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfleld in St. Andrew's P r esbyter I an Church, Newport Beach. Thei r parenLs are Mrs. E I a i n e Maguire of Newpori Beach, Frank Maguire, _Long Beach and f\1r. and Mrs. Russell Randall, Pasadena . Miss Lynn Maguire was her sister's maid or honor and Miss Jody Carpenter was the bridesmaid. At I en d I n g !he bride's brother as best man1 was Robert Randall, while ushers were another brother, Ray· mond Randall , James Dawers and David Clifton. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School And Orange Coasl College. She attended San Jose St a t e Cotlcge and will -cn roll at California Slate College at Long Beach in the fall. Coed Earns Club Award San Clemente H igh School student Kathryn Slamp has been named "Junior's Junior" by 1::1 Camino Real Junior \\1oman's Club. The 16- year-old 1un1or will receive the annual award• during an assembly on W~dnesday. June 9, ~1i~s Stamp. da"Jghter of r..1r. and Mrs. F. Thomas Stamp of San Clemente. has maintained a 3.2 grade point average and plans to attend California Stille Polytechnic College In San Lui~ Obispo. The award \1•inne r plans to major in home economics and is active in Christian education having worked as a camp counselor. Among her interests are sewing. t'amping and gourm~t <Vlok\ng. She is treasurer of Girls League and served on 1he cabinet fOr thl't'e ye·ari. Associat<'s of the Orange playing 1n Ja1nei; Thurb<'r'sr-----------------------;;;;1 County Philharmonic Sot'iely. play .. Ca1nino Hea l." :-Jcv.• officer~ for the \'t·:ir Hosting the noon affair v.·i ll be formally presented in Thursda \'. ~1av 20 . In her 0ol'cr Shores ·hoine 1o1•ill be clud1n~ ~11ss ~1ary Grahan1. r-.trs. Ceetl Shir<1rs. president and ti¥.! ~11ncs. Roth students nl n r . Stewa rt Coulter and l'lnyd ,1 I 11 I u 1· .• \\'ilson. \'1ce presidents : Angu. . aurice 1 a r c . .., s., Edgerle)' \\'ill rrL":'ll'C her BA \\'nght and Hugh \\·right. secretaries. and Truman Lat in n1ui;ic· in .Junr. She has ap- 1 h tin . lrC'asurer. pcarcd in rnany reeita s at l e ----------- unJl'ersitv ancl in Sl'l'eral leading · rolC's inc 1 u d i n g Penelope 10 "The (ioldt'n Ap- ple." the n1othcr in "A mah\ and the Night Visitors'' and ~tonica in "The ~1~dit1n1." A n1e111ber of the UCLA Opera \\'orkshop. sh£' rc<'cntly was aeecp1C11 IQ l~of' Mu st~rl ~\usic Clnss a t th e ~1us1c Academy ·of the \Ve~t . i\i iller: 11 dn:rn1a rnaJot. has1 pla}ed leading rolr5 in !-Uc h I ~hov.s AS ··~1~· F:ilr Lad y.'' ··~1u.s1c ~1an,'" "Bye Hye I I THE RED BALLOON LTD. O• 1,.. t ••n ••!l "··~····· ........ -""'""'-'·- NEW .. , 1umm1r thin11 for 1umm1r'1 chlld a IA~trf111 A~Mll'tnlf'lll ot play11r11r nnd -'( f2J'5. ~ ~ • • - • ' i\'OGA CENTE ._., I . lftl• 5Tlllff C011'11 Ml5A, CllLI,. ~6"-1211 A SPfCIAl OPPO JITUNITY ! MRS. RANDALL Honeymoon in Mexico Her husband is a gra<iuale of John Muir High School, at- tendetl Pasadena City College and is an alumnus of the University California . of Souther n Trim Vue TOPS Trim Vue TOPS meet at 7:30 p.m. each Thursday in Finley School, Trask Avenue and Edwards Streets, \Vcstminster. Unsure of yourself on dates? What's right? What's wrong? Should you? Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landers' booklet "Dating Dos and Don'ts.'' enclosine: with your request 35 cents in coin and a long, self- addressed, stamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. Altrusa Acts For Greenbelt Service. according lo thel Altrusa Club of Laguna Beach, must be relevant lo the needs and concerns of the com- munity. \Y ith this philosophy In 1nind. A 1 tr u s a n s have1 participated in many l \Yorthwhile activities. I b el latest of which has been to donate $100 to support the Greenbelt project. j Under the leadership of Miss Ann Whitner and her active board. members feel they have lived up to the meaninl! of Altrusa wh ich is derived ! from altruism, or service in l the inlerest of others. One of her wall hangings Is included in a current traveling exhibit of the C alif o rn i a Cultural Commission. and two examples o( her work. a macrame tapestry and quilted hanging were shown in the World Craftsman Conference in Ireland last September. As a teacher , she has tra vel~ ed to many parts of the coun- try for universities and craft groups. DIAMONDS AND ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED So~tt. Co••t Pl ••• Co1l• Mt1• 540-'1066 l •i1lol •I !ht S•n Dit91> fwy. LOCAL No other "1w1p•p•r t1ll1 yo11 mort, •~ery d • .,.. tbo~t wh•+'• qoin9 on i" Ike Gr••l•r Ortnq• C:1>•1t thtn th e DAILY PILOT. danrgn~~ ..,, Z6qo E.CoG.ll!-l"'Y., Corona de! Mar D•ity '1 :10 lo 5:)0 Sund"'I'' 11 lo 5 Tel' 644-7340 6oFA -Mo~ter c.;narg• artists' sidewalk bazaar may17·22 WOMEN INTERESTED IN tEARNINCO TO MAKE SUMMER WARDROBE. I I 5\\ lmv. rAr ~ Voq• ;, '"'•.•pin9 +ht count•~. Hoth• YOll• ;, • lllhlfol ••••t:1• I no 1lrao11in9 I ,.,11, .111,...d;.1, b•n•l•h, l~. ~•¥ ;, ••l••tlio'I, tile \Klt't for 111011 111119y. Roi• Y190 dot1 wt1Mden, c.l t••i119 th1 ..,;.,d ind vift l>1i119 !ht "'"ou1 ·~•I•"'· lhorotl !loll ! •nd Kolldos of !ht YOIJO C•"'-' ltoch comb ;ntd Htth, 111d Rt i• -"'Thi Beqinnln9 ond End" ol mod••" Yoq t . T~•v onvi!• y•u to loo~ ;nto '1'011• 1nd 1lf rl ih bt nt f•h now' The 13th An nual art show will be on display along the esplanad e at Santa Ana Fashion Square. Don't.miss this outstanding exhibit, well-known for its excellence and superb quaNty of inviting creative works. Enjoy vibran t colors, soft paste ls, skilled craftsmen's j objects d'art, and interestin g sketches. ~ Cl.ASSIS ST.ARTINO IMMlDtATEl.Yt 50°1195 Harbor Center Singer Co. cOsta Mesa 1hr 1111•1 •l~li,hllull 1 111111•"•' d1a1ltl'n'' ,,,..,,in 1hr .iu11hl1111l 16877 All(Olltlllin ~I. Ill \fl\t,IH\ M•'4•11 (714 114fl-1666 SANTA ANA OR GARDEN GROVE FREEWAY AT MAIN ST. Bullock's, C.H. 811ker ShOes, 08rrell's Tux, Draper's, Desmond's, Or. Ring (Op1ome1rl1IJ, Ellz&o f,,,. O•m1111st1otl111 T11111roew 1w .. t1~t4ey1 •' 10 •·"'· 1-r bettreymes-fmported Fashions, Fashion Fabrics, Guy Livingston, Hunter's Books, I. Mqnln, ,,.,, •• •'•rt "'•' W1dM1d11y, 11,, If yo11 pr•fe•. Sorurdoy 111or11· I Joan Buck Fashions. Joel's, Jurgensen's1 _Jolly Roger Restaurant, J . Herbert Hall Jewelers, IMq o"d Thul\dlly 11lt11.I. 1111 d• COM• t1111111tr•W ot IOI YOGA l.eed's Shoes, Magic Mirror Beauty Shop, Mandel's Shoes. Pickwick Fashions, Russo's Wonder· CENTER. 445 I. I 711t Sr., Cot ti M•••· '"'·tlll. lrl119 frl111d• fut world of Pets, Security Pacfflc Bank. See's Ca ndles, Shelley's Tall Glrl, Thot'ful Stoo ------------~-'"·'-''.'.".''.'.'·-----------------·•I f k>wers, Ven Oeusen's Jewelry, Wallah Clarke's Hawaiian Shop, Wetherby Kayser St'IOe:S I • • DICK TRACY i ··i 11 TUMBLEWEEDS ~IU&t.li ~IU&M.f. '.<.ll.l6bl.1i: MUTT AND JEFF . JUDGE PARKER WHAT HE'ICiHT? POOR MUTT·· f\E'S "T>;E ONE WHO SUFFERS / MOST! , e POP<X>RN? MOW CA.N AtNIOO'f EAT POPCORN AT A Tlf'/IE LllCE THIS "f . ' . , .... , .. ... .... . " . ··~· .. --.. By Tom K. Ryan ~--:-::--:---1 COOLP V!ORY l'ASll.Y !lUOMf ;>1S<:NCftf\Nf1'P Wi111 YOU. By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux 1!77 •• ~.,.,.,M~tM'""=ro::-::c:o.1~~.~0VT::=-~""""",.-:::-:--'1~M~E·~·~Wl<~IL~E~.~··~ ...... ""'.'"'.'""'.'"~~ I 'M ~Jl?V, SI J:: •• Tl-IAT "1UM6E£ DOE5N T ,\NS.Wai:: l, '/ PLAIN JANE 0 :/."· . : . ,....!:.";:... . • \ ... : '\ ..... I DAILY CROSSWORD ••. by R .• POWER I ACROSS t l PMt's 011\pu\ 4~ Oisbursr I F011dlts 4S Pio l!ock~y 5 Aud!lOl'!lllll l)la~rr units t 7 The Allir lO City Ill lt1d 1i t 9 Card 14 Eady 50 Unsucctsslul Jnhab1tarit !!'fSOO of Ntbraska 51 Com~I 15 F ar111tr to ltavt Ttxkish l1llt 53 Argtrmrnt of honor 55 T tr as lb Use boastfu l tmivtrsity . la"'iJuagt Abbr . ll Baron ---: Sb Stn;gglt Ttlltr of bl Subtlt lat! talts sWJgtstion 19 Ctrtmon1a! 112 C.ounly ol "' Scotland 10 Klnr1 or ~!WI 114 F Ol'mtrly 21 Stalt: Abbr . 115 "Pomp & Cit· 2Z First namt of cumstanct ' 1 Ptr5i•n pot! compost1 l 3 US M1!1ta1y 1111 Ktt n!y Ac&dt my dts1rous frts'"'9tl b1 Noblt1111n 25 Nttd1el1sh &3 Unwanttd ZO Blt111ish midt 11!1nt qrl)Wth by injury f,IJ P!1nt1 30 COlllpiSl point OOW// 31 Havirig lived hr tht I SpltndOI' I0119tS\ lilllf 2 Toiletry tasr "~ .. J C.argo ~its l!i Social group 4 Cut: Surf!., l8 Hoi.·in-ont 5 Brrak' into )9 "A' .il ilrr chips ----I. Water: Fr. -•. "'; 6 words 1 Vtry serious: 42 Adl'ltrrnt 5 word' of: Suff11 I Th ilhtr ' ' ' • ·y ' 1 " ~ " " " " ' ~ ti.i '·11·' " . " ,. " "' .. "' l'r " " .. '" " ' . ' ' • ' " ll'l' ·!· H " " ,. " ' " " . •• ,, " . ,, I .. I - Yts\e1day 's Puzzle Solvrd· .\ I l ! ~ • " • ' . " .. ' ? Rras011iblr HI Out ol oor s toun\Jy l J °'ath 2 w()"'(js 12 Pro -···· 13 R1prni119 Jtqtnt 18 O~nct Informal i4 Organic tornjl(M.id 25 Valleys 2fi Onr SltD in a Str1t s 27 ·····-Rica !8 Pt>r~ons who Jiff IJ'f'>tfll 29 Being 1n a 11atur111 cDOdfliDll Jl Religious be lit[ i11Yolv111g 111 i\Chcraft: Vat . 32 Vill119r of Scotland • "' " l:'.'~,f 16 t··· I i , . ,11 '"' . " "' "'-'! JI 1 '"' . " . .. .. " " " " " .. l' .. 5118171 )J A Roosrvr lt JS l1krd t nl'111· :s1astically )7 Rivero! France 40 By mt!ans or 41 Llktly •6 Channtl 101 draining olf Wl\tf 48 ParttCiNllll SI Mr. Zola 52 \ff17d )nd1C.J!1119 Jtnnoyanct SJ Looi! ror batljlilJUS 54 Kind of wood ~50ldW0t ld '"" 57 Cou11ter1t 1t 58 Hindu god. V1r. 5' Home of • wild .111lmal LO c,asrs t.3 Boy ,, " " , J2 " " • " " .. PERKINS MISS PEACH , By Frank Baginski t"I-\ ALL Yot..n?S~ SM.OOTl-i IAL.'KE.R I ~ ' ~ELL l St>leot. "DIU.MATtC SOCIET~ ili)]t/ 11111111 11 11111 I'VE JtEADTHE 5CIZJP'f, MA~IA ... CA~T1NG to"DAY. ·PEANUTS -,----..-. M DeClt>EO ~Tl IMNl ltl & WH<N I 6ROltJ UP. ' J Tutsday, M"y 18, 197l ________ ..:D.:.;A;:ll.:.;Y...:P.:.;ll:..:O..:T~J~S Ll'L ABNER !iALL Y BANANAS GORDO , '-.. ;~//'I\'\" MOON MULLINS ® Jl~i; HAP ir ! r 'M Nor BUYING .ANoTHl'i> STITCJI! ANIMAL CRACKERS WfU., 1r1s veieq CIJfE ... 8y John Miles ••• • ... J(W)~w. ,. -rD Ll~E ro PLAY r..,i; PAIIT OF T._,E ltEPlJL5/VE MAN WHO NOOOClV LIKES. . . . ' By Mell AL•EADY YOU'RE OVEJ<:·ACTING. Iv Saunders and Overaard By Charles M. Schulz ~~~~~~~~, 6000 FOR qoo_A5L'fil1El15 CALL IN, •/C>.J"LL & AllU TO E><COUl<A6E 1i<E EXCAA"6E Of DIFF'cRENT IDEAS •• By Al Copp By Charles Barsotti ' l By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson • MR. MUM I DENNIS THE MENACE • I .. •. . ·' '• . ' ' . . " . .. •• t. • ... . " ... 18 DAILY PILOT T11tsday, May 18, 1q11 Ex-Santiago Star Too Mucl1 for Angels By ROGER CA RLSON 01 h C11li1 'ill! 111)'1 For 1 young min who "'Is bumm1og free passes to get into Anaheim Stadium, he's con1e a long \vay in l\\'O years. California's slumping Angels had just been nipped. 3-2, before 6,903 at the Big A Monday night and in the fl.1innesota T\vins' locker room 1,1•as winning pitcher, Bert Blyleven. a 20-year-old \\'ith memories as a prep at Sanliago High still fresh ~n his mind. He had cooled lhe Angels with a dozen ii;trikeouts in eight innings and the only tallies the Halos C-Ould manage y.•ere unearned after an error opened the gales briefly in the second inning. On flvc occasion3 he set the Angels down in order belore help was required in the ninth . Rellefer Tom Hall finished the job by striking out three straight pinchhitlers after Ken t.1ct.1ullen and John Stephenson had opened up with singles in the fina l frame. Tonight they'll go at it again !Bl with the 'f\\•i.ns' Jlm Kaai j3-1) fac ing Torn f\·lurphy, who is seeking his second win after five setbacks. The Angels, with the los5, dropped lo fou rth place in the American League \\'est. 6112 games behind idle Oakland. For Blyleven, the strikeout mark equal- ec! his best ever performance in the m11· INDIAN POW·WOW -Three Cleveland lndians collid ed \\•hile cha.-;- ing a popup hit by \Vashington's Tom Mccraw that wound up as an inside-the-park homer. I..eftfielder John Lowenstein and centerfield- er Vada Pinson {28) sl ammed into each other \vhile shortstop Jack Heidemann is also ifl volved. Lo\venstein suffered a hurt leg and Heide· manna possible concussion. Pinso[). was given nine stitches In the ja\v. Sports in Brief Grady Sig·ns Pro Pact; Mustang to Nebraska Former t.1;iter l)ci ancl Orange Coast College star Kevin Grady h11s signed a professional football contract v.· i I h Calgary of lhc Cana dian Football League. Grady played 1he past lwo sea!llJns for !he Universit y or Oklahon1a where he was a t'ol·o·year starl.C'r. An Orange resident, Crady garnered all -CIF honors \1•hilt• al J\1ater Dei and -11as .an .all-1::.asler Coufere.n~-selection 1110 ~traight seasons a1 OCC e \f•11· Curt1l11r1'k er co~t;1 ~1e:ia s all·ltv1ne League tackle ,Jin1 J\llller has 1tigned a national letter of intent to enroll at the L:n1\"ers11~· or ~ebraska and 11lay foo1bnll for coach Sob l)evaney and the No. 1 -r a t e d Comhuskers A 6-3, 230-pound spec1n1en, J\liller also "·on the Irvine loop hca\'ywe1ght wreSll· ing tille in his junior year. e L11t111 lt1 lllt>ln LA MIHADA -Biota College an· nounced J\1onday the appointment of lloward Lyon. a 1·c1eran high school men- tor. ~s head basketball coach . Lyon. 43, ha~ coached J\1ill1kan High School or Long Beach to II 234·95 record during a 12-year tenure. His appointn1ent at Biola is effectivr on Sept 1. Lyon succeeds Ji1n Poteet ll'hO resigned lo accept a position at Bethany Nazarene College in Bethany . Okla. Blola last yea r posted a 17-13 record. e E n•!I \llrlt>rles B.B.USSELS_-6,111ecicaos .CliU Hichey. of San Anf;(elo. Tex .. Stan Sn1ith of Pasadena and Toni r.orman or Seattle v.·on easy \'ictor1es l'ilond:ty in the first mund of the $13 ,000 Belgian open tenn is championships. but Jinl l'ilc:ilanus of Los AnJ!"eles v.·as 1tcfcatrd. Richey whipped E1.io Di l\latLco of Ita- ly, 6·2, 6-4 : Smith routed Clauclc De Gronckcl of BelJ!iun1. 6·1. Ml and G<ir1nan topped Ban·y Phillips-i\·loore or Australia, 6-2, 6-4. t.·lcl\tanus fell to Bernard t.lignot of Belg ium 6-3, 6-1 e Tille "" I.hie SALT LAKE CITY -The Ulah Stars and Kentucky Colone ls, bruised and ex- hausted after six rov.·dy playoff games, v.·ill senle lhe ·American 8a.'Jke1hAl1 As:lociatiqn rhampionship toniflhl in I.he seventh and nnal game. )ors and he credlta the development or his curveba ll for his success. "I've been using my curve ball for my sltikeout pitch after geltln1 ahead of the ballers with fast balls. "'I had 1 slider in high school to go along with a fast ball bul my curve was just a little drop pitch," said the former Santiago High flash. And his recollections of past effort• in high school were vivid: '"Yes, I remember the ClF playoff loss to Corona dell.far (1--0l. but another one I won"t forget was wheR Chuck Loseth and Estancia be.at me. 1 1truck out ZZ lhat day and lost," grinned the Garden Crove resident . "Pacifica beat me on«, 8-7, but It wasn 't till later that I found out they we re stealing my catcher"s signs . , . and there were about. 25 scouts in the stands that day," he recalle!f. It was like old home '~eek for Blyle.ven, who attended two to three games a week at Anaheim Stadium. "I used to stand out in front of the pass gate and look lor free tickets. It usually took about a half hour," he admitted . C11ifornia's Rudy May receipted ftir the loss after tossing hitless ball through four innings. George ~1illerwald hOnlercd over lhc left field fence with Rod Carew aboard in the (if th inning and before it wa,, over the Twins had the wiMing run on Jim Net- tles' rbi single -his first safety in the majors this year. That nu ll ified John Stephenson'!! rbi doub le (upping his batling streak to \0\ and May's run-scoring single in lhe se- cond. The Angel s had one other shot at Blyleven -in the sixth frame l\'hen Alex .Johnson and Tony Conigliaro opened up with a single and walk. But Btyleven kayoed a pair of batters and got the other on a tapper to end !he threat. C.hargers Return to UCI Practice Sessions to Begin in Jul y Hy HO\\'ARD L. HANDY Of !flt O•flt Pllll tltll 'The San Diego Chargers profes.sional football team will re turn to UC Irvine for pre-seaSbn practice sessions in July and August for the third successive year, it was learned today by the DAILY PILOT. tinti it approved at this time." \Vilson ad- ded. Kaze is enthusiastic about the rctur,n. '·\Ve are real happy lo be returning l.o Irvine. The people there are terrific and the facilities are super," he saitf:· • operatipn ran ,into problems and ~·ere forced to abandon the project -at least temporarily. Irv Kaze'. vice president and business manager of the Chargers, confirmed the fact the Chargers hoped to return lo UCI and the school business manager. James Wilson added: "Basically the conltact is the same a~ it has bttn the past two years and it has been approved by the administration. Contracts for suctr'a mounts must also be approved by the board of regents who meet Friday. ··1 do not loresee any ddliculty in get- Dodgers Send Sutton Agai11 st Cards Tonight ST. LOUIS (AP I -Alter scraping up only one victory in a three-game stand against the San Francisef'I Giants. the Dodgers take on SI. Uiuis tonight in the lir~t of a triple-game set here. But. the 9-6 viC'lory over lhe National 1..eague Western Division-leading Giants may have its psychological value, all for the benefit of Los Angeles. Afler a day of resl Los Angeles send~ Don Sulton. 1-4. to the mound against the Dodger Sl<de •n O•m•• .,, krr1 l'*l Deatrrs 1t 51 L...,r, Ooda~ro 11 S1. Lovi1 Ood9UI •t SI. LO"i• 5;H Pm !•H•m. 10:11 1,m, Cardinals' Reggie Clevel;ind, l-2. tonight. Sutton·s only victory \Vas in his last outing, 5-0. over AUanta on f.lay 12. He "·ent the full nine inntn~s. "'1 qpn·1 think the Giants are as gOOli as their rerord savs lhev arc ." said manager \\'alt Alston ~fter Sunday·s game. "'\Ve h;n·en't seen enough of the shortstop and 1\·e haven't seen rnough ol lhe bull pen." he added. The last re1nark referred to a lhrov.·ing rrror by shortstop Chris Speier in the eighth inning lhat pul the Dodgers ahead ahd the five relief pitchers ~·ho gave up ih: runs. Los Angeles had fumbled two earller allempts against San francisco 8-4 and I· l . The contract calls lor the Chargers lo open camp at UC! on Tuesday, July & "''ith the closing date on Laoor Day. "The contract has to be submitted on a year-lo-year basis because v.·e don't know ~'hen a summer school sessioo might preempt use of !he dormitories,., 'Vilson said. The Chargers had planned a n1ove to a permanent training base al Santee near !he Border City, bu! those plailning the Asked if the Chargers would be a: cnn· tender during the 197l football season, Kaze said: ""H we can stay reasonably healthy, we "'ill make a run at it. We 're all optimistic and hopeful we can do a lot of things this year. "Of course, it all depends on keeping our key players from being injured." Newly appointed UCI track and field coach Bo Roberson began a six-year pro football career with the Cha rge rs in 1962. He played one se.:ison for them and "'·as traded to Oakland for the draft rights to the Chargers' current star rectiver, Lance Alworth. PHILLIES' JOE LIS SCORES UNDER JOHNNY BENCH TAG ATTEMPT. Mi11or Leag11e Ba se llall Not tl1e Saine, Says Baue1· '·Naturall.v. '"e·u cont inue lo give 100 percent but it really doesn't look that good for us," said \Ves Parker in refer- ence to the Dodgers· l'\o. 2 spot in the "'eslern Division, nine games bthind San NORFOLK. Va . (AP) -Hank Bauer got off to 11 slow start and as of l'ilonday Francisco. \\'Onders what h;ippened to thr minor fou nd ilself in fourth place \\'ith a 14-15 ''Re<illslicall,I', ~·oii"ve got lo "'·onder ... league baseball he left some 23 yea rs record . jusl 'ol'ho is going lo beat the Giants -I ago. Bauer has seen enough of the lnlerna- n1e11n beat them consistently." Parker . "'It's not the sam~:" he said. '·Nothing tional League to judge for himself. now. added. hke "·hen 1 played . . . Claudf_Ost~n~! 5tarttd Sunday_·, __ ~uer is mana~er of the Tidewater "All Triple A baseball now is hke a ~ame against S11n Franrisco and left in Tides. a Triple Aarm clu or lheNew gOO<l.Cla-ss A league-when-1 played ball." the sixth inning without tilt credit. said. York ~-lets in lhe lnterr:at ional League . he said. "The Giants aren't as aweson1e as lht The last lin1e the former f\el\' York .. Aiid toda y's big leagues? Only Triple Reds \\'ert. bu\ then the Reds didn"t ha\•e Yankee outfielder was in the minors was A."' t"·o ~loppers like lhe Giants do in in 1943 al Kansas City, when in thr i\lt1r ich11I and Perr" " American Association. The Dodgers' Bill (;rabarke"·itz \\'a~ f'rom there it "''as 12 golden ye~rs 1\•i!h placed on the disabled list l\londav ;ind the Yankees. a 1..-Quple more with Kansas the club immediately recalled ,infitlder City. and th9tl managerial jnbs ror Robby Valentine from their Spokane Chrirles Finley at Kansas Ci!v and far1n club. Oakland. v.·ith ·a \l'Orld championShip al Grabarkev.•itz surfers from a shoulder Dallirnore in betv.·een. &ilment and also has impacted wisdom 'Yhy the comedown to the minors? teeth "'hich need treatment. He will be on "Because nobody else ofrered n1e a the supplemental disa bled list for at \ea5t job,"' said Bauer. 1vho spent the 1970 1:; days. season at home going lo the mailbox on Vale ntine started the season \vi h the the first and 15th of each monlh to collect Dodgers. after being th~ 1\-los t Valuable checks from Finley on the second year of Player in the Pacific Coast U:ag ut iin his ORkland contract. 1970, Now he has a Tidewaler team v.·h1ch Bauer says the reason for the decline in quality is expansion. ""'Yhen I played, I.here were 16 big league teams. i\O\\' the.re are 24. Thal's 200 players 1,1;ho have no business in the big leagues." Bauer can use his O'ol'fl playing creden- tials as a guideline. Jn t947 for Kansas City. he batted .313 with 16 home runs and 79 runs batted in. "I didn't e'/en get invited the next spring to the Yankee camp," he says. "You know what they told me ? Go back and do it again." Donohue Agai~ Exceeds 17 4 mph So Bnuer did, and a bl! mon:~. ln 1948 he w115 batting .30:J with 23 homers And 100 runs batted In when the Yankees call- ed him up In September. "~ty first game was In Yankee Stadium and they had 64.000 that day.'' he recalls. "I was hilling third in the lineup and there v.·as 1 runner on second base v.·ho \1t1s slealing third. I stuck my bat out to protect the ruMtr and lined a single into right field . l NDIANAPOLIS (AP\ fl.1 a r k t'>onohu e caused the biggest slir of the day Monday, for the sparse cro'ol·d of 11pectators on hand Ot !he lnd1anapolis- l.1 otor Spttdway. The track was open for pr11chce at . J0· 18 a.m. and Dooohue. \\'Is one or tht ll rst dr1ven1 on tht 1rack in hi s t.icU.ren )•lark 16 car. "''h1ch he quaHfled In sec:-0nd Jl lace Saturday. The brig ht blue cat <lid 1$ laps around lhe 212 ndlf re<:tangle with hot lap speeds «l~ked as high as 174.7 milc:s per hour on his crtw's stopw1lchts. Roger Penske, f,tiiladelph1a. Pa . lhr .. • .. owner of lhe car and head or the crev.'. said they "'fre continuing gasoline tests In preparat ion for the May 29 In- dianapolis 500 mile racf'. Few or the other 25 drivers who took to lhe track in 24 cars ~1onday wert ablt to approach Donohue ·~ ~rforn1anct . Sunny skies ~·i th 1cn1pera1ure~ In lhe 8~ ~lowed dov.·n the lr11ck cons1d1:rnbly durlnR the atlernoon llOlffit. Robby lJnSt>r. :1nolhcr front fO\\I quallfier. louk his blatk And \\·hHe No. 2 t'lr onto t~ track f!•I' some ea sy te~t laps. The: J968 Indy MO champion from Albuquerque.,. N ~1 , cliri li'2 348 on h1.s rastest lap. Jigger Sirois. 11 36-year-0\d dri\·er from Hammond, Ind .. hitched a ride in the No. 63 <'ar. a Gtrhardt-Offy 111:algntd to Amie Kntpper or BeJle,·llle, Ill.. and ~uc­ cessfully completed hi.'J rookie refresher test. Some of the other driver1 alre11dv qualHi"d \\•enl onto lhe trec.:k ~1 ond11y 10 test nev.• englnes. cht'Ck g11~Hne ~'On· sumpllon or tn Iron out suspe nsion bug~. Tl1ey included defending champion Al Unser of Albuquerque, v"ho did a lap at 170.778: Jim t.lalloy, Denver ; Gord011 Johncock. f\11. Plta~anr. ~llch . and Dick Simon. Salt Lake City, \;I.ah. Jimmy Caruther~. Anahcun. the defen- ding 1,;nited Su1:es Auto Club midget dl\'ision champion, completed his rookie 1es1. car 97 . owned hy J C. AgriJrin 1an and LPon11rd Fnn~. "·as drivt'n b) bn1h RruC'e '\:ilk up end stock t &r ch:unploo Bnbhy Jrihn~ Jnh11~ "''8S 111 !he C'Ar l:lh' in the Afternoon \\'hen it blew an engine The f\l i:tn1i. F'la .. n11l1ve coalltcd to a stop in the first turn. :\tario Andrrttl. Naiare1h. Pa , also blr1.,. an engine 1n h1~ ~l cl\i11n11ra-F'ord. "That'• how I broke into the big leag11e3. I got two m-Ort hits 1h11t doy. Three straight hits ... and I said to myse lf. 'Gee. this is easy ' ·· 1 fini'.'hed the nionth hlUlng .180." Rauer comes from tht old ba~eball school. He likes his pitchers to throw \oni:: and hard . A good last b11\I pitcher lights up llank'!I 1:;yes like a Christmas trtt, '"Th(' reason I came down to lht minor 1tague111," he say~. "Is to pro\'C to sonll! big \e11gue general man11gers th~t I can s\111 m<1n11>r;:e ·• , Talkative :: :· Ax Retu1ns .. To Lineup The saga o! who Is ,in left continues tl)o day following one of the shortest· baoishments in memory . Alex ""The Ax '' Johnson returned to his familiar post Monday night al the Big A only hours after manager Harold "Lefty'' Phillips had announced to the v.·orld that his American League batting champion A 119el Slnte •n G•,..••.,, 1<Ml'C cntJ MtY 1f -Angtll VI. M•flMWll 1·M •m. 7:ll •.m. 1:n •·"" 7:$S •·'"· l(,.y !t -Ang~ll ••· M!nn~fflll Mt~ HI -AMfll vi. Mll!MICll Ma~ fl ..... t ll ••. (lllt.190 of 1970 would not be back until he had mended his "'ays. lronic.:ally. Johnson was willing to talk some"'hat t.1onday evening prior to gamelime, but Lefty was rathe r tight lip- ped over the matter . Johnson "'asn·1 clear about "'hat has been bothering him of late, but he said, "Something i.-; wrong with baseball and \\"ilh Southe.l'n California -you can nar- rov.' it dov.·n from there." As for his balling averagf!. which has ho\'ered at !he .240 mark. he said. "1 haven't been thinking -haven 't been concentrating.·· Phillips benched bim Saturday and Sunday for ·"defiance and nonchalance," and Johnson countered by saying, ''I've got· the ability to be in !he lineup, but I.hat's not saying I should be. '·If I don't run -I just don't run , that's all." he said. The ambi11;uity of the conversation was highlighted by statements such as : ''I like lo pl<'ly the game of baseball ... "\Vhat's good'.' When it's time to lea ve in the evening." Johnson responded with a single in four at bats Monday as the Angels fell to the · Minnesota Twins . 3-2. Phillips was asked if Johnson had demonstrated some type of action tO reverse his ban. "I'm satisfied. rve been led to believe he"ll play as I rxpect lhe others to play,'" said Lefty follo\ving the opening loss to Minnesota in the four-game series. MINNESOTA C•Lll'Oll:l"IA "TOYlt, )to Henl••, •I Kllltore ... lb Al~•a. H R~p, !o Cd•dent >. " '~'"""· :ti Mltt..-wald, c Holl. cl e•ri•~•"· P '>1111. 0 11 r hrlol •••~t'1 f f 1 0 A!OtNf. 11 f • 0 0 J 0 I I A.JO'l11r.on. II • 0 I 0 1 D 0 0 TCDnitllltto,rt JIG I , J 0 D 0 ll:trxii, cl f 0 0 O. 1 o o o McMwtl..,, :io • 1 t t. OIOS1t1>1>tn1""'f 121 11011,,11,p• ooo t l I 1 Spe:>eer. IO J t 0 0 •110(owt~.P" 1001 • 0 0 0 O'lrl~n. " J O t O OGOOatHy.ni. IOtO •.M•y.p JOJ I Fr1191i. pl> I 0 0 f To<•ll l< l I J TIH~lo JS 1 1 J Mift.,..lllll 0"0 OJO QOlt -I · c1111orft•• Oft! ooo ooo -1 E -Mcllulleft, love' LOB -M1n11•so11 I. C:~t•to,~1· 1 ie -51•1111'""'"· 1-<ol•, rov1r Mlt -M11!orw11d II) ~8 -~ Ja1>nion Stanley Cup Ma1·athon Ends I Longest Year CHICAGO <AP l -~1ontreal's proud Canadiens ha\·e forced a seventh game sho"·down in the marathon Stanley Cup playoffs and the only thing thars certain now is that the National Hockey League's longest season will encl tonight. The brothers Mahovlich, veteran Frank and young Pete. led a third period charge th1 T\1 Tonight C/1n1111el 2 a t 5:30 that earned the Canadifns a 4-3 victory over Chicago in Sunday·s nationally televised si xth game, tyi ng the series at 3.3, Now it coines down 10 the dec.ish·c seventh. The Canadiens, most succeS!ful playoff team in NHL history. "''ill be shooting for the,\! 15th champJ.onship since theJ~nlry Cup came u er league control 1n 1925, and their 17th overall. If J\1ontrea1 comes through. ii "'ill bt the Canadiens' third Stanley Cup in four years and fifth in the lasl seven. The Black Hawks are shoohng only for their fourth cup ever and their first in a decade. Also on the line is the Conn Smythe _ Trophy. awarded to the playoffs' 1.fos}. t Valuable Player and worth $1,500. ni.:l "''inner also will receive a car from a n~l ' tional sports magazine. •• 1 So there is plenty riding on Tuesday·~ contest, but the result probably won't , establish any clear superiority · of ei the r of these teams over the other . This series has been much like the New York-Chica go semifinAI and the opening round Boston-Montreal !11ilyoff. Both of 1 thQ_se shov.·do,,·ns also 'ol'Cnt to a dtcisi\"t 1 seventh game and rould have gone either \l':ly. f\lo111rnrum hasn't meant a thing so h•r in the Hna l round. Chicago won the first 1 '"''0 gemes at home but the Canadlens 1 bounced back to win lhe next t"''O al Mon-l treltl. Then the Hawks won the pivota l 1 flflh game and the Canadlens' camp was l jolted by Henri Richard's verbal atta<'k on co11ch Al t.lacNeil, whom he called ''inconl})ftent," a1non1 other things. Thnt W8! rollov.·ed by threats on I ll!acNtil's life and the coach was a<'-1 co1na1tnled hy sever111 plainclothesmen l ~·hen ~ tonk hi1t po~illon behind thl , bench for the sixth garne ; The CanMdiens, who had ne\'er btea : eliminattd from the pl11yoffs at home. : trailed 3-2 ~oin8 into the flnl'I 20 mlnutes. l But the t\;lahovlleh brothers tach 1trudf t for a i!Oal to turn It "round. I I - ' ,. 0 ' ' .. '· t • • • • • ' • • '· d • p in •• k • ry ly at If or !::! '· I» ur or • he. isj.· ~ ha:' ~l · .. ' " ., er . w g or ., er r Sl . ' n-I al ' n l C• : n ' I I J T11esd11, MIJ' 13, 19n DAILY PILOT 17. Competition Aid~ UCI Ac~ '.fop Fuel Dragste rs AtOCffi VCl Spike , Coach_Knows By HOWARD HANDY Of t11t O..lt' PW Sllff have piclled Ull b1nlotn1 a lot Gf wind lprint.!." What It Takes to Be Winner. "'Fell me, are thtre any more at hoIM Jike yw1'~ This statement was once Ul· tered by a frusttated young man upon ie11ming of a young 't'';l/ia~~~ female acquaintances' engage-•~ ment l.O another man. But in this instance, it ii the query ol roach Cary Adams as be addresses lhe new bat.- ting champion of the UC Irvine baseball team, senior Tom Spence. Surprisingly, the answer is yes and Tom's younger ' brother Rod is a senior at St. Augwtine High in San Diego v.·here he not only plays first base but shortstop and third base as well. Spence leads the U C I regulars in hitting with a .422 mark compared to .398 for runnerup Dan Coronado aDd .371 for Jaat year's leader Rocky Craig. It will take an enormous spurt by the latter pair to over1ake Spence. ln high school Tom played football and au(fered a knee ;,.1 .. ,.., In Jun. lor college that By R.ON BVANS "Some recruiting has been __ ,, -..1~ 1.. he t o1 "" o.•w ,.11t1 '"" d~ .. h b t •-u •· required surgery. He has talk· S1hi1uaY mar..., t re W'n -~. e 11)'1 u UV\,; nes w ed Rod out of such action and or tilt Super Hoover to the top Bo Roberson It a quiet, in-say who has done the job. feels Jt will take an' offer of at fuel dragster and fuel altered telllgent young man who has "It will be a disadv1t1tage least $30,000 to get him to sign competition at Orange County been at the pinnaC:le cl. success getting a late start but 1 am profeuk>nally. International Raceway. in athleUca a111 performer. sure lhere are a 1 ready How about himself and Re<X>r<ls have possibilities of He will embark on 1 new students on campuJ with the Jr~? falling in both divisions lf the career u head track and field prevklus eJP1r1ence and they "I would like to follow my vacuum vehicle has Its way. coach at UC Irvine la~ this will help to atart the program. older brother, Bob, and play Sherrnan Oaks' Tony Nancy month lrld there i re those "Wt obviously have the best pro ba.11 for •while." came within .o.1 aeoondt of around who feel he will again track ln the country. I don't B b · In the Ch Wbl setUng an a11-tlme dra"..+er reach tht aenlth of achieve. think I have seen a better one o ts: lcago tt &>• ment in 111 chosen career in any place and I have been told Sox organilatlon and is cur-record when he completed the the not too distant future. by some athletes that it is bet· rently playing first bast for OCIR quartermUe coorse in R·•-h I I I ter than u~ "•·" I 46 ----•-Jn Feb uuc:rson a s rom Y.M'\ Tucson and hitting .370. · J:IC\,vuua ruary. Phil d I hi ~ h •t •t and tlO ~•nds, AlaA +..... •.Jo. tr t · a ep a wuere e was an n or ,..... To date no JCOUll hive talk· A"1U a _,.. tr;1.u1 en an in t d' th rt Ro"·r-• Joolcs loda• ll'e he !he 1.... ·A'" "'-in t 2 out~ an inf ret·spo prep uic: ...... ,, "' ed to Tom but be isn't · rac .. <6 w "'-'' ~g 5 1 star with offers from more stepP,M oU the football field or cUscOW"lged. If be doe ... 't p.m. (quallfylng) and finishes th 50 JI f f II oot of a track unfform. ... t7 ( u 1 t•·-·)l s an co eges or a u pursue the play-fol'.-pay ranks, • p.m. e m na "'"" s an scholarship. His name has also been be plans a career in coaching Bernardino's 1-flte Sullivan. "I chose Comell for the associated with others In the and teachlq. He is 1 .IOCial Nancy and Sullivan head 1 same reasons I am takinC thia sports world. Two fellow science major and w I 11 list ot fO dtfVUI Colng (or the PoSiUon at UC Irvine," he told Phlh1delphlans In pro basket· graduate froni UCI after the 1' top foe! berths and eight the DAILY PILOT. ball include Wilt Chamberliln faU semester. altered spols on OCIR's rosin# ''Both ofler a chance for the of the La.kers and Guy Rogers. Right oow, however, his en· treated asphalt surfact. highest education po.ssible and "Fortunately, I didn't have tire concentration is on the l'I I ft the development of the mind." to play against W 11 t • • ' Diego Chargtr rootball team ln the AFL. "After one year, Al Davls traded me to 0Hkland ror the draft ri&hta to L 1 n c • Al" .. orth," he recall'!. At Oakland ht WU the most valuable player and Jed th• league ln kickoff rttuma before being tnded to Buffalo. The Buffalo tie w a • beneficial to both parties. Roberson was the team's leading receiver in Jiili with Jack Kemp doing the pasaing and the two combined to beal San Dlego for the AFL cham. ptonshlp, 23-4. Roberson was the first Ivy Leaguer to play pro football and he was also "the first sprinter to make the a<f.. juJtmait u I pass rtctlver even though he had played col· lege football as a l'}Jnnin1 back . "Rod would like to come to UCI next year," Tom says. "ln fact, the only thing that might keep him from doing so i.s to sign a professional con- tract." UCI BATTING CHAMP TOM SPENCE NCAA playolfs. Hls biagest ._,!JC es Ull The unmarried track and Roberson aays. 1•1 could jump thrlll in baseball to date was The American C Y c I e field devotee who played aix pretty well and played center in knocltiDg in tbe winning Association v.i ll open its 1971 years of professional football in high school but Wilt was on- While his background ha!I been in pro footbaJJ 1lnce hi11 collere days, he doesn 't worry . about UCJ not having 1 &rid squad. The scouts are looking at Rod and .several have talked to hin1 -unofficially, of course. for he h a s n ' t graduated trom high school yet But back to Tom and the up- coming NCAA wtstern regional playoffs that start Frid ay at San Fernando Valley State College i n Northridge with UCI meeting Puget Sound, Wash. at IL Tom bas spent two years playing first base for UCI altbougb It looked for &\\'bile earjy this year ttiat he might have to relinquish his position to freshman Jeff MalioofL Tom was hurt early in the >·ear and missed, several games and appeared only as a pinchhitter in three others. It didn't take long for him to reacquire his spot at first base and he has been there most of the time since I.hat injury. "I think we have an ex· cellent chance of winning the regionals this year," he says by way of contrast to last year when the Anteaters dropped t v.·o straight in the playoHs. ''When \l"C played San Fernando uµ ' there in a doubleheader. Rocky and l were both injured," he says. "I'm sure we can beat them and I think they are the toughest team in the tourna· ment." What one particular thing has made this year'! team a contender? • ''A year's e·.r. pt r J t n c e runs in a pab" of victories over slate \\'edne.sday night at El in the AFL, \\'ill complete Jy a sophomore when I ms a playing t.o&ether and several USC a year ago v.1th a three-Toro Speedway. week on his mastera' degree senior." players have improved. Also, run homer at Bovard Field. CompetlUon will be held in at '9.'hltworth CoTiege in Roberson attended Bartram the competition afforded by But he has 1n open mind on both junior and s e n i o r Spokane, Wash. this month High in Ph.iladtlphia and "'as the new players like Dan the subject and an NCAA divisions of classes for 125 c.c. before taking over officially at an all-star in three 1ports - Coronado, Jeff (Mallno!f) ud championship could e 1111 y motorcycles to 500 c.c. bikes. UCI. basketball, football and track David Lyons. surp1ss the USC vlctories. First race is scheduled tor I Righ t now he is more In· and field. '·And don't forget the im-And don't bet against Tom p.m. with Et Toro's Terry terested in geUlng the Uct After completing a tour of "Not having a football team will not affect me. My direct responsibility is to the track team and 1 don't think this will affect the recruiting or a track team. ''There are alhletes who participate in only one aport and It will bllance out." proved play of Bobby Farrar Spence beifl.I the hero or sucb Griner listed as the top area track and field program off on duty in the anny, he slimed u in the outfield and the record an accomplishment. entry. tM right foot. • frtt agent with the San of Tom O'Connor (rellef•------------------------------------~----------------- pitcher).'' \\!h at has been !he big change in Tom Spence's hit· ting? (He is almost .100 points above last year, .323 compared to .422 this season.) "Coach Adams worktd on my v.·eaknesses for one thing. And the competition from Jeff didn't hurt. "I have also been working on my speed and I think 1 ValueCenters Gau cho Ace A 11d erso11 Gains Spot All-cir cuit 011 A ll-County Team Saddleback College·s Eric Chf.istensen has been named to the all-Mission Conference firsi baseball team, as selected by circuit coaches ~1onday. Christensen, a sophomore, batted .333 in conference ac· lion. Ci rcuit champ i o n Southwestern dominated the 14-man fir$t team wilh six selections. San Clemente's C r a i g Anderson is lhe lone Onlnge Coast area basebell player to garner first team, hQnors on tl'e official All-Orange County dream leam es selected by !he Orange County SporlS\\'riters Association. Anderson teammates led hi s Triton to a CIF AAA pl1 yofr berth lrom h t s short.stop position . Area players on the second team arc Greg l(~ssler (Laguna Beach). Gary Simpson (1'.1ater Dei) and John Palmer <Corona del Ji.tar ). Anaheim's Ron Knaub was voted player or the year ·t-.r -tr -tr . ay Tire Event at EDco Value enters. Saddleback 's Jim Campbell. R sophomore, gained a second team berth and teammates Hov.•ard Hoyt and G a r y Jackson \\'ere 1 c corde d hooorable mention. San Bernardino Valley col- lege pitcher Dave Love \11as named th e conference's most valuable player. l<>ve, a freshman righthander. com- pil~d a 7--0 conference record. Al.L-MIS110N CONl'l•lNC:t l'lrsl TNll'I "'' ,.,,,... C:tfltH Awa. Yr. 1'-H. C:l'bt•os, Southwlslern S-1 So, "-0, Love, San 8tr(l<lo 1.0 Fr. P-T. Fll'de•IOl'I. So11lhw1•1or01 S.0 So. C:-C, Simi, SDUlhN•it•rn .100 So. IF-11' 01uer. Sin B1rctoo .l<IO f r. IF-E. C:llri1!1n11n, Stddltt.ltk .lll So. IF-1!1. APPIHl&tt. Gronmonl .l', So. IF-A, S1ndMr. SO..Olhw11!1rn .l'1S Fr. IF-H. Kr111ne" Pt lomfr .'71 So tF-0. H.,.n11'10e1, Cl>alltY .J06 Fr. OF-J . Stey1n1, Sou!llWl l ll•l'I .1M So, OF-K. Fr~t. Southwnlern .3111 So. OF-G. W1r1H1, C:lrrwa ·'* So. OF-T. F1~9, ll'IYtflldt .?H So. Pltytr ot Year -LOYI !Sin Btr~Qt... • S-n'lllT- P--M. Jo,,.u , Ch1Htr 3-i So. P-11:. Klou1tn1n, (ltf\IS 5-1 So. "-W. M.ck, PllO!fllr ?.J So. Player Leonard J\lorales Rich Simonin Bill Bolden Terry Stupy Ron Knaub Craig Anderson Scott Wilson Kell,v Mahoney Mark Lellnon Greg LaMendola J\lark Rodgers J erry 1'.1aras Jim Fox Dave Rhodes Stan \\'alkins Rick Gillmore Oa\'e Campbell Bob Stuhr Garv Carter Al Murillo c;reg Kessler Gsry Simpson John Palmer Brad Hillman l''lrst 'fea1n School Santa Ana Tustin Santa Ana Valley Los AlamUos Anaheim San Clemente Garden Grove Fullerton Bolsa Grande \Vest em Ranch-0 Alamitos Pacirica SecoDd Team Los Al:imitos Anahci1n Pacifica Fullerton Savanna Tustin Sunny Hills An aheim L:iguna Beach Mater Dei Corona del i\1ar Sonora Cl11s Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr Sr. Jr. J r. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Pos. p p p c IB lnl Inf Inf OF OF OF Util p p p c IB Inf Inf Inf OF OF OF UUI Record 6-1-2 ,~ 8-3 .441 .3'1 .286 .316 .485 .4<1 .326 .385 .410 ~2 6-1 ~2 .354 .416 .361 .300 .3)7 .360 .304 .350 .354 C-A. w ........ l"•1tm1r .JOI s.. Honorable fl lentkln J~::;:; t'::.· cc;'°0::::.,1 .'J~ :':. Steve Fox (l-'ountain Valley). Bob Deweese (El Dorado), _\E._-J.C1mPboll, Sl<k!l•Daa __ .uo So:_ Greg Cocrran (Lowell), Curt Peterson (El 1-iodena), Jim 1F-H. M..-1r.c1.1~11•trW---'-'!!,&. Peterson SOnora} :--R~a!""'Cl'O\Set'Vlte) Steve-Jones (Gar.-1F-0. <11t1. C!!ru1 .270 Fr. • '-6.., ~" • 1F-L. Sffu11nb1o. '"''~tun .:101 so. den Grove), Steve Fargo (University), Jim \\latson (Estan- OF-A. 1<1111on, s,,, BerdoO ·™ Fr. cia) Dave Slawson (Los Alamitos) 'Stan 1 '"k (Tustin) l\lark OF--F Ntl$0n, Cll11!1• .i6' So. • ' ":"° • OF-o : w11nH1. c 11n.o1 ."In F•. Bernhard (Fullerton ). Ron Lee (Sunny Rills). Blake Parker C1~~~':1~1":;,,~·:n-~ s • .;li~Da:;; (Brea), Brock Pem~rton (l\Iarina), Alvin Whi~ (Newport Mowi r.t Mort, ca,,. J1c-M111. }farbor). Bruct Fleming (Buena Park). " Heading north? Then head ' for PSA and Long Beach Airpon. It's no! all that .:.tar. It's easy 10 get Into and out of. P1omy cl oarking. And the crO\Yds haven't round it yet. Your travel agent kno~s the way . Atlas Grip-Safe Tires. Atlas Belted 2 plus 2;" • An economy lif• with fou r fulf piles of iturdy nylon co1d. • Modern wrap. around tread for g9od control. s21:n." PIUI &I .IS f'ad. (I,,,. lor 700llll tllffl111 tll1ck\ot1ll, • Four lull piles ol Oynacor rayon cord give a amooth, qulal ride. • lnlerlocklng tread de1fgn to grip the roed. • Low sUhouet1e tor modern appear# anc:e. 23.29 28.32 2.21 '·" '· ,,, s3s1~. '°" f11-1 .. (17&•1'1 ""•• wfllt-•lt IUllllH1 AUll~lfl2Pllll 2 llr11. •Two plln of Vlcrott polyesl&r pl111 two bulll·ln be/la of llb«glala . • f.t'lb lr•ad dtsiOl't !or good 1rattl0n, •Low and wide for the sleek, modern look. ••.aa. JAJI I. ... 2.IQ 12.95 ,I . I ll:, TAX .... 1.71 ~~ml 26.46 29.SO ~!::~rill 2a.94 31.97 .... '· 2.7 .. •• 48.24 51.52 •• •. ' •• 15.95 17.95 '" Swnmer Radiator Service. . • Fluth radletot. • 1,,a1an Alias Perma-Guard Anl \..Freti:e and Coolant (up to 2 gals.). • Vl1uelty lnapect radiator, h•ac.t f'IOM and all bells. • Prtuur•te11 cooling •riM•m. $695 ' h'$ an EtlCOttltlon with a continuing ptogl#nOf rwlfvalues. We don't lhlntc It makn-loryou to have to -all thtW'f across town to get• b8rglln on 11lre or a battery ot D'nlth1ng .,.. loryourcir. Not when an Enc:o ValueCenterinyour~ can sell you what you nood at a price that'a rlgl)t. Md lot you ci.rgo it alt on )QM' Enoo Cnldit Card, wilh months to pay. Stop in and see what we n'ltan, Extra hding Stamps. We've multlplled the num btr ol •t•mp1 you get lree when rou bur ga10Une al rnosl Ento V11ueC•nter1. Just look for Iha 1pecl11 mul1iote 111mp 1ign and drive in. Thl-prieoaon tno lnd-"- 1111 Milal>le nationally at- ..,._by Hu-Ott' Rollnlng' ~-.. "*lY-opolltwrl nalnd conmJnilSll. Prtces and Ott0'1 rrl'fV&f'/ al plttici· petlng indeptndont E--· _O __ V.1h1PC1·nlt•1.., ----- ''*• ................ .,..,11111..,Hll~CM a l'ltti!lirlfQMlp• .... Enco men are doing more. Jllit ..... htemll .... .,,,,.., • .-.. f"C• ti ....... ~ I • / • ...... .. ... .. . ' ........... ' ' • 111 I 8 OAll v PILOT Tue~ay, Ma)' 18, l'f7l r Start Your .. POINT voua ICNDS FOR PROPER FOOTWORIC . Area Spike List Tari Albritton I ' ~fes a Banquet Costa ?.1esa Higb will honor Its track, goU and tennis teains Wednesday night in the school cafeteria -with a spcrtS awards banquet. It gels under-\l'IY at 6:30. • GOLFERS Wllll Lew·H• ... k •"' ''•diet Al Tiie NEWPQRTER INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE $1.11-•ltlt thl• .. WMk ti•)'• .. Engines! A• c•'Y way to aet. tbe fcenos of proper rootworlc in the 101r 1win1 is 10 m1lce surt yqur kntet point in the ri1hl plaot at the ri1ht timt. Makes Big Gain FREE POOL PARTY by Deke Hou/gate [ " _,. • . "" HOY.' lucky tan a fcllo\\' get" If you asked Steve Krisiloff that last year he "d have said. "~'ou some kinda nut?" PLAN TO ATIEND SUNSET POOLS' ANNUAl SPLASH • BASH I 0 e.m. to 7 p.m. thi1 Seturdey end Sundey Ft•• Refreshments ;. Try it this week. Sieve is one of 1he luckiest rookies in I.he l1is&ory of the Indianapolis 500, and he kf\O\\'S it. In .illustration I I, we xc the top. or the backswin1 Position. The lcntt has turned lo the righ t and now points bchiod the ·ball. Five individ uals madt leaps the tfl highs ()ff his 14.3 wind· forward v.'hile there is only aid~ clocking in thf! prelims. one new name on the Orange There are area survivors for Coast area prep track and Friday night's CIF semifin als field honor roll as compiled by varsily event.! excluding the the DAILY PILOT. at Cerritos College in all The nev.•est entry Is Nev.•porl 440, two mile, 440 relay, high S,UNSET POOLS Kris1Joff accepted deli\'ery O\'Cr the y,·eekend of a twin STP i 1cNamara turbo-Ford to the one lhal will be driven in the race by Mario Andrelti. Very fe\\' rookies in the history of the big race ha\'e e\'er been gi\'en the opportunity lo drive a neY.', com· petilive machine. In illustration 12-the fonow- through posi1i~he riaht le.net has t11rn~ '° that it poinl s in front of tbt ball . Harbor junior Griff Amiesl-~'~'a~r~"['ly~e:v~e~n~l>:•:x~cl~u~d~in~g~lh~e~~~~~T2~>~7~S~-~l~r~oo~k~h~u~r~"~·~A~n~•~h~•l~m~~p~h~-7~7~2~_.~,~·~·~~~~ y,·hose 50.8 places hi m third in 'jump, long jump and pole the 440 and knocks off another vault. junior -Corona de! ~1ar·s ~tis fortune has apparently changed. To understand how much. lel's turn back the clock to 1'.1ay. 1970. \\'c mel 'Krisiloff in his garage al the speed\\'ay on the second weekend or qualifying. He had put the four-year-old Gerhardt IY.'in-cam f'ord into the starting lineup \\'ilh a speed of 162.443 m.p.h. on lhe first day. and he \\'as helplessly v.•aiting to be bumped f'rom the fie ld. ' If you I.cam to move your lcp into these positions, your weight will automatically shirt properly during your swin1. This prope r weight shift. will improve your balance and your timina: you'll hit the ball farther and ttrai&Jtler. (~. 11:1 .. ,, ..... 1'. -~ ~ !i.latt Cox. The latter's best is 50.9. t.laking the most impressive improvement on the -..list v.·as NeY.t>Ort's Terry Albritton. It lie was pullering around I.he car. making \1·ork for himself to keep his mind off y,·hat he knew \\'as inevitable. GOLFING PRACTICE NOW CAN PAY Off LATtR! Tiie Arnold P.1lmer boo~ltt, "Pract1ce. ~ $lm\ljS you now to p•i1Cl1te It home !or power pl1y 011 ,our l~vQnle course. SenCI I Oc ,.,,d 1 stilmped 1eturn t n¥tlopt to Arnold P1lmer, c/o this newsoaper. The Tur junior became the second area i;hoLputter to eclipse the magic 60-foot bar- rier with a 6U toss in last Saturday·s CIF preliminaries at \\'estminster. I r. ··rve gone as fast as this car will go.'' he said in a resigned tone or voice ... I nlay I:el to Lry qualifying another car. but I don't plan on it. I just go from da y to day. I don't try lo rigure things out. They don't Yi'Ork out." He·s only 911 incht's in back of senlor teammate t.!ark Stevens, the shot leader at 63- 51,::. . ' A few weeks later Krisilolf. \\'ho served as his O\\'Tl one·nlan c rew as well as driver, wa!I trailering his race car from Indiana· polis to Dover. Del., y,·hen he sOOpped at a motel in New Stanton, Pa., to get a night's sleep. Aren Briefs Although only a Bee, Edison junior Ron Co 11 i n gs ac- complished a lifetime best of 22~ in the long jump al the prelims to enhance his third place standing aniong the <i.r~a elite. \\'hen he woke up. the entire rig v.•as gone - a leased station \\'agon loaded with tools, the ~railer' and race car. engine parts. everything. Krisiloff's entire investment in racing was do\\.·n the drain. Co11dillo11nl lride Offered STP team boss Andy Granatelli had observed the quif'I. determined '!4-~•ear-old from Parsippany. N.J .. knew of his bad luck and offe.rcd him a conditional ride. KrisiloH was to stand by )' to drive in the California 500 at Ontario in the event that C.eorge (I Follmer -""ho had difficulties with officials -was banned from the race. Fetes Monarcl1s All1lele• Uo11ore1I Still another ltlh grader. NeY.'JXH1 hurler ~1att Hogsett lo"·ere<I his ronnerup mark in !he 180 loy,·s from 19.6 to 19.4. One outright leader and a C().leader also be I t e red previous pefsonal bests. \\'ell . fortunately for F'ollmer. he \\'as a!IO\\'ed to drive in the 500. But converse!.\', unlucky K:ri siloff had to find another car. .. , got down on my knees and begged Bob Wilke." Krisiloff said. ·'He ,:?ave n1e Bobby Unser's backup car, and I did all right ~· vdlh ii. Qualified it at 172 and was ·looking for\\'ard to good things in 1971." Rick Kniffin. Gary Si1npson and Ste\'e Fritz picked up the biggest laurels at the annual ~1ater Dei High School \\"inter and spring sports awards ban- quet Monday night. Junior Kniffin was selected as the most \'aluable player for the Monarchs' varsity basketball team ""' h i 1 e Simpson and Fritz. b o l h seniors. were accorded similar honors in baseball and track. A pair of spring sports a\1•ards banquets are sehedul· ' ed tonight in the Orange Coast area with Estancia and Foun-, lain Va lley Highs schedtfled to honor their athletes. Corona haifmiler Nir.k Rose loured his specially in a best- rver 1:54 6 while Huntington Beach".:i; Garth \\'ise jumped from a tie for first to sole possession of the top spot in ' I • I • • • ' • '• ' F'amed sporlsman \Vilke died. and Krisiloff was onc.e again out nf a ride. Granatelli hired him to drive the old A n d r el l i Hay,•k in the Trenton 200 -partly lo make amends for Krisiloff's missing lhe Ontario race. Late in the televised Trenton race Krisiloff was running l"f'COnd \\"hen the leader. t.like t.'losley. spun under the yellow fla~ and s1nacked hi1n into the \\'all. The force of that collision righted ~tosley. \1'ho \\'ent on to \\'in. Krisiloff retired. Bui at Ind~· Krisilofrs luck finall.v seems to be changing. \\1e talked bv telephone as he sat happily in the driver's seat of the ne\\'esl Indy car. in his garage at Gasoline Alley. Y.'hile tht creY.' adjusted steering wheel. instruments and mirrors to his satisfaction. ··rve got a ~real crew, a great car, aod J"m very happy." l\risiloff said. lie could have added. he has a great chance -even as a rookie -00 \\'in the Indianapolis 500. St•df111 Ser• if>tt I 111prt1t·ed Off icials ol lhe !\ports Car Club of America jazzed up the smnll Jieda n section nf their Tran1·Americ10 Cha.mplon.~hlps th l~ .\·ear. hoping for a eonfrontl'llion between American productk>n subcompacts (Pinto. Vega. el 11tl) and lhe foreign sedans IAlfa Romeo. 81\1\\'. Triumph. Ford Escort and others). \\'Ith the second 1971 race comin~ 11p 1\1onday. May :'It al Louden. N.H .• II appears Iba! little if any noise v.·llJ be heard from an Am rrico n car In tbr series. lnslead. ii may turn out lo be a ronflicl 1natehlng the eslablished European teams against the upstarl from Japan, Datsun. Three factory Oattuns "·Ill be raced by Bob Sharp, lhe veter- an from Wilton. Conn ., John ~forlon of Torrance. the national C Production amateur road racing cha mp. and 1'1ike Downs. a lillle kno"'n Vlr it:inian now li ving in El Segundo. Sharp rares out nf the East. y,•hlle ~lorton and Do""·ns drive for Pelc Brock's BRE !lacing Team in California. \Ve got acquainted with Do\\·ns O\•er the y,·eekend and found hlln to.uch an ,.xreplional young man "'e thought be should have an introduclion to I.he readers. \\'hy exceptional'~ He's ?ii yeari; old but has Men employed 111 some s.orl of job for Ii years. That's for star~rs. II seems that IJoy,·ns' father. a \\'ashintton. O.C .. ney,·spa per ref)11rler. y,·a~ killed in 1 traffic coll ision when the boy was very ~nun)(, le-aving hthind a "·idow. three daughters a nd ~like lo pro' ide for lhcn1seh·es. Al th,. age or eii:ht 1\like rarrie~ two ne"·spaper routes, one In thr 1norniog and one In the afternoon, in Falls Church, Va .. and on the sidl' picked up extra money 'lttitb his own lawnn1oy,·cr repair business. l liktlllll v1,,11v -MVP : ltlcl Kn11f1n, ,.,oit lmDr1W1d . 01v• N1nrv ; ""'1t in-1Dl•1!lot11I: Pe•t llOl>f1'SI bu! ••• ~nder; St~v• l(emoo•; COlld>l!'I' •w•rll: JOl>n GorM~n. Junior lll•tlrv -MVP· Gt<H9t He•old: mos• en1mi.i.,.· 51•¥• Cwunc. 8H -MVI'; S10w1 Mlrllrodt !f; motl ........ i.1 ... · OIYt Nal .. o. c-MVP· \!We O•lt .... •I "'"'' "'"' m1,;..., M1ttw G•ottlcl< 1nO llicl s ... ~ ... • ...... 11 V1'1lty -MVP G•rv S'"'°'"'°"' be:\I llttet'H ("l>Ck ... 011'>$, Dell d fenu: Ill•• !el111t; most ln1Drovl'd: Ml~t 1<."""me1•1. mo•t lno•lr1tlori1I• Tom COl!l9•· Tt1cl 1nd Fie!~ va,.ir, MV I'· 5•eve FrHn ou11!1ndlno i.1cl Ola 01wi•; o.11s1~,.. !~':,!..,'lelcl ti-'~ P':l.,;.:.!n; :,' ir,:: l Dl•1ll1>na!: JI"' POf'ltq•n !•• MVI'• John Ma~ontv Cte -Miii'; G""ll VIY1l nt1 ••• ll111h• -mo;! out<1Anlllfll. 0 -Ck M"cl"H!U1 Cl•l1!". e.o~ l•w!11. Coaches Tab 1'usti11 Star Tuslin·s Rich Simonin '"'as voted player of 1he year in Crestview League baseball loop's coaches. Most va luable and captains in each .. of the spring sports in all classification! will be the highlights at the sc h 11 o I cafeterias. Feslivities get under v.•ay at 6:30 at both can1puses. S1t,i 111 Ten111 f ,01•111s Applications are still bein,t: accepted !or the /'\e;1•port Beach Aquatics swim team. a new unit sponsored bv the Newport Beach Recreation Department. The program, coached by UC Irvine assistant Y.'illiam Je\\·ell and F,stancia .:·.vim coach Les Cutler. is open 1r1 hoyli and girls ,age 5-\j. in- c ludes no vice, intermediate and advanced levels or Sl\'!m· ming. Cosi to the il'ldividual is .~ per eight "·eeks in the all.year setup . Registration is being <ll'· cepted at lhe /'\ewport 8Path Recrea1ion DepartmPnl 11714 W. Balboa. Newport Beach1. Further information can b~ obtained by calling 8 " b Graner 1673·3180J or Je\\"tdl !6'16·06591 L111"ro .. e Tiiie 1"l0 -PMI M11• IFc.un11•" V1llevl, •I, C1•lo fo11o (C"'""' dol M1rJ, J"'1n /Jl ll11 (Co•ona del Mod. !ruco Gi,eH1I• 1E111ncT11, Jo. Von l!mlvll1 4M1dn1), " 770 -Cerio To.,I fCoran1 d~l M••). Pllll M••• IFl>Unllln V1lleYf, n.1; &•all Mcll:onzl• l$An ci.om~nto l, n.s. UG -Etlc Ol~on 4E1t1ncl1J, 4 9; l•m l(e1tnl•• tW~•lml~tl~•l , Sll.j. Grill ... m lt• \NewllO<"! HarbOtl. 50.1. NII -Nkl ltow (Cll'Dnl d•I Mod • 1 l•t: J•!I Voun1 cwestminsterJ, I SJ•; Jann Mullin• (l1un!ln1ton !le1clll, PreSI"" C1mobell CMt dl'>I). 1:~.o. Milt -Ed lt1dttm1cne< VAiHioti Vlelol, • 1' t: !lab !•i<kner tM1ron1!. t;!J.O, Oout M1Cle1n CCDSll 1f,es1f. •:1l • lwo m1lf O•v• Loc•m1n CMlron1l. 1.1& &. Jolon Ol">Wlnt l(OUI Me11). •·JJ 1; W1•n1 Lffd1 (l'duntt ln V1li.y). I JJ ' llO 11H -Girl!> W"e Cl1unlmeto" e.~1cn1. l•.S. i. lw. /~Ill Ho<,.•11 INtWPOrt H1tbarl. 1T~t Plc~lorn 111unllneT"" 811ch), 1• S llO LH -G~• T1ylor (~1rln1 ). lt.I ; Miil Ho<11"rl (N•wl>!Yl Hl•l>crf, I'•; Oennll ... •••vi tM1rfn11, 19 I. u a rtlf• -M1'1n1. •l.L FO<Jnrtin V1ll10. <J.7; Coton1 d•I Mir •J,S. Miit r•IAY -N•WPO•I 1-<A•be•. }'13.I; We1lmln1te" l :U 6; C:Ofon1 del Mft, J ;16 l . HJ -Jenn K••mer (NfWl>O•I H1rl>c•\, 6·•· A~• l11rri• 1F<>.Jn!1ifl V1ll1vl, l·J• ,; Vern MCGarry (51n (l•mPn!•), •·l LJ -lt1y l11rr11 (l'cun!11" V1llfy!, ll·C: Gttlh Wi.• (l1vntln111on e.e1c~!. 11·11l'i. 7l-lw; Ron (0111"9' (Edli.on/. 77~. PV -Ton• Hol!m1n (S1n Clernente) V1ll•Yl. l'"I''· !tll S~r<>.JI !Si n ci ..... ntel, tl4 SP -Mtr~ S1•ve~1 IN•WJl<W"I H1rlto•!, '3·!' 1. ltrr1 A I ~ t I! tan INewoort l-l1•1>rn, 61-1; 8r1d e.ornr~ IC0111 M1>1 I, H·l', 01 -M•" 51"v~m (N•wDCr! H~•bcrl. 11!).j•.; HOWlf!I 11.o•l!et tCor""1 11•1 M1'1, U9-"; &cb ~"Utile ICDtonl dtl Mui, ISJ·fl•. Pre p Tennis Co1ncts Wi1~ Firs Outing. Ba.seball Standings DEAN LEWIS !T!O!VIO!TIA! ' • Thr Cnsla l\lrsa Comets earned rhe1r first seinipro hn~ebal l ll'1n of 1he 1971 cam- paign by edging lhe \"i!.1t1ng S:in r.abriel Arhlelics. 3·2. in a nnn·lea,gue till fll Costa l\lesa's Te\~'inkle P:irk Sunday. Tall riAh1 h11ncler Tin1 Cun· ningha1n 11i·en1 lhe route on the mound ror lhP y,·inners and \1•as supported by a Se\'en·hit att;ick. includini:: a p11ir of ~afet 1e!. by ctn!erf1elder l..rc E1•:in~ .1, ' 1-.J, '"" G•b"ei "' •• ' ... """''· .. ' • ! •••on " ' • Mlf'9-!t ' ' Ot ••M•nl. 'b • ~"9u..,..,, lb ' • ltr•M"" • ' • M•n•on•. " ' • 0 """"· !9 ' • l-l•rvrrr•, '' ' • M9(1•"· • • ' lot1I$ ,., C11•• ••• "' • • ' • • • • • • NATI OJ\"AL LEAGUE East Dlvlskln IV L Prl. Ne\\' York 2t 12 PittsburAh 21 " St. Louis 20 1; Chicago " 17 :\lontreal 13 .. Philadelphia II " \\'est 0 1\·lskin San Francisco 27 IO Atl;:inta 18 18 Ooclter5 18 " Houston 17 19 Cincinnati " " Chicago to 25 M•ndly'1 lt11•lh P llllbut~I! I. M""TrtAI 5 •11&~1a • N•., Vo11; J. " '""int• f'nllAn•lon,A ) C•nrlnn•H 1 Hcu••On 7, ~ .... Ol"OC 0 Only ~'"'"' """"ul"" ,6.)6 ,fi()() ,57 1 .514 ·'" .~1J . 730 ,500 .486 ,472 .:17 1 .286 GB ~ • 5 IO ,,, • 91 : 13 16 A~JERJCAN t EAGUE East Diviskln ' Boston Ballimore f\ew York l)etroit IV L 21 JI GB I \Vashington Cleveland Oakland 1\finne!IO!a Kansas City A ngel~ 1\l ilv.·aukec Chicago 19 14 IS 16 16 18 15 20 13 "' \\'est Oh·ision 2:; 14 19 17 18 1!1 111 20 1~ !8 1:1 20 Me~d•v'• 1t.-i1111J N•w Vt)·~ l, 881!1mo•• l (l,Y•l&~ft ~. W••hlngl.,..,) P.o· 10~ l O•t•~lt 7 ~·1nn••ot• J, ... "••1• 1 on1. ••m•• w:hf<lut..,. lM!t•'• ~ ...... .5i6 ,500 .471 .f29 39< .G41 .5:!8 ·''" .474 438 ,39< ' ! 2 1~ I ' ' i'i 81,, ,,, ' "' '" 9 1>•1lw•L1~•• ll'ltl'n J J) •t Oo~l•~o 1 •«•~••• 6•JI, n;l~I /Alnn.o11•t lloc:~,.oof :J,J\ •I ... ft ffll ! ... Ill" l 11. f';IM Cnoc•ao IWOCl<I I )) -1 Ktn ... 1 (•!f 01f'll! ....... \.11. nlo~r (l•Y•ll nll 1Mc0owf ll l•ll 11 Wt <h"''lllO'I {M(• l ••" f.\\. n10M llan;mo,~ !Cuellt• ).11 " N•w V!lft l l'ti,,...., l n. "'•"• Ot>ltD•I ll•oo ~ll II II°''°" /$1H>frt 4-0), ~•tM .. ' ' .... 11. •11 ' • Mortl~, l"ll ' • : ·:1r_. ...................... ;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_J 8 !1 ... ..,, H Htd01(J, Jb O•HCIO'I, " G11me-1. u Evl "'· (! Gar-.,, t-lciull(M, rt ·-· ( c~~n1 ... 111,.,. • 101011 • ' I ' I ' , ' " ' • • ' • • • • I ' . ' . ' " ' . , . • • : ! I ' .. !-•~ c.1b•••l co• 010 ooc _, ' (OI'• M111 01~ 000 01~-J 1 DEAN ·LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Servi ce and Paris for All Imported Ca rs Modern Body Shop for All Cers Ora nge County's Large~t and ~lost ~1odern Toyota and \'olvo De;ler OVllSUS ll l LIYllY l'ICIALISTS • MA~PECIALS­ COROLLA 1971 Dem• S .. CIAL • $1777 VOLVO 1971 OEMO $2999 t~? 11t1~. r1di•, h1 1!1•, t., .. ,, • UllD CAR l,ICl.AL $3195 1 f6f Velie 164 SH•• •••'-· "••t.f, •• 11 ... 1tk, ,.. .... ""'""' '''II'' •tt C .... 111911. j YW• l4JI n.u• Idea fot CJOll·mlnded campetal How about cMnping in • delightfully new Palm Spring' resorl with atl type• of reereational facilities, right nerl to • brand new golf course? There's• hm1rio111 clubhouse end loung• in en area of lush green lawns and famou1 P•lm Spri"9' we•ther. J 1.1st 10 minutes from f•bulo us shof"nd restaurents. lt'1 al youn for' just $5 •day or $JO e•r week for• family of fovr {including water, electricity, and sewer). But sr,•ce i1 limited , so hurry. Write or c.aR today for rewrv•tions. Rtcre1tion1I V1kide Ro1orf ::." ~ A11 1cliv;ly of tk• U.S. Finon"o! G•oup l •l (1(1 O.t1 '•"" Oriw1, C.tkedr1I City, C 1liforni1 •223.( •• pfio111 (71 4 J 121-4'11] READ THESE SIMPLE RULES! Once eac:h hour KWIZ announces a name on the air and that pcr::.on spin s the Drea1n Wheel1for a chance f .• al Sl,000 cas h and hundreds of other p1izes, Send a postcard, or the attached coupon ( ,,·jt!Lyou.r.name, addre.s!i and zip coclc. inc:luclin:; phone number) to} ' KWIZ. San la Ana, California , 92703, ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PLEASE 1----------------------....., i1 I t KWl:I DREAM WHEEL 1 I I I NAME l I ADDRESS I I CITY l I ZIP l I I I PHON I I 0, I L---~--------------_:...._j Listen for Your Name On The Air! IZ1480 ON THE AM RADIO DIAL A1ualaei111 Dra11ui 'Ladies' Retait1s • -• Suspense Flavor " • • ,• ,• ;:: .. By TOM BARLEY 01 1"-D1"r ,..,., llflf l1ore.than 30 years ago this critic was a yowig member of a family party which braved the perils of the Wndon blitz to view a play that was lea~lng many bo1nb-"•eary residents of the British capital to trade lhe kind of suspense delivered by the Luftwaffe for the nail·biting len.sion .served up by playwrights Ed\\'ard Percy and Reginald Denham . Their brilliant shocker was "Ladies in Retirement" and it was a memorable evening of theater that was talked about in the famJly circle for weeks. It drew praise from critics and eublic alike as indeed it did v.•hen it was revived for the London stage some 15 years later. It is right here in Orange County th.ls week and this rave revitw is prefaced by the comment that this Percy. Denham classic has lost none ol lhe forte and eloquence that Jessel Set For Talk At College ·!• Actor, author. movie pro- · ,..:; ducer, and public speaker George Jessel v.·111 speak at :: Saddleback Cot\ege Thursday aft,rnoon and a~ain that night in Tustin under the auspices of the collegt. Tht "·orld r a m o u s en. tertainer "''ill appear as guest lecturer for the college's com· munity servict artisl·lecture ~'ri,s. His topic will bt "Entertainment and the Com- munication ti1'edia." Jessel. who sltrrted on the stage in the era of vaudeville and climbed to the. Jop a!i a movie producer in Hollywood, has gain'd fame as a !'IPt'aktr. He toastmastered so many \Vh ite House functions that former Prelident H a r r y Truman gave him th' ti!te "toa.slmaster xeneral of the Un1ted States." Re will appear. at the colle1te c&mpus at an lnrormlll public forum and prtss con ference at 4 p.m. Thursday al 8 p.m. .Jessel will presenl a lecture at F' o o t h i 11 1-lip;h School Auditorium in Tustin. Both th' campus 11 n d Tustin programs are free lt1 the pUb!lc. Because of limited seating for lhe evening pre> ,rram, admittance will be by licker. Tickels are available personnel office of the colle11:e at 837·9700. 495-i950. or 499. 2211 . In Western HOLLYWOOD IUPJ) Israeli actr's~ Daliah L11vi joins Yul Brynner a n d Leonard Nimoy in MGM 's western drama. "Catlow." with Sam Wanamak'r direc- tinr. once launched ll on a record· brtaking run. And what kept us on the edge of our seat in the Drury Lane 'llleater did exactly that for the third time in a row in the somewhat less palatial Loara Elementary School auditorium Used by the Ano-tiiodjeska Players. Surrouniiings meant .nothing to an opening night audienc' that soon bttame thorough!)' absorbed "'ith this tale of the dedicated, determined spinster "'ho will not stop short or murder to protect her two sisters<.and give them the kind or borne they have always looked to her to provide. Her problems include a domineering ex.actress who regards one sister as company and three as a very large crowd, an u n s c r up ul o us nephew who finds his haven rrom the hunting pollce to be'a veritable treasure trove and a maid \vhose affair vdth said nephew and capacity for lu.A· ing in to other people's con· versations lead lo that searing final scene. f\.1ary Sullivan takes the role made famous by Dame Flora Robson and she i.! magnificerit in the part of Ellen Creed, the anguished woman "'ho is never unaware of the prire she must ultimately pay for a momtnt's folly but who con- i;iders it to be "'ell v.·orth the paying if it is to mean the security of her sisters, Louis<t and Emily. Both '."'omen are integral factors in the superb casting ol this play but Dorothy Smita as the wooUy·minded, dilher· ing Louisa deserves a specia l ovation all t.o herself. Here was an exceptionally brilliant characteri1ation in a play fill- ed v.·ilb them. Laurie Lambert as Leonar:.i Fiske is "'ith us for just b;;t( of this splendid play -f~r reasoos that are best ex- plained by Ellen Creed -b!.IL she gives us in that time a first class contribution as 1he former thespian reduced to living in aa isolated country house with the kind of com· panion she '1-'ould have looked on in disdain in her years before the. footlights . Her battles wil lt I he , determined Ellen are amQng the best scenes in the play a•1d take second place only "'ilh an encounter that was, to us, superb theater -a r»holds- barred, bard·hitting encounter between the furious Ellen and her contemptible n e p h e w , Albert Feather. Mark. Haag does a fine job as Albert but is hampered, to our way of thinking, by his failure to master the Cockney accent he strives for. Far bet· ter lo forge t abou t the local brogue, Mr. Haag. and de.liver your fine part in your own style. That spellbound 11u· dience y,•ould never have known the difference. Kathy Wilson does a iir~t class job as the maid. Lui;:y, Sheila Stoffgren is equ"tly competent as Sister Therc.~a and Janice HiltunPn has a quiet but extremely capable night as Ellen's sisler. Emily. Final performances of 111is fine play are scheduled for 8: 15 p.m .. fi'riday and Satur· day in the Loara Elementa ry School auditorium, Loara and Broad"1ay, Anaheim. OA.ll .. Y '°ILO't 1t1U 'h•'- lffad Tea Party A dubious Alice (Leslie Freeman. l~ft) shares a cup of tea v.•ith Paula Cappel· lo and ~1ad Hatter Tracy Thomas In a scene fro1n the musical version of "Alice in Wonderland" being presented by the Costa ~·lesa Civic Playhouse Jr. this v.·eekend. Performances are 8 p.rn. Friday, 10:30 a.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Community Center auditorium on the Orange County fair· grounds. C~ia Gets First X Rating NE\V YORK (AP ) -Colum· bia Pictures, "'hich pridE"d itself on having ne ver pro- duced or distributed an X rated film, no longer holds that distinction. The rating board of the ti-lo· lion Picture Association of America ha!'! lagged I h P Colum bia reltase, "Drive, He Said,·• with the reslrictil'.! X. "'hich denies it to viev.·1ng by youngsters 17 or under. Leo Jaffe. president uf Columbi~. recently told a group of theater owners that hi.! e<>mpany had never made an X film and would em· phasl1e the G and GP pictures -open to all audiences - "because the comp an y believe!'! it is the right lhin~ to do.'' Jaffe wa s unavailable fur c:omment on the ratini;: for "Drive. He Said.'" but a Columbia spokesman said the MPAA ruling would be ap- pealed. He alluded to •·mare lrontlll exposure" in the Iihn u the probable reasoning for the rating. but would not com· ment further pending lhe ap· peal . The film. basically about campus rebellion, is the firs; directing ef(ort of J a c k Nichol!IOn and stars KarE"n Black. "'ho was nominated !or an Academy Award for her performanct in .. fivt Ea~y Pieces." Derby ~lov ie NEW YORK (APJ -Plans are underway to produce a film called "Wipeout." To be produced by Jim Kessler's Guadelupe P r oduct ions , "WipeouL" i.s set against the turbulent background of the roller derbies and is based on an original story by Alan Eberl. Qui11 n Makes Debut On TV iri 'Tlie City' By CYNTJUA LO\\'R Y disturbances an1ong students NE W YORK (APl -"The violently opposed to the plan, City," ABC's 111·0 hour filn1 and the mayor. of e<>urse. also feature Monday night, wos a was reluctant to see open formal introduction to l\1ayor spaces disappear. Thomas Jefferson Alcala, who The bomber managed lo will be around the channels prant his device in the mayor 's nexl season on a "'eekly basis. elevator ln time for the tX· Television, over lhe seasons, plosive climax, but this as well has had an assortrnent of as the mayor's escape fro1n dedicated doctors. district al· injury was both predi ctable torne ys 11nd lav.·men . Nexl <1nd familiar. ll V.'as. ih fact. a season, it 1Yi!I have a pretty slow moving story, ob- dedicatcd mayor in the person viously put together lo in· of Anthony Quinn. one or the lroduce a character big motion picture names Quinn does a good job as a prepared to take a flyer in harried. impatient man faced series TV. not only \\'ilh day by day pre> ti1ayor Alcala is a big, blems and a fanatic at large rumpled rilan. infinitely more but with the necessity of cam-- interested in running the city paigning ror re-election. and helping his 4'0nstituents -'=;~iiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~ th an in developing his image. L He is. of course. very honest and brave. In the pilot film he WAS charging around trying to shrug off police protection Although there was a bombtr running around trying to get him. Although the mayor's city - he flas been head ma n for 16 years -Is never named. lhe ba ckground has a distinct South\\•eslern ft'a\'-Or, and the ma yor occasionally slips into fluent Spanish when talking 11•ith his houseke,per or some of his people. The action in the film centered on the mayor's ef. forts to postpone action on converting some un ive rsity o\vned land inlo an industrial park. The project had caused Lectm·e Set 011 Ballet "The llussian Ballet : lls •••'°'' 1111c" ·• .,, •~• ••'••""• t. le~•I••• 11'• !tlo .• Ot, 1·1110 ENOS TONIGHT ALSO Oo•ld Hl•o11 "STATUE" Principles and Aeslhelics''l~!""'l!""'l!""'l!""'l!""'l!""'llllllllll "·ill be 1he subject of the clos.I~ ing lecture in " series on . Tut5d1y, M•Y l!, 1q71 D•llY PILOT IP. 'Thirteen Clocks' UCI Y outl1 Sl~ow Splendid By T0.\1 TITUS Of 1111 balh ,.1i.1 llt fl There ls a "gE"!\t'ration gap'' of !IOrls In the Ut~llter fls 1rell as in society. with tht' proble1n bein! this; how do you present a children's play which will "TH• THlllTllN CLOCKS" A mu1lc1l l1l•V !1le bv J1m1• l"u•l,.r, dlrMllOI II• 8t1tv Tt1m1ft, o•Ch••l<~ <;.DnC111<.l.,i II• Jlrn 1111wl1, 1..i aulon II< lllkh.o•a T•lollfl, c.:11tum1• II• Sl\1•1 LlnMll, HOMI,.. b• Camtron Ho•••" Ch0!'-•1 ..... • II• VIC!Wl t !11rrt!I, lf'(hftl(ll dl<K'"' llllc,,1•a JOIUIMI~. ~<IMn!td .i tl\t UC l•v\111 Studio 11\tller bv lht UCI a•1m 1 OtPlrlmtnl THI CAl't Pr lnct 11.11 Mlll•r Pt-lnct u , • .,,. ........ Jon" Cl••• Golu• •. .... •••••.•• S"•t w"'"~' 0Yk• ........... .... ~tnav II·•••• H••• .... ,,,.,,.,,.. Co/On Vn<;1•I H•tOI •• ., "'""""" M•rty Glf•t 8 1rll , •.•.•....• ,.. l!llHl>l'l~ P••t Ttl ... ltr ,. MICll•el l<.OI/•~ keep the "dulls enraptured as well. James Thurber cHme uµ with a fine answer when-he wrot!' "'The Tttirteen Clocks." and t.:C Irvine graduate siu. dent 8e1ty Tcsman h as foHo"'ed through with a n1o~l attractive and techrUcally in.' genious pr o ducl1on of Thu rber·s rnu sical f;ilry tolt' 1:rs her ii1aster's projec1 111 drama at UCI. The show. whk·h was presented one "'tckencl only,· contains a!l the inli!redienls necessary to satisfy t h r younger set. but it~ bonus • ' ca ptures and 1u1talns the mood in splendid l•shion. All 1n all, a most en· tertaining production which. for the benefit or young peopltt on the Orange Coast, 1hould be extended at least one extra weekend. perfornlance as Ille pfincc who must perform the pro- verbi al lmpo!slble lask. to win his fair lady. Steve \Varner borrows a bit of his C>Wn Sancho rrom last summer's ""-1an of L<1 Mancha" to cha racterl1e the p r inc~• Ii bumbling comrade. The prizf' role of any suchj[".==========~ offering Is that of the villain, and Randy Rivera brings a bit of Caligula to his nasty Duke characlerization. A no I her standout is tttatcy Gerke ,as lhe v.·on1an who helps lhe prince attain his goal. a fine Jf1\.'cl of a canlffl Cnh·in Vogel plays the fluke'.s erstwhilt lackey 11•ith a bit of Boy Wonder wholesomeness, whi)E" ~1ichael Kol1jn renders a pair of funny I performances in a dual assign· ment. Jann Clark exhibits a pleasing voict · as the captive princess, whil e Elizabeth PCel is an aUracrive bi! of fauna in bird costume . Trees that n1ove aboul the squ;irc staging area and top nQ!Ch sound and lighting cf· lcl'IS. p1:rrticularly a chilling thunderstorm, lend a pro- tes~ional quality lo the pro- ducllon . Anrl the orchestra, under the baton of Jim Ra"•ie, NOW-ENDS TUESDAY ACAOIMY AWAlO WINHll -llST fOlllGH FILM I quality is t h~ sa tirical treat. flc,Jfor•tJ Cast n1ent of lhe (ormula children's and "THINGS OF LIFIH theater plot. ti-1iss Tesman an1! ~E\V YOHK 1AP1 -Robert a fine student cast has seizt'd Jletlford will head the cast for on !his tongue·in-check o:ip· 20th Centurv·Fo11's ··The Hot proach to young people's lloc•k'' to be. directed by Peter drama 1o insure a pleasant \'ates front a '\' i 11 i a m hour ror adult audiences as Goldman script. well. !,---.....:'-'..~.....:=:...::==~==:::==:;=:;:=:==:;=:;=:;:=; NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES Pacing and ronllnual motion j combine 1~·i1h s I e r I i n .I! technical effects to make the --~;~~~!~~~~~~~~!!~!~;;~_, hour.Joo~ j o u r n e y inln storyland 11 brief one indeed . The UC/ production inclu<tcs some ~xcellent charac· t::rizal ions whictt both capture the child's eye and tickle thr adult'~ imagin11tion. · Bill Miller turns in a strong ENOS TONIGHT Geer90 C. Seen Jet1RllO Weedwerd "THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS" S•phl• Lor111 "SUNFLOWER" Starts Wedn•sday Barc3ain Matinee very W.ed., 1 p.m . FREE lE,RISMMENTS Ad11lh Sl .00 ACADEMY AWARD SHOW Winner 8 Academy of Awards IN ~OUTH CO.lSl Pt.lZ.l. IHCtUDIHCio BEST PICTURE"-BEST ACTOR GEORGE C. SCOTT PATTON ALSO -llST SClll.Nrl.A.Y MA:S·B. lot Offlct o,. .. ,:41 ,.M. "r.t.noH~ 1:11 ,.111 .. ''MASH" 10:11 ,.111. "" "'"" Visit the future where love 2nd lit ,, ... ,. is the ultimate crime "THX 1138" "THE lllUSTIATtD MAN'' Rod Steiger Weekdays MS Sot. & Sm. 12'30 RESIR¥1D SEAT IN.A61MIHT TORA TORA' TORA ~---;/!iiii 'Patto_n' un March dance by Olga Maynard Sun· day at -4 p.m. in !he Village Concert Hall at UC Irvine. Miss l\1aynard, lecturer In rine arts at UCI. will speak on lhrfoundings of Russia's· two lt C\.••IYI' ............ , great companies, the Kirov of Oscar Windfall Vindicates Producer Leningrad and the Bolsboi of ri.1oscow. She will illustrate Mr leciure with films Of COO· temporary Russian danctrs. By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD lliPI) -The immediate afterm•th of the ··Patton" swetp ol l he Acad emy Aw1rds is economically· breathtaking. On Friday, April 16, all 432 printa of the motion piclure We~ in a! many theaters ai::ross the country. On that Friday and the. followine Saturd11y and Sunday ·•Pal· ton" earned $2.8 mll\lon at the box office. .. And it's still going st rong ... said producer frank ~lcCarthy. Only a decade ago ii was assumed an Oscar·winnine film could garner another million dollars. But "Patton" could exceed that figure ten- fold. "ll'a like ha\'ing a brand ntw picture ," the st11rtled fl!cCarthy 11ld. "The film ls doinl better nn than when we nrst n:lea&td it." Jr McCarlhy LI elalld, lt Is understandable. He dtvoled ZO yeara and Stt million in a persbtmt effort '° tell Gtn. Geor1t P1tton'1 1lory on the scretn ''Approximately half of that tl2 million went to lhe Spanish Army for equipment and soldiers for our batlle scenes," 1\icCarthy said. He "'ent further. ··People told me when I was producing 'Patton' the time fo r war pie· tures was past. But this was lhe st£iry or a man in World \\'ar JI. It didn 't rclale to Viet- nam. "To many of to d a y ' K young people \Vorld \\'ar 11 i~ ancient history. Jllst as the Civil \Var was remote lo me \.\'hen I was a youngster with two grandfather~ "'ho had been in the Confederate Army. "I might add that both of them enttred ~prlvate1, fought 111 Gettyi;bur 11nd left the Army still priva eJ. "As a boy 1 used to ht1r their tales of the w•.r. but the 1torit1 were as far removed u the: American Revolutlon." Ont or the f111etn1ting facets of "P•tton" LI tht number of direclors and acton who, for one reaeon or another, refused 10 bttomt as~iAled with lht picture. including primas ballerinas Before George C. Scott ac· Galina Ulanova and Maya cepled the role which 1Yon him Ptisetskaya. The histories. an Oscar, the part v.•as IUTnPd styles and repertories ()f the down by Rod Steiger, U!e Russian ballet rompanles also MarYin. John Wayne , Roberl will be described. Mllchum and Burt Lancaster. T!cktts are Sl.50 and art fi'ranklln J . Schaffner won available from lhe fine arts the Oscar ror best direction In box office. 714·8.t'1·6617. "Patton." but not before tht ---------- directorial post was declined ~COl!Wfll OIMf .... .,... ~""' n. by John Huston. H en r y Hathaway, William Wyler and "'""""'"'"""'""'"" j • ..,.,.,1 fi'red Zlnnemann . 1: Originally Wyler and Scnll 11ere "olng '"do the picture."'/ ''SlrikJngl'' _,,~.,.,"e.11.,11. but_lhe.y couldn·.1 agree on.the f c°',:;. .. ;e;;;,• -. .... t script. After trying out vanou s . . oHlt::.:;_ rornbinations and talking to r.~ JACK NICHOLSON •gents. Wyler w." contracted &;;, nVJlUllJI for another mo'"· . '' , .,.,,,..,.8 "It was thf:'ll possible to sign , · .. :. ,.~~ Scott for the picture.'' ~9 M~11rthy said. "Throughout filming he kept changing th~ dialogue and s c en es al·I ttmpt.lng to mske P • t ton mort 11mp11theflc.e·.. / "But by and larae. he stuck to the script." - McClrthy, had ho d'5irtd, could have pulled rank on the actor. 'Ille producer was 1 brlgadl~r gener•I d u r I n s World W•r II . "llllVD ' llUIOFOB Jnl'Ai'Bb" .rm!J . . -. "' . Mv1r PR~OUCTIO~ ~i.-.ll., •llDROJ.EDA SlRAIN ···-ARfHUR mli · llA~O WAYNf ·MS DISON· KAlE REW s'ORiSLM'N'·NELso"NciiornNG. M1cHAf:l:CRicHroN . ROsE'R'Tw1sE·G1L'ME'LLE \ -.--...... -.-------: FASCIN- ATING . "'-"" ., ... ~ ""'..s"' I u•MiSAl P'l;TUR( IEC>t•ICXl\o~· PMIVIS~·· "Breath- Takin&!!" . ,..,.,. ""'*-.............. • • • • . . . . .. . ,-;; ..... "': -. .. • • I .. . · .. ..... ~ •· .. • • 1• ~ . ,... . . .. ' . ·' . . ... '\ ... ~ ·' 'f0 DAIL V PILOT T11e~ay, M1y 18, 1971 '3 Men on Horse' Irvine Sets 'Arsenic' Comedy Vintag·e Comedy. --Give n New Life The Irvine Commun l t y Brooklyn co~: Jay McCor-be given -"1ay 29-l!O, June 5- J)eater w:llL..cow:¥1 qplll,1 fll).l mick as the neighborhood 6. .11-13 and lS.20 at tht full season wlth 1 revival of clergyman. and direct.or Dow Hum3l!lfl6 Hall Playhouse on as a crotchety prospective ten-the UC Irvine campus. Curi1ain Joseph Kesselrlng's classic ant-victim. lime is 8 o'clock. and reserva- Tuesday Evening MA'I' 18 m l!;in1 f1 111ily111 San frandHO 1:05 ai) Los Afidon1do11n 11 C~untda• ' prewar comedy "Arsenk and Ten .per f 0 rm an c es of tions may be obtained by call· l:JO iJ Htt: H1w (R) Guest! 111 Jer7 lie ltw11 1nd Ftrlin Husky. Q NYPO Old Lace:' ''Arsenic and Old Lace" will ing 833-1024. lly T0\1 TITUS ing .oot horse races who falls ._1.ttaw ·~======================; 01 th• D•llr ,1101 s1111 Into the hands of three greedy ~TAll'llWKftl Richard Dow, president andlr ----- 1:00 I) 811 Ntwt Jtrl) Dunphy, (l)AIC Ntn Rt1111ner, Smith. 0 KNBC Ntwt Tom Snydet. O n. Alln Sht• D "ICE PALACE"-Part I * RICHARD BURTON and ROBERT RYAN -COLOR! D Sb O'Clod MO\'lt; (C) {90) "let Ptllct" Put I (dr1m1) '60 - Richard BurtGn, Aobtft R11n, M1rtlll Hyet. Story at tht b1t1&1 struutt be twetn two me11. 1t1rlin1 ovtt • 1irl, until thttr t11ndchi!d1en. 11 sl•I•· hood Is dtdutd, brint Ions bl1tt1 1nta1onisl1 to1eth11. 0 Didi v •• .,.. m "'' F1111htt11 .. G) Sttr Trek O rlJ~!l'JABC Moltit ol th• Week; (C) (90) '1hr Ovu-lh1-Hlll G•nt Rides A11in" (R) (we~tern} '10 -Fred Ast.lire. Walter Brennan. Chllt Wiils. [dg•r B!ft:hanan. Thiet 1tllred Tu.as R•n&ers Jlt joined by an old romude-in arms in • fun .filled topy ·~•inst crime in the old YieS!. 00 I 1JrC1Alf En11lberl Humptr· dintk A mus1c1I llour wnh 1Pet1tl auests K1ye Ballard and lou R•.,..ls. m DAVID FROST SALUTES * "HAIR " W Dl\'id r~J( 1 Show A salute to "Hai /" in ce!ell11t1on ol 111 thhd ann1ver1ary, with dirttto1 To'TI O'Hor11n; composet Galt McDrr· mot, boo~writer1 and lyricis11 J1mes R1do 1nd' Gtfome Ra~n1; lo1mer stars o/ the productio n: Heither McRae. Ronnre Dyson. Str11 Currie. :)helly Phmplon. and Sally Etton: plus t11rrent members ol 1he e15t. ... l'k b'-1 h resident director of the Jrvinr ~· 'Tis thr srason for riost:i!.l!i;:i. .....,t 1 a Ill: pony Payers w o 61l·••"~ I th · h t · ta! t group, is staging the period fnr resurreclin• the dimly lit par ay e1r os aj?e s ens ttllJll · I t · df If 'l'h " · Ch }d ' production, which will feature PAsl and recalling to mind or n o a wm a . e ... me is • 193.\ l th h . ht I th I r en s Eugenie A1axwell and Joanne reronstrucling ror youni:~r · ' 3 . e eig 0 e Wolcott as the dotty old ladles t0i 1 .,1 ,0.,1 ..... ,, generalinns the innocence of Depressi_on , when the ea~y whose only vice is helping ~ co1101r1.1. OIL M.f.lt. an era in !heater which v.·ill "" ~u~:ki~tngs out the worst in Show Slated lonely men to their eternal never corne again. d Thus wr ha~e "Jiarvev.'' ~1lehael Bowers climbs into rewar · "The r-.lan Who Came to Din· lhis role feet first and drtlvers The Huntington B-e a c 11 The three Brewster nephews ner.'' "Arsenic ancl Old L;ice" an outstanding performance Playhouse will hold open audi· will be played by Tom Titus as and many others ma\ting their as the litt(e guy buffc1ed by lions this weekend ror its an· Mortimer, the drama critic : way hack onto the community the avarice or his rellow man. nual summer children's pro-Ray Scott as the murderoos He is particularly brilliant in duction "Rip Van Winkle." Jonathan. and Paul Steele as his drunk scene of the first Nick Sylvester will direct the addlepated Teddy who be. • comt<i• bv Jo>i" CK11 '"''""' •nd act, a characterization so the show, wh'•h calls for Jieves his last name to be f".....-!'f' A.bl><>•,"""''-<' •n<J d4>S11ne<I lw "" "'°" AIMr1un. ~r•lll' m•n•oer !ilurn complete that it is difficult to several adults and many Roosevelt. ~";;;;'." ,,,.,.:.;•h1-:;~·1"•"~'~<1:; K!:~ re.move one's eyes from him children above the age of &. Others in the cast are Bill Nu•l'f'•. "'"'e"1"" r""••• ~ "" despite the pandemonium Small .....-.pie of any age are Brady as the plastic surgeon ~Aturd•v• '"'"""" Ju11t 19 •1 1M Lone d h' ~· Dr E 1' • s t e ,· • · Sharo• B•M~ commvn•tr Pll•"""~· ~1 £ aroun 1m. particularly required, he · " " · " An111e1m "'"". L~n4 1l•a<~-11......... As the boss of the down and noted. Threadgold a s Mortimer's 11°"' !1131 ~JI:~:: c•sr out horse players who latcb girlfriel\d, Elaine: Ga r Y £, ... ,,. T•o"D"n''" M""8"1 8<>""~" onto his' slranne talents, Nick The children's parts will be Saderup as the playwriting "lHIUlE MEN ON A HORSE" ':\ DUSTIN HOfl'MAN WIJTllf 816 MAN~ rlc.twrn •ated IG'I Call 673-6260 For Show Times •u<1rov T•owD•l<1~• 01••• II••"•"" s· 1 • 1 f double cast so that many poli'cema•, B"d E mer •• 0 n , r~"· Nick Svlv"''"' y vestcr encoun ers a ew h'ld 'II h " ~ ALSO PLAYING-"ADAM AT' A.M." M•ll•I ..... Ml•·~m K•l•er t' . hi b 1 d c 1 ren w1 ave an op-~1onte Sims and pet e fD I 16Cll' I llCET ALICtlo~ (CJ (6111} Houri of fun •nd bar11!ns• Vi1w111 call (213) 660-2450 lo bid Colltct t11l11 ra:ap!ed from 71 4 and 105 a111 oodts. ~ flJ!ttr f1m1ty CE Dr12nel c1~'~""""'0ol:>llln• .... L~ K•nn•av 1m1ng pro ems, u ren ers I ·1 I t I with Mlc.l111el Do119l-Lee P11rc.ell • ' I f por uni y o appear on s age G'.lfagher as three other cn••ll• ......... ,, ... w11111m ro"'" ;1 s rong Jl er or man c e _ _'.'.'.'.".'.!'.'.'.:..~~_'.'.~'._,'.'.'.'.'.:'._'1::::====:::::0;=================' l"••nk·~ c~~du vo•i.r , . · b ed b during the three-y,·eck run. HM•v • .......... . c.'"'" r.,~e" nrverthcless. lie is a ell Y h' h J 1 9 F th fl!) Nlltld11t 34 8' D11til Valley Dl)'I Cf) U Hora F11111U11 COii Consumlt til) flllws Jim H•Wlllorne. l :JO (])Ntwt am H11ddJ. (J} Tnitai er ConaeqUtnctl CIJ CIS Jhon Walter Cronkite. IJ C.nfl' c. .. ,. ®I NIC Mtn Dtvid Brinkl1y. ID n.· FlJlnt Nu11 Im Stllctff fll111/MUllC4ilt m n. Dtter1 •tpert GI:)RA m• ... 7:001J CBS Ktws Walltr Cronkitf. CJ 8' NIC Ntw1 D1vid'Brlnkl1y. Cil T• Trn tllt Trvtll 0 WMt't My Unt? 11) ltkk Ya, o,llt m I LID'lt Luer CE (f) D111111I @to) Plttern tor Uvint €E l• Coza J11z1t1da 9:00 CJ ®} a;) NBC Tuesd1 J Mov l1: {C) {2ht) "Better 1 Widow" !R) (comedy) '69 -V1m1 Lisi, Petti McEnerr. British en1ineer 1ssl1ned lo build • retineiy in 1 Med1!err•n· ean town is ~•uthl betwee~ two Wirrln1 indus!riiliStS. I) Thr rusitive " m rrlonJ Squid t!!) Ch1t!t112t a!) D Ptudo 6e Solia • 9:JO I) m All I" tllt F1111ilJ (R) Alchit hits the ceitin1 when ht finds 0111 th11 Glori1 b aom1 10 have • bab1 and his son-in.law Mi~e his no me1ns of su~portillg the child. e Clndid timer• m Tre•surr @ID Musiule/P1stor'1 Dts~ al la Cnu d1 M1riu Cr11c11 GI:) Ftstival Medcana y,• JC opens " y . ur er "'' (Mv•r .. ... 11.r1 0dn•"1, tv.·o other n1ugs drawn from lhturr11~rO• .... ltt &llhtein information !nay be Obfainecf c; .... Flo•~ncr Ftrr.rn the pages of a Dflmon llunyon b d Al,fttlor •O•li~rrv 11ov . ",',','",',',',,',' stor y_ \Villiam Brown as the Y calling the irector at 546-l<ntri •n•r<I . 9214 or 547-9421. beefy "enforcer'' and Charles ------------1 thel:ltcr sta~e JUSt as others of Yoder as a sort of shadow their ilk are returning to the figure whose di n1 i nu l iv e Bt·oadY.•av scene. But some <1f stature lends fine CTJntrast. these oldies find the lighL of Miriam "Kaiser is a swi vel- the l9i0s a bit harsh, and hipped picture of perpetual rnust be rendered palatable motion as the obligatory for today's audience by a litLle brainless blond e tagalong with directorial gi1nmickry. the proverbial heart of gold . \\1h1ch brings us to ''Thrl'e She is a pure delight lo watch. '.\1 cn on a llor~." an a mu.sing Also highly imprcs.sh·e is the piece or Thirties rroth made performance of George Tasker tln"nricht hilarious bv direr-as the gr an i I e -he,,... e cl tor Hon Alt>rrtscn and an ex-bartender. an excellent choice l'l'llcnl ca~I at the Long Beach for the role. t'or11r1111n1tv Playhouse. The On the home !ront. Dixie r111helhsh1lient or th is rather Rae Patty plays the ro!e of the pal11!1 period pie<:e enriches it "abandoned" wife with all the "1th !he fl:ivor of a brand ne1v melodramatic pathos al her play and ls the prirnary reason ~1mmand, wh ile Leo Kenn~cl)' for its su('{"rss. is a double-take riol as th~ Se1rgio Melnldles & Brasil '66 Fri. thru Mon. Mtv 28 thru 31 @ID Chrld the Uvl a1 Word (El An11tU01 Nttrot IO:OO IJ (1) 1 5,t,JA< I Juitit• In Amei-Albertsen has instilled in his bcleaguerccl brother in law 1e1 _Part 11 "T~e Crimt ot Court pl avers an aH1nity for the seeking his share of the ar· 2 Showi Each Nit• 8:00 p.m, & Midnite GI:) SI Nt Fuer11 Tu tl) Movie G11111 l :JO 0 Cl) IMrlJ Hihbllll• (R} Grin~~ C011IUll1 t Pi)'Chi1trlst in hopes oi · ~eepin1 M11k T1mpleton from !Um· Int Into 1 rt1I rrot. 0 l10.I m J111i1 (R) "1011\ Mtlb1 ... Julia •nd D1. Cht111y. 1ulltr lrom 1rouchinus cruwd b1 overwork. Conae,tion."' A look •t Ameuca'1 sigh! J:ag. the ovl•rt geslure, lion. Art Daniels as the irale courts, jails and system of j115ti~e the l.i(lt10le take 11nd the pral· employer becomes a hit much focusing on the cau5es b!hind the fall. This en1phasis on physical at times, but his fail11rc 1n ovulo•ded court calendars, come<iy. combined wit h a vary his level o.f perforinance Q Chrnnel 5 Pkw1 brl'ltkneck pace "'hich OC· is. ;if!~r all, a s!ap!e of hi s 0 (3) (i) ffi Mucus Welby, M.D. ieasionalJy prO\'CS loo hot for l'har;l('!er. (R) ··A11 the Golden Dandelions Are the casl to handle. results in a .. Tllfl'<' ~fen on a Horse" i.~ Gone ... A hlher wilh mononucleout production which Is constantly a ral.'e back In the Thirties at i~n1ue1 Dr. Welby's •dvice to shy I" mobile -it nu1y not always lhe speed of the Seventies, a AOOllll 51 ~ 1na vp. Am1rit1'1 G11.a111t VacttlOft &lljl. For Reservations call! ZEnllh 9-9924 . , Kings Castle Lake Tahoe/Nevada (7021831-111 1 bed IOf 1 month. be moving forward. bu! mov· hilarious piece o4 hokum 0 Vl11illi• G1•h•111 Show Guests ,,,. BaJler W••• Ntw1 · ·d f "·tt than whi'ch niakes for an en. B11b1ra Nichols, Steve rorrtsl rnd -1ng SI ey,•ays IS ar '-"" er Mil Schulman. ID Nein '1Jlnam/fhhman. sland1ng .still, tertauting evening for either 0 (J)@ CiD Tllt MIMI Squtd (RJ ffi M•ntup Al Hamel hosts. At the core of lhe p!ay's side of the theatrical genera- "A Double liN Daniu." Ju~e 11. ED 1s•tC1Al 1 lla:T Auctltn (C) fragile 11lol is ils central 11011 gap. It continues for fi ve aumei lh• ldtntity of a dead under· (oont'd.J f 1 g u re, a mild-mannered more y,•eekcnds at lhe plush ctMr •aent 1o eJpos1 tht leader ol .' J:rt'eling card verse "·riter Con1rnunity Playhouse, 5021 E. 1 nartotic:a iint. 10:300 "'"": (21fihr} ''Th• Ciutl Sta~ v.·1th an uncanny gift fnr dop-Anaheim Ave., Long Beach. IJ MIWOfl S Mol'it: (C) (2111) " Ticklisli Alfllr" (romane1) '63 - S!llrley Jmies, Red BuHons, Gi1 Yount. cdr•mJ 'Sl-Jic~ H•w~1ns, Donald _ ,T:::':::~;,~:r-:"ll":n~~::-:-:n;z, -~;-~~"."'"':~~:;;:=:;;;::;;:;~::1" Sinden. "' m•rn ~·M ,,., IS A FILM OF RARE m C.den• dr Anrultlas Reader's Diges J m Truth If ConNqUtnCll Q) II T1kt1 1 Thlrl Ill) Cln~• 30 m [Jptdatulo1 7:55 m Cuestl111 d1 Stpn6o1 ED! SFCC1l\ I llCCT Avcllo11 (C) (eonl'd.) m rull GOll)CI lulineUfl!tft IE Loi lnerly dt Ptr1l'lillo 11 :00 I) (I) EEi M•wt o \10J m News @ De1\ll Y1lle1 D•)'I 0 (lJ m flews 0 Mo't'le: "Most D1n1110111 M111 Alive" !dr1m1) '61 -Ron Randel!, Otbra Paget. m FRANK SINATRA IN * "HIGHER AND HIGHER" m Mavir: "Hilfler tnd Higher" (music1I) '43 -rr1n~ S1nal!a, Bu- bar1 Hile. ffi Beil the Cl11<k l:DO O Movie; (C) "Tiit Colossus ol New Yo1~" (horror) '5& -Ross Martin, Ollo l<rugar. !Ji O O (_al 'fQJ NeWI 0 Ont Step Beytnd m "II-Night Show; "Unc11 and "Come to thr Sl1bl1." -JJ5C-:::-Vu1-tl!ntn;-!Mlr"Rom111; -Wednesday Howard Dul! 0 "M12ic ToWll• (comed)'} '47 - James S1ew1rt Jane Wyman. DAYTIME MOVIES to:oo r3'1 (t1 "TI11l Touch ot Mink" (e1:1m· tdy) '6&--0oris Oay. Cary Grant 1:00 0 "Ap1d11 Chltl" (weslun) 'SO-1:00 ffi 0'Tht lady F1om Sh1n2ll.I" (mys- Altn Curt lt, Tom Ntal '0Hest11e1"! tny) '48 -Orson Welles. R1U Ha,. (drama) '43-lui!I Rainer, Wo;h•m l"iOrth. Bt"d1~. 1 2:00 0 (C) 'ille Wrtc:k al th1 Mary m "I W•s 1 Malt War l rid1''!1 Oellt" (adventure) '59 -Guy (comedy) '49 -C.ry Grtnl, Ann Coop.!r, C~arlton Heston. Sllt1id•"· 1 3:00 @ (C) "W11of1111 Worlds~ hcl·h) l:JO O (C) "T1n11nylk1~ (adven\1111) '53-Gent Blff)'. Arin RDblnson. "A Jx.auliful, memorable .:ind s!irrin~ film! By far the Best An1erican Movie I've seen in 1971 • Rt>x Rtt>d, H ol irl11y 1\f 4gaz int ' ··Red SJ..y 111 1\fur'1ing'' is • s111r1- " ing mo1"t"I of screen roma rrli- ci1m. It u·ifl 111rel_v be ont oft he most i mporl11n t filmJ of 197 1. Exlraord i 11a ry l "'p4ct ! " Winfrfd Bltl'in!, L.A. H frafd. bantintr HALWALUS I • • RED SKY AT MDRNING • 2ND FEATUIE AT HUNTINGTON• TIU II TMf. llllflm Df Tiil .. Of -mi:~~- THE FORBIN PMJECT' I • 2ND FIA TUil AT ANAHEIM DI. SM• "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" GP 0 ,. NOW • • •••CH •lYO &f l[lllS ' • ••• <:o••• .. -• ..., ....... 11 •-f &l'-•101. HUNn OIOfOOI ..... eH AT BOTH THEATRES .,..,,_ "' ....... , CO'll• ..a\.>, ->•o l•I ............. __ ,_ .. __ .. , Plu 1. Walt Disney't. 'DAD. CAN I BORROW THE CAR?'' -.,.YI U/Utf#Ml/11#1~• ,. U4JIWt /In~ -........ ,~,... ... lll••CMllllMtTr' "'"-·-· 'Mllolllilllf'1• .. IUlim""1W. D'lllllCl"•i.tr --..... "THX 1138" IS A STARTLING GLIMPSE INTO THE 25TH CENTURY Visit the future where love is the ultimate crime . THXll38 WMr>e< 8'05 P'~ rM• I 138 l'lobe-r1 Ovo1M l'ltl Qor.1•<1 Plel'$eA(I l~IKM!~ ;...,-:.,:: ~,G~, I ACADEMY AWA RD WINNERS BIST SCREENPLAY Plus· Borbro Streisand In "ON A CLEAR DAY SE;:. 1111 Actor· GffrJI C. Scttt llST PICTUll f ll1011 Gould Oonold Sulhorlond pp "A RARE DIUGHT. THE lEYEl OF SUCCESSfUl IN- VINTION IS MAllVElOUSl Y HIGH. 'A 11•• lt•I' 1chlt•H lhe """" • .,, l"''"M~I• I""''''' '''''Mn "'''It <H•n'i'' ti !111 ,.,1t' WALTER MATTHAUi'EtA'iNi'~tAY" "A neiiJ"t:ear" L~ (,o.or by 1"10YIELA9 EXCLUSIVELY! Richard Thomm--Catherine Burn~Desi Arnar, Jr. • • Ill HAlllOJI SHOl'l'\NG Cll'fTtR • • l!'OWAAOe HARBORc;:'r:..2 H•RIOll l l'ID. AT W!l.ION IT. COSTA llllSA l'l·OS7l 2N OTOPHIT Mlct!n tl-Ca'ln ~ -vnd 8"" E~lo~d In "GET CARTlR" (R) RED SKYAT MDANING AU'< Y{'fS•l PIC TU RE l tG,.~•CO lOR • 2nd Top Attraction! ERIC 8RADEN- SUSAN CLARK "COLOSSUS, THE FORBIN PROJECT" ROCK llUl)SON ANC IE DICK!l"SON TELLY SA \' Al.AS -' stereo 103FM the sounds of the harbor ·J ~ds::z:---7 youve never heard it so good - .-' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE _J DAILY PILOT ti DAILY PILOT WANT ADS I Houtttfor'* I~ G.Rer•I UNIVERSITY PARK A gardener• dl'f'am Beauttlully land11eaped 4 Bedroom home t~ Block to duh ll pool Compac;t family room open1 onto lovely y1u'd $39 !00 109' Dnwn REALTORS SINCE 19+1 673-4400 VIEW The Blue Pi1clf1c t rom 1h111 3 bdrm &: de" home 1n EXCLUSIVE CA· t-.IEO SHORES A homl! yo11 rtally c.1., afford Corner lot Insures privacy also access to l private ~achti One al our hrs! buys Cali to He $67500 133-0700 OPEN HOUSE 1 TO 5 DAILY 3115 IDAHO PLACE COST A ~1ESA Ottp plush 1hq ('rpt.s massive dbl tirepl. borh boal & trlr 1torage, 11nd l~11hly painted SJW!,rk• hnr 3 BR home with Lrs family rm 2 1leamln1 Mthl t. cool clean htd &c tltrd. pool Sli 950 Call ;).1$-842.C (Open eve1J '9·\t!!!*e•EHI BARGAIN HUNTERS Just relellSt'd Easts1de C M Govl!mment repouession • $21 .CJO 3 BR Covet'ed p.a.- tio Carpet11 Beem cell1np. Dbl gar Lrg lot on cul-Oe- 1ac S19'J per mo paYt everythina wl!h low dn pa,y mt to IU\)'(>fl' Call 540-UJI !()pen e\rS) HlllTAG! IUl IST•n l PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEWS Great Jlldea~ay A Fiamf' Alplne Home 50 hv1ng room Unhf'llt:vable $34 ~ WON T LAST CALL NOW Walker & Lee 2CW3 Westchfl Drive 646-'nll Opton hi 9 PM Town & Country In Mesa Verde Elegan1 4 bdr 2~ bath home wJth formal dining area, vrry large mas1er 1u1te, lovely k1tchrn family area <:.1tu11ted on large lot wn n pr vacy &: country aunos• ph~"' Sl9900 Phon e 54fi..Zl1J for appo1n!n1ent to ... \-0' THE REAL \""-ESTATERS rn·f N ur.i 11 , 1 ._., .. .. • "" k • .... .; ,..,. .. . . . ~ ·' •• ~ ,. j ... ' .... ~ .......... . . . • • !! DAil V PILOT T11r1day, Ma_y 18, 1'71 Everyone Hos Something That .Som eone Elie Wanb DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad -1 he13rggestMarketplac·e on -the Orange Co-a-st..._ Di"CJI041-5S-~or-Fast Results =-~='i"'~~~~11~-1 Jlfore Real Estate on Precedh19 Pa9e " Giner al 2 Bdrm. Townhouse · 3Yi Baths Detached Maids uuarters Live the easy \\-ay ot life. No upkNp worries. Cluh. hou'lle and pool. 2 luxurious bdrms. 314 lavish baths. Built in kitchen with dining area. Lush carpet and drap. es. Detached euest facililies Y.ith ha.th. Atrium type 20' patio. Only 1 yr. old. Very small dci\\'n and take over existing loan. You can't af- ford to rent! Besch~ Hurry. cn.c) 962-5585 19131 Brookhurst Ave. HunUl\ilOn Beach 3 Bedroom • 2 Bath Eastside Costa Meso Hardwood f I o o rs, flrepl, crpls, drps, cov'd patio, dbl car gar. Lrg back yd. )Jany beaut lni1r trees & shnibs. $28,:-o:l. Terms F'HA or VA. Roy McCardl1 R1altor 1810 Ne\\'poM Blvd., C.r.-1. 548-7129 * 3 INCOMES* Best loc. ii yrs, ne1.1•! Frplc., patio. Houae + 2 rentals in rear. Xlnt rental summer & v.inter. ~~ Blk. to bay & ocean. 163.000. . Call : 67J.3663 548-0715 Eves. associated BROKERS-REALTORS 20JS W Bolbocr 671-)66) YOU'LL LOOK FORWARD TO SUMMER I G1n1ral * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * THE BLUFFS -551,500 Just listed! "E" plan condominium on green belt. 3 BR. fam rm & 2 patios. ?\1any extras include bric k fireplace '\'/mantle, upgraded cptng & drapes. Immaculate! ''Our 26th Y11r" ·WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors. 2111 S1n..Jo1ciuln Hiiis Roed N1wport C1nter 6~910 Gen1r•I COLLEGE PARK -BEAUTIES- (1). 2366 Colgate -4 BR + la.mUy nn., shag ca.rpt.1::. WI terfall in "'"eU yard. $30,500 (2.l 338 \Vestbrook -3 BR w/ pool, large corner lot. $32,500 (3.) 125 Tulane -4 BR CU!- lomized home. 2200 sq_ ft. of lu.xury Jivinr. See the very best. I N1wport •• F•irvi1w 646-8811 (•nytim1) • SELLER WILL FINANCE ONLY 10% 00\VN \VILL MOVE YOU IN. Owner "''Lil c::arry ilit! loan on t h i s J charming Tv,.o Bdrm. hide. a"·ay. Large brieht kitchen with built-ins a. n d Bkfst. Rm. Comfortable rear llvini; room "'ith dining area. Se- cluded patio. ra.ra&e. \.\'Ol'k· shop and dark room. All this on COSTA !\1'ESA'S EAST. SIDE !or only $25.000. G1n1ral "MAJESTIC MANSION" 4·BDRS. 2·STORY -$28,500 That'J. r1fhl and only 21,,; years olrl. For the folks Y.'ho like the ult1n1ate in modern decor. Lush carpeting, step down living room. Chandel· iered formal dining room. l\la.saivs fam ily room. 4 i:i· ant bedrs 21, baths. Fire- place, garden kitchen that sparkles. Lush grounds. l\l1n. to beach. Shop around I.hen look at this for $28,500 • It's incomparable. Cail (714) 962-j5&'.} rORISI [ OL \0\ '"' f.ICAt TO/l( 19131 Brookhlll'St Ave. Hunlinrton Beach WALK TO CHURCHES AND SHOPS Bright 3 BR, 2 Ba, hardwood floor home -Believe it or not you can usume a 4 ~ii% loan on this one. Nice add· ed lanat, $27,000 G1neral G.ner1I G1n1r•I-I Corona d1I Mir ====;;;;!;;;=========;,;; UTILE NIFTY clinda J!J/e DUPLEX A ~ item In town. A one bedroom and a 2 bedroom unit in an exctlll!nt locanon with Jow down paymen1. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 12 Lind• l•I• Driv1 Only $42.500 Call 673-8530 UNUl U[ t1(J~H Elegant new 5 BR 41/2 ba. home \v/for1na l din. rm., fam . rm., wet bar. Impressive en· lry court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500. 'O T HEREAL \~ ESTATERS VIEW CAMEO HIGHLANDS For Compl1te inform•tion on •II homes & lots, pie••• c•ll: . ,.,. * 32l MARIGOLD * Lovely 3 bdrm. home, 1% ba"s. Be~t buy. So. ol Hwy. Cheery lrilchen w/eating area. Lots of cupboards & storage. 4j Ft. lot w/rm. for boat er trailer. BILL GJ!UNDY, REALTOR You Y.'ant ocean view~ Poplars and brick \\'AU privacy'." Statuary line formal ga.rd!n'!' Powder room at t'nlry ~ Double f1replac:t"'! l BR. family room, oll1ce or rues! room'!' Call 67.)...6000 10 SC(' The C~Ct\ hon1t. 833 Dover Or., Suit1 3, N.B. 642""'4620 ONLY $49,500 Gen1r•I POOL TABLE ROOM Hard lo f.lnd nowadays, is enough roon1 for tha t big pool !able, but you will have it in, this enormous 15' x 28' panelled game room. The hom« is an I'.\U.1ACULATE UNl()U~ f1C>MlS 4 BR v.·nh separate dini ng tt.11 'E•'-'"·''~ 244) 'E. Co•" Hwy. Coton. Dll Mar,Cllit room & thick, deep, SHAG CARPETS! Large pool size lot on a quiet cul.de-sac s~l. ~I I N T condition. COZY CORNER $36.SOO. OUR POT OF GOLD home in EASTSIDE COSTA • COATS l\lESA. \Vell kept Three , I. Bdrms .. 1 ~¥ Bath.~. fully WALLACE I c::upeted and draped, sttp REALTORS i;aving kitchen, spacioull -546-4141- Din. area. Covered pauo. (Optn Evtninss) double garage. lruit trtts 1 ~~~"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'~~ and "''ell 1andscaped. LOW1~ DOWN F H A. N~ DOWN * 5 BEDROOMS * G.J. -FIP Only $2J,9j(), 220 E.17tH Evenings Call ~4-7003 B/B 22 YEARS Of" REAL ESTATE SERVICE IN 'THE HARBOR AREA "PICTURE PRETTY" VACANT H•rbor Vi1w Homes Beautiful residen('(' \\"ilh v.·et bat, lo\•ely carpeUnr. aeU- clean1ni:; ovens. Quick pos- session. O.vnt'r An:<ious! s:J9.500 INCLUDING THE l..AJ\'D CORBIN- MARTIN G1n1r1I FREE 500 CASH! \Ve're not joshin .. ,plu1 you get one beautiful 4 bedroom home with private master suite. :shag carpet And all freshly painted. n!A or VA financing. Sounds too a;ood· huh .•. Jt11t let us pro~·e it. We are here to do businl'ss. l46-9l21 Nichols Real Estate MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675·6"59 HARBOR Viey,• Hills -Lusk home. ~ Br, 21; ba. l car gar., ocean view. S69,j00. Pvt ply. 9AJ\f.jPl\1. ~7119, 5Pl\f·9Pl\1, 644-1080. HARBOR View Hills • Lusk home. 4 Br. 2~l ba, 3 car gar .. oct'an view. $69,500. p,,, pty. !1Ai\1-5Pl\t 83j..TI19. S P.'1:·9 P,"11. 644-1080. 130 SHORECLTIT DR. *OPEN DAJLY 1 TO 5 • Vlew. 3 Br· 3 Ba. SJ 1.l.000. Pe te Barre ti Rt a 11 y 642-5200 . Cost• M1s1 e lj)UIET REST e COOL OFFI Gor~us Deanne Home near this :summer In this lowly the ocean on beautihllly \\'ell 40 fl. p •imminc pool . Ovrn- kept corner lot. shake roof, er trans. &, ha.a purchased a adult lived.in, o~ owner n£W home \n fll nother area, .home. 3 BR. 2 Ba, so make an oflrr on this 3 $25 ,500 BR. 2 ba. l\1esa Del !\1ar BRIJ\'G YOUR homt. Just rt'duced SZ,000 CHECK BOOK lo $33.9:'JO. I D1L•ncy R1•I E st•te N1wport -=~~"=·'·=1Z7~'=' = " , COLLEGE PARK AREA F1irview Sharp 3 lg Br. home 2 Ba. 646-8811 & fam rm. i;.hq: ca.rpet. $33,000. 546-:1780; 546-5797. l•nytime) 2;,15 Vasur Pl. Sparkling clean 3 BR .• lam· REAL TORS 644-7662 OPEN HOUSE 1 TO 5 DAILY Newport il:t rm. home. Garden living 2 STORY I •t r m. ,,,/.,.,'h.1~ bnck Irplc. & \ -. , N :\ •• * Reduced SI.ODO * FHA, VA, ConvcnL, or you name it! :: BR . + fam. rm. 2 Ba . $28,700 Call: Pat Wood cathedral ce11. An especial-STEAL 308S "iUJ\01 ·COSTA i1E~A - \11ietl you live in this 1p11c-f•irview lY I•<'-& functional k1tch. v,./ This fMWlic b<Lfirain oJ only Now vacant. Immt>d. pos. iola 2 BR, 1% BA Condo. · r """ < BR ho '"8111 "'·alk.1n r.~"t'"". Unusua]]y 126.950 includH 4 huge bed· se1'51on .... , me, Scenic Properlit'~ VACANT J BP.. 2 ;,~~2300 675-572b BA. all \li fh J• .... e pool, recrealJon ~ir .,.M. ·~ f'I d "" •• 1 "·mod bltins, crpts Thruou1. Cov'd -• lie. yard -tum thf' children room.s. l.l x 20 family room, y, crpt .. a.,...., ''""'. -n.~tio. Assume F'HA. no rm, laundry rm. C.arpet1, ! Evenings Cal\ ~-3265 (•nytimi) loose . or add 11 pool, Very formal dinin;:: room, 3 bath!'!, trn conven1en~. Cov d. pa. .... al tyi SJ 600 d S2_ 900 drapes, bll·ifll, fireplace, ! $24 950 y,•cU priced a t $·11.9.)(). carpets and drapes thruout 110 and fantas11c B·B·Q. {~1 l pri~~-. john ~~i~· le private patio, enclosed gar·! f I ~~!!"'!~~~~~!!!!!!! 67 S.JOOQ PLUS over :.IOO> sq. ft No Prores!'I. ldscpd_ Low_ inter· Assoc. 636-4470 age. Priced to 1ell at S21,900 , M GORGEOUS DOLL , mi:rtake or mispnnl ACT e~r loan avail. -S32,950 '\'ilh a 1 sum able loan. 4 80, + FAMILY R • HOUSE NOW. Trad~ yours' 54.>-8~24 (Open eves) 3 BR. 1 1~ ba, ram. Assume S.19.Q674 Spacious home. Large at fuU price ot $21,950. 3 hu.1::e ~ e 5~· % FHA balance, $13.900. 4 BEDROOMS room• tllroughout. Hug• "'drooms ••ith 2 boths, im· Walker & Lee 1134 mo. lotol 124,900. 1993 family rm., natural brick maculate thni<iut. Carpets . I i;f~)i~I;:l~1·-~ftfi"'"''"il"l' I ,C,M"'•~Y':,'=P-l,~A-p_p_l _54_S._3119~1 + GUEST HOME fireplace. 4 tv.·in sized bed· and glistening }idw. :floors 7682 Edmger • ·..:.;;;,-----eves. Immaculate home on priva1e :'.m:~t~n~al::~,1~t:ra~~!; mwi1_11hdomwa~c,.hiymng ~~10";'1.16Su,lb-OO -==;=ii;..,,.,-o,\ni;--·l-C:<TI'.',4'.!1_8'.C'".:'44'.'.'.',:;,:',·..'.o:C'c'541l-'.'.:C'~':'°'... ----J=O""G~---RETIRED ~ Retiring~ Quit. itrect -near WestcllU -zi.; .. .. .. " LIMPID POOL HOW MANY secluded 2 Br, l'~ BA. Adulr in 11lndscaping, Brk. Open G 1 , __ ~~ condominium. By 0\1'ner baths. covered patio • gold ttil 9 P .\I. 54-0--1720. · · """'n at St.:i.oo per mo., BARGAIN PRICED ON THE BEACH C'arpets • Guest house de-TARBELL 2955 Harbor including taxes or NO \\'111add10 ycur daytime sun HOMES &l2-9Z>86 · d •· DOIVN lo GI buy•-o' C d" 5 minute!! from NtY.'po't e 3 BR h b I ~igne to Ill:' greiu teenager • · · ·~ and evening_ fun. asca i_n: Do,,.,, .. suppose thei'f' art in ome Y owner. n .,, 9· ,-~ .,~..,. ''MOVE-IN Fl'A '''ms•. C•ll • J"" Beach. F'anlast1c 4 bed-_., h E 1 ., 1oc rec. room . .....,, JO . ,...........,.,_ .. 11·ater faU into shimmering r.Tesa Verde under S2S.500~ g'-"-"' s apr. as ·SJ e , 1-0' THE REAL \~ESTATERS '-. n•I ., I" '" "f•r~ W k & L ., POOL and I y rooms. family roon1 \1•1th nr 'Vtstcliff Plaza. $27,j()(I. CONDITION'' a I er ee cryst.... 0 n \Ve count :\ Md thlo nicC'sl fireplace. Easy maintenana: S2i,j()(). f.lodem built -in of the 3 by far t!'I this htllt' "" .• ~. CJ,...,.. to school. ;'>48-58.iS by appl Nothing to do bu! put the k · h d h '--·• '" "~'" EAST ., 3 hd 2 b 2 _ Bl 1tchen "''JI 1s 1.1·as,,,,r, , •. _,· •. 3 B·"room• , b•lh• ,.9 9~ C 11 '4"nll s1 e, rm, a, dishes 1n the kitchen and put .... 711 liarbor \'d. at Adams d ,.,._,,.. '"'' • ..., ··>Ai. a 0-1 · · d All " ff Th I ~•: n .• 6. 0 , il 9 P\I Cahforn111 fireplace, a n formal dinin~. ...,.,.,1 lilled patios, et. g11r on ey. Cu-ST_O_M on ie co ee pot. e Pace .,..., • ..,.. J pen 1 • : ALL TER~1S or take ovl'r ·· ,~ Slab for boat & camper pkg looks like a model home ~ 'd $I 8 OO yard and IO'i-Do"'"· 59 2 CLIFFHAVEN Eastsr e 4 . lowGov'tloan.Tradeyours. 528_2,.,. S24.500. byowntr. ;,,is-7 . 4 bedrooms and den. S3900 I ~ Charming 5 Bdrm. home, de· dO\l'n " ST;X! a month. Call Per Month Wa Iker & Lee 1''or details -673-8:">l0 HALECREST. Sacrifice by itiJled for the large family &iS-71il. I PAYS ALL REPOSSESSIO~ owner, 3 bdnn. 2 ba. 1213 1hat enjoys entertaining, A This 3 bedroom home in Rrallor~ Sparklin.1:: clean homes, some Parnell St, C.M. s2:>.500. Gl lu~hly plan!ed pn\'ate pa· Costa !\lrsa hu a doublt: 7682 Edinger rlt!\l'ly painted&: carpeted,? Loan. 543•7978 · uo gives open feeling. The detachtd g11ra.1::e. '2 baths, (71~) 842-~jj or .l~Q.j\4{1 3,4 & .; bclrms. Some 11·ith • DROPPED price to $1600 5th bedrm. or recreation rm. 1 fireplace. boat or trailer ac· pools. FHA·VA conv. terms, belo1v fai r market value to L'I t1eparate & flexible. LEISURE LIVING ccss. All for S2 1,500. -~-from SZ0,000 !o $40.000. S'20,900. t"ireplact:, l br. $69,500. 546-S&lO. ~ Collins &. Watts Inc. 5,;7-i767 after 4 Pet1 Barritt R1•lty Beautiful 2 BR Eas1s1de C.!\f. I CAMEO Rtalf" Compaoy 8843 Adams Ave. 962-5.)23 l\fESA Verde by o\\'11et; 3 642·5200 \\'alk to Catholic Church. ~ bd f 1 2 b ti Do You NEED e OCEANF'RONT DUPLEX rm. m Y rm, &, Pll o. lmmar. in every 1.1•ay, nu HIGHLANDS Open d&ily, S29 ,9S O. Costa Mis• Huntington le•eh AtESA Del ?\.far 5 BR, l BA. IT'S lll MESS ro.tany extras. 8y Owner. ~" nd S ~1701 Cle•n IV• e OCEAN VIEW e 3 BR, 2 Ba,.~. drpi1. blt· lmmac. 3 BR., by owner in R & o . uiet cuJ.4t.sae, $24,900. &'12·9816 Dan• Point pool si~e yard. Brin1 tome paint, lots of elbow rre•1e ---,-LOT--B-U_Y ___ , and lul<I a j~\.\~J nett. Dillli Poml lot. 0.,; lor SlB,300. Submit. 847·12Zl duplex or home, SOOXI. $24,950 BUTLER REAL ESTATL 3 BR + 2 BA + 430 De La Estrella +DIN RM + San Cltmentc 11' X 36' POOL 492-303.4 or 492-.lGlO Plush pa.lace with all tht East Bluff xtru on lf"i irtt(Ular 101 , ---------1 1.1•/w <:rpts & drps, dshwsN·. Must Sell bltin ""'-'· okdy ld>Cpd, Submit. M7·12Zl • APPROX 1/3 ACRE Big j bedroom or 4. and d~n. 3 BR + 2 BA + POOL 1 Z" tiaThs, formal dining J UST $21,750 I room. view or Back Bay. JncJudes beaut 20' X 20' covd 1 Owner has moved and IS l eocl'd patio "''/pvt firep! I desperate to sell. GREAT &. B·B·Q. W/w crpts, drp~J' OPPORnINITY. Ne1v I o p & bl tins. Choice profess Joan available. $.52.950. ldscpd cul-de.sac kJt. f'resb~; Broker S4j..!W.)J ly painted outside, No d1'1 Fountain V1llev GI, Le dn rnA. 847-1271 I ISLAND PARADIS! CHATEAU BLANC 4 BR +BIG fem. Rm. $36,000 2 & J Br Deluxe Townhouses. Truly a showplace, 16'x24' • Carpets k drapes Ind. lam. rm .. hi beam ttilin&. • Bltn kitchen • Pvt pauos Palos Vtrde 1tone tirepl. •420 ~q ft rumpus room • Cool waterfalJ in !iv. rm. Encl 2 car garage11 e S1vim. plUll tirepJ. Fish pond I: •-a- rning pools &: tennis courts. ltrfaU in atrium. Lush .lnd· scpg. Big corner lot All $24,350 to $21,500 terms. 847-1221 Close To 1 rvin• I School & Shoppin9 MOTIVATED SELLER l A tinf! 4 bdr horn~ situated Looking for a motivated buy. in the south Glen !\ia.r tract. er. Owner has been tranaf. This hon"Le has a new roof. & must move soon! Perfect buill·in spnnkler syslt'm, setting for your family, w/ gre~n shag cpfs & all stain. playgrounds. pools & tennis t"d 1.1·ood kHchen cabinf'r.s. to enjoy, 4 BR., 2\~ ba,, 1•.'/ Priced to sell s:zs.:i00. 1-"or formal dinin1 rm. All !Or a ppointment call 842.Z)Jj. only $49.800. \oTHEREAL '""'-ESTAT ERS 't . . '· (ired hill REALlY $21 ,900 FULL PRICE Univ. Park Center, lrvine for this gTf!at 3 bedroom Cali Anytime 833-0820 beauty. Lots of carpers \\'ith malch1n1 drapeg. l\fodern UNIVERSITY Park, 4. bd~ built.ins are 1n this country tY.71hse. 2.~ sq ft. 21, stylf' kitchl.'n; also a dish· baths, oversized fa_m rm, 2 washer l\love.Jn condilion. story lvg rm, brick frpl. At !hill. pri~. YOU CAN'T custom lndscA~, e xcel AFf'ORD TO REJ\'T. Call cond. Good location. $40,740. us .and y,·e·u qualiry YOU. Call 833-1.337 after 3 pm. W lk & L BEAlIT new B r oad moor a er ee home io TMO• Rock "' park y,•/pools & tenn11 2'i'90 Harbor Bl\'d. at Adams court!. View. 4 br, l ba, ,>ij..()46.) Open 'til 9 P:'.lt din'g rm. By owner. $17,150. ·~·-·1.J._2'_'4~----t 2 BR. mod, convtnienl J..;t ch L•guni BllCh 1.1· f'l~ blt1n RIO, garh d1~-1 ---------·I posl, plenty of cupboard~. ) UNITS nice eaung are~. rozy liv 2 Bedroom .sepuate nome rm wl tenno. cont'ld rA "'i!h 2 uni~ to rear of prop. ht. Upgraded WI "' crplj & erty. ldtal tor owner-oceu- d_rps_ C~v"d, S<:rcentd·Jn P~· p;ulf &. 1n\'tstment. \\'aJk:ing 110. O\'s1zerl dbl gar, fenc d distance to shoppinz I &: ldscpd_ 1 blk to shopp1n;::: btach. S-19.500. ca11 • cent. Your terms. 5 BR -MESA VERDE1 crpts & drp5, 2 panos, aJley I VIEW A TAX SHELTER? FORTIN ci~7.000 642-j()()() S4~207j. acCt'~s. $23,000. 2629 Harbor, C.1\1. 2 nice rental homes on I bi: ~~-~-----MESA VERDE Hirhlands, 3 If .see this $.harp-conte.mp ----r s24,·950-3 bedrooms and den. Large lot wlroom 1or-a lhird. 2-Coll111Ll!ark BR, 2-BA. familv rlOO'm l'ln· home on Jrg. cor. lot. .Rm tor k · d BR' h l ' t6• ••7 1llage Real Esta te _.,dataa bac yard With pano an r; cac • · garages. '"P-cul.de-sac. $32,500. 557-6529. --1 ( =::J546-IJOJ t:o.1 or trl r. Owner anxious. t'ven room for a pool. OH· re.need ya rds. Clean. Good COLLEGE REAL ESTATE Subm11 ol". VA a ppr. at 4 BO. + FAMILY RM. 1 ered for the first time and incoml'. l\'ear $Choo!. s39.300 PARK COSTA l\1esa, heatt"d pool, Al RUNE PrLOT TRANS. 1190 Glr.pncyre St $42 ,150. I FULL DINING ROOM exclusivl'ly ours 111 only 3 Bl!droom &. Pool. 011ner. 3-4 BR, a.djactnt to park. F'ERREO. Beau!ilul. ney,• '4!}.1.9473 :l-19-0311 PERRON REALTY co~ &m.3928 ~j.3~&3 Spac1our; homt. Large rooms S49.~. CALL 6ij.4930 ~panish Dt'cor. Bi: 101~ F'1n-..... ~~.ooo' 1_0 ... ~~~!!-By Ch\•ner 3.000 aq. II.. tn lt"vel, 4 0 fr 6 '} m lhroughou1. Hui:e fanuly .arrin; arranged locaJly. .... ................... bdrm~. 3 baths. dining rn1. cean ont Apt. ~-·l 1 AN'.ITl.\JE SURF SOUND rm , natural brick f1l"t'place. .COUSWORTlff&C0.. 642-8235 67.S.321 0 10'1 dO\\"fl, 7.2 1ntel"l.'~I Con-2 BR's, crpts, drpll, 11to1·e. g11rden kttchen. 18 ' x 3 0 · Dr11n1ar1c 1111rl & &horeline INVESTMENT SEND YOU ? 4 1w1n 111zed heclrooms, fine REAlTORS Vl'ntlonal. $33.!lOO. :-lo rraf· refrig. Fel'ICed yard. 2110 bonus r1n, :l l'llr 1;11.ragro. vie\\s rrom An l"legant l bd· quality built-i ns. entry hall. ....wtlll!Cll ""'"'"·"11 The Jaslt'SI dra1\' In the \Veit f1C". 549-0jJ() for app 't. Orange Ave, CM. 545-16.j7 l11ri;~ pool sized fl"nced rm. unir. Lar;e living rm, MINDED? I 1'htn eonic io Nt1\'!)0rl "Paradise" in landscapiOJ;:, LookinCJ ? yard. lush iha& carpt"I. \•: frplc., ~ h11 's., spac. d!'tk. Look11nf: f'or apprc1o11atc in· Shore-~ and ser. this c~~e 3 bkr .. o)"lf'n lil 9 pm. 540,.1720 C t I t" 1 custom nrapes. A s s u ~" 2 Garag" spacr.i;. Swi mmina flo1.1·~ Thi.Ii Is Jt! Priced modern home Access to 1 You ha"• i'ust fou~ lh•I -0 ~ -~ C:.. 9 O\l·ner 897-3.137. T A · \'es ment. "Tlle o • <'11:.h bedroom All open ....,am TARBELL 2955 Harbor on9ra U a IOftS • $© ~lvl °' f} largt" VA 151an. S39,9j(). pool_ ss7.soo. r1i;ht! 6 units. rm to build pools and tl.'nl\is courts, too OWNER TRANSFERR superb~nce in a life~i':nt op.. J.' P V e TIBURON CONDO e 1105 ~~~l ~~~~~·i::una JO more. Income to covrr 1\ll !or $1!1.500. Call 616-n71 . !\lust ull quick this 4 bed-ponun1ty -a lot for IO little. The Pun.le with the Bu;/f.fn Clruci:fft 2 BR. lam nn. fml din, up-494-11 77 Anytime ~red lif'nt t'XP4:nses + ca~h. :oo, m beauty.V.'LI~ huge_ fa,,m,-110"!1>80' dream lot In IM. o • ·--.. th trd sha.1 crpt~ thni. All eltt'. EMERALD BAY LOT J 0 E ·A'N""s·MITH RL 1 Y room. resruy pa.in! · loveliest ntighborhood in «Hioiige ~ • kit, a/~nd. Like nu. Bet1ut , TR. Calif. Ranch Style with ots Newport Bclich, Build your fOUI'" atrornbled wards b.. oov pal, :z c ger w/t'lec 400 E. 171h St .. C.~1. 646·32il of trtes. "'" i1'ill guaranttt dream herr overlooking. IOON to fonn four Jimpt. words. t'!pnr. VA I F'HA terms. G.I. APPRAISAL DESPERATE! :~=d~~~.0b~~ura~mi.~~A~ whOnasl•k· bay. & L I ll A,; IH E,,L I I 847-Sj(l7/96S·ll7S1!168-4377. Ready for ~~i~ clo~ing t'-Out cf to""·n O\.\'Tl«!"f mus1 sell I lenns 1nrlut1rd 111 the Pr!ce a er ee _ _ h ·3 B ' B th lhls 2 story prestlft hon\(' ln Wa Iker & Lee Fint'l<! & 11rgesl view lot 1127 EmeraJd Bay Bill Grundy, Rltr. Ill Do\tr Dr . N'p1 Beach 6"2 .. 620 crow, I.A rii<, a c, prtsti,, ilN!.i. < BR, 2 B•. 21:'}13 \\'t'~tchlf Dr1,·e. bliaest backyarii in \Oll'n. vacAnt & ~·1utuli:;. Pr1ci:d 21'!!0 1!.i11"or Blvd at Arlan1s 6-Jli-iill OJM!n ·111 9 PM" C Y R A S 1 f'Xtra large knctitn '' tht I I I \\'ill A.l!O sell FHA, I to it'll Jt SJl .000 .)4.'i-9~~1 Open ··01 9 P~t • * • * * * l j' j j j i Y.'atker .r.. Lee Inc-.. Realtors COLLINS & WAT1:S or s::i.100 CALL Ve-ry ln-ter-est·ing . . . . . . &92..44SS 962.jJll C\"f'. 962·&..~9 ----~===-.,=c t ~IARl~f:Rs SOiOOL-HAR-Pl"l<:I" uime ~w shar c11 r-I I * MESA VERDE * BOR HIGHI.A:'-IDS. Tmmac. ~1ln~ Call your p.1.inttr. T U S J E c Sint.e Women '"---....__.. 2 DELUXE '4°PLEXES lo\"'l?ly immac. honit. Be~ut. 3 BR. fll"n. l,, ba homto. Ea•tslde Io r 11. I ~. PrtTtY j I' I j J: ~" _.., ,- Spu, 3 BR 41 2 Ba tn c~lce :rounds. Cov. pauo. 3 BR . O"ner 'Jlfnl IOtN-dough cul-de·sac. 4 Bedroom home, • Ing those big: puria, rnore N.B. ana. 0wn(lr lo\"lnts I &. farn . rm. 2 Baths SJ;:;,!OJ. mod'z111;: tht' kltch w/all 2-bAths, buill·ir'l!I. AJI could ':~:;~::==:...,end more horMs ere being quick lilllt. Pri«d below Gtor9e Willl1mson !lain!('~S ~!tt'I R&.O, O\\', be beautiful. Vacanr. \\'eary rl T 0 y H A B I built without -. .r~19 1nk't. NE'\V SQ';~ loan. 7t'~ REALTOR 8-B-Q &-~ink, 1Jrlded a dtn 01.1'nt'r, 1 I' 1 1 A Complttw the diuri!e qvot-.:.1 HUIT)', thttt: lo\"Oll't list. 6iJ..4:UO IM5-lj64 E\'H. .tnd ('(l f'l\e Up \loith .a \"try Arnold & Freud I v by fflllng In the mllllng "WCll'"d $72,.SOO. EACH CdM DUPLEX r()n\fortable homf', but no . . . - - -. Ytitt dimlCf' hm ll•P No. 3 klow. PE "RON REALTY co ll"ln .. rr l•l"ft enourh for his 388 E. 17th SI .• C.'.\l. P\ • 2 LOTS :>rnw1ns l11111ly. '.\luat be REALTORS 646-7713 e J>ll~~s~lf~!;o!SllnfRS IN I' r la j4 I" r I 542-1771 ANYTt?.fE On Poppy. 564,950 1old, A~k!n" S34 .9!i0 Call -W 1111 3 B-.J • • _ • J . -. H SM ·-. 11tc .vroom ome ow R11ltor1 ~Ir H1rr11. !'Oum COAST S4".900. ~"" 642-20<!9 A UNTSCIO GAMllET ANf ~Y1l ilnEIS I I j I I J J rum tint Whlll Ele:pnanll. into caab thnl • Oaib-Pilot I otm ..... ...Une •d!t "Armc:h.a1r Hou11f'hunf1111'" REALTY. 545-4424 V ""'" _ _ _ _ . . _ ~ £. CQllf! llwy., CdM A i;;.'OOli wAnl ad Is a iood Sell the cld stuff 67l·7225 icv«tm•Ol Buy,,,. "'w •Ml SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 ' • ~=:=~=~~=~-IOCEAN viell', 3 BR, J BA. CLOSE TO THE OCEAN bluns. din rm. tile root, 2. . ' l'Ar ia.rag,._ $49.500. Easy Picture )'()Ur t11mily In 1h11 lf'rms, Owner 494_2339_ lrg, gTaciou.~ tam rm w/flr ,..,,, ;-;---;-------1 to ceilina t1rep\. 3 BR, 2 Ba Lido lal1 1..,fRcm11n rub. ~P din rm., ________ _ beaut lr1 f'nd patio. 3.c 1 '"·· "°"' "" • ""''"'· Lawson ld5Crd . Likt ne"·· 5tt to 11p. pl'f'~l•te. O:intemporary ~ bdrm .• 3 COLLINS & WATTS h•ths + l""· 111>1talr1 ta!YI· 962-.\\23 Eve 9&2-638~ Uy rect'f'a.t ion rm ln xlnl S22,700 C'Onrl .ts· Lo1. S90.COI FULL PJ't!C£ howon~ lOl'JJeOD j& l Br~. 2 Ba. LoeRted nr PeOIC.O. 1chool1 k -hOppin.1::. Hurry. 1416 Via Llrio 1r34.:ia \\111lk11r k Let. Inc. Realtt"IN Tht '"Ytllcw Pa.pf ' ol 8!1:?.,4.\\ el1!~1fitd ••. &U-JG73 Tur:sd.,y, MQ' llS. 1971 DAIL 'i •ILOT J3 l l~I -fir-1~1 1 :-1 ---"'--]~~ I "'"_ ..... lrtl , _,_ .. _ lrtl ~I ... _" __ , ...... _Jftl -.. -• I Condomlnlum1 · :• lJdo ltle Si n Clement• Out of""Sti1te ProP. 171 Hou111 Furnished SOO HoUMS Unfurn. ~5 Unfurn. 220 Aph. ,um. 3'I Ae.!,t Unfurn. -365 Apt:"' Unfurn. 1·11--'l-,."-l iiiiiiiiiiiif.:=::;::G{)iii;:'.:i;;;;:jji'.=;:(.n.acru ui-Entiat, \ CNOOAMJ Mai: lo.ni:::;,.:;,.:,;=:::--:===~ j Cost• Mew a.Ibo.a '"'ln.aula Co.&t&..Mtll t::oectllt>nt location, n ea. r Orchard & pasture li.nd. 2 --lfi;;;;;;pT.~;:;;;n;;r.J;iiiiiiiii;lii;iiii!iii II· " 'I I. L' I • vd ! pil ,,1· All ., ler' ho "' 3 "' W/ "'' .. , for II or nr ·~ ba; ... t. line bd- rm, k. ing ch A. l. t"" 1 lnt .... of Vacant Jot 32itl8 2 BR. 1 be : 30x81 4 BR. 4 ba: 90x88 SM,SOO ctnltr nf town, close 10 houst'1, beaut rivtr vleow. NICE house 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk 2 STORY • 2 tarse BR. 1'4 * $1$ UP * [2 Bdrm. trpl, baJcaey. 31S r.. $47,500 f'lletythLnt. Sell or trade for hOuse or from bch. $350 on yr'1 lea~. Ba. All blt·l.n!. Cpts, ctrpa. GIANT 1 l 2 BEDROO:\f! Bay. Winter rat~•. $175 HEW NEW NEW Lido Realty 3l77 Via Udo Sl42,500 BUTLER REAL ESTATE duplex. Musi 1tlJ. ~7231 RENTAL FINDERS ~~drn or pet&. Rettln& frplc.-Prlvatt patio. lAl'se Gor:it0..u.1. puk-liU atttln&;. !olonthly. Yurb', $22:5. Jn.- Inc. 430 De La Estrella or fi.45..2$89 Fr•• T• Landlords 1 ~"'°'""""'-----~ iw lm mlns pool, recrtalion Closed 1an.1n for nt&X· quire at apt C. 613-l.m or CORDOVA 613.7300 San Clem~te 'R~.-.-1'-'-=e~.~,.-,-.-----2 BDR..\IS, J\, ba.thl. Jrpl, rm, laundry rm, encloted lmum aecurlty, Quiet •trffl.1l;i"3-;..7771'°''7:=:;--:"7-.,.. VILLA ll!!!!!!!!!!!!llJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! II ~91.J034 or 492..:;&IO Exch an11e 6-45.0111 carpets. drapes, Pa 11 o ' pra1f!, llllldrf'n O\'~ 13. Adults, no per1. 20 20 $115 YEARLY • 2 br., trn • • .,.......,,...._ .. ,,..,•.,,.....,---4JJ W.1t"-C..,. M ... i:araae. YParly. 408 Acacia. Et1£t1ide C.1\r. 5'19-0674, Ji'ullerlon Ave (Hllirbor to mac JU' bay 1tore1 oc-ean QUIET-SATE Mesa cl•I Mar W11tmln1ter l ~~~~;;:=:.~..:.~1.534-3340~~~~~-~ .. ~·~ ~--'-----"'--1 &y then So. until 2· blkl ' ' ' · TRADE $28.SM Ch t1 It e I , Anh. • ·~T ~ves. Laguna Hilla So • I N ·-Bl d "~" 419~ E. 'St,y, adlta. 615.f112 40 Unit Atlult mort;age for dwn. pa.Y. on SllO.U1ll pd. Nice Baeh, w/ RUSTIC 16.,· 0 e~.,....~ v • n "' aft S • weektl\da c I Outstanding Loc•tion 4 BRS. • 21h 8A. ~'!..-------lr:;;;;:;;;::-;;:;fii;:;----1 Ap•rtm•nt •mp ex bch. hou11e nr bt'h prop. pool. Full cook'i· E·sld~. 3 BDRi\t, 2 b•. 1-1. 1300 mo. NE\Y dbc. sne:I 1ty 3 BR. 2 ...; c ,_, M e I • l 1D•Ms 4 br, 2 ha, lg:e kitch!.n/dln'c Mklng $23,000 for th!i beau-preft 1·1-ed. Pay5 $3j(J mo & Blu• Ba.aeon * 645-0111 6.10-Xl62 or 213 ·~lTU. BA. crpt.s, drpa, bltna. pool. Unbelievably Beeutlful ;liioirioniiioi .. iiiiii•i•i. iiiii I GAS •• WAT',R~PAID arta, trplc, brlek pa tio, t)', &lAO ha.1 bit. in11 •al· 1872 $600 mo. f'ully Children OK. 2 c el\C p r. VALD'lSEREGardenApta. Mo. to Mo. F"rom sr•• t~f!~. corntr house 11•/51de tacht.d aaraa:e. Call us now. 1 11 a r a n 1 e d p~·1• ply. • \\'A.LI< lo beach • l Br. Co1t1 Mtll grd A tnsb plrup tn<: S263. Adullll • no pels. 1'1o>A'tn "" yard !or boat or trailer. 2 Walker Ir Lee, lnc, Realtors T0-91413 t'lle , child I pet Ok. $13a. Bkr. 831-0006. verrwhe Stre j; :!323 Elden Ave, CM mLnUtt's to major shop'1 '~~~~892M~~35~~~~ FOR u.te or tf'toe: 2 BR ALA RrntA.!s • 645-3900 "' BR, 2 BA. G11rag .. , Jtl\C'l!d ~\'aterfa\1~~5· pool::: Rm, ~--.,, 1Near Back M.Yl eenter, tl"ef!Wl,)'tl, schools, Coron• dtl Mer yd, Nr\\'IY painted. Cpl&, Townhou .. Unfurn. 315 Sauna, <;.: .. I• 1.2 Bdrm, Fum • see ritr. Ted Woocthtad 50 ,oicrr P 1 r k. S3l.~. hou11f' Hollywood H 11 l • ---'-'---'"----! <11·p11, relJ·1g. electric rana•. ..,. ,.111. __ -I ~ S27.~. '\'ant unit' Laguna. COZY 2 Br cotlq:e, nr No pf'ti. $23:> mo. Watt'r pd. Coste Mt11 Untum. from $135. SE!: IT: _ .. £ 546-3086. f irlwiat • ~Pr-'~""~'~pa_l_ .. _<_M-~;~669--~ beach, beam ceilin&. trplc, Sf'curlty d•p tl'q. 649 Ros•. 2000 Parwons, Mi..8670 ON TEN' ACRES • 4 BEDRMS -$29.950 • ~-----~-~;;; Reel E•t•t .. Wenttd 114 pri11 plllio. $280. 675--4!H3. Cl\I DAily l0Ai\f.1?i\t. 3 BOfL\t townhouse, 2,.•,.m'· * SUS CASnAS 1 Ir 2 8Jt. l'Unl. A tJntum. FAIRWAY FHA, VA & conv terms. 2 BR I -1 I cpt.11, dfP5, blt-iN, . Firtplacu I prlv. patk>s. CompJ rf'deccrated, ~w Huntington Beech . 10use. Ava1 . !\ ay lllth pool~. Avail 6/1. $ 2 2 S LI"( roetly furn Ba.chek>r ~ Pools Tt Mlt Contnt'I Bkftt. VILLA APTS. ·-t • l• I•--" )' . Acreage for sel• 150 * CASH BUYER * Priv. yard. SlS:,/mo. Call 546-JTIO 1 Br Furnished mode.:1 ~r • '"'""" .( BR, lam rm, 3 ba, tri-lt>11el. befol"f' 6 111 ~10. ah 6 ----------· 900 Sta ~ CdM &'4-26ll Owner Bob La"' s.;7 aiot GOVT , "'D "/ 11, -1 Duplex•• Unlum. •50 open daily. New rental Hies ,..,. __ ._... ' ,.,A•• u ) ' • ' -...,.,, ..., ac. ri,. Don't list you r homt, Nr beach. July l!t.Jan 15th, pm, ~~7963. • 2110 Newport Blvd, O.l l•,..;.IU wur nr -..-.t owy days; 5;1"-8580 f'V,s. I Land Packa&e. 11~ Ar-S325. 962·74<14. BEAUTIF"UL fl.1e1111. 2 & 3 BR's 4 Br, 2 ba. m11ny custom r ow head Ave, S 11 n Sa\'e ~~:e:' ~~·eia~ionpy, Lagune Beach br home : Den, V~~.~ Costa Mese BA YCLIFF. MOTEL * COltOLIDO APTS * -Private paUo pool • lndlv. fratures $31.~ Assume Btrnard!no, Ca. immed. firnt offer. Broker d1n'g/rm, pool. S -4 00. 2 BR, 1 BA, compl . rtdf'<:. • LO\Y 'VEEKLY RATES * 2 Br. stud ios I: th'fff ltvf'ls, laundry fac:• 514 l"HA. PrLn. 0 n I Y • Condominiums • CASH BUYER * Ei\1ERALD Bay home avail 962-2326. Crpt~. drps, ref'ri1, stove. Kit chen, TV's, maid servict. SlSS I up. O.h\\'hr. frpl, dbl Near Orance Co, Airport Ir: ~6-.5027 for 1•1• 160 ~i-oa7l "-!l40-5336 for yrly renta.t. 3 br. 2 ba, . E-slde nr CJthollc church. Heated Pool, carport. LA R G E Pool. UCL Adults only. Mesa Verd• llf'P!I to beach. \\'!11 consider LRG ~ BR house in court, Oldf'r cpl, no pets. $150. &16-326S 673·3318 20I2l SAnta Ana Ave . VACANT \\'ANTED to Lfa.w: 3 Bdrn1 ~ummer r f' n ta l By patio, far, rompl. privacy. A .,2 •. 96 ti.far. 1'<tr1. Joachim, Apt 3·A 4 J...G E br, 2 ba, fam rm, lo11ely drps & Bigelow shaa crpl thruou1. Sl1 tc rntry. Xlnt cond. 2 patio~. beaut landscaptd f'asy-cllrf' yard. a1any lge trers. Quiet cul· df'-sac sl:reet. Price reliluccd 2 BR. 2 Ba \\'ilh charming boust> w/pool. No <"hildren. ~wnrr. 4!H-0737 txl it. !,,140/mo. 642-3495 or 557-88-gt.'" -v.i HOLIDAY PLAZA SG L. 1ty. 2 Br., newly cpld , 54"215 mezzanine mstr. bedrm, • 6lJ.-7lW. "' NE\V l Br, brick ras frpl. OELtr.hE Spacloua 1 BR drpd &. paln~d. S1ove A rf'f. bltin bunk bed s in 3rd down· I ~~~~~~~~~~ _N_•_w_po;....r_t_B_•_•_c_h ____ 1 J\IESA VERDE horn" wi th 3 beami, patio, v.'/\\', blln.,. 1 lurn apt $1Jj, Healed pool. Incl. l·Slk. to belch No Parlt-LUce Surrounding BR I I •• d adult, no p2t1. Yrly. $136. Ampl• .. rking. Adul!•, • 00 JM!!ll. Sllll ~to., l1e. QUIET -UELUXE ii1airs btdrm. Clean. Beau-11 • l * WE NEED * , rli: rnrn1 y ' ne11r 0 H 187 E 21 S °''. RE 644 1270 '·2 & 3 BR APTS h I 12~ C II pen ouse • , It t. ,.1,, ,~, Pomona, Ci\I., ... ncy . . -• tiluJ crpts &. drPs rhruour. financial SUMMER S<.' 00 8· JU per mo. a 642-8520 ~ Also Furn. Bachtlor Try S1500 do\\•n on "Special RENTAL A&ent : 5,)6..4 141. SPECIAL -Lo Rate1 trorn ron lf'&se tlf'luxe new s.U Prv patios * Hid P&ol1 l"lnancing." 3 en-FR. Near OCC. Cpts, * PRIVATE patio • encl s:z.; "'k. Kit av11il. m aid eler 2 Br.. 1 Sa. Nr s11Qp'1 *Adul ts only • OY.•ner transfen-ed. S37,000. 1701 Oahu Pl. 557-46.'.;4 SUPER SHARP Bu1in11s LISTINGS drp~. cov patlo, ,.1~ Bl·RO gar, 2 8i·cpl]drp11, Sl60 A itrv, TV Ir ph. Sf'a Lark Unob1tniclf'd \'Lew of bay It BURR WHITE 116l/mo Ph. 613-"9o Mottl, 2301 Npl Blvd ., CM . "''"· Adi~ ooly. ""' ,., Martinique A....,, 1600 sq. It. l2l5. 635-6750 mo on least 673-6992 ,.. •• e EARLY A.\IERICA.N e lmmac 3 BR, 2 ba .Ir f11.rn rm. Stained panell1ni:: .l 1\ .. llpaper. 2 lae us~ brick trp!c·s. Onr, S31,900 . M0-2801 Opportunity 200 "Villa Paci!ic" 2 BR , l~i Ba. 1------..,..--:-- lull mirrottd living rm v.·a!I. Working Capital lihag crpti. Seit buy in area ., s2:l.9;;o and terms 100 Loan Required Realtor . 675-4630 Eest Bluff 2 BR, encl patio, yl.rd , 1•r. 646-7<445 . lm San1a Ana Avt .. C.\f 290l Ne\\porl Bh·d. N.B. prelf'r couple, S t4:i/mo. e fURN JNCL U t l\-$220 1 BR O\•t>rlooki"8; Back i\lcr.Afltll3 ~ • EA3T BLUFr 548-8835 Wkdy1 aft 6 pm, DELL'XE .bacM!or A: :. br a.II,)'. t'rplc .. 2 P~1 patio$, HOLIOAY PLAZA FOR sale or les.se; Cmplty l..firge imrna.culate h 0 J i e Apu. $3.l v.·eekly Ir up. i\lo. \'1ew from l1v rm & br rm. RED FACED BROKER P rove Us Right & You're Tht Winner \\'e 1ald move our. thoroughly clean & comp!rt~y paint • so done\ It'1 vacant, clean Ser it fast, this t\'On'I l11s1: !. Lerwin Realty, Inc. 546-5411 •nytime Zl;,62 Brookhun;I. Hunl. BC'h. Oupltxe1/Unit1 sale ATTRA CT I VE S3t 500 Home +- below cos1. By 6f6-S7j(l 162 dup]f'X, rf'ntal, 011.•ner. k wa1tln1rt. it'.11 big & priced l ·rn=A-R~,~1~,N~-c~o-,-,-1,-x-.-E-./-,-id-., 1·1i::ht • 4 BR .. 3 Ba . & huge CM l30 ~ Xl P . 1 • ·"""· nt cond. \Veil l111ing rm. rem1um loca-earf'd for. By 0 v.• n f' r . tlon, $·16.000. 64.)...184!1 U14 Visit De.I Oro 1~ewpoz1 Brach 6'14-1133 DO YOU HAVE 5 m1mbers in your ramily? '! If liO, \\'e can sell YQU t':i~ gi'tat 4 bedroom homt> on the "NE\V f'.il.A. Program" Jor ju~t $100.00 &s do\\'n pay- mPnt. This ho1n,. is N!ady to occupy. Ca1·pet,;. Urapes. 2 lu.,;urious baths. Full price i, $23.900. Call u~ now • "e'll show you the house and e.xplain the program. Walker & Lee Rtaltor11 2791'1 Harbor Blvd. ti.I Adam1 ~.l-9491 0J)t'n 'Iii 9 Pl'.t Income Property "' * PENDING f'OJ'lECLOSURE Ha11e your cake alld t'al !1 roo: Li11f' "'here you wurk. Nice 3 BR hse. I: 800 ft. stortgf' + HOO sq. fl. bldg. All on 85' x 13.\' M-1 lot, All this for SJj,000. Call R11y Gault. Herita&r Realtors. 5-IO-JJjl .( Plex, Cosla. ltil'sa. Z br. 2 ba, forced air heat, 1200 Ml rt, patio, frpl, Ji:ar. S.';9.500. Income Si400. Principles only. 67>20111 aft 6 pm PRl:\fE .t-plrx. All :: br, 2 ba. Jnc S700 mo. No down 10 GI. $62,500. Nr OC:C. 5j7.fi\j] lndustrl•I Property 161 HAVE NEW OUice Build1ni \V/$100 K equity, SZ7K Net Income: WANT 4 IR $39,900 BAYCREST AREA. 0"11ner f'REE &. CLEAR going ea.~I. mu1t 81lll 4 bd· Industrial Bld'g or lot (l acl rms. family rm, dining rn1. \\'.R. DuBois: 5-l.l-7l66 2 ba1h~. 2 frp lC!, lilf' rntry. ,--:-...,---=-,..---~= 1arge dbl gar. lo1 so· wide, Lots for S•I• 170 S39.900 •••·141 , FORECLOSURE CALL (g ! 1 2~~ acre horse nnch upos-A.Wfr.d& sessed from former ae~ 7:1:ALTY . space employee now avail· Nt•t N•wp•rl P••t Offlt• able at developer1 COil e ONE e SAVE SJOOO KI ND VU HO!\tE on these fabulo1:1f1. oak 1tud- OF A ded, ranc::h 1Lze spreads. j()()() sq ft Dover Shor?.! Loc11ted in the booming Contemp. Spanish design South Coast ana nt"ar San 4 BR + maid 's, 4',~ ba Juan Capistrano. HI i h Sp11rC!ioU! gourmet. k1tch~n alxl\'f' !he imoa:, prlvalt AntiQ'Lle doo rs • ~ounllllrl road and Jocked gale &11ar. atrium. 4-car gar .. : T;~ns. anlee lhe natural beauty of $178.000 •• ;ws.. 9 th is former Spanish Grant ORONAOO home. 3 BR , surrounded by beautiful F1mil~· rin, Plush 1hall'. Clevf'land NaOOnal f orf'st. carpel throughout. Lot• ol All utilides a~ilable. $100,000 10 "!. INT. PAYABLE SEMI . ANNUALLY fur~; 4 .. br/3, 1-:i~, lam rm. 1>.ith bt'autilul &ardf'ns ____ '"'G :'\ rates. Terms /,vl.il, 998 El U~t ol pool, Call 54~12ti(J DELUXE Spaciou1 1 bdrm Inc : Elltrythin11: ft 0 m lullv encl4'Sed a.nd priva1e, Ai:i•t lments lor llt•nt =-Camim. ~51. 3 BR. 2~i BA Df!iu.,;e .!.pl. So. unturn. ,oipt. $120. Stove, rt· ", 1n~. ~lu~es _ 10 Roman tm~t llnd back. F'o u r I .. y of Hi\')', See ~l&r. JZ2.: frlr . flld J)OOI. Ample park· ub. s.oo. ~~3. btdroom~ or 3 amt den. 2 -$25 per week & up Mariuerite or ph. 513-7171'. inc. No chlldrt.n. NO pets. Hous•s Unfurn. 305 barlll. formal dining room. BACHELOR I: 1 BR. 1955 Pomona., 01. family ronm open lo kltcben A -~P~·~·~· _F_u_r_n_. ____ 360_ TV " m•ld strv. a11aU. SHARP l·Bdrm. carp .. drps, 2 srORY -2 lartl! i R, 1!\ Rf'cordrd collalrr1l &Pl'ur-Gentr1I 11.rwt enclo.~fd paio. $400 a .. 4j(j Victoria, C.ltf. prtv, patio. Grnd tlr. Ra. All blt-1n1. Cpll, drp1. ily position. Prrfer Ar ti\'t'.1 ----------·I month inC'l11dlng aardener. G•nerel 2 BR-$155 POOL S~nle Proptrtles 67>-5726 frplc. Private patio. L.artt 1'1alure Exeeu1i11e, Exp. Ln EAST BLUJ>'F Available immt'diately. Call -R-,~,-1 -.. -,-,.-. .,-1-lUm--l·IW'I-• Ad ult!!, no pera. 642-~520 2 BR. de.luxe . 'Valk to beach. s\\·Unminc pool, re<:reatlon Ad minlstralion. FlnanC'r, 1..arl[e •mznAculate h o u I'-P\'enings, "' e e k;e n d 1 . Adults. ~l .ltltera!!. m1, laundry rm, tnclostC ltlanufacturtng & ltlarket-11 Ith ~autiful garden11 • 673-6008 nr ;,i:;.s.iai. for u litlle as D•nl Point 8J.\..14n wkdaya garaae. Ei'ilside. c . ir. in(;'. Busin"si; in tcgl'ily a fully enclosed 11nd pr1valt'.I~--"-~~~---ONE MONTH 549--067~. mu~t. Modf'st salary to 11.d-Jront 11nd bark. f' 0 u r Fount1ln V1lltv SINGLE, 1'V, pool, pets ok. C t ... minisrer flnanCt"s & adv ise beoi 3 nd d 2 S25 I: up wkly. Da na !\tarlna •• e ITQlll RING BROS. Announet\ on prorrdurcs for gro"•lh rooni~ or .a.. rn, SPANISH bf'11u ty; 3 br/2 ba, complete with 3 11 Coa H Apts. Now Available of !'mall. l)rjvately owned batl~s. fornu1.l dining .room, walled 1ard1n, C&D blllns, your 1W/. Inn, 11 st W)'. MEDITERRANEAN co. Levf"1·age potential. lan11ly room open lo kitchen gar n'C f11c $260 968-2647 Purchota Option Huntington Beach VILLAGE a nd enclosed patio. i 400 a ' · · · -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I month including gardenf'r. IMM ACULATE 3 Br-2 Ba-lg Ind . Hem selection. • * Spanish El11ance 2400 Harbor Blvd. Princi ples Only' \Vritr classifiPd ad •46, Da il,11 Pllo1 , P.O. Box 1560, Costa ~IPsa, Calif. 92626 WANTED!! ~Ian lo re11ock and n1akr collecnon! from rommer- clal and indus1 rial snack and confrc11on acrounts In yoor area. Pan lime now. f ull time later . .>nrs. 1\eek- Jy ~Hort. ITQu1red, days or pvf'~. No sl'lllng, Excellent wrekly income po1l'nl1a l. Sl!)Q tnta] cai;h rrquired 10 sl<irl. for d~tails, "'rllli lo: Product"'I Oh'. #2, P.O. Box :il04, Anaheim. Calif. 928().4. lnclud" phonr nun1ber. TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES "The Broker wlrh Empathy" 1716 Orange Avt'., C.M. 645-4170: ~·0608 anytimf' \\'e need sales people I NEEDED: \VORKING PARTNER OR PVT INVESTOR, Substanl· Jal rtturn on money invest· elf, securffi w/collateral. For mort Info 1vritt P .0. Box J8l9. Sant11 Ana. B€AU1'Y Sillon, l ~t1tions. Nrwly ri.ccora1ed-low rent. S500. 1>.'ill han<llt> 523-1612 BEACH stand • f'oocl to ~o. Bff'r, plu11 re-ntals . Fa.111 6 month operation. 675·26:i0 Mone y to Loan 240 1st TD Loan 6~~ 3 TNTEREST 2nd TD Loan Terms based on equity, 642-2171 545-0611 A\•aih1b1e immediately. call bk yd, CuJ-de-s11c. Cpt'd 24 Hour Dely. La Quinta Hennn~a Com l'fesa ,. \'" n int! . w "ek e n d thru-out. S2SO. 962·5681 CUSTOM 1H Se.ta The. ~1oocl Tor 1714) !Sl-*020 613-6568 or :'>45-9451 . Huntington Beech Furniture Rental Spanlsb Country Estate 1Jv. 2 BR. FROM, s1i LARGE 3 bedroom. just , . 517 \V. 19th, C.~t 548-3481 if'IC Ir Spaclou11 Apt,, Ttt· Oultt A .. ult Living CO~IPLETELY R.EDr.C .1 pain1~. carpets & drapes, FANTA:~JC flmLly r m ' Anahe im 774-2800 raef!d pool; iunken 111 BBQ Shat Cpt e dtps e bll.n~ CLEAN & COZY FAMILY ff'nc:ed )'II.rd. family room, Hu&e :> BR hou&e. $350 .Ptt LaHabra &iWlOI Unbelievable Llvlnc • Only l!f'autl!ul Poot e All Util. Pd. UNIT!. CONV. LOCA'tION. children arid pel"'I OK. 2l0 ~.9·3 •113. ~1_.,~ A 1 CHATEAU LAP'OINTE 1 BR. Sl!IO . 2 BR UiO VJLL. ~fESA Ai-TS p/m. \Valker & Lee . "' ..... ., •.... v ll:. 1 Br unf $150-furn $175 Adul11 only.no,.-,,, 719 W. Wilton 646-12SJ LOVELY 2 Bit apt... Furn Ir l B I $175 I n $211 ~~·~,:;· lll4 J B42-4tl5 or 2n~R;~\·~·a:~~ ~~;·:::: Unfurn. Shag crpt'1, htd A~u~TIL INC~~DED 1 ,'.,".,'.,"""-'.,"°'!'!'!5!!'1·~!""'!!64!!"",,.,"~I HARBOR GREENS\ I 6 l II. 96, 7131 pool. Carpon1. Adulll, no 1~ a··~~ .. STUDIO ·-· FOR RENT A\'a l · .::i. -Specilll &nus; a 1\lvtr· * $lJO UP *-~,.... Ar"~~- llnmacula.1f' Jiin;:e "4 Bedroom Irvine pe1~i1 J>~~0~40Avi. C~I. pla!t.d candle snuffer 11 GIANT 1 k 2 BEDROOrir~ e710.ch. lp, 2. 3 BR'aW ...... SUC M.o.!1 1----------yours u )'t'U br lnt thli 1.d Gorceou1, p&.rk·llkt selling. 00 etenon ay, • homr in .~ltsa Verdf' · · · TURrt..r. Rock, 4 bdrm, him Balboli Peninsula \\'hen you visit our model!. C1osed 1arqu for mL,;· S4s.o.TIO I nlce location, clm:f' lo park. 2 bl; . Sl"!I 1 1ri Qui s~ per mo. 54&-9:121 ~~~"'"· 8;.~~;1~· II!\/~~. m~ 2 BR, furn or partly lurn. La 4 blks S. of San Dleio Fr1vy mum stCl ly. e.t street. * $170 * · N h Is R al E t1te up~tairs apl, sundt"Ck. Yrly on Beach I blk \Y en Holl Adults, no peis. 202 0 3 Br, l~I Ba , patio, hltn1, ic o e s \rPrkcnds I I 1-1\20 V to 16'211' ParUld~ Lane. Fullerton Ave (Har bor to crp"· d .... 1. A.le about our 4 Bedroom 2 balh hu.,. sf'. ~~·. ""'· \ • a... then &> until 2 blk .,. . · · Legune Be•ch Blllhoa Blvd, No. 7, 6~1070 17141 117.5441 ~. · s d iscount plan. IAO CenMr k1tcllen, f.Qme carpels anr11;;.;.::.;.;;.;,.c;.,;,;.;;.....; __ ._ ,.ve.s. l!!!1!!!!1!!!!!"'"'""""'•!!!!9 I ~,-.,.•!IOI N1\\-port Blvd.) St., CM. M2·1.340 rlt'apt>l!. Garage and al!IO • VTE\V HO!\fE • .,. l'.!nclosed yal'd. Rent at LAGUNA BEACH Rate-1 by Y..'eek en Ocean Le1une l••ch SHARlll bachelor unit, clon S19:i.fl0 pl'r mo. or option. 4 Brlrm. &: 111.m. r., t xf''c. Lovely •Bachelors, l -BR. Q u r Er i a rd e n ap t * BRAND NEW * to OCC & ucr, $130 mo. Call Brokf.r 54.:t-9491 ocean vlf'w. rlrfpl.trr., v.•/\\' l\.1aid service. Pool. Util. downrnw n. 1 BR. deC(lr&tor LA COSTA A1"TS, 1 & 2 BR. ~~~1: retr9iJt. Avail May 11 L.ndlord •• own.r. carp_, bl 0 t-ln kilch. incl ·--~•:,...6~7~54.;.:..74:.;_0~•:,...__ f rnl herl oct"an le 1 blk .... J-VnS, 13 Vale11cl1, Apt. u 11 • v w, Blln1, 11wtmmlnc ponl &: cor· N 2 I 33• "- Iv ·u 1 t•" .. , " refr1~. 1 \'. r. le.ase $350 mo. CLEAN b "·~ S to beach n•w cpts drpa o. . I no answer ............. e WI /'I! e-r .. an.., 0 yo •11ss10N REALTY IC!rlO'IVr apts. t1p1 . • ' 1£1. AU Ul/i pd, $150 to $170 FREE of charge. , • Many " • 494-0lll • 10 be11ch. SIOO &. up. 315 E. P1 alnt. 1~tu~ ,!~l~~·,,'d'f'l!.r mo. Aduha no pets. UN f'URN 2 BR, $1&5, l>ra· drslrabte tl'nanls on our· 1----------Ballm Blvd, 673-9945 f'lllf.. ....,., mo. ,.,......... ay J.~ A d · Ci\t 64 3 matlc 2-sty. Uv. nn. w/trpl., 11·a.iting list. L•gune N lgu•I Corona d•I Mar .t!H-3839 e\·r.a lr \lokends · voca 0• ' · · 2-97o 0 11erJookinf tropical Jndscpd Al.A Rentals e 64;;..3900 NE lV 4 B 2 Ba d' VF.RY QUIET b11ch .. lor ap1.: SPAC 2 Br apts lrom Sl.fO. S\\'1[11ming pool &: pa Uo. 145 • r, • in area BACHELOR nr "-pl"g l blk to bf'ach & to11.n S7 ~;. 1.IUh SI. 612-4603. N~WPORT \Vest. Clean 3 Jam rm. Jrpl, C'pt-, drp~. -' • lnop " • ' ' ;> Hid pool. Play yd. Crpt~. ~~--------1 BR., Bl!ns. 2 CAr &ar. S2~ sprlnklr.n, fl'nCfld ya rd. 1m-$12.\ mo inrl utilities, Sln1le mo. Ur1l pd . .t94-4029 Cl11ya, drpi;, bl!n~. p1 !lo. Newly 2 Br w/ car newly palntld l\lo. on yearly 1ea1e maC'. $310 . .tOC..4244 -'="~1~Y·~-=..:::=·:,...____ 4~.l!39 f!.Ve It. wkend de«iraterl. Kids ok. fncd yd . \\'tr pd. 636-41M Cay\\'OOd ~ally 5-t&-1290 3 BR. 2 BA, crplll, drp~. pav. Coste Mtll R60:'-.1 & bath w/p\1 in-1998 fl.1aple No. 1 IW2-6J.14 2224 P!i1cenlla Ave-B $130 F amil ,..0 .v lranr.f', Close lt1 bf'ach, bu1 BEAUTIFUL 2 Br, ]lk Ba 219-t Placentia Av•-B. Sl20 ! BDRM.. Y nn., t->" rd stora&f' ~p!IN! for trailer * SUNNY * & h · North d • Z17S Placentia Ave-D 1130 Ilk• yard. Calta Mtu. Kids or boat. 3 yn; old, Xlnt 11 ori i · e n · Studio, nllll.' crpts & paint. OK, brk., $200 a roootb, NO rond. sm . .t!l.H~44 * ACRES * 494-7079. Drp11. bllru:. carport. $160 DL.'i: upper 3 Br 2 .Ba nu FEE. 541)..1720. Newport Beich * Mottl·Apts. * Newport leech mo. No pt:ta-1 r.hild ok. 991 shg crpt, drp1, 0 bllns, 'sw SHARP 3 BR. l BA, bl!ns, _....;;..._______ Stud!., A: l Btdroom1 El Camino. 5'16-0451 n10. Nr OCC. ~7-6151. d M,';, LO\V RATE~ OCEAN VIEW. 5PAcious 1 Br. Aplll. c ..... ts, $170 2 B 2 Ba Studio DW. crpts, rpl .,....., mo . EX ~:CU TI VF. hom r S2.l \\'eek-SlOO i\fll . •N YRLY .,. ' • r., ' C1ll Ray Gaul1 540-11 51 overlookinit country club. ;, FU" • • t1rp~. dsh\\rr, all bltns, 1 crpts, drps, patio, car. 215 Daily R.at111 Avail. child ok $150 All 01le. 54&..1301. $16&3 Br, 2 Ba, Iii\', rtfrg, bdrm, 3'1 baths with e ColorTV, Alr-Cond 2BR 2BA bar lypik\tUP· ' per mo, 1 -~-,-==:--:-;;--;:-::r--- C'pt/drp. patio. Chldm ok. ~panish rntry. Nf'ar school• T 1ta.i.:.. Lri rec rm, patitl urll lnr.l'd. 643-0984. 307 *beiu,,;t J.2.3 BftO Blue Beacon* 645-0111 & ~hoppini. $335 per mo .• • SoPooJ,dPoot •bit 1rnflr. S300 mo ~1·3~34 Avotado, cr.r. Apt 9 All bltN. Ctpl1, drp1. Gar. n•)·,S40-8!80 ,evt1, una . SllALl t dl NS C t PI 73;6 N -•1 d 2 BR t 1 ~1 N · • I u o, rear corrar•· r •. oas au. e RARE! 2 Br, fncd yd , encl 5'19-0161. Ideal homt. iwpo,, 0 \' • urn ap 11· ruv •1tJ Np! Hll 11rea. Sep. yard. No 545--2321. gar, kids & petl. $130. $CS.975.'i chlldrtn or pe111. 24051i1 pt'I! Sllll mo Wl!~r pct ~==~~.c..-'--_..,.-~ ALA RentaJs e &l:l-l900 2 Br. parth1l~v !um hou~•. NEW OWNElt·under lfll'l St. N.l!. 54&-46&« 6~~5892/6.fZ-.'llOt • 3 BDRi\f, 2 ha.th, nr 1hoppln1 Up:<!a1ri;. $110 mn. Water NEW l\.lANAGEMENT <:f!.n ter & schools. Lr& fe nced i L\5-0ean 2 Br w/bltns k paui. r ouril" only. Call afttr 1 --'.::..-'-'-~-c.::::...;_ WESTCLIIT Drive • 2 Br. NEW 2 br. 1 ba, S.12·0643 aft ya.rd, S250 per mo. 545--77SI pntio. Avail Now! 4::10, 673-2.1~ I BR \\'/ltv I. ref. acl ult on-Newly dtcor. Bltn ap-6 pm wkdy~. \\'ill show SHARP 2 l\R $l40 Blue 8e1con * 645-0111 Lf.ASJ.: Qr Sale, fncd View ly. SIOO/mo. Alll'O I 8r lurn, pllance1. Pool. • 64U274 11.·knd of 5/22 & S/29, No llO pf't1 $110/mo. 914--B W. e WI NfER RENTALS e chilr!l'l!n, ., pol~. Hld Pool. Adultg, no pell. 3 BUR.\1. + family rm., full 3CrP·lrj! "' Bdrm home, 17th SL 548-69!14. 149 E. 8&y St. or 6'12·9320 dinina; rm., bullt-lns., brk. hor.o:P.c & rin~11 nk. 642-4<424. ABBREoYnl RNEOAWLTloYr Se~~·,' .• ~"" * REGENCY * STUNNING I 2 b _ $300 a month. NO FEE, N'..!::wp>::,":,;~::•::I·!!:.!:'':!;;::::;~ ./ 1 BDRM fUrn apr. $1.a "" . ......, ** ge r NeWJKtrt, M():.1120. ,.;, --If'' mtt.-No-~tll'. A~ ~n~ 2--SR tum aptJ Pntit-No 2 Br,_11!!,,.._g:p_!g/drPJ., self &1r.(IM1 apJ, J_wU)cs~ o!hf'r rxtra~. Tm m" d PRICED FROM S.q,950 posse.~!ion. $32.500. 831-9.)()Q LO\Y DOWN.EASY TERMS Serving H11rbor are1 21 yn, or..l»-2llOS-_ Circumitanee~ ioR:'e the-Im-. Sattle~tg~glt Co. 336 E. 11th SJTcet 6Y O\VNER -Ne"·por1 mediate disJ>OSJaon of tbeat 1 ._._.,.._._.,...., .. ,... 8f'11ch Home -1' i yn old. few choit~ parcels \Vho~e Larp;e 2 story 3 BR . li.m., former ownen LOSS Is your formal riinin11: room. cpts. GAIN~! Call or write for rlrp~. Near Fa,:hion Island &. cumpletit details ind color b e11 c h . t mm e di a l& on-slle photOll. Buy dll'l!cl Pos:uo~sion -$3000 dn pym."t. {rom the (kveloptr: ll:ta-Nil"fl 1 Br. s1ove. refrlg. BEAUT. mrwl. townhou~•. 3 !;trrr•, Co~I• !\t t 1 a . C'h lldrf'n o~ ptl8. · 240~'Ai· 1~th c.le1tn gas ov_en, encl car.' J>a-Sl55, • * &15-MlO BR 2 64~48 St, NB. 646-4664 lioa. 541·360a, 377 W. Wiiton 'E~-.~B~l -ff~-----1 "pis, drr-&. garaat>. ., '~ BA. trplr . p11 1ift. I"::...~=·--~~~-DE:LU5CE 1 BA.. 000 sq. ft., ·-·-'--"------ 1 Blu. •·econ * ,., '111 Pool. 2 Car aar. All _b ltns, ./AVA IL now · l & 2 BR tum. 1 BR dfn 2 ba dt'luxe --~ d " I"" •1o d 1 ' "~ h R 'r .0 bll111, crp", drp•, ~tn"<, carp, rape~ ..... w. ..,..., " . Pool, rec "11· 1d location. 1 r.x nr uo:ac r ~ req "" · lit & 2nd Trust Opds I• COZY Coltagf' • 2 Br, kids Ill 52J-.4710 or 64.>-5342 No children or P'l!. 64&-3124 •','1,.. 1210 ' 6'" ·.,..,.., · gar, bale, ltke new . • 'I . ·" 1120 u •· . mo. ,.....,.,,,,~ ...,... •JOJ. FREE ,\f'PRAJSA~ pels. n 011e Ln tvuay. . l'\!f!~/\\'knds. =...-. M I -.'_A:'l~A:_!!R~l!'I~·~~::_· ·~~~lu;;i;;;;;tt;-pA.i;----*• XTRA larre 1i111le, Apt. Unfurn, 3',Sl·*-'"B~EA""-',=~=.L-1-.-2-B-R. Cost• esa nvestment ~ en as :J.;>;JW University Park 5115/mo. 988 Million Drivf' v , .... .., Ol\·ne.r \Viii carry. Pym 11 Cash Fast! $41..7711 enytim• 3 BR-2 RA. frp\c, bltns. CI D, or ph. M6-8ll9 General Contemporary Garden ApL~. I"'""'"'"""""'"""""'""""' gar. yd. Kidl!/pell!. $1IO. 1;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; FUltN AAbiELOR OR l BR.. a•:-:;~;::~~=;: IJ··~i'~~""'~ ·~·~:.· ~~~~1·~~1 ·~~.·~·,~ .. ~3~"'°:1 · 1 \\'HO Nttds i\1oney' S Bl Beacon* "'0111 w, h''' UNf'-"ISH .. "' ~ ..........,, .,.. .,._ J.11 ue _.,. ,, vru~ eou Nicely decm'attt!I JU.S.l 140. YENDOME availablr on all lype1 of 1'1JRNISHED rtntali ln 2 'Br t!leluxe 'townhouAe. Pvt less 1han 1Tnt. 644--;,()45 RANCHO CAPISTRANO HARBOR VIEW H0i\1E, 5 2172 DuPont Drlve, Rm I Br. 3 ba , 3-car gar.. Newpol't Beach. Cal. 92654 Spacious fam rm, \\'el bar, -~~=833=-3273=~~=-I NEWPORT BEACH Vlllt Gr•n•tle Apts, Foo.r bedrooms wltb baJcon. let above A: "wlow. Graclola Uvtni Ir quiet •uftntnlilna for t&mlly with llhl!mn. Neu Corona del Mar Htah School. Fireplace, wet bar I built.Jn kitchen appll&nn s, 135 AMIGOS WAY 6"-2991 2 lrplo", Formol dio"g cm, CHOICE_ LOT Rt-al E11tate-paid for or not. • WALK 10 Bf!a<:h • 1 Br. Univet'!llty Park If Turtle _ _:_P=oo~l.:..::A=d="1=U~-~"=~~'~'=1:.1 _ ,atio, encl far, small Pf'l 9 10 9 pn1, dsily, TRUST cpl, drps, bltn~. child ok . Rock .tr would can~lder ft a * UlG redec 1 Br, centrally Ir-ifMACULATE APTll ok. $1&5. Avail approx. 6/1. DEED CENTER, Inc. Okr, S110. lvll hol I loc. Pool, carport, AdltA. no ADULT and 3009 Qlolidge. 541)..12-47 1323 N. 8roAdWay, S.A. ALA RP.nl11.l.o: e 645-3900 pr ere to p YOl.l '° ve pets. $135. 5llO W. Hmllton. FA~11LY Section N""' S )•our hou1!111 needA. ,.,. k .c.n 1 r. lrplc. beams, * Applf' Vallt'y R·I !2,995 ~H381 CORONA DEL !>.IAR·Z Br \1•/ &f&...4UIO or M~7w. Cl .. e to 1h1ppl"f, Par patio, wlw, bltns. l adult. S.'il ,900 * • 544.2121 ~ BR. 2 ba llomf' on I ~i lt11~ BUYS on Lido Ja:lanrl. Sunde<:k, mom to bu!hl. $62,{XXI. 673-718:i HARBOR HIGHLANDS 4 br, 3 b11. 5'·' f HA $39.9:l0 01\<nPr M&-n1 Newport Heights JBR&DEN • Cosra. ~ft"18. 4·units Sl!.950 _M_o_r_l_g_a_g_e_I _____ frpl, 1111 bHns. S200: QUl._"T 1111rae studlo1 $115. * S~clou1 3 BR's, 2 bi Yearly, S.136. Avl May 1. * Capiatr•no Ben R·T, I Trust O;td1 260 Blue Beecon * 645~0111 1 Br. Sl25. Adlls. no pet1. • Swim pool, put/p'ten 641-3520 view St0.000 9 wE Lik" Kid~' 2 Or:-aJi 21;,s El1lt"n, i\tgr Apt 6, CM. * f'rpl, Jndlv/11\dry fac'li l;2;';;8~RFu~ot'.-a~p~t.--=,~d-fi:r-.-,"'n * Nr.wJl(lrl Bch R-l. NO ONE can top our prlrr,. 2 R, 2 b k JM5 An h I A •· \'~ew Sl t 9.-,0 ('A~I! in 21 hr.,., ff'lr ;·nur tiltn~. C'f)l/drp~. $1 1'1 B a. sun t n llv rm, · a • m ve. ulil pd, 1tv Incl. Pool. Gar. I ALA Rentals e 61;;.:1900 f1'J'llC'. blllcony, Sl!W/mo 1256 COSTA M.ESJ: 642-2124 Alills, 1tO ,.ll. $165. M"" PERRON REAL TY CO. Trui11 IWrdi;. TRUST n•:Eo k s ~'M "" "'l •· 6-12-lnt ANYTii\1E CENTEH. lnr 13:l'.\ :-J $\JIJ.Newp(lr'! 11~1.J-'Nny hM" "SlNCE l'46" BA tr I.,'-' · .....,..4,,) 0. No. 9, 383 W. WilllOa, CM. 8f'06d\\·11y, SA. ~.1-8381 \\'/M'p yard. i\11'1. 11.·nml\n. lat \\'e~ttrn Banlc Bide $126-1 br, ullllfll>1 incl. No Just for Sl"t11• A411ults QUIET 2 Br, l~' &h•, crp!'rl. jCHOICE lot. 100 )I lP R-2 anytlmt'. Blue Bticon * '45.olll Univtrsity Park per~. Hi62 Newport Blvd, SOUTH BAY CLUI !orc-d air, bulll-in~ priv. f ~~~sttralls~:· CM ~oM! ~~ iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii • SPAC 2 Br, ht fool yd. Do1y1 13~101 Nights C.i\f, 642-1194. APARTMENTS palkl. 2&49 Ora.nae Ave., AJ'!l ~ear Chll Dr. Custom hOm~ lith St. shOppin; area ...--------,IJ 11!} cpls, drpt., kid• 1 Pf'll. S150 11d:~ •r:,.c1o;:1s~ .. ~. •d1~~ New,.rt Beech £, C!.1. MS-~ 6 Id 3 bd A: $22000 673-9.509 HMatfw"-IC ALA •-,_, e ~· -B 21 ... •'Kii 'l"' u. 880 Irvine Ave. 2 BR s!udio,l ~t Bath, erpl~. only yrg-o . rm1 • n.o:n .... • ~'1_, 4 R. \ .,.1n, • ..... ..,..., 1-1 Ch---~. ~·• ..... ft Nine aM"' t9thJ d hlld bl ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ ~ "'""0 ....-....w '"" rp1. 1ara1e, C' ttn/pel den. 2 tull baths, kil ins. R2 LOT zoned for 1 to 10 2 blka Beach\ 2 Br, 11n1\s. 4 BR. with family ft)ofn 2 BR. fund1Md wl bib\!!, _....:1.:.7:.14::1_64;.::S-O.l...::.::SO:... __ I ok. East1idf'. $110/mo. Avl Dbt 1ar. on alley. A rood units, $lx306'. Nr country tot P"t ok. Sl60 YrlyJ Turtle Rocle .......... S375 S155/mo. ~ Ortnae Avi . ol~!k.l~L-----IF':i""'ii;;;;J.~&15-'i;L!=;:;ltl;;•:;':=:'i:':i:P:7.M~ buy at Ut.!00. club, C.M. Realtor, (113) HtUMI Furnished 300 Blw Bt•con * .1..otS-Olll 3 BR. 2 batN .......... U25 CM .. ac ay .,. 4 BR 2 BA 314-1413 collect ------------~=""--3 BR. 2 Nth.I; fundshed !-""'---------clrp1, bl ""'"SIDE 2 Sr, bllns, dshW&'hr, ' • • ~ + Acre, vl rw IOI • General JSelboe Penin1ule avail. Au1. lat ••••. , .• S400 ""UICK CASH •~I. ~~651~' lAI , ~~~: !~:.~s..i~ prlv N I. I I Corona dtl 1'1ar i eel h 11 .,,. • Ph. 673-38911 * f'\\'PQrl f' fhtt lrTll O e &73-20lOe I OCEANFRONT-ju~! bullt 3 e U:: 2 Br, l~t Ba sludio ar,1. Co.it Me1a ... bdrm5, 2 I Sll>AHl'AC'.. 1 Bt. tompl ' &f].·fa.nt11;1ie btly • ocean . . r I THROUGH A Balboa ftnlnsule No pets, families only, Pr v. h~ths. on nlct 1111ulf'1 •O'f!el. Do1no1 Point duplex l1t1: {Ln11 \\ partn. lllen.1 1·pl. view, l Br, 2 8a, f-11 m rm, ftPlANO Mf'w DELUXE 3 Br, pa tio. 726 JGAJln St. Sl40 Larcr R.-2101 \\'/allty. Anx· S7,9Th lo 112.9MI 1Blut811con * 645-0111 natlo, sundeck, dsh w hr, nEALTY DAILY PILOT 2 S. a.[tt•. 1600 block E . LGE 2 Br, 2 Ba srudto. nf'W lou1fororf•r.••kint$1!1.000.I 13J..l090 (Bltr) 9aunc;p._;;-:~·.,.,.r ~):ll'l\ bhn,t, drpA, ...,-Pts. AdUll •, Unlll. Park Ct nttr lrvlne B!Uboa Blvd: cloJJ1 looet:lll Allt.,C, .bltnA. Children ok. , CALL 0 •••·l 414 1 Mt•• Verde Feirw1y I lot., child & 1;m11l pt!. Sil~. 1ml ptl. SOOO/roo. I.it. Cill Anyllm• 8.\'i.oA20 WANT AD or bay, 1 yr lean. Incl $1~/mo. 64>1496 11.rr 5 · AadM-. k>1. Onr. lll·1301:64743M Al .• A A.tnlal• e 641>3900 613-5034 Dl\Y, dJ11•· fJ'l>I It. crpL * J I A. M'tia Vtrde. c1tll, 7fuYTV · rut l'l!1ult1 "'"' ju$t a phoDe ROUSE ltunnng1 Walch tht "11~<>1-,,."""H~-,.,~.,,..n-r?,...,W~•~l<~b~.,,.,.. DAJLY PILOT ror action! 642·5678 6#-4161 days, 673-0:lSJ ev11 t11111. rttrlf. t vl. locked rar, ~-f1 r ~;•por i r•~• ot11,, call &1>.·ay · &f2-~i8 OPEN llOVSE col11n1n. OPl':N HOUSE column. Call &l2-."i1118 II &v•! fnr af'pl . $1M>-Sl.5.5. No pita. ~7-4400 I ' Colci\\•ell, Banker • Co. Mana,tn1 Aaent SU-5221 e NEW Dl!LUXE e" 3 BR, 2 8A Apt for leue. Jnel 1pac. m,oister 1ulte, din rll'I & dbl garqe, auro dGOr Optn1tr avail. Pool & Ree. atta. . ~. 165 Amlp1 'Vay, t.'B ~lanared by 'VlLUAl\I WALTERS CO. e TOWNHOUSE Cd~ 2 Br, 2\i: Ba. bltnl, lrp1c. patio, enc 1ar. QW.f:L ~503.! -2 BR IO\\'f\hoUse nr ecu". Crpts, drps, "'a1htrl~r. Stove. nlrtg:. 962-2172. 2 BEDROO)i, near ahop'1. Ne\\•ly deCNated. Sl20 l\1•. Realonomlcr Cerp. 6tM700 2 l!IR, erpt1;. drpi, bltlnt. 2 rhlldren OK. SW Ptl me. Tradewln.:ts rub'. "41·13lI We'll help you 1ell! 6U ' • , %.f DAILY PILOT Tutsday, M;ay 18, 1971 J[Ill Apt. Unfum. 365 1 Apts., !---------Furn. or Unfum. Huntlnvton kKh Apts., ..,. 371 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 EAST 17th ST., C.M . Shop & offi~. 22o Pow•r $ll0 Month 6iM100 Broker INDUSTRIAL Uni t or office or studio! S50. \V. 16th St. N.B. 646--1724 or r.12--7691. When You Want it done right ... Job W1ntH, F •m•I• 702 EXCELI.E1'<.'T BookUepifi&: background. .'\R & AP. Payror.. t}'pTh;:, Ct n. omee. i\1alurr., pre s ently employed. Prefer C'o(, NB att1t. :i4~2-US all 6 Seascape Apts LOVELY nl"W 1·2·3 BR. 1 blk from ocean. Crpta. dl"P$, pauo. dsh"'l\r, sundtdf. trpJ. 2!li l:ith St, !147-J9'Jr *PRIVACY* Reill cute 2 BR. w/gal' .. pa- tio, Redec .. carp, drapes. etc. Sn1all child OK. Call 0'A'OCr ~ ./ CHEZ ORO API'S 8234 Atl11nra. 1-2-3 Bdrms. Pool. Prl1·ate gar a i:: e. '\'shr/dryer. 536-0336, 536-'!727 Nr Huntington Harbour Triple~ -quiet area. l.ri i Br • Sl.W. 3 BR .. S2-KI. Pel! ok. (114) 8.J6-.0071. S1nt1 An• Santa Ana "'D«Jdy .. ,.. "U.W Md •• ,,. .. ll'f Monvny Ny•, "Th1t'1why .. 1w 11. Joi r.hlfdrtff .-! IMlr ,,.,.,,,.. ,_ '165::.. ----~ __. . ...,_, -........ _ -·---,...,_,.._.,....__ , ..._ . "-*' ' ,,,_ .._ R•ntelJ Wanted 460 l.IATURE v.·oma11 uraenlly desires l Br apt or atu<ilo compl. & nicely !um. for June, Little Isl. Wi~h lo re- locate & buy homf! w/rental. \Vrlte t.t, Betz. 702 f,scalona. Ca pitola, CA 95010. Ph. (4081 475--702-l ~-'·_·_·_ ... _._._ ..... __ JI (gJ Found (free eds) sso Call one of the experts listed below!! LADY '''llnts housecleanina. Exrwr. 011·n transportation. Call 8-17-3637 aftet• 6 pm. AIDE. companion, hskpr, Found In CdM Frlt!ndly red-clcanlng of apt. or homes. dish brown JlUppy w/fleal~"'llt"'llt"'llt"'llt"'llt"'llt~~~ ~~~~~"'111"'111~~~11-3 dayR, llve out. ~t.. collar. Dr. S!ocklou 673-1050 I jGCJ [ 1~ '"fe1 mature: call aft 4, ~ l dark black do1'1e, na collar . Services andRep!lin~ l trYicas andRepW,~ I SeMces and RepWs 1~ N~i~~~~kl~ found Vic. Garfield and • &16-l82'Z e "'lagnolla 968-5870 FOUND n1ale cat, irey &IB._•_b~y;:s-;i;.tt~ingriA;.O:C.:--· I :D~r~i~v:•;w~a~y~•:.,... ____ _ •.vhite 11lrlpes Ion&: ha Ir COSTA MESA llA"'LE\''S Dri\''"'8Y Se11 r. w/col!ar. :>19--0133 PRE-SCHOOL Coa ting. t·~ f'SI. C:\I. NB FOUl\'.O -Baby parakeet. Special Summer Program & Santa·aree only 5-(S-4474. Painting & P1per han9ing LAD\' 1visht's day""Ork, good and ?1!liable. Reienn<:e$. :;I day1 Ml-8029 2 BR, clean & attract., crpts. drps, blln!, air cond, nr. schools, shop'g & park. Kid!. ok. No pet.s. ~1548 -...own b&f ~cetTPI A 5"*",..,. ~ 1t;:1fM.., r-o,.,.... OLD UNfl.JRN APT/HSE 1 or 2 Bedrm., Expect to rompletely rep a i n l &: redecorate. 3 Blks or nearer beach, Nf'v.rpo1·t or O:irona. )'l'ly., $175 +. Bob Jacob- son, 833-8770. 3 or 4 BR house by Jllne 151h. l yr lease, Prefer Newport Hts area, Call col- lect. 213: SU--2391 front yard, Santa Ana Ave. 18th & )lonrovia, * day + Elect rical 6~2-1172 fttli day scssion.s. Planned S l't1 A L L black puppy program, hot lunches. Age& LIC'D Electrici11.11, maint. serv. Also, resid. lndu5trial. 642-4474 . BARNE'IT pai11ting : S(JC'c1al AIDES For eonvalescence, j offf'r. stucro eave11.~ labor, elderly ea.re or family eare, malertal. i;ingle SlS.l, l\\'O Homemakers 547-6681 1 story, S185, )'OU !rim and J b · · sa\·e, licensed 846--0934 or 0 s WentH, M & F 70C I Laguna B•ach \\'/"·hite markings on 17th 2-6, hrs 6:30 Al'tt-0 P.\1. near Harbor. 646-3798 $1!1 v.·k-COi\lPARE! &t2-W50 l.IALE Husky in Garden or 838-5237. I ·F~u-,n-l~t-u-re _____ _ Grove 534;-1339 VACATION fl1other -v.·ill Lost 555 take care of )'OW' children in Furniture Stripping 968-3236 MATURE couple to manage PROF. painting. Exte!' 1 11.pt. bldg, 16 unil~ or less. story, low u S225 w/id Lite main!. for apl. >is: paint. Avg rm $18. Airless area. 6.t5-57l8. * LOVELY GARDEN APTS QUIET 2 BR, 2 BA and 1 BR, ocean \"ie"'" I block to beach & toll'n. Year lease. \\·inler rates year-round. :\Tature adult.s. 494-4079 day, 494-3839 e1•e & \\'kend t-"\'l~f::'l4~~--/' 4 "lr ._..OlloooT........., e' FA~1ILY OF 6 -+-pet desires 4--5 Bdnn. 2~J--3 bath house in Newport Harbor High Sehl Distric1. MS-2155 Misc. R•ntals your home v.·hile you vaca-Special kitchen cab. doors $50 Rt:\\' ARO for small lion. Reliable, f! x e e 11 e 11 l stripped .$3 ea. Avg chairs black k& v.·hlte hairy female r<'(ll. Ov.·n ca1·. .5-18-8989. $.l ea. Gluing. &12-3443. dog. Has tags. 673--7992 or 5:18-4987 after 6 P~f Gard•ning sprayi~ accous. ceil ~nis, 2 H•lp Wanted M & F 710 coats SI.>. Roy, 847-1358. ' PAINTING, professional. All ADVERTISING ART I ST/ v.· o r k g u a r n . c 0 J 0 r Production ~Ianager for hot s peciali i;t. 96 :l-til43, r\'ev.1>0rt Beach agency. ;J47--J44J. l\1ust have &"ood board ~: blk beach. 1 & 2 BR. Pool. Adul1s. LcaSf', 2173 S. Coast Hwy. 494--0209. l BR. ne"'•ly decorated duplex So. Laguna. Mature adultK only. 499-2580 N1wport S.ach MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS Announces the availability ol 2 & 3 BR units for aduitJ desiring to live amidst beau. ty by the sea !n the pres- t1,iou1 WestcliU area oJ Ne~-porl Beach. FROM $230 For information phone r.1r. Robert fo.f. Buckley, ?.Ian.ag- er. at (7J4) &l:i-0252 or write (7'MJU1 ...... Apt a., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Costa Mesa * • • * El Puerto M•sa Apta * * * * 1 Bedroom Apts. fl.30 & up Incl. utilities. Also fun-Pool & Recreation area. Quiet Environment. OU stnet parkin&;. No Otll- dren, no pets. Also Garage& For Rent 1959-1961 i\Iaple A\'e. Costa Mesa - to The Office ol lhe Man- ager, t.Iarlner Square Apta, • ATIRACTIVE studio; 2 1244 Irvine Ave, NB. Cal. br/l~J ba, c r pt Id rps , 92664. bltlns, $15.5 un furn. 60-5297. j!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!! IHuntington Beach -EASTBLUFF - J-Bdnn. unI., upstairs \\'ith frplc. carpeted &. draped, bltns." &: refrig. $18,;. , c '75-4050 0 -1 MWMDT r.t.,lll PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms, and Tov.11hou!('5. Spa, pools, tt'nnis. From $175. Across from rashion Island at Jam· boree & San Joaquin Hills Roads. cn41 &U-1!00. A N•w Way To Liv• In Newport B•ach OAKWQOD GARDEN APARTMENTS On 16th Street btwn Irvine and Dovet" Dr. (7141 642-81711 SEACLIFF ~fanor Apts. 2 Br, cpts, drps, bltru;, pool, priv patio, studio type, 112 Ba.. Infant ok. 548-2682 ]52j Placentia. Alk about out discount. LOVELY BAYFRONT 2 Br. From $365. Fur n/Unf. NEWPORT TOWERS * &12-nn * * TOWNHOUSE * J BR. '2 Ba. 3-Carpon .• $175 REAL TOR f>.18-6966 \VESTCWFF Drive • 2 BR. Ne11.·1y decor. Blln ap.. r-iiances. Pool. • 642--6274 N•wPOrt Heights LGE deluxe 2 BR, trple. crpt5, drps. Adults. S170 2100 Haven Pl. 642--3i81. ON BEACH! NE\Y 2 BR. API'S From $230 FUmilurl! Available Carpets-drapes-dishwasher heated pool-saunu-teMis ~ room«ean Views patios-ample parkina Security guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7U OCEAN A VE .• H.B. CTI4J 5.36-1487 Ofe open 1D am-0 pm Dally \\UJ..WI WALTERS CO. Parklike Beach Living for Adults Casa Del Sol 1 & 2 BR-furn/unt Pvt pa. tio, frplc in 2 BR, elevator&, ds.hwsbrs, l11>~. drps. Pets accepted. From Sl4:i, 21661 Brookhurst St, HB. * < n .n 962-6653 * * 2 &. 3 BDR~fS. $130 UP. Pa ho, pool. Ch i ldren. l\10RA KAI APTS, 18881 !llora Kai Ln. 12 blk E. of Beach al Garlield. 71·1: 962-<99<. Lagun& Beach e 2 BR duplex-Oceanvu dt"C'k. shag cpts, Etove & re!. $210. 216 Fairview, 968-D117. 1 & 2 BR Apts. $18;)..S2l0. Ocean vie'lll'. JOO CliU Drive Apts. Ph. 49-1-59.13. Newport Beach VISTA DEL MESA Apartments 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unf. Dish- v.•asher -Stove and Refrig - 1-,-,,--------I Shag crpt'i;-Lrg Rec center. Kids Love It ! ! ! -RENT s1ar1> 11;; Santa Ana Great new l, 2 k 3 BR. Child Tustin & Mesa DriY• <'.m! ctr. Clubhouse. Card * 545-4855 * room.,.J3.BQ. 3 he.a.led pools I :.--,-~-:o---~-- t 1nore. $\6j up. Santa An1 SOUTH COAST VIL.LAS ----------1 &16-9553. No question CHILD care ages 2-5 yrs. ----'-------CLEAN. sngl gar, $ 2 0 • ai;kerl. Educational indoor, creative ,PRO!-~ESSIONAL !11 A J II\ T . Vi'estside. C.M. Easy 11.CT:ess, LOST Sal. &al p 0 in 1 outdoor play. !lfesa Verde. tree . v.·ork.. pr u n 1 n g , cement fir, elee. 642-5583 Siani~.o;e. lgc attrred male. 546--0469. i;praying, d111f!ase & wttd sklll~. Kno1v printing, pro-No \\>ast.ing * WALLPAPER * duction and i;cheduling. Xlnt opportunity. DUREL Wh'" you call "rtlac" ltentala I~ .__I --·~· I~ Vic Tustin & Bay, Costa TEENAGER desires haby11it-conlrol. Sprnkler repair. Mesa. Re11o'Rrd! 642-5107 ting in College Park area. ~~~3 up jobs. George. LOST-FeniaJe beagle puppy ~Veekends on I y, Call '"earing red collar, vic.i~""-~_78_1_7~~--~--AL'S GARDENING ADVERTISING. 2172 Du-. 543-1444 &1&1n1 , p:>nt Dr., N.B. 833--1670 1 LESCO PAINTING Res.id & Apts, Spraying ac-Ad1n Sales t"OUS; ceil.ings. Int I Exl. l Gu•st Home 415 SE.\tl-PRIVATE room in licensed guest home for cldetiy ambulatory lady. Good food, cong,!nial lit· mospher., lge yard &: patio. C.~1 . area. $2 50/mo. 616-2393 * PRIVATE ROOM for elderly lady. Bri.1:h1> .. cheery garden rurroundings. 'Nutrlt~ me a l"s. call 548-4753. THE Gallemore Guest Home has a pvt nn avl for 11.m- bula!ory iuest, &ro-2562, 642--9862 PRIV. rm, $225/mo. Comp\. lndividual ca.re. Spat'-quiet- com lor1able. 4 meals a day plan. Nurie on ca.II. 893-4497 Summ•r R•ntals 420 BAYFRONT collage RVail 6/15. June $i5/1\'k: July, Aug. Sept. $150/"·k or $500/mo. 646-7823. BAYFROf\'T-slip ava1L July & August rental, S300 v.·kly. 3 BR. 673-7571 Rentals to Shar• 430 Announc•m•nts soo Ideal Beauty Shop 64&-3621 Open 6 days a \\'ttk Evenings by Appointment ~--'-"'_'_"_''-·-~!~ Auto transportation 525 WANTED to ear pool or pay for ride to Century City, Dally. 962--0966. P•rsonals 530 LADIES YOGA! Begonia, CdM. Reward . $65 mo. Child care in my ror gardening & •ma I I 67:'>-8531 large clean home CM landscaping Sf'rvlcts, call ~5198. Serving Newport. Lic'd/lns. 645-2399. NO EXPER. OR PAINTING: Hone,t , DEGREE GRO\\'N male seat point 646--5537 Cd.'lt, Costa F-.fesa, Dover SiameSf! v.·/flea col1<1.r. 4th 1'B"u-i~ld_,...ec-,-------Shores, \Yestclill. guaranteed 1\'0rk. Lie'd. NECESSARY Island Hunli11gton Harbour.I----------nl ~6-3231, after 5:30 Business Service ONE: stop Japanese ga en- Local rel's. Call 67a-5740 aft $20,000 + 5. <\!EN i\IILITARY \VOMEN ing & minor landscaping. PAPERHANGING by pr<r LOST, bro"''" & v.·hite sn1all C 0 MPLETE Bookkttping }~rec est. 839-3917. Harbor lesslonal.~. all \\'Ori< gtd. EXCELLE:-O'T OPPOR- dog v.·/ red Ilea collar. Ans. Service All procedures l\ly \Tie10o', & Turlle Rock 1'"ree est., 00 job too ~mall. TUNITY TO JOJN AGRO\\'· to Slasher. 19&1-A ~!eyer Pl, .__ . If : 1 7"=__,-.,--~-~--I ~o ~16 • ING CO. THAT WILL', C 't R nf roume or your o i ce. AL"S Landscapi11,1;. Tree ""'7V.> •1• • ewa · ."7-'"16. 'rRAIN YOU FOR A PRO·! ,.., ,,., removaJ, Yard nmodeling. *PAPERHANGER* YORKSHIRE Terrier. Vic: C . . F'ESSIONAL BUS INES S' F.pttilull a-". Reward. arpet Service Trash hauling, lot cleanup. Supenor Craftsman. Rea,,s. CAREER. C0~1PANY \VILLI ,,,..._ -Repail' __ ~riDkle,a.._673-U66. Ra C Rebko 6:Uk.24'19. 645-1611 or 774--7443 CARPET shampooing, drv tes..-• .-, -""1\fAKE TT POSSIBLE FOR-'-.,, EX-PER. Japanese-American PROFESSIONAL · · 0 LOST lolin. bro\\•n poodle, foam. Resid, comm'I, win-pa1nUng -YOU TO DRIVE & WN gardener, eomplcte garden-· l ; I H k o fcmalP, 4 mos old. Vic. 44lh dO'>l':r; & !loon;. Free est. In er ex er. onest \\'Or . Y UR CllOICE 1N A 1971 ing service & cleanup. L. & · oog.7--9 .,,. ~'"" SL, :00.8 . 673-7574 afler 6 962~2 893-0l50 JC. Ins . ..n "' , ,,..;r........,, CAR. Diamond Carpet Cleanmi IL~A~l~V~N~o;-.,..-.,..-.-,-ro7,-,-w-oc7k-. !P~~la~s~l~•:r.=!P~a~t~ch~,~!R~e~p~a~i:c-1 ,------~ Avg size room $8 , . • Start l n1n1~1atcly ll J• j Repairing & im-tallations Light hauling. Ex P 'd · PLASTER-Pa!ch--Rm Adds. e Plush Office11 Rea~nble. Cal! ~3-9735 A ·1· 1 Free Est. 645-JJ17 ccous. ce1 1ngs, s u cc o e Full Fringe Benefl!s lnstruc:tlon DRIFOA){ CARPET CLEA.i'l · c'~1'91. ""' '588 alt >. 1 1;.jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiiiij;;;;iiiiij~j~fri;if,~c;\ru~~ii~ JAPANESF. Ga rd t' n 111 i:: refin. Free estimates . Service. Neat wurk.. Cleanup ...,..,... " ,,.._.. " YOU !lfAY EA RN Benefits start the ls! day_ Schools & in )'(!Ur home or office yd. main!. 968-2?.03 1 -.-P-A~TCH=--P-LA_sr_E_R_"'_'G-1 TIIROUG!i C0~11\IISSIONS FREE DE!llONSTRATJO~ instructions 575 Tomlin Svc * 557-9669 1c ''°L~E=A~N~U~p--'S~J>'--'d~•~I~~,-. 7h-,~ul-AU types. Frt!f! estimates &. SEP.VICE FEES AS AN \\'ed at to am. Bring a Call "'" o_, Carpenter ing odd jobs, 11e1v fence & ~ ASSOCIATE OF DAV I D friend. !\!en love Yoga. Wed °!iiiiiJiii!i!iiii!iiij•iii!i!ii1I :::;~iia;;;;:;:~;--repair. Reas. f>.l~:J.:i LOOKINGLAND FINANC-morn & Thurs nite cla~ ~ CARPENTRY Plumbing · IT'S YOUR MOVE FREE est. Comp! o• P'"'·-1 IAL INVEST:\lENT AN· :i;tan.ing "°"" Natura] Beau. 0 ' ~ V.,.,. y C fo.flN R REPAlRS. No Job ta""" maint. & ciea11up. LE\V Takas Ir. Son's Plum-ALYST. R. E. BROKER. ty & l..._.Lty. oga f!ntf!r, b 4.,-E 17 C" °'° "281 INDUSTRY CAREERS Too Small Cabinet in i;ar-L,,\1. Gardeni ng. &1 2-097.l 1ng Repair Re Pi Pf! $20.000-$30.000 YOUR FIRSI' ' · lh St. ·· · ~ "'" & o th" oabi"'~· R<mod'1 Ftt< E:,timat" YEAR. YOUR NEW PRO- Enjoy Life! ~5-8175 if no answer leave Jim~ La'A·n Cul1in;; and SIB-83-10 FESSIONAL CARE E 1t * FULLY LICENSED * AIRLINE & TRAVEL ' 0 00 ~12 H 0 Edging. Call ror Frcr IVILL LEAD YOU ~WARD m.sg. a .....,....,. · · · E · Pl &12 16Q~ Lf.:\V Takas & Son's Plumb-1v Renownt'd Hindu Spir itualist Ander:c;on. ~l'itimarP. lOrw • • ' ing Repair, RepiPe. Remo-Fl~ANCIAL SECURITY le BAOIELOR to share 3 Advice on all matters. ANY sz job. Resid., Conim'l, Cut & Ed;,:e La\\•n del. Free est. 646-83-ID TI-IE HEIGi-ITS OF PRES· bdrm; compl . furn w/ rolor Love. l\tarriage, Busine~~ e OPERATION~ AGEt-OT :\la!ntcnancc, Lic'd, Insured COLE PLUMBING TIGE. TV. frpl. On ulld. Call John Readings given 7 rlays a • TICKET SALES lndu!I., Ap!s. Reas. l'~rce est. 5-18--1808 aft 4. Fullerton 558-1000 or \\'ttk, 10 a.m. to JO p.m. e RESERVATIONS 9S2-!96l. e JAPANESE GARDBNl:."R e 21 hr. Service 675--8387 312 N. El Cam ino Real, • AIR FREIGHT-CARGO Cement, Coner•:• t.Iaintenanct, rlca.nup * 645-1161 * RESPON. young gal wishes San Clement<' e C0.\1!llUNICATIONS HS FV C~t area * 8424142 $8 HOUR to share <'harming Balboa I ~-~·92~·9~13'~. -'~'~'--00~;-'=~ e TRAVEL AGENT ~~c~;;:;f ;;,1;~ ~ :i JOHNSON"S GARDENING Plumbing/electrical repair Isl. home w/ s 11. me. SINGLE? WIDOWED? Alrlin• Schools Pacific decks -brick _ stone. Yard care. cl<'an-ups, plan· 642-27:-i;;· 642-l403 673-2383 *Divorced Over 21* 610 E. lJth, Santa Ana 6-12--0478 free est. tini;, sprinklers. 962-203J. PLUiY.iBJNG REPAffi e POSITIONS TO BE fIU.,. ED J;i.n.1EDIATELY. CALL NOW 547-6771 G I R t 435 I "!!!!!!!!!~~54~3-~6;S~96""!!!!!!!!!!!!i-~~~~~~"J!-; I~~~~::'~~~~ No ~b too small arages or •n Oldest & largest. For a self I ~ Cl"STOM CONCRE.,.E EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener • 642-3128 • Ask for Mr. Ov•rman LOCKED DBL. GARAGE-explanatory message 24 hrs BRIDGE lessons. $1.25 per PATIO-DRIVES-E"T'C. Com PI et e Ga rd en in g I ;;-,.,--------·l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j suitable for ~1nall boat, & day_ 5'11-99!11 person. fllorn & e.,,·e sessions Free est. 531-7!168. 6TJ-J:l16 Seivicc. Kamatani. 64&-4676 IR_oo_f_i_n_g _______ , ASSE!lfBLERS camper or personal p~ REDUCE safe & fasl 11•ith beginning May 19th & 26th. Child Car• Japancsf' G11 rdf'ner LEE P..oolin; Co. Roofing of Immediate Openinfs perty. 177 E. 22nd St, C<\f. GoBesf! Tablets & E-Vap The Shepherd of lhr Hills ----------F:x[J 'd. Yard \\"ork all type!. Recover. repairs, Good Pay! Ca.II Now! 6·12-l6t:; •·water p j 1111 '' Church. Laguna Nigut'l. Call YOU)'l;G Set School -Open CJ ran-up, Plant1ni;:" 6~6-0619 !her-nio roor coati ng~. ivh ite 9A~1-9Pl\I , Sat 9A~1-6PM Large 2~· x II' garage CRA\YF"ORD"S Rx Phar-<'fl 6: Johll Ell iott. 492-fi022 6:30 Al\1-7:?.0 Pi\f Ages 2-.l CO i\1 p LET F: la1~n & & t"Olor. Lie/bonded since Or11.nge Coas! Slorage only. s~ mo. macy. PIANO LESSONS pr~-school S20-I_ child, SJ0-2 gard enini:-!!Cf'\l<'C'. '47. 6tl-72?l Employment Agency rh1ld1'f'n, Special Sumn1f'r J -re n•n . 1869 Ne.,........,1·t Blvrl. CM Nr. fl,'"''PI k Fairview 64~2196 ALCOHOLICS Anonymo"'· y h C 1a d t h im ·> o-v-'V" T Guy Rool!n .. Deal 01n ct '"" our ome. rr yle eac · Progran1 for 6-12 yrars. --~~-~~~--· b • _ • 6-l"-3111 54·.3112 545-3113 Offic• Rent•I 440 Phol'I(' :>12--7217 or V.'T"ile t>rs. fllusic Sy~tems. ~Ir t"ield trip.~. S l\'i mmin~. l.A\\'N l\Taint. llaulin;:;. TlC\v ~.d._o9~ownv.'Ork.~J--7780, J a P.O. Box 1223 O:ista !llesa. Jlathcock, 6~4·0144 . beach. Arts and Crafts. h11vns. clean-up, prunin~. ,,.. ,,~ ASSEMBLER Profe~sional Bldg-Lease. Singles Dance Class PIAl\'.0 Je55ons for beg. & Ska ting. Pro If: s s i on a I J.•ret' f!SI. Call 5.~7319 Sewing/Alterations 7'20 5<l ft. -S32:i mo. Elegant a tmosphere. yng sturlent!. \'our h.J mr or Teachers. 646-37(M; General Servic•s Halilf'ss, exp. Call M~. 3j() gq . fl. -$160 mo. 534.1271 mine. Si5--7j().J . Cement, Cone•ete EUROPEAN Dressmakin:;::. Schmidt, \\'estcliff Persoimel air cond, o-pts. drps, pleh!y • Jiushand Busy~ Call ~loo5e Expertly CU!tom Fitted, Agency, 2043 Wf!stclitf Or .. of parking. Xlnt location. * QUALITY cement work, let 545-0820 aftf'r 6-Repair Accur. Reas. 673-1319 K.B. 64j-7770 .l.10 E. 17th St. C.M.: PETE * * * * * George do it. Lic'd, Bonded. Build-S<'rv Moi;t Things Alterations -642·5145 ASSISTANT '\'Anted for Ken BAR REIT RE ALT y · ;-------------------... li,6'~;..;;;lb1l5""-.c;;;;;;;;;:o--:::-::;:-;:: * LABOR UNLIMITED * Neat, accurate, 20 ~a.rs exp, Templeton's }lair stylists. 642--4353. CE~lENT \\'ORK, no job loo liANDY~tAN Tile r-.Iust bi> 1 t <'fl n :r; e d COS· DESK space avatlable $50 i1:mall, rea!;tlnable. Fr f! e \\'elrling --Carpentry 673-1922 ERAcmccii;-"";;;;:-"&11,;;m~•~''~log~is~l.~64~2..ss.;~·~1 ... .,..,.1 mo. \Viii provide furniture Trader's oarad1"se Estim. fr. Sh1nick, 5-18-8615. H I' CERA~IIC tile ne\\ & at $5 mo. Answering service. r1 au ing remodel. free PSI. Small ASSE~1BLER Trainees need- available. 17875 Beach Blvd. PATIOS. v.·a\k~. drivec · in-"NO .fob Too Small", Lit!' jobs 1o;elrome. ~l.36-2426. td immed. for good pay liu11tlngton Beach. 642-4321 s!All new la\\·ns. saiv, break, haullllj::, g11rai:;c & )'Arri · b~ Orange Coas1 Employ I• S rrn1ove. :..i8-866S for es.I. Tr•• ServJce 1iJ • • • DESK space available $50 I ne c](lan-u p, 11·indo11.·~ 11·ashed . ----------1 n1enl Agf'ncy, 1869 Ne\\'port mo. \Vill provide furniture • e CONCRETE. Floors, etc. f>lS-0172 bt,\·n 8-10 am TREES, Jiedges, Top, Trim. Blvd. Costa l\-lesa. Call al s:; mo. AnsY•erlng service I t ,·mes patios. drivf'~. 1"1ide\\·alk~.1,,·7'='="-'~'-m_. ---..,---cut. removed. hauled. Jns. &1:>-3111 1tva!lable. 305 No. EI slabs. Reas. Don 642-'1514 \'ARD, gar1n:c, cleanup~.1 ,,i•~IZ-!::r'OOt1~'~8~ig~Jo~lu>""_ ___ 01~~!'ll~'!'",:;;;:;""~~0'7.';I Camino Real.-San Contractor Removr ITres. dlrl. Ivy, GENEP..AL tree serv., yard APT Hou.st ,,1i;n.. Couple Jor Clemente. ot92-442tl I d 11 sklp!oader. hack hoe. cleanup. All Around han· 30/40 unit!. Painting & DELUXE PROP: SUITES _ 0 ars ~lY \Vay, quality _,!lome 962-J.7-lj __ dJima.n. Reas..~48 cleaning. -+-Apt salary. 17612 Bea<'h Blvd., Ji.B. 1-epair. \Valls, celling, floors [j~;;i;:;;~--'-'--·1=1~21~1~f~l~!n'S~-~~~~~:_~=-~ et(". No job too smaU. TRASH I.· Garagr. clean-up, Upholst•ry 1101 \\' . .\lacAnhur Bl\'d, 5-16-8823 Plentiful pkng, A/C, jan., !>li-OOJ6, 24 hr a ns. ~erv. 7 rlR~·s. SIO 3 Jnarl. Fett est. BAB\'SIITER. aft~rnoon&. j VILLA MARSEILLES music, ne11.· carpets I paint/ ,\nytime. 54s.;i031 .----,--..,,.-.---1 hN<. 3-:i rlay~ prr ~ "-eek. drps_ l2;i 10 ~ $!J. ft, Suit!' 1968 V'\V Bui;. auto ~1 1ck, Trade larte S30.000 lot. il't'e .Addi tion11 * Rernodelin" VINYL \\'eldin~--Culs, bums, so mf' ii·knd~. 962-4986 Westcliff QUIET, SPACIOU~Ne"· 2 br. 2 ba gardt'n apt. Plu~h gt>ld crpts. drps. bl tn~. p\·t I patio, chandelier In mas!er bath. Lots of on-sitt park'g + CO\''d gar. All sgl story. Wlllk to Coco's & \\'estclllf Plaza. Adult5. $18 a . "'--0"'· I Apts., Furn. ~r Unfurn. 370 1 Cost• Mesa BAY MEADOW APTS. BRAND NEW 8. Ph. 8,17_2j21 ne w engine, good cond. f.-clear, in \\"t'slcliff on S. Gr.nlick k Soll, L1r. • )!OVING. Garag" c-Jcan-u p tt'an;. Cus tom dyeing fall 8 TTIER , SPACIOUS 1'radeforla1rmodel El Ca-~anfiago Dr. for equity In 673--IDII * :>1~21 i0 I.: lite hauling. Rra!Orutble. rolol's l 649-2237 {n1obil(') BAYS .. ~. _n1Y home •• & DESK ~pace available $all mino: Rancho, or can1per Ne11·par1 Beitch home. F1-ee t s!in1a!r:r;, 61:>-1602. 838-3$;1' bo~. 8:~ hi .i:30 Call aft 2 2 Bdrm. Apts. mo. \Vil! provide furniture of equal valu". 8·12-8 17~ &16..s.xi:i Housecl•aning • P\f. _968--lilS. Adult Living Ill $5 mo. Ans\,·ering Sf!Nlce BEACH parking lot ?>fgr-al· F & U I La te nX>del Chrysler, con· urn. n urn. available. 222 Forest AVI!, Bay &: Beach Janitorial ~~~~~~~~~~~' tendant, Lllguna a r e a .. Di•hwa•h-. colo• -~Ina!-, ·-·na Beach. 494--9-166 Speedboat. Century w/Gray ,·err Ible, like new condition. f/time durln.... season: "' • '"""'"' ~u marine inhrrl eng, a!! 6tl'cl 21.000 milei:, still under Crpts. windows, !loon; et,c. S . 1 _, 1 . eel appliances . plush &hag NEW office. gmd Dr. Alr-Rts. &: Com1n'I. 6-1&-lfO J[Ill npe1v15e au oma\.,u ga e in Irle, ('Ove.1'. incl ski equip. \\'a1Tanly. trade for older I J II Id 1 ., ti d carpet · choice or :.! color oond., only SftO. 1652-A New· Va.I. $l.l00. Trd for l;ite ca r or 1 645_139:i DEDICATED CLEAr.VlNG Elftployment 0 5t'aso5n, e~1,.1'7L"'s."'nd schemes • 2 baths . stall po11 Blvd, CM &12-2871, ev~s \Ve do everything. Free ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim· iiliili'I person. ·tart :i 5h010o'ers • mirrored \\'an:l· S.11-5106, truck, rqual valu. 673-663.i \Vant rPntal un its N<'v.'POrl eJttim11te. Call fi73--4072 • resume-tint letter. A 11 robe dOl'lr,i . Indirect light· HAVE 2 story bldg. 2600 sq. or Costa ?>tesa. Trade <'!ear, Job Want•d, Mal• 700 replies ans11.·~d. \Viii i.,. Ing In kitchen . breakfast NEWPORT BEACH ft., C.~1. -choire corner. good Jll'Oprrty. Arcadia "-C l-IOUSE OF" CLEAN tervlew Laguna area, \Vrlte bar . huge private frnced $10S to t185 $-18,000 ('If, F'or honsr. dn-E. Pll.l!11d,.na . Equity 62'M o1nm'I & Re,o;.irl . Cleanin~ ----------1 Clruislfied ad No. 6'1, Daily patio . plush Jandscaplng • * 6ij..1601 * plex. Tile fo~ Co. Reat-A>:"t l lS·2211 Ext 33D. * 612-6824 * SCRAM-LETS Pilot. P.O. Box 1:;oo, Costa b k "--8 Q 1•0• s ~ 0 11· 1 ,,_ 6-,,_,.,-p.·,ntlng i. :'llt>sa, Cal if. 926.."G. nc °""'-· 's. large heat. """ · ~ • -ice or ~ore. .... ~ J. I.11guna Nip 1cl Goll Cour~ 1--~-------·I ed pools & lanai. Rea!IOnable. Costa t1fcsa. NE\V g1~x2-I G!r n L bo\i l. I Ot ~eluded c~nyon vu 01 Paperhanging ANSWERS Bcnuly opcr<1 tor: 1 3101 So. Bristol St. l'tlr. Pope 6~282Q You finish. J-la\'r ""\\ nn· 6 fnh'l,a)'R, I&~" k 1•lbhst', hoolh .~1>'11+ ror rent Ha~ , NOW'S THE \\'f's! 613--llS{i Beam ceillng8. pa~1lni::. prlv n; 11t\. N. ol So. C.O.ut Plaza) 11\'DIVIDUAL OrFJCES drr11<'1tlh bntsi: ha1~!1<a1·r. f rd few t."On11n. TD'~. n1ltp1': 11\1' I.· t::xte-r. Pn1ntin;:. · Lct hil l _ Scary _ Suilt _ ~B~~k-----~=" patloi!. l'f"<:n!'llKln f11c1IHles. I S1nt1 Ana Nf'"' liv!ne Jrwlust. romplex. Trade tor p11.;k-up, car or ? \n llbr ;11·eu. 011·11<'r &t>-l02J Lic"d, in:i;. F'rce l"~I . ;',o yt!i Bota n _ ATTICS ook ••JMr to $550 All 11dulla, no pets, PHONE: 557-8200 Top loc. Sll--3443 anytime 186 \V. 20th S1 6-12·-llllO. ~IA RKf-:T 8 U 1 L DI ~ G TIME FOR expc'I". Chuck. 645-0809 S!nc~ "'"Omen bfo~n carry. Nr11' posit kin, \\.'ork ."''/con-*' Bachelor apt tro1n $110 * 1 !~~~~~~~ 1 Cl XL:'\T OFFICE Space nov.· HAVE: FR~E I. rLt-:i\H· 1 . .ttrld, 6{):'(4j. l'rade valur PAL'lTJNG. Quality 11.'ork. ing rho!e big Punes mo~ Troller. Slable. J:l'O""l\I: co. * 2 BR trom $16.l * 8\;i;il. LIDO BLDG. lli1 Via LEASED CO~l:\TERCIAI. Sl j,000 for aci·t'ai;.e in So. Re a s on ab I e pr i c e 5. and more homes a~ being Plf!R~t \\Otkinr ronds. Top * 1 Br, den. wet bu'. 2 88 l~ Lillo, N.B. 673-4501 S AN Dl<\IA S. ~.t»J OIUI. 4!l'J f'r.inkfott, }18. QUICK CASH Rt>s/Comm/lndu~. 892--3206 buil t "'ilhOUI AlTICS. benefit&. Call <\llss Laura, J.B7 W. Bay St lblwn Jh1.rbor Rent1i. -~ 1 Sl\l,\LL office storage room. \\"ANI': HOUSE. DUPLEX Trnde up or Dcrn·n. 67U020 FOR clean I: neat painting, 1 need a job'. ::!~A~~il~b~ \~.:: A Newpon Blvd, 'A. ml. N. _ 10x20 + loller sho"<er. OR 7?? ]\fYERS. 673--lifJS. 21; arres v.'/beaut view on THROUGH A Interior & exterior, Call f'\'(' b«n a professional ~r SUl!e 211 SA ol 19th Sl). Easl C\1 50-IMl Baby foltt$ lrac'le or "!? Ga~n, !he stn!f>t 10 the Dick. 96&-4065 bartender for O\"er 20 yrs. · · · · CALL &f6-M73 Rooms 400 Business R1nt1I 441 $'10,0l'XJ ~ity In ;>. mohlll" Country Club. Relands, DAILY PILOT PAlNTING/papenrri::. 18 yrs Now having rai~ a good CAR hops or \\'atiresses, Al· homf' acre~ for Lot. boat Cal l!. \\'ill trade !or Ne\Oo·· In Harbor a1ea. Uc &: az. fam ~y. or 11«'t1-"itY, I've 1r 9 c t t \'e "I bub bllng A:-tAZING Adult L i v I n g stlOll'ROO'I mlo & olll•• -~ •-h ~.i fl('l"'!lona ll ty p/Tlm,. -.. 1 r u j ' • '-or ?? D)·namic ar'(';t, Rui:h· port prof1('rly, 673·Sll90. bonded. Rf'f's furn. &Cl-.WV ,,..ron1e ttnvY a! man) ' · 11"" Beaut l J: BR furn or uni RN. t1lp1n~ rm. qui .. !, lpll.Cf'. P11fk!nl(. C!o~-ln ,~ o~ 7 •• w ·NT AD l h!Of.:~-I'm not ::1 lr11irl ol 7-oo Re.~t. ICMl.st H11.'Y at Aplt. S.11 clean. ovenli, rlean pnv. horn,. ~ta!,. on-1 La~nJt. $8$--$395 !If 0 . Pr. ,,~-'""or ~ •0130. 28 1c br11ut \\ooded l.11 rwl l '.' PAINTlNG/papertna. 11 yrs \\l)rk. ,,11~1 can 1 do lor l\tc,\r!l1ur l, D/W lln 2 Br) dh1pl&. shag ly $1 7.50 v.·k. E\'f>li/wknd~ -19-1-i"·-~. Wlmt do you have 10 trnde! O\'f'rlook1ni: l-'l kf': Norfolk, In ffarbor attl. Lie k "iiii•---..-..-..-...-.. -.,..,,.., I o '6 20•• ~ 642 5678 bond-• R 1· tum 61" 'I~~ you'.' 67J.2fi06 '~ cpts, drp1, Jaeuzil I: &.1una '" -~-List II herr.--In Orll""e nr IOI. :\founta in Home, Ark """· e s · _._,_ CARPENTER & Cabine-· 00\\'llrlTO\\"N Balboa store. '"" PRO Euro-Tra1ntd "O r 1 "" baths. Huie pool. SI.PG rm for '1e11dy v.'Ork'g titt\ldln~. tl'xl!O'. Sl..0 mo. County's IMgest nad tr~d-Abo IOI.\ on llh,•11y 10\, f'or • Hou~ }luntln'!,? W.11!ch 111~· <'h"I !f'"k" dome,ilc·c~i 1);. rnunf'r~ nf:Ntt'd t !Tl m ~ d 1 Merr'lm•c Woods older n1an. no ('()Oki;: By mo 6~ in;: post.642·5678 prop, l'\8 or !! Gil.5990, OPl::i'i llOU~F .. rolum1t rnlti 63l--.~ll9 /l ) Omni:' Coit~! Employ~t 42! l\ferrimac \Vay, C.t11. only, $40. IM3 Or11 nge, Ct.I. * * * ~-=~-----.1 Aittncy, 1869 Nt<v.-port Bh.'lf: A good waot ad 1s • Rood * * The "YeUow Pazr•" of CnFIR l\lt~. Call &!'•-"Ill Call 60-&"11 Now! Buy !he n!'w 11ruif 1n\'f'~lmcnt ill•••••••••••••••••••• ~====================-!'~''~"~l~h:"'~· _!r.1~2~-"6'!_';8"-_c~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~·'..,,. J • I I • • { I . I • ff u;LY PILOT Tue,sis1y, May 18, 1'171 • ,..._..... llil [ ........... l§J I.__·_ ...... _ .... __,!~ I ........... l§J !~_-_ ... _-_!§] I ......... l§J I· .-·-I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;,1.;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I~ [ ......... . ...... Ront/Chort'r toll Mobile Homoo '15 Truclu ' "2 Autos., Imported 970 Avtos, I"-'*" PORSCHE 970 A~os, Imported 970 A~"• U'°" '90 Avtoo, UNd 990 Autos. UIOd P90 .· --------1 -EU A B L-1.:Ul £ 0 1acht ~ft' a,rency nMdt lharp -tioat~ I n11;"'to100'. !:rnle MlnnPy ~191 INSTANT-HOUSING -WHY WAJJ? Boots, S.11 The &ll oew Vllla.ie HCP.1st by l ~vlU--MOOU. SyaJ.cms CAL 28 Racer. LAllded. S 1S with sloping shake roor can rad. Dine-h>"· 9~li 0 . B . be )'OUl'S 1¥lW! AlMb: on RJrtheon spdmtr. Spin rtg. dhplay at. , , '&& DODGE CREW CAB -6 PUHll.itr. 81,i ft bed. ldtal for c&mpt>r. V80 automatic, pov.•tr a-1eerlklg, air cond., ~~~atet. Prl~ rt1h1! S9JOO. NY.·pt pitt avail. BAY HARBOR f9:1.:.m5l MOBILE HOMES 2100 Jlarbor Blvd. 24· MUST SELL 1m Bakor st .. "''" ""• •en CHEVY CARRYALL Sips 4, head. 11ink. ftllly Just S. of S.D. Fwy at"Harbor ""'- e.quiJ>P"d, AlllO, Sabot huJL 714/540-9470 A!I xln't oond. 644--0n;. -.CALL UNITED 3 Spd, 3 &!its, Ntiw P&lnt, NI~. lG\VE899) $995 PVT pty y.·ants to leue a 25' BEFORE YOU BUY 51.llboat on a monthly basis, Factory Direct • "in Park" Call &12-M26 anytime.. l'\o 5etups. ltesa.\e.11, You name clubs. please. it • "' got ii. ~ ~ CAL 2-24 : Sips 4. hf'ad &. United Mobile Homes xlllle.y. Motor, 't\'/ballery. 64~3140 6.t!-2961 2100 liarbor 81\'d. 6'15.&J66 I'~. • • ~· •179 """ __..... LANCER '69, zo· x 53', 2 ].TUSf sell '67 G~IC " FIAT aaaa '68 124 SPORT CPE. '65 PORSCHE C \Vhlle with ttd 1nlerior. Ex- cellent coodlUon. CTZP 30Sl Full price $24!15 or take trade. Call 49-J.7744, OUCSWAGEN 70 vw smAr 1806 APJ) $1799 CADILLAC ca,...1t·se1iClloft OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS · Radio, healer, m~s! newi (\\IXJ3S81 Like BLACK '6~ SC. Recent Harbour V.W. in Or•ng• County 1961 tfiru 1970'1 . ihe4 $1695 LOWEST PRICES -HIGHEST TRADES '69 124 SPYDER engine. I: lt'Al\!i. Mags, FM, !\lust &ee. 642-43'3 dy1, 187U BEACll BL. lJ..fJ-4~35 646-9115 all 6. Ask for JIUNJ:INGTON BEACH Lance. 1961 VW Squareback 1969-912. £?1rome Whls, A:n-SALE PRICED Fn1 radio. $4800. Orig. BELOW 'VHOLESALE ~CAOIUAC '"'"°""" """" 2600 llARBOR ... BL.. COSTA 1'1E$A 5'i0-9100 Open Sunday 5 §pttd, radio. heater, lamps. tZKEJ,j71 ~'~e':r. 833-3535, 644-4637 One owner trade, 30,000 mi. road \ · 4 spd trans. radio, heater, 1962 PORSCHE, rebll ena:. etc. XEV667 Sll75. Johnson '69 EL DORADO 1133-2400 .xt 456 days , It Son. 2626. Harbor Blvd., 1 OWNER 6-12--6237: 6~4--0089 eves. Costa J\Jesa, 5~56.'.JO. less Than 15,000 Miles '68. Pilrsche 9~. Super clean, '63 V\V, Ne\v rebll eni;. Still In Warranty $1995 Bill Jones' B. J. Sportscar Cent CHEVROLET FORD * """'61 Co~Runa, fTS:"""'t\"S" 9SS P"ont Wl.fO'lt, wunnt1' CheV)'-RUDS ~ new int. li'!lche.lin Hre1, new brakes, stn. st~ auto tran.11, 390 ens. $1,600. .c.c., . .,".ceoov;;.::;c., "'M"•°'li"b•:;-.,SS,.--I c,....-"-"'0089""'~~,--,,----t V-8 Auto. All extra• '67 FORD Gala.-.:'le K"tfll. Clean $9)). ~?9 2 dr, blk vtrt)'f top I. ,69 Impala 2 dr. Air. upholstery, Call belDni U or alter 8. 642""6165 Full pcv.·er S20:.0 • '"·'"'' • G.M.C. CONTINENTAL '67 G~IC van, 6 cyl, 6ira length, new pilnt, rece.nl overhaul. Jl300, 494-1763 JEEPS '68 JEEP CJ-5. V6, convl top, \\'arn hubs, radio. Good """'· $...,. 675-391). MUSTANG 14' Supt:r Slt•llite bdrm, 2 .>a. blt-lns, "'/d~ T~P.U. rng. V--6, ~E. $450 • 673-5383 Yltr '°ltel'lt'r, lwo 7 x <> , complete except alternalor. 2833 Harbor ill Adams COWMBIA 28, 1969 _ l.nad-storage sheds, country club Very gd cond. 26.000 n1i'1. Costa tilesa. Air, Of!er. 5'17~1 day!, trans, etc. I n1 mac u I a t 0 Flremist color, Full leather 673-l!l(ll eves. cood, Priced ror quick sale:. interior, AJ\tlFAI stereo, PS, '59 PORSCHE, :xlnt cond . days: ~1333, eve Ii: PB, P\V, P. seall! air cond. CONTINENTAL MKlll 17,000 ONE O\VNER MILES Striking pastel blue finish ,.,llh polar white leather in- terior It landau roof. LUx- ury equipped throughout. Full p'.1\\"er, air rood., po.,.,·er door Jocks, tilt j\eerfng \1'heel, radio, \l.'ilh stereo tape ayi;:tem etc. Afaintained Hke ne\v, Balance ol f~ctory \\'8rranty available. See Ii dri\'e today. 964AGD. John. SOI• '1c Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa li'fesa. >16-5630 '67 MUSTANG Power steerirw I brakes, a1.110 trans, air cond. Low mileae-e, e:oicorltent oond. ed. $9SOO. D a Ya: 2131 atmosphere. Adult• mobile ~. <Alita ~lesa 5~49 1 Frr;~:~~~;~~ ~:c~~:£:Tih~ :~:.~:~!~!! .. : ·§ass 4:5,000 mlle11. J\flllil Wt. 6T3-t532. Ul t Y."heel, landau' top, auto: $1.Jj(), Call ~2871 1970 V\V _ Ye.110\v v.'/sunroor, matte trunk & door locks '611 Por~che 912, AM-FJ\t Am-Fm radio, Porsche rims, I #9mJ Priced to lM!lJ. • Sl39l Mars. ntust sell, wood Steer'g \1'hl. $150 & l'SM----~· #JM_,.. __ ,.. . * S48-3309 * T.O.P. Call 54~3073, I~ I~ Harbor American • ~~6·02~ I GREENLEAF PARK. l f50 •67 _;~ord Squll'e wgn S69 mo. ThlM S.. RHODES 19 !loop, lull cov., \Vh.i:~0er1698Av... ,,.~ ,....10 '69 Cad El Dorado $179 mo. "FRIEDLANDER" SPRITE '70 VW ~ blue stereo 2100 Ha1·bor Blvd. 645-0l66 ---------1 tape, ,.,.ood 'whl, 'dash & '69 CADILLAC 1970 MARK 111 50.CXXI mi, ·s yr warranty Elegant blue, v.·hlte Bt'Gllg- ham top, h!Ue leather inter. ior. Every deluxe extra, inct stereo radio & tape deck, f\.Tichelin steel-belted tires. ror sale by ov.·ne.r. &12-8119 196Y HAROOR CO~IA ME '>A mtr., 2 se11 11.ails, xlnt cond. J'OO" ........... ~,, Sl.)9;j, 548-1007. 1 -----~~---· 1 '68Yontiac E.'<cc ".i" $19 mo. BEAUT '71 Go Iden we. s I '70 Frd GalAxy SOQ, $80 mo. LJDO 14 No. 1674 ~2j. Aquariwi, shag crpts, Full '67 Cad El Dorado, Sll5 n10. 811-3232 rxt 2370 days, drps, 2 full baths, 2 BR &: AND OTJ-IBRS 644-0089; &4U237 eves. den, tifirrored v.·all in llv. VENTURE 21, rully equip-rm. 536-6802 ped. many extrai. ECONO:O.fY Special Shasta * 968-9&58 * 8xlB mobile. home In park. SAILBOAT 12', orie sail, Permanent cabana, clean. Y.'OOd, free !lip. sm. best Call Chip at ~3931 attn oflfor. Very tun. 494-3394 5: JO 6T::>-8910 LJDO 14-Xlnt cond. Trailer, cover. Cii.11 544-1060 dayi; or 67.;..&46j eW11. Bo1t1, Slip1/Dock1 910 SLIPS for u.ilboa15. 24· to J.I' narrow heam . Bt!s l facilltieos. Free pr k n i , Phone 67J..8711 'tll lo P:\f. PRIVATE 1\de tie. 4j' max· imum. $100.JM,7 .c• __ 675-.6461 TWO 4-way tie boat sllps--$9j &: $110 per month. 67><880 ·---~ Booll, Speed & Ski 911 14 ·FT.. 73 HP Evin1-ude. Beaut. 1kl. $550 Inc. trlr. 347~78 or 346-5742 lli1 T\VO 40' DCFB Chri11'1, Xlnt cond, Local. 01'lf' 111 $20,!"ielo. Avco Bkr, 7141774-72ml '69 FORD Super Van-E!ec refrig. head, oven, 1to\'e, flip top, 11ir cond. 54;...-3215. Cycles, Bikes, Scooters '"""' HONDA -"FRIEDUllDER" , .. NAQI """· •• 537-6Sl4 • i!:l-7:xili Motor Homes VACATION . HOMES FOi.' Sale or Rent Explorer ~Jotor Hon1es & mini homes , Complete homl"S on "'het>ls that take you any.vhere you \\'ant to go-;n-sry1e-o1:-eomfort;- BUY DIRECT & SAVE New Explorer J81Ai to 26' FROM $7995 · ·+ tax &: license lKPLORER SALES CENTEll 830 So Harbor 81¥d. S11nt• Ana 71 4t 839 8040 Trailers, Travel 945 fic7'x2-I'' B 0 X .TRAILER LIKE NE\.\'! $150 337-3370, ~2621 ERIBA PUCK All cars "·/~.\IR SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING ~ \\'. Csl Hv.')', !\8 645-2182 LEASE a new '71 Pinto S50 mo. (36 mo.) open end. RENT a new '71 Pinto $4 day and .4c mUe. Put a little kick ln your life. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 iL\RBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 6-1'.!.00!0 Autos W•nted 968 WE PAY TOP CISH - for used can I: tntcks, juJt call Us lot ~estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales l\lana1er 18211 Be11.ch Blvd. ALF A Romeo 2 lltr.. rrl~IT 1!.il low miles good cond niany ~...:tras. 548-4431 AUSTIN AMERICA '68 Austin American 31,000 mi's stereo, R/H, Pirelli"it, Pvl pty, $8;il, NB. sra-6839 AUSTIN HEALEY 'G' HEALEY 3000. Looks, runs good, Rl'{.'t'nt engine 1J750 llACH ILYO. :Hwy. J91 893-7:)66 • 537-6824 t'IATS NEW & UM'd, all models, parts and se!"i«. O\"erseas Delivery. C. BOB AUTREY J\10TORS 186(] Long-Beach Blvd. 2l~J...872t HILLMAN 'all l~illman Station \Vagon. "61 Hillman Conve.rrible. Both need engine v.·01'11: S75. 5-lS-231X JAGUAR·-=--- '71 JAGUAR V12 ·g.~ Sprite, new top, 4 new knob6. 14,000 n_:ii: Xlnt cond~ COUPE DE VILLE tlrei, Jj,000 mllei;, good Pvt pty, Sl•95. 646-2635 .full power factory alr door eond. S725. &11-9954 eves & bhvn 4-7 pm. IOC'k.s, etc! ' \~·ukenda V\V Bus '64. Good concl. Ne"'' $4395 TOYOTA lil'es &: bra~_cs, Sharp, Many Mac How•rd Leasing TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT xtras. &'73-1597, 646-249) (Corner ls;I &: Ha.a·boi·) 7:3014:30. 839-9600 Santa Ana SUPER Clean 'G& V\V ~ew '69 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, rad!al !ires, chnln1e \\hU, 24,000 mi's, Pvt owner. Full Str:io. 962-8918 pov.·f'r A: a.fr + AM/FM '69 Squareback Volks\\"agen, stereo, vinyl root, leather iood condition, for sale be.st inter., tllt "'heel, power $69.01 MONTH* offer. 67:>-4041. m.'21:1'5' Perfect cond. 36 mos. Det. pay price.. '67 VW-Good ('(lnd, new ttres, 1,.,~==-::=o,-~--,,- $248-1.36 or ca.sh pr Ice R&.H, Jo mi. $965, 1970 Coupe DeVille Lo mi's, $2003.55 ind. Tax le Lie a.i5-t62.i all elect. air, A'.\1/F:\J. A.P.R. 014.~~f. Seri&J No. e '68 vw. Gocxt Cond. SlOOO. & assumf' paymts. 134347. SlOOO ~11...,;:,inny 34.)..-8..127 Days "'On approved credil Call 646-5'10!1 .-...::::.:"'° e\'f'S. Bill Maxey Toyota ·&.a VlV Bug. sunroof. 1500 1968 ea=d'Sed=::,.,-,d,". v"w",,..· .-:Al .. I .N . leather. pov.'f!r. ~ew 11re11. '65 i\·Ju11tang Jutb&ck.fi cyl. 3 speed. $695 *. * G'r;>-1().lj '65 conl'ertible·l...o ml. Ex· ceptlonally clean. $ 9 5 0. 613-2065 '66 l\lwitang, A;\f I F~t, '70 Cont'L 2 dr. fully equ!pt. 4-spd, etc., $895. 3519 E . Balance of nc"' l\'an<anty Coast H"y,' 9-5 ....,eekdays. transferable. $.'i095. 645-5191 TO SETTLE ESTATE '67 hrrllp, dependable., clean & in gd cond thnKlut, auto '63 Continental Executive M'· !rans, R/H, $950. "M9-39.>7 din. Air cond, full power. '65 llifust. Conv. 289 4 spd 642-8119. v.•/air cond, stereo S700 &: e 1968 LI~COL'J CON· mags. !l.»-6709 TtNE1':A~. Immaculate '6.'i ntt:STANG 6 cyl, new l lOnd. 6i::>-1i9CI I spd trans. Ne1v paint, J62j. '66 Contint-ntal, all Pxtras. or besl oiler &M>-1912 Xlnt. cond. One O\l'rlCr., .67 ;\fustang-Convl·VS, P/s, SllOO. 499-3945 disc brakes. Xlnt. Eme1ven- CORVmE '' ,.1, by wk...i. 673-7'13 1969 Must•ng Fastbk: S1895. • * 83().7'143 18881 BEAeH BL. 847:8355 e.ng._ Ex. cond. U-palRl, iif nd p t -it S3200 Autom.aUc, a..ir cone!., "'&w, HUNTINGTON BEACH S72S <ir Besl otfer :»S-3697 645-24~ • v p y. . 'I'G, Pwr. St. dlr. l\tust Sell, TOYOTA '70 vw. Ad~enturer camper. '68 Cadillac 4 dr DeVille $3000 Under factory \\'a.rranty_ DEMO S'ALE Lo nu. Like_ new. Under .65 1'~ord Ltd 4 dt s7:., '58 CORVETTE OLDSMOBILE Take older trade.. \Vill fin-· warranty. $3250. 673--7008 .,. ~· $1777 _...,..... Hardtop. 4 SM. Red w/ Blk ance pvt. pty. Call 540-3100 'fi9 VW Sqbk-Auto, sunroof. l"' #1S7-0627, 1971· TOYOTA 11,300 ml. Like new. Best CAMARO Stripes, 327 VS, overhlluled --~~==-;;-;;;;--·I De.mo •9206. Low miles, offer. 549-1004 by 1'1arcus tifoton. CIUZ570J '67 DELTA '88' '68 XKE 242 r u f I I • $1045 1'~uu power. Alr Conditioning. " "••Y "'" ppe... 1962 VIV "bll 1600 <ng. 1969 CAMARO CPE. . • ~ER OE'lOS ON SALE dlr. TRF087. l\Tust sell. \Viii J1rluµort 31111µorts \\'O\V! '69 K a r n1 a n n Ghia-Super clt'an. O n I y Sls:iO. 67~5612 alt .6 pm LOTUS LOTUS AUTiiORJZED SALES &: SERVICE J1rllllJOrl 31111µorts v •n " i\lags. Call 968-.3066 or SUPER VALUE ~ ~· !alee trade or finance. Call fl L 9G2-lQ.1;, F1ashy Comp<>tition or3nge •19-1-i11l. Wt ewiA "6~ V\V Bus, xln"t rond. li"JOO finish \Vilh Black Landau 2100 llarlior Hlvd. 61:-i-0166 l9ti7 r-s:;.-~V~,-"J-.-ood~-.,.-... ~. . TOYOTA engine. SJOTJ. roof & bucket i;c:its. VS, '(il \\"hilt' CorvcHe, A 11 r\e11• val\•es, \\'tr pun1p, 6-ffi--0~30 Au to Trans, Radio, llU', around xlnl cond. Needs alternator, pa int l tires J966 1-larUor, C.?tI. 6-16-9:'.0.'.: VOLVO Power Stee1•ing, Factory minor 01eeh. wu1-k I,, tires. $7:.0 833-2111 Air, e1c. YEJl070. $24l'ii. $650. take11 + sn1all t.o.p. + * l9G7 OLDS 442 • Johnson & Son lli26 Harbor 644--0940 . 1961 TOYOTA CORONA -----,----1 Bl"' 4 DR . SEO. VOLVO DEMO SALE Blvd., Costa l\feu., "'" m•. I 7.~.;;c":::~-,,,,,;;::c-=::; I .convt. Auto. fl.39.i . .,...__,.,..., '63 C.Orvair Spyder • good Call 645-1530 l\IUSf SELL Beauti!ul red flniib \vifh 2 • 144 Automatic M Air tone Interior. Auto tran& .• • 142 Automatic Radio Heater, e11; .• Price • 144 4 Speed ReduCed. VTL200 $915. John-• 164 Automatic: '69 CA.Jo1ARO, like nu, p\.\T S condition, 4 spd, AIUst sell! PONTIAC & B, air &. FJ\t, vinyl top, ICEv::.c":::..· ~.,~.....,,::C'7:~;;;;----J h)'d, trans. new sleel ndial COUGAR -------,---""'· ''°""'· One ownu, 1969 PONTIAC .GTO & Son 2626 ftarhor Blvd., \\'e Speciali~ In sacrifice 673-2191. PRICED AT \VHOLESALE Co~ta '!\lcsa, 540-:410. OveNeaa: Dellvery l97D Toyota Corolle 1200 Cpe. SP.OR"rY ECONO!\fY Bright re<I rinl!h '1'ith black ~erut LP.llli.t 9 VOLVO CHEVELLE I ~c:--:::--::-c-..,,,~ --'61 El Camino 327, 4. spd. New engine, 4-mags. XJnl cond. 673-6986 alt J. CHEVROLET buclrel stats, '4 speed tr•n3., 196C l larbor, C.III. 1>46-9303 Radio, Heatf'r, etc., Prlced1----::===---·1 for quick sale. 621Al\S. $1475 $3295 _ Johnson &: Son, 2626 Har-1969 Volvo 16-4 Sed. R., ll. '70 MONTE CARLO bor Blvd., Cotta Mtsa, Automatic. Factory Air lj() 1urbo hydromatic, factory 540-5630. Ccnd. Sharp. Y\VRJ-13 air, poY.'er rqulpped, Lan- BEST BARGAINS DEAN LEWIS dau, elc. 1969 Cougar-Pis, 11. u to , deluxe lnl. Landau top. etc. Pe11ect cond. Orig o\\'ner must sell. S:llOO. 842·ji88 1967 · Cougar, ne\1" paint, valves. tune-up, R/H, air, fa ctory tape, extras. Excel cond. il.49j, 545--691~ '67 Co\liar, v.'hite, 1 loving <Tl''Jler. AUto trans, PIS, R.\H. Sharp S1495. 644-1(2;) FORD COME SEE OUR IMPORTS '70 NOVA ''307 VI'' SELECTION OF &IG-9303 Au1omatic trans., po.,.,·er l97D FORD LTD TOY<YrAS 19-iG Harbor :h·d., 51ttring, fac1ory air. Ian-4 DR. SEO. Jim Slemons Imports Cossa J\Te!a dau IQp. e1c. REFLECTS 140 W. Warner '70 IMPALA CUSTOM t::.\:CELLENT CARB Beau11ru1 Lime frost melallif' finl~h v.ilh harmonizing Lan· dau & Interior. Auto trans .• radio. heat., pow. steer .. !KJW. brakes, alr oond., etc. E.'l:cellcnt l.'OIHlition thl'OUgh· OU!. S(!(' & drive today. }(TG· 923. $2175. J ohnl'.On I: Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Co3lil Mt>11a, :N0-5630 '65 PONTIAC GTO Automatic, radio and heater vinyl lop, air condrtioning: YVXl-11 $24BB DAVE ROSS '69 Bullaro 360cc. DeRrt or m<:llOC'rou ready. 3 4 mm 1 i\tlkuni carb. Re y 11 o I d s chain Tabloc, Aronts. fn"sh eng, super !a.st. S ;. ;; 0. 6~7 Tllf! Camper for little cars. Hitch \\"eight ,. 77 lbs. In- credible. ·21 ft long, height - 6"4". 2 burner stove. Sleeps 2 Adula + l child Y.ith comfort. Can dine Six. In- dependent lighting system. Self contained v.•aler. Am- ple Storage iDcluding; hang-. up closet. Paooramic \1in- dov.os. Bui11-in leveling. 4 additional Adults can sleep in optional add-a-roomtenL Has everything the big 0~·1 ha\'e and can be toy.·ed by the sn1all car. See it today \.\·ork. I want nl'!wcr car. ;noo \V. Coast H"''Y· S•nta Ana ~ THINK COUPE Beautiful one o.,.,·~er trade In. VOLVO' F 1 · I --' Dark l\'Y ~letallic linish Open Eves. & Sun. ·-ac ory a.1r, auuau, po1\·er 541).4125 _. equipn\ent. turbo hydroma. \\'ith matching landau roof. PONTIAC \Viii !!P.U this for $800. Ne"''J>Ort Beach fie, etc. Ivy gold interior. Auto. 2180 llarbor Blvd. al Fair Dr. Costa :\lcsa ;-,46-SOJi i 1969 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 5-16-20::() 1 -~~~==~=== 19!'78 Toyota Corona-4-~pd. ''ffflEDLANOER" Mac Howard Le•sing trans .. Radio, heater. pcn1·- n1, 1nag \\hls, new eng & ICornei· lit&: flarborl f'r steering, )Xl"''er brake~. 1970 Husquvarna 3frO Sport!man · Good cond. S900 or best oUer. 1970 Honda 450-Xlnt cond. S900 or best oiler. !>15-363~ '69 V\\I, 24:\l, perfect cond. " BAUER BUICK 23.l E. 17th SL Cosla :\Jesa 5''8-7765 '63 Austin Healey '.\lark II JllJO. New Ores & paint. Xlnt cond. S1200. ;,13--0931 '61 Healey ~3000. Good con- di!ion, carbs jusl re-hit. "'Hard" top, $850. 548-42.i7 BMW ""':-,;,. &o:.';.~~. iiiiiiiititR~O>'Y~ ER, Inc . or 49.i-43-13. ~------~!~ 2925 Harbor Blvd. Atttoe tor w. r::i Costa r..1es11. 546-44<14 "10 Honda 350 Scrambler • ~ . .-p m I. 15 lO . 0 • n '-;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:;~ I DATSUN TI41684-1941 ; a n y 1 i me I -.,-.,,..,,.,,,~,.,--:;:,=- .,,_,..,, An1;quos/Cl111ics 953 '67 DATSUN PICKUP '69 BSA 650cc LIGHTI\'ING TOUR t NG modtil·A65L, XKE Jag. 1968 Cpe. xlnt sine-le owner, lo ml. Xlnl rond. AiJ.·, radio Fl\t/All/ cond. Ph: 616-&Jn ar1,, 5_ S\V, x1ra spkr1 tor tape. 71~1774-0965. e HONDA 160. Xlnl cond. .,,C~=.:._:.c,,~~~~ $27:J or best ofler. Extrax. l!MO FORD P.U. V-8 flathead 646-0037 re°"ntly overhauled. Nttds pa.Int -body work $450. HONDA r:io Scrambler. Xlnt or 13e5t offer. 836-5672 cond. i\lust" .o;et' to appttc. I ~C....-~-'~---= $775-0fler. 67~ici.i!I Dune Buggies · 956 ·~-~~-------1 ~-'70 SUZUKI 901 like nu, Ru~ likf' nt'\I', tUVTSSll. .$999 Full Price. Barn·lck fmports, 998 So. Coast H"''Y·. La&una Beach. ~6-4051 or •19~-9771 , DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY MID SUNDAYS under 1''Rtranty, 7JO mlleg. $323. 6i~2191. 'TO ~·lye.rs To1v'd, VW po11·f'r, Lletnsed, Good cond, $97:i. 1&a35 Bea<=h Blvd. ~ dy!S, M0-9"_jJ cv.;•J . Hun~on Of!aeh '64 tlonda 2;,0_ Good cond, Sports, Race, Rods 959 __!_42:77ftJ or 5'~'"42 c.11 "'"m' '33 CHEVY PICKUP I '71 DATSUN WAGCN '65 Suzuki 80. f'Xcellrnt 4 5pt'E'd Mldlo, beater. 1-'uU $300, cond. llOO actual mlle1, Sl3.'.>., Cadillac f'ng\11t, hydro. i\fust price $1999_ ((MCAXl , B•;r. v.~ans be attn. wlt·k Import., 998 So. Co11~t '69 BSA T.'iOcc" ~-,._, lf.,.,·y., La I u n • Beach. 1900 f'lrm. Xln"1 cond. 1#4WI I~ ;)J641)jl or 64-9171. ;,tMlolS e\"4'1 alt -IP~t. • HODAKA 1969 * -5 spd tnrm • ~l%a7 SACHS 12.>la~l, d~(lf'ndahlf'. Xlnl rond.. Ste. $39a. C&ll 573--lOfil Mobile Home1 935 roR.i~. S:Xlt trallf'r, nlce park. Spe.1.'f &-ullllll•• undtr S&O. mo, &ore 10 ap- Pl~t'lltt $24.)1), $~g..1667 2100 Harbor Bli;d. Trucks 962 T:ECR£:\'1 IUN CE!\""TF.R ROY CARVER, Inc. 2923 J-111.rOOr Bh-d. FERRARI FERRARI AtmlORitED SALES i1r: SERVICE J1 rllllJOrl 31111port s Costa ~ll"llla 54fi-444~ SJ.00 \V. CoaAf Hwy. l\'e'U he.Ip you lcil! 612-5678 ___ N_•_..,..,..,.:__B<_,_,_h __ ) lire1. R'blt !;mog. t"un lo ~~~c· '537~ S39-9600 5.3l-060? Santa Ana f'actory air. Pie. See and drive. S!f.(l. 6-1&-2503 drive to appreciate. 37.)('QS '6!. Toyoia Land Crul~r '62 P-1800 Sprl ~pe. Xlnt '69 CHEVROLET $3150. Johnson & &in. 2G26 p U .. , 4 \l'hl itrlve SlfiOO. cond, 36,000 mi s, R/H, CAPRICE }farbor Blvd., Costa l!Jesa. \.\o'/can1""r Sl!IOO. 549--0;;()1 overdrive, $129j. 6-16-21Di Hard1op Cou ...... Fact . f>.10-3630 ----,T~iiiJiiiJjij;i--l,;'""~'~'~""'7-7'-=col ...... ory air, •c;.;=:;-;==A.,.-TRIUMPH pn1. "3.)()'", turbo hydromatic, STATION WAGONS '68 Vol vo 122 S, autom., 3-IOCXl po.,.,·er equlpt., landau top. '68 F<>rd. Air auto., PS. ps--.,,,,,,_-.,,""""°°""°c:--I n1i. Ve1'}' liood cond. Asking $2395 _ Sl9'Jii. '71 SPITFIRES Sl lOO. 49-l·ll9? Mac Howard Le•1in9 '69 Country Squire. Pov.·t>r, NOW ON DISPLAY Autos, Used 990 (Corner 1st & Jiarbor) air, raek, lo pass., etc. - Come In for • lo!st d1ive! 'j] Forcl school bu s. con. 839-9600 Sania AAA S319:>. FRITZ WARREN'S ,·erted. FOR SALE OR SALE OR TRADE '69 Kings"·ood 3 seai. Po\\·er, 1'IUST SELL At1Tact1ve Jtn1e frost flni~h 11·ith Black interior. Equip. pcd with Auto Trans. Ra- dio, Healer, Power Steer· ini::. Power 8l'akes, Powea· \\'ind01\·Jll, A beautiful Car throughout. Showlli g ood care, i"ER897. $2975. John- son & Son, 2620 Harbor Blvd., Cos1a :\fer;a, 540-5630. -;--,;;;-<;--:;o:::;;:=:=;;;;;:;·i SPORT CAR CENTER TRADE.~8-5613 aiter4.ask 1961 Chev. 4 dr, Jrnpala 28J alr auto., rte. -SZ79.'i. ., ·~ c.wu.;. .... ...._,. . .,,..._,....,;,;;o,;.;;~t~~~C\lrt--~ no-E.-n:t St., !."'A:---MT.:u-m Jim. .. :uro..-P•awOtl~R&.H'~ • MG AUTHORIZED SALES A: SERVICE J2rluµorr 31t11po1·rs ltOO \\'. Cons! H1\-y. l\'t>\\')Xlrt Beact. (.ift\ THINK m .. ~ .. "FRIEDLANDER" 111w lf.olt" ~"wv. Ml 893. 7566 • 531-6824 '66 :\IGB. 20.000 mi's, r.em. hrdlp. "Old laity school te11.chcr", SIJ9j. 613-1901 '63 :\IGB, G()(I(! co n d , hardtop, \\i re \\"httls, $825. ·~· MGB e \fCB 'G l·Llkc nt\\' in & our. \\11'l' 1\l}('f'l:1o, r . .t·ll. $9."iO. Call &l:Hifi.i PORSCHE '62 PORSCHE 1600 S 11900 8.13:3':'8 Tor bes! tt!lllts! 642-56~ Open dally 9-9: closed Sunday Fair nibb • New ball. $200. Factory air, )Xl"''er. rack, 'S.. Tn::t 'Green \l'lblack int. BUICK •()!"trade l6r P/U truck, pink 2'l,{Q) ml., etc. -sm;;. '&:> PONTIAC GTO: clean; Good 00-•. $800. ,,., "'"""'" tor pink.. &tS-2142 alt 6 PM, Mac Howard Leasing '"' ,,...__.,, {Corner Is;t &: Harbor! P\IT. strer. Ii br a k e s . ~·~•~k~l~o='~'~"~''=l~o====~I ERIBA PUCK 1,.,•,•,Sa;;::::t=&~S~o7n~.=· c::::=:::-.,,,-J839-9000 531-0607 Santa Ana Automatic. e ·:;g TJt.3• CLASSIC COND. '62 Chevy 1taLlon wagon, RI:'--;-66ij;"BB~ronoomo0.,-,4;,~·h;!l~drdi':.lh;;d~op0.. l --~l.j~57~5~. ~C~•~ll~'~67~i\.~2~723!!__ .s:lS(). Call 6iJ.~ ask for bit brakeii & tngil'lf'. Good RAMBLER John The CamJX'r for littlr car~. running oonrl. BEST OFF-O\'e1'(!rive:, locking hubs, sv.·. li ltch ""tight -71 lbs, In-ER. j~8-561J Alter 5:30 " lng-;n~ay spare. 3.'.>,000 mi, ----------1 rrediblt'. 71 tt long, height_ \reekends. brand ne1v sh't't't tire8 & '62 RA.\IBLER Sta. \\'ag.13001 VOLKSWAGEN ;.,;--;;;;;;;;;;;--;;~,.-..,,,. \Oo"hls, plus 5 xtra off the Rd. Facrory Air. PIS • PIB. ~ii!~~--~~~ii;;~l 6'f '. 2 burner ~lo\·~-Sleeps 1968 CHEVY VAN: Rll-1 !Ires &. .,.,-his. $2450. Alro To.,.,•ing hitch. Gi2-85!12, 2 Adults + J chilit v.·11h new 6 pli·• -, '•ndo · II 11 4• 7• 2•·· ERIBA PUCK comfort. Can d ine Six. Jn -PC'rfrct. 11695. 4912108~s-:~ rr~;~t~~~~7D;xAft ~ p~i T·BIRD dependent lighting s)'StC'm. 646-419i2 ' l!J0.-2621 Tiie Camper for little c11r3. Selr rontai~d "'~ter. Ani-1969 J\!ALJBU Chev II 2 d 0'6~9~F~o0·R=o~S~U~P-ER VAN Hitc-h v.·e.lght -77 lbs. Jn-~~ :1~::lgt ~;~~!1~fc h!~;~ landau top, auto . ~11.~;, ai~'. E.:wo 12.l" wheel base. VII, c~cllble. 2I ft Jong, heig ht -doi\·s B~ih-i n leveling 4 P"''r steering, vmyl seats, au~ofnallc trana., radio, 6'4". 2 burnel' .!!IO\'e. Sleep~ additionA' Adolt, ca•n 51(...., s2.:m. 833--010&. heater e1c: 2 Adults+ 1 child with in optio~l add-a-roomtl!;;;: 1964 Chevy ''Factory ' $2495 co1nfo11 . Can dine Six. In-Has t\"C'l")'lhing Uie bii: onc.·11 CampPr:· VA_n. R/H, aulo, Mac Howard le•sing depcndtnt lighUng 5,)'Slcm. have And c:in be toll·ed by everything, like ne1v SUOO. {Corner 1st I: Harborl Self corilMined Y.atC"t. Am-t~ small car, See ii today 497-108~. ~-!139-!l600 531-0007 Santa Ana pie S1or11ge int"\udlng hang. •I e "Si CHEVY-Coor!, reli•bl• TO 0 '69 RIN Squh't' \\'agon, ~:1,.~~~ili.~noo~~~ll~n~~'in~ BAUER BUICK ~~~~7rtation $.lZi. Call Pt>rleC"t cond, )g,ooo mi's, addition•! Adu]l5 can sleep 23i t:. 17th St-, , RIH. PIS, P.'8 & di!!-C In optionA.I add-a-roomient. Costa i\leaa $-'8-7iW &9 VAN V..S, auto. Stereo, ~~~=<>A.ir 'cond, $24 j O, H · · pantiled, Jouveltd \\indo\\'L .... ...-.JVUU aa e\•e.ry1hlng tht big one 1 ~~~~ lilln~ cond. ~ 642.-&Hl 1970 G~a.'tie. 500 4-dr HT. have and ca" be to-...·ed by ,69 BUIC ~ the small QJ'. See 11 tOday K RIVIERA '61 OI~ Sin 've-n; new Pa/Pb, alr, auto trans. ntv.· at }\ill povotr, factory air. Ian· en~. 11res. brakes, paint. t[re,s. 16.000 mi. Atuat sell! BAUER BUICK ••• "°'· A•11nr, 28.ooo &r.H98J, ,,-,..,.. 12880. llJ0.""7 ni iles loob k drives like '65 ~lair, P/S, PIB. Fae 1967 FORD Country Squit't' 234 E. Jilh St. ,... ...... See lit nlr, New Hre-', 1 c~·ner, a.ir cond. PS PB. GoOO Costa !\lrsa !'>18-776;) Mac Howard Leasing V.-ry clti11n, Si5(J, 8-17-282.i polyglas~ tires. On!y 52.oon (Co.-rie! 1~1 & H1u·bor) '62 4-dr lmpahi, Xlnr rood. mU~1. \Vt t I maintained, ERIBA PUCK The Camper for little c:ar1. llltt'h "''right -77 I~. Jn. C'l"t''libll". :n ft lo"1', height • 6"-1"', 2 burl"ICr 3lov,., Sleeps 2 Adult.t + J child with co1nfo11. C\n dir)fo Six. ln. dl:pendtnt lighting ISY'"tcm. &>It contained \\'a ter. Am- pl~ Stora.gt-lnchldlng hang- up c\05('1. Panoran1lc win- dows. Built.in le\'ellng. 4 addl1ion11.I AduH1 can iJPep In opliOnal add-a-roomtent lln.s e\·erythln1 the ble-one'~ hlll'(' llnd Cfln bt' IO\.\'ed by the 11nall car. See It today ., BAUER BUICK Z:;.J E, Jith 51. Co~1ll :i.1~'>-<1 S-IS· Ti&:'.i • "69 V\V. xlnt ('(lnd, lo1v ml. 8.l9·9600 531-06()7 San1r1 i\na Clt>an, llofusl ~f'e. $49.; or rlt'an. SlGOO jj7-Jl.cl_t ~­~tldf shlfL $1ol00. 5J6..il92 'iO Rh·ier~dt'd! All bt'st orrrr. 54G-:>9.iJ ·53FOi'i'.1 '1an00--;·11~oll-Auto, aft 3 pni. po'A·· Air. !\1ereo~11.1n-P"m. Can today ~ Sell toniOrrow! Pli<. Runs .l(l)Od. $3i!J, IJ!~~~~ 'GS \l'\V !if'dan, 'unroof. nt'<I IX'aut)'! S 4 • 4 0 0 · Fast rt"'ultl with a Dally 96.'i-2!l27 ·63f."R1n1. }fas all pcv.•er, A...\l/F'lf r11dlo, $1,lil 644-0UO. Pl.Joi Cl1ultltd Ad .• Dlal 1 .i7For d-Wag. $100-Fat. Rir, ~!),). ~~1 falrfleld ~A--030$ D1\lLY PILOT for action! dlf'e(:I ~'l'} -NO\V! .\~$~~9J: ercs. Dr, f 1-mri.'l r!cl ~la.r. •• '